<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15826" 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/15826?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T04:48:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48948">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/dce461aa56cf2b6e64fa072669da1a8c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4b7f6dc1bca8ea4a506c03fa7c194b37</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50686">
                  <text>&amp;-1beDallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Tuesday, May 22, 1979

.

Six ·Ohio Companies

180 seniors
get diplomas

~
&lt;1

(

!under investigation·
mon stockholcte'rs are. earning on their
investment ," Spratley said.
The office complied informatipn on
Ohio's 13 major utilities, based on
reports filed with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio.
·
None of the state 's seven electric
utilities were mentioned by Spratley.
as having excess returns on equity.
Their returns on equity varied from
6.7 percent by Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric to 12.2 percent for
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric.
. The Consumers' Counsel release
also said that the profits of the 13
major utilities declined three percent
in 1978 compared to 1977 profits. The
largest decline was recorded by
Columblis &amp; Southern, which shol"ed
a 27 percent decrease compared to
1977 profits.
But Columbia Gas showed a 28
per ce nt increase in profits, the
Consumers' Counsel office said, and
all te lephone companies showed an
increase in profits, with · Cincinnati
Bell's the highest at 23 percent.
Spratley said the decline in 1978
profits reflects the profitable year
Ohio utilities had in 1977, with an 18
percent increase in profits, or $133
million over the previous year.
He added that all four of the electric
utilities whose profits declined in 1978
have either received rate increases in
Ule last few months or are now asking
the PUCO for rate hikes.

: . COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP l - The
~Office of the Consumers' Counsel is
:Investigating six Ohi a utility
:e&lt;mpanles to see whether they are
::earning "excess profits."
Consumers' Counsel William A.
:lprailey said if it appears warranted ,
,lie will ask the Governing Board for
:authority to file a complaint against
-cne or more of the companies, asking
"the PUCO to force t.hem w reduce
"Uleir rates.
: Spri'tley said the six companies
include a~ four . major telephone
companies - Ohi o Bell, United
Telephone, General Telephone and
:Cincinnati Bell -and two major gas
:ampanies - Columbia Gas of Ohio
$d East Ohio Gas.
; According to !be figures compiled
py the office and released Monday,
F,;ast Ohio Gas had an 18.1 percent
return on equity in 1978; United
Telephone, a 17.3 percent return ;
Cincinnati Bell, 17 percent ; General
:re.lephone, 15.7 percent; Columbia
yas, 15.6 percent, and Ohio Bell , 13.6
~rcent. .
,
. "These companies are all earning
}tealthy return on equities, a reflection
0! the return that tbe companies' com-

Another pel buy

from

BAKER'S
BUDGET

SHOP

BEAUTIFUL·

PLATFO~M

ROCKERS

$78

READINGSGIVEN
Inspirational
readings were
presented at the recent meeUng of the
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club held
at the home of Mrs. Bertha Parker.
Mrs. Ann Mash, vice president had
charge of the meeUng which opened
with Ml-s. Parker and Mrs. Ruby
Frick singing the theme song.
Readings were "Prayer are Stairs to
·God" by Mrs. Mash, "Sunshine in a
Smile" by Ruby .Frick; "Be Careful
What You Say" by Mrs. Parker who
also read "What Heaven Means to
Me'." ·

Handmade fans were given to each
of the members by Mrs. Parker. Mrs.
Doris Shook and Mrs. Frick were
hostesses. Mrs. Mash Will have the
next m~ting . '

'

l

'

GUEST SPEAKER- Dave Evana, left, Ga!Upolla Attorney, waa the

guest speaker,at the noon luncheon meetinC of the Melgs-Giillia-Maion
Life Underwriters Association held rea!ntly at the Melp IM. With Evans
is Walter Grueser.
'
·

.CLEANS HOUSE- The Meigs County Jaycees "cleaned holl'le" at a
recent Ohio Jaycees' convenUcn held May 11-:IAI at the Dayton ecnventlon
Center. The Meigs C11apter wu represented by Dave Jenkins, past ••
president; Greg Gatrell, president; Cat! Vincent Gheen, Jr., secretary;
Bill Young, J.C.I. senator; Charles Hannahs, Internal director; Dave
FoJt, administrative vice president; Bob Haggy ;' Jim Snider, internal
director; Curt Jones and Pau!Searla, Internal director. The Metp Chapter received plaques for World Series of Membership division n first
place, and statewide triple up award; Top 10 chapter state most new
members a~~ed, ninth place; divlsion.II community actlcn prdgramming
award, second place; top_ thirteen chapters, percent of growth, second
place; top ten chapters, sixth place; Ohio's Number one most improved
~=-r. Pictured with the awards are I .tor, Dave Jenkins, and .Carl

u;

'I·

Area deaths

AGNUM,WJIITE
Agnes M. White, 68, Fourth St.,
Syracuse, died Sunday morning at
Dunbar, W.Va.
Mrs. White was preceded In death
by her parents, ·James and Dora
Jenkin.s DUckworth and her huSband
Robert M. White.
'
She was a member of the SyraCWIC
Presbyterian Church, Syracuse- D. of
A., Syracuse Firemen's Auxiliary,
Pomeroy Senior CltizenB and past of.
fleer of Tri.COunty CB Club.
She Is survived by one son, James
R White, Dunbar, one granddaughter, Mary Beth White, Dunbar,
three brothers, Carl Duckworth,
Zanesville, Millard Duckworth, Huntington and Richard Duckworth of
Syracuse, and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held

'

A special prOgram, directed In par·
ticular to those resldenbl of the
surrounding • trl-c:ounty area who
preaently have an ostomy, as well as
their famllle~ and friends who should
be properly lnfonned on the subject;
will be presented on Thursday
evening at 7:30 at the Medical Shoppe
located at 5211 Jackllon Pike, just West
of Gallipolis in the Spring Valley
Plaza.
Sponsoring this special public
education prograin enUtled, ! '1be
Rights of an Ostomate," Is the Gallla
County Unit ci the American Cancer
Society, In conjwlC.'IIon with both E.
R -Squibb and Sons, Inc., and the
Medical Shoppe.
According to Pat Boyer, ExecuUve
Director of the local Cllncer Society
Unit, a slide presentation will be included In the evening's program,
which will cover many of the
problems an ostomate that his or her
family and friends may face. Aperiod
for dlscUision and a118Werlng of
questions will also be available.
·
The availability rl. such a program
of lnfonnation can be enremely
valuable to the public for a better understanding of ostomates, as well as
beneficial to anyone who has .an
ostQmY, Trained peraonnel, experienced In working with a~tomateS,
will be present to assist In the answering ol questions that may arise.
As a special gu~ for the evening's

Hospital News

OUr bank will be closed, Monday, May

%9, Memorial Day in honor of the men
and women of ·our armed forces who
iuive .served 'Our great country and the
cause of freedom thorugliout the world.
Walk-up teller window
and auto-teller window
Open Friday Evenings s to 7 p.m.

illbeM ,.alionaiBank
,.

..... £b

I

/

.. ,. ,o"_,.,

.,-.;,

. ..........U

.

Member F.D . I.C.

.',

'

•I ,

·-· ~·

Df'p0si t s

lns urf' rl

fo

'd&lt;' 000.00.

'~·. ·

\

·~

.

'

Undenvriters hear Atty.·Evans

wednesdaY at 3 p.m. at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev. Mark McClung of.
flclating. Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may
call at the funeral home anyUme.

\

Mason Life Underwriters AslloclaUon secretary-treasurer, and Walter
held at the Meigs IM.
Grueaer, national commltteerrum,
Evana sp;oke ol his experience as a · I.:adles night will be held at 7 p.m.
life Insurance agent before entering June 13 at the Meigs llln. Tickets may
law school and how It helps him In his be purchaaed from BJll Quickel.
practice.
Roo Toler presented Ideas on how
Evana also said If people Would In- the l!l'Oup could help the cmmunlty by
vest a few hundred dollars in a trust having cl8"ea explaining how In·
tha\ the family of a pei'BOil who die~ surance works, time allotted to life i1A._
would be more able to receive more surance, property and 'ca.sualty, a'cl'\" "'
taJtwill.free benefits than with a simple · cldent and sickness (dlsabUity), and
health.
'
Evana stated "Which would you 1be aiiiiOCiation could provide three
prefer, giving It to the government or hours ol inatnlctlon with Roo Toler as
yourfamllyafterdeath?" .
·supervisor. County chairmen are
Oftlcers elec;ted for next year were, Walter Grueser, Mejga, Bill HUI8ell,
Muon, and Don Thomaa, Gallla.

WAITING

To UNE UP -Julie Byer, Vicky Ebersbach ll!ld Kimberly

ELBERFELD$

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 28

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1979

Wrangler· Kids
doesn't just mean
cowboy anymore

night.
Fined $100 and cOsts each on seven
eounta of theft wu J:loy Jack Neff, 18,
Middleport. Forfe!Ung bonds were
Larry L. Cleland, 30, Langsville, $300
posted on a charge ol driving while In-·
tolticated; Shennan L. Morton 1 Ut
••
~
umont, Tex., $50, dlJorderly manner; James D. Duiglna, 56, Seymour
Ind.,. f25, Improper backing;
&amp;eallnd s. Stewart, 30, Middleport '
$30, assured clear distance.
'

,/

Wll..LOWISLAND, W.Va. (AP)-11
Is not yet clear how construcllcn will
proceed when work resumes on· tbe
Willow Island cooling tower, according to a federal official.
"What they're going tO do and how
they're going ·t,o do it- that's never
been e~tplalned," Stanley Elliott;
director ci West VlrginiB opetatlons
for the. Occupational Safety and
Health Administration, said Tuesd,ay.
Fifty-one construction workers
were killed in April 1978 when
scaffolding broke loose from its
IIIOOi'lngs, dropping the men 168 feet
to their 4~ths .
OSHA reJresentalives -have been
meeting periodically with engineers
frOm Research-Cottrell, the Bound
Brook, N.J., company that is building
the tower, Elliott !lllid.
. He said that 10 days before
resumption·of construction Re!!!arch-

,_

MARIETIA - 1be proposed improvement cl. State Route 338 in Meigs
Cowlty, from the junction of State
Routes 124 and 338 to the new Raven··
swood bridge now under construcilon
'lrill be discussed with Interested per801111 at an Informal session on June 6
at Southern High School.
Glerin A. Smith, District Deputy
Director for District 10 Ohio Departinent ol TransportaUon, &amp;Mounced
.representatives from his department
will be available to discuss
preliminary alternatives from 3-7
p.m. Purpolle of the public session is
to facilitate an e~tchange of In·
fonnaUon between designers and interested citizens which hopefully will
enhance prospects rl. constructing an
Improvement in the best overall ·
public interest.
Funds for the project are expected
to come from Federal Aid funds and

She's absolutely
adorable in our
pastel parfait

sateen pant and
top. Drawstring
tie front pant
has an easy
fitting all
. elastic waist.
Front patch
pockets are

and

Cooling tower work procedures not certain
Cottrell, must inform OSHA of its
intentions and exactly how it will
proceed with construction.
A giant ·hammer-head crane has
been erected at the site to hoist the
concrete and ·other materials to tbe
top of the tower. It will replace the
cathead · system that was partly
blamed by OSHA for the disaster.
"At this point In lime, they have not
told us how they are going to he back"

Auditor Frank g~·ven
:E~~~:!~rt ~:~ ~h:.e::g .a nnexation petition
ill\

l .\.1.1.

the ·scaffolding and cleaning off the
last five-foot layer of concrete - will
take from. one to three months.
•
"That process itseH is a very
dangerous operation," Elliott said.
So far, the major change In

· femin ine picot

trimmelf neck
and armholes
plus a matching
eyelet pocket.
Lt. blue, pink
yellow. Sizes
. S-M-L.

Ohlfo Department of Tral18portaton .
· unds.

,1_,11.

I

l~r
----

We have .many other sty In tops· 1111nts- ahorts lor llttl

boya•nd glrii-C:hlldren•s DeP11rtm111t -21111"'-· 1

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

will be uaed in further development of
plans and In preparation of . the
required Environmental . doc~ent.
After the preparaUon of an ac·
ceptable Envirorunental docwnent, a
Public Hearing will be held.
For further Information or
clarlflcaUon, contact Glenn A. Smith,
OOOT District 10 Deputy Director,
Marletta, Ohio 45750. Telellbone 614·
373.qJ12.

OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATl

MEIGS COUNTY ..• _~~ .
HEAIUNG SLATED - 1be otito i&gt;epartm~nt of Higi!way~ (0001')
.will bold a public hearing on the p~ lrilprovement ol SR 338 In
_ 'Meigs County, June 6. Interested pers0111 are Invited to a.ttend and make
;~ IDY commenl4 pertinent to the project. The map above shows the
11•1

.....
••

school.
·
Thepelitionandmapwillbeon

service.

missioners

~~~:E~~hsLt~;;~~jJ~~~~ ~:~~of~~;twillf:s~~~~~~~tl:g
1g y-nme property

or approva

or

it will next go to · the Racine
Village Councillor final app.r~val

~~~~ Mt~~~:!·:~L~~:::::j
•a} D
·· •

....

111:~ Improvement.

The annexation plan which has
been underway lor two months,

::::

~',·' •,.:·

• _,i'. ....
'··:

...

53.50

the Jake Le~ residence.
'II be
Wingett reports the area w1
served and is included in plans
for the toMJ's sewage system.
Some areas on Route 124 might'

the session to discll88 their interests
The annexation area runs from
or' to provide lnfolinaUon relevant to' ,;.· Yellow Bush following a general

