<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15816" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15816?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T01:04:05+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48938">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/69da62f85e9679c024b02824ce4ff255.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4c0cb1de3938972ce48b763597c6f7c7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50656">
                  <text>•
14-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , May 9. 1979

Leaks thr.e aten

Cincy police

•
.
""
JOznzng wzves.:
• •

public confidence
WASHINGTON (AP) - Amid
grol\ing concern that gasoline
shortages could spread from
California, the Energy Department
says leaks of internal documents to an
oil industry group may threaten
public confidence in the 10ay the
department makes rules and policy.

Flowers are the prettiest
way to tell her you care
about her. For all the
thlngs .she is to you, for all
the things she's done, give
Mom or Grandma a
specia 1bouquet.
*Hydrangeas ·
*Cut Flowers
*Corsages
*Hanging Planters
*Azaleas
*Potted Mums
*Combinaton Pots
*Permanent Flowers

A report Dy the department 's
inspector general found that the
American Petroleum Institute, 10hich
counts among its members the
nation's largest oil companies, had
advance access to a number of
internal department documents.
Thomas S. Williamson Jr., deputy
inspector general, said those
documents included draft rules "l'hat
11ould directly affect the financial
interests of API's member oil
companies."
The report said departmerit
employees acted "in gopd faith" in
sharing the information. But it added
"the practical effect of their conduct
has been to favor a major industry
group over other interest groups and
members of the public.... "
Williamson said the lnspec1or
general's office was concerned "about
the broader implications of these
findings for public confidence in the
integrity of DOE's proCedures for
rulemaking and policy formulation."
Mean\\hile, Deputy Energy
Secretary John F. O'Leary predicted
that the nation \\as in for "a fairly
tight spring and summer on gasoline
supplies." Repetitions of the long lines
at California gas.stations may happen
else" here "unless people are very,
very patient and don't panic," he said.
In California, gasoline sales "iU be
restricted, starting todsy, in most of
that state's largest cities under an
emergency order signed Tuesday by
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr, The order
provides for sales by odd or ev.'ll
license plate numbers in at least nine
counties, 1\hich include such major
cities as Los Arigeles, San Diego, San
Jose and Oakland.
An Asljociated Press spot check has
found that nationwide long lines at gas
stations are the exception rather than
the rule.
In a related development, the
Senate was voting todsy on President
Carter's request for standby authority
to order gasoline ra~oning.

Pomeroy
Rower Shop

Authorized CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Phone 992-2039-,.2·5721
· 106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy,O.

234 E. Main 51.

We accept all major credit cards

and WCI wire flowers ev!!rywhere.

'1'0':\.1.

'W t~NJn~

t . UU1,\.HY

"' iHUl

t :ll'l&gt;l'l'l &lt;S'l'

••

Area deaths
MARK STEVEN BLACK .
Mark Steven Black, 17, Portland,
died this morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mark 10as born Jan. 2, 1962. He 10as
preceded in death by t10o brothers,
Jackie and Johnnie.
He \\as a member of the Apostolic
Church, Racine.
He is survived by his parent~,.
George and Helen Black, four
brothers, Larry of Carroll, Ohio,
Robert, Gary and DaMy all of
Portland, four sisters, Joann Dailey
and Cathy Black, Portland, Diana
Hysell, Pomeroy, and Cheryl Hysell,
Rutland, his grandmother, Daisy
La10son, Portland, several aunts,
uncles, nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at Morris Chapel
Cemetery 10ith Russell Cline
officiating, Friends may call at El\ing
Funeral Home after 7 p.m. this
evening.
CECU..BROWN
cecil R. Brown, 85, a resident of Rt.
3, Gallipolis (Safford School Rd.) died
around 12:30 p.m. Tuesday at hls
home. He had been in failing health
the past two years:
Mr. Brown was a retired farmer.
He was born March 13, 1894, in

.

Pomeroy, o. r·· ......

OWNED AND OPERATED BY

Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon . lhru Wed. ' ·5,
Thur. ' ·12, Fri. '·5, Sat. '·2
Guaranteed

or Your Money Back

I

Gallia County, son of the late Bert and
Blanche Blazer Brown.
He married Shirley Beck on Aprll5,
1923, at Pomeroy. Shi! preceded him
In ~eath on April 2&amp;, 1974. One 8(111,
Robert' K. Brown, Rt. 3, Gallipolis,
survives. One sister, Mrs. Charles
(Gladys)·Pope, Ft. Landerdale, Fla;,
survives. One brother and one sister
preceded him In death.
Mr. Brown spent all hill life in
Gallia County. He waa a member of
the Modem Woodmen rl America,
and 'W8S a World War I veteran.
Funeral services wiU be held 2 p.m.
Friday at the Waugh-Halley·Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. John Jeffrey
officiating.
Bilrial will be In Mound Hlii
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 until 9 p.m. on
Thursday.
.
.
Military graveside rites 'lrill be conducted by Post No. 4164, Veterans of
Foreign Wars.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
·
Admitted--otto Lohn, Pomeroy;,
Clarence Nichols, Middleport;
Bernard Rairden, Hartford; Curtis
Ward, Pomeroy; Dwight Burton,
Middleport; Floyd·Cummins, Racine;
Mark Black, Portland.
Discharged--Hilda Frederick,
Robert Smith, Sr.

Mayor' Coui1
.

Hm- Medical Ceater
Dll~ea, May 8
Harold Burcham, .Mildred Cur·
nutte, John Demey, Ishmael Dixon,
Cloda Drily, Richard Elkins, William
Fielder, Esther Fink, Opha Fitzwater, Marie Froideveaux, Rhoda ' 11"'"--~~~~~~~~~~:"":!~~~~~~~~---.
Gomez,BryanHIQnitton,HetenK.IestDUE TO MOVING TO OUR NEW
ing, Richard Lambert, Francis Lor·
•
dler, Janet Matthews, Shennan MeLOCATION WE WILL BE CLOSED

,

tc
Not all microwave ovens are alike I

Plllii.H '

CON'_I'EST MNNE~ ~ Tom Kl!llnedy, an eighth grader at the Mel liB
Juruor High Schoolm Middleport, was the eighth grade winner In a word
contest conducted by the Friends of the Meigs County Libraries. Tom, the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kennedy, Middleport, made the .m06t words
fr~ "public library" to win in the eighth grade competition. Pat Neece,
president of the Friends, presents Tom with five silver dollars as hls
prize. Tom will be moving to Massachusetts with his family soon.

ISears I

S~tisfilctlon

Ks: :N'S.I!HX'

l : Hrlt ' l ' H .. ti'l'U\.H1 ',

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati 10ept as his casket \\as brought in,.
police officers planned to join .their "They're feeling a combination ·. of
"ives in a march to today's City emotions. They're hurt . They're ID!Id. ·
Council meeting before ending a 24- They 're afraid, " said Lt. Col.
hour walkout protestirlg the conditions La'\'rence Whalen.
:
they claim caused the deaths of four of
"Maybe they've suppressed their
their companions .in 10 months.
feelings too long. But now they!re
Several hundred offfcers threw saying, 'It ends here. They'll be :no
their patrol cruiser keys against a more.' ·
stat~e · honoring the department 's
"They've chosen this method : of
, dead on Tuesday and l\alked away expres.Sing those feelings so the pulilic
from their jobs until City Council "Ul take up their cause the way they
l!l!!Cts today .
·
(the police ) have taken the public's
· Police were told to report back in · cause''
·
time to march to today's council
Many . police officers elq)l'e~
meeting, 10here they will be joined by concern about. the judicial system
a group of police wives who are beacause they claimed it l~ts
pressing for • afety · improve111ents criminala free.
.
including hollow-nosed ammunition,
While they marched, a Hamilton
t10o-man patrols, and body armor.
County grand jury was exlliJiin!ng
It was the first time the city has evidence regarding ·Percy Wilson,
been 10ithout its nonnal level of pollee charged with aggravated murder: in
protection since 1918.
connection with Henze's death.
" How can I uphold my 81\0rn duty if
Awaiting crowd cheered as the ffrst
I'm dead?" snapped one police officer police ·officer to return ·from 1he
10hen asked how he felt about walking cemetl1ry pulled up in front of City
off the job,
.
Hall with his siren blaring.
:
The job action was triggered by the
Crowds leaned out rl, windows l!lld
slaying Saturday of Officer Melvin "aved from the roofs of buildini!B aa
Henze, the eighth police officer to die the police marched through (he
on duly in five ye31's.
streets before going home for the d.$y.
Police and city officials refused to
" No one wanted to walk out," said
say ho10 many ·officers remained on Officer BUI McMillian, who expreaSed ·
the job, but about 300 officers dissatisfaction over. City Council's
marched en masse to their pace in considering propoaed reforms.
headquarters before leaving for the " We're going to make· them (the
day.
council) commit political . suicide."
" So far, things are relatively
quiet," said City Manager William
Donaldson. "We're appealing to our
citizens' civility and common sense. I
S. .
ask that they join me in praying for
the safety of the city."
Fined $25 and costs each In the court
Those police who remained on the of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffnian
job, mainly supervisory personnel, Tuesday night on dlaorderly manner
worked 12-hour shifts Tuesday. Polic:e charges were Earl Ar!x, 55, · no
asked residents to report thefts and . address listed, and George : A.
traffic accidents to the nearest McDaniel, 51, Middleport.
.
Forfeiting bonds in the court were
district station instead of calling ·for
an officer. Police also suspended Stephen R. Pullin, 30, Mt. Alto, W. \Ia.,
handling of juvenile compl.aillts and $100, posted on an assault charte;
crime prevention activities.
Buddy McKinney, Middleport, ~.
Donaldson said police staffed four disordetly manner, and ~rry : E.
two-man cruisers in all five police Livingston, 45, Bidwell!, $350, drlv)ng
districts Tuesday night and that this \\bile intoxicated, and •150, driving
was enough to meet all emergencies. under suspenSion.
:,
An
unidentified
sergeant
Seven defendants forfeited bondB in
investigating an assault said, "It's a the court .of Pomeroy Mayor Clilreilce
.sad . day for the pollee 1\epartment. Andre~~s Tuesday night.
··
Thank God they don't know how short
They are Millard R. H~·=~~
manned we are. They'd tear the city Route 1, Letart, w. va ., wo,
apart."
·
on a charge of driving
The most distressing problem for intoxicated·, Robert Dugan, "utland
"
•
city 'bfficials in the first bours of the $100, intoxication; Carol McFarlahd,
w~out w~ the towmg of about 60 Pomeroy, $50, disorderly conduct
cruiSers which had been parked and Nancy Pullins, Middleport, tso,
locked m the street outside C1ty Hall . . disorderly conduct; Steven P. Zegar,
It took nearly three ho~s to clear ·Monroevllle, Pa., $30, stop sign
thfre street a ndst gtet trafjof1c mrtov_mg violation; Clara Jean France,
ee1Yon a 1. 1ea wo rna r a ertes: Middleport , $30, assured clear
The emotion surrounding the recent distance and Calvin Mayle .Pomeroy
police deaths was evident on the faces $200·petty theft. Fined $100 and cost~
of the 700 law e~forcement officers on a charge of contributing to the
attending Henze s funeral at St. delinquency of a minor was Duane
Catherine's Church, some. of whom Qualls, Pomeroy.

