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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Punwroy, 0 .. Thu1·s&lt;la)'. M a r · - - - - - , ; ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

~l~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy.

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$1,492,058 appropriation measure approved

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••••

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Eastern's Local Board of Education has approved
permanent appropriations for 1979 totaling $1 ,492,058.
According to figures r eleased by the district 's boa rd clerk •
Eloise Boston , the budget Is as follows :
Instruction, $542,684 ; specia l educ a tion, $66,588 :
vocational instruction , $74,192; support services, $260:
guidance services , $19 ,449 ; health services, $10 ,033 .
psychological service, $750; support service inst ructiona l
staff , $8 ,070 ; educational m e di a, $19, 472 ; gener al
administration, $5,045; executive administrative services,
$36,295 ; other sypport services , general administration
$16,020; support services, school administration, $47,235;
support services business, $28,579 ; operati ons a nd
maintenance, · $123,462.39; transportation, $162,818 ; food
services (retirement, workmen's comp.), $4,510; staff
services, $500; extra curricular activities , $10,020; debt
services, $102,476.20; non-program charges, $18 ,000 ; transfer s,
$10,000 and other function s, $100. Grand total Sl ,311.5f·H.59.

4 BIG DAYS

'

FRIDAY
MARCH 30

SATURDAY
MARCH 31

I

TUESDAY
APRIL 3

MONDAY
APRIL 2

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
WOMEN'S

SPRING COAT SALE
EVER GRATEFUL - Mrs. Richard (Dot) Neutzling,
Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy, is ever grateful to the Meigs Unit
•of the American Cancer Society. In Februar-y of 1976, Dot
took advantage of a cancer clinic, sponsored by the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer Society, for a routine
checkup. The attending physician, Dr. Roger Daniels,
upon exannination , found a lump in her breast. The clinic
immediately made an appointment for her with a surgeon
at Holzer Medical Center. In March of 1976, she underwent
a radical mastectomy. After three years she is doing very
well b\lt goes regularly for check~~ps . Dot stated "I will be
eternally grateful to the Ainerican Cancer Society for the
care and concern given to me . When a volunteer knocks at
your door give till it hurts in order that the dreaded
disease of cancer can be cured," Dot commented . She
added "If they could do for cancer what was done for polio
it would be a prayer answ~red . " Dot's husband lost his life
to the dreaded disease on Oct. 13, 1978. Her brother~n-law,
the late Dan Thompson, also died of cancer. There are not
eno"&amp;h words for Dot to express her gratitude to !lie
American.Cancer Society other than her sincere thanks.
. The cancer crusade will be held Apr. I through Apr. IS at
which time volunteers throughout the county will knock on
your door . Dot asks "please give - so others may be

If you're shopping for a coat, th is
season offers a great variety of styles ...

JUNIOR SLACKS -

In neck sizes 141f2 through 17,

terns. Our entire stock Included
Junior sizes 3-13-14
Missy sizes6-20
Half sizes 14h-24'12

Reg. $40.00 •••••••••••• Sale $35.99
Reg. $52.00 ........... Sale $45 .99
Reg . $64.00 ............ Sale 556.99
Reg. $76 .00 ............ Sale S66.99
Reg . S86.oo ............ Sale $75.99

REG. '11.00 ....................... SALE '9.35'

for this sale.
Men's $7.95 Drt51 Shirts

REG. '13.00 ...................... SALE '11.05
REG. '16.00....................... SALE '1160
REG. '22.00....................... SALE '18.70

Men's SlO.OO Dress Shirts

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE
KNIT
SHIRTS
'
AND TANK TOPS

cured ."

A tremendous selection of
new spring and summer
styles. sizes 8 through 20.

Meshes.

terry

polyester-cotton

cloth,

blends.

/

Boys $3.95
Boys $4.95
Boys $6.95
BoysS8.9S

Shirts ........................... $3 ..49
Shirts ••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.29
Shirts ••.••••••••••••••••••••••• 6.09
Shirts ••••••• , •.• ••••••••••••••• $7.79

'6.10
'8.50

•11.00

Men's 515.00 Dress Shifts

•

LimE GIRLS

Easter Dresses
Dressing up is always a treat ...

prints, lacies . Sizes 2-4, 4-6X, 7-14.

Reg. ss.oo.............. Sale $4.55
Reg. sa.oo ............. Sale $7.25
Reg.SII.OO . ......... Sale$9.95
Reg . $14.00 .......... Sale $12.75
Reg. 517 .oo ........... Sale $15.45

'7.99 FUU. BED SIZE!!!~.t..~~.!i.'.t.~!..S4.00
'5.99 lWIN Bm SIZ£~!~~!.?~..'!!!~!.'3.00
'5.99 PR. PILLOW CASES......... -~~:. '3.00

END OF THE MONTH SALE

30% OFF SALE

Buy the jackets you need now and
save. Ovr entire stock on sa le in

MEN'S 3 PIECE
VESTED SUITS

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES ·

sizes small (34-36), medium (38 40), large (42-44). and extra large
(46-48) .

Solid color-s and neat patterns.
Sizes 36 to 46 In regulars and
longs, good selection .of styles.

BUY YOUR CUSTOM MADE DRAPES

'13.95 Jackets ........112.27

NOW AND SAVE 30 PER CENT

15.95 Jackets .. ~ ..... '14.07
119.95 Jackets. ........'17.57
'24.95 ·Jac~ ........ '21.97

Our Decorator Industries and Corlley
drapes. Big selection of fabrics, colors,
bring in your measurements and see how
much you'll save.
'

1

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) The Carter administration
deliberately and grossly
exaggerated the effect of the
Iranian oil cut-off on the
United States, a new
congressional study contends .
Energy Secretary James
R. Schlesinger was expected
to be questioned today on
allegations that oil imports
actually
increased
in
February
despite
administration claims of a
SOO,OOO barrel-a--lla y shortage reflecting the Iranian
cutoff.
An aide, Jim Bishop, said
Schlesinger was prepared to
deny the study's conclusions
in his testimony before the
House energy and power
subcommittee.
Bishop said the information
obtained by the committee is
· suspect and disputed the
increase in imports claimed
by the report. "I can assure ·
you this will be clarified, " he
said.
The study by the subcommittee staff asserts: " U.
S. imports during the month
of February surged by I
million barrels per day."
The report said it based its
conclusions on oil exportimport information recently
compiled by the Paris-based
International Energy
Agency.
Rep. Albert Gore, D-Tenn.,
a subcommittee m ember,
charged that Schlesinger's
agency kept the alleged incr'e ase in import s secret

when the styles are as pretty and
nice as these! Select tiers, floral

.

'89.95 SUITS ....'JAlE '77.35
'99.95 SUITS ......SAI.£ SBSJ5

'

OPEN HOUSE OBSERVED - Approximately 150
persons attended the open house held at Meigs Equipment
Co., Monday. Pictured with one of several tractors that
was on display are Mark Smith, manager and' Mrs. Harold
(Evelyn) Sniith , bookkeeper. Door prizes were awarded
and refreshments served.

SPECIAL GROUP

SEWING TRIMS
&amp; RIBBON

ANGEL TREADS
SLIPPERS
S-M-l-XL
REG. '4.00 ......... ;•.· .. ·.. ·.. •........ SALE '2.79
REG. '4.50 .............................. SALE '3.19
REG. 15.00....... -..... ·....... -.. -...... · SALE '3.49
REG. 15.50 ...................... · -..... SALE 13.85
REG. '6.0().. ....................... ~..... SALE 14.19
REG. '7 .00.............................. SALE '4.89
LimE BOYS'

You can now put aside part of your
Income tax-free .. .. and ,the Interest
It earns Is tax-free until you cash In
at retirement. Ask about our
special RETIREMENT PLANS for
Individuals and self-employed
persons .

Two and three piece suits in
sizes 2T-4T and 4 to 7.

REG. '15.00 ........ SALE 113.88
REG. 18.00 ......... SALE 15.88
1

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REG. '21.00......... SALE 118.88
REG. 128.00 ......,.... SAlE 124.88
WOMEN'S
Polyester -cotton blends, sheers,
.

'

Sale $6.29

BANK
Racine, Ohio

TAPE SALE

Nice group

Special 2-day sale of 8-track and cassette
tapes. Nice selection of all the popular
slyles of music.

REG. '3.79.......................... SALE '2.95
REG. '5.79 ......................... SALE '4.65

•
REG. '7.79 ... ;.................·..... SALE '6.25
REG•.'10.79......................... SALE '8.65

Easter

candy this

year.

and

Community Club Award t,OOO bonus point• for each

Reg. $20.00 Sale 517

•

Brach ' s,

I

summer

Reg. $6.00

SALE •4.19
Reg.

sa.oo
SALE '5.59

•

Reg. $11.00

SALE '7.69
Reg. $16.00

SALE '11.19

MEN'S
FASHION JEANS
Waist sizes 28 lo 42, lengths 30 lhru
36. Blue denims, twills, hopsackings.
Our entire stock of denim&amp; and other
fashion Jeans Included for this sale.

baskets , jelly beans. Fonny
Farmer,
Palmer .

of

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

chicks, bunnies, eggs, filled

Reg. $15.00 ~ Sale

it

was

em-

Contributing charges filed

weight gowns, robes and
paJamas. Sizes S-M-L.

.

You 'll like our fine selection of

Reg. 512.00 Sale

" because

barrassing to administration
policy ."
The staff report did not
dispute the reality of the
three -month
Iranian

Ungerie Special

EASTER CANDY

Peoplf_!

HOME NATIONAL

MUSIC DIPT.

EACH •1.00
PURCHASE

Reg . $9 .00

RACINE

9'Xl2'.......................... ONLY '69.00
12'112'......................... ONLY '89.00
12'115~ ....................... ONLY '109.00
12'118~ ... .. ... .. .. ... ... ... .. ONLY .

1,000 BONUS
POINTS FOR

polyester dressy styles. Sizes 3246.

Meigs County

Our warehouse has just received another
shipment of popular mill end carpets. Hurry
in while stock is good .

from Now To laster .

Spring Blouses
Reg. $7 .oo

MILL END CARPETS.

production halt . But it
claimed the cutoff had ·a
minimal impact on U. S.
supplies - at least in
February.
" Claims of a shortfall have
been used to justify ha rdships
for the American consumer
in the form of higher prices as
well as a reduction of
gasoline supplies," the report
said .
In other energy deyelopments :
- Sen. Abraham Ribicoff,
D-Conn., introduced a bill
Thursday that would allow
users of home-heating oil a
$125 a year tax credit if
Carter removes oil price
controls. Ribicoff said that
with deregulation, heating-oil
prices which now average 60
to 64 cents a ga lloq could soar
to 80 cents a gallon by next
,
year.
- In New York, Phillips
Petroleum Co. and other oil
industry sources confirmed
that Nigeria has imposed -a
$4-a-barrel surcharge on top
of the regular base price of
$14.54 a barrel set by the
Organization of Petrolewn
Exporting Countries. Several
other OPEC countries including Kuwait. Libya and
Algeria - a lread y were
attaching a s urcha rge to their
oil. A general round of high
surcharges could boost U. S.
gasoline prices by as m uch as
7 cents a gallon.
Weldon V. Barton,
director of the Agriculture
Depa rtment's energy offi ce,
told a House subcommittee
Thurs da y
any
federal
gasoline rationing plan would
insure that farmers get fuel
a lloca tion s "suffi cient to
meet lull food and fib er
production goals approved by
the president. "

I , ..

EASTER SUITS

Individual
Retirement
Account

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

A BIG SELEcnON, PA~RNS
AND COLORS.
USUAllY 35c YD.

Sl.OO purchase.

Men's '11.95 Jeans:...... '10.39
Men's 113.95 Jeans ....... '12.19
Men's t14.95 Jeans ....... '12.99
Men's 116.95 Jeans ...... .

.OPEN SATURDAY, MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pome

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Oil cutoff
distorted

'

Men's SlJ.OO_j)ress Shirts

Attractive butterfly patterns on light
background, discontinued pattern . While
they last ..

NO. 244

The boar d approved incr easin g t.he price of an extra one-

hal f pint of 1nilk to 15 cents.
.
. .
Supt. Cla rk l.ee s was a uUwrized to s ubmit an a pphcatton
to the State Department of EdUcation requesting 60 percent
reimbursement on the purchase of typewriters for t he business
·
department.
Lees explai ned that if the st ate appro vet! some amoWJt for
future expenditures lite local boar d could participate at the
rate of 40 percent depend ing upon the fin a ncial condition of the
school at the time.
Christy Caldwe ll was officihlly approved as a remedial
reading teacher fur the remainder of the school year. She
replaces Kim Monague who resigned last montl1. Approval fo r
home instr uction· for Tra cy Hein, a high school student, was
approved .

15 CENTS

FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1979

.

'9AO

NO IRON
MUSLIN SHIRTS

VOL NO. XXIX

Carol Crow, business ofFi ce education t eacher. was l!iven a
one year maternit y leave for the J97!hl0 sc h rol year.

enttne

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(USPS 145-960)

Men's Sll.OO Dre~Sh1rts

CLOSEOUT SALI

MEN'S SUMMER WEIGHT

JACKETS

at y

solid colors, while, fancy pal-

$6 ,0()(J will be neetled to take care of these projects .
lluk c Pu ll ins gave a report on buildings and grounds and
Arch ltose , tr ans portation coor dinator discussed bus routes.
He as ketl board approval to submit necessary applications for
purchase of new school buses for the next school year . The
board approved .
The board , at the request of Mike Will , head teacher at
0 1este r, agreed to pay $1 50 on the purchase of new curtain at
the school.
SEt: K NEGOTIATIO NS
Tom Gumpf , head tea cher a t Tuppers Plains , requested
that the board beg in negot iations with the Easter n Local
Teachers Assn .
· ·
A date of AprillO wa s set for the meeting .
J a mes Huff, district coordinator of federal programs,
rece ived a pproval from th e board to submit an application for
renewa l of the district remedial reading, Title I progr am for
the next yea r.

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MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
DRESS SHIRTS

3 TO 18

Classic reefers, wraps, tents, and more.
See our selection first and save. ·

ln addition , th• budget contains $42,825 in · bond
r etirement ; $98,600 for the IWlchroom, $20,010 . ~7 for Tille I :
$5.:!63.16 for uniform services ; $4,84J .7! in Title IV and DPPF .
$8,1157.:17. Tota l all funds, $1 ,492,05.8.60.
lt was reported the budget reflects only the necessary
fund s needed to operate the distr ict. No extra money with t he
exception or the usual increment in&lt;.:reases for instr uctors .
Mary Hose discussed t he fina nc ial status of the cafeter ia ,
oper ations and J ohn Riebel discussed with the board t he
fa ilure to employ a boys track coach . He was a dvised tha t no
one on the staff is inter e sted , but that the board will keep
tr ying to fill the position .
The board met with County Supt. Robert Bo wen to discuss
personne l matters in executi ve discussion .
BUILDING PROBLEMS
Later . the board disc ussed the problem of completing
improvem ent to t he sewage treatment plants of the Tuppers
Pla ins School and Eastern High School. It w~1 c;: PSti fTI ~ t Pri thRt

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

STYLED SLACKS IN COOL SPRING COLORS

I.

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Linda Wilkinson , 30 ,
Mechanic St., Pomeroy, was
arrested Wednesday on a
warrant filed by Cynthia Mill
of the Meigs Co unty
Childrens Services on
charges of contributing to the
neglect and unruliness of her
three children, according to
Meigs County Juve nile Of.
ficer Carl Hysell.
Mrs. Wilkinson appea red in
Meigs County Juvenile Court
before Judge Robert E . Buck
on Thursday and was sentenced to six months in county jail with five months of the
sentence s uspended and'
placed on six months
probation .
The charges reportedly
stem from Mrs. Wilkinson's
failure to send her 13-year-old
son to school and to provide
t:1e necessary needs for her
children.
'
At present, the children are
in temporary ca re of the
Childrens Services and
disposition on neglect and
dependency of these child ren
will be heard by Judge Buck
within IS days.
Investigating the case wer!!
Cynthia Mills and Mary Birchfield of Childrens Services .
Sheriff's Investigiltor r.ary
Wolfe, Attendance Officer
Otis Knopp and Hysell .
I

In another juvenile matter,
Wednesday, a 17-year-old girl
was picked up at a local lJw
by Pomeroy Police Officer s
Henry Werry and Russell
Eshelman. The youth wa s
reportedly from Canton and
without supervision or attending school. The girl was
held in detention overnight
and returned to Canton Thursday.

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CHECK FACILITIES - Dr. Lewis Telle and Scott Luca s, administ rator of Ve ter ans
Memorial Hospita l, check out t11e emergency room fa cilities at the local hospita l which
Monday will begin providing a 24-hour, seven day a week physician service.

Emergency physician
•
service now offered
E ffective Monday, 24 hour
emergency physicia n service
will be available at Veter ans
Mem oria l Ho spita l. Admini str ator Sc ott Lucas
announced today.
" This 24 hour ser vice is
long overdue and t he people
of Meigs County are entitled
to it. It has been a n age old
complaint from our people
that ther e a rc not doctors
her e aroun d th e c lock .
Finally we will tr y to offer
this service, " Luca s sa id.
The loca l h os pita l ha s
contracted
with
th e
Ph ys ic ia n s
P l a ce m e nt
Group , Columbus, for a fourmonth period. The Group will
provide doctors for the ni ght
em er ge ncy duties a t t he
hospital.
This will give the local
hospital around the clock
servi ce , plu s r eli e ve th e
burden on local doctor s.
The only loca l doctors who
will be filling the nig ht time
em er gency slots arc those
register ed for servi ce with
th e placement group .
Th e r eg ular em er ge ncy

entrance at the hospital will
be used for the new service .
All equipment necessary to
is
ha nd le em er gencies
available to a ph y si~ i a n ami
two nurses .
A four-ued facility has also

Minor mishap
investigated

been established .
It is stressed t hat the
situa tion need not be a "t rue
em er gency situation" . This
means people who a rc ill or
ha ve had some sort of a
·minor accident can visit the
new ser vice facility. They
need not be taken by an
emer gency vehicle.
All of the doctors assigned
to the local hospita l on a
monthl y schedul ed ba s is
have had special tra ining in
h a n d li ng em e rg e n cy
situatioris.
While Lucas spoke on th e
new ser vice as a " giant step"
he did stress. of course, that
unless t he service is put into
good usc then it cannot
continue as a perman ent
situation .

Th e Ga lli a -Me igs Post ,
Highway Patrol. investigated
a t wo-vehi cle accident Thursday in Me igs County on SR
124 at t he junction of CR I. at
2:15 p.m.
Offi cen r eport a west
bound a uto opera ted by
J ay ne Smith. 20, Pomeroy .
struck the rear of a second .;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::
west lJo und vehicle driven by
INSPECTION SET
Da nn y Ba r r ett . 19. MidA . volunteer
motor
dleport . while attempting to
vehi cl e inspection will be
pass.
held llpril6 lnim 8:30a.m.
Smit h wa s cit ed on a
to 1:30 p.m . at the Syra cuse
ch a r ge of passing at a n in·
Pa
rk. It is sponsored by the
tcrsection.
·
Ohio
Uighway Patrol.
Both ~ c~1 i cles in c urr ed
moder ate da ma ge .
;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;·

Suspect
booked
LOGANSPORT, Ind . (AP )
- A young truck driver,
described a s troubled over
problems at work , was
booked on pr e limi nary
murder charges Thursday in
U1e shooting deat hs of his fathe r a nd fo ur relatives,
authorit ies said .
The s hootings were on
Wednesda y night, the same
day that the defend a nt. John
R. Wall, 22, began a three-day
suspen sion from his job wiU1
a
Loga ns port
movin g
company, where he worked
L!J1der the s upervision of his
fa ther .
After a br ief court he aring,
Wall was ta ken to th e Indiana
Reformator y at Pendleton to
be held pending filing of
formal cha rges, said Cass
County Prosecuto r Thomas
Kraugh .
The victims, sla in in their
hom es about two miles apart ,
were identifi ed as Wall 's father , John R. Wall , 54; his si ster , Robin Musselman , 18:
her son , David Scott
Mussehnan Jr., 2; young
Wall's other sister, Nancy
~llanks, 21, and her husband ,
Thoma s J . Shanks Jr ., 25.
All five were shot " at least
·once in the head with a ninemillimeter handgun, " Sta te
Police Sgt. Fred Biggs said .
Police said Wall had a gun
matching the description of
the murder weapon in his
po sse ssion when he was
arrested .
Wall and his father worked
for Be ck 's Transfer , Inc., a
local moving company . Mrs.
Musselman also had worked
there the last two weeks as a
parHime packer .
Th e owner of the company
saul he and the elder Wall ,
who as dispatcher was in
charge of his son' s work
ass ignments , dec id ed to
suspend young Wall for three
days beginning Wednesday
after he had failed to report
for work Tuesday .

CLEVELAND tAP) Here are th e numbers
drawn Thursday in the
Ohio Lottery: blue 340,
white. 60, gold 8, winathon
49964 .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday: Turning colder
throu'gh the period. Rain
possible Sunday and
Monday. Becoming fair by
Tuesday. Low In the lOs to
lo\1· 50s Sunday and
dropping into the upper 20s
to 30s by Tuesday. High in
the 50s in the north tu 60s in
the south on Sunday. Highs
dropping into the 30s in the
north to 40s In the south by
Tuesday .

.

LE A6ING ROLES - Eric Scites and Lynella
Whittington, standing, will play lhe leading ro les in "The
Sound of Music" which opens at 7:30 p .m . this evening in
the Me igs High School Auditori wn . The second show ing of
the musical will be at 7:30p.m . Salurday n ight. Wi th Eri c.
and Lynette who play Capta in Von Tr app and Maria is
Lori Wood, who is accompani st for the populal- musical.

5,000 positions
niay be chopped
By The Asso ci a te ~ Press
Nearly 5,000 military a nd
civilian jobs in Ohio could be
on t he Pentagon's choppi ng
block over the next two years
as pa rt of the latest roWld of
military base closings and
consolidations .
The latest base r eduction
pa ckage proposed by the Defense Depa rt me nt if
carried ou( - would tr im.
som e 44 ,5 00 civi li a n a nd
mil itary
jobs
at
17
in sta llati ons ac ross th e
countr y , saving $474 million a
year.
Rep. Tony Hall, D-Dayton ,
said there "is still some fi ght
left , but it doesn't look good.' '
Hall
said
Oh io's
Congr essional delegation will
contin ue to ask that impact
studies be co nducted in
connection with the moves.
But he added " the Wh ite
House has not listened to t he ·
arguments put forth" by t he
delegation and " won't even
r eview the various options offer ed."
Thur sday's announcements
bro~~ght Conflicting figures
from
va riou s
mil it a ry
sour ces. A spokeswoman at
Ric ke nba cker Air For ce
Base, near Colwnbus. sa id
the base had r esorted to
merely pa ssing on the figw·es
released by \he Pentagon .
The Pentagon used "cost
avoidance" £igures, which in ~
dicated U1e savings in jobs
lite cutbacks would a ff ord
over the present level of
service . Also, it used job
authorization fi gures instead
of
ac tua l e m ploym ent
fig ures .
In Ri cke nbacker 's ca se ,
some fi gures applied only to
the Str ategic Air Comman d
compon ent lodge d at the
base , a nd other s to a ll Air
For ce units on the base , the
spokeswom an said.
As .near ij S could be dete r.mined, th ese a r e t he approx•mal&lt;' number of milita ry and ·.
civilian j obs tha t eould be lost•
aroWJ d Ohio:
-- Loekbourne - Rickenbacke• S AC for ces to be ·r elOca ted , with som e 439 milita ry
person nel and 25 civl,lians to
be tra nsferred, a nd 1,277
milita r y a nd 371 civiliiUl jobs
to be cut, making a total of
1,716 military and 396 civilia n
jobs lost.
- Columbus - De fense
O.lnst r uct \oo Supply Cente r ,
a st udy to determine its
closing could result in the
transfer of up to 882 civilians
and t he loss of 183 others.
,. - 'Jpringfield .;- Muncipa l

.

Weather
Cloudy, windy and mild
with showers and thund er storms., Low tonight in the
mid to upper 50s. Mostl y
cloudy with sho wers and
po ssibly a few thunderstorms
Saturda)' .

.

MARY HOBSn :·l· t·cR, clerk.. for the Meigs Co unty
(&lt;nnmissioner s, displays U1 e ne w county map which
includes road names and num bers , Cis well a ::; locations of
ehur rhes . Sl'hor)!!' a nd ."it reams. The tlJc-~p wa s r ecent ly

'

completed thro~~gh funding fr om the Depa rtment of ·
Housing and Urban Development. Copies may be obtained
j;j f the office of the r'ntlllnissioncr··s in the courthouse for
$2.

•

I

Air po r t .

to

swit ch to
c o n t r ac t
for vario us suppor t services,
culling nine milita ry jobs .
- Vienna - Youngsto\\n
\1unicipa l Air port, Air Force
Kescrve t o convert fr om 24 A37 aircraft to eig ht C-130
planes . cut~ 75 milita ry jobs
and adds 18 civilians.

co rn m e r ci a l

- Youn gstown
Six
civilian and 75 militory jobs
w be cut al'the Air For ce
Reser ve Ba se, and 24 AllForce Reserve technicians to
be added .
- Cleve la nd
Naval
Finance Center to s witch to a
commercia l contract for .
keypunc h operation s , cuttmg
34 civilia ns .
- Cleve land - Defense
Contr a c t
Admi ni s t ration
Region o ffi ce to be closed,
eli rnlnat i ng 440 jobs .

IIAWH EE

RETIRESve teran
Wa\'(· rl y nthl l't ic coac h.
&lt;rnntmrucd hls re tirement
Thursday. Hawh ec, who
bt·gan c oadting a t Waverly
in 1947. compiled a 477-214
WU ll w l os ~
rt• c o nl
in
ba ske thall. Hi s football
teams \\'on 110, los t 43 and
tied :l and his ba ..:ball
teams compii&lt;'d a 193-109
mark with the 1954 squad
&lt;'apturing the Class B stale
t·hampi onshi.,. Ha·-,·hcc
also c oa &lt;· h ~rl g•lf a nd ·aek
al Wa verly. During the
past nine years, Ha whee's
Wa~,erl y basketba ll teams
&lt;'ompile d a 105-21 r e cord In
SEOAL play, His teams
won lh rec Suuth e as tcrn
Ohio L eague ca ge lilies
a rt cr joining th e con C.

0.

Hm\' ht~ c .

Icrcnl'e in 1970. ·

•

�L

'

J
•
3- The Dally Sentmel, Mtddlcpor t-l 'ni!H'I oy, l J , J•1 Hid), M.11 JO, Jllifl

2- The Datly S.mtmel, Mtddleport-Pom&lt;'r&lt;l) 0 Fnda) , Mar 30 J!J70

A fQxhunting eulogy

\Editorial
-....
• •
opmtons

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

•

If ever I chanced to wn le an autobwgra phy, one chapter of

1NEA

I · Throughout t he recently re-

natlOnal debate over hmttat10ns on the outstde
tn com ~ ea rned b\ members of Congress , one cructal
asped of the complex tssue has rece1ved scant attentiOn
St-nators and re presentallves have good reason to avotd
dtscusston of tha t eleme nt - abuse of Ute1r offtcaal
positions for persona l fmanc aaJ gam - because tt exposes
to pub he scr ulln) t he da rk stde of congress wnal behavtor

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

But the \ Oters ought to be a ware that botli houses of
Co ngress agreed m recent years to accept cetlings on
outs1de mcome not me rely as a "good government" tra deoff for thetr ht gher salartes but also because some
lawmakers had engaged tn conduct tha t was unseemly 1f
not unethaca l
Were 11 not for that behav10r on the part of a relatively
few legtsla tors, t he Senate mtght have a convmcmg case to
support ats recent dec1saon to postpone for an additional
four years a resolutton adopted m early 1977 that would
hm1t outside mcome t o $8,625 a-- year , 15 percent of thetr
annua l salary
Instead, the sena tors now will be governed by the $25,000
yearly cetling contamed m the Federal Eleclton Campatgn
Act In addtlton , the maxtmum fee for any single speech
w1ll be $2,000 mstead of $1 ,000
Those 10flaled speak10g fees a re, by far, the largest
smgle source of outside earned mcome for the lawmakers
But many sena tors ar e rtghtfully cauttous about acceptmg
such persona l compensatiOn from specaalmterest groups
Some dechne all honorarta , others limit thell' fees to a
relatively modest $500 or $750 per speech and a few even
donate those proceeds to char itable orgamzations. A few,
however , abuse the prtvtlege
Sen Edwm J (Jake) Gam, R-Utah, IS the seruor
Republican on the Senate Banking Conuruttee. In 1977, the
most r ecent year for whtch full records are available, he
collected the malllmWil $25,000, mcluding speaktng fees
fr om these groups
Colorado Bankers Assoctatwn , $2,000; Arkansas Bankers Assoctation , $2,000 , Ka nsas Bankers Association,
$2,000 , Washmgton Bankers Assoc1alton, $2,000, Texas
Savmgs and Loan l,.eague , $1 ,000 , Independent Conunun1ty
Banks, Sl ,OOO, llltnolS Bankers Associalton, $1,000; and
Associa ted Credit Bureaus, $1 ,000
Sen J Bennett Johnston J r , D-La , ts chalnnan of the
regula !ton subcorrumttee of the Senate Energy Conuruttee
Hts btggest speakmg lees m 1977 mcluded
Amencan Mmmg Congress, $2,000; Domestic Petroleum
Council, $1,000; New England Fuel Institute, $1,000 ,
Outdoor AdverttSmg Assoctatlon, $1,000; Nattonal Petr&lt;&gt;leum Reimers Assoctallon, $1,500, and Natumal Assoctahon of Petroleum Investment Analysts, $1,000
Sen Robert J Dole, R-Kans , ts the semor Repuhltcan on
the Senate Agriculture Comrmttee. HIS 19771ist of speaking
lees mcluded
Oh1o Gram , Feed and Ferlthzer Association, $2,000,
Amencan Cotton Sh1ppers Assoc1a hon, $2,000, Amertcan
Feed Manufacturers Associat10n , $2,000; International
Foodserv1ce Manufacturmg Assoctat1on, $2,000; Grocery
Manufacturers of America , $1,500 , and Institute of Food
Technologists, $1,500
Sen Howard W Cannon, D-Nev , chan-man of the Senate
Corrunerce Conun11tee, acccepted speaktng fees of $1,000
a nd $2,000 aptece from numerous special mterest groups
directly affected by h1s conuruttee's work Also In that
category are Sens Dame! K. Inouye, D·Hawau, and
Jenmngs Randolph, D-W Va
'
Sen Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, the sponsor of the amendment to ra1se the ceilmg on outside mcome, emphasiZed In
hiS Senate floor speech that he was not motivated by
'greed or a des1re to trade on my posttton to become
wealthy "
If all of h1s colleagues could honestly make the same
statement, the mcrease !Tllght well have been jusllf1ed. But
that's not the case - and that' s why the stnngent mcome
limits a re needed

Names •••
in the news
NEWYORK (AP) - FU"st lady RosalyM Carter has'ecetved
the first Dtstmgwshed Nallonal Service Award of the Jew1sh
Th eologiCal Semmary of Amertca
Th e award was gtven Thursday to Mrs Carter m recogrutton
of "her dedicahon and her servtce to those whose needs m our
soctely are all too oftlm neglected "
Rabb1 Gerson D Cohen, chancellor of the semmary, sa1d
Mrs Carter has sought to "make of her !ruth an mtegrated and
crea Uve force m t his SOCiety "
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) - Actor James Cagney, 79, IS be10g
treated for sctattca at Good Samaritan Hospital, a family
spokesman says
"There's nothmg senously wrong, but 11 IS pamful,'' the
spokesman S&amp;d Thursda y
Cagney, who won the Academy Award for "Yankee Doodle
Dandy," has had trouble walkmgs10ce a stroke a year ago , the
spokesman S&amp;d He entered the hospttal Wednesday
Sctaltca ts descnbed medically as any painful condihon 10
the regwn of the hip and thighs, espectally neuritiS of the long
nerve passmg ,down the back of the thigh
MOSCOW (AP) - Pres1dent Leomd I Brezhnev's son has
been qu1etly promoted to fU"st deputy foretgn trade mmister
The promolton of Yurt L Brezhnev was noticed by Western
diplomats when a March 22 arttcle m the Communist Party
newspaper Pravda written by the younger Brezhnev referred
to htm by hiS new tttle
Brezhnev, 45, was appomted deputy foreign trade mmister 10
late 1976 Before that, he was chatrman of the All-Uruon Import-Export Assoctallon for Industnal Raw Matenals of the
For e1gn Trade Mmtstry begmnmg From 1968 untill970 he was
the SoVIet trade representative m Sweden.
WASHINGTON (AP)- Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavl IS
welcome 10 the Umted Stales, but a U S offtcials says 11 was
suggested to him that dlfftculttes rrught come up if he took up
restdence here
Among other things, satd th e offtctal, who refused to be idenltfied by name, are secur1ty problems for him and hiS farruly
and ''problems that may be rrused for Amertcansm Iran "
' We have never sa1d to htm that he should not come here,"
the offtctal told reporters Thursday.
After th e shah went mto exile m January the Carter admintstration mdtcated he would be welcome m the Uruted States.
Instead, t he shah fled to Egypt and later moved to Morocco
The offtctai, who refused to be Identified, sa1d he was not
aware of any spectftc request from the shah to hve tn the
Umted States

In 1961, the North Atlantic

Treaty Organil.Btlon bowed to
French
demands
a nd
forma lly closed NATO
m1ltla ry headquarters m
France
•

•

One year ago: It was annotmced that about 25,000
more lndochmese would be
admitted to the Umted Ststes
under a new refugee pohcy
a pproved by t he Cart er
admmls{);allon

Briefly noted .

