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a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 28, 1978

New construCtion contract awaits approval

Cost of living up 0.6 percent in February
By JAMES HILDRETII
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Soaring food costs boosted
the cost of living by 0.6
percent in February, the
government said today,
confirming that inflation is
escalating at a steady poce.
The February increase which comes to 7.2 percent
when figured on an annual
rate - was not as bad as
January's 0.8 percent rise out .
was still higher than any
other month since last May,
according to the Labor
Department's Consumer
Price Index.
Food, particularly meat

advisers, notably Treasury
Secretary Michael
Blumenthal, to demonstrate
that the administration is
seriaus
about
taming
inflati011 .

program to try to persuade
business and labor to
moderate wage and price
demands . That effort has

as prescriptions and nonprescription drugs and
supplies increased 0.8
percent last month, slightly
been staUed, howev~r, as more than in January.
Carter spent considerable
Cllarges for professional
Carter announced in time 011 other issues such as services also rose 0.8 percent
January a mild anti~nflation the coal strike and the Middle and charges for hospital and
East.
other medical care services
Meanwhile, Carter forces went up 1.3 percent.
have done little to combat
The February rise in tranexpensive new programs like sportation
costs
was
the farm bill on Capitol primarily due to increases for
Hill.
new and used cars, the
The Labor Department department said. New car
said medical care and costs rose 0.7 percent and the
transportation co.sts rose used car index soared 2.1
almost as fast as food costs. percent.
In the medica l sector ,
Gasoline prices declined
and beverages, was the main
prices of commodities such slightly from January.
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - A
culprit in February, rising 1.2
In the housin~ field ,
•
percent in cost, the same Navy jet fighter , describ!ld as
advance as the previous "in trouble" on a landing
(Continued from page 1)
month, the department said. approach, crashed into a
Medical
care
and busy freeway Monday, killing
A union spokesman said the
transportation costs also one crewman and seriously new contract - which still
injllring the pilot.
posted increases.
must win approval of the
But the only consequences union's bargaining council
The department said
grocery costs increased 1.3 to motorists were slight and ratification by the rank
percent, r.estaurant prices injuries to two occupants of a and file - offers construction By MARTIN P. HOUSEMAN
went up 1.0 percent and passing pickup truck, which men an inunediate $1.40 per
CARACAS, Venezuela
alcoholic beverages was destroyed in a rolling hour raise and 30 cents an (UP!) - President Carter's
crash, and damage to a car hour in the second year of the visit to democratic, oil-rich
advanced 0.8 percent.
hit by flying debris.
Beef prices shot up U
pact.
Venezuela today is focusing
The Navy said both
percent, compared with inConstruction workers, the on petroleum prices, the
creases of about 2 percent in crewmen ejected.from the F- people who build the mine Panama Canal treaties and
each of the three proceeding 14 Tomcat at a low level hen it shafts and tunnels for miners, human rights.
months, the department was only about 200feet east of negotiate separately for their
Carter is visiting Venezuela
the runway at Miramar contract, and had not agreed for 22 hequent critic of U.S.
said.
Pork and poultry prices Naval Air Station, and the to a new contract wh~n trade policies and U.S.-based
plowed
across miners approved a new pact multinational companies, but
also -Bhowed large incre8lles plane
in February, 2.6 percent and Interstate 15, scattering Friday.
a J&gt;l'rsonal friend of Carter's
wreckage, and burst into
1.6 percent, respectively.
Their picket lines hobbled a after two previous meetings.
full,scaie return to the pits
In a companion report, the flames .·
Perez, one of only two
"My body is awfully, Monday by the UMW's democratically elected presidepartment said
real
earnings for the nation 's awfully sore, but we were so 160,000 miners, turning dents in South America, also
workers feU 0.2 percent from lucky I just can't get over it," thousands of them away and is a staWlch hwnan rights ad~
January's seasonally said Kai Musurlian, 41 , who costing them a promised $100 vocate, like Carter.
was in the pickup truck with s how·up bonus .in seven
adjUS\ed level.
Spokesmen for both sides
President Carter has been Jim Roder. They escaped states. Most of tile miners say ·:energy policies" will he
were back on the job today high on the agenda, with
under pressure in recent with bruises and cuts.
uwe saw one of the wings ami coal operators said carter urging a continuation
weeks from several of his top
hit the highway. I told Jim w pfoduction should he back to of the petroleum price freeze
speed up, get around it, but normal in less than a month. beyond June of this year.
we knew we were goi,ng to hit
·John
Guzek,
chief
it ... the truck rolled over God negotiator for the UMW, said
knows how many times and he will ask his men to drop
when we stopped we wer~ their picket lines until a
The Pomeroy. Yolunteer pushed up against the center decision Is made on the new
Fire Department will stage a divlder. ''
contract.
They kicked out the truck
pancake supper from 4 to 7
An earlier plea that they
p.m. Saturday at the fire windows, Musurlian said, and stay away from the mines
station on Butternut Ave. ran about 100 yards before and allow returning miners to
Tickets will be $2 for adults stopping to look back at the receive badly needed first- ~
and ~1.25 for children under mass of flaming wreckage. day bonuses was ignored in
COLUMBUS (UP!) U. Wait Laskowski, 25, widely scattered . areas.
12.
Republicans
are conceding
Cleveland,
Ohio,
the
plane's
The menu will include
Constru c tion workers .
only
three
of
the 99 Ohio
pancake, bacon or sa usage radar inte'rcept officer, was reportedly were angry at
House
seats
in
this year's
and coffee or milk. A bake killed. The pilot, U. Brian · miners for going on strike
election,
a
marked
sale will be held in con- Shaw, 25, Garden Grove, Dec. when the construction
·
improvement
over
their
junction with the pancake N.Y., was reported in critiCal contract still had a month to
efforts
in
1976.
supper. Proceeds will go to condition at Balboa Naval run, and for returning before
The GOP organization was
Hospital.
the building fund .
a new construction contract
criticized
two years ago when
could be negotiated.
10
Democratic
incumbents,
"They let us down very mainly in Cleveland
and
!&gt;adly," said West Virginia
Qther urban areas , were
construction local President given free rides.
leonard ''Red" Cox.
(Continued from page 1)
With the expiration last
He threatened massive
work," Miller informed the 34-year-&lt;Jid Fortney. Contacted
week
of the deadline for filing
Monday, the secretary said ~e intended to discuss the matter picketing of Wednesday '&gt; petitions of candidscy, only
midnight shift to remind the House · Speaker Vernal G.
with the UMW chieftain because "he hasn't said a word."
miners of a promise made at
Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston, and
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. - THE AIR FORCE has a 1976 Cincinnati convention Democratic Reps. Le&lt;Jnard J .
abandoned the hunt for debris from the twin military to stay off the job until Camera of Lorain and
communications satellites that had to he blown apart when construction workers had a Thomas J. Carney of
new agreement .
they failed w achieve orbit Saturday.
·
Guzek, however , said Boardman were left without
The Triple 7 satellite launch was only eight minutes old
opposition .
when the bOOster began slowing down and the trajectory Monday he thought he could
In additio~, Republicans
deteriorating. The range safety officer punched the destruct persuade his men to retire fielded no party candidate in
from the picket line.
button :
the Eighth District in
"H we get to a tentative Cuyahoga County, but will be
agreement, I think that backing an independent in the
they'll withdraw," Guzek·fall.
said shortly before the
Republicans will be trying
agreement was reached.
to ·cut into tlie 62-37
"We're sort of disappointed Democratic advantage in the
in the construction workers House this year. Absence of
puiling out the coal miners," even a token opponent in a
he said. "Due to the pickets, district spares the incumbent
they were deprived of getting
party's time, manpower and
the $100. I'm ju•t sorry they
money for other contests.
pulled them out at that time." . . House Democrats have
Coal operators said the 111- filed in all but one district day strike did little damage the 64th represented hy Rep.
to the nation.
"All the prophets of gloom W. Bennett Rose, R-Lima.
Six Democratic Hous.e
and doom were shown they
.members are not seeking rewere wrong," said Carl election Utis year, including
Bagge, president of the floe retiring dean of the House
National C&lt;lal Association. - Rl!p. A.G. Lanciooe, D"The fact is that this strike
did not have as drastic an Bellaire. Six Democrats have
filed for Lancione's 99th
effect as U~e oil embargo or
House District seat, including
the gas shortage.
the topheavy favorite, fanner
"OUr plans are to go back
U.S. Rep : Wayne L. HBys of
and resume (production) as Belmont.
quick as we can. I think it
Another seven Republicans
That's what I like about Name Bank.
ought to he back up to normal
are giving up their seats,
in less than a month .''
Every tim e I go on there I get lots of
special attention If I've got a loan
problem. for example . Or a money
management problem . I like being on
the receiving end of the care once in a
whole!

Fighter
crashes
Monday

Tentative •••

Pancake sale
set Saturday

residential rents increased
0.4 J&gt;l'rcent last month and
home ownership costs
climbed 0.7 percent, both less
than in January. Prices of
home furnishing s rose
moderately for the second
straight month .
The only overall decline
was in Ute apparel category,
the department said. Prices
for alltypes of clothing fell 1.0
percent.
Entertainment costs rose
0.7 percent , up from
January's · 0.5 percent rise .
In the volatile food eost
sector, cereal and ba~~ry
products, dairy products,
sugar and sweets, salad and
cooking oils and processed

federal employee wage hikes.
Miller, for one, has urged
Carter to, impose import fees
on foreign oil If Coogress does
not complete acti011 on an
energy program within the
next month.
However. other Carter ad,
visers . such as domestic

fruits and vegetables also
climbed last month .
Prices for eggs were unchanged and prices for fresh
fruits and vegetables, fish
and coffee went down .
Carter and many of his
advisers
now
clearly
recognize that inflation is not
just a large headache but
threatens their overall
growth targets for 1978.
Treasury Secretary
Michael Blumenthal, O!arles
Schultze, Carter's chief
economic adviser
and
Federal Reserve Olairman
G. William Miller have been
urging Ute president to take
some concrete anti.jnflation
steps - such as restraining

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !
I

BERNICE RANDOLPH
REEDSVILLE - Mrs.
Bernice (Vema) M. Randolph, 69, Route I, Reedsville,
died Monday at the CamdenQark Hospital in Parkersborg following an extended
illness.
Mrs. Randolph was born at
Reedsville, a daughter of the
late David and Sarah Rood.
She wsa .a member of the
Eden United Brethren
CllurCh at Reedsville and the
Women's
Missionary
Association of the church.
A lifelong resident of Meigs
County, Mrs. Randolph is
survived by a son, Russell
Randolph,
Athens;
a
daughter, Mrs. Carl (Roxie)
Ford, Hockingport; three

Oil, human rights, canal
topics of Carter's visit
' Perez has already stated
publicly what his rejoinder
will be: he would favor even a
reduction in oil prices if
parity could be established
between what the developing
nations have to pay for
manufactured goods and
wha( they receive for their
raw materials.
Perez, a leading advocate
of Third World positions,
argued this position at the
,North-South· talks in Paris
last year, which ended will&gt;
no progress on resolvihg the
differences between poor and
rich nations,
Perez praised the Carter
administration for
an
important U.S. concession
during the North-South talks:
agreement to establish a fund
to help stabilize prices of
commodities like copper,

affairs adviser Stuart
Eizenstat, wlll'll that new and
stringent antlinflation efforts
may pose political problems.
Carter
has
delayed
announcing any action at all
until after he returns April 3
from his trip to Africa and
South America.

I

coffee and tin .
But Perez feels it is time for
further concessions from the
industriallzed nations in
quest of the elusive new world
economic order, namely the
pegging of raw products
prices
to
prices
of
manufactured and capital
goods.
Perez also fears the U.S.
Senate will amend the
Panama Canal treaties to
allow for armed Intervention
after l'anama takes contr.oi
of the strategic waterway.
A joint communique
expected Wednesday will
likely focus on human rights,
but he hind the scenes Perez is
almost certain to press
Carter for a firmer stand
against the Nicaraguan
regime
of
strongman
Anastasio Svmoza.

sisters,
Mrs.
Mamie
Buchanan, Tuppers Plains;
Mrs . Martha Buchanan,
Hockingport, and Miss Lucy
Rood, Reedsville; a brother,
Ernest Rood, Reedsville, her
mother-in-law, Mrs. Nettie
Randolph, Tuppers Plains
and three ·grandchildren.
Mrs.
Randolph
was
preceded in death by her
husband, Clyde, in 1972, along
with three daughters, three
brothers and a sister.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
White Funeral ;Home in Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial will
be in Eden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time after I
p.m. Wednesday.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
warm and a ~hance of
showers t,Mit day, with
blgbs rangllfl!'from the mid
60s to lbe mid 70s. Lows
wlU be in the upper 30. or
lower 60s early Friday and
in the upper 60s or lower
50s Saturday a ad Sunday.
:;:::;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;~:~:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

