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/

'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

�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May :u. 1979

2-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, May 24, 1979

1979 SEO District All-Star game Saturday

Speed up efforts. failing,
pipeline plans TRay be ~ut
.

.

i :

'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Speedup
efforts by various federal agencies
have not succeeded iii changing plans
by the Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) to
cancel a proposed oil pipeline from
Ca lifornia to Texas, according to
Sohio Chairman Alton W. Whiiehouse .
" I don 't think it's moving fast
enough," Whitehouse said T.uesday .
"Nothing has gone on in 'he past few
months that changes my :nind about
our decision to cancel the r roject."
. Sohio originally said i' was • r.lpping
Its plans for the $1 bill i·F• ' ;: ~ipeline

from Long Beach, Calif. to Midland,
Tex . March 13. But Sohio agreed to
reconsider the plan after various
California and federal agencies
promised to help resolve the
problems.
At that time Whitehouse blamed
·•endless
government
permit
procedures, pending and threatened
litigation' ~ as the reasons for
canceling the project.
He said Tuesday that ·Sohio has
received the ·promised help. Various
bills have been introduced to grant

.

Jimmy's Whitehouse

CANCER

Answer line

.Glenn keeps
10.W p ro £ile

By FRANK CORMIER
Now she foresees more (/lunches"
Associated Press Writer
at service stations.
WASHINGTON ( AP )
The
Last weekend posed a special
gasoline pinch has hit the Oval Office , problem, too. Ms . Clough wanted to go
Sort of.
·
white-water rafting in Pennsylvania
President Carter's personable - but most service stations close on
personal secretary, Susan Clough, has Sundays.
to gear her schedule to his - which
So she filled up a five-gallon
gasoline
can in additioo to her lank.
isn't good if you have 1o wocry about
keeping fuel in the family buggy.
Hauling .gasoline in such fashion lsn 'I
For instance, Ms. Clough gets to recommended, because of safety
work about 6:45am. each weekday . hazard§, but what's a hard-working
Many service stations along her route secretary going to do if she wants to
ar.en't open that early, and many of " get away from it all" on a weekend?
those that are have lines of waiting
customers that would make her tardy
Vice President Walter F. Mondale
if she got into one.
· calls the United Steelworkers "my
In the evening, when wock is done, favorite union."
few service stations are open.
But that didn't stop him from
So when Carter sat down last week keeping a wtion delegation and three
to discuss California's acute gasoline Democratic House members waiting
shortage with Gov. Edmund G. Brown 25 minutes last week for a scheduled
Jr. , Ms. Clough headed for the While appointment.
House parking lot and drove off to a
Aides explained Mondale had gone
gas station·
to his dentist foc a periodic checkup.
Although it was mid-morning, she
When he made a belated apcalled it her lunch' hour. Asked if the pearance, you couldn't 'tell whether '
president had excused her.temporary his face was red from embarrassment
absence, she replied, "No comment." or the sun. But his smile was
Ms. Clough didn't feel a bit guilty, gleaming.
'
however. She calculates she' s
secretary AI Eisele reported •
actually gone out to lunch only eight Mondale had required nothing more
times in the 28 months of the Carter serious than a cleaning job.
!::pr~e;;s;;;ide;;;;nc;;;,;,v;;;;.;.,;;........,;;;;...,....-.._ _ _ _...;._ _ _...;._ _ _ __,
r

CLEVELAND (AP) ~ U.S. 'Sen.
JohnH.Glennhasearnedareputation
for wocklng hard, but bad kept a low
profile wttil his views oo the SALT II
American Cancer Society
agreement pushed him into the limelight.
going
to
receive
has
a
good
record
of
The Ohio Democrat contends he has
A regular feature, prepared by the
success.
Today
there
are
tens
of
always
favored taking ''the rational
American Cancer Society, to help
approach"
to issues. In addition to
thousandsofpeoplewhohavehadthis
save your life from cancer.
aperaUon
and
who
are
now
living
ac·
successfully
sponsoring
37
A model asks: Every sununer I
read and hear about staying out of the live, nonna1 lives. Most of them have coosecutive amendments to bills, he
sun. I want to look healthy as well as learned to speak again and carry on bas offered legislatioo to allocate
be healthy. Isn't there a safe way to their normal daily activities in· more natural gas supplies to Ohio and
cluding business affairs. The ~oice other gas-short states.
tan?
technique
that you learn after a
The rational approach to the new
ANSWERline: There Is a way to tan
· that is a lot less dangerous than the larynjjectomy is called esophageal Strategic ,yms Limilation Treaty is
way most people do it. First, use a speech. It is taught routinely by to aSI!ure it cootains provisioos so the
speech therapists and trained volun· United Stales would know if the Soviet
~ preparation cmtaining
.PABA. Then take the swt a liWe at 8 leers. In additioo, there are a variety Union is cheating oo the agreement,
time, to avoid burning. Stay out of the of electronic speech aids. You mig!t he said.
"ldefinltelywantSALTbecauseit's ,
sun altogether during the most in· also see if your community has a
chapter
of
the
International
the
most important treaty we've
le!tse midday hours, or wear protective clothing. The price for not being Assoclatlon of Laryngectomees. Your every had, but .. . we have to know if
careful ranges from premature skin local·American Cancer will know.
. the Soviets are living up to it," Glenn
ilglng to skin cancer.
e. e e
said. "I know the president has said
' A 50-year-old ezecutlve complains :
he won't sign a treaty that Isn't
H cigarettes are so bad for you, wh)' is
verifiable, but these things don't fit
my uncle Bill still going strong at 115 COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov . together right now." .
e
· after smoking two packs a day all his James A. Rhodes has signed into law
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DMass.,
a bill that will revoke the driver's has said Glenn's views on SALT II
life?
verfication will be valued when the
· ANSWER!ine: Research indicates license of anyone convicted of causing Senate
votes 00 the treaty.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - John
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _Former
that whether or not a person develops a death while fleeing a police officer in
Glenn has refused to back down on Wayne, th.e cance.--5\ricken hero of Black Panther leader Eldridge
a
motor
vehicle.
a disease depends on both outside in·
The measure, sponsored by Rep. the issue . despite attempts by· 200 movies, will celebrate his 72nd Cleaver won one legal skirmish and
Duences (such as smoking) and on the
Rocoo
J . Colonna, DBrook Park, is Presidlint Carter and U.S. Secretary birthday Saturday with a gold medal lost two in his efforts to get the
state of hla ot her bOdY. Since we stlll
R. Vance to persuade from Congress and the prayers of California Supreme Court to suppress
know very little about who is most ooe of two pieces of legislation signed of Stale v"'~··
7•~
him
that
the
treaty
contains adequate countless fans.
evidence in his coming t.-ial for atsusceptible to which disease, the best Wednesday by , the governor. It means for tracking
Soviet com·
Wayne is in stable condition after a templed murder.
becomes
effective
Aug
.
22.
way to stay healthy is to control the
A 4-2decision Wednesday by Justice
The second law, effective im· pliance. Glenn criticized the president May 2 operation Ulat revealed cancer
factors with which we are familiar.
for depleting as wannongers those in his intestine. He was reported Frank Richardl!On held valid two
mediately,
attempts
to
tighten
up
an
That means maintaining good health
senators with reservatioos about the gaining strength and has been taking warrantless police searches of an
to help insure that our body's natural existing law dealing with school new treaty.
short walks down hospital corridors. oakland home after an April 1!968
defense system is working properly, finances by setting $20,.000 as · the
Glenn's
views
on
SALT
may
have
Plans for the birthday were not shootout in which Cleaver's
and avoiding exposure to substances maximum am9unt of money a school had an adverse affect on the senator's available
Wednesday, but hospital companion was killed. But the court
that are proven contributors to district can recover from a bonding relations with Carter, although Glenn . spokesman AI Hicks said Wayne will agreed the search of a car found some
company
for
violation
of
the
clerk's
dlseaae. Smoking is very definitely
says the relationship is not "all that get at least one birthday cake.
distance away was illegal.
the main eJ:temal cause of lung can· ·certificate statute.
And
the
House
approved
·
a
bill
__
bleak...
That law is a fiscal accountability
ctr, and leads to many other
Glenn
has
been
discouraging
Ohio
authorizing
a
congressional
gold
BOONE, N.C. (AP) _ Actress
statute which is applicable to school
lllnesses.
Democrats
from
pushing
Kennedy
for
medal
-one
of
84
ever
minted
to
Stella
Stevens has begwt what she
districts .
A businessman writes: I've just
1980
presidential
nomination
honor
the
actor.
hopes
will
be a career as a producer
the
Rep . Larry H. Christman,. 0.learned I have cancer of the larynx Englewood,
-and direclor .
sponsored the new law. instead of Carter. Glenn, who has
8nd will have to have surgery. T!&gt;'
been a Kennedy family friend, says
LOS ANGELES ( AP) - The
Miss stevens, who has played major
idea of cancer terrifies me, but I'm
winning 1s the object of next year's attorney for actor Lee Marvin says he roles in about 20 movies has been at
also very worried that I won 'I be able
presidential race.
.
will seek reconsideration of a $104,000 Appalachian Slate Uni~ersity here
to carcy on my business once my
to Michelle Triola Marvm
' . And th'IS wee k to m ak e a !l().m'100te
award
"I don't see a split party having
.
1aryrut Is removed. Is it true you.can .
success in a general elt!!!tion," he David Kagon said he might even documenlary called "The American
learn to speak again?
The establishment of the United
.d
appeal the landmark decision.
Heroine."
·
· ANSWER!ine: ~surgery you are States Mint was authorized in 1792. S81G~nn, who was disaPPointed when
Kagon said Wednesday his threat lo
Miss Stevens, 40, who played in such
he lost the vice presidential appeal was spurred a reques( from movies
as
''The , Poseidon
nomination in 1976, bas not announced Miss Marvin's attorney that Marvin ·Adventure,'' said she Is financing the
for re-electioo. But he has authorized pay some $500,000 in fees stemming film with her own money. She said she
the creation of a committee to raise from the case.
hoped it will beclltle a television
car.tpaign fwtds. Cootrihutors 80 far
He said the actor was willing to series.
have included the United Auto accept the ruling if "that was the end
" I've never wanted to be an older
Workers, the American Medical of the matter. Unfoctwtalely, the • career actress," she said. "I've
By Dr. Lamar Miller
Association and the Communication ~~ti~~.~ has seen fit to take further played blondes I've played redheads
Wockers of America, as well as some
and I've played brunettes, and that's
OU College of Medicine
business leaders.
Last month, a judge rejected Miss all the kinds of women there are.
Marvin's contention that she had an
"I'd hope some day to be known 85 a
implied contract to share her lover's good or great director."
Questloo: Is hypertensin a common hypertensive populatioo as a whole·,
assets, but awarded her $104,000 for
we can detennine a causative factor
problef9?
' 'rehabilitative purposes."
Answer: The most recent surveys in only 5 to 10 percent of the cases.
conducted by the National High Blod
All people should. have their blood
M8xtne 'A. Hobbs, Harvey J . Hobbs
Pressure Education Program of pressure checked at least once a year.
. .
.
. ·
HEW estimates there are a total of 35 Since thia is always included iri an- to Donald R. Hobbs, Jimmie Hobbs,
·
million hypertensives in the United nual physicals, It would · be done Parcel, Salem.
Manning D. Webster, MJ!ry A. WebStates. In the early 70s statistics automatically if people had yearly
ster
lo Richard W. Vaughan, Ruby A. ·
revealed only 23 mlllion people with physicals as most physicians advise. I
Vaughan,
Lots, Pomeroy.
should add, that as a person gets
this malady.
Eli
N.
Vance,
m, by Eli N. Vance,
older,
the
need
lor
such
an
annual
However, the problem U! even more
Atty. in fact, Esther Vance to Dennis
serious than these figures imply, physical becmles greater.
QuesUon: Since I feel the same ·Manuel, Gertrude Manuel, Parcel,
because it b estimated that only 60
percent (21 mlllioo) are aware they whether I'm oo my blood pressure Sutton.
Margaret H. Price, Earle A. Price
have hypertension. Further, of these pills or not, Is there any reason to
Barbara W. Graham, Jean Red·
to
known hypertensives, only one.wnt believe that 1 will live longer if I take
monel,
Parcel, Lebanon.
them?
(seven mlllion) are oo adequate con·
D. 0. Decker, dec. to Lella D.
Answer: With mild to moderate
trol, Another one-third are
inadequately eontrolled and the hyperte~~~~ion, which includes about 85 Piney, Rose Decker, Charles Decker,
i'emalning ~ are oo no to 90 percent of the cues, lite mor· Clairana McClung, · Aff. for trans.,
{/
therapy at all. Reasoos for this poor tallty rate Is 2 percent per year. For Lebanon.
Ralph
C.
Knight,
Charles
ij.
Knight,
. record were discusaed in my coluinn. hypertensives who do not take
over the last couple of weeks. In medication, the death rate riaes 10 atty. In fact, Carol Knight, Charles H.
Knight to Joseph Short, Gladys Short,
short, the major p:oblem Is patient percent per year.
With severe hypsertens!oo, 30 per· .987 acre, Chester :
education and alack of understanding
Joeepb Short, Gladys Short to Her·
cent of the cases are alive after five
u to wahl hypertension really is.
bert
Short, Marty Short, 4.538 acres,
Question: I am a black male, 35 years if they adhere to am edication
Chester.
years oL 'l1ld I've been told by my schedule. For thole i~ this group who
Beverly Marlene Pooler to James
doctor lhat I have high b11Y.'d do not follow the pre,..::ibed dosage R.
Pooler, Pl. Lot 145, Palmer's 2nd
only
3
percent
survive
after
five
prelll1lN . lsn't that wtusual at my
Add.,
Middleport.
years..
.
age?
Harold
E. Wolfe, Carol J. Wolfe to
Another factor to consider Is that if
Answer: Unfortunately, your race
Davie
Baker.
Susan Babr, Lots I'll
and sa have the highest percentage mild or moderate ~ion Is not
and
128,
Palmer's
Add., Middleport.
of Individuals with hypertension. treated, there is a significant chance
Adrian
A.
Carsoo,
Rolle Ellen Car·
it
will
progress
to
a
more
severe
Although black men have a much
son
to
Adrian
A,
Carson,
Rose Ellen
When
thia
happens
the
mor·
state.
greater risk of developing hyper·
Carson,
00
acres,
Rutland.
taUty
rate
riaes
dramatically
whether
tension than any other group, no age,
Manning Kloes, June S. Kloes to
sa or race is inunwte from this the patient hegins to take ~catioo
Wllllam
Lambert, Unda S. Lam· ·.
medical problem. Since you are or not In other words, there Is every bert, Lots,H.Middleport.
.,., selected .this main dish just for you, Tedrelatively young, ·statisllcs Indicate reason in the world to .adhere to your
a lot of baloney!" ·
.
· .
Eiflllt Easements, Tuppers Plains ·
that ,,there ..Iii a .better chance of treatment plan - unless you con.
CliesterW.
Dist.,
Pomeroy.
dlacoverlng 8 ·cause for your hyper· template suicide!
Drotha E. Rlehel, Affidavit, Reed·
tension than if you were olde,r For the ·
sville .
.. ·····- - - - - ' - ' - - - - ' - - - - . , . . , .
,.. - - - - '

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Health Review

P roperty

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Rosters have been annowtced for
the 1979 Southeastern Ohio District
All-star games to be played beginning
at 12 noon on Trautwein Field,

President Carter the authority to give
the necessary permits and clear some
of the possible litigation against the
pipeline. And, nearly all 700 ,permits
needed for the pipeline have been
granted.
One of the measures aimed at
speeding up government .approval
was introduced by S.en. Henry
Jackson, O.Wash.
,
" This project is in the ilational
interest and must be built,'' Jackson
said Tuesday. "At a time when
gasoline supplies are so low, we must
take every step possible to maximize
use of the trans-Alaska pipeline and
Alaska crude."
Jackson 's legislation directs the
Secretary of the Interior to issue all
remaining permits needed for
construction of thr so-called Sohio
pipeline.
.
But Whitehouse said there are still
the fears of lawsuits which could
continue to block the pipeline.
" Everyone has been trying to help
us,".be said. "But we told them at the
lime we said we would reconsider,
that we could not wait forever ."
Sohio is expected to make a fmal
decision within 30 days.
The pipeline was designed to bring
crude oil from the Prudhoe Bay.
oilfield ill 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 oil
oo the West Coast recently because of
the gasoline shortage there .
Whitehouse said several West Coast
refineries were drawing up plans to
convert equipment to han&lt;Ue the highsulfur content Alaska oil, rather than
imported oil. ·

Business

MellTOr • •
•

By JOHN CUNNIF~·
AP Busloess Allalyst
NEW YORK (AP) _ A hush has
fallen on Wall Street, where earlier
this decade the defenders of private
securities markets clashed with
government regulators over the mod·
emization of trading.
Cmfrontatlons are rare now; the
dialogue is calmer, the interfaces less
angry. Muscleflexing is hardly par! of
the scene. And so even is the level of
discussion that many people assume
the issues have died.
They haven't. What has happened Is
the presence of William "Mil" Batten,
69, who became chairman of the New
York Stock Exchange in 1976,
succeeding James Needham, a tough,
sometimes
combative
chief
executive.
Though assertive, as ""ecutlves
are, Batten's style Is low key. "I don't
think much is accomplished by
coofrontatioo,'' he said the other day.
''We can get more done if we avoid i!.'
. than if we seek it out." ·
It's Batten's management style.
"I'm result-oriented," he said. TOO
way to achieve goals Is to have each
group undersland t.he o~er. If
screaming would do tf, If 1t would
achieve goals, I'd be foc it."
,
He is a reasonable man • ''The
objectives of the SEC (Securities and
Exchange Cmuniasion) and people III
business are the ~,'' he said.
. We want a market '" the public,
mterest. We want integrity." .
Although you can find an argument ·
00 almost any subject in thia
notoriously oplnlooated community,
":WiY people feel the Batten style is
right for the times.
~
Under Needham, himself a former •
SEC commissioner, the . hard in· ,
fighting probably was required, since •
stock eJtChanges at the time 1I88UIIled ,..
they were flghllng fir their lives. F~w· ,
SEC opinions were left unchallenged . ~
But now the law is written. Under a ·
1975 act of Congress, the various
exchanges are conunltted to linldng
their . facilities into a central·
marketplace. Congress didn't specify ·
the flrlJl, but II stated the goal.
As head of the biggest exchange of ..
all, Batten's role Is to mainlain a ·:
constructive dialogue with other ~
exchanges, with the SEC and with his '
own membership, and somehow to .~
balance It all with the pibllc good. ":
To date, as he sees it, the linkage is ,
. evolving smoothly and "in •
accordance with the act," although he •
coocedea some disagreement with the :.
SEC oo the rate of progress - on the ~
timing of advances. .
.
,:

Rosters for the East team are as
Athens, Saturday, May :Ill.
· ·
Players were nominated and voted follows :
Pltchers - Dan Dutton and Jim
upon in a special meeting at Athens
Angert, Marietta ; Brad lightfoot,
High School Sunday. May 13.
Logan; Von Taylor, Kyger Creek;

SPORTS
The Daily Sentinel
. •

:~eigs summer league results
Priddy, Lacree, Wamsley, Spires,
DAvis, and · CremeaJJB each had a
lola! of two hill!.
Long had a triple for the losers and
'J'hompson had a double for the only
Red extra base hits. Four Red pit·
chers walked four and fanned four
whlle Peterson and Acree fanned sa.
Unescore :
Rutland
4Z1 s--.19 18 4

By Greg Balley
Jack Peterson and James Acree
· allowed just four hitS Tuesday night
as the Rutland Dodgers downed the
host New Haven Reds, 19-4. Peterson
got the win while Long took the loss.
Peterson also led his team in hitting
: as he went four.for.four at the plate.
Tim Wamsley, David Hoover, and
Kenny Wise each had a double, and

Meigs
Property
.Transfers

the visiting Pomeroy Yankees earned
a ~ victory over hll!lt Powell's

Willlam H. Coleman, Della H.
Coleman to John J. Evans, Teresa
Ann Evans, 15 acres, I acre, Lebanon.
Margaret Hysell Lewi,9 to Charles
Johnson, Kathryn Johnson, 3 acres,
Salisbury.
. Charles L. Abbot to Herbert Rice,
Clteryl Lynn Rice, :ll acres, Olive.
Clair A. Turner,.Shirley Turner to
Lee Bumem, Stella Burnem, 1.03
acres, 1.2673 acres, Rutland.
Billy G. Grant, Lula Lesta Grant to
Ernest T. &amp;nlth, Shirley A. Smith,
Lot 106, Middleport.
Jose Martinez Mascorro, Virgie
Mascorro to Harlan A. 8allard, Alta
L. Ballard, Parcel, Lebanon.
; Michael J. Larsen, Armice Jacoby
Larsen to Wlllism E. Polley, Nonna .
,,J. Polley, lll!cres, Columbia.
Nola Frances Amott to Pauline A.
·McClintock, Parcels, Syracuse.
. Pauline A. McClintock,to Rodney R.
Sayre, Kathy L. Sayre, · Parcels,
K. Fife to Terry Scott Brown, Pamela
Jean Brown, 41, Salisbury • En·
terprise . .

Walter D. Roush, Ulllan L. Roush
to Robert W. Davis, Beatrice M.
Davis, Lot, W. Paln)er's Add., Mid·

dleport.
· George Workman, Helen Workman
to James ,R. Brown, Lucille Brown,
2.1481 acres, Salem.
. Charlotte A. Brown, Affidavit, Middleport.
Charlotte A. Brown to Margaret

By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sjlurts Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - The olive
.branch has been offered. Not only will
the Cincinnati Red§ let Pete Rose
receive a baseball writers' award in
Riverfront Stadium, but they've said
it's only a matter of time until Rose's
uniform number is retired.
.. It probably means more to me
than the average guy because I'm
from Cincinnati," Rose said when he
was told of the gesture. " I was proud
every night putting that uniform on. I
still remember the thrill of putting it
on the first time."
The breakthrough was announced
Wednesday by Reds President Dick
Wagner, chairman of the board Louis
Nippert, and the Cincinnati Chapter of

the Baseball Writers Association of
America.
Reds officials originally refused the
writers permission to present their
1978 most val~~&amp;ble player award in a
ceremony at home plate.
"I am not interested in honoring a
player from another team here in our
park," Wagner said at the lime. "He
(Rose) chose his course.lf he 's a Red,
he 's honored here. But he's not a Red,
so he lsn 't. ''
But Wagner said Wednesday the
club decided to allow the presentation
rather than let negative publicity
overshad~w an important series
between two division leaders.
The Reds and Rose's new club, the
Philadelphia Phlllies, meet here for
the first time this season June I. The

begins at Dub.l in'

G=iesKnoppfannediOandwalk·
edfive.
Knopp also socked a double and tri·
By GEORGE STRODE
pie while Bill Howell had a triple and
AP Sports Writer
DUBLIN, Ohio (AP) _ An old
a single, Shennan Hoschar had a tri·
pie and Mike Thomas had a double for colleg·e wrestling inJ'ury keeps
theYankees. ·
Bobby Foster tOok theloss with . hampering Jim Simons' pro golf
relief from Bryan !Com. Foster had a
big night at the plate with three
singles and a double.
Brei Kom had a double and a triple,
Sean Doidge had a single and triple,
and Bryan Korn socked two singles.
Foster and Korn fanned ten and walk·
edeight.
Unescore :

career.

And because of Simons' recurring
left shoulder problems, his chance of
keeping his title are slim in the
Memorial Golf Tournament that
began today at Muirfieid Village.
"I hurl it wrestling a college
fraternity brothe~ at Wake Forest,"
Simons said. "It's bothered me ever
since."