~!=.:S~Y:JJ.::f~h
~~~!~.=

Get the complete facts on microwave co~king .

If you own a microwave oven, or you're
thinking about buying a microwave oven

Slavens, Truman Souders, VIolet
Stumbo, MArk Vallance, Marion Van

Meter,Betty8~~w1aeman.

MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY, MAY 14th &amp; 15th.
WE WILL BE OPEN IN OUR NEW
LOCATION THURSDAY, MAY 17th
FOR REGULAR BUSINESS HOUI{S.

~hte;,~a~~f:~.

Richard eau,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cloak n,
daughter, Bidwell.
Mr. and · Mrs. Clarence JArvis,
daughter, Wellaton.
and Mrs. Roger Nichols, son,
MacArthur.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Quillen, son,
Gallipolis.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Sayloo, son,
Oak Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tribby,
daughter, Vinton.

THURSDAY
MAY 10TH
TIME

NGEL'S
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELR.Y
106 N. 2nd AVE.

WHAT YOU'LL
· • Trained Amana demonstrators will lllplaln the many
benefits ot microwave cooking , Including how yOu can
save 50% to 75% or lha anergy normally us8d 10 cooking .
• The~ will explain how you can cook most foods gour,;,.,l
pert«u:t In juat one fourth the usLJ&amp;I time.
• Laam how you can brown, sear, grill, try, bake and saute
with a mtc rowava oven browning skillet.
• There will be a question and answer period so you Can
get the stra ight facta about microwave cooking .
• You wlll receive literature explaining .how microwaves
actually · cook . It Is completely different from conven tional methods.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Fi!Yout the coupon , but do it now. We are limited to
number of homemakers.
SEND THIS COUPON TODAY FOR YOUR RESERVATION

"'" TO INGELS FURNITURE
&amp;JEWELRY

r----~------------------•,II

I

Your '•tMrvltroll wiN M conlirr!ltd by ahont.

·

I I wouklllke I() ettend your mlcroweve oven

I

dlmonl1rlll0n luncheon.

II

Ntmll! -

~

I hklfu• _ II C.ty .-.
I Phon• .-

--

-

~-~-...;.

1

____

- - - • ·---------.
l rp Code ~ _

- _ S"t' - · .. _

_

_ _

..

,....-.~

__

........- _

II
I
II
I

~------------------------·
INGEL'S

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

DR. JAMES P. CONDE

ELBERFELD$
MOTHER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

Rolfs
'C heckbook Clutch

LEGISLATIONVETOED .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mayor
Tom Moody on Tuesday vetoed an
ordinance adopte&lt;\ the previous
evening by City Council which would
have r~ service stations to put
up signs listing the prlce.of unleaded
gasoline.
The veto stopped a threat by a
· station
operators'
service
organization to challenge the
conslitummality of the ordinance in
court.
Councilwoman Pam. Conrad had
offered the legislation. She said thai at
first she \\anted to require stations to
post signs large enough for passing
motorists to read that would list
prices for regular, unleaded and
premlum gasoline. After talking wit~
station operators, she amended the
proposal to require ' Only the visible
posting of· unleaded fuel prices.

Organized for her alone.

.
.
By Katie Crow
·
. The Ohio Department of Transportation has no plans to pave three city blocks
m the Village of Pomeroy. This was learned at Wednesday 's luncheon meeting
of the Pomerox Chamber of Commerce.
Glen Smith, GalliJl!llis, deputy director for Division 10, Ohio Department of
Transportation, Manetta, said the prospect of paving three blocks in Pomeroy
waa "out of the question.".
·
Smith said that due to the·width of Main Street in Pomeroy, (from Sycamore
to Butternut Ave .) the state cannot undertake the paving of that section. He also
stated that the state cannot pave where parking meters are located.
The State of Ohio rquires 30 feet for traveling which the Pomeroy business
district does not meet.
~ttorn~y Fred Crow asked that if the village ubtained pennission from the
r81l!'oad to pave to the tracks wpuld that help the situation.
In answering, the 'foryner Gallia County Engineer said the state must have
something ~?re definite in order to lindertakethe projecl.
Smith S81d 1t would cost $30,000 a mile to pave ihree Pomeroy city blocks.
Bids for paving from Nye Ave., to Sycamore and Butternut to the PomeruyMason Bridge approach will be let May 31, with work to begin 30 days later.

view photo-card case. Available In a variety of colors leathers and

patterns.

.

'

ROlFS
It shows you care.
Be sure to see all ·t he other Rolfs Clutches .· Wallets •
Key-Tainers · Cigarette Cases. So perfect for Mother's
Day Gifts.
·

Elberfelds .In Pomeroy

'

Larry Welle ung , mcmb&lt;c of Pomercw Counci l. .cskloJ about overiUlldecJ lruct&lt;s
traveling through the village and exp l ~tined that the state highway patrol will
not stop trucks within the corporation.
Wehrung also asked about the safety of the bridge with the large truck travel.
Smith said its legal weight limit was $80,000 pounds and bridge inspection has
been completed.
Smlth also explained that it costs two and one-half mlllion dollars a mile to lay
new highway on a four lane.
When asked about· a road to the new bridge at Ravenswood Smith reported·
ODOT Will repatr SR 338 at a cost of approximately one and one-half million
dollars.
In answer to Richar~ Jones' question regarding major projects, it was Jn.
dicated that SR .7 to F1ile Pomts was the N1unber I project foUowed by the
Rutland bypass. The continuation of U.S. 33 to Athensseems to' have gone by the
wayside due to the lack of money, according to Sml th.
·
J one~ extended thanks to Smlth and Gifford for their assistance in getting the
bids for the anticipated paving 'in Pomeroy, excluding the three business
blocks.
Smith stated there were 900 highway projects. Approximatelv 400 have been

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 19

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

cancollcu clue to lack uf funds . He also added thf.re are less enployes with
ODOT now than when he began his employment. He also co~ented that
engineers leave for other employment.
Design Engineer Howard Gifford explained the steps that must be completed
before a road can be built. It takes approximately 12 years now to develop major highway projects due to the studies .that have to be made.
Gifford explained there is a five-year program for construction of highwa)'ll
and each year this five year program is updated toaqd new projects.
other necessary data includes historic studies, pre-historic, noise, en·
vironmental, and archeological studies.
·
OOOT projects under consideration are to extend R.t 7 from Rock Springs to
Five Points, Rutland bypass, SR 338 from Ravenswood to SR 124 to the new
Ravenswood Bidge, and SR 124 at Bowmans.Run between Syracuse and Racine.
OTHER MATI'ERS
.
Bi~ Quickel reported on his trip to Randall Park Mall, Cleveland, .la!t
weekend. RandaU Park Mall is one of the largest malls in the United states,
Quickel commented.
Quickel reported they showed films of the Regatta and passed out flyers on
(Continued on page 16)

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1979

Firm named for waste study
Systeck Corp., has been chos~n to
conduct a solid waste planning study
for Meigs County according tO an
announcement Tuesday night by Jeff
Burt, of Buckeye Hills Regional
Development Commission .
Burt, meeting with Meigs County
Commissioners stated that it would
take about four months to complete
· the study for the Meigs County
Landfill at no cost to the county.
·Burt said commissioners would
have to appoint four ~ eight people to
a solid waste advisory committee.
People chosen should be from private
citizens, economic groups, elected
officials, and public interest groups.
Those persons would meet once a
month.
Also ·meeting with commisssioners
was Manning Webster, chainnan of
the 169 bOard to discuss the mental
retardation progarm.
Webster was granteq pennission to
· store mentally retarded materials at
the old Children's borne building.
Webster informed the board that
· buses are in bad condition and that a
new bus will be needed in the near

future.
Mildred Jacobs, susperintendent of
the Meigs County Infirmary also met ·
with the board to disuss the operation
of the infirmary.
Mrs. Jacobs was instructed to check
with local dealers on the price of a
riding lawn mower and report back to
the board by next week.
Michael Swisher, welfare director,
discussed the · operations of thal
depariment. Swisher went over .all of
the maintenance needs of the
building. He was instructed to proceed
with the necessary repairs and
cleaning.
·
·
The commissioners voted to permit
Swisher to become a member of the
Ohio Association of County Welfare
Directors.
Wesley Buehl was present and
discussed the new mixing material for
road patching. The commissioners
stated their desire for a better
material than was used last year.
Buehl reported that the pugmill is
now working and that the gradall is
repaired and his department is
proceeding with ditching.

'C.·y·c.1·1st mJure
· . d
in Rt. 35 mishap
Three persons were injured during
four accidents, including two
motorcycle mishaps, investig.ated
Wednesday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
one cyclist was injured during a
two-vehicle collision on U.S. 35, fourtenths of a mile west of Mitchell Rd.,
at 2;10 p.m.
The patrol reports that a cycle
operated by John Barcus, 18,
Gallipolis , went out of ·control
following the blow..,ut of the rear tire.
The cycle .overturned and slid into
the right front tire of a semi-tractor
trailer, which had swerved to avoid
collision, operated by Joseph
Wangler, 48, Clio, Mich . .
Barcus displayed· incapacitating
signs of injury and was transported by
SEOEMS to Holzer Medical Center.
Barcus was admitted for treatment
of multiple lacerations and contusions
of the head.
TIVo cyclists were injured during a
two-vehicle collision on Bob
McCormick Rd., six-tenths of a mile
north of SR 588, at 5:15p .m.
Officers report that a cycle
operated by Marcus Hardway, 16,
Gallipolis, struck the side of an auto
operated by Gordon · Amsbary , 34,
Gallipolis, while attempting to pass on
.the right.
·
Hardway and .a passenger, Gary
Taylor, 16, Gallipolis, displayed
visible signs of injury and were
transported by relatives to Holzer

Vandals hit
school buses

Functionally designed to
a fortune. A handy outside coin purse
puts small change within easy reach. And inside there's a rertoov'l'bie
checkbook cover for checks and check records, ballpoint pen,}&gt;nd 4112· ·
PICKET COURTHOUSE MONDAY
McARTIIUR, Ohio (AP)- Slriking
l\orkers of the Austin Po\\der Co.
picketed the Vinton County
Courthouse for more than four hours
Monday to protest an injunction
against them . .
A local court issued an Injunction
last Friday restricting picketing at
the plant. A union SPQkesman said it
10as felt that a hearing on the
' injunction which is scheduled for next
Monday should take place sooner.

ODOT paving project out in Pomeroy

· Meigs County sheriff's deputies
were called Wednesday to Investigate
vandalism at Southern Local's bus
garlll!e In Racine.
.
According to Sheriff James J. Prrl·
·fitt, two buses were entered and approximately 15 gallons of gasoline
waa taken. One bus was ransacked
with various items from a first aid kit
thrO\VII about lt. Several nails were
placed In a front tire.
Deputies are J).so Investigating the
theft of a 410 shot~un from the
Patricia Barrett residence at Rt. I,
LangsviUe. M1'5. Barrett reported the
gun was taken sometime Tuesday.
·
Sheriff Proffitt advises Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Barber, Rt. I, Reed· .
sVIIIi, have been cited to Meigs Coun.ty Court on a charge of failing to send
school' age child to school. The complaint as filed by Meigs County .AI·
tehdance Officer otis Knopp.

Medical Center.
Hardway was treated for abrasions
of the left leg, and released. ·
Taylor was treated for a laceration
of the left forearm and a contusion of
the left leg, and released.
Hardway was cited on a charge of
improper passing .
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle collision at the junction of
SR 7 and U.S. 35, at 2:15p.m.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Walter Stover, 54,
Gallipolis Ferry, turned from 7 onto 35
into the path of a south bound vehicle
driven by RQoda Briggs, 63, Cheshire.
There was moderate damage to
both vehicles. Stover was cited on a
charge of failure to yield. .
The patrol investigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 141, three-tenths
of a mile east of Sanders Rd ., at 7: IS

C. E. Blakeslee, executive director
of the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission, asked the
board to transfer funds in the
Planning Commission budget.
The board agreed and transferred
$1,050 from salary to contracts and
repair .
A second letter was received from
Judge John C. Bacon stating that
arrangements will have to made by
May ' 12, to move the Community
Action Agency office.
The commissioners agreed tha~ it
would be impossible to fulfill the
request within that time frame .
The board mimed Bob Bailey and
Bob Fisher to the SEOEMS Board of
Trustees to replace Joan Stewart and
Btlly WiUiamson and approved the
bond of Donna Koehler as deputy
clerk of Meigs County Court.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk.

. NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED- New officers of
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi were installed
Tuesday evening when they met at the River Boat
room at the Athens County Savings and Loan. Elected
were Tonya Davis, president, Kathy Cumings, vice

president, Carol Crow, treasurer and Connie Dotson,
recording secretary. Pictured, 1-r, ao:e Tonya, Kathy,
Carol and Connie. Absent was Patty Pickens, cor·
responding secretary. Picture by Oleryl Crow.

:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::.:::::::=:::::::::::::::::.:::::::.::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Extended Ohio
Forecast.
Saturday through Monday : A
chance of showers Saturday and
Sunday. Fair Monday. Low in the
-'Os Saturday and cooling Into the
uppei'40s.to 50s early Monday. High
in the 80s Saturday, and in the 70s
Sunday and Monday.
::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::=:=::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.

- CAA seeking space
for storage, workshop

Kelly to head industrial
portion· of-Rio c!Jmpaign
RIO GRANDE - Phillip Keljy will
lead the industrial ·portion of Rio
Grande College's "Challenge for the
Second Century" Capital Campaign.
Kelly is pres ident and founder of
Kelly Manufacturing Company of
Middleport, a light sieel fabricating
operation producing more than 40
products marketed nationally.
A native of Charleston, W. Va.,
Kelly believes keeping talented young
people in Southeastern Ohio is an
important mission for Rio Grande

College.
" Industrial growth in this area,"

Kelly said, "is dependent on the
availability of persons equipped to
enter the job force . Rio Grande
College and Community College and
its programs help to keep the young,
educated people in this area."
Miles Epling, chainnan of the
public campaign effort, is pleased
with Kelly's acceptance of this
lea dership position. Said Epling,
" Phillip Kelly's involvement in this

campaign is important because of his
sincere ·commitment to the area . ·He
cares about our youth and their future
in Southeastern Ohio."
Leadership positions in community
efforts are not new to Kelly. Along
with responsibilities at his own
company .. Kelly se rves on the
Chamber of Commerce, Is a director
of the Pomeroy National Bimk, and a
member of the Masons.
Kelly, his wife, Lois, and their thre'e
children reside in Chester.

The Gallia - Meigs Community
, Action Agency is seeking to rent
storage and workshop space for its
weatherization program. ·
Amount of space needed is approximately .1,000 square feet under
roof, easily·accessible, and secure for
storage.
Ideal location would be near
Cheshire. However, consideration will
be given to locations in either county.
Anyone having available space for
rent should contact Ron Crawford at
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) _ The ~omphes w1th . coohng tower
"What If one is a cookie
367-7341 or 992-7000.
Governor's Commission on Willow ~nspection gutdehn~s .tha\ ~SHA manufacture specialist?"
Island intends to get a commitment Issued after 5~ men died m Aprtl 1978 Gov. Jay RockefeUer created the
from a federal agency guaranteeing 1 when scaffoldmg fell at the Pleasants commlsswn and handed It the task of.
that inspections will be made when County site. . .
"Independently assessing" flndini!B of
Partly cloudy with a chimce of work resumes on a cooling tower
The commission also ~I ask to be the OSHA investigation. OSHA has yet
showers tonight. Low in the low to mid roject.
notified of mspections Wl~ll124h.o!D's, to make 8 public report of Its findings
60s. Mostly sunny and wann Friday. p The commission met Wednesday and to be mformed of the 1denbtles of but has cited ResearctK;ottreil Inc.,
a.m.
. .
the contractor building the tower for
Officers report that a west bound High in the low to mid 80s. The chance but just four of nine members were the mspectors .
Another
matter
unoff1c1ally
settled
auto operated by Richard Hinchman, of rain is 40 percent tonight and 20 presen t • one s hort Of the number
th
r
t to the Monongahela Power Co ., for 18
percent
Friday.
·needed to take legal action.
at e non-mee mg :va~ agreemen
alleged safety v,iolatlons on the
34, Gallipolis, had stopped in traffic on
who have the commtsswn ~ttorney . project. Research-Cottrell
Is.
Commission
members
141.
attended
the
meeting
said
they
would
research
available
avenues,
.
m
~uding
contesting
the
citations.
SQUAD
CALLED
A vehicle driven by Billie Johnson,
OSHA has turned Its investigation
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad seek a proval from missing members possible use of the comrrusston s new
38, Crown City, came over a hillcrest,
power,
to . obtain file over to the U.S. Justice.
was unable to stop and stuck the answered a call to Oak St. at 2:49p.m. to gef the inspection commitment . subpoena
Wednesday for Eugene Fisher, a from the federal Occupational Safety infol'!".atio~ on the backgrounds and Department for further investigation
Hinchman auto in the rear.
quahflcall.ons of the 14 OSHA related to possible criminal·.
:Jltere was moderate damage oo medical patient, who was taken to and Health Administration.
The conunission wants OSHA to mspectors ~ the ~ate.
prosecutions. A federal grand jury In
both vehicles. Johnson was cited on a Veterans Memorial Hospital where he
make sure futur e construction
Comm.isslon Chat,rman Stephen L. Elkins has been taking testimonycharge of assured clear distance. · was admitted.
Cook !18ld only one of the 14 OSHA about the tragedy,
inspectors.has responded to a request
Cleanup work is 1rr progress at the ..
the commiSSion made through QSHA project site.
.
·
for the infonnation.
Cook said Research-Cottreli "hal~
Cook, who is state labor done everything that we have asked:
commissioner, said the importance of · them to do," but "we have not
knowing qualifications of personnel received any public assurances (from
inspecting the cooling tower work is · OSHA) that the inspections arf going
obvious, and added :
' to occur."
·
He said a letter to the commlsslon
ISS\ month from the head of OSHA,
Assistant Labor Secretary Eula·
NO El'!D IN SIGHT
Bingham, "did not deal at all with the
MOUNT GILEAD, Oh1o (AP) - . issue's ·we had raised, particularly In
Morrow Co~ty Sheriff Tom H~dln terms of public assurl!llces."
sau! he doesn t see an end to a sickout
Cook said the reason for asking that
by courthouse employe,es and the commission be informed about
deputies, but .says he backs their OSHA Inspections soon after, rather
demands for higher ':"'ages.
than before, they are made is that
The walkout, which started at federal law prohibits advance notice
midnight Monday, was ~parked by . ~ of inspections.
r8lse g1ven at the hegmnlng of the
month to a few courthouse employees.
other employees contend the action ::::::: : ::::::: : :: ::::::::::: ::;:;:;: ;:::::::;:;::: :::::::::::::~:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::=:·
violated a long..,tanding policy of pay
DEADLINE MAY IS
raises at the beginning of the year. . . May IS Is the last day to 111111 up for
Hardin said. he has been on duty the proposed extension of Tuppen
alone and handling calls on an Plalns.O.ester Waler Dlstrlet at a lee
emergency basis with 'the assistance of UOO It was ·ailllounced today.
of the state Highway Patrol.
Appllcatlon for ierviee after May 15
The deputies have requested a 25 will be at the present tap fee of $211 for
percent hike In wages and the hiring · extension customers as· well aa
of
three more deputies. A meeting present customers.
,
quarters on N. Second Ave . Due to moving , Dr. Conde's
OPENS NEW OFFICE - Dr. Janies .P . Conde's
between
commissioners
and
..
If
lnlerested
contact
the
water
new offices are located on Mill St. in Middleport In the · office will ·be closed Monday and Tlie5day with the
employees was · scliedulec! for office. at Reedavtlle for more
ope[ling In the m;w quarters scheduled for next 'rhursformer Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Wednesday.
. Information and paym~nt. of tap lee.
structure. The bUilding har ' · on elC\ensively remodel- . day.
eel .by Dr. Conde.' Dr. , · t. hAs b&lt;&gt;cn locate&lt;l in

Inspection

Weather

com~it~ent

necessary

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May JO . I ~i9

2.,-The Daily SPntinel . Middleport -Pome~oy, 0 .. Thursday. May 10. 1~79

Berry's World

In Washington
Self-serving 'charity'
By Mar1ba Angle and Robert Walters
WASIUNGTON (NEA )- If misery
loves com~ny , American consumers
should be delighted to Jearn that
they're not the only objects of the
multinational
oil companies'
rapacious efforts to increase already
bloated profits.
In an audacious move reminiscent
of the buccaneering days of the "Standard Oil Trust" during the llite !BOOs,
the .Exxon Corp. is seeking to
dissuade the World Bank from providing financial assistance needed by
developing nations to harness their
own petroleum resources.
Instead, EDon is promoting an arrangement under which oil-and gas
exploration and production in the
lesser developed countries (LDCs )
around the globe would be the pri vale
domain of the world 's major
petroleum corporations.
The World Bank, which offers lowinterest loans and technical
assistance to encoutage economic
development in LDCs, is convinced
· that successful new petroleum ventures will both enhance those nations
economic stability andmeliorate t~
ha_rsh effects of the global energy

cnm.

Both Exxon and the World Bank
lulve identified a number of developmg countries with better-thanaverage prospects for successful
petroleum . ventures. The list inclUdes:
Arg~tina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia' Mexico, Peru, Trinidad
and Tobago, Angola, Egypt, Tunisia,
Zaire, Bahrain, Cameroon, Chad,
Congo, Oman, Syria, Turkey, India,
Malaysia and Pakistan. •
Petroleum production can be extremely lucrative, as indicated by Exxon's 19'18 net profits of $2.76 billion
and the company's recent announcement that net profits for the first
quarter of 1979 were $955 million, up
37.4 percent over the comparable
period last year.
But exploration is an expensive,
highly risky activity. One exploratory
well in an accessible area with known
reserves costs less than $100,000, Exxon notes, while a single similar wellln
the remote interior of Africa and
Latin America can cost S3 rilillion to
$5mlllion.
The World Bank estimates that in

•

',

Names •••
in the news
MEXICO CITY (AI')- The son of a
:former president is getting a chance
.to flex his own muscle - if only on the
·
-silver screen. ·
: Steven Ford, 22-year.Cid son of
•former President Gerald Ford, plays
the role of a 1880's deputy U.S.·
marshal in a movie being filmed in the
deserts of northern Mexico, a movie
:company spokesmnn says.
: The young Ford, in his film debut ,
-stars opposite Rod Steiger and Burt
Lancaster in "Cattle Annie and Little
Britches," which tells the tale of .a
marshal-, played by Steiger, who sets
out to capture a bank-robbing gang.

Uberatleader (orever," he told about
900 high school students on
Wednesday •.' 'but I certainly wouldn't
intend to quit and abandon them if we
all agreed that I should stay on ."

SPORTS

"

"
.

·Goals of $ALT II
accords have merit
BY LARRY EWING

.

Warning of the dangers ol dry 1\oles
and assorted other potential
economic disasters, Garvin professed
concern for the "poor countries" who
_eventually would have to pay .the
costs of exploration, even if unsuccessful.
·
GarVin 's proposed solution to the
plight of the LDCs: "Management by
a competitive industry._"
In his most outrageous demand
GarVin said that if the World Bank in:
sisted upon proceeding with its loan
program, "it should do so only after
ensuring that the acreage involved
had first been olfered to the industry
on rsonable terms."
In bis response, Blumenthal sought
to assuage Garvin, assuring the oil
company executive that the World
Bank program could "facilitate increased private capital flows" and
"enlarge the possibilities for private
bidding."
Blumenthal should have been more
supportive of the world Bank's important new initiative, but at least he
understood that Exxon was primarily
~otivated by its status as a corporation committed to maximizing its profits.
Exxon, on the other hand, deserves
little more than contempt for masquerading as a charitable institution
devoted to assisting developing nations while it's merely seeking to further expand control. of the world 's
petroleum Sllpply.

Editorial opinions,
comments

'

'

decade between 1976 ano 1985. the
LDCs will have to invest $6.85 billion
annlly to develop their petroleum
resources. Sarlier this.year, the bank
announced its commitment to assist
in It financing through a massive
$1.23 billion loan program.
But previously confidential exchange of letters shows tt Exxon's
board chairman, C-C. Garvin J r., is
hardly enthusstic abou! tl\e economic
self-&lt;:letermination and energy independence that mig11t result from
such a program.
,Earlier this year, Garvin wrote to
Treasury Secrery Michael W.
Blumenthal, the United States
representative to the World Bank.,
claiming that "such projects seem illsuited for bank lending " because "exploration for oil and gas is inherently

·'Little lady, kindly tell the congressman ah 'd
like to talk to him 'bout th·' windfall profits tax .
on o il companies . ·'

-

Jimmy's White House
WASHINGTON (AP) - Aging
athletes ::._·and a good many younger
ones - sometimes pull up limping.
President Carter is no exception.
The president has been limping
slightly this week because he pulled a
gro tn muscle jogging on Sapelo
Island, Ga ., during his Easter holiday .
Rear Adm . William M. Lukash, the
pr esidential physician, says it's not a
serious injury . He surmises it
occurred as Carter jogged on loose
beach sand .
The tender muscle hasn 'I stopped
Carter from running , either. Jogging
remains on his schedule as a matter of
almost daily routine .
Lukash reports tha t until the muscle
heals the president simply doesn't run
as long or as fast as he did before the
injury ·
When Carter flew to San Francisco
last weekend to participate in a
benefit tribute to murdered Mayor
George Moscone, the official White
House schedule said he would be
greeted by, among others, entertainer
Carol Chaiming.
It didn't happen that way, however,
because the plane ca,rrying Miss
Channing to San Francisco from a
club engagement in Las Vegas, Nev.,
was barred from landing until Air
Force One '\'!IS on the ground .
But Miss Channing appeared on
stage at the benefit on time, thanks to
the fact that she made the flight in full
costume. She also flew back to Las
Vegas in her stage duds - just in time
to make a scheduled performance

there.
When Carter last week filled a
vaca ncy on the fiv e-member
Permanent Committee for the Oliver
Wendell Holmes Devise, he turned a
fleeting spotlight on one of the federal
government's most obscure entities.
Some folks might suspect it 's one of
those hun\lreds of committees ripe to
be reorganized out of existence.
Never fear. It's aiready scheduled
to die.
·
Holmes , the eminent Supreme
Court justice and son of the 19th
century writer of the same name ,
bequeathed $2li0,000 to the nation
w,hen he died in 1935 at the age of 90.
Because Holmes did not earmark
th e m.oney for a specifi~ purpose ,
Congress sat on it for 31 years. There
was talk of creating a Holmes park,
with an appropriate statue of the
jurist. But land values had reached
the point by 1955 that there wasn't
_
enough money.
· Congress had not even invested the
quarter-million so it could grow
through interest revenues.
But the legislative branch finally
acted by creating the permanent
committee and, belatedly, added a
money grant to the bequest in lieu of
forsaken interest.
The committee decided to use most
of th e money to finance a definitive 11volume history o( the Supreme Court .
Three volwnes have been published
and three more are near publication .
But the Holmes money is giving out,
.so the committee has drumined up
extra funds from the Ford and
Rockefeller foundations to keep the
project alive.
AU the money will be spent by 1985,
by which time the 11 volumes should
be completed and the committee will
expire.

The announced purpose of the
Strategic Arms Umitation Talks
(SALT) was to halt the growth in the
strategic arsenals of the Soviet Union
and the United States.
It was to do so in accordance with a
formula that· would prevent either
side from gaining a sufficient margin
of superiority, such that it could
threaten the other or exert diplomatic
coercion.
.
The SALT process was conceived as
involving basically two steps: the fjrst, arms limitation; the second, arms
reduction .
The first step would both cap the arms race and provide a llalance of
power.
The second would reduce the level
of mutual terror, lower the cost of
defense for the two superpowers and
in time, lessen the threat of nJciea~
destruction and contamination to all
the nations of the world .
The Stretegic Arms Limitation
Talks between the' U. S. and the
U.S.S.R. have been formally underway since 1969.
In May 1972, the negotiations
resulted in the first SALT agreements
-the treaty on the Umitation of AntiBallistic Missile Systems (ABM's)
and the Interim Agreement on the
Umltation of Strategic Offensive Ar-

ms.
Since then negotiators have arrived
at the tel11lS of a new agreement.
- The proposed SALT II agreement is
in three parts: a treaty. with an eight
~f!lr life; a protocol, with.a three year
life; and a Statement of Principles
regarding the behavior of the parties
during the course of the agreement.
The primary feature of the SALT II
Treaty is the ceilinf!s that have been
placed on the overall · number of
strategic weapons·and tbe subceilings
on various · categories · of strategic
weapons. The principle of equal
ceilings or "equal aggregates" was
established in the Vladivostok Accord.
'PJe Protocol is to last through June
30, 1981. The purpose of the Protocol is
to place restraints on the development of new strategic weapons.
It restricts t11e deployn~ent of
ground-launched or sea-launched
cruise missiles with a range in excess
of 600 kilometers during :• • life of the
Protocol.
The original purpose of Principles
was to serve as a guide for SALT m.

The final version, however, simply
pledges the two sides to seek a followon agreement which wil~ provide for a
reduction in the numbers of strategic
.weapons.
Despite the fa¢ that SALT . II
provides for equal aggregates in
some classes of strategic offensive
weapons and will obligate the Soviets
to reduce the nwnber of weapons now
in their strategic inventory, the
agreement has come under heavy
criticism from opponents.
Critics charge that the agreement
is ' based on faulty intelligence;
neglects new Soviet systems; could
not be verified; and, would lead to the
weakening of the Western alliance.
The general theme' of the criticism
is that the · Soviet Union is bent on
global conquest and that the SALT II
accord would help achieve that goal.
Several military doctrines have influenced · strongly the forrmilas for
both SALT I and II. None has had a
more powerful impact than the doctrine. of Mutual Armed Destruction,
appropriately called MAD.
The basic contention of the MAD
theory is that the strategic deterrent
of both t!Je U. S. and U.S.S.R. would
be enhanced if the population i:enters
ol the two countries were undefended
- in effect making the people of the
two nations hostages to strategic
deterrence.
A major virtue of SALT II is that its
presentation to the Senate will
demand li major review, not only of
our strategic posture and the relative
balance of power between the U.S.
and the U.S.S.R., but also of our basic
military and foreign policies.
What is at Issue is not arms control
or the SALT negotiatlona.themselves .
What is at · issue is the specific
agreement, SALT II.
Is it an agreement that deserves
Senate and public approval? Will it
contribute to U. S. security and the
prospects for a stable world? Will it
enhance the possibilities for the .
management Of crises between the U _
S. and the Soviet Union?
,
If SALT II lias not achieved its objectives then it is necessary to ldimtify the causes of that failure.
Although the history 'of anns control offers little cause for optlmlsm,
the failure of past efforts alone is nit
a justification for rejecting continued
effort. The goals of the current SALT
II accords have merit·

HEALTH

Richards to Benny L. Branham,
Ca thy Branham, lots, Harrisonville.
Jeffrey D. Friend, Kimberly J .
lawrence E. lamb, M.D. .
Friend
to Thomas R. Hunt , Nancy L.
PARIS (AP) - Surrealist painter
Salvador Dati has acce pted an Hunt , 1.8 acre, Lebanon.
Anthony Bradford to Lee C. Smith,
invitation to join France's prestigious
Ta mela K. Smith, lots, Lebanon.
Academie des Beaux-Arts.
James J . P~offitt, Sheriff, J . H.
· The Spanish-born artist, who will be
Mildred A. Spencer to Tuppers
HYPERTENSION-PARTII
correct blood pressure reading 1s to
75 years old on Friday, was inducted Martin, et at., to Palma Goodwin, Plains Chester Water District, right of
QUESTION: My doctor tells me to put a blood pressure cuff on the ann
into the academy in ceremonies on Homer Goodwin, deed of correction way. Letart.
. take an extra blood pressure pill when ofthe patient.
Columbia.
'
Wednesday .
QUESTION : What is the "normal"
Clarence W. Wickline , Ha zel I feel upset or get a headache. Is this
_J ames J. Proffitt; Sheriff, Fred Wickline to l«lnald Lee Wagner, Betty good advice?
blood pressure range?
Pinkston, et a!., to Homer Goodwin Louise Wagner, parcel, Lebanon.
ANSWER : Criticizing other
ANSWER : Two values of blood
0
Palma Goodwin, parcels, Rutland. '
Jeffrey Sa'":ue_l Gordon, Marcelle physicians is not part of the purpose . pressure are . usually recorded
· NEW YORK (AP) - An shining
£
Ernest E;. Sanders, Gathie D. Mahon to. ":Ilham H. Harnetty , . of ~s colwiln, but the advice y,ou B:lthough it is possible tO record up to
lineup of rock musicians has joined
.
San_ders to Garry Wright, Paula E. parcels, Sc1p1o. .
.
claim to have received iji not f1ve . For a general understanding we
tjle anti-nuclear movement.
w
h 42
.
Jess
Anderson,
Audrey
Anderson
to
medically sound. There js a good only ~ed to kno.;· ~bout two Indices.
: Jackson Browne and the Doob1'e
J oh~ Wells. Jr. to Timothy R. Carroll
rig t, ·M.acres,
Fisher,Olive.
Joan c. Fisher to Gerald R. Dou_glas, Lmda L. Douglas, chance you may have misUnderstood The first is "systolic," or the measure
Jlrothers are among the musicians Dillon , Paula K. Hysell , I acre, Olive. Ste_ven E. Bailey, Sr., Rebecca J . parcel. DyeSV!Ue V1Uage.
.
whatyourdoctorsaid. The reason you of the pressure produced when the
who will perform in two Madison
Ronald 1.. HarbOur, Jan R. Har- Bailey, 6.1167 acres, Columbia.
W1lham R. Thoma to CorbMt 0 . sliould not take an extra blood heart iS' ejecting blood. The second
Square Garden performances which bourr to Trustees of Carpenter Baotist. Leah LAJuise Rhodes to Roger Cleek, parcels, Letari: . .
pressure pill under these cir- ·:diastolic," gauges pressure at th~ .
promoters hope will raise $1 million to Church, 9Diumbia. Carpenter village, P1_c kens,' Virginia Pickens. lot,
Em_erson Pooler, V1rgmia Pooler, . cwnstances is that hypertension time when the heart is filling with
Middleport.
benefit an non-profit, anti-nuclear parcels.
Phyl11s Reed, Dohrman Reed to even severe ~ypertension, ver-Y blood. Diastolic presliure 'ilepends 1n
energy organization.
Mary Jean Roush, Robert I. Roush Melvin R. ·Smith, Olive Smith to Norma Jean Sexson, L01 acre, seldom causes symptoms. For many part on the ability of the arteries to
. John Hall, Graham Nash , Bonnie to La ura Watson , 6 acres, Sutton.
Patrick H. O'Brien, 20.700 acres Chester.
years syn~ptoms such as headaches
contract. These two measures are
Laura Watson to John c. Bacon, Ora Salisbury.
.
'
Raitt and James Taylor also
Douglas A.. McCoy, Carolyn S. dizziness or nervousness were at: generaUy recorded as "systolic over
imnounced
Wednesday
their M. Baeon, 6 acres, s utton .
Mack Taggart , dec. to Evelyn McCoy to Jonm ~ Odell Smith, Bonnie tributed to higl1 blood pressure, but diastolic." Normal systolic pressure
Intentions to perform in the Sept. 19-20
Thomas Epr1 Manue1. J anet sue Taggart, nk a Evelyn Taggart Iren e Smith, Middleport.
research has shown otherwise
measured in millimeters of mercury'
concerts.
~anuel to Ronnie G. Ford; Mary V. Sulllvan , cert. of trans., Lebanon.
. Melvin G. Howard. Anna Howard to Numerous studies have been done _: is any level under . 150. Some
· -Ford, 1.25 acre, Letart.
Maxine A. Hobbs, Harvey J . Hobbs Franklin Y. Ho~~rd, Pamela some using doctors as patients -to SJil'llllce companies, however, . call
;_, BOSTON (AP) - Former Sen.
David L. Richards, Janette A. · to Donald R. Hobbs, parcels, Salem. Howard, 5 acres, ScipiO.
see if a person can tell when his or her any reading over 140 elevated. The
·
"'dward W. Brooke, divorced last year
blood pressure is elevated. Doctors normal diastolic pressure is represenill bitter proceedings which may have
.
.
have
even tested to see if they can ten ted by any figure under 90 .
contributed to his election defeat l'rA ~ ~ StA~ ·'li'&lt;Bl"""'by
looking
at or eqmining a patient millimeters of mercury. Some
Pians to remarry this spring, a sourc~ ~t.&gt;\1::
N .E .A . 79
(excluding
taking the blood pressure, authorities still~ 100 plus your age
c;lose to Brooke says.
of
course)
whether the pressure is as the normal systolic. This has
• The source, who asked not to be
not.
Neither the patient nor become. a debatable approach in
high
or
named, on Wednesday identified the
the
physician
was able to tell. The recentyears.
bride-to-be as Ann Flemming, a
only
technique
which will reveal the
QUESTION: Quite often the health
Canadiari whose age was unknown .
department,
~ed Cross or Heart
• Brooke, 59, a J;tepublican, was the
Association
offer
free blood pressure ·
nation's only black senator when he ·
recordings. Are these reliable?
t,epresented Massachuset~ . He was
ANSWER: These paraprofessional .
unavailable for comment on the
~rnces
are US!IIIlly_quite reliable, ,
r~marriage report.
smce
taking
blood pressure tequlres
: Brooke was defeated in a bid for a
_
n
o
difficult
or
specllil skills. Nearly .
third Senate term last fall. At the
anyone can be taught to take a per- ,
time, he was being investigated by the
mE DAILY SENTINEL
!USPSIIUIDI
son's blood pressure. Members of a
Senate Ethics:eommittee as a result
. family can be taught to record blood
of disclosUres about his finances
pressure, which is often neces8ary
during proceedings in his divorce
and
desirable in controlling a fragile
from his former wife, Remigia .
DEVOTEDTO'i11E
case of hypertension.
li'II'ER1!8T OF
MEIG8-MA!ION AR&gt;:A
. We need to realize, bowever,.that a
WASHINGTON (AP) - Former
ROIIERTJJOEPUCR
smgle blood pressure reading may
Sen. Paul G. Hatfield, D-Mont., :1~1
City Edit«
.
DAVII) IIUBKDIK
not reveal a definite diagnosis of
been confirmed as a U.S. District
AdYer11JiqMua...
hypertension, especially when the
Court judge to preside in Great Falls,
Publlohed dolly ezcopt Saturoay by Tile Ohio
pressure is minimally elevated or
Volley Publllhlng Company-Mulllmedla Inc
Mont.
·
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio -tO'let. suit~
borderline.
In this · case, several
By voice vote on Wednesday, the
Office Phone 1112- 2156. Editorial Phone
recordings
need
to be taken before a
912·2167.
Senate
. approved.
Hatfield 's
Second clais J)Oitage paid at Pomeroy, Oh.lo.
diagnosis of hypertension can be
nomination, submitted by President
National advertl!ing representaUve Landm
made. Occasionally a person's blood
Carter. ·
·
~soctates, 3101 Euclid Ave., aevela~d Ohio
4411~ .
'
•
pressure may rise temporarily l,h
Subs&lt;:rlptlun ratea: Delivered by carrter
response
to some strw in the en- .
TORONTO (AI') ..:._ Prime Minister .
where available 90 cents per week. By Mohr
vlrorunent
and then return to normal , ~
J~oute
where
carrier
servl~
not
aVallable
One
Pierre Q:Uiott Trudeau-has apparently
month, $3.90. By mail in Ohio and W. Va.; One
when
the
stress
Is over. This situation modified •i11s _plans in the event his
Ve1:1 r, $27.110i Si.J: months, $14.50; Three mon ..
. is not true hyptertension which · ·:
U ~. 18.50 : Euewhere 13%.00 year; Sil month!ll
!t.~"J~.party lrn!!!S a May 22 federal "We gotta keep things i ri pe,rspective - compared to n'ext' year, they're $17.CJO: Three mopth:!, S9.oo·..sub8criptl0n price without treatment, resulis in fair!; .
lrlcludcs Sunday Timeij- Sentinel.
consistent elevation of blood pressure
··•1 wouldn't u·ndertake · to remain dry holes·. ''
·
·
·
·
levels .

ty
P
r
per
T

raflS.ters

1n:

..

FoS.ter's bat heats Cubs, 7-4

'

[

lilt!

' ky"
rlS
.

~

•

.

I llll'AGO

The Daily Sentinel

Eagles dump Lancers
"

..

..

,.
;

,

By Greg Builcy
·
, The host Eastern Eagle~ took an
e~ rly 5~ lead while unleashing an 11blt attack last night to blast visiting
Federal Hocking, 10-3.
Winning hurler Da n Spencer got
back m the groove by tossing a nifty
four-hitter , fanning five and walking
three.
Eastern got three runs in the bottom
of the second on singles by Rusty
W1gaJ, Jeff Goebel. J eff Kimes, a
walk, and a passed ball. In the third
m~mg, the Eagles wrapped up the win
With two more tallies.
Four runs in the bottom of the fifth
gave Spencer lots of breathing room.
He led things off.with a single and R.
W1gaJ followed with a walk. ·Goebel
singled and then Robbie Smith hit a
two-run single, his second hit of the
night.
.
Other hitters for Eastern were
Goebel, Kimes and Spencer with two

singles ea ch, and H. Wigal, Jotmnic
Bea.ver and Greg Wigal with a single
each.
In the fourth , the Lancers na rrowed
the score to 5-2 when they got three uf
their four singles good for two runs.
Getting hits for ~'cdcral Hocking
were Arnold. losing pitcher Jim Hart,
Jeff Cale, and Smith. Hart and
reliever Driggs fanned three and
walked seven Eagles.
Eastern plays host to Wa rren
tonight.
Lincscorc :
.Fed.-Hock.
000 201 0- · 3 4 4
Eastern
032 041 x- -10 11 4
Hart 'I.P 1, Driggs \5 1 and Dowler.
Spencer and Bissell.

i ,\I ' 1

Na turall v

I MIII .'&gt; Il ' ll

111,,

ii&lt;J lll ll j., tl \'l'fd).~l.'

tu .: ! ~J 7 .

··Tile pll r h to Foster wati low :.111d
L:t..•orgc Foster would bavt· prc fcrntd. ;: ~
home run to a duuble . llut, .(lway.' but Llwre was nntlling on it ,"
considering the circumstances. he '&lt;lid l.vnn. Mc&lt;;Jothen , who pitched
was quite happy to pull up at second o~c inrung &lt;Hul took the lo ss, evening
ha s rc1·ord at :J.J.
base with the game-winning ttit.
II&lt;· reliever!. Mike Krukow to start
" It was a line shot. The way (Da ve 1
Kingman was standing nut tllcrc. I the "eventh, struck out pinch hitter
thought he had a chance wcatch it. I Da ve Collins 'ind ~ot Ken Griffey to
rtidn 't know if it had the height to go groWld out. He then wa lked Junior
out," Foster said after giving the Kennedy and . Dav e Con ce pcion,
Cincinnati Reds a 7-4 victory settmg up Foster's game-winning
Wednesday ove r the Chicago C.\tbs. blow .
"The whole situation is upsett ing, a
Had left fielder Kingman made the
catch, it would have been th e third out light hiller like Kennedy and you walk
in the seventh inning and the score him ," said McGloth en. " I have a lot of
would have remain ed 4-4. Instead, the •·espect for Co ncepcion, but you have
ball whizzed well over Kingman 's to U1row strikes ."
"Th e last hall, the J-and-2 pitch, was
head as he turned to play the wicked
low and away , not even close ,'' said
smash off the wall.
" I wanted it to go over the wall Concepcion. "He got wild on me ."
Chicago had fallen behind in the
because going through the wall is still
second
inning on Ray Knight's run only two bases," said the hard-hitting
scoring
single and winning pitcher
Foster . But, he added, " I'd rather get
a hit like that and &lt;\rive in the winning Paul Moskau 's sacrifice fl y. Dave
run than hit a solo homer and maybe Kingman got one of those runs back in
the bottom of the inning with his
lose th e game."
. Foster has led th e Na.tional League eighth homer.
Champ Summers tripled home two
m homers and runs batted in each of
runs
in the top of the thi•" .. nd Bill
the past two seasons. Th.is year, he
Buckner's
douhlr, "l~ tk tJh' :) t:or e 4·2
has just four homers but has driven in
27 runs. _His ,two doubles Wednesday after three Uullngs . (.'hica~o c au~ ht up

in till' ~ txU 1 when Steve. Ontiveros that lucky," said Reds Manager John
singled. Jerry Martin dou!Jied . Tim McNamara . Moska¥• 2~ . gave up four
Blackwell hit a sacrifice fl y and 1.il rry rWJs and nine hits m six innings.,
Buttner singled home a run .
Dave Tomlin pitched a perfect
C&lt;JIIins' single in the c i~hth 'ent seventh inning and Doug Bair gave up
a cross the final run .
only a walk in each .of the last two
Chicago left the base s loaded once innings w earn his fifth save.
and men un third U1ree times.
"Our relief pitching has been very
_"Our pitchers have ability . We go co nsistent this season," said
with our best against their best. We McNamara.
just pitched out of it. I don 'I rnnsider

East star intends to
attend Ohio State
COLUMllUS, Ohio (AP) Gran vill e Wa iters said Wednesday he
has signed a national letter of intent to·
attend Ohio State University in the
full. .
'
The 6-foot-11 Columbus 'East High
School basketball star, a second-team
Associated Press all-state selection
averaged 21.4 points and more than 20
rebounds per game in his senior year
as he led the Tigers to the Ohio Class
AAA title .
At a news conference, Waiters said
his final choice was between Ohio
State and th e University of NevadaLas Vega s.

f' liTSBURGH ( AP) - Dave
DiCicc w, a two-year starter at
(lefensive end for Pitt , and Temple
running back Anthony Anderson were
among eight collegiate free agents
sih'Tled by the Pittsburgh Steelers of
th e National Football League. ·
DiCiccio will be tried at safety by
thd Steelers.
Also signed Wednesday were wide
receiver Larry Douglas of Southern
University; wide . receiver Jerry
Taylor of Tulsa, guard George Small
of North Carolina A&amp;T cornerback
Derrick Gljsper of Vir.ginia ,
lmebacker Mark Olivari of Tulane
and defensive end Bernie Winters of
Syracuse. Winters played last season·
with Saskatchewan of the Canadian
Football League.

Jackson gals
top Meigs, 7-3
By Greg Bailey .
With two out in the top of the
seventh inning, visiting Jackson's
lrongirls plated five runs enroute to a
' 7-3 victory over the host Meigs
Marauders last night. The win vir. tually wrapped up a league championship for Jackson.
Meigs out-hit the visitors 10-7, but
that two-out lightning was too much to
handle.
Jackson took a two-run lead in the
first on a walk, a double, and a
sacrifice fly . But Meigs came back
with one run in the bottom of the inning when Pam Crooks reached on an
error and Tonia Ash doubled her
home.
Meigs knotted the score ' in the
.fourth when Sheri Lightfoot tripled
and raced home on a Beth Bartrum
single. They got the lead for the first
time when Dodie Chapman shigled in
the · sixth and came home on a
Ughtfoot single. .
With two outs and none on in the top
·of the seventh, Green singled off
Bartrum's glove. Bartrum took the
loss on the night. although she did a
fine .job on the mound. The next three
jackson batters walked to force in the
tying run. Then Luann Chapman
blasted a triple to give Jackson the
victory.
Lightfoot led. the hitters with her
triple and single while Nancy Smith
and T. Ash each had a single and
double .
Green of Jackson had a double and
her big single that kept {he rally
going. Chapman had her big triple and
Fannin, the winnlnR pitcher, socked
two -singles.
Meigs travels to Warren Friday for
the finals of the AA Girls Sectional
Tournament. Game time is 4 p. m.
Linescore :
200 000 5- 7 7 I
Jackson
Meigs
100 101 Q--3 I0 1
Fannin and Marek.
Bartrum iLP), Wilson (7) and
ChaP,man.

\

.

·t ;

MODEL
01250

LITTON'S.
MEAL-IN-ONE

om
. (//tl!illt
cZJOtJe•••
Mic rowave Cooking

oo

AS
LOW

S•dafacdoa•u•NCI
Give her the Mot her' s Day gift you know she
will love: A Litto n microW.,ve oven.

ill LITTON

---

Yo u have our word on it. Now thro ugh May
3 1, 1979 you can buy. a nd take home any o f

AS

this yea r's full line of Litto n co un t ~ rto p ovens

They cQme with the
latest features and advanced styling plu s a
Litton cookbook that shows how simple and
at the regular price.

easy mk:rowave cooking really is.

Let her try a Litton oven in you r kitchen for
30 days. If she likes. it, keep it. Your whole
famUy wiU get so tisfoction from it. If not, take
~ ~k to the dealer you bought it fro m

I

I

r.--.
I

I

@

II,

within 30 days of purchase and your
p~rchase

i
I

..

price will be refunded·

Make thls the best Mother's Day ever w ilh a

I•,

Litton microwave oven. Built by the people
who are changing the way America cooks.

"All returns must be accompanl?d by a

~

I

'I

--- - ----= ------~
MODEL425

dared proof of purchase.

-·~·

Litton ... changing the wayAmerica(ookr)~

Litton's ·budget-priced microwave features
Vari-Cook® variable power otren control.
You simply turn dial to high, reheat, roast.
simmer, defrost, or any setting in between.
e 35-mlnute dial timer. e l.arge 1.2 cu. ft.
oven interior.

Regular
'449.95

'348

Jayvees split pair .
~

with Southern nine

·,Whirlpool

Gallipolis and Southern's Jayvee
baseball teams split a twinblll . at
Racine Wednesday evening.
Southern won the first game, 12-3.
B. Wolfe was credited with the win. T.
Gillespie was charged with ' the loss.
Nance led the winners' 10-hit attack
with three safeties. K. Wolfe had a
home run. GAHS had six hits, two by
C. Mason and one by K. Caudill, a
double.
Inthe nightcap, Mark Allison hurled
a one-hitter as GAHS won , 1~. Rick ,
Shaw scored the game's only run In
the top of the fourth inning. Terry'
Adams and Todd Fowler had Gallia 's
only hifs. Teaford was charged with
the loss.
Friday, G,-\HS will close its season
with a twinblll at Jackson. GaiUa'ls 56 on the year.

Whirl,ngAg,I

Whirl~QAgl
HE~VY

DISH WASHER

DUTY

DRYER

•228
REG. 1279.95
Model
Em32DW

Model·LFE.5 100

REFRIGERATOR

'338

13.0 CU. FT.

REG. 384.95 ·
1

Model S0f5000

REG. '399.95 .

Skyline Lanes to .

WASHER

'298
REG. 349.9.5
1

Model LFA5500

host tournament
Skyline Lanes Fourth Annual M~s
Slow Pitch Softball Tournament will
be held in Gallipolis June 2and 3.
Tropllies will be a\\1a~ed to 'the top
three teams. Entry fee will be $80 and
· .two A.S.A. sanctioned soltballs. For
additional infDni)Btion .and details
contact Fred Staley, 446-4109 or John
·
. Nance 367-1147.

.. .
•'

'

�5-The Dailv Sentinel, Mlddl~port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 10, 1!119

.

4-The
. Dailv Sentinel Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, May 10,19·; Q

Boston power too much for Angels, 9-8

Brawls mar Pirates' romp

Today's

Sports World

In early !~50s radio. moderator
Peter Donald used to ask the
question : "Can You Top This ?"
There was a revival of sorts of this
radio comedy mainstay in the
.National League Wednesday night.
Hy Will Grimsley
Here's how it went : ·
AI' l:orrcspondcnt
The Pittsburgh Pirates blasted
. NEW YORK tAP ) - It is a sad Musketeers'! Aren't we living in an Atlanta 17-9 with the help of John
commentary indeed on the moral age when the Golden Rule has been Milner's grand slam home run and
fiber of the times, the coldness and modified to read, "Do unto others two homers by Bill Robinson . There
were two near brawls as the benches ·
crassness ofthe generation, that Ron before they can do you?"
cleared
twice in the ninth inning, both
Guidry is regarded as a freak by his
Sentiment is an anachronism .
Until recent years, .sports had teams played the game under protest,
contemporaries because he deigned to
stoop to an act of unselfishness.
provided the last bastion oi five persons were ejected, four were
"He has to be crazy," said team unselfishness . and gMd will. hit by pitches and Atlanta'S Gary
captain Thurman Munson after Traditionally, we have been a nation Matthews aiso hit a grand slam.
San Francisco Giants Jeft-hander
baseball 's finest pitcher suggested - of team players. The team comes
Vida
Blue beeame the first six-game
the
individual
subordinated
.
But
first
,
with quick acceptance from his bosses
winner
In the league with a !1-2 victory
now
that's
siUy,
schoolboy
stuff.
- that he sacrifice his role as a
over the Montreal Expos. He went the
starter and enter the bullpen to save Hasn't Ron Guidry learned that •
