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•

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D-IG-The Sunday 'fi"le!~-&amp;ntinel , Sunday, May 6, 1979

e

·contributions ·received for TV fund
GALUPOUS - The May donalipns
to the Holzer Medical Center
Television and Toy Funds wer~
received from Carter and Evans,
Inc., Excava,ting and Building Contractors, ahd the Knights of Pythias
Dramatic Order of the Knights 'of
Khor8SIIdn, referred tq as AI Hods
ACCUSED MAN RETURNS
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio (AP ) Michael G. Levine, accused of the kidnap-slaying of Cleveland supermarket chain executive Julius
Kravitz, today was scheduled to
return from Virginia to Ohio to face
murder and kidnapping charges.
,Levine, 35, the owner of a Twinsburg chemical finn , waived extradition Friday in Arlington County,
Va. He had surrendered to police
there Thursday night, accompanied
by his brother James, an Arlington
County policeman.
John A. Rile, 26, Levine's alleged
partner, had a court appearance
.FridaY: A Shaker Heights Municipal ·
judge set File's bond at $150,000.

..
i;..,.. ..

I

Fund to Earl Neff (right ), which will provide free
television for the children who are hospitalized during
the month of May, 1979.

MAKES CONTRIBUTION - Raymond DeLille
(left), Treasurer of AI Hoda No. 26 D.O.K.K., presents
the check for the Holzer Medical Center Television

'Low rates are
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we're the largest
home insurer.
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417 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-4290

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p 78825

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all classes of property with an additional two and one-half percent
property tax relief added for residential homeowners. This budget
allocates $595.8 million for property
tu relief. Since fiscal year 1973, the
Legislature had distributed
$1,367,000,000 in property tax relief.
•Included in the $595.8 million appropriation for property tax relief Is a
continuation of the homestead exemp. tion program. The current program
wi~ save elderly homeowners $56
.million in fiscal year 1980 and $60
million in fiscal year 1981. Also included in the budget package Is $26
million for . an eJ:panaion of the
progr.m to the eligibility levels of
Senate Bill 6. S.B. 6 extends the
discount to'eligible citizens by raising
the maximum income of persons
qualifying for the Homestead Exemption to $15,000. '(he upper income.
eligibility level currently stands at
$10,000 per year. ·
The exparision of the Homestead

conswners less for the same amount
of electriCity than public utilities
charge, .00 the rural electrics
generally speaking, charge more. '
The major public utilities, Ohio
Power, Cincinnati Gas and Electric
Exemption wlll !!I't!atly aid senior Cleveland El~tric lliumina,ting, fo~
citizens and disabled Ohioans. example, are m the middle, but exAnother provision of the budget bill ceptions to this are Monongahela
· wlthhaadllght
aimed at helping the elderly and Power, a West Virginia investor
owned
electric
which
i:.""rves
some
disabled Is the $4.8 million ap• All·ltool ....""
propriation to help reduce transit Eastern Ohio consumers, which has
. •Bit
bog
fairly low bills, and on the other side
• 4-on-tht·floor arpet shift
fares for these citizens,.
Edison, whose bills are qui~
• full tim1 ldfe-cliMing
111 other Items of interest, the Toledo
high.
• Hi-tpeed tool tuction
Energy Credits progra,m has heen inInvestor owned utilities are subject
creased by $38 million over the past
to
regulation by the Public Utilities
blennlwn, and an appropriation for $2
Commission
of Ohio (PUCO), while
million wu made to be used for
the
municipals
and rurals are
energy research by our state univer2 SPEm MolOR
publicly
owned
and
·not subject to
sities.
.
state
regulation.
In conclusion, the budget proposal
REGUlAR '129.90
To be fair, the differences in the
pused by the House during last
week's session Is a pt:oposal which cost of electricity do reflect
•Uilchment ... l .
wisely distributes the resources ol' the significant diffetllnces in the cost of
producing
electricity.
Factors
such
as
state according to the needs of Ohio's
citizens. The bill received 82 lif- trans~rt.tion, the size of generating
flrmatlve votes, more than any capac1ty, government subsidies, and
budget bill ,in over 21:1 years. This in- the number of customers per mile of
dicated that House members are line are important to cost.
"It Is interesting to point out what
working together, regardless of party
differences
exist and where they
affiliation, for the good of all Ohio
exist,"
Representative
James stated.
Citizens.
"However, a similar, but more
limited survey I made last summer
FlU OHE YEAI\
CUAICI\ V.fii\Atm'
showed a bout the same results
r/ ~ 1 ' ......._..-....
especially regarding the • price.:
FULL
RV£
YEAI\ WMM!ITY
·charged by rural electrics. The fact
COIMP.TIIUUEANEP.f!AS£
tield.
that there is a 100 percent difference
General conclusions drawn by Rep. · from the highest to the lowest bill for
James from the survey are that the same amount of electricity Is im- L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.:._ _ _ _ _ _ _.:..:..__ _:::::~--1
municipal electric cmp8111es charge port.nt to examine."
·

Some Ohio electric consumers pay
more than twice as much for electricity than other Ohio consumers
pay.
The results of a survey conducted
by State Represenl,ative Ron James
(D-Proctorvllle) in February, 1979,
reveal a wide discrepancy in the price
of the same amount of electricity paid
by consumers in Ohio.
Other electric comp!lllies use a
variety of rate structures and adjustroent clause to figure out monthly .electric bills. The results of the
survey show that there Is a doubling
in the price charged for the same
.mount of electricity from the lowest
electric bill to the highest electric bill
· in Ohio.
On February 5, Representative
James sent to every one of the three
types of electric companies in Ohio municipal, investoro()wned, and rural
- a questionnaire regarding their ac- ·
tual bills for a certain number of
kilowatt hours of el~tricity used.
Rep . James asked the question, "If I
had used 600 KWH of electricity in
your lsst billing period; what would
my total bill have heen?"
In all, the QUeStionnaire wu sent to
119 electric companies, and 97 responses were received. Twenty~ven of 2ll
rural electrics responded, 62 of 83
mun!cipals responded and all eight of
the mevestor. owned");ublic utilities
responded.
The rural electric that did not
respond was Frontier Power in ·
Coshocton, and the municipals that
did not respond included Amherst
Arcadia, Carey, Celina, Custar:
Georgetown, Grafton, Lakeview
Lucas, Minster, Monroeville, Ne~
Knoxville, Oak Harbor Oberlin
Piqua, Plymouth, Ripley, Seville:
~yrscuse, Tontogany and Waynes,

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POMEROV·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, MAY 7, 1979

.

Police officer killed
CINCINNATI (AP) - A psychiatric
examination was ordered today for a
Cincinna tl man charged in connection
with • Saturday's shooting death of
pollee officer Melvin Henze.
Hamilton County Municipal Judge
Ralph Winkler granted the request
. lifter -att~mey Leslie Gaines also
asked the court for a physical
examination of his client · Percy
Wilson .
Wilson alSo · is charged with
felonious assault in connection with
another shooting Friday night.
· Ga,ines said that his t:llent was in
''excruciating pain " and had
appeared to go into conwlsions which
made It d!Hicult for him to speak.
Pbil Muldoon, head of the court 's

probation department and psychjatric
clinic, said that Wilson had a previous
·history of mental illness according to
the court record and also was on
probation for disorderly conduct.
Winkler ordered a $1 million bond
on the aggravated murder charge, a
$500,000 bond on the attempted
murder charge and a $100,000 bond on
the felonious a~~SBult charge.
· The judge said he would hear
further argwnents on the matter later
tOday.
Police said Henze, 31, the father of a
4-year..old daughter, was shot at &lt;;!,QSe
range while trying to apprehend
Wilson in connection with the previous
night's incldent. ·
'
Henze was the fourth Cincinnati

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Ohio Power
Co. cushmers will receive decreased
electric bills during the nell:! 10
mooths because of a state ruling, the
utility announced today.
A billing adjustment, · which
iunounts to about 39 cents a month for
tile typical residential customer, is a
result' of a 1977 opinion of the Public
Utllltles Commission of Ohio that Ohio
· Power's .approved tarHfs produced
higher revenues . than was proper
between Dec. 21, 1975 and Oct. 22,
1976.
.
. The decision by PUCO was
appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court
by the utility. The court has not acted
on the appeal. However, It refused to
allow the utility to delay the billing
chm1ge until a decision is reached.
Ohio Power said no special
designation will appear on monthly
bills to show the adjustment. Instead,
the refund will he calculated into each
month's fuel clause.
The utilities serves about 600,000
customers in pa,rts of 53 Ohio counties.

police officer to die in the line of duty
in the last 10 monthS, and the eighth in
the last five. years. Two Cincinnati
officers were shot and killed Marcli 6
after stopping an auto being driven by
a person wanted on a police warrant.
Wilson was charged with
aggravated murder and attempted
aggravated murder Sunday in
connection with the shooting of Henze
and a warrant for felonious assault
\.·as issued regarding Frida y's
incident. The attempted aggravated
murder charge was flied because
police claim Wilson pointed a pistol at
another officer, who eventually
subdued him.
·
Sgt. Paul Morgan of the Cincinnati
homicide squad 511id that although
autopsy reports were not completed,
indications were that Henze was shot
six times.
Police said Henze was alone ·in his
cruiser and looking for Wilson
Saturday afternoon when he saw the
man and radioed foc assistance. At
that point, police said Henze was shot
from a distance of no more than five
feet.
.·
"He ·never had a chance," Police
Chief Myron Leistler said.
A funeral Mass is scheduled
Tuesday, with burial the same day.
Henze was a Vietnam war veteran
who joined the police force in
February 1972. He had received 10
letters of commendation and was
scheduled to begin work Monday·as a
plainclothes officer.
· The Friday night shooting ior which
Wilson . was being sought resulted
from an argument over a poolroom
dice game, according to police.
YvonneC8rr,34, wasstrucklntheleg
by one .of five bullets fired. Wilson
allegedly left the pool hall and
returned with a gun and started
shooting.
Wlison was described by a neighbor
as a quiet person wl)o kept to himself
in a first:noor efficiency a1111rtrnentj
"He dldri't bother anyblxly. .He
appeared to be 1onely," said .susan
Williams, a neighbor of Wilson's. "He
went to the library all the time ." .
Mrs. Williams said Wilson bought a
.25-caliber.handgun last week. He had
recently gotten a job in a
neighborhood grocery, she said, and
told her he was Investing "a big
·amount of money in It."
Wilson told her he · got the gun to
make sure he didn't "get ripped off,"
. Mrs. Williams said.
..

.

DIRECTOR SPEAKER - Sandy Rowland, Great
Lakes Regional Office director of the Humane Society,
seated center, front row, was featured at a quadrant
meeting hosted Saturday at the Meigs Inn by the Meigs
County Humane Society. Pictured with Ms. Rowland
are representatives from each group present for the

"I don't ·want to mislead you. It's
going to get worse," Carter told the
gathering Saturday . "There is less
mel in the future and you'll pay more
for it."
He sliid he wo!lld ask Energy
Secretary James Schlesinger to
"immediately determine the facts" of
why shortages are more ·serious in
California than in the rest of the
nation.
Carter said the lines could become a
Robert Radebaugh, Rt 1, [)exter,
nationwide problem by summer.
was
found guilty lifter three days of
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. has
trial
for trafficking in marijuana.
proposed that California ease the
Radebaugh was charged with
shortage through a gasoline
knowingly possessing marijuana in an
distribution system tied to vehicle
.moWJt
equal to or exceeding three
license plate numbers.
times
the
bulk amount. The bulk
Some counties, including Los
amoWJt
of
marijusna
is 200 grams,
Angeles, were expected to adopt the
and
the
State
of
Ohio
introduced
into
plan today.
.
evidence marijuana weighing 6,530.30
At a Hollywood station on Saturday,
grams.
a man cut in front of about 50
On Thursday, May 3, the State of
motorists. When an angry group
Ohio
vs. Robert Radebaugh trial
inoved toward him, he pulled a
began
with jury selection. Thomas
derringer and held off the crowd with
Stobart,
Racine, was elected foreman
the gun while he filled his tank, police
of
the
jury
. Other jurors were Etta
said.
Mae Hill,Racine, Etta Will, Pomeroy,
He was still pumping when he was
Helen Stout, Albany, George White,
arrested, officers said.
Pomeroy, Barbara Lester, Dexter,
A tow truck driver told pollee that
Gordon
Perry Albany, Sharon Hall,
about 20 persons tried to mug him
Langsville,
Pam Holcomb, Pomeroy,
Saturday as he took six gallons of gas
Shirley Johnson, Portland, Dorothy
to a motorist whose car bad run dry
Johnson, Racine, and Kay Sayre,
while waiting in a line outside a
Portland. ·
station. .
Meigs · County
Prosecuting
Also last week, police said, a D
.:~
h k •h
pregnant woman was allegedly
epu...,s C ec . miS ap Attorney, Fred· W. Crow , III,
presented the case for the State of
attacked by a man because he
Ohio.
Testimony was given by Sheriff
claimed she cut in froot of him in line ,
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Proffitt , special
and a 00-year-old woman, who pulled . department investigated a single car James J .
Gary
WoHe, Captain Bob
investigator,
her car into a line of waiting cars, was accident Saturday afternoon on. SR
Beegle,
deputies,
Lou Osborne ,
pulled out of he~ ear--by five men 338, in Antiquity where the road i&amp;
Darrell
Sloan,
Manning
Mohler, state
dressed in business suits . "One slipping into the river.
game
protector,
Andy
Lyle, former
slammed the do&lt;:f on her foot and the
According to the report, Lawhana
Meigs
County
Deputy,
Kenneth
other spat on her," dealer Fred Jacob Sue (loodnlte, 21, R.t .l, Letart., W. Va.,
Hoffman,
Ka,thy
Molnar,
criminalist
Sllld.
was · traveling· downriver and
attempted to slow down for a vehicle from B.C.!., and criminalist, Edwards
:r:r~:: ::~rrrrr::::rr:~:::~r:=:=rrr:=:':'rrr~ that was about to enter the bad SpOt in R. Hopkins from B.C.!.
Judge John C. Bacon would not
the highway.
permit
a B.C.!. undercover agent to
She said the brakes on her car failed
VOTING UNDERWAY
testify
on
rebuttal to the common use
. .Absentee voting for the June along with the emergency brake. She and effect of marijuana .
primary elections got underway today swet:Ved to the right to avoid hlttlllg
The evidence brought forward by
at the Meigs County Board of the other car and struck two marker prosecutor,
Fred W. Crow , III,
Elections. Tbe board office, located Ia barrels coming to a stop in 8 ditch. indicated that the Meigs County'
the Pomeroy Masonls TeJDple will be 91e complained of a slight injury to Sheriff's Department on Sept. 16, 1978
opeu from 9 a.m. lo 4 pm. Mooday her elbow. There was slight damage found four marijuana plants growing
through Friday ud f1'om 9 to 1% noon \O the vehclle. No citation was issued.
each Saturday for the convenience of
absentee voters. Primary election wlll
'be held Ia Pomeroy VIllage, for
Republicans ooly, and Ia the Eastern
and Southern Local School Districts
where tax levies are fD decided.
. :~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:~:;:;}:;:~:~:~:::;::t/:tt'J{;::;:{:?:~':::'\~:.

meeting. Front, I tor, Dorothy
of the
host unit, and Maureen Kreider of the
County,
.()hlo, Humane Society; back, 1-1', Brenda Brown, Putnam County; Dorothy Peavis, Muskingum County; Bill
Summers, the Parkersburg society; Ted Johnson,
Hocking County, and Patricia Prowse, JacksOI\ County, W.Va.

Guilty verdict ends trial
in the·defendant's garden, which after
being analyzed, were found to be
marijuana plants. lit addition to the
four plants,four stmps of marijuana
plants were found at the same
location.
Evidence presented by the B.C.I.
witnesses indicated that one plant
weighed in excess of ten pounds, the
exact weight being 4:871.8 grams, and
the stems and leaves of the other three
plants weighed approximately three
and one-th\rd pounds, the exact
weight being 1,658.46 grams.
The defendant, Rade~ugh was .
represented · · by
Charles
H.Knlght,local attorney, who urged
the jury to look at the charge in Its
social prospective.
The defense presented as witnesses
Rex Cheadle, Bill Harmon, Kelly
Shields, Ralph Meister, Mike Small,
Darlene Radebaugh , and the
'defendant, Radebaugh.
The defendant 's position was that he
had a right to raise 'marijuana for his

DST hours announced
by airport official

own personal use, and that the
marijuana confisca tell did not weigh
in excess of the bulk amount, which ill
defined by Ohio law as 200 grams.,
The defendant indicated that there
were only three plants remaining
when officers confiscated them on
Sept. 16, 1978. He further testified that
they were grown only for his personal
use and tbat four oft he five marijuana
stumps were male plants had no use,
and were fed to hia hogs.
lit addition to the plants found on the
defendant's premises, there were
eight · containers
containing
inarijmuana seeds found Pl:I!Buant to
~~earch warrant, at the det'end&amp;nt's
residence. The different contalilera
.contained
several
hundreds
marijuana seeds.
After the guilty verdict was
returned late Saturday night, the
judge delayed sentencing until the
early part of this week. Traffickmg In
marijuana is a felony and catrles a
minimum penalty of from one to three
years, with a maximwn penalty of ten
years and or a fine of five thoUBBild
dollars .
CHAMBER MEETS WEDNESDAY

The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will meet Wednesday at
·noon at the Meigs Inn. Speaker will be
Glenn Smith, director of the divlson of ·
Ohio Department of Transportation,
Marietta.

A Gallia·Meigs Reslonal Airport
Authority spokesman announced
today that as a result of Daylig!X
Savings time, the following hours indicate when the Gallla-Melgs
Regional Airport Building will he
Weather
open:
Clear
tonight
witli the low in the low ·
Daily - 9a.m. to7 p.m.
808.
Mostly
sunny
and warm TueSday
Sunday -II a.m. to 7 p.m.
Runway llghts will be turned off at but with a chance of aftemooo
11 p.m., but can be turned on by showers. High in the mid to upper 1111.
keying the Mlke-A-LJte system five 111e chance of rain Is near zero'
tonight and 30 percent Tuesday .
times on 123.0 Mhz.

not satlalledl

..details).

.: If there fs anything we can do to help you In the field of real estate · .•
pleasephoneordropinatLEAOINGHAM REALESTATE,S12Second ,
Ave., Gallipolis. Phone 446-769P. We're here to help.

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DO YOU .REALLY OWN LAND?

what they are.

it

ELBERFELD$

(Req uests must be mailed prior to
August 5. 1979. Limit one request per
customer. See ins1de package flap for

Do you really own the land you I ive on? Yes, but not uncond it ionally . •
There.'s no question that you , our family , and heirs have strong
.. historic rights to your own land. You can build on 11, dig in it, keep e
•
others away from It, sell it,, give It away, or borrow on If.
e
4i. But your rights do not override certain publ ic rights. A utility com· e
.- pany may buy rlghts-of·way for power lines. the telephone company
e, may have me right to a flve·fOQI easement for potes a tong your back lot : •
C line. Similar easements are purchased or granted for local electric
power ltnes, under~round sewer piping, natural gas lines, and water •
~ supply piping.
e
•
You should know about all easements, r ights and cla ims made on e
t your land while you are living on II. This is the reason for a title search e
e prior to purchase. When it 's completed. you'll know If your title to the •
j prqperty is, or is not, free and clear of all "encumbrances" and, If not, e
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90 ,.....,......
$79
SAVE ·~ (~i)

~rt

NO. 16

By The Anoclated Press
Gasoline stockpiles are shrinking in
·many parts of the nation, especially
when hit by the demands of weekend
motorists, but the tightest supplies
are in California, where drivers'
tempers are beginning to flare.
There · were reports this past .
weekend of some California drivers
waiting hours- sometimes overnight
- for Small amounts of gas.
Elsewhe~e around the nation,
however, some stations relaxed
slightly noW'tbat they have received
·thlimonth's allocatlons .of fuel; Many
of them had closed early and imposed
dollar sale limits a week ago, when
weekend traffic coincided with the
bottom of April's supplies.
Despite the shortages in California,
tourist attractions like Disneyland
and Knott's Berry Farm - built
around tourists who arrive in carsreported bUlliness at normal levels.
But One attraction that fell short.
was the Cinco de Mayo celebration in
downtown Los Angeles, . where
Preslctent Carter appeared . Last
year, •llll "elltlmated· 10;000 pel'llons
· crowded the Civic Center mall .. This
time, fewer than 2,000 persons turned
out.

FREE .

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VOL XXVIII

'C alifornia gas
supplies tight

HOOVER. ·
Convertible•

Survey results given

.................................
Home Office: BlOO mington, Illinois

Hoda No. 26 D.O.K.K., a body of the '
Knighl!l of Pythlas who hold their
regUlar meet!Jigs at the Lodge,
located at Second Ave. and Locust St.
in Gallipol)s, means that a,ll children
who must· be in the hospital during .
May will enjoy television at no
charge.
"'
Cliff Dill:on Is the Roylll Vlzar .
(R. V.) of the organization, and ~
presentation of the check to Earl Neff
was made by the treasurer, Raymond
DeLille. .
Area business and organization, as .
well as individuals, support these two
very important projects of the
hospital for the Pediatric patients. •
Anyone interested in participating in ·
the program should contact Neff et
lll3 Teodora Avenue in Galllpolls, u
he handles both the Televiaion and
Toy Fund donations for the Holzer
Medical Center•

•·

James' View from Statehouse
COLUMBUS - The Ohio House of
: ~iesentatives has passed the
.. budget bill, Amended Substitute Bill
,liM. The budget proposal is now being
considered by the Senate Finance
• Committee and is expected to be
- heard by the full Senate in approximately six weeks.
The primary and secondary
education . budget of the House
represents an increase of $1411 million
in excess of the Governor's request.
The $3.5 billion education total is $784
million more than was spent on
primary and secondary education in
the previous biennium.
The specific distribution of the
primary and secondary education appropriation will be decided when
Senate Bill 59 is considered by the
Ohio General Aasembly. This version
of the budget also appropriates more
than $1.5 billion to higher education.
This is $38.6 million more than the
Governor's request.
In regard to higher education, the
budget proposal freezes undergraduate tuition at Ohio tax sup'ported l!lllverslties at spring quarter
1979 rates. An increase lit general fees
would have to be submitted to the
Speaker of the House of RepresentatiVJ!!I and the President. of the Ohio
Senate before implementation. ·
H. B..204 also adds $4 million to the
Ohio Instructional Grants subsidy. Of
that amowit, $2 millirin dollars would
be added to increase the income
ellglbilliy for the Ohio Instructional
Grants Program to $20,000, while the
remaining $2 million would be added
to make students attending
proprietary schools eligible for Instructional Grants.
In addition, H.B. 204 ~ontinues the
.10 percent property tax rollback for

No. 26 D.O.K.K., in Gallipolis.
Contributions to the Toy Fund
provides toys and games, both new
and necessary replacements, .'for the
Pediatric Playroom at the hospital.
Smaller items such as book~,
crayons, toys and games are made
· available to the children who must be
confined to their rooms so that time
will pass faster for them while they
are ~F.Pitalized.
May's donation was presented 'by
Merrill Evans, Pre,sident of Carter
and Evans, Inc., on behaH of the company, whose offices are located in the
Spring Valley Plaza. This is the
second time Carter.and Evans, Inc.,
has made a donation to the Toy Fund
at the hospital.
The Television Fund provides free
color television· for the children who
are hospitaUzed at the Holzer 1\Jj!dical
Center. The contribution from AI

MOTHER'S DAY IS NEXT
..SUNDAY, MAY 13th
Yoti'LL PLEASE YOUR MOM WITH AGIFT
FROM OUR LINGERIE DEPT. ·

E

RFELDS IN POMEROY

•

RECEMNG SPECIAL presentations at the Melga High Band Banquet
Saturday nigllt, left to right, were Vern Felt, Columbus, director of the
flag e«pe who wai ~ted plaques; Charles Dowler, superintendent of
achoola who was given a farewell 8Ift presented a framed copy· of the
Alma Mater to be placed in a prominent spot in' the school district in
memory of the late James Lohse, who With hla slater; ~. Jennifer
Sheela composed the 101111· Alao shown Is Pat Wood, pretldent al the
Melga 'High Band Boosters. Wood wu presented 1111 engraved plaque
from the band by his daughter, Lori Wood, a graduatlrig senior. Mrs.
Sheeta wu presented the framed mUBic and in turn presented It to Dowler
for emlbiUoo in the district.
·

.