~~:S

1979.
At stake in the $329,000 tour stop is a
first prize of $94,000. Portions of the
final two rounds Saturday and Sunday
will be carried by CBS television .

Final baseball statistics for theSVAC baseball ' champioo Eutern
Eagles were released this week. The
team's batting average was a very
ds, swimming and use of oUtside respectable .303, with a total of 123
!acUities such as the track and tennis hits.
.
courts.
Five Eaglea finished the ~
Each camper will receive a camp with at least 8 .:m batting average.
shirt, group picture and personal . Greg Wigal led all hittera, hitting .400.
evaluatitln sheets. ·
Brian Bissell finished with a . •348,
Registration forms may lMl picked Rusty Wigal hit .347, Jfff Goebel had
up from Coach Osborne or Coach a .333 average, and Dan Spencer
Lanham.
finished at an even .:m.
.
For more infonnation, call Arthur
~iasell led the Eagles in five depart·
W. Lanham, Rio Grande College, Rio ments. He had the most at bats with
GrMde, Ohio 45674, phon~ 614-245- 66; most
with 21, most doubleli
5353, ext. 317; 614-~. home or with 6, most stolen·buel with 9, and
Jtm Osborne, Gallla Academy High had the team's only horne run.
. .
School; Galllpolis, Ohio 45631, phone
Greg Wigal had the most hits with
614-446-'1212.
:ll. Johnny Bever and he tied for mOBt
walks with 11 each,

The 29-year-old blonde from
102 032--a 11 3 Pittsburgh has tried almost evThe annual Rio Grande College
erything to cure tile problem. He even Redmen SUlllll\er s.sketball Camp
went to Toronto to see Dr. James will begin on Swtday, Jwte 10, acBaleman.
cording to Coach Art Lanham and
Nwtn, Lots 00, 21, Middleport.
"
He's
one
of
the
best
in
the
world.
Coach Jim Osborne, camp directors.
Marcia McEwen to Guy R. Sargent,
He
said
.
an
operation
wasn'
t
This year's camp will be for
76 acres, Salisbury.
necessary.
He
felt
with
isometric
yoqsters
in grades seven through
David M. McEwen, Bonnie.
.exercises,
it
would
tighten
up.
What
12.
McEwen to Guy R. Sargent, 76 acres,
he doesn't understand, you don't want
Cost.for those planning to stay at
Salisbury.
to
tighten
up
your
muscles
in
golf.
the
college during the June 10-15
Bertha Nichols to Carl S. Nichols,
"When
I
exercise
it,
my
shoulder
event
is $90. Those planning to com·
Sr., Lot 265 and Pt. 263, Middleport.
feels
b.etter
but
it'
throws
my
timing
.
mute
will
pay $60.
Bertha Nichols to Carl s. Nichols,
off."
·
Area,
high
school coaches and
Sr .• Lot 288, Middleport.
.
Since
he
won
a
head-to-head
duel
·college
coaches
will assist · in thia
Richard P. Carter. Daisy C. Carter
with
Jack
Nicklaus
for
the
1978
year's
OHSAA
approved
camp which
to Monongahela Po'!'Ver Co., Right of
Memorial
title,
siinons'
career
has
also
includes
canoe
rides,
camp aw8r·
Way,Olive.
.
been
on
the
downslide.
This
year
he
Doille Mae Pickett, dec. to Charles
Plckett, Gwendolyn Roach, Madalyne ranks 79th on the current PGA money
Markham Fleming, Evelyn Scott, Jan list with leSI! than $22,000.
He's missed the cut five times in his
Pickett, Eroll Pickett, Harley
16
tournaments. Simons' best finish
Plckett, Cert. of Trans., Salisbury.
Wednesday's Sports Transactions
Fitch head coach .
was
13th in the Tournament of
Dallas BleviM, Josephine Blevins
By The Associated f"ress
FOOTBALL
Champions.
He
came
to
Muirfleld
BASEBALL
National Football League
to Michael Elberfeld, Parcels,
Village after tying for 65th at Fort
American League
BUFFALO BILLS - Signed Ken
Chester.
DETROIT TIGERS - Placed Mark Johnson, defensive end, to a series of
Wort!)
a week ago.
Michael R. Grate, Debrah L. Grate
Even with afl of his problems, Fidrych pitcher, on the 21 day one xear contracts .
to Dennis Tillis. Diana L)'llll Ttllla, ,35
disabled list. Recalled Dove Toblk ,· DETROIT LIONS - Signed Ulysses
Simons liked his chances of stunning and
Pat Underwood, pitchers and Dan Morri s, tight end.
. .
the game's superstars foc the second Gonzales, outfielder, from Evansville
GREEN BAY PACKERS - An·
year in a row on the course Nicklaus of the American Associatiori. Pur- nounced the retirement of Jim Carter ,
chased the contract 'of Fernando linebacker. Signed Eddie Lee Ivery ,
built.
pitcher, from Evansville.
Corcoran . outfielder,

Sheldon Burnside and Bruce Taylor,
pitchers, tb Evansville .

.

acre, Rutland ·
.
Bernard V. Fultz, exec., Phyills].
Rowan • dec. to Clayton E. __
Green ' .6
Orang
acre,
e.
Raymond C. Cassady, Nora D.
=~~e B. Dorst, 6L ft.,

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10 Easements Leading Creek Conll.
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Eugene Chapman, Audrey Chapman, Lorena Davidson to Wllliam B.
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Worthy E. Stanley, Rose Ann
Stanley to Larry Stanley, Lot 12,
Rutland. ·

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furi'111\U'f!,

and equipment . Pr ime new g~lv1nl~ed
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International League.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
BOSTON CEL TICS - Named Bill
·

Ll"ttle League
do
Stan . lRgSo
0

LITTLE LEAGUE

0

w.

Pomeroy Yankees
Middleport Indians
Mason Rangers
New Haven Cubs
Rutland Dodgers
Powell's Giants
Pomeroy Pirates
Middleport Braves
New Haven Rods
M-ay's Rosutis
Yankees 9 Giants 8
Indians 11 Pirates 1 (41nnlngs)
Rangers 14 Tigers6
Cubs 26 Braves 1 (4innings)
T-y·s Rnulls
Dodgers 19 RectU (41nnings)

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OF CARPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

LOWER
1RATES

running back, to a series of one year
contracts. Signed Henry Monroe ,

defensive bock, and Frank Lockett ,
wide receiver.

·

NEW YORK YANKEES - Traded
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Signed
Dick Tidrow, pitcher, to the Chicago Te.d Brown, running back.
Cubs for Ray Burris, pitcher .
Canadian Football League
,
National League
BRITISH COLUMBIA LIONS ATLANTA BRAVES - Placed Signed Thomas Geredlne, receiver,
Larry McWilliams, pitcher, on the 21 Roy Binion and Chris Curran ,
day disabled list. Recalled Jamie defenslv.e bo cks. ·
HOCKEY
Easterly, pitcher from Richmond of
the International League.
National Hockey League
NEW YORK METS - Activated
ATLANTA FLAMES - Acquired
Pot Zachry, pitcher, from teh 21 day Curt Bennett, left wing from the St.
disabled list. Optioned Dwight Ber. Louis Blues for Bobby Simpson ,
nard, pitcher, to Tidewater of the

forward.

VANCOUVER CANUCKS - Signed
assistant coach Dave Dunn to a two
year contract.
COLLEGE
FAIRLEIGH DICK INS 0 N
uNtVERStTY
baseball
coach -. Named John Orsino
LAKE FOREST COLLEGE Named Charlie Miller head basket.
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Transactions

!!tis

110

Final Eagle diamond ·

Camp starts June 10

:lro 5:11-9 1 3

Simons, twice a winner in eight tour
years. "It will take me getting off to a
good start, getting in the right frame
of mind. I've got to get over the fear of
hitting a bad shot."
Simons' job seemed mowttainous.
In the select international invitational
field of 105 were top money winner
Tom Watson, Masters champion
Fuzzy Zoeller and Nicklaus. Included
were all of the top 15 money winners in

-

Fairland ; Jesse Combs, New ~­
ington; Rob Norman, Wellston; Rill·
ty Wigal, Meigs Eastern; Mike Webfl,
Hannan Trace; RIISIIell Robinson ,
Warren Local.
'
Catchers - Tim Zoller, Marie~;
Sam Jones, Trimble ; Steve RIISIIell,
·
Kyger Creek.
Coaches - Bill Wooddell, Athenl(;
Ken Stalter, New Lexington; James
Sprague, Kyger Creek.
·
Here's the roster for the WeSt
squad :
Pltchers - Joe G!Qco, Chlllleolhe;
Mike Poling, Lancaster; Jim
Wiillams, Ironton; Randy &amp;nlth;
Minford ; Doug Conley, Lucaavllle
Valley; Mike Carroll, Paint Valley.
Outfielders - Tcm Echard, Lan·
caster; Dave Clutter, Chllllcothe;
Craig Tubbs, Portsmouth; Keith
Brammer, Coal Grove ; Jeff ·
Zlc:Ulfoose, Paint Valley; Jeff Reid;
Lucasville Valley.
Infielders - Jeff Brown, Lan;
caster; Jim Lynch and Steve Loel,
Chiillcothe; Jeff Unn, Ironton; Scott
Burrows, Portsmouth; Mike Smith;
South Point; Ken Fisher, Portsmouth
Notre Dame; John Waglnger and
Mike Haseneur, Ironton St. Joaeph.
Catchers - Walter Hart, MlamJ
Trace; Fred Conley, Coal Grove; Ken
Adkins, Lucasville Valley.
Coaches - Charles Six, Chllllcothe; ·
Mike Burcham, Ironto'\; Jerry
Blankenship, Paint Valley.
Each player will be presented with
a certificate following the
doubleheader (two nine-inning
games), and an outstanding player
from each team will be selected.
In case of rain, the game will be
played on Swtday, May 'll, at 12 noon.
There will be a '' adml!sion J)rlce
per person .

statistics released·

Arroyo,

.,

Reds lead the National League West,
while Philadelphia is the Eastern
Division leader.
"This could be an important series
with both teams in first place, so
rather than take away from it ... " the
Reds reversed themselves, Wagner
said.
Wagner said he had gottori Iitpe
nega tive response to his earlier stance
- "two phone calls and two letters,
which was not very much" - but relented ·~after reflection and looking at
it, rather than let this thing boil out of
propOrtion .''
"From the amount of media
attention, we thought it would take
away from the·series," he said.
Wagner said no Red§ player would
ever again wear Rose's No . 14,
although the number , followin g
tradition, would !lOt be formally
retired until Rose end§ his career,
wherever that may be.
"It 's .a tremendous gesture on the
Reds ' part," Rose said. "It's a
tremendous repayment for all the
thrills I've had as a Cincinnati player.
"I think it's the greatest compliment a player can get, otber than
being voted into the Hall of Fame."
Rose signed with the Phillies for a
repocted $800,000 a year last winter
although he always said he would
have preferred to finish his career
with the Red§ .

Redmen Basketball

"Yeah, I can win here again," said Sent Tim

..

Belpre; Don l.'nner, Oak Hill ; Steve
Kalinoski, Oak Hill.
Infielders - Steve Riley, Marietta;
.John Schanzenbach, Athens ; Jon
Shuler, Marietta ; Joey Stuart,

Rose's number to be retired

M
·
·
•
I
t
N~~=rdogfightM.:.:-;v:~~
emona . ourney

..

Syracuse.
•
Gary L. Fife, Kathy Fife aka Kathy

Dan Spencer, Meigs Eastern; Paul
Shaffer, Hannan Trace.
Outfielders - TiQI Bowman,
Marietta ; Jack Smahers, . Athens;
John Wa_ugh, _Ja~kso~; Todd Blake,

POMEROY

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675-4079

�•

t-The Dally Sentinel, MlddlePQrt-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May :M, 19'79
~

...

LaCoss records fifth ·straight victo-r y

!-! \ ••
~ ._:_._:__,

I

By ERIC PREWITT
AP Sports Writer
SAN FRANCISCO ( AP ) - The
Cincinnati Reds came back from nine
of their worst innings ever to play six
almost perfect innings against the San
Francisco Giants.
"Hey, we haven 't played any other
Balti mor e at Detroit (n )
games like that," said Mike LaCoss,
Cal ifornia at Chicago (n )
Kan sas Clty at Minnesota (n)
whose pitching Wednesday night
helped the Reds forget their
NATIONAL LEAGUE
horrendous play in a 12-2 loss the
EAST
'previous
night.
W. L. Pet. GB
Philadelphia
26 14 .650
"When you play a game like that ,
MI:Jntreal
24 14 .632 1
it's best to say nOthing, to just go
St . Louis
21 17 .553 4
about
your business," added the
Pittsburgh
18 20 .474 7
Chi~ago
IS 20 .429 8 1r 2 young right-hander.
New York
13 23 .361 11
He pitched ~ three-hitter and
WEST
Johnny Bench, D~ve Collins and Ray
Cincinna ti
24 16 .600
San Franc isco
23 20 .535 2lrz Knight hit home runs off Vida Blue as
Houston
24 21 .533 21,:; the businesslike Reds beat the Giants
Los Angeles
21 24 .467 51,:; !Ml, increasing their lead in the NaSan Diego
18 27 .400 sv, tional League West to 2¥.. games over
Atla nta
15 26 .366 91;,
the Giants and Houston Astros.
Wednesday's Games
Through six innings, LaCoss
Montreal 3. Pittsburgh 0
allowed only one baserunner. Bill
St. louis 3. Philadelphia 1
Atlanta 6, Houston 5
North sing led in the fourth but was out
Chicago at New York , ppd., rain
attempting
to ste;~l, so LaCoss faced
Los Angeles 4, San Diego 2
only 18bl!tters, the minimum , in those
Cincinnati 5, San Francisco ·0

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball At A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB

Beltimore

27 14 .659
25 15 .625 1v,
23 19 .5&lt;18 •••,
23 20 .535 5

Boston

New York

Milwaukee
Detroit

16

Cleveland
Toronto
Minnesota
Ca.l iforn ia

,:rexas
Kansas City
Chicago
Oakland
Seattle

20 .444 Bh

18 23
11 33
WEST
25 15
15 17
24 17
' 22 20
20 20
15 28

.439 9
.250 17' •
.625
.595 1

.585 11' '
.524 4
.500 5
.349 ll lf,
15 28 .349 1111 2
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore s; Boston 2, 10 innings

Cleveland 4, Toronto 3

Milwaukee 1, California 0

Detroit 4, New York 3
Chicago 6, Oak land 1
Texas 7, M innesota 2

!Only games scheduled )
Thursday's Games
California 1Knapp 3-1)
at
Milwaukee IHass 3-3) .
.
Boston !Renko 3-1) at Baltimore
!Flanagan 6-3), In) .
Oakland I Keough 0-6) at Chicago
!Schueler o.l), In).
Seaffle IBannister 2-5) at Kansas
City (Le&lt;inard 3-4), (n) .
!Only games scheduled)
.

Friday's Games

Seattle at Texas lnl
Boston at Toronto (n)
Oakland at Milwaukee In)
New York at Cleveland (nl

'

Today•s Mal or League Leaders
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING- 185 at batsl - Kemp.
Oef, .392 ; Smalley, Min, .386 ; Carew,
Cal, .358 ; Boehle, Sea . .346; A. Bannister, Chi , .341.
RUNS - G. Breit, KC, 36 ; otis, KC ,
36 ; lynn , Bsn, 34 ; C. Washgln ., Chi ,
• 34.; leFlore, Del, 33.
.
RBI - Baylor, Ca l, 41 ; lynn , Bsn ,
40; Porter, KC, 37 ; Cooper, M il, 33 ;

Nettles, NY, 33.
'
HITS - Sma lley, Min, 61 ; Remy,
Bsn, 58 ; Carew, Cal, 54; Baylor, Cal,
53 ; Horton, Sea, 53.
DOUBLES - lemon, Chi, 14 ; E.
Washgtn ., Chi , 13 ; McRae, KC, 13;
Downing, Cal , 12; B. Be.", Tex. 12.
TRIPLES - G. Breff, KC, 5 ;
Griffin, Tor ., 4; 7 Tied with 3.
HOME Rl)NS - lynn , Bsn, 14;
Thomas, Mil , 11 ; Singleton, Bal.10; L.
May , Bat, 9; Smalley, Min, 9; Horton ,
Sea, t;t.
.STOLEN BASES - Otis, KC, 17 ; J .
Cruz, Sea, 17 ; LeF lore, Del, 16 ;
Wilson, KC, 15 ; Wills , Tex : 15.

'

l

l

I

I

PITCHING 15 Decisions) - John,
NY , 9-0, 1.000, 1.72 ; Kern, Tex, 6-0,
1.000, 1.27 ; Koosman, Min . 7-t, .875,
3.72 ; Barrios, Chi , 4-1, .800, 3.83;
Baumgrtn, Chi, 4-1, .BOO, 2.74; D.
Martinez, Bal, 6-2, .750, 2.82 ; Spl iltorff, KC, 6-2, .750, 3.0? ; Palmer, Bal,
5·2, .714, 2.95.
STRIKEOUTS - Ryan, Cat. 61 ;
Guidry , NY , 58 ; Jenkins. Tex. 53; J .

Chi cago (Holtzman 3-3 and Krukow

1-3) at New York (Falcone 0-3 and

Zachry 2-0), 2.

·

Cincinnati (.V.Oskau 4-0) at

Francisco (Nastu 1-2) , In) .
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
St. louis at Montreal (n)
Pittsburgh at New York (n)
Chicago at Philadelphia In)
Houston at San Diego In)

San

''

..

I

-~.

..
I

'

A

D.UT2
FAHR

Implements
SEE THEM AT

JUNE,.2. 1979
1:30 P.M.

Chi, 34; Schmidt, Phi, 34; Foster, Cln,
33 , Garvey, LA. 30.
HITS- Russell , LA, 60 ; Winfield,
SO, 58 ; Rose, Phi , 56 ; Garvey, LA, 56 ;
Concepcn, Cin. S-4.

DOUB LE S - Rose, Ph i, 17;
Parrish , Mil , 15; Reitz, StL, 13 ; K.
Hrnandz, Sf. L. 12 ; Morgan , Cin, 12;
Griffey, Cin, 12; Baker, LA, 12.
TRIPLES - T. Scott. St.L.. 6;
Winf iel d, SO, 5; Moreno, Pgh, 4;
l opez, LA. 4; Metzger, SF, 4.
HOME RUNS - Schmidt, Phi , 14;
Kingman, Chi, 13; Murphy, All, 13;
Dawson. Mil , 11 ; Stargell, Pgh . 9.
STO LEN BASES - Moreno, Pgh,
18; T. Scott, St. L. 13; Cabell , Htn , 13;

Taveras, NY, 12; lopes, LA, 12.

PITCHING (5 Decisions) - LaCoss,

Cln, 5-0, 1.000, 2.83; Reed, Phi, -1, .800,

3.45 ; Welch , LA, 4-1, .800, 2.90; Ruth ven, Phi ,

6~ 2,

.750 ; 2.52; J . Nlekro,

•"'

beat Pavel Hutka 7-6, 7-li; Uli Pinner
defeated David Carter &amp;-:i, 6-3; Jan
Kodes downed Joao Soares 6-3, 7-5;
Victor Pecci topped Stanislav Birner
6-2, 6-4; Ivan Molina elllilinated Karl
MeiJer 6-4, 7-li; Andries Gomez ousted
John James 6-3, 6-0, and Tom Okker
beat Antonio Munoz 4-6, 6-3, &amp;-1.
ROME · (AP) Top-seeded
Guillermo Vilas beat Phil Dent &amp;-2, "6, 6-1 to qualify for the third round of
the $200,000 Italian Open.
Vilas' opponent in the third round
will be Paolo Bertolucci, who beat
Tomas Smid 6-4, 5-7, 7-6 in their
second-i'ound match.
Harold Solomon beat Chris Lewis 36, 6-2, 7-5 and Dick Stockton reached
the third round by beating Alvaro
Fillol 6-3, 6-2.
Adriano Panatta, the hometown
favorite, advanced with a 6-4, 6-2
victory over American Bill Scanlon
while two other local favoriles, Paolo
Bertolucci and Corrado Barazzutti,
won matches. Bertolucci defeated
Tomas Smid 6-4, 5-7, 7~. and
Barazzutti downed Kim Warwick &amp;-2,

6-1.

BASKETBAlL
NEW YORK (AP) -Doug Moe, coach
of the San Antonio Spurs, was fined
$3,000 - the largest cash fine ever
levied against a National Basketball
Association coach - for "conduct
detrimental to the league," NBA
Commissioner
Larry · O' Brien
announced.
Moe was fined for comments
following San Antonio's 107·105 loss to
the Washington Bullets in the seventh
game of the Eastern Conference
playoff series.
The largest previous cash fine
against an NBA coach was $2,500,
assessed against Dick Motta, then of
Cb.lcago, in 1974.

FULTON-THOMPSON
TRAClOR SALES
II
I'

Sprlng _A ve.Pomeroy~· o.

992-5101

NBA Playoff~ AI A Glance
By The Associated Press

tennis titles

are on line
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, phio (AP)
Cleveland Adams girls are favored to
keep their Class AAA title while ·
Mansfield Senior has little chance of
keeping the Class AAA boys crown in
the Ohio high school track meet
Friday and SaturdaY.
It's the second year for the
combined boys and girls track
conlpe\ition in Ohio Stadium.
. Meanwhile, the 60th annual state
tennis meet unfolds Friday and
Saturday on the Ohio State courts with
both 1978 singles champions, Mark
Mees of Class AAA Zanesville and
Warren Kennedy's Barry Conlan in
Class AA-A, rettirning.
Adams' strength is Its relays. The
Rebels qualified in all four relays, led
by their ~yard foursome that broke
an all-time Ohio record in the
sectional tournament with 48.5
seconds.
Ed Cbay, publisher of the Ohio
Track and Field News, forecasts the
Class AA girls title is a toss-up among
Columbus Mifflin, St. Clairsville,
Dayton Jefferson and Columbus
Wehrle to replace Youngstown
Liberty as the champion.
Chay says Minster is heavily
favored to win its fourth straight Class
A girls championship with Columbus
School for Girls the closest pursuer.
Mansfield Senior's .lone strength is
hurdler DelRay Feagin, the leading
qualifier in the highs (14.1) · and
second in the lows (39.0) . Darwin Hill
of Middletown, the 1978 low hurdles
king, skimmed to a 35.9, fastest In the
nation this spring.
Meanwhile, Gahanna will pin its
hopes on weightman Bruce
Washington. He's the first man in
Ohio prep history to throw the discus
past 200 feet, doing 202-6 in a league
meet this season. The Lions' other
hopes are ,their mile relay team and
halfmiler Craig Lipps.
Lancaster, meanwhile, also shoots
for its first state track crown with
defending pole vault king Bob Echard
and distance stars John Zishka and
Dave Agosta .
Columbus Mifflin is the Class AA
'boys favorite , seeking its second state
title in five years. Warrensville
Heights, the 1978 ." inner, qualified
only one athlete.
Lorain Clearview, the Class A boys
winner a year ago, will battle
Shadyside this time.
ln tennis doubles, the. 1978 Class
AAA champions, Jim Hendrix and
Dave Braun of Upper Arlington, have
graduated. ln Class AA·A doubles,
1978 victor Mike Schiff o( Columbus
Bexley ret1!J'DS with a new partner,
Davie Portman.

Best of Seven Series ·
O.me1
Washington 9\1, Seattle 97
Thursday's Game .

Seattle at Washin~ton , In)
. Sunday s Games .
Washington at Seaffle Klngdome
Tuesday's Game

Washington at .Seaftle Coliseum, (n)

International Logue
A-llied Press

Bv TIM

Wedneld•y's Results

Charleston at Toledo
Columbus~.

