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(I·;~:·;:;;; Today

(Continued from page l)
Dayan arrived Tuesday for t&lt;tlks expected to renter on the
$4.8 billion package as well as attempts to find a comprom ise
plan for the future of occupied Arab lands as part of a Middle
East peal'e agreement.

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Area Deaths

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ADA NORRIS
Ada Norris, 89, Route 2.
Racine, died Tuesday night
at Mari ett a Memori a l
Hospi tal. ·

1Marga ret 1 Gloec kne r .
Racine. Mrs. Paul (Elsie )
Dav is. Park ersb urg, and
Mrs. Ra Iph 1Mary Ellen I
Kelley. Yarnel. Ariz.: two
Mrs. ~ o rris was born June sons, Richard of Ca rroll , Ohi o
23, 1888 . a da ughte r of the late and Alonzo of Dayton: one
Amos and Minerva Shields sister. Mrs. Margar et Roush ,
Ripley . She was also Baltimore, Md .: 12 grandpreceded in dea th by her chi ldren,
17
greathusba nd,
Clyde,
two grandchildren and sev eral
daughte rs, Mrs . Clare nce nieces and nephews.
tGol diel Story a nd Mrs.
Funeral se rvices will be
Ric h a r d 1 Mi ldr e d 1 held Friday at II a.m. at
Lego ullon. one grandson and Ewing Funeral Home with
one brot her. Orvill e Ripley. Doug Sea man off ic iating.
She was baptized into the Burial will be in Leta rt f' alls
Ch urch of Chr ist at Millwood, Cemetery . Friends may call
W. Va .
at the fun eral home after 1
She is survived by three p.m. this evening.
da ught ers. Mrs . F:r win

REV . RODENHUSH
RECENT SPEAKER Th e Reve rend Robert
Hodenbush, missionary to

Ghana , Afri ca. was a
rece nt speaker at the
Middl eport United Penl&lt;•costal Chur ch. Rev .
Rodeubush has bern on the
mission fields of 1'\frica for

nine years and is
sup erint end ent of th t•
western part of that ron-

linen!. Rev. Rodenbu sh
related that ia Ghana alone

Weather

there arr more . than 200

Clearing ton ight . with lows
near 40. Sunny Thursday,
with hi ghs in the low or mid
60s.
Probabilit y
of
precipit alion 20 percent thi s
afternoon and 10 percent
tonight and Th ursday .

Carter••.

United
P e nt ec osta l
Churches. Rev. Rodenbush
and wife, Evangeline. and
son. Robbie. res id e in
Ghana.

(Continued from page l I
income tax lC: t ws of our
country at the expense of the
average American family."
The president had another
busy day on la p today,
(Continued from page 1)
$31. speeding: Dennis Lee starting with a meeting with
Ric hards, Racine, $25, the co ngressio nal Black
running a red light; Roger L. Ca ucus. followed by meetings
Jones, Par kersburg. $50, with AF L-CIO Pr esi dent
overload and pulling down George Mea ny on labor
elec tri c lines : J ohn S. reform. He also was meeting
Harrison. 20 , Gallipolis. 120. wit h congress ional and
speeding: James R. Johnson, intelligence advisers on an
Baltimore, Md., $25 , fail ure intelligence agency cha rter.
to yield the right of way .

Mayor

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Gasoline excise tax chec ks
totaling $9,872,391 1 havr been
issued to Ohio's count ies,
to wns hips
and
muni cipaliti es. Sta te Auditor
Thomas E. Ferg uson 's offil'e
report s.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and showers
Saturda y and. Sunda y.
Highs will be in the 60s and
overnight lows wlll be in
the upper 30s or lower 40s
Friday, but moderating by
Sunday to the mid 40s or
lower 50s.

Area man attends sessions

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Each of th e state 's 88
C'O unties received $35 .000 an d
amounts received by the•
Elizabeth Hera ld, Frank
villages incl ude Middleport,
Hcra!U.
Jr .. Mary Jane
12.160: Po meroy, 12.30 1:
Herald
to
Keith 0 . Black.
Rar111e. $600 : Rutland, $531,
Melody
E.
Black.
8. 1 ·acres,
and Syracuse, $701.
Sa
lisb
ury
.
(Continued from page 1)
Marv Elizabeth Hart inger
members of chapte r 682 of
Thomas, Will iam B. Thomas
OAPSE.
to Villa ge of Middleport , Lot
Most teache rs and
Veterans Memorial Hospital
15, Mlddleport .
students in the district had
ADMITTED - Elver Fox ,
Wayne King, Hilda King to
honored picket lines set up Clift on, W. Va .: Nathan
Robert
V. King. Lillian B.
Vanam an, Rutlan d; Eli King, 2.37 acres, Salisbury.
1112 Pet . pe r year on a ea rly Monday morning.
Classes resumed an hour Vance, Racine: Anna Tucker,
4 year certificate of
Gera ld
E. Roach,
late this morning .
Raci ne:
Paul
Kl ein, Hoberta Roach to Kenneth
deposit .
On behalf of the county
$1 ,000 .00
minimvm board of educa tion. Supt. Pomeroy : Salem Ya tes, McFarm, Harold H. McFann,
Racine: Audrey Ours,
deposit .
Hairston today thanked Mr. Rac ine: Kelly Humphrey. Lot, Mi ddleport .
A substant1al penalt y is Santa Emma, Prosecuting Guysville; Alice Curtis, Long
in~oked on all · cert ifi cate
Attorney Joe Cain and Atty. Bott om: f'red Roush. Letart ,
accounts Withdrawn pr ior
David Selce r for thei r W. Va.
LICENSE PLATE FEES
1o the date of matu ritv .
assistance .
DISCHARGE D - Paul
Local governments across
Schu le r, Geneva Wi se , th e stat e can expec t to
Ji mmi e Ohli nger . Janet receive over $10 million in
Korn , Ross Kent , Albert 1976 license plate revenues
Martin , Pea rl Gilk ey, this week, according to an
Waitman Sleveris7 Alice ann ounceme nt by Gov.
Rairden , Charles CornelL
James A. Rhodes. Of the tota l
Meigs County will receive
The Athens Coun ty
$55,068.37 .
Sa vi ngs &amp; Loan Co.
PLEASANT VALLEY
French Fries
2!6 Second St.
DISCHARGED - Jessica
W1th P u r c ho ~e
Pomeroy, Ohio
Of 9' Sreo k
Putn ey, Poi nt Pl easan t :
MEETING FRIDAY
Sa ndw1ch
Arvan
Law son, Mason: Carl
"'ON IU H WI D
Trustees
of Salem Town. . ,.ll ]t. 15·U..
Schultz, Jr.. Racine; Mrs.
ship
will
meet
at 7:30 p. m.
AI All
Dav id Richards, Point
Friday
at
the
township
fir e
Pleasa nt: Helen J oh nson.
hall
,
east
of
the
Salem
Cente
r
Galli polis : Iva You ng,
School.
Mason: Mrs. Homer Painter,
Bid well : Brenda Bi shop.
-----..-·-;:·~ ------...-----..-...----1 Pomeroy: Huth Patterson,
MARRIAGE LICENSE
Point
Pleasant ; Sa ra
··&lt;-i..
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A
marriage license was
: ~~ ...,
Johnson. Middleport : Helen
issued
Tuesday to Douglas
I
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Wheeler, West Co lumbia.
Alan Burn s, 25, Pomeroy and
Sha ron Ann Covert , 17.
~
Pomeroy.

Strike. • •

former president joked about
the rivalry between· Ohio
nounced
t he
name State and his alma mater, the
Unive rsity .· of Michiga n.
correctl y.
Ford made a dinner speech "Woody Hayes is a very dear
Tu esday night in suburba n friend of mine, but he's one of
Clevelan d, but the session, the few people in the country
sponsored by Case Western I can agree wi th 364 days a
Heser ve Un ivers ity, was year and disagree with on
closed to reporters.
one," Ford sa id.
Ford met privately for .15
Ford's visit to Cleveland
rn inute1&gt; with Clevela nd was pari of hi s nationwide
Mayor· Dennis Kuci nich lit lecture to ur . On Monday
Ford's suite in the Cleveland night he spok e to a capacity
Plaza. Andrew M. Juniewicz, Crowd at the Front Row
Kucinich's press secrcwry, Thea ter
in
suburb an
said th e meetin g, which Highland Height s.
Kucinich requested, was a
He was a ccompanie d
courtesy ca II.
durin g his vis1t by Rhodes,
Asked later about his pla ns Cuyahoga County Republican
to run for president 10 1980, Chairman Robert Hughes
Ford only would' say, "We' ll and former Cleveland Mayor
ha ve to wait and see."
Ralph Perk.
Ford's speech at the CleveFord offer ed Carter faint
land Plaza was fill ed with praise for the leadership he
humormt~ r efer en&lt;..'es. The exhibited on the Panama

1

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decision.

Discussing his wife 's
recently disclosed problems
with drugs and alcohol, Ford
said he thought . his wife 's
candor will be beneficial to
women
with
similar
problems.
He suggested Mrs. Ford
will have won her battle by
1980 and her condition would
not be a factor in his decision
on whether to run for the
presidency.

PT. PI.F.ASANT - Robe rt knowl edge as part of the turers of the nationally and
Bateman ol Bateman Fa11ns. continuing program to keep int ernationally known brand
Point Pleasant. rere nll y Mode rn Farm Sys tems' of products which include,
bins,
augering
attended one of a series of dea lers out in front as experts gra in
equipm
ent
,
elevator
legs.
in
grain
and
materials
handregional two day ·product,
continu ous fl ow dr yers,
prog ram, &lt;Hld sales sessiuns li ng and storage .
Modern Farm Systems. dryin g fans arid heal ers,
presented by Modern Fnrm
Inc., with headquar1 ers in aeration fans and related
Syst e m~. Inc., helri at In·
Webster Cil y. Iowa, and accessories. Also the MFS
dianapolis, Ind.
The meeti ng conducted by addition al fac tori es in Imperial line of buildings for
fa ctor y person nel. wa~ Nebraska, Indiana an d fann and light commercial
designed to increase produ ct Miss iss ippi, are manufa c· use.

WAREHOUSE VALUES
25" RCA

COLORTRAK
CONSOLES
REG. $795.00

MURRAY
LAWN MOWER
- 3 H. P. BRIGGS AND
STRATTON ENGINE
- 20" CUTTING WIDTH

SALE 1749

Colonrak

REG . $850 .00

SALE 1769

ROTOTILLER
SALE

Anniversary
Special

.'•

1 ONLY REG. 1294.95

5 H.P. TIUER

FREE

SALE

·o-

l

1$45,413•..

WEBER

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~- ~TE 7-254

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(Continued from page I)
calls for the state to
rei mburse the la xing
districts for the reduction in
local revenue.
Pr o p e r ly
t ax
reimbursements are fu nded
entirely by the state 's
personal im:ome tax.
Tota l reimbur se ment
checks to Meigs Cou nty and
its subdivisions are as
foll ows : Meigs County,
$18 ,7 65 .23 : Midd lep ort ,
12.5 89 . 40: Pome r oy,
$2,632 .17 : Raci ne, $844.71 :
Rutland , $560.71: Syracuse,
$901.51 : Bed ford, $270 71:
Ch ester, $880.19; Colwnbia,
$44 1.72 : Leba non, $422 .01 ;
Letart, $361.25: Olive, $671;
Orange, $503.49: Rull an d,
1627 .92 : Sa lem, $703 .47:
Sa li sbur y, $681.68: Sci pio,
1317.77 : Sutton, $690.77.
Reimbursements wSpecial
Districts within Meigs County
toaling $1 2, 547.43 are : Ment.a l
Ret&lt;trdation Bonds, $2,182;
Tub er cul os is Hos pital ,
$1 ,431.1 1; Meigs Co. Hospital,
$357.77 ; Emergency Levy,
13,5n.76: Tri.County Ment.a l
Hea lth , $833. 14 : Rio Grande
Co mm unity Co ll ege,
$4,165.65.
School di stricts withi n
Meigs County were mailed
che cks fr om th e Sta te
Department of &lt;:d ucatio n
t o t a li n g $97, 453 . 81.
Distributions to the distr icts
were as follows: Alexander
Local, $-7,29 4.39: Eastern,
516,689.94 ; Meigs, $50,112.64;
So uthern , $2 3, 167 . 33;
Alexander Jr. Voc. School,
$589.51.

I MAKE vOURs HAPPY! I
!1
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Send the BUNCH -OF -LOVE
On Mother's Day , May 14th

A r em embr ance bo uquet of garden fr es h f low er s and mother wo uld love
and cher ish . And, whether your
Mother's Day flowers ar e going near
or fa r , our 30,000 fello w w ire flor ists
mak e del iver y nea rl y anywhere as
si mpl e as a phon e ca l l. Pl ease order
early . Stop by soon or ca ll us today .

l•

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Hydrang e a s
• Azalea s
• Combination Pots
• Cut Flowers

• Pott ed Mum s
• Hanging Planters
•Corsages
• Pe rmanent Flowers

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POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
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MR S. MIL LARD VANMETER
Phone 992·2039
106 Butternut Av e .
992 -5721
Pomeroy , 0 .
We Acc ept All Ma jor .Credit Cards and

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HEARING SET
DAYTON. Ohio IUP I I Mon tgomery County Juvenile
Court Judge Arthur Fisher
has relinguished jurisdiction
over three teenagers charged
with robbery and mu rder in
the purse-snatching an d
death of Ma rjorie Blacker, a
79-yea ro()ld retired Dayton
school teacher.
Followi ng that actron Tues.
day a hearing will be held to
de termi ne if the three yo uths,
aged 15 and 16, will be tried as
adults .
The th ree youths allegedly
reached out of the car window
and grabbed the woman's
purse in a grocery store
pa rking lot, dragging her
beside the car before run n in ~
over her in another area of
the parking lot. She died a
few hours later.
TWO KIU ED
GRAN VILLE, Ohio (U PIJ
- Joe Caudill , 16, Newark,
and his brother, Brian, 9,
were killed Tuesday night in
an au to co llision at th e
intersection or l.icking
County Roads 21 and 15.
Another motorist suffe red
minor injuries ln. the crash.

2 ONLY

TURF -6' &amp;12' WIDTHS
'4.95 Sq. Yd.
ARMSTRONG OUTDOOR CARPET
REG . $3.35
SPECIAL '2.95

BAKE SALE
A ba ke sa le will be held
Sa turda y at Ra cine Pos t
Offi ce lot beginning at 9 a.m.
The event is being spon sored
by llacine Chapter 134 OES.
All members are to have
ba ked guods at the Post
Office lot early.

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REUNION COMMITIEE - Alumni of Pomeroy High
School, class of 1938, are busy making plans for their
upcoming toth reunion wbe held on Saturday, May 27, at
Meigs High School cafeteria. Twenty-nine members of the
clllss have indicated they will attend the 40th reunion . Of
the 94 members of the 1938 graduating class, 11 of them
are deceased. A social hour will be held the afternoon of

CHARCOAL
BARBECUE·
KETTLES

REG. 194.95 2 H.P. TILLER
1

100% SOLID STATE

- Heavy Steel
Con struction
- Use d Less
Charcoal

"The Best
There ls"

VINYL LINOLEUM

ONLY

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

-12 FT. WIDTH

-100% NYLON PILE
-GOLD OR GREEN
- EXCELLENT SELECTION
OF 9 FT. &amp; 12 FT. WIDTHS · "'
-EXPERT INSTALLATION

ONLY

'495 Sq. Yd.

WAREHOUSE ON MECHAN.IC STREET

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

GREETING GOVERNOR AT NEW HAVEN - Two
members of th e West Virginia House of Delegates and
New Haven Mayor Charles Roush are shown with Gov.
John D Rockefeller IV this morning in New Haven where
he came to view the improvements bein g made to old
Route 33, a topic of controversy for years over wh o has the
r e~ponsi bil ity

at y
'.

or mai ntai ning it.

•

enttne

By Uolted Press International
.
:::
DAYTON, OHIO - THE SHILOH CONGRESSIONAL
CHURCH at Harrison Townshrp, north of Da yton, was heavily
damaged by a general alarm fire early today. More than 100
volWlteer firefighters fought the blaze at the church .
Minister Barry Johnson says the church celebrated its
!25th anniversary last week . Fire officials says no cause of the
blaze has yet been determined.

WASHI NGTON (UP! ) Rep. Cilrrence J. Brown , J\.
Ohio, has success full y
rer n se rt ed s pen d ing
auth ori zatio ns for the·
Portsmouth , Ohio, Gas
Ce nt rifu ge E nri chm e nt
Plant , to get $220 million in
constru ction funds, in the
Department of Energy
budget for fi scal 1979.
SJl&lt;'nding authorizations for
th e
fac ili ty
in
the
dep a rtm ent ' s
ori ginal

MARIETIA, GA. - TWO PERSONS FLYING home to
Ohio were killed Wednesday when ll)eir' small airplane
exploded over a baseball field five miles north of Mariett&lt;t . The
explosion is under investigation by the Fed eral Aviati on
Admlnlstration .
Pollee Identified the victims as Robert L. Suever, 56, and
his wife Audrey, 57. They were flying home to Delphos, Ohio
when their Beechcraft Bonanza exploded in the air and
crashed into a cluster of trees at 3:3S p.m.
CINCINNATI - THE CITY MIGHT HAVE to limit traffic
on ill! roads or risk a steady erosion of jobs due to federal air
pollution standards for business and industry, the Cincinnati
Environmental Advisory Council said Wednesday.
In a report to city council, the group said 1977 amendments
to the U.S. Clean Air Act will cause loss of jobs, prevent local
elrJli!Mlon by businesses, and hamJl&lt;'r creation of new jobs in
CincinnaU.

withdraws
ooLUMBus (UPIJ - Reduced customer demand , Increased purchases of Ohioproduced gas and extra
available quantities · of
natural gas wlll permit
Columbia Gas of Ohio tn
forego buying Sfveral billion
cubic feet of higher priced
emergency fuel this summer
and not add curtallments on
large volume users.
Columbia Gas of Ohio
Wednesday asked the Ohio
Pllblic Utilities Commission
lor pennlssion to withdraw
1111 March 14 application,
seeking authority w recover
the coat of buying higher
priced gas.
The finn said It has been
able to buy some three billion
·cubic feel of natural gas,
delivered In Ohio at a cost not
to exceed $2 per thousand
cubic feet, which is the firm's
average gas cost.
The PUCO had set a May JO
hearing on how the additional
cOO of the more expensive
ps should be recovered by
the company. It also ordered
Columbia to survey Its
CWI!oolers to detennine how
much of the emergency gas
they needed, which has been
• Ill ned. Columbla said It no
Ianger needed w make the
III'Vey .
Columbia said 1111 expanded
gaa procW"ement in the state
will mean 5.2 bllllon cubic
feet of Ohio-produced gas will
lntn its pipelines during
the ceming year, tn help
•olflet Ita supply defiCit.
At present, only a 100
percent cutbeck on large
volume boiler fuel usage Is in

now

ellect.
I

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fair Saturday and a
chance of showers Sunday
and Monday. Highs wlll be
In the 60s and lows will be
in the 40s.
::::::::::•::: :::.:::::::::::::::::::•:::•:::::•:•:·:·:-: :::-::-:·:·: :-:

Middleport
W0fflaJ1

hurt

fift een Cents
Vol 2!1. No. 9

Funding is
reinstated

;:;:

OOLUMBUS - VIOLENT CRIMES AGAINST THE
elderly or disabled in Ohio could be subject to more severe
penalties if Gov. James A. Rhodes signs into law a bill sent to
his desk Wednesday by the Ohio General Assembly.
The House passed the bill 00-7 during a lengthy fl oor
aeasion and after SusJl&lt;'nding its rules, the Senate swiftly
agreed to the House changes to send the bill to Rhod es.
Ohioans over the age of 6S or towlly disabl ed citizens are
increasingly becoming the victims of violent crimes becau se of
their helplessness, explained House sponsor Rep . Ha rrv
Lehman, ~eVPland .

May or Roush , Del. Charles Damron (D-Putnam ), Gov.
Rockefeller and Del. Dave O'Nea l ([)..Mason ). Gov.
Rockefeller, in addition to having old Rl. 33 paved ,
ann ounced today that he is go ing to rebuild the old Broad
Rw1 bridg e. He also pledged to do paving work in front of
the Hartford post offi ce.

PirturrrL fr nm 1f'ft are

rN;;;,·::· :· :··· :·: :·i ;::·:·Ji;;;f;\,1

request

GE 19" COLOR PORTABLE

the alumni dinner at the Meigs Inn from 3:30 to 5 p. m. The
dinner will be held at 6:30p. m. Shown are, front row, 1-r,
Bo Brown, Mary Elberfeld Morris, Rose Sisso n; back,
William (Bill ) Hobstetter, George Edward Morri s, and
Lyl e Hysell. Those who wish to reserve banquet licke ts
are to contact Rose Sisson at 614-992-2049 or 614-992-2431.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, April 27, 1978

Columbia

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GINOS

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COLUMBUS . (UPI) House-passed legislation
designed to regulate the
consumption of " junk" food
on public school premises is
ready for a floor vote in the
Ohio Senate.
The bill came out of the
Senate Education and Health
Committee on a 6-1 vote
Tuesday night, only one week ·
after it had cleared the
House. It was sent to the
Rules
Committee
for
assignment to the Senate
calendar.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. Virginia Aveni, D-Lynd·
hurst, requires local boards
of education to set standards
for food consumption on
school premises, including
quality, hours and location ,
based on state guidelines.
Originally, Ms. Aveni had
proposed specific
prohibitions on "juQk" food,
including soft drinks, candy,
Popsicles and chewing gum
containing sugar . Those
provisions were knocked out
in House committee.
Ms. Aveni said she will seek
to have stricter language
• restored on the Senate floor ,
alt~o ugh she has given up on
banning specific " junk "
foods .
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, R·
Defiance, voted against the
bill on grounds it received
only one hearing in the Senate
committee.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Hospital News

r-----.. .

bill ready
for action

Canal Treaty and for Carter's
attempts to maintain peace in
Cyprus. But he criticized
Ca rter's Middle
East
policies, economic programs
and Carter's decision to delay
production of the neutron
bomb.
"I don't think we should
have succumbed to Soviet
blackmail," Ford said,
referring to the neutron bomb

SaJd, drawin g laughs fr om
the crowd. Later, l1e prO·

••

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'Junk' food

Ford criticizes Carter battle plan
against inflation during Ohio visit
CLEVELAND t UPI I Former President Gerald
Ford has concluded his first
visit to northea stern Ohio
since the 1976 presidential
ca mpaign, picking up where
he left off just before losi ng
the election to Jimmy Carter.
Ford cri ticize d Ca rter 's
battl e plan against inflation,
co ntendin g it is a bu s!.
''TI1ey 've given us a great
opportunity. We can't fail to
tell that story to th e
American pe ople," Ford told
some 1,000 Republi cans
Tuesday at the Cleve land
Plaza Hotel.
Ford
had
troub le
pronouncing the name of
C u ya h oga
Co ur&lt;t y
Commiss ioner George V.
Voinovir h. Gov . .James
Rhodes' running mate for
lieutenant
gove rn or .
"Where's Vuko•ir h." Ford

~-~
! ) ' )

s pendin g requests

MEIGS HIGH SENIORS playing roles in the first of
four one act plays to be given at 8 p.m. on Fr ida y, May 12,
ar e pictu red. "Every body's Secret " is the title of the play .
The group includes, front , I to r. Joni Murray. Paige

Smith, Cathy Blaettnar : back, I to r. Velvet Swisher,
Susa n Wright , Nancy SWnley, Marcia Dillard, and Becky
Fry, studen t director. Not present were Jenn ifer Wise and
Cheryl LeFebr e.

West Virginian jailed
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports
Tobin Layne Kinder , 21,
Moundsville , W. Va., was
arrested Wednesday morning
by Mei gs County deputies for
operatin g a motor vehi cle
while under the influ ence of
alcoh ol.
Chec king la ter with West
Virginia auth orities, the
sh eriff's offi ce learn ed
Kinder was wanted in Hitchie
County, W. Va. on a felonv

charge of grand larceny. It is
all eged Ki nder and another
subject had broken into a
West Virginia Conservation
Offi cer 's car and took some of
the offi cer's eq uipm ent.
Ritchie County Sheri ff sai d
they woul d extra dite Kinder
wh en Me igs Coun ty is
fini shed with him.
In the meantime. Kinder
was ,jailed pending a hea ring
this Friday before Meigs
County Co urt Judge Robert
Buck on the DWI charge.
Virgil Phill ips, 27, Mid·
dl eport , wa s arre sted by
Meigs Co unt y Sh eri ff's
deputies on a warrant fro m
the Athens Dounty Muni cipa l
Court charging him with
l'Ontempl of co urt . Phill ips
was transported to Athens
Co un ty late Wednesda y
eveni ng .
In other activity, Russe ll
Holsinger, Chester, report ed
sometime Monday night or
early Tuesday morning his
mailbox had been dama ged.
The incident is under in·
vestiga lion.
Tw o weeks ago. "Meigs
Co unty Sheriff's deputi es
recove red some items from a
mine shaft in the Dark Hollow
area following breaking and
enter ings of two ne a rby
houses. At the lime, several
items were recovered that
were not claimed by the two
property owners.
Wedne sda y, deput ies
learned another house had
been entered at Dark Hollow

Virginia A. Scott , 60,
Middleport, suffered minor
injuries in an accident at I :50
p.m. Wednesday on SR 1611 at
the junction to US J5 in Gallia
County.
'
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
she was a passenger in a car
driven by Paul A. Scott, 62,
Middleport . Their car was
struck in the rear of an auto
operated by James A.
Stanley, 25 , Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
Spring Clean-Up Week. will
Mrs. Scott was not im· be conducted in Middleport
mediately treated. There was starting Monday, May I and
moderate damage. Stanley continuing throu ghout the
was charged with failure to week untll f'riday, Ma y 5,
stop within the assured clear
Residents are urged to
distance.
clean up their yards and lots
A deer was killed in an ,· and take advantage of this
accident at l :20 p.m. Wed· free pickup service provided
nesday on SR 160 near Kerr. by the village .
The animal ran into the path
Material to be picked up is
of a vehicle operated by to be pla ced at the curb in
Willard A. Robinson , 56, Rt. I, front of residences. It will be
Bidwell. There was minor picked up by th e street
damage .
department on the day
At 10 :45 a .m. on SR 7, two scheduled for ward pickups.
and one tenth miles south of
The pickup schedule is as
SR 218 an accident occurred follows : Monda y, first ward ;
when an auto driven by · Tuesday, second war d:
Samuel D. Smith, 19, Eureka Wednesday, third ward. and
Star Rt., Gallipolis, at- Thursday, fourth warp.
Brice Smith, a broker for
tempted to pass a ear on the
Pickups will begin al 7: 30 a.
the
Ohio Company spoke on
right. He lost control of his m. so please place your Items
the
stock
market hi tting upon
vehicle which ran off the at the curb the night befure
potential
earnings
and losses,
beim striking a utlllty pole the scheduled pickup in your
when
the
Pom eroyand fire hydrant owned by the area.
Middleport
Uons
Club met
GaUia County Rural Water
If you are 'missed during
for
a
lun
che
on
at noon
AssoclaUon. There was minor the regular scheduled date in
Wednesda
y
at
the
M
eigs Inn.
damage . No charges were your area, please cai1992·3H5
Plans
were
outlined
for the
filed.
or 992-5711.

Clean-up

scheduled

in village

an d Items ;t olen matched
those recovered. The owner
of th e house, Roy Bri ggs,
Co lumbus, was asked to rom e
to the Sh eriff's office an d
make positive id entifi cation .
A relativ e of Briggs had
chec ked th e house an d
report ed it had been entered
within the past two weeks.
Deputi es said charges are

WILLOW ISLAND, W.
Va . IUP! ) - A scaffolhlng··
high atop a power plant
cooling tower under con·
structlon collapsed today
sending dozens of workm en
plunging to the ground.
Initial stale poll ee
reports said that as many
as 60 persons were Injured
Ia the acddenl . Th ere were
no Immediate reports or
death s ,
althou g h
authorities said some of the
workmen may have !allen
as much as 200 h•et.
;.;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:-:·

GLASSES FOUND
The Meigs Co unty Sheriff's
Departm ent found a pair of
plastic fram ed gla sses in a
leather case on Elberfeld's
parking lot.
On the case are the names
of Dr. R. D. Thomas, Dr.
Will iam B. Thomas and Dr.
Gary L. Clarke, optometr ists,
Gallipolis. The owner may
pick them up at th e sheriff's
offi ce .

Smith speaker for lwtcheon

..

club's annual hole-in-one golf
CQntest and the possibilities
of a booth at the Mei gs
County Fair were discussed:
SJl&lt;'Cial tributes were given
to club member, the late
James Danner of Gallipolis.
Bruce Teaford , King Lion,
presided over the meeting.

pending.
Three juveniles have been
charged in the Meigs County
Juvenile Court on the other
two house entries, after being
identified as the perso ns seen
carryin g items fr om the
vicinity or the houses-.
Tu esday evenin g, Ma ry
Call, 39, Rt. 1, Rutland, was
traveling north on US Rt. 33
when her car struck and
kill ed a deer. There was
moderate damage . She was
not inj ured.
Tuesday evening at 7: 10 p.
m. on New Lima Road in
Rutland Township, Anna L.
Spires, 21 , Rt. 1, Rutl and, was
tr aveling north and said she
swerved to miss some
potholes in the road . She
advised that when she struck
a bad place in th e roadway
she applied her brakes, but
lost control of her car. It
skidded off the roadway and
st ruck a ho use trailer owned
by Francis Imboden, Rl. I,
Rutland. Th ere was slight
dama ge to the house trail er
and the Spires car.

we r e

deleted by th e House Energy
and Power Subcommittee's
maj ority staf f, when it
rewrote departm ent funding
guidelin es
for
its
con sideratio n . Br own
amended it Wed nesday.
be fore the authorizations go
to the fu ll committee .
Thew House Sc1enre and
Tcc hn o!Og)' Committee approved the $220 million
au thor ization last week. The
House Interior and Insular
Affai rs Co mmit tee, wh ich

ha s jurisdiction over energy
spendin g authorizations, is
ye t to consid er
th e
deparunent requests .
" If we had not authorized
fllo ney for this project, the
United States could have
trouble meeting future needs
for enriched uranium in both
th is country and the world ,"
the Urbana Republican said .
"And the result wi ll be that
foreign countries may be
forced to obtain nu clear
energy supplies to meet their
nuclear power demands from
coun tries such as the Soviet
Union .
" And th e result tha t this
potenti al situation could have
on our national sec urity is
obvious .
" Fu rthermore, these construction funds for the Portsmout h fa cility must be
authorized if thi s country is
going to meet the ag reements
of the reeen tly enac ted
Nuclear No nproli ferati on
Treaty ."

Governor Rhodes feels
Ohioans will see hike
COLUM BUS IUPI )- Gov .
James A. Rh odes sai d today
Ot.i o residents will see an
increBse of about $.13 a year in
their elec tric bills if electric
utilities are forced to install
scrubbers in an attempt to
fight air polluti on.
Rhodes aksed all Ohioans
to write Pesident Carter and
back the governor's call for a
thr eeyea r morator iu m on
meet ing U.S. Environmental
Protecti on Agency clean-air
standards.
He sai d th e scrubbers,
whi ch are mandated by th
U.S. EPA , would increase
electric bills in Ohio by 10 to
15 per cent.
"This would mean an increase of $38 a year to the
avera ge home conswner,"
said
Rh odes .
" The
. fr ustr a tin ~ part is that this
money would be spent on a

pol lut ion control sys tem
which

is

unproven ,

unreliable, and wh ich creBtes
additional pollution in the
form of lime sludge ."
Recent estimates indicate
that it would cos t Ohio
electric companies $1.4
billion to add scrubbers for
existing plants, plus another
$93 million for units currently
under construction or coming
on line, said Rhodes.
"These figu res are only for
the capital costs for the
equipmen t," said Rhodes .
"Annual operating costs for
scrubbers at the existing
plants are estimated to be
between $300 and $400
million."
"Consumers will have to
foot th is bill, despite strong
qu estions about the worth of
scrubbers, " Rhodes said.

Otairmrut infonns commission
Mannin g Webs t e r :
chairman of the Men ta l
Retardation Board, met with
the Meig s Co unt y Co mmissioners Tues day in fonning them about a predesign conference he and
architect Frank Lee attended
in Columbus.
Webster told the board
progres. Is being ma de
toward the construction of the
Mentally Retarded Training
Center .
Several citizens along with
Olive Township tru stees,
Chester Wells and Grant
Smith and Orange Township
trustee, Norman Weber met
with the board to discuss
problems created by garbage

C'Onta iners in those town·
ships.
CommiSsioners explained
location of containers was the
responsibility of the trustees
in their respective townships.
A lengthy discussion was
held concernin g pres ent
locations In Olive and Orange
Townships.
Upon
th e
recommendation of Wells.
Smith and Weber, trus!ees
attending , it was decided a
public meeting would be held
on Thursday, May 4, at
Tuppers Plains Elem entary
School at 7:30p.m. The public
at that sessi on, will be given
an opportunity to express its
opinion on locations of the
containers.
It was staled if a solution

co uld not be worked out at
tha t meeting regar ding
location of the containers,
they would in all probability,
be removed from the two
upon
the
town ships,
recomm endation of the
trustees.
The Meigs County Planning
Commission was authorized
to submit a pre-application
for federal funds from a
Developm ent Assistance
Planning Grant.
This grant will provide
planning assistance for the
county and will require no
cash match from the county.
Attending were Richard
Jones · and Jim Roush ,
commi ssioners and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk .

�3- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , I hursday, Apnl 27 1978

2- The Daoly Sent mel Moddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Thursday Aprol27 1978

Activities of ACS is

Editorwl sampling

What Ohio Newspapers
•
are saymg
•••

Many people sttll thmk
that ACS volunteers onl y rmg
doorbells to ra1se money for
resea rch,' smd S M1 chael
publi c onformatton cha ~rman
uf the Mc1gs Cancer Umt
'I11Cy don't realize that
we ve not onI) gro\\n 111 stzc
over the years but have a
comprehens ovc program of
rese arch edu catiOn a11d
scrvt cc to cmu:cr pa tients
Our a ttlV Il Jes 1ange from
ca ncer
pr e\ entwn
to
, chabohtalJon of ca nce r

The Columbus Dispatch
It os tune for federal environmental offlcoals to get off Ohio 's
back - they have become mtolerable nags
About 2,200 water pollution abatement permots have been
ossued to Ohio busmesses m t-omphance wtth federal clean
water regulatoons and only 20 companoes are not operatrng
accordrng to a comphance schedule
But the federal Enwonmental Protec Uon Agency IS vortually demanding these fe w exceptions be hauled mto court by
the stat.. EPA
What correct!) bothers Ned Wolhams, the Ohoo envoronmen1.91 choef os that Ohoo comparues are making a good faoth effort
to comply
But the federal EPA brooks no excuse however vahd ot may
be AToledo form, for example, has been unable to complete ots
comphanc e requorement because fore destroyed the company
fu rrushm g necessary eqwpment
Trouble woth the federal EPA people, says Mr Wolliams, os
that th ey are sott,ing on theor Clucago offoces and do not have
close touch woth Ohio conditoons Takmg the Ohoo EPA 's word
for condotoons os not enough But ol should be
Mr Wilhams has declared tha t 'I am a form behever that
the sta le should handle ols own progra m and I think most
people m Ohio feel the same way
Mr Wllhams os n ght The federal EPA people should
understand that reaht1 and get off Ohoo s back

pati ent s '

-'Th ey're not go1ng to have Mr Green)eans to kfck around anymore "

Mart1us Ferr) Times-Leader
If the Oh10 coal mduslrJ os to surv1ve, then one of two things
mu.-;t U(,: cur

E1lhm the feder al go,ernment through Congress must
compromose permanently on the permiSSible emtsston levels
of sulfur dJoXlde, Or 1l must g1ve more tome, maybe constd
erable more than the three vears asked b) Gov Rhodes at a
meeting m St Clatrsvtlle on order to develop a cost JUSllftable
method of removmg sulfur from coal
Thts tS not odie l&lt;llk The Sllualwn 1s urgent And the
predictions are not good If eastern Oh1o and the Oh10 Valley IS
hit w1th a double whammv by that we mean the dornmtshmg
effectiveness of the stee l mdustry coupled woth a serwus
deten oratwn of the coal mdustrv then the area wtll not be a
very deSirable pl ace lOlove If OllC IS able lO do tbe latter at all
The fa cts a rc begonnmg w mount To comply woth federa l
sulfur regu lattons the new Cardinal 3 generating urut, whtch
went on bne near Brilhant late last J ear IS ornporltng two
milium tons of low sulfw coal a year from a mtne near
Cha1leston W Va 1 hat," hen al l the coal Cardlnal 3 could use
IS n ght 111 1ts own backyard
SUlfur regulatiOns are a maw contributing fa ctor to a 43
percent decrease m ConsolidatiOn Coal 's Ohto acttvtty dunng
the past three years while &lt;~t the same ttme natwnal coal
production has risen 16 percent
Most momedtatel l Consolidation Cwl has announced that
the JObs of 1 000 Oh10 eoal mmers were tn Jeopardy beca use of
the refusal of the Cleveland Elect nc lllununaltng Co to renew
a 1 6 moll JOn ton contract CEI has already begun cootractmg
for nearly 8 m1lhon tons of coal from lo~&lt; sulfur coal sources tn
eastern Kentuck) ,md southern West Vorgtma
We would hope that c1 ttzens busmesses, CIVIC orgamza
twns u-,odc uruons a nd busmess assouat wns begm to take
senously the threat to our local economy The changes must
come at the federalle1el Hence letters to US senators- are
m order Mxi the ' OOner the better
LuraiD JuurlUII

••
\

•
•
'

The potentials of the touted Jetport m Lake Ene off the
Cleveland shore a re exceeded by the obstacles to 1ts
pracuca hty As the Akron Beacon Journal put the matter It
has been fueled w oth a lot of dollars smce 1972, but tl JUS!
won t t.9ke off
Now more dollars are wanted The Lake Ene Regtonal
TransportatiOn Authoroty trustees have voted to ask the
Federal Avlalton Admmostratlon for $200 ,000 more on top off
the $4 5 mllhon already spent, for oneftnal study
Has anvthmg happened to gtve cause to thmk the conclusiOn
reached on 1976 af ter months on months of study would for
some reason now be different ' The decJSton then wa s that a
Lake E:ne Jetport w"' not feas1ble and would not attra ct
enough passen ger volwne to JUStify 1ts constructtoo wtthout
closmg the Akron-Canton Atrport
Thai prospect 1s about as popular as a crutch m Akron and
Canton But the hometown parltsans have little to worry about
In our opmoon the Akron newspaper was rtghl m con cludin~
At an; rate Akron-Canton Atrport trustees shou ld not paruc
at thi s latest LERT A fh ght of fan cy "
Ravenna-Kent Record -Courier
The Stale Emergency board shou ld gtve sertous
conStderauon to upcommg pleas b; both Kent SUite and
Porl&lt;lge County that 11 p1ck up part of the expenses mcurred
durmg last year 's protests agamsl the KSU gym annex
Without state help , paytng the esttmated pnce of 1830,000 for
law enforce ment and JUdtcoal work that had to be done to get
Uorough the protest wtll prove a tough burden for the taxpayers
of Porl&lt;l ge County and the uru verstt y
Trul) U1e protest quahhes as a fmanctal emergency It was
not somethm g eother the county or the umve rs1ty could plan on
or budg et foc The county s share of the cost which comes to
$87,000, stret ches county momes beyond what local ta xpayers
ought to be expected to shoulder
Once the deciSIOn to go ahead wtth the gym complex was
made, durmg the 197&amp;-77 yea r, there was httle the umverstl)
could do to mmorn1ze the protest ll was not something that
could be controlled
Woth Kent Stale's fman ces already runnmg too short to cover
normal umverstly expenses, the mon1es 1t would have to pay
our of ots general fund reserve amount to more than the
umverSi ty should be reasonably expected to pay
rhe gym annex protest also should be seen as an tssue th at
goes beyond Kent State and Portage County It has 1ls roots m
the 1970s campus shootmgs that were not between Kent St&lt;lt..
.md the protester s but between the SUite of Ohio, as
represen t..d by the Nationa l Guard, and the protesters
That be mg the case the untverstty and the county have a
nght tu loo k to the SUite of Oh1o for some help m this latest
em e r g en~.:}

Mansfield N•ws Journal
The ( lea r r ur k r xperunent w1th great..r Ci tizen partl clpallon on the opcr &lt;~ ll n n of public schools w1ll be watched closely on
f1lhe r ilf l.:rl sc honl dJ~ l fi Ct.'i
Ihe br" onc hlld of (1ear rork Supenntendent Robert Spence,
the plan &lt;a lis for the electiOn of a comrmttee of parents, teach
crs and students for each school butlding m the dtstnct The
commit u,e headed by the pnnc1paJ of th e school, would be
empowered tn make deciSions on the opera Uon of the school,
decosoons wh och arc now mad e by the school board or the
ad nun 1:str at10n
Accnrdon g to Spenc ~ the tdea os to broaden the power, not to
diJuu, ll He hopes to tmplement hiS power to-the-people
cooce pt w1 thm three year•
The operatwn off the schools IS a subJeCt that ts very
ornport.9nt to parents, teachers and students the groups whtch
would be ~ t vcn greater VOICe under the Clear rork plan Thts IS
an adnurable attempt tn 1mprove comJnumc atwn , to Increase
Citizen mvolvemcnt and u rnJtk e schw l~ more responstvc lo
the people whn cat&lt; the mn&lt;t abou t them
But wil l 1l work '
Wtll the commJttee be abl e to do as good a JOb as the board
and agmtniSlrators are now dotng' Wfll the pubhc be any more
sat1sfled ' Will the prtnc•pals exert too much tnfluence -or too
httle' Wol l the schml board find tl pra cttcal to share Its
authority w1th several comrmttees' Will taxpayers who are
not parents expect a btgger vmce 10 sc hool operations as well '
There s only way to answer such questtons, and that's to do
It

Dodgers bomb Seaver, Reds, 14-4

explained by chairman

Farmers live poor, die rich
!EDITORS N(Yf E
fall , farm er s

art~ und

Lasl
thr

ct~un try

began prnlestmg fur
panty - h1gher pnces fur
thm products Snme ha1 e
threatened 111 "'thhuld farm

produ( ts frum tht· ma rket tu
dnve thus(' pn ces up
Althuugh th ere has be-en nn
real measurt ttf support m
Ohiu fur the farmers
str1ke, " sumc farmers and

state farm off" 1als bell e1e
the protest has served a
purpu se

makmg

111

cu nsum ers aware uf the
farm e r s
problrm s
f ,JIIowlng IS the sec11 nd
art1cl r m a three part series
by R1ck Van Sant ttl UPI s
Cincmnau bureau 1m lhc
farm s1tuatmn m Ohw m the
~ak.e uf the CCUIIIIID IC Culldl ·
twns of the fanner Tuda) 's
art1 c h~ rep,,rts un tht• n• flcc ~
tlons

11f

Ohw

AgncuJI ure

Dire ctor Juhn Stackh11Usr
and OhJ, farm Burea u t hief
Bill Swank 1

Bv RI CK VANSANT
United Press International
rarmers live poor and die
rtch, lame nts Oh1n fdrm
Bureau executl\ e \l e e
prestdent Btll Swank It s an
old sa) tng but sllll true
At least half-trot' agree a
lot of farmers !'he 'll'e
poor part that IS
U 1~ ess you happen to o"n a
heap of land and equipment
- '" ef fec t run what
am ounts to a corporation farmm ~ today remams thr
nsk tt alv.a) s ha:) been pomt
out both Swank w1d Ohoo
Agncul lure Depa rtm ent
Dorector John Stackholl•e
You can t be a small

