<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15809" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15809?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T08:20:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48931">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/6b4da4e920480442db6152ca57b578e0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1f70d0df7c3ed065e70bb09cde65abb3</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50635">
                  <text>8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May I, 1979

Motorists face
long gas· lines

NSCA won't support agreement
By The.A)lsociated Press
The National Steel Ca rriers
Association and several other steel
and iron haulers will not support a
tentative agreement with the
Teamsters Union , according to ·an
association spokesman.
Robert Coopes Said representatives
of the Detroit-based association and
other companies met Monday in
Cleveland.
Coopes said the group , which
employs a total of 8,000 drivers in the
Midwest and East, would continue to
.balk until the Interstate Commerce
Commission approves a 5 percent rate
surcharge to offset improved health,
welfare and pension benefits for
Teamsters.
Coopes said benefits and wages
force the trucking firms to pay drivers
88 cents on every dollar brought in ,
leaving 12 cents for the firms to pay
cargo insurance, terminal expenses,
other employees and administrative
costs. He said the firms need at least
17 cents on the dollar to pay their
overhead.
The NSCA was tile lone holdout
among the four truck~ associations
representing steel hauling firms. The
NSCA represents 50 companies, but
some members have signed their own
Interim agreement with the
Teamsters .
Coopes
said

representatives of 65 companies were
at the Mo.nday meeting.
.
Meanwhile, Cleveland steel haulers·
agreed Monday to start returning to',
work . But in Youngstown , d(ivers
voted unanimously to continue their
walkout. They said they would picket
and patrol to bottle up steel
shipments.
The conflicting actions came as the
month-long walkout by Teamster
steel carriers began running out of

gas .
.
More than 1,000 strike-related
layoffs continued at Republic Steel
Corp. and U.S. Steel Corp. facilitieS in
Youngstown, Canton, Warren and .
Cleveland, however.
Ted Taylor, a spokesman for Armco
Steel at Middletown said, "We're
seeing more carriers each day, but 1
it's not up to what we consider our
normal volume." He said, however,

that earlier layoffs of 1,060 workers
ended with the start of the work week
on Sunday.
In Cleveland, 155 striking steel
haulers told Teamsters Local 407
leader C James Kinney they would
return to jobs at companies which had
signed interim agreements with the
Teamsters, but wquld continue to
boycott flnns that have refused to
sign.

"We figure when the companies
who haven't signed see somebody
else's steel going down the road,
they'll sign too," said Frank Nichol, a
member of the dissident Teamsters
for a Democratic Union.
· A Cleveland Teamsters union
source said, "The strike is folding
up." He said steel shipments are
returning to Ohio. " It's not moving
fast, but it's moving," said the source,
who ask~!~! tllat his name not be used.

Drug smuggling ring cra~ked , ,:;,~g~a~s,;;,,
estimated to be about $300 a-pound, or
$300 million.
Federal agents said the drugs
amounted to about 8 percent of the
tqtal marijuana smuggled into this
country over that time.
The 40-count indictment, unsealed
today, alleges violation of 12 federal
laws, including one that carries a
maxlmwn life sentence.
' AttOrney General Griffin B. Bell
said in a statement, "This is the
largest case brought by the
department in the drug trafficking
field since I've been attorney
general.''
He said it was the fir.t ~ASP that is

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
goverrunent said today it had cracked
a $300 million drug smuggling ring in
Miami run by two owners of an
automobile dealership.
The Justice Department announced
that 14 persons, including the two car
dealers, were indicted Monday and ·
have now been arrested.
Federal officials said the drug ring
smuggled 500 tons of marijuana in
from Colombia over a llknonth.
period. They said the value of the
marijuana was conservatively

the result of a combined investigation
by the FBI and the Drug Enforcement
Administration into majo.r drug
trafficking.
The indictment charged ·that the
drug ring was organized in August'
1974 by Robert Jay Meinster, 37, and
Robert Elliot Platshorn, 36, both of
Miami Beach and partners in the
South Florida Auto Auction in Miami.
They began 'running tons . of
Colombian marijuana frQIII South
Florida to storage facilities in
Philadelphia before relocating the
operation in the Miami area by mid1976, the indictment said.

Friday and Saturday evenings for
lbe purpose of reglaterlag voten.
. Tbls wlll be the final reg!JtraUon
before the June primary eleeUoua.
uestdel being open from 9 a.m. to t
p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m. to l% noon
Saturday, Cbe board office wD1
remain open from 8 to g p.m., botb
daya.
Special boon are especially for
volen of lbe Eastern aod Soiltllern
Local School Dlatrlc!B aod Pomeroy
VIllage where primaries will be
beld. Saturday Ia tbe deadline for
regulerlng · for tile primary elec·
Uoua.
·

Construction worker
RUMMAGE
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A rummage and bake sale wlll be
Thunday lltrougb Saturday: . faces munler charges
held at St. Paul's Lutheran Church
Thursday, 9 to 3 p.m. Plants will also Showers poulble each day. Hlglulln
This
lr's Special
MARTINSVll.LE, Ind. (AP) - A MARION - Three Athens area
be for sale.
·
·
tbe upper . . ud '181 011 'l'banday,
fallla&amp; to tbe mid 5811n tbe north aod 22-}'ear-old Indianapolis man was General Telephone Co. of Ohio em·
ployes bave cqmpleted a course ofmid IGII In tbe aoatb 011 Salarday. being held without bond in the deaths fered
TERESA FERRElL
at the company's technical
of
a
woman
and
three
children
who
Ovendgbi!OWJin lite 3011n the aortb
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Teresa Ferrell, daughter of Mr. and aod In tbe 4GB In tbe IIOIIIb tbrGugb were killed after their car was training school.
Admitted-Elsie Forbes, Pomeroy;
They
were
Andrew
E.
Batey,
Rt.
1,
Mrs. Dilford Ferrell, Syracuse, is now tbe period.
disabled, authorities said.
Joan
Weyersmiller, Pomeroy; Mary
Middleport;
Thomas
E.
Hysell,
.
employed
at
Kay's
Beauty
Salon
ln
Pollee think the woman and her
USED CARS
Russell,
Poinervy; Wilbur Fetty,
Billy
J.
Spencer,
174
Pomeroy
and
Middleport. Miss Ferrell completed
children were slain by a passing
Langsville;
PJul Andrews, Long
Mulbery
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
'
her cosmetology at Meigs li!gh School
motorist who offered them a ride after
·
in June 1978.
Students learned how to test and Bottom.
he helped change a flat tire on their
Discharged--Jennifer McKinley,
car on . an interstate highway repair "carrier" equipment. Carriers
can transmit several telephone con- Unda Bailey, Jessie White, Stella
surrounding
Indianapolis.
THREE MORE EXECUTED
ENTERTAIN
Steven T. JU:dy, a construction versations over a pair of wires by use O'Bryan, Helen George, Burwell
TEHRAN,
Iran ( AP ) - Three
4500 miles, loaded with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter entertainMcKinney, Otis Olapmail, Jeromi
worker, was held Monday in the of radio frequencies .
many otions including CB
. ed Sunday with a family dinner party. former ·police officers were .executed Morgan County ·Jail on four
·
There are more than 90 courses and Dailey.
radio.
'
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Huber early today after an Islamic prelimiruiry counts of murder, said · seminars at the technical training
Fulton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomp- revolutionary court in the northern Prosecutor G. Thomas Gray. Formal school. Classroom training helps emSQUAD CALLED TWICE
son, Mr .. and Mrs. Joe Thompson, city of Gorgan convicted them of arraignment was scheduled later in ployes develop job skills and keep
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
Emmett Thompson, Cheshire, Mr. being "corrupt on earth," the state the week.
pace with changes in telephone direc- answered a call to Union Ave. at 6:15
·
and Mrs. Robert Thompson, and the . radio said.
a.m. Tuesday for Mrs. Mildred Morris
tory.
Judy had been free on bond for one
The broadcast did not say how they
hosts' SOIIll, Eddie and Alan.
who was taken to Holzer ·Medical
were executed, but every previous week ·while awaiting trial for armed
Center.
'
execution on which details were robbery. He was arrested at his home .
SQUAD CALLED
At 6:41 p.m. Monday the fire
You'll Like Our Quality
Sunday after his pickup truck was
reported
was
by
·firing
squad
.
.
The
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
FLEA
MARKET
departnient
went to. ROute 143 near
Way.of Doing Business
The executions brought to 164 the identlfied as one seen near the scene was called to Spring Ave., at8:17 a.m. Jack's Cafe to extinguish a brush fire.
GMAC FINANCING
A flea market will be held at Grace
of the slayings, said Gray.
' m -5342
Pomeroy
•
Episcopal Church Thursday, Friday number of people reported killed on
Mushroom hunters Saturday found · Monday for Joan Weyersmlller, who
Open Evenings 'til 6: 00
violence,
political
and
morals
charges
and Saturday fnm 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ADVISORY MEETING SET
Tll5 p.m. sat.
the bodies of Terry Lee Chasteen, 21, was taken to Veter'ans Memorial
since February.
by the Church Women.
Hospital.
There
will be a Title 1 Parent
Indianapolis, and her children, Misty
The squad went to I..Qng_Lane near Advisory meeling Wednesday at 12:45
Ann, 5, Stephen Michael, 4, and Mark
Lewis, 2, in a creek near Mooresville, Pomeroy at 7:57p.m. Sunday for Ida p.m. at · .the Ponoeroy Elementary
Christy . who was also taken to School.
·
about 15 miles from Martinsville.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
AU
interested
parenlli
are
invited
to
REPORT OF CONDITION
Gray said autopsies showed Mrs.
attend
tomorrow's
meeting,
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
Chasteen was strangled and the
especially parents of students
children were drowned.
participating iil the Title I program.
ASSISTANCE RENDERED
[t appeared Mrs. Chasteen had been
The
tanker
of
the
Middleport
Fire
This
program is designed to lmrrove
· sexually ·assaulted,. the prosecutor
·Department
was
called
to
assist
the
reading
skills and reading scores for
said, but laboratory tests to confirm
Mason
Fire
Department
at
a
brush
students
in grades 1-6.
that were incomplete.
fire
on
Lieving
Road
at
2:45
p.m.
of Middleport in tbe state of Ohio, at the close of business ori March 31, 1979 published In
Services were planned today for
PANCAKE SUPPER PLANNED
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Stales Code,
Mn. Chasteen and her daughter. ·A Monday. ·
Men
of the Racine United Methodist
funeral for the two boys was
Section 161.
BAKE SALE CANCELLED
" Church will hold a pancake and
National Bank Region Nwnber 4
Charter nwnber 8441
scheo;luled for Wednesday.
A bake s.Ue to be held by sausage supper in the church annex
Harrisonville Senior Citizens on May 3 from 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday. There will
and · 4· has been cancelled, however, be free entertainment including music
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
ADVERTISEMENTS
the rwnmage sale to be held at the and songs by the Rev. and Mrs. David
camCJZED
·
same time will be held as scheduled at Harris. The supper is on an "ali you
Cash and due from depository institutions .. . .....••................ . ... .... 1,396,000.00
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - 4J!d- tile town hall.
can eat basis" with the jrice at $2 for
U.S. Treasury securities .... . ..... ........... . . ... ... . ...... ............. 2,428,000.00
mark, Inc. advertisements urging
..
·
adults
and $1 for children.
Obllgations of States and political
'
fanners to "call us today for a fill-up"
SURGERY
SCHEDULED
subdivisions in the United States .. . ... ... ... ... .. .. ....• . ............. ...: 1,963,000.00
were criticized by state energy ofSharon Smith, Pomeroy, will
BEEF CLUB TO MEET
All other securities .. .. ... ...... ........... . ............. . .......... . ...... 30,000.00
ficials because the wholesaler had to under go surgery Wednesday ai · The Meigs County Better Beef Club
Federal funds sold and securities purchased ·
obtain ·emergency gasoline University Hospital, Columbus. will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday !II the ·
under agreements to resell .......... ... ............. .. ..... ..... ....... 1,200,000.00
allocations.
Roger Gaul residence.
Ulans, Total (excluding unearned income ) ........•..... .. .•....... 7,112,000.00
In a letter. to Landmark, Ohio
Less: Allowance for possibl&amp;loan losses ..... ............ . ...... ..... 84,0(!0.00
Deparlment of Energy Director
Ulans, Net .......... . . .......... ............ ......................... 7,028,000.00
Robert S. Ryan said, "At the very
Bailk premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
tlme this advertising program is ap·assets representing bank premises.
91,000.00
pearing, Landmark Inc. has a
desperate shortfall in product."
Allbther8:5:!ets
. 12,000.00
Landmark sales manager Steven
,;._---f_TOTALASSETS. : . . .. ......... ... ...... .. . .. ....... ..... ...... .. .. .... 14,148,000.00 - - Westfall said Monday that the com·
pany has advised local cooperatives
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
to discontinue such advertising. He
.andcorps .... ... .... .. ...... .. . ... : .. .. . ... ....................... .... 3,618,000.00
said similar radio commercials have
Time and savings deposits of individuals
already been halted, but . some
prtnshps., and corps . ........... . .... . ... ... . ...... .. . . ........... . .... 8,213,000.00
magazine ads probably can't be
DepositsofUnitedStatesGovemment ... .. '. .... .. ...... .. ........ ...... .. .... 7,000.00
removed because of advance copy
· Deposits of States and political
Ill
deadlines.
subdivisions In the United /Aates . .. .. ......... . ........ . . ...... ........... 698,000.00
All other deposits .... . ............... ... ......... .. ... . ... .... . ..... ... ..... 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ....... .. ...... ... .. ......... . , ....... ... .. ... • 43,000.00
NAMED MISS USA
Total Deposits ................................ .. ................... ~ ... 12,584,000.00
BIWXI,
Mills. (AP) - Mary
oC
Total demand deposits ... ..... ...... .. ................. ..... .
There,ote
Friers
college education hB.s
::;
Total time and savings deposits ............................. ..
been
interrupted
for at least a year,
HOME FURNISHINGS - 1ST FLOOR
All other liabilities .. . . ..................... , .. . ................ ... .. . ...... 11,000.00
now
that
she's
been
named Miss USA. .
TOTALUABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
.
The green-eyed blonde from
COMBINATION UPRIGHT ·
notes and debentures) ................ . ...... . .. ...................... 12,595,000.00 _ __
Rochester, N. Y.,' will have to cut
(;ommon stock
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER
short her studies in pre-law and coma. No. shares authorized 2,000
munications at St. John Fisher
INCLUDED:
b. No. shares outstandings 2,000 (par value ) ...... .. .. .. ...... .. ........ . 100,000.00
College, but she said Monday she .
• EICiualve ..WIY Dlef.A·Napt
6PC.
Surplus ......... . .. ... ..... .... .... .... ...... ................ . .. ........ 900,000.00
rug height acliuotment ..
would eventually return · to the .
AnACHMENT
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
classroom.
SET
and other capital reserves ... .......... ......... .. .............. ......... ~··'""'·IJU
• Top-filling dlopoilble duo!
"I'm going to be a lawyer, so that's,
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ............... .. .. . ........ .. .. .... ........ ..
bq prevento clogo, ke,po
~
deflnltely a priority," said ,Miss Friel.
euctlon otrong.
---+-TOTAL LIABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL . . .... . ... .. ...... ......... = = = - -

Course completed

w..

1979 OLDS 98
SEDAN

'9600

Red;~ed

Karr &amp;·vanlandt
.

THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

010 0

0 0

0 Ito t

o 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 1 0

0 0 0 I

I

0 0 0

I

010 0 0 0 0 0 0 I

I

0 I

I

I

0 0

0 0 0 I

o o o o

.,

-~
•-

UPRIGHT

SWEEPER SALE

Amounts outstanding Ill! of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denminations of
.
$100,000 or rnore . . . ... ...... .. ...... , ............. .. ..• •....... ......... 200,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total!leposlts......... ..... .. . .. .. . , ................. .... ... ........ . 12,584,000.00
I, MannlDg Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named ba!!k do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true.and correct to the best of my knowledge and )lellef.
Manninl! Kloes
Aprll3l, lf1?9 - - -

We the undenligned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
Uabillti~. We declare that it bas been examined by us,' and to the best of our laiowledge and
belief Is true and correct.
·
ROdney Downing
RoseS . Reynolds 7 Directors
Dale M. Dutton

THANKS EXTENDED

. The Charles (Chuck) W. Warden Ill
family extends Its thanks to all the
men of the Motintaineer pr~ject for
their kind support given it during his
recent loss. The Warden residence at
Cheshire burned March 31. ·

• Edge KI"Mr .creono thll
rut tough Inch olona the
' l\lc, O .''Jl

blllbolldl

• Brilliant heodllghl

I!~W

C~d~
.

'6995

MEETSMAY7

LIBRARY CLOSING
The PomerOy Public Ubrary will ·
cl011e at li~n Friday in preparation
for painting of Ita intertor. The
librarian will open for regular hours
at noon Monday.

•

~
· ,.,
. .

Reg. Upright 189.95 ~ ~
\- ·'-\
Tool Reg. $19.95
~ •
Total Reg. $109.90 ~

· The Meigs County Board ol Mental
Retardation will meet May 7 at 7:30
p.m. In the office of the Meigs County
Commiaslooers.

NOW
ONLY
.

.

e

N~W YORK (AP) ::_ Motorists, who
are . using more gasoline ·despite
higher prices, closed stations and ,
occasional Unes, face a longer walt to
get to . pumps in May as many oil
companies further reduce the amount
of gasoline they sell to service
stations.
The companies say the cutbacks are
due to tight supplie!! of crude oil and
tile government's request that !bey
emphasize production of heating oil at
the expenSe of g880llne production.
·Oil companies have been limiting
the allocations of gasoline to dealers
for several months, generally to about
95 percent of the amount of gas the ·
stations got a year ago. Demand for .
gasoline is about t percent higher than
a year ago ..
But many companies recently have
been quietly announcing more drastic
cuts.
Standard Oil Co. of California,
maker of Chevron gasollne,ls cutting
its allocation of g880llne to dealers
from 95 percent In AprU to ao percent
in May. Atlantic Richfield has cut
from 95 percent to 86 · percent,
standard Oil Co. of Indiana (Amoco)
has cut from 100 percent to 90 percent ·
and Exxon {('om 95 percent to . 80 .
percent.
·
·
·
The cutllacks will probably e~~use a
replay of the "closed" signs and
occasional lines that popped up at the
end of April as gas stations used up
their monthly allotments, according
to analysts.

'

INCLll&gt;ES 6 PC.

' ·•

ATTACHMENT SET

.

J

Elberfelds In Pomero

•

VOL XXVIII NO. 13

•

at

e11t1ne

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CEN:rS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1979

Meigs board hires educational consuliant
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Following an executive session
Tuesday night, the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education hired a
consultant to help study the 42
applications on file · for the

superintendent's position created by
the resignation of Supt. Charles
Dowler last month.
The board, while. in executive
session last night, reviewed the 42
applications before coming out to take

professor
of
educational
. administration at Ohio University, to
help screen and study applicants. The
new employe wiJI replace Dowler who
resigned recently as superintendent to
head the Wihnington schools.
In open session, the

act ion hiring Dr. Max Evans,

boArr1 rli c:,..,,o;:u:

the nee d for replacement of the roof at
the high school building and was
advised by Supt . Dowler to look into
several types of roofing products
before taking action. It was agreed to
have representatives of several
roofing companie. •Item th~ nrxt

regular board meeting to discuss what be at the school today to look at the
action they would recommend for the roof and interior problems that ha.ve.
developed in the structure.
roof at the high school.
The board recently advised Dwight
Supt. Dowler told the hoard that the
original architect and consultin g Goins, administrative assistant" to
engineer on the Meigs High School check into possibl~ legal actioo re!IB(- :
when it was built nine years ago will ding structural defects.

Communication group named
Principal John Lisle has instituted
a new program at Salisbury Elementary School. Known as "Salisbury's
Communication . Council," the
program Is composed of (iarents of
the Salisbury School and community
reslde11tli organized for the purpose of
assistance to the public for schoolcommunity contact.
Council members are made up of
adults who have children attending
the school, an adult who dnes not have
children attending the school, but
does live in the school district, a
representative of the faculty at the
school, president and secretary of the
Pl'O and the principal of the school.
Goals are to inform, discuss,

respond, inte~ret and assist the community to become fully aware ofthe
total school operation.
The councU meets once'during each
of the six weeks period.
Members of the council are: Mrs.
Shirley Kauff, Lupe Stegall, Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle, Margaret Parker, Mrs.
Christine Sauters, Darlene Hayes,
Yvonne S. Young, Barbara Beegle,

appointed

W.. SHINGTON (AP)
President Carter has passed over
15 more senior generals to pick
U. Gen. Edward C. Meyer to
become the Army's ·next chief of
staff, Pentagon sources sold
Tuesday night.
Only two weeks ago, Carter
named Meyer, now the Army's
deputy chief of staff for
operations, to become commander in chief of all U. S. Army
forces in Europe. There was no
explanatioo for Carter's action,
the first time in 15 )ltars that a
president has reached so far
down on the seniority list to pick
an army chief.
Maye~. 50, probably will be the
youngest general to hold a top Army post In modem times.

Onlered to jail
BATAVIA, Ohio (AP)- Pierce
Township Pollee U. Thomas
Hemsath was ordered Tuesday to
serve 14 days of a tbree-10 year
sentence for · conviction on
charges of perjury and tampering with evidence.
Judge Louis J. Schwartz sentenced Hemasth to three-tO yeats
in prison on each charge to run
consecutively and lmposed a
tli,OOO fine on each charge.
However, the judge suspended
the fine and all but 14 days of the
sentence, to be served in the Clermoot County Jail.
A jury convicted Hemsath
April 10 a.fter Dexter Amburgy of
Milford charged he was entrappj!d on a burglary charge In
October 1978.

Carson low man
NEW Y.ORK (AP) - Johnny
Carson may leave NBC 's
''Tonight Show," but he woo'! be
moving to the board of directors
of RCA, tbe televisioo network's
parent company.
RCA stockholders on Monday
voted down Carson's nomination
to be a director, He received 302
votea, considerably below the
fi9,957,('J:I votes received by the
lowest winning candidate.
Carson was, nominated by
. Evelyn Davia, a corporate gadfly
who said the RAC board needed
someone · who· was "not ambitious" and would not try to take
over the company.

Make ag1eement
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United States and the Soviet
Union have agreed to complete
the essential parts of a new strategic weapons limitation
treaty before President Carter
and Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev hold a summit
IJieetlng.

.

.

But there is stU! no word on
(Continued on page 16)
I

ch~ges

:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·"''·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

McART!iUR, Ohio (AP) - Vinton County voters turned out in
nearly record numbers Tuesday
to defeat a proposed $4.2 million
bond Issue for a new high school.
The bond issue was rejected by
a 2,283-1;510 vote. Election offictals said the total vote of 3, 793
was just 35 short of the county's
record turnout for any .election.
~boo! Bord President Andrew
Adelmann could not say whether
the proposal would be put to the
voters again.

M~yer

Satterfield
faces

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday tbrough Sunday: Sbowen
Friday and fair Saturday and Sunday. Hlgbllln tbe Ms. Overnight l'ws
In lite mid 40s to low 50s Friday, In
the mid 40s Satnrday and In tbe upper 30s to low 4GB Sunday.

.
.
NatiODWISe ' ' ''''' ' ' ' "'""'' ' ''' ''' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ' ' ' ' '
Probation
Bond issue loses
· k d
·
revo
e
e

Mrs. Frances Goeglein, Karyn - D.
Davis, Martha Husted, Judith A.
King, Floyd F. Shook, Pastor, Mrs.
Robert (Sheila) Whaley and. Mrs.
Norman
(Judy) Humphreys;
president of Pl'O, Barbara Fry;
secretary of PTO, Martha King; principal, John Lisle, and staff representation.
·

The probation of a Gallipolis man
who pleaded guilty to charges
stemming from the June 12, 1977
robbery of the . Burger Chef
Resta urant , Eastern Ave ., was
revoked Tuesday.
In a journal entry filed by Judge
Thomas Mitchell, sitting on
assignment in Gallia County Common
Pleas Court, it was ordered that the
probation of John L. Reynolds, aka
Squirrel Reynolds, be revoked and
that he be sentenced to the Ohio State
Penitentiary for a period of two to 15
years.
According to the entry, "Based
upon testlmony presented by the
probation officer, the Court finds that
the defendant was arrested and found
guilty to DWI. Further, additional
testin\ony was indicated that the
defendant violated his probation by
being out after curfew, drinking
alcoholic beverages, and committing
a traffic offense."

Kanauga man
dies Tuesday
A Kanauga man who sustained
severe burns to the upper body when
gas grenade cannisters ignited a
house from which he had kept area
lawmen at bay for two hours Saturday
died Tuesday at Cabell-Huntington
Hospital.
Tommy Damron, 62, was forced
from the frame dwelling when
extreme heat from the gas cannisters
ignited the contents and spread
through the house .
Armed with a 12-gauge shotgun and
barricaded inside the one·story
residence at 375 Pike St., Kanauga,
Damron shot two lawmen and held
officers at bay Saturday before being
driven from the home by the fire .
r&gt;eputy Alva Sullivan said Saturday
that fire from the use of the cannisters
is common because of the extreme
heat released as the noxious gas is
expelled.
The
Gallipolis City
Fire
Department had been called to the
scene Saturday because of the danger
of fire.
Following Saturday's incident,
Damron was transported by SEOEMS
to Pleasant Valley Hospital where he
was !reate&lt;! for first, second and third
degree burns to the face, neck, arms
and back.
He was then transported to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington for
Intensive burn treatment.
According to a report filed with the
Gallla County Sheriff's D&lt;ipartment
by SEOEMS, all of the intensive care
units at St. Mary's were occupied so
Damron was taken to CabellHunting!On for treatment.
Sheriff James Montgomery said
this morning ·that he was Informed of
Damron 'S· death by hospital personnel
Tuesday afternoon. '

ATTENDING THE NEWLY formed Salisbury
Communication Council Monday evening were, front,
1-i', Margaret Parker, YvOMe Young, Barbara Fry,

The Gallia-Meigs Post State High·
way Patrol bas charged. a Racine
man with aggravated vehicular
homicide following completion of its
investigation.of a fatal accident April
12.
Marvin Satterfield, Racine, was
charged in the accident which
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
claimed the life of ro-yeaNld Klma Reserve
Board Chairman G. William
Lee Jarrell, Rt. 2, Racine . The
Mlller
Is
calling the plays for an
mishap occurred on SR 338 in Letart
economic
policy
he hopes will help
Falls.
beat inflation by giving businesses
Satterfield was bound over to the
grand jury Monday after appearing more incentive to raise capital.
Miller wants the government to
before County Judge Charles Knight. speed
up the rate a( which businesses
Bond was set at $1,000.
write
off
capital expenditures "to give
Others fined or forfeiting bonds In them every
incentive to modernize
county court were Therlee Randolph,
their
facilities
and expand their
Reedsville, Harclel L. McMillan, (production) capacity."
Zanesville, Ray S. Foster, MidThe modernization, he said Tuesday
dleport, Thomas Theiss, Racine, night,
would lead ultimately to more
Daniel Surbaugh, Washington, W. . products
made more efficiently. And,
Va., and Scott D. Wolfe, Racine, $15 as the theory
goes, that would temper
and costs each, speed; Jon M.
Freeman, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to yield; David J. Williams,
FUNDS RELEASED
Athens, f5 and costs, defective
The Ohio Controlling Board throUgh
exhaust; James W. Windell, Flatwoods, Ky., $1~ and costs, speeding; the Environmental Protection Agency
Franklin Imboden, Raclne, $25 and Tuesday released funds totaling
costs, left of center; Carolyn L. Chap- $11,925 to the VIllage of Rutland, Sen.
man, Belpre, $11i0 and costs, three Oakley Collins said thi~ morning.
The hmds wlll be used to help pay
days confinement, DWI; Jeffrey
Proffitt, Syracuse, costs only, five . for engineering studies, plans and
days .confinement, no operator's specifications for Improvement to
license, $150 and costs, five daya con- Rutland's village water system.
finement, DWI; Randy Ebersbach,
Rt. 1, Minersville, $100 and costs, no
operator's llcense, $200 and costs, 10
days confinement, DWI.
Partly cloudy tonight. Low near 50.
Forfeiting bonds were Emmett R.
Burcham, Cleveland, and Luther Cloudy Thursday with scattered afBlevins, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $300.50 each, ternoon showers.' High in the mid 706.
DWI; Edna King, Albany, $62.55, lit- The chance of rain is 10 percent
tering ; Larry L. Drake, Pomeroy, tonight and 50 percent Thursday.
$37.55, speeding, $37.55, expired
operator's license; Richard Combs,
Parkersburg, Walter J. Herrala,
SEARCH CONTINUES
South Lyon, Mich., and Dale E.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Planes
Thompson, Washington, Pa., $35.50 of the Ohio Civil Air Patrol have
each, speeding; Dale E. Knapp, begun a search of eastern and
Syracuse, $35.50, no valid southeastern Ohio for a missing
registration; Tony W. Cunningham, single-engine aircraft containing two
Athens, $35.50, no operator's license ; persons, a CAP spokesman says.
Sherr! L. 'Clark, Pomeroy, f60.50 ,
The plane was en route from .
speeding; Carl Eugene Smith, Langs- Easton, Md. to the Ohio State
ville, $35.50, no registration; John S. University airport last Thursday but
Thomas,Rt. I, Middleport, $37.55, no failed to reach its destination. Its
cycle plate.
· occupants were not identified.