AWARD WINNERS - Randy Hunt, directOr of the Meigs High School
Band, Is plcturad with the two top .enlor award wlrmers at the aMual
band banquet held Saturday nig~ In the high school cafeteria. Center Is
' Lori Wood who was presented the Frederic Chopin award for her work
with both the Instrumental and vocal music department, and 011 the right .
is Kevin King who received the John Ph!Up Sousa Award u the ou~­
standing senior and the Louis Armstrong Award as the best jazz
musician.

TOP AWARD WINNERS - Alan Hunt, center, standing, lllll1istant
Meigs lDgh band director, is pictured With some of the top award winners
at Saturday night's banquet held in the high school cafeteria. Seated from
the left are L.ynne Oliver, outatandlng freslunan band student, and Linda
Eason, outstanding sophomore band student and also awarded a fie!~
conunander trophy~ back left to right, Tracey Jeffers, who received the
Arlen Award as ·the outstanding juniOr,, Hunt, and Jamie Johnsoo, who
was presented a field commander award. All members of the band
received awards at the baliquet.

~

;.L

'"

�....

~~ In

eatch

Washj,.ngton to.d ay

JIEALTH

..

.

ago claimed ' tJie franchise on tbe
leadoff spot. When neighboring states
tried to horn in and make the first
primary a regional affair in .the last
campaign, New Hampshire s~ly
moved· its date.rahead, a.we~;k.It all started with a loser, That was
Leonard Wood, favorite son, general,
organizer of the Rough RiderS, and
winner of the New Hampshire
primary on March 9, 1920. Wood was
the leading candidate for the 1920
Republican nomination - until party
leaders went into their smoke-filled
room in Chicago and came out with
Warren G. Harding as tbe choice.
Four years later, calvin Coolidge
became the first in the long succession
of New Hampshire winners elected to
the White House.
In those days, and WJtil 1948, . tbe
primary was a contest not among
candida1es but among slates of wouldbe national convention delegates.
That was changed with the 1952
primary, the first in which there was a
presidential preference poll. The
delegates were elected !f~!Pa·rately,
and the preference vote wasn't
binding. But the preference vote was,
and is, the attention grabber.
I

Collins' report.

doctor

this additional real property tax relief
toward homeownen and farmers.
This does seem to ,be a severe con-

stitutional pr.oblem involved in this
type of targeting.
·
The Ohio Constitution prohibits
classifying real property Into various
categories. By the legislative action
of favoring ho:meowners and farm~rs,
it appears that the Legislature has indeed classified the types of property,
and consequently this provisioli would
probably fall under a constitutional
test.
In the Senate during the week two
House blls were passed which are of
interest. H.B. 32, which cleared the
Senate, would permit the director of
Transportation to establlah school
zones on state blgbwa,ys at the
requj!Bt of a municipality or board of
township trustees.
The school zone area would Include
the actual school C1'08Swalk and a
distance of 300 feet on either side of
the crosswalk. The speed limit for the
school zone would be set at 20 miles an
hour duri112 the ichool hours.
The ~te 'alSO "j)Wed Jeglalation
concer'nlng cancellation of insurance
poUcles. H.B. 43 would prohibit an lnsuraqce company or Its sale:Sinen to
refer to tbe "non-cancellation
proviB!ilns" of a sickness~accident
insurance policy ·when' a
ptlng to
sell the plan. uniesli 'tile cancelabillty
and reneli'abillty provlsloiut ol" lhe
policy were satisfactorily el!Jllalned
to the potential purchaser.
This Is necessary beca~ current
Ohio law prohibits an insurance Com·
pany fro:m canceUng a policy during
the tenn· for which II ~ Issued,
however, there Is no Ohio law
requiring thlit an insurer renew a
policy once a currently - effective
policy expires. H.B. 43 is del!ll!ned to
guarantee that Individuals- considering purchasing an insurance
policy are well aWare of the, .fact that
theco:mpanymaychoosenCKtorenew
the policy.
J' ·

.,

•

THEDAR.YS
(USPS I - ) " "

··TUIIdey, May I '

.ASTROoGRAPH
:Sernice Bede Osol

derive

I great deal of aatlafac-

tlon from your work. Find out
more or what Ilea ahead for you
In tha year following your birthday by aendlng fo r you r copy of
Aatro.Qraph Letter. Mall S1 for
tiL.n \O Aatro·Graph , P.O. Box

4aG, Radio City Station , N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify bi rth
sign .

OEMINI (May 21-luna !Oj Be·
,.

May I, 1111

'fOu might ha\le a·o many thtnga
~o l ng for you this com lr"'Q year
)l:lat you 'll have to make a few
cholcll becauee you can 't
handle them all , It shou ld be a
buey and eucpeeslultlme.
TAURUS (Aprliii-May !0) A111tudee of co-work8re play an
important role In making you r
JOb 1111er today . You shou fd

over to your poin t 'of v1ew
today .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. ZZ) Tnl s
IS an excellent day to attempt
to balan ce the bud ge l. It you
are so Inclined . Yo u hl\18 th e
ability to calcuiate things properl y,

LIBRA (Sapt. 23-0ct. 23j YOur
leadersh ip qualities are showIng themsel'lles again today.
People are looking to you to
head the parade, so why not do

cause you don 't play favor ites
with friends , your po pular ity Is
111
lncreulng . Those who ('leed
SCORPIO (Dot. ! ..Nov. !!) AI·
support are grateful.
though you may appear to be
CANCER (Juno 21·July .12) You
on the qu iet side today, In
have the abilit y today to see all
reallly you are hard at work
sides of Issues . Co nsequently ,
yo u make an exc ellent med ia- • weighing and balanc ing th ing s
Important to you .
tor . You are the · one who ' ll
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Doc.
keeP the peace at home.
r1) Group endeavors are your
LEO (July 23-Aug . . !!) Faircup ot tea today . You alway1
. mlndedness arid an unprejuenjoy being with loll of peopla .
diced outlook Is all the equipTOday , they are even more fu n
mel'!! yo u'll need to wi n others

to you .than UIUII .
CAPRICORN (Doc. !!-Jon. 111
Because you shoW conalderallon Instead of ltepplng·all over
other1 to reach your goat,. you
might hear the thunder of applause In yo ur eara.

AQUARIUS (Jon. !O.Fob. 11) An
arrangement you have can be
adjuated more to you r benefit
Thin k through what you want to
say and ' make your proposal
today .
·

PISCES (Fob. 2Q.March 20) You
re ceive your greatest rewarda
tOda y ltlrough things that are
ahared wllt1 Others . Make certain yo u don 't pfay the loner's

role.

·'

.

ARIES (March ~1·Aprll

11)

.P~vt nershi ps appear to. have

more meantn·g 'to therri toda y
than they usuall y do, You 'and
yo ur assod ate s have eac: h
other' s inte res ts: at hea rt.
! N E WS~ APEA EN T~ APRI S E A SSN J

d

~...._.,......_ ..., ~

DEVOI'IDTOTHE

~~
IIOIII!JIT IIOI:rUCII
atyll'.dltor
DAVDliiiJtiiDIII(

Publilhed::.r;~=~,;.Oill.

VaUey 1'11bllallln( e-n.- M
,In&lt;.,
1tJ Coort St., l'crnot'ojl, llNo 41,... Office l'llme tta- 2111. 1!:dlloltoJ Pbonl
llll2-ltl 1.
I
Second clua pootasepotd •t Pomeroy, Olllo.
~ladvtr111inl repn.~tfft, Landm

- . .. 310I .Eucad Ave. , Clevetan&lt;t, Ohio
44111.
Subecriptlon rata: Dellverod lw ""rri«
where. available 110 centa per week. By Mtltor
Route where can1H arvtce not available, One
mon1h, 13.90. By 111MIIn Ohio and W. Vo., One

Year, 121.111i Six months,

$14.111~
·

moo·

lhl, SUO; E~AWhlre 132.00 year;
mont111
117.00: 1'hn!e mont~&gt;a , 111.00. Su
ptlon pri&lt;e
includes ~un~y Tlme:!l· SenUne);

,.

unit of measurement with which we
have recently had cause to beCome
familiar -and passes qn the infonnatlon by changing the color of its
pollen-bearingstamen, from blue to
pink.
By co:mparison, the ~lura!
background_ generates about 100
mlll1rems of radlatim a year foc the
average lnd!Yidual and the federal
safety limit for the general pubUc is
set at 170 inlllirema.
The spiderwort is said to be much
more sensitive to low-level emissions ·
than mechanical detection devices
nowln·use.
'
It could be that If nuclear power
turns out to be as big a part of our
energy future as some post-Three
Mile Island proponents continue to
assert, the splrdenrort could become
not merely a pretty roadalde flower
but a real !ifHBver:

CONTAGIOUSECONO.uES
By Don Graff
So huge and so dominant Is the
American economy, a 'truism has
long bad It, thst when the United
States sneezes the rest of the
developed world is likely to
pneumonia.
Not !lo much has been made ol that
during the recent years of mounting
trade deficits · and depreciating
dollars.Tiie United States, to read the
economic pages, at tlnles, has
become virtually a basket case. It is
Western Europe plus Japan that
would appear to have gained the
ecohomic upper hand.
History, however, seems to be
repeating Itself in a small way. The
Inflation that has preoccupied policy
makers in the United States. Is, according to a recent survey in .'lbe Wall
Street Journal, beginning to do the
same In Ita eeonomic partners.
It is not that these are ~el'll to
the problem. - InDatim has been
chronic in Britain, Italy and, · to .a
lesser extent, France during m11ch ol
the
era. But this
It Ispostwar
not restricted
to 8time
few around
shaky

WASHINGTON (AP) - When
George Bush got through announcing
his
Republican
presidential
candidacy the other day, he headed
off to New Hampshire - for th~ 12th
lil1le thil; year.
.n~t 's not unusual. By next Feb. 26,
when New Hampshire holds the first
state presidential primary of. the 1980
campaign, the ro11te to New England
will be a commuter run for almost
everyone who wants to he president. .
Republicans already are roaming
the state regularly :
President carter has made his first
visit of the new campaign. california
Gov. Edmund G. Bro.rn Jr. turned up
in Concord on what proved an
abortive mission to testify for a
balance-the-budget amendment to the
U.S. Constitution. Odds are he'll go
back.
They all will, because that is where
the primary action begins every.
(
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
fourth year.
And also because no candidate has
•
beconie president since World War II
without first winning the New
EARLYEXAMlSIMPORTANT
are ruptures. The mus~r wall of Hampshire primary.
. By Ll'lrreace Lamb, M.D. ·
the colon separates or tears and the
New Hampshire didn't invent the
DEAR DR. LAMB - . Recently 1 Inner lining o1 the colm literally rup- presidential primary, although it long
developed a slight disco:mfort In the tures through the tear to form the
sto:mach and abdomen acco:mpanied 'pocket.
by a change In bowel movement patThe most common Cause of the ruptem. My stools were smaller and ture is believed to be poor colon func.otteo watery. .
tim- usually spasms of the colon as
' AIIflmoidaacoplc elllunination aud' your doctor has diagnosed. The area
a barrlom enema X ray of the colm above the spasm Is stretched like a
'coLUMBUS - Stale Senator
showed no lntemal growth or polops. balloon aud It's this recummt stret- Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironton) reports
My doctor's diagnosis was spasm of ching process that ends up In the rup- the major legislative activity for last
the colon with diverticula. I was ad- ture and the little pocket called a week occurred In the Ohio House o1
Vised to take 'Metamucll and if this diverticulum.
Representatives when the House apdoes not correct the conditon, he will
Once they've developed, they're proved the biennial budget bill for the
prescribe so:me form of belladonna.
probably going to stay there. You can two-year period beginning July 1 of
.As I understand it, I have diver- help preventsymptoms and problems this year and ending June 30, !98!.
ticulltis. What exactly causes this by proper bowel management.
The total amount of fWJds ap. condition and is it apt Ill recur? Also
Metamucll is simply a bulk lax- propriated amoWJted to $16.3 billion
, can this condition develop into alive. It is a substance which is not for the two-year period. The budget as
:.something more serious, such as a absorbed but merely swells to provide passed did not include the funding for
:: tumor or. growth requiring a colec- bulk In the colon. It's all right but the Ohio Department of Trans.
there are many other bulk prepara- portation or the Ohio Department of
"tomy?
:: DEAR READER -Let me con- tionsaswell.
· HlghwaySsfety.
·
In addition, the best bulk of all is
It is estimated that these two
; gratulate you on having the good
·sense to go see a doctor. Anyone who nature's bulk - ceres! fiber. That budgets will approach approximately
,·develops persistent unelQllalned co:mes fro:m whole wheat cereals, $1.3 bllJion. This would raise the total
:change in his or her bowel habit pat- bran and real whole wheat bread. I biemlwn budget for (he State of Ohio
r· tem should go see a
at once. say real because a lot of the s~Ued to approximately $17.6 bllJion. This is
·;That can_!le the fi~t sign of cancer of whole wheat bread marketed con- about 18 per cent higher than the
·,thecoiOn~;rn Ill· .!\
talns large &amp;m?UJlts of refined or current .$14.9 bllJion biennial budget,
•· We •~M t~n';t~ much about It white nolir in which the bran has been · which expires June 30 of this year
;:and r s~p~ ir~ tiecause people are remove&lt;!.
A major highlight of the budget bill
~ .rather reluctant to discuss it. But
There s more to the whole problem was a $784 million Increase for state
cancer of the colon is the second ma~t than simply adding bulk to t~ diet. aid for elementary. and secondary
commC/11 ca~ of cancer deaths in You will probably need to tram your education, wbi(h is a::hout a 32 per
·.both men aud women. Ma~t of these, ' norm;ll bowel reflexes which Is cent increase over the current bien- '
H they are ~!l.~ly enough, can 00 disCIIlllled In The Health Letter I'm nl\ull. · •·
:)!ured. ~.P';'&gt;blem is ~t most of sending you.
The Ohio House of Representatives
~ ~m are not foUnd until they have
merely made one appropriation for
already spread to other parts of the
primary and secondary education sinl!ody ·
ce . the Seljate will be considering
, ' I .can't stress too strongly to all ol
1,000 LEAVE HOMES
Senate Bill 59 this week. S.B. 59 will
,)ny readel'll the lrilportance of having
CIHUJroTHE, Ohio (AP)- About be the Jeglalatlm which determines
,!I" early ~tiCJI! if they have any 1,000 residents of a 10-block area in how the funds allocated f.o edu!!atlon
.BUdden cliBn(le In OOwel movements Chillicothe's north end were ordered willactuallybespent.
lhat's not ezplaini!d or any unezplaln- from their homes for several hours
The budget as passed by the House
ed bleeding from the rectum.
Sunday afternoon after a Baltimore &amp; also included additional property tax
I'm sending you The Health Letter Ohio Railroad tank car began leaking relief by funding an Increase in the
nwnber :HI, Dlverticulosla. n will a highly toxic and flammable Homestead Exemption which wss in.give you a great des! more detail than chemical.
·
eluded in Senate BUI 6, which was
.I can here about this problem ol
Those evacuated were allowed to · passed earlier by the Senate and was
:!lOCkets ol the colon. Other readers return to their residences about five the subject of a prior legislative
;!'ho WBIIt this luue can send 50 cents hours after the leak occurred, when report.
;!"th a long, stam~. self-addressed officials declared ·the situation under , The additional property tax relief
:envelope for it. ~ your request to control. They . had been taken to an under S.B. 6 Is calculated to be ap~-in care of this newspaper, P. 0. emergency shelter at a local junior proximately $26 million: An additional S44 miillon in real property
.,.,.. 1551, Radio City Statim, New high school.
York, NY 10019.
Rescue units poured hundreds of tax relief wss provided through inWe really don't know: what causes gallons of water on the tank car, creasing the current 10 per cent
thc8e little pockets to develop on the which was reportedly carrying millage roll back to 12.5 per cent in
colm. Each one is !Jke a .small appen- isoprene ga~. The train wllS parked on specific Instances.
dlx. Most authorities think that they tracks near an Intersection.
The !Jill as pail.sed by the House o1
,
Representatives attempts to tar~et

..

North Ga'llia, Eastern win ,SVAC track meet

Today's commentary

Washington

PAY PHONE IN EVERY HOME
lure of lower monthly bills for
By Martba Ailgle aud
customers who restrict their phone
Robert Wallen
usage, heavy users sucn as families
WASIDNGTON (NEA)- Once upon with teen-aged children would end up
a time, as seasoned consumers will paying considerably more than they
surely recall, "more for less" was a now do under the prevailing flat-rate
proud marketing slogan. And nobody system.
-had any doubt what it meant, either.
Conswner advocates, including the
Whatever the service or conunodity U.S. Office of Coosumer Affairs, are
advertised, the purveyors were pr~ justifiably wary of the slowlydevelopll)islng to deliver more bang for the ing trend to LMS, charging it amounts
buyer's buck. A better calculator at a to theintroduction of a "pay phone in
lower price. A Ioriger plane ride at every home."
lower fare. Faster service for less
In areas where LMS luis been
money.
..
. ,
initiated- the Miami metropolitan
Those wer~ the good o1.d days, all . region is the latest to join the list- the
right, but theY are awrently gone telephone industry offers customers a
forever. "More for less" is still a- choiceofretainingflat-rateserviceor
dominant theme of the marketplace, switching to LMS.
but the concept has taiten on a nasty
But as Lee Richardson, of the, U.S.
reverse twist.
•
Office of Coosumer Affairs, points
As anyone who has bought a candy out, the choice may not last too long.
bar - or a house - in the past few As consumers with low phone usage
years can readily testify, the new rule shift to LMS, the flat-rate group will
' is "pay more and get less." If you consist increasingly of heavy users. don't believe it, just contemplate f(ll' whose rates will start to climb.
a moment the prospect of dollar-aAs flat-rate service becomes more
' gallon - gasoline and rationing at the costly, more and more custo:mers will
same time.
be driven to LMS. But unless they are
· ,, Or if that lacks appeal, as well it able to drasticaJly reduce their phone
: might, take a look at the latest usage, their monthly bills under that
: " bargain" dear old Ma Bell, system will still be higher than their
everyone's favorite utility, is seeking old flat-rate service.
Indeed, In three Illinois towns
: to foist off upon telephone subscribers
Iii a growing number of states.
where LMS has been tested for more
· After years of not only providing than a year, company revenues dropbut vlgOI'OilS!y promoting the flat-rate ped by 10 percent of what they used to
local service now used by almost 90 be under flat-rate service and a peti: percent of all residential customers, tion for rate Increases· has now been
: telephone operating companies have filed. Customers who enjoyed lower
• started switching signals.
phone bills under the early phases of
· In state·after state, the companies the experiment may soon find the
are ~~~!~:!Will
to introduce a usage- bloom is olf the rose.
se~f''· 1 pncing system for local · There's not much the federal
calls similar to that already in effect government can do about all this;
telephone rates are regulated by state
· for long-distance service.
:. Called "local measured service," comrnisslon, not federal agencies.
:or ~billing system lm- But the U.S. consumer affairs office
·~ e
_ on the number of has performed one valuable function
&gt;local' · .. , ,'
calls made each already by alerting the Pllblic as a
month; tlie 'duration of each caJI, and whole to the potential dangers of this
the distance covered.
latest "bargain" offered by the
· While the companies hold out the telephone Industry .

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 7, 1979

'.
I

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , May 7, 1979

North Gallla runners · swept first,
11ec0nd and third in the 100 and the 220
to overtake Kyger Creek to win the
boys' SVAC Iague Track meet. The
Eastern girls won their third straight
league title easily over Kyger Creek
· 85 to 'lT. The meet "'" held on Kyger
Cretk's cinders Wednesday aftemoon.
.
In the boys co:mpetition North
Gallla and Kyger Creek fought it out
for the championship. Mter the field
eventa, Kyger Creek held a 35 to 12
.lead over North Gallla.
•·'

Astros end Reds
8- win streak' 8-2
.

Today In Hlotory
By The Asaoclilt~ Press

Today Is Monday, May 7, the 127th
da Y of 1979. There are 238 days left in
the year.
·economies but general, aud beginning
Today's highlight in history :
to be the cause of the moat concern In
the COWJtries that had been moat
On this date in 1945, World War II
ended In Europe as the Gennans
stable.
signed unconditional surrender terms
West Gennany is moving to tighten at General Dwight Eisenhower 's
credit and restrict the mmey supply· headquarters at Rltelmll, Fran :e.
Switzerland, withttsmoney supply up
On this date:
In 1789, the first presi entia!
a reported 17 percent over a year ago
and the premium-valued franc ac- inaugural ball was beld In Nev.. York
tually falling against ' the dollar In honor of President and Mrs. George
recently, is moving In the same dlrec- Washington.
tion. As is Japan, dealing wit!l_a
In 1915, the British liner, LIISitania,
creeping lnflatim - wholesale prices was torpedOed and sunk by a Gennan
up 0.9 percent in March - that might submarine off Ireland, with a loss of
be bearable by u.s- standal'ds but nearly 1,200 Jives.
makes the tradtH!ependent Japanese
In 1943, Allied forces In World War
nervPartousof. the bJam is tald
the n won a major victory In North Africa
e
. on
as Tunis and Blzerte were Uberated.
dollar - s~lcally the multiIn 1954, a key French outpost in
national support effort Initiated last · Indochina, Dien Bien Phu, fell to the
November that has halted Its decline r:octh Vietnamese Conununlsts.
but at a cost of so:methlng like ·$30
In 1960, the Soviet government said
l)IIJJon to participating central banb. an American pilot shot down over the
These have been buying Up excess Soviet Union, Francis Gary Powers,
dollars but In the process Inflating would be put on trial as a spy.
theirownmoneysupplles. In 1973, the u.s. consul in
Another maj~ influeace is oll, with Guadalajara, Mexico, Terrance
current price IRCI'eases decreed by l.eorihardy, was released by leftwing
the producers hitting Europe and kidnappers after being held four days.
Japal) much more pai,nfully than the The Mexican government had freed 30
United Statea, whe~ the {uror over prillmers and flown tbem ·to Olba to
deregulation is essentially political secure the release.
rather thaneconomlc.
Ten years ago: City College of New
As a consequence, much of the plan York was closed as whites clashed
agreed upon at last year's Bonn sum· with black demonstrators.
·
mit .~d to be scrapped. That caJled
Five years ago: West Gerinany's
for VIgorous ~ulatlm of the Ger- governing Social Democratic Party
man and Japanese economies and . named Finance Minister Helmut
somewhat more moderate action by Schmidt .to succeed WU!y Brandt as
other count;rles to equalize growth O!ancellor after Brandt's resignation.
rates with a slowing United States One year ago: Police in Italy
and gradually equalize trade . lm- arrested 26 suspected supporters o1
balances. Instead of ~ulatlon, . the terrorist Red Brigades as a pollee
planne111 are turning to. 'lloughtjt' of search continued for the kidnapped
applying the economic brakes.
political leader, AIdo Moro.
And a cooaequence of that could be Today's birthdays: Actress Anne
renewed pressure on the dollar, a Baxter is 56. Poet Archibald
shrinklngofthemarketforU.S. goods MscLelsh Is fl.
·
ab~d and continuing trade 4eflclts.
Thought for today : Miracles
It s a situation that can be express- sometimes occur, but one has to work
ed In one word.
terribly hard for them - Chain!
Gesundheit.
Weizmann, Zionist leade~, 1!74-1952.
SAVED BY'l11ESPIDERWORT?
Art imitates nature, ·it's said. But
The Treaty of Aix-la.Qlappelle 1ft
here's a case where nature not ooly 1668 settled .French claims on the

Imitates an artifact, It goes It one bet- Spanish Netherlands.
ter.
A Japanese scientist reportS that an
•
artiflclaJly . raised variety of the
spiderwort plant Is lin . excellent
Thomas Edison, Inventor of tht!
monitor of low-level radiation. It can light bulb, · never finished grade
detect as little as !50 mllllrems - a school.

CINCINNATI (AP ) - The Houston
Astros took their share of Jumpa on a
lw~week-long road trip· tliat ended
hereSunday,buttheystillcameoutof
the ordeal leading the National
Iague West by 1¥.. games.
Hot~ston returns home to the
, , Astrodome Tuesday, and as third
baseman Enos CRbell says : "We
, seldom lose there. U anybody's going
. to beat us, they better beat us on the
road." · ·
The Astros lost three Straight
· games to the Cincinnati Reds, then
· salvaged a split of Sunday's doubleheader with an 8-2 victory. The Reds
pummelled Houston 17-5 in the
opener.
. "Mter losing three in a"row then
. winning the last one, that's a big lift,"
said Astros Manager Bill Vlrdon. "All
you have to have is somebody go out
and pitch a good game. That changes
the whole complexion."
That job fell to Frank Riccelll, a
. "spot starter" who held Cincinnati to
five hits, sllencing the bats that had
: boomed out 17 hits and three home
runs In the first game.