HOSPITAL
NEWS
(Birth, March26)
Holzer Medical Center

Mr. and Mrs. Edward
(Discharges, March 24)
Hans Bald, Teriey Clagg, Shepherd, a son, Ewington.
(Discharges, March 27)
Debra Oonch, Merle Cole,
Tonya Blair, Mrs. Harold
Mary Deverick, June Dillon,
Charlotte Evans, Bertha Brinker and daughter, PeMy
Hatfield , Clifford Helm, Bush, Hulda Caudill, Paul
Nellie Henderson, Ada Cook, Grace Hughes, Carrie
Hoffman, Evelyn Hughes, Marr, Bernard Myers, Rita
Vickie Johnson, Theodore Pickens, Charles Rawson,
Langhorne, Edward Lillico, Arthur
Reed,
Althea
Bertha Litchfield, Mrs. John Ridenour, Stephen Shields Jr.
(Births, March %7)
Manuel and daughter, Lois
Mr. and "Mrs. Lawrence
Martin, Maxine Maynard,
Edward Michael Sr., Leslie Johnston,&amp; son, Minersville.
Miller, O!arles Moore, Linda Mr. and Mrs. John Waugh, a
Myers, James Napier, Anna daughter, Jackson.
Partlow, Darrell Roberts,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Earl Rottgen, Max Russell,
DISCHARGED -" Ted
. Stoma Saunders, Charlotte
Nance, Glenwood ; Mrs.
Smith, Wendell Thomas,
William Terry, Oak Hill;
Regina Wright.
Charles Kinnaird, ·Apple
(Births, March 24)
Grove; Gregg . Casto, ·point
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Pleasant; Mrs. Richard
Brinker,
a
daughter,
Holley, Point Pleasant ;
including the two top leaders.
Senate Democrats, who
Pomeroy.
Lester
Leonard, · Point
They are House Minority hold a 21-12 advantage, have
(Discharges, March %5)
Pleasant;
Mrs. Dixie McLeader O!arles F. Kurfess of filed a full ~date of candidates
Joann Barlow, Sharon
Bowling Green , who is for the 17 seats up lor election Bentz, Giajlys Byerly, Frank Cauley, Mason; Florence
running for governor, and this year. Republicans are Ueland, Leroy Davis, Mary Kinder, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Miller,
Point
assistant floor leader Rep. not contesting the seats held Deer, Pauline Foster, Karla Harry
Norman A. Murdock of by Democratic Sens. Wolliam Gibbs, Phyllis Harris, Pieasant; Mrs. Linford
Cincinnati, who is running for F. Bowen of Cincinnati and Adrienne Hubbard, Mrs. · Sisson, Southside; Mrs .
H a m i Ito n
Denver ' Rollins,
West
o o u n t y Charles L. Butts of
Hobert Lowe and daughter,
Columbia;
Therili
Randolph
commissioner. ·
Cleveland.
Beatrice May, Allen Ross,
Jr., Racine; Joe Slagle,
Earl Sheets, Le&lt;Jta ' Sheets,
Letten of opiDion are welcomed. They should be 1 Jason Stanley, Wilma Un- Rockwell; N. C.; Mrs. Steven
less Ulan 300words long (or be subject to reduction by 1 derwood, Patricia Van Durbin and son, Point
the editor) aDd must be signed with the signee's ad- I Sickle, John Weeks, Mrs. Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Lanier,
Mrs. Edna
dress. Names may be withheld upon publication. I Thomas Whitehair and son, Southside;
Point
Pleasant;
Mattox,
However, on request, names will be dJsclosed. Letten
Mrs . Loren Wilbur and
George
Lanier,
Southside;
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, nO\ per- I' daughter, Terry Wilcoxen ,
Mrs.
Joe
Paugh,
Point
sonalllies.
1 Michelle Williams , Torres
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Kenneth
\ Williamson.
Kuhgn
and
daughter,
· (Births, March25)
I
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Franklin
I
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Gleason,
Point
Pleasant;
I Clonch, a son, Pomeroy. Mr.
I and Mrs . Allen Lee, a James Baisden Jr., Henderson .
I
I (laughter, Pt. Pleasant.
(Discharges, March 26)
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mary Adkins, Wendy
March 23, 1978 dsted March 13, 1978 and
Mae
ADMITTED
"U.M.W. Leaders to Meet Barker, Josh,u a Bright, Brewer, Racine; Kethel,
Dear .Editor:
I wish to express my thanks Sunday in Dilles Bottom" James Broyles, .E rma Hatfield, Dexter; Wanda
to you for all you have done dated March .17, 1978. Both of Canter, Wanda Marchi, Adams, Pomeroy ; John
for us in giving space for· the these articles were on the top Bessie Merritt, Sherry Duerr, Pomeroy; Enunogene
advertising of our revivals, of Ute front page of "The Myers, Patricia Payne, .Norton, Pomeroy. ·
and other items. I Qppreciate Daily Sentinel". God's name Randall Simmons, Frances
DISCHARGED - Edward
was openly spelled out being Wedge, Jonathan Wilkins , Wood, Veietta Rowe, HBttie
this very much.
taken in vain which is against Erma Wilson, Linda Wooten. Armes.
I would appreciate your
consideration of a request the law of God. We realize
considering news that these articles did not
reaches you where profanity, originate in the local office of
etc. is included. If you would the Daily Sentinel but we are
strike that part out I know protesting such being printed
many would he glad. Thanks in the local newspaper which
so very much for considering we and our children read. We,
this request. May God bless as O!ristians, in a O!ristian
country would like .to ask
·you!!
your cooperation to help us
Sincerely,
keep all smut and profanity
Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr., Pastor
from public view. We like The
Daily Sentinel and Wish it to
March 24, 1978 be a newspaper that we need
not be ashamed for our
Dear Sir:
I am writing concerning the family to read.
We, as a Church body and
news articles entitled "Ohio
Miners Remain Off Job" as a member of the Meigs
Area Holiness Association,
thank you in advance for your
cooperation.
I remain an interested
RESCHEDULED
reader of The Daily Sentinel,
. ' . •,
CHESTER - An Easter
Rev. Dale T. Bass
' '•,
Egg Hunt for children of
Pastor: O!urch of the
Chester only scheduled for
Nazarene, Box86
Sunday but postponed due to
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
the weather, has been
rescheduled for 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Chester
DOES NOT INCLUDE
fire house. The event is
FORE
IGN FILM
HOSPITALIZED
sponsored by the fire
The Pomeroy Emergency
departlhent and its auxiliary.
There will he a gold egg Squad answered a call to
worth $10, A silver egg worth Route 248 near Keno at !1:17
p.m. Tuesday for Kathy
$5, and other prizes.
Spencer, who was having
difficulty breathing. She !l'as
LIPHTS BACK ON
taken to Holzer Medical
The street lights in Center.
Pomeroy and Middleport will
he turned on within the week
according to Wendell Hoover
CLOTHING DAY
of the Columbus and Soutltem
The Salvation Army,
OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 8TH
Ohio Electric Company.
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy,
Th•
Columbus
and will hold free clothing day
Soutnern Ohio Electric from 10 a.m. untll noon
c.impany Monday reported a Thursday. All area residents
39-day supply of coal and Ute in need of clothing are
return of normal operations. welcome.

Marijq.ana
'
case
goes
to jury
A petit jury went into
deliberation doncludlng a day
and a half trial in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
this morning.
The defendant, Delbert
Fridley, was on trial for
possession for sale of
marijuana valued at approximately $60.
Attorney lot the defendant
w,as Chuck Knight while
Prosecuting Attorney Rick
Crow represented Ute state.
Jurors are Guy Harper,
Dorsel Larkins, William H.
King, Kathy S. Hood, Dorothy
Cray, Mildred Brown, Arthur
Eblin, Robert Tripp, Ray
Pullins, Janice Lawson,
·Grace
Pratt,
Everett
Calaw*y and Iris A. ·Paype,
alternate.

News •• in Briefs

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:::·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'

.

Fifti&gt;en Ct•nts

Vol.

~K. No . ~42

•

Quickel reviews plans
.

Plans for the annual Big
Bend Regatta slated June 23,
24 and 25 were outlined at
Tuesday's luncheon meeting
of the Pomeroy O!amber of
Commerce at the Meigs Inn.
Bill Quickel, chairman of
the event, outlined various
plans regarding the Regatta,
but pointed out he would like
everyone's assistance .
Quickel said it was definite
the P. A. Denny excursion
boat would be in Pomeroy on
Friday evening and all day
Saturday for the Regatta. It
will cost the chamber $2,500.
Quickel felt the chamber
rouid make approximately
$2,000 profit by having the

boat here. He suggested rides
for senior cotizens, children ··
and the general public.
Quickel also noted a dance
could he held on the boat.
He also reported Kyle Allen
has tickets to sell for boat
rides, the tickets being
provided by P. A. Denny.
Quickel also observed that
thus far no theme has been
selected. He asked members
wsuggestathemeatthenext
meeting. .
Quickel announced Jim
Frecker will again be
chairman of the parade that
will be held on Friday, June
23. A talent show will be held
on Thursday night June 22.

.

Local organizations or
individuals are being invited
to have concession stands
with Pa ul Simon, voce
pres ident
having
applicatoons. Bill Grueser will
he in charge of the rides and
has
signed
Nolan
Amusements.
The Gallipolis Ski Club will
perform. There will be power
boat races on Sunday. The ·
boats fo r the races will be
launched from the Mason
levee. Bill Mayer will make
signs
advertising
th e
Regatta.
Quickel added he hopes to
expand the parade this year
with more floats and more

trophies.
He also said a sponsor is
needed for the " big wheel"
race for the four and five·
year olds.
Fred Crow, presid ent,
aMounced the chamber now
has 71 members. He introduced Mark McCoy and
Fred Hat well as new
member s, who wiJl be
opening.the Elliott Appliance
Shop at 220 E. Main Street.
They will sell major appiiances and it will also be a
specia lity store providing top
quality service . Dr. Harold
Brown is also a new member
of the chamber.
(Continued on page 16)

Fire department project okeyed . .
A project by the Middleport
fire department possibly
leading to the reduction of
insurance rates for Middleport business houses was
endorsed Tuesday night when
the Middleport . Chamber of
Commerce met at the Meigs
Inn.
On hand to present details
of the program were Wayne
Davis and Kevin Dailey both
fire fighters. They explained
that through the project,
carried out cooperatively between department members
and business owners, each
establishment would be

.I!News. • ..in Brief~\

l

ELBERFELD$

enttne

visited by fire department
representatives. A sketch of
e'ach business buildings
would he made noting layout
of the building, location of
stairways, materials used at
various locations, type of
roofing and other pertinent
· information.
These sketches would he
filed by the department for
use in fighting any fires in the
business section, Davis and
Dailey pointed out.
During the meeting,
· presided over by Edison
Baker in the absence of the
president George Ingels,

plans were made for haVIng a
speaker at the April meeting.
The group also discussed at
length, plans for a sprong
cleanup in the business
section and expressed hope
that · a plan tan be impiemented decreasing the
amount of litter in the village
of Middleport. The chamber
commended the Middleport
village administration and

workers for the JOb beong
done in cleaning up the town
this spring after a hard
winter.
.
Attending the meetong were
Davis, Dailey, Mr . and Mrs .
Edison Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert King, Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mr. and Mrs .
Don Wilson. Mrs . Earl
Davenport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Owen.

.~.

United Presolnternalional
TOKYO - Japanese radicals campaigning to keep
Tokyo's new international airport from opening fire bombed a
nearby hotel today and the government threatened "drastic
measw-es" to curb the violence.
Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda ordered his government to
combat the spreading violence and political sources said _Utis
might include letting pollee carry guns lor the fll'St lime sonce
World War ll.

DERBY TROPHY WINNERS - The top three conle•tanlil in the M.Q -M Scouting
District Pinewood Derby, held Tuesday night al the Nutional Guard Armory nem· Puint
Pleasant, were presented trophies . Pictured in the foregrow od , from left, 11rc llucky
Johnson, Cub Scout Pack 253 of Mason, first place; Trey Casse ll, Puck 245 of Middiet&gt;lrl,
third place and Wyatt Akers, Pack 258 of Point Pleasan!, second pla c~. In the lm ckg~ound
are members of the derby committee, from left. M..C-M Daslncl Commassumer F runk
DiQemente District Cub Chairman Brian Billings and District Cub Commissioner Biii
Wise. The t;ophies were provided by the Point Pleusant Register, The Daily Sentinel nnd
Gallipolis Daily Tribune . In ail, 28 youths parlicipnted . SLoe Page 2 for additional photos.

I!~LO ·F ledges

·:::~=f.'f.~':!-:~"J:.::-:::::~::::~::;:::;;;~~8:8::~::::::::::::::::::~::8:.~::::::~::!!::~::::::::::::=:::::::=:::::::~:::

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

the miners.
But at least one construction unton leader said that wasn't
enough.
.
" We "'ant an increase of at least $1 .80 an hour each year of
·the three-year contract, " said Bryan Monk, of West Frankfort ,
Dl. " And we want a better medical system than tbe coal
miners got."
Construction worker picketing hit hard in illinois, where an
estimated 12, 000 of the state's l$,000 miners were idled.
Scattershot picketing also kept operations at a standstill in
western Kentucky and at several mines in Pennsylvania .
All Ohio mines were back in operation early today, however,
after construction workers lifted picket lines maintained
Monday and Tu!'Sdi•Y at one opeo·ation near Clarington.

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 29, 1978

GOP conceding only
three seats in '78

a:

The 14,000 UMW members who build mine shafts and other
was ratified or rejected . The plea was ignored by many and it
coal
operation facilities were angry that Ute miners drew fire from Peter Gordy, an Illinois construction local
financially
haltered in their winter-long strike - returned to
president.
"That kind of talk is dividing the miners and the mine the pits before a construction contract could he forged . Their
picket tines denied many of the miners $100 first.Coy show-up
coostruction workers,' ' he said.
_
Joseph Bonello, preSident of the Western Pen.~ylvania Coal bonuses.
"They may be hungry, but we're awful holngry too." said
Operators Association, agreed Utere was a diV!soon, but he
blamed it 011 the pickets.
. Leonard "Red " Cox, who heads a 1,500-member construction
"The construction workers are going to vote on thetr workers local at Marmet, W.Va. "We don 't know yet whether
tentative contraet Sunday, so why keep the miners out now?" we're going to accept this contract,"
The proposed pact is similar to one ratified last Friday by
he asked. "It's foolish for them to go out and pocket now ...
·
the
UMW 's 160,000 miners . It provides construction workers
Mmeone is not using his conunon sense .,. there's going to be
animosity between those trying to work and those out there on with a pay increase of $2.40 an hour over Ute next three yenrs
and gives them the same hea lth benefits as those accepted by
the picket lines."

By DNNB1H R'. CLARJ[
Ualled Pnu llllenlatl.al
A new cootract - this time for UMW mine construction
wockera - lay before the union's bargaininc c:Guncil In
Wubington today, pending c:Guncii approval and a weekend
ratification vote by the la!!t coal field rank and file still on
strike.
In theory, the coal strike was over . But in practice, It was
very much in •vidence Tueaday at mines throughout tbe
Midwest where returning miners refwoed to croaa picket lines
thrown up by construction workers who defied their leaders
and re~ to withdraw.
John Guzek, chief negotiator for the ,UMW, asked his
members to stay off the picket Une until the contrart either

Professor
says plants
'unplanned'

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va.
(UP!) - Taken alone, the
GRE9 BECKER
K.EVIN KING
WASHINGTON - TEN WESTERN STATES are being power plants that abound in
studied hy Ute Air Force as potential sites for an MX · the Ohio River basin
intercontinental ballistic missile system, too Pentagon has probably are harmless.
announced.
.
Collectively, there could be
Governors and cmlgressional delegations from Utah, regional problems, warns
Nevada, Californ,ia, ;vizoria, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Vincent P. Cardi,_a professor
KanSas, Nebraska and Colorado have been sent letters of law and one of two West
Two Meigs High Schoo l where he serves as president
informing them the Air Force is screen!"g parts ot those s.tates Virginia University faculty
. as posaible sites fo~ the mobile missiles, Pentagon offocials members serving on a 13- juniors - Greg Becker and ol the youth group .
Kevin King - have been
Becker os enrolled in the
said Tuesday.
member study panel.
"After a year of study, selected to · attend Buckeye scientific course at Meigs
in
June High SchooL He plays fool:
HOLLYWOOD -THEY'RE GOING TO MAKE A movie of we're now concerned that, Boys State
representing
Middleport's
liall, basketball and baseball
"Star Trek," with all the actors who were int he original fromaregionalpointofview,
·Post
128,
a
nd r eceive d honorable
Feeney-Bennett
television series.
•
power plants are largely'
mention
on
the
all
Paramount Studios announced Tuesday it will spend fl5 ·unplanned," Cardi said . American Legion.
Becker is the son of Mr. and Southeastern Ohio Athletic
mUiion on the film and has lined up ali the lop stars of the "When they 're studied
television series, including William Shatner to play Capt. . individually, the planning Mr s. Don Becker, Mid- League football and basketJames Kirk and Leonard Nimoy to appear as the emotionless, data may indicate no major dleport, and King is the son of hall teams. He is a member of
· Mr . and Mrs. William King, the varsity M. Club.
pointy-eared Vulcan, Mr. Spock, '
bad effects."
,
Both King and Becker are ·
The new movie will include the set of the UUS Enterprise
Cardi's group is conducting Bradbury.
King
is
vice
president
of
the
honor
students. King holds a
_ after which the American space shuttle was named - is the Ohio River Basin Energy
Meigs
High
junior
class
and
four-point
ave rage a nd
being built on lour different sound stages,
Study to assess Ute
environmental, social and is enrolled in the academic . Becker a 3.5 ..
COLUMBUS - GOY. JAMES A. RHODES announced economic impacts of basin co·urse. He is a member of the Alternates named were
. marching and jazz bands, the Brent Bolin, son of Mr. and
today he has approved spending f7.98 million in federal fllilds power plants.
.
to hire an estimated JO,OOOeconomically disadvantaged youths
Joining WVU are seven music club, and plays in the Mrs. Joe Bolin, Rutland, and
for jobs in 58 counites this summer.
other · universities in six ensemble. He was in the class Otris Veauger, son of Mr.
Administrative Services Director Richard D. Jackson said states. Congress authorized , play. King is a member of the and Mrs. Keith Yeauger, Rt.
young persons will work in parks, libraries, hospitals, local the study, the current phase Bradbury ·Church of O!rist 2, Cheshire.
govenunent offices and state agencies.
of which should be completed
The jobs will pay $2.65 an hour, will start June 5 and end in another two years.
Sept. 22.
·
The group believes that by
the year 2000, the Olilo River
requesting
Meigs
County
Com- mission
MAPUTO, MOZAMffiQUE - BLACK guerrillas of the basin will have one of the missioners Tuesday night assistance and guidance in
Patriotic Front today said they were fighting Rhodesian highest concentrations of agreed to contract the firm of obtaining funding for .a day
government troopa in one of the fiercest battles of the six-year pciwer plants in the world.
Easley, Lee, Vargo and care ~enter.
war againat Prime MiDister Ian Srnlth's white minority
Alluding to one potential Cassady of Marietta as
The commissioners stated
reglnie.
.
..
problem, Cardi said Illinois, architects for the con- they would check into funding
'f11e Patriotic Front said 600 guerrillas from Mozambique Indiana, and Ohio each might struction of a mental possibilities and inform the
had penetrated 40 miles into Rhodesia along the southeast locate five plants in the river retardation training center. group of their findings as
border. A spokesman said their advance was halted only by a area along their · southern
.
In other business com· soon as possible.
borders and Kentucky might missioners accepted the bid
The board approved the
flooded river.
The guerrillas also said they had opened another front on bulld six· or eight at its of Pomeroy Motor Company construction of a bridge on
Rhodeala's northeast border but did not give details of the northern border.
for a tandem dump truck in Rutland Township Road 174
"We
know
that
se"erai
the amount of $27,086 and the (Happy Hollow Road) as
Hf!ting.
times a year, for periods Dan Thompson Ford bid for a ·recommended by the county
WA&amp;HJNGTON- FOOD PRICES MAY RISE 8 percent in averaging two or more weeks 1978 pickup truck at a cost of engineer. Work is to he dorie
1978, up w double· the increase previously expected by the each, prevailing winds $4,69S.
by · force
account as
blowing up the Ohio Valley
government.
Commissioners, after t emergency work at an
Agriculture Department economists have been can
bring
massive receiving petitions from estimated cost of $24,788.
forecasting increases of 4 tO 6 percent, but said Tuesday retail concentrations of pollutants residents of T-174 in Salisbury
Mr . and Mrs. Walter
to the Wheeling-Pittsburgh Township, agreed to change . Green, Salem Township, met
foodpr!Ct!ll will average 6 w8 percent above 1977.
.
RillnrJiood prices conlrtbuted to the Increase in c011sumer area," he said.
· the name of Shotgun Hollow with commissioners
41
prices In February, witlt prices rising U percent for the month
Yet,
for
example, Road to Noble Summit Road. requesting the county replace
-far above the White House inflation target for the year.
planners at Paducah, Ky., or
Mary O'Brien, Becky a bridge culvert on T.:17 off
Evansville, Ind., would have Anderson, Donna Nease and SR 325 .
CARACAS, VENEZUELA - PRESIDENT CARTER little occasion to consider several other working , Comtriissioners stated they
responded today to the Third World clamor for a new that as an effect of siting a mothers met with the com- would have tlie highway
(COnllnued on page 16)
plani near those cities."
superintendent check the

