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                  <text>12- The Dluly Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday, Apn l 25, 1979

BancOhio grows to 215 branches
CO LUMBUS, Ohio (API In a few months, BancOh10
Nat1onal Bank will explo de
across Oh1o Overp1ght, It will
have 215 off1ces lo serve
customers m at least 40
commumties.
The C&lt;J!wnbus-based Oh10
National Bank, und'e r a
recent ch ange in the law ,
plans to merge 40 of 1ts 41
banks under a single flag the
weekend of July 1
BancOhio Natwnal Bank
Will r a1se 1ts sta ndar d
Statewide bankmg w1ll have
arrived in Ohio
At first , httle change "ill be
apparent.
"! lhmk th1s be a fa1rly
mvis ible chan ge," sa1d
R&lt;lbert G. Stevens, chrurman
of the bank known locally as
BancOh1o .
"Each of \he banks w1ll still
ha ve a lo cal pres1dent ,''
Stevens sa1d " Each will shll
have a local board of
directors Actually, they will
be consultmg d1r ectors
instead of legal directors. but
we hope to get the same
support and guidance from
them
in th e1r local

conunumues "
But the public Will see some
differences under the new,

setup.
"For example, someone
who hves in Portsmoulh and
comes to C&lt;Jlwnbus would be
able to do their banking here
the sa me as at home,·'
Stevens sa1d " He would be
able to make a deposit , wnte
check. use lhe An ytilue Bank
machme lhe same as you
would at home.
Checks and Anytime Bank
machme ca rds will not
change - until their normal
tune for replacement comes.
Then they will be swapped for
ones bearmg the new name
and lo go
Th e me rger alSO WIIJ
benefit lhe bank
"It truns our overhead ,"
Stevens sa1d. "For example,
r1ght now we have to keep 41
sets or boo ks
"All of our banks help each
other ma ke loans to their
custom ers . A farmer m
Circ lev ill e, for example,
probably needs a larger loan
than the bank tn Circleville
can make. So the bank lhere
makes the loan and gets a
bank in Colwnbus to take
part of It," he sa1d.
"That sounds good , but 11
means that you have to have
two sets of .Joan '· flles , you

See What We Have in Store for You
During Our

WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
*FRIGIDAIRE *CALORIC
*ADMIRAL* SPEED QUEEN
REFRIGERATORS - RANGES FREEZERS - DISHWASHERS -

WASHERS - DRYERS

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

have to have two banks
approve 11 It takes more
tune, more people, when two
banks ar e mvolved,"' Stevens
srud " After July I, 1f the
fanner m CircleVIlle wants
lhe same loan . he wUI be able
to make it with one set of
files, one approval process . It
will be greatly simplified."
The merger also means the
new bank will be able to make
larger loans, more loans of
the $500.000 to $5 million
vanety )'"
"Right now, I lhink the
Circleville bank can make up
to a $150,000 loan The ~nk m
C&lt;Jlwnbus can make up to a
$12 million loan When lhey
get consolidated it ('lhe new
bank 1 can make up to a $25
m11Iion loan.
·'It 's mportant to be able to
make the b1g loan , but the
most 1rnportant thing IS to be
able to make that $500,000
loan. That's our bread and
APPEAL IS MADE
TEHRAN, Iran tAP)
Prfme Minister Mehdf
Bazargan made a ne"'
appeal for national unity,
urging Iran's citizens to
"do O."ay 10lth the sense of
revenge "

and

MEETING FRIDAY
Chester Township Trustees
will meet Fr1day at 7:30p.m.
at the town hall lor the
purpose of appointmg a clerk.
Applications are now betng
accepted.

State No. 2%3X
CONSOL!DA TED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
ol Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business March 3t, l!rl9, a state banking Institution organized and operating
under the banking la"s ol this State and a member ol the Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a call made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Reserve Bank ol thfs Dlstrlrt.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depoSitory mstitutions .
U.S. Treasury set·urttJes
Obligations of U S. Government
agencies and corporatiOns
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States . . .. .
.. .. . . .
All other securities
a Loans, Total (excluding unearned mrome) .
b. J.ess: allowance lor poss1ble loan losses
c Loans , net
Ban~ premises, furniture and fixtures, and

other assets representing bank

All other assets
TOTAL ASSETS

prem1 se~

5,339,000 00
2,734,000.00
1,694 ,000 00
' .. . . . 2,664,000 00
. . . .. "". 24,000 00
. 13,547,000.00
109,000 00
. . . .. 13,438,000 00
. . .. 380,000 00
. . . . . 75,000.00
. . . . . 26,348,000.00

I.IABII.ITIFB
Demand depoSits of indi viduals,
partnerships and corporatiOns
. . .. . 8,267,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corp&lt;Jratwns
. 14,906,000.00
Deposits of United States Government.
... 41,000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
in the Umted States ..
. 815,000.00
AII other deposits
.. .. . . ....
. . 2,000 00
Certified and officers· checks
. . .. .. .. .. . . .... 150,000.00
Total Deposits . . . ...
24,181 ,000 00
a Total demand depos1ts . .. .. . . . .. .. . .. . . . . 9,210,000.00
b. Total time and savings depos1ts
14,971 ,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities
sold under agreements to repurchase
.. . .. .. . . . 250,000.00
All other liabilities. . . . . .....
232,000 00
TOTAI. 1.1 ABILITIES
.. .. " • . .. . 24,663,000.00
FAUITY CAPITAL
Common stock :
a. No shares authorized 16,000
b No shares outstandm g 16,000 .
. ..... (par value )
400,000.00
Surplus .. . .. .. . ..
600,000.00
Undivided prof1ts and contingencies and
olher capital reserves
.
. .. .. .. .. .. . . 685,000.00
TOTAL EQUJTV CAPITAl. . .
. 1,685,000 0
TOTAL !.1 ABIJ.ITIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAl. . . .. ..
26,348,000 00
MEMORANDA
Average lor 3() calendar days ror calendar month )
ending w1th report date ·
a Total depoSits
. 20,800,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and secunlles loaned (book value );
U.S Government obliga tions, direct and guaranteed ,
pledged to secure depos1ts and other liabilities ..... .
....... 1,161 ,515.01
TOTAL .. . ..
. . .. '. 1,161,515.01
1, Roger W Hysell, Cashier, of the above-rtamed bank do her~ by declare
that thiS report of condition is true to the best of my knowledge and belief
Roger W Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this report of condition and declare tha' it has been exa mined by us and to the best of our
. knowledge and belief IS tme and correct .
'
R C. FOJ .!.ROD
I.F.SLIF: F FULTZ - Directors
C. WAYN F.~WJSHF:R
State nf Ohio County of Mt•lgs, ss ·
Sworn to and subscribed before mt• th1&lt; lOth day of April, 1979.
· .JoAnn f'riSp, -Notary Public
My C&lt;Jmmiss1on Expires July 17, 1983

'

work

together lor progress.
But Bazargan safd In a
radiO&gt;-TV address Tuesday
night he was not criticizing
Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelnl's revolutionary
tribunals, which have sent
158 of Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavl's men before
!Iring squads since the
Ayatollah's forces took
po" cr 10 weeks ago.

1

butter busmess - loans of
$500,000 to $5 m1llion Most of
lhe banks l m the system
now ) can't make more th an
$200 ,000 loans, so we have to
go
through
that
. ( participatiOn ) ritu al."
Stevens said.

County Court
Twelve defendants were
fined and six others forfeited
bonds tn Meigs County Court.
Fined by Judge Charles
Knight were David C.
SIZemore, Galllpolis Allen D.
Moore, Whipple, Ohio, John
S. Thomas, Middleport,
Juamta E. Henson, Addison,
and Richard T. Hovatter ,
Middleport, $15 and costs
each, speed ; Donnie 0 .
Evans, Racine, $5 and costs,
no muffler; Theodore V. Coppick, Rt. I, Portland, $50 and
costs, reckless operation;
Harold E. Smith, Reedsville,
$150 and costs, three days
confinement, DWI; Max
La udennilt, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, reckless operation,
costs only, three days confinement, no operator's Ilcen·
se; Michael Braun,
Pomeroy, $15 and costs, no
cycle endorSement; Wetzel
Phillips, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $50
and costs, no operator's
license; Della Braglln, RD,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
disorderly.
Forfeiting bonds were
Lowell Halfhill, Gallipolis,
and Thomas Joyce, Wood·
ford, Va., $380.50 each, DWI;
Donald E. Kelly, Middleport,
$362.50, DWI; Darrell Dill
Hanning, Rt. 2, Albany,
$37.55, failure to display
license plates, $37.55, expired
operator's license, $62.55,
reckless operation; Stephen
L. Gregg, Utile Hockmg,
$35.50, speeding; Lasch
Douglas, Rt. I, Shade,
$362.55, DWI
Holzer Medical Center
Dilcharges, AprO 23
Mrs. Marshall Arrington
and daughter, Sbaron Bailey,
Lydal Black, · Hobart
Blackburn, Charles Bw1,
Steven Combs, Mrs . James
Counts and son, Stacy Flooy,
Chad Granen, Waldon Herd·
man, Janet Holllngshead,
Alice Hopson, Caroline
Johnson, William Lewis,
Ethel Pyles, Donald Saxon,
Chaires Staley, Carl Sullivan,
Do\ph Swick, Mrs, Larry
Ward and son, Mrs Dale
Whitt and son, Hobart Wilson,
Sr.
Births, Aprll24
Mr. and Mrs. John Notter,
daughter, Ravenswood.
Mr. and Mrs . Ricky Stout,
son, Bidwell.

· ~------------------------~

1I

Area Deaths

1

I

SHAKUN DUSENBERRY
MASON - Funeral ser·
vices were held Friday at
Goebel's Funeral Home m
Crooksville for Mrs. Sharon
Dusenberry, T/ , Crooksville,
who died unexpectedly April
17
.
Survivors includ e her
husband , Richard , two
children, Heather and
Valeri~. her parents, Mr and
Mrs Harold Jeffers, a
brother, S~phen Jeffe r~' iihtl
sister, Mrs. Ruth Ellen
LeWJs, all of Crooksville
Attending the funeral from
here were Mrs . Lola Jeffers,
an aunt, Mrs Nancy Hayes
and Larry Jeffers ol Middleport

Wayne
Km g , two
daughter s, Mr s. Mark
1Elizabeth ) C.1ark, Albany,
and Mrs. Gloria Meeham,
C&lt;Jiumbus; a son, Raymond
l~ster King, Nowata , Okla. ;
a sister, Mrs. Calhryn Ervin ,
Middl e p o r t,
12
grandchildren, several greatgrandchildren, and several
nieces , nephews and cousms.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the
Rawiln gs-C&lt;Ja ts
Funeral
Home 1n Middleport and
bunal Will be m the Bradford
Cemetery . Mrs. Kmg was a
member ol the Bradford
Church of Christ. Fnends
may call at lhe funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p m
Thursday.

HILDA J.KING
Mrs. Hilda J . King, 84,
formerly of Bradbury, died
Wednesday morning at
O'Bleness Hosp1tal in Alhens.
Mrs. King was born May 6,
1894 in Me1gs County, a
daughter of the late Miles and
Anna Greenler Hysell .
Besides her parents, she was
preceded m death by a
grandson, two sisters, Edna
Russell and Grace King, and
lhree brolhers, Howard, Eli
and Nalhan Hysell.·
She had been living m
Albany.
Survtving are her husband,

MRS. PE;TER KRAJCOVIC
Mrs. Peter Krajcov1c died
Tuesday at Wmtersville.
Mrs. Krajcovic was the .
mother of the Rev. Father
Joseph Krajcovic, a former
pastor of the Sacred Heart
Church in Pomeroy.
Funeral services Wlll be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday at
the St. Addlebert Church m
Dillon vale The body IS at the
W1lson Funeral Home m
Dillonvale where friends may
call from 7to 9 p m. Thursday
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Fr1day R&lt;Jsary services will
be held at the funeral home at
7 30 p.m Fr1day.

Hike hike set May 12 ·
The annual hike-bike of the
Meigs Association for Retar·
ded Citizens has been set for
May 12.
The hike-bike is a county
fund raising effort supporting
programs of the Association
of Retarded Citizens in the
county and the state.
Volunteer walkers and
riders travel a 2$ mile route
::: :::::::· ·:::;: :. ·.· :::'::::·:-:·:·:·:·::
EXTENDED 01JTIA)()K
Friday through Sunday ;
Showers poss1ble Friday.
Fa1r Saturday
and
Sw1day. Alternoon highs
will generally be In the 60s.
Overnight lows will be in
the 40s to low 50s Friday
morning, falling to the
upper 30s to mid 40s
Saturday and Sunday.

CADIZ , OhiO (API Sheriff's
deputy
J .E .
Me Millen says a second
conversation With Floyd
"Bill" Lamb Jr. produced no
new leads uof any value" in
the Investigation of the
shooting of Lamb.
Lamb, a United Mine
Workers offiCial, was
released from Martins Ferry
Hosp1tal Thesday, a day alter
being shot while en route to
Washmgton to claim a
disputed union office.
McMillen said Harrison
County sher~ff's officers
mterviewed Lamb twice
while he was m the hospital
"He thinks he may have $40
m1ssing, " McMillen added.
"He said it may be lost m his
car -and he hasn't had a
chance to get back to 11 to
look."

McMlllen said Lamb was
not ·asked whether the
wounds to Lamb's left arm
and left leg were selfmfllcted . " The 1dea JUSt
hasn't come up,'~
' he added.
No slugs were ecovered
and McMillen sai the Ohio
Bureau
of
Criminal
Identification
and
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Investigation is checking
Admitted-James Reeves, Lamb's clolhmg m an effort
Pomeroy ; Cltarles Challan, to determine the stze of
Athens; Jessie Wh1te, bullets that wounded hm
Pomeroy; Samuel Pickens,
Lamb, 44, sa1d he is not
Syracuse; John Nelson , willing to connect the
Middleport; Randall Batey, shootmg w1th his umon
Middleport; Lucretia Werry, activities or his dispute w11h
Pomer~y; Patty Landaker, UMW
President Arnold
Pomeroy; Mark Carson, Miller over handling of union
Racine; Linda Bailey, business.
Dexter.
Lamb was on1y two miles
Discharged-Bobby R&lt;Jy, from his home, en route to
Harold Jeffers, Jennifer Washington to try to reclam
C&lt;Jchran, Opal Kauff, R&lt;lss his elected seat as District 6
Kent.
representative on the umon 's
International
Executive
SUPPER PLANNED
Board, when he said he
Tuppers Plains School stopped to a1d a stranded
Boosters will stage a pubhc motonst and was shot.
spaghetti and soup supper
Lamb served mote than a
from 5 to 7 p.m Saturday at year on lhe board before he
the school.
was suspended by Miller last
August . He was again
MAYOR'S COURT
elected, over two opponents,
Two defendants were fined in a special election March I,
Wid three others forfeited but Miller suspended him
bonds in' the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Anthony W.
Reeves, 18, Pomeroy, $225
and rosts and three days in
jail,
dr1v1ng
while
intoxicated, and Jessie L.
Stewart, 72, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, left of center.
WELLSTON, Ohio (AP) Forfeiting bonds were Faye A Texas firm is continuing
Powell, Racine, $25, posted studies for locating a deep in·
on a stop sign violation; jectlon well for hazardous
Danny W1se, 23, Middleport, wastes in Ja~kson County af$25, disturbing lhe peace, and ter rejection of the site as a
Christopher Mackm , 22, hazardous waste landfill by
Riverside, N J., $350, driving the Ohio Environmental
while intoxicated .
Protection Agent. -·'
Don Fitch, vice president
for marketing services lor
SQUAD RUNS
Browning • Ferris Industries
The
Middleport of Houston, said company
Emergency Squad answered
engineers should complete a
a call to 107 PleaSant Ridge,
of a 365-acre !ann site
study
Pomeroy, at 6:03 p.m.
within two weeks. He said !he
Tuesday for Lucretia Werry engineers also should comwho was taken to Veterans, plete a study of the EPA
Memorial Hospital where she '
ruling on tbe landfill by that
was admitted. At 2:11a.m. tune.
the emergency umt and f1re
Last week the EPA ruled
. department was called to the
tbe
soil under former dairy
R&lt;Jute 7 bypass where a car
farm did not bave a 25-foot
accident had bet•n reported.
layer of clay needed for the
The units found a car had disposal of hazardous wastes.
struck a guard railing _but
The company's plans have
there was no driver or been opposed by a Jackson
passengers at the scene.
Cllunty environmental group .

was It ," Lamb said

"The

next lhmg I know , I'm laying
in the front seat of my car
w1th my arm hurtmg like
hell. I don't remember any
gunshot n
Lamb sa1d he doesn 't
remember much about his!:..
mile dr1ve to the home of a
fr1end, Melvin Martm, 31,
who drove hlfD to Martms
Ferry Hospital.
"I remember thmkmg I
was never going to get out of
lhose back roads," Lamb
said

SALE!

Sea!s

the~

·

Yardware
store

'

.

I· ou r

BRUCE FISHER

MICHAEL McGUIRE

DANIEL LEE TIIOMAS

Nationwise--.
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) - Four children d1ed
early today when fire swept through their home on the
city's south s1de, firefighters said.
The victims were Identified as Adam Boyd, 2, Jef.
frey Gibbs, 3, Veronica Boyd, 5 and Mattbew Boyd, 7.
The1r parents, Isaac Boyd, 28, and Loretta Gibbs,
T/, escaped the fire and were taken to Mansfield
General Hospital for treatment on mjuries suffered m
getting out of the house

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• Now on sale •n our "B" and "T" catalog supplements

ctuthorrzed CATALOG SALES MERCHANT
234 E. Main St.

1

Pomeroy.O.

Open· Mon . thru Wed. 9-S, Thur . 9·12, Fr•day 9-5, Sat.

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Shop C•taloc by Phone

ISears I

~

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992·2178

'

ELBERFELDS..-W A REHOUSE

SAN DIEGO (AP) - A Nigerian exchange student
abducted a psycHologist and forced him to Withdraw
money from a bank, then held off pollee for 3'/z hours
on an interstate liighway before being shot and killed
by police, authonties sa1d
Police spo~esman Bill Robinson sa1d the 22-year·
old student had hved Wlth the doctor as part o( a
foreign studies program, and may have been usmg a
pistol the criminal psychologist reported stolen on
Tuesday.
'nr. Richard E Townsend's family also on Tuesd~y
reported a woman housemaid was IDissmg, said
Homicide Lt. John Gregory , and police wre checking .
for a possible link to the abduction.

· • NEW YORK (AP ) - 'Burglars knocked tbe dials•·
and handles off jewelry safes in the G~rnbels depart·
ment store on Herald Square and stole as much as $1
million worth of gems, the jewelry department's
operator said Wednesday.
The robbery took place Tuesday night. Even
before a full inventory had been completed, Stephen
Parker, director of Marcus and Co. said the thieves
were believed to have made of! w1th valuable fm1shed
pieces of jewelry.
'They got diamond rings, pendants and earrings,"
sid Parker. "Manyh of the pieces are Irreplaceable,
one-&lt;1f-a-kind. They 're worth $5,000, $10,000, $20,000
each."

, MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) - Authorities in
Washington County say a lea~ from an 'oil p1pehne produced a 2'h-rnile spill m the Little Muskingum River
Wednesday.
Tbe State Highway Patrol at Marietta said the leak
was stopped at its source along Ohio 26, about four
miles from the village of Reno.
A spiJkesman for the state Department of Natural
Resources siad hte spill apparently did not affect
wildlife. But he sa1d the possibility of a fish kill still exists The Ohio Environmental Protection Agency said
no one living along the river as affected by tbe oil leak

Senate delays

taX

CARPETING
6 AND 12 FOOT WIDTHS

GRASS GREEN AND DARK GREEN TURF

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
MECHANIC STREET

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON (AP I Conswner pnces mcreased
another I percent in March,
led by sharply higher prices
for food, housmg , clothmg
and gasolme, lhe government
srud today
It said gasoline pnces rose
3 6 percent , the largest
monlhly jump In nearly four
years . Both housmg and food
costs were up by I .percent.
The March mcrease m the
C&lt;Jnsumer Pr1ce Index, whiclr
lollowed a 1.2 percent rise in
February, means that the
nation's 35 m1lllon Social
Security re c1p1ents Will
rece1ve a 9.9 percent increase
m benefits to offset the
unpact of mf!atum m the past
year. officials said.

The Gallla C&lt;Junty Board of
C&lt;Jmmissioners moved last
mght to send a letter to the
C&lt;Jmmun1ty Mental Health
and Retardation 648 Board
outimiitg fet'IIIS"lilong whiCI\'
the county would consider
frontloadmg the construct~on
of an admmistrative annex at
the Mental Health Center,
Jackson Pike
Questions roncerning the
legal1ty of expending county
and state monies for mental
health facilities in Gallia
C&lt;Junty ,,as well as the terms
of lhe agreement by which
the county rece1ved a portion
of the property upon which
the center IS built led
Prosecuting Attorney Josepll
L Cain last week to seek, on
behalf of the commiSSIOn, an

WASHINGTON (AP) Th e average elderly Soc1al
Security benefiCIAry will find
$25 extra .in h1s government
check this July and some Will
get up to $50 more as a result
or the automatic 9.9 percent
benefit mcrease announced
today.

cuts

The record mcrease, which

Dr. Zimm~rly
resigns post
Robert E. Dame!, chnic
administrator annou nced
today that Dr. John Zim·
merly, medical director at
the Jackson C&lt;Junty Branch of
the Holter Clinic, 1s resigning
effective July I. Dr. Zim·
merly, who has been w1th the
clinic for the past two and a
half years, has chosen to
• ·return to private practice and
will be re-locating h1s offic e
m the Jackson area
· Even with Dr. Zimmerly's
departure , Dame! commerted, Holzer has no plans
at this time to cease
' operations at the bran ch
clinic, located in the Jenkms
Memorial Clinic facility in
Wellston.
However , w1th1n the next 30
to -6 days, Holzer will be

Scout Awa rd in 1977 He 1s
Chief of the Order or the
Arrow Dance Team from
Thal-coo-yzo Lodge 457 Dan
IS a junior member of the
Pomeroy Voluntee r F1re
Department and a member of
Trinity (burch, Pomeroy
Williamson IS the son Of
Fred and Donna Williamson
ol Rutland. He IS maJoring m
co mmuni cations and electronics at Meigs H1gh School
H1 s hobb1es are tenni s,
photography . loot ball and
basketba ll and he IS a
member of the Rutland f' ire
Department

en tine

at y

111e average benefit will be
increa sed by about $25, to
$283 a month . Checks
refl ectin g mcreases Wlli go
out beginning in July.
Although the mcrease m
the C&lt;Jnswner Price Index
was less lhan in February, 11
was still at a level that
endangers the sue&lt;-ess of the
Carter admm1strat10n 's anti·
inflation program.
Pnces dur1ng the fust
three months of 1979
mcreased at an annual rate of
13 pe,rcent , the highest
quarterly rise In 41\o years
and
far
above
the
admm1stration's target for
thiS year of 7 4 percent.
The Increase- for the 12month period endmg m

optn1on from the Attorney
General
According to Cain, the
agreement with the Holzer
Hosp1tal Foundation contains
a cond1tioii that the cowJty
must use the property for
mental health or other health
related matters
A reverter clause attached
to the deed states that 1f the
county should not use the
property for such purposes
the property reverts to the
Hospital Foundation, and the
county IS pa1d $104,000, less
depreciation on the bUildings.
Pointing
to
other
goverrunent proJectS, such as
lhe Green Box Program and
SEOEMS, or1gmally funded
by federal grants and lhen
turned back to the local

SS recipients
given pay hike

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Sticking to the coutse
reconunended by its Budget Committee, the Senate In·
dieated Wednesday 1t will delay further tax cuts until
1!182 rather than make wholesale reductions in federal
spending.
On a 56-36 vote the Senate defeated an amendment
by Sen. William Roth, R-Del. , that would have allowed
a $10 billion tax cut in 1980 and a $$-billion reduction
the following year by cutting a variety of spending programs below the levels proposed by the committee.
Without such tax cuts, Roth said, inflation and
scheduled Social Security tax increases will take a bigger bite out of Citizens ' paychecks.

INDOOR-OUTDOOR

Weather

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

THURSDAY, APRIL 26, 1979

•

March was 10 2 percent
figures commg out for aome period.
One of President Carter's tune to come."
- Housing I percent, down
top inflation adVIsers, Barry
In its report today, the from 1.3 in February and up
l)le Labor Department said 10 6 percent for lhe year
Bosworth,
told
Associl!ted Press Wednesday workers' spendable earnings
- Apparel and upkeep 1.5,
that if Inflation does not begm dropped another 0.1 percent percent,. up from 0 3 in
to cool soon, it 1s likely to get m March because of riSmg Felruary and up 5 percent
much worse as workers inflation That raised the for the year.
demand steadily h1gher total lost buying power · of
- TransportatiOn
I 2
wages to keep pace With paychecks in the last year to percent, up !rom 1.1 perc-ent
steadily rismg prices.
an even 2 percent.
m Febr~ary and an increase
At a Democratic fund·
The department gave lhis or' 10.1 percent for the year.
rrusmg dinner in Bedford, breakdown on price increases
- Medical care 0.6 percent,
N.H.. Wednesday night, for vartous categories ln the same as m February and
Carter also warned of further March, compared w11h the an mcrease of 9 percent for
price increases.
previous month, followed by \he year.
"Inflation is bad and it will the total increase over the 12
- Entertainment 0.9
be months at \he very least months from March 1976
percent, up from 0.4 percent
before it gets substantially
--'-Food and beverages I in Felruary and an mcrease
better," the president sa1d percent, down from 1.6 ql 6.1 percent lor the year.
" Frankly, we will conttnue to percent m February and up
-Dther goods and serviceS
see dtscouragmg pra ce 12.5 percent for \he 12--mon\h 0.6 percent, down from 0.7

Commission-'s letter defines terms

Leak produces oil spill

1

Thomas . son of Mr and
Mrs Donald R. Thomas,
Pomeroy, is on the footbaJI
and
basketball teams He IS a
school and iS c urrently
servmg as ycari.Jook editor member of Boy Scout Troop
risher is employed at Dut- 240 and recc1vcd hiS Eagle
ton's Drug Store
McGuire 1s the son of Mr
and M., DaJias McGUire of
Langsville and IS enrolled m
corrununication elel.1.ronics at
Cool er With occasional
Me1gs H1gh School He 1s a showers or thunderstorms
loot ball player. a member of tonight Lows m the m1d to
VarsJlY " M" , and a member upper 40s. Cloudy and cooler
of the high school VICA. He Friday with periods of
was a member of th e showers.

•

VOL NO. XXX . NO. 9

llillb1lllcs 4-H Club ,for f1ve
l cars

March consumer prices up aga1n

$1 million jewel robbery

' BY
OWNED AND OPERATED
Jack &amp; Judy W1111ams

member of the Me~gs H1gh
French Club during hiS first
t wo years of high school He
was a l earbook staff meml&gt;cr
his first two ycurs or high

•

Kidnapper killed Wednesday

0

RICHARD L. WILLIAMSON

Me1gs H1gh School
Junwn; hHvc been named
df'icgiltes to the 42ud ann ual
lluckc) e Boys State slated
.June 1ti-24 at llowhng Green.
1bc) arc Bruce F1 sher and
Michael McGuire, who Will be
del ega tes of Middleport's
Fecn cy -l:l enn ctt Post 128,
AmcrJcon Lcglon. and Daniel
Lee 1'homas and H1chard L
Willia mson, uclcgatcs of
Drew Webst cr Po st 39,
American !.egwn . Pomeroy
F1sher . son of Mr and Mrs
Hobert Fisher. Middleport, 1s
a mem ber of Health Umted
Methodist (burch' He "as a

e

Four children die in fire

LOGAN, Ohio (AP )- Members of U&gt;cal882 of the
United Brick and Clay Wor~ers of America at General
Clay Co.'s Logan plant have voted to stnke Monday at
12;30 a.m., when their current contract expires.
Union President Wlllirum Huffines said the 47
workers rejected a company offer Wednesday that in·
eluded a '11 percent pay raise over three years with no
additional benefits.
Astrike by about 40 workers at General Clay 's Diamond pliint outside of Nelsonville was in itS 57th day on
Wednesday. Wor~ers there have been on strike s1nce
Feb. 28 in a dispute over employee time off, insurance
benefits, and the hirmg of non-union personnel.

Site remains

under study

Meigs delegates.named

wgan plant may be struck

No leads found
in Lamb's case
agam, saymg the earlier
dispute over expense reports
was not resolved.
Lamb sa1d m a telephone
interview from h1s hospital
bed that he remembered
seemg a hght-eolored car
parked alongSide U S. 250
Wlth 1ts hood up. A man with a
flashlight waved him down,
Lamb_said, and he stopped to
g1ve assistance.
" I walked over and that

· established by a local com·
mittee. Friends, neighbors
and businesses sponsor those
taking part, agreeing to
donate a predetennined swn
for each mile cl route
covered by the walker or
r1der
Forty percent of the funds
raised will go to the Ohio
Association of Retarded
Citizens to belp lund the state
programs.
.
Henry Cleland, Jr., agam
heads the hike·bike which
will start at 10 :30 a.m. behind
the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Manning D. Webster
will be honorary chairman.
Anyone wishing any m·
formation on the event should
contact Christopher C Layh,
·administrator, Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation,
992-'025

se riously evaluating its
ab1hty to provide coverage at
the Jenkins fac11lty subsequent to July I, 1979.
Daniel further stated we
are makmg every effort to
recruit additional fam1Iy
practitioners for the branch
operatiOn . As of August I,
1979, the chruc will add a
sixth full time pediatrician to
its staff, and it is possible that
full tune rotational ped1atric
coverage w1ll be available at
th e branch clm1c as of that
time.
Daniel commented that
Holzer Clinic will do
everything possible to
mamtaln continuity of care
during the transition or Or
Zunmerly' o departure.
~

wUI cost the Soc1al Security
trust funds $10.2 billion, came
automatically as a result of
the rise in the C&lt;Jnswner
Pr1 ce Index m the first
quarter of this year over the
same period m 1978
An estimated 35 million
retired or disabled workers
and their families and
sur v1 vors will get the
mcrease m lhe1r July checks.
Bimef1ts also will go up 9.9
percent for about 5 million
Supplemental Secunty
Income recipients at a cost of
$415 million.
Here is a hst ~ f the benefit
mcreases :
The maXImum monthly
benefit for a worker retiring
at age 65 in 1979 will jwnp
from $503 40 to $553.30. The
minirnwn benefit for ·a 65year-&lt;~ld worker Will go from
$121.80 to $133.90.
For a retired worker alone ,
It will go from $258 to $283.
For an elderly couple, both
gettmg benefits, it will go
from $439 to $482.
For a mother with two
ch ildren on Social Security,
benef1ts Will· jwnp from $614
to $674. t'or an aged widow, 11
w11J nse from $243 to $267 For
a disabled worker wilh a Wife
and children, it will go from
$581 to $639
The average benefi(for all
disabled workers will JUmp
from $291 to $3ZO.

