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                  <text>J.. '.: •, .:·

R- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, p.,Tuesday. Apri! IO. 1979

Attorneys want federal
investigation called off

Battle rages
for control
Associated Press
MANAGUA, Nicaragua
(AP) Leftist guerrillas
to overthrow
fighting
President Anastasio Somoza
battled national guard troops
for control of Estell and other
Nicaraguan . cities Monday,
while Somoza was on
vacation in the United States.
There was an unconfirmed
report from Estell that
Sandlnista rebels had seized
control of the city. Military

CLEVELAND (AP) _ investigation, in' light ol a
Cleveland School Board stay of desegregation granted I
attorneys labeled a federal by the 6th U.S. Court of
investigation of the board for APpeals pending a Supreme
possible contempt charges .Court
review
of
"saber rattling," and they desegregation in Dayton and
have asked that It be called Columbus.
off. · ·
Battisti has said the
The board . attorneys also , ·inves~igatlon should center
questioned the authority of on fiVe areas of alleged
U.S. District Judge Frank J. contempt . of
his
Battisti to begin the ~~segregation order by the

sources S8ld the national
guard command in Estell had
urgently
requested
ammunitio-n , troop
reinforcements and air
support.
Somoza, in Topeka, Kan .,
on the second day of a
scheduled holiday, told
reporters he had no
confirmation Estell had
fallen.
"The country is .under

control," Somoza said. '.'[am
the president ·of Nicaragua
and I dido 'I make any deals
with anybody ... I am coming
over here to see my son, and
that's it'"
Somoza was scheduled ID
Jury dismissed
fly to Miami on Tuesday for a
six~ay visit with relatives.
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) -• He said he would return ID
PLAY PRESENTED- The ageless, "Rip Van Winkle" was presented to the Rutland
The jury in the first Beverly Managua next Monday. He
Pl'O Mooday night by the students of Mrs. Donna J~nkins . :aklng t~ male roles In _the
Hills Supper Club civil trial and · a daughter · left
presentation were left to right: first row~ Todd Docz1, ?ld R1p Van Vmkle; D. R. Smith,
was dismissed without' Nicaragua Sunday , flyi~g
young
Rip Van Winkle; second row, Robllle Hatfield, Bnan Denny, Phtlhp !..auderrrult, and
he1U"ing a word of evidence in first to Topeka, where
Joshua
Henry. Third row, Ryan Mahr, Jimmy McDaniel, Charles Gilkerson, {)eron
what U.S. District Judge Carl Somoza's younger son, Julio,
Stafford.
·
B. Rubin said was a "very is a senior at Washburn
interesting case."
University.
The ji!I'Y was dismissed
Col. Aquiles Aranda
Monday after attorneys for Escobar, the national guard's
the 165 victims and 50 injured public relations chief, said:
aild the Union Light, Heal &amp;!; ~~At this time, there are
Power Co. announced a $5.75 combat situations in El
million out-of-court Sauce, Ducuali, Condega, I Dorothy Dell Neal Bush
~nd Gary, and six grand-I
settlement.
Achuapas and Estell, but the
Dorothy Dell Neal Bush, 68, children.
A cow'l spokesman said the army Is starting to win Gallipolis Ferry, was dead on
Funeral services will be
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)detailed agreement would he control of the situation."
arrival today at 5:30a.m. at held Wednesday at!:30 p.m. Israel protested to the United
on file today. Rubin said a
Reports from. the Estell Pleasant V-alley Hospital.
at the Halderman and Sett States and Egypt Monday
joint hearing will be area were sketchy and there
She was born May 16, 1910, Funeral Home in Lancaster. over a reported declaration in
scheduled
later
with was no reliable information at Henderson, W. Va. to the Burial will be· in Floral Hills
Cairo by Premier Mustafa
Campbell Circuit Judge John on
C3sualties.
The late Joseph and Mary Cemetery.
.·
Khalil that Egypt would
Disldn.
.
government re~orted 28 Elizabeth Taylor Neal. She
Mr. Snider was preceded· in . stand by Syria if it attempted
He said atiDmeys for the guerrillas and seven soldiers was a life-long resident of death by his parents, Mr. and
to liheraie the Israelivictims of the May 28, 1977 had been killed in the fighting Mason County.
Mrs. John H. Snider and two occupied Golan Heights.
fire at Soilthgate, Ky. could SUnday. It bad no reports
Survivors include her brothers George and Glenn.
Later Monday, an Egyptian
, I
raise objections, if they have about the clashes on Monday. husband Melvin Bush, two
government
spokesman said
them, at the hearing.
However, military sources daughte~s, Mrs. Patty Smith,
Egypt would join Syria in
Another settlement was said the casaulties on both of Mcrnonaca, Pa., and MRs.
nnilitary action against Israel
announced last Frid!iy in sides were very high.
Dottie Ohlinger of Henonly if the Jewish state
which Market·Insurance Co.
The Sandlnistas have derson ; -two sons, James and Veterans Memorial Hospital refused, to give up the
agreed to deposit $925,000 in waged
a
continuing Bruce, both of Gallipolis ,
HOSPITAL
disputed Golan Heights
the survivors fund.
campaign to topple the Ferry.
Admitted-Donald
Covert,
through negotiations.
In January, the owners, Somoza government. The
A sister, Mrs. Opal Plants,
The protest appeared to be
Richard J . Schilling, his four rehels .were defeated in a Gallipolis, · also survives, Pomeroy; Timothy Brewer,
sons and 4-R Corp. settled out September uprising last year along with a brother Charles Reedsville; Rohett Chaney, the first dispute over the
of cow'l for more than $3 in which 1,500 people died in Neal.from Aliquippa, Pa. and Pomeroy; Roma Harrah,, Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty
Long Bottom; Edward since It was signed two weeks
mllilon.
two weeks of fighting .
nine grandchUdren.
· Demoskey, Middleport.
ago.
Preceding her in death
Discharged--Eli White, · fsraeli Foreign Minister
were two sisters, Lydia Richard Lyons, DeWayne Moshe Dayan sent a letter to
\.J
Weathers arid Dimple Long, Dowell, David Dowell, Secretary of State Cyrus R.
Vance, and Prime Minister
--:::::::::-;_---~---'r"::::"-:--:-J and
two brothers, Ray and Gertrude Pell~rino.
Lawrence Neal.
Menachem Begin sent a copy
The funeral wiU be held
ID President Anwar Sadat of
Thursday, I :30 p.m. at the
Egypt al~ng with a personal
Concord Baptist Church with
note, a (oreign ministry
the Rev. Howell J. B1res ofspokesman said.
ficiating. Burial will follow in
The spokesman said the
(Continued from page I )
HEADQUARTERS
the Concord cemetery.
would not be published
letter
winner of · a IDp Oscar not
Fri~nds may call at the
until
Washington
and Cairo
WilcoKen Funeral Home after Involved in one of the received it.
Vietnam films. She was
4 p.m. Wednesday.
named best supporting
actress for her role as an
FERRY SNIDER
actress who loses her bid for
Mrs·.
Roy Snowden, an Ostar in Neil Simon's
COMMUNION
Rutland, received word ~~California Sui~."
SERVICE
Sunday evening of the
The nationally televised
The St. Paul United
unexpected death of her Oscar show was not as lively
brother, Ferry Snider, as some In the past, but there Methodist Church at Tuppers
'Lancaster.
Mr. Snider suf- was some controversy stirred · Pia ins will hold a cbargeMIDDLEPORT,
fered a heart attack.
by ''The Deer Hunter" and a wide candlelight communion
He
is
survived
by
his
wile,
bit of backstage warfare service at 7:30 p.m. ThursOHIO
Mildred, two sons, Robert between the principals of the day.
two Vietnam films.

r--Ai_:~a-D;;i;iii;-, Protest

filed

r

Oscar•.••

FOR

FRIGIDAIRE

' BAKER

FURNitURE

LIVE

EASTER RABBITS
AVAilABL£ ...~
APRIL lOth lHRU 14th

LET~ BUY A NEW

CAR TOGETHER

.
)
.
If you're still driving an old gas hog,-now's th~ time .for you to
turn it.in for one of the new coinpad gas savers! So go ahead
and find file new c;ar you want ·-- .then see us about financing.
· You'll like our low-interest bank rates and easy budget
payment plans. See us today about a new car-loan!

and Bunny Supplies
\

•Parakeets &amp; Cage Supplies
•Gerbils
•Guinea Pigs
•Land Hermit Cra~s
Specials on all Size
Aquariums

together we can make things better
'THE FRIENDLY BANK"
Walk-Up Teller Window Open Friday Evenings, 5 to 7 p.m.

l.mtiM.lfational·Bank
Miadleport,-0.

&amp;b

LIVE CHICKS AND DUCKS
Sold in lots of not less than 6

MODERN SUPPLY
•

.Member -F.D-I.C; Deposits

,.

l99WESTMAINSJREET 9U.l164
Pomeroy,O.
The slorewllh "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"
FOR P.ETS - STABLES - · LARGE AND SMALL
ANIMALS, LAWNS ·- G•dDENS.

Body identified
•

MORRIS, Ill. (AP)
Authorities have identified
the body of a !~year-&lt;Jld boy
whose disappearance
IDuched off an investigation
that led to the arrest of John
Gacy Jr., a suspect in the sex
slayings of 33 young inen and
boys.
,
A forensic odontologist
·Monday night identified
through X-i'ays the corpse of
Robert Pies!, which had been
tthe
f d 11 in·~ d
oun ear er ~·e ay a
Dresden Locks along the .
lliinois River southwest of ·
Chicago.
Piest had been missing.
since Dec. 11. Gacy, 37, was
charged with his murder and
six other youug men whose
remains· had been identified.
Authorities said the Gacy will
remained charged with.
Piest's murder although;
cause of death has not been
determined. An autopsy has
heen scheduled.
Gacy was linked ID Pies! ·
after the youth's mother told
oollce her son had ~one ID see

Gacy about a summer job
and then did not return home.
Gacy bas been connected to
the sex murders of 33 boys '
and young men, authorities
say. Twenty-nine bodies have
been discovered at his horne.

Police actions
CLOSED WEDNEsDAY
The Racine Home
National Baak will be
closed Wednesday, April
11, d11e 'to lhe death of
Frances Wilcoxen, 'an
employe of lbe bank.
Funeral services wiU be
held
Wednesday
al
1
p.m.
at
the
Racine Baptist Cburcb.
The drive up window at ihe
bailk wiU be opeu until noou
on Wednesday.

HUMANE SOCIETY
BAKE SALE
The Meigs County Humane
Society will hold a bazaar and
bake sale at their Thrift Shop
Two deer killed
in Middleport on Friday and
Saturday, April 13 and 14
Two deer were killed in two · from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
separate accidents Sunday
night the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
MEETS TUESDA V
AI II p.m., on SR 248, a deer
PastCouncilors Club,
was killed when it ran into the
Chest'er
Council
323,
path of an auto driven by ·
Daughters
of
America
wiD
Mark Edward Sniith, 17, .
meet
Tuesday,
April
17,
at
8
Reedsville.
p.m.
at
the
home
of
Letha
AI II : 15 p.m., on SR 338, a
deer was killed when it ran in- Wood's daughter, Margare1
to the path of a vehicle driven Emma Christy, Chester.
by Dwight Hill, 18, Rl. 2, Hostesses .will be Margaret
Tuttle and lnzy NeweU.
Racine. ·
There was moderate
property damage 'to both
vehicles.
SUNRISE SERVICE
There will be sunrise serv1ces
at the · Freedom Gospel
Mission, Bald Knobs, at 6 ·
a.m. The speaker will be Jim
BLOODMOBILE
Cundiff. Sunday School will
The
Meigs
County
be at 9:30 a.m. and church
Bloodmobile will be at the services at 7:30p.m.
Pomeroy Elementary School
Monday, April 16, from I :30
BOOSTERS MEE'11NG
to 5:30 p.m.
The Eastern Band Boosters
will meet Tuesday ,April17 at
7:30p.m. Plans for the spring
· banquet will be made.

First•••

(COJ1tinued from page I)
Keviri Dailey who were at ihe
meeting. Firemen will study
the bid which was for $75,276
and will meet with the council
fire committee on Wednesday .
night to further discuss the
matter.
,council approved the ·
report of Mayor Fred
Hoffman for the month · of
' March. The report showed
receipts of $2402.50 in fines
and costs and $941n merchant
police collections for a !Dial of
'$2496.50. Clerk-Treasurer
Grate read a letter from
·Ashland Oil Co. reporting an
increase of one cent a gallon
on regular gasoline and one
and one half cents a gaUon on
leaded ga!IOllne as of April 3. .
Councilman AUen Lee King
brought the matter of the
ll'afflc light at Locust and
Pearl Sts. not working before
council. He suggested that a
new light be purchased If the
present light cannot be kept
.working sa(ely citing many
school · children
at
the Intersection Is in- ·
volved, Kin~ said. Mayor
liottman S8la me iignt had
been repaired but went out of '
liming again last Friday. l,t Is :
believed that the light switch
mechanism causing the ·
difficulty can be repaired.
King also reported ~I the
village garage ne~ a new
'roof and he said his
committee will report soon on
recommendations to reduce
the heating costs on village
owned buildings.
Council voted to increase,
·as of Jan. I, this year, the
clothing allowance for the .
three r~gular pollee, olllcers
from $11'l0 to f200 a year and
the clothing aUowance for
extra pollee officers, a total
of three, was increased from
$150 to $300, for all three.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, ClerkTreasurer Gene Grate, and
councilmen King, Carl
Horky, Willi8m Walters and
Dewey Horton.

board.
"We
must
submit,
respectfully, that the order Is
a
vain,
unnece11111ry,
unwarranted, fear-Ulvest!ns
act which will serve no Ufleful
purpose " attorney George I.
Meisel ;.,.ole in' the motion
filed late last week.
•
He questi()!led the portion .
of B~ttisti's order which calla i
for the school officials to
cooperate
.with
the
· Investigation, saying It
violates the school officials' ·
rights
against
self-!
incrimination.
Meisel 'also said the U.S.
Justice Department baa heen
a party to the desegregation
suit as a friend ol the cow'l
and should not undertake the
investigation.

ru~ed

justified

CLEVELAN.D (AP)
Referring to public housing
projects as a snakepit, an
arbitrator. · has ruled that
Cleveland pollee were
justified in refusing lo patrol
the projects alone.
Arbitrator calvin L. McCoy
overturned Monday the
suspenslona of 13 policemen
· who were disciplined last
July for disobeying orden to
patrol alone in 14 Cuyahoga
Metropolitan Housing
·Authority projects.
,
. The 13 were fired by Safety
Director James Barrett July
13, precipitating a Ill-hour
JX)lice strQt:e. A judge sent tbe
dispute to arbitration after .
ordering the men back ID
work.
Declaring that "death lurks .
In these crime-infested
· properties," McCoy held that
the orders . for one manpatrols
were
an
"irrespmsible jisslgrunent"
that showed lack of
consideration for the officers'
lives and well-being.
City Law . Director Jack
· M.Schulman called the
decision outrageous.
"This means we now have a
volunteer pollee force,"
·Schulman said.
Two-marl patrols presently
are used In the housing
projects.

e
(USPS 145-960) .

VOL. NO. XXIX

Increasing cloudiness
tonight with a low in the
upper 30s. Cloudy and
warmer Wednesday with rliin ·
and possible thunderstorms
late in the day.

ELBERFELD$

'
ROLES'
·
'

See Our New Selection
- -~ ....
Men's Billfolds and Accessories

By The Associated Press
More than 250 people were
injUred and at least seven
were killed Tuesday when
IDrnadoes rampaged 1\Cross
an area of Texas and
Oklahoma
known
as
Alley."
An
"Tornado
unknown number of people
were tr~pped when two
shopping centers in Wichita
Falla, TeK8s, were leveled,
authorities said.
Victims .were trapped in
other demolished buildings in
'· . Wichita Falla, but rescue
efforts were concentrated at
the two shopping centers,
said · Texas Department of
PubUc Slifety spokeswoman
Barbara Henderson.

There were no immediate
reports of deaths In Wichita
Falla.
Tornadoes also struck
Vernon and Lockett, Texas,
and Lawton, Okla. as tl\ey
swept northwest over rolling,
barren country of sage brush
and mesquite tr.ees.
Officials in
Lawton
reported at least four
confirmed deaths, including a
man electrocuted when a :!IDvolt power line came down in
a pOol of water. Three were
confirmed dead in Vernon.
At least 100 persons were
injured in Wichita Falls, 92 in
Lawton and 60 In Vernon,
authorities said.
Tornadoes rampaged

Richard Jones, president of
the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners, expressed
his disappointment in the
response Meigs County has
received for damages to
highways during the recent
flooding Tuesday night.
Jones expressed his
disappointment In Gov.
Rhodes, the two senawrs,
congressman,
and
respresntatlve of out district.
· Jones further stated he felt
that the Ohio Disaster
Service Agency is completely
useless in these situations

and noted that he felt Meigs
County bad been cheated.
-'No county or area in Ohio
suffered more damages than
Meigs County and it Is a
shame that more effort hasn't
heen put forth by people in
higher places. I feel Mei~s
County has been forgotten,
Jones commented.
The commissioners went oo
record commending the
Meigs County Council on
Aging for submitting an
application to be .considered
under the Rural Congregate
Housing Administration.

·Nationwise-----.
· Volwtteers patrolling area

CINCINNATI (API - A six-year-&lt;Jld hoy played
"chicken" with an Amtrak passenger train Tuesday
.and escaped injury because the engineer was able to
slop Hi-20 feet from him, according to suburban Elmwood Police Chief Stanley Wllkymacky.
·
·
He said the boy had been urged to stand on the tracks
by other boys a "little bit older." Wllkyrnacky said the
boy had heen turned over to his parents . f&lt;K
disciplining. No juvenile charges were filed.

Sponsors begin their case

File all the jumbo-size foreign currency,
letters; photos and cards you have to carry.
Here's a billfold that's oversize inside, yet
folds down to slim-jim pocket size_ ·Extra
large currency section, two card pockets,
and eight-wing photo/cud case. Rolfs
"'l'ri-Fold''· In a selection of· fine leathers'.
Men's Department-lsi Floor
'
.

ELBERFELDS 1·N POMEROY
•

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 1979

Oklahoma Gov. George Vernon was converted into an
Nigh activated the National emergency shelter.
Guard to assist In the
''The hospitals and Civil
damaged area, said ·press Defense are In absolute
secretary Carl Clark.
chaos," said Wichita Falls
"We haven't bad time to Record-News City Editor Bill
stop and confirm ,how many McGee . An estimated 100
dead we have," said Lawton people were injured in the
Civil Defense spokesaman city.
Wes Miller.
McGee said the tornado
Miller said two trucks caused heavy damage at an
carrying hazardous apartment complex and two
chemicals were overturned residential areas . It also
-,- one of them a block from a damaged Midwestern
hospital. He said one of them University and a high school,
carried chlorine and the other . ATeK8s Electric Power plant
muriatic acid.
was knocked out, disrupting
"It looks like we have been power in a large portion of
bombed," a Vernon resident southwest Wichita Falls, he
said.
The
Wllbarger said.
Memorial · Auditorium in
The first tornado slammed

The commissioners stated
that should the project be obtainerl it would he necessary
to improve the access· road
from Union Ave., to Mulberry
Heights.
It was noted that proper officials In Columbus and
Washington are being con!acted to seek additional funds to complete the project.

various townships .at the
Slime price could be obtainerl.
Wesley Ruehl, county
engineer, was insb:ucted to
obtain this infromsUon and
report back to the board.
It was agreed to accept the
quotations of Diamond Stone
Quarries for the prnchase of
limestone thr~ughout the
year .

The commissioners agreed

Since no finn bids were

to accept the bid of the received on bituminous
Pomeroy Motor Co., for a materials a motion was made
1979 Chevrolet half-ton to accept the quotations of all
pickup truck at a cost os companiPs,
Asphalt
$5,454.
Materials, Guernsey AshIt' was agreed to table the . pahll, and Ashland Pe1ro1urn,
aggregate bids from Richar- · with
the
following
'ds · and Son and Tri-State stipulations: that the respecMaterials until such time as a live vendors submi1 monthly
clarification of supplying thP quotations for the cost of

Buckeye customers

down near Vernon in the late
There
were
three
afternoon, killing three, confirmed dead and aboUt 60
injuring 60 and leaving injured in Vernon, he said.
millions of dollars worth of
An undetermined number
destruction, officials said.
of people were trapped in the
About an hour ~later, the rubble of the Sikes and
Oklahoma Highway Patrol in Southmoor shopping centers,
l.;lwton, 80 miles northeast of arid Qthers were trapped in
V~rnon and about 80 miles demolished buildings
southwest of Oklahoms City, elsewhere in Wichita FaUs,
said one person was killeq, 63 authorities said.
were injured arid a number of
Gov . William Clements
homes damaged when a ordered 150 National Guard
IDrnado touched down.
troops into the devastated
Admipislrator Billy community ID aid In search
Robertson of Wilbarger and rescue operations.
The Owens &amp; Brumley
General Hospital in Vernon
said the facUlty was full, and Funeral Home said it bad
that . 15 of the Injured were received 10 bodies, and
sent to hospitals in Wichita witnesses counted 10 others
at a makeshift morgue near
Falla and Altus, Okla.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - Sponsors of a bill that
would require public schools to include a "scientific"
theory of creation whenever they discuss the otigin of
.man began presenting \heir case Tuesday, but the
state Senate put off full debate until a later date.
"Scientists are arguing about the possibility of life
ever occurring randomly, thai is, by chance processes,•
and many are so deeply biased toward one view or
. another that they are unllble to see t~e .problem with an .
open mind," said Sen. Richard Comtlo, one oflhe bill's
. sponsors.
.

Seven face gambling charges
FRANKLIN, Ohio (API -Seven men wt're arrested
on gambling charges following a raid here by Franklin
,police and Dayton vice squadmen.
. .
· Those arrested were schedl~ed for arrmgnment next
Monday in Franklin Police Court. AuthoriliPs said thPy
·seized gambling eq11ipment and ,2,000 cash.

Sheriff found innocent .
TROY, Ohio (APl -Miami County Shetiff Thurman
Adk1ns was found innocent Tuesday of four Cf1111lls of
theft in office.Visiting ,Judge Rn!(er Wilso11, of Champaign County, is.•ued a directed·w•rtl.if'1 for liCqllitta) to
the jury. The jury was seat.,! Monday. ·
Charges were filed in eonne&lt;'linn with allege&lt;! th.,ft
from sheriff's Fur1heram•e of .!usli&lt;~· fund.

,,

matrrials through&lt;llll the
year: said quotations to be
submitted to the board of ·
eounty commissioners on or
before the last' Tuesday of
each month for the next suceeeding month; quollilions,
will then he rev1ewed and
awardetl by the board in conjunction with the coun1y
engineer for purchase during
that month; all vendors to be
given at least 48 hours Qotice
of expected delive,.Y.
In other business the board
employed Pamela Sue Jmvis,
l.angsvllle, as a plat map .
worker on the CP.TA
program. Elmer Rowles was
employed on a 90 day
probationary basis, effective
Apr11 8, as a dozer operator at
the county landfill.
The board made a determination to k~ep the landfill
open fr(IJl 8 to 4 on Saturdays
as well as the balance· of the
'"
weel\.

. "'

i ~

15 CENTS

the Southmoor Shopping
Center .
Twenty cars were smashed
under a bridge and iniD an
abutment. Witnesses said the
roofs of some vehicles were
sheared off and the wreckage
was bloodifd.
A safe in a National Guard
armory e"Jlloded, exposing
shattered M-16 rifles lind
other weapons. Mobile homes
were blown across a
highway .
Efforts to free the trapped
were concentrated at the two
shopping centers, said
~partment of Public Safety
spokeswoman Barbara
Henderson. Elsewhere in the
(Continued on page 141

'

SIGNS PRoClAMATION- Richard Jones, president of the Meigs County Board of
Collil)'1lssioners, Tuesday signed • proc_lamslioo declaring the wee~ of Aprlll5 through the
21st as "home health week". With Jones is ~dna Russell, R.N., supervisor of Home Health
Department at Veterans Memorial Hospital. The theme for home heallh week is "There is
No Place Like Home". Meigs County joins in paying tribute to the dedicated people who
serve in the home health agency of this community, providing skilled and compassionate
health care to its citizens. The Meigs (',ounty Commissioners urge local citizens to take con~nizance of this event and to participate fittingly In il9 observance.

A request was received
.from the Olive . Township
Trustees to place a CETA
worker in. Olive ToWnship to
eu1 brush. The matter wiD be
Mrs. Patterson SHid her
referred to the county
committee recently cirengineer.
culated petitions demanding
Buehl repoted he had not
that Buckeye call the
been
satisfied with the patmeeting, bul added, "Comching material being used in
pany officials have not comthe past and that he w-ds
piled."
going to make every effort to
She added the committee
Urging that the county sup- 79 percent were .Tille XX creased percentage of Tille
obtain a better mix.
hHs already presented peli'
port
the operation of the
units. This percentage. 179 XX patients is due to the
The
board
appoinl•d
Fred
.
lions with 1,684 s1gntures to
Galli
a
-Jackson
-Meigs
Compercentl
is representative of large number of aftercare
Hoffman,
Wesley
Buehl,
Otis
Bu&lt;·keye Rural management
Patterson also said Knopp and Henry Wells to the munity Mental Health Cen- the area since approximately clienl9 that the Center Is
IJ) percent of the total catchWaler Quality Management ter, Muine Plummer,
treatin g.
customer~&gt;wners will try to
ment area population would
"In this fi scal year the Cenimpound the company's Policy Advisory Committee Executive Director of the
meet Tille XX eligibility ter received notification from
b&lt;x&gt;ks if it goes through With lor the Southeastern Ohio "648" Board, met with the
Gallla County Board of Com- criteria.
the 648 Board that we had
an agreed merger with South RiverTtibutaries Rasln.
missioners this morning.
"In l'&gt;Hy Treatment so far billed to our Title XX ceiling
Attending
were
Jones,
Central Power C'..o .
Stating that it was difficult
this year we ,have procided by early January which
Henry Wells and &lt;";hester
for
the board to lobby for the
6,032 patient days of service means that aU Title XX
Wells, · •·nmmissioners and
· allocation of state and
!number of patlcuts x the ellj:ible cl1ents seen afler that
Mary Hohstetter, clerk.
federal money to Gallia · number of days service is poin1 will be seen without
County without the following provided to those pallentsl reimbursement to the Center
fact sheet to the c'Om- "hUe 5,768 or 96 percent of unless some other form of
mlssloners:
the population serviced were third party reinibursemen\ is
''The Gallla - Jackson - Title XX eli~_ble . The in- applicHble."
Meigs Community Mental
Health Center is a private,
accident on SR 325, one and
non-profit comprehensive
eight-tenths of a mile north of
center serving a three county
SR 554, at 10 p.m.
area in :Southeast Ohio. Total
According to the patrol, ·a
The Middleport Com- population Is approximately
north bound auto operated by
.77,000 people. The catchment
F1oyd Lawson, 17, Vi!llon, munity Park will ring with area is designated 100 perswerved to avoid a pot.bole, squeals of delight from cent poverty by the Departand passed off the right ,Ide children Sunday wh~ the ment of Health, Education
of the roadway into a ditch. Middleport - Pomeroy R9tary and Welfare.
·
The Meigs County Co~ ssioncrs are .strongly
There was slight damage to Club stages Its annual Easter
"J.aot
fiscal
year
In outegg hunt at 2 p .m.
urging people to take large p1eces of trash directly to
the vehicle.
Ro1ary Club President patient services alone the
the county landfill instead of placmg them m or around
John Rice said the hunt will Center provided 29,872 units
the green boxes.
.
follow traditional patterns of service (a unit 1s one hour
It is Impossible for 1he packer truck to p1ck up these ·
..,
with one area designaterl for of service l of which 23,694 or
·
items. Therefore it causes an unsightly area around
"hunting" by pre«hoolers
the boxes, the commissioners slated.
.,.
wliile another area will he
Bags of garbage, as well as large articles, should
designated for use by school
never be placed on the ground, Persons ca~ght dumchildren through the age of
ping around the hoxes-wiU he prosecuted, according to
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) •
Revolutionary firing squads 12.
the commission.
Plastic eggs will contain
executed 11 more leaders of
The county landfill is located on SR 143 just off SR 7
the shah's regime today, slips entitling the find ers to
in Sal1sbury Township. People may Ul&lt;e the landfill
Dei:k replacement on the
Including former cabinet mer&lt;•hand1se prizes given hy
Monday through Friday between the hours of 8 a.m.
Shadle
Bridge, delayed by a
ministers, secret pollee area business people.
and 4 p.m. and &amp;a.m. untilll :30a .m. on Saturday. ·
Traditionally, there has combination of problems, wur
Fees for dumping at the landfill are as follows : cars,
chiefs, the speaker of
begin on a new target date,
5{1 cents; statlon wagons, 75 centsi srnaU pickup truck ,
Parliament for 15 years and been a ~old egg with a $10 May I, according to Joy
the commander of Shah cash prire going to the
$1.50; three quarter 1on pi ~ku~s , $2 ; large trucks ,.$3;
a spokesman for the .
Mohammad Reza Pahlavl's y&lt;&gt;ungs1er finding that egg Catsoa,
packer trucks , 75 cents per CUbiCyard . '
___,
and a silver egg with a cash West Virginia Department of
hnperlal Guard.
Highways.
Six aenerals were among . prize_of $g. Those 1op prizes
Ms. Catsos said the actual
will be offered again Sunday.
th011e who died.
·SWORN IN
construction
work will- begin ' :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:,:;:;~:::::;:~;:;:::::::::::::;:;.
'Mavor Fred Hoffman Is exThe executions were
MEDINA
, Ohio (AP) - L.
May
I
with
completion
set
for
carried out before dawn, JX.~ :t..d to op&lt;m the hunt wiih a October.
KEV
FOUND
J
ohn
Ribar
has been sworn in
•
Tehran Radio said, and brief wel&lt;·ome message. MldHave you lost your. car key as sheriff of Medina County
She
noted
that
the
delay
in
brought to 101 the number of 'dll'port firemen are also. exafter being elected by the
getllng started on the job was and house keys ?
men put to death since the pected to be on .hand to 8"-qist
If so, you might want to Medina County. 'Democratic
caused
by
problems
In
·set_
forces of Ayatollah Ruhollah with till.' cwnt.
ting materials due to striking check with Robinson's Dry Central Committee. R1bar,
Khomeinl ousted the laat · Pa1 Hill iHhairrnan forth" transport
workers, in ad- Cleaning in Pomeroy. A set of 36, had been acjing sheriff
Rotary Cluh and committee
royal government two
dition
to
weather
conditions. keys wa.s found on the sinee Nell Gray resigned the
· mPmbers art• Pat O'Rrien,
months ago.
..
In order to facilitate one- sidewalk near the establish- po!;l In February.
who is ''XJW&lt;'It•rl to appear In
Those shot today included
Riber . will serve until
way traffic, which will be' ment some 10 days ago and
two former chiefs Of SAVAK, . et~tuminJr · a~ the "F.aster
the owner of them has not Gray' s term expires ln
maintained
during
th~
Rahhil ' "· Hank Cleland and'
the · shah's secret pollee,
duration of the three-month been located. The owner may January 1981. Rlber started
J nmr.s Sht•Pt:-.
Gens. HallSBn Pakravan and
have them upon proper work With the sheriff's
Tn f' fU&lt;(' ' (tf cxtrt-JTWly. in- job. a traffic light Is slated to, ldentlf1cation.
Nasser Moqaddam; Gen. Ali
department two years ago as
be
installed
at
the
end
of
the
l'i&lt;'ml'nt wl'atht•r the hunt
(Continued on page 141
·a
lieutenant.
bridge,
Ms.
Catsos
said.
will lw f\(l..~ lpt•O&lt;'tt .

to meet April 21

Pi-obation given employee ·

Train manages to stop ·

Classic men's "Tri-Fold"
from ROLFS

enttne

-MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY,
OHIO
.

across North Texas and
Oklahoma on Tuesday,
killing at least four persons
and injuring more than 200.
An unknown number of
people were trapped when
twisters leveled two busy
shopping centers in Wichita
Falls, Texas, authorities
said.
People also were trapped in
other demolished · buildings,
but rescue efforts were
concentrated at the shopping
centers,
said
Texas
Department of Public Safety
spokeswoman Barbara
Henderson .
Tornadoes also struck
Vernon and Lockett, Texas,
and ,Lawton, Okla.

. • . WICHITA FAI.I.S, Texas (APl- High school ROTC . ·
vol"''teers and National GJ18rd troops patrolled this •
.JMerth Texas community. of 11,000 today to P.revenl... 4
looting after a tornado killed at feast 33
leveled two shopping centers and brought "absolute
cliaaos."
"Many portions of Wichita Fa Us.have been wiped off·
the face of the Earth," said Josh Fuller of radio station
Wynema Patterson, a resiKBJD.
dent of Lawrence County and
leader or' dissatisfied
customers of Buckeye Rural
Electric announced today a
· CIRCI.EVIl.I.E,OhioiAPImeeting wlll·he held at I p.m.
an employee of Orient Slate Institute has been placed
Saturday, April21, in the Rio
on five years' probaUon, given a one-to-ten-year
Grande College Lyne Center
suspended sentence and ordered to repay $10,000 he
gynasium.
allegedly stole from the Institute.
Purpose of the meeting, aeCommon Pleas Judge William Arnmer pronounced
cording to P•tterson, is "to
the sentence and also ordered Frank R. Burge of Grove
remove each of Buckeye's
City to spend 20 days in the Plckaway County jail as
trustees and hoard of trustees
part of the terms of his probation.
of the cooperative and to hold
It's unknown exacty-how much money was taken , but .
an election for new trustees
prosecutor James Kingsley said during the trial that it
and board of trustees."
was as much as $22,000.

ISf.AMABAD, Pakistan (API - Eighteen persons
were killed and 50 injured today in an el&lt;Jllosion in a
firecracker factory in Rawalpindi, polk'!' said.
The dead included 14 men, two women and two
children . .)Viore deaths were eXJ)&lt;icted as debris was
removed from the wrecked building. It was not immediately known what caused the el&lt;Jllosion, ;vhich
was heard as much as six miles·away.

The conquest of space

NO. 252

•

"

Response disappoints Jones

Explosion kills 50 people

'.

at y

.'