--------I

1
I
I

I
I

Social :
Calendar l

FRIDAY
REVIVAl A1 Lung Rottom
Un1 ted Meth odi St Church
Thursdav through Sunda y
7 30 p m and spe~ Jal muSic
each C\ cntng
Che ster
Lemley Vmton CVel ngehst
and pu blic mv1ted
SA TURilA Y
OPEN HOUSE ~ to 7 p m
Saturda) al Pomeroy Forr
Stallon 10 mark $:10'000 mort
gage burmng ccr em on) at
6 30 p m Occas1on 1o com
memoratc paJ on g off of
130 000 mortgage b) firem en
on their headquarters l 1ght
refr eshm en ts an d pubh r
InVIted

fa1 mer .1 nd ha1 e a large
mc ome saJd Swank And It
seems to be the ~&lt; r o n g ume to
tr) tn start a fa rm
Added Stac khouse Even
m contr.1st to re&lt;. ent }~ars
farm ers are not as "ell off
t&lt;Jda y because there s been a

In mor e and more
households, the woman 1s
workmg out of the house
fu lllune and there 1sn t as
much tome for food preparatwn," potnled out Swank
1 he conven ience that
moddlemen put mto foOd has
dechnc m mcome and (In become a necesstty
mcreasr 111 cost '
It s also amazmg to me
The proc e of fond IS JUmpm g how ltltle
consumers
too but farmers arc qu1ck to understand the food sttuatwn
tell agot,lted shoppers to The h1gher foo d pnc es
blame midd leme n the they're pa) ong 1s not because
p1 ocessors
and of the farmer but b&lt;!cause of
food
d1st nbuto1s
h1gher transportatton energ)
SY..a nk agrees, and tn turn and labor costs
also says the consumer 1s
I also don 't thmk people
to
th e are budgetmg theor money
contnb uttn g
rn Jddl e m &lt;~n s btg chunk of the
for food hke the) used to
fmd t.J b
Thev' re spendmg thm
Consume rs are almo!:it money for'!Vsa ndthmgshke
gettmg 111a1d serVIce ~hen that and then figure they re
the) sh• p toda y " sa od ge ttmg npped off buymg
Swank Who cuts the top off food •
carrots an) more? Who peels
But Stackhouse hopes the
pota h1e s am more ') Wh o recent farmers ' stnke' has
tnm s lll tuce anymore" It made an unpa cl on
JUSt docsn t happen 'er) c.:onswr1ers
much am more
The stnke d1d tw o
Women s hb and the search thmgs ' he sa1d
'Mo st
for the gtKtcl lofe also uuporta ntlv, 1l created a
.lppear to IJa.l, e boosted the pubhc awareness of th e
m1ddleman over the fa rmer squeeze that rarmers are m
1

(!}HEALTH

~awrence E Lamb,M D
Weight loss is vital
Lamb MIl
DF.AI\ DR LAMB - I am
so desperat e an d hea rt
broken My husband had a
b, pass ope ra tiOn and now
they tell me he has acce lerate d alh erosc!eJoSJ s
I1le surgerr wa s six months
agu li e IS only 41 and had
alwa ys bee n In perfec t
health
Pl ease could you help me
by letting me know where and
who I could poss1bl) see to get
help T" o olher lives depend
on h1s
DEAR READEH - I know
ho" fn ghtenmg It os to lea rn
th at a loved one has a senous
and perhaps fatal dtsease
But then are lhtn gs you can
do to hel p) our husband live a
longer and useful hfe
He has fatt y choleste rol
depoSits m hts art crJes and
there IS so me cvrdence that
th e process ean be slowed ,
.stopped or even re\ersed
The t Wtt most Imp orta nt
lhmgs to do are to not smo ke
and to get really thin The
lall cr has to be done
gradu all y but I don 1 tho nk
ma ny of the special diets help
much 1f a person doesn l get
nd of 1ll the excess fat under
the skm Unfortunately, too
oft en both the pa t ~enl and Ihc
doctor stop short of the real
goal of Ideal " eight reducLa~&lt;renre

REVIVAI a the Church of
Jesus Chml Ne w Lorn a
Road Rutland begmnon g
Saturday at 7 30 p m Elder
Damon Adam s Ma netta
eva ngehst Elder Ha) Rouse
past01 Public onv1ted
BAKE SAl E Saturday 9
am at Ra cme Post Off1ce
lot Members to brmg baked
goods early
StN DAY
tion
OLD FASHIONED Hymn
Get your husband down to
Smg Sunday at 7 30 p m at the pmnt that there rs no more
Morn1n g
Sta r
Uru ted , fat around the small of hJS
Meh t o d1 s t
C hurch
ba ck than you ordmanly ftnd
Congregation wea nng long under the sktn over the back
sktrts and overalls
of the hand That means no
sognJfJ canl fat depos its
around the waJSt anywhere
TEA SLATED
An yth1n g less lhan that
The muJUal Buckeye (," b means you ha\ c not done all
Slate orlenliJlJ on tea fo1 ) OUt.Jil do We do know thai
delegates and a ltun&lt;~ lcs w1JI "' moll key experiments the
be held Sunday al the f.an- fa tly
cholesterol depos11s
caster Legwn hall Mam St
will drsappear 1f the monkeys
from 3 to 5 pIll M1ss F:rma are put on a low-J' aloues, low
Srmth of the Amen can
fat, low - cholesterol d1et
LegJOn Auxi liary Drew
If your husband happens to
Webster Post , J9 wtll &lt;~ &lt;
have elevated blood pressure
1 tJmpany the gu ls to i.dfl
that should also be controlled
caster

Wctght
redu ctiOn
and
ehmmatton of salt help here
too
HJS dJCt should be low 111 fat
!that helps control the calone
onl ake lou J and low 111
cholesterol I am sendmg )OU
The Health Lette r number 12,
DJCt
Preve nttng
AtheroscleroJsJs, to help you
Others ~ ho want thts tn
fo rmataon can send 50 cents
wtth a long, stamped , self
addressed envelope for tt to
me 10 care of thiS newspaper ,
P 0 Box 1551 Rad1o C1ty
Stat1on New York, NY 10019
If h1s cond1t1on perm1ts he
could start da tly walkmg He
should not overdo the exerctse and should progress tn
th1s department at a rate hJS
own docto r permtts But the
more he ts able to walk the
more hel p he wtll get 111
reducmg hts body fat and
llllprovmg h1s corndttton
These are the measures
that help most tn reversmg
the pro cess of fatty cholesterol depostts If the
cholesterol level 1s htgh or
there are other tndtcatlons of
abnormal blood fats m the
blood sampl e then hts doctor
may w1sh to gtve h1m some
medlcmes to help also If hts
blood pressure rs high and
remain s so t here are
medicines that w111 help,
whoch you doctor can g1ve
him
The three fact ors that seetn
to have the most to do wtth
fatty-cho lestero l depostts are
the abnormal cholesterol or
blood fats, ctgarette smoking
and htgh blood pressure If all
of us would adopt life styles
that control these factors , the
dtsea ses - strokes and heart
attacks for tho must part caused by fatly cholesterol
blockage of the arteroes
wou ld decrease at least 50
percent And tn most Instances they would not occur
until m the late 70s or 80s for
most people The life span of
men could be ex panded
almost 10 to 15 years

Secondly 1t resulted m the
mtroductton of several pteces
of fa rm leg tslallon Even
though the stnkers farm aod
btll was not enatted other
farmers mcent1 ves are be mg
mcreased '
Stac khouse
sa 1d he
'sy mpa thi zed ' w1 th th e
stnke because of what 1t
was au-ned at - makmg Jt
possible for the farmer lo
make a proftt
Stackhouse sa1d he still
cons1ders hm1self a farm er
be causes of Ius fam ily 's 1 200acre seed corn, popcorn and
beef cattle farm m the small
north ern Oh10 communltJ of
Wakeman
'I wouldn t advtse people
not to go mto fa rmm g
because naturall) I'm b1ased
beca use of my pos tw n
added U1e state agr •culturc
department dtrector
but
I'm very much aware of
current problems because of
our farm '
Swank satd ll appears some
people fogure the fa n ners
strtke 11as a flop because food
product JOn dtdn 'l come to a
halt, but he mamtamed the
stnke was misnamed r~ nd
really was a success
' It wasn l a st roke he
sa1d It was a demonstratiOn
that farm ers have a
problem '
Next Agncultural expert
ana lyzes
rect'n l farm
developments and loo ks Into
the future

She sa) s 1! 1s well known
that the ACS mvests mtlho11s
of 1ts eontnbuted doll ars mlo
valuable research each yea1,
but ot her aspects of lhe
Society's work often go unnoticed
One of t he least un
derstood of our functwns IS
educ,Jllon Our phamphlcts,
film s and classes re not JUSt
frost mg on th e cake Illey .u e
1mportant tool s that s,,ve
lives she mamtams
There are Simple steps
mdJVoduals can take to help
prev ent
(a ncer
and
tcchmques they t dn use to
detect th e diSease 10 an c,u ly
treatable stage Stt ll oth er
t ancer tests c,ul be per
formed b) a doct01 dun11 g a
1egular physical exa m
Ma ny volu111eer s are
fo1 mer ca ncer pat ient s
them scl1 cs 11 ho can help
effe ctiv ely •be&lt;a use they
kno " what ot IS loke to have

cancer, colorecta l cancer and
18 other cancer Sites These
new brochures present all
srdcs of the subject mcludmg
the normal functiOnS of the
affected organ, what typ1f1es
the particular ca ncer and
how tt affec ts the body Also
mcluded JS mformatwn on
n sk factors and warmng
SJgns whiCh tf recogmzed by
!he tndJvJdual should mdtcate
the need to seek prompt
med1ca l attentiOn Current
medica l practices pertamlng
to the spectftc cancer stte are
hsted as well as treatment
methods and posstble stde
effects of such treatment
!'he pam phlets also mclude
the d~r ec l10n s of cuorent
resea rch for a 1 parttcular
cancCI SJte and mformalton
~&lt;In ch mdov1duals should use
m protec ti ng them selves
agamst that type of cancer
rhe lllll l also ha s other
fo lms,
and
ht eraturc,
prov 1d cs other addal1o nal •
servtccs Call 992-753! 1f we
t:a n be &lt;lnV asSistance to you
l'wnt:er I r1butt:
Id cnllc &lt;~ I

statues of the
M,ulonn,, of t11e lr a t! lla\C
''"'"' erected 111 12 states
sll etclung from Maryland to
C,lllfu•ma The , tatues arc a
mottument to tht courage and
dt:lmtmm:tl!O n of Amen ca 's
p1 unccr m o~hc rs

How cxtcnsJve and ef
fecllve ACS ser11ces are Ill
any g1ven are.l depend to a
great extent on tl s con
lJJ butoJs and ItS volunteers
M1chdel stresses !'he ACS
IS an orgamzat10n where
partoc1pat oon rcall ) co unts
At the prescnl time til e
Metgs ( ounty Unll has free
of charge newlv developed
pamphlet s by the ACS on
ut erll\ e camcr
brc(Jst

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s t eer~ng and brake s

the Los Angeles Dodgers
swept a two-game senes
from the Cmcmnalt Reds
Wtlh a 14 4 vtctory now has a
().2 record after ftve starts
Hts earned run average IS
500
Consecuttve fourth rnmng
homers by Dave) Lopes and
Btll Russell off Seaver and a
three-run blast by Reggte
Smtih off Pedro Borbon that
chmaxed a seven-run ntnth
tnmng were three of 19 htls, a
season htgh, that rattled off
the bats of the Dodgers as
they stretched their lead over
the Reds lo I ~, games m the
National League West
What 's more, th e two
homers off Seaver boosted to
etght the total he has ytelded
m the 27 tnnmgs he has ptl
ched to dale
' I'm concerned," conceded
Reds Manager Sparky Anderson But I'm confident
everythmg ts gomg to work
out ali nght so I m not
worried "
There was a shghl pause
before Anderson added the
word yet
Seaver's mabJltly to attam
the wtnnmg form that has
ea rned htm three Cy Young
Awards, though, tsn't An
derso n's only ptt chmg
headache There 's also Btll
Bonham's sore nght elbow
Bonham, who hasn t ptl
chcd stn ce beatmg the
Dodgers tn Los Angeles Aprtl
17 for hts lhtrd stratght
VIctory of lhe season, tested
his ann by throwmg along the
stdehnes before Wednesday
mght s ga me After 10
mmules, he called 1t qmts
saymg he sttll doesn't know
what the problem IS
Just how long Bonham Will
be sodehned 1s a matter for
speculation
Seaver, who departed for a
pmch htlter after four 111 •
mngs, wasn ' around aft er
the game to comment on hJS
pr esent dtlemma
Seaver's
hk e
a ny
athlet e sa od Heds catcher
Johnny Bench " He has hos
htghs and lolls When you re
havmg a low you can't explatn the reason to )ourself

i

1977 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
Dar k green w 1lh sp l tt vi nyl
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bumpers

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Al summe1 park conCCJ L'
tile
on I) astrondul lo fi) 111 the
1ts ha1 d tu tell the appl.mse
M
ere
u1y (,q&gt;nn Hnd Apvllu
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Upper River Rd.;
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446-9800

ottheMonth
8" ADJUSTABLE

·KIN FOLKS

you ca n ask others why and
not get any satiSfactory
explanation "
I got enough problems
now myself wolhout lrymg to
figure out wha t Seaver's
domg 11rong, " satd J oe
Morgan, who was hitless 1n 18
off1ctal tnps to the plate
before htlllng a home run
after Ken Gr~ffey's stngle m

WRENCH

thtrd straoghl vtctory, retired been home "
the mnth tnntng
That homer was ltmely Morgan on a soft Oy to center
' All f know IS I'm not
for me, but tl sure wasn t for woth the bases loade&lt;l for the happy the way thmgs are
g01ng," satd Anderson How
the team,' added Morga n thtrd out
We're
a
hot
weather
can
I be' We were 6-1&lt; Smce
The Red second baseman
then
we re 5-6
hllltng
team
"
sa1d
Morgan
dtdn l have to elaborate In
Dodn
l
our
hllttng
tat!
off
We
took a pretty good latl
the second mmng Morgan
when
we
got
to
San
Fran
ktckmg
tomght
period,
popped out w1th the bases
remarked
Anderson
C
ISCO'"
he
asked
loaded to end a Reds threat
And he added, tt's been
That, one mtghl say, was
And tn the stxth Rodger lefty
puttmg
ot mildly
eold
out
there
smce
we
ve
Doug Hau , who gamed hts

By TOM GREEN
SEA TTLE (UPI) - When
th e Seattle SuperSomcs
looked for a hot hand tn the
f~na l seconds , tt dtdn t matter
that 1t belonged to a rookie
rtrst year forward Jack
Stkma htl a 12-foot baseline
JUmper w1th ntne seconds left
remammg Wednesda) mght
to g1ve Seattle a 100-98 vtclory
over th e Portland Tra1l
Blazers A last-second JUmp
shot by Portland s Lwnel
Hollms bounced away
The wm g1ves the Somes a
3-1 lead m the besl-&lt;&gt;f,o;even
Wes t ern Co nf erence
semtfinal playoff sen es that
resumes Sunday tn Portland
The 6-foo t-tl S1km"

accounted for 11 of Seattle s
f1n al 12 pomts as the Somes
came back fro m a 14-po•nl
def1c1t m1dway m the lhtrd
pertod
I've neve r had an)
problem w1th confod ence
do~&lt; n th e stret ch
sa td
S1kma
He hit all of his seven shots
f1 om the f1 eld m the second
ha lf and led Seattle "'lh 28
pomts
The Somes defeated an
athng Portland team The
defendm g NBA champs
played wtthout cen ter Bill
Walton and for~&lt;ard s Bob
G1 oss and Lloyd Neal all out
w1th vanous leg atlments

R un n zng
•

PRESENTS
MASON COUNTY BLUEGRASS BOYS

FUUDI

By SANilRA L LATIMER
l&lt;lken and hurdles were open
COLUMBUS, Ohw (UP! ) - "'' I ga; e 1l a try ' she sa1d
Stepha mc Ho g hlower ha s ' I found 11 worth m) while
been runnmg for the past stx
She won the state 110-yard
years and ftnds 1t rewarding hurdles three years m a row
Hightower, a sophomore and 'm) 14 2 seconds record
hurdler on the Oh oo Sta te still stands
UmverSity women s trac k
Her father James a nat ove
learn , holds the Kentucky AA of Warren Oh10 retired from
women's state record for her the Ann y and moved the
specJalt) the 11 0-yard low farml y tu LowsvJIIe where
hurdles
Stephanoe attended Stua rt
The elementary educatoon Hogh School Iler brother
maJOr alw ft nds rwmmg a Rod 1s a fr es hma n a t
way to control her we1ght
We s tern K e n t u c ky,
It keeps the pounds off,
concentratmg on books
satd the 115-pound speedster
She was recru 1ted for Ohw
" I don t hav e a we tght State Umversoly b) Manne
problem, but I proba bly Ril llm s now the Lady
would 1f 11 weren t for u-a ck Buckeye s Coach and an
OlympiC hurdler herself
1 '
bones look
Just
at me. skin and
She finds havmg a hurdier
She saod she longs for a d1et as a coach helps her
to ga m a hltle weoght , but tr emen dously
m
her
added her coach won t let specJally
her
She benefits me, tells me
Htghtower starled he r what I m domg \Ho ng
u-ack career as a freshma n on Hi gh tower sa1d
She s
htgh school al t' orl Knox Ky cxpertenced what I m goong
Herfalhe.r ~&lt; as tn the Arm) al through Shes a good coach
the ltme
and no one else has that
My Dad ra n lrack and ts cx:per1ence '
enthusoasllc about 1l she
Ralhn s worked for the
says 'lJstenmg to hllll t.9lk Mayor
Daley
Youth
about 1t, J got enthusiaStic
FoundatiOn m Chtcago from
• In h1gh school, track was
UJC mam sport for gJrls, she
satd
She went out for tr uck and
was asSigned to the hurdles
on a ftrst -t:om e·hrst~sei ved
bas1s' as ,1 fr eshman m tugh
By BILL MADDEN
school
UPI Sp.,rts Wnler
"All other events were
There s som e stran ge
do1n gs goon g on on the
Nallonal Lea gue of !ale Jack Krol, a ma nager 11 1th a
perfect
I 000 wonn1ng
percent.&lt;lge, ts about to be
ftred and Tom Seaver has yet
to notch hts f~rst 1978 v1ctory
By
m f1v e lrtes
Krol, selected b) the Sl
All Americtm
l.OUIS Cardmals as mterun
manager until a replacement
MEETS
for the hred Vern Rapp os

WRENCH
•
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Bluegrass Music Is coming to Kin Folks Restau rant , by the Mason
Cou nty Bluegrass Boys Sat urda y Apnl 29 The band organized la st
June and worked up a show co n &lt;l ~er e d good end cleil n Mos t of th e
boys ha ve

p lil y~d mU SIC rill

thf'lr llvr

rltl(

r ( CjOOd r'T1U'1.1 ('1dn s. Thr.

band I&lt; booked a t ll1c Mol ton Opry House, Millon, W v,, , Blueg1 d SS
Festtval Lit tl e Hockmg , Oh• o and are book ing ali ihe County Fa~r s
tn th e area It" you en loy good music and like to e•l come to Kin
Folks Restaurant, Sa turda y April 29, B 10 p m and be served a
home cooked meal where the dr ink s are served 1n Quart Iars and
all the coffee you can dr ink and the Mason County Bluegrass Boy s
wil l provide th e entertamment '

Mec hanic 's qual1ty pr1ced for
hom eowner Sturdy drop forged steel

the
10

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.RPORATION
92'3 S. 3rd Ave

Middleport, O.

Pomeroy, Ohto

992-7034

'1 0000

CaseyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
9 til No&lt;'n

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On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon~

Tues., Wed, &amp; Sat.-

8:30 til 5:00 ThursdaY Til 12 Noon

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7:00to 5:00 Mon , thru-Frl .

7' 001o3:00 Saturday

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Ed 1tor

Hollms, lhrowmg on shots
from every conceivable
angle, led the Blazers wtth 35
po1nts on 15-&lt;&gt;f-28 shooting
Tra tlmg 75-61, w1th 4 02
left m the th ord quarter , the
Somes went on a 20-8 burst
over the next 611z mmutes to
get back tn the game Some
guard t'red Brown h1l 11 of
h1s 17 pmnts m that stretch
Seattle shot the ball we ll
and Freddie had some bog
hoops, ' sa td Portland Coach
Jack Ramsa) Stkma aod
rredd1e both gave Seattle
excellent games '
Seattle started out strong ,
scormg the fir st h1 e poonls of
the game and t.9king an early
1&amp;-10 lead Portl and [out hl

NEW YORK (UPI I- f he) make JOkes about lhe wav Leon
Spmks talks He runs Ius word&lt; together and IS dtffocult to
understand but he makes sense when he says beong the WOI Jd
heavyweight champoon somehmes makes lum fe el hke the
lonehesl man m the wo1ld
back for a 28-28 ftrsl-quarter
The longer I hsten to the troub le-prone 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld t1tle
li e and the n outsco red
holder,
the mm e he cnn1 mces me what he s look mg for mosl ts
Seattle, 29 17, on the second
a
fnend
quarter
Not the fa or weather kmd who'll fl alter hun to death and te ll
The "1nner of the Portland him
what he hkes to hear, but the type who' ll sllll be With h1m
Seattle senes goes tnto the
wheU1er he loses the champ10n sho p or not or whether he has
Western Confer~n,ce fina ls
ooly a mckel m h1s pocket
next week agatnst the w1nner
Muhammad Ah has thousa nds of f11ends At least they say
of the Mtlwaukee-Denver
they
re h1s fnends He knows how fe ~&lt; of these fnends he
senes, whtch resumes at
cou ld actually count on rn a pmch - maybe a handful But
Denver Fnday mght wtth the
there are a couple he s pretty sur e ~&lt; oul d st1 ck b) h1m no
Nuggels lea dmg 3-1
matt..r what and among those few 1e1 y hkelv wo uld be a 3&amp;Phll adelphta, wh1ch swept
year~ld former mmor league bct l boy
the New York Kmcks 1n four
Affa ble cur l y-ha~red Gene Kilroy who used to carry the
stra1ght may hnd out Frtday
bats for the Mahanoy C1ty, Pa team of the old Class D North
mght who 1t w1ll meet tn the
Atlanltc League was d li eutena nt m char ge of the U S Army
fmal s
as
Ea stern
Roxmg
team when he ftrst met All durmg the Rome Olympt cs
Washmgton, holdmg a 3 2
tn 1960 Awarm fnendshop developed between them dunng the
lead ove1 San Antomo, hosts
wughest penod of Ah s life. the tune "hen he ~&gt;as stnpped of
the Spurs
hJS l1tle and f01 the pasllO yea1s few ha ve bee1 any closer to
the former champ than K1lroy
Dunng that hme he has served as admmtstratl\ e assistant
to '.11, tak1ng care of h1s trammg camp h1s 11 avel and hotel
arr,mgements and the ordenn g of all h1s boxmg equtpmenl
You wouldn t call Gene K1lroy, ~&lt;h o IS white an emplo)ee of
Ah so much as you t1 call horn more of a fn end ,, good fnend ,
the kind Leon Spmks seems to be sea1t hing for and can't hnd
She pl ans to wor k on
People ask me what Muhamma d s b1ggest fault 1s ynd I
endurance and keep 10 shape alwavs tell them th e same thin g he 's too good heartW , he
so when the mdoor track g1ves ever) th mg away,' sa;s K1lro) He has never turned a
season opens 10 November
smg!e person awa) v.tw has ever come to h1s (amp He has
she can conce ntrate 0 ~rcat compassoon for all th ose he fo ghts too I asked htm once,
techmque and form
' Champ ha ve you ever hated an vbody tn your life -any of the
Outdoor tra ck ts her guvs you ever fought '
He smd No I could never forgove myself 1f I ever se nously
favonte _ tl s out 10 the open
and the dtslances are longer
hurt or kllk' l an) one 111 the 1mg He wasn I talk mg for
She also says the rndoor u-ack publicatiOn etther fhere were no newspape1111en around ,
ts harder on her legs
nus was JUst him a nd me
Durmg the track season,
At heart Kolro) &lt;1,11rns All IS much more a peacemake r
she pracl oces between two than a hghlfr
and two and one half hours a
K1lroy te lls about the tome All came close to becommg on
day The Lady Buckeyes voh ed m a street f1ght All was dnvmg hts Rolls Royce one
have three meets durmg the mght and Kolro) aiS&lt;, was m the car "I he epiSode took place
sprmg term leadtng up to the before the George Foreman f1ghl not too far from Ah s Deer
Big Ten Champtonsh ops and Lake, Pa lra mmg ca mp wheJ e he begms preparmg Monday
the AIAW Champtonshlps
fur Ius retUJ n w1U1 Spmks
She also has a fe ~&lt; Mrds
'We were out on the hoghway and one of these b1g trailer
for toda) s Jog gers a nd ll ucks cut m front of us Hr) sharph , says K1lroy The
propsectJve u-acksters
drover looked as tf he had done 1t on pu1 pose and he near!) hit
People are on a health and llS Muhammad swung around the truck a gam I pulled my
physiC al fitness kick so wmdowdo\\nandhollere dtoU~e dnvertopu ll ol er
The dnver pulled O\ er and Jlllllped down fl om the cabm of
10 ggmg 18 here for a while,
she sa1d
Ius truck Muha mmad and I also got out
If 1ou re a beg mner fon d
You crazy mggers 1 the dm c1 ) elled at us It was so dark ,
dn event you hke best, and 1( he thought I wa s bl.1ck also but then he recogmzed
) ou want to be good put some Muhammad
ttme work and eff~rt onto 1t
You cuunc off ' hcsd td llc was btg too muc hb1ggerthan
It won t come overmght, you Muhilmmad
lt~ v e to work at 1t'
How ami ~ onn a cut you off wnh a b1g tru ck ltke you got'
Joggmg gtves J ou a sense Mulmrrmla&lt;l sa od to h1m I m the ~ rea test f1 ~ htcr of a lll1me
of accomp liShme nt • she gettm ' 1ead) to f1gh t for $5 mllhon dolla1 s how crazy do you
added
thmk I am to cut tn front of Jour truck '
!lien I sa td to lhednver , C mon, I II take you You "anna
fight · rake me
But Muhammad stepped lil and sru d Caln1 down he s JUSt
domg hts JOb He probably has a w1fe and kul &lt; he s hnrr) mg
home U&gt; There II be nu f1 ghtmg here
The dm er wa s gi.Jd to hear 1t Muhammad then took us m
I
for a b1g steak dume1 Before he left the dn ve1 asked for and
E:lsewhere 10 the NI:, San got an autogra phed picture for htS kids '
D1ego slwded Houston, 2-1,
Pittsburgh bla nk ed New
York I-ll, m 11 inrungs
Fairmont State
Ch tcago topped Phtladelphta
4-2, and Atlan~t pul away San
signs Dave Burda
rranctsco f&gt;-1
Padr.-s 2, Astrus 1
~' A I RMONT , W V.1 1UP I I
Gay lord Perry lost hos
- Fatrmont Stale Signed
shutout m the runth, but , "'th
Da1e Burda d f&gt;-foot-11 t enter
rehef from Rollre Fmgers,
all J c km~ Valle) H1 ~ h School
notched h1s 247th career VIC- near Newark , Ohto, tts 1ts
tor) Owe Smtlh and Derre l second basketball recrUit
Thomas smgled home runs m
The 201-pound Burda hlt 58
the thtrd and runth mrungs
percent of hos focld goal
respectively for the Padres attempts on averagtng 16 9
Pirates I, Mets 0
pmnts and 11 9 rebounds a
ONLY
Bert Blyleven went all the ga me for a 20-J team wh och
way for his hrst NL v1clory captured the Ce ntral DJStn rl
and Ed Ott dectded the game cham ptonsh1p and wa s
tn the l ith mnrng wtth a ruo nerup 111 the Da) ton
each
leadoff homer The slumpmg Reg10nal
Mcts have now lost four m a
Guard M1ke Stone of two
row
MOUNTING AND
ume
state champton Logan
Cubs 4, Phillies 2:
BALANCING
Bobby Murcer hit h1s fourth ~&gt;as rmrmonl s ftrst rec rull

1957 through 1971 as an
ass1stan l coach and team
manager a nd set nwnerous
AAU, world and Ameman
records She was rated as the
number one hurdler m the
Umted States when she 11as
on the t968 Olympoc team
H1ghtower s mam goal no~&lt;
IS lo do her best th1s season
,md make ot lo the AJAW
na honals
She holds tile B1g Ten title
m the 100-meter hurdles and
th e 100 meter da sh and
entered the A!AW on both
events last year She ran the
hurdles m l! 4 last year and
hopes to get 1t down to 13 6
She w1ll be compelm g
F'nday and Sa turday m the
Becky Boone Relays at
Eastern Kentucky
And as for the future and
n1.1ybe the Ol;mp1cs
' It all depends on how well
J do thiS ye,lr she smd She
pl.oos to go on a year 10und
runmng program after thts

u d Ck season
l'htS part of th e counlr)
I,Jt ks 11, she sa1d 'The West
Codsl has the advantage of
rwmtng fi ll year round "

Cards rip Expos

•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp; VA

,
8 Adjustable

Sport Parade

rewarding experience

MODULAR
HOMES

SEAFOOD AND COUNTRY COOKIN'

Today's

Seattle nips Blazers

~=r:~~~~=:~;Y~o;u:c:an;as;k:yJo:u;rs~elf:w:h:ylaln:dl

'3295

pow! &lt;"I

t.1t \
l dw l •n h.'Ot uno
J IOI
I uLl d t\\ c (lndund Oh •&lt;14 115

w1th whrfe
c tape player

e1C i er 10r

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I po w&lt;"

Pu uau) Uhllt
~ilt l un

MORE
FOR

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

1975 PONTIAC
LEMANS

\U II.S.M \ SUN AKf A
RUHERTIIIIHI H ~~

J l~ \J ~ t

p5

'2695

[)A ll \' ~t NTI~~ I
llf \ OTHHCI rill

t ]lt',s

PAY

VW-AMC-JEEP

rm

SttuiMI

WHY

RIVERSIDE

t he d1sease

l'll lJh ~ I M.:t l tl 1 1 ~ lX \1 pt S I [ Ut.J, I ~
ll\ 11\t Olnu \ 1 It } Pull l ~ h u..:
fvlllflil/ 11 \l u ll lll t dl ~ lnl
I ll
l ,turt St l'umcrq otu • -t 57&amp;.l
!l U.S UI \ ~~ Ufhl t l'hlJi l !I'J.! Wi6
l •l1turml Ph mt •1921l:~i

CINCINNATI (UPIJ - ll
was back tn mtd-March and
Tom Seaver had just blanked
the St Louts Cardinals with
two hits over a SIX mnmg
span m an exhibtlton game at
St Petersburg, rla
" My arm feel s so good that
Jt worries me, " Seaver had
remarked at the llllle
' Every
pttch er
expertences a lull some tome or
other dunng the sprmg," he
had added " I JUst hope mme
doesn't come at the begmmng
of the season "
Seaver was jokrng at the
tome Ltttle then dtd he
reahze that hts JOkmg remark
made t hat sunny afternoon m
Flortda would return to haunt
him But tl has
The 32-year-old nght bander
pounded for ftve runs and
etght htls , two of them
homers, Wednesday mghl as

773 5592

Herman Grate
Mason , W Va.

found won his first - and
probably la st - game
Wednesda y
!'he Cardtnals pounded out
19 hits for Krol m dJ ubbmg
the Montreal Expos, 12-2 Ken
Rmtz led the carnage for the
Cardina ls wtth a two-run
homer and an RBI .,&lt;;mgle
!'he Cards are 1dle today
and General Mana ger Btng
Devme ts expected to se lec t
hiS new manager tn tome for
the team s return to St Louts
Frtday
Seaver meanwh ile, m
spnng trammg who JOked
about feehn g 'so good that tt
scares me gave up e~ g ht
htls, five runs and back-to
back homers to Davey Lopes
and Bill Russell m hts four
mmng stml Wednesday mghl
Hos ERA has ballooned to an
embarrassmg 5 00
The Los Angeles Dodgers
raked over the n ght-hander
and three other Heds pttchers
for 19 htts mcludin g homers
fora 14--\rornp O\ er the Reds
"l•m con cern ed
said
Reds ' Manager Sparky
Anderson who also must
worry about the sore arm of
hts No 2 p1 tch er, Bill
Bonham "I sttll thmk everyUung w1ll work out OK and
I m not worned about Seaver
- yet

I

I

H78/15
4 PLY
WHITEWALLS
$3295

ca reer grand-slam to gtve
Ro ck Reu sc hel hJS thord
vtclory
Steve Car lton
suffered hts thtrd loss m four
decJstons for Phtladelphta
Braves 6, Giants I
Rookte Dale Murphy drove
tn three runs wtth a smgle
and a lrtple as the Braves
beat the Gtants for the fourth
lim e thiS year Anothe r
rook te, Preston Hannah, went
6 1-3 mrungs for the wm

Linescores
Major League Baseball Results 1 ttm!. (8) Md Sadek Hanna
Solomon ( 7) and Pocoroba wBy Unl1ed Press International
Hanna (2 0) L- Knepper (1 1)
N at•ona l Leagu e
St L
100 224 10 1- 11 19 1 HR - San FranCI SCO Madlocl&lt;
Mil
000 000 07()--- 7 9 1 (11
Denny ana S1mm ons Swr
sher Tw,tchel! Atkmson (5 ) ( 11 mnmgs)
P•ltsburgh
Holdsworth (6 ) Kn owles (1)
00000000001
'
Bannsen (9) and c arter Reece
W- Denny (2 01 L - Tw itchell New York
000 000 000 00- 0 6 0
II 1) HR - Rellz (i l Owyer
Swan
Bly leven Md ott
Il l
LOCk WOOd (81 Myrt c k ( 11) and
Chr
004 000 000- 4 4 0 Stearns W- Btyl even ( 1 1) L Phrlll
000 000 11Q- 2 13 2 Mvnck (0 2) HR - P l tsb urgtl
R Reu:schel Sutter (81 and 011111
Cot&lt;
carlt o n
Reed O J LA
01 2 210 107- 14 19 0
McGri!w (91 ana Boone W- R
c.ncl
1110 001 002- ' 10 0
Reus.chel (l 2) 1..- Cartton (1
Rau and Yeager See~ve r
l ) HRs- Chicago Murcer ( I )
M urrav (5) , Cap1lla &lt;7 ) Borbon
Phil adelph ia Schm id t (4)
(9 ) and Bench W- Rllou (3 0) L
- Seever (0 2) HRS - LOS An
Sen Fran
000 001 000 - I 9 0
A li a
000 300 11&gt; 6 12 0 ge lcs, Lopes (Jl Russell &lt;l l
Sm1 th {3) Cin cinnati Morgan
Kn epper Minton (5) Wll

•o

I
I

'

"'

SanOgo
Hou~

FREE
001 000001

2 b\

000 000 001

1 70

P erry
Ftngers
(9 )
and
Dav•s R ch&lt;trd and Fergu son

W Per r y I? 0 ) l
11

R1chard ( l

Sea

0 14 000 000

5 81

Ci!l• f

0 10 007 100

4

90

Pole Burke \ 6) Rawley (8)
and Pas ley a n d St nson Brei!
Httr lzelt ( 9 ) and Do wn ng W Pole (2 31 l
Br etf ( I l l H Rs
- s eattle Stan ton ( l l Cal dor
nta , Baylor (6l

Llmtted Ttme

~---Offer

N
TIRE SALES
N Second Ave
Middleport , 0

�3- The Datly Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , I hursday, Apnl 27 1978

2- The Daoly Sent mel Moddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Thursday Aprol27 1978

Activities of ACS is

Editorwl sampling

What Ohio Newspapers
•
are saymg
•••

Many people sttll thmk
that ACS volunteers onl y rmg
doorbells to ra1se money for
resea rch,' smd S M1 chael
publi c onformatton cha ~rman
uf the Mc1gs Cancer Umt
'I11Cy don't realize that
we ve not onI) gro\\n 111 stzc
over the years but have a
comprehens ovc program of
rese arch edu catiOn a11d
scrvt cc to cmu:cr pa tients
Our a ttlV Il Jes 1ange from
ca ncer
pr e\ entwn
to
, chabohtalJon of ca nce r

The Columbus Dispatch
It os tune for federal environmental offlcoals to get off Ohio 's
back - they have become mtolerable nags
About 2,200 water pollution abatement permots have been
ossued to Ohio busmesses m t-omphance wtth federal clean
water regulatoons and only 20 companoes are not operatrng
accordrng to a comphance schedule
But the federal Enwonmental Protec Uon Agency IS vortually demanding these fe w exceptions be hauled mto court by
the stat.. EPA
What correct!) bothers Ned Wolhams, the Ohoo envoronmen1.91 choef os that Ohoo comparues are making a good faoth effort
to comply
But the federal EPA brooks no excuse however vahd ot may
be AToledo form, for example, has been unable to complete ots
comphanc e requorement because fore destroyed the company
fu rrushm g necessary eqwpment
Trouble woth the federal EPA people, says Mr Wolliams, os
that th ey are sott,ing on theor Clucago offoces and do not have
close touch woth Ohio conditoons Takmg the Ohoo EPA 's word
for condotoons os not enough But ol should be
Mr Wilhams has declared tha t 'I am a form behever that
the sta le should handle ols own progra m and I think most
people m Ohio feel the same way
Mr Wllhams os n ght The federal EPA people should
understand that reaht1 and get off Ohoo s back

pati ent s '

-'Th ey're not go1ng to have Mr Green)eans to kfck around anymore "

Mart1us Ferr) Times-Leader
If the Oh10 coal mduslrJ os to surv1ve, then one of two things
mu.-;t U(,: cur

E1lhm the feder al go,ernment through Congress must
compromose permanently on the permiSSible emtsston levels
of sulfur dJoXlde, Or 1l must g1ve more tome, maybe constd
erable more than the three vears asked b) Gov Rhodes at a
meeting m St Clatrsvtlle on order to develop a cost JUSllftable
method of removmg sulfur from coal
Thts tS not odie l&lt;llk The Sllualwn 1s urgent And the
predictions are not good If eastern Oh1o and the Oh10 Valley IS
hit w1th a double whammv by that we mean the dornmtshmg
effectiveness of the stee l mdustry coupled woth a serwus
deten oratwn of the coal mdustrv then the area wtll not be a
very deSirable pl ace lOlove If OllC IS able lO do tbe latter at all
The fa cts a rc begonnmg w mount To comply woth federa l
sulfur regu lattons the new Cardinal 3 generating urut, whtch
went on bne near Brilhant late last J ear IS ornporltng two
milium tons of low sulfw coal a year from a mtne near
Cha1leston W Va 1 hat," hen al l the coal Cardlnal 3 could use
IS n ght 111 1ts own backyard
SUlfur regulatiOns are a maw contributing fa ctor to a 43
percent decrease m ConsolidatiOn Coal 's Ohto acttvtty dunng
the past three years while &lt;~t the same ttme natwnal coal
production has risen 16 percent
Most momedtatel l Consolidation Cwl has announced that
the JObs of 1 000 Oh10 eoal mmers were tn Jeopardy beca use of
the refusal of the Cleveland Elect nc lllununaltng Co to renew
a 1 6 moll JOn ton contract CEI has already begun cootractmg
for nearly 8 m1lhon tons of coal from lo~&lt; sulfur coal sources tn
eastern Kentuck) ,md southern West Vorgtma
We would hope that c1 ttzens busmesses, CIVIC orgamza
twns u-,odc uruons a nd busmess assouat wns begm to take
senously the threat to our local economy The changes must
come at the federalle1el Hence letters to US senators- are
m order Mxi the ' OOner the better
LuraiD JuurlUII

••
\

•
•
'

The potentials of the touted Jetport m Lake Ene off the
Cleveland shore a re exceeded by the obstacles to 1ts
pracuca hty As the Akron Beacon Journal put the matter It
has been fueled w oth a lot of dollars smce 1972, but tl JUS!
won t t.9ke off
Now more dollars are wanted The Lake Ene Regtonal
TransportatiOn Authoroty trustees have voted to ask the
Federal Avlalton Admmostratlon for $200 ,000 more on top off
the $4 5 mllhon already spent, for oneftnal study
Has anvthmg happened to gtve cause to thmk the conclusiOn
reached on 1976 af ter months on months of study would for
some reason now be different ' The decJSton then wa s that a
Lake E:ne Jetport w"' not feas1ble and would not attra ct
enough passen ger volwne to JUStify 1ts constructtoo wtthout
closmg the Akron-Canton Atrport
Thai prospect 1s about as popular as a crutch m Akron and
Canton But the hometown parltsans have little to worry about
In our opmoon the Akron newspaper was rtghl m con cludin~
At an; rate Akron-Canton Atrport trustees shou ld not paruc
at thi s latest LERT A fh ght of fan cy "
Ravenna-Kent Record -Courier
The Stale Emergency board shou ld gtve sertous
conStderauon to upcommg pleas b; both Kent SUite and
Porl&lt;lge County that 11 p1ck up part of the expenses mcurred
durmg last year 's protests agamsl the KSU gym annex
Without state help , paytng the esttmated pnce of 1830,000 for
law enforce ment and JUdtcoal work that had to be done to get
Uorough the protest wtll prove a tough burden for the taxpayers
of Porl&lt;l ge County and the uru verstt y
Trul) U1e protest quahhes as a fmanctal emergency It was
not somethm g eother the county or the umve rs1ty could plan on
or budg et foc The county s share of the cost which comes to
$87,000, stret ches county momes beyond what local ta xpayers
ought to be expected to shoulder
Once the deciSIOn to go ahead wtth the gym complex was
made, durmg the 197&amp;-77 yea r, there was httle the umverstl)
could do to mmorn1ze the protest ll was not something that
could be controlled
Woth Kent Stale's fman ces already runnmg too short to cover
normal umverstly expenses, the mon1es 1t would have to pay
our of ots general fund reserve amount to more than the
umverSi ty should be reasonably expected to pay
rhe gym annex protest also should be seen as an tssue th at
goes beyond Kent State and Portage County It has 1ls roots m
the 1970s campus shootmgs that were not between Kent St&lt;lt..
.md the protester s but between the SUite of Ohio, as
represen t..d by the Nationa l Guard, and the protesters
That be mg the case the untverstty and the county have a
nght tu loo k to the SUite of Oh1o for some help m this latest
em e r g en~.:}

Mansfield N•ws Journal
The ( lea r r ur k r xperunent w1th great..r Ci tizen partl clpallon on the opcr &lt;~ ll n n of public schools w1ll be watched closely on
f1lhe r ilf l.:rl sc honl dJ~ l fi Ct.'i
Ihe br" onc hlld of (1ear rork Supenntendent Robert Spence,
the plan &lt;a lis for the electiOn of a comrmttee of parents, teach
crs and students for each school butlding m the dtstnct The
commit u,e headed by the pnnc1paJ of th e school, would be
empowered tn make deciSions on the opera Uon of the school,
decosoons wh och arc now mad e by the school board or the
ad nun 1:str at10n
Accnrdon g to Spenc ~ the tdea os to broaden the power, not to
diJuu, ll He hopes to tmplement hiS power to-the-people
cooce pt w1 thm three year•
The operatwn off the schools IS a subJeCt that ts very
ornport.9nt to parents, teachers and students the groups whtch
would be ~ t vcn greater VOICe under the Clear rork plan Thts IS
an adnurable attempt tn 1mprove comJnumc atwn , to Increase
Citizen mvolvemcnt and u rnJtk e schw l~ more responstvc lo
the people whn cat&lt; the mn&lt;t abou t them
But wil l 1l work '
Wtll the commJttee be abl e to do as good a JOb as the board
and agmtniSlrators are now dotng' Wfll the pubhc be any more
sat1sfled ' Will the prtnc•pals exert too much tnfluence -or too
httle' Wol l the schml board find tl pra cttcal to share Its
authority w1th several comrmttees' Will taxpayers who are
not parents expect a btgger vmce 10 sc hool operations as well '
There s only way to answer such questtons, and that's to do
It