Miller calls

Weather

economi~

rapid price increases.
Miller suggested that Congress
begin studying such a plan now "so
that in 1980 we can put in place this
powerful policy weapon of investment
to bring us back in the next growth.
pattern."
Not only did Miller explain his plan
to a dinner gathering of . the
Advertising Council. He illustrated it,
adman fashion .
At the close of the speech, the
usually reserved central banker
laughin\!lY presented his hosts with

Explosion kills cop
BESSEMEH, Ala. (AP) - An
explosion thought to be caused by a
bomb rocked an office at the City Hall
of this Birmingham suburb today,
killing a police lieutenant and injuring
the police commissioner and the
mayor's
executive secretary,
authorities said.
Police U . John Knight said U .
Clifford T. Hill was killed in the blast,
which occurred in the office of Police
Commissioner Max Williams. .
Williams was reported critically
injured . Gene Lint, Mayor Ed
Porter's secretary, was listed in fair
condition .
The blast shook the building and
scattered glass across a street.
Knight said Williams apparently
was meeting with tile other two men
when the explosion came.
Knight, asked if the blast could ha ve
been natural gas, said it "smelled just
like" a bomb.
· The explosion caused major
damage to the offices of th e
commissioner and the mayor and to
other parts of the fourth floor of City
Hall.
Federal officials were summoned to
, investigate .
There was no apparent connection
between the explosion and a stike by.
pollee and other city employees under
way in Birmingham.
·

plays ·

red and ye llow footballs. each
inscribed with the numbers I, 5 and 10,
"You now have the ball,'' he told
them. "I hope you will run with lt."
The council spbnsors public service
ads on topics from Savings .Bonds tO
forest fires.
Miller explained that the numbers
on U1e footballs were meant 'to
illustrate his proposal. The policy b!
is pushing woulB allow businesses :to
write off their investments for
goverrunenl·mandated
environmental , safety and health
expenses in one year ~ for equipment
and processing machinery in five
years; and for structures ahd other.
permanent facilities in 10 years. : :
The poli cy, he said, would
compliment Carter administration
efforts to stem inflation, which has
heen at an annual rate above 1.0 :
percent so far this year.
ln a speech earlier in the day, Mille~
warned that no one should be.
surprised If the Federal Reserve:
pushed Interest rates up further ·to
slow inflation .
He did not, however, confirm .
market experts' analyses that the ·
Fed, which does not reveal its actions'
until a month after they are taken,
had acted Friday to raise rates.·
Higher rates discourage borrowihg·
and takes pressure off the prices of
business and consumer goods.
A Carter administration supporter,
Rep. Uonel Van Deerlin, [).Calif., had
left the session by the tlme of the final
"110-recommendation" vote. But hu
presence likely would have only
broadened the margin to 22-20.
The "no-recommendation" vote
came after supporters of the plan
fa iled for second tlme within a week to
win eomrnittee approval of it. A
motion seeking that endorsement died
Tuesday on a 21·21 tie vote.
At the White House, press secretary
Jody Powell said "it would be
absolutely foolish for this country not
to be prepared for the posalbility of an
emergency" and called such a failure
" ludicrous."

'

__.. Powell expressed encouragement,
however ,
that
the
"norecommendation" vote did not defeat
the Carter plan. He said that on
Capitol Hili as well as in the public In
general , "t~ere appears to pers,lst
some confusion about the the plan
means.

'

-,/
I

•

Sohio stations get :
95 percent of gas

Otemical spill
..... .... ._,._.. •·

'· ",
- ----···....

not dangerous .
A chemical tank car on a Chessie
system train ruptured Tuesday night,
spilling toxic hydrogen chloride along
the tracks behind Krodel Park near
Point Pleasant.
Railroad officials have assured
local authorities, however, that no
evacuation Is necessary since there
are no residences in the immediate
area of the spill.

Martha Hoover, and Judy King ; back, John Lisle, Mar; ·
tha King, Frances Goegleln, Judy Humphreys and
Barbara Beegle.

TAKING ADVANTAGE of the warm weather, that
hopefully is here to stay, were children of the Mid-

LIMA, Ohio (AP ) - Standard 011
Co. (Ohio) Stations in Ohio, Michigan
and Kentucky in May will receive ·1'5
...,.li!\l percent of the gasoline they sold in
May, 1978, while stations to the east
are on 85 percent allotments.
Robert Griffin, Sohlo vice president
for marketing, said in disclosing the
allocations Tuesday that scl\eduled
and
unscheduled
refinery
maintenance is responsible for tlie
short fuel supplies at its stations.
Griffin also told reporters who
Loured a Sohio refinery here It u
foolish to attempt to forecast gasoll,ne
price increases but attributed then\
mostly to the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Griffin said demand for gasoline
increased 3.4 percent nati.;hally, 'Iii ·
dleport Elementary School Tuesday. The warm
1978 and 1.6 percent in Ohio. He said
weather has also brought on the spring sports and
the industry· expeC\s demand to
recreation in the area. ·
increase by 3-3.5 percent this year.

·t

�E;gr;t~P'B~bcats,Southern dumps Pirates

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 2, 19'79

·1. To.d ay's commentary
The beef about beef
. By Don Graff
To boycott or not to boycott?
'- 1llat is a question that concerns
multitudes of Americans concerned
• with the accelerating price of beef
'• right up to President Carter, almost.
· He, judging from the views expressed
by his anti-inflation czar, Alfred E.
: . Kahn, would appear to think not.
But conswner groups and urban
•: authorities from New York City right
·•across the country to points very
close to Marlboro country itself think
·otherWise. They are calling for a
. repeat of the 1973 nationwide beef·
·buying boycott to bring down current
prices and they are beginning to
make the cattlemen very nervous.
• The boycott call has a strong ap·peal. It represents direct action
against a widely shared problem. And
'the would-be boycotters can make a
dramatic case. Retail beef prices are
upward bound according to one cur·
. rent calculation at an aMual rate of
•nearly 25 percent. That's the broad
:picture, let's not even bother to go in;to such details as·the latest price of a
. \pound of hambllrger let alone ~
.respectable steak.
· The bind is being felt even by the
. 'biggest.budget of all. The adminlstra'tton _IS cutting back government beef
'purchases for. the coming 18 months
-by a coincidental25 percent.
: There is, however, much more to
lhe beef story, to hear the cattlemen's
side of it. Take the 19'73 boycott, which
1hey acknowledge did have an effect,
a twofold one. In the short term, by
curtailing consumption It did lake the
preasure out of prices. But in the long
nm it created the conditions for to~y's price explosion. Herds that
;:-were trlnuned then as a consequence
" of buyer reSistance mean a short sup'• ply of beef to market now.
:~ Cattle-raising is a long-term opera·
'•:tion. It is also capital intensive, with a
·•!Wnstderable Investment tied up in
•animals for years before they are
:ready for market. And that market is

,

.

~.

,•

'

highly susceptible to the mfluence of
not only supplynd demand but
weather and other conditions. over
which the grower has little or no con·
troL One year he may end up like
Daddy Warbucks, the next as a Uttle
Oi'phan Annie, with not many laughs
to be found in either situation.
The production cycle, the sWings
from short to plentiful supply, is on
the order of 10 years. According to
growers, they are just now emerging
from the low side of the cycle, a "li·
quidation" period of reduced herds
and three straight years of losses on
an industrywide basis. Herds are now
being built up. A successful boycott,
they say, would be disastrous, interrupting the rebuilding and intensify·
ing the future supply shortage.
Inflation.fighter Kahn is inclined to
agree. While concerned about the in·
flationary Impact of beef prices, he is
discouraging organized action that
would disrupt normal marketing processes. Hls suggestion is that in·
dividual consumers follow the
government's lead, cutting back purchases and substituting lessexpensive meats and poultry where
possible.
1llat is, of course, the sort of
nonredeemable advice that comes as
no news -certainly not good news -to
the consumer. From the growers, the
advice is patience. Higher prices,
they say, are an encouragement to
keep heifers born this spring for
breeding purposes. Allowing for
growth to breeding age, then gestation and feeding of calves, it works
out to tw&lt;;H~nd-a-half years before the
market reflects the incrsed supply,
and supposedly an casing of prices.
From that, It would appear that
we've been looking in the wrong place
all along for the answer to the beef
problem. It's a matter of basic
biology as much as market-place
economics.
Meanwhile, chicken anyon?

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

· 2Don' t treat yourself
DEAR DR. LA.I\fB -I seem to have
the same trouble as the man I heard
you talking to Tab Hunter about on
Y&lt;lur TV show. It began when I was
first pregnant. I seemed to notice having heartburn and I felt as though I
was ruptured around my diaphragm
where It joins the stomach.
.
The only way I could get some relief
was to straighten my anns up and
stretch. Then something would go
back in place but I still get Iota of
· heartburn. Sometimes I'm afraid to
eat. I feel as If there ts a hole and It's
very disturbing. I'd like to learn more
about this. Why ts a hiatal hernia
operation so risky? I'm ~ years old
lind can't seem to lose w~ght I'm 167
pounds and am 5 feet 3. Can you help
me?

·:

Heavy gunfire hitls
Tehran jail today

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Inmates
a jail in downtown Tehran and
heavy gunfire broke out today as they
held off revolutionary militiamen.
Bystanders dived intc drail)age
ditches near the jail compound and
militiamen blocked off streets In the
area, located behind the capital's
central police s\ation.
Officials said the prisoners ·seized
cohtrol of the jail Tuesday afternoon,
and held some guards ·as hostages
before releasing them unharmed. The
source of the gunfire was not clear,
· but police said they believed prisoners
had seized the guards' weapons.
Guards said there were 200 to 300
inmates in the jail. Some reportedly
were members of the notorious secret
pollee organizatiqn SA\; AK, arrested
lunch in Washington with some people following the February revolution
who have done a bit of running that overthrew Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi's regime.
themselves.
Sen. Paul E. Tsongas, O.Mass.,
whose office says he runs each
morning and can go eight miles at a
stretch, was host for a luncheon
Tuesday in honor of the Worcester,
NEW YORK (AP) - The big
Mass., runner.
problem these days, says Harvey
Rogers' wile , Helen, who also runs , Kapnick , is not inflation, even If
came with him.
President Carter has declared it to be
Among the guests were Sen. Max No. 1.
Baucus, · D-Mont., who brought his
As an accountant - chairman of
sneakers, and Sen. Strom Thurmond, Arthur Anderson &amp; Co.,.one of the top
R.S.C., who said that at the age of 76 accounting firms - Kapnick is aware
he still does calisthenics and jogs a bit of the current 13percentrise in prices.
each day.
StU!, he maintains, "inflation is not
the problem."
LOS ANGELES ( AP) - Apple
Instead, he says, it is a result of
Records Inc ., the recording company problems : deficit spending, a weak
founded by the Beatles, has filed a trade position , discouragement . of
$16.5 million breach-of-contract suit savings, a failure to develop domestic
against Capitol Records and its parent energy, uncoordinated regulation,
company E.M.I. Records .
and. lagging productivity.
The Superior Court suit filed
We attack the symptom, inflation,
Monday claims Capitol failed to pay even while growing aware that the
Apple full royalties on records and real problems can .be dealt with. The
tapes made between 1962 and 1976 by real problems, however, are easy tc
the now-defunct group and its avoid; in every instance they in¥olve
individual members - John Lennon, painful political decisions.
Paul McCartney, George Harrison
So biten, it seems, accountants "limit
and Ringo Starr.
their function to reviewing the
Under its agreement with Apple documents, verifying the numbers,
Records, Capitol was authorized to analyzing procedures, and applying
manufacture · and
distribute or withholding their imprimatur.
recordings in the United States, Sometimes they comment on
Canada and Mexico.
management, but management is
their employer; it doesn't happen
often.
When Kapnick spoke recently at
Indiana University he felt constrained
to advise his audience that hi&amp; words
would sound harsh, "all the more so
coming from an · accountant
accustomed to calm, precise
expression .''
He .proceeded to criticize the
s~lzed

in the news

••
••
•' BARNSTABLE, Mass. (AP) -

.:Norman Mailer's fourth wile has
"turned tc Sen. Edward M. Kennedy to
try to stop the Internal Revenue
;!&gt;ervice !rom auctioning off the
-beachfront house she wanls as part of
her divorce settlement from the
)uthor.
• "That house was my settlement,"
~'d Beverly Mailer after her husband

)pent most of Tuesday testifying in
. flarnstable Probate Court in the final
ptages of their divorce hearing.
1 Mailer said he didn't think he could
produce $80,000 owed to the Ill-S and
tedeem the $135,000 Provincetown
home because he was already in debt
lor more than $300,000.
; Mrs. Mailer told reporters after the
hearing that she had requested the
Massachusetts Democrat to intercede
f'ith the IRS.
• A California firm, Cape Cod See,
boughi the house at auction two weeks
f8o for $65,000.
•
• According to the IRS, Mailer has 120
· days to pay his $80,000 income tax
debt and get back the title to the
house, where his wife and their two
chUdren now are living.
Mrs. Mailer is suing the novelist lor
divorce and is seeking a settlement
including the house, $1,000 a week to
help her restart her acting career and
tuition for their sons.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Boston
Marathon winner Bill Rogers had

DEAR READER- It's important to
know why you have heartburn before
you start treating it. This pain or burning In the pit of the stomach or just
under the breast bone can be
associated with Irritation of the lower
part of' the esophagus, usually from
the acid digestive juices leaking out of
the stomach Into the lower esophagus.
The leak occurs because rl. a faulty
closure mechanism where the·
esophagus and stomach join. This can
be asBOClated with a hiatal hernia.
Such hernias do conunoniy occur in
women during pregnancy. The Increased p:essure Inside the abdomen
forces tne stomach through the normal hole 'n the diaphram. The hole is
stretched
~ a re:..Jt, part of the stomach that
joins the esophagus where it comes
tnrough the diaphragm may slide
through the enlarged hole or herniate.
It follows that pressure inside the

~~

Names •••

•

BY GREG BAILEY
Hoat Eutern 's Greg Wigal and
Kyger Cteek 's Gary Nlllert looked In
a pitchers' duel last night, but I!OIIle
timely hitting and Wigal's pinpoint
· control allowed !he Eagles to come
away with a hard-fought 5-4 victory.
Wllal. walked no one and Nibert pit·
Cliiffutless ball for the first three innings.
Kyger Creek got on the scoreboard
first with two runs in the top of the

Iran's provisional government said
Thursday would be a day of nat10nal
mourning for Ayatollah ·Morteza
Motahari, a member of the
revolutionary regime's secret ruling
politburo and the second promment
Some people expect too much from
member of the regime to he themselves. They try for perfection in
assassinated Within nine days.
everything. The Mental He!!lth
Motahari, reputed to be among the Allsociation suggests that you don't
20 most influential of Iran's blame yourself if you can't achieve
approximately 100 Shiite Moslem the impossible. Appreciate the things
ayatollahs, was shot in the _head you do well. Your Community Mental
Tuesday night as he left a dmner Health Center cares about you and
party In Tel!ran and died early today, your mental health .
officials at Torfeh Hospital reported.
The assassin apparently escaped.
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini
!USPS IUMII)
described Motahari as his "dear son
and disciple" and said the killing
would make him more determined to
DEV111'EDT0111E
reach the goals of hiS Islarruc
INI'ERI!ST OF
MEIGIJ.MAliON A11t:A
revolution, the state radio reported.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ctly Editor

DAVIn BUSKilllt
. "&lt;Advortlolq,-er , •
" . l
PubUJllOCI dolly mept Silurilayby '!'lie Ohio
Valley Publlahlng Compllll)'· Mt. nedlo, Inc.,
111 Cowt st., Pomeroy, Otuo 45769. Business

Business mirror. • •

Collins' report

abdomen ts a bad thing for anyone
who has a hiatal hernia. 'That
pressure can be CBUBed from the ac·
cumulation of fat inside the abdomen.
Because of your weight problem this
could well be a contri!mtlng factor to
your recurrent heartburn.
Also you don't want to wear
anything tight or constricting around
the abdomen. This outside pressure
will squeeze part af the stomach and
tend to push It through any enlarged
hole in the diaphragm.
I am sending you The Health Letter
number · •-8, Hiatal · Hernia,
Esophageal Reflux. Other readers
who want this ~ue can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it. Send your request to
me in care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 1551, Radio City Statim, "!ew
York, NY 10019. It will give you more
specific Information oil things you can
do to belp control such problems:
I'd like to say again that you'll need
to know for sure tt vou do have a
hiatal hernia before yoti start treating
Yourself. That meana you should see
your doctor and have a medical ell•
aminatlon.
·
To give ' you sliDe help with your
weight control program, I am· also
sending you The Health Letter
numher 4-7, Weight Losing Diet.
(Other readers can order It for 50
cents, too; froo the above address.)
There are two problelllll witil an
operation for Hiatal hernia. The first
is that they dm 't always relieve the
sympto1I18. Correctlilg the hernia
doesn't necessarily mean that you
correct the leaky valve problem. In
fact, a person can have the leaky
valve problem with reflllll into the
lower esophagus without having a
histal hernia at all.
The other problem ia the risk of a
major pperation. How big a risk that
ts often depends on the overall
medical status of the_indlvldual.

scoring.

.

Meigs never really threatened, sending a runner as far as second only
twice. Montgomery held the hosts in
check on thOle two hita and twelve
strikeouta while giving up only two
free passes.
·
.
Owens, starting his second game in
a row, did a job that should have been
goOd enough to win. The _Marauder
fanned five batters, walked just two,

Tuesday's
Sports Transactions
av The Associated Pren

000 131 il:-6 7 1

FOOTBALL

Niltionill Football League

Freshman Kent Wolle picked up his
first varsity win as the Southern Tor-

LOS ANGELES RAMS Signed
Dan Kendra , quarterback . to a tree

agenf contract .

*

Sport Shop

!t

• Fishing Tackle and Rods
·
• Guns and Reloading
• Ball Gloves
eCamping Equipment
eArchery
elndoor Games ·
• We have Gift Cer·
tificates ·
&amp; Reels :

:

SOCCER
American Soccer League

*

CLEVELAND COBRAS - Signed
Carlos Mendez: , m idflelder, and Oscar

:

FO~

•
:

THE FINEST
GIFT SHOP

•

WASHINGTON REDSKINS .- ·
Signed free ag' ent Paul Smith ,
defen siVe end .

,it

Mother's Day
May
. 13

Pisano , defender . ·

,._
. ,._

COLLEGE
OAKLAND
UNIVER ,S ITY
Na.m ed Lee F;r"eder lck head basket ball coach .
SAM HOUSTON UNIVERSITY -Named Bob Derryberry head basket ball coa ch .

lWO'S COMPANY .:
DRESS ..SHOP
• *
Main
Pomeroy*

.
i

'., .**"'**************...

DALE'S KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
''Home of'Beal¢,ful Kitchens"

601 Main St.

·•

'

'

2i9 Jackson Ave.
675·2318

=a
Do

m.-2m 8

'

'

·Pt. Pleas~~~~
\ .

.

rich Md easy ·
life style') .

Meet~ kitchen: .

Srdtesman

VIBRANT ,
·BEAUTIAIL
OAK ANISH

1UiJbb-iciiS"Gi88ntNJ;
1
1

I

l

Pro playoff results

San Antonio 119, . Philadelphi~ 106'

Gamel

nows and a few bullhead are being
caught &lt;luring the evening on night·
Philadelphie 123, San Antonio 115 crawlers. Outlook good.
Game4
OHIO RIVER, GALIJPOIJS POOL
San Antonio 1'15, Philade lphia 112
(Gallla Co.) - 57 degrees F. Cloudy
Games
Philadelpolia 120, San Anron lo 97
and slightly high. Largemouth bass
Game6
are
being caught on nightcrawlers
Philade lphia 92 . San Anton io 90
and
crappies
are hitting on minnows.
Wednnday•s Game
. A few catfish are being taken on
Philadelphia at San Antonio , (n}
nightcrswlers. Fishing is best in the
Eas1ern Conference Finals
backwater areas. Outlook good.
Bes1-of-Seven Series
ROSS · LAKE (Ross Co.) - 54
Washington vs . Philadelph.la -San
degrees
F. CIW' and normal. Boat
Antonio winner
flshennen are catching largemouth
bass on rubber wonns and nightN HL Playoffs At A Glance
crawlers.
Northern pike are being
By The Associated Press
caught on large chubs and anglers
Semifinal Round
ses1 of Se\'en Series
working the shorelines are catching
Series 'I'
bluegill on wonns.
Game 1
LAKE WHITE (Pike Co.) - 62
New York Rangers 4. New York
degrees F. Cloudy and nonnal.
tsianders 1
·
Game2
Largemouth bass are being ·caught
New York Islander.§ 4, .New York throughout the lake on worms and
Rangers 3, OT
nlghtcrawlers. Bluegill are hitting
Tuuday's Game
around
the shoreline areas on worms
New York Rangers 3, New York
Islanders 1
and meal wonns. Crappies are being
·
Thursday's Game
caugh~ In the upper half rl. the lake on
, New York Islander· ~ at New York
minnows
and apinners. Outlook good.
Rangers, Cnl

G J"t/E/1&gt;. VI /4 y

INSTA-PURE

WATER ALTER
75' GARDEN

HOSE

atUCK

KITCHEN FAUCET••••••••••• 1989

PHEl£'5

----------~--------------------. MAy J-5 DRAWING
. . I

I
I
I
I

1
I

Thursday, Mey 3 through Mty 5

I

Monday lllru Frldty

II

INC.
9 a.m.-s p.m. ~on .
thru Thun. &amp; Sat.

ta :m.-ap.m. Fri .
Closed Sunday

I

Superiors

Mountain Dew,

.

.PEPSI .............. ~.~.~~~=~~.~~.-.~1\ .

I

I

19

• .

Plus Tax &amp; D•poslt

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

$

HOT DOG SAUCE ................. 41'1.00

29

.

6'1&gt;01.

. TUNA .•••.•.••••.•...••.•.•.•••••.••.• 7r

HAM

I

303 Cans . 3/'l.OO
CORN .............................
LIPTON

.TEA BAGS................... !~~~-. '1.89
W/Pork

FLORIDA .

CELERY

19C:

29'

·

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ...................... ~~~·. '1.69

LETTUCE ·
Head

,

LUCKS BEANS~.~~~~~~~.·:.'~!~~!~ .~··2179'.

39'
'

I

'

GEBHARDT510oz.

.FRANKIES ....~~·.. l
Fresh Sliced
.
LB goe
SI[)E ......;••.....
;. .,.

·CABBAGE
LB.

•,·' .• '

.

SALTINE CRACKERS ..............~~:. 49'

....................~~·. 1r

SUNDAY.$

·1
DRAWING MAY 5th

HARTLEY'S SHOES,

LB

, , ootll7:00
Soturdoy 9:00-9:00
CLOSED

I
I
I
I

PHONE

. COLORS: •WHITE • BRITISH TAN • BLACK
SIZES: N-W-W·XW

For more information, call 446-5500 in Gallla, 286·1626
in Jackson, in Meigs 992-2192.

.UVERS ...........~~-.. 894
.
CHICKEN
.
79t
$129
LB.
GIZZARDS. .............. ~.~:. .
Sup,!lrior
.
·
·
s129
.JUMBO FRANKIES ............. :..

~tOftE

·we Gltdly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

I

ADDRESS

'lr'

HEARING EVALUATION
HEARING AID CHECK for damaged hearing aids .
.
HEARING AID SELECTION to find best aid fqr the client's hearIng
HEARING AND FITTING
HEARING AID SALES starting at $215
HEARING AID ORIENTATION AND LIP READING
COMPLETE FOLLOWUP SERVICE

CHICKEN

1

1 NAME

PRICE

BUYS

'

ACE HARDWARE

or heat

FOOD

$279
GARDEN HOSE ••••••••••• ~ .
DELEX - MODEL ZlOO -:- Zl02
$

lI

against cold

THE SPEECH &amp; HEARING DEPARTMENT OF THE
GALLIA·JACKSON·MEIGS COMMUNITY MENTAL
HEALTH CENTER has these services available for
the hearing impaired individual.

if
if

cushioned comfort

insulates

··--·- ·--.. . ..

if

Tuesday~ May a
In ) ,
Montreal at
Boston,
necessary
Thursday, May 10'
In ) ,
Boston at Montreal..
necessarv

_.CABINETS
.IN SIOCK.

Sale
50'

( n J,

PLANTATION
lor foot·pllmpllrl'led

FELT
LAYER

Gamel

Montreal 4 , Boston 2
Game2
Montreal s, Boston 2
Tuesdily's Game
Boston 2, Montreal 1
Thursday's Game
Montreal at Boston ,· In)
Saturday , May 5
Boston at Montreal ,

ON

cool

tlng throughout the day on smsll_'tnln·

San An 't onio 121. Philadelphia 120

Plumbing
HARDWARE

~

Series 'J'

·DISCOUNT
OFF
.UST PRICE

Open 8 a.m.-5:30p.m . Mon. thru Sol.

.s~o fishing outlook

.saturday, May 5
New York Ranger~ at Nt!w York
ls la,-,dei's, (n )
Tuesday, May a
New York ISlanders at New Yor.k
Ranger S. Cnl. If necessary
Th.unday, May 10
New York Rangers et New York
lsl~nders, (n ), if necessary

' 40%

GRAVELY TRACJOR SAI.£S &amp; SERVICE

Pomeroy's annWl'l
tag day saturday

So Comfortable.

Nibert and Russell.
B. Wigal and Bissell.

~

nation's economic management. We

risk disaster, he said. "We need a
coordinated economic policy as much
as we need a coordinated defense
policy ." We don't have it, he said.
We di5co~age thrift, the basis of
capital needed to make jobs and raise ·
productivity, he said. Our regulators
regulate narrow-mindedly. Our
energy program concentrates on
price instead of self-sufficiency .
We don't even stop to identify the
overriding issues that cause inflation
and that must be dealt with In
developing a coordinated, long-term
national policy, Kapnick said, adding
these observations·:
-The federal budget deficit is

BY ~REG BAILEY
The Wellston 'Golden Rockets are
locked In a tie for first place in the
SEOAL after Jeff Montgomery shut _
out the boat Meigs Marauders last
night on a two-hitter, ~·
Athens fell to Ironton to throw the
league lead Into a tie•.between the
Bulldogs 8J!d the Rockets.
·'
Montgomery and · Meigs' Tom .
Owens were locked In a real pitchers'
duel until the top of the third when
WeUston took a I~ lead. A free paas,
fielder's chOice, and the only Meigs
error of the night allowed Wellston to
pick up Its first run.
In the fifth,· the- visitors pushed
three more runs.
The lead-off batter walked, stole
lleCOnd and third, and then Parsons
slashed an Infield hit off the soe of
Owens to plate the first run. Montgomery then followed with·a two-run
bomer over the 330 mark in leftcenter field to rolind out the night;s

******************~

992-2157.
probably bigger than what the
Pl. Pleasant, w. va.
Second class postage paid ~t Pomeroy, Ohio.
nwnbers tells us . He should know; his
NaUo111ladvertlslng representative. Landm
Auoclates, 3101 EUc::Ud Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
job is peering behind the numbers.
Using other accounting methods, 44115.
Subacrlption rates: Delivered by can1er
accwnulated federal deficits for 1975 where available 90 Cents per week. By Motor
A~ross from Courthouse
Route where carrier servfce not available, One
throug)) 1977 were probably 50 percent
mooth.-13.90, By mall In Ohio and W.Va., One
PHONE
greater than shown.
Year, J27.50; Slz: months, fl4.50; Three monupen sunaay 1 p.m .-6 p.m.
ths,
$11.50;
EIJewhere
$3:2.00
year;
Sii
months
"We need sound data at all levels of
Monday thru Saturday
Three months, 11.1111. Sub!cripl1011 price
government to identify problems 117.1111;
9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
lrlcludes Sunday 1\mes- Sentinel.
before they become crises. We can no
longer have deficits of $30-$50 billion
and unrecorded liabilities of the .
magnitude shown in the unofficial
accru31 statements."
-We must have a national program
tc export more. Our trade position is
deteriorating, and it isn't because of
oil. "Both West Germany and Japan
import greater percentages of their
oil than we do, and both have strong
Gravely~ 30-inch rotary mower cuts rig[u
economies, sound currencies . and
through the toughest grass and weeds and
favorable trade balances."
The problem is on the sell side. U.S.
does a.good job on your lawn as well.
·competitors use tax and other
The mower is tough, with ali-gear direct
financial incentives to stimulate
dnve. all-steel deck and anti -scalping
exports. We do not. We must change
roller.The tractor ts also all·geardriven ..
our policy.
·
Call us for a free demonstration.
~!iiV-;;
- We have chosen to wage the
We service what we sell.
energy battle with one band tied.
Nuclear power is still the cheapest
and most abundant form of energy.
"It is a ~rime that our vast coal
resources have not been mobilized."
We must gain control of energy
availability. "In business, a company
U\at loses control 'o\ier ''its ability to
gain access to necessary raw
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy,o.
992·2975
'
materials usually goes out of
Manning_Roush, Own~r

business."