'

Death, hijuries accompany tornadoes

persons,

Weather ·

•

•

Fact sheet presented commission

Patrol probes
three wrecks
The Gallla-Melgs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
three accidents Tuesday.
Officers Investigated a
four-vehicle accident on SR 7,
four-tenths of .a mile south of
SR 218, atl0:20 a.m.
According to ihe patrol, an
auto operated by Rodney
Myers, 22, Scoi!Dwn, bad
slowed in traffic on 7.
A vehicle driven by Barton
Repass, 32, GaWpoiis, faued
ID stop and struck the Myel'"
auto In the right rear,
Following Impact, the
Repass vehicle struck a
parked auto owned by Carol
Cox, Gallipolis, which spun
around and .struck. a second
parked ,vehicle owned by
Dale Cox, Gaillpolla.
There was severe damage
to the Carol Cox auto,
moderate damage to the
Repass and Dale Cox
vehicles, slight damage wthe
Myers aulD.
Repass was cited on ll.
charge of faUure to maintain ~
an assured clear distance.
Officers mvestlgated a onevehicle accident on Roush
Lane, 100 feet west of SR 7, at
·
8 p.m.
The patrol reports an east
bound auto operated by
Minter Scharllger, 37,
Middleport, went off the right
side of the roadway and
o
rned . .
here was · moderate
damage w the vehicle. No
citation was IssUed.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle

:;tu

Egg hunt

fina1ized

Proper box use
urged by county

11 leader·"'
execu..ed

Bridge work

slated May I.

_____

'

~

••,.

�3- The Dady Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Aprtlll, !9i9

Washington'
( :lm·encc
Report B ~ J\1illcr
Not enough volunteers a r~
volunteermg for the allvolunteer Army. And many
of those who are, are
tnadequa t ely pr e pared
I&gt;esplte greatly mcreased
bcneftts. despttc genero us
bonuses,

I ·I

Donald F. Graff

': ,

Three Mile Island
By

W1th milhons o£words already devoted to the Three M1le
coming.
These must awa1t determmation of the precise cause or
cause~ of the reactor malfunctiOn and decisions as to how it
1s ~o mg to reshape the role or nuclear energy m our future,
as they s urely will
But the very a bse nce of such crucial answers at th1s
pomt ra1ses a question : What if this brush with catastrophe
had occurred not m central Pennsylvania, United States of
Amenca , but m a closed SOCiety?
We may never have a n a nswer - unless the result of
stmllar mcident should be catastrophe But we can be

''

fatrly certam that tt would not be publicized as Three M1le

in the news
TUlSA, Okla. rAP I - Country music entertainer Roy Clark
has been admitted to the Mayo Cltnic m Rochester, Mmn., for
tests and treatment of a persistent bronchlBI condition, his office here announced.
'
Tuesday's annO\lllcemenl sa1d Clark has been plagued by a
conlinumg bronchial mfection and congestion for several
weeks.
"Clark's doctors in Tulsa felt he needed severd! days of total
rest and medical supervision at Mayo's to corred the
sttualion," the statement said. "He IS expected to remain
there through this week."
Clark's manager, Jim Halsey, said the smger will be back on
stage on April 21-22 at Binghamton, N Y.

'

.
'

t

't
l

t·

'

Is land has been, or have similar public consequences .
If there is a real complamt about mfonnatlon concermng
Three M1le Is la nd, 1t ts not tn a shortage but an
overabundance of detatls. The pubhc has been inundated
w1th fa ct, often vanously mterpreted, and speculation
And tf there has been confusion, much of 1t may be

..
.
.
?I
' 'Another pnce
nse
. .... Th'IS .ts an outrage.I
sheriff!" I

we're

'

"'

6.

,,

'"
h

traced to the complexity of the nuclear generating process
Itself plus the numerous levels of not always fully

coordmated authortty - state, federal , scientific
deahng w1th and tssutng statements on the situation .

goin' to get the

'

Three Mile Island has been no coverup. What 11 will be Is

,,

Proponents of nuclear power see 1t as vmdicallon. Safety
procedures worked, justifymg the1r fa1th in the practical·

Unsettled q~Jestion: How
much radiation is too much?
EDITOR'S NOTE
Mention rad1ation and many
people think of nuclear plants
or the atom or hydrogen
bomb. But radiation is also a
constant in our lives and
bestows benefits in the fonn
of medical X-rays and other
applications. Here's a look at
the pervasive role of thiS
ambiguous force.
By ANDREW SCHNEIDER
and
KEVIN McKEAN
Associated Press Wrllen
WASHINGTON (AP) The nuclear age exploded
into popular consciousness at
Hiroshima, but· natural and
man-made radiation was
around long before the atom
bomb or reactors.
The sun and stars are
powerful emitters of X-rays
and the Earth contains many
radioactive elements.
IIi the course of a lifetime,
all people, plants and anbnals
absorb a certain 81Jl!)Wlt of
set up a constant chatter of
radiation ms1de thetr bodies.
Color television sets,
luminescent clock faces, the
granite
palaces
of
government and conunerce,
the natura] gas but:ned for
cooking -all spit radiation at
.

the people who live and work
in or around them.
It's well esiablished that
radiation carries a risk of
cancer and birth defects. The
unsetUed question is how
much radiation is too much.
ThiS controversy was kindled
anew by the accident at the
Three Mile Island nuclear
plant •In Pennsylvania
Ahd scientists note that
nsks must be weighed
against benefits. "Fractures
can be treated without X·
rays. X-rays just happen to
be a better way to do it," said
Dr. Reynold Brown of the
University of California at
San Francisco.
The total exposure of the
American public from manmade radiation sources still
has not equaled the exposure
from natural sources.
Neve-rtheless, some
perS&lt;Il§ - X-ray technicians
and rui\:Jear workers among
them - get many limes the
naturalpackground radiation
in a y~r. ·
·
Here,;jlfe the places people
absorb radiation in their dayto-day, . hves. Absorbed
radiation is measured m uruts
called fFms and mllllrems. A
milllrem is one thousandth of
a rem . ,
-Th~ average American
;

'.•

Health Review
By Dr. Lamar Miller
OU College of OsteopaJhic Medicine
'

HERNIATED DISKS
QUF.STIOIN : Whitt IS a disk and why does a herniated d1sk
cause so much trouble'
ANSWER A disk is a piece of ftrm cartilage, the conSistency of hard rubber, which separates vertebrae from one
another. II acts as a cushion or shoe~ absorber. The central
UNlTED NATIONS IAPl - Untied Nallon.• Ambassador
part of the disk , called the nucleus pulposus, ts the porliom
Andrew Young says the Academy Awards to "The Deer Hunwhich &lt;·an push out and cause the firmer outer nng lamdus
ter" and the stars of "Coming Home" were well deserved
ftbrosus l to protrude As I have discussed tn earlier eolwnns,
because "these motion pictures help to assure the political
this process of pushing out and protrudmg 1s characteristic of
feasibiltty of an aggresstve dtplomallc policy that shuns wara hernia
fare."
-J
As a person ages the disks degenerate, JUS! as our other
"The Deer Hunter,'"'about the Vietnam war, was named
liso-ues do, and as a result they become thinner and less firm .
best film at the award ceremony In I ,os Angeles Monday night.
Th1s is the reason why moot people looe some of the1r height as
they grow older
Jane Fonda and Jon Voight were named best female and male
Durmg our younger years disease, infection or trauma may
stars for their work in "Corrung Home,'' about wounded
veterans of the war.
· deprive the disk of some of its blcKtd supply This lack of
nourishment encourages degenerdlwn of the disk and makes il
Young, in a statement released by the U.S. mission Tuesday,
more prone to injury by even tnv1al trauma If we remove the
sa1d, "You can 'I have millions of people seemg this kind of f1lm
herniated portion of the disk by surgery and send it to a
and then wanting our nation to !Jttervene in wars around the
pathologist for m&gt;eroscoplc exalninalion, his er her report
world."
usually indicates degeneration There is no way It tell with abOXFORD, Ohio IAP) + Fonner Congresswoman Bella Al&gt;- solute &lt;·ertamty, though, when this degeneration IS due to
zug says she is fonrung a political orgamzalton, Women
chronirally msufficient blood supply and when recent trauma
ts the sole&lt;·ulpril
U.S.A., to give "unorganized women some clout" in the 1980
When a disk is slipped or herniated , pam will usually be
e!ecllons.
Fonned with fanner Congresswomen Yvonne Burke and , present as a result of the disk pinehnl!l or unpmging on a nerve
Patsy Mink, the organizallon Will lake aim at economic con- whtch connects with the sptne If the herniation ts severe
ditions which affect women's equality, she !lila.
enough , nerve damage can produ&lt;-e serious problems in the
Speaking at a news conference at Miami University, where
legs, resultmg In permanent weakness or even paralysis This
she gave a speech, Mrs Abzug sa1d Tuesday that such a
situatiOn may require emergency su~ery Fortunately, most
hernia,ted disks are not this &gt;evere and surgery can be postpolitical organization could force candidates to seek its support and ensure passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, poned nr even prevented with proper non...surgu·:-~ 1
management
which would forbid discrimination on the basis of sex.
QUESTION What ktncl of surgery ts done for hermaled
disks? Is it a common procedure' .
,
ANSWER · Only a small perc-.mta~e of hermaled disks need
to be operated on Ea&lt;'h year between 300,000 and 400,000 of
these surgeries are perflnmed. q'he procedure, called a
' 'laminectomy,'' involves remnvmg a portion of the bony
covering
rthe lamina I m order to gel at the portion of the disk
TIBETAN ART
,
PIPE DREAM
which
ts putftnl( pressure on the ne~e.
WORCESTER, Mass. (AP)
LITTLE COXWELL,
r.enerally this procc•dnre takes about one or two hours, oc- The exhlbition "Tibet : A England lAP) - When this
casionally !nngJ•r. II c&lt;•drtamly ts Mt wtlhoultts dangers even
Lost World, The Newark tiny village w~s finally
when perfonn!'d by careful and skillful orthopedic surgeons or
Museum Collection of connected to mam sewers,
neurosurge&lt;ms The re~ulls are not always predidable and the
Tibetan
Art
and families were so relieved that
pahent may be dis&lt;•OIIrage&lt;t when he or she still bas some
Etlmography" is on display , they threw a party for the
di:-~C'nmfnrt after s11rgery.
at the Worcester Art Museum workmen who piped th~m
QUF:STION I've' read somewhere about a new surgu"dl
through April I.
·
into the_2()th century.
pro&lt;•t•tlure
&lt;'allt•d a "micro diskel'lomy." Is this safer'
The , show features more , T)le VIllagers even baked a
ANSWER
· Nnt very many surgeons are performing this
than 200 works "representing cake to~ped with a model of a
prll&lt;'&lt;'tlurl'
yet,
hut s11me of the early reporl• sh11w ~real
every facet of Tibetan , mcchamcal digger.
prnrni~t· ht•t'aU~f" If t-\hurhm.c.: lht• operating time by 50 perl'ent
culture, from the cotton and I
Smc'l' It 11-1 pt~rfonn ed tU1der' a surgH~al rrucroscope, a mU&lt;'h
Sheepskin chupas (robes) of
Crusaders. brought bad. smallt•r inc•ision is l'l'f!Uired, ancl thereforel&lt;•ss blt.-lts lost.
the nomads to the bejeweled water from the Holy Land to
A!· wUh CllJ n~w proc edures m merhdnf?, it is m.' f'eS...~ry to
sculpture of the Buddhist be , used m the baptisms of rlt•fl'r JUdgm&lt;•QI nn1il more is knl&gt;wn alxntt the !ong-tem 1
priestS." '
rr•suJts
thelt children.

Ity of the nuclear process. •
Opponents also see Jt as vmdtcallan, a near miss with
disaster that should be taken as a warntng that from the
standpoint of safety nuclear power IS Inherently unreli-

able.
'
It is neither at the moment What 1t IS will be detennined
after the mc1dent m all 1ts complexity and the lessons
learned from 1t have been thoroughly atred - a word with
a grim double meaning in this context
And m our open soc1ety they surely will be

·
gets 105 mU!irems a year in _ Studies in Britain and the
natural background United Stales showed that a
radiation, d1v1ded about &lt;developing fetus is five to 10 No laughing matter (continued)
equally between cosmic rays, limes more sensitive to XSome people just can't tell a joke, and one.of them is
radloactive elements m the rays than an adult. For this Connecticut Judge Walter Pickett.
Earth and radioactive reason, doctors avoid taking
Judge Ptckett made the news back tn early 1978 in the
abdominal X-rays of women course of the performance of h1s offtc1al duties. On the
elements in his own body.
-Medical X-rayS can add of childbearing age except in basts of evidence that one of four men arrested in the
another 50 to 100 millirems a the first 10 days after abduction and assault of a woman had not been able to '
year. A chest X-ray, for menstruation. During this rape the victim, Pickett ordered that he not be bound over
tr1al.
example, runs about 30 period, there is less chance forWhat
made this news was not the dectsion but the
mUllrems.
that a wcman IS pregnant.
accompanying comment · " You can't blame somebody for
- Riding in a commerclBI
Doctors also have all but trying ''
.
mass
X_,-ray
jetliner adds a millirem stopped
The facetious remark was greeted with a general
every three hours from screening of healthY women absence of amusement , particularly on the part of a
cosmic rays, which are under ag~ 50 for breast number of orgamzations-and' md1vidua!s who thought the
should be made to answer for 1t.
cancer. This was based on a 1ur:jge
stronger at high altitudes.
Well, the answer has been .slow in commg, but It is ftnally
-Wakmg up to an alann 1961lssludyof62,000wllllenin here . Connecticut's ~udicial review council has taken
clock with a radium dial adds a New York health plan · disciplinary action. Ptckett has been privately censured.
10 millirems a year, but if the which showed that X-ray
Th1s is the least serious act1on which could have been
dial is pamted with screenmg was of no value m taken, not affectmg hts cont~nuance on the bench. Other
radioacll ve promethiUm prolonging life in the under-liO opllons were pubhc censure or recommendatton for
dismissal
instead the dose IS less than a group.
Orgamzations•and mdiViduals finding nothing the least
mUiirem.
Women under 50 are now
bit
humorous in the subject of rape still aren't laughing.
- F a IIou t
f r o m advised to avoid breast Xatmospherlc bomb tests rays unless they have cancer
around the globe has added symptoms or a family history
about seven militrems a year of the disease.
since 1951.
But scientific estimates of
, Granite, sandstone , therisksofradlatlon continue
cement, dry wallboard and to change. For example, it! ,
other bulldmg rna terials was only last year that twO{
often contain uranium and scientists determined that the
thorium traces. Doses are in atom bomb dropped on
Lawrence£. Lamb, M.D.
the range of a dozen Hiroshbna was more deadly
m producing long-term
milllrems a year.
-Smoking a pack and a leukemias than the lxmb at
half of c1garettes a day gives Na!lasakt
who can no lo,ger alford it.
l TnC'onvinC't&gt;d
an annual average of two
Well, what can you do about
rems to the lining of the lungs
a)C'oh!iliC'
1t' I'm sending you The
from radioactive elements in
THF. OA II V SF.NTI'NF.I
Health Letter number 1-4,
tobacco.
,
rtJSPS 145-9al)
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am Alcohol, Whisk~y, Gin,
These doses, like the doses
worried about my husband. Vodka , Rum , Wme; Beer to
at Three Mile Island where
He is a constant beer drinker. give you more information on
plant ne1ghbors probably
He drinks it like it was water what alcohol does to the body.
OF..VOTF:DTOnfP.
received less than 100
INTF.RESTOF
smokes two packs of It might help you some in copHe
rnllhrems altogether, are
1\tF.J('..Ii\.MASON ARF.A ~
c1garettes
daily. He used to ing With your husband's proROHF.RT HOEFUCH
well below the limits for
City F..dlt1•r
drink coffee upon rising in the blem Other readers who
causing obv10us ill effects.
DAVID BUSKIRK
morning and now it's only one want this issue can send 50
Advt•rtlwln~ Ma118gt'r
Today, it takes large and
Pnhh ~ ht.'fl tlrtlly exl'ept Si! turday
cup of coffee and right away cents w1th a long, stamped,
controlled
stud1es
to
hv Th•• Ohio Valh.&gt; y Pubhshm~
he switches to beer. It's be· self-addressed envelope. for i
C't•mp;lni'·Mllltunt•tllu Tnt ,
111
determine
whether
a
tween
8 to 12 cans a day 11. Send your request to me in
C'111111 St , P,.u•m•nty Ohu• 45769
particular use of radiation IS
Ru ~ mt N~ Offfn Phunt' 992· 2156
Never less than six and care of this newspaper, P.O.
F:tl!l lnlal Plwrw9m-2J57 ,
medically justified.
Box 1551,Radio City Station,
sometimes many more.
St•• 111111 cla!t'f posta,l!t• paul at
Radiologists say they avoid
Pn!nt'rHy Ohio
In the morning when he New York, NY 10019.
N.t lhm&lt;~ l at iVl' rh~m)! rt'presenunnecessary X-rays . But
In addition to being informdrives to work, he starts in
ta llvt , J.. mdnn A~;Sti('Ullts, 3101
federal regulators estimate
ed
you've got to enlist the
F.m lid Avt , Clevl!lcmd, Ohlo44115
coughmg real hard and ends
that one-tenth of the 129
S11h~1 rlrltlon rall'K Oellv t&gt;red bv
help of whatever agencies are
up
vomiting
a
whole
lot
of
li&lt;tr r wr wht rr &lt;tVHilalllt' 91'1 c:ents pt'·r
million X-rays In the U!)ited
quid He won 'I see a doctor available to you locally to see
WN•k Rv MHtr•r Ruull• wtwrl! t•arrl(lr
Slates each year are re-ahots
~t· rvl•t• tiro! avoulablt' Om• mnnth
I've begged him to go to one if you can gel your husband to
$.1 ~ Ry mall m Ohio and W Va ,
needed because of operator
but he won't. He says it's do something for himself.
Orw Vrar, m 50 S111 montmt.
error.
$14 50 Th r t•t• rnunths. $151)
Look in the yellow pages of
from his sinus dramage into
F.l!'ll wht•rt• S.12 00 yt•l:lr S1x munths
Sometimes, superfluous Xyour
telephone directory
his throat Do you think all of
$1 7 Ofl Thrt&gt;t' mr•nth~o~ , $9 00
rays are taken to protect
under
alcoholism and see
Suhst I IJIII!On pi UI' indntif•'&lt; Suntla v
that beer is good for him • Do
physicians from malpractice
Tltni"'"'C\t•ntl rwl
_r
you think he is an alcobolic~ what centers and services are
suits, radiologists say.
available to your community.
What should I do •
DEAR READER - If your If there are none because of
description is even halfway tj,Je size of your community,
I
correct, your husband is an g~t a telephone dlreMory
alcoholic. One of the awful from the nearest large city
,....---- - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , aspects about alcoholism is that you might be 'able to
that a number of them have utilize. These run the gambit
to hit rock · bottom and have from Alcoholics Ar)onyrnous
severe medical comphca• to mental health clinics. Solions or total complete finan- meone in one of these groups
cial collapse before they're will be able to give you some
wilbng to do anylhtng for pretty good adVice as to
ihemse!ves. The picture is what's possible to be 'achievcomplicated by the point that ed in your husband's case.
Sometbnes a spouse has to
many people with alcohol
and at some
problems have complete be very
denial of lllness. They think point just refuse to have to
there's nothing wrong with live with such a problem
them when, in fact, they're when the other in'dlvidual
refuses to do anything abou(
getting worse every day.
In our free society, it's dlf· lt. That's tough to do with a
ficult to make people do loved one but sometimes it's
things agamsllhelr will , even the ollly solution that's l~ft.
when It's for their own good
The alcohol and cigarette
habit are two outstanding ex·
amples . The combination of
these two habits represents
an enonnous financiallood to ·
our society.
,...._..,,II 's sometbnes said that we
get a lot of taxes from these
habits and they help to support our society. That's totally false The combined habits
create medical e)lpenses
which far exceed any taxes
that are obtained from these ·
.,._.,.'Y ....
...-..
products. Society as a whole
"Dear, what would you think of our becoming
"Looka like lhe el'IIDCh hao
has to pay for it in the fonn of
laid back?"
finally 'Jit the nilddle eJa•. 1
increased insurance costs as
well as providing direct They're aU llhonllnC their
medical support for those • 4own :walt&amp;.''

-:HEALTH '

t

1

w0 rId

Be rry S

finn

.

Robin Yount supplied a
homer and sacrifice fly as the
Brewers won lhetr home
opeJler before a crowd of
54,392.
In other AL action, the
Minnesota Twins trounced
the California Angels 8-1, the
Texas Rangers whipped the

'

the bottom of the ninth .
l'wlns 8, Angels I
Veteran Jerry Koosman
shut out CalifornlB for seven
innings in his American
League debut in the first
meeting between the TwiDS
and Angels since the Rod
Carew deal. Carew grounded
out twice and walked three
limes for California whUe
Ron Jackson hit a two-run
homer and Ken Landreaux
delivered an RBI single for
Mirmesota.
Koosman, who spent 11
seas'l!ls with the New York
Mets , outdueled Frank
Tanana, allowmg etghl hils,
walking four and striking out
five m 72-3 innings.
Rangers 5, Indians o
AI Oliver drove in three
runs with a pair of homers
into the teeth of a 38-mile-anhour wind as the as Rangers
opened their borne season
behind the seven-bit pitching
of Doyle Alexander and Jbn
Kern. Oliver lagged Rick

WISe for a solo.homer in the
ftrst inning and added a tworun shot in the third .
Blue Jays 10, White Sox 2
Bob Bailor drove in three
runs and R1ck Boselli, John
Mayberry and Dave McKay
each knocked in two while 2Gyear-&lt;lld
pitcher
Ph1!
}Juffman made a succeBSful
major leagu~ debut as
Toronto spoiled the While
Sox' home opener. Huffman
scattered seven hits m. six
mnings and allowed one run .

Braves
edge
Reds

ATLANTA (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds have MW
lost four of their first six
outings, but Red!! Manager
John McNamara says he sllll
feeti good about his team.
~ 'They're

outstanding, 11

Richard stops
Sports World Dodgers, 2-1
Today's

'

By WW Grimsley
AP Correspoodeut
Jf vou hr~ppt•n tn ~et.· a thm rnHn w1ttl a bl;wk muslat'he,
c·nllar pullP&lt;I up arouncl hts fH('t' :-;urreptitwns)y :-&gt;nt&gt;Hking mto
a rt'mnte l'ornt~r nf Vanket• Stctrhum , don 't pamc, Nn net.•d to
1

•·all the FBI.
It 's not an anar&lt;•hisl. It 's only Btlly Martm,l&lt;»kmg for a safe
spot from whi&lt;-h to watch a Yankee baseball game "
"!fee! lost, like some kmd nf an intruder,'' says the ftery onagain, off-again mana~er of New Ynrk's world baseball clutmpwn.• "I'd Ilk• to watch some games but I feel unromfortable,
likl' a bla&lt;'k &lt;'ai,&lt;'V&lt;'ry time I get near the team
"If I show up in the locker room or on the field, I am surround•d hy lht• pre~' guys, wantmg to know what gives. Then
r.eorJ!e Stc•inbrenner thinks I'm pres.•uring him It 's hard for
rnPio watrh from tht• stands People swann all over me "
The fiery , 51 -year~&gt;ld Martm 1s a man m limbo After
resigning on July 24 last season while up to his eyeballs in l"ntroversy, he was rehired dramatically ftve days later With a
dramatic electronic Sl'Oreboard announcement by owner
SleinbreMer that Martin would be bark in 1980..
II was a publk relation.. coup Billy's adnrmg fans at the OldTimers' Day game went wild Billy went into hibernation, but
nnt for lpn~
He was art•use&lt;i of belting a sportswriter in a Reno, Nev.,
bar last November and was subsequently sued for $20,000. He
showed up at spring training in Fort Lauderdale and reportedly gave the impression he felt Steinbrenner W'dS giving him
the old "l&gt;on'l-eall-us, we 'll call you" treatment Also he was
linked to another bar room brawl, never ~-ubstantlaled .
Steinbrenner was livid.
The sometimes bombastic Yankee owner said that 1f Martm
expected to return as manager he would, in effect, have to
keep his nose clean "It's a two-way bargam," George warned.
"Keep my nose clean, hell ,'' Billy says. "I'm myself+ BillY
Martin Nobody's gomg to elutnge llutl. others, all the way
baek to Babe Ruth, have lutd lhe1r scrapes. f don1 believe m
double standards "
In his interim role as scout of the Yankees' mmor league
talent and spy on ptk&lt;slble future free agents, Billy bas steered
clear of the team he gmded to Amencan League pennants in
1976and 1977 and World Series Vlt'lory in 1977 + rut notl•rgely
by chmce
"I try to watch the games on telev1ston,'' Martm says "I
can't do it. I feel like all my guts are eoming out. I have to turn
the things nff. I .em's done a great job, bull still consider 11 my
team. I've got to get baek to the dugout."
Martm showed up in Salisbury, N.C, to receive a headliner
award from the National Sportscasters and Sporfswnters
Assoc1al1on
He shrugged off suggestions that he would never be back as
Yankee mana~er, that Steinbrenner was planning to ditch
him
"I will be back," he vowed. "r.eorge bas told me too many
bmes that the job is mme m 1980 I believe him "

McNamara said Tuesday
mght after the Reds dropped
Babbitt defeated Willie a!(e 16, 110 lbs
Approxunately 700 fans atMikt- f&gt;toal , GJou:-itPr, agt•
a 6-4 contest to Atlanta.
tended amateur boxing even- Johnson of Zanesville iii the
!6, l:llllhs.
"We'll be there when It's all
ts Saturday night staged by 160 pound weight division.
D&lt;'s"lar Ktt!le, Che"lt·rhil,
over."
Other
winners
were
the Meigs Jaycees at Meigs
Junior H1gh School.
James Acree, Randy a!(e 16, 125lb.'
The Braves went ahead in
F.ddll' Banks, r.touster . age
the sixth mning on a pair of
S1x local men won their Stewart, Van W1Uford , Jbn
walks to Jeff Burroughs and
" ' respective
m a tc hes Hayes, and Larry Stewart , all 15, l:«&lt;lb.,.
Van Wilford , Pnmt•roy, a~f'
Dale Murphy, a sacrifice
highlighted by Larry Babbitt of Pomeroy.
bunt, a wild pitch that
of Racme who captured the
Following is a list of wm- 18, lil5lhs.
,JJm Hayt&gt;~, Pnmr roy, e~gt&gt;
allowed Burroughs to score,
ners with their ages and
main event trophy.
17,
IOO!hs
,
weights
,. and former Red Mike Lum's
The trophy was given in
.John Cnux, Glnm4t•r. CJJ.!('
run«:oring single off loser
memory of Delmar A
Dave Hellver, r.1ouster
1~. 100 lhs
Fred Norman.
Canaday who fought from age 10, 00 lbs ·
J
.arry
Strwf!rt
P(1m1•ro~·.
fMurphy
had lied the score
.,,. 1!121-1!127 using the ling title of
.1(-lme~ Acrt•r Pomt-'rny.
agt•
IR,
1110
lhs.
at
2-2
w1th
a home l'W1 in the
''Kid Kennedy''
age 12, 951hs.
"
LHrry RHhh1tt . RHc'im•. fl~'t'
fourth.
,John Rrunton. Glnustt•r,
"The two walks in the sixth
21. 100 lh".
ag&lt;• 14, 100 lb.,.
BOAT
definitely hurt. That changed
Doug f'luhart y. 7-'lnesville.
the complexion of the game.
\
PROTECTOR
age 14, 95lbs.
II was a b1g inning," said
Randy StPwClrt , PumPrnv.
A
c: om p r e h en s • ~v e
McNamara.
protectaon plan for boat,
agr 13, 140 lbs
&gt;I
It will take Norman "some
motor &amp; accessories .
Jeff Mt·Donald. r.t oush•r.
lime to get in the groove, he's
David E. Jenkins
agc• 12.70 lbs
had some leg problems," he
Chnl'k Stevens, IAtgan , age
Agent
wd
304 E. Main
Pomeroy , 0 . 15, 1101bs
Clnemnati scored its fll'sl
Mike Thomas, Crnnk.!wtllt•,
992 6681
"
two
runs in the opening inning
age! 5, !25lbs.
BY GREG BADJ':Y
on
a
throwing error by Frias
Bob Gauller, 7-'lnt&gt;Svil!e.
"
Three teams advanced and a passed ball. The Reds
ag~
15,
l35lbs.
,,
Monday night in the F,astern got their third run in the •
' I ERIE
Scott NIXlm, Trimble, ag&lt;'
Local Independent cage tour- eighth when Ray Knight
16, 160 lbs
INSURANCE
ney.
doubled and scored on Cesar
Joe nixon, Glouster, age
In the first game, Penns- Geronimo's single. They ,
EXCHANGE
16, 160 lbs.
boro, West Virgmia downed added their final run in the 1
Jerry !)avis, Zanesville,
Southern Methodi st of ninth.
Racine, 53-38
Phil Niekro, 1-1, whose
Rick Flemmg led the WID· second-inning single scored
ners with 12 points while Atlanta's ftrst run, was the
ATLANTA (AP) - Ken
George Washburn had 11. winner . Niekro left the game Griffey, with five hits off
Roger Wilford led the local after the seventh because of a Atlanta Braves pitching and
team with 13 points to illke pulled groin muscle.
five doubles in the first six
sconrlg honors for the mght
Jerry Royster, who has had games of the season, l!elieves
In the seeond game, Neal's seven h1ts in nine at bats in he can be a better leadoff
Insurance of Gallipobs edged the Braves' two games hitter for the Cincinnati Recta
out Homer's Hammerers of against Cincinnati, led off the than Pete Rose.
Tuppers Plains • Reedwille, Atlanta seventh with a double
"I think I'm better than
83-76. r.ary Swain was jwt off reliever Mike LaCoss. He Pete. I can do mOI'e things. I
too much for the Ham- was bunted to third by Glenn can steal bases and beat out
merers' defense as the Ga!lta Hubbard and scored on Gary infield hils, that's two things
boy popped in a bit 36 points. · Matthews' single.
right there," said the 28-yearTerry Wall added a mfly 23
Atlanta scored its final run old rlghtfielder.
For the losers , Ken Cald- in the eighth off Pedro
Griffey previously batted
well and J1m Caldwell bad 16 Borbon.
second behind Rose, who is
and 12 points, respectively
Royster, filling in at third now with the Philadelphia
In the final eonle&amp;1 of the for the injured Bob Horner, Phillies.
evening, Bob Saunders said: "I'm fortunate to be
"I feel freer at the plate. I
Qudker Stale had an easy playing . It's unfortwtate that don't have to sacrifice myself
lime of lings wtlh a 104-liOvic- Bob had to get hurt, but II unless the situation comes up.
tory over Hart 's of Racme
gave me the chance to prove Batting behind Pete, I Ulled to
When you buy any one of ftve
Mark Moyer led the winners myself.
have to move htm over, hit to
Homelite Cham Saws
with 28 points while Rod
the
right side a lot."
"I was reaily upset about
Ferguson had 27.
Griffey hit 35 and 33
bemg benched, but Pepe
f'or Hart's, Mike Roberl&lt; Frias Is a good defensive doubles the past two aea11011s.
had 12 points while John shortstop,"
continued He has his sights higher this
Salser added 11
Royster. "But I'm Jerry year.
The tournament continues Royster, and I have to look
"If I get 411 or 50 dooblea I'd
every evening this week with out f&lt;r myself. I'm trying to be satisfied," he said.
the finals to be played on win my job back. II was
H~ stole his second base of
Saturday.
terrible at third base. I've the season Tuesday night.
In Tuesday night's tour- never felt any more
"If I gel a good jwnp there
nament action, Fnnna Scien- uncomfortable in my life. I ain't nobody going to throw
tific defeated &amp;urn's Lum- was nervous aU night . Not me out," said Griffey, who
ber of Chesler, 6'1-66: POE of having been there In three managed 23 in 28 attempts
Wellston dumped Jim's r.ulf years, I was completely last season. He would have
of Pomeroy, 54-41 and uncomfortable."
liked more attempts.
Young's r,arpet of Pomeroy ·
"The reason was Joe
Frias, a notoriously weak
beat Mcindy's of Marietill, hitter, took the shortstop's ( MOI'gan) was hilling behind
76-72
job away from Royster with me. They wanted a hole (by
Jerry Mitchem was the his glove. He is hltless in 11 at keeping the flrat bueman
leading scorer for Fonna bats and has made five close to the bag) and he
with 24 points. Dennis Ward errors.
had 15 for the winners while
Tuesday's victory was the
Dennis Eichinger led first in five tries for Atlanta.
Baum'sl.umber with 29
This valuable Woodcutter's
contains
"The first one Is the
markers.
everythmg you need to keep your Homehardest. Jerry hlt the bail
In the second contest, John great," Braves Manager
lite in-top running condition: bar and chain
Royster led Wellston with 18 Bobby Cox said. "It's a lot of
oil, engine oil, felling wedge, bar cover,
points. Joe Ramsey bad 10
relief
file with holder, funnel and grease gun.
For the losers, Mark Tanne·
"Pepe had one tough ~Y.
hill had l6poinL•
We had good pitching, and we
Paring Young's In the hlt the ball hard aU night. It
finals were Miek !)av.nport was a while befcJre we 8larled
and Tlan F erguson each with getting Jlits, but even before
20 pninL&lt;. Henry Martin led then, we were hitting the ball
M&lt;•Indy's with 18 JKtinL•
to the fence, " Cox said.

..

.

..
..

Three teams
advance in
Eastern event

Griffey likes
leadoff spot
wasn 'I hltling much. That
was pretty much it."
"I had an off-year last
year . I hit 10 home runs and
had 63 runs batted in, wh1ch
isn't bad. But my average
was .288. That's not bad
either, but I'd rather stay
over my lifetime average,"
.309.