•

•

By Doa Graff
Here's an early encouragmg word - for some of us - on
thas year's federal 1ncome tax reckomng

Middle East peace precarious
By BARRY SCHWEID
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP ) The pact is signed, the
IX'Byers offered But peace m
the Middle East may be as

precarious as ever.
Egypt has come to terms
wtth Israel. But practically
all the other Arab countries
are pulling further away
from acceptmg the Jewish
state
Some, like Ubva and IraQ ,

have never even hmted they
were ready to live With
Israel.
Jordan, Saudi Arabia and
Syna were coDSldered peacelovmg and moderate by U S
pohcy-makers Only a few
years ago, they were vtewed
as as likely as Egypt to make
peace
Not any more, although
President Carter hasn't gtven
up hope He continues to woo

them, and the Palestintans, to
JOID the negottations
"I welcome and inv1te
those who have so far held
back- for whatever motive
they might honor - to jom
us," Carter adllbbed at the
celelration dinner Monday
night at the White House.
The response was further
conaenmahon of Egypt and
Israel and
contmutng
terrortsm by the Palestme
Liberation Orgaruzatlon

'Ohio perspective'
COLUMBUS, Ohto ( AP ) Offtclals of the state lottery,
which has had bad publicity
1n recent months, get letters
from ticket buyers
But so far recent charges of
contract kickbacks and other
alleged irregulartties which
may lead to the operattOn 's
overhaul haven't been prtme
toptcs of concern
Aspokesman for the lottery
corrumssion says nearly twothirds of the mail asks that
lottery
rece1pts
be
eannarked specifically for
educatiOn ,
wh1le
the
remamder calls for bJ.gger
prtzes and other types of
games.
Meanwhile, latest figures
from the Cleveland-based lottery operation shows Ohio
has earned more than $200
milhon 10 profits s10ce tiCket
sales began m August 1974.
Durmg the same span,
more than $250 million has
been patd 10 pnzes
Sellmg fees have Maled

$42 5 milhon , whtle $37.5

million have gone for staff
and
other
operating
expenses
Battelle Research Laboratones, Inc m Colwnbus IS
ge\tmg started on a so far
hushhush federally-financed
search for a better way to
dispose of nuclear waste
The $90 millton project, researchers mdtcate , traces to
a belief m government and
SCientific cU"cles that the
chief stumbling block to
nuclear development IS the
waste disposal question
Sc1enhsts have been
burymg the waste deep
underground and far at sea,
and have encased 11 m salt,
lead, and cement
The research project ts evtdence that none of the
disposal methods used so far
ts entU"ely satiSfactor y
Former Gov John J Gilli-

Business mirror
BY JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - The
OPEC prtce mcrease seemed
to shake everythmg but the
stock ma rket and the value of
the dollar, both of which grew
stronger tn seeming defiance
of what certainly was bad
news
Satd analysts m tmlson
The market already had
discounted the bad news , 1t
was a nticipated, 1t " as
already worked mto value
estimates stock and dollar
pnces had been lowered 10
advance of the news
When the oil prtce mcreases turned out to be less
than feared, satd the
analy st s, traders
Immediately realized th ey had
overdone thetr pess1m1sm
Th ey bought stocks and
dolla rs, a nd prices rose
S1Inple
A neat explanation for a
late March Tuesday on which
the Dow Jones mdustnal
average vaulted 16 54 pomts,
btggest gam m ftve months,
and on which the dollar
gamed agalllSt all major
currencies
A day on which tt was
learned that the cost of domg
busmess m the Umted States
would rise and the payments
Imbalance would be worsened and the public would, m
effect, be forced to drive and
heat less
Without deni grating the
breed of stock analyst that
promotes this notton, the
nolton of the all-w1se market
that quickly digests all world
events and mstantly spews
out tts dectston, could they be

pnv1lege of buytng !or
st rtctly market r ea sons
alone They can't hold thetr
mcommg cash for ever , they
must get 1t mvested
Th1s betng so , what better
ltme ts there for actton than
Just before the end of the
quarter? Won 't 1t make the
quarterly report look good
w1th aU the dogs weeded out
and quality stocks put m thetr
place'
It IS not hkely to be mere
comctdence that some of t he
biggest rtses were 10 mstltuttonal favorites, such as
IBM, Xerox , Polaroid, Texa s
Instruments, Burroughs and
the hkc, all up a dollar or

In

some

su

weeks ,

Egyptian
and
Israel!
negotiators will be wrestlmg
wtth the Palestmtan problem
As Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat rerrunded reporters here Tuesday, that IS
the crux and core of the ArabIsraeli conflict
Solvtrtg it would make the
16 months of tedious treaty
negotiations between the two
countries seem Uke child's
play by comparison.
Jordan is still boycotting
the talks So are the
Palestinians.
Without their parllCipahon,
any autonomy plan worked
out by Egypt and Israel
would be on shaky grotmd
The Paleshmans are the
people who would live under
the plan . Jordan once
controlled most of the land
mvolved
Then there
IS
the
monwnental task of devismg
a plan wtthin the one year set
as a goal for completing the
negotiations
Sadat wants the plan to set
the stage for Palestuuan
statehood.
Autonomy IS just the "first
step on the road to self-(!etermmation and statehood," he
declared at the Wh1te House
dinner .
There IS some mclinahon,
espectally m the euphorta
over peace, not to take Sadat
literally, to asswne he Is
taking a hard-line on the
Palestinian 1ssue only to
assuage Arab critics.
But it IS at least as logiCal
to assume that Sadat means
what he says
And that could foreshadow
a cnsis m the negotlallons
with Israel, posmg an
awesome test of the powers of
American med1atton.
lsraeh Pnme Mlntster
Menachem Begm has offered
autonomy to the 11 milhon
Palestmtan Arabs hvmg
tmder Israeli control on the
West Bank of the Jordan
River and m the Gaza Strtp.
But, by all indications, 11
would be a very limited self·
rule, with Israel retairung a
strong security Iresence and
the tight to establish new setUements on the West Bank

more

Stmilarly, tt would seem
unlikely that the U S
Federal Reserve and the
central banks of partner
nahons wouldn't be ready to
support the dollar on the day
a major oil pnce mcrease
was to be announced
This doesn 't mean that the
analysts are all wrong Cause
and effect are always at work
m the marketplace, and the
oil prtce aMouncement was a
very big cause But cause ·
effect sometimes soulds
knee-Jerk
It would require a master
of mass psychology and a
battery of electromc com·
puters to get even a gltmpse
at the mmd of the market
And it would take further
analysts to prove the 1mdings
But what ts known IS that
some of the marketplace, for
bOth the dollar and for corpor ate stocks, doesn't so
much react to what are called
wrong?
market forces as to more
Might not the tmprovement mecharucal rcquU"ements of
tn stoc ks been for less msttlUt!OnS
cerebral reasons, such as the
need of mstttuttons to get rid
of cash surpluses' Or, in the
dollar s case , lw!causc of the
support acttvtty of central
Thought for today: Every
banks'
man ~ dangerous who cares
B) thetr nature. 10slltutions for only one thmg - G K
such as mutual and penston Chesterton, English wr1ter
'
fund&lt; seldom have th e \874-1936

•

gan, who steps down thiS
week as chief of the U.S.
Agency for International
Development, may wmd up
on the raculty of Notre Dame,
his alma mater
But
the
58-year~ld
Democrat has some other
Irons m the fire, including one
poSSibility of working with
prtvate agencies m aSSisting
underdeveloped nations
arotmd the globe.
Also, he could go back mto
pohtics, he said, adding "I
haven't ruled 1t out."
Gilligan says he plans to
spend the Easter hohdays m
Cinctnnati wtth his family,
and after that "I will have all
my ducks tn a row "
,- He wd he was leavmg the
Carter Administration post
w1th regret, and Without
bemg gtven a reason
However, he said he 1s convmced the decision to drop
hun was a result of
differences with the State
Department and Secretary
Cyrus Vance.
Gtlltgan, at Carter 's
request, came up With a
reorgaruzatton of U S. foretgn
&amp;d programs which would
have taken some current
functions away from State
and the Department of
Treasury , plactng them
under a more efficient and
streamlined AID umbrella ,
he satd
He said the other agencies
didn't want to surrender any
prerogallves, a traditional
charactertsllc
of
bureaucrattc
government.
Also, G1lhgan sa1d he
worked m his JOb to help wtth
the long range development
of poor nations, while the
state Department tries to
make friends for the U.S.
expediently, using foretgn a1d
to short term advantage

More realistically, Carter
acknowledged Sunday at a
Nat10nal Assoctatlon of
Broadcasters convention in
Dallas that it may oot be
possible to reach an overall
settlement in the Middle East
during hiS presidency.

Berry's World

The Internal Revenue Serv1ce w1U be auditing 43,000
fewer returns than last year, 2.11 percent of total returns
as compared w1th 1977's 2 16 percent
That could mean that the tax people think we are
becornmg more honest Or , much more likely, that the
returns have gotten so complicated that they can't hitndle
as many

Of degrees and dollars
The tax btte IS something this year's college graduates
nught well keep In mind as they prepare for their
professional futures, particularly those most m demand
They, accordmg to the College Placement Council, are
the engineers Engineenng operungs account for 61
percent of all bachelor's degree JOb offers to date and are
up some 40 over last year. Startmg salanes for the very top
of the line - petroleum engmeers - average $1,788 a
month. Next come che!Tllcal engmeers at $1,633
At the other end of the employment opportunity scale are
the graduates m soctal sc:~nces and humanities. Offers are
down some 9 perct!nt from last year, which wasn't so hot
Itself, am! average startmg money IS $911 a month.
It only goes to prove again that m figurmg the payoff on a
college educatiOn, It 1s mdeed a matter of degree.

Happy ending
Remember the killer bees?

These were the feroctous hybnds, an accidental cross

between bad-tempered African and domesllc Brazilian
bees, that were buzzmg thetr way north, attacking
everything In their path from people and liv&lt;:stock to motor
vehicles. They were supposed to reach Texas by 1985
They still are But according to a late report from Brazil,
they are no longer a threat Dr Helmuth Wiese of the
Brazilian Confederabon of Apicultunsts tnfortllS that the•
ktller has succumbed to romance. Enthusiastic mating
With Brazilian bees has blunted Its stmg and transfonned it
Into an tndustrious honey producer
Love, how sweet 1t 1s

How's that again?
Ugandan Prestdent Idl A1mn recently VISited the front of
hts ftve-month-&lt;&gt;ld war wtth nelghbonng Tanzanta
The dictator IS reported to have found hiB troops " ready
to fight to the last man "
He may have nusunderstood. What they probably meant
was " the last Amm ..

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Fibroid tumors
DEAR DR LAMB - I
would appreciate your
d1Scuss10g f1br01d twnors I
have a fnend who had them
10 the uterus and all she had
was aD and C. I had another
fnend wtth the same thing
but they removed her uterus
Now I've been told by my
gynecologist that I have a
ftbro1d twnor. He Will do an
operatiOn and remove 1t wtth
the uterus and the ovanes He
wants to take out the ovanes
because I'm over 50 Are
ftbrotd tumors cancerous ' Do
they grow? How are they
started? At this ttme I feel
good and don't have any pain
Is tt necessary to have the
operabon?
DEAR READER - The
reason twnors are called
ftbrotd IS because they are
hard, fibrous !ts sue .
Somettmes they are called
W~'Oflbroma, which refers to
the fact that they have bssue
10 them rel~ted to muscles m
the uterus In any case, the
s1mple, uncomphcated
flbrotd tumor 1s not

cancerous That's one reason
doctors don't get too upset
about them as long as they
aren't too large and aren~
causmg symptoms
Your fnend who had a D
and C (a type of exanunaton)
apparently d1dn't really have
•

'MtE DAILY SENtiNEL

1USPS 145-9111

~,~-~·~-DEVOTEDTO THE

ll'&lt;I'Elm1l' OF

MEtGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
CtlyEd!Ioo-

DAVID BUSitmK
Adl'titlda&amp;MUICtf

Published datly .,....,. s.turoay
by The Ohio V•lley Publi!hing
C&lt;IITII"'ny-Multlmodla Inc , Ill
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio 45768
Bua1nell Off1ce Phone 992· Zl56
Ec:Utorl•1Phone"2-2157
Second class pMtage pa1d at
Pomeroy Ohio
National advertli!Jig ..,......
LaUve, LandQn Associate!, 3101

any symptoms and the doctor
checked to make sure she
didn't have a disorder that
needed additional treatment
If the fibrmd tumor IS too
large and Is causing pressure
on another organ, the doctor
may decide to remove 1t
Also, some small f1brouls,
depending upon their locat1on
m the uterus, can cause excessive or frequent bleeding
That also IS an mdication for
removal The decision really
has to be made on firsthand
knowledge of how large the
twnor ts, where tt's located
and what symptoms It's pr&lt;&gt;duc10g Your doctor IS m the
best posibon to know these
things, m your case
Yes, fibroid twnors often
grow, although since they are
not cancer, they don't spread
The mam effects, again, are
pressure symptoms and
bleeding.
Nobody knows how fibroid
IWilors are started, just as we
really don't know how cancer
starts This IS true of many
tumors, both mahgnant and
bemgn We know many factors contnbute to such pr&lt;&gt;blems, but often we don 'I
know the real cause
You didn't comment on
whether or not 'you've gone
through the menopause, but
smce you're over 50, tt is
reasonable to presume you
either have or soon wtll.
Under those circwnslances,
tf a woman does have a
hysterectomy, many doctors
feel1t 's a good tdea to remove
the ovartes as well.
If the ovanes aren't funcbonmg, about all they do at
that pomt IS provide a possible source of ovarian cancer
It isn't a real common cancer
but when tt does occur, 1t IS
often not detected until it has
already spread So why leave
something m the body thst
can't help and may harm the

•

Cll l(

would am ve on schedule w1th theU" respecttve gaggle of
hotmds '
Thetr arrtval was one of the week's highhghts for me, the
yotmg bystander The hounds were usually transported m the
trunk compartment of the cars, and when those trunk lids were
opened they would eJect like so many jack-m-the-boxes '
Mass confusiOn was the mevttable result, as the hounds,
" overly eager for the hunt, bounded to and fro like unbroken
colts Heavtly laden wtlh hunlmg gear, the hunters were
- always hard-put to conslram the fractious anunals, and as
yokes and leashes became engangled, a great amount of
yelpmg, howl10 g and execrating, would ensue, as dog and man
altke, became entwmed 10 a web-work of chams
Once or der was restored, the hunt10g party " auld proceed
on fool to one of the htgher eleva twns where ltsterung would be
tmrestn cted
On the ra ther rare occasiOns I was 10vtted to J010 the
group, I would always voltmteer to lead some of the hounds I
soon fotmd that thetr relentless slrammg at the leash worked
wonders at propelhng one up the steep slopes
When the proper locatwn was reached, the hounds were
released and while they were off m a mad scramble to fmd
Reynard, certam tasks were of the essence before mghtfall
The most unportant , perhaps, was the rustltng of an adequate
supply of firewood
When avatlable, a carbtde lamp, wtth tts open flam e,
greatly reduced the skill requtred to kindle a ftre 10 wet
weather But, rega rdle~ . I th1nk a ll foxhunters harbor a
certam amotml of prtde concermng lhetr prowess at geltmg a
ftre gomg under adverse conditiOns
For 10stance, one of my great uncles swore he could strike
a match on a snowball' But, come to th10k of tt, he's the same
uncle who proclaimed, that whtle chasmg a squtrrel, he
attempted to Jump from one tree to another , suddenly
reahzed , midway, the dt stance was too great , and had to jump
back
Sadly, no one witnessed etther feat, so hts name remams
unhsted m the Gumness Book of Records
To me , the fire was the best part of the hunt Astde from
warmth and hghl, tl could provtde the means for some
prlffitttve cookmg Dad usually had the forestghl to load some
pockets w1th chestnuts or large potatoes, which, m due lime,
he would place beneath the hot embers to roast
It always seemed hke an etermty before he pronounced
those "spuds" done and properly cooled for eatmg But they
were well worth the watt Sprmkled wtth a ltllle ptcklmg salt,
they rtvaled any cutsme served at the Rttz'
A frre also msptres conversatlon And smce conversatton
begets story-telling, there was never a shortage of mtrtgumg
tales, as seemmgly , each mdtvtdual arunously awatted his turn
to expound upon some past advent ure
' ' : · .,.
To digest the stones, I !U"sl had to acquamt myself wtth a
certam amount of foxhtmter Jargon , which, m 1tself, was an
adventure o me I learned about 'cutters," "rabbttters,"
11
longuer.s" and Hcold·trmlers "
11

A

CUtter,' ' for example, 1s a hound that becomes so

SUCCESSFUL SE ASON - Southern 's seventh grade
basketball team, hke the Tornado varstly and r ese rve
squads, posted a 9-4 record, ftntshmg second tn the
seventh grade toW"nament Team members were front

It was about an old tune foxhunter who came to the
• • pamful conclusiOn that hts favonte hound had broken away
from the mam chase, and was m some far away hollow
pursumg rabb1ts
Smce the ftrsl arttcle of the foxhunter's code ts dedicated
to the propos11ton tha i no foxhound shall ever taketh up a
rabbtl track, the old fe llow was highly embarrassed and
though the rughl was an evtl one, wtlh ram and fog, no amount
of cotmsehng by hts comrades could dissuade htm from gomg
after hts wayward carune
After what seemed hke hours, his weary footfalls were, at
long last, heard squtsh-squashlng m the muddy earth as they
made the1r way toward the hght of the fire
Hts lantern had gone out a nd smce he had either lost, or'
' ' for gotten to take a leash, he was carrymg the dog bodily ' To
compound hts trouble the mutt he depostted by the ftre was a
total stranger, bear10g little or no hkeness to hiS own hound,
which, ·obviOusly, was sl tll at large Grandfather dtdn'l
mention how much hard c1der was on hand that rught, but I
• ' gathered the supply was adequate
On some occastons the hoWJds had to roam far and wtde to
ftnd reynard's spoor When thts happened, all the hunters
could do was hope the fox would c1rcle back wtthm audtble
' range [( thetr luck was good, someone wtlh a keen sense of
hearmg would ratse a hand, all talk would drone to a standshU and every ear l'Ould attune Itself to the mght
Framed m the fll"elighl, each fa ce soon reflected the
posttwn 1ts bearer 's hound hel\:l m the race If the face
regtslered content hound m front ; deJeCtion hound behind.
My unlramed ears were al" ays the last to detect the
vo1ces But soon, I too could make them out Ftrsl, the
sopranos and tenors, and lastly , the ban tones and basses
· •
Topping a rtdge all Ute vmces would blend mto a
)' euphomous chorus that reverberated from every corner of

___ ______

, .,_

....,.

b dward Coffman - SteveDFtsher , Martm

Andrew l'unmy Evans, Tony Deem, Trevor Cardone,
Wade Connolly Slandmg, 1-r, Jason Htll Kevm Curfman
Cor e&gt; McPhale, Mtlch Bable, Dennts Tea ford, Nelson
Morns. l'roy Wa rd. Gregory DuVa ll , Coach Btll Hensler

'

Detroit hurlers· look tough
lly .IUH N Nl-:l.SON

ng h l ~tand e t

\P Spnrt s Wnh•r
Detr oit T1ge1s Ma nage r

who appeared tn

Les Moss may be drawmg
staws before the \\o ee kend '.s
aver He needs to tr un In s
ptl ch tn g sta ff but hiS

1'' gc1mes \\11 h I &gt;etr01 t last
se a so n s ta 1ted fut lhe
T a g~ 1 s ~~~ Ika ng out fi ve ami
a lluwmg IXJt h lllts and bot h
run s 111 fave mmngs
Sheldon llw nstde, a 24-

youn gs ter s a re not

year-old left y, hdndl ed the

co o p ~

er atang
On Thursday two of them

combtned wtth veteran
reliever .John Htller to two ~ut
Ihe Boston Red Sox st nke out
12 ~ tncludmg ,Jun Rtce four
tunes an a row - and gtve the
Tager s a 6·2 vtd ory
Steve Ba ker a 22·VN1r-' •lrl

next tin ee mnangs

st nkin g
out sax d lld Hallcr handlerl
the l c~ st mnm g c.: h c~lkin g up

the 12th stnkeoul

Mr Rtce

(:!gam
Moss prt,ble m 1s that he
wants tu c.:cu 1 ' nme ptlcheJs
so he must cut Bake r
BUJ ns1de 01 24-) ear -&lt;.1ld Jac k
Morns

oth er

e xhtb1t 10 n
cont es t s t he Plu la delphi &lt;J
Phdllcs defea ted CmctnnatJ
7.I:J the Ne\o\ Yur k Mets
In

hl (l nk ed

St

l ouJ s

4-ll

Montr e.1l ~d ~ cd l'exH s 5...:1
Pi 1t sbut gh d1p ped Baltu nor e
6 ~ Tort1nto g&lt;JI by Kansas

Ltl&gt; j I Cleveland edged
Ca ltfo t nt a 8 1 Oakla nd
dol\ ned Seattl e 4 2 the
&lt;Jucago \VIu te !i!x beat the
New Yur k Y&lt;t nkees 4 1 and
the
Chic&lt;t go
Cu bs
"h!! e~ a.shed San' I r a nCIS(O

;.u

\t l,tntd lost a p&lt;t lr, the
B1 dves A squad bo\\ 1ng l:J-10

Jays humble
Chagrin Fails
lh GEORGE smOIJE
\P spurts Wrtl('r

197G-7B Class AA tttleholder
I la1 tley 22·2

Co f:UMBUS, Oh to tAP ) It s a claSSIC ma tchup for the

Hartle) s Hawks scored a
cont rove rsial 52-tiJ decJsJOn

Oht o Class AA girl s
ba sket ball lttl e but Bo b

over Nm th Henrl l aylor m the
oth er opemn g semtftn ,d
Ohlnchissure who 'sgom 'lO bef111 e 5 90 1 1n St John
wtn betw ee n ,Delphos gSl Alena
J oh~S
and
Co lum bus
·n1e Cl(ls~ AAA a nd Cla s~ A
Hartley
semtft na hsts took oH t today
" I can ' t see a nybody
l lyn a played Akron Sl

beatmg Delphos, sa td the
Cha grm Fa ll s coach , hi s
tea m 's un bea te n r e
d
dtSmtegra ted b) the ~~~e 1

V1nce nt -St
Maq
an d
Ba1 be rt un went a ga rn st
Cmcmna tt Hughes m the big

educated wtth the lay of the land and the habtts of such-andsd tool pl a) offs In Class A
such a fox , that he will oftt lffies peel away from the rest of the Jays 70-o5 Thursday mght m play tnmgltt Ma nsftelrl Sl
pack and attempt to cut Mr Fox off at the pass
th e sta te setmhnals
Pet&lt;•t s tests Holgate ~md
If his hunch proves correct, he unrnedtately places the
" Maybe tf you brought l"o rl 1 or a mt e faces Old
other hounds m an uphtll battle and a smtle on hts master's back Colwnbus Ea st s boys \Vaslu ngton Buckeye 'Ira ti
face If, by luckless chance, however , the fox , meanwhile, from last \l ee k and gave
11te (]ass AA ltlle game
selects a new route, old Rover wmds up m the boondocks w1th th em Clark Kellogg .. hed •ed starts at 11 a 111 Satw cia)
the gr1m prospect of playmg catch-up '
Ohlnch
•
'
g
Wtlh Class AA/\ &lt;tt ) p Il l ctnd
Of all the slortes, the one I remember best was told by my
Delphos" 1977 Class A stale Class A at 7 p 111
Grandfather, so m one sense I'm ancestcrally obhgated to champaons ha \e won 73 of
I lelphos Coach r ' an Voll
assume 1t' s a true one

row , 1-r ,

th ear last 74 ga mes, mcludmg
25 straight thts wmter , gomg
mtoSat urda s shoo tout " U
Y

I

1

be li eves h1s sm ol ll er mg full
c:our1 pi es.s was the btg
re a son
Cha gr tn
F'a ll s

God 's starltl runphtlheater Al tha t momen t few men, m my
mmd, could say tt wasn 't mustc
For too long, foxhunters have been dubbed as umque
oddballs " ho spend all rughl pursumg a quarry they never
hope lo catch and all week purswng thetr hounds m hope of
another hunt Whtle thts, m th e mam may 1M! true doesn't tl
only serve to strengtlten the bDnd of fr•endshtp between man
and anunal and cerltfy one's devoti on to hts sport ?
And, tsn't tt a rare breed of hunter who stmes not to tn)ure
or ktll the quarry, but to preserve tt al all costs?
Uruque' You bet'
If horseracmg be the sport of kmgs, the foxhunler JUS t
mtght be - the kmg of sports 1
- David H Cunu ngs

could ha ve pla) ed better
(Jfl offe nse
he sa 1d
Voll the Ohto Class AA
&lt; 11.1Ch of the \'ea t predttls tt
be

gr ea t

v

wtth

gcn ne

Ha tti Py

ll1e' ve won ,two of the last
1111 ee lil ies

I hey can pia)
here WC\ egot loshatpenup
c~n£1 wor k ha rde1 he sa ad
1\l~.()hlOd!l J e~urn e Arn zen
1lle ;:~ f&lt;.:N1t 10 da ughter uf St
John's &gt;ete,,m bu) S Coa&lt;h
Bob AI men poured '", 26
pu mt s tu outd uel Sue \\ 1se,

Otagnn I al;s al l-st ate who
sett led fm 12 pomts
A c&lt; lhstun of Hat tie) All Oluoan Nancy Wtlltarns and
I tn da 1110111£\S I Cl) lot s deft

playmaket led tu btlter fee l

mgs wtth I 26 to lpl c~~ m the
fout th qu:ntc1 \\ lllaams fe ll
to the fl ow and farled to get
up for sc\ eral mmutes
Her

Tampa Fla
l'hree Mets prtc hers II ayne 1\Yit&lt; he ll Sktp l.ock -

\\ OOd ,u1d Mtke Bruhert cornbaned on a t'l't o..tntter
str1kmg out 12 to stym 1e lhe
l drrl' Bruhet t ~ lso dehvered
a run sco rmg groundc1 Ill the

'

d&lt;JUIJil
nave r d.... a td~ dru\e !ll
1hr ec nms anti 13Ui nbu HI\ era
hdd t\\ O HBI m Mmncsota s
\\111 uver Atl anta s A squad
l lc1ustun

'

':

.'