,,
~

A pe~~ion and mR ap toVaillnnex
some lw acres to acme
age
was filed with Meigs County
Auditor Howard Frank Tuesday
afternoon.

~~~~ni~:'::sur:Y~~ ~ . • :~' ;::~~~~ned the petition filed dl~~~~o;.:'~issioners approve,

....""...

PANT
$8.00
TOP

::::
;:::
:':'
·:·;

::

-~

.,

~:~:

j.. ~~4;'§~;E ~~;t~

&lt;J)

dainty eyelet.
Lt. blue, pink
in sizes 4-6X .
Polyester/
cotton tank
top boasts

::;:
':':

·

emon

sure the con~re~ had sufficiently
cured. The scaffolding was anchored
Into the concrete Itself.
A spokesman for ResearchCotrell;
Tom Buonpane, said the company's
chairman had told him not to
commel!~ oli work at the site while a
federal grand jury is investigating the

disaster.
The grand jury, which has •
meeting In Elkins, could return
criminal Indictments against
companies Involved In the work.
ClvU citaUons have been Issued .
against Researc!K:ottrell and two
other companies.

.,:~.,: Trouhl~s seen for pipeJ.iDe

·:·:

tr immed with

Oh Kan Coin Club
meeting Wednesday

construction procedures has been tbe
OSHA cited three. contributing
substitution of the crane for the factors In an earlier report about .the
cathead system. Elliott said be did not disaster: failure to properly anchor
know if there would be any otber the beam sectlo118 · supporting the
major changes.
catheads, Inadequate anchoring cl. the
"All far as the scaffold system Itself, IICaffoldlng system to resist horizontal
it appears to be safe," he said. "That and vertical pressures from beavy
system had been used In many 'other loads, and failure to make tests to be
places many limes."
· ...................................................................................... ... .... ..... ....... ........ .·.·................ .................. .
::::·............·.·········· ·.·.···.·...·.·.·.·.·.·.·,'.·.·.·...·.·.·...·.·.·.·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·················:·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:'·· ...,...................·.····· ...·.··········''''·'''·'·

and proceed with the work, said ,,,,
Elliott. He said the actual pouring :~:~
process is one of the key items to be }

SR 338 project
•
da
h earlng y set

One defendant wa8 fined and .four
others forfeited bonds In the court of
Middleport Mayor Hoffman Monday

Nor NEWHA VEN RUSSELL
the Debbie Russell menUoned In
the report of the homicide story In the
Sunday 'l'llneHlentlnel ·was not Debbie Glbnan RllW!ll·of Fourth St., New
Haven.
·

cises.

e

~-

DANCESA'nJRI)AY
There will be a .round and 11Quare
dance 8atlll'!lay, May .26, at Southern
High School foliowing the &amp;Mual
alumni banquet. There will be a live
band. There is no adlnl.sSion.

Tuesday night waiting to line up to enter the school for graduation exer-

Payne, 1-r, were among the 180 graduates that stood outaide Meig,S High

whatever we choose to do," Miss Dan·
ner obllerved.
Jana Kaye Burson, !llllutatorlan, In
her salutatory address told the
graduates, "We spent the last lOW'
years not only preparing for our
future careers, but also learning
things not necessarily associated with
our careers but equally Important."
"1be main purpose of high school is
to educate studelibl In preparaUon for
life beyond high school, but as an ad·
ded bonus It has helped us to grow
socially."
"I wish good luck to the 18?9
graduates and hope that we never
stop growing and meeting our own
cluillenges In our owit way," she con·
eluded.
Baccalaureate serviceS preceded
the commencement prcgram.
1be Rev. Mark McClung gave the
baccalaureate sermon. Introductl0111 .
were given by John Stout, class
president.
The presentaUon of the clau wu
made by Jlllllell Diehl, Jr., principal,
(Continued on page 14 )

London pool season tickets available

Mayor's Court

Velerui Memorial H01pllal
ADMITTED - Ullie CUmmins
Pomeroy; , Larry Powell, Racine;
The OH Kan Coin Ciub will conduct
Chester r.fundry, Reedsville; Alfred · 118 2IIOth meeting ln the River Boat
Warren, Gallipolis; John FlerninR, room at · the Meigs Branch of the
. Syrcuse; Pearl Ash, PPmeroy; Mary Athens .COunty savings and Loan
Ramey, Pomeroy; Gertrude Johlll · Wednesday, May 23.
Pomeroy; Betty Theiss, Racine.
'
Several out ol town coin dealers will
DlSCHARGED- Nooe.
be preaent to buy, sell or trade coliec~
tors Items. A social hour will precede
the 8 p.m. meeting.
Special and rare eldllblts of earlY ·
American coins bave been promlaed
MEETSWEDNESDAY . ·
for viewing. A coin auctim will be
The Metp Area Hollpesa ABIOcla- held following the meeting; prizes will
. Uon will meet Wednesday, May 23 at be awarded and refreshments served.
the Hysell Run Free Methodlat Edward Bwtett, president, lnvllell
Ch.urch at 7:00 (!..Dl. The Rev. John anyooe Interested In coins or paper
Coffman will be the · guest speaker. money, or· interested In a membership to attend.
The pulic is invited~
·

l. t

Galli

=

program, RomUd Veard, Area
Representative for the Ohio Division,
American Cancer Society, will be
preilent.
All a result of this public education .
p-ogram foc osfomates, It is OOped by
the local Gallla County Unit, that a
nucleus can be formed for an area
osloolate group, according to Mrs.
Boyer.
This special . Thursday evenlng
program Is open to medical persoon~!, including pb}'Siclans, nurses
or anyone Involved In the health'field
who Is interested, along with members of the general public who have
an Interest or concern for this subject.

1 .,

Dav~.- Evans, attorney from BJll Quickel, president, Roo Toler,
po...,, was the speaker at the vice president, Dave Jenkiqs, second
recent meeting ci the ~allla- vice president, Bill Huasell;

Season tickets for Syracuse's Lon· llludents, 75 cents and &lt;OOdren under
don Pool are available at the pool school age, 50 cents.
Swimming lessons will begin June
from 8 a.m.. to 4;30 p.m. or the
residence of pool ·manager Herman 11. Pool rental fee for Parties Ia f25
GARNET L. MOORE
London.
.
per 1wur with a minimum rate of two
Garnet L. Moore, P(llleroy, died . Ttcke~ are · priced as follows: hours.
Monday at her residence.
· Family of two, PI; pilll $3 for each
P091 parties will!Ml held fnm 7:30
'
Mrs. Moore was born Sept. 7, 1913, additional member. Mu:lmum to9:30p.m.
the daughter of the late Salomon and · charge $45. Individual season passes,
Minnie Miller Moore.
$:1AI. Dally rates are Sl.2it for adulbl,
She is survived by her husband,
A'ITENDCHURCH
Robert E. Moore.
MASON
- The Malon Extension
Funeral servlcea will be held Thurs·
Homemakers
Club attended the
day at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with
PROGRAM SET
Muon Saint JORph Catholic Church
the Rev. Floyd Shook officiating.
Burial will he in Beech Grove
~«rieroy Boy Scouts from Troop ~U:::::H~w:·~Cemetery.
249 s Order cl. the Arrow will perfonn Raymond Jabllnak
_ _.~
·•
Friends may call at the funeral aulhenUc Indian dances In· the Mrs
e, .....- • were
Multipurpose rocm ol the Activity y . Laurene Lewia, Mrs. Roberta
homeafter4p.m. Tuesday.
Center at the Galllpolis state In- Ca~
Mrasin~l~~· Mrs.
stltute. Ftank Casto, Cbapter Ad- DaWIOII Mra i
Canooe Jean
visor, and the 10 Boy Scout ' par- Hue! &amp;ruth . ~1.
J.l.~'
tlclpanbl encourage . all per101111 in- .Mrs. Alma :Marm;.n
uou....,,
terested in Indian lore to attend the 7 c8rtwrtght, Mrs. ~ Belcher
Dorothy
p.m., Wednesday, May 23 presen- Matilda Noble, Mrs. Ramona Sy'~
tat!on.
*lcker and Mrs. Sarah Spencer.

Ostomy semina~
slated Thursday

LEST WE FORGET . • I •

BY KATIE CROW
"Our school years, especially the
past four years of high school, have
trained us to have self-discipline,"
Deborah Ellen Darmer, valedictorian
r1. the Meigs High School graduating
class told the 180 graduates of Meigs
High SChool Tuesday night.
Meigs High School WliS the second
class of tile three county high schools
to graduate this spring.
The conunenoement, held in the
Larry Morrison Gym, was filled to
capacity.
Miss Danner, in her address, said,
"Self~lpline Is indispensable at
the present time. We are now setting
our goals for the future and we need to ,
be disciplined to accept our abilities
and set reallatic goals. Then we need
discipline to attain our goals. These
goals set the direction our lives will
take In the future."
Miss Danner told the seniors the
Greek, philosopher, Aristotle, stated
that self~lpline Is the hardest vic·
tory. "Truly, it Is hard to gain, but once gained, It will insure us suceess In

CLEVELAND tAP) - The chair·
man of Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) said
he doubts the .$1 billion oil pipeline
from California to Texas will ever get
off the drawing board.
'"I don't think it's moving fast
enough," Alton W. Whitehouse said
Tuesday. ''Nothing has gone on In the
past lew months that changes my
mind about our decision to cancel the
project."
Sohio said it was dropping fhe plans
for the pipeline from Long Beach,
Calif. to Midland, Tex. March 13. But
Sohio agreed to reconsidet the plan
after various California and federal
agencies promised to help resolve the
problems.
Whitehouse had blamed "endless
government permit procedures,
pending and threatened litigation" as
the reasons for canceling the project.
Tuesday, he said Sohio has received
the promised help. Various bills have
been introduced to grant President
Carter the authority to give the
ne~essary permits and clear some of

the possible litigation against the
pipeline. And, nearly all 700 pennils
. needed for the pl)?tlline have been
granted.
· ..
·
· ·
But Whitehouse said there are still
the fears of lawsuits which could
continue to block the pipeline.
" Everyone has been trying to help
us," he said. HBut we told them at the
time we said we would reconsider
that we could not walt forever." '
Sohlo was expected to make a final
decision within 30 days.
The pipeline was designed to bring
crude oil from the Prudhoe Bay
oilfield in Alaska to refineries In the
East and Midwest ·and save the costs
of shipping the oil through the
Panama Canal.
.
Sohio has been selling more of Its oU
on the West Coast recently because of
the gasoline shortage there.
Whitehouse said several' West Coast
refin'erles were drawing up plans to
convert equipment to handle the high·
sulphur content Alaska oil, rather
than imported oil.

ay progrmn giVen

.
·Drew Webster Post 39, American and in case of rain, the event will be
L ·
·II
egJOn ' WI present a program held at the Pomeroy Legion Hall. The
Monqay, May 28, on Pomeroy's upper event is a community program for all
· parking lot at 9:30 a.m.
Legionalres · and members of the
. Guest Speaker will be Jim Hamp- community.
son, Eighth District vice chairman.
Following the conclusion of the
The program opens with the raising of program, a firing squad will proceed
the flag followed by the National to Beech Grove Cemetery and Sacred
Anthem 'by Meigs 'High Band. In· Heart Cemetery. Dinner for members
vocation will be given by Post will be served at the post home at
Chaplain \Joseph Zwilling.
11 :30 by the ladies auxiliary.
Guests Include Dim Thomas and
The firing squad will go to Chester
Richard Williamson, who will attend lor I :30 p.m. services then to Hemlock
Boys State at Bowling Green Grove Cemetery and ROck Springs
University; Mrs. Grace Pratt, Cemetery.
president of the auxiliary, who wUI
present a readitlg; Mrs. Grace Elch,
Regent for Daughters of American
SAFETY BREAK SCHEDULED
Revolution of Meigs County; who will
A safety break will be held· over
also present a reading ; Sheriff James Memorial
weekend for
Proffitt, Mayor Clar.ence Andrews, trav.elers . by Day
!be
Big
llend C. B.
Gold Star Mothers and World War I Radio Club, Inc., at the
Eastern
Veterans.
High
School
parking
lot.
The Meigs High Band under the
Coffee and soft drinks will be
direction of Randy Hunt will present served
everyone stopping. The
several selections; Lynette Whit· Royal lo
Crown Bottling Co. is
tlngton will sing "Battle Hymn of the providing the soft drinks. The
Republic" accompanied by Lyle Moon
break will start at 6 p, m.
on the drums and CamiUe Swindell on safety
Friday
and will conUDue until 6
the bells; · the Senior Citizens Choir
p.m.
on
Moaday. Club members
will present a number under the will be monitoring
Chauel13 on the
direction of Ira Wolfe accompanied by
rltlzen band radios during the break
Mrs. Hazel Thomson.
A reading will be presented bY period.
Jimmy Parker, the young master of .·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;
ceremonies for Salisbury School's
Ohio Exlended Outleok Friday
latest stage hit.
.through
Sunday: Fair Friday and
James Soulsby, Pomeroy Post·
master. will o(fer solos accompanied Saturday and a chance of showers
or thunderstorms on Suaday. High•
by Mrs. Hazel Thomson.
A salute to dead will he given by the . In the mid 60s to the mid 70s. ·Lows
firing squad followed by taps. '\'he In the 40s Friday, Increasing to the
benediction will be given by Mrs. Paul · &gt;Os by Sunday.
easel. Legion Auxiliary chaplain.
There will be no parade. this· year
If&gt;

CHARLENE WJUTE

CA'l11YBAYL0R

Kyger Creek will graduate
65 seniors Friday evening
Miss Charlene White, daughter ol Society, Scholarship' team, French
Club, Keywanetlell, newspaper staff, ·
glril basketball and volleyball teaml,
and a basketball cheerlMder. She
also served as head majorette and a
the 1979 graduating class at Kyger member ci the band for fOlD' yean.
Creek High School.
·
Here Is the 1979 graduating class
Sixty-live will graduate at 7:30p.m. roll :

Mr. and Mrs. Paul White, Rt. 1,
Cheshire, and Mill Cathy Baylor,
daughter of Mr. and ~- Lee Tyler,
Rl. 1, Galllpolill, are the top seniors In

Friday at the K)tger Creek Football
Stadiwn.
Miss White, the clalls valedictorian,
Is president cl. the NaUonal Honor
Society, member ci the District
Scholarship team 1!1 18?6, 1977 and
1979; secretary-treasurer of the Shop
Club for. two years, junior class
president, and member of the school's
French Club and termis team. She has
been active In 4-H club work. ·
Miss Baylor, class salutatorian, Is a
member of the National Honor

·' .

Glona Peace Amos, Cathy Ann

Baylor, Angela Blazer, Beverly Ann
Brown, Howard Keilh Chamber&amp;,
Bruce Way.-.. Coleman, Nlkl G.
Corf•as. Mark A. Curnulle, Judy Lynn
Darst, Palrlcla Ann Eblin, Timothy
D. Felly, Brenda Kay Fife, SM&gt;dra
!(ay Fife, Bryan K. Gardner, Rick
Gteene . Howard Lee Halley, Sherry
Lee Harrison, Jay L.. Hasklns, Margie
N• cholelle Henry , Btll Harold Hood
aarbara Jea n Hood, David A. Jones:
Rebecca Russell Jones, Kim Dlarie
Kern , Cheryl Lynn Kilfle, Rick Lavne,
(Continued on page 14)
\I

�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wectnesday, May 23, 1979
2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,May 23, 1979

..

Washington today
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Q&gt;rrespoodeot
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate
. resolutions usually are like the ones
· people make on New Year's Day : they
sound good but they aren't binding.
This time , though, the resolution got
results. The Senate's condemnation of
revolutionary justice in Iran has
added a new c001plication ID relations
between the United States and what
was a key ally in the Middle East.
• There may be more to come. There
~eady is pressure in the Senate for
the administration to offer asylum to
lhe depoSed Shah of Iran, branded an
outlaw and sente~ced to death by the
new regime .
·• The resolution the Senate adopted
:last Thursday with no dissent was its
:ilst of the year. They are not laws,
·clnly expressions of Senate opinion on
Qne matter or another.
• But this one hit home, at least in
tehran. It was proposed by Sen.
~acob K. Javits, R-N.Y., and it
lienounced the executioo of more than
· ~ Iranians by order of Isljlrnic
eourts under the new regime. The
"anians retorted by assailing Javits,
lfhd by telling the administration not
tp send its new ambassador to Tehran
as scheduled.
;:While Javits took the lead, the
~lution had 20spoosors, and among
•

them were Sen. Frank Church, Dldaho, chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee, Majotity leader
Robert C. Byrd, D-W .Va ., and
Minority Leader Howard H. Baker
Jr., R-TeM.
On three occasions, the administration has publicly criticized
the sununary trials and executions in
Iran , although less vehemently than
the Senate resolution.
The State Department was
coociliatory oo Monday, urging Iran
to accept the new ambassador in
order to resolve misunderstandings
between the two countries. lronieally,
the administration decided to send a
new envoy to help ease relations with
revolutionary Iran.
State Department spokesman
Kenneth Brown said the United States
still supports the objectives of the new
regime, which he described as
freedom, justice and democratic institutions.
While the administration sought to
smooth things over, Senate lf!iders
said they were glad the resolution
stung the Iranians.
:
.
" It indicates Iran is not insensitive
tQ international reactioo," Byrd said.
" It was meant to touch a raw
nerve," said Baker. ."I hope it
produces a humane and generous
result."

Berry's World

~l

01 1919 Dy NEA In ~

•

.•'

.·

.·

Names. • •
in the news

•;HOLLYWOOD (AP)- Bob Hope is
li9ing on the road again - this time ID
[Nt on a show in the.People's Republic
of China.
·The show will be telecast next
season on NBC.
.Hope will film the show in June ,
principally in Peking and Shanghai.
NBC said Tuesday it would be the first
IIQCh show since the thawing of
relations between China and the
lznited States.
l· China is one of the few countries
flope has never visited:

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - Rock and

roll singer Chuck Berry has pleaded
iflnocent in federal court on three
income tax violations.
Berry was accused in a three&lt;ount
indictment handed down by a federal
grand jury earlier this mooth of
evading taxes and knowingly filing
false individual and corporate tax returns for the year 1973.
U.S. District·Judge James Meredith
oo Tuesday set July 9.as Berry's trial
date. If he is convicted on all three
counts, the singer faces a maximum
':''I'm very excited,'' Hope said. ''It's penalty of up to $20,000 in fines and II
iomething I've wanted to do ever years in prison.
~ce things opened ·up between our
1 OPORTO,
Portugal (AP) Ito countries."
:_•The special will feature Hope as a England's Princess Anne visited port
t,iplcal American tourist seeing the wine makers and drailk a 164-year-old
~untry for the first time. Top Chinese vintage on the first day of an official
l!ittertainers and cultural attractions visit to Portugal.
The priil~ess was shown port cellars
vPn be amoog the highlights.
Tuesday in · ()porto, where the wine
•
%ANci..EMENTE, Calif. (AP) - has been made for four centuries. She
11lrmer President Richard Nixon is was given IOO'liters of a wine made in
~g a new neighbor - old friend 1977, the year of the birth of her son,
Peter.
Q\arles G. "Debe" Rebozo.
Princess Anne was invited to
· ·:owayne Berger of San Clemente
~lty said · Tuesday the Miami Portugal by President Antonio
niillioneire has bought a luxurious Ramalho Eanes, who made a state
hOme next ID the Nixon estate, which ·visit ID Britain last November. It is
is'.one of 50 in a guarded private the first visit by an English princess ID
·Portugal, England's oldest ally, for
cinpound.
.
.;;Rebozo is one of the few people 600 years .
The princess and her husband,
N.b:on has seen regularly since he
r&amp;ligned the presidency in 1974. Capt. Mark Phillips, were to fly to
Bfrger would not say how much the Lisbon today for sightseeing and a
gala dinner at the British Embassy.
t.tme cost.

.,..__
•'

•

Expect more business

TIIEDAILYSENTINEL

..

(USPS 16-la)

DEVOTED T().THE
INTERI!8T OF

•,.

MEI~N

ARJ::A

ROBERT HOEn.JCH
CUy l!dltor .
' DAVIDIIUSJURI&lt;

_._... _,"

.'

'

. •Publlahed doOyuceptSaturdoy by The Ohio
V'Jley ~ ~y- Mullime&lt;lla, lnc.,

til Ccurt st., Pomeroy, Ohio ~789. BIL!ine.u

0111.., Pilon• 191- 21M. Editorial Phone
!IIIWI57.
&amp;erond c1aa po!tage paid at Pomerny, Ohlo.
Nat.lonal adnrtisinJ( repruentatlve, Lendoo

AiNclates, JJOl Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio
44)15.
Subecriptlon rates: Delivered by carTier
wbere available 90 cents per weell. By Motor
Reutt where e~~nieraervn notaVIilable. One
month, $3.90. By mall in Ohio and W. Va., One
Year, t2'1 ·:1!i SlJ: mooths, $14.50; Three mon.
thl, 18.00; touewhere 132.00 year; Six monthl
' $11.00; Thn!e monU., 10.110. Subo&lt;ription pri ce
ln~-BundayT!meli· S.nUneL

'

-E ditorial opinions,
comments

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - The Ohio
Department of Economic and
Community Development expects
tour bus business in Ohio this year ID
be nearly triple what it was last year.
Director James A. Ouerk says an
additional 1,000 tour buses are
expected to travel in Ohio this year.
That compares with 584 buses that
were reported touring the state in
1978.
Duerk says tour bus passengers are
expected to spend more than $9
million in Ohio this year, and he says
overall the travel industry annually
brings $3.2 billion iniD the staie,
making travel Ohio's third largest
industry.

" I 'm worried about my parents. All they ever
do is watch television! ..

'Ohio perspective'
By TOM Glu.EM
in federal aid .
Associated Press 'Writer
The Department of Transportation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohioans is one agency where the loss is most
who already pay more money ID the graphic'.
federal government than Washington
Director David L. Weir, testifying
gives back have one sure way to get last week on his l!m-1981 budget
more funds from Uncle Sam's coffers before the House Finance Committee;
- raise state and local taxes.
explained some examples of how the
That may seem strange - paying state will lose federal funds.
more just ID get back what you've . "The department will have at least
already paid - but it is the dilemma 36 major reconstruction jobs ready for
facing state and local governments sales in the next biennium," he said.
which see federal matching . funds "These projects would require $18.5
waiting to be had. ·
. million in state matching and capture
"To receive any substantial $57 million In federal aid money.
increases in federal aid, Ohio's
"But OIXYr has only $8 million
taxpayers would probably have to available to construct 11 projects," he
accept a higher level of taxation in said.
order to provide the matching funds , Every time Ohioans buy a gallon of
needed ID capll\re more federal gasoline, they pay 11 cents in taxes, 7
dollars, " the Ohio Public Expenditure cents ID the state and 4 cents to the
Q&gt;uncil says.
Federal Aid Highway Fund.
The council, a Columbus taxpayer . Legislation ltl increase the state tax
education group, says federal grants by four cents Is being considered in a
ID state government,' public schools House COOlrnittee.
and local governments in Ohio
In the current biennium alone, Weir
increased by 319 percent in the decade said Ohio is eligible ID $546 million
from 1968 to 1978.
more from the federal fund than the
But last year, when Ohio ranked state will get, just because there is no
seventh nationally in the amount of state money to use for matching
federal aid received· and sixth in dollars.
·
population, the state paid $1.29 for
The normal matching ratio is 20
every Sl returned the federal govern- percent state and 110 percent federal,
ment, the council says.
which means for every $20 dollars
The decision by ·Gov. James A. Ohio pledges toward a highway
Rhodes and legislative leaders ID stick project, the federal government will
ID a no.flew-taxes budget for Ohio provide taO from the fuel tax Ohioans
during the coming biennium means have already paid.
the state will forfeit millions of dollars

Business mirror
·By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Buaioeu Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - While some
Americans worry ahout bigness in
business and mourn what they see as
a loss of individuality, there are
others who claim the seeds of a new
selfreliance are being sown.
Joseph Mancuso is one. From his
encompassing perspective, he sees
able people rebelling against bigness,
peaceably and constructively, . and
asserting and expressing Qlemselves
as entrepreneurs.
It's a celebration, not a wake, says
Mancuso, 38, holder of certain
credentials to make such an

"

assessment: Harvard Business
School, author of seven business
books, teacher, · businessman,
director , entrepreneur.
It is this last.fl&amp;med description that
Mancuso prizes most hlgllly, having
recently founded the Center for
Entreprenurial Management, a
nonprofit organization to develop and
promOte creative management.
Evidence of a growing spirit of risk
taking is all about us, he says. That it
is often overlooked, is to him simply a
fault of perception.
Since 1965, he continues, at least 250
college-level entrepreneurship
courses have been developed, many
on campuses tnat once considered
themselves suppliers of managerial
talent ID establishment companies:
Several entrepreneurial institutions
have sprung up: his own, based in
Worcester, Mass. ; the .
Entrepreneurship Institute, in
Columbus, Ohio; and the School for
Entrepreneurs, in Tarrytown, N.Y.
Mancuso's effoct, which already has
1,000 paid members ($71 a year),

offers "software" such as seminars,

~.·
" J~st a little off the top , please ."

books, tapes and a newsletter at
discount. The seminars are held
mainly in the Wilrcester-Boston area.
While entrepreneurs usually work
for themselves, in Mancuso's view
they may work for others too;
including large companies, If given
the freedoms thelt' personalities
demand. His membership includes
both.
A number of magazines also attest
to the movement. Two were founded
this spring: Inc., for new and small
businesses, claims a circulation of
450,000; Venture claims an initial
circulation of 75,000.
Others include Successful Business,
a year-&lt;&gt;ld quarterly published in
Knoxville, Tenn.; Small Business
Reporter and Business Owner, each
2\2 years old; and the Journal of
Applied Management, folD' years old.
The entrepreneurial base, ihat
Mancuso and others expect will pay
economic dividends lil the 198\m, also
includes a proliferation of seminars
on establishing and managing your
own business.

,,

Washington
By Clarence
Rep.o rt Miller
\

As one who enjoys nature and the
wide open spaces as much as anyone,
I was surprised this past week t.o find
myself and other initial opponents of
the Udall-Anderson version .of the
Alal!ka Wilderness bill being laveled
as linti-enviromnentallsts. I like
green lrtiell, clear water and clean air
as much as · the next person. Just
because I have reservations over the
128·miWon acres the Federal Government chose to set aBide as wilderness
areas does not mean I jllll against
ecology.
Perhaps an explanation of just what
such a designation aa ' 'wilderness
area" means will help to clarify my
position. I feel many people support
the expansion of . our wilderness
areas, without having a full avpreclation of the Issue. As defined by
Congress, a federal wilderness area is
an area where the earth and its community of life are untranuneled by
111811. where man hlmaelf Ia a visitor
who does not remain. No roads, campers, motoriZed veicles or boats are
permitted in such areas; nor are improved campsites, ski lifts, or permanent structures. The only permissible way to get into a wilderness
area is on foot, on horseback, or by
canoe. The percentage of the public
that use and visit existing wilderness
areas is extremely small.
I suspect many people mistakenly
think of wilderness areas and parks
such as Yellowstone and Yosemite,
synonymously. They think of. wilderness areas as recreational lands
easily accessible to the general
publlc. This Ia not usually the case.
Though some of our more accessible

national parks out west do contain
wilderness areas, most of such areas
are by their very · nature, remote,
isolated from the publlc by rugged
terrain and vast distances.
Why then the I'UIII to dealgnate such
vast amounta of acreage in Aluka u
wilderne~~~ areas? For wb01e benefit
are we doing so? The bill's advocates
are of the opinion that unless the8e
lands are so designated they will be
subjected to extensive commercial
exploration and exploitation by oil,
mining and timber Interests, and the
natural beauty of the lands will be lost
forever. Such arguments in my
judgment 1re more emotional than
substantive. Yes suchlands, If left ondesignated, would be open for resource exploration but such exploration
would be selective and would not be
undertaken unless there was a good
basts for doing so. In this time of
serious resource shortages we cannot
afford to rule out potential sources of
supply. Many of the areas in questioo
are believed to contain large mineral,
gas and oil deposita, deposits which
would go a long way toward leasening
our nation's Increasing dependence
on foreign imports to supply these
critical resources.
Though I supported the Alaska
Wlldernesa bill in Its flnal fonn, in my
judgment the blil would have been a
better bill had It been modified to
balance the interests of all parties
concerned. A compromise propoaal to ,
do just that was offered by Represen- ·
tative Dingell, Breau and Huckaby,
but unfortunately failed to receive
sufficient support.

'

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Distention problem
OEM DR. LAMB- I am a 42-yearold WOIIljlll, 5 f~t I, 124 pounds and