"I think he's a natural to
lead off," said Atlanta
Braves Manager Bobby Cox.
"He can hit doubles, steal
third and hit one out ooce in
awhile. I think Griffey can
pattern himself after (Lou)
Brock," of the St. Louts
Cardinals.
POI.mCAI.CARTOONS
IllS ANr.F.T .F'.~ I APl Some 100 migmal pc•litil'al rartoon draWings by Paul
Cnnrad of the f"" Angeles ,
Times will be on view
lhrnugh May 20 at the I""
Angeles County Museum of
Art
Cnnrad, a syndil'aled
editorial earloonist, has
twi&lt;'&lt;' wnn Ihe Puli1.7.er Pri&gt;e
The museum says, "Tiw
&lt;'Hrt&lt;MlnS exp!ort• the major
sol'ial anci poliht•a! •s.•nes of
thP present tlt'&lt;'etdt' cts ('ffl·

Here's where to find it

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LEBANON
LFlBANON, Ohio lAP) Crystal Pmes caught Dr's
Gold K'hlghl at the wire in a
photo finish Tuesday night to
win the $1,100 featured pace
mile m the eighth race at
I.ebanon
The winner paid $6 40, $3
and $3 The place horse paid
$.1 20 and $3 and High Wind,
third, returned $3
The~ double of Sau&lt;-y Smdy and M&lt;x&gt;nlight Truly paid
$2.1 20 and the crowd of I ,52~
he!$1 68,148

bodied in !oi lX of thi~ c•mmtrv's

1-Ia\.e ore built for )QU!

HomeHte.The Chain Saw King.

By BERT ROSENTHAL
dividends against th e
AP Sports Writer
Pirates. Rose ripped two
At 6-foo~. J .R. Richard IS doubles and a smgle 1 walked
the tallest player in the major ooce and scored ·once, while
leagues
advancmg two places on
He also is the "wildest " baseball's all-time career
Not m the sense of wild and list The two doubles tilled
crazy. Richard, deSpite h1s Rose's career total to 504,
SIZe, 1s quiet and soft spoken. putting htm ahead of Charley
But wUd in the sense of wild Gehrmger for eighth place,
phehes. Oh, is he wild!
and his four at-bats increased
Rtchard,
in
fact, his total to 10,210, passmg
established himself as . the 1'r1s Speaker for eighth place
wildest pitcher in modern on the all-lime list
baseball history, throwing a
record six wild pitches in a 2-1
victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers Tuesdliy night.
"Maybe some of them (the
Tuesday's
SIX wild pitches ) should have
Sforts Transactions
been stopped,'' Richard said
By he Assaclaled Press
HOCKEY
after his scatter-armed
World
performance against the two~
Hockev Assoctat1on •
lime National U,ague West NEW ENGLAND WHAL
champions. "But catching LE RS
Called
up
me isn 't easy sometimes" Pierre Roy , defenseman .
.
· from Springfield of the
Richard, who set a National Amen can Hockey League.
U,ague record for right- .
SOCCER
handers with 303 strikeouts
American Soccer League
last
· t
tr
t hit
CLEVELANO COBRAS Signed Dennis Almeida, mldyear, IS 00 s ong O
frequenUy . He struck out 13 fielder , and Mike Belts,
and allowed only six hlts .
forward .
The six wild pitches brolle
INDIANAPOLIS
DAREthe modern mark _ since. 1 DEVILS - Signed Kev
•
in Missey and Roberto
1900 - of f1ve set by Charles Arciniega, mldfielders . and
Wheatley of Detroit In 1912 Jan Dolinsky, forward
and equalled by Larry
COLLEGE
Cheney of Brooklyn in 1918. N:~e~L~e~ry G~o~~Nhead
John Ryan of the 1876 hockey coach.
Louisville team holda the allMANHATTAN COLLEGE
limerecordofiOwildpitches - Named J ack Power s
in one game
athletic director
'
MISSOURI -ST. Louis ' .
In other Nallonal U,ague Named Tom Bartow head
games, Philadelphia beat basketball coach.
Pittsburgh 7-3, San Francisco
N0 RT H CAR 0 l l NA
downed San Diego 4_2 CENTR_AL - .Ann ounced
Atlanta topped Clncirmatill-4: [,~~3nr~~balf'co~~~ Greene,
St. Louis whipped the
OKLAHOMA STATE Chicago Cubs 7-0, and Named Paul Hensen head
Montreal outlasted the New basketball coach.
.
TENNESSEE - Named
York Mets ~2m 14 innings. Ralph Chancey assista nt
PhilUes 7, Pirates 3
football coach.
Pete Rose who cost the
WASHBURN - Named
Phillies' $3 :i million for a Bob Chipman head basket
·
bal l coach
four-year contract during the
off-season, began paying

key figures · President r.itrter, fonner PrrsJdenL• Nixon
amt Fnrd, Califnrnia Gcw

AFFO.RDABLE
ECONOMICAL
DRIVING

..

\

Cleveland lnd1ans 1&gt;-o, the
Toronto Blue Jays crushed
the Chicago White Sox IG-2
and the SeatUe Mariners
downed the Oakland A's 4-1.
The Detroit-Kansas City
game was rained out.
Yankees 7, Orioles 6
Reggie Jackson's tw()-l"lln
pinch homer m the eighth
inning and a solo blast by
Graig Nettles rallied New
York after the Yankees blew
a 3-11 lead in the seventh
inning. Jackson connected off
rook1e reliever Sammy
Stewart, silcmg an oppositefield drive Into the left-field
bleachers following a pinch
singte by Jay Johnstone.
Nettles, who singled and
scored on a triple by Bucky
Dent in the fifth and singled
home one of two New York
runs in the sixth, then
homered for a 6-4 lead.
Thurman Munson s1ng!ed
home what proved to be the
winnmg run in the ninth after
Dent opened w1th a double.
The Orioles scored twice in

700 attend boxing events

open to some debate

'

radioacbve chemicals 1that

Names •••

Don Grall

Isla nd crists. the ftnal ones ma y stt11 be a long time in

h a~ g rown conside rabl y
~ orty two mtlhon dollars has

the

By HERS&lt;.:HELNISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Not only is Mike Caldwell
after Ron Guidry's Cy Young
Award, It looks like he's out to
make peqpie forget Guidry as
well.
The Milwaukee left-bander,
nmnerup to Guidry in last
year's Cy Young voting,
hurled a five-bitter Tuesday
and stretched his string of
scoreless innings to 17 as the
Brewers blanked the Boston
Red Sox 3-11.
Meanwhile, Guidry also
was stalled to a 3-11 lead but he
and New York relief ace Rich
Gclssage failed to hold it,
although the Yankees rallied
to rup the Baltbnore Orioles 7-

COMMENTARY
•

1

problems besettmg the all
'oluntecr i\nny. 'l lte cost of
attra€\ mg new and quahftcd
personnel for our mU1tary

been b"dgeted m 1980 alone,
JUst for recruttmg purposes
military'ts fatlmg to meet tis t\t present. 56 cents of every
manpower needs
dollar expend ed for our
1lte mcreasmg dtfftculties nuhtary IS spent for perbcmg expenenccd by the all- sonnel needs as compared to
volunteer Army has sparked 23 cents of every dollar bcmg
consaderable dascussion here spent by the Soviets for the
m Washtngton as to what to sa me pu rpose Stated In
do about 1t Do we admtt the anoth er way . this leaves the
volunteer anny concept has Soviets 77 percent of thetr
been a failure and return to m1hlary budget to use for the
the draft ~ e abandoned m development and purchase of
1973'
Do we broaden weapons systems, Y.hile we
the draft beyond our tr) to keep pace with but 44
to percent of our budget bemg
military
needs
some form of national vouth expended for the same
system, wherem all people purpose.
11hen they reach the age of
Another factor workmg to
etghteen become sUbJect to undermmcthc viability of the
some fonn of mandatory all-volunteer Army IS our
service to their country, be it Nahan's
demographics.
m a soc1al service position or Because of a dramatic drop
in a military capactty ' Or do in births m the last two
we stmply remstttute the decades. we arc laced With a
selective serv1ce system to rap1dly declining manpower
register all our young people pool from \\hlch to attract
when the~ reach the age of volunteers The pool of young
eight een, so that in the event men of pnme mihtary age
of the need for mobUlZatton, 117-211 reached a peak of 10.8
we w11l have an tdentlfled milhon last year and has
pool of personnel to draw begun shrmkmg . Studies by
from
the Department of Army
Right now our Se!ect1ve est1n1ate that by 1991 , the pool
Serv1ce System IS essentially will ha vc shrunk 'by 19 petm moth balls and has few full cent to 8 8 rnllhon
lime employees. II IS
As my colleague Congressestunated that m tune of man Paul McCloske y of
cr1sis it would take more than !;ahfornla pomted up at the
90 days to produce the first lime he introduced his
100,000 inductees for service. leglslatlOn callmg for the
Our military reserve force ts National Youth Service
not m much better shape.
System, that I made
If the Ready Reserve "ere refer ence to ea rlier, " A
activated tomorrow we would combat ready army is
find that they would be far perhaps the first responfrom ready. Army Cb1ef of Sibility of the Congress. We
Staff, General Bernard should never forget that the
Rogers, warns that the prunary purpose behind our
number of reservtsts now own &lt;.:onstitution was to g1ve
available would be " com· the power to the Congress to
p!etely madequate" 1f war raise an /lnny and prov1de
broke out Present Army for a Navy ."
estbnates indicate a need for
If the army we hav~ is to be
729,000 men in the Ready an effective and ready army,
Reserve. AI present the 11 is beeommg increasingly
actual strength is only apparent that we are going to
182,000.
have to take steps to insure
Ashrinking reserve force is 1ts future
only one of the many
enlist ment

I(

Caldwell blanks ·Red Sox, 3-0

•

!

2_ The Dally Sentinel Mtddleport-Pomeroy. o. Wednesda)', Apili 1./r'

"You' ll Ltke Our Quality WAY of Doing Busint.s s"

9?2 5142
Ope"

'I

GMC Financing
F.v~nlngs unlll6 . ~~

Ills o

,

"'

POMEROY
Sal.

Pickens Hardware
. MASON, W. VA.

�•

... :··

1- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, Apnl IJ , 1!179

1979
·::

•,,

·: .

Bird seeking $6 million, six year contract

-.

Ry IJICK RRAUOF.

AP Sports Writt•r
fAP1 - lnd1an&lt;t
state star Larry - R1rn apparently wanl• to be the
highest paid player in
Na tiOn a l
Ba ske tball
A'"or1allon history. ask in~ a
$6 million, six-year r1mlr:H't
from the Roston Celtil'S
The opemng salvo m the
contract talks was fire&lt;!
Tuesday by Biro's Rostonbased agent, Bob Woolf, who
met for three hours w1th
Celtics President Red Auerbach.
The team made a eounter
offer, believed !o be abrut
$500,000 per year, but Auerbach wouldn 't comment He
RO.~TON

- :-:Hit'!' 'rm•
rlut S»Y tht· twn
Hpflrt," whih.• Wnulf h•JTIWd
tht• f.!&lt;~ p "suhstomhal. ''

R(llh ~ir1t•s ~iW Rini wants a
s1x-year l'ontrHct, rmcl tc1lk~
w1ll n·~11mt' Thursr!t~y
. Woolf wnulrl neither &lt;'&lt;m finn nor deny a rt'quest for $1

m•lhon ['ler yt-ar
HP said Oclvid Thnmpson of
thf&gt; Denver Nuggt·t~ 1s tht•
highest Jlllld NRA pla)'er, at
$1100,000 per seastOI , adding,
"If you were starting an NRA
team, who would you rattwr
have, Tompson nrRird'''

The agent said Rird himself "doesn't know what ht•
wants That's why he hired
me - to makr sur• he,gets a
fair rontract for som'eont&gt; of

hi" !'fal un• .
Tht• Ci •ltit'' 211-S~ thiS
~t·a.son . nt•t•d R1r11 h;ullv .
WfNllf S~tu l Aut• rt~wh enuillt•rt•d 1hat Rird nt&gt;t•rls Rnstnn
ht•cttUSt', " Nn nnr will pay
him 1f ht• dnt•!-tn't play. Ht•'s a
gn•ttt plttyrr, but wt•'ll
O[ll.•rah• fw1thout him 1 We 'vr
bet-n m hmnm•ss 3.1 y(•ttrs "
Aut'rbat•h acld"l he will
begm making player trades
whl'n Lhe NRA playoff• ~ml. if
nnt sooner
Hour s after Harrv
Mangurian hN•ttml• solt
(lWnt'r of the Celhrs, buyin~
out J»&gt;rlner John Y Rrown. a
Kentut'ky
gubernatorial
hopeful , Anerbat•h sa1d,
" No.t nothm~ ran Sidetrack

mt•

W l''l't'

on our wm·.

Thm ~!' cu·4• J'Utn ~! hl hP 1Hkt:n
('fi r&lt;' of.''

uf

H nt•w prid for .l ohn
H&lt;~vlit•l'k dunnf! lht• NRA WHr

R(lskt&gt;lhaU Asr-;O&lt;'Iiillun
41
Wt• w~nt to J.!t•t to thP pnmt
nf a final nrfrr St:Km." Wnnlf

with th•· &lt;lt•fun!'l Ament·an

jumnr.

8

as manager after last season.
Lurn, who batted .'lf&gt;7 w1th
tile Reds last season, turned
down a $1 million, three-year
offer to play in,Japan in order
to return to the Braves,
where he played before
commg to Cincinnab m 1976.
Lurn said that Anderson
never explained why he
wasn't used more.
"I can't remember the last
time Sparky S31d anything to

(

J

s.c hedule on April 21st
.i~ rr&lt;soN

- One nf
~m1lh1•m Ohit1 '~ mn!-1 pnpulur
sprin~&lt;tim r t•vent". lht' l~th
~mmu1l
.T ;.u·k~wn
Trnut
Ft•HtlvHl ttl HMrun t~rtown

nowscewb.Y
they won on tiiO!

T~kt• 1c.: c.:c·ht•dult'tl for

SHtnr~

Now you kno\'o who the Academy of Motion Pictun."S

&lt;lay, Aprll2J.

Arts and Scit&gt;nct&gt;S ptckro &lt;~s Btost Ptctuw, ~~Actor,
Best Actr~:ss , lk-st Dm..&gt;chn-:md all the rest,
Bu t how many ofth('Jt c h 01c~s do you agree Wi th )
And how man) of those p1ctures have you actually seen?
HBO s u bsc n ~rs ca n walch many of thE&gt; very movtes
and slars you saw win th e~r Oscars 'fuu'U be abll.' to
enJOY the ones you nusSt·d- and, tf you wa nt. toSC('ondguess th~ Acadrmv voters 1
What's mon.· m·the months to come, you' ll S(!(' most
of what wtll turn out to be next year's nommees and
wmners Arrd yo~ 'l/5(t' tllt'lll tl // Jm£111 Atuf unm t rrrupt~ 1
I low much w11l 11 oost1 incredtbly httle in fact, a
whole month ofHBO costs about thl' sa ml' as two ~·

Tht• ilaylnnJ! t•vc•nt ,!.i letrlo.: etl
7 Cl .rn . ~tnd t'lmtnnwd until 4

p.m. Co-Chairman Kt•ith
Wllnlmn ttnd Tclrn Ptorr'V ~met
a &lt;'nmplt-t&lt;• an&lt;! wt•ll-ruitntlNI
prnl!r'U m of ~H'li\•tth•!' 1-tntt
/'it' n'Wl·~ 1-!rt' plHnm•rt fnr tht•
t•ntlrt• fMmJly
Httmmc•rtmvn T.Cikt&gt;. i'l 210~
;wn• hody nf wrttt•r. · j ~ c•on~i dt•rt&gt;d nn1• of Oh141 't-: ht•.ro:t
f1~hmg IHkt·~. Tht• Oh1n
Dt•part lnen t nf Natural
Rt•snun·t•s will stn&lt;"k tht• lrtkP
with !l,OOO rainhow trout immP clia~l'l y
priclr to thP
fl'!-'tJvnl ·
Tht•rr w1l1 ht' drttWJ n J.!~
thrnnJ.! Iwut thP clilY fnr C'l
VH fit•ly nf rrt7.t'~ dnnHh'tf hy

pie go1ng tOone movte 1

THU£'5 ~FOil IVDYOHIE
Ewn tf someone tn your famil y doesn' t hke moVIes
(unhkely as that may be•), there's still plenty for them to
watch on HBO
Exdusrve nightclub acts, fo r msta nce- (ust as they're
seen 1n the great cntert.un ment cap1tals of the world
And sports program!! that can I be seen anywhere else
Plus "Upclust'" mlcTV tl'WS with top-sta rs And new
programs on fads , fashton, and consumer tssues
GrT HIO- AND SN/1

Cable Subtcrlben cu bave HBO bulalled
lor juat $211.110.
Noa Cable Subtcrlben cu have botb
Cable and HBO hlltalled for just pe,oo.
Order wltb tbe coupon below llld

JHck~on

e~ rt•et

nwn·hHnt~

Prl7.t't' tn hP ~' I Vi;'n indmh•
hnat~ . rud~ and rt•tol~ . tac•kiP

hnx.-~. fi ~hlnf.! suppli~·!-1 &lt;-~net
mort.•.
ThP t-rout fpstiv:tl is phm-

,u•.

nt"tl

ftl'

H

''whol~

outing Arran~(·~
ment!&lt;: httVr bren rrwdr for
pe~rk mg n-frr~tunt&gt;nt~ and
s&lt;th•. nf bait. TiwrP will ht• a
fir "t f-1111 stCltHJn cmd fi shin ~
lirPnst'!' will ht• fur sa)(• rstatt•
1:-~w rf'qmrt•s N 'l'rynnt• nvrr
Jj; to hAvt• a valitl fi~ing

hy

r-----------------------------------------------1
1
So•n&lt;l ln
1
tnl•y'

1

) Yes, I want

N&lt;'lme

Home Box Offa
( ) I'm not a cable subsmbrr,
so Rgn m ~· up fo r both
HBO and Cable 1V

I
AFFILIATE NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE NU MBER

It

I

1\ddn.'S

C• ty
Ph one

..

I

I
I
I

Stille_ _ Zi p

L -------- -- ------------------------------------- ~

Qn~tlity f'Oitlf'.~

II

'·~

..

CRISPY

· -· ~ENlUCKY
FRI_ED CHICKEN

'

CRCM'S

FAMILY RESTAURANT

t: ...,.... PAlradl.. of Values
Great Collection Misses'

'·Easter'Paradeof

992-5432
Pomeroy, 0 •

CANDY FIUED

' -

Select

a

decorated

~

Easter Basket to delight

misses and half sizes. At Stiffler's
buy fashion at budgel prices.

Make a bee line at Stiff-

ler's. Great select•on

$}99
...,

HEARTY HOME

'

RC COLA
8 PAK 16 OZ.

99~

I
I

popular two piece pant suit

\'

tops wtth

___J

for misses. juniors and the larger

.,- --

- --v-- .

---r

,•,.

. , E4!ster Paradeof .Values
' to. ,, ' Spring
. and Easter

~I

•

Easter Parade Values
l;adies' Name Brand
Spring and Easter

FOOTWEAR
Smart new styles for Spring and
: Eastern Dress, casua l and spqrt

Perfect for all your -casual styles
Choose from our wide select1on

. slyles budget priced at Stiffler's

·, Shop now and save Spring ~ashlon
values

Spring Fashion Volues.

Price~ From

sgc

Priced Fro!'!

$1499~":.

~•..:::~.~···~-~~,,::;, ::~,,,;,~·: : ,:;,,,,,,,~''*";.:,.:;~:,.;,.;~;~~...?:,.t.,,l~~~·-;,.,,;~~--~..~·:&lt;.&lt;&lt;~*~"«'·'''· &gt;*~~~~~~~,~~~:::·.&lt;·«·;.~,~''"~»~:~,~~'~&lt;~,~~i~~~~~f~~,~~,,0;,;,,~,.~.,~.:~..· :~~~~'' ' ' 'l:«~'''''~~~-~J·:i·0~'"~~3&lt;~~~'~'''~~~'~::~,,,
,,,~,,,,«,~;:;,,,~,,,,~,,~~&lt;:~
. ,·:,:·:

'

',•

'•

Easter Parade of Values
Spring Collection!
Name Brand Children's

Easter
of Vah,111s
Infants' and Chlld~en's
Spring and Eilsler

SPORTSWEAR

•'

'

'•

Special group of peri-na·press

dreSi shirts In white, solid
colors

and fancy patter11s

Slzes·14'h to 11 Shop Stiff ler's

Forget pt.Jckering, forever . Grut

and save

filling !Mns!,

Budget Priced

Budget Priced

::.
Easter Parade of Values ·
Men's Knit

·:.

:··
Easter Parade of Values
Ladies' Popular
Colorful Folding

Easter P1rMie of Values

Men

Boys' Popular
Fruit ofthe LOom

-UNDERWEAR
Tee Shirts
lto , gg
Pkg. 4•

UMBRELLAS

UNDEKW~R

'3.99

lto

$3 99

Jto
Pkg.
•
llroadcloth Shorts
lto
Pkg.

Pkg •

Priced From

3to ,

Pkg.

BOSTON BRAND ,
~AL MD.DRESS
A great spring and Easter

selecllon of mell's Boston
brand belts In your choice
of styles and fashion colors.

Choose from IM!her and
.eather-llke vinyl.

$319

'
Budget Priced

$3if
YOUR CHOICE!
BOYS' FASHION

MEN'S SPRING
SHORT sWYE

KNIT SHIRTS

KNIT SHillS

Big selection of now aprlng

Boyt' campus short sleeve
fashion knit shirts In the
newest spring styles and
colors. Sizes 8 to 18.
'

stylea and colors In fashion

knlll. Plockot · collor and
slyles, crew neck and Vneck . Men's sizes.
'

Priced From

Priced From

$3·50:~:
)•

fils 10 to 13.

Parade of Values

Priced From
And
Up

Men's high bulk acrylic
.. and nylon stretch socks In
• assorted colors . 01e size

Tee Shirts

BELTS

of men s ready fled and
four In hand neck ties .
Your cho1ce of fashion
colors and fancy paHerns.
Spring fashion values.

SOCKS.

Lycra-1pandex reinforced leg
openings on Br iefs tor beller
com tori
Knit Briefs

3to
Pkg.
Athletic Shirts

.:·

NYLON ACRYLIC

Famous Fruit of the Loom
unconditionally
guaranteed

Knit Bo-iefs

.CiREAT FOR
THOSE APRIL
,SHOWERS

FASHION
NECK TIES

I,

DRESS SHIRTS

IU••

And
Up

· Easter Parade of Values
Super Selection

00

Easter Parade of Values
Men's Sport Sleeve
Perm Press

Aut.~lck JMnil Men's famous .' ·.'
Maverick
Denim leans ore now
Aulomatlckl:
Forget shrinking. Forget wrinkling .

Pricect From

VAUEY BEU

CLAIRON

,..,

DENIM ·. JEANS

So lovely! Stiffler's collection of
lnfanls and children's now spring
and Easter dresses will make any
IIIJie girl looK so special

Busler Brown and

\

'

Easter Parade of Values
. ' ~n's Rugged
' 'Maverick Blue

DRESSES

And
Up

Monte

I

EKtra, P~~p,de of Values
Ladies' Stylish
New Spring

See Sllffler' s new spring
totlectlon. Cool and comfortable

Priced From

$1Q99~pd

" •

SANDALS

colors and prints just right
you. Spring Fashion
Value!

PriceC! From

G•ve101ay every day.
Drawing at 4 o'clock p.m.
every day. ~New Winners
every day. Register every
day. All names will be in a
big drawing on April 14 for
an Easter basket and a
tavern ham. Thru April
19th milk. bread, wieners,
potato chips, and bacon
are a few of the everyday
•tems to be given away.

(

::

,..•

for

Priced From

'

.

selection Is large ... the

... budget pri ces - al al Sllffler's.

...

.. :··

That perfect extra ... the
fancy handkerchief . The

Dr~s coats for the llt11e girl 1n
your life . You are sure to find just .
what you want to complete that '
special Spring or Easter outfit.
Spring fashion va lue!

'"

:

HANDKERCHIEFS

COATS

"Where only lhe besl food is good enough" .
'

09

Values to S5.99. Save now

Priced From

Easter Parade of Values
Great SelectiOn
Ladies' Fancy

CHILDREN'S DRESS

\
'

Large group Ladl es' Better Kn1t

Slacks, asst. patterns and colors

woman

:: "·::

COnAGE
·CHEESE
24 oz.
., 09

..

wardrobe . Fabrics, styles,

colors ... all new at Stiffler's
Shop now and save.

Stiffler's new spring coltect!Ofl

match tno or contrast•ng

KNIT SLACKS

Stiffler' s new spring fashion
blouse$ will a dd · to any

you'll get. at Stiffler's' Slyles,

Includes

Eas&gt;ter Pi.,radi~&gt;of Values
Your Choice Misses'
Values to $5.99
New Spring Fashion

$399~:

TIDE..................... ~ ..............:.....~~-~?... ~~: $399 CHERRY PIE FILLING .....~~:.. ~~~.~i~·i·· ~~~ sl EVAPORATED MILK .........~~~~~-~........... 3P1
CRISCO ................. :.................~...........~.~.~~ ... s1 99 FOLGERS INST. COFFEE..~:~~~.~ ....:... .'.~.~~:. s379 TOWN HOUSE CRACKERS.................~~: .. 6!r
:.:~:. 9!r RIVAL DOG.FOOD......................... ~!:;.-. 7P100
WHOLE KERNEL CORN .............!?!.•. 3/sloo DOMINO SUGAR ...................................
or mOre
..

Parade of

BLOUSES

Priced From

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT."'

r o1

2
..

Easter

Easter Parade of Values
Misses' Solid and Fancy
Spring and Easter

colors, fabrics ... all the latest In

pa nt s Shop et"'r ly fo r bes t se lec tion .

17rT\'Io.

THANK

11
• ..

our

$

If It"s lops you wanl. It's lops

A sprin9 br lghl coll ection

FAMILY SIZE

CJ n ythl n~

fOf" sport
... for fun
for dress!
Coats brighten spring
Layaway now at Stiffler's
March In and save during

FASHION TOPS

Stiffler' s spring collection of the ever

I

At Bob Evans Steak House, we
serve a rot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, hot baked
biscuits , fresh farm 'eggs, and all the
·good things t~ at go with Bob Evan's· '
F. arms country fresh Sausage.
So stop on in on your way to work.
And do it right for breakfast.

CARROTS
' 2b~gs 4!r

Pius deposit
E"joy a Free Drink
of RC when you register .

cfo

coats tor spring

I

SMOKED JOWL ............................................:.'.~:.~~~.~~~- s1.39
""~'
Center
$
End .
PORK CHOPS
........ ~ ...........~~!......~.~; 1.29 .......~~!.!~: .. s1.19
TEl
A "' "'•
ROUND S . K.:.. :.:.:_.. :.. :: ......................................~~-. s1.69
•
SLAB BACON........................ ~::~~-~~!1.- 99~ ........ :~~~~... ~.~: .. 894
TASTEE
'BOLOGNA
:
........................................
~.~?:..5.':~.~~. s1.69
SLICED
BOILED HAP.1 ..........................................................~?.-..s1.89

CLOSED
SUNDAYS

An ywh er e,

Priced From

and Extra Sizes

PANT SUITS

.,•
••

AWAY FROM HOME.

'
Phebe wants to thank all her customers for making her business successful for 10
years by offenng extra special buys for the week of Thursday, April 12 thru
Thursday, April 19, 1979.

9:00!117:00
Saturday 9:00-9 :00

COATS

Easter coats Meet or ao

Values!

Easter Parade of Values
Juniors'- Misses'

Easter Parade of Values
Ladies' Two Piece
Polyester Doubleknlt

RACINE FOOD MARKET

1

Priced From

•'

Priced From

And
Up

Health Tex -

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··

Priced From

Priced 'F rom

more! The selection Is great .. . the
styles the latest- easy care fabrics

• ' I I &gt; ....

(rom!:? 59

· Easter Parade of
Misses New
Spring and Easter

·:· great looks ot Spring and
Easter are at Stiffler's today•
·:: COme and choose from
·,:.:,: famous name brand sports
wear . .. You'll roar with
::· pleasure at our' low budget
:~: prices!

Oulstanding Collection! Spring Is

the k1dd1es at Easter time.

!

,__. \&gt;

Nationally advertised bras

Pf'iced From

Spring Fashion Valuesl The

here and Easter Is cOming Stiffler's
carries the dress for you to wear In
the :• easter Parade! " Junior's,

f illed

I.

1

Pnced From

· SPORTSWEAR

DRESSES

beauti f ull y

candy

I

PHEBE'S STO~E

•

Easter Parade of Values
Misses' Name Brand
Spring and Easter

SPRING AND EASTER

EASTER
BASKETS

'I

Thursday, Aprll12 lllrough April 19
·we Gladly Accepi,Fod. Food Slamp•
Monday.thru Friday

and ~;wdtes .. a great
selec t•on . Girdles pciced

..

~

first .

L~-~:~~~~~::

va lues

slips '" brands you know
af)d trust . All are easy care
and easy on your budget

full slips -

,

f

M~.•ilf·"' County lrht'rt•

Owned and Operated by

to

which

stylish half

unQergarment needs
ha s
th eml
Sti ffl er's

EXTRA

•

•'
111

many

your

Ladies' fancy and tailored

'

LILLIES · TULIPS-HYACINTH·
BEGONIAS-BASKETS &amp; MANY OTHERS
Olflt•tcl ~tr•~'rlhomw

So

GIRDLES

What eve r

..'

.;i

• nwm•d Hnd lcl&lt;•ah'tl ju~t w(·~t
of .Y~wksnn nn l'nnntv rnarl10
MHrk tlnwn Apr1l ?t nn ynur
n~lt•r~elur und phm tn hring
tht• fHmi ly for et wnnclt•rftll

I
I

Name Brand
Bras and

,,.••

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

Thr ft~tivH I il-l sponson&gt;rl
hy tht• Jackson Chamber of
rnmmt•rr P wi th tht•
&lt;'fl(l[Wrat ](ln nf th~ dty of
.Jr~rksnn , .Jay('t'PS and lht&gt;
.&lt;tate department of natun1l
rP.sonn•rR Ham mrrtnwn
J.rtkP rmd prtrk is mnni(•Jp;~lly

~ Easter Flowers

Your Choice
Full and Half

$100And
Up

And
Up

''

Super se l e&lt;: t1on of spring

·:·.·

of Values

SUPS

and summer handbags .
Sport casual and dress
handbags ... the choice is
yours All sprtng fcosh1on

Priced From

"

·.· :·:·.·
Parade of Values

HANDBAGS

choose. Shop now and save.

Priced From
•

.·

Ladies' New
Spring - Summer

scart 'headquarters
from

:·: ··::·:·

''

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TR,Y OUR

.

I

are

accessory for your purse or
handbag.

me that they'd like to keep
me in some capacity alter
I'm done playing," Lum said.
"Security ... it's a good
feeling ."
Lum played nine years with
Atlanta before going to
Cincinnati. Hls belt season
came in 1973 whim he batted
•294 with 82 nms batted in.

:·..
Parade of

Dress up any outf1t
Scarves are " In " this
season and Stiffler's 1s your

certain to find i ust the right

STE!!..K ·HOUSE

ramping IS not fll'rmitt&lt;•il
at Hammer! own I 01ke it,Pif,
hut lhl'rr &lt;l ft' nnnwrmL&lt;;
private C'Hmpgronnds and
I .akP Alma ... {I. park near-

You

.•.

SCARVES

.

accessories

ev-a.

llt•f'flnst•l
PH·nic f~un lilw~ a rt•
HVH iht hlt• t'lnd lht&gt;rt• IS
rJ r:~ygruund t•quipiTK•nl fnr
~&lt;mHih•r &lt;'hJhlrt'n.

.

Just arrived! You must see
this s pecial group of purse

·:

,-......J..:---.-..---··-------1

PolntVIew Cable TV 675-3391 or 992-2505

Hf ttw lf-l• k""n

Trout FPstJval

fhty1nng

... , ..~~~D GREENH~~~~.

I
I
I

~prlnl' nutm~,

frtmllv"

me at all," Lum said. "Not
hello, how are you. He'd walk
right by me."
!.urn. admitted that the
Reds were a baseball team
which had good players
which made it difficult to
break into tile starting lineup.:
" But
when
(Cesar)
Geronimo was hurting last
year, I played two weeks ...
then Gerorumo was put back
in the lineup still hurting.
Geronimo and I talked about
1t. He was hurting.
"I was wasting my career
in Cincinnati. I'd get 130 or
140 at-bats That 's not enough
to do anything."
It was kind of a reunion for
Lurn · Monday when his old
Reds' teammates came to
town to play the Braves. In
Atlanta, Lum is the Braves'
first baseman. He has a
regular job and a future.
"They have expressed to

New Spring
Ladies' Fashion

'

· Lum now Brave regular - : - - - - - - - - - -

R1r1! tht•nll't! lmhana St.atr tn
tht• NCAA finals. wmmn~
ATLANTA (AP) - Mike
player-ol-tht'·Y&lt;''" honorx. If
Rnstnn t•an 'I Sign th&lt;• frcneh Lum says he was never told
1 .1ck~ lnd , natlvt• by the NRA
why he didn't play more when
.June draft. ht• f!tws b~U'k in
he was with the Cincinnati
tht• lalt•nt piMII.
Reds.
w,.,lf imt1ally mfuna!t•tl
Now, the answer doesn't
Auerbaeh w1th a !111d:May really matter since he's back
signing deadhnr, but the with the AUanta Braves.
aJ,!ent said lht-rt• Wt&gt;rr no
In fact, the 33-year-&lt;Jld
outiielder.first baseman had
tdtimatums 'Ptlr" l"Y·
W"JII and Auerh•u·h an• already made up his mind to
old rtdve~ar:ies, stt•rrurung · become a free agent when the
from thr Hgent 1S ncgolit~linn/'i Reds fired Sparky Anderson
•

Special Group
Ladies' Pwse

ACCESSORIES

ThP rt• ltll'' &lt;lr,lft"l R1 rtl
No I IHst yl'ar &lt;Hi

Jackson Trout Festival

You've seen Who
theOscan-.

"Rinl'~

Parade of V•lues

Parllde of Viii lues

'

badly do the Celtics want
H1rd""

in an nnuuCil
l'i ltn;tt wn. Rnston is his f1rst
ehoi&lt;•t• Thr qu estion is, how
~id .

•.·

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And
Up

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�6 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W•'&lt;lr\esday , April It , 1979
;:. :. ~ .

Kern paces Texas win

: :·:!
"&lt;" II
' '&gt;I

'

"'

Tt·x~ ' , AP &gt;
TP.XH~ RHnl!t'N'

ARlJN&lt;iTON.
'- When thr

;'"".
~

•••
r

.,
e.
....
~

'

•
•"
',, !

-,,
•

..••

obtained reli•l pitc·hern Jim
Kern from th• a:It•veland Indians and Sparky Lyle frnm
Thursday, April12

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede
. Osol'

~ q'our

·
~ 'Birthday

~,u..