Dodgers bomb Seaver, Reds, 14-4

explained by chairman

Farmers live poor, die rich
!EDITORS N(Yf E
fall , farm er s

art~ und

Lasl
thr

ct~un try

began prnlestmg fur
panty - h1gher pnces fur
thm products Snme ha1 e
threatened 111 "'thhuld farm

produ( ts frum tht· ma rket tu
dnve thus(' pn ces up
Althuugh th ere has be-en nn
real measurt ttf support m
Ohiu fur the farmers
str1ke, " sumc farmers and

state farm off" 1als bell e1e
the protest has served a
purpu se

makmg

111

cu nsum ers aware uf the
farm e r s
problrm s
f ,JIIowlng IS the sec11 nd
art1cl r m a three part series
by R1ck Van Sant ttl UPI s
Cincmnau bureau 1m lhc
farm s1tuatmn m Ohw m the
~ak.e uf the CCUIIIIID IC Culldl ·
twns of the fanner Tuda) 's
art1 c h~ rep,,rts un tht• n• flcc ~
tlons

11f

Ohw

AgncuJI ure

Dire ctor Juhn Stackh11Usr
and OhJ, farm Burea u t hief
Bill Swank 1

Bv RI CK VANSANT
United Press International
rarmers live poor and die
rtch, lame nts Oh1n fdrm
Bureau executl\ e \l e e
prestdent Btll Swank It s an
old sa) tng but sllll true
At least half-trot' agree a
lot of farmers !'he 'll'e
poor part that IS
U 1~ ess you happen to o"n a
heap of land and equipment
- '" ef fec t run what
am ounts to a corporation farmm ~ today remams thr
nsk tt alv.a) s ha:) been pomt
out both Swank w1d Ohoo
Agncul lure Depa rtm ent
Dorector John Stackholl•e
You can t be a small

--------I

1
I
I

I
I

Social :
Calendar l

FRIDAY
REVIVAl A1 Lung Rottom
Un1 ted Meth odi St Church
Thursdav through Sunda y
7 30 p m and spe~ Jal muSic
each C\ cntng
Che ster
Lemley Vmton CVel ngehst
and pu blic mv1ted
SA TURilA Y
OPEN HOUSE ~ to 7 p m
Saturda) al Pomeroy Forr
Stallon 10 mark $:10'000 mort
gage burmng ccr em on) at
6 30 p m Occas1on 1o com
memoratc paJ on g off of
130 000 mortgage b) firem en
on their headquarters l 1ght
refr eshm en ts an d pubh r
InVIted

fa1 mer .1 nd ha1 e a large
mc ome saJd Swank And It
seems to be the ~&lt; r o n g ume to
tr) tn start a fa rm
Added Stac khouse Even
m contr.1st to re&lt;. ent }~ars
farm ers are not as "ell off
t&lt;Jda y because there s been a

In mor e and more
households, the woman 1s
workmg out of the house
fu lllune and there 1sn t as
much tome for food preparatwn," potnled out Swank
1 he conven ience that
moddlemen put mto foOd has
dechnc m mcome and (In become a necesstty
mcreasr 111 cost '
It s also amazmg to me
The proc e of fond IS JUmpm g how ltltle
consumers
too but farmers arc qu1ck to understand the food sttuatwn
tell agot,lted shoppers to The h1gher foo d pnc es
blame midd leme n the they're pa) ong 1s not because
p1 ocessors
and of the farmer but b&lt;!cause of
food
d1st nbuto1s
h1gher transportatton energ)
SY..a nk agrees, and tn turn and labor costs
also says the consumer 1s
I also don 't thmk people
to
th e are budgetmg theor money
contnb uttn g
rn Jddl e m &lt;~n s btg chunk of the
for food hke the) used to
fmd t.J b
Thev' re spendmg thm
Consume rs are almo!:it money for'!Vsa ndthmgshke
gettmg 111a1d serVIce ~hen that and then figure they re
the) sh• p toda y " sa od ge ttmg npped off buymg
Swank Who cuts the top off food •
carrots an) more? Who peels
But Stackhouse hopes the
pota h1e s am more ') Wh o recent farmers ' stnke' has
tnm s lll tuce anymore" It made an unpa cl on
JUSt docsn t happen 'er) c.:onswr1ers
much am more
The stnke d1d tw o
Women s hb and the search thmgs ' he sa1d
'Mo st
for the gtKtcl lofe also uuporta ntlv, 1l created a
.lppear to IJa.l, e boosted the pubhc awareness of th e
m1ddleman over the fa rmer squeeze that rarmers are m
1

(!}HEALTH

~awrence E Lamb,M D
Weight loss is vital
Lamb MIl
DF.AI\ DR LAMB - I am
so desperat e an d hea rt
broken My husband had a
b, pass ope ra tiOn and now
they tell me he has acce lerate d alh erosc!eJoSJ s
I1le surgerr wa s six months
agu li e IS only 41 and had
alwa ys bee n In perfec t
health
Pl ease could you help me
by letting me know where and
who I could poss1bl) see to get
help T" o olher lives depend
on h1s
DEAR READEH - I know
ho" fn ghtenmg It os to lea rn
th at a loved one has a senous
and perhaps fatal dtsease
But then are lhtn gs you can
do to hel p) our husband live a
longer and useful hfe
He has fatt y choleste rol
depoSits m hts art crJes and
there IS so me cvrdence that
th e process ean be slowed ,
.stopped or even re\ersed
The t Wtt most Imp orta nt
lhmgs to do are to not smo ke
and to get really thin The
lall cr has to be done
gradu all y but I don 1 tho nk
ma ny of the special diets help
much 1f a person doesn l get
nd of 1ll the excess fat under
the skm Unfortunately, too
oft en both the pa t ~enl and Ihc
doctor stop short of the real
goal of Ideal " eight reducLa~&lt;renre

REVIVAI a the Church of
Jesus Chml Ne w Lorn a
Road Rutland begmnon g
Saturday at 7 30 p m Elder
Damon Adam s Ma netta
eva ngehst Elder Ha) Rouse
past01 Public onv1ted
BAKE SAl E Saturday 9
am at Ra cme Post Off1ce
lot Members to brmg baked
goods early
StN DAY
tion
OLD FASHIONED Hymn
Get your husband down to
Smg Sunday at 7 30 p m at the pmnt that there rs no more
Morn1n g
Sta r
Uru ted , fat around the small of hJS
Meh t o d1 s t
C hurch
ba ck than you ordmanly ftnd
Congregation wea nng long under the sktn over the back
sktrts and overalls
of the hand That means no
sognJfJ canl fat depos its
around the waJSt anywhere
TEA SLATED
An yth1n g less lhan that
The muJUal Buckeye (," b means you ha\ c not done all
Slate orlenliJlJ on tea fo1 ) OUt.Jil do We do know thai
delegates and a ltun&lt;~ lcs w1JI "' moll key experiments the
be held Sunday al the f.an- fa tly
cholesterol depos11s
caster Legwn hall Mam St
will drsappear 1f the monkeys
from 3 to 5 pIll M1ss F:rma are put on a low-J' aloues, low
Srmth of the Amen can
fat, low - cholesterol d1et
LegJOn Auxi liary Drew
If your husband happens to
Webster Post , J9 wtll &lt;~ &lt;
have elevated blood pressure
1 tJmpany the gu ls to i.dfl
that should also be controlled
caster

Wctght
redu ctiOn
and
ehmmatton of salt help here
too
HJS dJCt should be low 111 fat
!that helps control the calone
onl ake lou J and low 111
cholesterol I am sendmg )OU
The Health Lette r number 12,
DJCt
Preve nttng
AtheroscleroJsJs, to help you
Others ~ ho want thts tn
fo rmataon can send 50 cents
wtth a long, stamped , self
addressed envelope for tt to
me 10 care of thiS newspaper ,
P 0 Box 1551 Rad1o C1ty
Stat1on New York, NY 10019
If h1s cond1t1on perm1ts he
could start da tly walkmg He
should not overdo the exerctse and should progress tn
th1s department at a rate hJS
own docto r permtts But the
more he ts able to walk the
more hel p he wtll get 111
reducmg hts body fat and
llllprovmg h1s corndttton
These are the measures
that help most tn reversmg
the pro cess of fatty cholesterol depostts If the
cholesterol level 1s htgh or
there are other tndtcatlons of
abnormal blood fats m the
blood sampl e then hts doctor
may w1sh to gtve h1m some
medlcmes to help also If hts
blood pressure rs high and
remain s so t here are
medicines that w111 help,
whoch you doctor can g1ve
him
The three fact ors that seetn
to have the most to do wtth
fatty-cho lestero l depostts are
the abnormal cholesterol or
blood fats, ctgarette smoking
and htgh blood pressure If all
of us would adopt life styles
that control these factors , the
dtsea ses - strokes and heart
attacks for tho must part caused by fatly cholesterol
blockage of the arteroes
wou ld decrease at least 50
percent And tn most Instances they would not occur
until m the late 70s or 80s for
most people The life span of
men could be ex panded
almost 10 to 15 years

Secondly 1t resulted m the
mtroductton of several pteces
of fa rm leg tslallon Even
though the stnkers farm aod
btll was not enatted other
farmers mcent1 ves are be mg
mcreased '
Stac khouse
sa 1d he
'sy mpa thi zed ' w1 th th e
stnke because of what 1t
was au-ned at - makmg Jt
possible for the farmer lo
make a proftt
Stackhouse sa1d he still
cons1ders hm1self a farm er
be causes of Ius fam ily 's 1 200acre seed corn, popcorn and
beef cattle farm m the small
north ern Oh10 communltJ of
Wakeman
'I wouldn t advtse people
not to go mto fa rmm g
because naturall) I'm b1ased
beca use of my pos tw n
added U1e state agr •culturc
department dtrector
but
I'm very much aware of
current problems because of
our farm '
Swank satd ll appears some
people fogure the fa n ners
strtke 11as a flop because food
product JOn dtdn 'l come to a
halt, but he mamtamed the
stnke was misnamed r~ nd
really was a success
' It wasn l a st roke he
sa1d It was a demonstratiOn
that farm ers have a
problem '
Next Agncultural expert
ana lyzes
rect'n l farm
developments and loo ks Into
the future

She sa) s 1! 1s well known
that the ACS mvests mtlho11s
of 1ts eontnbuted doll ars mlo
valuable research each yea1,
but ot her aspects of lhe
Society's work often go unnoticed
One of t he least un
derstood of our functwns IS
educ,Jllon Our phamphlcts,
film s and classes re not JUSt
frost mg on th e cake Illey .u e
1mportant tool s that s,,ve
lives she mamtams
There are Simple steps
mdJVoduals can take to help
prev ent
(a ncer
and
tcchmques they t dn use to
detect th e diSease 10 an c,u ly
treatable stage Stt ll oth er
t ancer tests c,ul be per
formed b) a doct01 dun11 g a
1egular physical exa m
Ma ny volu111eer s are
fo1 mer ca ncer pat ient s
them scl1 cs 11 ho can help
effe ctiv ely •be&lt;a use they
kno " what ot IS loke to have

cancer, colorecta l cancer and
18 other cancer Sites These
new brochures present all
srdcs of the subject mcludmg
the normal functiOnS of the
affected organ, what typ1f1es
the particular ca ncer and
how tt affec ts the body Also
mcluded JS mformatwn on
n sk factors and warmng
SJgns whiCh tf recogmzed by
!he tndJvJdual should mdtcate
the need to seek prompt
med1ca l attentiOn Current
medica l practices pertamlng
to the spectftc cancer stte are
hsted as well as treatment
methods and posstble stde
effects of such treatment
!'he pam phlets also mclude
the d~r ec l10n s of cuorent
resea rch for a 1 parttcular
cancCI SJte and mformalton
~&lt;In ch mdov1duals should use
m protec ti ng them selves
agamst that type of cancer
rhe lllll l also ha s other
fo lms,
and
ht eraturc,
prov 1d cs other addal1o nal •
servtccs Call 992-753! 1f we
t:a n be &lt;lnV asSistance to you
l'wnt:er I r1butt:
Id cnllc &lt;~ I

statues of the
M,ulonn,, of t11e lr a t! lla\C
''"'"' erected 111 12 states
sll etclung from Maryland to
C,lllfu•ma The , tatues arc a
mottument to tht courage and
dt:lmtmm:tl!O n of Amen ca 's
p1 unccr m o~hc rs

How cxtcnsJve and ef
fecllve ACS ser11ces are Ill
any g1ven are.l depend to a
great extent on tl s con
lJJ butoJs and ItS volunteers
M1chdel stresses !'he ACS
IS an orgamzat10n where
partoc1pat oon rcall ) co unts
At the prescnl time til e
Metgs ( ounty Unll has free
of charge newlv developed
pamphlet s by the ACS on
ut erll\ e camcr
brc(Jst

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s t eer~ng and brake s

the Los Angeles Dodgers
swept a two-game senes
from the Cmcmnalt Reds
Wtlh a 14 4 vtctory now has a
().2 record after ftve starts
Hts earned run average IS
500
Consecuttve fourth rnmng
homers by Dave) Lopes and
Btll Russell off Seaver and a
three-run blast by Reggte
Smtih off Pedro Borbon that
chmaxed a seven-run ntnth
tnmng were three of 19 htls, a
season htgh, that rattled off
the bats of the Dodgers as
they stretched their lead over
the Reds lo I ~, games m the
National League West
What 's more, th e two
homers off Seaver boosted to
etght the total he has ytelded
m the 27 tnnmgs he has ptl
ched to dale
' I'm concerned," conceded
Reds Manager Sparky Anderson But I'm confident
everythmg ts gomg to work
out ali nght so I m not
worried "
There was a shghl pause
before Anderson added the
word yet
Seaver's mabJltly to attam
the wtnnmg form that has
ea rned htm three Cy Young
Awards, though, tsn't An
derso n's only ptt chmg
headache There 's also Btll
Bonham's sore nght elbow
Bonham, who hasn t ptl
chcd stn ce beatmg the
Dodgers tn Los Angeles Aprtl
17 for hts lhtrd stratght
VIctory of lhe season, tested
his ann by throwmg along the
stdehnes before Wednesday
mght s ga me After 10
mmules, he called 1t qmts
saymg he sttll doesn't know
what the problem IS
Just how long Bonham Will
be sodehned 1s a matter for
speculation
Seaver, who departed for a
pmch htlter after four 111 •
mngs, wasn ' around aft er
the game to comment on hJS
pr esent dtlemma
Seaver's
hk e
a ny
athlet e sa od Heds catcher
Johnny Bench " He has hos
htghs and lolls When you re
havmg a low you can't explatn the reason to )ourself

i

1977 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
Dar k green w 1lh sp l tt vi nyl
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bumpers

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Al summe1 park conCCJ L'
tile
on I) astrondul lo fi) 111 the
1ts ha1 d tu tell the appl.mse
M
ere
u1y (,q&gt;nn Hnd Apvllu
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Upper River Rd.;
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446-9800

ottheMonth
8" ADJUSTABLE

·KIN FOLKS

you ca n ask others why and
not get any satiSfactory
explanation "
I got enough problems
now myself wolhout lrymg to
figure out wha t Seaver's
domg 11rong, " satd J oe
Morgan, who was hitless 1n 18
off1ctal tnps to the plate
before htlllng a home run
after Ken Gr~ffey's stngle m

WRENCH

thtrd straoghl vtctory, retired been home "
the mnth tnntng
That homer was ltmely Morgan on a soft Oy to center
' All f know IS I'm not
for me, but tl sure wasn t for woth the bases loade&lt;l for the happy the way thmgs are
g01ng," satd Anderson How
the team,' added Morga n thtrd out
We're
a
hot
weather
can
I be' We were 6-1&lt; Smce
The Red second baseman
then
we re 5-6
hllltng
team
"
sa1d
Morgan
dtdn l have to elaborate In
Dodn
l
our
hllttng
tat!
off
We
took a pretty good latl
the second mmng Morgan
when
we
got
to
San
Fran
ktckmg
tomght
period,
popped out w1th the bases
remarked
Anderson
C
ISCO'"
he
asked
loaded to end a Reds threat
And he added, tt's been
That, one mtghl say, was
And tn the stxth Rodger lefty
puttmg
ot mildly
eold
out
there
smce
we
ve
Doug Hau , who gamed hts

By TOM GREEN
SEA TTLE (UPI) - When
th e Seattle SuperSomcs
looked for a hot hand tn the
f~na l seconds , tt dtdn t matter
that 1t belonged to a rookie
rtrst year forward Jack
Stkma htl a 12-foot baseline
JUmper w1th ntne seconds left
remammg Wednesda) mght
to g1ve Seattle a 100-98 vtclory
over th e Portland Tra1l
Blazers A last-second JUmp
shot by Portland s Lwnel
Hollms bounced away
The wm g1ves the Somes a
3-1 lead m the besl-&lt;&gt;f,o;even
Wes t ern Co nf erence
semtfinal playoff sen es that
resumes Sunday tn Portland
The 6-foo t-tl S1km"

accounted for 11 of Seattle s
f1n al 12 pomts as the Somes
came back fro m a 14-po•nl
def1c1t m1dway m the lhtrd
pertod
I've neve r had an)
problem w1th confod ence
do~&lt; n th e stret ch
sa td
S1kma
He hit all of his seven shots
f1 om the f1 eld m the second
ha lf and led Seattle "'lh 28
pomts
The Somes defeated an
athng Portland team The
defendm g NBA champs
played wtthout cen ter Bill
Walton and for~&lt;ard s Bob
G1 oss and Lloyd Neal all out
w1th vanous leg atlments

R un n zng
•

PRESENTS
MASON COUNTY BLUEGRASS BOYS

FUUDI

By SANilRA L LATIMER
l&lt;lken and hurdles were open
COLUMBUS, Ohw (UP! ) - "'' I ga; e 1l a try ' she sa1d
Stepha mc Ho g hlower ha s ' I found 11 worth m) while
been runnmg for the past stx
She won the state 110-yard
years and ftnds 1t rewarding hurdles three years m a row
Hightower, a sophomore and 'm) 14 2 seconds record
hurdler on the Oh oo Sta te still stands
UmverSity women s trac k
Her father James a nat ove
learn , holds the Kentucky AA of Warren Oh10 retired from
women's state record for her the Ann y and moved the
specJalt) the 11 0-yard low farml y tu LowsvJIIe where
hurdles
Stephanoe attended Stua rt
The elementary educatoon Hogh School Iler brother
maJOr alw ft nds rwmmg a Rod 1s a fr es hma n a t
way to control her we1ght
We s tern K e n t u c ky,
It keeps the pounds off,
concentratmg on books
satd the 115-pound speedster
She was recru 1ted for Ohw
" I don t hav e a we tght State Umversoly b) Manne
problem, but I proba bly Ril llm s now the Lady
would 1f 11 weren t for u-a ck Buckeye s Coach and an
OlympiC hurdler herself
1 '
bones look
Just
at me. skin and
She finds havmg a hurdier
She saod she longs for a d1et as a coach helps her
to ga m a hltle weoght , but tr emen dously
m
her
added her coach won t let specJally
her
She benefits me, tells me
Htghtower starled he r what I m domg \Ho ng
u-ack career as a freshma n on Hi gh tower sa1d
She s
htgh school al t' orl Knox Ky cxpertenced what I m goong
Herfalhe.r ~&lt; as tn the Arm) al through Shes a good coach
the ltme
and no one else has that
My Dad ra n lrack and ts cx:per1ence '
enthusoasllc about 1l she
Ralhn s worked for the
says 'lJstenmg to hllll t.9lk Mayor
Daley
Youth
about 1t, J got enthusiaStic
FoundatiOn m Chtcago from
• In h1gh school, track was
UJC mam sport for gJrls, she
satd
She went out for tr uck and
was asSigned to the hurdles
on a ftrst -t:om e·hrst~sei ved
bas1s' as ,1 fr eshman m tugh
By BILL MADDEN
school
UPI Sp.,rts Wnler
"All other events were
There s som e stran ge
do1n gs goon g on on the
Nallonal Lea gue of !ale Jack Krol, a ma nager 11 1th a
perfect
I 000 wonn1ng
percent.&lt;lge, ts about to be
ftred and Tom Seaver has yet
to notch hts f~rst 1978 v1ctory
By
m f1v e lrtes
Krol, selected b) the Sl
All Americtm
l.OUIS Cardmals as mterun
manager until a replacement
MEETS
for the hred Vern Rapp os

WRENCH
•
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Bluegrass Music Is coming to Kin Folks Restau rant , by the Mason
Cou nty Bluegrass Boys Sat urda y Apnl 29 The band organized la st
June and worked up a show co n &lt;l ~er e d good end cleil n Mos t of th e
boys ha ve

p lil y~d mU SIC rill

thf'lr llvr

rltl(

r ( CjOOd r'T1U'1.1 ('1dn s. Thr.

band I&lt; booked a t ll1c Mol ton Opry House, Millon, W v,, , Blueg1 d SS
Festtval Lit tl e Hockmg , Oh• o and are book ing ali ihe County Fa~r s
tn th e area It" you en loy good music and like to e•l come to Kin
Folks Restaurant, Sa turda y April 29, B 10 p m and be served a
home cooked meal where the dr ink s are served 1n Quart Iars and
all the coffee you can dr ink and the Mason County Bluegrass Boy s
wil l provide th e entertamment '

Mec hanic 's qual1ty pr1ced for
hom eowner Sturdy drop forged steel

the
10

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CO.RPORATION
92'3 S. 3rd Ave

Middleport, O.

Pomeroy, Ohto

992-7034

'1 0000

CaseyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
9 til No&lt;'n

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On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon~

Tues., Wed, &amp; Sat.-

8:30 til 5:00 ThursdaY Til 12 Noon

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7:00to 5:00 Mon , thru-Frl .

7' 001o3:00 Saturday

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Ed 1tor

Hollms, lhrowmg on shots
from every conceivable
angle, led the Blazers wtth 35
po1nts on 15-&lt;&gt;f-28 shooting
Tra tlmg 75-61, w1th 4 02
left m the th ord quarter , the
Somes went on a 20-8 burst
over the next 611z mmutes to
get back tn the game Some
guard t'red Brown h1l 11 of
h1s 17 pmnts m that stretch
Seattle shot the ball we ll
and Freddie had some bog
hoops, ' sa td Portland Coach
Jack Ramsa) Stkma aod
rredd1e both gave Seattle
excellent games '
Seattle started out strong ,
scormg the fir st h1 e poonls of
the game and t.9king an early
1&amp;-10 lead Portl and [out hl

NEW YORK (UPI I- f he) make JOkes about lhe wav Leon
Spmks talks He runs Ius word&lt; together and IS dtffocult to
understand but he makes sense when he says beong the WOI Jd
heavyweight champoon somehmes makes lum fe el hke the
lonehesl man m the wo1ld
back for a 28-28 ftrsl-quarter
The longer I hsten to the troub le-prone 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld t1tle
li e and the n outsco red
holder,
the mm e he cnn1 mces me what he s look mg for mosl ts
Seattle, 29 17, on the second
a
fnend
quarter
Not the fa or weather kmd who'll fl alter hun to death and te ll
The "1nner of the Portland him
what he hkes to hear, but the type who' ll sllll be With h1m
Seattle senes goes tnto the
wheU1er he loses the champ10n sho p or not or whether he has
Western Confer~n,ce fina ls
ooly a mckel m h1s pocket
next week agatnst the w1nner
Muhammad Ah has thousa nds of f11ends At least they say
of the Mtlwaukee-Denver
they
re h1s fnends He knows how fe ~&lt; of these fnends he
senes, whtch resumes at
cou ld actually count on rn a pmch - maybe a handful But
Denver Fnday mght wtth the
there are a couple he s pretty sur e ~&lt; oul d st1 ck b) h1m no
Nuggels lea dmg 3-1
matt..r what and among those few 1e1 y hkelv wo uld be a 3&amp;Phll adelphta, wh1ch swept
year~ld former mmor league bct l boy
the New York Kmcks 1n four
Affa ble cur l y-ha~red Gene Kilroy who used to carry the
stra1ght may hnd out Frtday
bats for the Mahanoy C1ty, Pa team of the old Class D North
mght who 1t w1ll meet tn the
Atlanltc League was d li eutena nt m char ge of the U S Army
fmal s
as
Ea stern
Roxmg
team when he ftrst met All durmg the Rome Olympt cs
Washmgton, holdmg a 3 2
tn 1960 Awarm fnendshop developed between them dunng the
lead ove1 San Antomo, hosts
wughest penod of Ah s life. the tune "hen he ~&gt;as stnpped of
the Spurs
hJS l1tle and f01 the pasllO yea1s few ha ve bee1 any closer to
the former champ than K1lroy
Dunng that hme he has served as admmtstratl\ e assistant
to '.11, tak1ng care of h1s trammg camp h1s 11 avel and hotel
arr,mgements and the ordenn g of all h1s boxmg equtpmenl
You wouldn t call Gene K1lroy, ~&lt;h o IS white an emplo)ee of
Ah so much as you t1 call horn more of a fn end ,, good fnend ,
the kind Leon Spmks seems to be sea1t hing for and can't hnd
She pl ans to wor k on
People ask me what Muhamma d s b1ggest fault 1s ynd I
endurance and keep 10 shape alwavs tell them th e same thin g he 's too good heartW , he
so when the mdoor track g1ves ever) th mg away,' sa;s K1lro) He has never turned a
season opens 10 November
smg!e person awa) v.tw has ever come to h1s (amp He has
she can conce ntrate 0 ~rcat compassoon for all th ose he fo ghts too I asked htm once,
techmque and form
' Champ ha ve you ever hated an vbody tn your life -any of the
Outdoor tra ck ts her guvs you ever fought '
He smd No I could never forgove myself 1f I ever se nously
favonte _ tl s out 10 the open
and the dtslances are longer
hurt or kllk' l an) one 111 the 1mg He wasn I talk mg for
She also says the rndoor u-ack publicatiOn etther fhere were no newspape1111en around ,
ts harder on her legs
nus was JUst him a nd me
Durmg the track season,
At heart Kolro) &lt;1,11rns All IS much more a peacemake r
she pracl oces between two than a hghlfr
and two and one half hours a
K1lroy te lls about the tome All came close to becommg on
day The Lady Buckeyes voh ed m a street f1ght All was dnvmg hts Rolls Royce one
have three meets durmg the mght and Kolro) aiS&lt;, was m the car "I he epiSode took place
sprmg term leadtng up to the before the George Foreman f1ghl not too far from Ah s Deer
Big Ten Champtonsh ops and Lake, Pa lra mmg ca mp wheJ e he begms preparmg Monday
the AIAW Champtonshlps
fur Ius retUJ n w1U1 Spmks
She also has a fe ~&lt; Mrds
'We were out on the hoghway and one of these b1g trailer
for toda) s Jog gers a nd ll ucks cut m front of us Hr) sharph , says K1lroy The
propsectJve u-acksters
drover looked as tf he had done 1t on pu1 pose and he near!) hit
People are on a health and llS Muhammad swung around the truck a gam I pulled my
physiC al fitness kick so wmdowdo\\nandhollere dtoU~e dnvertopu ll ol er
The dnver pulled O\ er and Jlllllped down fl om the cabm of
10 ggmg 18 here for a while,
she sa1d
Ius truck Muha mmad and I also got out
If 1ou re a beg mner fon d
You crazy mggers 1 the dm c1 ) elled at us It was so dark ,
dn event you hke best, and 1( he thought I wa s bl.1ck also but then he recogmzed
) ou want to be good put some Muhammad
ttme work and eff~rt onto 1t
You cuunc off ' hcsd td llc was btg too muc hb1ggerthan
It won t come overmght, you Muhilmmad
lt~ v e to work at 1t'
How ami ~ onn a cut you off wnh a b1g tru ck ltke you got'
Joggmg gtves J ou a sense Mulmrrmla&lt;l sa od to h1m I m the ~ rea test f1 ~ htcr of a lll1me
of accomp liShme nt • she gettm ' 1ead) to f1gh t for $5 mllhon dolla1 s how crazy do you
added
thmk I am to cut tn front of Jour truck '
!lien I sa td to lhednver , C mon, I II take you You "anna
fight · rake me
But Muhammad stepped lil and sru d Caln1 down he s JUSt
domg hts JOb He probably has a w1fe and kul &lt; he s hnrr) mg
home U&gt; There II be nu f1 ghtmg here
The dm er wa s gi.Jd to hear 1t Muhammad then took us m
I
for a b1g steak dume1 Before he left the dn ve1 asked for and
E:lsewhere 10 the NI:, San got an autogra phed picture for htS kids '
D1ego slwded Houston, 2-1,
Pittsburgh bla nk ed New
York I-ll, m 11 inrungs
Fairmont State
Ch tcago topped Phtladelphta
4-2, and Atlan~t pul away San
signs Dave Burda
rranctsco f&gt;-1
Padr.-s 2, Astrus 1
~' A I RMONT , W V.1 1UP I I
Gay lord Perry lost hos
- Fatrmont Stale Signed
shutout m the runth, but , "'th
Da1e Burda d f&gt;-foot-11 t enter
rehef from Rollre Fmgers,
all J c km~ Valle) H1 ~ h School
notched h1s 247th career VIC- near Newark , Ohto, tts 1ts
tor) Owe Smtlh and Derre l second basketball recrUit
Thomas smgled home runs m
The 201-pound Burda hlt 58
the thtrd and runth mrungs
percent of hos focld goal
respectively for the Padres attempts on averagtng 16 9
Pirates I, Mets 0
pmnts and 11 9 rebounds a
ONLY
Bert Blyleven went all the ga me for a 20-J team wh och
way for his hrst NL v1clory captured the Ce ntral DJStn rl
and Ed Ott dectded the game cham ptonsh1p and wa s
tn the l ith mnrng wtth a ruo nerup 111 the Da) ton
each
leadoff homer The slumpmg Reg10nal
Mcts have now lost four m a
Guard M1ke Stone of two
row
MOUNTING AND
ume
state champton Logan
Cubs 4, Phillies 2:
BALANCING
Bobby Murcer hit h1s fourth ~&gt;as rmrmonl s ftrst rec rull

1957 through 1971 as an
ass1stan l coach and team
manager a nd set nwnerous
AAU, world and Ameman
records She was rated as the
number one hurdler m the
Umted States when she 11as
on the t968 Olympoc team
H1ghtower s mam goal no~&lt;
IS lo do her best th1s season
,md make ot lo the AJAW
na honals
She holds tile B1g Ten title
m the 100-meter hurdles and
th e 100 meter da sh and
entered the A!AW on both
events last year She ran the
hurdles m l! 4 last year and
hopes to get 1t down to 13 6
She w1ll be compelm g
F'nday and Sa turday m the
Becky Boone Relays at
Eastern Kentucky
And as for the future and
n1.1ybe the Ol;mp1cs
' It all depends on how well
J do thiS ye,lr she smd She
pl.oos to go on a year 10und
runmng program after thts

u d Ck season
l'htS part of th e counlr)
I,Jt ks 11, she sa1d 'The West
Codsl has the advantage of
rwmtng fi ll year round "

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CINCINNATI (UPIJ - ll
was back tn mtd-March and
Tom Seaver had just blanked
the St Louts Cardinals with
two hits over a SIX mnmg
span m an exhibtlton game at
St Petersburg, rla
" My arm feel s so good that
Jt worries me, " Seaver had
remarked at the llllle
' Every
pttch er
expertences a lull some tome or
other dunng the sprmg," he
had added " I JUst hope mme
doesn't come at the begmmng
of the season "
Seaver was jokrng at the
tome Ltttle then dtd he
reahze that hts JOkmg remark
made t hat sunny afternoon m
Flortda would return to haunt
him But tl has
The 32-year-old nght bander
pounded for ftve runs and
etght htls , two of them
homers, Wednesday mghl as

773 5592

Herman Grate
Mason , W Va.

found won his first - and
probably la st - game
Wednesda y
!'he Cardtnals pounded out
19 hits for Krol m dJ ubbmg
the Montreal Expos, 12-2 Ken
Rmtz led the carnage for the
Cardina ls wtth a two-run
homer and an RBI .,&lt;;mgle
!'he Cards are 1dle today
and General Mana ger Btng
Devme ts expected to se lec t
hiS new manager tn tome for
the team s return to St Louts
Frtday
Seaver meanwh ile, m
spnng trammg who JOked
about feehn g 'so good that tt
scares me gave up e~ g ht
htls, five runs and back-to
back homers to Davey Lopes
and Bill Russell m hts four
mmng stml Wednesday mghl
Hos ERA has ballooned to an
embarrassmg 5 00
The Los Angeles Dodgers
raked over the n ght-hander
and three other Heds pttchers
for 19 htts mcludin g homers
fora 14--\rornp O\ er the Reds
"l•m con cern ed
said
Reds ' Manager Sparky
Anderson who also must
worry about the sore arm of
hts No 2 p1 tch er, Bill
Bonham "I sttll thmk everyUung w1ll work out OK and
I m not worned about Seaver
- yet

I

I

H78/15
4 PLY
WHITEWALLS
$3295

ca reer grand-slam to gtve
Ro ck Reu sc hel hJS thord
vtclory
Steve Car lton
suffered hts thtrd loss m four
decJstons for Phtladelphta
Braves 6, Giants I
Rookte Dale Murphy drove
tn three runs wtth a smgle
and a lrtple as the Braves
beat the Gtants for the fourth
lim e thiS year Anothe r
rook te, Preston Hannah, went
6 1-3 mrungs for the wm

Linescores
Major League Baseball Results 1 ttm!. (8) Md Sadek Hanna
Solomon ( 7) and Pocoroba wBy Unl1ed Press International
Hanna (2 0) L- Knepper (1 1)
N at•ona l Leagu e
St L
100 224 10 1- 11 19 1 HR - San FranCI SCO Madlocl&lt;
Mil
000 000 07()--- 7 9 1 (11
Denny ana S1mm ons Swr
sher Tw,tchel! Atkmson (5 ) ( 11 mnmgs)
P•ltsburgh
Holdsworth (6 ) Kn owles (1)
00000000001
'
Bannsen (9) and c arter Reece
W- Denny (2 01 L - Tw itchell New York
000 000 000 00- 0 6 0
II 1) HR - Rellz (i l Owyer
Swan
Bly leven Md ott
Il l
LOCk WOOd (81 Myrt c k ( 11) and
Chr
004 000 000- 4 4 0 Stearns W- Btyl even ( 1 1) L Phrlll
000 000 11Q- 2 13 2 Mvnck (0 2) HR - P l tsb urgtl
R Reu:schel Sutter (81 and 011111
Cot&lt;
carlt o n
Reed O J LA
01 2 210 107- 14 19 0
McGri!w (91 ana Boone W- R
c.ncl
1110 001 002- ' 10 0
Reus.chel (l 2) 1..- Cartton (1
Rau and Yeager See~ve r
l ) HRs- Chicago Murcer ( I )
M urrav (5) , Cap1lla &lt;7 ) Borbon
Phil adelph ia Schm id t (4)
(9 ) and Bench W- Rllou (3 0) L
- Seever (0 2) HRS - LOS An
Sen Fran
000 001 000 - I 9 0
A li a
000 300 11&gt; 6 12 0 ge lcs, Lopes (Jl Russell &lt;l l
Sm1 th {3) Cin cinnati Morgan
Kn epper Minton (5) Wll

•o

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SanOgo
Hou~

FREE
001 000001

2 b\

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1 70

P erry
Ftngers
(9 )
and
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W Per r y I? 0 ) l
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R1chard ( l

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0 14 000 000

5 81

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90

Pole Burke \ 6) Rawley (8)
and Pas ley a n d St nson Brei!
Httr lzelt ( 9 ) and Do wn ng W Pole (2 31 l
Br etf ( I l l H Rs
- s eattle Stan ton ( l l Cal dor
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TIRE SALES
N Second Ave
Middleport , 0

�1-------~------ ----. ~~ ------

4- The Da1lv Sentinel, Middlepo1t-P9meroy, 0., Thursday, April 27, 1978

Leon ; Charl es Kinnaird .
Apple Grove: Mrs. Dewey
White, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
Point
Thomas Berry,
Pl easa nt ; Mrs . Jam es
Belville a~ d daughter,
Bidwell : Mrs. Everett Lutton, Point Pleasant ; Grover
Arrington, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Chad Tipton, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Bernard Wallace, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Otis McNutt, Hartford:
Calvin Clark, Grayson, Ky .;
Sceva Beaver, Leon ; Lionel
Wilson Ill, Point Pleasant ;
Kevin Miller, Point Pleasant :
Mrs. Jerry Harper, Minersville; Mrs. Thomas Jones,
Cheshire : Erica McKenney,
Point Pleasant.

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Admitted - An~elynn
Brunty, Minersville: Judy
Miller, Middlep ort: Billy
Brewer, Portland : Lora
Circle, Racine: Melvin
Mullins, Cheshire; Roscoe
Cozart. Racine; Robe rt
Roush, Jr., Racine; Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse.
Disc harged
Ali ce
Dodson. Will iam Kennedy ,
Nellie Lemley. Angie Roush,
Daniel Ha ll. Elva Fox, David
Eakins, Paul Casto.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. David
Davis, PomeroY; Victoria
Sturgeon, Point Pleasa nt ;
Michael Proctor. Gallipoiis:
Mrs.
Keith
Taylor,
Gallipolis: William Perry,

-.

SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Old
Route 33 at 9:57 a. m. Wednesda y for Mrs. Belva Sloan
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

~-----~l
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Florist Since 1957

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PH. 992-2644
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1..IM~2~1~

By ROBIN STAFFORD
ROME (UP!) - The Red
Brigades maintained an ominous silence on the .fate of
kidnapped ex-premier Aldo
Moro today after an
anonymous lip that he had
been released turned out to be
from another crank caller.
A new vigilante group in
Milan threatened reprisals if
the terrorists, who kidnapped
Moro 42 days ago, carry out
their threat to "execute" him
now that the government has
rejected their demands for
the release of 13 ja iled
comrades .
An anonymous tip that
Moro had been found alive in
a sack tossed from a speeding
car
Wednesday
sent
hundreds of police rushing to
a location southeast of Rome.
They found nothing.
· TI1ey grin1ly put the tip
down as another hoax - the
latest of hundreds of crank
calls and letters that have
been
flooding
Italian
newspaper offices and police
stations since the grisly Moro
affair bega n with hi s
abdu cti on fr om a Rome
str eet March 16.
"We're in the midst of a
terrible war of nerves," said
a weary official from Mora's
Chri s tian Demo c rati c
Party .
The kidnapping broug ht
threats of repnsals from
righ tw in g groups and
prompted Pope Paul VIto tell
visitors Wednesday that he
"feared and trembled" fo r
the civilized world.
An unknown vigilante
group calling itself th e
"People's Brigades" issued a
warning in Milan Wednesday
that Red Brigades members
would be "exterminated " if
Moro is murdered.
'·We've dec ided to brea k
your bones and heed us
because we don't joke. If you
sat isfy your barba rous
instincts and carry out the
useless assassination of Moro
we 'll exterminate you

said.
There has been · no word
from the Red Brigades on the
fate of their frail , 61-year ~ld
captive since Monday when
the government re'jecled
their latest ultimatum to
relea se
13
convicted
cr lm inals and tf!'rrorists.

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Pope Paul, who five days
ago begged the terrorists "on
bend ed knee" to release
Moro, told wellwishers at his
weekly general audient'l! that
he still hoped for a "peaceful
and reassuring" end to the
ordeal.

Area Deaths

I

BONNY B. ALLEN • ,,
Mrs. Bonny B. Allen, 35,
But he added, "How ca n we Vine St ., Racine, died
pa ss over the episode, still
Wednesday at the Holzer
under way , of the kidnapping
Medical
Center.
of a man of Aldo Moro's
Mrs.
Allen
was preceded in
moral, political , academic
death
by
her
father , Dennis
and social stature without
Adkins.
fearin g and trembling for the
Surviving are her husband,
stability of our modern
Do
uglas G. Alien, six
civilized world ?"
children, Tommy, Ricky,
Christopher, Lisa, Laura and
Bonny Jean, ali at home ; her
moth er,
Mrs.
Gatha
Alvarado, Milwaukee, Wise.;
eight brothers, Bob, Lendon,
Raymond and Wayne Adkins,
aU of Milwaukee; Randall
and Eugene Adkins of
Syracuse; Roger Adkins of
Racine·, and Michael Adkins,
Minersville, and four sisters,
advise r to the presid en t, Mrs. Hattie Good, Fair Plain,
issued a statement from Qis· W,ash.; Mrs. Betty Foley,
Sy racuse ; Mrs. Linda
office in Calhoun saying
depositors at either bank ever Stewart, Chester, and Mrs.
lost a cent as a result of these Brenda Richards, Cleveland.
credit policies," which, he Several nieces and nephews
said, were cOmmon in also survive.
Funeral services will ·be
banking circles.
held
at 1 p.m. Friday at the
Lance's statement said the
federal government never al· Ewing Funeral Home with
leged he personally profited the Rev. Bob Stewart offr om NBG or Ca ihoun ficiating: Bu rial wili be in the
Letart Falls Cemete ry.
banking practices .
Lance sent the SEC a letter Friends may call at the
saying he is not now involved funeral home any time.
in banking, but agreed to give
the fe deral governmen t 60
LAWRENCE MORDEN
days notice if he goes back in
Lawrence D. Morden,
th e business.
Girard, former Middleport
A federal grand jury in resident , died Wednesday.
Atl anta is consid ering
Mr. Harden was a son of the
possible crin1inal violations late R. H. and Hattie Harden
ari sing
fr om
Lan ce's of Middleport.
practices, inclucling a pattern
Surviving are his wife,
of transactions in whi ch Edythe; three children, Lois
Lan ce and some of hi s Hunn and Elphia Thea!, both
relatives overdrew checking of Buffalo, N. Y., and Richard
accounts by substantia l of Tampa , Fla .; eight
amounts.
grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren; a brother, Dr.
H. C. Horden, Columbus; two
Sisters, Mrs. Phyllis Skinner ,
Pomeroy, and Grella Harden, Columbus, and several
nieces and nephews.
Graveside services wili be
held at 2 p. m. Sunday at
Riverview Cemetery in
AURORA , Ohio (UP! ) Middleport with Mr. George
No progress was reported Glaze officiating.
today in an attempt to end the
teachers' strike in Aurora.
Meanwhile, non:teaching
employ ees say they soon may
join the teachers on the picket
Clea r and co ld tonight .
lines. but a decision will not Lows in the upper 30s. Mostly
be made until Sunday.
sunny again Friday. Highs in
Teachers, represented by the upper 60s or lower 70s.
th e Aurora Edu cati on Probability of precipitation
Association, went on strike near zero percent today,
Wednesday to protest the tonight and 10 perce nt
school board's decision to lay Friday .
off 17 teachers - effective
with the fall term - because
HYMN SING SET
of a lack of · funds and
An ol d fashioned hymn sing
declin ing enrollmenll;.
Schools were open despite will be held Sunday at the
Star
United
th e fact just 179 of the Morning
sys tem's 1,951 stud ents Methodist Church at 7:30
attended classes Wednesday .. p.m. The congregation will be
No attendance figures were wearing overalls and long
skirts.
ava ilable ea rly today.
The AEA , which represents
11 5 of the 117 teachers in the
schoo l system, compl ai ns
ALUMNI HAS DANCE
that the layoffs seriously will
The Meigs High School
affect the quality of education Alumni Assn. will sj&gt;onsor a
in the schools.
teen dance from 9 to 12 p. m.
In negotiations whi ch Friday at the Meigs Junior
lasted more than three hours High School with "Uncle
Wednesday, bargainers for Dugger" of Parkersburg
the AEA and the school board spinning the platters.
fai led to chan ge th eir
position.
The non-leachin g emSEEN VISITING
ployees, who are honoring
Jack Smith of Lancasterthe teachers' picket ll~es, say visited in Pomeroy Tue~day
because the school · board w1th hi s aunts, Mr s.
repeatedly has refused lAJ Genevieve Meinhart, and
re cog niz e
the
Ohio Miss Erma Smith, Spring
Associa tion of Publi c School 1\ ve .
Employees as their official
bargaining agent they will
meet at noon Sunday to Now you know
decide whether to strike.
The koala bear is an exThe OAPSE represents 53 tremely picky eater who
of Aurora 's 73 non-leaching feeds only on eucalyptus
employees.
leaves.

