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12- 'nte [?ail)' SentinE-l , MidrliE&gt;pnrt·Poml'rny, 0 ,, W~'flnt&gt;~d;1y .l pril JR, l!l7fl

·

. .

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

. rogr.·am available I
New p
A new program, W:J.r. h~s

been addPd · to the Meigs

rlinir or physirl~n servi&lt;'l's.
Jt Is horwd that W.J.C., in &lt;·on-

.
P.xarnples of aulhorilNI
foods &lt;"ontained . In the
parkagr are: iron-fortified
infant formula, milk, rhPP!&lt;P,
rggs, fnlit juires arid iron fortifird cereals. Thr foods •n&gt;
pn•vided through thr rrd;m.
ption of roupons at l()(·al

Area Deaths 1·. R.egistt;atio~
dates lzsted .

.
cLYDEE.BROWN . .
who ~!'t' on W.J.r. In ariot~
rounty ·n&lt;'l'&lt;f to termiMte in
Clyde Everett Brown, 71,
that rotonly an~ herome .,.,... Pomeroy, died Tuelday at
tiffed hen' .
Elmwood Village Nursing
Nutrition Rduration is an Raine, Portsmouth.
1 ........ t rt oft'- wr,.,
Mr. Brown wu the llltl ol
;;;;;;;.;;:, ";; is
i~i: lhe ·late Georg~ .and Elale
.through eduratian, positive Roulh Brown. He
al8o
a1'&lt;f permanent chanf(es in precededindealhbyhllwlfe,
PatinK patterns will be made Frances, one half-brother
and one half-elater.
10ndhealthslaliL• Improved.
rrrtiflration for the'
He was employed at
P""""Rm """Uirt&gt;S ~-;aht an• Parkersburg Rig and Reel lor
.. .,.. measui't'Jtlenta,
--~
'"' • and" 37 yea!'ll before reUring.
weif(ht
hPmnKiobin . or .hematocrit
He Is IIU'Vived by one
testi&lt; to i~ntlfy anemia. daughter, Marlene Relnbart,
Children are re-&lt;'Valuati'd on- . New Marshfield and son-Inee every sJx month•: women law, Robert Rtotnhart, three
are &lt;'Prtified durin!( prPJ!nan- . granddaughters, Angela
ry and rvalu)lted durin~ Meek, J-na Greene, and
delivery.
Bobbl
Reinhart,
two
n.l&gt;orah Lavalley, R.N., I• grandaons, Dennis and Sam
thl' W.J.r. Project Nurse. For Reinhart, three brothers,
more information or an Victor Brown, Mlnersville,
apolntment please contact R a y m o n d B r P w n ,
her at thr Mri~• rounty Reynoldsburg, and Floyd
Health J)epartment located Brown, Middleport, one
at 23fi w. 2nd, Pomeroy, sister, Gretta Thomas,
phone 992,'l7ZI or 992-7160 br- ' Pomeroy, and ~.-al nieces
tween8::)0a.m.and4p.m.
and nephews.

Funeral Bel"((cea llill. be
helt!riday a~ l p.m. Ill
Ewu.,. Olapel with the Rev.
A.
Frederick
Huish
officiating. Burial will be in
Mllea Cemetery. The family
· will receive friends Thursday
from 2 to hnd 7 to 9.

.

Rio announces
advanced scholar program

;;:u

w•

Board gets

··

Meet•••

Maso_ library'

willroopen

:1Sears I'

c._,..,.,.

'We Invite VOO
to test driVe
the first ChfNY
of the '80s ...

'------------------..J

CITATION I
See

Bus driving course Slated ·

p u blz·c

APRIL 19~

POMEROY M010R CO.

·hean·ng
'

ELBERF.ELDS

..JOGGING

OUTFIT

'H OGG .&amp; ZUS.P AN
MATERIALS CO. .

MASON, W.VA.

nece~·rry .

Pnm~.