With Rich Gossage on the sidelines route, scattering 10 hits in what is
the floundering New York Yankees.
"I wouldn't have done it when I was with a freakish !hum!&gt; injury, the becoming typical Blue.
- Philadelphia Phillies right28," said Guidry's pitching mate, Yankees were left without a short
hander
Dick Ruthven · became the'
catfish Hunter. "I would have been relieve r . They took an awful
~nd
six-game
winner in the NL
walloping recently on a .Wing out
home a lot earlier if I had ."
with a one-hitter. He went 62-3 innings
"It 's not the smartest thing in the West .
world," Allie Rey nolds , the old
That was when C::uidry suggested, without yielding a hit, beating the San
Yankee mound ace of another era, "Maybe I could help them in the Diego Padres 2-0 in hi• third complete
told Henry Hecht of the New York bullpen."
Post. "It 's not a career stretcher. It's
Word got upsiairs to the frustrated
like giving your . brother-in-law a Yankee brass .. Boom -just like that
present. Don't expect anything back." - Guidry found himself doing relief
Everybody keeps warning the wiry, duty. In three appearances he has two
160-{Jound fireballer that his left ~rm saves and a win, giving up. no runs.
It's not what he aspires to be.' He ,
is going to fall off or that he's going to
wake up one morning and find he can't like. any other pitcher, admits he
lift a cup of coffee - his money wing prefers starting rotation . .He would
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Ask Danny
just another slab of cold , useless flesh. like to win 20 or more games ~gain &lt;nark and he'Dtell you that Pete Rose
Guidry scoffs ·at such panicky and another Cy Young.
brought more than a .310 career
suggestions.
But right now.his tellfll is about to go batting average to the Philadelphia
"Those guys helped me win the Cy down in flames . So he rushes blin&lt;\ly Phillies.
Young Award last year," he says, to the rescue .
Because Rose, who ro~ked baseball
referring to the Yankees . "Why
Ron Guidry is a rare breed of cat - by landing an $800,000-a-year
shouldn't I do what I can to help a loose, happy-go-lucky cajun from contract, is off to one of his best spring
them ?"
Lafayette, La. , who d""""'t aspire to starts, so are the Phillies.
That 's ·virtual here5y ' in today's commercial exposure and public
Thriving on new surroundings at
world.
acclaim, who never worries about the age 38, Rose is batting .356 while
Didn't · the theme of " AII-for.Qne bottom line.
.spurring Philadelphia io a major
and One for All" go out with
He's a modern Palladin in a white league4eading 2()..8 record after the
Alexander
Dumas '
Three hat : Have ·arm, wiU travel, ·
first month .
But Rose's bat is only half the story.
"I knew what he ·could do on. tbe
field, but I wasn't aware of the things
he does in the clubhouse," said &lt;nark,
the Phillies' manager.
Rose's infectious enthusiasm has
rubbed off on his new teammates,
according to Ozark.
"Some players are playlilg hurt,"
Mid Ozark. ~'And some are playing
Kyger Creek plated five runs in by Amos, Taylor and Paul L;lsseter. with a little more enthusiasm. He's
each of the second and fifth innings
McComas Jed the Pirates with two always there on the bench making
Wednesday night enrdute to a 14-8 singles.
them think more optimiStically ·and
SVAC victory over North GaUia.
Taylor topped the Bobcats with more aggressively.''
The win possibly eliminated the three hits in four tries while Amos also · In something of a gamble, &lt;nark
Pirates from any further title hopes. had three hits and Gilmore added a dropped · Rose from · his familiar
Southwestern leads the SV AC with a 6- triple and single.
leadoff spot down to No. 3 spot one
2 league r ecord.
Taylo.r and Gilmore combined for week into the season.
Coach Jim Sprague's. Bobcats six strikeouts and 12 walks. Petrie and
Some wonied aloud that the switch
finished their season with it 7-8 record three other -Pirate hurlers allowed 10 might affect Rose, who had won three
in all games and 5-.&gt; slate in the SVAC. walks and fanned three Linescore : National League •batting titles in 16
Wednesday night, the Bobcats No. GaUia
010 000 3- 8 5 2 seasons as ·ctnclnnati's leadoff man .
spotted North GaUia a run in the Ky. Crk
051 251 x- 14 12 3
But since the move, Philadelphia is
second inning before jumping on
Petrie (L) , Howell (5), Payne (6), 20-li and Rose has hit safely in 16 of his
starting and losing hurler Tim Petrie · Little (6) and Glassburn.
· last 18 games, a .412 pace.
for five runs In the second. That rally
Taylor ( W), Gilmore 171 and
Ro.se had three hits for the second
featured a walk to Tom Rees, triples Russell.
night in a row Wednesday night as
by John Amos and Bruce Gitihore and
singles off the bats of Terry Porter,
Von Taylor and Steve Russell.
Coach Walt Stowers' Pirates plated
four runs in the fourth inning on two
NEW YORK (AP) - Should a pay Horner $1110,000 for the 1979
walks, singles by Tim McComas and
Buddy Howell and a two·&lt;un throwing signing bonus be considered part of a season.
baseball players' annual salary ?
Woy coptends that if Horner wins
error.
That's
th'e , key issue In the Bob his arbitration, he would become a
Kyger Creek broke the game open
In the fifth on four walks and singles Horner-Atlanta Braves salary free agent and available to the highest
arbitration case.
· bidder among all te!IIJIS.
The
long -brewing
dispute
If Horner's position is confirmed,
concerning the 1979 salary of last teams might be reluctant to offer
year's National League Rookie of the . signing bonuses.
Year was to be heard today by
Horner; sidelined this season with
arbitrator Ray Goetz, a law professor an ankle , injury, signed with the
at the University of Kansas. The Braves last June right after being
arbitration hearing is expected to last drafted out of Arizona State as
two days.
basebaU 's No.I pick. He was given a
110 MECHANIC
Horner is seeking a multiyear $150,000 signing bonus and a one-year
contract for a reported $3110,000 a salary of $21,000. The 21-year-old
STREET
year. Horner, his agent Bucky Woy of slugger went on to belt 23 homers - 19
POMEROY, OHIO
Dallas and Marvin MiUer, executive _in _1\tlanta and four in Chicago's
director of the Players Association, Wrtg;ley Field .
992-3279
say the minimum Horner can gel is
$146,1100. That figure is reached by :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
OPlOMETRISTS:
combining Horner's 1978 salary and
HOLE IN ONE
his bonuses totalling $182,000 and
Wl1llam (Bub) Stlven .scored a
DR. A. JACKSON BAILES
deducting the maximum cut allowed,
bole fD oae oa the Pomeroy Golf
· which is 20 percent.
Coilne 011 May 7 He used a Dine
The Braves , however, are
Iron on the 158 yard, fourth hole:
DR. T. JAY BRADSHAW
contending that salary and bonuses
must be se~rated . They are willin~t to

game aml stxth consc&lt;'lttivc win
without ~ loss.
- Houston beat St.lnuis ' .n 16
innings. but not before three -•rdsinclt.-iing Manager Ken Boyer -· were
ejectep. A Houston policeman had to
move inio the St .Louis dugout after
the ninth, when !rate Astros fans
began pelting the Cards with debris.
Elsewhere in the league, Cincinnati
downed the Oticago Cubs 7-4 and Los
Angeles whipped the New York Mels
7-2.
Both Pittsburgh Manager Otuck
Tanner and right fielder Dave Parker,
two of the four Pirates ejected, said 'it
was the craziest game Ill which they
had ever heen a party - Parker
adding, "from knot hole until today."
The Pirates scored seven runs in the
ninth to break open a 1~9 ball game,
capped by Milner's slam, which he hit
right after the first bench-clearer.
Atlanta reliever Gene Garber plunked
one off Parker's size-large body, his
second hit batsman of the inning.
Giants 9, Expos 2
Blue now has completed four games

tltis seaSJrl, none of them classics. He
· has thrown two nine-hitters, a sevenhitter and a six-hitter, and his ERA is
4.62 .
Blue struck out six and walked two,
pitching out of numerous jams. He
retired the side in order only once the first inning.
Bill Madlock drove in two runs with
a single, and Jack Clark smacked a
three-run double.
'
Phillles 2, Padres 0
Ruthven's sixth win was a bit 100re
stylish than Blue's. lie didn:t allow a
hit .until Dan Briggs doubled with two
out in the seventh . He struck out two
and walked two in his second
consecutive shutout.
" If you don't get a no-hit-ter, you
shouldn't get upset,'' Ruthven said.
"A no-hitter's gonna take a lot of
luck."
Astros 5, cards 4
Bob Watson's bloop single drove .in

the Astros '. winning run in the bottom
of the 16t)t, ending a long, uproarious
ball game.
St.U&gt;uis tied it 4-4 with a run in t!le
sixth. Then in lhe botton of the ninth,
the Astros mounted what looked li~e
the winning rally.
With Jimmy Sexton on first via "a
single, Terry Puhllayed down a bunt •
which cards reliever Will McEnaney
fielded · and threw to second. Umpitie
Dave Pallone ruled the throw pulled
, GarrY Templeton off lhe bag . In tile
· ensuing argument, Boy·e r, T~:d
Simtnons and Keith Hernandez were
ejected. ·
·
Dodgers 7, Metll2
Don sutton tossed a three-hitter for
his 209th career victory, tying him in
that category with all-time Dodgers
great Don Drysdale. Sutton, ~.
retired the fmal '20 Mets in order.
Ron eey l!nd Steve Garvey each hit
thr!'f'-run hmters.

Yastrzcmski sUre was.
By HRUVE LUWI'rr
Lynn, the major league home run
AP Sports Wrller
Young Fred Lynn wasn 'I there leader, hit his 12th of the season with
when the· Boston Red Sox really one i-nan on in Lhe sixth iMing and
needed him - but ol' Ca rl unloaded No .l3 with lwo aboard in the
seventh inning Wednesday night.
But after Brian Downing 's homer
had put california ahead by a run in
the top of the .ninth, Lynn led off the
. bottom of the inn~ng - and jan ned.
· With that bit of business out of the
NHL Playolfs At A Glance
way, Angels reliever Dave LaRoche
By The Associa ted Press
proceeded to walk Jim Rice, then fed
Semifinal Round
a fat fastball to Ya~ who crashed it
Best of sev~n Series
into the right field stands for Boston's
. Serie~ ' I'
Gamel
9-8 victpry.
New York Rangers 4, New York
Butch.Hohsnn i!lso h\Jmered for" the
Islanders I

Pro playoff results

Kyger Creek tops
No-r th Gallia, 14-8

In the rest~- the American l.eaguc.
Oakland beat Baltimore 4-2, New.
York silenced Seattle 5.0, Cleveland
defeated Milwaukee 8-7, Kansas City
shaded Texas 4-3 and Chicago
trimmed Detroit S-4. Toronto's game
al Minnesota was rained out.
A's4, Orioles 2
Oakland's Mike Norris lost his nohitter, his shutou_t and his 2-0 lead
when . Gary Roenicke of Baltimore
doubled with one out in t)le bottom of

Newman drove in runs in the ninth Lo
hand .Jim Palmer the loss Norris had
his third victory and fir;t compl ete
~a me in seven starts this year .
Yankct.•s 5, Mariners 0
Ed F'igueroa checked Seattle on five
hits for his first shutout and third
complete game lhis ye~ while Lou
Pintclla and Thurman Munson hit RBI
singles and Reggie Jackson unloaded
a mammoth three-run homer in the Yankees' victory over the Mariners.
Jackson's homer, his sixth, was, a 44~

fuot shot into the New York bullpen in
left ..:enter field .
Indians 8, Brewers 7
Bobby Bonds had a home run and
three singles and drove in lhree runs
and Toby Harrah also hit a homer in
Cleveland 's victory . But it was relief
pitcher Sid Monge who was the
Indians' hero - and nearly the goat.
Mon ge came on with the bases loaded,
one out and Cleveland in front 84 in
the ninth and got Milwaukee's Cecil
Cooper on a pop-up. But he balked to
se11d one run home, then walked
Gorman· Thomas to reload the bases
and walked Ben Oglivie and Sixto
Lezcano to force in two more runs .

Kuyals 4, Rangers 3
Kansas City took advaniage of four
Texas errors, two by AI Oliver, to bOat
the Ferguso n Jenkins · and the
Rangers,
Kansas City scored twice in the
first. Stev~ Braun and George Brett
singled , Darr~ll Porter's single scored
Braun, then Brett scored on Oliver's
wild throw from center field. llraun
also homered.
Tigers 5, White Sox 4
Ralph Garr drew a bases-loaded
walk from Detroit's Milt Wilcox to
force in one run in a three-run third
and hit a homer for another run in the
White Sox's victory.

New York Rangers J, New York
Islanders 1
Game4
New York Islanders 3, New York

Rangers, 2, OT
Game4

New York

Ranger s 4,

New

York

New · York

Garhe6
Rangers , '2,

New

York

Islanders 3

Islanders 1

NOW ON SALE

Series' J '
Gamel
Montreal 4, Basion 2
Game2
Montreal 5, Boston 2
•
Game J
Boston 2, M on tr eal 1

Game4
Boston 4, Montreal 3, OT
Games
Montreal 5, Boston 1
Gamet.

Boston 5,' Vontreal 2

Thursday's Game

Boston at Montreal. In I
It's planting lime again ... Gel all
lawn,

garden

supplies

you 'll

need, plus "how to" tips right

here.

·

NBA Playoffs AI A Glance
By The Associated Press

HAHN-ECLIPSE MOWERS ·

Best of Seve!l Series

Easter·n Conference Finals
Game ·l

San Antonio 118, Washington 97
Wash i nglo~

Game2

115, San Antonio 95

Wednesday 's Game

Wash ington at Sari Antonio, lnl
Friday's Game

Wash ing ton at San Anton io, lnl
·

Sunday's Game

San Antonio at Washington
Wednesday, May 16

GR SS SEED ·:·

Wash ing ton a t San Antonio, (n), if
necessa ry

Friday·, May 18

.Ulk F£RRY-MORSE

San Antpnio at Washington

In I. If

ne ce~sa ry

Western Confer.ence Finals
Game 1

WEED KillERS·:·

WE£0.rt0-MORE

Sea ttle 108, Phoenix 93
Gamel
Seattle 103, Phoeni x 97
Gal)1el
Phoeni x 113, Seattle t03
·
Game4
Phoen ix 100, Sea ttle 91

•RAKES-GARDENS&amp;LAWN
• PRUNING SHEARS
•SAWS
• SMALL PLANTING TOOLS

NOW IN STOCK .
Ferry Morse_Seeds
Bulk &amp; Package

Friday's Game

Phoeni x at Seattle, (n l

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

Sunday's Game

Seattle at Phoen ix
Thursday , May 17
.
Phoeni x af Sea ttle. TBA. if necessary

•

"l:verything In Hardware"

Street

0.

Arbitration case ready

League leaders

'

Communicate your love for
your mom with a beautiful
Styleline®Phone from the
GTE Phone Mart.

Optometric
Vision Center

Division .

1h •· .'.t.'\enlh inmn~ - iJL!I Nonts dtdn't
!1 fst' II is t ·ool .
It was tilt' Orioles' ·onl v 'hit and
wh~n !\lari o (;ucrrl' r o · anrl ' Jeff

Rangers, 3, OT
Gamel

best start in recent years
Philadelphia downed San Diego ~ for
Its sixth straight victory , equalling its
longest sq-eak of the young season.
"I started off w~th Bake hitting fifth'
but it was really screwing him up.
With Bake leading off we •ve got more
speed and Pete is perfect for the third
spot because he's a switch hitter . The
No: 3 batter should be your best
hitter,'' explained &lt;nark . .
Rose's three singles gave him 2,359
for his career, moving him two past
Nap LaJoie for sixth place oi) the all~e singles list. Be is 67 singles away
frolll Honus Wagner's all-time mark
of 2,426.
Rose said his painful departure is
behind him, but he looks forward to
the Phils' first meeting with the Reds
on June 1:
"All three games are already sold
out, " said Rose. "I would like nothln'
better than to go back there hitting
.325 and · with both teams in first
place ." He said a "personality
conflict" with Reds' President Dick
Wagner led to his leaving. Rose said
Wagner never did make an offer
during the long stalemate last fall.
. After returning from Japan, Rose
said he and his attorney Reuven Katz
met with Wagner ·at Wagner's .
request.
"We sit down and we said; 'Well,
what's going on ?' because the next
week was y.rheti we were going to see
the other teams. Reuven said, •n;ck
have you got anything to offer us?'
You know whitt he (Wagner) said? 'I
didn 't have time to think .about it.'
Now !his ls the same guy' I give 16
years to ."

17-hil attaek and. wilh UJC victory,
move'&lt;! 10 percentage points ahead of
Baltimore and into first in the East

Game2
Islanders 4, New York

New York

BULK SEEDS

Phillies, Rose off to

Itt,.'{) Sux . who wt:.•athered Califor~~i&lt;.~ ' s

TODAY'SMAJOR
LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (65 ,at bats) - Kemp,
Det, :415 ; Smalley, Min, .400 ; Lemon.
Chi, .376; llfong , Min , .370; A. Ban nister, Chi , .357 ; Porter, KC .. 357.
RUNS -' Ly nn , Bsn, 28; Otis, KC, 27 ;
Smalley, Min, 25 ; Le Flore, Del, 24 ; 5
Tied with 22. ·
RBI - Baylor, Cal, 30; Lynn, Bsn,
29; Parler, KC, 29; Cooper, Mil, 27 ;
Lezcano, MiI. 26.
HITS - Smalley, Mi n, 44; Lemon ,
Chi. 41; Horton , Sea. 39; Cooper. Mil.
38; Lansford , Cal. 38; Landreaux,
Min , 38.
DOUB LES ~ Lemon , Chi. 11 ;
Cooper. Mil, 10; Down ing . Cal, 9; C.

•
•
•

This Mother's Day, give your mom
·. a .gift that's sure to create a lot of talk. A
beautiful Stylel ine Phone of her very own.
It's sleek and modern and there's a
great selection of designer colors to choose
from.You even get a colorful GTE gift box to ·
take it home in. So come in soon to pick out
your mom's favorite color and
give her a gift that'll give her a
lifetime of good conversation.
The GTE Phone Mart.
More than just a phone
store. we're your phone
company.

Washington , Chi, 9; Norwood , Min , 9;

B. Bell, Tex. 9.
TRIPLES - LeFlore, Del , 3;

R.

Jones, Sea, 3; 17 Tied wi th 2,

HOME RUN S - Lynn , Bsn. 13;
Thomas, Mil, 9; ,Singleton, Ba l, 8;
Smal ley, Min, 8; L May, Bal , 7;

Cooper, Mil, 7; Ogilvie, Mil , 7; Gross,
Oak. 7.
.

STOLEN BASES - LeFlore, Del,
13; J. Cruz. Sea. 13; Otis, KC, 11 ;
Manning. Cle, 8; R. Jones, Sea, B;
Will s, Tex. 8.

Salem

.

PITCHING (4 Decisions) - John,
NY , 6-0, 1.000, 1.92 ; Koosman, Min , 0·
o. 1.000, 4.23; Kern, Tex . 4·0, 1.000,
l.S3; Marsha ll , Min . 5· 1. .833. 0.85 ;
Spittorff, KC. 4-,0, .BOO, 2.84; Jen kins,
TeK, 4-1, .800, 3.3 Drago. Bsn, 3-1. .750,
3.20; Eckersley . Bsn, 3-1.. 750, 3.41.
STRfKEOUTS - Ryan , Cal. 43 ;

Carrier Needed
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Sa(em

Guidry, NY , 40 ; Jenkins, Tex . 39 ;
koosman, Min, 31 ; Torrez, Bsn , '28 ;

'·

CALL

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY I OHIO

Worlham,' Ch i, 28.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING 165 at bats) - Brock, St.
L... 375 ; Winliefd, SD, .358 ; Foster ,
Cin, 3.57; Rose, Phi , .356; Carter, .
Mil. , .356.
·
RUNS - Concepcn, Cin, 26 ; PHhl,
Htn , 24; Winfield, SO, 24 ; North , &gt;F.
23; parker, Pgh , 22 .
RBI - Foster, Ci n, 27 ; Winfield , SO,
25 ; Carter, Mil , 24 ; Cabell, Hfn, 24 ;
Murphy , All, 23.
HITS - Winfie ld, SO, 44; T. Scott,
St. L.. 4t ; Foster, Cin, 40; Griffey ,
Cln , 40 ; Concepcn, Cin, 39; Russell ,
LA, 39.
·
DOUBLES - Parrish, Mtl ., 12; K.
Hrnandz, Stl . L.. U; Cromartie, Mil ,
10; Rei tz, St. L , 10; Morgan. pn, 10.
TRIPLES - T. Scott. St . L.. 6;
Winfield, SO, 5; 7 Ti.ed with 3.
HOME RUNS - Schmidt, Phi. 9;
Murphy, All., 9; Kingman, Chi. 8;
Carter, Mt l., 8; Dawson , Mtl. , 8;
Matthews, All. 8. .
.1
STOLEN B ~SES - M&lt;Jreno, pgh ,
15 ; Cabell, Htn , II ; T..Scott, St. L., 10;

Light
1008

lOW TAR I NICOTINE .

Morgan, Cin , 9 ; J. &lt;:ruz, Htn, 9.

•

PITCHING (4 Decis ions) - Ruth ·
ven, Phi , 6-0, 1.000, 1.65; B. Lee, Mtl , 40, 1.(j()(),_3. 68 ; Espinosa, Ph i, 4-1, .800:
1.05; R1chard, .Htn , •,o. .800, 3.2.1.
Blue, SF, 6-0, .7.50. 4.62 ; Gr imsley.
Mtl , 3·1. .750, 3.701 Reed, Phi , 3-1. .750, .
0.61 ; Lilfell, St. ~., 3-1, .750, 2.76.
STRIKEOUTS - Richard, Htn, 47 ;
Sulton, LA, 37, Blue, SF , , 35 ; P.
Niekro, Atl ,, 34 ; Carlton, Ph i, 32.

992-2156

'
' •.

Make.your own spending money and eam prizes.
. f,
·~

I •

..

..."'

• t

&lt;
~-

Warning : The Su~geon General Has · Determined
That Cigaretle Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
'·

·•

.'

�V-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, Ma) -lO, l~ i9

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 10, W/9

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
it makes them Ieelma&lt;lequate and Inferior. Your comments may be right.
But t!Jat does not change the fact that
your bhmtness creates distance between yuu and others.
.
For that reason alone, it is essential
that you give up your total commit,
ment to the truth and become more
tuned in to the human experience.
Learn to cope with irrational fears .
Write for Dr. Baker's hotline, "If You
Are Phobic." Send 50 cents plus
stamped, self-addresSed envelope to
Dr. Blaker in care of tjlis newspaper,
P.O. Box 475, Radio City Station, New
York,N.Y.10019 ..
Send your questions to Dr. Blaker
at the above address. volwne of mail
prohibits personal replies, but questions or general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

Is honesty
best policy

Wooda, Jon Perrin,' Chad Wiliams, Sbawn Eads, Rick
BOYS TRACK TEAM- Boys of Meigs Junior High
Edwards,
Greg Taylor; third row, Rick Chancey, Paul
who are members of the track team are front, l-1:,
Riggs, Jolm Smith, Ed Blowtl, Mike Doi'st, Matt VanKevin Belzing, Brett Carl, Troy Bauer, Brill King,
Fred Colburn, Craig Sinclair, Mike KeMedy, Randy . Vranken, Rick Cremeans, Ed Bishop, Todd fife, and
Melvin VanMeter.
·
Carl; 9eCillld row, Doug Mitchell, Mike Jacl!son, Kyle

Highlanders
take 4-2 win
sooibwestem

spotted visiting South
Webster a sin8Je I"WI in the first then
came back with two I"WISin its half of
the Inning Bnc! one each in the third
and fourth framett to down the Jeeps,
+-2 Wedneaday evening.
The win gave Coach Wayne .
Bergdoll's Highlanders an 11-3 record.
SWHS leads the SVAC with a 6-2
mark.
South Webster got its first I"WI oo a
leadoff hit by Kallas,- a stolen base
and hit !elY I.yldns.
Southwestern came back for two
runs on a hit by Sberman Potter, a
fielder'• chclice, a double by Jay
Burleson and single by Gene Laytoo.·
Wayne Slzanore's hit, a fielder's
choice and two errors produced two
·runs tn the third and fourth innings.
Potter, Burleson, Layton, Sizemore
and Dale Newberry had the Highlan-

der hits.
Pitching-wise, Sizemore, in going
the route, faMed three and walked
three.
He got into trouble in·the seventh inning when two Jeeps reached with
two outs. Coach Bergdoll elected to
walk South Webster's cleanup hitter,
loading the bases to set up a force
play. The move worked as the next
hitter popped up ending the game.
Southwestern plays Hannan Trace
this evening at.Meigs High School in
the Class A Sectional Tournament
~plooship tilt.
Friday night, the Highlanders will
attempt to move closer to capturing
the SVAC championship against
Southern.

GIRLS TRA&lt;;K TEAM - Girls of Meigs Junior
High who are members of the track team are, front, 1-r,
Suzanna Wise, Sonya Wise, Mae Nakamoto, Kris

••• :lf:l··

•• j• •

I •• .

•

8

!!_!! l1 : . : I
~~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Kansas City
NATIONAL LEAGUE
16 13 .552
Texas
15 13 .536
EAST
13 15 .464
W. L. Pet. GB Chicago .
Oakland
12 18 .440
Philadelphia
20 7 .741
10 21 .323
18 8 .692 11/:z Sealtle
Montreal
Wednesday's Games
St. Louis
14 13 .519 6
Ch icago
12 12 .soo 61/:z Oakland 4. Baltimore 2
Pittsburgh
11 15 .423 81,"2 Boston 9, California B
New York
9 17 .346 lOll&gt; New York 5, Seattle o
Chicago 5, Detroit 4
WEST
Cleveland 8, Milwaukee 7
Houston
18 12 .600

Cincinnati
San Francisco

17 12
14 16

.586 . l, :z

.467

4

4' '

Sisson, Rowena Averion, Barb Will, Paula Swisher;
second row, Kris Snowden, Margie Mllier, Karen
Goggins, Barb Grueser, Andrea Batey; Cathy Dean,
Cindy Crooks, and Paula Horton.
·

RIVER DOWNS
Sumsation' and Northern Shoos, paid
CINC.INNATI (AP) - Selke! came $91.60.
off the P,.ce to -win by a neck in
A crowd of 3,429 wagered $422,058.
Wednesday's feature race at River
· Downs Race Track.
The winner ran the six furlongs in ·
WE'VE LOWEREOTHECOST
I: 12 3-5 and paid $7.60, $2.60 and $2.20.
OF CARPET CLEANING
Arlen was secorid and paid $2.40 and
$2.20, while Noon Shadow returned
NOW RENT
$2.20 to show.
The dailv do~ble combination of ~.

5
7

CARPET CLEANING
SYSTEM AT NEW

9
11 ., ,

LOWER
jRATES
l

Kansas ity 4, TexaS ~
Toronto at Minnesota. ppd ., rain

Thunday' s Games
Los Angeles
14 18 .438 . 5
Seattle (Jones 0-21 at New Yor k
San Diego
12 19 .387 ' 6'"
Atlanta
9 19 .321 8 · (John 6-01
Cleveland (Wise 3-31 at Milwaukee
Wednesd.ly's Games
(Slaton 3-0) .
Cincinnati 7, Chicago 4
Qakland (Johnson 0-41 at Baltimore
San Fr,ancisco 9, Montreal ,2 ·
(McGregor o. 1), (n) · .
Pittsburgh 17, Atlanta 9
California (Aase 2·31 at Boston
Houston 5, St. Louis 4, 16 innings
Do-it-yourself
(Eckersley J-11. (n)
Philadephia 2. San Diego 0
and get professfonal
Kansas
City
(Spllttorf
4-21
·
at
Los Angeles 7, New York 2
Linescore:
ffiSU/ts
Chicago (Worfham 4·21. (n.) ·
Thursday's Games
South Webster
100 010 6--2 7.4
Only games scheduled) .
Cincinnati ( Hume 3-3) at Chicago
Friday's Gam.e s
Southwestern
201 100 X--4 5 2 (Lamp J.O).
.
.
RENT
()()PER HOUR
Philadelphia (Espinosa 4-11 at San Texas al Toronto, -(n)
FOR
Seattle at Baltimore, (nl
Diego (Perry 3-21 .
ONLY
(4 Hour Minimum)
Montreal (Rogers 2-ll at San Oakland at Boston, (n)
WMPO
California
at
New
York.
(n)
Francisco )nastu 0-l} .
St. Louis (Sykes 2-21 at Houston Milwaukee at Detroit, (n)
SATURDAYS
Cleveland at Minnesota, (n)
(Richard 4-11. (n) .
' New York (Swan 3-21 at Los Angeles k:ansas City al Chicago, (n)
'Racine, 0.
949 -2525
8 til Noon
(Messersm ith 2-21. (n)
(Only games scheduled!
Frid~y·s Games
oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooao
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, (n)
0
Atlanta at St. Louis, (n)
· Chicago at Houston, (n)
0
New York at San Diego,. (n) ·
0
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Fifteen a lifetime.
Montreal at Los Angeles, (n)
0
rookies have reported to the
"It's true I haveri't been exposed to Philadelphia at San Francisco, lnl
0
'
'
Cleveland Browns training camp, as much pass blocking as some guys
0
Baseball At A Glance
saying they were excited but ready to and I know I've got a lot of work to do
0000
By The Associated Press
go to wCII'.k.
to become good, but I don 'I expect it to
AMERICAN LEAGUE .
"I'll WCII'k aa hard as I can " said be a problem."
EAST
W. L. ~ct.
GB
wide receiver Willis AdaDiB, ~ho has Claphan added that the key to being boston
18 10 .643
been described as being as potentially a good pass blocker was to have good Baltimore
19 11 .633
great as three of the best · wide feet. He said he had good feet and Milwaukee
18 12 .600 1
receivers In the National Football could move quickly, adding, "I'll be New York
15 14 .517 3°/2
Detr-oit
11 13 .458 5
League -Lynn SWann, Ken Burrough OK."
Cleveland
9 18 .333 81/2
and Isaac Curtia.
Claphan was competing with two Toronto
8 22 .267 11
"I'm 8lllious to learn the Browns' other rookies for the starting position
WEST
•·
system as fast as I can and to work vacated by the trade of Barry Minnesota
20 8 .714
California
17 13 .567 4
myself into the starting lineup," he Darrow.
said.
It was James Ramey of Kentucky
Adams, offensive tackle Sam who was given the best chance to
THISI'LEOOWN
Clapban and cornerback Lawrence become a Browns starter because he
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio (AP) Johnson are the three largest of the 15 was the first defensive end lo be
Mike Perrotta rode Arab Spray to his
rookies who rej,orted to camp at drafted by the Browns.
victory
at
Baldwin Wallace College Wednesday .
"I didn't know what to expect before second straight
Thistledown,
taking
Wednesday's
Chaphan said he was surprised to be and I haven't really thought much
drafted in the second round.
about it since," he said. "All I know is featured Starter Allowance.
The winner covered the six furlqngs
"ldldil't think I would go that high, that I want to get into things here,
In
1:10 ~.
wt I'm glad I did and pleased the establish myself, play and let the
Spray
paid
$4,
$3
and
$2.31,
Arab
Browns took me," said the former people in Cleveland see that l'm a
while second-place Dan's JubUee
Oklahoma player. "This Is the thrill of man.''
returned $5.40 and $4.20 and thirdplace Green's Great paid $3.
The 2-111-8 trifecta of One More
Try Our All New Drive Thru Carry Out
Slekel, The Cllunker and Patty Bruno
returned $1,734 on 29 winning tickets.
ONE SliiP
The crowd of U47wagered $495,581.
SEATI'LE (AP) -Abnost everyone The Suns' reserves produced 25 points
FOR All
Is feeling sorry for Seattle and 23 rebounds TueSday, colnpared
YOUR
PICNIC
SuperSonics center Jack Slkma.
with only 10 points and 12 rebounds by
Teammate Frl!!l Brown said Sikma, Seattle backups.
Wednesday'• Sports Transactions
SUPPLIES
By The Associated Press
who hit only two of 13 shots from the
"Those guys on our bench are pretty
BASKETBALL
*COOLERS
field in Tuesday's 100-91 National good players," said Phoenix guard
5TH·
lOTH·
National
Basketbali
A•sociatlon
Baatetball ~lion playoff loss to · Paul Westphal. "Not fmnous, but they
*GRillS
NEW ORLEANS JAZZ -,. Named
15TH. 20TH
the · Phoenix Suns, is being ·have confidence."
Frank Layden as general manager.
*CHARCOAL
FOOTBALL
"neutralized" by ·the officiala.
Phoenix Coach John MacLeod
25TH
National Football League
Phoenix center Joel Kramer, who p(-aised forward Gar Heard, who
LIGHTER · - '
PITTSBURGI-j STEELERS took over in the third game of the started the first game of the series but Signed
free agents Larry Douglas and
PERSON
IN
A
*INSU1AT£D
Western Conference championship was benched in favor of Leonard Jerry Taylor, wide receivers, DAve
CAN HOlDERS
playoffs after center Alvan A(jams '-'Truc-k" Robinson . Heard pulled DICiccio and Bernie Winters,
CAR COMING
defensive
·
ends,
Anthony
Anderson.
sprained his ankle Sunday, agreed down 10 of his gam~igh 12 ~ebounds
*BEER &amp; WINE
running back •. Derrick Glasper,
THRU
OUR
Slkmahad"abadshootlngnlght ... but Tuesday in the secOnd half.
corr.~erback, Mark Oliveri, linebacker,
SNACIIS.
"He's like a· Paul Silas (Seattle's and George Small, guard.
1 don't think thia Ls indicative of how
NEW DRIVE
HOP
SAN DIEGO CHARGERS - Signed
•· , he shoots."
.
veteran forward)," said MacLeod.
THRU
The best-of-seven playoff series is "They're both unique players. They John Floyd, wide receiver, to a series
of one-year contracts.
tied at two games each, with the have experience."
. Canadian Football League
teams returning . to Se~ttle's · "We've got tci control the boards,"
TORONTO ARGONAUTS - Signed
Kingdome .for the fifth game Friday Sikma said. "When we do, chances Mike MacArthur, running back.
SOCCER
.
night.
.
are that w~'ll controlthe game. !think
American Soccer League
Officials are "not glvlllg Jack ·a we'll come back. We're disappointed,
N.Y . EAGLES - Nonled John lr·
chance to play," Brown complained. but not down."
vine general n:aanager.
"Jack can't even move ·around. ·
·•
They're neutralizing him. It wasn't
our fault Adams sprained hia ankle."·
Seattle COach Lenny Wilkens,
meanwhile, said his playen paid too
much attenUon to the officiating and
should let him do. :he grlptng to
992,202
olflclals. Wllkens drew a technical
fLtJ in the second half of Tuesday's

Casey Kase.m

Browns have 15
rookies in camp

-------------'$1
STAR SUPPLY CO.

SATURDAY, MAY 12th
10 A.M. TIL 5 P.M.

1

Suns top Seattle

free

DEAR DR. BLAKER- Last week I
found out some distressing news. My
best friend does ·not tell me
everything she thinks and feels about
me.
'The issue came up because she
mentioned she thought I had been too
jealous with a previous boyfriend.
When I asked why she never told me
that at the time, she said she thought
It would have hurt my feelings.
What really hurts my feelings is her
inilbility to be perfectly honest with
me. I can handle anything except
deceit.
How can I convince her that she
should say everything that is on her .
mind?
. DEAR READER - You can en·
Racine News Notes
courage your friend to speak inore
Easter
weekend guests of Mr. and
frankly. But in the stnalysis, she is
lier own person, with the right to Mrs. Ralph (Barney) Shain of Anti·
decide whether, how much and when quity were their daughter and husband , Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Reed and
to diSCU8S her feelings about you .
Truth for its own sake is not a children, Sherri Jo and Theresa of
primary chacteristic of healthy rela- Logan, and their son and wife, Mr.
tionships. In many cases, ''just telling and Mrs. David Shain arid son, Jason,
the truth" is an excuse for un- of Antiquity and Mrs. Shain's mother,
Mrs. Garnet Ervine, Racine. They en·
necessary hurtful words.
So, trust your friend 's judgment. joyed an Easter dinner together.
Mrs. Grella Simpson and Mrs.
Knowing how Important honesty is to
you, she will probably only hold back Dorothy Badgley visited on Thursday
information that might be harmful to with Mrs. Helen Slack who is
recuperating at her home in Letart
your mutual relationship:
following surgel-y. ' they enjoyed
Falls
DEAR DR, BLAKER - I am con·
stantly getting myself in trouble eating lunch with her. Visitors of Mrs.
because I like to say what is on my Slack on Monday were Mrs. Gamet
Ervine, mrs. Caroline Miller and
mind.
I think I have the right to speak the Mrs. Marjorie Grimm.
Easter weekend guests of Rev. and
truth as I see it."This seems to offend
mrs.
Don Walke,r were their two sons
many people. More than once I ve
and
their
wives, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
been described as far too blunt.
Walker
of
Summerville.
Do you think I will ever find anyone
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Colwnbus
with whom I can truly speak my
visited Friday and Saturday of Easter
piece]
DEAR READER - Total freedom weekend with her mother, Mrs. Ura
to speak one's mind is a re luxury. Morris .
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart and Mr.
And that's the truth. One prerequisite
and
Mrs. Ronald Hart enjoyed an
for gettinglong with people is the
evening
out together dining at the Bob
capacity to oe sensitivend diplotic.
You might come closest to your · Evans Steak House . This celebrated
the 41st anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Ideal in therapy.
Therapy provides the patient with Ronald Hart.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster and
an opportunity for more hosty than ls
children,
John Dean, Eric and Cheryl,
possible in most social and work re·
of
Colwnbus
spent Easter here with
tionships. You can even explore your
1\frS.
Foster's
parer.ts, Mr. and Mrs.
negative feelingsbout the therapist
Albert Hill Jr. and his mother , Mrs.
without fear of rejection.
·
A journal is another outlet for un- Edna Foster.
Mrs.
Brian
Simspson
and
Mr.
and
mitigated thoughts and feelings.
There you could be totally true to children, Lisa and Darin, and Lisa's
friend, Gar Philips, of Baltimore,
yourself.
Ohio,
visited over Easter'holiday with
And getting out your feelings on
Mr.
Simpson's
mother, Mrs. Helen
paper might release just enough of
Simpson,
and
Mrs.
Simpson's mother
the pressure to enable you to be more
and
father,
Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph
diplomatic with others.
Also
visiting
the .Badgleys
Badgley.
. You may have cbncluded that peowere
their
son
and
daughter-in-law,
ple resent_your_ total honesty because
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Badgley and
children of Colwnbus and Mrs . Oma
Hysell of Minersville.'
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Grirrun and
children, Mark and Marcy, spent
Easter Sunday with Mr . ·Grirrun's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm, and Mrs. Grimm's mother,
Mrs. Anna Wines, and daughter,
Karen. The Grimms reside in Wester·
By
ville. Also visiting with Mrs. Wines
ALL AMERICAN
and Karen were Mrs. Wines' son, Mr.
Meets
and Mrs. Robert Wines and chiJdren,

MODULAR
HOMES

Westerville. .
Jeremy Buskirk, infant son of Mr.
and Mrs. David Buskirk, was
dedicated to the Lord by Rev. Don
Walker during the Easter worship
service at the Racine Baptist Church.

• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;.VA
See our lot model today .

fl!dM

KINGSBURY.
HOME
SALES
1100 E. Main

OBSERVING ANNIVERSARY
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star, will observe its 75th
anniversary Friday evening at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Worthy
Grand Patron Jack Jotmson will be
the visiting officer. All Eastern Stars
are invited.

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

G\f'l

'0 '"8"

MD

*

*

Come, Relax With
Your Friends.
Plenty of Booths

DR. JAMES P. CONDE
announces the relocation of his office to

150 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
(fhe form.er Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Com pany)

EFFECTIVE TUESDAY, MAY 15
Open ·Monday 9-12, 1-4, 6:30-8: 30; Tuesday-Thursday Fricla 9-12. 1-4; Saturday 9-12; Closed Wednesday.

YOU CAN'T BEAT OUR PRICE! !
I I

Bumgarners IJonored
by family night fare
The Ht•v. and Mrs Rubert
Bwngarner were honoretl Sunday
evening at a family night dinner held
at the Heath United Methodist
Church.
The couple, after eight years serving the Middleport church, will be
moving on June 18 to Seven Mile ,
located in the Cincinnati area. A gift
of a IJ)icrowave oven was presented to
the minister and his wife by the
church congregation with Bern"rrl

.

. 748 NORTH SECOND

"We're just not playing good
basketball right now," WUkens sal!!.
"We're out of sync, (CII' some reason.
· One ~bing ia that when we get upset at
the offlclall, we're standing around;"
, For the secood COIIIM!Cutive game,
Phoenix's bench helped win the game.

MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

.

.

Becky Thomas

The Uliv)'-Urange Hi gh School The dance will be open to the public.
Alumni Banquet and dance will be · Serving the dinner will be the Ladies
held Saturday, May 26, at the Tuppers Auxiliary of the Orange Township
Plains Elementary School.
Fire Departm ent.
Hesc rvations must be ·sent in by
Allalumniare invitedandmaytak e
a guest. The dinner will be at 7 p. m. May 17 to Mrs. Marvenc Caldwell,
and the dance at 9 p. m: with music by 41035 SH 7, Hcedsv illc, Ohio 45772. The
the Blue Knob Express.
dinner and dance will be $8 per per·
Honor classes will be those of 1916, son. Dinner only is $6 and the dance is
1924 , 1929, 1934, 1939, 1945, 1949 and $2. Alumni Association officers this
1954.
·
year are Howard Caldwell , president :
Several door prizes .will be awarded Hobert Dorst, vice pr esident : Mar·

Local girl cops first place
honors. in Parkersburg show

Becky Thomas, age nine , won a fir·
st place trophy for her entry of a
"Shaggy Dog" cake at the fifth an·
nual Parkersburg Cake Show which
was held on Saturday, May 5, at the
an ~ attendance this . year is urged if vcne Caldwell , secretary, and Martin
Grand Central Mall.
the annual event is lo' he continued. Dorst, treasurer.
She entered in the Children's
·nvision which was for ages 12 and under.

She also· won a Junior Wllton
Medallion which goes to the hest cake
in the Children's and Youth DIYilion,
ages 17 and under.
· Becky is the daughter of Mr, and
Mrs. Eddie Thomas of Cheshire. She
attends the third grade at ChelltireKyger Elementary School.

Marie Hawkins returns home

Mrs. Marie Hawkins has returned
from Des Moines , Iowa where she at·
tended the national convention of the
Order of 'the White Shrine of
Jerusalem held at the Veterans
Memorial Auditoriwn in Des Moines.
The convention was called the "Session of Joy" in tribute to the presiding
Velma Joy, supreme worthy high
priestess.
· Mrs. Hawkins traveled by
chartered bus to Iowa where sh~ par-

A Mother 's Day theme was carried
out for the program of the Eleanor
Circle of the Heath United Methodist
Church meeting Tuesday night at the
church.·
f
Mrs. Donna Byer and Mrs. Betty
Fultz had the program and were joined for a playlet by Mrs. Billy Jo

Reedsville
Visiting with Mrs. Verna Rose this
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
J . Rose of Akron . They were ali
Easter Sunday dinner guests of·· Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Van Meter and family
· of Belpre.
.
Randy and Judy Lew1s of
Perrysburg were overnight guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise and Mrs.
Mabel Hetzer .
.
Mr. and Mrs: Frank B1se, Mrs. Jeff
"Foster and chtldren v1s1ted w1th the
Rawleigh Hetzer family at Akron and
Tom Dy e ai a nursin g hom e in Akron.
Mrs. Verna Rose v1s1ted recently
with Mr . and Mrs. Garrett Reed at
Coolville.
. Mrs. Gladys Baughman of Gahanna
IS VISiting with her s1ster, Mrs. Rose
Thoma s.
Week end guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Gene Wilson were Mr. and ,Mrs.
Charles Congrove of Zanesville and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sams of Weston,
.
W. Va . .
Spendmg Easter weekend with ~r .
and Mrs. Walter Brown were Mr. and
Mrs .. Steve Cowdery and sons of
Ch1l11cothe and David Brown of Ohio
State Um vers1ty, Columbus. . .
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith VISited
with Mr . and Mrs. Howard Young and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Marrow at
Paden City, W. Va., Mildred Evans at
Parlsley, W. Va ., and Harry Spencer
at Middlebourne, W. Va., recently.
Mrs. Helen Arch er spent · E"astcr
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Tuttle on Texas Road .
Visiting with Mrs. Helen Archer
recently were Mr. and Mrs. Don
Coleman of Col umbus.
Ea ster dinner guests at ·home of Mr.
and Mrs. · Denver Weber and sons,
Dave and Mark, were Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Meredith of Beverly, Charles
Meredith of Ashville. Mr . and Mrs.
Harold Sauer and daughters, Mary
Ruth and Joy, of Middleport, Mike
Kelly of Syracuse and Mr. and Mrs.
Warren· Pickens.
Mrs. Hazel Balderson of Vienna , W.
Va ., spent- the weekend • with the
Williams· Balderson family .
Mrs. Gladys Williams spent an
evening with Mrs. Bess Webster at
Tuppers Plains.

FACTORY DIRECT

I I

Fire

In Meigs County Common Pleas

Co ntrol

Techni cian Second Class Harold M. Court Nancy V. Cornell , Portland,
Winnings. son of Leona G. and Harold fi eld suit for divorce against Ja~ Lee
·
M. Winnings s·r . of Box 52, New Cornell, East Uverpool.
Haven. W. Va ., has reenlisted for fou r
years while serving with Fight er
Your "Extra Touch"
Squadron 84 , based at the Oceana
Nava l Air Station, Virginia Beach, 1
Florist Since 1957
Va .
~
Agradu atcofWahama High School ,
Mason, W.Va ., he joined the Navy in I
August. 1974.
FLORIST
I!

i

.__..._._..__.._____l

I

/?!-~

~

The most common· surname in the
Soviet 'union is Ivanov, ihe Russian
'
equivalent of "'Johnson .

.HICKORY MODULAR _
BLDGS.
675-4079

.

1 PH. 992-2644
I 352 E. Main, Pomeroy I
,__ .!E!'.!.t.T~!!~~-J

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

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

OPEN EVENINGS IV. APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

in Europe.

Mason, W.Va.
Wei kle's fath er, Wesley U.
Weikle. resides on Rt . 2, Letart, W. J;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Va .
773 -5592

~crgcant

BEEF SALE
'

l '

'

FILL YOUR FREEZER
INSTANT CREDIT
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
NO DOWN PAYMENT NEEDED
6 MONTHS MAXIMUM REPAY
HALVES
WHOLE
QUARTERS
FRONT _:_ l1.49 LB._·_
HIND ·_ 31.69 LB.

•1·49 --•1 ~~

LB.
AVERAGE WEIGHTS - QUARTERS 116 LB. - HALVES 235 LB. - WHOLE 475 LBS.

100% CHOICE PRIME GRAIN FEED BEEF

..

&lt;

GUARANTEE
RAIN CHECK -

YOUR MEAT TENDER OR REPLACED PACKAGE FOR PACKAGE
I_
F WE RUN OUT OF ANY ITEM IT WILL BE HONORED WITHIN
10 DAYS

''

ALL BEEF SOLD HANGING WE1(,7HT AND SUBJECT TO TRIM
LOSS &amp; WEIGHTS AVAILABLE- CUT -WRAPPED- FROZEN
• LABELED- PACKAGED ACCORDING TO YOUR FAMILY SIZE

PHONE COLLECT 614-667-3221 .

TRI-COUNTY MEAT

Cabins - Barns- Storage

!
!
!

SHOP

.
BRUCE WEI.KLE
OXFORD, England -'· Bruce W.
Weikle , son of Mrs. Ada A. Greenlee of ·
Rt. 2. Leon, W. Va., has been .
promoted to staff sergeant in the U. S.
Air For ce.
The sergea nt , a personnel specialist
al Upper Hcyford RAF Station,
England, serves with a unit of the U.
~-. orces

Aviation

NaVj

1

Krawsczyri, Mrs. Nancy Cale, Mrs .
Mary Wise and Mrs. Pauline Horton .
Mrs. Helen Byer presided at the
ineeting during which time routine
business was conducled. Mrs . Donna
Byer and Mrs . Fultz . served
refreshments.

S. Air

TO END MARRIAGE

IIARUI.D \¥INNINGS

ticipated in the opening drill as the
supreme queen's attendant. In addition to her honorary position, Mrs .
Hawkins also served as a delegate
from Mary Shrine 37, Meigs County.
She was appointed to the Supreme
special obituary conunittee &lt;juring
the session. Next year's convention
will be in Oklahoma City.
Enroute home those on the
chartered bus did some sightseeing.

Mother's Day theme carried out by church .

'

POINT PLEASANT AIRPORT .

Th&lt; l"niily - night program was
hosted hy the United Methodist
Women with Mrs. Nan Moore as
chairman. Musi c was presented by
the Rev. Mr. Bwngarner, Vernon
Weber, Steve and Donna Jenkins.
They sang old favorites and gospel
songs. There was fellowship singing
led by Vernon Weber and comments
on their reassignment by the Rev. and
Mrs. Bwngarner.

Alumni banquet, dance set

and Stools Inside.

game.

Full:! nwk1ng li t~: presemation .

SERVING W. VA. &amp; OHIO FOR OVER. 13 YEARs·

TORCH, OHIO
Rt . 1
· &amp; so.

f .j· i~io-;s .

1

Tracks

i

lOX 256

, . 1 · Post Office

-: ',·

"i

... ;.;_ .

County Rd . 62 .

·' . .

·J •

· r~

�Band members presented awards

8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. May 10, 1 ~9

ABC sweeps up Neilsons this week
NEW YORK tAP) - Bolster ed by
high ratings for shows featuring a
rather odd trio of characters, " Mork
and Mindy" and " Ike," ABC-TV
swept to first plate in the A.C. Nielsen
Co.'s ratings for the 17th week in a

row .
An episode of," Mork and Mindy" at
8 pm . EDT last Thursday grabbed
first place in the ratings for the week .
ending May 6, and " Mork and Mindy"
at 8:30 the same night was tied for
second with Parts I and lll of "Ike,"
the network's three.part war years
biography of · Dwight D. Eisenh ower .
Part ll of " Ike" was !5th in the
ratings .
.
Only two programs, the Miss U.S. A.
beauty contest and "60 Minutes, " both
on CBS, stood between ABC -Nielsens
NEW YORK ( AP ) - Bolster ed by
high ratings for shows featuring a
rather odd trio of characters, " Mork
and Mindy" and "Ike," ABC-TV
swept to first place in the A.C. Nielsen
Co.'s ratings for the 17th week in a

row.
An episode of " Mork and Mindy" at

Cpe ., ; cyl. , auto., c lean , good
tires, rattio, good mileage .

'2695

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON
Acyl. , auto . trans ,, local 1 owner
car &amp; real sharp, color white,
radio , good mileage .

'2295

1974 CAMARO
350 V·B. 3 speed, 8 track tape, am
radio, good tires . body needs

painting .

'1695

'3495

1978 IMPALA COUPE
locall owner &amp; only 11 ,000 m iles,
am·fm radio, power windows, &amp;

D. locks, cruise control, tilt st .
wheel , air cond ., digital clock, 305

V·8, p.s., p.b ., and sharp car,
silver with red vinyl top.

'6195

1977 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR.
Small V·B, auto., p.s .. p.li., lock -

'4095

1977 PINTO 2 DR
Local owner, clean interior, amp·
rm cB radio, good tires .

. '2795

1976 CHEV. C60' CAB
CHASSIS
292 engine, 2 speed R. axle,
825x20 tires, solid cab &amp; good

mechanically , 102" C. to axle.

•4995

.._
-

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

.

" YourChet'Y De/tier"
Hl·21l6
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til B:OO p.m.

tive blossom . r or Le1·rariums she said
the moon valley plant pirrea and the
nerve plant, fetonina are good . Mrs.
Barton listed several new roses and
panzies, and talked about the new
flowering tobacco plant.
Mrs. K.arl Krautter gave a review
on organic gardening from "No Work ·
Garden Book. " The a11thor recommends no cultivating just mulching
with spoiled hay noting that this
eliminates many insects. Members
discussed the pros and cons of organic
gardening and talked about their experiences with mulchinll, and insect
control.
Mrs. Leonrad Erwin gave a
demonstration on arrangements of
the Victorian Era noting that in that ·
Iinne it was believed that flower· arranging built good moral character.
Children were ~ncouraged to garden
,and arrange. She said that arrangements were usually overdone
with more types Of flowers than are
used now. She showed a collection of
containers similiar tO thnse of the era
and told of the "tussy mussy," a hand
arrangement consisting of layers ·or

~nnounces

program

c~an~.of

P---~--------------~

Ladies Day obseroed

%

126 E. MAIN

on the World Day of Prayer and May
Fellowship Day, and noted that the
Middleport church will be host for the
World Conununity Day in November.
Reports on project work and other
activities were given by th~ circle
chairmen, and there wa.s also a report
of the love gift for the year. Mrs.
Searles thanked her officers for their
· assistance during her two years as
president.
.
·
· A Mother's Day theme was carried
out · in the program with the group
singing 'Faith of Our Mothers" .and
Mrs. Smart giving a prayer. Mrs.
AI wilda Werner had devotions entitled "The Privilege of Motherhood."
The love gift dedication wa.s by Mrs.
KathefYn Metzger who used "A
Mother's Prayer in the Morning" as
her topic. She was assisted by Mrs.
Leora Sigman, Mrs. Louise Davis,
and MisS Hall.
Mrs. Sara Dawn Owen had the program which was a tribute to mothers.
Taking part were Miss Hall, Mrs.
Isabelle Winebrennef, Mrs. Metzger,
Mrs. Smart, Mrs. Mary Brewer, Mrs.
Edwarda, Mrs. Searles, Mrs. RUey,
Mrs. Fowler, and Mrs. Anthony.
. During a concluding social hour, ·a
dessert smorgasbord _wa.s served. ·

I'm back in the office.
Please be tolerant through
the proceedings.
Erie is above all in .

sE Ry IcE

JOHN KAUFF INSURANCE
240 Lincoln St.
Middleport, OH 4576~

992-3969

i "'-

~

ERIE~
INSURANCE ERIE
GROUP ,;~tc"•

POMEROY, 0.
•'

Summer
is childs play.

. Hours :
9 : lOID5 : 00

VIS4'
;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::~:=:

2nd

KIDDTF.SHOPPE
..

t

I .

.

~:~:
CHORE SERVICE - The day comes when senior
\ citizens can no longer manage the home cleaning
ch~res Involved in sta~i~g in their homes. Through tbe
:;:: Me1gs County Seruor C11lzens Center a "chore" service
has been established to help seniors· who have pro-

POLLY·s POINTERS
~I

blems with the cleaning of their homes. Three
members of the "chore" group from'the left. are Anna
Quivey, Elizabeth Milton and Ann Barrett. Two others
of the service, not pictured, are Crystal Housh and
Goldie Graham,

I. I GoJden years remain glorious

I

l

(Editor's Note: This Is the third of Well, the Senior Citizens Center has
six artiCles . relating to Meigs organized a "chore service" which is
County's Senior Citizens in most beneficial in helping ·seniors stay
recognition ol May as Senior · in their own homes for as long as
Citizens Month and the observance possible. And how important that is!
of Senior Citizens Day on Tuesday,
At the present time 95 residents
May 15.1
have been or are being helped , som e
on a regular basis, through the serBy Bob Hoeflich
vice. There is a waiting list of some 17
America romances youth.
more who need the service. -Included
If you don 't believe it, check the in the 95 already receiving a much
advertise ments in a populitr needed helping hand are one amputee ,
magazine or the television com- 11 on walkers, one in a wheelcha ir, 28
mercials. Here you'll find scads of with heart problems, six who are blind
attractive young people using just the or nearly blind, a cancer patient and
" right " products.
.
four stroke victims . The others a lso
Now aren't these young people have some ph ysical problem which
beautiful'! You bet! However, they prevents them from doing some or all
are not always going to be young. You household iasks.
·
know the saying, ·" Tinne waits for no
CloSely related to the home chore
one ". One day, the young and servic e is a hom e maintenance
beautiful look around and they, too, program which provides for minor
are senior citizens. And with the repairs about the. homes of senior
golden ;rears, there sometimes come citizen s who cannot afford, at toda y's
problems greater than which product prices, to .k eep the old home in good
to use or wearing the latest fashions. repair. The senior does provi de
The Meigs County Senior Citizens money for the materials needed for
Center staff is well aware that no one such r epair but the labor is provided
is young forever and quite through the program: Many times, the
knowledgeable of the problems that , r epair may he a project such as repair
Sometimes accompany moving into of steps which could be ha.zardous to
the senior citizen status.
the senior citizen's safety. Only 20
How frustrating it is for the woman seniors can be· helped annually at this
who always maintained a ship-shape time because there just isn't enough
home or a widower to keep a home money to do more.
And - there comes a time in life for
tidy and neat 1\'hen they no longer a re
physically able to cope with the ac- semors when transportation becomes
tivity involved in cleaning. The spirit a problem . How does one get to the
_ may be strong, but the flesh is weak. doctor; the hospital, the grocery and
other places to take care of needs and

Humane societies hear speaker
Ms. Sandy Rowl~d, Great Lakes
Regional Director of the Hwnane
Society of the United . States, was
speaker at the recent quadrant
meeting of humane societies in
Southeastern Ohio and West Virginia
held at the Meigs Inn.
Topics of discussion included
money-making projec:ts for operating
expenses ways of obtaining grants
animal shelters and animal disposi:
lion. Each or the organizations present commented on problems encountered and Ms. Rq,~ d gave su~gestlons and soluti~ proposed by
.the national organization.
Areas of specific concern now at the
national level include rodeos, dog raelng and animal slaughter. A
'
· ..
'

6 TIL DARK
WED. &amp; THURS.
Henderson's 404
Fisher St.
Middleport, 0 .

992-3647

.: SPRING
SPECIALS

concord
RIVE.RSIDE AMC JEEP

Street

Pomeroy, 0 .

Near Stifflers

UPPER ROUTE 7

. GALliPOLIS/OHIO

446-9800

Polly Cramer

n: _,_,________________.:____________

··=·

YARD SALE

AMC ,..

'

•,•,
•.·.

::::

Ill