.

Middleport Post names
boy state delegates

By NED TEMKO
BEIRUT, Lehanoo (UP!) .
- The Palestine Liberation
Organization says it woll do
aH it can to assure the
success of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in southern
Lebanon, but it stopped short
of endorsing a cease.fire wifrl
IsraeL
An estima ted 1,000 U.N.
troops ste pped up reconnais·
sance patrols in the region
today and Israel threatened
to take matters "into its own
hands" unless Palestinian
guerrillas hail their rocket
attacks on northern Jewish
towns.
· At the United Nations ,
. Secretary General ·Kurt
Waldheim said PLO leader
Yasser Arafat agreed to a
cease-fire in a meeting with
the commander of the peacekeeping force .
"I am most gmtified by
Mr .
Ararat's
pos lHve
response," Waldheim said.
But the PLO office in Beirut
did not confirm Waldheim 's
announcement and guerriiia
sources said any such assurance probably wwould he
conditional on progress in
removing Israeli troops from
t.Qe region .
Instead, the PW said, said
Arafat conveyed to Maj. Gen.
Emmanuel Erskine Tuesday
his movement's 1 'readiness W
give all necessary facilities to
ensure the success of the U.N.
force'~ task."

suppo.r t

The statement also sulci
Am fat was seeking nrrauge-

ment.s to "guarantee I sr·~~eli
withdrawal from south l.cbn non." Isra eli officials said
such a pullout dependeol ""
U.N. succ.css in purgmg the
area 'of guernlla influence.
In an apparent move for
increHsed U.N . presswc on
the Palestini a ns, Isr aeli

Defense Minister Ezcr
'Wetunan late Monday gave
guerrillas 46 hours to hail
rocket attacks on northern
Israeli settlements .
H the attacks persisted, he

soid, Israel would take
mutters '' into its own hands.''
DeHpite ~he confusion on
whether Atufat hud agreed to
observe 11 ti'Ute , a high U.N.
source in Beirut !Wi d, "The
atmO:iJ&gt;herc and tone of the
Arafut-Erskine
m~etlng
leads us to believe the
Puiestinians will try for the
immediate future to exercise
as mu ch r es traint ~s
possi bie."
" We arc confident the
major fighting is behind us/'
he sajd.

CQmmission employes architects
situation and report back to
the board.
James Jennings told the
commissioners a draft on the
Page Street project will be
completed by. the end of this
week.
It will then be subJTlitted to
the Ohio Department of
Transportation, (ODOT) ,
Mari,tta. ODOT will take 10
days to review the plans then
the county will hold a public
hearing .
Following that hearing, a
final draft will be sent to
ODOT in Columbus and from
there to Washington for final
approval. The project should
be under construction by the ·
end of the year or the first of
next year.
Attending were H~nry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

Linda Eason as Ethel Toflelmier an.d: Raiuly
Marcellus Washburn strike a pose from
dance
number as they rehearse roles for "Music
bein8
presente&lt;l_friday and Saturday ~ighlil at the Meigs Htgh
Sehool Auditorium by the vocal music department. The
dance which also features Sj!veral oUter dancing couples
is done to "Shipoopi" sung by Roach. Curtain time Friday
is 7:30p.m. whUe the curtain time on Saturday is a p.m.
Direction ls hy Mrs. Paige Hunl and Laura Hoover Ill
student director . This marks the first time 'a Broadway
musical has been presented at Meigs High Sehool.

�•
•

.
. . :·
.. ....· .···········:··::·.:······:·::·

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 29, 1978

'., ,

!ienlino!l, lll.iddleport-P•om,ero,y, 0., Wednesday. March 29, 1978

Rivermen say tax proposal could
be .devastating for inland waterways
PI'ITSBURGH tUPil Officials l!l Pittsburgh and
other inland port cities fear a
congressional tax proposal
could deal a devastating blow
to the Northeast and Midw est
through a vital transpo rtatlon
network
the Inland

l!ldustry in inland port cities
The head of the Cincmnaubased Oh1o River Co , which
has facilities in Huntington,
W Va labeled the Senate b1ll
"totally unrealistic."

waterways.
Two bills in Congress would
enact a users' tax on diesel
fuel consumed by barges, tax
money would be used lor

mtmstration would more than
double the cost of a gallon of
diesel fuel )iow.ever, a
separate bill already approved by the House of
Representatives would add a
tax of four cents per gallon by
1979 and six cents by 1981
Geray sa1d he f1gures the
b11l enacted would be a
C&lt;lmpromise measure more
in line with the House ver-

maintenance and operation of
locks and dams
Officials say such a tax

could more than double the
pnce of d1esel fuel used by
river barges and result i.n
increased steel and uuhty
costs
John D Geray , pres1dent of
the Ohio River Co., smd the
proposa l could cau.se a
.. sen ous economic disruptton" in th e transrortfltion

The Senate measure
backed by the Carter ad-

In
Pittsburgh,
Ed
Beachler ,
director
of
waterways development for
Pittsbu rgh's Port Authority
Transit, said if any of the
proposals are passed, they
would be chaUenged in the
court:; as unconstit utionaL

Beachler said when the U.
S. Constitution was ratified in
1789, It included a provision
first adopted in the Northwest
Ordinance of 1787 guaranteeing the states that th e
rivers would "forever remam
free "
River barges "a re not only
the cheapest form of transportatiOn, but the greatest
conserver of energy and the
lowest polluter because they
sion
Any tax w1ll "increase can ca rry more tons greater
costs and affect our rates," distances, '' Beachler satd.
He cited a study by the
Geray sa1d, noting that cost
Iowa Department of Trans·
in cr~ases would be passed on
portallon tha t ~ showed one
to consume r s

barge can carry the tonnage
handled by IS jumbo railroad
ca rs or 60 trucks.
One bill. already approved
by the House, would add a 4cent-a-ga llon tax by 1979 and
6 cents by 1981 , tncreasmg
costs $40 nullwn to 158
million .
ASenate bill, backed by the
Carter administration, would
put a 42-cent tax on each
gallon of fuel, more than
~oubling its current cost of
about 3ii cents a gallon and
addmg $350 million to costs.

recent times.
The Museum announced

Friday that tests over 16
months have established the
rock is truly an egg - 60
million years old and
believed to b&lt;j that of a reptile-like forerunner of today's
crocodi le.
Bruce Er1ckson 1 the
mu se um's
curator
of
paleontology, sa1d the fossil

an egg so I didn't throw 1t.
"I told my dad what I
away and may be the earliest thought It was, and he put it in
evidence yet that the his jacket pocket."
It wound up at the museum
reproductive behavior of
prehistoric reptiles closely and Erickson began h1s tests.
" We wanted to be as cer·
resembled that of today's
tain as possible that we knew
crocodiles.
It 1s believed to be the firSt what Chris had found because
such discovery in the United obviously something so
States, although Erickson fragile as an egg does not
said he was aware of a generally become a fossil."
Only the shell remal!ls
stmllar fossil in a museum m
intact, the paleon tologist
Germany .
Chris, a student at Adams SBld.
Elementary School m St.
Paul, was huntmg w1th his
father, Dennis Czech, 41, a
member of the shipping
department at Univac Corp .,
when he made the find
"I was walking in a kind of
drainage ditch and tossing
roc ks into the nearby bushes
trymg to hel p my dad flush
out a deer," Chris said. 11 1
spotted so mething that
seemed whiter llian the other
rocks and It was shaped like

may once have contamed an
embryo that has smce wasted

•,•

.:··

River people are backing
the 4-eent House bilL
"This 1s the lesser of the
evi ls
that
propose d ,"

have

been

Beachler sa td.
" We can live with that."

He said m order for the egg
to survive for 60 mllhon years

1t had to have been buried in a
swamp or lake shore and
there had to have been " a
fairly rapid sealing over by
sedtments. ••
For Chris, who said he gets
"mostly A's except once in a
wh1le in Enghsh," lt has
meant a change In Ufe's
amb1t1ons. He has spent
many hours with Erickson
and now he wants to be a
paleontologist too.

Goo:'!'ndAJ.~::!;. ~~= look~~·n::dha~;~~;::

·_:,_j_

Deanna Lynn, being held by Beverly Huffman , R. N. in
the Nursery of the OB Department at Pleuant Vlllley :·::
Hospital.

PVH Initiates New Visiting
Policy In Obstetrics Area

estlffiate.