Lance still faces
criminal violations

By .WJLLIAM COTTERELL
ATLANTA (U P! )
Without conceding any
wrongdoing , former federal
budget director Bert Lance
agreed Wednesday not to
engage in any of the banking
practices that torpedoed his
position in President Car ter's
administration .
An out-of-court agreement
among Lance, the federal
government and the two
banks he he aded before
joining Carter 's White House
inner ci rcle prqvides that
Lance wi ll u~itate his
financial statements at any
ba nks currently extendi ng
him credit and will not
borrow to finance political
campaigns.
He also agreed not to
overdraw his check in g
accounU; more than other
customers are allowed, and
not to "kite " chec ks - a
practice of covering a check
at one bank with a ctieck from
another, where funds may not
be on hand to cover the
second check.
The National Bank of
Georgia
and Ca lh oun
National Bank, where Lance
was a top executive before he
went to Washington, agreed
to cond uct an internal
investigation of their lending
practices an d publicly report
their findings. The banks also
without
pity," news
the agencies
message agreed to apply the san1e
sent
to Milan

G&amp;J
CP-734

:

Silence is maintained

HOSPITAL NEWS

credit stand ards to their
officers and directors as to
other borrowers.
The federal complaint said
that while the Calhoun bank
was generally 11 ienient" with
all ove rdrafts, it extended
special privileges to Lance
and his family and fri ends . It
said that in 1974 and 1975,
, overdrafts in Lance-related
accounts ranged from $70,000
to $800,000 - more than 70
per ce nt of all overdrafts
owed to the bank.
When he switched to NBG ,
the government said , some of
Lance's relatives and friends
borrowed from NBG to pa y
overdrafts and loans' at the
Calhoun bank, and that "by
virtue of Lance's position at
NBG, he was able to transfer
certai n marginal loans fr om
Calhoun to NBG, thereby
relieving Calhoun of the need
to write down such loa ns."
La nce was out of the
country and unavailable fo r
comment when his attorneys
reached agreement with the
Sec urities and Exchan ge
Commission and the U.S.
Comptroller of the Currency.
The consent decree, signed
by a federal judge, has the
impac t of an injun ctio n
forbidding Lance to engage in
qu es ti onable banking
practices.
The form er OMB chief, still
a close friend and unpaid

Oeveland buys
trolleys from
Canada
CLE VELAND ( UPI)
Th e Grea ter Clevela nd
Regional Transit Authority is
going to purchase nine old
Cleveland streetcars from
the
Toro nto
Transit
Commission for about $17,500
apiece, it was revealed today .
The cars, beginning this
summer, wiU be used on the
Shaker rapid lines for at least
21k years until a $31 million
package of new RTA rapid
cars are delivered from Italy ,
according to William J . Bouf• rd, RTA board president.
We have to find some
remedy -outside of excuses
- for service on the (Shaker )
line," Bouffard said.
The cars to be purcha sed
from Toronto are part of a
group of SO sold by the
Cleveland Transit System for
$26,250 each in 1972 during
CTS ' conversi on !rom
streetcars to diesel-powered
buses.
The cars were used in
Cleveland less than seven
years , acco rding to Bouffard ,
who said RTA employees
would travel to Toronto next
week to pick the nine cars
from Toronto 's Oeet.

KC recommended

"no

CLAUDE MAYNARD
Claude Maynard, 56, Ash
St., Middleport, died early
Thursday morning at the
Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
Mr. Maynard was born
Jan. ~. 1922 In Inez, Ky., a
son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Maynard . He was
employed as a cook at Craw's
Steak House and earlier
worked at the French Service
Station in Middleport. He was
a veteran of World War II
having served in the U. S.
Army and was a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amercian Legion. Besides his
parents he was preceded in
death by four brothers and
three sisters.
Surviving is his wife, Lena
Mae Preston Maynard.
. Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiating.
Burial will be in the Clifton,
W. Va., Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

ii-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.;Thursday, Apri127, 1978

'Don't buy a film,- get it from 'the library
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
VIdeo tape recor.der a.nd
player - the rllachine wh1ch
records and plays back TV
programs - has another use .
One company has put
~vera! old movies on halfmch casette la]leS and loa~s
them to llbranes, whic,h m
turn check them out to
patrons like they check out
books.
One of the few libraries in
the nation which accepted 20
of the casette tape~ fr?m the
EastlnPhelan D1stnbut'":g
Corp. of Davenport, Iowa, ts
the Public Library of
Columbus and Franklin
~~nty .
. That means. you can see
films by checki~g them out
rather than paym~ as much
as $SO to buy a him," said
Randy Stith, head of media
production at the hbrary for
the past two years.

GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
issued to Keith Herbert
Petrie, 22, Pomeroy, and
Connie Kay Musser, 18, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy ; Charles Wayne
Pugh, Jr., 20, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, and Linda Mae
Lambert, 22, Galiipoiis.

Social I
1 Calendar I

Professional
Performance

is lacking

Wh en vou fill a pr cso'l'iption

with
that \ ' Oll )!PI what

us. vou"rr sure
yo u.r olol'lor ord e.rrol. We ' re
known for ou r ao•o·urao~ v.

DUTTON DRUG CO.
LOOK
FOR OUR
SPRING
SALE
'
CIRCULAR
IN THIS
WEEK'S
MAIL

Pomeroy
Cement
Block Co.
The Department
Store of Building

N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport , 0 .

CAMPA IGN FINANCE
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio General Assembly
Wednesday ga ve final
approval to a bill aUowing
" tandem " candid ates for
go vernor~ieutenant governor
this year file a joint
ca mpoign finance form .
Without the change,
according to Rep. James A.
Zehner, D-Yeliow Springs,
persons eould get around the
U ,OOO campaign donation
limit by contributing to the
lieutenant governor, who is
not an individual candidate
lor the firs\ time this year .

992-3106

Big May~~·
Save upto96%
ofthefeeon
Travelers Checks.
· Buyupros5,000worthof
Arst National Cit)' Travelers Checks
for only as2 fee dunng the Big May Sale.

Since 1915

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2,500
t,OOO
500
- Qflprgood ,nU S

NEW! I

~

UMIII'

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$50.00
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96%

tO.()()

2.00
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ll n d P u~ rl o~ • c o

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II""' h.1t l' ,,, ,.,,u ,,,"hi 1." ,. " ' "'' ,.

FROM
PRINCE MA TCHABEUJ

nurses invited .

·REVIVAL
beginning
Thursday at Long Bottom
United MethoJiist Chur ch
through Sunday, 7:3() p.m.
each eveni ng with Rev .
Chester Lemley speaking.
Special music and public
invited.
MIDDI.EPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 7 p.m. Thursda y at
Fee ney-Bennett Post 128 ,
American Legion Home with
uniform inspection to be held.

11\"i'

FRIDAY
REVIVAL now in progress
at new Independent Holiness
Oturch, Pearl Street, Middleport . The Rev . David
Light Is the evange li st.
Pastor is the Rev. O'Dell
Manley.

•O.. It kh. "" 11 r 111111 . 1111 o11ht.·o , , ,,.,.,,.,,

1•

''"'"
lhol ' ''' ' ' · • • •· ~ l.o /( II\ l r:"d' '"
h.·, I.. · ,_ ..,
t

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111 ,~.., . .. ... , .. , ,, •

AZIZA
New Natural Lustre
Lip Gloss and Eye Makeup

A Home Bank

'

For

Now Available From :

'Meigs County

Village Pharmacy
Middleport, Ohio
or
New Haven, W.Va.

THURSDAY
MEIGS Co unty Women
Fellowship Thursday 7: 30
p.m. at Rutla nd Church of
Christ.
FREE CLOTHING da y at
The Salvation Army, Butternut Ave., 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Thu rsday . All area residents
in need of clothing are
wel com•.
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Pack 245 meeting scheduled
for Thursday evening has
been canceiied.
SPE CI AL MEE TING ,
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, 7: 3() p.m.
Thursday; work in the Roya l
Master and Select Masters
Degrees.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
at 8 o'clock at the home of
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery with
Mrs. Tom SJiencer and Mrs.
Okey Co nnoily as cohostesses. For the program
Mrs. David Chadwell and
Mrs. Roy Hannum will tea ch
the members to make a
macrame hanging planter.
OHIO NURSES Assn.,
South ern Hill s Distr ict ,
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Mt. St. Mary 's
Hospital. Film strip "Process
Cor Peop le" and Shirl ey
Patel, hostess. Ail regist ered

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by Realistic

Itt lilt• lilce ol RIS I N G PRI CES (the
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Chronomatic -116

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.

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.._. .. Set how~~ SM.

'

NEW! I

RADIO SHACK 9·VOLT
BATTERY BONANZA -

1

Progress

Weather

are bein g che cke.d out
regularly ."
Many of the selections are
old movies, some of them
silents . Selections include
• · L o we I I T h o m a s
Remembers," · "Countdown
to World War II", Otaplin
movies, Douglas Fairbanks
in "Black Pirates" (1926 ) and
"Thief of Bagdad" (1924 ),
some cartoons and some
ne.;er movies' "M-A-S-H,"
"F rench Connection" and
"Gent Iem en
Prefer
Blondes."
Stith says there are many
old and silent movies because
Eastin-Phelan has worked in
that area .
The casettes are checked
out from the audio-visual
department of the library two
at a time, to persons over 18
with a library card, and for
one week at a time.
"These films are another
way of using the video tape
machine 'with a playback
feature," he said.
But there is one drawback.
The
casettes
are
manufactured to fit only the
Beta Viedo Tape Recording
units.
VTR 's became popular
about one year ago . This past
Otristmas, may merchants
here said they were big items
and could have sold more if
they had had them in stock.
Stith foresees the day when
every home will have one of
the units, since one big selling
pomt is that "you can tape
programs when you are not
home." He doesn't own one
" because they are too
expensive right now.''

---....--·- ·-I·
I

ANNUAL INSPECTION
The annual hike bike inspection will be held at 7
Friday evening at the Senior
Citizens Center, East Mam
St., Pomeroy.

for accreditution
Kyger Creek High School
has been recommended for
accreditation for at least
three more years following a
North
Ce ntr al
team
evaluation co ndu cte d
Wednesday at th e school.
Dr. David Helms, Capital
University, who headed the
visitation team, said he wa s
very impressed wit h the
improvements made during
the past two years. He particularly cited the school's
adopted course of st udy , new
materials, new equipment
and other imRrovemenf•

"The company came to us
in January to see if we
wanted them," said Stith, a
radio and television graduate
of Miami University with a
n1asters in film from Dhio
State University . " The
company wanted 1AJ .see if
there was a market for the
· tapes. "
Stith said the tapes are 00
loan for six months "after
which we will have t~ decide
whether we want to buy them
or return them."
If the library decides to
purchase them, Stith figures
they would · cost ''in the
neighborhood of $SO to $75
each per movie."
And with the way they are
going, it is possible the
library could purchase them
when the six-month trial
period is over .
"They've been going real
well," said Stith. "Not all are
out at the same time, but they

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
.RACINE

OHIO

UNITED Mine Workers
Supporters Club Friday 10
a .m. at Miners Relief
building, High St., Middle~~rt. Anyone wishing
additiOnal mfonnation are
asked to call 992~163 .
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM,Chester, meeting 7:30
p.m. Friday with work in the
EA and FC degrees; all
Master Masons invited.
ANNUAL BAKE sale of
Forest Run Methodist
Chureh, Friday, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at Dale C. Warner In·
surance Agency, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy.
WEEKEND revival,
Friday through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. each . evening at
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, with Rev . L. R:
Gluesencamp speaking;
Good News Singers of ·
Washington C. H. featured
Saturday evening; public
invited.

CUT 50°/o

95

SAVE Reg. 2188
260//0 . 29" £

Pl ay fasi - a c tton t en n rs, ho ckey or
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�1-------~------ ----. ~~ ------

4- The Da1lv Sentinel, Middlepo1t-P9meroy, 0., Thursday, April 27, 1978

Leon ; Charl es Kinnaird .
Apple Grove: Mrs. Dewey
White, Gallipolis ; Mrs.
Point
Thomas Berry,
Pl easa nt ; Mrs . Jam es
Belville a~ d daughter,
Bidwell : Mrs. Everett Lutton, Point Pleasant ; Grover
Arrington, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Chad Tipton, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Bernard Wallace, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Otis McNutt, Hartford:
Calvin Clark, Grayson, Ky .;
Sceva Beaver, Leon ; Lionel
Wilson Ill, Point Pleasant ;
Kevin Miller, Point Pleasant :
Mrs. Jerry Harper, Minersville; Mrs. Thomas Jones,
Cheshire : Erica McKenney,
Point Pleasant.

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Admitted - An~elynn
Brunty, Minersville: Judy
Miller, Middlep ort: Billy
Brewer, Portland : Lora
Circle, Racine: Melvin
Mullins, Cheshire; Roscoe
Cozart. Racine; Robe rt
Roush, Jr., Racine; Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse.
Disc harged
Ali ce
Dodson. Will iam Kennedy ,
Nellie Lemley. Angie Roush,
Daniel Ha ll. Elva Fox, David
Eakins, Paul Casto.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. David
Davis, PomeroY; Victoria
Sturgeon, Point Pleasa nt ;
Michael Proctor. Gallipoiis:
Mrs.
Keith
Taylor,
Gallipolis: William Perry,

-.

SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Old
Route 33 at 9:57 a. m. Wednesda y for Mrs. Belva Sloan
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

~-----~l
~

Your '' Ex1ra Touch "
Florist Since 1957

RUMMAGE SALE
The young people of the
Enterprise United Methodist
PH. 992-2644
Church will hold a rumma ge
sale fro m 9 a. m. to 3 p. m.
35'2 E . Ma in , Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist
\ Friday and Saturday at the
cMrch.
_.._....-..-..-..-..-_.
FLORIST

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~

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DAN'S

BOOT SHOP

J,l
70i..c-Dita-DCNI~~~~~~O~.X:OOI~
1..IM~2~1~

By ROBIN STAFFORD
ROME (UP!) - The Red
Brigades maintained an ominous silence on the .fate of
kidnapped ex-premier Aldo
Moro today after an
anonymous lip that he had
been released turned out to be
from another crank caller.
A new vigilante group in
Milan threatened reprisals if
the terrorists, who kidnapped
Moro 42 days ago, carry out
their threat to "execute" him
now that the government has
rejected their demands for
the release of 13 ja iled
comrades .
An anonymous tip that
Moro had been found alive in
a sack tossed from a speeding
car
Wednesday
sent
hundreds of police rushing to
a location southeast of Rome.
They found nothing.
· TI1ey grin1ly put the tip
down as another hoax - the
latest of hundreds of crank
calls and letters that have
been
flooding
Italian
newspaper offices and police
stations since the grisly Moro
affair bega n with hi s
abdu cti on fr om a Rome
str eet March 16.
"We're in the midst of a
terrible war of nerves," said
a weary official from Mora's
Chri s tian Demo c rati c
Party .
The kidnapping broug ht
threats of repnsals from
righ tw in g groups and
prompted Pope Paul VIto tell
visitors Wednesday that he
"feared and trembled" fo r
the civilized world.
An unknown vigilante
group calling itself th e
"People's Brigades" issued a
warning in Milan Wednesday
that Red Brigades members
would be "exterminated " if
Moro is murdered.
'·We've dec ided to brea k
your bones and heed us
because we don't joke. If you
sat isfy your barba rous
instincts and carry out the
useless assassination of Moro
we 'll exterminate you

said.
There has been · no word
from the Red Brigades on the
fate of their frail , 61-year ~ld
captive since Monday when
the government re'jecled
their latest ultimatum to
relea se
13
convicted
cr lm inals and tf!'rrorists.

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ex haust systems. brake drums, shock
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• Corrosion proof valvi ng for tro·uble-ltre4
Performance
• Rapid hammer action saves
cuttlhg time

Pope Paul, who five days
ago begged the terrorists "on
bend ed knee" to release
Moro, told wellwishers at his
weekly general audient'l! that
he still hoped for a "peaceful
and reassuring" end to the
ordeal.

Area Deaths

I

BONNY B. ALLEN • ,,
Mrs. Bonny B. Allen, 35,
But he added, "How ca n we Vine St ., Racine, died
pa ss over the episode, still
Wednesday at the Holzer
under way , of the kidnapping
Medical
Center.
of a man of Aldo Moro's
Mrs.
Allen
was preceded in
moral, political , academic
death
by
her
father , Dennis
and social stature without
Adkins.
fearin g and trembling for the
Surviving are her husband,
stability of our modern
Do
uglas G. Alien, six
civilized world ?"
children, Tommy, Ricky,
Christopher, Lisa, Laura and
Bonny Jean, ali at home ; her
moth er,
Mrs.
Gatha
Alvarado, Milwaukee, Wise.;
eight brothers, Bob, Lendon,
Raymond and Wayne Adkins,
aU of Milwaukee; Randall
and Eugene Adkins of
Syracuse; Roger Adkins of
Racine·, and Michael Adkins,
Minersville, and four sisters,
advise r to the presid en t, Mrs. Hattie Good, Fair Plain,
issued a statement from Qis· W,ash.; Mrs. Betty Foley,
Sy racuse ; Mrs. Linda
office in Calhoun saying
depositors at either bank ever Stewart, Chester, and Mrs.
lost a cent as a result of these Brenda Richards, Cleveland.
credit policies," which, he Several nieces and nephews
said, were cOmmon in also survive.
Funeral services will ·be
banking circles.
held
at 1 p.m. Friday at the
Lance's statement said the
federal government never al· Ewing Funeral Home with
leged he personally profited the Rev. Bob Stewart offr om NBG or Ca ihoun ficiating: Bu rial wili be in the
Letart Falls Cemete ry.
banking practices .
Lance sent the SEC a letter Friends may call at the
saying he is not now involved funeral home any time.
in banking, but agreed to give
the fe deral governmen t 60
LAWRENCE MORDEN
days notice if he goes back in
Lawrence D. Morden,
th e business.
Girard, former Middleport
A federal grand jury in resident , died Wednesday.
Atl anta is consid ering
Mr. Harden was a son of the
possible crin1inal violations late R. H. and Hattie Harden
ari sing
fr om
Lan ce's of Middleport.
practices, inclucling a pattern
Surviving are his wife,
of transactions in whi ch Edythe; three children, Lois
Lan ce and some of hi s Hunn and Elphia Thea!, both
relatives overdrew checking of Buffalo, N. Y., and Richard
accounts by substantia l of Tampa , Fla .; eight
amounts.
grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren; a brother, Dr.
H. C. Horden, Columbus; two
Sisters, Mrs. Phyllis Skinner ,
Pomeroy, and Grella Harden, Columbus, and several
nieces and nephews.
Graveside services wili be
held at 2 p. m. Sunday at
Riverview Cemetery in
AURORA , Ohio (UP! ) Middleport with Mr. George
No progress was reported Glaze officiating.
today in an attempt to end the
teachers' strike in Aurora.
Meanwhile, non:teaching
employ ees say they soon may
join the teachers on the picket
Clea r and co ld tonight .
lines. but a decision will not Lows in the upper 30s. Mostly
be made until Sunday.
sunny again Friday. Highs in
Teachers, represented by the upper 60s or lower 70s.
th e Aurora Edu cati on Probability of precipitation
Association, went on strike near zero percent today,
Wednesday to protest the tonight and 10 perce nt
school board's decision to lay Friday .
off 17 teachers - effective
with the fall term - because
HYMN SING SET
of a lack of · funds and
An ol d fashioned hymn sing
declin ing enrollmenll;.
Schools were open despite will be held Sunday at the
Star
United
th e fact just 179 of the Morning
sys tem's 1,951 stud ents Methodist Church at 7:30
attended classes Wednesday .. p.m. The congregation will be
No attendance figures were wearing overalls and long
skirts.
ava ilable ea rly today.
The AEA , which represents
11 5 of the 117 teachers in the
schoo l system, compl ai ns
ALUMNI HAS DANCE
that the layoffs seriously will
The Meigs High School
affect the quality of education Alumni Assn. will sj&gt;onsor a
in the schools.
teen dance from 9 to 12 p. m.
In negotiations whi ch Friday at the Meigs Junior
lasted more than three hours High School with "Uncle
Wednesday, bargainers for Dugger" of Parkersburg
the AEA and the school board spinning the platters.
fai led to chan ge th eir
position.
The non-leachin g emSEEN VISITING
ployees, who are honoring
Jack Smith of Lancasterthe teachers' picket ll~es, say visited in Pomeroy Tue~day
because the school · board w1th hi s aunts, Mr s.
repeatedly has refused lAJ Genevieve Meinhart, and
re cog niz e
the
Ohio Miss Erma Smith, Spring
Associa tion of Publi c School 1\ ve .
Employees as their official
bargaining agent they will
meet at noon Sunday to Now you know
decide whether to strike.
The koala bear is an exThe OAPSE represents 53 tremely picky eater who
of Aurora 's 73 non-leaching feeds only on eucalyptus
employees.
leaves.

Lance still faces
criminal violations

By .WJLLIAM COTTERELL
ATLANTA (U P! )
Without conceding any
wrongdoing , former federal
budget director Bert Lance
agreed Wednesday not to
engage in any of the banking
practices that torpedoed his
position in President Car ter's
administration .
An out-of-court agreement
among Lance, the federal
government and the two
banks he he aded before
joining Carter 's White House
inner ci rcle prqvides that
Lance wi ll u~itate his
financial statements at any
ba nks currently extendi ng
him credit and will not
borrow to finance political
campaigns.
He also agreed not to
overdraw his check in g
accounU; more than other
customers are allowed, and
not to "kite " chec ks - a
practice of covering a check
at one bank with a ctieck from
another, where funds may not
be on hand to cover the
second check.
The National Bank of
Georgia
and Ca lh oun
National Bank, where Lance
was a top executive before he
went to Washington, agreed
to cond uct an internal
investigation of their lending
practices an d publicly report
their findings. The banks also
without
pity," news
the agencies
message agreed to apply the san1e
sent
to Milan

G&amp;J
CP-734

:

Silence is maintained

HOSPITAL NEWS

credit stand ards to their
officers and directors as to
other borrowers.
The federal complaint said
that while the Calhoun bank
was generally 11 ienient" with
all ove rdrafts, it extended
special privileges to Lance
and his family and fri ends . It
said that in 1974 and 1975,
, overdrafts in Lance-related
accounts ranged from $70,000
to $800,000 - more than 70
per ce nt of all overdrafts
owed to the bank.
When he switched to NBG ,
the government said , some of
Lance's relatives and friends
borrowed from NBG to pa y
overdrafts and loans' at the
Calhoun bank, and that "by
virtue of Lance's position at
NBG, he was able to transfer
certai n marginal loans fr om
Calhoun to NBG, thereby
relieving Calhoun of the need
to write down such loa ns."
La nce was out of the
country and unavailable fo r
comment when his attorneys
reached agreement with the
Sec urities and Exchan ge
Commission and the U.S.
Comptroller of the Currency.
The consent decree, signed
by a federal judge, has the
impac t of an injun ctio n
forbidding Lance to engage in
qu es ti onable banking
practices.
The form er OMB chief, still
a close friend and unpaid

Oeveland buys
trolleys from
Canada
CLE VELAND ( UPI)
Th e Grea ter Clevela nd
Regional Transit Authority is
going to purchase nine old
Cleveland streetcars from
the
Toro nto
Transit
Commission for about $17,500
apiece, it was revealed today .
The cars, beginning this
summer, wiU be used on the
Shaker rapid lines for at least
21k years until a $31 million
package of new RTA rapid
cars are delivered from Italy ,
according to William J . Bouf• rd, RTA board president.
We have to find some
remedy -outside of excuses
- for service on the (Shaker )
line," Bouffard said.
The cars to be purcha sed
from Toronto are part of a
group of SO sold by the
Cleveland Transit System for
$26,250 each in 1972 during
CTS ' conversi on !rom
streetcars to diesel-powered
buses.
The cars were used in
Cleveland less than seven
years , acco rding to Bouffard ,
who said RTA employees
would travel to Toronto next
week to pick the nine cars
from Toronto 's Oeet.

KC recommended

"no

CLAUDE MAYNARD
Claude Maynard, 56, Ash
St., Middleport, died early
Thursday morning at the
Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
Mr. Maynard was born
Jan. ~. 1922 In Inez, Ky., a
son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Maynard . He was
employed as a cook at Craw's
Steak House and earlier
worked at the French Service
Station in Middleport. He was
a veteran of World War II
having served in the U. S.
Army and was a member of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
Amercian Legion. Besides his
parents he was preceded in
death by four brothers and
three sisters.
Surviving is his wife, Lena
Mae Preston Maynard.
. Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiating.
Burial will be in the Clifton,
W. Va., Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

ii-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.;Thursday, Apri127, 1978

'Don't buy a film,- get it from 'the library
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
VIdeo tape recor.der a.nd
player - the rllachine wh1ch
records and plays back TV
programs - has another use .
One company has put
~vera! old movies on halfmch casette la]leS and loa~s
them to llbranes, whic,h m
turn check them out to
patrons like they check out
books.
One of the few libraries in
the nation which accepted 20
of the casette tape~ fr?m the
EastlnPhelan D1stnbut'":g
Corp. of Davenport, Iowa, ts
the Public Library of
Columbus and Franklin
~~nty .
. That means. you can see
films by checki~g them out
rather than paym~ as much
as $SO to buy a him," said
Randy Stith, head of media
production at the hbrary for
the past two years.

GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
issued to Keith Herbert
Petrie, 22, Pomeroy, and
Connie Kay Musser, 18, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy ; Charles Wayne
Pugh, Jr., 20, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, and Linda Mae
Lambert, 22, Galiipoiis.

Social I
1 Calendar I

Professional
Performance

is lacking

Wh en vou fill a pr cso'l'iption

with
that \ ' Oll )!PI what

us. vou"rr sure
yo u.r olol'lor ord e.rrol. We ' re
known for ou r ao•o·urao~ v.

DUTTON DRUG CO.
LOOK
FOR OUR
SPRING
SALE
'
CIRCULAR
IN THIS
WEEK'S
MAIL

Pomeroy
Cement
Block Co.
The Department
Store of Building

N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport , 0 .

CAMPA IGN FINANCE
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio General Assembly
Wednesday ga ve final
approval to a bill aUowing
" tandem " candid ates for
go vernor~ieutenant governor
this year file a joint
ca mpoign finance form .
Without the change,
according to Rep. James A.
Zehner, D-Yeliow Springs,
persons eould get around the
U ,OOO campaign donation
limit by contributing to the
lieutenant governor, who is
not an individual candidate
lor the firs\ time this year .

992-3106

Big May~~·
Save upto96%
ofthefeeon
Travelers Checks.
· Buyupros5,000worthof
Arst National Cit)' Travelers Checks
for only as2 fee dunng the Big May Sale.

Since 1915

-

o.cll

•

•

$5,000
2,500
t,OOO
500
- Qflprgood ,nU S

NEW! I

~

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25.00

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2.00

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FROM
PRINCE MA TCHABEUJ

nurses invited .

·REVIVAL
beginning
Thursday at Long Bottom
United MethoJiist Chur ch
through Sunday, 7:3() p.m.
each eveni ng with Rev .
Chester Lemley speaking.
Special music and public
invited.
MIDDI.EPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 7 p.m. Thursda y at
Fee ney-Bennett Post 128 ,
American Legion Home with
uniform inspection to be held.

11\"i'

FRIDAY
REVIVAL now in progress
at new Independent Holiness
Oturch, Pearl Street, Middleport . The Rev . David
Light Is the evange li st.
Pastor is the Rev. O'Dell
Manley.

•O.. It kh. "" 11 r 111111 . 1111 o11ht.·o , , ,,.,.,,.,,

1•

''"'"
lhol ' ''' ' ' · • • •· ~ l.o /( II\ l r:"d' '"
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t

. . , t l\,il\' 1•• " 1111 l•'f .Ot\'l oto oo! ll. ,.tol\l.'

111 ,~.., . .. ... , .. , ,, •

AZIZA
New Natural Lustre
Lip Gloss and Eye Makeup

A Home Bank

'

For

Now Available From :

'Meigs County

Village Pharmacy
Middleport, Ohio
or
New Haven, W.Va.

THURSDAY
MEIGS Co unty Women
Fellowship Thursday 7: 30
p.m. at Rutla nd Church of
Christ.
FREE CLOTHING da y at
The Salvation Army, Butternut Ave., 10 a.m. to 12 noon
Thu rsday . All area residents
in need of clothing are
wel com•.
MIDDLEPORT CUB Scout
Pack 245 meeting scheduled
for Thursday evening has
been canceiied.
SPE CI AL MEE TING ,
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, 7: 3() p.m.
Thursday; work in the Roya l
Master and Select Masters
Degrees.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club
at 8 o'clock at the home of
Mrs. Ronald Cowdery with
Mrs. Tom SJiencer and Mrs.
Okey Co nnoily as cohostesses. For the program
Mrs. David Chadwell and
Mrs. Roy Hannum will tea ch
the members to make a
macrame hanging planter.
OHIO NURSES Assn.,
South ern Hill s Distr ict ,
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Mt. St. Mary 's
Hospital. Film strip "Process
Cor Peop le" and Shirl ey
Patel, hostess. Ail regist ered

9V REGULAR

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0 Pt'l rll es on H1i r. rdi&gt;d !o .rlt t· rv uu In 1 vr•.t r
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hrgh speaker s I Super su r prr se f or M om and a WISe buy
for you at a wh opptng 40°o sa vrng st

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BATTERY BONANZA -

1

Progress

Weather

are bein g che cke.d out
regularly ."
Many of the selections are
old movies, some of them
silents . Selections include
• · L o we I I T h o m a s
Remembers," · "Countdown
to World War II", Otaplin
movies, Douglas Fairbanks
in "Black Pirates" (1926 ) and
"Thief of Bagdad" (1924 ),
some cartoons and some
ne.;er movies' "M-A-S-H,"
"F rench Connection" and
"Gent Iem en
Prefer
Blondes."
Stith says there are many
old and silent movies because
Eastin-Phelan has worked in
that area .
The casettes are checked
out from the audio-visual
department of the library two
at a time, to persons over 18
with a library card, and for
one week at a time.
"These films are another
way of using the video tape
machine 'with a playback
feature," he said.
But there is one drawback.
The
casettes
are
manufactured to fit only the
Beta Viedo Tape Recording
units.
VTR 's became popular
about one year ago . This past
Otristmas, may merchants
here said they were big items
and could have sold more if
they had had them in stock.
Stith foresees the day when
every home will have one of
the units, since one big selling
pomt is that "you can tape
programs when you are not
home." He doesn't own one
" because they are too
expensive right now.''

---....--·- ·-I·
I

ANNUAL INSPECTION
The annual hike bike inspection will be held at 7
Friday evening at the Senior
Citizens Center, East Mam
St., Pomeroy.

for accreditution
Kyger Creek High School
has been recommended for
accreditation for at least
three more years following a
North
Ce ntr al
team
evaluation co ndu cte d
Wednesday at th e school.
Dr. David Helms, Capital
University, who headed the
visitation team, said he wa s
very impressed wit h the
improvements made during
the past two years. He particularly cited the school's
adopted course of st udy , new
materials, new equipment
and other imRrovemenf•

"The company came to us
in January to see if we
wanted them," said Stith, a
radio and television graduate
of Miami University with a
n1asters in film from Dhio
State University . " The
company wanted 1AJ .see if
there was a market for the
· tapes. "
Stith said the tapes are 00
loan for six months "after
which we will have t~ decide
whether we want to buy them
or return them."
If the library decides to
purchase them, Stith figures
they would · cost ''in the
neighborhood of $SO to $75
each per movie."
And with the way they are
going, it is possible the
library could purchase them
when the six-month trial
period is over .
"They've been going real
well," said Stith. "Not all are
out at the same time, but they

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

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OHIO

UNITED Mine Workers
Supporters Club Friday 10
a .m. at Miners Relief
building, High St., Middle~~rt. Anyone wishing
additiOnal mfonnation are
asked to call 992~163 .
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453,
F&amp;AM,Chester, meeting 7:30
p.m. Friday with work in the
EA and FC degrees; all
Master Masons invited.
ANNUAL BAKE sale of
Forest Run Methodist
Chureh, Friday, 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. at Dale C. Warner In·
surance Agency, W. Main St.,
Pomeroy.
WEEKEND revival,
Friday through Sunday, 7:30
p.m. each . evening at
Freedom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, with Rev . L. R:
Gluesencamp speaking;
Good News Singers of ·
Washington C. H. featured
Saturday evening; public
invited.

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�7 The Daily Sentmcl, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Thursday, April 27, 1978
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepot1-l'om~roy, u.. Thursday, April21, 19/B

York speaks to Auxiliary
James York, assistant
superintendent of the Ohio
Sailors and Soldiers' Orphans
Home at Xenia , was guest
speaker at the Tuesday night
meeting of the A!nerican
Legion Auxiltary,Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
Introduced by Mrs. Ruth
Powers, children and youth
cha innan for the Auxiliary,
York showed a film on the
home and its facilities . He
described the home as a place
where children are given a
home-like atmosphere and
the freedom to move about on
the campus whtch is without

• White
• Bla ck
• Pat .
• Came l

fences and guards.
For the t oll ege-bound
youth of the home, ways of
fimmcing his ed uce~tiun c.t rt!
found . York said that within
lhe next 90 days by a bill signed by the governor, the home
Will becurne known as the

Ohio . Veterans Children's.
Home .. The hom e ac comodates 450 children but
the enrolbnent at the present
time is 250, he reported. Only
three percent come from
negledeH an~ des titute
familtes, accordtng to York,
who emphasized that the
home does not try to take the
place of natural relatives.
Helping the child make the
transition from the home of
their natural parents to the
orphans' home is the biggest
problems officials fa ce, York
said.
He note9 that the home ts
on 500 acres of land. The new
swinuning pool is completely
paid for now through contributions from the American
legion, the Auxiliary , and the
Eight and Forty . Many of the.
boys go into the army once
they have completed thetr
education, York said. He also
said that once tne needs of
veterans ' children are met
then other ncedv children will
be accepted. ·Mrs. Powers
presented him with a gtft
from the Auxilia ry.
Guests at the meeting
welcomed . by Mrs. Grace
Pratt, pres ident , were
Clarence Sclunucker, . post
commander ; his daughter,
Winola Sdunucker, Shenff'
James Proffitt, Jud ge Robert
Buck, Carl Hysell, juvenile
office r ; Judge Manning
Webster, Edga r Van In·
wagen, post representati ve,
and Lula Hampton, representative of Lewi s Manlcv
American Legion Auxiliary.·

Following York 's lalk , a

sc._~· ia l hour was held wittl

Mrs. Faye Wild!!nnuth, Mrs.
Dorothy Jenkins, Mrs. Dollie
Hay es, and Miss Erma Smith
Sl'rvm g rdreslunents .
At the business meeti ng
conducted by Mcs. Pratt,
chairmen were reminded
that annual reports are due
Monday. She thanked all
those who helped with tire re-,_
cent junior district confere nce and annvunced tlrat
Ute junior Auxiliarv will have
a memol'ial for Siterri Marshall at tire May meeting.
Appointe d
to
t ile
nom mating commi tt ee were
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs·. Pearl
Knapp anti Mrs. Gladys Cwnmings. Mrs. Wilde rmuth and
Mrs. Marge Reuter were
na med tu the auditing committee. It was repot1ed by
Mt·s. Pratt that the legionnai res have requested a di nner to be served on Memorial
Dav. Plans for that will be
ma.de at a specia l meeting of
the Auxi liary .
C'unununi cali uns induded

a lltank you nuh.' rro111 Pam
Powers. acknowl edgment of

rupot'ts from Violet Ai chholz
and Linday Neff , &lt;md a note
f1·um the Marshall fam ily. ,\n
annuurwemcnt Wi:i !i also
made of lite Buckeye Girl
Stale tea to be held Sunday at
the American Legion hall in
Lancaster.
Reports from cvnuniltees
inrlu?ed Mt s · Smtt lt ,
Ainencamsm, who . rea d,
"It 's Your Flag and Your Aclion wi lt Keep It Waving", ·
Mrs. Genevieve Mein hart,
ca rd and flo wers, including
sympathy to the Marshall
fami.ly, get well l'afds to Mrs.
Davts, Mrs. Iva P,owcll . Mrs.
Rhoda Hackett, and Mrs.
Mat·y Marttn: and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp. fore tg n relations.
Poppy days wilt be lteld on
Ma y 24, 25, and 26 and the
program for May meeting
will be on the puppy.
Hos tesses will be Mrs.
Meinhart and Mrs. Edith
Lanning.
.Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins was
pianJst forth~ eveninJ4 .

MOKE TROUBLES WITH GRANDMA!
DEAR RA P:
My grandmother has to be the biggest nag there is. She's
been living with us three years and it's pure hell.
She never goes anywhere, though she's healthy . So she's
always here. She worries, complains and criticizes non-stop. If
one of our friends lights a cigarette or even mentions beer she
has a fit... for days afterwards, even.
Whatever we do, it's wrong, dangerous. sinful, ungrateful
and selfis h. And that's before she really warms up.
She's breaking our family apart, but she won 't consider
mov ing to a senior citizens· home.
Please write something about older fo lks livi ng away from
their children and granchildren. - AFAMILY GOING CRAZY
DEAR F AMILY:
Isn't it sad' - old er folks who stir up the biggest problems
are often the ones m ost lik~l y to li ve with tlretr children. This,
perhaps, because they've always browbeaten their way
through life, and :he kids have neve r lea rned to as.ert

Circle
makes
donation

A donation was made to the
Barone College by the Elcda
Circle of the B. H. Sa nborn
Missionary Society at a
meeting held Tuesday night
at the Middleport First Baptist Chut·ch.
The balance of funds in the
treas ury of U1e ci rcle will be
spent on the layette to be
taken to the Women's Conference in June. Other itetns
for the layette are to be
brought by members to the
mother-&lt;laughter banquet to
be held Monday at 6 p.m. at
the church . Mrs. Marjorie
Walburn and Mrs. Freda
Hood will assist with the banquet arrangements.
Mrs. Beulah White had
devotions using "Two Golden
Days" as her theme. The love
gift dedication was by Mrs.
Hood .
Refres htnents were served
and others attending were
Mrs. Pea rl Hoffman, Mrs.
Eliza beth Searls, Mt·s. Janice
Gibbs, Miss Rhoda Hall , Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Golda
Hous h , Mr s. Flo rence
Hhodes, and Mt·s. Texanna
Well.

Contribution
made by class

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

T-shirts need help
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Do you
know how to remove
deodorant stain s from Tshirts? I have tried .severa l
things but nothing has
worked . Please help me.MRS. M.B.
DEAR MRS. M.B. - A U.
S. Department of Agriculture
bullelln suggests sponging
with dete rgent and warm
water and then rinsing . If
stain Is not removed use a
chlorine or sod ium perborate
ble.ach or hydrogen peroxide,
We are presum ing your shirts
are while and cotton.
Bleac hes are sold under
various trade names at the
grocery store and the 3
percent hydrogen peroxide
used for bleaching Is sold lo
drug stores. Rin se very
carefully and do not leave on
too long. - POLLY .
DEAR POLLY- I save all
my faded plastic place mats
and then use them on .our
outdoor picnic table in the
surruner. This saves laun·
der ing tablecloths and they
do not blow away in the wind.
- MRS. C. M.

DEAR POLLY - I rea lly
use the b'utt onhole at-

Contributions of $25 each
were rnade to the Middleport
Firemen and to the Senior·
Citi zen s Center when the
Busy Bee Class met rece ntly
- .4
at the Middleport First BapI
tist Church,
Planned duri ng th e
Betty Ohlinger
meeting
was tile annual
102 E. Main
mother-&lt;la
ughter
potluck to
Pomeroy , 0 .
be held on Ma v 18 at the
church. Members sang " HapPY Btrthday" to Mrs. Janice
(; t bil s, Miss F r edd ie
Houdashelt. Mrs. Florence
Hhodcs,
and Mt·s. Lillie Dyke.
themselves.
The
devoti
ons were by Mrs.
lf your grandmother is as troublesome as described, she's
Beu
lah
White
and the proeither got to shape up or go.
gt"Wll
by
Mrs.
Elizabeth 1'----_..:=-----'
A good seniors' complex has much more to offer than a "sinS
la
vt
n
.
Mr
s.
Lillia n
ful . ungrateful, selfish'' family - and Granny may even ag ree,
Demos
key
and
Mrs.
Eva
after your parents develop some backbone. - HEI.F:N AND
Hartley
sct-ved
a
dessert
SUE
co urse. Others attending
wert• Mrs. Dana Hanun. Mrs.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
Freda
Edwards, Mrs. Nelle
We had a healed discussion in our family. l 've heard that
W
erner,
Mrs. Edith Sa uer,
The Kiddie Shoppe m Pomeroy
people are paid for donating vtta l organs to science. Dad says
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Sea rles, Mrs.
you give them away.
Isabelle
Wine~nmn
c r, Mrs.
You sell bl ood, why not a kidney or heart or something' Surhas all your Carter pajama needs.
Kathryn
W
erner,
and
Mrs.
vivors of a dClld person could proba bly usc the money. Or they
l&lt;·ot·a
Sigman.
could sell the whole b&lt;xly to a medical school. ·
Boys and girls. A !so a selection of
What do you think ?- UNSU RE
DEAR UN :
nightgowns. Available in Boys'
Selling btts and pieces of a dead pet·son- or the whole bodysmacks too much of grave-robbmg. lle.&lt;ides, think of the
IN THE HOSPITAL
gru esome details: Say " much-wanted org"n will become
Sizes l -14 and Girls Sizes 1-6X
John
Hayes is a surgical
availabe as soon as the pa tient dies. His famil y cou ld get so inpatient
at the St. Josep h's
volved in dickering for the highest btdder lht•y might not eveo
Hospital in Pa rkersburg, W.
Hours :
mourn him.
Va . Both he and hb wife were
9:Joto 5:00
:-:-::~~;::&lt;·
Stay with dunations, " Unsure."- HEI J' :-1
Mon . lhru Sal .
patient' there last week , but
9:30-8, Fri.
Mrs.
Hayes returned home
:;J
2nd Street
UN : I Aml other who ha ve asked 1:
,
Friday.
Mr. Hayes underPomeroy, O.
Should you wish to donate organs for tra nsplant. or your
W&lt;'nl
surgery
on Saturday
whole body to science, write tu : Transplant, :no East 67th St.,
and
expects
to . remai n
KIDDfE SHOPPE 0:car Stiffler&gt; New York , N.Y., l0Q21. Or wfilho The Livtng Bank , P.O. Box
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. 6725, Houston Texas, 77005. You will rece ive a wallet ca rd hospitalized for several 1r10re
days.
whi ch info nns "orvi vors of your wishes. · SUE

Marguerite's

Shoes

Little Dreamers
Sleep
Tight

"'"

-·

I

-

LOOK
FOR OUR

SPRING
SALE
CIRCULAR
IN THIS
WEEK'S
MAIL

Pomeroy
Cement
Block Co.

Drive, he said
SHF:RMAN, Texas !UPI )

.......

- If Odessa Mae Parish ever

takes another driving test,
she ·u probably go elsewhere
to do it.
Mrs. Pa ri sh, 72, had
co mpl eted her driving

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

exam inHtion Tuesday and

He shouldn 'L l1d \ c d:&gt;J..o.:li.

Is Proud to Announce
that they will now

cards on each
visit.