Greg Smlth and Bruce Gilmore
both singled, and after being
sacrlflced to secontl and third both
scored on a single by Jolin Westfall.
With two outs in the. bottom of the
fourth, Eastern namiwed the score to
2-1 when Dan Spencer singled and
scored on a double by Mark Norton.
In the fifth, the host Eagles ex·
ploded for three runs on a double by
Johnnie Beaver, a hit batter, a double
by Brian Bissell, and a big triple by
Spencer.
After the Bobcats tallied once in the
sixth, the Eagles plated what proved
to be the winning run.
G. Wjgal and Robbie each singled.
· A walk to Beaver moved both runners
over, and then Bissell brought in the
winning run on a sacrifice fly.
·
Spenter Ie(l the hitting With his
triple and single while Blsaell, Nortoo, and Beaver each had a double. G.
Wigal and Smith each had a Bingle to
round out the Eagle hitting.
Nibert fanned three and walked
three while Smith led the Bobcat hit·
ting with tWo singles. Von Taylor had
a double as did Tom Rees. John
Amoe, Weatfall, anci Gilmore each
bad a single.
. Eastern hosts Southwestern tonight
and then t.omorrow goes to tournament action against Crookavllle at
Nelsmvllle.
Llnescore:
KC
002 001 1-4 7 2
E

Neither lellm committed an error and with three tallies in the fii-st.
runs and Mikel•• Nance smacked a and Russell each singled, and ~tcher
With one out, John Pape and Wolfe single to drive in West.
there were fine de[ensive plays from
MartyGiasllburn aingled In Griffith.
bothteams.
. each drew walks. Senior John West
Steve I.Jttle then forced in the .
The Tornadoes picked up another
Southern got all the runs it needed then stroked a .triple to bring in two. run in the fourth when Chuck;t.lichael second run when he drew a free pa~~a.
hit safely in his third straight game. But two fine defensive plays got Wolte .
He later scored on a perfect squeeze . out of a bases-loaded jam.
For the Tornadoes, West led the hitby John Pape. Dwight Hill added an
insurance run in the sixth .when he ting with his triple. M. Nance, Jbn
walked , stole second and third , and Powell, Michael, and Jonathan Rel!8
each had a single.
,
came home on a wild pitch. ·
and gave up only three hits.
York matchup. The game will begin
Turk
Payne
took
the
lou,
fanning
The
Pirates
narrowed
the
score
to
Besides Montgomery's homer, Set- at 4 p.m. at the Athens High School
six
but
walklng
eight.
GJ•pboun
I.eil
4-2
with
two
runs
in
the
fifth.
Griffith
ties and Parsons each had a single for field.
the
hitters
with
two
singles
while
nm
the only Rocket hits. Jerry' Fields and
Linescore:
McComas, Griffith, and au-11 eac~
Owens .had the only two Meigs hits; w
001 030 0-4 3 1
collected
a single.
both singleS.
. ,
M
000 000 0-4 3 I
Southern
opens sectional tourMeigs gets on 1..1e tourney trail this
Montgomery and Seitles,
nament
play
this afternoon at Meigs
The Pomeroy Youth League (swnweekend when they take on the winO)vensand Venoy.
High
School
against
Hannan Trace at
1
mer baseball program) will hold an·
ner ci New Lexlngtm • l\IP •on•'i~1o
nl)lll Tag Day on Saturday, May 5, in 2:30p.m.
l.Jnescore :
Pomeroy. The youth league will have
300 101 0-6 5 0 .
players tagging the downtown area s
NG
000 031 0-2 5 0
plus knocking on doors seeking
K
.
.Wolfe
and
Robinson.
donations. All players will be uniforBURR OAK LAKE (Morgan aiid bow trQiit are being caught by shore med and in the POMEROY AREA Payne (lp), Howell (4) and
Glassburn.
Athens Co.) - 55 degrees F. CloUdy fishefll\en trolling cheese, spinners, ONLY.
and normal. Anglers are catching corn, and rooster tallll on the_llottom.
The Pomeroy Youth League baa 13
JACKSON LAKE (Jackson Co.) - teams (over 200 youths) participating
nice stringers rl. bass on spinners and
59 degrees F. Clear and nonnal. in sununer baseball program. The
rubber nightcrawlers ..OUtlook good.
OHIO POWER RECREATIOI':I Largemouth bass are hitting on ar- donations derived from Tag Day will 11
Syracuse., Ohio ·
·
AREA (Morgan Co.) -55 degrees F. tificial lures and bluegill are hitting . be used for upgrading fields, equipon
worms.
Outlook
good.
992-5776
Clear and nonnal. Anglers are catment, insurance, etc.
OHIO RIVER, RACINE POOL
ching biiBs on rapalas, apiMers, and
Just the l.Jttle League and Pony
Open·Daily 9·8
nlghtcrawlers . throughout the area. (Meigs Co.) - 57 degrees F. Cloudy League players will he involved in I
sunday 1·5
and slightly high. Largemouth bass Tag Day. The Powells' Giants and I &lt;:OI!1plete assorlm,nt of lleddh'l•
OUtlook good.
LAKE LOGAN (Hocking Co.)- 58 are being caught durtng the morning Pomeroy Tigers (l.Jttle League
plants, hanging baskets and' I
foliage plants .
degrees F. Cloudy and normal. and evening hours m Johnson silver teams) will report to Pomeroy City
Largemouth bass ranging 3 to 6lbs. ln spoon baited with pork rind worked 111 Hall at 9a.m.
"SEASON SPECIALS';
l
size are being caught by boat fisher· 2-5' depths. Bass fishing Is good In all
The pony league teams' (A's and
Bedding Plonrs uc dOZH
llOCk. H•rdy Azaleas 10" spreed
men working the upper end of the embayment areas. Crappie fishing ts Royals) are to report In at 10 a.m.
S2.25 each 110 or more $1.75)
lake. Bass llsherrnen are using both best In the Old Town Creek em- (wearing uniforms). The other two
each) .
·live and artlllclal nightcrawlers for bayment area ·with crappies being litue· league te81Ill! (Yankees and ,L_...,._..__.._...,__,_ _ _..
caught throughout the day· on small Pirates) will report in at noon .
bait. OUtlook good.
JACKSON CITY RESERVOIR minnows worked at 4-.'1' around tree
(HAMMERSTOWN, Jackso!l Co.) - tope. Outlook fair to good.
SHADE RIVER (Meigs Co.) - 57
59 degrees F. Clear and normal.
Largemouth bass are being caught degrees F. Cloudy and normal. Chan·
durtng the morning and evening on nel catfish .are being caught
• ••
live and artificial nlghtCRAWIERS. throughout the day on nlghtcrswlers
fished
on
the
bottom.
Beat
fishing
Is
in
Bluegill are hitting on wonns. Rain·
You Won't Want To Change
the Middle and West Branches ·of the
Shade River. Outlook fair to good.
FORKED RID! LAKE (Meigs Co.) •
Shoes When You Change Activities.
·55 degrees F. Cloudy and nonnal.
Rainbow trout are being caught
throughout the day on salmon eggs,
MAGIC BAND
cheese, or onHlghth ounce rooster
of GENUINE
tails (yellow) worked at 6-10' depths
SUEDED SPLIT
or near the bottom. Trout fishing ts
LEATHERR
allows foot
best when working the shoreline in
N BA Playoffs At A Glance .
EASY CARE
to breathe
the
Hall's
Ll!nding
area.
Outlook
By The Associated _Preu
SURFACE
.ataale1
Second Round
good.
wlpescletn
permits
Best of Seven Series
TYCOON LAKE (Gallia Co.) - 57
with o cloth
shoe to
Easten• Conference
.
shtpeto
degrees·F.
Clear
and
nonnal.
A
few·
POROUS
W. L. Pet.
vour foot
INSOLE
' 3 3 .500 largemouth bass are being caught
San Antonio
keeps foot
3 3 .500 during the morning and evening
Philade lphia
Exclusive
dry end
G~m ·e 1
WELCONIZED
hours on·apinners. Crappies are hit·

Wellston whitewashes Meigs

third.

Tri- County

Office Phone' 992· 2156. EdJtorial Phone

nadoes posted a ~2 wm over visiting
North Gallia Tuesday night.
The southpaw fanned six and
walked six In going the distance.

'

BLUE BONNET

.lb. .Quartan 511111
MARGARIN E•• •. ••••••••..••••• •• •••. :6sTORK
.
l2 ,. 59'
111
HAMBURG BUNS.......r............ .

�4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Wednesday, May 2, 1979
~
;;;;

'
'

I

•••••••
z.:

Odcago Cubs whip

•••••••
•••••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

•

''

)

.'
,

.'
•

\.

'

'

Western Confe re nce Finals
Best of Se\len Series
W. L. Pet .
'
Seattle
1 0 1,000
Phoen ix

0

1

.000

Tuesday's Game
Seattle 108, Pho enix 93
Friday's Game
Phoenix a t Seattle . (nl
Sunday's Game
Seatt l e at Pho enix
Tuesday , May 8
Se attle at Phoeni x, tn )

.. ..

Friday , May 11
Pho en ix at Sea tHe . (n l. i t n ecessary

Sunday , May 13

Seattl e at Phoen ix. i t necessary
Phoen ix at Seattl e, (n 1, if necessa ry
BaubaU At A Glance

By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
· EAST

Chica go
St. Lou is
New York.

.

'

, 700

1

9 9 .500
10 10 .500

5

6

8 11
7 12

Pittsburgh

. 4~ 1

.366

5

61 z
7 1'1

WEST

,.

Houston
Cinc i nnat i
San Diego

..,,
..'

15

San Francisco
Los Ange.l es
Atlan t a

.. .
.

•'

Minnesota
Cali fo rn ia
T exas
Kansas City
Chicago

14

7

15
12
12

9
9
1

9

12

.66 7
.625

GB
'•
Jl ;t

3
611

7 1 ..

11 ,

21 J
5
6

7

.68 3

11 11
10 14

,500
. 4 17

10 14
10 IS
8 13

. 417 6
.400 6 1 1
.381 6 1 ')

4
6

Tuesday's Gam es
Montrea l 7. Los Ang eles J
San Franc i sco 7, Ph i la delphia 0
Atlanta s. Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 5, Cinc innat i 1
Sa n Diego 10, N ew York. s
St . L ou i s 7, Houston 6, 11 inn i ng s
Wednesday ' s Games
Atlanta (Mah ler 0-1) a t P i ttsburgh
(Candelar i a 0-l l. (n)
Houston ( K-. Forsctl f o) at St . L ouis
(Denny 1-2&gt;. (n)
Chicago (Reu sche l 1-3) at Cin cinnati (LaCoss 1-0&gt;. (n)
Only games scheduled
Tttursday's Games
Atlanta at Pittsburgh

9 1' .39 1
9 16 .333 7 1 ~
Tuesday 's Games
M inneso ta 3, Toronto 2
Cleveland 3, Milwaukee 1
D et roit 5, Ch icago 2
Kansas Citv 9, T exas 3
Oak l an d 7 , Bo sto n 5
New Yo r k 12 , ·Califo rn ia 8, 11 in ,
n ing s
Balt imo r e 3, Seattl e 1
Wed ne sday's Games
Minneso t a {GQitz '} . j) a t T or onto
( Buffm an 2-ll. (n) ·
MilwauKee (Haas 0- 11 a t C le ve la('ld
(Ga rlan d 0 2J, (n l
D et ro it (Rozema 1-21 at Chicago
( Baum garten 7-0 1. ( n I
T e)(as (Come r 1-3) a t Kansas City
(Leona rd 3 2). (n l
Bos ton (Tor r ez . l 1 J a t OaK land
!Keough 03 ) (nl
New York (Guid r y 2 1) a t Ca l iforn ia
(Ryan 3-1 ), ln l
Baltimore {F lanagan J--2) a t Se attle ·
( Honeycu tt 0 4 o r M i t c he ll 0-2&gt;. (nJ
Thursday's Gaines
Toronto at Milwauk ee, (n)
D etro it at M inn eso ta, ( n )
D Chicago at Te)(as, (n)
Only games sc h edul ed

By KEN RAPPOPORT AP Spans Writer
A lot of Phil' Niela'o's knucklers
have danced around home plate since
he signed his first professional
baseball contract in l!Mi9. Ah, yes, he
remembers it well - especially his
first contract .
"My biggest thrill was when I first
signed at the age of 19," says· the ace
right-hander of .the AUanta Braves.
''That was the biggest thrill I ever had
in my life - just getting the chance to
play major league ball."

Sports
shorts.

"

;
;
-' • ·

,;

_, _
'•
:
'~ .
~

&lt;

~
' ·

; ,

•'

~ •

from all of us to

,'

•'

''·
,

I

'

'

''
'
I

I ,,•'-

.I

,
''~ •

'rr

,
~

..
'

By The Associated Press
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) _: U.S.
swimming and track and field teams
selected to compete in the 11th Hapoel
Games in Israel were announced '
Tuesday by the Amateur Athletic
Union .
· The week-long games, held every
fourth year, will wind up May 8, the
AAU said.
American swim team members
include :
Nancy
Hogshead,
Jacksonville, F1a. ; Renee Laravie,
Dayton, Ohio; Jill Sterkel, Hacienda
Elsewhere, the Kansas City Royals Heights, Calif., Linda Thompson,
HERSCHEL NISSENSON
thumped the Texas Rangers 9-3, the Scottsdale, Ariz.; Gynthia Woodhead,
· AP Sports Writer
Jerry Koosman hlis left Losers ville, Cleveland Indians downed the Riverside , Calif'.; Jamie Fowler; San
N.Y. , behind him and is now a Milwaukee Brewers -3-1 and the'. Marino, Calif.; RDwdy Gaines, Winter
resident of (a) Victoria, Minn ., and Detroit Tigers beat the Chicago White l!aven, Fla.; David Larson, Jessup,
Ga . ; David McCagg, Fort Myers,
(b) the victory column for the Sox ~2.
F1a.,and Glynn Perry,Jonesboro, Ga .
Ken
Landreaux,
who
singled
home
a
Minnesota Twins.
The U.S. track and field
The veteran left-bander_, who second-inning Minnesota run, hit a tie·
managed only a 3-15 record with the breaking homer in the sixth . Koosman representatives inclulde : Steve
Philadelphia;
Mark
punchless last-place New York Mets went six lnningsillus, scattering nine Riddick ,
Enyeart,
Logan,
Utah;
Charles
in 1978, notched his fifth consecutive hits and striking out five before giving
Duggan, New York; Glen Irion,
victory with seventh.ffining help from way to Marshall .
Philadelphia ; Gene McCarthy, New
Yankees
1%,
Angels
8
Mike MarSball Tuesday night as the
Bucky Dent, Juan Beniquez, York, and Patty van Wolvelaere, Los
' Twins nipped the Toronto Blue Jays 32 and climbed into first place in the. Thurman Munson,' Lou Piniella and Angeles.
Graig Nettles delivered run-scoring
American League West.
Ironically, the Twins edged paSt singles with two out in the 11th inning
California when the Angels were as the Yankees snapped a five-game
beaten lU in 11 innings by the New losing streak. Piniella and Beniquez
PAIRINGS ANNOUNCED
York ' Yankees, who had to bring homered as the Yankees kayoed
'lbe Class A SeeUOlllll Bueball
Tommy John in to bail out a . Frank Tanana in the first inning and
shellshocked bullpen . John joined built a 7-0iead inter three . The Angels T011l118111eot beglm today at Melp
Koosman as ~ pitchers with some finally tied it 7-7 with four runs in the Hlgb ScbooL HaDDaD Tl'aee plays
bottom of the ninth against three Southern ID tbe lint game at. Z:30
clutch relief.
The red-hot Baltimore Orioles, · relievers before John, nonnally a p.m. wblle Kyger Creek meets North
meanwhile, took over first place ill the starter, came on and struck out Rod Gallla In the second COllies! at 5 p.m.
AL East with a 3-1 victory over the Carew and Don Baylor to leave two 'lbe wiDDer of the Kc-NG game
meeiB Southwe.tem -Mllllday. The
SeatUe Mariners while the BosU!n Red runners stranded .
wlmter of tbat game plays the mOrioles 3, Mariners 1
Sox' were stranding 18 runners and
Southern
wilmer 'lbunday, May 10.
Ken Singleton homered in the first
losing to the Oakland A's 7-5.
inning and Rich Dauer and Eddie
Murray drilled RBI singles in the
sixth as the streaking Orioles posted
their 12th victory in the last 13 games
behind six-hit pitching of Dennis developed a sore back.
White led off the bottom of the first
Martinez. !AJSer Byron McLaughlin
had retired 14 batters in a row until with a homer off Jon Matlack, ·who
Dave Skaggs waiked. with one ou.t in was jolted for five hits and six runs
!he sixth and AI Bumbry doubled to while lasting only 21-J innings in his
set up the RBI hits by Dauer and first appearaAce o( the season after
·
Murray.
coming off tile disabled list.
A's 7, Red Sox 5
IndlaDS 3, Brewers 1
Jeff Newman delivered a pinch twoRick MaMing drove in all the
run double and Dave Revering sent Qeveland runs with a single and a
Oakland ahead with a lwCH'un single homer while Mike Paxton gained the
during a five-run seventh-inning rally. vicwry with seventh-inning help from
The Red Sox outhit the A's ·17-ll but Sid Monge. Manning's first. home run
left 18 runners on base - two short of of the seasorl-followed a single by Jim
the AL record -and dropped one-half Norris in the third inning off Lary
game behind 'Baltimore in the AL Sorensen.
Tigers 5, White Sox 2 ·
East. They left the bases loaded four
times, including the ninth inning,
Lance Parrish and Jerry Morales
while the A's stranded only four hit successive home runs off Ken
baserunners.
Kravec in the eighth inning to seal
Royals
9,
Rangers
3
Detroit's victory. Steve Baker was the
her great ring
Darrell Porter and Frank White winner with seventh-inning relief homered to bac k the &lt;-ombined seven- from Jack Billingham. The Tigers
hit pitching of Paul Splittorff and jumped to a 3-0 lead in the third inning
Marty Pattin. Splittorff yielded only a when Lou Whitaker · drove in a run
two-out double to Bill Sample in the with a sacrifice fly, Steve Kemp
third inning . Pattin took over at the singled a run home and scored on a
start of the sixth when SDlittorff double by Jason Thompson.

Koosman ·h as
.
fifth AL wzn

.,

I

"It was a hard slider, about knee
high , that could have been caUed a
strike," Buckner agreed.
Ivan DeJesus drove in two runs for
Olicago with a second-inning single
and scored in the seventh on a single
by Bobby Mur~ after r'eacbinf! base
on a fielder's choice.
.
.
Ray Knight led off the Cincinnati
third with a single and scored on Keil
Griffey's triple off Buckner's glove for.
the Reds' lone run.
" I was hurt l~t year and I want to
prove I can.work (play) every ,day,"
said Buckner, who spent the winter
working o11t in a Chicago gym. "I'd

Braves' Phil Niekro cops
200th big league victory

31 ;

12

.bOO
.545
.42"9

Oak land
Seatt l e

W. L. Pet. GB
15 5 , 750
14

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W . L. Pet.
Bc;t ll imo r e
15 9 .625
Bos ton
JJ B .6 19
MilwauKee
13 10 .565
New Yo rk
11 11 .500
De tr oit
8 9 .471
7 14 .333
Clevela nd
To ronto
7 16 .J0-4

WEST

Tuesday , May 1S

Montreal
Phi la d el p hia

Hou ston at 51, LOUIS
New York at San F rancisco
Montrt'a l a t Sa n D ieQO, ( n )
.Phit&amp;delphia at Los Anq clt's. (n J
Onlv games sclledult•d

ClN Ci i'oNII'fl lill'l - 'l'wo louurs of or the Reds series.
batting practice put a jolt in Bill · "The first 1homer) was a breaking
Buckner's sleeping bat. He slammed ball. The second was afasthlill. I knew
two solo home runs and a double !hat one was a home run," Buckner
Tuesday night to power the Chicago said.
Cubs to a :&gt;.! victory over the
Both came off loser Fred Norman,
Cincinnati Reds.
1-3.
" !hit into two double plays Sunday .
" Freddie just didn't have good
· That 's when I realized I needed to get rhythm," said Cincinnati Manager
some extra hitting," the Cub first John McNamara. "He just couldn't
baseman explained . "! must have hit get his pitches in the Tight place."
a couple hWldred balls Monday."
Norman said he got at least one
Buckner played well in spring pitch exal'llv right. but it didn't rio
exhibitions .but got&gt;off to a poor start him any good . It was a 1-2 pUch just
in the 'regular season and was hitting before the pitch that Buckner hit off
just .183 going i.nto the opening game the second-level facade in right field,

MOM

l ull CIJI

·1

1
I

r·

three b1 rth stars

love Is expressed by th~
geflulne diamond, her children by
the glowing birth stars In colors
!hat match the blrlh month of
each child.
Beautiful styles with stars for 1 to
6 children - or Qrandchildren.

come in and see tile radiant col ors of all12 birth stars.
All rings in 10 Karat white or
yellow gold . Enlarged to show
detail.

~(39'

'O'J•eler.s

212 1. !Min, Pomii'OY

.-

THIS WffK'S

SPECIAl. .
PillA BURGER
79~

PillA BURGER &amp; FRIES

'1.09 ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALLEY
57~ w. Main
Pomeroy,O,

like to be able to

st8rt

about ISO; ·

gam~s . "

Winner Ken Holtunan, 2-1,,
scattered six hits over 7 1-3 innings to.
the victory. He was obviously;
happy to be back with the Cubs, wherehe had an earlier six-year stint before;
roaming to Oakland, Baltimore and
•
the Yankees.
''I worked hard In spring training w
get in shape and it's ~ off,':
Holtzman said. "I'm out theJ.r busting,
my tail every game. If I lose, I lose but it's not going to be because I 1111\
out of gas .
•
"I'm back where I started
(chicago) and I want to'fmlsh out my,
career here. I have maybe a year ten.
and I want to go out on a positlv(

oiarn

note."

oo::

1::11

...00
c

-••.".
-.t
0

4

..

a I

I'

I

z•

~

~

~

~

.........

....

....00

..

a I
1111:

cIll.

POMEROY

JNI1 GI.U.OG NO 010• ·aNY 1n0 11nd

JNI1 011100 NO 010:1 QNY 1n0 11nd

----~-~-----------------------------~ ------------------------------------------------------------------1 •· .1·\''
•·
,.
• •
'I
PULL ,O_ll~ A .._
D FOLD ON DOTTED LINE
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON DOTTED LINE
~

..

en
en

;

a I
a I

c::c .. c::
a u $::
Ill
•••
g:

N

a.

THURS., FRI., SAT., MAY 3, 4, 5, 1979

0

....
-•·=
•..... 00
z

LADIES BLOUSES

~~c::

by Lady ManhaHan, Jantzen.
Catalina, Lori Lynn

00
•·=

c&amp;
::1:!5

"h PRICE
1 RACK

Uil:

LADIES' ·SHORTS
-REDUCED 30%

1 LOT MEN'S

UNDERWEAR .

Boxer &amp; Gripper Shorts _
T-Shirts by Jockey &amp; Arrow

. . REDUCED 30%

LADIES'
PUNT SUITS
REDUCED 40%

PANTS
REDUCED' 20%
. STEP IN
fOR YOUR
FAVORITE FASHIONS .

'
LADIES

DRESSES
RE.DUCED 20%

.c:
w
;;
..... ·-en

....In

!l:ct&gt;

- ..............
-.... • .
Ncn

en

ffiJ!!:C'oi

.....

-'NO ·cu

c:z: ....• I.A.• - •

If
·-o...:="'

..

-~..,

:i: • .,
!1: j!: !I

·;:;

.
I

'

'

.

.

8

--

:fl"l
a.:N

u::t
u::t

=
..
a I

1

SKIRTS1_ PANTS,
BLOUSES
REDUCED 30%

a I

·-·
cnN . , - ......,.
Q .. -.::t . . . . .

KNIT TOPS
1 RACK

~

Ill. "'NN

Sleeveless, Short Sleeve,
Long Sleeve

REDUCED 30%

..
§•....
..en
Ill.

•

1 RACK MEN'S

by Puritan, Ban Lon
Short Sleeve

,, .

•

-

SHIRTS

\

I

o.
z

JUMPSUITS
"h PRICE

"
D

FUMER SII)P

1 LOT MEN'S

-.••
...-

........
..

YOURS HAPPY!

SPORTS COATS
&amp;SUITS
1h PRICE

c

00

MAKE

.f Sea;s

-·-

.

·:

McNamara had a little bit of a•
positive news, too, considering tb&amp;
state of his injury-depleted Clnclnnatt
. pitching staff.
.:
"ltlooks now like Tom (Seaver)
be able to pitch Friday night,',
McNamara said. "But It'll be j1181like
the last time -he'll throw as long ~
he can and come out if the pain get~
too. bad." •
.·
Seaver missed one turn 8l1d pitcheCI
just 3 1-3 innings his last tl!ne out
because of a lower back sprain. .~

Niekrohasplayedmajorleague ball moved fTom New York to the West
extremely well and Tuesday night hit Coast city had lost eight straight
the lofty 200-victory plateau with a 5-2 ~:ames.
decision over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
Cilrdloals 7, Astros i
"I feel great tiut there," noted .the
Pinch-hitter Roger Freed slugged a
4().year-old pitcher who has posted a ba~oaded home I"UI) with two out in
lifetime 200-175 mark with the Braves. the bottom of lbe lith inning,
"! still like to piich ."
powering St. Louis over Houston. The
Niekro's 200th triumph came in the dramatic hit wiped out ·a three-run'
city of Pittsburgh where he won ·his rally by Houston in the top of the 11th
first major league game, in May of that had given the Astros a 6-3 lead.
1965. Among the 5,122 spectators at
Freed's homer, his first career
Three Rivers Stadium was his grand slam, was his first hit of the
mother, Ivy, fTom nearby Lansing, year in six pinch-hit appearances.
Ohio.
· ·
Padres 10, Mels 5
" When your mother is sitting in the
Gene Tenace and B8rry Evans
stands and she brought you up and drove in tw~ runs apiece with a pair of
cared for you for some 20 years, it's a bases-loaded singles, leading San
good feeling to do lt in front of her," Diego over New York.
said the right-hander, who tossed , a
Gaylord Perry worked six innings tO
seven-hitter.
earn his 2'io.:h major ·league victory.
In other Natlonai League g8II)es, He surrendered nine hits, including a
the San Francisco Giants · beat the three-run homer by Doug F1ynn, but
Philadelphia Phillies 7.0; the St. ~uis struck oUt 10 Mets.
Cardinals edged the Houston Astros 7Expos7,Dodgers'3
6 in 11 innings ; the Chicago Cubs
Rm-scoring singles by Rodney
whipped the Cincinnati Reds 5-1 ; the Scott and -Warren Cromartie in the
San Diego Padres outscored the New - fifth inning helped Montreal beat Los
York Mets 10-5 and the Montreal Angeles for the Expos' seventh
Expos stopped the Los Angeles straight victory. The rally gave the
Send th11 BUNCH-OFDodgers 7-3.
·
Expos , a f-2 lead and eventually . LOVE On Mother's Day,
Nlekro's historic victory was .proved w be their winning runs.
May 13.
fashioned with the help of two home
The 1riruler was Bill Lee, who won
•Hydrangeas
runs by Gary Matthews. His second his third game without a defeat this
•Azaleas
homer, an inside-the-park shot season with late-Inning relief help
•Combinaton Pots
leading off the hinth,, broke a :l-2 tie from Elias Sosa .
•&lt;:ut Flowers .
·and the Braves added two insurance
rWls on a sacrifice ·fly by Mike Lup! '
• PoHCid Mums
. Authorl,zecl CATALOG
and an RBI single by Glenn Hubbard. ,
• Hanging Planters ·
SALES MERCHANT
•Corsages
Giants 7, Pblliles 0
. Terry Whitfield hit an inside-the• Permanent flowers
park home run, singled and drove In
three runs, while Bob Knepper
234 E. Main St.
Pomeroy,O.
pitched a five-hitter to lead San
OWNED
AND
OPERATED BY
Francisco over Philadelphia.
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
. Mrs. MlllarifVanMeter
It was the _ first victory in a
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9·5,
1N BuHernut Ave. PomerOy, 0,
frustrating road trip for the Giants,
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2
Phone ftH039 • ftl-5721
Satisfaction Guaranteed
who for the third time since they
w~ ..cept all m•ior crldlt cerds
or Your Money Back
and we wire flowers everywhere.

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

d1amond .

Reds,s~~

Ul

... -f.

11·-

c:=

~~-~~

:.o
-. . z ..-......-.~..
-=..,

' I

I

. -··..
Q

CQNII!:
A.
·-

~0;

....

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 2, 1979

Bengals look for li.n emen, quarterback

Today's

Wednesday , May2, 1979

Sports World .
By Will Grimsley
AP (.;orres pond cnt
:
;
;
:

...

I

:.

that prevalent throughout the world .
"We had 225 entrants from nine
countries and the top 20 marathoners
in the world in our International
Championship at Atlanta last
: · It was Switzer who was largely March," she said. "We were told that
; instrwnental in breaking down the sex there must be at least 25 countries
t l;larrler- in the hallowed Boston involved. So we have 29 for West
: Marathon. Now she has trained her Germany. I don't see how they can
, gtms on a broader and more powerful knock us ba ck any longer.
t force , the Olympic Games.
"Marathon running for women is
: She is leading the fight to allow mushrooming everywhere. Australia
has written. it wishes to stage a
: women to compete - as the men do • in the traditional distance races of national meet. Japa n is planning
: 5,000 and 10,000 meters as well as the three. Similar reaction comes from
: 26-mile, 385-yard marathon.
Spain , France and Gerf!lany.
" It's amazing the physical and
~
"The longest women's race in the
~ Olympi cs is 1,500 meters," the
psychological benefits that accrue
=champion of women's athletic rights from running. While jogging is the
~ says. " That is discriminatory . fastest growing sport in this country,
45 percent of our women get little or
~ Medical evidence has shown that
; women have as much endurance as no exercise at all . There are only 4,000
• men , if not more, even if men do women marathoners in the United
~ possess more speed, strength and States cqmpared with 40,000 men. "
As an updergraduat~ at Syracuse
~ power.
r "It i!l,too late now, but our aim is to University, Switzer ran with the
~ liave a full program of women's men's cross country team s and
~distance events on the 1984 Olympic outlasted many of her male
~ program in Los Angeles."
· counterparts. When the track coach,
• Switzer, who crashed the all-male Arnie Briggs, decided to enter a team
:., Be ston Marathon in 1967, is organizer in the 1967 Boston Marathon, she
:: and director of a women 's insisted on being included.
~ international running circuit.
:, The International Marathon
~Championship, with top women
: runners from 29 countries, will be
: staged Sept. 22 in Waldniel, West
! Germany.
The
tive
U.S.
~ representatives for this event will be
: chosen at the National AAU
• Championships over the slightly
::shorter 30-kilomeer ( 18.6 miles )
BY GREG BAILEY
: distance Friday in Springdale, Ohio.
The Meigs Girls' Track Team took
~ The women's bid for Olympic
nine of 14 first place finishes to defeat
: recognition at Moscow was rejected Logan 54-52 in an exciting dual meet
· : on the grounds that international last week.
~iriterest in marath~n running was not
Andrea Riggs copped a first in the
•• •
high j'ump and ' set a school record
•
with a leap of 4'9".
Laura Smith took firsts in both the
shot put and discus. She shoved the
round ball twenty-eight feet one and
•••
one-half inches and tossed the disc
eighty-two feet one-half inch . .DeBord
•• MM:HM MODEL 504
completed a Meigs sweep of the field
••
events as she took a first with a jump
of 12'11" In the long jump.
·
•
~
Sheri Drehel sprinted to a first in
both the 100 and 220-yard dashes. She
ran the 100 in : 12.4 and the 220 in :27 .4.
R. Blake won the440in I :10.7.
. The Meig~ B80 Medjey team, composed of Drehel, Riggs, Wallace, and
Anderson, took first with a time of
..!•I •.' .' .
I
r
2:03.3.
.
· The440 relayTeam won with a time
- . _;?.
of :56.1. Meigs runners sharing that
honor were Wallace, Riggs, DeBord,
- ~- .
~r
andDrehel.
Wallace took second and third in the·
100 . and 220, respectively. DeBord
took third In the 100, Anderson copped
second in the hurdles, and Smith captured second in the 880.
Logan swept all three places in the
mile. ·

' --· r~

en
en

I

~

=:a

0

I
0 0

..