PREVENnON
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BEST POLICY .
As an Independent insurance'
agency, out primary function Is
to provide policies which alford
financial protection In case of

loss.

But, we also have ·a vital in ·
teres! In loss preventiOn, as
should our clients. We encou•ag e
care, caution and safety ...
preventive measures wt]lch can
keep that car accident frOm happening, that building fire from
starting,

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Prevention saves life, limb and
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When losses do oCcur, our
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need . But we still say - preven·
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DAlf C. WARNER
INS.
992·2143
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

Sunday, May ·13
San Antonio al Washington
Wednesday, May 16
Washington at San Antonio, (n), If

necessary

-•
y

in. the news

Friday, May 18
San Antonio al Wash ington, (n) , If

''·

necessary

.

'

I

NEW YORK (AP)- Ftlm director
Roman Polanski, who fled to Paris m
. Feb. 1,1978- the day before be was to
have been sentenced for having Belt .
unlawfully with a 13-yesr-old il!rl may return to the United Statee, ssys
Newsweek magazine. •
·
Newsweek on Sunday ssld POJariakl
told an l111erviewer: "!lysterla will m
longer be predominant" In hi•
decision to stay In Parts or return. He .
said his cale Is being viewed ''In a
more r~ttlonal · li&amp;llt."
Newsweek quoted . Polanski as
saying he ntade an advance toward
the girl, " ...but she responded. And,
certainly, lhe wsa not druBBed at all,
at any time. She wu three weeks
short of 14 at the time, but at thla age
you can be an adult, which she was. I
can't say anything derogatory about
her,
·
"She was jlllt a nice girl. 1 pleaded
guilty to ~void the carnival
proceedings of a pablic trial and to
protect the girl's anonymity."
Polanslli pleaded guilty in August
1977.
NEW YORK (AP) - ~ge Bush
says be's going to borrow some ol
President Carter's campelgn tactlca
to land the Republican presidential
nomination, but there tbe ]IOUtlcal
resemblance ends.
The former GOP national chairman
told an Interviewer lm !iBC's "Meet
the Press" SUnday the key to victory
rests In out-organizing the
competition tn key states like New

•

H11mpahlre, site of the first
presidential primary, and low•.
,
But Buah iald he would not emulate
what he called Carter'i campaign ~
promises and his vacillating
presidency.
·
~
He
conceded
that
othe~
RepubUcans, such as Ronald Reagan;
John Comally and Sen. Howmt
Baker, Stood hlcber than he did In
polls, but added, "I'm goiltg to out1
organizl! them. I feel stronger abouC
wilY I want to be president than thea 1
others·and I've got to convince peoplq
one-on-one, acrosa Iowa, Ne'll'
Hampshire, . through those earl,:!
primaries, aud I'B do that part of the,
formula .the way President. JinlDit,i
Carter did lt.'.'
•
:~

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. (AP) ~
Talk of Inflation, anna limitation and-~
other national headltches seemed tart;
away as Vice Prealdenl WalteF •
Mondale and his wtfe, Joan, stoo&amp;l
along the .muddy fence and wat~
their daughter compete In an;;
equestrian show.
~
Eleanor Jane, 19, was M! of 120.'.

rlden

from

Sports briefs.

=

•

Na:mes . ...

~ was unsuccessful. Greg Smith
and Tom Reel! also captured third and
.fourth respectively in that event. The
only event that Kyger Creek did not
score in wss the pole vault as Good of
Eastern won the event.
The running events became a
reversal of wl\at had hapjlened In the
field events.
North Gallla dominated the sprints
and placed men 'In scoring positions to
tally up the needed PQints.
North Gallla 's Sam Smith captUred
three Individual events, the 100 (10.5 ),
. the 220 (23.9) and the 440 (54.8) to lead
the comeback.
The PirateS 440 Play team won that