The SSJ payments, -which
go to \he elderly, blind and
disabled who are nl'Ody , will
climb from $189.40 to $208.20
for an individual, and from
$2114.10 to $312.30 for a couple.
Most states supplement these
payments
Last year's cost of living
mcrease was 6.5 percent.
This is the fifth annual
cost-&lt;~l·living
automatic
mcrease and exceeds the
preVIOUS high Of 8 percent in
1975

Gatrell heads
Jaycee club
Gr eg Gatrell has been
elected president of the Meigs
County Jaycees.
Oth er ofh cer s elect ed
Monday mght were !lob Schmoll . treasurer ; Carl Gheen.
secr etary, J eff Russ~Il .
programmmg v1ce preSident ;
David Fox, administrative
vtce president. and Dave
Jenkin s, •tate director.
The new constitution and
by- laws were approved and
mem~ rshipnt ght

phms were

ma de for ~ prll 30 at the
coonhunt crs bulldmg on the
count) fairgrounds.
A district meeting will be
hel d ~pr1l 29. at the
coonhunt e r s building
H cgiStr~tion bcgms at 2 p m
llill Young and Dave
Jenkins were named to co·
chair the l!li1J fro g JUmp
1'he next I.Joard meetin g
\Ill! be hold May 4 at 6 p m at
th &lt;•
headqu a rt er&gt;
II
\·1sita t10n wa.s mad e IJy lh e

Athm s Ja) r·cts i't
Monda) ni ght m l'd lifg

th e

govern m ent for contmued

mamtenance, Cain said last
mght that if a Similar
situation should occur with
mental heal!h (unds ancj t he
county rollrd ' not maintain
such services at lhat site, it
would be unla1r to taxpayers
to have potentially millions of
dollars in constructed
buildings revert to lhe non ·
profit corporation.
Following a meeting In
executive session with the
prosecutor, the commissiOn
moved to send a letter to ,the
'648' Board adv!SIIm, lhat to
HEARING SCHEDULED
.The VIllage ol Pomeroy
will hold a public bearing at
(;30 p.m. on May 1, 1979,
concerning the Commuafty
Development Block Grant
iCDBGJ.
'llle (Mirpose fs to hear
suggestions lrom cftlzeos on
development of a proposal to
submit to the Department ol
•Housing
and
Rural
Development (HUD I.
.'[lie HUD dollars would be
used to extead sewer Jines to
the Kerrs Run Area .
. While the VIllage ol
Pomeroy has been notiHed ol
its ellgtltty to complete the
application , any proposal fl
subject to approval by HUD
prior to actual fuadtng.
.The meeting will be held at
City Hall council chambers,
E. Second .St., Pomeroy.
.For further Information
contact the Pomeroy Mayor's
Office. City Hall, Pomeroy.

alleviate legal problems in
lrontloadlng the annex,
arrangements should be
made with the hospital
lourulation to eliiQill!'le tbe
reverter clause, or to modify
lhe deed In such a way that
lhe·foundation would pay fair
market value for any
buildings constructed at the
s1te.
The letter to be sent wUl
also advise that consideration
of the annex JX'O ject will be
rontingent upon the return, to
Gallia from Me1gs C&lt;Junty, of
'648' Board funds and the
designation of Gallia C&lt;Junty
as official fiscal agent for the
board.
Cain said last night that
wilhout such a designation
the county auditor C8Mot
legally certify lhat funds
exist for the project.
In a letter dated March 5,
'648' Board Executive
Director Maxine Plununer
advised the commission that
lhe board's funds, which had
been assigned to Gallia
C&lt;Junty smce the beginnlllg of
the Mental Heallh Center
project, were being moved to
Meigs C&lt;Junty.
Cain
emphasized
throughout the evening
sessioo lhat the deciSion as to
where to locate the
administrative annex was
one to be made by the '848'
Board, and that it was his
opmion that the county
commission should not be
mfluenced by threats from
the '648' Board to withdraw
1ts funds and personnel If the

OSP checks
three· wrecks
The Gallla -Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
three acCidents Wednesday in
Meigs County',
A Pomeroy man was Cited
on a charge of DWI following
a one-vehicle accident on SR
7. one and lhree-tenlhs of a
mile south of :;It 5,' at I :50
a.m '

Officers report that a norlh
bound auto operated by
Lulher Blevins, 19, ran off the
nght Side of the roadway and.
struck a guardrail.
There was severe dllmage
damage to the Blevins auto
The patrol was called to the
scene of a ml!!hap on CR 1,
five :lRd four-tenlhs of a mUe
north of SR 124, at B a.m.
Officers report a norlh
bound auto operated by Jaerl
Quick, 24. Albany, swerved to
avoirl ;m on comtn ~ vehicle

dr1ven by Earl Barnes, 28,
Albany, and pasaed off the
right side of \he roadway mto
a ditch .
Barnes was cited on a
charge ofleft of center. There
was slight damage to the
Q111ck auto.
The patrol investigated a
two-vehicle collision on
Township Road I, three·
tenlhs ola mile west of CR I,
at 8 am.
Officers report \hat a west
bound auto operated by
Ralt*l Chrlstian, 34, Welli!ton,
and an eai!t bot11d vehicle
driven by Unda Vaughn , 26,
Langsville, sidesWiped In a
curve .
There was moderate
damage to the Christian
vehicle, shght damage to the
Vaughn auto No citation was
Issued
41

county d1d not cooperate.
Present during the meeting
was Rev . Frank Hayes, '648'
Bo81'd member , who echoed
an opinion expressed by
Plummer in a Jetter
presented
to
the
conunissioners on Tuesday,
stating that Gallia County
had everything to gain and
nothmg to lose oy proceeding
With the $400,000-plus project.
··· · ::::·::·:·:··:·:·:: : :: ~~::•:':: •'••

·....;..;.;.;

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday: Showers ending
early Saturday. f'alr
Sunday and Monday. Highs
In the 505 Soturday, war·
mlng to the 70s by Monday.
Lows from the upper 30s to
tbe lower 40s Satunday,
warm!Dg to tbe mfd 40s to
mid 505 by Monday.

Attempted

B&amp;E
probed
Me1gs Count y Sheriff
James
J
Proffitt's
department is invesllgatmg
lhe attempted breaking and
entermg of Gilbert's Teuco
Station on SR 7, below
Middleport
According to the Sheriff's
report the mc1dent occurred
sometune ater 10:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Attempts to pry
open the front door were
unsuccessful Since the
per so n or persons were
unable to open lhe door, the
glass m \he door was broken.
According to Gilbert ,
manager , the intruders did
not go inside the b_uilding .

Sidewalk sales
slated May 3·5
Sidewalk sales will be held
m the village of Middleport
May 3, 4, and 5. Th1s was
decided when the Middleport
Chamber of C&lt;Jnuneree met
Tuesday night at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
A!WIIda Werner reported
there are'!/ pald members of
the chamber
In other business,members
agreed to purchase new
atrtstmas bulbs.
Ladies of lhe Order of
Eastern Stars prepared and
served the dinner. Attending
were Caoh Bahr, Jresident ,
who Jresided, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Owen, Mr. and Mrs.
nrw- bert King, Mr • ~·
""d Mrs.
Don Willloll, Libby stumbo ,
Ml!rilyn Meter Mrs. Werner I
Audrey Oav..;port and Mr :,
:~nd Mrs . Edi..W. Baker.'

percent m February and an
Increase of 7.5 percent for the
y~ar .

The Labor Department
said the C&lt;Jnsumer Price
Index in March stood at 209.3,
meaning that goods and
serv1ces priced at $10tlln 1967
had increased to $209.30 last
month .
The department said a 2.7
percent mcrease m meat
prices accounted for most of
the rise in overall food costs.
Beef and poultry· prices
increased sharply lor the
s1xth consecutive monlh .
There also were increases
m the price of eggs, pork,
fre sh fruits and dairy
produds However , prices for
fresh vegetables declined
sharply, reflecting an
mcrease in supplies of lettuce
and tomatoes because of
1mprov e d
we ather
cond1t1ons, the department
srud.
The department said the
mcrease in housmg costs
resulted from a 1.6 percent
increase in mortgage interest
rates and an 0 9 percent r111t!
m housmg prices.
The 3 B percent m gasoline
pr1ces was the largest for any
smgle month since July 1975
and renected the world oil
(Continued on page 9)

Urgent
appeal .
sounded
An urgent appeal was
issued today by Hank Cleland
for volunteers to help In the
Hike - Bike for retarded
citizens which wUI be con·
ducted here by the Meigs
Association for Retarded
Citizens
Cleland Is chairman of the
Hike-Bike which will take
place Saturday May 12 at
10.30, on behalf of persons
with mental .retardation In
Meigs C&lt;Junty.
.
Already the list of volun·
teers is extensive.
Ron
James ,
State
Representative from the 92nd
House District, pledged 1118
support. He wll! appear on
Hike-Bike Day.
Rick Crow, Proaecutlng
Attorney, Robert . Arms,
candidate for Mayor of
Pomeroy, and Christopher
Layh, Superintendent of the
Meigs County Board of
MP.ntal Retardation are all
so!letting sponsors lor their 25
m1Ie nde .
'This event takes people.
We have jobo for anyone
willing to give a little of their
time to our cause. Little jobs,
big jobo, all kinds ol jobs. If
working would be too much
tune, then be a sponsor! A
sponsor pledges an amount of
money for each mile the
person he sj&gt;onsors fln1shes .
We ask the people ol our
community to help us spread
the word," Payh commented
Anyone wishing to join the
H1ke Bike are asked to call
Rea Roush ·at 992-3232.
ACflONS FU.ED
In Meigs C&lt;Junty Cnmmon
Pleas C&lt;Jurt the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co ,
Pomeroy. liled suit in the
amount of $10,989.02 against
Thomas R. Dunham, Vickie
L Dunham, of Rt . 2, Albany,
and Harold R. Dunham,
Gahanna.
Nancy Lawson, Middleport
filed suit for divorce agalnat
Dale Lawson, Rt. I, Portl~ -

'

�~'!:he Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Apr 26, 1979

2- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Apr 26, 1979

'

t:TTA ..I'T wo""' il)ooR.Tt&lt;£"""""'

IIULIYIE

,. E.A

•g

Editorial

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

• •
OpiDIODS
•

A challenge to charisma
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

LEBANON , N H (NEA) · For a clear md1cat10n of which
candidate has surpassed all others - Democrats and
Republicans al1ke - tn orgamzmg for the 1980 presidential
campatgn , glan ce around the famtly den 1n businessman

THE U.S. AND YOU

Roger Wood's home here
Displayed a top the ptatlo m a place of honor IS a color
photograph of handsome. snuhng Rep Ph1hp M Crane
"I m looktng forward to workmg w1th you over the next

While other pres1dent1al hopefuls now have assembled

paid staffs rangmg from a half-dozen to a dozen people,

Crane has a campatgn payroll of about 30 full-time

Medicare's dental gap
By WU!Iam Stell
The subJect today 1s teeth, or lack of same if you are
gettmg along m years.

Americans will eat less beef
COLUMBUS, Ohw ( AP) AmeriCans will be eatmg less
beef for the next several
years because of the
consumer boycott and
government pr1ce ceilmgs of
the early 1970s
Those
two
factors,
accordmg to Dr Wallace
Barr of the department of

herds , cattle doesn 't get
slaughtered After they breed
next month, 1t will be 9
monUts (unttl a calf 1s horn )
Then 1t will requ1re another
12 or 14 months to ra1se hun
and get hlffi to market
"The whole thing mvolves
both hwnan psychology and
the physiology of the cattle
industry," he explamed.
Psychologically, sa1d Barr,
It takes "a year or so" for
cattlemen to dec1de 11
potential mcome and pnce 1s
for real. Once that's dec1d~,
then the physwloglcal
"btolog1cal phenomena."
process 1s 110plemented.
"Since farmers are holding . " It takes 44 to 48 monUts to
hack heifers to expand thm, see the effects of mcreased

normal hqwdatlon
"bt 1900, there will he less
beef to eat per person than
Uus year He1fers are bemg
held back for herd expans1on
wh1ch further reduces beef
producllon," he explatned
Beef, sa1d Barr, will he m
short supply for the next
three or !our years.
"ll will oomewhere around
1983or 1985 before consumers
will see a lot more beef on
their platters," he added.
The reason 1t will be so long
before beef is plent1ful 1s due
to what Barr descnhes as a

•

Jimmy's White House

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Everyone needs tee,th, natural or false . But Congress
1gnored that need when tl slttched Medicare mto the Social
Secunty law m the mld-1960s So Medicare 1does NOT pay
for dental work. Or for dentures.
In 1977 two-thlrds of the $41 3 bllhon health care costs of
people 65 or older was patd by government, mostly through
Medtcare and Medlcaid.
Medtcare alone paid 74 percent of all hospital b1lls for
these folks and 56 percent of all doctors' bills, a new Social
Security study says.
,

rhetoncally , t~en answer,
four traditional questwns,
startmg With, "Why IS lhlS
mght different from all other
mghts"

It was the f~rst tune they
had been called oo m such a
fashiOn Etzenstat told Miss
Feldman "As I tried to
coach them, the president
tapped my knee to md1cate I
should g1ve them a chance to
do tt on the1r om1 "

At another part of the
Jay
was
domestiC pohcy adviser, to observa nce,
take part m a traditional ass1gned to go to the front
"seder"
the central door and open tl to
ceremony of the Passover symbolically admtl the
prophet EliJah , regarded as
fesllval
Not only did Carter avmd representmg hopes lor an age
taking along the customary of uruversal peace, love and
motorcade
"pool"
of brotherhood
But the 8-year-old IU"st ran
reporters and photographers,
but he mentloned nothing to the back door to ask one of
about h1s plans to Ed Carter's Secret Serv1ce
Sanders, h1s hruson w1th the bodyguards lor perrruss1on to
Jewish community, or White open the front portal
House counsel Robert
The pres1dent h1mself
Lipshutz , whose Passover
to
the
seder he attended two years contnbuted
proceedmgs . E!Zenstat
ago
The event did not go totally related that Carter died a
m
Isaiah
unrecorded, however Carter passage
pennttted Eizenstat to give a prophesymg a peace pact
full account of the three hours between Israel and Egypt
of dmmg and symbol~aden that would be a harbmger of a
ceremonies to Trude B broader peace m the regwn
Feldman, Whtle House
The Carters' 11-day Easter
reporter
!or
Jew1sh
pubhcabons here and abroad vacatton m Georgia was, m
the president 's eyes, a huge

what he hked best about it,
Carter replied, "Bemg by
myself''

Carter apparently rehshed
the fact that h1s Sapelo Island
hideaway was far removed
from the traveling Wh1te
House press corps.
"We had a good time and
the press had a good time. We
were on one Island, and Utey
were on another Island,'' be

satd.

But Med1care paid nothmg for dental work Medicaid, a

I

smaller program for the needy, pa1d only a dab of the

cattle productiOn - roughly
four years," he said
More cattle, however,
doesn't necessarily mean

lower pr1ces
"There Will probably be an
eas1ng

of

prices/'

he

adimtted, "but it's awfully
treacherous to talk about
lower prices m light of
mflahon ."
Consumers,

1n

the

meant110e, will he probably
be eating more pork and
chicken
"We're gettmg a very large
expanSion in hogs There'll he
substanttally as much as ... 25
percent more pork m 1980
than th1s year And we'll have
more poultry, as well."

Although the pr1ce of pork
has been relatively htgh for
the past two or three years,
Barr foresees a low )l9mt m
terms of price by late th1s
year and durmg all of 1980
Higher beef prtces and the
availability of more pork, he
added, will prompt a shift by
consumers.

costs.
If you're in your 60s, chances are one m two you've lost

all your teeth. A natwnal health survey found that almost
two-thtrds of people 65 or older had lost all their upper or
all their lower teeth.

Result . Poor nutr~llon, speech difficulties, slower healmg of oral wounds, greater rtsks of mfect1on, psychological

problems.
Cost seems to be the reason Medicare, now covering

almost an e1ghth of the US populatwn, doesn't Include
dental health
But now Rep Harold E Ford, D·Tenn., 1s gearing up a
campatgn to mclude tt He's tntroduced legislation in
Congress so that Med1care would cover dentistry and

dentures. Rep. Claude Pepper, [)..Fla , who heads the
Committee on Aging, supports the 1dea So do
House Select
1

other well- placed lawmakers
Let's step back a moment and see what health care
spending in 1977 amounted to for each person 65 or older,
according to Soctal Secunty.

The average was $1,745 Of th1s, $769 went for hospital
care ($679 of that was paid by government). There was
also
- $446 for nursmg home care

- $302 for drugs.
- $51 for "other" health serv1ces, $13 for eyeglasses and
appliances

- $43 24 for denhstry
Of that, only $1 96 came from government, mostly from

MediCaid. Nothmg from Medtcare.
So older folks who needed dental care m 1977 reached

Thought for today: Adopt
the pace of nature: Her
secret lS paUence - Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Amencan
poet, 1803-1882

Business mirror

ATHENS - The loth annual Ohjo University Basketball School IS expanding and
will accept grades 5 through
12 m two sessions heglMmg
' July 22-'EI and July 29 •
; Augusta
Every youngster w11l
, receave individual coaching
by Bobcat basketball coach
Dale Bandy and assistants
Mike Backus and Larry Epperly along w1th a staff of
outstanding college and high
school coaches Bandy, a lormer Bobcat player, has been
a part of all but one of Ohio's
. seven M1d-Amencan Conference ChampiOnships.
Phil Ford, the Kansas C1ty
Kmgs' Rookie-of-the-Year
candidate m the NBA, Will
make a guest appearance
, during the second week of the
school. Ford was an All·
Ameracan Ruard at the

~ NOW!
FIX YOUR
BRIGGS &amp; STRA'n'ON
ENGINE WITH
ORIGINAL SERVICE
PARTS
We II be glad to serv•ce your e QIJ IP·
ment But you can save hme and

money by dOing some JObs yourself Get your Bnggs and Stratton
parts here Installation lnstruct•ons are on the packages
fh1s Braggs a: Stratton Servace and
Repau Instruction Manual will

month Social Securtty beneftls, dental health IS a relatively

shaw you hai--w-~----.

years ago showed that only one-ftfth of elderly people wtth
annual mcornes of $5,000 or less see a dentist even once a
year

One elderly person m 10 needs but doesn't have dentures
Almost one-thtrd of elderly persons who have dentures

need them reftlted or replaced
That's why Ford says "the people who need Medicare
help the most for dental health don't get it "
The situation ts the same for eyeglasses and hearing

aids. The only way MediCare wtll pay for eyeglasses is if
they're prescrtbed after cataract surgery Medicare won't

NEW YORK (AP ) Beverly Hamby says she does
not beheve 11, even 1f the
Umted States government
says 1t 1s so No, she sald,
secretartes do not agree that
their careers are at a dead
end
That
notwn
was
dissemmated lhts week m a
statement by the Natwnal

from payday to payday, but
mstead works at her job as a
career, I can't beheve she
thmks of 1t as a deadend,"
S8ld Mrs Hamby, who is a
CPS
A CPS • A Certified
ProfessiOnal Secretary,
earned m a twCK!ay, six-part