\

8

i=

!;
ii

.,•

........

.!!.,N

-:

n
c:...,
!0 i :

c.c
I

*

Riggs paces

~

~
I

track victory

:IE
!!.

-...•
.....
00
c::
=r

I*

i

N
00

·.. NEW YORK (AP) - The very idea
of tabbing women ''the weaker sex"
lfends sparks flyin g .off the head of
~~~~~~;itzer, the lady who spars

*

:.-----------------------,

....
I
I

:

•'

INI1 GIUOG NO 010:1 a .N Y.. lnO 11nd

STYLIST.
..
"'1(J

INI1 GIUOG NO 010• GNY .&amp;.nO 11nd

-...,.-·----------·----------~--~----:...----------------------------------------------------------.-------------·
PULL OUT AND FOLD O_
N DOTTED LINE
PULL OUT AND FOLD ON D01:f1D LINE

"I~ -:~

Q.- "' -~ /

'FEATURES : Free-arm capabfli·
ty, 4-step buill-in buttonholer,
front drop·in bobbin, flexistitch
, paHerns, 8 built-in stitches, and a
fuiiJO·vearwarrantv .

.....
=
M

..._.
I

I .......,
c.D

....
0

..._.

en
e.G

e.G

rD&gt;En

)(3010

=t":ll=
"'~

....

~

ii@K:CT

..'"'
:Ill

"3~~

~

~'8

80

~:ll(iii

•lsi ~ 0

!"

J::5'
-&lt;
0 :;. I'D

•

~I'D~

"
-,
~ ' !1
_,.
-&lt;
~

~~

lltC:.\1'

~

::!!~

-~

;;:!.~

fta.c
. '&lt;
"''"i
~lit !II

r~.,(

~zo
~
c

o.?-::: ·

...
c
...cz
en

Cl

'"'
:Ill
en

We repair all makes
of machines. Have
your scissors
sharpented, too .

FABRIC SHOP
IISW. 2nd
Pomeroy,
Ohio

·-------.
-z
-,
,.z

SAY-E.-GAS SAVE MON~Y .
In these days of ever-increasing prices, it's good to ft_nd_a
bargain and now Riverside V.W. has the best bargatn'"
town. A Tune-Up special designed to keep your V.W. running with efficient performance and economy.

~

.

I ll

....,.
I ll

TUNE-UP

SPECIAL

AU RABBITS
'29~!sTax
•

ALLPARTS&amp;LABORINCLUDED

-3

eNEW POINTS
eNEWPLUGS
eADJUSTVALVES
eREP.LACE VALVE
COVER GASKET

~i( -

-M ·Z

w

MOCSTANDINGS
(MOC) (OVERAlL)
mAM
WL WL
Malone
9 1 14 5
8 9
Cedarville
6 4
IUoGrande
8 6
10 13
Mount Vernon
7 7 10 9
Tiffin
·
55
57
Ohio Dominican
5 7 10 14
Walsh
4 8
6 12
Urbana
2 8
3 9
This Week's Games - Thursday Cedarville at Dayton; Otterbein at
Rio Grande; Mt. Vernon NCCAA.
Wednesday - Ohio Dominican at
Urbana ; Otterbein at Walsh; Tiffin at
Fincllny; Central State at Rio; Hiram
at Malone.
Saturday- Urbana at Malone ; Tiffin at Cedarville; Edison St. at Rio
Grande.
Sunday-Walsh at John Carroll.

eSETTIMING
eADJUST DWELL
eADJUST IDLE
eADJUST CO% '

CINC lNN ,\Tl (AP 1
The
Cincinna\i l:lengais indicated they will
be shopping not only for a top
quarterback to understudy veteran
Ken Anderson but for defensive and
offensive linemen and a running ba ck.
And the team tha t suffered through
last year's 4-12 season has a pocket
· full of choices for Thursday's·National
Football l.eague draft , a day that
General Manager Paul Brown calls
"th e most exciting time in football.
" We're fans too," said Brown. "We.
watch and we wonder ·why Dallas
made this choice of a guy whom we
didn't rank l)igh. You're curious and
yo u're anxious to see if they were
right or if you were right. "
Cincinnati has the third and 13th
choices in the rirst round . They also
get two selections in. the fourth round
and a total of 14 selections in the first
12 rounds of 'the two-&lt;lay draft.
"Anderson wUJ be 30

=
I

,,

..•'
\

•

-~

'

the''Perhaps
draft. because of Ken Anderson . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and his success, he (Simms ) will go
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
higher than Anderson went," said
Pete Brown , personnel director .
MAY 3, 4, 5
There was speculation tha t

Highlanders whip
.
..
HT Wildcats, 14-4
'

'

Southwestern plated 14 runs on 12
hits and took advantage of six errors
Tuesday night to dump Hannan
Trace,14-4 in an SVAC contest.
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's Highlanders jumped on starting and losing
pitcher Waugh for four runs in the first frame and were never headed.
Sherman Potter, Wayne Sizemore,
Gene Layton , Scott Russell, and Dale
Newberry had two hits each. Potter
had a triple , Layton and Sizemore
each collected double while Russell
slammed a home run .
Pating Coach Tim Sc.arberry 's
Wildcats were Webb and Paul Shaffer
with two hits each.
Layton, in going the route, fanned
six and walked six. Waugh and Shaffer combined for five walks and two
strikeouts .
The win put Southwestern back into
the SVAC title picture with a 5-2
league mark and f&gt;-3 overall ,record.
The Highlanders travel to Eastern
today and host Southern Thursday.
Hannan Trace plays Eastern this

a

afternoon in a Class ASectional Tour·
nament game.
Linescore:
001 030 0- 4 5 6 ·
Hannan Trace
Southwestern
442 031 X-14 12 2
Waugh (L) Shaffer (3) and Beaver.
Layton (W) and RusselL
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP ) - Arnold
Palmer, the winner of 61 tour events,
has accepted an invitation to play in
th e $300,000 Memorial Tournament
May 24·27 at Muirfield Village Golf
Club.
Palmer joins a list of 105 invitees
th at includes all of the 1979 · tour
winners, led by leading money winner
Tom Watson and Masters champion
Fuzzy Zoeller .
Jim Simons will defend his title in
the four-year-Qld tournament which
has Jack Nicklaus as the host. "

1 GROUP

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

CANVAS

3
. 1 GROUP

GROUP

WOMEN'S
SUMMER SANDALS

40%R~~

CHILDREN'S
CANVAS &amp; SANDAlS

$300

PAIR
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (AP)
David Greer, a 5-foot-9 aU-state g u a r d D
&amp;IN
from Canton McKinley, has decided to
WOMEN
play his college -baksketball at
BOOTS
Bowling Green State University.
CANVAS
Greer averaged 15.5 points and 9.9
·
•
e r s assists per game in his senior season.
20~
30~
He scored 856 points in his career and
broke the school assist record each
REG. PRICE
·
REG . PRICE
Toda y's Major
season he played.
1------------~~~~~~==~~;...---f
L ea gue L eaders
The Mid-American school already
WOMEN•S
ENTI.RE STOCK
By Th e Associated Pres s
had signed !H; Jay Smith of Mio,
MEN 1S
NATIONAL LEAGUE
B A T TIN G {5 0 a t bat s )) - Wi nf ield , Michigan's all-time career scorer.
PURSES
s d , .38 1; Cr ?ma rt ie, M i l. .379 ; G riff ~y.
PRICE

GO

•s

League lead

0 OFF

OFF

0

wORK SHOES

C in . 368 ; Fos t er , Ci n , .365 ; Roy s t er .
Al l, .353 .
RU NS -- Puhl. Htn , 21; W infi eld.
S O , lB ; Daw son , Mit , 17 ; J Cruz , H tn ,

17 ; Clark, SF, 17.
RB I -- Fo s ter , Ci n , 22 ; Kingman ,
C h i, 20 ; Murphy , All , 20 ; J Cruz , Htn,
19 ; 5 Tie d Wi th 16.
. H ITS
-Win f ie ld ,
SO ,
3.7;
C r omart ie, M il. 33 ; G riff ey, C in , 32 ;
Fos ter , Cin , 31; Garvey, LA , 3 1;
Ru ss ell , LA , 31 . ·
DOUBLE S., __ Cromart ie, Mil , 9 ;
G..J rn cr , Pgh , 8; K Hrnand2 ,. St L , 8 ;
Re it z, St L . 8 ; Mor gan . Ci n , 8; G riff ey ,
Cin , 8.
TRIP L E S -- T Sco lt , St L. 4 ;
Winfield, SO , 4 ; Temp le t on , Sf L. 3 : 12
T ied With 2 .
HOME RUN S -- Murphy , A ll , 9 ,
Kingman , C h i, 7: Ca rt er , Mtl , 6 ;
Daw son, M tl , 6 ; Ma tth ews, Al l, 6.
ST·OLEN BA SES . . . . , Mor eno, Pgh ,
11 ; Cabe ll. H ln , 10 ,· Morgan. Cin , 8 : J
C ru1 . Hln , 8 ; Ma11i ll i. NY , 7.
P IT CH I NG (3 Dec i s ion s) R uth ·
ven , Ph i, 40 , 1.000, 2. 33 ; Richard , Hln ,
4 -0 , 1.000 , 2 . 66 ; B Lee, M il , 3· 0, 1. 000,
3 . 00 ; And u j a r , Hlfl , 3-0 , 1.000, 1.52 ; K
Fo r sc h , Ht n ,·3-0, 1.000, 2. 29 : Espino sa,
Ph i, 3- 1. ,750. 1.32; R eed, Ph i. 3- 1, .750;
0 . 84 ; Litt el l S t L, 3- 1. . 75 0, 1.98 .
S TRIKEOU TS - Ri c hard , Htn , 44 ;
P Nickro , Al l, Jl ; H oo t on , L A , 28 ;
Sulton , LA , 27 ; Mura , SO , 26 ; Blue,
SF , 26 .
Today's Major L eagu e
L ea de r s
By Th e Ass ociat ed Pr ess
AMEiiliCAN LEAGUE
BA TTIN G {50 at ba t sl Kem p .
D et, .396 ; Lemon . Chi, . 37 8; A Ban n ist r , Chi, . 375 ; Smaitey , M i n , .370;
W h it ak er , D el , . 368 .
RUNS
Ot is , KC. 21 ; Lan s ford ,
Cal, 19 ; Lynn, Bsn , 18; CMpe r . Mi l,
18 ; Po rt er . K C. 18 ; co w ens 1 K C. 18 .·
RBI · Baylo r , Ca l, 29 ; P ort er , K C,
22 .· Coo per . MiL 21 : Sing l eron , Ba l . 20;
Cow enS, K C, 20.
H IT S ~- La n s rord, Ca l , 33 ; C:ooper , •
M il,3 2; Gri ch,Ca l , 32 ; Ca r ew , CaL 31;
L e mon , Ch i, 31.
DOUBLE S -· Coc p N, Mil , 9 ;
Down in g , Ca l , 9 : Lem on. Chi. 1:1 :
Young , Mil , 7; H is l e , Mi l, 7: C
washgtn . Chi. 7 ; McRae, KC . 7 ;
Norwood , min , 7.
TRI PL ES - Jones , Sea, 3 ; 10 T ied
W i th 2,
HOME RUN S -· Lynn , Bs n , B;
Sing l('lon . B a l. 7; T homa s. Mi l . 7;
Coo per 1 Mi l , 6 ; Grich , Cal. 6.
STOLEN BA SES -- J Cru 1, Se a , 11 ;
O t is, KC·. 10 ; Le F l ore , O c t, 8 ; Man ning , Cl e, 7 ; Rando lph , N Y , 7.
P ITCH I N G (3 D ecis i ons) John ,
NY ,
1.000, 1.48 : Koosman , Min , 5
.o, 1.000. 3. 86 ; Jen k lns. Tex. 4·0, 1.000,
2 68 : Mc Clu re, Mil , 3-0 , 1.000-, 3.5 2;
Z.ahn , Min , J . Q, 1.000 . 2.6 1; Kern :T cx , .
3 ." 0 . 1.000, 1.8 3 ; Ca ldw e lL M iL 4-1. .800 ,
- 1.8 4 ; Sp l l ttorf K C. 4 1, .800, 2. 84 .
S TR IKEO UT S -- Ryan , Ca l , )5;
J enkins, Te x, 33 : Wo r tham, Chi , 26 ;
Koo$man 1 Min , 26 ; Aase, Cat. ~S : F
Ba nn istr , Se a . 25.

s.o,

USED TRACTORS
Massey Ferguson 165 &amp; 115, International 656, Deutz 450~ . Come
"I n, We're Re1tdy To Deal.

OFFER GOOD THRU MAY 31

'i11at -~wh a t happened last year . We
had no intention of going after a
defensive lineman, but when we saw ·
we had a sot at Ross Browner, we had
to take him ."
Brown added there were no runners
in the class of Tony Dorsett or Earl
Campbell ava ilable this yar.
"There are a nwnber of fine backs
coming out, and I'm sure at least one
of them will become a superstar. The
difficulty is determining which one."
Pete Brown said Cincinnati was shy
on (jcfensive linemen with only five.
He said there were also other areas
that needed a boost.

C\~cmnau will pick Kell en Winslow,
the 6-foot.j), 255-pound tight end from
Missouri.
There wer e also report!&gt; that the
Bengals will use their first round pick
for a running back.
" A lot of people are saying that
we're going to go after a back and I'm
not saying we won't. But a lot will
depend on what happens between our
two number one picks," sa id Pete
Brown.
" If a guy we feel is one of the top
players in the country is sUI available
when we get our second turn, we
probably would consider taking him .

·rh~ffl 1 '-" '"'n

All Wor1&lt; Guaranteed 6 Months or 6,000 Miles
All work is done with genuine V.W. replacement parts and
installed by trained v.w. mechanics.

question we 'J like tu start pretty soon
brin ging around another guy. The
quarteback, after all , is the most
valuable property you have, as we
proved last year."
Cincinnati's nosedive was traced to
Anderson's preseason hand injury and
did not il'nprove until late in the
season when it began to heal.
The Bengals, as usual, say they will
be lookin g for the best available
player .
Anderson was selected fourth out of
tiny Augustana College.
For this reason, pro scouts expect
Phil Simms of Morehead State
University in Kentucky to go high in ,

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor 5ales
Now Open Saturdays, 9tii 1.
99H101

Spring Ave.

Pomeroy , 0 .

Int er national Leagu e
By The A ss ociat ed Pre ss
Tuesday 's Result s
Tol edo 3, Tid£'wa rl'r 1
Ro c he ster 9 , Richmond 1
P aw t ucket 11, Syra cu se 5
O nly games sc heduled
W edne sday's Games
Cha rl es t on af Co lum bus
Tid eWa ter a t Tol edo
Ric hmond a t Roches t er
Paw tu ck e: t a t Syr acuse
Thursday ' s Gam es
Ch a rl eston a1 Columbu s
Tid e water at To ledo
Ric h mo nd a t R oches ter
Paw tucket a t Sy r acuse

3
2001/0 OFF
heritage house

ROFFEG. PRICE

REG. PRICE

OF SHOES
N. 2ND AVE .-·
MIDDLEPORT,O.
OPEN FRIDAY Tl L 8 P .M.

RT DEPT• ·STORE
!!
-~~~ llll!lilli ~. aut ,., 1llJI1I ~ [1 lilt il!m!l~Jm . . . .
-..
SIDEWALK SPECTACUL.ARS
II
11111 •

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

-CLOSEOUT.

GIRDLES
&amp;
BRAS
50~

.OF

ODDS &amp; ENDS
MEN'S SHIRTS, lADIES.TOPS,
DRESSES AND
GIRLS' REVERSIBLE

RAINCOATS
SIZE 7 - 12

-Ill ..
-II
.,.
• •

'

FISHING EQUIPMENT'
-CLOSEOUT-

PRICES
SLASHED
•HOOKS
•TROUT LINE
•BOBBERS

'300
LADIES' TERRY

JOG
SHORTS

•
)

.

�8-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 2, 1979

·

9-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. May 2, 1979

'Spring In ·Bloom' staged over weekend

I Rose Garden Club met./
TUP.t&gt;ERS PLAINS-The - Rose
Garden Club meeting recnetly at the
home of Mrs. Leota Massar discussed
plantings at the Tuppers • Plaina
Elementary School as -a civic
beautification project.
Mrs. John Rice, Mrs. Jimmie
Caldwell, and Mrs. Harley Rice were
appointed to have charge of the planting. Arrangements were made to
provide flowers for the spaghetti supper held at "the Tuppers Plains last
week. Mrs. Rice, president, appinted
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith, Mrs. Carl Barnhill, and Mrs. Robert Dorst to the

MEETING SET

RACINE-Racine. Chapter 134,
Order IX the Eastern Star, will meet
in regular session Monday evening at
7:30p.m There will be a practice session and planning for inspection to be
beld on June 4 at the Masonic Temple.
The worthy matron has requested
that all who have Community Club
Award points bring them to the
meeting. There will also be a silent
auction.
BLUE RIBBON WINNERS-Mrs. Reva Snowden, · left, and Mrs.
Pauline Atkins display their blue ribbon winners in.the artistic design .
cl8sses of the "Spring in Bloom" flower show of the Rutland Garden Club
held over the weekend.

11IIS INTERPRETIVE DESIGN
made by Mrs. Judy Titus was a blue
ribbcln winner in the class "R is for
Rutland" at the weekend show of the
Rutland Garden Club. It is displayed
here by Mrs. Kate Jarrell' a
member of the club.

RUTLAND-Forty fl_ower ar·
rangements were entered in the "Spring in Bloom" show of the Rutland
Garden Club staged over the weekend
at the RuUand United Methodist
Church.
·
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis was
general chairman for the show which
also featured nwnerous specimens
from spring flowering bulbs, bran·
ches of flowering shrubs, bushes and
.trees, and displays of pesticide and
gardening supplies, lilong with seeds
catalogs and bookll on gardening.
In the artistic arrangement classes
the winners, listed first, second, third
" and fourth, respectively, were as
follows:
"S is for Springtime with Love in
the Air"-Reva Snowden, Neva
Nicholson, Binda Diehl, and Anns
Turner.
"P is for Plants Cmning Up
Everywhere"-Paullne Atkins, Judy
Titus, Pearle Canaday, and Mrs.
Nicholson.
"R is for Rutland, Home of the
Show"-Mrs.
Titus, Mrs. Atkins, Mrs.
·
Canaday, and Mrs. Turner.
"I is for Interest in Making Things
Grow"-Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. Titus, Mrs.
Nicholson, and Mrs. Diehl.
·

is guest
sll
eaker
_
'J'._
Karen Walker, a Title I reading
teacher, was guest speaker at the recent meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
held at the Meigs Inn.
Mrs. Walke~ was introduced by
Mrs. Kathy DOidge, chatnnan for the
culturlil progm. Also at the meeting to
give a demonstration was Candy Ingels of Ingels Furniture and Jewelry,
presented by Mrs. Tanya Ohlinger.
It was noted that a check had been
received for the sale of the fair ada.
Cathy Cwnmings extended thanks to
those who sold the advertising. Kay
Walker reported on proceeds from the
Easter egg and bake sale. Janell Haptonstall thanked those who had helped
with the ritual of jewels ,tea and
members were reminded to submit
names for new pledges to Mrs: Cum·
mings before May 8. It was noted that
8700 bonus points bad been received in
the Community Awards program
through a call made by Mrs. Cununings to WMPO.
Mrs. Kay Walker and Mrs. Haptonstall were hostesses for the
meeting.

WEDNESDAY
SOUTHEAST OHIO Garden Tractor .Cluj) Wednesday 8 p.m. in the
• building located behind the fire
: station in Chester. All interested per. sonsareinvitedtoattenu.
• ODDS AND ENDS sale at Chester
: Methodist Church Wednesday and
Thursday !run 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sponsored by Chester UMW.
EVAJiiGElJNE CHAPI:ER, OES,
6:45 p.m. practice for inspection. All
officers to attend.
THURSDAY
EVANGElJNE CHAPTER, OES,
inspection 7:30p.m. with dinner at 6
p.m. Inspecting officer, Marilyn
Giey, grand conductress. All Eastern
Star m_embers invited
MEIGS COVNTY Better Beef Club,
7:30 this evehlng at home of Roger
Gaul.
FRIDAY
POMEROY Public Library closes
at noon Friday in preparation for
painting interior. Reopening at noon
Monday.
- AN EVENING of theatre, Friday, 8
' '
p.m. at Meigs High School by juniors
and seniors who will present four oneact plays; admission, $1 students;
The annual reunion of the Pmneroy
$1.50 for adults.
.High School Almnnl Association ~
been set for Saturday, May 26, at the
·
ROUND AND SQUARE dance Meigs High School cafeteria.
Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. at Pomeroy
Dinner will be served at 6•30 p.m.
: Senior Citizens Center. Adults $1, followed by a dance from 10 p.m. to 1
: children under 12 with parents ad&gt;; a.m. There will be no formal program
- mitted free. Music by Stringduste_
rs .
and Joe Struble will be master of
SATURDAY
ceremonies.
Tickets for the event at $5 each may
DANCE PARTY Saturday from 9
p.m. to I a.m. at Royal Oak Park be purchased at the New York
sponsored by Royal Oilk Ballroom Clothing House, Swisber-Lohae'Drug
Dance Club. Music by "Windfall" of· Store or from Pauletta Harrison,
· Columbus.
Route 2, Pomeroy. Deadline is May 22
• BAKE AND YARD SALE Friday and only a llmited amount of tickets
· and Saturday at Reedsville Fire will be sold.
Providing music for dancing will be
Station from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sponsored by Olive Township Volunteer Whiskey Rivers, Colum~ and the
Fire Department.
dance will be open to the public at $2
BAKE AND RUMMAGE SALE followjng the banquet.
Officers for the 1979 reunion are Ed
Friday and Saturday from 9a.m. to'4
- p.m. at Pmneroy Masonic Temple. Kennedy, president; Struble, first
· Members to bring baked goods. Those vice president; George Kom, Jr.,
making donatiolis to rurrunage sale second vice president; Mrs. Harrison,
secretary-treasurer; Danny Morris,
contact Vivian May or Enna Yoho.
Keru1eth Wiggins, Johnaru1a Shuler
FLEA MARKET at Racine and Jane Bourne making up the
American Legion Post Fann Satur- executive committee.
- day, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. $2 a table, call
• 742-22'19; also fishing derby at post

Annual reunion set

derby.
PANCAKE AND sausage dinner at
· Racine United Methodist Church annex, 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday by men of
. the church; free entertainment by the
, Rev. ·and Mrs, David Harri.s. All
customers can eat at $2 for adults and
for children.

n

~

.

"N is for Newcomers, Each Club
Needs a Few"-Mrs. Titus, Mrs.
AtkiiiB, Mrs. Diehl, and Mrs. Canaday.
''G is for Garden Chores We Must
Do" -Scott Geyer and Jeff Birchfield.
"I· is for Invitations, We ,\!ways
Send Out"-Bernice Carpenter, Bend
0' the River Garden Club; Pat Holter,
Chester Garden Club; Janet
Koblentz, Chester Garden Club; and
Margaret E. Lewis, Rutland Garden
Club.
"N ill for Nervea the Chalnnan Has,
There's No Doubt"-Mrs. Carpenter,
Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. · Nicholson, and
Mrs. Holter.
Iii the horticulture division the winners rl ribboos were:
"B is for Blcm~ of Specimen
Flowers"-(spring flowering bulbs):
Tulips, Bernice Durst, Middleport
Amateur Gardeners; Mrs. Nicholson,
Mrs. Snowden, and Mrs. Holter.
Multiflowered narcissis: Mrs.
Atkins, Mrs. Lewis, both second and
third, and Mrs. Atkins.
Single flowered daffodils: Mrs.
Atkins, first and second, Mrs.
Snowden, and Mrs. Lewis.
Specimens other than ~ hnve wl!t~h

Kar~n Walker · Spring

· d
·social C.aJen
ar

:-~s:c~:;; ~eto~i~g"~~:~:o~

RIBBON WINNING ExtnBITS at the show are displayed here by Mrs.
Pearl IJttle, cbainnan for junior exhibits, Mrs. Neva Nicholson, Mrs.
Binda Diehl, and Mrs. Anna Turner, club president.
.

FUNDS RELEASED
.. The Ohio Controlling Board through
.the Environmental Protection Agency
Tuesday released . funds totaling
$11,925 to the Village of Rutland, Sen.
Oakley Collins said this morning .
·nte funds will be-used to help pay
lor engineering studies, plans and
specifications for Improvement to
Hut lan~·s village water system.
I

grow from spring flowering bulbs :
Mrs. Lewis for scillia, a blue, and
Mrs. Lewis, Wy of the valley, a red.
"L is for the Lovely Soft Spring
Showers"-Mrs. Canaday, Mrs.
Snowden, Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Atkins.
· "0 is for Open, to One and to Ali"Mrs. Lewla, Mrs. Kate Jarrell, Mrs.
Snowden, both third and fourth.
"0 Ls for Oh, Gee! Make this One
Tall"- Emma Ledlie, Mrs. Nicholson,
Mrs. Ledlie, and Mrs. ATkins. Atkins.
"M is for Methodist, Who Lend Us
Their Hall"-(juniors) J . R. Walker,
Michelle Barr, second and third, and
David Barr.
Specllil displays included an exhibit
of gardening aids from the Modern
Supply, a blue ribbon; and African
violets by Bernice Durst and Modern
Supply, both blue ribbons. There was
also an exhibit of seed catalogs by
Mrs. Snowden, and a display of bookll
from the public ll!Jraries prepared by
Ms. Ellen Bell, also awarded a blue
ribbon. Mrs. Snowden received a blue
ribbon for pictures of new plants for
1979.
Mrs. Janet Bolin, an accredited
judge of the Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, was the judge.

·· VISrroRS .

WAngeal~:ra:~=;.

HAVE GUESTS
Mrs. Violet ijysell and Mrs. Marie
Curd were Saturday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Johnson; Norwich.

Mother's
Day Cards

An

ExquiS ite

senior citizens present. The beautiful
decorated birthday cakes were
doriated by Cora Hilton and Inez
Wickline.
After dinner, group singing was enjoyed. frank Holter, who celebrated
his 86th birthday in April, entertained
with. a reading. Omar Daily, another
senior member, pleased everyone
with hannonlca selections. It was a
happy dljy that was enjoyed and will
be long remembered by all present.
· New members are always welcom~
at' the Satellite Nutrition Program,

Knits
ID

SUDDy

1978 FORD BRONCO

18,000 miles, ai r cond ., traction lock front &amp; rear, Ranger XL T P_kg .
console, cru ise ·o-matic, conv. group, lockout hubs, light group , trader
towing, H.D. &amp; P . brakes, P. steering, auto . tra ns. Security lock gro~p.
Two hooks, spare tire &amp; carr ier, AM·FM stereo &amp; tape, rear seat, !0·
side head re lease, 4 wh ite spoke wheels, 11 ·15 tires, si lver, black hood.

......

btr.• th
_,] _
. uay

YOU GET ALL OF THIS

FOR

Roberta Anne Caldwell
celebrated her fourth birthday and
FAMOUS
Mrs. Lucy GaUl her 83rd birthday
recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
BELl( NAP
Howard Caldwell, Jr. , Tuppers
BRAND
Plains.
A de~orated cake and ice cream
were served to the honorees, Mr. and
Mrs. Howie Caldwell and Keri Lynn,
Mrs. Ruhal Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs.
··
Bob Caldwell, and Mr. 1111d Mrs. Tim - '---------~-ilrrrrirwiri'.iViiiA;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
Baum.

ONLY

•7995 00

S.ee one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
or George Harris.
·

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

PICKENS HARDWARE

·~

992·5342

"You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business "
GMA Financing
POMEROY
Open Evenings until6 :00, til S p.m . Sat.

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

Yd.
( Remnanll from a
''famoaa name bnnd")
on oar lilies table at ear
lide enin!Jce.

MAY 3-4-5, 1979

On !hoT
Mtddltport, 0.

'

;

~

THURSD(t Y, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
MAY 3, 4, .S, 7979
1 GROUP "MEN'S HUSH PUPPIES SltOES

----,

20% OFF

I
I
I

MAXWELL HOUSE

1 GROUP MEN'S SHOES

COFFEE

Regularlv Priced from $27.99 to $15.n

NOW '18.99 TO •$.00
1 GROUP BIG BOYS SHOES N~ '10 99 10 ss 00
Reg. $16.99 to S9.99
un
•
•
1 GROUP LITTLE BOYS SHOES NCM sg 99 TO '3.00
Reg. $15.49 to $9.99
.
•

NO. 805
2 LB. CAN

1 GROUP LADIES' HUSH PUPPIES SHOES
1 GROUP LADIES SHOES
Reg. $26.99 to $10.99
1 Group Misses and Chldren's Shoes u.nw
Reg. $15.99 to $?.99 ·
11\111

SJ(PI to

$3

I·

6!/C

I
I
I
II

·Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Mav 5, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
·

-----------

s4•

...

1 GROUP CHILDREN'S PATENTS
Reg. $11.99

N0W'500

I GROUP Infants White Shoes, Reg. $8.99
I Group B"ovs Canvas Footwear

1 Group Children's Canvas

NOW$3.00
"f!!OW$6.99
NOW $3.99

THE StiOE BOX .~
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. · -,.,_,. ,.

.

or 14KT yellow or wl'11te gold
with genuine or synth•tlc blrth-

$tones, ror everlasting remembrance.

ltV I• FJ not twilltbl• ..ith l)lnuiM non...

SPRING

Place Your Order Now.

CARPET SALE

.
.
COUPON
-------·COUPON---------~---:----.
---------~-------- COUPON
SKIPPY - -----------------COUPON----:
MIGHTY HIGH

SEVERAL .
PAnERNS FOR
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY AND
INSTALLATION

DIAL SOAP

~:=~t~:,:~~~-··················· . ~3~.

© 1979 Hallnwk Cards. Inc .

GOESSL.ER
JEWELRY
Court St.

Pomerov,o.

•

l

:
1

I
i-

I

CHEERIOS_
(100137000)

59~

N0 .'85
1ooZ.BOX

l

:
1

Limit one please with this coupon
coupon Expires Mav s, 1979
TWIN CITY-GATEWAY

l·I

PEANUl BUTTER
NO. 155
280Z.JAR

'149

Limit one please with this coupon
Coup~n Expires Mav s, 197Y
TWIN CITY GATEWAY •

:

FROZEN PIES

'129

I'
I

l
1
1

-

Limit one please wrth this coupon
Coupon Exp.ires Mav s, 1979
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·

---~~~~OUPON--------~---------COUPON---------~--------COUPON--------t---------COUPON--------

Yd.

• "Two In one Store" .
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
\,

99~

BATH BARS
.
·th th " 0 pon
Limit one ple~se wMav 5 ·~~79u
_Coupon Ex~~~sGATE~AY

L1 PTON TEA BAGS

INGEL'S _
FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY -

N. 2ND AVE.

3

NO. 275
.

KITCHEN CARPET ..................... ~4~- vd.

2nd Ave.

V: ~;

sP£C.'"'" _

Ring,