Boy happens upon important fossil
By ARNOLD DIBBlE
ST. PAUL, Mmn. !UP[) In November 1976, young
Chr1s Czech was huntmg With
his dad 10 east-central
Wyoming , throwing rocks
mto the bushes in the hopes of
flushing out a deer .
The boy , now 12, picked up
a rock that seemed whiter
than the others and shaped
like an egg. He decided not to
throw it. If he had, the
Sc ience Muse um of Mm·
nesota mtght have missed
one of the most unportant
archeological discovenes of

~~~

VISIT MOTHER - Father and daughter, Glen and
Melinda Gooldin, visiting mother, Bonnie Gooldin, in OB
Department at Pleasant Valley HospitaL

Mother Is in the hospital to have a new baby. What do
the children do ? Da!ldy can visit Mother and the new
baby each day, but what do the brothers and sisters of the
new baby do?
At Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal they visit Mother and llie
new baby, too! Startl!lgAprill, 1978 big brothers and big
SISters wiU be able to see Mother and the new baby for
one hour one time during llie hospital stay.
Recognizing that becoming a "blg brother" or "big
sister" Is an important event in family Ufe, Pleasant
Valley Hospital has initiated this new visiting policy for
siblings
On a day which is convenient for the family, the
brothers and sisters of a newborn can come to Pleasant
Valley Hospital from 6:30· to 7:30 p.m. and visit their
mother and see the new baby through the nursery glass.

Whether or not the children should visit Is the
decision of the family, however, hospital nursea will
deny visiting privileges to children if it appears they have
"colds" or possible Infectious diseases.
This new "big brother-big sister" visiting policy in no
way affects the rest of the hospital or other visiting hours.
In the maternity wing, patients can have visitors from
noon unlll1 :30 p.m. and 2:30 until ~:30 p.m. in the afternoon and from 6:30 until 8 p.m. In the evening each
day. New fathers may visit at anytime.
When visiting a patient In the hospital, remember to
keep the visit short and pleasant. Do not bring "colds" or
other infections to the patient. Always observe the safety
signs In the hospital such as ' no smoking" "Isolation"
''family visitors only'' and etc. These are for your safety
and llie health of the patlenl.

spot in the UP! Board of
By GENE CADDES
Coaches ratings. But her
UPI Spol'll Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - De- scoring is overshadowed by a
nette Kolhe of Lakeside Dan- rebound average of 26.7 per
bury, a s-loot-1 senior center game.
Kolbe, the oldest of three
wbo Coach Jim Rinaldo says
girls
in the Harold Kolbe
is
mobile
enough
to
play
By MILTON RICHMAN
family
, shot 67 per cent from
guard,
heads
the
United
UP! Sporu Editor
Press International Class A llie held llie past season,
DUNEDIN, Fla.'(UPI) - You can't blame Tommy Hutton girls all.Ohlo basketball most of her &amp;.'Orlng coming
for feeling lliere ain 't no just1ce. He works like a dog all day, team.
on llie inside , and 63 per cent
running, sweating, puttirJg in long hours, and then when he
Kolbe, who will attend from the free throw line.
comes home, his wife, tlebbie, gives him one of those fishy Tennessee Tech on a
"She is one of those girls
looks.
basketball scholarship, was a who worked very Mrd," said
"I get home so late, she thinks I'm fooling around. runaway wiMer in the player Laker Coach Jim Rinaldo.
Especially because I'm so tired by the time I get home," says of the year balloting by " Her dad started her out. He
Toronto's slick-fieldmg first baseman.
coaches from arotmd the put up a run outside and
. He laughs when he says it, knowing his behavior has been state.
started playing Willi her.
exemplary and that he isn't in any real trouble willi his wife
Joining her on the aU-Ohio Then, she started to grow.
although she keeps remembering how much earlier he'd come first team are Ada's Lynne ' "She 1s just one of those
bome.during the spring training period when he was Willi Coe, LIS8 Graeff of Arcanum, kids who come along once in a
Philadelphia.
Jermi Heisler of Edgerton lifetime," said Rinaldo "She
There was a reason for that. Several reasons, in fact.
and D~anna Imbrock of is just an all around athlete."
The Hui!Dns have a condomiruum apartment in Clearwater Patrick Henry.
Kolbe also starred on the
Beach, which is only f1ve 111inutes from where llie PhiUies do . Kolbe averaged 25.5 points Danbury volleyball team
their spring training. Hutton waa willi the Phils SIX years per game llie past season in which lost only five games in
before they sold hiin to the Blue Jays last December and it leadmg Danbury to an three years.
would take him hardly any time at all w get home from the ·unbeatenseasonandtheNo. I
Coe and Graeff will go
ballpark.
Dunedin, where the Blue Jays tram, ISII't lliat much farther
!rum his home, but it does take Hutton longer to make the trip.
That's only one of llie reasons he's putting in longer days with
Toronto.
"We have only one field we can use," Hutton explains . " The
complex they 're building here will have three fields , but it
won 't be completed unhl next year."
Life with the Blue Jays is far different for Hutwn than it was
with the Phillles, but he seems to be enjofl!lg it because for the
first tune since coming to the big leagues, he has heard he's
going to get a chance to play regularly.
''I've read where I'm going to play (irst base,'' he says, with
Led by third baseman by Semak1 Corhas, doutile by
the attitude of a man who has heard llie same thing before. Claude Cornelius, the Kyger Nibert and smgle by John
11
l'm not going to believe 1t though until the season ts over and Creek Bobcats defeated Amos produced the winning
I've played at least 152 games."
Trimble 5-3 Tuesday night in runs ,
Roy Hartsfield, the Blue Jays' manager, says Hutton needn't a game shortened because of
Taylor, the w~nnmg pitcher
wrut that long ,
m relief, had two hils m four
darkness at Cheshire.
He's OW" regular first baseman," says Hartsfie ld. "What
Coach J1m Sprague's trips .
does he think we got him for?"
Kyger Creek travels to
Bobcats jwnped into a I-ll
Willi the PhiUies last year, Hutton backed up Richie Hebner lead only to see Glouster take Southern Tuesday night and
at first base and pinch hit, winding up willi a creditable .309 advantage of the wildness of Will host Hannan Trace and
batting average l!l!07 games. Never known much for his long· starting hurler Gary Nibert Southwestern on Wednesday
ball ability, he had only two homers and II runs batted in.
to take a 2-1 lead l!l the third and Thursday of next week
Durmg his eight seasons l!l llie National League, Hutton hit mning .
Line Score:
Tom Seaver the way he haq absolutely no nght w,wearing out
002 01-3--:l 1
Kyger Creek won the non- Glouster
llie three-time Cy Yo110g winner with--.. better than .400 league e ncounter in the Kyger Creek
100 4~ 8 2
average.
Meade,
Holbert
(3) 1Ll and
fourth inning plating four
''I'm glad w be over here l!l llie Amencan League, but God, runs. Von Taylor opened the Jones.
am I gomg to miss Seaver," Hutwn laughs .
N1bert , Taylor (3) (W) and
rally with a single, two walks,
Somebody else he'll m1ss 1s Tim McCarver, the Phillies' a double by Cornelius, smgle Russell
veteran receiver. The two were almost always togellier and
they related to each other so well, one kne\v what the other was
going to say before he even said it.
" I can't say enough for Tinuny," says Hutton. "If anybody
with llie Phillies was ever in a depressed mood, aU he'd have to
do is talk with Timmy a httle and he 'd be aU right again ."
Hutton also has some warm words for his old manager,
Danny Ozark.
11
He's very low key, yet he's a fair man," says the 31-year·
Terry Wall socked a first llie third mning.
old,leltAianded hitting Californian, who onginally belonged to inning home run and hurled
Today, GAHS Will host
llie Dodgers. "He always treated me squarely and let me know Coach Jim
Osborne' s Chesapeake 1n a non·league
exactly where I stood. Some people criticize his way of GaUipohs Blue Devils to a 4-1 game. The tilt will be played
managmg, bull don't. If he tried to be a boller guy, it would be Southeastern Ohio League on Rio Grande College 's
phony. It's just not his way_"
baseball victory over Evans Field. Memonal Field
With the expansion-born Blue Jays, most of whom are1in Wellston Tuesday evening. is still covered by high water.
their '20s, Hutwn is regarded as somellimg of an elder
The game ·was played at. Game time is 4:30pm.
statesman.
Wellston It was the season
Linescore:
The kids come around and ask him all kinds of questions; opener for both teams.
GAHS
120 001 0-4 6 0
seeking his opmion on a wide range of subjects from where to
Wall, m going the distance, Wellston
001 1100 0- 1 6 0
station lliemselves on relay throws ID how much difference allowed the Golden Rockets
lliere is fielding a ball on artificial turf as opposed to grabbing stx safeties and one earned
it off regular grass.
run. He fanned five and
One of the young Blue Jays came up to Hutton llie other day walked three.
with this question :
Rav Maerker started for
"What kind of a guy 1S Steve Carlwn ?"
the Rockets. He was relieved
"He's a fierce competitor," Hutton said. upm glad I don't
by Jim .Montgomery in the
have to hit against him ."
fourth inning . Maerker was
NBA Sfandmgs
By Uniled Pn~5 S International
charged with the loss.
Eastern Conference
Maerker fanned eight but
Atlantic Diviston
W L Pet . GB
walked SIX. Montgomery
X Phil~
52 21 712
farmed two and walked two. New York
38 37 507
By Unhed Press lnternat•onal
agent
JO 43 411
Dallas Love and Kev Boslon
College
Tuesday
Buff a lo
26 48 35 1
west Virgin ia Un1vers•tv
Baseball
T!lompson
had
two
hits
22 5.4 289
New Jr sey
Nam ed Gale Catlett of the
St LouiS - Pla ced r1ght
Central DtVIStOn
handed pitcher Larty Dierker Univ ersity of C1ncmna t l as apiece to pace the Gallians.
W L Pet
GB
on wa i-vers ; gave ou tfielder head basketball coach
other Blue Devils hitting Sa n Anton
46 28 622
Mike Anderson his uncond• tion
safely were Wall and Chuck Wash
40 34 .541
al release
37 38 493 9'n
Derifield. GAHS scored four · Clevland
Ctnc•nnat• Bought left
New Or lns
36 40 474 11
handed r eliever Dave Tom lin
runs on stx hits.
Atlanta
36 40 474 11
from Te)(as ; ass1gnet:t p1tchers
25 50 333 21 •1~
After Wall's first mning Houston
Mike Lacoss. Mano Soto and
Western Conference
Raul Ferreyra and ou tt 1elder
homer, GAHS plated two runs
MtdWeSt DIVISIOn
Ed Armbr 1ster to the m inor
W L Pet. GB
in the second. The Devils
leagues
,
Denver
43 31 581
Retur11ed
added an insurance marker
Chicago (AL) Mtlw
40 35 533 31!?

Sport Parade

;:~:

·.·.

Total revenue generated by

the waterways IS about 1950
million annua lly, official s

Kolbe named Class A 'lllayer-of-the-Year'

Today's

headto-head Thursday night
when thetr teams collide 111
the semifinals of the girls
Slate Tournament at St. John
Arena .
The &amp;-101'. Coe averaged
24.2 points per game in
leading Ada to a 2().2 recocd,
while Graeff, daughter of
Arcanum boys Coach Dick
Graeff and one of the
outstanding g1rl alliietes in
the state, averaged 16 JXJmts
per contest in pacing the
TroJans to an unbeaten mark
and llie No. 2 Class A rating.
Heisler, llie only junior on
llie first team, averaged 22.8
p oints per con t es t for
Edgerton, wh1le Imbrock
averaged 22.
There are \hree jumors on
llie second team - Margaret
Burelh, of Old Trail, Sue
Klingel, of Ca rdingtonLincoln and Kim Sehinunel of
Old Washmgton Buckeye
Trail Semors Conme Nick1es,

.

:·
:·
:·:
:·

·.·..
·:·

·.·

By GREG AIELLO
UP! Sports Writer
After the New York Knicks
scored an important 10&amp;-103
victory over llie Denver Nuggets Tuesday night Madison
Square Garden Prestdent

11

Sonny Werblln and Kn1cks
President Mike Burke were
seen talking with David
Thompson's fmanctal advtser

(J

GAHS tops Wellston

4-1 in loop opener

They'll Do It Every T1me
ASKiNG YOLIR. !NTCRNIST
AA/ Ot/TS/Oc r:;vESTION -

SO MA'N.'l SOAP
OPERA MEDICAl.
1'1\lf?ACLES · DOC

DOCTOI':, I'VE
READ ABC&lt;JT

\'OJLDN 'T KNOW
~ RfAL CURE IF
IT V.ACCINA"TE I;il

PEBRASAN- A NEW PIS·

C0Vf;R.'1

T ~1AT

SOU NDs GOOD
FOR M"f

THAT MoD1CINE

TI&lt;OUBLE·

W'J'l

STOf'PfD

t£ARNING AFTE~

GOING TO COUNCIL COMPETITION -The above 10 youths, finalists in the M-G-M
Scouting Distnct Pinewood Derby Tuesday mght, will have llie opportunity to compete in
llie Tri-State Area Council Pinewood Derby in May _In all, the M-0-M District can send five
from llie 8-9 year-&lt;Jids competition and five olliers from llie Webelo group. Ollier youths who
w1sh ID participate m the Council Pinewood Derby must enter in llie Open Class. Above at

HE GOT HIP 10

left are llie 8-9 year-&lt;&gt;ld Winners. They are, from left, Matt Van Meter, Pack 253 of Mason;
Bucky Johnson, Pack 253, Mason, who ended up baing the M-G·M District Champ; Jay
Buskirk, Pack 245 of Middleport; Tim Cassell, Pack 245 of Middleport and Wyatt Akers,
Pack 258 of Point Pleasant. In the phow at right are Webelowinners, from left, Trey Cassell,
Pack 245 of Middleport; Jay Taylor, Pack 258 of Point Pleasant; Billy Weaver, Pack 245 of
Middleport ; Vincent Kn1ght, Pack 259 of Pomeroy and Scott Hysell, Pack 249 of Pomeroy.

&lt;,._,1 __.

[~~~~~~~:1~~~~~~4~~~~~~~

900,1100 tons a week The
patrol obviiously bad the
situation well in hand."
Bob Jones, a spokesman for
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., said a number of
facwrs eased llie Situation.
He agreed lliat one factor
was
the use of the Ohio
combmaUon
wmter
weather and ofthesevere
coal stnke.
Rhodes told the Ohio
Newspaper

#.;-~"

"'i,~ 1'0~;«&gt;

'

' "!' -;___,,_,.. "

'

~~

&amp;

&gt;

r

ROLE REVERSAL seems evident in UU.. scene from
the IsraeU-&lt;&gt;ccupied West Bank oi the Jordan River. This
family belongs to a group of Israelis see~lng to foiUid a
permanent settlement at a West Bank archeological site.
The u.s.has criticized such setUements on occupied Arab
- land aa "obstaCles to peace and contrary to international
law.''

Association

Convention on Feb. 9 that
"Ohio ts on a countdown to
catastrophe." "Sen. John
Glenn, D-Oh10, later echoed
the governor's remarks.

Highway Patrol w escort
shipments of non-union coal
to the state's coal-starved
utilities.
None one anticipated th'at
coal deliverles would be
resuming on such a large
scale pnor w the actual
settlement of llie strike," said
11

Power conservers will
benefit under proposal

Two of the state's hardest
hit utilities-Columbus &amp; Columbus and Southern has
Southern Ohio Electric Co spent approximately 21.5
and Ohio Edison- were million dollars on power
forecasting the possibility of purchased from outside the
mass1ve layoffs and rolling company system in order to
blackouts.
save coal during the coal
State Economic - strike.
Development Director James
The company asked that
Duerk ssld in January if the billing of these costs be
strike didn't eild by March I, deferred until alter aU costs
over 450,11000hioans would be assoc~ated with the purunemployed.
chased power are available;
Ohio's energy related and that the costs be spread
layoffs were minimal, over a four month penod to
voluntary conservation was alleviate the impact on
urged by most utilities, some consumers. The matter of
cl\ies, including Colwnbus, method of billing these
turned off street and freeway charges has been a concern
lights.
and the company has atAnd that's about it.
tempted to detennl!le the
What happened?
most equitable way to bill
Chan Cochran, media aide these costs.
to Rhodes, said there was "no
Under the method the
question" the dire warnings company prpposes to use, the
were valid at the lime lliey charge would be associated
were given.
With the customer's kUowatt
"Coal plies were dwindling hour (KWH) consumption as
and at that point you couldn't billed ~uring the months of
see yow- way out of it," said January, February and
Cochran. "But the governor March. Since the charge is
got us through this thing associated w1th khw con·
without any mandatory swnption, those people who
curtailments."
conserved during the
One of the reasons was the emergency would benefit.
increased use of Ohio
"This is a more equitable
Highway Patrol escorts for method over attaching the
non-union coal.
•
charge to future usage of
"In the last couple of weeks customers, which, in some
before the strike ended, cases would be substantially
600,1100 tons of coal a week more or less than during the
was moving," said Cochran. emergency," said R. E.
"The non-strike average is Sisinger, Vice President of

Rates and Corporate Affairs
In addition, this method of
billing would permit those
customers
who
were
receiving a 25 per cent credit
on electric heating bills to hve
the 25 per cent credit apphed
to these deferred purchase
power charges as well .
Another possible inequity
that would be avoided invo lves the circumstances
surrounding new customers.

Jones . "Because of that that utility's service area
stockpiles were increased . from more severe cutbacks.
''There was also continued
"Then there was the purw
chase of outside power,' ' said conservation on the part of
our consumers and the fact
Jones, "and the conservation
which we think . was that we managed wbring the
successful. All of these things BruceMasfield plant on tine
modified the position lliat and the power we got from
was made in llie dead of the Beaver Valley nuclear
plant at Shippingsport, Pa.,"
winter.
" It is easy w look back and said Peoppelmeier.
"In eliminating those backsay 'what was all llie concern,"' said Jones. "lt could up generators we took some
just as easily be said that if big gambles," he said. "We
none of lliese other things had modified operations that
come through, those very oorrnaUy we wouldn't even
real potentials could have have considered."
The purchase of out-ofcome true."
Dave Peoppelmeier of Ohio state power was expensive so
Edison also said increased who has to pay for it?
Apparently the consumer.
purchases of oul-&lt;&gt;f-slate
However, Ohio Constuners'
power, more shipments of
non-UMW coal and a cutback Counsel William Spratley
in back-up generating wants to take a long look at
systems, saved ctLStomers in that sspect of the stale's fuel

Th ird Team
Sa nd y Cordonn1er , Russia ,
5.51'l, Sr , 25 9
Kim Dlble, Liberty Benton,
5·6, Sr . 215
Kathy Fox . K1rlland , S 7,
Sr .. 21 0
Cyndy H('l rpe r , F r anklorl
Adena, S 6, Jr , 18 8. .
Janet Shelly , Bluttton, s 9,
Jr .. 17 5
Special Ment ion
(hr 1ssy
Ot\ng e lo ,
Sall ne\l ll le Soutlu!rn Cheri
Fielitz ,
Hlillop .
Sue
Hontgford . Ollovllle . Cheryl
Mast.
Smllhvil!e ,
Lt sa
Mullett. Ind ian Valley So uth .
Theresa N i~t;on , Lancas te r
Fisher , Ctndy Rosselct.
Hoiga1e ; Theresa R.11 s ton ,
Mtlle rsoor t . Sharon Sc h

Ted Shay.
It is no secret the Kmcks
are
pursutng
David
Thompson, the Nuggets
gifted hi gh-sconng guard
who becomes a free agent at
the end of the season. But
their action Tuesday mght
could leave U1e Knicks open
to charges of tamper111g.
Thompson, himself, was
not in much of a mood w talk
about anything after mjuring
his left elbow m llie last
minute of play ije later was
released from a New York
hospital after precautiOnary
X-rays were taken
The Nuggets, meanwhile,
continued their slide.
They have now lost five of
their last six games aM eight
of llieir last 12 and Denver's
leadover
first-place
Milwaukee m the Midwest
Division has been reduced to
31'. games.

Denver Coach Larry Brown
attributL-d part of hts team's
problems to all llie attention
bemg paid Thompson 's
future .
"All that talk isn't
helping,'' said Brown
Thompson scored 23 points
before leaving llie game with
33 seconds to play painfully
holding his elbow.
In other games, Detroit
beat Buffalo, 123-118,
Cleveland U&gt;pped Seattle, I t2100 , Atlanta edged Los
Angeles, 10&amp;-104, Kansas C1ty
routed Chicago, 128-105,
Golden State dumped San
Antonio, 108-94, and Boston
defeated Portland, 104-92.
Pistons 123, Braves 118:
Eric Money scored a game~
high 31 pomts, lncludmg 14 in
the !mal quar\er, and Chns
Ford added 24 m a reserve
role to help Detroit hand
Buffalo Its six lli straight loss
Cavaliers 112, SuperSonics
100:
Elmore Smilli tossed l!l 19
points and Jim Chones
grabbed 16 rebounds to spark
Cleveland - battling New
Orleans and Atlanta for a
playoff spot - to Its third
sta1ght victory.
Hawks 105, Lakero 104:
John Drew converted a

la yup w1th 21 seco nds
remauu ng to spoil the I.akers
rally and pull Atlanta into a
t1e w1th 1dle New O•·lci\ IIS for
llie final playoff spot 111 the
EHslcrn CunfcrenL:c,
King&lt; 128, Bull&lt; 105:
OtiS Birdsong scored 22
points and Ron Boone added
20 to lead Kansa' City over
Ch1cago. Bulls center Artis
Gilmore took game ~cor mg
honors with 29 pomts.
Warriors 108, Spurs 94 :
Sonny Parker score-d 20
pomts and R1 ck Barry
celebrated his 34th birlliday
with 18 w lift Golden State to
an easy . vlctory over &amp;m
Antomu.
Celtlcs liM, Trail lllazers

• F1s hing Tackle
and Rods
and Reel s
• Gun s and
Relo ading
• Ball Gloves
Camping
Equ•pmenl
e Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
hav e GrIt
CerlrfiCates

601 Main St.
Pt. Pl e a sant. W. Va .
VISA '
Ac ro '.i5 from Courthouse

9'l :

PHONE

Dave Cowens scored 28

pomts and Dave llmg adde-d
26 to send the Trail Blazers
reeling to t he ir fourt h
stra~ ghl defeat

67 5-29 88
Open Su nday t p m ,-6 p.m
Monday lhru Sa turday
9 a .111 to 8 p .m .

Senco • Oren - or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

crowd greets
!Standings \ champion Wildcats

Catastrophe did not materiali e
By JOHN T. KADY
COLUMBUS iUPI) -State
offic1als and Ohio's coal
burning utilities in January
were predictlng the worst
crisis the Buckeye State has
ever faced because of a

First Team

Lynne Coe, Ada , 5· 10 1 ' Sr ,
242
Usa Graefi , Arcanum. 57 •
Sr . 16 0
·
Jenni He1sler, Edgerton , 5
10. Jr .. 2'1 B.
Dianna lmbrock ; Patrick
Henry, 54, Sr ., 22 0
Denette Kolb e . Lakes ide
Danbury 6· 1, Sr , 25 , 1

17.0.

nwcker ,
Eas1
Canton ;
Vanessa Sowards , [akeside
Danbu ry
Honorable Mention
Ang le Anderson , Smith
ville ; Mary Lynn Abell.
Middletown Fenwick . Kathy
Brown. Plymou th ; Kyle
Bo rnhorst. ~ster . Mary
Bohn ing ,
Rocky
Ri ver
Lufheran West ; Tammy
Behnfeldt , T1nort't , Kim
Clark , Sa linevil le So uthern ;
Kathy Decker, Ada , Brenda
Gray . Arcanum , Lu~nne
G1ewe .
Rocky
River'
Luthe ran
West .
Robin
HAH,CS , Hun11ng ton ; Tina
H1 le s . . Berne Union ; Lori
HeCtdy, Buckeye Trail ;
B~rb Howell. Lowellville .
Linda Krider , East Can ton ,
Karen Kin , Riverdale , Joyce
Kllflgsh irn , Holgate ; Casey
O'Connor , Akron Our Lady of
E lms . Shana Robertson ,
(tnc t nnati Coun tr y Day .
Cat hy Sherman. Rocky R iver
Lut he ran West : J on! Sorg ,
Lancaster Fisher , Ten Statil ,
Ada . Agnes Varga , Mi'IT,sfleld
Sl. Peter's , Suzan ne Vans .
coy . Cana l Winches ter ; Amy
Wrigh t, Black Rtver
Piilyu -of. lh e . year De nette Ko lbe , Lakeside
Danbu r y

~----p~~---lHuge

TAKlNG A

PU.LSE 1

COLUMBUS IUP I ) - The
United
Pre ss
In
lerna tiona I Class A Girls' all
Oh1o Basketball Team
1978

Second Team
Bure l ll. Old
Trail, S S Jr .• 21 8.
Sue Klmge i, Cardington
Lmcoln, 5·7, Jr ., 18 0
Connie Nickles , Sm ith vi lle,
S-S, Sr., 16 8
Kim Schimmel , Buckeye
Trail, 5· 7, Jr ., u 1
Stepp1e
Trybus ,
Mid
dlefteld Cardinal. S-11. Sr ,
Margan~ !

Knicks 'tamper' with
Nuggets' Thompson

:K.yger Creek
•
wms
opener

:··

of Srmthvllle, and Sleppie
Trybus, round out the second
team.
Nickles
and
Schimmel's teams also meet
in this wee k end's State
Tournament.
The third team consists of
two juniors, Cyndy Harper of
Frankfort Adena and Janet
Shelly of Bluffton, and three
seniors, Sandy Cordonnier of
Russia, Kim Dible of Uberty
Benton and Kathy Fox of
KtrUand.

Sports transactions

adjustment clause.
"We are looking at a
number of components of the
clause itself," said Spratley.
"One of the issues is
purchased power. We don't
think the cost should be
passed on to the consumer
through the fuel adjustment

•

clause."

Sllratley said his office has
one •uch case before the Ohio
&amp;!preme Court and if the high
court rules in his favor, tbe
utilities would have w
attempt to pass on the costs
through normal rate cases.
"And these cases would be
reviewed much
more
thoroughly," said Spratley.
"If you look at that fuel
adjustment clause, it doesn't
say
anything
about
purchased power."

Oil, gas spills outlined

The individual who js moving
will rece1ve a blll for the total
amount of this charge incurred at that residence
during the emergency. This
way, a new customer would
not be paying for charges
incurred by a former

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The would be 90 to 100 percent. If occur," said Dobbins. "But
Ohio E nv1ronmental 10 hours go by we can only get more Importantly, the health
Protection Agency said about 10 to 20 percent and welfare of citizens can be
Tuesday that 1,112,345 gallons recovery."
IrOiected should the spUI
of oil and gasoline were
Dobbins said a bill involve toxic materials."
spilled in Ohio last year, but currently in the legislature
only 682,012 gallons were would go a long way in c
'THE DAJLYSENTINEL
recovered.
correcting the problem.
DEVOTED TO THE
John Dobb1ns, chief of the
resident.
The bill wquld require
INTEREST OF
MEIGSoMASON AREA
The effect of the company EPA's Emergency Response companies to report spills
ROBERT HOEFLICH
expenditures on the In- Office, said companies immediately.
CII}'Edller
dividual bill is expected to responsible for the . spills
Pull)lahed dolly ""~'~ Sotouday
"If this bill is enacted, a
by 1'he Oh.lo YaUey Publllhini
amount to about a penny per don't report them quickly substantial increase In
Company·Mu ltlmed1a, Inc.,
1q
kwh billed during ·the enough.
Court St.., Pomeroy, Ohio ~7811;.
producl recovery would
11
BllSIIIQ8 ORtce Phone f92.. 2lli8.
emergency. For example, if a
The average reporting
Editorial Phvne 992-21&amp;7 ~
customer has consumed 1600 lime is 10 1-2 hours after the
Second cl..ut! po~rtqe paid a1
Pomeroy, Ohio.
kwh from ·Jan . I through the spill occurs and then only 40
NaUonal advertisl.n« reprqen.
end of March, the deferred percent of the companies
tatiYe Ward • Griffitli ~y
purchase power charge responsible bother w reporl,"
Inc, BotlinelU and Gallaaher Drv.:
~7 Third Ave., New Yori N.Y
CYANIDB BAN UPHELD
would be approximately $16. said Dobbins. "The rest
10017,
'
•
CINCINNATI
(UPI)
A
.
comes
from
police
and
fire
That amount would be spread
Subscription rates Dellver.d by
c.r+ler where avallable n cents per
federal appeals court today
over four months, beginning deparlments.
week. By Molor Route where curter:
"If the companies would approved a new U.S.
with the customer's April or
aerviL'e not av.U.ble, One monUI.~
~l.Z5. By n-..il in ONo and W Va - ~
May Dill, so the customer report ~ptlls faster, the government emergency
One Year, $22.00, stx mono»:
would . antiCipate paying recovery rale would really . health regulation aimed at
flLSO; Three montha, $7 .ociii
roughly $4 per month for four . increase," said Dobbins . protecting factory workers
Ellewbere t21 CXI y&amp;~r , Six mon\M
fi.UO , Three month•, $7 H I
months in addition to the "For example, if a spUI Is exposed to v,lnyl cyanide,
SublcripUon price tncludel Sundllyl
reported within one hour, the which bas been linked to
Times&amp;nlinel.
normal bill. ·
•
approximate recovery rate cancer.

-

free agent pitcher Mike Paz ik
to Iowa of the American
ASSOC18t10n
Minnesota - Purchased ou t
fielder Jo se Morales from
Montrea l, sent pitchers Kevin
Stanfield, J eff Holly, Dav 1s
May. Greg Field and John
Sutton, catcher John Lonchar,
shortstop Date Soderholm and
second baseman Sam Pertozzo
to m 1nor !league . camp for
reass1gnment
Traded lef1
Montreat handed relief P.1tcher W1 ll
McEnaney to P1ttsburgh for
p1tcher T1m Jones
San
D1ego Assigned
catchers Oave Roberts and
Tom Vessey , pitchers Ste\le
Mu ra and Juan Eichelberger
and Infielders Tucker Ashford
and Pat Scanlon to their mmor
teag ue ca mp and asked waivers
on pitcher Brent Strom
Football
Green Bay - Stgned deten~
s ive tackle Bob Brown as a free

BOWLING

m the Sixth.
Wellston's lone run came in

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Tripltc:ate
March 21, 1978
Standings
Pis.
Team
Royal Qak Park
65
Shamrock Motel
David Brickles .
General Contractor
Royal Crown Cola
ol6
Francis Florist
30
Mark V
30
High Individua l game
Pat Carson 213, 193, 178.
High series - Pat carscm
584; Betty Smith 506 ; Bev
Hensley 450 .
Team high game - Royal
Qak Park 501
Team h1gh series - Royal
Qak Park 1416.

Homers

::give Reds
5-2 win
TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) George

Foster,

Danny

Driessen
and
Davey
Concepcion hit homers to
lead llie Cincinnati Reds to a
5-2 victory over the Los
with MaJor Hoople Angeles Dodgers Tuesday
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
behind llie combined sevenr.::::;-:;w::;:-::;;;;-;:OOT~;:";imi(iiiDii~;"J';Ci1'ii:i=fwt~ hit pitching of Bill Bonham
and AI Downing.
The viclim of the three Red
homers was Dodger pitching
ace Don Sutwn, who was
tagged lor all live
during
KIL.U:.I' 1 the five innings he pitched.
~~~~~~'r:~~~l__::.~ theFoster's
homer, coming in
·~
second inning, was his
sixth of the spring. Both
Driessen and Concepcion
connected for two- run
homers in the fourth innirlg.
Bonham restricted the
Dodgers to five hits during
the six innings he pitched,
yielding a run in the third
when Davey Lopes singled
home Steve Yeager. •
~1iil;j~~ Downing, bidding for a spot
1 in
the Reds bullpen, was
nicked lor a nm in the
seventh when Rick Monday
walked, took second on a wild
pitch and scored on Yeager's
..-::::...:!:!~~!..:!~~-~:..:..J single.