110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o

LEBANON
LI :HANON Ohto t AP I
II s A Demon caught Hacy
He1ress a t the ware to wm tile

'

I

Off1ce Hours :
Monday-Friday
9-12 - 1-4
Exammalions .

the game-\unner on
Jerr y Wh 1te s sangle tn the
eighth mnang as the J~ x pos
h·pped 1 ex as
Htll HobtnStJn and Henme
S! en nett each had two t un
homers to po wer till' Pn ate~
past Halt un m e
Dav e Mc.: Ka) ~ hAr O·JUn
smgle tn the fi fth mnmg lifted
I ot onto ov er Kansas Cat )
&lt;.~n d (,al ) Alexand er tnplet
m the nm th to drtve m the
,-. mmn g r un as C1e \ elap cl
d!lwned the Ant.=:els
ld f Ne\\ Jnan smgled tl u ee
limPs dra vmg m two runs. to

by Appointmenl

•
1 HISTI.EDOWN

NOHTH H \N IJAI I Ohw
\ P ) -- Bl'll effJIIt e M1ss won

pi &lt;:H.: l• PH ka spem

I~

ull l\lluwlu lg:c pend $ ~
1Jafed a ~ umen; w~r~ Bt.•

\ .d1 111 1111 Bf'.W Hr anJUic-.
! 111.mtl ( ,11lrH hem o\ li .., Wt r t 11
l i t I t \ \l lllllll g lu kt•tli u l d c J ~
c1l ll'f l1d$.!

l l e&lt;-tch

1 ehan

d (JrJh

A1 1ssue a re the sa la11es
.md wo1 kin ~ condJliun s uf tht.:
1unpu es \\h O dt e askLng fo1
tm 1 ra..,es fl um d 1 urrent
nHm rnu m of $17 5011 1o $23 500
d iH I d t UirCnt llldX ll !llllll of
JUS! foVei $40 000 lv $GO 1)00
\,.! Sl \ca r
SIX Ulll)lll PS
Odllll'ti less til an $20 000 I~
\\1..:1 t.: belo\\ $2S ()()0 20 bt:l t v.
$10 000 II belu" $40 000 and
thnc (J \(' 1 $-\0 000 , Phtll!p ~
sr~ 1d
I he on!} ul!lplt es
1 nakm ~ more than s.IOonua1 ('
H.'tt:r dll S noug liar \(~ Bill
II Hile r and l ~d \ argc1
\'hlllips tom par 1 rl

t11at

\\ lth Neill( ndl B&lt;.~ s ketball
\ssoctdtH!n t t•frt ces \\)10111
llt ,tl:-)(f 1 epr c~c nt s \ ]() HiH
\ t; tu cHI llldj (! l l~..:a~ Ut: lll llpl! e
$QJ()0 &lt;1 )ta.r ot $20U
fOf Cell.: h uf lGl g&lt;t llll'S \\1 Jth I Jl d
180-&lt;1.&lt;) seasu n I 10-\ ''"'

t.'d llt S

NI\A ofii Udi gets

'ear M $;)5U fur
g~• rne s wJth Jn

$4 51J( ~J d

~dc h
d

of 1:11
210-da\

St: .I SUJI
Br~seball

hds .Jrt &lt;UJ~ed to
lhe r egulm s wat11
mmot i lc~g u e &lt;.olleg Jdtl' \ug h

1eplt.it

e

sc )l()(,J .md santl l()t wnpu es 1f
lhe Y. or k stopp&lt;tg(' stl tl&lt;. hes
ulto til e 1eg ul ar season
For all your home
En terta •nm enf and

Apphan ce Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

992 6173

CARPET

RIDENOUR'S

As low as

TV &amp; A~J!Ilan ce
Gas Servtce

Yd

New Colo~
Arriving Weekly

Ra crne, Ohi o
Chester. Oh1o

W ll ~l11 n g to n

&lt;b ove m h'&gt; o 1uns cmd scored
ont e to pace the While Sox
pa ~t th e Yankees
Cub s
sta rter
Lynn

McG lot hen

ptlc hed

ftve

shutout mnm gs and keyed a

th ard·lnmng rallv
aga 1nst h1s for me1 team
m.ttf• ;;; the Gwnts w1th a

1\\ 0 -i Un

co unt er pdt t

of

DOUBLE BELTED TIRE

E

puo 1

chat gcd Heath

\\ auld not

t.: nter

Save money NOW on our
popular, long mileage
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PowER KING

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\1 Ill II II \I I

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und •ld tort
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I 18 14 Jr, G ~ I I

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POLYESTER
cord body
Strong

p.nd I I "'"I $2 hiJ "i htrd place

II'

tJC'

di spute be~-:&lt;m

Rt 1 M1ddl epor1 0

S} 50 sq

ou ld

help OakJ ,md defeat Seattle,
.llld Clau d e ll

$Fl25 1!i

the $G 500 £eatured race at
Th ts l ied to\\11 fhur sda 1
p.mng $! 1111 $2 ao and $2 20

Optometrists :
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes
Dr . T. Jay Bradshaw

1

ad vised

he 1 ep1aced

\\ hen Sldff upen1ngs we re
d\ di ldblt:
\'htlltps sattl that 11a~ the
stxtll ul tun at wn the umpu cs
hd \ l' 1 \:'((' 1\ C cJ S \Jlt(' the

ODDS &amp; ENDS
SHOP

spor tstni:lnshi p
'l1le) shot us duwn " hen
she ( CunWllV) went out and
shoved our gu l It blew us
ctpa ! t lt upsel us She IS our

neck Thursday mght
The wmner patd $5 20 $2 20
and $2 80 The place h01 se
patd $2 20 and $2 20 Easy K
return ed $2 60 fur show
The 8-4 double of Noble
&lt;'loud a nd Popul ar Ka to
returned $110 20
The crowd of I IHO bel

~·~ wul

'"

Ju.tqutn

ancl

\ \ Ct ~..:

~\utud

$1 200 featur ed pace mtle by a

1

614-992 -3279

.st art~ r

rncam\ h1l r tussed d
th r l e-hJtle t a g c~an s\ t ht:
Braves B team
'\ mi UJdl

th e\

as

Optometric Vision Center

.

the 11

on

tm l1l tuda} to sagn then
tun II .1cts If the, fail to s1gn

pn\v pst~ r

MAN-SIZE TRACTOR
at a garden tractor price
You can mow 2 3 acre s nt grass an hour w1th the
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bu lldoze gmcle plow 1111 c ult val e hand le al l
JObs fas te r eas1er w it h over 20 attachm en ts T111S
man·s ze 1ractor affords extra w e 1ght and 11 ::JCIIO!l
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REED'S COUNTRY STORE

"42
44

--1- 4 7:-t--7X-t-------1·

51

LiS In

WH II EWALI.S AlliJ S2 to s I

cmd h(){ l\

p n H J( h " a n n t 1C1 .1hh "mor.t h

'' '

upda te

b\ lndd) th e\
tlh tl

w ach Beth Conwa y,

pushed 'l110mas on her way to
Wt lh ams s1de nte 'I aylot
( I owd
booed
Afte rw a r d
Mdl tll:i HcL1th the 2~-2 lo se r s
f.. oa&lt;. h .u;cused he r Hart ley

kc)

Pa ul

-

he cou ld not otdet the
wnrm t.:s bac k to v. m k the
tw o leag ues ad\ 1sed the
of!tuals that th ey would lw 1e

S&lt;:OI ed

II C

will

Hose growtded out three
l am es and f ltcd out um:e get
tmg a ma xed rc&lt;.:eptaun from
the Reds home crowd (1t

an

fo1

Ga1y Ca1ter drove m the
I) ang r un wi t h a double, then

tn 24
l thought

'A I' 1

s1t uat u,n
1- ollowmg ct f£'cl er~li cow t
JUdge s r ulmg th is \\ Cck th dl

mng

~-:.uncs th1s season

S.Jl u• dd)

to Mmncsuta and the u H
squ(:ld losang to Houston 2·1
Sa n 01egu vs MIIWC!ukee was
u uu.: c le d bec au se of wet
~ ~ uw1ds
Pht ladclphla got tv.·o-r un
hom ers fr om Bake McBri de
and Pete Mac.:kan m and Pete
Hose rni:lde h1s debut as a
Ph !lite aga mst hts fm mer
tea mmates

Mets three-t un etghth m·

suffct cd tts first loss

~( ,()

Pn or uf the Nat iOtld! l .caguc
has bct ume the fu st ~ete r a n
tunpu e to s1gn a contra ct fur
tlw 1979 season ~ nd 1113) be
the onl y 1 egul;.n wo1kmg
.,.,h l'n rhe rnclJ ur l e~1 g u e
Sl a ~o n
begins
nest
Wt-'llnesda y
Pt)UJ ag 1eed to a t \\ u vcat
lon tr ad thas week JOln m g
1 oo kJe 1\rn erJ can J ..eague um·
p1re l ed Hendr} \.l.hO llad
s1gned hiS contr act befor e the
e.. un e nt
da s pute bega n
llemlry r ep or t ed for spr mg
t1 am1ng th iS week tn At azuna
dft cr ICCC I\In g cl ea r dll!.:C
fi om th e urnpar es .I S
SU&lt;.: mtJO n
'11l&lt;tt It' a\ es 50 wnp u es st all
on the sadeh nes and the) wei e
sc heduled to meet here todet)
"a th attor ne) Hrchae Phtlltps

mam event, and come sundown, Fa ther 's hunhng crorue s

person?
SINCE YOU are at the

menopause age, I am sending
you The Health Letter
Euc lid Av~ , Cleveland, Ohio 4411$ 1
5-12, Menopause
number
SublcripUon rates Delivered by
Other readers who want this
carrier where available 75 cents per
week By Molar Route whtre carrier
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Elsewhere 132 011 ye•r, Six months
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Box 1551, Radio City Station,
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--~---- -----------------------~ T'------------~ New York, NY 10019. -•

Pryor first to
•
sign contract

my book would have to deal wtth foxhuntmg
Although my own ear never became addicted to the camne
symphony, to any measurable degree, my father was a hfelong
partictpant of the sport, and smce, as a lad, my dati) asstgnment of chores mcluded tending the hounds, 1 hke to cons1der
myself an accessory after the fact '
And, perhaps I should mentton here, that the type of
foxhtmting I refer to mvolves the chase only , and has nothin£
to do wtth the enha ncement of anybody 's wardrobe
I beheve most foxhunters regard thetr hounds as sacred
chattels, and Father was no exception to the rule m fact, he
went a step furth er. Though he dtspensed wtlh all formal
baptismal ntes, he habtlually turned to the Scnplures when he
had a new pup to chnslen
Consequently, I was regularly called upon to feed Moses;
water Joshua , or conquer the htlls of Abraham 1
From all I could observe, most any mght was a good
hunting rughl prov1ded the weather was JUdged ftt to take a dog
out At our house, however, Saturday was reserved for the

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON

The Daily Sentinel

J

A EULOGY ON FOXHUNTING

Unseemly trade-off
ne~ed

SPORTS

Ed 's Note From time tllltme, Dav1d Cummgs take&lt; ttme
out from his dulles as a Pomeroy Postal employe to pen a
humorous column for The Datly Senl!nel Cummgs toda&gt;
remm tSCes on !oxhtmttng

fl dl'

"Fares tone

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. MAIN

992-2094

POMEROY, 0.

"FRONT END ALIGNMENTS"

I

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i•

�I
,1

5-The Dally Sentinel, MIOO&amp;t:IJ&lt;lrt·rOin~roy, v ., r nu..y, M• r ..~1 . ~~~•

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Mar. 30, 1979 .
CLASSA
r---------------------~------------------------------------~~------------------------------------~-1
Ohio Girls High School
'
Basketball

•
l
••

·"~i~~~~t~l~!·l!:X~~£~;~

By The Associated Press
State Tournament at

Washington Buckeye
(2 1-2). 9 p.m.
Cha m p ion shi p
7

Ohio Stale

Friday' s Pairings

Angels may be new AL_ West.power

Tra il

p .m .

CLASS AAA
Akron St. Vincent -St. Mary Saturday

ManagerUene Mauch 's plans
liest hiIter. to play lirst base, (~i s in left field .
California acquired Ford to
c;eorge Brett missed most for the Twins.
,Jackson , Goodwin and
replace the late Lyman uf spring training with an
Bostock in the outfield, and injured lllumb, but he 'll be Landreaux will be everyday
free agent Jim Bair for the the everyday third baseman, players along with shortstop
with f'reddie Patek at short, Roy Smalley and catcher
bullpen .
Manager Jim Fregosi Frank \\'bite at second and Butch Wynegar. Hartzell
figures w open with an infield either Otis or Pete LaOlck or moves iniD a pitching rotation
of Carew at first , Bobby John Wathan at ftrst. The constructed
around
Grich at second, third catcher is Darrell Porter.
newcomer Jerry Koosman ,
The return of Steve Busby 1 and returnees Dave Goltz,·
baseman Carney l.ansford,
and either Dave Chalk or strengthens the Royals Roger Erickson and Geoff
Rance Mulliniks at shortstop. pitching staff with Paul zahn. Free agent Mike Mar·
Ford, Joe Rudi and Rick Splittorff, Demis Leonard, shall decided to stick aroWld
Miller are the .outfielders, l.arry Gura · and Rich Gale and is the main man out of the
with Don · Baylor the the main starters and the bullpen.
,
Hungarian,
AI
designated hitter and Brian Mad
Shortstop Don Kessinger
Downing catching.
Hr~bosky , the No. I man out
will double as the manager of
The pitching is headed by of the bullpen.
the Chicago White Sox and
Texas did some house- needs some medical good
superstars Frank Tanana
and Nolan Ryan and backed cleaning over the winter and luck for his club to contend.
by Don Aase , Chris Knapp new Manager !'at Corrales '111e White Sox looked like
and Dave Frost. Barr joins a will have some new faces. General Hospital last year
bullpen that includes Ken The rebuilt bullpen· has with key men such as
Brett, Dyar Miller and Dave Sparky I,yle and Jim Kern, as outfielders Claudell Washinggood
a
lefty-rlghty ron , Chet Lemon, Wayne NorLaRoche.
Kansas City presents the combination as there is in the dhagen and Thad !flosley, in·
same cast that has won three leafue. The new shortstop is fielders Jorge Orta and Alan
straight division titles. Man- rookie Nelson Norman and Bannister and pitchers Pablo
ager Whitey Herzog has the new thfrd baseman is Torrealba and Ron Schueler
shuffled it a bit though, trying Buddy Bell, acquired from all sidelined for extended
Cleveland for Toby Harrah. periods.
ID get more mileage out of
·
speedy Willie Wilson . "H Wil- Oscar Gamble, who came
All are back in working
son plays fulltime, he'D steal over from San·Diego for Mike order and could play
roles
100 bases," the manager said. Hargrove, becomes the DH, significant
on
Tllat explains the spring with veteran Mike Jorgensen Kessinger's club. The Sox
training experiment battling rookies Pat Putnam, also have one of the most
switching Amos Otis to first G;u-y Gray and Dan Duren interesting rookies, r..foot-3
base. Hit works, Wilson will for Hargrove's old first base Harry Chapp~s. who's trying
work in center field, flanked job. Second baseman Bump to beat the manager out of the
by AI Cowens and either Clint Wills compleles the infield shortstop job.
Torrealba joins a pitching
Hurdle, Tom Poquette, Steve and Al Oliver'! Richie Zisk
Braun, Hal McRae or even / and John Grubb or Bill staff headed by Francisco
Sample will be the out- Barrios, Ken Kravec, Mike
fielders, with Jim SWldberg, Proly and Jack Kucek. The
one of the best in the Sox also like them yoWJg
business, the ·-catcher.
arms such
as Ross
Fergie Jenkins, Jon Baumgarten, Rich Wortham
Matlack, Dock Ellis and and Steve Trout, son of a
Steve Corner figure as the ooethne Tiger star.
starting rotation, with Lyle
Eric Soderholm will play
and Kern ready to pick them third base, Orta is at second
up.
and Lamar Johnson at first,
Minnesota didn't exactly with Lemon, Washington and
By Will Grimsley
give Carew and Ford away probably Ralph Garr or Bob
AP Correspondent
and receive nothing in return. Molinero in the outiield and
Third baoeman Ron Jackson Bill.No.:&gt;orodny catching.
Somebody up there still likes Rocky Graziano - up there, and first oaseman..:atcher
Oakland has another new
down there, out there, over there, wherever the human fmger Danny Goodwin came over manager, no novelty for
can point.
for Ford. Carew brought Charlie Finley's . A's. This
"I'm still getting thein residuals- ahnost every mail brings outfielder Ken Landreaux time Jim Marshall is in the
a check of some kind," said the gllarled ex1Jug, ex-hood, ex· and pitcher Paul Hartzell, All hot seat, hoping for some
middleweight boxing champion Qf the world who has just four figure prominenUy in maturity from the club that
authored his second book.
led the division for much of
"This author stuff; TV and the movies -it's a piece of cake,
the first two months last
Exhibition Baseball
better than ripping off stores. Pays better, too.".
season
.
AI A Glance '
Graziano, 57, an immigrant dock worker's son who grew up
By The Associoled Press
on the tough lower East Side of Manhattan, threw a "coffee
Thursday's Games
klatsch" Thursday ID introduce his latest literary effort,
Minnesota 13, Atlanta "A" 1 KENSINGTON, Conn. ( AP)
"Rocky's Boxing Book," a soft-cover ring primer aimed 10
Houston 2, Atlanta " B" 1 - Old Dominion University
'
largely at kids.
New York IN) 4, Sf: Louis 0 of Norfolk, Va., has been
He didn't choose a fancy place like the 21 Club of the Waldorf
Montreal s-, Texas .4
named winner of the
for the occasion. He picked a fast food spot, Chock Full o' Nuts,
Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati S Schoenfield Sportsmanship
Broadway and 34th streets, in teeming mid-Manhattan.
Pittsburgh 6. Baltimore 5 Award by the Collegiate
Toronto 5, Kansas City 3
quit school in the sixth grade because of pneumonia," he
Cleveland 8, California 7 Basketball ·officials
srud. "Not because I had 11- but because I couldn't spell it.
Oak land 4, Seattle 2
ASsociation .
'.'It took me nine years to get through the fourth grade. When . Detroit 6, Boston 2
The award is named for the
I got iilto television commercials, I had tn take a crash course
Chicago (A) 4, New York late Sam Schoenfield, first
in reading . I was 32 years old and couldn't read the cue cards." I AI 1
Chicago ( Nl 5, San · president of the organization.
Graziano today is one of the most recognizable ligures on
More than 200 colleges along
Francisco a
television - particularly among the small fry and mothers,
San Diego vs. Milwaukee at the eastern seaboard were
who adore him - and one of the richest. Movie and TV Sun City, Ariz ., cancelled, rated by the CBOA.
rain
residuals bring him aroWJd $5,000 a week·.
Friday's Games
He can be seen early in the morning on weekends, pushing
Houston vs. Cincinnati at
cereal on the cartoon shows. He has plugged everything from Tampa, Fla .
yogurt and foot powder to dog food and women's deoderant. He
St. louis vs . Boston at
Winter Haven, Fla .
shills for aulD transmissions and chicken caccia!Dre.
Detroit vs. Philadelphia at
The word has gone out on Madison Avenue. If you want to Clearwater,
Fla.
sell a product, get Rocky.
Pittsburgh vs. Chicago (Al
"Rocky is an example of complete television empathy," Dr . at Sarasota, Fla .
Oakland vs . Settle at
Cltarles Winick, an eminent New York University psyTempe,
Ariz .
chologist, once said.
San Francisco .vs. Chicago
"En\pathy? Empathy? What's that?" Rocky exclaimed INJ at Mesa. Ariz.
when the professor's comments were relayed ID him. "I
San Diego vs. Seibu at ·
1-fawaii
thought I was going to have to go back to jail".
Atlanta vs . Baltimore at
Graziano, born Rocco Barbella, is tbe least plausible person
Miami, Fla .. (n)
one would expect to make a success in TV and the movies.
Montreal vs. Minnesota M
His nose, broken in four places, wanders all over his map. Orlando, Fla .. In)
Toronto vs. New York ( Nl
His hair, once reddish brown, is crew cut and shoe polish black
St. Petersburg, Fla . In)
from a monthly application of dye. His mug - as they call it a :Te)Cas
vs. New York (A) at
down at the stationhouse - isn't exactly what a schoolgirl Ft. Lauderdale. Fla., In)
would pin on her dresser.
CaHfornia vs . Los Angeles
"When I go to a psychiatrist," Rocky quips, "he makes me at Los Angeles. (n)
Mi Iwaukee vs. Cleveland at
lie on my s!Dmach."
Tu•son , Ariz., lol
It's these scrambled features plus his "dees, demand dose"
Saturday's Games
rhetoric that make Rocky so believable.
Houston vs. Montreal at
"Rocky comes across with a lot of warmth and honesty " a Daytona Beach, Fla.
'' B" vs. Atlanta
Madison Avenue executive explained. "He's non-threatenlng. at Baltimore
West Pa lm Beach, Fla .
He makes the listener feel superior. You know he's not going to
St. Louis vs. Pittsburgh at
steal your girL"
Bradenton. Fla.
Toronto vs . Ph11adelphla at

By HAL BOCK
AP
Sports Writer
( 19 -2) \I S . Elyr ia Sen ior (23 .. Thursday Ni ght's Results
The balance of power may
1). 1 p.m.
, CLASS AA
Barberton (22-2} vs . Cin be shi{ting from Kansas City
Co lum b us Ha r tl ey 52 .
0: ci nnat i Hughes. (20-0},. 3 p.m .
to California in the American
Nor
th
Bend
Taylor
49
,
Champ ions h i p 3 p . m .
Delphos St. J ohn's 70, League West. thanks in large
'
Saturda y
Ch agrin Fa lls J5
part to the trading policies of
the Minnesota Twins.
The Twl'ns made two major
winter deals with the Angels
and as a result, peremial
batting champion Rod Carew
is now ·working in California
along with outfielder Dan
f'ord. In exchange for those
· two, the Angels surrendered
six players, nooe of whom
'•
figured prominently in their
1979 plans.
The Royals have won three
straight division crowns with
essentially the same team
and shoots for No.4 with very
few cha;:,ges. The question is
whether they 'II be able tn
hold off the improved Angels
and the ambitious Texas
Rangers . After those three,
Minnesota and Chicago
occupy the middle of the
division, with 0akland and
Seattle in the rear .
1978 Finish - Kansas City,
California, Texas, Minnesota,
Chicago , Oakland, Seattle.
1979
Prediction
California , Kansas City,
Texas, Minnesota, Chicago,
Oakland, Seattle .
The Angels did an effective
job of plugging llleir holes
over the winter . Besides
getting Carew, baseball 's

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Mitchell Page is Oakland's
best offensive player and
speedster Miguel Dilone will
join him the outfield. The
third job is open with Dell
Alst on , Glenn Burke, Joe
Wallis and Tony Armas
among the candidates.
Marshall likes his young
pitching staff, especially
John Henry Johnson, Matt
KeQugh and Alan Wirth, all of
whom had good rookie years.
Other pitchers include starter
Rick Langford and relievers
Dave Heaverlo and Bob
Lacey.
The A's could use some
punch from first baseman
Dave Revering and third
baseman Wayne Gross with
Jim Essian and Jeff Newman
sharing the catching.
Seattle. feels the addi~iori of
Odell Jones and 'Floyd
Bannister, both obtained in
winter trades,
should
strengthen the Mariners'
. pitching staff. They join
_Glenn Abbott, Paul Mitchell,

'

•

Byron McLaughlin and Rick
Honeycutt.
Manager Darrell Johnson
likes his infield with Bill Stein
at third base , newcomer
Mario Mendoza at shortstop, ·
.Julio Cruz at second base and
Dan Mey'er at first .. Leon
ltpberts and Ruppert , Jones
hold down two of the ouUield
jobs, with Tom Paciorek or
Bruce Boehle the likely third
starter . Old pro Willie Horton
will handle the DH job and
Bob Stinson is the catcber.

Thoughts on keeping Meigs Pomeroy Jaycees for the
County beautiful were ex- mini-park · being developed led in the club prayer, with
Mrs. Bert Grimm using devo·
pressed by members of the bet ween Butternut and
lions. " Prayer for the Earth"
Bend 0 ' the River Garden Mechanic St.
was the theme used by Mrs.
Club in response to roil call at
Durin g the · business Grimm.
a meeting Monday night at meeting the regional meeting
Members signed a roundthe home of Mrs. James to be .held at the Meigs Inn
robin card for Mrs. Andrew
Diehl, Mulberry Heights.
was announced and members Cross who is cnfined to the
The members discussed the were asked to get their noon
Holzer Medical Center.
trash containers around the luncheon reservations in by
For the program, Mrs.
county and called for Apnl 14. The meeting will be Buck gave a talk on her trip
authorities to enforce regula- held April 21. The club voted
to · to Alaska. She toured
tions for useage. They com- to · contribute $10 for the
Western Canadatraveling by
mented on roadside litter, Canter's Cave 4·H project.
bus and Amtrack up the
and talked about wild flowers
Mrs. Eileen Buck gave the Western Coast, around Lake
to be protected and flowers to thought for the day and Mrs.
, Louise at Glacier Park, and
be planted this spring, all in ,Wilson Carpenter had the
Banns Springs. She com·
the effort to beautify the club poem. Mrs. Ruth Banlitz
mented on the outstanding
area.
The club commended the
senior citizens for their work
near the Center, and also the

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Turf Builder 5M
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Turf Builder +2 SM
Turf Builder +2 10M
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Sale Prices Good Thru April 7, 1979

.

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MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main

Pomeroy
992-2164

"The Store With
All Kinds of Stuff'

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FRIGIDAIRE HEAVY
DUTY WASHER
MATCHING
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To help deliver dependable

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used
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Knits cycle, helps keep
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items
with . 3
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rather than the ways of the
world.
·
"Spring Thoughts" washer
theme and she read from
Psalms and several poems including "There .is Always
Springtime", "Life Begins
Each Morning",, and "It's
Never Too late to Change'."
Reported ill were Clara
Gilkey, Mabel Walburn in
Holzer Medical Center, Mrs.
Lena McKinley home from
the hospital, Mrs. Bea
M IDDLEPORT, O.
Stewart and Mrs.· Phyllis
Gilkey, both confined tn
• . . . . .IMMHII'I:I041MMHIIIOI:MXIIC'I:I04::MIICIQ• Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Herman Kincaid, improving
at home following surgery,
Bob McElhinney, at home,
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Dale
Walburn, and Steve Fife.
SALAD WITH
It was announced that at
the April 26 meeting Arlene
EVERY 3 PIECE OR

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with a personalized Speidelldenr. lt's the perfect
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American League

CLEVELAND INDIANS Placed Wayne Garland,
pitcher, on the 21-day
disabled list .
.
Nationa I League

ATLANTA BRAVES Sent Tommy Boggs and Dom

Chiti, pit~hers, and Larry
ONen, catcher, to their minor
league
complex
for
reassignment.

LllfCINNATI REDS Sent Eddie Milner and Paul

Householder, outfielders, to
their minor league compleX
for reassignment .

NEW YORK METS Waived Lenny Randle, third

baseman.

Placed

Kevin

Kobel, pitcher on the 21-day
disabled list.
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS Placed Jerry Mu.mphrey ,
outfielder , on !he 21 -day
disabled li st.

-

FOOTBALL
National FQolball League
CLEVELAND BROWNS

,,
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Traded Oscar

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Angeles

lo

the

Roan ,

Los

Rams for an un·

disclosed draft choice In the
May 3-4 draft .
NEW YORK JETS -

Signed Russ Cooke, Steve
and Lynn Hover,

Head

linebackers ; John Gibney,

center : Andre Herrera and
Barrett Paige. running
backs ; Steve Taylor . safety ;
Na te_ Washington , defensive

Hawaii
Cincinnati vs . New York

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THE MEIGS INN

THANKS OHIO;
LAST YEAR YOU DRANK
73,290,0~2* glasses of
DIET RITE COLA. Drop by
your favorite store and
take advantage of our special
March cents off saVing time.

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POMEROY, 0.

INDIANAPOLIS
DARE·
DEVILS - Signed Paul

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defenders.
COLLEGE
.SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

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Wenson and Pat Hogan,

"

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assistant basketball coach .

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Spurlock , missionary to
Nigeria, will be the guest
speaker. Miss Spurlock is
home on leave.
A potluck dinner preceded
the meeting with Mrs. Martha Childs giving the bless·
ing. Mrs. Grace Pratt
welcomed guests, Mr. and
Mrs. Erroll Conroy, and Allen
Jenkison. Members gave the
Lord's J?rayer.

Sew-Rite Club met
The Sew-Rite.Sewing Club
meeting recently at the home
of Mrs. Mildred Wells, Ball
Run, voted to sponsor Ann
Browning in the Bike-a-thon
for the Mentally Retarded.
The club members also
voted to solicit for the Cancer
Fund on Lincoln Heights.
Mrs. Nettie Boyer had charge
of the meeting with Mrs. Ann
Browning giving the
treasurer's report, and Mrs.
'Evelyn Gilmore, the
secretary's report. Mrs. Martha Hoffman will have the
next meeting. Refreshments
were served to those named
and Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
Flo Strickland, Mrs. Betty
Wehrung, Mrs. Lenora
McKnight, and Mrs. Shirley
Baity.

.11

POMEROYBROWNtETROOPI~l

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Miller

,Lori Harris weds
Lori Dawn Harris and
~
Stephen Douglas Miller were He is a 1973 graduate of Point
Pleasant High SchooL He is a
joined in marriage with a 1978 graduate of Rio Grande
double
ring
ceremony c
preformed by Rev. GeorgeS. allege. He is presently
Crooks at the First United l'mployed as the assistant
manager of the Dutch Pantry
Methodist Church January 26 · Resturant in Austintown,
U&gt;ri is the daughter of Mr. Ohio.
andMrs. Thomas Bumgarner,
Route 2, Letart and the late
The maid of honor was Sally
Harden and the best man was
Luther Harris Jr. She is a 1977
graduate of Point Pleasant · Rody Harden, both of ShipHigh SchooL
penville, Pa.
Stephen is the son of Mr. and
The couple reside at 4831
Mrs. Ralph Miller, 308 Staff Westchester Dr., Youngstown,
Ohio.
House Road, Point Pleasant.

Special seroices planned
Special services are being
planned for the St. Paul
Church congregation during
the Easter season. On April
12 there will be a Maundy
Thursday candlelight com·
munion service at 7 :30 p.m.
Th.ere will also be special services on Easter Sunday .

At the Sunday seJv&amp;ce at·
tendance was 74 for Sunday
school, and ~9 for worship
service. The minister ~poke
on "Rising Above Our
Fears." Scripture was taken
from Romans 5 and Luke 13.
The Adult .Bible Class will
sponsor a yard sale on May 4
and 5.

UMW makes $50 contribution
A $50 contribution on the
new kitchen at the church
was made by the United
Mehtodist Women of the
Forest Run Church meeting ·
recently at the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon with Mrs. Mae
Holter as co-hostess.
Mrs. Mary Nease presided
at the meeting during which
time the members agrec'&lt;l to
pay their pledge. Fifty-seven
sick visits were reported.
Devotions were taken from
Matt. 6 with the prayer, "Just
fur Today Lord" bv M". Ann

The pinewood derby race of Thoren, Mrs. Gary Freeman ,
Syracuse Cub Scout Pack 242 Mrs. Jeanette Duffy, and
was staged at the pack Mrs. Hugh McPhail.
Attending were Mr. and
meeting held Monday night at
Mrs.
Robert Deemer, Chris
the Syracuse Elementary
and Kevih, T. J. Robbana,
SchooL
The race was won by Mike Corbitt Patterson and Mike ,
Patterson with Chris Deemer Mr. and Mrs. Greg Bailey,
coming in second, and Todd Chri : and Andy Baer, Mr.
Adams, third. The Lord:s and Mrs. Jerry Aleshire and
Prayer and pledge to the flag Jerry, Mrs. Roger Grindley
by Gary Aleshire and Chris ad Chris, Mrs. Allen DavidGrindley opened the meeting. son and Todd, Mrs. Jim
Wolfe hadges were presented Adams and Todd, Mrs.
to Chris Grindley, Todd Jeanette Duffy and David,
Davidson, and Chris Baer, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
with silver arrows to Scott Frank, Jeff and John, · Mrs.
McPhail, Chris Baer, and Gary Freeman, Brian and
Chris Deerner. The cub Deanna, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
scouts did a skit on how to Thoren; son, Eric, Kelly
Grueser. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
catch a fish .
Welcomed into the pack McPhail, Heather, Scott and
were Todd Lisle, D. J. Corey, Mr. and Mrs. John LiHarden, Chris Stout, and sle, Todd and &amp;ott, Mr. and
•Mrs. Donald Harden, D. J.
Shain Simpson.
The living circle closed the and Mike, Dave Stout and
meeting and refreshments Chris, and Mrs. Cryslal Simpwere served by Mrs. Pete son and Shain .