masterciarteo In elagaot lOKT

Hallmark card. Sunday,

Middleport, o.
' - - - - -- -- - --

LI

11aS

-

FamilY

May 13.

DRUG CO.

Steve and Nancy ·Winebrenner,
Belpre, are announcing the birth of a
six pound, two ounce son, Steven Archer, on April21 at the Camden Clark
Hospital. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. A. E. H. Crow, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Winebrenner, Syracuse.
Great-grandmothers are Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner, Syracuse, and Mrs.
Goldie Swart, Racine. Steven is Mr. , • L
and Mrs. Winebrenner's first child.

After a delicious dinner, ice cream
and birthday cake were served to Tl

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

SALES SET

.!Lu4!k~

Tell her how much you
love her with a beautiful

DUTTON

.

Ruth Hill and l!renda Pettit receiv- Omrch and five new members were
MEET MONDAY
SATUKUAYSAI.E
ed 20 pound ribbons at the Tuesday welcomed. At the Point Pleasant
The Orange Township Trustees will
TI1ere will be an odds and ends sale
evening meeting of Slinderella held at classes, Frances D!Uon lost the most
the Heath United Methodist Church. weight and there was a tie for runner- al Chester Methodist Church Friday meet in regular session at 8 p.m. MonTwo new members were welcomed up between Julia Higgins and Edna and Saturday from 9 ~ - m . to 4 p.m. day at the home of the clerk, Nina
UMW. Robinson.
and Margie Lawson were was ac- Matheny. The evening class met and sponsored by Chester
cepted into the slilJI and trim pro- took in three new members with Lingram.
da Wamsley losing tbe most weight
At the morning class of Heath and Claire Plants being the runnerChurch in Middleport, Grace Welch up. Twnety-pound ribbons were
received her 20 pound ribbon. Top presented to Linda Wamsley and Donl05e~s for the week at the Middleport
na Elliott.
·
classes were Judy McDonald and
Juanita Sayre with Mrs. Welch, M~;~x­
~n
ine Kesterson and Brenda Pettit as
RUMMAGE SALE
the runners-up.
There will be a rummage sale at the
Twenty pound ribbons were
presented to Johnnie Meadows and Pomeroy Episcopal Parish House
Melissa Hoffman at the class held Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May
Monday night at the Mason Cath~llc 3,4and5.

20% OFF

l\tlfhenllat

~

winners.

Beautiful

A yard and basement sale will he
held Thursday and . Friday at the
Rutland United Methodist Church, 9
·a.m. to4p.m. each day.

· May 8 - secorid niglt, speaker, Rev.
Carl Hicks, music by The Soul
Seekers from Chester.
May 9 - third night, speaker, Rev.
Wlilter Frost, music by The Temple .
Gates Quartet, Davisville, W.Va.
May 10 - fourth night, speaker,
Rev. Wendell StuUer, music by The
Chrlstlariaires.
·May 11- fifth night, speaker, Rev.
Jacob Lelunan, music by The Bethel ·
Messengers.
'
May 12 -sixth night, speaker, Rev. \
Randy Koehler, music by Doxology '
from Athens.

SENIOR CfiiZEJIIS
PLAN DANCE
There will he a round and square '
dance Friday, May 4, from 8 to 11 testing.
p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center,
Mrs. BrOWJI is urging all residents Pomeroy.
of the district to take advantage of the
The dance is open to the public. Adskin testing program.
mission is $1 for adults and.children
under 12 will be admitted free U ac- ·
RUMMAGE SALE SLATED
companied by their parentS. Music
Mary Shrine No. :n will sponsor a will be provided by the stringdusters.
rununage and bake sale Friday and
Saturday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mem- ·
bers are asked to bring baked goods. '
Those wishing to make donations for
MAY 13,1979
the rummage sale are to contact
Vivian May or Enna Yoho.

.

I

, h
Announce btrt

Racine Car Wash on Third St. A
vancty of items will be lor sale ceremonial .
including ~ wide range ol clothing.

Summer

by The

TB '~'Em'S DATE SET
Jane Brown, Meigs County TB nurse, will be at Eastern High School
Tuesday' May a, to give ' tuberculin
skin 1e1ts to students and school personnel. Any junior or senior high
student can take advantage of the

The Golden Rule Class of the Middleport First Baptist Church enjoyed
a boW'llng party at the Mason Lanes
Thursday night and then went to tl!e
home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walbuin
for a business meeting 8lld social
time.
Mrs. Martha Klein presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Katheryn Metzger
giving the ~·s report, and
Mrs. Walburn the devotions on the
theme "Life Giving Vitamins." A
discussion was held on having a song
fest in May with ice cream arxl cake
to follow.
Mrs. Walburn served barbecues,
potato chi]lll and soft drinks. Allen·
ding were Coke Ambl"Oie, Sill Van
Maire, Mr. and Mrll. Fred Klein,~­
and Mrs. John M~er, and the Rev.
and Mrs. Mark McClung.

located at Old 1:own ~·rats in the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints.
Come and join us - there is
something for everyone. Let spring be
a very joyful and pleasant time for
you.
.

SOCIAL CALENDAR
SUNDAY
WIDTE SHRINE of Jerusalem, No.
37, practice Sunday at 2 p.m. at
Masonic Temple. Pracllce is for

. Prints

revival set

The St. Paul United Methodist
Church, located . in Tuppen Plains,
will hold ita annual spring revivlil
May7through12,at7:30p.m.nlghtiy.
There will be a different guest
minister speaking each evening and
various groupS will provide specllil
music during the week. The public Is
cordially invited to attend these
special services.
The schedule includes:
May 7 -first night, speaker, Rev.

BY GRACE HOLTER
RACINE - On Good Friday, April
13; the senior citizens at the ~e
Satellite Nutrition Site celebrated the
Easter Season. In the morning eggs
were colored and then hid on the lawn
of the church. The 23 members
present all joined in the egg hunt. After lunch a religious service w~s condueled by Mrs. Josephine Srruth and
included gospel readings, music and
prayer.
Birthdays are very special days. On
Aprlll7 the seniors enjoyed an all day
birthday party for members having
birthdays in April. The honored
guests were Goldie Pickens, Linda
Holter, Blythe Theiss and Frank
Holter.
·
In the forenoon, games were played
and pri2es were awarded to lucky

Class enjoys party

Mrs. Etoilla L. Cassell -visited over
the weekend with her son and his
wife, Dr. and Mrs. John L. Cassell,
Creston, at their new country home.
Her other children, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas C. Cassell, Ada; Mr. and
Mrs. Riley S. Cassell and family,
Cadiz; and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil St.
Marie, Cadiz, joined them for a family re!Jillon.

Hill, Pettit receive 20
p-oun~ loss ribbons

Activities announced
by nutrition site _

nominating conunlttee.
Mrs, Harley Rice will have the prol!ft!lll for the May meeting. ~- Kenneth Griffith woo the door pnze ~
Mrs. Leota Maasar won the traveling
prize . The hostess serv~·d
refreahments to the 13 members 811!1
guests, Mrs. Ulah Swan and Mrs.
Oscar Babcock.

YARU SALE SLATEU
"!11 ~ !lacine Em ergency .Squad will
st~~e a yard s~le lroril 8 a.m . to 6 p.m.
Thursday and Fri~ ~y in front of the

NQ. 405
100CT. BOX
•

'

Limit one please with this counon
Coupon Expires Mav 5·, 1979 TWI

:

I

',

I

I
I

DOWNY

FABRIC SOFTENER
. 33 OZ. _BTL.

99~

Lim,i t onp please with this coupon
coupon Expires Mav s, 1979
_ .
TWINCITYGATEWAY '

1

I
I

:
I

I

BIRDSEYE

I

FROZEN PEA or -CORN

l
I1
l

NO. 355

4
.

1002
·
PKGS.

'1 00

1
I

WAGFfERS

FRUIT DRINKS
NO. 75
54 OZ. BTL.

69~

Limit one please ~ith this coupon
Coupon Expires Mav s, 1979
TWINCIT'\'GATEWAY

�· Wednesday, Miy 2. U7f ·

'•
:
•

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 2, 1979

.,.'

;
f.

Ms. Spurlock guest speaker

Second annual 'Fun Run 'set May 19

f•

The Second Annual Fun Run, sponsored by the Employee Recreation
Committee of the Holzer Medical'Center, wm be held on Saturday, May 19,
at the Gallia County Fairgrounds.
The course covers blacktop, gravel
roads and grass paths.
Ron Saunders, Director of the Fun
Run. said, "With the excellent response of more than 125 people last year,
at least 250 participants will probably
register for our upcoming run. Ail in
the pas\, three races will be available
for ent.ry: the 1.5 miles, 3.0 miles and
6.0 miles, with trophies awarded to
the winner and runner-up .In each

•
•

.•
•'•

I• .
~-

•
•

••
••

~1

~-

f

I

'

•

race." To enter either of the three
races,-complete the registration form
and pay $4.50 fee, if the registration Is
received before May 16, 1979. Mter
that lime, or on the morning of the
run, the fee will be $5 •
Entry blanks are available at the
library in the Holzer Medical Center,
froo1 members of tl!e Employee
Recreation Committee, and will appear in the newspaper later this week .
When completed, they should be
returned, with the fee, to Ms. Beverly
Jackson, Medical Library, Holzer
Medical Center, P. o, Box 280,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

~OLLY·s POINTERS

:,''

Polly Cramer

;•

•

Yellowed baby shawl

........

-~-·""·' ~

;,...

•

'•

'f:

•.
''

.
'

·{¥

CHARLES E. HOLZER JR., M.D., President of the Medical Staff at
the Ho~r Medical Center is the first to register for the Employee
RecreatiOn Committee Second Annual Fun Run to be held on May 19, with
Ron Saunders, Otrector of the Run, looking on.

·Garden club meets
1•

'
,

~

,·
. .·
::
~

:.
•
:
:·

•

~
~;

r:
~-'

Mrs. Betty Dean was guest
demonstrator at a meeting of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners held
recenUy at the RuUand Church of
Cluist.
'
Using "The Simple Things in. Life
are Free" as her theme, Mrs. Dean
made several arrangements using a
variety of spring nowers, with wood
and ceramic accessories. She spoke
of arrangements needing to be in tune
with nature and filled with expresslon.
Also present at the meeting was
Mn;, Pat Holter, new Meigs County

contact chainnan, who aMounced the
spring meeting of the county clubs for
May 7 at the Pomeroy Library . .The
Fernwood Garden Club will be host.
· Mrs. Suzy Carpenter welcomed the
members and guests from seveal
several clubs. Mrs. Lois Walker had
devotions using the topic, "It's Raining Violets." The exhibitors and
judges' school to be held June 19 and
20 with Bob Thomas as instructor was
announced.
Several door prizes were awarded.
Cake, punch, mints, nuts and coffee
were served.

:·

DEAR POLLY - Have you a solution for whitening a baby shawl knitted with baby wool, that has t~ed
yellow' &gt;JEAN
DEAR JEAN '- Anything you try
must first he tested because s&lt;H!alled
baby wool may not be all wool but
combined with synthetics. Cream of
tartar in water may be used for soaking until white and then wash as
usual. Commercial color remover
(found with dyes in the storeS )!so Is
good for removing a yellow look.
Read directions carefully and follow
directions to the letter.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - An easy and
greaseless way to remove oil from a
can of tuna fish Is to simply invert the
opened can (lid inside the can ) over a
small plastic glass in the sink. Push
down on the inverted can and up on
~e ~d inside and wale~ the packing
liqmd go down the drain instead of on
you. There is no danger of cutting

DANGEROUS FOR KIDS
SACRAMENTO, Ca lif. ( AP) -Keep

nuts - especially roasted nuts away from children lll)der 5 years old,
says Or. Leslie Bernstein.
B.ernstein, chairman of 'the
University
Medical · Center's
Department of Oto•hinolaryngology,
says he . and other docwrs in his
deparbnent treat many people who
have accidentally inhaled solid
jlatticles such as nuts, many of them
children.
.A child died recently because
P!!anuts accidentally became lodged
in his breathing passages, he said.
What if, despite all precautions, an
a~cident happens ?
"U a child is choking, try to have·
someone call an ambulance - or do it

your hand on the lid either.
·DOROTHY .
.
DEAR POLLY- I was ready to use
a large tablecloth and discovered it
was mussed and had some fold
marks. I knew that U I pressed it, by
the time I finished one side the other
one would look just as -bad. So I wet
two Turkish towels (not dripping but
aboUt like they would be after spinning in the washer) and put them in the
dryer with the cloth. In from 30 to 60
minutes, depending on the condition
of the clqth, II wllllook gteal and Is 90
easy to do. - HELEN
. DEAR POLLY -To remove the
odor left after a pet had an aecldent .
on my carpet I used a rug shampoo to
which I added a liberal amount of
vanilla. Use a cloth or small brush
dampened with the solution and scrub
vigorously. -LOU
DEAR POLLY- I want to tell Mrs.
D.M.I. that when painting our house
we always add a few spoons of vanllla
extract to each gallon ol paint. It does
not affect the color oJ the paint, It
takes away the odor and the paint
does not hurt the eyes.- MRS. C.N.E.
·P.olly will send you one of her signed
thahk-you coupon clippers if she uses
your favorite Pointer, Peeve or Problem newspaper.

. THURSDAY
·fRIDAY

Miss Arlene Spurlock, a missionary takeB place in their lives. Most of the
In Niger, Africa, was guest speaker at people there are Moslem and there Is
the Thursday meeting ol the Loyal much opposition with the family when
Women and Men 's Class at the Mid- one turns Christian, she reported. Shs
dleport Church of Christ.
told of several Incidents where
Miss Spurlock who has been a mis- .children were not pennlttsd to return
sionary for the past 25 years, no\ed to their homes once they have become
that the only trouble in her area of Christians.
·
Africa has been between the tribes.
Miss Spurlock will be returning to
She said that besides her duties as a Niger In June and will be there
nurse, she Is helping to translate the ~!'other three years before having a
Bible into the language of a tribe furlough.
there.
Mrs. Grace Pratt presided at the
She talked about those who accept meeting welcoming the members and
Christ and the radlc:aJ change which guests, Miss Spurlock, Mrs. Thomas
Danner, and Mrs.. Esther Danner.
Following the Lord's Prayer, Miss
Frances Roush read Psalm 116 for
t..:ONTRACT REJECfED .
devotions. Reported ill were Jennifer
PIKETON, Ohio ( AP) - The 1,600 McKinley, confined to Ve~rans
members of the Oil, Chemical and Memorial Hospital with a broken
Atomic Workers union at the uranium arm; the mother of Ed Evans, ·Mrs.
· enrichment plant here . were to Clara Conroy, and Mrs. Nelle Bahr, a
participate in a strike vote today after patient at Veterans Memorial
turning down a contract offer by the Hospital. RepOrts were also given on
Goodyear Awmic Corp.
Steve Fife, Pearl Reynolds, and Mrs.
The plant , which· enriches w:anium Hattie Smith, confined to a nursing
for nuclear power plants, is operated home !II West Columbia .
by Goodyear Atomic Corp. for . the
Hostesses for the soCial hour were
U.S. Energy Department.
·
Miss Roush, Mrs. Clara Gilkey, Mrs.
Details of the pact rejected by the Blanch Gilkey, Mrs. Beulah · Roush,'
workers Tuesday were not available. and Miss Mildred Hllwley.

.

Thursday
• Friday - Satu~day - May 3rd - 4th • 5th
.
At Two Rivers Ford, Inc.
STOP IN NOW AND BUY A NEW 1979 FORD CAR OR TRUCK
OR A 1979 MERCURY AT ;DEALERS ABSOLUTE COST!

'"

•

'Yo.

'.

"'

I

"·

J

••

.

~

.•
.'"• .
...
&gt;

THE TOUGH 2-cycJe

,, .
.•

$2500 OFF
ON ANY LAWN BOY·
Mercury Qrana Marquis 4-Door Sedan

1979 FO~D LTD • 4 door, Landau, air, p.s., p.b., cruise control, power
windows, power door locks, luxury group, am-fm tape, power seats, white side
wall tires.
· Was 19,598.
You Save 11899.00
0

WILKINSON
Small Engines
Sales &amp; Service
I

491 Locust St.
Middleport, 0 .
992·3092

NOW

'7699°

1979 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS. p.s., p.b., air, auto.,
power seats, power windows, powet door locks, am-fm stereo, this car has
everything.
You Save 12,005.00

Was 110,285.

.,

NOW.

'828000·

MAY3
MAY4
MAY 5

SALE!

SATURDAY

.

••'
'
•
'

yourself if no one else is around," he

~ckrich

PICKLE
LOAF. •••••••••••••••• ~.:.~·. $1.59
Homemade
HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••• ~.~-.
$1.19
.

said. "Then hold the child upside
down and slap him on the back
sharply several times .
" U the child turns blue and stops
breathing you .should consider mouthto-mouth resuscitation."

,.

'

French City 12 oz. Pkg.

WIENERS••••·••••••••••.••••••••••~~·••

LEVYAPPROVEDTUESDAY

97~

DEL{I WARE , Ohio (AP) -Delaware
voters approved Tuesday a 5.8-mill
operating school levy. The vote was

COMPLETE

COTTAGE

New

$ -

CHEESE----~-~~... 1.29
12 oz. kraft Pimiento
Pkg.

, 1-lb. Cello Pak

.49

$

GREEN .
29~
CABBAGE ..... !:~:.
..

School Superintendent Robert
Schultz said passage of the levy will
mean continu~tion of school programs
at their current levels and
development of new ones.

CARROTS -----~~~.. 25~

CHECK WITH
US FIRST

RUGS

LOVE .
SEATS
SMALL SOFAS
With lots of style &amp; comfort, some rock, some
conceal ·a bed. Fine
selection.

'

K &amp; BEANS••••••••••••••••••. 2/&amp;fJ
17 oz . Stokelys

APPLE SAUCE •••••••••••••••••••••••• 39~
32oz.

CR~NAPPLE

DRINK ••••••••••••••••. 83~

•
•
•
•

WASHERS • DRYERS

. 29 oz. Del Monte

PEACHES •••••••••••••••••••••••• 2P1.49
Jumbo ·

BOUNTY TOWELS......... ~ ......~~~!. 7fJ
10 oz. Maxwell House

-INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••• ~~~. ~4~39
(

.

John F. Fultz
Manager

Pomeroy,

o,

992-2109

Choose From

COLOR TV's

* 4.X4 TRUCKS

18" SET.........................'329
25" SET~ ....••••....••.. :.......'566

If Your In The Market For New Car Or Truck Stop In And
· See Bill (Ole) Hoss Or Bobby Roush.

'298
'248
REG. 1499 ................ SALE '398

REG. 1389................. SALE
REG. 1349;, .............. SALE

15 cu. Fr.

$398 ·

Two Ri.v ers· Ford I Inc.

BEDROOM SUITES..:._LIVING ROOM SUITES .
Spring Air Bedding · Dinettes - Metal Cabinets • Wardrobes - Lamps - Tables • Mirrors • Pictures .
Wall Plaques - Baby Beds - SlrQIIers ·Card Tables.

ALL SALE PRICED FOR THIS3-DAY .EVENT
Free Delivery
Convenient Terms
Store Hours
Mon. -Wed.- 9-5: 30
Thurs. 9-12
Fri . 9-8
sat. 9-5:30

BAKER FURNITURE
.MIDDLEPORT; OHIO.
Cincinnati

•

*

•

4X4 BRONCOS
Prices Include Dealer Prep.

CONSOLE STEREO

REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER

*FORD VANS

* MERCURY MARQUIS

*FORD LTD

13" SET ....................... ,,'299

25 CU. Fr. FREEZER

- MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

11 ,23800

•Body Not Included!

ADMIRAl ·

Shows Less Soil
Helps Resist Static !;lectric Buildup
Keeps Origi'nal Texture Longer
Looks Cleaner When You Clean It
IT'S SUPER 4 CARPET Reg. $16.95

'

1

F-600 FORD CHASSIS

'588

10'12 oz. Hiltop

.OYSTER STEW. •••••••••••••••••• 21s1.29

NOW

~1'"111

Heavy ·duty, large capacity with fabric
softner dispenser,
··
.
&amp; matching electric dryer.
.Bu the Pair
·

100% ANSO NYLON PILE
See our
Bargain
Rae!&lt; for.
Used
Tires
LowLowPrices.

You Save 12741.00

SPEEJ~_Q_UEEN

CARPET

21 oz. Van Camp

Was 113,979.

You Save· 12380. 00

PRICED
FROM

12 FEET WIDE

CORN BEEF HASH ••••••••• :}!~~~~:! .89~

mirrors.
Was '9,996.

.

An Excellent Gift for the
Girl Graduate.

SAVE 20%

SALE PRICES.

GREEN TURF
Weahter Proof carpet
12' Wide Roll
$]91 Sq. Yd.

15 oz. Armour

LANE
CEDAR
CHESTS

DRESSERS - BEDS CHESTS - DESKS
MAKE YOUR OWN
SUITE AND

slip rear axle, rear step bumper, auxiliary
fuel tank, gauges, am radio, low mount
'
.

CHAIRS 1h PRICE

BEDROOM
GROUP

"S_UNDECK"

BREADED FISH PORTIONS~ ••~~~!l.93

From Living 'Room Suites

SOLID MAPLE

·1979 FORD CAPTAIN CLUB WAGON VAN .air, auto.,
p.s., p.b., cruise control, premium sound system, styled wheels, it's loaded!

1979 FORD F-250 4X4 • air, auto., p.s., p.b., lock-out hubs, limited

DRESSERS

9x12 VINYL

1,826-1,459.

Broughtons 24 oz.

Maple or Wa nu
Finish

Quality
Home
Furnisl!lngs

·-------·
3 Floors

· Rt. 62 North

675-1490

Point Pleasant

Of Values

,

-------·
Since i952

.

"

.

�.d

13-The Dally !!entmel, Mldaleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 2, 1979

· 12-'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 2, 1979 .

'.'

'
•

WINNERS NAMED - The seven winners of the
rilht-tcH'ead program held at the Riverview Elementary School are pictured. They are fi,'OOl the left, April

'

•.

Amy Berkhlmer, Travis
Newlun, Beth Ber!thimer, Zeb Zartman and Brian

Ritchie, Sara Berkhimer,

Reed,

Seven major firms
facing accusations

'

EVERETI'R.CALAWAY
Everett R. Calaway, 86, Coolville,
died Tuesday at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg following an extended
illness.

Mr. calaway ·was born in Orange
Townshlp,Meigs
County, a son of !he
. - , late Charles E. and Minnie Springs
calaway. He was a member of the
Tuppers Plains Cluistian Church and
had been a timber cutter and farmer
for most of his life.
SUrviving are his wife, Sarah Ann,
two brothers, Harry and Guy, both of
Reedsville; a sister, Dora May
Calaway of Coolville, eight
grandchildren, and- 14 great- .
grandchildren. Preceding him in
death were two sons, Lawrence in 1961
and Elda in 1973, a brother, Vere, and
a siSter, Hazel Wooton.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Thursday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with Guy White and
R. E. Smith officiating. Burial will be
in the Vanderhoof Cemetery. Friends
;; ; - may call at the funeral home anytime.

·.

...

ROOF INSPECTION
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Aller a
storm, take a few momenta to inspect
your roof.
Wind and rain can dislodge or lear
off shingles, says Owl!ili-Olrning
Fiberglas
Corp., ·
·shingle
. manufacturer
.. Out-of-place sliqll!l!
., can allow water tO !leeR-Ullder •the
roof, causing leaks. · ,
:
U the damage Is caughi in time,
often only one shincle ·• need be
replaced. U not, the wood deck under
"
the shingles may rot, caustnc damage
.,•( • to the roof.

.

'"
.~ -

~=iJ~

"

..
...
(

.. .
....
.'··.
.

20% OFF
Swing into Spring with eKciting
footworks
espadrilles. Fabric and
rope rev up together to put
you In high fashion gear. A
wlth·lt look to liven casual
and dressy times.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Energy
Department today accused seven
major oil companies of overcharging
their customers $1.7 billion for crude
oil over the past six years, in what
could be the biggest such case ever
between the government and the .oil
industry.
·
in
an
The
department ,
administrative complaint, said the
companies on paper illegally
converted lower priced categories of
oil into higher priced categories.
This was done mainly by
improperly redrawing the boundaries
of their oil-producing properties and
by counting some wells that should not
have been included.
Accused in the complaint were
Texaco Inc., Standard Oil Co. of
California, Standard Oil Co. (Ohio),
Standard Oil Co. (Indiana), Marathon
Oil Co., Gulf Oil Corp. and Atlantic
Richfield Co.
The complaint alleges the
companies
violated
federal
regulations to obtain higher prices,
and demands they refund' the $1.7
billion to customers or; if they cannot
be located, to the U.S. Treasury.
If the new charges are upheld, the
government could seek penalties later
that might increase the cost to til!!
companies to as much as $2.4 billion,
the department said.
The CQmplaint potentially is the
costliest overcharging case ever
broilght by the government against
the oil industry, exceeding a lalj'Suit
filed in January jhat seeks to recbver
$1 billion from nine companies in
alleged overcharges for natural gas
liquids.
_
Texaco iS accused of half the
alleged overcharges, totaling $888.3
million . The other companies and
their alle&amp; "d overcharges : Gulf, $578
million ; California Standard, $101.6
million; Atlantic Richfield, $42
million; Marathon, $29.1 million;
Indiana Standard, $24.1 million, and
Ohio Standard, $17 million .
ACHIEVEMENT
HARTSVILLE, S.C. ( AP) - Elias
Joe, Jr. , who lost both his arms in a
~xtile industry accident in 1967 says,
You have no choih. You have a
handicap and you have to learn how to
deal with it."
Jo~, ~. dealt with it by finding an
occupation "that you could do without
bands."

mr.u~~~~~~oR[t;,~RT

Direct
-hogs (Fed .state): Barrows and gilts
.00 higher, demand good. U.S. 1·2, 200230lbs. country points, 44.50-44.75, few
at 44 .50, plants 45.00-45.50. U.S. 1-3,
230-250 lbs. country points, 43. 7:;..41.50,
p)ants 44.25-45.25.
.Receipts Tuesday: Actuals 5,700,
today's estimates 6,000. .
Cattle, from Columbus Producers
Livestock Co-operative Association;
uneven; 2.00 lower to 3.00 higher.
Slauhter steers an yearlings, choice
72.00.78.40, good 65.25-76.50. Bulls
market Ulleven, .1.00 lower to 1.00
higher . Cows market steady to 4.00
lower.
Veal calves, choic and prime 123.00
and down .
.
Sheep and lambs steady to 4.00
higher' old sheep 40.00 and down.

:·

•

wayne hosplt.alir.M

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Actor
John Wayne Is back In UCLA
Medical center, occupying the
PUCO HEARING
same room he had when he unUNDERWAY
deJ;"Went cancer surgery In
COLUMBUS, Ohio . (AP) - The
January, hospital spokesman AI
Public Utilities Commission of Ohio
Hicks
said today.
began hearings Monday on a request
Hicks
said Wayne was adby Columbia Gas of Ohio for an 11.4
mitted
to
~ hospital Tuesday
percent Increase for its customers In
night,
·
but
added
he did not know
COlumbus.
what
.
his
symptoms
were. "I
PUCO spokeswoman Debbie Cardon~
have
any
.
statement
from
nes illlid public testimony was heard
his
doctor,
but
I
understand
his
In the mornlag, with statements b~
son
issued
a
statement
saying
It
company representatives presented
was
abdominal
pain,"
Hicks
said.
In the afternoon.
Earlier., KABC-TV, reported
The rate Increase would total $10.1
_
that
the71-year:-l!ldactorwi,uuflnilllon annually.
fering
from !'iladamlnaJ. pains"
•
Testimony on the request Is
or
"poulbly
1 gls bubble:" ·
scheduled to continue throughout the
'
week.

.

.. BROTIIERS
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - In what