runs

LEXINGTON, Ky . (UPI)
- The damage done by a
cTowd of between 7,1100 and
10,1100 welcoming borne the
NCAA champion Kentucky
Wildcats early Tuesday
morning was descnbed by
offic~als
m Lexington
descnbed as "substantial."

James Brough, manager of
the airport, said an X-ray
security station that an .employee said would cost $40,000
to replace was damaged and,
Brough said, a wmg was
broken off a ceramic eagle
Ch. cago
37 40 481 7 1f1 valued at $2,1100.
Det roit
35 39 473 8
People frantically climbed
K-'n C1ty
30 45 400 131h
lnd 1a na
29 46 387 1411~ atop ledges over car rental
PaCifiC DIVIS lOR
W- L Pet
GB counters to welcome home
)( Portlnd
55 20 .733
their winrung team, wh1ch
PhoeniX
45 30 600 10
amved
around 3:45 a.m.,
Seattle
42 33 560 13
about an hour later than
LosAng
41 34 547 14
Golden St
38 37 507 17
expected.
x-clinched divt5tOn title
The crowds had begun
Tuesday's Results
Detroi t 123, Suffalo liB
arriving shortly after the
New York 106, Denver 103
champwnship game ended,
Cleveland 112, Seattle 100·
Atlanta 105. Los Angeles 104
and by 2 a.m., police said
Kansas C1ty 128, Chicago 105
people were jammed into the
Golden 51. 108 , San Antonio 94
terminal concourse.
Boston 104, Portland 92
Wednesdily's Games
Airport pollee, who called
Kansas C1ty a t Washington
in
reinforcements from the
Seattle at Oetro1t
San Antonio at Indiana
Lexington Metro Police
Buffa lo at Philadelphia
Department to 1\eld control
Golden Sla te at Houston
Los Angeles at New Orleans
llie crowd, said about 24
Boston at Denver
people were taken into
Portland at Phoenix
custody . They were not
Thursday 's Games
Washtngton at New York
immediately charged.
San Antonio at Cleveland
Another dozen people in the
tnd1ana at Mtlwaukee
packed crowd required
medical trealment after lliey
NHL Standings
passed out, police sa1d.
By United Pres5 International
Cilmpbell Conterence
Former Baseball CommisPatrick DIVISIOn
W L T Pts. SIOner and Kentucky Gov.
NY Islanders
.u 16 14 102 A.B. "Happy" Chandler was
Philadelpht
42 19 13
97 among the dignataries who
Atlanta
30 26 18
78
NY Rangers
28 32 13
69 ventw-ed out into the crowd w
Smythe DIVISIOn
greet the champions.
W L T Pts .
'Members of llie team and
Chicago
29 ' 27 18
76
Vancouver
19 40 16
SA Wildcat Coach Joe Hall were
Colorado
17 38 20
SA
St. Louis.
17 45 13
47 escorted to an airport
Minnesota
16 49 9
41
Wales Conference
Norri$ Divts1on
W. L T P1s.
)( ·Montreal
55 9 10 120
Detroit
30 30 13
73
Los Angeles
29 31 14
72
P itts burgh
22 33 18
62
wash1ngton
1J 48 13
39
Adams DIVISiOn
W L T Pts
Boston
AB 15 11
107
Buffalo
42 15 17 101
Toronto
40 24 10
90
Cleveland
19 .43 12
50
x.clinched division title
Tuesday's Results
Boston 4. Wash 1ngton .4, t1e

Det roit 7, Buffalo 0
Minnesota 9, Vancouver 4
Colorado 4, Ph il adelphi a 3
Wednesday's Games
NY Islanders at NY Ran~ers
Toronto at Atla nta
Plttsbvrgh at Montrea l
Mml')esola at Cte\lela nd
Los Angeles at Chtcapo
Vancouver a1 St . I..OUIS
Thursday's Games
Pittsburgh at Boston
t...os Ange les a t Detro1t
Cleveland at Buffalo
washington at Colorado

PER BAG .

balcony where lliey spoke to
the crowd·.
Hall llianked llie fans for
their support llirough the
season and called the Wildcat
victory ove r Duke " a great
win for the team ."

pressure
had
"The
mounted all year," said HaD.
"Now it's finally off."
The largest response went
to senior forward Jack
Givens, who dumped m a
career-high 41 points during
!he game. Chants of "Goose,
Goose, Goose," Givens'
nickname preceded his
speech to llie crowd.
He oold the audience the
same story he told reporters
folloWing the victory ." I just
had one of those nights . I had
a hot hand. "
Givens
held
the
championship trophy high
over his head and again the
crowd erupted.
The team left around 4
a.m .. Police reported a
massive traffic jam after the
crowd left the facility on
Versrulles Road, the major
arter y leadm g mto the
airport.