April 12. 1979
Expect many new associations
to be made this coming year

which could play a promineot
role in your affairs . Be ciutlous, however , to check out

th(' Nt•w Vc• rk Vunk l't'S inlh"

WCirOillJ! nttJ~~
wt&gt;nlup ttrnnnd 1ht• i\Jnt'rica"n
. 1,('(-lg'llt' .
And il w:1s J&lt;prn's brilliant
four nnd lwo-thirc!s innings of
four-hit relit•f. l'ollplt•d with
AI Olivt&gt;r's twn hnmf' nms into~ :l8 mil&lt;•-an-hnur g~le , !hill
snuffed nul !ht• Indians 5.{1
Tuesday night in th l'
Ran~er~' hc•mt• Clflt'nt•r .
" ThiB is ~n · imprnvrd
R•mg&lt;•r dub Jxot·au~e they
haw l'l'lief pitching for the
first lim(• t•vrr," sflici
Cleveland third baseman
Toby Harrah, who spent all
.his C'art&gt;t'r at Tt&gt;xas and
Washjnl{ton lx-fore lx-ing
traded in the off-srason. ''I

strangers ' credentials before

entering ~to business deals.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Put
oft all decision-making unlll
another day . What you agree to
today may n.ot be to your best
advantage in the long run . Find
out more about yourself by
sending lor your new Astra-

Graph Leiter lhal begins with
your birthday . Mail S1 for Bach
to Astro·Graph, P.O. "sox 489,
Radio City Station , N.Y. 100t9.
Be sure to specify birth sign.

TAURUS (April 2D-May 20)
you should have

Some thi ng

taken care o! today will be
brushe d aside . This will leave
someone very disappointed
and even a bit angry .

GEMINI (May 2t-June 20) Avoid
soc ializing with one who
co mes on to o strong in order to
Impress others . This person

will cosl you a lot ot mQney for
a crummy time.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) No
home Is big enough for two

st rong-willed chiefs . Someone
will ha'o'e to gLve a little ground
11 harmony Is to prevail.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You
might be able to get your polnls
across, but that doesn •t mean
the 'l 'll be well received . t1ow
you present your case will

de lermine lhe outcome.
~IRGO (Aug . 23-Sopl. 22) Be on

guard, or so ~e kind of financial
loss co uld be . sulfered today
through a friend, or even
thro ugh a group with which
you' re involved.

off-~t'c-tSOil,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Brace yoursel f today. There 'll
be certain responsibilities that

hi~ fir~t

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...__

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Wednesday's Game

Atlanta at Houston · ~ .
Friday's Game ·
Houston at Atlanta

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Baseball AI A Glance

By The Associa1ed Press

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST,
W.--L. Pet. GB
St . Louis
3 0 1.000

ttt -IJ.:tt. "I lwt-trd

thn.c.:t• fans and wnntt'&lt;l tn du
~lJiit•tirit!

for tht•m . It's nnt• ur
my hi~~''"' thrill". · T'rn
d&lt;'finilely not a IWW&lt;'r hiller
allhou~h I. could ht• if I cho-.•

1\'\ontreal
New York

essar.y ,

New York I Figueroa Q. l) at
Bartimore (Pat'mer t'-01. (n)
. Detroit (Billingham 0-01 at
~ansas

In)

City (leOnard 1-0).

,

· Winner vs. San Antonio .

·'

.

Cleveland (Wi lkins 0-0l at
Texas Jenk ins I·OL (n}

' ·Atlanta-HOuston winner vs .

Western Cdnierence
Tuesday's Gt,me

WaShington .

·----~llljll-illiiiil.
TRY ou
· R

Wes1erri Conference .
Phoenix- Portland winner

Denver 110. Los Angeles 105
Friday '.s Game

EXTRA
CRISPY

vs. Kansas City.
Denver-LosAngeles winner

Denver at Los Ang eles
Sund~y's Game
·
los Angeles a t Denver' i r

vs . Seattle .

1n

KENlUQ(Y
FRIED CHICKEN

necessary.

3 1 .750

21 .6671
1 2 .333 '2

·R eds notes

.,

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•, '

..

:·,.

ihe Cincinnati Hell'' lrHvelmg pa.rty to mtss a bus on a
roaq trip this. .b as•ball
ATLANTA (API. _ Guess $eason?
w.J:!o .as the ftrst member of
It w•s Ooug Rureman, tht•
Nal1onal · League dub 's
~llilillll!!~~~~~~~~--iliJ traveling secretary, who is in
charge of making such arOUR
rangemenls .
• -a
But the Reds arrived here ·
&amp;A lilA
Monday , Bureman went to
~•py
check what' had happened to .
. ~...
the bus scheduled to
transport the team to its
hotel.
By the time he found out,
.·
the bus had arrived, picked
fAMlY RESTAURANT up the Reds, and left.

!l

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.· KENTUCKY
· ·FR·I·m CHIC..KEN

•

CRcM'S

••

• •

FAMILY

.,

•

. Cll(M'S

t

'i'

J.,•.

-

-

.. Tin'

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992-5432
Pomt!rO ; 0.

ATLANTA lAP)_: Johnny

· Bench says he's happy that

""""'liilliliiilil•..l

the CinCinnati Reds' first

homestand was only four
games. .
.
'''I think !her&lt;' was alnl of
pressure on aM of peoplr.,"
!he Red" calt'her said.
"Everybody wanted to· see
how John McNamara would
do as manager and anlicipated how we"d be wijhoul
Pete Rose.'
The Reds lost three ofibeir
firstfour games before beginningtheirfirstroadtripof!be
season.
"I think the club is much
more relaxes the last C!JUple
of days," Bench said.

mC~rk he didn't l&gt;qu'rt1 o-t .YPar
ago until May 6.
I(He'sabout 90-92pert"·,•nt h1
bei~g the ·toni Seaver wi·
know," said Reds raleher
Johnny Rench.
It was.'ieaVI'r's fi111! vi&lt;'iol')'
of the year after failing to
survive the second inning in
the Reds' opening game.
' The fas!hall ~nd · slider I
had tonight, I'd be.happy with
them every game," Seaver
said.

ATLANTA iAPl - Cincin. nati Reds caleher Johnny
Bench's home run in the sixth
inning against Atlanta MonATLANTA (APl ..,. When day left him only two RBis
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom · away from the club recod of
Seaver strtick out 10 Atlanta 1,115 held by Tony Perez, now
hatters Monday, he reached a · with the Montreal F.xpos.

fini sh the season tied with
F'rederlck Banting and
Birmingham , they gQ to the Charle5 Best amoWiced their
'.
.. playoffs. Adually, it's just discovery of lnsuUn for the
like playt~ff hockey right now,
WHA 's final playtJ!I. Hirm· · We know we have to· win or treatment of diabetes in 1922.
ingham alHo has four gttmes we're out of it," he said.
left. Coach F'loyd Smith Sllid l)e
"The drafi will lake care of had a "good feeling" alter
itself. Someone will draft me Tuesday 's spirited practice,
aild try to sign me," said
The Stingers were hoping
"Photo• are
r.artner.
'the injury-plagued Nordiques
"Right now I want !tJ play might play some of the 'front
Forever"
!be best hoc~ey T.can, and I line players sparingly tonight
• Portr'a i Is
think everyone else on the to pres~rve them for the
•Weddings
,
team feels the same way. playoffs. .
•Special Occasio"s ·
Who wants to be a loser' We
•Passports
Quebec reported injucies to
have a chance to· make lhe key players Real Cloutier,
.• Senior Portraits
.playoffs arid lhen, who Serge Bernir, Rich Leduc and
knows. No one wants to go out .r.c. Tremblay.
.
a loser," 4artner ~id~
"f have a feeling, Quebec
(Bob Hoeflich I
"We have to win . two of won'! play all of their big ·
109 High St.
these games to be sure. We players against us," said
Pomeroy
can~ stay tied, because if we
Gartner.

Stingers
must
win, win
.
.
~

.

rfNCfNNA'fl ( APl winger Mike Gartn&lt;•r
wasn'llhinking about the National Hockey I .eague drHft
as !be Cincinnati Stingers h•fl
fnr their dn....w-die flrivt&gt; tn the
World H1.-~ey Association
payoffs.
~~rm not worryinf.{ abnut
next year," said the 19-yearold star as the team left Tilesday for tonight 's game with
the Nordiques at Quebec.
Cincinnati, which will not
be part of next year's merger
'•· with the NHI., .has lour road
.games lei\. Jl is lied with the
· Binningham Bulls for, the
fifth place playoff spot in the
R,.&gt;ki~

The Photo Place

GRADE

EASIER SIGlE
. All Kroger Stores Open .
Easter Sunday, April15
I lAM 1117PM·

ECKRICH JUMBO BOLOGNA•• .'•••••••• ~~. $1.59
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD............... ~b~. $1.19

OPEN MONDAY I APRIL 16
AT 8:00AM AND REMAIN OPEN ~
REGULAR HOURS

loct. of thll.. CJdv•rt iad il•m i1 r~u1r11d ta b1 r.od~ ly
~;J~~Uilobl• for Kilo I t~~., !Cro;.r Stor•. ••c•pt Cf tp~~t ific:o l lr
roolttd i l'l !hil od . It .,.... do rut~ Ou! of on ad~••l i Md i,.m,

.,... will oH•r yOu rour choic-. of o comporoble il•m . wh•"

SMOKED CALLIE HAMS

~;J~~UIIabl• . r•llll(ri~ IN IQml 110vrngt or a rgi11dt11&lt;k wllich

will •~"~'•II• you lo purcha.. tMI ad~•t~i11'd il•m a,• thll
odwertiMd pric• wilhon 30 doy1.

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

"ct.

said _"Ooyle dirt get a win·. A

h ... I

Seattle

~

Fir.-;t, t P udC npws : , .Jmc 1y
Mrs are mnrt- Pxpt&gt;nsivt&gt;. Th~;&gt;
gnud m•ws : Tiw priet• ha~
huill-in diet t·unln•L

4

2 .667

1

Calif.
2 3 .400 _21/2
"Chicago
1 3 .250 3
Oakland
0 5 .000 41f:z
Tuesday's Games

Toronto 10, Chicago 2

Milwaukee 3, Boston 0
New Yof-k 7, Baltimore 6
Texas ·s, Cleveland 0
·r-:::.::;;.QQ.:::;;,.;;:,.::~~:.::;::.::;:~:::.;:::.;;;;;.QQQ.:;.;:...,;;y., Detroit at Kansas City,
11
pPd ,, rain
,
·
· ·
·
Minnesota 8, t:allfornla 1
~095
Seaf11e 4, Oakland 1
·
·
Wednesday's Games
. Toronto (Underwood 0-1) at

SAGITIARIUS
23-Dec.
21) You ten d totNo"L..
be careless

tances .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J•n. 11)

NBA Playoffs
AI A Glance

By The Associated Press
First Round

Best of Three Series

Eastern Conference
Wednesday.'s Game

New Jersey at Philadelphia
Friday'• Game
Philadelphia at New Jersey
Sundoy"s Game'
·New Jersey . at Phil ·
adelphi~. If necessary

Sl'•uun.u,~
..""",I ®C'......-.""tL
•"''SRI:""•'
Chic. ago (Pro. ly 0-1)
11.:n
PLUS IvuuE
(,'l',ST().~(
•m•TDv•s•.
1,---------1111...-illlllllllllllll•
' AD
..
;,~ .,..,
.. DB&amp;
\.JD..~:.o&lt;C

today wlth the company you

keep , and could be drawn Into
a compromising situation. Better to shun sha..Qy acquain-

necessary

De8ign your own claae ring
Maec;ot

Be honest wllh yourself as to

AQUARIUS (Jon. 2D-Feb. )9)
There could De more talk than
muscle In evidence today , and

a )ob lha1 mtghl be Important lo
you won't get done . Have altern.atives ready .

PISCES (Feb, 2D-March 20) It Is
quite possible loday that you 'll
eKpect rnuch more from an-

-Smoked

48 oz .

TEEN QUEEN SHORTNIN&amp; .............~a.". $1.69;~
18 oz·. · Planter's Cream

$.

46 oz: Hunt's

lb.

HUNfS CATCHUP............. ~ ............ ~:'~ •••. 994
PEANUT BUTTER~ .........................~a:. $1.15

·

name

BRING IN THIS AD TO GET THIS OFFER WHF.N
. YOU ORDER YOUR SILADIUM RIN(; ,

JOHN ROBERTS
~m••;.•y•·~··
CLASS RINGS

-· ·

both of you are really .contribut·
.lng.

•

'

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••
t

GWA1

-••

12·11'11. AVG.

i

t •.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

lb.,

'N'

lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOI.CE STANDING .

..... $z••

SW,FT

Ill STEAK ..................................................... 52'\

BUTTERBALL

USDA CHOICE ··

WHOLE
LB.

'

••

.

18 Lbo. II Up

FRENCH CITY TASTEE

HALVES

IN ·

·. ~'_$139

.

.20-~~!.~~·..... .·

:=::;=:;::=:A Quality Produce Place=
· ==== •

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

' FRIENDLIEST SERVICE .IN TOWN!

CELERY
...... ~~R.~~~~.~...................... ~ .................:........ 2 ~~E STALKS 6f
Y~LLOW COR,N.. f.W.~t~!~L~~.~"~~ ....$W~.u........ :............. ~::.t~~.~!:.~~~.::~::: Jgi
IDAHO POTATOES .!!!~..~~.~~~.... ;.~ .............. ~ .............................. ~~.~:.~.....$129
CARROTS DON1 FORGET ntE EASTER BUNNY .:.: .........,.................... ~.~...~~~: .•• $100.
BANANAS QUALITY BY IHE BUNCH
'
···•··~ED
········•····
··•········
······•·•···QUALilY
·················· .............. ~......... 4 ll• ,FOR
wASHINGTON STATE
OR GOL[)EN
DELICious

·auANTI'rYi
RIGHTS .
RESERVED

\ APPLES ...............................................~ .....:.......~.~.~.~~ ..... .AVG. 1 to 2% ~ St09
.
STRAWBERRIES..sELEq, ~~,1.~!.. ................................... :~:.·::::~:.·::~.·.·~!~.!..:. 6~'·
.

.. W:E ALSO CAR.Y A . FI~E SELECTION OF EASTER
FLOWERS AT 'A BEnERTHAN LOW PiiCE

.

HOZIN GlADE A YOUNG TURKEYS ,
10·14-li, AVG,

lb.

.

Baking Hens .. .. ... .. .. .. .. .. . lb.

••,

. · U.I.D.A. CIIIADii A
MAIVAL Of VIRGINIA, 1·14·11. AYG. ·

.

Fresh Turkeys ........ :.. .. .. lb.

"
"

age
69C
c
99

Red Ripe .
Strawberries·

I

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$

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.-rJCUSIIII . . . . . Sf.IIIM'*II.r II A..
IR'FIIIIIaiiUJ
,

Hb

,liVE

Fresh
Celery•

_, •'""'COIII'IIII• sr.JI
TillS
fUICIWI (IXQIDM

$121.
,ON4

Awallobla Only In Storet
Hot Fooda AwalloWa I I AM

WllOLI o• NALP

Virginia
Baked Ham

•• '~'
Pak

~

'

DEPOSIT

.

Staawberry Pie ..............9·1nch
,.. '$399 ·
'

, Easter Flowe.-• : ·

3

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4

5 11 .TO' 5 11'
' -5"~
lUlU 6'·,' p0 fl ,..,,
'

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IIIIILI uti ..tl ·"
Orchid Conages · .. DOUI&amp;I-...
tt.M

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29
.

GREEN

(:ltEESE .......:............. .

may llhOI
betotoface-up
your liking
you'
have
to . lhal

what your motives are
doi ng things that could
others . Only VIrtuous
tions wUI · stand up
today's aspe~ts.

Atlanta at Houston , if nee.

.?::-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Wednesday, April 11, 1979

'

.
•,:1

a

Sunday's Game

I

BASEBALL . SCOREBOARD

lrtiilt•rmtrk ." ~~irl Olh·i•r , who
rPI't•ivt•d a •:-:tc-tmiin~ ovrttinn

in

••-. 1

NF.W fliRA TOR
Minnesota !Goltz 1-0) at
Tuesday's Game
'JnRON'Jn ii\PJ- · f11·n~i"
Phil a .
California (Ryan 0·11, (n)
Phoenix 107, ·Portland 103
Ril-himl R!'id ; a r~n~dinn art
Pitts.
1 3 .250 ' 2112
Oakland (Keough 0-0)• at
Friday's Game
hbt.nrl;m,
has IW4•n namt'tl
· Ch"icago
03 .0003
Seattle IMt:La~ghlin 1-01. In )
Phoenix at Portland
th~t rnutP. ' '
WEST
RESTAURANT
c
nr;tfur
nf
f"ttnudinn
On Iy games scheduled.
Sunday:'s Game
Kt&gt;rn sEiicJ ht• f.!lll nn p.ar- San Fran .
4 1 .800
Thursda_y-'s Garnes
' 992-5432
Portland at Phoenix, if nechi~lnril·~l art ~I ihe Art
...cl 1 .800
lknlar ch;lrJ~•· nut nl ht•ating Houston
Boston at Milwaukee; lnl essary
,. rrtt}l~~ry of Ontarin.
...
Pomero , 0.
los
Ang
.
.cl 2 .667
lJ:z
New York at Baltimore, In I
hi~ old lt•o-tmmatw.: ;'Cine.
2 4 .333 2h
Cleveland
at
Texas,
lnl
' )
"J don ~t t'njny bf&gt;Hting thnSt• Atlanta ·
1 · .4 .200 3
Minnesota at .California,
'
guys,'' said Kt•rn . HJ was in San Dieg'o
1 4 .200 3
In)
·
Tuesday's Games
the organir.alinn 11 yrar. and .
Oakland at Seattle, In)
Montreal 3, New York 2, 14
On Iy game~ scheduled
!ht•y always tried h•rd. I irinings
~nes!-i it was si~niricant,
San Francisco .cl, San Diego
though, that in my first lime 2
'NHL PlayQHs
felt W£• ho-tel a rhancl"' to win out as a Ranger I beat
Philadelphia 7,· Pittsburgh
AI A Glilnco
J
•
the J'»!Sl two sef!sonc.; but the r.Jevel~nd . "
By The Associated Press
Atlanta 6. Cincinna1i .c1
Preliminary, Round
managt&gt;ment wnuld not gn. · Alexander got into trouble
Houston ' 2, Los Angeles 1
Best of Three Series
out and- gel help for our when he permilled a sin~le
St. Louis 7, Chicago 0
series 'A'
bu)]pen ."
Wedne~ay's Gilmes
and walkt'il two batters tn
· Tuesday's Game
Chicago !Holtzman 0-1) at
The RanKPrs lost. 19 l{amt&gt;s load !be bases in· the fifth .
Vancouver 3, Philadelphia
St. Louis (Denny 1.o) .
1
· !h 1 1 · 1
2
kern rame 'on ln for('e Andre
ast )'P3r m e HS e 1Dn ngs
1\'\ontreal (Grimsley 0·0) at
Thursday's Game
bet·ause they didn't have a
Thornton tony out.
New York I Falcone o.oJ
Philadelphia at Vancoucer
stopper.
Cinctnna1i I Hume 0· 11 at
s·aturdety's Game
"I had a fnur-nm lead and I
Of his new team, Harrah was lmt for a win," Mid Alex- . Atlanta (Solomon 0-01. (nil
VanCOuver at Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh I Blyleven 0-0)
said : "Om.'t' we get back , amtE'r. " Then• wo-ts nu
If. necessary
at Philadelphia (Carlton 0-1,
Series '8'
home I feel wr'll gel unlrark- justification fnr him rr.nr- In)
Tuesday's Game
Los
Angeles
I
Sutton
1·01
at
ed. We've 'played a rnuple of ra]es) to take ml"' nut."
New York Rtmgers 7, Los
Houston (forsch 1·0 {n)
games in 25 degree weather,
Angeles 1
San
Diego
!Jones
o.
II
at
missed onr workoulc; -~cause
Thursday's Game
San Francisco (Niontef usco J.
of rain and have had litllt"
New York Rangers at Los
01,
(n)
Nati\'t' TTI't'S
Angeles
French City
Thursday's Games
batting prat•tice since sprint!
Tlwrt&gt; o-tn• A65 ~'JK·c·it•s of
Sal.llrday's Garno
Philadelphia at New York
training.''
lrt"t'!'i neifi vt' 1n tht' cnntinj•nl!il
Los Angeles at New York
San Diego at San Francisco
6-8 ave. lb. 95~
Rangers, lf necessary
Ironically, it wHs Kern whn trnil«l SIHI~"· inl'lu&lt;iing Hf••w
St.
Louis
at
Pittsburgh,
In)
•••••••••••••••••••••• 4
.stopped his fortner teamAtlanta at los Angeles, {n)
'
I
import!-t. Ihe~t httvt• lw&gt;&lt;·nmt•
Series 'C'
Only games scheduled
mates after IJoyle A f'Xander natnrali7.rcl ~·thAt tht•y nuw
Tuesctay•s Gaml!
DAIRY
PRODUCE
Toronto 2, Atlanta 1
went four and two-thirds inn- n•pmlu&lt;;l' lh••n'"&lt;'lVI's in tht•
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Thursday's Game
ings before he got inlo!n)Uble wild ·''"'"· Tht• ohlt•sl livin~ ·
EAST
Atlanta at Toronto
_ one out short of qualifying ir&lt;'l'" in the world are n•pnl!'l Mllw.
W. L.
GB·
Saturday's Game
for a victory ,
3 1 .750
Toronto at Atlanta , If
to hfo thr hristlrc·on~;~ prim·~. Baltimore
2 2 .500 1
necessary
"If that's aJI the confidenet&gt; growinJ! on the :uhf &lt;'Mif!S (lf , ·eOston
2 2 .500 1
he tmanal!er Pat Corrales) r;.~li(c•rnic-t'~ Whittl Munn- Detroit •
1 1 .500 1
Series '0'
a 0z .- Kraft
has in me, he should have IHins . Some ~r&lt;· •·slim~ led 111 &lt; New York
2 2 .500 1
Tulsday•s Game
started someone else," sniff·Cleve.
I J .250 2
New
_
~
Pittsburgh &lt;. Buffalo J
lw mnn• than 4.ROO .vt•r-tr.- uhl. Toronto
1 3 .250 2
Sliced lndividua I
·
89~
ed a m•'ffed Alexander.
Thursday's Game
The• nlclt•s1 knmvn rt'Ciwnod!-i
·wEST
CABBAGE..,}~·Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Corrales, who took over for Hf(' t-thun~ ~.500 yc'ilr!·Wid .
Minn .
4 0 1.000
Saturday's Game
lhe fired Rillv Hunter on the
Texas
2 0 1.000 1
Pittsburgh at Buffalo, if
last day fo ihe 1978 season,
Kan. City
3 1 .750 1 ,

Texas Ranger win."
Oliver tagged Clev~;&gt; land
starter Rick Wise 1()-2) for a
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Before 370-fool solo homer in the fist
you take on .anyone today,
evaluate your opposition very
carefu lly ._There 's a, strong likeIt hood this person holds a
higher trurrip card .

inning tht•n •·r;l&lt;'~f'(1 Cl two-run
~hot in thl' third inr1in~~ .
·'Th~· . h11tnt' nin i~ nc\f my

~~;; ..., ~

• ·· Second
~ ·
Rourid
· ·, The word "ballyhoo" is
·
believed to come from the
'llesiC&gt;f Seven Series
Dateund Times
vlllage of Ballyhooly In
to be annQunced
.Jrehind, commWllty noted
Eastern .conference.
· for Its brawls.
Ph1ladelph1a·JIIew Jersey, · · ·.

-~ Donuts.......... JO
LOll....

ggc

for

.

.-.••

$329 '

Swiss c•Hse .... "".""""'" lb. .