Nature trail project

DEAR READ ERS
Recently this column printed
a Point er from Gladys
suggesting the use of gasoline
and corn meal for deanlng a
stuffed animal that could not
be washed. The Fire Marshal
of Kent, Wash., answered
with a teller, too long to be
published ln Its entirety,
warning of the danger of
using gasoline as a cleaning
agent. This column contained
a warning " to handl e
gasoline carefully and away
from cigarettes, pltot lights,
children, elc." bul he would
like that comm ent changed to
"Do not handle gasoline
pe riod." Thank you , Mr.
H.O:O.- POLLY.

.,
~--

.

...

..
'

'

EAS'l'F.HN ~TA ll lelll bcrs arc working clearing ;1
wooded m·ea in tir e development of a nature trail and
pi cni&lt; ' arcH on the Eastern liigh Sehoul grou nds.

services and a better qualily
of living in rur al communities, and to improve the
socia l and physica l environment in cities, town$,
villa ges and (arm communities.
If completed by the end of
the year, the Eastern Chapter
could receive between $100
and
$1,000
.towards
development of the project.
This grant would come
from the Farm and Home
Administration and the Ohio
Department of Agriculture.

DRESS SANDAL BY
· ~~
I ~ \ Hush

} . ,. 111uppic-s"

Middleport Dept. Store
FOR SPRING

FRUIT OF THE LOOM
PULLOVER POlY

COTTON
SHIRT

LADIES' SPRING COATS

SALE PRICE
SALE
Reg.

'28 00
'26 00
'2300
'16 00
'1400

$41.95
$3 9.95

$34 ,95
$24.95
$2 1.95

I

:'\

ln both reg ula r a nd 1 2
s izes . Checked po ly-kn it
and poplin .

1·:,\S'I't-:H:'-l lliKh FFA llll"lllbers are in volved

SKEIN

If Hlli!Hlt\'Jtitw! ts l"l'lTlV trlJ;
Sm·ull Secu r i t y lwncfit s, a
\lt•dH'arl'
I'Hnl
is
.t ulu m &lt;~ tt call} sent to him
JU5t twr,.rc age· li5

ur not, you sltould sign up rur
Mcdkarc three mo nt hs
lk.' furc you reach age 65 .
Once you are on Medicare,
yo u t.:an h(•\p rceeive these

paylltellts more ra~ idl y

the charge for each service.
The bill should show the
pat ient's name and Medicare
claim number exactly as it is
shown on their Medicare card
if yu u - including the letter at the

su1Jn11 t pro per ly it emiz ed

dot'! or btll s with yo ur
MedH.:an• furm s An itemi zed
lull with lite doctor ur su pplt t•r's mtrn(', must also show
th e dutc. plc:H: c , an d
descriptiou of each ml'&lt;lica l
service invo lved - as well as

end.

Usua ll y, Med icare
payments are made to the
patient either before or after
the bill Is settled with the
doctor or suppli er.
Help in pre parin ~ Mrrli!'are
PUBLIC NOTI CE

ANGEL TREAD

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Co lors : whi te , pink . blu e

$2

Visit-Baker'~ Budget
for inexpensive
furniture today.

END-OF-THE-MONTH

Open Friday lil8
Saturday lil6

I

G, APH

For Friday . Apo:.:rc:.II::Z"=
Bc:::c--=-c::--

ASTRO •

Y}~jQJ~

GJ1l!Vwill0~

.

Success

vour

1S assurecl

co p y ol Aslro·Graph Letter
Matt 50 cent s fo r each and a
long sell-add ressed . s ta mped
en'lel ope tb As tr o-Graph . P 0
So,; 489 , Rad1 0 Cr ty Statt on .
N Y 100 19 Be su re to specify
btrlll SIQil
.

CAN CE R (June

2t-July

111

There are two std es fo eve ry
tssue. a11d all problems have
alterna!IIJCS. You won ' t en -

!Oct. 14-Nov. 11,

CAPRICOR N (Dec. 21-Jan . t9 1
Th 1.~ snoulcl Oe a pr oou c l!v "
eM¥" ll1r )·ou bec ause vou " ' no•
1 1k el &gt;~

to waft o n O H1 f" S 1:1 '1'
ttu ng!' ~· ou can handle ~ c u r:H't'

AO UARIU S (J an. 10·Feb .

.ens -

s22.40

TO

SALE

heritage house of shoes
Middleport, 0 .
Store Hour s : 9:30 lo5 :00 Monday thru Sal . Open F&lt;idav Evenrngs 'ttl H.

s12.60

s70.00

\ ( i--L-A_D_I_E__
S ____________

)I\\

~

TO

s42.00

LADIES

BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

TURTlE BOX JEANS

REDUCED 20%
LADIES' SLACKS
REDUCED 20%

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESlATE OF Tr ina Mar ie
Johnson . DECE ASED
Case No. 12292

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E NT

LADIES

COTION DRESSES
Values To $12.95

SALE PRICED
ES

RACK

LADIES' SPORTSWEAR,
DRESSES, ETC.
REDUCED 40% to 70%

PANT SUITS
&amp; DRESS SUITS
REDUCED 20%

OF FIDUCIARY
On Janua ry 10. 1978 , in th e
Mei gs Co u n ly Probale Court ,
Cas e No . 22291. Ronn ie D
Johnson , RouU! 3. Pomeroy ,
Oh i o wa s appoin t ed Ad
m ln lstr ator Of the Estat e of
Tr i n a
Marie
Johnson ,
deceas ed , ll!l te of Route J,
Pomeroy , Oh i o.
Man ni ng D Web ste r
Probale Jud ge
Clerk
{4) 13, 20, 21 , 3t c

MEN'S WEAR
ME N'S

MEN'S

SUITS &amp; SPORTS
COATS
REDUCED 20%

-

...

REDUCED

THE

SEWING CENTER
"On the Tin Middleport, 0 ."

DRESS PANTS
AND

LEISURE PANTS
REDUCED 20%
MEN'S

MEN'S LONG
SLEEVE SHIRTS

MtN 'S

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8 P.M.

Reg . $18 .00 to $60 .00

e~nrwa y

'

N. 2nd Ave:

POMEROY, 0.

I'

Half Sizes

SALE

PISCES (Feb . 10-March 10! 8•·
cause ~ 'JU terntJer your d rf'drn s

w inn er of 45 lirst place awards
in 22 years ol ln ternatfonal comperilion .

'29995

MAIN ST.

191

ma r tJe ~!lll1 c un to co rn e o ut ol
'f ou· shell toda ,· "' 'n ee you
won : tee1 as a t Pa &lt;&gt; e as you
u c.:; uatl~ do
Makt-&gt; 1he ellen!

&amp;

LADIES' DRESSES
REDUCED 30%

Reg . $32.00 to $1 00 .00

make a sale

'164 95

''EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

All WEATHER
.) COATS &amp; PANT COATS.
'v

?J) No rmat l ) vo u' rp a rattle·
ncl dfer unt spe nd e~ but Io den
f \I U II be ve r, vatue c on SC IOU .:.
tit; ·~ no t on t11e bdrgam cOu fl·
tc · 111e s tore tsrt 1 ilk £1\' t\'

·

Misses

I

oust tn yu w g ray malt er
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 13-De c.

With a new Elna Sewing Machin e

PRICES STARTING
FROM .

·EBERSBACH HARDWARE

LADIES

You II reco gn 1ze a gooa 1de"
today T1p ~. pa s sed on to yo u
that COUld DrOVC J)t!ISOrtall)
acl yan tagr ous won't co lle c t

TO
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Char los Riffl e, R . Ph .
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon . lhru Sol. 8:00a .m . to 9 p.m .
Sundoy 10 : 30 to 12 :30andsto9p.m
PRESCRIPTIONS
~H . 992-2955
Frltndly Service
Pomeroy, 0 .
E. Ma in
Open Nights l ill 9

LADIES' WEAR

11rne dS po ss1 blc to hn1 Sh1n y
protec ts Ctear lh t! tra ck s sc
you can ent OY the weekend

ONE RACk

and self-propelled mower.

BY DENVER KAPPI.E AT

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

LI BR A (Se pt . 1J.Oc l . 131 f h" ''
a gooli da y to devote as rnu t. r,

because of

app roach Fmd
out wtw you rc romanllcally
su1tccJ to by sendmg for yo ur

END OF MONTH SALE

by worry 1ng about th 1ng c; tha t
ma~ tl f' ver happen En tov yow
se lf and the cornpany a t o HH~ • &lt;..

SCO RPIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bahr Clothiers

fu n tocla}

IH&lt;~ C II c al

The Hahn-Eclipse Tough Ones.
Built tought to make your ·life
easy. Available in both push

EXPERTLY INSTALLED

a damper o n your

THE SHOE BOX

you II

wrttt reat1sm tu lld) . you wo n:
0u 1W yourself up fr.11 a letU own
'fou II kn o w exa ctl y what sob
tamabl ~ and what ts n' t
ARIE S (March 21 -Aprif 19 1 You
take t .1ngs Se fl ous!y today a nd
TAURU S (Ap ril 20-May 20~ are IJ 'epared to go aft er what
fr1 rnm,nq aw ay the fr~l l s anll yOu want Oe termmal1 0 n and
gett 1ng to the heart of ow J fortilu dc wtl l help yo u wtn.
matter I ~ your Slf engi h today
INE WSPAP[ H [NlfAPAISf A'iSN

GE MINI (May 21 -June 10) An
obfigalion will be due lor pay·

LAWN MOWERS

11

VIR GO [Aug . 13-Sep l. 11 ) Don :

claims is available at any
Socia 1 Security office.
For more in£ormation , call,
write, or visit the Athens
Social Security Office located
at 2211&gt; Columbus Rd .,
, Ath ens , Ohio 45701. Th e
number to call for Athens
Count ¥ is 592-4448, and for
Mei gs County residents the
number is 992-&amp;;22.

·~

op po s•l•on

only see th e o ther person ::.
YI 8WP0 111l
LEO (July 13·Aug. ZZI You 1P
mor e eager to wo rk tlard today
than you were yeste rday
You 11 get a btgger k1 ck o u t o 4
betng pr ot1uc li1J e tha n you w1l l
w&lt;l s!l ng ll!ll C
put

envi r o nm e nt al
as sessiTl ent has be en com
pt et cd bv Floyd G Br ow ne
a nd Associates . Ltd . lor t he
propo se d co nstrv clion Of
&lt;;;e wage t acdlllf!!l. 1n the
Powell St are.:~ o f t he Vi llage
ot M id dlepor t
T h 1S ct ocume nt will b e
availab le f or pub li C i n
spcchon Mond ay rnrough
F r •dav betw een the hou r s ot .B
A M and 4 P M I rom May l.
19 78 throvg l'1 May 15 . 1978 at
April 28, 1978
rhe Mayor 's Off ice , 1J1 Ra ce
Eve n th ouqh yo ur ambition s
51. , M1ddl cpor1 , OhiO .
Fred H o ll man, M a yor · rm~y appear to tJc a bit too Io tt y
vII I age of M i dd lcpor 1, Ohio lor o thers ttliS commg year
Apr 27 , May 4
you II know wh ere yo'U re
gorng Btg tllmgs ar e probable
bc c aus~ you w 111 plan w 1scl y
T he

97 Reg . S4.50

counter

Medicare is explained
IL' Cl! tVc i.l
\1 ,·tlr, ·nrr card Hutonwlki.i lly
1 "'-·f~t rL' tilt') n 'C I' l\1' their 24tlt
I 'IHI S&lt;'&lt;'U\1\'~ clts:tbtlity check.
i'rkdli 'UtT 1s H\su av utlcthle tu
mart)' pl·qp lc under 65 with
t••rm"n•·nl kidney fai lure.
\Vhrthcr you pl:111 to rctir&lt;•

ASSORTED

High School. They stand in an area which now has been
cleared in the development project.

I
·----------------------------~

hL•ndicw ri cs

100%ACRYLIC

aae

Tlll-: ~ 1·:

lllhUlltllng tltWturc trail Hml plcrnl' iH'!'et ncH r Uw Ea stern

lltsabll'll Sucinl Seeunty

YARN

SHINY
WHITE

DUGAN, Rutland , is one of the members of
the men's quartet from God's Bible College in Cincinnati
singing at special services at the Rutland Community
Church this weekend. The gro up from U1e top includes
Mark Jones, Wesley Huntin g, Marty Dugan, Keith Forney
and Steve Enyan. The Rev. Terry Walker will speak at the
services which will be at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday and at 9:30a .m. and 7 p.m. on Sunday . Dugan is
lead singer. The public is invited.

Assorte d Colors
Si7PS s. M. L. XL

Sin('e 1915

•BRAKES
•MUFFLERS
•SHOCKS
eWATER PUMPS
•ALTERNATORS
eFUEL PUMPS
eTUNE-UPS

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. David
Sigman, Sr., Letart, W. Va.,
are announcing the birth of a
seven pound, 12 ounce son,
Steven Glenn, on Thursday,
April ~0, at Pleasant Valley
Hospit~ l. Grandparents are
Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Fields,
letart, W. Va ., and Mrs.
Leora Sigman , Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs . Sigman have
two other sons, David, Jr ., 7,
and Troy Curtis, 4.

THE "COUNTESS"

menttoday Don t tnt n k of 11as
an HlC O n~en1 en c c
A1ddmg
yo ur sr fl of 11 will bnng you
h eedorn

Medical Cards.
your rl1 edicaJ

'

Members of the Eastern
High Sehoul Chapter, Future
Farmers of America , are
busy working on a project
Our
called
" Building
American Communities'' and
through the project are
developing a nature trail and
picnic area on the high school
propert y.
Purposes are to develop
activ e, experi ence d and
knowledgeable co mmunity
leaders; develop a ruralurban balance by creation of
job opportunities, community

Jacobs, a. son , Jackson ; Mr.
and Mrs. U.uis Jindra, a son,
Jackson ; Mr . and Mrs.
James Johnson, a daughter,
Wellston ; Mr, and Mrs.
Jimmy Massie , a daughter,
Pedro; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Sorrell, a son, Ja ckson.

Holzer Medical Center
(DischargesAprll26 )
Mrs. Roy . Bailey and son,
Paul Barnett, Alice Buckley,
Virginia Caldwell, Heid i
Caruthers, Eric Causey,
Bett Y.
Cro~se ,
Judith
Delaney, · Harold Durst ,
Elaine Grogan, Tomi Helm ,
Nanc¥ Jqhnson, Stoney
Johnson, Kenneth Koehler,
Judith Livingston, Karen
Lyons, Etta Mars hall ,
Charles McWhorter, Freda
Miller, Michael Morris, Mrs.
Robert Nelson and son, Larry
Rice, Virginia Roush, Linda
Seymore, Vance Spellman,
Robert Spradling, J ohn
Thompson, Lisa Ward ,
Robert Wood , Rose Young ,
Susan Young .
(Births April %8)
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Ch.andler, a daughter,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Jerid

-Eastern
chapter
busy
.

LETHA.

.Store of lluildiflg

Mr s. Pari sh reversed,
sh ifted to a forward gear and
th en ap parenll¥ became
confused. The ear jumped the
curve and lunged through the
plate glass window of the
license offi ce, leaving 30 feet
of skidmarks on the waxed
floor as it plowed through
des ks, chairs and offi ce

honor all U.M. W.

Please present

Th e Dep11rtmefll

was about to receive her
license as she pulled into a
parking spot at the DPS
office. Officer Gene Hodge materials.
decided she wa s too close to
A clerk, Car lene Walker ,
another ca r and asked her to 25, was hoilpitaliz~&gt;d with a
back up and try again.
broken foot but there were no
other injuries.

Pomeroy, Ohio

tachment on my se wing
machine but used to find it
impossible to slip material
under the plate that holds the
fabric without damaging it.
Now I mark the buttonhole
and then place waxed paper
over the spot. The fabric slips
with no damage to it and the
markings can be seen
through th e paper . When
removing the materia l I slip
in a .piece of cardboa rd such
as comes under seam tape
and the material comes out in
good shape. - MG .A.
DE \R POLLY - To make
the job of drivin~ nails into
ha rd wood or plaster easier,
bore a hol e in the end of your
hammer handle and fill it
with paraffin - a melted
candle will do. Lubricate the
nail by pushing the tip into

:~

992-3586

the paraffip. Refill as this
reservoir gets tow. If this is
not conveniert( good results
may be had by inserting the
nail in a bar of soap. - MRS.
R. J . s.
DEAR POLLY - To keep a
hair-&lt;lo in place I use a piece
of ny lon net (6 inches wide
and long enough to fit aroWid
my head) and then clip it in
place with hair clips. Air gets
through to the head so this is
nice for summe r use.

40%

SHORT SLEEVE
JUMP SUITS

30%

REDUCED

$}475

BIB
. . REG. $17 ,95 pr.
OVERALLS.......................... .

Bahr Clothiers

~AIR

N. 2nd Ave. Monday thru Saturday 9:15 a.m. t~ 5:00 p.m. Middleport, 0.

�7 The Daily Sentmcl, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Thursday, April 27, 1978
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepot1-l'om~roy, u.. Thursday, April21, 19/B

York speaks to Auxiliary
James York, assistant
superintendent of the Ohio
Sailors and Soldiers' Orphans
Home at Xenia , was guest
speaker at the Tuesday night
meeting of the A!nerican
Legion Auxiltary,Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
Introduced by Mrs. Ruth
Powers, children and youth
cha innan for the Auxiliary,
York showed a film on the
home and its facilities . He
described the home as a place
where children are given a
home-like atmosphere and
the freedom to move about on
the campus whtch is without

• White
• Bla ck
• Pat .
• Came l

fences and guards.
For the t oll ege-bound
youth of the home, ways of
fimmcing his ed uce~tiun c.t rt!
found . York said that within
lhe next 90 days by a bill signed by the governor, the home
Will becurne known as the

Ohio . Veterans Children's.
Home .. The hom e ac comodates 450 children but
the enrolbnent at the present
time is 250, he reported. Only
three percent come from
negledeH an~ des titute
familtes, accordtng to York,
who emphasized that the
home does not try to take the
place of natural relatives.
Helping the child make the
transition from the home of
their natural parents to the
orphans' home is the biggest
problems officials fa ce, York
said.
He note9 that the home ts
on 500 acres of land. The new
swinuning pool is completely
paid for now through contributions from the American
legion, the Auxiliary , and the
Eight and Forty . Many of the.
boys go into the army once
they have completed thetr
education, York said. He also
said that once tne needs of
veterans ' children are met
then other ncedv children will
be accepted. ·Mrs. Powers
presented him with a gtft
from the Auxilia ry.
Guests at the meeting
welcomed . by Mrs. Grace
Pratt, pres ident , were
Clarence Sclunucker, . post
commander ; his daughter,
Winola Sdunucker, Shenff'
James Proffitt, Jud ge Robert
Buck, Carl Hysell, juvenile
office r ; Judge Manning
Webster, Edga r Van In·
wagen, post representati ve,
and Lula Hampton, representative of Lewi s Manlcv
American Legion Auxiliary.·

Following York 's lalk , a

sc._~· ia l hour was held wittl

Mrs. Faye Wild!!nnuth, Mrs.
Dorothy Jenkins, Mrs. Dollie
Hay es, and Miss Erma Smith
Sl'rvm g rdreslunents .
At the business meeti ng
conducted by Mcs. Pratt,
chairmen were reminded
that annual reports are due
Monday. She thanked all
those who helped with tire re-,_
cent junior district confere nce and annvunced tlrat
Ute junior Auxiliarv will have
a memol'ial for Siterri Marshall at tire May meeting.
Appointe d
to
t ile
nom mating commi tt ee were
Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs·. Pearl
Knapp anti Mrs. Gladys Cwnmings. Mrs. Wilde rmuth and
Mrs. Marge Reuter were
na med tu the auditing committee. It was repot1ed by
Mt·s. Pratt that the legionnai res have requested a di nner to be served on Memorial
Dav. Plans for that will be
ma.de at a specia l meeting of
the Auxi liary .
C'unununi cali uns induded

a lltank you nuh.' rro111 Pam
Powers. acknowl edgment of

rupot'ts from Violet Ai chholz
and Linday Neff , &lt;md a note
f1·um the Marshall fam ily. ,\n
annuurwemcnt Wi:i !i also
made of lite Buckeye Girl
Stale tea to be held Sunday at
the American Legion hall in
Lancaster.
Reports from cvnuniltees
inrlu?ed Mt s · Smtt lt ,
Ainencamsm, who . rea d,
"It 's Your Flag and Your Aclion wi lt Keep It Waving", ·
Mrs. Genevieve Mein hart,
ca rd and flo wers, including
sympathy to the Marshall
fami.ly, get well l'afds to Mrs.
Davts, Mrs. Iva P,owcll . Mrs.
Rhoda Hackett, and Mrs.
Mat·y Marttn: and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp. fore tg n relations.
Poppy days wilt be lteld on
Ma y 24, 25, and 26 and the
program for May meeting
will be on the puppy.
Hos tesses will be Mrs.
Meinhart and Mrs. Edith
Lanning.
.Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins was
pianJst forth~ eveninJ4 .

MOKE TROUBLES WITH GRANDMA!
DEAR RA P:
My grandmother has to be the biggest nag there is. She's
been living with us three years and it's pure hell.
She never goes anywhere, though she's healthy . So she's
always here. She worries, complains and criticizes non-stop. If
one of our friends lights a cigarette or even mentions beer she
has a fit... for days afterwards, even.
Whatever we do, it's wrong, dangerous. sinful, ungrateful
and selfis h. And that's before she really warms up.
She's breaking our family apart, but she won 't consider
mov ing to a senior citizens· home.
Please write something about older fo lks livi ng away from
their children and granchildren. - AFAMILY GOING CRAZY
DEAR F AMILY:
Isn't it sad' - old er folks who stir up the biggest problems
are often the ones m ost lik~l y to li ve with tlretr children. This,
perhaps, because they've always browbeaten their way
through life, and :he kids have neve r lea rned to as.ert

Circle
makes
donation

A donation was made to the
Barone College by the Elcda
Circle of the B. H. Sa nborn
Missionary Society at a
meeting held Tuesday night
at the Middleport First Baptist Chut·ch.
The balance of funds in the
treas ury of U1e ci rcle will be
spent on the layette to be
taken to the Women's Conference in June. Other itetns
for the layette are to be
brought by members to the
mother-&lt;laughter banquet to
be held Monday at 6 p.m. at
the church . Mrs. Marjorie
Walburn and Mrs. Freda
Hood will assist with the banquet arrangements.
Mrs. Beulah White had
devotions using "Two Golden
Days" as her theme. The love
gift dedication was by Mrs.
Hood .
Refres htnents were served
and others attending were
Mrs. Pea rl Hoffman, Mrs.
Eliza beth Searls, Mt·s. Janice
Gibbs, Miss Rhoda Hall , Mrs.
Ethel Hughes, Mrs. Golda
Hous h , Mr s. Flo rence
Hhodes, and Mt·s. Texanna
Well.

Contribution
made by class

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

T-shirts need help
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Do you
know how to remove
deodorant stain s from Tshirts? I have tried .severa l
things but nothing has
worked . Please help me.MRS. M.B.
DEAR MRS. M.B. - A U.
S. Department of Agriculture
bullelln suggests sponging
with dete rgent and warm
water and then rinsing . If
stain Is not removed use a
chlorine or sod ium perborate
ble.ach or hydrogen peroxide,
We are presum ing your shirts
are while and cotton.
Bleac hes are sold under
various trade names at the
grocery store and the 3
percent hydrogen peroxide
used for bleaching Is sold lo
drug stores. Rin se very
carefully and do not leave on
too long. - POLLY .
DEAR POLLY- I save all
my faded plastic place mats
and then use them on .our
outdoor picnic table in the
surruner. This saves laun·
der ing tablecloths and they
do not blow away in the wind.
- MRS. C. M.

DEAR POLLY - I rea lly
use the b'utt onhole at-

Contributions of $25 each
were rnade to the Middleport
Firemen and to the Senior·
Citi zen s Center when the
Busy Bee Class met rece ntly
- .4
at the Middleport First BapI
tist Church,
Planned duri ng th e
Betty Ohlinger
meeting
was tile annual
102 E. Main
mother-&lt;la
ughter
potluck to
Pomeroy , 0 .
be held on Ma v 18 at the
church. Members sang " HapPY Btrthday" to Mrs. Janice
(; t bil s, Miss F r edd ie
Houdashelt. Mrs. Florence
Hhodcs,
and Mt·s. Lillie Dyke.
themselves.
The
devoti
ons were by Mrs.
lf your grandmother is as troublesome as described, she's
Beu
lah
White
and the proeither got to shape up or go.
gt"Wll
by
Mrs.
Elizabeth 1'----_..:=-----'
A good seniors' complex has much more to offer than a "sinS
la
vt
n
.
Mr
s.
Lillia n
ful . ungrateful, selfish'' family - and Granny may even ag ree,
Demos
key
and
Mrs.
Eva
after your parents develop some backbone. - HEI.F:N AND
Hartley
sct-ved
a
dessert
SUE
co urse. Others attending
wert• Mrs. Dana Hanun. Mrs.
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
Freda
Edwards, Mrs. Nelle
We had a healed discussion in our family. l 've heard that
W
erner,
Mrs. Edith Sa uer,
The Kiddie Shoppe m Pomeroy
people are paid for donating vtta l organs to science. Dad says
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Sea rles, Mrs.
you give them away.
Isabelle
Wine~nmn
c r, Mrs.
You sell bl ood, why not a kidney or heart or something' Surhas all your Carter pajama needs.
Kathryn
W
erner,
and
Mrs.
vivors of a dClld person could proba bly usc the money. Or they
l&lt;·ot·a
Sigman.
could sell the whole b&lt;xly to a medical school. ·
Boys and girls. A !so a selection of
What do you think ?- UNSU RE
DEAR UN :
nightgowns. Available in Boys'
Selling btts and pieces of a dead pet·son- or the whole bodysmacks too much of grave-robbmg. lle.&lt;ides, think of the
IN THE HOSPITAL
gru esome details: Say " much-wanted org"n will become
Sizes l -14 and Girls Sizes 1-6X
John
Hayes is a surgical
availabe as soon as the pa tient dies. His famil y cou ld get so inpatient
at the St. Josep h's
volved in dickering for the highest btdder lht•y might not eveo
Hospital in Pa rkersburg, W.
Hours :
mourn him.
Va . Both he and hb wife were
9:Joto 5:00
:-:-::~~;::&lt;·
Stay with dunations, " Unsure."- HEI J' :-1
Mon . lhru Sal .
patient' there last week , but
9:30-8, Fri.
Mrs.
Hayes returned home
:;J
2nd Street
UN : I Aml other who ha ve asked 1:
,
Friday.
Mr. Hayes underPomeroy, O.
Should you wish to donate organs for tra nsplant. or your
W&lt;'nl
surgery
on Saturday
whole body to science, write tu : Transplant, :no East 67th St.,
and
expects
to . remai n
KIDDfE SHOPPE 0:car Stiffler&gt; New York , N.Y., l0Q21. Or wfilho The Livtng Bank , P.O. Box
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. 6725, Houston Texas, 77005. You will rece ive a wallet ca rd hospitalized for several 1r10re
days.
whi ch info nns "orvi vors of your wishes. · SUE

Marguerite's

Shoes

Little Dreamers
Sleep
Tight

"'"

-·

I

-

LOOK
FOR OUR

SPRING
SALE
CIRCULAR
IN THIS
WEEK'S
MAIL

Pomeroy
Cement
Block Co.

Drive, he said
SHF:RMAN, Texas !UPI )

.......

- If Odessa Mae Parish ever

takes another driving test,
she ·u probably go elsewhere
to do it.
Mrs. Pa ri sh, 72, had
co mpl eted her driving

Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

exam inHtion Tuesday and

He shouldn 'L l1d \ c d:&gt;J..o.:li.

Is Proud to Announce
that they will now

cards on each
visit.

Nature trail project

DEAR READ ERS
Recently this column printed
a Point er from Gladys
suggesting the use of gasoline
and corn meal for deanlng a
stuffed animal that could not
be washed. The Fire Marshal
of Kent, Wash., answered
with a teller, too long to be
published ln Its entirety,
warning of the danger of
using gasoline as a cleaning
agent. This column contained
a warning " to handl e
gasoline carefully and away
from cigarettes, pltot lights,
children, elc." bul he would
like that comm ent changed to
"Do not handle gasoline
pe riod." Thank you , Mr.
H.O:O.- POLLY.

.,
~--

.

...

..
'

'

EAS'l'F.HN ~TA ll lelll bcrs arc working clearing ;1
wooded m·ea in tir e development of a nature trail and
pi cni&lt; ' arcH on the Eastern liigh Sehoul grou nds.

services and a better qualily
of living in rur al communities, and to improve the
socia l and physica l environment in cities, town$,
villa ges and (arm communities.
If completed by the end of
the year, the Eastern Chapter
could receive between $100
and
$1,000
.towards
development of the project.
This grant would come
from the Farm and Home
Administration and the Ohio
Department of Agriculture.

DRESS SANDAL BY
· ~~
I ~ \ Hush

} . ,. 111uppic-s"

Middleport Dept. Store
FOR SPRING

FRUIT OF THE LOOM
PULLOVER POlY

COTTON
SHIRT

LADIES' SPRING COATS

SALE PRICE
SALE
Reg.

'28 00
'26 00
'2300
'16 00
'1400

$41.95
$3 9.95

$34 ,95
$24.95
$2 1.95

I

:'\

ln both reg ula r a nd 1 2
s izes . Checked po ly-kn it
and poplin .

1·:,\S'I't-:H:'-l lliKh FFA llll"lllbers are in volved

SKEIN

If Hlli!Hlt\'Jtitw! ts l"l'lTlV trlJ;
Sm·ull Secu r i t y lwncfit s, a
\lt•dH'arl'
I'Hnl
is
.t ulu m &lt;~ tt call} sent to him
JU5t twr,.rc age· li5

ur not, you sltould sign up rur
Mcdkarc three mo nt hs
lk.' furc you reach age 65 .
Once you are on Medicare,
yo u t.:an h(•\p rceeive these

paylltellts more ra~ idl y

the charge for each service.
The bill should show the
pat ient's name and Medicare
claim number exactly as it is
shown on their Medicare card
if yu u - including the letter at the

su1Jn11 t pro per ly it emiz ed

dot'! or btll s with yo ur
MedH.:an• furm s An itemi zed
lull with lite doctor ur su pplt t•r's mtrn(', must also show
th e dutc. plc:H: c , an d
descriptiou of each ml'&lt;lica l
service invo lved - as well as

end.

Usua ll y, Med icare
payments are made to the
patient either before or after
the bill Is settled with the
doctor or suppli er.
Help in pre parin ~ Mrrli!'are
PUBLIC NOTI CE

ANGEL TREAD

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Co lors : whi te , pink . blu e

$2

Visit-Baker'~ Budget
for inexpensive
furniture today.

END-OF-THE-MONTH

Open Friday lil8
Saturday lil6

I

G, APH

For Friday . Apo:.:rc:.II::Z"=
Bc:::c--=-c::--

ASTRO •

Y}~jQJ~

GJ1l!Vwill0~

.

Success

vour

1S assurecl

co p y ol Aslro·Graph Letter
Matt 50 cent s fo r each and a
long sell-add ressed . s ta mped
en'lel ope tb As tr o-Graph . P 0
So,; 489 , Rad1 0 Cr ty Statt on .
N Y 100 19 Be su re to specify
btrlll SIQil
.

CAN CE R (June

2t-July

111

There are two std es fo eve ry
tssue. a11d all problems have
alterna!IIJCS. You won ' t en -

!Oct. 14-Nov. 11,

CAPRICOR N (Dec. 21-Jan . t9 1
Th 1.~ snoulcl Oe a pr oou c l!v "
eM¥" ll1r )·ou bec ause vou " ' no•
1 1k el &gt;~

to waft o n O H1 f" S 1:1 '1'
ttu ng!' ~· ou can handle ~ c u r:H't'

AO UARIU S (J an. 10·Feb .

.ens -

s22.40

TO

SALE

heritage house of shoes
Middleport, 0 .
Store Hour s : 9:30 lo5 :00 Monday thru Sal . Open F&lt;idav Evenrngs 'ttl H.

s12.60

s70.00

\ ( i--L-A_D_I_E__
S ____________

)I\\

~

TO

s42.00

LADIES

BLOUSES
REDUCED 20%

TURTlE BOX JEANS

REDUCED 20%
LADIES' SLACKS
REDUCED 20%

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESlATE OF Tr ina Mar ie
Johnson . DECE ASED
Case No. 12292

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E NT

LADIES

COTION DRESSES
Values To $12.95

SALE PRICED
ES

RACK

LADIES' SPORTSWEAR,
DRESSES, ETC.
REDUCED 40% to 70%

PANT SUITS
&amp; DRESS SUITS
REDUCED 20%

OF FIDUCIARY
On Janua ry 10. 1978 , in th e
Mei gs Co u n ly Probale Court ,
Cas e No . 22291. Ronn ie D
Johnson , RouU! 3. Pomeroy ,
Oh i o wa s appoin t ed Ad
m ln lstr ator Of the Estat e of
Tr i n a
Marie
Johnson ,
deceas ed , ll!l te of Route J,
Pomeroy , Oh i o.
Man ni ng D Web ste r
Probale Jud ge
Clerk
{4) 13, 20, 21 , 3t c

MEN'S WEAR
ME N'S

MEN'S

SUITS &amp; SPORTS
COATS
REDUCED 20%

-

...

REDUCED

THE

SEWING CENTER
"On the Tin Middleport, 0 ."

DRESS PANTS
AND

LEISURE PANTS
REDUCED 20%
MEN'S

MEN'S LONG
SLEEVE SHIRTS

MtN 'S

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8 P.M.

Reg . $18 .00 to $60 .00

e~nrwa y

'

N. 2nd Ave:

POMEROY, 0.

I'

Half Sizes

SALE

PISCES (Feb . 10-March 10! 8•·
cause ~ 'JU terntJer your d rf'drn s

w inn er of 45 lirst place awards
in 22 years ol ln ternatfonal comperilion .

'29995

MAIN ST.

191

ma r tJe ~!lll1 c un to co rn e o ut ol
'f ou· shell toda ,· "' 'n ee you
won : tee1 as a t Pa &lt;&gt; e as you
u c.:; uatl~ do
Makt-&gt; 1he ellen!

&amp;

LADIES' DRESSES
REDUCED 30%

Reg . $32.00 to $1 00 .00

make a sale

'164 95

''EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

All WEATHER
.) COATS &amp; PANT COATS.
'v

?J) No rmat l ) vo u' rp a rattle·
ncl dfer unt spe nd e~ but Io den
f \I U II be ve r, vatue c on SC IOU .:.
tit; ·~ no t on t11e bdrgam cOu fl·
tc · 111e s tore tsrt 1 ilk £1\' t\'

·

Misses

I

oust tn yu w g ray malt er
SAGITTARIU S (Nov. 13-De c.

With a new Elna Sewing Machin e

PRICES STARTING
FROM .

·EBERSBACH HARDWARE

LADIES

You II reco gn 1ze a gooa 1de"
today T1p ~. pa s sed on to yo u
that COUld DrOVC J)t!ISOrtall)
acl yan tagr ous won't co lle c t

TO
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Char los Riffl e, R . Ph .
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon . lhru Sol. 8:00a .m . to 9 p.m .
Sundoy 10 : 30 to 12 :30andsto9p.m
PRESCRIPTIONS
~H . 992-2955
Frltndly Service
Pomeroy, 0 .
E. Ma in
Open Nights l ill 9

LADIES' WEAR

11rne dS po ss1 blc to hn1 Sh1n y
protec ts Ctear lh t! tra ck s sc
you can ent OY the weekend

ONE RACk

and self-propelled mower.

BY DENVER KAPPI.E AT

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

LI BR A (Se pt . 1J.Oc l . 131 f h" ''
a gooli da y to devote as rnu t. r,

because of

app roach Fmd
out wtw you rc romanllcally
su1tccJ to by sendmg for yo ur

END OF MONTH SALE

by worry 1ng about th 1ng c; tha t
ma~ tl f' ver happen En tov yow
se lf and the cornpany a t o HH~ • &lt;..

SCO RPIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bahr Clothiers

fu n tocla}

IH&lt;~ C II c al

The Hahn-Eclipse Tough Ones.
Built tought to make your ·life
easy. Available in both push

EXPERTLY INSTALLED

a damper o n your

THE SHOE BOX

you II

wrttt reat1sm tu lld) . you wo n:
0u 1W yourself up fr.11 a letU own
'fou II kn o w exa ctl y what sob
tamabl ~ and what ts n' t
ARIE S (March 21 -Aprif 19 1 You
take t .1ngs Se fl ous!y today a nd
TAURU S (Ap ril 20-May 20~ are IJ 'epared to go aft er what
fr1 rnm,nq aw ay the fr~l l s anll yOu want Oe termmal1 0 n and
gett 1ng to the heart of ow J fortilu dc wtl l help yo u wtn.
matter I ~ your Slf engi h today
INE WSPAP[ H [NlfAPAISf A'iSN

GE MINI (May 21 -June 10) An
obfigalion will be due lor pay·

LAWN MOWERS

11

VIR GO [Aug . 13-Sep l. 11 ) Don :

claims is available at any
Socia 1 Security office.
For more in£ormation , call,
write, or visit the Athens
Social Security Office located
at 2211&gt; Columbus Rd .,
, Ath ens , Ohio 45701. Th e
number to call for Athens
Count ¥ is 592-4448, and for
Mei gs County residents the
number is 992-&amp;;22.

·~

op po s•l•on

only see th e o ther person ::.
YI 8WP0 111l
LEO (July 13·Aug. ZZI You 1P
mor e eager to wo rk tlard today
than you were yeste rday
You 11 get a btgger k1 ck o u t o 4
betng pr ot1uc li1J e tha n you w1l l
w&lt;l s!l ng ll!ll C
put

envi r o nm e nt al
as sessiTl ent has be en com
pt et cd bv Floyd G Br ow ne
a nd Associates . Ltd . lor t he
propo se d co nstrv clion Of
&lt;;;e wage t acdlllf!!l. 1n the
Powell St are.:~ o f t he Vi llage
ot M id dlepor t
T h 1S ct ocume nt will b e
availab le f or pub li C i n
spcchon Mond ay rnrough
F r •dav betw een the hou r s ot .B
A M and 4 P M I rom May l.
19 78 throvg l'1 May 15 . 1978 at
April 28, 1978
rhe Mayor 's Off ice , 1J1 Ra ce
Eve n th ouqh yo ur ambition s
51. , M1ddl cpor1 , OhiO .
Fred H o ll man, M a yor · rm~y appear to tJc a bit too Io tt y
vII I age of M i dd lcpor 1, Ohio lor o thers ttliS commg year
Apr 27 , May 4
you II know wh ere yo'U re
gorng Btg tllmgs ar e probable
bc c aus~ you w 111 plan w 1scl y
T he

97 Reg . S4.50

counter

Medicare is explained
IL' Cl! tVc i.l
\1 ,·tlr, ·nrr card Hutonwlki.i lly
1 "'-·f~t rL' tilt') n 'C I' l\1' their 24tlt
I 'IHI S&lt;'&lt;'U\1\'~ clts:tbtlity check.
i'rkdli 'UtT 1s H\su av utlcthle tu
mart)' pl·qp lc under 65 with
t••rm"n•·nl kidney fai lure.
\Vhrthcr you pl:111 to rctir&lt;•

ASSORTED

High School. They stand in an area which now has been
cleared in the development project.

I
·----------------------------~

hL•ndicw ri cs

100%ACRYLIC

aae

Tlll-: ~ 1·:

lllhUlltllng tltWturc trail Hml plcrnl' iH'!'et ncH r Uw Ea stern

lltsabll'll Sucinl Seeunty

YARN

SHINY
WHITE

DUGAN, Rutland , is one of the members of
the men's quartet from God's Bible College in Cincinnati
singing at special services at the Rutland Community
Church this weekend. The gro up from U1e top includes
Mark Jones, Wesley Huntin g, Marty Dugan, Keith Forney
and Steve Enyan. The Rev. Terry Walker will speak at the
services which will be at 7:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday and at 9:30a .m. and 7 p.m. on Sunday . Dugan is
lead singer. The public is invited.

Assorte d Colors
Si7PS s. M. L. XL

Sin('e 1915

•BRAKES
•MUFFLERS
•SHOCKS
eWATER PUMPS
•ALTERNATORS
eFUEL PUMPS
eTUNE-UPS

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. David
Sigman, Sr., Letart, W. Va.,
are announcing the birth of a
seven pound, 12 ounce son,
Steven Glenn, on Thursday,
April ~0, at Pleasant Valley
Hospit~ l. Grandparents are
Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Fields,
letart, W. Va ., and Mrs.
Leora Sigman , Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs . Sigman have
two other sons, David, Jr ., 7,
and Troy Curtis, 4.

THE "COUNTESS"

menttoday Don t tnt n k of 11as
an HlC O n~en1 en c c
A1ddmg
yo ur sr fl of 11 will bnng you
h eedorn

Medical Cards.
your rl1 edicaJ

'

Members of the Eastern
High Sehoul Chapter, Future
Farmers of America , are
busy working on a project
Our
called
" Building
American Communities'' and
through the project are
developing a nature trail and
picnic area on the high school
propert y.
Purposes are to develop
activ e, experi ence d and
knowledgeable co mmunity
leaders; develop a ruralurban balance by creation of
job opportunities, community

Jacobs, a. son , Jackson ; Mr.
and Mrs. U.uis Jindra, a son,
Jackson ; Mr . and Mrs.
James Johnson, a daughter,
Wellston ; Mr, and Mrs.
Jimmy Massie , a daughter,
Pedro; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Sorrell, a son, Ja ckson.

Holzer Medical Center
(DischargesAprll26 )
Mrs. Roy . Bailey and son,
Paul Barnett, Alice Buckley,
Virginia Caldwell, Heid i
Caruthers, Eric Causey,
Bett Y.
Cro~se ,
Judith
Delaney, · Harold Durst ,
Elaine Grogan, Tomi Helm ,
Nanc¥ Jqhnson, Stoney
Johnson, Kenneth Koehler,
Judith Livingston, Karen
Lyons, Etta Mars hall ,
Charles McWhorter, Freda
Miller, Michael Morris, Mrs.
Robert Nelson and son, Larry
Rice, Virginia Roush, Linda
Seymore, Vance Spellman,
Robert Spradling, J ohn
Thompson, Lisa Ward ,
Robert Wood , Rose Young ,
Susan Young .
(Births April %8)
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Ch.andler, a daughter,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Jerid

-Eastern
chapter
busy
.

LETHA.

.Store of lluildiflg

Mr s. Pari sh reversed,
sh ifted to a forward gear and
th en ap parenll¥ became
confused. The ear jumped the
curve and lunged through the
plate glass window of the
license offi ce, leaving 30 feet
of skidmarks on the waxed
floor as it plowed through
des ks, chairs and offi ce

honor all U.M. W.

Please present

Th e Dep11rtmefll

was about to receive her
license as she pulled into a
parking spot at the DPS
office. Officer Gene Hodge materials.
decided she wa s too close to
A clerk, Car lene Walker ,
another ca r and asked her to 25, was hoilpitaliz~&gt;d with a
back up and try again.
broken foot but there were no
other injuries.

Pomeroy, Ohio

tachment on my se wing
machine but used to find it
impossible to slip material
under the plate that holds the
fabric without damaging it.
Now I mark the buttonhole
and then place waxed paper
over the spot. The fabric slips
with no damage to it and the
markings can be seen
through th e paper . When
removing the materia l I slip
in a .piece of cardboa rd such
as comes under seam tape
and the material comes out in
good shape. - MG .A.
DE \R POLLY - To make
the job of drivin~ nails into
ha rd wood or plaster easier,
bore a hol e in the end of your
hammer handle and fill it
with paraffin - a melted
candle will do. Lubricate the
nail by pushing the tip into

:~

992-3586

the paraffip. Refill as this
reservoir gets tow. If this is
not conveniert( good results
may be had by inserting the
nail in a bar of soap. - MRS.
R. J . s.
DEAR POLLY - To keep a
hair-&lt;lo in place I use a piece
of ny lon net (6 inches wide
and long enough to fit aroWid
my head) and then clip it in
place with hair clips. Air gets
through to the head so this is
nice for summe r use.