-I'm 21 -physical condition. In that
years old, have two children case, you . may need to
exammat1on encompassing
and weigh 145 pounds I have gradually start a daily walkbeen trymg to lose wetght but mg program and slowly
behavioral sc1ence, busmess
I nave fa1led I would like to develop your ability to exerCommiSSIOn on Workmg I a w,
e c on o m 1 C s ,
lose at least 35 pounds. I am c1se. Try to build up to walk·
Women, which ushered m management,
accountmg ,
on the pill. Do you think the mg an hour a day Start off
Nat1onal Secretartes Week decision-making,
p1ll is the reason for my not With just walkmg 15 minutes
With responses from a survey admlillstratwn.
a day and then gradually mlosing we1ght?
of 19,000 "secretartes "
Mrs Hamby, mother of
I eat a small breakfast and crease 11 so that you don't ex·
But were they really three, 34 years a professwnal,
before lunch-time I am very haust or "wear yourself out.
secretaries• Mrs Hamby, demonstrates her
hungry and my stomach
No, I don't think that the
pres1dent of Ute Nat1onal professtonal
skills
as
won't go down I do sit-ups p11l is responsible for your
Secretartes Assoc 1allon, secretary to Albert Goleman,
but after I do Sit-ups for gammg we1ghl nor do I think
beheves many responses a sen1or partner m Golemon
awhile .I start gettmg this it prevents you from losing
were from clerks rather than and !Wife, architects And
severe pam at the bottom of weight It's true that the p1lls
secretaries It happens all the she still takes cow-ses
my stomach. I perspire cause the body to retain
tune, she says
A deadend? Absurd, she
beyond your unagmation. Is soodlum salt, which m tum
E1zenstat's sons, Jay, 8, success
Clerks,
at
seems, says There is always a
11 because of the water m my causes you to tetam water. and Br1an, 6, rose to ask
When a reporter asked arbitrarily boost themselves challenge bt fact, It IS weD
body? I was thinking about These few pounds of water
mto the higher classification, known m executive CU"cles
taking water pills but I'm are not fat and, m any case,
and m domg so confuse the Utat many a secretary kilows
afraid to lake these smce I you wouldn't be retammg 35
defmlt1on The t1tle has lost more about the off1ce, and the
am on the pill too
pounds of water
prestige, she says. Even top job, than does the execut1ve
DEARDR LAMB-Iam20
DEAR READER - Your
professionals have lost prtde m charge
letter suggests that your years old and have bad dark
"Women now say 'I'm only
It ts as tl should be, she
b&lt;-slc problem With we~ght c1rcles under my eyes I
a secretary' m Ute same way says "The secrtlll"Y should
control IS you eat too much haven't S)JOken to doctors
they once s&amp;d 'I'm only a know q~ore about the office
That's true of everyone Peo- about it because I don't know
housew1fe,'" she declared. ft than the boss." The boss
pie get fat because they con- if anything can he done I eat
distw-bs her. She abhors the should be free to make
sume more calones than a balanced diet and I don't
tendency to demgrate one's decisions "He, or she,
thetr body uses The excess think there's any vitamin
own occupahon .
~ shouldn't have to b~
calones are sunply stored defiCiency I wear glasses so
" If a secretary 1s not just conceme~ With trmalilles
fat We lose those fat stores if eye slram 1sn't the answer.
markmg tlffie and waitmg
Pr1de, Ill -sell and work .
Attitude. They, 1t would
we consume fewer calones Could this be from other
.seem, have as much to do
than our body uses
sources• I have a fair comWith makmg the professwnal
Many people don't think pleltlon
as
does a knowledge of
about usmg calories, but
D1~AR READER- If a perTit~ lli\ II V !\f:NTINY.I
finance
or
law
or
rather think only of limiting son 1s relatively thin, there
(Tl~~ W i 9611
management
theory,
which
calor1cs w1th a diet It 1s a may be very little fat
Mrs Hamby studied m night
simple equal! on just like a underneath the eyes. In hghtcourses
checking account
skmned people who are thin
n~v~n m TifF.
But pride sometimes is
I am sending you The the ve1ns undemea\h the ski~
INTF.RF.~T nr
offended - by the salar1es
MF.J('.,"i MAMN liRF.A
Bealth Letter n~ber 4-7, may show through giving a
RO'RF.RT NOF.n rrn
She agrees With the 55
We1ght Losmg Diet, to pro- dark bluish appearance
rlh F.dl111r
percent m the government
VIde you a plan of a balanced
Another factor Is mcreased
0.\VlORJI~KmK
Ach 1 rfl~inJ!" Mana)!t r
sw-vey who complamed of
diet that you can use to con· pigment. The cells m your
Pu hll ~lw&lt;l 1l111h c~~ 1111 ~!urd/1\
low pay "lthmk there's oo
lrol your calone mtake. skm that produce melarun
ll\ TI11• Oh11 • v 1111' Pnhh~huw
f"lmp:n• Mnlilm1d1.• lr•r
111
question about ' that," she
Other readers who want this pigment may be overacllve m
l"1 i1r! ~~
P••rm•n" flt&gt;u• 4!i71ill
srud "No questton
ISSUe can send 50 cents WJih a this area. This 15 an mhented
Ru ~ u r ~~ ()fh• ,. Pt&gt;• n• fll't? ?1~
The
survey
tound
F'1l1
1o
u
l,tl
Pt&gt;,
n•
941'&gt;
.~
)
57
long , stamped, self- charactensllc and lS just as
~ 1••nrl • ] , , ..,~ 1'~~"1•11'•
p&lt;llrl
11t
respondents
eammg
about
addressed envelope for 1l much a part of you as the colPr 111 n 1 Oh11•
$8,500
a
year
.
,
Cert11Jed
Send your request to me ir or of your ha1r . This 1s the
1I •!N11•il••n.•l
.uh ''''"'llll' r1•rr••:-q n
I'
I . ul!)l'fl A !' ~t~ I Ilii•~ ~Hll
Professtonal Secretartes now
care of this newspaper, P 0 same pigment that the cells
•Fn 11•1 1\ lt' rl•••ltllll Ohlfl4411~
earn
about $16,000'to $18,000 a
Box 1551, Radio City Slallon, in your skm elsewhere pro~~ liS! rij•l u•n I •I• ' I'll II\ 4'rt'CI 11\
year , Mrs Hamby said. But
, '''"' '' 1111 ''·IIIHhlt•!ll'l•~·nl~po.r
Now York, NY 10019.
duce to cause tanning. How
li t' k Ro,; VI •I• r R••nl1• 11.ht rt•' nn:JIIr
she satd recognition and
Along with lhlS diet; as The dark your skin 1s depends
~ ~ r1 u • r••l ,n r•rh1hl! On• mnnll•
higher pay are coming
~~!Ill Rl 111,111 !II lihl•• ,lt•d w V~i
Health Letter explams, you literzlly on how much
n111 V t •I t'lj ' (I ~TV JY'!&lt; 11Ift~
IJ&lt;·&lt; "use there IS a shortage of
should exercise Your storr of melanm p1gment 1s produced.
tttt;O Tht'' tl'J•fllh&lt; ~~~0
good
secretaries.
"
Now.
then,
how
badly
do
you
want
to
get
pam m the pit of your In e1ther case, there's not a
r:'l '''''' '' ~"'(ltl I t.,... St~ 1111'1'11 '
t
t7no
Tl"
'
'
''"''II
•
•nnn
Maybe
a secretary's
mflat10n
under
control?··
stomach and excessive great deal which can be done
~~~h~r rill!' r• l'r l • 1• • hult ~Ill' ' ''
potential
1s
not open-ended
sweatmg suggests to me that about 1t other than the use of
1'11•11 ~ !i:, 1 ' '''' 1
you pnay not be1m optimal cosmetics. ~.
L________jl~'------------~~------~~----~~------~ But dead-ended • Hardly

Berry's World

)1

pay for hearmg atds at aU.
Ford is In a pos1tlon to prod the House along. He's not
only on Pepper's commtltee but also on the tax-writing
Ways and Means Committee, which mittates Soc1al
SecuritY and Medicare leg1slat10n.

Ford IS shooting for public hearmgs on the dental
problem soon He thmks the rtSmg pressure for a start on
nallonal health msurance may brmg some results, even

• S tep c y stec •n s!fu c 1 o n s
• D eta1 led d1agrams

• O n ly S4 25

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Pomeroy

W lnd

though the chances are NOT bright thiS year for Congress
moving to cover dental health (or eyeglasses or hearing
aids) under Medicare.
'
If you want to help Ford- and posstbly yourself- write

him at 1230 Longworth Building, Washington, D.C., 20615.
Or: wr1te your own congressman or senator and tell him

what you think of the dental gap m Medicare coverage ,

\Hlh two outs ,

wm Ray Andre"' s played a

fmc third base and socked a
smgle wh1lc Greg Becker,
Univers1ty of North Carolma Steve Ohlmger, Tnplett and
Each boy will have the ser, Kennedy each added a smgle
VIces of a full-time trainer 24
Tnplett fanned SIX 11hlle
hours a day, rece1ve a loser Cedar struck out three,
basketball schol T-shirt, play and walked one
m lea~ue competition, have
Me1gs IS no" 3-7 on the
the opportwuty to Win awar- season and w1ll resume play
ds and may enjoy swimming, F"nday when th ey host
Baseball At A Glance
leM!S and golf in his free Waver!)
By The Assoctated Press
tune
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Lmcscore
EAST
Each one also 1s covered by
Me&gt;gs
010 000 1- 2 6 2
W L Pet
GB
an insurance plan which In- H'nswood 000 000 0- &lt;l 3 5
11 4 711
Ph !Ia
duds coverage to and from
10 5 667 I
Mont
Triplett and Venoy
home and the school
Ch1cago
765383
Cedar and Johnson
St LOUI S
875333
The Oh1o Un1vers1ty
6 8 429 41 ~
New York
Basketball School has
Pills
6 10 375 5 1 ~
received the approval of the
WEST
Ohio High School Athleltc
Houston
12 S 706
(IMCin
9 9 500 J 2
Assoc1allon. Deadlmes for
San
Fran
9 10 474 4
apphcahons are July 6 (for
San D1ego
8 11 421 5
the f1rst sesswn) and July 13
Lo s Ang
a 12 400 5' 1
By Greg Halley
(for the second) The cost Is
Atlanta
5 12 294 7
Beth Bartrum hurled a
Wednesday's Games
$120 per week, and a $25
Pittsburgh 3 Cmcmnatr 2 11
deposit 1s required upon ap- three hitter and batterymate 1n01ngs
Dod1e
Chapman
socked
a
plication Deposits are refunMontreal 9, San 01ego 6
dable unlll the deadlme home run and tnple as the Ch1cago 4 Houston 0
host Me1gs Marauder soft- Philadelphia 5 Los AnQeles 4
dates
St Lou1s at Atlanta . ppd
League championship and hailers downed the v1sitmg ra
1n
all-star games Will be played Athens g1rls last mght, 11-1 New York 2, San Franc 1sco 0
Bart rum went the d1stance,
' Fr1day afternoons. ParThursday 's Games
Houston (Richard 3 0) at
ticipants are free to return lannmg seven"Athens batters
(McG lothen 2 1)
home after dinner Friday and walkmg f1ve Rankm took Ch1cago
San Franc1 sco (Knepper 1
the
loss,
strtkmg
out
no
Me1gs
Parents are mvited to attend
1) at New York (Allen 0 I)
afternoon sessions and may batters and walkmg nme
In I
(O..Iy games scheduled!
Me1gs got all the runs they
jom their son lor dinner m the
Frtday 's Games
needed m the second mnmg
OU dimng hall
San
Franc1sco
at Montreal
A typ1cal day begms at 7 30 when they had seven runners Ch•cago at Atlanta (n )
a.m. and after breakfast, on- to cross the plate Chapman Houston at P1tt sburgh (nJ
the-floor coaching ftarts at 9 singled and April Kmg and St LoUIS at Cmcmnall. (nl
Los Angeles at New York {nJ
a.m. m offens1ve fun· Bartrum each walked to load San
D1ego at Phliadelph1a
the
bases
damentals,
ind1v1dual
·In)
Terri W1lson then smashed
techn1ques and group drills
Alter lunch, lectures and a triple to clear the bases
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Nancy Smtih smgled, Kelll
dnlls by outstanding college
EAST
Rought
walked,
and
Pam
and high schol coaches are at
W l Pet
GB
I g m At 2·30 p m , defens1ve Crooks Singled to round out Bos ton
I I 4 733
New York
10 7 588 2
fundamentals, md11hdual the second fram e
Ball
10 8 556 21 1
Me1gs
added
four
msurance
techniques and group dnlls
655453
Detro1t
runs m the fourth, highlighted Mllwau
are featured.
7 8 467 4
League games and free by Chapman's two-run Toronto
6113536
5 10 333 '
tune are at 4 p m. and 7 I~ homer Athens got 1ts only Cleve
WEST
p.m m Ohio's spaciOus, air run 10 the seventh on three Calli
12 6 667
cond1honed ConvocatiOn Cen- Mflgs errors. the hrst one Texas
10 s 667 1 2
hemg on a strikeout
ter
Mmn
10 6 625 I
Chapman had her homer Kan C1ty
8 8 500 3
At 9 30 p m., cokes m the
Ch•cago
7 10 412 41 2
dorms with mformal and a smgle to lead the Me1gs Oakland
6 12 333 6
attack
whlle
W1lson
had
a
discussions with the coaches
Seattle
5 13 278 7
and counsellors; films of the triple. smgle and four RB!'s
Wednesdav's Games
Crooks had t"o smgles, and Mmnesota 4, Cleveland 2
NCAA Tournament and the
T
Ash had~ double Kyle had Detro1t at Mtlwaukee. ppd .
Ohw High School tourney,
two
smgles for the losers ra1n
plus top college games
4, Toronto 3 10 mnmgs
whlle
Brown had a double for Texas
Lights out at 11 p.m.
Kansas C•tv 7, Ch 1cago 6
their only hits
Batt •more 5, Callforn•a 2
Me1gs 1s now 7·2 on the year Oa kland 1 New York a
and tomght they travel to Boston 4, Seattle 1
Thursday's Games
Parkersburg H1gh School to
Detroit (Biilmgham 1 1 and
battle the B1g Reds
Baker 0 1) at Mllwaukee
(Sialoo 0 1 and Caldwell 3 I)
Linescore
Cleveland (Paxton 0 I) at
Athens 000 000 1- I 3 1 Kansas
Ctty (Galt! 0 2) In)
Meigs
070 400 x- 11 10 3
Balt1more ( D Mar !Inez I
Rankm and Evans
2) at Callforn•a (Ryan 3 1),
In I
Bartrum and Chapman

lfi!!t\
~

BASEBALL

Marauder gals
bomb Bulldogs

RIVERSIDE
V.W.-AMC-JEEP

Names •••
in the news
SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Comedian Phyllis Diller broke
an ann today when she fell out of a hotel bed while reaching lo~
an alarm clock, according to ber secretary.
Miss Diller, 61, was unable to summon help immediately and
needed oxygen while en route by ambulance from the Kings
Cross Hotel to a c1ty doctor's office where sbe was treated, according to the secretary, Miss Annette Van Duren.
Miss Diller is on a mouth-long Australian tour that was to
endMayl3
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - Newspaper •
serialization of Margaret Trudeau's memoirs has been halted '
while a federal judge decides whether their pabllcatlon·
v10lates an Argentme law prdhibltlng public advocacy of drug
abuse.
;
The newspaper La Razon started pubUshing excerpts of'
Mrs. Trudeau's life story, "Beyond Reason," on Monday. Tho::
paper complied with the order of Judge Jorge A Valerga Ara~
on Wednesday, but the paper called lt "an affront to the right;
of citizens to he fully and truthfully informed."
The first excerpt told about Mrs. Trudeau's experimentation,
With 11 vatiety of drugs in Morocco during her "flower child"·
period befO!'f meeting and marrying Canadian Prime Minister.
Pierre Trvdeau.
:
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (AP) - Actor John Wayne has!
lashed out at unnamed members of the media after being sent·
home !roll) a hospital where be was treated for bronchitis.
Wayne, treated lor one week at Hoag Memorial Hospital, left
uilnoticed Wednesday and later issUed a statement through a·
spokeswoman, Marcy Mobley, accusbtg reporters of trying to:
bribe hospital workers to talk about the 71-year-&lt;lld actor's·
~
condition,
"I haven't !ted to the press about anything, but they will not
take our reports as truthful," Wayne'sstatement said.
"They (reporters) sneak aroond trying to bribe people to say,
something that won't coincide with the official report. I don't
know why it IS necessary, but I guess that Is modem-day 'news
methiKis.'
_
''It used to be considered yellow journall.sm. Anyway, hilve a·
happy day," the statement said. Wayne could not be n!ached
to elaborate on the bribery clabn.
•
:
Wayne was hospitalized a month at UCLA Medical Center
this winter after undergoing surgery to remove his cancerous
stomach. Wayne's only public appearance since then W8f at
the Academy Awards ceremony April9,

1979 Wahama White Falcon Diamondmen

third and an error on a thro\\
allowed hlm to score an m
ON THE MOVE - Already sportmg an 11-3 record on the year, the
surane!e run for Trtplctt
Falcons are hopeful of capturmg the Class AA tttle P1ctured m front are team

Vcnoy caught a ftne game managers and olflclals, left to nght Beth Weaver, Ahc1a Roush, Tamrm
and added h1s double to the Young, Elv1s Zerkle, Donald Roush, !Wd Bumgardner and Jeff VanMatre

offered two sessions

btllton.
,
A lot of people aged 65 and up don't have the money to
low pr10r1ty Although older persons v1s1t doctors on the
average of s1x times a year, they're not hkely to v1s't .t!
dentist once a year.
And they should go more often A SuMley done several

mnm~

Tnplett drilled a smgle and
Vcno) follo11e&lt;l ~1th a double
( huck Kenned) then ha~ an
mheld hlt to dme Triplett
home w1th the only run he
needed
In the top of the seventh .
Venoy reached on a walk and
error Aground out got htm to

into their own pockets for 1t. Their total expenses: About $1
smk mto dental care If you're hvmg on $300, $400or $500-a-

second

advanced to second on an

OU's basketball class

organazers. most of them workmg out of a national
headquarters tn a northern Vtrginta suburb of Washmgton
Crane 's ftrst group of f1eld orgamzers also ts already m
place - here m New Hampshire and m other states that
wll\ hold early pnmartes or prectnct caucuses, mcludmg agnculture economics at
Iowa, Florida and Ilhno1s
Oh1o State Umvers1ty,
Crane's 22 tnps to New Hampshire far exceeds the total
m
market
of any other Whtle House asptrant He recently became the "resulted
distortwns
m
'73
and
'74 and
ftrst 1980 contender to purchase televiSIOn tune m the state
and tn the commg months \Ull be buymg llme for radJo eventually encouraged
fanners to hqwdate thell"
comrnerctals and openmg storefront offices here
That high-powered, fast-paced operatiOn already has cattle herds."
produced beneftts for the congressman When he declared
Consequently, Barr added,
hts mte nuons last August, most of the supposedly conswners are now paymg
sophts tlcated pohtlcal experts wrote h1m off as a longshot the pnce for that larger than
- but toda) he's almost always listed as one of SIX
·sertous ' contenders for the Repubhcan presJdenbaJ
nomtnabon
The on.ly other candtdate whose orgamzatton 1n New
Hampshire approaches Crane's lS George Bush Both
clearly are relymg upon the (ormufa developed by the man
who was a vtrtual unknown when he began campatgmng
ror the presidency m 1974, won the Democratic presidential
nommatlon m 1976, then went all the way to the Wh1te
WASHINGTON (AP) House - Jtmmy Carter
PreSident Carter's wellBut pohllctans, hke generals, are notorious for thetr
publicized celebratton of
penchant for flghtmg the last war - and the 1980
Repubhcan race cJearly IS not the 1976 DemocratiC contest
Easter With an all-black
Carter faced a £teld of generally lackluster competitors,
Baptlst congregatwn m
a luxury not available to Crane and Bush Two other
Georgia was m marked
oontenders for the GOP nommallon, Ronald Reagan and
contrast to hts pnvate
John B Connally, probably are the best "stump speakers ..
partactpatwn
m
an
-Republican or Democrat - m Amertgan politics today
On the other hand, orgamzahon traditionally has been a observance o( a Jewish
cruc1al element tn presidential primaries tn New Hamp- hohday.
Fow- mghts before Easter,
shire, where a relatively small votmg population places a
htgh prem1wn on personal contact with the candidates
Carter and h1s w1fe,
There are, of course, other candidates In the RepubUcan
Rosalynn,
drove
race. But 1t could well develop mto a fasclnatmg contest
unatu1ounced to the home of
between Crane's and Bush's organization versus Reagan's Stuart
E1zenstat,
h1s
and Connally's chartsma

HEALTH

B) Greg Bailey
l nplett kept the Hed Dev1l
M1ke Tnplett hurl ed a batters off balance all mght
three-hit shutout as the Mmgs w1th h1s off speed stuff and
Marauders mpped host walked onl) one batter That
Ravenswood Red Dev1ls 2-0 Y.Jn avenged an earhcr
last 'mght · '
sea son 11 2 loss to the Dcv1ls
Trtplet was never m trouble
Tnplett and batterymute
and with one out 1n the s1xth Mark Vcno} were mvolvcd m
was workmg on a no-hliter both of Me~gs runs In the

William Steif

two years ' says the handwntten mscnption " Warmest
regards. Ph il ..
The m emento actually IS a mass·produced 1tem, one of
thousands of tdenttcal copaes But behmd tl hes the story of
a pohbca l orgamzat10n that has far outpaced a ll others
ever smce tt was creat ed last s ummer to support the
prestdcnlial aspirahon of the conservative Repubhcan
from I llm01s
""
Late last year , Cra ne 's campaign staff orgamzed a mass
mathng aimed at approximately 20,000 mnuentlal Republica ns, rangmg from grass-roots acttvtsts and precmct
chaannen to offacers of county and state GOP commtttees
throughout lhe nahan
Each rectptent was mv1ted to JOin Crane's d Nahonal
Advis ory Council , 'a somewhat nebulous msbtubon whose
pnnt:t pal purpose apparently as to act as a reserwotr for
Crane support Those who accepted - almost 1,400 to date
- rccetved the mscrtbed photo as remmder of thetr
commttment
The s1gmf1cance of that sophlsttcated operallon hes m
the fact that It was well underway at a bme when most
other contenders hadn't even prepared the basic ptece of
campatg n literature, the throwaway pamphlet or leaflet
uwanably distnbuted by atdes dunng the candidate's
handshakmg tours

Triplett blanks
Ravenswood, 2-0

New York (Trant 0 I) at
Oakland (Keough 0 21 (n)
Boston (Stantey 1 1) at

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1976 FORD

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'9

01 , (nl

{Only games scheduled)
Fnday's Games
Mil waukee at Toront o (n)
M tnnesota at Detro1t (n l
Texas at Ch1cago. (n )
Cleveland at Kansas Cdy, {n)
Baltimore at Oakland , (n)
Boston at Ca llforn1a &lt;nl
New York at Sea ttle, (n)

1976 CHEVY
CAMARO
Small305 V 8 Engine , auto,

I

Best of Seven Ser1es
Senes 'I '

Thursday's Game
New York Rangers at New
York Islanders , (n)
Saturday, Apr1128
New York Rangers at New
York Islanders. TBA
Tuesday , May 1
New York Islanders at New
York Rangers , (n )
Thursday, May 3
New York Islanders at New
York Rangers (nl
Saturday , May, 5

or

MID·OMIO CONFERENCE
BASEBALL STATISTICS

MOC Overall

Rio Grande
CedollrVIIIe
Ohio Domrnlcan
Mount Vernon
Walsh
Urbana

T1ffin

Sunday, Mav 6

New York fii!:angers at New
York Islanders TBA, d
necessary
Tuesday , Mav a
New York Islanders at New

York

Rangers

necessary

TBA.

II

Thursday, ,.,.,V 10
New York Rangers at New

York Is landers,
necessary

(n)

If

or

17 3 8 470
29 6 13 448

Parfenchu ck IODl •

23

Glasser IMI
Dillon (RG I
Greetham ICI
Derrow IRGI

45

Weaver(MV)

4-A

s

- AP Sports Writer
The Los P.ngeles Lakers,
thetr seaso n over , now a watt
word whether Jerry West will
return as Ul etr coach

Speculators sa1d West
would step down fl om the
post he accepted m 1976, but
West wasn't saymg much
Wednesday mght after the
Seattle SuperSonics had
beaten the l.akers 106-100 for
a 4-1 v1ctory m thmr best-&lt;Jfseven Natwnal Basketball
A.o;soctataon sermfmal

"My plans for the futw-e
wtll be known m seven to 10
days," satd We st, who played
14 seasons for Los Angeles,
then gu1ded them to the
playoffs three consecutive

Bobcats
bombard
Wildcats

vacatwn plans, With Seattle
gomg on to meet the wUlller of

Suns !US, Klngs 91
Phoemx gol 26 pomts from
guard Paul Westphal and
ag~ m succeeded m st1flmg
Kansas C1ty rook1e star Phil
Ford m takin g a commandmg

the Phoemx Suns-Kansas
Ctty Kmgs senes The Suns

sen es lead
The Suns can move mto the

beat the Kmgs 103-94
Wednesday to take a 3-1 lead
m that set

conference fmal Wllh Seattle
by heatmg the Kmgs at
Phoemx Fnday mghl
Westphal, who had scored
JUSt 12 pomtsover the last two
contests, erupted lor 16 m the
second hall alone
Ford, who entered the
game havmg made JUS( e1ght
of hi' 35 f1eld goal attempts,
managed only stx more fur 12
pomts
" You've got to g1ve the
Phoemx defen se credit,'-' sa1d
Kansas C1ty Coach Cotton

seasons
as
coach
'Otherwtse I have no
comment on futur e plans "
The other Lakers can make

The Eastern Conrerence
sem1fmals resume tomght,

w1th the San Antonto Spurs,
leading 3-1, hopmg to flmsh
Ut e Philadelphia 76ers and
the Atlanta Hawks- trathng
3-2 - seekmg a lle w1th the
Washmgton Bullets
All the SuperSomcs have to
do IS wa1t They got 10 thirdquarter pomts from Fred
Brown and 10 fourth-quarter
pomts !rom Gus W1lltams m
rhllymg from a 51&gt;-53halft1me
dcf1c1t at the Seattle
Coliseum
Seattle had been rousted
from 1ts 1978-79 home, the
Kmgdome, by a baseball
game between the Marmers
and Boston Red Sox So they
returned to the confmes of the
Collsewn, where they have
won 33 of U1e 42 games played

23

40

45

37

Thompson {M)

57 11 20 351

Fttzstmmons ' We only shot
m spurts and that hurts "

Tolhvcr 1ssucd seven walks
whtle fannmg four

The

1110

Dawkms of the 76ers, author
of slam dunks natned the "In
Your Face Disgrace " and the

"Left-Handed Spme Chiller
Supreme,' ' w1ll start

agam.~&gt;t

San Antomo as Phtladelphla
struggles for surv1val
And Dawkms, all 6-feet-11,
260 pow1ds of h1m , says he 's
preparc'll to slam dunk a few
Spurs 1f necessary
'I mtend to play as d~rty as
I have to to wm ," sa1d the 22year-old tltey call Squawkm"
Dawkms " There's gomg to

he some hangmg around out
th ere "

San Antomo Coach Doug
Moe d1dn't seem tmpr essed
' Darryl 1s not dumb, he s
smart," satd the coac h
' What he IS saymg IS meant

to mtun1date the ofhc1als and
the players."

Now the Kmgs must beat
the Suns m Phoemx , where

Utey have lost all four of their
games thas season

"People will say, 'TI1ey 'll
Utrow mUte towel now,' but I
gua1 antee we won't ," sa td
fi'ttzsunmon s

Scott Wedman led Kansas
C1ty w1th 21 pomts and Sam
Lacey added 18 Garfield
Heard had 20 pomts for the
Suns

Kyger Creek's sputtermg
offense exploded Wednesday there smce Len .Wtlkens took
mght as the vlsltmg Bobcats over as L'Uach
W1lhams, replaced by
bombarded Hannan, W Va ,
Brown
early m the third
Ma ss iVe center Darryl
14·1 tn a h\ c annmg contest
quarter
r
eturned
to
score
Paul La sset er led the
wmncrs wtth three h1ts tn e1ght pomts m the 12-2 Seattle
that
put
the
lt!rec attempts John Amos, bur st
94-l!J
w1Ut
'
SuperSomcs
ahead
John Westfall and Greg
6
25
to
play
Sm1th each stroked two hits
Williams topped aU scorers
Akers led the W!ldcuts With
Wllh
30 pomts - five more
two smglcs
Ulan
Ute Lakers' Kareem
Tcrr; Porter , the winmng
Abdul-Jabbar,
who was
p1tcher fanned four and
forced
to
the
outs1de
by
walked five Three Wildcat
SuperSon
ic
defenders
and
hurlers Akers, Young and

WHY
PAY

MORE
FOR

CARPET

LEANING
Get professional
results at a
fract1on of the cost.

m&amp;ssed several tumaroLmd

jump shots

pu shed KC's

season mark to 4-6 The
Hobcats vt sll Southern

tonight and ho st
Pleasant F"nday

Pomt

Home runs

l.mcscore

Kyger Ck
155 lZ--14 15 I
Hannan, wv 001 oo- 1 5 4
Porter !WI, Gilmore !4)
and llusscll. SlTIIth 141
~kcrs 11.1 . Young \.1).
Tolliver 151 and Barnett
111lS fl.EUOWN
NORTH RP.NDALL, Oh1o
( AP ) - Doll's Ahead led
froiil Wlre~-wlre m wmnmg

Wedne s da y's
feat ur ed
Allowance at ThiStledown
Race Track
.Jockey John A Bunkley
rode Doll 's Ahead over SIX
furlongs m 1 11 2-.'i She pa1d

$23 30 , $12 60 and $7 30
Second-place Emerald Aire
returned $4 and $4 20, wh1le
th~rd-pla ce Bold Latch pald
$6 80

beat STY/US
W .J.J1
I

Home runs by Marty
Glassburn and Tim McComas
powered North Galha to a J-2
SVAC
victory
over
Southwestern Tuesday mght.
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Htghlanders jumped into a 1-0
f~rst mnu1g lead on a walk to
Jay Burleson, stolen base and
double by Gene Layton
Coach Walt Stowers'
Pirates took Ute lead m the
third
when Glassburn
slammed a two run homer off
losmg
p1tcher
Ke1th
SIZemore bt the next frame ,
McComas slammed another
home run to leftfleld
Wmnmg p1tcher Tun Petne
faMed e1ght and walked two
whlle Stzemore re corded
three strikeouts and tssued

Casey Kasem

STAR SUPPLY CO.

WMPO

SATURDAYS

__

9 til Noon
------ -

949 2525

Rae me , 0
___;

two free passes 1

The wm pushed North
Galha 's season record to 4~
overall and 4-l agamst league
foes

North Galha goes to
Harmalt Trace Thursday and
plays at Southwestern agam

10 435
11te New York Gtants woo f&lt;~raday evening
11 19 422 four sira1ght pennants, from
I .mescore
2 9 391
100 100 G-2 5
12 18 391 1921 through 1924, the only S'western
No
GaL
002
100 x- 3 B 1
9 12 378 Nat10nal League team ever to
916 364 do It
S1zemore (I, ) and Russell
12 13 351

Fullmer IC)

Schlater IUI '
Cremean ICI

Sunday, Apnl 'l9
Bos ton at Montreat TBA
Tuesday, Mav 1
Montreat at Boston (n)
Thursday, May 3
Monlrea l at Boston. (nl

Saturday, May 5

or

Sundayt May 6
Boston at Montreal, TBA . 1f
necessary

necessary

AB R H Avg,

Hall iburton (0 0) 1 o 11
Ltvensparger (MV)
30 2

Saturday , Aprtl28

Tuesday May 8
Montreal at Boston. (n)
nec essary
Thursdav . May 10
Bos1on at Montreal. {n)

By t RANK BROWN

Th e Tn feet a of Coal
Thytlm1 15), Gabb) One (10)
6 4 7 10 and Heal Caballo (3) pa1d
5 s 9 8 $2 607 90 on 20 wmnmg
4 6 6 8
3 7 5 9 t1ckets
The crowd of 4,508 wagered
1 5 1 6
{No Report) a total of $556 331
5 3 7 6

AVERAGES

D•ke!UI
Joyce { 00)

Lakers eliminated

Petr1e (W) and

Fht ~&lt;:l)ll

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PITCHING
W· L IP ERA

Senes 'J'
Thursday's Game
Boston at Montreal (n)
J

WLWL
7 I 11 5

Team
Malone

Second row Larry Hesson, Scott L1tchfteld , Grant Hysell, Barry VanMatre,
Shawn Fields, Mike Buzzard, David S1x and Carlos Hams Third row Fred
Smtih, Mark Sm1th, Vmce Weaver, Don Russell, Tlffi Rickard, Ferg McK~rgan,
Jack Smith and Kre1g Sayre

1f
If

81

282
3 26 1 08
I 0 8 112

I

Isler (M)
Lawhead {C)

4 1 31 1 74
0 0 10 1 80

Hocholt iRG I
Turskev IMI
Hobar iCI

2 1 28 2 25
2 1 18 2 50
I 0 10 2 53

Merritt (ODl
Thursday -

2 0 74 2 55
Mt Vernon at

Ttff1n, Clark Tech at Cedar
v1lle , Malone af Cleveland1St
Frtdav - Mt vernon at
Oom 1nlcan , Capttal at Ur

bana . Cedarvllel at Walsh
Saturday -- Rto Grande at
Mal one
Cf'darvllle at
Oomrn1ca11 Tlfftn at UrhM&lt;"
Sunday
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•
5- The Dailv Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Apr. 26,1979

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0~ Thursday. Apr.'26, 1979 .

•

Baseball .officials, umpires negotiating agam
CHICAGO
(AP )
• BaS.bau league officials ' are
. meeting with major leag ue
umpires at an undisclosed
lo cation to work out a

settlement to the umptres
strike , CommiSsioner Bowie
Kuhn says.
Kuhn said that in addition
to the meeting Wednesday ,

I&gt;Jth si des met last Saturday
;md pl an to continue doing so
in an attempt to settle the
dispute
Spea king a t an America n

Bar Associ a ti on luncheo n

Wednesday , Kuhn said he
never considered the strike a
"league matter' " and denied

tha t the co mmi ssioner's

A's blank Yankees, 1-0
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Wrker
" Happy Birthday to You,
Happy Birthday to You ,
Happy
Birthday
Dear
Yankee -Ki ller, Happ y
Birthday to You."
The Oakland A's warbled
that little ditty to birthday
boy_
Craig
Minetto
Wednesday night after he
celeb&lt;ated No. 25 in the best
possible fashion , recording
his ftrst major league victory
by beating t he world
champion New York Yankees
1-0 with clutch relief from
Jim Todd .
Just four years ago ,
Minetto
was
singing

NEED A

PROGRAM

'

Call us. We can provide an illustrated talk
or film Presenration
ror yOur group a1 no
charge. The programs
deal with varied

or

aspec ts
the energy
situation and are

designed 10 encourage
a qu~s tion and answer

period . Our phone ·
number is 992-.1786. ,

Ohio Power
.Company

·· Arri v-eO~rci, Homa" ... or at
l eas t · ' Ar .riv e d erci ."
Bol og na ''
After be in g
released by the Montr eal
Expos' organization on Sept.
18. 1974. he went to Bologna ,
Italy , in 1975 where he made
$1 ,000 a month in a weekend
league .
" They called me 'Cnk · in
Italy beeause t hey couldn't
pronounce Cra ig," he said .
There was no word on what
U1 e Yankees called him .
In other American Leag ue
action, the Boston Red Sox
downed the Seattle Mariners
4-1 , the Baltimore Oriol es
beat the caliiornia Angels 52, the Kansas City Roya ls
edged the Chicago White Sox
7-6. the Texa s Rang er s
.nipped the Toronto Blue J'ays
4-3 in 10 innings and the
Minnesota Twins defeated
the Cleveland Indians 4-2.
The Detroit-Milwauk ee
gaine w~s rained out in the
top of the fifth with the
Brewers leading 3-2.
The 6-foot left-bander, who
had made just one start in his
previous six big league
games, combined with Todd
for a seven-hitter that bested
the four-hit effort of loser Ed
Figueroa.
The A's scored in the sixth
when Glenn Burke led off
with a drive that hit the wet
grass - it began to rain in the
fifth - and skipped past left
. fielder Juan Beniquez for a
triple. He scored on l\1itche11
Page's grounder .
Minetto was relieved by
Todd after Chris Chambliss
and, Beniquez singled with
one out irl the· seventh. With
runners at first and third,
pinch hitter Jim Spencer
grounded into an inning ·
ending double play.
Red Sox 4, Mariners I
Jim Wright , making his
first
appearance ·after
starting the season on the

disabled list .. pitc hed flawless Toronto nicked reliever Jim
b;!l! for 52-3 innin gs and
Kern for a run in the nintlJ .
Geor ge Scott a nd F' red Lynn
fwins 4, Indians 2 .
hom ered as t})e Red SQx beat
With the score tied in the
Seattle for th eir Sixth stra ight nfnth inning, Jose Morales
vi clor y and the Mariners'
. drew a oneoo{)Ut walk,
l Oth lo ss In a r ow. Wright,
Cleveland r ight fielder Bobby
who came off the. disa bled list Bond s
dropped
Bobby
Tuesday , yielded an infield
Randall' s sinking liner after
single to Mario Mendoza a long run - Randall was
after retiring the fir st 17 given a hit - and rooki¢ John
batters. He '!iruck out six an~ castino delivered a lwo-run
walked non e in his s ix double.
scor eless inn ings.

office has avoided kill at1 ive
role in the dispute.
·
" The commissioner is very
much involved in ·. the
situation ," he said. o(You are
sometimes much better off to
work quietly in the bl!ck
room .···.
The umpires refused to sign
individual contracts before
the opening of spring training
with th e Nationa l and
American leagues in an effort
to renegoti ~te sala~ie:S alld
expenses. Although the
umpires signed a live-year
colle c tive .bargaining
agreement in 1976, each man
must sign a contract
annually .
. Kuhn
sa id
baseball
officials ' ref~sal to . meet the
wnpires' delnands was a .

Southern ·tops
Lancers, 10-2
By Greg llailcy
Jim O'Brien tossed a twohitter and host Southern
erupted for five runs in the
fifth inning in a come-from·
behind 10-2 win over Federal
Hocking last night.
The hard-throwing
righthander fanned five and
walked only three in going the
distance, allowing a single in
the first inning. and another
harmless single in the top of
the seventh. That last runner
was cut doWJi trying to steal .
With two out in the top of
the first, F ederal Hocking 's
Arnold drew a free pass and ,
ad\-·anced on an error. After a
stoien base, designated hitter
Driggs drilled a single
-scoring both rlliU1ers.
Southern got one run back
in the bottom of the third on a
Kent Wolfe single. an error.
and two walks. The Tornadoes knotted the score in
the fourth at 2-2 on a Terry
·McNickle single and three
walks.
With one out in the fifth,

.

catcher !Jave l{obinson and
pinch hittei Chuck Michael.
singled . McNickle drew a
wa1k, and a Lancer error
permitted two runs to score.
A walk to John Pape and an ·
error on Kent Wolfe 's
grounder allowed two more
runs to score . The fifth run
came on a walk that forced in
the run.
Jonathan Rees and Pape
each cracked a double in the
bottom of the sixth ·to add
three more rUns for the hosts.
Robinson led Southern's
hitters with two singles, and
Pape and Rees each had a
double.
McNickle, K. Wolfe, and
Michael each had a single.
Driggs 'IJld Adams each had a
single for the losers ' only hits.
Southern 4-4 entertains
Kyger Creek tonight.
Linescorc:
FH
200 000 il- 2 2 5
Southern 001 153 x- 10 7 I
Hart tLP) , Lewis 16) and
Dowler.
O'Brien and Robinson.

Sports World.

objected to the slow pace of
the talks with striking
umpires.

'T'.

•

~ ransBctiQRS

-NE W YORK (AP) - It 's a long way from the glamour and
~litter of Hollywood to the stench and sweat of Gleason's gym
m lower Manhattan, but Tony Danza made it.
It's a back-home-again odyssey that the young pugilist-actor
. wouldn 't miss for the world.
"I've always go\(a come back," insists the 27-year-old son of
a Brooklyn garbage. ~ollector. "I gotta be myself agail)- see
all the guys in the neighborhood, show that I'm real- not just
somebody in somebody 's mind ."
Tony Danza is a man who lives two lives.
'
Qne of them Is in the Pacific Coast's movie colony where he
'&lt;;"ides in a thickly carpeted apartment, fraternizes with
directors, courts movie starlets and occasionally plays the
ptano.
The other Is in his native Brooklyn where he does road work
through the str~ts of familiar ghettos, punches the heavy bag
m the old Prospect Hall and swings merrily through familiar
haunts.
•
· ''How . ya, Tony boy? + We catch you on the tuhe, you're
something else," friends and admirers yell at him as he walks
theteemmgbl!ckstreets.
.
"Be pulling for you at the Garden."
· Danza, ruggedly handsome with the Latin swarthiness that