I've always had -a pouchy stcmach.
Now I'm distended from under the
breut bone to the bladder area
almost all the time. I exercise
regularly and bicycle but I stili look
quite pregnant.
.
Four years ago I had a' hemorrhoid
operation' and subeequentlv a lower
GI study and was not advt..cd of any
problems. I've been through the
cancer prevention ~~nter and was
told I was In good health.
When I asked about bloating I was
advised that some people are allergic
to some foods but my diet is simple
meat and potatoes - no rich foods. I
probably eat a little more sugar than I
need. My bowel movements are
regular but I do have a gassy system
and I feel nauseated at times.
I have stretch marks that I never
had when I was pregnant. I would be
very interested In yotir opinion and
what course of action you feel I should
take.
DEAR READER - Generalized
distension of the degree you are
describing has to be associated with
the .accumulation of gas in the colon.
It comes from either swallowing air
or the fermentation of incompletely
digested foods and sometimes from
both. About 10 percent of the general
population does suffer from severe
gas difficulties. Everyme has gas except It doesn't accumulate or isn't
trapped in the digestive tube in such a
way to cause the kind or problems you
are describing. ·
I'm sure you eat something .else
besides meat and potatoes. Perhaps
you use milk. A reasonable percentage of the adult population has milk
intolerance because ~y_ can't split

the lact011e sugar In milk. It's a double
sugar and has to be apllt into lllngie
sugars before it can be ._absorbed
throilgh the Intestinal wall and into
the bloodstream.
Anyone having the degree of dlf.
flculty you describe shoulcl see a
epeclalllt in gastroenterology. If you
should liave a food problem such u
milk intolerance, it won't · show
anything at all oo the X ray but your
history of the type of food conaumption and general characteristics will
tell your doctor what the problem
maybe.
To give you more detailed informa·
lion on such proberns, I am sending
you The Health Letter number IHI,
Controlllng Gaseousness. Other
readers who want this Issue can send
50 cents with a long, stamped, self·
addresaed envelope for it. Send your
request to me in care of this
newspaper, P:o . Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
In the meantime, I would suggest
that you eliminate all milk and milk
producta, eliminate coffee, including
llecaffeinated producta, tea,
chocolate and all soda water drinks of
any kind.
I don't want you to stay off of milk
for a long period of time because you
might, develop a calclum deficiency.
Milk and milk producta are our major
source of calcium. It's all right to test
yourself u I have suggested but
please see your doctor for a more
detailed examination and see if he
can help you Identify which foods are
a problem.
U your difficulty should prove to be
milk, there Ia an enzyme called Lect·
Aid that you can add to milk which
may :lolve this problem for you. You
can get more· lnfonnation llbout It
from SugarLo Compatiy;-3540 Atlantic
Avenue, Atlantic City, NJ 08404.

cocoa,

Minority business
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Rep.
Edward J. Or lett says current
programs to help minority businesses
are inadequate and Ohio should form
its own commission to promote such
enterprise in the state.
The Dayton Democrat is spoosoring
a bill to establish the Ohio Minority
Business Development ~ion to
push for establishment and growth of
minority-owned businesses. · ·
"Current funds are available to help
minority business at the gra8s roots
level, but we have to establish a
program which serv.es to alleviate the
.excessive loss rate. and other administrative problems," Orlett told
the House Small Business and
General Business Committee last
week.
· Orlett said the economic opportunity lending program administered by the federal Sn\!lll
Business
Administration has
experienced a loss rate that is
generally unacceptable.
"This failure rate has caused an
overall ~eluctance on the part of
successful black businesses to
participate," he said. "The current
program does not serve to dlatlngulsh
between those entrepreneurs who ·will
succeed' and thoae Which will not."
His legls\atlon Is a "reallatic
attempt to Iring about refonn as to
how Ohio helps its mlnFY buainesses

get started," Orlett said,
Under the bill, the nine-member
commission could loan. money · to
expand or establish minority
businesses if the project Is
economically sound and will increase
employment opportunities.
The colllJIIillslon could loan only up
to 35 percent of the total amount
needed to start or .expand the
enterprise.
Funds for the ·loans would Come
from granta, gifts and contributions
from the federal government,
individuals and public · and private
corporations, as well as from state ·
revenues.
Orlett said the commi8alon staff
would serve as a continual mmltor
and counselor to the businesses.
"The minority entrepreneur must
agree to the input of the Staff u a
cootractual term of the venture
cootract It enters intD with ... (the
commission)," he said. "This Ia
where elisting state and federal programs have tailed In the past."
The monitoring protects the
investment and assists the bwdnesa In
ineeting Its objectives, he said.
"In reality, these two alma · are
analogous u the protection of the
investmmt can best be ena~red by
helping the buainesi aloog," Orlett
said.

Indy 500 could be large field or no field
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - The
welded shut. While other cars had
reality of racing is little more than an during qualifications.
"Nevertheless , many of these used a washer to shrink the size of the
afterthought at the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway today with the previously qualified but bumped car pipe, Ferguson's case was considered
possibility looming of either a 44-car entrants feel that they were deprived flagrant.
Woodward said he filed the suit out
field or no race at all when the of an opportunity to qualify with a
starting time arrives for Sunday's reduced exhaust pipe. If the other 33 of desperation .
entrants agree, we will give them that
Indy soo.
Matters came to a boil Tuesday opportunity. "
Woodward's car was not included
wben car owner Wayne Woodward
because
Ferguson had a second
ftled suit ID halt the $1 million race
qualifying
attempt but failed as his
and the U.S. Auto Club decided to
offer 11 other entrants an opportunity engine died in the final hour of time
IQ qualify their cars in a special trials Sunday. Earlier qualification
runs of Krisiloff and Bigelow also
session Thursday.
Woodward's suit, filed in Marion were disallowed, but theY were able to
County Superior Q&gt;urt and schedUled make the field later after restrictions
for a hearing Thursday, asks the race in the exhaust pipe were removed.
be stop(ied unless his car is reinstated . . Ferguson's qualification run was
Woodward's racer was removed from disallowed Saturday when officials
the lineup after qualifying amid found that the exhaust pipe had been
allegations of cheating on power
restrictions imposed by USAC.
Woodward's car, driven by Dick
Ferguson, was not among the 11
offered an unprecedented chance to
win places in tlie field . All of those
A bases loaded wallt to Jay ders posted a 6-4league mark and 10-6
cars were bwnped from the grid
Burleson gave the Southwestern record overall.
during time trials by faster cars.
North Ga1118 finished with a ~
Any of the cars in the special session Highlanders a 3-2 win over North record to tie Kyger Creek and
Gallla
Monday
evening
and
a
coqualifying faster than the slowest car
championship with Eastern in the Southern for second or third place In
now in the field - placed there by SV
theleague.
·
AC loop standings.
Roger McCluskey at 183.908 - would
North Gallia had taken a 2-1 kad in
Coach
Wayne
Bergdoll's
HlRhlan·
be relegated ID the back of . the
traditional 33-&lt;:ar ijneup.
The offer was made by USAC
President Dick King under a US.(C
competition rule allowing special
rulings "for the wellbeing of
automotive competition." The only
stipulation was that all 33 entrants
already in the race agree in writing to
the extra qualifying round.
Pee Wee baseball action got un- Rangers downed the host Pomeroy
Lindsey Hopkins, owner of the car
derway
last night, and the Syracuse Tigers 1U Monday evening. Seven
that JooMy Parsons has qualified in
team
started
right with a 13-4 victory runs In the last Inning broke up an
the third row, wouldn't speak for his
otherwise clsoe game.
over
host
Letart.
fellow owners, but said: "I'll agree to
Clyde
Sayre
socked
a
·
trlpte
and
it. 1 think it's a temperate, wise single and Barry McCoy cracked two · Roush got the win with Hysell getting a save, They faMed five and
decision.''
·
singles
to
pace
the
winners.
Scott
Mcwalked five. Ulvender and Hysell
King said the action was taken
Phail
got
the
other
Syracuse
hit,
a
each
had two hits for the wiMers.
because the 11 cars involved qualified
double.
.
Chris
Shank took the loss for the
before a USAC bulletin was issued
pitchers
limited
the
Four
Syracuse
Tigers,
but
contributed three hits to
prior ID the final day of time trials hosts to just one lilt, a double by B.
lead
bls
club
In hitting. Shank and
"sUggesting" that intake exhaust Hupp. McCoy, Shawn Cunningham,
Parker
Long
fanned
nine and willked
pipes have a minimum inside
Chris
Baer,
and
Tqdd
llile
shared
the
12
for
the
Tlg~rs.
.
diameter of 1.47 inches. The bumped mound duties for the wlnnen.
Brian
Buffington
and
Otis
Norris
drivers said that amounted to legalJ. Rouslr started on the mound for each had a single for the losers.
izing attempts . to override power
Letart.
Llnescore:
restrictions and put them at a
Unescore:
M
302 207-14 8
competitive disadvantage.
p
03) 130- 6 5
823
00-13
5
s
The special qualifying session,
210
014 I
L
Roush,
Hysell
(6) and Sparks.
which would begin at 10 a.m.
Shank (lp ), Long (6) and S. Hysell.
Thursday, would be wen to the cars
It!
boys
baseball
action;
_
the
Mason
originally qualified by Steve Krisiloff,
Spike Gehlhausen, John Martin, Bill
Vukovich, Dana Carter, Jerry Karl,
AI Loquasto, Tom Bigelow, Joe
Saldana, Joon Mahler and Larry
Cannon. Krisiloff, Gehlhausen,
Bigelow, Saldana and Mahler
qualified in other cars after they were
bumped, thereby openin·g the
possibility of other drivers qualifying
those cars.
King took issue with the rumor that
By Will Grimsley
cheating on power restrictions had
AP
(.:orrespond~;nt
been widespread on both the first and
second weekends of qualifications. He
said those reports were " based _ ,Of P"?Pie, p~ces aod things:
putting blade now ensconced in golf's
largely on ruritors and hearsay." ·
The fmest shtp can toss _and twnble Museum. Some day there may be
" USAC's technical committee, and wander off ~olU'se when it loses another equally eminent club resting
headed by Jack Beckley, are the deft touch of tis skipper, and such beside It - Nancy U!pez' tattered
competent, fair-minded people who IS the sad story of the controversy- "Raggedy Ann ...
know what they are doing," he said. nddled Indisnapohs 500.
"I've had the putter since I was 13,"
"Every wastegate assembly from a
As long as T~y Hulman was alive, says th,e fetching princess of the
qualified car has been inspected and he kept operations on an even keel. women's tour, heading toward new
sealed ..They must be used on race day Sin~ ~is dea~ 18 .months ago, the mooey-winning records. ''The grip is
in the same configuration as was used nation s prerruer auto race has had frayed and the squared palm area has
. . - - - - - - - - - -.......
--'"1 nothing but trouble - a crack in the
ranks of car owners and drivers,
disqualifications, protests and law
suits.
eon tinuing friction has thrown a
smoke screen over next Sunday's
speed orgy. The magic names that
normally electrify the sports pages the Unsers, Foyt, Rutherford and
Johncock -have been overshadowed
by affidavits, summonses and
injunctions.
.
What the Indy 500 needs is a firm
hand, such as Hubnan wielded after
he.succeeded Eddie Rlckenbacker in
1946.

" I don 't waul tius race halted on my
behalf in any way, shape or form
unless that 's what it takes to put my
car back in the race," he said.
Named as defendants in the suit
were USAC, the Speedway and Eldon

SPORTS
The Daily Sentinel

Highlanders co- champs
the top of the seventh inning on a walk
to Tim McComas, a sacrifice bunt by
Shupe and a single by Shaw.
Southwestern came back to tie the
game on singles by Scott Russel) and
Keith Sizemore a walk to Dale
Newberry and a sacrifice Oy by Pug
Rawlings.
Sherman Potter, Russell and

Summer leag_u e action :tr::Orzr~d
·
• 8 m· Me•·gs eounty
begm

two hits each for the
Sizemore, the winning hurler, fanned six and issued two free passes.
Petrie, the losing pitcher. recorded ,
five strikeOuts and walked two.
Linescore:
North Gallla
000 001 1-2 4 0
Southwestern
000 001 2-3 8 I
Petrie (L) and Glassburn.
Sizemore (W) and Russell.
RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Buena Vair
won the featured eighth race at River
Downs Monday, getting past secondpla ce Round Circuit by a neck.
The winner,, ridden by Perry Ouzts,
ran the mile, 70 yards, in 1:44 4-5 for a
payoff of $4.110, $3 and $2.60. The horse
came from off the pace, and slipped
through the scramble in the stretch .
for the vic!Dry.
Round Circuit returned $3 and $3.
Two Ways To Toast paid $3.60 for
show.
·
· The daily double combination of No.
10, Sabre· Man, and No. 1, Early
Chance , paid $26 ori a $2 ticket.
Attendance was 3,328, and · the
mutuel handle !Dialed $430,093.·

Today's

Sports World

Rasmu•sen of Indi anapolis, who slowest 111 the field.
Later, Woodward said the suit
qualified in 33rd and last position for
would
be amended ID list McCluskey
the race . Woodward said one driver
would have to be bumped if Ferguson 111stead.
were reinstated, and Rasmussen was
listed although his speed isn't the
The Athens County Brartch of thb
hthritis Foundation estimates that
.... " . SClOToRESULTS
last year more than $133,375 wa.S
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Woody wasted in Athens County on worthless
Tropicana, driven by Norm arthritis remedies. For more
Dessureault, came from second place information on new drugs and
at the top of the stretch to win the treatment methods that can help
featured eighth race by a half-length arthritis, write the Athens County
in 2:02 3-5 at Scioto Downs Tuesday, Branch, The Arthritis Foundation, P.
The winner paid ~.20, $3.00 and $2.60. 0. Box 802,
Ohio ~701.
Second was Streaker Obrien,
returning $2.80 and $2.40. Piper Pink,
third, paid $3.40.
In the ninth race trifecta, Just
Time, Fudrick and Pikadon lined up fi.. '
6-10 to pa y $942.90.
The crowd of 4,266 bet $334,231.

Tri- County

Sport Shop
• Fishing Tackle and Rods
• Guns and Reloading
• Ba II Gloves
• Camping Equipment
eArchery
elndoor Games
• we have Gift Certificates
Next to Mason &lt;..ounty
Grounds, Grandview Hgts.
Pt. Pleasant, w.

I

BlACK
ROOF PAINT

&amp; Reels

5 Gallon Buckets

•8.95

ONLY

Fair

v•.

PICKEN'S
HARDWARE

PHONE 67l-2fN
Open Sunday I p.m .-6 p.m .
Monday thru Saturday
9 a.m. to 8 ;:.m.

Mason,

w. VI.

vouwortrmm

MANYGRAVELYS IR
lliE GRAVEYARD.
Gravely lr~cldrs are built to
work better and las! longer.
With all -geardirect drive,no
belts. Instan l forward and reverse.
Rack -and- pinion sleering.They
.
power over 20 lawn and ·
garden attachmenrs.

shifted around in the sij!~, I don't dare
have a new grip in~talled . I just
readjust."
. Nancy says when she first began the
game, she used a putter with a blade
little wider than ·the ball. "Then I got
this Ray Cook mallet-head. It's on its
last legs, but! wouldn'tpart with itfor
the world. "
New honors have come to former
heavyweight
ririg
champion
Muhammad Ali and pitcher Tom
Seaver. Ali is third and Seaver is loth
in a Forwn Magazine poll of women
edl!Drs to select the "Ten Sexiest Fathers." No. I? A softball player
named Ted Kennedy. No. 5, a jogger
named Jimmy Carter.

Paint
up

See why a Gravely
outlives other lracIOrs.We also service
what we sell.

~GRAVELY

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.

"2-2975

Manning Rouah. OWner
Open I o.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon . thrv S.t.

Pameroy,O.

'

There's

nothing
like it.

lolenl• MUk:f\lng .._,-••
Sell·prppellod, mooel 9uts
ind recut chpptngs mto
tine mulch which ter1ilizes
·'laWn • . Cuts 22" swath · •
. Front wheel drive • Convenient wash-out port lor

NIY clean-up.

.Buy Now &amp; Save

. Reg ... sm. so
Now.:. S283.50

.SAVE ..••• }40.00
Offer Good Now
Thru Moy 3tat

WILKINSON
Small Engines·
Sales &amp; Servic.-

Bobby Bragan, baseball's brash,
cigar-chomping director of field
operations, turned up with a bright
phrase at the Lexingtoo, Ky ., salute
last week-end .to A. B. "Happy"
Chandler, the former commissioner.
"America is fortunate to have had
two Abies who were emancipators,"
he said. "Able Lincoln, who freed the
slaves, and A. B. Chandler, who
opened the door for blacks in
baseball."
Chandler, a fiesty 110, told of the
problems in keeping the hot-headed
Jackie Robinson in tow - a necessity
if the historical project&gt; were ID
succeed.
.
. "Once Jackie came to me and
complaine~ that Leo Durocher had
called hlni an SOB," Happy recalled.
"I asked him, 'What did you do?' ~I ·
call!!(! him an SOB right back,' replied
Jackie. 'Good; l said. 'Now you're
even. Go on out there and play ball.'"

4fl LOCIIIt St.

t1lddfe110rt,
0.
The late Bob Jones had his "Calamity
3092
_
____. . Jane ." a famous hickory-shafted

~....-,;...__'"_-

AMC/JEEP OIL AND
LUBE SPECIALS

'1695PLUS TAX

VOLKSWAGEN
TUNE-UP SPECIAL

ALL RABBITS

JEEPS SUGHllY HIGHER
. ALL WORK IS DONE BY TRAINED BECHNICIANS

VOLKSWAGEN OIL
AND LUBE SPECIAL
BEETLES •1 0 95 PLUS TAX
. RABBITS S 1349 PLUS TAX

'2995
PLUS TAX

ALL PARTS AND LABOR INCWDED
•
ALL

AMC/JEEP
TUNE UP SPECIAL

SIX CYLINDERS '35~~s ·ru
V-8's Sl.IGHnY HIGHER
PARTS AND WORKMANSHIP

ALL WORK AND PARTS GUARANTEED
OR
MILES
. . . . . . . .~~~~~.;~ii;;.:;~:.-•••••

SPRING ECONOMY SPECIALS
.

'

A WELL TUNED ENGINE MEANS BmER FUEL ECONOMY

RIVERSIDE V.W.-AMC-JEEP
GALLIPOLIS,.OHIO

UPPER RIVER RD.
•.

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT NOW

446-9800
,.

'

..

,

.'

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , (\!ay 23, 1!119

•-'lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, May 23, 1!119

Giants bomb Reds

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC LEAGUE
1979 baseball aLL· LEAGUE TEAM
POS. YR.
PLAYER - TEAM
OF Sr.
Jack Smathers. Athens
SS Sr.
Jolin Schanzenbach, Athens
1B Sr.
x.Art Chonko, Athens
OF Jr .
Chris Tenoglla , Athens
p Jr .
Jeff Bush, Athens
SS
·
P Jr.
Ken Brown, Gallipolis
3B Sr .
x·Jeff Linn. Ironton
P Sr .
'Jimmy Williams. Ironton
SS Jr .
Scott Donahue, Ironton
p Jr .
Brian Swan, Jackson
OF Sr .
John Waugh, Jackson
SS Sr .
Da•e Lehman, Logan
OF
Jr .
Gene Birkhimer, Wa•erly
OF Sr .
•· Bob Noi'l'nan, Wellston
p Jr .
Jeff Montgomery, Wellston
C Jr .
Lowell Settles, Wellston
p Jr .
Rick Maerker, Wellston
HONORABLE MENTION
Gary Bentley, Athens ;: Chuck Derlfleld, Gallipolis; Tink Will iams,
Ironton; Mike ~te•ens , Jackson ; Brad Lightfoot. Logan ; Ray Andrews.
Malgs; Robert Holsinger, Wa•erly ; Gary Speraw, Wellston .

By EIUC PREWiTT
py, often comical play of the losers.
AP Sports Writer
The Reds had one basenmner
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The thrown out at home plate by 20 feet in
Cincinnati Reds and San ·Francisco . the sixth inning, when they trailed by
Giants have switched roles this year. six runs. A scoring threat in the
"This is the worst I've seen us plily seventh· ended with two rwmers at
1D seven or eight years. They seem to third base.
It all added up to an easy night for
bring out the worst in us " said Joe
Morgan, the Reds' second baseman, Halicki, 5-3, and a losing one for Reds
after an embarrassing, to put it ·starter Hill Bonham, 2-1.
.
"After theflrst.tunearound agaUl!ll
mildly, 12-2 defeat Tuesday night.
Morgan's counterpart with the · them, I thought I .d shut them out. B~t .
Giants, Bill Madlock, shook his head th~n I lost the Zip off my fastball, .'
.
and said, "I can't explain it. S8ld Halicki.
Cincinnati is a 'lot better team than
"I was really tired. H we hadn't.had
we've seen in our five games against such a big .lead, I woQid have told
· ·. them ."
·
· .· .
(Manager) Joe Altobelli to warm up
There's no doubt · about thl\t. The somebody in the bullpen," !le added.
Reds still have a 1¥.. game lead in the
Halicki is one of baseball's hottest
National League West over the Giants pitchers . He has three straight
and Houston Astros.
·
complete-game victories and has
But In five games against the allowed only 17 hila and three earned
Giants, the Reds are 1-4. They've runs in his last 33 .innin!!S.
,
committed 12 errors, including three . He scattered rune hits Tuesday
Tuesday night and have been mght, but the Reds had only three
outscored ID-18. '
after five innings anJ trailed S.O. The
"That reminded me 1of opening Giants clinched the victory wl~ five '
day," said Johnny Bench,recalling an runs, four of tbem unearned, m the
1!-&lt;i loss in Cincinnati. The Reds made 01ghth.
five errors in that game.
DarreU Evans had three . hits and
Last year, Cincinlll)ti . W8$ 1~ th~~ RBI foc the 'Gianta. Jack Clark,
against the Giants who haven't won a W1lhe McCovey, Bill North and
season series with ihe Reds since 1968. Madlock had two hits apiece and
Ed Halicld, the Giants' pitcher Roger. Metzger contributed a three· ·
Tuesday night, had a 2-9 ·lifetime run tr1ple.
,
record against the Reds before he
On the other side, the Reds Champ
cruised to victory with the help of a 14- Summers had one error and several
hit San li'rancisco attack and the slop- mental errors.
"We were a joke and I was the most
outstanding,'' said the outfielder' who
International league
played ·In the place of injured George
By The Associated Press
Foster.
Tuesday's Results
Charleston 7, Tidewater 2

x . Indicates repeater from 1978 squad.

. Positions are listed for players although they were selected·regardless
of position. No selection made of a Most Valuable Player or of a Coach of

the Year .

Hot Bochte leads
Seaule ·over K C

!

.,

.

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
If American League pitchers
appear tense, it could be because
Bruce Boehle is more relaxed.
"I think it's all psychological, "
Bochte said after Tuesday night's 1211 Seattle Mariners victory over the
Kansas City Royals in 12 innings.
"I'm just more relaxed this year." ·
Relaxed at the plate, Boehle
slammed a home run, a triple and two
singles, driving .in six runs.
"In the past, with rwmers on base, I
would get tensed up," the Seattle first
baseman said. "Now' l'm approachiqg
it from the standpoint that I'm gonna
do. what I'm gonna do and that's that." ·
In other AL games Tuesday, Boston
defeated Baltimore 7-&lt;i, Cleveland
stopped Toronto 8-6, Milwaukee
clobbered California 7-1, the New
York Yankees outlasted Detroit 12-8,
the Chicago White Sox edged Oakland
:M. and Texas nipped Minnesota 4-3.
~ White So" 5, A's 4 ·
·Jorge Orta's tw!H'un homer in the
eighth inning lifted Chicago over
Oakland, snapping a three-game
White Sox losing streak,
:Lamar Johnson sinlded to start the

IN DISTRicr- Meigs HighSchool's Andrea Riggs In her first year of
~ck qualif~ed for District competition by placing in the AA Sectionals at
Rio Gra~e m~high jump,. At the district meet at Lancaster on May 18,
she receiVed a sixth place nbbon and set a new school record in !hi! high
jump of.4'10". This year Andrea baa two firsts three seconds and a sixth
place, S~ received a second place medal at
SEOAL ~I in Athens.
Andrea IS also a.m~ber of the school's 440 and 880 yard relay team. A
sophomore, Andrea 1s the daughter of Dr.and Mrs. Keith Riggs of
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
.
.

the

eighth. After a sacrifice, Orta
smashed his second homer of the
season off loser Dave Heaverlo, 2-3.
Red Sox 7, Orioles 5
Fred Lynn's three..-un homer was
the big blow as Boston scored seven
runs in the second inning, then held on
to beat Baltimore. Lynn, the AL home
run leader, now has 14 for the season.
BiUy Smith hit a three.run homer
for the Orioles, ' whose East Division
lead over the Red Sox was cut to onehalf game. It was only the sixth loss in
the last 29 games for the Orioles.
Yankees 12, Tigers 8
Chris Chambliss, Roy . White, Jay
Johnstone and Bucky Dent drove in
two runs each and Willie Randolph,
Reggie Jackson and Jerr1y Narron
each got one RBI as New York outslugged Detroit and gave Luis Tiant
his first victory as a Yankee. New
York battered Mark Fidrych, 0.3, and
reliever Sheldon Burnside for eight
runs and seven hits in the third inning:
Indians 8, Blue Jays 6
A grand slam homer by Andre
Thornton was the big blow as
Cleveland downed .Toronto. It was
Thornton 1S first . gran&lt;f slam of his
career and sixth homer of the season.
Eric Wilkins, 2-2, gained the victory in
relief while Toronto starter .Mark
Lemongello, 1-6, took the loss.
Brewers 7, Angels I
A five .. un fifth inning, sparked by
Paul Molitor's tworun single, backed
Lary Sorensen' s five-hitter as
Milwaukee stopped California. Dick
Davis also knocked in two runs for the
Brewers, who won for only the second
time in their last nine games and
snapped the Angels' six .game winning
streak.
Rangers 4, Twins 3
Buddy Bell'&amp; first home run of the
year in the bottom of the eighth inning
boosted Texas past Minnesota and
handed Twins pitcher J~rry Koosman
his first American League loss. Bell
also singled home two runs in the
third . The loss dropped Koosman's
record to 7-1 while Jim Kern picked up
his sixth victory against no losses in
·
relief.
The Twins had tied the game on Ron
Jackson's seventh homer of the year.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Montreal

At A Glance

B~seball

St . Louis

By The Associated Press

Pitt sburgh
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB New York

Baltimore

26 14

Boston
New York
Mil waukee

25 14
18
22 20
15.20
17 23
11 )2

23

Detroit
Cleveland

Toronto

.650
.641
.561
.524
. .d29

''

3' '

5
8'
9

.425
. 256 161

2

2

Cincinnati
San Franci_sco
Houst on
Los Angeles ..
San Diego

Atlanta

Callforni~

25 14

.641

25 16

.610

'23 17 .575

Te xas

14
17
19
20
23

.622
.541
.486
.429
.361

Wednesday's Games

2
5

Tidewater at Richmond
Charleston at Toledo

7

Columbus at Syracuse
Rochester at Pawtucket

9

m,

Thursday's Games

WEST
23
23
24
20
18
14

16
19
20
24
26
26

Richmond at Tidewater

.590
.548 ]1 ,
.545 1',,
.455 51, 2

.409

Charleston at Toledo
Columbus at Syracuse
Rochester at Pawtucket

1
21
A'
6

2

Montreal 6, Pittsburgh 3
Ph iladelphia 3, St. Louis
Houston 4, Atlanta 1•
New York 4, Chicago 2

1

Kansas City
n 20 .52A 2
San Diego 7, Los Angeles 6, 10 in,
Chicago
19 20 .487
Oakland
15 21 .357 n• 2 nings
San Francisco 12, Cincinnati 2
Seattle
15 28 .349 12
Wednesday ' s Games
Tuesday's Games
Pittsburgh (Caldelaria J . 2) at
Boston 7, Baltimore 5
Montreal (Rogers 3·2l. (n)
Cleveland 8. Toronto 6
St. Louis (Martinez 1·0) at
Milwaukee 7, Californ ia 1
Philadelphia I Ruthven 6· 1), (n)
New York 12. Detroit ' 8
Houston (Richard 4·4) at Atlanta
Chicago 5, Oakland 4 ·
..
Seattle 12, Kansas City 11 , 12 inn ings (Matula 2·3L (n)
Ch icago (Holtzman 3·3) at New
Texas 4, Minnesota 3
York (Falcone o.J ), (n)
Wednesday's Games
Los Angeles !,Hooton 3·2) at San
Boston (Stanley 4·2) at Baltimore
Diego (Jones 4-2) , (n l
(Palmer 5·2), (n)
Cincinnati (LaCoss 4-0) at Sari
Cleveland (Garland 1·41 at Toronto
Francisco (Blue 6-4) , (n)
(Huffman 2-4!. (n )
Thursday's Games
Calitornia (Aase 3·3) at Milwaukee
Chicago at New Nork, (n)
(Tra•ers 2-21, (n 1
Cinc innati at San Francisco, (n)
· New York (Beattie 3·1) at Detroit
On Iy games scheduled
(Rozema 1·2l. (nl
Oak land (Johnson J.6) at Chicago
( Kravec 3.3), (n)
Minnesota (Goltz 4·4) at Texas
(Jenkins 4-21 . (n )
Only games scheduled
Thunday's Games

r

RUNS : Brett, Kansas City , 36; Otis,
Kansas City , 36; Lynn, Boston, 34 ;
LeFlore, Detroit, 33; Washing ton ,
Chicago, 33.
RBI : Baylor, California, 41;. Lynn,
Boston , 39 : Porter , Kansa~ City. 37;
Cooper , Milwaukee, 33 ; Nettles, New

-OIINO

:-COTToN -KNITS
•

: -KETTLE CLDTH
; -BROADCLOTH
' ..,.POLYESTER KNIT

York, 33.
HITS : Smalley, Minnesota ,
Remy,

Bost~n,

61 ;

55 ; Carew, Ca_utornia ,

53 ; Hor ton , Seattle , 53 ; Brett, Kansas

----- FABRIC

sHoP ~

nsw. 2nc1.

Baltimore,

10 ;

May, Balt imore,

GIV£/l Wll y

6 QUARTS VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

Wills, Texas, 14.

PITCHING (5 Decisions) : John,
New York , 9-0, 1.000, 1.72 ; Kern ,
1.000, 1.27 ; Koosman,
Minnesota, 7-1, .8'15 , 3.72 ; Barrios,

Texas,

6-0,

Thomas, Milwaukee. 11 ; Singleton .

Johnson . Oakland,

SAFETY BLINKERS
FIRST AID KIT

STR IKEOUTS : Ryan, California,
61 ; Gui dry , New York, 58 i Jenkins,

Te xas, 50 ; Koosman. Minnesota , 43;

69~

POTATOES

9:001117:00

.L B.

15~

CORN

5

EARS

!

I~ foilage ~lan1s.

..

"SEASON SPECI.!ILS"

pack . Hardy Azaleas 10" spread
$2 .25 each (10 or more Sl.75)
each) .
· ··

L---~--~

. . . .-

THE SPEECH &amp; HEARING DEPARTMENT OF THE
GALLIA·JACKSON ·MEIGS COMMUNITY MENTAL
HEALTH CENTER has these services · available for