40%

SHORT SLEEVE
JUMP SUITS

30%

REDUCED

$}475

BIB
. . REG. $17 ,95 pr.
OVERALLS.......................... .

Bahr Clothiers

~AIR

N. 2nd Ave. Monday thru Saturday 9:15 a.m. t~ 5:00 p.m. Middleport, 0.

�&amp;--The;:v~;t:~Middl•po::n:~~:::"rsday.t\prilii. l iv7ant
97

CH~RGES
-·

rn~ hrend~&lt;oranddo

1 W IS H TO thank
rH~rghbor) lor th ~

o11d fl o we r~

15 Wunl, &lt;,~1' Urttlt•r
Ca&gt;ob

100

I tla~

180

I 25
l.!lO
:! 15

100

.I i:i

1~1

'I dil\ !l

j Ua) ~

6 da~~

blood

Po m erov
rluct~
l o p p11 cP
~ow ! rm bet
Coli
1\("nt Hanby 1 · •~&lt;~0

\~~ '"'"'' rol

01 \ (&gt;l('r(&gt;rh

~~o unl l+\' t•r

Eadr

tlw

IIUli UTIW il

IJ

lilt ~·

CltAR ANCE SAlE beg• 11~ M an
~ eb 13 01 Se .... N SE' "' Outlt;-1
Mo rn
St!e£&gt;1
Ro c•ne
A. lt
poheq(&gt; r double l.. n 1 t~ •Pduc~d
. w~. a nd &gt;0". Thread b1g spool
) IOI ST

In nwmun t"&lt;11tl uf Tltt~llk~ &lt;Hit!
Olltluan · { t't'lll.!&gt; ~·r Yt ord, SJ 00
unnunUiil ( a!&gt;ll ur !ilh otlltt'
~l uluk Htrnw SJlt.., .md Y&lt;1rd ""'~~~
,m• rlt'lt•ptt•d 1rrrl~ ~~o r th t d3h 1o0tth
11n lt·r· :!S ct·nt ,·lwn:t• fv•· &lt;J(b I"Jrn·
u 1 ~ Hv~ ~uml11•r ltr (":•r't' ,,f rllt' ~11·

GUN

Tlw PulJII.~lwr rt',el't'~ 1tw llt!hl
lit t•t hl \I I" n.•jt'l1 &lt;I ll\ d\l.' tkt"I1Wt1u(}JCI uvr1&lt;1l Tht• Pul.Jii'h,•i " ill mil i.Jo:
l"t'~p.m~iblt• fru lll1tlt"1h.trl &gt;Ill' IJl\ t l"·

..

w ~ q\{&gt;11 ~

lr1 i (lr ll'Qi t011

ot~B't

' .~

Su

a&lt;•P&gt;~ 9 10 ' '

rr 'li&lt;l~

l' \I
•f

.' .. : )el
~ I \I

· ~~

•II' &gt; I tloor

EXPERT
HUNTER

.,Jkr·,,~·"

~

: J.:. :; •

~

: -~-~

,:)-: . .: : .•::, !. ::-: ·. ;.!.:_:.
-: .. :::.x :: -&lt; · :···~

.: ; r ~ ·

::. ' -t .· ~ 't•

.. :

:

rna"

Del1ot?tl."d 10 Oh1o Pollel

Co R1 2 Pomeroy QQ"} / o8Q

:•&gt;:

.!. •

·

-

U) l. D
traCior
woth
hyd raulr&lt; 3 pt ht tch 742 307J

SCA.SHS /o, tu11 lo. { 0 '~ Foye-,
I 1uc k ond A u to Por • ~ W11? Cio.P1
St"IY I(€' l •re ~ale and Repo u
Rurlond 74'1 '1081 0 1 Pe1111101i
74 '2 Q57 S

Wi&gt;,N 1 10 buy Young cou pl e
wan ts to bu .,. coun try pr operty
50 to 100 plus oc,e!&gt; g ood
worer and mrncrol . 11qh ts
!illoble o11d I,'. Ooded
John
e1 J b54 17l 2

COI NS CU RREN CY t o ~ em o ld
poc l.. e l wa t che~ and cho11ts
~olv er ond gold We n eed 1Q64
ond olde t sdvt-r co ons Buy ~ell
c" 11od e Call Roger Wornsley

SPECIAL

mrle
99') 59 48

..

.au

oil

M1ne r~.,.d le

Any U.S. made car - par1s
ex tra If needed . Excludes

AND

DECLARING

N
/11d
A p;rt ')7

9'. - J ack W. Carsey , Mgr .
AliA. Phone99 2·2181

EMERGENCY

BE I T ORDAI NED oy tr"le
Council o t the Vill age of
P om e roy. Me rgs Cou ntv ,
Ot110
Sec tion \ Thai Ord inances
No~
HSQ 01, 1550 .01 , 155o .oq
and Ord i nan c e N o 448 , M
a nd the same are
ame nded to r ead a~

to ll ow~

mole bea gle
l e h h om l aurel Clr ll

Q~(QI

01e-0

~r r11 tt"1

Q9') ~S9 4

, n.td-; pe t

Metered Ser-.1 1C e

F rrt;t 1 ,000 gallons , \6 00
N e" t 3;000 g a lion~. \ 24 oer

IOQ gallon

N e)(t 10,000 ga llons , S ~0 per
100 g a li on
Ne)(t 15,000 g a t to n s . \ 13 per
100 galion
A l l ov er JO .OOO gallon~ . \ 12
per 100 ga llon
Consumers on the Athens
Road extcns ron oufs1 de lhe
co rp ora tion shall be charged
a m1n1mum o f S6 00 per
month Rare scne o ute above
shall apply as wr ll te n cller
f ir st sfe o
Co ns um ers en rne Mmer~
v1lle Road ouls.tde the co r
poratrcn shall . be ch arqed a
mm rmum of S6 00 per m onth
Rat e schedu l e abOve sh a ll
app t .,. as wr 1tten a fter fi rst
step
M inr mum
cha r ge
t or
M e ter ed Se r •nce
Th r u 1 1n ch meter 'li6 00
oer mon th
T11 r u \11 rnc h mete r . S6 00
per monlh
Thr u 1 ~ 1f'1Ch meter Sl O .s o
per montn
Thr u I 1nch mei er \ 20 80
per mon t h
Tnru 1 . rncn merer \]~ 80
of'r month
Thr u ? •net mf l N
S67 JO
per montn
Thru 4 one~ Te ter \ 119 90
per month
Th r u 6 rncn m~&gt;ter \ 775 75
oer month
B li S are OuP on or b£&gt; to r e
thP 1Qtn o t ettc• month B ills
arc nor oard b'y tr-e lOin are
subrect ·o a o~&gt;ra t ty o f 10
pPr c ent
S£&gt;t: t ron 2
f LA 1
RATE
SI:RV IC E
Unm eterea
co n5urners sn a i l be lu r n1shed
waTe r upon tt' t' tJas s o t d
rr n1mum c.nar(JP ot \6 00 per
mont~ e - ce ot n c ases where
rrP'ers arP rerroved
to
prf'vPnt tree1 ng
111
such
cdses c narQ&lt;'S w 1r1 oe based
upon C0fl\l..'T1 er ~ aver ag e
montnly con su11"pl rons
TWO OR MORE
CO NSUMERS ON ONE

&gt;ERVICE PIPE

U.. lp Wanted
!J.ltEND\Y H O M~ I a ~ Porroe!&gt; now
ul ou r i31d year ,., {' • pondmg
and ho~ apen•ng~ l or M onogf""r~
and Dea ler~ Parry Pion e •
p("r 1en ce
help lu i
Our
guoren teed r oy~ and grll~ wll
then,.,elv~!&gt;
No t o~h r r lvt.~''
rT!PrlT
N o '&gt;ervKe cho1gc• to

No

{U~IOI&lt;, ('r~

col\ p c t1ng

dl·!l.,.(&gt;rlllq
Cor
ph o n e
nNe'&gt;'.O' y Call tolt Pc 1 Carol
Day 518 &lt;~ 89 8395
WAt!Rl~S

WANHO A ppl y 111 t)('r
~on
Cro w s S r ea ~
Ho use
Pomero y Ohro

WOULD YOU l1 lo e to earn S \0 S3S
and 11\ Q!P oro hour' NP("d lodre'&gt;
I C1

11t~

drmon\t&lt;O IP Ia&lt; r&gt;

p ~ prr '~"(('

necP\~ary

appeoramt' and

7

Rt

B.,. po~~

o l ( hriJ il'll~

\ 0 1'.&gt;

P~ H ~ON

OR r ,.,.,on'&gt; I&lt;J opf'n and
flO'&gt; £' graY''' ul Rm lo )l)ft!19l&gt;
(r,nlurt

~nl1\bur f

Guy

Hl LP WP.N1tD 00IIylf"10n ! lt.•f&gt;d
f'd loti q ,s 9 JS!f]

WlSH RN

SOUI HlRN Lo lto In
ol PomPIOJI ha '&gt; on
o p ~&gt; n1ng on an e~lob l"l lf'd h!l
,, ,ory
3alory p l u~ &lt;Oifilfll\
~·o n\ t.·rellenl bem•frt~ If you
ore 'tole~ 111111d ..:&gt;d anti ron mPet
p.-.ople tht~ ~~ o 91eot op
portun1ty W 11l l:-' nr r a il l or on
'"e' 11tew 9&lt;f7 '}.480
~u iO f\C P

N~ W

EXPERIE NCED

bobv~1 tt er

for

three p1c ~c h oo lc r~ ond '&gt;0
meone to do '&gt;PIIng clean1ng
Q85 473 7

WANilD OlDER !orl yr o ~t oy woth
old(!! !1'10&lt;1 fo, harm" and \OIIlf"
wa ge s 99') ) 76.4

Seer on J NnerP warer 1S
c;.upo lo f' 'i from a :. r.gte ser
v1ce D•Pe or to more lhCJn on e
con\um rr Q{Cl..Odnl o f a
ore-m se
ea cr. c on\umer
occupanT muST oe sup p 11 ed
w ' h a metrr
Wh£&gt;re 11 rs
ohys. rc a ll .,.

rnoos s •ble

l moracr~ c a tTo e~tta c t"'

shall
be
d1scont1 nued
R esror a lion of water serv ic e
to the l atter c onsumers shall .
be made on l y atter fh e
payment of a ll pas t du e bi lls
and

penalt i eS
An added
of
T en
Do ll ars

charoe

EXPERT

mo~ (

nod

WORK

w 1l l

be

mi'lde

for

res 1orrng the water serv1ce
Sect 1on 5 BULK SALES OF .
WATER Bu lk. ~al£'~ olwi'iler
!:.11 al l oe

f u r nr ~hed

\1 60 per

at a rate ot
thousand gallons

exc:e pl cu tk sa tes to M rd
dleport , w nich rs based on
c ontra c t O£&gt;tween !he . two
towns at 40c per thousand
5ectr on 6 Thai thts Or
Clln an ce rS hereb'p' declared tO
b e a n emergency measure
necess~?try for
the orese r

&gt;J a li on o f In£&gt; puOiic pea ce,
he a lt h , sa fely , comfort and
welt are ot the Inhab itants of
tne V rllage o f Pomeroy in
thai s a 1d rates must be in

c reased to support borrow ing
rn an tiCt pat ion of waterworks

re..,enue s for proposed water
work.s Im provement , and II
s ha ll take effect upon Its

adopt ,o n
Adf OPed

. C l erk.

0

APPROVED :
Cl ar ence And rews
Mayor

( 4 ) 70 . 17. 2tc

C'mh

17~

d1rp1

1'(1[

h

PANT ~

co~t~ralb

gurdew1tl.!

SJOO

~o

chonnf'l

rodr o wtlh D 104 nu t. e

S400

30&lt; 867 3188

•tem'&gt;

Buy ~e ll

N e&gt;w a nd u~e d

~addle!.

Huth Hc (&gt;~f·~ A lba ny
6983}90
Bnl1r rl PIQ

onrl
o utdoor
r VII~
Groomonq all br~'f·d ~ (IPOfl
~(.)IIl lO! "/
f 01111 f 1e~
(hP~ h iT I '
Ph o nP 61 4 367 O'Yf?

111rl()or

DOG O Bl Di t N(f (Ia~~ l ot mooq
no w Call I Jb7 (J ~;(J

E II ·[

GI'ITI't .ll

L

N~W 3 bed 1oom home

Honw

Par~

nor th ol l' omt&gt; roy
lorgeloh Co119?7 7,J7q

JJ

l b FI

A.f' 1

Rer~ r ols

rt&gt;n !

O.,\l~~ron(n

10 1e ~
l or Senoo1
Con tocr V1llo qe M anor
M 1ddlepor t 99 7 7787

(l lttPrl ~
Apt ~

10 " 50 mohr le home '}b ed room
ncar Ro crn e 992 ~ 858
SMAll APT Wl l~b le l o r onl y ohe
F urn1~hed Coli QqJ 5767 even
lrtg'

,

bO

tr otl e'

Che~hlfC

Oh1 0

located at
(on'&gt; tlu CI IOI1

R 111er~tde Apt ~

l

bPdtoom Sll3 P"'' month S150
~ e tu r 1111
d~p o'or !
1:117 bOQ8
E. quo I H oul&gt;m g Oppor IUill l)"

It\(

T

son I W Vo be\1de Hec k .,
1q73 Br oodr nore 14 ~ 6-4 ')
bed1 oorn
\973Dor oo rr1 4 ~ t.07bed r oo m
1q71 Voctor10111 A ~ 67 3 bed topm

be•ch oom
HEOUO SAH &amp; l o~t wr th GoBe se

&amp; E-Voo

.... a te r

p rl l ~.

(!N~ k s

lq74

liMESTONE 5ond gro ve l ,

fll(ti:UP

991 7453
NICE PI GS lo1 sate

h41t!!or to tM

I

c..•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,~

&amp;

AT

··:KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY CO.
Phone
992. J748 or 99J.SOlO
FREE PARKING
3·31 ·1 mo.

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300 Main Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992.6263
8 A.M. Io4 :JO P .M .

.

SALES AND SERVICE
JJ .9.tfc •

Qqj

STO RY

H~ ( tHI C(O RD o rg on
~ tond

Good {on
oq uar1u111'&gt; wilh

fill/ 33 -P
1

Check our lOW , lOW
prices on

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERlO-PELS

lr orn£&gt;

s

8 I 00 111 I f'l llOd l• lf&gt;d
o il 1111\)f"&gt; tOI 11gh 1 ~ iue J
to ol
lu 1norC'
Rutl and or eo
SJb 000 Nt •w 3 bed1 oom totnl
f'! ro (IIIC

hm 11P

I

113

0t1e~

" ~" Ul

mm(.l~ S27 (X)() Bv rl d 1ng
) I) O tl l '~ IUIOI wolt:ol o n
lo t $3 HOO Coli 147 2f:ll9 nl!i •r 5
pru u1 ony t1mu Sot &amp; Sun

IWO HOUl EI
lr

~yrotu~e on
. acre lo r
)pmrou~ 3 bedroom .,... 1th lo1ge
u l tlrty 100111 llard wood lloor~
and c01pct f ru1 ! treec;. or1d
!ohru b l&gt;

3 • acre~

In Rortn e

b cc/ roorn
p l e tf'ly

Bcou11 l ul 5

3 both home Com
ti' rnodeled

a nd
{ Orpeled Ho'&gt; bo th ga !&gt; Ol•d
c let trtc l u1110'e large carpor t
0 11 d ., fora g e b u 1ld1ng ~ Cen tral
011 pl u~ l ull bo !oem ent For 111
l or motion call 94q 2011:1

I , acre !&gt; oro leod1 n g Cree \. Rood

Q92 7006
!RAI LER WIIH lo t on Un1on A ve
l o l (Ill forr.,.1cw Her ghl s water
lop and ~cpllc to n k Ph one
99'1736b

LIN COLN Hi l l 3 bed r o1n h o v 5c
ta rpet
elec t11(
heal
good
go1den lot Wolk, n g d1~ton c e
/, o m to wn Coli olte1 4 00

9Q7 7677
APP~OX

9'. _Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
Ail Phone992-2181

)0 one ~ 0 11 Fla t w ood~

Rood lb Elect11c o11d wolet
ovodablcSee b l.. ey H1tl
Pomer o y
Oh1o
Ph on e

997 3885.

R.esidential
and
commercial. Call for
estimate , 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 98S.3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoxJ

ME , YOU'!' FI~D
IM EVERY ~I f
AS UNPLEASA~r
AS I LOOK!

1f Jt\fruf m1f

"
"

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~\~~~ ·.,

BOHN I .OSEH

,_---------.\1
1tlU WI&lt;;H 1HI'7 'IJM7 FI.RI&lt;I&gt;.H 1'/&gt;,Wc.&amp;n" \
...__--:'&lt;::::'7' WALKI~ WITH ~OJ ,
OOIJ'T 'iOU I

I I

I KEPOD

[J

I

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

byHennArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one let1er to each square. to form
lour or dmary word s

; tf 'l .. '"' C• u lll' • """

J&amp;L

I I

• o.l '" ' • • - · '"'

I
~ .

\EMORCH I

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save JO pet.loso pel .
on healing cost
Experience and
fully insured
Free Esl . Call , 992.381S
4-9· 1 mo. pd

AUTHORIZED
RCA &amp; WHIRLPOOL
DEALER

,...

JT .. · IT 'S GAMMY ..
SHE ... S HE 'S

...c;o AHEAD ... LET

I' M

G·GQ.IE. ANNI E ...

YOURSELF GO"'

OK ...

THEY .. : THEY DID
OiEIR BEs; ... IT
WAS NO GOOD ·

LISSA ... O H. LISSA

1\ ROO M TWO .,t 0 111 h o u ~e Oou
ble goroge w rth apor tmen t , out
b u1ld111g ~
17 acres Rutland
~e e
0 1 t oll 1 0
)lewor t.
l a1 7d?l

4 rJ 1 mo

1Jusines5 Senice5
bRADFORD

A uc roomwr
Com
p low ~erv1ce Ph one 94q ? 4 ~7
o r Q49 '}()()() Rocmo O h• o ( rill
8rad l o•d

II WOOD

,

BOWfR S Rl PA IR

~w t• f' !)(·r~

t o o~te 1~
11 0 11 ~ oil
)m all appl1once~ (own tnowm
II Utl to Store H 1g hw oy Go1oge
0 11 !l ou 1e 7
Phon to&lt; (b 14 1 98S

367~

REMODEliNG Plumbtng hoatmg
and all type!&gt; ol gene ra l r opo1r
Wa1 k guoror, lced 70 year"!&gt; e.lli
pc-r1 Crt t e Pho11 e 997 7-40Q
MA CH IN~ Repous \.C I •
VICIJ all m al&lt; es 99 2 ?28A The
I obr H
Shop
Pamer oy
Aut h o111 ed Sm gm Sale~ and
Se1v 1ce We :!&gt;harpen S CI~~o rs

SI::W1NG

EX ( A VA riNG , dozer l oader and
backh oe w o rk durnp 11 ucks
and lo boy'&gt; l o t lm e w 1ll houl
hll dut , to so 1l luncs toM and
gra.,.cl Call Bob or Roge1 Je tl et ~ doy ph one 992 708&lt;:1 , r11ght
ph on e 992 -3575 o r 992 5131

EX CA VATING . dozer
bo(khoe
and dtlcher . Charles R Hot ·

lteld

Bo ck

Ho e

Sl!!v1{1;~ .

Rutland Ohro Phone 741 2008

HOWERY

AN D MARliN
&lt;Oval1ng
se pltc
s ~ .. t e ms ,
dozer backho e dump tr uck .
lunes lone
gravel
black top
povmg Rt 143 Phone I {61 4)

IN

CRY, LISSA .. · Il'S TH'
ONL'f' THLNG THAT'L l
HE LP, NQ&gt;If ...

I X1 )"

(Ans wers tomorrow )
Yesterda~

s

I Jumbles
Ans wer
1

FRIAR GIANT STOOGE TRYING
Shy when going to bed -" AETIAING

..

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puulea !aavallabltt for S 1.~ postpaid tram JlJmbte. c1o tnls newspaper, P.O. Bo• 34 ,
Norwood , N.J. 07648. Include your name. address, ZIP code and make
checks pavabte to Newspaperoooks

ALLE YOOP

no E . Main st .

\\'H~T .:HA

Pomeroy, Ohio
4 4-1 mo .

~11$5

~

OH ,
ME; .JH M\ ! SUCH

5 'P05E

SHE DID WITH,

A SIGHT 0EJ.l0&gt;lTS '.
MY E,E:.'

{Qf\ ) t ru( I! Qil

PIANO

HEQ .:t.JTHES:

IUNINC

lone

Don1l!l~

Aho rc po 1tS 011d odtu stme n ts
qff) 2~81

1! no omwer

coli

'W7 7082

'

BATHROOMS

THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY

AND

Kn chcns

rcmodoled ce rO IT"IIC ttle , p lurn

bmg , cor per, try
rnomtenance . 13
perience . 992 ·3685

,,

Aller ~ co li

1977 Monte Carlo ••••••$6100

992 7608
REDUCED TO I1S,900 - " S UPER BARGAIN IN
POMERO Y" - w, s lor y ho me in very good cond lllon .
Features -4 bedrooms, love ly fam ily room In basement,
nlce llv lng room . &lt;lichen &amp; b1llh . Large yard fen ced In
back . Bet-ter c al l now, th i$ w o n ' t last long ,

lot
Ir;~~~~~
M[j truck':;
of Aqood
readLJ
todalJ,

lri c,~mrl-=;

..-.....u

'.

it

MLJ driver's l1 cense
expires ne&gt;\t week
on
birt hd3LJ 1

HOliDAY RAMB l ER 18 l oo t Fur
noce, sl o"e w1th oven go~
1ef rrgero1or ileeps S1.1 , new
ownmg , e.-cellen t condrllon .

142260 7
21 r OO t Terry Camper . E ~ece ll en l
( o nJ1tron. Col i '192 5696 ah er -4
pm

33 Neckwear

city
25 Biblical
weed
27 Amorous
28 Greek

J4 JosUe
J5 Greek
enchantress
39 Burrowing rhursday. April 2i
beast
-------:=-:=-:::::-;~;;;;------42 Be mistaken

goddess

BRIDGE

will
do

1

me'

4) li lre
automatic. power steeri ng &amp; brakes.
rad ia l w w tires, t inted glass, spt. wh . c overs, less th~n
I.S,500 miles &amp; sha rp as new . or~nge f i n i sh .

1976 G20 Chevy Van}7495
TEC Conversion . high back seats, h lde·a ·bed , delu xe
decor package , air cond ii i0/1 , AM F M sle reo ra dio,
tape &amp; -4 speakers, auxillery battery , 350 V-8 engine,
automatic tran s., power steering &amp; brakes . w-w t ires ,
beautiful 2 1one gr een, retad list appro)( . $10,500. Used
as co . car . Redu ced .

1975 Ford Torino :.~::..S2495
Dark green finish , blk . vlnyllrlm , 351 V·8, aulomallc,
P.S.. P.B.• wh . cove rs , radio, local 1 owner.

1974 Camero HT Cpe .!3295
Auto., good tires , low mileage, V·8, P. steering, dark
maroon . v l n y ~

roof .

1978 Ford lf2 Ton••••• ~5295
8' bed,
engine, aulomat lc tranS ., P . steering , radio,
w-wtlres, wheel cover5, 5peclal2 tone paint . Less than
2,200 miles .

ntt\ NK &amp; ERNI E

ftfl.ST, AN

ANNOUN~tMeNT:

OUfr Nf:W

:::::---..:..:.:...

COLL.!C:.TJON

PLR,.es HAvE
fiNALLY
Aft RIVED

• • So AL\.. &amp;f yoU
WHO LOAN~P US

YoL# F~asle~s
MAY PIC.J( ,.ttE M

BEATS ME I
IW~ INHEQE

I'JORKIN6 ON

~ e&gt;ILLY, THIS HA5
NO'IHINlJ 1!J 00 Wl'TH '&gt;OU

lliON'T WANT 106ET

LETiS
fO?!SET ?HE WHO/.£
THIN5i

YOJ IN\OLVED!

.

YOUVE

W

flE KIDDING! WH Y,

YOU MT6HT HAVE
e&gt;EEN

1(/LL£1/.'

I+

K

IKV

THPG C

HLH
UN

AE G JUHB C

CGGD C

WG

IB CN
NH

KVF

NEBNL

KVM

EG JOHV GM

L B I K.V

C H-

FOR INSTANCE , WHAT

DO ANIMALS Tf.\I NK
ABOUT ALL DAY 1

.. BESIDES EATING AND
SLEEPING, I MEAN ...

50

Pass

P ass

Pas.....,
Pass

Ti-jAT KIND OF
NARROWS IT DO~IN

HOW DID TATER DO
IN KIDOYGR RDEN
IODAV, M
BESS IE?

You

.

hotel:

--

A QX
+ AQxxK
t

+~

If they do, congratulate
lhcm . If they ~o down. don't
lau ~ h at them. We watched a
worlcklass player blow the
cun lrCJct.
It didn 't take him much
tim e. He took his ace of
clubs and led the 10 of
spades. East took his ace
and retu rned the seven of
hearts . Sou th was in with the
ace . He tried to ruff a heart

A

Texas reader wants to

kn ow what we open, pla y ing

two clubs as our only forci ng

opening.
We open this hand two
spades playin g standard
Am erican and two cl ubs if
that 1s our only forcing bid.
r N~: W SI'AI' t·: U E~TI·. HI'HISt: A..'iSN l

roo · you 11ave a quest1on for
the e~perts 1 Wn te " AsK the
erperts. · C8re of th1S newspapet

lndn•t dual

BUT I
PATCHED 'EM
UP,LOWEEZY

questions

Will

be answered 11 accompamed
by stamped self- addl1ressed
envelopes The most tn terestmg ques 11ons will be used m
thi S column and wt/1 rec etve
cop1es o l JACOB Y MODERN)

ruffed and another slam had

. HE TORE A
HOLE IN HIS
BRITCHE£

4127- B

+ AK.Ixx
..

in dumm y, but East over-

BARNEY

LOOK, ALL f WANT
IS A LITTLE
INSIDE INFORMATION ...

5+

4+

diamonds.

~·'r \978 Ktnj{ F' ta~urc3 Syndteate, I nc.

Conversion Vans -See Us Now.

Pomeroy
Open Evenings 1118 :00 p.m.

3+

JUGNF . - SEGMGEUJD
NLG
YEGKN
Yeslerday's Crypluquote : THERE IS NOTHING MORE
FRIGHTFUL THAN IGNOHANCE IN ACfiON.-GOETHE

New Chevy Vana, Sport Vans,

992-2126

14B

3+

I' RYI'TUOI TEJTES

?

1 owner. good llres, V.8, a ulomallc . P .S.. P . B.. RADIO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"

North East

Hy Oswald Ja r oby
One h~ ll er simply :,l ands for an othN . In thi s..!l amplr A is and Alan Sontag
ust.'cl for th l' th r ee I. 's. X for th (• tw1 1 0 s. etc Stng le ll't tNs ,
Here is a good ha nd to try
apostrophe~ . th(" ltl ngth and forma\!('" of th e wMd s ar(' all out on your fri ends . See if
h inl s Eac h d&lt;~y th1• rode lt · llt""' ~ arc dr fTt' r l' nt
any one of them make six

WINNI E

1976 GMC %Ton ••••••$3695

Chevrolet

West

Opening lead :

S!~VIc;!.

SOME FILM ...

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

14b

UP aFT~ "He

rno~e

COD NER'S CAMPERS an Ro rnbow
Rrdge . Htg h quoltly , law prices,
l ull hne recreol JOnol ve h 1de~
ond occcnane!. , O tt Ohio RL 7.
sou th o t Tuppers Ploin!., tok e
CR 18 t o 8oshon , to llow !.igru .
Open trll dotk . Conta ct Robert
Codner , Long 8oll orn , O hro

22 Sicilian

29 Biblical

WIN TER GET to vour hou!.e? lei u!io
necess ary repotrs . AI
Tr o mm . Cons fl uctton . H2-2318

e.

1976 v.a,Monza 2+2~:u::. $3695

1976 21 !no t Terry ~ell conlotnod
lr o vel 1ra iler 99'} 7066

949 7857

GASOLI NE ALLEY

FRIDAY , APRIL28, 1978
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:50-PTL Ciub 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:00-PTL Cl ub 15.
1&gt; :25-Soclel les In Transition 10; 6 : 31f-Columbus
Today 4; · News 6; Sunrise Semesler 8; 6 :45Mornlng Reporl 3: 6 . 50-Good Morning, Wesl
Virginia 13 ; 1&gt; :55-Chuck While Reports 10; News
13
'
7 :Oil- Today 3, 4, 15; Good Morning A!Tlerlca 6.13 ; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7:3(}--Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Capt . Kangaroo8.10 ; Sesame St. 33 ; 9 :(){)-Merv
Griffin 3; Ph11 Donahue 4,13,15; Emergency One 6;
Fam ily Affair 8; Malch Game 10 .
9 :30-Andy Griffith 8: Fam il y Affair ·10.
IO :QO-Card Sharks 3,4, 15 ; Edge ol Nig ht 6: Pass the
Buck 8; Joker ' s Wild 10 ; To Tell The Truth 13.
.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: High Hopes I&gt;; Pnce
is R1ghl 8,10 ; S20,000 Pyram id 13.
11 :00-High .Rollers 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6,13; E lee . Co.
20.
11 :30-Whee l ol Fortune 3,15 ; Family · Feud 6.13:
Partridge Fam ily 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Sf.
20,33; 11:55-CBS News 8: Loving F ree 10.
12 :00-Newscenler 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gamb it 8: Midday Magazine 13.
1:!&lt;30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ; Elec. Co. 33.
1 · oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 :
News
Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; Not For Women
Only 15.
1· 30-0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10 ; 2 :(){)-Qne Life lo Li ve 1&gt;,13 .
2 · 3Q-Docfors. 3,4,15 ; Guidi ng Lighl 8,10; 3 :(){)Anolher Wo rld 34, 15; Ge neral Hosp ital 1&gt;,1 3; Ascent
ol Man 33 ; Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20 •
3: 30-AII In T he Fam11y 8,10 ; Crocke tt ' s Victory
Garden 20
-4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4 ; For Richer. For
Poorer 15 ; Merv Gr iffin I&gt;; Addam s Family 8;
Sesame St 20,33; Gomer P yle, USMC 10; Dinah 13 .
4:30- Lillle Ras cals 3,15 ; Gilligan's ls . 4;, 8; Brady
Bunch 10 .
5 :(){)-Here Come The Brides 3: Slar T rek 4;; Gun·
s moke 8; M ister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33 ;
Hogan 's Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; Petticoat
J unction 15.
5·30- News 6 , Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10 ;
Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6 :(){)-News 3,4, 8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom lQ ;
Adam s Chronicles 33.
6 :30-NBC News 3, 4 , 1~ ; ABC New s 13 ; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7 : 0Q-Cross -Wit s 3, 4; Newlyw.ed Game 6,13 ; News 10 ;
Gil ligan's Is. 15; Almanac 20 ; Mak ing Things Grow
33 .
7 : 3()- P orter Wagoner J; Gong Show A; Price is Right
8; MacNeii . Lehrer Report lQ ; Pop Goes T he
Cou ntry 15; Math Bowl JJ.
8 :00-Pilol " Space Force" 3,4,1S; Doro lhy flamlll6.13 ;
Wonder Wom an 8; Wash lnglon Week In Review
20.33; Julie Andrews &amp; Robert Goulet In Co ncert 10.
8 :31f-C PO Sharkey 3,4,15; Wall Slreel Week 20,33:
9 :(){)-R oc kford Files 3.4,15 ; Mov ie " Play Misty for
Me" 6:13; Incred ible Hul k 8,1 0; Soundstage lQ;
She pherd' s Pie 33 .
9 :30-Makem &amp; Clancy 33: lO:oo-Qulncy 3,4, 15;
Husband5, Wives &amp; Lover5 8,10; News 20; Meeting
ol Minds 33 .
10:30-Monly P ython' s Fly ing Circus 20 .
11:00-News 3,4 ,6 ,8, 10,13 , 15; Dick Cavell 20; MacNei l·
Lehrer Report 3J
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Barella 1&gt;.13: NBA Play
Off .a ; Monl y P ylhon' s F lyin g Circus 33.
12 :00-Janak i 33; 12 :40-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Iron.
si de 13 .
1:oo-Midnlght Spec ial 3.4.\ 5; Movie "I. Monster " 10:
1: 40- New s 13.
2:3(}--News 3; 3 :(){)-Movle " Esc ape to Mindanao" 3;
4:3Q-Mo,le " Gunfight in Abilene" 3: 6 :01l-FB I J :
7 :(){)-Bewitched 3.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P M . - Ch ec kered Flag or Crash I PGJ
9&amp; 11 P .M. - Nelwork IRI
Cable Channel s 6:30 P .M. - Testimony Time
7:00P .M. - Pau l Gaudino Family Fllness Show
7:30P .M. - Sports Block
10 00 P .M. - 700 Club .

Red wi th w hite viny l top . carefu l ly dri ven and loa
w it h every opt io n Inc . air. tilt wheel. speed af1d c r u ..:,
tull power . Compan y car , never t itl ed.

and generol
yeOI !&gt; elf ·

AT 446-3643

Evenings Call446·li'Y6 or 446-78t1

Whit e o..,er green. 250, 6 cy l. eng ine. au tomatic tran s.•
power st . &amp; brak es , power door locks &amp; wi ndows,
comfort i lt , AM-FM radio, de luxe equ i pment. Le5S than
12.000 miles. Co. car . never titled .

v.s

PU lliNS EXCAVATING . Comp lete
Service . Phone 99'1·1478

CALL
IN GALLIPOLIS

THE

DENTI?TRY!

Prln(an$werhere : "(

u

For
Sales &amp; Service
Phone
992 ·7113

ElliOTI APPLIANCE II

LI SSA 1 WHAl IS 11?
~OU ' RE 50 PALE ...
SIT DOWN .. .

~E

LAS"T WOR:D

Now arrange the Ci rc led letters to
form the surpr ise answer. as sug gested by the abo'r'e cartoon

ORPHAN ANIOE-THERE'S BED NEWS TONIGHT
WAi1lL LISSA SfE 5 ME V! I1 HOU r
TH' CRUTCHES ... HARK 1 HER
Slfi'S ON 1f1 1 S TAIRS"' ALIT
SQ SLOW ...

27

COULD

I I

IJii'I.F: OH PI!..AN i\NNIF:

1977 Chevelle Malilllr.$4995

Midd leport . Ohio

b9B 733 1 •

! 7100

MIGlW HYBRIDS 100°o replant
ogr Pt&gt;rn o n t 1! you don t ge l a
• l and
) 01nes
H
Sm 1th
Heflllo (k
Gr o ve
Ohr o
992-'J574 , 1eove rnessoge

.D~AR...

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

DON'T PASS UP THESE UKE NEW USED CARS

hou~e

hOIII I '

Pomeroy Landmark

lteal l£•tole for Sole

100f 1llQ

plumbmg and heolt ng No 10b
too Iorge 01 too ~rn oll Ph one
74'} 73A8

709't

!'J A( Rf

Gull

500 bo q !&gt; ol
~ v ery 1h mg ne{ldvd

h~h

JUST CALL MEv O N C ~ YOU
DE ~ DHEAD.
6ET TO ~NOW

Yesterday 's Answer

o l Rut land Co n1p le1e 1ra1lt!r
troo k up C!l~o 'l ban i-. ~ approh
,~ d p ro pt• r1y nt $! ~ ~00 Ph onf'

PIC K UP

A ppro ~

7

v I

Call Q85 3877

lot

11 1 ~ulot1 0 n
to go 1nto buc,"'e~~ QQ'} JQQ)

do ll on

\· .

Pomeroy,O.
3·15-lfc

Ph. 992-2141

Chester, Ohio
10·30·&lt;

9!2-!174

Will d o

eo,

!N~ULA110t~ B U)\N ~ )~ I Q74 ~ r ep
Vcm 11 \H ~ ond i l!l\ulo t 11tq
t n a t h1!1 l!~ {0111ple ro w11h e ~&lt;IIO

b lo wen

L ETS KEEP IT

LOW ~EY·· HUH. l
BABY~ SCREAM I '
.. ·~
WON'T DO 'lA A WH.WH WH O
BIT OF GOOD!
4R E Yc'U-,

Dusine•• Servke•

You Have
:arefullv
Chosen

'00Hl~ and bo rh cella r o vt
butldrr, g ~ ~ orr
land o t edge

YAL ! f Of.IK l ol l Phor\f' 449 ;.r!Q~ 01
4J O 7'} \0 lor rnor " 1ro l ot 1110110 11
1ndp~

5 TR AN 6ER5: ...
OH. DEAR! ... AND THE
RA DIO AfoJT Efl NA'S
DISCO N ~EC fE D!

74] 3163

178&lt;1

000

Q lOOm

TH REE

1.eAVES T~E McKEE Pll v'·
ABOAll!D! AND MOVE FAST.
'IO U F00L 5 ... 13EFORE SHE
J!,ARS THE DOOR!

ed 011 gm hf'a t and on cond1
11on•ng
I our le~el lot 1n
~ul lond
SIB 000
Ph one

I"] ~00 1 Glo~~ fl,mwr Doytorr o
boo t 1?0 h p MP rcur y Cruo~ ('
I0
ho nl ! ur tlo.ll'l IOI long
h•qh '&gt; fW&lt;'d hau l power Wl 'llrh
., ~~ ~ and t&gt;qurpr111&gt;1\1
SJ 7)0

DA l ~ Uf.J

WITh

Pomer oy qQ2 ~8QJ
DATS UN

4-24-1 mo.

Camping Equipment .

ca k1um c hlo11de lerlllr 1er dog
food a nd oil type( of 50 It fit
c el~ 1o r Sol t Wo1 k ~ " In( E Mom
Sl

Of

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

THURSDAY , APRIL 27,1978
7:oo-Cross·Wils 3,4 : Newfywe .d Game 1&gt;,1 3; vong
Show 8; News 10; Gi ll igan's Is . IS; Hocking Va ll ey
Blue grass ·20; Mars hal l U. Reporl 33 .
7:30- Hollywood Squ a r es 3,4; Mal ch Ga m e PM 6;
Tallle tales 8; Ma c Neil Lehrer Reporl 20 ,33; That's
Hollywood 10 : Nashv ille On The Road 13 ; Ma rty
Robbin s' Spotl lgh l 15 .
8:QO--.Hanna -Barbera H ap py Hou r 3,4,15; Welco m e
Back. Kotter 1&gt;,13; Watl ons 8,1 0; Once Upon A
C lassic 20,33 .
8:30-Whaf' s Happening 6. lJ; Arabs &amp; Isr ae lis 33 ;
O r iginals 20
9.00-Cper ation : Runaway 3,4,15 ; Ba r ney Mill er 6.13;
Hawaii Five·08 : Advocales70,33; 45 Billion Dollar
Connection 10.
9:30-Movie "Go West , Young Girl! " 6, 13 ; 10 :00Natalie Cole B, 10; Our Mutual Friend 33 . News 20.
10 :30-Lock , Sloe&lt; &amp; Barrel 10; 11 :00-News
3, 4,6,8,1 0,13, 15 ; Lili as Yoga &amp; You 33 .
I I :30-Johnny Carso n 3, 4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hu tc h 6, 13,
Ma sh 8; M ovie "Zulu " 10.
12 :0Q-Janakl 33 , 12 :05----Movie " Imi tation General "
8 ; 12: 4Q-- Ta ma 6, 13 ; 1 OD-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1 : 5()News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M. They M a de Me a Cr imina l IGJ

BY OW NlH 3 bed 100111~ w1 th l or(

lWO

q~q

OCI8~

Nelson Dru g
CO AL

399 W. Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

Comrn(l !{•o l prope trv opp•o ) 17
OO(&gt;~
l {hel land loca ted or
1up pe1!&gt; Plo ur~ on Oh10 Ro ute
I Phonu ,1.&gt;14 ) 06 7 630A

1 11d

'

1977 ( o..,en try 1'7 ~ 65 3 bedroom
l 9bQ State 5mon
17 ~ 60 ]

Tab le t~

\ ~!=\

balf1~

service, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gibson Tillers. Lawn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service .

by 7

v ...

&amp; BLEND

2 both

'1

r RtE G A S 7 (QI gmoyl•
~u mJJH'.!r ~ll { h e r o and bordt.&gt;ll'&lt;l

, - - ---:---:r-.._..,

men o nly Phone :J04 773 5873

A VAI LABlE AT

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
ServiceProm tiM ..,,.., frudi
lv114o•,..-

CARTER

hou~e

U NI T~ ICJt
clc·ctrrr
ror1gro' ..vdl f 1r Wh11lpoo l Mo
j("~ I 1C ond o lhl"l\ SJ l""och
B-1 3 280 1 ! l oye'I M cM ul rey

SJ 3J
Ha u te

Henderson
67S. JS82

Hartlord
882·217!

COUNTRY f o1mlond v.1th ~ e cl ud
C'd woo d :. wot (• r Qnd good 0 (
( c.&gt;ss rn Momo e Coun t.,. W Vo
$1 000 down ( 011 130.4 77")
310'} 01 13041117 37'}7

&gt;97 30~ I
BY OW NER 5

H~A JI N G

l uttH'&gt;h&lt;&gt;d and un
Phon {' Q97

aph

COU N1R't' MO B!n

"Get A Load Of This"
WETHERALL CONCRETE

MODERN
SUPPLY
Small engine &amp; mower

QQ? 311ftJ

J HM

Rt . 1
Middleport, Ohio
24 Years Service
SPRING SPECIAL
Complete Painl Jobs
Small Cars
1100.00
Large Cars
112S .OO
Trucks
$11S.OO
Body work &amp; repair ·Sl.OO
per inch using only the besl
Dupont materials.
742· 3010
4·9-1 mo .

oil ell!'c
I ou t~ M 1ddlepo1t
do~ t:&lt; to Rur lull(l Phon P f19")
748\

J.Hk W (M;Py Mqr
f'hone Y92 2181

')4

t'or Hen I
lur111~hed

AUTO PAINTING

HOMES tlE S l or ;o le l ot'e and
up M1 ddh~ p o 1t n c ar fol u1!ond

~ 1•1 Al l You1

\97 4

J AN D

BOB'S

CAPTAIN EASY

HPal ..:stale for Sale

'&gt;.\11· Pnr1"•

K1~m 1P I

Phone 992·2181

30 yr l rrooncmg ol ~o
1e ft n ~n c.111 9 l1 e lo r'd M ar tgoge
77 [ Stal e A then!&gt; phone 161 4)

POMEROY
LANDMARK

I'Pts for Sale

S!AR

4·12: 1 mo. P

UNION OPERATED
3·30· 1 mo.

H o 1p ntn1 Applt,HlffH,

H I~I N G

p.m .

MOORE'S

VA I HA

't'ARD ) All Aprol 78 8 79 9 om to
6 prn
i4 1 Bt.• t.•t h )1
M 1d
dl0p0 11 fl011 1 t On ( t."l'

6\ ~

,_...;

9. _Jack W. Car5ey , Mgr.

and

J
Bt&gt; O•II~
th e
1o w4:'1 CDt -14 I OIO! lhc.&gt; coo •
10ll' coblf"' qr ou11d plc11tt" and

l rorn
l\1 lu'e
dr~ h e~
clo th (&gt;~
and
odds and e-nd~ Call Q4'1 1747

tr ode or lfnr n

-

6il

Call After S:OO or
Anytime Saturday
992·7119 or 992.&gt;041
• ·21·1fc

', EXTERIOR
PAINTS

Pomeroy Landmark

~ h or t ~

w or t..