e

G

· ·
Pomeroy Elementary,
County Health J).,~rtmrnt.
junc·tinn with these health
Purenl• wishing to register
WJ.C. is a special sup- "''rvires. will help to hrin~
their. ehlldren for kinder- . Monday, April 30, from 8:30
plemental fod program for a!&gt;out healthy roul'!'e and outf"~rten or as new enrollees in a.m. to4p.m.;
women, infants and children. rome of prr""anry and orthe first """de Idid not attend
Middleport Elemen"'ry,
It is adminis.trred on thr lima! growth" and developkinder~;.;;;., in Melgs l.ocal) Tueaday, May I, from 8:30
state lev•I by the Ohio J)e~r- mrnt of ~rtirlpants.
may re~r their children a.m. to4p.m.; .
Rutland Elementary, Wedtmcnt Of Health, nivision of
Thr Ohio W.Lr. Program ~or(l('!&gt;ryanddnt~stort&gt;S.
·
acrordin~ to the following
nesday, May 2, from 8:30
Maternal and rhild Hralth ~&lt;Prves approximately 60,000
The Meigs County Health
srhedule:
a.m . to4p.m.
and is funded by the United low inrome pregnant and . n.partment plans \o rrrtlfy
EMILY CONGRoVE
Kindergarten age students
StalPs nepartment of mtl'l'ing women , and rhildrrn 500 participant.• within the
Emily L. Cangrove, 88, 785
.. from the Harrisonville,
.Agric. ulture, Food ai"l · under five y•ars of age, who nrxt'six months. J( is........_. to
South Higbstreet, CoiiDilbUB,
M•
d
·'are det•nnlned by a hralth im·rrase this numher
·~~~·
died Tuesday at un1ve!'llIty
mor acci ent
Salem Center and Rutland
nutrition service.
later
area are to register' at
Jt is a health program profrssional to he a mrdiral - during lh&lt;' yrar. OnlyMeigs
Hospital.
Rutland. ·
d•signed to operat• as an ad- · nulritional ris~ . P.ligihh• p&lt;•r- C'ountv ri•sid•nts c•an he rrr·
Sbe was the daughter ol lbe cheeked Tuesday
junct to existing low. cost sons ;ore provided a f(l(l(l tified.·
· 1
late Charles and GertrUde
Any child whose flltl! blrih••
prenatal and"'r fl"!liatri•· ~&lt;'kagr selrrtrd for its high · M•igs County residents,
Larkins Warner.
Two cara recetwd medlwn day falls on or before Sepnutrient c·onl rnt .
Sbe Is• survived by one damagea and qne driver wu !ember 30, 1979, may be
brother, Wilbur Warner, cited to maylir'a court aa tbe registered for kindergarten
Chester, two uncles and one reau1t of an accldtllt at tbe fortl\efallol1979 . .
8
ol E Main st
Any mild who sixth birth~eral aerviC.. wni be In•"----'..,..,......,., · ·
·• day falls on or before Sepheld Saturday at 1 p.m. at and
Nye Ave., Pomeroy, at t be 30
em r . , 1979 may .be
8:03 p.m. ............
for first grade for
Ewing Ol8pe) With the Rev •. Pomeroy·-:r.
Police lllld lbat a .....nstered
....
Robert McGee ofllclating. car driven by Lallie Frank, the fall d 1979. ·
Burial will be In Clester 18, PClll)ei'Oy, travelinc.lllllth
Parents are to provide ,a
Cemetery. Friends may caU
N A
red Ugbt "'&lt;'Ord of Immunization - 4
RJO GRANDE - A pro''The aim of the program is whirh will be supplied to him
at the Funeral HOllie aftewr ~ ~~~ib~! of a car I"IPT, 3PolloSabln, !measles
gram which will give full tui- to introdm·• students to the at the hiJ!h srhool and his
10 a.m. Thursday. ·
driven by Kenny Klaer, !Rubeola), I Rubella (Ger·
lion scholarships to students edurationai opportunities counselor will vrrtfy his
Racine, traveling eut on man measles) and a rel!ent
seeking a headstart on col- past high ~chooi "'\.ailable," rPsidenry and necessary
Eaat ~in .St.
TBbef skin test (within one year
lege was announced today.
Hayes said. "Seniors ran class rank. One~ this, iH•om·
'
Frank was cited to court on . ore ' entering, srh&lt;iol) are
Rio Grande College and · receive a headstart on a rol- plrted, the s.tudent .will
a cliafge of faDing to yield tbe · required for ·~~ion in the
Community College president lege degree and juniors will n&gt;reive an AdvMred Srholar
.rildJt of way.
fall;, and the childs birth cerPaul C. Hayes outlined the hopefully he sparked with Rd- rertificate whlrh he then br·
tificate.
reasons and criteria for the drd motivation which will ings to either of the summer
.(Continued rrom page I)
. All parents elljleCtlng to
program whirh will begin this rontinur thon1gh thei r ~&lt;Pnior ·registrations (June II or July
(Continued from page I )
period of time to prepare a
have children enrolled in the
summer.
, yrar and on into rollcge," he _ 16) for dasses that he wiRhes rmdodlan vorational' program, llt&gt;rnlre Hoffman, and extra response to the ch;lrges that
fall as kindergarten students
According to Hayes, any added .
· to attend.
printing for S&lt;"hOOis, llt&gt;rnlre. Hoffman; food service super- have been maclf'."
n.
or,as new enrollee students in
student from Gallia, Jackson,
·Students ran enroll for
'l'hP only rostto the otudent vi!Oill', Avire Railey.
·
Since there is some
· the first grade are urged to
Meigs and Vinton Counties courses in either or both of will he the S3 institutiooal fee
Otber rstra aulpmM!Io glvrn fill' lnn~rr periods hfoad question as to the legal sui·
register their children at the ·
who is presently a graduating Rio Grandr's two five-week per rredit hour and thP root of varsity foolben and bo)'J' athlrUr dlrrrlor, Charlrs CbaiM't'y, flriency of the charges and·
· appointed tlmea and places. ·:
high school senior or a stu- summer terms. ronrses his . books, supplies and, if thrrr years: lbndy Jfant, bend dlrrrtor, thrrr )'O'&amp;rs, and ht'ad petitions, which have been
Questions concerning lis :
dent who is presently in the whirh will be "vailable in- aplirable, lab fees.
boyt1' val'lllly haskf'thiD, Rllll r_.,aa, lhft.t. )'O'al'!l.
delivered, . the Roard of
registration may be directed ··
upper 50 percent of the rluded lntrodurtory college
For additinnallnformatioo,
Given twn'year contrtlcts as principals were John JJsle, Trumees lllis decided in all
to the principals' offices of
srhool'sjuniorclasscantake level Rn~lish, math , studentsshouideontartthelr John M()l'll and Rnbert Moms. Melvin Felta was given a ron- fairness to ask for a court
MASON -The Mason City the l'e5peclive schools:
introductory college classes rhrmistry, biology, history; guidance clf'partmrnt or call trart as head tl'llrht'r.
det,errnlnation. Accordingly IJbrary will be open Satur- . Middleport Elementary, .
at Rio Grande this summer and others. ·Only one credit Rio Grand~ Coll~e and romCI.ASSIFJm F:MPJ.OVF.D
an action .for a declaratory day frim 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Robert Morris, 992.,'!387;.
on a fun tuition srhol•rship.
·!Jour activity courses are •x- munity rollegr, 245-5:153, ext.
Non-teaming personnel given continuing contracts were Judgment was fled in the without · lights, heat or
Pomeroey . Elementary, :
rluded .
200.
HO!!er Holmal!, J.eland Parker, mechanics; T&gt;onna naniels, Common · Pleas · Court of telephone, according to Robert Moms, 992·2710;
nean S. Rrown , director of
Charlotte 11111ard, bus drtvrrs ; Sylvia Neerr, &lt;"OOk; 'Jarob Gallla County on Friday, Evelyn Proffitt, librarian.
Harrisonville Elementary,
Autltori:ed CATALOG
Mrs. Proffitt said, "So Greg McCall, 742-3000;
Holman, custodian: J.ynne rrow lpart titnP\,an'd romie Mar- April 13. This action simply
admissions
and
records
,
SQUADCAILED
SALES MERCHANT
noted the advantage of earn••
rum, S&lt;'!'l'rlaries.
asks the Cotirt to determine many ~ue$ bave come In
RuUand Elementary, Eric
in~ advanced credits . Rrown
The
"'I'd dIe Port
Two-year contracts went to Pam Ogdln, 1.ois Wyanl, bus ail legal Issues· surrounding for books and materials, Hart, 742-2686; .
·
sa id, "A student may apply Emergency Squad anawered
drtllet'll: Phylllsl"luu(an, t'OOk: Patricia MrCartv as.•lstant to · the legal sufficiency of the which are needed for school
Salem Center Elementary, ·
advanced rredits toward a two calls Tue!lday eveniilg.
assignments, workshopa, Melvin Felts, 742-3ll3.
thl' tl'l'!lsurer: Darla Hawley and Margaret Johns;.,, aides.
dorumerts involved.
·
Z3f E. Mala St.
degree at Rio Grndr or
At $:53 p.m. the llqlllld was
etc.,
that
we
are
doing
this
as
One-year
rontracts
went
to
Rlla
Mae
Southern,
rustodian,
Jf
the
court
deci~es
that
the
Pomer~O.
·
transfer them elsehwere."
called to Village Hall to treat
'
aod Rarhara Archer, secretary.
documents 81'!! legally suf- a public service."
'OWNI!DANDO RATEDBY
Represl&gt;ntatives of Rio Shirley Jcns who had been
·
She
noted
thai
i!
Is
hoped
· ·JaCk&amp; Judy Williams
board gave a ·ol1&lt;'-year leave of abBen&lt;'l' to Annette flcient to require a speelal
Gra~de will he visiting the bitten by a cat. ;4.1 8:23 p.m. KayThr
!he
library
can
be
opened
on
Firk
;hi~h
sr~ool
m'athern!otlcs
instructor.
.
meeting
to
consider
the
Open: Mon. lllru \'1~. ~5;
squad went to South Sixth
a
regular,
although
llmlted,
Thur. 9-U, Friday 9-5, Sat. arra schools to introdurr the . the
Profe!iidonal
meetings
approved,
John
Redovian
to
rolumcharges
made,
then
such
a
Ave., for Heather Wood woo
9-2.
program to area students and had reo!lved 1 _...,,_ ann
bus, YF.TP ('(lnferener; Jarltle Rrooks with two students to meeting will be called .prom- .basis. Until such notice is
~tWartHIIt
!!llidance ('(IUnselors.
...-.Ohio FFA ron vent ion; I .ynn J.ovdal to viRit ·a teaming ptly, and notice Issued to the posted, Individuals may
To. be ell~ible a student fracture in a fall. She was
or Yowr MOIItM Botlr
dl~abil!ty rlaiiS at Rradbury: Arthur. Arnold to the state FFA complete membership, 1)01 ,Jeave thelJ" books, rerord8 ·
needs to complete a fonn taken to Hoher Medical
metotinf( with thr.PP students and Retsy ·Horkv to a rlass In juat to the relative few who and magallnea at B and B
. Center.
Market and Shoppers Mart in
Athens.
·
·
have si~ed the petitioos.
7
Mason.
·
The board !!r&amp;nted one hom•·emOmics instr:uctor, oot of ' Eve)i,i• said Walker, "If
ACflONS FO.ED
four applyinf(, pennlssloo to attend an ln-ttervire session on the the Court should detennlne
In Meigs CGunty Common
handkapped .wilh high sehool principal James niehl to name that the charges and ·petitiona
Pleas Court Harry ' King,
.
. are legally insufficient, we
the.one to attend.
lAng bottom filed suit for
Rebeeea Dowler and Araka Grate were accepti'd as tuition will nonetheieas arrange a ·
MEETnuDAY
divorce againlt Carolyn Sue students and a letter was acknowledged giving the North &lt;'.en- meeting for a full dilcussion
A
special
meet1JW of the
King, same addresll.
tral AMorlation approval of Meij!ll · High School with no and airing of the views of Meigs REACT team to
Marrlagea dlsaolved wwe ylolationsfoundduringevaluatton.
. .
AJJ, Interested conawners dlsclilllhe hike bike will be
Carl Vin'cent Gheen, Sr., and
I .ejand Parker was employed as director of transportation· and members concer:ning the held ,at 7:30p.m. Friday at ,
Caro\Marie G'-'; Ricky J. for the remainclf'r of the current school.year and for the next future of thl'ir cooperative.
the !lelllor citizelll '*Iter in
Morris and Cindy Mae
school year with Robert Moore employed as a merhanidor . "Until such meeUJI!( is Pomeroy. All members are
Lawson Morris. Cindy~ thl'satnPperiodsoftime. .
·
··
called by'thl' Buckeye Board ID'ged Ill attend.
was
restored to her former
The board agreed, with permission from the State J')epart- of Trustees, J ·wish to stress
Our communily communications program
name of Cindy Mae LaWMn. · ment of Education, to advertise for six new srhoo'! buses wtth the faCt· Ula~ "'" meeting of
offers limely presentations pealing with difThe case of Jimmy Lambert Bpe('iflrations being discusSed.
,
April ~ C!'n only be conferent aspects of the energy situation . To
.and Annette K. Lambert was
It
af(reed
to
allow
fl
,200
granted
a
couple
of
years
a~o
to
be
strued
as an ·informal
schedule a program for your group, just ca ll
dismissed.
for
dugouts
at
the
high
srhool
tithletir
complex.
meeting
.'in
which members
spent
•
~-3788. Ali presentations are without
Mat~rlaht on identification of the handicapped were may air their views. No legal
charge.
MF.F.TS TONJCdiT
distnhutedforboardstudy.
action• can be taken at that
Meigs-GaiJia-Mason· I.ife
The
board
later
moved
Into
executive
session
to
discuss
meeting,"
OHIO POWER COMPANY
Underwriters Association progress made in negotiations with employes. Bnard members
will meet Wednraday, April attending were Pirree, president ; PoweU Virgil 'King Ml'!l.
18, at nOQn at the MPI!(s Im.
Sheets and T&gt;i'. Riggs along with adminiotn:tors, Supt.,n;,.lei-,
Goin.• and nan Morrts, director of rumeulum. Present also
AJJ,F:Y CLOSED
~~~~~~~~~
were Treasurer Jane WaJ!ner alld prlncipaht, Jolin Mora, RuUand VIUage Council
Robert Moms, Ertc Hart, James Diehl and head teacher has voted to close an alley
,Frits.
· between VIUage Hall and
Salem st. to provide parking ,
If here
spare for fire department and
emergency
squad
members
. '
Want
to
be
a aehool bus training course: They will be · andswertn~ calls for help.
NOW AVAIL.AIU FOR YQUR JOII
A spokelll'f\8n sald.attempts
driver? '
~
qualified to operate B' bus
to
secure a lot for such parkIf so, you'll want to in- with pupils on board.
Professional Engineering Semce-24-lndl DNrlllll&amp;
ing
had been futile. As a ,
vestigate a new bull driving Location of other classes
result, thl're was no parking
t'OW'8e whim will begin next will be detennined at the first
facility for those answering '
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the meeting.
calht.
·
Melga High School,
I
John Riebel, who heads the
VETERANS
MEMORIAL
bus driving training course,
:Admitted-Mary
Little,
reports the pi'O!(ram conslsta
Athens;
Donna
Haning,
of 12 hou!'ll of clasSroom work
Pomeroy; Mattie Warner,
and approximately eight
GU)'IVille;
Harold Jellers,
hou!'ll of on the bull driving in·
. Pomeroy; Grace Sopher, ,
struetlon.
Racine: Juanita Olapn!Jn,
Applicants must meet ·
·
·
'"Your. Chevy,_,.,...
· Cll!ton; Avla LaWIICIII,' Kerr.
.
,
I
medical standarda; 'submit to s' lat~d
Dl8cbarged-Robert ' .
local and. nati01181 criminal
~
992-2126
·
·. · Pomeroy
Chaney, Mlllard Swartz,
record rheck; 111bmlt to local
Open Evenings Til8:00 p.m.
•and national driver check and
The VIUage of Pomeroy Harry Shane, Teresa Hunt,
Myrta Schaefer, Raymond
he mommended by a school will hold
bU Ilea
.,-rintendent. All Meigs
a pu c . ring Justla, Dtlma Knapp . .
••,...
Thui-sday .concerning the UrC'.ounUans are eligible to app- ban Developl'lent Action
ly and should contact their Grant Program (UDAG ).
respective
district , Purpose is to · hear
superintendent for a recom- · suggestions from citizens 011
menda!ion.
.
· dewlopment of a proposal to
Upoo sueressful C&lt;lltlp!e- be bmltted to the Depart
Uon of the course, the tn,
su
•
dividual will have paBBed the . ment ol Housing and Urban
school bus driver's teat eon· · Develop1J~ent IHUD).
The propo~~~~l would co1181st
dueled by the Ohio. State of methods to combine
Highway Patrol; will receive ' prl"'te funds provided by,
.. - .
a certl!lcate of completion local enterpriRs and public
For Men
issued by the State Depart- ~ provided by tJ\e tmAG
men! of Rducauon: a 00'· program to help stbil)llate
A favorite 1. v -neck top and shorts. · !n
liflcate of completion I88Ued the local economy.
white with contrast trim . .Poly-cotton.
by the National HighWay
Whl.le tbe VIllage of
Traffic Saf\!IY Admlnistra- PGmeroy has been notified of
(4/12 PITCH)
Stop In the Ml!n's and Boys' Dept. on the
lion: and a pateh siplfying · its elil!lbility to complete,
1st floor- See our big selection ot shorts
successful competian of the ·
lis bj
·
pre4erviee !!&lt;'hool bi111 driver any JII'OIXIII8 au ect to ap"nd lhh1~ for men and boys. Buy wtwlt
DEL.IVIRID TO JOI SITf
r
proval by HUD prior to ac- .
you need !lOW and In y.our correct size LmRARY a.o&amp;JNG
tual funding.
1
'
styles
and colors you like.
'. The Middleport , Public .
The meeting wlU be held at
Ubrary will .be clolld from 7:30p.m. at City Hall, Coun,
''
noon '· Friday until 'noon · ril Cham~rs, E. 2nd street,
, Mmdlly. PalntiJII of the Pomt'l'oy.
lnteriot of the library wm 1~
For further information
underway Friday thereby ~••ntart the Pomeroy
making
the
cloalng MRyoi's ,.omce, City Hall •.

ELBERFELDs·.
·IN POMEROY

•

·(USPS 145-960)

.

at

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 4

'

.

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, APRIL 19, 1979

15 CENTS

-Man dies in. SR ··7 eras
~

·~

·'

One person waa killed and
another injured in an
accident this morning on SR
7, just·norll) of Cheshire.
Fatally . injured · was
Timothy W. . Petty, 24,
Falkville, Ala. Petty had
been living In Cheshire with a
relative.
Called to the srene at 2:47
a.m., .the GalUs County
Sheriff's·Department reporls
a south botmd four-wheel
drive vehicle operated by .

.

Petty went left of center and vehicle
R.
spilli~g · Coroner , Donald
traveled into the path of a approximately o~lf of a Warehime. The body was·
north bound semi tractor- load of rough cut lumber onto · removed froln the accident
trailer .driven by Dennis A. lhe Chevy Jllazer.
site by Miller's Home 'for
Beman, 18, Rio Grande.
,
··.
The tractor-trailer came io Funerals:
The semi ·.· repor\edly rest on its side 33 feet north of
Beman displayed visible
swerved to avoid collision. the Petty · vehicle durrip\flg signs of. injury and was
The vehicles struck head-on the remainder of the load transported by a relative to
at the center line of i.
onto the roadway. Ollicers Holzer Medical Center,
Officers report ·that tbe worked until 7:25 a .m. where he was treated for
.force of impact shoved the removing the wreckage from abrasions, and released .
four-wheel.' drive veh)cle 209 the highway.
The accident, Gallia
feet down the roadway. Tbe
Petty was pronounced dead . County's second of the year ,is
semi rolled over the Petty at the scene by Gallia County still under investigation.
Mr. Petty was'born Dee. 16,
1954, in Alabama, son of Mr.
F:•trnded Forrrast
and Mrs. William Prtty, who
Showers po~siblr. Satursurvive -and reside in Falkvlllr, Ala . ·
day and Sunday. · Fair
Monday. Highs In the lllw
He was a 1973 graduate of
70s Saturday, •oollng to
Falkville High School. A contrailer struck head-on on SR 7, just north of Chel!hire. The
11P._ATH VEHICI.F: - Timothy W. Petty, 24,
the uper 50s to low 68s Sun- ·"strurtion worker, he was em, LOS f'.NGELES (AP) - Corks popped and chainGallia
County Sheriff's Department reports that the force
Falksvtlle,
Ala.,
was
ktlied
this
morning
when
his
south
day and Monday. l.ows In
ployed by the Union R!Jiler·pagne Oowed as.)l!ichelle Triola Marvin celebrated the
of
impart
shoved the four-wheel drive vehicle 209 feet
bound
Chevy
Blazer
and
a
north
bound
semi
tractor
•
th~ low to mid 50s Saturmakers No. 1301 , New haven ,
.'$104,000 she ·won from l.ee Marvin, while the actor . .
down
the
roadway:
·
·
'
day, dropping to th~ upper
W. Va .
claimed he· won "on all counts" the suit his former
30s to low 40s by Monday.
Surviving besidPs hi ~
lover filed against him.
.
parents
are two brothers and
Miss Marvin and her lawyer, Marvin Mitchelson,
one
sistrr;
William W. Petty,
toasted at a party what they said was a tnwnph in her
Portland couple
Maryland ; Pete Petty,
suit to win $1.8 million, an estimated half share of MarAlabama , and Mrs: Mary
vin's earnings during the time she lived with the actor.
facing charges
Floyd; Rt. 1, rheshire, with
A beaming Miss Marvin arrived at the party with
l'late and Nancy Lawson, whom he was residing.
her poodle; a present from Marvin during the time they
Funeral arrangements will
Route I, Portland, were
lived together.
be conducted by Peck
arrested Tuesday. on
warrant filed by Cynthia Funeral Home at Hartselle,
Mills,
of the Meigs County Ala. ,
. · PORTS)I!OvTH, OhioiAP) -James Rei!, 23, of .
Jlr. Bernard F. Nirhm, half years in the U. S, Armed Services during World War JJ ships and Associate Director
Lora! arrangements are
· rhildren services, charging
West ZPorsmouth, was foun~ gul'ity by a Scioto County
ChainnHn
of the Meigs,
under
the
direction
or
contributing to the neglect of
primarily in the China - Rur- of the East Central Region,
Coirimon Pleas Court jury Wednesday of t~e. murders
Gallia
,
Mason
nistrirt of thr
Miller's
Home
for
Funerals.
their
four
mnor
children
,
ma
- Jndi a thea ter Ill Roy Seoul~ of America.
of two women last January.
·
·
1'ri,~tate C&lt;&gt;unril, Roy Srout"
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lawson
apopc:rations.
Mr . Wil son , an Hl'·
·. ·The panel of eight ' women and four men
of Amrrtra, a,nnounrrd todaJ
peared
in
Meigs
County
complished
speaker snd
Mr.
Wilson's
scoutin~
deliberated for six hours before finding Bell guilty of
lh~t Rrnest H. Wilson,
Juvenile
Court
Wednesday
career
inrludes
positions
of
advocate
for
longtime
two counts of aggravated murder in the d~aths of
National Field Rrprrsrnmorning
for
a
preliminary
scouting
in
America,
brings
a
Distrirt
Executi
ve
in
Deborah Coleman and Donna Kennard.
tatiw of the P.ast Centrul
hearing.
Wilmington,
Delaware,
vital
message
to
the
M-G-M
Judge .J . B. Marshall sen.tenced Rell to two conRegion , Roy Rrouts · of
Mrs. Lawson was released
l'lirector of Field Service and ' nistrict's adult scouters, the
secutive terms of life imprisonment.
Amrrira,
will hr guest
,
Wednesday
afternoon
after
J)rputy
&amp;-dut Exerutive of people who really make
M~anwhile; the trial! of David Gamble, 20, a second
speaker for thr Annual M-Gthe
Kansas
rity Area Council' S('(IUting a reality for the boys
posting
a
$1000
cash
bond,·
Meigs
County
Sheriff
man charged in the slayings, coqtinued in another
M Jlistrirt Recognition DinMr
,
Lawson
is
to
he
and
Greater
New York Coun- of our area.
~ourtroom.
released ow his own James J. Proffitt today ner. ninner is heing held at
riis.
Individuals who desire
.
reported the arrest of 2fo.year Kinfolk R.-taurant in pt ,
The two women were killed Jan. 24 in a mobile
More
recently
(1973-1976)
more
information regarding
recognizance pendin g a old Toney W.Manley· ·, PIPa simt at 7 p.m . Thursday,
home they shared. '
this
outstanding
community
custody hearing on the four
f
he
held
the
position
of
nirerminor children. It was setror Middleport,on 8 wai'rant 0 April 26.
event or wish to make a
tor
of
Protestant
Relations
.
May 2.
Indictment
charging
Mr. Wliso~. an outstanding
with the National Council of reservation, should contact'
Charges steam from the traHicking In drugs;
rarr•r srouler, rt•&lt;·eived hi~
Roy
Scouts of America. Mr. Dr. Bernard Niehm, 446.S520; '
· JACKSON, Miss. IAP) - Downstream r'esiden~
Manley was one of the education at West Chester
.
Wilson
's present position and ' P.arl Painter, 446-7522; )3il\
allegation that Mr. and Mrs. secret Indictments returned StAle rolle~r . WPst Chester,
looked,·f,or higher ground today as the rampaging Pearl ·
title
Is National Field Wise, 675-3652 or· J\m
Lawson
failed
to
provide
an
River, ln!IV.cd . relenlle~ly toward ,the Gulf of Meidco
adequate ~orne envlr.onment by~"" gr~ jury pertaining '?•· ~· srrve.d.threto and. one
Rrprrsfn\atlve
for Relollon- Gilmour, ~75-Z'/6) . ,
,.
after cau51ilg •i. ~teo half billion dollars darriage
and
basic
needs,
for
~tlmir
to' draa owe
'
'
·
to the state's capital city Md leving some 17,000 perManley was ~ed up' on
children. The four children the Pomeroy parking lot
sons homel;,..,
SQUAD RUNS
are now in the temporary Wedenesday and 1s being held
The Middleport
"We've stiiJ'got a serious situation here," Viva Polk,
custody of the Meigs County in the oounty jail pending Emergency Unit went to
a spokeswoman for the city of Jackson, said Wednes'
Welfare Department.
· arraignment before Conunon Pearl St. at 5:39 p.m .
day. "Our homes . and businesses are still flooded ,
Jnvestigating the case were Pleas Judge John c. Bacon. Wednesday lo.r Marion
we've got thousands still out of their·homes and we're
Cynthia
Mills and Mary Bir-'
In other activities the VanMeter, a medical patient,
having to conserve our drinking water and eledrirlty
By MARC CHARNEY
erodin,g the press' freedom to process of a reporter and all
chfield, of Children Services, department Investigated a who ·was taken to Holzer
because of damage to equipment."
Associated Press Writer
gather news.
and Gary Wolfe, Sheriff's ·Jn- one car accident on SR 7 Medical Center.
the subjective judgments he
Across
the
nation
- It.will be easier for public is forced .. . to make Is a
vestigator.
Wednesday evening.
The squad 'fi:BS called to the
·According to the sheriff's jail at 3:44a.m. Thursday lor Wednesday, editors, figures to file frlvoiowlibel George Orwellian Invasion of
report, Leora J. Hutchinson, Hubert Stewart, a prlso~r. · publisbers and broadcasters -suits and har11ss news the mind."
Jam(!l! Goodale, esecutlve
20, Rt . I, Rutland, was who was treated at the scene. . expreBBed fear that their organizations that criticize
freedom to investigate and them.
vice president of the New
traveling south on SR 7, on
criticize officials was erod,ed
- The "cbllllng effect" will York Times, said the ruling
Middleport Mayor Fred yards and lots and have the collected along the curb.
Masser Hill above Eastern
·
when
the
·
Supreme
Court
faD
heaviest on small news would "hamper lhe really big
Hoffman today announced accumulation of trash from
Ali trash must he put at thti High School, and lost control
allowed
public
figures
to
·
organizations
which lack the investigation
stories"
that cleanup week will be the winter hauled away free curb In front of the residence of her vehicle when tbe right
SQUAD.CALLED
Inquire
into
a
Journalist
's
resources
to
figh~
long Ubel because reporters would
held in thP community M,on- of charge by the village.
wheels
dropped
off
the
right
and the street department·
The Pomeroy Emergency "state of mind" during •libel · suits.
· know that if they got Involved
d~y, Aprlt. 23, through
Residents are also en- will pick it up free of charge edge of the pavement.· The
Squad
was
called
to
Nye
suits.
The
ultimate
loser
will
be
In libel suits, they "in effect,
vehicle
skidded
across
the
Friday, April27.
couraged to sweep the street on the following schPdule:
Ave., at 10:54 p.m. . Mucb of lhe reaction was the public, which could wind are going to have tO stand
road
Resiclf'nta are asked to use . and sidewalks ' in front of
and
went
off
011
the
Jell
Monday, April 23 - First
·wednesday for Donald . strongly stated -In phrases up le!IS well-Informed about naked In front of the courts
into a ditch.
this opportunity to clean their their homes and pile the litter Ward .
Deputies
are
also Coates and Blaine Casto woo such as ''Orwellian invasion controvel'lllill situations.
with respect to aU their
Tuesday, April24 - Second
lacerations
and of the mind," and ''incredibly,
John Finnegan, ex~utlve thought procesaes."
inv·estlgatlng the reported had
Ward .
editor of the St. Paul Pioneer
Erwin G. Krasnow, senior
theft of a lawn mower from contusions. They were taken thoughtless."
Wednesday , April 25 to
Veterans
Memorial
Many
predicted
a
"chiJling
Press-Dispatch in Minneao~, . vice president and gena:al
Malcom Guinther's residence
Third Ward.
Hospital "!here tlley were eHect" on reporters writing and chairman of the Freedom counsel for the Nation•!
JACKSON, Ohio (AP)
faced with a --Love ·can8i
Thursday, April 25 - Four· in SYfacuse sometlme early treated and released.
s t o r i es
I n v o I v I n g of Information Committee of Association pf Broadcasters,
Tueadar morning.
·The Ohio Environmental situation."
thWard.
eoqtroversial figures . A the
Associated
Preu said news organizations
Prote.ction Agency has
number
wondered
how
a
jury
Mtinaging
Editors,
said
"the would not be the only ones
refused to allow a Houston
could
make
any
intelligent
media
may
well
back
~way
affected. "Citizens speaking
Orm to develop a laJI(Ifi1l for
judgment about .what a from doing storlea on publlc out at public meeting milst
the dwnplng ol hazardous
· reporter or editor had been ligures where aU the facts are now weigh any increased risk
chemical wastes In Jackson
thinking whim a story . was not verifiable, and yet stories of suit and accompanying
County.
. .
The Eastern High School just returned from a tour peared.on the famed Fantasy' secured by the group . Pro- being prepared months or that should be publiahed in demands lhat they account
A comprehensive Select Ensemble will be under tbe direciton of Merlyn Fair Stage at Disney World
the public interest."
for their disagreements with
ceeds from Friday evening's years before.
geological study of the land featured a!Qng with ·the Rio Ross. The group has traveled yharly since 1975.
Many
also
said
they
felt:
Ralph OtweU, editor ol the public officials."
show, to include song and
lhowed it did not meet the !&gt;rande Chorale In the through Eastern United
The select group from dan&lt;-e, will go toward the ·-It Ia the latest In a string Clicago Sun-Tlmea, said that
"I expect some ,daY it will
minlmwn staDdarda required Eastern High School Variety Sillies and has made major Estern
been chosen to Georgia trip. Tickets will be of Supreme Court decisions "going Into the thought
(Continued on page 9)
by the agency, James Show to b.e staged at a p.m. appearance in West Virb1nia, representhasSoutheastern
Ohio $2 for adults and $1 for
McAvoy, director of the Ohio Friday In the school Kentucky Georgia and this coming fall at "Six Flags
students and will be available
EPA, said.
auditorium.
. Florida. The group has ap- Over Georgia". Matching at the door.
Area residents had oppoaed . The Rio Grnde Chorale has
spring outfits have been
the dwnp' site which wpuld
haye been developed by
Brownillll Ferris , Industries
for use by Ohio firms.
'fbe diaapproval applies
mly to lhe secure 1andfil1 the
CCIIllpally propOIIed a!lll doei
not include a deep weD llqulcl
wute ~I facility for
which the company has not
. yet llllmltt,ed an application.
McAvoy said the EP,l
requlrela minunwn of Zt eet
ol undllturbed clay under any
Bite u:cavatlon and the· clay
silt at the proposed site
' ranaed from zero to ~ feet .
wilh an average of 15 to :II
feet.
~said because there Is· an
· estenslve · layer of sand
llllderneath the· ,clay, tbe
· cllance for runoff and tJJe ,
potential contamlntition of
ground water and spring-fed
aurface streams would be '
estremely high at the
Jacbon lite.
CHORUS OFFICERS - The Grande Chorl'le from Rio Grande Community College will
McAvoy
n'oted
that ,
be
the
featured guests at the Rastern High School Variety Show Friday, April 20. The four
.conaiderable waste Is
girls, Eastern Chon&lt;s offirel'l', I to .r, Cindy Pitzer, treasurer; Kay Balderson, secretary;
'rndlac:ed In Oblo and proper. ·
EASTERN ENSEMBLE - Pictured In their new sprln~
Susan Hannwn , prel!ident, and Karen Probert, vice-president, have been preparing the day
ciiiP"M) .uea muat be found
Riffle,
Judy
Mora,
AIIISha
Risseil,
Karen
·Probert
and
Brenda
outfits
are
members·
of
the
Eastern
High
Sehnol
Sei&lt;'Ct
Enlong activities for the choral while at Eastern. Sorile of the highlights will be a one-hour
but add~, "We will do
Cindy Piller; bock row, I to r, Teresa Reed, RryC&lt;' Ruckley,
semble
which
wtU
appear.
in
the
Flastern
Variety
Show
Friday
workshop with the combined groups, ~n afternoon assembly for the student body and an.
~ poulble to a118111'e
.Jim
Rauman,
Rocky·
Pitzer,
&amp;-ott
Dlllon
;
Jel'f
Smith,
Rnger
night.
The
group
Include!,'
I
tor,
Susan
.Hannum,
Kay
B~lder­
hour segment for the evening variety show. Tickets may be purchased for the variety show
that oat · children and
J;li~&lt;.•rll , Tom Seyor, t!)rt R~th T•~ford , ·
'
s.
o
n,
Donna
.Jacks,
AngeJ
Qla~e
.
•
Reth
Rlebel,
.
Oonn'~r
Persons,
•!-the
""''\(Adult tickets are $2.00 and the student!frice Is $1:00.
\t.
·~·
cretFidldreil wW never be

Nationwise. ___,

Maroins' happy with decision

Bell found gUilty WednesclJJy

MGM District Boy ·s couts
recognition fete April 26

a

Man charged
in dmg case

RB$ide,nts seek higher groun

Editors, puhlisiiers.·and
broadcasters express fear

Middleport clean-up week set

Pennission is refused ·

Eastern variety show Friday

,

�•
h'The Daily SentiQ~I. Midtllt•ncJrt-Pomrroy, 0 ., Thur'!f&lt;~y, Apr. 1 ~.1!179

2- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pom•rnv. 0 ., Thutsd• Y, Apr. 19, 1!179

roo..y~ ·
· ··
·· Sports World
·

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and ·
Robert Walters

Vouching for education
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (i~EA) ·In California, the birthplace of
so many social and political trends, a new popular
initiative . is -geslatin&amp;; which could develop Into the
.; PropoSition 13 of the 1980 elections.
· ·
The Issue this time Is not taxes but education, a subject
which is becoming a sore point fo• growing nwnbers of
,. families not just in California but all over the nation. ,
Sponsors of the initiative, which Is still in the drafting
,•
stage, are seeking to put on the ballot a new and
sophisticated version of an old idea - a school voucher
r system.
Under such a plan, which amounts to a GJ Bill for
elementary and secondary education, paren~ would be
given a voucher by the state which they could then use to
" purchase'' an education for their cbUdren at the school of

I'

,.'

.

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff •
'

~-~-~\~\.

.

•

The l.ranian perspective
By Don Graff

There's nothing like a sense of history for putting a
their choice - public, private.or religious.
contemporary situation Into proper perspective.
Although the voucher cQncept is simple enough, the
We have one Ahmad Salainatlan to tfumk for a l'e!'l'nt
mechanics. of such a system are quite complell:. No school
reminder of this relationablp between experiences of put
district in the country has ever actually tried such a
present, Salamatian, deputy foreign llllnlster in Iran's
".I'm with the Tanzanian. army as they march through Uganda ... Just a and
system, althOugh there have been several abortive
revolutionary government, peevishly reprimanded foreign
attempts.
·
.,
. moment, they've fo.~nd something hiding in the brush."
press attention to the ongoing ad hoc trials and executions
The prime movers behind the California initiative drive
of Iranians tainted by association with the former Imperial
are John Coons and Stephen Sugarman, two law professor's ,
reoime, observing:
.
the
nMore than 100,000 people were e~&lt;ecuted during
at the University of California at Berkeley and co-authors
French Revolution without any trial, while those executed
of a 1978 bouk entitled "Education by Choice: The Case for
Family Control."
Unlike some earlier proponents of the voucher .c oncept,
'_t'
Good point, and' if anything, h~ has understated hla case.
Coons and SUgannan are by no means associated with
Those were only lite French VICtiiDS. If the casualties of the
right-wing political philosophy. Indeed, 011e critic of their .· ZANESVILLE, Ohio (AP)
Muskingwn CoWlty Common tbe Zanesville Campus of
"Because of fragmentation wars Initiated throughout, Europe by the French Revolu- .
plan calls them ''limousine liberals."
_To outsiders, voters in this
Pleas
Court.
,
Ohio
University,
contends,
...
some areas of town have lion should be included, tbe body count w~d be many
Their baste argument is that parents can and should be
Colleen Woods, a · staff "The Zanesville controversy seemingly been ove&lt;looked times greater. No wars- yet - havlng.arl.len from the
trusted with the primary control of their children's central Ohio city may seem
associate with the Ohio does have implications for when such amepities as lranl,n upheaval, in comparison it is almost trivial.
education, and that they should be given the wherewithal fickle about government.
Still one need not be a defender of the shah or an
· 0 hio.'• schools, streets, cultural and apoi"fiist
necessary to choose the type of school their youngsters
Within four months they MwlicipaI League says she other mW!icipanties In
for the functionaries of his regime now being
attend.
abolished their city . charter · doesn't think the Zanesville
In
a recent analysis, Dr. recreational facilities were called to account for their authoritarian el&lt;cesses to be
Coons, in a recent telepbo~ interview, noted that form of govenunent and then dispute wiU impact on oilier Jordan suggested that tbe involved, Dr. Lyn~ood concerned about the faablon rn which juatice Ia being
California over the past few years has experienced a reinstated it.
charter
Wlderlying issue in ZIJ!esville Montell, · director
for served In the new Iran.
A court chaUenge of the
sizeable exodus from the public schools to private and
govermnents.''Charters
are
was
citizen
alienatitln
a
Intercultural
and
folklore
It is understandable that vigilantism should exert a
parochial schools- a trend which Is evident in other states second election by anti- very specialized affecting · problem other cities with studies at Western Kentucky strong
appeal in a society seeking redress for Wro!lgs, put
~~ '
" This is an ominous development,'' he said. "It means charter forces has put the only one particular city. AD similar governments ·should University, who conducted a or present, commiUed against It by forces. beyond the
study of Zanesville, said. "In reacl1 of popular law. There are, however, both moral and
the rich are fleeing, leaving behind those who cannot issue in limbo uniU after an are structured differently," watch out for.
•
"The city's charter,". 'a government such . as politically practical objections to Indulgence in what Ia
alford to opt out of the public schools."
April 25 lieariQg before she ·s aid_,
...entially revenge rather than Justice. Punishment meted
With a voucher plan. low and middle-income families Guernsey Comly Common . BUt Dr. James Jordon, a Jordan
ex pIa In e d , Zanesville, it is easy to out in rij!hteoua zeal can exceed tbe crime. The tndlvidual
would have the same opportunity as the wealthy to choose Pleas Judge John Shepard · political ~lence profeasor at "apparently did not provide unintentionally
deny strung up aU too frequently may be the wrong one. And
a private school instead of a public one, although private who will be . sitting in
an
effective
mechanism
for
adequate
representation
to even if not, he may have been tn many of his compatriots
schools particlpating in the system would have to meet
political leadership."
all parts of the city."
leSs a culprit than a leader or relative- and becomes a
certain strict conditions.
Many cities amend their
According to 8 ,member of martyr to be avenged.
·
Among these, 4j;oons said, would be an open admissions
Vengeance exacted In blood tends In nourish a new
· ch rte but Chilli the
policy - no child could be turned away, and if applicants
City a rs
co
council, who asked not to be generation of avengers. In their zeal to purge the
exceed ... d the slots available, the school would have to
·is the only other city in Ohio identified, there· are people corruption of the past, the lranlap komitehs may be
conduct a tottery to fill its enrollment quota.
·
to abolish one, according to
"angry" · over different preparing the way for a new roilitd of vigilantism should
The California Teachers Association, an affiliate of the
the niWlicpalleague.
·issues. One group was lhe revolutionary pendulwn swing back tbe other way powerful National Education Association, Is ada,n'umtly
Ry ClfF.T CURRIF.R
One rnmmnn mea•ure of ci't!About 64tb.4 percenulattiof Ohio's unhappy about the city's wiBth thketmstheelvFes as hthRe obj ectatl ofUvnednegretheanceclr
. c"~•tan
' · ces
opposed to the Coons.Sugarman proposal and Is gearing up
thr moorl ci in•titutional
es w1 a pop
on over handling of a federal
ac o
rene evo1u on.
-·to fight the initiative drive that will get under way this
APRuslnessWrlt.r
.
h
5000ha e hartersf-atotal
' that may not have been the moat apprOpriate historic
summer.
•=.w
YORK !AP)- Ask a mnnev manap.rr• I• t •
'
v c
~
winterl'zatl'on- program,
tif
te
I
'
'"'
·
of 233 Cominlssio
example to have chosen to jua y con mporary ran s
"We consider it a very · serious threat, even though stO&lt;'kbroker
these days why J""rrentp.e of tlll'ir as..ts they of I50out
·
ns another with the way· an experience. For aU its acknowledged excesses, the French
nothing's moving yet.'' said OTA e~ecuUve secretary he or she Is bullish on the arc• ~r•ping in "ra•h" in
Reynoldsburg . and intersection was being upheaval was a constructive event with f~r-reachlng and
Ralph Flynn. ''All the ingredients are there for real market outlook, and rhances whirh in till' jargon nf thr Falrfieldarewritingcharters widened,
lasting impact.
1
trouble. Attitudes are so volatile right now tbat every
are
you
wiil
gel
something
hu•ine••
refrrs
not
to
nlrkels,
to
be
considered
by
the
Mayor
Walter
Frueh
said,
It was only superficially a political revolution and tbe
alle.n ated group In t!&gt;e state might latch onto Ibis thl"!!-"
about
"institutional
rash
rliine•
anrl
quart•rs
stored
in
voters.
.
''In
a
community
tbe
size
of
fact
that it er.u pted in France did not make it uniquely
••coons is convinced the publlc schools system 11 a
a vmllt •nmrwherr, hut to
"Charters allow flexibility Zanesville, aU it takes Ia a French. Tothecontrary,itwasfundamentallyaresha~.&gt;ing
failure, and he wants to destroy it to •save' lt," said Flynn. reserves" for an answer.
&lt;hnrt-term monrv. -market 'for people to" establi!h their parklng lic"~t to get some of . of aU of civilized society. It Willi instinctively oppooed by
" I'm disturbed about the schools too, but there's a baby In
The institutions in question
f
f
nt
..,
the old regimes and struck Instinctively sympathetic
that bathwater."
are the nation's pension se&lt;'llritl..s sur·h as 'l'rea•ury own onn
governme as thepeopleadamantenOIIP to chords among the populations of many countries.
There are a ·number of arguments that can be raised funds, bank trust depart· hill&lt;.
tbey see best fits their take a stand."
The French Revolution was the seminal. event of the
against any voucher system, including cost and the m!'llts, Insurance companies,
'l'rarlitionall)•,
the
in•lituneeds,"
said
Ms.
Woods.
Duane
Oyster,
chairman
of
.
n:&gt;odem
world, sweeping away a no longer relevant peat to
constitutionality of any scheme that results·, however
mutual
funds
anrl
other
suoh
linn&lt;
llav•
,11srrl
tl"'sell)on•y·
In
'
1912,
the
Ohio
Cone&lt;!rne&lt;lCitlzens
for
Better
open
the
way for a socially and poUilcaUy· lnnovaUve
indirectly, in public subsidies for parochial scbouts.
Terror, Napoted
f the
But given the climate of the times, and the widespread plares where large pools of marli~i'serurities •&lt;' a sort of Constitution Willi aiilended to Goverament or· Zanesv1·ue · future. ·Jts ldeala survived the murderoua
rarkin~ place for money, include, Article II, known as (called Concerned CitizeDB to
Ieooic imperialism andh repea
Idresurgencea o
dissatisfaction with the public school system as it now money tend to collet"!.
whrr• it ran e•rn interr;1 'homerule,' which allowed Abolish the City Charter
reactionary past to r"" ape the wor .
operates, the Coons-Sugarman Initiative seema virtually
,.,
Ohl0 unl lpaUtl to ha
They " still doing so, providing the dynamlca for the ,
In l't'ctnt years, New York
certain tn tum into a fiercely debated political Issue In the StOC'k F.xohan~eli~ures show whil~ they .rledrl• wl1t&gt;n and
m c
es
ve before tbe election) said,- established societies of the democratic worlcj and the
months ahead. And once again, California may be a that institutions have ..... . where to inv•st it ' for the local
government . "1be people of Zanesville
motivation for later-developing societies tbat would join
. bellwether for the nation.
rounlerl for mrire than half lonvrr l•rm':
ZanesvUie established .Its have become dlss~tisfied
th~: world.
tfw. total dollar value of
In tlieory. the more rn•h charter in 1917.
.becauseofthelnsensltivltyof
They have been"a factor in the Iranian revolution, an
stooh bnu~ht and sold on thr. they h.av. in r..rrvr al any
B u t · c om m u n i t Y the city manager f&lt;rm of amalgam of many interests united by opposition to the
R' ll d
l'ivrn·.limr, the ~rratrr the dissatisfaction in the city of government."
authoritarianism of tbe shah. But not the dominant factor.
'RI! oar · f t"-·
~tenlla
.. ·I futnJ'I'· demand for about . 3~,000
residents
In Novemba•., tbe city . They are not the ideals of the forces ti\Bt have become ·
1
era use o •.-1r vrry s .r, ,...
ha bee
wtng
~·
dominant now that that revolution has achieved the initial
and herausr nf lr~al con- -storks.' And rl~ht now thl\•e. apparent1Y s
n gro
. charter was abolished by a
goal of deposing the shah.
. .
strainl• rrquirinj! th•m to he re""rv"" arr very larj!e.
The charter provides for a 3,7tla-3,138 vote. rn·February,
These" forces seek not to sweep away tbe put 'but In
"pnodrnt," ml\•l institutions
Thu• thr Value Llnr lnv•.t· cUy manager to 'be hired by it was relristated by a
return tn it. The Ayatollah Khomelni's komitehswooild not
llp!'rate under a different set . mPI!t . Survey, the ronntry's · City COWICil members who slimmer margin and lower
open tbe way to a new freedom but resurrect an older
authoritarianism.
. ,
of rlrcumstanoes than those la~~·•t inv"'tment advisory are elected at..Jaige in a voter turnout - 2,577-2,370.
that (ypically confront the in· servire, ar!(UPS, "Thp rc&gt;m• ;citywide, non-partisan
.Jn the second election, the
So much for perspective.
dividual investor of modest hiqlilion of lh• widely a!!reerl- election. The mayor is pro-charter group spent
La.-vref1Ce E.Lilimb, M.D.
11 ~ rhrapne"" of storks, selected from council by $5,452
campaigning
mPans . .4•
===--==-----,-;:--:::-~-----.....;,"~~Rut H·i• ronsid~rl'&lt;la ~nod . '""~rd with thr enormous fellow members. Critics say compared to about $600 for
i.ilea. for. ariy follower of the c·ltsh ro••rv•• known to he ·the manager is not as the antl-cllarter group which
.: :
:;:• •.• :, stnrklitArkettn keep an eye awaitln~ the 'ri~ht moment' responsive to the commlilllty had tried to stoP the voting
you
.
can
bend
your
. kp.~$: &lt;)" these.'ell'!'hanl• rl the in- to lll'~in to retum to the as a 1118yor elected by the through the courts and spent
Modifit&gt;rllt&gt;g lift's
pull,l~g your feet baCk· liP , . vPstmenl-junJ!l,e, if only to .h.!' •qultl•• market, puts people would be.
·
moretban$3,5001nlegallees.
toward your buttocks ·again · '.t.Ondin~ "m a safe plare prr&lt;&lt;uro on ihe holders of
Oyster blamed the low
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read
and re~~t the exercise.
•hould thrv start a stamj)\'lle,. ra.s~ reserves -not to miss the
turnout
aQd election •.results
your colwnil about using leg
In thiS manner, you have
·
. ·
·boat;"
'·
•
·
·
on
reluctance
by voters to
llfjs tq develop a trim belly your belly mll$cles tightened
Merrill
l
.ynrh,
Pl•rr
e,
Fen,
vote
.
a
second
time on the
and fight the pot belly. r have to help protect the back musn•r 1&amp; ~mith analy&lt;ts noted
Goxey's Army (Itl94) was same Issue. "The people back trouble of a sort so can cle and you don't produce·
. that ·mutuaJ... funds had I~J hJstory . ret;&gt;eatlng itself. would come up and say 'we
AMERICUS,GA. (AP) - Billy Carter is headed for another
you send me a simplified ver- jerky leverage against back
. JIPr&lt;Vnt of their assets in rash · ~~~·e~~~;k ;,;~xeXD';!'~~,t.~ voted once, why vote again',''
bar this weekend , but when he bellys up this time it'll be for a
sion of leg lifts'
muscles that niay not .he able .
as nf'Febnoary. That stood as Coxey.
said Oyster.
Coke, according to his doctor.
-DEAR READER - I am to take it.
!he
Jar~e.t
p!'rrenta~e
sinre
"And
every
ooe
tbat
was
Olherw
say
tbe
anti-charter
Dr. Paul Broun Jr. said Wednesday the president's llrother
Twelve defendants were
sending you The Health Letother readers who want
· a t~.5 ,..
~rrent
fi~11re
in that
In dlstresa, and every one group did not ,..~~•~n hard
is
allowed t!l spend weekends away from the hospital where he
.
"as
in
debt,
and
every
_,.,.....,
ter nwnber J-7, Girth Con- this issue on methods to coo- fined . and ei~ht others
September
1!174,
JUFI
before
one
that
was
discontented,
in
Fell:uary
because
they
Is
being treated for alcoholism.
·
forfeited
bonds
in
Meigs
trol: Avoiding The Big .Mid· trol the size of your abdomen
the end of a &lt;ever. bear , gathered themselves unto w~ expecting the court to
"When I called him late last week, l)e sounded in real good
die, because you asked for. it. can send 50 cents with along, County C'.oun Monday.
blm; and he became a cap- tule against having the
spirits," said Broun. "He indicated he is not going back to
Fined by Judge Charles market.
However, I want all of my stamped,
self-addressed
"Furth•r buyinl( interest lain over them .. , " - I Sam. election.
,
drinking when he gets out of the hospital.
readers to know that if they envelope for it. Send your re- Knight -were Wilbur L. Sims, rou Id romP f ror:n uR"
·~- n~ t 1on
' '.s , 22:2
•
"He said we'd go to a country bar and gallivant, but I could
have back problems, they quest to me In care of this Pom~roy, $150 snd costs, pension fund&lt;. whirh have · ...
.
drink
beer ... he'd stick to Coke."
three
days
Cllnfinement,
should riot do leg Uft exer- newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
heen
~cumulating
new
money
f
suspended
30
days,
license
cises or exercises that In- Radio City Station, New
' HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -Sen. l .owell Welcker wants the
driving ·, while intoxicated, at a[na billlon' annua_l,rate," .
volve working the back until York, m' 10019.
the brokerage firm saJd.
Supreme
Court to decide If his foreign birth disquailfles him
five
days
ccinftnement,
costs
they have talked to their docDF.AR DR. I.AMB -Would
"Tri 1978 the.e funds plarerl
.
.
from running for president.
.
tor about it. Leg Ufts, par- you please mention in your only, no operators license, $50 only 9 perc•nt of their nrw
'
The
Connecticut
Republican
told
a
state
Capitol
news
con' ticularly, can cause an ex- column what can be done for and costs, fleeing and eluding money into. equities vs. 20
ference Wednesday he hopes for an early court test and a
an officer: Dana H. Ralley,
cessive load on the muscles in' pyorrhea'
JIPFrPnt to 50 perrent in rP.
Supreme
COurt ruling on the question. He was born In Paris,
$55.50,
overload;
Albany,
the back and may aggravate
DF.AR READER - Pyor·
relit yeal'!l, fur:ther rl'&lt;lnrbi~
although
his
parents were American citizens.
Adams,
Reedsville,
Clifford
back problems.
rhea Is a lay tenn for infec·
till' portion of their as....ts In ,
There has never been a test Of the exact meaning of the conFor those of you who are tion around the roots of the Jarlde 1.. King, Pomeroy and stork&lt; to 52 perrent from teh
stitutional provialon banning foreign-born presidents .
permitted to do such exer- . teeth, usually associated with F.velyn Maynard,' Racine, $15 1!172 hi!!h of 73 ]ll'l'!'t'nl."
Weicker said he hoped hia status as a presidential contender
cises, a simple way to do leg little pockets of lnflam· and costs each, speed;
would !!0011 be chaUenged, either by tl)e Federal Elections
lifts and not strain the back is matory material and build up Thomas R. Burnside,
Commission or the secretary of the state in one of the stales
Pomeroy, oo two counts of ll·
'·
to avoid that excess· leverage of calculus,
where
he plans a primarf. He said he wants the Wile cleared ·
legal
deer,
$25tland
~on
that occurs from lilting the
You will need to see a denup once and for all
·
~ THF. OA ll .V SF.N'J'JNF.I,
heels straight up off the floor tist and have your teeth each count; F~rl Kauff, Jr.,
11!SPRI41-1111
with the legs straight.
Cleaned. If you h!lve little I .on'gllottorn, $2511 and costs,
NEW YORK lAP) -If Sen. Edward Kennedy, 0-Msss.,
The way you do this Is pockets where the gingiva Illegal deer; Ronald .
·
runs
-lor prolsident In 19M,ne may not·have iUs wife, Joan, by
simply Ue di!Wl) on the bed or I gwn) Is separated fr&lt;J~Y~ the Haggy, ' Rt. 4, Poinetoy,
his
side.
But Mrs. Kennedy, an admitted alcohOlic, says she ·
A,
Noldn,
Jr.,
'David
on the floor on your back with tooth, these pockets may
doesn't
think
their separation will end in divorce.
GaiUpolls,
and
John
K.
Gill,
·
your knees up and bent. Tills . neM to be removed.
-In
the
May
lasue
of the Ladles' Home Journal, Mra. Kennedy
Patriot,
$175
and
costs
each
,
means the bottoms of your
There are many causes for
describes her Ufe since she ~ drinking. A, BMion apartfeet will be flat on the floor. pyorrhea but one cause for overload; Bernard J..
ment is home now, and college classes and sessions with an
ow keeping the knees bent, bone loss, which leads to Canithers, Belville, $10 and
Alcoholics Anonymous group are part of her new lifeStyle. The
. you can lin the ·reet off the developing such pockets, is costs, failure to dlaplay
senator,
she says, visits once or twice a month .
·
license
plates;
Jerry
Matso,
Roor and bring your knees up osteoporosis or FJfl ening of
.
Mrs.
Kennedy
says
she
Ia
"working
on
J,llyself...And
unUI I
Rt.
1,
Rutland
,
$25
and
costs,
against your abdomen. Tl1en the bone. The first sign often
to
yield.
·
do
that
I
cannot
begin
to
talk
about
marriage
or
. no
failure
straighten · your legs out, Is bone loss around the teeth.
marriage ... Al the end of a couple years, I can· make up my
Forfelllng bonds were
keeping your feet off the A !actor in causing this Is a
mind about things, from a poeitlon of strength, and of being,
Roor.
calcium deficient diet. Dogs · Deanna Dowler, Athens,
well,verywell."
·
•
As you do this maneuver, have been put on calclwn Tony R. Landis, Sugar Creek,
Kenneth
Barntoart,
Bremen,
be ·sure and voluntarily deficient diets and bone loss
tighten your abdominal aroWld the teeth has follow- Paul McMurray, Columbus,
muscles liB much as you can, ed, re~ulting in pyorrhea , So Paul. M. Witkosky, Relpte
particularly those in the be sure you get a quart ~f and J)jane K. F.IUott, Albany,
$35.50 each, speeding: Robert
lower abdominal area. Hold milk a day,
.
these muscles as tight as you
J.arge d011es !500 mg a day) Rup!', Rutland, $.15:50, lt'ft of
r.an while you let your heels of vitamin C may help. If rt'nter; John R. Rumgamer,
l'Ome back to the floor while you're a ~moker, stop . New Havt'll , $260.50, no
oeprators llrt'nse.
your knees are straight. Then rl~~rettes 11rely. •
.
1'

·
l
d·
Zanesvi le isnute continu.es:

:::.~~~.!~~rseofthelranlanrevolutiontotalfewerthaniOO

Business mirror

°

set(

HEALTH

•

Co

..,

unty coui1

8erry s w0·rId

oi

,t

Eastern now 4-0 after easy wins
Ry r.rt'Jl Rai1t·y
twn Wl'rt' Clllt. R. Wilial rot R
Thr F.~~l('rn F.aj!IP~ rHisc'&lt;l ~iPJ!lt• ;mel t•amP hor'nf' on fl
fh&lt;'ir ret"ord to 4-ll with two ll"n Srwnrer rlonhlr. Miller
win!' so far lhiR wN•k.
lic•d il in lhrir half of the lnJ&lt;~•! niJ(ht at Miller, the ninl! wht•;, Slmmnn!'i stn~JM
F.a)!lrs trimml'&lt;l thP F'all'ons ami •rampererl home on a ll.
· Il-l aftrr hlastinJ! hn•t Han- lhi•Pns double .
nan '!'rare Tuesday night, 2.'1F:astrm J!Oi all till' n1n.• it
10.
nrrdt'Cl hy platinJ! four in-the
Milkr ntrthit F.ast~rn 14.!1, top of the sc•ronrl .
hut fine F.al(le defense kept
With two outs. Johnnie
Miller runner&lt; off the basr Bc•avrr walked and Gary
!"'lh.•. 'l'hreP SUci-essful piPk- Ciri~gs singled. Catcher
offs ' and a double play Brian Bissell th•n boomed a
nullified five F'alron nmnrrs.
double to"""" hnth nonner&lt;.
Rusty Wigal ~ot tht•)Vin as Jrff Ciot'hel ·walked ·a nd an .
he went the distanc•r to fan
.'rror on a R. Wll(al fly h!lll
nne anrl 'walk two. 'l'oth tool&lt; allowed th•• nrxt two nonner&lt;
the lm;.•, fanning thf• and to srore.
alkin~ five .
Ri.sellll'd thr F.astern hit·
F.a.trrn drew first bloorl · ling with a rlnuhle and single '
with a run int he first after whilr Gri'J' Wival ~,qf'!cM

twu ~inj.!lrs . ~rw nl'r r hmt hi!-:

Prrot'!'. fwt' walk!'~ ;1nct a
!-Z:u•rifi f•r '''t' rf• I"HntlwiPhPcl in
n·ith sinJ,!)P~ hy ~J'('tH't.'r , .f(•ff
Kim('!' , Rt•avrr und Ris!-it&gt;ll to
J.!iVf' F.a~trrn thl' Jr~rt for
good .
Paul Shaffrr ~avr up &lt;rv•nhit• and thrc~· walks in !hilt
••cond frum e. Rusty Wi~al
gut two ~lnJ!It&gt;~ in that inning
and Rpenrrr and Kimcs rach
hurl a double. Ri.sell. f:OPix•l
Hnrt_r.rigg~ hart H.~ing)(• t&gt;lH'h
in that innin!(.
Rut th• Wilrlcal• wrl't' not
down unci out. Thc•y tallied
nnC'f' in thtt sPrond inninf!,
fnur 1imt&gt;~ in thP third, oncr
in the fourth and four more ·
times n the fifth , 8nd lll'fnre

flnl!hlr, ~net C10f'twl. R. Wi,•nl,

Mc,rk Nortnn Hnd .r.nvv.~o~

F.;-~J..! IP run~

in tht• ~ixlh

R. Wigal and Risse II
'!'nth Hnd Sturgill
F:aslem tltll OIJ 4- 2.1 'll l
RT
014 140 0- 10 ll ~
~pt•nr•r lwpl, r.. Wigal 151
and Ri!;.qpll .
Shaeffer rJp l, Waffe 14 l
and Rray .

r~nd

fnur in Uw Rl'Vrnth wrappt•O
th&lt;' 1•idory up.
Bi.'&lt;l'li harl a fonta., tic
ni~•ht ;-~~ thr pl;-~h• CIS ht• W\•nt
fiv(' (nr ~ix with two s in ~ I Ps
nnc1 two (ionhlr~ flnrl Ct hnnw

KimP~ wets al.so fi vt• for f-lix
with thrN• .sint.rles Ctn&lt;t. two ·
WE'VE LOWERED
douhlrs whill' R. Wig:ll had
t hrrt' •Ingle" and a triple.
.
cost oF
Cioehel and SpenN.•r earb
.CARPET CLEANING
hild three hits while Norton
ol!ld WigCt] had two sa ft&gt;liP.s. '
.l. Rray hHrl two hnmr ru n.s n
a )fl ~'iflJ! C'(IIJSP .
P.w&gt;IPrn &lt;'ntPrtains North
0Allia toniJ!ht in a
rtouhlrhearler.
'I:~~~=~::~CLEANING
AT NIW
J.inf'.srore.s:
F.a•t&lt;•rn
140 101 l--11 9 I
Miller
100 1100 0- 1 14 2

LOWER
RATE'S

Maerker two~hits Marauders
a

uder ga lS

• 3• J

Pro I
!Standings 1

u.s:

Do-it-youtulf
and get profen lonal
resulrs

Wln,

.-----------,.

ease, Kam.
WMPO

'

-~~AR SUPPLY 00.·

'

949-2~~5 .'

SATURDAYS
· 9 til Noon

Redn..o ·

--=-

-

IRY OUR

Tuesday, May 1

Winnipeg at Quebec, B
p.m .; lf necessary .
Thursday, May 3

1978 MERCURY
ZEPHYR 'll
6 cylinder, white with

red pin stripe and red
lnl. a-c, power steering .

•4895
MERCURY
COMET
6. cylinder eng., auto.,
PS, a-c. 4 door sedan.

STATION WAGON
~-

cylinder, aulo. tran.
smlssion, local owner.

1975 FORD

PfUSTANGJl
Excellent cor for the
y.oung driver In th'
family.

'2695

IEEnE

SPIRIT

Excellent mechanical
cond. 53,000 miles.

. SOO MILES
4 cylinder, 4 · speed
trans.

'4295

FORD

1978 FORD

MAVERICK

PINTO

4 door sedan new llres.
auto., a-c , PS

Redesigned fuel tank.
Safety design.

·•3995

'1,ocJoDII Discount On All
New JEEP RENIEG~DES
See Doug Loa.., Jim Welker, Tt"'Y Homlllnn or Pete,
Som«vllle

Pill

KEfUUCKY
FRI_ED CHICKEN

.$4,400. '

CRCM'S

FAMILY RESTAURANJ
992-5432
· Pomero .o.

FOlDS

COME IN NOW DURJNGOUROPE.N HOUSE.
FORD PINTO PONY.
NEW DESIGN POR '71 .

Thll vetf'l Pinto Pony 11 new up front,
new In bacll lnd new lnakM. filMy