they believe is a first, Rhode Island
state senatorial brothers Michael and
James Flynn have introduced a bill
that would 'prevent job discrimination
based on age.
The "first" is not the idea of
banning age discrimination, but the
brotherly cooperation in introducing
the bill.
·
Since the Flynns are thought to be
the first brothers to serve together in
the chamber, they would be the only
ones to have had the opportunity to cointroduce legislation.
The Flynns' cooperation even
~osses party lines. Janles is a
Democrat, and Michael is one of the
state senate's five R~publicans.

unleaded gasoline dropped a penny to
Going up were prices fot sugar, ll!i 6
78.9 cents. !n Salem, prices remained percent to $1.23/or a five-pound bag;
constant at the stations chec.ked.
potatoes, up 4 percent to $1.55 for a t4}.
But in the other Ohio cities pound bag ; tomatoes, up 5 per~nt lo
surveyed, gasoline prices pushect ever 8J cents a dozen; hamburger, up: S
closer to the $1 threshold. The largest percent to $1.55 ,41 pound for groliild
percentage increase was in Columbus chuck, ·and peimut butter, up ~8
where the cost of unleaded gasoline at percent · to $1.16 for a jar of ;a
'
·a full-serve pum~ jumped by IU nationally-distributed brand.
percent and the )cost of self-11Crve
Prices remained constant.at MarCh
unleaded was up by 12.7 percent from levels for milk, $1.71 a g8llon f~r
the levels at the end of March .
whole milk· margarine, 66 cents •a
Egg prices cracked in April, . ix&gt;und ; and'coffee, $2.59 a pound. ~
declining in average price by 10.7
The lowest April total marketbaskl!t
percent to 8J cents for a dozen of was in Canton, $19.57, compared to' a
grade A large eggs.
March price of $2».85: The hlghfll
Also dropping in price, statewide, total in April was rung up In Van Wet;(,
were pork chops, down 5.5 percent to $23.67 compared to a March total of
,
'
$2.03 a pound for center-cut chops; $22.84:
·
1
_chicken, down 2.8 percent to 67-&lt;•tmts
The other cities' totals, with MilrCh
per pound for whole fryers; bacon, off figures in parentheses, were: Athena,
4.2 percent to $2.01 a pound for a $21.19 ($21.26)· Chllllcothe $W.S7
nationally-distributed brand; bone-in- '($21.14); Clnc~ati, $22.13 i$22.87);
blade chuck roast, off 4.9 percent to Cleveland~ $23.17 ($23.78); ColliDbl!l,
$1.75 a pound.
- $20.68 ($22.27); Conneaut, S21.U
- Alsl, chocolate chip cookies, down ($2!.13); _Findl~y. $22.42 ($22.27);
4.3 percent to $1.()!1 for a sack of a . Fremont, $21.38 ( $21.70); Kel)tnati~nally-dlatrlwted· brand; 9range Ravenna, $21.61 ($21.21); Mauilkib,
juice, down nin~nths of a -percent to $20.22 ($19.83); Painesville, $22.17
$1.02 for frozen concentrate; lettuce, ($22.41); Portsmoulb, $22.19 ($%1.14;';
off 5.2 percent to 54-cents a head; and Salem, $21.16 ($21.87); Steui;Jenvllle,
tomato soup, down half a penny from $22.32 ($22.44); Toledo, $21.29 {$20.03),
the March average of 23 cents a can. 111\d Youngstown, $%L2;i ($21.24) . :

1

•

'

10~00

PUBLIC AUCTION

•01 THIS liON
TMIOUGMOUT TMI

lfOII'OJI
SAVtNGl

•.t.NTAif~

SATURDAY, MAY Sat 11 :GO O'CLOCK A.M.
FARM MACHINERY &amp; BEEF CATTLE
SOUTHWEST OF MARIETTA, OHIO TOWARD ATHENS: Take St.' ¥&lt;
Rt. 550 to Bartlett .,.. turn south onto St. Rt. 555 for 5 miles to the .
Centenary Methodist Church- tum Nit on Co. Rd. 236 lot 1 mile (3rd -;,
farm) or turn off St. Rt. 555 usl of Bartlett onto Co. Rd. 236 to the J,
Leo..rd Teague Farms. Follow signs.
.
26-BEEF CATTLE -26 HEAD
.
·!HEREFORD, CHAROLAIS, ANGUS CROSSED)
._
11 cows and 5 healers. all pasture bred. 5 yearlings (open). 4 steers
and 1 " Jii call, 8 months old. Health papers day of sale.
"
CATTLE &amp;MACHINERY WILl- SELL AT 1:30 P.M.
FARM MACHINERY: T.D. 14 lnernatlonal dozer W·winch &amp; 12 II
blade In excellent condition; 2 section Rome disc harrow (HDl tor
dozer; Massey Ferguson 3.5 diesel tractor; Massey Ferguson pick-up
rake; Massey Fergusi&gt;n plck·up disc (28); New Holland pull rake;
Massey Ferguson No.3 baler; Massey Ferguson corn plante•; Massey
Ferguson 2 bottom plows, 14 ln.; Ford scraper; Freeman loader;
Massey Ferguson 3 pt, cultlvaors; Massey Ferguson 3 bottom plows, •
1-'ln.; Massey Ferguson wagon; John Deere No. 33 manure spreader; '
Al)ls Chalmers hay conditioner; New Holland Model 270 hayllner ·'
baler ;-1955 Dorsey 3211. flatbed tractor trailer w·tandem wheels; 3 pt.
post hie digger; 21 fl. hay elevator w-e lee. motor; _3 pi. cement mixer; ,
3 ~t. hitch cut-off saw; 196-4 GMC 2 ton truck (needs some repair); 3 ·· ,
house trailer aKies &amp;-tires; drag harrow; two farm trailers 14ft.. long,
and other Items. ALLMACHINERY IN VERY GOOD CONDITION.
FARM &amp; SHOP EQUIPMENT, TOOLS, ETC.: Welding machine; IV:r •
ton chain h~lst; vise; 2 chain saws; welding table w-vlse; pipe-die set;
2 sets acetylene torches &amp; gauges; log chains; •ump pump; 4 logging
chockers; 30011. new 5181n. cable; forks, shovels, hand tools etc ·
'
OTHER ITEMS: Metal building 180ft. long, 21ft. wide, and 8 ti. high ,
(already torn down); six -40 11. light poles; lot used metal siding; soo
gal. water tank; 2 .ln. water pump w-Brlggs Stratton motor; cattle
sprayer; 4 hole. hog feeder; two 2 ton metal liquid tank feeders;
wheelbarrow; lot Insulation; flourescent lights; approx. 1,000 bales. ,
hay, an&lt;! other Items not listed.
-.
,
Nolhin'l shown before day of sale. Lunch·on premises. Terms . cuh or '
check w-posttlveiD day of sale. Not responsible for accidents.
OWN!£R-MR. J. LEONARD TEAGUE-PHONE 1-614·551-2614
Auctioneers-Bill Janes&amp; Associates,
Phonel-614-557-3411 or 1-614-557·3133 ·
· , 5
FARM FOR 5,\LE BY OWNER: 333 Acres w-10 room all elec. modern
hpme, 2 barns (one almost new&gt;. other buildings. Wellwater with srp·
lngs &amp; _pond. over 10!1 1\cres tillable. Farm on blacktop road In goo&lt;l ·, . 1,
neighbOr:~ 20 miles sw Muletta, Ohio or 16 miles w. of " ,
Par~eniiUr;g, W. Va. Mineral rights with farm.
Owner - ·Mr. J. Leonard Tueue-i'llonel-614-151·2614

Ofli ltoGII llANO
PIOOUCTS

usno ttLow ••• Nit
AfiWIUMilU

-.m,

GOLD UESt . DIV IOASTED

Peanuts

.'

16·01~1

1979 GRADS

..

CHAPMAN
SHOES

"Next to Elterfelds
In

Fans, Radios and many other items.

High St.
· Pomeroy
._.............
--~.,
109

19

COfi'YitOHf 1m- THI KIOGII CO . 111M$ AND PIICI:S
GOOD IUftDA l APIIL -211 THIU IATUIDAY MA.Y S. 1979 IN

GALLIPOLIS &amp; POMEROY STORES

WIIUIIYI TH£ IIIOHT TO UMiT QUANfiTIES. NONE SOLD
TO~IItl .

ROUND TOP

Kroger 20-oz.
White Bread ........._.

8$

KROGER

Grade A
Large Eggs ...... oo•.

SAVE
$205

., .

-lb.
Can ·

Rice

::98c
. t ..,

•

.~; ·1 .'•

i .

:~,.)
ILIOW

Macaroni

:!·6lc

FRESH IN THE HUSK

Sweet
Corn,.......... .. ...... ....

Ear
KROGER

Old Carolina
• d Baeon ...l-Ib.
511ce

Pkg.

Instant
C0 ff ee ............. .....10-oz.
Jar

5·7·l8. AVG. WHOLE

~
.

__. .-

KIOGII

Spaghetti ·

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ...... lb.

. . 35c
Pkl·

2'~x4rrx8'

STUDS

.7c

'!

ONLY

KROGER CONCENTRATED

rooms

''

i

Fabric
S0 ft ener ........ Ctn.
KROGER
Peanut
40·01.
BUtter .................... Ctn.
33·01.

t

..

,.'..'

HOGG &amp; Z'USPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

16c

ON4

4·11-ll. AVG. WHOLE

Semi· Boneless
-,Smoked Hams

h

...

IUSSII

$ •

MASON, W. VA. .

.
20,000 PLANTS
Cabbage, Peppers. Tomatoes, Flowers and Hundreds

KROGER

Salad
Dressing ~ ......... ~;

of Pieces of Pottery .

TERMS: Positive I. D.
Lu.nch .. Served by
Carleton
Church
Not
Re•pon5lble
for
Accidents
OWNER:
Fred Burson
AUCTIONEER: Lloyd Dillinger-Routt 1. Shade, Ohio

'·

spo

Tontato ·sauce

"

••

SAVE

'
'.

'"'

'•

cBob Hoeflich l

c.

Drill .

20% DISCOUNT TO

lHE PHOTO PIJCE

Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

!Of yOUr 10t.ll

11lilf~tion regar~ of manul.clurer . It rou 1111 n01 sa~!ls­
rild, Kroger will t'tiMCf voor iteiTJ 'Mih the Mme brend cw a
CCNT'II*eb6e tlflnd or refund .,OUr purch1M puce

c..

'i

A.M.

ANTIQUES
1883 Colt Rille, Tobacco Cutter. Old Stone Jars.
Maytag Oil. Lantern Globes, Seth Thomas Mantel
Clock, Marble Top Dresser, Hand Grist Mill, Old
Telephone, Milk Cans, Hand Grindstone.
OTHERITEMS
.
Lone Star Boat, SO H.P. Motor, Trailer, 11'h 11. Sell
Contained ~amper, 8 H.P . Dynamark Mower, Turfmaster Self Propelled Hand Mower, 73 Kawasaki
S1·250 Motorcyle.
CB EQUIPMENT
New C« Antenna Rotor. 2 Power Paks, SWR watt &amp;
Modulation Meter plus other CB Equipment.
STORE GOODS
200 Doz. Can Lids. 8 Doz. Canning Jars, Salt, 150 lb.
Candy. Hardware, One Lot Spices. One Lot Sundries,
Fishing Equ ipment, 80 gal. Motor Oil and Grease.
STORE EQUIPMENT
Fuel Oil Stove Bruner, 1 H.P. Air Compressor, Wheel
Balancer, 24 cu·. fl. Side by Side Refrigerator-Freezer.
OTHER MISC. ITEMS
Beds, Carpet, Chest, 2 Guitars (electric &amp; regular),

us.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOI!

TOTAL SATISFACliDN GUARANTEE
E~hing VOO Du~ 11 Kroger 11 guartnteed

Farm Trailer, 4x8 Steel Trailer, 13 Disc. Tractor Grain

.r

doing prom and cap and gown

photos. If you need any info, can

bcQt Closed SltlrUJ Midttli&amp;llt
Til 9AM S.diJ
bu,t Riatall Wllitt lllpHr

. ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Elcn Df ..... . . , . _ , . i1tml i1 IIIQUirlld tq bt
~ 11\'llilllble tor .,ale in ueh Kr0(14H Store, e•cept as
~!"101m in . . ld. If M do 1\Kl WI C1l en~-:!
w. wit! oftlr you your choice of • comp~r•ble rtem,
'IIII'Mr\ ~ reftecbng the 111'11 tiVII'lQ$ Of I raincheck
~ wilentitltl you to P"f'C:haM the ~ertiMd rtem ill the
~or~ wilhil'l :II dlvt.

BURLINGHAM, OHIO
Located at Burlingham Store about 15 miles South of
Athens on U.S. Route 33. The following Items will be
sold:
TRACTOR &amp; EQUIPMENT
Massey Ferguson Pony Tractor, Plow, Culllvaors,
Pickup Disc, Blade, 6 flo Bush Hog · 3 pt .. Tam den Axle

..

SENIORS
Yes, we wil' again tnls year be

24-HOURS
ADAY

~001

BARTLm, OHIO

.'

..• .

The schedule for the Meigs County
Bookmobile Thursday includes : Salis,bury, 2:15-2:45; Letart, 3:153:45; Racine Home National Bank, 45; Racine, Wagner's Hardware, ~;
SyracuSe Swimming Pool, 6:15-.!:15.

OPEN

•
BUDJJINC?
REMODEUNC?
we can he.lp

PUBLIC AUCTiON
SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1979

Property
Transfers

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER

KIO~II

~

,.

The Racine Volunteer Fire Depart- Chancey, Clifford and -Lena Holter,
ment II conducting a fund drive to Michael Winebrenner, · Lawrence ·
repllu;eJts tank truck. The present Wells, Nondus Hendricks, Oravo, Tri·
lruclt: IJ I ~967 Chevrolet and the tank State Materials, llacine Food Market,
Is 25 years old. A new truck and tank- Phoebe Roberts, David and Maudie
Is needed to better serve the growing Zirkle, Mr. and 'Mrs. Eugene CarRacine area.
peter, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest SumDonatiOiia are being accepted at P. mers, MrS. Gussie Dailey, Betty
0. Box 3;18, Racjne.
Triplett, Racine American Legion
Thoae who hltve donated so far In· - Auxiliary, Ray and Laura Riffle,
elude: George Brut Beulah Nelgler, Frank W. Porter, George and Velma
Therem Johnaon, Paul and Jean Stobart, Ann Coe, Clarence and
Sayre, Olarles R. Harris, Pat and Maxine Price, Mr. and Mrs. William
Mary Roush, Harry and Genevieve Roush, Harry and libby Wilford,
Richards, Yvonne Sellers, Edson and Mary Ann Huddleston, Grace Holter,
Mary Roush, Richard and Myrtle Frank and Joyce ReY!lOids.
Abela, Golda Swart, Mrs. T. W. White · Paul and Cora Mae Marr, Forrest
Robert and Martha Lee, Edison and Neigler, Hattie Paynter, WIIUam and
Mabel Brace, Frank and Cora Hazel Fox, Jolm C. Young, Blondena
Wallace, Wiley and Audrey Ours, Hudson, Ben .and Maxine Philson,
Henry Roush, Jack Wolfe, Lynn and Vernon and Lucy Oonohew, Clarence
Jolmanna Shuler, Garrett and Mattie and Hazel Wickline, Mr. and Mrs.
Circle, Kenneth and Bernice Theiss, John R. Lee, Marty and Jay
~ T.,lor, J; C. and UJu&amp;ean M91'arlty, Dorsa and Beall Parsons.

:

After years of rehabilitation and
study, he became South Carolina's
first black licensed auctioneer .
He attended the Missouri Auction · When writer Robert Louis
School in Kansas City. He was the first Stevenson was a reporter for the
black graduate.
Monterey Californian, he was paid $2 He currently works at odd 'a week.
auctioneering jobs.

\

•

to Thomas Thoboben, Marsha
Thoboben, 23 acres, COlumbia.

Racine firemen ~onducting fund rive

Ohio food prices decline in April
Hy rh&lt;· Associated Press
Food prices declined almost
imperceptibly while gasoline prices
continued their seemingly ever
upward march during April in Ohio,
actbi'l!ing to a monthly Associated
Press price check.
Each mopth, the AP surveys prices
of 17 - ~ommonly-purchased grocery
items plus the pump prices of leaded
and unleaded gasoline in 18 Ohio
cities. The survey is not desig~d as a
scientific sampling, but the same
items in the same stores and stations
are checked at about the same time
each month.
The average marketbasket price in
April-was $21.57, doWII nine cents from
the average price in March .
The average price of self-serve
unleaded gasoline was 77.9 cents per
gallon, up 5.2 percent from a month
earlier. At full-serve pwnp8, the price
for unleaded gas in April averaged
just over 80 cents' per gallon, an
Increase of 4.8 percent in a month's
.time.
The average price of self«rve
regular gasoline was 73.5 cents per .
gallon, up 3.5 percent; full-serve
regular averaged · 76.2 cents, up 5
percent in a month.
The highest price for a gallon of
unleaded, full-~~erve gasoline was
found in Columbus - 86.9 cents. The
lowest was iri Salem, 75.9 cents. For
those who pump their own gas, the
highest price for unleaded was 80.9 in
Cleveland, and the lowest was 74.9 in
Salem.
· The highest price for a gaUon of full·
serve regular was in Athens and
Orlumbus - 79.9 centS. The lowest
was in Salem - 71.9,
The total grocery bill declined in 10 .
of the Ohio cities checked in April, led
by a 7.I percent drop In Orlumbus to
$20.68. Toledo's checkout ·tape of
$21.29 was up 6.3 percent from March
levels, , the largest percentage
increase in the cities surveyed.
Surprisingly, gasoline prices
. actually declined in one city - Canton
- where the price of full-serve,

Clitford Might , .Evelyn Might, one•
half i•:lerest in Parcels, Salem.
Clarence Might, Jessie Might to
' Clarence Might, !essie Might, onehalf interest in Parcels, Salem.
Sidney Durst, Margaret Houdashelt , Junior Hunt, Naomi Neville and Mr.
F. Berl Boggs, Robert D. Boggs,
Golda Gillilan, Thomas and Juanita and Mrs. Jeffrey Harris.
Ida May Boggs, Shirley I. Boggs to
Gregory T. Bailey, Jo Lynn Batley,
Sayre, Charles and Be~ Cornell,
1.334 acres, Orange.
Donald Pigott, Emil and Virginia
Wayne E. Cleland, Patricia J.
Plichta, Hazel Bearhs, Marie
Cleland to Carl E . Morris, Janet E.
Hayman, Edna FO&amp;ter, Gayle and EdMorris, .42 acres, Rutland.
na Price, Ada Van Meter, Bill and
Ernestine K. Williams, Gernestine .
LIIJian Hayman, Ruth Tucker, Mr.
and Mrs. Floyd Farra, Ruth Wolfe,
Clarice All~n, Clayton Allen to K. May, Robert T. May to David E.
Esta Roush, Charles Theiss, c. w. Clarice Allen, Clayton Allen, Lot 45, Ellis, Elaine T. EUis. 1.667 acres,
Rutland.
Proffitt, Bob and Martha Beegle, Eva Chester.
Wells, Roger and Violet Williord,
Dana Hoffman aka Dana Hoffman,
Ralph C. Calvert, dec. to Ralph C.
Jolm and Martba Dudding, Ernest Sr., Gertrude Hoffman to Dana Hoff. Calvert, Jr., Cert. of trans., Pomeroy.
Clark, Virginia Hayman, David and man, Gertrude Hoffman, Parcels
Charles F. Wildermuth, Kathryn L.
linda Spencer, Howard Lawrence, Olive · Orange.
' Wildermuth to Charles F . WilderLettie McCain, George Hensley,
RodieR. Hatfield, Lena J . Hatfield muth, Kathryn L. Wildermuth, ParCharles and Reva Norris, Earl and to William Allen Barnhart, 20 acres, cels, lots, Pomeroy -Chesler.
lillian M. F~ost to Richard Frost,
Doris Adams, Kathryn Philson, Early Bedford.
.
Roush, Eileen' Buck, Robert and
John W. Brog11n, Jr. -to David Jud
Parcel, Chester.
Lucille Roush, Charles Ihle, Harold Flossie Jud, 36 acres, 4 acres, Salem. '
Rexford M. Hammonds, Betty J .I
and Margery Roush, Jack Adams, · f!Rv f'.eorge, Rose Geonie to Cllf- Hanunonds to Richard M. Collins,
Earl and Opal Norris, Freda Miller, fora Might, Clarence Might, Parcels, 17.006 acres, Scipio.
· Linnie Crary, Affidavit, Olive.
Freda Carpenter, Don and Sue Ann Salem.
Sammy Louis Darst, Sherry Darst
Beegle, Pearl McLeod, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Might, Evelyn Might to

I/

'!

Wonderbar Bologna...... 11i.
FRISH
.
• ·
9·1nch $211
Strawberry P1e.:............. "e
AMIIICAN 01 MUST AID
Potito Salad ... ..,............. . lb. 79c.
c
fiiSH lAMED
6
Cinnamon Roll$ ........... . for 99
•

�14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 2, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in the ·Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
1~

Words or Undfr
CUh
Cl\a.rge

I .~

1.00

1.50

1.10

-1.10

2.21

3.00

3.71

E.lch ward oVer the minlmwn
15 words ll4 cents ,per word per
day. Ad! running other than con.
a«ulJft days will be charged at

, theldayrale.

In memory, Card

..,.,..

of

Tlionb

and Obituary : 6 cents per "'ord,
t:J.OO minimum. cash ln adMobile Hm~e sall!!!ll and Yard

ea1es ar1: ·•ccepted oniy with

cash with order. 2$ cent char@:e
for ads C81T)'ing 8os. Numbtr In
Care of 'ftlt Sentinel.

The Publlsher reserves 'the

ript to edit or reject 1ny adl
deemed objectional. The
Publbher wt1l ool b: ......,..ible
for more than one incorrect ln·
aertion.
·

Wanted to Buy

Yard Sale

CASH FOR junk cars. 2-4 t&lt;tour
wrecker Servic e . Frye's ,

YARD SALE. May 3 &amp; 4 at
Chuter Fire De,1t. 9-4.
Chester Safety Patrol .

Ru tland. OH , 742-2081 .
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
d1ometer 10'' on largest end.
$ l 2 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton . Deliver~ to Ohio
Pollet Co . . Rt . 2, . Pomeroy.
m -268'1 .
OLD FURNITURE, Ice boxes,
brass beds, Iron beds, desks ,
etc ., com plete househalds .
Write M.D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pome roy or call m -n60.

ODDS AND En·ds Sole. Chester
U.M.W. May .t &amp; 5. Chester
Methodiat Church. 9·4.

OLD COINS. pocket watches.
class rings, wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or silver . Coli
RoerWamsley , 742-2331 .

Acorss from the RC Plant. Lots
of childr41n.'a clothing.

WANT TO buy : old

WANT-AD

~YERTISING

DEADLINES
Monday
NoononSa,turdly

Tuesday

thnJFrlday
4P.M.
the day before publication

Sunday
4P.M.
Friday afternoon

Notices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
6:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.
LAST· WEEK of complete sellout of household goods. Stop

by 760 Laurel St .. Middleport.
.TO WHOM It may concern :
Truat. .s of Tuppen Plains
Christian Church Cemetery
will put Into effect ·M ay I ,

1979 , the following : Grove
plots will sell for$125 each, all
plots must be pold in half and
balance In 90 days; after 90
days unpaid plots will b.
resold. Plots spoken fo r now
but not paid will have 90 d0ys
in which to pay In full .
Board of Trustees, Hermon '
Block, Howard Caldwell. Daryl
Well . Lindsey Lyons.
OPEN ON Mondays. 9 om to 1
pm. Kay's Beauty Salon. 169
N. :2nd Ave., Middleport.

Phone m -2725.

· Lost and Found
lOST: MALE Irish Sett-er . Approx . 2 yrs . . old. Area of
Boshon Qn Bbshon Rd .
Children's pet. Reword .

949·2-t66.
LOST: GERMAN Schnauzllt' ,
male. CR 18. Reward . Family

pel. 742-2336.

OPENING .

Laboratory Technician. 3· 11

shift . Exporlonced MLT (ASCP)

.
''

and 76

records . Coli .
992-6370 or Contact Morfin
Furniture.

TRANSM iSSION

fer

1964

Rambler . 992-2921 .

GARAGE SALE May 3 and 4
8:30-5 ot Guy Spencer's home ,

Tupper• Plains, second house

behind

St.

Paul's

U.

M.

Chu rch. Sponsored by St. Paul

Adult Blblo Closs.
YARD SALE . May 2 &amp; 3.
Will iam St.. Middlepor t.;

A SIX family Yard Sole. May
3rd and ,.th at Rod Grimm' s.
Come to fir.• house in R~ine .
Go straight up hill. turn right
on Broadway . Baby . clothes
and large sizes ; misc. Items .
YARD SALE. Herbeft HOover
residenCe, Bradbury Rood .
Wed. and Thurs. 9 till 2

YARD SALE . May 3rd and 4th.

Auctions
GIGANTIC TOOL AUCTION .
Truckload od new tools. Saturday, May 5. 6 pn1 . Complete
selection of hand tools, air
tools and electric tools for
plumbers.
carpenters ,
m.chanics. Electricians and
contra.c tors, tool.- fOr every
need including air com,
pressors, wel~ers , sanders
and grinders, etc . at Ohio
River Auction , S37 High St ..
Middleport, Ohio.
AUCTION , Friday 7pm . Lots of
new merchandise at Ohio
River Auction, 537 High St.,
Middleport.

lOom to • pm . .tl3 Spring Ave.
lots of clothing and misc.

BASEMENT SALE. May 3, 4, 5.
9 am to 3 pm. Bo';'s' clothes,
sizes 1•-20 anCI many other
items at 105 Wright St .•
Pomeroy . Ohio,

Pets for Sale

Society.
REDDISH blond, male dog .
young , housebroken . Racine
949-2300 or 992-7680. Beagle
type , female, houseb roken,
good with children. See at 224
Wa lnut . Middleport.
Collie, block with brown and
white female. about 10 mo.
old, olce gentle animal.

m -3736 or 992·2Q64. Colllo
male , block and white.. 1 year
old. and a shepherd mole , 8

mo. old. 742-2252.
min iature .

Collie.

mole

DOG OBEDIENCE Classes for-

ming now. Call614-367·0550.

or equivalent. Excellent salary
and frins- benefits. Shift ciif·
f~rentoll . Contoct: Peraonnel
Office, Pleasant • Valley
Hospital. Volley Drive, Point

Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponte&amp; .
Ruth Reeves . 61•-698-3290.

Auto sales
I '173 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
· 11 .000 mile•. fully equipped,
Oir, wench , etc. , excellent
condition. 992-2121.

CHEVROLET

throe·
quarter ton pickup. $2000.
m -2724 or m -2143.
1977 2·door Chevelle malibu.
Excellent conditiOn . 30S
engine . 99:2-5786 or 992-2529.

1977 FORD h4 F-150. 20,oob
miles. 614-367-0203.
1'175 FORD E-300 von. Good

Pleasant , WV. 25S50. Phone
30A·675-43AO. An £qual Opportunity Employer .

tle. 614·667·33'18.
SLEEPING ROOMS lor working
men only . Breakfast If
desired. Reasonable rates .
Phone 99:2-5-422.

EXPERIENCED
SHOP
FURNISHED APT . suitable for 3
FABRICATORS , WLEDERS ,
AND LAY· OUT PERSONS , or 4 cOnstruction workers.
After 5pm call m -543A ,
NEEDED. GOOD BENEFITS.
•
m -3129. or m -5914 .
CONTACT L &amp; H METAl
WORKS ,
INC
at
OFFICE SPACE for rent in
1·30A·428·4:100.
Pomeroy. $75 per month, all
utilities "paid. Coll992-6009.
SOMEONE TO keep on oldorly
man in their home , Roy
Oonohew. For Information
contact JaH Dono hew, 6.!1 oak
Drive , Little Hocking .
989-2819. Racine-letart area.

BABYSITIER IN my homo 5
dar• a wnk. 3 yr. _old boy and
6 mo. o!d girl . m ,soos ..
WANTED. SAWYER to work at
Pgint Valley Pollet, Scottown.
256--6363 between 7 and 5pm .
. or 886-8840 offer 5 .

Wanted to Buy
WANT TO buy: old iowolry.'
Call m-5262 or write Kay

Cecil , 67 s . 2nd, Middleport.
OH.
.
WANTED: ONE aero of land
near Five Points. Call after 5,

·m -395s.

NOTICE ON FILING
· OF INVENTORY
AND
' APPRAISEMENT

The State· of Olllo, Meigs
county, Court ot Common

Pleas. Probate Oi \'isi on

HOUSE, 4 rooms and both . Unfurnished . 992·3090.

ONE BEDROOM homo . Adults
only. m -2591!.

, the surviving s pouse. the
next
of
kin .
the
benefi ci aries under the
wilL and to the attorney or
~ttorneys representing any
of th e aforementioned

person s:

Frank
M
Fu gat e,
Pomeroy , Ohio , Case No .

22187 .

You are hereby notified
that the Inv entory and
Afprelsement of the estate

o
t.he aforem e ntioned,
deceased , la t e of sai d
:county . wer e fil ed in this

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
Genera 1Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES
9 ... _ JackW. Carsey

Yard Sale

cauliflower, brussels sprouts,
head lettuce, tomatoes , and
large selection of bedding annuals. Pots of flowers and
Greenhoute .
Cleland, Radne.

Cleland

Geraldine

Yard Sale, 2 family between

22 FOOT DELUXE Storcroft

Meigs Fairgrounds and church

troller.

on Old 33. May 2-3. 9-3.
SALE :
Plano ,
MOVING

A.C., sleepa 6. On display ot
Hagerty's, 625 Beech St., Mid-

Stove,

refrigerator,

dleport .

freezer, 2.5 cu . ft. gos -el.ctrlc
refrigerator , dresserS, bed,
l'n4 GMC JIMMY, P.B.. P.S..
couch, choirs, ladder with
A.C., 2-wheel drive. Priced
stond•off .
picnic . table ,
reasonable. Call992·3580.
clothing, toys , hous.hold
GOATS.
SOME lull freshoned.
items. Sat .. May 5 , 9-5 , 387 S.
Fourth, Middleport, 992·2788. · two due in July and August.

Also kids. Shade. 696-1234.

ODDS AND Ends Sole. Chesler
U.M.W. May 4 and S . Chester
Methodist Church. 9·4.
MUt Tl GARAGE Sa los. Rig·
gscresr Manor. Top of Eastern
High School hill , oH County
Rd. 26. Signs. Fri. and Sot.
May 4 I 5. 9 om- 3pm.
THREE FAMILY Yard Sale. 4

SIX FAMILY Yard Sale. Thurs·

day and Friday. First houJe on
right on 143 just off Rt . 7
Bypass. ·

'

TWO USED pianos and used
organs for sale In your area.
For more Information write
Credit Manager , 15.4 W. Main
St., Lancaster, Ohio. -431..CO or

callt -654-5663.
FIFTEEN FOOT

lowe

llno

oh,1mlnum bass bact. 20 h.p.
Mere., stick stHring, fully
equipped with tr9il•. con
985-4339 . .
.
NCR CASH register tOr grocery '
store. Separate totals for
meat , produce, groceries,
misc. and taxes. Excellent
condition .
$125 .
Phone

FAMILY Porch Sole.
May 3, 4, &amp; 5. 10-4. T.V.,

742-225S ..
1'174 SUZUKI, 9400 mlloo.
$1100. m -3511 .
HANGING BASKETS, oil klnda.
Bedding plant•. blooming.

clothing. and misc. Rain or
shine. Green house next to
Enterprise Church .

Vegetable plants, all ready to
go, potted. s- Don Stobort,
Rt . 2, ~ocine, Ohio.

CARPORT

SALE.

Thursday,

May 3rd and Friday, MIJy ,. .
10-4. 311 Wright St., Pomeroy.
T~REE

kitchen , dining and living '
room. Car.,.t, Full basement.

located 0r1 6\-1 ocr01 on CR 28 ,
approx. 3 miles from Racine. If

Middleport. m-5239.
FOR SALE BY owner. 4.39

intern ted contact Lorry Wolfe
9.49-2836 weekends and after