.ii

event In the time of 48.4. Lewis Of North Gallla won the 300 meter low hurdles in 43.7 as Smith of Kyger Creek
finished second.
Kyger Creek freshman Ed Moore
was a double winner in the Mile (4:52)
and the half-mle (2.18). John Amos
captured the two mile run (11:29 ) as
c,lid Tim King in the high hurdles. The
Mile relay team from Kyger won that
event in the time of 3:57.
North Gallia's squad depth proved
to be the deciding factor as the
scoring showed five firsts, 10 seconds,
seven thirds and five foUrths.
North Gallia controlled the Sprints
placing in first, second, and third in
both the 100 and the 220. In. both of
those events, North Gallla outscored
• Kyger Creek 20 to one-third to gain
the advantage.
Kyger Creek runners captured nine
By Tbe AssOciated Press
firsts, three seconds, four thirds, and
GOLF
HOUSTON (AP) - Wayne Levi took five fourths. Whereas North Gallla
"I wasn't getting a whole lot over," command with a course-record 63 in dominated the sprints, Kyger Creek
Riccelli complained afterwards:1 "I the morning round and then coasted to dominated the field events and distanonly had two good curve halls all Clay. a :Htroke victory with a closing 71 to ces.
The Eastern girls captured their
But I bad a good enough fsst ball ·to win the Houston Open golf
third straight championship over
tournament.
sneak by."
cabell drove In three runs with two
In addition to the course record 63,
. singles, and Riccelli drove in .three he also had the lowest 54-hole total of
more with a bases-loaded double.
the year on the tqur, 197, and set a
"He's not a bad hitter. I remember course record with his 268 total, 16 Borbon says he ~as
Riccelli as a kid in the Giant shots under par.
organlzetlon," said Reds Manager Mike Brannan dropped a J().J7 foot trying to help friend
John McNamara. "I've seen·him used birdie putt ·on the final hole to clinch
as a pinch hitter (In the minor second at 270. He had cla~tng rounds
CINCINNATI (AP) - Pedro
leagues)."
.
of ~70.
Borbon,
after pitching six innings of
McNamara, whose team gained two Orville Moody, Sammy Racbels,
four-bit
relief
to earn the victory in the
full games on the Astros during the Hale Irwin and Bob Glider tied for
se ries, said the first-game rout third at 272. Moody shot 67-119 and Cincinnati Reds' 17-li rout of the
" sh!lwed that "our bats are starting to Irwin closed with 71~. Gilder was 70- Houston Astros Sunday, decided to
break his sllence about an incident
come around."
68 and Rachels 6&amp;.71 .
" It would have been very nice to go
HU..'l"'N HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) last week In which he allegedly bit a
into first place (by sweeping the - Nancy Lopez came from behind bouncer at a Cincinnati discotheque.
"I go out for one beer," Borbon said
series), but we have to be satisfied with a 4-under-par 68 for a 72-hole
with taking three out of four," total of 282 to win the Women's of his late-night altercation. '.'There
M~Namara said. "We played very Intematlonal Golf Tournament by was a fight and I break it up. Two guys
knock me down . I no started the fight,
well all week long."
three strokes.
One of the bats that came to life
In second place with an eveJlil81'-72 I swear.''
Borbon ssld he and a friend bad
belonged to O!amp Summers, who and a ~er total ol 285 was Donna
been
Invited to join two stra~ers for a
drove In five runs with a homer and Horton White.
drink.
He left to make a ielephone
three singles In the opener Sunday. · Tied for third with 200-totsls of 286
Summers was the ·Minor Iague were Donna caponi Young and Bonnie call, he said, and when be looked back
Player of the Year last season, but Lauer. YOIDlg, with a final 72, and the men were healing up his friend.
Bbrbon pulled the men away, he
that was the first game in which he Lauer, finished, with 71. .
said. Then John Topits, a law student
had four hits or drove in five runs as a
TENNIS
majoc leaguer.
.
NEWPORT BEACH, calif. (AP) - and part-time bouncer at the disco,
He drove In the first two with a Rod Laver rallied to defeat Ken Interceded.
Toplis filed the a588ull charge,
single off J .R. ftichard, who had been RosewaU u, 6-4, 6-4 and capture thi!
unbeaten and the National Iague tiile at the $25,000 Tennis Legends alleging Borbon bit him during the
strikeout leader going Into the game. Championship at the · John Wayne fracas.
"I tackled him (Borbon) / ' Toplts
Richard, an imposing 6Joot-8, 240- 'i'ennill Club.
said.
"He then proceeded to bite me
pounder, was chased after I 1-3
Laver and Roy Emerson teamed to
and
would
not let go."
Innings:
defeat Rosewall and John Newcombe
Borbon
said
he may have bit Toplis,
"That first hit was a turning point," in an all-Australian doubles final 7-li,
but only because his arms were
said Summers, who had been 7-li . .
struggling to win a spot In tbe
MADRID(AP) - The'UnltedStates pinned to the floor.
"I apologized," said Borbon, who
Cincinnati lineup but was not . won Its fourth consecutive Federation
intimidated by Richard. "He's so big QJp _the world team champiorehlp faces a court hearing a week from
his arm was almost touching my of women's terulls - as Chris Evert today when the Reds return from a
numbers when he let the ball go."
Uoyd beat Australia's Dianne road trip to Chicago and Pittsburgh.
Borbon said the club has not told
Cesar Geronimo slugged a bases- Fromholtz 2-6, lh'J, U .
loaded triple off Richard In the firs!
Earlier, Tracy Austin beat him tf he will be fined because-of the
Inning, and Dave Goncepclon and Joe Australia's ~rry Reid &amp;.3, ~ to glove incidenl. ·
"I pay enough fine already - $2,900
Morgan sent Richard to the showel'll the U.S. team Its first singles victory .
It
ca~t
me for ljvooay suspension" for
with back4o-back homers In · the It was the Americans' elght)l
refusing
to pitch In the final game of
second.
ctwnplonahip victory.
.
spring
training,
he said.
Bob Watson bit a three-run homer
DALLAS (AP) - Jolm McEnroe
for Houston in tbe first Inning.
defeated f~wred Bjorn Borg 7-li; ~.
6-2, 7-8 to capture the $100,000 first
.prize In tbe World Olamplonship
NBA Playoffs AI A Glance
Tennis finals.
By The Associated Press
TRACK AND FIELD
Eastern Conference Finals
Best-of. Seven Series •
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Renaldo
Friday's Game
Nehemiah bettered his own pending
San Anlonlo 118. Washington 97
world record In the lllkneter hurdles
Sunday's Game
with a clocking of 13.00 seconds as he
Washington tiS, San Antonio 9S
Wednesday's Game
. beat CUba's Alejandro Casanas In the
Washington at San An tonio, (n)
UCLA Invitations! Track Meet.
·
Friday, May 11
Nehemiah, ·a University of
Washington at San Antonio, (n)
. Maryland sophomore, had run a 13.16
~~~==;;;t--, two weeks ago, but casanas' 1977
mark ol 13.21 remains . the world
standard until Nehemiah's time can
be approved by the International
Amateur Athletic Federation.
The Kyger Creek boys donilnated
the field events sweeping scoring
honors In the shot put with Chris
Elliott winning with a liesve of 38~ ".
The discus event bad · three Kyger
Creek boys placing in ·the scoring
column, as Rob Waugh.won the event
with a throw of 120'11".
·
Tlie long jump was won by KC's
Greg Smith with a leap of 17'8¥.. "
followed hy 'Fim King In second.
Kyger Creek's Alan Shee.ts captured th~ high jump with a ~10 effort.
Sheets' attempt at a school record

:ao

states

competin(~

Sunday in the 117'11 Interoolleglate&lt;
Horse Sbow Finals.
·
:r:
"We're very proud ol her. She has-..
been lntereeted In honea f(ll' yean.~
·and years and years," Mondale uld.~
The vice }ll'esldent abook banda with~
those who approached· bil!l, but;;,
showed little lncllotlon to talk .
. poUtics on the brief viii!.
·

BUILDIN SUPPLI FOR·
ALL HOME IMPROVEMENTS
AND

·POMEROY CEMENT

Westem Conference Fina Is
Best of Seven Series
Gamel
Seattle 108, Phoenix 93
Friday's Game
Seattle 103, Phoen ix 97"
$unday's Game ·
Phoenix 113, Seattle 103
.Tuesday, May 8
Seattle at Phoenix. In I
Friday, May 11
Phoenix at Seattle. lnl. lf,necessary .
Sunday, May 13
Seattle at Phoenix, If necessary
Tuesday, May 15
Phoenix at Seattle, In !. if necessary

· BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
Of Building

Since 1915

read with a

YOU CAN'T BEAT·OUR PRICE! !
.

I I

Leonardo da VInci was left-handed

aud often ltrote backwards; some of
his notf!S and Nnatures have to be

m¥Tor..

FACTORY DIRECT

second place Kyger Creek and North
Gallia. The Eastern gals captured 10
firsts, Kyger Creek won three events
and North Gallla won one.
Eastern's Trusell and Curtis took
one, two In the 100 and McClure,
Beaver, and Jacks took one, two,
three in the 220. Angel Blake wss a
double winner in the 4«1 and the 880
and won the High Points Trophy for
the girls. Laurie Matthews, Eastern's
miter who went to the state finals last
yesr,capturedtbe mile In 6:18.
For Kyger Creek, Sherry Harrison
won the shot put with a throw of 29
feet, 10 inches.
Loretta Gilmore ran the low hurdles in 17.8 to win that event and the
880 relay team won the event in the
tlme of2 :17.
Payne from North Gallia won the
high jwnp with a leap of 15' to record
its only first place finish.
Sam Smith ci North Gallia won the
High Points Trophy with !6o/• points
and 1\ngel Blake won the girls High
Points Trophr with 15 individual points.

Kyge r Cr ee k; 67 and on e· lhlrd ;
Eastern , 17 and two-th lrcls.
GIRLS
100 Yard Dash - Trusell, E, 12.6;
Curtis. E : Tavlor, KC; Russell, KC.
no Yard Dash - McClure, E 'if.t:
Beaver, E ; Jacks, E ; Shaver, k&lt;.:.
440 Dash - Blake, E. 1:06 ; Ed·
wards. E.
880 Medley - Eastern, 2:28.
880 Rur - Blake, E. 2: S8 ; Schultz
lE I : Harrison IKCI .
•
Mile Run - Matthews (E) , 6: 18 ;
Parker ( E.
880 Relay - Kyger Creek. 2: 17.
110 Lows - Gilmore. KC. 17.8.
High Jump - Matthews, E, 4'4";
Paine, NG; Edwards, E.
440 Relay .- Eastern, .58.2 ; North
Gallla.
.
Mile Relay - Eostern , S: S2.
Shot P u t -

Harrison , KC, 29' 10" ;

Sheets, E ; Schultz, E; Hollingshead,
NG.
Discus - Blake, E, 80' ; Harrison,
KC; Ru ssell, KC ; Blake, E.
Long Jump - Paine, NG, 15' ;
McClure. E; Blake, E : Gilmor e, KC.
ToomiScoring
Easlern . 85 ; Kyger Creek, 27 : North
Gallla, 12.
Boys' High Points Trophy- Sam
Smith, North Gallla; wr,.
Girls' High Points TrOPhY - Angel
Blake, Easter, 15.

Here are the r esults ot the SVAC
League Tra ck Meet :
BOYS
· RunninaEvents
.
100 Yard· Dash - Smith , 10.5 INGI ;
Cr emee ns, NG; L i v ingston , NG ;
Burnett ( KC) , Riebel (E ), Norton
I El.
220 Yard Dosh - Smilh. NG. 23.9;
Cremeens. NG ; Glassburn . NG. and
Riebel I El .
·
440 Yard Da sh - Sm ith. NG. 54.8;
Howell. NG; Spri nger . KC; Burnett .
KC.
440 Relay - Nor th Gallia , 48.4 ;

Eastern.

'880 Run - Moore, KC , 2. 18; Griffith,
NG · Lee, NG : Cisneros, NG.
T'wo Mile Run - Am os, KC, 11 : 29 ;
McComas, NG ; Bissell , E; Eynon, E.
120 High - King ( KC I. 18.7 ; Howell ,
NG ; Wolfe, E; Shriver, NG.
330 Lows - Lewi s, NG, 43.7; Smith
( KC) ; Lookado (NGI ; Howell (NG) .
High Jump - Sheets, NG, S'tO" ;
Livingston , NG ; Smith, KC; Rees.
KC.
Mile Rela,Y- 1. Kyger Creek, 3: S7 ;
2. North Gall ia.
·.
Field Events
Pole Vault Good. E. 9' 4' ";
Chapman, E; Plants, NG ; Shriver,
NG ..
•
.
Shot Pui- EIIioll. KC. 38'9" , Wau9h.
KC; Van Sickle. KC ; Ross, KC.
Di scus - Waugh, KC, 120' 11 ";
Franklin , NG; Ross (KCI : Elliott,

®
·only

$800per
-day

IS12.00 overtilght)

KC.

Long Jump - Smith, KC, 17'91J.'";
King, KC; McComas, NG ; Payne,
NG .
Team ~orin~ - North Gallla, 74;

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Cabins - Barns· Storage
HICKORY MODULAR BLDGS.
POINT PLEASANT ·AIRPORT .

675-4079

••

�-Pomeroy teams have new Jtniforms ' .•
'- '

5-TheDailySenttnel, Middleport·POIIleroy', o .,Monday, May 7, 1979

Church cekbrates
May Fellowship
Day last Friday

'

Through the generoelty of the mer- owner), again has outfitted one (i)
chants and residents of the Pomeroy whole R!tle league tesm with unlfor·
area, four Pcmeroy little league ms. 1bl.s team will play under the
teams and one Pob!eroy pony league banner of ·" Powell 's Giants."
team will bo! sporting new uniforms Powell's Super-Valu haS supported
for the upcoming swnmer baseball the Pomeroy Youth ·League tremenprogram. These new unforms were dousJy and the league Is very appurchased through Elberfelds Depar- preclatlve.
tment StJre.
Down lbroagh the years, Elberfelds
Powell's Super-Valu (Larry Powell, Department Store has giveQ its

wholehear t ed support and
cooperatloo to the Pomeroy Youth
League. The support dates back to the
early 50s when the Pomeroy IRilllliler
baseballprogJ'IIllwaslnltiated.
Pomeroy Youth League extenda ita
thankl to Its tee ball and pee
team sponsors. These sponsors
provide T-llhlrts for the youth. Spon.
sors are The Dally Sentinel (fourth
year); Reuter-Bragan (fourth year) ;
Powell's (tbird year) ; PIJ:za Shack
(third year) ; Dale C. Warner (third
year); Elberfelds (HCOildyear); and
SugarRunAahiancl (aecoodyear).
The' Pmneroy Youth Leque a1ao
. extendsits thankl to Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews, and the village for
i'Yjoody, with biB best tournament In the use &lt;A facilities and for Its nipyears , shot 67~9. Irwin, a deeply port.
frustrated non-winner on the
Listed below are the merchants and
American tour for more than a year, others who contributed to the unlfonn
closed 71-Q. Gilder 'was 76-68 and fund drive: Melp Auto Parts,
Rachels 66-71.
American Lecion, Pomeroy, K and C
Jewelers, Swisher and Lobae, Stiffler's sto~, Wayland's Market, Dr.
H. D. Brown, Pomeroy National
Bank, Meigl Inn· PIJII Shack, SmithNe!Soo Motora, Teaford Realty, Ohio
Today's Malar
Valley Plwnbing, OandJ Auto Parts,
League Leaders
Carpenter's L. u. 850, Pomeroy
By The Associated Press
Bowling, Ben·T&lt;m Corp., Rock
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BA TTING (65 at bats) - Kemp, Spriligs Company, R. C. Bottling,
Del .. 414; Lemon, Chi , .404; Smalley, ~bow Inn, Modtrl) Chemical, Ex· Min, .380; Pryor. Ch i, .371; Wilfong,
celsior Salt, Pomeroy H&lt;me and
Min, .357.
RUNS - Otis, KC, 23; Lynn. Bsn, Auto, Kingsbury . Home Sales,
22 ; LeFlore, Del, 22; Dauer, Bal, 20; Pomeroy Cement Block, Meigs Tire
Racle, Bsn, 20; Cooper, Mil, 20; Center, 3 In One, H. and R. Block,
Lemon, Chi, 20 ; Smalley, Min, 20.
RBI - Baylor, Cal, 29 ; Porter, KC. Karr and VanZandt, GeJie Coleman
26; Cooper, Mil , 24; Singleton. Bal . 23 ; Ashland, P. J. Pauley ~.
Lynn. Bsn. 23.
Powell's Super-Valu, Kiddie Shop,
Mil=&gt; - Lemon/ l.h l, 4U; )mauey,
Min, 38; Cooper, Mil, 36 ; Horton, Sea, Crow's Family Restaurant, Corner
35; Bosettl, Tor, 34; Carew. Cal, 34 ; Bar, The City ·Loan, Fannen Bank,
Lansford, Cal, 34.
Dr. Keith 'Riggs, Crow, Crow, and
. DOUBLES - Lemon, Ch i, 11 ; Porter, Landlnart, Green Lantern,
Cooper, Mil, 10; Downing, Cal. 9; C
Washgtn, Chi, 9; Yount, Mil , 8; Bob Roberts, Caiison Crow, Simoo's
Pic-A-Pair, Pomeroy Flower Shop,
McRae~ KC, 8; Norwood, Min, 8.
TRIPLES - LeFlore. Del. 3; R Regatta Inn, Fabric Sbop, N. Y.
.Jones, Sea, 3; J2 Tlep W.l!.h J..
Clothing House, GibbaGrocery, FranHOME RUNS - Lynn, Bsn, 11;
Singleton, Bal, 8; Thomas. Mil , 8 ; cis Florist, Sbammy's, Twin City
Machine Sbop, Mrs. Charles Strau.u,
Cooper, Mil. 7; D!lllvle, Mil, 7.
STOLEN BASES - J Cruz, Sea, 13 ; Sugar Run Mill, Gravely Tractor
Otis, KC, 11 ; LeFlore, Del, 10; 6 Tied Sales, Pennzoil, Moore's store, Davis
With .7
.
.~ 1.T_q·1f!W.(4. Declslons)- John, NY, Insurance, Marguerite's Sboea, Har6-0, 1.000, 1.92; Koosman, Min, ~- u, tley's Shoes, Elliott Appliance D,
1.000, 4.23; Jenkins, Tex. 4-0, 1.000, Two's Ccmpany, Sears, V. D. Ed3.59 ; Marshall , Min, 5-1.. 8;13, 0.85 1 wards Inaurance, Quality Print,
Palmer Bal. 4-1, .800, 1.70; Ryan, Cal,
4-1, .800, 2.6 Spllttorlf. KC, 4-1, .800, Fashion Beauty Shop, Athens SaYir~i'
and Loan, Quality Coal, Eagles Club,
2.84; Drago, Bsn, 3·1, .750, 1.93.
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan, Cal, 42; Ewing's and Pantacote.
Guidry, NY, 36; Jenkins. Tex, 34;
Koosman, Min, 31; Wortham, Chi, 28.
ST04'N BA.SES - Moreno, Pgh,
13; Cabell, Htn, 11 ; J Cruz, Htn, 9;
Today•s Major League
Morgan. Cln. 8; 6 Tied With 7.
Leaders
. PITCHING (4 Decisions) - Ruth·,
By The Associated Press
ven, Phi , 5-0, 1.000, 1.97; B Lee, Mil, 4NATIONAL.LEAGUE .
BA TTl NG (65 at bats) - Brock, St o, 1.000. 3.68; Espinosa. Phi, 4-1, .800,
L. 3.82 ; Winfield, SO, · .375; Carle•, 1.05: Richard, Htn, 4-1, .BOO, 3.21 ;
Mtl, .366; Griffey, Cln, .364; Reed, Phi , 3-1, .750, 0.71 ; Littell, Sl L,
Cromartie •. Mtl, .353 ; Royster, All, 3-1, .750, 3.29; Andujar, Htn, 3-1, 3.38;
.353. .
K Forsch, Htn , 3-1, .750, 2.42.
'
RUNS - Puhl, Hln. 24; Winfield, STRIKEOUTS - Richard, Hln, 47;
SO, 23; Parker, Pgh, 22; North, SF. P Nlekro, All , 32; Sutton, LA, 32;
22 ; Concepci on, Cln, 21 .
Mura, SO, 31 ; Blyleven, · Pgh, 29;
RBI - Foster, Cln, 25 ; Carter, Mtl, Blue, SF. 29.
24; Cabell. Htn, 23; Winfield, SO, 23;
Schmidt, Phi, 22; Murphy, All, 22.
HITS - Winfield , SO, 42 ; Griffey,
HOW'S YOUR
Cln. 40 ; Cromartie, Mil. 36; T Scott, St
L, 36; Foster, Cln, 36; Puhl, Htn, 36.
HOSPITAUlATION?
DOUBLES . - Parrish, Mil , 10;
Cromartie, Mil, 10; K. HrF'{andz, St. L.
10; Reitz, St L, 10; Morgan, Cln, 10.
TRIPLES - T Scot!, St L, 5;
Winfield. SO. 4· Temoleton. St L.
- ~IDilhil
3; Concepcion, Cin, 3; J. Cruz. Hln, 3;
Metzger, SF, 3.
ftllllf ••.•
HOME RUNS - Schmidt, t'n1 , v;
rregg Gibbs
Murphy, All, 9; Carter, Mtl, 8;
Dawson, Mil, 8; Kingman, Chi, 7;
992-3443
Simmons, St. L, 7; Winfield, SO, 7.

wee

Levi scores two-stroke win

Sunday in Houston toumey

unlfonns are back, 1-r, Jackie Welker Bill -Howell ·
Bobby Fmter, Kyle Woods and joe Fields; front, Joey .
Roush holds one of the tops to a unlfonn purchased by
Powell's Super,Valu. Powell's outfitted one entire little
league·tesm with unlfonns.

SPORTING NEW UNIFORMS - Four Pomeroy
Little Leque teams and me pony league team will be
!ipCII't1ng new unlfonns tiU season. The new unlfonns
were made J)OIIible lbroagh generous donations by
area merchants and businessmen. Shown with new

Schmidt ends slump
By F1lANJt BROWN
APSporla Writer
Philadelphia's Mike Schmidt came
to loa Angeles with a batting slump
· that ml&amp;bt have rubbed off on the
Dodpn. He left witb five home runs
and nine runs batted In for the series
wlile Loll Angela went scoreless 21
OOII.IeCitive IDnlnp.
. Schmidt was o.lor-17 unW the ninth
' Inning of 'nllll'llday night's serieaopenlnc a~~~test. 'nlen, after striking
out three times against Rick Sutcliffe,
he blasted one of the rookie's pitches
for a h&lt;mer.
"I was thinking then it mi8ht be a
stepping atone," said Schmidt, wbo
couldn't have been II)Ofe correct. He
hit one more Friday night, two on
Saturday and aoother Sunday in the
Plilllies' 4-0 triumph.
"I hope tbll streak doesn't end,"

Maior LOgue tlaHball
By The AsiOCiated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. Gil
Philadelphia
17 7 .7011
17 7 .7011
Montrul
Chicago
12 10 .545 ~
St. Louis
13 12 .520 ~·h
New York
9 1~ .391 7'h
9 u .391 71/,
Pllllburgh
WEST
Hnudm
17 11 .607
15 12 .556 11h
Clncinnail
13 15 .464 4
San Francisco
·s.n Diego
12 16 .429 5
·Los Angeles
11 18 .379 6%
Atlanta
8 17 .320 7'1•
Sllurday's Games
Chlago 9, Atlanta 3
San Francisco 6, New York 4
Cincinnati 6, Houston 2
Pittsburgh 6. St. Louis 5
PHiladelphia 11, Los .\ngeles 0
San Diego 6, Montreal;'J
Sunday's Games
Cincinnati 17-2, Houston-5-8
Chicago u, Atlanta 13
.
St. Louis 4, Pittsburgh 2
Phlladelfhla 4, Los· Angeles 0
Montrea 7, San Diego 5
New York 5, San Francisco 4
Monday's Games
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 1-ll at
·Atlanta (M. Mahler ·0-2), (nJ
Philadelphia (Carlton 2-41 at San
Diego (Clwchlnko o·O), (n)
New York (Falcone 0-21 at Los
An~eles (Hooton 2-21, (n)
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Cincinnati at Chicago
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, (n )
St. Louis at Houston, (n)
Philadelphia at San Diego, (nl
New York at Los Angeles, (n)
Montreal at San Francisco •. (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
18 9 .667
Boston
16 9 .640 1
Milwaukee
17 11 .607 1'12
New York
13 13 .500 4112
Detroit
8 12 .429 6
Cleveland
8 17 .320 9
Toronto ·
8 20 .286 10'12
WEST
Minnesota
18 8 .692
California
16 11 .593 2'1•
Texas
14 11 .560 3'h
Kansas City
14 12 ..538 ~
Chicago
12 13 .480 5'1'
10 17 .370 8'12
Oakland
Seattle
9 19 .321 10
Slturday's Games
Boston 11, Seattle 4 ·
New York 5, Oakland 4
Kansas Cllv 3, Cleveland 2
. •Petrol! 8, Minnesota 4
Milwaukee 6, Toronto 1 •
Baltimore 9, California 1
Ch icago 7, Texas 6
Sunday's Games
Milwaukee 4, Toronto 0
Baltimore 6, California 0
SUttle 3;, Boston 2
New York 6, Oakland 5, 10 Innings
Cleveland 5, Kansas City 4
·
Minnesota 9, Detroit 6
Chicago 3, 'f:exas 0
Monday's Games
California (Ryan 4-IJ . at Boston
(Torrex 2-1), (n)
Oakland (Langford 0-41 at
Baltimore (Stone 2-IJ, (nJ
Seattle (Mclaughlin 1-11 at New
York (Tianl 0-11. (n)
Chicago (Trout 0.0) at Detroit
(Rozema 1-2), (n)
. Toronto (Huffman2-2) at Mlnnesola
(Goltz J-3), (n)
Kansas City (Leonard 3-3) at Texas
(Comer 2-31. (nJ
Tuesday's Game

C.llfornla at Boston, (n)
0.1dllnd at Baltimore, (n)
Seattle at New York, (n)
Chicago at Detroit, (nl
Cleverand at Milwaukee, (nJ
Torbnto at Minnesota, (ril ·
Kansas City at lexas, 1n1
J

said Schmidt, '·'but I'm- realistic
enough to know I'm not. a .300 hitter."
But Schmidt, with a .255 lifetime
batting average in six full Na.tional
League seasons, iB a long-ball hitter.
HiB h1r.1er Sunday was his ninth &lt;A the
season and the !99th of his career.
The Dodgers, meanwhile, seem to
have picked up where Sclunldt's
slwnp left off. They got six hits
Sunday, as Nino Espin0118 threw his
second shutout of tbe- season, and
suffered their sixth loss in seven
games. .
'nle defeat also was their sixth in
seven games against the Phillies.
"I hope we got them mad ellliugh
that they beat up Montreal," .. said
Sc.hrnidt, noting the Expos (tied with
the NL-East leading Phillies) start a
three-game series against Los
Angeles later In the week.
In the other NL games Sunday, the
Expos beat the San Diego Padres 7-li;
the New York Meta nipped the San
Francisco Giants 1M; the Chicago
Cubs topped the Atlanta Braves 14-13;

the St. IAuis Cardinals nipped the
Pittsburgh Pirates 4-2 and the
ancinnati Reds routed HOU8ton 17o
before losing 11-2 in the nightcap &lt;A
their double-header.
Philadelphia pitching easily outdtd
the Dodgers ' staff lit the last two
games of the series. The Phlllies
roughed up Los Altgeles for 11 runs
Saturday night and the four Sunday.
Doug Rau, 0-4, was the victim of
Sclunldt's two-nm shot.
Eipos 1, Padres 5
Gary Carter's fifth-inning grand
slam capped a fivHUn Montreal
burst against Gaylord Perry and
carried the Expos past the Padres.
The EJPOS led 7~ befcre Bill ~:Ale , 40, gave up five seventh-inning runs.
.
Mets 5, GiaDIB f
Doug Flynn's .111ll«:oring single
with two out In the eighth inning
capped a four-run rally and lifted the
Mets over the Giants. San Francisco,
which had a four-game winning streak
snapped, built a 4-llead before New
York came back.

Suns top Seattle
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - ~Seattle
felt it just bad an off day, while
PhoeniJ: thought It had finally put
things together.
~he outcome, however, was
Indisputable: PhoeniJ: had pulled out
a 11~103 victory Sunday ~ore a
seUout crowd of 12,660 at Veterans
Memorial Colisewn. 'nle victory cut
Seattle's lead in the best-of-eeven,
NBA
Western
Col)ference
championship series to 2-1, with Game
4 slated for Tuesday night In Phoenix.
"We just bad much better defensive
aggressiveness," explained Suns
Coach Jolm Maci.A!od, whose club has
won all six playoff games it's played
at home this year.
"'nlere was an improvement In
defense, and we had some good fast
break opportunities. I think we could
be more aggressive, although I
thought our effort was good.".
In the first game of the senes, the
SuperSmics out-rebounded the Suns
1!6"15 and co$ted to a 108-93 victory.
In Game 2, the Suns offense improved,
but Seattle took a 59-38 edge In
rebounding and a 1~96 victory.
Sunday, PhoeniJ: sliced Seattle's

rebounding margin to 52-46. At the

same tim~. the Suns won the battle on
the offensive boards 24-19.
" You can only give them one shot,"
· said
Lenny · Wilkins, whose
SuperSonics are the defending
conference champions. "You can't
allow a team two or three shots and
that hurt us ."
'
. AI the same time, Wilkens doesn't
think the victory was due to so much
to what the Suns did but what the
SuperSmica didn't oo.
'"!bey did a better job because we
allowed it," said Wilkins. ·•we played
very poorly as a team. 1 thought at
limes we were too much In a hurry ...
we threw the ball away (311umovers)
... we took lurried shots."
MacLeod attributed Seattle's
turnover problems to pressure by the
Suns while Wilkins maintained the
Suns' were able to get into their
nmnlng game because "one team
played badly "
. Gus williams led all scorers with 35
points Including 2t In the opening
half ~hile forward John Jolmson
add~ 17 and guard DeMia Jolmson
had 15 in the losing effort.

HOUS'roN (AP) - Wayne Levi,
suddenly possessed of the .f irst
Individual Iitle of his brief pro golf
career, has a plan for the rest ol the
PGA tour season.
· "I'm g~na relax and take It easy
for the rest ol the year," the
phys!cally and emotionally ellbausted
Levi said Sunday after scoring a 2stroke victory In the $.bole windup of
the HOU8ton Open golf tournament ,
"Oh,l'm going to play, but I'm not
going' to worry about it," Slild Levi; a
26-yearo(lld who is finishing his second
full year of tour·lictlvity.
In other words, his lle&amp;IOn Is made.
'nle victory, built on a courserecord S-under-par 83 for the first 18
boles of the twiH'OIInd Sunday windup,
gained for him: his first invitation to
the Masters, in 1980; a · spCit in the
Tournament of Ouunplons; the sure
knowledge he'll be exempt from
qualifying for the 1980 season; and,
with $54,000 from the toial purse of
$300,000, gave him a very respectable
$117,03f in earnings fer the 8ea11011.
As for the rest of the year, Levi first
mentioned his. plans for a l!klay
cruise he and wife Judy have for Ibis
fall.
Levi, a native of upsiate New York
now living in Tampa, Fla., made his
first bid for prominence when be
combined with Bob Mann for a victory
in the National Team O!ampionship
late last year.
He's threatened several times on
the tour this season, Including a tie for
second In the San Diego Open.
But this was his first Individual
victory, and he won it with authority.
He pulled Into :Htroke command
with the 63 In the moming roWld,
which left only three golfers - ~ookie
Mike Brannan, Sammy Rachels and
Orville Moody - with any real chance
of catching him over the final 18,
which he flnlahed at par 71.
· In addition to the 'Course record 63,
be also bad the lowest 54-bole total of
the year on ' the tour, 197, and set .a
course record with his 288 total, 16
shots under par.
· "When I shot the 83, that's the best I
ever (lUlled," · he said. "But after
shooting a round like that, )rou know
you can't come back with another one.
In the afternoon I just wanted to get
the ball cloae to the hole, maybe make
a couple, just get It ln.
Brannan, who got into this
tournament as the fifth alternate,
dropPed a 111-17. foot birdie putt on the
final hole to clinch lli!Cond at 270. He
bad closing roWlds ol 66-70.
Moody, Rachels, Hale Irwin . and
Bob Gilder tied fer third at 272.

stylersr

rich8nd
life

CALLMitlliil()
. ,..,.. "'ql

• ... .

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..
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1!:\'ANGEUST JOHN LANIER of Junction City will be speaking at
the Enterprise United Methodist Churcb at 7:30 p.m. May 8 through May
13. The public is Invited. ·
'·

· Received 35 pound ribbon
Mra. Jane Johnson rec~ir- · )'!'ere Opal Johnson and Judy
'ed · her 35 pound ribbon at tbe 'McGuire. Runners-up were
.Maaon class of Sllnderella Dodie Seth, Nola Yourig, and
lalt week. Five new members Pauline Myers. Mary Roush
:were welcomed into the pro- was accepted into the Slim
gram, and Mary Jewell was and Trim Program. Ten new
recognized for having loSt the members. were welcomed in;most weight.
to the classes.
: At the Middleport class, the
At the Point Pleasant class
ones loalng the most weight meeting · at Krodel Park Club
'
·
. House, Geraldine Blessing
·· Shower held recent/11
and Leona Green tied for the
'-'
most weight lost, and Lizzie
Stover was the runner-up . At
· A shower was held recently honor- the evening class there, Cin·
. ing Paula 8yBell, bricJe.elect of Tim dy Crump lost the most
Dllloo. The shower was given by weight and Doris Crump was
Bnllda ~and Sherrie Starcher the runner-up.
and was held at the Frecker home.
AttendtnC besides the hostesses
were Ada Younkin, Paula Frecker
Ruth DIUon, Grace Price, Diana
By.Melody Roberts
Evana, Terri PuWns, Cindy Pi~r,
Guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Frances
Kay Baldsman, Daisy Freck:er,
Andrew
were Miss Mary Ellen
EvelyJi Clarli:, Dawn Sorden, Debbie
Spencer, Karen Probert, Laura Mat· Andrew of Pennsylvania and Mr. and
thews, SUian ·Hannum. Games were Mrs. Larry Collins and family, local.
1,\lr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman and
plsyed with Prizes going to Grace
Price, Dawn Sorden, Cindy Pitzer, daughters were vacationing in Pound,
and Evel1n Clark, Cake, punch, Virginia , with Mrs. Hayman's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ewen Countiss
potato chi)ll, and dip were served.
over tpe Easter holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins spent
CARPETING
Easter Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Weber and family. Callers at
S12 to $14 Yard Carpeting
the
Larkin home over the holiday
! for Only
weekend were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Larkins and son of Maryland, Orland
'4 &amp; '5 YD.
Branch of Belpre and Mr. and Mrs.
Sidney Branch of Kentucky.
ODDS &amp; E~DS SHOP
Grace Loudin has returned home
Rt. 1, Middleport, 0.
from vacationing with Mrs. Marion
992·6173
Hayman of De Land, Fla .

'2995
·

YOUR CHOICE

Sunday, May 13th

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1
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GIFT
PACKAGES

••

lib. $4.25

1

$6.35

.

••

.

Weekend guests of Mrs. Ernestine
Hayman. were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Fitzpalrick and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Keith R,ldenour and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Hayman and imaily, Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Hayman. Robin and
Laurie Fitzpalrick are spending a
week with Mrs:. Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Andrew's guests
were Michael Andrews and his
fiancee, Donna Katusin of Colwnbus,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Milliron and scins
of Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
· McCrery of Colwnbus.
Get well wishes go out to Mrs.
Emma Powell. Mrs. Powell suffered a
stroke and is a patient at the St.
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg. Her
room number is 233 and she is on the
second floor ward. Please lry to send
· her a cheery card.
Guests of the Harold Holter family
were Mr. and Mrs. Steve Holter and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Drake and
daughter, all of Gahanna, Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Groeneveld and Tommy of
Worthington, and Mr. and Mrs. David
Smith and family of Reedsville.
Callers at the Joseph Bissell home
were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Groeneveld
and Tommy of Worthington .
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Adams were
visited over the holidays by Mr. and
Mrs. Don Ruckman, Baltimore, and
Mr. ·and Mrs. Paul Hauber and
Melody.

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!
•

MOTHER'S DAY GIFT
8oz. $2.15

•

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•

OM FINISH

40%
DISCOUNT
OFF .

. LIST PRIU: .
ON ,

CABINETS

:iN SJOCK. :

.~

OEM·ART .

''

~~s~. '

'

DUnON DRUG CO.

.

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;

CANDIES

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I

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1

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·"·

A rummage sale was scheduled for
June 4 and 5 In the church basement
when the Happy Harvesters Class of
Trinity Church met Friday afternoon
at the church.
Miss Enna Smith presided at the
meeting. It was annoWlced that
vanilla and get- well and birthday
cards are for sale. Several items 8ll a
memorial to Mrs. Clara Klirr were
discussed with a cOJIIIIIIttee to report
at the next meeting.
Mrs. Phillip Meinhart ·bad devotions using scripture from Sol. 2,
verse 12 with readings, prayer and
hymns. In the absence of Mr~. Dale
Smith, Mrs. John Terrell serlied as
secretary. Mrs. Terrell was also
pianist for the meeting.
· The Lord's Prayer in unison closed
the meeting. Mrs. Homer Holter,
Mrs. Joe Cook and Mrs. Charles Kuhl
will be hostesses for the next meeting.
Cookies and coffee were served. Mrs.
William Watson was a guest at the
·meeting._

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Feature:. 4-soft
cones &amp; 1 sherbet,

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for Cu.srom Full uppe r &amp; {ul~ lower de ntureS.

For Complete Information Call FREE

1-800-282-6410

Outside Ohlf) Coli Free I-800-114S-6478

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Cafl 1rH1111 for
)'0111' Fr" COPJ •
of Dr. Ri~itrt 's
informativt
b;ochu,-,

END CUT LB.
CENTER CUT LB.

$1

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WIENERS •••••••••• J.f~
WILSON COOKING

99$
·BACON•••. .t.~P!;.

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GROUND

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159 CRACKERS.•• .'•••• !IP}.
2% MILK .•.•~ •.•

69$

TAB. SPRITE
OR

OF STORE SLICED ·

serve

Good May 5· 11

member &lt;A Trinity Church and active
with the Parent·Teacher Forwn at
the Meigs Junior High School.
Married to Tom Grueser, an iron
worker, she has two children, Jeff, a
senior at Meigs High School, and Bar·
· bara, an eighth grader. Anthony
Wilson, Mrs. Grueser's nephew, also
resides In the home, For eight years ,
Mrs. Grueser workect_at KJ:ogers.
Mrs. Doidge, who qaovell here from
California only a few years ago, has
been a member of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter for three years . She is now
the ways and means chainnan . Mar·
ried to Nonn Doidge who works at
Foote · Mineral, they have four
children, Sean, 12, Leah, eight, Kelly,
three, and Taryn, four montbs. They
reside on Lincoln Hill. Mrs. Doidge iB
the daughter of Mrs. Ulllan Moore, a
member of ~ PreceQtoJ', Beta Beta
Chapter.
1, ::·0 l&amp;N lilH•· •
,,h1~1 1.1riT 1o :"'

Custom full upper &amp; lower

BEEF•••.••• ;••••••!.!~;.~ 1

Any Send\Vlch

.t

1~9. She is a past president of all
three chapters and has held all other
offices. For 197NO she serves as
president of City Council which iB
comprised of representatives of all
three chapters.
· Married to Hugh P. Custer she has
a son, Jim rl. Pomeroy, and two
daughtsrs, Betsy, a student at Ohio
University, and Melinda Rowland of
Kentucky, and a granddaughter,
MeganRowland,eightmonths.
She is a member of Grace
Episcopal Church, the Omrch Vestry,
and the Episcopal Church Women.
She is also active In the Middleport
Arnsteur Gardeners and the Women's
Association of the Pomeroy Golf Oub.
Mrs. Grueser has been a member of
Beta Sigma Phl for 14 years, is a past
president, and has served on many
conunlttees. This year she is the ways
and means c!lalnnan. She is a

SAVORY

With Purchase of

INGELS FUJINITURE &amp; JEWELRY ·
MII)DL.EPI[)D'T. 0. -

june rummage sak

CHOPS

25$

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES
lib. $3.50

. Candy's Classic Collectior..t_

Happy Harvesters

PORK

FRENCH
FRIES

!

. lfappy
~odteri- ma.y

POMEROY-Each chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority traditionally
selects a member to receive the tiUe
of "Girl &lt;A the Year" at the annual
Founder's Day observance. This
year's honorees are Kathy Doidge for
Ohio Eta Phi, Carolyn A. Grueser for
Xi Ganuna Mu, and Nonna Arnsbary
CUster, P.receptor Beta Bela.
Selection of those to receive the tiUe
was made by vote of the chapter
membership with travellng trilphies
being presented to Mrs. Doidge and
Mrs. Grueser, 'and a ring to Mrs.
Custer.
Mrs. Custer Is the only remaining
active member of the Beta Sigma Phi
Chapter which was organized In 'the
Pomeroy-Middleport area in April

LB.

THIS WEEK'S
SPICIAL

' -: "

NORMA AMSBARY
Preceptor Beta Bela
"Girl of the Year."

'Girl-ofthe- Year ' honored here

VALLEY BELL

I·
t·

MRS.

CU~R,

. $}39

'nle small, cbmond4hsped pane of
glass used In lattice windows Is called
a quarrel.

; -~

MRS. KATilY DOIDGE, Ohio
EtaPhi"Gtrioftbe Year."

BEEF

a

'

VIBRANt'
BEAUTIFUL

MRS. CAROLYN A. GRUESER,
XI Gamma Mu "Glrloflbe Year."

to limit quantities

and Jeremy Thursday evening.
Emily Congrove of Columbus
passed away after an extensive
illness. While she was in Columbus
University HOIIJ)ital, Mrs. Josephine
Osborne and Mrs. Vera Weber, Mr.
llld Mrs. Dorsel Larkins .made
special trip·to see her. Miaa Congrove
was the niece of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Larkins arid Mr. and Mrs. Ellis
Larkins of Long Bottom . Also
surviving ' Is a brother, Wilbur
Warner, also of lAng Bottom .

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we reserve the rigid

Mr. and Mrs. L8wrency Johnston, Jr.

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Cats were burned at the stake as
witches ill many parts of Europe until
the 19th century.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hauber visited

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"Our Children - Our Promise " was ,
the theme of May Fellowship Day
celebrated Friday by Church Women
United of Meigs County.
Emphasis of the program held at
the Pomeroy United Methodls\
Church was on dealing with today's
children, many .of whom come from
single-parent households and families
where both parents work. The Church
Women United platfonn Calls for
strengthening family units thriJugh
education and child Care centers.
A filni, "Cry &lt;A Pain'' dealing with
child abuse, was shown before the
program. The . call to worship was
given by Mrs. Clara 1bomas with the
congregation singing •'For the Beauty
of the Earth." There was a confession
of the community where children
were aclaiowleclged as gifts from God
In unison. Reading scriptures were
Mrs. Faye Wallace, Mrs. Clara
Criswell, and Mrs. Elva Cotterill.
Mrs. Florence Richard had the
prayer for the offering taken by Mrs.
Virginia Thoren and Grace Campbell.
The money was contributed to the
emergency fund of the . Meigs
Ministerial Association.
Taking part In a litany for children
were Mrs. Beuna Grueaer,Mrs. Doris
Grueaer, Mrs. Alwllda Werner, Mrs.
Mary F. Baumgardner, Mrs. Phyllis
Skinner, Mrs. Caryl Cook, Mrs. Bernice Baker, Mrs. Edith Sisson, Miss
Enna Smith, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
.Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, Mrs. Lula
Hampton, Mrs. ~une ForbeS, and
Mrs. Georgi8 Walson.
'nle group joined In prayers and
promises for children and concluded
with a responsive reading calling for
advocates for social justice and ·
human rights for children.
Mrs' Margaret Blaetlnar was
organist for the service which followed a noon IWlcheon with cake, coffee
and punch being served by wonlen of
the host church.

Long Bottom News Notes

For That Special
Gift on
MOTHER'S IJAV

GMatcJyng CJJicmJ~rtd
CEarrings ~ PencJiiLts

Pf. Pleasant

.

.

·Loop leaders

DQ_yOO,

eulti\'ate.a

'

.. '
.'

GMatcJdess ~ maitYJicent

"Home of B'eJJutiful Kitchens"
675·2318

•1

SALE

DALE'S KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
2119 Jackson Ave .

I

rft

! i -+- -+- ~

dauy-.sle

' Locust St. ln Middleport
P~ . "1·5241
' ''

I

COKE
99*

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerey, 0 ., Monday, Msy 7, I!Y79
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, May 7, 1979

NOTI CE OF EL E CT I ON

Garden club elects officers, .makes plans
New officers were elected and plans
lllljde for Improving· the civic
beautification planting at the Meigs
County lnfinnary when the Winding
Trail Garden Club met recently at the
home li Mrs. Wilma Terrell.
The lificers elected were Mrs.
Margaret Parker, president; Mrs.
Mary llfltchell, first vice president;
Mrs. Clara Riley, second vice president; Mrs. Pat Thoma_, secretary;
and Mrs. Alice nxunpson, treasurer.
On May 15 members will go to the
lnflnnary planting to clean the area
and plant swnmer flnwers. The
flowers are to be prOvi&lt;led by Mrs.

Addalou Lewis and Mrs. T!)ompson.
Mrs. Pal Thoma reported that she
had talked to the Meigs County Commissioners about replacing the flag
pole at the site and to Mrs. Veds
Davis li the American Legion Auxiliilry, Drew Webster Post 39, about a
new flag . A report was given on the
recent Region 11 meeting held at the
Meigs Inn by Mrs. Thompson, Mrs.
Parker and Mrs. Lewis. Mrs. Tl!ompson, Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Mitchell attended the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners open meeting where Mrs.
Betty Dean was the demonstrator.
A meeting of the garden club county
association scheduled for tonight at 8
p.m. In the basement of the Trinity
Church was aMounced. Wlndlr.g
Trail will have the program with Mrs.
Thompson to talk on horticulture.
·
It was noted that David Lewis and ·
Tim Hysell had cleaned the entrance
to the Beach Grove Cemetery. Mrs.
Parker told of the newly organized
junior garden club announcing the
next meeting for May 14. .
The traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Clara Bell Riley was won by Mrs. Terrell. Mrs. Lewis presided at the
meeting with members responding to

The arrangement of the inont)l was
a May basket with Mrs.. Terrell
receiving a blue, Mrs. Iris Kelton, a
red, and Mrs. Thoma, a white ribbon.
Mrs. Kelton also received a blue ribbon for a horticulture exhibit.
Herb gardens were discussed by
Mrs. Thompson who noted . that
superstitions go along with many
herbs. She said some Indians believe
that a house surrouncled by basil Will

roll call by naming their favorite iris.
Mrs. Terrell had devotions using
poems and prayer. Preceding the
meeting members toured the azalea
garden of .Mrs. Tertell. ;
Garderung tips were given by Mrs.
Parker who noted that now is the time
to fill planters with plants, set out
tomatoes and other vegetables,
cultivate around newly planted trees,
plant annuals, and spray roses.

'

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
•

\

'

\ ..

Racine ·

·- "

Mrs. Chaney .
and daughter

First child born
Mr.
and
Mrs .
Steve
: "Chaney, Middleport, are an: nouncing tbe birth of their
: first child, Misty Dawn, April
•19 at tbe Holzer Medical

Center.

The baby weighed six
pounds, 10 ounces. Maternal
. grandmother is Mrs. Anna ·
· Kauff, Columbus. Paternal
: grandparents are Mr. and
·.Mrs . John Chaney, Five
:Point.
Great-grandparents
:are Mr. and Mrs. Roy Searle
·of ·Middleport, and Mrs. Sadie
llavidllon, Chillicothe.

Social Calendar
MONDAY
; SPECIAL MEETING Bosworth
:Council Monday 7:30 p.m. Annual
·portrayal of the super excellent
master degree.
EVANGEUSTIC Services at
Carmel United Methodist Church,
Racine, Monday through Saturday
7:30p.m. nightly. Chet Lemley guest
apeaker. Nursery provided.
MEIGS County Garden Clubs spring meetlng Mooda Y8 p.m. at Trinity
Church. Fernwood hostess club and
Winding Trail Club In charge of program.
•
: MEIGS COUNTY Board of Mental
Retardation meeting, 7:30p.m. Moo(lay, at the office of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
·
RACINE Elementary PTO Monday
at elementary school. Art show and

second grade homeroom mothers will

serve refreshments. Babysitting will

be provided.
' ·
TUESDAY
: SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday 7:30
p.m.Everyoriewelcometoattend.
RACINE WDGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday 7:30p.m. All master masons
lnvitedtoattend.
,
MASTER MASON meeting by Midjlleport Masonic Lodge 363, 7 p.m.
Tuesday; all Master Masons invited.
. MEIGS FAIR Board meeting, 8
p.m. Tuesday at secretary's office on
the Rock Spriilgs Fairgrounds.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, RAM,
Wednesday 7:30p.m. Bosworth councll46, Rand SM 8:15.

. MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
borne of Mrs. c . E. Blakeslee with
Mrs. Harold Lohse, co-hostess. Mrs.
Charll!ll Kuhl, Region 11 director, will
be the speaker.
MIDDLEPORTUTERAJtY CLUB,
annual social meeting, 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the home li Mrs. M. L.
French with Mrs. Sibley Sllick, president, h011tells. Ma . . Ellen Bell,
librarian, will talk about library programs and services. For roll call
members are to give suggestions for
nett year's program.
UNITED ME11IODTST CHURCH,
Letart Falls Church, home of Mrs.
Harold Roush, Racine, Wednesday,
7:30p.m.
BENEFIT CARD party with Sl!iad
bar Wedne8day at River Boat room of
the Melga Branch li the Athens County Savings and Loan at 1 p.m. Sponsored by members of Episcopal Church.
SADDLE and Sirloin Riding Club, 7
p.m. meeting; PCA building.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath United
Method!! Church, Thursday .7:30 at
the church.

be a house blessed. :me spoke of basil,
chives, dill, feMel, horseradish, mint,
parsley, rosemary, sage, thyme and
their use In enhancing salads, sauced
sauces, and other foods. . Mrs.
Thompson also talked. about
medicinal herbs including Fleabane
which she said is good for digdve
flow, catnip for stomach ailments,
rosemary for colds and headaches,
garlic for sore throat, mlnf for
digestive problems, cOinmolie for
calming the nerves. She Sl!id that
potatoes and tomatoes are bad for
rheumatillm and. arthritis and that
. martgolda and panzles planted in a
garden serve as Insect repellents.
. Mrs. Lila Sue Mitch and Mrs. Mar·
tha struble served refre.!Jhments for

Attendance at the morning services,
April29, at the Free Methodist Olurch
was 97. Choir members present were
12. Larry Clark sang a solo.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mathew, Huron,
spent the week with Mrs. Mathew's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfield and
son, Paul Stahl; Columbus, ·visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mrs. Emma Fox spent the weekend
with her sister, Mrs. Irene
Countrymen, Frankfort.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dailey ll!ld
son, Junior, Wilksville , visited
recently with Mrs. Emma Fox . .
Mr. and Mr·s. Ernnie Wells,
Middleport, spent an evening recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Lennie Lyons and
Mrs. Larry Walker and children spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Howell.
Mrs. lola Howell and Mrs. Ruth
Douglas had dinner recently with
their mother, Mrs. Emma Fox.
Ralph Swan has been reported very
ill in Holzer Medical Center.

'

Mrs. Terrell. Others attending
besides those named were Delores
Surface, Mrs. Dollie Hayes, Mrs. ,
Ruth Moore, Mrs. CAn Beegle, Patty
Parker, 1\JrS." Jackie Brickls, Mrs.
Peggy Crai1e and Mrs. Jo Wiles.

Harrisonville

purpose of maintenance
a nd oper~tlon ot schools.
T~~ estima ted aver~gc
addt ftOnl!l l fa)( ra f e outstde
of the limitation imposed
by Secti~ n 2 of Artic l e XI!.
Oh io
Con stitution.
a·s
ce r tified by t,he Count y
Auditor Is lt-.0 m tlls tor each
on e dollar of va l uat ion,
which amounts t o Eighty
ce11ts (S0.80l f or eath one
hundre d
dol la r s
of
va lua lion .
_The poll s to r sai d el ection
w tl l open a t 6 :30 a._m. and
remat n op en unf tl 7:30
p.m .• o f said day .
By ord er of th e Boar d of
E l ections of M eigs Coun ty,

OhiO .

Ernest A . W ing ett
Ctlairman
Dorothy M . Johnst on
Director
May 4, 1979
(5) 7, 14, 21, Jtc

NOT I CE OF E L EC TION
ON TA~ LE VY
FOR sou ·rHERN LOC AL
SCHOOL OI ST RIC T
Notice is tlereby given
that in pursuance of a
r esol ution of the Board of
E d ucat ion of th e SoUther n
L oca l
Sc h ool
Dis tr ic t
adopted on M ar ch 22, 1979,
t her e wi ll be subm itted to a

vote of the elcc tors ot satcJ
~choo l District at a Spec ia l
EJection to be held there i n
on .June S. 1979; ar th e
regular pla.ces of voting
therei" , the Question Of
levying -a tax in the sum of
Eighty Eig ht Thousand
Fou r Hun d red
Doll ar s
(SBS..IOO .OOl per year to r
Fi\le Yea r s. beginriing wifh
a l evy on the 1979 taK list
and dup l icate for th e
!Jurpose of maintena n ce
and operation of schoo ls.
The estimated average
addi t ional ta&gt;&lt;. rate outSide
of the l imita tion . im posed
by Section '2 of Ar t icle X I I .
Ohio
Const i tution ,
as
cer t if ied by the county
Aud itor is 6.5 mills f or each

'

hundred

dollar s

of

br i ng you

extra cas h
f or
shopping spr ees

Ernest A . Wtngelf
Chairman
DorothY M . Johnston •
D i rector
May 4, 1979

l SI 7, 1&lt; .

11.

99

Jtc

.

BACON ..................~;.99

~

fOR COOKOUTS
CARNNIL

ST&amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COFFEE
Z

Lb.

DRINK
MIX

·can

CHARCOAL or