the hearing impaired individual.
HEARING EVALUATION
HEARING AID CHECK for damaged hearing aids
HEARING AID SELECTION to find best aid for the client's hearing
HEARING AND FITTING
HEARING AID SALES starting at $215
HEARING AID ORIENTATION AND LIPREADING
COMPLETE FOLLOWUP SERVICE

MAY. 24-25-26

700 E.Moiin
Pomerov,

8Ft.
· Reg. $3.77

VINYL REPAIR

Reg. $7.98

$5!1

~------------------------------MAy 20-.26 DRAWING
II

ACE ·HARDWARE

I

II

NAME
ADDRESS

I
I

PHONE

I
I

.I

DRAWING MAY 26TH

L---------------------~--------J
FRESH
MEATS

BOILED
Superior

~LICEO

LB.

BACON ••••• N!••• $}29
SAUSAGE ••••••••••• ~~•• 159
Eckrich

$

HAM.
SLICED
LB.

NEW YEUOW ONIONS
49~

iI'

KOOL-AID
DRINK MIX
I

I

No. 2SS
lOQt. can
Limit 0!\t please with coupon
Coupon Expires May 26. 1979

JELLO GElATINS

'1.49

3

'1.00

1

I

OPEN PIT BARBECUE SAUCE
I

No. 155
No. 105
6oz. Boxes
.
180l. Btl.
49~
1
1
1
Limit one pleue with coupon
I
I
.
Limit one please w.llh coupon
I
.
Limit one piusewilh c011pon
Coupon Expires May 26, 1979
I
I
· Coupon Expires May 26, 1979
.. 1
Coupon Expires May 26, 1979
--------!_~n~!!_Y_2~~~--------+--------.!!!'!.C~~G!'!!'!Y-------1---------~~.:I!!!:_a_!::::,a.!, _______ t---------~':~~~~~------·-·
3 Lb. Bag

KEEBLER ICE CREAM CUPS

49

~

1
·I

II

DREAM WHIP TOPPING
No. 155
6oz.Box
99~
Limit one pltue with coupon
Coupon Expires May 26, 1979
Twin City Gateway

•

.-

G

BOOSTER CABLE

·.

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

About 212,200 cubic feet of water a
second · .thunder over the Niagara
Fa Us.

SATURDAY

992-2101

I!

Bedding Plants &amp;Sc oer dar~tn

43.

99~

5th &amp; Pearl

Saturday 9 : 00-9:00
CLOSEO
SUNDAYS

1iiiibbird's'G~h0iise

.MEIGS TIRE CENTER. INC.

CAR WAX

3.83; Baumgarten,
Chicago, .1. 1, .800, 2.74 ; D . Martinez,
Baltimore, 6·2, .750. 2.82 ; Splittorff.
Kansas City, 6·2, .750, 3.09; Palmer,
Balt.imore, 5·2, .7214, 2.95.

·. GRAPES

sT~E

deal." Auerbach said. "Give them
your best shot, bowl them over. make
him the highest paid rookie in NBA
history and that's it. "
Instead, Woolf claims Auerbach
simply won 't bargain and that unless
he does, "I would not be optimistic"
about Bird's chances of joining the
Celtics.
Woolf conceded he wants somewhat
more than the Los Angeles !..akers will
pay Michigan State star Earvin
" Magic" Johnson, who will be the
Auerbac;h 's response was . ." We've
team's and league's top pick in next
been more Utan fair . There 's only
month 's draft.
Woolf said reports are that Johnson three people in the NBA who make
will get $600,000 a year . But Collies more than we 're offering." David
officials say it's far less - $250,000 Thompson of the Denver Nuggets is
cash and real estate, with money paid said to be No.I, with a salary of

THURSDAY-FRIDAY·

The Photo Place

F

9;

Seattle, 9.
STOLEN BASES: Otis, Kansas
.City. 17 : Cruz, Seattle, 17 ; LeFi o~e.
Detroit, 16 ; Wil son, Kanssas City , 15;

Chicago, A·l. .BOO,

Thunclay, May 24 through May 2o
"" u•aaoy Accept Fed. foo.d Slam~.
Monday lhru Friday

$800,000 a season .
Woolf said the Ce ltics also want to
Despite the hostilities, both sides
pay Bird on a longterm basis, without said Utey still want Bird to play for
interest. But Auerbach responded, Boston, and Woolf said, "Tiult's
" I' ll give the money anytiine."
Larry's goal."
Citing controversy centering on
Bird 's money demafl(ls, Woolf blamed
the Celtics, saying, "I am at a loss to
understand why the C~ltics organ.Syracuse, Ohio
ization . by inference or innuendo, I
I
992·5776
would in any Wa Y unfairly blemish the
· image of a fine young athlete ... " The
Open D&lt;~ily 9·8
..
agent said Bird "has never made any I
Sunday 1·5
suggestions as to what thetenns of his ~ c..omplete assortment of bedding,
Plants, hanging baskets and
. contract· should be."

AUTOMOTIVE SALE

PRODUCE

"
t'Jt£JiE'S

beautiful wedding In lull color
pllototraphs.
FMI '"" to VISit us to visamples and discuss our
reasonable prices without obligation.
(Bob Hoe!Uch) ·
109 High St.
Pomeroy

gave me a fair shot and I think the
Phillies would have," he said.
Tolan, who has a lifetime major
league average of .265, said he has
faith he'll get another chance.
"I feel this is my trial to see if I can
keep my cool.
'
"There may be someone in the
stands with instructions to go down
and watch Tolan for five games. I
want to be ready for him whoever he
is, whenever and wherever he shows
up . I want to be )lilting the ball hard,
running hard and playing with
enthusiasm.
"I know I don't belong here, and I'm
going to keep doing it ilntil somebody
notices me," he said. "Maybe it'll he
three months. Maybe it'll be three
years."

over a pcnuU. uf years.

Smalley, Minnesota , 9 ; Hor t.on ,

City, 52.
DOUBLES : Lemori, Chi~ago, 13;
McRae, Kansas City, 13 ; Downing,
California, 12 ; Washington , Chicago.
12; -Bell, Texas, 12.
TR IPLES""BreU _!&lt;ansas City, 5 ;
Griffin, Toronto, 4 ; 7 Ttect-With 3.· ,
HOME RUNS : Lynn , Boston, 14 ;

LB.

MIAMI ( AP) - When the Big Red harder at bat. And I try to keep from
Machine first rumbled, Bobby Tolan .drifting off by talking to guys when
and Pete Rose were the sparkp.lugs. they get to first base .
"But when they start asking me
Rose and Tolan batted onetwo in
1970 as the Reds went 102-GOduring the what I'm doing here, I change the
regular season. Both batted .316. Rose subject," Tolan said.
Tolan's problems may have begun
scored 120 runs, Tolan 112. Rose
played left field, Tolan center. Tolan with in 1973, when he charged that the
led the National League in stolen Reds were fcrcing him to play with an
injury. He was benched, and sat alone
bases with 57.
Today, 'Rose makes $800,000 a year at the end of the dugout, shunning his
as first bar;eman lor the pennant- teammates.
He was traded to San Diego; then to
contending Philadelphia Phillies .
Tolan makes less than $20,000 a year Phila delphia, then to Pittsburgh. He
playing first base for the.San Juan Bo- finished 1977 with a .189 batting
average, and became a free agent. No
ricuas.
The Boricuas are last in both one drafted him, and he wound up in
attendance and winning in the lnter- the Japanese League last season.
The Phillies and Texas Rangers
A,merican League , a somewha t
chaotic first-year league with invited him to try out this spring·, and
he decided his chances would be
franchises in four t'Ountries.
"I don't know why I'm here, " said '·better with Texas.
He was cut three days before the
Tolan, 33. "I find it difficult to be here.
. "I've got to concentxate . much season began.
" I regret not going with
harder to produce. I try to keep my
mind off where I am by concentrating Philadelphia, because Texas never

a clean, fast

RECAP .
TIRE

Boston at Baltimore, (n 1
TODAY'S MAJOR LEAGUE
Oakland at Chicago. (n)
LEADERS
Seattle at Kansas City, (n)
By The Associated Press
Only games scheduled
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING (85 at bats) : ·smalley,
NA TtONAL LEAGUE
Minnesota, .396 ; Kemp, Detro it, '.381 ;
EAST
Carew, California, .361; Boehle ,
W. . L. Pel. GB
. Seattle . . 346 ; Downing, Ca litornia , Philadelphia
26 13 .667

TERRY

Tolan playing for -San Juan

draft pool.
" I U10ught we'd have

lh PRICE OF NEW
TIRES WITH ,ANEW
TIRE GUARANTEE

.338.

~STRETQI

Celtics' refusal to budge from their
Tuesday .
Nevertheless, Woolf, Bird's Boston- origina l $500,000-a-year offer to the
based agent, called a news Conference college Player-of-theYear from
to insist both that his current contract Indiana State. Woolf initially asked
off er is fair and that the National for $1 million a season, plus another
Basketball Association team, through $200,000 in extras. Sources now say
team president Auerbach, begin Woolf has come down to about $700,000 a year .
"bonafide" negotiations.
Bird was drafted No .I by the Celtlcs
· "He I Woolf) means negotiate as
long as I go up," Auerbach responded a year ago as a junior. The team has
until the NBA draft June 2S to sign
later . ,"Can I go down?"
Th e sla iemate centers on the him or Bird ~oes back into the 1979

HIGH 'MILEAGE
RETREADS

.350 9h

California at Mi lwaukee

.GREAT SELECTION OF
SUMMER AND
SPORT FABRICS

Wedding
Bells?
Let us r.c:ord forever your

By UICK BRAUDE ·
AP 'Sports Writer
BOSTON ( AP) - The lid has blown
off contract talks between the Boston
Celtics and the negotiator for college
star Larry Bird, with an explosion of
demands and allegations.
·
"There is nobody In professional
sports, including Red Auerbach and
myself, who ca n accurately
&lt;letermme what is a fair contract for
Larry," attorney Bob Woolf said

]1, 2

Tuesday's Games

WEST
Minn esota

23
20
18
15
13

Pawtucket 4, Richmond 3

Columbus 5, Syracuse 2
Olly games scheduled

Lid off Bird-Celtic contract negotiations

I1

TENDERLEAF TEA BAGS

1
I
1

IOOCt.Box
Limit one'please with coupon
Coupon Expirtl May 26, 1979
Twin City Gateway

•1.19

1
I
I
· 1
1
I

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

·

BIRDSEYE AWAKE · .
2

No. 155
12oz,Cans 89~
Limit one plene with coupon
Coupon Expires May 26, 1919 ·
Twin City Gateway

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

�..
Today in HlBiory
By Tbe "-•oclated Preto•
Today is Wednesday, May 23, the
143rd day of 1979. There are 222 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in hi!ltory •
On this date in 1618, the Thirty
Years War beg119 as Bohemian rebels
won a viqtory in the East EW'opean
city of Prague.
On this date :
In 1455, the Battle of St. Albans was
fought in England's War of Ute Roses.
'In 1701, Captain William Kidd was
hanged in London after being eonvicted of piracy and murder.
ln 1785, Benjamin Franklin wrote in
. a letter that he had invented bifocal
eyeglasses, making it llnnecessary to
carry around separate pairsof spec·
tacles.
In 1788, South Carolina became the
eighth·state in the Union.
In 1937, the U. S. Supreme Courl
upheld the Social Security Act as constitutional:
In 100o, Israel disclosedtltat former ··
Nazi official Adolf Eichmann had

tl

..

/

'

..:V

•

.••

j

i

\

-· -.{
.,
/

.

r~~:~&gt;

...
·.·

,

~-

.

I

..

Officers for the lm-80 year were
Installed in an impressive Ci!remony
concjucted by Mrs. Rose Reynolcls,
jlast president and chl!rter member,
at a meeting of the Middleport
Business and ProfessiOnal Women's
Club Monday night at the Columbus
,.
Gas Co. offiCi!.
Using an original ceremony with
gold keys tied with green and gold rib•
bon Mrs. Reynolds installed Mrs .
Frances Louise Davis, president:
Mrs. Eva Robson, vice president:
. · Mrs. Marjorie Goett, secretary, and
Miss DoMa Davidson, treasurer.
She presented the key of mansge•,.'
ment to Mrs. Davis charging her with

l
'I

.....
.
·.

..
.·

the responsibility for presiding at the
meetings and directing activities of
the club. Mrs. Robson received the
key to program planning after being
charged by Mrs. Reynolds with the
responsibility for presiding In the
absence of the president and for acting as program chainnan.
To Mrs. Goett, Mrs. Reynolds
presented the key for perseverance
noting her responsibilities to main·
lain records of club meetings and
handle correspondence. The key of
finance was presented to Miss David·
son .and she was reminded.of her duty
to act as custodian of all funds,

membership In the chapter; Roberta
K. Mlndllng, past grand matron;
Howard I. Shull, past grand patron:
Millie Holter, grand organist; and
Sue Kerns, grand Adab.
Also recognized were Lois Pauley,
cleputy grand matron of District 25; ·
Alice Jack, deputy grand matron of
District 24 ; Kathleen Johnson, grand
representative to Quebec; Louise
Stewart, grand repr:esentative to
Washington and president of District
25.
Introduced were the worthy
matrons and worthy patrons of
Belpre, Albany,. New Marshfield,
Marietta, Thea, Euphelilia, Athens,
Wilkesville , Harrisonville ,
ID81'ShalJ'
Presented and given a' welcome Evangeline and Racine . Past
were Jack A. Johnson, worthy grand matrons of Pomeroy Chapter
patron, who was given an honorary presented were Ella Smith, Sylvia

•
The 75th ilnniversary of Pomeroy
: . :. Olapter, Order of the Eastern Star,
•: .was ·celebrated at a special meeting
~•
held recently at the Pomeroy Masonic
•• Temple.
:: • · The chapter was lnstltuted on May
: • • 13, 11104 with 25 members being in•
• ; : iUated on that date. The charter was
• , granted in October, 1004. Of the 245
: ' · members of the chapter today, 15
: : ·• have been members for 50 years or
.... ·· more.
Mrs. Ann Hemsley and Thomas Ed·
wards, worthy matron and worthy
patron, Jll1!sided at the meeting. The
pr~ tern officers were Sue Soulsby,
conductrees, and James Soulsby,

.
RIO G~E- Audition dates for
the premier season of "Rio Summer
'
Theatre" (R.S.T.) have been an~
nounced by the Rio Grande College
, · and Commwtity College departments
•
ofM114icandTheatre.
Two legitimate Broadway musicals
will be produced as outdoor theatres
•
durtng August. Slated for production
• ate Lerner and Loewe's robusi
,. • • musical of the Gold Rush Era, "Paint
.

'

Your Wagon," and Schinidt and
Jones' electric ·musicalization of N.
Richard Nash's pl&amp;y '"The Rain·
maker,"knownas "liOin the Shade."
Ed Roark, one of the directors of
Rio Summer Theatre, said these.two
plays were selected because of their
large casts and scenic and costwne
demands.
Roark said, "We are hoping to accommodate the widest range of com·

.'•

Midkiff, Dorothy WOOdard, Marie
Curd, Mabel Goeglein, Ruby
Vaughan, Florence Well, Evelyn Lan·
Ding and Sue SoW.by. Past patrons
presented were Dale Smith and
'lbomasEdwards,bothKnlghtsofthe
York CrOIIS of Hooor, James Soulsby
and Richard Vaughan. James
Buchanan, commander of the Ohio
Valley Commandry 24 and Ralph
Graves, Knight of the York Cross of
Honor were introduced and Graves
presented a 25 · year pin to his
daughter, Carolyn Thomas. Grand
pages, former grand appointments,
past matrona and past patrons of
other chapters were recognized.
The sunshine offering was taken
and will be donated to leukemia
~h.
·
. The program Included comments

MOBIL OIL 10-W-30
at 79¢ Value

.

•'

••

~

---'1

'"'"~
.....
~"'

-.•
... .

,.••

Express your own ki nd of
sty le with ou r new selection
of matching perrdant and
earring sets by Seville ~ .
You'll attract glances from
men who usuallydon'tlook .
We have a lot oj different
·styles to choose from .. .
COme in.and IndUlge'
yourself.

•
'

.·;
·'.,.
.

l •

l

I
I

I

,•
•

..•.•
•

••

.•

by

,•

Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.: Pt. Pleasant
JWiior High School, Music Room ~
May 29, TueSday, 7:30 p.m.
Jackson, Ohio : First · United
Presbyterian Church, Church Street -June I, Friday, 7:30p.m.
Audltloners are requested to
prepare a song from a Broadway
musical or a motion picture in order
to acquaint the directors with the
audltioners' voice ranges.
Accompanist&amp; will be provicled.
Persons wishing to audition who
cannot ·attend any of the audition
dates should contact Rio Summer
~Ire, · Rio Grande CoUege _and
Community College, P. 0. Box 1046,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.

,

$1.58 Value

89¢

99¢

~~=·!!

......

TURTLE WAX
LIQUID

STAYFRI!l!
MAXI PADS 30.

$1.91 Value

$3,34 Valua

• Moore.

4 oz. Reg.,or Straw,btrry

754 Value

2/79~

2/69¢

SUAVE .HAMPOO
28 oz. StriWbtrry, Baby,
or Honeysuckle $2.19

PAMI!CO
HYDROGEN PEROXIDI! .
8

o.z. 37C Yoluo

2/49¢
GLAD WRAP
Ex. Wide 88¢

PAMECO ASPIRIN
300 mg. 1001 47t Value

ENIESC:O PLANTERS
wl~eet $1.70 Value

STORAGE CHESTS
24x13x10 51 .49 Value

.'

GAMES

special assortment of mill lengths
in tine quality 60" polve•ter dou ·
ble knits In a y.~lde choice of solid
colors and some tancv patterns.

SPECIAL VAWES, TO '2.99 &amp; '3.99

LADIES .SHORTS
Values to $3 .99. ·Special group ladles

Jamaica short and joggers, asst. colors
· and styles. GOOd selection of sizes. Stock

at Stltllers .

$ 88

PAIR .
IT: &amp; SPOOLS
YOUR FRIENDLY STORf WITH THf•fRifNDLY PRICES

'

~

CRICKET LIGHTERS

II.~

99¢
OLD IPICI!
A"ERSHAVI!
4lf• oz. w/FrH Shive Cr.

51.49 Value.

~~

" -"" ¥

\ ;. .2/99¢

$3.00 Value

e oz.

$199

CEPACOL
12 oz. 12C 011

$1.661/alue

-TIAIE
, SALESPECIAL MANUFACTURERS
ASSORTMENT
.
.
MISSES' AND WOMEN'S

SALE-TRADE
BIG SPECIAL PUCHASE GROUP
MISSES' AND LADIES'

Valutt. ~ 112.". Lactlet

•.~d

mlnH pop_ular atyltt prt·
wllhtd jeanl. Sllglit l'rtQulart,
good IIIOrt~tnl Of ttyltl.

'"

. BOUTIQUE
PLASTIC

.

•:

19C Value

.

8/99¢

60 INCH
POLYESTER
. DOUILEKNIT

FAIRIU

SUMMiA BLOUSiS

J·

BeautifUl ntw IIIOI'tmtnl
· ol 80" polytlltr doublt

J

POPULAR SHORT SLEEVE STYLES
e..uUiul .

knltt. GOOCI ·colora • cut
lrom 'u ll bcHI tl tl'llt very
loW" 'tilt prlet.

••J.:tment ot ltdl..
tllmm.r blouati, $htlrt, knit•
'F c.n1 · arH1novtlt lu . Valuea to S7 .9S ·· I ·
very tptc lal'group for 1~ 11 1111.

ShOP 11r1y for btJt Hltctlon .

SALE PRICE EACH
TRADE EXPANSION SALE
$12.99 VALUES

"r"

MIN'S SHORT SLEEVE
FANCY AND WHITE

1~·.

MEN'S MAVERICK .
.,
' BWE DENIM

JEANS

,.nan AND CLARK WINTUK

KNITTING YARN

lhlrtl of thla ·quallly are unheara
Ot tlll'lit price. TP'i*Y art well midi
ot ntca fabrict tn whitt and ftn·
Cit~.

Regu lar ,12.99, flr at quell · ,
t)l , men 's tamoua Maverick •

1eans, straight and flare:•

All NQU!Ir t !Ztt: tilt pr iCt .

legs. Stock up now at this •

very , v•rv low price.

f

$10

I

·

~

Mary Shrine No.
3 7 holds ceremonial

TOOTH BRUSH
N~ion

$1 .11 Yoluo

4/59¢

"Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0."
9 a.m.-5 p.m . Man.
lhru Thurs. &amp; Sot.
h.
Fri.

;

.

Seven new members were Initiated
Into Mary Sbrlne No. 37, Order of the
· White Sbrlne of Jerusalem, during a
cereaH111a1 held Friday night at the
Pomeroy Maaonlc Temple .
The presiding officers were Vivian
May, worthy high priestess, and
Thomu • Edwards, watchman of
lbi!pl)erdl. Presented were Jeall!
· Brinker, deputy~ watclunan
of shepberds, Marie HaWkins, .special .
llipnme obllll&amp;rY Clllllllittee .mem-ber, and~ Edwards, dl.ltrlct
chairmlln of material objective.
A membershiP achievement awar.d
was received for the year 1~8-18'19 .
An Invitation to a banquet and recap. lion was received from Zion Shrine
No: 15.
Relnishments )'l'ere served. in . the
. dlnlrig room following tbe
Ceremonial.

PAIR

-TRADE IIIIAIISIIIII SALI-

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES &amp;MISSES

SPORTSUJ£Aa..

.

79¢
·

..........------

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT-PT. PLEASANT

Dr. Lewis Telle was guest speaker
at the Monday night meeting of the
Ladles Au;l:lliary of Veterans
Memorial Hcepltal.
Dr. TeUe talked on the "State of the
Art d. Medicine" discussing the
changes in trealment technique, pa·
Uent care, and general hospital im·
provements and care for premature
babies, those with diabetes, bin In·
juries, and heart problems.
Mrs. Louise Bearhs presided at the
meeting with Mrs. Ethel Grueser giying the secretary's report. Sborty
Wright had the prayer. Refreshments
of sandwiches, Jello salad, cracli:ers
and beverages were iletved by Mrs.
Eva Hartley, Mrs. Reva Beach, Mrs.
Alma Newton' Mrs. Ruth MoJTts, and
Mrs. Nellie Bol1!an.

79&lt; Value

feared to tread because (1)
contemporary styles have changed to
separates, vested suits ond sportswear
and (2) you ore making your own cal ls on
style and comfort Hush Puppies " shoes
are ready now if you 're
looking for contemporary
comfort at q price that
helps where it counts.

~------../·

POLYESTER
DOUBLEKNIT

DRESS

ARTLEY· SHOES, IN"'••
'

TRADE EXPANSION SALE

FOR THE FAMILY
IMIILTON BRADLEY AS$0RTED

AND

STATIONARY ASST

Don't Forget

"Seu11IE

·

Ladies
Auxiliary
·met here

Grey &amp; ·
Brown

~'

Pomeroy, o.

TRADE EXPANSION SALE

PRE-WASHED DENIMS

.I

l~

...
..

992·2556
570 W. Main

VALUES TO '1.99 YARD
MILL LENGTH ASSORT MILL
LENGTH ASSORTMENT SOLID

FASHION J£ANS

AGREE CONDITION.ER

••

The Ohio . State Charolals
Association's annual · fie)d day and
second annual Silver Steer and Heifer
Show will be beld June 17. The event
will be hosted by the J.D. Cramblett
Farm, five miles from Carrollton,
Qhio. The judge will be .Ot:. Randall
F\eed, Ohio State trnlversity.
Premiums will be awa.rded. For more
information, .contact Eugene Bailey,
Stone Del Fanns, P. 0 . Box 25, Hartville, Ohio ~. phone 21~-'lto
home or216-877-8200 fann.

TUii SOtKS

2/59¢

8 oz. Oily , ~~- Body, o·r Regula ~
$1 .64 Votuo

.•

BAR-BE..CUE
BAR-BE-CUE
WITH FRIES
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAliD .

PLAN FIElD DAY JUNE 17

Popl.lllr tox lor boys. Tube lox , whitt with colored at ripe
tops , Stretch atylt one tlzt . Shop tnCI save It thll big

A pt'(lg1'8l1l was held In the churcb
sanctuary following the dinner. Tak·
ing part were Angela Clifford, Angela
Baker, Terri Roush, Tracie Hubbard,
Veronica Provo, Wendy Fry, Jucly
Wllllalils, Jikly King, Norma Baker,
Fay, C1iffo)'d, April Hannon, Cathy
Fry, Shelly Winebrenner, Jane Ann
Wllllalils, Tammie Buckley, Nancy
Baker, KriBten King, KriBten Pape,
Hope Moore, Jucly Pape, Jea~~
Weayer, and Roseann Jenkins.
April Harmon presented vases of
daisies to Rochelle Jenkins, daughter
o.f Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jenkins, the
youngest daughter; Anna Obltz,
grandmother with the most gnuid·
daughters; Mrs. Elizabeth Salvin,
mother with the most children, and .
Mrs. Florence'Potts, mother with the
most descendant&amp;.
Out«-C:ounty pests were Anna
Hough, Washington ; Bobble Jo Chur·
~eld, Gladwin; Mich.: Ruth Fink,
Cheshire: Mrs. Kenneth H. Smith,
Duncan Falls: Linda Boyd,
Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mary Jane
Gibbs, Parllersburg, W. V~.; Gamet
Baxter, Cameron, W. Va.: Sharon
and Sara Gaul, Vincent.

HARD AS NAli.S
POLISH RIMOVIR

2/89¢

.

'

u oz. 40&lt; on

2/99~

Hush Puppies ·

'..'

SPECIAL

BOY'S POPULAR ASSORTED
WHITE STRIPED TOP

O!urch, syracuse .
Elghty.flve guests attencled the
banquet whicn was sponsored by the
Young Adult Class with Faye Clifford
as chairperson of the committee.
The tables were coverecl with
yellow cloth!l and decorated With
vases of daisies. Eacn ooe attending
received a vor d. a hand made dlilsy
from the Young Adult Class. The din·
ner was potluck and was prepared by
various women of the church. Group
Blnglng Preceded the dinner and the
iluests wet'e welcomed by Mrs. Hope

"PS9DENT

NOXZEMA SHAVE
11 oz. Reg. or Methol
$1.69 Value

from MrS. Cora Webb, Ra~ine _
Chapter, which instituted the
Pomeroy Chapter. Mrs. Marie Curd
gave a history of Pomeroy Chapter,
and James Soulsby sang "One Day at
a 'llme" and "To a Sleeping Beauty.
He was accompanied by Mrs.
Margarel Newman at the piano. Mrs.
Mlndllng was at the piano for group
singing,
Table grace was given by Mrs. Ella
· Smith before .the potluck which
followed the meeting. Mrytle Sillson,
El Smith; and Evelyn ·Lanning
reglsterecl the guests. Pinons were
dlamond-6haped felt pieces sprinkled
with glitter. Mrs. Georgia Wa•·~n
was assisted In -serving by Chloris .
GAul, Judy Jewell, Edns Slusher and
Caryl Cook. Bowls of spring flowers
were used on the tables.

FATHER'S
DAY
stand to be counted
More and more Hush Puppies • shoes are
JUNE 17
showing up where dress casuals have
.__ _ _"""'_ _,

•.

NUTRA·NAIL
Value

.5 oz. $4.95

55¢

~

rnunlty involvement."
Though this ts the first dununer for
R.S.T., a long future Is -planned. "We
hope,"· Roark continued, ''to offer a
wide variety of quality summer
theatre productions every sWIIIIier
for local training and participation in
music and theatre arts."
All ages are encouraged to par·
ticipate.
Auditions for parts !lnd interviews
for production support positions will
be )leld at the following locaUona and
times.
Rio Grande, Olllo: Rio Grande
College, Music Building - May 25,
Friday, 8-10 p.m.; May 26, Saturday,
12 noon.Q p.m.
·

THIS WffK'S

was the

recently held mother.daughter ban·
qUet d. the "-bury United Methodist .

$139

i

I :

·:•

W~ey

1111 .

'

I

REOOGNIZED at the Asbury United Methodist Churcb motherdaughter banquet and.presented flowers were Rochelle Jenkina, being
held by her mother, Mrs. Roy Jenkins, the youngest daughter: Mrs. Anna
. Obllz, grandmol!e' with the most granddaughters: Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin, motlter wtth the most children; and Mrs. Florence Potts, mother .
with the most descendants, standing left to right.

weight and Unda
cunner-up. '

.· - - -

''Daisies Tell'' was the theme of the

receipts and disbursements and . Davis, past president.
rt!pOrt regularly to the club.
In other business. fins! reports for
Mrs. Reynolds in her cenneony in- the year were given. ~rs. Robson and
eluded Mrs. Alwilcla Werner, past Mrs. Terrie Walker reportedt on the
president, and on behalf of all the state convention attended by them
members of the club presentedto her this past weekend In Cincinnati. A
the key of faithfulness. Mrs. Reynolds . report was also given by Mrs.
concluded by reminding the member- Warner, Mrs. Goett, Mrs. Robson and
ship that the key to the success of any Mrs . .Walker on the April District
organization Is .In support from all meeting held at Nelsonville.
members, with each one doing her bit Refreslunents were served by the
to promote the objects for which the · nominating conunittee which had
club was organized.
charge of the program. Others attenThe nominating committee ding were Mrs. Wanda Eblin, Mrs.
presented corsages to the new of- Mary KWIZelman, Mrs: Catherine
fleers. A gift was presented to Mrs. Welsh, and Mrs. Grace Pratt.

/

.

I

.l

ing class, Frances Dillon lost the mosl

held locally

Rio Grande theatre auditions planned soon

I

J:

right, Mrs. Frances l,.ouise Davia, president; Mrs. Eva Robson, vice
president ; Mrs. Marjorie Goett, secretary ; and Mrs. Doiuta Davidson,
treaBurer.

Eastern Star celebrates 75th anniversary

.••'·

runner-up. At the Pool Pleasant eve~-

A 5G-pound pin for loss weight waS'
presented to Rosa Greene at the Monday night meeting of the Mason class
of Sllnderella. Four new members
were welcomed and Jane Johnson
showed the. most weight lOllS for the
Jieek.
A ~ pin was given to Linda
.Hubbard at the Middleport morning
class and Janet MoJTts w~ accepted
into the lljBintenance program. Rho~ ­
da Roush lost ·the most weight and
Shirley Johnson was runner-up. At
the evening class, Judy McGuire
received her 35-pound ribbon. Donna
Guinthet lost the most weight and
Wanda Po Powell wu the runner-up.
Mrs. Alice Hoschar received a »
poand ribbon at the. Point Plea~~BDt
Class Thlirsday monrlng and also
showed the greatest weight loss for
t))e )~reek with Melocly Hoschar as

f

I \

. INSTALLATION - Mrs. Rose Reynolds, left, installed the lm-80 of.
fleers of the Middleport Business and ProfessiOnal Women's Club left to

.

.

~

\

Weight loss pin given
at Slinderella meet
.

Banquet

B&amp;PW installs officers on Monday

.

been captured in Argentina and would
he tried in IBrael as a 'war crimlr;al.
Ten years ago: Tl)e death toll was
put at more than 500 in race rioting fu
Malaysia, with most of the fatalities
&lt;llinese.
.
Five years !lgo: The United States
assured the Gllneva Diaarmament
Conference It would not llevelop
miniaturized nuclear .weapons that
could be used interchangeably with
coJWenUonal weapons on a battlefield.
'
One year ago: .France said the
military forces it had landed in Zaire
would leave as soon as their aaslgnment of rescuing French clvlllana
from the so11them batt!~ area of
Sha!Ja Province was eompleted.
To day's birthday : British
eeonomist and writer Barbara Ward
is 65.
Thought for today : A child
educated cnly at . school Is an
uneducated . child - George San·
tayana, Spanish poet and philosopher,
1863-1952.

...
'

.

,_ 7-The Dally Sentinel, Mitldlepor1-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 23,1979
' '
.

BOY~S

.77!111

FRUIT OF THE LOOM

·UND£8UJ£A8
ll'emout "'Nit ot Loom Underwear" lor bOyt. loth IH
-.lrtt and t.rtlfl at 1 very tpteltl prl~ during our Annual

Tlllde b'*'tlon '"'"·

rlllllllts

'

·

A -.pecltl purcl'latt makaa thla
,prlcl pottcltllt .. Atgular 12.18
ttraw hand biQt ·larD• and roomy .
. ~ l!!luutllul wuvtt and llyltt.

Oooel ttltctlon ol tldlll tporW••·
Famous brandt. Oood Hrly tu'mmtr tiYIII
In· tl:lt coJo" You llkt. Your ' ' " Ia htr~ lo
comt tarl\lll"'d makt your choloe.

1100

SIZE
ONE
FITS ALL

EACH

I]U

......

• IIEII'S FIIUIT OF THE LOOM

UN8£RUJ£AR .·
...,., • - IHirMI wndltW"' """'lltd ootton
- · MCI t• lflirfl, .,...,,, low jlliQ• """"' our

..,l_ ..,...ion'
. ""·
.

Flret quality non, kr'IH hi aty'*'·
good tpi'lng co.lora, one '''' flta all.
Stock up at thlt v~ tow ~nc.t ,

·]5'
_,.•..,..• _
.

.

PR.

coLolii&amp;"loou
· Big anortmer'll Of c.ottoo te rr y wash cloths. Fac tory
ctean·up gioup made to setl for $9c e"ch. Assorted col·
on and wh ite.
·

25~

SI'ECIAL SELECTION .

Nkll UIOI'Imtnt Of Ohlldrtn'l OOIOf•
ln t - •• luy H¥tr.l lll!d 111111 tilt

kldt buey, Cltntro~l 1111 •. Ytr/

, ...lalllilprtol.

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, May 23, 1979

r-~Social ea1endar

I Recital presented Sunday afternoon·

WEDNF.SDAV
REGULAR MEETING, Ohio
Piano of aMrs.
Donnarecital
WeberSaturday
Jenkins · . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
students
Valley Col)l!lWndery 24, Knights . pre~nted
afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Templar, Wednesday, 7:30p.m..
Vernon Weber, Rutland.
AMERICAN
Students and their selections were
LEGION AUXIUARY, Feeney· Ben· ''Glittering Goldfish" and "Twinkle,
nett Post 128 of Middleport, meeting Twinkle" by Ulurte Shenefield ; "Sw·