~~~:Sa~~~~
DEAR POLLY - Sometimes an
aluminwn pan rubs against dishes in
the dishwasher and leaves a silvery
mark on them . I hope someone can
tell me how to overcome this. -PAT
DEAR PAT - Of course, the best
thing is to arrange things in the
dishwasher so ·no aluminum or
stainless steel rubs against china. But
when this does happen the only I have
found to remove the marks is to use
toothpaste. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - J.K.H. wrote
about a problem with perspiration
odor in shirts even after they were
laundered . The so'IUtlon for this was
given to me many years ago by a dry
cleaner and I have used it on all kinds
of fabrics with no color dage. Pour
white vinegar on the area, rub in gently and then wash the garment the
usual way. I have done this to cotton
T-shirts, cations with blends ,
&amp;weaters and cotton and blend dress
shirts . :.. PAULINE
DEAR READERS .: Even though

I

personal business '!
/\gain - the Center has come
threugh heautifully with a solution. It
currently has two 14 passenger vans
a nd a station wagon in use every day

with every portion of the county being
covered on a regular basis. Transportation for seniors is only a phone
ca ll away and 992-7886 is the magic
number which will bring forth a
vehiCle so that the senior can get to
various necessary locations.
Of course, .the Center building in
Pomeroy is a bee hive of activity
every da y, and it's " the g r eates~" for
seniors who feel like taking part. But
the services to those unable to take
pa rt in Center a ctiviti es are just as
vital and they are extensive.
In addiiion to transporta tion , home
chore and home maintenance services, a hot meal delivery service is
provided to homebound seniors who
are unable, whether temporarily or
permanently, to get to the Center.
Smile 45 sen(ors are currently being
helped th,ough this service and
generally there is a waiting list of
a dditional seniors who need the home
meal delivery. ·
Oh, it 's great to .be young. But yo uth
doesn't last forever and sooner or

later each person ll)SY have to fa ce
one problem or ·another In the golden
years of life. · However , what with
" keeping young at · heart" and using
help and fa cilities that are offered
through the Meigs Senior Citizens
Center , these yea rs can certainly he
worthwhile and r ewarding .

Project, a bargain

From: Christopher C. Layh
representative of the American Horse
Administrator, Meigs Co.
Protection Associatio~.. Inc . Board
presented a program detailing the
of Mental Retardation
- ruthl~ss treatm~nt or.the Tenn~ee
County Curthouse
walking horses m vartous show nngs
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
around the country. .
,
Dear Editor,
. Attending the meet~g were Su KIIn these dayli when the nickel as
mger, Dorothy Peav1s, and Julia well as the buffalo is dead and the
Smltb, Muskingwn County; Nancy sales tax adds up to what the item itWildermuth, Joyce Johnson, Colby self used to cost, it's a relief and a
Kan~Halloway, and Ted Johnson, pleasure to find something that gives
Hocking County; · Orlinde Carter, more value for your money.
Margaret Hampton, and Patricia · The Hike-Bike for Mentally Retar. Prowse, Jackson County; Brenda ded Citizens Is still helping Uves for
-Brown~ Nancy Brown, Susan Bonnett, the cost of a twenty&lt;ent sponsor, all
and Cindy Gail Meadows, Putnam around Ohio every day.
County; Becky Snuth, J?av!! Uevmg,
Each year, between 100,000 and
Rodney Lynch and Bill Sununers, 200,000 children are born with mental
Parkersburg:. Vanessa Kearns, retardation in the United States and
Maureen Kreider, Norma Chafee, you can make the difference to them.
and Nina Bentley, Jackson cOunty;
the money to carry on programs of
Dr. and Mrs. Dan Notter, Gallipolis; help to these people goes up as it does
and Goldie Dill, Dorothy Davis, Rita for all programs to help in promoting
LeWis, Dorothy Fisher, Joyce Miller, education, identification, and treatMarion.Crawford, and Carolyn Smith, ment.
Meigs County.
I urge all residents of Meigs County
to support the Hike-Bike on May 12th
by sponsoring a Hiker with your
BASKETBAL
SEOUL (AP) - Sylvia Sheeney's pledge to contribute for each mile
final-second goal gave unbeaten hiked. Whether Y.OU pledge a dime or
Canada a crucial 56-55 victory over a dollar a mile, you will be getting tbe
Japan and Italy defeated France 72-54 most for your money.
Wednesday in the final round of the
you
eighth World Women's Basketball Thank
Ouistopher C. Layh
Championships.
Administrator

mei~e(J ·

•BEAUTIFUL HUSH PUPPIES SHOES
DRESS AND CASUAL

•SANDALS •ANGEL TREADS
•HANDBAtiS'
White -Bone· Tan -B Iack · B lu e ·Mul ticolor

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

HolzerMedfcal Center
Dlschargeo, May 9
Esther Alltieri, Mary Burnheimer,
Bertha Burnside, Anna Butts, Charles
Chalftin, Virginia Dean , John Elardo,
Ruth Fraley, Tim Godwin, Judy flail,
Carrie Harper, Cynthia Hayes,
Zacariah Hutchinson, · Tima Jeffers,
Pearlie Jewell, Thomas lamiJE!rt,
Kenneth Lee, Jr., Dorothy Le..yis,
Sidney McManis, Jessica McClellan,
Sarah Murphy, PAtricia Noel, Kyle
Oxyer, John Peters, Nancy Propp,
Gloria Salisbury, · Clara Shamblin,
Nancy Sheets, Carrol Shockey, Judith
Thompson; John Vance, Charles
Wilson, Pat Wilson.
Births , May 9
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Harford, son,
Minersville .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hickle, son,
I ,·ta rt.
:11r. and Mrs. Richard Kent,
daughter : Gallipolis .
Mr. and Mrs. Douglass Simm~ . son,
Nm1 !•11p

Pauline has had constant luck with
the white vinegar, do test on your own
particular fabric before diving in. and
putting it on everything. -POLLY
DEAR POLl..Y - After USing my
scouring pad I always put it In the
freezer section of the refrigerator. It
is easier to work with when frozen and
does not rust.- MRS. A.N.
DEAR POLLY -1 aminmy80sand
a denture wearer. When I am troubled with sore gums I find relief by
removing the dentures and running
cold water over them before putting
them back in my· mouth. Hope this
he lps some fellow sufferer. -MARY

Patty Mitchell, Barbara Thomas,
Cheryl Johnson, Rhorida Haning ,
Savannah Smith, Freeda Chapman,
U&gt;ri Faulkner, Shelia Fet1y, A!)drea
Riggs, Rhonda Southern, . Carla
Smith, Linda · Williams , Jan Betzing,
Deena Neece, Shari Drehel, Ruth
Blake, Tina Bradford, Kim Glass,
J ean Horton, Linda Eason, . 8illy
Dyer, Bill Browning, Becky Long,
Debbie Woodyard, Nancy Wallace,
Connie Mossman, Angela KeMedy,
Sherr! Hysell, Bren&lt;la_C;!!appelear,
Katie Lewis, Dean Colwell; Becky
Dorst, Angelia Baker, AprU King;
Bob Evans, Camille Swindell, Kelly
Thomas, and Mindy Long .
Juniors received pins representing
the instrument that the students play
in the b;md. This group Included: Kim
Warner, Jamie Sisson, Charle"'e
Goeglein, Sarah Diddle, Kellle.
Rought , Anita Musser, Yvonne Core,
Kathie Quivey, Regina Dorst, Carr!_e
Bearbs, Mafk Biggs, U&gt;rl Klees,
Tanuny McDaniel, Jimmy Snldet,
Dave Thornton , Margo Martin, Anna
Wiles, Eric Scites, Tracey JefferS,
Rena Lefebre, Vicki Hood, Missy
Cale, Marc More, Lyle Moon, Todd
Morrison, Aligela Martin, and Chris

Woods .

,

Seniors received trophies, this
group included: Lisa Nash, Jamie
Johnson, Bev Hoffman, Sherrie
Osborne, Carin Bailey, Do!Ue Rousey, .
Tammy Charles, Julie Byer,
Stephanie Radford, Mandy SIMon,
Kevin King, Mary Johnson, Brenda
Foster, DAve RJggs, Pam.Mees, John
Story, Patty Dyrer, Dorsel Thomas;
Don Richmond, Jana Bursoll, Jo
McKinney, ~usie Smith, Jeff l)anlelS,
and Lori Wood.

___
_
' Hubbard's Greenhouse

s.

~._._...._..._..

!?EAR POLLY - Today I was making some maple cream fudge and as
usual my s]ioon kept slipping down.into the candy. I wound a rubber band
around the spoon handle two or three
times and this solved the problem
beautifully . No more slips. MIWRED
Polly will send you one of her signed
thank-you coupon clippers if she uses
your favorite Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her collllllll. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of thisnewspaper.

II
I
~

iI

........ ._

Syra.cuse, Ohio

992-5776

Open Daily 9 -8 ·
Sunday 1-5
\.:Omplete assortment of bedding,
plants, hanging bas~ets and
foilage plants .
"SEASON SPECIALS"
Beddin.g Plants BSc per dozen
pack . .Hardy Azaleas 10" spreld!

!

$2.25 each (to or more 11.75)

each).
L._..._..._..._..._.. ....... _

Meigs Junior High School Principal
John Mora has announced the fifth
sixth weeks grading period honor roll.
Making a grade of " B" or above in all
their subjects to be listed on the roll
were :
. Seventh - Sherry l\rnold, Tammy
Black, Chris Burdette, Megan Cale,
Robin Campbell, Barbara Chappelear, Carl Davies, Patty Duffy, Tim
Frazier, Tracy Herman, Paul Janey,'
Mike Kennedy, Jack Kitchen, Vickie
·lamp, Michael Mourning, Angela
Myers, Tammy Parsons, Kim
Pauley, John Perrin, Angie Pratt,
Christi Quivey, Cberyl Riffle, Nick
RJggs, Paula Swindell, Teri Thoma ,
Kenny Sue Thomas, laura VanMeter ,
Zandra Vaughan , Sam Wamsley.
Eighth - Rowena Averion, Jeff
Baughman, Karla Brown, Steve
Bunce, Cindy Crooks, Angela Farley,
Brent Finlaw, Kim Fraley, B~ky
Handley,. Scott Harrison, Stephanie
H.ouchins, Jim Hoyt, Tom Kennedy,
Natalie Lambert, Suzan Lightfoot,
· Shirley McDonald, Cindy Parker,
Scott Pickens, Kim Roush, John
Smith, Kris Snowden , Tanya Stobart,
Paula Swisher, Joan Tanner, Greg
Tayulor, Renee Willis, Susanna Wise.

"·

FASHIONS
Fine

Summer
Wearing

Apparel
For

Men and
Women.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
Middleport, 0.

9:lstil5:00

GIVE l't®l't

RBfST!

SPRING
DRESSES

LADIES'

SLEEPWEAR
&amp; LINGERIE

Cho.o se. from a selection of
fashion styles in sheers &amp;
polyesters, misses; j rs ., 112
sizes .

Poly/cotton Gowns - Baby
Doll P.J. - Robes - Panties.

ANGEL TREAD

•'

SPORTSWEAR

SCUFFS

DEVON
AILEEN
REDEYE
FASHION
STAR

All Sizes &amp; CQiors
Complete Washable

HANDBAGS
Asst .
Styles

Free Gift Wrap
On All
Mother's Da·y,Gifts

BLOUSES
lOPS

JOG SHORTS
Asst. Colors &amp;
Fabrics by

LAURA MAE
WRANGLER
. I

GLOVES

VISA'

To

OPEN MON.-SAT. 9:30 TIL

·"

'

l

l
!

_.._..~-.c

Meigs honor roll

Mother's Day - Sunday, May 13th

~

Backed by the excl.usive
AMC Buyer Protection Plan®

Griin, Lisa Gardner , Melanie Dillard,
Scott John•nn . 'Helen Sl""" Laura

Smith , Knst1n Anuerson, Danny
RJggs , Mary Beth Hawley , Brenda
Willlams, Brynda Fry, Barbara
Whitlatch, Jeff Nash, Lynne Oliver,
Gary Nakamoto, Billy Colmer, Bryan
Gheen, Fred Young, Vicki Boyles,
Barbara Haley, Georganua Knapp,
Lisa Smith, Connie Smith, Lynn
Klees, Kim Mulford, Bruce Gheen, .
Mark Friend, Tracey Pope, Betsey
Herald , Penny Miller, Otis Core, Kim
Birchfield, and Cathy Blake.
Sophomores received large " M"
awards and the group included : Beth
Perrin, Sue Taylor, Connie Bailey,
Jena Welker, Shelia Horky, Lorra
Wisecup, KeUy Brown, Cathy Hess,

l!il

1979 CONCORD DiL WAGc;&gt;N

· We've a cool and colorful
line-up of all-star playwear
for your Iii' swingers.
See our large selection
of boys and girls overalls ,
tee-shirts, shorts,
jackets and much morel

Mon . tnru Sat .
9 : l0·8, Fri.

:~. · ~~hi;;;:r~l,R~~~~:it~~~. R:l~~~

EVENING

258 6 cyl. . engine, radial tires, A. C., power steering ,
tinted glass, roof rack, power brakes, tilt wheei, AM-FM
stereo, proteCtion group, convenience group, rust proof ing, wood grain side trim, color keyed wheel covers, in dividual reclining seats, color coordinated, pin striping,
plush carpeting, bumper guards .

awar an
e gr.oup me u
: am
Crooks, Melinda Thoms, Tammy

-.• .•,:. .:•

·:·:
.•.·.
·=:::

MOVING!

do the job.
Well appointed to
do It In style I

Dressing for

992 -3586

:·:

t

~II equlp;:o~:'"

MEN'S SUITS

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

.

r

ENTIRE STOCK

BIKE-HIKE T-SHIRTS
NOW READY. MEN'S
AND BOYS' SIZES.
RIDE AND SUPPORT THE
MEIGS ASSOCIATION
·FOR RETARDED CITIZENS.