~J. OO NRAt&lt; E R

9 ') ACI O~ S
Ro une Ba nlo. Old lur

H o r ~f'~

(614) 667-6177
Between 7:30 &amp; 9:00

•'r"

r ~..J\.:!A

-1Prltfn (u t o fl ~ Odd., orrd f 11d~
~h o p R1 I V. •ddlepo1 t Q h ,o
9q7 b IIJ

~ Al [ )Oivldoy

HOO f HOlLOW

JERRY MURPHY

&amp;
I;~
~
!;

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

etc.

·BEST QUALITY
INTERIOR

EOUIPMEN I ~OR comple te beau ty
~ h op f01 four oper otot S 57100
rl ~old th1\ weelor.
Phon e

4 17 !B

ATTEST
Jane Walton

Wheel
Balance

&amp;

Call

Colt 99'1 7481

lf"'{ ~ cl ed tl'Oil '!

985 431 I
YARD

no

B 8 S MOBilE H0 Mf: S Pt Plea
f S\0 DO)

9'. _Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr .
Ail. Phone 992-2181

1965 El CAMINO 997 705 4

QUill)

land scaping ,

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

DAVE'S BACKHOE

Specialized
in
yard
grading,
driveways ,

Pomeroy Landmark

QQ"] ~b0 7

tCONOMV IRA( TOR wrth all a t
tachmenh ltke new o~knog
S"]'} 50 Pbanf' 614 ~98 3790

or

to ei'lCh con!.umer ocru pi'lnts
tn l?
u t llrty sh a l l
I "'' rrt!e se rv oce
ch arQe of \6 00 per c onsume r
occuo a nt rn ada t 1on ro rne
re ~ ul ar mE''E'r charge If a ny
co nsumer occucant ta ils to
pa y the w ate r rent wnen au e ·
or vtol at es a nv rule o f the
uhlr Ty , 111e water may oe
turned o ft tram such premise
un t rl th e re nt rs pa 1d and the
rules o t the u t tlr ly co mplied
w rth
Sec t tO n 4
Pavment for
Water Se r.., rces All bill s fo r
water serv 1c e rendf'red to
co nsumers
un.de r
Rate
Sche d ule, Sect.on I , sh all be
due and payable at the offrces
of tne ufl llt y on tne tentn day
o f rne month 1n w h1C h ren
dcred
Pay ments re c el 'o'ed
thereafter shalt be ~ubiect to
a penalty of lef'\ oercent ~ 10
percenl) of The .-.mount o f
eiJc h brll
Se r\1 1Ce to con
su me r s w hose b il ls r ema1n
ur•pa 1CJ en rne 15 th d ay at the
mont tt m w hich rendered

G RA VElY UT IL I TY l Oll 26 ~ 39 ~
12 wrth ~u i~Py '&gt;C"Ot tilt bed
ond br oh~ A l~o 1955 Dodge
&gt;ton 11uclo. Ph o ne QQ') 7897

WA~ HUi· M-1 0

for ~Sale

a m eter

prem se ,
m ak e a

9'91 340 I

/ J ')"J9S~

N~&gt;or

pleo ~on r

1o w n\ hop
l1u'&gt;lt' ' ' ~
Hu'&gt; '&gt;ell &lt;W) ')771

DOOR) PI C I UR ~ wo n do .,., bolh
tub co mrn ode Coil aft er 6 p n1

HO MI:MADf

No

per
~on olily o mu!&gt;l Coli SuP l or op
porn Tm£.'nt QQ'} 7006

Cemt;nl i'r~

2SO BU ("01 co 1n Hand p1&lt;ked S7
a bu 985 3928

S lN ~I MAliC
or
" 'uc h •m'
Ph orl t'
QQ') 71~0
lh ~:' Ou1ly ~ t·ntlfnol
II\ Cnu1 1 S tiPP!
l' c111W10 y
O h•o

lHR l E FAMi l Y ¥01 d Sol e&gt; lh ur~
I 11
8. So t 10 10 ? lt!ono •d
B o~ '&gt;
Rt J ~ 4 ~y1 oc u~e C\)1
1QoJ1~
bed \preod~
dropL'!&gt;
rug~
rt:"dm cr
111 io f) t b o y\
c lo th e~ 8 mv c tl more 9Q7 50Gb

cl ol hl'\

LO~T O R !;,lra~ed

N o co llo1

We have enlarged our
service department and
will 5ervice Hotpoint and
other brands .

COUil llrtq

FI V[ FAMl l't' C.oroql" Sole Ap 1ol
17 &amp; 28 Q to J A. bo11 r&gt; Em tr&gt;r n
H1gh S1 hoo l Lot ' ul \lot he ..

Lmlt md t'ound

hereby

S995

BURR OUGH')
1/4

SAf ETY Pot 1ol 't'ard
r,ale I ,, Ap rd 2t:lth (0111er ol
I ores r Ru 11 Rood and Rr 7 \0 to
4
E ~e1 y!h H19
hel l
pr1 ce
(onu~lled rl ro •n'l

Appointment
Pomeroy Landmark ·

AN

N ew lore ~

o ver. havl ed

t0CUS1 PO~JS l o r ~ o i C" 8 1! long
Sl 2!1 ("Q ( tl 1975 l ord r 250 4
wheel drt.e S3800 Good ron
dl! ron 99} 1.&gt;295 or 843 7933

clo thmg ~ r erpo
boor
1Qo7
Como10 lhur'&gt; and f-I t 9 5

Call Now For

O I NC ORD I NANCES NO .
1S50 .0 1, l SS O 02 , IS SO 09 an d
OliDtNANCE NO ~48 . TO
RAISE T HE RATES FOR
WATER
SERVICE
PliESCRIBING THEREBY .

195q INifRN AliONAl '1 ' 1 ton
tru(k
[97 · engrne
N ew1y

Jack W. C.rsey , Mgr
Phone 992·2181

· 'lARD SAll 01 Jud i' l&lt;. rou 11 er ~ m

AMEN ·

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pomeroy Landmark

C H~ S Tl R

NO

WATER WEll dr1ll1119 Wdl10rn I
Gran t. 747-287&lt;1 .

Let us test your water Free

YOU hove a H ." fvl(€' to o ll{"r
.... o rn 10 buy or sell ~om e1h111g
ae look mg fo1 w o d &lt;.
or
who 1ever
yo u t! 9 ''11f:.'Sult~
laster w 11h o S e mm~l Wont Ad
Ca l l QQ2 2 156

YARD ~All f r • and ~at Ht

J.( -

O'I:OINANC E

1977 IOC(.ic( Burghon dy SpOII 5tCI
1800 rntle~ Ell Cel len t ca nd1TIOil
Km g and Qu een ~e ol $3300
Q49 2171 alter 6 pm Scor rou ~
co i l ~ o nly

WILl CARE lo t the elde1ly 111 out
ho m'e . Phone 99'1 7J 14

&amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
softener, Model uc. svl,
Now Only

2331

SA LE
30 ,
A venue M 1ddleport
78/9Q5

fron t-wheel d rive cars .

AN

Coli

WANTED SMAll u~ed tro&lt;t o r
\·'v ode l1on1 end 3 po1n l end
Phun l" 99') 3187 or Q92 1496

PORCH

~

\9b..3 FOHD I , ton l1u r lo.
'l 47 386?

I.

OOZER FOR HIRE

Service6 Oifered

304 773 S365

PORCH S Al~ A pr ol 77
) 8 \ 0 to
) 751 Brov.r)ell M rdd lepor!

;
: :·-

·'·

P ole~

10 011 la r ge st e11d S8
p!?t ron Bundled slob S6 pe r

I~

... ' .

•,• J.

vJooo

d10111ett:1

1011

197J YAMAHA ISO mOtoiCIIC II.:'
c ' oa d
(Oll diii OII
SB5 0

Business Services

Qq') 70~ 4

'289.95

•- ~ : :: • :: ; '• • ::. .... ="='·

' '

'I•'

"14 "]

Wheel
Alignment

..'

::
..

'•'

G l a~~wore

t&gt;

"l', ''" ,h idrP• ~ lc rh•no OPd
· ,, ol ,·, \t o · On•c R , f'r A uc
• -:'" \~ t&gt; • Q' D tl:l1 \.' •ddlt'pOll
Oh, R... au o Sore f 11 01'd
Sv• or ~ .... w

ru ,· - Jc~ 1

::. :

~olf'~

,o ·::J

flea
''o· -. e·, u r .J pubh[ Saru rdo ,..
A. ('
:'0 1 L"" 1\o r t&gt;t"IOu H" Lr

\l ,.nJ·•\
-..ol ur ,jd\

.•ul•.J•&lt;tl.

Al1e 1,t1on

A ~,.(TtO N

IPO •N~

\ r•t l oil'

!- nJ...

Q¥7 6370·
CHIP

Jo tul
M or !&gt;o
El e l
111 alia
\ e1npwood ond Nolh uo z ,on
Heat CCI 8 Put nom 01 j o lt Mr ll
!;, t J A them 61~ 597 01.)7Q 0 1
b)409b118 7

997 5S40

7760

J'

1u~ · \'"' ~ ed

SP f CI A l

Cl--•&lt;,.)0'•0''

o11

~}

(en! !-'1

Ru t l and
A m e r•lon lt&gt;g•on Pos t Sot &amp;
SL•" A ar ·l ]O•~o, o·'d 30th ho1t, 7
to) SJ pe• P \'\ (' p('r do-., lO I.. e

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

~

99 "] )Q65 or
85 70

GOO O

NOTICE

Go.:

~rondor1g

lot

NO 11fM 100 l mgfl or too ~moll
Wil l hu~ I prece or co111plete
hou,PhoiJ New u~ed or ontr
quP~ Ma rtu1 s Fu rr11! u re 20 N
7n rl St
Mtddlepo r t
Ph one

.-, ! Oh•O Ph ~"n l' '10/ ,OOU !01 111
~ I ~HING

l'~U.r•

I:U-~ 1 ~ Hl:CTION ol th e n~.,·~ • wood
'l oves rn Southco~I C' III O ht o

Pr o

OlD fURNIT URE •ce b o ~C' ~ b •m~
bt'&lt;"h 11 cu1 bed s e l c com pl e te
househol ds W1 tie M U M tiiC'I
Rt 4 Pom ero.,. Ohoo 01 w!l

A(llQ N A.N D help lor 8a11 ~1Pd
\'V cn, en WI(
Sraru, Repo1t

ll"l"llll:lt"r\ll•U
PlK!Ilt !N].!ljj;

thrlJ

R url?n~ .. l'?g oon

'lHOOI

fo 1m e~er , ·Sundo t' at 1/00
noor' Spon&lt;oort"'U bt V~\.Y

unci

Fore'&gt; •

liM BER

FO UR BEDROOM ho mn Colum bu!&gt; Ohto 1•nden o r eo SPII 01
rradP l o r p1 0 p~r1)· 0 1 14 " 70
ho u se \ r a1 l" ' ol equal volv e 111
Merg~
Co unrv
99? 73q0 m

9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Bobble Jo and The Outlaw I Rl
Cable Channel S 6:30 P. M . - Tes tim ony Time
7 :00P .M. - Pau l Gaudino Fam il y Fllness Show
7: 3D P .M. - Superspor ls
10 :00 P .M. - 700 Club.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

t.'o r ~Sale. Hent or '{rade

For i:ialr

0

\\:antt'd to uuy

Hosp.tol

l'o olrd~ •~· ~ n·rrt~&gt; ].11'1 ~ urd J.!t'l da~
Atb r·unnml! utlrt·r than t'U il~\'t'U l t t• c
ila ~~ utll i.ll' than!t'Lt 111 tlw l d")

--4

Jt' •

locd a mi

w tle Beoflho F S.milh A. 'IJ t'CIOI
than.,_s 10 Rc• Br M io. or\d Rt••
Gro te () 1 p, 1 l., pn' &lt;Jrld nil thtuurse!l

Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

r11ony

'!i)l"m pat hv or rht• d o:'ott'J 0 1 nr y
lli&lt;!TKt'

.

9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pomeroy, U., Thursday , April 27, 197~
DICK TRACY

--~

GLORY BE ·· TATER
. GOT A GOLD STAR

�&amp;--The;:v~;t:~Middl•po::n:~~:::"rsday.t\prilii. l iv7ant
97

CH~RGES
-·

rn~ hrend~&lt;oranddo

1 W IS H TO thank
rH~rghbor) lor th ~

o11d fl o we r~

15 Wunl, &lt;,~1' Urttlt•r
Ca&gt;ob

100

I tla~

180

I 25
l.!lO
:! 15

100

.I i:i

1~1

'I dil\ !l

j Ua) ~

6 da~~

blood

Po m erov
rluct~
l o p p11 cP
~ow ! rm bet
Coli
1\("nt Hanby 1 · •~&lt;~0

\~~ '"'"'' rol

01 \ (&gt;l('r(&gt;rh

~~o unl l+\' t•r

Eadr

tlw

IIUli UTIW il

IJ

lilt ~·

CltAR ANCE SAlE beg• 11~ M an
~ eb 13 01 Se .... N SE' "' Outlt;-1
Mo rn
St!e£&gt;1
Ro c•ne
A. lt
poheq(&gt; r double l.. n 1 t~ •Pduc~d
. w~. a nd &gt;0". Thread b1g spool
) IOI ST

In nwmun t"&lt;11tl uf Tltt~llk~ &lt;Hit!
Olltluan · { t't'lll.!&gt; ~·r Yt ord, SJ 00
unnunUiil ( a!&gt;ll ur !ilh otlltt'
~l uluk Htrnw SJlt.., .md Y&lt;1rd ""'~~~
,m• rlt'lt•ptt•d 1rrrl~ ~~o r th t d3h 1o0tth
11n lt·r· :!S ct·nt ,·lwn:t• fv•· &lt;J(b I"Jrn·
u 1 ~ Hv~ ~uml11•r ltr (":•r't' ,,f rllt' ~11·

GUN

Tlw PulJII.~lwr rt',el't'~ 1tw llt!hl
lit t•t hl \I I" n.•jt'l1 &lt;I ll\ d\l.' tkt"I1Wt1u(}JCI uvr1&lt;1l Tht• Pul.Jii'h,•i " ill mil i.Jo:
l"t'~p.m~iblt• fru lll1tlt"1h.trl &gt;Ill' IJl\ t l"·

..

w ~ q\{&gt;11 ~

lr1 i (lr ll'Qi t011

ot~B't

' .~

Su

a&lt;•P&gt;~ 9 10 ' '

rr 'li&lt;l~

l' \I
•f

.' .. : )el
~ I \I

· ~~

•II' &gt; I tloor

EXPERT
HUNTER

.,Jkr·,,~·"

~

: J.:. :; •

~

: -~-~

,:)-: . .: : .•::, !. ::-: ·. ;.!.:_:.
-: .. :::.x :: -&lt; · :···~

.: ; r ~ ·

::. ' -t .· ~ 't•

.. :

:

rna"

Del1ot?tl."d 10 Oh1o Pollel

Co R1 2 Pomeroy QQ"} / o8Q

:•&gt;:

.!. •

·

-

U) l. D
traCior
woth
hyd raulr&lt; 3 pt ht tch 742 307J

SCA.SHS /o, tu11 lo. { 0 '~ Foye-,
I 1uc k ond A u to Por • ~ W11? Cio.P1
St"IY I(€' l •re ~ale and Repo u
Rurlond 74'1 '1081 0 1 Pe1111101i
74 '2 Q57 S

Wi&gt;,N 1 10 buy Young cou pl e
wan ts to bu .,. coun try pr operty
50 to 100 plus oc,e!&gt; g ood
worer and mrncrol . 11qh ts
!illoble o11d I,'. Ooded
John
e1 J b54 17l 2

COI NS CU RREN CY t o ~ em o ld
poc l.. e l wa t che~ and cho11ts
~olv er ond gold We n eed 1Q64
ond olde t sdvt-r co ons Buy ~ell
c" 11od e Call Roger Wornsley

SPECIAL

mrle
99') 59 48

..

.au

oil

M1ne r~.,.d le

Any U.S. made car - par1s
ex tra If needed . Excludes

AND

DECLARING

N
/11d
A p;rt ')7

9'. - J ack W. Carsey , Mgr .
AliA. Phone99 2·2181

EMERGENCY

BE I T ORDAI NED oy tr"le
Council o t the Vill age of
P om e roy. Me rgs Cou ntv ,
Ot110
Sec tion \ Thai Ord inances
No~
HSQ 01, 1550 .01 , 155o .oq
and Ord i nan c e N o 448 , M
a nd the same are
ame nded to r ead a~

to ll ow~

mole bea gle
l e h h om l aurel Clr ll

Q~(QI

01e-0

~r r11 tt"1

Q9') ~S9 4

, n.td-; pe t

Metered Ser-.1 1C e

F rrt;t 1 ,000 gallons , \6 00
N e" t 3;000 g a lion~. \ 24 oer

IOQ gallon

N e)(t 10,000 ga llons , S ~0 per
100 g a li on
Ne)(t 15,000 g a t to n s . \ 13 per
100 galion
A l l ov er JO .OOO gallon~ . \ 12
per 100 ga llon
Consumers on the Athens
Road extcns ron oufs1 de lhe
co rp ora tion shall be charged
a m1n1mum o f S6 00 per
month Rare scne o ute above
shall apply as wr ll te n cller
f ir st sfe o
Co ns um ers en rne Mmer~
v1lle Road ouls.tde the co r
poratrcn shall . be ch arqed a
mm rmum of S6 00 per m onth
Rat e schedu l e abOve sh a ll
app t .,. as wr 1tten a fter fi rst
step
M inr mum
cha r ge
t or
M e ter ed Se r •nce
Th r u 1 1n ch meter 'li6 00
oer mon th
T11 r u \11 rnc h mete r . S6 00
per monlh
Thr u 1 ~ 1f'1Ch meter Sl O .s o
per montn
Thr u I 1nch mei er \ 20 80
per mon t h
Tnru 1 . rncn merer \]~ 80
of'r month
Thr u ? •net mf l N
S67 JO
per montn
Thru 4 one~ Te ter \ 119 90
per month
Th r u 6 rncn m~&gt;ter \ 775 75
oer month
B li S are OuP on or b£&gt; to r e
thP 1Qtn o t ettc• month B ills
arc nor oard b'y tr-e lOin are
subrect ·o a o~&gt;ra t ty o f 10
pPr c ent
S£&gt;t: t ron 2
f LA 1
RATE
SI:RV IC E
Unm eterea
co n5urners sn a i l be lu r n1shed
waTe r upon tt' t' tJas s o t d
rr n1mum c.nar(JP ot \6 00 per
mont~ e - ce ot n c ases where
rrP'ers arP rerroved
to
prf'vPnt tree1 ng
111
such
cdses c narQ&lt;'S w 1r1 oe based
upon C0fl\l..'T1 er ~ aver ag e
montnly con su11"pl rons
TWO OR MORE
CO NSUMERS ON ONE

&gt;ERVICE PIPE

U.. lp Wanted
!J.ltEND\Y H O M~ I a ~ Porroe!&gt; now
ul ou r i31d year ,., {' • pondmg
and ho~ apen•ng~ l or M onogf""r~
and Dea ler~ Parry Pion e •
p("r 1en ce
help lu i
Our
guoren teed r oy~ and grll~ wll
then,.,elv~!&gt;
No t o~h r r lvt.~''
rT!PrlT
N o '&gt;ervKe cho1gc• to

No

{U~IOI&lt;, ('r~

col\ p c t1ng

dl·!l.,.(&gt;rlllq
Cor
ph o n e
nNe'&gt;'.O' y Call tolt Pc 1 Carol
Day 518 &lt;~ 89 8395
WAt!Rl~S

WANHO A ppl y 111 t)('r
~on
Cro w s S r ea ~
Ho use
Pomero y Ohro

WOULD YOU l1 lo e to earn S \0 S3S
and 11\ Q!P oro hour' NP("d lodre'&gt;
I C1

11t~

drmon\t&lt;O IP Ia&lt; r&gt;

p ~ prr '~"(('

necP\~ary

appeoramt' and

7

Rt

B.,. po~~

o l ( hriJ il'll~

\ 0 1'.&gt;

P~ H ~ON

OR r ,.,.,on'&gt; I&lt;J opf'n and
flO'&gt; £' graY''' ul Rm lo )l)ft!19l&gt;
(r,nlurt

~nl1\bur f

Guy

Hl LP WP.N1tD 00IIylf"10n ! lt.•f&gt;d
f'd loti q ,s 9 JS!f]

WlSH RN

SOUI HlRN Lo lto In
ol PomPIOJI ha '&gt; on
o p ~&gt; n1ng on an e~lob l"l lf'd h!l
,, ,ory
3alory p l u~ &lt;Oifilfll\
~·o n\ t.·rellenl bem•frt~ If you
ore 'tole~ 111111d ..:&gt;d anti ron mPet
p.-.ople tht~ ~~ o 91eot op
portun1ty W 11l l:-' nr r a il l or on
'"e' 11tew 9&lt;f7 '}.480
~u iO f\C P

N~ W

EXPERIE NCED

bobv~1 tt er

for

three p1c ~c h oo lc r~ ond '&gt;0
meone to do '&gt;PIIng clean1ng
Q85 473 7

WANilD OlDER !orl yr o ~t oy woth
old(!! !1'10&lt;1 fo, harm" and \OIIlf"
wa ge s 99') ) 76.4

Seer on J NnerP warer 1S
c;.upo lo f' 'i from a :. r.gte ser
v1ce D•Pe or to more lhCJn on e
con\um rr Q{Cl..Odnl o f a
ore-m se
ea cr. c on\umer
occupanT muST oe sup p 11 ed
w ' h a metrr
Wh£&gt;re 11 rs
ohys. rc a ll .,.

rnoos s •ble

l moracr~ c a tTo e~tta c t"'

shall
be
d1scont1 nued
R esror a lion of water serv ic e
to the l atter c onsumers shall .
be made on l y atter fh e
payment of a ll pas t du e bi lls
and

penalt i eS
An added
of
T en
Do ll ars

charoe

EXPERT

mo~ (

nod

WORK

w 1l l

be

mi'lde

for

res 1orrng the water serv1ce
Sect 1on 5 BULK SALES OF .
WATER Bu lk. ~al£'~ olwi'iler
!:.11 al l oe

f u r nr ~hed

\1 60 per

at a rate ot
thousand gallons

exc:e pl cu tk sa tes to M rd
dleport , w nich rs based on
c ontra c t O£&gt;tween !he . two
towns at 40c per thousand
5ectr on 6 Thai thts Or
Clln an ce rS hereb'p' declared tO
b e a n emergency measure
necess~?try for
the orese r

&gt;J a li on o f In£&gt; puOiic pea ce,
he a lt h , sa fely , comfort and
welt are ot the Inhab itants of
tne V rllage o f Pomeroy in
thai s a 1d rates must be in

c reased to support borrow ing
rn an tiCt pat ion of waterworks

re..,enue s for proposed water
work.s Im provement , and II
s ha ll take effect upon Its

adopt ,o n
Adf OPed

. C l erk.

0

APPROVED :
Cl ar ence And rews
Mayor

( 4 ) 70 . 17. 2tc

C'mh

17~

d1rp1

1'(1[

h

PANT ~

co~t~ralb

gurdew1tl.!

SJOO

~o

chonnf'l

rodr o wtlh D 104 nu t. e

S400

30&lt; 867 3188

•tem'&gt;

Buy ~e ll

N e&gt;w a nd u~e d

~addle!.

Huth Hc (&gt;~f·~ A lba ny
6983}90
Bnl1r rl PIQ

onrl
o utdoor
r VII~
Groomonq all br~'f·d ~ (IPOfl
~(.)IIl lO! "/
f 01111 f 1e~
(hP~ h iT I '
Ph o nP 61 4 367 O'Yf?

111rl()or

DOG O Bl Di t N(f (Ia~~ l ot mooq
no w Call I Jb7 (J ~;(J

E II ·[

GI'ITI't .ll

L

N~W 3 bed 1oom home

Honw

Par~

nor th ol l' omt&gt; roy
lorgeloh Co119?7 7,J7q

JJ

l b FI

A.f' 1

Rer~ r ols

rt&gt;n !

O.,\l~~ron(n

10 1e ~
l or Senoo1
Con tocr V1llo qe M anor
M 1ddlepor t 99 7 7787

(l lttPrl ~
Apt ~

10 " 50 mohr le home '}b ed room
ncar Ro crn e 992 ~ 858
SMAll APT Wl l~b le l o r onl y ohe
F urn1~hed Coli QqJ 5767 even
lrtg'

,

bO

tr otl e'

Che~hlfC

Oh1 0

located at
(on'&gt; tlu CI IOI1

R 111er~tde Apt ~

l

bPdtoom Sll3 P"'' month S150
~ e tu r 1111
d~p o'or !
1:117 bOQ8
E. quo I H oul&gt;m g Oppor IUill l)"

It\(

T

son I W Vo be\1de Hec k .,
1q73 Br oodr nore 14 ~ 6-4 ')
bed1 oorn
\973Dor oo rr1 4 ~ t.07bed r oo m
1q71 Voctor10111 A ~ 67 3 bed topm

be•ch oom
HEOUO SAH &amp; l o~t wr th GoBe se

&amp; E-Voo

.... a te r

p rl l ~.

(!N~ k s

lq74

liMESTONE 5ond gro ve l ,

fll(ti:UP

991 7453
NICE PI GS lo1 sate

h41t!!or to tM

I

c..•.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,~

&amp;

AT

··:KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY CO.
Phone
992. J748 or 99J.SOlO
FREE PARKING
3·31 ·1 mo.

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300 Main Sf.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992.6263
8 A.M. Io4 :JO P .M .

.

SALES AND SERVICE
JJ .9.tfc •

Qqj

STO RY

H~ ( tHI C(O RD o rg on
~ tond

Good {on
oq uar1u111'&gt; wilh

fill/ 33 -P
1

Check our lOW , lOW
prices on

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERlO-PELS

lr orn£&gt;

s

8 I 00 111 I f'l llOd l• lf&gt;d
o il 1111\)f"&gt; tOI 11gh 1 ~ iue J
to ol
lu 1norC'
Rutl and or eo
SJb 000 Nt •w 3 bed1 oom totnl
f'! ro (IIIC

hm 11P

I

113

0t1e~

" ~" Ul

mm(.l~ S27 (X)() Bv rl d 1ng
) I) O tl l '~ IUIOI wolt:ol o n
lo t $3 HOO Coli 147 2f:ll9 nl!i •r 5
pru u1 ony t1mu Sot &amp; Sun

IWO HOUl EI
lr

~yrotu~e on
. acre lo r
)pmrou~ 3 bedroom .,... 1th lo1ge
u l tlrty 100111 llard wood lloor~
and c01pct f ru1 ! treec;. or1d
!ohru b l&gt;

3 • acre~

In Rortn e

b cc/ roorn
p l e tf'ly

Bcou11 l ul 5

3 both home Com
ti' rnodeled

a nd
{ Orpeled Ho'&gt; bo th ga !&gt; Ol•d
c let trtc l u1110'e large carpor t
0 11 d ., fora g e b u 1ld1ng ~ Cen tral
011 pl u~ l ull bo !oem ent For 111
l or motion call 94q 2011:1

I , acre !&gt; oro leod1 n g Cree \. Rood

Q92 7006
!RAI LER WIIH lo t on Un1on A ve
l o l (Ill forr.,.1cw Her ghl s water
lop and ~cpllc to n k Ph one
99'1736b

LIN COLN Hi l l 3 bed r o1n h o v 5c
ta rpet
elec t11(
heal
good
go1den lot Wolk, n g d1~ton c e
/, o m to wn Coli olte1 4 00

9Q7 7677
APP~OX

9'. _Jack W. Carsey , Mgr .
Ail Phone992-2181

)0 one ~ 0 11 Fla t w ood~

Rood lb Elect11c o11d wolet
ovodablcSee b l.. ey H1tl
Pomer o y
Oh1o
Ph on e

997 3885.

R.esidential
and
commercial. Call for
estimate , 24 hour service.
Anyday , anytime.
Phone 98S.3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
BoxJ

ME , YOU'!' FI~D
IM EVERY ~I f
AS UNPLEASA~r
AS I LOOK!

1f Jt\fruf m1f

"
"

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~\~~~ ·.,

BOHN I .OSEH

,_---------.\1
1tlU WI&lt;;H 1HI'7 'IJM7 FI.RI&lt;I&gt;.H 1'/&gt;,Wc.&amp;n" \
...__--:'&lt;::::'7' WALKI~ WITH ~OJ ,
OOIJ'T 'iOU I

I I

I KEPOD

[J

I

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

byHennArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one let1er to each square. to form
lour or dmary word s

; tf 'l .. '"' C• u lll' • """

J&amp;L

I I

• o.l '" ' • • - · '"'

I
~ .

\EMORCH I

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation
Save JO pet.loso pel .
on healing cost
Experience and
fully insured
Free Esl . Call , 992.381S
4-9· 1 mo. pd

AUTHORIZED
RCA &amp; WHIRLPOOL
DEALER

,...

JT .. · IT 'S GAMMY ..
SHE ... S HE 'S

...c;o AHEAD ... LET

I' M

G·GQ.IE. ANNI E ...

YOURSELF GO"'

OK ...

THEY .. : THEY DID
OiEIR BEs; ... IT
WAS NO GOOD ·

LISSA ... O H. LISSA

1\ ROO M TWO .,t 0 111 h o u ~e Oou
ble goroge w rth apor tmen t , out
b u1ld111g ~
17 acres Rutland
~e e
0 1 t oll 1 0
)lewor t.
l a1 7d?l

4 rJ 1 mo

1Jusines5 Senice5
bRADFORD

A uc roomwr
Com
p low ~erv1ce Ph one 94q ? 4 ~7
o r Q49 '}()()() Rocmo O h• o ( rill
8rad l o•d

II WOOD

,

BOWfR S Rl PA IR

~w t• f' !)(·r~

t o o~te 1~
11 0 11 ~ oil
)m all appl1once~ (own tnowm
II Utl to Store H 1g hw oy Go1oge
0 11 !l ou 1e 7
Phon to&lt; (b 14 1 98S

367~

REMODEliNG Plumbtng hoatmg
and all type!&gt; ol gene ra l r opo1r
Wa1 k guoror, lced 70 year"!&gt; e.lli
pc-r1 Crt t e Pho11 e 997 7-40Q
MA CH IN~ Repous \.C I •
VICIJ all m al&lt; es 99 2 ?28A The
I obr H
Shop
Pamer oy
Aut h o111 ed Sm gm Sale~ and
Se1v 1ce We :!&gt;harpen S CI~~o rs

SI::W1NG

EX ( A VA riNG , dozer l oader and
backh oe w o rk durnp 11 ucks
and lo boy'&gt; l o t lm e w 1ll houl
hll dut , to so 1l luncs toM and
gra.,.cl Call Bob or Roge1 Je tl et ~ doy ph one 992 708&lt;:1 , r11ght
ph on e 992 -3575 o r 992 5131

EX CA VATING . dozer
bo(khoe
and dtlcher . Charles R Hot ·

lteld

Bo ck

Ho e

Sl!!v1{1;~ .

Rutland Ohro Phone 741 2008

HOWERY

AN D MARliN
&lt;Oval1ng
se pltc
s ~ .. t e ms ,
dozer backho e dump tr uck .
lunes lone
gravel
black top
povmg Rt 143 Phone I {61 4)

IN

CRY, LISSA .. · Il'S TH'
ONL'f' THLNG THAT'L l
HE LP, NQ&gt;If ...

I X1 )"

(Ans wers tomorrow )
Yesterda~

s

I Jumbles
Ans wer
1

FRIAR GIANT STOOGE TRYING
Shy when going to bed -" AETIAING

..

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puulea !aavallabltt for S 1.~ postpaid tram JlJmbte. c1o tnls newspaper, P.O. Bo• 34 ,
Norwood , N.J. 07648. Include your name. address, ZIP code and make
checks pavabte to Newspaperoooks

ALLE YOOP

no E . Main st .

\\'H~T .:HA

Pomeroy, Ohio
4 4-1 mo .

~11$5

~

OH ,
ME; .JH M\ ! SUCH

5 'P05E

SHE DID WITH,

A SIGHT 0EJ.l0&gt;lTS '.
MY E,E:.'

{Qf\ ) t ru( I! Qil

PIANO

HEQ .:t.JTHES:

IUNINC

lone

Don1l!l~

Aho rc po 1tS 011d odtu stme n ts
qff) 2~81

1! no omwer

coli

'W7 7082

'

BATHROOMS

THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY

AND

Kn chcns

rcmodoled ce rO IT"IIC ttle , p lurn

bmg , cor per, try
rnomtenance . 13
perience . 992 ·3685

,,

Aller ~ co li

1977 Monte Carlo ••••••$6100

992 7608
REDUCED TO I1S,900 - " S UPER BARGAIN IN
POMERO Y" - w, s lor y ho me in very good cond lllon .
Features -4 bedrooms, love ly fam ily room In basement,
nlce llv lng room . &lt;lichen &amp; b1llh . Large yard fen ced In
back . Bet-ter c al l now, th i$ w o n ' t last long ,

lot
Ir;~~~~~
M[j truck':;
of Aqood
readLJ
todalJ,

lri c,~mrl-=;

..-.....u

'.

it

MLJ driver's l1 cense
expires ne&gt;\t week
on
birt hd3LJ 1

HOliDAY RAMB l ER 18 l oo t Fur
noce, sl o"e w1th oven go~
1ef rrgero1or ileeps S1.1 , new
ownmg , e.-cellen t condrllon .

142260 7
21 r OO t Terry Camper . E ~ece ll en l
( o nJ1tron. Col i '192 5696 ah er -4
pm

33 Neckwear

city
25 Biblical
weed
27 Amorous
28 Greek

J4 JosUe
J5 Greek
enchantress
39 Burrowing rhursday. April 2i
beast
-------:=-:=-:::::-;~;;;;------42 Be mistaken

goddess

BRIDGE

will
do

1

me'

4) li lre
automatic. power steeri ng &amp; brakes.
rad ia l w w tires, t inted glass, spt. wh . c overs, less th~n
I.S,500 miles &amp; sha rp as new . or~nge f i n i sh .

1976 G20 Chevy Van}7495
TEC Conversion . high back seats, h lde·a ·bed , delu xe
decor package , air cond ii i0/1 , AM F M sle reo ra dio,
tape &amp; -4 speakers, auxillery battery , 350 V-8 engine,
automatic tran s., power steering &amp; brakes . w-w t ires ,
beautiful 2 1one gr een, retad list appro)( . $10,500. Used
as co . car . Redu ced .

1975 Ford Torino :.~::..S2495
Dark green finish , blk . vlnyllrlm , 351 V·8, aulomallc,
P.S.. P.B.• wh . cove rs , radio, local 1 owner.

1974 Camero HT Cpe .!3295
Auto., good tires , low mileage, V·8, P. steering, dark
maroon . v l n y ~

roof .

1978 Ford lf2 Ton••••• ~5295
8' bed,
engine, aulomat lc tranS ., P . steering , radio,
w-wtlres, wheel cover5, 5peclal2 tone paint . Less than
2,200 miles .

ntt\ NK &amp; ERNI E

ftfl.ST, AN

ANNOUN~tMeNT:

OUfr Nf:W

:::::---..:..:.:...

COLL.!C:.TJON

PLR,.es HAvE
fiNALLY
Aft RIVED

• • So AL\.. &amp;f yoU
WHO LOAN~P US

YoL# F~asle~s
MAY PIC.J( ,.ttE M

BEATS ME I
IW~ INHEQE

I'JORKIN6 ON

~ e&gt;ILLY, THIS HA5
NO'IHINlJ 1!J 00 Wl'TH '&gt;OU

lliON'T WANT 106ET

LETiS
fO?!SET ?HE WHO/.£
THIN5i

YOJ IN\OLVED!

.

YOUVE

W

flE KIDDING! WH Y,

YOU MT6HT HAVE
e&gt;EEN

1(/LL£1/.'

I+

K

IKV

THPG C

HLH
UN

AE G JUHB C

CGGD C

WG

IB CN
NH

KVF

NEBNL

KVM

EG JOHV GM

L B I K.V

C H-

FOR INSTANCE , WHAT

DO ANIMALS Tf.\I NK
ABOUT ALL DAY 1

.. BESIDES EATING AND
SLEEPING, I MEAN ...

50

Pass

P ass

Pas.....,
Pass

Ti-jAT KIND OF
NARROWS IT DO~IN

HOW DID TATER DO
IN KIDOYGR RDEN
IODAV, M
BESS IE?

You

.

hotel:

--

A QX
+ AQxxK
t

+~

If they do, congratulate
lhcm . If they ~o down. don't
lau ~ h at them. We watched a
worlcklass player blow the
cun lrCJct.
It didn 't take him much
tim e. He took his ace of
clubs and led the 10 of
spades. East took his ace
and retu rned the seven of
hearts . Sou th was in with the
ace . He tried to ruff a heart

A

Texas reader wants to

kn ow what we open, pla y ing

two clubs as our only forci ng

opening.
We open this hand two
spades playin g standard
Am erican and two cl ubs if
that 1s our only forcing bid.
r N~: W SI'AI' t·: U E~TI·. HI'HISt: A..'iSN l

roo · you 11ave a quest1on for
the e~perts 1 Wn te " AsK the
erperts. · C8re of th1S newspapet

lndn•t dual

BUT I
PATCHED 'EM
UP,LOWEEZY

questions

Will

be answered 11 accompamed
by stamped self- addl1ressed
envelopes The most tn terestmg ques 11ons will be used m
thi S column and wt/1 rec etve
cop1es o l JACOB Y MODERN)

ruffed and another slam had

. HE TORE A
HOLE IN HIS
BRITCHE£

4127- B

+ AK.Ixx
..

in dumm y, but East over-

BARNEY

LOOK, ALL f WANT
IS A LITTLE
INSIDE INFORMATION ...

5+

4+

diamonds.

~·'r \978 Ktnj{ F' ta~urc3 Syndteate, I nc.

Conversion Vans -See Us Now.

Pomeroy
Open Evenings 1118 :00 p.m.

3+

JUGNF . - SEGMGEUJD
NLG
YEGKN
Yeslerday's Crypluquote : THERE IS NOTHING MORE
FRIGHTFUL THAN IGNOHANCE IN ACfiON.-GOETHE

New Chevy Vana, Sport Vans,

992-2126

14B

3+

I' RYI'TUOI TEJTES

?

1 owner. good llres, V.8, a ulomallc . P .S.. P . B.. RADIO.

"Your Chevy Dealer"

North East

Hy Oswald Ja r oby
One h~ ll er simply :,l ands for an othN . In thi s..!l amplr A is and Alan Sontag
ust.'cl for th l' th r ee I. 's. X for th (• tw1 1 0 s. etc Stng le ll't tNs ,
Here is a good ha nd to try
apostrophe~ . th(" ltl ngth and forma\!('" of th e wMd s ar(' all out on your fri ends . See if
h inl s Eac h d&lt;~y th1• rode lt · llt""' ~ arc dr fTt' r l' nt
any one of them make six

WINNI E

1976 GMC %Ton ••••••$3695

Chevrolet

West

Opening lead :

S!~VIc;!.

SOME FILM ...

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

14b

UP aFT~ "He

rno~e

COD NER'S CAMPERS an Ro rnbow
Rrdge . Htg h quoltly , law prices,
l ull hne recreol JOnol ve h 1de~
ond occcnane!. , O tt Ohio RL 7.
sou th o t Tuppers Ploin!., tok e
CR 18 t o 8oshon , to llow !.igru .
Open trll dotk . Conta ct Robert
Codner , Long 8oll orn , O hro

22 Sicilian

29 Biblical

WIN TER GET to vour hou!.e? lei u!io
necess ary repotrs . AI
Tr o mm . Cons fl uctton . H2-2318

e.

1976 v.a,Monza 2+2~:u::. $3695

1976 21 !no t Terry ~ell conlotnod
lr o vel 1ra iler 99'} 7066

949 7857

GASOLI NE ALLEY

FRIDAY , APRIL28, 1978
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:50-PTL Ciub 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:00-PTL Cl ub 15.
1&gt; :25-Soclel les In Transition 10; 6 : 31f-Columbus
Today 4; · News 6; Sunrise Semesler 8; 6 :45Mornlng Reporl 3: 6 . 50-Good Morning, Wesl
Virginia 13 ; 1&gt; :55-Chuck While Reports 10; News
13
'
7 :Oil- Today 3, 4, 15; Good Morning A!Tlerlca 6.13 ; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7:3(}--Schoolles 10.
8:oo-Capt . Kangaroo8.10 ; Sesame St. 33 ; 9 :(){)-Merv
Griffin 3; Ph11 Donahue 4,13,15; Emergency One 6;
Fam ily Affair 8; Malch Game 10 .
9 :30-Andy Griffith 8: Fam il y Affair ·10.
IO :QO-Card Sharks 3,4, 15 ; Edge ol Nig ht 6: Pass the
Buck 8; Joker ' s Wild 10 ; To Tell The Truth 13.
.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15: High Hopes I&gt;; Pnce
is R1ghl 8,10 ; S20,000 Pyram id 13.
11 :00-High .Rollers 3,4, 15 ; Happy Days 6,13; E lee . Co.
20.
11 :30-Whee l ol Fortune 3,15 ; Family · Feud 6.13:
Partridge Fam ily 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Sf.
20,33; 11:55-CBS News 8: Loving F ree 10.
12 :00-Newscenler 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gamb it 8: Midday Magazine 13.
1:!&lt;30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ; Elec. Co. 33.
1 · oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 :
News
Young &amp; the Restless 10 ; Not For Women
Only 15.
1· 30-0ays of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10 ; 2 :(){)-Qne Life lo Li ve 1&gt;,13 .
2 · 3Q-Docfors. 3,4,15 ; Guidi ng Lighl 8,10; 3 :(){)Anolher Wo rld 34, 15; Ge neral Hosp ital 1&gt;,1 3; Ascent
ol Man 33 ; Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20 •
3: 30-AII In T he Fam11y 8,10 ; Crocke tt ' s Victory
Garden 20
-4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4 ; For Richer. For
Poorer 15 ; Merv Gr iffin I&gt;; Addam s Family 8;
Sesame St 20,33; Gomer P yle, USMC 10; Dinah 13 .
4:30- Lillle Ras cals 3,15 ; Gilligan's ls . 4;, 8; Brady
Bunch 10 .
5 :(){)-Here Come The Brides 3: Slar T rek 4;; Gun·
s moke 8; M ister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33 ;
Hogan 's Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; Petticoat
J unction 15.
5·30- News 6 , Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10 ;
Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6 :(){)-News 3,4, 8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom lQ ;
Adam s Chronicles 33.
6 :30-NBC News 3, 4 , 1~ ; ABC New s 13 ; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7 : 0Q-Cross -Wit s 3, 4; Newlyw.ed Game 6,13 ; News 10 ;
Gil ligan's Is. 15; Almanac 20 ; Mak ing Things Grow
33 .
7 : 3()- P orter Wagoner J; Gong Show A; Price is Right
8; MacNeii . Lehrer Report lQ ; Pop Goes T he
Cou ntry 15; Math Bowl JJ.
8 :00-Pilol " Space Force" 3,4,1S; Doro lhy flamlll6.13 ;
Wonder Wom an 8; Wash lnglon Week In Review
20.33; Julie Andrews &amp; Robert Goulet In Co ncert 10.
8 :31f-C PO Sharkey 3,4,15; Wall Slreel Week 20,33:
9 :(){)-R oc kford Files 3.4,15 ; Mov ie " Play Misty for
Me" 6:13; Incred ible Hul k 8,1 0; Soundstage lQ;
She pherd' s Pie 33 .
9 :30-Makem &amp; Clancy 33: lO:oo-Qulncy 3,4, 15;
Husband5, Wives &amp; Lover5 8,10; News 20; Meeting
ol Minds 33 .
10:30-Monly P ython' s Fly ing Circus 20 .
11:00-News 3,4 ,6 ,8, 10,13 , 15; Dick Cavell 20; MacNei l·
Lehrer Report 3J
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Barella 1&gt;.13: NBA Play
Off .a ; Monl y P ylhon' s F lyin g Circus 33.
12 :00-Janak i 33; 12 :40-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Iron.
si de 13 .
1:oo-Midnlght Spec ial 3.4.\ 5; Movie "I. Monster " 10:
1: 40- New s 13.
2:3(}--News 3; 3 :(){)-Movle " Esc ape to Mindanao" 3;
4:3Q-Mo,le " Gunfight in Abilene" 3: 6 :01l-FB I J :
7 :(){)-Bewitched 3.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P M . - Ch ec kered Flag or Crash I PGJ
9&amp; 11 P .M. - Nelwork IRI
Cable Channel s 6:30 P .M. - Testimony Time
7:00P .M. - Pau l Gaudino Family Fllness Show
7:30P .M. - Sports Block
10 00 P .M. - 700 Club .