~~~c~~~;3334*
and
·baQdtng matafleJt
FORDMU~G.ANEWBREEDPOR'7t.

Aerodyl\lmic etyllno and gre11 choi ce ol modelt make the '79 Muatarig
oneollhe moate•cltlriQ Mu111ng• ever. (Wh1te SICtiWIII &amp; S43.00

*

1979-AMC

'995

'2995

Quebec at .Winnipeg, 9
p.m., If necessary .
Saturday, May 5
Winnipeg at Quebec , 8'p.m.
1f necessary.
_
Series c
Edmonton
vs.
New
Englend-Cinclnnati winner.

EXTRA
CRISPY

'2195

'2995
1971 v.w.

s:

.,

.

t•nch had et l"inglr. Almfl[olhv
By wm Grimsley
h·~ the hosts with thrPP
AP Correspondent
~inulf"s
. ·
1bey're throwing a big conuriissioner,
'l'nrsduy
' nij!ht at Hunnan
bash for . A.B. "Happy"
He signed basebeU 's first
'l'nl&lt;'r, thP F.ar!les and WilrlChandler down in Lexington big television contract ,
&lt;"&lt;•t• han~rrt out a tow! of :l8
established the players '
Ky., May 18 - a couple
hiL•! F.ustern had 'll and till'
months before . his Slst · pens10n fWld with a major
hosl&lt; II as Dan Spenrer
birthday - and leading part of.· the . proceeds and
pi&lt;'krrlup
the 2.'1·10Yictory .
figures of' spor,ts, industry weathered su1ts challenging
Rprnrer
and r.re~ WlgaJ .
and politics will gather to pay · baseball as a monopoly. He
tfa med up to fan six anrt·walk
backhanded tribute to one of ·· restored the score of plsyers
just three whllr PRul Rhaefthe fasclnatiog_men of our who defected to the Mexican
fer took the I= as h~ and
generation.
League,
suspended
Leo
1
Waffe fannerl no nne unrt
• The occasion is a "Happy Durocher and gave freedom
walk•dfive.
Chandler Roast " . with Joe to players unlawfully treated
F.ast•m ~ot six big nms in
Namath as r~astmaster ·by owners. No one was too big
the Jirsl inning and right
proceeds going to th~ to face his justice. Owners
morr in tht&gt; seronrt .
linyonP knPw It, thpy wen:o
Kentucky Epilepsy ousted hun at the AU.Star
In thai fir.•t nrnv. twn hehinrl
onlv. IR-10. Rut thrc•e
Fomdatlon .
game m 1951.
.
.
Deserved awards and
Happy's most historic act
recognition finally are was the erasure of baseball's
CODling Happy's way after a color line. Branch Rickey
quarter of a ceniury of virtual .could never have achieved
ostracism by baseball; He the breakthrough without
was principal luncheon him.
speaker at the All.Sq.r g!lllle
"I'll never forget the ·
to c'!'nterfield, but a sharp·
Ruy Andrt'ws socked a ni~ht in an SF.OAJ. contest.
Ry G,..;g Railey
in San , Diego last year, In meeting in N.ew York,"
Wellston's ,Jeff Maerker had hop•kipped past the out- ·double unrl Cliff Kennerly Tht Rr.s€'rVf'!'i entertain
January' he received the Happy recalled . •'The owners fire-d
two-hitter at . host firldc•r and rolled to the fen- rollerterla single for the only
Robert F . Hyland Award voted 15-1 against letting Mei~s last night as ·the re , nllowinl! Maerker to Meigs hits. Maorkrr, Nor· · Warren toni~ht .
· Tjne.srorr!' ;
from St. Louis baseball Jackie Robinson play ·for
Ciolden R"''kets went home sr•orr. S..t\les and Spearos man and Settles eac·h had twu W•ll.too
ooo 002 0- 2 7 2
writers for . "meritorious Brooklyn. I said if I died and · with a 2..(1 victory. '!'hat two- thc•n SOC'kl'd h!lck-tn-bark hits for 1111' winners.
Mei~s
000 1100 0--0 2 I
service to the game."
went .to heaven, my Maker hjller nversharlowerl the per- •Ingle&lt; to knO&lt;'k In Norman
The improving Meigs
Maerker
and ~ettles:
But the telephone hasn't might ask me why I didn'tiet fonnance of Meij!s' Mike for th• game's final run.
:;quarl hosts Logan Friday ' 'l'riplettand Venoy.
jangled with news of the big the man play ball. I would ' 'l'ojpl!'!t who gaw up seven
Th•r• was ~oorl defense all
one: hasebaU'sHaU of Fame. have had to reply, 'Because hits, walkerl just two, and
night
as Meij!s commlttl'&lt;l Jl.l
No one deserves the honor be was black.' My Maker fannerl five . Wellston is now just one
error and Wellston lr~ara
. would have said, 'That's not
more.
· two. .
5-1.
What's the hangup? What's sufficient' So I went against
'l'hr Meigs defense krpt
·The only nms of the ball
the obstiroacy in the Old the owners and ruled Jackie
Ry f:l't'g Rall•y
rainr rame in the top of thP nine Wellston runnel'!l who
third, ·and A throwin¢ error
Timers Committee, which could play.
A fine pltrhing per- on the ratrher allowrlthe run
sixth. Maerker lerl thing&lt; off di~ !l'arh h!l&lt;e in rherk.
"Southem boys like Dixie with a double.
has honored the late Ford
Melj!s threatened only onre formam·e by Reth Rartnun
tn ~t'OrP.
Frick, Warren Giles and Walker and Ben Chapman ·
when
a h!ltter reaclll'rl third rarrlerl the Meigs girls soft' Nonnan . •marked a sinl(le
Kim Seth srorl'd the final ·
other administrators. Failure · said they'd mske trouble. I
hall learn to its sixth vic1orv
In the hnttnm of the st'Venth.
Mel~s
runinthe fourth to
to induct Chandler is gross warned, 'If you do, I'll make
af!ainst just one defeat l~si
make
It
~..(]; She walked , adinjustice.
·
trouble for Y.O~.' Rickey and r
nif!ht, ~-I over Wellston.
Vfln&lt;'t'd
on
a Crooks singlf'\
Onetime bush ball ·player, knew Jackie, was hot- 1
RArt~nom ~nd IoRin!! pitand
rame
home
on a wilrt pit•
Harvard-educated lawyer tempered. . We nu~sed him 1
. rher Hatl~y eac•h tn.sed a rh.
I
Kentucky governor,
along like a baby."
ICE HOCKEY
fiv&lt;'-hitter, hut th• Melg• las.•
Wellston f!Ot its only nm ir
senator
and
finally
MONTREAL _ Quebec fanned &lt;even and walked Ju•t the bottom of tlll'"f(Rh wher
cornmisilioner of basebail,
Wednesday's Sports
Nordlques~ right wing Real four. Hatley stn1i-k out &lt;ix
Dusty Staten si~gled iJ
Trans1ctions
Pro Hoc~ey At A Glance
Happy left a long and
Cloutier
was named World and walked slx.Halley after till' pitcher had
By
The
Associated
Press
By
The
Associated
Press
impressive legacy as the man
Hockey Association Player of · All of the M•lgs thrre runs rearhed on a walk ,
BASEBALL
All Times EST
who guided the game through
World HOcJ&lt;ey
American Le.-aue
the Year and 18-year-old were unearned .'
. Tlodlr Ooaman lerl the
one of its most turbulent
OAKLAND A's- Recalled
Association
center Wayne Gretzky of
In lhe first, Meigitook ~ J..(J Mel~s hitters as she ronDerek Bryant, outfielder,
W L T Pts GF GA Edmonton wa, chosen Roolde lead whe.n Pam . C'rooks
periods.
llnuerl tb have a fantastic
from
.
Ogden
of
the·
Pacific
Edmon.
48 30 2 98 340 266
Iron-willed, · unbelievably
Coast League. Placed Tony Quebec
41 34 5"87 288 271 of tbe Year by :rhe Hockey reached nn '!In error, arl- •prio\g. She pounderl nut two
honest; he conducted his Armas, outfielder. on the 21 · Winn.
vanrerl on An error and a wild &lt;Ingles while Crooks, Wilson,
. 39 .35 6 ·' 4 307 306 ·l'!ews. .
commissioner's
duties day disabled lis1 retroactive N. F.n~ ;
37 34 9 u3 ;r~s 287
The weekly newspaper's pltrh, and rome home 'on a
and Nanry·Smlth eal'h had a
·
Cincln.
l3 41 6 72 274 284 WHA first team AU-stars, In forre out py Tonia Ash.
without fear of consequences. to April 15 .
sln~l•. Staten led Wellston
Birm
.
32
42
6
70
286
311
.
FOOTBALL
.
,
He refused to be a pawn of the
' addition to Cloutier, Included
A non by 'l'rrri Wilson In the with two single•.
Wednesday's Game
National F®lball League
inen who hired him, the
MIAMI - Obtained Ralph · Edmonton 9, Winnipeg 3
center Robbie Florek of serororl priwed to he the
Meigs' n•xt ~amels Frirluy
owners - a factor that• Ortega, linebacker, from the
End Regular ~eason
Cincinnati, left wing Mark derisive mar!(in. Wil•nn 11'&lt;1 at .Jarkson.
proved hia ultimate undoing. Atlanta Falcons, for a thirdHowe of New England, off with a single unrl arlJ .inPsrrurr : ~
PLAYOFFS
He was eaUed "the players' round draft choice.
defenseme.~
J.C.
Tremblay
of
.
v~nrerl
on
a
walk
to
~lll'rl
Qu.arter.finals
Meig.&lt;
110 1110 0- 3 5 2
.
COLLEGE
conmlissloner" becauSe he
B•st of Three
Quebec and Gordie Roberta 1.l~htfoot .
GARDNER · WEBB w.u,t~n .
ooo 010 0- 1 5 8
felt he WBII ordained to be Announced the registration of
·Series A
of New England, and ·goaUe
A wild pltoh s•nt W!lson to
Saturcllly's Game
COJrulllMioner of the entire Billy Kinard, head football
· ·
Cinclnnall 111 New England, Dave Dryden o( Edmontm.
game and had an equal coach.
MOSCOW - Joe Mullen
UNIVERSITY
OF 7:30p.m.
obUgiltion to the players, fans CALIFORNIA - RIVER - ·
· Sunday, April22
·scored a pair of goals to pull \
and even the wnpires.
New England at Clnclnnall, • tioe·united States to a 5-5 tie '
S I DE - Named John Mas I
·
·
7:05p .m.
Chandler, who once won 11 head basketball coach .
. with Poland, while Finland.
Tuesday,
April
2f
UNIVERSITY
OF
SAN
of 12 games as a pitcher and
skated to a 5-2 triumph over
Cincrnna.tl at New England,
FRANCISCO- Named Bill
, batted over .400 for Grafton, Fusco assistant athlt;!'Hc 7: 30 p.m., tf _necesSary .
West Gennany in the first
N.D., in the old Red River director .
.
round
of the World Hockey.
Semifinals
UNIVERSITY
OF
Valley League, ·resigned his
Championships.
· Be•t of seven
' Senate's seat in 1945 to WISCONSIN '- Extended the
l
Series B
contract
of
Elroy
Hirsch,
· succeed the legendary athletic director, through
Saturday's Game
Wi nolf'O~ at Qkebec, a p.m.
KenesawMoWltaln Landis·as June, 1988.
Tuesd&lt;oy, Aprll24
Winnipeg at Quebec, 8 p.m.
Friday , Aprll27
Quebec al Winnipeg , 9 p.m.
Sunday, Apr if 29
Quebec at Winnipeg, 8: JO
p.m.
'

Names

in the news

.

·

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extra coat opti on .!

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Annual tea for
prospective nurses·
set for Sunday

'
• II

•••

I
I

I
I

I
I

Sports

'

,

I
I

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
By The Associated Press

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pel.

Mllwau .

New York

-'

Boston
Detroit

Toronto

Cleve..
Baltimore
•

Texas

,.
•1 .

'

.

'.
!',

Colli.
Minn.
Kan. City
Chicago

seattle
Oakland

7
7
5
4

3

.700 GB

3 8 .273 4v,

WEST

7 2 .778 'h
9 3 .750
1 4 .436 llf2
5 5 .SOD 3

. s 6 •.&amp;55 J1h

·5 9 .357 5
4 9 .308 5112

Wednesday's Games

Milwaukee 4, Boston 1
Cleveland 6, Texas 4
California 11 , Minnesota 6
Chicago 12, Toronto 5 ·
Oakland 5, Seattle 2
New York 3, Baltimore 1
!Only gam.. scheduled)

')

.,••
·'·'
.:i,

..••••
•'•'~c:

.,
'I

!'!

,·.

Foster, CJn, 14; . J .

Cruz, Htn, 14; Madlock, SF,
12; Schmidt, Phi, 11; K.

·Hrnandz, St. L., 11 ; Drieuen,

Cin, 11 ; Cabell, Htn, 11.
HITS - Foster, Cln, 20;
Winfield, SO, 20; Mazzilli,

NY, 18; Concepcn, Cin, 18;

TRIPLES - T. Scott, St.

L., 2;

Conce~,

Cin,

2;

Winfield, SO, 2; 29 Tied with
1.

New York ITiant 0-1 )
' HOME RUNS - Murphy ;
Milwaukee !Slaton 0·0) at All. 5; Schmidt, Phi, 4;
Bonnell, All, 4; Kingman,
Boston 1Rainey 0·0).
California IAase t-0) at Chi, 3; Dawson, Mit, 3; G.
MaddoK, Phi; 3.
Minnesota {Hartz~ll o.o).
STOLENBASES-J. Cruz,
!Only games scheduled)
Htn, 7;
Cabell, Htn, 6;
Fridily's.Games
Moreno. Pgh, 5; Royster,.Atl ,
Toronto at Detroit
A; Morain. Cln, 4. ··
Kansas City at .Boston
PITCHING- 2 DeclslonsMilwaukee at Baltimore,
Chicago

Richard, Htn, 3·0, 1,000,
2.21; Blue, SF, 3·0, 1.000, 2.67 ;
Palmer, Mil. 2·0, -1.000, 2.35;
Zachry, NY, 2-0. 1.000, 3.18;

0.67;

Texas at New York , n
Oakland at California, n
Seattle at Minnesota, ri

Ruthven, Phi. 2-0, 1.000, 2.70;

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
Montreal
Philo.
St. louis
Pitts.
New York ·
Chicago

W. L. Pet. GB
8 2 .800
6 3 . 66 ~ 1'12

5 4 .556&lt; 2,12
4 7 -~ 4 '12
3 6 _333 4'12

2 6 .250
WEST
9 4 .692
Housfon
7 6 .538
Son Fran.
Clncln.
6 6 .500
San Diego
6 7 .462
Los.Ang .
6 8 .429
4 7 .~
Atlanta
Woclnesd.ly•s O.mts
Montreal 6, New York 5

5

2
2'12
3
3!1:1
4

EXTRA

John, NY, 3·0• 1.000. 0.76 : ·
Wortham, Chi,
1.000, 2.59;
Jenkins, Tex, 3-0, 1.000, 1.99;
Drago, Bsn, 2·0, 1.000. 2.31 ;
McClure.
Mil , 2·0.
2.45;
E. Rodrlgez,
KC, 1.ooo.
2·0, 1.000,
2.70; Koosman, Min. 2-0,
1.ooo. 3.78.
STRIKEOUTS - · Wor .

J.o,

J~~~~~hfe!~'2~;~~~;:.t.~~:

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111\Uft
FAMILY RESTAURANT
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Pittsburgh at Houston, n
Cincinnati at St. Louis, n

Los Angeles at San Fran.
cisco, n

Manning Cle 5; J. Norris, ·
Cle. s. '
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PITCHING 2 Decisions -

Caldweu, Mil, 3-0, 1.000, 1.00;

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women.~· iuo'rkshops ~ffored

AMF,RICAN I .EGlON AuxIliary, Racine Post 602, 7: 30
Tuesday night at the hall.

Ill

thot she, the nursing students
and the faculty members are
all anticipating a large group
of visiting high school
students and urge them to
take advantage of the Sunday
aftermxm Open House to
1£&gt;arn more about nursing
!'du&lt;'Btlon opportunities.
Refreshments will be served. Visitors will be we!Com!'d
in the main lounge, of Davis
Hall , home of the Holzer
Mdical Center School of Nurs-

For
All The Famil.y

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BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
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GOING
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Y~LID APR. 11 THRU APR. 23, 1971

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FOOTWEAR

TRY OUR

ojjicers at Thursday meeting

'

_....ciQ-

"

Art in Care of the Cancer Patient " at 9:15 a.m. session ,
Following this, Mrs. carleton
will rover the "Role of the
Nurse • in Ambulatory
Chemotherapy". Mrs. Strang
will then do an "Interview
with a Cancer Patient."
· Following' the 12:30 p.m.
lunrheon, the Value of Support Groops to the Cancer Paftent and Family wil) ·be the
topir of. discussion lor the
afternoon session.
Moderating I~• day's pro• ' ..
gram will be Rhof!da Dailey,
R.N., Diredori,of lnservire
E~ucatlon
at. Veterans
Memorial Hospital. She Is the ·
assessing the jon market, rhainnan of the Professional
selling YOW' skills, reselling Ed?cation C011111'1ttee of the
yoW' skWs and movll!g up the Me~gs County Umt of the
"Ar.&lt;i. Dr. Berkich serves os
career ladder.
·
·
f h h'
Sl"'akers are Charolette Mr&lt;!lcal Trustee or t e 0 w
C. nl C mica Engineer • Division of !he ACS wh1l e
·
·Mrs. Strang 1s a member of
a er, era
Technician; Stephal\le Starr• the board of the Galli a County
Social Programs Specialist;
.
and Barb Cox, Social Worker. Unit. .
.
Participants will have an
Registration de~dll~e to atopportunity to talk with the tend th1s. all day nursmg conference 1n Pomeroy Is Moopane I mem berg
· about
day, Apr1'I 23 . Reg1.'st ra· t'wn
port
unities
at
educatlona1 op
. fee is $3 to rover lurrheon
each of the represented in· nd the coffee break. For
iltltutt.ona of Ohio University,' ~
.
Hocklni ; Technical...; College, more mlormallqn, .contact
and
Grande College- the Meigs Colinty Uml of the
Community College.
AC"S at 992-7531 .

FREE 5"x7"
ENLARGEMENT

. ,. . . .