Syracuse l

Tidewater at Richmond, rain
R ~hest~r

at Pawtucket, r~ln

Thursday's G1mes

Richmond at Tidewater
Friday, Junel
·
Seattle at Washington , (n), if Charleston at Toledo
Columbus at Syracuse
necessar·y.
Rochester at Pawtucket, 2
.,_
Sunday, .,June 3
Friday's Gimes
ash lngton at Seattle Coliseum, If Richmond at
Tidewater
neces sary.
Chirleston
at
Toledo
Wednesday, June 6
at Syracuse
Seattle at Wa shington (n l-. If Columbus
Rochester at Pawtucket
necessary .

record In 1977 and it appeared as
though his career niight be over last
year.
Orioles 5, Red Sox 2
Kelly's first horne run Of the season
ruined a complete-game effort by Bob
Stanley and came after Billy Smith's
on~ut infield hit and an error by
third baseman Butch Hobson. Eddie
Murray also homered for the Orioles,
who won for the 24th time in the last 30
games.
Steve Stone, who shaved off his
mustache and changed"his unlform
number from 21 to 32, held the Red
Sox to eight hits over the first nine

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent
lt'soutofthefrying pan into the fire rope in mld.July, 1977.
for Billy Martin, -the pugnacious,
The tenet : A manager must be
outspoken manager:.to-limbo of the . honorable.·
New York Yankees.
The purity of Martin's inlentloos
Poor Billy. Again he is the victim of are bound to c=e up for question
his unharnessed tongue, He isn't the when Steinbrenner meets with Billy,
master of diplomacy and discretion . his agent and lawyer at the earliest
He doesn't know when to keep his convenience.
mouth shut.
When Martin resigned under
It is almost certain to be his undoing growing pressure on July 24, 1978 only
- as it was in hil; successful but short- to be rehired with a dramatic
lived managerial careers with electronic scoreboard announcement
at' the Yankee Old Timers' game fhe
Minnesota, Detroit and Texas.
U, as reported, Billy has agreed to days later, the stipulation was that he
shell out $8,000 and make a public could have his job back in 1980 lf he
apology to settle the law suit by a regained his health .and mental
Reno, Nev., sports writer, who composure and stayed clear of
charged he was slugged by Bad Billy trouble,
'
In a bar, Martin's hopes of getting
Billy did the tormer. The latter
back .his Yankee job In 1980 are became the stumbling block. ·
diminished rather than enhanced.
Last Nov. 10, Billy was hoisting a
The best prediction is: Don't count few with friends at halftime of a
on Billy being in the Yankee dugout basketball game when he was
next year.
approached by. Ray Hagar, a Reno
Owner George Steinbrermer doesn't sports writer. Hagar charged that
say so- "I don't know all the facts, I Martin became incensed at some of
want to talk to Billy first" - but all his questions and hit him, knocking oft
one has to do Is read the writing oo the the rePQrter's glasses. Martin Insisted
wall.
he was provoked.
Steinbremer, questimed at the
Martin has violated the seventh and
most imPQrtant of Steinbrenner's time; said that Billy's future would
famed seven guidelines, enunciated depend on his being wholly vindicated
when Martin was wal\dng the ti~tht· of the charge,
·
'
As early"as a week ago, Martin, on a
visit to New York, told newsmen:
ilcrOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - No "That case with the guy in Reno. It'a
Beiter Time, a 00.1longshot, came on coming up soon. I will be cleared."
"Sure, I'm sure I will be hack next
strong in the stretch to win the
year,"
he said. "Steinbrenner gave
lea lured race by a neck at Scioto
me his word."
Downs Wednesday night and pay
That's true.
$140,40, $35.60 and $7.40.
Yet now it appears that it isn't
Tlte winner toured the mile in 2:08 3SteinbreMer's
credibility - but that
5.
of
Martin
which
is up for challenge.
· Tippadio returned $7.20 and $3.20 for
While
Billy
was
proclaiming
that he
second and R. Earl, $3.80 for show.
would be totally cleared of all blame,
The 2-7-9 first ·race trifecta was
was he secretly negotiating with the
worth $1,112.70.
'
plalrit.iff to have the case seWed out of
A crowd of 4,343 wagered $347,147. court?

1111S'l'LEooWN
NORTH RANDAll.., Ohio (AP) Central Matador rallied on the outside
to win the featured Ohio Allowance
event at Thistledown Wednesday ..
Centra-' Matador covered the mile
and 40 yards in 1:414-:i and paid $5.40,
$!!:20 arid $2.110. Beep and Bork was
secpnd, paying $3.80 and $3.20.
Stevie's ~een paid $4.40 to show.
Attendance was 4,051; the handle
came to $497,610.
If Auto 1nsuranc~ is a problem, see me for the best
c;overage and; the lowest
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·

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Innings.
Ra11gers 7, Twins 2
Oliver smashed a twiH'Uil homer in·
the first Inning and solo shots In tli8
fifth and eighth as Texas hammered a
club record five homers and Ferguson·
Jenkins allowed six hits. Pat Putnam
and Mike Jorgensen also htmered,
with Oliver and Putnam slllllllllinl! ,
tworun shots in the first Inning.
Brewers 1, AD!Ieil 0
Paul Molitor scor!!d the game's only,
run on Don Aase's bases-loaded wild pitch with two ·out In the seventli'::
inning and Billy Travers hurled a s~x: :;:
hitter for his sec;md consecutlV!l,;:;;
shutout. Molitor and Sal Banda
singled with two out and
Thomas walked. Aase's 1-2 pitch ti1.~~
pinch hitter Charlie Moore boilnced iJ!:,:
the dirt and was deflected "about 10
feet down the third base line by'"'
catcher Jim '.-Anderson, who then&gt;.' :
slipped trying to retrieve the ball. ·- ::
Tigers f, Yllllkees 3
•• ~
Jim Kaat nicked Steve Kemp on the
arm with a l-2pitch with two out in lhe"''
bottom of the ninth to force home life.":
winning run. The Tigers loaded ~;~
bases with me out against Ken Clay
on two walks around a single by Mark' w
Wagner before Kaat gd Lou Whitaker'' '
to ground into a force at the plate.
White Sox 8, A's 1 ·
Cbet Lemon's tie-breaklng threerun homer climaxed a four-l'un fiftli::'
inning that carried Ken Kravec to his
fourth $'Bight victory.

Gorman .

Today's

Erie Is above all In

Championship Finals

.

"The problem is that he's throwing
the right pitch at the wrong time,"

single. The Cardinals made it 3-0
the fol!f(h when Tooy Scott sln!~~ed,
stole seCOI)d and came home on
Reitz's double.
Doqers t, Padres %
Butt Hooton checked San
six hits and Steve Garvey doul~led
home two · rwts in the Dodgers'
victory. Los · Angeles shelled Randy
Jones and three relievers for 14 hits,
four by Dusty Baker.
.
The Dodgers wiped oot the Padres'
2-1 lead in the fifth when
Thomasson and Bill Ru.uell sing:ted,
Garvey doubled them bOth home,
Garvey scored on Baker's single.
Expos 3, Plrales 0
Steve Rogers scattered
and Tony Perez and
Cromartie knocked In rwts to
.
Expos beat Pittsburgh and win for
fifth tim~ in six games.
Rodney Scott ~s bunt single prec~ed~~_,:
Perez 's triple off loser
Candelaria in the fourth inning
Montreal added 1\\o nms, ooe on
martie 's single, in the eighth off
Tekulve.

Garland completes first game since 71:..

Track and

WORK!

.~ HORACE KARR
FARM

ERA.

I

Sports briefs. • •

11

The Reds' first victory of the year,
after they dropped their first three
games, was in LaCo.ss' first start. Hedidn't get through the firSt' inning,
allowing five unearned runs, but the
Re_dscame back to beat the Giants 7-6.
Collins and Knight hit tlleir first
home runs of the season Wednesday
night. Bench's homer was No. 3.
For Blue, now 6,5 with three
straight defeats and a 5.06 earned run
average, the three home run pitches
made his &amp;eason total 12, the same
number he allowed all of last year
when he won 18 games and had a 2. 79

By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
1n other American League action,
the Baltimore Orioles downed the
AP Sports Writer
The song says it's a long, long way Boston Red Sox 5-2 on Pat Kelly's
from May to September, but it was the three-run pinch homer in the lOth
other way around and even longer be- inning, the Tetias Rangers whipped
Cincinnati at Los Angeles (n}
Atlanta at San Fra ncisco (n)
tween complete games for sore- the Minnesota Twins 7-2 behind AI
shouldered Wayne Garland .- from Oliver's three home runs,. the
Milwaukee Brewers shaded the
September (1977) to May ( 1979).
The 28-year-old right-hander, who California Angels 1-o, the Detroit
made only six appearances last Tigers edged the New York Yankees
season before undergoing surgery for 4-3 and the Chicago While Sox beat the
.
a torn rotator cuff in his shoulder, Oakland A's &amp;-1. Kansas City and
allowed four singles Wednesday night Seattle were not scheduled.
Today's Major league leaders
Garland, 2-4, was a 20-game winner
.· . for his first complete game since 1977
BY The Associated Press
for
Baltimore in 1976 and then signed
as
the
Cleveland
Indians
nipped
the
NATIONAL LEAGUE
BATTING (85 at bats) - Brock , St. Toronto Blue Jays 4-!l...and two of the a lucrative free agent contract with
L. , .381 ; Murphy, All. , .353 ; Rose, Toronto runs were unearned .
the Indians. But be dipped to a 13-19
Phil., .352 ; Foster, Ctn. , .340; Win'
field , SO, .335.
RUNS - Lopes , LA, 37; Concepcn,
Cin , 34; Schmidt, . Ph i, 31 ; Dawson,
Mil, 30; North, SF, 30.
RB I - Murphy, All , 36; Kingman,

Hln, 5-2, .714, 2.77; Grimsley, Mil , 4-2,
.667, A.70 ; B. Lee, Mil , 4-2, .667, 4.62;
Rogers. Mtl. 4-2, .667, 2.87. ·
STRIKEOUTS - Richard Htn , 75;
CMiton, Ph i, 50 ; Sullen. LA, 47; Blue.
Johnson , Oak, 44 ; koosman, Min , 43. SF , 45 ; Hcoton , LA. 43.

By The Associated Press
SOCCER
WEMBLEY, England (AP) -Wales
held England to a ~ draw in the
BrilOO!•cer championship before a
crowd of 70,200.
The draw gave Wales a chance to
takethe_championshipoutrlshtforthe
first time since 1937. Wales meets
Northern Ireland Friday night and
England plays Scotland Saturday.
· TENNIS
BERLIN (AP) - Virginia Ruzici beat
unseeded Iris Riedel 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 to
advance to the quarter-finals of the
$100,-000 German Women's Tennis
Cbampionships.
ln other second round matches:
second-seeded Kerry Reid beat
Glgiana Gonzalez &amp;-2, 6-3; fourth·
seeded Evonne Goolagong defeated ·
Yvonne Vermaak 6-2, 7-li and Mirna
Jausovec ousted Maria Pinterova 7-5,
&amp;-2.
MUNICH, West Germany (AP) Wojtek Fibak beat Jean-Louis Hallie!
6-3, 6-4 in the first round of the $75,000
Bavarian Tennis Championships.
1n other matches: Werner Zirngibl

pitch."

said pitching coach Larry Shepard.
"There's no doubt he'll come out of it
"It's like" Bill Madlock hitting .200.
It just doesn't figure."
Madlock, the tw&lt;l'time NL batting
champion, is Blue's counterpart
8Jilong the San Francisco hitters. He
crept over .200 with a nine-game hitting streak, but he was stopped by
LaCoss and his averageillpped to .197.
Braves &amp;, ,4.stros 5
Jerry Royster's two-run single
highlighted Atlanta's five-run eighth
inning that enabled Tony Brizzolara to
chalk up his first majQr league victory. Brizzolara allowed seven hits in
eight innings but was virtually
Wttouchable afWJ' Houston's four-nm
first.
Cardinals 3, Phillles l
The St. Louis Cardinals literally
stole their game from Philadelphia.
Three stolen bases off Phils pitcher
Dick Ruthven were followed by three
run"""'ring hits. In the third, Ken
Oberkfell singled, stole second and
came in on Gary Templeton's single.
Templeton then stole second and
came home on Keith Hernandez's

Thursday's Games

Leaders

'l

six imings with the help of excellent
fielding support.
'
The 22-year-old
Californian
improved his record to 5-IJ, best in the
league.
"We haven't lost a game I've
started yet," noted LaCoss, adding
that Manager John McNamara
"seems to wave ·a magic wand when I

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 24, 19'79 .

Gn

Valley Area Ubrarles'
children's SWJUDer
Mall·A-Book catalogs will be
Meigs County achoo1s
llchool ;rear ends.
the year, OVAL's Mail·
A-Bodt: prvgram makes. paperbacks
avi!llable free of charge to tllGee
My County · residents who are
WIBble to uae traditlooal llbrary aervices. nte P0111eroy and Middleport
Ufhrtl!l contract with OVAL to
pmvlde lhil valuable service. In or· ·
der to IIICOUI'IIge summer reading by
children, OVAL provides a II1IIJliDer
SIJilplsnent which lists 100 books for
sct:~oo~aae children. 1be catalogs are
~ to thole Meigs County
schoohiliildren wbo are unable to
visit the Ubrary because of
(0~AL, 19'19

e

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Open Eventnss IIII:N P':M: ·

U, as Hagar claimli, the settlement

Is being made, then it's going to be

difficult for the scrappy skipper to
claim total vindlcatioo. It's virtually
an admission of guilt. The boss is off
the hook.

the
In addltin to the Mail·A·Book supplements, Meigs Cowlty school
children also will receive reading
foldent .for Ohio's atatew.lde 'awmner
reading program, "Pulbook to Ad·
venture: Reacllng 'Round the World."
This libral'y activity a1so 1s designed
to .stlmulate children's reading clurlng
the lllllllllllir months.
children
who participate In the program
receive ' 81lch material&amp; as bookrnarb, ''passports," and reading
foldent. Certificates are awarded to
children at the end of the. IIUIDIIler.
"P-PQrt to Adventure" has been
developed by the State Ubrary of
Ohio. The program Ls being coor·
dlnated In this area by the Pcmeroy
and Middleport Ubrarlea and OVAL.

n-

.!-gsbury
·
l\. T
1\ T
17e";S llOtes
'17
.BJ.Il

ho9tesses.
. Auxiliary grave mari&lt;ers will be
, placed on the graves of deceased
members on Memorial Day. Ar·
rangements were completed for aerving 8 dinner to the legionnaires and
guesta taking part in the Memorl Day
observance at the post home.
A report was given on the Gtrl State
tea held Sunday at Trinity-Dwrch and
MLss Enna Smith, chainnan, and

w.

.

•BEACH ltMBs
.. •SWIM TRUNKS
For Men
&amp;Boys

I
1
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FROM
YOUR

COLOR
NEG.

WORK SHOES
•SHEBOYGAN
-cHIPPEWA
•REDWING ·

·

RIO GRANDE -Nine Meigs eoun-·
t1ans graduated from Rio Grande
College and Community College In
commencement ceremonies Sunday,
May~.
.
A total of 123 students received
degrees Sunday In the college's 103rd
anniversary commencement and the
Community Colleges fifth anniversary commencement.
Many graduat~d with high
academic honors. Those dealgnated
SWIUliB Cum Laude have maintained
at least a 3.8 grade point average
during their ~ge career. Magna
Cum Laude graduates have main·
talned at least a 3.5 average ancl Cum
Laude students at, least a 3.25
average.
MlddlePQit residents receiving
degrees Include Unda Gerard
(magna cum laude), Bachelor of
Science·, and Mary Sauer and
Del:orah Taylo~ (magna cum laude)
were parUclptints ln Rio Grande's
two-year Medical Laboratory
Technician program ln conjWJctlon
with Holzer Med.lcal center. They
both ,..,,_..,,..,..
----~-• Assocta
. te of Applied
Sciencedegrees.
Pomeroy residenta who received
degrees Include Michael Nesselroad.
(cum Illude), Bachelor of Science;
and Laura OUver (cum laude) and
Patricia Warner (cum laude) were
participants in the Medical
Laboratory Technician program and
received Auoclate of Applled Science

CLEANUP - Members af Sallabury Junior Girl Scout Troop 1100
were at the mini-park area near the Rock Springs fairgrounds cleaning
up mowing and planting fiO'Inlrs. The group Includes Tereea Pratt, San·
dy' Hoyt, Un Owe, Lisa Pullina, Kim Roulh, Sulan Jones, Ruth Fry,
Brenda Sinclalr, Valerie Slmpeon, Anilll Smith and leader, ltfrs.
Margaret Parker, and her assistant, Patty IV~ter.

Daughter born
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Price of
Pcmeroy are IJUlouncing tile birth of
a daughter, Stacey Michelle, born (I)
May 22 at the Pleasant Valley
HOifPital. The baby weighed e!81t
pounds.
Grandparents · are .Mr. and Mrs ·
Charles Werry, Pomeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Lowell Price, Middleport.
Great--andparentsareMr.andMrs.
,..
Leslie Price, Pcmeroy, and Hazel
Mitchell, Bardentown,. N. J. and
~h Gibba, Sr. , Ncw Haven, W. 'v·a.
· Mr. and Mrs, Price have a
daughter, Stephanie,agethree:

MEETING SET
The Long Bottonl Community
Asaociatim will meet Wednesday,
May 30 at 8 p.m. at the conununity
building.

I'!YII

COUPON MUST ACCOMPANY ORDER
1
VALID ENTIRE MONTH OF

!A!.:. "~-J .
WiERAS FILM
MANY ontER Gin ITEMS

~....;;:::-,

Open
9:301115:00 p.m.
.. .. .

.

OR

NEW HAVE

.

BAHR
CLOTH-IERS

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I 'iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif

. Two Locations to Better.Serve You

~VILLAGE
PHARMACY,
·
MIDDLEPONI •.U.. .

WOMEN'S-SHORTS,
TOPS, SWIMWEAI_l

Creative excellence is an American tradition.

*

* wiT'C*iifs":"*ciRof*

~l::

I

MENS-SHORTS, SLACKS
SHIRTS, SWIMWEAR

~~~

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11 lllf 2...

·sPORTSWEAR
FOR THE LONG
NEEDS WEEKEND

Hi-Brow
Studio·Cants•.

--l
8179
I
I·

Middleport
Open N Mon.thru Sll.
Friday nghltit

Send a
greeting that
makes 'em laugh!

·

tor

f)a11's _Q3oot S~of

LIBRAJUESCLOSED
-~
Both the MiddlePQrt and Pcmeroy
:. -,&lt;
N. 2ND
Libraries will be cl-.1 Sunday and
Monday due to the Memorial Day , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ,
holiday.

PHOTOS

From your print

Shower held

. 1be shoWer was bolted by Karen
· , , Smith who will ..ve as mallm of
honor at the wedtllnc; Brenda Boylei,
Lori Young, and Debbie Davia, who
will be the bridesmaldll .
The hall W8SJ1ltractiWJ!y decorated
for the shower which was •ttended by
numerous relattves and frieDdl.

WALLET

10

illa!'Y.

setting for a bridal shower bonoriitg
• Diana (..yon Massar. brkiHlec:t of
, Kevin Neal-Buckley.

BETHEL 8, Intemational Order of
Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday night
at the Middleport Masonic Temple.

~~~-~.. ILLET-PHOTOS
l"'·
1
I

Sr., and flowers were sent to Janice
Fetty «&lt;uring her hoepitallzatioo.
A conununlcation was read fnm
)\frs. Lawrence Hartline regarding
membershiP. Also read was • leUer
from the Gallia, Meigs, Jackson Com·
munity HNith Center outlining - ·
vices. Other CCi111111unlcatloaa were
tnm the ·seeiiDd member· Ill the
Department Junior activitlea
acknowledginljunior sc:rapboak and
history, Mrs. l.etlter Merritt, d.lrector
of Buckeye Girls' State, and dlatrlct
and department chairmen to a.yJ
~ for field aervice report~ Mlaa
Smith for hlltory and Allle!icaJU!l;
Faye WUdermulh for IICbolarhlip;
Ruth Manthall for community ~Slle,
and Ruui Powera for children · and
youth. ·
A COIIIIIIelldatton .wu U.O given
ltfrs. WUderiDuth by Sllerltf J Prolfitt for ber aervice to the Au·

The FellOWiblp hall of till MI. fhr·
man United Brethem QJurcb wu the

9radualion eSpecial

•BEACH OOVERUPS
•SWIM SUITS
For Ladies,
Juniots &amp; Gils

Mrs. Grace Pratt both thanked those
members who 111181sted.
Announced at the meeting was the
Eighth District sununer conference
to be held on June 7 at Wellston.
Delegales .and other members plaMing to attend are Miss Smith, Mrs.
Welsh, Mrs, Pearl Knapp Mrs. Betty
Wiles, Mrs. Dorothy Jenkins, Mrs.
Genevieve Meinhart, Mrs. Grace
Pratt, Mrs. Veda Davis, Mrs. Mary
Martin, and Mrs. Gemma Case!. The
bolletin frcm the Eighth District
president, Mrs. Richards, outlined
pliw for the conference along with
noting other scheduled meetings.
Mnt. Goett reported on the recent
Junior DepartmeJ!t conference held
in Columbua and thanked the unit for
the corsage. ·
.
Mrs. Pratt noted that Vernon Nease
has requested the unit to serve the
bloodmobile on June 11. Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Wiles and Mrs. Goett will handle
that. Named to the auditing c(l1lll)ittee were Mrs. Marjorie Reuter and
Mrs. Meinhart. Mrs. Cuci reported
oo cards and Dowers sent to
membent. Get-well cards were. signed
for Harry Davis and George Hackett,