~,; .~: ~~~ds!f:d~tkthed~::t~::~~l~d:ed:ciap.:~~

a

AMC
CONCORDDL
WAGON

Best SUITED

·oFF

Mem ber' ,,, (lie Me1gs High School
band were presented thei r awards for
the year at the annual hanquet held
S..tunlay night in the high school
cafeteria .
'\laki ng the presentation were Randy Hunt, director , and his assistant,
) · Alan Hunt. The event was planned by
::;= the band seniors. Both of tile Hunts

flowers in a cone shape carried by
ladies to counteract unpleasant odors.
It was reported that 18 members attended the regional garden club
meeting, six went to the open meeting
of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
four attended tile Ye Ole Village
Garden Club luncheon in Gallipolis,
and two went to the open meeting of
the Gallipolis Garden Club.
Four members made 10 table arrangements for uie Pomona Grange
hanquet. Six floral pieces were provided for the regional meeting, eight
(Qr the Ohio Eta Phi founder's day
dinner, and several will be made next
week for the Senior Citizena Day
observance at Royal Oak Park.
It was announced that the Chester
Garden Club and the Winding 'rrail
Garden Club are sponsoring a n.ew
junior garden club, "Utile Redbuda"
with Bunny Kuhl and Mrs. Leland
Parker as adVisors. Sunday the club
members enjoyed tour cl the Stahl's
Nursery near Belpre. The monthly
sunshine visit and gift will be handled
by Linda King and Pat Holter.
Refreshments were served.

Baptist Women 's Convention announced

The Baptist Women's Conference to Gibbs, vice president. of missions ;
be held at Denison University at Mrs. Katie Anthony, vice president of
Granville, June 10-22, was announced leadership training ; Mrs. Searles,
at the Monday night meeting of the B. love gift chainnan: Mrs. Freda EdH. Sanborn Missionary Society of the wards, scholarship chainnan; and
Mrs. Frances Smart, Christian social
Middleport First Baptist Churcp.
Mrs. Elizabeth Searles, Society relations.
Project work for the year was
president, reminded members to get
articles .for the layettes to be taken to discussed and the Society took as a
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) - " What's a ll judgment
Astarre
termed the conference to Miss Rhoda Hall by special project, assistance to Judson
the fuss about? It 's just a round "undeniably erroneous ." He was on June I. Reservations are also due by College. A gift of $115.00 was sent.
number."
best-dressed lists year after year and thatdate. ·
New circle chainnan named were
That
was
Fred
Astaire's · to many, in his top hat, white tie and
Officers Installed by Mrs . Searles Mrs. Sarah Fowler, Dorcas; Mrs.
characteris tic response on the tails, he was simply elegance who used "Look at Your Hands" a.s Clara Bell Riley, Love Joy, and Mrs.
occasion of his 80th birthday today. personified.
. her theme, were Miss Hall, president; Bernice Baker, EJecta . Members ·
From "Dancing Lady" in 1933 unltl Mrs. Freda Hood, secretary; Mrs. were assigned to the circles.
The ultimate dancer of show
business history , AJJtaire plans to the 1976 duet with Gene Kelly, Fred Sarah Fowler, treasurer: Mrs. Janice
Mrs. Baker, key women, reported
spend his four-score anniversary in Astaire was the impeccable dancer
his usual modest style -a dinner with and complete
gentleman
to
daughter Ava son Fred Jr., and their generations of movie-goers .
familie s in~ludlng a half-dozen
And now , while he won't dante, he
grandchildren .
hasn 't retired from acting .
Abo~t his life today =' "I'm doing the
His role as a disabled oldster i~ a
The Air Force Base of choice enlist- training in one of 13 specialties are
'things l want to do·."
· .'
· television movie , "A Family Ups1de
ment option has been e:ot:panded to in- eligible for this option.
Besides his family, he is interested Down ," won hun an Enuny last year.
The country of choice option
clude an overseas assignment or
in race horses . His greatest success His latest role was in a segment of the
country cl choice according to authorized initially for may include
was with Triplicate, who won the o~ter space series " Battlestar
Sergeant Gabbard bere . Qualified the following countries or overseas
Hollywood Gold Cup and earned Galactica ."
young men and women interested in locati.ons: Germany, England,
$244,000 befoce retirement.
"It was a tough show to get. done joining the Air Force for guaranteed Okinawa, Philippines, Guan, Alaska ,
" I have a brood mare and couple of because of the technical aspects and
Hawaii, Turkey, Japan, and Spain.
foals that are not ready yet," he we went three days over schedule',, he
They will be available on a first come,
reported. " I don 't know if they ever remarked. "But I enjoyed it. It was
first serve basis until all assignments
will be. But I'm hoping ."
different kind or' role and i did it
have been selected. However,
What Astaire is. not interested in is largely at the reQuest of my
Sergeant Gabbard added, not all
the profession he pursued f~om a.ge grandchildren . The only problem was
Today in History
countries listed are available for each
5'h, when he entered vaudeville With that 1 didn't understand the language
By The Associated Press
specialty.
sister Adele .
. .
they used on that show."
· Today is Thursday, May 10, the
Underthisprogramthelndividual's
"I won't . danc;e i' he sa1d m a
He'll do other roles if they interest !3oth day of 1979. There are 235 days assignment is guaranteed upon suetelef!hone mtervtew Wednesday , him _ "I'm reluctant about jumping left in the year.
cessful completion of basic training
echomg one . of .the famous songs into anything; 1 just say, 'Bring me
Today's highlight in history:
and specialty training, if the job reassociated with hun.
the script and I'll let you know ."'
On this date in 1671, the Treaty of quires attendance at il technical
. "I danced up to th~ age of 70, when I
At 110, Fred Astalre remains in r'rankfurt ended the Franco-Prussian training school.
did my last teleVISion special. That athletic trinn
war , and Alsace -Lorraine was ceded - The specialties available under the
was too damned long," he added. " It · "I don't e~t too much and I don 't
to
Germany.
option for May are : aerospace ground
was strenuo.us, but fOI;tun~tely 1 diet," he says. " I'm ba;ically light ;
On this date:
equipment mechanic,. jet engin~
suffered no Ill effects.} m JUSt not I'm rarely over 135 pounds . I don't go
In 1497, Italian navigator Amerigo ·mechanic, aircraft maintenanc~ -· .gomg to push my luck .
· f
ph I 1 to t
I do 't .
.. He relented on his vow for no more m or anr ~s ca . r ur~;
n Jog. Vespucci sailed on his first voyage to craft armament systems, fire 1r •t...C•
dancing in 1976, whtn good friend or anything like that. I like to loosen the New World.
lion, air cargo, food servic.:, fuelll,
.
.
K
uaded
him
to
oin
a
up
and
piay
golf
and
occasionally
In
1775,
the
Second
Continental
material facilities, a..minh•tr:Jti ve,
Gene e11 Y pers
1 .
some tenms
Congress
met
in
Philadelphia.
security,
and law enforcement
brief duet for MGM's musical
"Th
in
. th'
· th t
k
1
In
11165,
during
the
Civil
War,
Union
s(iecialists.
-;
d
"
Th
t
'
E
tertainment
e
rna
mg
ts
a
eev
cava Ic~. e
a s
n
' moving around, I'm lucky to retain forces
captured
Confederate
For more infonnation on this proAstaire artistry remains a
whatever athletic ability President . Jefferson Davis a t gram and other air force oplrwinville, Ga.
-portunities, contact Sergeant Gablegend, from the Broadway musicals 1 ve had .
.
with Adele to 10 films with Ginger
o.ther aspeds of the ~sta1re
In 11169, a gold spike was driven at bard at 221 N. Columbus Rd., Athens,
Rogers to other glittering musicals reg~en: , 00 cigarettes --;- I .hate Ogden, Utah, marking the completion OH or call592-4592 collect.
'th
h . tn
a Joa n Crawford , smol&lt;mg;
WI sue par ers s
ea ly to bed~ cocktaU ~t dinnertune ; of the fir st transcontinental railroad .
In 1940, during World War 'II ,
Rita Hayworth, Joa.n Fontaine,
~e consid~rs hinnself a lucky man. German
forces invaded Belgium, the
Audrey Hepburn, Leslie Caron and "Even though 60 i5 just a round
Netherlands and Luxembourg.
Cyd Chansse.
nunnb~r ' I'm glad 1 got here •" he says.
In 1941, a top Nazi official, Rudolf
The
choreographer
George
Hess,
landed by parachute in Scotland
Balanchine once called him "the
in a private effort to ma}&lt;e peace in
greatest dancer In the world," a
World War II .
Ten years ago : National guardsmen
and law officers brought a quick end
Ladies Day is being observed every to what was billed as the first national
Tuesday at the Pomeroy Golf Club.
"7.a p-in " after rowdy young people
Officers of the newly organized wrecked the block-long main street of
Women's Association are Mrs . Zap, N.D.
Margaret Follrod, president; Mrs.
Five years ago: Iceland was
June Freed, secretary-treasurer; preparing for ne w elections after the
Mrs. Pearl Welker, vice president; resignation of Premier Olafur
and Mrs. Betty Fultz, handicapper.
Johannessen.
At Tuesday's gathering members
One year ago: Israel began the
met from 9 to 9:30 at which time they celebration of its 30 years of
drew for partners. Prizes were independence after a day of mourning
awarded in several categories in- for its nearly 13,000 war dead.
cluding lowest score on two and three
Today's birthdays: Fred Astaillt is
'
won by Mrs. FoUrod; lowest putt, 60. Comedienne Nancy Walker is 57.
Mrs. Fultz, and the most sevens on Connecticut l.overnor Ella Grasso is
score card, June Freed and Mildred 60.
I
Karr.
.
Thought for today : Humility is the
Thirteen women attended and solid foundation of aH the virtues memberships · are now being ac- · Confucius: Chinese philosopher , 551cepted. Guest day is being planned.
479 B.C.

P~t

C'-• Chevy.nc • 20'
Mlal Home, Pull '411ul,._ent- ~AYI

wa s
represented at th&lt;' lx•ttmn nf lhe
ratings : "Mackenz ies of l'ara ttise
Cove" on ABC was a5th, followed by
·•supertrain" on NBC. a "C BS
Reports" news specia l on the ThreeMile Island nuele.a r accident, "The
Osmond Family ShOw '" on .ABC and
NBC's "Highcliffe Manor."
Here a re the week 's· Top 10
programs :
" Mork and Mindy ," 8 p .m ., with a
rating of 27.6 representing 20.6 million
homes, ABC ; " Mork and Mindy ," 6:30
p.m., "Ike," Part I, and "Ike," Part
Ill all 27 .1 or 20.2 million, a ll ABC ;
" Three's · Company," 26 .5 or 19.7
million, and "Laverne and Shirley ,"
26.3 or 19.6 million, both ABC ; " Miss
U.S.A. Bea uty Pageant," 25.5 or 19
million, CBS; "Ha ppy Days," 23 or
17.1 million, "Taxi," 22.9 or 17 million,
and " Fantasy Island, " 22.2 or 16.5
million, all ABC .
The next 10 shows:
•·Love Boat," ABC; "60 Minutes,"
CBS ; "Charlie's Angels," Movies" Beach Patrol " and "Samurai," and
" Ike," Part II, all ABC ; " Country
Music Awards ," NBC; " Eight is
Enough ," ABC; "Aii,ce " and "Dukes
of Hazzard ," both CBS, and " CHiPs,"
NBC.

Air Force

1978 CHEVETTE 2 DR
Local car, .4 speed trans ., radio,
good tires, c lean inteior, blue
finish, real good economy .

gree'l finish . ·

i.l rr last l'hursua y gra llllc'!l
first place in the ra tings for the week
ending May G, and "Mork and Mindy"
at 8::\0 the sa me night was tied for
second with Parts I and III of " Ike,"
the nelwork 's three-part war years
biography of Dwight D. Eisenhowe r.
Part II of ' " Ike" was 15th in the
ratings.
·
Only two programs, the Miss U.S.A.
beauty contest and "60 Minutes;" both
on CBS, stood between ABC and a
clean sweep of Nielsen 's fir st 15
places . ABC's heavy representation at
the top added up to a rating for the
week of 20.5. The networks say that
means in an average prinne-time
minute during the week, 20.5 percent
of the homes in the country with
television were tuned to ABC.
The week's No . 1 show had a rating
of 27.6. Nielsen says that means of all
the homes in the country with TV, 27.6
percent saw at least part of the
program.
All three networks scored with
specials in a week sprinkled liberally
with reruns. The Country Music
Awards show on ABC was No. 16,
NBC's "The Best of 'Sa turday Night
Live' Part II," was No. 27, and
"Castaways from Gilligan's Island,"
abo on NBC, was 32nd.
NBC's best regular program was a

Tips 011 spnng planting, a look at
organic gardeing, and and a
demonstration on arrangements of
the Victorian era highlighted the recent Chester Garden Club
.eting
held at the home of Mrs . P~ul Karr
with Mrs. Richard Koblentz as cohostess.
For tne meeting members wore
corsages which they had made
themSelves and showed them in
response to roll call .
·
Mrs. Richard Barton gave the horticulture talk suggesting that the
members plant a tree peony, which
prefers the morning sun, takes about
ihree years to bloom but is resistent
to most insects . She sai the pllintwill
not stand high winds and needs to be
planted in a light soil which has been
enriched.
She .also discussed plants which are
good for outdoor planting ·mentioning
begonias which coine ill over a hundred varieties . She said these should
in early spring in senii-!!haded moist
ltiei!tions. All for hanging pots, she
suggested sweetheart ivy and also .the
gold fish plant which has an attrac-

Today 's Topic:
Astaire waltzes into 80 years

1976 MUSTANG II

Ing diff., air cond., clean interior,

a p ·"I.

r epeat ·of " ( 'llll)s, " ~~~ . 20.
Each of · tlw netwo rks

Chester Gardeners look at spring

�. ...

Library

,.~~{!It

...~\~

91)'! . •

' . .;... ~ ' '='~·
•

•!\"1\1

&gt;

'

Letters

,.,o ......

R
A

'f\'l''[\C

I
8

tl~'l

_, ;"
.~~

..t.i'"

,~

~

R ,,r. '!'... '\''i"' .i\,c .

..):

t_}'."'
,,

N

·:

.,_ (·

. .,, " 4 '

--~(.

y

'

&gt;

'

MURPHY HAS 20.l'J, GAIN
G. C. Murphy Company sales of
$58,116,000 for the four-week period
ending April 26, 1979 were up
$9,739,000 or 20.1% higher than for the
corresponding period in 1978, Murphy
,Clialrman S, W. Robinson annoUnced
today.
Harold and Rhea Norris
Sales of $165,942,000 for the thirteen
weeks ending April 26 were up
$21,405,000 or 14.8% greater than
results for the same period in 1978.
Mr. Robinson said the sharp sales increase in April was due partially to
fluctuation rl. the Easter selling
Harold and Rhea Norris of Har- program and displays emphasized season, which occurred in March 1978
risonville represented the Big Bend that the program is contemporary but fell in April this year.
Girl ~cout Sernce Urut at the .annual and meets the interests and needs of'
meetmg of the Black Diamond Girl today's girls while maintaining its
Scout Counc1l held at the G1lmore ' dedication to the basic · values set
C~unty Recreation Center at Glen- forth when girl scouting was foWlded
VIlle, W. Va.
67 years ago. More than 200 adults · •
Theme for the ~eeting was ""The voiVed in scouting attended the Co~New Faces of G1rl Scouting." The ell meeting.
·

Represent girl scouts

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted--George . Hackett, Sr.,
Middleport ; George Deem, Racine;
Ina Massar, Reedsville; Martin
'Cunnlrigham, Racine; Eugene Fisher,
P~meroy ;
William
Buckley,
Middleport; Ruth Ann Mulford,
Pomeroy; Paul Burton, Racine;
.Robert Riffle, 'Pomeroy.
_
Discharged--Philip Null, Curtis
Ward, Billy Brewer, Kathryn Mees,
Marie Custer.
-

, Charlemagne, founder of the Holy
Roman Empire in the 9th century is
said to have been 8 feet tall.
'

r-""':'----------------------..

, G~~eratl~n R~p
By Hele n and Sue Bouel
KIDS ARE 'KIDS' SAYTEENS:
PRECISE ELDERS DISAGREE
DEARHELENANDSUE:
"Moon Maid" (who doesn't like the
label "kid") has provoked my senses.
. I don't find being called "kid" de: meaning at all; in fact, I am enjoying
. my youth, the fun and serious sides
:alike, and think the title reminds me
·ol the right to' act youthful when I
' wish.
But I resent being treated like a kid
as some teachers do when I'm ~
responsible young aduit. They are so
hung up on rules and regulatiOIIS that
tJM:y won't let me think for myself.
This goes for Jlllrents I have known
too. Their own inadequacies as
human beings (i.e., their insecurities)
. prevent them from realizing that it
~es patience and understanding, InSight and respect to develop in young
~le the attributes they see befitting adults. Until they give us room to
grow, kids will be "kids" (in Moon
! Maid's seil9e), regardless of their
labels. -DANIEL .

A layette shower was given recent- Reeves, Kimberly Farrell, Shari and
ly honoring Mrs: Tammy Johnson &amp;I • Amber Colmer, Barbara Colmer,
the home of the Rev . Clyde Render- Mamie Stephenson, Freda Henderson, Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy.
son, and Nancy Whittekind.
Games were played with prizes goOthers presenting gifts to Mrs .
ing to Debi King, Brenda Johnson, Johnson were Mrs. Larry Hoschar
Joyce Black, with Hyllia Eblin win- Mary. Johnson, Beatrice Rardin'
ning the door prize. Mints, nuts, Alice Fay Gardner and daughters'
punch and a .cake decorated with Eula and Joyce Redman, Evelyn and
green and yellow booties were served. · Jill Johilson, Vicki Miller, Connie PatAttending were Kay and Sandi Mor- terson, Rita Eblin, Susan Tracy,
·ns, Eunice Eblm, Judy Eblin, Anna Carla and Bill McKinney, Mary and
McKinney, ;Brenda Johnson, Verenla Pam Walburn, Virginia Smith, Myra
Keesee, Anita Van Cooney, Paulette Bayes, Bill McKinney Shirley Tyree
and Ricky Farley, Cindy and J. R. and Dorothy Bentz. '.
.
Blackwell, Br~nda Temnleton .Janet
·

\)

May9, 1979
Tom Kennedy
701\'.o Broadway St.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Dear Tom,
Congratulations, you are the official 8th grade winner fo the PUblic Library award contest.
(Since this is a newspaper column and we did not
publicize the contest.outside the 6th -7th- 8th grdes let
me explain that students in each grade were asked to
make as many words as possible from the words
Public Library. )
The official count for your paper was 275 words. I had
promised to publish the winning list of words, but Ruth
Powers can't type that many words right and neither
canl.
.
Tammy Parsons, the 7th grade winner had the next
highest number fo words (21) and Vincent Knight-Jr.,
the 6th grade winner had 209.
I hope that all of you enjoy the 5 silver dollars given
to each of you by the Friends of the Ubrarie5.
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Ubrariari
Serving aU of Meigs County

..

Layette shower held

.,oil~

L

Social Calenda

j eremy johnson

First child born

*BOOT CUT FLARE
*STRAIGHT LEGS
.• PRE·WASHED

*100% conoN
Children's &amp; Adult Sizes

$an's

a3oot

S~o.p

Middleport
Open 9-5 Mon. thru Sat. ·

Friday night till 8 p.m.

KLEENEX
PAPER TOWELS

MYLANTA
ANTACID
UQUID
12 01 or

1 Rol "'

27Si.09

tOO's
Mig lrst 12 ti3 ea

l1~lets

...... Da~ ......

~illfT!S
........... ........ .

PURSE

California
rationing

·EX·LAX

By The Associated Press
California muddled through its first 1
da y of odd-even gasoline sales
Wednesday while the Senate approved
the latest version of President
Carter's plan for standby rationing on
a national basis.
·
Reactions to the West Coast plan
were mixed. Lines at some stations
were shorter than they have been, but
lines at others were longer.
~~'Ibere's as much pBnic noW as
there was before because if you don't
get gas today, then you won't be able
to get it until Friday.'' said Nancy
Weisburg , a college student who cut
classes to get in a long line in West Los
PLEDGE OF THE YEAR Angeles.
Dee Spencer '11'1111 named pledge
In other energy developments:
of the year of the Ohio Eta Pbl
-Service station operators and
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi 'for
industry spokesmen Sjlid $1-a..:gallon
19'18-79 at the recent Founders
premium gasoline, already a reality
Day. event. She was presented a
in parts of the country, will spread
trophy during Founden Day acacross most of the rest of the nation by
tivities.'
winter. The White ·House had
predicted that the price barrier
wouldn 'I be broken until spring .
- Amtrak, the -nation's quasi-puolic
passenger rail network, and major
bus companies reported business is
booming,. as motorists look for
alternate means of transportation.
Amtrak's advance bookings for !he
next two weeks are running 40 percent
ahead of last y~ar.
- -Texas Gov. Bill Clements said his
staff is trying IAl develoP a statewide
gasoline distribution plan in case of
fuel shortages similar to those in
Calilornia. "We're talking in terms of
a calculated and planned distribution
system. I don't want anyone to think
WASHINGTON (AP) - Treasury
that we in Texas are going to institute Secretary Michael Blumenthal says
a rationing plan with coupons," the government's ability to adopt an
Clements said.
, energy policy is being threatened by a
The California plan draWn up by shocking refusal of many Americans
Gov. Edmund G. Brown -went intn to believe the energy crisis is real.
effect Wednesday in eight of the
"It is beyond question by
state's 58 counties- home to about 10 .reasonable men that this nation faces
million of the Calilornia 's 15 million energy problems that strike to the
drivers. Other counties are expected core of our political and economic
to institute a similar set up later on. security, and affect the very stability ·
The odd-ev:en system means that, of our ,ociety," he said.
with a few exceptions, drivers wholie
Within minutes after delivering that
license plates end in odd numbers can sober ~essment Wednesday to the
refuel only on odd-numbered days; House Ways and Means Committee,
even-numbered cars can get gas on Blumenthal faced a skeptical
even days. No driver can get more congressman.
Why is it, asked Rep. John Duncan,
than20gallonsatatimeandmotorists
whose tanks are more than baH full R-Tenn., tMt every gasoline shortage
are banned from ''topping off" their seems to disappear as soon as prices
tanks.
rise high enough?
The standby rationing scheme
Blumenthal had no answer. But, he
approved by the Senate would allocate to!d Duncan, the administration
gasoline coupons to individuals based thinks a plentiful s~pply of gasoline
. •on the number of cars or trucks in will be assured as soon as President
their household. There would be a Carter's energy plan goes into effect.
three-vehicle limit per household and,
Energy
Secretary
James
under one of the modifications in the Schlesinger could run into the same
original plan, residents 0 ! states doubts in his scheduled appearance
where average gasoline consumption before the panel today.
is high would get extra coupons.
Carter has announced plans to begin
The Senate's 58-39 vote in favor of on June I phasing out federal controls
Carter's plan came after additional on oil prices in hopes that will raise
last-minute concessions by the prices, force conservation and give
president, who promised no Ito use the the oil industry greater financial
standby power merely to ease long' incentives for increased production.
lines at gasoline stations and who
Akey element of the Carter plan is a
vowed to make more gasoline "windfall profits" tax, which would
available to farms and some take·away a share ofthe revenues that
industries. The House is expected to , would flow to the oil companies as a
take up the plan on Thilrsday.
result of removmg price controls.

Disbelief

hurting

MIAMI (AP) -A Dade County antismoking ordinance was snuffed out by
a slim 820-vote margin in a recount
Wednesday, but the man behind the
"clean air" referendum said voters
haven't seen the last of it.
A recount of · the ballots late
Wednesday showed le'ss than half a
percentage point - 0.43 percent of the
192 204 votes cast - separated the
96,S12 voters opposing the proposed
smoking curtaihnent law from the
95,692 who favored it.
"We are not giving up," said
Charles Freefleld, president of the
Group Against - Smokers' Pollution,
GASP. "We are goinll to trv &amp;Rain by

Chocolilte li&gt;IIM:
16"s

i~77

$.li51 ,,.
Chocobltt or

Y;uult~

··

underway

Smoking
ordinance
snuffed out

!Vlothers

.. l ib Cl~

9~

8.69

getting the issue on the ballot in the
presidential primary .'' Florida's
primary is next March.
But Freefield said he hoped the
Dade County Commission would enact
a smoking curtailment ordinance
first, making another campaign
Wlnecessary .
The recount narrowed an unofficial
1135-vote margin reached after 3,287
absentee ballots were counted earlier
in the day. The recount figures were
expected to he certified Wednesday
night, officials said.
·

SQUADRUN .

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the Middleport Church
o( the Nazarene at 7:21 p.m.
Wednesday for Tina Hoffman, Route
1, Middleport , wlio had become ill
there. She was taken w Holzer
Medical Center.

I

.

s.,R-••iiiiiiiiiO-.~·

WOMEN'S

SUMMER .SANDALS

lE

20% DISCOUNT

LOVE CHESTS

TO ALL

GRADUATES

.

~OTE FROM SUE: To say a kid
fiways means a "young goat" is the
lllme as saying a fly should always be

eaught, rather than zipped or· swatted. "Kid,' ' with Its several deflni·
--tions,lll part of our language, I like It,
no kidding. ' )not "nogoating.''J

BAKER
· FURNITIJRE
Mkldleport, 0.
....
- - '
~

heritage ho~
of shoes

N. 2nd Ave. Middleport, o.
Open Friday
Til8 P .M.

I

eCHINO
eGABARDINE &gt;
• POLY /LINEN
.eDENIM
.
fH!:Sl

A~l SUOOfS l~O

OPT tON"' I

W• 1~

~~

[GifT CfRTIFKAiJI

A 0 PI'I ICU

1'"-1 TIC JPolt 11't&lt;l S TORf S

rNitramt on our own

nuclear '-'would be in dan~er if we now reject confidence in us, as a nation
determined to have detente with the
a tnas::iive nuclear arms race, those
At anQlher point, Carter argued UJat Soviet Union and not to initiate a
C'ountries ... would feel that there was rejection would cause NATO allies to nuclear conflict, whose effects would
flU lonl(er any constraint on them," "be severely shaken
in their first fall on Europe ....
Carter declared.
He asked his audience "to help me
sell to the American people and
directly to the U.S. Senate the
advantages of ratification, and the
devastating disadvantages" if the
treaty is rejected.
"I think UJe most important single
achievement that could possibly take
place during my life time for our
nation is the ratification of UJe SALT
treaty," said Carter.
"Rejection of this treaty, now that it
has been negotiated ... would be a
massive, destructive .blow to world
peaee. ''
Since the dawn of the atomic age;
the preside!'! said, the United States
"has taken ili e lead to put constraints
on th e evolution of nuclear
weaponry."
All such efforts, starting with those
of President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
wt•a iXiru'}'. and initiate the prospect of tins treaty, " he continued.

Seventh annual fishing event
scheduled June 15, 16 and .17
Rolling hills and farm ponds set the
scene for three days of fishing and
related classroom instruction. The
Ohio chapter of The Brotherhood of
Jungle Cock 's seventh annual fishing
weekend is scheduled for June 15 16
and 17 in Rio Grande, Ohio at Bob
Evans Farms and Rio Grande
College.
Th national organization was formed in Maryland in 1940 for the purpose of introducing youth to the art of
fly-fishing and sound conservation
practices. The Ohio chapter's instruction will include fly, spin and
bait casting, as well as rod building,
fly tymg, pond and stream reading,

•BASEBALLS
•SOFTBALLS
•BATS
•GLOVES

fish cleaning and canoeing and water
safety. The instruction will be
provided by the state's Division of
Wildlife, Division of Watercraft and
noted Ohio sportsmen.
Cost Is $30 each for child and sponsoring adult. This includes meals and
lodging for the weekend. Reservations must be made bY May 15 and
should include the $30 fee for each
person. An adult may sponsor up to
three children. The minimtun age 'is
nine years. Send reservations to or for
more-information write: Ohio Chapter, Brotherhood of the Jungle Cock,
League rl. the Ohio Sportsmen 4330
Clime Road North, Columbus,' Ohio

RUN ON IN

43228.

ereo

For a Happier Mother's Day

The Nationwide
Supermarket of Sound'

Saves1oo·
~ , .;
I I~
..
..
~

~-

...._
:. _I
"

&gt;

.. .

. . . . . . .... .

.....

"

. . . . . .. .

~-

10

Sensational Hi-Fi Value!
AM/FM Stereo Receiver
STA~4B by Realistic&lt;!!&gt;

Features the same type of
phase-locked 16op c ircuit as
our best receiver, for audibly
superior FM stereo . Has a
switch for adding an extra
pa ir of speakers, giant edge·
lit dial and meter for easy
tuning, lots more. Luxurious
walnut veneer case. 31 -:Hlat

Reg. 259.95

159
1-

95

.

1_

l~ :Mos rs roRfSI
. VIS4 '

.•

CHARCJE IT

Save 150

80

Give Mom a Complete Hi-Fi System!
• Realistic MC-1400 Bass
• Realistic STA-648 AM/FM
Reflex Speakers with 8"
Stereo Receiver with 18 watts
Woofers
min. RMS per channel at 8
• Realistic LAB-55 Changer
ohms, 20-20,000 Hz, 0.5%
total hannonlc distortion
with Dust Cover, Magnetic
Cartridge •

Reg. 499.80

$349
38°/o Off!

AM~FM

Olglta! Clock Radio

Chronomatlc®-1 13

by

Realistic

Now Mom can rise 'n sh ine to FM, AM
or a buzzzer! Snooze Bar for a few
minutes extra rest , Sleep Switch .
earphone jack. lighted clock. 12~1506

Reg. 39.95

Super Value! Cradle-Style
Telephone Amplifier
Ready to use - nolhing to install or
connect Place phone handset in
cradle and it automati ca lly amplifi es
ca ller's voice . With battery . ea rphone. ,
speaker. 43·230

GIVE MOM THE VERY BEST ON HER SPECIAL DAY-AUDIO GIFTS FROM THE SHACK®

fABRIC
SHOP

VILLAGE PHARMACY

115 W . 2nd
· Pomeroy,
Ohio

· 271 N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

·-

•

WASHINliTON lAP) - President
Carter appealed !Alday for public
support of the new anns limitation
treaty with the Soviet Union , arguing
that its rejection by the Senate would
ill' "a massive , destructive blow to
world peace ."
·
Addressing a White Hou se
breakfast for retailers, Carter said
that if ilie Senate does not ratify the
pact, "we would be looked upon as the
')'armonger" and would suffer a
serious loss of trust among NATC
allies. .
The president , asking for individual
support by the representatives of the
American Retail Federation, also said
a Senate tum-&lt;iown would undermine
his efforts IAl halt the spread of
nuclear weapons.
Emphasizi ng the list was
incomplete , btl cited as potential
nuclear powers such nations as
.Brazil , Argentina, Pakistan, South
Korea , _India , Taiwan and South
Africa .
"If we show now that we reject this
mutually advantageous voluntary

SAT.

20% OFF 60" FABRIC

CARE ·

GIVE LANE

President seeks support on issue

.--MUTI-ifR'S [)AY-..

YOU

a

.

policies

SATURDAY

PO'ITED PLANT and hanger sale
by Meigs County Jaycee-ettes 9 a.m.
'J'HURSDA Y
to I p.m. Saturdsy in front of the New
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, OES, York Clothing House.
BAKE SALE SATURDAY al Ladies
officers, practice at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, Thursday, 8p.m.
Auxiliary of Rutland at the Rutland
FAMILY COVERED dish dinner · DepartmentStore,startlngat9a.m.
sponsored by Parents Without Part:
CIDCKEN Barbecue, Saturday,
ners, will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. starting at II .a.m. at the new fire
at the Gallipolis Mental Health Cen- stat10n at the New Hav~n Fire Depar- ter. Women to bring vegetable, salad bnen~. sponsored by the department
or dessert, men to bring beverages. aUXIliary· .
Everyone to bring own table service.
YARD-~AIE Friday and liaturday,
Meat will be !lrovided. All single part- ram or shine, from 9 a:m. to 4 p.m. at
ners and the1r children invited to at- 238 Condor Street, behind Landmark.
tend.
Spoilllored by Carleton Church youth
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding Club 7 group.
p.m. meeting; PCA building.
'
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7 p.m.
potluck with meat and dessert furnished. Bowling team to be honored.

Mr. and Mrs. David Johnson of Middleport are announcing the . birth of
their first child, a boy, born, March 21
at the Holzer Medical Center: The
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Sorority
baby was named Jeremy David. He Thursday
7:30 p.m. in River Boat
weighed seven pounds, 12 ounces and room at Athens
Colinty Savings and
was 20 Inches long. Maternal grand- Loan. tnstalla.tion of officers. Nellie
parents are Mr. and Mrs. William
Freed, hostesses.
Stephe115on, Pomeroy, and the pater- Brown and June
RAP :
FRIDAY
"Moon Maid," I have a wee bone to !181 grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
RETURN Jonathari Meigs Chapter,
Carl Johnson, Mason, W. Va. Great- Daughters of the American
pick:
You call yourself a "Scotch" grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John Revolution, 1:30 p.m. Friday at the
'II'OOl8JI arid are very uptight about the Lemley,NewCumberland, W.Va.
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber, Rutland,
word "kids" which you say means no
. with Mrs. Dayton Parsons, Mrs.
more than young goats. Having been
Steve Jenkins and Mrs. Lawrence
born In Scotland myseH, may I point
Milhoan as assisting hostesses.
SCHOLARSHIP TO-BE GIVEN
out you are "Scottish," not Scotch · POMEROY CHAPTER 186, OES,
The Pomeroy High School Adlumni
which comes from a bottle.
celebration
of the 75th anniversary ,
announced that
As for your criticism of the "kid" Asociation
7:30p.m.
atthe
Temple.
label U8ed by Helen, we asked our 9- f h e r e P o m e r o y
DANCE at Kera party house at
.
. and 13-year-olds and they said they High School Alwnni.
In order to qualify, a transcript of Ravenswood, W. Va., Friday, 8:30
: certainly prefer this term to "you
: people" - the way youngsters are grades, a recent photo, and a letter p.m. for all single parents. Women to
bring snack food and I}len' beverages._
; referred to in some schools today. stating a list of school ac• Semantically yours, - A SCOTI'ISH complishments must be sent to the
MOM
.
Pomerot High School Scholarship
Association, P.O. Box 2ll2, Pomeroy,
OHio 45769. Transcripts must be sent
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
, no later than May 18.
· · I think that using ''kid" for a child
:. IS in the aame category as using
"girl" for a woman. It's demeaning
; -even II women do call , each other
BARBECUE SET
: "girls." Such womeo have · unTUPPERS PLAINS - The Orange
consciously agreed to being oppresS'•
ed In this way. Women and children Township Volunteer Fire De'partment
will hold a chicken and sparerib
' deserve ~Iter. -KEN D.
· barbecue dinner on Sunday, May 13,
Mother's Day, at the fire house in
'
.: DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Tuppers Plains. The dinner is $3 and
• As a f!lother of six lovely children, I includes choice of meat, baked beans
· frown on them being called "kids." I and cole slaw.
do not have goats. Have you ever
heard the phrase, "Kids of God" ? , MRS. G.T.
RAP:
To me, ''kid'' is a term of endearRANDY WEST
:ment, for any age. I am presently on a
Randy West, evangelist, will be at
Buy A Pair of Shoes
:sjleaking tour of schools to help show the National Guard Armory, Pl. PleaAnd Get A
~young people what liquor and driving sant, May 11 and 13, at 7:30 p.m. The
-can do. ' With me is a pollee officer in Armory is located five miles north of
'hla early 2011 -a very grown-up "kid." Pt. Pleasant next to Two River Ford
.
:we repeatedly use the word - it's Co.
lL REG .
llllll'e personal !him "teen-ager," less
For 7Z PRICE
'childish
than
"children
"
';''Youngsters," etc. The kids. respond.
. My 16-year-old would be alive today
)f he and ~ young driver of the car
GROUP:OF
badn't had three beers. They weren't
,drunk, but they lost control. JUst kids
I
who had so much to live for ... just kills
who aren't here any more... MIKE'SMOM
40%- OFF RP,nee
e~.
READERS ALL:
Large selection and sizes.
_: "The "kid" controversy brought a
Dood of mall, about eveuly divided
~ro and con. And It sent me to the dictionary, as many "anti's" dlnged us
for using slang. I do, often, because I ,
think It expressive, but in this case,
Webster's New Collegiate proves
lbem wrong. One of the,book's definitions for kid is "child, young person,"
ind nowhere ~oes it l'l'fer to the word
as "slang" or nsubstandard."
LEN

SHOW
HER

. ...