M

~~~......
Ca
- k '
..... '299
~twr
II ... ,.... ,., ...... 2iCake
·

CAlli

.

.

.

. '

Easter Eggs ...................... lach

59

-.-•
~

c

\

•

�9- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesda y, Aprilll, 1979

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, A'Pril 11, 1979

CANCER

CHOICES

Answer line

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Amefk:•n CIII1Ctr Soc:Mty

A regular f e ature,
prepared by the American
Cancer Society, lo help save
your life from cant-er.
An office worker writes:
" I've heard · • lot about
cancer prevention. Can
cancer really be prevented?''
ANSWERIIne: Some
caneers 'can he prevented,
and there is research underway that hopes . to uncover
more methods of prevention.
Two major cancers that are
largely preventable are lung
cancer and cancer of the skin.
Since about 80 percent of all
lung caneers are caused by
cigarette smoking, avoiding
that habit can prevent most
lung cancers. Skin cancer
usually ·is the result · of
overexposure to the sun. You
can reduce this hazard greatly by using a sunscreen
preparation (preferably one
containing P f\BA) and by
wearing protective clothing if
your work requires you to be
outdoors a great deal. THe
sun is most !~tense between
10 a.m. and 3 p.m. You can
help prevent some other
cancers by avoiding contact
with certain
iflrhn:fri ?. l

...
substances. Ashesto.•, for example, is one of the 11K"t po- ·
tent of these can&lt;"er-&lt;'ausin~
agents, particularly for
smokers.
A housewife asks : "no all
cancers spread?"
ANSWERiine : As a general
rules, yes. But some cant-ers
spread sooner or faster than
others . Common skin
cancers, For example, tend to
.remain ID&lt;alized. for quite
some time, while breaSt ·
caneer and a rare but serious
.form of skin cancer,
melanoma, spread more
readily. The spreading occurs when cells break away
from their original site and
are carri.ed tborugh the
lymph or blood systems to ··
other parts of the IKxly. In recent years, cancer arugs
have been found effective ir\
seeking out and killing
cance.rs which have spread,
especoally those too small to
•
' ,l',t
' '
catch up with in any other - · '·
way. The best protectiOn
Howard Brammef,';,minister
against cancer is really
detection, so that trealmert
can begin when the &lt;1Jsease is
'.f' I /1 6 I 1:;1 /1 VU
still confined to the original site.

They'll Do It Every Time
I'OR~tiMS

STAV~"~

F£&amp;T! o&lt;eeP YbUJt
FOt7T EI..EI'ATEP/!
DON'T WALK

CASEOF~S81670Er;t~$,

IM·EPSCIM'S
OllOERS

ON IT.'!

ARE····

.SO-NEXT
TIM~If!:TtiM

IX79
ANOTHER
M.D.· · ··

Is this ioke funny?·

~

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
2119 Jackson Are.

Pcint Pleasant

....

'

1

•

The Pomeroy Church of •· Bible S~JDinary. l;loward
Christ wi!P be having it,. 1979 , Bramm~r is married and has
spring revival April 15-20. · two child[en. Mr. Brammer
The nightly meetings will was in J';'leigs County last
beginEasterSundayevening , spri~ ak.p speaker for the
and continue throughout the annual m~n 's retreat held at
week at 7:30 nightly.
the Ohio Valley Christian ·
Howard
Rra·mmer , Assembly l'ampgrounds In
minister of the •Fairfield lr•rwin.
·
Churrb of Christ inl,anca;1er
The song leader for the
will be the evangelist for the meeting will be Bob Purtell,
week. Brammer recently the ministe'r at the Zion Churcompleted his sixth year with ch of Christ in Meigs County.
the church in l,ancaster There will' be special singing
·Prior to that he preached ai plus great conl(regational
the Church of Christ in singing during the revival.
Batavia , Oh. He is a 1967
The public is invited. John
graduate of the Cincinnati McArth~·'!·the minister.

The Meigs County Com!"unity M"J.'Ial Health Center
tn cooperation wtlh the Grace .
Church !Episcopal) of
Pomeroy will he presenting a :,
pare~t guo dance workshop
startmg April19.
. The wor.ksbop JVill he held
10 the pansh house of Grace
Church at 326 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, every Thursday evening from 7 to 8:30
from April 19 through May
17.

675-2318

DF:AR DR BLAKF.R - l
loved your joke about the 93year-old coupl e who stayed of marriage.
unhappily married until their
DEAR DR. BLAKF.R - I
children's deaths, only then · sent for your holllne "Taming
feeling free to consult a the TV Beast." It really
lawyer about a divorce.
helped our family resolve this
Here's another orie I complicated and .emotionally
thought you would enjoy : 'i'he charged problem.
couple ne:rt door talked about
I do, however; want to take
getting a divorce but decided issue with one comment in
to stay !&lt;&gt;!(ether for the sake your newsletter. You menof their marriage counselor!
tioned that television does not
DEAR READER - I ap- give an accurate view of the
preciate the hunnor, but It.'s realities of life. As.an examimportant to remember wh~ pie, you say that women are
we find these jokes so funny . still being cast as passo·ve and
.
,
That's because a truth pain-' dunnb.
ful to eonfront is exaggerated
I must disagree with that
' until it makes us laugh.
statemept.
Charlie's Angels
There are unhappy couples
anything
bot! ·
are
who stay together primarily
DEAR
.,
READER
for their children. , And •
Charlie's Antels aside, the
evidently there are couples U.S. 'Civil Rights Commission
·who do. not divorce primarily · ~ecently charged that
iJecause of the influence of
minorities and women contheir marriage counselors. ·
linue to be cast on television
Both situations are sad.
in stereotyped ways.
· The commission·aJso fotind
that those groups are
professional mental-health Wlderemployed in the lelevi,counselors are involved.
sion. industry. The corrunis· What are marrial(e sion·pojnted out, for example,
C~Ul18eiOrssaying(ornOtll8y- that women comprise only
ing) . that ~eeps, unhappy .. '11.7 percent of prime-time
couples marned? Why wollld dramatic characters.
.we joke about it if it wasnl
I'll staild by my original
happening?
statement.
. Are thest; counselors sell:
Readers who 'wish to order
mg ~mage ,on moral "Taming the TV Beast" can
g~oonds. Or a~ !heY in- send 50 cents and a self' dorectly suggesting ot would addressed, stamped envelope
hu!" their business and-or to me in care of this
pride of couples parted even newsP."per, P.O. Box 475,
after the benefit ·of their ser- Radio City Station, New
vices?
York, N.Y. 10019.
Wh~tever the answers, the
W~ite to Dr. Blaker in care
practoce must be stopped. of this newspaper, P.O. Box
After all, ean you irriagine .475; Radio City Station, New
dlvor.ce . counsel?rs losing York, N.Y. 10019. Volunne .of
face of chents decided to stay mail prohibits personal
marroed• Or, even worse, replies, but . questions of
death therapists. expr~ssing general Interest will be
disappoontment of thetr pa- discussed in future columns.

SA.LI
OFF

LIST

BUTYIRNUT FINISH

MORGAN RUSSELL
NEW YORK (AP) - A gift
of Morgan RUS5eU's works
and papers has been
presented to the Whitney
Musewn of American Art by
Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Reed.
The gift consists of painlings, a large group of
R 0 ~ s e 11 's drawings,
notebooks and · his personal
arctuve of related papers and
correspondence.

Thtire's
nothing

, ; ,. lik~ it.

BE'rrER MA"E IT
TWO BOCKS FOR
A COP OF COFF.E"ES:
.

Bolen.. MulChing M""'or••
Sell-propelled model cuts
and recut ciiCpings Into

..

.tine muJch Wh Ch fertilizes
lawn. • Cuts 22" swath •
Front, . whnJ drive • Con..
venient wash-out port for

easv cteari .. up.

Bt.iy No~ &amp; Save ·
Reg ... $323.50
Now ... 5283.50
'

Hera'&amp; COUNTRY CLASSIC, newest member of
Riviera's family of fine cabinets. And what a beauty
Ills. The grace of arched cathedral doors, the subtle glow of hand-rubbed hardwood and the carefully coordinated hardware combine to make ·
COUNTRY CLASSIC live up to its name. Countrystyle gone elagan~ It Ia perfect with American
traditional furniture yet adaptable enough to be at
home with other stylet. Riviera c raflsmen even developed a spejl.lal stain 10 highlight the unusually
handsome iltalii,Qf the 1m!zt1Y alder hardwood.

••

1

RAT SNIFFERS
TORONTO (AP) - Rats
are far more effective than
dogs in sniffing out ex-'
plosives, says Dr. Sidney
Weinstein, a U. S. Army
researcher.
. Weinstein, in Toronto to
attend a . seminar recently,
said rats were also cheaper to
buy a"d train than dogs "and
you can take a rat just about
anywhere.''

·T{tY OUR

EXTRA
CRISPY

SAVE ••. ,.'..'40.00
Offo~ Good Now

ThruMay

1

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WILKI,SON~

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l

~t~eauty...to PresefVe

..

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'

.

"'llili-...JI

Hammond, Heidi Hash, Ruth
Higgenbotham ,
Paul
Houston, Edna Jones, Robert
Kight, Jamie Lewis, Brencta
Mahle and son, Barbara MrDanlel, John McGowan,
Hayes McMurray, Ruby
Miller, Lema Niday, RObert
Proffitt, Sam Rankin, AUhea
Ridenour, Kathleen SeurlD&lt;k,
Nila Seyler, Dorothy Shaw,
Melissa Sisson, Howard
Tucker, Ivan 7,addack.
· Discharges, Aprll7
Rruce Adams, Hilda
llarringer, Rose BJ.unnfleld,
Eileen Callahan, H Michael
Carlion, Mary Cheatwood,
Helen Dempsey, C',arl Dobbins, Themla 11owe, Rick
!Carles, Patricia Setherols,
Paul Greene, Jan Harrison.

..

A lot of pride has gone

out of it. Only select

hardwood solids and
Veneers were chosen
to receive its lovely

fruitwoodfinish.lt's
fitted with a precise
German movement
and a moon phase

dial. Glass side panels

SEND ONE...
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OURFTD

the brass weights and
pendulum,.which
operate the lovely
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traditional design
elements have ·
been beautifully

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For Exterior or: Interior

$4"

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HIGH MILEAGE ~ETREA~,:
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MASON, W. VA.

M~IGS·

Mlddleport,O.

9~2101

"2-30f2
I

...

· Pomeroy, 0 .. .

~92-~160

l
'

KENlUCJ(Y

.

CR(M'S

...

..........

'INSURANCE FOR EVERY NEED!

•

J

P'"'""'

..

II••

and

Mrs . James

hrnk1•nintwnm1lff'(lh'(~~ .

ReY.nolds, son, Pedro.
I hoi"'' th•t WilliHm •ntl
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brum- .l•m.r.• St&gt;ll&lt;•&lt;•k had 1"'n
·

tli~turfl4'(1

nl'.~t !-:

TIRE CENTER ·.
too E.

tRISPY

anfl hrnu¢ht ]nw in

.cy

Happy Easter!
SUNDAY, APRIL 15

Easter Grel'tings Box $2.65

Russell Stover Candles are the
finest in quality, lreshnesJ and
goodness. Choo58 from many
assortments of delicious can•
dies especially deco.rated for
Easter •

Multi-color Bamboo
Basket ·$4.95

~oll.fltovc,.

aa•••••
................

I lb. Assorted Chocolates
$3.50

EASTER LILIES

59 N. second St.

:

EXTRA

field, daughter, Gallipolis. lhr•ir final rest hv th&lt;• "'"""' .
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunn, . Juw ft•mpt•rHlurt•~ 1-fntl fit' f'('1'
daughter, Oak Hill ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jesse James. storms of th•• ra"t winfPr Hnrl
nut hv tht&gt; m.imflt'f'l~ wmson, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va . ' 1fl 11~m
.·
~u
("nmmnn
Dtsrharges, April tO
f'Vt•rywherf' lhf·~t· flaY~ .
Erma Adkins, Bradley
M)' mimi tlw&lt;•llr•rt In ""~Bailey,
Ruth
Rlrchter,
F..d""""
and l'f'Vnlsinn nn a
Call or stop in today.
ward
Blake,
Paul
Burkins,
"'"'nl
""w''P"I"'r pidun•
We send flowers alMark Bryan, K Jason Butler sh~&gt;wing Rll toml,.lnnes ~~·&lt;·r­
most anywhere
Margaret Carison, IJnm: tnmPd in th&lt;• Mount Hehrnn
Copley, Arnold Dean, Pauline . .l&lt;•wish&lt;'l'mPit•ry in FhL&lt;hlng,
- the FTD way.
' Delaney, Neva Denney l ;mg Islam!. A few davs
Nicholas Goodwin, Sheil~ lah•r. nearlv 700 h&lt;'Hd!&lt;l!&gt;D;.,.
•15.00 ·
Harmon, Jeremoy House, wrn• t!lppi•'l HI tht' 11nit•d
Merble Jenkins, Gina ·Hphrrw Crmeterv an&lt;l th••
$15.00.$12.00
Kemper,
Lester Lee, Helen · adjnining Mflunt · Ri&lt;•hmond
cash 'n carry
Lucas, Charles Martin, Ricky C&lt;•mrhlry ~&gt;n Stall•n IRland.
Pinkerman, Sally Reynolds
11n!l&lt;'l' lh&lt;• hrmtlinr• "00·
Mary Russe)l, Loi~ MINOTH!':ORVOFHATE,"
Schoonover, C. Lynn Siders a nr•wspapt•r ••dlt!lrlal
and daughter, Warren Skid- 'I"'&lt;'Uiat"l lh•l all thrl'• "'"'·
more, Brian Smith, Heather turo•l atnx·itlrs against th&lt;'
Stinson, Gtace Stobart clt'Hd mav ha\'t' hf*fon ,,-,mRichard Thomas, Record mittrd· H~ st1me ~nrt · uf ~ick
Toll, Betty Wilson, Geraldine i-rvengr f~&gt;r thr signing nf the
YeaUl(4:f. .
F:gyptian-lsraeli
peH&lt;'P
Births, AprillO
tll'aty.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
It takes a !&lt;p.-·i•l kln&lt;l 1&gt;!
Mlller, son, .Jarkosn .
mranm''"· hryond tht' [XIII&lt;'&lt;'
Mr. and Mrs. Lester . hlntt&lt;•r
t&lt;•rminfllogy
Stover,
Aon,
Rtdwt&gt;Jl.
~&gt;m~t1h•inn~
rni:;&lt;'hit&gt;f,'' tn
(
kntwk ov,•r I,SOO ~rnvf'
rnark.. rs fnr fun ami kil'ks . Tt
takf'r&lt; ~ · SJlf''iHi kind nf nutd- '
ner&lt;s. •lmmd b!'vr&gt;nd thr
h&lt;lull(l.!o! nf pity, tn v8m1Hiin• a
'
hurh•l
·grouncl H~ 11 protf!!-\l
SHELLFISH HIGH
Hl!tdnst peat•e .
GLASGOW,
Scotland
(AP,
•
Make il a lradilional
The dP~tcf (It 1t•it':'~t . vnn
E.lster for family and - Heroin, believed smuggled wnulrl think,""' heyon!l hat•.
Into Scotland by mistake .
friends . Give a fresh when a ship missed Its tx•ynnrl hnr1. tno btlt• tn jnin
Li:y from Dudley's original connection in nr f'!"'(lll~(' HOY pfc,f(•SI
qreenhouses.
Southa mpton , has been ; prnt't'!ifolion .
F'imllnl! a mnraJ in nil thi!&lt;,
turning ·UP In Chinese
nr
at IPaf'f H Wl-fV nnt nf tht•
·restaurants
in
boxes
of
frozen
Moll
1
grm•r•y•nl. I hnP,. a~ain thr
prawns.
cash 'n carry
~·ll&lt;'f•k hrt&gt;thrrr&lt; w1•rr felll'l
--~~
by """" hitter wintry blH!!I
1-lnfl nflt ttw• wnnton wif'ktlfl- .

Free.Mounfilif!

491 Locust St.

................

EASTER

high . See this

Middleport,

!:

BASKET®

Jncorporated in
modern straight line
design to make this '
one of the most
versatileofclocks at
horne in any deco;.
Stands a regal81 '

· 106 N. 2nd.Ave.

Sunday night was No. 22 in
. N~W YORK (AP) - It's "Happy Oays."
CBS made it close with four the ratings.
been this way now for two
NBC's best series was
months and, in ARCs case, programs in the Top 10
including
No
.
No.
4
"sO
"Diff'rent
Strokes" in 19th
In the wake of Proposition more than three months, with
· enough that it doesn't bother
Minutes"
and
"All
in
the
.
place.
13, 'Z1 state legislatures have little sign of change in sight.
advertising .
NBC had three of the
Because of chronic called on the U. S. Congress ABC, with six of the week's Family" in sixth pl!lce.
A)lC
's
rating
f&lt;r
the
week
week's
lesst-wakbed sbows
shortages, crowds gather to convene a new con ~
~
r~:~:c:
~ho:
.
was
18.8,
slightly
better
than
including
No. 63 "Weekend ,';
outside
newly-stocked stltutional convention in
CBS'
18.6
and
a
good
bit
No.
64
"HaUmark
Hall of
ratings,
CBS
second
and
NBC
tobacconists and a black order to guarantee a
better
than
NBC
's
15.7.
Fame
:
Beauty
and
the
a
distant
third,
balanced
federal
budget.
market in Cleopatras thrives.
The
networks
say
that
Beast,"
and
No.
68
"Harris
~·or ABC, the week. ending
. "I gave up smoking.before Only seven more are needed
I came here," says a British before Congress must call AprilS was the network's 13th mea011 in an average prime- and Company ." ABC's
in a row in ftrsl place in the time minute during the week, " What'!l Happening" was
salesman in Egypt. "But such a convention.
Albert Dittes, pastor of the A.C. Nielsen Co.'s ratings. 18.8 percent of the homes in 65th and a "CBS Reports"
cigarettes are so inescapable
the country with televisioo special on the handicapped
in Egypt, arid it's such a Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad- NBC, with i!S best lodged in were tuned to ABC.
was 67th.
bother to refuse a cigarette ventist Church, said today his 17th place in the ratings, was
,
Nielsen
says
the
·rating
fqr
Here are. the week's Top 10
for. the
eighth
without offending Arab denomination opposes the . last
Laverne
and
Shirley"
shows:
.
senslbilltles. :.that I've drive. "Calling a new con- con~u!Ive time. ·
The . steady, week-W-week means of ~II the homes in the · "Laverne and Shirley,"
vention would give the
started up again."
wtth TV, just over a with a rating of 33.7
· One importer . estimates writers an unlimited man- configuration Is a factor of country
thtrd
sa"
at least P.art of the representing · 25.1 million
ABC's
strength
at
the
top
and
tl)at 90 million cigarettes are date ro scrape the existing
show.
.
homes, "Three's Company / '
NBC's
representation
at
tbe
sold dally. But that flgw-e Constitution and the Bill of
NBC's
best
wasn't
31.4. or 23.4 million, and
may be an WJdereatimated' Rights," said Dlttes. · "We bottom of the ratings. NBC, something. the network could · "Happy Days," 29.9 or 22.3
since another dealer reckons strongly oppose such a for the 11106t recent period, count on Ul weeks to come. milllon , all ABC; " 60
had three of Nielsen's five
40 percent of Egypt's supply move."
The troubled netw&lt;rk's top Minutes," 28.8 or 21.5 million,
least-wal&lt;!hed
shows.
W. Melvin Adams, director
is smuggled In to avoid duties
show
was the second of low- CBS; "Mork and Mindy,"
ABC's
t~
show,
as
it
has
of religlo118 liberty for the
and Is never recorded.
chapters
in the "Jesll8 of 'Z1.4or20.4mllli9n ABC' "All
One ·American, assessing Seventh-day Adventist been eight times this season,
Nazareth"
miniseries - a in the Family," i.a.a o~ 19.8
life in C&amp;tro, said: "The General Conference in w~ "Laverne and Shirley/' rerun at that . It was ranked million, CBS; "Taxi," 26.2 or
phones don't w&lt;rk, the traHic Washington, D. C., says the wtth a rating of 33.7, followed 17th. The concluding chapter 19.5 million, ABC, and "One
is awful. But at least I can dell~ate balance of freedom by "Three's ~ny" and
Day at a Time," 25.3 or 18.8
light up wherever I Uke and embodied In the First
million,
CBS; "Delta House,"
·not have a milltant anti- Amendment could be wiped
25.2 or 18.8 million, ABC, B!ld
smoking activist rush up and away in a s~le stroke by the
."M·A-8-H," 24.8 or 18.5
kn'!"k the cigarette out of my new convention. In ·addition, r.;~-=;:;::;;;:::.;~:_:;:;;._,.....,..,-~~~~~~~~ million .
(reedom of speech and the
mouth. It's heaven."
The next 10 shows:
press, freedom of assembly
~~Dallas,"
CBS; 11 The
and the right to bear anns
Ropers," ABC, and 11 Duk:es of
are aD found in the first ten
Hazzard/' CBS, tie; "Allee,,
amendments to the present
CBS; "Charlie's Angels,"
Constitution.
. ABC; uWKRP ln Cincinnati,"
Jeremy Landrum, Sheila
"As important as a
CBS; Monday Movle-"Jeaus
l.anham, Susan Leonard, balan·ced budget · is, we
of Nazareth," NBC, and
Jack Murphy, J. Sherman believe the way to mandate it ·
11
Vegas,"
ABC,
tie;
Porter, Edith Rupert, Is for Congress to pass a
"DIIf'rent
Strokes,'' NBC, '
Katherine Shiflett, Rachel · constitutional amendment
and "Lou Grant," CBS.
!
·Siders,. PAtrieia SLaven, and the states to ratify It, if
Lavada Swindler, RonAld they so choose," Dlttes said.
Swisher, Vera Van Meter, "Going the· route of a new
TRY OUR
Robert WasHmer, Lila convention to rewrite the
Waugh,Sandra Whitt, Amy Constitution Is too dangerous
1
Woodcheck, J)orothy Wright. to think about."
Discharges, April8
Rernice Roster, Connie
' I
Brannon and son, Loretta
FRIED CHICKEN
Bryan, Richard r.Arter, DonPIC~EP
WJmNF.~OAY
I
na Cremeens and dau~hter,
Tt&lt;£
POMF:ROV- MJnJ)i.F.Richardx Fuller, I&gt;Qnald
·''
WRONo
FAMILl
RESTAURANT
Kirk, Estelle Maynard, Opal MRT I .IONS· f'l .!!A. n&lt;W&gt;n
TOP IG=
992-5432
Mitchell,
Christopher W1•dnP~tlay ~tt f~· Ml&gt;i~(~ Inn.
Pomero ,0.
.,•
Newsome, Russell Sargent, !\Ill .ion!&lt; m·~t'(1 tn rtth'nd .
Chad Saunders, Gerald
--~
Schu~ter,
Jack Sparks,
Chastotv Walkuo. Brenrl•
Yeauger .
Dlsrhargts, Aprtl9
Tammy Balestra, Tara
CHandler, Brandon Floyd,
Jam,ie Greenlee, F.mory
serving Meigs, Gallia, Vinton. Athens,
AP Spt&gt;rlal rnm•spmrlt•nt
pNwt• ~ftt&gt;r su manv
,.
Hart, Melissa Houck and son,
Washil!glon,
Jackson, Lawrence Counties.
RIDOF.FJF.J.D . f'onn . ~~•m•ratinns had lrfl it Hlnno,
Rrooks Hunter, James
Hutewr, Joseph Lucas, rAPl + 0.1t for~ walk f\n H T c·ommt&gt;nd tn tllPir altt•ntinn
ALL LINES OF INSURANCE
fnr a th• epitaph ShHk&lt;Spt'Hrr
Thomas McCI,ung , Goldie rainy day. I
YOU NAME IT, WE HAVE IT
mnment
in
lh&lt;•
small
wrot•
fnr
hhn.•&lt;•lf,
whi&lt;'h
Muse, James Nelson, Marry
Pickens and son,' Sandy ovrrJ!rnwn family 'h!WVPyHnl ~ miJ!ht be Hworthy in:&gt;('riptinn,
duwn thP rnact rrnm rnv ' fur thP twn fathrrs In hanu nn
Very Competitive Rates
Pyles, Lois Riffle and huust•.
·
,...
'' .
lh• iron gHtr of
,c;..ll•&lt;•k
Comparison Proves
daughter, Rose Sayre and
Thr• qnartPr-a&lt;•re pint famil)•plot:
son.
nvrrlnnlcinr
nnr llftiP lakt•
"Gnnd frit•nrl, (c)r .Jc•t-:n'~
Insurance specialist with over
Blrlils
cnniHin!-1 Jr.~~ Hum twn clor.rn snkP fnrllf'ar
35 yean experience.
Mr . and Mrs. Keith tnmh.~.:tonr~ .
Ttl di~ tht• th1.-.:t f•nl'ln.'lt'cl
Fetherols, son, Hamden.
·
See us today ...
Sim'&lt;' l had Ia!&lt;~ ill'&lt;'n h&lt;•r•. h&lt;•r&lt;' .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harmon,
. Wm. M..r. S.ll&lt;'&lt;'k. rli&lt;'fl MHv
Rl&lt;'sl bt• the '""n th•t
son, Gallipolis.
12. 11157, Hnrl .iHmes S.ll•ek. .&lt;par&lt;•sthe&lt;eston"".
Mr. and Mrs. james rli&lt;•d Arril 25. 1859, had top ·
f'ursrd b!' h• thHt movr•s
liS E. Second St.
Pomeroy, 0.
Houck , son., Gallipolis ph•d nvc•r nn fh(•ir fHc·~ . Tht•v . my honr!-1.''
992:6641
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Jef- hHtl slufl(l ht•rr for mun- tht~O
fers, son, New Hoven, W. Va. tt hnmln•d Yt'H~. sine~ tht•
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Riffle, tuwt•rinl! shaJ!l»trk hkkc,rh•!'
1 daughter.
Gallioolis Ferrv. !'h;ulinJ! tht• plul wt·~ nnlv
· W. Va .
AAnlinj!s
, and MPW t'itc'h wa~o.:
1
•
Mr. and Mrs. Richardx !-lf'j'mfHlf-'(1
frnm jj~ 00~ Hnfl
Creemens, son, Gallipolis
Mr.

give full exposure to

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

ABC still no. 1 in Nielsons

V•.D. Edwards Insurance

into this Ridgeway

dock.Andyou'resure
to get a lot of pride

Sales &amp;.Service

r,'

UP

a

fantastic value at our
showroom now.
·

Adlil.mtistJ oppose
.constitutional
convention

HOSPITAL NEWS

FAMILY RESTAU.MT
992-5432
o.

.
OLD 'WORLD CRAFTSMANSHIP.
:. REAL 'WORLD PRICE. ·

, Small Engines'
1

fines on · offenders in buses
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) no time to discovet; that
Reeking of cigarette smoke, and cinemas of up to $7 - a virtually all Egyptians
Its streels a gaudy blaze of hefty · sum, considering that
smoke . Rarely is th.e
cigarette ads, cairo Is a the average wage is about proffered pack refused.
puffer's paradise - or , $300 a year.
Occasionally, and with
But in Egypt, state~nspired
depending on your habit - an
much fanfare, studies are
anti-smoking lobbyist 's campaig118 have a way of
quietly dying out, and the produced linking smoking to
nightmare come true.
cancer. But these have little
Government offices !Ill anti-smoking campaign effect on a public whose
with smoke within minutes of hardly got off the ground.
TV cigarette ads are gone, problems lie more · in
opening. In banks, theaters,
reportedly
under contracting the djseases of
buses, department stores and but
the poor.
.
'
hospitals, "No Smoking" pressure from newspapers
the
worst
effect
of
Perhaps
signs are there . to be that were losing l!dvertislng.
smoking
is
that
lower-class
And they have blossomed in
cbeer'fully ignored. ·
Egyptians -the majority of
cinemas . .
Only inside the pyramids The standard Egyp\ian ad the jlopulation of 40 million over whose entrances hang
carries · the same tired spend half the~)" salary on
huge no-smoking placards message that U.S. anti- cigarettes and tea, the
Is the low obeyed.
beverage.
The image of Egypt as a smoking lobbyists are trying national
On
the
credit
side, It should
smoker's Nirvana begins at to abolish - smoke our brand
be
noted
that
alcobollsm Is
Cairo Airport, where there and you will be chic and almost unknown in this
are outside ads for American goodlooking, meet · the beSt leetotalling Moslem society.
and European brands. The people, el&lt;!.
Among the poor, smoking
Advertising has exploded
road intO town is lined with
begins
at age 12, when a
cigarette billboards that across Cairo with the advent prominently displayed pack
of President Anwar Sadat's
stretch up to a mlle.
of Marlb&lt;ros, Rothmans or
"You would abnost believe 'open-door eeonomic policy Larks is a sbortcut to status.
that smoking is an admirable toward the West, launched
American brands at 77
pastime, the pub1lcity on I~ four years ago. And, Hke cents a pack are most
had effects is so scarce," the many countries, Egypt is in favored, but the statedaUy Egyptian Gazette, a no hurry to cutb smoking manufactured Cleopatra, at
rare and quixotic anti- because the cigarette .duties 29 cents a pack, Is popular
smoking campaigner, it collects - in a hard- ·
pressed economy -are about
recently editorialized.
There are no health $800 million a year. ·
Egypt is much Uke other
warnings on cigarette packs.
"Thellll messages disappear developing motions regarding
I
once the cigarettes are smoking. And here may He .
Holzer Ml'dlral Center
exported to Egypt," said the the hope of U.S. and
Dlscharg•s, April &amp;
Gazette. "Is it then less European manufacturers as
Christie Beegle, Elma
hannlul to smoke here than their markets at home shrink CAldwell, Thelma Calloway,
under ··pressure from anti- John Carpenter, Walter
anyWhere else?"
A couple of years ago, the smoking groups.
C\oandler, Bessie Connley,
Official statistics on Charles Corbin, Donna navis
Health Ministry launched a
compalgn, flashing health cigarette coosumptlon and Geneva Drollinger, Alfred
warnings on televlsloo after lung disorders are hard to Duff, Esta Evans, Lovercia
cigarette ads, and slapping come by, but it takes a visitor Evans, Kimball SeEras

ClOtS

J
•
":1

;

Smoking in Egypt: more hazardous

..

"·

••

·

Heather Nancy
Goins,
Retty
Graham,
Greene
and
lp-••••••••••••••••••.. son,
Angela Hale, JAmes

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

.

AKRON, Ohio (AI') - A. lite tallest peak I've ever
University of Akroo professor climbed .... "
has SCaled the highest points . An explorer a11d DlOWllain
in the 48 continguous states. climber for many years,
Ron ,;Schneider _now. . i~· Schneider realized several
trainliig lils sights
the years ago /10 was reaching
biggest of them aU in North grow~ nwnber of state hjgh
America, Mount McKinley in points.
Alaska.
·
In 1950, he .climbed New
"Climbing McKinley is a Hampshire's
Mount
feat in itself and needs · Washlilgton, dubbed as the
careful 'planhlng 'and top "most dangerous small
physical coodltloning," said mountain in the world" by
Schneider, who teaches climbers. At that point, he
;[
physics.
wasn:t even thinking of his
But before Schneider even' current achievement.
looks · northwest toward the
By the early .J970s,
'(
20,320-foot McKinley, he Schneider had recorded some
wants to accompllsil another 16 to 18 state high points and
PRIZF. CRF.ATEO
dream - climbing the 80 or decided to pursue the rest.
NF.W . VORl&lt; f API
so peaks in Wyoming that are , Moot of them were scaled in
Creation of the Qarenrt' I .. 13,000 feet or higher.
the IIQIIlllll!rs ofl975 and 1976.
Holle rrizr has 'tx•en ,;n"That will take some · Two similar sounding and
"''""''"d hy the Twenty-Fin&lt;~ doing ," said .the professor sometimes confused peaks,
Century F1&lt;&gt;nmlaton.
from Aurora, "but wooldn't it Granite and Gannett receive
Thr foundation 'says the be e&gt;;cellent tr~lning for · Schl,l!lder's most difficult
prize "will b!' awarded in· McKinley?"
·
' labels at this point of his ·
lt•rnatinnallyrvery two years
Of the Alaskan landmark, hobby.
in rer·o~nition . n.f si~nificant Schneider said, ."U woilld be ,., Granite, Montana's
and lasting rontributlon to
·
· summit at 12,799 feet, has
, the &lt;'ultural heritaw• of.,
•
difficult terrain and limited
Afrkans and of the African
accesslblllty. The last of the
J)iaspora made throul(h
stale 1Ugh points he has
published · writings of ex- · · , BAPrlSMAL SERVICE
scaled required Schheider
!'&lt;'llenre·in lileratuo;e and lht'
Philip Andrew, Htimm, '!"' and his psrty to make ,It a
htunanities.' 1 "
cond•son of Tom and Lind&amp; three-day round-trip to their
The fi'"t award of the.prize • !Hamm,. was baptized at the base calll(l.
- $5,000 - W'dS made to J)r. Jmornlng service ·on Palm . At 13,785 feet, Gannett, the
Chaneellor. Williams fr~r his 1 'Sunday at the St. · ~Ohn ~ bighest point in Wytming,
edueational and r&lt;dentlfi&lt;' r,utheran Church. 11\BDY requires tile longest "hike;
achievement in the "field nf relatives and freinds were in" of ~ summits in the 48
African· historv. William• 'present·· for , the baptism. ~tinguous stales.
'·
retired ·in Jll74 "" profes,..;. of Phlllp Andrew was born at . And then there iire the ~
Afrkan ,1 hit•'ry at How-drd the Pleasant Valley Hospital ' mesln Delaware, Illinois lmd
Univer:-:it~.·
on~· 15,
li'lorlda.
.
.'
Delaware's high point Is the
crown of a state highway. •
FUNN'i'.BUSINESS
Roger Bollen • •lllnols' Charles Mound.
.r-----:-~~"!""--.,;;;.;....;.;::...,_""'....:· summit Is 1,235 feet. Visitors
.)lily $1 to pass over an elderly
lady's property to stand oo .
CAN YA SPAI&lt;'E A
.the
mound. Florld•'s ,
unnamed
summit Is 345 feet
8l)CI(-FIFTy... QH ..·
abov•. ~ levei.
·

on

•

yOLCANO! .
NEW YORK (AP) ...,. Two
FORTY
shows, "Porn
. pell AD79" and
-FOUR
.
p
1
·
·
·
"Volcano!"
will be on exhibit
(Ap)
·DALLAS
- 0 tee Ul
Dallas have adopted a new 44 at the American Musewn of
as standard ll!lulpment. .Jts ~~t":'al History AprU 22.July
firing~takes
only a fraction of
"Pompeii AD79" const"sls ·
a s~ond, and there•s no
noise.
·
' '
of 350 examples of Roman art
Forty-four is the nwnber of and artifacts: 'The musewti
solid-state pusb.buttons that ' says it ' wtll "present these
control . each
of
10 beautiful objects In th~
sophisticated consoles in t!ie context of bow Pompelnalis
nel' ' Dall~s pollee com- usedtbem,'o!Roman life as It
municatlons center.
was 2,000 years ago." · · '
·with the help of the push"Volcano!" will "with
buttons from Honeywell, one , light, sound and ·111m take
console operator can coor- 'visitors inside the heart of an
dinate
mobile
units, · erUpting volcano, have them
helicopters and a computer. peer down inside the cone,
That 's why .the officer in give them a tour of , active
the patrol car who stops you .volcanoes from Iceland to ·
· may know nearly as much Indonesia, and introduce
about your car as yow- neigh_, them to the causes of these · 1
bors do.
· massive ·eruptions In the.··
,crust of tbe earth."
·

Professor trains sights on
Mt. McKinley as next goal

The cosi'l.in be $10 per participant fhysbands and wives
count as Ol)e 1:
The work~hop leaders wiU
he Joh~ E ..ljrammer and Bill
Breckeririi!'~e of :uie Mental
Health Cenfh. Both John and
Bill. have P,~~sented this type ·
of worksh~ pn two O&lt;Caslons
in the past 'In Meigs County
and have '1.\und them to be
highly successful.
For m ~re information
please call~-2192.
'

Today's Topic:

Mrs. Martha ' Hoffman a white elephant sale In May.
ho!lted a meeting of the Sew- Mrs. Nettie Boyer wiD hoot
Rite-Sewing Club at her home the nelf1 meeting. Door prizes
Wednesday night. Mrs. Joni were won by Mrs. Lucy While
Hoffman presided at the and Mrs. Gilmore and the
meeting with Mrs. Ann hostess served refreshments
Browni-ng giving. the to those named and Mrs.
· treasurer's report, and Mrs. Shirley Baity, Mrs. Mildred
, Evelyn Gilmore, the Wells, Mrs. Pandora Collins,
secretary's report.
Mrs. Flo Strickland, · Mrs.
A thank-you note was read Carolyn · McDaniel, Mrs.
from the Wllllatn McKnight Lenora McKnight, Mrs. Netfamily . Plans were made for tle Boyer, and Mrs. ~)~!tty
Wehrung . .

-

TR·A-ILER LO.A I)

50%

tients recovered?
One practical hint : If yoo
are selecting a ITl&lt;lrria~e
counselor, find out hi• or her
attitudes about the institution

S.ll....in;u 1}11/.)v;, ,;,1 set ~~~~~~~e~e;l~;:~r:·:crus':
.
Ap
"1.
h
..
·
·
,
fior . rt ere. ·

R
· ·
· -arent workshop offered

DALE'S

Mrs. Marth'a Hoffman
hosts Sew-Rite Club

. The first.. high -school
driving course began at
Pcnnsylval'ia's State College
High. School in 1934.

nf

~nmP

l!fiWI'\';ml

~~tinhl~ .
'
.
rf it.,,::,~ nn un.'lf'f'n hand nf
hHI.,· nr ...:hmittil,. tll;~l ''flO•
c'Ji7(•d fhi.!oC j.!J'O t) ' j.,t d cJ~ 11 .,:- '

, ,1~onr.OIII fflctutloUII, R. Jill.

Clllrteo RiHio, R. Plh

Ron old H......... R. Ph
Mon. lllrw Sot. I:OOo.m. lo9 P,m.
SundiY lO:JOto 12::111andStofp.m. •

'PRESCRIPTlCitd

-·

E. Moln

Frlondty.Strvice
Opero llllillt• tlllt"' .

PH. 'f2-295S

·
Pomotoy/ 0 .
I

J

�.

10- The Daily S&lt;&gt; ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday , April!! , 1979

r~---------·-------·

PTO hears presentation by county
iI MasOn ~nty
News Notes (""ii;J;~''H~iP "l
By Alma Marshall
I ,, u
:
:
.along
with
student
play
4-H
,agent,
1
1

I

Mt~h~&gt;list

MASON - P.ight P""'""s join"! llw·Mas&lt;m Unil&lt;"l
Church by prof&lt;•ssiun of faith on Palm Sunday "ith nr ..lnhn P..
Wil&lt;lman, pastnr. offil'iating. Marsha Sis.o;nn, l.isa Hnffman.
Sheila Russell , 11&lt;mald RIL&lt;;.&lt;;&lt;•IJ , Rit•hanl r-'lrson, Angela H&lt;N•I.
Valerie Hil'kman and Mrs. Glenna Fn&lt;th wt•re bapli11&gt;d.
The children 's choir presented " I'Hn!l!!l! entitle&lt;!, " RlS!'n
and Returning."
I

Communion servict&gt; was a},!o;O tN'Ict .
This week 's coming t&gt;vent~ at the church eommrndn~ on
Maundy Thursday, April 12, at 7::&lt;o p.m., Sunrise servi&lt;'e,

I

Aprill5 at 6:30a.m., F't•lh•wship b"•akfast, April IS, 7::!0 a.m..
and Mortling Worship lr.anla!l! 1, April15, 9:45a.m.

r•
;,

a

•
~

I
•

t

I

••

"

t
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~~

MASON - Several area relatives attended the ehristiming of
Allison Hart, four and nne-half month old child of Mr. and Mrs.
Reginald Hart, at the Christ United Methodist r.hnn•h in
Wheeling on Sunday. 'fh!o baptism w•s p&lt;'liOI'IJX'd by tlw
Reverend Joseph Casey, pastor of the church.
Attending were ti)e grdndparents, Mr. and Mrs. WilliHm
Zerkle, Mason, and Mrs. James Hart,l.etart.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thomas, Robbie and Chris, New Haven:
Mrs. Michael Wolfe, P!. Pleasant: Alan Hart, Hurricane, -W.
Va., and Mr. Brent Hart, Huntington, W.Va .·
Following the christening, dinner was served at tlw Hart·
home in Wheeling, to the relatives mentioined, the Reverend
and Mrs. Casey, neighbor;; and friends .
·
MASON - THE lliason F.xtension Homemakers attended
the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Alburtice Young
on Sunday at the Young home in Clifton. Mrs. Young is a member ofthe group.
Among the Homemakers attending included Mrs. Clara
Williams, Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. I .ester Johnson, Mrs.
Evelyn Stewart, Mrs. Catherine Smith , Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs.
Matilda Noble, Mrs: George Carson, Mrs. Ramooa Svden·
stricker and Mrs. J. Marshall.
•
Mason and Area Per.;onals
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Troy and sons, .Johnny, Timmy, Troy and
Todd &amp;If, l.exington, Ky. visited on Friday evening with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart and with her grandfather , Christy Bletner. On Saturday inoming Mr. and Mrs.
Troy and so,ns, Johnny and Tinuny, left for Yonkers, N.Y., and
their other son, Todd, remained for a longer visit with is grand·
parents. The Troys are expected to return by the middle of the
week.
Airman Vance VanMeter of the Air Force s!Btioned at Norfolk, Va. visited over the weekend with relatives at Clifton.
Valerie Blake of Le!Brt visited over the weekend with her
grandmother, Mrs. Wilma RlakeatClifton.
Valerie Blake oll.e!l!rt visited over the weekend with her
grandmother, Mrs. Wilma Blake at Clifton.
Mrs. Curtis McDaniel underwent minor surgery on Thursday at Holzer Medical Center and returned home on Friday.
Visiting during the week were Calvin McDaniel, pt, Pleasant;
Mrs. James Loyd, Nashport, 0., Mrs. stan Saunders,.Colwn·
bus.
Mrs. Nora Cross of Le!Brt Falls underwent surgery on
Friday at the St. Antony Ho;-pital, 1450 Hawihome St., in
Columbo~,
Mrs. Cross, the former Nord Yeager, of l.etart,
W.Va. ISm mtensive care and her mom is 1001 .

9·

ASUNRISE SERVICE
A sunriJe service will be·
held Easter at 6:30 a.m .. at
the Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ.
.
· Included In the program
will be a special service by
the youth of the junior
. church. A breakfast will
follow at the church. Elller
worship services begin af
9:30a.m. A play, "Whatever
Happened to Jesus?" will be
presented. The public is in·
vited to the services.

Turns ten
Bryan Lee Reeves celebrated his lOth birthday
with a party on March 31 at
the home of his.grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. James C.
Reeves at Wolf Pen.
Cake, Ice cream and other
refreshments· were served to
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves,
Sr., and Brandl and Robbie,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tucker·
. man. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Darnell, Jr., and Jeff, · Mr:
and Mrs. Jack Elam and Bill
and· Carolyn, and Ronnie
Haning. S&lt;!nding gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. John L. , R.
GIIIUan, Mr. and Mrs. George.
GUWan and Lee and Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Haning.
TRACY IIEIN DAY
The Keno Church of Christ
held a "Tracy Hein Day" on
April I with a special
collection of $110 which was
given to the family to help
with expenses and med·
!cation.

t

.S • • • By Helen Bottetl\ii

A prPH'ntntinn tl\' .TPan
·.:. Srx•m·t•r , c·mmty 4-H aJ!t•nt .
Hnd ri play by shuiPnts nf

)

NON.('IIS'ffiOIJ\1. MO'MIF.R SIRTNS
ami distrihutecl leanl'ts tn
Klll!i P.VF.N ON WF.F.KF.NM!
Mr s . Oonna .Jenkin s J»lrenls. She will attc•nd
OP.AR HF.I .F.N :
hi ~hlight ..l a m""tin~ of tlx• another meeting and show
J I'HII Untlers(Hil(f why my Sisler I(HVe "L'\tndy of her mildren
Rutland PTO held Monday slides of 4-HaclivitiPS.
In lwr •·•·husband. She was involved In 8 11&lt;'W IU1d dt&gt;onandin~ ni!•ht.
1\ Jl.trt' t' rrowd was on hand
c·areer. while lw i.&lt; well-eslablished Hnd !'8n affonl H
hnusekeep&lt;'r. Jl's betterforthe klda.
Rut she made a hlg thinK of having them with her every
other weekend , erylnK about how mu&lt;·h she'd mis.• them.
Well, ohe pirks tlwm up - ltnd dumfl" them on our parrots
whole she tootles off Infant')' plat'l's with inltle friends .
It's heen. four month.• si!K'e the children have seen her for
COl ,IJMRII~ -- State Sc•n;otor Oak!"'' C. Collins IR-Jronton I
mc ..e than a few minutes on visitin~ weekends. This lsn 'I fair
states
th~l it appe~rs nnw !hat the "ban the bottle" le~islatinn,
to tlwm or lny folks lthou~h no one has complained yet 1.
Ho&lt;L«'
Roll1~9. whJI'h was mtmlured in tht• GenerHI As.o;embly
WOO should do what about this slt118lioo'- T&gt;JSGUSTF.O
hy
the
initiative•
prcwt•ss, will not he pas.secl by tlw Legislature.
OF.ARnJS :
.
H. R. 139 would han pull-tah "'n!Biners and require dt•posit.• on
Your sister shoold do a lot aboo&lt;t the situation, before her
heer and soft drink c•nntainc•rs. The Hou.o;e Energy and En·
children write her off as. a nOIHTlolher!
vironment CommittPP this week vote&lt;! 9-2 to rej ..i the bill. The
Your parenlll should rebel at semi-weekly baby.. itting
committee's vot~ , however, did not indefinitely J!O'o1pone the
l&lt;mless they're happy with It 1.
boll . If the rommtttee had voted to indefinitely poSI]l!me the bill
The falher should suggest lhat If his ex-wife doesn 'I want her
rather than merely reject it, tlw sup]l!&gt;rters of the initiated bill
youn~sters, visitinK privileges can be Ciul!'l!lll!d.
.rnuld
then have immedialely begtm .,,IJ..1ing the additional
Rut you, who seems most upset, should s!By clear. It isn't
'
115,000
signatures net'!'s.sary to put the pmposal to a s!l!tewide
your problem. -H.
vnto.
The Conslitution of the SIBle of Ohio allows the General
DP.A R HEI F.N:
As~c·m~ly
!'! take up to four months to t"nsider legislation
This isn 1 exHctly advire column material but everyone
whwh
os
lmtoaterl
by the people. If the four mimths expires, as
should be interested in CO"'!&lt;!rvation of energy these days.
will
ht•
the
rase
on
May 3 for H.R. 139, tlwn the supporters of
So here's my contribution: To save winter healing fuel we the hill are given 90
days in whit'h to collect an additional
leave bath water in the tub until it cools to room temperat~re.
Its heat is tramferred from •ater to air. Thlnli o1 the free heat amount of si~natures equal to three percent of the statewide
we've let go down the drain in years past! ,.. GRACF. FROM vote for govemi•r at tlw last gubernatorial election. The group
nri~lnally needed 1&lt;1 obtain this three pert'ellt figure in onler to
FRF..SNO, CAl JF.
Initiate the hill befnrt' lhP Generdl Assembly. Thtl', by obDF.AR GRACF. :
taonmg
tl!e numher of signatures equal In six percent of the
With household utility bills running upwanls of SIOO per statewode
vote for gcwernnr at the last gubernatorial election,
month, and that's In mild California, any little hint helps.
the.grOI.Ip
supportin~
H.R. 139 will he able to bring lhat piece of ,
Thanks. -H.
le~oslahon to the NoV!'mher bal)ot fnr ·a s!l!tewide vole bv
Ohio'tH·itizen~ .
o
•
OEARHF.IF.N :
,
House Rill 139 has !wen strongly oppose!~ by a coalition of
Books say women are still sexy after menopause, but I : l~h&lt;1r, inrl&lt;L'try an~· re!Bilin~ groups. These ~l'!lllps are con·
wonder.
1
.
I Vlll&lt;""l that this '\lll&lt;n .the bottle" Je~islatlon poses severe
At 55, J re!'l!ntly had llOX after 10 years abotinence. F.videnUy t~'moml!' problem,( Jt os further questionable whether or not
all my hormones had been used up as It was very painful· I got the dep"•it ran serve as a large enough ineenlive to encourage
cramps in both hips and Walked with a llmpfortwodays.'
.the lltterin~ public not lei Jitter.
·
.
Have my vaginal walls thimed Ior whatever) beyond hope
The Public Utilities Conunissiun of Ohio a~ain has a full
or should J try again? Where can I get adequate details oo sex three·memher Commission. The Ohio Senate this week con ..
in the agin~? - AFRAID OF NF:XT TIMF. lthough he's a , firmed GovernorRhodes' lw1iappoinlmenls he had ITillde (othe
wondeliul man l
Publk utilities Conunission. The new member on the ComOP.AR AFRAID:
mission is Midiael Del Rane from Hubbard, Ohio. Mr. Oal
Your fl.rst experience with sex, some 35 years ago, was no 'Bane, a former' Democratic member of the Ohio House of
doubt pamful too .. But you dldn1 once ccnsider gjving it up, Representatives, was appointed to the PUCQ. to fill the
remember' So think of yourself as a semi-virgin who need'! Democratic vacancy on the Conunission. Originally, Mr.
practice to make her lovellfe good again. Ill's been a long dry HowHrd Cummins had been appointed to this position by the
spell.l
r.overnor and had resigned because it appeared likely that the
A doctor can prescribe creams or suW..Utories which could Senate would not confirm his appointment. The Senate also
be all you need. Jf your honn&lt;Ji\e count is low and you aren 1
confirmed tlw current chairman of the Conunission, C. Luther
rl estrogen.
fealiul ol side effects, he may SUI(I(est mild
Heckman, to a new six-year tenn CIS thr Currunissiun's chairA good book to relld is "Fires of Autumn," subtitled "Sexual man. Mr.•Herkman has alreadv served for four years as the
Activity In the Middle and I.ater Yeafll," by Peter A. Olckln- &lt;ilairman of the PUCO.
·
son. -H.
The Senate passed le~islation during the week which would
P.S. Keep i~ mind lhat any physical exercise after 10 years'
permit trucks owned and used by nonprofit '"rpor•tions to
abslmence will be u~comfortable and sore-making- at first.
transport
waste ITtllterials for recycling or reu.&lt;te to only have
Try,tryagaln-1-H.
!()pay a flat fee of $25 for motor vehicle re!(istration. Senate
RillS requires .that an officer of the non-profit corporation submot to the Regostrar of Motor Vehicles an affidavit stating that
the tnork will be used exclusively for the purposes nf trans·
pol1in~ waste materials for rl'l•ydin~.
·

Collins' report

oo.;,

, Polly Cramer
Mildew Is thriving

DEAR PQLLV _We stay In
our mobile hoi!M! In Florida
only six months rl the year
COMMUNION
and wQOder If you could give
SERVICE
us any suggestions for stop.
A candlelight and com· ping mildew and IIIO]d during
munion service wiD be held at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the Mt. our absenee· We aIw.ys
the windOW!! and put
Union Baptist Church at crack
charcoal under the couch and
Carpenter.
· beds bullhal does not seem to
A sunrise service will be hel
MRS s
p: · ·
held Sunday at 6:30 a.m. The
DEAR MRS. S. - 1 think
pastor, the Rev. Cecll Cox,
invites the public to attend. talking to yopr neighbors
about what they have done
might be of the moat help
because any solutions they
ENLARGEMENT
have pertain to your par·
CAMPAIGN
ticular area , Mildew thrives
The Rev. Damy Decker of in swrun ~•·u 111
er, ~·""""' y secGod's Bible School in Cin·
lions
of
the: country where
cinnatl will be speaker at BJI
bigh hwnldity prevails.
enlargement campaign ·to be
!.eave closet doors open
held at the DanvWe Wesleyan and drawers pulled o!Ji a bit
Church Sunday School at 9:30 for. ventilation. Dfyness and
a.m. Easter. There wiD be a cleanliness will help prevent
special program by the mildew's attack. Any mildew
children. The Rev: R. · D; that forms should be removed
Brown, pastor, blvltes the as soon as possible and soap
public.
and a cleaning solution.
should do the job. This par·
ticular funuus thrives in da k ·
•
r
ERROR NOTED
dai!'&lt;P places so II might help
Students of the Riverview if a neighbor would go 'in
•• often and let some
El ementary Schoo I par. every ~
tidpatlng in a read·a-thon sunshine and warm dry air
collected $353.44 which was in. -POLLY
given to lbe Mental Health
DEAR POJ.J.Y - Whenever
Assn. rather than used for I I try ·~ new recipe I always
purchasing library books as · write 8 comment beside it on
was reported recently.
how we liked. ,It nr on 80

RADIO SHACK
407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT
OPEN
M Moo.-sat.
12-6 Sunday
.~Easter Sunday
M2-3662

alterdtlon I might want io
make ano~r time. My
cookbooks are full of such
helpful hints. -CHERYl.
DF:AR CHERYl,- I think it
Is also very helpful to add
how nuiny can be served by
(ollowing a favorite recipe.
' POLLY
DEAR POl .LV -One of my
Pet Peeves is with the en·
!ranees to slmpplng center
parkiiJI( loll! that are btlrely
wide en~h for two cars to
enter and leave at the same
time. One must come to a
complete stop; stopping the
traffic behind so that you
enter with caution to avoid
the car that is leaving the lot.
- BF:I.VA
DEAR POLLY- My ta~les
seem to spot just from steam
in the room so I have to use

EASTER CANTATA
The · choir under the
direction of Mrs. Debbie
Gerlach wiD present a can·
tata, "The Glory of Easter"
when sunrise services are
held on Easter at 6 a.m. at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Following the presentation
a breakfast will be se..Ved.
Tom Bowen will do the
narration for the cantata and
accompanists will be Clarice
Erwin at the organ and
Jennie Sheets at the piano.
, Others taking part will be
Dorothy Roach, Bea Stewart,
Peggy Brlckles, Trod)
Williams, Clyda Allensworth,
Lena McKinley, Shirley
Bumgardner, Dorothy Davis,
Sharon. Stewa.rt, Cathy Er·
win, Don E;r!l'ln, Mike
Stewart, Randy Roach, L. D.
Hartinger, Earl McKinley,
Mac Stewart, and Joe Bishop.

coasters for all glasseo. After
using my nice coasters for
famUy use· I had to run out
and buy new ones when J was
going to have guests. Now I
have discovered the plastic
t~ from the cylinder-type
pretzel and potato chip cans
are just perfect for everyday
coasters as the liP holds con·
idensation from cold drinks
and when tu11Jed over keeps
the heal f
hot drink
rom
mugs
~~;i'F.h"T' the IBbles. Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers If
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or ProbleQlln
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS In care of this
II!!Wspaper.

I

for the meet in~ durin~ whi&lt;'h

a cli!-icussion was held on how

parents''"" help with repairs
at lht• &gt;&lt;l'h&lt;XJI. The election
ami installation of offil'ers
was planned for the ne.l
meeting: ·

•

More· tha.n ·Bo persons Bti;end .k ickofffete

The room bsnner went to

th• fifth grade of Mrs.
Jenkins whose studenis
presented a play, "Rip Van
Winkle" by Adele Thane.
Parents of third graders ser·
ved refreshments.

"'
·" n

More than 80 of Rio Grandt&gt;
College's

11

Cha llenie for the

. l

aheud.
!ht&gt; puhli(' monc•y i!-l tn jnin

fmnily rh ~l ~l' has 1fl ·dtth•
rai:wd t,l ,:l80,0&lt;t l.

.J.. Second r.entury" raml»'ih'Tl
With t' orporatf• gifts ,
" Tt is with this impn•s.~.;ivt'
" ' leadership gathered in
bt&gt;qut-.st s, plt•rlgt•s frinn heginning," F.vans sail! ,
Jackson Thursday to kit•k-&lt;Jff : fal'ulty, staff, alunmi ami "that WI' hegin the publk ef·
_,., the .college's public fun~
friends of the collrgt• tCl fnrt . We must tah tlw camraising effort.
(;lt'hieVP tht' OVP fa1J t'am- paiKn to our entirP st•rvic·t•
Prominent eltizen.c; ·from
paign 's f4 .9goctl ahectd .
area."
Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
nani el Evans. ~eneral
Public' !'a mpai~'ll chairrilan
Vmton Counties '&lt;l!'ializL&gt;d
l'Hmpaign chainnCln, lWgcm. · Miles T. Epling set the m1""t
dined, and listened to !'am:
the evening with a report on for the remainder or the
paib'll committee leaders
t~e .~u~cessful ," family por.
evening 's ' . mntivationitl
outline the $500,000 goal
loon of the !'ampaign. The speecht'S as he e~plained his

r·- -·-·- ------.. . -- .. 1 r
I· Social Calendar I. I
.

· ROCK
SPRINGS
WEDNESDAY
GRANGE,
7:30
p.m.
Thurs&gt;
TRUSTEES of Meigs·
day, at the hall. Baking and
County
Pioneer
and
Historical Society will meet · sewing contest will be held.
The program will be
at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
presented by the women of
Meigs Museum, Butternut
the
grange .. ·
Ave. AU persons interested in
ihe society or the upcoming
FRIDAY
history3book invited.
EASTER
BAKE Sale, AdPOMEROY CHAPTER 80,
dison
Freewill
Baptist Ladles
RAM Wednesday,' 7:30p.m.·
Aid,
10
a.m.
al
Murphy's In ·
Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM
Plaza,
·at 8:15.
SATURDAY
SYRACUSE . MINERS·
CHESTER
TOWNSHIP
VILLE · Basebsll Association
Wednesday . at Syracuse · Trustees meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the town ball.
M · 1 1B
umc pa uUding at 7 p.m.
SUNDAY
All coaches are urged to
COUNTY
WIDE prayer
attend.
meeting,
2
p.m.
Sunday at
MIDDLEPORT ~teur
Hiland
Chapel
with
Glen
Gardellf!rs, a p.m. Wedlles·
Bissell as class leader.
day In lhe Riverboal Room of
VOICES OF Liberty
0111 of lbeAibetts
cantata, "The Last Week" by
the Meigs
ceand lAiau C
John W. Peterson, 2:30 p.m.
.~~:~It ...r
Sunday
at the Pomeroy
Veda Davis will be hOIIteoseo.
United Methodist Church
THURSDAY
under diJ;ection of Mrs. june
GALLIA COUNTY Human . Van Vranken and Mrs. Dale
Service Council, 12 noon,: Maehlr. accomnanlst.
Community Mental Health
SUNRISE services at
' Cenier, speaker, Jack : Freedom Gospel Mission,
Rodcrus, Housing Authority ' Bald Knobs, 6 a.m. Jim
Director, lunch $2, for
Cundiff Is the speaker.
. reservations call Phyllis Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.
and Church services at 7: 3()
Mason, 446-5500.
p.m.

GUY HYSELL
Guy Hysell, Pomeroy, Is In
the intensive care unit at
Pleasant Valley Hospital
undergoing observatiQn for a
heart condition. Canis may
be sent to him in care of the
hospital.

ves our supp,ort."
Fe(ltured stwakf.&gt;rs ftlr lht•
t•vc•ninK wert~ F.mily JRt•dy.
diredor of Women 's Servie~

Divi sion Ohio Rureau of F.m-

. :;j ,,

...
.,"

"·
'&gt;:''

,.

CRAFTS, BAKED GOODS, CANDY,

AT

-~~.

.

ACROSS FROM DR. CONDE
MIDDlfPORT, 0.

I

' GRANDF: - More
RIO
than $700,1)00 in federal
assistance was awarded to
'students at Rio Grande Col·
lege and Community College
dyuearirn. g the 1978-79 academic
Mark Abell, director of
Financial Aid, released the
comprehensive report of all
grant, loan, scholarship and

,,

~...

work study pro~rams io the
college's Board of Trustees.
The $701,309 figure
represents an eight percent.
increase over last year's
$677,866 IolBI. These funds
were distributed through 58
percent of the Rio Grande
College and Community College full-time student body.
Federal and state grant

programs accounted for over
$450,000 of the.total. Amounts
. ol these grants, which are
based on the applicant's
family income, will increase
next year due to the recent
passage of the Middle Income
Assistance Act which raised
'the maximum qualifying in·
come level.
"Approximately 30 percent

,._

3 DAY

BLACK, NAVY AND
BROWN

.'

"

Russell Stover Candies are the
finest in quality, 'freshness and
goodness. Choose from many
assortments of delicious can·
dias especially decorated for
Easter.

Multi-color Bamboo
Basket $4.95

Multi -color Basket

534
'R,...ill. St.vcl\.
.

lb. Assorted Chocolates

:. ~ """
·!~

. $3.50

·.·

~.

. .

'"

CHILDREN'S
DRESS SHOES
WHITE AND BLACK PATENT

Stride Rite: .

'· SYLVANIA
FLIP FLASH 1 Os

Features free-arm capability, 4-step buill·
in buttonholer. front drop-in bobbin, flex·
istitch patterns, 8 built-in stitches, and a full
30-year warranty .

$2.77. Value

115W.2nd
!&gt;om~roy, O~io

,.

FUJI FILM
C110·12 • C126·12
$1.69 Value

99¢

We repair all srwlng machines.
· We sharp~n ~cissors .

FABRIC SHOP

CHAPMAN'S QUALITY
SHOE STORE •

SYLVANIA
MAGICUBES 3s
$3.39 Value

DUTTON ·DRUG CO.
'

,

Commerce will meet at 12
noon Friday at the Meigs Inn.

·106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

Two's Company Dress
Shop for that Special
Easter Dress .

· Bake sale
Middleport Elementary
PTA will hold a bake sale
Saturday, Aprill4, in front of
Cash Rahr's beginning at 9,
a .m.

Jr . J · I5sizes
Misses 8·20 sizes
Half Sizes 141/,-24 '1•

..

M•et tonight
Pa;1 Councilors Club,.
Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America will
meet this evening at 8 p.m, at
the home of l.etha Woods's
daughter, Margaret Emma
Christy, Chester.

TWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

118 E . Main Pomeroy, o.
992·2347

EASTER BASKETS
FILL THEM YOURSELF!
Mexican St11w, Pintle

of our students," said Abell,
"qualified for the federal
grants program. Based · on
what I feel is a cooservative
estimate, 65 percent of the
student population wiD be
eligible next year."
The state program has also
indicated an increase for next
year . "It seems," Abel\ add·
ed, "that our state Hnd.
federal governments are
beginning to recognize the
needs of the middle inc.ome

By the baak:et and fill younelf. You' ll
sa11el SeiKt from 011ala, a~res. palls,
reetangular, buckets and other ahapet. We
have a site tor every Bile ch~ld . .

59~

WI WILL II CLOSID
EASTII lUNDA Y

'')ft

The college itself awanled
over $101,000 to 179 students
through academic per·
formance , talent, need, and
work programs.
Private donors' scholar·
ships accounted for $37,390,
di stributed among 54
students . This figure
represents an almost $10,000
increase from last year.
"Academic scholars~ips,"
Abell said, "are most iinpor·
tan! .to the college, Through
this type of aid the college
can attract students to cam·
pus who provide incentive
toward excellence for all
other students."
· The Rio Grande College
and Community College
District Scholarship, created
in 1978, was the first giant
step toward increasing the
academic scholarship ·programs at Rio Grande.
'Twelve District Scholar·
ships were awarded to
seniors from Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and Vinton Cuunties.
The group, ' which included
two high school valedictorians, one co-valedictorian,
and two Ohio Board of
Regents Scholarship winn~rs.
have found success
academically in the college
level as well. Through winter
quarter, the group .carries a
3.70 grade point average
· IGPA) . Four of those
.students carry perfect 4.0
• Rio Grande was chosen by
four of the Ohio Academic
~holarship winners . These
awards go to the top student
In every high school
throughout Ohio. Abell noted,
'"To enroll four of these
scholarship · students
represents a tremendous sue·
' cess for otir ·academic programs. Most schools, 'exeE']lt·
for the s!Bte:s large unlver- ·
sities, enroll one ."
Abell also sees a bright
future for increases 'in
academic scholarships lit Rio
Grnde. "'flllhln the current
capital campaign," he said,
"is the framework for prtvat~·
citizens or rorporations to
earmark pledges toward
ac•ademlc
scholarships. ·
Many have already d1me so,
and Wt' hope many more wiD
folJnw suit. "

MuiU·calor or Grnn &amp; White
RtiUIIr '6.49

,,

Sprfng

$·566

. Compare!

66~

16
Ounce

Ar•
Ov•r
Plowing
With

• .

· · LAWN CHAIR

Voluod

·.,

.

. .•·. .. ·:.;.,.
''
.

II"' ' ~

SPRINQ HANDBAGS

MARSHMALLOW
IUNNIIS
Boa 01 10

2 oz.

DOZENS OF.cSnLES AIID COLORS
{' IM•cramee,

patenta,
c;anvaa, dr ess vinyls In
I'~"WY wanted color. Shop
ovr handbltga, you 'll llkt
our varied, wide seledlon.

WE'RE CANDY EXPERTS

.,f .8&gt;1LJ ~599Tosl499

MOLE REPELLENT

LAWN
DAISY

•r! l

TEENS,AND WOMEIIS

. qetals
34"

FAS.HION TOPS
Far llow AliM
Liter. 'I
AHUGE COLI.ECTIONI

Hilh

'1''100
·

WE'Ll SAVE YOU lOilEY!

PEANUT BUnER

~=~,. '

s&amp;e

Choose tram fank topt,
sleevelets or tnorl SIHvt
styles. Not lust a rew. but •
huge wonderful colltctlon .
ComeS... you' ll want ...,.eral .

,

.

MALJED MILK
SPECKLED 66~
EGGS
I

,

. R111llr 1nd XL SiBs

$299 $8

(I

oz.)

SOLID fOjL

WRAPPED EGGS

'

·"I

'

12xl2

Heldt 2 Ptlplt

'
1
1944
Wootlltm
·

ABIG SELECTION
HOLLOW
MILil CHOCOLAT\.
liUNNIIS

':J&amp;C

REDWOOD CHAIR
:'"''In WOOD SIJTS

lltAIIII~IIIIUfllulill1 ::.;·
SAVE '2.55

96c·

M.AISIIMALLOW PEEPS......... 10ForW
CARMEL NUT EGG$ ............... 8For7f'
4 OZ. FRUIT OR IIUT EGG$ ........... 66'
SPERRY CREME EliG$. .............. ...15'

L_,;_.il-':" ' SfiE
~'3.55

$1244

MAIONN
WHIPPID CRIME
IGOI

30C

FLOWER FIU£D
·aMITIRY VASE
· - • III~Hts
.

~=

, AITIFICAl

FLOWIRING·l·,,
lUSHES .

t

'Roaes ,
Geranlumt
daisies and atvtrll
other wented types .
Bu&amp;I'IY and Full.

$1ftAnd $299.
80STOII

Moliere .. the great French
·dramatist. died in 1673.

Our
Stor••

~ ~F-IWGALUMINUM

, 5x4x4 Webs

$249

TO

SPICED OR BLACK .

So Our EmpiOJMS Can Spend
The Day With Their F1mllits

GPA's.

SALE

MEET FRIDAY
The PomerQy Chamber of

t.

student."

&gt;

20 % OFF

of the 'Challenge for the
Second Century Campaign' is
an investment the p&lt;'ople of
Southeastern Ohio will make
for· today's children and
tomorrow's future ."
Closing remarks by Oan
Evans predicted sucL'eSS for
the campaign's public goal.
:The challenge has ·been.
1ssued ,' he said, ''and it's our
job to see itthrough,"

game protector, aid, "Wild
turkey populations in isolated
areas of Ohio have been in·
erasing significantly in recent years and equal interest
in harvesting the game bin!
by Ohio sportsmen has also
inereased, eonsequenlly,
seminars like this one will
hlep educate the hunter with
proper knowledge of
harvesting tet•hniques."
The Wild Turkey Seminar
is free and open to the public,

Culhige-Community College fund drive. On left are Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Evans. On right are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hayes.

~

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

at. Rio Grande -H~ well as she
other colleges. A!'lt Qne of six
children of a Raptis!
mini ster, wit~ two children

Hlreaciy in college, Rio Gr&lt;ln·
de represenl&lt;•&lt;l the onlv
college e&lt;lu!'ational op·
portunity for me dm• to it.o;
low cost. Even though the
roll e~ e ha s grown and
upgraded its academic
programs and credentials
since those eary 1!150s, it has
never forgotten who it was
meant to serve."
He added, "Public support

!

t

THRIFT. SHOP

'H I

r Federal assistance received

EASTER RELATED ITEMS

SPONSORED BY HUMANE SOCIETY

She ~trf'Hs t•d f.l
" nrl'd fur job ready l'ullt'~e
g-raduates in a society J!Cfl red'
towetrd leehnieal and :ierviec
c•mployment opportunities."
Or. Hoyt spnke of his
"debt" to Rio Grande. Hoyt
said , "In 1950 I was accepted

•

MILES T. Epling, public campaign chairman, makes
a few s!Btements in connectioo with the Rio Grande

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

tr;~ining .

With ' Ohio's wild turkey ,
hunting season openin~ April
:!0, a Wild Turkev' Seminar
sp1•nsored by the Gallia Coon·
ty ConHervalion ASSncialion
will be held Saturday, April
:!8. at 1:30 p.m. at the Bob
P.vans .Farm shelterhouse.
The farm is lll!'ated one-half
mile east of Rio Grande along
St. Rt. 35.. ·
'· ,
The seminar will be )1'osted
by association mem~r Rob
F:vans, presldeni',, ' of the
sausage an d restaurant enm·
pany, Rob Evans Fanns, Inc.
Rob, an avid sportsman and,
conservationist, suceessfullv
bagged a wild turkev laSt
season in Gallia county'.
S&lt;!minar speakers inelude
. J.ew McClure, r.anton, who
holds several national and
regional wild turkey calling
titles; and Olla Arbogast,
We;1 Virginia's tyrkey call."
ong champoon. · · ·
Commenting oiJithe value
of such a seminar, Kenneth
Tomlinson, GalUa.. County

Mr'::

EASTER BAZAAR

plnym«·nt Hnd a 1949 j.!rnclttatt&gt;
of Rio Gn mclt• fmd· Or. .John
Hoyt. a 1954 Rio C:rttndt•
alum nus and Pfl'l'it'ntlv
president of The Hmm&lt;rW
S&lt;K•iety of the United States,
Wa shinghm, 0 . C.
J,(•t•ciy actdrPssefl the g:rnup
on tt\e advantnt.ws nf thP Rio
Grand~ CnliP~(· 8!1d r,om ~
munity Collt-ge program C\f
Liberal Arts anti teclmi&lt;'al

Seminar slated

...

··· l~·~

20% .OFF
LENA POUu.:K
WRNSII
Tbe 88th blrlbday an·
nlveraary of Lena Pooler was
• observed Friday, March 30,
with a dinner. Allendlng were
Viola Tea11rden, Pearl
Fraley, Portamouth, Brad
and Caryl Pooler, Sally
Pooler, Edwin and Butb
Batley, Jean Scuon, Doug
and Lena Belle PuliJna, Ray
and Marilyn Wiener, Dorh·
man and Pbyllls Reed,
Eunice Halsey, Carroll
Dodderer, and Maxine, Kim,
Jamie and April Wien&lt;:r.

portunities for the penpll' of
SoutheHI-\tt•rn Ohio. Fnr th&lt;•st•
t"ffort ~." ht&gt; added, " it dt•ser-

L...

SUNDAY, APRIL 15
Head Start, Racine, 2-2:30;
Portland Post Office, 3-3:30;
Racine Home National Bank, ·
4-5; Wali!"er Hardware, Ra·
cine, ~~;' Syracuse Swimming Pool, 6:15-8:15.

c·pmmihm•nt tn the• eff&lt;H1 .
Epling 1-~pnkr of .. Rio C1nmdt· ·s grPat 1-~trides in im·
pr~lvt•d
erlur;ational op-

"'':\"~

Happy Easter!

..

I

''

Mrs. Spt&gt;n&lt;·Pr spnk(• on the
lx•nt•fits uf Uw 4·H prugrnm

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O .. Wednesday, April ll , 1979

fiiN
lUSH

_____,

Artificial, wahlble poly flowers . Spring tvJfl

are going out rat, 10 ~your ne.dl for Eutw
and l•ter now. We will not have mtny more loose

flowen .

$100

NATUIAL DIIID

FLOWERS

' 12T ts

$129
.
. Bundlt

·

CrM~TIIY

IPIA Yl

: an, trl•ngle. and other
shapes. L.erge end · small
. SfM'IVS rot Easter Ctm.tery
Oec«lfillt,
.

.$rOO TO $599

POINT

~LEASAIIT

OR MASON
(

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , April II, 1979

w~.~~~~~~;;:;·~~~~;~~:~~:~

WANT AD
CHARGES

nr-ig hh C'l( ~

N Q~ni7'nllf'n"

Cash
ldayZdays
Jdays

fdaYI

t'Nirge

1.00
1.$0

1.25 '
1.90

I.Ml
3.00

U$
3.~

running other than COI1Raltive
days will bt charged al the 1 day

.....

1n """"""' c...d o1 Tbanko and!
ct.ltwary : 6 C'ffiL!J per word, $3.00
millimum. Ca!h in advance.
.

I

the right
,. ediL or reJ«&lt;any ads deemed obJect.Jonol Tile Pllb!Uher "'ll n&lt;lL be
~ble for IDOI'e than one lncor- ,

9'11 · 5108.

NOTlCE .

8FGINNER CAKE dHora ti ng
clo ss t- s ~ fo r tin~ right owQ~··
Coli Ca rouse! Con f~ct io nery in
M irlrliP.f'IO r1 . 997-bJ47 or evf'n·
iu9s Qf1?·3'1EI9. Bu y· your Fn; IPr
candy suppli l'!i n1;1w . Tim f' . i ~
running shor t.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISIN(.
DEADLINES
~~~.