.MONDAY

of Sandyville,
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. &lt;llarles King, &lt;llarlle
..
•
,
and Susan, visited recently with her
tfn._,~teda ~tlayl1d_.MrsthMr
. Graandce parentl, Mr. andand
. MrsMr. SmiRa)'IDGIICith
ha
Wfiite
•,.,
•
Smith,
""·~,.
.
,
'
•Ml'll.
"'-'- "'·'te
Scbrlebe• at Bill Run
~·--·•
" .. r
•
· been • patient ill O'Bieness Hoepltal
THey also visited Mrs. Edith but Is now able to be at home.
~ and daughter, Evelyn, Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Bea1 bad as
w.X. were guests at the Schrieber
-'·'to Mr and Mrs Martin
•
recent .... nt
..
·
.
Church ·-·ed food at Smart and Roms Sue of Reynold·
"'"' B
'
s'-·'"""Fred
Auction....,
Saturday
""'" who celebrated her ninth birth..,_
urson
·
day.Otheri!Uestntthebirthdaywu·
~·and Mrs. Ray Roush are an- fierwereMr.andMrs.RogerYoung,
n~ th&amp; arrrival of a son, Wesley and Yvette, Mr. and Mrs.
CIVUtopher · Ray, at O'Bleness Kirk Chevalier and Jeealca, Mr. and
Hollpltal,A~.
·
Mrs Russell Well and Heather of
Jbe ltlng8bury Mlssi01111ry Club Clleder
m!Jt at the home of Anitll Dean Thur· ' VIal~ over the weekend with Mrs.
sd!Y· lbe meeting was openecl with Neva King were Mrs. Nn Cummins
prayer by VJirglnia Dean followed by " and 8CIII, James. On Sunday they all
~ptilre
~th .::'!,,~ber taklngMrs were 1n HUflllnCion to v.i8it Mrs . Myr· degrees.
~~ .,...., - -... were
· UeCannananddaughter; Ruth.
Syracuae residents receiVing
~~~. ~-· Trenda·
ShellaCougarWhaley::
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter Dean,, degrees wre Shirley Sayre (magna .
""'¥ mu
John and Jeremy, Mr. and Mrs. ,Jolm C1DD laude), Bachelor of Science
Anl!ela, Mrs. Mary Houdashelt and , Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Marldns degree; and Bobbie Chapman (cum
. Belay, Mnt, Yvonne Young, Jeealca ' were all villtont at Pataskala Sunday laude) was a parUdpant in the
an~ Yv¢1e, Mrs. Elloabeth Murray, , where they villted Mr. and Mrs. · Medical Laboratory Technician
Mrs. Ruby ~urnslde, Mrs. Neva King, Robert Reed, Rodney . and DaVid. program and received an Associate of
Mrs. Virginia Dean and the hofltesa, . Other vlsltont were Mr. and Mrs. AppUedScience degree.
Mrs. An-'111 Dean, Jeremy ilnd James_.' Willer Terrell, Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Karen Rhodes Davidson, Racine,
1111' next meeting 1rill be the second Smalley, Jr., Dale, Hable and Mrs. received li Bachelor of Science
'lbuntday In June.
·
Kenney Jones of Weirton, W. Va., Mr. degree
Mrs. Steve Smith fell and fractured - and Mrs. Hobart Smalley .of
'
her ankle recently.
. Muskogee, Okla., Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Anita Dean and Jeremy, Mrs . Richard Smith and son, Joshua of
Virginia Dean were in Athena Satur· Poway California and Linda Smith
DISCO SLATED
day to attend the wedding of Mr · and and children of Pataolrala. They all
''The
Singles Spring Fling"," a
Mri. Mark Richard Gilkey.
Celebrated Virginia Smith'• birthday.
Recent viaitont of Mrs. Hazel Ar·
Mrs Grace While was a recent dance for the area 'a single, divorced
nold were Mr. and Mrs. Patrick vis!~ of Mr. and Mrs. Robert or widowed, will II!! sponsored by
Mik~l Casto's Ballroom Dance
Wlll1ama and family of McArthur.
Graham
Studio,
Sunday, May rl, from 8-12
Mrs. J~lm A. (Virginia) Dean, who
Recent viaitont of· Mrs. Elilabeth
p.m. at the Point P I - t Inn dcme,
MUJTay were Mr. . and Mrs. Bill was a patient at Hober f&gt;ledlcal Ceo· "The Upper Deck". MUBt be 18 years
MWTIY and son ol. Colwnbua, Mr. 1er has returned heme.
or up, dress clothes or dress jeans.
Dana MUITIY, Tina and Greg Murray
'
Advance ticket&amp; may be purchased at
Fruth's Pharmacy (GallipollB and Pl.
Pleasant); Jones Boys (Middleport);
Carl's Shoe Store (Galllpolls); Pl.
Pleasant Inn "Upper Deck"; New
Gl8mour Salon; or Mlkkl Casto's
Ballroom Studio.
'IN·

M..

·CHEVY

--...

Otfic~rs for the 19'19oro year were
elected and final plans for the obser·
vance ..of Me~porial Day were made
&lt;luring a· meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary of . Drew Webster
Post 39 Tuesday night.
Elected were Mrs. Marjorie Goett,
president; Mrs. Gemma Gasci, fitst
vice president; Mrs. Iva Powell, second · vice president; Mrs. JOlin
Vaughan, secretary, and Mrs.
Cathertne Welsh, treasurer.
·The new officers will be installed at
the June ~ meeting by Mrs. Arnold
Richards, Di.!trlct 8 president. At that
meeting the Buckeye Girl State
delegates, Tracey Jeffers and
Charlene Goeg)ein, will give their
rePQrts , and the juniors will _be

geoiraph.lcal
Thil aummer,
catalogs will be dimibuted to 25,000

~~Carleton
.

We're Dealing
Chevy Plokup•·

muRSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY React Team
meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday at' Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy to
plan for coffee break to be held
Mernorial.weekend.
TWiNCITYSHRINEITES, 7:30p.m.
Thurnday at the home of Mrs. Edna
Slusher.
·
. HARRISONVILLE Senior Citizens
Thursay at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Hot dogs and beverages will be sold.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
CHAPI'ER, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
6:30p.m. potluck picnic at Fort Mel~
Thurnday.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, 7:30
Thurnday, at the Masonic .Temple, of.
fleers for a practice.
·
FRIDAY
BIG BEND C.B. Racl_lo Club, Inc.,
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Friday at Rock
Springs Grange Hall. All members
urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT Alwnni decorating
Friday at 6 p.m. Bring a card table.
At full capadty and cannot accept ad·
dit.lonal guest reservatoos.
SATUROAY
BAKE SALE Saturdtly at Gaul's
Grocery, Olester, III)OI1SOred by
Merry Makers HI Club.

Nine Meigs
0 VAL distributes junior books Countians ·
dlltaliCe.
C&gt;hio
~or:'.:.~~~esaerved among Rio
d
.
eLTr.'IJ
. ·, uates

,

i~SQ4 '
GPDOP
. ·- ·

WINNING.STREAK- Mrs. Nancy Roush,~ Plainl, continues
ber wltl1lng streak In capturing honors In area cake decorating lhowlt.
Mrs. Roush tool! ftrat place 1n the advanced d_lvlslon !Qr a cake patterned
after a greeting card and first place In the advanced novelty divillon with
a Circus train cake at the recent show held at the mall•t Vienna, W. Va.
Her daughter, Jennifer, 5, won aecond place ln the chlldren's-diviJioo
with a giraffe cake. Mrs. Roush and daughter are ptctured with their
awards. Following the competition, ltfrs. Roush flew to MinneapoliB,
Minn., where she attended a five day course conducted by Roland
Winbeclder, worldwide known for his work in sculptured cakes on people
and animala. Mrs, Roush holda a sculpted bead which she learned how to
make du.lmg the course,

Auxiliary pl{Jns holiday fare here

~--Social Calendar

•

Ca•yKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS

'I til Noon

L.....-CO-

«einnw 1n MC~utto,.~;Jt. .....
Chlrtos Riffle, R. Plh
· Ronald Hanning, R. I'll
Mon.lhru Set. I:OOI .m. to 9p:m.
Sunday 10::10to 12 : ~01nd5ta9p~ m .
· .
PRESCRIPTIONS
~
.
rn. •!2·2955,
-FI'I.,.~IY-~rvtca
·
· ...
PametoY-. ·
E. Main
Opelllll_,.h_ls II II P..

·••
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�&amp;-'lbe Dally sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy. 0 .• Thursday' May 24. 1!r19
woo by Mrs. Robert Rhodes.
The bride's table was decoi'Jil!!d
with a white cloth, trlpuned in red
green crepe paper, and white
APPLE GROVE - A shower wu lll!d
weddlllg bells.
·
held at the Apple Grove Metllodlat
Refreahmenta
were
served
to the
Church Saturday eventng tn hnor ll
following
81lesta:
Mrs.
BWDavidson,
Evelyn Swart, brldM!ect ol Paul
Ables, both o1 canal Winchester. Mrs. Robert Rhodes, Mrs. Dorsa Par·
liOIIS, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Mrs. Herbert
Hostess wu Mra. Jack Ables.
Games were played .with prtzes Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
going to Mrs. LucUJe Rhodes, cOtton Balser, Mrs. Patty Laudennilt, Mrs.
game, am Mra. Sblrley Ables, Ruaaell Roush, Mrs. Eileen Buck,
honeymoon game. Door prize was Mrs. Julla Norris, Mrs. Ronald
Ruaaell lll!d daughter, Mandy, Mrs.
Cha.rles Mugrage, Mrs. Anna
Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables, ·
Mrs. Allee Balser, Paw Ables lll!d
Ev~ynSwart.
.
Sending glfta were Mrs. Charles
'Micbael, Mrs. Roger Roush, l\frs.
Louie Pickett, Mrs. Cora Webb, Mrs.
Florence smith, Mrs. Darrell Noriis,
Mrs. Donna Hlll and Mrs. Mrs. Bertha Robinson.

... . .

.Shower held

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7- 'lbeDally Sentint!l, Mlddleport-PCIIIerOy, 0 ., Thursday, May24, l!r19

Nehaclima Gardeners hpld banquet in Pomeroy
The Nel!ilcllma Garden Club held

its annual Mother-Daughter Banquet
at the Melgs .Inn In Pomeroy. The
president, Mrs. Roy Jones, welcomed
all attending: Potted flowers .were
useda.sfavorsateachplate.
Following the dinner, an tn·
stallation service was held for the
new offleers. Thse Installed were:
President, ltfrs. Roy Jones; vicepresident, Mrs. Chester Weaver ;
Recording Secretary, Mrs. Douglas
Miller; corresponding secretary,
Mrs. David Simonton; treasurer,
Mrs. Dennie Harbour. The officers
wer~ presented a gift and a silk
flower . Out,golng officer for
corresponding . secretary, Mrs .
Donald Bumgardner, was also

presented a gift.
. Melllllen lll!d IIUC\lM

dinner were Mrs. Donald Bumgardner, Mrs. Freda Hart, Mrs. Chester
Weaver, Mrs. David Fields, Jr., Mrs.
Lulema Weaver, Mrs. William C. Gibbs, Mrs. Mary Kelly, Mrs. Thomas
Hoffman, Mrs. Ruth Batey, Mrs.
M;lrian Batey, Mrs. John C. Roush,
Mrs. Mel Clark, Mrs. Carroll Adams ,
Jr., Mrs. ilennan Layne, Mrs. Hoble
Lowe, Mrs. Harry Grimm; Mrs. Pete
Burris, Mrs. Howard Burris, Mrs.
Roger Estergaard, Mrs. Margaret
Esterg!lllrd, Mrs . Sam Longanacre
81111 Megan, Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs.
Richard Rawlings, Mrs. David
Simonton Blld Betsy, Mrs. Larry
WUey and Jennifer, Mrs. ~ohn Campbell, Kristin and Annette, Mrs. John
Thome and Marcia, Mrs. Harold
Mailey, LaDonna and Lori, Mrs.
Harry MIJler. Mrs. Goerge Jewell,

Easte.rn Star holds Grand Inspection

Mrs. Gall Davenport~ MrS. MiChael Roush, Mrs. Douglas Miller and ManMerritt and Virginia, Mrs. James N. dy, Mrs. Dannie Harbour and Wendy

Gi-and inapectlon ·.cd Evangeline
lhel72, Order ci the Eastern
. • waa d recently with Marilyn
Gtey, grlll!d COnductress, as the In~ olflcer.
~K.~•~ were
··-~'11. past grand
matrm; Howard Shuyl, past grand
patrm ; Janet Cooperrider, gram
Martha ; Sue Kerns, granc1 Adah: LClis

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Tax books open for second half of 1978

'·

·.'•

Real E•tate Taxes. Final day to pay tax

will be July 20, 1979
New office hours effective May 29, 1979 8:30 to
4: 30, Monday 'hrough Friday. Closed on Saturday.

I~
'i

. MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER .
GEORGE M. COLliNS

··

MlllJian Collece iD rem-.

She received a degree ol bllcbeiCJr ol
IC!enee In IOdolotiY with a minor In
psycholQCY, and baa been accepted Into the fll"llduate IJI"OIII'IDI at Georgia
lnlltltute TecbnoiOCY In the ana ol cl·
ty plaMtng. Ml8ll J11111111 111"8duated
with a 3.3 average am WILl ~elected
the oalltandlng IIOcioiOCY ltuclent ol
the year. THe cnduatlm ceremooy
waa held at Se egar OJapelat the col-

• At the llfllduatlon, the Rice family
villted wltb the Rev. llld Mrs. Fred
Gardner wh01e aranddaugl!ter,
s...n ~ Shoun, WILl In the
graduatlne clul. Sbe received an
· IIIOC!ate decree In IC!ence. The
a.nm.n are bmer Middleport
relldeDII having been the putonJ
fmllly at the Mldltiport Church ol
Oll'llt for many yean.

"•

Picnic held
Mra. Doo Jenldna, teacher at the
Rutland Elementary Scbool, entertalned recently wttll a picDie fOI" her
co-teacllera. and g11esta. 1be picnic
waa held at the home ci Mr. and Mra.
Jenldna.
Otben attending were Susanne
Teaford, TerMR Newflold, Marge

Goett, Mr. and Mn. Paul Rice and
Shaun, Mr. and Mn. Greg McQill,
Mr. lll!d Mrs. Randy Hayl, Mr. and
Mra. Tcmi.JMlal, Mr. llld Mrs. Kellll
Albley, carol Reeae, and Cheryl Barnhart.

•
''

1be Women ol the ChUrch ci God ol
New Haven held their annual May
Fellcnnhip Dlnnet at Mrs. Perry's
Bounty Table In Ravenswood. 1be
welccme wu given by Mra. Orpba
Fields, president. The lllvocatlon waa
given by Spiritual Ufe · Director
Delores Taylor. PCIUed Dow.~ were
uaed u favora at each plate.
After the dinner, two members
were hooored with a birthday cake
and &amp;lfta. A poem, ''Only A Mother",
WILl read by Orpba Fleldl. Penny-ADay Calendarll were received by Mrs.
Patty Maynard, stewardahlp Director.
'n- attending the dinner· were
Mra. Bonnie Fleldll, Mra. Mickey
. Dodlon, . Mrs. .Grace CUDnlngbam,
Mill Sharon Cunnlnibam. Mn.
Delores Tayloc, Mn. Bec11y Reed,
Mn. Mary KeUy, Mn. 5anh Glbbll,
Mrs. Iva Capehart, Mrs. Orpba
Fleljla, Mrs. Pansy Fry. Mrs. Rena
Jobnlm, Mftl. Fay Clrplinter, Mra •
Roberta Maynard, Mrs. Eleanor
Davll, Mrs. Patty Maynard, Mrs.
'l'belma Grueeer, Mra. Loretta
Stewart, Mrs. Golda Lerner and Mrs.

.

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Salem

•

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Two children were dedicated on
Mother •a Day at the Rutland United
Methodist Church. 1be Rev. Wilbur
HUt Ulled water water from the River
Jordan for the baptiernel service.
Dedicated were Jamie. Lynn
Wlllla!l!lll'4\, daughter ol Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wllllamaon, Route 1, Rutland,
and Bryan Keith Colwell, son ci Mr.
and Mra. Frank Colwell, Route l ,"Vln-

ton.

RelaUves ol Jamie attepdlng
besides her parents were Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Wllllattwon. lll!d Mr. and
Mrs. W!Uiam Thornton, grand·
parents; Mrs. Edllll Wllli•!TIIUI\,
great-grandmother; Mlaa Ilvlene
Thornton, an aunt, and Rlclr: Wllllam11011, an uncle. The baby waa atured In
a long handmade dreea dslgned by
her mother.
Besides Mr. and Mrs. Colwell, other
relativea.there for Bryan's dedication
were hla grandmother, Mrs. John Colwell, hla great1!f811Clr:nother' Mrs.
Grace Colwell, and aunt, Miss Mary
Colwell.

Has 1Oth birthday

.......

llrlldy lllld carol Knotts enterlalned
Sunday willl a party bonortng their
800; Timothy 00 hla loth birthday.
He wu preeented a semi-truck
c:Ue al0118 with glfta. Calle, Ice
cream, Kool-Aid were served to Dale,
Jennfe, Dele, Jr. little, Michl King,
Audra Houdaahelt, April Clarlr:,
carta, Darland Misty King, Joe, Jim
and Mike Parker, DBMy; Melodl,
Carl and Wesley Young, Timothy
Jones, Ralpb Carl. Sending glfta were
Cllf and Mary Wolfe, Oaytm, BW lll!d
Cordle Colllna, Earl and Lilah
Freclr:er and Tim, Pomeroy, and Emmett and Huel Haning, Albany.

FJreB REUNION
1be annual Fitch F.wJy Reunion
baa been aet for Sunday, June 17 at
the Portland Park. A dinner will be
lel'\'ed at 12 nOCII am electioo of of.
flcera will be held In the afternoon.

.

TO OBSERVE HOLIDAY
The Gallla - Meigs Head Start
Program wUI be closed on Monday,
May 28, In observance of Memorial

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CL:o8ED MONDAY
OOLUMBUS- Director Clifford E.
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ute liquor atorea, agenclea lll!d
c1epar1menta1 olflces will be dOled
:Jimday, May 21, 18'19, In obeervance
ol Memorial Day.

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'75 PONTIAC LEMANS 4 DR

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The lrilh Leprec:baWII4-If Club will
be JIIICX1IOrlng a n~~~~~~~a~e and bake
llle 111 Saturday, Ma7 :18, at the poet
offtce IIi Lanprille. They will be sell·

TRAcrORPULL

...

Children dedicated

WORSHIP SERVICES
There will be worship services at
the Eagle Ridge Ccmmunlty Clurch
at 7:30 p.m. Sunday IIIIth the Rev.
Carl E. Hicb apealdng.

ut ESSE'l'

1bere will be • garden tnlc:tor pull
·Monday, May 28 at Chester at.lO a .m.

patrons, BW King , Bob King, Paul
Darnell, and Raymond Wilcox.
Honored masons, James Buchanan ,
Jim Wilson, and Harry Mannring ; 50
year members, Evelyn Lewis, Grace
French , Beulah Hayes, Helen
Reynolds, and Roberta K. Mindllng ;
and Dick Legrande, trustee of the
Ohio Estern Star Home were
preaented. Also introduced were
Loulae Stewart, president of District
25 ; Joan McHaffie, grand page ;
fonner grand appointrnenla, past
matrons and past patrons l1f other
chapters.
Sunshine pages were Naomi King
and Etta Mae Norton.
Donald Fitch and Fred Karshner
were Initiated tnto the order. Glen
Evans, l!dolst, sang "He Touched
Me", and'cluring the dosing remarks ,
the inspecting olflcer noted the 75th
anniversary of the chapter and talked
about events since 1904 when the
Chapter wulnstltuted.
1be DeMolay Mothers Club served
pre-Inspection · dinner .
a
Refreshments were served following
the meeting.

HO!p!tal.

DEAR HElEN:
My wife wanta to go to our 35th high
achool reunion. I didn't like our 25th,
and fiiUre this me wll be twice u
t.d :' the wcmen· lng and the men
pretend they're more aucceuful than
they
are; and you can no lmger fan·
1
tu1ze about your first girlfriend, the
~. beca~ abe's added
about 50 pound8 and waddles when
llhe walks. (I suspect her Dab \II'U my
wife's reason for going.)
Since then I've aucceslfully avoided
reunions, mainly because we were
s,ooo miles away from our home town.
But now we're living cloee by again.
How can l talk my wife out ri. thla
cnzy Idea? -"SHOW ME THE WAY
(NOf)TOGOHOME"
DEARSMTWN'IGH:
I'm not keen on high Bdlool reunions either - people either look too
old wblch makes me sad, or too young
wblch IJllllles me jealous. But IJ your
wife baa her heart set oo your 35th,
don 'ta.slr: me to talk her out of it.
Look: you're only giving up one
night ol the year for aomethtng she
really enjoys: Humor her.
(Besides, the former cheerleader
may have lost her Dab.) - H.

.

clothtq, buckets,
planters, baked goods, etc.

Kathryn Mitchell, Kathryn Knight,
Farle KeMedy, Evelyn Lewis ,
Virginia B~ , Grace French,
Kathy Jolllllo, Na~ .J{tng, Glenna
Crisp, Marilyn Wilcox, Bessie Kin!!.

WEEKEND SPECIALS

~ M,.eltoo.

lng

Etta Mae Norton,

dinner at the Hollday Inn Sunday
following commencement at Rio
Grande Coliege . - dinner
honored
• ..,
.
their «&lt;aughter, Mary Ruth, Who
received an aaaoclat.e ol IIJil)led
science in medical .laboratory
technology.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
WUllam Meredith, Beverly; Mr. and
~. Warren Pictena, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whlt.ebead, Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber, all ol Reedsville;
ltpchael Kelly, Syracuae, and Joy
Sauer.
Miss Sauer 1a employed In the
laboratory ol Veterans Memorial

Got a problem? An adultsubject for
dicuaalon? You can talk It over In her
~llunn IJ you write to Helen B«tel,
care ol thiB newspaper.

FeOowship fare held

.l

,I

'
·l

wo"r!hy patrons of other chapters

were ·prmented ai0118 with 16 past Ann Thomas, Belllah Hayes, and
matronl ci Evangeline Chapter, Helen Reynolds ; and four past

Mr. .and Mrs. Harold Sauer halted a

our expeuaes.
I yearn fOI" a beautiful relationship.
HO\II'wllllaccompllahthia? - W.S.D.
DEARW.:
By finding another man ! - H.

. ytJUpn

!I
.I

"

DEAR HELEN:
I Uve with this guy Who's 17 years
older than me. Whenever my wcmen
friendll come over, he lrlcb them out.
He wm 't let me go anywbere alooe or
willl the glrla, but he takes off lll!d
comes bact when am if_ he pleases.
He never takes me places or spends
IIIOIIeY on me. My salary pays most of

rill ol Jappa, Md., a lllllllor at

·~

·

H.

lege willl UJOIItudentsln the~Gotng to r - for graduatim
were Mr. and·Mra. Denver Rice, Mldclleporl They _ . . jOined by Mr. and
Mrs. Cbes&amp;er Rice, College Park, Ga.,
and Mr. am Mra. George Chambers,
eblldren, Clint lllld Emily, Eut Polut,
Ga. and Mill JIIDHII' fiance, Bob Mer-

•

0

. DEARDJ&amp;}USI'ED:
Contain your lildignatton (and
poalblejealousy), sit back and watch
bow 10011 this manbandler bedhop8
benelfrlght out of a job. Really, moat
.male bollaes dm't rate T. and A.
above brajns, and they're pretty
quiet to fire a dull-wttted employee
wbo would rather tum on married
men than her electric typewriter. -

residents, graduated SUnday from

•
:
:
•

t"

By Helen BotteN

Sbe's ~ down our standards.
Hciw do ·we handle her? - '11IE
DOOUS'I'EnS

Gtnger . James, wbJ llllkel her
lllme tn College Pari, Ga. with Mr.
.am Mrs. a.ter Rice, former

.

•

....

Graduates from college

.

US•

t

J

'nJRNINGON 'lUE OFFICE MALES
11JRN8 OFJI''IUE OFFICE GIKU
By Bdea Bottel
DEAR HELEN:
T'bll WOIIIIIII Who worU with Ill Ia
lllvoiVIid In a very torrid and open affair with a married man; she l.s acUvely cultlvaUng another, alao married, and baa no qualms about making
~~~~ggelllve remarka and using body
language to enUce them (and others).
1'be nlllt ol us women have worked
bard to gain our politions and ccnvince the male management that we
have more than Just busts and
behlnda. '!ben this female offseiB
em-ytblng we've accompliahed by
being the epltmJe of the dull-wttted,
round-beeied, easy-mark stereotype
that the majority of businessmen see

Ginger james

,·

Heie·n Help

·~,,

\

,.

Host dinner

w~~~;::;;;::,,~::::.::::::-:-:-:,:-:;,:-:::;;:::;;:;:;.;:~:-:::;:,:,:;:;:,:c:,::;:;;::::;:-:_:;;::::::::::::c=;.;::~=~---:-:-::-~::;:~t..;

•

·

Pawey, deputy gr8nd matroo of
Diatrict 25; Louise Stear!, grand
. representative to Washington; and
Florence Mannring, grand representative to WlaCCIISin.
Tw~ve worthy matrons and seven

mEmORIAL* DR

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
ll

A DIVISION OF TAN DY CORPORATION

Rad•o Shack
Dealers
look lor th •S,
Sll~n

tn your

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~
•

PRICES M A Y VARY AT INOIVI DUAL STORES

I . •

••

�.