11- The Da\IY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Mav 10 197g

10--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. May 10. 1 ~'79
...
.
;
'

fO~.._.,o-&lt;

..

I

'&gt;

''

10

Moll

95
Reg.

15.95

11ems

11 lso IVIlllble II

Rad•o Sheck

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
BA OI'J ISI ON OF T ANOV CORPOAA.TIQ N

Outer1
l ook tor tll !l
s•gn •n you r
n e lg.h borh()O d

! 'I II CL' • MA'I VMtV A 1 1/II OIVIQU AL STOn ES

�••

.'
12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, M~y 10, 1!179

13- The Daily Sentinel , Mitldiepolt-Pomeroy: 0 .. Thursday. Apr. 26, 1!'79

ORSANCO delves
into plant site

..

....
,.

CINCINNATI (AP) - "People
always look for simplistic answers to
comple~
problems ," observed
Warren Braun, chairman of the Ohio
River Valle y Water Sanitation
Commission, · as commissioners
delved into discussion of power plant
siting in the Ohio Rivenegion .
The siting question was a prime
issue at a tw!Hiay meeting ending
here today . The commission was
created in 1948 by eight states lllinois, Indiana , Kentucky , Ohio,
West Virginia, Pemsylvania, Virginia
and New York - to fight pollution in
the Ohio River region .
At that time, water quality was the
commission's main concern. l'hat
emphasis now is shifting to include air
pollution.
"A power plant on one side of the
(Ohio) river could use up all the
available clean air on both sides Of the
river" as determined by federal
Environmental Protection Agency
standards, Boyd Keenan, co-director
oftheOhioRiver Basin Energy Study,
said Wednesday .
Keenan
predicted
that
"communities, states and utilities will

Today
... in the world

compete for the remaining clean air
... if present laws remain on the
books," and that energy development
could be curtailed.
Co-di rector James Stukel told
commissioners perm1ss1on for
building new plants could depend on
the amount of pollution put into the air
hundredS of miles away.
Because of the southwest-tonortheast wind ·currents, plants in
Pennsylvania and Ohio could be
atfected by gener.ating stations i1j
lllinofs and Indiana, Stukel said.
He cited air quality samples over
Wheeling, W.Va ., that contain more
than double the amount of pollutants
allowed by law in neighboring
Pennsylvania.
John Quarles, a specialist in
environmental law, said · the battle·
may boil down to economic
development vs . environmental
protection .
"The difficulty of obtaining permits
for new construction may force
companies · to expand existing
facilities and continue usihg plants
long after they normally would be
retired," Quarles said.

Cults must be
curbed --writers
'•

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP) Two writers who spent abnost five
years researching religious cults say
such groups must be curbed to avoid
greater tragedies than the Jonestown
mass sulcid~urders.
Jim Siegelman and F1o Conway,
authors of "Snapping: America's
Epide111ic of Sudden Personality
Change," told an audience at Bowling
Grteeen State University Tuesday
night that "Jonestown may be a
picnic" compared with what might
happen in other cult groups.
They
said
that
although
investigations into cult practices
might trigger a tragedy, as they did in
Jonestown, the goveriunent should
take a firmer hand in cult control.
"In the past it was easy to discern
techniques of persuasion and
propaganda
from
religious
practices," Ms. Conway said. "Now
we're talking about. a new
configuration that brings into a
confrontation church, ·state and

science."
The two listed the Rev. Sun Myung
Moon's Unification Church, Hare
Krishna, the Divine Light Mission,
The
Way International and
Scientology as the top five cults in the
U.S. More than 3.~ million Americans
'
belong to cults, they estimated.
The five !ll'e distinguished by a

Fire injures five
PITTSBURGH tAP) - · Flames
leaped from manholes, burning
five people, as a fiery electrical
failure at a substation in Pittsburgh'sOakland section left
2o,OOO homes an\1 businesses.
without power for a short time.
Electridty to most of the affe cted . Duquesne Light Co.
customers restored Wednesday
evening. But power outages were
reported in several locations
later in the evening.
Three people were hospitalized
and two treated for burns when
manhole covers blew off the
street and flames spewed onto a
sidewalk along Forbes Avenue.

Trial continues
DAYTON, Ohio (AI.') - The
murder trial of Eugene Gall of
Hillsboro continued today, with
the prosecution basing much of
its evidence on statements that ·
Gall made to police.
Gall, convicted earlier in
Burlington, Ky. of the rape slaying of a Cincinnati-area girl,
is charged with kidnap, rape and
murder in connection with the
October 1977 slaying of Beth Ann
Mote, 14, daughter of the Rev.
Doris Mote, an Episcopal priest.

Pilot dies

pro~ of mind control, used to cause
"snapping" in their members, the
CHARDON, Ohio· (AP) - A
authors said.
Union Lake, Mich., man was
Snapping is the term the pair used
killed when his Beach E 185 twinto describe the sudden change in a
engine plane crashed into a gu)ly
person's mjnd when he becomes a cult
and burned in Geauga County.
member. Former cult members
Authorities identified the pilot
described their experience by saying ,
and only occupant as John
"something just snapped" in their
Bradford Knight, 31.
minds, they said.
Positive identification had been
Interest in cults has increased
delayed until late Wednedsay
sharply since last fall, the two said,
because the body was badly
Prosecution of the Synanoo cult an
In the crash, according to
burned
California,
U.S.
House
of
the
Ohio
Highway Patrol. The
Representatives hearings on the
crash
occured
about midnight
Unification Church and the Guyana · Tuesday.
tragedy changed the skepticism with
Witnesses . said the aircraft
which their book was initially greeted,
buzzed
a house where Knight's
they said.
parents, Andrea and Jcibn D.
Knight, live a short lime before it
plunged to the ground. The patrol
said the house was about a half
mile from the crash site, about
SCHOOL CONCERT TONIGHT
eight miles south of Chardon.
Meigs Junior and Senior High
School vocal and band students will be
presented in concert at 7:30 this
evening in the high school auditorium.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Vocal students will be ·directed by
Senate committee has r"'=&lt;lmMrs. Paige Hunt. Randy and Alan
mended passage of a bill
prohibiting the permanent
Hunt will direct insrumental students.
storage ohluclear wastes in Ohio,
at least prior to January 1983.
The vote late Wednesday night
David Uvingstone, the Scottish
in
the Energy and Public Utilities
missionary and explorer, died in 1873.
Committee was 5-1 withSeii. Paul
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, oppdsed. He
said the legislatitm is " overly
provincial" . Pfeifer said Ohio
already has nuclear power
plants, with more coming on line,
and that it is wrong for Ohioans to
expect to store the wastes they
produce in other states.

Eight more
'l'l•' HRAN
Iran , AI-'J _ A Jewish shopkeeper, who refused to, be
•
·
' and seven identified . "You're not-going to get me
prominent
Iranian
Jew
Moslems, including a wc•ithy involved ."
industrialist, were executed
.!ring
Some members of the Jewish
squads Wednesday .
community
said
El ~ han,i,an
Iran's Jewish • community was apparently ':"as picked out smce he
shaken by the execution of Habib ~ was very r1ch and .someone ..h~d a
Elghanian, a 69-year-old entrepreneur pe~sonal grudge a~a~st hun . They
and former head of the Tehran Jewish satd they beh~ved 'th1s was not g.omg
Central Committee.
to be the_be~.anmng of trouble for our
Radio Tehran, which announced the commumty.
.
.
. . ,
latest executions, said he was charged
Khomeant, des~lte hiS anti-ZiOnism,
with "co ntact with Israel and has pledged relig10~s freedon~ for
Zionism." The eight killings Jews and other Iraruan mmor~t1es.
Wednesday .and 21 on Monday brolight . After the lsl31111c re~?lution, a
the total to 199 since the monarchy fell JewiSh group called the Society of
in February.
·
Intellectual Jews:• suddenly emerged
In · Jerusalem, the
Israeli and announced 1ts support for the
government said in a communique : revolt 1!1 an ~pparen_t attempt to head
"The state of Israel condemns this off anb.JewlSh senhment.
Several.days after Aya'?llah Morte~
spilling of blood and turns to every
state which supports the existence of Motaharl ' a clo~e Khomeml
human rights to condemn this act ... " colleague, was assassanatated ear~er
An estimated 10,000 Jews have left . th1s month the group held a memorial
Iran since Ayatollah Ruhollah serv~ce. at a Tehran synagogue. T~
Khomeini toppled Shah Mohammad officiating rabb1 repeated the Jews
·•
gun
· e Before the allegiance to
!raman Islamic
Reza Pa hi av1sre
.
R bli
revolution there were about 7~,000 to
'!&amp;~ ~~althy Moslem industrialist
80,000 Jews an the country.,
"We are very frightened," said one

Russians to purchase 1.15 million metric tons of corn

shot Wednesday was Rahim Ali
Khorram , a millionaire who ·
established the huge Khorratn
amusement park outside Tehran. The
official Pars news agency said he
owned casinos . Islam oppose s
gambling.
· According to the newspaper
Kayhan, witnesses at Khorram's trial
accused him of throwing a poor man
into a lion 's cage. Tiley said the man
died after the lion had chewed on him
for 3\2 hours.
·

WASHINGTON I AP) - After weeks
of ·rumors that it soon would bounce
into the U.S. gr~in market again in a
big way, the Soviet Union has sealed a
huge order for U.S. corn, one of the
biggest in recent years.
The Agricult\ll'e Departmen t sa id
Tuesday the new sale is for 1.15
· million metric tons of corn. to be
delivered this year.
Officials said the saie was reported
to USDA by priva te exporting
companies who arrange their own

contracts with Lhe Soviet Union ami · A metric ton is about 2,205 powrds
oth er co untries.
and is equal to 39.4 bushels of corn or·
Agriculture
Secretary
Bob ~6.7 bushels of wheat.
Bergland also announced the new
Th e combined lola! sold to the
sales at a news conference in Chicago. Sov iet Union so far this year - abo ut
According. to the department, the 9.4 million metric Lons - compares
Soviets now have bought about 6.89 with around 14.8 million metric ton s
million metric tons of corq and 2.53 the Soviet Union ordered in ·lhe
million metric tons of wheat for agrcement'ssecond year which ended
deli very through Sept. 30, the end of last Sept. 30.
the third year of a marketing
Under the pact, the Soviets are
agreemenl lhal call s for Russia to buy committed to buying a t least 6 million
minimum amounts of grain annually. metr ic tons of the two grains each
year and up to a maximum of B million
metric tons if it chooses.
But if more than B million metric
tons is wan led, the United States must
give its approval. Last fall , the Soviets
SATURDAY, MAY 12 AT 1D:30 A.M.
were told they could buy up to 15
million metric tons in the third year if
ANTIQUE FURNITURE, GLASS. CHINA
they chose, the same' as in 1977-78.
Only corn and wheat are covered by
&amp; OLD ITEMS
the
agreement - a five-year pact that
Tiike St. Rt. '0 to McConnelsville, Ohio . Turn onto St . Rt . 78 west
will end Sept . 30, 1961.
through Malia, 0. Stay on St. Rl. 78 lor 3 miles out of Malia toward
Glouster -turn on Co. Rd. 47 to second farm .
In addition to corn and wheat , the
Hiving sold farm will sell the following antiques and ~ld items of Mrs.
Soviet Union has bought about 900,000
Clsh Clements which have beenin the family for 111 years. Mrs.
metric tons of U.S. soybeans and 6,300
Clements has lived on this farm for 74 years .
metric tons of rice in 1978-79, the
depa&lt;tmenl
said.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE &amp; OLD ITEMS : Cherry corner cupboard ;
Officials said the new sale of 1.15
Grandfather's clock purchased 111 years ago 17 fl. lall) ; faint ing
couChi ice box ; doll cradle ; child's cradl e; lg. spinning wheel ; ant.
million metric tons of corn - about
beds ; old hobby horse ; walnut stands; plank bottom rocker; dropleaf
4~.3 million bushels - was one of the
table; hat rack; oak wardrobe w·can1ing at top ; 6 walnut cane seated
largest
at one time to the Soviet Union
chairs; organ stool ; rocker ; p·lank bottom c.h airs ; clock shelf ; old
·aeckwith organ (made in Chic ago) w-mirrors &amp; carving at top ; wall
since the five-year agreement was put
mirrors ; oak high front bed w·carving at top ; aSt. old chairs ; oak
into effect.
chest-drawers w -mirror ; old tr unks; several stands; blanket chest ;
The dcparlrnent did not say why the
Iron beds; old quilts ; old books ; very old hanging lamp W-m ilk glass
Soviet Union ordered so much corn at
base (elec.); fluting iron ; 2 stereoscopes w -pictures; walnut chest drawers w -revolving mirror, white knobs &amp; casters; deacon bench,
one time, but one source close to the
needs rockers ; oil lamps; extr-a nice unusual bed ; c_hest w - ~ dra~e~s
transactions said the delayed spring
W·teardrop pulls; Lincoln ro cker; Boston rock~r; h1gh cha1r ; ~h1\d s
plantings of the U.S. crop may be a
focker ; Aladdi.n lamp ; old pictures-frames ; qu11tmg frames; y1ctrola
reason, if "the Rus~ians think prices
W·horn ; mirrors; washstand w -teardrop pulls ,· oak spool cabmet W·2
might climb because of a short (U .S.) ·
drawers; oversTuffed couch w ·oak back &amp; arms that drop down; house
shutters; wagon seat &amp; wheels ; wagOn bed ,· old wagon w ·wooden
harvest" this fall.
. .
wheels cut down; iron kettles; old magazil')es; chu~ch pew; wooden
Another
reason
may
be that the
lawn furniture; croc;:ks, Iars , jugs, salt jar, s1one c~urn, etc .; glass
record Soviet grain harvest of last
churn; granite; flatwall cupboard; drop.leaf table ; trnware ; 12•14 fl.
year probably included abovewool rug w·pad w-matching throw rugs, l1ke new, etc.
SPECIAL: 1950 CHEVROLET 1/ 2 TON TRUCK, 3 SPO. TRANS .,
average losses and additiOn~! U.S.
. DARK BLUE, RUNS EXCELLENT. ELGIN 15 JEWEL GOtO
grain is needed to help bwld up
WATCH . HAMPDEN17JEWELGOLDWATCH .
. .
..
,
.
stockpiles.
GLASS, CHINA, POTTERY, ETC. : Carnival ! deep drshes; prtch~rs ;
Still another factor, the source sa1d,
crcker bowl ; lot old chin8; Austrian china; Pink &amp; green depresSIOn;
Goofus ; German china; some P&lt;&gt;llery, elc .
asking not to be identif.ied, is that
MODERN FURNITURE : Ne.w large heating slove !bollled gas wplanting in the Sov1et Umon also has
controls); 2 pc. living room suite; elec. refngerator ; k!tchen table w·6
been delayed b~ . ~ad weather · th1s
chairs; pots, pans, dishes, utensils, etc.; sewing macme ; chest deep
spring, perhaps ra1sang concern about
· freezer, etc.
·
.
HORSE DRAWN MACHINERY, ETC. : Braking plow; cultrva 1ors;
the .t979 harvest potentiat:
hillSide plow; fodder cutter; drill ; spring tooth harrow ; wheat cradle;
WASHINGTON (AP) - Over the
aluminum ladders ; hay ladders, etc .
.
.
objections
of
the
Carter
Thl~ Is only a partial listing of !his all day sale. Clrp thos ad for date&amp;.
adrninlspoation , the House Agriculture
directions. The. ClemenTs have owned this farm for 111 years. T-her_
e
will be someting from this large country home sale for everyone. Ant1·
Committee has voted to expand
ques are In e&gt;ecellent condition .
·
various
rural · housing
and
·Nothing shown before day of sale. L.unch on premises. "!erms · cash ~r
development
loan
programs
by
check w-posilive ID&lt;Iay of sale. No! responsible lor accodents.
almost
$2
billion.
Own'r - Mrs. Cash Clements
Miss Freda ClemeMsln charge of sale.
President Carter had asked that
Auctioneers - Bill Jines &amp; Randy Newsom
ceilings for the programs be reduced
Phone 614-557·3411 or 614-557·3133
by $400 million.

PUBLIC AUCTION

SOFTBAlL LEAGUE
The MelC~~ County Mlnlsietial
Association is lnlereated in forming a
church softball league in Meigs County.
Those interested are asked to attend a meeting at 7 p.m. next Wednesday, May I6, at the Ptmeroy Uni~
Methodist Church. Infmnatlon will
be presented at that time. Churehes
are asked to send a ~'~!presentative to
the meeting or call9112-6544 for ad!ll·
tionallnformation.
~

Sports ~oris
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - Trinity
College will be the site of a June
"
match between · the world champion
U.S.S.R. men's volleyball team and a
U.S. squad.
The Soviet team, which begins its
seven-city American tour with the
Hartford game, took the world title in
Italy last September and the silver
Hobo ...
medal at the Montreal Olympics. The
a comfortable
Russians are favored to win the gold
city sandal with
medal in volleyball in Moscow in 1980.
The American team, which is
a great fashion
training for the 1980 Olympics,
flavor. Leather
includes six California residents.
upper, cork
They are Paul Sunderland of Malibu,
Don Shaw and Dave Ol!iright of U&gt;s
stacked heel.
Angeles, Bryan . Carpenter of San
Diego, Darrell Richards of
Colors:
Bakersfield and Joe Battalia of
Pasadena. Other team members are
White or Bone
Doug Beal and Rich Duwelius of
Cleveland, Ohio, and Mark Waldie of
Wichita, Kan.
NEW YORK (AP)- Mike Caldwell
of the Milwaukee Brewers and Ken
Forsch of the Houston Astros have
MOTHER'S DAY-MAY 13th
been na!I1ed the . April winners of
Baseball Magazine's Acliievement of
the Month Award.
·
Forsch was selected for his no-hitter
against Atlanta on Aprll '7 while
Caldwell was chosen for his string of
BETTY OHLINGER
2~ consecutive scoreless Innings
102 E . MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
against the New York Yankees • IL.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiiiilll
Boston Red Sox and Baltimore Orioles
·'
during the month.

M OFF ALL DRESS SANDAlS

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

'

t\grtt·ul tu re
~ec rcta ry
llub
llergland , in a letter to the ·panel,
upposcd uuth those mcreases and an
increase in the siz~ of rural towns
eligible for aid with their community
faci lities a nd a section setting aside 25
percent of the fanning loans for poor
farmer s arid ranchers.
Under the House bill , passed
Tuesday by voice vote, up Lo $5.82
billion a year could be appropriated
for the various programs. compared
to this year's estimated $3.93 billion in
loans and guarantees and lhe $3.&gt;2
billion sought by Carter.
'
Later . Tuesday . the Senate
Agr iculture Committee passed a
companion measure with .program
ceilings totalling $2.29 billion above
Carter's request, bul without the other
sections Bergland opposed.
"That 's too much for us to absorb"
with pr esent sta ff , Assistant
Secretary Alex Mecure sa id just
before the Senate panel voted. Only
two Republicans ba cked him as the
bill was approved 12 to 2.
None of those totals incl ud es

'

disa ster-relief loans made by the
Farmers Home · Administration,
which reached $3.4 billion in fiscal
year 1978 and are estimated at $578
million this year_.
.The programs ' spendmg authorities
expire this faW Th e bil\s would extend
them until Oct. I, 1982.
" Our recommended levels '... are
ap 1&gt;ropriate and sufficient to carry on
a s uccessful Farmers Home
Administ1·ation program," Bergland
sairl.
The agency needs flexibility in
deciding how much aid to keep in
reserve to help new farmers and those
with net incomes below the poverty
line, he added.
'The House measure would open the
$250 million community facilities loan
program, now limited to places of
10,000persons or less, to towns with up
to 20.000 residents. It also would raise
the cap on the program to $:i00 million.
Rep. Edward Madigan, R-111., sa id
the number of eligible communities
would increase from 18,467 to about
19,600.

'

ll also se ts an annual ceiling of $1
billionon ruralwaterandsewer loans,
compared to $700 million ~ught by
Carter, and $100 million for the water
conservation and development
, programs, on which he wants a t60.~
million cap.
· WASHINGTON (AP J - Wet fields
are still keeping farmers behind in
their corn planting this spring, says
the Ag riculiure Department.
A$ of May 6, an estimated 13 percent
of the nation 's corn acreage was
planted, compared to ~ percent a
year ago and the average progress for
the date of 35 percent , the department
said Tuesday.

NEED A
PROGRAM

Sports briefs..•
DUESSELDORF, West Germany
(AP) - Australia completed a 3-0 rout
of the U.S. men Wednesday by
sweeping the decisive third set in
doubles at the Nation 's Cup Tennis
Tournament.
John Alexander a nd Phil Dent beat
Arthur Ashe and Stan Smith 7-6-in the
tiebreaker. In other matches, Kim
Warwick whipped Edd ie Dibbs 6-2, 6-2
and Alexander beat Ashe 6-3 , 6-7, 6-4.
Italians Adriano Panatta and Paolo
Bertolucci teamed up to whip Jose
Luis Clerc and Ricardo Cano of
Argentina 6-4, 6-7, 6-3 for a 2-1 victory
over the Latin Americans in a Group
A match.
In other Group A matches, Spain
virtually eliminated Britain's chances
of a strong finish with a 2-1 win.
RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - Topseeded Chris Lewis of New Zealand
crushed France's Jerome Venier 6-4,
6-2 in a professional tenni s
tournament.
1n other third-round action, Ivan
Molina of Colombia easily defeated
Warren Maher of Australia 6-3, 6-2
and Charlie Owens defeated Richard
Legendre of France 6-3, IH
Also, Rejean Genois of Canada
outlasted Bobby Smith 2~. G-3. 6-4:

John t\uslin trounced Chris Gunning
&amp;-I, &amp;-1 ; Trey Waltke defeated Telso
Saconondi of Brazil 6-2, 6-0 and
Michael Grant beat Willem Prinsloo
of South Africa 2-6, 6-3, 6-4.
ROME ( AP ) - Top-seeded Chris
Evert Lloyd breezed by Janet
Newberry 6-2, &amp;-1 Wednesday in the
second round of the · $100,000 Rome
Women's Open Tennis Tournament.
In other matches Tracy Austin ,
seeded fourth , defeated South Africa's
Yvonne Vermaak 7·5, 6-1 and
unh eralded Ivanna Ma'druga of
Argen.tina upset defending champi~n
Regina Marsikova of Czechoslovakia
6-t , 7.JJ.

Cat! us . We can provide an il
lustrated talk or film presentation for your group af no charge
The programs deal with varl
aspects of the energy situati
and ure designed to encourage a
question and answer period. One
phone number is 992-3788.

Ohio Power
Company

~--~~~~~~~~~::":~"::~"':"~~~~~~--,

DUE .TO MOVING TO OUR N_E"''
' "
LOCATION WE WILL BE CLOSED
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY, MAY 14th &amp; 15th,
WE WILL BE OPEN IN OUR NEW
LOCATION THURSDAY, MAY 17th
FOR REGULAR BUSINESS. HOURS,

DR. JAMES P, CONDE

·Pas882e

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

THE RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

In the state of Ohio, at the close of business on March 31, 1979 published in responae to call
made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title I2, United States Code, Section 161.

WASHINGTON
(AP)
Ohioans use an average 60.~
gallons of gasoline per month per
vehicle , according to the U. S.
Department of Energy.
The amount would be the basis
for determining ' rationing
allotments for drivers in the state
if the latest version of President
Carter's standby plan for
gasoline rationing is put into
effect.
Administration energy officials
have said they would not consider
rationing unless a fuel shortage
on the order of 20 percent occurred. Thus, Ohioans could
expect a monthly ration of 48.4
gallons of gas - a 20 percent
decrease of the 80.5 gallon figure ·
- if rationing became necessary.

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
SEE&gt; US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR PRICES. QUALITY
MATERlA.L AT REASONABLE PRICES.
CASH&amp;CARRY
WE
PRICES
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION .

Walkout ended
Cincinnati police Wednesday
ended a one-day walkout to urge
better safety measures for officers, but municipal employees
In three other cities remained off
the job, in two cases defying
court orders to return to work.
A Worcester, Mass., Superior
Court judge ordered about 1,000
striking city employees back to
work Wednesday amid reports of
harassm'-'!'t by union members.

Middleport, 0.

992·2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to 3:00 Saturday

.

'

The Biggest Name
in LiHie Computers TM

'

Now! Off-the-Shelf Delivery on
Low Cost Personal Computers!

Charter number 9815

• TRS-80 1979 Prices Har9 Nor
and WILL NOT be Increased
• Now Used In Offices , Schools ,
Hospitals, Labs, even at Home!
• No Prior Knowledge ol Computing
is Required to Use the TRS -80
• TRS -80 Is the World 's Most
· Wldety.iJsed Small Computer
• Designed and Manufactured in
the USA by Radio Shack

National Bank Region Nunnber 4

Statement of Resources and Llabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from depository institutions . . ...... , .. , . .. ........ .. .... ....... 61i5,(D!o(l0
U.S. Treasury securities ..... .. ........... ... ; .. ........................ . 1,096,000.00
Obligations of States and political
·
·
.
subdivisions In the United States . ......... ........ .. ..... ... . .. .. , . , ...... 303,000.00
. All other securities .. .'., ......... ... . ; ...................... .. ......... ... .. 8,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ...... ...... .. . .. .. , ..... .... . . .. _. ........ ... .. 650,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ... . ... , ... ...... ... 7,909,000.00
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses .......... ..• ..... .... . . 103,000.00
Loans, Net .. .................... . ... .. ..... . .' . . . .......... .. ........ . 7,806,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
·
other assets representing hank premises .... . .. .... . : . ...... . .... .. ....... . '""••""''·w
All other assets ....... ... .... . .... ..... ..... . ........................ .
I--+- TOTAL ASSETS .. .. . : ... . .. ........ .. ..... ..... . ................... ..
Demand deposits of in!lividuals,
.
prtnshps., and corps ....... . .... ... ... ... ......... .. . ......... ......... 1,952,000.00
Ill
Time and savings deposits of Individuals, ·
.
;:::
prtnshps.,andcorps . ... ........ ... .... . . . .... . ..... . .............. .... 7,«m,ooo.oo
Deposits of United Stales Government .. ....... ... ............. , .... . : ....... 90,000.00
Deposits Of States and political
·
·
·
• Silb\livislons in the United States ........ .......... .................. ..... . 840,000.00
Certified and officers ' checks ....... . ... .. ... .. ......... . .................... 28,000.00
Total Deposits .. ~ . ...... . .... .. , .·. ....... . ....... .. ·.. .. ....... .......... 9,773,000.00
Total demand deposits . ........ . . . . .. ..... : .............. .... 2.t45,1!0Q,OO
Total time and savings deposits .. . ... ...... . ...... . . ... ...... 7,328,000.00
.,.--+- TOTAL LJABIIJTIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures J •••.. •.•• U73,000,00
a. No. sharedauthori2ed 5,000 (par value)
•
.
--b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value ) ......... , .. . ...... ·. . ............ 125,000.00
Surplus .. .. '.. . ........ ............... ... ......... , ....... ... . .. ........ .". 125,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
.and other capital reserves . .. .. .. . . . . . . .. . .. .. . .. . . .. .. . . .. . . .. .. .. ..... 636,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ~ .......... ... ................... . ........... 886,000.00
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL. , .......... ·•.... •• .. . .. .. .. I0,659,000.00
--,..,+-- Average for 30 calendar days (or calendat month) ending with report date: · .
Total deposlt,s ................. , . ...... .. . . .......... . . . .- ........ ., ... 9,7116 000.00
1
Q
I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-ruuned bank do
.hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and cor·
reel to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John T. Wolfe
0
April2JJ, 1979 .
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been ~amlned by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
!Jelief is true and correct. .
·
'
.

..
' I

-.
B1g
12-lnch
Screen

Cassette
Recorder

1ft

.i-..
-.c..

SATURDAY- MAY 12th
UNTIL 4:30 P.M.

"FAMILY OUTING''
OF
RESEARCH &amp; DEVELOPMENT DEPT.
AND
SERVICES DEPARTMENT

OF

UNION CARBIDE TECH. CENTER

Fully Wired and Tested, NOT a Kit
TR S- 80 is the world 's fi rst mass-produced complete
m'icrocomp ut e r system . It includes it s own 12" video monitor.
It 's U.L. approved . lt's ·fully ex pandable in power, languag e
an d its ab il ily to acc e pt printers . disk drives, telephone
inte rfa ce s . voice synthesizers and a wid e range o f off-our-shelf
soft ware . At less than th e pri ce of a Leica cam e ra o r mo s t
vide o tape reco rders , TR S-80 cou ld w~ll be th e most satisfying
Investment you 've ever made fo r y o ur bus iness. trade . educa tion
o r mere ly t he pure pleasur e of u nders ta n d ing th e
l ec hn o log y that' s "tak ing over" our world . ,

al

t:"'
-~
::::a2~
u

Add accessori es and T RS-80 will rea lly s urpr ise you . It'll kee p
a 100-acco unt Genera l Ledger w ith u p to 180 0 e ntries p er
month . It can conlro l a 1000- il em inven t o ry . It ca n ca lc ul a te a nd
prin t pay c h ec ks . And , with a littl e ima g inat ion . y o u can c reate
you r own co mputer pro g rams . Like the surgeo n who us es
his TR S-80 to ca lc ulat e d e li ca t e cornea trans pla,nts .

t 0-Key
Calculaior
Keypad

53-Key
Prolessoonal
Keyboard

Level-2 16K TRS-80
System as Shown*

An Incredibly Useful Gift

z

=
:i

CHARGE IT {MOST STORES/

...

:.:·'

Bu s iness men, p rofessio n als . teachers and s tud ents by the te n s
o f th ousa nds have laken advantage of Radi o S h ack's
microc o mput e r pri ce breakthrough, in some cases wa iting
mon th s fo r d el ive ry . Now th e wait ing -exce pt for a few per i ~ h.eral
items - is ove r. You ca n get into com pu ti ng WITHOUT DELAY
at over 7000 Radio S ha c ks and deal e r stores aro und the.
wor ld . And we se rvice wh a t ¥Je sell!

Th e system s h o wn here ca n' h e lp teach yo u to a nalyze investme nts,
manage the bu dge! of a h o u seh o ld or small busi n ess, teac !l
s ludents m at h o r other subjects . It can a lso ca ta lo g co ll e c t1ons
of
kinds . Or e nt ~rt a in you by playi ng chess!

c

PARK· RESERVED

.•

•

P.S. As a gift for your dad, grad . sludent . ev en your
12-year-ofd wh izki d durinG lh e long hot su mmer, th rnk
abou t TR S-80 . Or , to put it anolher way . can you aff ord
no t to? Gel a fre'e demonstrati on and TRS -80 catal og at
ou r s to re nea rest yo ~'

.sgas

* Lcvol r e l!~rs

ma m1.11 and gmnc:

casscttC. 4K

ssgg
Mos t •tems

1lso avl •lab le at

Earl Norris

Rad•9 Snack

SILVER BRIDGE .PLAZA

Carol R. Norrts- Directors
Freeland S. Norris

Dealers.
Look lo1 t h1s
J1gn

••

m you r

..I.

_L .

ltadiO
l'llaek

PRICE S MAY VARY AT INDIVlOUAL STORES

M ~'

.

I

'·

I:

·:i·

nerg t1barhood.

!lA DlVlSION OF TANOY CORPORATION

'

' ~ .::,

s:ystem or111tS (opl!Ona l extra) 10·koy pad .

FOR A DEMONSTRATION AND. OUR FREE COMPUTER CATALOG, COME IN NOW!

. . .,..

.' ......
. ...

Level-1 4K TRS-80
Starter System*

to, vc rs•on of OASIC ll!hguagc . Levcl-2 is ta ster, (l10re complete.
Level and men•ory can be c"pandcd All sys tems •nclude 232 -pa\le users

CAMDEN
PARK
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
Closed

...

Put Radio Shack's TRS-BO™ to Work for You Today!

Rate determined

923 5. lrd Ave.

On the farm front

�14- The Daily Sentine.l, Middleport-P om e roy, 0 ., T hur sday, Apr. 26. 19·, o

J1ffj'lf.\.ft ~1}

.

Your Best Buys ·Are .Found in the Se:Qtinel Classifieds
'

Help Want!!d

WANT AD

t:, Word.lloc Und ~r
CaJh
Charge

:I days

!days
edays

1.00

1. 25

1.50
1.110

1.90
2.2S

! .00.

! .75

Each word over the minimum
Ui wordi!J 4 cents per word per
dly. Ads running other than con·
secutive days will be rhar!!:ed at
the 1day rate.