Red wi th w hite viny l top . carefu l ly dri ven and loa
w it h every opt io n Inc . air. tilt wheel. speed af1d c r u ..:,
tull power . Compan y car , never t itl ed.

and generol
yeOI !&gt; elf ·

AT 446-3643

Evenings Call446·li'Y6 or 446-78t1

Whit e o..,er green. 250, 6 cy l. eng ine. au tomatic tran s.•
power st . &amp; brak es , power door locks &amp; wi ndows,
comfort i lt , AM-FM radio, de luxe equ i pment. Le5S than
12.000 miles. Co. car . never titled .

v.s

PU lliNS EXCAVATING . Comp lete
Service . Phone 99'1·1478

CALL
IN GALLIPOLIS

THE

DENTI?TRY!

Prln(an$werhere : "(

u

For
Sales &amp; Service
Phone
992 ·7113

ElliOTI APPLIANCE II

LI SSA 1 WHAl IS 11?
~OU ' RE 50 PALE ...
SIT DOWN .. .

~E

LAS"T WOR:D

Now arrange the Ci rc led letters to
form the surpr ise answer. as sug gested by the abo'r'e cartoon

ORPHAN ANIOE-THERE'S BED NEWS TONIGHT
WAi1lL LISSA SfE 5 ME V! I1 HOU r
TH' CRUTCHES ... HARK 1 HER
Slfi'S ON 1f1 1 S TAIRS"' ALIT
SQ SLOW ...

27

COULD

I I

IJii'I.F: OH PI!..AN i\NNIF:

1977 Chevelle Malilllr.$4995

Midd leport . Ohio

b9B 733 1 •

! 7100

MIGlW HYBRIDS 100°o replant
ogr Pt&gt;rn o n t 1! you don t ge l a
• l and
) 01nes
H
Sm 1th
Heflllo (k
Gr o ve
Ohr o
992-'J574 , 1eove rnessoge

.D~AR...

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

DON'T PASS UP THESE UKE NEW USED CARS

hou~e

hOIII I '

Pomeroy Landmark

lteal l£•tole for Sole

100f 1llQ

plumbmg and heolt ng No 10b
too Iorge 01 too ~rn oll Ph one
74'} 73A8

709't

!'J A( Rf

Gull

500 bo q !&gt; ol
~ v ery 1h mg ne{ldvd

h~h

JUST CALL MEv O N C ~ YOU
DE ~ DHEAD.
6ET TO ~NOW

Yesterday 's Answer

o l Rut land Co n1p le1e 1ra1lt!r
troo k up C!l~o 'l ban i-. ~ approh
,~ d p ro pt• r1y nt $! ~ ~00 Ph onf'

PIC K UP

A ppro ~

7

v I

Call Q85 3877

lot

11 1 ~ulot1 0 n
to go 1nto buc,"'e~~ QQ'} JQQ)

do ll on

\· .

Pomeroy,O.
3·15-lfc

Ph. 992-2141

Chester, Ohio
10·30·&lt;

9!2-!174

Will d o

eo,

!N~ULA110t~ B U)\N ~ )~ I Q74 ~ r ep
Vcm 11 \H ~ ond i l!l\ulo t 11tq
t n a t h1!1 l!~ {0111ple ro w11h e ~&lt;IIO

b lo wen

L ETS KEEP IT

LOW ~EY·· HUH. l
BABY~ SCREAM I '
.. ·~
WON'T DO 'lA A WH.WH WH O
BIT OF GOOD!
4R E Yc'U-,

Dusine•• Servke•

You Have
:arefullv
Chosen

'00Hl~ and bo rh cella r o vt
butldrr, g ~ ~ orr
land o t edge

YAL ! f Of.IK l ol l Phor\f' 449 ;.r!Q~ 01
4J O 7'} \0 lor rnor " 1ro l ot 1110110 11
1ndp~

5 TR AN 6ER5: ...
OH. DEAR! ... AND THE
RA DIO AfoJT Efl NA'S
DISCO N ~EC fE D!

74] 3163

178&lt;1

000

Q lOOm

TH REE

1.eAVES T~E McKEE Pll v'·
ABOAll!D! AND MOVE FAST.
'IO U F00L 5 ... 13EFORE SHE
J!,ARS THE DOOR!

ed 011 gm hf'a t and on cond1
11on•ng
I our le~el lot 1n
~ul lond
SIB 000
Ph one

I"] ~00 1 Glo~~ fl,mwr Doytorr o
boo t 1?0 h p MP rcur y Cruo~ ('
I0
ho nl ! ur tlo.ll'l IOI long
h•qh '&gt; fW&lt;'d hau l power Wl 'llrh
., ~~ ~ and t&gt;qurpr111&gt;1\1
SJ 7)0

DA l ~ Uf.J

WITh

Pomer oy qQ2 ~8QJ
DATS UN

4-24-1 mo.

Camping Equipment .

ca k1um c hlo11de lerlllr 1er dog
food a nd oil type( of 50 It fit
c el~ 1o r Sol t Wo1 k ~ " In( E Mom
Sl

Of

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

THURSDAY , APRIL 27,1978
7:oo-Cross·Wils 3,4 : Newfywe .d Game 1&gt;,1 3; vong
Show 8; News 10; Gi ll igan's Is . IS; Hocking Va ll ey
Blue grass ·20; Mars hal l U. Reporl 33 .
7:30- Hollywood Squ a r es 3,4; Mal ch Ga m e PM 6;
Tallle tales 8; Ma c Neil Lehrer Reporl 20 ,33; That's
Hollywood 10 : Nashv ille On The Road 13 ; Ma rty
Robbin s' Spotl lgh l 15 .
8:QO--.Hanna -Barbera H ap py Hou r 3,4,15; Welco m e
Back. Kotter 1&gt;,13; Watl ons 8,1 0; Once Upon A
C lassic 20,33 .
8:30-Whaf' s Happening 6. lJ; Arabs &amp; Isr ae lis 33 ;
O r iginals 20
9.00-Cper ation : Runaway 3,4,15 ; Ba r ney Mill er 6.13;
Hawaii Five·08 : Advocales70,33; 45 Billion Dollar
Connection 10.
9:30-Movie "Go West , Young Girl! " 6, 13 ; 10 :00Natalie Cole B, 10; Our Mutual Friend 33 . News 20.
10 :30-Lock , Sloe&lt; &amp; Barrel 10; 11 :00-News
3, 4,6,8,1 0,13, 15 ; Lili as Yoga &amp; You 33 .
I I :30-Johnny Carso n 3, 4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hu tc h 6, 13,
Ma sh 8; M ovie "Zulu " 10.
12 :0Q-Janakl 33 , 12 :05----Movie " Imi tation General "
8 ; 12: 4Q-- Ta ma 6, 13 ; 1 OD-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1 : 5()News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M. They M a de Me a Cr imina l IGJ

BY OW NlH 3 bed 100111~ w1 th l or(

lWO

q~q

OCI8~

Nelson Dru g
CO AL

399 W. Main St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

Comrn(l !{•o l prope trv opp•o ) 17
OO(&gt;~
l {hel land loca ted or
1up pe1!&gt; Plo ur~ on Oh10 Ro ute
I Phonu ,1.&gt;14 ) 06 7 630A

1 11d

'

1977 ( o..,en try 1'7 ~ 65 3 bedroom
l 9bQ State 5mon
17 ~ 60 ]

Tab le t~

\ ~!=\

balf1~

service, Massey Ferguson
&amp; Gibson Tillers. Lawn Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service .

by 7

v ...

&amp; BLEND

2 both

'1

r RtE G A S 7 (QI gmoyl•
~u mJJH'.!r ~ll { h e r o and bordt.&gt;ll'&lt;l

, - - ---:---:r-.._..,

men o nly Phone :J04 773 5873

A VAI LABlE AT

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
ServiceProm tiM ..,,.., frudi
lv114o•,..-

CARTER

hou~e

U NI T~ ICJt
clc·ctrrr
ror1gro' ..vdl f 1r Wh11lpoo l Mo
j("~ I 1C ond o lhl"l\ SJ l""och
B-1 3 280 1 ! l oye'I M cM ul rey

SJ 3J
Ha u te

Henderson
67S. JS82

Hartlord
882·217!

COUNTRY f o1mlond v.1th ~ e cl ud
C'd woo d :. wot (• r Qnd good 0 (
( c.&gt;ss rn Momo e Coun t.,. W Vo
$1 000 down ( 011 130.4 77")
310'} 01 13041117 37'}7

&gt;97 30~ I
BY OW NER 5

H~A JI N G

l uttH'&gt;h&lt;&gt;d and un
Phon {' Q97

aph

COU N1R't' MO B!n

"Get A Load Of This"
WETHERALL CONCRETE

MODERN
SUPPLY
Small engine &amp; mower

QQ? 311ftJ

J HM

Rt . 1
Middleport, Ohio
24 Years Service
SPRING SPECIAL
Complete Painl Jobs
Small Cars
1100.00
Large Cars
112S .OO
Trucks
$11S.OO
Body work &amp; repair ·Sl.OO
per inch using only the besl
Dupont materials.
742· 3010
4·9-1 mo .

oil ell!'c
I ou t~ M 1ddlepo1t
do~ t:&lt; to Rur lull(l Phon P f19")
748\

J.Hk W (M;Py Mqr
f'hone Y92 2181

')4

t'or Hen I
lur111~hed

AUTO PAINTING

HOMES tlE S l or ;o le l ot'e and
up M1 ddh~ p o 1t n c ar fol u1!ond

~ 1•1 Al l You1

\97 4

J AN D

BOB'S

CAPTAIN EASY

HPal ..:stale for Sale

'&gt;.\11· Pnr1"•

K1~m 1P I

Phone 992·2181

30 yr l rrooncmg ol ~o
1e ft n ~n c.111 9 l1 e lo r'd M ar tgoge
77 [ Stal e A then!&gt; phone 161 4)

POMEROY
LANDMARK

I'Pts for Sale

S!AR

4·12: 1 mo. P

UNION OPERATED
3·30· 1 mo.

H o 1p ntn1 Applt,HlffH,

H I~I N G

p.m .

MOORE'S

VA I HA

't'ARD ) All Aprol 78 8 79 9 om to
6 prn
i4 1 Bt.• t.•t h )1
M 1d
dl0p0 11 fl011 1 t On ( t."l'

6\ ~

,_...;

9. _Jack W. Car5ey , Mgr.

and

J
Bt&gt; O•II~
th e
1o w4:'1 CDt -14 I OIO! lhc.&gt; coo •
10ll' coblf"' qr ou11d plc11tt" and

l rorn
l\1 lu'e
dr~ h e~
clo th (&gt;~
and
odds and e-nd~ Call Q4'1 1747

tr ode or lfnr n

-

6il

Call After S:OO or
Anytime Saturday
992·7119 or 992.&gt;041
• ·21·1fc

', EXTERIOR
PAINTS

Pomeroy Landmark

~ h or t ~

w or t..

~J. OO NRAt&lt; E R

9 ') ACI O~ S
Ro une Ba nlo. Old lur

H o r ~f'~

(614) 667-6177
Between 7:30 &amp; 9:00

•'r"

r ~..J\.:!A

-1Prltfn (u t o fl ~ Odd., orrd f 11d~
~h o p R1 I V. •ddlepo1 t Q h ,o
9q7 b IIJ

~ Al [ )Oivldoy

HOO f HOlLOW

JERRY MURPHY

&amp;
I;~
~
!;

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

etc.

·BEST QUALITY
INTERIOR

EOUIPMEN I ~OR comple te beau ty
~ h op f01 four oper otot S 57100
rl ~old th1\ weelor.
Phon e

4 17 !B

ATTEST
Jane Walton

Wheel
Balance

&amp;

Call

Colt 99'1 7481

lf"'{ ~ cl ed tl'Oil '!

985 431 I
YARD

no

B 8 S MOBilE H0 Mf: S Pt Plea
f S\0 DO)

9'. _Jack W. C.rsey, Mgr .
Ail. Phone 992-2181

1965 El CAMINO 997 705 4

QUill)

land scaping ,

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

DAVE'S BACKHOE

Specialized
in
yard
grading,
driveways ,

Pomeroy Landmark

QQ"] ~b0 7

tCONOMV IRA( TOR wrth all a t
tachmenh ltke new o~knog
S"]'} 50 Pbanf' 614 ~98 3790

or

to ei'lCh con!.umer ocru pi'lnts
tn l?
u t llrty sh a l l
I "'' rrt!e se rv oce
ch arQe of \6 00 per c onsume r
occuo a nt rn ada t 1on ro rne
re ~ ul ar mE''E'r charge If a ny
co nsumer occucant ta ils to
pa y the w ate r rent wnen au e ·
or vtol at es a nv rule o f the
uhlr Ty , 111e water may oe
turned o ft tram such premise
un t rl th e re nt rs pa 1d and the
rules o t the u t tlr ly co mplied
w rth
Sec t tO n 4
Pavment for
Water Se r.., rces All bill s fo r
water serv 1c e rendf'red to
co nsumers
un.de r
Rate
Sche d ule, Sect.on I , sh all be
due and payable at the offrces
of tne ufl llt y on tne tentn day
o f rne month 1n w h1C h ren
dcred
Pay ments re c el 'o'ed
thereafter shalt be ~ubiect to
a penalty of lef'\ oercent ~ 10
percenl) of The .-.mount o f
eiJc h brll
Se r\1 1Ce to con
su me r s w hose b il ls r ema1n
ur•pa 1CJ en rne 15 th d ay at the
mont tt m w hich rendered

G RA VElY UT IL I TY l Oll 26 ~ 39 ~
12 wrth ~u i~Py '&gt;C"Ot tilt bed
ond br oh~ A l~o 1955 Dodge
&gt;ton 11uclo. Ph o ne QQ') 7897

WA~ HUi· M-1 0

for ~Sale

a m eter

prem se ,
m ak e a

9'91 340 I

/ J ')"J9S~

N~&gt;or

pleo ~on r

1o w n\ hop
l1u'&gt;lt' ' ' ~
Hu'&gt; '&gt;ell &lt;W) ')771

DOOR) PI C I UR ~ wo n do .,., bolh
tub co mrn ode Coil aft er 6 p n1

HO MI:MADf

No

per
~on olily o mu!&gt;l Coli SuP l or op
porn Tm£.'nt QQ'} 7006

Cemt;nl i'r~

2SO BU ("01 co 1n Hand p1&lt;ked S7
a bu 985 3928

S lN ~I MAliC
or
" 'uc h •m'
Ph orl t'
QQ') 71~0
lh ~:' Ou1ly ~ t·ntlfnol
II\ Cnu1 1 S tiPP!
l' c111W10 y
O h•o

lHR l E FAMi l Y ¥01 d Sol e&gt; lh ur~
I 11
8. So t 10 10 ? lt!ono •d
B o~ '&gt;
Rt J ~ 4 ~y1 oc u~e C\)1
1QoJ1~
bed \preod~
dropL'!&gt;
rug~
rt:"dm cr
111 io f) t b o y\
c lo th e~ 8 mv c tl more 9Q7 50Gb

cl ol hl'\

LO~T O R !;,lra~ed

N o co llo1

We have enlarged our
service department and
will 5ervice Hotpoint and
other brands .

COUil llrtq

FI V[ FAMl l't' C.oroql" Sole Ap 1ol
17 &amp; 28 Q to J A. bo11 r&gt; Em tr&gt;r n
H1gh S1 hoo l Lot ' ul \lot he ..

Lmlt md t'ound

hereby

S995

BURR OUGH')
1/4

SAf ETY Pot 1ol 't'ard
r,ale I ,, Ap rd 2t:lth (0111er ol
I ores r Ru 11 Rood and Rr 7 \0 to
4
E ~e1 y!h H19
hel l
pr1 ce
(onu~lled rl ro •n'l

Appointment
Pomeroy Landmark ·

AN

N ew lore ~

o ver. havl ed

t0CUS1 PO~JS l o r ~ o i C" 8 1! long
Sl 2!1 ("Q ( tl 1975 l ord r 250 4
wheel drt.e S3800 Good ron
dl! ron 99} 1.&gt;295 or 843 7933

clo thmg ~ r erpo
boor
1Qo7
Como10 lhur'&gt; and f-I t 9 5

Call Now For

O I NC ORD I NANCES NO .
1S50 .0 1, l SS O 02 , IS SO 09 an d
OliDtNANCE NO ~48 . TO
RAISE T HE RATES FOR
WATER
SERVICE
PliESCRIBING THEREBY .

195q INifRN AliONAl '1 ' 1 ton
tru(k
[97 · engrne
N ew1y

Jack W. C.rsey , Mgr
Phone 992·2181

· 'lARD SAll 01 Jud i' l&lt;. rou 11 er ~ m

AMEN ·

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pomeroy Landmark

C H~ S Tl R

NO

WATER WEll dr1ll1119 Wdl10rn I
Gran t. 747-287&lt;1 .

Let us test your water Free

YOU hove a H ." fvl(€' to o ll{"r
.... o rn 10 buy or sell ~om e1h111g
ae look mg fo1 w o d &lt;.
or
who 1ever
yo u t! 9 ''11f:.'Sult~
laster w 11h o S e mm~l Wont Ad
Ca l l QQ2 2 156

YARD ~All f r • and ~at Ht

J.( -

O'I:OINANC E

1977 IOC(.ic( Burghon dy SpOII 5tCI
1800 rntle~ Ell Cel len t ca nd1TIOil
Km g and Qu een ~e ol $3300
Q49 2171 alter 6 pm Scor rou ~
co i l ~ o nly

WILl CARE lo t the elde1ly 111 out
ho m'e . Phone 99'1 7J 14

&amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
softener, Model uc. svl,
Now Only

2331

SA LE
30 ,
A venue M 1ddleport
78/9Q5

fron t-wheel d rive cars .

AN

Coli

WANTED SMAll u~ed tro&lt;t o r
\·'v ode l1on1 end 3 po1n l end
Phun l" 99') 3187 or Q92 1496

PORCH

~

\9b..3 FOHD I , ton l1u r lo.
'l 47 386?

I.

OOZER FOR HIRE

Service6 Oifered

304 773 S365

PORCH S Al~ A pr ol 77
) 8 \ 0 to
) 751 Brov.r)ell M rdd lepor!

;
: :·-

·'·

P ole~

10 011 la r ge st e11d S8
p!?t ron Bundled slob S6 pe r

I~

... ' .

•,• J.

vJooo

d10111ett:1

1011

197J YAMAHA ISO mOtoiCIIC II.:'
c ' oa d
(Oll diii OII
SB5 0

Business Services

Qq') 70~ 4

'289.95

•- ~ : :: • :: ; '• • ::. .... ="='·

' '

'I•'

"14 "]

Wheel
Alignment

..'

::
..

'•'

G l a~~wore

t&gt;

"l', ''" ,h idrP• ~ lc rh•no OPd
· ,, ol ,·, \t o · On•c R , f'r A uc
• -:'" \~ t&gt; • Q' D tl:l1 \.' •ddlt'pOll
Oh, R... au o Sore f 11 01'd
Sv• or ~ .... w

ru ,· - Jc~ 1

::. :

~olf'~

,o ·::J

flea
''o· -. e·, u r .J pubh[ Saru rdo ,..
A. ('
:'0 1 L"" 1\o r t&gt;t"IOu H" Lr

\l ,.nJ·•\
-..ol ur ,jd\

.•ul•.J•&lt;tl.

Al1e 1,t1on

A ~,.(TtO N

IPO •N~

\ r•t l oil'

!- nJ...

Q¥7 6370·
CHIP

Jo tul
M or !&gt;o
El e l
111 alia
\ e1npwood ond Nolh uo z ,on
Heat CCI 8 Put nom 01 j o lt Mr ll
!;, t J A them 61~ 597 01.)7Q 0 1
b)409b118 7

997 5S40

7760

J'

1u~ · \'"' ~ ed

SP f CI A l

Cl--•&lt;,.)0'•0''

o11

~}

(en! !-'1

Ru t l and
A m e r•lon lt&gt;g•on Pos t Sot &amp;
SL•" A ar ·l ]O•~o, o·'d 30th ho1t, 7
to) SJ pe• P \'\ (' p('r do-., lO I.. e

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

~

99 "] )Q65 or
85 70

GOO O

NOTICE

Go.:

~rondor1g

lot

NO 11fM 100 l mgfl or too ~moll
Wil l hu~ I prece or co111plete
hou,PhoiJ New u~ed or ontr
quP~ Ma rtu1 s Fu rr11! u re 20 N
7n rl St
Mtddlepo r t
Ph one

.-, ! Oh•O Ph ~"n l' '10/ ,OOU !01 111
~ I ~HING

l'~U.r•

I:U-~ 1 ~ Hl:CTION ol th e n~.,·~ • wood
'l oves rn Southco~I C' III O ht o

Pr o

OlD fURNIT URE •ce b o ~C' ~ b •m~
bt'&lt;"h 11 cu1 bed s e l c com pl e te
househol ds W1 tie M U M tiiC'I
Rt 4 Pom ero.,. Ohoo 01 w!l

A(llQ N A.N D help lor 8a11 ~1Pd
\'V cn, en WI(
Sraru, Repo1t

ll"l"llll:lt"r\ll•U
PlK!Ilt !N].!ljj;

thrlJ

R url?n~ .. l'?g oon

'lHOOI

fo 1m e~er , ·Sundo t' at 1/00
noor' Spon&lt;oort"'U bt V~\.Y

unci

Fore'&gt; •

liM BER

FO UR BEDROOM ho mn Colum bu!&gt; Ohto 1•nden o r eo SPII 01
rradP l o r p1 0 p~r1)· 0 1 14 " 70
ho u se \ r a1 l" ' ol equal volv e 111
Merg~
Co unrv
99? 73q0 m

9 &amp; 11 P .M. - Bobble Jo and The Outlaw I Rl
Cable Channel S 6:30 P. M . - Tes tim ony Time
7 :00P .M. - Pau l Gaudino Fam il y Fllness Show
7: 3D P .M. - Superspor ls
10 :00 P .M. - 700 Club.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

t.'o r ~Sale. Hent or '{rade

For i:ialr

0

\\:antt'd to uuy

Hosp.tol

l'o olrd~ •~· ~ n·rrt~&gt; ].11'1 ~ urd J.!t'l da~
Atb r·unnml! utlrt·r than t'U il~\'t'U l t t• c
ila ~~ utll i.ll' than!t'Lt 111 tlw l d")

--4

Jt' •

locd a mi

w tle Beoflho F S.milh A. 'IJ t'CIOI
than.,_s 10 Rc• Br M io. or\d Rt••
Gro te () 1 p, 1 l., pn' &lt;Jrld nil thtuurse!l

Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

r11ony

'!i)l"m pat hv or rht• d o:'ott'J 0 1 nr y
lli&lt;!TKt'

.

9- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pomeroy, U., Thursday , April 27, 197~
DICK TRACY

--~

GLORY BE ·· TATER
. GOT A GOLD STAR

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Mnldleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, April27 1978

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

IAU

200 gather to.honor .two longtime physicians

JUNIOR
SLACKS
Sizes 36 to 50
in regu lars and

Smart

longs, solid colors

sprint styles

and
cool cobs.

and patterns m
lights ar'ld darks,
)

an excellent

Junior

selection .

•

SIZIIS

3 to 18.
I

,,

HONORED - Dr . Ra ymond Boice and Dr. Roger
Daniels were honored Thursday night for th eir many
years of servi ce w Meigs C&lt;lunty . Shown are front, 1-r,

Mrs. Boice, Dr. Boice, Dr. Dan iel' and Mrs. Daniels.
Back, Thereon Johnson , Fred Crow, and Richard Jones.

•

e

TALKI NG THINGS OVF.R - at the banquet Thursday night were Dr . Raymond Boice ilnd Dr . Roger
Daniels. The banquet was spon,ur.ed by the Pomeroy
Cham ber of Comm erce.

•

at y

enttne
Meigs men among tragedy victims
51 killed 0
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday. April 2X. 1!17X

_ _ _...
EN-DOF THE MONTH SALE!

MEN'S

BOYS'
KNIT SH-IRTS

)

~{

Reg. sl()'l! .............. Sale s7"
Rig.. sfr!.............. Sale Sf'
Reg. s16 ............. Sale s12"
Reg. s22 ••••••••••••• Sale s1 J5'
END OF THE MONTH SALE !

-

By Kalhryn Crow
Two hundred persons assembled Thursday night to honor
two of the h:ngest practicin g physicians in Meigs County - Dr.
Roger Dan1els and Dr. Raymond Boice.
The awards banquet was sponsored by .the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce and was held at the Pomeroy
Elemenl&lt;!ry School.
·
. Fred Crow, preside nt of the chamber, welcomed all those
m attendance and slated it was a privilege to honor the two
docwrs.
"ThQu Sha ll Love Thy Neighbor As Thy sel f" and these lwo
men have done this in Meigs C&lt;lunty ," Crow comm ented.
Richard Jones served as
master of ceremonies. Jones, Me dical Associa tion and
in his comments, welcomed Meigs County Medical
friends and patients of the Society . He was presi dent,
two doctors and stated "these direcwr and chief of staff at
two men we are extremely Meigs General Hospit al, wa s
proud w honor."
president and chief or staff at
Dr. Daniels has been Meigs Memorial Hospital ,
practicing medicine in Meigs member of St. Paul Lu theran
C&lt;lun ly since 1936 and br. Church, Pomeroy, Mason ic
Boice has practiced 50 years . bodies, organized first living
Paul Simon, vice presi del.tl blood bank in Meigs County in
of the chamber, presented the late 1930's, one of the
Dr. Boice with his gift .
promoters of the golf courses
Simon, in his remar ks in the co unty, and on the
about Dr. Boice, ga ve a board of directors at the
resume of his career. ·
Pomeroy Ntional Bank .
Dr. Boice is a member of
Dr. Dan iels was presentEd
the Amer ican Medi cal his gift by Thereon John;;on .
Association , Ohio State
{Continued on page t2 )

SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS

Fifl~· t·n

The World Today

Small, medium, large

Short sleeve st yles ,
an excellent selec t ion
in sizes 8 to 20, stock
up now on what you
need .

•

and extra large sizes.

zn plunge
of scaffold

Solid colors, plaids,
floral pattclms, stripes.
Our entire stock is
included in

I

this sale.

Two Meigr C'ounty r esident s, Alvin W. Gorr of
Tuppers Plains and Floyd llupr of llt•x tcr . were
listed among the 51 falalities in the tragic collapse
of a sca ffold 11sursda _y mornin g at Mononga hela
Power Company's l'lt•asants Power Station .

/I

BOYS' $295 KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S '655 SP08T SHIRTS

- ROUND AND SQUARE STYLES
- GOLD, BROWN, RUST. BLACK

'5"
MEN'S sp SPORT SHIRTS
'7"
MEN'S s1r SPORT SHIRTS
'I"
5

MEN'S lrs SPORT SHIRTS
'10"
"

by RUSSTEEN

MEN'S
.
DRESS SLACKS

SALE

REG. '13.95 ........ SALE '11.50 ,.-.~--E-N_D_O_F""r-H""'E-M""o~NT~H~SA~L-,.E:":"J'- - t
REG. 116.95 ......... SAL£ 113.50
WOMIN'S
REG. '17.50......... SALE '14.00
REG. '26.50 ......... SALE 121.00

l-1~ki¥·SALE

Our ent ire stock in sizes
29 to · 48 waist. Solid
colors
and
neal
patterns. most all are
100 per cent polyester
double knit .

I
1
I
I
1
1

Slacks, sweaters, ves1s,
blouses, skirts, jack~
pre-teen sizes,

... _

Warm flannel lining, just
right tor the cool spring
weather . sizes 2 to 14 .
Reg. S 8.00.......SaleS 6.39
Reg . S 9.00 ...... SaleS 7.19
Reg . SlO.OO..... .. SaleS 7.99
Reg . sn .oo ....... Sales 8.79
Reg . $15.00 .. . ... Sale $11.99
Reg . S17 .oo ...... Sale S13.S9
Reg. S19 .oo ...... Sale $15.19
Reg . S23 .00 .......Sale $18.39
'F' l

.............___

End of the Month Sale I

SMALL LOT

$1 99 NECK
Corduroy in solid colors,
while they last.

l

Men's 14.95 Dress Slacks ••• ~ •••• 11.50 1
1

1

~~~~_Dr~~~~=::~=~J

Nylon and

$20,000

permanent press,
pastels and

losses
in fire

prints.
,..

Sizes S, M, ~
XL,XXL ·

PILLOWS

3/6 thru 11/14

Men's 111.95 Dress Slacks •••••••• sg,20
Men's 112.95 Dress Slacks.:••••••• sg,90

WALTZ
LENGTH GOWNS

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS
IN_
POMEROY
-·-I - · .._, , . . . , _ . _ . , _

By Ln.LIAN SWANSON
WII.LOW ISLAND, W.Va . 1UPJ 1- Federal labor inspectors
illday were trying to determine why the scarfold inside a power
plant cooling tower collaJ&gt;ied without warning, sending all 51
workers w lheir deaths 170 feel below.
Ten memilcrs of one family
were killed in I he acddc nt at ~upcrv t.sur s, arcon.l111g tu th(!
the Monongahela Power Cu. newspaper , blanwd till' cu:·
den t on the .,caffold itsclf.
plant, Thursday morn mg.
Fur Gun· Steele and l1is
Carpenters, eledrir1ans
wife,
the tr~tgcdy w&lt;ts tllmwit
w1d other workers t umbled to
unbeetntblt.•
: ten rclt~tivc.s
their dea ths in a ~ asca dt• of
per
istwd
in
tht• c.u.:t:tdent - an
lumilcr, concrete . briek Wid
unelc.
four
brothers.
and fl\'t'
twisted steel.
c uu~ln~ .
No one nn the scaffold that
For lhe Ducllcy bruthers,
enei rded the tower wa '
tragedy was a
Thursuay·s
spared when it ilccame to
quirk
of
fate
- one brother
disi ntegra te. Like a co lumn
dted
and
the
other
lived.
of dominoes, they toppled to
The
Dudley
brothers
had
their deaths .
bt•en
alrnnsl
inscpttriiblc,
but
The Charleston, W. Va ..
Thursday
Edgar
•·efused
to
Gazette reported today that
follow
his
brother
up
the
some construction workers
had ~om plai ned that some spirali ng scarfo ld in~ .
"No, Buck, I don't wan t to
foremen were rushi ng the
go
up 011 that tower," Edgar
project and nul allowing lhe
""id.
and w&lt;Js worki11g in
lower's concrete to harden
another
area when he hea rd
surficien tl y. Co nstruction
the thundering crash.

REG. '3.50 ••••••••••SALE 12.99
REG. '4.50..........SAL£ '3.89
REG. '&amp;.Gr ~....... SALE •5.19
REG. st.oo......... SALE '7.69
·REG. •12.00...~ •• SALE •10,29

..... '"""

I

.

!

.

i :

LOsses were estimated at
about $~,000 as the res ult of a
fire which struck the one
story frame horne of Mrs.
Freda Swan, Shady Cove
Road below Middleport at
8:54a.m. Friday.
Middleport flremen were
on the scene untilll :45 a.m.
fightlng the blaze. Firemen
saidthehomewasengulfedin
nameS When they arrived.
Members of the family ~t
horne atthe tlrne were asleep
when a member awakened
and fOWld the living room
ablaze. Cause of the fir e was
·
be
believed to have
en a
defective chimney.
Tom Swan, 19, was taken to
Veterans Memoria l Hospital
by the Middleport emergency
squad where he was treated
for bums received tn hi s
escllP,e rrom the house ·
Pomeroy firemen anBwered
an aid to asslll\ call wlth a
tinker and one engine. The
was destro•ed by the
ho ....
~
'
.
fire.

tra ctor ·
1. Joseph Baflle , W!lsh in gton,

Pa

2. James llloulr , St

Marys ,

bicycles

WASHINGTON I UPI I - The dust from Attorney General
Griffin Bell 's firing of U.S All orney David Marston has just
he gun to settle and now Bell is being at-cused of a coverup in
the investigation of the FB I's alleged pa' t illegal surveillance .
The new con trove rsy was tri ggered by charges of William
c;"' .. ncr. once head of the investigation, I hat Bell blocked the
pro:-··• ution of eig ht unidentified high-level FBI officials on
clw 1.~&lt;'S of illega l wiretappings..and "black bag jobs."

Says leadership eroded
MIDDLETOWN, Oh io I UP I I - Hep. Clarence Brown, fl.
Ohio, says lbe nation 's traditional leadership in basic
industries such as steel , petroleum and ot her conswner goods
has eroded and must he reesta blished .
"Nel'er berore in the hi sto ry of the United States has there
been a greater challenge to compete economically with other
rt&lt;ttions," Brown sa id Thur sd ay in an address to a group of
Armco Steel Co. executiv es .

.

l.,ll~

Bickering stepped up

.q;;

GETS COVETED AWARD - George Holman, center , who served as scoutmasler of
Syracuse Boy Sco ut Troop 242 for over l!i years, received the highest honor that can be
bestowed at the distri ct level of Scouting when he was presented the Award of Merit plaque
Thursday night at the annual Meigs- Gallia- Mason District . Recognition Banquet held at
Kin Folks Restaurant in Pont Pleasant. l.ooking on here are Dr : Bernard Niehm,the newly
install ed district chairman, left, and Ben Rineha rt of Tuppers Plains, new diStrict
commissio ner. Robert Wingett, outgoing districl chairman , presented the award "'
Holman.

A btcyde Inspection is
sc heduled for today from 6~
P -IlL at 1he Meigs Senior
C'1 t1zens Cenler in Pomeroy in
preparation for the Hik e-Bike
•m Sat urday .
Th e Meigs Co unty RE:ACT
team will be on hand, and
Lhey will inspect the bicycles
making any minor repairs. It
is sl ressed that this is not a
repair night and riders should
try and hal'e their bi cycles in
goud repa ir. Bi cycles can be
pla ced m the Senior Citizens
Center O\'er night and they
can be picked up prior to the
C'\·enl tomorrow.
The tnspection nigh! was
\'C ry well received last year
and 11 is rett lha t thi s event
Will help with breakdowns
along the co urse.
Thts inspe ct1on nighl is
sponsored by the Mei gs
Associa tion for Re ta rded
Citizens in conjunction with
the annual Hike Bike
sched ul ed rur Saturday . April

29.

The ride will begm at 10
H.m. with registration from 9
to 10. Rid ers Will tra\'el ap-

Eastern calls off Saturday classes
EAST MEIGS - Scheduled
classes in the Eastern Local
School District ror tomorrow
- the last of several Saturda yo - were cancelled when
the districl' s board of
erlucation mel in recessed
session Thursday aflernuon .
Supt. John Ri ebel said the
cancell ation was made due to

Fatality list
BOUNO BROOK , N.J. IUPI )
Here Is the list of 51 men
)ttll ed in Tt1Ursday 's scaf f old
collttpse n ear Willow Island,
W lla ., prov ided by Res eM ch
Colfrell Inc . construct ion con

.'\o. 10

Inspecting

Bell accused of coverup

HOME: 1UPI J - While politicians stepped up their
bickering over whether w negotiale with the Red Brigades
kidnappers of ex -premier Aldo Moro, the terronsls have
st ru ck again - I his time shtxJt ing a Fia t nfficiaJ in the knees
ou tsid e hls 1'urin hume.
'l11e latest vktun of an atl&lt;!ck attributed to th e Red
Brigades was Serg in Palmieri. a Fiat labor ~elati ons orficial
relied by a burst of gundfire as he left his home in Turin .

~!1 .

\ 'ol.

( 'rnls

25· Howaro J Mc. ura vcr. s1

Mary s, W Va
16. Willard

action laken by the Ohio
Legislature on calamity days
fur schools even though lhe
exact details are nol yet
known .

The board hired Sa ll y
Mil ehem as lhe lngh school
secretary . Mrs. Mitchem has
been working as assistant
clerk and pan time secreta ry
lo Supt. Riebel. The moving
of Mrs. Mitchem to the high
sehoul secretary's post
creates anut her vacancy cmd
applicat ions are being acce ptcd for Mrs. Mitchem's

McCown . Penns position. Supt. Riebel said
boro.
W
va
·
Mrs. Mitchem 's job is full
U Clayton .Y\onroe, Park er s
time and involves working as
burg , W.Va .
18. · Robert Moore , FtatwoocJs, assistant to the board clerk as
w;~• · C hoJ Payn e. 51 . Marys , wcll as parttimeinhisofficc.
Appli ca nt s should contact
w.va .

30. Edgar
Ph il l ips,
East Riebel.
w va .
3 Robert Blouir . St . Marys , Liverpool, Ohio
w.va .
31. Ravmond Pol ing, Th orn
The board agreed not to
' · Steve Blou.r. Sf. Marys , ion . w.va
renew the contract of Duane
J2. area
Fred. Pr;de, p;lfsburgh. Wolfe as head ba sketball
wiva Kcnnelh Boring. Salem . Pa.,
w va
33 . Robert c. Riley , Parkers coach and acce pted the
6. R;chard Bowser ' Parkers
bur~~~ · ~YV~ollyson , Pennsbor o. resi gnations or Nancy
burg , W.va .
7. Thomas Cross. Sl Marys . w vo
Larkins.
hi gh
school
JS. Floyd Rupe , Dexter , Oh io. mathematics teacher ; Ra lph
wivaRoger Cunnongham , Par
36 Alan Sampson , P&lt;trkers
kersburg . w.vo .
burg. W.Va.
Wigal as assist ant rootball
' · Larry Deem . Pltlsburgh,
31 . Glen
Sa
llerlleld
,
st
coach;
lAlrena Frecker and
, W Va .
P~ii. "~aoy Deem. waverly. Ml'rys
lB. Jeff Snyder. vienna . Leota Massar. Both Mrs.
W.Va ,
w.vo .
Frecker and Mrs. Massar are
ll Rav Duelley . Glenvi ll e.
39. Emmett Steele, St. Mary!. , retiring.
W.Va .
W.Va .
11. Darrell Glover , Mounds
40. Ernest Steele , Sf . Marys,
Speci fica tions for a new
roo
f at the Chester
v lllt~: wL6:en Ke i th Glover . W.va.
41. Larry Steele. St . Ml'lrys ,
MoundS.II Ie, WVa .
w va .
Elementary School were
" · Al,ln w. Got!. Tuppers
&lt;1 Miles Sfeefe , SJ . Marys , approved and will be adPla ins, Ohio .
15. Gory GossetJ . Walker. w4/' Ronald Sleeie. Sf. Marys. verti sed
for
bids.
w.v•.
w.va .
Represe ntatives of the
16. Jllmes Harr ison , Parkers
" Rl chord Slokes. Woverly, Tuppers Plains School
burg , W.va .
W.Va .
11. Claude Henorlck~n. Sf .
&lt;~5 fif:Jchard Sw ick . Be ver ly. booster s group were present
1
Mf;~so::, v~ens ler. Newporl . ~~
&lt;6. Brion Taylor , s1 Marys. and It was agreed at the r
Ohio.
w Vo .
request to ask the Meigs
19. Ken Hill. M;dlond. Po .
~7 . Dale Waooner1 Belington. Co unty Commlssioners lo
· 10. Gary H;n &lt;fe , Plltsbu ,~h,
Pa .. area
·
w4~~Charles WarrCfl . Parkers move th e garbage collection
11. Roger Hunl. Par~ersb urg.
burg , w Vo.
"dumpsters" across frqm the
w2~.0 'rom Kapus . Cairo. w.va . oh'l~ . Jack weutall , Newporf. Tuppers Plains School.
13. Randy
Lowlher. St .
so. Lou is Wildman , StouiS The board approved [ a
M 1t1s, W Va .
Marys, w va .
n Ronald Yocum , Park er~ senior class trip
o
24. Ronald Mather , Wa lker
w.va .
burg , W.Va .
Wa shingto n, D.
a nd

f·

Spring forw1ml, fall lnwl.-umrd

Alexandria, Va ., for the wee k
of May 8 and it was agreed to
poStpone an auction of timber .
on the school grounds to a
later date to be set. The
aut1ion was originally set·for
May 20.
The board set May 11 as the
date for a meeting of PTA
and Boosters groups of the
disl rict as well as uther
school supporters to plan the
promotional program for a 10
mill, one yea r tax levy to be
voted upon at the June
pr imary elect ions . The
meeting will Sta rt at 7:30
p.m. at the high school.
Boa rd members attending
were Doug Bissell , Jam es
Caldwell and Dorothy
Ca lawa y. Others present
were Supt. Riebel, Clark
Lees, high school principal ,
Wolfe, applica nts for th e
secretar ia l post and the
Tuppers Plains Rep rese ntatives.

WASHINGTON (UPl J - "Spring Forward, Fall
Backward."
That helpful little line translates Into the ta rt must
Amerlcall• will lose one hour Sunday morning as the
na liun returns w Daylight Saving Time.
The "fast time" becomes effe ctiv e officially al 2
a.m. ESf Sunday, but the Department of Tra ns~~rtatiuo 1 which regulates tim e zones arruss the
t•ounlry, suggests setting the (•lork ahead before
reti ring Saturday night.
The lost hour will be recouped on the last Su nday of
October when the cuunlry rclurns to Standard Time.
Exceptions W the lime change are the slates uf
Arizona and Hawall and lhe Virgin Islands, American
Samoa and Puerto Rico. Those stales and possessions
have never come under daylight time, remaining un
Slandard Time ihNughuul the year.

proxtmately 25 miles and
lunch and other refreshm enls
will be provided at the fiv e
chec k points.
The ride will be on mostly
paved roads and the Meig s
County REACT team and
various poli ce departments
will be un hand to insure a
safe event. The Meigs County
Jaycees wil l be riding as a
sarety pa trol in charge of
nders. Riders are reminded
that they are riding at their
own nsk .
Accordin g to Hank Cleland,
~ene r a l chairman, everylhing is ready and the ride
Wi ll lake place reRardlcss of
•l'ontm ued on page 51

•

h

This week's winDing Ohio

Lottery Numbers :
Gold oumber- 3.
While oamber- 54.
Blue oumber--387.
Extra Cash
%47453
Lucky Buck Two
Tbree-dlglt oumber-

$11.

Six-digit'
128931.

.

oumber-

~.

'1.~

'.

ANCE TICKETS for "Big Bend Varieties" to be presented at the Meigs High
School at 8:10p.m. on Saturday, May 6, went on sale Thursday· afternoon in Pomeroy. The
show will mark the 25th anniversary year of the Big Bend Minstrel Association and will be
sponsored by the Meigs Alhletic Boosters . Jim Soulsby , right, heading the ticket sales for
the boosters, ls pictur«:&lt;J leaving tickets with Kermit Walton at the New York Clothing
House, one of the sa le points. Other locations are Swisher-Lohse Drug Store, Pomerny, and
Duttoo's Drug Store and Downing-Childs Insurance Agency . Middleport. Advance tickets
are $1.25-;.Admission at the door on show night wU) be $1 .50.
1

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