8-The Daily Sentljlel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, May 24, 1!179

'\;

I 1

\I

'

t-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday' May 24, 1979

Gas. supplies low, expensive

'

•

DISPLAY WORK - Eighteen Portland Elementary
&amp;:boo! students entered the r~erit Rio Grande Art
ex,bibition with six receiving awards. Winners shown

are, 1 to r, Michael Boso, Je1f Connolly, Lee Cornell,
Randy Beegle, and Eugene Chaney.

Information on the economics of
health care delivery should include
data on hospital use by older people,
what is insurable from a practical
standpoint, and the cost of covering
certain types of risks. Information in
this area may remoPe difficult to obtain, but a likely source would be an
insurance comany you have been affiliated with during your working
years. They may also be able to provide information on how ~rivate
health insurance works and what to
look for in selecting a policy.
A brief discussion of basic information in these areas of concern will provide a stat1ing point for a more detailed investigation of private supplementary health insurance.
Medicare consists of two parts :
Hospital insurance which helps pay
hospital-related bills, and Medical insurance which helps pay doctor bills
and other medical services.
In a nutshell, Medicare hospital insurance'pays for all covered services
for the first 60 days of a hospital stay
except for the first $160 in a benefit
period.
From the 61st day to the 90th day in
a hospital stay, Medicare will pay all
but ~ a day, and for each of the 60
lifetime reserve days, Medicare will
pay all but $80 a day.
Medicare medical insurance pays
for 80 percent of the reasonable
charge for covered medical bilsl after
the $60 annual deductible has been
met . Medicare medical insurance
does not pay for out-of-hospital
prescription drugs, most nursing
home care. routine physical exams,
or dental care.
Moreover, Medicare caMot pay for
the portion of a doctor's fee that exceeds the reasonable charge, as
determined by the Medicare carrie,r.

w.,..,.,

POMEROY - A fonner college
basketball coach of the year is practically moving mountains - and
perhaps ruffling some feelings in ·a
foreign country - to tee It up in the
Dave Diles Golf Classic July 30.
University of Michigan basketball
coach Jhonny Orr had a prior commitment for a clinic in Italy. But Orr,
a noted after-dinner speaker 88 well
88 a celebrated coach, is trying to
change his schedule In order to accommodate the golf tournament. "
"I figure a fellow can go to Italy
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

l'

Doooy May, suo uf H1UIIIIIIe Agent

Doa 8lld Vlvlao May, bolds Ught to a
dog tbat oeeda a s~lal bome. Tbls
lllllmal II a DacbahUDd lype tbat Is
amall, with abort legs 8lld loog body
8lld iJ a Dice Cbocolate brown

female. She appears to bave been
well cared for dnrlng her two or
three yean - iJ weD behaved, gentle
aud a hOUJedog. She iJ really a sweet
dog 8lld If anyone illnleelted In 1119",
thi'Y may call912-'1853 or 99Z-7880.
BONDS FORFEITED
Three defendants forfeited banda in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Wednesday night. They are
Wanda Adams, Pomeroy, $1110 posted
on a ~;barge of leaving the scene of an
accident; Mark Mora, Pomeroy, $39,
speeding, and Randall CoMolly,
Mason, $30, speeding.

answered a call to Hobson at 6:16
p.m. Wednesday, the scene of a
reported !ICCident. However, arriving
at the scene, squad members found
that no accident had occurred.

'

nell and Tammy Adkins.

OPENS SA1URDAY
. London Pool in Syracuse will open
for the season Saturday May 26, at 1
p.m. Hermon London, manager announced today.
'

Ohio Enended O.llool
By the Aasoclated Press
Fair Saturday, will! • chance of
showen or thaadersterm1
developing ·Sandly aud collllllldag
Moaday. Hlghlln tile mid . . to the ·
ml,d 71111. Lows in tile . . Saturday In·
creulllg to the 5111 by Moaday.
:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;::::

Ohio .
briefs.

• •

anytime," said Orr, "hut the opportunity to come to an event Uke this
is rare and I plan to make f!'(ery effort
to be there. I may wind up hurting
SOIIle feelings In Italy- wt I don't do
lllllch recruiting there, anyway."
Tournament officials also are
hopeful that the Wolverines' football
coach, Bo Schembechler, will be on
hand. He originally planned to attend,
but because ~ the early Big Teen
football season, moved ~ractice .
IM!Illliol!B up.

April receipts down
Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for April, this year, were
down 15.38 percent under receipts for
April, 1978, according to the report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey, state
treasurer.
Receipts for April, 1979, totaled
$47,571.74 compared to receipts of
$56,218.85 for April, 1978, a decrease
of $8,647.11.
Motor vehicle sales tax for the
period, however,, increased 6.65 per·
cent. Receipts for April, 1979, totaled
$63,696.16 while receipts for April,
1978, totaled $59,721.38, an increase of
$3,974.78.

~r .

By liE'ITY ANNE WIWAMS

But there is significant skepticism
as well.
"I just think ifs the normal
bureaucratic underestimation of wbat
the real cost in the reaJ world will be,"
sald Rep. John Rousselot, R-Calif.,
ranking Republican on the Ways and
Means public assistance and
employment subconuhittee.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan ., ranking
Republican on the Finance
Committee, voiced similar criticism.
The Department of Health, Education
and WeHare "has had a history of
woefully underestimating the cost of
major programs," Dole said.
Administration spokesmen say they
expect the measure to pass the full
Senate if it can clear the Senate
Finance Committee headed by Sen.
Russell Long, 0-La., a long-time
opponent of a national guaranteed
income.
The program would Increase
incm~es for nearly 6.5 million people
and would add 200,000 people to the
welfare rolls, about 70 percent of them
children.
The $5.7 billion price tag placed by
the administration on the new
program compared with $17 billlon for
the plan rejected by Congress.
Your "Extra Touch"
! Specifically, the president wants to
· Florist Since 1957
! create 400,1100 public jobs for the poor,
raise benefit levels in the 13 - mainly
- states where they are the
! Southern
lowest , boost tax rebates for the
working poor a·nd simplify
FL=
paperwork.
'
PH. 992-2644
I About $9110 million in annual fiscal
352 E. Main. Pomeroy
1
relief would be provided to the ststes,
1
Your
FTD Florist
including $220 million to California
_..__.._.__.._,._.._...,

As10eiated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Carter
administration's latest proposal for
welfare reform is picking up
important support In Congress, along
with c001plaln~ it will be more costly
than the president estimates.
In outlining the new package
Wednesday, White House domestic
policy adviser Stuart Eizenstat said it
will coat about $5.7 billion more than
the present system when fully implemented in 1932 and predicted it
"has a reasonably good chance of
passage."
Some of the basis for optimism
lakes into account the backing of Rep.
AI Ullman, DOre., Ways and Means
C&lt;lllmlttee chainnan. He oppoaed the
~resident's more ambitious welfare
overhaul last year, but is
cospmsorlng the 1979 version.
Rep. James Corman, D-Calif;,
chairman of the Ways and Means
subcommittee that has direct
Jurl!dictlon ovel' the plan, also is a
sponsor. Sen. Daniel Patrick
Moynihan, DN.Y., who heads the
Finance subcommittee on public
8881Jtance, Is the chief Senate spon-

"I'm sUll trying to juggle ~
around so I can be there," said Bo.
''After all, Ohio's my heme state and I ,
might nm into 1001e big bigb school
lineman down there who wants to
play somewbere otbt!r tl_wl Ohio State
and I'll just bring him back with me."
Schembechler Is a native !1. Bar·
berton, Oblo.
TOIII'IIIIIIellt olllclals are U11linll
area golfers to make appllcatioo for
the tournament, an 111-hole event to be
contested at Riverside Golf Club in
Mason, West Virginia. Entry ft:e Is
$1110, and Includes dinner and entertalrunent at Royal Oak Park.
Pr~ from the event will go to
charity.

r----------.
FOR SALE
GRAVELY TRACTOR
WITH MOWER

---------...,
1
~
L__

&amp; SULKY

· ~

·Good condition. $700. Call
after 4:30p.m. ·742·2459.

!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio
Bank Superintendent
is ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , ; ,...
leaving
his job JuneH. Hal
I toNichols
become
president of the Citizens Bank and
Trust Co. at Wadsworth.
Sterling Sechrist, board chairman
ofthe bank in Medina County, said the
Board of Directors elected Nichols
president and chief operating officer.
Nichols, 36, is a lifelong resident of
Medina County and has commuted
from his home at Sharon Center since
accepting the state banking job in
AprU 1977.
·
·
Nichols has served as a director of
the Co nference of State Bank
Supervisors and was chairman of the
conference's second district which int ludes Ohio.
Before he took the state · banking
job, Nichols spent six years with the
Comptroller of the Currency as a
national bank exa"miner.
Gov . James A. Rhodes will name a
successor.

Dave Kaplan, a spokesman for Sill
~ lags Over Georgia, a
large
amusement park near Atlanta. " hi
1974, Six Flags Over Georgia had a
record-breaking year ."
However, a Long Island, N.Y.,
resort town ran out of g~~s this week
when Its only service ststion ran out of
its May allotment. The station was tn
get an emergency supply today, but in
the meantime, Point Lookout
residents had to drive six miles or
more for gas.
Some New York service statloo
officials predicted as few as 10
percent of the metropolitan . area
stations would be open this weekend.
For those too worried to try driving,
the Long Island Rail Road said it
would offer round-trip tickets· for the
price of one-way fares.
In California, where the gas squeeze
has hit hard~t . . attractions like
Disneyland which are close to major
cities report no trouble, though
business is down at more out-of-theway places.
Las V~gas officials aren't worriect
that reservations for Memorial Day

I

,- emora

.•
•

.

.

.1~ QTI

~·

1 Group

LADIES' TOPS

DRESSES &amp; SKIRTS

50~.

30% ·50~· OFF
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OFF

1 ·PR. '6.00
2 PR. '10.00

1 Group Ladies' Pullover

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Ladies Spring

small Group

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RISING STAR Kennels . boor·
dmg "and grooming, oil
breeds . Che Jhire, 367 -om.

1q75 11 FOOT tru ck camper .
self- contained, air condition ,
•~ce ll en t
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condition . 992 -21;21 .

- -- - - -

-

COATS
•12 to •15

lWO'S COMPANY DRESS SHOP
Pomeroy,O.

Main Sf.

..

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.,

Hospital News
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, May 23
Robert Betz, Patricia Brady,
Delmer Cobb, Brett Cremeens, Henry
Doss, Kenneth Fanner, 'Mrs. Larry
Fields and son, Mrs. William Foster
and daughter, John Greene, Edith
Jackson , Eugia Jolmson, Jo Ann
King, Shirley Mayes, Harley McCulty, Tonia McCarley, Roy Newell ,
Dorothy Parsons, Tim Peterson, Mrs.
Calvin Pearson and daughter, Roy
Person, Ryan Pratter, William
Ramsey, Maxine Roark, Clara
Schultze, Hazel Smlth, Roger
Stevens, Edgar Vaughn, Ada
Wasmer, Mildred Wesfall.
BlrtluJ, May %3
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Malone,
daughter, Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Wright, son,
Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Monte Sheets,
daughter, Gallipolis.
v eteralll Memorial Hoopllal
ADMITI'ED - ·Laura Crooks,
Syracu.o.•; Margaret Gans, Pomeroy ;
Clarence Story, Pomeroy; James
Miller, Syncuse; Vera Kreimer,
Parkerilburg; James Young, Racine;
Mona Neal, Middleport; Wilbur Sims,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Larry Powell,
Grace Gardner, Joyce Hall.

DANCE SET
A dance will be held at the Southern
High School beginning at 9 Saturday
night following the . annual Racine
Hlgb School AllllllJli Association ban·
quet. The dance is being held in conjunction with the reunion of Racine
Hlgb School grduates and music will
be by "The Heather" which plays a
variety of music'. Admission to the
dance is $5 a couple. The dance concludes at midnight .

- - --

I t' (&gt;

.tun1

oc o tt c r ca

w•!l

to

NOTICE
Bod\ wdl b&lt;'

C,l('~(, f o b~O

fOil OWIMj

pubi• C sal e

to r

t h£&gt; h 19ht&gt;SI

I) odder on lh&lt;' :lnd a a v ot
June, 1979, at 10 a .m

Zenith co l or tv _ scr NO .
8:1 86116
Sale o f- t he securi t y lis t ed

above WiH be held on the
premises ot Th e Cltv Loen
and Savi ng s Co mpany , 125
E

S t re~;t ,

Main

P o,.., er ov .

OhiO .

Weste rn

r .erm s ot sa te : casl'1 .

Seller reserves 1he r ight

to bid

and the

r ig h t

to

reject any and all bids.
Prior to t he date of sa le,
a rrangements may be ·
made t o i n spec 1 this

merchr'lndise by

Auctions

ca l ling

9'12 ·2171 bet ween the hours
ot 9 a .m . and S p .m .

OHIO RIV ER Aucti on Tu esda y
on d Fr ida y, 7 PM, 537 North

(5) 24, ltc

Hi gil St .• Middle port Ohio .

r t-c. e•vCO at

InC! oth ce at Bcrnaro v
F ultr . Pomeroy Nat •on al
Bank Bu d d ing , Pomeroy .
Ohto . vot d June 1. 1979, at
10 ·00 o'c lock AM, tor th e
f orme r res•dence real
estate of Roscoe Cozar t ,
si tuated on ·state Route 338.
Eas t of Racine , Ohio ,
over look ing the Ohio R.i11er ,

con sist ing of a one story
tram e dw ell ing . f ive rooms
a nd
bath ,
on
ap
pro)( imatety one .acr e to t .
For furth er In formation
te lephone 'il92 S896 .
The E)(ecutor reserv es
reje c t
the right 1o accept
any bid .

or

Robert Cozer t,
Exe cu tor
Estate ol
Eoscoe Cozart
May 18. 20. 22. 24 , 27 , 29 , 31

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8:30 to 5: 00 Thursday till12 Noon

lnvol11e yourself with groups.
VIRGO (Aug . 23·Sopl.22)
't'ou ' re en t er i ng a luc k y
achieve me nt cycle , so set Iotty
goals and pursue them vig o r~
ousty . Don 't be afraid ·to th ink

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY .
Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va.

773·5592

big.
LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl". 23) Circumstances could not begin to
_ta ke a beneti cialtwlst and bring
In to be ing som ettling you 've
been hoping for. Keep your
dieams all11e. ·
SCORPIO (Ocl. 2._Now. 22)
Joint ventures are very promls- 1
lng for you at th is point in time ,
especially II you' re teamed
with one who already has a
good track record .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) Conditions are very favorable tor you 11 present In
matters call ing for collective
bargaining . Keep vour wits
ii!bOul you . You 'll come out on
top.
,.....
CAPRICORN (Dec. H·Jon. 11)
There Is a reedy market waiting
tor your skills and talents.
Perform to your beat abil ity,
because the rewards tor good
work can be quite large.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
A.lllences that you enter Into
now shOu ld prove ol great
advantage to both you and you r
counterpan. Each will be quite
lucky for the other .
PISCES (Fob. 20-llorch 10) II
you 've been thinking of lmple·
mentlng some changes to lm·
prove your besl c lilastyle , now
It the time to do 11. Strike while
the iron Is hot. · .
ARIES (ll.orch 21·Aprll 1.!}
Changes Jifl developing that
should be ol benefit to you
socially.
If-you are already
popular, you ain't seen notntn'

,...

NOTI(.E OF
PUBLIC SALE

VERY G ENTLE Quarter hor1e .
par ade, sad d l e .
Phon e 698-3290.

ASTRO·GRAPH

and $1 ~ million to New York, the
states with the largest welfare populatioos.
This year's plan does not provide
benefits for nee~y singles and
childless couples as did the one
offered last year . Also omitted was a
~roposal to pay cash benefits in place
of food stamps for all weHare
recipients and to establish a minlmwn
national income.
Under the new jrOposal, ablebodied
persons whq apply for weHare or wbo
are -receiving it would have to search
for a private job for eight weeks as a
condition for gettlng benefits.
Mter eight weeks, the recipient
would be given a publicly subsidized
job or be enrolled in a job-training
program for a maxlmwn of 78 weeks.
This would be followeq by another
search for private work .

.

HOOF ~ OLL OW , EngliJh and
Wes t ern .
Sodd l es
an d
horneu . Hones and ponies.
Ruttl Reeves . 6U ·698 -3290.
Barding &amp; Ridi ng l enoMs and
Hors~ ·c a r e pr od uc-ts. .

awning s, self-con tai ned ,
are down about JO perc•lll. Many of ing
loaded with e xtras. 698·82 18
th eir visitors arrive by airplane - and ait" 4 pm .
last weekend business pid!ed up at the
Frldey, Mey 2$
last minute.
Memorial Day ·wee!&lt;end .motorist'
will pay about 18.5 cents a gallon more
May 25, 1179
than last year for the fuel they can
Allhough you may e~eperience
find, a survey shows.
pressures in ce rtain areas this
In Long Island, the ~rice of a gallon coming yea r, your luck wil l
of unleaded regular has jwnped to 89.9 O\l erpower the opposi ti on .
cents since last May, a 22.2-&lt;.-ent 1Think positive. Don 't let trivial
d isturb you .
increase, according to the industry's things
GEMINI CMay 21·June 20} You
Lundberg Letter. Houston drivers are are enterin g Into a 11ery creative
paylng 15,3 cents more for gas, 79.6 cyc le , so don't demean your
bright lde;as . Get involved w ith
cents per gallon, it said.
persons wh o can help you
Prices would continue to rise UQder marke t them. Discover with
President Carter's plan to lift price whom you get along ce~t foman tlcaliy by sending for your
controls from domestically produced new
AstrO-Graph LeUer . Ma!l $1
oil, says a Congressional Budget for each and a self-addressed
Office study. Lifting cootrols .will cost enveloPe to Astro-Graph . P .0 .
Box 489, Radio City Stat ion ,
the average :American household N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify
another $135 a year by 1932 for such birth sign 1
•
. products as borne heating oil and CANCER (June 21-July 22) The
time Is now ripe fo r yo u to
gasoline, it says.
close situations that .. mean
Carter does not need congressional somethi ng to yo u financially .
approval to lift price controls, and Take advantage of matters
House Democrats on Wednesday whil e h,1 ck Is in your corner.
LEO (July 2l-Aug. 22) Valuab le
refused to llsten to a compromise and contacts can be made at th is
continued to stress their opposition to . lime through persons you 'll get
to know socielly. Be a jo iner.
the proposai.

Welfare proposal gaining support ,

Dave Diles Classic golf tournament

FALSESQUADCAU.

ST'&amp; PEARL ST.R EeTc-1··
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

received best of,show, are 1tor, Karla Smith, Lee Cor-

;,~

The Middleport Emergency Squad

rdinal

ART WINNERS -'- Three winners of the art show
being held.at Portland Elementary School. who each·

Orr trying to change schedule for

r our· Social Security
A frequent question rail;ed by people on Medicare or whl&gt; are approaching retirement is how much
health insurance they need to supplement their Medicare protection.
"The question ·sterns from the fact
that Medicare does not cover all
hospital or medical expenses. Many
people feel the need to pu_rchase addi tiorial insurance to pay for any
charges not covered by Medicare.
Hearings held during recent months by the Senate Committee on Aging
inW,:Sted that there is a great deal of
co olusion among Medicar e
benefi~iaries on how to purchase supplelJ)entary health insurance: Some
people tend to purchase much more
t1laiJ they need. Others fall prey to
higli pressure salesmen and buy insurance that doesn 't really meet their
ne$.
It1s estimated that about 65 percent
of the 2li million people now Of1 the
Me&lt;jicare tolls have supplementary
priVate health insurance. There are
no hard and fast rules on how or
whe(her to select a supplemental
policy. It 's a decision that people need
to nlake based on their personal situation:;. However, it may be helpful to
disouss some of the consldratlons that
shoUld influence their decisions .
Anyone selecting health insurance
to supplement their Medicare protection.should~ sure to get information
in three areas : I ) what Medicare does
and does not pay "for, 2) the ec• nnmlcs
of health care delivery (to determine
what is practical to insure against),
and 3) how private health insurance
works .
Information on what Medicare pays
for is explained in "Your Medicare
Handbook." Copies are available
from the Athens Social Security Of.
fice upon request.

,,.

~

- ·-----·--Pets fo r Sale

JCHJ PATHFINDER camper spr-

By MARK POTI'S
Auoclated Preu Writer
Gill may be in short suppl)' in some
places - and nearly 20 cents a gallon
·more expensive than la!t year - but
many of the nation's resort owners
say they ellpeCt business to be pretty
good this Memorial Day weekend.
Tbat assessment came Wednesday
u President Carter worried the
natllll would avoid dealing with its
fuel problems "unless there is such a
aevere crisis with shortages that the
American people are shocked."
']be Prelident continued to accuse
Congress of "excessive timidity" in
dealing with e!lefgy issues as House
oernocrats renounced his plans to lift
oil price controls, pl!lns that could
make Americans pay an additional
$12.2 billion for petrolewn products
within three years, according to a
cmgressional study.
Reaorts and amusement parks are
keeping a wary, but optimistic eye
toward business as the Memorial Day
weekend ap~roaches.
"What we have to base it on is the
simllsr gas situation in 1974," said

.
J'.l'
r.

- -- Ca_m ping Equipment

e.,an

. ..

disco

dANCER

C:~~~~~~~For dress ing up In style
you 'll want the sexy sandal that bares and adds
lnsiant ·glamour to your most beautlrul dress.
High heel and lois of straps. Priced
beautifully low, too .

AVAILABLE IN BLACK PATENT OR WHITE

.

TAURUS (April 20-lloy 211) New
opportun!lles are stirring that
cbuld help you add to JOUr
resources . BrHka will come
through persons you already
know .
.

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY, 0.

102 E. MAIN

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A SSN .)

"PHONE
675-4539

MIKKI CASTO'S
BALLROOM
DANCE·STUDIO

COME
PARTY
WITH USI

IS SPONSORING A DANa

AGES 18
AND UP

(For Singles- Divorced, Widowed
Parents Without Partners)

"THE SINGLES SPRING FLING"
SUNDAY, MAY 27 FROM 8 P .M. T.IL 12 P .M. AT THE
PT . PLEASANT JNN .DOME •'T HE U.PPER DECK"
Advance Tickets On Sale At
Refreshments
Available.
Dress Clothes
or Dress Jeans.

Fruth'' Pharm•cy (Gall. &amp; pt.
Pleas. ), Jones Boys !Middleport,
0 . ), Pt. Pleasant Inn "Upper Deck",
Mlkkl Casto's Ballroom Dance
Studio.

"Spider Web"
Will Provide
DlscoMuslc
&amp; Songs of the
50'S PIUS
Disco Lights.

••

•

Memorial Day is 11 time for everyone to honor all
servicemen and women who have fought and died
for their country. Let 113 11l11o pa113e and pay
tribute to the memory of those who were dear to 113
and luJVe paned on.