5 evenings.

ocret. •'hyeor old house, •
bedr. , rec room with fireplace,

2 baths, gorogo and utility

room. 1v, miles from Rutland

on New
-742·2866.

Lima

DEEP STEAM
CARPEr
OEANING
FrMI!stlmatt
COllilet: G - Smith
or Mikt Grate
11 Rutland Furniture Co.
'
742-1211
Allor 5 fll .M., H2-Q09
orr.z-2174
4·2

FOUR FAMILY Yard Solo. BRIDESMAID'S gown with veil.
Thursday .
9·4f .
Behind Slzell -12. $30. m -5958.
.Court . Said Inventory and Syracuse DriYe-ln . All si ze
Appra isemen t will be for
NEW SAVAGE Fox B double
hear ing before thi s Court cloth ing and lots of misc. Rain
borroll 12 QUoge. $150. Coli
cancels.
011 the 21st day of May , ·
992-6093.
1979 , at Pomeroy 1: 00 YARD SALE . May 3 and 4. I
o 'c lo ck P .M .
:
1974 KAWASAKI , 125. E•·
Any per son des iring to mile below ' ~lddleport on cellent condition. low miles .
file e)(ceptions the r eto State Route 7. Yards ond yards · Best offer . 992-772'1.
must fil e them at least five of polyester knit, poly. ond
days prior, to the dat e se t . cotton fabri cs . (Close out form
1977 HARLEY DAVIDSON
for hear ing .
store .) Also good used
Sports fer.', Contact Mike lm·
Given under m v hand clothing , children ' s and
baden, Wel ahtown Hill ,
ana seat of said co urt , t his adults . dishea and misc. Minersville. 992-2977.
30th day o f May 1979.
Robert E . Bu c k tiems .
MIGRO-HYB RIO seed corn .
J"dg t:- YARD SALE . Fridoy and SoturlOll per cnet replant Qgrenddy , M oy 4 &amp; S. Roll- a w ay bed ,
m·e nt i.f seed · doesn't grow.
By Carolyn G . Thoma s
James H. Smith, Hemlock
Deput y Cler k gun roc: k, cho irs, lots of misc.
133 Buf1ernut Ave., Pomeroy .
Grove, Ohio . 992,2524 .
(5J 2, 9, 2tc

WEDNESDAY. MAY'/:, 1979

N. L' Conitruc:b
- .

Rill Estate Lon
Purchase
ond
Rtflnance
' 30 Yur Terms · .
A-No money down
(tlltlble veterans)
FHA-AS 101!11 as :i%
- n (non-veterans)

1 .

MORmAGE
co.·
17 E. Stole, Allllns

Rt. 3
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
H2·5M7
HS·l mo.· Pd.

592-3051
4·23: 1 mo.

Rd.

Coli

...

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

.'!14 lillie off Rl, 1 by-pass .
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland.

Auto&amp;Truck
Repair
Al$0 transmiulon
Repair
Phone 992·5612

•New Home
•Addons
RemQidlngs
•Free estimates

*

New; repair;
guHers and ·
down spouts.
Window cleaning
GuHer cleaning
Free Estim.ates
949-2762 ~ 949-2160
4·5·HC

mo. (Pd. )

4231

ment If'! Mlnerville. 992-5823.

Reynold's

Electric,..
608 E .
MAIN

~:~nM" ROY . o .

New Llrr11 R""d
R utl1nd, Ohio
Pholle 742·2003
NEW LISTING
2
buildings In Dexter . One
. building fs 30'xol5' and has
aluminum siding. The
ot~r Is two story and
:measures 55')(30' ~ It is
:made out of beautiful hand·
hued lumber. Slluated
nice size lols with 2 wells.CaH for more Info. You can
have both for 116,000.00.
A-FRAME on Slate Route
10. Excellent 3 bedroom,

NEW LISTING -Mid·
dlepart, 2 story frame &amp;
brick . 3 bedrooms, kit·
chen Is lovely ,.nge and
· oven, formal dining,
large re&lt;:. or family
roofed
patio
and
carpeted sun deck .
$39,900.00.
NEW LISTING 9
years old, large
business room on State
Route. «lx60 now con·
talns a Grocery Store
and gas pumps, these
can also be bought . All
are clo:,e to mines .
MAKE MONEY- Here
is an old established
business In the same
location 25 years. owner
retiring . Low priced for
a quick sale.
HERE IS A BUY - 2
building slies of 1 acre
each. Located In new
addition, all utilities, all
new homes. Going al
jystS6,ooo.oo.
MIDDLEPORT 2
family, both rented, You
could very well live In
one side and rent the

mdoern home on 2112 acret.

Call for an appontment.
Only $37,QOO.OO.
WEST RUTLAND .Beautiful 3 bedroom coun·
try · home. Situated M
almost 2 acres. Large
detached garage and
much~

~
11 Years Ex parter.· ·e

much mor~!!

.RUTLAND - Very nice 3
bedroom home M Salem
.Streel: EKira nice out·
building with heat and elec ·
trlc . Out of flood area. Only
139,000.00.
NEW LISTING- Large 2
story home In MiddlePOrt.
Home has 4 bedroOms, ltv·
lng room, dfnlng room, kit·
· chen, pantry and bath. II
has a new gas furnace and
new root. Detached cement
block garage. We iNOn'.t
nave this one long. Sells for ·
145,000.00.
'
FARM - 99 acre farm .
Formerly known as the
Paul Orr · farm .
All
buildings In excellent condillon. Home Is bUilt of
California Redwood . You
must see this one to ap·
preclate Its beauty . Ca.ll to·
day ..
Cheryl Ltmley, Associate
Phone 742·2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc11te
· Phone 949·2519
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr.
Broker H2-57J9

other. 1'12 story frame

With ' part basement.
Close to schools and
slores. 113,000.00.
WE HAVE MANY ,
OTHERS - CALL US
FOR YOUR NEEDS IN
REAL ESTATE.
This office stoncfl reody
to serve you whenever
you're buying or selling.
We Inspect, appraise,
advertise, nogotfat~.
Call the EXPERTS TODAY. NO CHARGE
unless we complete ttie
dell you want.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry 1!. Cleland Jr.
Hl-2259 99Hi91 m-25611.

'

CENTRAL.REALTY COi
COUNTRY !lOME -5.acres and a pond, remodeled
4 bedroom, fully carpeted nome, large living room,
fully carpeted home, targe ·llvlng room; has a heat·
a -lator fireplace, kitchen Is. equipped with
refrigerator, stove and dlsllwasher. Priced at
$39,900.
JUST LISTED -Immediate possession, real nice, 3
bedroom home, With large lfvlng room and family
room, all nicely carpeted, large eat-In kitchen
equipped with diShwashar, disposal, and stove, 2
full baths, 112 basement and garage, nice verden on 1
plus acres of lend In Racine. Priced at Sol$,000.
JUST LISTED- MIDDLEPORT -Nice 9 year old
3 bedroom house, equipped with stove and·
refrigerator, mostly all carpeted, with natura! gas
heat, nice yard and storage building. AsklngS35,ooo.
JUST LISTED ~ acres, good l'h story house, 3
bedrooms, llv:nv room, and family room, large eat·
In kitchen, mostly an carpeted, some fencing,
localed close to Pomeroy .. Priced for quick sale.
$37,500.
JUST LISTED -Approximately 70 acres all fenced
.with lots of nice pasture and some farming ground,
has a barn and a toot building, 2 old farm houses and
il nice mobile home, minerals too, located on Route
33 }us! north of Pomeroy. AlklngS47,900.
.
COUNTRY LlVI NG IN TOWN -Total privacy Is
the key here on 2 plus acrn, the liVing room has
brick fireplace, step-down family room, equipped
kitchen, full batn, launary area; and two bedrooms
complete downstairs. The unfinished upstairs
makes expansion possible. Priced to sell at
900.
WE'RE "SINQING THE PRAISES ON -THIS ON I!"
' "'ot only does It offer fine value but at a low prlct.
Located In Letart, 0 ., Rt. 338, II offers 3 BR Wllh
large closets, full batn, b&lt;!autlfully carpeted
throughout, the living room Is io Inviting with a for mal DR &amp; fenllly room . The large kitchen has plen·
tv of C11blnets and the dishwasher stays. Priced at
$35,000.
JUST LISTED --85 acres, with plenty of good
pasture land end some farming ground. Good barn
with drilled w.ll. Garage and other buildings. Two
farm houses, both need some repair. Mineral rights
too. Good location abOUt minutes from Pomeroy
off Rt. 33. Priced for quick sale. 142,500, 1
.
75 ACRES with a 3 bedroom frame house, barn and
olher building, mostly fenced . Some timber and ex·
cellent .bottom land. AbOUt l ,QOO fHI' o! beautiful
OhiO River frontage . OWner will help flnltnce. Ask·
lng S57,0QO, Wlthouttlmber S55,QOO. ·
HOME SITE - Bashan area. excellent area; ex·
cell en! home site. Water an~ electric aval ble. Has
been surveyed. $3,000.
SYRACUSE ~DOd 2 bedroom home, at o.l new
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted, laundry room,
all Insulated, natural gu haat, utlllty building, 2
lots. $21,500. .
.
1
·
'
LOTS - 1 Acre and up near Pomc!roy,

w.

s

f

WANTED: WE NEED NEW HOMES &amp;! FARMS
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 94t-2311
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
t4t-26M or Nt-Ut1

EXPERIENcED
Radiator~

Service ~
Prem tM

lullcltter

., ·

KJ I I

KJ

ONE' WRON 6 MOVE
AND YANO; ~ILL S!f

FORCED TO PUT OUT
YOUR LI6HTS 1\GAIIV!

I I 0 I I

S· A

Wl'IA'T THe CA~PENiEFI:

PU'T

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

Yesterday's

Molals,lnc.
Ph. m-2114

Pomeroy

CAI.ll~L-JI.l0

The two-club opening bid

'(OUR
FOUO{!

VinJI and A11111inum

. TUNING

Siding

~JUELS .

BISSEll.
SIDING 00.

TRAILER SALES
true M•tten~er't' Rei.

L...1vtltt, OW.
614-46,..U4S l~tenlntl
2MIItsaadOfWIIktsYIIIt
SUPER
GOOSE
ITOCK
flAIL!. NOW AYAILAILI.

Coli for • Fr. . · Siding
Eslim1te, 949·2801 or
949-2160. No · S~nd•y

I«ADFFOD. AuctlonRr, Com·

1965Goneral, 60xl2, 2 bdr.
1'170Skyllno, l:bc65, 2 br.
1'170 Sylva, 60&gt;&lt;·12, 2 bdr.
1'170 Costle, 60x12. 2 bdr.
1973 Nobll}ty, 12•60. 2 br.
.
, 1'173Ridgewood, 70xl4 , 3bdr.
1.'173 Nashua, 60xl2, 2 bdr.
I'173 Gov.,.nar, 60x 12, 2 br .
1'174 Morkllne, 50x12, 2br.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT. WV.

pleto Service. Phone '149·2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio,
CriH Bradford.

ELWOOD IIOW£RS REPAIR 367-7101.
Sweeper-e. tooater1, Iron•. all
PAINTING AND aanGblr&gt;t'"'l· . unalf appfloncet. Lawn moer ,
next to State Highway Garage
FrM estlmat•. Call949-2186.
on Route 7, 985-3825.
1'001. CHEMICALS. s-on
SEWING MACHINE R-ln,
pocfoa. Free- delivery. . D.
seNice , all mokee , 992-228-4.
•UnlfCI'dner Solos, lrt&lt;. Equlp- ·The Fobrlc Shop,· Pomeroy.
l!'enl.and suppiiH. ~-572A .
Authorized Singer Sales and
-

HOUSE REPAIR and remodelIng. Careful work. ReoaOnobie
rotH. Erny Dcnrl•. 7&gt;42-2090.

Camping Equipment
1'175 II FOOT truck comper,
••cellentcondlllon. 992-2121 .
CODNER$ CAMPERS loccted
on Rainbow Ridge, 1 mllolrom
Baahon. Sales: Motor t.om••
to tappen , rentala, travel
trailers, Mrvlc• and suppll ...

614·843-3011.

PULU~

EXCAVATING. Com- .
plete Service. Phone m -2476 . .

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE .
bnn cancelled? Loot your
operotora II&lt;OtiM? Pflone
m-21o.
E·C

ELECTRICAL

DRIVE &amp; UTIU
&amp;
SAVE ALOT
A GOOD SELECTION
DF END &amp; ROLL
IALANCES. ·.

NCMON

wm, 24 hourt aer·

SM.£
FROM

svstems ,
Rt, 143.

dozer, boc:khoe·.
Phone I (614} 698-7331.

STOCM for Immediate
4-'iwery: various slzn of pool
kits. Oc&gt;it- yourself or '-t ua
ln1tall for you. D. lu""Frclner
Salft, Inc. 992·$72.4.

IN

216 E. !le.-ltrtt&gt;
QEN, · AP .P LIANCii
STOR I! - All stock and
fixtures at Inventory.
Wonderful location for
an · lnter.Hied couple.
Call If YOU want to go In·
10 the business venture.
IN THI COUNTRY- 3
bedroom nice older
home with furnace,
r•rge modern eat·ln kit·
chen. Modern beth, and
large lot. Hemlock
(Orove iree. 123,000.
IUSlNESS IU1LD1NG
- In Middleport on ttte
T . 26'x96'. Several
rooms up with balh,
restroom and la&lt;ge
buslna'ss room down.
RIVER VIEW ~ In
Pomeroy. 6 room house
with storage building,
cellar, and garage.
Natural gas, city water,
and M Ohio P-er. Just
117,500.
IN THI COUNTRY Nice older home with 4
bedrooms. Enormous
family room with wood·
burnlllll fireplace. 3 car
gar- end workshop.
1'."&gt; acres. Great for a
large family tor 135,000.
LOTS
AcrtiQI,
woods, cleared land,
campsites and home
sites. All sizes, all
prices.
LIST IT WITH US 'AND
WE WILL ADVISE
HOW TO GliT Till
MOST PROM A SAI.I.

1/ou.·; l/111
Ht!iUICfllill INS

GilAVEt Y TRACTORS and
Equipment. Experl8tlced aer·
vice. 2o. Condor, Pom•rPY,
Ohio. m -2'175.

H

Pass

4¥

5+

Pass

PBss

articles.

is a raise . For a ll he knew,
North was showing a real
he art s uil.
At this point North know
that there was eno ugh am-

+K

Toda y ~ s

munition for 12 tri cks . His
five-s pa de bid confirmed
spades as the s uit and told
South to bid six if he held
second -round club control.
South might have held just

experts

warrant that amount
cussion.

three hearts is a general
cohtinua tion of the fo rce.

South's raise to four hea"r ts

have aLmost as many way s
of using it as the re are
· e;o:perls, but the bid does not
come up often e nough to

ot dis~

As lor the wea k bids of two

spades, hearls and dia·
monds we recommenQ the

come
evict
ljOU

one club . He did have two, so
he passed a t five s pades .
The defense took two club
tricks and South look the

rest.
/ NEWSPAPER EN TERPIU SE ASSN )

(For a c opy of JACOBY MODERN, send St to: '' Win at
Bridge.·· c are of this newspa·
per, P.0 . BDK 489, Radio City
Slalion . ('Je w York, N. Y 10079.)

~

learn in' to live with I can't staLl in
it, but I can tell 40u, if5 ml.j be5' thin's
fo:
riqht
unseWin'! _J;ver!

by THOMAS JOSEPH

18 Beaver's

WINNIE
WELL, O NE OF YOUR.

DAD'~ FAVORITE BOOKS

WAS ·'Y'OUCAIV'r GO

HCNHE At.MINf'/ I

DON'T KNOW HOW
IN--NY TIMES HE
READ IT.

'

YET BACK AT 11-IE ISLAND HOSPITAL
WHERE HE REGAINED &amp;OME OF HIS
STRENGTHtHE CREDITED r-.-----..._

UPTON SIN lAIR WI TI-l
BEING THE AUTHOR ...

IIV5TEAO OF
7HONI45 WOI.Fi:/

80YOU
DON'T THINK
HE'S f+\KING-1

EH?

Call 742-2211
TAL,KTO
Wlftdefl ,.- Herb Grate
WG-Smll11

RlmAND
RJRNilURE
Rutland

BARNEY

RtlllAiiD RiRNilURE

w•

OFfiER YOU ...
1. Two full 11-. of all naw
fumftura.
2, Nice ilfiCiions of uHCI fur, nltun.
3, A large llellldlni full Of
bHullful urpet.

MIND YORE
TABLE MANNERS
TONIGHT, JUGHAID ..~,'\.l."~
I'M EXPECTIN'
TH' PARSON

I DIDN'T KNOW
YE INVITED TH'
PARSON OUER
FER SUPPER

I DIDN'T-·
I SAID I WUZ
EX-PECTIN' HIM

relative
19 Orbison
or Acuff
20 Achmed's
favorite
fruit
21 Deal with
24 Heaped
25 Sublet
26 Twice : Lat.~:-7-++-+27 The gwns
28 Lay to rest,
as King Tut
32 Cavett
or Clark
34 Hitchcock
sensation
35 Leave
37 Assuage
38 None
the less
38 Mulliga n ,

DAILY

J.IOW CAN ~OU PIG-QIJf
ON ALL THAT JONt&lt; FOOD
EVER'r' DA'i, Sl~ ?

1 Equestrian
2 Teheran
citize n
3 President
Ca rter , e .g.
4 Prelude
to peace
5 Child uf Loki
&amp;Stadium
s hap e
7 Word
for word
8 Hoist•
9 Assay ·
It Did a newsroom job

Yesterday's Answer

IS SOurce

2!1 Declaim

20 Kind of s ignal 30 Heston role
21 Plod
31 Concoct
22 Take over for 33 Noted
23 Put into law
screen
24 Languish
monster
Z6 Tout's
36 PatriotiC
customer

monogram

THURSDAY- May 3, 1979
S:25-World at Large 17; 5:50-PTL ·
Club 13; 5: 5~Sunrlse Semester
10.
.
6 : OQ-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15 ;
17 ;
6 : 25-For
6 : 10- News
You ... Biack Woman 10.
6 : 30-Dragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :50-Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7 :0D-Today 3,15 ; Good Morning
America 6, 1;}; Thursday Morning 8; Sc~oolles 10; Three
Stooges-Utile Ras cals 17 ; 7 :15Weather 33.
7 :30-Famlly Affair 10; 8 :0D-Capt .
Kangaroo 6,10; 'Leave It To
Beaver 17 ; Sesame St. 33 ; 8 :3o.-:.
Di scovery l7 .

9 :oo-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
13,15; Emergency One 6 ;
Hogan' s Heroes 8; Love of Life
10; Lucy Show 17 .
9 : Jo-Brady Bunch 8; Green AcreS
m Hogan 's Heroes 10.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Magazine 8, 10 ; Oatlng
Game 13 ; Movie " But Not fof
Me" 17 .
10 :30-Ait Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13; Andy Griffith 6:
10:55-.CBS -News 8; House Cal!
10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 6, 10.
II : 30- Whee l ol Fortune 3.1S ;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
20; Nova 33; l1 :55-News 17.

CRYP'l'OQU&lt;;)TE- Here's how lo work il :
AXYDLBAAXR
lo L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single le tters .
apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all
h ints. Each day the code le tte rs arc di ffe rent .
..

I'LL SET
~OU'VE NEVER

EVEN TRIEO
ONE, SJR

WHAT IS ASTOMACH THAT'S
£~PECTIN6 AOiOCOLATE

8AR GOIN6 TO SA'i Wf.IEN IT
6ET5 A CA~ROT STICK ?

E)(PLAIN TO IT ~AT ~OO'RE
ALL PA~ OF Tf.IE SAME
TEAM,511UT'1.1. APPRECIATE
6EING INVOLVED,_. .

CRYPTOQUOTES
I U H E S
OKRI

y D

QOI

VYQQVI

S EM

BOYVI

QQI

PEE V

OMUQYUJ

PET

NET I .

DWKUYDO
DKSYUJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: EVEN A FOOL CAN DECEIVE A '
MAN- IF HE BE A BIGGER. FOOL THAN HIMSElF.MARJORIE BOWEN
() 1979 Klnt

News 6, 10;

Password 15; Young &amp; tne
Res !less 8; Midday Magazine 13;
Love· Amer ican Style 17.
.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Search forTomorrow 8,10; E lee . Co. 20,33; .
Not For Wom en Only lS ; ·
Baseball 17 .
·
1 :00-DaysofOur Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6.13; News 8; Young &amp;
the Restless 10; I :30-As The .
World Turns 8, 10.
2 :0D-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to Live
6,1 3; 2 :30-Another World 3, 1s ..:
3 :OD-General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lilias.
Yoga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17.
3 :30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; ·
Fllnlslones 17; Di ck Cavett 20.'
4 :OD-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Addams Family 8; Sesame St .•
20,33; M ike Douglas 13; Space·
Glanls 17.
.•
4 :30-Bewltched 3; Gilligan' s Is. 6;
Lucy Show 15; Gilligan's Is. 17 ."
S:OD- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly '
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer
Pyle, USMC 10; Bionic Woman
13; Brady Bunc h 15; I Dream of
Jeannie 17.

e.g.
40 Mystery
Writers'
award

PEANUTS

See the Grite Family at

DOWN

t Gunwale pin
9 Radial, e .g .
10 Abuse ·
12 Cheese
13 More than
happy
14 Lady of Spain
16 Dolly of
Broadway
· 17 Undies
fabric

Widow
Brown?

24 Rolls Of C.r1111 In
. Stock &amp; 100's Of Semples.
to Choose l'rom.
·
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE

41 His: Fr.

ACROSS

1 Well - of

4et,

$'7t!i

.SHPAT ...

B; I : 00-Tomorrow 3; News 15;
I :35-Baseba ll 1-7 .
I : 50- News 13 ; 4 : 05- News 17 ;
4: 25-12 O'Clock High 17.

12 :00--Newscenter 3;

1"f4.yd.

HOWEJIY AND MARTIN Ex·
septic

Pass

We could discuss the tw oclub opening bid for many

AU. CARPEr

vice. E,.,.rgency calls. Coli

covatihg,

2 NT

3•

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

WHAT 'THE HEO&lt;
ARE Vle601N6

. SAVEON
CARPETING

Controctor

812-m2 or 812-3454.

Pass
Pass
Pass

' ALLEYOOP

GASOlJNE AlLEY

Hrvlng Olllo Vqiley region.
Six daye o

South

or B) and s h ows a feature
with a maximum (9 or 10) .
The South ha nd is a maximum for a weak two bid so
he rebids three diamonds to
show his side ace. North's

675·442~

Service. W•sharpen Scissors.

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and . bodchOe woril; dump
trucka and lo-boya for hire,
will lloul fill dirt, top aoll.
limestone and gravel. Coli Bob
or' - - Jeflera. day phone
992-7089.
night
r nono
992-3525 or 992-5232.
EXCAVATING,
d ozer ,
bockl&gt;oe and dUeller, Cllorlea
R. Hotflold: Biock Hoe ·S.rvlce .
-utland, Olllo. Pone 742-2008.

North East

Opening lead:

4·4-1 mo.

H ·lmo.

WATER AND mloc. ha11ilng.
Call m -51511.
... ·
,

for Rldo Imboden.

and forcing . Opene r rebids
his suit with a · minimum ( 7

P~ss

CIIIS.

Mobile Homes Sale's

. limestone, grovel,

The two-notrump response
to a weak two bid is arti fici a l

2.

Business Services

~ULING :

ond.

Vulnerable : North-south
Dealer: South
West

Services Offered

oM mite Items. 7..C2.·2909., ask

preferred distribution is 6-33-2 wilh 6-3-3-1 coming sec-

• K 9
+ A 52

ORPHAN ANNIE-HARD BUGAINER

5 :30-Carol Burnett3 ; News6; Elllc
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10:
Odd Couple 15; ' Lucy Show 17;
Doc tor Who 33.
6 :OD-News 3,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Andy Gri ff ith 17 ; Villa Alegre .
20.
\
6:30-NB C News 3,1 5; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20 .
7 :00-Cross-wifs 3; Newl ywed Game
6, 13 ; Porter Wagoner 8; News
10; Love American Style 15;
Carol Burnett 17; Dick Cavett 20 .
7:30-Do ll y 3; Match Game PM 6 ;
Muppet Show 8; The Judge 10;
Th a t' s Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15 ; Base ball 17 ;
Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
B:OD-Real People 3,15 ; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Jeffersons 8, 10;
Live from Linco ln Center 33 ;
Mas terpi ece T heatre 20.
8 :30-Miss Winslow &amp; Son 8.10;
M ovie " Torn Between Two
Lovers" 8, 10; Charlie's Angels
6. 13 ; F .Y. I. 20 ; 10 :0D-Vegas
6, 13; Fall of Eag les 17; News 20;
10 : 30-Foolsleps 20 .
11 :OD-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Hogan' s
Heroes 17; Turnaboul20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee
Woman 6,13 ; Roc kford Files 8;
ABC News 33; Movie " The
Seven Minutes " 10 ; Movie
" Station SI• -Sahara " 17 .
12 :40-Mannl x 6.13 ; Hawaii Flve-0

some Lady to it and the

+QJI0 1 il

'TO DO' C:XX?

NOW HAUliNG llm01tone In
Middleport-Po•mroy area.
Call for free eatlmote.

moves you. The s uit should
be six ca rds a nd should have

SOUTH
U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

14·Y~. Experlatlct

IME

hand have 7-10 high"Card
poinls with th e understanding 1hat yo u ca n go up to 11
or down to 6 if the s pirit

NORTH
;.2
+A K 3
¥ A 10 5
+ KQJ43
• J 4
WEST
EAST
• 92
• 86
• J 66 3
• Q 7 42
• 96
• 10 8 7
+ K Q 10 7 5 +A 9 6 6

• 32

PIANO

Specialist In Home ond
scfiool Pta no · Tuning
and Repairing. ·Servtne
Athens, Mtles, Oalila I
Vin!Gn counties, 1110
M111011 &amp; ·Jack11011 counlleslnW.VI.
Ph. m -2511 fW m-20e2
•·10·1 mo.

Jumbles: BUMPY GOOSE FORMAL RANCID ,
Answer: Whatlha host did when It ralned" POURED "

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

IAJf:.'P-6

,.riencil. Pr" utlnlatH. Call
rem Haskins Mt-2110,
AthlniArU
"H"I4J 11M' 797-2752
1-)0-pd.

J

BRIDGE

and
Home Maintenance

•

(Answers tomorrow)

. BORNLOSER

m.l•teuM:e, ,.... . - nNir.

992-2356

tJ "(XI r

Wednesday, May 2

Ohio Valley Roofing

.

tl

·

Storm doon •ncl windows. All
work tYW•ntHII. 20 YNrl IX·

Sniith Nelscll

1"-110 HIS

'HOLE" WOIII:I&lt;.

Prfntanswerhere:

·Au rypes roetlnf, IJUttaf's 111111
daWIIspGUII. All fV'pes tiOIM

No-

651 Beech Street
Middleport, 0.
3-7 ·1 mo. !Pd. )

l1rent Trvcll:
Refilter

watant HNttr c.;..

WIIIMikl
Service C.lls

room; stone fireplace,

on

REf LA~, MY DEAR CHAP ! NO
, POI'-IT ·IN 6E.rT1"'6 VIOLENT..
, . AFTER ALL..,VOU'Re; AT A
!SL16HT DI!&gt;ADVANTA5EWIT~ YOUR ~1$T$ TIED!

H. L Writesel
Roofing

992-6011

4·30-ttc

REALTY

IVEELAC I

CAPTAIN EASY

CONTRACTOR

0

I KJ

BI.OCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

IRElAND

Ro&amp;li'HyseH

SEVEN ROOM house and bose·

tDSTE1TER

ON THE LINE , SIR.

view.

fireplace , fully carpeted, central air, enciQJed sun porch,

.

PLANTS, CA86AGE, broccoli,

boskots.

river

S&amp;G

self· contained. air condltkH\,

...
Mgr.
- · PhoneH2·2181

llonging

TO the ExeCu t or o r hosues above old Rkhords
Administretbr
of
the and Sons gravel pit In Apple
es tate , to s u c: h o f the · q.rove, Ohio. Thurs. and Fri .
fo llowing as are residen ts
of ,the Sta te of Ohio , viz : -

For Sale

with

Stole, Athens. 614-592·3051 .
MODERN THREE bedroom
house ,
full
basem•nt,

OWNER SELLING: 2 bedroom

1974

locati on

$12,000. Sllown by appoint·
ment. m -2082 or 742-~.
FIVE ROOM house on College
Rd .. Syrocuail. m -2467 .
THREE BEDROOM '-'e. large

frame house. ExcellenJ In
town location. Call992·3023.

. Route 33. north of Pomeroy.
Lorge· lots. Call 992·7-479.

posture. Plenty of water.
Could occomodote 50 plus cat-

VA. No money down {eligible
veterans). FHA . As low at 3
per cent down (non-vet,.rans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., n E.

nard. I year old. Gentle.
N..ds home In country with
room to run. $100. 992-7819 or

young. · paint. New tires. Carpeting,
V-8 auto. 992-7876.
.
MALE CAT, gray and white, 1'n7 DODGE VAN 6 cyl. A.T.,
short hair , 985 -43..C8 or P.S., P.B., AM-FM stereo
992·7680. MiniatUre collie, cassette. Customized Interior.
female. young , very nice. Low mllooge. $3800. 949·2621 .
992·206-t or 992-7853. Female
cat, gray. with while , young. 1'179 FORD F-150 4x4. P.S..
Bassett beagle, female , 6 to 8 P.B., auto., topper . 985-..c339.
mo . old . 992· 78S3 or 992-7680.
1976 FORO VAN Econollne
THREE DACHSUND puppies. 100. Low mil.age, good tires,
Excellent condition. Suggested
m -3100.
retail , $3600. Flnt come, first
serve, S3000 . Ingels Furniture.
Middleport.
For Rent

992· 543A .
9ll ROLLING ACRES of good

I WILL OFFER FOR SALE AT
10:00 AM . MAY 5TH, 1979, AT
THE OFFICE OF CROW. CltOW
&amp; PORTER . ATTORNEYS ,
POMEROV ,
OHIO.
THE
m -369:..:1:.....- - - - , - - GERALD 0 . VIOLET REAL
1975 HONDA 175 Elsinore. ESTATE LOCATED IN TUPf'EIIS
New tires. chain ond sprocket. PLAINS. OHIO. TWO HOUSES
ON REAL ESTATE. PROPERTY
Ex(:allent condition. 7.42·31 ~ APPRAISED AT $20,000 AND
TO Ill' SOLD TO TH1 HIGHEST
BIDDER. PROPERTY IN EX·
Real Estate for Sale CELLENT
LOCATION AND QN.
FARM FOR Sole. Houae, 2 . LY TWENTY MINUTES FllOM
PARKERSBURG , WV . THE
born1, troller. large pond. 10
RIGHT IS RESERVED BY THE E)(·
acres or 82 acres , 742-2566 .
ECUTOII TO REJECT ANY AND
31J, qcres In Pomeroy . .SE.clud·
All BIDS . FOR INFORMATION
ed wooded ~roo 0r1 lop of hill .
CALL VIRGIL ROUSH (614)
Overlooks river. Water, elec91!5-3379 OR FRED W . CROW
tric available. 992·3886.
(614} m -26'12.
REAL ~STATE Loans. Purchase
TWO STORY 3 bedroom llouH .
and refinance. 30 year terms , ·100 x 150 h . lot. Excellent

I HAVE DR. GHOTE

Business Seroices

aond,

AKC REGISTERED malo St. Ber-

949-2160.

3 ·AND 4 8M furnish.d and un,
furnished
opts .
Phone

LIMESTONE.

grovel. ca lcium chloride, fer·
tlliter, dog food . and all types
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
inc., E. Main St. , Pomeroy,

m -3A57.

992-21'12.
GiveAway
RISING STAR Kennels , boar·
ding
and grooming, oil
PUPPIES, 8 weeks old, female ,
breeds. Cheshire, 307-0292.
3 · blonde with white mark·
ings , 3 · brown with some ' HOOF HOLLOW. EnQIIsh and
black, will be med. size. Ter·
rior beagle, female, blond
with o4 white feet and blote, I
or 2 years old. Pup, 3 ar -&lt;4
months old, all blond, female.
992·7853 or 992·7680. Humane

COAL .

Real Estate for Sale

TWO STORY 3 becboom frame
house
in
Mid·dleport.

COUNTRY M061LE Home Pork.

Help Wanted
IMMEDIATE

~5