In ~Ory ; Card ol Thanks
and Obltlllry; 6 cents per Word,
$3.00 minimum. Cash ili ad·

......

Mobile Home sales ~nd Yard
art'! ~~;ccep~ only with
cash with order. 25 cent t'tlarge
for ads canying Box Nwnber ln
Care QlTht Sentinel
~~olea

The Ptlblisher_ reserves the

. right to ftlit or

~jed

any ads

deemed objectional. The
PUblllher will not be reaponsible
for more than one incorrect in·

sertlon.

Pllone 992-21~

MALE oR female . full or port
time position . Must be 18

years of age or older . Stop or
col i the City limits. 748 N. 2nd
St ., Middlepo,t. 992-6202 .
RN'S AND LPN's. Good salary.

excellent fringe. benefits . shift
di lfernetloL Contact : Parson·
nel
Deportment ,
Pleasant
Volley Hsopitol . Vol ley Drive.
Point Pleasant. W6st Virgin ia
25550. An equal opportunity ·
Affirmative action employer
M' F.

Yard Sale

NOTICE
WANT-AD

IAIJJERTISING
DEADUNES
Mohday
Noon on Saturdly

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale.
· Wednesday . Thursday and Friday . 9:30-4:00. Trailer ac rosS:
f_rom gas station, Salem St . .
Rutland . Truck tire and rim ,
motorcycle tire s , ro ller
saktes , ice skates, golf shoes.
baby clothes and antique
glassware .

Friday afternoon .

YARD SALE . Bill Cross'
residence at Racine. Ohio. Friday. May 11 . 8·4. Wood burning sotve, curtains; women's
clothing. girl s' clothes .a nd
girl's jeans , pool table, od~s
and ends.

Card of Thanks

YARD SALE . Broadway in
Racine. Some children's and
adult's clothing. Soturday 9 to
5.

Tuesday
tttru Frt_
day
4P.M.
the day before publicaUon
' Sunday

4P.M.

THE FAMILV of Anno E. Kro-

jcovic woukJ like to thank al l
the friends for their prayers .

masses, cards and flowers
during the recent loss of our
lo.wed one. May God Bless . all

of you.
Peter Krajcovic ond Fomily .
I HU.\\Bl Y and aincerely wont
to
thon'"k
my fr l•nds ,
neighbors, relatives, for the ·
pr"Jers. cards. letters, visits
an calla you gave me during ,
mr, stay in University Hospital.
A. so, thank• to my !'l•ignbors
tor the many little chore5 they
did for us. Continua to keep
me In your proyera for my up
coming 5Urgary soon. r d a"·
preciate it and thanks again.
Mr• .
Avery · {Helen"'e )
Goeglein.

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
6'30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY .
LAST WEEK of complete sell·
out of household goods. Stop
by 761J laurel St., Middleport.
FlEA MARKET apoces. Corner
Rt. 7 and 33. Saturday and
Sunday.
IEGINNIJ'IG MAY 1&lt; . Buying
botterys. brass. aluminum.
copper , lead . Meigs Metals,
Rt. 7 and33.

LEGAL N'DTICE
Gerald V.iolet real estate
in Tuppers Plaim, , Ohio . is
offered for sa le . Appraised
in the estate at S20.000 .00 .
Pric e reduc ed . For in .
forma tion call Fred W .
Crow . Attorney at Law ,
Pom e ro y . Ohio . Te lepho n e
992 ·2692 or Virg il Roush
985 -3379 .
(SJ 10, 11 , 13 , 14 , 15 , 16, 6tc

GARAGE SALE . Thurs. and Fri
at Mark Beegle residence. 2
miles above Racine Dam. Lots
of maternity. infant. children's
and ladles' clothes .

YARD SAlE. Carlton Youth
Group. 238 Candor St. Fridav
and Saturday. May 1_1 and 12.
9-4.

TRUCKS , 2 tan 1973 and 1 Y~
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft .
bo~Ces. Phone 992-6206 or
992·6173.

WANT TO buy; old 45 and 78
phonograph records . Coli
992-6370 ar Contact Mart in
Furniture.

1978 1/ r- SUZUKI dirt bike 250
RM . Like new . Cecil Brinager. ·
949-2387.

wan.ted to Buy
CASH FOR junk ca,rs. 24 hour
wrecker service . Frye's ,
Rutland. OH . 7-42·2081 .
CHIP WOOD . Poles moK.
diameier 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bu nd led slob . $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co. , Rt . 2, Pomeroy.
992-2689.

WANT TO buy ; old jewelry.
Call 992-5262 or write Kay
C~il . ~ S. 2nd, Midd feport.
OH.

Auto Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAl SCOUT
21 .000 mi les, tully equipped.
air. wench, etc., e~Ccellant
condition. m -2121 .
1974 GMC JIMMY , P.B.. P.S.,
A.C.. 2· wheel delve. $1725.
Call992-3580.
1972 DODGB DART . 51 ,000
miles . Uses regular gas. GE
electric stove. 992-2075.

IB FOOT FRANKLIN complng
trailer. Reese hitch Included.
742-2874.

. For Rent
Pets for Sale
RISING STAR l&lt;enn81s . boar~
ding and grooming, all
breeds. Cheshire, 367-0292 .
HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
ond
harness . Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves . 614-698-3290.

Wfl.~t-11 IN HEF&lt;e.,
OR IS IT

ME

OLD COINS, "ocket watches,
class rings , wedding bonds.
diamonds. Gold or sliver . Call
RoerWam1ley , 742-2331.

-

HUGE YARD Sale. 3 lamlly .
1977 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE can·
1 y, mile from Cheshire ori Rt.
55.4 . May 11 and 12. 9 til ? · vertab le . 1500 cc. Good gas
13 ,000
miles.
Sears boot, motor and trailer. ·mileage .
'192·5760.
Tools , furnituJ ft , swivel
rocker , Avan , curtains ,
1972 DART SWINGER 2 doo, ,
bedspread, all sires children's · 225 Slant Six engine . auto ..
and adu lt's clothing , toys, ki t·
69,500 miles . Uses regular
chen. utens ils. dishes. ant i·
gas . $1495 . Call between 6
ques, much more.
ond9, 992-7177.
YARD SALE . Nice clothing.
1973 OLOS CUTLASS Suprema.
baby thrU adults . Baby .Items ,
Good condition. 985-3341 .
swing-o-motic . wa lk er and
1975 GRANADA GHIA. 22 ,000
etc. Records. topes, r~order ,
miles. Michelin tires . air, AMtables and other nice items.
FM stereo ·tap•. EJI[cellent.
May 10th thru May 13th. 10 am
Donald
Foglesong.
til7 pm . Up behind J &amp; R Spo't
394-773·5274 .
Shop on left . Phone 992-7314 .
1972 DODGE POLARA. $700.
YARD SALE . Saturday 12th on742-2451.
ly. 9!30 to 5:00. 606 Main St.,
Racine . Carroll Teaford's.
1971 VW BUG . Price $6.50.
992-7841.
YARD SALE. Thursday and Friday. :118 Willaim St. , Mid1974 MUSTANG II , • cyl , •·
dleport.
speed. $1700. 992·3625 .
YARD SALE. Eotern Bond
Boosters ot the Lqng Bottom ~ Camping Equipment
Community Building. Friday.
May II.
1975 11 FOOT truck camper,
self· contained. olr condition.
SAlE ATLog Cabin May 10, II ,
excellent condition . 992-2121 .
12. 50274 Bigley Ridge Rd .. on
rood Keno to long Bottom. · COONERS ,CAMPERS, troller
rentals, will park, all R.V.
Some collector's items. Bicy·
needs Soles and Service. On
cle. cameros . dishes.· electric
Me1gs Co. Rd. 28 to BashoA .
razors , Intercoms, watches
614-843·301.1.
and jewelry.

A2E.D 1 15 IT
il'UST

OlD FURNITURE . ;ce . boxes,
brass beds. iron beds, desks ,
etc .. complete households.
Write M.D. Miller, Itt. • .
Po~e roy or call 992-7760.

COAL , LIMESTONE. sand. 1965 G enerol. bOJ~:1'1 . 2bdr.
grovel , calcium chloride. fer· .11no Skyl ine , 121(65. 2 br .
til lzer, dog food. and all types · 1970 Sylva . 00x 12 . 2 bdr .
of salt . Excel~ior ·Soli Works . J970Costle. 60 .: 12 . 2bdr.
1973Nobility , 12x60, 2br .
lnc. · E. Main St. , Pomeroy . 1973 Ridgewood . 70KI4 . 3 bdr.
1
992:_38~ -_ - - - - - 1973Nashva, 60)(12, 2bdr . ·
PlANTS . CABBAGE. broccoli. 1973Governor, 60x 12. 2br .
,:ouJiflower. bru55els sprouts, 1974 Morklina, 50KI2. 2 br .
head lettuce, tomatoes. and
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
Iorge selection of be~ding on·
PT . PLESANT, WV.
nuols. Pots of. flowers and
67S·o4o424
hanging bas~et s . Cleland
Greenhouse .
Gera ldine
1969 fEARLESS MOBILE home.
&lt;;: lelo11d. R9cine.
12 H 52 , 2 bedroom . 7-42-.2•51 .
22 FOOT DELU XE Starcraft
tra iler. Stove, refrigerator, 197~ 60,. 12 Kirk~ood mobile
A.C. , sleeps 6. On disp lay at home.1 'h bath . total electric.
HOgarty's. 825 Beec h St .. Mid· new ·stove. new ki tchen
ca rpet, 2 porches, un derpinn·
dleport .
ing. 8 x 10 Wood stOrage
HANGING BASKETS. all kinds. buiding all an 60 ~120ft. . lot in
BeddVege toble plants, all letart Foils. 247-3895.
ready
to
go, potted . See Don Stobort , 1971 MOBILE HOME . 12 x 60. 2
bedr oom ,
furnished .
Rt. 2. Racine. Ohio.
fi replace . Good condition .
MIGRO· HYB RIO seed corn. SA.SOO. Must sell immedia tely.
100 per cnet replant ogress. 843·2945.
men! if ' seed doesn't grow.
James H. Smith. Hemlock 1967 PR ICE MEYERS ~obile
home 52 K 12. 3 bedroOm .
Gra'le, Ohio. 992-252-4 .
Good condition . Phone
VERMEER BAlER Modol 605 C. 7-42· 2209. Harrisonville.
Makes 1500 lb. bale. E'lenings
Phone 742·2877 or 742-2152.

. LOST: MALE Iris h Setter . Ap·
prox 2 yrs. . old . Area o f
Boshan on Bo st·. an Rd .
Chi ldren ' s l'e l. Rewa rd .
949-2466.
LOST: SEVEN month old block
and rust mole Doberman
Pinuher In Beorwollow Ridge
vicinity. $100 reword. Notify
John Pauley . Beorwallow
Ridge Rd. Call696· 1063 .
WANTED . SAWYER to work at LOST: lWO sheep . I male. ~
Point Valley- Pollet, Scottown . female . EAst Letart area .
247·7615 .
256·6363 between 7 and Spm .
or 88~~0 after 5.

. OPENING .
l~borator.f Te chn icio.n. 3· 11
sh ih . Elo:per ienc•d Ml T (ASCP)
or equiva lent . Ex cellent sala ry
end fringe benefits . Sl'lift differentoil . Contact: Personnel
Off ice . Pleo!o n t Volley
Hospital, Vallav Drive, Point
PIIKlsont. WV . 25550. Phone
304-675--43-CO. An Equal Op·
portunlty Employer.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Call 992-7479.

:-=----,:-:--

GENTLE 3 Yt year Qld (luarter
horse . 742·3018.
PUREBRED SHORTHORN bulls.
service· age. 1 mile east from
Wilkesvi lle, SA 124 . . Tel
669-~. Hollis Grate.
130 FT. NEW state approved
PVC 6" sewer pipe. Very reasoonble. 30-C-773-5615.
ONE .GOOD· us&amp;d automatic
washer. S75. 667·3932.

Business Services
MONTGOMERY
TRAILER SALES
17320 Montgomery ltd .
Langs~tlll e . Ohio
614 · 6~9· '745 E~o~e nln gs

l Miles Eutof Wilkesvill e
SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWA Y "' IlABLE .
4 5 1 mo

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
•New Home
•Add ons
Remoldings
*Free estimates

*

Real Estate for Sale

992 -6011'

MODERN THREE bed,oom
home. Total electric, on o lot
Iorge in ' Hutc;hison sub·
divlsiQn . 742-2047 .

423 1 mo. ( Pd.)

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

NICE THREE bedr. house- in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Wonderful
view of the Ohio . Ri ver. Hard·
wood floors . This is a barga in.
For information contact Fred
W. Crow, Attormty of law.
Pom•roy, OH . Telephone
992-2692 .

Residential and commercia I. Ca II for
estimate. 24 Hour Service. Any day , ariytime.
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 985-3806
.Jack Glntller 985-3806

3.11 i'.CRES lAND. City wate,,
natural gas, $ewage system.
Electric seN ice. $9300. With 12
x 65 mobile· home. $13.000.
949-2860.

Jack's S.ptic
Tank Service
Bo• J

ROSE

BUSHES
w. Carsey

Mgr.
. _., Phone 992-2181

SWEET POTATO plonls. 5
varieties . R.W. LeWis. SRI2o4 .'
Racine 8•3-2-1_32.
HOMEMADE QUILTS far sole .
520 and$30 oo. 742-2984.
1975 FORD GRANADA. 1974
VW bus. 5 piece bedroom
suitel Antique wa lnut dresser.
Maple chest of drower5.
992-7692 .
QUASAR COLOR TV. Excell ent
condition. 9-49-2265.
RAYS USED Fruniture, Addison. 367:0637. 2 piece
bedroom suife, $85 . Bottle gas
range, $65. Refrigerator with .
large I freezer , $150. Moytag
ringer washer, $65 . Chest of
drawers. S30. Kltchen cabinet
with gass doort , · $35 .
Metal
utili ·
ty cabinet, S15 . G lassware,
pottery and lamps.
JOHN DEERE 50 ft . elevator
with hopper, handles baled
hoy or ear corn, $300. Allis·
Chalmers small round baler.
$300. 985-3538. Paul Korr ,
Chester, OH .

Chester. o.
5·6-1 mo. pd .

N. L Construction

Good Selection

Jack

BLOCK .&amp; BRICK
WORK, G£NERAL

216 e. second Street
1.9 ACRES - One of the
best locations in town .
Good 9 room renovated
home. 2 baths, full basement, garage and large