draws feminine sighs, will don gloves Friday night for a
featured eight-round middleweight fight against the more experienced Max "Sonny" Hord in Madison Square Garden's
FeltForum.
·
Shortly afterward- win,lose or draw - Tony must fly back
to Hollywood to screen 22 half-hour segments of ABC's
television series, '.'Taxi," in which he has a leading roJe. He
' plays a lighter whodrlves a taxicab.
.
.' Danza. admits he doesn't have to fight for a living.
:Discovered by a Paramount producer while working out In the
.gym a year ago, he got a quick ride on the 'sbow business
.e scalator. Besides the part in "Taxi," he played a racing car
driver in an ABC pilot film, "Fast Lane Blues." He has the
romantic lead in a movie titled "Hollywood Nights."
"When they talk about me, I 'd like for them to say, 'That guy
,c an fight' and 'The guy can really act."'
Danza went to the University of Dubuque (Iowa) on a
·w restling scholarship and earned a degree in education and
social studies.'He wanted to be a teacher. Instead, he became
part owner of a bar in Queens. The bar had a piano. He learned
toplayitbyear.
"I didn'tdare look at a piano when I wasa kid," he says.
He fought in the New York Golden Gloves as a lightheavyweight, turned pro two years ago. He has a unique
. record - eight victQries, all first-round knockouts, and three
defeats, two by kayo in the opening round.
,• Tony has a "Keep Truck\n'" tattoo on his right ann, which is
..mildly embarrassing. He admits this might inhibit his chances
·,of doing a bathing suit scene with Racquel Welch.
·~ But he's never regretted going Hollywood.
' "It was like finding Aladdin's Lamp," he says. "But I still
·•love fighting. It makes me feel like a 12-year-old."

Spdrts Transactions

By The Associated Press
BASE'BALL

National League

GENERAl Ellis

NBA Playoffs At A Glance

Suspended

Valentine, outf ielder ,

Mont rea I Expos,, for three
days and fihed him 5500.

FOOTBALL
Ncitional Football League
DENVER BRONCOS receiver , to a series of one ·
year . contracts. Signed Lee
Gross, center .
NEW
ENGLAND
PATR lOTS - Signed Ray

if necessary

By The Associated Press

Sec;ond Round

Game I
Seattle 112, Los Angel es 101
Game2

Best of Saven Series
Eastern Conference

Game I

Jarvis and John Ricc:io, wide

receivers,

. Seattle 108 , Los Angeles 103,

San Antonio 119. Philadelphia
106

OT

Gamel
Los Angeles 118. Seattle 112,

at

linebacker, to a three -year

co~~WL TON TIGER- CATS'
- Signed Mark Peretti, of.
fens i ve tackle. and Tim
James , offensive g.u ard ..

COLLE!,iE
KANSAS STATE -

An -

nounced the resignat ion of
Judy
Akers ,
women ' s
bas~etbaH coach .

OPENING TUESDAY,
MAY 1ST

Game I
Washington 103, Atlanta 89

DR. KIT HEDGES,. CHIROPRACTOR

Game:z

Atlanta 107, Washington 99

Gamel
Washington 89, Atlanta 77
Game4
Washing-t on 120 Atlanta 118,

OT

Chuck

BRITISH COLUMBIA
LIONS - Signed Sam Britts,

OT

120

Game4
Gamel
Seattle 117, LoS Angeles 115
Philadelphia 123, San An Wednesday's Game
Seattle 106, Los Angeles 100
folliO 115
Game 4 .
Friday's Game
S~n Antonio llS, Philadelphia
Seattle at Los Angeles, TBA.
111
.; if necess~ry
Thurvtav's Game
Sunday's Game
Philadelphia at San Antonio ,
Los Angeles
Seatt le, if
Inl
' necessary
Sunday's Game
San Antonio at Philadel ph ia.
if necessary .
Wednesday, May 2
Philadelphia at San Antonio
( n.) if necessary

and

Campagna ,
defensive
lineman .
Canadian Footba II League

'

(Former Bradshaw Office) ·
181 Second St.
,
Middleport,
Phone 992 -6141 or 593 -6886 (Athens, 0.)
OFFICE HOURS
Tuesday 11 A.M . to 5 P.M.
Thursday 11 A.M. to 5 P.M.

'

Tuesday's Game
Atlanta 107, Washington 103
Thursday's Game
Wa shington at Atlanta

o.

Sunday's Game
Atlanta at
necessary .

Washington,

if

Western Conference

·

Gamel

Phoenix 102, Kansas City 99

Optometric Vision Center

Game2
Kan sas City 111, Phoenix 91
Game J

110 MECHANIC STREET
POMEROY, OHIO

Phoenix lOB, Kansas City 93
Wednesday'5 Game
Phoenix 11)8, Kansas Ci t y 94
Friday's Game
Kansas City at Phoenix, TBA,
if necessary

· ....~Sports briefs...

OPTOMETRISTS: DR. A. JACKSON 'BAILES
DR. l JAY BRADSHAW

,.

~

TENNIS
LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Bjorn
Borg
defeated
John
Alexander ~-7, 6-4, 6-2 in the
second round of the $250,000
Alan King Tennis Oassic.
In other matc-hes, Jirruny
Connors
downed
Dick
Stockton 6-4, 6-4; John
McEnroe topped Corrado
Barazzutti of Italy 6-3, 6-1;
Tim
Gullikson
upset
defending champion Harold
Solomon 6-4, 6-1; Gene Mayer
defeated Peter F1eming 6-3,
~ . 7-6; Johan Kriek defeated
Stan Smith 7-5, 6-4, and
Rllscoe Tanner beat Rllul
Ramirez of Mexico 7-5, 6-3.
BASEBALL .
SAN FRANCISCO - The
Oakland Coliseum· filed a
damage suit of more than $10
million against Oakiand A's
owner Cltarles 0. Finley,
alleging he breached his
contract by not promoting the
team.
The suit , filed by the
Coliseum, Alameda County
and the city of Oakland,
alleged that since the
beginning of 1975 season,
. Finley has done little to
promote local interest in the
team .
HOCKEY
MOSCOW - The Soviet
Union 's line of Boris
Mikhailov, Vladimir Petrov,
and Valery Kharlamov
combined for four goals as
the Soviets scored a 9-2
victory over Tear1 Canada to

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•

By The Associated Press

·~
l·i
,,.

'....',.
..,..

•,,,,.•

clinch its second straight
World Hockey Championship
title .
The Soviet victory gave
them an unbeatable threepoint edge going into the final
day of play .
In
other
action,
Czechoslovakia beat Sweden
6-3 to clinch second place \n
the tournament.
BASKETBALL
ST. LOUIS - Hopston
Rllckets center Moses Malone
was named NBA player of the
year and Kansas City Kings
guard Phil Ford was named
rookie of the year in a player
poll condu~ted by The
Sporting News. ,
The weekly newspaper's
first NBA All-Star team
consisted
of
Malone ,
Philadelphia's Julius Erving, ·
Milwaukee's Marques
Johnson, Denver's David
Thompson ; and San Antonio's
George Gervin .
TRACK A:ND FIELD
DES MOINES, Iowa - Jim·
HoweJJ dominated the field in
the running events and won
the Drake Relays decathlon.
Howell finished . with 7,470
points to win for the first time
in six tries at Drake. Dennis
Adama of the Indiana 'I)-ack
Club was second with- 7,333.
Howell won the 11\kneter
high hurdles and 1,500 meters
and finished second in . the
pole vault and javelin. He
won the 400 meters in
Tuesday's opening round.

•

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&lt;.'Onsecutive ·batters in one
stretch . The Mets managed
just three hits, but one of
them was John Stearn s'· first
home run of the season off the
left'field foul pole leading off
the fifth Inning .
Expos 9, Padres 6
Montreal scored five runs
m the first inning, three of
them on · Jerry White' s
homer, as the Expos stayed
one game behind the firstplace Phils. White replaced
Ellis Valentine in the lineup

CINCINNATI I AP) Pittsburgh manager Cltuck
Tanner said he · knew the
slow-starting Pirates would
come to life with a jolt, but he
was especially impressed
with Wednesday's 3-2 extrainning victory over the
Cincinnati Reds.
"This game was really
more important than our first
win here (a 9-2 runaway
Tuesday night ) because of
the way we did it - a onHun
game in extra innings," ~mid

Tanner, who must take a
scheduled day off Thursday
right when his team is hot.
"I don't mind the day off,"
he said. "I can't do anything
about the scheduling, so I
think it 's good we have a day
off ."
Kent Tekulve, the last of
four pitchers Tanner' used,
got the victory by pitching 3 13 hitless innings. Bert
B!yleven started and pitched
a strong 6 2-3 inpings, ~iving

Sports shorts
By The Associated Press
MISSION, Kan. (AP) ·The University of Central
F1orida will host the Division
1-AA football championship
Dec . 15, the National
Collegiate
Athletic
Association said Monday.
1-AA is the NCAA's division
for school's smaller than the
football powers, but larger
than the Division D schools.
The game, to be broadcast by
'ABC, will be held at the
Tangerine Bowl in Orlando,
F1a.
•
The NCAA also said its
Divison II championship will
be Dec. 8 at the University of
New Mexico in Albuquerque,
and the Divison
title game
will be Dec. I at Fort Va)ley
State College in Phenix City,
Ala. Both will lMi regionally
televised.

m

ROCHESI'ER, N.Y. (AP)
- The Rnchester Americans
of the American Hos~
League and the Buffa15
Sabres of the National
Hockey League have reached
two-year
working
a
agreement.
Under the new agreement
announced Monday, the
Sabres will provide 20 players
to the minor leagu~ Amerks

each season.
Amerks President Bruce
Davey said, "We're finally
·with an organization that's
willing to spend money to
make money.' 1 Buffalo has
the second-highest payroll in
the NHL.
Earlier, Buffalo severed its
minor:league arrangement
with the AHL's Hershey
Bears and the Amerks cut
their ties with the NHL 's
Boston Bruins. The Bears
remain affiliated with the
NHL's Washington; capitals.
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) -

Ron Waples, third in the

up five hits and both
Cincinnati runs. ·
"Bert was strong right up
to the end," said Tanner, who
yanked Blyleven after he
walked Reds' starter Fred
Norman. "I made the change
because I wanted Grant
Jackson to go against Ken
Griffey. "
.
Jackson got Griffey on a Oy
ball . Enrique Rllmo retired
two batters in the eighth, the,n
got lnto trouble and Tekulve
· wen~ the rest of the way.
It was the first ~xtra-inning
1 victory
this season for
Pittsburgh.
11
What can you say?" asked
Cincinnati manager John
McNamara . "The game was
well-played on both sides .
"This I Pittsburgh) is a
good ballclub, and you know
these guys are going to win
their share hefore it's all
over_,
Fred Norman pitched 7 2-3
good innings for Cincinnati ,
giving up four hits and a pair
of rWls, one of them a thirdinning homer by Steve
Nicosia . At one point he
14 consecutive
retir.ed
batters.
Norman's lone walk , also to
Nicosia, became the tieing

standings for the last two
years, has taken over the 1979
lead in the North American
harness driving race, the U.S.
Trotting
Association
announced Monday.
Waples had 136triumphs in ·
the latest USI' A figures for a
)()-victory lead over Herve
Filion, the North American
dash champion in 10 of the
last 11 seasons. Carmine
Abbatiello is third with 115
triumphs.
In the money category,
Filion leads with $904,309 to
$607,'020
for
archrival
Abbatiello . Ben Webster is
third with $666,276.

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During Our

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run when pinch runner Matt
Alexander stole second and
scured on a single by Omar
Moreno .
Dave Parker , who had two
of Pitt sburgh 's six hits ,
ifoubled to lead off the lith
inning and scored on Lee
Lacey's sacrifice · fly .
The Reds got two runs in
the third inning when Vic
Correll led off with a single,
went tn second on Norman's
sacrifice bunt and scored on a
basehit by Griffey. Dave
Concepcion followed with a
single up the middle, driving
in Griffey .
McNamara was more
optimistic Wednesday about
the return of his top two
pitchers, Tom Seaver and Bill
Bonham .
"It's . still possible Tom
could be back Sunday. The
key date 1to determine that 1
is tomorrow," McNamara
said . "Bill is going to throw
tomorrow morning . He's
thrown three times and has
looked better each time ."
Bonham took himself out'of
the Reds' rotation last week
because of a sore shoulder.
Seaver skipped his scheduled
start Tuesday night because
u£ a lower back sprain .

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after the' Expos' r ight fielder
was suspended by National
League Pr eSident Chub
F ee ney for bumpin g an
ompire in a game last
Saturday .
Cubs 4, Astros 0
Dennis Lamp fired a fivehitter· and Dave Kingman and
Bobby Murcer hit home runs
as Chicago blanked Houston
for its fifth straigh~ victory.
Till'ee double plays helped
!..amp post the shutout.

U

od

Where the dream
begins ...

cardenal grounded to second
as Trillo scored the tying run .
Mrts 2. Giants 0
New York 's Craig Swan
pitched the first two-hitter of
his career, striking out four,
walking one and retiring 16

·P l:p.o
• t es edge Reds, 3-2

.

·· ~

992-3279

. Sunday's Game
Phoenix at Kansas City, {n),
if necessary
Tuesday, May 1
Kansas City at Phoenix , (n~,

and a sweev uf the three' llle Phils won the In st t wo
game series between last games of the serie s 4-3 and 7~
There was only one thing year's National Lea gue 6, both in 10 innings .
Philadelphia has won nine
wrong with the Philadelphia playoff rivals.
The Phils have reached the of its last 10 games and is now
Phillies' three-game sweep
over the Los Angeles Dodgers best-of-five ~hampionship .11-4, its most wins ever in the
series the last tllree seasons, month of April :
- the timing .
'!he Dodgers had · scored
A sweep in April just isn't losing each time. Last fall the
the same as a sweep ln Dodgers beat them in. four three . runs in . the eighth
inning to take a 4-3 lead
October, and nobody knows games.
In other National League before the Phillies bounced
that better than Pete &amp;se ,
the $3.2 mlllion free agent games, the New York Mets back against rQOkie reliever
signed by the ?hils last blanked the San Francisco Rick Sutcliffe, who had
!"inter in hopes of . ending Giants . ~-0 , the Pittsburgh • allowed just one earned run
their string of ran failures . Pirates edged the Cincinnall in 131-3 innings be for e
" Man, I wish that was the Reds 3-2 in 11 innings, the Wednesday night.
Manny Trillo started the
third game of. the playoffs, " Montreal Expos outscored
the
San
Diego
Padres
9-6
and
winning
rally with a single .·
said Rllse, who singled home
the winning run with two out the Houston Astros shut out went to second on Bo b
in the ninth inning to give the the Chicago Cubs 4-0. St .· Boone's sacrifice and took
Phillies a f&gt;-4 victory over the Louis at Atlanta was rained third on a pinc-h-single by
Greg Gross . Pinch hitter Jose
Dodgers Wednesday night out.
ISy Al.t:X SAt.;H,\KE
AI' Sports Writer

By WID Grimsley
AP Correspondent

Signed Vince Kinney , wide

Gamel
San Antonio 121. Philadelphia

Orioles 5, Angels 2

' Ste ve Sto ne a nd Don
Stanhouse combined to pitch
Ba ltim ore to it s seventh
victory in a row and hand the
An gels
their
third
consec utive loss after a l()..
game winning streak. Doug
DeCin ces, who scored what
proved to be the winning run
on Rick Dempsey's sixthinning single, singled home
two insurance run s in the
ninth . Frank Tanana suffered
his third loss in five decisions.
Royals 7, White Sox 6
Frank White doubled with
two out in the bottom of the
ninth and scored on Al
Cowens' single. Darrell
Porter, who drove in four
rULis , gave the Rllyals a 6-5
lead with a solo home run in
the eighth but Bill Nahorodny
got the White Sox even in the
ninth with his second home
run of.the game. The Rllyals
came from behind with four
run s in the seventh on tworun doubles by Porter and
Clint Hurdle.
Rangers 4, Blue Jays 3
Tenth-inning singles with
two out by AI Oliver, Oscar
Gamble and pin ch hitter
Johnny Grubb produced
Texas' winning run. Oliver
drove in the Rltngers' other
three runs with singles in the
third and fifth innings. Texas
starter Ferguson Jenkins was
in line to become the majors'
first five-game wiJmer until

" que st ion of' principle ," the regular umpires, " but
adding that if umpires tried added that the men were
to " work things out," some "perfectly competent and
m odification in the contracts . they 're honest.
might have been reached. .
'"They 're doing their best
. " I believe the umpires have and that's t'he main thlng," he
pro ceeded in ·the wrong said.
way ,'' Kuhn said while not
Despite mounting criticism
ruling
out
fut ure of
the
substitutes '
modifications.
performance in games, Kuhn
Kuhn , conceded · that saidmajorleagueattendance
substitut e umpires drawn through Sunday was up 7
from amateur and minor percent from last season .
- leagues ','are not as good as
He added ,that only one of
the 26 teall) owners has

Rose hero, Phils sweep .LA, 5 to 4

Today's

....... .
'

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'' "'•

...
'"
I '":' ~

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'·~

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'•'
"

IS
Gallipolis Dai~ Tribune .
Point Pleasant Register
The Dai~ Sentinel.
Sunday Times-Sentinel ·

COMING
MAY .1
.

OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING co~

Chrome Grille. Wheel Cove rs, Bright Wrndshield. Dri p and
B ac~ l .i g ht Mo ld tng5, Explo rer Hood Ornament , Color·Keyed
F.O· A·D Tailgate i..eners. Power Steermg, SetectShll l Automall c
Transmission . Tin Steer1ng Wheel.·nnred Gla ss. AIt Condit toning.
Con. . emence Group and Del uxe Ptck up Bol( Cover
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�7- Thc O"ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Apr. 28, It'll

'Spring in Bloom ' theme offlower
show to be stage_d this weekend in Rutland
RUTLANll-"Spring In , of Garden Clubs . All classes
Bloom" will be the theme of are open for exhibit to the
the spring flower show of the public except five artistic arRutland Garden Club ·to be rangements classes -"Sis for
staged lhlll weekend at the Springtime with Love in the
Rutland Methodist Church.
Air", an arrangement using
The public Is InVIted to view spring colors; "P is for
theshowwhichwlllbe)udged Plants
Coming
Up
·at 1 p.m. Saturday by Mrs. Everywhere", an arrangeJanet Bolin, an accredited ment showing motion ; "R is
judge of th• Ohio Association for Rutland. Home of the
·

Sh. ·Ower
La~ette
·

HAD THREE WINNERS - Heritage House, Middleport, had two winners In the recent
Easter coloring contest sponsored by Big Bend area merchantS during the Euler season.
Shown, 1-r; are Charlotte Lyons, first place winner, In the 9 to 12age group, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John Lyons, Middleport, Audrey Daveriport, employe of Heritage House, who
made the presentations, and Wendy Fry, third place winner In the 4 to &amp;age group, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fry, Syracuse. Charlotte received $15 and Wendy$$.

r------------1
\
1 Pomeroy
I Personal Notes

HUMANE SOCIETY SEEKS

GOOD HOME FOR PUPPIES
Mrs. Vivian May with five female puppies mixed
breed - mother mediwn sized beautiful blonde. Puppies
- will be medium to small, all cute as dickens. Call
992-7853.

Mrs. Pearl Jacobs spent
Easter in Columbus with her
daughters and son-in-laws,
Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Jacobs
and Mr. and Mrs. William
Davis.
Mrs. Sandy Darst and
daughter, Columbus were
Easter weekend guests of her
perents, Mr. and Mrs. James
GUmore.
Miss Susan Flesllman of
Wesiervllle,
former
· librarian, visited several
days last week with Mrs.
Pearl Jacobs.
Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Walter, Toledo; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Smith, Mrs. Deloree
Smith and Melanie, Columbus; Mrs. Audra Thompson,
New Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Mater, Montclovia,
were here for the funeral serVices of Dewey Pullins.
Weekend visitlors of Mr.
and Mrs. 'Carl Moore were
Charles .and Mary Moore,
Tuppers Plains, and Mr. and
Mrs. WUI Mason, Waterford.
Drlday night guest was Mrs.
Audra Thompson, New
Albeqy.

· · · ·...........
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Helen Help

{uS
IJI

j:

Drew W.eb'Ster
.

}

i!_!-

metfordinner
Members of the

Past

• • • By Helen Bottel::; ==~ J':i:Y At!li~;

.
. A layette shower was given
recently honoring Mrs. Brenda Roush at the Cilrleton
Church. HOB!Ing the shower,
were Becky Smith, Marjorie
Smith and Donna Hatfield. 1
Games were played with
. prizes going to Linda WeD,
lona Brickles, Louise lf!lrrison a119 Debbie Ro~.
Mints, nuts, punch and cake
""'de and decorated with
pink and blue boOties by Peg
Houdashelt was served.
Attending were Kandt
Kearn, Debbie Glaze, Phyllla
Cross, Wanda Dillon and son,
Jason, Ruby Burnside, Ethel
Hatfield, Sharoo Duncan,
Helen
Dais,
Mary
Houdashelt, Judy Carl and

held

daughter, Meiodi, lona
Brickles, Denise Brickles,
Elizabeth Murray, Louise
Harrison Mabel Brickles
Janeth ~I, Yvonne Young,
Unda Well and daughter,
Heather, Anita Dean and son,
James, Virginia Dean, Eva
King, Paulette Harrison,
Cora Roush, Debbie Roush,
rnna GIUand, Debbie .Ellis'
Peg Houdashelt, Barbara
Hatfield, and Michelle
Taylor.
Others presenting gifts to
Mrs. Roush were Marlene
Harrison, Sadie Carl, Gladys
Roush, AUie Marr, Nancy
Bums, Ola St. Clair, Anne
Chapman, Millie King, and
Connie GIUand.

Albert Roush honored
Albert Rolllh who has
retired from the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
· Co. after 29 years, wliB
honored at a siii'Jllise retirement perty held EUler Sun·
day atbts home. The celebra·
tion was hoeted by his
children.
"Happy Retirement, Dad"
was Inscribed on the cake
served followihg the dinner
and Roush was presented a
pocket watch and a celling
clock. During the afternoon a
scavenger hunt waa held with
Lanny Tyree,. Jr, winning,
and an egg hunt with Doug
Mathenyasthewinner.
. Attending besides· the
honored guest and his wife,
Velsla, _were Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Parsons, Kim and Lola
Roush, Pomeroy; Mr. and

MrS. Larry Flowers, PickerIngton ; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherri and David, St.
Albans; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Roush, Susie, Roger and
Doug, Grove City; Mr. and
Mrs. Lanny Tyree, Lanny,
Jr., Jenny and Charlie ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenny Roush ,
Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Miller, Mrs. Gamet
Herdman, · Mrs. Bonnie
Matheny and Doug, all of
Leon,W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller,
·Mrs. Mildred Mead and Brian
Morris, Columbus; Mrs.
Veronica Wilson, Jason and
Bobby, Newark; Mr. and
Mrs. John Miller, Jonathan
and Rosemary, Susan Standard, Newburg, Ind.; Kevih
and Christi Smith, Pomeroy.

Show ", intrepretive; "I is for
Interest in Ma~ ing Things
Grow" a traditional mass,
and"N is for newcomers,
Each Club Needs a Few", a
modern design. These are
open only to Rutland Garden
Clubmembers.
The schedule includes a
cia~ for junior·.gardeners in
the artistic design category
entitled "G 18 for Garden
Chores, We Must Do", in'
eluding a gardenihg ''toy;
and Invitational classes open
to.all garden club members ih
. the county, "I is for Invitations We Always Send Out',. a
favorite design; and ".N is
for Nerves the Chairman
Has, There 's No Doubt! ".
containihg flowers and bare
branches. Only one entry is
permitted in each of the artistic design classes by each
exhibitor.
In the horticulture division

'A

SPRING

•GCT.

Friendly Circle met,
heard dogwood legend
Mrs. Kenneth Harris gave
thoughts on the crucifixion
for the program at Tuesday
night's meeting of Friendly
Circle held at Trinity Church.
She also read the legend of
the dogwood tree, and had
readings 11 Life is a Clock"
and "Time." Miss Elizabeth
Fick had charge of the
business meeting during
which time it was reoortf'd

II

that the circle has 10
cookbooks for sale. Mrs.
Donald Hauck expressed appreciation for get-well cards
sent to her mother.
Hostesses were Miss Mary
V. Reibel and Miss Mary E.
Chapman. The table was
decorated in. a spring motif
and they served a dessert and
coffee.
·
'

KINGSBURY

HOME
SALES &amp;
ACCESSORIES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
992 -7034

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Girl Scout Diary I
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· of Drew Webster Post 39,
'DAUGIITER'S MOVE-()UTOVERDUE:
The Harrisonville Junior students were making Easter
Pomeroy, motored to Point
SO START MOVING ON, MO'llfER!
Pleasant Wednesday evenihg Troop 11116 and Cadette Troop candy. A bowling party was
DEAR HELEN:
for dinner at a restaurant 1118 met recently for an planned. Prizes at the party
I lnade a terrible mistake and 111 never he happy again. I there. ·
·
~ Easter egg hunt with Susan were won by Kim Roush,
blew up and asked my 32-year-old daughter to move out~ and
Mrs. Olin Knapp presided Arnold finding tile prize egg Susan Jones, and Lynn Chase
she did. Though I've apologized for my regrettable actions, she at a meeting which followed . and being presented a with Ruth Ann Fry winning
is still aloof.
.the door prize.
A thank you letter was read chocolate bunny.
We were always extremely close and were constant compa· from Mrs. Henry Patro,
The pledge to the flag and · SYRACUSE JUNIOR
!lions. Then she met a man in January and we started fighting. chairman of the Department the girl scout promise opened
TROOPI.204
I resented him.
Work on the needlecraft
Past Presidents Parley, for a the meeting which followed
I now know I shouldn't have interfered with her happiness. contribution for women the hunt. Plans for proJects to bedge was completed when ..
How can I make her understand and get back to the way we veterans who are hospitalized get ready for the Meigs Coun· the Syracuse Junior Troop
were before• - ALONE AND MISERABLE
met Tuesday night at the
and a contribution to nurses ty Fair were discussed.
DEARAANDM :
Syracuse
Elementary School.
scholarship. Next meeting
FoDowlng the meeting the
Prove you've really let go, and your daughter will "get will be held on June 20. Mrs. scouts beld a surprise birth· JUI Nease had the opening
back," but never to the way you were before. Those constant- Edith Fox of Point Pleasant day perty for Harold Norris, and Sherrie Sisson the closcompanion days sh&lt;l!lld have ended a decade ago. You're both joined the group for dinner.
troop leader. Attending were Jni!. Next week the scouts will
long overdue for.new lives::: ih different apartments. -H.
·
Rhea Norris, leader, have a scavenger hunt.
dawnette and Darla Norris,
DEARHELEN. .
·
U
Susan Arnold, Kenda
I'm 23 and still live at home with my parents. I've been workDonohue, Unda and Usa
ing five years. We've never had any major problems.
·
Riggs, . and Mandy Reeves.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush Dawnette bed prayer before
But now i've fallen in love with an employee at the·plant.
He's wonderful and I know my parents would love him except of Grove City, are announc- refreslunents of cake, Ice
ing the birth of a son, Roger cream, snacks and koolaide
for one thing -he 'S black and I'm white.
1 want to marry him and have his children, but r can't in- Wayne Roush rr, born on were served.
.'
troduce him to the family. They 'II kick me out. If I tell him April 5 at the Riverside
SYRACUSE BROWNIE
that, he11 be hurt. If I bring him home, they'D be furious. What Methodist Hospital. The be by
TROOPII.!I
-weighed nine pounds, seven
canldo? -BLACKANDWHITE
.
At
a
recent
meeting of the
ounces and w~ 22 inches Syracuse Brownies,
DEAR BLACK AND WHITE :
daffodil
If you can 't face the hard fact of prejudice, you're not a good· long. Mr. and Mrs. Richard favors were prepared for the
candidate for a mixed-race marriage. Discuss the situation Huecker, Sidney, an4Mr. and men and women at the Meip
with your fiance. He may agree -unless you learn to come out Mrs. Albert Roush, Pomeroy, County Infirmary. A tour Ol
are grandparents. Mr. and the radio station was planned
ofhidihg. -H.
Mrs. Roush have a daughter, and Lois Davldaon served
Susan Marie, one. ·
DEAR HELEN.
refreshments.
My husband told me the reason most marriages break up iB
SALIBBURY TROOP 111111
because the wife did not trust her husband ; that his friendship
The Modem Woodmen of
-RECENT VISITORS
for an unattached office worker (half his age) was only that. I
America
hosted an Eaater
Mrs. Margaret Place of
suspected if he didn't like her a lot he wouldn't be trottihg over
party for the members of
Homer,
N.
Y.,
and
Janie
to her house every time she caDed and said the plumbing (or
Salisbury Troop 1100. The _
whatever ) quit; but I tried to think platonic, just as your cor- Halliday of Groton, N. Y . girls visited the Meigs holllli
were recent visitors of Miss
respondent, "Doubtful," did.
economics room where
Freddie
Houdashelt.
Then when he, an ardent non-fisherman, told me be was Jtolng fishing with the fellows - but took along good clothes and
- -~
. expensive shave lotion- I stopped being ashamed of my suspicions. That's when I learned what a fool I'd been, and started
becoming a -FORMERLY TRUSTFUL FORMER WIFE
READERS :
"Doubtful" (who wondered if Good Samaritan husbands
were actually "just friends " with the office females they I'
helped through weekend household crises) received no enFOR THE BEST DEALS
couragement from wives. But a man wrote :
'·
IN THE
"I helped a male friend seed his lawn and my wife thought
that was great. But when a female secretary has a car or house
problem and calls me, my wife turns green. What's the difference•- HELPFUL"
.. .If you really don 't know, Helpful, your wife has no problem. - H.

--

there is no restriction as to display of pictures of new
the number of entries which plants.
each exhibitor 111ay make.
Mrs. Margaret EDa Lewis
The classes are: "B is for is general chairman for the
Bloom of Spec imen show with Judy Titus as adFlowers ",
specimens of visor.
flowers from spring fiowering bulbs; " L is for the Lovely Soft Spring Showers",
specimens of flowers from
rhizomes; "0 is for Open to I ·
Oue and to All" , specimens
other than above; "0 is for
Oh, gee, Make this one tall"
specimen branch of flowering
shrub, bush or tree; " M is for
Methodist; who Lend Us
Their Hall" , specimen
with
flowers suitable for use in the
'church .
Special displays wiD include one from the Modern
Supply of pesticides and
gard enin g aids; seed
•AWNING
catalogs by the club
•.CARPORTS
members; a·display of books
from the public library, and a

I.

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

MAIN ST.

POMEROY, 0.

bi h
nno nee rt.

----FOR PRECIOUS MEMORIES-..

**EAR
NAME PENDANTS
RINGS .
*NECK CHAINS

*RINGS
*BRACELETS

COMPLETE STOCI&lt;

SHOP

Mason Furniture

Y2PRICE
PRICES
GOOD NOW

TRI-STATE AREA

THRU

MASON FURNITURE
Man .. Tues., Wed. ,. Friday &amp; SiJl-

MEET FRIDAY
Harrisonville OES will
· meet Friday at 7:30 p.m. at
th e Middleport Masonic
Templ e.
The · annual
inspection will be conducted
by the worthy grand matron .

· COOKIES AVAILABLE
There are still somP. Girl
Scout cookies available ih
Meigs County. Anyone
wishing to buy them is a~ked
to contact the county cookie
chairman. Pat Philson. at
992-7539 .'

'

Kings : Bmg"tar:' 0.6mg nicotine- ·
•100 ·s: 11 mg " tat:' 0.7mg nicoti neav. per cigarene, FTC Report May'78

SUNDAY.
APRIL ·

8: 30 to 5: 00 ·
Thursday
till12
noon
..
.. - - ....
.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined·
That Cigarette Smoking is Oang_
erous to Your Health.

OPEN EVENINGS BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY
. Herman Grate
'773-5592
'

E. M&lt;lln.
Mdson, W. Va .

Kings &amp;tOO's

@ l'h ilip Mw n • l nt•. 1'1711

C)ptft Nights 11119

Pomeroy, 0 ,

.

.•

,,

.

"

�8- The Daily SentineL Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Apr. 26, 19'19

9-.Ille..Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apr. 26, 1979

\

.

School financing bill vote expeCted in May

Sorority observes.anniversary, recognizes 'members
•

:::;u11day aftcrnuon members
of the Alpha Omicron
Chapter of Delta K~ppa Gam·
rna Society International met
· to commemorate the 40th an·
niversary of the organization
of the chapter.
The observance took place
in the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co., Meigs Branch,
where the colonial decor
along with the old fashioned
attire of many of the
members enhanced the
gathering.
The chapter was organized
on May 6, 1939 at the Hotel
Berry in Athens with charter
members . from Athens,
Meigs, Vinton and Jackson
CoWJties.
First president was Mrs.
Ethel Chapman of Rutland,
and the other charter
members from here were
Cl~ire Buzzard, Middleport;
Cecilia Marsh, Rutland :

Lucilie Smith, Chester;
Margaret Wells Parsons,
Rutland; and Ruth Drake
Euler, Middleport.
Attendin g Sunday's
celebration were Mrs. Chap..
man, Miss Smit. Mrs. Parsons and Mrs. Euler.
"Honor the past" was the
theme carried out in the program which began with an in·,
spiring invocation by Rosalie
Story. Mary . V. Reibel
. presented the program for
the afternoon. She concen·
tratl!d on Delta Kappa Gam·
rna symbols- a rose, a book,
a candle red, a golden phrase
• or two.
lri her program, Miss
Reibel pointed out how clOse·
ly the program of the society
has related to national affairs
and international events.
Delta Kappa Gamma came
into being 50 years ago at
Dallas, Texas and this year
the society is celebrating its

'

Belts, belts , belts

News from St. Paul ~-&amp;~~·-·~
United Methodist Church I Calendar I
I

THURSDAY
OHIO NURSF:S' Assn. to
meet, 7:30 p.m. al OU Inn,
Athens. All registered nurses
invited.
PARENTS DF girls par·
ticipating in Salisbury jWJior
and softball teams Thursday
7:30 p.m. at Rock Springs
Grange Hall..
FRIDAY
REV . WILLIAM (Bi!ll
Beegle of Cheshire Methodist
charge will be guest speaker
at Nease Settlement Church
Friday 7:30 p.m. Public in·
vi ted.
CHESTER
Town ship
Trustees Friday , 7:30p.m. at
town hall lor the purpose of
appointin g a clerk. Applications are being accepted.
TITLE I Parent Advisory
Co uncil meeting will be held
Friday. April 27 at I: 30 p.m.
in stead of 2:30 as was
reported . .
THE Meigs - Mason Pony
League will meet Friday at
l :30 p.m. at Pomeroy Village
Hall.
SQUARE DANCE Friday 8
p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at Tuppers
Plains Elementary School
with music by Blue Knob Ex·
press Band . Sponsored by
Orange Fire Department.
Refreshments and a cake
walk .
WESTERN SQUARE dan·
ce 8 p.m. to midnight Friday
at Recreation building, Royal
Oak Park. Callers, Chad
Johnson, South Point ; Bill
Bush, Jim Briggs, Hun·
tinglon, and Ed Cla rk,
Jackson . Refreshments. All
Western Square dancers

Worship service was held
following ·s unday School with
70 present. Rev . Richard
Thonna s announced the
spring gardening proj~c.1 of
the Meigs Ministries for
Senior Citizens and persons
with low incomes. Persons
may obtain further in·
formation by writing Meigs
Ministries, Box 207, Middleport, Ohio 45760 or Call
992-7400.
Rev. Thomas spoke on
" The Cleansin g of the
Temple" from Matt. 21:12·17.
At the close of the service the
eongregation welcom ed Mr.
and Mrs. Thomas Russell as
new members on profession

of fa ith.
Some cookbooks are still
ava ilable by eontacting Mrs.
Chester Gorrell. Th e UMW
has
homemade
rug s
available by contacting any
UMW member.

Medical outreach supported by
Pomeroy Adventist Church
The Seventh-Day Adventist give an offering to support
Church has a wealth or Lorna Linda University at
medical programs designed services this Saturday.
to help everyope in th e
community, says Pat Dittes,
R. N., wife ofthe pastor of the
Pomeroy Adventist Church. Chester PTO
" Our church operates
400 · hospitals,
almost
dispensa ries and clinics ,. officers elected
around the globe," says Mrs. !
Dittes_. •: including Sl in North
CHESTER-New officers
America. Kettermg Me~lcal • were elected at the recent
Center, Dayton, IS one of meeting of the Chester PTO.
these 51.
Th
are Mrs Esther
. In 1977, Adventist medical May::president; Mrs. Janet
mst1tut1ons. t~eated hve ?,nd Koblentz, Mrs. Marilyn
one half ll)tll~on patients..
Spencer, secretary; and Mrs.
The church .s mam medical Carolyn Holley, treasurer.
A. report was given on the
trainmg. facility. IS located at
LoLomAa L1~ da UThmvters1tty, near 1979 !'TO project which in·
s nge1 es. . a ms ltut•on eluded remodeling the school
operates med1cal, dental and
·
Th
o'ect is
nu~sing schools, in addition to =;;'':.;..pie~~~ lt was
alhed health pr ofessiOnal . reported. The Eastern School
schools such a~ public health. District Board of Education
~nother med1cal school 1s has approved allotment of
situated at Montemorclos, $!50 to go toward expenses on
Mextco.
.
the gym, it was noted:
The Pomeroy church Will
PIans were rna de for se rving the Chester Alumni ban·
quet In June, and school kit·
chen. Mrs. John Rice had the
Bring in your policy
invocation to open the
and compare ,;, you~ll
. meeting.
be surprised with
your sa'vings.

sERvIcE

r

Syracuse, Ohio
992·5776

I

JOHNKAUFF

lj

INSURANCE
240 Ll"coln Middleport, 0 .

992·3969

EI\IE
INSURANCE

Complete assortment of
·Iri bedding
plants, hanging

l.

GI\OUP

rJ:

~~~

•

i
1

Open Daily 9·8
Sunday l ·S

l baskets and foila.ge plants.

.... .o. ...

1

·~

I'

i.

~

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

.

.

RIO GRANDE - Noted
psychologist and radio - TV
personality Dr. Joyce
tomes

Brothers

to

Rio

She has appeared on the
Tonight Show, Dinah Shore,
Merv Griffin, Hollywood
Sq uares and many other

Grande College and Com·
munity College May I at 8 p.
m.
Dr. Brothers will be the

ne twork telev ision shows.

fin a l

The author of two books,
"Ten Days to a Successful

perform e r

in

the

" Stardates" artist and lee·
t ure series sponsored by the
co lle ge's programming
board.
A Columbia Uni versity
Ph.D. and a Hunter College
professor. Dr. Brothers is
best known for a common
se nse approach to her
profe ss ion . She attributes
much of her succe$5 to "an

ability to dispense sound
advice in simple language."

Her syndicated column appears in over 340 daily
newspapers.

·

Memory" and "Better Than
Ever" . Dr. Brothers views

hersell as a link between the
layman a nd professional
journals. Says Dr. Brothers,
" I attempt to give people
information which will be of
so me service to

them in

everyday living."
Tick ets fo r the per·
formancc arc $5 at the door .
"S tardates" season tick et
holders will be admitted free.
Mr. and Mrs . Howard
\'uung of l'aden City, W. Va.,

·

SJ&gt;t!nding a ft:!Wd1:1 ys with Mr.

day beginning at 5:30 p.m. ;
publl'c Invited.
SPAGHETTI · SUPPER
&amp;!turday at Salem Center
School beginning at 5 p.m.
Adults $2. and chlldren $1.
Public invited.
KNIGHTS 01 Pythi as
monthly dinner, 6:30 p.m.
Bring covered dish, table
service. All members and
families please come.

SUNDAY
HYMN SING Sunday 2
p.m. at Salvation Army, !15
Butternut Ave. Everyone
welcome;·
MONDAY
REVIVAL AT Danville
Wesleyan Church Monday
through May 6, 7:30 p.m.
nightly . The Rev . Roy
Ankrim,
Barberton,
evangelist. Featured singers
will be Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Weaver of Pt. Pleasant.

I

"SEASON SPE
. CIALS "
Bedding .Plants 8Sc ·per [
dqzen pack . Harty ·Azaleas
10" spread $2.25 ech (JO'or
!'lore S1.7.Seacht .

Dr. Brothers to appear
as part of Stardates
series at Rio Grande

Reedsville · ·
SATURDAY
have returned home after
DYESVILLE WOMEN'S
Group of Dyesville Church News Notes and Mrs . t;arth Smith .
will hold a soup supper &amp;!turwelcome.

.~--H"usiMIYs-,
I GREENHOUSE ' l

Erie is above all in

Dr. joyce Brothers

DEADLINE COMING
The Quality Print Shop jn
Middleport reports that
validation stickers for A
thi-ough K are to be purchas·
ed before the end of Aprtl.
The office is open 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. e.cept Saturday when it
closes at noon .

retcnUy with ,Mr.
Bnmk Bise and

V 1s1tmg
&lt;:~ nd Mrs.

Mrs . Mabe l llctzer were Mr.
a nrJ Mrs. lbtwleigh Helzer

a nd family ~of .\ kron and Mr .
and Mrs. Art hw· Hetzer of
Belle. II' . Va .
Mr . C~ nd

Mrs .

1 ·\m~s l

Whi t ehead spent a few l ht ys
\~r ilh Mr . a nd Mrs . ISl:Uil'

F r ydn wn ami fa mil y at
Hu fL::tlu (:n,n~. Ill.
Hel:c nt dinne r ~iu es \ s uf Mr .

and Mr.!:! . l·:dward &lt;'hcvalier
were Mr and Mrs . Zenith
t 'hl'va lier ·ami sons of Belpre
Hd.

He(.'e n1 visitors uf Mr . and
Mrs . I lavid 1\ . Smith and
I li&lt;llla, were Mr. and Mrs;

Tom Drake and daughter ,
Anne, itf &lt;~a hanna, and Mr.
Hn&lt;l MI'S . !)a vid f; . Smith of

c,tldwell .
Susan
B~ottom

ll a nnum of l.ong

and Kay IJalderson .

participctled in the spring
fiia n•1 red ta l of Mrs. Connie
1.. Mt~rris at Parkersburg, W.
Vr1. She presented them each
wilh 1:1 certificate and a
ste~tue tte of a
famous '
• ·u r.n po~e r .

Breez y

the sandal
with the molded
arch support

WRITERS

Now there's a sandal
made for comfort all day
long - Barefoot Frolics
by Miller They're thE!
sandals with soft, supple
uppers. cushioned slid e
re ~is tant insoles and soft
"caress" Hnings. And,
they come in widths from

AAAA

pleust• write immedi all•ly., Stat&lt;" whcther you would prefer
a morning. uft(•rnoon or cvt•ning appointment , and plt"ase
includt• yqur phon&lt;&gt; numlx•r. Ynu will ret'Cive a l'Uilfirmation hy mail for a dcfinill• tirnt' Hml pl-.te.

to EE to fit your

Mr. Jo.t AtlaMt
Vantap ' ' " ' · Inc.

221 North La·Sal'• StrMt, Chltt..,o, IMI'"'It10601
Tof.(312j 712-2294

•

bill,

by

A, Roberto , D-Ravenna, a
di stric.1 certified as lacking
s uffic ient fund s to keep
schools open could levy a
temporary income tax of up
to I percent under spelled-out

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP J No new major highway
construction will be done in
Ohio for at least two years
because of a fWlds shortage,
the state director ·of
transportation said today.,
David L. Weir said $70
million in projects will be
delayed because a higher
than expecteq rate of
inflation in eonstruction eosts
•• · 'in the past 'six montlts has
depleted department funds .
" We will shortly submit to
the Ohio General Assembly a
revised budget orooosal for a .

·feet exactly. Come in
today. The new
styles and
colors are here.

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES .
BETTY OHLINGER
102 E. Main

Pomeroy, o.

conditions.

The tax could only be
imposed by srhnnl hnorrls in

' loans already
order to repay
granted by the state, and the
tax would be lifted once the
loans were repaid or at the
end of the· borrowing year.
The
c ommittee
amendment, which Roberto
a l so sponsored,
acknowledges that some
districts would not be able to
bail themselves out within a
single year.
lt says that if a district

limited program of bridge 'vehicle 'fuel tax and highway
replacement , safety and users tax levied on gaso line
maintenance projects on our sales is not enough to meet
highways, with a severely cut the demands of increased
program of new construdion. highway usage.
.
•.
Unfortunately, this will mean
The director noted defeat of
no
new
inlerstate , a statewide bond issue in 1975
Appalachian development or that would have provided
other
major
highway
construction for the next two
years, at least, " he said.
" ... we sinlply will not have
to
do
both
money
maintenance and new
con st.ruction," Weir said,
"and we must put a priority
on the safety of motorists
RIO GRANDE - The Third
using our existing facilities." Annual Grandma Gatewood
He said federally sponsored Hike and Campout will l!e
projects which do not require held at the Bob Evans Farms
matching state fWids will on Saturday, ·May . 12.
continue. He also said some
Again this spring; hikers
$10 million in state contract (rom aroWld ~outheast Ohio
maintenance jobs such as will gather to commemorate
bridge repair , guardrail ''Grandma''
Emma
reconstruction , pavement Gatewood the legendary lady
striping and drainage also from this area who hiked the
will be completed.
Appalachian Trail three
Weir said in the last decade times starting at the age pf
the department ha s been 67.
loosil)g ground in its attempts
In July 1977, Bob Evans
to keep pace with rising costs Farms dedicated a 5
and federal. regulations. He kilometer trail to Grandma
contended that the motor and has since sponsored a
spring hike in her honor.
Short, medium, and longer
hikes wiU depart from the
Raccoon Creek Canoe Uvery
Log Cabin at I pm. Saturday,
May12.
Those desiring an easy
walking afternoon hike can
travel the Adamsville Trail
mi a l'lz hour hike or a three
· hour hike along the Gatewood

WEAR
PJ's &amp; GOWNS
MONTH SIZES

PJ's FOR BOYS &amp; GIRLS

SERVICE • SAI::ES

SIZES 1 TO 14

MTD TOP FLITE
18" MOWER

VISA "

Hours :

9:30105:00
Mon. thru Sat.
9:3()-8, Fri.

3 HP

'9995

2nd Street

Pomerov , 0 .

Near Stifflers
992-3586

VULCAN
21" MOWER

Only '104

needs lon~er to repay, tho
sthlXJI board eould renew the
tax from year to year for up
to four years. Voters would
get a chance to repeal the tax
by referendum only after the
school board imposes the tax
initially, and not after any of
. the renewals, Roberto said ,
Sen. John T . McCormack,
D-Euc!id, who voted against
the bill, said he opposes !be
theory of lettin g school

boards impose any kind of a
lox without a . vote of the

people, but that limiting the
of referendum makes it
"even more objectionable."
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R·
Ir onton,
s o u g h 't
- unsuccessfully to change the
. "modified equal yield "
subsidy. formula contained in
Roberto's bill, but was voted
down 7-2.
He also attempted, in the
srune amendmPnt , to aUorRte
ri~ht

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Western
•
W1nners

95

•

PLUS:

*ACMt

*WEED EAT~~~ $.1 495

*JUSTIN

*TONY LAMA

*MALATHION &amp; SEVIN
FOR TENT CATERPILlARS
Other mowers available at:
Middleport
Open 9·5 Mon ..thru Sal .

MOORE'S

Fridav mqht hll B p:m .

'·

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Larry Spencer,
Racine; Cynthia Hartenbach,
Pomeroy; Otis Chapnnan,
Cheshire;
Jon
Clark,
Syracuse; Vivian Jones ,'
Ra cin e· James Gibson,
Pomeroy; Myrta Schaefer,
Pomeroy.
Discharged...cioyd
Brookover, Henry Turner,
Charles Chalfan.

March. • •
(Continued from page
I)

supply problems.
Ollicials
said
the
maxim urn Social Security
benefit for an individual will
increase by $50 to to a total of
$553 monthly . Average
benefits for an elderly couple
will rise $43 to a total of $482.
The 9.9 percent increase in
Social Security benefits will
cost the retir ement system
$10.2 billion and will be the
largest yearly rise since
Congress voted to provide
automatic--iflereases to help
offset the effects of inflation.
The t978 increase· was 6.5
percent.
Supplemental
Social
Security benefits for 4.5
million persons are increased
by th e same percentage as
regular Social Security
payments.
·
The increases are based on
the difference between the
average Consumer Price
Index number In the first
quarter of 1979 and the
average in the first three
months of 1978.
In
the
interview
Wednesday, Bosworth said
March might be the last
month for large increl\ses in
food costs to the consumer.

$800 ne~t year and $1,600 the

se&lt;:ond year of the bienniwn
for st ate-pa id raises for

school teachers, along' with
hikes of half that amount for
non-teaching employees.
R&lt;&gt;berto 's bill adds $500 in
each of the two years to
increase minimwn teacher
salaries. but thi s would not
mean a ral!;e fo r many
teac hers al r eady ear nin g
above th e minimum . Sen,

Paul R. Malia , R·Westlake, pupils, mostly in the big
cities, by $40 million , and
pointed out .
Malia gave Collins his only hikes funding of vocational
other vote on the nine· units from $4,000 to $5,000.
While Increasing basic aid ,
member committee.
the
bill would not penalize
The other main provisiOns
school
districts levying In
of the bill, aside from the
income tax , increa'se basic excess of 20 mills by
s tate aid from $960 to $1,160 reduttions in state support.
oper pupil in 1979·1980, and to These districts would be
penalized Wlder the current
$1 ;250 In 1980-81.
equal
yield formula, which is
F~rther, it increases state
under
court cha)lenge.
subsidies for disadvantaged

'

Steel haulers different breed

transportation funds. He said
the department has. " kept
afloat" over the last four
· years by operating with 2,200
few er employees who were
not replaced when they were
eliminated thr0 ugh attrition .

Hike, campout
slated May 12

SLEEP

Trail.
Backpackers are invited to
hike the entire 5 kilometers of
the Gatewood Trall to the
prlmitive campsite. Over·
night campers wiD return the
next morning by noon.
For more infonnation, call
(614) 245-5305. This is another
free community service of.
fered by Bob Evans Farms.

PI'ITSBURGH (AP I - The
men who drive the big rigs,
moving the nation 's freight ,
are a breed apart from most
of us. And those who make
.their living hauling steel are
different yet.
·.Unlike general freight
carriers, most steel haulers
own their own rigs. It's that
degree of independence
which makes the steel hauler
opt for the heavier,
sometimes more dangerous
load known as low-rate
freight in the trucking
industry.
But it doesn't appear
they're likely to trade steel
hauling for high-rate freight
which, they say, commands
better w~ges, a more
comfortable life,. greater
security and more eontract
equity.
"It's up to the individual ,n
. said Bob Steele, a Bedford
Co~nty steel hauler . "If you

want to be an independent,
you own your own truck. U
you want to live by company
rules, you drive a company
truck. ''
Steele and about 17,000
other Teamster drivers have
been on strike this month
over a supplement to the
national freight agreement
between the union and the
trucking eompanies .
The steel haulers , a
minority among the 300,000
freight-hauling drivers, fear
a raw deal· and resent not
having a separate vote on the
eontract rider that affects
only them .
Though Wlion steel haulers
represent only one-third. of
the nation 's steel-hauling
force , according to a
·Teamste r spokesman, the
strike has stopped nearly all
steel-hauling service.
Other steel haulers are are
not crossing picket lines in
sympathy, and in some cases,
out of fear of reprisals.
steele, 52, said he hauled
general freight lor 16 years
and equipment error, White · before switching to steel. " I
said.
made easier money then, " he
"Nevertheless, the lesson
said. "You have to work quite
to be learned is that , despite
a bit harder to make the
the things that went wrong • money freight haulers make .
and there were several - and
although many people were
Wild turkey
inconvienced, the effects of
the
accident
were
seminar slated
eontained," he added.
White said AEP's Donald
The Gallia Couht:l\ Conser·
C. Cook Nuclear Plant on·the
southeast shore of Lake vation Association wlll host a
Michigan is equipped with Saturday, April 28 "Wild
design and protection Turkey Seminar" at 1:30
features to prevent the initial p.m. in the Bob Evans Farm
sequence of events that took Shelterhouse, located ooe·
place at Three Mile Island .. half mile east of Rio Grande,
"We have a far greater along State Route35.
Bob Evans will be on hand
degree of protection. lor
retaining a much larger heat· to host the event as well as
removal capacity," White several special speakers who
will explain hunting hints and
said:
~~we are. however, taking
procedures for success with
every advantage of the Three the wild turkey. Ohio's wild
Mile Island experience by turkey season opens April 30.
analyzing all
of its' Admissioo is free.

And all th ey 've got invested is
a suitcase.''
Steele said he put $15,(1()0
worth of repairs into his
$40,000 rig last year . He said
he worked about six months,
grossed about $37,000 in that
time and ended up in the hole .
" I know freight drivers who
made as much as I grossed in
tho se six months, with
nothing invested," he said.
Steel haulers, who chain
their OWn freight and eover it
with tarpaulins, claim they
each do the job,of five or six
men on any given nm. And
th er~'s
no
pay
for
" deadheading," coming
home with an empty truck.
The di spute over th e
contract suppl ement has'
provoked uneasy feelings.
Freight-hauling locals here:
have pledged support, ' •

promising not to cross picket
lines. But William Fink says
that's not enough.
Fink, a nother Bedford
County steel hauler, claims
the Wlion only wants to
appeal to the more numerous
freight haulers and shun the
independents .

·r-----·---'1
1

.

•

Your "Ex1ra Touc h."

I
I

FLORIST

PH. 992·2644
J~2 E. Main , Pomeroy
' Your FTD Fl o n~t

----·---·

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
( AP) - American Electric
Power Co. will move ahead as
planned
with
nuclear
expansion
despite the
accident at a Pennsylvania
nuclear facility last month ,
company Chairman W.S.
White told AEP stockholders
at their annual meeting here
Wednesday.
"We feel that the industry
and nation must learn from
this accident and respond
accordingly," White said.
"But this response should not
mean an emotional and ill·
conceived ban on nuclear
energy."
The Three Mile Island
nuclear
accident
was
apparently caused by human

GRANDSON DIES
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead of
Reedsvllle has returned
home after spending a few
days with br daughter and
family, Dr. and Mrs. Isaac
Frydman and Sarah at Buf·
falo Grove, Til. , following the
death of their son and Sarah's
twin brother, Joshua.
Joshua Adam died at the
age of six months in the
Children's Medical Center at
Dayton on April 14 followi~Jg
a brief Illness while !he
family was visiting his pater·
nal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Abe Frydman.
·
Mrs. Whitehead and her
daughter, Jane Hensch,
Cuyahoga Falls, ac ·
companied the family to their
home.and attended graveside
srvlces Tuesday morning in
Buffalo Grove.
Mr. and Mrs.· Whitebead
. had just returned from a visit
with the Frydmans four days
prior to their grandson's
death .

POINT PLEASANT AIRPORT .

-White said a new AEP load
forecast projects an average
growth rate of 4.6 percent in
peak internal demand
through 1988, in eontrast to a ·
5.9percent rate projected one
year ago .
·
Members of the AEP
System are Appalachian
Power Co., Michigan Power
Co., Indiana and Michigan
Electric Co., Wheeling
Electric Co ., Kingsport
Power Co., Ohio Power Co.,
and Kentucky Power Co.

......... - -

When it comes to shoes,
variety ' s the spice of fashion .
So at the heritage house,
we've seasoned our hearty
shoe stock with the softest
touches of strippling sandals
by CONNIE .

Mayor's Court

Two de[endants were fined
and eight others. forfeited
oonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andr ews
Wednesday night.
·
Fined were Tim Crites,
New Haven, $300 and costs,
to
the
contributing
delinquency of a minor, and
$100 and costs on an
intoxication charge, and Jim
See, Mason, $300 and Costs~
assault.
.
Forfeiting bonds were
Robert Ritchie, no address
MEET MAY&amp;
recorded, $200 posted on a
The Ohio V.aley Steam destruction of property
Thresber Association will · charge and $50, disorderly .
hold thetr fish fry and conduct; Gale Triblett, no
buslne811 meeting on Satur· address recordea, $200,
day, May 5, at the Fanner destruction of property, and
Sportsman Club on County $50, disorderly; Ronald
Rd.28.
VanMeter, $200, destruction
Those who have not of property, and $5~,
acquired their 1979 mem· disorderly; Leslie . Frank,
bership may do so at that . Pomeroy, $30, failure to yield
Ume. Memberships are $5 the right of way ; Mark
and inciude the immediate Hudson, Pomeroy, $30,
family.
SQUAD RUN
rWining a red light; Earl
The
Middl e port
Faudree, Reedsville, $370,
Emergency Squad was called
driving
wllile intoxica,ted;
NEED APPLICANTS
to !59 South Fourth Ave. at
Sarah
VanSickle,
Gallipolis,
N. 2nd AVL
Applications are belhg
8:21p.m. Wendesday for Mrs.
$30,
failure
to
yield
the
right
taken by the MeiRS Coynt v
Myrta Schaefer who was Health Department for the of way; Wally ·Phelps,
OPEN FRIDAY
taken to Veterans Memorial W!C supplemental program. Middleport, $30, assured
Hospital where she was
Those interested must clear distance.
admitted.
make an appointment lor an
interview.
SPONSORS HORSE SHOW
'The Eastern High School
Athletics Boosters will
sponsor a horse show
RETURNS HOME
beginll!!'g at 9 a.m. Sunday at
Guy
Hysell, who has been a
the Bar '30 Grounds 'on Route
patient
at Pleasant Valley
7. The event is an approval
Now, getting together your
Hospital;
has returned to his
Ohio Valley Hor se Show
"easvwear" components wa~drobe
home
in
.Rutland .
Assn . show .

r,

20% DISCOUNT

"

.,

TO ALL

·"
,.
"

'79 GRADUATES

,,

heritage house

·'

:. •

OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT

TIL 8 P.M.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
PHONE 992-7113

675-4079

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II ·

....

I•

Summery.Spare Parts

FOR

.,

J

High style ... on platform
and well-heeled bottoms ...
for the young group always
on th'e go.

succeeding events."

AUTHORIZED
RCA and WHIRIJ'OOL
DEALIR ·

i

I.
I

AEP plans continuing

I 1

HICKORY MODULAR BLDGS.

~

5C:I

.

I

•
••

' I

!
t.
:
I

for Summer is as cool and simple.
Just shop Bahr Clothiers.
.