phonograph

l'tlone 992-2150

NOTICE

For Sale

..

TPIPrision
ViP.Wifl{!

FuturH Syncnc•t•. In c.

5 :30-Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Sanford &amp; Son· 8; E lee. Co. 20; ',
Mary 1y ler Moore 10; Odd ·
Couple IS; Lucy Show 17; Doctor ,
Who 33.
6 :oo-News 3,8, 10,13,15; ABC News
6; Andy Griffith 17; VIlla Alegre
20.
6 : 30-NB C News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 6, 10;
My Th ree Sons 17; Over Easy 20.
7 :0Q- Cross . Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6,13 ; Marty Robbins'
Spolllghl 8; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Carol Burnett 17; Dick Cavett 20; Wild
World of Animals 33 .
7 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers :
6; Ma lc h Game . PM 8; S100,000 ·
Name Tha t Tune 10; Nashville ·
On the Road 13; Dolly lS; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8:0D-Hi ghcllffe Manor 3, 15; Mork &amp;
Mindy 6, 13; Time Express 6, 10; :
NOva 20.33; Movie "Living It
Up" 17 .
8:30--Movle " The Castaways on : ·
Gill igan' s Is ." 3,1S; Mark &amp;
Mindy 6, 13.
9 :0D-Ike 6,13; .Hawaii Flve-0 8.10;
World. 20,33.
10:oo-Susan Anton 3, 15; Barnaby .
Jones

8, 10;

Commanders

17 ; ·

News 20; Footsteps 33 . .
"
ll ;QO-News · 3,8, 10,13,15; Hogan ' s ·
Heroes 17 ; Best of Groucho 20;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3.15; Starsky
fl. Hutch 6, 13; Mash 8; ABC News
33; Movie" Inherit the Wind" 10; .
Movie " The Black Shield of
Falworth~' 17.
12 :05-McCioud 8; 12 :40-Mannlx
6,13 ; 1:0D-Tomorrow 3; News ,
IS.
1:25-Baseball 17 ; 1:50-News 1~ ; ·
3: S5-News 17 ; 4 :15-12 O'Clock
High .
1

�M~Y

THURSDAY,

'

FRIDAY, MAY 4th

3rd

SAlURDAY, MAY 5th

9:30. to 8- P.M.

9:30 to 5 P.M.

9:30 to 5 P.M.

MEN'S SHORT SlfEVE ·

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS

KNIT SHIRTS

· Small (306) ; medium (38-.01; lerge (~2-«1; exIra larile (46 ·48) and super large sizes. Excelle~l
styles and color selection. Tank tops Included '"
this sate.

MEN'S 15.95 KNIT SHIRTS ........ '5.09
MEN'S 17.95 KNIT SHIRTS ........ '6.79
MEN'S 18.95 KNIT SHIRTS ........ 17.59
MEN'S 110,95 KNIT SHIRTS ....... '9.29

MENTAL HEALTH MONTH DECLARED - Governor James A.
Rhodes has proclaimed May as Mental Health Month for Southeastern
Ohio. Shown with the chief executive as he signs the proclamation are,
left to right, Mark Johnson, center administrator, Gallia.Jackson-Meigs
Community Health Center; Maxihe Plununer, executive director, 648
Board· Tom Gramley, center director, Gallia.Jackson-Meigs CommunitY Mental Health Center; and Annette Levine, chainnan, 648 Board,

SUMMER TOPS
-Famous Perfect Sleeper Construction.
-Durable hotel tick.
-Twin, full and queen sizes.

continued layoffs on Tuesday, second·
ranked Bethlehem Steel Corp.
recalled about 350 workers furloughed
at its Johnstown plant.
"We anticipate our operations will
be back to near normal by the
beginning of next week," said a
Bethlehem spokesman.
"Improvement in truck traffic is

ONLY ~ggoo Each Piece
(Queen sold in sets only)

MAY SAI.f
JACKSON AND PERKINS

evident. "

National Steel Corp., which laid off

ROSE BUSHES

:! 000 workers in Weirton, W.Va., has

n~t decided when to recall its
employees, a spokesman said. "It's
still going to take several days,
perhaps as much as a week to
determine ·the status," he added.

Nationwise
(Continued fror/1 page I)
wben that meeting will be held
and there is no end in sight to tbe
pre.,&lt;;ummit negotiations. The
agreement to wrap up major
provisions of the treaty before
Carter and Brezhnev meet was
disclosed Tuesday at the State
Department by an Official who
asked not to be identified.

Bill sponsored
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
rising cost of gi!Boline and inflation generally have helped
produce a bill easing restrictions
on certain school district expense
accounts.
Rep. Ronald H. James, DProctorville, wants to lift t(Je
present $600-a-year limit on
traveling expenses of superin·
tendefits and assistant superln·
tendents. Tll'e House went along
116-7 with his bill Tuesday, sending it to the Senate.
Under the proposal, local
school boards could fix their own
ceilings,

Turkey kill given
Hunters killed 62 wUd turkeys
Monday on the opening day of
Ohio's 1979 gobbler season, state
Wildlife Division officials said.
The figure was the highest
opening day total since the start
of modern turkey hunting In the
state in 1966. Last year;s opening
day kill was 28. Last season's
\w()-week total w~ 147.
Hocking County had the highest
total of opening day gobblers
bagged with 11. Nine turkeys
were killed in Vinton County and
five each in Carroll, Pike and
Scioto counties.
.
Turkeys were taken 1n 15 of the
18 counties where spring gobbler
hunting is permitted.
L----------....1

MAYOR'SCOURT
Four defendants were fined and a
fifth forfeited a bond in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Michael J. Meldau, 18,
Racine, $25 and costs, illegal license
plates; George A. McDaniel , 51,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner; Roy F. Boggs, 45,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner, · and Andy Doczi , 18,
Middleport, $225 and costs and three ·
days in jail, driving while intoxicated.
Forfeiting a $25 bond posted on a
VETERANS MEMORIAL
charge of spinning tires was Duane L.
Veterans
Memorial Ho~pital
Sidders, 32, Middleport.
Admitted-Mary Yoho, Coolville.
Two defendants were fmed $300 and
Discharged-None.
costs each in the court o£ Pomeroy
Mayor Cllll'ence Andrews Tuesday
Christopher Columbus was awarded
night.
They are Charles Tyree, Pomeroy . on a contract by King Ferdinand and
II!IBBult charges and John Partlow, Queen Isabella or Spain to seek a
Pomeroy, contributing to the passage to the east by sailing
westward in 1492.
delinquency of a minor .

Excellent Mother's Day gift, easy to
. plant, quick to grow, good selection of
varieties.
1

4.25
5.45
'5.95
'6.45
1

F'H!Id
Redi
Redi
Redi

Grown Roses .............'3.39
Plant Roses .............. '4.29
Plant Roses ............. J4.79
Plant
.............. '5.19
Regular '3.49

., ..

60 INCH WIDTH POLYESTER
Solid colors.
Limited quantity ,

· without charge.

OHIO POWER COMPANY

REG. $6 .00,. ......... SALES 5.09
REG. S 7. JO ........... SALES 5.99
REG. S 8.00 ........... SALES 6.79
REG, S 9,00 ........... SALES 7.69
REG. S1G.OO. ••• •• ••••• SALES 8.49
REG. $111)(), •• ,, e,, ,, • SALES 9.39
REG. S13. \1 ••• ,. ••••,. SALE 510.99

WAREHOUSE

WEBER
BARBECUE KEmES
· ~Lasts

for years and years.
_,Heavy construction.
A NICE GIFT FOR MOM!

20% OFF
CORONADO '1.49.

PLACE MATS
WOMEN'S HALTER TOPS-

You'll find all sizes in our selection of camera film, black and while, and
color. Still cameras, Instant cameras, movie cameras. Stock up now on
your needs.

-3 Styles
-one size fits all.
REG. $2.50 ..•••••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••. •...•..• SALE $2.09

REG. S3.00·······························••••••••••••SALE $2.59

SALE PRICES

REG. $3.•50 ·····••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.• ••••••SALE $2.99

'1.49 RED HEART

Sale Pierced Earrings

WINTUK YARN
4 ply hand knitting yarn, 3'12 ounce
skeins, big selection of colors. save
Thursday, Friday and Saturday.

$119

-Large rack of many styles.
-Gold or sliver.
Reg. S2.00 pair.

SALE 2 PAIRS FOR $2.88

SKEIN

EUREKA$109.90

COSMETIC SALE

UPRIGHT SWEEPER WllH TOOLS

Save 20 per cent on Revlon nail enamels
and lipsticks.

$89.95 Eureka sweeper with iight, six way height adjust ment plus$19. 95 deluxe set of attachments.

SALE PRICE

You Save
$39.95

20% QFF

SALE PRICES

SAVE

BOYS JEANS

MEN'S WRANGLER
$}595

Regular, slim and husky, Sizes 8 to 20
pius student sizes 26 to 30 waist Blue
denims, cotton twills, cotton polyester
blends. Our entire stock included for
this sale.

BOYS 17.95 JEANS .. .. ............... '6.99
BOYS '9.95 JEANS ................... '8.79
BOYS 11o.95 JEANS .... : ............. '9.59
BOYS 111.95 JEANS ................ '10.49
SPECIAL GROUP

WOMEN'S
SLEEPWEAR

•

J

e

- VOL XXVIII NO. 14

' TAKING PART in the chorus line will be, 1-r,
Carrie Guinther, Teri Crouch, Sonja Hill, Cindy War·
den, Meg Amberger, Darla Evans and Paula· Wolfe.

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The variety show will be staged Friday at Southern.
High School at 8 p. m. The show, entitled "Yesterday;
Today and Tomorrow", will feature dances of tbe 50'~ •
disco and future dances.

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MAY 3, 1979

ors.

-S izesS,M, L, XL.

Kodak and Polaroid Film

· lh PRICE

Our community cmrununicati0f1S program offers timely presentations

.
•

- Knit and poly·collon .
- Large selection of styles and col·

Size 12"X18", solid colors,
reversible, washable.

Gowns, Robes, Paiamas,
Broken sizes.

dealing with different aspects of the energy situation. To schedule a
program for your group, just call 992-3786. All presentations are

•''

evening perfonnance is for the general public. Ad·
mission il! $1.50 for adults and 75 cents for students.
Directors are Valerie Jolmson and Sandra Hill. Piclured back to front are Beth Huffman, Della Johnson,
Peggy Neigler, Traci McGraw, Julie Gibbs, Kim
Dllgan and Tina Gibbs.

--·-·-~~-·

.Uncertainty leads to layoffs
CLEVELAND (AP) - Uncertainty
over the strike by steel-hauling truck
drivers has continued, with about
1,000 steel industry workers laid off in
: northeastern Ohio despite the vote to
· : end the walkout.
·
· Randy Woods, a spokesman for
- Republic Steel Corp., which laid off
the 1,000 workers in the Cleveland
lll'ea, said Republic continued to be
adversely affected by the strike. He
. said it was not known when the
· workers would be called back to work .
: 1n Youngstown, where steel haulers
. had voted against returning to work,
· the strike continued. However, no
: incidents were reported Tuesday. ·
' 'The Warren-Youngstown area is
just flat ," said Hugh Tobin, a traffic
manager for Republic .
A decision to call off the month-long
nationwide strike was made Sunday.
. The walkout by many of the union's
. 17,000 Steel haulers began April I over
· a proposed nati!Jnal contract for the
. trucking industry.
· "There's a lot of flatbeds out there,"
: said Mel Packer, Pittsburgh
. organizer for the dissident Teamsters
for a Democratic Union , which
spearheaded the strike.
"As far as we know, they're running
pretty heavily in Canton, Cleveland,
Gary
and
Pittsburgh.
But
Youngstown is down and holding
tight," he said.
The strike, originally aimed at
trucking companies, turned into a
union dispute when steel haulers
demanded a separate vote on' the
t;011tract they share with 300,000
general freight hauler~.
The union has refused to allow the
steel haulers a separate vote on the
contract . But steel haulers won other
demands, and most of them have
.agreed to give up the strike.
1n Pittsburgh , U.S. Steel Corp.
Chairman David Roderick told
stockholders Tuesday, " We have
oontinued to produce throughout the
strike, but we have probably lost
250,000 to 300,000 tons of shipments in
April."
Roderick said he expected the
cmnpany to make up the shipping
deficit by the end o!,the quarter.
Although most steelmakers

CHORUS UNE - This chorus line along with
,_ another group will be dancing to "Shake Yol!l' Groove
'· Thing" at a variety show.to be $aged at Southern High
School Friday at 8 p. !II· The show will be presented to
tbe students in tbe grade school Friday morning and
tbe students at the high school in the "afternoon. The

BLUE JEANS
14 ounce, no fault pre-washed blue denim,
true western cut, straight leg or boot flare
styles. Sizes 28 to 42 waist, lengths 30 to 36.

SPECIAL
PRICE

.WOMEN'S
DRESSES
Our entire stock of summer
dresses is· included in this
sale. Buy now for Mother's
Day! Junior, missy and half
· sizes.

FROM

ONLY

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Jones upset
·.•with ruling
Meigs County Commissioner
. Richard Jones is apparently upset
..,. with the recent ban placed upon the
., TupPers Plains area by the Ohio EPA.
.. Jones, president of the board of Meigs
County commissioners,. issued the
following statement' during Tuesday's
. regular commission meeting.
' "The connection ban imposed upon
the Tuppers Plains area by the OEPA
is a serious blow to the growth of the
Tuppers Plains community. ·
''Once again the EPA has shown a
lack ol· sensitivity to the people of a
small commmunity by coming forth
with an order that is impossible to
comply with instead of offering a plan
of assistance.
"For the past few years the Tuppers
·Plains Community has been
victiJnized . by the EPA ban on
tommerclal building. 'rhey have now
come forward with a ban that will
prevent home construction in one of
the most desirous building areas in
'Meigs County.'· . . \
,~ "This, it would seflm, makes it
perfectly clear that the Tuppers
Plains community Is being used by
.EPA to set an example.
. "The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners would be the first to
· agree that there is a need for a
sanitary sewage facility in this
community. However, it only takes
conunon sense to realize that the
tremendous amount o£ money that
would be needed for such a project
would be prohibitive for the citizens of
·this community.
"The Meigs County Commissioners
will meet with their attorney to
discuss the possibility of appealing
this order and in addition are hopeful
of arranging an open meeting with the
~itizens living within the proposed

V by Harold Clark; Vaughan's Cardinal Market by Russell Starcher;
Gaul's Market by Mark Hall; Radio
Mid-Porn by Daniels; Newell's
Sunoco by Gregory Vance Ginther;
Dave Grindstaff by Doug Bell;
Gerald Simpson by James Smth;
Ridenciur's TV by Ronnie Masters;
Ridenour's Supply by Lowell
Ridenour; The Dally Sentinel by Dorset Thomas; Krogers by Rhonda
Reuter; G. and J. Auto Parts by
Robin Carter; Dave Grindstaff by
Brian Grindstaff; Fannrs Bank and
Savirlgll 'Cb. by Chris Yeauger;
Powell's Super Valu by Tqm Hawley
and The Jones Boys by David Riggs.

Pair charged in car case
. Carl · R. Hysell, Pomeroy Police
officer reports that John E. Partlow,
20, Rt.'3, Pomeroy, and a 17 year old
Itt. 1, Middleport youth have been
charged in the unauthorized use of a
IJ)Otor vehicle belonging to Tommy
. ~alters, Middleport.
Walters' car which was parked on
Pomeroy's lower parking lot and was
taken around 1 a.m. Sunday. The
vehicle was found a few hours Ia ter
wreCked and abandoned on the Flood
Road by Pomeroy Police Captain
George Hicks. it had heen stripped o£
1\;tapeplayer and an amplifier. .
Through
the
cooperative
investigation of the Pomeroy,
Middleport Police Departments, tne
Meigs County Sherif£'s department
1\911isted by BCI agent Herrnan Henry,
tll!! suspects wer~ charged m the
liicldent Wednesday.
Partlow appeared before Mayor·
Clarence Andrews on contributing
j.

charges and was fined .$300 and costs.
On Wednesday, Partlow appeared
before county court Judge . Charles
Knight, on a charge of unauthor~zed
use of a motor vehicle, and was fmed
$100 and sentenced to 30 days
confinement. In adlli.tion, he ·has to
make restitution to Walters for
damage to the vehicle.
..
The juvenile has been charged m
the Meigs County Juvenile Court and
will appear later before Judge Robert
Buck.

'

FUNDS DISTRmUTED
State Auditor Thomas E; Ferguson's
office announced tbe May, )979
distribution of $34,651,104 in Aid to
Dependent Children to 458,402
recipients in Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs
County received $65,099 'fOr 1,180
recipients.

.....

....

~

'r·:·

district so that the. matter can be £ully
a ~red and pubhc mpu t can be
received" Jones concluded.
County engineer , Wesley Buehl,
presented an estimate on \he cost of
replacing a bridge on county road 20
in Salisbury Township.
The board accepted his estimate
and authorized the engineer to
proceed with the project. Buehl also
discussed the eminent danger from
the .rocks behind Mrs. Phillip
Meinhart's residence on Spring Ave.
Several suggestions were made as to
how the problem could be alleviated
but no solution was reached .
Jack Crisp, director of the Leading
Creek Watershed Association and
Forest Acres Park met with the board
to discuss the future of the park and to
request that the county take over its
operation.
When asked what would happen if
the county did not take over the park
Crisp replied that it would eventually
have to close.
The commissioners stated they
would seek the opinion of the
prosecutor as to the legality of the
county operating the park .
A letter was received from Judge
John C. Bacon stating that the space
now being occupied by ·the
Community Action Agency will have
to be vacated by June 1, of this year,
in order to provide additional court
space.
The commissioners signed a
proclamation declaring May 12, as
Hike-Bike day £or retarded citizens in
'Meigs County and appointed Chester
Wells to the SEOEMS board o£
trustees.
Attending were Jones, Henry Wells,
and Chester Wells, commissioners
Mary
Hobstetter,
clerk.
and

Employers recognized
: Framed certificates of appreciation
1!'ere presented employers of students
Tueaday night when tbe Meigs High
S&lt;:hool Chapter of the Distributive
Education Clubs of America held its
. annual employer-employe banquet at
tbe Meigs Inn.
·· Jeff Daniels, president, was in
charge of the short program with
DaVid Riggs, vice president, giving
tbe D.E.C.A. creed. Introduced was
blgh school principal James DiehL
Buslneases receiving certificates of
appreciation from studenls who were
employed at tbe respective locations
lnclulled: Murphy's Mart by Debbie
Jewett; Krogers by Dale Riffle : Mark

Men face
charges ·
~. ,.,~_ ;;.

'

~ ·~

-:;·

lt

/'

r

.

Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reports the arrest of Marvin
Cremeans, 23, Rt.l , Reedsville and
Eve rett Rodney Cremeans, 32,
Coolville, on charges of petty theft.
The pair were picked up ea'rly
Wednesday morning by Sgt. Randy
Forbes after investigation of the theft
of a microphone and 22 Derringer
from the res iden ce o£ Freda
Buchanan, Long Bottom, late
Tuesday evening.
Mrs . Buchanan filed charges
Wednesday. Everett R. Cremeans
posted bond and was released .
Marvin Cremeans remains in jail
lieu, of hond . Hearings will be held
later in county court.
The sheriff's department receiv.ed
two accident reports, one involving a
deer.
Tuesday at 9 p.m. on SR 124 Mark
Coughenour, 26, Rt. I, Langsville, was
traveling east when a deer ran into the
path of his vehicle . The deer was not'
killed. .
'
,
Wednesday at 2 p.m. on SR 124 the
windshield of a ca r owned by Oliver
Mullins, Dexter, was broken by a rock
thrown up from the roadway or from a
passing truck . The incident is under

u;

SIGN PROCLAMATION- May is being declared
Mental Health Month throughout tbe nation and the
Meigs Cotinty Commissioners, in a .proclamation
signed Wednesday, saluted the citizens of Meigs County who dedicate their lives and their talents to provide
hope for tbe 'mentally lU in the community. The
proclamation signed ~Y Richard E. Jones, president of
tbe board, noted "mental health strikes 15 percent of
the population, affectin~ as manv as 32 million

Americans across tbe nation." Th~ boilrd of the Gallia .
Jackson· Meigs Community Mental Health Center and
its staff join with the commissioners in urging aU
residents of Meigs County to lend their support in the
fight against mental illness. Pictured are, seated, 1-r,
Henry· Wells, Richard Jones and Chester Wells, commissioners; standlng, John Brammer, clinic chief of
the Community Mental Health ~nter.

Refund warranted
WASHING TON ( AP) - Seven
major oil companies accused of
overcharging customers for crude oil
should have to refund the nearly $1.7
billion to consumers or the federal
treasury, says the Department of
Energy.
·
The companies were accused by the
department Wednesday of violating
federal price controls on crude oil,
primarily by incorrectly classifying
low-priced oil so it could be sold at a
higher price.
Paul BloQm, special Energy
Department counsel {or compliance,
told a news conference that the
complaints were administrative and
did not involve charges of criminal
activity.
·
He said the department would seek
to have the alleged overcharges
refunded io consumers whose claims
can be identi£ied or to · the federal
treasury as a last resort.
The latest complaints bring to ahout
$3.5 billion the amount alleged to have ·
been overcharged by refiners during

ADDmONALHOURS
Additional hours will be maintained · ·
Friday and Saturday by the Meigs '
County Board of Elections in order to ·
register all possible voters for the
June~ primary elections.
,
Besides being open from 9 a.m, to 4 ,
p.m. on Friday the board located In :
Saturday through Monday :
the Masonic Temple building ·
A chance of showers Saturday and Pomeroy, wUI be open from 6 to g .
Monday . Fair Sunday. Overnight lows p.m. and on Saturday the office wUI '
in the 40s . Dally highs in the 60s.
beopenfrom9a.m. to9p.m.
.

Weather

the past 51f, years, he said. The
complaints are the result of audits of
the major refiners to check their
co mpliance with £eder al pri ce ·
regulation:\ from August 1973 through
March 1979.
The Energy Department's proposed
orders see.k the highest refund £rom
Ail Evening of Theatre, consisting
Texaco at $888.3 million ; Gulf Oil of four one-act dramas, will be
followed with $577.9 million.
presented Friday, May 4, at Meigs
The orders also seek $101.6 miilion High School by members of the junior
£rom Standard Oil of Cali£ornia, $42 and senior classes. The perfonnance
million from Atlantic Richfield and ends more. than a month's prepara•$29 million from Marathon Oil.
tion for 50 M.H.S. students.
Other refunds sought include : $24.1
Plays to be preSented include
million £rom Standard Oil of Indiana "What
Seems to be the PrOblem?",
and $16.9 million from Standard Oil of set in a typical high school featuring
Ohio.
typical students; "So the Jury was
The allegations were either denied
Hung",
pits one, lone male jury
by the companies or they had no
foreman
against eleven female jury
immediate comment.
members - with predltable results ;
"Gross Encounters of the Worst

Plays slated Friday

PREDICJ'S VICTORY
YORK (AP) - Sen.
Howard H. llalter Jr. predicted
Wednesday thai he woald win the
Republican presidential
nomination, and thai former
Ca!Homla Gov. Ronald Reagan
would be "my principal com·
pelilor In the home sli'elcb" lor
tbe GOP nom.bullloo.
"This II pro~bly lhe besl opporlanltyu the Republicans ~ve
luld slDce 1952 to gel not only the
presldentlal office but also win
control of the Senate," the Ten·
nessee RepubliCDD told the an·
nual &lt;onference of the American
Society oiNewspaper Editors.

King" - an obvious adaptation of, ~
''Close Encounters of tbe Fint Kind'' :
- features an lnter-planatary space ·
traveler, a spaced-()Ut grandmother;
and a trio of far-out analysts, and
"Keep Your Halo Straight" haa .:
moral "conscience" who keepe til(
hero out of trouble - but in hot water. ·
Admission will be $1 for atudenta
and 1).50 for adults. Curtain tlme II 8
p.m.
Co-directors for tbe plays are CeU
McCoy, Dorothy Oliver and Carin
Bailey.

NEW

NOFINESINMAY
May is "fine-free month" at the
Pomeroy and Middleport Ubraries.
"Bring back your overdue books, no
matter how long you've had them,"
said librarian Ellen Bell, "and there
will be no flne.lf we're not open when
you come, leave the books in the
bOxes you ~I find in front of Mid·
dleport Library and to the left of the
;:;:;:;:;:;:: :::::::;:;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:;:~:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
front door at Pomeroy."
After May 31, tne libraries plan to
begin preparations to go to court In School funds received
order to get back their missing books.
"We don't want to do that," comApril State Schol Foundation submented library assistant Agnes Dlx· · sidY: payments totaled $71,485,929.26
on," but too many good books have to 610 Ohio city, exempted village and
not come back."
local school district and 87 county
boards of education, State Auditor
Thomas E..Ferguson reported today. ·
The three local districts in Meigs
County received a total of $257,725.49
including $72,086.94 for Eastern;
SQUAOCAI.I.EO
$123,814.36 for Meigs and $61,824.19
The Pomeroy Emergency SquRd for Southern.
·
was ca lled I~ Village Hall ~t I :33 a.m.
In addition, the Meigs County Boad
Thursday for Tony Stevens who had of Education received a direct allotfallen. He was !Jtken to Veterans ment of 118,565.68.
Meu]oria l Hospital.

.,

investiga tion .

I

I\

'
H

PLAYS SCHEDULED - Four one~ct plays will be presented Friday
evening at Meigs High SchooL The first performance begins at 8 p. m.
Cast members are, front row, lefl to right, Sara Diddle, Ruth AJling, Debbie Danner, Charlene Goegleln, Margo Martin, Carrie Bearhs, John
Jacobs. Second row, I tor, Dollie Rousey, Carol Wilkes, Vicki Blankenship, Bob Seelig, Jody Sargeant, Keith Krautter, Randy Arnold. Third
r.ow, I tor, Jo McKinney, Julie Kitchen, Kevtn KJng, Lori Wood, Fhonda
Wod, Marc Moore. Fourth row, ltor, KJmSeth, Lynetta Whittington, Lori
KJoes, Tracey Jeffers, Kellie Rought, Anita Musser, Anna Wiles. Fifth
row,l .to r, Rick Blaettnar, Linda 'Donahue, Chris Wood, Todd Morr~on.
Not pictured are Greg Becker, Cliff Kennedy, Dan "Edwarda, Chrl5 Eber·
sbaugh, Lee Lewis, Cinrty Haggy, Rhonda Snider, 'Kathy Qulvey, Dave
Thornton, Robin Southern, Rick Hovatter, Shari Milch, Eric Scites and
Mark Riggs.,.
,.,

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="816">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11468">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50637">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50636">
              <text>May 2, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2009">
      <name>calaway</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