Watson. Mrs. Edith Sisson,
program leader, sang " Lord
Jesus I Love Thee" followed
by the reading of the purpose
of the UMW read in unison.
Title of the program was
"Prayer is Adventure" wifh
poems and readings pertaining to Ea ster being given by
several members. A discussion on prayer was held. The
program closed with sin gin ~
''Sweet Hour or Praye r.''
Pie cmd coffee were ser ved
to the 12 members present.

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10,
DIET RITE &amp; DAOS ROOT BEER BOTTLE
CAPS FOR CHARITY.

RC BOTTLING COMPANY
:£-~OR~~~~-----··:~~~~~~~0~.

Arnie and Debbie Cully,
who receive some support
from the Calvary Bible
Church, were recent g uests
for services at the church.
During the morning worship
service, a report on the couple's work was given . They
will leave in June for TiHwan
for miss ion work . A dinner
was held at the church in
their honor.
On April 30, May I and 2
there will be a revival at the
Bible Church with the pastor
of the Marietta Church as
evangelist.
Today's birthdays: Former
CIA Director Richard Heims
is 66 years old. Statesman
McGeorge Bundy is 60 .
Singer Frankie Laine is 66 .

A nature hike and skating party were among the activiites
planned when the Pomeroy Brownies met this week at the
school.
The girls_worked on their sit-upons. Last week they made
e~g shell p1ctures which are now on display at the Pomeroy
L&amp;brary. Sarah Anderson and Melissa Dailey held the fla g
while Barbara Cole~an led the troop in the pledge. The girl
scout pledge was given by Eri ca McClintock. Nancy Baker
~erved cookies.

Kingsbury News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
had as guest at their home
following funeral services for
Anna Mae Terrell, Mr. and
Mr s.
John
Thomas,
Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. and
Mrs. Koger Ri ebel and
children of Chester, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Terrell of
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Smalley , Jr . of
Wierton, W. Va .; Mrs. Robert
Ried, Rodney David and
Bruce of Pataskala; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Markin s,
Racine ; Miss Juanita Terrell,
Pataskala, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Spaun, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mr s. John Walter Dean,
J eremy and James, and Mrs.
Donna Young, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles King
visited her mother, Mrs. June
Smith who is ~ patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young
had as guests at their home
following funeral services for
her grandfather, Mr. William
Beal. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Beal. Mr. and Mrs . Kirk
Chevalier and Jessica , Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Well and
of Chester ; Mr.
Heather,
and Mr s. Noel Young ,
Bradley Young, Bruce Young
and Galen Young, all of
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Swart and Roma of
Reynoldsburg ; Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Beal and Stanley
Bea! of Middleburg Heights,
Ohio.
Mrs. Kenneth Markins was
honored on her birthday at
the home of her grandson,
Mr and Mrs. John W. Dean
Sunday with a birthday
dinner followed by birthday
cake and ice cream served to

these attending: Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Ried, Rodney
and David of Pataskala ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Ried and
Robert Jr. of Syracuse, Mrs.
Virginia Smith and son
Joshua of Poway, Calif. ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Spaun and
Shannon, Mrs. Donna Young,
Bob and Susan and Adam. all
of Pomeroy;
Kenneth
Markins,
Racine,
and
Jeremy and James Dean,
Susan and Charles King Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ri chard
Houdashelt are announcing
the arrival of a daughter,
Betsy Annette, borned at
Holzer Medical Center. Betsy
weighed 10 lbs. 10 ozs. and
was 22 inches long. The
Houdashelts have another
daughter, Audra . Grandparent is Mrs. Ruby Burside.
Mrs. Charles Arnold, who
was burned at her home nine

weeks ago, is still a patient at
University
Ho s pital,
Columbus, and recovering
slowly .

all

DID YOU
KNOW!
Although God loves you He
will let you be lost if you

don 't obey His will!

SUNDAY
Bible Classes
9:30am
Morning Worship 10 :30 am
Evening Service
7: 30pm

QiURCH OF

CHRIST

Reedsville , 0 ., SR 124
John Tyler, Evangelist
IJOq) 295 -6910

Announcing New Hours
1

BOB EVANS STEAKHOUSE
EFFECTIVE APRIL 2ND

WILL BE OPEN
7 DAYS A WEEK
5 A.M. til 12 MI.DNIGHT

DREAM HOMES COME TRUE

WITH BRIGHT, NEW

Wall Coverings

weather conditions.

Alfred

Social Notes

'8 OZ. GLASS

~

INN PLACE

Eddie Woods,

cornerback.

and Ivan lrlcanln assistant
coaches.

·''

THE

California at Los Angeles.

INJ

IT'S DIET RITE
CENTS OFF
TIMI
'

HatH1 A f'.ood Time At

(NJ at St. Petersburg, Fla.,
In)
New York (AJ
vs.
Baltimore "A" at Miami , In)

CLEVELAND COBRAS Names Jimmy Mella head
coach. Named Herb Heller

'

Get Out and

San Diego vs. Sei bu at

Ji

Cub scouts hotd derby

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contemporary books.
The club collect led by Mrs.
Slack opened th~ meeting.
For roll call members
answered .with an important
social issue. There was a lei·
ter from Ellen Bell thanking
the club for a donation to the
library improvement fund.
Mrs. Slack thanked all who
had assisted her during the
past several meetings.
Next meeting will be April
I I. Refrestunents were serv·
ed by the hostess.

planned for May when the Sa lisbury Girl Scout Troop 1100 met
Tuesday night at Meigs High School.
The scouts also discussed including a visit to the Ohio
H&amp;stor&amp;cal Soc iety building while in Columbus for the camp-in
at CO,'\\) Fourtee? members and three advisors were present
for the meetmg with Susan Jones serving the relrestunents .
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP
Plans for a visit to the Meigs Museum next week were made
at a meeting of the Salisbury Brownies Tuesday at the Meigs
H&amp;gh SchooL For the&amp;r craft session, the girls worked on metal
sllckons . The promise, pledge and flag ceremony opened the
meeting. Rita Eblin and Shirley Kauff are the leaders.
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP ll21l
World Association pins were presented to the members when
the Syrac~e Brownies met this week at the school. The troop
made stamed glass window replicas.
Sarah Philson led in the girl scout promise; Kristen Pape,
the pledge to the flag, and Becky Winebrenner the Lord 's
Prayer. Jennifer Arnold served refreshments.
'

Guests of church

•

••

Seattle vs. Milwaukee at
Sun City, Ariz.

forward; Dan Tobin , midfielder, and Dean Wurz berger, defender .

Phone Ahead 992-6292

••

BEVERAGES ·SOLD

Scottsdale, Ariz.
Cleveland vs . San Fran ·
cisco at Phoenix, Ar iz.

SOCCER
Americ•n Sotcer
League
CALIFORNIA SUNSHINE
- Signed Paul Renkert,

••'
•

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Chicago lA) vs. Detroit at
Lakeland, Fla .
.
Chicago (NJ vs. Oakland at

end ; and

&lt;Saturday and Sunday Only)

•

Dance 11om lO:uo til 2:0l',

Minnesota vs . Boston at
Winter Haven, Fla.

•

.

From FredericktOwn, Ohio

Fl. Myers, Fla.

By The Associated Press
BASEBALL

MEMORIAL FLOWERS
Anyone wishing to place
memorial flowers at Heath
Methodist Church for Easter,
should contact Mrs .. Beulah
Jones.

MARCH 31 and APRIL 1

•

'l'HE MEIGS INN

'

WE'VE GOT IT. • •
*PIONEER
*FUNK'S
*KENWORTHY

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TliiS WEEKEND •AT

Transactions

SEED CORN

OUT DINNER

BA(){ BY 'P01'ULAR DEMAND ,

Clearwater, Fla.
Texas vs. Kansas City at

The importance of making
the right choices in life was
the program topic presented
at the Thursday meeting of
the Loyal Women and Men's
Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Mrs. Rose Reynolds had
the devotions and the pro·
gram and spoke of choosing
an optimistic attitude and
outlook . rather than a
pessimistic one, taking the
r1ght viewpoint on issues and
choosing to follow christ

II

I.

wild
flow•'" ·
the
geranimwns and wild roses
along with the lupin lillies and
buttercups. Mrs. Buck also
described the totem poles
which are patterned from the
tribe's family history, and
commented on the seals and
whales which were sighted
near the British Columbia
coast. She showed slides and
pictures.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Ben Philson.
Mrs.
Di ehl
served
refreshments from a table
centered with a small basket
of spring flowers.

Right life choices program topic

By Charlene Hoeflich

A trip to the Center of Science and Industry at Columbus wAs

cycles. Team it up with the

big -load drying c::apacity of
the Frigida ire Dryer . • It
lets you dry as much as an
18-lb. load all at once, and
provides tender care for
everything from delicates
to denims.

BAI&lt;ER

'

Mrs. Sibley Slack revielt1!d child, who remained lonely as
"The Women's ~oom" by a young woman at Harvard
Marily French, .
the University. She married and
Wednesday meeting of the had a fmaily and became a
Middleport Literary Club business executive. Mrs.
held at the home of Mrs. Ber- Slack gave brief sketches of
nard Fultz.
families. mostly of the soap
Mrs. Slack read reviews opera type, and commented
from the New York Times on the equal rights for women
and other newspapers on the which dominated throughout
book which. is a portrayal of the book.
the lives of several families
Members had a general
with emphasis on one woman discussion on the quality and
named Myra. Mrs. Slack value of the book, and then
described Myra as a lonely discussed the value of many

a!

performance ,
th i s
Frig!daire Heavy Duty
Washer has a heavy duty
motor

3 Piece Bind

II

'The Women's Room' revealed

:·1

TURF BUILDER

IGirl-Sco~Di~I

Bend 0' the River Gardeners
want to keep .Meigs beautiful

Sunday · Schooi attendance
on March 18 was 57, the offering $29.30.
Worship services were held
following Sunday School with
an attendance of 32. Rev. and
Mrs. Thomas sang a special
number "Reach Out to ·
Jesus ." The sermon was on
"DisCipleship" taken from
Mark 8.
Holy Week service will be
held at the church here ·on
April 11 with guest speaker.
Sunrise service on April 15
with Rev. Thomas in charge.
The U.M.W. will hold their
meeting here on Tuesday
evening at 8 p.m. at the
Follrod - Bobinson home - a
J!Ostponed meeting due to bad

Word has been received of
the death of Cash Betnz of
Ravenna , 0 ., formerly of this
place.
Gerald Violet of Tup~rs
Plains, well known in~his
locality, recently injur in
an autn wreck, passed a ay
in . a ·Parkersburg hasp, taL
Mr. and Mr~ . Arthur
Atherton recently called at
the Cbarles D. Woode home .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles D.
Woode visited Mr. and Mrs .
George Guthrie Sunday af·
ternoon. George is recovering
from recent surgery and able
to do some chores now . We
wish him welL
Charlotte Van Mctci" who
recently was hospitalized was
able to attend church ser·
vices Sunday. We wish her a
speedy rec overy from
surgery .

ON SELECTED VINYL.COATED
WALL COVERINGS. OVER 35
PAMRN BOOKS WITH SALE
PRICES.
HURRY - SALE ENDS. APRIL 25, 1979

405 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, .0 .
Phone 992-3748 or 992-5020
Convenient Free Parking

�•

7-The Daily Sen!inel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., l'riday. Mar. :lll. l!li!l

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wo,coh;P''"''
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p m
COMMUNlT~\ CHURCH

TRINITY CHURCH . Rev . W . H .
Perrin . pastor. Bob Buck . Sunday
schoo l supt Church School 9 15
a .m .; worsh ip service, 10 30om
Cho1r rehearsal , Tuesday, 7 30
p .m . under direction of Alice
N ease
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARE NE Corner Un10n and
Mulberry , Rev . Clyde V Hender ·

Church
7:30 p .m . prayer
meeting 7 30 p .m Thursday
'
MIDDLEPORT Pt:NHCO STAL . . .
Th i rd Ave ., the Hev W1ll 10m Knit
tel , pastor Ronald Dugan Sun day School Supt Classes tor all
ages . even1ng sennce, 7 30, Btbt e

son . pastor. Sunday school , 9.30

study , Wednesday . 7·30. p.m .;

Near Long Bottom, t-:ds el Hart ,

poster. Sunday school

Dw rgh t l. Zov ttz , dr rec tor
H A R R I S 0 N V I l l E
P RE SBVTE~ IAN ,
Rev
Ern9SI
Strick lin, pa sto r. Sunday church
sc hool , 9,30 a .m ., Mr s. Homer
lee . su pt .. mornrng worshtp,
10 30
MIDDlEPORT , Sunday sc hool ,
9.30 a m .. ~ichord Vau ghan , sup!.
M orntng wo r sh ip , 10:30.
SYRACUSE Mornrng worsh1p. 9
om . Sunday school , l Oa m M rs
Sompson Hal l sup t
RUTl AND CHURCH OF GOO,
Rev . Bobby Porter, pastor Sunday school , 10 o m .; Sunday warsh ip 11 o m .. Sunday e- .... ening
se r .... ice. 7 p m ., Wednesday Fami·
lv Trn ting Hou r, 7 p m.Wednesdav

John F. Fulll, Mgr.

10 om .;

10'30o m.
BRADBURY

CHUR CH

OF

CHRIST Mr. Donald Roley po s1or
Sunday school q 30 a m ' wor ' ship service , 10 30 a .m ., Sundov
serv rc es, 7 p. m ., youth grou p,
Wednesday , 1 p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST . Rev . Earl
Sh uler , pastor Su nday sc hool
9 30o. m Ch u rch service, 7 p .m ,
youth meetin g, 6 p m .Tue sday Bi ·
ble Study, 7 p.m .
RACINE CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE , Rev John A Coff man , pastor. Fronlo.lin lmbodon,
chairman of the Boord o f Chrrs tio n life. Sunday School ~ 30
o .m.. morning worsh rp , 10 30,
Sunday even mg wors h ip 7 30
p m . Prayer meeting. WPdn es '
day, ~: 30 P·r:"

BOOK STORF
Church &amp; Office Suppltes
:l iFT"

&amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
PrelCriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

of Your Choice

Automotive

Service

KERMIT'S KORNER
Pomeroy, Ohio

Middleaort

Pomeroy

Complete

This Sunday

.EN

Of Our Religious Heritage

These Messages

l

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

·

Roy Riggs

.

Chost,r!

"h. 985.4100

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL
Ph. 949-9130

RACINE
FOOD MARKET
The Store
With A Heart
Racine
Ph. 949-2626
2 Conven•ent

Miorkets

Pomeroy , Ohio

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

•f;i

St ..Rt. 7

'POMEIIO'r

lfFRANKLiri

RIGGS USED CARS, I,.C.

6j(

Social 1
1 Calendar l

1

Chur(~h

Attend the

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

Ph . 992-2101

-=

a .m .. Glen McClung , supt.; mo rn - youth services . Friday . 7·30 p m
1ng worship lQ.30 o.m evemng
MIDDLEPORT FRl:EWill BA~
servrce, 7 30· mtd week ser¥tce ' TI ST Corner A sh ond Plum . Noel
Wed nesday , 7 30 p .m
Her ~man . posto-r-SOtu rday even
GRACE EPISCOPAl CHURCH -·
rng 5 ervrce 7·30 p.m .. Sunday
316 E Main St , Pomeroy · The School 10 30 o m
Rev Robert B. Groves , rector .
MEIGS
Sunday servrces . 11om. morning
COOPERATI VE PARISH
pr ay~ {Holy Communr on first
METHODIST CHURCH
-s-unda y of each month) and serRobert T Bumgarner,
mon Church church school and
Director
nursery care provrded Coffee
POMEROY CLUSTER
hour rn portsh house following
Rev Robert McGee
the ser'¥rce .
Rev . James Corb11t
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
POMEROY , Sunday Schoo l 9. 15
212 W Main StJohn McArthur , 0 m . Worshrp serv rce 10:30 a .m .
pastor , Brbl e schoo l, q 30 om , Chorr rehearsal Wednesday , 7
morning wors hip 10·30 o .m ., p m Rev . Robert McGee, pastor .
Youth meetings, 6 30 p.m evenENTERPRISE Worsh1p 9 o m
rng wors hip. 7.30. Wednesday Church SchooiiO a .m
night prayer meeting end B1ble
ROCK SPRINGS , Chu rch Sc hool
study , 7 30 p m
10 a .m Worshtp 10 om, UMYF
THE SALVATION ARMY , 11 5 6 30p .m
Buttern ut Ave ., Pomeroy . En ¥oy
FLATWOODS Church School10
and Mrs. Roy Wrning, offrcers in am. Worshtp 11 a m .
Sun day holrn ess
MIDDkEPbRTCLUSTER
c ha r ge .
meetrn g. 10 a m Sunday School
HEATH Church School 9:30
10·30 a m Sunday schoo l leader
a m . Worshtp 10·30 a m . UMYF 6
YPSM , Eloise Adams . 7 30 P m
p m Robert Bumgarner . Pastor .
RUTlAND , Church Schoo! 9.30
sal v atro n mee t i ng , vo rrou s
speakers and musrc specia ls
a m . Worship 10 30om Wilbur
Th ursday- 10 a.m . to 2 p.m
Hilt , Pastor.
lod tes Home league all women
SALEM CENTER , Worshi p 9 am .
inv tted . 7 30 p m prayer meeting Church Schol9 45 o .m
and Bible s1udy, Bob Estep
SYRACUSE CLU STER
lead er
Re ¥.
Noe l Hermon
Rev. Harvey Koch , Jr
t eache r .
FOREST RUN . Wors hp 9 o m
BURLING TON SOUTHERN BAP
Ch urch School 10 a .m .
TIST CHAPEl Route 1. ShadeMINERSVIllE Church School q
Pa stor Bobby Elk rns
Sunday 0 m . Wor shrp 10 a .m .
sc hool . 5 p.m .. Sunday worship ,
ASBURY · Church School 9·50
5 45 p.m.; W ednesday prayer se r
o m Wo rship II a m Bible Study
.... rce . 7 30 p.m
7 30 p m Th ursday UMW fist
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHUR CH Tuesday .
OF CHRI ST, 200 W Main St , Jerry
SYRACUSE, Church School 9·00
o m . Worshrp servrc e 7·30 p.m .
Paul , minister, phone 992 -7666
Conse rvativ e non- instrumenta l
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Sunday wo rshrp. 10 a.m .; B1ble
Rtw David Harris
study , 11 dlm ; worshtp . 6 p.m
Rev. Steven Wil son
Wednesday Brble study , 7 p m .
Florence Smith
OLD DE XTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
Hrlton Wol fe
C HUR CH, Re v .Ro l ph Smith
BETHANY, (Dorcas) . Worshrp
9 00 a m Church School 10 00
pa sto r Sunday school , 9 30 a.m .
Mrs. Worley Froncrs , superrnten- 0 m
dent. Preaching ser'VICes frrst &amp;
CARMEL , Chruch School 9 30
third Sunday s follow rng Sunt;1oy a .m . Worship 10 30 o .m 2nd and
School
4th Sundays.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST
APPlE GROVE , Su nday School
Preochrng 9 30 o m ., first and se· q 30 o m Worship 7 30 p m lst
cond Sunday s of each month, and 3rd Sunday s Pray er meeting
thi rd and fourth Sundays each Wednesday 7.30 p m . Fellowship
mont h, worshtp serv tce at 7 30 supper first Saturday 6 p.m UMW
p.m . Wednesday evenings at 2nd Tuesday 7:30pm .
7·30. Pr ayer and Bible Study .
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9
SEVENTH -DAY ADVENTIST . am. Worship service 10 o rn "
Mulberry Herghts Rood . Pomeroy . Prayer meeting 7:30 p . m .
Pastor, Albert Dittes Sabbath Wednesday UMW second luesSchool Supe rinte ndent , Rrta day 7: 30pm .
White Sabbath School , Saturday
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday
afternoon at 2.00, with Worshtp sc hool 10om . worshtp. 11 a m
Servtce fallowrng at 3: 15.
Choir proc t tce , Thursday , 8 p m
RUTLAND
FIRST BAPTIST
LETART FAllS- Worship ser Harriett vrce9a .m ChurchSchool10o .m .
CHURCH Sis ter
Worn er Supt Sunday School ,
MORNING STAR . Worshrp 9.30
9 30 a.m.; morning worship, o tTl .. Church School 10 30 am :
lO 45 o.m
Mid -Week Service Wednesd ay 8
THE HilAND CHAPEL . George p m .
Cas to pastor . Sunday School
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School
q 30om . evening won hip, 7 30
9 30 a .m . Worship 11 a .m .
PORTLAND, Ch urch School 9 30
Thu rsday even rng praye r serviCe,
7·30 p m.
o m . Worsh rp 11 a .m
POMERO Y FIRST BAPTIST ,
SUTTON , Church School 9 30
David Mann . mrn rster W tlham o m Worshtp 1st and 3rd Sunday s
Wa tshn Sunday school supt . Sun· 10:30a .m .
day school 9 30 o m ,. morning
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
worsh ip 10 30om
Rev Rr chord W. Thoma s
!fiRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST . 282
Duane Sydenstr~cker. Sr
Mulberry A ve ., Pomeroy , Pa ul
John W Douglas
Srl ver . Pastor : Woodrow T. Zwrl Charles Oomigon
ing Sunday school superinten JOPPA , Worship 9:00 o m .
dent Sunday school , 9 30 a m , Church SchooiiO·OO o .m
CHESTER
Worsh rp 9 a .m ..
mornrng worshi p , 10:30, evening
w orship, 7:00 p.m Midweek Church School 10 o m Choir
prayer se rv ic e 7 00 p.m.
I Rehearsal 7 p m . Wednesday Br MIDWAY COMMlJNITY CENTER . ble Study, Wednesday s, 7·30 p.m
Dex ter Rd . langsvi lle, Ohio, Rev .
LONG BOTTOM , Sunday School
Clyde Ferrell , Pas tor Sunday at 9 30 o .m Evenrng Wor ship at
School
11
a .m .
Saturday 7 30 p.m Thursday B1bl e Study
pre ochrng servtces 7 30 p.m. 7 30 p m
REEDSVIllE Sunday School 9 30
Wedne sday evenmg Brble study
at7 JOp m
am. M orning Wors hi p 10 30 a .m .
FAITH TAB£RNACLE CHURCH , Even ing Wor shp 7 30 p.m. Bible
Bailey Run Rood, Rev Emmell Study Wednesday s of 7·30 p.m .
Rowson, pa stor . Handley Dunn ,
ALFRED . Sunday School at 9 .45
supt. Sunday sc hooL 10 a .m Su n- o m Morntng Wor!lhip ot 11 a m
day evenrng ser~M ce 7·30 Brbl e Wednesd ay
Ni ght
Prayer
teaching 7.30 p m Thundo-;
Meeting , 7.30 p.m .
DYE SV IllE
COMMUNITV
ST . PAUL. (Tuppers Pla rns ).
CHURCH, Roger C. Turne r, pus tor . Sunday School 9.00 a m M orn rng
Su nday school , 9:30 a.m.; Sunday Worshrp at 10 00 a.m. Monday
mornrng wo rsh1p , 10 30: Sunday Night Brble Study 7 30 p m
evenrng se rvrce 7.30.
SOUTH BETHEl (Sil ver Ridge )
MIDDlEPORT CHURCH OF Sunday School 9.00 o m . M orni ng
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Woship 10 00 a .m . Wednesday Bi
lawrence Manley, pastor; Mrs. ble Study . 7.30 p. m
Ru ss ell Young , Sunday School
TUPPERS PLAINS , Wor ship 9
Supt . Sunda y School 9 30 o .m . am Chu rch School l Oam .
E11entng worship 7 30 Wedne sI&lt;ENO CHURCH OF CHRIST , ser doy pra ye r meeting , 7 30 p.m
, vices each Sunday 9 30 a .m .
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, George P1cken s
pasto r wrth
Racine~ Rev . W
H Lykin s, preaching on f~rst and thrrd Sun·
pastor Mornrng worshtp , 9'; 45 day of month Oliver Swain, Supt
am Sunday sc hool. 10 45 o m .:
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION .
evening worship 7 Tuesday , 7 30 Re v. Kerth Ebl tn, pastor . Sunday
p m , lad res prayrir mee ti ng, School,
9·30
a .m.,
l eonard
Wednesday 7:30pm YPE
Gr!more . h rst elder . eventng ser MIDOLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, vrce . 7·30 p m . Wednes day praye r
Corner S1x th and Palmer, the Rev . meet mg . 7 30 p m
M ark McCl u ng . Sunday sc hool.
BEARWAllOW RIDGE CHURCH
q 15
o .m ,
Don
Wt!son , OF CHRIST , Duane Worderi ,
lacy
Borton , minister Bible d oss, 9 30 a m .
superr ntendent
a sst . su pt Morning Worship , morn rng worshrp · 10.30 o .m
10 1So m Vouth meetmg , 6 p .m .; evening worshrp , 6·30 p.m
7 30 p.m . Wednesday Btble study , 6 30 p m
evenrng w ors hrp
NEW STIVERSVIllE COMMUNI
Wednesday n ight Btbl e study and
pr ayer service , 7 30 p.m
1 TY Churcli, Sunday Sch oo l ser
CHURCH OF CHRIST , M id- vrce , 9 45 o.m ., Worshrp servrce,
dleport , 5th and Mor n George 10·30. Evongel1stic Serv1ce . 7 30
Glaze, mrn rster , Mrke Gerlach. p m .
Wednesday ,
Prayer
supen ntendent Terry Yankey , meeting , 7·30.
youth min ister . .Srble school , 9 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
o m ; morning worship, 10·30 Pome roy - Horrr sonvrlle
Rd .
Purtell , pastor:
Brl!
o m .; evening worsh rp, 7:30; Ro bert
praye r serv rce. 7 p.m . Wednes · McE lroy , Sunday school supt Sun·
day
doy school 9 30 o m morning
MIOOl_EPORT CHURCH OF THE worsh1p and commun ion, 10 30
NAZARENE, Re.,. Jtm Broome, a.m Sunday worsh ip service, 7
pa stor , Bill Whtte , Sunday sc hool p.m . Wedne sdor. e'Jenmg pray er
supt . Sunday school , 9·30 f? .m .; meet~ngandB rb es rudy 7p m .
mornmg worshi p, 10 30 a .m ;
ST. JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday evange lrs t rc meetmg . Pine Grove. The Rev Wllliam
7 00 p m . Preyer mee ting . M1ddl esw orth , Ppstor . Church
W e dn esda y ,
7
p m
services 9·30 om . Sundov School

UNITED
PR ES BYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF ME IGS COUNTY ,

•

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

i:u' RHIT.UR E

&amp; HARDWA,&amp;! ,
H...,etlte Sows
'

Ph. 98$.JJII8

"Surroundings coum - but not mu ch. And where there is love,
surroundings .do not count at all. ..

Chest01

Mv g r ancl mother to ld me th 1s. But for the longes t ti me I did not

'\\tirlpool

undcrscan d what she meant. I thought people were a product of thetr
l·nv ironmcnt. I thought pe(;plc grew accord1ng to their circumstances:
bustn ~s s penjJit' became merch a nts, rellg •ous people became clergyffil•n; concerned people bec.lme firemen and nurses.
Now and

a_garn,

I

stdl

APPLIANCE II ·
Soles-SJtrvlct·Accesoorlts
' 220 E. Main Sj.

pass s lums; child ren playing in filth y alleys

and on b roken si dewalks. Am.ll cemembe.- m y questi ons. Where do the

...

ch ildren of alleys sleep? How arc t hey warmed? And ho w do they grow
111 s urrollndinAs that strangl e clean ar r , c~mfort a nd b eau ry ?

'
.... t&gt;

SERVICE
CENTERS

G .-andmo dll' r (ould nt!vcr am; we.- all ffi)' ques ti ons. She would just
smile and tell me, "Jesus Chrisc was born in a stable and He was [he
Saviur or a ll rnankr nd ...

282W.~In

I understand now. Sur roundings do not count at all there 1s love. And love 1s found in church.

P: J. PAULEY,
. AGENT

..

Mr. and Mrs: Paul Harris

not w h ere

Midway Market
Bob's Market

Silver anniversary
Sunday, April 1

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, 0.

B04W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

An open house is being
planned for Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Harris on Sunday, April
I, from 2 to 4 p.m. in celebration of their 25th wedding anniversary. Hosted by their

children and their fam11ies,
the eelebration will take
plaee a( the Harris home in
Minersville. Friends and
relati ves uf the couple are invited tu attend.

Tractor Sales, Inc.
New

Devlz

A view from the Indian mound

Farm

B.

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

·TEAFORD ·SR.
216 1Second

Pomeroy
992-3325

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE
Groc:eriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

Attend The Church

uan Thompson Foret, Inc.
461 S. Third, Mlddlepor

'ltere there is love

'fYZ· ~

t.,.

Cable TV.Systems, Inc.

Copyught 1979 ~eos tet Advertising SeN tce. SH-asburg Vrrg1ntE1

This Sunday
MIKE SWIGER
STATE FARM
INSURANCE

Scr1pruros selected t&gt;y
The ArnefiC11n B•ble Soc r o r~

II

Sunday
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
Connth1ans II Timothy Titus
I John Revelation Revelation Revelation
1:1-20 20:1-15 22:1-21
5:1-2 1
2:1-26 2 1-15
5:1 -21

Auend The Church

BROWN'S

Of Your Choice

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Equipment
Sales-Service
Fire Extinguishers
Fire Dept. Equip,
Rutland 742-!777

This Sunday

143 S. Third
Middleport
!'h. 992-7155 '

PIZZA SHACK

Ken Grover
Let us capture the story
of your Weddtng .