Cabins
BarnsStorage
1
1
J

t he

in come

committee Chairman Marcus

TIME IS 1:30
.
The Title I Parent Advisory
CoWlcil meeting will be held
Friday, April 27 at I : 30 p.m.
instead of 2:30. as was
reported. •

the luoad of tht· Chit-ap;u uffict' of a well-

known N(·w York suhsidy publish inK firm . will IX' interv iew ing lo&lt;.·a l aut hor s in jun&lt;' in ordN to un&lt;·ov't'r
manwil'r ipts wort hy of publication. All subjr&lt;'ts will be
&lt;·onsidc nx l. im·luding fidi1m , non-fjdi()n , por try, .-tc.
If you h a \'e a manusl·ri pt ready pr almost rudy for book
publkation, and would likt• to di!ijt•uss it with Mr. Adams,

taxes.
Under

PONY LEAGUE TO MEET
The Meigs · Mason Pony
League will meet Friday at
7:30p.m. at Pomeroy Village
.· . Hall.

YOU CAN'T- BEAT OUR PRICE! !
FACTORY I)IRECT
I I

N. ¥. Book Publia/ter Coming
Here To lntervieUJ A..uthora
~d ams,

(

in more than 80 sizes!

tant iced tea getting hard .
When opening a new jar and
after removing the needed
amount put the closed jar in
therefrigerator. I do not
understand why but the tea
will not harden. -S.S.
Polly will send you. one of
her signed thank -y ou
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses · your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in c~;~re of this
newspaper.

impose temporary

Ohio ~ projects are delayed

,.

-Mr~ . I.Yit· HaldL·rsun

Mr. Jnd

DEAR POLLY - I never
wear belts and since most
dresses come with them I
havs a sack full that are
never used. Perhaps some of
the readers would have some
idsas on how to put them to
use.- DOROTHY
DEAR DOROTHY - I am
sure we will be hearing from
some of our ingenious
n:aders with ideas for using
your many belts. If you sew
and have scraps and pieces of
fabrics on hand they could be
rolled and secured with some
of the belts and take less
storage space and be neater
looking, too. I save · dry
cleaners, plastic bags to use
for covering out of season
clothes and such extra bags
could be rolled and fastened
the same way. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY . - Those
plastic rings that hold sixpacks of soft drinks can be us·
ed to make a' hand tote bag.
Fasten six-pack plastic rings
(double for added strength)
with links from a chain belt or
even with pape~ clips. Use 12inch lengths of chain for
handles, line tbe inside and
have a novel tote. - JINNY
DEAR POLLY - I think I
have a solution for Ruby who
has a vinyl~vered recliner
with a perspiration odor. I
have had great success
removing sour milk and other
stubborn odors from plastic
milk jugs and other con·
tainers by filling them with a
well · known
electric
dishwasher solulion and
water apd leaving for some
hours. Ruby could .soak
towels with this and then
place them on her chair.
My portable dishwasher
has two suds cycles and the
second suds ter comes out
clear and sudsy so I let this
run into a large bowl and
recycle it by using' it for
washing the coffee pot and
any things that are not
dishwasher safe as well as
wiping off the sink, fridge and
cupboards and to keep tbe
dish cloth · clean and sweet.
This even works magic as a
pre-soak for extra stubborn
stains on clothes 'to go in the
laWidry. -HAPPY
DEAR POLLY- This is for
Jeri who has trouble with ins· .

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP ) State senators are expected
to vote in early May .on a
maj or school funding bill that
carries a record $3.5 billion in
state subsidies for the ne&lt;t
biermium.
It emerged 7·2 Wednesday
from tlie Senate Education
and Health Committee.
.An amendment loosened
slightly a controversial
provision allowing moneystrapped school districts to

Hawley, Nan Moore and Ann ·
Webster. Birthday cake and
coffee were served during the
social hour.
Other Meigs County
members attending were
Martha Husted, Lee Lee,
Winifred Naas, Geneva
Nolan, Olive Page, Nellie
Parker, Fay Sauer, Emily
Sprague, Rebecca Tate, and
Dorothy Woodard.·Vinas Lee,
a fonner member, and Irene
Barnes were guest$.

Polly Cramer

..

The St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains armounced Sunday the
dates lor its annual Spring
Reviva l, May 7·12, at 7:30
p.m. There will be a guest
mini ster spe akin g nightly
with spec ial music each
evening.
Sunday School attendance
for April . 22 was . 61. Bill
Francis, assistant Sunday
School Superintendent, read
a thank you card from Mr.
and ~- Oscar Babcock for
the Aise of the church
basement lor their golden
we ddin g a nniv e r sa ry
recently .
The Adult Bible Class will
hold a yard sale on May 3 and
4 at the nome of Guy and
Evelyn Spencer. The April
mee( ing of the St. Paul Adult
Bible Class will be April 30 at
7 p.m. at the church .

silk rosebud and a parctunent·
facsimile of a book, aga in in
keeping with the Society's
symbols.
Margaret Benson, presi·
dent, commended the charter
members lor all they have ac·
complish~ , and reviewed the
purpose of the society. On
behalf of the chapter, she
presented each each charter
member a booklet com·
memorating the 40 yers of
growth . of Alpha Omicron
Chapter.
Comments from each presi·
dent on the highlights of her
tenn of office, the purpose of
the society and an interesting
data and fact sheet about
each member, make it a com·
plete directory. The book was
eompiled by Lorayne Jones,
Ludle Downard, Mildred
Hawley, Nan Moore, Esther
Macrker, and Margaret Ben·
son. Harriet Wood designed
the rose symbol for the cover.
Mrs. Benson had on display
program books of many
years. Esther Cassill had
charge of group singing for
the afternoon and hostesses
were Carolyn Smith, chair·
man, Rosalie Story, Mildred

POLLY'S POINTERS

CHARTER MEMBERS-Recognition of charter members, left to right, Margaret Par·
sons, Rutland ; Ethel Chapman, Rutland, Lucille Smith, Chester; and Ruth Euler, Mid·
dleport, was a feature of the 40th anniversary observance of the Alpha· Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Gamma Society-International, SWlday afternoon m Pomeroy.

!

goltlen anniversary. What
started out with a handful of
women coming together to
unite women educators in
seven dif(erent purposes, has
developed . into chapters in
every state and many foreign
eountries, Miss Reibel said.
She noted that today Delta
Kappa Gamma is surpassed
by no other teacher's
organization. Miss Reibel
shared many souvenirs of
preciotis moments teachers
have in working with
students. She spoke of the
chann of young children and
their excitement and en·
thusiam. She noted that in
this period of rapid change in
eeucation as well as
technology, the needs of
human beings seem to re"
main constant. All students,
she pointed out, still need the
three us's" - the "a" of acceptance, the ·"a" of achievement, and the "a" of affection.
The goal of the teacher remaim the same - to help a
student become more than he
has been.
Miss Reibel presented each
charter member with a red

•'

I

•
••

•
I

•LEVI'S, blue denim,
brushed, faded colors, etc.
•KNIT SHIRTS, sport &amp; dress .
by Arraw. Career Club, Jockey
•TROUSERS by Hagger &amp; Hubbard
•BURMUDA SHORTS by Hubbard
*CUTOFFS by Levi
•SWIMWEAR by Brentwood
*'Many other quality , spring items..

·' .
'.

• I

•'

..•
'

!

BAHR CLOTHIERS

.'

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .
)

f

�.,
10-The Dally Sent)nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thurl!day , Apr 26, 197•

COUNT~

MEIGS
P UBLI C NOTIC E

T ne

fott o w+ng

we r e re ce

\ICd

aocu mr nt s

Til e Oh10 Environm e n t al
Pro t echon AQE;n c y du rmq OH'
prev•ous wee k T he c tf cc t v r
date of ee~ c h f •n al a c t .on •5
stat ed 1 h (' •S s uanc c d a! C' o t

ea c h propos ed uc t .o n 1!i
stated Anvonc aqqr,cv ca or
ad verse l y a ff ec t ed by a ft n at
acllon to ISSue d e n y m o d tl y
revok.e or r e new a p ('r m 1t

lict&gt;nse

or var .ancc

or

to

approve or d•sa p prov C' plan s
and spec tftcat ton s may t ile

an appeal w •th The En v. r o n
mental Board o t Rev•ew
SUI ! €.' JO.S 39 5 E
Br o ad St
Co lu m b u s , Oh o -t 371 6 w1f h 1n
lt1• rtv (30 1 days o f l h( c f
f ec t l ve d Ol(' pu r suan t t o O h •O
RC\IISed Cod e 5 ('cf,on J7 4 ~ 0 7

un l ess

such

flna J

ac t iOn

"For Best Results Use Sentinel. Classifieds

WANT AD
CHARGES

or pr cpa r ea by

I~

Wl)rds ur Umlt't

c."'100

Charge

~day-"

)50

,.,

3di:I)S

100
300

225
37S

! Jay

6days

125

F.at.•h word owr thl&gt; m1mmum 15
worth LS 4 &lt;.'t'nlli pl'r ~ ord ~ r W.y .
Ads runnln,.: utht-r than ('Onst'CUbve
will lw dutrged 11t the 1 day

d~tys:

rate
In

memor~

Obttu11ry 6

Canl or Thanks and I
t.-e nls pt'r word, $3 00

nummwn ~h mad\ tml~

Mobtlt- Aom e SMies and Vt~rd ~les
arc !l('t"epled only With cttsh WJih
order ~ cent l'ha rgc fo r ad:s t.•arry-

by t he same o r
111~ Box Number In Ca r~ of The Sfnsuostanr.ally
rne
s a me
hnel
proposed act •o n Jn add(! on,
pur s uant to Sect•on 37&lt;15 01 o t
Tht&gt; Pubh.s!wr rt"serves the nt!:hl
the Re:v•sed Code noiT cc ol
to h .hl ur reJecl any 11ds detmetl 00..
the fthng of the appeal s.h all
}t'CIJOna.! 11\e Publisher Will not be
be fd ed wllh th e Dir e Ctor a t
resporunble fur more lhtl.n one trll'Orthe Oh10 Env Jro n m o n t a l
rt'l'l msertion
Prot cc r.on Ag cncv 36 1 E
Phone 992 2156
Broad Stre e t , Columbuo:. Oh• o
41216 , w•thm tnree (31 day s
after the appe al 1S hied w 1th
The En v. ron mentat Boilrd of
Rev •cw All such f1nnt ad tons
are so .deni •I•C'd Such pC'r
sons ma\ rcaucs r an a ,t
JUd c: at ton he armq be t or e Tnc
Oh•o EP A on a pr oposed
ac t on to •ss ue de n y mod1ly
r ev ok e or r enew a perm •I
l•ce n!'&gt;e or var1an ce o r to
appro ... e or d1 sapprove plan s
and spec il•cat ons Wt lh1n
Monday
rn.ny ~ O l days o f t he
Noon un Sat u rd&lt;~V
ISSU anc e date OR C 3745 07
docs no t provtd e l or a d
Tuesdlly
!Ud• cat•on. heann g re quest s
thru Fnday
or a ppeals on arden ve r dted
com pla.nts or enforc e men t
4PM
l~ day before publiL'ation
com pl•ance schedule lellcr s
W1 th1n 10 day s of publi ca lion
tn a neWspaper •n the a ff ected
count y any pe rson may also
( I ) s ubm 1t wrtlt en commen t s
rela t1ng to i!CI •ons proposed
ac t ions ve r •f•ed com pla n ls
o r enf or cemen t com pltanc c
Notices
sc he dule lctlcrs {1 ) r eQu es t
a pub liC meet mg r eg ar d1ng
GUN SHOOT EVERY FRIDAY 6 30
proposed a c l•ons and or (J l
PM RACINE GUN CLUB FAC
requ es l nolt c c o f f ur t lle r
TORVCHQKEGUNSONLY
acti o.'!} or proceed1ogs AI) - - - - - - - - - - r e q uTs Is tor ad 1u d 11= a I •OQ r,r LAST WEEK of comple te ~ ell o ut of
hear tng s l '~ 1 an d
publ ·~ '• household goods Stop by 760
me ct•nSJS. •arid ot her c~m.
Lau rel St M1ddleport
mun• c at •o n s
concer n ing
-- - - - - - - - - - - pu b lic me e ltngs adJudt cal ton HYMN SI NG Sunday Apnl "19 2
hea r •ng s
ver •hed com
pm Solvo hon Arm.y ]15 But
plam ts a nd r eguta l tons
ternul Ave Pomeroy Oh1o
shou ld be addres sed to Th e
Everybody welcome
Lega l Reco rds Sec !ton Oh to
_ __ __ _
_ __
EPA , P
0
BO)( 1049
Col um bus, OhtO 431 16 . ( 614 )
466 6037 unless otherwts e
s tated m par t tcular noiJCcs
a ll o t her comm un 1cat•o n s orders
II nde r ORC Cha p 61 11
•nclud•ng comme nt s on
Boa r d o f Cty Comrns
proposed ac t 1ons sh ould bf'
Tupp er s P la 1n s Area O H
add r essed e1 ther to The A lf e lfe
c l •ve da t e 04 18 79
Pe r m ti S and Comp l ance
h ts f•nal act.on no t pr
Mon ttor •nQ
Ot vtsto n
or ce dl ed
by pro pos ed acl•o n and
Pe r m1 1 and App roval Sec !io n
1S appea lab le to E BR l m
wh•chever JS appropflat e at pos
e s s pcc+a l connec t1on ban
The Oh10 EPA P 0 Bo•
1049 Col umb us Oh•o J32 16
( d ) 2 6 lt c
Issua nce ot f•nd 1ng a nd

pre ce ded

NOTICE

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES ,

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, APRIL 28
AT 10 O'CLOCK A.M. SHARP
ON ST. RT 690 (BETWEEN AMESVILLE &amp; ATHENS,
0 . )10MILESNE . ATHENS, OHIOONST RT 690
Take St. Rt SO east our of Athens - turn onto St Rt 690
toward Amesvtlle or take St Rt 33 north for 1 mile out
ot Athens, turn on Sf Rt 550 toward Amesville, then
tum on St. Rt 690 to the Loeffler Farms. Follow s1gns
IANTIQUE~ URNITURE , GLASS, CHINA,
FARM MACHINERY, CATTLE)
FARM FOR SALE BY OWNER: 277 Acres. 3 gas we lls
w coat &amp; mmeral r ig hts, mod ern house , 2 b ar ns, other
outbuld tngs, creek land , extra good pasture, 4 ponds,
lot sp nng s tn good neighborhood in Athe ns County The
LOefflers have l(ved here s mc e 1904
ANTIQUES SOLD FIRST
CATTLE &amp; MACHINERY SOLD AT 2: 30P.M.
ANTIQUES Lg cherry corne r cupboard , dbie glass
doors at top (16 pane ls), wooden pinned, wdl ftt tn
modern hom e, 1 of the nic.est s old an~w h ere . oak curv
ed glass c htna cupboard w ball c law fee t d rop leaf 5
legged tebt e round oak table w c law teet, ex tra ntce
fl atwall Cupboard p1 a no stools , sen11ng ca b1net s .
leather ta1nt.ng couc h , oak china c upboard w 1 lg
glass door, c law feet, lion 's heads at top extra n1 ce,
mahogan y love sea t w go ld ve lvet, c law fee t a lot of
very beaut1ful p1ctures &amp; frames , cha1r S'h lg blanket
chest , p1cture CT he OoctorJ , laDde r back rocker
walnut cha1rS , wa lnut d r esser w whtte marble w
wooden f r uit pulls &amp; revolving m irror , oak stand w
beveled edge , oak chairs w ca n e sea ts. rose back
c ha1r : cane bottom c ha1rs. fa 1nt1ng c ouch w green
crushed velvet cover , c he rry c he st drawers w brown
marble top , c herry dresser w brown marble msert w
g love top &amp; bra ss pulls . walnut dresser w Wh tte marbl e
tnse rt, teardrop pull s, 1nla1d fron t , carv 1ng at top , mtr
ror , walnut chatrs , oak washstand w brass pu ll s,
walnut stand w brown m a rbl e, heavily carved legs, lg
oak wa ll m~rror . maho gany secretary w brass pulls,
serpent me front , dble "glass doors a t top , mahogany
chair W't lliw fee1 'c'ou c~ w lion's head s . cl aw feet,
be tge veN"e1 cover, tHt·top s tand ctlfflnere, and many
other. pieces not ltsted
LOT GLASS, CHINA, LAMPS , POTTERY, ETC
Havtland chtna . ove r 200 pes Bavanan &amp; German
ch1na . Rosev1tle, Mr;Coy &amp; Hu ll pottery . lg punch
bOwl, p1tc he r w bowl set oil la m ps. cu t pressed glass ,
depresston , c r uets, m ugs, e tc , Fenton , Fostona ,
hand pa1nted plates , deep d1shes , s tone &amp; glass ptt
che r s , compotes. ove rl av. ste1ns cake plates. etc
This 1S only a part1aii1St1ng of glass~ &amp; ch1na
•
OLD ITEMS Stone tars, 1ugs, c rocks. etc lot old
books , coffee grinder , cow bel ls , old tool s ; several odd
cha 1rs; lanterns , hand tool s, cream ca ns , kegs , et c ~
SPECIAL Extra n1ce 1 hOrse s le tgh , s1e1gh be ll! , ex
tra mc e buggy , walnut orga n , needs repa1r , round coa l
stove, old separator, Mode l T coils &amp; rims , old ha rn ess
&amp; c ollars , wagon w hee ls , single &amp; dble trees, steel
traps , old buttons , hom emade quil ts, l1n e n s, e tc , post
cards , ctw r ns , old l1cense pl a tes back to 1 924 ~ ttn
boxes, hundreds old magazi ne s . bpok rack , e tc
MODERN FURNTIURE , ETC
Extra n•c e coffee
table , f1gurlne &amp; elec lamps , 2 ceda r c hests maple
washstand . some d 1shes, pots, pans, etc , knt~tty ptne
wardrobe, cedar lmed, 5 ft , ex tr a n1ce Knee hol e desk.
sp reads, hnenes, etc , e tec fan , a lot new Tupper
ware , console TV , ut1l 1tv cab1net, chest freezer , fr utt
jars, etc
FARM FURNITURE &amp; CATTLE TO BE SOLD AT2 :30
PM (MAY RUN TWO AUCTIONEERS AT THIS
TIME) 1q51 Oliver (0C 3) craw le r trac tor , 1951 Far
m a ll M tractor , New Idea baler w bale thrower ,
manure for k for John Deere, old gram drill , Side
deliv ery rak e, f latbed wagon o n rubber brush hog ,
gratn &amp; ha y e leva tor w elec m ot or , AIIts Chalmers
corn ln silage cu tter, International 1 row corn -c hopper,
J o c orn plante r , wa gon on rub ber w 1ns11age bed, old
c ulttpa cke r , Hel1x wa~o n Conv ev 0 Matte w .t ft rac ks
for grass or insilage, J D 1 row corn p1 c ker No 7,
Case mower Mode l 10 w HY D lif t , Cockshu tt hay con
d ft 1oner , cu lt1va tors . lime &amp; m anure sprede rs, old
chopper &amp; mowe r for pa rts , 2 s teel wheels for J D
trac tor, 300 &amp; 400 ga l fue l tanks, severa l tomts P•Pe
metal watering trough, 3 rolls bale r tw tne, old mst tage
cutter , wheatbtnde r . app 200bal sstraw , somem1xed
ba led hay , hand corn s helter , and many other 1tems
CATTLE: Scows, Hereford Hol stetn s: rossed 3 he tfers,
Hereford Holstein crossed 10 months old 2 bull ca lves
Cows are pasture bred Hea lt h pape rs day of sa le Ch p
thts ad for da te &amp; dtrections for sale Sat . Apn l 28 at 10
O'Clock AM This will be '3n a ll day sa le - someth1ng
' for everyone Mav be necessa ry t o run two a uct1oneers
part hme The anttques 1n th is co untry hom e are tn
m 1r.tt cond1tlon Mr Loeff le r ha s lived m t h •s hom e fo r
72 years.
Nothtng shown before da.v of sale Terms-cash or
check w positiVe ID dav of sale Lunch on prem1ses
Not responsible for accidents.
owner and •n Charge of Sale- Mr Rollo Loeffler
Mr. George Showalter - Adm
Auctloneers- BJII Janes &amp; Randy Newso m
Phone 614 557 3411 or 614 ·557 3133

~.

lr

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to
·~ :

.
..
'

•••
t

I

I

!.,... fir. ;

•

•

11 - The Oallv S.ntlnel, Middle port-Pomeroy, 0

LOST • MALE lrts h Seller

DICK TRACY

--

.