.••

Another good buy

BAKER'S .,
BUDGET

'
"

•CHARCOAL GRILLS
•CHARCOAL LIGHTER
•CHARCOAL

•ICE CREAM FREEZERS

~~~~i~ITWA Home
&amp;ink
For

FOii THOSE WARM DAYS

1'/t:Nit: &amp; COOKOUT REMINDERS

CHARCOAL
HEAVY DUTY

REYNOLDS WRAP

10 lb . Bag.
25Ft.

. •ICE •PAPER CUPS &amp; PLATES
•PLASTIC KNIVES, FORKS &amp; SPOONS

PLENTY OF

FANS

I

IN STOCK

••
•

iACINJ
HOME NATIOfW.

·BANK

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
51!1! US I'IRST AND COMPARE OUR
MATERIAL/IT R.EASONABLE PRICES.

CASH&amp;CARRY
PI\ ICES

Meiga Co;mt ·
People

K'INGSFORD

'·

..

-

PRICES. QUALITY

WI!
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

.

Middleport, 0.
992·2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Slt\lrdiY ·

923 5'. 3rd Ave.

.SHOP
4 DRAWER /'

CHEST

$39

..

.....
•

•

...

PHONE
67~

•
BARBECUE PJ..ANNED
A chicken and sparerlb barbecue
will be held Monday, Ma~ 28, at the
Chester Fire House beginnlnl! at 11:30
a m HOO!ernade ice cream, cake and
pie ~U aiM~ be sold. A parade will be
held at 1:30 followed by a tractor pull .

.'

.•
•

Carrier Needed
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONKEY RUN_
, POMEROY, 0.
CALL.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2156
Make your o~n spending nwney and eam pri:zes.

�10-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , ~ ., !!'~Y, ~y Z4 , I !n9

111-c!IJI!
. Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , u ., Tnursaay, May 24, 1979
TRACY
·

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel OassifiCds
Help wanted

For Rent

BABYSinEft NEEDED. Flo&gt;ible

COUNTltY MOBILE Homo Pork .
Route 33, north ot Pomeroy .
largo loto . Coil 992 - 747~ .

WANT AD

CHARGES
!cloy

2days
3days
&amp;days

15 Words or Under
Cash
Chaf'He
1.00
1.25
1.50
1.90
1,1)
2.25
3.00
3.7S

Each word Olltr l.h@ minimum
15 words is 4 cenLs per word per
day. Ad! running other than conI«'Utive days will be charged at
the 1day rate.
In memory. Card of Thanks
and Obituary: a cenb per word,
S3.oo· minunwn. Cash in advence.

Mobile Home sales and Yard

sales •~ accepted only With
cash with order. 25 cent charge

fur ads earrytng Box Number In
ea.. ol The Sentinel.

The Publi!ber reserves the
rigt)t to edit or reject any acb
deemed objectional. The
PubU.shtr will not be reqKrlSible
ror mort t.han one inco"rnct in-

!trtlon. ·

Phme 992-2U6

hours . ReferencM required .

992-6233,

Wanted to Buy
CHIP

WOOD.

Poles

moK .

construction

Monday

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
lhruFriday
4P.M.
the day before pubUcaUon

SWidoy
4P.M.

Friday afternoon

workers .

Allor Spm coil 992- ~3&gt;1 .
992-3129, or992-5914.
TWO IEOROOM fyrnlshed apt .
992-3129.
992-5434 , or
992-5914.
SlEE~ING

ROOMS

992 -~409

ony time ofter 5 pm .

OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT.
$75.00 month. All utllltioo
paid. Phono992-6009 .
NfW CUSTOM built contemporary hom•. dote to store
and schools. 3 bedroom. 2
baths, iafgo living room. dining room, fomily room. One
car gorogo. A. C.. 0 .W., garbage diopoool , cothedrol coil·
ingt. Malon, WV. No pets inside. Fot appointrMnt call
614-367-7560 after • :30.

OLD. COINS. pocket watches ,
clau rings , wedding bonds,
dlomondo . Gold or ollvor. Call
RoerWamsley , 7.f2-2331 .
WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78
phonovroph rocordo . Coli
992·6370 Of Contact Martin
Furniture.
WANT TO buy: old jo-lry.
Coli 992-5262 or writ• !(ay
Cocil. B7 S. 2nd, Middleport.
OH .

cauliflower, bruuels sprouts ,
head lettuce . .tomatoes, and
~ Iorge •election of bedding an:
nuals. Pots of floW•n . and
hanging bask•ts.. Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cl•lond, Racine.

HANGING BASKETS, oil kinds.
Bedding plant• . blooming.
Vegetable plants . all ready to
go, potted. s,. Don Stobart,
Rt . 2, Racine , OhiO.
•
VERMEER BALER Modo I 605 C.
Mok.. I:SOC lb. bolo. Evenings
Phono 742·2877 or742-2152 .
TRUCKS. 2 ton 1973 and 11J,
ton 1970. Both with 12 ft .
boxes . Phone 992-6206 or
992-6173.

For Sale
Yard Sale

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION of
flowers for Memoria I Day .
Foye'a Flower Shop, n•xt to
Firestone Stor•, Middleport . 9
am'to8pm.

YARD SALE Thursday and Friday, Moy 24 and 25. 9 to 5.
Nice polyester drenes .
especially pr.. teen sitn.
Books , bottles , plantt, and
planters. 2 mil" north of
Ch.. ter, Ohio on the Sum"er
Rd. Co. Rd. 36 at Coil Flndli"ll
ret idence. If rain. sale to be
held following wHk·, watch
for tale signa.

WESTERN BOOTS from Acmo

LAriDMA~K
1

Phone H2·2111
Ask For
CHARLES BUSH
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
· PhoneH2·2181

and Tony Lama for work or
dr.. s. We have a large selection of boots on hand for men
and ladies at Mountain .
Leather a"d General Store.
Services Offered
104-106 W, Union St . . Athens .
OH . Monday thru Soturdoy. WATER AND misc. houling.
-4 FAMILY gor oge 101~.
10-5:30. 5~-5.178 .
Wedn..day , May 23 to ? .
Call992-5858.·
Condor St.. Pomeroy 9 til · Zenith stereo, .t-speed record
NOW HAULING llmostone in
dark .
playor with opoal&lt;ors, $30. Ail
Middleport-Poemroy area.
in good condition. s.. at 256
odi8.0522.052402DINETIE SET,
Call for free estimate.
So. Fourth, Avo .. Middleport .
table and 6 chairs, maple cof367-7101.
foo lablo and matching ond 1973 CHEVY NOVA 3:10 4·
PAINTING AND sandblosting.
tables. Good condition. Phono speed, p.b. , bucket seota,
FrH •stimat••· Coll9.f9-2686.
992·3079.
aluminum wh. .la, excellent
TREE TRIMMING and Removal .
condition, new tires, coli
742-3167 ar742·2573.
985-:JSoll aftor 5 pm.

m

Notices
GUN SHOOT. EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
-LY.
STANS BARGAINLAND and
Gr~ery on State Route 12..
and County · Rood 5 will be
sponsoring a Flea Market
ev•ry Sunday until further
notic•. Everyone welcome. $3
to
up. s.. you all Sunday.
We are open 7 days a week .

••t

Lost and

Found

LOST: MALE Irish Setter. Approx. 2 yrt. old. Area of
Boshan on Bathon Rd .
Children 's pet. Reward.
949-2466.
LOST DOG white with tan

Auto Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21.000 miloo, lully oquippod,
air , w•nch, etc. , exc.llent
condition. 992-2121 .
11174 GMC JIMMY. P.B., P.S.,
A.C.. 2-whool drivo. $1725.
Coli 992-;1580.

FORO F· I:SO. 4•• . po, pb,
auto .,
topper .
Phone
985--1339.

markings, goes by the name
1977 2 door Malibu, 45,000
N•mo . Phon• 992 -5651
Jerome Cool!; , PomerOy CliHs . mil... A-I condition $2800.
Apt. Apt. 20 Un io" Ave. S.. ot 605 Wool Main St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
1976 DOOGE CHARGER, P5,
PB, air conditioning, radio,
HelpW•nted
vinyl top. 23,000 mil... S3000.
IMMEDIATE
OPENING . Coli 992-6055.
Laboratory Technician, 3-11
1977 CAMARO. Rally Sport.
shift. E&gt;J&gt;Orlonced MLT (A5CP) air, auto., loaded. 992-6681
or equivalent. E•cellent salary boforo 5 pm "'992-3133 oftor
ond lringo benefits. Shift dlf- 5pm.
fere"talf. Contact: Pertonnel
Office , Pleasant Volley 1970 DODGE DART. . $300.
Hospilal, Valley Drive, Point 992-5147.
Pleotant. WV ·\ 25550. Phone 1977 F250 Ford truck. heavy
304-675-43ol0. An Equal 0p, duty, P.l., P.S.. low mlloogo,
pcrtunlty Employer.
10 ply tlr... " WANTED. SAWYER to work at spare ~"d snow tlrft and
Point Volley Polloi, ~ottown . wliMI1 , 4-speed, mint condl·
256-6363 betwoen 7 ,and 5pm. tlon . Regular gos . S.. at
larry's Grocery, Syrocuse or
or 886-8840 after 5.
coli 992·5324 .
WANTED , LIFEGUARDS.
ROYAl OAK PAIII&lt; contact 1975 XL 2:10 Hondo. S5CJ9 or
bet toHor, 992-7084.
Horoce t&lt;arr, 985-3341 .
SOMEONE to stay with ton 1969 CAMARO 307 onglne, 4 .
ond Invalid husband till I go to oJ)Oed. Co11992-5175.
hoopltol and bock 992-3254.

T-.

PUBLIC
AUCTION
(FARM SALE)
3MILES NORTH OF BARTLEn,OHIO
T1ke St. Rt. 555 north oot of Bortlott toword Cllelterhlll
- turn on first rood !Co. Rd. 2G6l. far 2 miles. or 3 miles
southwat of Dolt, Ohio on Co. Rd. 2N to ,.,. Rllpft .
Glge Forms. '
FARM MACHINERY, TRUCKS, 5 FARM TRAC·
TORS, WELDING EQUIPMENT, ETC. :

I

\

l

.''

allent location for many difforont typos buolno11. Phone

&gt;1-46-3258.
1967 23 Foat Airstream
Troilor. Phonol-304·~75-3098 .

MF 175 TRACTOII 2200 hours.
MF 3 pt. 16 Inch 3 bottom
plows. New Holland Mower.
1976 Ford F 250 pickup. Phono
992-2877 aftor SJ9 p.m .

FOil SA.LE. utllily bed for throe
quarter ton truck , also will do
cvttOm baling. MedlunJ tlze
bolo, contact 985-3846 .

1977 KAWASAKI 400 Rood
Bike, bcellent Condition.
$1.000. Phono 992-3&gt;153 "'
992:2752.
1970 OIAMPION 12x60 i
bedroom ,
appllanc•s .
bluldlng. Situated on nice
ron ted lot. Phono 992· 7235
after 5 p.m.
NEW 30 GALLON GAS WATER
HEATER for oalo. Still In
original carton. Contact
Carolyn Grueser, phone
992-3853.
IN COUNTitY 5 room house
and both plus daublo gorogo
with workonop In ond ·of
houoe. Corpetod, drilled wolf
and 5 of ground with
fenced In pasture located
ol&gt;out half milo from Raclno
Darn on country rood . Phono
247·3862 onytlmo.
I977 I&lt;Z 7:10 KAWASAKI
motorcycle With wlndiammer
2.400 mil ... Phone 992-3&gt;153.
A.M.F. ~OTOTILLER . 3 and hoff
H.P. Like n•w. Phone
985-4175.
VERY LAIIGE wolf built dog
houoo. Must . soil . $45 .

614-~62-1!.

SATURDAY, MAY 26 AT 11 O'CLOCK A.M.

)I

15 FT. LOWE LINE Aluminum
boss boat. 20 HP, More .. stick
lloorlng, fully oqulppod with
trol!or. Phono985·.c339.
FOil SALE, 22,cpo sq. ft . ond
10,400 sq. ft. undor loooo, ex·

OAK ICE box. Maplo bedroom
auite with twin beds. luggy
horno11. ox yoko. H'R 32
plotof. 949-2531 ovonlngo.
USED MA '/TAG wooh.r ond
dryer . Small Hotpolnt
rolrpotor. 992-53:1.4 .
DINETTE SIT, IOblo and 6
chain. Maple coffM tabl• and
motchl"ll ond tobloo. Good
cOfldltion. Phorlo 992-3079.
24 FOOT ALL olumlnum pontoon boot, :SO hp ·motor. 15ft.
boll boat, Mlnkoto trolling
motor. 50 tl.p. Mercury motor.
14 ft. Runobout , 35 hp motor.
All roocly for · tho river. Try
th.m · out . Robert Hill.
949-2013.

(

WARDS PAINTING, inferior ,
exterior, resid•"tlol, commer·
clal, 30 yeah •xperlence,
guaranteed work .' Phone
7,.2-2671. Harrisonvme, Ohio.

ADD ONS AND remodeling
gu1ter work. down spouts .
Some concrete work , walks
and
driveways
(free
fttlmot•). V. C. Young,
Racine, Ohio, 949-274B.
ROOM , BOARD AND LAUNDR·Y for 2 elderly pertons.
S175 month eacl1. Pho"e
992·6022.
.

WILL DO HOUSE WORK and
cloonlng. Phono985-3861.
WILL DO roofing, pointing,
gutter;"remodeling, plumbing,
electrlc;al and general repair.
Fr. . estimot•s. Call985-.. 121 .

GiveAway
FLUFFY Kittens. varioui colora, ami• and f•mole . Phone
742-2833 .

FIVE KITIENS, 6 to 7 wooko
old. 4 calico, I tlgor. 992-7680.
Humane Society.
TWO CATS. I calico and I
tiger. All female. out'!g.
Humane Society 992-7680.
PUPPIES, 2 to 4 months old. 1·9
weks old. 1 adult Dachshund
type, chocolate brown. 2
years old, female, real gentle.
Human• Society. 992-7853.
HEALTHY B wook old klttono. t
calico. Others blue and whit•.
Humano Society, 992-2592.

Mobile Homes Sale's
1965 General. 60x12, 2 bdr.
1970 Skylino, 121&lt;65 , ~ br.
1970 Sylva, 60xl2, 2 bdr.
1970Cootlo, 60xl2, 2 bdr. ·
1973 Nobility, 12x60, 2 br.
1973 Ridgewood, 70&gt;14, 3 bdr.
· 1973 Nas11ua, 60x12, 2 bdr .
1973 Gov•rnor, 60x12, 2 br.
1974 Morkllno, :SOx12, 2 br .
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANT. WV.
675-4424
MIDDLEPORT. ONIO for loaoo
11 .600 sq. ft. floor opoco, 'two
loading docks. will romodol to
au it tenant. Phone .f46.3258.

Real Estate for Sale

3'/t acres In Pom•roy. SEclud3020 John Deere tractor; J .O. 56Jwheel rake; J .D. No.
.:t wooded area on top of hill.
5 mowl"ll machine; J .D. 10ft. portable disc; J . D. 3116
Overlooks river. Water, eiiiC·
plows; bush hog; 8N Ford tractor ; Allis Chalmers
trlc available. 992· 3886.
manure spreader O«l bu . ); 444 International tractor
2001 end loader; Allis Chalmers mower; Allis ·
REAL ESTATE Loons. Purchase
Chalmers front end loader; International grain dtlll; 3
and refinance. 30 year terms,
VA. No monoy down (eliglblo
pt. seed••r; • fl. brush hov; hay wagon; 2 wheeled
trailer; ofd cul.tlpackt!r; International TO &lt;45 hay baler;
vetera"s) . .FHA · As low 01 3 ·
3 pt. post hole dfll\ler; 197B Massey ferguson 255 diHel
tHREE FARM tractors . ' per ~t down (non-v•terans).
tractor, llkt! new only 18 hn. 06.9 • 28 tires); 1971 brush
troland Mortgage Co .. n E.
Aoooclotod Equipment. Call
hog, used onct!, 3 pt.; Hawk Bill balt!r (round bales
State, Athono. 614·592-3051 .
oltorSpm, 992-5$47.
from 300 to 1500 lbs.) good; I r&lt;YW Lundell lnsulMODERN THREE bedroom
choppt!r, good; N..., . Holland 3 pt. 7 ft. mowing
2A PIGS, 7 - · old. Thomas
11ou•• ·
full . bo•ement,
Soyro.
Groat
lond,
Ohio.
machlnt!; 18 fl. tandem trailer (8.25·20 tires) w/elec.
fireplace, fully carpeted, cenPhone
743-2~91
.
.
brakes on both axles; 1969 F750 Ford 2 ton truck with
tral. air, enclosed sun porch,
air axii!S, t!lc. HO 16ft. twin hOlst be&lt;! (Neakhfde); ·IN2
RUTLAND
HARDWARE .
located on 6 '.4 acres on CR 28,
Reo HD tandem tractor w -2200 hrs., good rUbber, extra
Rutland. Ohio. 2 .t-o down
approx. 3 mil .. from Rcx:IM. .If
· good (If not sold .before day of salt!) ; commercial 12
from Post OHico. 742-2255.
lnter"htd contact Larry Wolfe
Gravely 50 ln. rotary mower, 30 ln. brush hog, blade,
New and used cash registers
949·2836 wookendo ond after
and 2 sulkeys; Farmall Cub tractor w ·5 fl. rotary
and calculators. Paper and
Sevenlngs.
mower, also cutter bar mower, cultlvalors. braking
oupplloo. Mortln-Sonour point
TWO STOIIY 3 bedroom house.
blade tractor w-HYD lift (to be sotd as one unit);
Pro llno SI. IO go .. 1200 col·
100 ·x 1.50 ft. lot. Excellent
ge 1'h ton truck w-hOist, steel rack &amp; grain bed;
Of'l , 2 gal. can e•terlar flar
location with river view .
horse drawn rake; old nay tedder; old corn sheller; 150
lato. houH point $13.00.
$12,000. Shown ·by. oppolnt;
bbl steel tank; gas portablt! water pump) I burr stone
whlto only. «&lt;gal. goo wotor
mont. 992-2082 or 742·2328.
mill; 2 burr steel mill; 2 r&lt;YW corn planter ; Dynamark
heator, gfos, lined, 5 roar
l ·:ld riding lawn mower, t!XIra good; Homt!lllt! chain
Warranty ,
tale
priced ,
BY OWNER 3 or 4 bedroom
saw w ·new bar &amp;. chain; etc.
,
$119.95. M.T.D. 1-n mQWor,
houoo. Woll Ia woll carpot, oil
w•LDING EQUIP, TOOL$, ETC. :
3* hp 27' cut, oalo prlco,
appllancfl , fully Insulated,
1 ton Ford welding ruck; portable 200 amp welder;
Sl25. Also gQrdoflouppU...
full botement. Large corner
acetylene welding outfit Elec. planer; elec . IInder;
lot in Mason , na-5302. .
elec. saw; elec. router; 2 spray pump lor PTO; WOOd
splfHer; 2 homemade trailers w-lactory ax fa; pipe
TH~EE
IIEDROOM HOUSE, ·
dies; bell dies; wrenches; wood wcrklng tools; pipe
woodburning stove, gas fur- •
noc'e, 3 ocr... on Racine ltural
wrencllel; etec. drills; lot hand tools; old blacksmith
tools; Suburban coat &amp;. WOOd stove &amp; blower; lire
Route,
$20 ,000.
Phono
949-2766.
bricks; used bricks; old church seats; old ch1lrs; old
cupboards; pla,n ed walnut lumber, 12 yrs. old; Nddles,
HeMiquarters for
lOT IN .Pomeroy with 12K65
bridles, halters, old harness, and many other Items not
Schult trailer, city water. 3
Motpolnt and
listed.
bedroom, air condition. Will
Nothing s - n before cloy of .. re. Lunch on premfHS.
General Electric
Mil
, lr~Jil•r teparot•. Phone
Torma - cosh or chock w -poslllve I 0 day of sale. Not
Appliances
992-7491 oftor 530p.m.
responsible tor accidents.
5.75 ACRES af wooded land
OWNERSlocated 2 miles from Tuppert
II
PJains, clot• by Fqrct.d Run
MR. and MRS. RALPH GAGE
JIC~ W. C.,...Y
, 'Stare Park . All utilities
Mgr.
bvoiloble. price $6900 , willn ~
AUCtiOIIHr-alfl Jines, Phone 557·3411 or 5S7-31i3
. P'ltano 992·2111
.
to tolk about price. Call
667-3932.
.

f::'•

POMEROY
LINDMARK

SALE PRICES

---. - - - -

---~--'

FOUR BEDROOM home, full
basement . Loco tedin Autlqnd .
v~ ac re . carpeting, draperies
;ncl uded . 742·2754 .
NEW CU:iTOM buill cont•m·
porory home . Clot• to store
and tchools. 3 bedroom•. 2
boths. large living room , dining room . family room .onecor
gorago. A.C.. D.W.. gorbogo
disposal, cath.dral c•ilings.
Mason, WV. No pets inside.
For
appolntm•nt
colt
614-367· 7560 afer 4:30.
MODERN THREE bedroom lotol
'electric home . Situated on
iorgo lot . 742-2047.
VUY NICE 3 bedroom hi&gt;uoo
with fiMiahed bosem•nt and
workshop.
Attractively
decorated. All appllanc" in-·
eluded. Rustle Hills, Syrocuse.
992-2257 or 949-2014.

Busin~ss

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

BISSFI l
SIDING CO.

c•nutoslc !WOOd fiber)
· Thormollnsufltion
Save 30 pet. to 5G pet.
· on hMtlng cost
Experlenco •ild
fully lnsu•ecl
f';reeEit.
cin 992-2772
5·17· 1 mo.

Call for a Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2101 or
. 949· 2160. No .s~ndav
calls.
~ - ~ · I mo.

Real Estate Loans

All Across

Ameri~a

25 Acres $49,9001
beautiful country home,
2 bedrooms, bath, large
living room, beautiful
kitchen , Jt.. basement,
forced air heat, lots of
shade trees, 5 acres
tillable, I mile from
Chesler, S miles from
Pomeroy .
EXTRA NICE 2
bedroom house, 469
Fisher Street, S26.000. 1
Must be seen to be
appreciated .
Nice
garden .
C1ll Bill Stewart ·
374-7311
Marietta, 0 .

949-2862-949-2160

592·3051

~ - S · tf c

3-7 ·1 mo . (Pd.)..J.

J&amp;R OIL

co.....

OIL

Rlcine, 0 .
Whofeslfe, Distributors
for
fine
Pennzoll
lubrlcltfon products,

.

''

Industrial Chemical
Supplies. In addition to
most malor brands of
motor oil.

A good

with no layoffs. Two
people or family can
easily operate II. This is .

d111on

•nd windows.

perience. Free estlm•t•s.

C~ill

Tom M•sklns '4f-2160.

Call: 949·2818
or 949-2150

.

COUNTRY HOME
Nice modern kitchen,
new bath, 3 bedrooms,
oil furnace, full base- ·
ment, garden, and large
yard. Only 523.500 .
NEW LISTING - Nice
zoned building lot in

AthensAr..
1f7-2745

or 7f7-'.ii7S2
1-- ·pd.

N · Pd.

BOB'S GENERAL

PIANO
TUNING

subdivison,

CONTRACTING ·

••·Yr. Experience

near Chester .
NEW LISTING 7
room frame · home
building wtlh restroom,
city water, and nice
level lot on Main St.,
Rutland . Ideal for con·

eNEWHOMES
e ROOM AOOITIONS
eROOFfNG
eVINYL SIOING
eGUTTER &amp; SOFFIT

lANE DANIElS
Specialist In· Home and
School Plano Tuning
and Repairing. ·Serving
Alhens, Mel!!•· G1flli &amp;
VInton counties, also
Mason &amp; Jockson counties in W.Va.
Ph. 992-2581' or 992-2082
4-10-1 mo.

tractor or accountant.

BUSINESS LOCATION
- Building with 2~96 sq.
11. on first floor. Now
has antique furniture

store.

POMEROY
3
bedroom home above all
· flOods with view of lhe
river. Has bath and all
city utilities, nat. gas
furnace .
SYRACUSE - 6 room·
and bath, nat. gas fur·
nace and 1.17 acres Of
nice land. I mmedlate
I

Just Arrived

ROSE

BUSHES

..

Gooel Selection

SALE PRICES

Housing
Headquarters

Jack w . Carsey.
Mgr ;
,.. • • Phone 992·2181

'

'

Phone 992-6323
Frtf Estimates
5-20·1 mo.-pd.

.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby arid Alan Sontag

992-6011

Jack's Septic
Tank SeiVice
Ch•sler,O.
5-6·1 mo. pd.

Bo• 3

VERY GENTLE Quarter Horae.
Western parade saddle.
Phone 698-3290.

LEO MORRIS Trucking. Will do
lime and fertlllter hauling ond
spreading, Also limestone and
grovel hauling . 742-2455 .
SALES AND SERVICE on
Howard Rotavaton and V
chisel plows. leo Morris.
742-2455.

Downing-Childs Agency
NEW LISTING - Mlcf
dleporl, 2 story .brick, 5
bedrooms , 2 baths,
family room , . formal
dining, basement,lots Of
features. 1 113 acres.
$28,900.
NE.W LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 11h story frame,
2 bedrooms, bath, por-·
ches , many,
many
fealuros here. Asking
i ust $25,000, HOME
WARRANTEE .
MIDDLEPORT .:_ Love·
ly 2 slory frame, 3
bedrooms, very large
family room; this home
has so many features
you will have to see it.
$37,500.
2 acres
1J UST LOOK in new addition, owners
transferred have to sell ..
All utilities . $6,000.
5 POINTS AREA - 3
· bedrooms, living room,
dining, fully equipped
kitt:hen, central afr,
drapes and rods, about
7 years Old, 2 large ·
.level lots. S29, 100.
MIDDLEPORT 2
family.
1 has 3
'bedrooms, bath, I has I
bedroom , bath . Good lno'ome, corner lot .
$13,000.
TOO MUCH HOUSE
FOR
YOU
NOW?
Perhaps you'd be happier In 1 smo ller home.
We have fomllles who
NEED a larger house ...
and you might be sur·
prfsed 11 whit they ' ll
pay f.o r yoursr See us
about selling ... buying
... or oxcha.n glng.
REALTORS
Henry E . Clelond Jr .
· H...-y E . Clot1nd Sr •
992-2259
99H191

INSURANCE- REAL ESTATE
RACINE - Beautiful large 13 room home you will