CONTRACTOR
Rl. 3
Pomeroy , ·Ohio
992 -5547
4-25-1 mo.-Pd .

~~~".f:c.~·~· Appro• -

lmalely 36'M80' . C;ty
water, air conditioned,
concrete floor, loac;llng
dock., under ground fuel
storage tank , and 'parkIng . $40,000.
NEW LISTING - 2 .lois
40'X120' trai ler setup on
.one and 8 room house on
the other. 2 baths,
natural gas, city water
and sewers. Will take
$17,500 for • qu ick sale.
OVER 4 ACRES - In
the country for the
children and livestock. 8
room house all modern
on the inside, 3 or 4
bedropms, carpeting,
Leading Creek water,
-garage, and hen house.
Only S27,500.
PLAN OUR FUTURE
NOW AGAINST MORE
INFLATION, BUY AND
SAVE YOUR RENT
MONEY ON THE AP PRECIATION OF THE
NEWH'OME.

1972 DODGE SWINGER, one
Housing
owner. 6 cyl .. 60,000 actual
miles, excellent condUsterin
Headquarters
diesel
engine .
18 h.p .. can use for cutting
. SLEEPING ROOMS tar working
men only . Breakfast if . firewood . irrigation. 949-2124 . . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
desired. Reasonable rates . FRUIT
TREES .
Corp"Gf''s'"' r
Phone 992-5422 .
Nurseries . 992·730a .
FURNISHED APT . suitable fOr 3 ASTRO BEAM~ and CDE rotor .
or 4 construction Y'{orkers. $100. Call949·20.5alte' 4pm.
Af1er 5pm · call 992 · 5.4~ .
REMINGTON · RAM calculator,
992-312'1. 0' 992·S914 .
$65. Modern Supply , 399 W.
608 E . L.Wi~U..I ,
TWO BEDROOM Mobile home. Main.
MAIN
Racine area . 992·5858.
POMFROY . O .
JOHN DEERE .490 co rn planter,
MOBILE OME in Syracuse. 2 .4 · raw. Good condition. Earl
JUST. LISTED ....:Over 5
bedroom. Mayme Custer ManDean, Chester, OH. 985-3855.
acres with nice home,
ning . On Cherry and Third St.
barn &amp; ch;cken house.
1972 FORD PICKUP, campe'
992-5249.
.
Home has 3 bedrooms,
topper. Real good cond ••.on .
bath, nice kitchen , lots
992·2645.
of remodeling, part
Allctions
basement, garden, Nat.
gas heat. 516,500.00.
AUCTION EVERY Wed. night 7
LOVELY
BRICK
pm at the Hartford Community
HOME - 4 bedrooms.
Center. Hartford. WV. lots of
2'h tJaths, 2 car garage
new and used merchandise.
and 2 car car pert, 2 very
AUCTION FRIOAV 7pm . Lots of
nice acres; 2 rec. or
Headquarters for
new merchandise. 9hlo River
family rooms, fireplace,
Auction. 537 N. High. Midlovely equipped kitc hen.
Hotpoi nt and
$60,000.00.
dleport , O
:::cH
c:;·c_-,-- --,.Genera I E lectrlc
LOOK ~UST 11,000.00 SPECIAL AUCTION Saturday
Appliances
Less than a price of a
7pm .
Naw
fu rni ture ,
new
car: In very good
mi crowave ·ovens, camper
condition, has 4 lots. 3
TV's, tool s, and lots of other
bedrooms, carpeting,
new merchandise at Ohic
Jack w. Carsey
paneling and lots of
River Auction , 537 N. High St. ,
Mgr.
others.
-.
M;ddlepo,t, OH.
Phone ~2-2181 •
INCOME PROPERTY
N.C.l . INDUSTRIAL AUCTION '
Live In this remodeled
Thu rs .. "May 24 . 10 am: Struc·
home and rent mobile,
tural Stonewore, Inc. 22 a cre . ONE NCR cosh register, 3 dept
let rent pay your way.
Carlyle Quarry Tile and iron· ' and tax, excellent condition ,
Located In Middleport,
Ware pover mfg. plant., 922 $200. One NCR cosh re9ister,
overlooks
river .
Pike St.. Ironton, (Coal . 3 depts, toM and refund , good
515,000.00.
Grove) . Ohio. For Brochure, condition. $200. One stainless
POMEROY • Condor
,. call Bill Dice, 513-435·2:WO. steel meat tray with Saran
St. Excel:( .; 1 or home
National Coritent liquidators. dispenaer', hot ~ire cut·off,
Or niobile, AvOu i 3 lots,
Inc.
$35. 742·2255,
lots
of
frontage :
$1!,500.00. Make offer.
2:71:C:..:::
F00
;:7.T
;=:S:::
T'A
:-R
::-:Co::Rc:
A-::FT:-:CC;h-,lo"'f.
T!IAILER OR HOME loin, ia~oard Mercu ry crui ser Services Offered
H'ere ts your answer .
day cruiser. Trailer and a·cWATER AND misc .. haul ing.
cenorles incl . Con be seen at · over :zoo ft . frontage .
(orig i nally
had · 2
Coll992-5858.
Doug's Ma ri ne or phone
houses) . Locate~ in
992·703'1.
NOW HAULING limes tone ln
Pomeroy . SJ,ooo.oo.
Mlddleport-Poemroy area .
FORD MOWING machine, 3 pt.
BUY A COMPLETELY
Call for free estimate . hitch, 6ft. cut. 9•9-2057.
REMODELED HOME
367-7101 .
AND MOVE IT . 2
BEAUTIFUL SELECTION ol
bedrooms. bath and etc.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
flowers for Memorial Qay.
10 acres available just
Free estimates. Call949·2686.
Faye's Flower Shop . next to
around the corner .
Frestona
Store,
Middleport.
9
HAULING: limestone, grovel,
16.000.00.
and mise items. 742-2909. ask · amta8pm . .
HOW LONG HAS YOUR
for Rick Imboden .
1976 HONDA MOTORCYCLE .
HOUS.E BEEN ON THE
MARKEH ' DON'T
HOUSE REPAIR ond 'emodol· He lp ' wonted to work in
WASTE TIME, LIST
ing. ·careful WNk . Re.o sono ble garage to clean up and do
body w&lt;:&gt;rk. Ha rold Hy~e ll' s
WITH THE EXPERTS ,
rates . Erny Oovi8s. 742-2000.
c:_;_~ oge , Rut land , Ohio .
,.
----~--·-·
CALL NOW 1:0 LIST.
'TR EE TRIMMING ond-Rem&lt;)\,al.
REALTORS
WINCHESTER OLD modal t2
742-3167 0' 742·2573.
Henry E . Cleland Sr.
·with pol~ choke, good condl·
Henry E . Clfland Jr.
WILL
00
house~o.rl( .
lion . s:JOO . CJBS-'3301 doys .
992-2259 992-6191 992-1168
747· 2545
98~ - Al-40 even .

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
Call for a Free Siding
· Estimate, 949-280 1 or
949-2860. No Sunday
Ca lls .
~+1 mo.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator,......-....
Service

SIDING

Just Arrived

.SALE PRICES

Vinyl and Aluminum
·Siding

Real Estate for Sale
MODERN THREE bedroom
house ,
fu ll
bosemen't.
firep la ce. full y ca rpeted. cen·
trot air. enclosed sun porch,
located o n 6Yr acres on CR 28,
opprow. 3 miles from A:ac"i ne. If
· interes ted contact larry Wolfe
949-2836 weekends and after
5 evenings .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
house
!n
Mi dd lepo r t.
992-3457 .

3 AND 4 BM furnished and un·
furnished
opts .
Phone
'192·5434.

4

SEVEN ROOM house and bose·
ment in Minervi ll e . 992-5823.
TWO STORV 3 bedroom house,
100 ·" ISO ft . lot . Excellent
location with ri ver view .
$12,&lt;XX). Shown by appoint·
men t. 992-2082 or 742·2328.
HOUS E AND -4 acres in bock of
Minersv ille . $5500. Ha rvfly
Leomond, Broadway, Racine.
TWO HOUSES. 2 acres of la nd
in H.ortford , WV . All for
$15,000. 304-882-2073.
SIX ROOM house in Syracuse.
2 bedroom. 1 fron t r'oom, din·
ing room and kitc hen plu ~
ut ility room . large lo t.
992-b337 .

Pomeroy

H. L Writesel
Rooting
New; repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

SALE PRICES

-·

!---------

WANTED - X-RAY TECHNICIAN
Male or Female - Full or Part
Time - Sena Resilme ta Veterans

Memorial Hospital, Mulberiy

Hii&amp;hts, Pomeroy, Ohio
Poll)eroy, Ohio ,
Phone 614·992-2104
·
Good Fringe Benefits
Equal Employment Opporru'nity

- - - · -· - - - · · - - - , . - - - . . . . . . _

••

-

T

-·

--~·-··.

---···-

592-3051

~ ·23 · 1

IBRYDOWt

CAPTAIN EASY

IIH·IIH·AHI DON'T ~EACH

IRELAND.
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

DRE'AM5VI~•e- YO U Well:!:'

FOR. THAT MA~~ET!

TA~Kil\1(;

ASOUH

I KI

mo.

I

Yesterday 's

I

BRIDGE

guntrs and
types ltome
maintenance, new and rtHir.
Stor m ·d~rs 1nd wlrtdow1 . All
work guara_n!Hd . ·20 Ylt•n elf·
perlence. Fru enlmate•. Call
Tom Haskin• tn-2 160.

Reynold's
Electric .Motor
ShOp

:V4 mile off Rt. 7 by-pass
an St. Rt: 124 · toward
Ru11and .

Auto &amp; Truck
·Repair
Also Transmission
· Repair
Phone 992-5682

Wholesale, Distributors
for
fine
Penntoil
lubrication products,
Motorcrah, Fram , and
Industrial
Chemjcal
SuppUes, In addition to
most ma1or brands of
motor ail.

Call : 949· 2818
or 949-2150
~ · 4 - Pd .

J Y, acres in Pomeroy. SEclud-·

ed wooded area on top of hill.
Over lo~s river. Water . electric a vailable. 992·3886.
REAl ESTATE loa'!s. Purchos4p
and refinance. 30 -ye ar terms.
VA. No rrioney down (el.lgible
veterans). FHA · As low as 3
per ce nt down {no'n ·veterons) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens. 614-592·3051.

·~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;..~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

•

lNG-CHlLDS AGE
INSURANCE
REAL ESTATE
MINI FARM - 20 ACRES - LANGSVILLE

Well Built Older Home in Midd leport , 3 bedroom s ,
l'h bath , hardwood floors. Out of hig h water. S19.500.
Big Beautiful Home in Racine; - Cotnpletefy
remodeled, you ~ ve got to see this o ne to appreciate ,
- $13,500.
.

NING -CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, BR . Mgr.
Phone 992-2342 - Eve. 992-24.49
anr~rr - Ohio

NORTH
+ K Q6
• A8
t Q1iS32

~.

f&gt;t•

'

'" Partner, maybe we didn't
bid enough," i:ind led a low
diamond rrom dummy .

f&gt;- 10

• J ·9

.

WEST
+Jl098
• 9 73
• K 10 9 8
• 75

EAST
• 74 3 2
• K6542

·-- --

.• 6 4 3 2

SOUTH
+A 5
• Q J 10
• AJ 4
.AKQ108
Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer: South

S&amp;G

DEEP STEAM
CARPET

West

North East

Pass

6 NT

South
2 NT
Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead: • J

CLEANING
r

CAN SEE A

STA~S.

~- 2

·'

By O~wald Jacoby
aitd Alan Sontag

POe!

There ri re ple nty of ways

i.OOKS I.II&lt;E
'l'l&lt;E S10~M 'S
0\1!1R!

PIANO
TUNING

to get to s ix notrump with
the North-South cards, but

lay doWn .
At tri c k two, South s h o uld

hAve risen with the a c e of
diamon ds. At trick three , he
should have led a low di a·
mend toward dummy . Wes t

the slambang method used
by this pair is about as good
a ny . 01 co urse , they belong
in six n otrump played by
North s ince a h eart lead will
defeat South at the s lam .
However, West wasn ' t
playing with mirrors a nd
made his norm al lead of t he
jack ol s pades.
·
South wo n in dummy ,

14-Yr. Experience

LANE DANIELS
Specialist in· Home and
School Piano Tuning
and Repairing. Serving
Athens. Meigs, Gollla &amp;
VInton counties, also
Mason &amp; Jackson coun- ,
ties in W.Va .
Ph. 992-2581 or 992' 2082
4·10 ·1 mo.

I t\'linlt. 40ur nephew,
Wilmer Bobble, will
qet them!

BRADFORD, Auctioneer'. Com-

· plate Service. Phone 949-2t.b;

or 949·2000. Racine'. Ohio.
~'::'c:i'c'.::_B':=o::d'-'lo::rd::·=:::-=-:-ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR _
SweeperS, toasters, irons, ell
small appliances . lawn moer,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. 985·3825.
SEWING MACHINE Repoira.
service, all makes, 992-228.4 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING. dozer , loader
and backhoe work; dump .
trucks and lo-boys for hire,
will haUl fill dirt , top 5611,
limestone and graveL Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, doy phone
992·70B9,
night
phone
992-3525 o'

WE WON 1T KNOW

GOSH , YOUR

A 'TH ING UNTIL

POOR IWJM ... JUST
IMAGINE WHAT
Si'IE MUST BE

11-IEY REWIOVE
Tl4E MNDAGES!

m -sm.

GOING THROUGH .

EXCAVAT ING ,
doze, ,
backhoe and ditcher, Charles
R. Hatfield. BloCk Hoe Service,
Rutland. Ohio. Pone 7o42·2008.

V.E CAN LOOK
NOW, PAW

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covating. septic systems ,
dozer, backhoe. Rt . U3.
Phone! (614) 698-7331.
IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits. Oo-it· yourself or let Us
ins toll for you. 0 . Bumgardner
Soles, Inc. 992-572-4.
GRAVElY TRACTORS and
Equipment. bperlenced s•rvice. 204 Condor, Pomeroy ,
Ohio. 992·2975.

diamonds

PEANUTS

J

(Do you ha ve a ques t1o n fOr

the expe.rts ? Write ··Ask th e
Experts ... ca re of th is newspap er In divid ual ques ti ons will
tJe ans wered If accomp anied
by stamped. Self-add ressed
envelbpes . Th e -mos t in le res lmg quest ions will be used in
this co /Limn and will rece ive
cop•es of J ACOB Y MODERN.!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Droop
4 German
car.d game
8 Neighbor
of Ga .
9Tied
the oxfords
13 G lowing
If Fruit
mixture
15 Intrepid
flyer
18 American
Indian
17 Get it '
18 Forsake
20 Company
21 Turban 22 Jo Worley
23 Lorre film
sleuth
26 College
· in Oregon
27 Soon
28 Wock unit
30 Wet
31 East Indian
cedar
35 M.D .'s
36 Fencing
dwnmy
37 Past
38 "Dry" drink
40 Marble
41 Native
42 Greek
lette r
43 Prudence
44 Snug spot

DOWN
1 Sidedish
%Restaurant

owner,
in a song
3 Security
items
4 Get one 's
hands on
5 Puztling
6 Nautch

Yesterday's Answer
~Singer,

danseuse
7 Spigot
10 Trig term
11 Perpetual:

poet.

Donna Z3 Bovery's title

%4 Type on , 1d
:15 Facing
Z8 Heavenly
29 Left by
g radual

1% Thought
to be
19 Black

erosion

3% Outmoded
33 5 12-point
type
34 Martin's
partner
38 Fine
c otton
39 Asian
holiday

1

Is

GiveAway

ri ve

1NEW.'i PAPI'-: H E Nn : RPillS ..~ AS." N

DAlLY CRYPTOQUOTE -

COlLIE PUPPY, female , 6 to 8
weeks old. 247-3870.

and

clubs.

tier•'•'lf)w

,

PART COLLIE pup. Yeoi old.
Male, gentle. 949-2~1 .

So SouLh would h ave two
diamond tric ks h om e . Then
h e could c ome to his hand,
take a nd lose the h ea r t
finesse a n d be home with
three s p ades , two h earts,

two

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI.L OW

tti work It:

one le tter simply stands for ·anOther. ~n this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O' s, C!tc. Sin gle lette rs .
apostrophes, the length and formati~n of the words are aU
hints. Each day the code lette rs are d1fterent .
CRYPTOQUOTES

ll month old female to good
home. 992·7115.
.

ouw

PUPPIES, black and ton and
bluetick ~ 742·2918.

DOUCW

VERY SMALl dog . Port
chihuahua, female . 992·2929.

OHLDLZG

KITTENS. 7 w'"'ks ' old. Middleport. 992-7567.
1

SPTCWT

TWCUWW

z y

HG
F. Y U M

z y

0

ZB WLU
F L Z B

Y Z B W U
A W V , - . U Y H W U Z
H D 0 QM
Yesterday's Cryptoquotc: LIFE IS A MATTER ABOUT WHICH
WE ARE liST IF WE REASON EITHE R TOO MU CH OR TOO
LITTLE.- 5AMUEL BUTLER
., e 19Jt Kll"'g Fe.lurts Synd lute, Inc.

SIJ&lt; WEEK old puppies. Mothor
lrh h Sette·r , fOther cock8r .
spaniel . Pups Qre black with
Whi'it
markings. · Good
.natur ed. Call 992·6093.

__,_

'

F.RIDAY,MAY11, 1979.
5 :4!;--Farm Report IJ; 5:50--PTL
.C lub 13; World at Large 17.
S : S~Sunrlse Semester '10; 6 :00700 Club 6,8; PTL Club .15.;
6 : ID- News 17 .
6 :2!;--Soclelles In Transition 10;
6 :3D-Dragnel17; 6 :4!;--Mornlng
Report 3: 6 :5D-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6:5!;---Chuck
While Reports 10; News
7:1Ml-Today 3. ]5; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Sc haolles 10: Three Stooges·
Little Rascals 17. · ·
7 : 15- Wealher 33; 7:30-F,.mlly
Affair 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
8,0Q-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It
lo Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
Discovery 17; 9:00-Bob Braun 3;
Phil Donahue 13, IS; Emerg111cy
One6; Hogen's Heroes 8; Low of
Life 10; Lucy S~ow 17...
·
9 : 30- Brady Bunch &amp;f' Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acre• 17 .
IO :oo-Card Sharks J, IS_; Edge of
Night 6;' Allin The Family 1.10;
Dating Game 13 ; Movie ' Til See
You In My Dreams" 17.
10 :30--AII Slar Secrets 3,15; $70,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew! 8,10; 10 :55-CBS News 8;
House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Pr jce Is Righi 8.10;
Elec. Co. 20 .
,
11 : 30- Wheel · of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family . Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
20,33 .
12 :00--Newscenter J; Password 15;
Young &amp; the Reslless 8; Midday
Magazine 13 ;
12 : 20-Love
Ameri can Style 17.
t2 ,3D-Ryan's Hope 6.13 ; search tor
TomorrowS, 10; Elec . Co. 33; Not
For Women Only 15; Movie "Big
Jim Mclain" 17.
,.
, ,oo-DaysofOur Llves3.15; All My
Children 6, 13; New• 8; Young &amp; •
the Restless 10.
1 : JD-As The World Turns 8,10;
2,oo-Doctors J, 15; One Life to'
Live 6, IJ ; 2 :25- News 17 .
2:3D-Another World li15; Guiding
Light 8,1 0 : I Love Lucy 17.
,.
3:oo-General Hosoltal6.13; lntlnltv
Factory 17 ; J : 3o ~ Mash 8;
Joker's Wild 10; Fllnlslones 17;
Dick Cavell 20.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Hollywoo,d
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Sl• Million Dollar Man 10;
Mike Douglas IJ; Space ' GI111ts

u.

diamond suit.

Free. Estimate
Contact: Gene Smith
or Mike Grote
at Rutland F=urniture Co.
742-2211
Aller 5 P .M., 99H309
or 742-28.74
,

.

East sh owed o ut and So uth
talked again , ·' Partner, we
did bid eno u g h ." Then he
proc eeded t o t a k e the s lam
and throw lt o ut the window .
Wilhaut thinkin g at a ll , he
played hi s jack of damonds.
West won the tri ck and evenlu a ll y the defense collect ed
·a heart trick .
South r emarked that the
odds ha d to b e about 50 to
one agai n s t the bad breaks
he got, but North sh ut him
up quic kly by pointing o ut
that ba d breaks ot no bad '
brea ks, the s lam ha d bee n a

c ould nat h ave affo rded to
take the trick a nd set up the

E-C ELECTR ICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Valley region .
Six day~ o week . 2.t hours 1er· '
vice.. Emergency coils. Call
.
002-2952 0' 882·3454.

large 4 Bedr~om home on Sp r ing Ave. in Pomeroy,
corner lot, 2 ca r garage, Reduced -$17,500.

made the tatuous remark.

WHAT IWE::S
OIJ COWIJ

IPd .) .

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com.
plate S.Nice. Phone 992-2478.
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE
been cancell~d? lost your
operatorS llcen5e? PhOne
992-2143.

Looking for peace and quiet in the country or your
awn ground - not too big- not.too small, this Is it.
20 acres of beautiful rolling land with a well stocked
pond . 4 rooms and bath- 2 roams and larqe storage
up. Laundry room in basement. Good wen water.
$40,000.
OTHER LAND
78.8 Acres - 3' mi. from P o m eroy on St. Rt.
124- $15,750.
18 Acres On Nor t he rn Hh . in P omeroy- All
Utillti es- sn.ooo.
9 Acres on St. Rt . 143. Bequtiful home s ite-510,000 . .~
1 Acre dn Page 51. in Middleport- $3.800.
' NE\V LISTING
On ~ l~rge corner lqt overlooking the _r lv~r in Mid ·
dleport . TWO houses - Iive in one and rent the
other . Both prese nt ly r:ented for $495.00 a mo. in ·
come. LooklnQ for a buy or investment proe prty Hurry - $35,000 .00 .

Wr_ong playing blows slam

TO CO WITH

I '' 1• ~, •I \

Busi"ess Services
Real Estate for Sale

1-JOTH I ~

.

Middleport, O.

OPENING SALE

Racine, o .

HAVE::

.

651 Beech Street

00-tf c

J&amp;R OIL co....N. .OIL

~~If\/~ M~, I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ll1BR£.1

18 Years Experience
Will Make
Service Calfs

3-nmo.

Rogei Hysell
Garage

WHY DO I GET 1HB
BLAME' FOR
ltii\T wr;s
WROtJ0AT

Artlens Area
791·2745 or 797-2752
. 1·30·pd.

992-2356.

"(I I I I J"

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles LYRIC PATIO IMPOSE RADIU S
Answer: Whal lhe aslronomer OKCiaimed when he
disco~ered a new constell a tion" MV STARS!"

All

~ · Hfc

Now arrange 'the circled leNers to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here:

Ohio Valley Roofing .
and
HOme Maintenance

949-2862-949·2160

POMEROY
lANDMARK

f'

I I KJ I

.

SmHh Nelsoo
Motors, Inc.
Pn. 992·2174

I DYNAS I

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
Refinance
lO Year Terms
A- No money down
!eligible veterans)
FHA- AS low as 3%
down Cnon·veterans)

dawnspouts.

THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1979
00- Cross . Wils 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13 ; Marly R.obbl ns'
Spolliaht 8; News 10 , Love
Ameri c an Style 15; Carol
Burnet t 17 ; .D ick. Cavett 20; Wjld.
W;td World of Animals 33 .
1: 3D-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers
6; Match Game 8; $100,000 Name
that Tune 10; Nashvil le on the
Road 13; Dally 15; San ford&amp; Son
17; MacNeil · Lehrer Reporf 20,33.
a :oo-Whodunnll? 3, 15; · Mork &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Time EM press 8, 10;
Nova 20,33; Movie " Ho mbre" 17.
8 :3D-Highcllffe 3, 15 ; Angle 6,13. ·
9 ,oo-Chevy Chase 3, 15 ; Barney
Miller 6, 13; Ha waii Flve·O 8,.10;
World 20,33.
9:3D-Car ler Country 6,13; lO :ooSus.a n Anion 3.15; Family 6,13 ;
Barnaby Jones 8,10; News 20;
Footsleps 33.
10 : 30- Commanders 17 ; ·Hocking
Va lley Bluegrass 20; Area
Showcase 33.
·
II :!Ml-News 3,6,8, 10,13, 15; Best elf
Groucho 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson J, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, IJ; Mash B; ABC News
33 ; Mov ie " Boom Town" 10;;
Movie "The Ugly American'' 17.
12 :0!;--McC ioud 8; 12 :4D-Mannl•
6, 13 ; 1:oo-Tomorrow J; News
15 .
:50- News 13 ; ' ' 55-News 17;
2: 1!;--Movle "Gunslinger" 17;
J : 5D-WIIchcrall &amp; the Occult.

( ~~'l;.r:".:t::..- ~ ' ...., .... ..

All ty!)fl rooting,

Nathan

,I /

I VUMEA I
l I I I [)

For Sale

IMMEDIATE

CHARGES
I day

-- Cos ,-anci Foilnci"-

Television
Viewing

byHenri AmoldandBob ~ee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one iener to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

.

.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~Ul~ tl'

17 .

•
•'

..

.

4:3D-Bewltched J;; Gilligan's Is. 8;
Lucy Show 15

r
Dream of Jea~nle J,17 ;
Beverly Hillbillies I ; · Miller
Rogers Neighborhood 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5: 30-Carol Burnett 3; News . 6;
Sa nford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mary Tyler MC!Ore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 , oo-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Andy Griffith 17; Villa Alegre
20; St udio See JJ .
6:JD- NBC News J, 15; Carol Burnett
6; CBS News 8.10; My ThrH
Sons 17 ; Over .Easy 20,33 .
.
7:00- Cro ss ·WIIs 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13; Sha Na No 8; News
10; Love American Style 15;
Carol Burnett 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7:3D-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Pop Goes
The Counlry 15; · Sl.98 Beauty
Show 6; Family Feud 1,10;
SIOO.OOO Name That Tune 13;
San ford &amp; Son 17; MacNeilLehrer ReJ&gt;Orl 20,33.
8 :1Ml-Diff'renl Slrokes 3, 15; Nlwle
11
Power M a n " 6, 13; ln crec~Mtt
Hulk 8.10; Night Gallery 17.
8 :30- Wall Street · week 20,Ji ;
Baseball 17 .
9: oo-Oean Martin 3, 15; Dukos of
Hazzard 8. 10; Royal , Heritage 20;
Money News &amp; VIews 33.
9 : Jo~Movle " Nighlrlder " 6,13 ;
Raised In Anger 33.
.
10 , 00-Dallas 8.10; News 20; 10 :»Cons umer Survival Kif 20;
Pearls 33.
11 :00-News 3,6.8,10,13,15; Hogan's .
Heroes 17; Fawlty Towers 20.
11 :3D-Johnn·y Carson 3,15; SOep
6, 13 ; NBA Play.Off 8; ABC !Wws
.JJ ; Movie " Dr. Jekyll &amp; Ntr.
Hyde" 10; Movie " The · Vam·
plres" 17.
12 :1Ml-Monty Python 33; 12:05Baretta 6,13.
LOO-Midn lghl Special 3.15; .1 : 1!;-News 13; 1 :3D-Baseball 17.;
2 :30-News 3.
J :oo-Movie ·" The Sisters" 3; 4:0G. News 17; 4 , 2o-12 'O 'Clock .Hith·
17 : 5 : 00- Movle " The Brlee
ca me C.O .D." J .
•
5:oo- l

•

'•

.~

'

' l

�16-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerlly, 0 .. Thursday. May 10, 1!179

ODOT .p aving. ..

Elberfelds In Pomero.y

....... Mothers ·DaLJ ..........

1Continuetlfrom ; · ·~6c If

R\!gatta Amusement and Ubraries. He noted 'ney pr omot ~d Meigs Cow1Ly very
well and felt that there will be additional pe 0ple, especia lly fri&gt;m the Cleveland
area, at the Regatta as a direct result of their display.
Meigs County missed by a very small margin as being the number one
festival in Ohio last year, Quickel commented.
· Quickel also announced he had learned that pennission has been given to use
the Meigs High Football stadium for the Jeannie C. Riley show.
.
Quickel said they have been given pennission to use the high school gym, but
felt his would hurt the Regatta financially.
It was reported that the school board fell that Regatta Committee was going
to use the field and drive heavy equipment ·on it. The conunittee does not plan to
do that at all.
Another contact with the board will be made since members felt there was a
misunderstanding.
•
. Bill Nelson reported that the .Dave Diles Invitational tournament is progressIng very well. He stated thus far, commitments have been made from 33
celebreties.
Nelson reported proceeds will go to the United Fund for Meigs aud Mason
Counties. Nelson also observed that committees had been formed headed by
bank members and busineSsmen.
·
The tournament Is a handicap event and Is open to Meigs-Mason residents only until June I, after which time it will be open to residents of other areas.
Attending were Paul Simon, president, who presided, Smtih, Gifford, Crow,
Phil Kelly, Bob Miller, Dave Jenkins, Larry Wehrung, Bill May~r. Paul
Gerard, Stan Houdashelt, Donna Nease, secretary, Mary Hobstetter, clerk for
the county commissiooers, Billy Joe Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Teaford, C.
E. Blakeslee, Leo Vaughan, Scott Lucas, Richard Jones, Jim Frecker, Kennit
Walton, Jack Carsey, John Koebel, Bill Quickel, Kyle Allen, Ted Reed, Joe
Young, Bill Nelson, Pat O'Brien, Wesley Buehl, &lt;llester Wells and Bill Grueser,

II
r
................................... ..............
~

FRIDAY, MAY .1 1th and SATURDAY, MAY 12th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
ER'S D.AY SALE

in Parkersburg, W. Va .
Mrs. Union was born in Olive
Township, Meigs County, a daughter
of the late Loyal and Jennie Cramtet
Barnhart . She had resided in· Athens
County most of her Ufe.
Surviving are four' daughters, Mrs.
George (Fern) Secoy, Perrysville;
Mrs. G~orge (Clarice ) Norman,
Houston , Tex.; Mrs. Robert (Janice)
McGee, Pomeroy, wife of the Rev.
Robert McGee, pastor of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church; Mrs. Paul
(Lillian) Dye, Boise, Idaho; four sons,
Earl, Athens; Bernard, The Plains ;
Forest of Coolville, and Robert,
Mansfield ; a sister, Mrs. Burt
(Nettie ) Rallies , Brice ; 18
grandchildren,
30
greatgrandchildren and ·four great-great·
grandchildren.
Preceding her in death besides her
parents were her husband, Gene ; a
son, William Evan Linton ; a sister,
Anna Congrove, and brothers,
Wellington, Harrison, Ben, Isaac,
Fred, . Elza, · Clarence and Lod
Barnhart.
Funeral services will be held at t
p .~ . Saturday at the Jaegers Funral
Home, Morris Ave., Athens with the
Rev. Roy Rose officiating•. Burial will
ALMEDIA LINTON
be in the West Union Cemetery,
Mrs. Almedia Unton , 86, Athens, Athens. Friends may call at the
formerly of Meigs County, died funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
Wednesday at the St. Joseph Hospital p.m. Friday.

COUCH·

DRESSES
Save on junior, missy and .halt size
dresses for Mother's Day. The latest in
styles and colors.

REG. 113.00... .... ... ....... ...... SALE 111.00
REG. '18.00. ........... .. ........ .. SALE 115.00
REG. 126.00 .... ,.........•..... ... SALE 120.00
REG. 132.00 ..... .. .... :... ...... .. SALE 125.00
REG. 142.00 ................ .. ...... SALE 134.00
REG;
........... .. ... ... .... SALE ....,_uu

Area deaths
HENRY FRANK
Henry Frank, 57, died Wednesday
night at his Pomeroy Route 3
residence.
Mr. Frank was born Dec. 10 1921 a
son of the late &lt;llarles and Floren'ce
Well Frank. He was preceded in
""ath by a stepson, Barry Bowen, in
addition to his parents .
Mr. Frank was a member of the
Meigs County Farm Bureau and Drew
Webster Post 39•. American Legion.
Surviving are his wife, Freda Wood
Frank; a son, David Frank, Fort
Riley, Kansas ; three stepsons, Robert
Bowen , Carroll ; Billy Bowen ,
SWanton; Bernard Bowen, Bucyrus ;
two stepdaughters, Betty Thomas,
Newa~ k . and Beverly Gabriel ,
Athens ; a brother, Alfred Frank,
Pomeroy, and a sister, Hazel Lynch,
Pomeroy. Also surviving are seven
· step-grandchildren and two step
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with burial ·to be in Meigs
Memory Gardens, Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Friday.
.

ALL PURPOSE

Non slip, washable, fring~d edge. Good ·
selection of solid color and patterns.
Use for chatrs, auto seats, card tables,
sectionals, hide-a-beds. Select one. now
for your Mother's Day Gift. ·

SAVE 20%
20% OFF
JEWELRY SALE

TIMEX WATCHES
~
" '

~/

"\ .

Save 20 per cent on our .entire
stock including electric watches.
We have a large selection of styles
in white and yellow gold .

Save 20 per cent on necklaces,
earrings, ankle bracelets, pins,
hair . accessories,
· beads,
bracelets and rings.

REDUCED 20%

20% OFF

WAREHOUSE

WOMEN'S SLACKS
Solids and checks In summer shades of
polyester. Sizes 3 thru 20 and 30 thru 46,

GREAT GIFTS FOR.MOTHER'S DAY!
Our entire stock of summer fUrniture is

reduced for this sale.
· • -Genuine California redwood .
-Famous Lloyd Fibercraf!
-Telescope folding furnihJre.
Chaises, rockers, straight chairs, spring .
base chairs, tables, umbrellas, . Weber
barbecue kettles, picnic tables .

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

REG. S 6.00 .... ..... .... SALES ·4.79
REG. S 7.00 .... ... .. .... SALE$ 5.59
REG . $11 .00 ..... .. .. ..... SALE$ 8.79
REG. $13.00 .. ..: . ... . . • .. SALE $10.39
REG. $16.00 ... .. ... . . .. . SALE $12.79
RE .G . $20.00 . .. . ...... •. • SALE $15.99
REG. $24.00 ....... .. .. , • SALE $19,19

MOTHER'S DAY SALE.

BLOUSES

MOTHER'S DAY SALE

Co-Ordinate Sportswear ·

Specicil sale pri ces on our entire stock
of women's casual and dressy blouses.

Business mirror

Long sleeved, short sleeved and
sleevel.ess styles in regular sizes 30 to 38
and extra sizes 40 to 46.

1 Famous Bradley quality In skirts,
blouses, jackets, slacks, vests and
sweaters. ·orchid, white, peach, blue,
beige.
Reg. sizes s.thru 20.

NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S.
economy .is now probing its way
REG. $13.00 , .. . . . . . . •. .. SALE $10.39
through rriurky weather.
REG. $17.00 ... . . . . . ..... SALE $13.59 .
H you were piloting the economy REG. $21.00 •.. . •....•..• SALE $16.79
assuming it could be piloted - you
would be buffeted by conflicts.
REG. $34.00 • .. • . .••• ... • SALE $27.19
You must act even though you're
REG. $36.00 .... , . ••• • , . • SALE $2B.79
uncertain of vital data .
Only reluctantly would you· take
BUY MOM A NEW RECLINER!
FURNITURJ DEPARTMENT
in
such
decisive
action
circumstances. And when you did ,
your decision might be made with
your instincts, rather than the mass of
conflicting data.
That, to some degree, is the
Sale prices on our entire stock of
dilemma faced by those officials in
recliners, rock -o·loungers, swivel
the carter administration and the
-HAND
_,AINTED
OILS
rockers and occasional chairs.
Federal 1 Reserve Board who must
monitor and attempt to guide an
RESIDENTS UPSET
-PRINTS
economy of more than $2 trillion.
READING, Ohio (AP) - A proposal
·-LARGE VARIETY, OF SIZE.S
FREE DELIVERY .
There's no limit to the advice and
statistical data available. But what it by Safety Director Frank Carnevale
A LASTING GIFT!
FOR MOTHER'S DAY
adds up to is a decision made as much to limit the number of dogs per
by ·hunell' as by science .
howsehold caused many residents to
~
· O
The Index of Leading Economic get a litlle upset.
In fact , they turned out in large
10
Indicators fell in March for the third
,_,_J
straight month . Once it was believed n~!Jers Tuesday to tell the city t·-·--· ----·-·-·-·-·-·-·-h-h-~-~- -~-~------·--f-·-,--·-·-·-·-·-·-h-h-~ ~~.:..:.::.,;:;,:;_:_,
that three straight signaled a :~~: 1 tr~:.t he was barking up the
recession coming.
" It looks to me like the index is
"In all my years on COIDlcii, I've
throwing off some fairly mixed never experienced such an outpouring
signals," said William Co• , of public response as this dog thing "
·
Commerce Department deputy said Councllman Robert Geoge. '
1\11 councilmen confirmed that their
G.E. 119.95 SMOKE ALARM .. .................. :... ... ., 114.99
analyst. Very true; the index showed
rises in both the workweek and the phooes had been ringing since last
layoff rate.
week about the proposed dog .
CORELLE 136.95 20-PIECE SET DISHES ...~ .. .. ....... 129.95
,
·
Is there guidance in the consumer ordinance:'·Westmoreland glau Is· handmade.
mood? Little. Surveys show buyers
1
CORELLE '62.00 20-PIECE SET EXPRESSIONS........ 49.95
are depressed; they also show them fig';:.~r:~o ~=o~~~etde~~ ~~
buying up a storm. can credit give "merely arbitrary and Intended to stir
·
See the new colors, the new shapes,
MIRRO 127.95 WATTA PIZZARIA ...... .... ............. : 114.00
guidance? Uttle. March extensions citizens· comments."
reached a record ; so did repayments.
122.99 STAINLESS STEEL 25 PlECE SERVICE FOR,
The employment figures ? In April,
sizes. Stop In, you'll like the selection.
employment declined sharply but the cititens commlitee to try to solve the
level of unemployment; seasonally problem of roaming dogs in the city.
adjusted, rose only one-tenth of one
ALWAYS AN APPRECIATED GIFT
MOTHER'S DAY SAI.E PRICES
per~tage point to 5.8 percent.
Can you· get some guidance from
business spending plans? They're way
EGG REPORT
up; McGraw-Hill says business will
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~ Eggs spend $177 .9 billion on capital Prices paid to country packing plants
· imJl'ovements, "the . sharpest rise for eggs delivered to major Ohio ·cities
since 1966."'
cases included consumer grades
Long gowns, rci~s; short gowns; pal amas
Our erillre •lock of Cannan
But analysts say industry in the past including u.s. grades, minimum 50
baby dolls. Petite thru XXL.
·
'
Royal
Family
and
Monticello
used the hiatWI of a downturn to case lots.
shee ts. Perfect gift f or your
imJl'OVe it's equipment and plant. Cartoil Large A 64-68, Medium A 61mom . Twin sizes, . full , king
REG . S 5.00 . .. . . ........ .. .. SALE$ 4.39
Maybe busjness expects another 64, Small A 50-56.
an~ queen with pillow cases to
match
.
REG
. S 9,00 ..... ........ • ... SALE$ 7.89
downturn ?
Sales to retailers in major Ohio
REG,
$14.00 ..•. • . . , •. .. .•. . . SALE $12.29 .
The pace of housing doesn't seem to pities, cartoos delivered: Large A
offer clear guiJance. r• seems almost white 73-112, mostly 73-7S, mediun'l 70REG. $21 .00 •. . ... , .. . .•....• SALE $18.49
immune to high prices, high interest, 79, mostly 70-72.
~EG. $28.00 .. .. .. ·.... .... ... SALE $25.59
and sometimes tight- money.
Poultry prices at Ohio farms', hens
REG. $38.00 ...... . ... . .. .. .. SALE $33.39
In seeking guidance from · light too few to repott.
economists you find almos t a
consensus : there will be a downtux:n,
per.haps beginning during the second
half of the year. BUt then they said the
same thing a year ·ago.
'
Moreover, you recall the great About 85 percent of China '.•· "ork
~bts economists have about their force is cnp.aged in agricult•·

CHAIR SALE

SALE
FRAMED PICTURES

SAVE 25
..

MOTHER'S DAY SALE PRIQS
HOUSEWAR•ES 1ST FLOOR·

..

SAVE 20(//

__

New Shipment

· Just Arrived!

WESTMORELAND GLASSWARE

eo~ft~c~~~:~:;~t~~ ::~!;:

,

ADMINISTERS TREATMENT -Employees of
Veterans Memorial Hospital check a patient brought in
durtng Thursday's mock emergency staged In the trlcounty area. Dr. Mateo Dayo, New Haven, a new mem-

ber of the hospital's staff, is on the left. The emergency
situation was pari of National Hospital Week staged by
Veterans Memorial, Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
Holzer Medical Center. Various emergency squads in
M~igs County participated.

•

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 20

MOCK DISASTER - Twenty-five Meigs County
senior citizens were injured or killed Thursday afternoon. Well, not really. Actually that was the
simulated situation for a mock emergency staged in
the tri-&lt;!ounty area. 'll!e Meigs people were in 1111 autobus accident in the Laurel Cliff area. They were taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital where staff members

•

at y

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

examined and tagged them lot the type treatment
needed for .the respective injury. A patient Is shown un•
dergoing examination upon arrival at the local
hospital. The Pomeroy, Middleport, Syracuse, Rutland
and Racine Emergency Squads took part in the drill
with those not making ruris standing by to answer any
•nthentic calls which might develop.

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1979

. MOTHER'S DAY SALE

·SUMMER .PATIO
FURNITURE
1--0'%:':. ~

i

AND
CH~IR THROWS .

WOMEN'$

.\ I / 1

\

4.~18.39

CANNON ·
BED SHEETS

WOMEN'S
SLEEPWEAR SALE

SALE
PRICES

MOTHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY., MAY 13TH

SHOP SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 5 P.M. .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Schlesinger watching oil industry
WASHINGTON (AP)· _ Energy
Secretary James R. Schl'!lllnger says
he plans to .watch the oil i!tdllStry
closely in the next few weeks to see
that giiSOllne p~oductlon is not held
hack in anticipation of higher prices.
But for the moment, Schlesinger
told the ~ Ways arid Means
Committee ThUrsday, it is principally
a shortage o1 crude oil - not any oilindustry coospirll:q - that has held

-

· U.S. refineries to 85 percent of after decontrol.
The committee planned to bear
capacity.
.
In an effort to reduce U.S. today . from• Ch.ar les L. Schultze,
consumption of foreign oil, President Carter's chief eco~mic adviser, on
Carter will begin phasing out federal the economic effects of decontrol. .
Rep. Ed Jenkins, D-Ga., told
oil-price controls June 1.
Schlesinger went before th e Schlesinger many Americans
committee seeking support for strongly suspect the current scattered
Carter's proposed new tax to take · shortage of gasoline is a deliberate
away some of the windfall revenues effort by the oil companies to hold
that will flow to ·the oil companies down production until decontrol
begins and the maximum allowable
price of oij is raised. ,
"We have no such eVidence "
Schlesinger replied.
'
He added that as oil imports from
Iran continue to climb.toward normal
levels, refinery output should

Station owners
may get holiday

·::;:::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::

SIGNING SET
..
WASHINGTON
(APl - President
Marysville.
and
Soviet
President
Leonid l .
Carter
Average prices in early May of
Brezhnev
will
meet
for
the
first
time
regular and unleaded gasoline at selfat
a
summit
conference
from
Juoe
.15
service P11111P" in participatlnt! cities
were : Akron, 74.9 cents and 78.5 to 18 in Vienna 1o sign their new SALT
cents; Alliance, 75.2 and 78.5; Athens , n treaty to cap the oulear arms race,
75.9 and 80.9; Chlllicothe, 74.9 and It was anoouoced today.
78.9; Cincinnati , 7S.9 and 77 .9;. ::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::
Cleveland, 7P.9 and 82.9; Collimbus,
73.9and 77.9; Massillon, 74.9and 78.9;
Piqua, 74.S and 78.5 ; Portsmouth, 74.S
and 79.5; Toledo, 74.9 and 78.9;
Warren 75.2and 80.2; Xenia, 7S.2 and
78.2; and Youngstown, 75.S.·and 80.7.
Marysville, comparing only full·
service station prices, reported an
average oi 79.2 cents per gallon for
regular and 82.9 cents for unleaded
fuel.
·
·

increase. The Energy Department produced oil artificially low in
will monitor the refineries and "if . comparison with oil from the rest of
they are too conservative, we will take ' the world and has contributed to a 30
action," he promised.
per~ent decline in the value of the
The carter administration contends dollar abroad.
Schlesinger estimated that removal
controls have held the price of U.S.·

of controls will raise the price of
gasoline five-to-aeven cents · a gallon .
by 1981 and ·will cause an overall
increase in inflation of about 0.3
percent.

Blame defeat on confusion
. WASHINGTON (AI;' ) - Hou se
leaders are blaming the stunning
defeat of President Carter's standby
gasoline..-ationlng plan on confusion
over which Americans would have
gotten the most fuel under its
provisions.
Mter several days of intense White
House lobbying on Capitol Hill, the
House voted 246-1~9 Thursday night to
kill the rationing plan under which
Americans would have needed
coupons to buy gasoline during a
national fuel emergency .
Disregarding an impassioned
appeal from House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill that ''this is the only ptan

impiementing · the national mllitary
draff, which was in place when World
War II began three years later.
The majority leader said that in a
major energy crisis the president
would need a rationing plan.
· He appealed to colleagues to put
aside questions of how much gasolin~
their own disiricts would receive if
rationing were invoked.
Carter declined immediate
comment, but Rep. John Dingell, DMich., chairman of a House Energy
subconunittee, said it was unlikely the •
president would try to tind another
rationing · plan acceptable to
Congress.
A White House spokesman said
Carter would comment on the
situation today.
While Carter could send a new plan
to Congress, the One voted on
Thursday faced 8 Friday deadline for
action and there is no legal
~~~ement for him to fashion a ne~
The rationing proposal originated
with a !97S law which required the
president to propose various standby
measures for use in case of a major
Cl,ltoff of foreign imports such as the
1974 Arab oil embargo.
Carter made concessions to
senators from rural states
Wednesday , agreeing to base
e.llocation of gasoline during an
emergency on the amount used In

each ·state In ·past years. .
The rationing plan cleared the
Senate Wednesday 53-39. But there
was fear among White House officials
that the compromise approved by the
Senate would simultaneously lose
votes in the House, which has stronger
urban interests.
California House members - bitter·
over what they ·said was
administration ir)action in solving
.aJready-&lt;!xisting gasoline lines·in their.
state - complained that the!~
constituents would lose gasoline un~t
the comJl'omlse agreed to in t~
Senate. Similar complaints we~e
heard from Pennsylvania.
(Continued on page 12) .

AssOciated Preis
Some gasoline service station
owners could get an unwanted
Memorial Day holiday if the pace of
sales set in early May continues and
·they run out of fuel to sell . .
And motorists, no longer surprised
at the rising cost of gasoline, may stay
you"ll have," the Democratic ..
at home for swnmer's first big
controlled House handed Carter a
holiday weekend if they can't find
bitter setback.
gasoline for their cars.
"Many Ame~icans f~lt this was a
Despite conservation efforts by
plan to implement rationing ," said
wholesale and retail gasoline dealers,
House Whip John Brademas, Da spot check on sales indicates some
lnd., "even though the bill would only
will exhaust.their May fuel allotment
have given Carter standy authority."
well before the end of the moo.th.
In addition, Brademus sal~ lastThe .i\ssociated Press survey of IS
minute changes to the plan made by
Ohio cities shows that where price
the White House to win votes needed
. A double semi-tractor trailer
comparisons are availab).e, the per
in the Senate led to fears in the House
accident on U.S. 3S was investigated
galloo cost of gasoline increased one
that some drivers would have ended
Thursday by the Gallla-Meigs Post,
up with a disproportionate share of a
to five cents in the first 10 days of D
Highway Patrol.
·
limited supply.
. May. Pump prices checked at two or
I
Called to the scene at 12:10 p.m.,
three stations in each of the IS cities
" It is difficult for members to
officers report that an east bound
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
allow the average cost of a gallon of
approve
something tbey don 'I feel
tractor trailer operated by Earl
the oumbefs drawn Tbunday In the ·
regular gasoline at self-rvice pUmps
Blevins, 43, Elizabeth, Tn., struck the:
weekly Obfo Lottery: blue 521, wbite they can count on," he said.
O'Neill likened the issue to the 1938
increased 1.5cents in tbe same period,
rear of a second east bound senli·
41, gold 1, ,tnatboo znes.
congressional l debate
over
from 73.8 cen~ to 75.3 cents.
driven by Samue.l Woods, 4~ •.
-·
In tbe same period, the cost of .
•
Columbus, when !he brakes on.;tl)e'i ·• ..
Blevins vehicle failed .
. :,;•.. ''·. ~~
unleaded gasoline pumped by
customers increased by .9 cents per
Following Impact, the IDevins. se~
gallon. The price of regular gasoline
·
·
traveled off the right side or - the~:
-~ the full-service pumps also
roadway and ignited. Wreckail~ &lt; " · .
increased by .9 cents per gallon.
WASHINGTON
(AP) .
blocked the west bound lane of 35, one-: : •..
Unleaded gasoline at full-service Management personnel operating the
half mile west of SF\ 588, for :._. •.:. ~ :
pumps rose on average by .3cents per Goodyear - Atomic Plant near
approximately two hours as the patrol,
galloo for the !O:day period.
Portsmouth have neither the
worked to clear the scene. Both ·
A station owner in Cleveland expertise to do so safely nor the ability
vehicles were demolished.
approached the half-way point in his to respond to emergencies, union
Woods was transported by the
80,QOO.gallon May allotment several officials say.
patrol to Holzer Medical Center,
days ahead ·of the mid-month date , . As a result, communities near the
where he was treated and released.
indicating he could run out several urani~ enrichment plant could be
No citation was issued .
days before Memorial Day.
endangered by a potential atomic
Officers Investigated an accldent
Wade ~obb, a Texaco dealer in a accident because the best trained
Involving a Gallipolis City School' bus
suburben Columbus neighborhood, personnel are on strike, national and
on Starcher-Hamrick Rd., lit4:30 p.m.
had delivery by May 9on 17,500 of the local officials of the Oil, Chemical and
, The patrol reports that a south
2G,Im gallons he is alloted far the Atomic Workers International said
bound auto operated by &lt;lleryl Basil,
inonth. Cobb said, in an effort to Thursday in Washington.
28, Rodney, and a north bound bus
stretch his allotment, he may close his
"Many people operating the
driven by Arvis Hurt, 29, Rio Grande,
Jl'emlum gasoline pumps and take equipment have no real knowledge of
collided in· a curve.
that volume ·of fuel in unleaded or the system," said Dennis Bloomfield,
Hurt was cited on a charge of failure :·;.
regular gasoline.
president of the 1,600-member
· to, yield one-ball the roadway.
1 '·'
Price averages at self-service striking local. "A miscalculation in
. 'l 'A JW1;11'1'1t t•,\.lt ~UNM
There was moderate damage to tbe
pumps on regular gasoline amoog the the handling and storage of this
NltV l iM' l ' lt CUt•~ lm
\'. l;,\;CJ~ x ·t· lt.~uatT ~ rn
auto , slight damage to the bus.
SW'Vey cities ranged from 73.9 cents in enriched uranium could be critical.".
NJ X ·1· n «;Jt.tUtJ ~
" ', rc Ml nt ~
·
A motorcyclist was injured early
Columbus to 78.9 in Cleveland. The
Anthony Mazzocchi, national vice
'' JliCJIJ1 #Jl: l .. l ltl1,\. t1"\"''
\\' f N ~I ~ H:
today
during a deer accident on U.S.
range 00 self..serve unleaded started P~~sident .of the union, told a news
w unn ':o~PJ•nS'l'
. l' \L)_~I.. H ' J . IJH.f A J. t'\"' "·
35,
one
mile west of milepost 17.
at 77.9 in Cincinnati and Colwnbus conference it was impossible to ·take
'vfJ~t
u.
t
"
('
~
1·1:v•·
Called
to the scent at 2:05 a.m.,
and went uptt 82.9 certs in Cleveland . 1,600of the plant's 3,000employees off
officers
report
that a deer JI8JI into the
Premium gasoline at self-serve the job and have it operate normally.
'
path
of
a
east
bound
cycle operated by
pumps ranged from 80.5 cents in
Mazzocchi said an accident could
.. . · Gregory Browning, 20, Cheshire.
&lt;llilllcothe, to ·84.9 In Cleveland.
result in large amounts of radiation
_
• .. : !·f!rownlng was transported to Holzer
At full«rv(ce stations, the regular escaping intD the environment, and he
my
Par8ons,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arnold
Parsons,
~edical Center, where he was treated
PRESENTS SILVER $$ - Barbara Kerr, left,
gasollne price ral18e was from 76:2 accused the Energy Department of
Pomeroy,andontherightisVincentKnight,
Jr.,sonof
~·for
multiple abrasions and
secretary of the Friends of the Meigs County Ubraries,
cents In &lt;llillicothe to 79.9 cents m · relaxing safety rules so the . plant
filr.
and
M.rs.
Vincent
Knight,
Sr.,
Polileroy,
sillth
lacerations,
and released.
is presenting prizes five silver dollars each to ~ sixth
Cleveland; unleaded from 80.1 cents could keep operating.
grade
winn~r
.
Tammy
attends
Meigs
Junior
High
in
There
was
heavy damage to the
and
severltli
grade
winners
of
the
Frienda
word
· in O!illlcothe to 83.9 cents in . The union leader denied that raising
Middlepori.and
Vincent
attends
the
Pomeroy
Elemencycle.
The
deer
was killed.
building
contest.
Center
is
S
j!Venth
grade
winner;
TamCleveland· and premium from 82.5 the safety question was a ne~ot iatin g
tary
School.
cents in Alliance to 86.9 cents in ploy.

ersonnel
lack zng
•
ex·nertzse
r
r

••••

Semt" wreck

blocks US 35

..

~.

~.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="816">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11468">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50658">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50657">
              <text>May 10, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="847">
      <name>barnhart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="212">
      <name>frank</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="5914">
      <name>linton</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