at 7:30p.m. preceded by a 6:30 ·sup- ing Along" and "Chopsticks" by Jeff
per. Mrs. Florence Richards, Eighth Carson ; "Spring Song" and "The
District president, to speak on Viet· Chimes: by Melanie ·Arnold; "Mel&lt;·
nam. New officers to be elected.
lean Music" and "Bells Are Ringing"
,.
MIDDLEPORT UONS CLUB, by John Arnold; "The Falry's.Harp"
f
n6on Wednesday at the Meigs !nit. All and "To a Wdd Rose" by Kristi
Uon5 urged to attend.
Haynes; "The Music Box and "Nar·
MEIGS AREA Holiness Association cbsus" by Miss! ·Primer; "Dark
Wednesday at Hysell Run Free Eyes" and "The Spider Dance" by
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. The Sherry Arnold; "Blue Danube" and
Rev. John Coffman speaker, Publi~ Is "Come on Rangei,'S" by Jeff Arnold;
and "The Nightingale and buckoo"
. invited.
and "BarcOlle" by Steve Patterson.
'lUURSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY React Team Steve also joined Mrs. Jenkins for a
meeting, 7 p.m. T)lursday at Meigs duet
A decorated cake and punch were
Senior Citi2ens Center in Plxneroy to
plan for coffee break to be held ~rved to the students and guests,
Mrs. Elmer stone, Mrs. Larry
Memorial weekend.
TWINCITYSHRINETTES, 7:30p.m. Haynes and Matthew, Mrs. Michaels,
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Edna Mrs. Harold Carson, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Patterson, Mr. and Mrs. BobAr·
Slusher.
nold,
Mrs, Carl Shenefield, Mrs. Rex
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA Shenefield,
Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan,
CHAPl'ER, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, and Mrs. VemonWeber.
6:30p.m. potluck picnic at Fort Meigll
'••
Thursday.
POMEROY CHAPl'ER 1811, 7:30 .
' i DULCIMER MAKER-William Grueser, 83, who resides in. the Rock
A refrigera tor with co n V~riie n c e
Thursday, at the Masonic Temple, of· \
'
·: Springs community displayed several dulcimers of different styles at the
you can afford: Work· saving
Holler Medical Center
.
\
fleers for a practice.
· ·: apring conference of the Ohio Child Conservation League, South Central
Fro st•c tear system and handy
Dlsebargee,
May
ZZ
r District Conference, held Saturday at the Meigs Inn.
FRIDAY
factory-installed Ice Master, plus
Tod Bariow, Anna Brown,
f
.
BIG BEND C.B. Radio Club, Inc., Margaret Carpenter, Bertha Combs,
3 six-position adjustable gl ide-o ut
;;
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Friday at Rock Fred Deer, Jr., Esther Dixon, Susan
shelves. 2 glide-out crispers .
:·
Spring's Grange Hall. All members Evans, Jan Ferguson, Ruth Goody,
Silver Lin ing foam insulation and
Teresa Hall, Diana Hart, Stanley
convertible- reversible doors.
lUcks Ethel Jones, Cecil Keefer, Tim
•
Friday at 6 p.m. Bring a card table. Lam~rt, Kathy Manring, Sherry
At full capacity and cannot accept ad· Munsy Elsie Priddy; Teresa Shaffer,
Dolly Snider, Faith Thacker, John
"Two 1n One Store"
at Gaul's White, Fannie Wilcox, Mrs. Randy
106 N. 2nd
Middleport, 0 .
Treadway and son. .
~. ·
Grocery, Olester, sponsored by
J1&gt;~ Miller, Director, ill an· July 10 and II. Ma. Susan Drake will MerryMakers4-HClub .
.-neuncing"'auditions for tht'"first of be Miller's Assistant Director for tia
ROUND AND SQUARE Dance
,.tllree scheduled smnmer dirmer production.
Saturday at Southern High School
,.; theatre productions by .The Uttle . - - - - - - - - - - - , following alumni banquet. Uve band
.. Theatre.
.
and no admissions.
: • TrY-outs for that raucous comedy,
FOR SALE
•, "The Owl and The Pussycat" will be
;;,held at The uttle Theatre on May 29,
~1979 at 7 p.m. Jackson auditions will
:·be held at 7 p.m. on May 31 , il\ the
'~ackson Ubrary.
,f The play requires one female , age ·
·126, and one male in his mid.OO..
,i*nyone wishing further information
c0ntact Susan Drake at~.
JOr• tirei!Millerat~733.
Good condition . $700. Call
l&gt;e1:ionnance dates for Gallipolis
after 4:.30 p.m , 742·2459.
July 6, 7, 13 and 14; for Jackson,

Gibson$

17.0 CU. .FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

I

ur~~=RTAlumnldecoratlng

f Auditions

scheduled
"f~:;.,!. r next dinner show

DEAR POLLY - The instructions
8ald I needed a pair ol rubber gloves
to wear wldle applying a color rinse to
my hair. I had none so 1 just slipped
my hand Into a plastic bag with no
holes, futened It around the wrlat
with a rubber band and It worked
very well.- MRS. G. B.
D,EAR POLLY - My daughter
gave me the following good Idea. I
grit d mel'~ all
it I did
hid amne old fWI net ltocklnga (not
an
_,
over .
not panty hole) 10 I -ed a pair tosether
want to ICI'Btch the grill and did not at the top, knotted the ends and have
know what to do. When It cooled my cne of U.. ._ lklnny acarfs. The
lwband pulled off all he could. 1bea black ntt looU nice on 1 white bl--.
be put some ~•""'no alcohol 011 8
- the grill unW Dm't yoa think thlll8 a good way to
damp cloth and·
rubbed
ltloola!goodunew.-CHARLOTrE ~~ol4-fuldoned stoclclnca? DEAR POLLY- My hlllband loves . PoUy wilhend you CIQe of hr ,,...,....
carrot cake but I always hated the
...,._
thank-you newapaper coupon clippers
~rna~ when the carrota were put It ahe 1111!11 your favorite Pointer,
In the blender. I had the Idea of 1lling Peeve, Prllblem in her coliiDUI. Write
be II8IDe amount. of junior baby car- PO
'S
rots In the recipe, Tbe cake was ter·
LLY POINTERS In care ti this
rifle and no more messy blender. I newspaper.
feel that any wuman who had a~OOBband who llkea carrot cake but diads
they tbougbt of cleaning that messy
The U. S. Mint system has coined
blender wll benefit by my ~ery. money for more than 20 foreign coun·
-MARLYN
tries.

POLLY.$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer
APPUQUES MUST GO
By Polly Cramer

. POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Can you or one of
the readers ten me wbat will remove
plutlc floral appliques
the bottomofthebathtub?-M.K.
~ARM.K. -Put an inch or two of
hot waw ill the.tu
. b .and let the •ppll~
ques ~ lot quite a time. With a
JIPIItula or p!ltty knife l0011e11 one cor·
ner and · then pull hard and they
lhould Cllllle off. Wann vinegar or
rubbing alcohol sbould remove any
nmalnlng sticky substance. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - The other morn!DC u we !Ued breakfut the plutic
bread wrapper touched the hot wlffle

mm

GRAVELY TRACTOR

t

'·t

t
t

French City

. BULK WIENERS ••.••••••.••••~b~ $1.29
••

·HOMEMADE HAM SALAD.•• ~~.;$1.19
Eckrich Bulk

SMOKED SAUSAGE."·········"•· $1.79
'/2 Lb. Southern

MARGARINE

2/49e

VELVEETA CHEESE
Boll

$1.59

.

HEAD LEllUCE

49e
WINESAP APPLES

2 LB. ORE-IDA_
sag gge
FRENCH FRIES ·••• ••••• ·••• •••••·

jeremy Markin ·

Tum's two years
Jeremy Lee Markin, son of George
and ~ Markin&amp;, celebrated his
second birthday, on May 17 at his
home in Cheshire.
.
.
Gifts were pttsented to him and a
Shaggy Dog cake baked by his greataunt, Mrs. Patsy Spirea of Kyger, 1r111
served with Ice cream and pop; Atten·
ding besides Jeremy and his parents
was his grandmother, Ma. Inna
Bales, Kyger. Other grandparents
are Mayo Bale&amp;, · Sevam, N. C.;
Stanley Marldll, McArthur; and Mrs.
Catherine Stone, Jacbon. Great·
grandparents are Ms. Muriel Spires,
Kyger; Ma. Faye Bales, Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Pendleton,
RadcUH; and Mrs. Opal Ma\1dn,
Union Ridge.

501.

VIENNA SAUSAGE.••• ~~!~?~~~! .. 2/89~
32 oz. Kraft

SALAD DRESSING ..........~:~ •••$1.29
-17 oz. Del Monte

FRUIT COCKTAIL. •••••••••••••••.•..5~
Gallon Rich •n Ready •

'ORANGE DRINK .•.••••.••••••••••• 89~ ·
6'/2 oz . Star Kist

LIGHT TUNA ......................... 39c

t

t
t

t
t

10 of. Nescafe

INSTANT
4, oi.

COFFEE.~ ••••••••• ~~~ ••.$4.49

_'

&amp;oll

BOLD LAUNDRY DETERGENJ•••n.59
10 oz. Castleberry~~

HOT DOG CHILl .......
.

Mix or Matcn

Cleveland wW be conducted as Dr. John Houck, Director of the
deleptea vl.slt various ateaa ol 'Divl.slon for Service and l!&amp;alon In
ml8alan oulre!lch bt this large America will be pre111111t to npresent
metropolis. The Itinerary wtlllncl~ the vari0111 b!llrds and divillona o1
minlltrtes to nunjng home ~dents; the Natonal Clllrcb offices.
The Ohio Dutrtct ol the American
persans facing housln8 CIWI; per·
Lutherin
Clurdl repreenta over 2110
aons Involved Ill the Criminal Jllltice coogreptions
in Ohio and other
System; with imer~ty pegple; with states. ,. the delegates fnm the!le
phyllcally dlllbled persons; with churches gather at John Cerroll
!::!~ he~led*ai-e~ ~ University, owned by the Jesult Order
. Center, Cleveland Education Resour· ol the Roolan C.tbollc Cburch, a
ce Center and the Holy Family unique Chrlatlan witness will be IDIId.e
H0111Jice.
in the Metropolla ti Cleveland.

•

Embers
Charcoal

10
••

...

9AM-10PM
REOPEN MONDAY MAY 28TH
AllAM

lfOIIfOI
fNIIASftCUYINGI
ON UOGII IIAIC)

""""'""'

Ull• •lOW AII ,MT
A nw llAWtll

•

.r 1111C IIIII_. Ill SUI . .niiUil f I! Ul.

u

Df'.

Remain 0 n 24 Houn • Balance Of Week

Shortening

~ ~01.$149

Plan A
Cookout

-y

COfv.GHT 1m-nt1 KIOOII CO . ITIMI ololiiD HK.Il
QOOD ...... A'Il\AV Jti'HI\! SA'IUIDA'I
It, lt1t IN

,GALLIPOLIS &amp;.POMEROY STORES
M ..-vi THIMtft TO UMfT QUANmlU. NONIIOlD

iUCUIIII TitS IHI)

I
I
I

Watermelons

I
I
'I
.I

99'

emorial!

10-.

I
I

.

_I

.a y

I
I
I .

Grape Jelly

rozen Morton
Fried Chicken

SAVE _..
30' •

VERY LIF.ELIKE • ARTIFICIAL. POLY

:I

·J

.,

C

I
I

IQUNDTOI'

Kroger 20-oz •
White Bread ..... .

FLORAL ·SPRAYS
•CROSSES

U.S, GOY'T GRADED CHOICE.
lONE IN

Beef Loin
.
Strip Steak ..........

•WREATHS

•HEADSTONE
SPRAYS
•PIU.OW SPRAYS

1

.. , CMI

2$ 89

' Th'e Biggest Selection You'll See!

I'
I

I

$

Kroger 0. 5 %
· .l'loollc
Low f at MI•lk..........
Gal.

I

Ctn.

i

ICIOGEI

lb.

--I

Grade A
Large Eggs ....... Do•.

I
I

I

lAIOI - 1•. . DOZ. 67.'

UP TO 30" LENGTH
NON IETUINAILE

Look Around!
·compare!

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

But. don't wall to long. Our
selection Is huge - A vast
•rr•y of colors •ncl types,
but they're selling fast.
Most •II are boxed. Hurry
· on in

Sltei·Up

~.$129

14·11-LI. AYG •

.

Spaghetti

Whole
Fresh Hams ...

lb .

Country Oven
· Potato Chips ... :;;:

~~- 89C ~:~~~=~on .. ::...... ~::
8

~---~,Z..--1 FIOZIN U.S.D.A. INSI'ECTED

10·1'-LI, AYff.

Young
Turkeys .........111.

. JIIDIII'I

Cut
.watennelonl

30ct. Jumbo

·BOUNTY TOWELS •••••••••• ~ ••••••• 79c

Lutheran Church will be the feature
sp.ker and wW spend Ume In

encounter. Bua toun · throuChout diaculllon with bcJth laity and clergy.

OPEN SUNDAY MAY 27TH

. Lnrnl Bowling
Wednesday Eorlybirds
AprlllB, 1979

welcomed to the &lt;leveland area by
Mayor Dennis Kuclnlch. Dr. David
Preus, the Prelldent ol the American

Metropolis."
One rl. tbe opportunities they will
have durin&amp; the three day convention
will be to parlidp11te In the "buaing"

*Except Closed Saturnr Midnight Til9 AM Sundar
n•aucuaUt nt1

·~

I

The convention delegates will be

delesatea who will meet under the
convention theme, "Mtaaion in

ADAY"

c·

t

TRUSTEEs TO MEET
Tbe trusieeB d. the Meigs County
Pioneer and Hlatortcal Society will
mMt at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Meip
MUHIPD along with the history book
to further plana for publlablng the
new history of Meigs County. Don
Milll ol the publishing finll will meet
. with the group.

OPEN 24 HOURS

.t

t

·

ALL KROGER STORES

WITH MOWER
&amp; SULKY

Cleveland will be the location ol the
Nineteenth ,Annual Convention ol the
Ohio · District of the American
Lutheran Church. MeetinC at John
carroll University, May 31..June 2,
will be the Reverend Roland Trolke ·
and the delegate, the Reverend Ar·
thur Lund fnxn New Life Lutheran
Chun:h of Gallipolis. ~Y will be part
ol over Six hundred lay and clergy

I

I

· INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

di::~~E;

Annual convention for American
Lutheran Church slated in june

IIGIAAII 01 CHUI I'AK

Any Size Pkg.

Ground Beef .

$

••

Fried

Chicken

19c

.~. . 5!!
............... .
~awa

...

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

41

lolled Ham .................. . lb. $2 99
..... CIIIIOI-AID
3
SJ89
Potato Salad .. ......... .. 1~
~!ft. Dogs ...................3.,., SJll

DIU lUCID

Genuine Idaho
Potatoes ..~ ........ ~
1·11. Ill••• " '

�•
11-TI)e DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedneaday, May23, 19'79
.

l~TheDaUySentinel ,

Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday, May 23, 1979

Meigs .Local gets ESEA . grant

Travelers could
..
face first test
•

,,

By JOE MeKN1GHT
Ryan's department conSiders 300 or
Assoelated Pre.S Writer
more · requests per month for
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP l - The emergency fuel allotments. Then,
approaching Memorial Day weekend near the end of each month it releases
" may be the first real test of how back to the suppliers whatever
motorists are ·reacting to the gasoline is )eft.
tightening gasoline situation, says a
Ryan said state government uses
spokesman for Ohio Highway PatroL about 16 million gallons of motor fuel
" I just don 't think it ha~ alarmed a year and said at least two
' ' people yet," Sgt. John Francies said departments are taking steps to
':~- of
the
claimed
shortages, reduce fuel consumption.
· • skyrocketing prices and closin g
The health department, he said, is
service stations.
parking all its vehicles on Frideys and
Meanwhile, Gov . James A. Rhodes the transportation department is
was expected this week to announce a using cars instead of trucks to take
volunteer gasoline cooservation drive workers to job sites because cars use
aimed at reducing Ohio's motor fuel less gasoline.
coosumption by 10 percent.
Ryan is on a six-city tour this week
' Francies said Monday that urging business and community
statistics are not yet available to leaders to increase !heir efforts to
' · indicate any influence on motorists, conserve gasoline. Tbe tour opened at
" · but he sees little if any change in a seminar in Columbus and Findlay
n ' travel habits as a result of a reported
on Mondey, moved to Akron and '
;. gasoline shoctage in Ohio.
Youngstown today, goes to
"This weekend might show a Middletown
Wednesday
and
difference,'' he said of the upcoming Cambridge Thursday.
· Memorial Day holiday. "We might get
', some indication then because we are Money deadline June 9
• enforcing the SS miles per hour speed
limit."
June 9 -is the deadline to tum in
Francies noted the volwne of traffic proceeds from the Hike-Bike. Money
' tickets written by troopers· is greatly may be turned in at the office of the
affected by the weather because far Mental Retardation located on the
; more drivers are on highways in good ~round floor of the court house,
weather and · more of them drive Cleland Realty, or by calling 992-3232.
: cautiously during wintertime ice and
Bikes w!U be awarded to the winsnow conditions.
ners the following week. All sponsors
"We will write more tickets during are urged to make payment by check
the swruner, but we · also have made out to Meigs Association for
maximum traffic coverage during Retarded Citizens.
,. that time."
·,: Gasoline dealers in various parts of
• ·Ohio have indicated they will exhaust
''their May allotment or gasoline before
· 'the holidey and have to cloae until
they receive their June supplies. ·
By The Associated Press
' Director RobertS. Ryan of the Ohio
TENNIS
Department of Energy said Mondey BERLIN (AP) - Unseeded Caroline
the state will release its emergency Stoll scored the first 'major up!iet in
"gasoline reserve for public !he $100,000 German women's tennis
coosumption on Wednesday. That championshiJlli as she upended top' amounts to 10 million to 12 million seeded Wendy TUrnbull 2-6, IHJ, 7-6 in
"gallons of gasoline, less than one dey's a first.;ound match.
MUNICH, West Germany (AP) . supply to Ohioans who burn 5 billion
· Top-..eeded Manuel Orantes scored a
: gallms of gasoline a year.
Federal law requires gasoline s.G, 6-1 victory over Ross Case in the
suppliers to set aside 3 percent of the first round of tbe $75,000 Romika Cup
gasoline flowing In Ohio for state use Tennis Tournament.
'In emergency situations. Whlle it is
ROME ( APl- Dominique Bedel of
·largely a bookkeeping function,

'llw Meigs Local School District ha•
just b&lt;een informed that it has ooen
awarded a Title IV-C, ESEA, Adoption Grant lor a program entitled
"Curriculum for Ca reer Awareness,.
Dan E . Morris , director of
curriculum, announced today .
'This Adoption program is designed
to prov ide ca reer education expcriences fo r st udents frnm kin·

FOR·THE GRADUATE

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
IDIDCICICII::I

Court St. in Pomeroy
=

BULOVA
ACCUTRON
QUARTZ
CARAVELLE

Stickpins
r ol'&gt;hinno~ble, lrend -wttintc stick
p i n" h.u the look t~f toda y.

By AL LANIER
Associated Press Writer
GREENWOOD, S.C.·( APJ - Faith
healer Leroy Jenkins says he will
cootinue his ministry and will ask
followers to contribute to a $115,000
defense fund to help appeal his 12-year
prison sentence.
Jenkins, 44, was sentenced TUesdey
to four consecutive five-year terms. A
jury found him guilty of plotting to
burn two h001es and conspiring to
have two men assaulted.
Circuit Judge James' E. Moore,
rejecting Jenkins' tearful plea that he
not be sent to prison, imposed the
rnaximU1JI five years on each count.
But he ordered that two years of each
sentence be suspended after three
years of each has been· served.
That total of 12 years would be
reduced still further to eight if Jenkins
receives the onethird reduction in
each sentence granted in South Caro·
!ina.

'

Attorneys for Jenkins said the
conviction will be appealed, and the
state Supreme Court will be asked to
free hinn under bond pending. the

France crushed sixthseeded Brian
Gottfried 6-2,6-1 and Tonino Zugarelli
upset Ilie Nastase 6-2, 6-1 in the first
round of the Italian Qpen Tennis
tournament.
Fourth«eded Peter Fleming lost to
Sandy Mayer 6-I', 2~. 7-43, Harold
Solomon, the No.5 seed, rallied to beat
Deon Joubert 2~. 6-2, 6-2, and 16th·
seeded Dick Stockton edged Massimo
Alciati 7~. 6-3, in their first-round
matches. BASEBALL
NEW YORK (AP) -Tommy John of
the New York Yankees, who pitched
two complete. game victories last
week to raise his season record to 9-11,
won American League P.layer of the
Week honors, while Dave Kingman of
the Olicago Cubs shared National
League honors with Dale Murphy of
the Atlanta 'Braves.
John beat ~troit 11-3 with a sevenhitter oo May 15, then blanked the
Boston Red Sox 2-11 Sunday with a twohitter at Fenway Park.
Kingman, in six games, had 11 hits
in 24 at-hats lor a .458 batting average.
He hit four homers, drove in 10 runs
and scored eight runs.
Murphy, who had 12 hits in 26 atbats for a .462 average in seven
games, drove in JOruns.- two of them
game-winners - and scored six
times. He also hit three h~mers during ·
the week, all in one game.
HOCKEY ·
CINCINNATI (AP) - A federal
appeals court upheld the National
Hockey League's player reserve
clause and ruled Dale McCourt is the
property of the Los Angeles Kings.
McCourt, the leading scorer for the
Detroit Red Wings in 1977·78, had
refused to play f&lt;r Los Angeles after
his contract was turned over by the
Red WiQgs. McCoUrt remained with
Detroit during the past season. ·
The reserve clause entitled Los
. Angeles to compensation from Detroit
for the loss of goaltender Rogatien
Vachon.
BASKETBAll
NEW YORK (AP) - Moses Malone of
the Houstm Rockets, the National
Basketball · Association's leading
rebounder·, was named the league's
most valuable player foc the 19711-79
season .
Malone received 112 votes In
·balloting by 223 NBA players
completed at the end of the regular
season; the' NBA announced.
The 24-year-old Malone averaged
17.6 reboljnds per game. His 587 ·
offensive rebounda broke his own
NBA record and he grabbed 10
rebounds or more in 78 of the 82
· regularsejlson games.
Miilone, 6 feet 10 and 215 pounds,
1100 ranked fifth in the league In
scoring with a 24.8 average.
Malone is the 15th straight center to
be named MVP.
GOLF
MALMO, Sweden (AP) - Severiano
Ballesteros of Spain fired a one-under
· par 71 to beat Briton Howard Clark by
one stroke and win a dual golf challenge match.

First cycle to roll

.e... &amp;heart with

. , enctlanllng gift of
~. Ellgenlstvlee

tor

neck-

10 K. Yellow Gold

IPI. Dl•mond

wrist ...-In

14 '-at aold. 8terllng
liiYw and 12 karat
. gold filled.

Congratulations
Graduates
!dent. Br•celets

,1979 '

ng

•'

$250

cognitive development, · motor
development, etc. at the same time.
The 'participating staffs in the
schools participating will receive
copies of the Instructional Activity
Pachges and all. other necessary
1
suppltes and matertals.
The program is designed for
maximum flexibility and Iran·
sportability. It is suitable for .use with

Jenkins continuing.· ministry

Sports briefs

LASTING GIFTS

dcrga rtcn through grade six.
Tlw project eonsists of a nwnber of
. imt ru ctiona l activity packages
1IAI''&gt; 1, designed for easy .integration
with nomial classroom activities.
Through the activities, students wUI
be able to obtam valuable hands-&lt;&gt;n
experiences which allow them to
s u cces~ full y arrive at tangible
products. while assisting their

MARYSVILLE, Ohio (AP) - The
first motorcycle is expected to roll out
of the new Honda motorcycle
assen\bly plant · near Marysville in
August, according to Shigsyoshi
Yoshide, executive vice president-of
·the Japanese firm .
"AI that time, the work force will be
very limited," he said. "We want to
increase the units of production on a
·
very gradual basis.' 1
At maximum capacity, the plant is
expected to employ about 40!1 workers
and make lour models.
.
Yoshida said Honda had made no
decision on whether to build
autmnoiJiles at the Marysville facility
• elsewhere in the U.S.

all K~ students.
The experiences in the packages
integrate naturally with reading,
social studies, mathematics, science,
and creative efforts. The project does
not demand a great deal of time and
should in no way diminiah the existing
curriculum in parilclpating schools.
Major intended outcomes of this
Adoption program. include : advancement of the participating
students' understanding and attitudes
related to their career development
stages and growth in the attitudes and
ablllties of teachers in · providing
appropriate career developments
learning , experiences for their
students.
Some thirty-live (35) classroom
teachers are eligible for participation
in the program which will be im·
plemented during the 197~ school
year. It is hoped that all elementary
building staffs in the district will
become Involved with the program.
The Title IV-C, Adoption Grants are
administered by the Division of
Planning and Evaluation in the State
Department of Education and are
awarded on a competitive basis. The
Meigs ·Local Schools have suc·
·cessfully competed for and have been
awarded four (4) IV-C Grants in the
past two (2) years. These grants are
seen. as an effective and efficient
means of developing curricular areas
within the local system.

outcome.
.
out of school in Greenwood while· in
Jenkins, who ran for governor of the fifth grade . He began faith healing
Ohio in 1977, claims 140,-000 famiUes in Atlanta 22 years ago and built up a
are contributilig members to the lucrative organization that was
Leroy
Jenkins
Evangelistic headquartered In Delaware, Ohio.
Association .
When ·his "Cathedral" In Ohio was
His half-hour programs on Sundey, destroyed by a mysterioll'l fire in 1977,
featuring faith healing and appeals Jenkins then returned to his native
for contributions, are telecast over 37 South Carolina.
stations, mainly in the Midwest and
While awaiting the jury verdict,
South.
Jenkins told newsmen if found guilty ·
In contrast to bitter and often he would find a way to contiilue his
defiant testimony he gave earlier in evangelical activities, "perhaps
the day, the swartliy evangelist through correspondence."
·
appeared contrite and repentant after
He said he may have to rely more on
the jury returned the guilty verdict his
organization's
second-infollowing an hour and 40 minute-(Je. command, Richard Diamond. of
liberation.
Mansfield, Ohio.
His voice breaking, Jenkins asked
"I don't mean no har-m to anyone
Judge Moore to impose a fine rather and I love everybody," Jenkins told
than send him to prison. He said he the judge a~ter tbe verdict was in.
needed to be with the three of his eight
"I don't know what to $BY except
children living with him in Greenwood I'm sorry .
"I don't blame anyone. I feel I
and, "I want to continue my ministry.
"I am helping people," he said. · needed to learn this." · · Jenkins, who is divorced, dropped 1n f' 1
"Is to th .
ma argumen
e JUry,
defense attorney Kermit King of
Columbia said, "I think (he) is a
loudmouth and I think he has a hot
A number of students A nwnber of
temper- but we're not trying him for
A number of students were honored
that."
when the amual Southern High School
King said "extraneous and awards assembly was held recently.
Nine defendants were fined and six improper" testimony had been
Receiving awards were Bill Harris,
others forfeited bond in Meigs County introduced by the defense at the trial. the DeKalb award for agriculture; Ed
Court Monday.
"We're not concerned with his ·Roush, agriculture key; Brent Pat·
Fined by Judge Charles Knight religious beliefs, his political beUefs, terson and Debbie Pickens, social
were Earl E. Barnes, Albany, and his language or his sexual practices," studies ; Sharon Matson, home
Vernon B. Allen, Barnesville, $10 and King declared .
.
economics; Chris Circle and Jolm
costs each, left of center; Dennis C.
Jenkins was convicted largely on West, industrial arts; Seth Hill,
Clark, Pomeroy, $50 and costs, speed; testimony and taped conversations science; Pam Brauer, typing; Penny
Donna G. Hicks, Cottageville, W. Va., produced by Bruce Mirkin, an Smith, shorthand; Tammy Smith,
David W. Grindstaff, Racine, undercover agent f&lt;r the . Treasury · commercial; Tammy Smith, com·
Woodrow D. Perkins, Rt. I, Coolville, Department's Alcohol, Firearma and mercia!; Brice Hart and Naomi
Lewls Watson, Pleasant Hill, Tohacco unit.
Foreman, mathematics; Robert
Louisiana and Denner Bush, Rt. 4.
Mirkin infilt1ated the Jenkins' Taylor and Debbie Pickens,
Pome.roy , $15 and costs each, organization last fall.
dramatics; Naomi Foreman, both
speeding; George A. Deweese,
The evangelist contended the EngUah and French; Dennie Wolfe,
Athens, $10 and costs; failure to yield. undercover work was a corltinuation activities; Naoml Foreman, and
Forfeiting bonds were Ellsworth H. of government effocts "to get me" Robert Taylor, citizenahip; Teresa
Sherby, Senecaville, $35.50, unsafe which had started in Ohio.
Ervin, perfect attendance key for four
vehicle; Jeffrey Hamilton, Zanesville,
Two men Indicted as co-defendants years; National Honor Society, Lori
Phillip Saunders, Ironton, IIJld Royce on the arson and assault conspiracy Chapman Hill, Naomi Foreman,
E. Barker, New Philadelphia, .$33.50 charges, Scott Shirley of Hodges, S.C., Brice Hart, Seth Hlll, Jeannie
each, speeding; Katie Carpenter, and Frank Minor, of Del van, Wis., Johnson , Brent Patterson, Cindy
Rutland, $360.50, driving · while in· pleaded guilty and testified against Patterson, Debbie Pickens, Naomi
.toxicated; Jack L. Clark, Rt. I, Jenkins, their fOI'mer employer.
Foreman, Seth Hall, Terri Zirkle and
Middleport, $362.55, driving while
Scott and MinOI', both Z2, were to be Debbie Pickens, certificates of
intoxicated.
sentenced today by Judge Moore.
achievement.

By BRIAN B. KING
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farmers
last wee~!; abnost doubled their corn
plantings and overtook last year's
sowing pace, thanks to five or six good
dey~ for fieldwork in most states, the
Agriculture Department says.
.. Some concern had been raised
about the planting delays despite their
ultimate irrelevance last season.
TUesday's update on spring planting
nught cabn those uncertainties.
&lt;
By Sunday, about 67 percent of the
•· crop was pl~nted, compared to o!lly 34
'· · percent a week earlier and 13 percent
two weeks before, the report said.

i

By SUSAN STOLER
Auoclated Preu Writer
AUSTIN, TelliS (AP)- The dozen
Killer Bees of the Texas Legislature,
after stinging efforts to pass an early
" · presidential primary bill, swarmed
back to the Capitol Tuesday to a
heroes' welcome.

,,

By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Lacking the
votes to stop a move among House
Democrats to renounce oil decontrol,
White House allies are pushing a com·
promise measure tying decontrol to a
o; windfall profits tax.
.., Under the new proposal, expected to
;., be offered as an amendment today at
a meeting of the House Democratic
Caucus, President Carter would be
., asked to delay his decontrol decision
, until "an adequate windfall profits tax
is enacted ."

2"x4"x8'

STUDS

'''

LONDON ( AP )
Students from
China have started to study in
Western Europe, where everything
from sexual permissiveness and disCo
dencing to constant hot water and
laundromats is making them aware
life is very different from back home
in the People's Republic.
Nevertheless, the students are
plunging into a whole array of
subjects, including
computer
technology , agricultural mecha·
1 nization, mechanical engineering,
-electronics, medicine, biology·,