IT'S HIS

f~Sai~ --

Yard Sale

old Areo of Bashon on
Boshon Rd
Ch1ldren s pet
Rewo rd q.49 2.466

liiG GAHAGE and Yord Sole 26 COAL LI MESTONE sand grove l
colr•um chl onde terti lt zer dog
Ra1l rood St Mtddleport Star
-food and oil types of so li Ex
11ng
Sunday
Apn
l
29th
I
6
pm
Help Wanted
celsto r Soh Works Inc f Mo1n
Monday 10 4 Furn1ture ntc e
St Pomeroy ~:l 3891
_
IMM EDIAT E
OPENING
cloth•ng dolls o nltques ond
laboratory Techn tf: ton 3 11
many other 1tems In case of PLANTS
CA BBAGE
broccolt
si·Hft Experte nc&amp;d Ml T (ASCP)
coultflower brussels s prouts
rotn w11/ be held l ol~~~~g do_r
o r equ tvol enl hc&amp;llen t solory
head le ttuc e taino taes and
~
and frmge benel•ts Sh,ft d•f
Iorge sele chon of beddmg o n
ferentad Contact Pe rsonne l
--'P
'-'e'-'ls_f_
o~~a_l_
e __ _
nuols Pots of flowers a nd
Voll ey DOG OBEDIENCE Classes l o rm~ng
OlfiCe
Pl e a san t
hangtng ba sket s
Cleland
Hospttol V oll ey Dp ve Po1 nl
Greenhouse
Gero ld tne
now Coll6 14 367 OSSO
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone
Cleland Rocme
AKC REGISTERED Old E n g lt ~h
304 675 4340 An Equal Op
New. rep a or ,
2'1
FOOT DELUXE Sto rc roft Ira tie r
Sheepdog pupptes 8 weeks
'
por tunt ty Emplo yer
Stave
ref
n
gero
lo
r
A
C
g ullers and
old
Shots e nd wo rmed
sleeps 6 On display ot Hager
LOCA LUNION 5668 USWA ore oc
614 667 3920
down spouts.
ccpt•ng opphcoflons lor o per
ty s 875 Beech St M1cfdleport
SpE'Ciillhst 1n Home andd l
---._ ...
Schoof Ptano Tunlnq an
monent secreto ry Appli cot•ons_
Window cleanmg
Ca II for a Free S1dmg
1978
'',
SUZUKI
dtrt
b1ke
250
RM
Repatrtn9
may be obta ined at Local Uruon
Auto Sales
Gutter cleanong
Ltke new
Ceetl Bnnoge r
Eshmate, .949- 2801 or
S{'rvtnCI Ath ens, Metg!l ,
Hall The oppl lcottons mus t be
94q
2:387
&amp; Vmton counties ,
Gall1a
Free Estimates
1973 INTE RNATI ONAL SCOUT
949.-2860
No Sunday
returned no later than Aprtl '17
- als&lt;l Mason &amp; Jackson
21
000
m1les
fully
equtpped
l ocal Unton Hall •s loco led 3
197&lt; GMC JIMMY P B P S
949-2862, 949-2160
calls
c-ounttE'S 1n W va
otr wench etc e)(cellent con
m 1l e~ south of Ravenswood Rt
A C 2 wheel dn ve PrJCed
Ph 997 · 75111 or 991108?
d1t1on 992 2121
441 mo .
4-5-tfc
4·19 1 mo
2
reaso nable Coll992 3580
--- - - -·- -1971
MONTE
CAR
LO
P
S
P
a
SOMEONE TO keep on elderly
GOOD CONDITIONED hoy $ 70
PW CC T S AC :33000
Oehveryc vo,lcble 992 7201 or
man tn thetr home Roy
miles
Coli 742 2.421 o r
Donohew For 1nl orm ontoct
'1'12 3309
9'12 2881
--Jelt Don ohew 65 Oak Ort ve
----GOATS SOM E 1vst fre shened
Ltttle cme leta rt or9Q
197~ FORD CUSTOM F ISO truck
two due m Jul y and Augu st
302 engme 1/ r ton auto , P S
CARPENTERS LU650, 218 E Mom
Also ktd s Shade 6% 1234
P B A____
C 7.. 2 ,.2826
,.
St Pome roy Apphcohons wil l
110 000 lb mtlk route for sole
"'• mile off Rt. 7 \IV·IIISS on
be take n f or opprenf+ce Moy 1970
All types rooftng , g utters
CHE VRO LET
IMPALA
qss 4207 or qas 3861 or wr1te
St. Rt. 124 tow•o'l Rutllond,
19th 30th and 31st 1979 10om
and downspouts All types
Custom 350 2 bbl
power
37
_
P_
o~e~or
_____
~
__
0.
to 12 noon Morvm E Knopp
home maintenance - ~ ew
sea ts P S P C O verhaul ktt
coordmot or
Tn State 0 C
t.a
&amp;
T
k
and
rttpair Storm doors
for 289 Ford minus rod beormg TWO USED ptanas and us eiJ
AUr.z
J A C
Equal Opportun il )l
organs fo r sole tn your oreo
rue
and wmdows All work ·
q49 2641
For more mformat•on wnle
_!~p~o~e~ _ ~ __ __ _
220 E Moin Street,
Repair
ouaronoeed 20 years ex
1977 OLDS CUTLASS Solon AM
Cred11 Manager 154 W Mc1n
Pomeroy, 0.
A]so
Transmission
peor1Pnce Frf'E' eoxttmates
TAKING APPLICATIONS for
FM rod1o buclocet seats extr a ~
St Lancas ter Oh1o 43140 or
Call
Tom
Hosk1ns.
.
Cilll992-7113
wQ tfress and cook Apply tn
742 2435
co li I 654 5883
Repair
949 "'o
"For Free Est• mates
person Ol'\ly Steamboat Inn
Phone 992-5682
At~ens Area
1972 BUICK LE SABRE factory a u
Rocme
1977 SUZUKI GS 750 Excell en t
11
..
9
1
mo
I;
797
7745 or 797 '2757
oulo P S P 8 New battery
cond 111on 5000 m1 W1th ex tras
WANTED ONE counter man No
power door locks 992 J..f77 1
7&lt;2
2375
phonfl ca ll s App ly m person
Motor Parts Co
157 Walnut 1973 DODGE POWER wagon "')("'
TROY BILT ROTISSER IE garde n
New fifes 985 3378
~~ ~~~ lepo ~
_
~l~w- ~s!_d..!, ye~r _!!_2~~-NEED BABYSITTER for one 2
1972 DODGE CHARGER 318 good
Camping Equipment
-cond ttton 992 2232
eventngs o week My hom e or
yours 992 5760 o~
1975 11 FOOT truck camper self FOR SALE calf creep feeder Call
..... -------- ~ con tomed ot r co ndtl+on e)(
EXPE~IENCED
SHOP
992 3652
--- - ~ - FABRICATORS WLEDERS AND
cellent cond1t1on 992·2121
NEW
SAVAGE Fmc B double bar
lAY OUT PERSONS NEEDED ~ ----------- -18 Years Expenence
rell 12 gouge $ISO Coli
GOOD BENEFITS CONTACT l .&amp; 1974 27 FOOT CA MPER Sleeps
W1ll Make
sl)(
Gas furnace
e lec triC
972 6093
H METAL WOfH(S INC ot
Serv1ce Calls
- -- - ..
27320 Montgomery Ad
heater
bu1h
tn Lo rge both wtth - ---1 304 428 4200
BEAUTIFUL SELECTION of fl owers
Langsville, Oh10
shower 742 2577
for Me mona I Ooy
Foye s
61~-669-4245 Evenongs
Fk1wer Shop next to Ftreston.e
651 Beech Street
2 M1les East of Wilkeovill~
wanted to Buy
~ t~!_· ~ ~~~~P__?r:.!_ ____ ~
Middleport, 0.
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio
SUPER
GOOSE STOCK
For
Rent
CASH FOR junk cars 24 hour
TRAILERS
NOW
992·2356
992-5547
w recker
serv•ce
Fr ye s COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pa rlo. TWO DEEP dtsh chrome reverse
whMis w1t h lug nuts fits
AVAII,.ABLE
Rutla nd OH 742 2081
· ~251maPd
Roote 3J , nonh of Pomeroy
Chevy Two Anser slots w1th 1______3:...;_7-'-m..:o::....:i..:P..:d...:..JI
CH IP WOOD
Poles mo )(
La~! l~ t ~ ~o~ ~~ 7~7! __ _
lugs ond washers f11s Dodge 2
dtame ter I0 on lo r g e~ t end 3 AND 4 BM furni shed and un
pt ece Early Amertcon hv tng
$12 pe r len Bundled slab $10
room su•te Stereo console
fur n tshed op t5
Phon e
per ton De livered to Ohlb
992 3982
m 543.4
Pallet Co
Rt 2, Pomeroy
1974
and 1975 Pe te Con venllonal
qo ROLLING ACRE S of good
Purchase and Refinance
9'12 2689
Tande m tra ctors 1963T Ca te r
-- ---- posture Pl &amp;nty of wafer Could
30 Year Terms
OlD FURNITURE ICe bo)(es brass
p1 llar engtnes 30t up to houl
cccomodote 50 plus cattle
A- No money down (ehgt·
beds tron beds desks etc
coal Also 1974 C•tr ond 1964
61&lt; 667 33'18
ble veterans)
---complete households Wnte _..._
Fruehauf Tn All:e s
Phone
FHA~As low as 3% down
SlEEPING
ROOMS
lo
r
worktng
M 0 Mtll er , Rt 4 Pome roy or
614 753 3661
(non veterans )
men
only
Breakfast
1f
deSired.
co ll992 7760
Reas onable roles
Phone ..----------~.,
*New Home
OLD COINS pocke t watches
9'12 5~22
class rtngs wedding bonds
1liAdd ons
d1omonds Go ld or silver Colt TRA ILER 1 dean adult 992 3181
Remoldongs
_ ~o!r_W~~~e~ :._43._ ~~ __ _
HOU SE 4 rooms and both un
Free
Eshmates
77 E Sta1e, Athens
furnished 992·30CXJ
WANT TO buy old 45 ond 78 . -------4·23·1 mo .
992-6011
phonograph re cord s
Cell TRAILER AND bu1ld mg •n Svrocuse
•
Headquarters For
992 6370 or Contact Marlin Fur _ ~n 3rd and Cher.!Y 992 ~~!. _
423 1mo ( Pd }
ntture
Hotpoont and
TWO BEDROOM tro lle r In Mtd
•
WANT TO buy old 1ewelry Call
General Electric
dleport
Oepos1t re q u1 red
Business Services
99'1 5'16'1 or wrtte Koy Cecil 87
Real Estate for Sale
Real Estate for Sale
Appliances
_ !!J59~ ~~~~pm - - - - _
S 2nd Mtdd leport OH
BRADFORD
Auctionee r Com
FURNISHED APT su1toble for 3 or
REAL ESTATE Loons P urc ha ~e a nd FARM FOR Sole House 2 barn s
WANTED ONE acre of la nd near
plete
Serv
tce
Phone 949·2,.87
A canstruct•on workers After
reltnonce 30 year terrns VA
trotle r Lorge pond 10 Ocrl!s or
Fi ve Pomts Col I after 5
or 9.49 2000 Roc me Ohio. Critt
Spm call99254:3.. , 992 3119 or
No money down (ehg tble
82 acres 742 2.566
JACK
W
9'12 3955
Bradford
,.
992,591&lt;
veterans) FHA As low os 3 CARSEY
(
) 31fl a cres tn Pome roy SEcluded
Mgo
per cvr t dawn non vete ran~
wooded area on top of htll ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
, _ Phone 9q2 2181
Sweepers toasters tron! all
Yard Sale
Ire land Mortgag e Co 77 E
Overlook s rtver Water e lec
small appltonces lawn moer
For Sale
c;,,.,,..
Athens 614 592 3051
tn c O¥OIIcble 992 3886
FOUR FAMILY Garage Sale April
ne xt to Stole H.lghway Garage
-----~- ---28th of Rona ld Harts res1dence RUTLAND HARDWARE Rutland
on Route 7 9B5 3615
Oak Grove Road Roctne Oh1o
Oh1o 742 2255 Martin Senour
SEWING MACHINE Repairs ser
D1s hes glassware clo thm g
Auctions
potnt pro ltne ex tenor whtle
vtce all makes 992 228.. The
ele
$8 10 gal Pla!l1c water sewer AUCTION Fn doy 7 pm l ots of
Fobr tc Shop
Pome ro v
RUMMAGE SA LE Wh1t e Shnne
dram gas hne and fttlmgs We
new merchondtse ct Oh to Rt ver
Authonze d Smger Soles and
:fl May 4 &amp; 5 at Pomeroy
also carrv plastiC water ltne
Servtee We shorpen Sctssors
Aucl1on 537 Ht gh St M•d
Masontc Tample 9 to 4 Ptekup
some s1ze w1th ftff •ngs to match
~~
~~!..
_______
_
-EXCAVATING dozer looder and
golvontzed ptpe AutomatiC gas
numbe rs
co li 992 7853
backhoe work dump trucks
992 7.4q5 m 5107 or drop ot
water heaters ,.0 ga l g lo~s li n
All Across Amer1ca
608
ond lo boys lor h ~re will haul .
Po~ t Oll1ce
ed 5 year warrentv $129 qs
2S
Acr
es
$55
,60
0
GiveAway
-------------f1 ll d ~r t , top sod hmeston• and
Automatic
electrtc water
MAIN
hf' ,1111 tful rou ntr y horn e . 7
THREE FAMILY Garage Sole Apnl
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef
heaters 52 gal gloss lmed 5 FOUR WEEK old pup pies half lmh
hNi r oo m s bn lh lnrae lt v
POMEROY,O .
26 27 28
Good quahty
fers day !)hone m .708q ntght
year
warrenty
$139 qs
Settf! r ond Cocker Spo nt el
tno r oom hP Au t.ful ktt
outgrow n cloth1ng
baby
phone 992 3575 or 992·5232
Lakewood window fans metal
Block w1th wh1te mcrk1ngs Coli
r hr n 3 ', bi'ISP m Pnl, fo r ce (l
NEW LISTING M1d
clot hes and otehr m1sc tte m~
blades
5
yr wor ren tv Jrtces
9'1H093
A
tr
hP"
t
late.
of
-;
h(1&lt;1&lt;'
trrf:'
s
t11e port excelle nt hOme, 3
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
2 miles east of Roc1ne on Rt 12~
----sta rt at $31 7" fans on wtn
5 fl&lt;"rf'S t dlr~ hlf' , l ,m•Lr from
and dttcher, Charles R. Hal
bedrooms 11 1:&gt; baths, lots of
_ ~t ~~r~..nty res1 de!:!_C! _ __ _
dow panels extra l&lt;tng elf FREE PUPPIES Rullond 742 3Q6J
(".hf's ter
' m il rs ' fr om
fteld
Black Hoe Servtce
s toroqe level lo t. base
culating cool and wood
TWO FAMILY Yard Sole Frtday
Rutland Ohio Pone 7"2 2008
Pnm r r oy
m e nt, 'J ca r gM age w•th
heaters Ccb1net models 9900
and Saturday Ftrst rood on left
roo r.n over , 975 sq ft 10 ell
Mobile Homes for Sale
Call Bill Stewut
PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
for $329 95 w1th blower Kmg
Na tur nl gils heel! P or ches,
- ~~~~~~ --------374
7311
Se rvtce Phone 992 2478
orculot
lng
go~ heaters ti-le r
Jq65 General 60x12 2 bdr
Utl
lt
fY
LARGE SIX Fomtly Ya rd Sole
Maneu~ . o
mo statt colly controlled w1th ro 1q70 Skyhne 12'1165 2 br
NEW LISTING ........ Older
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
Thursday and Frtdoy April 26 &amp;
d1a nce and gloss front 70 000 1q70 Sylva 60x 12 2 bdr
cancelled ? Lost your operofors
home but mu ch done 1n
27 10 om Good chtldren s
B T U $329 95 Gorden seed 1q70 Castle 60x12, 2 bd r
l~eense? Phone992 2143
wety
of
remodellnq
cloth1ng all sizes good mens
a nd supplies Reasonably pr te 1973 Nob1hty 12x60 2 br
ca rpe t1n g , pane l1ng t1 le
dreu pants stze 40 loh of
C
ELECTRICAL Contractor serv
E
ed
1973 R1dgewood 70)( 14 3 bdr
£&gt;C t
J bedroom s M tur i~l
d1she-s bedspreads trumpet
mg Ohto Vol ley reg ion S1x
1973
Ncshuo
60x12
2
bd"
gos heC'I t sto rage buildtng ,
ftre screen w ith glass doors 12 RUTLAND HARDWARE Rutland
dovs o week 24 hours service
1 car ci! rport many oth e r
Ohto 7"2 2255 Close out at 1973Governor 60)(12 2br
gouge double barrel shotg un
Emergency cells Call 882 2952
197"
Morkhne
50xl2
2
br
fert
t
u
r
es
Got
n
g
a
t
bose CB ond 2 super mag
cost All sma ll electnc ap
or 882 345,.
B&amp;S
MOBILE
HOME
SALES
$18,500 OQ
pl1onces tnclud1ng toa sters
antennas, lots of ch1ldren s toys
PT PlESANT WV
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
blend'lrs hotr dryers a nd monv
NEW LISTING - Lovely 1
and story books hke new
675-442..
covottng
sepflc svstems
o ther Items Brand names
floor plan , tcle al f or family
gu Jtor Tu r n nght ot top of Hart
dozer backhoe Rt 143. Phone
Sunbeam Protor Stle)( ond 1971 MOBILE HOME 12 x 60 2
3 bedroom s, bath, hot
ford Htll first house o n left on
bedroom furmshed fire place
1 (61&lt;) 69a 7331
Wt' te r hee1 t s torm door s
h•tl Not responstble for oc _ othe r ~ol.ty ~~s _ ___ _
Good
condil •on
$.4700
_ ctdents 1Lots of other m1sc __ FIFTEEN FOOT Lowe lm e
a n d w1ndows, dtntng bt' r
216
E.
Second
Sir
..
•
IN
STOCK for •mmedlate delivery
843 2945
e nc losed re ar porc h lots of
----¥Orlous Sizes of pool k:1ts Do 1t
olum mum boss boot , 20 h p
YARD SALE Thursdof and Fndoy
CONVt:NIEN
l
In
town
c arpe tlhg , ver y nt ce front
yourself or le t u1 lnstall for you
26th and 27th Estl Collms ftrsf
Mere
stlcl~ steen ng
fully 1q63 NE'y\' MOON mob tle home
locrt t1 o n ~ex t to bus 1n ess
porc h DI Shwa s he r wa te r
Good condttlon $3000 Aft er
D Bumgardner Soles Inc
equippe d w1th trotle r Coil
house on Rt 7 JUSt post 1"3 h
sect 1on 3 bedrooms, le~rge
s
oft
ener
mony
o
th
e
r
992 572&lt;
II q 1tl2
985 &lt;339
~~~~1,.!92 ~~7- - - .. both , n ew fur na ce nnd ktt
fe atur es $18 500 oo
_..
c
h
f&gt;
n
CUf)boords
oil
lnr
ge
fi V'"E-FAMiiV-Y~;d'"So le Frtdc;v NCR CASH regtste r for grocery
RUS S S SHOE REPAIR Rl 2 SR 7
NEW LISTING M1d
SIZe r ooms $25,000
Byposs Po meroy Ohio Open
store Separate totals fo r meat
the 27th at Howard Rou sh
dle port 2 bus 1ness room s
t;_sta!¥
Jor
saie
RENOVATED InSid E'
everyday 9 5 e•cept Thursday
produce groceries mtsc and
Rocme 1 doy o nly ratn or
(r ented) and 2 apar tme nts
and ou t IS ail new E nciOSE'd
taxe s
E)(cellent cond1t1o n MODERN THREE bedroom hous~.
end Soundoy
HarOld C
each .:1par tm en t hCI S 2
- ~~.!~~pm - - - - bath , l r~ r g e k1tc he n, :J
Russell
\
$125 Phone 7"22255
hedrooms
bath
k1tch ~n
full
basement
f~reploce
lullv
THREE FAMILY Yard Sal• 130 But
bed room s, qa rden rur dl
ftvtnCJ room , total num ber
carpeted central air e ncl~ed
S
&amp;
G
Carpet
Cleaning
deep
ternut Aye' Sotu~day 9 "' Sun DISHwAsHe R - -s4o- wo t er find cen t rill he ntmg
sun porch located on 6 */, acres
of r ooms tn th e 2 apart
steam
extrocfton
free
992 29'13
Ju so S73 000
;!o1~~ -- ~----on CR 2B opprox 3 mtles lrom
m e nts IS 8 lOt SIZe IS 5())1'6Q
estimates Cell between 8 am
INESTMENT
A
t"E'a
l
Rocme If lntere~ted contac t
w 1th an i".ll ey 1n the rea r
a nd 5 pm 742-2211 evenings
wnt e off w1th 5 mco m es
Lorry Wolfe 949 2836 weekends
$33,500 00
m .63()q or 742 28n
You should see t h1s or cOmE'
NEAR CHESTER - Lov e
~n~~~~~~--tn fo r rle t rHis Good for the
S &amp; H htenor Palnfmg Houses
IY bn c k home Probilbly
TWO STORY 3 bedroom fra me
futur p
mobile homes and roots
onf' of the n 1cest homes 10
~O~S_! 10 Mtddle pa~~2 3~
MODERN - 5 bedroom
992 6309 or 7.42 217"
Me1gs County 4 bedrooms,
fr o m e home onl y ~ few
SEVEN ROOM house and base
2' ., baths. '2 large rE&gt;c r eC~
Male or female, acceptmg applications for
ye nrs old If yo u need
ment m Mtne rv1lle 9&lt;12 5B23
t ton room s, wood burntno
· full time technologist. ML T or Cl T with
room. thts one has tl 3 full
ftr(' place, beautif ul k1t
FROM 5 to 80 acres 3 m1l es out of
Services Offered
hC'Ith s, cent ra l he atmg ,
c hpn 2 car qa rag e, 2 ncres
HEW. Salary will be commensurate with
Rutland 742 245 1
li'lrcte
convente
nt
k•
t
che
n,
leve l la n(,'l M a ny otht&gt;r
WATER AND ml~e hauling Coli
-----.experience . Resumes can be mailed to
fQrm n l din lntl, large lt v mg ,
OWNER SELLING 2 bedroom
fe Atur es $60,000 00
9'12 5858
nt ce e normous fetm tl y room
Veterans Memor1al Hospital, Box 749
frame house Exc!!llent m tow n
LONG BOTTOM - 70 •ere
NOW HAULING limfttone In
ilnd '1 Cil r oo ra ge
locohon Coll992 3023
f r:~r m , up to 12 tt l tabl e l'cres
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
Mtdd! .,.,ori·Poemroy area. Call
NEW
LISTING
4
11
c
lea
re
d,
som
e
good
1 Will OFFER FOR SAlE AT 10 00
Phone 614·992 · 21 04
forh"estlmole 367·71 01
hPrlroom
home
1n
t
imber,
ba
rn
,
milk
house
AM MAY 5TH 1979 AT THE
s vracuse Needs a l1ttle
Equal Employment OpPQrtun1ty
PAINTINC AND sondblattlng
c or n crib, old chi Cken
OFFICE OF CROW CROW &amp;
r'"PPiH r , bUt thi S IS your
FrH 11timate1. CoJI949 2686
hou se, t1sh1n g cab tn wlth
POR TE R
ATTORNEYS
r han ce to OE't ahPild Ht~ s
Oh 10 Rt ve r fronta ge 3
POMEROY OHIO THE GERAlD
TREE TRIMMING and ~removal
ce ntr ;~ l he nttng , wood burn
bedroom r an c h typ e house
0
VIOlET REAl ESTATE
742 3167 or 742 2573
tngftn~ pl ore, d en &lt;'lndover
whi c h Is unf 1n1she d , gc'lr df'n
lOCATED IN TUPPERS PlAINS
an r~c r e of ln nd $26 000
POOl CHEMICALS Seaton pocks
spr.ce . &lt;" 11 m 1ne r a ls 1 ye M
OHIO TWO HOUSES ON REAL
LI ST ING YOUR PROPER
Free delivery p Bumgardner
le ft on oi l r.nci Qos A
ESTATE PROPERTY APPRAISED
'rV IS A PERSONAL
Soles Inc Equipm.nt ond 1up
SUPER BUY $33,500 00 .
AT $20,000 AND TO BE SOLO 10
THING WE WILL NOT
pl1es 992 572"
THE' EASY WAY TO SELL
THE HIGHEST BIODER PROPER
MAKE
A
PATH
When you want to
TV IN EXCEilENI lOCATION
HAULING l1mestone, grovel and
THROUGH , BUT WILL
chl'nge homes, you ' ll have
AND ONLY TWENTY MINUTES
mtsc Item• 742 29.09, 01k for
SHOW ONI V BUYERS
ple nty of proble ms as It ts
FROM PARKERSBURG WV THE
Rick Imboden
wtthout worrytng about
RIGHI IS RESERVED BY THE EX
C~LL 9Y J 131~ W E LL DO
SELLING YOUR HOUSE . , WILL DO pointing Inside and out
ECUTOR TO REJE CT ANY AND
0' 1~ BES T
Good refe rence For more In·
let an e)( pert do that!
All BIOS FOR INFOOMATIQN
He len L
formatiOn call W'J 6331 before
Won•t
cost
a
cent
UNTIL
CAll VIRGil ROUSH (614)
Gordon B
noon or otter 8 30 pm
and UNLESS we get vou
9a5 3379 OR FRED W CROW
:,ue fl Murphy
the
desired
RESUL TS•
WILL Do hou•• clean ing
~6141992_3~~ -.- . .
~~ il in , Po m r r o
0
~ e.11or A:. ~..: cJafe s
LIST NOW!
'185-3S7&lt;
MODERN THREE bedroom home
No P~OJ' P r o ll •
REALTORS
Housing·
Total electnc stluoted on Io rge
WILL DO odd jobs or help sa.
HENRY E CLELANO SR
or Call Guido GirolilmJ J 305 -845-8425
lot 1n Hutcht san sub dlv11ton
meone on jobs 992 6038 or
HI'NRV E CLELANDJR
7d2 2047
992-:293&lt;
Headquarters
99?6191

H. L Writesel

----

Roofing

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PIANO
lUNING

lANE DANIELS

...
CAPTAI N EASY
GE!E! THI~ 1,\l!Jl· S VI!. ~
P~ETTV SNAZ.Z Y,
&amp;iLOVE D POP!

IMA5JNE C l\l&lt;l&lt;Yl~ 6 A ,;LEEK
I NEVER
l.ITILE Dl&lt;EAM&amp;OI\T LIK E
5ETTLE FO R
THI? IN51PE A &lt;31A~T "'U8
INFER IO R QUA!.ITY,
LI KE POSEIDON :
MY SOI&gt;J .. I ALWAY5
SEEK THe 81!57"
IN EGUIPMEtJT
A~ WELL A?
HUMAIJS!

---

-- -----·

Your Headquarters For
Armsi!Ong Carpeting

--

-

-

__ ____

-~-

THURSDAY, APRIL 26,1979
7 ()()-.C ross W1ts 3 Newlywed Game 6 13 Marty
Robbins ' Spotlight 8 News 10 , Love American
St yle 15, Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17, D1ck Cavett
20. Wild, Wild World of Animals 33
7 3D---Holl ywood Squares 3 Bonkers 6 , Match Game
PM 8. Sloo.ooo Name Th a t Tune 10. Na shvil le On
\ he Road 13 , Dolly 15 San ford &amp; Son 17, Mac Neil
• Lehrer Re port 20 33
8 ~Whodunnll' 3 15 Mork &amp; Mmdy 6. 13 Time
'
Express e NOva 20,33. Wayne Newton 10 . Movie
' Va len tino" 17
8 3Q--H Jgh clllfe Manor 3 15, Angle 6,13
9 oo--Qu 1nc v 3, 15 Barnev M1ller 6, 13, Hawan F 1ve 0
8, 10 World 20 Movie " The 8lSt Blow ' 33
9 30--Carter Cou nt ry 6. 13,
10 00-Susan An ton 3,1 5. Doctors' Private Lives 6, 13,
Barnaby Jones 8 10 M1 Ss1on Impo ssible 17 , News
WHICH 10' WHY I LOOK
FORW~ RD TO YOUR l!Rl~l'l
20
IN6 YOU R FAMICY 8A CK
10 3~ Ho ck tng Valley Bluegrass 20, Area Sho wcase
HEl&lt;E. TO EtJJOY OUR
33
&lt;:ULT HEAVEIJ!
11 oo--News 3.8 10.13.15 . Hogan' s Heroes 17 Best of
WELL,
Groucho 20 . Over d! asy 33
ER- \\IH'I
11 JG-Johnn y Carson 3,15 Star sky &amp; Hutc h 6,13.
NOH SOUIJDS
Mash 8 . ABC News 3'3. Movie ' Gasilghl " 10. Movie
LIKE A BREAT
"Them " 17
IDEA ~
12 05--Mc Ctoud 8 , 12 4G-Manntx 6,13
1 QO-- Tomor r ow 3. News 15 , 1 3G-Movle 'The Black
Invaders" 17
1 50- News 13
3 50- News 17 , 3 50- Movie
" Operation Bikini " 17
'illf\j!N}) ~1f ~ THAT'SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
b)'Henr1Arnoldand8oblee

Business Services

~ --

------

--

ROOER HYSELL

GARAGE

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

Ohio Valley Roofing

and

Home Maintenance

)

- - -- -- --

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOTOR
SHOP

-

-

TRAilfR SALES

--

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

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tetter 10 each square, to form
tour ordinary words

BORN LOSER

'IOU Pl&lt;17.'6 1\-\~ "UP"
suno~ OR TH6 "C:OWt-J"
BUTTOt.l TO O.U.. IT
WWt-J"?
--='-

BLOCK &amp; BRICK
WORK, GENERAL
CONTRACTOR

I KEJY'B

OR. IF '{OU W~TA 00 CCMJIJ,
00 '{'PRe75 THt::. "CON~"
""·rrr" 1 1oR THt; 'UP"BUTTO\J:?

IF 'bJ WNJ\A 00 UP AND
ltt~ Bl.~VATQZ IS UP, DO

~::::~::::::•:':'':•:·~~L-----------~'~1~5wP~~

-·

-

TELEVISION
VIEWING

WAIT A MINUoE-oHIS
AIN'T DICK

.

Ap pro~e

2 ~n

-

, Thursday, Apr 26, 1979

I.. I

!~~=..:..- ~

~--

~

-

________

WELL, HE WEHT
OUT ON IT THA"I
NIGHT · THA"I'S
S URE ···

AND THEY
HATED FACH
OTHER· '

IT'S A MESS , ND1
EVEN MRS MAC BOND

-~--

**

POMEROY

LANDMARK

SMITH NELSON
MOToRs. JNt.

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

~
. .~OCI

-GRA'I' •

•
ALI.EYOO? .
NO.. . HIS
PLACE' 15

AND 'IOU

HE'RE' ON

LE'FT.

SAID He
SC:UTH OF
JUST.,

'SS&amp;!

5TROUT

REALlY
INC.

------.----

~-

--

----- ----.----·-

=~~aT

=

Ph-;,;;e

MEDICAL TEQINOLOGIST

-------

BEER ·WINE CARRYOUT
FOR SALE

CONTACT VIDIA GIROLAMI
C/0 SHAMMY'S

v,

e.

She and her
dest.ruct.1ve brats
deserve to be
evicted!

-

Why,oh,
M~ ven-1 honor why can't
is at. st.ake! I do it?
m4dut~!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
to "l Never Has
I " Pistol
- Snow 11
Packin' - ~~ 41 Gaelic
DOWN
5 Be heard,
heard, heard I V1rtuous
2 Along
9 Burden
m years
10 Tour
3
Party
game
of duty
4 Beseech
12 Hazard
5 Beau
13 Parley
15 Moslem
6 Piece
of work
t1tle
7 Hebrew
II June
measure
beetle
8
With
bats m
17 In uruson
the belfry
18 Sennon
11 Occupant
ZO V1s1t
14 Make
Morpheus
21 Smell rest1tut10n
16 Set of two

Yeslenboy'• Auwer

19 Shoe

30 Claude

'insert

of cinema

%2 Blaze

S1 Broadway

the trail

" Orphan"

23 Brown

3&amp; Mask

Z4 Sans shoes
25 Sononty

17

,.

2 3Q--News 3, 3 ~Movie " Dan' I.J usl STand There
3
3 50-News17, ~ lo--Movle " The Big Shot" 17; 5 : ~
Movie "Uncertl!!lln Glory" 3
Thursday, Aprll2tl

the

BRIDGE

facts

%7 Unpro-

37 Flerrung's

duct1ve

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

"Diamonds

29 Grievance

~

- Forever"

One of the best recalled

nver
23 Gave
the orders
, 25 Eas1ly 1rked
!6 Formerly
!7 Wild p1g

6'-4-+-+-

NORTH
• 8 7 53

•

r-

'T'1iANICS

. DOG.

HE:APS,
ONL.Y

A

LITTLf: 'r'INERP Lll(l:

You G0 UL.D HAVE
c:"'f2EP ftiiY INFfRIORI,.Y
C::OMP' EX.
OltltbyN U

Inc: tlol Re&gt;;~ US h i

4-U

t A K 94

NOT AT A LL A&amp; I

A CH ILD, OR

PHOTO MOM .'ILI"'" )'v
HAD ON. 11-jE

EAST

+9a2

+H

• J 86 2
tJS
tQ!Oa7a
+JI098
+AS
SOUTH
• A K Q 10
• K QS4

-==~=::::;::;o;:E:i::~=~r--------:-- 34 Ne1ghbor

oftheUS

35 Hard

Vulnerable: Ne1ther
Dealer. North

worker
37 Related
38 Golf t enn
39 Italian
pamter

West

Pass
Pass

Pass

to

work it:

SDB

BXBERPGLDA,
HDVJBE

VG B ' V

VHR

YBSYTB

I.

L ' XB

GHXBD ' P

SDTR
GHW

PSUSEESJ
- BTLKHOBPG
PHRTSE
Yesterday's Cryploquole: IF THERE BE ANY TRUER
MEASURE OF A MAN THAN BY WHAT HE DOES , IT MUST
BE BY WHAT HE GIVES.- ROBERT SOUTH
'' , 1979 Kmg F.ea tures S)'nchcale Inc
RI\RNF:Y

I KNOW THAT DADBURN
THING IS IN HERE

~,~ER~..:S~O~M~EWHAR !!

3.

..

4.

,

WHAT THING
ARE 'fE LOOK IN'
FER . MAW?

South

Pass

I+

Pass

4.

Pass

PaOB

Opening lead :

One le t ter s tm p\y :stand s for an oth e r In this sample A IS
used for the three L s, X for th e two 0 s, etr: Smgle letters
apostrophes, the lengt h and formalwn or the words are all
hmts Ea&lt;' h day I he code li'lte rs are diffe r ent

ASP

North Eaat

I+

DAILY C RYPTO&lt;IUOTE - Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELL()W

JGBD

near top score

• 32
• 76 4

CRYPTOQUOTES

REMEMBER HIM A5&lt;

WEST
• 10 g 7 3

WINNIE

'IE&amp;1 Blf1" HE
LOOKS 50 O LP,
DOE:SN 'T
HE.?

4-26

+ KQ3 2

lava
!9 Box ·holder
of
mythology
32 Shinto
temple
33 Pr1or to

.F·;,;RA,;;,;.NK.:;_&amp;_E_R_N_IE_,..------------:-1

many as the greatest bridle
P.loyer of all time and cor·
lalnly ranks among the lop
three or four
Here Is a nund from 1M
Ufe Master'• ualrs of 1941
whic h Howard won The contract was Just lour spades,
but -Howard made six lor a

•A

'-'H"'"" !8 Powdered

---~

~

[I]TH E( l I I I ]
(Answers 1omorrow)

I

..

--

Now arrange the orcled le"ers to
form the surpnse answer as sug
gested by the abOve csnoon

Jumbles BARON ICIN G THIRTY PIRACY
Answer
The Italian lUNCH I ANTICIPATED- In
e ludes this kind of wine ·- 'CHIANTI

Yesterd av s

SAL£ PRICES

-----~-

t

QU5~TION5.

I'M 'FRAID·· ·

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO.
592-3051

'YOU PLAY iWENiY

Print Bflswer here:

CAN HELP MUCH,

SIDING

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

HOW 'VOUMIC:.HT
C!:&gt;ET AN~WEP:~ WHEN

ICEETIN
· I I I lJ

lJTTLE ORPHAN ANN! F.

REAL ESTATE OOANS

----------~

J

r

I I

Inc I M &gt;leg U 8 ... , 01!

------~--

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

0

I BINLEBj
a... EJ!

The

...... - ..