.,PRICES MAY IIAAV AT INOIVIbuAt.. IT~II

ferenre is being sponsored by
111&lt;' Meigs County Unit of the
American Cancer Society
(Ar.&lt;i), Ohio J)ivision, lnr.
Participating from the Holzer
Medical Center will be Edward J . Rerklrh, M.D. , a
me111ber of the hospital 's
m!'dical st.lf; Eleanor Slang,
R.N., Oirector of Nursing
. Servire at the Holzer Medical
Center and C".onnle ~arleton,
R.N.. staff nurse on the J.V.
Team at Holzer.
. ·
Dr. Rerk)ch along with
Mrs. ·Strang will present an
"Overview on the State of the

to 1111 areH high schools announcing the Spring Tea.
The F'reslunan Clas. of the
S&lt;•hool of Nursing will rondurt tours of navis HaiL
Time will also be available

ROBF.RT GOJ.DSRF.RRV
Robert Goldsberry, New
H•ven Heights, is a 'patient at
llniverslty HospitaL He
underwent heart surgery
Monday and is reported to be in~ .
in satisfactory r•ondition . His ...,_ _ _ _ _ _"!""_"1
wife, S.lly, is in Columbus,
··•

Philathea Society installs

1l!ESDAY

15-5:00

l-lnct,

10

.

1

FOR MEN BY
·oUCCll..LI

•

·----""!'..

· C:ONNIE CARLTON, R.N., is shown preparing an
I.V ., typical of her responsibilities on Fridays in the out·
patient Oncology Clinic at the Holzer Medical Center
where she adm.lnl sters rhemotherapeutlr medications.

Ohio
Univorsily
in
oooperation ·with the Ohio !~r~~~~~'::!'t:'n fo~h1:~~ · .
Council of Churches, is of- Career and Ufe PlannlnP
workshp is to he held ~n.
Doris Grueser: Margaret April 28, at the GalllaRose assisting hostess, Cora JackBon-Meigs Community
Officers were installed at Mabel Walbum, Mrs. Hattie
Beegle, devotions . a nil Mental Health Center.
Georgia Watson, program. Beginning at 9 a.m. and the Thursday night meeting Swift.
Wll.LING . WORKERS ending at 3 p.m., this of the Phllathea Women of 1 Mrs. J.ena McKinley ha~
Class of Enterprise United workshop will provide the Middleport Church of the blessing before t~e
potluck dinner which preel'd·
Methodist Church Titursdl!y · chUdcare. Fees are 13 which Chrtst.
Installed were Mrs. Betty Nl the meeting. Mrs. Retl.Y
7:30 p.n'l. at home of Mrs . . will provl!le both relre.sh·
Agnes Weeks. Mrs. Barbara mentsand lunch.
· McKinley, · preside~! ; Mrs. McKinley and r.lrs. Erwin
Included in the program 'Kathy Erwin, vice president; had charge of the t.bles for
·------------------~Weeks,
l&gt;lstess.
. ·- ~ willhe 'apanelofwomenwbo Mrs . Dorothy Roach, thr potluck. Devotions by
-.
,·· DEMOCRAT
COM·
MITTEE Thursday 7:30 have retumed to school and sl'&lt;'retary; Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Roach inrluded 'a
! p.m. at Carpenters hall, East . the work world. They are · assbtant secretary; · Mrs. reading, " The • lnvlsibJr
from Hocking Tech, Rio Farie Cole, treasurer.
· Florist."
·
Main St., P&lt;meroy.
Grande
College,
and
Ohio
The
annual
mother·
OthersattendingwereMrs.
FRIDAY
ROUND AND SQUARE University. The women will &lt;laughter banquet was set for Sylvia Rice, Amy F-rwin,
Dance Friday from 8 to 11 dlsciiSS the problems and . May 10 and ronunltlees nam- nartn and Reth Wolfe, guests,
solutions to such things as ed Include, Mrs. Rice and ' Mrs. Kathryn Ervin, Mrs.
p.m. at Senior Citizens financial
aids, coordinating Frances Roush, tables ; Mrs. Louise McElhinny, Mrs.
Center, Pomeroy. Dance
motherhood,.
career, and the Erwlri
lind
Clyda Mary Bailey, Mrs. Evelyn
A
open to public. Adults $1,
sometimes
·
traumas
.
of
Allensworih,
program;
Mrs. Murray, Mrs. Clara Conroy,
children m~der 12 admitted
SPRING
divorce
and
separation.
MrKinley
and
Rea
Stewart
Mrs. Roy Reynolds, Mrs.
free. Music by Stringdusters.
Discussions
wUI
locus
on
and
Mrs.
F-rwln,
kitchen
.
Regina Swift, Mrs. Carol
INVESTMENT
REVIVAL at 7. each
solutions
to
career
pl111111ing
A
letter
was
read
froni
at Freedom Gospel · and development of harmony Wayne Clark, a missionary Wolfe; Mrs. Gertrude Miller.
FOR PROM evening
Mission, Bald Knob, with the within oneself while the who receives regular support
Great Selection Of
Rev. 0. G. McKinney process of reevaluation of from 'the Philathea Women.
speaking; special music and oile's Ufe Is taken place.
Thank you cards were read
SUITS - SPORT
public invited,___:_ .. _
.
A variety of resoW'ces will · from -the l.ohse family and
RETURN
JONATHAN be avalJ!Ible on career op- Mrs. Bea Stewart, and Mrs.
COATS - BlAZERS
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of port unities and assertiveness Lena Mckinley thanked the
the American Revolution, training lor getting the job or ~roup for remembering her
·WE' RENT
Friday, 1:30 p.m. at the education you want. Topics during her Illness. Reported .
FORMAL WEAR
=~~-lnn. The Rev. Wilbur for group discussions Will be : i1J were Mrs. Bessie Ashley,
10 have charge of lhe
assessing your skills , Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, Mrs.
program . Election of
nominating
·committee .
Hostesses, Mrs. Edison
ilobstetter, Mrs. George Morrts, Mrs. Thorne Cottrill and
Mrs. Thomas Ewing.
•·
Middleport, 0.
Closed sunday
Open Mon, -Sat. ·, ,
P.M.

~eg.1 .H!HII

YOU liVE. WORK OR Pt.AY. 1Hf"I'S A RADIO SHACK STORE NEAR VOUI

~-

MAKING RASKETS - Pictured above are J.y~la
Williams, Coominator, and Steve Keller, Art Therap1st,
both of thE&gt; Adult rpmmunlty Training Pro~ram of lhi'
Gallia.Jackson-Meigs Community Mrntal Htalth C:ent~r.
. The A.C.T. prOgram made Ill&lt;' Easter hMkel~ In the pielure and presented them to the &lt;":hildl'&lt;'n's Home.

99fch .

Cot-. 44-11M.

.,

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Social Calendar

N. 2nd Ave.

For better so~nd
from yourtape
player.

. 595

"rancer Nursing - The Slate
of the Art" , on Thursday,
April 26 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital · in
Pomeroy.
This full day nursing con-

DEAR RAP:
Erie's lather is a nice man who sells vitamin pills for a living. Eric says he takes 24 of t!Mim a day!
Can he get hooked Qn vitamins? Will they hurt Erie? Are that
many really necessary? -DONNA
DEARDONNA:
,
· .
Erie can't get hooked on vitamin pills, except In the sense
that he so thoroughly believes multi-doses are necessary lthry
aren't! ) that he won't slop taking them.
Are they harmful when overdone' The body usually
eliminates vitamins it doesn't need, but a few can be hazardous If taken in large quantities. A 24-pills-a.&lt;Jay type should
check with his doctor to make sure. -IIF.J.F.N AND SUE

BAHR CLOTHIERS

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A member of the 'Medical
Staff, the Dirctor of Nursing
Service and a staff member
ofthei.V. Team altho Holzer
Medical Center wll all he
speaking at the conference on

'
MRS.P.:
Mom's advice is a bit too passive for me. I'm more the
dirert-adlun type who would can the mother and tell her you
ran 't believe the things her daughter says about Harvey a~y
more than you ever believed the things Nadine S.id about
HER.
F~om there you might progress to a discussion of Nadine's
exaggeration problem, something·that really should be treated
. before It becomes worse. -SUE
·

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viations were sent in advance

Holzer staff members participate in
C.ance r conference ·in Meigs County

-72

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Thr Annuul Spring Tea and
Oprn House at the Hol7&lt;•r
Mt'&lt;lirat r enter School of
Nursing will be held on Sunday aftr rnoon from 2 p.m. - 4
p.m. 111 Davis Hall, the home
of the hospital's School of
Nursing, located at 514 First
Av•nue in Gallipolis.
~tudtml• and faculty will be
on hand thn•ughout the afternoon to am;wer questions for
the visiting high school ·
students who attend and may
be interested in pursuing an
rduration In the field of nursin~ as a promisin-g career. In·

t

,
111URSDAY
Thursday, ' Riverboat Room.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD Members to come dressed In
C~pser,v~iion League, 7:30 'a role which a mother plays.
Mrs. Thelma Osborn to have
devotions, Mrs. Peggy Harris
i *WRANGLER BOOJS
Mrs. Helen Bljlckston tQ
~IPPE;VjA
. . and
be hostesses.
\;·
• '
. REVIVAL SJCRVICES,
;*ACME
Coolville Alleghany Wesleyan
•RED WING
Churrh just north of 1\ippers
Plains, Thursday through
*LEE JEANS
Sunday, 7:30 esch ev.enlng.
Rev . Jlobert F-arley,
evangelist. ____
ROCK SPRINGS BF:'M'ER
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. at the
Trecle Abbott, Thursday.
Midd leJIOrt
Jackie Zirkle to have the program,
Mrs. Martha King, the
Open 9-5 Mon.thru Sat.
contest.
·
Friday nlghtlllll p.m .
MAGNOLIA CLUB ThursL;...;.....-...;__.....__;;, day 7:30 p.m. at heme .of

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Our son and .daughter~n-law married when they were both '
18 and are-now getting a divorce at 20. We blame immaturity,
- and hoped the two famili es would remain at least speaklngarqualntanres.
,
y.
'
· But Nadine is a bitter girl with a talent for exaggeration. Sht&gt;
.
·~
told me terrible things about her own mother (while she and
our son were married and she.visited us a lot ). Said she was a
~
"haltered child," and never loved. J couldn't believe this; 11s
we never saw any evidences in the time we knew the family.
That's when I began to realize Nadine builds up big stories for
sympathy and attention , and finally com~s to believe thenl .
herself.
.
After the break-up, I heard from friends that Nadine's
mother Is telling how Harvey (our son) mistreated and beat
her daughter. Evidently the girl has made a case for herself
with her mother (who always liked Harvey and was shocked
when Nadine sued for divorce).
·.Harvey's reputation cpuld be ruined. He's not a violent rnan, ,
but rather almost too logical and patient- which can be upsetting to a woman.
El.F.ANOR STRANG, R.N ., Direetor of Nosing SerThe mother avoids me. Should I rail her up and have it out
vir~ at Holzer Medical Center, will speok during the morWith her?- MRS. J.P.
.. '
ning session of the r-anrrr Nursing Conferenct' in
DEARMRS. P.:
.
,
Pomeroy next Thursday.
·
"Having It out" with a mdther who thoroughly believes her
.
daughter will only lead to open warfare. Perhapo you should
let Harvey's reputation as a patient, logical man do the perSU8ding. Those who know him won't believe, especially If they
hear a little low-key "Poor Nadine, she's always told Wild
storie~" talk from you. Those who don't know him won 'l'be all .
that interested, and the gossip will soon end.,. let's hope! ,
·HELEN

I

3

..:::!~=::::::::::::.._

TWO MOTHERS-IN-LAW ATOilDS
IN CHII.DJ!,EN'S DIVOJiCF. FIGHT

r-~---------~~~~

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PHOTOGRAPHERS HOURS
11 AM TIL7 PM

OPEN- EV' ENINGS BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY

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FRIDAY, APRIL 20

Thursdav fill12 noon

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ONE SPECIAL PER FAMILY
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SHOP