chemistry, physics, nuclear physics,
astronomy ,
zoology,
botany,
agriculture,
oil
technology,

"
'
·
·
'
'

..'

Bernice Bede Osol

,,
M1y 2. , 1979
.- Your ambitio ns and material
• goal s will be lurthered I hie
co ming year by persons Work in g behind tt1 e sce nes . Breaks
..., wlU come jus t when th ings start
to look their darkest.
.- GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Ar:_. range your schedule today so
11 tt1at things don't have the
" chance. to pile up on ~ou . Your
~ work witt su ff er if it 's left to the
last minute . Find out more of
• what He s ahead for you In th e
yea r lpllowing your birthday by
.. se nding l or your copy o f AstraGraph Letter. Mail $1 for each
"and a sell-addressed envelope
to Ast ra-Graph , P .O. Bo)( 489,
Radio Cit y Station, N.Y. 10019.
.. Be sure to specify birth sign.
•
1

CANCER (lune 21·July 22) You
"ocould elC pcfience so me unu,sual social pressures today , so
It's best· you k:eep your guard
up. II some thi ng unpleasant
~: occurs, don' t overreact .
LEO (July 13-Aug. 22) The rug
could be pulled out from under
you today in a situation that you
th ink yo u have under controL
, Be, read}\ to make some Quick
iidJUstmehts.
VIRGO (Aug . 13-Sopl. 22) Avoid
confrontations today with perIOns whose basic philosophy
conflicts with you rs . You may
say some thing which you'll
regret.
LIBRA (Sflpl. 23-0et. 231 Don ' t

ONLY

Yard Sale

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. VA.

plause and cheers as the 12 senators,
all Democrats, entered the chamber
surrounded by wives, friends and
media.
· After Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby pronoun·
ced a quorwn for the first time since
last Thunday, the Killer Bees were
excused to tell their story to a packed

Carter has announced be will begin
lifting price controls on domestically
produced crude oil on June 1, allowing
the price to rise to world levels by
mid-1981.
1n a test vote Tuesdey, House
Democrats e1pressed opposition to
that move by nearly a 2-to-1 margin.
The caucus of all 276 House
Democrats was meeting again todey
to take a final vote on the resolution
supporting a continuation of controls.
Carter's decision to llft price
controls is not subject to ·con-_
gressioilal approval and the resolution
'&gt; attacking it is nonbinding.

However, passage of the resolution
would put the president at odds with
his own party in the House on tbe
controversial issue. And it would be
another embarrassment to an
administration that has seen other
Carter energy proposals rejected by
Congress.
Thus, to slow the anti-decontro1
momentum, a group of seven
Democrats usually aUgned with the
White House , on energy issues .
announced it would offer the
amendment on the tax proposal.
In a "Dear Colleague" letter, the
lawmakers said, "We believe a

:· China's students enter 'mod' era

ASTRO·GRAPH

.

The "Buzzin' Dolen," l.blent five
deys, were preent wllen the Senate
roll was called and cluJmed victory.
· "We think the bill Is dead," Sen.
Oscar Mauzy, D-Dallas, one of the abo
sen tees, said at,a news confeJ'I!IIce.
The Senate gallery burst Into ap-

,. 'Allies -support compromise

Thursday, May Z4

HURDINC?
REMODELINC?
we can help

last year's !10 and the 94 percent
average, the report said.
About 23 percent of the soybean
acreage was planted, up from 1978's
15 percent but below the 33 percent
average.
Last year at the same time, 57
. percent of what became an
unexpectedly huge corn crop of 7.1
billion jl.)IShels had been planted.
Nearly 1'0eal weather in the critical
summer and early fall months more
than offset the d~ays .
Seventy-five percent · planted is
average for this point.
The report said thatfuel supplies for

fieldwork "generally rated adequate, carbon copy of last year because It 'is
although supplies were tightened wet, the crop is late, and many fields
from !he previous week . Only a lew lo-.. were weedy early in the spring."
The western Corn Belt was still
calities reported fuel short enou~ h to
interfere."
lagging behind last year's pace and
It 'didn't mention another ·problem longterm averages at 61 percent.
some Midwest corn growers are
But that's a 38 percentagepoint gain
fa cing - an abnost certain repeat of in a week and more than double the
1978's hassle with cutworms, which previous week's rate . The Great
can destroy a crop in days if not Lakes states also were generally still
behind.
checked .
Planting sur ged ahead in the
Donald Kuhlman , an extension
entomologist at the University of · eastern . parts of !he belt, with 66
Dlinois, said, "As the planting season percent planted, and in the Southeast,
is pushed back, the chance lor severe where 95 percent of th e crop was in the
infestation increases. This looks like a ground.

'Killer Bees' swarm back to Austin

''

County Court

@

Higher temperatures and only light
rainfall· in most areas gave the
farmers a chance to catch up after
weeks of cool, wet weather , the
bulletin said:
Spring wheat seedings jumped from
20 percent to 43 percent, but that'sstill
well behind l~st year's 68 percent lind
the 71 percent average, the de·
partment said. Oats and barley
plantings also were short of the 1978
mark and the averages.
Cotton plantings advanced to an
average 66 percent, ·ahead of la,9t
year's 60 percent, however, while rice
sowing stood at 83 percent, lagging

I

Southern students
presented awards

'

Farmers double corn plantings, .sowing p~c,

....
e=.

YARD SALE Thursday 'and Frl·
day, May 2• 011d 25. 9 to 5. ·
Ni ce polyester dreues ,
••pecially pr•teen 1ize1.
8ooks, bottle1 , plants, and
planter~ ; 2 miles north of
Cheater, Ollie on the Sumner...,
ltd. Ca. Rd. 36 at Cod Fi~dling
~es idence . If rain, sale to be

held following week , watch
for sale signs.
Y.ARO SALE at Brendo Hysells,
one and half miles out Rt. 1.c3.
Tue s. ' Wed ., 22 ond 23.

FAM ILY gorage sola,
Wednesday, Moy 23 to 1. 320
&lt;;ondor $t. . Pomeroy 9 til
dark .
.C. 1

· adi8.0S22 .052402DINETTESET,

!qbl• and 6 chairs , maple cof·

t.. table and matching end
table, . Good conditiCln . f:hone
992-3079.

..

metallurgy, ship building, forestry,
navigation, law and politics.
The flow of Chinese students follows
tlie recent creation or closer links
between · mainland . China and · the
West, including the establishment of
diplomatic relatioos 'beween China
and the United States last Jan. 1.
An Associated Press survey shows
at least 700 Chinese students are
·studying in five West European
countries this year. ·Even more study
in the United States and Canada.
Indications are the European number
eventually could grow to more lhaP
1,600, Involving at least 10 European
countries.

be stingy today , but use your
common sense before len~lng

Sending students to the West is seen
as part of China's effort to repair
demage inflicted on its educatlonal
system by the social upheaval .and
aftermath of the 1~9 Cultural
Revolution. Cliinese students studying.
to London at the time of !he Cultural
Revolution were among those recalled
to take part in it:
·
. The bulk of the students China is
sending to Europe are in Britain
where a bunus is acquisition of
English, one of the world's most
Widely spoken languages. Ages range
from 17 to a few post post-graduate
students of 51.
.

wlll be rejected If you · fall to
appreciate the bellefa of oth·
era.
careless with his or her own ARIES (!Iorch Z1·Aprll II) sopossessions.
fore acting on the advice today
SCORPIO (Clot. 24-Ncw. 22) You thtt ~uld cost you money,
will not appreciate having your make sure your advotaer knowa
lndependenc!f tampered with what he or she Is talking about.
today, so steer clear ot per. S.d Information could prove
sons who like to arrange your expenalve.
schedule for you.
·
TAURUS (April :O.Moy zt) Oocl·
SAQITTARIUS(Ncw. Z:I-Ooc. Z1t alona that you make under
Ted ious tasks are not·your cup pressure today could work
of tea today. It' s beet to .locus against your own beat Interyour elfort,s on Jobs that don't eats. Take time to weigh all
regulre a long attention SPfin .
11ternallv11.
. • :lJ
CAPRICORN (Doc. ZZ.Jon. 11)
IHEWSPA~EA ENTERPRtS£ ASSN. )
Don't make heavy demands of
· your pals today. They may not
"l'm referring you to
be In the position to Comply
with your wishes. You could
Ehrlicl:. He hao a longer
misinterpret their re·aaona .
cOuch."
AQUARIUS (Jon. IO.Feb. 11)
Care must be taken not to
~OTICE TO
upset the boas or those who
CONTRACTORS
are runlng the show today.
STATE OF OH 10
Antagon izing authority flgurea
DEPARTMENT OF
IN THE
will bring down the roof on your
TRANSPORTATION
COMMON PLEAS COURT
held.
Columbus, Ohio
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
May 4, 1919
PISCES (Fob. :O.Morch zt) Try
OHIO
Contract Safes
to be flexible In your thinking
HARRY KING,
Legal Copy
tOday , rather than adhere to
Plaintiff,
Nc . 19- 311
narrow views. YoUr opinions
· ~$ ·
UNIT PA ICE
CAROLYN SUE KING,
CONTRACT
Oefend•nt.
Se aled proposals will be
No . 17,150
rece i ved at the office of the
NOTICE BY
Director of
the
Ot11o
PUBLICATION
De partment of Trans .
Auto Sales
porta lion , Columbus, OHio , . TO : Carolyn Sue King,
whose last known address
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT unti l 10 , 00 A . M .• Ohio
was 46898 Scout Camp
21 ,000 mil•. fully equipped, Standard Time , Th ursday ,
Road , Long Bottom, Oh10
air w.nch etc
excellent May 31. 1?79, for lm ·
You are hereb~ notif ied
'
'
·•
... provements 1n :
condition. 992-2121 .
Athens
and
Meigs
that you have been named
1974 GMC JIMMY p B p S Counties , Ohio, on vlHious , a defendant in a legal
action ent itl ed Harry Kino .
• 1 d ,l · 's' • ·• ~ec lions .. ATH .. State
Ac
· ·• 2·WnH
r
1725. Route U4 In the Village of
Plaintiff , vs . Carolyn Sue
T ht~
Call992-3580.
Coolv i lle in Athens County , ' King , D efendan t
act ion has been assioneu
1975 FORO RANGE XLT TRUCK and . MEG .. United States
Rou te 33 in the Village of · Case No. 11,150 and Is
12 ft. truck camper, 1977 Pomeroy
pending in the Court of
and State Routes
Kawasaki 400 motor cycl•, 141 and 681 in Meig s
Common Pleas of Meigs
may b. SMn at 336 Lasley St., Coun ty , by resurfa ci ng
County , Ohio .
The Ob jec t Of thE! COn i
Pomeroy. orclol 992-3163 .
with asphalt con crete .
plaint is the obtain ing of a
Pavem en t
Wiatn
1973 MONTE CARLO " AC Tilt v aries
• divorce and the
ter ·
whMI , swlvelseat1, ANt tOpi'
mlnafion of a marriage
Pro ject and Work L ength
c ontract
betVteen
t he
$1850c992·2661 alter 5 p.m .
-- 95 , 145 feet or 18 .02 mil es .
parties, the settlement of
"T he date se t for com
FORO F- ISO, 4x4 , pi, pb, pletion of th is work shall be
the property rionts of th e
auto . ,
topper .
Phone as set forth In the bidding
parties , and the issue of
985·4339.
'
support and custody of t he
prOPC?Sa I."
Eac h bidder shall b e 1Ch ildren .
1977 2 door Malibu, 45,boo required to file w ith his bid
You .are required t o
· miles. A-1 condition 's2800. a ce rtified c h ec k . or
answer the complaint
within 28 davs after the la st
Sn at 60S West Main St .. cas hler ''!i check for an
publication of th is not ice,
Pomeroy, Ohio,
amount equal, to five per
Whi Ch will be publish ed
cen1 of his bid, but in no
1976 DODGE CHARGER, PS, event more than fif ty
once each week for six
PB, air conditioning, radio, thou sand dollars, or a bond
succeSsive weeks . T he la st
publication will be maCJe on
vinyl top. 23 ,CXXJ miles . $3000. for ten percent of his bid •
June 26, 1979, ana th e 2B
payable to the D irecto r .
Caii99Ur055.
days for answer will
Bidders must apply , on
1m CAMARO. Rally -Sport. the pr op er forms . for commence on tha t date .
tn ct;tse of your failur e t o
olr, auto. , looded. 992·6681 qualificat ion at l eas t ten
answer
or
o th e rw ise
before S pm or 9'12· 3133 after days pr ior to the date se t
respend as required by the
t or opening oias in ac
pm.
OHi o
Rules
o f · c i vi l
cordance with Chapter 5525
Pr oced ure ,
the
t i nal
1970 DODGE DART, $300. ·Ohio Rev ised Code .
hearing on this matter will
992-5147.
Plans ana specificat ions
beh eld after the expiration
are on file in the . Depart
1m F250 Ford truck . h...iy mentot lr a ns portation and of 42 days after the last ca y
of publication Clf th i&amp; notice
duty. P.l ., P.S., low mileage. th e off ice of the Di str ict
or as soon the r ea ftt' r as ca n
·Topper, tO ply tlrn , new D c pu ty D irec tor .
be 'ichct:lu l ed by tne Cou rt .
T f1C
D ir ec tor ' reserve s
spore and snow tires and
whHii , 4-s.,..d, mint condl· ft'tC rigrd to rejec t ony and
Larry Spencer.•
a ll ,bid s.
tion : Regular gas. S.. at
C Jerk of Court
larry's Grocery, Syrocuse, or
of Me igs County ,
Qt.\ I O. L WEIR
coil m-5324.
Ohio
OIJ.&lt;ECT·Of&lt;
R e v
8
I 7
7
J
t975 XL 250 Honda. , $500 or
(~) 22. 29 , ( 61 . ; , " · 19 . 26,
bel toHer , 9'12· 70114 ,
6tc
·
'IS ! 16, '1 J 'l ie

LAFF -A- DAY

~-- ...

s

· preferred position 101' our caucus
would be to set the decontrol in motion
only when a stiff windfall profits tax is
established."
Rep. Toby Moffett , D.Conn., main
sponsor of the anti-decontrol
the
new
resolution,
claims
amendment wotild confuse the issue
an!l said he will oppose it.
Offering the proposed "compromise" were Reps. John Dingell of
Michigan, Richard A. Gephardt of
Missouri , Richardson Preyer of North
Carolina, Joseph L . Fisher of
Virginia, Philip R. Sharp of Indiana
and Vic Fazio and Tony Coelho, bolh
of California.
· On a 1sa.,2 vote, the House
Democratic Caucus rejected an
attempt TUesday to kill Moffett 's
resolution.
"This is a complete repudiation of
the president's position," said Rep .
Edward J . Markey, D-Mass., after the
vote. "The Democratic Party has put
the president on notice that the litmus
test of the 1980 elections will be how he
comes to grips with energy problems."

Meanwhile, the Senate was laking
up a bill today that some senators
claim could be a substitute for the
president's rejected standby gasoline
rationing plan.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The deiry
·• subcommittee of the House
Agriculture Committee has endorsed
keeping the minbnwn dairy price
support rate at 80 percent of parity
"It's breathing rather slowly rtght through September 1981.
now," said the sponsor, Sen. Bill
Unless Congress acts, the legal
Meier, D-Euless.
minimwn will drop to 75 percent on
Sen. carl Parker, [).Port Arthur, Oct. I. The subcommittee approved
said nine of the group stayed together the extension bill by unanimous
in a friend's home, but he would not . voicevote Tuesday and the full
disci~ where.
committee may act this week.
"There was one toilet and one
Prices generally have been above
phone and half of them kept wanting !he support rate since last year. A ·
to trade the toilet for another Congressional . Budget Office, study
telephone," Parker said. The con· last month said that dropping the level
troverslal bill would establish a Mar- or raising it sharply would disrupt
ch .presidential primary separate either the retail or farm markets or
from the May general party elections, both.
a move seen as benefiting the White
At 100 percent of parity, farmers
House hopes of former Teli8S Gov . theoretically would have the same
John Connally.
buying power farmers had in 191~14 .
Mauzy said the plan was hatched as Since the 80 per&lt;;ent mjninnum was
a joint effort after the group felt there enacted in 1977, the Agriculture
was no other way to stop the primary Department has set t11e da(ry
measure. The legislators fled the supports as high as abnost 83 percent.
capitol Friday.
"Allowing dairy supports to decline
Earlier Tueaday, Democratic Sen. could discourage decisions by
Gene Jones of Houston, one of the first producers to maintain adequate milk
to return, said Hobby had agreed not supplies for consumers , '' said
to order any of the absentees arrested subcommittee Chairman AI vin
if they returned TUesday.
Baldus, D-Wis.
'
Gov. Bill Clements had threatened
Some members of Congresa want to
to declare their seats vacant.
put dairy fanners oo a formula that
"We ought to do something about reflects just their costs rather than a
the spoiled children," the Republican parity formula that includes all
governor said when he retunted from farming expenses and prices.
an out-of-elate trip. "We might spank
them."
WASHINGTON (AP) - The ann11al
Clements, who had taken a hands· interest rate on Agriculture
off attitude earlier, said he might Department price-eupport loans tliis
declare the senators' seats vacant year will be 9 percent, a jump of
and ~all a special election.
almost opethird from the 7 percent
The group had been hunted by the · charged on 1971krop loans.
Texas. Rangers. Killer Bee T-ehlrta
USDA's
'commodity
Credit
came Into vogue and somebody wrote Corporation noted Tuesday that tl)e
a song about their flight.
law requires it to charge the same
Without at least two of the missing interest it pays when it borrol'tS
senators, the 31-rnember Senate money from the Treasury, plus
lacked the 21 members needed for a handling costs.
~
quonun and could do n~thing.
The lower rate remains in effect far
1971krop loans.

.C arrier Needed

anything of 'lalue to one who Is

v•.

room of reporters and photographers.
Later, the bill the group claimed
wa8 b!!ing used to enact a separate
primary received a 17-lf vote, short
of the two-thirds majority needed for
passage. The vote meant the bill
probably will never clear the Senate
this S4!ll8lon, which ends Monday.

The p states included in the weekly
report accounted for 93 percent of U.S.
corn production in 1978. Planting
progress in them, as of May 20 and
compared to a year ago, was given as :
Colorado, 69 percent by May 20 and
78 percent a year oofore; Georgia, 100
and 100; Illinoi~, 72 and 37; Indiana , 60
and 20; Iowa, 82 and 71; Kansas, 60
and 55; Kentucky, 60 and 38;
Michigan, 55 and 80; Minnesota, 37
and 73; Missouri, 59 and 21 ;
Nebraska, 60 and 75; North Carolina,
95 and 88 ; Ohio, !10 . and .45;
Pennsylvania, 68 and 32 ; South
Dakota, 28 and 30; Virginia , 82 and 64 ,
and Wisconsin, 42 and 50.

------

MIDDLEPORT, ()HIO

MONKEY RUN, POMEROY, 0.
CALL

THE DAILY 'SENTINEL
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2156
Make your own spendi.RK money and eam

pmes.

Puffs has good news for noses!
It's great news. New Puffs feel
.even softer:.and less irritating on
your nose than any tissue. Including
old Puffs.
And the most economical way to
buy Puffs is to stock up on Puffs
Family-Pack now.

�12-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pimeroy , 0 ., Wedrle.tay, May 23, 1!1'19

Your Best Buys Are
WANT AD
CHARGES
IS Words or Under
Cash
Chara:e
1 dar
2dayll

3dayl
I days

1.00
Uti
1.80

1.25
1.90
! .:15

3.00

3.7:1

Each word over tht minimum
l!l words Is fctnU per word per
day. Ads running other than consecutJve days will be charged at
lhe 1dly rate .

ln memory , Cud of 'Mianla
and Obltu~ry : Sctnb per •ord,
$3.00 minimwn. C..!dt__ in »d-

.....,..

Mobile Hollle saiet~ and Yard
Nlet!l Iff j~~ pled

only with -

cash With order. 2$ cent chlr!e

for a~ Cllnying Bo.l Nwnber n
Care of The Sentinel.
The Publis"'r reaerves the
right to edit or reject any ada

deemed

objectional.

The

Publisher wiU not be responsible
TllOf"e than one Incorrect in-

fer

Jfrtion .
Phone:Wl-2J56

NOTICE ·
WANT,AD

~ERTISING

DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thru Friday

4P.M.

th! day before publkation
SWlday

4P.M.
Friday afternoon

Pets for Sale

For Sal«

1

In Memory
IN MfMORY of my poor
broth.r, who deported tills
llfo4 yoon ago, May 23, 1975.
little did we know when
dawned that morning
The sorrow that doy would br-

Ing
The end was sudden , the
shock se\lere
To part with one we loved so

c!Mr
Death leav" a wound no one
can heal
Th.y live wifh us in memories
still
Not jutf todoy but always will
When evening shadows ore
lolling
And we or• t ilting alone
In our heart com•• a longing
If you could only come home
To think that we did not say
goodbye .
.
Will Alway1 bring regrett
But the hearts tflat loved you
bottol all
Are the hearts that won't
forget
·
Dear Brother, you are not
forgotten
Though on earth you ore no
more
·
' Still in memory ou are with us
As you always were before. ·
Sodly milled by hit sister,_
Mrs. Richard thomas and
niece Mary Jonn.
Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
lY.
RACINE GUN ClUB. Flohlng
Derby, Moy26' &lt;7, 8o.m. to6
p.m. Prtzes. For memMrs and
thelrfomlll.. only .
STANS BARGAINLANO and
Groc.,-y on State Route 12.C
and County Rood S will be
sponsoring o Fl.a Market
every Sunday until further
notice. Eve~one welcome. $3
to set up. See you all Sunday.
We are open 7 doyt a week.

COAl. liMESTONE, .:.nd, .ISING STAR Kennels, boor·
ding and groom ln;, __ all
grav•l. calc ium chloride, t.r~
tilizer. dog fqod , and olltypn
lwMda. Choshlro. 367·0292 .
of tall . Excetflor Salt WOrilt,
HOOf HOllOW, Engllth ond
Inc ., E. Main St .. ,omeroy,
Western .
Soddres
and
'1'12·3891.
hornets. HOf"' ond poniM.
PLANTS. CAIIIIAGE, broccoli ,
Ruth ll"v" . 61•·691-3290.
lording a Riding lnsona and
cauliflower, bruttels sprouts ,
HorM Core products. ·
head lettuce, tomatoes, and
iarge selection of ~ng on·
nuals. Pots of flowers ond
camping Equipment
hanging · baskets . Cw.nd .
1975
11 FOOT truck camper .
Greenhous• .
Geraldine
'Hif·
contained,
air condition ,
Cleland, RoclM.
excellent condition. 992·2121 .
HANGING BASKETS. oil k!ndt .
1973 PATHFINDER campo&lt; apr·
Bedding plonll, blooming.
1~
awn in1JS . self·contoined.
V.getoble plants, all ~ to .
lo0d4td with e)(tras. 69f.l218
go, potted. Soo Don
ollot'4 pm.
Rt. 2, Raci ne, Ohio.

s.-...

VERMEER BAlE~ 605 C.
Mo~oo 1500 lb. bolo. E-o.,.
Phone 7~2 · 21n or 742·2152.
TRUCKS , 2 ton !973 and 1 'lo
ton 1970. lloth wtth 12 ft.
bo)(es. Phone 992-6206 or
'192·6173.
BEAUTIFUl SELECTION of
flow•rt for Memortal Day·
Faye's Fl~r Shop. ne;.t to 1
Fireston• Store, Middleport. 9
amto8pm.
WESTERN lOOTS lrom Acme
and Tony Lomo for woftc or
dre11. W• have o lorp Mle&lt;·
tion of boats on honct for men
and lad!•• at Mountain
L.ather and General Store.
ICM·I06 W, Union St .. Athono.
0+1. Monday thru Solurday.
10.5:30. 592·5-178 . .
Zonlth otloroo, ~- lf&gt;N'I record
player with speakers, AO. All '
in good condition. See .t 256
So. fourth. Avo .. Middleport.
PIANO ANTIQUE CHIM'f,
$550. RADIAl TIRES on rlmo.
7&amp;.15 $50.00 for pair. 992·27811
or 992·3850.
1973 CHEVY NOVA 3SO ~ ­
spood, p.b.. blickot
·aluminum w~1 , e~l.,.t
condition. new tirft, call
985·3541 after 5 pm.
15 FT. LOWE liNE A l - bool boot, :10 HP, M«t., ot1ck
st.. rlng, · tully oqulppool· wllh
trailer. PhoM98!-419.

For Rent
COUNTRY Mo.llE Homo l"ori&lt; ,
R..,to 33, north of Pomeroy.
Largo lots. Coll992·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
furnished
opts.
Phon•
992·5-134.
FURNISHED A~T . suitable for 3
or 4 construction workers .
A!tor 5pm call 992-5-134 .
992·3129, or992-5914.
TWO IEDI!OOM lurnlohod opt.·
"2·3129 , 992-5434 . . or
9'12·59 ...
'stHI'ING !lOOMS '192·2&lt;109
eny tlmo oftor 5 pm.
OffiCE. SPACE FO~ ~!NT,
115.00 month. All utllltlol
,.ld. Phone 9'12·6009.
NlW CUSTOM built contom·
porary home, close to store
and ochools. 3 bedroom, 2
bathl , large living room , din·
ing room , fomlty room. One
car garage, A.C., O.W . , gar·
bogo dioposol. cathedral coli·
lnp: Moton, WV. No peh in·
ticM. For oppointtMnt call
61~,367·7560 allot' 4:30.

-b.

. Mobile Homes

.------'"'""---,I

BULl LIME
SPREADING
POMEROY

.MIDOlEPORT , OHIO lor loose
11 ,too oq. ft. floor opoc'; two
l&lt;*ilng docka , will remOdel to
svlt tenant. Phon•..C-46-~ .

LA~DMARK

Phano "2·2111
Alii Fer ·
CHAIILES lUSH

~

Jac- w.
. Mf/r.

services Offerld

·c
.
..y

.-

· .._

~ARR

AND mloc. hauling.
.c.tl992·5858.
flOW HAUliNG llmostono In
Mlddl•r,ort-Poemroy area .
Call
or free estimate.
367·7-101 .
PAINTING AND IGndblaotlng.
Fr.. Mtimatft. Call ~9· 2686.
lltEI'TRIMMING and Removal .
7&lt;12-3167 0&lt; 742·2573.
WARDS PAINTING, · Interior,
••terior. r.. ldentlal , commer·
cia!, 3Q years e)(perlence,
guonanteed work . Jlhone
1C2·:J671 , Harrisonville, Ohio.
ADO ONS AND romodollng
work, down tpOUfl.
.
concrete work , wolks
and
driveway•
(free
- t o ). V. C. Young,
Ralno, Ohio, ~- 2748.
lOOM, aOAIID AND LAUN·
DRl' for 2 elderly - ··
$175 month -h. l'hono

fft·illl

FOR SAlE, :12,000 oq, lt.. and
IO,AOO sq. ft . under IMM, ex·
c•ll•nt location for many different types busln..s. ~~hone
446-3258.
1967 23 Foot Airstream
Troller. Phono1 ·3CM-67$-3CIM.
MF 175 TRACTOII 2200 ' - "·
MF ' 3 pt. 16 Inch 3 bottom
plowo. New Holland ·
1976 Ford f ~ plckUfl. ~'han.
992-2877 alte&lt; 530 p.m.
FOR SALE. utility bod Ia&lt; quarter ton truck, aloo wtll'do
custom baling. M«::ium sile
.bole, contact 915-....

1m

KAW~I

Bike,

hceffont

2

C:

4011 'A&lt;*l

Cootdllioft.
· .,

SI.OOO. Phono 992--

'1'12·2152.
1970 CHAMPION 12Jill0 2
bedroom ,
appllanc·e e , ''2-6022.
bluldlng. SljuQtod on nl&lt;e · Will . DO HOU$E WORK and
rented lot. Phone 992-n:JS doonlng. Phono 985·3861. ·
after 5 p.m.
Will DO roofing, pointing,
NEW 30 GAllON GAS WATER guHer. remodeling, plumbing.
HEATER lor .. lo. Still In electrical and gen•rol repair.
Lost and Found
- · original carton . Contact Froo nffmotn. Col1985-4121.
-~~==..:..===-Carolyn Grueser, phone
lOST: MillE Irish Sottor. Ap992·3853.
pro•. 2 yn. old. Area of
.i eel Estete for Sale
Iathon on Iathon Rd .
Children's pet. A•ward .
CUSTOM built contom949·2-166.
porory home. Close to store
and schoOls. 3 bedrooms, 2
L()ST DOG white with ton
·b,tttt, · large IMng r~m. dinmorldngo, gon by tho !l&lt;lmo
... room ,' family room ,orttl car
Nemo.
Phone
992· 5651
Heaciquartara for
Jo1o:Tie Cook, Pomeroy CIIHt
~·· A.C. , D.W.• gw;k , 811
...,_.,, cathedral collk1411.
Hotpolnt all'cf.;
Apt. Apt. 20 Union Ave.
Pomoroy, Ohio.
· WV. No poll lna!do.
General Electric
••r
appol"tment
call
Appllanc•
6TA-367·7560 al.r 4:30.
Help Wanted

·POMEROY -·

~DMARK

IMMEDIATE
OPENING .
Laboratory Technician, 3-11
ohlft .. E•porloncod Ml T (ASCP)
or equiW~Ient . Excellent sakJry
and fringe bonoflll. Shift dlf·
ferentall . Contoct: Per.onnel
Office , Pl•asont Voll•y
Hotpltol , Volley Drive, Point
Ploooont , wv. 25S50. Phone
3CM·47S.A340. An Equol Opportunity Employer.'
WANTED. SAWYtR to wori&lt; at
Paint Volley Pallet, Sc9Howh.
256-6363 betw"n 7 and 5pm.
or1116-11840oltorS.
WANTED, liFEGUARDS.
ROYAl OAK PARK contact
Horoce Karr, 985-3341 . ·
SOMEONE to stay with son
and Invalid huobond till! go to
hospital and bock. 992·325-1.

max.

CHIP WOOD. Polos
diameter 10" on largest end ..
$12 por ton. Bundled slob. $10
per ton. O•llv•red to Ohio
Pollet Co.. Rt. 2, Pome~oy .
992·268'1.
.
OLD FU~NITURE, . Ice bo•os,
, brOil beds, ·iron beds, desks,
etc., complete househotds.
. Wrlto M.D. Mlllor, Rt. 4,
Pornoroy ...,.n992. niJIJ.
OLD CotNS, pocket watchos,
clott ringt , ~ing bands,
dlomonda. Gold or allver. Coli
Roor Wamsley, 742-2331 .
WANT TO buy: old A5 ortd 71
phonograph recorda. Call
992-6370 . or Contact Mort in
·
Furniture.
WANT TO buy: old l•wolry.
Coli 992·5:162 or write Kay
c.cn. 111 s . 2nd, Middlopoq.
0+1.
BUYING JUNK . cora and
'bodies. Also scrap iron and
metals: Rider's aolva..-. SR
124, Pomeroy. 992·5468.

SALE PRICES.
.-

.z,..
_

Jack w . C:arMY .
Mfl(.

I

. Phone1'9)1-2111

IN COUNTIIY 5 r_, '-""
and both plus clovble '
with worl&lt;ahop In
of ·
'-••· CarpoMd, drtllod well'
and S acroo of ~ with
foncod In poltuN ltoleaM
obolit haN milo '"""' Oom ·0!' country ..............
247·31162 on~.
liD K2 7SO
motorcycle With wit !
2,.000 mllos. Phonofft'-.
A.M. F. ROTOTillER, 3 ortd hall
H.P. Like new . 'hen• ·
985-4175.
VERY LARGE well built clot
house . Must .sell . S45 .
6i 4-378·6245.

a

w.••-..o

'"*'

OAK ICE box. Mab!:,~td oom
suite .with twin
. lueaY
hornell. ox )lolte. H"R - !2
piotol . 949·2531 ovortiT.
USED MAYTAG _.._. Md
dryer . Small H~!Pirlnt
rolr!gorotor. M-5324.
.

HOBSIEII ER·
.
REALTY

FOUR BEDROOM homo, full
· bosem•nt. locotedln ltutlond .
•;. ocr•. cor'petlng, draperies
Included. 742· 275-1.

MODERN THREE bedroom
house,
full
basement.
fireplace, fully carpeted, cen·
trol air, enclosed sun porch.
located on 6 1/t a cres on CR 28,
appro ~e. 3 miles frOm Racine. If
interested contact Lorry Wolfe
,.,,2836 weekends and otter
5 evenings.
TWO STORY 3 bedroom house.
100 x 150 ft. lot. bcellent
location with river - view.
$12,000. Shown by appoint·
....t. 992·:1082 0&lt; 742·2321.
IY OWNER 3 or .c ~room .
house. Woll to wall carpet, all
, appliances, fully i nsulat~.
full botement. Lorge corner
lot In Maaon , n3·5302.
THIIEE BEDROOM HOUSe.
woodburning stove, · gas fUrnor::e, 3 acres, on Racine Rural
Route ,' $20,000. · Phone
9•9-:1766.
LOT IN Pomeroy ~itt, 12)(65
Schult trailer, city water. 3
bedroom, air condition . Will
Mil trailer s.parat.l. Phone
992:7491 oftor 530 p.m . .
5.75 ACRES of woodod land
located 2 milft from Tuppert
Plains, cloM by Forded Run
State Pork . ·A!I utilities
ovalloble, price
wiling
to talk about price. Call
667·3932.

MODERN tti,_H bedroom total
.. ectrlc home. Situot.d ~
large lot. 7•2·2047.

G-.

'10 milo ott Rt. 1 by-pass

•
.
All Across Amorlco
Acros _ 151 ·,600
beautiful country home,
2 bedrOoms, bath , largo
living room, beautiful
ki tchen , l/• basement,
forced air heat, lots of
shade trees. 5 acres
tillable, I mile from
Chester, s miles from
Pomeroy .
EXTRA NICE 2
bedroom nouse, 469
Fisher Street. 526,000.1
Must be seen to be
appreciated.
Nice
garden.
Call Bill StiWirl
374-7311
Marlotta, 0.

25

$ALf: PRICES