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5- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 29, 1978

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 29,1978

A's release.

.Maravich may After several rain delays, Rio
have surgery hopes to ope·n season Saturday
The Rio Grande College tournament. The weather·
baseball team will try again man has been holding up
to open its 1978 spring season Rio's baseball season for two
Saturday on Stanley Evans weeks. Rain has cancelled
games
with
Xavier,
Field.
The Redmen will host Mt. Wilmington and Capital
Vernon in a 'doubleheader Universities. Also, Rio's Mid·
beginning at I p.m. Mt. Ohio Conference opener at
Vernon won the Mid-Ohio Urbana has been postponed
Conference title last year but
were eliminated· by the
Redmen in NAJA district

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) New Orleans Jru:z Guard
Pete Maravich, who m.8y not
be able to play for the rest of

the Eastern Conference, won
just one of the four games
Maravich played in . But
team officials said they would
the season because of ~ a keep Maravich on tile active
partially !Drn cartilage in his list.
· right knee, !l'IYS he may have
"U he is on tile injured list,
to undergo surgery if tl!e knee we'll have to replace him fails ID heal witl!in the next put anotl!er body on the
two months.
roster,'' said Jazz spokesnum
"Surgery is not in the plans Dave Fredman.
right now, " Maravlch said
Maravich, who leads the
Tuesday. "I'll see the doc!Dr NBA in scoring average, will
again in about six weeks. U be unable to defend his NBA
the pain persists , I'd ' Scorlng crown because he
probably have wlook toward does not have enough points
surgery."
(1,400 ) to qualify.
Marovich, who has played
in four games since returning
on March 21, said he
aggravated tl!e jnjury and
would be unable to play the

,,

68-67 winner

Led by Ron Ferguson's 16
points, RC Cola edged the Rio ·
. bctl! agreed from the stand· Independents, 6U7 in the
point of the pain and the North Gallia Invitational
swelling I'm experiencing, 1 Ba sketball Tournament
should stay off tl!e leg lor a Tuesday night.
few more weeks ."
Davenport had 14 points lor
The Jazz, fighting with the winners. Pacing Rio was
Cleveland and Atlanta for the Bill Horwell with 15 points.
last two playoff spots from Mike Beverly canned 14.
Tonight 's action finds Bob
S t e r Saunders' Quaker State team .
'playing the Big Wheel squad.
Another team from Thaler
Ford
was
scheduled
cut
Redsorigin~uy. however. due to
two InJured players, the team
CINCINNATI (UPi l - Re· will be unable to perform.
11

Armb.n·•
by

only sparingly for the Reds in
·re cent years, being used

Reds Reduce Roster

CINCINNATI {UPI ) -The
Cincinnati Reds Tuesday re·
duced tl!eir roster to 29
players, sending pitchers
Mike Lacoss, 23, Mario Solo,
22, and Raul Ferreyra, 22, ID
the minor leagues.

mostly as a pinch-hitter.
He is best rem em bered lor
hls

involvement

7'

We

serve
outfielder
Ed
Armbrister was dropped
from the Cincinnati Reds'
major league roster Tuesday
and sent to the team's minor
league spring training
complex in Tampa , Fla .,
Redsland; for reassignment.
Armbrister, ;!9, has played

in

a

controversial play that
he Jped the Reda beat the
Boston Red Sox in tl!e 1975
World Series. Alter fielding
an Armbrister bunt, Boston
catcher Carlton Fisk threw
wildly to secorid base and

Exhibi tion Baseball Scores
By United Press International
Baltimor e 4, Ph ila 2
Oe t 5, Bo ston 4, 11 inns.
K.C.- N Y Yank ees , ppd . rain
Hous .A!Ianta , ppd . ra in
Cinc inn at i 5, Los Ang ele s 2
M innesot a 1, Mon tre'al 0
N Y M ets 7, St . Loui s 4

Torooto 12, Pittsburgh 3
sa n F r a n 5, Cli icag o Cub s. 4

complained that Armbrister

Cle11e1and 8, Oakland 4

had interfered on the play .

San Diego 5, M ilwauk ee 3

Sea tt le 8 , Cat i!or n i"

o

Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI ) Cliff Albertson guided
Sneaken Deacon to a two·
length victory over longshot
Chief Atomic in the featured
eighth pace Tuesday night at
Lebanon Raceway ,
The winner, in front all the

decision over Pat DuPre, 22,

Aniston, Ala., but admitted
·tl!at he got in troutile because
he was having difficulty with
his return of service.

"I just couldn't make any
returns at all and I wasn't

ALVIN{,AKE

Karate class
starts Monday
An introductory course in

Okinawan Shorin·Ryu Karate
will be taught by Alvin Lake
at the Community Mental
Health Center, Gallipolis,
beginning Monday, April 3.
The 14 session class will
meet Mondays and TIJUrs·
' days, 5:30·7 p.m., as part of
the continuing educatiQn

program of Rio Grande
College and Community
College.
Lake said that anyone 16
years of age or older may
register for the 'class. Tuition
is $20.
...
Participants will have an
opportunity to learn a
classical system of karate
which can be traced ' back

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI)
- Ivy League. power Brown
University wi,ll renew an old

Lake, whd is director of
research and evaluation ·for

the Comm unity Mental
football rivalry with Army in Health Center, holds his f,irst
1981, the two schools degree teaching black belt in
Shorin·Ryu, He studied with
announced Tuesday ,
The Bruins will play Army Garrick Hu, head instructor
at West Point's Mitchie of the Asian Martial Arts
Stadium on Sept. 26, 1981, Studio, Ann Arbor.
Lake ;s
martial
arts
Brown Athletic .Director
background
also
includes
Robert Seiple said. They
haven't played each other in training in Doshin'kan, Aikido
and Hung-Gar Sii·Lum Gung
10 years.
Fu.
Hu and Lake will team up
for a public demonstration of
Shorin·Ryu Karate, Friday,
FORT LAUDERDALE, 7:30 p.m., at the Mental
Fla. (UPI)- The New York Health Center.

way, covered til!! mile in 2:09
2-5 and returned $8, $3.40 and
$2.80. Chief Atomic, off at 6().1
odda, paid$25.20and $7, while
Ashlawn showed and kicked
back $4.60.
reduced their roster
Raceway Rocket (2) and Yankees
lo 31 by sending pitcher Gil
Buttonwood ,tori
(4) Patterson and .outfielder
combined lor a nightly double Garry Smith to their
payoff of $22:i.OO.
Hollywood minor·league
A crowd of 1,424 wagered camp for reassignment.
$156,987.

Anyone

interested

in

registering lor the course
may do so by phoning the
continuing education office at
Rio Grande, 245-5~3. ext. 215,
or by attending the first class
session.

~

getting a chance for a
breakthrough, " Gottfried
said. " I never thought I was
going ID lose, but I've thought
tl!at before and lost anyway."
But he did come close ID
losing as he dropped the first
set and was down five games
to tl!ree, ~ove, in the second
when DuPre double faulted.
Both players admitted
after the match that the
double fault really didn't
mean that much, but the
Alabama netter was on the
defensive from tl!at point on.
4
' EV'en after winning that
game," Gottfried said, ''I had

to level the matcb at five-aU
tl!en I got behind in the tie-

to April 13.

Rio Grande's Redmen are

Third yea r coach J ohn

Ecker (35·22 ) says this year's
squad is the best offen sive
and defensive team · we've

fielded in 3 years. Pitching
looks pretty good but is un·
proven . We have the potential
to win it all if we can put it

•Parts

.
breaker but pulled that out."
DuPre wok a 4-llead in the
tie-breaker before dropping
six straight points in tile
second set.
Gottfried, 26, the filth·
ranked player in the world,
said : "There really is not
much difference between
professional players and
often its the mental side that

United Press IDterDillloul
Tuesday afternoon
exat:Uy five years al'll one

led by senior captain pusty
Moran at third base. Moran , month alter he became the
who played his high schoo l tl!en-l!ighest paid baseball
baseball at Lancaster Berne player in history witl! a tl!reeUnion hit .325 last year with 5 yeru:, $750,1100 pact witl! the
home runs. Sophomore Steve Chicago White Sox ·Miller from Pt. Pleasant, W. controversial slugger Dick
Va. will play shortstop and Allen was given his uncondi·
· sophomore Frank Gregory, tiona! release from the
Cadiz, wjU be back at second Oakland A's.
base . F1rs t base and
The If-year veteran, a local
desi gnated hitter will be hero when he was Rookie of
shared by Mike Nesselroad, the Year with the 1964
iuniorlromMeigsandJunior Phillies before bcuncing from
Coliege transfer Paul N1day club wclub alter five stormy
from Wayne of Lavolette, W. years with Philadelphia, was
Va . Veterans Kevin Purcell suspended in mid-June of last
and Larry George will share year by Oakland . owner
catching and right field Charles 0. Finley for

Catlett takes
Mountaineer
post Monday

Other seeded players were
to see action as the
tnurnament continued wday.
The finals are scheduled for
Sunday.
Ashok Amritraj, one of
three Amritraj brothers from
entered

in

the

Jenike also says the 10person "University Atl!letic

Of

Gordon
Skin'ner,
an
economics professor ,
the
Jenike said in
meantime, the present staff

assistant

basketball

coaches - Gary McPherson,

Mike Brown and AI Hmiel will continue to recruit for

uc.

WHA Standings
By Un ited Press International

W. L. T. Pts .

Winn ipeg
48 '24 2
New Engl.,nd
40 30 4
HOuston
38 31 4
Quebec
36 36 3
Ed·monlon
36 36 2
Cincinnati
32 37 3
Birm inghm
32 40 3
Indianapol is
23 45 5
Tuesday ' s Resu lts
Edmonton 4, lndpls 3. ot

98
84

80
75
74

67
67
51

Quebe c 6, Cincinna t i 4
Houston 5, Winnipeg 3
Wednesday ' s Game
Cincmnati at New Engla nd
· Thursday's. Gam.es
Winnipeg at Ind ianapolis
Edmonton at Houston

Tackett, Cincinnati Lakota ,

BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI)
- A spokesman !or the
International League
Clippers said Tuesday the
Pittsburgh Pirates have
reassigned live players to
Columbus.

Parsons, Wellston.
Probable starting llneup
for Rio Grande in Saturday 's
hOme opener will be:
38
Dust{ Moran
Brei Wil son
CF
Larry George
RF
Steve M i ller
ss
DH
Paul Niday
Mike Nessel road
18
Jim Derrow
.

Fr~nk

LF
28
c
p

Gregory

Ke11 in·Purc:e l l "
Jim Blauvelt {lStgainel
Tony Fiscus (2ndgamel

p

RIO GRANDE
BASEBALL SCHEDULE

Apr. 1
APr\ 4
Apr . B

~ - Mt .

Vernon
atCen tra iS tate .
x-Oh i o Dominican

Apr . 11
Apr . 13
Apr. 15
Apr. 16
Apr. 18
: Apr. 20
Apr. 23
Apr , 26

Dayton
x -at Urbana
x ~'al Cedarvil le
Denison
x ~at Ti ffin
W. Va . State
at Denison
at Ohio Doniinican
Apr . 29 ·
X· Malone
May2
atW . Va . Tech
May 4
x-Walsh
ftt..ay 6
Centra I State
May 7
at Otterbein
May 9 at Ci ncinnatiMay l l-

13
NAIA Dist. 22 Playoffs
May 18-20
NA lA Area Vt
Playoffs ·
May 25.June 2
Series
x- MOC

NAIA World

St. Joseph Mo.

Pitchers AI Holland, Tim
Jones, Ed Whitson and Tom
Walker and infielder Dale
Berra are to report to Pirate
City, Pittsburgh's Minor
League training camp, said
the spokesman.
·
All but Walker played for
the Clippers last season.

Signup dates
, Expos trade

Si81Jup days for the Middleport Youth Baseball

relief hurlers

League summer program
have been set for Saturday
and SLinday at tl1e fC'rmer

Middleport Villat;" r.ouncil
chambers on the ..first ltuu.· \lf

village Iia!L
A registration lee of $5
must be paid at the time of
sign up. The fee will be used to
purchase
eql(ipment,
uniforms, team insurance
and ot her related. supplies.

According to the age of
participants by Aug. I, the
youngsters will play in the
following league: tee ball, 5- ·
7i pee wee, S.9; little league,

10-12, pony league, 13·15.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - The Montreal Expos
Tuesday traded relief pitcher
Will McEnaney to the Pitts·
bUrgh Pirates in exchange for
right-hander Tim Jones.
The
left - handed
McEnaney, a star for the
world champion Cin~innati
Reds in 1975, -had a
disappointing 3-5 season with
a 3.95 earned run average for
Montreal 1!18\ year and has
not been effective all spring.
The contract of tl!e 24-yearold Jones will be assigned to
tl!e Denver club of tl!e

Anyone
having
a ny American ASsociation. jones
questions about sign up or the had an outstanding sea8on
league is asked to call with Columbus of the

President John Hood or American Association last
year, posting a 15-6 record.
Secretary Pat Kitchen.