Eat In or ,
Carry Out
12&amp; E. Molin

985-4155

992-6304

Chesler, Ohio 45720

RACINE FlRST BAPTI ST , Don l.
HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISIIAN
Walker , Pa stor , Ron nie Sa lser , Roger Wat son pastor Kenn eth
Sunday sc hoo l sup t.. Sunday Byer Sunday sc hoQI sup ! M ornsc hoo l. 9·30 o .m morn tn g war · mg wors ht p 9 30 o rn
Sun
sh ip, 10.40 a m Sunday eve n1ng daysc hoo l , 10 30 am
evenrng
worsh tF., 7 30 We-dnesday even- SN11 rce , 7 30 Wednesday B1blc
rng Bib e stu dy, 7·30.
Stu dy 7 30 p m
DANVILLE WES LEYAN Rev . R
MT
UN ION BAPT IST . Joe
0 . Brown , pasto r Sunday Schoo l , Sayre . Su nday sc hool superrnten mor nmg wor sh 1p dent Su nda y sc hoo l, 9·45 o rn ,
9 30 a.m .
I O·.t 5 youth servrc e. b 45 p m
evening worship, 7 30 p m
evening wors hip , 7 30 p rn .. Pray er mc~ t rng . 7 30 p m
prayer a nd p ratse Wednesday , Wed nes day
TUPPERS PLAIN S CHRIST IAN
7.30 p m.
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST. Rev . CHURCH, Randy Koe hler pa stor
Morv rn Markm . pa stor Steve Ltt · Denn1 s New land, Sunday sc hoo l
ti e Su nday sc hool sup! Sunday superin tend en t Sunday Schoo l
sc hool . 10 am . morn 1ng wor· 9 45 am E11en 1ng w or sh1p I 30
ship , II am . Sund ay evenr ng p m pray er mee ftng 7 30 p m
worshrp, 7.30 Pray er meeting Wedne sday
and Brble study Th ursday 7·30
LETART
FALl S
UNITED
p.m you th se rvrce 6 p m Sun - BRETHR EN , Rev Free land N orrr s,
da y
pas tor , Floyd Nom s, sup! Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, school 9 30 a m morn rng ser Rev . Do nny R Cook pastor. Sun - mon 10 300 m Pra yer serv tce .
day school 9·30 o .m wo rshtp Wednesday 7 30 p m
se r ... rce 11 am . even 1ng se rvice
CHESTER CHU~C H OF TH ~
7 00· youth se rvrce Wednesd ay. NAZA RENE , Rev Herber t Gra te
pastor Worsht p scrvrcc 11 a m
7 00 p m
lANG SV Ill E
C HRI ST I AN ond7 30p m Sunday Schoo l 9 30
om Charle s Bro;sel l sup! PrayPr
CHURCH , Robert Mu sser, pa stor
Sunday sc hoo l , 9 30 o m . Roy meet m g. Wed nesday 7 30 p m
Srgmon . su pt .. mornt ng wars h1p.
LAUREl CLIFF FRH MnHOOI ST
CHURCH, Rev Floyd F Shook ,
10 JO Sunday even rng se rvice
7 30 m'd - w eek se rv1ce Wedne s- pa stor , ll oyd Wrig ht, Sunday
day , 7 p m
Sc hoo l Sup! Morning Worshrp
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TH~ 9.30 am Sunday Sc hoo l 10 20
NAZA RENE , Rev. Dol e Bo ss , am Wedne sday Prayer and Br po stor ; Bob Moore , Sunday b le St\;'dy 7 30'p m Sunday ev en
School supt Sunday school q 30 rng worsh ip 7 30 p m Chorr Pro c
o m . morn ing worsh ip, 10 45 !tee Thu rsday 7 p m
a m ., evangelist ic se rvice , 7 p m .
DEXHR CHURCH O f CHRIST
Wednesday se r vices
pr ayer Charles Ru sse ll. Sr , m1n1 ster .
and prai se, 7 p.m
Naza r ene Rr ck Macomber sup t Sunda y_
you th 7 p.m . Oo tl y pray er sc h ool , 9 30 a rn w or ~ hrp ser
meeti ng, B.30 am Mens prayer vice 10 30 o.m B1ble Stu dy , rue smeeting. Saturday , 7 p m
doy , 7 30 P m
EDEN UNITED BR ET H~ f N IN
REORGANIZf O CHURCH OF
CHRIST , flden R. Bloke poster
JES US CHRIST OF LAflER DAY
Sunday School 10 a m Rober t SAINTS . Portland Raci ne Road
Reed . supt . M~rntng sermon 11 Wrl l1om _Rou sh, po ~ t o r_ Phy llr s
a m . Sun day nigh t se rvrces Chm. - Stober! , Su nday School Sup t ~un
tion Endeavor. 7 30 p rn Song • day School , 9 30 a 1r- Morntng
serv1ce B p.m , Preaching 8.30 wors h rp , 10 30 0 m
Sunday
p m . Midweek Prayer meef tng , evemn g ser'¥ tr e 'I p m W C"dn es
Wednesday 7 p.m , Roy Adorn s. day evemng pr oyrr ~N11 t ce&lt;s '/ JO
loy leader .
p m.
.
.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRI ST
BHHl t HEM BAPTI ST , Re11 Earl
locah'td a t Rutland on New l rmo Shuler . po ster, Wo rship SC9-' tCc
Road , ne x t to For est Acre Pork , 9·30 om . Sunday sc hool lO JO
Rev Roy Rouse , pa stor; ~ob er t o m Btble Study on rl rrayt?r ~t?r
Musse r Sund&lt;?Y Scho ol su p!. Sun
Vtct? Thur!&gt;rloy -, 30 p m
day sch_ool , 10 30 o .m wqr~h i p
CA IUUON (HUfJ(H Krn gsbury
'I 30 p m .Btb le St• tdy ',M~;:.:Jr i OS · RoaJ Gcity K1 ng ro •.tM . Sun day
day , 7 30 p.m
Sa turd ay n1ght sch r10 l 9·JO 0 m
Rol ph Carl
prayer service , 7·30 p rn ,
c: upNrr li Pnden t· \"vf' tltn g wo r ~ krp

,,

7 30

p
pm
r oy e r rn ce t1ng
Wr.-d nesdoy 7 30 p m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN ,
Wa lla ce
Bruce Sm1th, pa stor
Darn ewoo d, Sup! Brble Schoo l,
''0 am
p re och rng se rv rcc ,
9 ..,
10•45o m Noevcnm g sc r vrcc
HYSEll RUN fREE METHODI ST
CHURCH Rev Herber t Ail mg .
pastor Surrdoy School 9.30 am
M ornr ng se rvrce , 10.30 om .,
hangel rsfic serv1cc 7 p m . Praye r
and prar$e serv tce , Thursday 7
p m
f'RHDOM GOSPEl MISSIO N ot
Bo ld Kn ob
Rev
l aw re nce
Gl u esenca mp Sr , pas to r · Roger
Wrll for d, Sr , Su nda y sc hoo l su pt .
Sun doy sc hoo I 9 30 o even1 ng
wor sht p
7 30 p m
Pray er
mee lt ng , Wedn esday 7 30 p m
Yout h meeti"g Sun doy, 5 30 p m
wt th Don and Mort ho Mea d ows rn
cIla r ge
WHITFS CHAPEL (oo l vrll e fm
Hev !-l oy Dee ter pastor ' Sunday
sc hool 9 30 am wo rsh1p se r vtce
10 30o m Brb le study and praye r
se rv rce Wedn es day , 7 30 p m .
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CH RIST
l orry Colem an . past or
Herb
El lt olt Sund ay sc hool su p! Su n
rl ny sc hool q30 orn , mor ni n g
wors hip and comun ion , 10 30
am Sundoyeventngservrcc 7
COMM UNITY
H U TLA N D
CHU RCH Am os Trll 1s, pa stor
Da nny Trll rs Sund ay Schoo l Supt
Su ndoy Schoo l q 30 am . war sh1p st-•rv rce , 11 am . Su nday
ov~:?n r ng ~er v r cc , 7 p m . Prayer
I p m
rnc etrng , Wednesday
WMPO Radr o b roadcas t , Sunday
mor nrng I 45
RU TL AN D CHURC H OF TH E
NAZARE NE Rev lloycl D G rrmm .
Jr . pa stor Sunday sc hoo l 9 JU
om , worshr pservrce 10 30om
Br oodras tlr ve ove r WM PO young
I, o pi P '•
~erv r r co
7
p m
b; n ngcol tsl ic s{•r v r1 e 1.30 p m
WE-dnes day service, 'I 30 p rn
FIRST SOUTH ERN BAPTI ST, Cor
ncr o f Second and Ander so n
M aSM Pa stor FrnnK Lowt her
Sundny school, 9 45 a rn , wor~
s hop ser vice 11 am . a nd 7 30 ~
p m
·w e~ kly B1b le Stu dy ,
Wl'dnC' sday _7 .30 p m.
•
MA~O N L HURCH OF CHRI ST .
M1ller St . Mosnn , W Vo. Au rice
M 1r ~ pastor Sunday Bible&gt; Study
10 a ru Worshr p I I o m ond 7
r rn . B1 blp SttJdy Wednesday 7
P 111 Vo(o l rnusrr
MASON f\ SSI:MBLY O f tJ OD

.

' '

./iA

•:

MARK V STORE

Attend The Church

Middleport

.of Your Choice
This Sunday

0 dd
l
M
W
h'
,
d
u tng one .
oson,
Vo 1 Preoc rng s~ fl1 r ces every / Sun oy
Chester Tennant Pa stor Sund a y olterno t1ng w rth C E W e8n esd oy
Sc hoo l 9 45 am . Chrl dren 's prayer meetrng 7·30 p m Re v ,
Chur ch 6 45 p m Young People 's James l each
pasto r: David
Servt ce 6 115 p m
Evo ngeli stt c Holter loy leader .
Servrce 7 30 p m W omens
, M ts
JEH 0 YAH 'S WI TNE SSE S 1 mr·te.
sronory Council 10 am fr rs t ,ond east of Rutland. ju nc ti on of Route
tlmd Tuesday s Prayer and Bibl e 124 and Noble Summit Rood (T·
Study, Wednesday 7·30 p m
174) Su nday Bible l ec tu re , 9 30
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR IST · o ., Watchtower study , 10 30
IN CHRI STIAN UNION , The Rev
o m , Tu esd ay . Brbl c study. 7 and
Wilham Campbell. pa stor. Sunda y 8·15 p m . Thursday , theoc ra trc
School 9 30om .: Jomes Hu ghes
sch oo l . 73 0 pm . . service
meetrng , B.30 p m .
sup! even tn g se r v rce 7 30 p m
We dne sda y eve nin g prayer
RU TL AN D FREEWill BAPTIST
rneel tng 7 30 p rn 'r' outh pray er Ch urch
Leland Hal ey , pastor
servrce each Tuesday .
Sunday schoo l. 10 a .m . even rng
FA IRVI fW BI BLE CHURCH
se r.,.r ce
7 30 p m
Prayer
l etar t W Va . Rl 1, Rev Cores
h I
meelr ng , Wed nesday , 7 30p m
Hargra ves pa sto r Warshi p se r CHURCH OF GOO of Pro phecy,
vrces , q 30 a m . Su nday sc hoo l
locat ed on the 0 . J. Whrte Rood
I I am , evenrn g warsh1p, 7:30 off hrghw oy 160 Sunday School
p m . l ues d ay cottage pray er 10 om. Superrntendent Joh n
mectrng on d Bt bl e stu dy , 9·30 Lo 11edoy First Wednesday nigh t
am Wor sh tp serv1ce. Wedne s- of mon th CPMA services , second
day 7 30 p rn
Wednesday WMB mee ting , thr rd
CA LVA RY BIBLE CHUHCH, now through fifth youth se rvrce
lo&lt;oted on Pomeroy Prk e, Count y George Croyl e pa stor .
Rood 25 nea r Flatwoods Rev
HOPE BA PTI ST CHAPEl _ 570
Blackwood . pa stor . Servrces on Grant St , Middleport Rev Don
Sunday at 10 30 a m on d 7 30 Blok e , pas tor Sunday schoo l
p m w ith Sunday sc hool , 9 30 I 9·30 a m ., mornrng wors hip
orn Bt ble stu d y , Wedne sday , 10.30 a .m., evening wors hip, j
7 30 P·'!' · .
p.m .. Wed nesday eve nrng Bible ,
INDEPENDEN T
HOLINESS studyOI'ldproyerme etrng 7 p m
CHURCH INC.
Pea rl St M1d- Afftl 1ote d wtth Southern Bapti st
dleport
Rev
O'De ll Manl e y
Co nven tion
po ;,tor . Sonny Hud son, SundaY
BRADFORD
CHUR CH
OF
sc hool su p! Sunday school, 9.30 CHR IST -Eugene Unde rwo od ,
am , even in g worshi p 7 30 p m . pa st o r :
Harry
H e ndrrck s,
Pra yer ond pror se se r vrce . ' superrnt en den1. Sunday schoo l.
Wednesday 7·30 p .m
9 30 0 m
morning worshi p
RUTlAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH 10 30 am evening w orshrp j
OF JESUS CHR(ST , Eld er Jame s p.m. Wed~esday Bib le study : 7
M rller Btbl e study . Wednesday, p m.
7 JO p m : sVndoy School 10 o m
JUBILEE CHRI STIAN CENTE R Sund ay n rght se rvtce 1 30 p m
George's Creek Road 'Rev C. J :
POMER O Y
WESL EY AN Lem ley, pas tor, John Fellure,
HOLINE SS • Hari'honvrlle Ro od. superintend en t. Church sc hool ,
Dewey King . pa stor: Edr son q 30 a .m ., mornin g w orshtp,
Weave r assis tant , ' Henry Eblin , 1030: eveni ng service , 7 p.m .
Jr , Su nd ay sc hoo l su p! . Sunday Vout h mee trng Sunday . 6 p m ~ r schoo l , 9 30 a .m ., morntng war - b te study in dep th . Wednesday . 7
shtp . 11 a rn . Sunday even1 ng se-r - p m
Classes for all Clges.
vrce 7 30. pray er mee ttng , Thu r s- Nurser y pro ... ided f or worship ser
dny, 7 30 r m
vlce .
SY RACU S~ FIRST CHURCH OF
ST PAUL lUTHERAN CHURCH
GOD
No t Pentecostal , Rev . Corn er of Sytomo re and Second
Georg e Oi ler pas to r Worsh rp Sts, Pomeroy The Rev W rl lia m
se rvtce Sunday 9 45 am . Sun - Middleswo r th, Pa stor
Su nday
day school II o m worship ser- Schoo l at 9 45 o m 6nd Church
v1ce, 'I 30 p m. Th ursday pra yer Services 11 a.m.
rnpofrn g, 7 30 p,rn
SACR~D HEART , Rev. Father
MT . HERMOf:J United l:lre th rtn Raul D. Welton. pastor . Phon e
Chu rch Sunrlo 9 Sc hool 9 30 a .m . 992-2825 . Saturday evening Mo ss.
Wa r ~ h rr
!\'e r vrce
1045 am
7::10· Sun day Moss Band 10 a m
'
'

I

I

'

Confess ron S.Jturdoy , 7 7 30 p.m
VIC TOR Y BAPTIST _ O n the
R
J
E K
7b
oufe Sy pc:t s o~ esl ·; eesec ,
0
pa sto_r. un °~: sc ~ ' 0 a m .:
m ornrng wo,rs tp 1 0 m : even·
rngTRINIT'r'
ser vtce, Ch
t
A
bl
rr s ron
ss em y,
Coolvrl!e
· G rlbc rt Spencer,
pos t or . Sundoy _schoal 9 30°m .:
mor n_rng wor § h~p . 110 m Sunday
7 30
eventng servrce
Pm
m!d wee~ praye r serv rce Wednesdoy , 7: 30p .•n.
MOUNT O lt ve Commu n it y
Chu.-ch , Lawre n ce Bush, pastor,
Be tt ie Pigott , Sunday schoo l sup!
Sunday School and morning worship , 9 ·30 m . Sunday eveni ng
service, 7 p.m , Youth meetrng
and Btb le stud y . Wednesday . 7
Pm
FAITH BAPTIST Churc h, Mason,
m ee t at Uni ted Steel Workers
Union Hall, Railroad Street ,
Ma son. Pastor , Rev . Joy Mr tche ll .
Mor n tng wor shrp 9·.45 o .m , Sun·
doy School 10 3 0
m Prayer
m eeting Wedn esdoy ,730 P m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST R ~v .
Nyl e Borden , pastor. Corne lru s
Bunch, svpenntendent Sunday
sc h ool. 9.30 a .m .. second and

°

°

~o~t~S undoy sworshrp servlce ot

Mf ;;:ORIAH BAPTIST _ F rth
·
.
ou
~n1 M~n St., Mrddlepor t. E~e~ .
o v rn mnr s. pastor Mrs . '¥10
Bum gardn er
s upt
s_undoy
sc h ool , 9 30 o .m · worshtp serv t cr:~~f4~o . m T H
Un i t e d
M h d
ChBE h ~l
Ch
e f o IS!
urc · ev
or 1es
Oomlg o n, pastor. Sunday School ,
9 30 a . ~ ., -;a r s ~~ SeSr.,.i cde , 1 ~ ~
1 e
am · un °Y
tu y ,
P m ·:
Wednesday
prayer
m~e~G~ e 7 : Jgr m PRAYER AND

6

~~AJSEP Liberty A ve., past Burg~r
e
omeroy . Eugene Anspo ,

po sto_r. Sunda~ . sc~oal , 10 am ..
~ornrngto~s
a .md Eve n
~~fd;;'or;
u~ ay , ues oy an
Y
p. ·

fa'

'd · \

TISBTU~l~~~~~M RSO~TH1ER~hB~P-

•
ou e . .
a .e.
Pastor Oon Bloc~ Affll toted wrth
Southern Boph ~f Con_ve ntlon.
Sund~y sctJ~ojQ 1 · 30 p.m ., hSun~ay
wors rp, ·
~ - m . T urs O'Y.
ev~~ ~fE~~~;tul y, 7 p.m.
'
R .
R A
~SSEW~IB_L Y,
10
acrne ,
oute
"·
r• m ,
~~bade , rlS~o r. Sunday sc tl~ol ,
m
~n day edenrng ~e rvtce .
6 _ 3 ~ - p.m
e n es oye emng ser •
vrce , 7.
'

12

1

PERO..S OF GARDENING OR
GREAT GALLOPING GREEN WORMS
Ah, spring. The frogs are yelling, the robins have arrived.
Time to quit dreaming over those seed catalogs full of big,
beautiful nowers and vegetables. Time to lace reality . Reality
thorn, no thistles, until he and Eve got to sneaking around with
t11at Snake. But even after he · got cursed with thorns and
thistles, there isn't any mention of bugs and worms.
. Adam was the flrSi gardener. He was doing all right:no
thorns, no thistles, until he/got cursed with thorns and thistles,
there isn't any mention of bugs and worms.
Some gardeners try to have a perfect garden, no weeds, no
bugs. My back starts aching just thinking about it.
There are three things between me and thai perfect
garden:
I. Weeds. I'm willing to help vegetables when they're
, young as parents help their children. When both are older, they
should fight for themselves.
.
Weeds come in many sizes and shapes , but my pet hate
weed is wild buckwheat. Remember the story of Hercules and
the Hydra with nine heads ? Every time old Herk chopped off a
head, two more grew m its place. Wild buckwheat IS the Hydra
of the weed world.
2. Bugs and worms. Bean beetles on the beans, Japanese
beeUes gobbling the red raspbemes, the roses, the corn silk.
But the most plagued vegetable in the garden is cabbage. As
soon as its puts its leaves out of tbe ground, the black leaf
hoppers jwnp on it. If it survives them, the galloping green
worms arrive and stay all sununer.
3. Me. Since I've had this slipped back disc, I can't bend
over to weed. I have to sit flat on the ground or squat, both
uncomfortable positions. And my mind has terrible thoughts :
What am I doing all this for• What would happen if I just gave
it up? We'd probably starve, that's what. Anyway, I can't give
up gardening. I'm progranuned.
So to work. Time to check the seeds I have left over. Time
to plant those pear tomato seeds I saved last fall.
Happy gardening, all you sore-muscled, broken-back
people,
Mrs. Wilber Parker

Racine Social Events
Mr. and Mrs. Orland K
Mitchell of Parkersburg
visited recently with his aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs A, C.
Bradford.
Sunday visitors of Mrs,
Margaret Houdashelt wer e
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lohn of
, Pomeroy.
Recent visitors of Mrs Ura
Morris were her grandson
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Lakeo and children, Lori and
'Sean, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Swift, Columbus, and
Mr, and Mrs. Pete Gould,
Nelsonville.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Hayman and children of
Jonesboro, Tenn., visited
here with his parents. Mr.
and Mrs. William Hayman.
Rev. and Mrs. Don
Walker's son, Delbert, of
Summerville, W. Va., was
injured in a truck accident.
He is in Charleston General
Hospital in Charleston, W.
Va.
Freeland
Norris
is
recuperating at his home and
improving slowly. Recent
visitors were Mr. and Mrs.
Roderick Grimm and Mrs.
Garnet Ervine.
Guy Nelgler has been ·ill
and a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
· Mr , and Mrs. Martin
Wilcoxen were in Columbus
over the weekend visiting
with their daughter and sun·
in-law , Mr. alld Mrs. Rock
Young and children.
Mrs. Caroline Miller has
returned
home
from
GaUlpolis where she spent .a
few days at th~ home of h~ r
daugh~er and Jbn·in,law, Mr.
.

.J

I

N '

and Mrs. Robert Cornwell.
Recent dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Wilcoxen
were Mr. and Mrs. Linley
Hart and Mr. and Mrs.
Roderick Grinun.
Mrs. Steve Cleland and
children of North Ridgeville,
Ohio visited lor a lew days
here with her mother, Mrs.
Anna W~ne s and s1ster ,
Karen.
George Sayre Jr., Denver,
Colo., has been visiting for a
lew days here with hiS aunt
and uncle, Mr , and Mrs .
Herbert Sayre, Other visitors
recently of Mr . and Mrs.
Sayre were Mr, and Mrs.
David Sayre of Antiquity,
Carol Sayre of Racine and
Mr . and Mrs. Howard
Robinson, Ripley, W. Va.
Mr . a nd Mrs, Herbert
Sayre wer e visiting recently
in Browhard, W. Va ,, with
their ni ece and husband, Mr.
and Mrs. Weldon Kinney.
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker
and Mr and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm spent a day shopping
in Columbus recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Gpry Carter
and daughter, Andrea, and
Gary Sellers and friend of
Columbus were recent guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Ward Sayre,
Mrs. Carter and Mr. Sellers
are granddaughter and
grandson of Mrs, Sayre .
Timothy Ivan Gheen, son of
Mr and Mrs. Manuel Gheen,
born F'eb. 18, was dedicated
to the Lord during worship
service at the Hacinc Baptist
Church on Sunday morning
March 18 by Hev. Don
Walker, !fa;1or of the church .

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, ~·&amp;AM, meeting at
7 p m Friday With work in
the Master Mason Degrees;
all Master Masons mvited.
SATURDAY
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, 2
p.m. Saturday, Middleport
Masonic Temple, for the annual inspection . Dollie
Rousey is honored queen.
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 8 p.m. Saturday at
the home of Mrs. Lillian
Moore for a spring fling,
SUNDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of J erusalem
rehearsal, 2 p.m. Sunday at
Ma sonic
the
Pomeroy
Temple.
DISTRICT 13, Daughters of
America, practice Sunday, 1
p m at the Gtlrnan Ave.
Methodist Churrn Educational Building , Fort St.
Marietta, for the district
ra !iy to be held April 2L All
distri ct officers and members
urged to attend,
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY SALON
710, Eight and Forty, home of
Mrs. Julia Hysell, 7:30 Monday night with Mrs. Eileen
Searles , hostess
B. H. SANBORN MIS·
sionary Society, 7:30 Monday
evening, Middleport f1rsl
Baptist Church, annual
fellow ship tea , Mrs Betty
rultz to be the guest speaker
on her trip to China and
Japan last year.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
Order of Eastern Star,
regular session , Monday, 7:30
p,m, Masomc Temple. Initia·
lion practice and officers to
wear chapter dresses CCA
points to be taken to the
meeting . Dues are payable.
SALEM CENTER
Education
Organization
meeting 7:30 p,m, Monday at
the school W!th Dwight Goins
and Dan Moms of the Central
Office, Metgs Local District,
as speakers. Refreshments
will be served, public invited.

25" GIANT·SCREEN COLOR CONSOLES
D&lt;AGONAL

Super
Color TV Value
with
COLOR SENTRY

COMFORTABLE VIEWING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
• Brilliant Chromacolor Pict ure Tube • Electronic VIdeo Guard Tuntng
• Reliable 100% Solid· State Chassis • Elegant Ftne -Furniture Styling

Dt ~ Go ~• l-

The CHADWICK • K2518M - Early Am enca n
style with rich, warm simulated Maple
tlmsh Decorative, matchtng lm 1sh Simu lated wood gallery , Iron! and ogee bracket
te et Casters

The BRENT • S1928W - Famtly -StZe tabl e TV lealures
Zemth 's Colo r Senlry automattc color control system
that corrects the color ptcture 30 t1mes a sec ond
Zenith Powe' Sentry Voltage Regulat1n g Syste m.
so lt d·sta te tumn g and brrllian l Chromacotor Pl clute
tube Rtch , srm ulate d Walnut

The MASSE NET • K2520 - DramatiC
Med iterranean styling Beautiful s1mulaled
wood -gram iln iSh avatlable myour chOICe ol
Pecan co lor (K2520P) or Dark Oak col or
(K2520DE) Casters

llniShed cabinet

STARTING
AT

YOUR CHOICE OF STYLES

MONDAY
ALL 1969 graduates of
Meigs High School invitO&lt;! to
attend a meeting at 7:30p.m.
Monday at the Meigs Inn
meetmg room,

Energy Savers!

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
I he Middleport firehouse.
Mrs. Fred Kessinger and
. Mrs. Rita Hamm will be
hostesses. Program by Mrs,
Dav1d Bowen. Display of
,Audubon bird prmts by Mrs.
John DaviS.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America, Tuesday a p.m Practice for
receivmg national and state
offi cers Good of erder committee to have silent auction.
Initiati on w1ll be held .
Members to wear while.

LIMITEDEDITIW SPEED QCJEEN
Wlshday Pair

GAS
RANGE
AS LOW
AS

-

StJie $239.00

Sllle $339.00
* TWO

\MASON - The Mason
Omted Methodist Women met
March 12. A program en·
titled, "Prayer is a Venture
of faith" was presented by
June VanMatre.
Plans were made lor· the
Mother and
Daughter
Banquet to be held May 14.
. Some of the women at·
tended the Spring District
Meeting on March 29, at
Cross
Roads
United
Methodist Church.
Thirteen members at·
tended .

Edna Mac Rhodes, dec. to
Alice Rhodes Stelzer, cert. of
trans ,, Lebanon.
James W. Suttle, Greta M.
Suttle to Greta M. Suttle,
parcels. Olive.
Adolph F. Grueser, dec. to
Haze l Grueser , J ames
Grueser, Sharon Hayhurst,
Sandra K . Barney, a!fid. for
trans, , Sulton,
Herman J . Grossnickl e.
Marga ret Grossni ckle to
Columbus and Southern Ohio
l::lectri c Co., casement,
Olive,
RIDDLE FOR TODAY
Ho" long ago was Judge
Edgar Erv in 's Pio neer
Histor) of Mei gs Co unt y
publi shed'' Me1g s H ,
B·Jok free stor y dcadl'
April 5. Yesterday's amm:l'r
llaker Funuturc on N.
&lt;
Scconrl Strcd .

REG. $279. 95

REG. $399.95

Mason UMW met

Property
Transfers

r

rELITTON
Microwawt Cooklll!l

*
*
*

SPE ED
THREE TEMP
LARGE CAPACITY TUB
PERMANENT PRESS CYCLE

*
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*
*

AUTOMATI C &amp; TIME DRY
THREE TEMP
PERMANENT PRE SS CYCLE
LARGE CAPACITY

COUNTERJOP MICROWAVE
RANGES

SAVE UP

PRICES START
AS LOW AS

m'250

'298

ZENITH

ZENITH
Midel K1908

..........
.... "'.
- l t t o.

$449.95

AS LOW AS

RIDENOUR
CHESTER, 0 .

985-3307

More value per dollar on KitchenAid
dishwashers, compactors, and disposers.

Model 52572

.,.__,
....
suus NOW
(wltto

!"""' 25 in. . .••I ..
-color TV.

$499

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
BOnLE GAS
RACINE, 0.

949·2020

�8- The Daily Senti nl'l. Mi&lt;l&lt;llt•pnrt -1'111111'riiY. CJ •• Fnll"Y. M;w. :Ill, 1 ~7~

61N.M~tir'

'·

Cutbacks trigger calls
By TERI::NCE HUNT
Associated Press Writ("r
WASHINGTO N ( AP I Proposed
c utbacks
at
military bases througho ut the
. country have triggered ca ll s
for. congressional hearin gs
and meetings with h1g h~ eve l
defense officials to review the

decisions.
Overall , howeve r , t he r e
was not a large outcry on
Capitol 1-'ill Thursday against
the r eductions, which would
trim defense jobs in 36 states

;mel the Distrid of L'ol wn b1a .
Thirteen st atcs would wind
up wilh a nel increase in jobs.
Only Vermont IS not affected
by t he proposals anno unced
1lJursday .
The Defense Department ·s
pl a n calls for d osing, cutting
back and mnsolidating operat ions at 157 military baseseliminating 44 ,500 military
and civilian jobs.
Ohio's
congressio nal
deleg ation is seeking an
appointment with Defense

Secn·tar) Hc.trulil Br(IWfl tu
dete rmine whether th e
expected savings are e nough
to ju s tify the financial
hanlships that would result ,
accordin~ to a spokesman for
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum .
0 -0hio .
Ohio and Florida are the
two states hardest hit by the
cutbacks, with Ohio losing
5,362 military and civilian
positions a nd Florida lo sing
5,3li5.
On~ of the
strongest

Easter robbery victim
EUCUD, Ohio ( API Former Cleveland Indians
slugger Luscious " Luk e"
Easter , who was shot to death
by two gunmen in a robber y
Thursday , was · a peaceful
man, according to those who
knew him .
His only violence came
during ~a m es when he
slugged balls with all his
might. He walloped what is
r egan !"&lt;! "' the lon gest home
nu
'"
in Cleveland
St a&lt;,...
Ul June 1950. It
tra veled 477 feet.
Easter , 63, was slain
111w·sday morning outside a
Euclid bank where he had
gone to cash about $40,000 in
checks as a favor for his
fellow workers at TRW Inc .
He was a union steward
there .
Two men rushed up to him,
fired a shotglin at him and
Oed with the bag of money,
according to a witness.
Police said Easter was hit
just above the heart , by the

charge fro m the shotgun, as
he left the Cleveland Trust
Ca. branch office.
Police were holding two
men , aged 31 and 32, in
connection wit h the shooting
Thur s day . The two were
lodged in the City Jail , but no
charges had been filed .
Police said about $30,000 of
the money was recovered

when

the

two

were

ap pr e he nded following _ a
police chase and gun battle.
Officers speculated that more
may be hidden in the alleged

escape car.
Police said the two men lost
control of their car and slid
into a bridge abutment. The
driver allegedly fired at a police car. shattering the windshield but mis sing the
officers . The other man
allegedly shot at police !rom
behind a car, officers said .