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmlsslo!l
' Repair
Phone 992·5682
OO·Ifc

. .m.JJts

.

l16 E. SOcond SITMI

BUSINESS -, A good
self employed venture,
with no layoffs. Two
people or family can
easily operate 11. This Is
your chance .
COUNTRY HOME
Nice modern kitchen ,
new ba"th, 3 bedrooms,
oil furnace, full basernent,garden.andl a rge
yard . Only $23,500.
MEW LISTING - Nice
zoned building lot In
aauni's subdivison,
near Chester .
NEW LISTING 7·
room
frame
home
building wtlh rest~oom,
c·lty water, and nice
level lot on Moin St.,
Rutland. Ideal for con·
trpctor or accountant.
BUSINESS LOCATION
-Building wllh 2496 sq .
fl . on Hrst floor. Now
has antique furniture

store.

POMEROY
3
bedroom home above all
. floods with view of the
river. Has bath and all
city utilities, not. g~s
furnace .
SYRACUSE - 6 room
e~d bath, nat. gas fur •
11aee and U 7 acres of
nice land. l mmedlate
ston
•.·r~ ..

Hot1sing
Headquartf!rs

&lt;

SIDING CO.
Call tor a Free Siding
Estimate, 949· 2101 or
949· l860. No Sunday I
call~.

4·4· 1 mo.

-

H. L Writesel
'

Roofing

TRAILER SAl E$
2Fl20 Montt•m•;., Ret .
L.Mtsvlttl, Otllo

•1".... '"'241 Ev~lnt•
2 Mlln 1!111 of Wllltel'tltlt
SUPE.R
GOOSE
STOCK
TltAILE,R NOW AYAIL.AaL.E.
• ·!I- I

New, repair,
guNersand
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

'

I MYTHE
I KJ

Cellulosic (wopd filter I
Thermal Insulation
Sllve :111 pet. to so pet,
on floating cost
Experience aild
.
fullY Insured ·
FrftESI.
Call tt2·2772
· 5·17·1 mo.

Purch•se

608 E .
MAIN
POM"ROY.O.

5 POINTS AREA - 3
bedrooms, living room, ·.
dining, tully. equipped
kitchen, central air,
drapes an&lt;l rods, about
7 veerS old, 2 large
.level lots. $29,100. ·
MIDDLEPORT 2
f ·amlly . I has 3
· bedr ooms. bath. 1 has 1
bedroom , bath . Good In·
come, corner lot.
$13,000.
.
TOO. MUCH HOUSE
FOR
YOU
NOW?
Perhaps 'you'd be hiP·
pier in a smaller home.
we haVI families who
NEED a largorllouse ...
and you might bo su.r·
prlstcl at whit they'll
pay for' youn 1· SH us
about soiling ... buying
.•. or exch1nglng.
RI!ALTORS
Hortry I . Cloland Jr.
. Heiii'Y 1!. Cleland Sr.
"l·2259
992-4191

'

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
WE HAVE FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN
NEW LISTING - .Good 3 bedroom house, mostly
· carpeted, large carPOrt, outbulldlngo end garden
space. l'h acres of land; lOcated close to POmeroy.
Priced at $32,000.
.
C~UNTRY HOME -5 acres and o pOnd, rem-led
A bedroom, fully carpeted home, largo living room,
has e .heal·a·lator fireplace, kllchen Is equipped
. with refrigerator, stove and dishwasher. Prlcod at
139,900.
JUST LISTED - Immediate possession, real nice, 3
bedroom home, with large living room end family
room, all nicely carpeted. Iorge eat·ln kitchen
equipped with dishwasher, disposal , and stove, 2
full baths, 'h basement and garage, nice garden on 1
plus acres of land in Racine . Priced at $45,000.
.
JUST LISTED- MIDDLEPORT - Nice 9 year old .
3 bedroom house, equipped with stove and
refrigerator, moslly all carpeted, with natural gas
neat, nice yard on&lt;lstorege building. Aaklng $35,000.
JUST Ll STED -&lt;I acres, gOOd Ph itory hou!Mt, 3
bedrooms, living rool)'t, and flimlly room, large eat· .
· In kitchen, mostly all carpeted, some fencing,
·lOcated, close to Pomeroy. Priced lor quick sale,
'
137,500.
. JUST LISTED - Approximately 70 acros all fenced
with lots of nice pasture and some farming grovn&lt;l,
has e barn and a tool building, 2 old farm houses an&lt;l
1 nice mobile home, mlnerols too, located on Route
331ust north of Pomeroy . ASking $.17,900.
COUNTRY LIVING ·IN TOWN -Total privacy Is
the key here on 2 plus acres, the living . room has
brick fireplace, step·down family room, equipped ·
kitchen, lull bath, laundry area, and two bedrooms
complete_ .downstalrs. The unfinished upstairs_
makes expansion llOSSible . Priced to sillol 525,900.
LETART, 0 . - 3 BR with Iorge cloMts, full bath,
beoullfully carpeted throughouf, large living room
with a formal DR &amp; family room . Tho large kitchen
has plenty of ·cabinets and the dishwasher stays.
Priced at $35,000.
·
JUST LiSTED -85 ocres, with plenty of good
paslure land and some farming ground. Good barn
with drilled well . Garage and other bulldlngs,.Two
farm liou51", both need some repair. Mineral rlllllls
too. Good location about 5 minutes from Pomeroy
off Rt . 33. Priced for quick sale . $.12,500.
75 AC:RES with a .J bedroom frame house, barn and
other building, mostly fenced. some limber and ex· .
cellent . bottom lan&lt;l . About 1.000
beautiful .
Ol\lo River frontage . Owner will help flnarw;e. Aile-.
$57,000. Wlt~uttlmber sss.ooo ..
·
.
SllVE ON THIS MIDDLEPORT HOUSI! -GOOd 4
bedroom house at a low price. Plenty of. closet space
and kitchen cabines , low heat bills . Priced for extra
quick sale. 527,000.
LOfS - 1 Acre one up near Pomeroy .

99l·60H

Print answer here: (

"-

4231 mo. (Pd .)

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Residential ond com·
merclal .
Coli for
osllmote. 24 Hour Ser' .
viet. Any d1y, •nv.tlme.
Portable toilet rental .
Pllont915-3...
Jack Glfllfter 915·3106

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

.

5·6·1 mo: pd.

-·

WORK, .G.~NERAL

1-G '{OUR HU'.&gt;Sf&gt;,f.ID ~RRIBL.'i t,;H'{ ~

H·l mo. ( Pd.l·
OPENING SALE.

J&amp;R OIL CO. ,. ..._._
Roclne, 0 .
Wholesale, Distributors
tor
fine
Pennzoll
lubriclltion products,
MOtorcraft, Fram, and
Industrial Chemical
Supplies, In addition to
most major bral\ds of ·

motor on.

-

01"949·2150
H·Pd.

Weak defense

z

·,

....•

+A 8
• 6

.

Home Maintenance
typn roofing , guHen and

All typn home
malnttnance, new and rtptlr .

.,

.,

Storm doors .1nct wJnclows. All
tw.rant~ . 2t1 yean ex-

work

Frn tsllmates, Call

Tom H..klns Mf.21tG.

Athens Ana
•

7f1· 27•5or 797·275.2
~
l ·lll ·l)d.

PIANO
TuNING

EXPERIENCED

RadlatcW-..--..
Sarvlc•

·14 -Yr . Experience

LANE DANIELS

, ...,
1

Smith NMolols, Inc.
Ph. Hl·2174

Pomeroy

Business Services

Specialist In Home and
Scltool · Plano Tuning
and RttNtlrlng. Serving
Athens, Meigs, Galli• &amp;
Vinton counties, also
~son '&amp;

Jackson coun-

ties In w. va.
Ph. 992·2581 or "2-2082
4·10·1 mo.

S&amp;G .
DEEP srtAM
CARPET
CLEANING

BOB'S GENERAL . ;:
•

CONTRACTING . -:!:.
aNEW HOMES
eROOMADDITIONS ·
a ROOFING
eVINYL SIOING .
eGUTTEA &amp; SOFFIT
Phone 9tH323
Free Estimates
· 5·20·1 mo.·pd.

SAVE ON
MADFORD. Au&lt;tlonMr, Com·
plote Service. Phone 949·2487
or 94\1-2000. Aoclno. Ohio,
CARPOING
Critt Bradford.
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR &amp;
Sweepers , toasters, iront, all
small opplioncet. Lawn moer.
&amp;
Frea.E.stlmate
rte)(t to State Highway Go.r og•
Contact: Gene smith
on Route 7, 985-3825,
or Mike Grate
·
SEWING MACHINE R-1(1,
at Rutland Furnllu.re Co.
service, all mok•s. 992-2284.
• A GOOD SELECTION
742-2211
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
OF END &amp; ROLL
Alter
5
P.M.,
"2
-6109
Authorized Singer Soles and
BALANCES.
·
or 742·:1174
S.rvice. We sharpen Scl11ors.
4·2
· EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
and t.ockkoe work : dump·
trucks Gnd lo-boys for- hire,
will haul fill dirt , top soil,
GiveAway
· limestone and gravel. Call Bob
'
; or Roger Jeffers, day phone
FLUFFY Kittens , voriout col·992· 7089,
night
phone ors , amte and female . Phone
• 992-3525 or '1'12·5232.
'
7d·283:!.
FROM $~.yd.
EXC ... VATING ,
dozer , FIVE KITTENS, 6 to 7 wMkl
backhoe cind dlkhor, Chorl"
old. 4 calico, 1 tiger. 992·7680.
R. Hatfield. Block Hoo Sorvlco,
24 Rolls of carpet In .
Human• Society. ·
Rutland , Ohio. Pone7.C2·2008.
Stock &amp; 100' s ot Sompln
1WO CATS, 1 calico ond 1
to Chooae From .
PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Com·
tiger . All female . oung.
IUY NOW &amp; SAVE
plete Service. Phone 99'.2·2478.
Humane Soci•ty 992-7680.
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE
PUPPIES, 2 to4 montha old. 1· 9
Call 742-2211
been cancelled? Lost vaur
woko old. I adult Dochahund
TALK TO
ope'roton llc•n ..? Phone
typo, · chocolot• brown. 2
Wondoll or Horb Grato
992-2143.
yeart old, female, riiCII gentle.
or Gene Smith
i E·C ELECTRICAL . Controctor . Humane Soci•ty. 992· 7853,
~· serving Ohio Volley region;
HEALTHY 8 week old kittens, 1
· Six Cloys o w•k, 2.C hours ser·
col leO. Others bl~.te and whit•.
vic•! Em.,.gency c~lll . Call
Humono Society, 992-2592.
11112·2952 or 882·:1454.
HOWERY AND IMRTIN h ·
742·2211
. eovotlng, septiC systems,
Rutttnd
~ do•er,
backhoe. Rt. 143.
l'hono I (614) ~98· 7331 .
·IN STOCK for lmmodloto
delivery: various slzn of pool
'kits. Oo· it· y0urMif or let Ul
Install fo r you . D. Bumgardner
SHPAT .. .
Saln, Inc . 9'12·5124.
·
GRAVElY TRACTOIIS and
Equipment. bperl~ed str·
vice. 2'04 Condor, Pomeroy,
WE OFFER YOU .. .
Ohio. 992·ffl5 .
L Two lull floors of 111 now
EXTERIOR PAINTING, houon
furniture.
or roofs. ·Minor corpeftfry
2. Nlct ioiiCIIons of Ulld fur·
work. ReosOnoble rates . FrM
nlhtre. .
eitlmCites. Phone 992·6309 or
3. A larto Dulldlnl tun of
7~2-2910 .
.
· boaull!uf cor;ot.
COONER'S CAMPERS on Roln.
Ridge with top of tho
ll,._llorti&gt;-Swloo Colony J01co - MotOr Hom" to Toppen , occenorl" and friendly:
sen~lc;e . For direc:tlona call
6"·843·3011.
See tile Gra.. .. F•mllv at
VIRY GENTLE: Quarter Horse.
W•stern parade saddl• . .
Phone 698-3290.

DRIVE

LimE

SAVE ALOT

All CARPET
NCMON
SAL£

RUliMD
FURNilURE

..

~'
.....

~

-·..
...'

PHARMACY

Auctions
III:IVU Auction Tuesclclv
and Friday, 7 PM, 537 North .
High St .. Middleport , Ohio.

A8SQ1-U'n1!LY, THt.S
Mf.I:&gt;JCII\If WILL. c.u~
)'OU., .s'dl

•

•

NoSOPY .J.#.S
GOME 8AC:f&lt;. fOfl
secoND BoTT'Le •

..::
"

•
••

0

••

..

•
'~
$
I

-'

l

THURSDAY,MAY24, 1t79
raised to two .
Now West, a free s pirit 1 5· 15-World at Large 17; 5:45. Farm Reporf 13; S :~PTL Club
elected to compele with a
takeout double . . East r e·
spo nde d with lwo .spades and
South bid his six-card club
s uit. When this got back to
East he went to three
s pades. North wanted · to
double, bul he got no chance.

13 . 5 . 5s-summer Semester 10 .

6 ,00...:7&lt;)(l

one

z

or

......•

zo

.
MEilN- HONCDME EVERYBODYS
WHlLE...

SO ANXIOUO&gt; RJR MOM
TO COME BACK 2
DOE9N'T ANYBODY
LIKE ,\JIE?

SURE,
HONEY, WE

lOVE. YOU ,
t:.UT WE

Ml55 'tOUR

MA,100!

..

"

"•
••

PAW!!

WE JEST GOT
A SPECIAL
FROM SAIRV
JANE!!

RunMD FURNilURE .

~.

bly two. At this one table
North, who liked to open the
bidding and never bid a four·
card major, opened o ne diamond. Soulh didn't know
exactly what to do and just

:w

we

SOME800V GET IT!
SOME~OOV GET IT!

D
0

I 60'f IT! I GOT IT!

DON'T SA~ ~OU'VE 60T
IT UNLESS I(OU'RE
SURE ~OU'VE 60T .li!

,,

10 : ;oag~'s~i: Scared Straight
FollOW· UP 3;
11 :00- News
' 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Footsteps 20;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33,• ·
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,1S; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Switch 8; ABC
News 33 ; Movie "Money from
Home' ' 10; Movie "The Last
Sunset" 17 ; Turnabout :10.
12 :40-Mannlx 6,13; Hawaii Flve·O
8; 1 :DO-Tomorrow j; News 15.
1: 50-News 13; 1 : 55-News 17;
2 : 15-Baseball
17;
4 : ~5 Dragnet 11 .

~~,

.'

•'

score and probably make it
or go d oW n a tri ck or possi-

WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1t7t
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; AndyGrlffllh 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Studio See. 33 .
6: J&lt;f-NBC News3 ,15; ABC News13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8,1 0;
Over Eosy 20,33; My Three Sons
17.
7:00- Cross ·Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter . WagQ~~er 8;
News 1.0; Love American Style
15; Carol Burnell 17; Dick c'Ovell
20.
.
.
7:jo-Dolly 3; Muppet Show 8; The
Judge 10; That's HollywQO!I 13;
Wild Kingdom IS ; Baseball 17.
8:oo-Real People 3.15; E·lght Is
Enough 6,13; Rocky's Friends
8,10; Mas terpiece Theon 20;
Scor lef Letter 33.
8: 30- Good Times 8. 10; 9:00Scared Slralghl 3; Barry
Monllow 6,13; Pollee Story 15;
Blind Ambition 8, 10; Great
Performances
33 ;
Lewis
Mumford : 20.
IO :DO-Scared Straight 3; ~as
6,13; Heifetz Concert 33; Falf of

....,,.e

--'

..•,.

high

Television
Viewing

Club 6.8; PTL Club 151
6 : 10- News
17 ;
6 : 25-F or
You .. Biack Woman 10.
6 ·30-Dragnel 171 6:ci5-Mornlng
· Vulnerable : North-South
. RePOrt 3; 6 : ~Good Morning,
Dealer : North
west VIrginia 13; 6:55--Chuck
West North East South
South went to four c lubs and
White Reports 101 News 13.
It
Pass 2t
West doubled.
7·oo-Todoy 3.15; Good Morning
Obi.
Pass 2t
3+
He ha d an interesting rea·
. America 6 , 131 Schoollu 101
Pass Pass :1 •
4+
son for this double. He was
Three Stooges. Lillie Roscals 17;
Obi.
Pass
Pass Pass
lookin g al three aces and he
7·15-Weether 33.
thought that his · partner
7 : ~Famlly Altair 10; Lilias YOIIa
would have just one di aOpenin g lead: • 3
&amp; You 33 .
mond. Therefore, he led lhe
B. DO-Capt . Kangaroo 8,101 Leave It
three of diamonds .
. To Beaver 171 Sesame St. 33.
East produced the ace
8 ·30-Romper Room 171 9:oo-Bob
much to West's happy
· Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,1~;
surprise and promptly led
Emergency One 6; Hogan s
·By Oswald Jacoby
the s uit back. West was then
Heroes 8l Love ol Life 10; Lucy
and Alan So ntag
able to collect tricks with his
Show 17.
,
own three aces and give
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogans
When a hand is played a
East a diamond ruff lo 'come
Heroes 10 1 Green Acres 17.
coupl e of hundred thousand . out with plus 500 on a non10 .oo-card Shorks 3,15; Edge of
· times it is a lmost impossible descript sort of hand .
· Night 6; Allin The Fom11~ ,8, 10 ;
to get a complete top or 1NE WSPA PER ElNTF.RPR ISF. ASSN . I
Doting Gome 13; Movie Mrs.
bottom score. Nevertheless,
Mike" 17 .
we are going to s h ow a
(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
10 :3D-Ail Slar Secrets 3,151 520,000
couple of results that would
ERN. send S1 to: " Win ar
Pyramid 13 1 Whew I 8,10; 10.55come close if aU res ults Bridge ." care qt this newspaCBS News 8; House Call 10.
could be labula led togelher .
per. P.O. Bo )( 489 , Radio City
11 .oo-High Rollers 3,151 Lavernv &amp;
At nearly all ta bles some- Station . New York: . N . Y. 10019.)
. Shirley 6,13 ; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11·30-Wheel ol Fortune 3,1~ ;
. Family Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
201 Nova 33: 11 :55-News 17. .
by THOMAS JOSEPH
12 ·oo-Newscenter 31 News 6,10,
. Password 15; You~g &amp; Restless
ACROSS
' 37 "Love Letters
81 Midday Magazine 13; Love
I Easily
in the .:.. "
American Style 17.
molded
38 Twine
,,
12 .30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search!~
· Tomorrow 8,101 Etec. Co. 20,.u;
5 Byre
around
Not For Women Only 151 Movie
dweUer 38'Eievatlon
"The Savege" 17.
.
'
. 8 - Harbor, 48 Strong need
1: oo-Doys of Our Lives 3, 15; All My,
Guam
41 Good whack
Children 6,13; News B; Youn&lt;,~ &amp;
9 Popular
DOWN
the· Restless 10.
! ·30-As The World Turn• 8,10;,
Jolson tune
I Cavalry
. 2·oo-Obctors 3,1S;
Llle to
13 Traffic
weapon
YOIIenlay'o ¥ower
Live 6,13 1 2:2$-'-News 17.
sound
Cultural
18 U.S. Blcenten· 23 lmpalnnent
2·30-Another World 3,1S; Guiding
14 Philippine
topic
nial expoZ4 -, one vote
· Light 8,10; 1 Love Lucy 17.
city
3 Boston
sitlon
25 Stubborn one 3·oo-General Hospital 6,131 Lilias
· YOIIe &amp; Yoo :ZO/ ReboP 17; Know
15 Rather than
sightseeing 11 CoUege In
Z7 lnferUJe
Your Schools 33. ·
.
18 Lay odds
route
Michigan
zt Word with
3: 30-Mash 8; JoKer's Wild 10;
17 Barbados
4 Knock
1% That Ia
meal
work
Fllnlstonn 17; Dick Cavett ~ ·
native
5 Arrived
to say
38 On edge
4··oo-Misler Cartoon 3; Holl.,.,.ood
, Squares 1S; Merv Griffin 6;
18 Shine
8 Egg-i~haped 18 Savalas·Uke 31 Presbyter
Addams Family 81 Six Million
First lady
7 Lacking
19 So that's It! 3e Negative vote
Dollar Man 10; Sesame St. 20,33;
21 A European
color
Z% French river 37 Hit sign
Mike Douglas 13; Space Glnats
capital
17.
, I B•
4·30-Bewlltlled 3; Gilligan 1 s. •
Z% Russian
. Lucy Show 151 Gilligan's Is. 17.
city
s ·oo-1 Dreem ol Jeannlt31 Beverly
23 Uke
. Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogera
certain
20 33 . Gomer Pyle 10; Bionic
w~m'an 13; Brady Bunch 1S; I
stadia
Dream of Jeannie 17.
25 Danny
6
5 :JO-Carol 'Burnell 3; 1 Nows :
Kaye
Slinlord &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. :10.
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
film role
Couple !5; Lucy Show 17; Doctor
Z&amp; Belore:
Who 33.
Lat.
6·oo-News 3,1,10,13,15; ABC Naws
27 Heavily
. 61 Andy Grllfll~ 17; VIlle Alegre
Involved
20 · Studio See 33.
6 .~NBC News3,15; ABC News13;
21! Sea : Fr.
· CarOl Burnell 6; CBS News B,10;
Z9 Painter's
Over Easy :10,33; My :ThrH Sana
item
32 "I7·0~Cross·Wits 3; Newlywed
. Game 6, 13; News 10; Love
Camera"
American Style 15; Carol Bur·
33 Acrimony
nett 17 ; Dick Cavett 20; Wild
Electrieal
Wild World of Animals 33 .
Wlit
7 -:lo---G.~Hizzonner 3,151 Mork &amp; .
. Mindy 6, 13; Waltons 8, 10; Novo
35 Fancy dive
20,33; Movie '.' That Touch of •
•
Mink" 17.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE.., Here's how to work It :
: 30-PIIot "Cor Walh" 3;)S; Pilot
8
AXYDLBAAXR
"Young Guv Christian 6,13.
Ia LONGFELLOW
9!oo-Qulncy 3,15; Barney Miller 13:
Cannes Film Featlvol Awards 6,
·One lette~ simply stinds for anolher, In this· sample A 11
Hawaii F lve-0 8,10 Views of Asia
used for lhe three L's, X lor lhe two O's. etc. Single letters,
aposlrophes, lhe length and formatio n of the words ore all
20,33.
3 to·oo9.30-Corter countr.v 1 1
·
.
hints . Each day the code leiters are dltlerent.
· Alan King 13; Barnaby J _ . •
CKYPTOQVOTES
8,10; News 20; Foolltepl 33.
10 · 3D-C9mmenders 17 ; Hocking
· Valle\r Bluegrass 20; Mea ,
XIYYZUPFF
N X P·
BWFN
Showcase 33.
11 .oo-New• 3,6,8,10,13.1S; Bill af
.Groucho 20; Lowell .Thomas ,
RWUFZFNF
SWDHV
NXZF
Remembers 33.
S XI N
Y W F F P F F Z U A
11 . 3()..-Johnnv car!I0/1 3, 15; Starsky
. . &amp; H~tch 6,13; NBA Play ·OII ~: 10;
ABC News 331 Movlo
Or .
.T W F X
A PN.
WNXPDF
RIU'N
Terror's. House of Horrors" 17.
12 : ~0- Mannlx . 6,13 ;
l :GOMZHH2!UAF
Tomorrow 3; News 15.
of .
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: ... THE POOR, WHO NEED
1 : 30...:Movle "The Sword .· •
MONEY '111E MOST, ARE THE VERY ONES THAT NEVER
• Damascus" 17; 1 :50-News 13•
3:30-News 17; 3 :50-()pen Up
HAVE lT.-FlNLEY PETER DUNNE
~ 1t1t 1(11"0 FMtvr• $yncllcate. lftC.
17.

• 3 2.
t K754
+KQ114Z

and
All

• 10 53

SOUTH

"•·

dGWnlp!tUU .

s~ores

one will play at a low part
NORTH
e KJ 92
• K Q 10 6
t Q. JO 9
• J 9
WEST
EAST
e A 43
• Q 10 8 7 5
• J 97
• A 85 4
• J 863
t A2

Ohio Valley Roofing

perltntt.

can: 949·2818

- --

00, BUT H8-'5 A eaJD
Li5Wf..lE:.R, RlbHT,

tn&gt;S , HB~

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

992·2356

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sont~--

CONTRACTOR

0.

I l I I ]

Jumblos: MANGY DITIO NEPHEW ASSURE
Answer: Where to find a hea lth resort In a European
co untry-"SPA·IN''

I

~

WANTED: WE M£ED NEW.ttOMES I FARMS
CALL JIMMY DEE';~: ASIOCIATI Mt·2·
· OR NANCY JASPERS, &amp;SSOCIATI!
t4,· ZU4 or 949·l591

cllelltr' 0'

lox3

~

I

,,.

4'23·1 mo.

BLOCK &amp; BRICK .

to

(An•wers tomorrow)

Yesterday·s

592·305l

Etectric Motor

le~e rs

gosttd by tho above Clllloon.

77

N. L Constructioo

Middleport,

Now arrange the circiad

&amp;AD.

form the surprise answer, as sug·

)

MORTGAGE
CO.
E. Stole, Atftens

· Reynold's

t?JII:OP'PEI:'·

MAN\.JI!R$A~e

'

and

llfEIMD

4·5·11C

~!!

WHEN 50MEONE'$

'

651 Beech Street
.

MI&lt;&amp;HI

ITESGAKI

•'

30 Year Terms
A..:...No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS lOW as 3%
down (non·vet«•ns)

18 Years Experience
Will Make
service Calls

*New.Home
*Addons
* Remoldings
*Free tll'tlmates

I

KJ I

H~ ~~'T Hf&gt;,VB MIJC.H lO "'AY,

C: R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

tJ

Ae~inance

949·2862--949·2160

mo.

l

K]

••

Real Estate Lon

byHenri!.rnqldendBoblee

Unscramble these four. Jumbles,
one iener to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

·~

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

~ TltAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ $

SITOF

J&amp;L

BISSEll

on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rullond.

NEW LISTING . - Mid
dlePOrt, 2 story brick, 5
bedrooms , 2 baths ,
family room, forme!
dining, bosement, lots of
features, 1 113 acres.
$28,900.
NEW LISTING- Mid ·
dleport,l 'h storyframe,
2 bedrooms, bath, por·
ches, many , 1 many
ieatures here. Asking
just $25,000, HOME
WARRANTEE .
MIDDLE PORT - Love ·
ly 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms. very large
family room , this home
has so many features
'tOU will have to see it.
$37,500.
~. ~cres
1JUST LOOK In new addition, owners
transferr.cl have to sell .'
All utilities. $6,000 ..

J.v~!.~~Ji

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

Rogel Hysell

fi'lfj}N} fi;})l

---

Business Services

I

"900,

Housing
Headquil(lt::rs

Classifieds
.'

~tal Estate for Sale

ac:r•a in Pomeroy . SEclud·
eel wooded areo 1on top of kil l.
Overlooks rlvw. Wat•l'. •lee·
tric available. 992-3886 . •
REAl EST,AU Loons . Purchase
ond refinonc•. 30 year terms,
VA. No money down (eligible
v•terons). FHA · -"• low 01 3
.,... cent down (non~v•terans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co.. n E.
State, Ath•ns. 61.C·592-3051 .
3 Y,,

'"''of

Goocf Selection

Se~tinel

the

Real EsTate for Sale

Sale's

IM5Gonorol, 60x12, 2b&lt;lr.
1971) Skyline, 12x65, 2 bt .
1971) Sylva, 601&lt;12, 2 bdr.
1971lCastlo, 601&lt;12. 2 bdr . .
1973 Noblllty, 12&gt;oiJ/J, 2 bt.
1973 Al-..ood, 70xiA, 3 bdr.
1973 Nashua,
2 bdr.
.1973 GoYorl10f', 60i&lt;12, br.
197~. Mari&lt;lltOO, S0.12, 2 bt.
liS MOillE HOME SAlES
PT. PlESANT, WV.
675-4424

60wp,

Fo~d__in

zu
zu

' I

�•

/

'll-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero), 0 .. Wednesday, May 23, 1979

Additional diesel fuel production urged
leagues ·voiced opposition to his plan
By MARK POTIS
to lift price controls from
Auoclated Press Writer
Midwestern congressmen, invoking · domestically produced oil.
In New York, service statlons whose
the specter of idle tractors, have
prices
exceed 99.9 cents per gallon ursed Prfl!ident Carter tri increase
but
whose
pumps can't accmunodate
;diesel fuel lor farmers. But in trying
.to balance suPi&gt;lies of gasoline and an extra digit - wQJ be allowed ioday
'heating oil , the administration to price gas by the half-gallon.
And in California, where lines at
actually may cut supplies· of the fuel
service
stations dwindled but did not
.that powers the nation's farms.
disappear,
Gov . Edmund Brown Jr.
Twenty-&amp;x farm state congressmen
Tuesday reminded President Carter called for " more candor, iesg
of his pledge that "rural America will inconsistency· and more leadership"
·not run dry" while their House col- from the federal government In the

energy crisis.
The Energy Department Tuesday
asked refineries to step up production,
primarily of ga..,line. Officials say
the decision will not cut into the winter
heating oil supply . But by adjusting
their operatioos . to increase gas
production, refineries are producing
less heating oil and diesel fuel from
each barrel of crude.
Thedepartmenlpu$edbackbyone
· mooth its ·oct. I target date for 240
million barrels of heating oil, saying
the original date was unrealistic. But

because the supply of heating oil will
peak later, the supply of. diesel is
likely to remain tight for a longer
period.
Last wee~. a study by the New
England Ecooomic Research Office
said' that unless some actiOn were
taken immediately -perhaps even to
the extent of cutting back gasoline
production - a majbf shortage of
bQme heating oil could result in the
Northeast. And the report warned
heating oil is also used eitte)lsively in
the Midwest and Middle Atlantic

states.
Getty Oil Co. said Tuesday it would
halt sales of diesel fuel and heating oil
ili the Midwest for about a week while
it works out a new dlstrlbutlon ·
system. That announcement came as ·
Midwestern senators and House
members asked for a meeting with
Carter to work out a way to funnel
diesel fuel to the farm. belt.
"Today we race the very real
prospect of idle tractors and irrigation
pumps durlrig the height of the
planting and groWing season," they

Spenkelink 's life spared by judge
: By 'l110MAS E . SLAUGHTER

Auoclated Press Writer
STARKE, Fla . (AP) - John A.
· Spentellnk's life was spared early
today, ooly hours before the ~year­
. old murderer was to die In Florida's
: . electric chair, when federal judges in
~ Atlanta and Washington granted
- separate appeals f~r a stay of exe. cutim.
·
"Praise God !" Spenkellnk shouted
, as the news flashed across a television
, acreen outaide his cell a few feet from
the death chamber.
His EpiScopalian IJ1inister, the Rev.
: T&lt;m Feamster, gave Spenkellnk Holy
Ccmmunlon at I a.m. - just one hour
before guards had been due on Deatft
· R9w to shave Spenkellnk's head ·and
leg to increase the efficiency of tbe
.
; electric chair.
• Less than 12 hours before, on
;Tuesday afternoon, Spenkelink's
-lleath Row companion, Wlllle Jasper
:Darden, also was granted a stay of
execution when a federal judge
agreed to hear his appeal.
The ttecutions woUld have been the ·
first in the United States since a Utah
firing squad shot Gary Mark Gilmore
100re. than two years ago.
·
' GUmore had refused to pursue court
appeals, and these would have been
: the first executions of prisoners
· against their will in the United States
since 1!167.

Spenkelink was to have been

Another good buy

executed at 7a.m., Darden at 8.
But minutes after midnight, in
Atlanta, Judge Ellberl-s. Tuttle of the
5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
issued his stay oo an appeal which
former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark had helped seek. Tuttle
said he would set a hearing date
today.
A few minutes later, U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Thurgood Marshall
granted Spenkellnk's lawyers another
stay of execution - after two other
Supreme Court justices had turned

them down . The high court is to take
further acti,on Thursday.
·
His mother, Lois Spenkelink, 67 ,
\vas with friends in Starke, 11 miles
from the prison, when she got the
word. "l'hank God. OUr prayers have
been answered," she said. "Thank the
LOrd. He found somebody to make the
stay."
Then she was driven to the e'dge of
the prison, where reporters and
protesters had gathered. "Thank you,
Judge Tuttle and Justice Marhsall for
being fair, " she said. " That's all we ·
ask. Gov . Graham,.! beg you not to put
John and my family thrpugh this
ordeal for a third time ."
·
Spenkellnk, convicted of murdering
GRADUATION SERVICES SET
a
traveling companion in 1973 after
Eastern High School will hold
having
escaped from a California
graduation practice Friday, May 25
was
to have been executed In .
prison,
at 6 p.m. School will be dismissed
September
1977.
But an appeal saved
Friday at 2:30p.m.
him three days before that was to
MEETING 'l11URSDAY
HarrisQnville Senior Cltlze1111 will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the town
hall. Hot dogs and beverages Will be
sold.

GRANTED DIVORCE

.
In Meigs County Ccmmon Pleas
Court, Marlene Pooler wsa granted a
divorce from Ronny Pooler and the
marriage of Helen Miller and Harry
Miller was dissolved.
CLOSED MONDAY
The Gallia·Meiga Coolmunlty Ac·
"lion Agency will be closed on Monday,
May 28, In observance of Memorial
Day.

BAKER'S

BUDGET
SHOP

DRESSERS

$79

CLOSED MONDAY
The Gallia-Meiga Head Start
Program will be closed on Monday,
May 28, in observance of Memorial
. Day.

Authori1ed CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

:1SearS I
23f E . Main St.

. Pomeroy, 0.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon. thru \Ned. 9·5,
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sot. 9·2

Satisfaction 'Guaranteed

or Your Money Back

have been carried out.
The stay Tuttle granted was based
oo what Clark said· was an entirely
new issue ~ the quality of
Spenkelink's legal representation.
Millard Fanner, a lawyer and death ·
penalty foe, told The Associated Press
that he, Clark and Atlanta attorney

Marjorie Hames had sought it.
~~The grounds," Clark said, "are
matters not raised, heretofore that
have to do with the adi!CJUBcy of
counsel at the trial (Spenkellnk's
murder trial) and various stages of
the apjleal. There are about 10 or 12
factual claims."

ID!d Carter in a letter. "Reports In·
dicate that a good )MI1ion of
America's crop may not be planted If
fuel oil supplies do not become
avail8ble 8oon.'.'
Meanwhile, the Agriculture
Departrn!!llt reported that IOille f1
percent of the nation's crop was
planll!d as the week began, compared
to an average level for this time of
year of 75 percent.. .
.
The report said fuel supplies fof
farm work ''generally -rated
adequate, although supplies were
tightened from the previous week."
In other fuel developments
Tuesday :
·
-Amoco .Oil Co., the largest supplier
of gas to the Midwest, announced )t
could provide only 80 to 85 percent ¢
1978's supply of gasollrie and other
fuels "for the forse&lt;lllble future."
-Dlinola state pollee dispersed a
eoovoy of aeml.traller trucb parked
acrosa Interstate 80 near Joliet in
protest of the state's crackdown on
speeders, a crackdown ordered to
help save fuel.