Welch, LA, 2·0, 1.000, 2.77;
Perry, SO, 2-0, 1.000, 2.52 .
STRIKEOUTS - Richard,
~~~123 ; Kne:?'!!"Jrf s~:,.:9~$
16°; Rnson,h
' I;, 15 ; S;_.an',
eusc e , Ch
NY, 15; lson , f&gt;Qh, 15.
17; Caldwell, Mil. 15.
AMERICAN1.EAGUE
BATTING 20 at bats Trammel, Del, .~76; A.
Oliver, lex, .471; Kemp, Oet,
.467 ; Cooper, Mil , .462; A.
Baimisfr, Chi" .455; Squires.
Chi, .455.
·
RUNS- Downing, Cal, 12;
Cooper, Mil, 11; Lansford.
Col. 11; McRao, KC, 11; 8
Tied with 10.
RBI - Baylor, Col, 17;
Porter KC, 13; Boc:hte. Sea.

Mil. 11; Gr.ich, Col, 11.
HlTS - Boc:hte Sea, 22 ;
Lansford, · Col, 21'; Lemon.
Chi / 21; Downing, Col, 20 ;
Carew, Cal, 19.
DOUBLES- Cooper. Mil.
6; Hisle, Mil, 4l Downing,
Cat, 6; Lemon, Chi, 6; C.
Woshl~ton, &lt;;hi, 6, · TRIPLES- R. "MIIIer. Cal,
2; Norwood, Min, 2; 30 Tied
with 1.
HOME RUNS-·Lynn, Bsn,
6; Grlch. Cal, 4; 1 Tied with 3.
STOLEN BASES - Ran·
dolph, NY, 7, Harrah, Cle, 6 ; ,
J . Cruz, Sea, 6; Bonds, Cle, 5;

participated in g ames during · ~·r. RUSSIAN ART
the strike WO\lld ·~ subject lo MADISON, Wla, (AP) - ~
deportation. · Then, the "The Art of Ruaaia, 110(). ·
Department announced that 1850" will ~ on view at UJe ;
no action would be t.ilken . Elvehjem Muoeum II. Art '
against aliens who had through May 6.
.
:
recieved visas before t~. The show lncludea 154 ;
strike.
works of art.
·

of

..

St. Louis 3, Chicago 2. l4 .' 13; Ly~n , Bsn, 11; Lezcano,

Innings
Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 2
San Diego 7, San Francisco 6
Houston 4, Los Angeles 0
!Only games scheduled)
Thursdly'sO.-s
St. Louis (8. Forsch 0·1) at
Chicago (Lamp 0-0)..
San Francisco I Blue 3·0) at
San Diego !Perry 2·0) .
.Atlanta (Matula 1-1) at
Cincinnati (~aver 1·2)), n.
!Only gam.. scheduled)
Fri~y·s O.mos
Montreal at Chicago
San Diego at Atlanta, n
New York at Philadelphia, n

~o n

'
II\ l'hc. Assuciall'd Pre~s
defeated Ftancis&lt;;o t;unzaies
·
TENNIS
or Puerto Ri co, ~. 7-5, in a
By Cll't'~ Jloti&lt;'y
CH ARLESTON , S.C. World Chimpionship Tennis
Tim Pl•tri f' htul ~ dc'u~l&lt;' Colombia 's Alejandro Cortes . rournament.
and cr sinvh· and pih.'hrd 1ht• upset fifth-seeded David
In other matches, fourthNort.h Cl11lli11 Pir11h"' to 11n R-2 carter of Australia 6-4, 6-3 in seeded Manuel Orantes of
win nvttr tlw Ky~er Crt•Pk the first round of the $10,000 Spain
defeated
West
Jloht•• ts TtwsiiHy ni~ht in 11n Charleston · Invitational Germany 's Ulrich Pinner, ().
SV Ar rontesl .
Tennis Tournament.
4, 6~. while Roscoe Tanner
PMrir Wf'nt thP di~bmrP,
Jn other matches, No.2 seed won the first set, 7-5, against 5.
fonning thn..- anrl w11lking Robert Trogolo of South Italy's Adriano · Panatta
SOCCER
justone. Nibert was to gg!'d Africa defeated Bruce Se_igler , belore play was suspended WASHINGTON _ Players in
with lht• lfl.'l' 11s he and 6-2, 6-2; No.3 Bruce Fox because of heavy rainfall and ' the North American Soccer
n•liovPr Minor fann!'d JO and defeated Rarniro Benavides U&gt;rnado warnings.
League ended their five.&lt;Jay
• wttlbd fivr.
. of Boliv,ia 6-4, IHJ; fourthSAN JOSE , . Calif. - strike, citing confusion
Kyger rrt'rk piHtNI a run seeded Steve Krulevitz Second-seeded
Peter among foreign players astbe
in tht• first inning, but North defeated Sanuny Marlin 6-2, Fleming held off Vince Van cause.
G1111i11 ~111 two l1111ies ll&lt;'ros.• .
6' 1; No .6 Bruce Nichols Patten, 6-2, 5-7, · 7~ (8-6) U&gt;
.The . players' union "had
Two Pinth• rtms in tht1 defeated Turkey's Bulent advance to the quarter-finals been informed by, the Labor
""''nnd 11nd lour mon• in the Alllnkaya · 6-3, 6·1, and of the $50,000 · Grand Prix a n d 1 m m i g r a .t i o n
thin! put the g11me on ire for seventh-seeded Haroon .tennis tournament.
Department last week that
.the hosts. The PimiPS of IBmail of Rhodesia defeated
Van Pallen, a 21-year-&lt;Jid foreign
players
who
rnarh Mikr Nr sselro11d Marcos Hocevar of Brazil 7~,
outhlt Kyger rrrrk , 9-7.
~
Oth.r hitters for ttw winNo . 8 seeded Alvaro
nrr.o: wt&gt;rt' Turk PaynP with a BetancW' of Colombia lost to
dfluhlf". Rt-P~. C1ilmorP, Por· Roger Guedes of Brazil&amp;-4, ().
lor 11n&lt;l J(lng eoch horl a 4. and lop-seeded Charles
~in~IP.
•
Owens advanced by defeating
North GalliH travr ls to Jolm Hays 6-3, 6-3.
· F11slern tonight for a
HOUSTON - Gene Mayer ;
FOR THE BJST DEALS _
doubleheader with the
IN THE
Filgl.s who are 4-l\ on the

n · 1&lt; . Forsch, Htn, 3·0, 1.000,

at Cleveland. n

~.

••

RBI -

Ctn, 6 ; Wtutfteld, SF, 5.; 6
Tied with 4.

Baltimore ( Palmer 1-1) atj

••
••
••

Phi. Htn, 12; Porker, Pgh, 11 ;
Lopes, LA, 11 ; G. Maddox.
Phi. 10; Concepcn, Cln, 10.

Puhl , Htn, 18 ; Russell , LA, 18.
DOUBLES - Griffey, Cin.
7 '· Reitz, S': L . 6; Morgan,

Thunday•s Games

.,.,-r'.

· TOOAY'S MAjOR
LEAGUE LEADERS
By The Associ•ted Pross
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING ~ 20 ot RAt&lt; Mazzlllf,_ NY, ,-1&lt;12; Fosler,

,12 · Cin , .426 ; G. Maddox-, Phi.,
A .636
.421 ; Winfield, SO. .408; Ott.
4 .556 w,
Pgh, .391 .
4 .500 2
RUNS - J . Cruz, Htn ., 12 ;
A 7 .364 3•; 2

3 7 .300 4

.

and

television actor Dick van
Patten, · came
back
repeatedly in the final set ro
overtake Fl~ming and send
the miltch inU&gt; a tiebreaker.
Jn second-round matches,
fourth .,.eeded Butch . Walts
beat John James of Australia
6-1, 6-3 ; Bruce Manson
defeated Jaime Fillol of Chile
6-3, 6-1 and Ferdi Taygan
eliminated John Austin 6-4 , 7-

beatKC

••••• •• •••

Baseball At A Glance

mov ie star

hn.e{S
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' '~;;';"';;:';i:-~J;;d'~"lon.g term answer in public's handS ~(~£.~~ .
. Mr.... R1•cky Mt1hlH 11'&lt;1 ~
wd,·ttrnt•4llnto d11h nwmlwi·~hip c•f ;-J mPPiin·,, nf H'l' Mid-

POTI .IJCK PI.ANNF.Il

ft. f:ttht;r-~nn (lfltlut'K wets

plann&lt;'d fnr May 11 at ih&lt;'
I .:mn•l Cliff Frt'&lt;' MPih"list
Church when lht• Li ght :md
J.ift•

M~·n's

Frllnwship rn f'l in

ttw• dmr&lt;'h soda ] mOrn,
"'·"i&gt; ·

Pravrr bv Otln J.nhn npt•n·
r(l thE- mt•(•ting with Sl'ldon ·
Rake&gt;r , .Tr. J'h·.i~f.t lhl' dpvo-

ciiPtli•rl Hu~inPS.'-l :nHI JTof~·s~
.cfpp WI\Jnf'n',..: (')nh hPicf Mun.

tiom:. F.rlJ!ar Van. lnwnJ!rn
h4ul thP finmwt• rt'1Xn1 Hn(l
thP F:ustrr t'~l! hunt twirl
S;1tnrdrw afternoon w;n.:
.notPd. Mikl' Wright Will t!iW
dt•vntions at Ow May
m£&gt;rtinJ!. Thr R('\'. Floy~l
Shonk httrl pl"Ctyt)r· and
r"frt&gt;shmt•nt$ wt•rr t&gt;nj1•yt•tl
,durint!'H so&lt;'i;.t] hour.

1111~ ·
r.:~ ~

ni1•ht ol lht• ('l•lw nhin

wa!' Hllnf'llrH't'cl . RPsPrVati(ms
:1rt• tn h(• m~·Htc• witt- Mrs.'
· Mr~. ,Tmwt' Knrn . spcmsnr Alwiirln WPrrwr. A Jc&gt;Ut•r w;.~s
fnr Mrs. Mnhlt·r~· prP!-lt'nll'il rf;ul frl'l.rn Mrs . .fant•t Ryt•rs,
twr with C'lnh rrt-drnti;.t]~ anrl School nf N11r~inJ..! ~1 th&lt;•
llw i\rnt•rit'~n flMf.!. Mr!.; . Mf'r- Hnl7t'r Mrcti()Hi C:t'n11'r,
jurh• f:nt•lt of thf' mPmllf.'r- n•pnrtinl{ (m Trn•sa ·MNtdoWs
!-:hip c·ommittt·t~, pn•st•n!Ni who ha" the BPW St'holarshlp
U1t&gt;-00ckgrClund Clf t•ligi~ility Hward. Rt&gt;fKlrts wt&gt;re aJso ·
for mt•ml&gt;t'rship and rPmintl- giwn on tht• ho,pital equi~

rn. ortic'(' .

fair

~~1

thl-lt lh&lt;• winning

l'f1d

C'P\1-

plr ''"" Jlllrtirifll'tt• in lhr·

S:l1nrdMy aftprnoon , la st clay

of tht• fair. Fee to t•nter the
nmte't lias been set at $1.
Memhe" were reminded of
t•tl ml'mhrrs th:•nh .. 197n.flfl ml'nt nf lh&lt;' rlnh, •nn the the National Ferleratiim (:OOYPHr i.'i tlw timt' of tlw golciPn r,nnmunilv
. rJuh
. Awanl~ pro- vontion to bt' held in July ·at
Ro,ton, Mass . The McArthur
poppy.
grmn.
MrK F'r:mrt-'S Loni~H' nuvi ~
Th'• MPiJ.!~ County fair was RPW rJub ·will ohsrrve its
rrt·sitlt•tl at thr mt•ding. Th&lt;' rli ,ru."'l'tl with th&lt;• little Mr. 4oth anniversary on April 26,
clistrif'! r;rweting to _hf' hPlti anrl Mi ~~ Meigs C'nunty Fair antlloral cluh members have
~und11y 1-11 lhP Hocking VMlley
jmlglng to takr plare on bern Invited to attend. ·
Mutur 1 odge in Nrl,onvillr WPrlnrsday rvening at the · Rn:::ltrsse~ servt"d rookies

fnllowin~ tile '

pmwh

mPrtinJ!.

jtinior fnir purartP m1cf :ICtivitic•~ fnr thr rrmuindrr'" of

the w"•k . Th•• pretty baby
l'nntest will 'till be held .on

POMEROY - The Meigs Veterans Memorial Hospital.
County Unit or the Ameriran
At 9:15 a.m. overview of
Cancer Society will sponsor a the state of the art in care of
fconference on "eancer nur- the canrer patirnt will be
:sing-' the state of the art" on given- by Fldwartl Rt&gt;rkich,
. ~Thursday, . April 26, at M.n .. Gallipolis, anrl F:iranor
•VeterarisMemorialHaspltal. Strang, R.N. , dirertor 0fnur~ Registration will be held sing services at . Holzer
rom 8: 30 to 9 a.m. Ml'rliral renter
:Moderator will be Rhonda
))ailey, R.N ., director of inAt 10:45 a.m. there will be
service education at short break and at II a.m. the
:Veterans Memorial Hospital. role of the nurse in am: At 9 a.m. the welcorffe will buMory ehemotherapy will
i:J1e given by Teresa Collins, be given by Connie Carleton,
.~.N., director of riurses at R.N., staff nurse, I. V. team,

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992 -5432

REGISTRATION FORM
NURSJNGCONVERENCE
"Cancer Nursing-The Slate ol the Art"
Thursday, April %II

Pomeroy·, 0 :

Name ."
Address : ___ _ " . . . _ County . _ :
City . ___ _ __

other-daughter banquet set

State . . . .. _ . Zip . _ ..

Luncheon and coffee breltk fe e: S3.00
Deadline for registration is ~ondav , Aprl l 23, 1979
Make checks payable to and mall with this for~ fo :
American Cancer Society, MPigs County Unit, Post Officp
Box 692, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

'·

•

nnnual mot~er- Railey, Mrs. llorot.hy Mnrri•. for the b banquet.
dau~htrr banquet of ~ Mid- and Mr.;. Betsy Horky will
Mrs. I .owery read ' "Farin~
rllepnrt First United work in the dining room; Death with Faith" and •:New.
Presbyterian r:hurrh will be Mrs. Judy Crooks, Mrs. Len- Life Is All About us." Mrs.
held on Mav 15 and rommit- ni~ Haptonstall, Mrs. Carolyn Kathryn Miller had the
tees for the- event wrrp 118ft1- ~tterfield, Mrs . . rarol prayer while the least coin
ed at a meeting TuPsday . Harprr, Mr.. Patty Stem, and was rollected. The Rible
night of Group II at the home ·Mrs. Gladys Cummin~s will study was from the ·seventh
·of Mrs. Faye Wallace.
.
have rhar~e of the program; rhapter of "The Christian's
Mrs. Ruth Wootlward, Mr,;. and Mrs. F.thel Lowery, Mrs. Answer to I.ife's Ur~ent' ProMvron Miller, and Mrs. Vi- Waliat'l', Mrs. Marcella Col-. blems'' on the topit•, "What
vlim Waddell will serve as eman, and M.,, Martha Comes After Death:''
f!rrelers ; Mrs. Mildred Karr, Anderson will serve on the
Refreshments were served
Mrs. Kate Rrown, Mrs . kitrhen rommittee. Hel~n by Mri&lt;. Wallace ·nnd Mrs.
Velma Rue, Mrs. Mildred Sauer reported on the plans ·Woodward.
The

Charles Pugh

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'In Newness of Life '
theme of campaign for
Christ in Reedsville

Associllted Press
But the long-term answer to hack to basics. They can, say
Pork and poultry producers soaring food prices Is largely experts in the (ederal Office
are rushQig to 1111 the gap.lefl · in the hands of the American of Consumer Affairs, buy noby the drop in beef supplies. public.
. frills groceries and shop at
Economists say the warehouse stores, They can
inCrease in Ule number .of, pass up products that are
Holzer Medical Center.
hogs and ehlckens wUI help high on packaging and low on
At 11 :30 a.m. an Interview put a temporary brake on tbe nutrition.
with • ranrer paUent will he ·rise in food bills.
·
The key to f(\00 prices in the
presented by F.leanor Strang
But !bey also say that near future wUI be supply and
ani! ~t noon a qilestim and keeping prices on an even · demand, particularly at the
answer period will be held.
keel ·will depend on meal oounler.
At 12:30 lunch will be ser- controlling the inflation that
"The meal supply situation ·
ved and at I :30 p.m. value of is Pushing up the cost of is the most important thing
""Pport groups to the ranrer getting food !rom the farmer for the next year," said Jim
patient and family will be to the consumer. ..
Zellner, economist in tile
reviewed.
Consumers are
not . consumer affairs.office.
- At 3 p.m. a rompiPtion rl. helple... They can switch
Beef supplies are 'tlown.
eva luation reporis will be · from beef to eggs, chieken or Cattlemen are expected to
given.
pork, If everyone switched . produce only 22.4 billion
Those wishing to make once a week, lt would more poun'ds ol beef in 1979
reservations are to complete than offset the deCrease in ' compared to 24 blllion pounds
and mail the form btolow, beef supplies.
·
last year and nearly 26 billlpn
TleadlineisApril23.
-Coosumers also can get
·

"In Nt"wness of Lift-", wiD · mt'mber of the F.ditorial

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be the them e of a rampai~n
for Christ, by the &lt;11urch of
Christ at Reedsville, from
May 6through May 12.
In addition· to p&lt;&gt;r,;onal inmtations being extended to
p&lt;&gt;ople in a door4&lt;&gt;&lt;1oor
visitation program by the
&lt;"hurch membership, seniicl!s
will be held nightly at the
church building at 7:30p.m.,
with Thursday night beintr a
special night for teenagers.
The purpose of the rampaign
is to make Christ real in the
lives of ihe people in !he
Reed s ville community.
F.vangelist Charles Pugh of
the C-amden Ave, Church of
Christ in Parkersburg, W.
Va., will bethespeahr.
F.vangelist Pugh graduated
from Ohio Valley College ,in
Parkersburg, W. Va., and ·
received his BA ,in speech
from Harding College, Searcy, Arkans~s. He has an MA
in Philosophy .in Religion and
Apologetics, from Harding
Collel(e. Mr. Pugh is a

'

•WINDBREAKERS
•INCWDING
SATIN JACKETS

Two $50 contributions, one
to the Heart Fund, and the
other to the Tracy Hein Fund,
were made at . a rerent
meeting ' of ihe Bi!! Rend
r--~·-·--·-··-·1

t

SIZE 12 MO -: 14 YRS.

NOW-

PARF.NTS WITH
PARTNF.RS
There wiD be a meeting of
Parents Without Partners
tills evening at 7:30p.m. at ·
the Community Mental
Health Center, Galliplls.
Guest speaker wiD be Dr.
&lt;11arles Holz ~r. A diS&lt;'ussion
will follow and coffee will be
serviod. Ali single parents are
welrome to attend. The
merlin~ is open to residents
of the Rend area . ·

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Hours :

9:301b 5:00
Mon. thru Sat
' '30to'a:oo
Friday

20% OFF

..#_
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2i1d St.
·, POMEflOY.ft».

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.. Polly Cramer
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~Whites are
~turning gray
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Reg_ Price
Sale Price
551-95 _, , , ....., .......... ,_, ... ·.. $34.99
. S47. 95 •••••.•••
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$31.99
$~5.95 -··· .... ... ...... • .......... $29.99
$37-95 - ......•.•...• '' .•... .. •. ... $25.99
535:95 ...... .. .. ' ....•.•.. - ....... $23..99
$31.95· ... .. ....... .. ....... - ... .. . $21.30
$29-95 - .............. ... .......... $19.99
$19_95-. ' ·' ..... ' ..• ; . ..... - .. '.. " .. 513.99
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I!IIG SELECTION OF
STYLES AND COLORS
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READY
FOR ·

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CHILDREN'S SIZES
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Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
Thai Cigaretle Smoking Is Dangerous to .Your Health.
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Miss l.ouise Conde of Pittsburgh, Pa. spent F.a 1ter with
her sillier, Miss Bertha Conde, Pomeroy.
Mr. arid Mrs. Jark Denison
of J&gt;ittSburgh, Pa. spent
F.aster weekend. here with
WEEKEND
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith
REVIVAL
' and family and Mr. and Mrs. . Church services In the fonn
C.arl Denison, Rutland.
of a weekerid revival will be
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon , held at Harris Baptlst
Fisher _and son, Masoo 9f Church1Apri)17,28UJ!:I9,al
WeSt:1\afayette we,re lfe~ for · 7:30 p.m. eadt eventng. '11te
F.aster weekend w1111 his guest speakers will be the
J!Brents, Mr. and Mrs. James Rev. MDes Trout, James
M. Fisher. Joining the family · Pattenon and Jeff Butcher.
for F.aster Sunday wert' Miss Guest singers will be Tom
Rarbara Fisher, r.olumbus, Kesael's Joyfindera, Friday;
Mr. and ·Mrs. Willi'm Fisher Jim and Kathy Sisson,
and son, Will, Orris ·Harris, Saturday, and the Garrison
Mr. · and Mrs. Dave Danko. Quartet, Sunday. Everyone is
F:vening railers were Mr. and welcome.
Mrs. Milton Roush and Randy, Mr. and Mrs. David
Danko, Sr., and daughter,
Millfield .
· Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saltz
have l'!llurned to their home
in New Martinsville, W. Va.
after spending Flaster
weekend here with their
parents, . Mr. and Mrs.
&lt;11arles Kuhl anti Mr. and
.M(S. Roy Mayer.
I '

BF.SSIF. HD.J.
, , IN HOSPITAl.
Mrs. Bessie Glaze Hill suffered a heart attac.k Saturday
night while visiting her sons
In Cincinnati and ill confined
to the . Good ' Samaritan
Hospital there. The Hill family had been in Cincinnati for
.F:aster weekend.
Mrs. Hill remains In the ·
coronary care unit. Visiting
with her Monday were Mrs.
Donald Pullins, r.o!wnbus;
Mrs. Grace Glaze, Midand George Glaze,

Citizens nutrition program.
Harry Thoffi'~S was named
as· the new vice president.
Repqried ill were Henry Cnnning,ham and Harold ·WI)J 1 A
dub dinner was dlscus'li'&lt;f.
The door prlzes ·wel'l' wo~' by
Cap•hart and 'l'erry
Seidenable. Refreshments
wrre served by the Ladies
Auxiliary. Next meeting will
beonApril27.

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OPEN FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

POTWCK OINNF.R HF.IJl
Apotluck dinner in celebrAtionofthebtrthdayofMi's. W.
0. Rarnit:z was held F.aster
Sunday at the ~arnliz hQme.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
J.awrt.&gt;n('e·

They'.re light and lively. They'~e the newest,fashion sandals by
Tho.m MeAn. As comfortable as they are good looking. Why not
step into a oair today,
.. ,

Nel'soti,

Kalama7.oo, fd!rh .; Mr. 11nd
Mri Wilson C'..arpenler;'iMr.
and Mrs . . Hayman Ramit:z,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ramitz, Rick, &amp;ott,
Jeff and John, Mason, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs . . John
Youn~. Phil, Robin and Lisa,
Lancaster, and Mr. and Mrs .
Keith Rarnitz, Tom and Tim,
Kingston.

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· he.r ,l t.Q ge ~ouse...
,.

OF ·sHOES

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N. 2ND.AVE .

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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now.

SAVE '$1.00•••

The first Chevy
ofthe'SOs.

CH

WHEN YOU BUY YOUA FAMILY
THE COLONEL'S

~ITATI9N

Citation's a whole new kind of Chevy.
Outside, the trim aerodynamic design measures
less than 15 feet from bumper to·bumper. Yet
inside, five adults can sit in comfort. Want cargo

room? The rear seat folds easily in hatchback
models to provide 41.1 cubic fee t of storage area
for wagon·iike versatility. On the road, you'll
appreciate the traction of front wheel drive.
Plus r~ck - and -pinion steering, a tranSverse.
mounted engirie, front disc brakes . .. and
much more .
'

Chevrolet cars are equipped with GM·built
engines produced by various divisions .

See Citation for yourself.

COME IN FOR A TEST DRIVE

992-2116

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1
Personal Notes I

Pomeroy, o:

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l'itizens Rand Radio rJub,
Arran~emenl&lt; were made
during the meeting presided
· ·.Wor by Mike Capehart for a
rolfee Sllfety break to be held
fmm 6 p.m. on May 25 to 6
p.m. on Monday, May 28 at
the F:astern High !irhooi
parking lot. Free roffee and
Rov~l Crown rola will be provid.ed for motorists. Arnmgements w~re also completed for a bake sale to .be
held May 4 at Krogers with
prort"eds to f!O to the St-nior

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POMEROY
MOTOR
CO.
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"Your·

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HOME

BRAND

·~
·~EEDS
•WEEDS

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KINGSBURY

&amp;
AtXESDIES
noo e.

Women's Sandals

Club makes two $50 donations

Board of the Bible Herald.
and moderator for the Op&lt;'n
Bible T.V. Program.
The Reedsville · Church of
Christ extends a rordial
welrome to the MIMlhio .
Community to hear Mr.
Pllgh.
,,
St&gt;rvires will be held night- ·
' ly at 7:30p.m .. and on Sunday
at 10:30a.m.and 7:30p.m.
The rhurrh is locted on Rt.
124, in Reedsville.

crystals touch the Items.
Keep records Of who wore
the clothing and for what occasions. Photographs and
'
~ DF.AR POLLY- I am hav- . other documentation can be
;ng trouble keeping my hus- of great value if· you ever
hlnd's underwear white. decide to donate such things 1
Jk&gt;th cottons and polyester to museums or univer.!ity •
'blends turn gray even if they costume collections. I do hope
·are new. I have tried this will be of some use to the
1ukewann water, hot water readers.- V.I..K.
11nd even bleach. - R.C.
Thank you , V.L.K. I am
~ DFd\R R.C . -Buy a box of sure we have all learned a
~olor remover (sold with dye)
great . deal from your most
and follow directions on the informative letter. - POLl :Y.
box .- POLLY
Polly will send you one of
! DEAR POLLY - I have . her signed thank-you
noted that many of your newspaper coupon clipper.! if
readers are concerned with she uses your favorite
~oring old garments. I am a
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
rollege instructor and have her column. Write POL! ,y'S
been doing research in textile POINTF.RS in care of this
tonservation for the past two newspaper.
years and would like to offer
the following recomri1endufions.
' Flat atgrage is the best
l\orage If one has the room.
f'old items as little "'I possiLle and layer them as little as
bossible. Should layering be
necessary put the heaviest
O.ings on the bottom.
·
..
1Soi!Je items should not be
~ung, such as those With narwith
iow shoulder straps, dresses
teavj at the bottom such as
'!"aded dresses of the 1920s
~nd garments that are cut oo
f11e bias: If garments are
•AWNING
hung they should be put on
P.,dded hangers.
·
·
•CARPORTS
t For heavy clothing such as
military uniforms use
•GCT.
wooden hangers and cover
tile hangers with muslin. Two
Best on the · Market.
~re hangers could be used
Ask
about our 48 mo.
Jl,gether and then ·be padded
Home
Improvement
)lnd covered wiW muslin. Use
ijust covers over clothing Financing plan.
}flen;s shirts are.great for this
lmd never crowd items. ·
l : Group items' to be stored
~onling 'to color - whites
~· darks as natural dyes.can
rob off. Wrap in clean wl)lte
)heels or white tissue paper
1not blue&gt; but do not IIIII!
plastic, ne~pers or allow
item to touch wood. A.ir out
slordl items at least once a
Main
y\lar and then avoid direct
Pomeroy, 0 .
sunlight. Jf you must use
9tH034
· moth crystals do not let the

It means that coosumers
in 1976.
.
2 percent larger tfluibn last have to sbop even more
Cattlemen now say they afe year; production O roiler carefully tban usual.
increasing production, but it chickens is expected to grow
"I believe the American
wlll tai,&lt;e time fof meat by about 8 percent..
. people will have to change
supplies to increase.
. ile~· riUSDA ulredl: th: . some of their jlatterns of
"There is very little lobe · . e P res w . con . ue
living," sai~ Mrs. Peterson.
done about the situation rise during the f1rst half of the "We've got to get back to
except to let the normal year and will peak in the basics ... 1 think there's a
forces of the market restore summer months when great .deal of overpackaging,
the halan~. and they will," consumer.s start to feel the of advertising of foods that
said AHred Kahn head of the effect of mcreased pork and are not highly nutritious
Council on .Wag~ and !'&gt;rice poultry supplies. Overall, the foods ... The best way to gel
stability.
USDA says, beef prices this · rid of a product ts to leave it
What he's saying is that as year will average about 20 00 the shelf."
beef gets more and more perc,ent higher tha~ last
Industry and government
costly, people will turn to years.
spokesmen say consumers
substitutes, ultimately,
A short-term
trend seem willing to· pay for_
reversing .tile price trend.
.worryin~ ~orne . people , convenience and service.
The . U.S. Department of meanwhile, '" ant1cipatory , William T. Boehm of tbe
Agriculiure expects 16 P r 1 c 1 n g ·
Some USDA ;·s Economics, .
percent to 20 percent more man~facturers, afrrud that Statistics and Cooperatives .
pork to be available thts fall PreSident Carter wlll unpose Service, said : "The fact that '
than at the same .time last mandatory pnce co~trots. il processors continue to add year. That should keep pork hi~ V?luntary , antHnfiatlon andsell-moreserviceswith :,
prices at a level not much guldeUnes don t work, are food products is a reflection ·
higher than 1978's.
boosting pnces now - Just m · of our changing lifestyles. To
Lee Campbell, president of case. (Carter has. satd. a significant degree, higher
the Poultry and Egg Institute repeatedly that he will not food prices reflect our
ofAmerica,saideggsupplies seek mandatory controls.) ·willingness . to pay for
during the first half of the
"These are real fears, " preparation, .packaging,
year are expected to be about said Esther Peterson, special ·.boxing, slicing. Wld selling,"

Che'vy

Dealer"

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15
PIECE BUCKET
(REGULAR PRICE $7.55)

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OFFER GoOD THROUGH SUNDAY, APRIL 22ND

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·• 9-1111! Da!lY_Sentinel, Middl_~'f'Ort-Pomeroy, 0., Thur!&lt;dar, Apr. 19, 1!179

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I Area Deaths
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MARION E.HUU.
Marion Edward Hull,58,
Hillard, fonnerly of Rutland,
died Tuesday evening at
Grant Hospital In Colwnbus
following a Ungering Illness.
Mr, HuD Ia survived by hla
wife, five children, five greatgrandchildren; hla mother,
Mrs. Flossie Phillips of
Logan; three ' sisters, Mrs.
Eura Phllllps, Logan; Mrs.
Deasie Conley, Pataskala,
and Mrs. Fred Berry,
Gahanna; two aunts, Mrs.
Alpba Barr, Langavll1e, and
Mrs. Ronald Bailes, Hamden.
· A nmnber of nieces and
ne!iJews also survive,
Mt. HuD waa reared in
Rutland and attended
Rutland High School. He was
a member of three brothers,
Jadilrt Clalrdt at HWard and
wu alao a member of the
Masonic Lodge.
Masonic rites wW be held
at 8 p.m.thla eventnc at the
Webater.Junk Funeral Home
in Hilliard and funeral
services will be at the funeral
home at 10 a.m. Friday.

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GENE PAUL
Gene Paul, who resided in
Pomeroy when the PomeroyMason bridge was built; died
unexpectedly in Richland,
Washington, March 25.
He was an employe of the
Dravo Constructim Company
and worked as a resident
engineer on the local bridge,
After working on a munber
of other projects for the com, peny, he was transfer'red to
Richland where he as resident engineer for the Atomic
Plant there,
He retired In 1969. He was
married to . Maud Vance of
Middleport. She preceded
him in death in July of 19'17,

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GEORGE PULLINS
George Dewey Pullins, 79,
died at Veterana Hospital,
Chillicothe Wednesday.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced later.
Mr. Puillns was the, son of
the late Jeff and Ella ljaUey
Pullins.
He was also
preceded in death by 'three
slate'rs, Mrs. Gertrude
Charles, Mrs. llalel ~ung
llld'Mri. MarCia Delay.. He '
had j)een employed in the
iteelmillaatWelrton, W.Va.,
until the time of his

rebrement.

He is survived by two
sisters, Mrs. Ethel Smith of
Pomeroy and Norma Pullins
of Chillicothe and several
nieces and nephew~ .
Funeral services will be
held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the ,
~:wing. t'u,neral Home with
the Rev . James Corbitt
officiating. Burial will be in
Mt. Hermon Cemetery.
Frierxls may call at , the
funeral home anytime after I
p.m. ••riday.

GEORGE E. STANLEY
George Eugene (Gene)
stanley. 83, Route %, Albany.
died Wednesday evening at
Veterans Memorial HOB)Jital.
Mr. Stanley was born at
Snowville, a son of the late
John ani! Mary Bolen Stanley
home Friday evening and
Satsurviving are hla wife,
Della Bolton Stanley; five
sona,IJoyd E. and Linder G.,
both of Fairborne; Larry J.,
Edison; Lowell D. and
Russell D., both .of Albany;
six daughters,Merrllyn
Travis, _New
Albany;
Darsene' Mansfield, Port
Rickey, F!a:.; Thelma Hock,
Columbus; Barbara
Matthewson, Athens;
Eleanor Snow and Cheryl
Radekln, b&lt;th of Albany,
Also surviving are 33
grandchildren, 13 greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces and rEwphews.
Preceding him in death
besides his parents were a
son, Kemetl) E. S&amp;l!n)ey; a
sister, Mrs. Roma Beal, and
four brothers, Charles,
Culbert, Hobart and Edward.
Funeral servtc:es will be
held at 2 pm. SUnday ~~ the
Blgopy-Jordan Funeral
Heme in Albany with the Rev.
Joseph Blslunan officiating.
Burial will be In the Hanning
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home Friday
evening ml Saturday. The
famlly will receive friends
. from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday and
lrom 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday..

SEASON OPENS
SEPTEMBF.R7
1
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COLUMBUS, Ohio ! AP) ·~· ' Ohio's. 1979 squirrel hunting
• • : season opens Sept. 7 on
·' , j private land and on most
• public hunting areas and
· Sept.2 I at the Waterloo
• Wildlife Experimental Sta, 1101) in Athens County.
~ ·', . Squirrel h~ntlng n)oses
· ·Nov. 10 on pnvate land and
Dec. 22 on public land, ac- .
cording to the state Dlvlson of
WThelldJHdae.II ba II It both
,
Y g m on
: · red arxl gray squirrels Is fnur
and the poueaslon limit alter
thefirstdayjselght.
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jOHN WILT
John Emery WUt;tlf, Rt. 1,
Middleport.
died Wedneedsy
..
Hoi.- Medleal
Center.
Mr. WUt waa born May 17,
1914ln Gallia County the son
of th&amp; late Charles arxl Hattie
Shoemaker WUt.
He II survived by six
daulhters, Janet Ricbardaon,
Columbus, Charlette Ann
Willis, Wellston, Sharon Wilt,
Middleport, Evelyn and
carolyn Lou Wilt· of
Columbus, one son, John
Wilt, Arizona .. one slsler and
one brother-In-law, Margaret
and H~rman Kincaid,
Middleport,
seven
grandchildren, several
cousins nieces and nephews
Fun..:al services will ~
held Saturday ·at '2 pm. at ·
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Heme with the Rev. WIIUam
Knittel officiating. Bw -1 I , ~
be in Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Funeral HClllle Friday from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9.

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f"llfF '' ri'TJM~
nAVTI'IN, Ol,i&lt;• lAP\

Meigs
Property
Transfers

A

Yf'tu'l' !nt,thl'r mul lwr h\'f'
c·hiltln•n \\'l'rt' killl'fl Wt•tlnP~­
c!:~~ ·

in ;1 fm• ;tl 1-4 puh1ic' hnu~­
inv rn'jt•t•t nn t hi~ &lt;·it,.'s mwt t"l
siclt•
·
•

P&lt;•hhh• Pari,, 21. ht•r '"n,
C. D. Core, Juanita Core to . n»lt• 'Bt•(•('h , 7. :•nt1 «fttll~!hft•r
Roger Adams, right of way, MuiH~II P:ui:;, ~ . dil'ct in 1hc·
hlf-17C'. Mr~ . Pari!'' ni&lt;,thcT .
Bedford. .
Glen Stout, Ruth E. Stout to Ann:-~ Rt&gt;t&gt;ch. 57. wn~ li~tf'd in
Roger Adams, right of way, :o:Pric•u~ c·nm1itinn rtt MilJml
V111lt•y Hn~pilfll
Bedford.
THP c•nrnnt•r '~ offi,•t• f:H icl
Phyllis Vanlnwagen, exthe•
f~1milv hfld !"!'"•HVt-d frnm
trx.; Oma B. Smith, dec. to
Willln~•hor&lt;•
. N.•1. ~bout fiv&lt;·
Donald C. Ward, Rebecca A.
month~
~'1'1\
hut nriJrimdly
Ward,
lot,
Salisbury,
wm: frnm lhl' nuyfnn ;lrPH
Pomeroy.
John M. Wella to Jay Hall,
Jr., 2810 acres, Lebanon.
Charles W. Cornell, Jr.,
affidavit, Meigs. ·
Roger Lee Starcher,
Jacqueline K. Starcher, C.
Robert Kautz, Judy Ann
Mo,lly rlear tonight. Lows
Kautz, Terry Leon Starcher, in thr low 40s . Partly cloudy
Catherine A. starcher to C. Friday. Highs in thr low to
Robert Kautz, Judy Ann mid 70s ThP rham•r- of rain is
Kautz, IO.OOO!acres, Chester. rwar zero tonight.
Esther Bonn Slmplon,
James E. Simpson to Sandra
Jean Ro'!lb,lots, Middleport.
Mary E. Wataon to Nelson
D. Wataon, lots, Pomeroy.
Roy Jones, Grace Jones to
William M. Jones, Deborah
A. Jones, 5.644 acres, Sutton.
Ola St. Clair to Roger D.
Young, Yvonne S: Young, 9.2
acres, Bedford.
• CubaN. Vickers to Keith R.
Brandeberry, lot, Mld•dlepofl.
'
Keith R. Brand~ berry,
Evelyn Brandeberry to D. L.
B. Associates, lot, Middlejlort.
Larry J. Pettit, Diana P.
Pettit to Elmer Tufts, Albert
Tromm, lots, Pomeroy,
Salls
· Allee Rhodes Stelzer,
Joseph Stelzer to Jolin
Pickens, Virginia Pickens,
two-thirds Int. in 34.5 acres,
Lebanon.
Guy Swadley, Geraldine
Swadley to Ray Rouse, Orpha
Rouse, 1.03 acres .
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Raymond L. Oliver, Clirol
S. Oliver, 1.008 acre, SuttOn.
Arcllle E. Lee, June P, Lee
to Lester M. Ohlinger,
CaroJyri L. Ohlinger, 1.098
acre, Sutton.
Geol'l!ia E. Oller, dec. to
George S. Oiler, certificate of
tranaferr, Middleport.
Geol'l!e S. Oller, Virginia
Oiler t o G!!De C, Oiler, lot ,
Middleport .

Weather

bury: .

Poster contest
ends tomorrow

Therrnn .Johnson, Roy Miller
nnd navid Glot&gt;ckner, and
~••il ,ronservation Pe,.,.onnel
lloyd Ruth, Rei&lt;l Vounl! and
Oonald Mora , will judr,e the
posters. whirh must ('onvey a
messal!e about soil and-or
water co nserva"tion , en·
vironmental pollution or
wildlife preservation.
An environmental film,
"Our Land- ·Needs Your
Help", was shown In most
el~mPDtary schools In the
county in preparation for the
contest, and booklets,
''America's Conservation
nistrirls - The Idea That
Worked", were distributed to
all fourth grade students by
Leola Young, District
serrrtary, as pert ' of •the
ni strlrl's
e duca~ional

A l'nnRf'rvatiOn po~oo'tt•r c•nn.

h"'t ••pon"'&gt;r''!l hy the M!'i~!~
S.:lll ~nd WatPr ron~f'ry~tion
Tli~trirt rswrm will .nd
F'rid~y Only fourth ~r•dto
'tudrnls are eligible to enter
(lOP poster in rompt'tition
with their own school mates.
A first place, winnlnl! a
blur ribbon and three silver
dollars: a second plare, winninl! a red ribbon and two
silver dollars, and a third
plar~, winninl! a white ribbon
and one silver dollar, will he
selected frorh each school.
All participants will receive a
conservation district pencil.
A champion ami a r~serve
champion, 'to be selected
from first place winners from
all srhools, will each bo
awarded a trohy.
SWCD supervisors, Rex
Shrnrfirlrl 'rom 'T'helss

See me to save up lo
one half of what you
are curr~mlly paying
for your business insurance.
Erie is above alt in

TIIY OUR .

EXTRA
CRISPY
KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

CRaNS
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992 -5432

Pomeroy, 0 .

Optometric Vision Center
110 MECHANIC STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
992-3279

OPTOMETRISTS:

'

• A. JACKSON BAILES
~T. JAY BRADsHAW

pro~ram .

.

MAALOX

CEPACOL

12oL

MOUTHWASt.l
\----I

GARGLE

18

oz.

BOTTLE

:r~~smmiiiiiin
••
111R.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Danny
Buffington, Pomeroy ; Debbie
Pridemore, Pomeroy; Addie
·Pullins, Pomeroy ; Henry
Turner, Pomeroy : Bobby
Roy, Racine ; Tammy
Cremeans, Coolville; Marie
Custer, · Pomeroy; ~amela
Contin, RuUand.
Discharged-James Sellers,
June Cremeans, Karla Rue.

BOTILE
Number one
selling antacid
• Not
Pleasant Taathilll
'•

.•

'

'

TUSSY

CREAM

REG. 12.29

DEODORANT

ONLY

ONLY

'•

8. OZ:'

2 oz.

JOHNKAUFF

REG. 89'

INSURANCE

ONLY

Llntoln Middl~:~port. o.
997-3969

'

• I :

Editors~ •

•

(Continued from page 1)
aald Leroy
Clemena, executive edltu- af
the Elgin (Ill.) Courier-News.
"But I also I!I)M!ct to see an
awful lot o( - - In jail
before than."
Mary O'Melvtny, a lawyer
wbo repre.ud Lt. Col.
Anthmy HeliJst, n- libel
llllt .,alnat CBS and others
JI'Ompted the ruling, said
: • • "the abWty of the preas to
: truthflllly report on events of
; ' ' · public
Interest
and
, Information his never been
" . at I.-In thla cue" because
' "knowing lalaehoOds and
' ' dellbenle diltortlona have no
place
In
the
Firat
Amellllmlitt's pro&amp;ecllon af
,free debate."

be ~changed,"

Marlboro
LIGHTS

LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE
..... 4&amp;11 •-""'

Wiu'lTing;. The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

.:;
mg nicotine av.per cigarette,FTC Report May' 78.100 's: 1

• ••

mg mcotme av. per cigarette by FTCMethod.

I

Z

IMJY.

• . . · -PUBJ.IC Nm"ICF.
. : Pllbllc hearings will he held
on April 30, 1979 and May I,
, · 11179 at 7:30 P.M. downstairs
' · at Villlll(e Hall, 7Z1 Race St.,
' : Middleport, Ohio. Pu.,..., of
1
. the hearin~s Is to providt
• ; citizen Input before the filing
• of an application for a llinglt
Pw pose Grant under the
Community Development
Rlock Grant Small Cities Proepm. 11le applleatlon is for
1130,300 to pi'O\'Ide seW8ge
• IM'Vke for the area of Rroad, · . ftY Stret&gt;t below Pari!" St.,
:JI3m St., Railroad.., st . .and
PJge St. All lnterestf'd
·tliii'JI!na art&gt; Invited to att!'lld.
For turther ln!OI'tnlltijlll rointa(t the Mayor's Office, 'IX1
Race street, Mlddltport,

1&lt;JIIn4i7110. ,
,21 Mpr. 11, 10)

SEfiGEANT'S
SENTRY IV

CREST OR OOLGATE'

TOOTHPASTE
•
•

1 oi.
.
Faster, ~ore powerfUl all day!

Able to P.lay and play!
Lookdownl
S~r Sneak•rr.Misln town!
Check out the genuine-Superman emblem
Oil these Iough blue nylon/grey suede
s1yles. Kids need 5hoes that are fast moving
and rugg~ft. ]Uslllke lhe Man Ot Steel.
This Is a job lor Sl,lper Sneaker! Comes
wl1h a l'ree Kid Power comic book.
.

McKESSON
ASPIRIN

ONLY

HEAVEN
SENT

FW &amp; liCK COLlAR
REG. 13.29

.,..

ONLY

20Q tABLETS

REG. 11.19

.. '"

ONLY

'

oz.

7.00

1

ONLY

$350

BETTY OHliNGER

POMEROY, 0.

3.5
REG.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. MAfN

EAU DE PARFUM
NATURAL
... SP.RAY MIST

\J/

'

·'I

'

(

�· 10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlep&lt;&gt;r1 ·P~mt·roy . 0 .. Thursday. Afll'. l9, l!l7n

.

1

, ..

Groundbreaking event April 25
RIO GRANOF, - Rio nt&gt;t'drd spHC't' for tht- rollfgt-'~
Grande College and C&lt;m- ar1sprn~rams.
munity College . will hold
The program for tht•
groundbreaking &lt;-errmonirs ~roundbi'E'aking will include ·
for its fine and pt&gt;rforming rommrnts by hoards of
ar1s center April 24, 10 : ~0 truslet• memb&lt;&gt;rs, the rola.m .
le~e's farul!y and " perThe $2.25 million strurturP formant•es by Rio Orandr
will house a 500 seat t!Watrr. students currently involved
television , graphir arts, in the t•ollege's arb pr&lt;&gt;reramic painting and musir grams.
-·
arras. Fundt'd by the State of
Events
begin with a
Ohio, the re_n_ter wil provide welroJlle E¥_ Rio Orande

Gallia-~eigs CETA furading is anno~Pf.ced . [

Patrol ·

prrsidrnt Dr. Prml C". fh1yj ·~ .
foli&lt;&gt;wt'd by an invoc"atinn h~·
Dr. f'hllrlr. Wt't'd.
Following the invor11tion.
mrmb!'rs of the ~&gt;Nord• of
trust!'t&gt;s of Rio Grande Collt'f!r and Rio flrdndr CommunityCollege will speak.
Thfo Rio flrande Choir and
Chorale will ·perform
lhroul(hout tb!' ('t'remonie.
and the works of Rio Omde
studt&gt;nt MarJe F'ulmer. a

l!urnmnnkHliun~ major from
7.;mt•svillr. willb!'onvit•w .
Farulty mrmbt•rs t•urrrnt ·.
ly prarlldng f&lt;&gt;r tht•ir upc·oming dinner tht'atrr prndurtinn
of Neil Simon 's "fl&lt;~l's
· F'avuritr"willalsoper!orrn.
nr . .lark Hart , rhairman of
the Communicative Arts
J1topartment at the. t-ollege,
will SJ&gt;Pak hrieny prP!'eding
Four person~ were injured
theartual groundbrraklng .
durin
g two
accidents
A r..,.;.plion and publir
investigated Wednesday by
•----------~----------... . -... .· - - display
of objrrl•
from the Gallia-Meigs Post,
lht&gt; C'Ornfrstone
oft.ken
rorrununiHigh~ay Patrol,
''ty Hall, whirh was demolishAn Ashland, Keotucky,
ed to make room lor the new inan was cited on a charge of
sln~t·ture, will ronrlude the
DWI following a twcrvehicle
a&lt;'liv!tirs.
•
collision on SR !liO, sevenThe· public is invited to at- tenths of a mile south of U.S.
tPnd all of the artivilis which 30, at 8:29. p:m.
· will t.ke place at the s it~ of
Officers report that a ·
tb!' new stn~duft', just off the ·vehicle opera led by Gloria
C~lle~e green ned to Allen
Snyder, 24, Gallipolis, hacked
Hall. The rerepti011. and in from a private lot onto 160,
raSl' of rain the entire and was struck by an auto
N'remony, will take plare in driven by John Seward, 20,
tb!' Jrann~lte navis I jbrary. Ashland.
Snyder claimed injury and
~
was transported by the Gallia .
. • Volunteer Squad to Holzer
Medical Center, w~re she ·
SEEKSDIVORCE
was treated for minor
In Meigs County Cudge injuries, and released.
Joheas Court Juanita • Both vehicles Incurred
Wilkinson, Pomeroy flied suit moderate damage:
'
for
divorce against Gerald P.
Two persons were injured
, 992-366~ ·
Wilkinson, Pomeroy.
during an accident on U.S. 30,
at the junction of SR 279, at
8: IS a .m.,
~
Officers report that an auto
operated by Norman Ball, 33,
West Chester, 0.., had stopped
in traffic in the west boWJd
lane.
A vehicle driven by Joseph
Stover, 17, Jackson, well! out
of control while passing 8 line
of vehicles in the east bo\IJid
lane. The Stover vehicle sUd
across the medium and
struck t~ Ball auto.
Stover and a passenger,
,.1
!
.
•
.
Christine Grow, 17, Jackson,
clalnied injury and were
transpol'led by the Gallia 1
Volunteer Squad to Jfolzer
Medical Center. ,
•
Stover was treated . for
abrasions and released.
Grow was treated for
abrasions and lacerations,
and released.
· ·
Ball claimed injury. but
was not Immediately treated. '
Bo.th .vehicles incurred
heavy damage. Slover was
f

will

charges

manDWI '

RADIO SHACK .

Tlw fund~ go to publir and Union, Van . Wert, Vinton;
om-profit agenries in the Washington, Williams llll\l
following rountles :
· Wyandot.
Adams, Ashland , Auglalze,
,.
· ~Jmont, Rrown, r.arroll, . ~ .. ---.:or.~_.....,..._.._ ;
•,..... ampa i""
,... , CII
. nton , c~•-""'""-"'·
Your "Extra Touch"
ton, CraWford, Darke, De·
FlotisfSince 1957
fiance, F.rie , Fairf.leld,
Fayette, Fulton , Gallia,
Guernsey, Hancock, Hardin,
Harrison, Henry, Highland,
.Hocking, Holmes, Huron,
.
.larkson, Jeff~rson. Knox,
FLORIST
Lawrence, J.o~an, Madison,
PH . 992-2644
Meigs, Mercer, Miami,
MEETING FRIDAY
Monroe, Morgan, MuskThere will be a headstart ingum, Noble, Ottawa,
352 E. Main , Pomeroy
'\'our'FTD Florist
meeting for parents at ' the Paulding, Pickaway, Pike,
headstart center In Rllclne, Putnam, Ros, Sandusky, ~----..--....,.....,..._
Friday, April 20, at 1 p.m. · Seneca, Shelby, 'J'uscarawl!!..
('()f ,l!MRlTS, Ohio I API The spending of $7.5 million
In ft'drral Comprehep~ive
F.mp!rlymt•nl and Tralnin~
Art fund~ was ttnnounn"£1 .
Tu ~s day by the arl·
minlstrativr services depart·
ment:
The money is to provide
traini nl( and jobs in 57 rounlies in tb!' state Summer
Youth Employment Pro·
gram.

'79

~

.

OPEN
Mon.-sat.

12-6 Sunday

,,.___IJi!ll•••••l

BRINGS -TOP ACT TO TOWN

I!

You'll never forget our. 1st Anniversary Sale. Everything
reduced for 4 Hours ONLY!
Many items below cost. There
w.ill be no deliveries during the
sale,
because all our
employees will be on the sales
floor to serve you.

..
I•

XL-100

19"

di"90naa

noll
RCA

' .

Homelltee 380
• Vibration isolation subdues vibration between the
engine and the handles .for less fatigue . .. better
control
1
• Loop scavenged engIne has ram intake porting for
. more horsepower .with greater fuel economy ·
• Automati c oiling gives smoother cutting with less
chain wear
• Chain tensioning screw allows convenient chain
adjustment
.
•
·
• Dual chamber Soft'oneTM muffler keeps noise
.
·'
levels down·
•. Displacement 3.5 cu. in. (57.4Cc) with hemi-head
design

12"
._.,.

SPECIAL

.THIS WEEK

THIS.WEEK

...
MASSENET • K2520
Mediterranean styling.
dturadbleb,::oo~
Wood-grained finish applied
d 15 n top and ends. Fron an
pro uc o ood Dark Oak color (K2520DE)
simulated wl (K2520P). Castoro. Also with
or Pecan c~nd 111 EWJo Remote Control :
5 pace
BUSONI• SK2521P
•

so

REGULAR '339.95

nftiJ
U

*394°

Sportable
Mode l AC012

BLACK &amp; WHITE

..

MODEL Dl250

'94 ~

·RK-

,.

'

,

~

..

.:

MODEL K2510W

"

.,..

~

'

'a· lawn~

REG. '699.96'

$

•s

The TCHAtKOWSKY • K1101C

STAND

HEAVY
DUTY
.
.

DRYER

4

$224

.

REGUlAR $249.00 ·
SPECIAL

-

S~w C!l•ln

Wedges ·
51h INCH
'2.59
•

lHIS WEEK

REG. '279.95
Model LFE5.00

Model
EET132DW

0

File Guide
•nd File

'5.39

9
Cove1'81Sc•bberda · .

'125

..

•
'14.iilth '13.76
Rount~lle -l6' inch '16.20
'1.59

~park

REFRIGERATOR
13.0 CU. FT. · .

REG •. '399.95

SUGtm.Y DAMAGED

WH.IRLPOOL
DISHWASHER .

'100

., REG, '384.95.
Model sDf5ooO

WASHER
-~

$294

00 ·:

· REG. '349.95
Model LFA:t:tiiiU

OFF

WHIRLPOOL 17 CU. FT.
NO FROST

REFRIGE.RATOR
REGULAR
'499.95

Pluge

'1.69

.

•

ONLY

Grease Gun 2.69

REG.
I

HOURS

Homelite- pumps.·
Ready, ·rugged
and reliable.

•394

REGULAR '629

DISH WASHER

·'

.

25" COLOR T.V.

2·5 " ·COLOR T.V•

·WhirlP.QAgl

·Whirlpool

,.

$195~

LOW AS

,..., ..

The CHADWICK • K2518M
Early American styling.
Maple wood-grained finish applied to
durable wood products ori top and ends.
Gallery, front and feet of simulated
-wood. Casters.

SPECIAL

1

•

.,,

'119.95

mower ca n go ... farther out than
an electric can reach . • On tv. 7V•

SPECIAL
THIS

RCA
Black I Whtte

REG.
'699.95

Gasolll'!e-Powered Strlng 'Trimmer

REGUlAR
1149.95

:!:: LITTON.

0

25" COLOR T.V.

THE ·HOMEUTI:ST-100

lbs. (lightest .9asoline trimmer
made)• E~~:clus1ve Idle-Liner"' fea·
tu re advances string only when
idling - Saves plants from unexpected stri ng advance • 20'' cut·
ling path (larg est of any string.
trimmer) • Homelite t .3 hp
2-cycle engi ne • Adju st abl e
handle for better balance • Fuel
tank in handle for easier refueling
• Uses large, high-quality .095"
dia . string

Regular '449.95 ·

lpo: ••••

~.

• Trims closer in than

. (INSTAllATION AVAILABLE)

$594

when 1)9wer.goes off.
. The Portable
Power Station ...
Homellte" Emergency
·Standby Generator.

,HSB·SO

'3!~

~ .• Plus

MAKEs··. sHORT WOR·K·OF LONG TREES!