be proud of. Completely remOdeled. 4 bedrooms, 3
complete baths. Living room, family room, com plete kitchen, formal dining room, workshop,
garage. You·~e gol to see this home to appreciate $53,500.00.
SYRACUSE - 3'12 years old, nice neighborhOOd, 3
bedrooms, I bath, living room, dining room, eat-in
kitchen, garage, patio on large lot. Full basement S39,ooo.oo.
MINI FARM, LANGSVILLE - Lookl"ll lor peace
and quiet In the country , not too big or not too small,
this Is II. 20 acres of green rolling land with a well
stocked pond. 6 room and bath home. fullv Insulated
· and aluminum siding. Laundry and furnace In ba5!'·
ment. GOOd well water. $39,900. ·
MIDDLI!PDRT - Two homes far the price of one on
a large· corner lot overlooking the river. Both
presently rented for $.495.00 a month Income. A g00c1
location. A good Investment. Sl5,ooo.oo.
MIDDLEPORT Well built older home, 3
bedroom, 1'12 bath, hardwood floors. out of high
water. priced to sell $19,500.00.
POMEROY - Large 4 bedrooms, two bath, can be
one home or two apartments. On corner lot with
chalnllnk fence. Price reduced, owner moved out of
town and wants to 11111 now, $17,500.00. ·
SPI!CIAL -IN A CLASS BY ITSELF
RACINE- Only 4 miles from the new Ravenswood
bridge . Just 5 minutes from 1·77 when completed . .
Beautiful country estae with charming colonial
hOme on 32 acres of gently· rolling land, and a
peaceful 3 acre lake . woll stocked with bass. Over
~ sq. ft. of living area Including 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, complete .kitchen wllh 24 II. of cabiMts, a 30
fl. living· room, lull basemt!nt with central heat and
air conditioning, OWn gas well, own watt!r W@lf, pius
an exercise rOQm With over $4500 new equipment.
Plus a b1rn thiills really a gymnasium. Lof Is complelely fenced with chain link . This estate Is for you
who make dreams a realty . No drt!amers ony,
please. Call .for your apolntr:nent tOd_ay. $2:10,000.00.

DOWNING-CHILDS
ROONEY, BROKER

MRS. DRIFT HAS WORKED LIKE II, .
DOG, SUPPORTti&lt;I"EM ... BUT S HE 5
i!EEN SICK FOR A MONTH ... H"'· "' " '
SOMEBODY MUSf HI\VE B~EN
HELPtN' OUT ...

LI'51EN TO TH' Blc&lt; LUG ... IS
HE I&lt;IDDI~ '? NEVER WORKS --- ·,
AND HE CAllS THAT SUCCESS .. •

EXPERIENCED

Radlatofl,--.-...
Service

+

Smith Nel•
Mcms, Inc:.
Ph. 992·2174

Pc;tmerov

S&amp;G'
DEEP STEAM
CARPET

.

BILL, B.R. MGR.

PHONE 992-2342
EVE. 992-2449
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''

CLEANING
Fre,Estlmate
Contact: Gene Smith
ur Mike Grate
at Rutland Furniture Co.
. 742-2211
Alter 5 P.M., 992....,9
or 742·2174

1

a.oT .,.HAT

. EMPL.O~E MOTIVATION ~

Gange
:v, mile off Rt. .7 by-pass .
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland:
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

Jl.EpO~ DoNE,~~

:t CAN',. GST AN-f OF
,.,_.e .S'EC.ftE1"AAIE$
TO .,-vpe ,,. uP.- .

•

'

,

•
•'

••

IIAADFORD, Auc!lon-r. com.
ploto Service. Phon• 949-2487
or 9.f9-2000. Racine, Ohio,
Crill BrodiO&lt;'d.ELWOOD BOWEIIS REPAIR Sweeper•. tocnters , Irons, al l
.•mall apPIIanc.. . l~n moer ,
next to State Highway Garcge
,on Routo 7, 985-3825.
SEWING MACHINE Ropolro.
service, all maket, 992·2284.
Tho Fabric Shop, Pom.roy .
Authorized Singer Sal" and ·
Service. Weskarpe" Sclhors.
EXCAVATING. dozor. loodor
and backhoe work ; dump 1 ,
trucks cind lo-boyt for hire,
will houl 1111 dirt , top ooil.
llmHtono and grovof . Call Bob
or Rogor Joffon, day pllono
992-7089 ,
night
phono
992-3525 or 992·5232.
. EXCAVATING .
dozer .
bockho. ond dltch.r . Chorloo
~. Hotfiold. Block Hoe Sorvlco.
Rutland , Ohio. Pono 742·20&lt;11. '

BARNEY

PAW GOT A JOB ONE
TIME, BUT THEY
FIRED HIM AFTER

WHAT
FER?

HE NEVER SHOWED UP
FER TWO WEEKS

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been ca"ceUtd1 lost your
operators llctns•?
Phone
992-2143.
E-C ELECTRICAL Conlroctor
servtng Ohio Valley region ,
Six dayt a w.-, 2~ hours ••r·
· vice. Emergency calls. Call
882-2952 or 882-:1454.
HOWE~Y AND MARTIN Excavating, septic •yatems,
dazor, backhoe. Rt. 143.
Phono 1 (614)698-7331 .

IN. . STOCK

for

lmmedloio

Mvery: various slz. . of pool
kltt. Do-lt· yourMif o.- let us
Install for you. D. Bumao~ner
SoiH, Inc. 992-5724 .

GRAVELY TRACTORS ood
Equipment. Experlenc.ct servic•. 20ot Condor, Pomeroy,
Ohio. 992-2975.
El&lt;TERIOR PAINTING, houpr roofs. Minar carpentry
work, Reoaonablt rat. .. FrM
fttlma'"'· Phone 992-6309 or
742·2910.

.'

THURSDAY, MAY 24, 1979
7:00-C ross -Wits 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13 ; News 10; Love
American Style 15 ; Carol Burnett 17 ; Di ck Cavett 20; Wild
Wild World of Animals 33.
7:30-{)()-Hizzonner 3,15; Mork &amp; ·
Mindy 6.13; Waltons 8,10; Nova
20.33; Movie " That Touch of
Mink " 17 .
8: 311-PIIot "Car' Wash " 3, 15; Pilot
" Young Guy Christian" 6,13 .
9 :00--Qulncy 3, 15; Barney Miller 13;
Cannes Film Festival Awards 6;
Hawaii Flve-0 B, 10 Views of .Asia
20,33.
9:30-Carter Country 13 ; IO :DOAian King 13; Barnaby Jones
8,1 0; News 20; Footste~s 33.
10 :30-Comma nder s 17 ; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20 ; Area
Showcase 33 .
11 :DO-News 3, 6,11,10,13,15; Best of
Groucho 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 : 311-Johnny Carson 3, 15 ; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; NBA Play-0118, 10;
ABC News 33; Movie "Or .
Terror's HotJse of Horrors" 17.
12 :40- Mannll
6, 13 ;
1:00Tomorrow J; News 15.
1 · JO-Movl e · "Tho Sword of
' Damascus" 17; 1:50-News 13;
3:30-News 17; 3:50-&lt;lpen Up
17.

open in third seat with a sort
of psychic lead directing'
diamond bid.
North started for trouble
when he made an unusual
takeout double. East made a
sensible redouble. South bid
one heart. North tried two
clubs. South rebid correctly
to two hearts. He couldn't
Loll about that North distribution.
North passed. After all he
did have ac&amp;-jack of hearts
and East doubled. He had
his values .
West was most unhappy,
but could find no place to go
and passed, as did North.
Now .West got of! to the
unfortunate lead of a diamond . At this point South
could make two hearts , but
South managed to produce a
total misplay.
AI trick two he led a heart
to dummy's jack . East won
and · led a heart back. We
won't give the rest of the
play except to say that South
continued to play give away
and held himself to five
tricks for 800 ill the bucket
and about as bad a score as
possible.

~'61'4'

-Hysell

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com·
plete Service. Phone 992-2,.78.

.

----

.

Television
Vie-wing

FRfDAY,MAY25,1979
5:4()-.World at Large 17; 5:4sFarm Report 13; s:50-PTL Club
NORm
13;
5: 5s-Summer Semester 10 .
+ K 10 8 5
6:D0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club IS;
• AJ
6:10-News 17 ; 6 :2s-Socleflesln
Transition 10.
+AQJllll
6:311-Dragnet 17; 6:4s-.-Mornlng
WEST
EAST
Report 3; 6:50-GOod Morning,
+843
+AQ2
West VIrginia 13; ~:55-Chuck
•s
•KQess
White Reports 10 ; News 13.
+ KJ965 • 732
7:00--Today 3,15 ; Good Morning
+ K 9 62
+ 108
Amerlca6, 13 ; Friday Morning 8;
SOUTH
Schoolles
10; Three Stooges• J 97
Little Rascals 17 ; 7:1$-Weather
•107432
33 .
•AQ10B4
7:311-Famlly Affair 10; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You 33.
Vulnerable: Both
8 :00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave II
Dealer: East
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33;
8:30--Romper Room 17 .
Weot Nortb East . Soutb
9· 00--Bob Braun 3; Emergency One
p...,. p...,.
· 6; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Hogan's
It
Redbl. , .
Dbl.
Heroes 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Pus 2+
p...,. 2•
Show 17 .
Pus Pllll8 Obi. Pass
9 : 30- Brady Bunch B; Hogan' s
Pass Pass
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17 .
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Opening lead : 6
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10;
Dating Game 13 ; Movie "The
McCon·nell Story" 17 .
10:311-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000
Pyramid 13 ; Whew I B, 10; 10 :5sBy Oswald Jacoby
CBS News B; Houllt Call 10.
aDd Alan Sontag
11 :00--High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne&amp;.
Shirley~. 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Normal results for the
(~EWSPA~R ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Elec . Co. 20.
charity game wlll find North
1
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
playing In two or three clubs
(Do you have a question for
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St .
and probably corning up the experts? Write " Ask the
20,33 .
with nine tricks. Some East- Experts," care of this newspa~
12:00--Newscenter 3; News 6,10;
West pairs will get Into the per. Individual questions will
bidding and wind up getting be Bl)swered ff accompanied
Password 15; Young &amp; the
set at . some red-suit con- by s tampBd, self-addressed
Restless B; Midday Magazine 13;
tract.
12:20-Movle "Strangers on a
envelopes. The most Interest~
The bidding In the box In(/ questions will be used In
Train" 17.
·
~ows whal happened when
this column and will receive
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
one Weal player · elected to cople5 of JACOBY MODERN.)
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33; Not
For Women Only 15 .. ·
1:oo-Days of Our Llvel3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; News 8; Young &amp;.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
the Restless 10; I :30-As The
· World Turns 8, 10.
ACROSS
t3 PB!ISOver
2:00--Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live
1 With I Down,
meal
6, 13 ; 3 : 00- General Hospital
Gibson Girl's 44 Principle
6.13; Lilias Yova &amp; You 20; Inattribute
45ltsy-bitsy
finity Factory 17; Studio See 33.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker ' s Wild 10;
8 In motion
DOWN
Fllntstones 17; Over Easy 20;
11 Sacred site 1 See I Across
Washington Week In Review 33.
12 Captain
Islamic deity
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Nemo's
3 Early
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
creator
scripture
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Yesterday'a Alllwer
13 Ballot
t Rested
Mike Douglas 13; Space Giants
14 Fiat
5 Foot lever 20 Minuscule
31 Perfwne
17 .
15 Sidekick
8 Forestall
brook
32 Buy and sell 4:311-Bewltched 3; Gilligan's Is.
16 Scottish
7 But: Lat.
23 Soft drink
:13 American
8,11; Lucy Show 15.
5:00--1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly
COUnty
8 Three days Z4 Near East
poet
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogors'
18 German
·of prayer
expert
37 Unearthly
Neighborhood 20,33; Six Million
article
9 Make
25 Brando flhn 31 Never, In
Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15;19 - il ( busy)
angry
21 Oriental
. Bavaria
1 Dreani of Jeannie 17.
21' French
10 Lose groWld 27 Engagement 41 Neckline
.5:30-Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
number
17 Chatter
28 Pigeon sound
shape
Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lee. Co. 20;
ZZType
Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Z3 Elam's
Couple IS; Lucy Show 17; Doctor
capital
Who 33.
6:00--News 3,B,IO,I3,15; STudio See
:U Woman's
33 ; Andy Grllflfh 17; Villa Alegre
name ·
20.
%'1 Heavenly
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC Nt&gt;ws 13;
sight
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Z8 The McCoy
Over Easy 20,33 .
7: 00-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed
29Capeln
Game ·6,13; Sha Na Na 8; Ne~s
Mails.
10 ; Love American Style 15;
30 Fool
Carol Burnetl17; Dick Cavett 20;
31 Musical
Watch Your Mouth 33 .
\
7: JO-Hee Haw Honeys 3;; $1.98
work
Beauty Show 6; F amlly Feud
34 Harness
B.IO; SIOO,OOO Name That Tune
piece
13 ; Pop Goes the Country 15;
35Camper's
Sanford &amp; Son 111 MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33.
· item
i:OO- Ditf'rent
STrokes . 3,15;
3e Regret
Welcome Back Kotler 6,13;
38Goddesa
Incredible
Hulk
8,10;
of peace
Washington Week In Review
to Dodge
20,33; Movie "Invasion of the
Body Snafchers"l7; 8:30-Hello,
· CZ Tiny finch
Larry 3, 15 ; Wall Streel Week
20.33.
9:oo-Rockford Flies 3,15; Movie
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
"Hot Rod " 6,13 ; Dukes ot
AXYDLBAAXR
Hazzard 8, 10; Royal Heritage 20;
Ia L 0 N G F E L L 0 W.
Money, News &amp; VIews 33.
10: 00-News 20; P-allas 8,10; Night
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's X for the two O's, elc. Single letters.
Gallery 17.
apostrophes, the length and formatio n of the wo rds ore all
10: 3D-Baseba.ll 17; Consumer
hints. Each day the code lett ers are dllferen l.
Survival -Kit 20; Cat 33 .
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Fawlty
CRYPTOQUOTES
Towers 20; Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33.
11 : 3()-- Johnny Carson 3,15; Soap
IWYIDW
PXPODDG
AYUW
6,13; ABC News 33; Movie-" Tilt
Incredible Two-Headed TranRLUAD .G
QYVJLVQWT
ZBOZ
splant" 10; 12:DO-Juke-Box 8;
Monty Python's Flying Clrcus33.
Z BW L U
' I U W - 12:0$-Baretta 6, 13 ; l:f:".!!-Movle
VILVLYVX
"O.S. S. 117" B; I :oo-Midnlght
Special 3.15; ·Movie "Dracul.a vs.
QLYPX
ZBOV
t BWG
.ZB0 Z
Frankenstein " 10; Movie "Thti
Last Grenade" 17 .
ZU p W. W Y U C .W
X 0 VZ0 G0 V 0
1: 1$-News 13; 2:30-News 3; 3 :DOYeslerday's Cryptoqaole: MOST OF THE HAPPINESS IN
Movle "Flowing Gold" 3; Movie
TIUS WORLD. &lt;X&gt;NSISTS IN POSSESSiliG WHAT OTHERS
"One Detlre" 17;
CAN 'T GET.-JOSH BIWNGS

·----

4 -JO·tfc

608 E .
MAIN
PnMFROV.O.

Bad situation made worse

4231 mo. !Pd. ) _

-

CODNER S CAMPERS on Rainbow Rldgo wllh top of tho
lln._Barth:-Sw!u Colony Jayco - Motor Hom" to Toppers, occ"sori" and friendly
service, For dlrec;tlons call
614-843-3011 .

I X X)I"

.

•New Home
*Add ons
* RemQidings
*Free estimates

All

work t••nntetd. 2CI ve.rs ••·

"[I]-(

(Answers tomorrow)

maintenance, new ana rtPilr.

Storm

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by !he above cartoon.

Jumbles: FOIST THYME ANYHOW GASKET
Yesterdays 1 Answer: Migh t be dropped when someone's manners .
are bad-1;11NTS ·
Thuroday, May :U
·

All types roofing, tuHers 1rttl
dGwnspouts. AU ty~s ltomo

Matorcraft, Fram, lnd

self employed venture,

Baum's

Ohio Valley Roofing
and .
Home Mainte!llnce

OPENING SALE

216 E. Second Stroot

· your chance.

Prlntanswerhare :

C. R. MASH
VJNn &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

.

-w;~!.~I ~. ~J3
BUSINESS -

. - - - - - - - . . , . ._.I ,

Resldentlol and com '
mercia!. Call for
esllm1te. 24 Hour Sor!
vice. Any day, anytime.
Por1obfetollet rtlf1tot.
PhOne 915·3806
Jack Gl~ther 915-31416

Housing

.

4-.5-lmo.

BLOCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

Rt. 3
.Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5547
~-25 · 1 mo .-Pd.

. THe 15119 ISANANA HIM~eLf!

STOCK

Electric Motor
~
18 Years Experience
992-2356

-3325

GOOSE

SEPTIC TANK
CWNING

Middleport, 0 .

,

SUPER

OLA:Lfi&gt;! WMT A ISREAl&lt;!
TH!:RI:' SO!:!&gt; WMIH NOW--WITH

TltAtl!R ~WAVAILAILIE .

N. L Construction

651 Beech Street

I
I I I KJ
~RICOTE I
IJ I

IEWSUIN

L•ntsvlllt, Otllo

mo.

CONTRACTOR

'

614-669-4245 Evenlngt
2Miles Etstol Witllts~tllle ,

Reynold's

Will Make
. Servl&lt;e cans

Headqur~r t~rs

·

.

~ - 23 · 1

t.

IOCHAM
I I I IJ

Z13JO Montv111mery Ret.

down (non-veter•ns)

IRElAND
MORtGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

..''". '-'·-··-- ~

TRAILER SALES

Purchase
and
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A-No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as 3%

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

b
I _,_i .. I

ICHED

.MONTGOMERY

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble theae four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words.

IS

Services

J&amp;L

H. L Writesel
Roofing

BULK LIME
SPREADING
POMEROY

FIVE f100M furnlohod houoo.
Phono 742-2991 .

WANT-AD

I

furn ished and unoph.
Phone

I

-- Real Estate for Sale

PLANTS, CABBAGE, broccoli ,

or ,.

OLD FURNITURE, ice boxoo.
bran Mds, Iron beds, d"ks,
etc., complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt, 4 .
PomerOy or co11992-n60.

For Sille

FURNISHED APT . suitable for 3

furnished

diameter ta· on largest end.
$12 J&gt;Or ton. eundled slob. $10
pe; ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
992-2689.

~

992- ~3&gt;1 .

.e R~

SEEMS THE PUBLISHER
THE" ZV GHOTE BOOK
15 LO&lt;:'ALLY BASED50 THE FRAUD CASE
OUR ..JURISDICTION.
I

COAL , LIMESTONE, oond ,
grav•l . calcium chloride, fertiliter. dog food. and all types
of salt . Excelsior Salt Works.
Inc .. E. Main St ., Pomeroy .
992-3891 .

3~NO

NOTICE

~fo~G

-.

]t~~rul
.
fi;}
re lt ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

I WAS AFRAID
IT WAS l.IFE!

•

i

i
.
c

z

''.
''

ou.w

ouw

ouw

C

.

!e)

lf7f KIM F"Nitl"'" "VNfl ,._.ttot. ,,.,.

•( .

�ELBERFELD$ IN POME

'-'·

: VOL XXVIII

No progress
PIKETO~ ;

Ohio (AP)
Negotiators for the Goodyear

SPECIAL VALUES FOR FRIDAY, MAY 25 AND SATURDAY, MAY 26

Atomic Corp . .and striking Oil
Chemical and Atomic Workers

met Wednesday, but no progress
was reported toward reaching
agreement 01111 new contract.
The talks were recessed by
federal mediator Howard Hughs.
No further sessions were schedul·
ed.
Some 1,600 employees have
beenon strike for three weeks.
Collipilny officiab say production
at the Uranium enriclunent plant
Ia being maintained by supr·
visory persoflllel. The plant
makes fuel for nuclear reactors.

Wayne medal
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
ress aent President Carter .
legislation Wednesday to have a
special gold medal 9truck in
honor of actor John Wayne.
The Senate passed the meaSure
by voice vote several hours after
the · House of Representatives
voted Its unanimous approval.
Carter is expected to sign the
biU,.since he told a House bank·
lng subcomml~ · by letter
earlier this week that he favors
creation of 11 special gold medal
for Wayne.

., Two murdered
SAN SALVADORE , El
Salvador (AP) - l.efti.sl gunmen
ambullbed and ldlled the educa·
tion minister and his chauffeur on
Wedneeday, pollee reported, me
day after 14 persons were slain by
officers outside the occupied
Venezuelan Embassy.
The ongoing violence in the
Central American nation prompted the Venezuelan govenunent
• to fly about 50 of Its clUzens back
to Caracas on military planes.
President CariM Humherto
'· Romero was meeting with securi·
ty officials and political leaders
of 'his mllltary-backed regime.
1bel'e was specillation he would
!rope- a state vl siege tci cou'nter
the bloody rebellion. ·

l.Ance indiCted
ATLANTA (AP)- Bert Lance,
President Carter's clilse friend,
financial adviser and former
federal budget director, was in·
dieted Wednesday on charges of
bank fraud, conspiracy and
miBapplying bank funds.
Lance and three others were
accuaed In a grand jury Indict·
ment of Involvement In a conaplracy involving more than $20
mllllon In loans which alegedly
call8ed lo8ses of more than
~.000 to a nwnber of Georgia
banks.

Autopsy res~ts

..
SALE
PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR
SUMMER TOPS, SKIRTS, PANTS, VESTS,
,

8WERS AND BLOUSES

Reg. ~.00 ••••••••••••••••••• Sale s3.89
Reg. ~.00 ••••••••••••••••••• Sale '5.89
Reg. s12.00 •••••••••••••••••• Sale '7.79
Reg. $16.00 •••••••••••••••••• Sale SJQ.39
$24.00 °
Sale SJ5.59

Celeste sworn in
WASHINGTON (AP ) Richard F. Celeste was sworn In
Wednesday as director of the
Peace Corps.
The 41 year old fonner Ohio
lieutenant governor told several
Obloans, admlnl!!tration aides
and foreign ambassadors In the
White HOUle East Room Ulat he
felt the Peace Corps was "com· .
mltted to service In a fre!h sense.
These days the leaders of the
1blrd World have a clear Idea of
·how they want to develop."
Celeste said he looked forward
to the day foreign volunteers
come to this eowilry to
us with our problems."

SANDALS
,.

AND

cANVAS
FOR ALL THE FAMILY

S~')E

..

-·

DARNETTES
.SHORTS AND TOPS
FOR LITTLE

~YS

PLAYTEX CROSS YOUR
·HEART BRAS
$2.00 off regular price plus other savings on
Piaytex No. Visible Mea~:~s of Support ~ras, Soft
' Sider Bras and other styles.

AND GIRLS

*Months sizes to 6x-7
* Irregulars

SAVE .'2.00 .

FROM S150

PLA YTEX CROSS YOUR "EART BRAS

MEN'S -SUITS

BOYS' 8.95 JEANS

'7.59

MEN'S 89.95 SUITS

BOYS '9.95 JEANS

'69..

'8A9

1

BOYS' '10.95 JEANS

MEN'S '99.95 SUITS

'9.39

'79..

BOYS'' 11.95 JEANS

'10.19

Cool summer fabrics.