I P.r,t.
the day bdore publication

I P.f!l.

Fri&lt;lay-.-.~
PUBLIC fo(OTICE
The Vi llage of Syracuse
wi ll hold a public aucti on and
rec eive sealfd bids on April
2L at the Fire Station . Th e
auction will begin at 4 p ,m .
Sealed bicls must be sub
mitted by 3 p .m . on the 21st .
Items to be sold are : police
c rui se r ,
trac tor 1
gang
mowers and a transforme r.
The Village of Syra cus e
reserves the right to r e iect
any or all bids .
/

(41 ll , 13, 17 , ' 3 tc

PAULINE \'On EIIEINSTEIN
•1 Cole Street
Middleport, Ohio,
Plaintiff,

,

•

,

•

'

•

'

• secon~ary activities, such a~

•

.,

GREEK ART

--- ___

_.

.

several nice listings in and
llrpund Rutland so give us a

.

•

.

on

Brick

Street

.

NEW LISTING -

bedroom home with almost
2 acres. Bath, furnace,
'around · ten years old.
Needs a little finishing but
only $17,000.
.

14 Yr. Expe~ltnce
Aural 'Molhad

I\JIII
unnl
LANE
·
As•c•ate

·

.L----..-.,.~3:..·1:.:.l·:.:.l.:;m.::•::::···l.J

J

RIVER VIEW -- Abovea ll
floods , beautiful pcmor;:tma
si te . Hits 3 bedrooms. bath.
nat . pets furnt~ ce, city water
and h lock gara9e
Only

·\
,

.3-16-mo.

only 57.500.
NEW LISTING --, 6 .01
acres. 6.30 acres, 7.12 acres
jar 20 acres nea..r Meigs Sr.

Gordon B.
~eator AssoCiates

Housing'

$3,000.

'608
MAIN :
..
I'OMEROY,O . .

JUST LISTED- 85 acres. with plenty of g~ posture
· land and somelarmlng ground. Good barn with drilled

REAL NICE RANCH -

both need some repair. Mineral rlghfs too. Good
ENJOY COUNTRY LIVING In this beautiful
remodeled 4 BR fully corpeted home. The·hom..,lts on
5 acres and Includes a pond. The stone heafa-lator
flrer, lace sets off the large L. R. area. Kitchen Is
:upped with refrlg., stove and dishwasher Home has

Priced for quick sale. S42,SOO.

S39,900.

FIVE YEARS OLD- Beaullful &lt;bedroom home w·llh ·
large eat -In kitchen, 2 baths, TV room, all nicely
carpeted, large utility room and tnaf'ly more eMtras.
Natural fas forced air furnace . .Plenty of garden space

on 1 acre of lond . Pril ed right $36,000.
bedroom house with full

neighborhood .
528.500.00.

other buildings. Cheap at
$33,500.00.
BUILDING SITE-2 acres
of
land in
Wildwood
subidlvlsion ,
beautiful
homesite. $6,000.00. ·

YOUR OWN CAR WASH Good part time Income and
a place to wash your own
car . Call for deto!! l ~ .'

SETS, S39.q5. U·HAUl, RICE'S
NEW AND USED FURNITURE ,

PAINTING AND ~ondb!as t i ng .
Free eslimoles . Coli 9•9·7686.

85• 2nd AVE .. PH . 446-9523

5900. '1'12·7376.

· · · • · · ·
POOl CHEMICALS. Season pocks .
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
Free deli 11ery . D. Bumgardner
71 ,000 mile! , fully equipped .
Soles, In c. Equipment and supair , wench , etc., e.wcellent con·
_rli,es_. qq
. 2.·5.72.4..
dition. 997· 2121 .
- - · · HOUSE EXTERIOR pointing. Roof
1975 CADILLAC Eldorado. 25,000
painting and repair~ . Ca ll
mil es. f ully equipped. El(cellent
992·63d9 or 74'1 ·2174 lor free
~o.nd.itl_o~~2!''".'""' :.. ~~- es timvote.
MUST SELL. 1977 Molibu 2-door. Will TUTOR eleme11tory cind Jr.
992·5786.
• • I
.
,
High child ren in read ing and
moth in my home . B.S. degree
1973 BUICK GRAN Sport. Good
in El Ed. M.A. deg reA in
........! odiol tires. Roll~ whpels.
reocli ug 5 years e•perience in
auto ., P.S.. A .C. . $1600.
puhli(' and pri vate scho.ols.
985·•2?6:
940· :2A:n.
1975 CHEVY -'l x• lruck. Coli

9'12-5335.

with l"rqe beef barn near Pomeroy.

- _ - · _Give !!Y!.ay __

-

good 2 bedroom home, almost new

Insulated, natural gas heat, utili ty building 2 lots
'

TRAILER

.

po ss. wagon . S11'15 . 1974
Chevy Malibu, npw tir es . ex
· hoost 'system , battery. $1295 .
304 -773·5.. 71.

JUST LISTED - 75 Acres with· a 3 bedroom frame
house, barn and other building, mostly fenced. Some

also. s~.soo. oo .
WE HAVE
BUYERS,
INANC ING &amp; A NEW
OME
WARRANTY
PROGRAM. WE NEED
LISTINGS NOW!
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.

tlm~r ~and e11.cellent bottom land. About 1.000 feet of
beautiful Ohio River frontage. ONner will help finance.