~~~if~~co~-~m~·!es~o~n~s~v~o~ng~~~

SYNTHETIC TURF CARPET ·

Meal-In-One· Microwave.

XL-100 .

"' STA.NDS "'"

It\. Parts

.

'

FREE REFRESHMENTS

· Regular '680.

TV

'

REGULAR
'1999

19'dlaaon•l

Jh~ Adair
Model FC44 1

color TV with 100% solid state
XtendedLife chassis

operation .

.

:~: OZITE

Our
RCA
lowest
XL-100
price ever
25"
diagonal
for an XL-100
'
·console with
Xtended Life·
chassis
J!~~~§!~~~y;jj

RCA

I~..!======.:========~=:;::::::;;:::;::::;::;::!.~J · cited on a charge of."l'eckless· ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ

992-2139

4 ·HOURS
O'N LY

REG. '299.95

~594 00

DIRECTLY FROM ENTERTAINMENT CAPITALS
LAKE TAHOE ON ·THE BILL WITH DON RICKLES
STARDUST IN LAS VEGAS

WIST 2ND ST., POMEROY

RANGES

MOND~Y. : APRIL .23rd

'

"The Richard Kimble Show" .

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS COMPANY ,

GAS or ELEC.

ON~Y

6 p.M. TIL 10 P.M.

l

·Eating good farm cooking is always great,
but there's something special about eating · ·
farm fresh food in a restaurant that's located
right at the farm .
At Bob Evan's Sausage Shop you not only
get delicious farm-size helpings of your favorite farm dishes, but you get true farm atmosphere and friendly service to go with them .
So pack your kids in the car and drive on
over. We hope to see you soon .

.

c...,

M ode l 358W·1

ENJOY
FRESH FARM COOKING
RIGHT AT .THE FARM.

MIDDL£PORT .

~Mogle

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
MONDAY,· APRIL 23rd

.,

407 P'EARL ST.

I

{{.L

.

ODDS
&amp;
ENDS

'39

00

WHIRLPOOL LAIGI CAPACITY

·WASHER ·r·.
GOLD
COLOR

,.50.

0FF

�_12-The OailySenHnel, Mlddleport·Pnmerov, 0., Thursday, Apt· 19, l!l'l9
Frldoy, April 20

Bernice Bede Osol

V•or

Aprtl20, 1979

•

Set lofty goals for yourself this
coming year If you don 't accept second best you can
attain that Which you go after .

TAURUS

(April

ZO·Miy

20

holds tor. you Send tor your
Astra-Graph Letter by mailing
S1 for each to Astra-Graph ,
P.O. BoK -489, Radio City Station, N. 'f . 10019. Be sure to
specify birth sign .

I

A!OSISTANT ADM INISTRATO R wi tl1
nt-.11ilir&gt;s an~ knowiPCfgf' of
hon~~IPPping ,

typing. repor·
finn . pClsting ledqE"rS royrnlf,
gran ! w nling, C'iNifol rtuti P'nnrt lioi!IOM fN thf' Soorci o f
Hf"n1th. A nnua l solory S7A98 .
Su hmlt tPsumM hy Arrll 30,
1979 tl M ei g~ Cn. H•o1th OC"'pt .
P Bow 63.1 PnmProy . &lt;?H
SANITARIAN wi th tleg rPP to con·
d 1•rl ond C'orry out stotr man
dC'ttPd on d other C"Ounty pro
~rC!mS in Meigs \ounty. Annual
c;nfo ry $8711 '10
Subm i t
rf'~llmPs hy April 30 , 1979 to
MPigs Co . Health DPpt .. PO Box

TV AND
ELECTRONICS

0

SALES &amp; SERVICE
39260 Bradbury Rd.
992 -2276

GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Em·
belllshlng the racts In order to

.631 . Pom~roy. OH

gel others to sit up and take
nonce will work against you
today . Cover your mouth It you
start to blurt out something
CANCER (June 21.July 22) A lOST· MAN'S wallet between To ll
ill Hous@ Needs a ll papPrs 1n
pal thinks that what you have in
wa llet desperah•ly Contnrt 740
your pocket belongs to him ,
C"ondor Sl , Pome roy or Doily
too, and may try to put the bite
Sent1nel
on you. Be cqreful, he could
- .
.
catch you off-guard.
FOUND: YOUNG fernoiE" OobPrLEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don 't let
mon with rollor Near Hoh$on
pride stop you from a reconcitl ..
'1'11-7501
. . - ..
ation 1f you and your mate have lOST
MALf Irish Setter- Appr01r
a t1ff today . It' s mut;h nicer to
7 yrs. old Areo of Bod•cm on
patch things up than to punch 1t
Ba'-hon Rd . Childrpn's pf"f.
out.
RPword. 949·1466

RN NffD£0 lor s p~ri al pro1~ct
thnt will he e nding SepiPmber
:30, Jq7~ . SS .67 on 11our . Subn,it
rf'SlH""' by April 30 1~79 to
Meigs Co HPo!th Dept , P.O Box
631 Pomp r?y '?h~o
,
HANDY MAN for roofing,
c. hingiPs, spou ting, !:ome durt
war ~ . roof rE&gt;polr . Must bP e~C ­
pNiPntPrl, ~ t,.ody wor~ Write
In Po Box 150. Pt PI@O~ont' WV
?5550.

ally you have good work habits,
but today you could feet a little
sluggish and may shrug your
responsibilities off onto others.
They 'll resent it.

TRANSFER OF FUNDS
Notice IS hereby glvtJn that

the 17th day of April , 1979,
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. Z3) Silly on
the undersigned Petitioners

SCORPIO (Oct. 2._Nav. 22)

ence.
SAGITTAIUUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Jumping to conclusions

tiled a petition In the Court of
Common Pleas of Meigs
County, Ohio , being Case No.
j·17 , 151 on the docket of said
court, asking that $3,000.00 be
transferred from the General
Fund - to the Gas Fund, as
provided by law, for the
reasons ut forth" In said
petition ; and that s~id
petition will be set for hear1n0
on th~ '28th day of Apr il, 19797

may create a misunderstanding
which could cause big problems for you today . Listen
carefully to all that's said and ask QuesUons!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jtn. It)
An extravagant friend could
lead you astray today If you 're
not careful. You know your
limit, both with spending and
consumption , so exercise dis·

clpJine.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 11)
You have good leadership qual·
Illes today II you take the time

w r PC' ~er

oftE&gt;r 5pm .

Cn ll949 ·7'650

Frye's

WANT TO buy. old 45 and 78

phnMgroph recorrl s Colt
9'91·6370 or Con toft Marlin Furnitune
WANT TO buy old jewelry Coli
qq7.5261 or wriiP l&lt;oy CrC'II. 87
S 2nd . M.Iddl~p~r! &lt;?H
GOOD lOCUST posts. 997·5590 or

PUBLIC AUCTION

99?· '1841

SATURDAY, APRIL 21 AT 10:30 A.M.
SMILES WEST OF CHESTERHILL, OHIO
{MORGAN COUNTY I

- - Yard
- - - Sale
--

- -

Take St. Rt. 377 through Pennsville to Chesterhill turn west onto St. Rt. SSS at the Quaker State Filling
Station for 5 miles to the G.or~ Howard Farms, 16
miles southwest of McConnelsville, Ohio. Follow signs.
Retiring from farm - Farm of 187 acres tor sele- extra~ood pasture &amp; farm land - well watered, 4 gas
wells, lot good..timber, lot road frontage w-beautilul
I
building sites, Ia rAe modern home, · j:IQOd barn.
garages, outbuildlnJIS, etc. Listed w-Mercer RealtY • ·
Co., MarieHa, Ohio.
·-· ·,

FARM MACHINERY,CAMPER, TOOLS, HAY,
LUMBER , ETC. TO RIO SOLD f':T t :30 P.M .
Farmall Supf.&gt;r H tractor, Massey Ferguson tractor
(20) w·loaded tires ; 1949 Ford tractor In excellent con
dition, good rubber ; good International (Model .46)
baler; 7 ft. Massey Ferguson hay conditioner ; 7 ft.
John · Deere pull disc CKB }; International manure
spreader on rubber; Massey Ferguson side delivery
rak e, extra good ; Massey Ferguson 2 gang la1 in .
plows; Massf.&gt;y Ferguson cultivators; Mi'lssey
Ferguson 3 pt. manure loader w ·dlrf scoop; John
Deere 7ft. mower ; International corn planter {horse

drawn) w-3 pt. stub tongue; 511 brush hog, 3 pt.; slip
scraper, 3 pt ; 28 ft _ C!~ elevator w ·m otor ( hay or
grain) ; 15ft. aluminum grain elevator w ·motor; two
good flatbed wagons on rubber w 14 ln. grAin bee! on
one, 14ft. long , lime spreader on steel (extra wheels) ;
Old dble. cultipacker ; drag harrow; single potato plow;
field sprayer, barrel type complete, ,3 pt.; 7 shovel
cultivator; 13 pt. cattle t:ack &amp; grain bed for GMC ; left
hand braking plow ; HD 8 ton ·ch!!lln hoist .complete w·
hooks &amp; pulfeys, manual ; HD HYD lift for garage, por ·
table , twin cyl. traller type compressor W·Wisconsln
motor, portable; stationary draw bar ; tractor &amp; truck
chains; truck flares ; 11ft . Little Champ self contained
cab over camper w -auto. legs, complete w ·bottled gas,
stove w ·fan, fur.nace, shower·bath , sleeps s, like new,

.

-

VARD SAL£. April 18th thru 2ht.
685 locust S!., Middleport,

Ohio

. - - . . " - . - . . .
GARAGE SAlE . .48S Corner of

.

.

South 4th ond lincoln, Mfd.
dle port April 70th ond 21U.
Storts
9om .
Clothing .
, glnuwore . A\lon etc Cleon
me rrhondlse , so mething for
pveryone.
.
- THREE FAMilY Yard Sole. 20tl1
ond 21st, Brodfo rd's hou se In

ROlliNG ACRfS

OLD

ITEMS,

FUR -

NISHINGS, ETC: Ant, peper ba:Jer w ·stencll ; horse
drawn grain drill on steel w·orlglnal stencil rvan
Brunt) ; wicker des!( w ·chalr, verv unusual ; orga:n
stool ; 2 iron beds ; sectional bookcase w -glass doors;
coal heater ; 13 player plano rolls ; old pictures ; A lad·
din lamp; buggy frame; lg. &amp; small woven baskets;
~ opper boiler ; 2 burner oil stove ; lard P,ress; sausage
grinder ; con~rvo canner ; oil h~ater ; wooden arm
chair; other old chairs; old sewing machine; old radio ;
pitcher pump, egg baskets, lanterns, tie picks( chicken
crates. etc .; old records ; fruit jars ; h~y fork; single &amp;
dble trees; cherry swivel top stand; 2 new Oriental
rugs 1 tt . x~'h fl. and 7ft. x S'h ft. ) ; 2 pc. living room
suite; component amplifier w.-speaker &amp; turn table;
VIctor chest freezer C3 doors) ; Coldspot refrfgenttor,
Maytag wringer washer ; homemade wooden boat,·
charcoal grill w ·rotlsserle : BB gun, and many other
Items not listed.
NothJng shown before day of sale. Lunch on premlles.

-

•

.1.-

!

hauling Coli

~ - 5R5B .

~a_le

Soles . InC' EQuipmen t ond su p·
r liPs 997-57'1J

bobysitf~r will do '
hnbysift1n g m my h ome,
F' rsumes ovoi)able 9cr:J 6327.

•

-

•

•

+

•

•

•

•

•

3 "• ceres in Pomeroy SE~ iUdecf '
wooded oreo on top of hill.
o.,erlooks river . Wate r , elec·
tric ovoiloble 99:1· 3886
·- ·
-·--·-REAl EST ATE loon s Purchose ond
refinan ce 30 yeor terms , VA .

No money down (eligible
vE'teron s). FHA - As l ow os 3
per rent down (non-veterans)
Ir e land Mor'tgoge Co ., n E
Stofe, .4.thens. 614-592·3051
•

-

•

-

•

+

•

•

-

•

-

MODERN THREE bedroom house.
full basement: flreploc@. fully
carpet e d, c~nlrol air , enclosed •
sun p o rch, located on 6 1 '~ acres '

PHO"E .

niE DAILY SENnNB.
992-2156

on CR 28, oppro)(. 3 miles from
Racine. If interested contort
lorry Wolfe 94q. 2936 weekends
ond afte,~_5 e11enings .

Ph. 99~ - 2Sll1 or 992-2082

I'UIZ-1174

Real Estate for Sale

Ohio

fully

in·

Val~. Roofing

POMEROY,Q

.••

fi •

·---

-

OVERLOOKS A LOVELY
LAKE - 1978 Holly Park
Mobile ptus 48 acres or
grovnd. Has ' s ft. expando
and 1.4x36 add a room .
Loads of deck with bu iltIns Central air.

CLOSE

•

•

•

•

•

-

+

full bae ment. $77,300.00.
24 ACRES with lovely ~
year old split entry home. 3
bedrooms , lovely kitchen,
bath, ·own water system.
Rec. room, 1 many other
features. $38,500 00

LOVELY BRICK 3
· bedrooms, bath, nlte kitchen, fireplace, hardwoOd
floors, patio, porch, IBrge
lot . . Excellent for the

money . $31,800.00.
21 ACRES with many
building sites and close in
Electric
and
water:
e~vallable .
WoOds , small
pond, many other features.

$23,000 00.
'fHE EASY WAY TO SELL
Y(hen you want to
change homes, you'll have
plenty of problems as it is
without worrvlng abOut

SELLING YOUR HOUSE.
Let an expert do that!
Won't cost a cent UNTIL

and UNLESS we get you
the desired RESULTS!
LIST NOW.
t:\EALTORS
HENRY E. CLELANO SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
992·2259
992-6191

home maintenance -

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

new ,

and repair. Storm doors :
and windows. All work
.guaranteed. 20 years eJr-

Free

extimates.

TWO STORY hcuti!o. aluminum
sldlng 3 bedrooms , woll to
wall farpetlng , 2 boths , noturol
wood cabinets. dlst-lwosher.
t:tnroge ond ~ hop Call 9Aq· '1172

- . . -.

FROM 5 to 80 Ocres, !J miles C&gt;ltl of

E1;,~~~7~;;:-~:~ ~eig~

.,~!!ft

.i

m i::S.COIId StrHl
SPECIAL Here's a 1
room older home with bath,
dbl. garage and workshop.
Dr i lled well , hot water,
wood burner , garden,
young bearing fruit .trees
and small s t~eam . only

Co.,I)

mifPs from Wilke11vllle. Cou4
WotPr, SE'\IPrOI goo d building
~f 1 f"S . Pl1(\l."t' 1 ·304-67!5 5AS5
I'

.

Phone 992-2342

(Answers tomorrow)

.

BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Com•
plete Service . Phone 949-248?
or 9.49· 2000 . Racine, Ohio, Crltt
.

:

- · - - · - · · · ·-

-

RfPAtR --

Sweepers, toasters , Irons, oil
smoll appliances lown moer,
next to State .,_.lghwoy Goroge
on Route 7 . 985 ·3825. .
s~wiNG -MACH-IN-E -R~p~fr~, -s~rv1 ce~ all mokes, 'X12·278a1 The
Fabr ic · Shop,
Po meroy,
Authorized Singer Soles ond
S e!v~c~ . ~~ s~a! p~n. S~ls~o~s ._
EXCAVATING . doter. loader ond
backhoe work : dump tru cks
ond to-boys for h ire , will hduf
fill dirt, top soli. limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jeffers, day phone 992· 701!9. night
ph_o~e ?9?·~5~5 ~r-~·.52_32_. •
dm·er , bockho~

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Complete

Service. Phone 992·2419 .

···--···-····-

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your optJrotors
license? Phone 992· 2143.

e.C• ELEcTRicAL Co~tr~cta;

Or cheap home with bath,
clty1 water in small village

? r_882'·~4~4.: - - . - " . " .•
HOWfRY AND MARTIN Ex-

75 ACRES - Really some
nice-timber and lots of good
A ·frame home sites located
In Pomeroy.
4' '~ ACRES - Rural water ,
electric, 8 room house,
modern inside and 2 car

C'Ovotlng
septic systems
do::rer , backhoe Rt 1.43. Phon•

t (_614 ) _6~8-?331 , - - - . . .
1N STOCK for 1mrn4Kfiote del ivery:
various sizes of pool kits. Do· If·
yourself or let us install for you .

ingham, 2 r.tl ce bedroom'
ran ch home with bath , din ·
ing , utfllty, baseboard
heat, '2 porches, garage and
::14 acres Only $17,500.

_ ~--Auc_ t,_,i;:,:D:;
ns, _ _---'
AUCT19N FJRDAY ' 6 pm.
Trurlcloods from Cinc\nnotl.
furniture , Including
bedroom sets, 2 or 3 pie-ce livIng . room sets, recliners,:
rockers, etc lots ol misc. Ohio _
River&gt; Auction, 337 High St ..

Lots of

NOW IS THE TIME TO
CALL US. WE HAVE A
LARGE WAITING LIST
FOR PROPERTIES: DIAL
992·3325.
HELEN L., GORDON 8.,
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
"REALTt&gt;D u•nt:IATI;$,

DOWNING-CHILDS.
Bioker· .
Bill, .Br.

·Rodney,

Mgr·.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

17 Overfill
ltGoodluck
object

Z3 Man)umclle

number

10 Sholl' one's

age • ,
It Pe~y
18Castout

111 OkJahoma

city

Z1 Person . ZO Family
of largesse
member
Z8 Hair care ' Z1 One,
product

in Toulon

Ylltei'day'a .U.wer
2% One and
33 Fellow

only
!f Fonnl c
acid source

Z5Functlon

zs Brenda Z8 Setback
30 Tum In·

lonner : sl.

3% Open to
bribery

3f Engage

35 Ac tresa

Sorcerers" 10.

ill Impala, ,

81 1 6 1

---'---..,...-:~--D-----'---_:.._

e.g.
tZ Girl's name

Final word r.--,;-~-r.;-rc-

Where's

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

30·~De~~p~r.~v!ed~~4+~ ~t-t-H~:~~r~ts~s~h~o~w~their worst

Pert.

33 Late

Widow
erown?
lt'G

Cuban bero

~&lt;-rr..-- ~~~j:.;Pu.:t~11n;;.to~~1.1:~+-+-lf-+-+-+-

"

past

r

eviction

time!

NORTH
• 7843

address?
Puglliltic
settlll8

Momar.
e.g.

or
FRANK &amp; ERNIE

"' A

95

• J 82
WEST
EAST
• A a5
• KQJ9
• to a 7 2
• B4
t U
t A3 2
• g753
• K Q 10 8

SOUTH
• 10 2
• KJ 93
t K Q 10 7 4
• A4
Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

114~

SANTA. J(NOWS
If YoU'Ve I&amp;EN NAUGJif"(
~ NIC:.! IN Di!c:eMIE.fil~
t

North East

IERNJt, .Ju'r' :t
Bi,. li! c:.A/U'"f'

Ptl.l
Pau
Pa1111

ICt!P TRAciC. AUV!AR!

I.

Pau
Pau

- MobileHomes forSale

--------

1967 TOTAl ELECTRIC mobJio

home, furnllhed , 3 bedr. ·
washer and dryer. Air conditioned. 1 lot, ~1 0 ft. frontage.
$12,000 Phone 7&lt;12-2826.
I· • -

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

·-1955 Prairie Schoon•r, 28x8

bdr'
·
1965 General. 60x12 . 2ebdr.
1968 Elcona. 52x12, 2 bdr

-.

'

'

1%9 Buddy, 60x 12, &lt;I bdr.
1970 Sylvo, 60x12, 2 bdr.