~~~~~.; . . .. .~..!259
c
FAMILY PAK

, _..__., _,.

IDAHO
·
$ l
9
POTATOES···········lO LB. BAG

WASHINGTON STATE RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS $1 00
0 ACM·
APPLES ••••••••••••••••••

ICEBERG
.
HEAD
e
LETTUCE····························
TENDER
GREEN ONIONS••oo5BUNC~ES $100 .

BEAUTIFUL RED CALIFORNIA ·
PINT
~
STRAWBERRIES ................. .
AU VARIETIES OF
·
Yz DOl.
59~
BEDDING PLANTS DOZEN
99~

1

39

12 ~ !. ·

59

SALE DATES
MAY 7 • 12, 1979

INSTANT

·

SA VARIN COFFEE .............................. ·~~':'

$2"

DEL MONTE

PEACHES59;
YELLOW CLING

30-oz.

Can

SLICED or HALVES

MOTTS

_
APPLESAUCE ............ ~~.?~:.39$

PEPSI

CHEF-BOY-AR.OEE CHEESE

8

PAK
16 Ol.

PLUS DEPOSIT AND OTHER PURCHASES

GRADE A LARGE

EGGS
DOZEN

IS l/S

PIZZA MIX ............................. pkg.. 994
LIBBY'S DEEP BROWN _ .
14 oz.
PORK &amp;BEANS ............................................ 3. cans .8'
KEEBLER HONEY GRAHAMS OR

.

CINNAMON CRISP. ...... ~........................·............. ~~-~. ~~. 8!1
NABISCO' COCONUT .
·
12 p11g goe·
CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES ..................:...........~..... :.. .,
GARDEN DELIGHT

~REICH -

I DAIRY VALUEs ·I
MINUTE MAID CHILLED

ORAliE .
JUICE g!~o:~
IOADEN8 SLICED

59
•

.Valley Bell

·

·

~

_

12-or . $

AMERICAN SINGLES .. ,.......................
1 Gal

11•

s•

·DDDATE DRINK ................... :...1

BOilllEtf
conAfiE-.cHEESE ............................ ,:•.••.
.....s1"

REG. "' CRINKLE

CUT

Ito&lt;• •
00 -10 -0 5

2 -lb . .
Pkg.

SANDWIOIES .......89~
Cardinal

~~EAM ........... ~~.1::~1 29
..

0

__

~
&lt;7o Sl ORES

.,

- ..

I

;

''·

'.

~

VJ

~

CARDINAl fll"

"'
.;;;
1!
...

"'
"'
Q

n

.

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

Hl-( ................. ~~.?~:.~.~?~~~.~~.~.1 19

~~

_.......

49

FRYERS .........L~; •••

~s"

&lt;;omplele assortment of bedding, ~
planls, hanging Nskets end
!foliage plants.
,

___ _

ggc

MAXWELl HOUSE

~7

"SEASON SPECIALS"
II
Bedding Plants sse per doun
pack. Hardy Azaleas 10" spread
12.25 uch (10" or more $1.751
each).
.

.

·WIENERS •••••• ~~·.

Open l)aily 9-8
Sunday 1-5

,_

POMEROY, OHIO 992-2156

'

$}79
SA USA G E............L~; •••

lb.

ardinal

IHiiiibir.d'sGreenhou581
992-5776

CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL
Make Your own spending money
and earn prizes

HILLSHIRE SMOKED

VAUGHAN'S.

Turns one year

Syracuse, Ohio

Carrier Needed
s·YRACUSE

Classified Ads

va luation .
Th(i' polls tor said el ection
will open ,at 6: 30a .m ., and
rem a in open until 7 · 30
p .m .. o f sai d day .
By or der of the Board of
El ec tions of Meig s Coun l y·,
~
Ohio .

r-~----------------PRODucr:----------------------~

Jacl' .

the home of his grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Michael, S)'rac~.
Attending were his parents, Barry
and carol Theiss, his sister, Stacey,
'111URSDAY
. · along with Gary, Roger, Dennis and
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, OES, Debbie Michael, Brenda,Shelly and
officer&amp;, practice at the Pomeroy Tara Wolfe. The Thelas famUy was
. here on vacation from Mountain
Masonic Temple, Thursday,~ p.m.
Home, ldaha, where i38rry is stationed with the U.S. Air Force.

one

PICNIC
BOLOGNA lb.89~ HAMS............~.

· ~~oase

Matthew Alan Theiss celebrated his ·
fint birthday recently with a party at

Fiv~

dollar of valuation .
amoun ts to Six 1y
Cehts (S0.65 J t or eilch

Wh• ch

CRI~PY SERVE

'

.

POMEROY BEN FRANKUN

Matthew ·Theiss

one

FRENCH CITY
TASTEE TREAT

po::.:

Langsville

SCHOO L DISTR ICT
N Qflce Is tle r eby given
tha t In pu r suance of a
reso lut ion of the Boar d of
E dL,t ca tlon of th e East ern
L oca l
Sc ho ol
D is t ric t
a dop ted on March 29th ,
1979. ther e w i ll be sub m itted t o a vote of the
e lec tor s of said Schoo l
Distric t a t a special
election to be held the r e-in
on Ju ne 5t h, 1979, at th e
r e9 u Ia r p laces of voting
ther ein , th e q ues t ion of
lev yi ng a tax in t he sum of
On e Hundr ed T wenty .
Th r ee Th ou san d E ight
Hundr ed
D a 1 t ar s
( $1 ~ 3 . 800 . 001 per year f or

CUBE
STEAKS

Mr. and Mrs. Bud Douglas spent a
few wee~ with their daughter and
son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Don ·Gibsoh
in Rockville, Md.
Bob Gibson and daughter, Robin of
Columbus, spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Alkire.
·
Virginia Burke, Helen Pickens and
Ray Alkire visited .a week with their
sister and aunt, Mrs. Coeile Campbell
In San Diego, CaUf.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple visited
their chUdren in Zanesville recently.
Mrs. Janis Waldeck"and chUdren of
Loudenville visited .her parenta, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Epple recently.Rev. and Mrs. David Wiseman ·and
family of Lima visited his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman' recently.
. ·Raymond Chapman, who Uvea in
Maryland, formerly of here, is in a
Maryland hospital with a blood clot.
Mrs. Frazier Dorden of West
Virginia is spending a few weeks with
her sister, Nellie Borgan. "While here
they were called to Columbus. Mrs.
Borgan's grandson, Terry Borgan,
was burt seriously in a motorcycle
accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Theo Hinds of
Zanesville visited Mr. and Mrs. K. C.
Welsh and Mrs. Leatha Cowen
recently.
Mrs. Adriene French has returned
to her home and Mrs. Bates Is helping
to care .for her.
Mrs. Ray Hart of Allensville called
on her daughter, Betty Bishop, a
recent Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Loftis moved from
the Herb Bradfield farm to their new
home, formerly the Durham Iarm.

are

1!7

Three Years, beginning
with a l evy on t he 1919 taK
list and clu p llcete f or t he

Society News

By Mrs. Francis Morris
"ANDROCL&amp;'! AliD THE UON"- Pictured are Karen Geiser, left,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sayre of
and Jeff Call, portraying the title roles of "Androcles and the Lion", playBowerston, Ohio, visited his sister,
Ing at the Little Theatre In Galllpolls on May II and 12. A 2 p.m. matinee
Mrs. Ura Morris Salurday evening.
is scheduled for May 12.
.
They came especially for the surprise
birthday celebration of Mrs. Sayre's
mother, Mrs. Ethel Johnson, and
joined other members of her family
for the event on SUnday.
.,,
tl"
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and children
of St. Albans, W. Va., wer~ recent
By Saady Mills
with instruments from all over the
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs·.
A hand clapping, knee slapping world. The audience took part in the
Kenneth Turley. The Balls visited Mr. performance by Keith and Rusy Mc- singing . of one of America 's
and Mrs. Larry Turley and son ·at Neil, folk singers from Riverside, favorites, "Shenandoah''. A banjo
Letart Falls in the afternoon.
Ca., brought to a close the Tri- solo, "Crossing the Plains", was
Travis and Ta!!Sica Hayman of County Comtnunity Concert followed by a second banjo tune,
Jonesboro, Tenn., spent a week with Aasoclation's 1978-79 local concert · ''The Strawberry Roan", both pertheir grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bill season. The audience was treated to formed by Mr. McNeil.
Hayman. Their brother, .Tate, came joyful sound&amp; froni the guitar, fiveThe McNelis then sang a duet enThursday night and Mr. and Mrs. string banjo, Highland bagpipes, titled "Daniel Prayed". A camP.
Hayman took them to their home in African drums, mouth bow, Ap- meeting song from the 1830's, "Say
Tennessee Saturday.
palachian dulcimer, clarinet, · har- Brothers, WUI You Meet Us?" was
Mr. and Mrs. William N. Branuner monica and other exotic Instruments then performed. The McNelis conof Cleveland visited his aunt and from around the world.
tinued their musical travels throtJgh
uncle , Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford.
According to the McNells, folk history with the northern protest
Mr. and Mrs: Lewis Van Meter, music is "good time" music · song from the Civil War, "John
enroute from Kingsville, Texas, to representing America at play, at Brown's Body". The audience then
Oceana, Virginia Beach, Va ., came worship, and at work. Folksongs
enjoyed another American favorite, .
for a visit with his grandmother, Mrs. also cOmmunications of joy · and "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." ·
Laura Byers and other relatives.
Elements of humor were lnanger, triumph and despair, as well
. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle spent as a means through which history troducedlnthesongs, "It's AShame
Easter with · Mr. and Mrs. Bill can be taUght and understood. The to Beat Your Wife on Sunday" and
McKenzie and family at Gallipolis
McNelis' concert selections reflec- "Where Is My Wandering Ma
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Grimm· ted America's major social Tonight?" The audience laughed
spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. movements during the past two hun- again ·and again while listening to
Larry Grimm and children at dred years, as well as America 's two songs from the Temperance
Westerville.
Movement, "Sign Tonight" and
religious history.
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Ihle and
The artlsta began their per- "Brandy, Leave Me Alone". "Lydia
daughter were guests of her parents, fonnance with ''Scarborough Fair". Pinkham" was then performed to
Rev. and Mrs. Chaires Norris of South Then Rusty McNeil played remind the audience of the rather
"SCotland the Brave" on the humorous "patent medicine era" In
and !'drs. Delbert Van Meter of Highland
bagpipes. African drums American histocy.
GahaMa spent sunday with his livened ·the tempo, while members
Soothing melodies from "The
mother, Mrs. Laura Byers.
of
the audience were invited to clap Colorado Trail" originally were
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of their hands to the rhythm of the sung by cowboys to quiet cattle on
vinyl in sensational
Sptmcer, W. Va., spent Wedne sday drums. Next, · the McNelis' two trail drives. 'nte equally soothi!Jg
and Thursday with Mrs.. Grella daughters, Jennifer and Sara, joined melodies from the lament, "Black
or popular prints to enhance your table!
Simpson.
in a famlly tribute to the dawn In "El Girl", quieted the concert audience.
52 X 52-in.
52 X 711-il. . 52 X 91Hit. REcTANGLE
Floyd Farra Jr. of Columbus came Canticle Del Alba."
"Bill Bailey, Won't Yott Please
SQUARE
&amp;0-in. ROUND
after his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fleyd
Two versions of "Cielito Lindo" Come Home? " represented the
Farra, Sr., taking them to his borne were sung, while members of the sounda of New Orleans' black
where they left by bus and spent a audience accompanied the artista musicians, and was performed well.
week with their son, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
The Hebrew song "Hava Nagi)a"
Farra at Rome, N. Y.
ended the concert on a joyful, lively
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Morris of
and enjoyable note, with members
Athens and Mrs. Elsie Roush of
of the audience eagerly clapping
Pomeroy called Sunday afternoon on
their hands and tapping their feet.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Barr, Mrs. For an encore, · the McNelis perMrs. Ura M;orris and Mr. ·and Mrs.
Elvira Barr and Larry Barr were formed the beautiful serene song of
Clifford Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Turley and . called to Evans, W. Va., by the death farewell from Ireland, "A Parting
200 East Main
Pomeroy; 0 .
sons spent Easter with his mother, of their uncle, Harvey Barr,
Glass".
.
.
Mrs.
Mae
Lynch
spent
Friday
at
Mrs. Gladys Turley at Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Hayman of Middleport with her daughter-In-law,
Bradbury visited her parents, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Surface.
Mrs. Ann Dexter of Ashland,
Mrs. James Autherson, Sunday.
Virginia, spent an afternoon with her
inother, Mrs. Dorothy . Wright
recently.
Mrs. Roberta Musser of Hysell Run
The Soviet newspaper Pravda has a is 11 surgical patient at Veterans
daUy circulation of · more than 10 Memorial Hospital.
million.
..
Mrs. Alpha Barr had as Easter
Sunday dinner guests her chUdren,
Mr ..and Mrs. Duane Barr and Shawn,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Barr of
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Blair
Cadwallader and boys of West Union, .
and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
. cblldfen.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver and
sons of Hatfield, Ind., Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Thoma and children, Columbus
and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Iva JOhnson Ill Pomeroy were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Barr.
·
Mrs. · Dorotha Handley had as
dinner guests on Easter Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Handley and chUdren, Jacky and
Becky, and Lincoln Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. John Merrill and son,
of Columbus spent a weekend ·recently
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.
LedUe.
·
Mrs. Alpha received word of the
death of her nephew, Marion Hull, of
Hilliard, Ohio. The funeral was held
Friday.

Folk dup big smash · ·.

t...

ON TAX LE VY
FOR EASTERN LO CA L

\

�8-The Dallv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, May 7,1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel

Notices
GUN SHOOT , EVERY FRIDAY
6:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY .
lAST WEEK of c~plcte sell·
out of household goods. Stop
by 760 Laurel St .. Middleport.

LOST: MALE Irish Setter. ApprolC . 2 yrs . old. Area of
Boshan on Bashon Rd.
Ch i ldren' s pe t . Reward .

WANT-AD

9~9·2466 .

~JERTISING

DEADlJNES

street in Middieport Saturday,
April 21 . Parton moy clolmby
identifying within 3 days.

TU"""y
lhru Friday

992-3689.