Asking 557,000.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992-22St

_

--a-1111--1111-'""
_gal ...

..,.._
.. ,. ___
........ __
.,.,.. eor.o---ono........
.,. ..

CRISPY

home IUOh .. lleotrtcll. jiiUmblng. oenlntl .........
~lr·condiiiONng, INIIIIIIIII-In IIPIIIliOII.
.

FRIED CHICI\Eif

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

'

THilfT f(f!WOC)M
f, ',.; . J-, rl n:
" ,f;._l i'173 .

WMT 1111£ 1-110111 CMllll ~ · I~ 1110AY1

unrf,-.rrini•lug,

QQ:).t)llfl

f ,·,, u :c~e

CLELAND REALTY

trni lr-r .

t , ,, ,, •r ni~ hf' rl .

'

•

I

per

aspera',
zpndera (suspect)
3 Sinatra

1

10 Suggesting
strength
16 Dessert
wine
19 Rimbaud
or Neruda
22 Kind of skirt
Z3 Italian
seaport
24 Carry on

,, .,
'

,,,,

One of

Bede.4'~

',

old

~hoes,

NORTH

Slim!

• J 10 7 5

•

;'

Nurth East

2+
Pass

Pass
2t
Pass

H

Pass

Opening lead: • K

C. II 742-2211 II .
'•',

~

__

.

. ...
~

; W~ UFFER YOU ;.,

By. Oswald Jacoby
and Al~n Sontag \

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is

used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lenglh and formation of the word1 are all
hints. Each day the code lt'tters are different.

WINNIE
• -'HE WA&amp; FAIR EI\IOUGH
5AIC&gt; 1 WA&amp;N'T ~EING
HELD HERf AGAIN&amp;T
MY'WILL. 1 COULC&gt;
LfAVf; ANvnME
1 LIKE.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y D L BAA· X R
Is LONGFELLOW

OR !COUI.P5r'AY.. -50
~ll~H Wll'H "THESE
11TE&amp;n;11 SHE!:;
ARAANGED !=OR ...
FIND OUT WHO !.
ReALLY AM I

•

I{OU Tf.\INK I(OU'LL. HAVE

FOR60rrEN WHAT IT WA5
LIKE TO HAVE SEEN A
KIO ~OURSELF ?

fully finessed the spade king

the

hearts .
The defense
crossroads. If
• routine ly a nd

South

,.

1+

played

low,

was at the
East had
mindlessly

South would

ha ve stu ck in his nine of
hearts and W est would have
been forced to win with the
10. W est w ould then ha ve
had to all ow South either to ~
· score his king of hearts or
get a ruff and discard .
East was .too alert for this.
He knew South's e xa c t distribution from the. proceeding play and there was only

one holding to a llow him to
defeal the contract : that
wlhest WOJ uldk 1h0oldf. hprecisely
e ace- ac • o earlli . If
this were the case, there was
counter for declarer if
East put up the queen o~
hearts.

no

magical ace-jack-10 In his
DLY

PQWJDY

E

PEW

QU

partner's hand and guarantc'eing the defense three

heart tricks.

LY

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . 1

I'D BE

11M 601N6 TO SIT ON
M~ FRONT PORCH,ANO
SCIZEAM AT ALL THE
KIOS WHO TRif TO
CROSS NJI( LAWN !

after winning trick one with
lh~ kin g. Soulh ruffed .
Declarer Jed a low club t o
dummy's queen . He su ccess ·

queen of hearts, catching the

(f) 1971 KiJII1 Fealunl Syndlcote, Inc.

I

ably pla ced .
We st continued diamondE

Therefore, he played the

CRYPTOQUOTES

· 1. Two full floors nf •II new
furniture.
.

3. A !ergo building 1ull of
btautlful ·urpol,

that supcrricia lly depend :
on both the a ce of hearts an(.
kin g of spa d es being f avor -

ja ck and led lhe three of

. .

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : East

,--~- Yd.

0

and Alan Sontag

SOUTH

• A K 88

Wat-t.. You G!'r'
OUT O'f HeRe !
....

" Hercules,

and dr'ew trump in two
rounds . He ran his club suit
ending in dummy with

• 4

992-6009

Mavle

• 87J
• J tO
• QJ 95
WEST
EAST
• 63
t K2
• A J 10
• Q 6 54
+ U871!
t Q 9 B5
• 42
• 10 7 3

+ AQ984

$"JIIi - . .

; see the Gr.rte Family at

4-Jl

• K 92

·TALK TO
Wendoll or Htrb Grete.
or"Gene Slftlth

15;

Pinpoint defense analysis

24 Rolls of ta rpot In Stock
&amp; IOO's of Samplts to
Choose From.
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE

.

News

BRIDGE

, end up lnStelltoi'

:

3;

25Sport.sWednesday, April 11
caster Red
26 For!l$ke
28 Philippine
island
Oswald Jacoby
29 Making
aU stops
30Corundwn
35 Uncle : Scot.
36 Ziegfeld

SAL£..-!

____ Yarc!.§al.!_ _ __

:oo-Tomorrow

Prisoner of Evil" 17; I:SQ-News 13.
3:oo-News 17; 3:2Q-12 O'Clock High 17; 4:20-12
O' Clock High 17. -

r«MON .

FROM

'..

Francisco" 10; Best of Groucho 20.

Yeslenlay's Alllwer

'•.,

·:

12:05--McCioud B; 12:40-Mannlx 6,13.

'C

n. plan WOiit...
~...,.,.

. · KENllJCI(Y

0 1'"' S.dl ~j.,·.,

DOWN

AU. CMPET

·fumlture·.

MCM: MICMutiCAL C&amp;IIW'it:Anotl, • """-d

What all that talk around the san i tation

lruck was-A LOAD OF RUBBISH

40 Unique

OUO AI'PIUA- WITH PIIOo
TICt10N WCW1CII.INC..·,.,..._the1Mf181yau
NICI to OTWWtiiii'IOit...,. ~~

EXIRA

Dick Cavell 20; Wild, Wild Wor ld of Animals 33 .
7:30-Bonkers 6; Match Game PM 8; $100,000 Nome
That Tune 10; Nashville On The Road 13; Dolly 15:
Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:oo-Whodunnlt? 3, 15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6, 13; Chlsholms
8,10; Nova 20,33; Mission : Impossible 17 .
B:3o-Highcilffe Manor 3,15; Angle 6,13 .
9:()(}--Qulncy 3, 15; Barney !"'Iller 6, 13; Kenny Rogers
8, 10; World 20.33; Movie "The Eyes of Charles
Sand" 17.
9:3o-Carler Country 6,13;· 10:oo-Qulncy 3,15; Doc·
lors' Private Lives 6,13; Oral Roberts' Daybreak
10; Barnaby Jones 8.
·
10 :»-Baseball 17; News 20; Area Showcase 33. 1
11 :co-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, IS; Hocking Val ley Bluegrass
20; Over Easy 33 .
11 :30-Johnny t,;arson 3,15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6,13;
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie "Incident In Son

HOTBED BREACH

A GOOD SELECTION OF
END &amp; ROLL BALANCES.

· 2. Nice uttelions of uaed

.....•• hiM

I Answer :

i ;, Ad -

&amp;
.SAVE AlDT

WM lt1l buyer UN~nlbciUie:tlrdng fill budglt tf .

w.

Jumbles: PAUSE FLUID

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,.

DRIVE AUTILE

CM'Otlllml occun'ld '"" ~
thl buyllr trightlned .,. "" " ' af eoml
e111m1n11 Df thl hOlM ll'lllllf' w I atlon?

TRY OUR

fir('p lnrf'
, S:'i?O(l.

_?

6,13; Pilot " Gulnness Game" 8; News 10 ; Love,
American Style 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17;

~euwVJeal

''I

CARPETING

9'12·7708.

YARD SALE . Thundoy, Friday one
Soturdoy. 14~ Mulbsrry Ave.
lots of clothing and misc. ·
it~m_s . _R~os_o~o~ly_ p~1~~· . .

Yes1e1day's

~

SAVE ON

9'12·5724 ,'

SIX FAMILY Yard Sole In trailer .
2' Smiles west of Tuppers Plains
on 681. Thru Sunday. Vincent
Hawk residence .

XXXI XX)"

Jumble Book No. 12, containing 1tO puzzlaa,la avallablalor S1.75poalpald
from Jumbla, c/othll newspeper, 8011 :tot, Norwood,N.J.07848.1nctude your
name, 1ddrt11, :rip coda and m•k• ch.c:ka p1yable to Newapaperbooka.

'

sa1e·

CD'S

CROSSPIECE OR TWO
•·· TOO ~~K TO SEE
Bl.IT I CAN FEEL ...
NOTHIN' HERE '"'

I

~ ~o}lile~onii!s
- - -·- - ior
- -· --

Apj"'l innrf'l s,

I MU!&gt;l 'A' MISSED

===~=:-:====-.....1

.

HE"[

(Answers lomarrow)

11-9-1 mo.

~

I (614)698-7331 .

Print answer here:

A

1

--

"

CE II'

"ffi'~...."ttdll:.,. .,

. - HOWERY AND MARTIN · EMcovating , uptlc systems ,
darer, backhoe . Rt. 143. Phone

1

1 1

"

..'
.,
'\·

220 E. Mlln StrHi,
.. . ,_Pollltroy, Q..•.

Coll742·2328.

PHOTOIS&gt;RAPHE!t WA&amp; IN
AN IR:RITAe.Lc MC&gt;OD•.J

Now arrange the circled leners to
· form the surprise answer, as sug L-'-'--'--..l.&gt;-':.0::..-'l'--'· gested by the above cartoon.

'

I'll'

,..-

Griffin 6; Addams Family 8; Sesame St . 2'b,33;
Batman 10; Mike Dougla• 13; Space Giants 17.
4:30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8, 17; Brady Bunch 10;
Lucy Show lS .
5;0Q-J Dreamoi Jelinle 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC
10; Bionic Woman 13; Brody Bunch 15: I Dream of
Jeannie 17.
5:3o-:.tarol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6: Sanford &amp;
Son 8; E lee. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33 .
6:0Q-News 3,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Andy Grllfllh 17 ;
· Hodgei&gt;odge Lodge 20.
6:30-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
7:oo-&lt;lra l Roberts' Daybreak 3; Newlywed Game

WHAI MADE THEM
iH INK THE:.

.... \TSATLE±
k J
.

',.'

r-:--::::----==----:::-------------------_;.,.....,.:-.:.,

1967 TOTAL 1HfCTMIC mohHe
home. l urnl 5hed . 3 heclr.
1977 CHEVROL ET 4&gt;~-4 short whee l ·
wo~her 'and dryer . Air rofldlbase. Mossey Fergu~on .corn
, li oned. 1 lo.t, :no ft . front09e.
.PII!n.t er . ~2· 7_084
$17 ,000. Phone 141·181b.
.
'
1969 MERCURY COMf! Sport
1955 Prairie; SchoonN. ?fh· 8.
Cnupe. 307 V-8, auto .. '} 11Pw
hrl•
fires . $400. 9A5 -410b.
. ''
1965 G('nNal. 60w17. 1 hrlr .
1968Fitono 52x1'J, 'lbrlr .
1Qflq Buddy, b(l.wl7 , 4 brlr .
197(.\Syllln M0~17 . 2bdt.
'
197&lt;'·Cos tl r. 60xl? 7 hrlr ·
·1973 Arlln(:lfon , 60ll'l 2. 1 bd r
197!1 Ridg Pwq~ . 70.1t'l4 , 3 hdr.
'
1973 Kir~ wbn d SO.wlJI. -2 bd r
PIR !\ M&lt;;'J HII F HO I&gt;M' c;,AI FS
PT . PI.F SA NT WV
"
67S.44 ?4
11'.173 FREfDOM ~JdBilf 1-io·.:n,. •

Pomeroy. 0 .

· Fully

equipped all furniture,
12':-;60', 1970 s:an rent lot

j

.

BJJOU.

.ADPUA.II

WALLPAPERING AND pointing.

LOTS -

$21,500.

.

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor serving Ohio -Volley region . Si&gt;~
days 'a week . '14 hours service.
Emergency calls. Call 882-2952
or 882·3•54 ,
•.

DICK' SMITH'S garage. Retoil
motor. tune-up, wash jobs,

SYRACUSE -

I

bvHenriArnoldandBoblee

-- One Life to Live 6,13.

[] I .

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-TRIAL AND ERROR

m

' HANDYMAN' S SPECIAL .
- Only st,ooo. and a few
repairs will make you a
nice ineMpenslve home.

Elec. Co. 20,33; Nol For Women Only 1~ ; Movie
" The West Point ·story'' 17.
1:co-Days of Our Lives 3, IS ; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; Resll~ss 10.
1:3o-As The World Turns 8, 10; 2:oo-Doclors 3,15;
2:25-News 17; 2:30--Anolher WoriQ 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:oo-General Hospital 6,13; Lil ias Y99a &amp; You 20;
Banana Spills 17.
3:30-Mash 8;; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnlstones 17; Over
Easy 20.

'IDORIAT I

==::;;___

.. on

..'

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and li ll
.backhoe work : dump trucks Auctions
and lo-boys for hire. will haul .
WI dirtt top soi l, limestone Clnd
grovel . Coli Bob or Roger Jef- AUCTION EVERY Sundoy. lpm.
fen , day phone 992·7089. night
A lso, auction every Wednesday
992 3575
5
e11ening 7pm. Hartford Comh
p .0 ~• • . · . _ .0 ' . . :_ 2_32: _
munity Cent~r . Hartford, WV . .C
EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
miles up from Pomeroy·Moson
and ditchar, Chorles R. HotBridge.
field . Block
Hoe _ Service,
· · · · · · · - · · · • ·
Ruf!ond. Ohio. Pone 742-7008.
AUCTION FRIOAV 7pm'. Truck load
of new merchandise. color TV
PULLINS EXCAVATING. CotT)plete
etc at Ohio River Auction, 537
Service. Phone992·'2A78. ,
~i!iih_ s~.• !li~d~le.~rt: ~hi.o.
AUTOMOB ILE INSURANCE been
concelled? lost your operators 1r.---'---:____,....;__::,
license? Phone 997-:21-43 .

$22.500.

1 Acre and up ilear P9meroy.

12 : 3~Ryan•s HOpe 6,13; Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10;

,. , , l.I'I'TJ.E ORPHAN ANNTF

FFMAL F GFRMAN Shp nrcl. 8 mo
nth !i ol d. '149-7381 .
.
·

1q73 OlOSM081LE CUSTOM 9

-

·

~

•

Sweepers . toasters. irons. all
smo ll appliances. Lawn moer, 1.
ne xt to Stbte Hlghwoy Goroge '·
on Rouhl 7.

IN STOCK for l mm~di o;e d ~ii~e;y:
various si:r~s of pool kits . Do-ll·
yourself or let us Install for you.
D. Bumgardner Soles , Inc.

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

1975 PONTIAC ACTRE hatchback .
o. 949-2283 .
.• cyt.
. . ool
. . " .. .

ELWOOD BOWERS . REPAIR. .

In a truly nice home. 8
vears old, 4 bedrooms, 2Jh
baths, famil'y room, rec.
room,
woodburnlng
fireplace,
and
other
features. $60,000.00.

. klt~hen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room. all

TRFE TRIMMING ond remo¥o l.
74'1·3167 or 742·7573 .

1972 GMC PICKUP. 6 cyl. std.

BEAUTIFUL, BRICK '
RANCH - Counlry living

about 15 m inutes north on Rt . 33. Priced for _
q uick sale,

9'12·5411

ONLY

FARM - 70 acres, 10 year
old ranch type home (needs
repairs ), large barn and

JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedroom house about 10 y~s ·
old. Mostly carpeted wllh attached garage and utility '
room. All Insulated . Approx. ¥... acre land. Locate&lt;~

·'

J

bedrooms ,
equipped
kitchen,
carpeting, .
carport. nice yard , gbod •

well. Garage and other buildings. Two farm houses,·

BY OWNER
4 BEDROOM
TRI-LEVEL HOME

*

Love

American Slyle 17 .

ax
4

AnnstJ'on&amp; Carpetin•

or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio, Critt I
Bradford.
.

·-···

&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13;

4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Mer,

ftlU!i.S'!&gt;

4:~1 ino-:-

·

12 :oo-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10; PassWord 15; Young

I

' ~~'l:t~"e~"'"' ~. _ ,,.....

K~'l./&gt;.I.Je~

. ..,_...,.,.._..;;.;;;.
..............
Your Headquartels for

Com·

. I I [J

.-----------,-___,.-~-

fiB'(,

,.

saus .·

!\'o'AII,.~BLE

plele Se&lt;vke. Phone 9•q·2487j

·-~---·

is Dangerous" 17 .

10:3Q-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; S20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :0Q-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13.
11 :30-Wheel of fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
of Life $.10; Sesame 51. 20.
II :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10; News 17 .

1 :oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15.

BORN LOSER

I

17.
'
IO :OQ-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of l\llght 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie " This Woman

Turn : Lellersto CBS News 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" The Proud &amp; lhe Damned" 10; Movie " Wings of
the Morning" 17.
12:oo-Rocklord Flies 8; 12':4o-Mannlx 6,13.

~~Tl

_TRAILER

__ Busine!s.Jervice.!__
Auctioneer·.

9 : 3D-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan' s Heroes 10; Green Acres

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to 1orm
four ordinary wards .

27320 Montgomery Rd.
,_.ngs•lltt, Olllo
614-669-4245 Evening•
2 Milts E.!l~l of Wl!kttvl.f.!t.
SUPER GOOSE STOCK
TRAILERS
NOW

----BRADFORD,

8:3o-fv\lss Winslow &amp; Son 8,10.
9,1!0-Charlle's Angels 6,13; Wheels 15; Dar Detective
, 8, 10; Movie "My Geisha" 17; Masterpiece Theatre
20.
10:oo-Dolly 3; Hal Linden 6, 13; Kaz 8, 10.
10:30-Hollywood Squares 3; FrMkle &amp; Johnny 33;
Footstep• 20.
11 :OQ-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; Turnabout 20; Lilla,, Yoga &amp;
You 33.
11 ; 30-Johnnv Carson 3,15; Pollee Woman 6,13 ; Your

!,..

I'LL ADI,IIT 1'HE

L.o.....-------1 ,.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser vire , oil makes, 992·728" . The
Fobr~c Shop , PomeroY . q
Authorized Singer Soles ond
Ser11ice: We sharpen Scisson .
:

'

well Insulated. Priced at

~torm doors

I

Headquarters·

NEW LISTING- Bashan area, excellent home siie.
Water and electric available. Has been surveyed.

NOW HAULING lime ~ t one in
Middleport·Poemroy oreo . Co li ·
for free es timole . 367-7101 .

WELL · ER-

'&gt;'E~ A~D loJO

and windows. All work 1:
guaranteed : 20 yurs !'
651 Beech Street
e • Perl e ,n c • ·
F r 1 • ''
: Middleport, 0.
estimates, Call: Tom
992 _2356
Hoskins, 149-2160.
J.7· 1 mo. ,. _ __.....__·_.3;;;-7..:_
-'l:,.:m:::o:::..:.&lt;:..Pd::·:.~)
·;

~·

3 1 '7 ac res in Pomeroy .· SEcluded
wooded oreo on top of hill.
Overlooks river . Water. electric ovoi lohle . 997-3886 .

land and large •torage building. Price $21,Soo.

-·

FOJZ. ~ •

18 Y..rs Experience
,Will Mlkt
service calla

· · Repair
Phone 992-5682

FARM FOR Sale. House. 2 barns .
traile r. large pond. 10 ocres or
82 acres, 7•7·'1566 .

One 6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10; Lucy
Show 17.

~ ~ ~~ ®

--Also TransmlssiOI\

- ---------Real Estate for Sale
. .- - - - - - ·- ·- - ---

9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Emergency

lhe King 17; I Was

Edw~rd

1t ltll'iMl ID'il 1~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

"Repair

992-6011

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

WATER AND mi se hauling. Call
992 -5858 .

.

601~ '
HER~-

Au"&amp; Truck

1iAdd-ons
1i Remoldings
1f Free Estimates

NEW LISTING- Here' s a
bargain or wrifeoff. 2
bedroom home on the bus
!line in town. Has a bath for

Broker 99H739

ACREAGE -

PllOD OUT MAIN

''HE.A\IE-N"

' fl . .

GeorgeS. HobsteHer, Jr.

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

SI.SCTI&lt;IC CIITTLI"

++I mo . .

~ mllt\off Rt. 7 Vf... U aii
St. Rl; 124 to..ta Rutlelld, ·

ii:New Home

$17,500.
Only $17,500.

Phone 94f-2589

Services Offered

a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2881 or
949-2860. No Sunday
calls.

-ROGER HYSB1.
, ,GARAGE

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

·

Sue P.'Murphy

s

H~V! W·W·WOTTA
YA 6ETTI&gt;J' THAT

Ca II for

It To Beaver 17;

Sesame St . 33 .

Born a1 Home 20.

Ohio Valey Roofin&amp;
llld
Hame Maintenance
i.nd repair.

Elberlelch of Pomeroy
and Kimball Music Center
· of Alhoils
Phone99l-25JI
or 992-2012

a business for fhe price of
the fixturles and inventory.
Retirement reason for
selling: Want to work inside
for vouno·p if ·
NICE AND QUIET · · New ,
3 b enroam home with 7
bitths. fami l y room with
firc pl r~ce . N ice k i tr::h en 1
with cfininQ area, suntteC"k ,
? ca r (:lrtr~ge: , larQP front
porch i"f1d one wooded ttcre

piUs .

a
·
s·

B : ~apt . Kangaroo 8, 10 ; leave

a,

SIDINGOO.

All typH roofing, guners
and downspouts. All types
home molnltnanct - new

at

YOUR CHANCE.:.. Here Is

location about S minutes from · Pomeroy off Rt. 33.

WILl CARE for two invalid or
elderly per sons in my home
Twenty years ell'pPrien re.
Reosonoble rotPs. 99'7-6027 or

'·

TUNING'

Cozy 2

/.

Schoo lies 10; Three Stooges- Little Rasc als 17 .

7: 15-Wealher 33 ; 7: Jo-Famlly Affair 10.

8 :.oo-Mackenzles of Paradise Cove 6,13 ; Disney
Animated Celebration 15 ; Jetter sons
10;

BISSEll

949-2862, 949-2160

PIANo·

Cheryll'emley, Associate

Good

'

~IG SANA~A·~ o&gt;ot
A PRETT~ S.NAZZY

Hiqh .
CALL 992·3325, WE'LL DO
,.OUR BEST.
Helen l.

CHESTER -

Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavell 20; Big
Green Magazine 33 . ·
·
7:30-Baseball3; Malch Game PM 6; Muppet Show 8;
The Judge 10; Thai' ' Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom
15; Sanford &amp; Son 17 ; MacNeil· Lehrer Report 20,33 .
Shakespeare Plays 33;

~-5-tlc

·Hilton Wolfe, Associate

years old. For appointment
phone 992-6055 anytime.

Roofing

Sidlni

Gutter clea'ning
Free Estimates

6 :30-Romper Room 17 .
6:4S-Mornlng Reporl 3; ~:5o-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; New•
13.
7:0Q-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13;

Waggoner B; News 10; Love American ~tyle 15;

YIIIJI and· Aluminum

· Window cleaning

.6 : )0--News 17; 6 :25--For You ... Black Woman 10.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11,1979
7: oo-cross.Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6.13 ; Porter

ti. L WI itesel
New. repair.
gutters and
down sp9uts.

SMITH foiiiLSON
MOTORS, INC.

Phone 742-2003

All brick, heal pump and
central air, •12 acre lot in
lower Middleport. Only 3

r

L-----_;--------'---.,----~--,----------.;.;,_.;.;,ijj

MOOFHN THRF f hPdroom hous...
lull ho ~P mf'nl . firrrlo('('l fully
(O rr r"l~d . centro! Clir . pnrln!'f!cl
~un pOrch . locotl!d n11 6' ·, QNN
Qn CR 7H ._oppfnx. 3 milns lrom
Rnc i1w. If interes!P.rl (' ontncl
tnrty Wnlfe949·7B3b Wf" Phnd ~
nnd nit(!( 5 evening~ .
'
.

WE NEED LISTINGS.
CALL AND DISCUSS
YOUR REAL ESTATE
PROBLEMS WITH US .
WE'LL TRY TO HELP

__ ~-~ ve~y

-

Services

((" li!lihl€'

basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx . 1 acre

__ -~- - -

OOwn

FHA

FOR SALE

SAVE UP T030' STORE WIDE.
NEW 7 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE.
Sl.t9 .95 . NEW 5 PC DINETTE
SETS, $49,95, NEW SEALY MATTRESS'S TWIN SIZE INTERSPRING $ .. 5., NEW 3 PC END TABLE

·'
'

I

Auto·Sales

WASHINGTON rAPl -An
• ·exhibiUon of ancient Greek
: art- "Cycladic Art"- will be·
on view at the . National
Gallery rl Art May 20
throllj!h Sept. 3.
The show is made up of 166 .
objects from the pliVllte
'collection of Mr: and Mrs.
. Nlc~olas Qoularydris, the
largest and mn&lt;t 'important
' - collecilon of Cycladic a1i ir
private hands. •
\

.

WANT TO buy: right front fe11der
for~197 0 Maverick . 675-'} 134.
. . . . . .
WANTED: Flywhe el and pressu re
plote -for 230 or 250 Chevro let.
Fronk Dodderer . Bow 167,
_C~ol_vi l.le. OPi.o

children's productions, tours
and script workshops.
The · rece~t survey by the
Canadian Thealre Review
says that while govetnmenl
cutbacks won'l be fully im·
plemented until- 1979-80,
theater activity is no.w beinl(
slowed.

•
'

.

WANTED: POWER woodw;odo;ing
tools. 992· 7501 .
·

APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On March 23. 1979, In the
Meigs Co~.mty Probate Court, ·
Case No . 22,646, V i rgil Roush,
Route 3, Pomeroy, Ohio •5769
was apr,olnted Executor of.
the est a e of Gerald 0 . Violet,
deceased , late of Tuppers
Plll ins , Ohio •5783.

CANADIAN CUI'S
TORONTO ( AP) - A survey of 60 professional
i theaters in Canada has
, · shown that 32 percent of the
companies have cut back on

wel l worlh $18,000.00.
RUTLAND - We have

SEARS CUSTOM ·7 r iding mower .
Good ronrli tlon . $475 . Gltnn
Bissell . 949·4'801 .

WANT TO b~y : one cow , or cow
ond co if. Call W2·7604 or write
39340 White Ook Hd .. Pomeroy.
Ohio.

NOTICE OF

' I

needs a I ittle work but it Is

Sl1 .000:00

WANT -TO ·b~y : old .ieweiry .. Coli
qq']816'1 or write Kay Cecil. 87
~ · ?~d ._ M_ld~lepor t. OH

· - - - -e~Jtn ~:CEGAES~~LD O. -DECEMBER
SAlE
Cast No. 22,646

' '

other good buildings . Home

home

WANT TO buy : old 45 and 78
ph onog raph r ecords . Coli
99'1·6370 or Contact Marlin Furniture.

PROBATE COURT OF

Robert" E. Buck
Probate Judge Clerk
(ll 28 Ul 4, 11 , 3tc

are 50 acres pasture and 49
t illable. Pasture is spring
fed . It has 2 cattle barns, 1
horse barn, equipment
sheds, milk houses and
conctete Silo. Excellent
home built of California
Redwood . This farm is a
good clean farm with some
wood,s and 2 ponds. If is all
fenced. Call today for more
info.
DANVILLE - · 4 bedroom
frame home situated on a
.15 of an acre. It has a
sr'noke.house, cellar and 2

noo

MEIG'HOUNTY, OHIO

"· '

finest. form~rly known as

lhe Paul Orr 'farm .. There

CHIP
WOOD . Po les _mo.w ,
diometer 10" on largest end. STEREO JVC re ceiver. BIC lurn·
table . 7 Bo!le ~peoker!- . less
~11 per ton . Bundled slob. SIO
_than o year old. 99'1·_2679.
P£'" ton. Deli vered to Ohi o
Poll et Co.. Rt . '1 , Pomeroy . , 1978 ", · Suwl&lt;i dirt bik e RM '150.
9'11·16ll9.
_C~c i! B~i~o!iler , ~4~· 1381,
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes. bra ss TROV -BILT rototillers . Immediate
beds . Iron beds . desks. etc ..
deli very. 10 per cent off .
compl ete households . Writ e
Author ized Troy-Bil1 dealers .
M .D. Mi ller, Rt . 4 , Pomeroy or
Complete gol-den supplies.
call f:W'J .
Aulogar Inc. , Plozo Shopping
Cen1er, Athens . Ohi o. Phone
OLD COINS . poc ket watches.
614 -597-3085.
class r ing s. wedding bonds.
diamond$ Gold or si lver . Colt
Roer Wamsley. 7-47·233 1.

: (3) 7, u, 21 , 28 ( 4) 4, 11 , 6t

'·,··',,·

NEW LISTING- '19
farm. One of the coun11v·•

call.
·
POMEROY - 2 bedroom

CASH FOR junk co rs . 14 hour
wrecker
service . l=ry"' 's
. Rutlond. OH. 747 -208 1.

-

m-

_ _ yt,a.!1f_ed__l~ ~uy _ _

Dated : February 26, 1979.
Larry Spencer
Cl!:!rk of Court~
Meigs county Common Plea~
Court

•'

Middleport 4 r C'lo ms and bnth
Al l u tillti e~ furnisht"d ~ndo d i119
rnh iP f1;1r TV. Privot£&gt; Pntronff' .
Pri votc drive pa r k ing. S750 p N
month.
n36 oltl'r s
..-------------,
.HOBSTETTER REALTY
I H ACRfS Of= gond r rop hottom
New ... ima Road
nrnunrl. Co!. h rentn l. '197· 733l)'
Rutland , Ohio
, nfh•rS
Phone 74'2·2003

WANT A ldoy to live-in or stay
port·ti mc with elderly lady.
99'1·t:H/4 or 991·771 3

.

KARL von E8EINSTEIN
A oute 2. 8011. 563 a
West
Columbia,
South
Cuollna 29169
Defendtnt
No. 17,082
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Kart von Ebeinste ln ,
whose l ast known address
was Route 2, BoJC. 563 B. West
Columbia, South C.a rollna
29169 ; you are hereby noHfled
that yot.i have been named
defendant In a legal action
entitled
Paul i ne
von
Ebeinstein vs . Karl von
Ebelnsteln . This action has
been assigned case number
11,082 and Is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas ,
Meigs
County ,
Ohio ,
Pomeroy, Ohio •5769 .
The objecr of the Complaint
is tor divorce, alimony and
costs. You are qualified to
answer the Complaint within
28 deys after the date of the
lest publicetion of this notice,
which w ill be pub I i!.hed once
each week for six consecut ive ~
weeks . The last publication
will be made on April 11, 1979.'
In c-a se of your failure to
answer or to otherw i se ·
respond es required by the
Oh•o
Rules
of · Civil
Procedure , judgment by
default will be renderec
egainst you tor the r elie1
demanded In the Complaint .

"

HOl LING

TEMPORARY l ight del ivery open .
N ea t
oppeoronce . Gond
tron!lportolfon necessary _ Onl~
th ose lom lli or wi th orPa need
apply. Phone 985-4385.

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OH 10

•

OWNFR SFLLING. 1 bc&gt;rlrnnm
trom P h1;1uSP . breiJent in lflwn
loc oli on. Coli 997 3073 .

TEMPORAHV TflfPHONf soles
position open from our ~Hire .
Day
and
evening
shift
available . Phon e 985.4384 .

IN THE

Cl l 1

Onk Grovf' R~ . For rnorP infn rmC'lti on rnll 9.:19-?405 .

Ph onf'

mC'In('y

vr l r&gt;ron$-)
A.s lnw o'&lt; J
p('r r("nl clown ( ,--,pn · v-" ' "'on~)
lrr lonrl Mnrtgnf!f' Cn . 77 f .
Stnh&gt;, Alht"n~ . 614 -5q7-3051

mf'lrlPrn hf'lmf'.

H no f'~ '· milt' nul nf Rn(inf'

··-- ------ - -

Sunday

· \'S ·

THRH ~ Bfi)RO()M

HOMEMADE EASTER Candy wi ll
be sold at th e Jones' Bo~ s Fri ., cloy . April 13 lrom 9 tO I . Will
hovp wr ker s, duel&lt; s, lombs
rohhit s. hi!e· Si 7e and fill erl!i'gs ., ~- --- 1------For Sale
Or call Sharon Reiher ol
~
949-748'1
(QAt , LIM ESTONE : sancl, gro ve l.
( okiu m chloride. fertili7N . dog
l o{lrl. and all types of soli . Elc __ !:f~lp_ yta!)t!!d. __
r f'llsior Salt WNks , Inc. , E. Moin
St. . P om cro~ . 997 -3891 .
MMFDIA TF
OPENING
l abC"&gt;ratory Technician . 3-11 " f VF flYTH ING'S GOTTA GO" .
shih . ExpNiencecl MLT (A S(P)
HoiJS!:' and lot. fu rnil ure.
or eq uivalen t. Exce llent solo ry
clothes . oil my household
and fr i11ge benefits . Shi ft dil items. Dr op by 760 Lou reiSt ..
feren toil. Con tact: Persanrtel
Middleport .
Office .
Plea sant
Volley
Hospital . Voll ey Dri11e. Poipl Fl ftTRIC GUITAR with rose, lil-t. e
new . Stef'l 9uitor with ca sE&gt;,
Pleasa nt , WV . 75550. PhonP
goo~ co n~ili on .•q~? - 7"?3.
304 -675.4340. An fquol Op_port~n) ty. E'.Tlplo.yer .
.
CARR IER WANTED FOR SYRACUSE
AREA . PHONE997-71Sb

·

NQ

h 01• ~ r

ACHf S of gnt;M'l
rn '&lt; lurf' PIPn l y nf wnfrr r f'1 ulcl
o_cr('mOdo lr 50 rl11 s cn lll"' . SIX ROOM S ond hoth . in Mirl,
t&gt;l4 ·b67 J39fl
· dlr-pnrt. Rf'n~oMh l y pri rf'ri .
Col!74? -71llq
ON ~· BFOH OOM nrt ~ . 'd("si9nC"&lt;I
~ r ('('i/ i co lly fnr whr'rkhoir rn ·
TWO BFQFOOM h n u ~P. ln'lulnlf'rl.
l icn,ts. Co li h("twf',-.n q nnd il .
Storm win rlow~ and hasemPnl.
qq'}.7777 .
•
Could ho v(" mnr(' hrrlrooms, In
FURN ISHED APT . 1(1r 7 or 3 men · Clifton. · WV . Sl4 000 . 304 - •
773-5471
nf'o r Pl'ITINCly· MO!'-on 8rid9c . in

Q(J

.