1970 Costle, 60x12, 2 bdr.
1973 Arlington, 60x12, 2 bdr .
1973 Rk:fgewood, 70xU, 3bdr.
ICJ73 kirkwood, 50x12. 2 bdr '
B&amp;S MOillE HOME SAlfS

Appllonces :

und•rp!nnlng,

fireplace. 992. 5.413 or992·6118.

$.1200. .

.

---·----- '
t97t MOBILE HOME ti 12; 6o. 2
bedroom, furnished, fireplaCe.

~~ t:_O~dl!~n :.~!~~~~ ~3·?9_... ,:
''

South
It
1 NT
Pass

South did rebid to two dlamonds and did make nine
tricks lor a score of plua 110.
At this table South elected
to rebid one notrump. When
It came aroWld to Eaot, he
decided to compete with a
double. Thlo waa not a tak·
eout double . Not only did II
aak hla partner to pa1111, butlt
went one step further- It
asked his partner to open a
spade.
West was fully aware of
thiA. At leaal he ahould have
been. West did peas, but
West decided to open a heart
anyway.
This wasn't a happy
choice. South won In dummy
and started on diamonds.
East took his ace .and went
right alter spades, but all be
could gather In were lour
spade tricks plus that ace of
diamonds. South !JU!de an
overtrick for a score of plua 380 and a profit of seven
IMPs.
Had West opened a spade
the defense would have set
up their clubs before South
could clear diamonds. South
would have been down two
for minus 500 and an UIMP
lo1111.
/NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. I

997·3018
.lndoor·outdoor.
. . . . . ____
,. __ _
---~-

Paso
Obi.

Opening lead' • 2

- ····-··--·-FEMALE SPAYED catl . All shots .
r

H&amp;

• J 86

FRff PUPPIES. CoJI7•2-3063

I-

·

1: 15-News 13;" t :30-MovJe "I Dream Too Much' 1 17.
Barbara
2:-Niws 3; 3:110-Movle " The MaJitM FaJCOII" 3;
37EIItnlcgroup
3:30-News 17.
38 High3:50-Movio "Slim" 17; 5:110-Movle "Destiny 'of, a
strung
Spy" 3.
39 Behold! Lat. Tbundliy, April IS

;'A~d~Je_p&lt;&gt;rt, qhlo .• , ___ .

PT. PlfSANT, WV. ·
675-•~2· .
'
1973 FREEDOM MOillE homo.

Eve. 992-2449

Hogan's H.roea17.
11 :30-Johnny CarSCJrl 6, 15; Soap 6,13; NBA PLay.Otf
8; ABC News 33; Movie "YQV-Monster from Space"
10; Movie "Bombers 8 ·52" 17.
"'
12:110-Monty Python' s Flying Circus 33; 12:05Beretta 6, 13.
1:GO-Midnight Special 3, 15; Movre "Night of the

----·--• ___GIV_!A~a_y _ __

Gordon B.

Housi11q
Ht!iulqu, "tet s

Inc .

Soles,

m -sn•

garage. Need $27.500 .
NEW LISTING - Burl -

Htltn 1-.
Sut P. Murphy
RuHor A"oclotos

Bum9t;~rdner

0

note word

;e~-

mg Oh1 o Volley region. Six
days o week. . 24 hours service.
Emergency coil s. Coli 982-2952

yard . Only $35,000.
BUSINESS BUILDING -

crime
18 Bridal '

Bradford

········--·-··-

for {ust $12,000.

1:3&lt;&gt;-As The World Turns 8,10.
2:110-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live 6, 13; 2 :25-News
17 . •
2:30-Another World 3,15; Guiding Light a, 10; I Love
Lucy 17.
3:110-Generat Hospllal 6, 13; Lilias YQga &amp; You 20;
Banana Splits 17; Studio See 33 .
3:»-'Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; ·Dick
Cavett io: Wall Street Week 33.
4:110-MJster Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Grlllln 6; Addams Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Batman 10; Mike Douglas 13; Space Glanrs 17.
~ : 30-Bewllched 3; Gilligan's Js. 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Lucv Show 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
5:110-1 Dream of Jeennle 3i ; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister RQgers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Six MJIIJon Danar Man 13; Brady Bunch
15; I Dream of Jeannie 17.
5:30-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; - Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33.
6[GO-News3,B,t0,13,15; ABC News6; AndyGrlll1th 17;
, Hodgepodge . Lodve 20; Studio See 33.
·
6: 30-NBC News 3,15; ABC Ntws 13; Carel Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; My Three Sons17; Over
Easy 20,33.
7 :00-Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Sha Na Na
I; News 10; Love American Style 15; Carol Burnett
&amp; F.rlends 17; Dick Cavett 20; Big Blue MarbJt 33 .
7:30-Hee Haw Honeys3; $1.98 Beauty Show 6; Family
Feud 8, 10; $100,000 Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
The Country 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeii· Lehror
Reoort 20,33.
8:GO-Diff'rent ~trn&amp;r•" ~ . 15; Family 6, 13; ln,.rNIIhle
Hulk 8.1u; washington Week In -Revtew -20,33;
Night Gallery 17.
8:30-Basaball 3; Hello, Larry 15; Wall Street Week
_ 20,33; Night Gallery 11 .
9:110-Movlo "Drive Jn" 6, 13; Rockford Flies 15; Dukes
of Hazzard B, 10; Royer Heritage 20; Movie "The
Face of Fu Manchu" t7; Money News &amp; Views 33.
9:30-BoxJng 33.
10:110-The Duke lSl Dallas 8,10; Nows 20.
10:»-&lt;:onsumer S1lrvlval Kit 20.
11 :00-News3,8, 10,13,15;

ond ditcher, Charles lt. ~ Hot- ·
field. Block Hoe Servlee,
Rutland . Ohio. Pone 742·2008

9.
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2
bllfhs, modern kit. with
stove. Full basement and
tots of room for a garden or
children .
NICE OLDIE - 9 room!,
looks f ine inside, furn ished
kitchen, carpeting down ,
dining , small
f or mal
business building and large

Call us for all you( insurance or real estate .
proble"'s. Established 1868 .
)

"K I I I I]" [IJ

• 4-5-ttc

EXCAVATING,

$17,000.
FINE OLD HOME -

DOWNING-CHIUJI-;
INSURANCE.REAL ESTATE

•

' here:
Print answer,

949-2862, 949-2160

' HWOOO BOWERS

·-

HOUSf FOR sole- Corpet all over,
dropes,
&amp;love
dist-lwosher,
, garage . 1 mile obo\le Racine
Locks. 247 2401 ~

1

TO SCHOOL -

Ideal tor children. Has 2
lots . 1 floor plan . 3
bedrooms, bath, large eat·
In kitchen , lots ot cabinets,

~ . U I !'.tOil

tJ

Roofing

All types raoflng, gutters
and downspouts. All types

-

.

~
.... - KJ I _

Now arrange · the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

H. L Wtitesel

and
Home Maintenance _

Perlence.

' Otll'tii)I"'E... .... ,TM

I ..

!\VAI~ABLE

Call : Tom Hoskins,
VF RY NICf 3 bedroom home ' '•
949·2160.
t~rre , lull bospmpnt, completely
Athens Area
finlt herl w1th niC'e wrokshop
791:2745 or 797·27~~ _ . ·
nod lounclry room Hardwood
.4· b -t"a . .
floors ond carpet All electric,
Attractively
Ohio Pow f"r
cfprornted All oppllonces mrluded. Rus tiC' Hills. Syracuse
FARM FOR Sole . House , '1 horn s.
or '949-70I.i
.Phone
. - .992·1257
.
troiler large pond . 10 acres or
87 acres , 7.t2· 2566.
MODERN THREE bedroom home
. . . . - . . . . . .
situated on lotglll' lot ii1 Hutchin·
son Sub·Oivision. 747.2047

MAIN

I

27320 Montgomery Rd.
u,..vmo, Olllo
614-669-4245 Evenings
Miles Eaot of Wllktsvllle
~UPER -GOOSE STOCK.
TRAILERS
NOW

.d-19-1 mo.

TWO STORY 3 bedroom irome
hoys_e ~n ~l.ddle.po.rt ~ ~2:3457,
SEVEN ROOM hoUse and basement irt Minerville. 992- 5823

or 446 · 9.446 .

J

Repairing.
serving Athens, Meigs,
Gallia &amp; Vinton cDunties ;
also Mason &amp; Jackson ·
counties In W . Va .

C'Orpetlng

SYNIOl

GRINTY

_TRAILER SNF,S

Specialist in Home and!
Sthool Piano Tuning and

FXPfRIENCED

-

·

mw WI!'( Amtr '100 t..Ai.J"'IIIJto? ~K..:..;)rc.:...:;K""""Jt--o-0-,
IBUSUDEI

POOl CHEMICALS Season pocks.
Frf'e delivery. D Bumgardne r

-

-

fOr Frw • mitis

-

RUTlAND FURNITURE

11red ol "Draaon"
unused.Items from
closet to closet?

22t E. Mllln StrHt,
_"-"!troy, 0, . _
C.. II,.~ IL...J

DANIEL~

FOR SALE . .

Phone 742-2~11 Day •
or 742-~~46 Nlte

Restl~!l~ 10

.PIANO
. TUNING
,...,...
. . Yr _ ExoerlencP

lANE

&amp; the Reslless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search lor Tomorrow 8, 10;
Not For Women Only 15; Movie "Sanctuary" 17.
1:110-Days ol Our Lives 3,15; News 8; Young &amp; the

Unsc,amble these lour Jumbles,
one lette r to each square, to form
1our ordinary words.

-··3-16-mo. 1-------...;__;
11-9·1 mo.
H -1 mo . .
L-----;,.;.;;.;.;.;.;.;='-'
,:..,_.....,...,......,_ __ _

· N&lt;1W HA UliNG limestone In
'··-··· - ··-· - Mld rllt"porl PoPmroy area. Coli OWNER SEUING 2 bedroom
fC'r frf'C' t'!S tlmote. 367- 7101
lrome house. bcellent 1n town
Col/ 992·3023
~ Will CA Rf for two 1nvolid or
.locotlon.
. . . . . - - . "
pl rlerly persons in my .home NEW HOUSE for sole by Meigs
Twponty yeors
experience .
Rutland Furniture has purMmeNo . I . $26 ,000. 992-7191 .
--·-···--- ..
Rro~onobiP rolf's 997 6072 or
chased 3 new trucks and we
W'l-5472
.
now have 3 good used
- . . . . .
trucks to self.
PAINTING AND sandblasting
. Coll9A9.26B6
1- 1974 ':t Ton
. ' Free.~stlmoles
.
.
1-1972 3~ Ton
TRF~ TRIMMING ond removol
1-1971 3~ Ton
7.47. 31 6 7 o r U7. 7573.

-----------Real Estate for Sale
-------------

'

for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or ·
949-2860. No Sunday
calls.

,
FRIDAY,APRIL20, 1979
5· 110-WorJdal Large17; 5:•s-Farm Report 13; 5 : ~
PTL Club 13.
5 :5'- Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:110-700 Club 6,1; PTL
Club 15
6 : 10-News 17; 6 :25-Soclelles In Transition tO.
6 ;30-Romper Room 17; 6 :45-Mornlng Report J;
6:5G-GOO&lt;! Morning, West VIrginia 13; 6:55Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:110-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6, 13; Friday
MornlflQ 8; Schoolles 10; Three Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.
~
7: 1s-:-Weather 33; 7:30-Famlly Affair 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave IJ To Beaver 17;
Sesame St. 33.
8;30-HazeJ 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Emergency
One 6; HQVan's Heroes 8; Ma)ch Game 10; Lucy
Show 17; Mister RQVers 33 .
9: 30-Brady Bunch 8; Nova 33; . HQVan's Heroes 10;
Green Acres 17.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge al Night 6; All In The
Famllv 8, tO; Oallng Game13; Movie "Dear Heart"
17.
10:30-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andv
Griffith 6; Price Is Right B, 10; Know Your Schools
33.
11 :GO-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; S~lrtev 6, 13; EJec.
Co. 20; Great Midwest Hot Arr Balloon Rally 33.
11 :»-Wheel of Fortune 3, lS; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
ot Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 : ~BS News 8; .House Call tO.
. 12: QO-Newscenter 3; Password 15; News 6, 10; Young

APPLIANCE II

Ca II

304 -773-5386.

•

AuctiOIIeer-1111 Janes
Phone 614-557-3411 or 614 - 557-313_~

EWOlT

fo·woll

-

responSible tor. ictldents.
'
. •
owners.:... Mr. end Mn. Gtortt HOWard

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

~uloted, full bo~ e ment , Iorge
corner
I Cll
in Mason .

'!&gt;

Terms- Cash or check W·IHIIIIIve 10 diV ot sale. Not

VINR &amp; AUJM.
SIDING

Solem Cen ter·VInton Rd . Will

------------ _ fl!!"
__ _ _

Phone 992-5612

3-7' 1 mo. (Pd.)

Anns~ron1 ,~lint

div1de
Water and t:"lettric
.O\loiloble.
. . . - 304 ·768·5885. .
BY OWNER 3 0r 4 bedroorn. wotl·

~

-- -

992-2356

11 .30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Mash 8; S1arsky 1!. Hutch
6, 13; MOvie "Land of the Pharaohs" 't7.
12 :05- McCioud B; 12 :40-Mannl x 6,13 ; 1: 00Tomorrow 3; News 15.
·
1:30-BasebaJI 17; 1:~News 13; 4:110-News 17;
• :21&gt;---12 O' Clock High 17.

' .

• ReSNir

Sidin&amp;

fJO ACRES IN Solem. Township on

WATFR AND mis f

bales good

HOUSEHO~D

197d GMC JIMMY , P . B.. P S .
A C . 1 wheel dnve . Prirecl
rPnscmnhiP f o il 997-3580

APT FOR rrnt 9'1?-'?0S h• fnre 5. _ _ ~e!v_ic~s_ O~f~r~d_ •

mixed hay, neVer wet ; odds·ends,Pianed lumber, etc.

ANTIQUES,

1978 "' SUZUKI dirt hike . 150 RM
lik e new CE!ci! Brinogr&gt;r
949- :1387.

rPrs o"n Security dPposlt WotPr
roil'i . 9977897 .
• _- _ - . - - - - -

· ft ladder , platform scales ; hand QOrn sheller; wooden
feed box w ·metal lining; wool tiers; two HD snatch
blocks ; tot new elec . wire; 2.50 ft. new A In flexible
pipe; 600 ft . new J~ In flex ible pipe ; evespoutlng;
belting ; pulleys ; elec. motors ; metal hog trough;
screw iacks, forks. shovels, spud bar, sledges, axes,
pipe wrenches, scythes, grease guns, hatchets, etc.;
barbed wire stretchers; wire cable; blower type oil
burner; used batteries ; hcmd sprltyer; galvanized roof
lng;"elec . brooder; 6 in . cut -off saw; bench vise; bench
grinder ; log chains; come·l'l·longs ; large anvil ; lot
pipe &amp; gas fitti ngs ; lot rope &amp; rope halters ; dehorning
Silw; steel tr,ps; buckets grel!se &amp; oil; rotary lawn
mower;. app. sqo bales gOOd mixed hey, 7nd cu tting;
~

19b0 G .M C 60 po ssP.nger bu$. '
Ho s hf'en worked ove r,
pnmtE'd ?O.o~ ll.re~ 99?·6345 . ,

of goori

.

0.

Your ltlldlllllrtets fGr

Melvon

FAMti.V

- -

Middleport,

Groucho 20; Over Easy 33. · ·

ll(lso Transmission

. Vinyl and Aluminum

MNrl s. 997 72A8

614 .667-33qe .
. - . .
SMAll TRAilER in Syrocu1e Will
rE&gt;rtl to cl&lt;Port. rPiinbl• Y!Orklng

-

n ·oo-News 3,8,10, 13, 15; HQgan's Heroes 17; Best of

'.ReSNir

'l'l?-330'1.

white w·blue trim . Cub Code! !Model 106) r iding
mower w A2 ln. cut, extra gOOd ; 32ft. ext. ladders ; 10

am l.Q!!O b§ie5, 1st cutting, and app .

RIDING MOWfR 8 h p

.

-- -

Tom

~

33.

Au~&amp; Truck ·

C. R. MASH

lioii:~,~·!·

rosturP Plfl!nty of water Could
ocromodote SO plus caUl•

'

Call :

o. ' '

6S1 Beech Street

3-7-1 mo.

. . . . .Poiiilmiiiiierioro-.io'

~'1 · 5434

-

Free

:,

Hoskins, '949-'2160.

FAMILY RESTAuRANT

FOR PARTS. 1rrTO Pontiac Bon·
nPvHie &lt;155, 4 bhl., motor ond
WILl givE' lesson s on nnturol
Po rtland , Ohio Some new
frons Perfect. S150 997· 6270
guitor . Dobro ond Howoilon
hond made Items , old furniture
N see ot 143 Buftprnut
c.fppj
Fbr informctlon, roll
ond mlsC'.
. . . .
. - . - . . . .
747
-2'175
17 FOOT DElUXF Slorcroft troiler
.
.
Two
Yard Sole Frld~y.
Stnve
refrigerator , A .C., HAULING limestone gravel , ond
April 20th . 9 til 4. One Fi1her
slefl'ps 6. On display Of Hoger·
mi se Items, 747· 7'909 , oslc for
St . Pomeroy.Ohlo Re asona ble
RlcM
tv.'
.
s,
.825
Beerh
~'·:
~i~dlef?:Or!
pr ices . Off Spring Av~ Follow
. - .Imboden.
.
.
1962 .404 Int . tractor , newly SPF'ING REFRESHFR ond begin·
sign ~ .. ·. . _ _ _
.
O\lerhouled engme. new poin t,
nPr's goll les sons C lub rppol r.
VARD SAL£ Thurs and Fri., 19 &amp;
1'•
Jroh n Teo lord 61A - ~8S . :Jq61.
gnorl
rubber.
$1700
.
.AMF
3
70. 'll:30 till dork Rost&gt; Mar·
.
- . .
.
h p. rototlller, forworrl ond
tmko Forrn. AntiquP furniture,
WILl DO pointing in~icle ond out.
reverse. Like ;,f'W. Sl30 Keith
Good referenc t&gt; . Feu mor@ in·
~1sh~s . J ~pp o. R~ . _ _ . .
RidE'nour 985·(175
. . . . - . . . - .
lorrnC'Ition rall997-6331 hefore
BASFMENT SAlE sq.1 Peorl St.,
VFSPA CIAO mopeheo d bi~e
noon or oftpr 8·30 pm
.
. . . . . - - - - - . . .
Apri!
~n~ 1.1 .Fr!'": 9-5 _
Mole DobPrmon 26" boys'
NURSES
AIDE for E"lderlv d uring
hike J For more information,
the eve rtlngs . ~7· 2200
C'oll985 -4255,
'
Pets for Sale
WATFR Wfll drilling . Myers
- COMPlfTf RffSE hitch w1th 1000
Pump Sales anrl Ser vice ,
GfRM/\N SHfPARb. maiP , wf,lte,
· !b. sway bars. 7&lt;1'1·761!7
.
.
- . . . . ' HPotOf"l Drilling. qs5 . .4353 after
B monlhs · old, partly trained .
LOWfRV plano. lllce new Will
~·7 - ~678
~!;!~ · . . . sa c-rifice $900 Coll843-7255

-

estim.-t.es:

GOOD \ ONDITIONEO hoy S 70
Phone
DPiivrryo vo il obiP. 992.7701 nr

Vnr~omon .

yean

, . ~,.,. ....

St. Rl. n4 IOWfl.. Rutlltnd,

WIIIMtkt
Service C..lls
,
1

GMAEE1·-..

pd.

~

OlD COIN~ . pocket wotch.s .
rlon ring ~. · wedGing honds ,
diamonds Gold or s il ver. Coli
Fioer~amsle~ , 74,·:1331

20

experiente.

CRCM'S

- - For
- - - - - - - -.
- - - - Rent
--- -- -

90

guaranteed .

992-6011

WOOD
Pole s ma~t
dlometer 10' on lorge1t end . COUNTRY MOBILE Home Por~
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
51? per ton . Bundled s lob $10
largP lots Coil m .7.479
f'IN tan. DelivE"red to Oh1o
'
' . . . . . . . ' .
PoiiPt Co , JU, 7. PomProy . 3 AND a1 BM furnished and un · ·
'1'1?- ~689
.
furnished
opts . Phone
- . ~ . . . . . . -

Unfortunately, you'll only make
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morcll 21) doubte lrouble lor youraetf.
\Nf:WSPAPEA ENTERPRISE ASSN )
Your thinking cap may not be

!'

and windows . All work

'

ROGd·ifYsal..
""lllilt\Oif Rt.

18 Yean Experience

and repair. Storm doors

CHICKEN

992-5432

SJI)P

home maintenance - new

*New Home
"i Add·ons
~ Remoldings
iii' Free Estimates

74 hour

Rutland , OH 747-2081

head-to-head combat.

Home Maintenance
All types roofing, gutters
and downspoulo. All typts

.,_.n r ri ~o n vl lle .

7A7 7761

OlD FURNITURf, ice boxes, brass
hPds. Iron beds. desll s. etr ..
C'OmpiE"tt&gt; hnusehokls Write
MD M1ller, lh 4 , PomProy or
coll992·7760.

and

_!~"TlQY

FRI_~D

1075 FORD CUSTOM 500. S1750

REYNOlD'S I ;
ELECJRIC ~

Ohio Valley Roofine

QUSPY

,.

1976 ("HFVY Bonnn:ro Aw4 s t-INt
whrl'l bo~ p I 3~ 8S'1·1396
.

C.,_.IP

on stra1gnt today and you could
make mistakes. Why not leave
mental gymnastics to others?

'

TRY OUR
EXTRA

1957 C"HFVY Bfl Air 2·door 783
w1th two 3·!1 pPPrl tron ~;; Body
rot•gh , 997 . 7037 or 9A9. 2184

_.. THURSDAY, APRIL 19,1979
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Match Game PM 8; SlOO,OOO Nome That Tune 10; NoshviiJe On
The Road 13; Dortv t5; Sanford 1!. Son 17; MacNeil.
Lehrer Report 20,33 ..
8:QO-Whodunnlt? 3; Mork 1!. Mindy 6, 13; ChJsholms
8,10; Nova 20,33; Jack Van lmpre Cusade 1S;
Baseball 17; .
8:30-Highclllte Menor 3; Angle 6, 13
9:1»--Qulncy 3, 15; Barney Mrtter 6,13; World 20,33.
9:30-Corler Country 6, 13.
lO :QO-PIIot "Sgt. T K.Yu," 3,1S; Doctors' Private
Lives6,13; Barnaby Jones8,10; News 20; Footsteps
33 .
.
10:30-Hocklng Valley Blu09rass 20; Area Showcase

Business Se1evices

.

Nolt'

se r vice .

•

aR

wPenRitflonrl and

ju nk cnrs

CASH FOR

.

1'il7R CHFVY A w -. with lots of e• ·
STFFIFO·rodio-tnpe romblnotlon ,
tm!'. PrirrH to sell . 741 '1667 .
! 190. Mnple ciineHe set Sl80
1qn FORO I TO 4-d oo r A rent
~lod&lt;~ Boston roorkf" r , $'90 SPe
. pPm . 7ft00 oct uo l mdN .
nt 760 Lourel Sl , Middl,pport
Show roC'Im
rlf"on
Ph C'InF'
PLANTS . fA8BAGF . . . br~r~H .
.997-7467
r ouliflower, brussels sprouts ,
1973 \HFVY BLA1FR l f'u thon
hf"oc:f lrllucP. tomatoes , and
15,000 , onP ownPr OvN~11e
lnrgf" sP if'r hon ol hP.dcl ing on rims . tl rf's . Air C'C'Inditiooing.
nun Is Pots nl fl owPrs nnd
~3350 90~ - 7731
.
hnng11.,9 bas~ ets
l'lf&gt;lond
1975 CHfVROLH MALIBU. P S ,
Grf"f" nhou se.
Gf"raldine
CIPiond , Radnf! .
P.8 tdt steNing wht&gt;el, air
cn ndthnni nQ, good C'ondition.
53000. Coli 94'll '009 before
5.30 or 94'il 2117 oftflr 5 30

__ ~a_!lt~d- I(_) ~uy • _

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) You
to think things out. Erratic may try to nurae your Impabeahvlor would put you In tience with extravagant whims

,,

,.

PC1mll!&lt;roy .Oh io

Earold Dean
Raymond Cotterill
Eugene Phillips
Trustees, Scipio Township,
Meigs County, Ohlo

TELEVISION
VIEWING

..:\

.

.

-

. .

For _S a It:_ • _ _

tC't S75.000 . Mgt, pos•t1cin oow 1q76oGMC SIFRflA G rondP ' ; ton
Cl pPn . hcPIIPnl earnings white
pirlcup P 8 , P S , A C flo- .
IPCJrning When quolifled, you
CjPI1Ptn condiliofl SAOOO 47,000
will ottPnd moi'IOge mE"nl trainmilr~;; , John !hiP. Rt. 1. Ror inP,
Ing school anti wi ll rPtei\lf' $50
Oh1C'1 .
n doysnlary and el(pensPS dur ·
_
_ __. _· _ _
ing llmitPcl schoolin q pPrlorl .
s,.lf rosltlon al so ovollohiP Ap - _ Cam_pi_n9 ~qyipJ!1e_n~ '
rly 10om Tu ~s thf" 17th nt thf"
HC1fidoy Inn, Gallipolis , OH . 1q75 II FOOT truck C'ompPr , sP II·
C't~ntninf&gt;d air roncii.tio!'1
e~t,
.A~., for Mr MNgon . Ft~ uol
rpllf'n t C'Onrlttion 997. 2171
FmploymPnl Opportunity
.
.
NATIONAl COMPANY now hir· 1ft FOOT FRANKLIN t'Omping
traile r
good
condition
1np For intMviPw , wriiP 747
7d1·2~7A .
l'rondwoy, M1cidle rort , Ohio
. . . . . .
.
.
LAOIFS FARN 575 to 5150 pPr 13 FOOT travel trailer. hrellent
cnndlllon .
(•OS
SIOYP .
wppf,; po rt limP, $100 ff' 5300
rPfri~rrotM
po~toble to ilet
lull tifT'If". l'or nerE&gt;ssory . WritE"
00
NPw Limo lld
bPI·
8C'tw 719·H r ·o Do1 ly SPnl inPI.

NOTICE OF FILING
OF PETITION FOR

-

.

'·

INTERNATIONAl
SCOUT 4'"t'\AI liMF 5T0 Nf , o;C'Inrl gravPI.
?I 000 mdf'~ fu lly equippNi.
rolru1m fh iNirlP f prtihrer. cine
oir wrnch rtr .. &lt;t&gt;•rPIIt&gt;r&lt;f rn n
lrnd. nnrl nlltyrP' C"f c;oh . r,.~
ciitif'! n . ~7 · 11?1
c-,..\c; i('lrl;, olfWork!i , Inc- . F Main
St. PI'IT'N(Iy, 9Q1 JA01
1971 l'HfVROLfT _.,._.. short wht"f'l 1 •
hnsr. Mnsse~ Ff&gt;rglt:;on C'orn . ftf("Tfl14'" r.l!ITAR with co sr, lt"e
nf'-w , Stcf"! ~mtnr with ro!IP
plnntrr qq7 . 7094
ol"lr-cf cnn dtt1on 997. 7453
11:~77 M&lt;1NTF \ARl O P S . P.fl
.
p W C.\ . T S A (' 33 ,000 SPRING HAS ~ prung ogoin ol
mi!P~ .
C'oll
747 . 7.411
or
1\ t"l h . !&lt;
MorMPt
ond
997 ?fl~l
GrPrnhousPs Onion ~e t s, ~end
r o tCIIOPS
INtih7fH . holk
1q7Q FORO C'USTOM F-150 truC' ~
gnrdrn
~~eel ond oil l'lOrly
1
30~ PnQinf'
'• ton , nut n .. P S ,
VPQrto hl e
plonts
ond
P B , A C 747. 'JS26
~tro wh~ rry plants now rf'ody
fN ~ al P Boh'~ Mar~ ~ ~ Mo!&lt;nn
1974 OLOS CUTlASS Sup nPm P
Phnne 773 ·5771 OpPn '! d oys
51700 ~S5 . 3505 .

MANAGfMfNT TRAINH$ 15.000

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Usu-

Keep your opinions tO yourself
today , especially If you feel
strongly about something.
You 'd only alienate your audi-

r N tunity Fmployf'r

FRANCE

find out what the year ahead

out OJ financial affairs of those
you know· and don 't let them
stick their noses in yours.
Either case spells trouble.