~

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WASHINGTON (UP!) The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 .
!Dday that city governments
are not automatically exempt
from antitrust laws.
Justice William Brennan,
writing for the majority, said
the over 00,000 units of local
government in America have
an important· effect on the
nation's

economic

life,

especially through surh such

services as utilities \bey own
and provide.
He said cities clearly fall
witl!in tl!e definition of "persons" covered by antitrust

laws.
Dissenters said the ruling
in a case involving two

Louisiana cities that provide
utility services could impose
"staggering costs" on
municipal governments

Fighting
•
Increases
in Rhodesia
By JACQUF.'! CLAFIN
SALISBURY, Rhodesia
(UP!)- The Patriotic Front
said today 600 of its guerrillas
have thrust 40 miles into
Rhodesia and are engaged in
ooe of tl!e biggest ba \ties in
their live-year war with
Rhodesian troops.
Rhodesian military
command officially played
down tl!e report saying its
forces where only carrying

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i

1978.

carter, for his part, had
taken a different tack in a
major policy speech to the
Venezuelan congress this
morning. He endorsed the
idea of a new economic order,
but said the attaining of it
must be

a cooperative

venture and that tl!e oil..-ich
nations must share in the
burden and that the
developing nations must also
do their part.
Despite their differences
over oil - Carter wants to
hold prices where tl!ey are

•

and Perez wants a 5 to 8
pert-eilt increase - they are

considered close · fri ends .
Among other things they see
eye to eye on tl!e necessity of
Senate ratification of the
Panama canal treaties .

flight to Brasilia, secood slop
on a 14,000..nile tour that will
take him to Nigeria and
Uberia .
Carter , in his speech to the

conference. Aides said the

Chamber of Deputies in
Venezuela's domed capitol
building, declared, "We need
to share a responsibility for
solving problems - nnt ID
'divide tl!e blame for i~'!loring

talks centered on energy and
economic policies, but no

them ."
He started his remarks off

joint communique had been
issued by the time ca rter
departed on the 4'h hour

in Spanish, saying :

Perez eseorted Carter to

tl!e airport after the two held
the ir

final

one·hour

Rhodesian sources confirmed
that one of the biggest single
incursions of the war had
taken pllice. .
The sources said it came to ·
light when a small Rhodesian
patrol stwnbled onto a wellcamouflaged guerrilla base
camp in Rhodesia, south of
the town of Umtali.
The Patriotic Front said in
a communique issued in the
Mozambican capital of
Maputo that 600 guerrillas
from Mozambique had
penetrated 40 miles into
Rhodesia, their advance
impeded only by the flooded
Sabi river.
· The Front, not a party to
the "internal" majority rule
agreement reached by Prime
Minister Jan Smith and tl!ree
moderate black leaders, said
one of the fiercest ba\Ue of
· the fiv.e-year war was now
raging .in southeastern
rhodesia.
Sources said the guerrillas
at the base camp dispersed
rather th8n a\and up to tbe
patrol, leaving behind large
quantities of equipment and
leaflets
urging
black
Rhodesians to oppose tile
intemalagreement..
A military spokesman said
"the number of terrorists
surprlaed in tl!is contact (at
the base camp) is no greater
than other groups contacted
and destroyed on past

'

~Approve

"In view of the comments

provoked by my address at

the airport in Spanish
yesterday, I have decided to
speak to you today in
English" .
Actually. Venezuelans· had
been surpljsed and favorably
impressed wlth Carter's two
Tuesday speeches in Spanish,
which were easily intelligible
despite his southern drawl.
Carter was not interrupted
·a single time b)' applause
during his brief address and
got only a modest ovation at
the end.
"All of th e OPEJC nations
have a responsibility to use
their surpl"'i wealth to meet
Ule humun · needs of the
world:s people," Carter said.
OPEC is the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting
Countries, which Venezuela

helped fOWld .

antitrust suits carrying triple opinion joined by Justices
Thurgood Marshall, l..ewi~·
damage penalties.
There was no majority on Powell and John Paul
the question on when Stevens, said a 1943 ruling
municipalities are protected that antitrust laws are
inapplicable to 4 'state action''
from antitrust suits.
In his written opinion, is not , extended to cities,
becauSe " they do not receive
BreMan said:
"If municipalities were all the federal deference of
free to make economic the states that create them. " narrower area in which he
The four said sutxi~vislons believes cities are liable. He
choices counseled solely by
their own parochiallnter~ts of the state are only exempt said, for instance , " The
and witl!out regard to their from antitrust laws when running of a business
anti-&lt;:ompetitive effects, a they engage in anti· enterprise is not an integral
serious chink in tl!e armor of competitive conduct operation in the area of
antitrust protection would be · "pursuant to state policy · to traditional government funcintroduced at odds witl! the displace competition with tions."
Justice Potter Stewart; in a
comprehensive
national regulation or monopoly

Decline noted in death rate
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
ATLANTA (UP!) - A
presidential healtl! adviser
says tl!e United States during
the last five years has
achieved tile most dramatic
decline in the national deatl!
rate since the discovery of

penicillin.
Most of tl!at gain, Peter
Bourne told the 13th annual
meeting of tl!e u.s. Publlc
Health Service Professional

was a situational

Bourne also said the
government should lead a
shift from 11 Crlsis health
care 10

Americans' health.

·Regarding the lower incidence of heart disease ,
Bourne, a special assistant to

off~nse

pris()ner I Joe campos Torres,

his very own comet come

around every few years.
Whipple, a comet expert,
discovered his comet in 1933.
This week it completed its
seventh round trip around the
sun since be first spotted its
faint image.
" Well, it's kind of fun to

spinning

have it c·ome back seven
times," he said. "Now I've
got to stick around for its
eighth return - along with

U1e comet is heated by !he
sun, he says some of the ices

Halley's Comet - in 1986."
Whipple's Comet never
gets very close to the sun abcut 230 million miles or so

the glitter.

-

of

be tl!e most fundamental
contribution tl!e government
can make toward improving

suits and flanked by their · which the defendants will
lawyers, stood silently before never encounter again ... and
an oak-paneled bar of justice that long periods of
and awaited their fate.
confinement would have little
had ·cop's gun
"I deeply regret that the impact," Sterling said.
' incident hapJ)ened," Terry
When the brief hearing
CLEVELAND (UPI)
Denson
told
U.S.
District
concluded,
tl!ey were taken ID
Agents of the U.S. Bureau of
Ross'N.
Sterling
in
the
Judge
·tl!e
federal
marshal's office,
Alcohol, Tobacco and .
hushed courtroom. "I hope processed and fingerprinted
Firearms are trying to find l've
been as honest as like any other prisoner . At
out how a shotgun turned
possible."
some date in the future they
over to a Seven Hills
"None of us intended or · will surrender themse'lves
policeman ended up in the
hands of an alleged Mafia hit wanted tl!is deatl!," said his voluntarily to begin serving
friend aild co-defendant their terms .
man.
Stephen
Orlando. Joseph
Torres' mother, Mrs .
Seven Hills Police Chief
Janish
's
statement
was
Margaret
Torres, ljlld about
Thomas Resek said the
inaudible.
two-dozen
demonstrators
patrolman involved resigned
Sterling
listened
to
the
who
identified
themselves as
in 1976. The patrolman
reportedly told a federal tl!ree one last time in the People United to Fight Police
.were angry.
grand jpry this week . he security .. conscious court- Brutality,
0
room.
Then
he
senldon't
think it was right,"
turned the weapon in to the
tenced
Denson,
27,
Mrs.
Torres
said. "I thought
police department. But Seven
Orlando,
22,
and
Janish,
tl!e
lederals
were going to
Hills Mayor John Kelley said
24,
to
one
year
each
in
prison
take
care
of
it.
What do tl!ey
·prope,rty room records didn't
for
civil
rights
violations
in
think
my
son
was , an
contain an entry for the
the
drowning
deatl!
of
a
animal?"
shotgun.

CA:MBRIDGE, Mass .
(UP I )
Harvard
astronomer Fred Whipple
says it's kind of fun having

prevention

Bourne said, this move would

Mafia hit man

Whipple's Comet keeps

to

illnesses through public
education . Apart from
national health insurance ,

may melt in spots and create
a chain reaction which causes

the · president,

said

11

dissent joined by Justices
Byron
White ,
Harry
Blackmun and William
Rehnquist ,
said
city

that in the final hour of

biinterol talks between the
two presidents, immedialely

after

th e Co ngressional

address, Perez. r e lterated

that the OPEC member
states cons ider oil the cutting

edge of the Third World effort
In the so-called Nortl!South
dialogue on improving the lot
of the Third World nations.
Carter told the Venezuelan
Congress he had called for a
28 percent in crease in
bilateral ald. He listed a live.
JXlint pro~rrun to achieve ''a
mt1re just eL'OtlOmic order .''

The points were increased
capital fl ow to developing
nations ; n more open system

of world trode; world price
stabiliUltion, especially for
raw prnducts; cooperation on
energy conservation and
development ; and Increased
transfer of technology w the
developing nations .

governm ents subject to
direct popular control are "a

far cry from the private
accumulations of wea lth tl!at
the Sherman Act was
intended to regulate."
" Today's decisi on will
impose staggering costs on
the thousands of municipal
governments in our coUntry ,''

he said. "The prospect of a
city closin g its schools,
disc harging its poli cemen
and curtailing it s lire

..,.,,·, ht 'n sassy
·l

~\ild1D~

departm e11 t in order . to

defend an antitrust suit would
surely dismay the Congress
that enacted the Sherman
Act."
In another split ruling
today, the high court said a
federal tax on the usc of civil
aircraft did not violate the
implied immunity of a state
governm ent from fed eral
taxation - even though it was
assessed o·n a helicopter

owned by Massachusetts and
used by its state police.

1. Surf

Black. Beige

PERFECTION
GUARANTEED

$}600

a

government • initiated
program focusing on diet,
exercise and early detection
of hypertension seems to
have paid off." ·
He said infectious diseases
no longer pose a major threat
to most Americans . The

leading causes of death and
illness, he said, are tl!ose
"relating to life styles -lack
of exercise, automobile
acciderits and the excessive

use of alcohol .and drugs, not

to mention suicide ."

GUEST SPEAKER
The
Rev.
Donald

Keepsake"

2. Suns et
Navy

Genhiemer, missionary from

Africa, will be speaking and
showing slides at the Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
Friday at 7:30p.m. The slides
will show his work in Africa.
The public is invited.

C ho se n t(• be e hc mh cd
fo r a li fct rlllc .. . a mi rnorc
yo ur rerfcct K c c r ~akc
cll ~a g cmcnt d Htlllorrd .' ..
gua rant eed i n wr itin g and
pe rma ne ntl y n: gi ~ t c r c d .

$1500
HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
"Middle upper Block"
Pomeroy, Ohio
Store Hours
9 a .m.-S p.m .
Mon . thru Thurs . &amp; Sat .
9 a .m. · Bp. m. Fri .
Closed Sunday

SKATING PARTY
There will be a skating
party Sunday, from 2-41or the
children of the Forest Run,
Syracuse Asbury and M[ners-,
ville Methodist Churches.
Children are to bring 25 cents
lor their skates :

so it isn't one of the ·

brighter, spectacular coniets
that occasionally become
visible on earth. In fact, it's
moving a few million miles

farther a way every year.
But Whipple, former head
of
the Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory in
Cambridge,

isn't

exactly

resting on his 45-year-&lt;&gt;id
discovery.
For instance, he recently
calculated how fast tl!e nuclei
of six different comets are
rotating and he has a theory
why some comets suddenly
flare up brightly. ·
He believes they are a mix·
ture of very fragile ices and
dust grains - the S&lt;Kalled
"dirty snowball" idea. When

·

-and each.of these prices
includes thick rubber padding,
door bars, seaming ... plus
complete, expert installation!
Elegant nylon random shear
tJ .. ,.,,,tt,r ''""' r ,r ~I"" L "' .;.nt•' tllor ~e o f
• It''" v· tu .uol co lur~ flu•t SO 00 ..._, VII

'7'5

8 additional makeup da:ys

·: · COLIJMBUS (UPI) - The
' HoUle Education Committee
. : today reported out a bill
~· slvlng Ohio school districts
an additional eight makeupfree days H they had todose
beca111e of hazardous winter
"Weather.
" · The measure, approved on
-an 1-1 vote, now goes to the
HoUle floor for action. It is a
product
of
majority
Democrallc legislative
leaden ll;lld education
~

the

wearing somber business

Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Ed· si\y as are their husbands.
wards observed their 41st Wayne Shere, husband of
wedding anniversary Tues- Cheryl Ann, rec~ived his
master's degree from the
day.
The couple have two University of Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwards
' daughters, Mrs. Cheryl Ann
have
tl!ree grandchildren,
Shere of Houston, Texas, and
Mrs. carolyn Sue · Heines, Kristen Renee Heines, Wendy
Route 3, Pomeroy, and a son, Ann Shere and Wayne Shere.
John David Edwards, student They have been residents of
· at Rio GraQde College. Botl! Meigs County for 35 years·
Mrs. Shere and Mrs. Heines haviug moved here from
are graduates of Ohio Univer· Athens.

.

public service."
"When the state itself has
not directed or autl!orized an
anticompetitive practice, the
state 's subdivisions in
exercising their delegated
power must obey the
antitrust laws," tl!ey said.
Chief Justice Warren
Burger, a member of the
majority, described a

country, . policy Congress established."
Brennan, in a fUrther
subjecting them to possible

~cross

gents were members of the
Zimbabwe African National
Association Tuesday, has
Liberation srmy, the military
been due to a reduction in
arm of Robert Mugabe.
h!!art disease.
·
Mugabe and tl!e Zambiabased JoShua Nkomo are coleaders of the Patriotic
Front.
Fonner officers on trial
The sources said the
infiltrators have scattered . By BRUCE NICHOLS
~ter a barroom drunk arrest
into small groups amid
HOUSTON (UP!) - Tbe last year.
ground and air pursuits.
0
three former policemen,
} have concluded that this

Wedding anniversary marked
Save '15ontheHomeliteX[Automatk,
........,. ...... '$8495
.

Perez during his stay on a
wide range of problems. But
!Dday tl!ey talked of the key
issoo on which they differ
widely - oil. The talks took
place beneatl! a huge painting
of liberator Simon Bolivar in
Miraflores, the Venezuelan
presidential palace.
Informed sources said it
·was during tl!ese talks that
Perez warned that oil will be
used to attempt to force such
industrialized nations as the
United States whelp create a
new world order.

Venezuelan sourl'es said

The sources said tl!e insur-

Down Tlme, Frazzled Nerves,
and Worry Can Be Eliminated At

point plan to improve global
economic conditions and to
raise living standards in
answer to Third World
demands.
Carter, wbc made a hit witl!
two Spanish language
speeches during his 22-bour
visit to this oili&gt;'oducing
nation, flew to Brazil for talks
with President Ernesto
Geisel on key problems that
have damaged U.S.Brazllian
relations- human rights and
nuclear energy.
Carter conferred twice with

Governments may not be exempted

occasions.''

How Much Is
Service Worth

11152-1

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White Route Reporter
CARACAS, Venezuela
(UP!)
Venezuelan
President Carlos Andres
Perez warned President
carter today that oil will be
used as a weapon to force
industrilllized nations to help
forge a new world economic
order.
carier had just endorsed
his own plan for a new
ipternatiooal economic order
in a speecli to the Venezuelan
congress by proposing a five.

out ''routine operations,'' but

are announced

AUTO PARTs· COMPANY

.._, Plus

rained out.

Pirates reassign 5 to Columbus

Hailer, Jackson and Keith

first.round

uc.

I'm looking forward to going
and get myself back in the
swing of tl!ings," said Blue.
In exhibition games:
Derrel Thomas' checked·
swing single in tbe lOth inning
scored Chuck Baker with the
winning run in tl!e Padres $-3
vic!Dry over the Brewers ...
Dick Pole, Rico Romo and
John Montague combined for
a twohitter and the Mariners
scored five runs in the third
inning ID defeat the Angels, 80 ... tl!e Indians gathered five
runs in the first · inning,
highlighted
by
Fred Kendall's three-run triple, lo
defeat the A's, 8-4 ... pitcher
Bob Knepper scored the win·
ning run after doubting to
boost .the Giants over \be
cabs, S-4.
. Tonirny Hutton drove in
lour runs with a pair of
doubles in leading tl!e Blue
Jays over the Pirates, 12-3 ...
the Twins scored an unearned
run in tl!e eighth inning to nip
the Expos, 1~ ... Bill Bonham
and AI Downing combinedJor
a sevenhi\\er and George
Foster, Danny Driessen and
Dave Concepcion all hit
homers to lead tl!e Reds over
the Dodgers, 5-2 . .. and the
Mets prnduced a pair of runs
in tl!e fourth, fifth and sixth
innings in support of pitcher
Jerry Koosrnan, who doubled
in two runs of his own in the
sixth for their 7-4 defeat of St.
Louis.
The Kansas City-New York
Yankees and tl!e Houston·
Atlanta gam~s were both

Earl
Sullivan, Pickerington; Ron
Jackson .
Other freshmen are outfielder
Tim Saunders,
Olentangy and catchers Paul

Ap!Ds, Calif.
other

Union;

and lefty Wayne Skaggs,

victory Tuesday . Anand
Amritraj advanced with a 1)...2,
7...f.iwin over Erick VAn Dillen,
In

of

Fairfield

lournament, eliminated his
brother, Vijay, with a 6-1, 6-1

students, faculty, staff and
alumni, will serve as the
search committee to lind a
replacement for Catlett. The
committee is beaded by Dr.

showering early in a game.

a new Contract agreement, so

Other freshman pitchers
_are .Jerry Stover from

current meet,

CINCINNATI (UPI) - . matches, Gene Mayer,
University of Cincinnati
Athletic . Director William Hamden, N.J., defeated Ross
Jenike
says
he
is Case of Australia fi.ol, 6-1;
"disap pointed •'
tha·t John Yuill of Soutl! Africa
basketball coach Gale Catlett ousted Goefl Masters of
quit to take a similar job at Australia 6-3, fi.ol; and Terry
West Virginia, but adds tl!at Moor of Monroe, La . ,
Catlett has been released defeated George Hardie,
from the two years remaining Long Beach, Calif., 6-3, 7~ .
on his existing contract at