There were no irijuries.
After leaving the Indians,
Easter continued to play in

the minors for many years.

Fifteen years ago, when he
gave his age as 52, he was still
in action with the Hochester
!led Wings, where. he was a
player-coach and pinch
hitter :
Easter used to play cards

sometimes when he was not
playing ball.
An anecdote recalled by a
sports writer who knew
Easter in his earlier days told
how the two were in a game
with other players one night
as the Indians traveled by
train from Boston to Detroit.

There were two strangers
in the game and the others
quickly lost , but stayed to
watch .
Suddenly there was a yell
from one of t he players. One
of the stranger s had dealt
from the bot tom of the deck .
Easter insisted that his
teammates and the sports
writer let him handle the
matter. He started playing
gin rwnmy with the stranger
and cleaned him out within 20

rilinutes .

L t&lt;J#.,_o'

I
8

R
A

.

,.,.,

•'1.' •''

R
y

When the strangers had left
and Easter paid his friends
back, the othersaske&lt;j how he
had done it.
" I never do it to friends, "
the slugger said . "But I can
deal from the middle of the
deck."

Library
Letters

Chairman
addresses

Mary K. Yost
HD I
Hacine, Ohio 45771
Dear Mary K.,
·
Jeanne and 1 are off k&gt; the Wild West (otherwise known as
Denver) a nd, thank s to Patti Vugan, snatches of John Denver
(" I'm leaving on a jet plane: • and it's p- lpng way from Langsville to Denver" ) are runnmg through a mmd weary from
(rying to compre he nd the textbook we were told 'to read before
COJI[ing . ( Patti assigned me the task of getting john Denver 's
autogfa iih·l' I get that close, l 'll take AU.. of him instead! I
Every~ne has as ked why, out of aJJ !he librarians in the
coWJtry, Jeanne and I are among the 100 selected to
partic ipate in this adult literacy workshop . We don 't know but we like Barb Karr's s uggestion best. She says it's for the
same reason they send slum kids from the cities to the country

in summer.
We are due a t the work shop at ~:30 today {Wednesday) .
According to the schedule, .tonight they will tell us why we ~re
at the workshop and beginning some coverage of the matenal
in the text . ~'rom 9 a.m. to 10 p.m . tomorrow , we have classes
- with a chapter to read again for homework. Friday and
Saturday are also 9 a.m . to 10 p .m . class sessions. And on
Sunday, we wrap it up with a 9 a.m.to I p.m . session ._
Ted Heed says airlines are now setvmg drtnks over
Kansas . With a s c hedule like this, those are probably the only
ones we'Ll get to have!
·
':cough this is a work session , and not the lark so many
P&lt; ,, :'•ink we ' re going on, we're both excited at the prospect
of ~ - , :1ng another wa y to help our adopted county. And we
refus, w have our a rdor dampened by the prospect of hard
work. (Or as my step-sister said, " you mean you 'r e actually
happy to be going back to school again '") We hope to Jearn
enough to come back and spread literacy in the !0-eounty
OVAL area as thickly as Robert spreads butler on his bread!
Thanks for your help in getting us he re .

Sincerely,
Ellen .

ffhe Perfect Easter Gift!•

I
his Easter Sunday
I
et her find one of
I
J&gt;ur glittering crosses or
~
tendants in her Easter Bask

prHlcst s

wa~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

r t"g tst~red

New .Jersey's congr essional
to

SGIVe the

huge

recruit

8: News 10; Love American Style 15 ; Carol Burnett
&amp;

$1.98 Beauty Snow 6: Family Feud 8,10; ;- $100,000
Name That Tune 13 : Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33 .

8:01}-D!ff'rent Strokes 3,15; Family 6,13: Incredible
Hulk B: Washington Week in Review 20,33;
Celebrity Concerts 10: NBA Basketball 17.
B:30-Wall Stret Week 20,33 .
·
9:oo-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,15: Movie "You Light Up
My Life" 6, 13 : Dukes of Hazzard B. 10: Diplomatic

added that , "we find the
Army's action today not only
cruel in .its implications and
unjustified in its motives but
militarily unsoWJd as well. "
Maine 's freshman senator,
Hepublican WiJJiam S. Cohen,
asked the Senate Armed

Commiltee

Style of Andrew Young 20; Money , News &amp; VIews

33.
9 :30- T&lt;&gt;rnabou t 3,15.20 :1 0 : DO-Sweepstakes 3, 15;
Dallas 8,10: News 20: When The Boat Comes In 33.
10 : ts-Night Gallery 17; lO : J~onsumer Survival Kit
20 : 10 :45,--Love American Style 17.
11 :oo-News 3,6,B,l3, 15; Hogan' s Heroes 17; Monty
Python ' s Flying Circus 20: Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15: Baretta 13: Movie "Lucky
Luciano" 6: NBA Basketball B; ABC News 33:

to

schedule hearings to force the
Pentagon to justify proposed
cutbacks at Loring Air Force
Base. which would lose a total
of 14 B-52 bombers and KC135 tan ker planes and their

MOvie "The Mummy' s Revenge" 10; ·Movie " The

Monster That Challenged the World" 17.
12 :40- lronslde 13: 1:01}-Midnlght Special 3,15; Movie
" They Saved Hitler's Brain" 10.
1:30-NBA BAsketball17; 1:40-News 13: 1 :40-News
13.
2:30-News 3.

crews.
Texas
would
lose
Goodfellow Air ~'orce Base at
San Angelo but stiiJ wind up
with a ·net gain of military
jobs . Even so, Sen. John
Tower of Texas, ranking
Republican on th e Anned
Services Committfe, said he
could not agree with the
decision to close Goodfellow.
"The Armed Services Committee will take a long, hard
look at the Air Force budget,
and I intend to examine every
facet of base construction and
oper at ing costs in the
greatest detail, " Tower said .
Sen . William Annstrong,
H-Colo. , called the proposed
c los ing of th e Aerospace
Defense
Com mand
in
Colorado Springs " the latest
in a series of steps which
leave the United States
almost completely helpless
before an air attack by
manned bombers or ballistic

missiles.''

History
deadline
AprilS

members

Fr iends 17: Dic k Cavetl20; Big Blue Marble 33.

7 : 3~Hee Haw Honesys 3; Pop Goes The Country I!&gt;;

Another New .J ersey Democrat . Hep .•Jam es .J. Florio ,

Services

ACROSS

3:®-Movle "Torn Curtain" 3; 3:45---News 17.

4:05- 12 O' Clock High 17.
5:00-Movie " Work is a Four Letter Word" 3.
5 : 05--DrilnnP.t 17

SATURDAY, MAt&lt;O::H ll, 1979
5 : 35,--World at Large 17.
6 :00-Sunrise Semester 10; 6 : 1~Discovery 17.

6:30-Saturday Report 3; TV Classroom B; U.S. Farm
Report 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
6:40-News 17.
7:oo-l)ncle Waldo 3: Mailers of Life 6; Mr . Magoo B:
Public Policy Forums 10: Animals, Animals,
Animals 13: Three Stooges-Little Rascals 17.
7:3D-Ciiffwood Ave . Kids 3: Dusty's Treehouse 6:
Porky Pig &amp; Friends B: Pin~ Panfher 13; Vegetoble
Soup 15.
B:oo-Atvln &amp; the Chipmunks 3,15: Scooby's All. Stars
6,13; Popeye B.10; Cliffwood Ave. Kids 17.
B:30- Fantasllc Four 3,15 : Partridge Family 17.
9:01}-Godzllla 3,15; Bugs Bunny-Road Runner B,lO;
Star Trek 17.
9: 30-Superfriends 6, 13.
lO :oo-Movle "Advise &amp; Consent" 17.

10 :30-Daffy Duck 3, 15; Tarzan -Super-7 B; Movie "On
Borrowed Time" 10.

·

11 :oo-Freed '&amp; Barney 3,15: Fangface 13; Vegetable
Soup 6.
ll :3C-Jetsons 3.15; Glgglesnort Hofel 6: Action News
for !&gt;.Ids 13.
·
12 :oo-Buford 3, 15: Weekend Special 6, 13; Spoce
Academy B.
,
12 :30-Fabulous Funnies 3,15: American Bandstand
13; Point of View 6; Fat Albert B: In The Know 10.
1:01}-Big Blue Marble 3; Aware 6:' Fishing with
Roland Martin B; Festival of Lively Arls for Young
... People 10 : Trouble witH Mother 15: Dragnet 17;
Once Upon A Classic 33.
1:30-Trouble with Mother 3: Columbus Bowt,lng
Classic 6: f!ob Jones B: Wild Kingdom 13: PTL Club
15: Baseball 17.
l :oo-Bewltched 3: Viewpoint B: Trl State : Today &amp;
Tomorrow 13; Wh·en The Boat Comes In 33.
2:30-This Week In Baseball 3; Sports Afield 6: Junior
Achievement a; Amerlc'an Sportsman 13.
3:01}-0utdoors With Julius Boros 6: Golf 8,10:

The final submission date
for family histories (fp r the
A cademy leaders 33 .
Meigs Couhty,.History Book is•
3
;
JQ-1'/omen's
Golf 3, 15: Pro Bowilng 6, 13 .
.
· '
C' le:&lt;;s7t'hMI a Week away . Or- 0 4''o &amp;-Mlssion : Impossible 17: Sugar In The Gourd 33.
M.ary O'Brten ,. cr us~ de
d c r s arc , needed with
4:31l-Catch -33 33.
cha1rmanofthe Metgs Umt of · payments the same date.
5:00-Voyage to The Bottom of the Sea 3; Wide World
th e _ Am e nean
Cancer
April 5.
oqpoFts 6, 13; Abbott &amp; Cosfello 15: Flshln' Hole 17:
Society, told ~embers at ~
Although . abo ut 700 S\~ ries
Growing Years 20; LoWell Thomas Remembers 3.
mectmg of Cancer.,.,.?'!_ciCt)
ha_,..,alread)) l]c.,.,.,ubmitt'ed,
, 5:30-American Life Style 17; Wild, Wild World of
Tuesday mght th'll t-- ~urmg
m iT"n f"1 amil ies J r e
ot .G:.J~-~ nlmai S/:3~~ · y
6:00-News 3,10; Concern B; God Has The Answer 15;·,
cancer " ,a rcahty:
..
·represented . E ach hqu;;ehold
Wrestling 17; Crocket's VIctory Garden 20; Over
Mrs. 0 13nen stated We
in Meigs County is entitled to
Easy 33.
Wlt~essed 75 cured ~a n cer 500 words or less and on e
30-N
BC Ne~s 3,15: News 6! CBS News 8,10;
6:
patients at the annual k1ck-off
picture _ free.
Newsmaker
'7913 ; Ohio Journal 20:; West Virginia
cancer crusade and cured
Additiona l wo rds arc 10
Outdoors
JJ
.
cancer assembly held last
cents each .
7:01}-Abbott &amp; Costello 3; Hee Haw 6,B; Bugs Bunny
Sunday in Columbus .
(f each hou sehold had
10: Forsyte Saga 20: Film Makers 33.
" Thes e people are th e submitted. we would hav e
7: 30-We Think You Should Know 3: World War II:
results of thcrap~es ot 1950-liO well over 10.000 stori es. Many
G.t. Diary 33 .
8:01}-Chips 3,15: What's Happening 6,13: Bad News
and 1970. The cure rates, or families com bin ed their
Bears B.lO: Hee Haw Honeys 17; Once Upon A
s urviv~l rates, for . toda y_'s
histories. which is fine.
. Classic 20,33
1bis wa s your chance to
the.raptes most certamly wtll
8:30-Del ta House 6,13: Billy B,lO; NBA Basketball 17;
brtng forth s pectacular write vour story. the way you
Great Performance 20; Turnabout 33.
results." Mrs . O' Bncn
want · it told for future
9:oo-BJ
&amp; the Bear 3, 15 ; Love Boat ~6~ 13; Movie
co mmented .
genere~tion s.
"
Hustle:·
B.lO; Big Band Cavalcade 33.
One of four Americans will
Many citizens that didn't
10 :01}-Fantasy lsland6,13; Methadone : An American
get ca nce r Mrs. O' Brien write may be included in a
33 .
commented and one in s ix rel a ti ve' ::; stor y. Ho weve r,
10 :45,--Nashville On The Road 17.
wiiJ die .
11 :oo-ABC News 6.
there arc a Jot of residents
She further stated that
11
: 30-Bob &amp; Ray &amp; Jane, Laraine &amp; Gilda 3, 15; Movie
who will be left out unless
there is certainly no cause to they write a story now. There
" The Death of Me Yet" 6: Juke·Box 8; Movie "The
Horsemen" 10; Movie "The Return of Count
be compl ace nt about the will be no ot her exten sions.
Yorga" 13: Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 17; F .Y.t.
progress. but neighter can we
Time is up for writing at this
33 .
beco m e demoralized and deadline .
12 :01}-Movie "The Brothers O'Tolle" B.
discouraged .
1berc will be someone at
1:oo-Movie " Madigan " 3: Movie " Equ inox" 13; JukeThe welcome was given by
the Meigs County Museum
Box 17.
Bernadette ' Anderson , Sunda y. Monday. Tuesday ,
1 :30-NBA Baske.tballl7: 2: 30-News 3: ABC News 13.
president , and Delores Frank Wedne sday and Thursday
3:01}-Movle " Dreams of Glass' 3: 3:45-12 O'Clock
reported on the role of the next Week to c.tccept stories
High 17.
1\meric~m Cancer Society in
, 4:js-Dragnet. 17: 5:oo-Movle "Zita" 3.
from 1 to 3 p.m .
Meigs County .
1
Mrs. Frank introduced
m ember s and announced
upcom ing events. On Apri11622 "bowl down cancer" will
be held ; in May "grocers'
cancer da y at Vaughan 's
Cardin a l ; in June ' ·dilly
du nk er" during Hcgatta ; in
.July a swim-a -t hon; in
August a t enni s tournament
wiiJ be held .
"The Tom Harper" story
was s hown foll owing the
m eetin g.
l ug 9 e o.. d .. !dptic.,
51 ,U • .00
ool• p•ie• aood """ ~o~ .... ~ Jl , ..!c .!.!!:.~
10V IOOVI&lt;

40 Roman river
41 Close by

I Whale of

FRIDAY , MARCH30, 1979
.
7:oo-C ross Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; Sha Na Na

training .center at Fort lJix .
" I intend to challenge their
data and fight this proposal
ever y inch of the way." said
Hep BiJJ Hughes. D-N .J .

TRACY

by THOMAS JOSEPH

by

delegation. which is fighting

9-The D•ilv Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, Mar. 30.1979

5

' JS.OQ

H•a&lt;fl igMo .,,.~d&lt;&gt;rd to ~•I!&gt;

a skipper
5 The players
9 Cough syrup
measurement
10 Creighk&gt;n
Univ . site
I2 Architeclura! pier
13·Suave
15 Getting
ahead
17 Go wrong
18 Director
Strasbe•g
19 "Krazy -''
20 We own it
21 Bacteriolo-

gist's wire

DOWN
1 Saw
2 Kind of roll
3 Active
4 Frijole
5 Reildishbrown
6 Soap plant
7 Casa's
dining
room
8 Underbrush
11 Content
14 Otemical
salt
I&amp; Overfill
20 "- Buttermilk

Yesterday's Answer

Z9 Eiectronk

21 ~real
plant
22Terence23 Forsake
:U Noted,
quoted

sentinel

30 Uke shist
kebab
31 Uly
variety
32 Teus cit:
34 One kind
of warder.
35 Collar
style

poet
25 Monk's

wear
27 Maple leaf
land

22 Melt ore
25 Service
affairs
26 Like
a pussycat b--+-+--t-27 Camper's
purchase
28 "Things looking up" 1;1,--i-+29 Brutally
frank
30 Play a part
33 King
Arthur's
sister
36 Mexican

CAPTAIN EASY
A~L ~ISHT. ~0 YOU
l!I~OW MY ~HIP

c:AN

APART! 81'T TO THE
. P01Nn ..,WHAT I~ IT
VOIJ WANH

WMTIO MY l!IREAT

PON'T MAKe ME

THEN DON'T
A5K FOOLISH

YOLI POi!&gt;! ·

GIUE5TION5•
STUPID!

IF VOU'IlE NOT IN ON Hi5
CRAoz;Y PLOT, MI~TER, THEN
, TELL ME.. 15 THERE ANY
CHA!oiCIO THIS MADMAN

ON THE OTHER HI\&gt;! D•. I NEVEOR.
ACTUALLY 5AW THE:-M GTUFF THI~
VEST WITH' EKPLOSIVE:- OR RIG
'---- THE- Dt&lt;TOo-11\TOR!

15 &amp;LLIFI'!N&lt;lt'!'

...HOLY. MACKEREl.! TH'
DANIS '11-\ING MU5TA
MY VINE'.?i"?
~KEP LOOS!;i'!

HEY, WHE'.IlES

inn
37 Work the
soil
38Sahara
resident
39 Heraldic

wreau.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTF;- Here's how to

wo~k it:

ORPHAN ANNlE-BUSINESS FIRST

AXYDLBA .A XR
Is

LONGFELLOW

AND, OH, ROCKY'

TRY IT, PAL! .
I'M READY
FOR. YA!

One letter simply stands for another. · In thls sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
· hints. Each day the code letters are differenl.

15 MY HUSBAND--LEGALL'(!

LYESK

JZBZE

ISAE

FMXX

IS A

~I I P I

Q MEL

YDJQX .

I

GSXZCY
CDEPZE
Yesterday'sCryptoquote: IF THEY WANT PEACE, NATIONS,
SHOULD AVOID THE PIN-PRICKS TIIAT PRECEDE CANNONSHOTS.-NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
© 1919 King Fealunls Syndloate, Inc.

GASOLINE ALLEY

It's liqhtfinqers

Min riqht
enouqh ! fi'Y! •.MI

Ke&lt;:l'ic'n ~ou
could speed up
an' shalo\e her?

-HONOPOI.IZIN6 71-/e CELEB
AT 7HE BENEFIT -- -1-41-I(A, CHAMP.1 V'A
KNOW. I SAW 'ltJiJ THE

NIG&gt;HT 'ltJiJ LOST TO
RED BUNION---I SAW
SAILOR BARG&gt;E

SOME8DPY' WILL

BELT I?A7ZER YEf. ..
.14A'1'8E TONII!&gt;IITS

TFIE,fl'•&lt;ltHT-- ·

BEiAT '(OU, TOO--·

THE CHAMP

IS OUR OOEST .
OF HONOR ···

RAZZER'LL TRY

7HATS fiREAT/

~SELL~IMA

THE LAST
HAVE BEEN RECEIVED

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sonta
_.g"--

A well-executed end play
king. Trwnps were now acNORTH
• K J 92
• 8 75

WEST

BoRN LOSER

3-3ll-A

NEW 1979 NOVA

Available for Delivery Now

6 43
EAST

•e5

•76

• A9 4
t Q J 10 7

• Q J to :1
t 9 B6 4 3

+J987

+Q2
0

SOUTH

CUSTOM NOVA 4 DOOR

• A Q 10 4 3

cashed

¥ K62

dummy's king and noted a
diamond dlacard from East.
Clubs had not broken, but
Pete was home free . He
simply Jed dummy's last
club, discarded his own
deuce of hearts and showed
West his hand .
West was end-played and
could score just one more
trick rio matter what he did .

tAK

6 cyl., air, and many other desirable
options. Color. light green.

+A to 5

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
West North East

HATCHBACK NOVA COUPE

Pass
Pass

6 cyl., automatic. power steering and other
options . Color, light blue .

2&lt;1'

Pass

Pass
Pass

South
t•

4.

Opening lead: t Q

ONLY

1010

s1149

BA
~JM
-·
r

"Your Chevy Dealer"'

TRUE VALUE
985-3301

992 -2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Til8:00 p.m.

BETTER PICK UP
THAT THAR RAKE
AFORE SOMEBODY
GITS HURT

I

------

LOOKV YONDER!!

THAR'5 THAT WUTHLESS
WALDO HAWKINS CUTTirll'
ACROSS Mlf PROPITTY

#ERE/

Today in History
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, March 30,
the 89th day of 1979. There are
276 days left in the year.
Today's
highlight
in
history :
On this da te in !867, Russia
and the United States
reached agreement on t he
American purc hase of Alaska
for a little m ore than $7
million .
On this date:
In 1791 Maryland ceded the
'

Ws

ace ,

led

to

fourordinarywords .

r---,,.,.-,:-:::=--,

L_:L~E~X.;.=.E:.;P
_+h:&gt;"":::r-1
.
~

I I I
.

.

.
..... , .....,........