E,.prripncf'd MlT (ASCP)
r&lt;r "t'JliiVOIPnt fxreiiPnl !IOinry
roncl fringr bene fits Shih ciif.
INr&gt;ntnil . CcmtoC't PN~onnf11
OlfiCt'
Plf'OSont
Vollt"y
H ru~ pitnl Vol fP.y Driv.- Poin t
Pl f' nc.ont . WI/ 75550 . Phnnf&gt;
3('1.4 675 4340 An fqunl Or

OPIN FOR
BUSINESS

Trymg to put on pretentious
alrs·ln order to accomplish your
purposes today won't work Be
humble , rol l up your sleeves,
and do what needs to be done .
Begmning with your birthday,

--

107:1

~h1 f1

-

~

"

_ . • A_u!o ~'!_le_s •

_

IMMFDIATF
OPrNING
I nhrorCIIc&gt;ry TP('hnidnn , 3 11

RA\INE VOlUNTFfR Firto DPrt 1"
r onrPtl inn thiPr Qt•n shoot until
this fnll ThP RorinP Fir~ Df"pt.
Wl~hf"~ tn than~ Pvf'rynnf" fnr
hPiping ttw&gt;m mokP thp gt•n
!'hoot a c;urres~ HopP tn H'P
you all th is fnll.

-

,.

- · - ·-

_ _ He_ I() Wanted

frr!&gt; nrr ~ynhl&lt;' now. For lour
qrn11&lt;' loh. 510 F&lt;~r 7 arallf'
i('Jic;. 55 n
Send rn,..(ks !{'I
\lnrf"ncr Nnrm . 7376'1 Hdl
ff f"lnd RarmP , OhiC'I

Cftirthday

.

, .,.

IFTAPT FAllS Cf"mf"t&lt;'ry lot cnr(" __

'blr
,

'For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds.

GUN SHOOT. FV~RY FRIDAY 1.&gt; 30
PM RAC'INf GUN ClUB F.a.C
TORY ('"HOtcF (',UNS ONI Y

ASTRO•GRAPH

t~~TirP t\oilv Sentinel , Middloport-Pnmernv , 0 , 1'hursd"Y· Apr. 1~. m~
DICK TRACY

© lrll Klac ,_lyrollcolo, Inc.
L'ARN ME HOW
WAAL-- 1./E KNOW JT'S
TO TELL TIME,
EIGHT O'CLOCK WHEN
AUNT LOWEEZV
TH' LITTLE HAND
POINTS TO THE
EIGHT--·

•• AN'TH'
BIG HAND
POINTS TO
TH'BED

�l .

r
r
I
I

'

j

'

•

.Eiberfelds .ln Pomeroy
SPECIAL SALE PRICES

.

•

tit

ODTprojects crippled
by inflation, red tape

..

FRIDAY, _APRIL .20th AND SATURDAY, APRIL 21st
OPEN TIL 8 P.M. FRIDAY
ODD lDT

NO IRO~ MUSLIN SHEETS
lARGE .COLLECTION OF QUALITY
BUSTER ~(MN amHING FOR OIILDREN.
INFANT SIZES 10 &amp;X-7

Full and twin bE'n si7E~s. pillow ri'lses to mi'ltrh .
N~t every sizE' in f'Vf'ry color or pi'lttern. RP~.
pnre&gt;s $5.99 pr . ri'ISE'S to $8.49 full size sheets
Whilethf'Y li!St.
.

~

h PRICE

1

FffiST FINNISH SHF.F.P - "A flock at a time." Thai's the story for Mr. and Mrs.
J~ck Se1denabel, Sprmg Ave., _Pomeroy, whose Finnish F.we, "First Lady," gave birth to
SIX laml&gt;s on March 13. The Setdenabels' sheep are the first Finnish breed in Meigs County.
.

PRICE·.

· Arthur Haddah, assistant
director, .Ohio Deparbnent of
Transportation, Thursday
rught painted a rather bleak
picture 'of future highway
construction projects in the •
BuckeyeState.
' · ·
On the other hand, Charles
Miller, West Virginia 's state
highway corrunisstoner was
more optimistic ·on s;;,ilar
projects in the Mountaineer
State.
The two officials addressed
. approximately 40 area community leaders attending last
night's April meeting of the
Central Ohio Valley In·
dustrial Council I!) OS&lt;;ar's

Restaurant in Gallipolis.
cases.
fieials thHt unless something
If Ohioans want morp and
Haddah pointed out what is done, it's possible no new
better highways in the future · took just three yPars to com- construction jol)s will be sold
they'll not oniy have t~ plete li major highway during th• next fiscal year,
request it, but pay for it project .a decadP . ago now and that includes the first
deatly. ·
. reqtiires 12 years or longer pha'e of the proposed Rl. 35
That was the u n- because of various problems. project in southern Ohio.
derstanding of COVIC memOhio's assistant director
If that be the case, 23 other
bers ' lollowing · Haddah's. jolted area leaders· when he Ohio construction projects
,
· informed them that It now ap- and 15 resurfacing jobs
remarks.
Because of a static gas tax pears the state's last sale totaling $70 million in costs
(it's been 7 percent since . date for construction this will go by the boards.
1959) coupled with inflation fiscal year (which ends June
Under current conditions,
environmental and othe; 30) is May 15.
ODT may not even be able to
government . red tape, high· · Three sale jobs will be can- • maintain existing facilities in
way construction and im- celled. "That's a first in the Buckeye State during the
provements in Ohio have not · Ohio," Haddah remarked.
next biennium.
only beeu delayed, but forced
The real shocker came
"We've cut back' on perto a grinding halt in most when Haddah told area of·
(Continuedonpage!O)

douglas marc

Major decisions underway

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - subsidies in the next attending
state-assisted .
•
Majer policy decisions on biennium - boosting the total universities.
Explaining the budget
school funding and the state state outlay to more than $3.5
Ouality Douglas Marc coordi"ates
sale this
budget bill ·have started to billlon - most school officials chan_ges to the House Finance
fall intn place after weeks of claim more local money will . Committee, which continued
weekend, at inflation-fighting prices. Jackets,
haggling in the Legislature. have to be raised to avoid to review the document
blouses, slacks, sweaters, vests . Reg . $16.00 to
During a flurry of activity school cl"'"'gs in· the tw"' · today, Chairman Mxrl H.
$48.00.
Tuesday, senators i:ame up year period starting Jilly 1. Shoemsker, D-Bourneville
'
with a bipartisan plan giving
In other action Wedni.sday, :Wd It ~rovldes "a majo~
money-troubled school the·Senate approved by a 32~ mcrease m support of public
00
dl.stricts the power ID leyy a 1 vote and sent to the House ·a education and significant new
percent districtwide iricome major bill extending more property tax relief for
· . tax.
property tax relief to two homeowners. No new taxes
School boards would be classes of Ohio taxpayers - are necessary and none will
able ID impoae it without a senior citizens and the totally be requested." .
, vote, but the tax would be disabled.
The net effect · of the
subject to' referendum among
The bill raises to $15,000 the ' Democrats' changes was to
voters If properly challenged. maximum annual income iricrease state spending by
. At the same time, the under which a family can $85 million beyond that
: Senate "!""apped an earlier qualify . for the state's proposed by the governor,
proposal under which local homestead property tax making the new budget totai
: property taxes could have exemption. The present. more than $17.8 billion.
On Any Piano In Stock ..
: been increased as a result of maximwn is $10.000. It also ·
However, ·Shoemaker said
· inflated increases in property increases the amount of relief the document is seen as
Re,g. ~1390.00 ....................... Sale •1025.00
: values, also without voter for homeowners in those balanced because of a fiB
R-·· '1450.00 .........................Sale '1085.00
· approval. . Current laws ·categories who have low million increase in revenue
: restrict slich tax boosts. · . incomes.
estimates and cuts In · Reg. 1 1470.00
· I
•
···:··· ·········,······· Sa • '1101.00
: Support fer the income tax
Sen. Jerome P. Stano's pro~ speitding ordered
Ret •. 5 90.00 ........................ Sale '1225.00
; plan was announced by both measure wUI be funded with ' for a number of slate
Al.l p1ano purchases earn extra 20,000 bonus CCA points .
. the majority Democrat and $15.1 milllon contained in the agencies:
for
your club. Every piano tuned free .
: Republican caucuses. in . the governor's two-year state • Democrats sl8ehed from
. Senate, and It reportedly has budget bill . which was $94 million to $44 million
. at least tge tacit backing of substantially revised last RhcMies' propoSal tO Increase t"-"'":;:'1illii;i~--------.-..-....;____.;__,__
: GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes. week and unveiled Tuesday ID 12'&gt;1 percent the present 10
SAVE THIS WEEKEND
·• "We'll have to- the bill " by majority Democrats in the percenlprupelty 18ji:rallbliclt
said Chan Cochran,
House. Stano, D-Parma, said the
state
currently
administrative assistant.
the total cost of the · underwrites f« Ill of Ohio's
.·
Despite a planned increase ~omestead proposal will &lt;l'eal eltate tuplyers.
ot f784 million in state school mcrease to $2S million
The si2e of the .increase
SiZE'S 8 to 70, PXCPIIent SE'IPction of
because of an expected $10 remained the same but
stylps and colors, tank tops inclucfecf
mil1lon increase needed ID Shoemsker said the ~
f~r this sale . Short slet-ve styli'S.
TRY OUR
continue the program at l;atdget e:dends it
to
BOYS S3. 95 KNIT SHIRTS
13.3·
current levels.
owner-l&gt;ccupled
Among the
changes 1 and to farm dwellera and
0
made by Democrats .In acre of their land.
BOYS$5 ..95 KNIT ·SHIRTS
1
Rhodes' $17.7 billlon budget
The higher rollback would
5.00 ·
KENlUCKY
bill were the scaling down of . be deuied commerctal and
boys $6.95 kNIT SHIRTS
1
a Rhodes property tax relief industrial real estate
'5,90
FRIED CHICKEN
,pa'ckage by $96 miUion to $70 taxpayers, which caused
million, a 10.7 percent some finance committee
BOYS S8.95 KNIT SHIRTS
increase in Aid to Dependent members to raise questions
FAMILY RESTAURANT Children benefits, and a concerning the proposal's
.
9\12 -5432
SAUl
freeze on irurtructional and constitutionality.
Pomeroy, 0 .
tuition fees of Ohio residents
Rep. Robert Taft II · R·
Cincinnati, and others

on

SALE $12"" TO $36

SPRING COATS
Reduced This Weekend.

'6 995

FRIDAY -

1---------------------

kl/e~t ft}U faY~: ~"'~
J/ftl.ll~t;

Y"(,f f'ciNf, t'~l'llf

--~, ..,. -- 111l ~ t'lrtlt

A'f'lll'f ~,,.HS _,~,.~
,.,,,., - -t:Anvlr

f"~ ~

1/16~/t -~ C-~()MH~
/Htz'~~fr.

Ohio
court
decisions
expressed
concern
about
r~quiring
taxation
at
statewide unlfcrm rates.
1)1 ~pproVing the $25 mtlllon
ID finance th~ expansion of
the homestead property tax
·exemption, Houae Democrats
cut the governor's homestead
plan by $46 million. Rhodes
also called for a $5,000
increase in allowable inccme,
but went further and
suggested making the
exemption avaUable ID new
categories of taxpayers.
..........

Mayor's Court

Men's '19.95
Men's '22.95
Men's '24.95
Men's '34.95

COATS AND CLARK'S 4 PLY YARN IN A BIG SELECTION
OF SOLID ·cOLO.RS, SPARKLE COLORS ANO VARIEGATED.

., ,,

People

.RACINE
·HOME NAnONAL.·

TWO DAY SALI

· .MEN,'S SUITS ·

MEN'S '99.95 S,..ITS

SALE '7CJ00
SATURDAY
LAST DAY TO SA VI

$1oo

~ PER CENT 'OFF SALE ENDS SAnJRDAY, APRIL 21st.

Off..Men's Hanes underwear

·
•1.00 A Package OH On Any Men'•
Han••

~~:~ c;:.ve~: ~Y ~~.

STOP-IN RIGHT AWAY, BRING IN .YOUR MEASUREMENTS
Red Lal:tel lrlefs, r..hlrt•, Athletlc'Shlm.
George
51,·,
AND .SAVE ON THE CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES YOU
•
·
Middleport,McDaniel,
charged wtth
.,.oxer
or Gripper Boxer Shorb. Include•
dl.sturbing the peace.
'
Five defendants have
SELECT. SALE INCLUDES• OUR DECORATOR INDUSTRIES
· A II Hane• llg Man SluL
forfeited bonds and two
.others have been fined in the
AND CORTLEY. DRAPES.'
SAL£ ENDS SA.~RDAY,· APRIL 21ST. .
crrurt of Andrews.
Pomeroy Mayor ~--~~~-:~~~~~~--~-w~~~----~~~~~~----~~~--"
Clareuce
·
··· ·
-~~---~--------..J

Forfeiting bondil 1n the
court were Jack Allen
Middleport, f30. posted· cri
speeding charges;· Peggy 1
Kerns, Middleport, •3o
!allure ID yield the right o
way ; Jeffrey Childers, ,
Letart, W, Va., t30, ·
disorderly conduct: Tim
Crites,, no addre~~allsted, f&amp;(),
disorderly, and Dwight Carl,
Pomeroy, ._,.,0, driving while
intoxicated. Fined were .
Monty Riffle, Pomeroy, $100 :
.and COBts; lntoxlcaUon, and
Bruce Post, Flushing, N, Y.,
$30 and costs, speeding.

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

SPfCIAL OROUI'

.

ME. N'S KNIT SHIRTS
.

MEN'S JEANS

•

•
•
• h i~· !'J)rri~ l !'~IP inc lucfp~ our f'nf!rr .
!'fC'Irk or rnPn's short ~ IPE'VP lcnit
!'t"llrt s, i'l tr r mpnctou~ · !'PIPrtiM Clf

T

!'f y lf'_!' , f'c'ltfP rn !', ("I' IM~ . $j 7 f'~ Ml"lflll ,
fT\rcttt~rn , !i~ rf! f', £')" fr;. l ;~ ror etncl E")(·
tr;, , ryfrt"'ll;tr~w . Trtnlc topi lnrluctPct.

MI'N ' S SS.95 KNIT SHI"TS
~4 . 95

~egular prices $11.95 to $17.95. Not every size
10 every style. Blue denims, polyester cotton
~~e~ds. Sele.~ted from our regular stock
llmsted quantsty.
7
'

MI'N 'S &lt;1.95 KNIT SHI .. TS
M~N ' S

,~ . 69

S9,,S t&lt;NIT 5HI A'TS
Sft .l'

MF.N'S $11 .95 l&lt;ljiT SHIFITS
Sl0. 19
MFN'5 '14,9.5 KNIT St-IIA'TS

1

.

!: 1 ' .6CJI

'

BANK
Racine, Ohio

The okapi, wmch looks like

.·

• .

Y2 PRICE

,I

OPIN SATURDAY TIL 5 P.M.

E1be rf Id I ·p

~~r;·r~:ctually ~lated to:~---.~--·__;;;;8~S:;..;.;n,:_
, :,..O=.;m;.::.;:&amp;!·::~~_J
a cross between a horse and a

I

grant·
'·

received here

JENEI.J, KELLY

TRACEY JEFFERS
....

~~ :r·· ·&amp;·~·n m.- ;;·· &gt;liii~
·;yo.~-~··· ~"'"""·'
.,...._,

STRIKE ENDS
l'u•t•nty~four

members of

l.u&lt;·al 23S' IBEW, are
f'IM'''h·d to return to work
Munday
mornjng.
A
('ltnlrat·l hdweL•n the union
auol

Ruekeye

Rural

.El,·&lt;·tr.it• Clt-ttp, G~Jiipol~s ,
. wa" agrt•t•d upon late

The Pomeroy and Mid- . mayor · of Albany. !Ohio),
flnirsday morning. It was
dleport J.ibraries · have member of the Athens Coun'ilg nt•d rhursday aftero.oon '
received a $1,000 grant from ' ty and Alexander Local Boarac•&lt;•ording l•• a company
the Ohio Program in the ds of Election, and member
spokl-sman. The SPokes·
of the Senior Nutrition Site
Humanities.
man gave credll lo both
Because of the grant, on Council In McArthur and the
ii&lt;lt•s for yielding on some
Jl!lle 23, Saturday, of the Big Athens • Vinton - Hocking
vt•ry intrnse difference.
Bend Regatta weekend, the Mental Health and Mental
r&lt;·rms or the contract were
libraries will rent the stern- Retardation Services Board.
nol
rcvL•aled .
Union
wheeler P. A. Denny for two · He has previously made
m••miJt"rs have been off
trips seven miles up the Ohio studies of Albany, Hocking
lltt'i.r .lobs since December,
Valley miners and mining, ·:;:;:;:::: ::::::::::: :;;:;:;;:;:::::::::~::=:::~::::::::~!: ::~:~== :~:::·
River and back.
On each trip, 200 lucky and country music. Dr. Tribe
people !principally out-&lt;&gt;f· also served at one time on the
school adults) will hear "As staff of Rep. Clareuce E.
History Flows : A Short Tour Miller.
Variable cloudiness tonight
Mrs. Spencer has previous
on the Hlsto'rlc BJ,autiful
and Saturday with showers
Ohio," a talk prepared by Dr. experience assisting in
possible Saturday. Lows
Ivan Tribe, history Instructor dramatic presentations of · tonight from the' upper 40s to
at Rio Grande College, and history and is sure to make
the low 00.. Highs Satunlay
delivered by his assistant, the tw()ohour trip Informative '" In the low to mid 70s.
as well as enjoyable.
Barbara K. Spencer.
Members of the library
Dr. Tribe is well-known· in
· the Ohio Valley Area staff, trustees, and Friends of
Ubraries (OVAL) counties.· the JJbraries will be on board
He-has been a teacher in both the riverbOOI~ to ·encourage
the Eastern and Southern visitors !o stop In .at the
Local Sehool Districts and in libraries and see what else
Vinton, and has served as their libraries can do lor
them. The libraries are also
: issuing a'Speciallnvltallon to
Senfor Citli:ens and clients of
the Community Mental
Health Center; they will be
giveu first preference for the
very limited nwnber of seats.

· Weather

SALE '6CJOO

Jackels ...... :.... 116.30
Jackets .......... iff30
Jackels ... ,...... '20.40
Jackets .......... '28.60

.SAVE 30% .

·
1

Meigs Counfy

SKEIN

l1lRIKl1lES

..

s1• WINTUK KNITTING YARN

MEN'S '89.95 SUITS

=~f~:;~~~r~ CUSTOM MADE DR~PERIES
Fred Hollman Tuesday ntght
on a disorderly manner .

SATURDAY SAUl

S!zes 36 to 46, regulars and. longs, 3
p1ece styles in solid colors, st,ripes
·
and patterns.

'7'ecfium, liird'P
Si7('S
Pxtril large . Good selection of
styles 11ncf colors, in~tuctes our.,, .
tirl' s tock . S11ve Fricfay 11nd Satur·
cf&lt;&gt;y .

I

15 CENTS

1

With 6 pc. Tool
Attachment Set.

'

CRCM'S

MEN'S SUMMER
WEIGHT
JACKETScine!
smC~II,

FRIDAY, APRIL 20 1979

-6-way Dial-A -Nap rvg he'ight adjustment.
-Top filling disposable dust bag. .
-Edge Kleener close to baseboards.
-Brilliant headlight.
REG ..UPRIGHT S89.95
CLEAN TOOLS REG
$'19 ,95
TOTAL REG. $109.90

BO:YS' K'NIT SHI.RTS

bi~~

MIOOLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

•EUREKA UPRIGHT SWEEPER

!

EXTRA
CIUSPY

enttne

SAVE $39.95

SAVE •365oo

JU!ode~'

NO. 5

at y

Meigs High Girls' State delegates, alternates announced

Other
price
ranges
.similarly reduced for big
savings.

k1msa1r

VOL NO. XXIX

(USPS 145-96Q)

Reg. '74.00............ Now '59.110
Reg. '70.110....... .... Now ss&amp;.Qii
Reg. 168.00 ;.......... Now '54.110
Reg. '64.110 .......... Now

••

•

·e

.

of Division 10, Ohio Department of Highways and John
F.llis, right, ODT's design engineer, discuss the situation
with Arthur Haddah, assistant ODT director,.second from
right, during Thursday night's COVIC meeting at Osca r's.

CONSTRUCTION of new highways in Ohio appears
dim at this time because of inflation and red tape, Above,
John (Jake) Koebel, left, president of the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Corrunerce, along with Glenn Smith, director

~'7.

""

•

-

·

·

la

.. ·

e

-

. A member of the steering the needed signatures to call
committee
which
has the meeting were circulated
scheduled a meeting for improperly and tbat many of
signatures
are
Saturday to recall the curreut the
·lxlard of directors of Buckeye duplications.
Walker further charges
Rural Electric Cooperative
charged this morning that that some of the signatures
statements · released by were certified by witnesses .
Board Secretary9:lyde B. 'days before they were signed.
Reacting to those charges,
Walker are designed to
''-'confuse the issue" and Ann Zimmer, of Lawrence
"thwart the desires of . the County, said this mornlng
that any duplications on the
memllership."
In a' statement released petitions were the result' of
Wednesday, Walker charges . multiple membership in the
that the announced meeting electric cooperative, for
is Illegal, according to the which members pay a $5 fee
Cooperative's Code of for each account.
" U those signatures are
Regulations.
considered
to be duplications
Walker claims that recall
by
the
Cooper~tive,
then the
petitions circulated ID obtain

winners ruimed
State representative Ron

James today announced the

CONTRACTS ISSUED
Granted five-year teaching
cmti-acts by the Southern
Local Board of Educatloo
tlils week were James
J,awrence and Joyce Ritchie.
Given continuing contracts
were Aaron Sayre and Carla
Shuler,

.

~

_

......~~ ..~itJM ... ....L,.

.....

•

LJimmer c zms statement was
•
d
'
·
fu
·
•
'
. . e · to . con_ se zssue .
d esrgn

·Scholarship

winners rJ the Ohio Academy
Schoia111hips awarded an·
nually by the Ohio Board of
Regents. •
Each scholarship totals
.1,000 and Is renewable for
fnuryears .
,
· ·Meigs County winners
were Dawn Sorden, RD,
Pomeroy, Eastern · High
School; Deborah Danner,
MlddlepDrt; Meigs High
School and James Patterson,
Racine, Southern High
School.
The winner from Alexan·
der High School was I,isa
. Dye, RD, Albany .

MARIALEGAR

CHARLENE GOEGLEIN

By Charlene Hoeflich
Meigs High S~hool
delegates and alternates to
Buckeye Girls' State, the
America n Legion Auxiliary's,
annual work shop In
democracy, have been an·
nounced .
Janet Horky, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horky, and
Lori Kloos, daughter of Mr. ·
and Mrs. Manning Kloes,
Middl eport, have been
·selected as delegates by the
Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American !.eglon.
Tracey Lee Jeffers,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Wendell Jeilers, Pomeroy,
· and Charlene Goegleln ,
daughter of Mr. ·and. Mrs.
Charles Goeglein, Route 3,
.
Pomeroy, have been named
BARBARA MURPHY
delegates by 'the Awdiiltry of
~ ~ ......... ..._ ~.. •
-'---~- ... ~ P.J~~ - Webster Post 3,,
Anl~rican !.eglon.

Middleport man
injured in fall
Robert H.Bratton, 27,
Middleport, is listed in
satisfactory condition ai the
Holzer Medical Ceuter where
.he was admitted Wednesday
following a construction
accident at tbe Kyger Creek
Power Plant.
Bratton, an employee · of
Union Boiler, prirriary
COil tractor lor the plant's new ·
precipatators, sustained a
laceration to the back of his
bead.and trauma to· both feet
when'~ he fell 18 feet While
layinl¢ block.
·
A compaey spokesman said·
Bratton fell through an.
AWEI .COME 'RF.UF.F'..:1'11e ternper~ture .In downtown Pomeroy Thursday at- .
opening. He v...,. treated at
t&lt;•mnon soared to a high of 75 as was 'shown on the lighted thermomelt'r at the Pomeroy
the scene then transferred to
NMinnRl Bank . It looks like we are at Jon~~: last gotr.: to enjoy another "good old summ..the hospital by a plant
hnw.11
.
.
ambulance.

inembets

have

been

overcharged," Zimmer said.

Walker
ci~iins
that
although an individual's
name may appear several

timl!S on the membership list
because of ownership of
several houses, the person is
eutltled to only one vote, '
according ID the code.
Zimmer S.id this morning
that lhe steering committee
had been advised by Its
attomty. Carol Ann Hampton
of Ironton. and the Rural
Electric Association of
Washinton that the petition
drive was administered
to ·
code
according
regulations.
"Walker is simply trying ID
keep people from atteuding
Ute meeting· by confusing the
issue," Zimmer said today.
In addition to the charges
brought by Walker, Zimmer
objected to the language of
the press release issued
Wednesday.
"I'm shocked and appaUed
that the €oopel'lltlve -would
resort to nanie calling."
Zimmer said ,
Walker's statement

~

Miss

Goegl ein,
11

earlier

~:·d~~d~~e~~rt·
~~=~li"~
unit, will attend. Buckeye

Girls' State as a delegate
from
the Pomeroy unit under
referred
to
those
participating- in the recall c()osponsorship of · the XI
effort as "dissidents" and to Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
the members of the steering Sigma Phi Sorority. Miss
corrunittee as "ringleaders." Kloes Is co-sponsored by the
Zimmer said this morning Citizens National Bank at
that the meeting, scheduled Middleport.
Alternates to Miss Jeffers
ID be held at .Rio Grande
College at 1 p.m. Saturday. and Miss Goegleln are Maria
would be held and that action I.egar, daughter of Mr. and
would be taken to remove the Mrs. Charles l.egar, and Bar·
current board members and bara Murphy, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Murphy.
elect new ones.
Because of questions All delegates and alternatet.
s~rroundlng the meeting , are juniors at Meigs High
Buckeye Rural officials have SchooL
Buckeye Girls' State is
filed suit in Gallla County
Common Pleas Court seeking scheduled for June 16-Zl at
a declaratory judgment Capital University, Columordering that any action .bus.
Miss Hotky Is a member of
taken at the Saturday
the
National Honor Society is
meeting be ruled null and
on
the
yearbook staff, and
void.
·:::•:::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::•::::::;:;:;:::•::::::::•:::::::&lt;::«=• participates In vocal music
EXTENDED FORECAST
activities. Her past activities
Sunday t b r o u g b have included membership in
Tuesday: Mild wilh the Literature Club, lbe 1
showen possible Suaday. French Club, the Meigs hand, '
Fair and mUd Moaday and· and Bethel 62, International
TUesday. H,lgbs through • OrderofJob'sDaughters.
the period from the mtd 60s
Janet Is employed at Dutto the mid ~0.. Lows mostly . ton's. Drug Store. She attends
In the 40s.
the Middleport First United
::::::::::::~::::::: :::::::::::::::::::~:=:=•=:=:•::::::;:;:.:,:,:;:;:::::: Presbyterian Church.
\ Miss Kloes has been In the
band for three ye.ors, the .
vocal music activities lor two
· years and both musicals
presented hy the department,
the junior class play, and perrespectively, of live years, 2S formed in the Big Bend
years and 10 years.
Minstrel . Associa lion's
Judge Buck set· bond on presentation last spring.
both defendants in the
Lori Is a member· of the
amount pf $30,000 and both Middleport First Baptist
defeudants were confined in Church, active in the youth
the Meigs County jail.·
fellowship and the choir, and,
Is a.candystriper at Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital. .
Miss Jeffers belongs to the
Junior Am~rlcan !.eglon Aux- ·
illary and is pugler for both
the Pomeroy and 'Middleport
American Legion P~ .·
· She is a membe~ of the pep.
marching, concert and jazz
bands, on the yearboo!t ~If, ·
In the Pep and Spanish ClubS,
and on the girls' track and
fi.eld team.
·She Is also a member of the
62, . International
Bethel
CLEVELAND (AI') ~
of
Job:s l)aughters, a
Order
Here are the number~
candystriper at Veterans
drawn Thursday In lbe . Memorial Hoilpltal, · In the .
weekly Ohio t..ottery: blue junior Class play, on the·prom
490; wblte 77; gold 9;
(Contmued on page 10)'
winathon zt757.
~ ..
'I·

Pair arraigt1ed
Tony Manley, Rutland, I!Jld
Bailey J . (Buddy) Dugan,
Middleport, were arraigned
before Judge Robert Buck
Thursday afternoon on
. chatges of trafficking drugs.
They were secretly indicted
by the rj!Cent grand jury.
Manley was charged wilh
selling
iySetglc
acid
diethylamide,( LSD II
· Schedule I drug, in an amount
equal to or exceeding three
times the tiulk amount. This
offense is a felony upon
co nvict ion and carrie s a
sentence of up ID 25 years in
lhe peniteutiary. .
Dugan was charged with
three di fie rent offenses .
including·.
sellin g
of
, atijliana. · aiding and
a•,.tting the sale of lysergic
acid diethylamide, and
aiding anq abetting in the
sa le of anphetamines .
Du JJan's c"l ii! ~" " ~"' fi ' have
maximum -pcHalilies

an~~=~~~~i~J.~e~~~r.

Iy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Kelly, Middleport.

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        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50604">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50603">
              <text>April 19, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2512">
      <name>hull</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7740">
      <name>paul</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1207">
      <name>pullins</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="183">
      <name>stanley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1060">
      <name>wilt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