Nice selection of colors
and prints. Sizes 12 to 20
and 14'12 to 261/o.
. Reg. $9.00

·· SALE

LITtLE BOYS'

SWIM TRUNKS

Denim, terry and
I
. Sizes 6·20 and

'

Reg. •2.99 ·••••••••••·······Sale s2.69

Reg. $11.00
SAL~ '8.79
· Reg : $13.00
SALE ~10.39

Reg. $3.50·················· Sale s3.09

MEN'S
KNIT SHIRTS

Reg. 518.00

1

Sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL,
Big selection of
styles. You'll want several
M~OihEtn you see this savings.

r,".,... F•••· XX XL.

SALE •15.00

Men' s $5.95 Knit Shirts

Reg. $22.00

. Men 's $7, 9~ Knj! Shirts

Reg. $24.00

'6.93

SALE '19.00

Men's.s us Knit Shirts

Reg. 530.00
Shh'ts

LE •24.00

s12.oo ... Sale S9.59

SWIMWEAR

CHILDREN'S SHORTS
Little boys and girls shorts Of denim, terry cloth,
polyester, satin and coMon. Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x
and 7to 14.

REG. $2.59 .•..•.• . .. • . • ... SALE $2.19
REG. $3.29 ••...•..••••.. ~ .SALE $2.79
REG. $4.25 ••..••• • . • ••.•.• SALE $3.59
REG. $5.50 •. . .......••...• SALE $4.69
REG. $7.00 ........ .. •. ; . ; . SALE $5.99
REG . $10.00 .........•. . . . . SALE $8.49

MEMORIAL DAY SALE

Sizes 36 to 46, regulars and
longs, solids and patterns.

REG. 149.95 SPORT COATS

'3788

.''
· ·;
. ·;
: ::
· ..;,

made In the Eastern Local School
Diatrlct May 29, 30, 311ind·June I, Ar·
ch Role, tranaporlation coordinator,
said today.
.
Following are complete In·.
· • ~ atructlons on the changes as reported

· Reg. $27.00

Sale $22JO

MEN'S SPORT COAT SALE

SALEI

Energy crunch
causes changes
.•
As a conservation measure,
. · : changes in bus schedules will be

Sale $18.00

SALI

PYREX COFFEE MUGS
· Regular 5].95 Set of 4 Mugs,
Matches Corelle Dinnerware

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON (AP) .-.. Led by the : .had indicated there might he some
biggest increase in gasoline prices in relief in .food prices, adding that
DU'e than five years, conswner . "hopefuUy, the worst of the fuel price
prices roae 1.1 ))!lrcent In April, the increases are behind us."
Labor Department reported .today. While the government was
It wu the third consecutive month releasing the latest consumer price
· in which conswner prices have risen ligures, the AFL-CIO was releasing
. by I percent ~ more. The March the first report of its nationwide
Increase . was 1 percent, and "price watch" begun In April.
February's was 1.2 percent.
"Early returns from the
If COll8umer prices continue to rise monitors ....reflect . a continuing
In the nezt nine months as fast as they upsurge in the prices on all sorts of
did from February tbrough April, consumer goods," the labor
they will produce an annual inflation .~ganization said In a statement.
Me an whi Ie , .Ag ri c u It u r e
rate of 13.9 percent, the department's
figures !!how.
.
Department figures indicate higher
That Ia nearly double the Carter middleman expenses may account for
admlnistratloo'sofflclaltargetofa 7.4 almost 68 percent of a $22.8 billion
percent inflation rate for 1979, and Increase in consumer food bills
well above the 9 percent rate for all of expected this year.
·
1978.
Although official estimates are not
In a related report, the Labor to be released f~ two or three months,
Department said inflation and taxes department analysts agreed that
had Clll)blned to reduce further the calculations worked out by a reporter
buying power of American workers. using existing statistics and USDA
The amount of money workers have to guidelines "are in the ballpark the
apend fell 2.4 percent in A!X'il, the way things look now."
'Bureau of Labor Statistics said. So far
Bosworth, an economist who heads
thb year, the decline was 4.5 percent. the president's Councll on Wage and
The report on the Consumer Price Price Stability, told a . Senate
Index indicated that the greatest price Appropria lions subcommittee
increaaes In April Involved Thursday dramatic increases in the
trAIIIIp(rtation, up 2 percent for the !X'ices of some consumer necessities
month, and houslllg, up 1.1 percent. probably were ·over.
Both figures reflect large increases in
"In future montm! we can look
on products.
forward to a substantial slowing of the
Patrick Jackman, an economist food price inflation," he said. "And,
whoheadsthe&lt;:onswnerprice branch ·hopefully, the w~st of the fuel price
at the Labor Department, said about . increases are behind us.
.22 to 23 percent of the price Index
"If we can prevent the spread of
increase was due to gasoline.
earlier increases In food and fuel
Food prices, · which began prices Into the structure of pay rates
moderating somewhat in March, rose and prices of the industrial sector, the
0,9 percent In April. Most of the rate of inflation will moderate over
increase was attributed to continued the remainder of 1979," Bosworth
high beef and veal prices..
said. .
The report indicated, however, that
Bosw~th's views paralleled those
pork prices declined and poultry of Alfred Kahn, who chairs the wageprices were steady, giving conswners price council and serves as President
DD'e reasonably priced alternatives Carter's anti-inflation adviser.
to beef. Fresh vegetable prices also . Kahn told the panel he would not try
dropped.
to predict the fmal inflation rate thla
Still, food prices were nearly 12 · yeat, but added : "We think we have a
percent ahead of April 1978, Labor fair !!hot at getting the rale down
·lltatistics llhor. · -· · · .
below the double-dliilt level."
The Conswner Price Index stood at
Earlier this month, Treasury
Z11.5 In April. This means that Items Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal
that COlli a conswner $100 In 1967 now told the conunlttee the government
would cost f211.50.
had "screwed up" In its inflation
Bef~e the prlceindez was l'eleased, prediction of 7.4 percent and said the
anti4nflation official Barry Bosworth rate likely would he "8.5 percent or
higher."

Pre -teen and 'j unior si'zes,
one and two piece styles.
comfortable
Lycra
Spandex.
Reg. 516.00

Sale $i4.oo

•, byRole:
. .
In an effort to ease Eastern's
economic and fuel crwich some bus
IIChedules and the elhnlnation of one
bul route will be attempted May 29,

30, 31;and June 1.
All students will be transported to
! achool with lesa mlle~~ge and more ef·
\ flclently In an effort to save laliJIIIyers

.·

, money.

.

nw changes are as follows :

. The first II people. on Mr. Pen·
nlngton 's morning route will be
picked up by Mrs. Cowdery and Iran·
sferred to Mr. Pullins at Keno and
return the same way In the evening .
All the Junior and Senlor' High
students from beloe Helen Blake's
home on Rt. 124 ihrough Reedsville
and across Rt. 681 to Tup~rs Plains
will be picked. up by Shiels Fields.
The grade school chUdren going to
Tuppers Plains will also ride her bus.
In other words, all students now
riding Mrs. Satterfield's and Mrs.
Reed's buses bound for Tuppers
Plains and Eastern are now to ride
Mrs. Field's bus.
Mr. Pennington will be transporting
1Continuea·on page 121

SET OF 4

REG. '59.95 SPORT COATS

'47..
RUBBERMAID SALE

MEN'S
FASHION JEANS
Entire stock of blue denIms
and cotton twills sale priced .
Sizes 29 to 42, waist lengths 30
to 36.
Men's $11.95 Jeans
~ '10.57
Men's 514.95 Jeans

ICE CUBE TRAYS
AND BINS
'

YOU KNOW THE RUBBERMAIO
QUALITY. SAVE DURING THIS SALE.
79' ICE CUBE TRAYS

., ...

2 for '1

17

•1.98 ICE CUBE BINS

DRESS SLACKS
Waist sizes 29 to 50. An· ex·
cellent seleciton of solid
colors and patterns.
MEN'S It 1.95
DRESS SLACKS

SALE $9.59
MI!N'S$14.95
DRI!SS SLACKS

SALE $11&gt;99

•

•::..

enttne
•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1979

O..iropractor
opens office

Spenkelink
electrocuted

JANA lt. BuRsoN

Scholarship
winner·named
Jana K. Bur~~on, Route I, Shade,
has been awarded a yearly renewable
$600 scholarshp by Modem Woodmen
of America, a fraternal insurance
society · with home offices in Rock
Island, illinois.
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
•Fred L. Burson.
High school seniors from
throughout the United States receive
th!l merit awards, which tolal $108,000
for the four-year scholarship period.
Modem Woodmen has committed a
total of $734,400 1o the 171 young mem·
berswhohavereceivedawardsunder
the Fraternal College Scholarship
program. This is the loth year in
which the annual awards have been
made.
. Jana , like the other winners, earned
her schoiarship .ln open competition
with other high school seniors in one
of six geographic areas of approximately equal Modem Woodmen
junlormembership.
College 11ptitude of the applicants
was judged by a panel of eminent
educators. Evaluation criteria in·
eluded scores on college aptitude
tests, scholastic records, and leadershipandcharactertralts.
No .Modern Woodmen official or
employee took part In the selection
process.
Jana is a 1979 graduate of Meigs
Hiilh School. She was president of the
·National Honor Society. She was
named In "Who's Who Among
American High Sc))ool Students" and
received the D.A.R. Good Citizenship
Award.
Jana received a National Merit letter of commendation. She was a
member of the rrtarchjng, jazz, con·
cert and pep bands and was named
Outstanding Band Member twice. She
will major In zoolugy at Ohio Univer·
sity, Athens.

OPENS OFFICE

Dr. Kit Hedges, e!dfepractor, has

opeaed offices In Ml4dleport.

Dr. Kit Hodges, Athens cblroprac·
tor, has opened offices at 187 N.
Second Ave. In Middleport,
A 1978 graduate of the Palmer
College of Chlropractlcs In Daven·
port, Ia., Dr. Hedges also did post
graduate work at the Shennan
College of Chlropractlcs in Spar·
tenburg, N. C. In Aug¢, 1977, he
opened offices on Richland Ave., In
Athens.
The local office is open frun 11 a.rll.
to 5 p.m. each Tuesday and Thursday.
The phone nwnber Ia 992-e141.
In Middleport, Dr. Hedges will con·
duct orientation sessions as a patient
educaUon program to f&amp;millarlze
patients with the role of chiropractic
services In the total health program.
Dr. Hedges is assisted In hiB offices•
by his wife. They l)ave-one son,
Christian, 3. Both Dr. and Mrs.
Hedges are natives of Detroit, Mich.

Memon"al
Day
·

Sheriff James .i. Proffitt ret)o~ts the

re1111Del

. u uaual Tueaday.

ARC grant
announced

Gov. James A. Rhodes today an·
nounced approval of a flj3,334 grant
from the Appalachian Regional Com·
mission (ARC) to the Ohio Valley .
Health Services Foundation, Inc.,
located in the City of Athens, for the
CLEVELAND (AP) _ Numben
second-year funding of a primary .. drawu 'l'bunday Ia tbe Oblo lottery:
care management program.
The grant will be supplemented
Bille 117; .' wllite 51; lold 4;
with $25,'125 from local sources.
wlllatboll tU31.
The project provides primary
health care services to a Ukounty
area which Includes Athens, Morgan,
Gallla, Jackson, Perry1 VInton,
Meigs, Ross, Lawrence and Hocking
counties.
The projeCt was submitted for approval by the Depari!Jient of
Economic and Community Development 's Appalachian Development Of.
flee, which adminbters the ARC
program In Ohio. ·
Ohio's 19'19 Appalachian Development Plan and Project Investment
Package contains approllimately f8.4
m!Won in funding proposab for
Ohio's 28 Appalachian oounties in
a.rW of health, child development,
energy, education and natural resour·
ces.
ARC Is a state-federal partnership
which promotes the economic and
social development of the Appalachian reglqn of the United States.

Three perso~ .arrested by Melga

arrest of Paul Steinmetz of Rutland in County sheriH s deputies on chargee

Progrrun UJVeD

NO PAPER MONDAY .

been carried out in thb country since
1967.
Spenkellnk was fastened so securely
In the head harness that he could not
open his moutb and stared
Impassively at the 32 persons who
wltnesaed the ezecution ID the other
side of the glasa partition. About a
miaute after the Ii1lnda were drawn, a
black hood was lowered over
Spenkellnk's face. Several attendants
Inside the death room stepped back
from the death chair and the flrlt jolt
of electricity was delivered.
When the jolt surged lhrolJ811 hia
body, Spenkellnk clenched hia left list.
Shortly after Spenkallnk received ·
the first electrical charge his banda
began to curl and blacken. He mQVed
only slightly during the entire flvemln\lte ordeal and once he had beeR
pronounced dead the blinds dropped,
covering the death room again.
In the hours before hiB death,
Spenkellnk received final visits by his.
family and hiB minlller.
The 10 a.m. ezecutlon deadline wu
set early today after a panel of three ·
judges from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals In New Orleans removed a
stay ·Imposed by an Atlanta member
of the appellate court, effective at 9:30
a.m. EDT.
.
Spenkellnk's sister, Carol Myers,
and his fiancee, Carlotta Key ol
Jacksonville, vlalted the condemned .
man about 5:30 a.m. Thliy were
allowed one hug, then they chatted
(Continued on pa ge 12 )

Rutland man arrested

connection with the Wednesday night '
!!hooting of Wilbur Sima, Middleport.
• .
Sheriff Prolfltt said charges will be
rued with the proaecullr later today.
e~
. The !!hooting occurred at 7:25 p.m.
The schedple for Memorial pay ser- Wedneaday outside a Harrbonvllle
vices by Feeney-Bennett Post 121, residence.
American Legion, · was 81Ulounced
According to the report , Sima and
today. ·
the driver of a 19117 Dodge four-door
Members are tO meet at the hall at sedan became Involved In an alleged
8:30a.m. andfromtherewillgotothe argun;ent. at the residence o( Earl
Middleport levee at 8:45, then to the Arlx. Sims was take11 to VeleraNI
Middleport Riverview at 9 a.m.; Memorial Hoapltal by the Pomeroy
Bradford Cemetery, 9:15a.m.; Mid· ER Squad.
dleport Hill Cemetery, 9:30a.m. and
Thursday Sims was listed by
Cheshire at 10 a.m. where a flag and hospital officials as being In stable
pole donated by the Ivan Grover condition.
family will be dedicated.
At 10:30 a.m. the legionnaires will
LIMITED SERVICES
be at the Addison Cemetery, at 11
a.m. •t the Middleport Gravel Hill The Gallla • Jackson • Melga Com·
Cemetery, at 11:15 at the American munlty Mental Health Center will
Legion Park nell to the Middleport have limited aervlces on Monday,
PM! office, and from there will go to May 28, In obllervance of the
lhehallfoducnhat11 :30a.m.
MemorialDayHoUday.Servlcesare
AI 1:30 p.m. lhe legionnaires will always available for anyone In need
of servicea by calling the Crl.llallne.
pa rticipate In services at the Crlsial1ne
telephone numbers In the
Burlingham Cemetery.
three CQIIIIIies are Gal1la County, 4485564; Jackson County, •11664 and
Melga County 91U5M. Center ad·
ministration and staff a.nbers take
thla opportunity to espress their
wishes for 8 safe and happy Memorial
Day Holiday.

'lbe Dally SeaUDel wOl oot be
publllhed Mooday In order tblll em·
ployea may oblerve the Memorial

Day Holiday. PubUcatiOD

STARKE, Fla. (AP) ::.. Convicted
mUI'c!erer John A. Spenkellnk was put
to death in Florida's electric dlair
today, becoming the first prboner
executed against his will in the United
Slates in more than 12 years.
Spenkellnk, · 30, was pronounced
deadatl0:18a.m. at the Florida State
Prbon. He received the first jolt of
electricity at 10:13 a.m.
After the first surge, which singed
the skin on his right calf, sending
smoke into the death chamber,
Spenkellnk received another jolt of
electricity.
A doct~ was then called to check
his heart at lO:a a.m. The doctor
looked at prison superlntolndent David
Brlerton, stepped back and waited
two more mlnule!l, when he again
checked Spenkellnk's heart with a
stethoscope and again stepped back.
Finally at 10:18, he made a third
check, lifted the death hood to look at
Spenkellnk's eyes, and checked hiB
Jlllbe. Spenkellnk was dead.
The condemned man had lost his
last hope of reprieve four minutes
before the scheduled 10 a.m.
execution when the Su!X'eme Court In
Washington voted 6-2 to deny a stay.
Lawyers for Spenkellnk had
presented a petition fer a stay to the
court clerk at 7 a.m.
Spenkellnk was the first man
ezecuted In the United States since
Gary Mark Gilmore willingly faced a
firing squad in Utah on January, 17,
1977. Bef~e that, no executions had

CLEAN UP REQUESTED
Malon Town CouncU Ia requesting
Malon property owners to clean
empty lots of weeds and trash.
Town employes will observe
Monday, Memorial Dsy, as a holiday
and village hall will be closed
Residents are reminded also that
absentee ballots are avallable for
those who will be out of town on
election day, June 5. ·

r:i unruliness and contributing to the
delinquency of miiJors were found
guilty during separate Juvenile Court
trials . .

Joe .Ratcliff, 23, Rt. 1 ReedlviUe,
wu !M!OteQced to llx montha In the
county jail, but the court IIUIPI!IIdell
all but 15 days which will be Mt:Ved on
weekend&amp;. He Willi placed on one- ·
year's probation.
·
Donny Barringer, 18, Rl. 1, ReedsvWe, was aentenced to 30 dayaln the
County Jail but the coplaurtceds~
all but four daYS and
. '""'on
probationfor~months.
Mike Wlllon, 18, Rt. I, .ReedlviUe,

was sentenced to 30 dayaln the Coun·
ty Jail, but all escept three daya were .
suspended' and he was placed on six ·
months probation.

$7,200 judgment
action filed here
A suit In lhe amount of rt,IIO has
been filed in Meigs County Court by
Carl Vanover, SyraCII8e, againlt, Mu
HW, Rt. 2, Racine, O&gt;em Haulen,
Inc,, Florence, Alabama, National
Indemnity and M. Lee Mitchell
Insurance, Inc., both of BlrmlnghazQ,
Alabama.
()J June 24, 1978 Vanover's tractortraUer was legaDy parked on the
Gll•m parking slot In Ohio and Hill.
negligently failed to park hla tractor
aild trailer and as a direct rwult Hill's
tractor-trailer rolled Into the
plaintiff's tractor and trailer.
The plaintiff demands judiment
against Hill In lile amount vl P,IOO,
plus costs and from M. Lee Mitchell,
Insurance,. Inc., National Indemnity
Co., and Chern Haulera, Inc., jointly in
the amount of p ,eoo plua costa. ·

MENS1U5
DRESS SLACKS ·

SAL.E $13.5!

SQUADCALLED
.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to 270 W. Main St., at 5:05
p.m . Thursday for Richard
Winebrenner who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 7:41
a.m. Friday the squad Weill to 333
Lasley St for Marie Custer who was
alao take11 to Veterans . Memorial
Hoopital:

flt11!N'S S1U5 . '.
DRI!SS SLACKS

9:30 TO 5-PM
CLOSED MEMORIAL DAY, MAY 28th
OPEN SATURDAY

BOX

at y

e

·Price
index
.
.
up in April

SALE

Reg. $23.00

'5.23

SALE '17.00

14.97

eg. $7.00 .... Sale S5.59
eg. sa.oo ••.• Sale $6.39
....11!11. 510.00 •.• Sale $7.99

Reg. $3.99 ·····~···· ••••••• Sale s3.59 .

Regular and extra sizes of Lvcro
Spandex featuring Power Net
figure control . Popular colors
ond .Prints.

Men's 516.95 Jeans

1""!1· $6.00 •••• Sale $4.79

I'"'IIV• $11.00 • •• Sale $8.79

WOMEN'S SWIMWEAR

. '14.07,

WOMEN'S
SUMMER SHORTS

Nice group of satin, cotton and
polyester trunks. Sizes 3 to 7

SALE .'7.19

Men's $15.95 Jeans

Save on genuine riCIWOOCI, fOlding
aluminum furniture •nd Lloyd
fiber cr•ft furniture.
ATOUR
MECHANIC ST. WARI!HOUSI!

1

WOMEN'S
DAYTIME DRESSES

'13.17

SUMMER ·
FURNITURE SALE

and huskies pius student sizes
26 to 30 waist. Entire stock Of
boys jeans on sale. Denims,
blends, 100 per cent cotton
twills.
1

Sizes 36 to 46. Solids and pat·
terns. Entire stock of men's 3
piece vested suits is on sale.

I

E

BOYS' JEANS
Sizes 8 to 18, regulars, slims

SA I.E

0

THE

SAVE '2.00

SPECIAL PURCHASE

00 00 0 • • • • • • • • • • •

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) AutOpsy reporla on the carcasses

of cows tha died recently on
farms near the cripled Three
Mile Island nuclear plant showed
lllOII died of complications in
calving and two suffered lnfec·
tiOIII! of the uterus, the slate
Agriculture Department says.
Clair Hoover, whose farm Is 4\1
miles from the disabled nuclear
power plant, reported that 19 of
hla· cows died In the past six
weeks. Hal Drager, whose farm
Ia three mles from the plant, said
he lOIII two COWl in the past three
weeks.

OPEN FRIDAY ·TIL 8

NO. 30

•

·--

y

..
~

.· *1'H MEETING - The OH·KAN Coin Club held
its ~ meetlrw WI!Cine8day night at the Riverboat
Room, Meigs Branch, Athena County SaVIngs and Loan
Co, New officers of the organization pictured Include, I
'\

~

tor, Eddie Burkett, president; Dsvid ~warda. vice
president; Douglas UWe, second vice prelldent;
Vaughan Spencer, aecretary; and Donna Ds:rldlon,
receptionist.

'

'

.

·
·
.

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