---::-=:-:---,b
HIS FY
' ~~':,:-,~~-:-~

...
1
L-",;~r--1-r~~""'rl

V~

~ A

V'
"-

~~~h=- l!xpe:~ \CoTE(Lj

IN WHIC:HTO

MAKe A I"ER50N-1L

+ Qx x

••

By Oowald Jacoby
and Alan Soolag

APP£;ARANCE. ·

1

\DQRICHj

• K
AJX X0xx
+
X

PessimlBtlc Pete looked
over the dummy and noted
that he, Pete, had been wise
lo have made no effort to
reach a slam. He noted further that with really bad
luck he might actually go
1 down at his game contract.
,; There was one !lure club
- loser and three possible

heart looers.

A Kentucky reader asks
what we respond to our
partner's forcing tw&lt;&gt;-spade
bid.
We raise to three spades to
show spade support to start
our approach to a slam.
.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I

IFor a copy of JACOBY MOOERN . send $1

to :

·'Win at

Pete cashed his ace of Bridge,'' care of this newsp.:.spades al trick two and led a 1 per. P.0 . Box 489, Radio Cily
second spade to dummy 'el' Station. New York 1 N. Y. 10019.)
.

District of (;otwnbla to the
federal government .
In 1822, a te rritorial
government was establiSh ed
in F lorida.
In 1870, Texas was readmitted into the Union after
the Civil War .
In 1940, Ja pan estab li shed a
puppet
governme nt
in
occupi ed Otina .
In 1966, France ord ered the
closin g of American military
bases on French soil within 12
months.

counted lor. Then Pete led a
club from dummy and
played hls 10 alter East
produced the deuce. West
won the trick and led a
diamond.
Pete Jed a third trump_ to
give his opponents a chance JJWJW&amp;!1~THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME
to make a .helpful discard,
·
_In
~ &lt;!:
by Henri Arnold and Bo.b Lee
but they both chucked diamonds. So Pete had to . go UnscramblE! these 1our Jumbles.
back to the club suit. He one letter to each sq uare , to torm

• 52

+K

rOd u&lt; o O&lt;D II'Ing o l .ou• lawn

wANrs rosrnv

HjM?

Friday, Marcb 30

Mow••

OON'T Tff!NK PAPPY

AND I SEE

THE CAR···

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

THAT1$ JUST IT 1 I

WHEN CAN BILLY

CHANCE ON

OO• '

&gt;"" O•O"'"""') I

Min ain't so liqht with
th' foots
as she is
with th'
fingers!

liqhtfinqers
Min is right
b'hind us!

ain't
itt in' on
'
moren
one

herself.'

They'll Do It Every Time

'"'"'"Q
"'' •· • ., ,, ~oQ' o• •••
h o\N

I SAID YOU'D
GO ALONG···

IS A

BARNEY

' "11 Uoooin~ l 6"

llRIGHT 60Y!

F DI

VAL

· FDEP

Y DB Z

KMRR

FA Q.

GET YOUR NEW NOVA NOW!
51ot l
lot 0010 ~ nd """'oniot•&lt;•

ARE. COMIN' ... WE'LL
SETTLE THiS
LATER ·••

CRYPTOQUOTES ;,

•• ,.M """' wotk do•

[l~tt tri&lt;

OOT, OK .. . CUSTOMERS

AFTfR AlL, JOHNNY

/

)

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form tht:l surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canoon .

I I K

Print answer here:

"[ I I] r XI I I)"

(Answers tomorrdw )

Yes te rdays

1 Jumbles BASIC GUEST
.

ARMORY MARROW
·

d

1 Answer · In whi c h c,hildren may ge t pushed aroun -

CARRIAG ES

Jumble Book No. 13, containing 110puules, Is awa lht.ble lor.S1 . 75~ottpald

trom Jumble, c/o th is newspa:r•r. Bpx 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. tnc ude your
11 ame , acldress . lip code an maU checks payable to Newspaptubooka.
~.

�The Datly Sentmel Mtddl•port-Pmncro) , 0 , f'nda)
Notice To M o t o r , .1·.
1
venlcle Dealers
In accordance wo lh Sectoo r
307 86 of the Ohto Rev1sed
Code seated b1ds Wtll be
recet\' ed bY" the Me gs County
Board of Commtsstoners In
15 words or Under
c.,h
Clut.rg~
lhetr off ce lo cated n the
100
125
Court House Pomeroy Oh tO
I dlly
unttl 12 00 noo n on Aprtl 5th
2diiy3
100
180
1979 the b tdS Wtll be opened
225
3 dl!Y3
at 12 00 noo n on April 5th
300
375
6doys
1979 and r ead aloud for a 12
F...at:h word U\cr lhc trummum 15
ton P tcku p Truck Each b td to
meet the condtt1ons and
wurili; ts 4 c~&lt;nts per word per W.y
,
Atls rwmlllf! ulht&gt;r ttum con!St"CUlJVt'
spect fteal ons as follows
1
tlay!S
wdl
~
l
hargt'd
i:lt
the
1
di:l)'
l- One 1979 2 ton model
rutc
p1 c ku p tr uck
2- 350 cv n or larger V a
In memory C&lt;t n.l of Thanks and'
gas eng ne regular or leaded
Otntullry 6 coolll per word S3 00
gas
rrummwn Cash 111 atlvan u~
3 6 000 GV W tor regular
gas usage
Mobilt&gt; Homt&gt; sa les and Yard S&lt;t lt&gt;s
4- He avy duly front and
ur~ t~ccepted only w1th ~~~sh w1lh
rear sp r tngs
order 2S cent &lt;:twrge fur alltl carry·
s ~ H eavy
duty
pow er
lH!J Box Numl&gt;t!r In Ca re u£ The St&gt;n·
bra k.es
lm~l
6- Power Steenng
7Fu l depth foam bench
Tile Publisher reserves the nghl
seat hea11y duly tr tm
tu etbl or reject e~ ny e~ds deemed ob8 - J 78 x 15 t tres
steel
Jet.1ion4tl The Publtsher wtll nol be
belled rad tal t1res
re.!lpun.slble for more Lh1:m one lm:ur·
9- 0ne add1t1onal J 78 x 15
rec;t m!lt!rtJOn
ttre and rtm
Phone 99'2 2156
10- Comb natton rear and
front d1recl1onat
s•gnal
hgh Is
11- Tr afftc hazard swttch
12- Dual etectrtc horns
13- L H and R H Jr West
Coast M •rrors
14- Heater and defrost e r
15 - Two speed wtndsh eld
wtpers and washers
16- Hea\/y duty shocks
17- Rear step bumper
18 - Automa t tc
tra n
I'
sm sston
19- 77 Amp battery and 60
MonduJ
amp or larger alterna tor
Noon on Saturd&lt;ly
20- 131 5 wheel base
21 - Colo r Omaha Orange
Tuesdliy
22 - Th e front o l the en
lhru Frtda}
ve tope enc tos ng the btd must
'iPM ...
be marked
P ck up Truck
the d~:~v befort~ pubhcallon
23- Btdder to f4rn sh lhetr
own btd f6 rm s. l1Si tng b1d
Sunday
prtce as tndteated on the line
4 PM
ttem spectftcatton sheet as
Fndoty ttU.emoanad11ert sed
24 - Dehvery must be made
by the successful btdder 45
In Memory
days after bidS are awarded
=..:.:.=c:..:.:~_
c__ _ _ _ __
or b1d IS VO tded
IN 0
25 - Th e
County
Com
L VING me mory of Clatr H
m 1ss 1oner s may accept th e
Po rhtn son who po~sed owoy
Mar ch 31 1978
lowes t btd or select the bes t
b d for the tntended purpose
Morch comes w th 5-ad regrets
and reserve the ngt]t to retect
Th e day th e month we shall
any or a ll b ds .II' and or any
never forget
part ther eo f
Loved and remembered every
Mary Hobstetfer, Clerk
doy
Metgs County Board of
Our hearts were so sod to lose
Commtsstoners
( J 1 23 30 2tc
you but you tourneyed not
alan
Foro po rt of us went wtth you
The day God coiled you home
Sadly mtssed by ht s wtfe Olt ve
NOTICE
Daughter Evelyn
G ron d~on
Nof1ce To 81fummous
Ronn and son n low Floyd
Vendors
Wycmsk1
Seated btds will be recetved
ov the Board ot Metgs Coun ty
Commtsstone rs
at
~ he
No! tees
Commtss oners
Otfr c;e

10-

· ----------,y
WANT AD
CHARGES

""

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

loca tf'd '"the Court Ho us e n
the Vt tage of Pomeroy Ohto
untlll2 OOnoon on the 5th day
of Apr I 1979 and the b tds
Wt ll be opened at 12 00 no on
on th e 5th day of Apr il 1979
for
fh E1
t urn shtnQ
o!f
btfumm ous matenal s for the
Metg s
Co unty
H tghway

D epar t men t

E stimated

quantttt es of ltQu•d asphalt
requtred
appro)( t ma t e t y

500 000 gal lons

Specthcat•ons tor th e Btds, as

Follows

1- Btd pnce per ga ll on
f o b vendors plan t iJ.A.d the
Prtce per gallon de ltv e.ied to
vendo r s portable tank to any
lo c al on w thtn the county
destgnated by th e County
Engtneer
for the vartous
grades
of
b•fumtno us
materta l s which may be

r eq u•r ed by the Metgs Co unt y
H ghway Departmen t wh 1c h
s hall con form to the pertmen t
State of Oh1o Department of
th e H1ghway Co n struction
and Materta l Speclftca tmns
2- Wtth respect to the
a for esa td est ma t ed quan
ftfte s th e vendo r s s hall un
ders land that no gua r antee ts
Q•ven to the actua l quanttttes
of btlummous mate r tals to be
fur n shed but eac h sue
cessful ve ndor shall be
reQu tred to tur ntsh all o r any
pa rt of the Metgs County
Htghway
Depart m en ts
actual r equ trements as or
dered du nng the btd year
3- Prtces on th rs btd shall
be f trm and m effec t f rom
Apr il I 1979 to Aprrl 1 19 80
4- AII btdders mus t agree
to turn tsh any b tummous
ma te r tals as reques ted n
Item 1 at the same pr ces to
all townshtps of Metgs County
dur.ng the btd year
s - On the enve lope con
ta n ng e ac h b d the nam e
an d address of the ve nd or
m u s t be platnly mar-ked
Bttum mous BtdS
6- Proposals are to be
r e turned on btd forms s up
pl te d by the Metgs County
Comm s~ oners whtc h may
be obtat'led through the off ce
o f the Metgs County Engtn eer
or Board of N etgs County
Comm •sstone r s and wdl be
ope ned on the date and place
spe c f ed above
7- Th e
Me gs
County
Comm SStoners re serv e the
rtght to ac ce pt or retec t any
o r a I btds or any part thereof
Mary Hobstetter Clerk
Metgs Co unt y Bo ard of
Commtsstoners
( 3 &gt; 23 30 2tc

PROBATE CO U RT DF
ME,GS COUNTY OHIO
Estate of
Lorena McKe\ ttl Saelens
Deceased
Case No 22596
Nottce of Appotntment
Ot Ftduc ta r y
On March 12 1979 tn t he
Metgs County Proba te Court
Case No
22595
Ado lph
Saelen s
6S9
Broadway
M tddleport Ohto 45760 wa s
appo tnted Executor of the
estate of Loretta Me Kev 11
Saelens deceased late of 659
Broadway M1dd eport Otlto
45760
Robert E Bu c k
Probate Judge
(3 ) 16 13 30 3tc

LEAKS CONTINUE
HARRISBURG , Pa (AP )
- Rad tat10n leaks from the
Three Mtle Island nuclear
power plant cont mued today,
authopttes sa td a s a debate
grew
over
what
was
descnbed as one of the m ost
scrtous s uch m c tdents m thts
country's htstory
The vapor that ts now
gomg mto the atmosphere ts
from a s ump pump and ts
onl) mtldly radtoacttvc
w tthtn accepted hm tts
satd
Don C urry , a spokesman for
the Metropohtan Edtson Co
owner of the plant The pump
ts des tgned· to remove water
after tt has coo l ed the

,

reactor

URGENTlY NEEDED Local on to
room and boorf mdoor and
Of.l tdoor dogs lor Me tgs Co
Huma ne Soc e ty wh tl e homes
o e sou ght for them 992 5427
or 992 7660
NEW BATON classes Beg nners
tntermedtat e and advanced
Taught by C ndy Patterson at
th e Syrac use Grode School
GY. n For more ml o rmoho n
caf1992 2088 ......-£.)..
_
GUN SHOOT Rae ne Vo lun teer
Ftre Dept Every Saturday 6 30
pm at thetr bu1 ldtng 1n Boshomc
Factory choke guns only
JONES BAR feol unng Edd e and
the Desperodoe~ 3m les south
o f Pomeroy Brtdge on WV
Route 62 Fr day n ght 9 30 to 2
om

----- --

GUN SHOOT EVERY FR IDAY 6 30
PM RACINE GUN CLUB FAC
TORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY
H e lp Wanted
NOW INTER VIEWING for c e rk
pas l•on Fu ll 01 po rt t me
Work 6 doy s o week Ex
pertence
preferred
Phone
9q2 2179 tor tntervtew between
9ond 5
TRACTOR TRAIL ER drtver s te ady
employmen t oil the hours you
won t home every ntght Must
be 21 ye ars old 667 3131 Ohto
Vol ley Monufocturtng Tuppers
Plotns Oh10
SO MEONE ro c e on and cook 1
day 2 to 3 dey ~ c week for
e lderly co uple who hve tn
Syracuse 304 675 6269

NOTICE
Not. ce to Aggregate
Vendors
Sea le d b.ds wtll be r ecetved
by the Board ot Metgs Co unt y
Comm tSStone r s at th e Co unt y
Commissioners
Offtce
loc ated n th e Cou rt House m
th e Vt ll age o f Pome roy Ohto
u nr 1 12 00 noon on the 5th day
of Aprtl 1979 and the b ds
wtll be opened at 12 00 noon
on the 5th day of April 1979
for the turnt sh •ng of a ll ktnds
and stzes o f aggregate that
may be r equt r ed by the Me gs
Coun t y H1ghwC1y Depart
men t
E s ltmated quanttltes of a ll
aggre gat e requ tr ed
ap
prox mate ly 40 000 tons
S p ectftca tt o n s for th e
B1ds as Follows
l - B1d prtce per to n fob
loaded at the vendor 's plant
for th e var tous k nds and s ze
o f aggregates that may be
requ red whtch wtll confo rm
to the Perttn e nt Stal e of Ohto
Department of Htghways
Co ns tructton and Mater als
Spec •f1 c at on s except ng pea
or shot gravel wh1ch ts an
u ngraded matertal
2 ~ Wtlh
respect to t he
ator esa td est1mated quan
t lte s the vendors sha ll un
der s tand that no gua r antee tS
gtven to t he actua quan t 1t es
o f aggregates to be furnt s hed
but each vendor sha ll be
requtred to furntsh any par t
of the actual requtr e ments
as ordered durmg the btd
year

3- Prtces on lh1 s btd shall
be f1rm and tn e ff ec t fr om
Aprtl I 1979 to April 1 1980
4- Atl btdder s mus t agree
to fu rntsh any aggrega te
ma ter al s as requested •n
Item I at the same prt ces to
all town s htps of Metgs county
dur ng the btd yea r
5- 0n the en\lelope con
tatn ng th e btd the name and
addre ss of th e vendor must be
sh own and pla tnly marked
Aggregate B1dS
6- Proposa ls are to be
r etu rned on b d for ms sup
plted by the vendor and wtll
be opened on the date a nd
plttce specllted abo11e
7 Th e Me gs County Co
mm ssto ner s r es erve t he
rt gh t to accept or retect any
or all b1ds and or any part
th ereo f
Mary Hobstetter Clerk
Board of Meigs County
Com mtsstoners
Cll 23 JO 2tc

Sentmel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 , • rtday Mar

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Buy
CASH ~Oil 1u nk r ot~
WI e&lt; ker
'iPfV &lt;£&gt;
Rutlond OH 747 706 1

'}4

For Sale

ho ur

Fr yE&gt;

OLD ~URNITURE ce boll:es brass
h eds tron be d$c des ks e tc
&lt;omp le te households Wnte
M D Mtll er Rl 4 Pome roy o r
r oll7/2 7760
OLU CO IN S pock e t watches
class nng s wedd ng bq nd s
d•omonds Gold or s ly er Col i
Roer Wa ms ley 742 233 1
WANT TO buy o ld 45 and 7B
phonograph records
Col
QQ2 b370 or Con foci Mort n Fur
mture
WANT TO buy o ld tewel ry Call
QQ2 52b2 or wnte Kay (ecd 87
S 2nd M ddl eporl OH
WANT TO buy young fryer rob
btts 4 , to61bs Coll9923bl7
Y ard Sale
PORCH SA LE Mev ng ou t of state
Furn lure and rntsc TV wosh ~r
and dry e r Dusky St Syracu se
Thur s tfu u Sun

Mark Your Calendar!
Come Regtster a t

SPRING SALE

APPA LOOSA Stoll on
SPrv•ce
Breed tng for con
lmm nt on
spos1tton
color
614 797 2300

CLASS DOOR cubbo rd new 19
oo lo r TV Pearl Hawth orne
1!43 2645 any! me

tOO PRIZES FIRST
PRIZE ~WHEEL DRIVE

~
........

JEEP
APRIL 4-7
oS THE PLACE'

JACK W . CARSEY,
MGR
PH

992 2181

Your HeadquarteiS For

Armstrong Carpeting

SALE
Regtstered
Polled
Hereford Dispersal Sale of
Wayne Jtvtden, GallipoliS
0 on Saturday, Aprtl71h at
6 30
PM , Gallia
Co
Fatrgrounds Selling bulls
cows wtth calves open and
bred hetfers

ELLIOIT
APPUANCE II
220 E Matn Street,
Pomeroy, O

m

Call
7113
F or Free Estimates
11 9 1 mo

·1 0110 '*'
-.
and

ROGER HYSEl1

Home Maintenance
All types roofing, guHers
a nd downspouts All types
hom e matntenance - new
and repa tr Storm doOrs
and wmdows All work
guaranteed
20 years
experte n ce
Free
estimates
Call
Tom
Hoskens 949 2160
3 7 1 mo

THE 'WHEEL THING!
REAL GOOD CARS ot REAL GOOD PRICES!

SPECIAL

TOGO

VALUE
RATED

~ GARAGE

1975 CHEVY IMPALA
32 000 mtl es p
whtte vmy l top

;&gt;, mile oH Rt 1 lpY p.IIH on
st Rt. t241owarll Rutland,
1

0

COAL LIM ESTONE so d g ovel
cole tum chlor tde fe r)tl tzer dog
food and all ty pes of sa lt Ell:
celstor Salt Work s In c E Mom
51 Pomeroy 992 3891

GA RA GE SALE James May s
garage ~ rn tle oft Rt 7 on CR
25 a t Ches te r q 5 Fr and Sa l
17 5 Sun March 3031 Apr 1 1
F111e fomd es Wat ch for s tgns

FOR CATALOG WRITE

CARL BIRNEY
Route 1
Freeport, Oh1o
43973

Radiator~

REYNOlD'S
ELECTRIC MOtOR

Service,...... the -.... , , . ., .........

SHOP

EXPERIENCED _

......... tt.

"""
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

18 Years Expenence
Woll Make
Servtce Calis

red wtth

81'11111GTIMI! 18 81¥CIAL VALUE TiMEt

1978 CAD. CPE. DEVILlE

'9995

1977 M£RCURY COMET•••••••• '3295
4 Or

4 dr

v a 302 cu

i?t , a tr P 5 P B auto

1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON ••• '3895
Spectal Edtfton 4 Dr Sla nt 6 s t~ndard transmtss on
w1th overd r ve power steenng power brakes atr
r ad to color Btttersweet wtth w:()Od gratned panel
stdes lu ggage rack Showroom c lea n1

SIDING
*New Home
11tAdd-ons

1975 CHEVY MALIBU ••• w. . . . . . .'2495

**

.t

Dr

P S

P B a tr

1975 FORD F-150 •••••• : : ••••• '2495
Au to

LI'NE DANIELS

Auto

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

~'Your

~'Birthday
March 31 , 1979
Make II a def lnlle polnl to
expand your social outlets th is
coming year Valuable contacts
car\ be developed with persons
with whom you share fu n mter
ests
ARIES {March 21-Apdl 19)
Gains co uld come In unrelated
ways today so when oppo rtu
nlty beckons be prepared lo
move especiall y It It s lhrough
one who Is obligated to you
Discover whi c h stgns you are
most compallble wllh by P 0
Box 489 Rad iO City S tat o n N Y
10019 Be sure to speclty b trth
sign
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Your

- -- -

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DRIVE A LimE

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

Red a uto

Pete Burns

a1 r auto

P S

985-4100
Chester_, Q . · Ray Riggs

over your peer group

Is Qu ite pronounced today
Fnends will be lo oki ng to yo u
to tell the m wha t to do - and
whe n
GEMINI {May 21-Juno 20)
There s a strong possibility
you II get a second s ho t at
sornethtng today that you were
previously u nab le to take ad
vantage of careerwtse
CANCER ~June 21·July 22) You
have a g ift If you c hoos e to use
it to day of maki ng everyone
feel Important This touch ca n
greatly enhance friendships
LEO {July 23-Aug 22) Ma nagi ng
situations for others so that
eve ryone benefits Inclu di ng
you rself ts your forte today
Yo u re best at Involvements of
a fl nanctal nature
VIRGO {Aug 23-Sepl 22) The
secret to your s ucc ess today Is
to put the needs of others
before your own Surprisingly
you II b e help ing yo urse lf as
well
LIBRA (Sepl 23-Dct 23) Jo tnl
ventures could prove to be an
ex treme ly p rofi ta ble area for
you loday especially If you re
co ntribu ti ng your energy and

P B

1974 CHEVY MAUBU ••••••••••••'1695
2 dr auto

ps pb V roof

1973 HORNET SPORTABOUT••••• '1495
4 Dr wagon 6 cy l au to

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

P S atr

1973 FORD MAVERICK •••••••••• '1495
Dr auto

P s

vtny I roof

1972 OLDS TORONAOO.;~a.d:~ ••••• S995
1973 MERCURY MONTEGO.~~~ ••• sg95
1975 FORD GRAN 10RIN0 ••••••'1995

•

2Dr HT AIR,PS,PB

1972 MERCURY MONTEGO MX •••sg95
4 Dr

atr auto

P S

RUTlAND RJRNRURE

P B

TRUCKS
1974 FORD 12 PASSENGER ••••.'2695
Wtndow Van

1973 FORD CUSTOM F-100 ••••• oc'995
v 8 auto

1973 DODGE VAN •••••••••••••• ~2195
Slant 6, auto

ps pb

1974 FORD RANCHER0 •••••••••. '2495
p

s

P B auto

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

WANTED
WE NEED NEW HOMES &amp; FARMS

See Roger Riebel
985-3345 or 667-3463
St. Rt.

7

1 m1le north
Tuppers Plams. OhiO

r

PB

RIGGS USED £ARS

1978 FORD LID 11 ••••••••••••• s3995
.4 Or

PS

1958 FORD llf2 T. RATBED TRUCK '595

I

$~sq

ru na bout rad1o

1972 fORD 4 DR L1D ......... }1095
1971 FORD TORIN0 •••••••••••••• '895

ALL CARPET
NaN ON
SALE

2 dr

'

e)(pertlse
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22)
Thi ngs which you have learned
from experience will be used
advantageously today In stead
of repeat ing mistakes you It
be nefit tram th em
SAGITIARIUS (No• 23·Dec
21) Put your talents for
transformtng the o ut moded
Into something more useful to
work today Don t fear to make
cha nges If you feel the y II lead
to Improve ments
CAPRICORN {Dec 22 Jan 19)
Your organizational skills are
honed to a s harp edge today
You re adroit at managing s itu ations be they massive or
mini sc ule
AQUARIUS {Jan 211-Feb 19) It
you apply yo urs e ll you can be
extremely cle ver tn bu s iness or
financ ial maile rs today use
yo ur smarts to place yourself In
the p rofit colu mn
PISCES {Fob 211-March 20)
Don t be slay at home tod ay
Get out where the action Is with
people who know how to make
things happert Somethtng be n
eflclal could rub o ft on you
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Gary Dill, Flosste Dtll to
Gary D11l, Flosste D1 1l ,
Parcels, Chester
Btlly H Cretsm ger, Shar on
K Cl'Ctsm ger to Archte E
Lee, June P Lee, Parcels,
Sutton
Robert H Po;ter, Jean
Potter to Geor ge A Groghan,
Jud1th D
Grogh at
Rerecord, Pomeroy
Charles E Grueser, Ruby
Grueser, Mary Russell,
Wtlham Russell, Walter

31 JfHS

Lebanon Townshtp
MCIQS County
Portland Ohto
Jan 31 1979
1 cerJtfy th e 101 o wtng
r cporl IC ~ e correct
Clarcnt.e Lawren ce
Townsh p Clerk
1 Cl N o 614 8•H ~815
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
Balance Jan 1 1978
General Fund
$0 134 33
Moto r Vehtcle Lteense
Tax Fu nd
463 404
Gasotmc TaJC Fund
3 853 06
Cemetery Fu nd
202 20
Federal Reven ue
Sha rm g Fu nd
1 156 45
M1sce laneous Funds
292 00
Tot a ls
16 272 08
Total Rece•pts
General Fund
11 436 75
Motor Veil cle L ce n se
9 12J 80
Tax Fund
Gasoline Tax Fu nd 13 231 12
Road and Br dge
Fund
2 143 56
Ccm e lc ryFund
21 1590
Fed e r a l Revenue
Sha nn g Fu nd
2 696 00
To ta ls
40 747 13
To t a l Rece tpts &amp; Ba lances
General Fund
H 571 08
Motor Veh 1cle L•c e nse
TaxFund
1375713 4
Gas o l ne Tall: Fund 17 084 18
Road and Brt dge
Fund
2 143 56
Cemetery Fund
2 318 10
Federal Re venue
Shar tng F und
3852t15
Mtscellaneous Funds
292 00
57 019 21
To tal s
E.:pcnd1tures
General Fund
12 695 83
Mo tor Veh c le L ce ns e
Ta x Fund
11 63 1 69
Gaso tne Ta x Fu nd 15 14 3 13
Road and Br1dge
Fund
1 663 83
Cemetery Fund
1 746 80
Federa l Rc11e nu e Sha rtng
Fund
1 000 00
Miscellaneous Funds
276 20
Tot a I!.
44 157 48
Balance De c Jl, 1'178
Gene r al F und
4 875 25
Motor Vet c le L cense
Ta x Fund
2 12615
Gaso tm e TaJC Fund
1 941 OS
Road and Brtdge
F vnd
479 73
Ceme tery Fund
57 1 JO
Federal Re\l enue
Shartng Fund
2 852 45
Mtscellaneou s Fu nds
I S 80
To ta ls
12 861 73

Fully equopped

" You II L1ke Our Qual tty Way of Dotng Busmess
GMC Fmancmg
992 S342
POMEROY
Open Eventngs unlil6 oo-111 s p m Sal

lnfluenc~

P B wht fe &amp; red

1974 FORD LTD BROUGHAM•••• '1895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

31

runs good

1974 FORD PINTO••• ~ ......... '1525

Drive Home A Winner

'
Salurday, March

P B

Su per 10 Cheye nne a r P S

1976 VISTA CRUISER 3 SEATS ........... 14295

See one of these cturteous salesmen
Marvtn Keebaugh or George Harrr s

P S

1974 CHEVY SUBURBAN ........ s2895

1974 OLDS ROYALE CPE.................... ,..,,"'
1974 CHEV. I;APRICE WAGON ............. '3295
1973 CAD. CPE. DEVILlE. .................. '1595
1974 OlDS 98 LS. SED................... '2595
1975 OLDS 98 LS. SED. .. •••••••••••••• •• '4095
1974 CAD. DEVILLE SED................... '2495

_?dJ

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

aut o , 6 cyl

1976 FORD GRANADA •••••••••• '3125

C. R. MASifc
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

PIANO
TUNING

Housing'
Headquarters ·

p b

AT KARR &amp; VANZANDT

Trucl
'Repair
1(1so Transmission
Repa1r
Phone 992-5682

EV fRYTHINC S GOTTA GO
651 Beech Streel
Remoldmgs
House and lot
lurmture
Real Estate for Sale
Middleport, 0
c othes cor a ll rny hou se ho ld
Free Eshmates
•le ns Drop by 760 l oure iSt
SEVEN ROOM house for s ole 3
992 2356
992-6011
I'lL ttl2114
Mtddl epo rt
bed rooms ond both modern
37"lmo IPd)
YARD SALE Backyard sole Satu
ktt
c
hen
wtfh
range
a
nd
J 16 mo pd
day Mar ch 3 1 9 t I 4 at the DINETl E SET ma rbl e table lop b
dt shwasher corpe hn g up and
chotrs
brown
ond
whtte
Used
Boum Add than the Jock Morr s
down hot wa ter baseboard
1 month $200 Four 16 111
GR INDSTAFF PENN ZOIL now hcs
res1de nce Ro n cancel s
Real Estate for Sale
hea t up and down all d rap es
wheels Be st offer QQ') 7762
lull auto serv ce and repo tr 404
and
sheers
polo
2
cor
garage
YARD SALE Odds a •'d ends
ONE ACRE lots near Longsvtlle
E Mo n St Pomeroy O.:.
hc::.
o:.__
1975 FORD F 250 4 wheel dr ve
on
d
gorden
Seen
by
appotnt
Sa turday March 31st q to 5
Oh o Co ll 742 2409
Phone
9Q2
5378
me
nt
on
ly
247
2401
BRADFORD Auct toneer Com
930 l ogon St Mtdd leport
plete Serv ce Phone 949 2487
MODERN THREE bed room house FARM FOR Sale House 2 barn s
HUGH YARD So e Apr. I 2
3
or 949 2000 Raetne Oh1o C ttl
ful basement ft reploce ful ly
Ira ler large pond 10 acres or
14 Yr Expertenc:t:
Three fomdy lo ts of used
Brad lo rd:c.__ _ , _ _ _ _
carpe ted central or enclosed
_82_o~res
2566 -~-c lothtn g
glassware
beer
Aural Method
sun porch locat ed on 6 1 acres 3 1 acres In Pomeroy SEcluded ELWOO D BOWERS REPAIR stgn s lot s ol new merchond tse
wooded area on top of h1ll
on CR 28 opprox 3m les from
Sweepers toasters tran s all
The blue house beht nd the
Roetne If tnte rested co ntact
Overlooks nver Water e lec
small appliances Lawn moer
Mason Glo ss Co bet ween
ASSOCiaTe 01
lorry Wolf e Q49 2836 wee~ends
1nc ovadoble 992 3886
nel(t to Sta te H1ghway Go rage
Mason and Har tf ord WV Ro n
Elberfelds of Pomeroy
5
on Route 7
a nd oile r e':'_en_:~g:._ _ _
REAL EST ATE loons Pure"Ch-o-se_ o_n-,d
cancels
and K1mball Musrc Center
STANDING
TIMBER
on
Me
gs
re
ft
~an
ce
30
yea
r
terms
VA
SEWING
MACHINE Repa rs ser
PO RCH SALE Monday Tu esday
of Athens
Fotrground Co lt 94Q 7822
No money down (e l• g1ble
vtce all makes 992 2284 The
Wednesday Apnl 2 3 4
Phone 992 2S8l
veterans)
FHA
As
low
as
3
Fa br tc Sh op
Pomeroy
Bestde the Wotf le Shop tn Mtd
or 992 2082
pe r cent down {non ve tera ns)
Authortzed Smger So les and
3 11 1 mo
dleport
_ -•-•
Ireland Mor lgoge Co 77 E
~~~e shoFpen Sctssors
YARD SAL E Sat urday 10 30om
Stale Athen s 6 I 4 5Q2 305 1
Tra1l er Pork tn Syracuse look
EXCAVAT ING doze r loader an d
for stgns 9q2 2492
backhoe work dump truck s
Campmg
Equtpment
HOBSTETTER REALTY
a nd lo boys for h tre wdl haul
New Ltms Road
TRAVEL MATE 11 foot truck
f1l l dtrt top so tl lt mestone an d
Auto Sales
Rutland, Ohto
camper Sleeps 6 both smk
grove l Co li Bob or Roger Jel
Phon e 742 2003
s tove
elec tr iC
or
gas
fers day phone 992 7~ ntgh t
BLUE FORD vo n rear seo t
D~CEMBER SALE
NEW
LISTING
phone 992 3525 or 9'il2 5232
re frtgerotor and furnace $15
985 3857
SAVE UP TO 30~ STORE WIDE
Extremely n ice J bedroom
Co ll 742 2843
NEW 2 PC LI VI NG ROOM SUIT E HEAVY
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
DUTY
uphol s t ery
hom e w 1th bath fam tl y
$ ld9 95 NEW 5 PC DINETTE
a nd dtt cher Charl es R Hot
m ocht c
$250
Ph one
SETS $49 95 NEW SEALY MAT
room large k tfchen and
843 25 42
ft e ld
Block Hoe Serv1ce
NEW LISTINGS - Goo d
TRESS S TWIN SIZE INTERSPR
uttllty r oom Home has
Servtces Offered
Rut la nd Oht o Pone 742 2008
TWO
BAL
K
mdk
tru
cks
3
rntlk
lNG $45 NEW 3 PC END TABL E
s tr eet 1n Mtddleport 2
natural
gas
heat
WILL CARE for two tnvaltd or PULLINS EXCAVATING Co'Tlplete
routes
Cal l 985 3Bb I
or
SETS $39 95 U HAUL RICE 5
3
bedro"t.o lns
s t or tes
Outbu lldmg is extra nt ce
Se rvtce Phone 992 2478
985 4207
elderlv persons tn my home
NEW AND USED FURNITURE
equtpped l..~ dch en formal
w ith hea t and e lectrtctty
Twenty yea rs eJCpenence
854 7nd AVE PH 4.46 9523
dmtng
n
tce
lt
vtng
R
St1
ua
ted
on
good
s1ze
level
AUTOMOBILE
INSURAN CE been
16 FOOT BAS S boot 50 h p Mer
Reasonable rates 992 6022 or
garage
b asemen t
lot on Sa lem Street m
cancelled? Lost your operat ors
cury e ngtne Mt n nkolo tro lli ng
1976 P 250 Ford trUck and 1200
992 5422
re mo de led
and
n1ce
ltcense? Phone 992 2143
Rutland
Out of floods
boles mtll:ed hoy Co I 9q2 2877
mo tor ready fo r f1sh ng $7000
S l6SOOO O
PAINTING AND Sandbla sttng
14 ft Lo ne s lor runabout w th
Sell s tor only $39 000
a fter 6pm
..(JE C ELECTRI CA L Con tra ctor serv
Free es lt mo tes Co li q49 2686
Ira ler ond convPrtob e top
CL OSE TO MINES tng O hto Volley reg ton Stx
1977 CHEVROLET 4x4 short whee l
$bOO 24 It Rt vtero Crutser pa n
Lovely mobtle loca t ed on I
POMEROY Nt ce 2
WATER AND m sc ha uling Call
days a week 24 hours servtce
ba ~e
Massey Ferguson co rn
loon boot all alumtnum lo ts ol
acre wtth cr eek thro ugh
bedroom home wtth bath
992 5858
Em erge ncy cal ls Co lt 882 2952
planter
corn cultivator
ex tra s 50 h p 78 model Mer
all fenced loads of con
L shaped kitchen and
or 882 3454
992 7084
NOW
HAULING
l1
mestone
tn
cury engm ~ engtne sltll under
crete parktng about 2
unftnt shed a1ttc Prtced to
M ddleport Poem roy prea Co li MOB IL E HOME repotrs Furnaces
worrenty $4500 Would con
1978 FORD , ton p1 ck up B It
years o ld 5 16,500 00
se ll $20 000
e lectncol work ptpes Sowed
for free es tt mote 367 .:..:..:.::c..._.
7101
bed Rod ol t res $3575 AI
s1der cor top f1 s hm g boot on
WANT A FARM&gt; 70
plumbtn g 9Q2 5858
t ode 949 2013 Robert Htll
condtlt on Co ll 992 2238
WILL CARE for two tnvoltd o r
acres
newer
3
bedroom
WEST
RUTLAND
Ructn e
e lder ly persons 111 my home WALLPAPERING AND patnltng
1950 FORD 4 door Good sha pe
home barn
corn cnb
Beauttful
J
bedroom
Ca ll 742 2328
Twenty ye ar s ex pene nce
$1 500 Co ll qq2 5fJ14
ELECTR IC GUIT AR w th case I ke
storage located on the
coun try hom e w tth famtly
Reasonab le rate s 992 6022 o r HOWER Y AND
nP.w Steel g u lor wtth case
room
ltv
tng
room
(has
ro
ve
r
A
STEAL
AT
JUST
MARTIN
Ex
1978 FORD PICK UP sup e r co b )J 8
good condt tiQn q92 7453
$l3 soo 00
ftr ep lace) uhht y room and
992 5422:.:....=:--- - : : c - cavot ng
se pttc systems
w th mper top Good con d I o n
WANT ACREAGE ~8
V2 basement Large 2 car
PAINTING AND sondblo shng
dozer backhoe Rt 143 Phone
Goad gas m leoge $5400 NEW RO LL BAR fo r p ckup tru ck
acres .. mob le
hom e
99'} 7001
d e ta c hed garage wtth
I (614 ) 698 733 1
Free est tmates Ca ll 949 2686
949 2042
(al m ost new) 14x36 a dd
wor kshop T here's more so
TREE TRIMMING and removal
1976 F 750 Ford truck and 1200
on large pati o many
call for mor e tnfo
742 3167 or 742 2573
bo les mlll:ed hoy S:oll 992 2877
many tea tures GOING AT
a fter 6 pm
JUST 14800000 {pnce of
A frame home wtth J
1975 CUTLASS Supreme 2 door
ground)
bed r oom s 11h baths large
GtveAway
350 v a bcell enl condttton
MIDDLEPORT Nee ds
famt ly room uttltt y room
O NE YEAR old collte male to
985 3970 after 6pm or anytime
some wo r k 2 story frame
and ntce outbutldtng
wee kends
good home 992 7766
goo d loca tt on 3 bedrooms
S tt uated on 21f2 acres
bath forma l dtntng nat
Ask ong onl y S37 000
1972 FORD PICKUP F 100 wtth top
TWO PUPS I mo le 1 female 9
gas furnace INVEST NOW
weeks o ld ;, b1rd dog Phone
pe r 302 V 8 au to P S P 8
992 34~0
Wdl sell or trad e lor boot and
JUST $20,000 00
RUTLAND Grocery
motor " o f equal 11alu e 1975
MIDDLEPORT 21wo
bustness Wtth upstatr s
LARGE
SA ND STONE
rock
Plymouth Dus te r slant s x
story
build
tng
s
ha
s
apartment
Bus mess does
9 9~ 5552
992 3325
a uto n m e ~ to the gall on or
apartmen t s
over
all
very well All stock and
be tt er on gos
W
se ll
216 E Second Street
t ed
VE r y
n1c e
equ tpment are mcluded tn
reasonab ly Cal l 843 2561
Mobile Homes for Sale
restau ra nt b usiness tn one
sale pnce Ca II for more
EXCELLENT BUY
A GOOD SELECTION OF
tnfo Ask tng $29 500
o ld est ablt s hed busmess
1972 GMC PICKU P 6 cy l s td
1972 ALL ELECTRIC trader 12 x 60
La r g e block st ucco house
END &amp; ROLL BALANCES
ISS 000 00
$900 992 7376
Central a •r underptnntng On
wtth 4 bedrooms formal
NEAR GRADE SCHOOL It you are thmkmg of
lot
tn
Mason
304
773
5438
1977 OLDS CUTLASS 5 P S P B
dtnmg equ1pped kt fc he n
1 story frame 3 bedr oo m s
se lhng geve us a call We
A C crUise con tr ol AM rod o
gas ftreplace tn the ltv ng
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mob1le
low he atmg btll 2 lots full
ne ed ltstmg s and we do our
less Ihan 14 000 nt les S5200
full
basemenJ
2 car
home
fvrntshed
3 bedr
basement Id eal for famt ly
best to se rvtce vou as tf
992 3442
was her a nd dryer At r con dt
garage
and
2 room
each lt s ttng was our only
$27,300 00
!toned 1 lot 210 ft frontage
19 73 BUICK CE NTURY
Low
s t orage
Also 2 room
ll sttng
YOUR HOUSE IS TOO
$12 000 Phon e 742 2826
m1 leoge 55 000 mdes Good
b us tness butld tn g All for
GOOD TO GIVE AWAY +
ttres sq5o 985 3857
on ly $35 000
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc1ate ,
1955 Protrte Sc hooner 28~oe8
CALL US NOW TO SELL
LIK E N EW - 3 bedroom
bd,
1978 FORD BRONCO 400 eng ne
IT FOR YOU
Phone 742 2003
FROM
yd
frame
c o mp lete! y
1965 Genera l 60xl2 2 bdr
4 speed 6000 mt les New tt res
Hilton Wolfe, Assoctate
REALTORS
overhauled
1ns
tde
and
ou
t
1968
Elcona
52x
12
2
bd
r
lots of e)(tros $700() 843 3053
Phone 949 2SB9
Henry E Cleland Sr
and up tnstalled
1969 Buddy 60ll: I 2 4 bd r
Modern ba th new furna ce
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
He nry E Cleland Jr
1970 DODGE DART Fa r condt
1970
Sy
lva
60xl2
2
bdr
n tce lar ge kttchen uttll t y
Broker 992 5739
ton $300 992 5147
24 Rolls of ca r pet In Stock
1970Cost!e 60JCI2 2bdr
bu1ldtng and 1114 a c re lo t
&amp; !DO's of Samples to
1973 Arltngton 60 x12 2 bdr
1966 G T 0 Exce llent con d ttton
Askong only $23 000
Choose From
1973 Rtdgewaod 70x 14 3 bd r
H gh perle monee 742 22 49
BARGAIN - Old used 3
1973K trk.wood 50xl2 2 bdr
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE
bedroom
fr
ame
home
but
1975 MALIBU STATION wagon
B&amp;S
MOBILE
HOME
SAL
ES
ha s natural gas cily water
A I shape S2595 949 2753
Call742 2211
PT PLESANT WV
and
bath
Varntshed
TALK TO
675 4424
FIVE
YEA
RS
OLD
Beautltul
4
bedroo
m
home
woth
woodwor k' and the floo rs
Wendell or Herb Grate
1973 FREEDOM MOBJLE home
For Rent
la r ge eat tn k1tchen 2 bath s TV room all mcel v
are so l1d
Handyman s
Appltonces
underptnn ng
or Gene Smtih
carpe ted la rge utthty r oom a nd many m o r e extras
TWO BEDROOM mob le hom e
spec tal for /U S1 $12 000
f1reploce 992 5413 or'fn bl1 8
Natural
fas
for
ced
atr
furnace
Plenty
of
garden
space
k1tchen fu rn tshed Prefe r m td
INCOME - 5 apts tn g oo d
$5200, _ _ _ _
on 1 acre of •and Prtced nght $36 000
die aged couple or elderly cou
condtfton w dh low mcome
1970
REBEL RAIDER 12 )( 48 Very
pie No pe ts qq2 774q
Can be upgraded to a goad
Good 5 bedroom house wtlh fu ll
CH ESTER cond tt on $3500 247 3875
good
tn vestment All u ttlt ftes are
SENIOR CITIZENS Apt s I be dr If
or 949 2643 oiler 4
base m ent and 2 baths Nat gas hea t approx 1 acre
pa•d by th e r enter s WAnt
you ore on SS or D•sob Itty SS
Rutland
742 2211
land an d large storage butld ~ng Prtce 52 1,500
to see what you can do
rent based on mcome 992 7772
between 9 om a nd 6 pm
5 BEDROOMS - All have
ACREAGE - wtth large beef barn near Pomeroy
c losets modern k 1t c he n
COUNTRY MOBI LE Home Pork
w tth d tsposa dt s hwa s her
Rout e 33 no rth of Pomeroy
JUST LI S T ED ~ Good 3 bedroo m house aboul 10 yrs
large famtly room wdh
Lorge lots Coll992 7479
o ld Mostl y carpe ted w tth al1ac hed garage and u t tlt ly
pool table laundry room
room All tn su lated Approx =&gt;J4 ac r e land Loca ted
3 AND 4 BM lurn tshe d ond un
sun deck 3 baths a nd 2 car
abou t 15 mtnutes north on Rt 33 Pnced for quick sa le
f urnts h ed
opts
Phone garage at $65 000
$22 500
992 5434
NEW LI STING - 75 acr es
90 ROLLING ACRES of good of woods some saw ttmbe r
LO TS - 1 Acre and up near Pomeroy
po sture Plenty ol wa ter Could
wt th do zens o f bea uftful
WE OFFER YOU
occo modote 50 plus collie
bu1ld ng s tes Located tn
50 ACRES FREE GAS - Good l'h s tory house wtth fu ll
1
Two full floors of all new
ol4 667 33qa
Pomeroy
Al l ult l th es
furn1ture
'
basement Large pond stocked w tth fts h Prtced for
a v ailable
for
on l y
TWO Bt:DROOM mobde home
qwck sale $40 000
2 N1ce selecttons of used
$25
000
00
Adult s only 992 2598
fu rniture
NEW LISTING - 8 acre s
3 A large buoldtng full of
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroo m home, a lmost new
ONE BFOROOM opts de s•gned plus 3 bedroom ranch
betiulilul carpet
k1tc hen cabtnets all mcely car peted , la undr y room all
spec tft colly lo r wheelchatr po
home bath full basement
msu lated natural gas h eat uttltty butldtng 2 lots
11ents Coli bet ween 9 and b
1ust out of Mtddl eport a
992 7772
$2 1 500
coup le of mtles Redwood
Nl;W FO UR bed room opts
d ec k carpettng an d lots of
JUST LISTED - 1 acre on Co Rd 32 and 28 No ce
o 11odoble for fm otly of 5 10 8
pn vacy $32 000
home stte Water and elec tri c available Also
Coli between Q ond 6 992 7772
WANT IT SOLD WITHOUT
surveyed $3 000
I
AN UPSET IN YOUR
~ee
the
Grate
Fam1ly at
FAMILY
ROUTINE
J UST LI STED - 7S Acres with a 3 b edroom frame
For Sale
CALL THE TEAFORDS'
house barn and other butldtng mostly fen ced Some
FOR YOUR ca ndy and co ke sup
TO TURN TALK INTO
hmber a nd excelle nt bottom land About 1,000 feet of
pi es come to Dt s Spr ng
TRA NSACTIO N
bea utiful Ohio Rtver frontage 0\\lner wtll help finance
Jo ll e y Plozo FREE ln &lt;; ter r an dy
Ask tng $57 ooo
dosses Coll44b 7134
REALTOR ASSOCIATES
- Gorden B Helen L and
Wf HAVE choco lates d obet•c
Sue P Murphv
choco lat e~ and ot he r candy
su ppl o~ Free Easler randy
&lt;l oss Co li Carousel Con lee
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949 2388
I onery
tn
M ddleport
O R NANCY JASPERS ASSOCIATE 949.2654
097 f'. !4/