-The Energy Department said
avallahle evidence does not ~ck up a
suggestion by the Federal Trade
Commission that "the current
gaSoline shortage may be contrived."
That possibility was raised last week
by FI'C Bureau of Competition di.
rector Alfred Dougherty, who cited ·
"reported figures" .Indicating that
refiners had cut gas production by an
amoiUit greater than their. import
losses.
-Carter allles in the Houae,lacklng
the votes to stop a move to renoWlce
oil price deconlrol, began pushing a
compmnllle askillg carter to delay
lifting cootrols from domellic crude
lUlU! a windfall profits tax Ia enacted.
Carter says lifting the controla ·will
boost domestic production and re&amp;lce
dependence on foreign oil . .

and Marl&lt; Holland, 28, asked for the
jojnt trial. The motioo was opposed by
Prosecutor Richard Ward who said he
planned to call Holland's wife to
testify against BeQoaft but could not
do so If the two were tried together.
. . . in the world
BeCraft and Holland, chemi8ts at
the Goodyear Atomic Corp. plant
near Piketon, are charg!!d with
By
Alleelaledl'reu
making
a .drug called DMA 111 their
·
PORTLAND, Ore.- A gunman who homes in Olilllcothe.
joked with his hostages and even
allowed them to continue their work
WASHINGTON -Sen. Edward M.
before he. surrendered to pollee at a Kennedy Ia picking up four more en·
downtown Portland motor .hotel was . dorsements for the 1911 Democratic
being held today on $100,000 ball.
presidential nomlnatloo despite his .
Pollee said James B. laWliOJI, 28, of , Insistence that he supports President
Portland was charged with fint Carter for a second term.
:
degree robbery, and authorities said
The lateat unaollcited support
' additional charges may be filed cornea from a group of congresarnen
(Continued from page IJ .
against Lawson.
who were holding a news conference
and Cl1arles Dowler, superintendent,
today 10 announce fOI'II!Btim of the
(Continued f11&gt;m page 1)
presented diplomas.
CHIUJconiE, Ohio- A body of a Committee for a Democratic Alter·
The invocatioo and benediction young man found May 17 sprawled on native, as the veicle for promoting op- Linda Annette Lucas, Kimberly
were given by the Rev. McClung. The a bridge piling In the Scioto River In pDBition to Carter for the 1911 Oxyer Martin, Ctnlhla Sue McCoy,
senior processional and recessional, Chillicothe was identified Tuesday as nomination. Kennedy Ls their choice Herber! A. McQuaid, Jimmy A.
McQuaid and James Ralph Misner.
played by the band, was Pomp and that of Robin A. Bowers, 18, of Colum· for an altemative.
Teresa Ellen Mitchell, Paula Marie
Clrcum8tance.
Mokry, Dennis W. Mollohan, James
bus, pollee said.
D. Moody, Jeanette Jones Moss,
Receiving diplODIIIS . last night
The cause of death remained WI·
OOLUMBUS, Ohio - For several Thomas
Christopher Myers, Gary L.
were:
detennlned. Results of an autopsy years, .Rita Martin of Columbus 8111· Nibert, William David Norrtls, David
Hart, Deborah J. Hatf ield, Kelly S. were awaited, pollee said. Highway fered from gall bladder probleDII. So Palmer, Julia I. Polcyn, Sandra Kaye
Hawk ins, Thomas Eugne Hawley, maintenance workers discovered the when she sperienced recent lltcimach Putney, Robin Renee Fife Hopkins,
Terry Dale Hayes, Rita Kay Hayman. body, which ·was identified through dlscmlfort, she simply thought It was James Rothgeb, Terry R. Rothgeb,
Christy Ann Roush, David E. Russell ,
Beverly Ann "Hoffman, Gar"y Keith
· her gall bladder acting up.
Don Rus,ell, Steve Russell, Tina
Holliday , Rhonda R. Hoover. David fingerprints.
Louise Saber, Mary Ann Shuler
It wasn't.
Mc Kinley Horton, Richard T .'
Hovatter, Jamie Johnson, Mary Ann
WILMINGTON, Ohio ~ A tractor·
On Friday, Mrs. Martin, 211, 11114 her Brynn Keith Sutphin, Charles Randall
Johnson, Tammy Diane Johnson , trailer truck leaking a poisonoua husband, Patrick, became the proud Taylor, James David Taylor, Von
Jon ThompsOn, Sc:ott Van
Brett A. Jones, Martha Jane Jones, . chemical caused a stretch of Jn. parents &lt;:l an l!iJound, kwlce boy. 'Taylor,
Sickle, Robert K. Veith, Charlerie Kay
Namon W. Joseph, Charles Edward
Kennedy , Don M. King , Kevin Harold tcerstate 71 near 'here to be closed for She sald she had no Idea unW Thurs- While, April Jo Wise, Kevin Wise and
·
King, Julie Ann Kitchen , Kevin Kit. aboutflve hours Tuesday.
day that she wu pregnant. "I felt Roberta Young.
chen, Karl Keith Krautter. Steven
The Ohio Highway Patrol closed the movement during the recent mOIIIIII
Ray Lambert, Orv•lle Keith Landers, approDinately 15-mllestretchofroad of pregnancy hut I felt I wu having
D1anna Lynn Lee, Kelv 1n Edward
Lee, Jeffrey Lynn Lewis , Tanya D" between OhiO routes 72 and 73 while gas or lllomach pains," the Uoot, &amp;Lightfoot, Keith Lynch, Valerie Rae emergencycrewsneutralizedpuddles inch, 24().polind new mother said Moo·
Watson , Josep,h P. McCloud, Anna M . of the chemical that had spilled from day.
McK1nney , Uretta Jo McKinney .
truck headed f Cincinnati The
Dal~anna Little McKinght, Pamela a
or
·
Kav
Mees . Donna . Christine roadwasreopenedby3p.m.
Metheney. Tina Marie Mi ller. Shari
The truck was carrying toluene ell·
Jenlce Mitch , Ernest Mitchell. isocyanata a chemical used to make
Michael A. Milchell, Ste.ven · Dale · plastic acc'ordlng to u--''yn Heasl
Morns , James E. Mornson, Tod
'
mw:u
ey
STUDENTS SUSPENDED
Morrow, Vincent Earl Mossman &lt;:A the Ohio Environmental Protection
ATHENS,
Ohio (APJ - Three Ohio
Elizabeth Mould , Michael Keith Agency.
University students who allegedly
Musser, William Thomas Musser,
Julie Ann Napper. Lisa Ann Nash ,
JACKSON, Ohio -A West Virginia participated In a street disturbance
Charles E. Oberholzer, Billy R.
early Sunday morning have been
O'Brien, Vincent Lee Ol ive r, Sherrie man was killed In a head-oo colllBion
suspended
indefinitely by President
Ann Osborne, Patrick Allen Owens, on U. S. Route 35 west of Jackson
Charles Ping . The suspensions of the
Kimberly Diane Payne, Rebecca Kay Tuesday morning.
Phillips, Robert Pickett, Ruthanna
The Ohio Highway Patrol said unidentified students will remain in
Lynn Plants, Jeb C. Prater, Nv&gt;ry
effect until the three are given
Kathryn Pr ice, Gary L. Priddy , Michael Wright, 21, of Hqrrlcane, W.
James D. Priddy, Larry Dennis Va., was killed when hl8 car ap- hearings, expected sometime before
Puckett, Denese D. Qualls, Stephanie parently went left of center, striking the spring term ~nds June 9.
Bottles were hurled at police and
Raymond L. Andrews, Randall L. another vehicle.·Two others.were In·
Arr'lold, Stephen Quinn Arnold; Carin
two·
officers were injured slightly
In bone,
Sue Bailey, Elaine Mlna Barnhart, jured In the accident.
during
the two-hour disturbance in
Gary G. Basham, Jr .. Gregory Alan
Becker, David Andrew Blake, Vicki
CHIWconiE, Ohio -Rosa Coun· downtown Athens by an estimated 500
black, red
Renee Blankenship, Brent Alan Bolin, ty Conunon Pleas Judge J. Donald persons.
Jana Kaye Burson, David A. Burt,
Julie Anna Byer, Bruce Ryan Car. Ratcliff has taken under advlBement
Drown patent.
man , Robin Sue Carter , Lance · a pre-trial request to jointly try two
~hapman. Tammy Dee Charles,
scientists on drug charges.
Laura Le igh Clark, Douglas C.
Attorneys for Frank BeCraft, 'rl,
Clelland, Debra Ann Coleman, Tina
Jane Coleman, Shari Lynn Colmer,
Memorial
Nv&gt;ry C. Colwell, Juanita Kay Corbitt,
Amos B. Cross, Jr., Doug Cundiff,
Weekend SDecia Is
'
Jeffrey E. Daniels, Deborah Ell en
Rain and occasional thWlderslorms
Danner. Danny Darst , Diana Lynn
Davidson, Cinda lou Dav is, John M . tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 55
10 lb. bag Sl.7Q
Davi:s . Carol A. Delong, Deanna; Lee to 80. Becornlng windy Thursday with
Denny, Andy 0 . Doczl IV, .Henry a high ot 55 to 80. Chance of .rain is 100
6Pak
William Doerler, Michael · R. percent tonight and 80 percent Thur· ·
BliveraAe Holders
Donohue. James M ichael Orehel ,
Ronnie L. Dugan, . Linden Edward sday.
Dunn, Patricia Ann Dyer. Vi, ky Jo
Ebersbach, John Hansford Eblin,
Daniel Giles Edwards, Christ ina Kay
DRIVETHRU
Evans. Cynthia L. Faulk, Theressa
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Ann Fish, Russell Fltchpatrick ,
748
N. SeCOfld St.
Admitted - None. '
Ntxtlo Efberfetds In Pomeray
Brenda louise Foster.
Middle
ort, 0.
Discharged ~ Robert Jeffers,
Ruby Jean Fowler. Terri . Fo&gt;,
Terry Ray Gardner, Donald M. Geary Howard Scanlan, Bernard Rairden,
Ill, Douglas Clayton Gloyd, Michael
R. Gore, Dennis Ray Grant, Beverly Lawton Templeton, Michael King,
Kay Grate, Mlctrael Troy Griffith , James Starcher, Ida I;luddlng, Pearl
Jeffrey A. Grueser, Debra D. Haggy , Mora.
Robert D. Haggy, Judith Lynn Hall .
Sandra Jo Hamilton, Todd Harder ,
Lewis W. Harper, Jr .. Will iam R.
SQUAD RUNS
R. · Radford , Rhoncfa Sue · ~ eu ter,
Two calls were ·answered Tuesday
Donald R. Richmond, David Ray
Riggs, Rita Jane Rousey, .YBncy E . night by the Middleport Emergency
Roush , Judith Carol Sargent, Charles
M. Saulers, Usa G. Scaggs, Allee Squad.
At 7:57 p.m. the unit went to the ·
F-aye Scarberry, Robert Seelig, Tina
Middleport jail for Roy J . Neff, who
Sheley, Randal R. Simpson , Amanda
Ruth Sisson, 'Cheryl Smith, Da via 1- . refused treatment, and at 8: 17 to the
Smilh, John Smith.
LaSalle Hotel for Mike Beliceau who
Kathleen Marie Smith, Michael. was . taken to Veterans Memorial
Todd Smith, Nancy E. Smith , Vicki
Picke ns Sm ith, John Fitzgerald Hospital.
Snyder, John Vanley Stewarl, Joh n
Vern Story, Johnnie Stout, Cra ig Allen
Swick, Randall Lee Tackell , · Jr ..
Br ian Mic hael Taylor . Chris T.
MINOR DAMAGE RECORDED
Taylor , Daniel Richard Tay lor .
Steve n Clayton Taylor. Fredrick
There were minor damages in an·
Oorsel Thomas , Barbara Tillis,
accident at 3:10p. m. Tuesday on Mill
Select co"on knits ilncl mnft stvln In short
Michael Lawrence Tr iplett. John St., Middleport.
sl"ve
knits onclt1nk tops- good stylelflcl color
Edward Umbarger, Mark Andrew
Miecllon. Sl1e1 I to 20.
Police said a car driven by Norman
V~noy. Rita Diane Vining , Bever l y
Men's 1nc1 Boys' l)j~rtment - lsi l'toor
Ellen Fau lkner Voss, Jacqueline Sue Presley, Route 2, Pomeroy, backed
Wagner, Roger Dean Wamsley; Carol from a. parking space into a car driven
Sue Wilkes, Daniel Allen Wil l, James by Florence E . Wells, Route 3,
.J.
Will. Joyce Anita Will. Kelly Wilson.
Fhonda Sue Wood, Lori Ann Wood, Pomeroy.
Presley was cited on an improper
Timothy Ph ill ip Wy•o l and
Chrlslopher A. Y~aug e_r .
backing charge.

Today

180

Kyger Creek

..

. Weather

KINGSFORD CHARCOAL

CHAPMAN'S

·-

QUALITY .

'1.00
CITY UMITS

••

SHOE STORE

-ELBERFELDS
SUMMER
'KNIT

Let's Not Forget To
Remember•• .May 28, 1979
Ftowers are for remembrance, recall ing In their quiet beauty a
thoughtful message for friend! and loved ones. At Pomeroy Flower
Shop we take great pride in the true American quality of. our popular
flowers, so appropriate tor this holiday dedicated to American heroes,
wno have served their country through the years In every time of need.

• Potted Plants.
•Cut ·Flowers
•Monument Sprays
•Wreaths
· •Arrangements in both Real &amp; Permanent flowers

I

··poMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MRS. MILLARD VANMETER
Phone 992,2039
106 Butternut Ave .
992·5721
Pomeroy, Ohio
We accept all major credit cards and .we wire flowers
everywhere.

'

.

I

TOPS
FOR
BOYS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Most gas stations expected to close Sunday
By JOE McKNIGIIT
Ass&lt;lclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS ( AP) - The Ohio Retail Gasoline Dealers Association
estimates 80. percent to 90 percent of its member stations will close
Sunday, Mooday or both days over the holiday weekend because of the
gasoline shortage.
VIncent Chaleckl, president of the statewide group lhat counts some
2,700station operators in Its membership, made the estimate. He jointly
blamed the gasoline shortage on oil exporting nations and this country's
federal environmental rules.
·
Some stations, he said, may close for the holiday so fuel allotments will
stretch through the final three days of the month next week .
Another lnd11stry spokesman said distributors will do everything they
can to keep gasoline supplied to dealers who want to stay open over the
holiday period.
"I don't think the industry wants a black eye In Ohio over Memorial
, Day and they are doing everything possible to get the product out," said

Roger Dreyer. executive director of the Ohio Petroleum Marketers
Association. " I think they are trying to get all the product out they can
get. "
.
Dreyer, whose group is composed mostly of distributors, said in the
first thret months of 1979, gasoline -consumption in Ohio rose 6.5 percent
over the first quarter of 1978. He said March consumption was up 7.3
percent over March 1978, and was at a record level.
" I don't know what people are doing," he said . "They must be trying to
get in one last fling ...
"The public just can't go on at this level for the rest of the year. We'll
look like C;ilifornia if we keep up at this level. You just can't continue to
go up 6 percent to 8 percent every month when the refineries put us on an
. 80 or 90 percent allotment."
The Ohio Department of Energy on Wednesday released to the retail
market the gQSOIIne accumulated during May in its federally mandated
fuel setaside orogram.

•

at y

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 29

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Officials noted that the 8.45 million gallons the department turned loose
is less than a oneday supply In a state that burns over 500 million gallons

of fuel a month.
The state tax department reported that In March it collected the
required 7 cents per gallon tax on 457,686,033 gal)ons of gasoline and
73,564,555 gallons of special fuels, mostly heating all and diesel.
That was 30.8 mllllon gallona more gasoline and 10.1 million gallons.
more heating oil and diesel fuel than were taxed in March 1978.
Tax department charts show gaoollne consumption is up 7.22 percent
for the period and heating oil-diesel fuel consumptio11 is up 16 percent.
Average increase on OOth fuels is up 8.35 percent over March 1978.
The American Petroleum Institute, working Independently of tax
figures, r_eports that Ohio, while relatively less dependent on oil for
energy than the nation generally, will .have some driving Inconveniences
and he impacted indirectly as supplies and prices affect the national.
economy.
·

en tine
•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, MAY. 24, 1979

$2,264,210 building budget
approved . by commissioners
Engineering Co. of Columbus as the
Gaul as informed that public obfirm to do soil exploration for the jections had been made to this project
project.
·
and several legal questions had been
The matter of $electing a surveying raised.
company was tabled until such lime
Gaul was told that he would be
as the architect can obtain additional given an answer on leasing a portion
quotations, as only one quote was of the Commons after the prosecutor
received .
has made a determination on the
Victor Gaul, president of the Shade legalities and after the Jaycees have
River Jaycees, met with com- given the public sufficent infonnation
missioners to obtain decision as to about the project in order to obtain an
the construction of a tennis court on opinion of the majority of the people.
architect.
Conunissioners noted that most of
The board approved the CLT the Chester Commona by the Jaycees.
the response they have received had
been favorable to the project. '
Michael Swisher, welfare director,
and Joe Barsotti, CAA director,
discussed transportation of people
unable to gain transportation for
medical care.
Commissioners liecided to help
provide the service on a matching
basis with OAA. Swisher and
Prosecutor Rick Crow presented a
proposed IV -D contact for child supBy ARTHUR H. ROTSTEIN
gasolin~. The estimate was made
port which was tabled for additional
Anoelated Preu Writer
abc.ut four weeks ago, he said - stll!ly.
CHlCAGO (APJ - The National be!ore the shortage ...:. when gasoline
PROCLAIMS POPPY DAY - Pomeroy Mayor the two days selling poppies. Pictured are, front, I tor,
It was the board's decision tO lease
Safety Council estimates between 500 supplies were roughly the same as in
Clarence Andre'II!S Wednesday declared Friday and Amber Cumings, Poppy Princess, Mayor Andrews,
located
at
the
.
in·
the
premises
and 800 peraons may die on the 1978.
Saturday, May 25 and 211, 1111 P.DPPY days In the village of
and Jeruilfer Rae Croea, POppy· Princels; back, Grace
natton's highways over .the thret-day · "We're committed to that estiinate tersectioo of Union Ave. and SR 7 and
Pomeroy. Members f the ladies ainillary of Drew W~b­
Pratt, presl,dent &lt;:l the auxlll8ry, and Jtobln Campbell,
to
locate
offices
for
the
Ohio
Bureau
Memorial Day weekend despite at this moment," Recht said. ''My
Junior Miss Poppy. Abient.was Mica Jones, Uttle Miss '
ster P011t 39, American Legion, will be on the streets
o
f
Employment
Services.
'the
county
'
expectations that many motorlBts \\'ill own feeling is that it might be
Poppy.
GETA
office
will
also
be
there
.
have trouble buying gasoline . .
somewha t lower than that estimate,"
Attentling
were
Richard
Jones,
Over the 1978 holiday period, The depending on the number of mile•
Asao&lt;:lated Press counll!d 528 traffic· Americana drive. "It's too late to president, Henry ,Wells, and Chester
Wells, commissioners, and Mary
related deaths.
revise it."
Hobstetter,
clerk.
Jack Recht, statistics manager for
But he noted traffic deatha wef!! up
the coWlCII, said Wednesday the 13 percent in the first three months o(
number of deaths likely will be 1979 compared to last year - "a .;:::;:;:;: ;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;~::;:~:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;: ;:;:; :;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
The American Legion Auxiliary nually to dlatribute these memorial paid for this objective.
' affected by the availability of pretty phenomenal Increase" - and
Unit 39 of Drew Webster Post, Dowers in memory of the men who
As American troops advanced .
APPEAL BEING MADE
had influenced the 500 to 800 estimate.
Pomeroy, will hold Its poppy days lost their lives In our nation's wars.
through France and Flanders the only
The council said 10,380 J)ersons dled 'lbe famUy of James David Coan- Friday and Saturday, May 25-211.
Frcm 1914 Wlti11918 the battleflelda touch &lt;:l life and beauty they often
through March, and a 1972 .record of dlloetallhll poueaaiODiln a mobUe
Mothers, wives, slllters, daughters of Europe were trampled by the boots saw were the wild poppies that
56,278 deaths would be broken if the home fire lui Friday,
and granddaughlerll &lt;:l men who ~er­ of milliona of flghtingmen. From lill7 bloomed amid tha nibble of war,
They are ID need of all howlehold ved and s&lt;me 'tl'ho died in World War Wltil 1918 American troops were part
higher deatlt rate continues.
Along the trenches, around the shell
ln -1978, 51,901 persons were killed in Items IUid clolhiDC. ClolbiD&amp; needed I, World. War ll, the Korean .Cpnfllct &lt;:A the tlllled' forces which .fought to craters, and among the barbed wire
Wilbur Leo siins, Jr., 38, Middleport, traffic accidents, and. a 13 percent 11 u followa: cblldrea, elze t IAJ lad· and the Vietnam War will be aaking
bring peace to Europe and liberty to and wreckage the little poppies grew
lB liBted in stable condition at Increase this entire year would mean dler; men's paoli, Zh3Z, ablrll, size residents to wear a poppy.
its peoples; Montha of hard fighting and blocmed.
zo ID boys and small ID meo's; More than 100,000 volunteer an· and
Veterans Memorial HospitB.l where a record 58,641 deaths.
The tiny bloUoma also covered the
thousands of lives were the price
"On the one hand, you have a womeu, 13-11 ID olacb and 38 ID
he was admitted folloWing a shooting
graves of American flghtlng _men who
incident at 7:25p. m. Wednesday out· gasoline shortage; on the other hand, blouses.
had fallen oo the battlefield; they
you have an indication of a relatively
Mn. CouDcll II espectlng • new
soon became a symbol of ucrlflce to
side a Harrisonville residence.
By JOE McKNIGHT
maintain service at the highest .level the living. A Britilh colonel, Jobn Me·
Meigs CoWlty Sheriff's deputies large increase in fatalities, the baby July 1 aDd clo1hblg for the baby
explanation for which we don't have II alao needed.
Associated Preas Writer
while making a broad effort to reduCe Crae, com)IOI!ell his poem, "In Flan·
said Sims' assailant is still at large .
'l'h- wbo .w ilh IAJ contribute may
COLUMBUS(AP) - Gov . James A. gasoline usage.
According to reports, Sima and the details," said Recht.
der' Fields".
However, council President VIncent do 110 by contactlag Mn. Jllllletl C.
Rhodes today reCOgnized the groWing
His order gave approval for
Retuming 11ervlcemen brOIIIIht with
driver of a 1967 Dodge four-door
sedan, became Involved in an alleged L. Tofany said "an assumption seems Cow&gt;cU, Lalllllville, 74Z-Z'IZ5 or 7U.. fuel shortage by" ordering state department heada to "authorize a them memorleaof the battlefield popagencies to cut gasoline conaumption two-week work schedule of eight 9- plea, and the flower !0011 toot on a
argument af the residence of Earl proper that higher speeds are behind 228t.
the
disiurbing
increase
in
fatalities."
by 10 percent for the next two mooths. hour days and one 11-bour day, or a Ycred significance. The red Dower
Arli.
·:·:·:·::;.;:::::;.;.;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;.
Tofany said observing the national
His order suggested less driving, weekly schedule of four 10-llour days soon ·llecarM the Dower of rememThus fin, the assailant has not been
fewer trips, car pools and that where appropriate ."
lrance, for the men whoee lives had
charged, but his identity Ls known. speed jimit of 55 mph will help
department heads consider four-day
Other suggested conservation been 1081 In the defense of out
Sims was tranaported to Veterans conserve fuel. Its Introduction five
work weeks for oome workers or nine methods included executive approval freedom.
Memorial H011pital by the Pomeroy years ago has saved at least 35,000
lives,
he
said.
work days within a two-week period for each trip In a state vehicle; review
Wearing poppies In honor &lt;:l the war
ERSquad.
The Associated Press keep&amp; a
while maintaining 41Johour work of policies on callq and attending dead fint occurred In New York City
traffic death count for the holiday
weeks.
meetings
and
eliminating on Nov. 9,1911. A YMCA staff worker,
Child's death
period that begins at 6 p.m. Friday
His order came as motorists faced unne&lt;'essary meetings; one "office Miss Moina Michael of Athenll, Ga.,
and ends at midnight Monday local
Middleport Park Director Pat Kit· the prospect of fincllng up to 90 percent day " weekly to curb travel; inter- distributed poppies to a group of men
time.
chen today announced that weather · of the gasoline aervlce Stations In Ohio departmental coordination on tripa attending the 25th conference of her.
leads to discovery
permitting, the municipal pool will be closed at least me day during the Me· and car pooling; strict adherence to organization. The American Legion
open Saturday from 12 to 3 p. m. with moria! Day holiday beca~ of short speed limits and incentives for car adopted this Dower to be ita national
.. • IIOOI'ON (APJ - The death of a 10
no charge for swimming on this fuel supplies.
ooolb1g by employes. ·
Dower in !920.
year old boy has given scientists the
openln&amp; day.
.
Rhodes' executive order otated
first proof that diabetes In children
Season paases will also be on sale at there wm be a shortfall of normal
can be caused by a virus.
the pool at this time . Family season gasoline supplies for at least 80 days
The dlacovery ralaes \he possibility
tickets are $25 plus f5 for each child and ,said it IS Incumbent on state
of the eventual development &lt;:l a vac·
and single season passes are '15.
government to lead the way in
cine to prevent childhood .diabetes,
General admlssloo at the gate for conservation . He asked departments
wlllch Ls usually far more serious than
those not having 11easoo tickets will be , ·~d agencies to make every effort to
.. the fonn of the diseaae that strikes
for those In the ninth grade or older
adults.
and 75 cents for those under the nihth
UnUI now, the cause of juvenile
grade.
diabetes was a mystery although
Sunday, May 27, the pool will open
State Representatlve Ron James wave actioo from Increased depth as
researchers have long 'lll8ptlCted that
for the regular season. Hours Sunday
(I).Proctorville) announced today the cause of the eroston. "If the river
It might bli triggered by a virus,
and Monday will bello 6. Hours while · Because of the. energy crunch, that Ohio Attorney General Wllllam erosion Is caused by the lncreued
Genetic Inheritance and weakness In
school lB In session will be 4-7 and
Meigs County offlce holders are Brown will investigate the erosion of river depth, there Is a pOISiibillty that
the ·body's Immune system also have
weekends 1~.
the Corp of E~neers may be respon·
altering
their oHice hours beginning the bankS of the Ohio River.
been viewed as p0111ible factors.
Times for night 8Wimmlng, Junior
sillle,"
continued Representative
the
Environmental
Attorneys
from
May
29
on
a
trial
balls
.
.
The researchers who discovered
· and Senior Ufeaavlng and swimming
is why I have asked the
James.
"This
Tuesday, oflicesof the county Law Section of the Attorney Genersl's
the v1n1t linked disease ate still WI·
lessons will be annoUnced later.
Attorney
General
to investigate the
Office
will
visit
the
HWltington
certain whether the germ cauaes
Anyone wLshlng to rent the pool or auditor, clerk of courts, recorder, District Offlce of the U. Army Cor• po88ibillty that evidence against the
common
pleas
court,
probate
cowt
lllOII cues of childhood diabetes or
reserve the shelter houses may call and treaaurer will be open from 8:30 ps of Enl!lneers to review the In· Corp of Engineers could be
only the rare exceptiona.
Pat Kitchen at home 9112-GI2 or at the a. m. to 4:30p.m. Monday through . fonnation which the Corp has relied gathered."
pool lifter Friday. Charge for pool
In addition~ the Attorney General's
upon to support its position that it has
Friday and closed on Saturday.
rentallB $25 per hour.
Office
will monitor the progress Of the
no
responalbility
for
the
erosion
Thla altention will . .hle the
case
currently
before the U. S. Court
problem.
heating - cooling unit of the cowt
"The fact that the river bank lB of ClaimS which will also attempt to .
house to beturnedtolowonFriclay af.
ternoon and will reduce gasoline eroding Is clear to everyone," Rep. determine the respollliblliiy of the
WEIGB·IN·~'n:JRDAY
Corp &lt;:A Engineers for the eroelon.
All 4-H and FFA members with usage of court house employes by one- James stated, "but there remahis a
"1 expect the Investigation Into the
Rain arid possible lhun "
/
serious
dispute
amoog
the
exvery
market hop or market lam!» are sixth to and from work.
erosion of the Ohio River bank will
perts as to the ca.use o( the erosion."
derstormstonlght. Turning windy and
BEST OF SHOW -" Rhonda reminded that these animals must be
Acconllng to the U. S. Army Corps continue: I am aware ol the lou of
cooler with tempentures dropping to Swift, a student at the Portland brought to the faii'J!I'OIUids on Satur·
of Engineers, .the erosion ls caused by private property along the river bank
the mid to upper 40s tonight . Ught Elementary School, received the day, May 28, to be eartagged and
rain or tlr!Qie likely Friday. CQn- "best of show" award at the Rio weighed In, according to John C.
changing land use patterns and due to er08ion, and Lleel.that some atPRA.CriCE SLATED FRIDAY
.. tlnulni Windy and cool Wlth highs tn Grande Art Exhibit recently. Rice, County Extension Agent,
Practice for graduation will be held natural forces such as flooding thai tempt should be madl toile\ermlne if
the mid to upper 5011. Chance of rain 1S ' Rhoda 's painting WIIS one of over Agriculture.
at Eastern High School on Friday, are outside the control of human fur· compensation to the victims will be
necesSary."
110 percent tonight and 70 percent three thousand entered from three
The weigh-In and eartaggihg will May 25, at 6 p. m. Claaaea on the 25th ces.
Friday ·
counties.
However,) other experts point to
lake place from 9 a .m. to 12 noon . 1 ~ will be diSIIlissed at 2:20p.m.
Meigs County Commissioners
Tuesday night approved a $2,264,210
project budget for the construction of
a school for the mentally retarded
and an adult workshop In Meigs Coun·
ty .
.
Meeting with commissioners to explain the project were Manning Webster, chairman of the '169 Board, Chris
Layh, mental retardation ad·
mlnlstrator, and Frank Lee, project

a

500-600 holiday
deaths expected

Auxiliary's poppy days set

Shooting victim's
condition stable

Gas redllction' urged by Rhodes

Free swimming

day announced

'I

Office holders
aJtenng" hours

Brown
will probe
..
river bank erosion

s.

Weather

~

t

�</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="50688">
            <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="50687">
              <text>May 23, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