&lt;P.M.
the day before publl~a ti on

LOST: PORTLAND area , ,male
black scottie dog . After 5,

COhllftbUI, OtiiiD

Ailrt12t, 1t7t
Contr•ct h~l Lot• I cop~
No. Jt..Jll

UNIT I'RICE CONTRACT

Setled proposels will bt•
r•celved .• ., the office of the
Olrtttor .Of the OhiO Oepartmtnt of Tr•nsport1t1on.
t•lumbua, OHio , until 10:.00
A.M .• O~lo St1ndard Time.
Tutadly, . May 15, 1979, for
Improvements In :
Athens, Gellla ; Hocking,
MeiGS . Monroe, Moroan,
Noble,
VInton
and
Wtshlngton Countlet, Ohio,
on various routes end sec tions , tly applying
lines.
center lln~s and edGe llflt!l .
Pavement Width - Varlt!l .
Project Lenvth - 0.00 fHt
or 0 .00 mlltl .
Work Lenvth -"- Vertoua
teet or verlous miles.
.
"Tht dlte Itt for com pl•tlon of this work shall btt
as set forth In the bidding
prOitOHL"
EJ .Ch Dlddttr Shill . bl
r.caulrecl td"flle with his bid •
certified ches:k or clshltr'l
c~Kk for an amount equal, to
fiYI per Clftt Of till llld, bUt In
no event more · thin rtfty
thqusand dollars, or • bond
for te" per cent _If hit llild,
p1yable to the Dlr~ctor.
Bidders must apply, on th't
proper
forms ;
·' for
qualification at least t.n days
prior to the daft!' set for
openlft9 blft In •ccoroance
with Chapte~ 5525 Ohio.
1A: evf1ed Code.
·
Plans . tnd •P.fCH~ITJ91'\S
ere on flit in lhe D'e pertmerit
of Transportttlon • and ~ rhe
offici of fl'le District Deputy
Director . .
.
Tt'\t Oinctor reserve~ the
rignt. toreiKt ·· ,.,,., ana_ 111
btU.
' .

'*"'