--- -

s

r

AutQ&amp;

P S
MEIA L ~O LOING c hotr ~ Ike ne""'
$4 e o 100 or more $3 50 e o Ice
cre am cobmet s frozen food
d splay Wyatt prellel or p1zz:o
011e n NCR cos h reg•s ter Pop
corn candy fl oss &lt;orme l corn
mochtnes 614 237 44 02

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIP S
For Ftscat Year En dmg
O~ccmber

'~
WAY

Business Services

~I: G t S Tl-RI: U

&lt;;

CHIP WOOD
P o l~ ~
max
d om ~t er 10 on lmgest Pnd
$11 po• ton Bundled s lo b Sl O
pe r tpn Oe ltvered to Oh1 o
Rt 7 Pomeroy
Polle t Co
99'1 2bl39

For Sale

:m, 1!l7g

E llen Bon ecutter to Donald
A Ma) VIVIan M May lot,
Pomeroy
Allen C Durham, Dorothy
A D urham t o J oseph D
t -&lt;&gt; ftls, Cor a A 1-&lt;&gt; llls 1 020

acr es Sc1p10
Alle e Lou tse W1 lhams
Parker t o R oc h a r d Lee
Wtlltam s
S t ephen
W
Wtlllam s
Mt c h ael
R
Wtlltams Cert of trans ,
Rutla nd • Middleport

EASTER KILLED
EUCLID Ohto (AP)
Former Cleveland Indtans'
hrst baseman Luke Easte r
was shot and ktll cd after
bemg held up by two men
outs1de a bank Euclid pohce
repo rted today
Easter w as leavwg a
Cleveland Trust Co branch
off tce aft er cashwg ch ecks
wh en he was shot, pollee satd
Easter, "ho pla) e d for the
Indtans from 1949 to 1954 had
been workmg for TRW Inc
sm ce 1967
Pollee sa td hts assat lants
fled m a car but were captured by pursumg pollee after
th etr car htt a n embankment
seve ral m 1l es a\\ay m
Clev e la nd
Ten years ago In Detrotl, a
pohceman was killed, four
Black mlittanls wounded a nd
135 people arrested 1n a gun
ba ttle followmg a meeting of
a group called New Repubhc
of Afrtca
Ftve years ago Secretary
of State Henry Ktssmger
marrted Na ncy McGmnes m
Arlington, Va

EXPE NDITURE S
BY F UND
Genera l Fund
Bal Jan 1 1978
6 134 33
R ecetpts
Gene r a l Property Tax Rea l Estate and
Tr a ler (G r oss)
J 027 95
Ta ngtb e Persona l Proper t y
Tax (Gro ssl
34 29
Estate Tax (Gross)
473 40
Lo c a l Government and
Stat c ln comeT ax
407341
Ctgarctte License Fees
and Ft ne s (Gross)
75 00
Ad tu s tn ent s an d
Refund s
34 oo
Other lntangtbl es
3 718 70
To ta l Recctp t s
I I 436 75
Total Beg nn tng Balance
Plu s R ece t)'t s
17 57 1 08
E ~ p e ndttur es
Tota E)(pendtlures
Adntns t ratve 119 22 79
Town Hall s
'VIcmona l Butldnt gs
23 04
And Grou nds
F1 r e Protecll on
750 DO
Grand Tot a Exp
General Fund
12 695 83
Balan ce Dec 31 1978 4 875 25
Tota l EJCp Plu s Bal
Dec 31 1978
17 571 08
Motor Ve h1cl e Ltcen se
Ta:. Fund
4 634 04
Bal Jan 1 1978
Recct pts
Mot o r Vehicle L1cense
Tax
912380
Total Re cetpts
9 123 80
Tota l Bcgtnn ng Balan ce
P lus Recetpts
13 757 8l
Expcndtture!&gt;
Total Ell:pend tlure s
Mt SCC IIJn eous
I 3 I 3 53
10 318 16
Ma tnlen ance
Grand Tot al Exp
Motor Ve htcl e L1c ense
Tax Fund
11 63169
Bat Dec 31 19 78
2 126 15
Total EJCp P lu s Ba t
De c 31 1978
13 757 84
Gasot 1ne Tax Fu nd
Bat Jan 1 1978
3 853 06
Re ce tpt s
Gasol ne Tal(
13 200 00
Other
3 1 12
Total Rece tpt s
13 23 1 12
Total Begmn ng Balan ce
Plu s Rece 1pls
17 084 18
Expendt1ure s
Total Expe nd tlure s
- Mt sce llaneous
S 482 96
Ma ntenancc
9 660 17
Grand To t a l Exp
Gasol ne Ta)( Fund
15 143 13
1 94 1 05
Ba l Dec 31 1978
To tal EJCp Plu s Ba t
Dec 31 1978
17 081 18
Road and Bndge Fund
Rece tpt s
General Prope rty Ta x Real Estate a nd
Tra ler {G rass)
:l 119 56
Tang ble Pe r sonal Prop erty
Ta x(GrossJ
2400
Tota l Recetpts
2 143 56
Tota l Begtnn ng Balan ce
Plus Recc tpl s
2 143 56
Ex pend itur es
Tota l E,.xpe n d lures
M•scel aneous
I 663 83
Grand Total E x p
Road and Brtdgc
I 663 83
Fund
479 73
Ba t Dec 31 1978
To tal EJCP P lus Bal
Dec 31 1978
2 143 56
Ce m etery Fund
202 20
Ba t Jan 1 1978
Rec:e1pt s
General Property Tax
Real Estate and
Tr a er (G ross)
2 08 1 61
Tang ble Persona l Property

Efhe D Norma n to John
Norman J uamta Norm an
Parcels, Saltsbury
NeRI D Bonecutter, ooura

TIRE CHANGEOVER
Remove · Remount
Snowt1re to Regular
Tire, Inspect &amp; Balance

ERAL
TIRE SALES
N. 2nd AVE.

1978 FORD RANGER
LARIAT F-150

1977 CHEV. C.10
PICKUP

1977 CHEV.
EL CAMINO

V 8 4 sp overd r ve radto
P S
tutone
owner P B

pamt

loc al

V 8 a uto trans
loc al owner P S

rad•o

V 8 I It wheel
local ow ner

P S

al

'5195

'4095

'4595

1976 GMC
1h TON PICKUP

1976 F-150 RANGER
XLT 4X4

1972 GMC lfz TON
PICKUP

V 8 s tandard tr ans

P S

N1 ce

VB PS
PB aor ~ual
tanks 1200xl5 tir es wh1te
s poke whee ls &amp; more

'5295

'3095
1974 F-100 1h TON
PICKUP
vs

s

p

a1r rad1o

1975 FORD F-100
lfz TON PICKUP
VB s tandard tran s

'3095

'2695

CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND

Grueser, Mary Grueser, Ann
Tucker, Howard Tucker, Joy
Grueser Sharon Hayhurst,
Robert Hayhurst, Sandra K
Ramey formerly Sandra K
Kmg to Jerry R C uster,
Myrna Cust e r, Parcels,
Mmersville
Charl es S Beller to David
D Peterson, Lmda Peterson,
10 34 A , Rutland
James J Proffitt, s hertff,
Edna Coryell, etal, to J ames
W S uttle, Grella Suttle, deed
of correclton, Ohve
Edith Watkms Woolard to
John B ram er, lot, Pomeroy
James W Boyd , La dona G
Boyd to James W Boyd,
Ladona G
Bo yd 20 A ,
Bedford
Charl es Lawson, Hazel
Lawson to Charles Lawson ,
Haz e l Lawson, Parcels,
Letart
Susan D tane Bennett to
John R Calaway, Patty Ann
Calaway. Parcels Ohve

GREAT

V S auto tr ans

PS

atr

'1295
1974 CHEV.
SUBURBAN WAGON
V e P S rad

a

'1295

PAT HILL FORD
Open Ttl6 PM exce pt Thursday &amp; Sa turday hi S 00 Closed Sunda y See Rocky Hupp
Darre ll Dodrtll or Pat Htll General Manager for a Good Deal on a New or Used
Ve htcle
992 2196
Ml DOLE PORT 0

Ta xiGross
3429
Total Rece tp ts
2 115 90
Total Beg nn ng Balance
Plus Rece pt s
2 3 18 10
Ex pend tfur es
Sa tares
I 555 40
Tool s and
E qu tp n en!
191 40
Total Expend lu r es
I 746 80
Bat D ec 31 1978
571 30
To1al Exp Plus Bat
Dec 31 1978
2 3 18 10
Federa l ReHnue
Shar m g Fund
I 156 &lt;15
Bal Jan I 1978
Recetpfs
Gran1 s Federa l
2 696 00
Total Rece pts
2 696 00
Total Bcgtnnmg Balanc e
Plu s Receipts
3 85? 15
Expend tt ures
Matnt a nd Op eratto n
Equ pment
1 000 00
Total Expend tu res
I 000 00
Bal Dec 3 1 1978
2 852 45
Tala I Exp Pus Bal
Dec 31 1978
3 fl52 45
Anft Reces s ton Fund
Ba Jan 1 19 78
292 00
Ex pend 1tu res
Sa lar es
276 20
Total Expendtlurcs
276 20
sa D ec 31 1978
15 80
To tal Exp Plu s Bat
Dec 31 197 fl
297 00
(3) 30 lie

Brown new UCLA coach
LOS ANGE LES ( AP) UCLA has h1red La r ry

Brow n

former

De nver

Nuggets coach, to succeed
Gar) Cunmngham as the
Brutns basketball coach the
Los Angeles Tunes reported
m today's editmns
Brown 38, has had no pre
voous college coachmg ex
penence, but has been
successful m the pro ranks
With teams m the Amertcan
Basketball Assoc tation and
Natto n al
Basketball

Association
UCLA A th lettc Dtrector
J D Mor gan had no comment
on the report that Br o wn had
been htred Sunday after an
mien tew Saturd ay
An
off1c1a l announceme n t IS

ex pe c ted Wednesday 01
Thursday the newspap e t
satd
Athle llc pubhe~ty dtreclu r
Vtc Kelley sa td today he ha&lt;'
no knowledge w hether Bro"1
had been htred

,-----------.,
MEIGS

I
I

Pomeroy, 0.
Ph. 992-2176

I

Equipment Co.
HOURS
8 5 Mon Fr t
812onSat
Closed Sunday

1
i

New Idea J
Equtp m e nt J

1977 PONTIAC GMAND PRIX ..... ........ .... ........................ '4995
1977 PONTIAC TRANs-AM ......................................... '5895
1977 PLYMOUllt FURY 4 OR............................ ........... '3895
1977 BUICK ELECTR~ 225 LIMITED 2 DR. ........................ 16795
1977 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR........... . ................'3995
1976 PONTIAC LEMANS WAGON 4 DR. ............... . .. ..
t3995
1975 BUICK APOLLO 4 DR ........... ,..................
'2895
1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ......... .......................... '2995
1
2795
1974 FORD T-BIRD 2 DR
1974 AMC GREMLIN .. ... .. ... .... .......... . ................... 11795
1974 CHEVROLET C-10 ............... . . .... . ............. . '2395
1973 BUICK CENTIJRY 2 DR ................................ . 11895
1
1195
1973 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4 DR ... ........ ....... .
1973 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 DR .. ....................... ..
.. '1495
1973 FORD CUSTOM 500 4 DR ................................... '1495
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 OR .................................. '1295
1973 BUICK CENTIJRY WAGON 4 DR ........................... '1795
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 4 DR ........................ - 11195
1973 BUICK ESTATE WAGON ..................................... '1 795
1973 PONTIAC FIREBIRO ....................................... '2495
1973 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR .................................... 11595
••• 0 •••••• 0 • 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Buy your n ex t car from The Frtendly Dealgr We care abo ut you
Come m and see or call one of These Frtendly Salesmen J D Story,
Ray Douglas, or Btll Nelso n

SMITH NELSON

MOTORS INC.
POMEROY, 0.

500 E. MAIN
l

I
I
I
I

__________ _

.._lnternahonal
Harvester

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

'

992-2174

•

�Governor reconsiders evacuation
B) IIIIIIIJVOIH 'IIAK

.\ssudat&lt;•d Pn·ss Wriu•r
HARRI SilURG ,t Pa. 1APJ
An unexpected release of
more radioactivity from
11uee Mile Island nuclear
plant today prompted Gov.
Dick Thornburgh to consider
evacuating the four-county
area surrounding the facility.
Thornburgh
said
at
midmorning a decision on
evacuation was imminent.
More than 950,000 people
live in the four counties York , Dauphin, Lancaster
anti Cwnberland.

i': .C. McCabe, section chief

with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, said a :10
millircm per hour readin!(
was taken so uth of the plant
after the release and was
rapidly decreasing. He said
that "is not an indication of a
serious problem . It is
indic'!tive of a gaseous pocket
that . w~s released and
dissipa fed.'·
Speaking from the plant
sjte, McCabe added, " We
have not heard of anything
serious enough for an

wheu there wa• n buil~·np of
" If it were 10 times that, I the volwne of gases in the
would slarl tlriuking of primary coolant system of
the plant following an
limitin~ the ·stay lime ' for
IM.lOple working in the planl ." accident Wednesday.
The average American is
The governor's press office
said there was a reading of 1,· exposed to 100 to 120
200 millirems per h.our at the millirems of radiation per
plant vent, from which the year, including radiation
from everything from space
gases escaped.
to
X.rays .
Thornburgh's
statement
1\
millirem is a term used to
was issued by his press office
meas
ure absorption of
in the state capital.
radiation
by body mass.
Officials said radioactive
Harrisburg , the state
gases were automatically,
but unexpectedly, released capital is in Dauphin County,
C\ l..ll'W1lh .l1 j

ct.

School subsidies ·get boost
UTILE • BIG GIRL - Jennifer Couch, 10, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Couch, Pomeroy, has been a
volunteer worker for the Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society for the past four years. This year she will
again take on the task of going from door to door on
Mulberry Heights only. The first three years she was
assisted by her brother and sister, last year and this year
she will be on her own. Jennifer is a fourth grade student
at Pomeroy Elementary School.

-------------------------I
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I
I

! Area Deaths
I

Chester Spencer
Chester Lee Spencer, 63,
Charleston, died Thursday.
Mr. Spencer is survived by
his wife, Fontelle Caster
Spencer, one son, Steven
Wood Spencer and two grand·
children of Oregon, one
sister, Mrs. Maxel Schulke,
Ludington, Mich ., and one
brother, Jack D. SpenPer.

Lompoc, Calif.
Funeral services will be
held Sunday at I :30 p.m. at
the Wilson Funeral Home,
Charleston. Friends may call
at the Funeral Home Satur·
day from 7 to 9 p.m.
Graveside services will be
held at Memory Gardens in
Athens County.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
STATE RESTING
HOSPITAL
MANSFIELD, Ohio (API
ADMITTED-Joyce John·
- The prosecution planned to
rest its case against Thad· son, Langsville ; Elsie Cox,
deus Lewingdon today after Pomeroy; Lena Nesselroad,
playing for the jury a four· Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED-Phyllis Gi·
hour· tape recording of a
statement by Lewingdon to Ikey, Lena Heilman, Helen
Harris, Pearl Nixon, Robert
Columbus police.
Smith,
Grace Stobart.
On Thursday, the panel of
eight women and four men
saw for the first time the police department said the
nearly foot·long, .22-caliber weapon was found in a shed
Stoger Luger that the at Lewingdon s hoine in
prosecution says Lewingdon Glenford. The silencer, he
said. was found in a car
used to kill nine people.
Prosecution witness Sgt. belonging to Lewingdon 's
Tom Davis of the Columbus b~other Gary.

w. COMPTON, O.D.

P-----~~-----------------,

I

I1I

N.

I

I1

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT

I

.!-!~.!2~!~2.~--------~------:

WE
MAKE
MONEY
GROW

f--"M~:;;;u;;;;;~~;---~

PLUS.

I
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1

11

10,000 BONUS

I

I
I

POINTS

!I
I

·1

for your favorite club for each.
&gt;100 depo sit to a savings account 1
- DOUBLE bonus points for your
f1r st deposit to a new account . 1~

L~~~-~-----~-~----J
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy

nationa
bank

the bank of
the century
established 1872

.,

FDIC

origmal ~Z .'I billion school
outlay for this biennium.
Now that he has $ll4 million
on top of that, Roberto would
like to hike per pupil aid even
more. But the summit
leaders want part of the
increase to go for :ioo more
vocational education units
and I ,200 more special
education units for dis·
advantaged pupils in big
cities.
Common Pleas Court
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court action, William
W. Hawk was granted a
divorce from Winifred Lynn
Hawk.
Cases dismissed were
Charles G. Sheets, Jr., again· .
st Paul M. McElroy; Carol L.
Guinther and Kenneth R.
Guinther; Joyce M. Terry
against James D. Terry;
Associate Commercial Corp.,
against Stanley D. Trout.

'

Marriage license
A marriage license was
issued to Hugh P. Cuister, 54,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy ap Norma J .
Amsbary, 54, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

named
.. to club

Meet Tuesday
.Syrac use
Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday,
April 3, at 8 p.m. at the.
Syracuse Municipal Building.
GUEST SPEAKER
Richard Long will be the
guest speaker at the Nease
Settlement Church . thi s
evening at 7:30 p.m. The
public is invited.

Nuclear Regulatory
Commission investigator who
rushed to the scene after the
reactor's cooling system
malfunctioned early
Wednesday.
The radiation still being detected was evaporating off
the floor of the auxiliary
building. Plant officials said
the radiation inside the
reactor dome was 100 times
the normal level.

DR. CLYDE INGELS
WILL .REOPEN

HIS
DENTAL OFFICE
APRIL 2, 1979

Something New At Our· Drive-Thru Window

ROAST BEEF OR BAKED HAM
SANDWICHES
Our Roast Beef and Baked Ham Sandwiches start with
specially selected USDA inspected meats. 'The meat is
sliced thin and STACKED HIGH on a sesame seed bun.
There is plenty of lean meat nutrition that the entire
family needs daily.

Try Our Drive· Thru Instant Seroice!

Crow's Family Restaurant
• Pomeroy, Ohio

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY
,I

CUSTOM MADE -DRAPERY SALE

SAVE

in crash

•

( Receive a free meter stick with a
$100.00 deposit to a new or existing
savings account .

Kenneth Ri

16 killed

Our business is to help
you get on easy street
. through insured savings and attractive
interest rates . Stop in.

I

By RGBERT E. MILLER Ocasek, D-Akron, said the individual taxes . Its cost
Associated Press Writer governor agreed to hiking the would be $94 million.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) outlay for primary and
Rhodes also caUed for a $61
Gov. James A. Rhodes' pro· secondary education by $148 million expansion of the
posed $636 million increase in million .
homestead property tax
state school subsidies will be
However, he said the Re· exemption received by the
disabled
and
boosted to $784 million, he publican governor did not in· totally
and top legislative leaders dicate where the money will homeowners 65 and over. He
h;lve decided.
come from within his $17.7 . did not provide details of the
expansion.
However, the agreement at billion, two-year budget.
an education summit meeting
Later, House Speaker
A Senate committee has
Thursday apparently means Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New recommended a more modest
expa-nsion,
the Legislature will scrap Boston, said he believes the howestead
Rhodes' call for about $155 proposed tax relief is the only increasing from $10,000 to
million in property tax relief. place the extra school money $15,000 the annual income a
The legislative leaders dis· can be found . Rhodes family could have and still
cussed with reporters the indicated he understood this, qualify for the exemption . It
eighth in their series of Riffe said.
would cost $16 million.
'(he increase would push
Senate Education
summit meetings with
Rhodes and state school the state funding for Chairman
Marcus
A.
officials before the Senate education to . nearly $3 .5 Roberto, O.}Ujvenna, whose
and House held routine floor billion in the next biennium committee i~ considering the
sessions ending the . Legis- .a record. The increase is formula under which the
lature's work week.
based on an assumption that school money will be &lt;~llo·
Semite President Oliver state revenues, even without cated, said he still must await
an increase in taxes, will key policy decisions at
~w by$he billion ill be summit meetings scheduled
19~1 biennium, whic11---next Thursday and the
'ggS
starts July 1.
following week.
Taking more than half of
One decision is on the level
the revenue growth for of basic, per pupil aid.
schools means all other state Currently this is $960. The
progra,JpS will get a total of proposed bill would hike it to
Kenneth E. Riggs of Reeds· $716 million - barely enough $1,160 next !'ear and $1,250 the
ville has been name.d a for modest increases to year after that. Roberto
member of the President's accommodate inflation, estimated the cost of his plan
Honor Club of John Hancock officials say.
nt $700 · million above the
Mutual Life Insurance Co., an
Rhodes also wants to spend
.association .of leading sales more than $200 million of the ·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:,
,representatives from the $716 million to give some
BULLETIN
firm' s nationwide general 80,000 state employees a 7
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)
agency field force.
percent pay increase.
- Gene Leroy Hart was
II member of the Frank E.
In his Feb. · 6 State of the
found Innocent today of the
Clagg Agency in Columbus, State address, Rhodes called
1977 sex-slayings of three
he was among 333 members for an increase from 10
Girl
Scouts at a summer
attending the com pan y's percent to 12"2 percent in the
camp in northeastern
annual President 's Honor property tax rollback, the
Oklahoma.
Club meeting last week at the money the state reimburses
Hotel Bonaventure in Los counties for
re~u cing ::::::::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Angeles, Calif.
Heading the home office
officials in attendance were
Edwin Matz, chairman of the
board and chief operations
officer, a nd John G.
McElwee, president and chief
.
operations officer.
Seventy-four first · time
qualifiers and eight new life
members were presented
with medallions, symbolic of
membership in the Honor
Club, by McElwee.
Riggs joined . the John
Hancock in 1965, and is a four·
time qualifier for mem· ·
bership in the company's
President's Honor Club.

which has a population of
more than 220,000. Lancaster
County has a population of
more than 319,000; York
more
than
262,000;
Cumberland 158,000.
In addition to Harrisburg,
the cities of Lancaster and
York are in the affected area.
Earlier, officials .had said a
controlled release of lowlevel radiation was still
bean)ing from 250,000•gallons
of highly radioactive water
inside a disabled .nuclear
power plant, and experts said
the water might have to be
buried in lead or evaporated.
But at that time federal authorities said the radiation
was contained inside the
Three Mile Island nuclear
plant's 28().acre perimeter
and no longer was a threat to
neighbors of the power plant. ·
"Based on what we've been
able to see so far, the danger
is over for the people off
site," said Charles Gallina, a

QUEBEC (AP)- A promi·
nent Montreal lawyer and 15
other persons were killed
when a Quebecair passenger
plane crashed into a hillside,
split in three parts and burst
into a baU of flames, officials
said today.
Eight others were injured,
some seriously, when the
twin-engine turboprop F-27
bound for Montreal with 24
aboard went down at 6:50
p.m. Thursday shortly after
takeoff .
Officials said the pilot had
trouble with his right engine
and turned in preparation ·for
an emergency landing but
couldn't make it back to the
Quebec City airport.
They said among the dead
was lawyer · Robert Jodoin
and the pilot, coiJilot and
stewardess. The other
victims were not identified
pending notification of
relatives.
Guy Gilbert, a 23-year-old
forestry engineer who lives
near the airport, was one of
th e first persons on the scene.
" I was upstairs getting
ready to take a walk with my
daughter . Then I heard a loud
boom and the house vibrated
.. . Then I looked out and saw
a big ball of fire ."
l;ilben said he ran to the
crash site and "most of the
bnrlies were spread out on the
li!JOW ... There was blood all
over .
"' Mosl of the people were
nor dead . Several died the
fir st half -hour after the
accident. There were limbs
cui off. We had lu be careful
'.\hen we were nro\'in..: thNn ..

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AND CORTLEY

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