I rJ
... lri

1--9

FR1DAY,.•PRIL27, lt7t
5 3o--Warld at ~arge 17 ; 5 &lt;5-'Farm Report 13; S : ~
PTL Club 13
5 55-'Sunrlse Semester 10, 6 ~700 Club 6.8: PTL
Club 15
6 1o--News 17, 6 25--Soclelles In Transition 10, 6 30Dragnet 17
6 45-Marn/ng Report 3: 6·~Good Morning, West
VIrgin ia 13, 6 ss-&lt;:huck Wh ile Reports ID, News
13
7 ~Today 3, 15 , Goad Morning America 6,13, Friday
Morning a. Schoolles 10, Three Stooges-L/ Hie
Rascals 17
~
1 15-Weather 33. 7 30--Famlly Affair 10.
a oo--capl. Kangaroo a, 10, Leave II To Beaver 17 :
Sesame Sl 33
a 30--Ramper Room 17
9 ~Bob Braun 3, Phil Donahue 13,15, Emer~ncy
One 6, Hogan' s Heroes 8; Lave of Lite 10: Lucy
Show 17
9 ·30-- Brady Bunch a. Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17
'
10 ~Card Sharks 3, IS; Allin The Family a,lO; Edge
at Night 6, Movie "The Blue Angel" 17
10 lil-A II Star Secrets 3, IS: $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6, Whew' a.
•
10 5s-&lt;:BS News a. House Call 10
11 ~High Rallers3, 15 , laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13: Price
Is Right a.10. E lec Co 20.
11 3Q--Wheel of Fortune 3,15. Family Feud 6,13,
Sesame St 20,33
II 55-News 17
12 ~Newscenter 3. News6,10, Password 15, Midday
Magatlne 13, Love American Style 17
12 3Q--Ryan' s Hope 6,13, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
Elec Co 33, Nat Far Women Only IS; Movlt "My
Pal Gus" 17.
1 ~Days of Our Lives 3, IS; All My Children 6, 13;
News a. Yaung &amp; the RE1IIess 10.
1 30-As The World Turns 8, 10, 2·~Dactars 3,15;
One L1fe to Live 6,13
"'
•
2 25-News 17: 2 Jo--Analher World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10, I Lave Lucy 17
3 ~General Hosp ital 6, 13, Llllas Yoga &amp; You 20:
Banana Splits &amp; Friends 171 Studio See 33.
3 3Q--Mash B. Joker's Wild 10, Fllntstones 17; D ick
Cavell 20; Wall Street Week 33
4 ~Mister Cartoon 3. Hollywood Squares 15, Marv
Griffin 6, Addams Family a, Sesame St 20,33, Stx
Million Dollar Man 10, Mike Douglas 13, Space
Giants 17
4 3o--6ewllched J , Gilligan's Is a,17 , lucy Show 15
5 ~I Dream of Jea~nle J: Beverly Hillbillies 1:
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Gamer Pylo,
USMC 10, Six Million Dollar Man 13, Brady Bunch
15
5 3o--Caral Burnelt3, Sanford &amp; Son a, Elec. Ca. 20;
Mary Tyler Moore 10 , Odd Couple 15; Lucy Shaw
17, Doctor Who 33
,
6 ~News 3,8, 10, 13. 15; ABC News6: Andy Griffith 17;
Hadget&gt;adQe Ladoe 20, Studio See 33
6 3Q--NBC News 3,15, ABC News IJ; Carol BurneH &amp;
FrlendS6. CBS News S, IO; My Three Sons17; Over
Easy 20,33
7 oo--crass-Wits 3. Newlywed Game 6,13: Sha Na Na
a; News 10. Love American Style 15, Carol
Burnell 17, Dick Cavell 20, Blg Blue Marble 33
7 30--Hee Haw Honeys 3, $1 98 Beauty Shaw 6, Family
Feud a,IO. $100,000 Name That Tune 13, Pap Goet
The Country 15, Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeli-Lenrer
Report 20,33
a oo-Diff'rent Strokes 3, IS : Family 6, 13; lncrodll&gt;lt
Hulk 8 10, Washington Week In Review 20,33:
Movie :' Orecula-Prlnce of Darkness" 17
a 3Q--Hella, Larry 3,15, Wall Street Week 20.33
9 ~Rockford Flies 3,1S, Movie "With This Ring"
6,13, Royal Heritage 20
9 30--8111 Mayers Journal 33, 10 : ~ The Duke 3, 15,
CBS Reports B,lO; Night Gallery 17; News 20.
10 30-Night Gallery 17, Consumer Survival Kit 20;
Baston Marathon '79 33
1
11 ~News 3,6,8,13,15, Hogan' s Heroes 17 •
11 3o--Jahnny Carson 3,1S, TenniS6, 13; NQA Play-Off
a , ABC News 33, Movie " Enter the Devil" 10,
Movie " Terror Is a Man" 17
12 ~Monty Python' s Flying Circus 33
1 ~Midnight Special 3,15, Movie " Frankenstlen" 10.
1 30--'News 13, Movie " Action ln the North Atlantic"

+J

By Oswald Jacoby

aad Alaa Soatag
The recent death of How·
ard Schenken at the age of75

was the second of the extremely durable Four Aces
team who dominated bridge
from 1ts fo rmation in 1933
until broken up when Oswald
Ja coby quit bridge to join
the Navy right aRer Pearl
Harbor Dave Bruc e died In
1965 Mike Gottlieb and
Jacoby are still around and
playing bridge
Howard Is regarded by

East took dununy's queen
of clubs with the ace and
returned the suit to
dummy ' s king
How. .d
cashed dununy 'o •co of
hearts, played twa rounda of
trumpa, noted the fall of
East's jack and rroceeded to
make th~ rest o the trlcltl.
He caahed hla king IUid
queen of hearts to get rid of
dummy'slast clubo!. Then he
made the key play . He
ruffed his last heart.
Dummy's ace and kina of
diamonds came next. fol·
lowed by the ruff of a dl•·
mond. West could do nolhlnl
except discard a club. How·
ard ruffed his last club •nd
was home. II he had ruffed
the club first, West could
have c hucked his last heart
and been able to ruff
Howard's last heart with the
nine of trumps.
INE WSP~PER

(Do

ENTERPRISE ASSN I

you have a question lor

rhe experts? Write " Ask r~te
EKperts, care of this news~
per fndivldual question~ will
be answered 11 accompanied

by atamped

sell.... ddr••••d

envelopes The most fnterettmg Questions will be usN In
this cofumn •nd w/U tsCIIIv~
copies ol JACOBY MOOERN I

TH' LID TO MY

SAUCEPAN

•

�Situation confusing

12- :rhe Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday,

Elberfelds In- Pomero
-

Court receives amended complaint on issue

'

•

SHOP FRIDAY 9:30 TO 8:00 &amp; SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00
f.O.M. SALE

E.O.M, SALE

NO F EAR SHOWN - This.wild duck and her eight ducklings paraded in front of the
Meigs High School recently showing little fear of those who arri,ved at the school to attend a program by the National Honor Society. A student said that some wild ducks do
· live in a field near the high school.

Sand hags plugging dikes
The Assod ated Press

Sand bags have become the
last barrier of defense for
thousands of Minnesota and
North Dakot a •residen ts
struggli ng to cont am the
flood-swollen Red River.
On e million sa ndbagsha ve
been slapped into 16 miles of
dikes in East Gr and Forks,
Minn ., population 8,400, and
its sister city, Grand Forks.
N.D., population M,OOO . The
dikes , plugged daily by
vohmteers, stand about one
foot above the murky
floodwaters.
The Red had b..,n expect ed
to crest early this week , but
the National Weather Service
said Wednesday a reeord
peak of .49.5 feet wo uld not
come until Saturda y. The Red
wa s at 49.02 feet late.
Wednesday .
The delayed crest mea ns
added pressure on the dikes,
and on th e people. said Jay
Graba, a coordinator of the
Gran d Fork,s flood control
center. " It just means we've
got to tighten our belts and
watch the dikes another Utree
days,'' he said.
Sand
was
rushed
Wednesday to 3,000 marooned
residents of The Point, a l l'.!mile-16ng str ip of land at the
confluence of the Red River
and Red Lake River.
Food, medical supplies and
other necessities also arrived
by Coast Guar-d launch.
The Red and its tributaries
formed lakes up to 15 miles
wide north of East Grand
Forks, engulfing scores of
farm hornes and isolating
towns.
In the South ,. the crest of
. Mississippi's floo ded Pearl
River was expec ted to start
pushing into the Gulf of
Mexico today, and officials
predicted the waters could
claim a new victim - the
.Gulf Coast. fisl]inp industry.
Shrimp and oy \' were

threatened by the gush of by 55 mph winds forced
freshwater into the gulf, the Fl oridians in Dade and
Broward counties to boat
officials said.
Ala bama state health down flooded streets in some
officials ordered a halt to neighborhoods. . Telephones
oyster harvesting along the didn 't work, and electricity
coast Wedn esday because was off. Roads flooded and
floodwaters were believed to tr affi c snarled when the
be carrying a high bacteria computer controlling many
count to oysterhbeds.
traffic lights went on the
I n Mi ssissippi ·coun ties blink. Roofs leaked and some .
where the Pearl already has Miami-area schools closed .
crested. Wedn esday wa s a
The Nation al Weather
grim homecoming d!ly for Servi ce said 16.24 inches of
residen ts d ispl a ced sin ce rain
lei{ .at
Miami
Good Friday by the muddy International Airport from 7
waters.
a.m. Tuesday to I p.m.
In Florida, Miami 's 90-day Wednesday . The 16.21 inches
drought ended in a big way that fell in ll1e 24-hour -period
with a reco rd rainfa ll ending Wednesday afternoon
Wednesday.
bettered the record of 15 .1
A downpour accompanied inches on Nov . 29-30, !925.

Scouts holding
energy program
Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts and
of th e Tri-State
Area Council ll'ill be focusing
their attention on conserving
energy on Saturday, April 28,
Scouting E.nvironment Day.
" Each of our Cub Scout
packs, ·Boy Scout troops and
Explorer posts is being encouraged to run its own
resour ces conse rvation
pro jects,"
Brent
De .
Mesquita , Energy Program
Coo rdin ator, said . " These
include such things as energy
ga rden clinics, tree and shrub
planting , and litter · prevention education .

Ashland. Gallipolis, Pt.
Pleasant. Louisa , Wayne ,
Ceredo , Pomeroy and
Grayson.
Forty -fiv e thou sand
booklets - that' s over two
tons of energy saving in·
formation. The booket was
printed for the Alliance to
Save Energy, a Washingtonba s ed not-for - profit
organization dedicated to
energy education and conservation by the U. S.
Department of Energy." .
This distribution effort is
part of a nationwide drive by
more than half of Scouting's
" But our main emphasis in local Councils to put the
the Tri-state Area Council is booklets in the hands of more
on energy conservation . A than 5 million peop\e.
Co uncil proj ect this year is to
,.
distribute 45,000 copies of the
'
new booklet "How to Save
Money by Saving Energy ".
Copies will be distributed to
resident s of Huntington,

E;~plorer s

Survey show's
teens giving
up STTWking

-

c/i.ut ;lie J.ilvt~ ""mer
J-nsll accowd- -~ .fma/1 '

d*7'n/6 · ·.fe&gt;e&gt;n ~ow/
~.....

J;f 1(/tV &lt;5'_.

Meigs County
People

RACINf
HOME NATIONAL

BANK

WASHINGTON {API Teen-agers may finally be
climbing onto the no-smoking
bandwagon with
their
parents and other older
people.
A new government survey
due out today was expected to
show that the teen-ager
smoking rate , which grew
from 12 percent in 1968 to 16
percent by 1974, is now
turning downwards.
That trend would follow the
pattern already established
by older smokers.
An estimated 54 million
Americans still smoke, but 30
million . have quit since the
first surgeon general's report
on smoking and health in
1964, according to , the
Department of Health ,
Education and Welfare. The
percentage of adult smokers
has fallen from 42 percent to
33 percent.
HEW Secretary Joseph A.
Califano Jr. planned what his
offi ce called "a major
announ cement on teenage
sn1okin g" today in San
Francisco at a confere.nce of
the National Interagency
Council on Smoking and
Health .
A government Murce who
asked not to be identified said
Califano would reveal the
drop in ieen-age sm.oking as
well as information about 3.5
million Americans who have
recently quit smoking.
He also was exp&lt;:cted to
challenge · the
tobacco
industry to mount a
campai~n urging youngsters
.to wait until they are adults
before deciding whether to
smoke.
A drop in teen-age smoking
would mark a significant
·milestone ill Califano's 15month -old war against
tobacco, particularty since
adults already. have been
quitting in large numbers.

•

Charging
tha t
"confrontation and possibly
violence" could result if the
court does not restrain the
new (or invalid) board of
trustees from interferin g
with the current (or ousted)
board of trustees , officials (or
eK-officials) of Buckeye
Rural Electric. filed an .
amended complaint for
declaratory judg ment ,
temporary and permanent
injunction with the Gallia
County Common Plea s Court
Thursday.
The amended complaint

MEN'S
WESTERN
SHIRTS

BOYS'
SPORT SHIRTS
Reg. $7.95 •• ~ •••• Sale '6.99

REG. 111.95 ........... SALE '10.49

(USPS 145·960)

Reg. $8.95. •••••• Sale '7.89 ·
Reg. $9.95 ••••••• Sale s8.79

REG. '13.95. :., .•••• :. SALE '12.29 ~~
REG. '15.95 ........... SALE 113.99 ·~

E.O.M. SALE

~~~

SCANNERS

Summer prints and solid
colors, long sleeved, short
sleeved and sleeveless
styles. Sizes 32 thru 46 .

REG. '7.00 ................. SALE '5.99
REG. '9.00 ................. SALE '7.69
REG. '12.00 ............... SALE 110.19
REG. !15.00 .............. SALE 112.79
REG. '18.00 .............. SALE 115.29
REG. 120.00 .............. SALE 116.99

VOL NO. XXX NO. 10

----r

Nigerian student acted alone
THE TOUCH

16 CHANNELS
NO CRYStALS NEEDED

M00EL

10 CHANNELS

$3000 CASH REBATE

E. 0. M. SALE

ACT-A 106

$1 ()00 CASH REBATE

WAREHOUSE

GENERAL ELECTRIC

unLE -.ovs·
DENIM JEANS
Slims and regulars, sizes 1 thru 3
and 4 thru 7.
'

.VINCENT, Ohio (AP) - The majority of the 800 ~
pupils at Warren High School walked out of the classrooms Thursday to protest the school board's refusal to
renew the contract of football coach Bob Kussmaul.
Superintendent Edward Jones said the district is
not firiancially able to support athletic programs
unless voters approve a 10-mill operating levy in June.
However, Jones said that even if the levy passes, Kussmaul, whose. team had a 3-7 record last season,
probably will not be rehired .

Reg. '6.00 ••• ~ ••• ~ •• Sale $5.39
•100 PER CENT SOLID STATE
Reg. $7.00. •••••••••• Sale '6.29 .
•AUTOMATIC COLOR CONTROL .
Reg. $8.00 ••••••••••• Sale '7.19
•DEPENDABLE SERVICE
'9.00 ••••••••••• Selle '8.09 . 19 INCH SCREEN •••••••••• Special
Reg. '10.00••••••••••. Sale '8.99
E.O. M. SALE

JUNIOR
TOPS
SHORT SLEEVED, SHELLS,
TANKS, MANY, MAMY OTHERS
SALE PRICES START
AT ONLY

SAN DIEGO (AP)- Police say they believe a 22year-&lt;&gt;ld Nigerian atlete, who was killed in a hail of
pollee bullets, was the sole person responsible for stabbing a woman to death, strangling her daughter and
taldng a psychologist hostage for three and one-half
hours. "We have no reason to l)elieve anyone else Is involved," Bill Robinson, police spokesman; said Thursday.
But Investigators still were not certain of the
motive behind the alleged actions of Newman
Augustine Osebor, who was on a track scholarship at
Uilited States International Uiliversity here".. He had
hoped to compete in the Olympics as a long jwnper, but .
was dropped from the track team a month ago as
academically ineligible.
·

Students protest non-renewal

PORTABLE
COLOR
TELEVISIONS

$399.00
17 INCH SCREEN •••••••••• Special $369.00
· f.O.M. SALE

·~

Proposal has less bite
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter's
proposed tax on oil profits woUld have far less bite than
generally supposed on the additional billions of dollars
oil price decontrol will give to producers.
Although described originally as a 50 percent tax ,
the levy actually will cost oil companies only about 13
percent of the first three years' worth of extra income
from decontrol, according to figures made public by
the .admlnistration for the first time Thursday.

Teachersuesschoolbo~

WE5r8END.:
~·

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP ) - Fonner Taft High
School teacher Samuel Shie has flled a notice of appeal
- in connection with a common pleas court decision on
his firing by the Hamilton Board of , Education. The
notice of appeal was filed with the Jsf Ohio District
Court of Appellls in Cincinnati.

. where craftSmen still c are'.!

4QT.SLOW
COOKER
• Almond
porcelain ~ on- .
aluminum pot has Non -Stick

interior, "see-thru" glass
cover.
• Pot removes from base for
easy cleaning a11d oven or

those

REG. $21.95

f.O.M. SALE

TABLE
COVERS
•VINYL AND CLOTH
FABRIC
•ROUND, OBLONG
OR OVAL

20% OFF

E.O.M, SALE

. MEN'S·
DRESS SLACKS
Checks, solid$ and plaidS ih cool
summer colors . Waist sizes 29
thru 50.

Reg. '9.95., •••••• Sale $8.79
'

Reg. '14.95 ••••• Sale '13.19
Reg. '16.95 •••• Sale s14.39

.....,_, '19.95••Sale $17.59

·Elberfelds In Pomero

General Manager of the
Cooperative.
The ori ginal complaint ,
filed on. April 13, sought a
d ec laratory judgment
ordering that any action
taken at tlie .Wril 2lmeeting
be ruled null and void.
According tO that action,
petitions circulated to call the
recall
meeting
were
improperly distributed, and
that the meeting itself was
called in violation of the

Code

of

represents the cooper ati ve

off ic ials said during· th e
recal.l meeting that it. was the
board 's position that tbe vote
taken was illegal and not
valid .
According to the complaint
filed Thursday, the act ion
taken at the "pretended "
meeting wa s invalid because :
-No evidence what~e ver
was presented in support of

the charges ag ains th e

plaintiff trustees.
-All votes taken at the
meet ing were by a show of
hands with no mean s of
di sl inqu ish in g be tw e e n
members and non-members.
-The election of trustees
was not by secret ballot as

PRESENTED CHECKS - Two Meigs 'High sChool seniors were presented $100 each
scholarship checks Thursday afternoon by the Ladies Auxillary of Drew Webster Post 39;
American J..egion. From the left are Lori Wood, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Wood.
Pomeroy, and Rhonda Reuter, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Tommy Reuter, Rock Springs
Road, winners; Mrs. Faye Wildennuth, chairman of the auxiliary's schola!'Ship
program, and Mrs. Veda Davis, director ot the awdUary's junior program. Both Miss
Wood and Miss Reuter h~ve been active in the junior program.
~·

~

th at

since

th e

meeHn g, " ... all of the

were

cUrrent controver sy has
caused confusion as to

tempora ry chalrman.

- Proc ee ding s

whether the "duly elected "
trustees or those who now
claim to be trustees _ are
authorized to deal on behalf
of the Cooperative.
"This could lead to the
interruption or cesSation of
th e supply of electric power
and energy to conswners
unless .the Court , maintains
ll1e status quo by ordering the
defendants from interfering
with the pla,intiff trustees in
the operation, management
and
control
of
the
Cooperative," ll1e complaint
states.

Thu rs da y's com pl a int
cha r ges

conducted in violat ion of
basic rules of parliamentary

required by the Code of
Regulations . ·
-The meeting was not
conducted by a proper ly
elected
chairman
or

Widow recalls
painful news

en tine
.

procedure and fund amental

cannons of fairness.

individual defendants have
publicly held themselves out
to have obtained control of
the business, properties and
assets of the Cooperative and
have publicly indic'ated that
they were taking 'forceful '
action to gain control of the
Cooperative."
According to the action, the

/

'

15 CENTS

FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1979

_ , .~--

·

Racine Dental Clinic
opens in near future

By MICHAEL KUCHWARA
Associated Press Writer
Rising Red River floodwaters, surging toward an
expected crest today,
churned along a !50-mile
front of 11.rime prairie !annland. from G~aod Forks, N.
D. to . Winnipeg, Manitoba,
threatening the are~ 's im-portant wheat crop.
National Guard helicopters
swooped low Thursday over·
the upper Red River Valley,
their crews scanning vast
flooded areas In search of
marooned farm families .
"There was water as far as
you could see going north into
Canada," said one helicopter
pilot.
" Our chopper pilots
·reported a couple of !ann
families who said they hadn't
seen anybody in four days
and appreciated the . food
brought In," Lt. Col. Adrian
Beltrand said Thursday.
In East Grand · Forks,
Mimi ., and its sister Community, qrand Forks, N. D.,

- il

the Red River climbed to
more than 48 feet lat e
Thursday, I'-'.. feet under its
expected crest. An estimated
2,000 persons remain away
from their homes in the
beleaguered communities,
civil . defense officials said.
A hot, steady sun baked
· South Florida Thursday as
residents of the wealthy Gold
Coast area north of Miami
tried io dry out ' following
Wednesday's record rainfall
of more than 16 Inches In a 24hour period.
"It's like a big swimming
pool here and . it' s . impossible," said Mayor I..enny
Kimm el of North Lauderdale,
Fla. "The kids are out 01
school and they're swimming
along with the fish and the
snakes and the alligators."
In Broward County, hardest hit by the deluge, Lew
Watson of the Agricultura l
Extension Srrvice said farm,
nurse ry and livestock
business may have been set
back b)' as much as $20

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday. Fair and cool
Sunday. Warmer Monday
and Tuesday with a chance
of showers Monday before
clearing Tuesday. Hlgtis In
the 50s Sunday and In the
60s Monday and Tuesday.
Lows In the 30s Sunday and
In the 40s Monday and
Tue•day.

SET CLOCKS

FORWARD
ONE HOUR
SUNDAY
APRIL29
2 A.M.

·~·

Wheat ~ crop

million. Some 5,000 acres of
vegetable crops, worth an
estimated $5 million, were
destroyed by the torrential
rains in Pabn Beach County.
President Carter declared
40 counties n North Dakota a
federal
disaster
area
Thursday and Minnesota
Gov. AI Qule said he would
request similar designation
for MinneSOta sections of the
valley once the waw has
receded enough to ossess
damage.
The fiat, fertile Red River
Valley allows no r eal
drainage. Flood water s
spread over wide areas,
threatening a score of towns,
breaking through !ann djkes
and oVerflowing country
roads and interstate highways alike.
~ Hundreds of !ann familie s
have chOsen to stay at their
sandbagged , wat erlog ged·
homes to protect livestock
and property,
''You can get In a boat right
here and go 10 miles either
~

.

grandchild was born four
days after my husband was
buried. He never got a chance
to see the child he was so
anxiously waiting for and
that child will never know his
grandfather,"· Mrs. Rupe
said.
Soon after ll1e death of her
husband, Mrs. Rupe found a ·
job as a clerk at a local coal
company .
Before
the
accident she was enrolled in
accounting courses with
plans to take a job sometime
in the future.
·
~e says she and her son
"get by" with her earnings
from that clerk's job.
Mrs. Rupe has !Ued a total
$5 million in civil suits filed
against
II
companies
involved in the tower
mllapse . She is seeking $2
million compensatory
damages and $3 million in
punitive damages.
No court date has been set
for the suits, pending In the
·Pleasant County, W.Va . ·
Circuit Court .

·J

Flood ~threatens

SALE

'

as

RUTLAND, Ohio (API "I woke up a wife that
morning and by l!Ulchlime I
was a widow ." That is the
sober reality Jane Rupe
faced on April 27, 1978.
It w.as the day her husband,
along with 50 other workers,
fell 170 feet from the top of the
cooling tower construction
project at the Pleasants
Power Station in Wjllow
Island, W.Va.
One year later, the memory
of that day hangs painfully in
her mlnd, but she knows \he
realities of her situation and
continues in a positive
direction. She has a job and
maintains dreams for the
future .
Floyd Rupe was 41-years
' !ftt!ir~~~t
old
and a foreman for
C••f•'
h t:if tt
Researcfi-Cottrell at the time
of the accident.
~:.-·P·- - ··~
::._~.... -~---··
He was home from work on
Tuesdays, Thursdays and
weekends since Willow Island
is over 75 miles from the
Rupe home. He was due home
for a Thursday visit when the
accident occurred.
All soon as Jane RUpe heard
CONFERENCE HELD - A conference on "Cancer
Medical Center, was conducted. An overview of the state
the news from a friend that
of the art in care of cancer patients was presented by Dr. · the scaffolding had given way
Nursing - The State d. The Art" sponsored by the Meigs
Edward J . Berkich of HolZer Medical Center. Dr. Berkich
Unit of the American.Cancer Society, was well attended
from the rim of the tower she
is a member of the board of trustees of ihe American CanThursday at Veterans Memorial Hospital. The moderator
knew her husband was
cer Society, G'allpolls unit, and associated with the Hillwas Rhonda Dailey, RN, who Is in-aerviee director at
among the casualties.
crest Surgical Cliilic. Role of the nurse i,n ambulatory
Veterans Memorial Hospital and chairman of the
" I knew the way my
chemotberapy was given py Connie Carleton, RN, Holzer
prOfessional education committee of the Meigs unit Of the
hu~band worked. He'd go up
Medical Center. Teresa Colli!lli, RN, director Of nursing at
American Cancer Society. Mrs. Dailey was coordinator of ·
wi\h the men first thing In the
Veterallli extended the welcome. Participants were,left to
the conference. An interview with a cancer patient by
morning and stay up there all
right, Teresa Collins, Eleanor Strang, Rhonda Dailey,
day; many times not even
Eleanor Strang, RN, director· of- Nursing at Holzer
:;~;:;:: :::::::;:;:; :;:;~ ;:;:::::::: ::: :::::::::::: ;:;: :::::: ; :;:;:::::;:;:;.
Conilie Carleton and Dr. Berkich.
taking a break."
Mrs. Rupe has three sons
SPECI:AL HEARING
·and
a daughter. Two of her
The VIllage of Pomeroy
children
are married and
will hold a public hearing
another works a job that
at 7:30 p.m. May 8 conkeeps him away from home
cerning the Community
most of the time. Her
Development Block Grant
youngest son is a 16-year-&lt;&gt;ld
t CDBGI.
high
school juilior.
Purpose Is to hear
"Life just goes on and I'm
suggestions from citizens
living it day by day. Right
on development or a
The Racine Dental Clinic, a
proposal to submit to the
Exact date of opening will Athens is the sponsor of the now, the most important
Department of Housing component of the Meigs be determined pendin• clinic and wiD manage the thing I can think about is the
son I'm raising/ '
County Rural Health receipt and Installation of project.
and Urban De\·elopmcnt
"I lost my husband but
Initiative
program,
will
he.
final
items
of
dental
equip(HUDI .
ment.
The
local
policy
advisory
more
importantly, our
opening
in
the
near
future
.
HUD dollars would be
LaWson, daughter of Mr.: committee. for the clinic is children lost their father and
Tbe clinic is located in a
used to edcnd sewer lines
facility constructed by the and Mrs . Gene Lowell Jeffers composed Of Tom Wolfe of our grandchildren lost their
to the Kerr's Run area.
While the Village of Raetne Home National Bank of Carpenter Road, Albany, the Racine Home National grandfather. Our second
Pomeroy has been notified ' at the rear of the bank was valedictorian of the class Bank and tbe Board of
building on 3rd Sireet in of '71 at Alexander High Trustees of Veterans
of its eligibility to complete
Racine.
'
·
School, graduated Cum, Memorial Hospital, Hugh
the application , any·
Laude with a Bachelors of Custer, Harold Sauer,
proposal Is subject to
Margie Lawson, D.D.S., a Science Degree in Zoology Russell Brown, Asa HaskillB,
approval by HUD prior to
National Health Service Cor- from Ohio University in 1975, Earl Clark, George Hackett,
actua l funding.
ps
assignee, will provide and received her degree of Jr. , Andrew Cross and Early
The meeting .will be held
general
dental services at the Doctor of Dental Surgery Roush. This group also sera I City Hali council
clinic.
Initially,
the schedule from Ohio State University in ves as the policy advisory
c ham hers, E. Second St. ,
wiD
be
8:30
a.m.
to 5 p.m., 1978. Margie', her husband body for the Meigs County
Pomeroy.
Monday,
Tuesday
and Wed- William Michael (Mike ) Medical Clinic that will be
For further Information
nesday, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Lawson, a builder and real opening in July in the
c Ontact the Pomeroy
tLEVELAND lAP) and 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Thurs- estate salesman, and tbeir Medical Bujlldlng adjacent
Mayor's office, City Hall,
Here
are the winning
days and 8:30a.m. to 4 p.m. five month old son Michael to Veterans Memorial
numbers
in this \\'cek's
·:r:~~:~~mr:::::::=:=:::::::::=::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.;::·=· Fridays. Otber clinic staff Gene, reside in their recently Hospital in Pomeroy.
Ohio
Lottery
game :
will include a dental assistant purchased home in Racine.
Telephone nwnbers at the
Blue
534;
white
01, gold
and a secretary - recepThe Ohio Valley Health , Racine Dental Clinic are 9496;
winothon
28176.
tionist.
Services Foundation of 2575 and 949-2576.

elow-watt'heat base as 5 difterent heat s.eHings, or ou can

tings.

Regul ations.
Amember of the Columbus
ba sed legal · firm th at

ser ve

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

rangetop cooking .
set the dial in between set-

Cooper ative ' s

board to

a1

HARISON, Ohio (AP) - Voters in the Southwest
school district approved a 4.2-mill tax levy in a special
election Thursday by a 1,868-1,292 margin.
Tbe school board will meet tonight to rescind budget
cuts that would have eliminated spOrts and other activities if the levy had not been approved. Voters h!ld
defeated nine previous levies. OfficialS said the new
levy will raise $467,000,
Two weeks ago, the board orderedthe firing of 29 employees, most of them school bUs dtivers, and
eliminated fonda for sports, band· and reading
programs and honor societies. Paul Kuhn, former
Gallipolis school superintendent, heads that school
district.

· '&amp;

again st

has been appointed by the
new

•

School levy finally passes ·

E.O.M. SALE

WOMEN'S
BLOUSES

Thursday

elected Saturday to serve as a
ne w board members.
Named in the action are
Wynema Patterson Ronnie
D. Miller, Earll..ev~sai, Guy
Adams, Marvin Huston, T.J.
Moore Edward Prince and
Rich,;d Wade .
'
Also na med in the
complaint is Don Murnahan ,
who, according tn the Action ,

Nationwise

Reg. $11.95 ••••• Sale '10.49

REG. '17.95 ........... SALE '15.79

were r emoved by cooperative

members and a new board
elected.
During an afternoon
meeting at Rio . Grande
Colleg e ,
co o perativ e
members voted to oust, by
unanimous show of hand
votes, trustee s Neal 'Taylor,
Gene Nance , William Smith,
John Holliday, Phillip Pope,
E .W. Holcomb . C:l)•de R.

e

Chambray and plaids, long
short sleeves, sizes 8 thru 20 .-

Nice selection of long and
short sleeved style-s in cham bray, plaids and prints. Sizes
S,M, L,XL.

stems from
questions Walker and Lee Snyder .
surrounding the l~ gality of a
Those trustees ousted,
vote taken last Saturday along with two members of
durmg whtch the the board of _ the cooperative, fil ed the
trustees of Buckeye Rural a m e nd e d
c ompl a int _

direction just a cro ss th e
fi elds ," sa id Ed Jundt ,
chairman of the Pembina, N.
D., ~' lood Committee. ." Most
of the grain bins are full of
grain antl some are sitting in
[our or five feet of water."
Canadian offtciais !eared
the flood waters could delay
grain shipment s, causing
crop losses In the millions of
dollars.
''Another day or two of
rising waters will stop all
grain movemen~ into or out or
grain elevators In the Red
River Valley," said Keith
Wilson of Manitoba Pool
Elevators. "I'd Bl!Y 70 to 75 of
Pool' s elevators In the area
will be out of commission by
the end of the week." ·
Wilson said more than $100
million worth of crops cou)d
he in jeopardY, .of down-·
grading or .loss, depending on how wet binned ·
grains get ~nd how they
recover after fanns dry out.
Officials estimated that up
to one-~hl~d of the province 's
·~

total crop of 150 million
bushels stored on, ranns is in
the flooded area.
In northeast Loui siana,
heavy rains along the
Mississippi River produced
floodin g Iri Catahoula ,
Concprdia and LaSalle
parishes and the eyacuation
of 175 families.
• In the New Orleans suburb
of Slidell, some 100 families
left their homes Thursday
when water from Lake
Pontchartrain was unable to
drain Into the Gulf ol Mexico.
Thunderstorms soaked
Alabama again on Thursday.
Birmingham reported its
wettest April in abnost 80 ·
years. A monthly rainfall
record set In 1900 - 13.1!6
inches - was surpa ssed
Thursday night when the
total reached 13.47 Inches .
And residents of south
Mississippi straggled back to
their homes, as the Pearl
River continued to drop as it
now~d toward the GuU of
.Meldco. ·

·'•

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