IIAViQ L. W!IN
OIRECTOII

Seat , ~rOp ·C&gt;uls Will b"
received at tht office of the
Oltf(:IOr
Of . the
OhiO
Oepartment
of
Trins.
portatlon, Cotumbus, Ohk»,

~~~~a.:~ : o~, m!;M,: Uts~:i~

Mov , IS.

1979 • . for

lm ·

provem enh In :
Athens , Gellle, Meigs,
Monroe.
Noble
end
Withington caunttes; Ohloi
on various routes end sec tions in tne Vlnagu of Crown
Cfty , Pomeroy and Caldwell,
by cleaning end painting
tKIStlng !iiUitdtlll .
" The elate set tor com pletion of this work shall be
as set forth In the bidding
propose! ."
Each bldber shill be
requ ired-to file with hiS bid a .
c:ertlfl'd check or cashier's
c:neck tor en 1mount equal. to
five p•r c•111 or tfls bid, but In
no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or e bond
for ten ,., cent of ,f'lls bld.payebte to the Olrettor.
Bidders must apply, on the
proper
rorms.
tor
qi.IBI!flcttlon •t lll'lat ten !:fays
prior to tht date set for
opening bidS ln •ccordance
wltn C"apttr 5575 OhiO
Reviled Code.
Plans and specifications
are on flit In -t he Otplrtmtnt,
of Transportation end the..
office of the Ol,trlct Deputy
Dlr•ctor .
·
The Dlr@ctor rtserves me
r!Qtlt .to reject any and ill .
bids .

Rev . a.-17 -13

OA.VID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR

(977 HARLEY DAVIDSON
Sj)Ortster. Contact Mike lm·
boden , Welshtown Hill ,
Minersville. Wl-"1.977 .

MIGRO-HYB RID seed corn .
I00 per cnet replant ogress·
ment if seed doesn't grow .
James H. Smith, Hemlock

Grove, Ohio. 992·252• .
VERMEER BALER Model 605 C.
Mokot 1500 lb. bolo. Evenings
Phone 7~2-2Bn "'7~2-21 52.
Yard Sale
TRUCKS, 2 ton 1973 ond I y,
YARD SALE . May 3 &amp; • at ton 1970. Bath with 12 lt.
Chester Fire Dept. 9-4 , · boxes. Phone 992·6206 or:
992·6173.
Chester Safety Patrol.
CARPOI!T SALE. May 8 &amp; 9. LIVING ROOM suite ond
10.5. 918 S. 3rd Avo., Mid· porto-crib. 992-3996.
dleport. Reasonable prices.'
HIDE-A·BED SOFA, vinyl
LARGE TWO Family Yard Sole. redlner. Both In good condi·

and rust male Doberman
Pinscher In Beorwollow Ridge
vicinity. $100 reward. Notify
John Pauley , Beorwallow

Ridge Rd . Coll696·1063.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Horne Park .

SALE.

Tuctday

Planing Mill.
GARAGE SALE

at

and

behind long lotl'om . Post Pf·
flee . May 7-8 from 9 till .C. TV,
vanity, chest of drawers,
humidifier, llner'll, electrical
appliances, dlshas c.lothlng,
etc.
Mrs . Josephine Osborn• .

pasture. Plentv of water.
Could occomodate 50 plus catlie. 61•-667-3398.
SLEEPING ROOMS for working
men only . Breakfast if.
desired. Reasonable rates .

Phone 992·5.422.
FURNISHED APT. suitable for 3
or 4 construction workers.

After Spm call 992-5.43A ,
992·3129, or 992-5914.
TWO BEDROOM Mobilo homo.
Rocineoreo, 992-5858.
~ll house in country. Fur·

nished or unfournishJd. Cantact Yvonne Gartefl on Mile

Hill or call 2~7- 38n .

Wanted t11 Buy
CASH FOR junk cars. ·2.4 hour
wr&amp;ckar service. Frye' s,
Rutland, OH . 7•2·2081.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest end.

$12 per ton . Bundled slab. $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

~.

OLD COINS, po&lt;kol watches.
class rings, wedding bands.
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
Roar Wamsley , 742·2331.

1970 Sylvo, 60•12, 2 bdr.
1970 Cootie, 60•12, 2 bdr.
1973 Nobility, 12•60, 2 br.
1.973 Ridgewood, 70•14 , 3 bdr.
1973 Naahuo, 60~e12, 2 bdr.
1973 Governor, 60x12, 2 br.
197~

Marklino, 50•12, 2 br .
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT, WV.
. 675-~~24

1969 fEARLESS MOBILE name,
12 • 52, 2 bedroom . 7~2-2~51 .
197~ 60 • 12 Kirkwood mobllo
home, 1•;, bath, total electric,
new stove, new kitchen
carpet. 2 porches. underpinnIng. 8 x 10 wood storage
buidlng all on 60 x 120ft. lot In
LefOrt Foils. ::247-3895.

1971 MOBILE HOME. 12 x 60. 2

IMMEDIATE

OPENING .

Laboratory Technician, 3·1 t

ohifl. E•perienced .Mll (ASCP)
or equivalent. Excellent salary
and fringe benefits. Shift dlf·
ferentail. Contact: Personnel
Office , Pleasant Volley
Hospital. VaUey Drive, Point
Pleasant, WV. 25550 . Phone

304-675-•JAO . An Equal Opportunlty·EfTiployer.

WANT TO buy: old jewelry.

I - 304 - ~28 · •200 .

and 78

Cocll, 87 S. . 2nd, Mlddloporl.
OH.
WANTED; ONE acre of land
.near Five Points. Call after 5,

992-3955.
TRANSMiSSION

for

WANTED. SAWYER to work at
Paint Valloy Pollet, Scoflown .
256-6363 bolwoen 1 and 5pm.

or ~8840 after 5,

196~

hound

or Norwegian Elk
pup at reosonpble

price. Coli 985-3925 aftor 5:30
on weekdays and anytime on
weekend•.

·Pets f11r Sale
DOG OBEDIENCE Classes for-

ming now. Coli 61~- 367 - 0550.
RISING STAR Ke:nnela, boor· ,
ding and . grooming, all

breedo. Cnoshlro, 367-0292,
HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves. 614-698·3290.

Help Wanted

•

Aviation
mechanics
trainees and other
trainees wanted In
numerous lob fields.
Relocation required tor
lob and training . High
· school graduates to age

25.

.

CALL TOLL FRI!;E
1-100-212-12..
BetwMn 'AM &amp; 2 PM
MON. tltru WED.
liFE GUARD, Mutt have Senior
Lifesaving certificate. Poys
$-4 .2.4 and hr, -40 heur week,
plus holiday pay. Anyone In·
terestecl may apply ot Forked
Run Park, Reedsville, Ohio, In

person.

LAFF- A- DAY

REGISTERED QUARTER hone
goldlng. Roglotored Appc&gt;loata ~oarlln~ . good canformotlon, good 1how prospect. Standing registered Appaloosa
stallion .
Good
disposition. Good color. good

GENTLE 3 1/r year old quarter

horse. 7~2-3018 .
MOTHER'S DAY SPECIALS. 30
per cent off on all pont tufts,
tops and dresses. Permanent
regular $25 now $20, $20 now

Alllo-

$300.

Cholmers small round baler,
s:IXX&gt;. 985·3538, Pau1 Korr,
Chester, oH .

FOR SALE
Rutland Furniture hu
purchased 3 new trucks
end we now h•ve 2 good
osecl trucks to sell.
1-1974 .,.Ton
1-1972 ~. Ton

(67,000

miles,

ntw

tlres,good ·candltlon)
Pllone 742-nll Day
or 742-n44 Nile

.

river .

515,000.00.
POMEROY - Condor
51. Excellent for home
or. mobile. About 3 ·tots,
lots
of
frontage.
S8,5oo.oo. Make offer.
TRAILER OR HOMEHere Is your answer.
Over 200 ft. frontage
(originally had 2
houses) . Located In
Pomeroy. $3,000.00.
BUY A COMPLETELY
~EMODEL.ED .HOME
AND MOVE IT. 2
bedroom•. bath and etc.
10 acres available jus!
around the corner .
$6,000.00.
HOW LONG HAS YOUR
HOUSE BEEN ON THE
MARkET?
DON'T
WASTE TIME, LIST
WITH THE EXPERTS.
CALLNOWTOLIST.
REALTORS
Hen~ E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992-2259 992-4191 "2-256t
FOR SALE BY awnor.

'

~ . 39

ocrea, .4%yeor old house, ~
bedr., rae room with fireplace ,

2 batno, garage ond utility
room. 1Yt miles from Rutlc!nd·
on New Lima Rd. Coli
7~2·2866 .

THREE BEDROOM ·novoo with
wood burner on 3 . acres in
Racine area. 9-49-2766.

RUTlAND RJRNITURE
Wllkosvlilo, SR 12~ . Tol
66'1-3654. Hollis Grato.
MOVING, MUST soli Amana
refrigerator, frost free, 1 mo.

216 E. SeCGIId SlrMI

old. While lave ooat with
choir, ·year old. Air condl·
tlonel", 36,000 BTU .r:om·
fOi-matlcCJ02.:)6.t7 after 5Jm.
~EDUCE
G~e

1.9ACRES- One of the
best locations In lawn.
Good 9 room renovated
home. 2 baths, full basement, garage and large
storage. S-48,500.
STORAGE - ApproxImately 36'x10'. City
water, air conditioned,
concrete floor, loading
dOck, under ground fuel
storage tank, and parkIng. $.10,000.
NEW LISTING """ 2 lots
o40'x120' trailer setup on
one and 8 r..om house on
the other . 2 balhs,
natural gas, city water
and sewers. Will · take
$17,500 for a quick sitle.
OVER 4 ACRES - In
the country for !he
children and livestock. il
room house all modern
on !he lnolde, 3 .or 4
bedrooms. carpeting,
Leading Craek water,
garage, and hen house.
Only 527,500.
PLAN OUR' FUTURI!
NOW AGAINST MORE
INFL.ATION, BUY AND
SAVI YOUR R I! NT
MONI!Y ON THE! APPRICIATION 01' THI!
NEW HOM I.

SAFE AND fast with

Tablets and E· Vap
"water pills". Nelson Drug_
.

Services Offered
WATER AND mite. hauling.
Call992-5858.
NOW HAUliNG flm ..tone In
M iddleport-Poemroy area .
Coli for free ettlmate.

367-7101.
PAINTING AND tondblatllng.

POMEROY

JOB CORPS_
Gel paid while learning. Free toad; , hoiJslng,
medical care, clothing allowance and spending
money. JOB CORPS trafns males and females for
job skills such as Auto Mechanics, keypunch,
Bricklaying. Nursing Skflls, Welding, Office Skills
and many more. Must leave. area. If, Interested in
Improving
,_ your future, visit:

JOB CORP REPReSENTATIVE
City Hill-council Chambers (2nd floor)
110 2nd 51., Pomeroy, OhiQ
\¥ed. &amp; ThUrJ., May 9 &amp; 10

·-· ---·---·~~---

overlooks

blood line. $50. Campor lop,
$100. 6U-5'13-7390.
1978\1 SUZU~I dirt bike 250
RM. Like n1w. Cecil Brinager.
9.49-2387.

- u.s. Department of Labllr
Y11ung women and Men Ages 16·21 years
In

"He got hooked on soap operas
when he was In the h(J8pital."

608 E .
MAIN
POMFROY.O ..
JUST LISTED -over 5
acres with nice home,
bllrn &amp; chicken house .
Home has J bedrooms,
bath, nice kitchen, Jots
of remodeling ; pari
basement, garden, Nat.
gas heal . 516,500.00.
LOVELY
BRICK
HOME - ~ bedrooms,
2tl2 baths, 2 car garage
and 2 car carport, 2 very
nice acres, 2 rec. or
family rooms, fireplace,
lovely equipped kitchen.
560,000.00.
LOOK JUST $8,000.00 ~
Less than a price of a
new car. In very good
condlflon. has • lots. 3
bedrooms, carpeting,
paneling and lots at
others.
INCOME PROPERT~
Live In !his remodeled
home and rent ·mobile,
let rent pay your way .
~ocaled In Middleport,

Free estimates. Coll9~9-2686 .

FREE JOB TRAINING

'
L•ntSYIII•, Ohio

LANDMARK
Headquarters fQr
Hcltpc~lnt and
Gen-e ral Electric
Appliances

· SALE PRICES
J•ck w. Carsoy
Mgr.
, Phone m-2111

HAULING : limestone, graver ·
and mite Items. 7-4~-2909, ask
for Rick ll'l)boden, ·

HOUSE

~EPAIR

and romode l-

lng. Careful work. Reasonable
rates . Erny Davies. 7'-42·2090.

SIDING CO.

27UO MCNitgomer'f' Rd.
'14·64f.,.2U Evtnlngs
:Z MII.Sii!:IIIOf Wllii.IYIII.

SUPER

GOOSE

STOCK

TRAilER NOW AVAILABLE .
4·5·1 mo.

servlqt oge, 1 mile east from

AVIATION

WANTED TO buy: a bone!
haun~

tor

PUREBRED SHORTHORN bulls,

Rambler. 992-2921 .

TRAILER SALES

Housing
Headquarters _

Call for a Free Sldlnt
Estimate, 949-2101 ar
949-2840. No Sunday
calls.
4·4-1 mo.

EXPERIENCED

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

John Deere 50 ft. elevator

Call 99:2-5262 or write Kay

~5

phonograph
records.
Coli
992-6370 e:r Contoct Marlin
Furniture.

TWO HOUSES, 2 ocrft of land

SpKililll In Home and
SC-i Plano TUBII!I
and Rtp~lrlng. ·5arvll!l'
Athans. Mt1111. Galli• &amp;
VInton countiH, also
Mason &amp; Jacks.ties in w- va.
Ph. m-2581 or m-21112

:cAPTAIN EASY
'
'

..,.,n-·1.

Radiator.,-.._,

• 8

+A871il
• AQ2

4231 mo. (Pd .)

Ph. 992-2174

Residential and commercial. Calf
for
estimate. 24 Hour Service, Any d1y, anytime.
Portable toilet rental.
Phone 915-3106
Jec.k Glnt.!!_~ ,es-3106

Jac~'s ~

Tank Service

Chest••· o.
. H -1 mo. pel.

STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sires of pool
"kits. Do-lt- yourself or let us
install for you. D. Bumgardner
Sales. Inc. 992-572..4 .

GRAVELY

TRACTORS

: BORN LOSER

and

Equipment. Experienced ser:
vice. 2().4 Condor, Pomeroy ,

Ohio. 992-:1975.

I

mo.

1
- - --- - -.-- -- -~-. ._

Rooftftg .

..

-

WWRotJ0Z
-- ----· - - - - --=;:._--:::,. -

.HOBSIEIIER
N-LimaRNd
Ruff and, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
DEXTER- 2 bUildings
on nice size tots. Both
sell tor only $16,000.00.
DANVILLE· Nice
older home on 34 acre.
Home has 4 bedrooms,
. kitchen, family room
and bath . Needo some
repair, but well worth
the effort at a price of .
only $18,000.00.
POMEROY
2
bedroom home with Lshaped kitchen. 'living
room, bath and attic.
Sells lor $17,000.00 .
BUSINESS -We have a
well -es tabl i shed
grocery wllh upotalro
apartment In Rutland.
Call for more Info.
MIDDLEPORT
Large 2 story home. II
has ~ bedrooms, bath,
(upsllrs) living room,
dining room, kitchen
with pantry. Full base- ·
men! wltlt new gas fur nace. Detached garage. ,
Asking only $45,000.00.
·FARM -Available with
or without liouse. If has
99 acres (including
home), 2 cattle barns, 1
horse barn, 2 ponds, sprt_ng led pastures and
much morel Or you can
.buy 97 acres with all
· buildings
excluding
house. Formerly known
u lhe Paul Orr farm.
Thlo farm Is one of !he
finest and · Is a good
clean farm . ·call us for
more Info.

_-_·_·

___

- -

a

'lfAH ... I SEEN I'T
ALL ·-· KROK SET OA'T
'TRAP FOR ROCKY ...
'THEN FELL If'! HSSELF·..

Mlddlepc~rt,

Cheryl Lemley~ Assoc.

Pllone742-2003
Hlltois'walle, Auoc.
.Phone 949-2589
Georges. Hobstter, ~· .
Broker 992-5139
REAL ESTATE Loont. Purchoto
and refinance. 30 year terms,

VA. No lnonoy down (oilglblo
veterans). FHA · As low as 3

-'

played to the same trick _ A
check of a ll cards showed
that there was no six of
diamonds in the deck. He

asks if there is a rule . .
Yes, there is. That deal is

not counted, but all previous
hands are counted.

.BLOCK &amp; BRICK ,
WORK, GENERAL

~-

CONJdcroR
Rt. 3
. Pomeroy, Ohio
"2-5547
4-25-1 mo. -Pd.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR sw-pers, toatten, irons, all
small opplionc". lown moer,
"'"' to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985- ~:25.

The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles. and
Service. We sharpen Sclnon .

EXCAVATING. dom, loador
and backhoe work; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire,

will haul fill dirt. tap soil.
limestone and grovel. Call Bob
or Rog~tr Jeffers. day phone

992-7089 ,
night
phono
992·352S or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dour ,
baCkhoe and dit&lt;hor, Chorlos
R. Hatfield. Black 'Ha. Service,

Rutlond ,.Ohio. Pono 742·2008.
PUlliNS EXCAVATING. ComS.rvlce. Phon• 992·2478.

INSURANCE

Answr: SHE"( I

.I

j

-•nl ·

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9f2·5612

s.tunt.y 1

SAVE ON

t.o

eat.
and

&amp;

SAVE ALOT

move

A GOOD SEL.CTION
OF END &amp; . ROLL
. BALANCES.

ALL CARPET
NCMON
SALE

WINN!t.
YES. AM .. :mE
OPEAATION(5 &amp;ET

WHEN WI LL

f'OR;rD~ROW

'vOU KNOW...

AND... AND

Tl'IE DOC'TDR&amp; ~INK: WE'LL
HAVE OUR AN&amp;WER IN

THREE OR R)LIR DAYS!

I.'ORNIN61

yd •

(began a

RUTlMD

882-2952 or 882-3A54.
flOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

RJRNITUR£

ayttems ,

143.

7u-nn ·:

20 " ... ships sealing wax 11

goll game)
22 Uquefy
24 Employ
25 Bra!ICh
26 L£g
27 The auld sod
26 VItality
32 Off omi's
34 Lofty spot
35 Lure
36 Baron
Munch-

to ChaoH l'rom.

Call742-nn
TALK TO
Wentell or Herb Grate
or Glfte Smltlt

Nevada
10 Serfs
13 Highway
14 Dead wrong
15 Suffix
with depend
16 Circus
employee
17 Advertising
mediwn
19 Talbot
or Naldi

21 - off

24 Rolls of carpet iA
Stock &amp;'1DO's of SamJIIH

992-.2143.
E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Valley r•glon.

(~ tunorrow)

THOMAS JOSEPH

1 " Blowout"
5 Food fish
9 City in

qot

DRIVE &amp; unu

BUY NOW&amp;SAVE

I X)-[ I I I IJ' HIM

Jumblea: PHONY TRAIT STYMIE OUTING
An-: How he found himself-IN A "TIGHT" SPOT ·

ACROSS

CARPOING

$7'!..

II

Now arrange tho circled lotlers to
torm the surprise aniWIII", u suggaslad by tho obov8 cartoon.

~CLW~

GASOUNE ALLEY

by

I' ROM.

II

HOW HIS. c:m&lt;.t..
Fill:! EN~ ~OOTHE!t:'
"1'HE GAN65TEJ&lt;.'.

JumW.Iook No. 12, containing t10 pUUI~.It tvtlltblllorl1.75poatltakl
fromJwnllile, Clottlll newsptper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07MI.Include your
n1me. addrna, zip code tnd mtke checkl payeblt to Newsptperbooks.

-':30-tfc

been cancelled? lost your
operatqrs
license? Phone

Six days o wMk, 2·fhours aer·
vice. Emergency calls. Call

AN ~ACTIVE: DARKIoiAillED 'YOI.JN6 LArN AND A
SIS &lt;SUY NAMED"O'&gt;&lt;"?

.... mile off 111, 7 by-peso
on St. Rt. 124
Rutland.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
service, all makes, 992-228-4.

·J

_ _.., __ ...

IRILLAPj
tJ r

ARE ....OU ACQUAtrmo!J WI"TH

3-7-1 mo. CPd.)

Rlittencl

BARNEY

HOW CAN SNUFFY
JEST SET THAR .
WHEN THAR'S
CHORES
TO BE

SHPAT ...

RIJTlAMD RJRNITURE .

2 "I'll Walk
10
: 1944
song
3 Emulate
Dorothy
Hamill
4 Plasterer's
need
5 Took part in
&amp; Loki's
daughter
7 Evenlually
8 Softer, as
a pillow
11 Squirrel
monkeY'
1Z Violin,
for short
1&amp; Camping
item

Yesterday's Allswer
I~ Chevalier

song
22 Of the

29 Pay booSt
30 Word with

spy or
hour
sea
31 Flanders
Z3 Gave off
battle
%4 Suspend
site
%5 Adjust anew
33 Uke some
:!t Major
drinks
divisions,
3i Tennis call
in biology

lz-+-+---'

ausen. e.g.

PAW AIN'T JEST
SETTIN' THAR,

37 Youngster
38 To be : Lat.
39 Russian's
emphatic

ELVINEV--

~~ yes"

40 Hardy lass

DONE?

WE OFI'ER YOU ...
1. two full n-. of 111 new ·
fUrniture.
2- Nice ielecllons ot uud 'furniture.
3- A 1..-11 bulkllni filii of
beaut!!!~~ urpet_

DOWN
1 Basque
headwear
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AIVDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLO. W

frolond Mort- Co .. n E.
Stato, Athont. 61~-592-3051 .
MODERN THREE bedroom

28:

I ·0

ALLEYOOP

per cent down (non-veterons).

house,
full
bo1ement,
fireplace, .fully carpeted, centro! olr, encloaed sun porch
loCoted 'on 6 1/t ocres on Cl
approx. 3 miles from Racine. If
Interested contact Larry Wolfe
q.-49-2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.

York tournament. At some

ISLOAMT!

992-2356

~ ·Hysell

septic

example from a recent New

two fives of diamonds were

KXJ

0.

N. L Construction

backhoe. Rt.
Phono I (614) 698-7331.

find yourself in trou}lle on
occasion ...
Alan: " He r e is a good

A Maine reader tens us
that they had been playing
bridge for some time when

FlOOR

65i Beech Street

~-5-tfC

doior .

Oswald: "No matter what
system you use ·o r how well
developed your partnership
is, you are always going to

there . . . -.:-.~·\Jv

11 Ye.,s l!xperlerjce
Will Make
Service Cells

949-2862-949-2160

cavotlng,

AskiiiCI!iiDCPIS

There

~-

New, repair,
guHers ;t11d
down spouts.
Window cleaning
GuHer cleaning
Free Estimates

AUTOMOBILE

Peter

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Elecbic: Motor

~•te

"Actually,

gies a little extra ."

........

BRADFORD, AuctlonHr, Complete Service. Phone 9~9-2487
or 9.49·2000. Racine, Ohio,
Crltt Bradford.

REALTY

Alan: " Peter Weichsel,
one of the best players in the
country is one of the players
who e lected to bid tha t two
clubs. His theory was t hat
there was little cha nce that
North would pass there.
That if North did raise clubs
enthusiasti ca lly , he would
have five clubs for tha t action and that a club slam
might eventualize ."
Oswald : " The s tory cer tainly has a ha ppy ending.
Sin ce diamonds broke ~2
South made five diamonds,
one spade, two hearts and

o~-

AtMnsArw
m-21cs., 797-1752

Roofing

OverloOks river. Water, alec-·
trlc available. 992~3886.

Pass

cessful one this'time ."

Tom Haskins Mt·211t.

Reynold's

3V, acres In Pomeroy. SEclud·
ed wooded orea an top at hill.

Pass

Pass

2+
3 NT

tables North passed and
South made four diamonds.
At most i.ables North responded one spade although

maln..,..nce, niW aN ...,.lr.
Storm deon altcl wiMiows. Aft
worll 1uarafl1Md. 21 yMI'I ••·
perlet~n. Frw ntlmlftl. Clll

H. L Writesel

Roal Estate for Sale

2t

. Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

FIVE: BAL-L-S IIJ THf; L-AI&lt;5, A IXJUBL-~
130':£'{ Ol111B PAR-? NJD I'M (i::W'jf..i/b
A GOL-D sagE;;! WHA-T MOge GAfJ

and

Pqmeroy

.

Pass
Pass

South

bidding in (he box s hows .a
two-club rebid by South _ An
imaginative bid and a s uc-

Alan :

.

SEPTIC TANK
CI,.EANING

I+

again

made ten. He always wan·

.-.nen ...

992-6011

..

South

Pass

and

one club for nine tricks."

All ty"' rw.tln-.
llownSIMM!h. All ' " " .....

SmRh Nelal
Moten, Inc.

• j 10 54

• AK 5

Home Maintenance

•New Home
. '
•Addons
·• Remoldings
*Free ·e stimates

IN

v.,

Service

SIDING .

Box3

Ohio

• K 983

Opening lead : •10

IRElAND
MClRlGACE
CO.
77 E. State, Atllena·
592•3051

+QJ 54
• Q8 6
+Q 2

MAK~

Rill Esllte Lon

- - -- ~-23·1

EAST

+K92
• 10 9 7 3
+KJ

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
West North East

PEANUTS

MAI&lt;8E '!'OUR SON6S
AREN'T HAm eN"U6H

See the Grall P'emlly at

SIN6 SOMETHIN6 THAT
MAKES PEOPLE HAm...

One letter simply stands for another. In 1his sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Sin11l e letters,
apostrophes, the length a~d formation of the words are all
hints. Each uay th e code leUers are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
'LAR

YRGI

KGF

DAB

HYRGL

KGF

co

LAR

Viewing
MONDAY, MAY7,1919
6 : 3(}-N BC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8.10;
My 'Three Sons 17.
7: 00- Cross -Wils 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Pop Goes The
Cou ntry B; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Carol Burneil 17; Dick Cavell 20.
7 : 30- Thal Nashville Music 3:
Muppel Show 6; Price Is Righi 8:
$1.98 Beauty Show 13; Nasvhllle
an the Road IS; Baseball 17;
Ma~Neli - ~ehrer Report 20,33.
8 : DO-Movie " Rollercoaoler" 3,15:
Battie of the Neiwork Stars 6,13;
White Shadow 8, 10; Bill Moyers
Journal 20,33.
9:DO-Mash 8, 10; Prime of Miss Jean
Brodie 20,33; 9:3(}-WkRP In
Cincinnati 8, 10.
IO :DO-Piayboy's 251h Anniversary
6, 13; Lou Grant 8,10; Originals.
Women In Art 33; Ascent of Man
17: News 20; 10:3(}-Wnodunnll?

3,15,• Almanac 20.
11 :DO-News 3,6,8, 10,13,1 5; Hogan' •
Heroes 17; Crockett's Vlclory
Garden 20.
11 :3(}-Johnny Carson 3.15; Pollee
Story 6, 13; Rockford Flies 8;
ABC ,..ews 33; Movie "Tortilla
Flat" 10 : Movie ' ' Thunder
Road" 17.
12 :4(}-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 8; Ironside
13; I :DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
TUESDAY,MAY8, 1979
5: Is-World at Large 17; 5 :oi5Farm Reporl13; s:5(}-PTL Club ·
13; 5:5s-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 :D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6 : J(}-Newsl7; 6 :2s-&lt;:oncerns &amp;
Comments 10.
,
6 :4s-Marnlng Report3; 6:5(}-Good
Morning West VIrginia 13; 6:SsChuck White Reports 10; News
13.
.
7:DO-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Tuesday Morning
8; Schoolles 10: Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17; 7:1s-Weather
33.
7:3(}-famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga '
&amp; You 33. ·
8: DO-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Leave If
to Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
B: 30-Discovery 17 ; 9 : 0(}-Bob
Broun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15;
Emergency One 6 ; Hogan's
Heroes 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17.
9 : 30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Groen Acres 17.
IO :DO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edgo of
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10;
Dating Game 13; Movie "You
Can'! Run Away lrom It" 17.
10 : 3(}-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6;
Whew I 8,10; 10:5s-&lt;:BS News 8;
House Call 10.
11 :DO-High Roller&gt; 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Righi 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family 'Feud 6,13; 11 :5s-Newa
17.
12 :DO-Newscenter 3; Password 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday
Magazine 13; . Love American
Style 17.
12 :3(}-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Eiec. Co. 20,33;
Not For Women Only .15; Movie
"Girls of' Pleasure Island" 17.
1:DO-Days of Our Live• 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; News 8: Young &amp;
the Restless 10; I :3(}-As The
World 'Turns 8,1 0.
2:DO-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
· 6,13; 2:2s-News 17.
2:311---Baseball 3; Another World 15;
Guiding Llghl B,IO; I Love Lucy
17.
3': oo-General Hospital 6,13 : Lilla•
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17; 3:311--Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Flintstones 17; Dick Cavett 20 .
4:DO-Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St . 20.33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Sesame St. 20,33;
Mike Douglas 13; Space Giants
17.
4:3(}-GIIIIgan's lo. 8,17 : Lucy Show
IS.
5 : 00- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3:
Beverly Hlllbillleo 8: ' Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle 10: Bionic Woman
13• Brady Bunch 15; I Dream of
Jeannie 17.
5: 3(}-Carol Burnell 3; News 6;
Sanford &amp; • Son 8; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Odd Couple 15; Lucy
Show 17; Ooctor Who 33 .
6:DO-News 3,8,10,13,15: ABC News
6: Andy Griffith 17; Villa Alegre
20: Studio Sae 33.
6: 3o-NBC News 3,15:' Carol Burnett
6; CBS News 8,10; My Three
Sons 17: Over Easy 20,33.
7 :oo-Cross-Wih 3; Please Stand By
8: Newlywed Game 6,13: Ntwl
10; Carol Burnett 17; How To
Buy a Home 33; Dick Cavett 20;
.
Lave Ame•lcan Style 15.
1: 3(}-Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8;
Hollywood Square• 10; Donn.• ·
Fargo 13; Abbott &amp; Costello 15;
Baseball 17: MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33 .
8 :DO-Greatest Heroes of the Bible
3,15: Happy Days 6,13; Paper
Chase 8,10; Austin City Limits
20: City Notebook 33.
a :3o-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 33.
9:DO-Movle "Hanging by a Thread"
3, 15 ; Three's Company 6,13;
Movie" Anatomy of a Seclucllon"
8 ,1 0: Alexander'• Bachllme
Band 20.
9 :311---'Taxi 6,13; 10:oo-Starsky &amp;
.... Hutch 6,13; America 17; News
20; 10:311---Lock Stock &amp; Barrel
20; Crosstalk 33.
11 :oo-News 3,6,B, I0,13,15; Hagan~~
Heroes 17; Like II Is 20; LoW.fl '
Thomas Remembers 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,15; Movie
" Diamonds"

KGZRO

RSRYP

KGF

URRI
HYRGL. __:_ H . Z .
JAROLRYLBF
Saturdey'• CI')'Jit"''uote: THI.NK WHAT COWARDS MEN
WOUlD BE 'I F THEY HAD. TO BEAR ClfiLREN. WOMEN
ARE AN ALTOGETHER SUPERIOR SPECIES.-GEORGE B.
SHAW

TWO STORY 3 bedrOom houoo:. TWO STORY 3 bedroom framo
100 x 150 ft. ,lot. Excelionl hou1e In Mlcldleport.
.
location with river view. 992:3457.
$12,000. Shown by appoint- SEVEN ROOM houoo and bot•
mont. 992' 20112 or 742-2:128. · ment In Mlner\lllle. 992-5873.

·--- ~·-·-- - ---'---"------1

SO WHY

diamonds , whereupon North
passed

Wf..ST

'
ME DO
IT THE HARP WAY!

FIGHT tr, EA?'r\ !JOY!
JA8 Of' THI$ NEEDLE
YOU'LL FLOAT !&lt;16HT
rO DR:EAM7VILLi!;!

his hand was a book pass.
Then South rebid to three

made four diamonds .' :
Os wa ld : " I s ee that the

SOUTH

Purchase
Refinance
:10 Ye..- Terms
A~No
money down
Ctllglble ,.,.,..ns)
FHA--AS low I I Ulo
down rnon-..,.,..ns)

BISSAI

992-7238.

9a _ Jack w. Carsey
llliill
Mgr.
,
m , Phone 992-2111

hoppor,

.Fr... Estlmete
Conlul: Gene Smith
or Mike Grlle
at Rullond Furniture ea.
742-2211
After 5 P.M .. "2-&lt;1309
or 742-2174

SHilg ~

forced olr furnoce, natural
gas. Coli Nancv , 949-::265-4 or

~PRICES

LAfiE DANIELS

Vinyl and Aluminum

house, like new. $27,000. -4
bedroom. kitchen , living room
and bath. Aluminum siding,

BUSHES

. 14-Yr.l)&lt;,;r,t~ce

a.EANIN'G

0-7

• 76

~ · ~ · Pd.

MIDDLEPORT._ 10 yoar old

ROSE

with

CARPET

HOUSE AND~ acres In bock of

in Hortfo('dr WV. All
$15,000. J0.4 ·B82·2073.

' .PIANO
TUNING

DEEP STEAM

Minersville. $5500. Horvey
leomond, Broodway.-Raclne.

bedroom ,
furnished,
$16, $18, Now $15. No rods,
fireplace . Good con~ltion.
J-4500. Must sell Immediately. • just rollers perm, $10. Aline's
Oren and Beauty Shop
843-2945 ..
9~9-2666 .
5th and VIne,
Racine, OH . .

Help Wanted

·

Real Estate for Sale

Just Arrived

Mobile Homes Sale's

EXPERIENCED
SHOP
FABRICATORS, WLEDERS,
AND LAY-OUT PERSONS
NE~DED .
GOOD BENEFITS.
CONTACT L &amp; H METAL
WORKS ,
INC
at

WANT TO buy : aid

week s old. 2-47-3870.

GIIOd Selection

1965 General, 60x12, 2 bdr .
IV?_O Skyline, 12x65, 2 br .

Call: 9~9-~818
or 949·21,$0

COLLIE PUPPY, lomole, 6 to B

houto

Large lou. Call 992· 7~79 .
992-5.43A.
90 ROLLING ACRES of good

TWO YEAR old teal point

1975 CHEVY truck bed. $125.
'185·3335.
.

Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
3 AND~ BM furnished and unfurnished
opts .
Phone

Racine, o .
Wholesale, Diltrlbutors
fC)r . fine
Pennzoil
lubriutlon products,
Motarcrtft, From, end
Industrial Chemlul
S~pplles, In addition to
mast major br•nds of
motor all.

tlon. 992-2007. Can M seen at
2()t Butternut.

Manp11wer Admlnlstratllln

W 30, 151 7, 2fo

-- -------

Bedding · plants, blooming.,
Vegetable plants, all ready to
go, potted. See Don Stobort .
Rt . 2, Racine, Ohio.

9~9- 2035.

Pomeroy or call992-n60.

· UNIT PR'ICE .Cc;INTRACT

1977 FORD l TO, 4-door, power
steering and brakes, air condition, radio , 8000 oCtual
mi les. Real clean . 742-7462.

Siamese cat. m -2075,

YARD

Write M.D. Miller, Rl.

Colum'bus, Ohio
April tO~ lf1t
Contreet lieltt Le111 ~opy
No. 19-UD

1972 DOOGB DART, 51 ,000
miles. Uses regular gat. GE
electric stove. 992-2075 .

Hogerty's. 825 Beech St .. Mid·
dleporl .
HANGING BASKETS, oil klndt.

Wednesday . Bob Waldnlg
residence ocron from Racine

brass beds. Iron beds, desks,
etc., complete households.

NOTICt:. IIIJ
CONT ..ACTORS
STATE DF OHIO
DEP,.RTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

1976 FORO F-250 4x4 . Lott of
extras . 992-7287 .

GiveAway

Rl . 33. 992-7429 .
LOST . SEVEN month old black

992-268'1.
OLD FURNITURE, leo boxes,

30 (51 7, Vc

auto:

7~2- 287~ .

troller. Stove. refrigerator ,
A.C .. sleeps 6 . On display ot

ored with peach on bock . Old

992-7302.
FOUND: POODLE . Apricot col-

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS '
STATE OF OHIO._
DE ~ARTMENT OrTRANSPORTATION

992-7589.
1973 CAMARO. 350
992-7869.

18 FOOT FRANKLIN campi~g
troller. Reese hitck Included.

22 FOOT DELUXE Slorcratt

LIVING Room, complete tight
pc. pc. $750, refrigerator,
$225. . rocke'rs , double mottress, typing toble, and a file.

LOST: .ONE white ailver diamond
pierced
earring.

Friday aftemoon

$400. 992-6238.
197• GMC JIMMY: P.B. , P.S..
A.C., 2·whoel drive. $1725.
Call992-3580.
1976 IMPALA ~-door sedan.
A.C... P.S.. P.B.. 25,000 mllet.

lots of blue jeans, children's
clothes, curtoint, small appliances. 131 S. 4th Ave., Mid·
dleport. Right across from
American legion . Monday.
Tuesday. 9·6.

843·24BI .

Sunday
&lt;P.M.

&lt;•J

WOU LD THE party that took
our block cot called Boots,
please ca ll us 992-3018.

FOUND: LARGE baby Item on

Monday
Noon on Saturday

pi ckup.

CB radio . am radio. $3501).

Lost and Found

NOTICE

ton

614-IW3·JOII .

J&amp;R OIL CO. "11!.0~

S&amp;G

~

right lo edit &lt;lr reject any ads
deemed objectional.
The
Publbher 'IViU not be resporu~ible
for more than one inC'O rrect inser1lon .
Phone 992-21S6

'l r

· needs Soles and Service. On
Meigs Co. Rd . 28 to Ba'hon.

OPENING SALE

NORTH
+ A 10 7 6 3
• J 42
• 10 9 3

L

The Publl.sher reserves the

1968 FORO

cauliflower, brussel1o sprouts,
head lettuce, tomatoes , and
large selection of bedding annual a. Pols of flowers and
honginw bo~okeh .
CleJand
Greenhou~oe .
Geraldine
Clelan~ . Rciclne.

13 FT. TRAVEL trailer S700.
742·2761.
CODNERS CAMPERS, troller
rentals . wt!l pork·. all R.V.

:

Mobile Home Sllles and Yard
sales ·are accepted ohly with
cash with order. 2S cent charge
for alb carrying 8o1: Nwnber In
Care of The SentineL

air, wench, etc., 8)(cellent
condijlon . 992-2121 .

992·38'11.
PLANTS, CABBAGE, broccoli,

J~7:~t!~~rE?ru~~Pc~m:::. ·l, ____!l_!'S_l·!'~-~~ _§_~~...,!·~~e~~....,.·__. . ·1. .

.

V8lll'e.

Aut11 Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21 ,000 miles, fully equlppod,

grovel. calcium chloride, fertilizer, dog food , and oil types
of salt. Exceh~ior Salt Work s,
Inc ., E. _Main St .. _Pomeroy,

Troublesome hand secured

self· contai ned , air condition .
excellent condition. 99::2: 2121 .

:

ln memury. Card ol Thanks
and ObitUIJry : 6cent.3 per word,
$3.00 minlmwn. Cash ~ ad·

'tHE FAMILY of Dole Kesterson , wishes to thank all who
;ent flowers and food and the
beautiful cards . Thanks to the
ones who donated blood. Also
the rturslng staff and Or. Telle
and Or. Ridgway . The Ewing
Funeral Home and staff.
pallbearers. Special thanks to
our dear minister Rev . James
Corbitt (lnd wife. God Bien
oilThe Family of Dale Kesterson.

tond,

:

Each word over the minimum
1$ wo«b b 4 cen~ per word Per