'

nnrl both wllh
~orog.-. O~t th1• il rli l1n lf('n l n ic,.,
('J CHd Pil l' Jl OI I CJCO if'd O l l 0nq
·.
Bottnm , O~io Q.IIS-41tl7 .

Q9?·54.1t1 .

A STfi' OI OGV CLASS. Storh A pri l
16. 16. 7 pm . Athens Co. S~Ning
on d toon Commun ity Room.
S 15 . M~ rio m R'uthch ild Jacob~ .

Phooe 992-2156

ort !'-

- -

~FA I f SlAH lonn"- Purr hf'l"" nnrl
r.-.f irl(1nrr. 30 yNl f lf"rrn!' VA

TWO STORY J kP&lt;I'''""' l1 nmr&gt;
hf'IH!'£' ;,; M irlrlif'r('l • 99? :l.t !'i .,

:1 AN() d 8M l urn i!'hed r111d un

GUN SHOOT . EVFRV FRIDA¥ 6:30
PM R~ C IN E C UN ClUB . FACTOR¥ CHOKE GUNS ONl V

~lna!rtion.

(",

COUNTRY. MORIL'F Hnm,.,· Pori&lt;
f'C"u l p 3:1 n1;1rth nl P{liT1Pr{ly
l nr!J£' log . (o11Qq?.747'1 •
l t~rn iS hC'rl

---- -...--- - - ·- - ..

·-

Re~l Estate for Sale

'•

&lt;, ('If

For Rent

Gl iN SHOOT Ra cine Vol11nteN
Firl' 0f'pt ht'"ry Soturdny 6·30
pn, nt their hui ldin9 in,Bo!&gt; l--oatn
Fnrtnry'( hoke guns pn ly

re~rves

tq lfi-

-

Rt'al Estat~ for Solll'
'

rtVF HOOM

-- - -----

order. 25 cent cbu.~ for ads Carry- '
lng 8oJ~: Nwnber In Cure rAtbe Sen-'
llnel.

.

.

rntnJ'r '
r C~ ntn in r'cl oi r r t111rl itir•11
cl" ll"' " rnnclitinn QQ? 7171

Notices

are accepted only wtUI cash -with

.

1975 11 F(H1T

hN chi lcircn .

· ·Mobile !tome sates and Yard sa lea

Noon on Sat~

.

THURSDAY , APRIL 12.1979
5:3o-Worldal Large 17; 5;45-Farm Reporl l3 ; 5:50PTI. Club 13.
5:55-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:0()--700 Club 6,8; PTL
Club 6.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

l'

Camping Equipmen~

tinn cmd thnt; f!Mhdnf'~&lt;; fh r
ln vf' l hn t f' l rl mothrr n nct wilp
qnvf' In P lhf'&gt;r!' dur inq hrr
lifrtiml' hn• hl"f'n rf'tun, ~rl nrH'
tho u&lt;.o nd folcl -Wt" will f C'I rf'vN
bP 910IP iul to romh n l yo "
H1 r ~ hn n rl O vnl ()irlcfl€' nnrl nil nl

~

_,

nnrl ·

oh Didr! IP wi th nn (lhnu nrlinCl
di ~ plny C'l f ~ i nrlr• ~"~!' cnn &lt;. irlrrl'1

· Each wool 0\'er the minJmwn 15
..,nls is f ctni.B per word pt"r .day .'

'l'bl! Pllbliaher

rl' lot ivl) !'

For·Best .Results Use Sentinel Classifjeds.

whC' cli ~ ployf'rl
hNwtitul ly th r-ir lC'I \'f' IN l"\11
Inti" rY'1n lh f'r nnd wik Mr ~ Sm

1$ Wordll or Under

13-The D•llv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.·, Wednesday, April II, 1979
.
.

' DICK TRACY

TICKLED
TO, MAW

(For a copy ol JACOBY MODERN. send $7 to: " Win at
Bridge. " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489. Radio City
Station . New York . N, Y. t0019.J

I'
t

'

�'

.

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. April II. 1979

Mayor's corut

.Free radiation tests
administered Tuesday
HAKIUSBURG, Pe. (AP)
N; the scanner. le~t.s began
-Scores of people wbo live in shortly before noon, NRC
homes or farms near ihe biologist R.L. Gotchy said,
contaminated Three Mile · "We don't expect tn see any
Island nuclear plant received significant levels at all." By
free radiation tests Tuesday mid-afternOQn, when about a
and were told the computer dozen · persons had been
checks confirmed that the tested, he said there had been
levels ill their bodies are no aboormal readings .
oormal.
··
·
But one woinan who ·
On the island, meanwhile, brought her :1-year-old son
technicians were keeping up was jittery.
their routine but cautious
... I really don 'I like having
chOI'e of draining gas pockets our kids here until we're sure
from a primary cooling they 've completely cleaned
system to prepare the out (the plant), " said
crippled reactor core for its Carmella Swartz. Her tot was
eventual cold shutdown - a In a red wagon carrying a
process . still several days sign reading: 10 Because
away.
we're alive, it doesn't mean
we survived TMi."
Evacuees were returning
borne, filing Insurance claims
for losses, and sending
children back to schools
which were open for the first
time in 12 days.
DEUTZ
The NRC said radiation
levels around the plant were
still dropping toward the
Save Money
level of natural background
Thr~e Ways
radiation
for Harrisburg.
- No liquid Coolant
And officials said even
-:... Le ss Fuel Per Hour
though levels remained
- Lower Annual
Mai.ntenf!ncP.
higher than the normal
background level for this
. FULTON-THOMPSON
area, they posed no danger
TRACTOR SALES
and did I)Ot exceed what some
$pring Ave.
POm e roy , 0 .
other areas, such as Denver,

A

Tractors

c.-.

,

Future

II leaders

CRISPY
KENTUCKY
CHICKEN

·tRcM's

R

INSURANCE
SERVICE

214·E . MAINST.
POMERO'( , O.
992-5130 or 992-5139
"YOU DON'T BUY A PO~ICY.
YOU HIRE AN AGENT" _

NO. 253

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1979

MINOR TRUCK FIRE
. The Middleport Fire ,
Department answered a caD
to Roush Lane In the Chelhlre
area at 8:53p.m. Tuesday to
extinguish a fire In a truck
owned by Charles Stewart.

reportedly said Egypt would
stand by Syria If it were to
attack Israel to regain ·
cootrol of the occupied Golan
Heights should the Illl'sellil
not return the diaputed
territory after. negotlatims.
The Israelis sent protest
letters to President carter
and Sadat In the first pubUc
dispute between the two longtime ~nemles since the treaty
was signed.
In the emotional cUrnax to
the Parllilmentary debate,!
the majority of members
clapped their !Janda and sang
the national anthem, "My
Country, My Country."
Opposition
members
screamed: "Traitors! You
have betrayed Egypt!"
Authfliimt CATALOG
SALESMERCHANT

PERFECT _,,.,....,;...,.u.~~. .
IN JUST ONE PASS.

RATED IIY,'

·

Open: Mon . thru Wod. 9~5,'

Thur. 9-ll, Friday 9-S, Sol. ,

WICHITA FA LLS, Texas
Emergency crews ,
strling lifeliiles Wednesday to
splintered neigbborhoods in
this oorth Texas city and
'three other "Tornado Alley"
'towns hit by tornadoes that
killed at least ~6 persons and
injured more than 800 others.

9-2.
s.tiiAuiiM a,.;;,,.,M

(AP) -

orY•I'MNVNBwft

Matches blamed
for fatal fire

Symbol of hop_
e.

Dresses, Boys' Suits, ·
Girls' Tops, Skirh ,
Jeans
Jackets.

and

Slacks, ·

Stop In

now. '

Eas1er is next Sundar.

Make your selections.

no belts. Ask for a free test drive.
~""""'~
We service whai we sell.

- MUMS ... AlAI EAS CORSAGES- CUT FLOWERS
BUY NOW AT REGULAR PRICE
AND GET lHE ATTACH.,ENTS
AT 25% OFF

ARRANGEMENTS
PERMANENT MEMORIAL FLOWERS

Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs . Millard Van Met~r ·
Pomeroy, 0 .
. 106 Butternut Ave.
~;.,..: :....:.:· \
. ·
·Phone 992-2039 or 992-5721
·l' We accept all major credit 1=ards and we wire
flowers everywhere.
'{

GRAVELY
:TRACTOR SALES &amp;SERVICE
204 Condor St.
992 -7975
Pomeroy, 0.
M,,n., :;lO Rou:-.,_, , C .~ 1 nu·

Children's Dept • .
' 2nd Floor ·

ELBERFELD$; IN POMEROY ·

Associated Press
the federation bought the
CHESTERHILL, Ohio land for just over $10,000.
(AP) - An Islamic group
"At the best, I don't think
may aUow oil prospecljng on . we got more than $30 or 'so a
their land in southeast Ohio, year In royalties," Rusbten
but a spokesman says they're added.
.
not after great wealth, only a
The steeply rolling site has
playground or sllmmer camp one house on It which is
for fellow Moslems.
rented, but the land is too
from the Gallipolis, (;SI, and Middleport fire departments
The Federation of Islamic hilly for farming.
fou ght the blaze for on e and one-half hours before bringing
A3sociations In The United "Rushten denied a trade
States and canada collected . publication report o.f an offer
it under control. The building is owned by Marc A. Sarrett.
small oil royalties In the late for na.tural gas rights on the
1960s. from a few low-volume land. Coal Industry News, a .
"stripper" wells on the. 13&amp;- bi-weekly with o!Uces at
acre tract in . southern Morristown, N.J ., has
Morgan County.
reported tbal a goup funded
11
There were some old oil by Saudi Arabians were
wells there when we bought . offered over $2 million for
the property," In 1967, said natural gas rights on their
Frank E. Rush ten, federation land .
treasurer, who lives at
"I've heard of that but
Logan, W.Va.
there is nothing to it," said
"And I understand there is Rushten,
a
retired
some coal there . But we automobile dealer at Logan
didn 't buy it for that . We hope wbo became a Mosllm In 1952.
. N; the cleanup was under second tnrnado in four days. to develop the site for a camp
"I've never heard of any gas
way a long lh e Texas- Buildings were damaged, but for the children, and in fact
there
.
Oklahoma border, several th ere were no reports of (for) aU young Moslems in · He ."said the federation
other tornadoes struck in injuries. A tnrnado Sunday this country."
env1s1ons develo.ping a
Arkansas, injuring at ieasl 26 caused more than $1 million
Current state geology maps swiuner camp on the site:
persons in the Polk County d?mage and injured 17 show six plugged wells on the "You know, a lake and trees
communities of Grannis and persons.
land. A spokesman said their
A small tornado swept permit numbers indicate they and some buildings. But that
Wickes.'
takes a lot of money and so
The Red Cross said 21 across an area north of are very old wells.
· far we don't have it," he
mobile homes were destroyed Topeka, Kan ., Wednesday,
Rushten said the oil wells added.
and 15 others were damaged overturning two mobile played out a few years after
when a twister hit Grannis in homes . No injuries were
.
the western part of the state. reported.
And at least two persons
Other tornadoes touched
down in rur81 areas of were injured at Cabool iii
Washington County, Conway southwestern Missouri as a
County, Slone County and tornado damaged an airport
and blew a tractor-trailer rig
Van Buren County.
The south Arkansas town of off a road.
Hamburg was hit by · its

Death count going up,
damages $200 million

Pome~O.

Ja-ck-&amp; Judy Wlllioms

Oil prospecting

LAUNDRY BUILDING DAMAGED - Loss was set at
approximately $70,000 in"a fire Wednesday evening at the
Ohio VaUey Laundry building located on Stale Street near
Gallia Aca_demy High School iii Gallipolis. Volunteers

I.NE.MiiDSt.
·-

SPECIAL MEANING - This huge cross high on
Pomeroy's lincoln Hill lakes on special significance
duriilg Holy Week and is shining each evening this week .
over the Big Bend area. The cross is lighted each evening
and on weekends throughout the year by Mrs. Clara
Shuster upon whose property it is located. The cross was
plaeed on the hill by the Trinity Church and is maintained
by the church.

may he allowed

;1Sears I'
•OWNID M'D

15 CENTS

and toward the rear of the
Fire caused arr• estimated first floor of the building.
The blaze then spread to
$70,000 in damages to a four
stnry building that houses the front of the first floor and
Ohio Valley Launderers and floor of the second story, the
Cleaners, 121 State St .. last report continued.
· Th e first floor of the
night.
building,
owned by Marc A.
The blaze was reported at
Sarrett,
Gallipolis,
sustainejl
7:19 p:m . when a State Street
resident noticed fire coming heavy damage as the blaze
from the rear of the buildlng, destroyed most of the
Gallipolis City Police said clot hing and equipment
inside .
this morning.
The second floor, used for
The Gaflipolis City Fire
storage,
also sustained fire
Department responded to the
damage,
while
the
call with 'll men, three tanker
p·umpers, and an aerial WIOCCUp.ied third and fourth
ladder. City firemen were floors incurred heal and
aided by 10 firefighters from smoke damage.
City Firemen said thi!f
the GaUipolis Slate Institute
morning
that the fire, the
Fire Department and a
cause.
of
which
has yet to be
portable air cascade used to
fill air tanks from the determined, was bruught
Middleport Fire Department. under control within an hour
According to a report filed and a half of the alarm caD.
The scene was cleared at
this morning by the Gallipolis
II
: 4~ p.m . Three . City
Department,
the
fire
(Continued on page11) ·
apparently originated iilside

lntoxlca~.

FINERY

"GOOD FRIDAY"

VOL NO. XXIX

enttne

Bv Larry Ewb12

EASTER

FRIDAY, APRIL 13th

at y

Gallia firm
hit by fire

ELBERFELD$

AT NOON.

'

(USPS 145-960)

•

Overwhelming approval
given new peace plans

dis~ussed

'

f

KATHERINE MILLIKAN
also survived by 11
Mrs. Katherine MU!lkan, · grandchildren and sill sreat80, Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, ·srandchlldren. She reared
died Tuesday evening at two grandchildren, Rolland
Veterans Memorial Hospital and Dollle Rousey of
followJns a llnserins Illness. Pomeroy.
Mrs. Milliksn was born
Mrs . Millikan was . a
May 9, !898in Huntington, w. member of the Pomeroy
EMPI .OYEE HONORE!) - Mrs. r.enevieve Sisson Swartz, Pomeroy·, ;.as honored in
Va., a daughter of the late United Methodlat Church and
ret•ognltion of her 50 years of employment at the Elberfeld !Jepariment Store Tuesday morHarry and Norma Jones served as organist of that
ning. On behalf of the store, .John Anderson presented Mrs. Swartz with a grandfather's
calkins.
She was also church for several years. She
clock. Mrs. Swartz bega n her employment with the store 50 years ago on April I.
preceded in death by a was a member of !he Ohio
Music Teachers Association.
brother, Char!es.
Surviving
are
two She was a music teacher in
daughters, Mrs. Sara Lee Athens for 35 years and alSo
Yoabam, Lima; Mrs. Paul taught music In Pomeroy.
(Jennie Sue) Tarowsky,
Funeral services will be
Wintersville; two sons, Hugh held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rousey , Pomeroy, ,and Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Norman Rousey of Palmer, Home In Middleport with the
Alaska ; a sister, Mrs. Gladys Rev. Robert McGhee and the
Gibson of Columbus and a Rev. Steve wtlson officiating.
cousin,
Mrs.
Charles Burial will be in the Portland
(Margaret) Neuman, Cemetery. ' Friends may call
Pomeroy. Mrs. · MIJ!Ikan 1s at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday. . CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - The Aviv market and Israeli Egypt in this task." •
Egyptian Parliament gave planes flew retaliatory raids
Khalil made his caD for
the expected overwhelming against guerrilla positions Arab unity after 18 of the 22
Arab League members
approval
Tuesday
to deep inside Lebanon.
recalled
their ambasaadors
President Anwar Sadat's
The roD call vole in the J60.
peace treaty with Israel. The member Parliament was 329- from Cairo to protest the
(Continued from pa~e I l
vote. came hours after a 13 with one abstention and 17 Egyptian-Israeli treaty. The
city, National Gu&amp;rd troops
league plans to move Its
Palestinian
terrorist bomb absent.
and volunteers patroled to
headquarters from cairo to
killed
an
Israeli
man
in
a
Tel
Th
ere
has
been
little
prevent looting,
'
outward resistance to the Tunis, Tunisia. Egypt has
MayOI' Kemeth HW urged
treaty among the Egyptian moved to block the
residents in a radio broadcast
population or its politicians. headquarters transfer by
to "please go borne." But
Prime Minister Mustafa freezing nearly $90 mUilon In
hund.reds were reported
League
funds,
·
Kalil
said at the close of the Arab
Thirty-seven arre&amp;1s were
homeless.
.
Impounding
its
archives
and
session:
"
The
people
of
The Red Croae issued made by the Middleport
urging
the
league's
·
large
Egypt
have
said
their
word.
urgent appeals for blood aiKI Police Department during
· ... We now call on the rest of Egyptian staff to remain In
fuel to operate emergency March, Bl'Cording to the
the Arab countries to revise cairo.
report of Police Chief .J. J.
vehicles.
In parliamentary debate oil
their position . We have ahead
Tornadoes also struck Cremeans.
the
treaty Mmday, KhaW
of
us
a
hard
struggle
to
Included in tho se
Vernon and Lockett, Teus,
implement
peace.
I
·call
on
Rio Grande
College
and Lawton, Okla.. as they arrests )Vpre eight persons
officials met with the the Arab COUIItries to join
swept nOI'Iheast over ro!Ung, charged ,with disorderly
llarren country of Nllt brush manner and six others with Gallipolis Area Chamber of
TRY OUR
Commerce during Its regular
driving while intoxicated.
and meequlte
There were two persons monthly meeting Tuesday.
Lawton reported four
EXrRA
Dr. Paul Hayes, Rio
coofirmed deaths, Including a charged on the following ofCollege
and (Continued from pa ~e I i
man electrOCilted when a 220- fenses: speeding, falling to Grande
voll power line came down In yield the right ' of way, Community College Neshat, the Imperial Guard
a pool of water. Ten were criminal mischief and President, and Mr . David c ommander ; Gen .
Strang,
Director
of Mohammad Taghi Majidi,
FRIED
&lt;mfirmeddead In the Vernon possession of marijuana.
Development , discussed who headed a military court
One arrest was lllllde on
area, said Justice of the
Peace Joe Krebs. Another each of these charges: left of present and future building that tried rebels against the
death was cmfirmed 17 miles center, running a stop sign, plans ·during the Chamber's shah; Gen -. Ali Hojat
FAMILY RESTAURANT
Kashani, who was accused of
spinning tires, assured clear luncheon meeting.
away In Harrold, Texa1.
992-S432
"We haven't bad' time to distance, parking In a no . In further action, members large-scale · embezzlement,
Pomeroy,O.
stop and confirm how. many parking' zone, assault, of the Chamber's Recreation and Brig. Hossein Ali Bayal,
threat s , Committee reported that they a .member of Parliament,
dead we have," said Lawton menacing
Clvll Defenae spokesman Wes trespassing, and allowing a bad met with both the City senior police official and
and County Boards of gover nor of the city of
dog to run loose.
. Miller ~ '
Charges were dropped in Commissioners to discuss the Zanjan.
Miller said two trucks
Pakravan had also been
carrying hazardous three cases and two cases development of recreational
information
minister· and
which
has
been
facilities,
chemicals were overturned were disll)issed by the
ambassador
to
Pakistan and
.
established
by
the
Chamber
mayor.
- one just a block from a
Parking meter collections as its number one goal for France.
hospital. He said one of them
Other former cabinet
carried chlorine and the other for the month totaled $598 1979.
The Recreation Committee ministers executed were
and the police cruiser was
muriatic acid.
AboUt 150 bomea in a 20- . driven 4,234 miles during lhl' reported that they had · Mansur Rohani, former
received support for their minister of electricity, water
block area of Lawton, a month.
effort by both commissions. and agriculture, and AbbfiS
community of 7$,000 adjacent
The committee is to Ali Khalatbari , foreign
to Fort Slll Mllitary Vetei'IIDB Memorial Hospital
develop
a
package minister from !971 to 1978 and
Reservalion, were destroyed,
Admitted
Mary
officials said, and temporary Esenbuth, Pomeroy; Latna recommendation for the secretarycgeneral of the
shellers were set up at a Trout, Albany; Christopher review of both Boards of Central Treaty Organization
from 1982 to 1968.
church and the Red Cross Cross, Langsville ; Elmer Commissioners.
Center.
Blankmam, Parkersburg;
At least two persons were Ida White, Rutland; Ruth
pinned In a motel and a child Lewis , Middleport.
was reported missing,
DiSCharged - Ada Kessee,
authorities. said. One man Robert Parsons, Timothy
was killed when a cement Brewer.
block feU ori him, pollee said.
Gravely's all -gear rotary plow is a unique
At least 700 persona in!re
•
piece of lawn and garden machinery
Injured in Wichita F'alls, 92 iii northwest of DaUas to 110
Lawton - eilllrt critlcaUy _ miles southwest of Oklahoma
It Plows to seven inches deep and blends
and 66in Vernon· authorities City - call the area
the soil into a seedbed ready for planting.
said.
'
"Tornado AUey" because it .
Something no other plow can do. .
R&lt;Bidents of the area - · gets more than its share of
The Gravely powers over 20 optional
from about 150 miles tornadoes.
attachments. It has all-gear direct drive.

plans are

Easter. It's a time
to look upon the
world around us with
o renewed sense of
peace and love . . .
faith and hope.
A lime to refle&lt;t
on the loiter miracle .. . and all that
its meaning holds
for us . We wish you
ond your foved ones
oil the blessings of
this Hoiy Holiday.

•t

was no radlatio~ leak, the
NRC said.
Within the contaioment
buDding, an NRC official
'!Bid. technicians were still
unable to . figure out exacUy
what was happening to the
high levels of radiation which
cootamlnated the building
just after the accident.

37 arresl s

Give Thanks

'

a

neath. • • Middleport
police had

Rejoice
In The
Spirit
Of Easter
Far All Of
Life's Joys

consider oormal.
At the plant, meanwhile,
five workers took a sample of
the coolant, hoping to get a
better idea of how badly the
uranium core is damaged.
Last week, one worker
received an overdose of ·
radiation·when he took such a
sample. But this time there

•

e

Eleven defendanll
booda In the cOIII't of·
. Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews l'Ueaday night.
The group Included WU!lam
Cook, Pc.neroy, 130, posted
on
charge of improper
backing; Michael NevUle,
Galllpollo, $30, improper
backing; Earl Phelps,
Pomeroy, $50, disorderly
conduct and $200 ioaulng
menacing 1~eata; Jimmy
Mod~ltt, walker, W. Va .,
130, aisured clear dlatance; .
·Peul Shepard, Cheshire, $200,:
petty theft; George G.·
McDaniel, Pomeroy, $30,
.wrong wpy on a me .way
street;
Ronald Arms,
Pomeroy, $100, lntollicatlon,
and f50 disorderly 11)8nner;
Jeffrey Couch, Pomeroy, $30,
making au-turn from Lincoln
HW mto Butternut Ave.;
· Henry Doe'rfer, Pomeroy,
130, left of center; Murray
Brewer, Paducah, Ky., $374, .
driviDII wblle intoxicated,
and Jlimnie Job!Jaon, 'New
Haven, $350, drivlnll wblle
forfei~

'

'

••

WASHINGTON (AP ) District of Columbia officials
blamed the careless use of
matche s as th e probable
cause of a pre-dawn fire that
swept a halfway bouse for
mental patients Wednesda y,
killlng nine persons.
Mayor Marion Barry
ordered an Investigation into
·bow the house, which had no
fire escape nor smoke
detector, was issued a license
laSt August by city housing
officials.
"From the surface, it looks
as If some very bad decisions
were made, " Barry told
reporters.
James F. Whitt, executive
director of Volunteers of
America , which operates the
borne in the city's northwest
section near the National Zoo,
told reporters · one staff
member was on duly when
the blaze, one of the worst in
.the city's history, broke out
·about I a.m.
Battalion fire chief Richard
'Hubscher said · the fire
apparently started when one
of the residents tried to light a
cigarette on the ground floor
of the two-story home,
consisting of two converted ·
residen ces joined by a
passageway. The fire,
confined to one of the
buildings , spr . ad up a
stairway to the second floor,
he said.
Six women were injured in
the fire , one of them
critlcaUy. Most of the 47
residents were women aged
'10 to 80 and were outpatients
. at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, a
federally owned mental
facility that . serves . the
Disll;lct of Columbia.

Texas Go v. Bill Clements
took to the air to survey the
damage left by Tuesday's
kille,r twisters and said the
cost to rebuild would run
between $200 million and $300
million.
The Department of Public
Safety reported 41 bodies had
been foimd in Wichita Falls
by noon , plus 11 in Vernon
aiJd one in Harrold , a fe w
miles to ihe west. Across the.
Red River in Lawton , Okla.,
three more were counted
dead. Larger figures had
been reported earli er in
Wichita Falls and Vernon due
to counting errors, offi~ia ls
said .

Build{ng turned .over
to New Haven council
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Fire Department has
agreed to turn over its half
ownership in the New Haven
City Building to ·the town for
a three-year period, but with
the stipulation , that improvements be made to the
structure according to the
fire
departm ent' s '
speci fications.
1'be fi re department made
known its decision at a
meeting Tuesday night of the
New Haven Town Counci l.
Although the fire ~ eparl­
ment has moved to its new
headqua rters, it share•
ownership of the city building
with the town.
Ownership of the building
has been a roadblol'k in lh&lt;•
path of council members ,
who art" l'onsidering eithPr

thr remodeling of the current

ami sewer rates for New
Haven. Information will h•
released to the public shortl y.
Meanwhi1e, the counci l
scheduled a public hea rin ~
rega rding the rate hikes for
May l at 7 p.m. at the new
fire department headqtwr-

vehicles.

Gr imm, leaders of _the Four

meeting a request for a per-

eil, p :lari tn rlea n up mid
re[»lir lht•l'ity buildinf.!, paint

fin• hvrlnmts. reston• and
plant 'nowers at the New
Havrn Park, and paint nnd
pl:ic•r tra ~h r:ms throug-h out
th&lt;' t'Ommunity .
Tn oth(•r r~l'tinn . the ('0\ln-

strnc•ture or thr bu,ilding of l-1 dl :
new stn~c turr at the same
- Vnted to purc·has(' a narlocation .
. N&gt;tirs field lest kil and
Thr rnnnf'il Hlso disr ust&gt;d regi~tralion mkrn fklw for
t h~· clo~ing of the New Haven
thP pnlkr rtepfl rlmt&gt;lll. ·
·
J .ihra rv and voted to keer the··
- n(•&lt;·idNI 'lo mr1intHi n
Jibr&lt;~rY oPen two days r~ w(•r.k St~r rnth Strr('t as n two~wt:tv
with help from the• c'om- slrel'l but. &lt;•ffed ive Mav i.
mu~ity, lh&lt;' llhra•Jans and
HJlm;: pHrk~lJ.! On tht• ~c;nth
~s~ist;.~nt s .
•i dr of the '1n•Pt on!v. The
f:Arl Wi1t•s r~ c'onsultan l tn c·ntmdl ftsk.~o; 1h._.t &lt;'1.11 t'itr
tlw fown, !l in!d fl(·t~i11'i of 11 uwrwr.; nn fh p ~lrPPf ~~~~ · fhf•ir
1

proposf'~f intTPn~~·

in wn~tfT'

- Orafted a letter to the

t1ri"l'\WT ~· .l·

In prtrk

tlw ir

Election
plans made

mit to ered a. douhlr-wide
lrai!pr on Se\lrnth and Rntler
StrceH hy JHsic McC!nrl!. Thi s
~~ to niJow tim!:' for the coun ~

ril to look Into another
noqm•sl by MrCinre lhal the
dt•fld -(~nd strt•et be repaired.
- ni srussed the probl ems
of dog.s nmnlng at la rge but
de&lt;'lined to takr artion due to i
th•• fa&lt;'t that it was noted thai '
withnnt a dog pound thE're is .
no w~y lo
cii ne~nct• .

enfor('t' the·ctog or~

- HNtrrt ~ n•quP~1 from
Alfrl'rl Ashworth for a street
• .. ; ign for J.ynn Stret•L
All!•nding tht• m1•t!ting
WNf' Mrtvor ctmrlt•s Smith:
RPt nrdPr' Wendy nlvt·r~: ·
,.f,urwil mf"mlwr ~ .Jarnt&gt;~
Me·Knii!hl . .Te•ffM1&gt;nkl n. Mike
F'iPhlt-: ;mtl Ollvirl .Yon'· ~ · ri nrl
~m·J}-lo n :•!1 . n nlf' C:rimm.
.Tr•.c&lt;.:i P M1of1nr1•. ~.ofr&lt;.: r.;n·r
YinJ' mul Alf,·t•d A ~ ~ \•:1· rih
,I

EXTENDED FORECAST
saturday through
Mooday: Cooler witb
obowen or raiD possible
through the period. Highs
lo the 5011. Lows from the
mtd .308 to the mid 10..

Cloudy and mild with occasional showers and
thunderstorms tonight and
Friday. Lows tonight iii the
mid to upper 50s. Highs
Friday between 70 and 7~ .

New Haven American r..egion

. !979 DAIRY PRINCESS- Janis camahan, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. James Carnahan, Racine, was named
1979 Meigs County Dairy Princess at a dinner meeting
held by the Meigs Dairy Service Unit at St Peul Lutheran
Church . Fellowship HaD Wednesday mghl. Janice Is
pictured being crown~!(( by Mary Mora, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. flon Mora, near Pomeroy, last year's title
bolder. Miss carnahan, a senior at SOuthern High School,
was selected by judges Mrs. Janet Korn a~d Wallace
Erickson: Other candidates were Terri Pullins, daughter
of Mr . and ·Mrs. Theodore P41llns,' and Penny Smith,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Smith. Miss carnahan
r....·eived several gifts. Mrs. David Nease was in charge of
!lw c·or1le st.

·

*'

acc id en t s Wednesday
evening.
Brenda Rucker, 16, Rl. I,
Reedsville, backed out of the
parking lot at the Reedaville
Post Office and struck an
aulo owned by Robert
Law son, Reedsville. The
Lawson vehicle was parked
at Reed's Store. There was
slight damage to the Rucker
vehicle and. moderate to the
r.awson vehicle ..
On U. S. 33, Wilson Carpenter, Pomeroy, was
traveling south when a doe
deer ran into the path of his
vehicle and was killed. There
wasslight property damage.

H

• wiJl
eanng
.

reswne May 21

Weather

granting them permission to
set off fireworks again this
year on the 4th of July at the
Legion Hall.
- Issued building permits
ters .
·to floug McPeek and r.ary
Martha Hart and Tlal&lt;• Kin!( and table'! until the next

Corners 4-H Club, .explained
to the council a project the
club proposes to undertake
for the benefil of the •·ommunity. The youngstr rs, \vith
tht• c;nopt~ r.at ion of the roul'i -

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports that
[)wlght ·Pele Haley, Jr., 31,
Middleport, was transported
to the Ohio Penal · Medical
and Reception Center,
Columbus, Tuesdayto begin
ser:vi'll: hls., sentence , of six
months to five years after
being found guHty of
violating terms of his
probation.
Haley had prevjously been
before the Meigs County
Court of Common Pleas on a
bill of information charging
breaking and entering of the
r.race Gardner property in
Rutland Township. At that
time he plead guilty and was
placed on probation. He was
arrested by his probation offleer on March '!/ and lodged
in Meigs County Jail.
After being found guilty of
violating his probati on,
Judge Bacon imposed sentence of six months to five
years for the breaking and
entering charge.
In other activities the
department investigated two

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::&gt;:::::::::::::::::::

.

.

Man transferred
to begin terms

CINCINNATI (AP) - A
pubhc prehearing on a
proposed license for the
Zimmer nucl~ar plant at
Moscow , Ohw, will be
resumed from May 21 to 23,
the federal Atomic Safety
Li censing
Board said
Wednesday·
The board previously
suspended the prehearing to
enable opponents of the
power station time to further
prepare their case.
The 1664 million plant,
upstream from Cincinnati m
the Ohio River, was
scheduled to open in January.
and begin generating
electricity iii mi~-1980.
The plant will be operated
by the Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. It is jointly
finance~ by CG&amp;E, Dayton
Power &amp; Light Co. and
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
"We're glad to hear thai
they intend to proceed and to
evaluate the Zimmer station
on it.s merits rather than· put
it into limbo or try Jt In the
emotion a I aftermath of
Harrisburg," sad David
Alt~muehle, spokesman for
CG&amp;E.
The prehearing is required
by law before publlc licelislhg
hearings can be held, officials
said.
The nuclear plant was
originaUy opposed by the
Miami VaUey Power Group.
The opposition will be taken
over by Citizens Allalnst a
Radioactive Environment,
the board was to\d.

Plans for the election of oilicers and development of a
new constitution and by-laws
were formulated at the Monday 111eeling of the Meigs
County Jaycees.
Visitation ·plans to Shade
River Jaycee Club were
finalized along with plans to
attend the Region Eight party
slated May 5 at Athens. The
loca l club will host the
district party April29 .
Charter night for the Shade
River Jaycees was set for
SQUAD CALLED
April 21 at 7::JO p.m. in Meigs
Inn.
In other matters, members The Middleport Emergency
ciiscussed'Ways of providing a Squad was. called to 714 s.
- .safely patrol for the annual Second St., at I : 20 p.m. Wed·
bike-hike for the mentally ncstlay for Eleanor zeiher
whn was taken · to Holzer
relarded .
Ml'&lt;lical
Center. At 7:40p.m.
A board meeting will be
W
ednesday,
Rescue 17 unit:
held April 16 an4 the next
went
to
Gallipolis
to asi.!st
·ro!!nlar s~sslon Is scheduled
that
department
with
a fire at
April~1al8p. m .. il .
thelaunrlry ~Sta te St. .,.

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