day. A.cbruMing other than con·
secuUve days wtll be charged at
the 1day rate.

pathy.

LIMESTONE ,

Television

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

:

15 Word:! or Under
C...h
Chars•
I day
1.00
1.2:5
2days
1.50
1.90
3dan
1.110
2.25
&amp;days
3.00
3.75

w ith poly choke. good -condition . S3000. 98~· 3301 days .
985-41-40 nights.

COAL .

BRIDGE

·

CHARGES

THE FAMILY of Rosa Searles
wishes to express their ap·
predation to everyone for
tt,eir expressions of sym-

For Sale

WINCHESTER OLD model 12

~lassifieds

·

For Sale

Card of Thanks

WANT AD

9-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondav. May 7, 1979
DICK TRACY

..

~

..

13:

Movie "The

Flrecnasers" 6; Barnaby Jones
8; A8C News 33; Movie "Boys
Tow~"10; Movle'' The Man from
Laramie" 17.
12 :40--Movle "Terraces" 8i 1: ~
Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1 : 55- News 13; 4: lD-News 17;
4:3G-12 O'Clock High.

s

•

�10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Porrieroy, 0 ., Monday, May 7, 1979

e

·Demonstrators W(ant energy ·secretary fired

,

,
'
'

,.'

.. WASHINGTON (AP) - Chanting
No more HBIT~burgs," tens of.
thousands of Am
rched 10
encans rna
~e SUJIIhine Sunday and cheered
emands ·that ~nergy Se~retary
James R. Schles10ger be f1red for
relying too much on nuclear energy.
Police estimated from a helicopter
that 70,000 persons had assembled at
the bue of Capitol Hill for the antinuclear rally. But Ralph Nader, one of
the p-otestocs, put the crowd~s size at
125,000 and said he was sure its roar
could be heard by President Carter in
the White Howle, a mile away.
Carter left the White rlouse twice
&lt;mrlogtheday, to ride to church in the
morning and, late in the afternoon, to
Oy by helicopter to nearby Bethesda,
Mel., to vlait a friend in the Naval
Medical Center.
"Hell, no, we won't glow," read a
banner held aloft as the protestors
marched from behind the White
House along Pennsylvania Avenue to
the Capitol in a demonstratio11
remlnj.scent of the protests against the
Vietnam War.
But this crowd seemed to lack the

McClure's

. ''

rage of those days. JI.Josl of the
clemonstra.tors. were young an_d some 1
doff d th shirt
d hr
.e
e1r
san t · ew Frisbees
while the orators, mostly veterans of
oost protests such as Tom Hayden,

354 E. Main

Pomeroy,O.

'

Mon. thru Wed.
(May H)

",

.FOOTLONG
&amp; FRIES

-

'1"

ONLY

-TUESDAYFREEI SUNDAE DAY
' Buy 1 Sundae
. Get one Free

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Nettie
Hemsley, Syracuse; George Greene,
Hartford; Ada Keesee, Pomeroy·
Virgil Price, Long Bpttom;
'
Saturd:ay Dt&amp;charges--Helena
Brickles, Terry Brewer, Paul
Andrews , Maye Mora, .Samuel
Pit:kens , Carrie Osborn, Larry
Spencer.
Sunday Admissions--James
Meadows, Portrland; Philip Null
Tuppers Plains; Garnet Beaver:
Cheshire; Bertha Griffin, Middleport·
Billy Brewer, Portland; Kat~
Mees, Pomeroy; Theresa Mulford,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Aaron Hysell,
Elsie Forbes, Linda Freeman,
Elizabeth Barow.
HOLZERIIJEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, May 4
Missy Anderson, Walter Asbury,
Paul Claar, Ruby Coldiron, Ruth
Cooper, Melva Davia, Hazel Dison
Louise Farley, Blanche Gibbs,'
Gfi!man, Barbara Hemsley, Carl
Hively, Carmie Johnson, David Jones,
Mary Lanning, Bernard Lawless,
Shawn leach, Patricia lee, Richard
Maler, Harold Marshall, Lucas Oxyer, Vema Pottl!, Marte Provert,
Nancy Radford, Johil Rolle, Brenda
Shwnaker, Mrs. Gregory Smith and
son, Judith Watson, Thomas Westen
Shelly Williams, Chris Woolford:
Msrgaret Yerian .
Blrtlll, May 4
Mr. and Mfs. Alex Bryan, Sr., son,
Pliny, W.Va.
·
Dllcbarges, MayS
Rorurle Bevan, Tonia Boyer, Grace
Bradbury, Donald Brooks, Lei
Brown, George Burkett, Goldie Carson, Ronald Clark, Mrs. Donald
Bailey and daughter, Betty Beerlng
Stepb Dray, Nettle Geocge; LarrY
Guthrie, Sheryl Harris, Truman
Jenkins, Lola Lewis, Paul Mason,
Marv Middleton, Janet Moore,

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N. w. COMPTONJ O.D.

r -----------------------

I

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Calif

I

OPTOMETRIST.

·1 . OFFICE HOURS: ,:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
I _ONTHURS.)-EASTCOURTST.,POMEROY.
.

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•

-.

·--Ad...-..

jld

BAKER FURNITURE
0.

MEETS TONIGHT
The Salem Center Educational
Organization will meet at 7:30 this
evening at the school. Grandparents
night will ~ observed and the band
will be present. .
·
SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered three calls Sunday. At 4:18
p.m., the unit went to· the Ewing
Funeral Heme in Pomeroy where
Mary Pullins had become ill. She was
treated on the scene. AI 7 p.m., the
unit went to Route 143 for Charles
Burt who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 9:23p.m., the unit went to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
transferred Hubert Stewart to St. ·
Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg.

_/-

saving
for a rainy day

makes·sense
.

ne.!cf a

Building an ark worked in Noah's time, but nowadays, you'll
good.nest egg to stay afloat financially. Our many savings plans offer_high Interest and a measure of security in a financial emergency. One of them is right for you. Find out.
.
.

..

&amp;• tlters BaDk

~.
.~ . D

;.= 1¢

•dl$
~

POMEROY, OHIO
7

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor

VOL. XXVIII NO. 17

ELBERFELD$
MOTHER'S DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

SEE OUR
NEW
SELECTION

ARfA

Ru,s ·

,. Ufe lnsuritnce
I. -~- / FamilfeS
retirement years. Call m ~ fnr details :

1

··-

,

I

MIKE SWJ~E~ ··· ,

Middle o~t. 0.

., . .,. ,...

I·, ....A.._
I '

'i'tate Farm

992-7155

Life and

Accident A""ssurance

,!1!!1. ~~~~!e

Bloom•NJIOn. III1AJlS

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1978

Health costs theme ·
A nationwide campaign to contain health c11re costs wiU be the fdcus
of activities at Veterans Memorial Hospital now through May 12 as that
institution observes National Hospital Week.
·
·
The campaign Is called the voluntary effort to contain health care
costs. Veterans Memorial Hospital joins 6,400 hsopitals around the cOuntry during National Hospilal Week to eall attention to the voluntary effort
(VE) .

The VE, estabUshed in late 1977, Is a coaHtin of hospital~, physicians,
health industry suppliers and representatives from government, business
and consumer groups. The goal is to provi~Je national leadership. for an
all-()ut assault on rising health care costs.The coalition recognizes that
. everyone must share in the responsibility for rising costs.
"The Idea behind the Voluntary Effort Is simple enough," Scott
Lucas, administrator, said. "We believe that since we all do our share to
raise the cost of health care, we can all do our part to h!lld down costs."
.
The national goal Qf the VE Is to red~ce the rate of increase in health.·
care expenditures by a total of four percentage points in 1978 arid 1979.
And the VE Is working. Sa~ngs to the American people during 1978
reached more than $1.3 billion.

cHECKS EQUIPMENT - Manuel A. Figallo, M.D., checks out

. .RESPI.RATORY THERAPIST - Bob Casto, respirator therapiSt, Is
pictured With eqwpment used at Veterans Memorial Hospital in making
some40,000 respiratory procedures in a year at the local hospital.

_ equi~ment m the emergency room facllities at Veterans Memoriil '
Hospital. 1bJ:ough the Physi~ian Placement Group, doctors are providing
~ hourserv1ce at the hospital on a trial basis for the time being. Dr.

F1gallo IS a member of the group which provides physicians for the night
hours thereby relieving local doctors of 24 hour seven days a week .

Pothole repair be!Pns today
~ -~

within the corporation, but could stop and $2,788.50 collected ' from the
the trucks outside the city limits. · parking meters. Tickets issued last
· Rod Karr, councilman, reported month were up by 297 from the same
trucks traveling through Ihe village time last year. Hartenbach was
are hauling fly ash and limestone. commended for an outstanding job.
Another question J)OSed'etmcel'lled the
Chief Webster's report showed that
1\eight limit on the Pomeroy-Mason his department made 43 arrests,
Bridge and 'hOI\ .much weight would investigated 24 accidents and drove -·
the bridge continue to withstand.
the cruiSer 4,498 miles last month.
Mayor Andrews reported that bids
Council approved the purchase of
for paving of Main Street from Nye four new tires for the present cruiser.
Ave. to Sycamore Street and from The nel\ tires will be kept , for
Butternut to the bridge approach replacements "hen the new cruiser
would be let May 31 with work to begin arrives.
30 days thereafter.
' Baronick announced that there will ·
Council passed a . resolution be a salely meeting Tuesday, May 15,
VISJTING AUDIOLOGIST - ·Allen Anderson, audiologist, Is vlsllinl!
authorizing filing of final application at 7:30p.m: .
Veterans Memorial Hospital four timea each week currenUy to provide
with · Department of Housing ani!
Council on a 3 to 2 vote agreed to
extensive hearing tests for Me\Bs Countians. Urban Development [or a grant under purchase new linoleum for the front
project title CDBG. The grant is to office at city hall. Voting no were Karr
~mance
construction
a~d and Bill Young. Young stated he could
unprovement of the Kerrs Ru]n . not see putting money in the present
building when \\e have a good building
sanitray sewer system. .
In other busmess, council agreed to m the old senior high.
transfer a liquor license from Walter
Jack Krautter, superintendent of
F . Roush, dba, · Whitehouse the street department, informed
Restauran• to Anna L. Roush, dba, council there was something wrong
Whitehouse Restaurant.
wilh the front end of the ne\\ truck. He
Steve Hartenbach , meterman, told council he could do the repair if he
subr,mtted a report for the mo~th of had a hydralic jack. Krautter also
shortages will occur," Adams Silld. ·
NEW
YORK
(AP)
April. There were 1,139 tickets ISSUed advised that with a jack he could also
The industry does agree that gas
change flat tires. Council -advised Transportation Secretary Brock supplies are pinched. "I think there's
Krautter to check on the size jack' Adams and gasoline Industry officials no denying that we 'i'e looking at a
needed and authorized him to make appear at odds about how serious the very tight situation, and I don't see
nation's gasoline supply squeeze will
·the purchase.
\\hat's going to change ·that," said ·
The meeting wa's opened by prayer be this summer.
Murphy.
Adams said Monday thai the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - More ·which was sought by the Ohio Rail $7.5lnillion each, \\ill have seven 16- by Mayor Andrews. Attending were current
"The situation is probably not going
long lines at California gas
than' $1.1 million has been approved . Transportation Authority.
bed cottages and facilities ,for sport Mayor Andrews, Jane Walton, Clerk, stations are a harbinger of' things to to get any better during the summer
for rehabllitative work on the state's The contract, Phase II of tiM; services, therapy and administration, Wehrung, Brown, Young, Karr and come in many parts of the nation in than it already Is," said Carl
Baronick, council members, Chief
Woodside Receiving ·:ospltal in authority's proposal to link major department officials said.
Meyerdirk, a spokesman for Standard
the next fe~ months.
Webster and Krautter.
Oil
Co. of Indiana, which markets
Y~~~q~stown.
Ohio cities with passenger trains that
In &lt;~!her business, the board:
But industry officials said that while
The
seven-member
state travel up to 110 mph, covers
Amoco
gasoline. "Conceivably, It
-Voted down 3-4 a mental health
supplies of gasoline are tight and may
Controlllns
Board
agreed preliminary engineering, route department request · to transfer $2.3
could
get
worse."
·
gel tighter, the lilies in California are
Wlaillmously Monday to release the location and alternative methods of mi!Uon from a contruction project at
The
shortage
of
crude
oil brought on
unique to that state.
funds as requested by the Department financing. Cost of the entire rail Columbus State Institute to one at
by
the
Iranian
revolution
Is one of the
"You see a picture In your morning
of Mental Health and Mental system is estimated at $3 billion lo$6 Gallipolis State Institute . Both
most
important
factors
In the supply
ne11spaper of long lines, and the first situation. Iran is now producing only
Retardation.
billion and coUld be completed in the projects . involve living quarters for
thing
you think is, 'I've got to fill up about two-thirds as much oil as It did ·
Department officials said the 1980s.
·
patients, but department officals said
this
morning,,"'
said Edward Murphy, before the revolution .
money will be used to remodel the
Some $445,000 for architectural fees Gallipolis is further along_ and needed
director
of
statistics
for
facility and bring it up to new on projects at the ' Clermont County the funds this fiscal year.
Other' oil-producing nations which
the
American Petroleum In- temporarily
stepped up production to
standards.
Developmental Center at Batavia and
- Approved the releas~ of $114,338
stihite, an industry group. "H a lot of fill the gap left by Iran have now cut
The board also approved 6-1 a the Butler C_ounty Developmental . £or construction cif a swine finishing
Point .Pleasant Mayor John· C. people do that, you 've got problems." back' in ' an attempt to keep world
$577,812 contract for more advanced Center at Fairfield \\ere also barn at Apple Creek Stale Farm in
According to Murphy, this sort o£
Musgrave
said Monday he hils been
work on the proposed high-8peed approved by the board.
Wayne County. The bam will be used advised by the West Virginia panic buying Is causing problems in supply tight and prices high. As a
intercity railroad system in Ohio.
Netzley also .... as the only member to fatten s\\ine for market.
result, the world supply of crude oil is
Department of Highways that deck California. While other states have about 90 percent of previous levels,
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura, voting against each of those requests
-Voted 3-4 against approving an
had some problems with gasoline and U.S. supply Is running at similar
by the Department of Mental Health $8,500 Department of Natural replacement work on the Shadle supply,
cast tbe dissenting vote against a
they have not been as s~vere
Bridge has been postponed
month contract with Dalton-Da1ton &amp; and Mental Retardation.
levels.
Resources subcontract with Ohio indefinitely .
as
in
California.
Newport consultants of Cleveland,
BOth centers. which will cost ahout State University to develop harvest
In addition, the Department of
Adams, speaking in Washington at a Energy
DOH Public Information Officer
has asked refineries to
management recommendations for Pat Galligher had told the media only meeting of the Society of American
emphasize
production of heating oil at
Muskingum River mussels, or fresh Friday thaI the new target date for Business and Economic Writers, told
water clams. The money would have beginning the deck work was May 15, a California reporter asking abOut the the expense of gasoline production s0
that next winter's heating oil supply
been the state's portion of the $25,000
Originally, the project had been situatien there, "Your sumriler's ' a "ill not· be affected by further
project , with the federal government scheduled to begin May 1.
little early.
Area . resi4ents were reminded
This year's disaster, conducted paying the rest. .
"Throughout the nation this will disruptions in the supply of crude oil.
Musgrave
said
he
was
informed
by
Refiners also have found
today that the Seventh Annual Mock during Jo1atlonal Hospital Week, wlll
the DOH of the ne1A delay when he occur," he said. He added, however, themselves unable to produce enough
Disaster, conducted in Meigs, Gallia consist of three simultaneous school
contacted
the
• Charleston that not all areas "ill have shortages' unleaded gasoline to meet demand.
arid Mason counties Involving three bus accidents, one ir) each county,
TAKEN TO COLUMBUS
and that supply problems will vary.
separate hospitals will occur Thurs- near the local hospitaL 'i'he drill is ' Meigs County Sheriff James J. headquarters to discuss the problems "There may be areas where no Because of anti-pollution laws;
.the
current
state
of
the
span
is
causirig
automobiles built in the last few years
day at 3 p.m.
being handled this way in the interest Proffitt reports Charles E. "Doodles"
area
mot
or
isis
.
use unleaded gasoHne, which now
The Holzer Medical Center in Gallia of cost containment and fuel economy. McGrath, Rt. 1, Rutland, was taken
"I was told the n.m delay is
makes up about 40 percent of the
County, Pleasant Valley Hospital in In past years one huge similated Monday to the Ohio Medical and
market. The oil companies say they
Mason County a~d Veterans catastrophe with emergency vehicles Reception Center at Columbus to resulting from the fact that steel
iS not complete and it Is
do not have enough refining capacity
Memorial Hospital in Meigs County traveling to all three places has oc- begin a six months to five year sen- fabrication
SQUAD
RUNS
have participated in this coordinated curred. This year, the participants tence for the breaking and entering of not kno11n at this time \\'hen it will be
The Middleport Emergency Squad to keep up wlth demand for unleaded.
ready,"
Musgrave.said
.
trilateral exercise for the past seven will remain within theh' Immediate · Rodney Walker's property last
\\as called to Zuspan Hollow Road at
years.
vicinity. : ·
.
December.
B:!Sp.m. Monday fer Edna J. Madden
. .
SQUAD CALLED
These exercises not only test .the . McGrath was arrested il) DecemT!Us event Is 1111ique because hun\\ho "as taken to Holzer Medical
Th" Pomeroy Emergency Squad Center. At 3:27p.m. the squad also
dreds, of people including various disaster pfans of the agencies active bcr and entered a guilty plea on the
WARNING ISSUED TODAY
answered
a call to Laurel Cliff al 2:34 ans11ered a call to tlie Wahama. High
state, county, municipal arid local in each of the three counties, but also Bill of Information.
Syracuse Mayor Eber Pickens
On AR!'il 30, he appeared again p.m. Monday for Mrs. Robert Moore School\\ here a bus driver had become announced today thal residents of tbe
agencies from three counties and two the specific emergency plans of th e
before Common Pleas Judge John C. who \\as taken to Holzer Medical ill. The driver was taken to Pleasant village must keep their dogs tied, if
states are involved in the planring, three hospitals 11\volveu.
Center.
Bacon
and was sentenced.
Valley Hospital by the squad.
·executiOn, and critique of the drill.
not, they "ill prosecuted, he w-arned.
BY KATIE CROW
calls as did Baronlck.
street maintenance workers for
Wehrung, Monday night, suggested
Pomeroy village were to begin that when people swe-ep the sidewalks
repairing potholes today according to they should pick up the debriS rather
an announcement Monday night by than 'sweep it onto the streets·. He
Mayor Glarence Andrews.
.
added that the villilge is wasting its
Mayor Andrews reported the street time in trying- to clean the streets
compactor had arrived and street when debris is swept back on the
department employees will begin streets.
filling the pOtholes on Mulberry Ave.,
Wehrung also suggested that
today.
persons owning vacant lots and
Council allocated $5,000 for street unoccupied houses allowing weeds to
repair at an earlier meeting. All grow be cited to court.
potl)oles in the viJiage are· to be
Harold Bro\\n, councilman, again
repaired it was indicated.
to~ched upon the issue of trucks
At the last council meeting Larry traveling through main street that In
Wehrung, councilman, suggested that his opinion are overloaded. Brown
$19,000 council had to match in grant noted "We want to take care of the
money fer the mini-park be· used for streets, ooce they are paved, and in
the streets. Betty Baronick, council order to do this, we must be careful of
member, also agreed that streets had the tohnage traveling on the streets" .
top priority. It was suggested that
Chief of Police Jed Webster
council get residents' opinions on reported he had contacted· Jack
whether they wanted the park or Carsey of Landmark in regard to
better streets.
"eighing trucks on the scales at
At last night's meeting, Wehrung Landmark. Carsey informed Webster
reported 42 persons had told him that that the village would be responsible
they wanted the. streets repaired and · for any damages to the scales or any
no one supported the park. Mayor injuries that might be sustained.
Andrews had eight response~ for Webster · also reported the Ohio
streeet repair, not counting phone State Patrol \\ill not make arrests

Secretary Adams·,
officials at odds

GSI. .c onstruction.request rejected

Bridge work
po~tponed

indefinitely

Mock disaster set Thursday

i Askme.. _
I offer • toto! progrorlno help
p~tect your family's w~y of living
alid build financial security for yourl

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

l2-

SEEK I.JCENSES
Marriage licenses were Issued to
J~ffrey ~eni ~\hank, 24, Pomeroy and
Wanda Fay. Wigal, 21, Middleport;
Donald Richard .Ta)llor, 45,
Middleport, a_
nd Diana Susan Taylor,
38, Middleport.

I

entine

National Hospital Week observance set

Area ·deaths

ON THE
HIGHEST
AUTHORITY. • •

.

'

·
·
.
omia Gov. Edmund G. Brown, unimagined generation that will pay power would be an Issue 1'in that
addressing the crowd, called for "a the price of the {oily of this decade," campaign.
new politics -a politics of the future
Brown, .a potential rival of Carter's
Nader said that when Carter ran for
_ a politics that represents the f the 1980 Dem
.
unborn, the undreamed of, the or . ti
ld ocratic presidential office he had once told a crowd, "U I
nomma on, to reporters nuclear ever betray you I want you 'to come
and take me out of the White HoUle."
"When he appointed James
Schlesinger as his energy-adviser, lie
Jessica Murray, Aric Patterson,
betrayed us all," Nader said.
·
Marton .Price, Theodore Radcliff,
Ms. Abzug .said people in power ar:e
Earl Roberts, Beverly Rose,
deceiving the COWJtry.
PAUL L.MCDANIEL
Charlotte ThollUI.!, Bethany Tucker,
H.HALLCHAPMAN
Shaking her ~lst, Ms. Abz!lg
P~ul Leonard McDaniel, · Sr., 48, shouted, "No more nukes! For the
Brenda Ward, Billy Williams.
H. Hall Chapman, 78, Coolville, died
llirtlll, May 5
Saturday morning at Hlllview Fourth St., Middleport, died Sunday sake of our Hvesl Fer the sake of our
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Bowers, son, Retirement Center, Portsmouth, at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
children! For the sake of our future!
Mr.McDaniel was born March 9 No more nukes!"
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald following a brief illness.
. ·
Chovnaec,11011, R8venawood; Mr. and
Mr. Chapman was ba'n at Spencer, 1931 in Meigs Cou'bty, a son of the lat~
In the auillence, Tom l.owderbaugb,
Mrs. Stanley Miler, '11011, Crown City; W.Va., the son of the late F. Wirt and George and Artie Virginia Bartrum 35, of Washington, wearing a lieard
McDaniel. He was also preceded in and blue jeans, said the day reminded
Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Murdoch, son, Columbia Gaston Chapman.
death
by a brother, Ernie.
Whitfield, W. Va.
He was also preceded in death by two
him of demonstrations he bad
Surviving
are his wife, Margaret participated in against tne Vietnam
brothers and three sisters.
Mary • Dllciau'les
Clare Beyerly, Edward Blake, Ad·
Mr. Capman was a member Of the Louise Barr McDaniel; a daughter War.
die Canterbury, EsSie Connley, Mrs. Coolville. 'United Methodist Church, and son-in-law, Joyce Louise and'
"I'm one of the senior cltlzenl ·
Michael Cremeens arid son, Mrs. past lliiiSier and 50 y,e ar member of David JaCks, Middleport; a son and here," he said.
Leonard Foster and daughter, Anita Coolville Lodge 337, F&amp;AM, past daughter-in-law, Paul L. Jr. and
Marching to the Capitol, the crowd
Hill, Barbara Hively, Jeremy Lit- commander of Athens Commandery, Dixie McDaniel, Vinton;' · two chanted, "Two, four,_ six, eight;. we
chfield, lOngley Meyer, Jr., Jeffrey 'Knight Templer, ,Athens Council grandsons and tw'o granddaughters; don't want to radiate" and "no more
Moaa, Naomi Neville, Marvin Royal Select Masters, Athena Chapter four sisters, Mrs. Frank (Mary), Harrlsburgs -shut 'em aD down ;, an
Radabough, George Robinson, Lor- Royal Arch Masons, Alladin Temple Hawley, Columbus; Mrs. Jim (Wanda' alljlllion to the · reactor !lccldent at
raine Sanders, Ray Smltl!, Tina of the Shrine of Columbus, · past June) Tolle, Leesburg; Mrs. Larry Three Mile Island.
.
White.
president of Athens Shrine Club, (Wiln)a) Wyman, Kyger, and Mrs.
Some held up red signs in the shape
BlrtllaMay •
' former director of Tri-County · Bank William (Martha) Frye, Michigan; of stop signs that simply said "stop."
Mr. and Mrs. James Herald, son, . Coolville, arid .the Athens County ·feur brothers, Clarence, Middleport;
. Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Robin- Savings and Loan Association, former Artlrur and Jerry, both of Greenfield,
One person injured
son, daughter, Pedro; Mr. and Mrs. member of Carthage-Troy Board of and Robert, Crystal Lake, D).
Mr. McDaniel was an Army veteran
Howard Sharp, daughter, Ironton.
Education and served on the board of
public affairs, Coolville. He was a of the Korean War. He received the 1 Two acclden!J were lnveatigated
prominent Coolville merchant over 50 Purple Heart, the Medal Award in the early Saturday by the Gallia-Melga
·
years and was Interested In providing Japanese . Clasp, the Koren service Post, Highway Patrol.
Bronze
Star
and
the
combat
infantry
One
person
claimed
Injury
following
improvement for CoolvillP
Chapman Ia survived by his wife, badge. He also served in the army of a two-vehicle mishap on U.S. 35, nineMone'Y
~ctions
filed
r
~ _,
He was formerly tenths of a mile east of SR 325, at 7:04
Helen, a resident of Arcadia Nursing occupation.
employed
as
a
custodian
in the Meigs a.m.
·
Home,
Coolville;
a
son,
Ronald
F.
Two suits for money have been filed
Local
School
District.
·
Officers
report that a.n east bound
Chapman,
Portsmouth;
a
daughter,
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Funeral services will be held at 1 auto operated by ·Perry Harless, 211,
Mrs. Dan (Barbara) Budd,Big
Court.
Elkhart, Ind., had slowed in traffic 111
Charles H. Morrison and Sara Ann Piney,Wyoming; a brother ,Lester, p.m. TueS&lt;!ay at the Rawlings-O&gt;ats 35.
.
Funeral
Home
with
the
Rev.
O'Dell
Morrison, Mineral Wells, W. Va.,flled Dunedln,Fia.; two sisters, Laura
Manley
officiating.
Burial
will
be
in
A
second.
east
bound vehicle driven
Goodwin
of
Brldgeport,W.Va.,Majel
suit In the amount of $21,829.84 against
Meigs
Memory
Garden.
Graveside
by
Charles
E.
Masters,
19, Galllpolia, ·
Kiracofe
,
Fredrickstown,
Ohio
and
Frank G. Weaver and Nancy L.
will
be
conducted
by
Feeneyrites
was
unable
to
stop
ani!
struck the
six
srandchlldren.
Weaver, Mineral Wells, W. Va.,
Funeral services will be held Bennett Post 128, American Legion. Harleas auto In the rear.
Michael L. Cooley, Waverly, w. va,,
A passenger in the Harless vehlcle,
and George Collins as treasurer for Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White Friends may call at the funeral home
Lisa Preddy, 32; Elkhart, Ind.,
amount due on a promissory note. · Funeral Home in Coolville with the any~e ..
claimed Injury but was not
Richard Stewart, Rt. 1, Cheshire Rev. Timothy Snyder officiating.
CHARLF3 KLEIN
Burial
will
be
in
Coolville
Cemetery.
and the State Automobile Mutual
·CharlesHeiU'Y Klein, Sr., born Nov. Immediately treated.
Both vehicles incurred · moderate
Friends
may
call
at
the
funeral
home
Insurance Co., Columbus, me&lt;i suit In
25, 1917, died Saturday at his home at
damage.
Masters was cited on a
at
anytime.,
Masonic
rlgh!J
will
be
the amount of $1,132.90 against Rex
158 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
charge
of
failure to maintain an
Douglas Hurley, Rt. 1, Cheshire, and cooducted by Coolville Lodge this
He was married to the former
Kenneth Raban, Huntington, for evening at 7::,0 p.m.
VU'gie Mae Russell who survives · aSsured clear distance.
The patrol investigated a twodamages. to plaintiff's house 'as the
along with eight sons; Gene, Akron;
OPENING
ROUND
SLATED
,
vehicle
colllslm on CR 25, ·at the
result of an accident on Dec. 15, 1977.
Law-rence, Minersville; Charles, Jr.,
The
Opening·
women's
day
of
the
junction
of Sander's, Diive, at ~:40
'Nancy L. Reed, Pomeroy, and
Pomeroy; Bill, Chicago, DI.; !)avid,
·a.m.
seasm
of
the
Pomeroy
Golf
Course
David F. Reed, Pomeroy, flied for
Middleport; Paul, Fort Leonard,Mo.,
Officers report that an auto
dissolution of marriage and Arlene will be held Tuesday starting at 9:30 and Kenny and Tonuny, both of
Joy Hayne, Millheim, Pa., flied for a.m. and will be held each Tuesday Pomeroy; seven daughters, Mrs. operated by Mark New, 19, GaWpolla,
suppcrt against Michael S. Layne, throughout the seasoo.
Gertrude Wise, Mrs. Mary Pullins, pulled fr&lt;m Sander's Dr. into the path
The Ladies Golf Assn. met recently Middleport; Mrs. Edna Buchanan, of a . north bound vehicle driven by
Chester.
and elected officers who are Margaret Chester; Miss - Donna Klein, Robert Sanders, 211, Galllpolia.
Follrod, presidcent; Pearl Welker, Pomeroy; . Mrs. Darlene· Boyd,
There was moderate damage to
vice president; June Freed, Parkersburg, W.Va., and Miss Connie both vehicles. New wu cited on a
secretary-treasurer, and Betty Fultz, Klein and Miss Katie Klein, both of charge ol failure to yield.
handicap chairman.
Pomeroy. Also surviving are 31 .
grandchildren, several nieces and .
. nephews, a sister, Hana Jane Klein,
Masslevllle, and a brother, Grover
MEET WEDNESDAY
Clifford
Klein, Pomeroy.
The Past Councilors Club of
Preceding
him In deat)l were his
&lt;l!estewr CouncU 323, DAR, will meet
mother,
Myrtle
Mae Klein; his father,
Wednesday; May 9, at the home of
Mary K. Holter, Bashan, at 8:30p.m. William Klein; two daughters, Hana
Jane Klein· and Hazel Mae Klein, . a
Co-hostess Is Thelma White.
·
grandson, Kenny Ray Klein; four
·
sisters,
Gertrude Batman, Lizzie
FREE PRESSURE CHECK
·
Sarvers,
Kaley
Klein and Leona Klein
IALI
There will be a free blood.preasure
arid
two
brothers,
William
(Bill)
C.mp
..tt With
clinic at senior citizens hall 111'
Tools.
Harrisonville Tuesday from 11 a.m. to Leonard Klein and Johnny Klein . .
Mr. Klein worked all of his life as a
,._._AoR~
2 p.m.
At II Cloono"
coal miner in the Meigs County area.
He has been retired for several years
due to ill health. He was amember of · tEAIItC......mUSTEES MEET TUESDAY
the Fraternal Order of Eagles in
The Chester Township Trustees will Pomeroy,
Aerie 2171.
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the town
Services
will be held at 3 p.m.
hall.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Edison Weaver
officiating.
Burial will be in Beech
BOOSTERS MEETING TONIGHT
The ,b elt way to care for
Grove
Cemtery.
Music will be
The Eastern Athletic Boooters wiU
Hoo~r Convertablt quner.
presented
by
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Henry
meet this evening at 8:30 p.m. at the· Eblin, Jr., and daughter, Drema,
hlgli school.

HOSPITAL NEWS

MarY

'•

Jane Fmda, Benjamin s ck Bella
Abzug and Barry Cpoomm' oner
expressed their dismay with
America's growing dependence on
nuclear..aenerated electricity
"
·

I

Just received a big shipment area rugs - Ill sizes _
Plus runners - bath roam r!Jgs- bath sets. EKcellent Gift
for Your Mom. .
.
·
s

. HOME, FURNISHINGS - 1ST R.OOR
.

ELBERFEI.DS IN POMEROY .

~

.l

I

~

~~

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