Committee," comprised

positions. Purcell is from

Oxford and George played at Allen, who signed as Q free
South Point. In centerfield is agent witl! Oakland, left and
Brett Wilson , Rio's leading , never returned tD the team.
hitter last year as a freshAlthough Allen showed up
man. The Ieltfielder will be at camp for the exhibition
Jim Derrow from Wellston. season, he wasn't put in a
Sophomore Gene Orr from single game and sat on the
means victory or defeat."
· The other seeded player~ Marietta will be the courtesy bench lor the entire spring
advanced without problems runner and utility infielder· season .
outfielder . Outfielder Pat
In other cuts Tues~y, the
on the first day .
Third-seeded
Harold Young , a transfer from St. Louis cardinals released
Solomon, Silver Springs, Md., Malone College will also do veteran right-hander Larry
ousted Nick Saviano, Los some pitching . Likewise, Dierker, who won 137 games
Altos Hills, calif., 6-ol, 6-1; Terry Swisshelm, an out· in 12 years witl!' the Houston
Tim Gullickscn, Onalaska, fielder from Yellow Springs, Astros before being obtained
Wis ., No . 4, easily defeated has been switched to pitcher. by tl!e cardinals at the end of
Senior Ielthander West tl!e 1976 season.
Bernie Mitton, South Africa,
Hairston
of Rock Hill and
In other news, VIda Blue,
S.l,l)...l; a:nd Hoink Piister, No .
sophomore
lefty Tony Fiscus, who failed 1o show up at the
6, Bakersfield, Calif., de·"'
feated Dave Schneider, South, Eastern Macon are the only SarrFrancisco camp because
veteran pitchers returning he was 11 disappointed" the
Africa, H, 6-2.
for
the Redmen . Jim club refused to renegotiate
But a new tourney
Blauvelt,
a freshman from the $140,1100 contract he had
· champion was assured as
Springfield
South, looked held with the Oakland, said
Jeff Borowiak, Berkeley,
good
last
fall
and is expected Tuesday he would fly to
calif., withdrew because of
to
help
the
Redmen
pitching Phoenix to rejoin the team.
an injured knee. Borowiak
stall.
" We have spoken briefly on
was seeded No. 1 in the

India

over 500 years in China and

which is both an effective
method of sell-defense and a
disciplirled ann form.

But n9 interference was

calied and the play helped the "
Reda win the game.

UAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Brian Gottfried's positive
mental attitude paid off Tues·
day night.
"I always think I can get
back in when I'm down,'' said
Gottfried, the No. I seed \n
the Dayton Pro Tennis
Classic, after he came close
wlosing his first round match
in the $75,000 tourney .
He salvaged a H , 7~. 6-2

'I

found 40ccs of fluid still in the

knee ," Ma ravich said.

together.

Gottfried Survi•ves .
d
h
•
,
fJrSt rOUD ntatC

RC Cola is

rest of the season .
"I went tothe doctor and he

Dick Allen

Warning issued, oil to be used as weapon

groups, Inc 1 u dIng wlll ·have to be in session
representatives of school beyond June 16 to meet the
teachers, employees and minimum state &amp;ttendance
, administrators.
·
requirement, provided they
The bin lol'l!ives scbools make up the balance· of the
.five days for closing in ad· days they missed on Satur·
dillon to the five establlsbed . . days.
·
In permanent law. It adda
Rep. James E. Betts, Rthree more days for when the · Rocky River, opposed the
governor declared Ohio in a bill, saying it could cause
state of emergency In problems for districts who
January. ·
have · already made up the
Passage of the legislation days designated as forgiven
will ensure that no schools under the Iegislatloll.

.

.

sq. yd .
Thickly textured nylon
Red and Orange

These bargains
are bound to go in ~ hurry
... so step on it and economize!

'

106 N.

'4"

sq. yd.
Geometric kitchen pattern
plush mini·shag

'6'5

sq. yd.

INGEL'S FURNITURE
AVE.

10 Patterns

'4"

sq. yd.

MIDDLEPORT 0.

�,.

6- The I;laUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesilay, March 29, 1978

•

Church youth conduct
Easter sunrise service
\ outh of the Rock Springs Triumph " by Rhonda Zirkle,
United Methodist Church "He Lives" by Tammi Eblin;
pr ese nted the program, "Whosoever" by Beth Pierce,
"Shrouds and Butterflies", at "The Only One" by April
the sunrise service Easter Clark, "A Lovely Time" by
morning.
Michl King, " He Is In My
Each member of the con- Heart" by Neal Richmond ,
gregation was given a "Jesus Loves Me" by Tim
"shroud" which represented Jeffers, '' Pass It Round" by
death, which was exchanged Uarissa Pierce, " My Verse ~&gt;
for a "butterfly" symbolizing by Angela Pierce, "lmporthe resurrection and new life. U!nt" by Mary Pi erce,
Sue Zirkle, Terry and Tam- " Prayer of Giving" by Lisa
my Adkins, accompanied by Pullins, " My Bible'' by
Tracey J effers, sang "The Teresa Pierce, " No Greater
MATTHEW MORRIS
Three Nails."
TURNS ONE - Matthew
Gift" by Angie Sloan, and
At the Sunday school hour 11 BecalLSe It's Easter" by Dee
Morris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
there were recitations and Dee Henderson .
Roland Morris, Pomeroy,
songs by the boys and girls.
celebrated his first birthThe junior class reciwtions
The nursery class sang "A were "The Easter Greeting"
day on March 25. An Easter.
Sunbeam" and their recita- by Kim Eblin , " Easter Time
theme was used with a bun·
tions included "I'm Happy" is Joyful" by Tim Sloan,
oy cake being presented to
by Jay Humphr e ys , "Lilies Pure and White'' by
him aloog with gHts from
"Children Love" by Marsha Jay Evans, " Rejoice;' by
his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs . Eldon Morris, his · King, "Jesus Arose" by Usa Dixie Eblin , "Christ Arose"
Darst, " Not Long " by Gail by Doug Eblin , "Easter
grandmother, Mrs. Mary
Pierce, "Ever New" by Bloom' '',.' nd "The Angels"
Showalter, Mr. and Mrs.
Tracey Eblin, "Songs of Joy" by Scott Pullins.
Nat Carpenter, Mr. and
by Tara Humphreys, "A
Mrs. Walter Morris 1 and
During the worship hour,
Wish" by Mandy Eblin , "To the choir sang " Jesus is ComMr. and Mrs . Jim
All" by Dale Eblin, "Be HaP' ing Again " and there was a
Broderick and Jamie.
py" by Leslie Lyons, " I Am solo by Sue Zirkle wit h
Others sending gHis were
Very Small" by Annette
Miss Julia Carpenter, Mr.
Pierce, and " Happy Easter"
and Mrs. Ray Mulford, Mr.
by Leeanna Henderson.
and Mrs. Bill Francis and'
The primary class selecSusie, and Mr, and Mrs.
Earle Showalter and Tim- · tions included " It's Easter"
by Sally Radford , '·Day of
my.

•

411 •

Tracey J effers at t he piano.
Baptized during the servke
was Mrs. Carol Lyons, and
dedicated were Leslie Lyons,
Christopher Lyons, J arrod
Folmer, Angela, Clarissa,
Beth, Melissa Pierce.
Ulies on the altar were in
memory of Helen Radford by
the-·Radford fam ily, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Burdetle by
Robert, Ginny and Bob, the
Mor gan a nd Jo ac him
families by Mrs. Gladys
Morgan, Amos Leonard by
Lottie Leonard and Mr. and
Mrs. James Conkle, Naomi
and Flora Radford by the
Rev . Waid Radford, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jacob Grueser and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith by
Mr. and Mrs. William
Grue.ser.
Mrs. Louise Radford was
orgnist for all the services.
The Rev . James Corbitt is
paslo1· and the church attendance was 166.
Following the services an
egg hunt was held for the

-·

-'

,,'

.
'

ROLES IN "THE GOODBYE GIRL" earned
Academy Award nominations for the film 's three leading
performers. Richard Dreyfuss is in the running for "best

children .

Rutland Garden Club
makes four contributions

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD.

A set up

When the time comes, Jimmy will arrange his own sexDEAR D(l. Bl..AKER _Our ual initiation - proba~iy with
tl-year-&lt;Jld son likes boys bet- a little help from his friends.
ter than girls. Does that mean · Or perhaps he is already sexhe has homosexual tenden- ually experienced. How could
cies?
·
you really kr)ow? A teenMy husband is so upset ager's sex life is usually a
about this possibility he has closed book to his parents.
devised a plan .he hopes will
Stop second-guessing a bout
·•get Jimmy back on the right your son's sexuality. You
track. He is proposing we set cannot assume Jimmy needs
Jimmy up with a kind, a sexual experience at this
knowledgejible prostitute for time any more than you can
an evening so he can see what assume be has not already
he bas been missing, by not had one.
spending •more• ·time with
Your husband is not alone
girls.
in believing that a kind,
1 think my husband got this Wlderstanding prostitute can
idea from ~ Q'fll youth, introduce a teen-age boy to
when his older brother ar- the world of sex with a
ranged the same kind of ex- minimum of trauma. Older
perience for him. Evidently it boys have traditionally arworked out well and he wants r•nged these experiences for
to duplicate itfor his son.
their yoWJger frienda. Harry
1 am going along with the Stack Sullivan, a prominent
plan because my husband psychoanalyst, even sugprobably Wlderswnds our son gested it is wlfortunate there
better than I do. What do you is no parallel experience for
think?
teen-age girls.
DEAR READER _ It is
Although the value of an inclear that your husband feels itiation by prostitute is open
the need to provide Jimmy for debate, no one has ever
with a female sexual compa- advocated parenbll involvenion. However, it is not clear ment in the planning of this
whether Jimlny needs this first sexual experience. Why?
experience right now and, Because !I&lt;Xual activity dureven more important, ing the teen-age years is
whether he needs it to be ar- largely an act of rebellion
ranged by his father .
AGAINST parental authority.
First things first: Jimmy is
Condoning sex would
13 years old, His interest in eliminate some of its value as
boys is not wtcommon, nor is an arena where a young perit a sign of impending son can feel competitive with
homosexuality.
- yet separate from - his
Companionship with the parents.
same sex always preceeds
All avenues of reason point
relationships with the 01&gt;' to one conclusion: Your hus·
poslte sex. This is the pr&lt;&gt;- band should not arrange this
·gression of psychological eiJ)erience for Jimmy.
tasks that must be acWrite to Dr. Blaker in care
complished for a normal ad- of this newspaper, P.O. Box
justment to adulthood . 489, Radio City SU.Iion, New
However, just when this York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
change in sexual orienbltion mail prohibits personal
occurs is a matter of great in- replies, but questions of
diVidual variation.
general interest will be
--------~--di-·s_c_ussed
__ _fu_t_ur_e_c_o_lUIIUIS
_ _·-:

1"'

m
· _

Oscar. • .at 50
At 50 years old he still has
the body of a Greek god. In
fact, his body is ci&gt;veted by
just about ev'ery actor in
Hollywood - male or female .
His name is Oscar, of course,
and he 'II celebrate his 50th
birthday this April3.
To get in the right mood,
here's a mini Ocscar-test.
For sblrters; name the only
actress to win Best Actress
without ever uttering a word
in the film ' (not a silent

.,

movie J?
Three actors were in competition for Best Actor after
their deaths. Name them. ·
Three men won Best Actor
Oscars in musical roles. Who
· were they , and in what films?
II the Iitle has anything to
do with its winning an Oscar
here's something to ponder;

Four films with the word
'All" in the title have won
Best Picture. Name all four.

Contributions to the Johnny
Appleseed Fund for highway
plantings, the wildflower
preservation fund, the Victor
Rees Fund, and Wahkeena
were made when the tland
Garden· Club met Monday
night at the home of Mrs.
James Titus with Mrs.
Charles Lewis and Jack Robson as hostesses .
It was announced that on
Apri13 at 7:30p.m. there will
be a volunteer in·service
trainint: program at the.
Gallipolis Slate institute.
Mrs. Carl Denison reported
on the ·recent therapy pr&lt;&gt;gram at the G. S. I. attended

Mrs. Telk
directs pageant
An Elaster pageant. "The
Risen Christ'', was presented
at the sunrise service of the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church.
Mrs. Lewis Telle was director of the . pageant with
Timothy Hayden, Debbie
Downie, Sherri Wright, Mike
and Mark Goeglein, Matthew
Van Vranken, and Charlene
Goeglein in the roles. Mrs.
Charles Goeglein was Mrs.
Telle's assiswnt for the
pageant narrated by the Rev .
Robert Hayden. The senior
and junior choirs of the
church provided the inusic.
The scene was a spotlighted
cross surrounded by lilies
with a lomb used to one side
of the cross.
A breakfast was served
following the pageant with
Mrs. Telle being assisted by
the youth and the United
Methodist Women in the serving.

Mrs ..Roush
hosts circle
Mrs. IIlah Roush was
hostess for a recant meeting
of the Emma Smith CirCle of
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Christ of' Latter Day
Saints attended by 10
members.
. The cookbook being compil·
ed by the women was discussed and it was noted that
recipes for the cookbook as
well as orders are to be sent
to Anna McHaffie, Route 1,
Box 41, .Portland. Friday
evening members of the
church will observe Friendly
Night.
Attending the meeting were
Mrs. Roush, Mrs. Goldie
Gillian, Mrs. Beulah Roush ,
Janice Lee, Goldie Clendenin,
Mrs. McHaffie, Mrs. Pearl
Proffitt, Mrs. Lucy Taylor,
Mrs. Ruth Bradford, and
Mrs. Mattie Teaford.

ANSWERS : 1. Jane
Wyman in "Jolumy Belinda"
HOSTS 'GUESTS
(1948). 2. James Dean ("East
SEEN AND HEARD
Mrs.' Joha Scott and Mrs. of Eden" 19r&gt;5 and "Giant"
Mrs. Mitchell McCole ,
Russ WatsOn were hostesses 1956) , Spencer Tracy daughter, Maureen and son,
for an Easter Sunday dinner ("Guess Who's Coming to Mitchell Patr.ick, Jr .,
at the home of Mrs. Watson, Dinner" 1967) and Peter Williamstown, W. Va. and
Forest RWl. Guests were Mr. Finch ("Network" 1976). 3. Mrs . Thelma Blain,
and Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Jen- James Cagney in "Yankee Parkersburg, W. Va .. were
nifer and Susanna, Mid- Doodle DandY: ' (1942), Yui Thursday guests of Mrs. Medleport; Steve Harrison, Brynner in ''The King and l''
Gale's grandmother, Mrs.
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. (1956) and Rex Harrison In Bernice Grueser, Middleport.
William R. Knight and Bill, "My Fair Lady" (1964) . 4.
Point P!eaSj~Jlt; Joha Knight, "All Quiet on the Western
••), "All the
HW1 ling!
. on; ,Mr. and Mrs. Front" (I"""
...,.,.,
The generation gap never
Richard 'l(nhillt; Ga)lipolis, · King's Men" (1949), "All bothers people unW they find
and William J?yne of About Eve" (1950) and "A themselves .peering over the
Bluefield, W.Va.
Man for All Seasons" (1966).
brink,

ac!Dr," Quinn Cummings (center) for "IJI,•• supporting
actress" and Marsha Mason for "best actress". All three
are shown here in a scene from the film. Mason's
husband, playwright Nell Simon, won an Osca?
nomination for the movie's script.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Can't finish quilt
DEAR POLLY _ 1 embroidered some readystamped quilt blocks and put
many hours of work into it. I
. would like to finish the quilt
but some of the printed sblmping shows and l need to
know how to remove it.
Maybe some reader has an
idea. - BERDEINA ' ·
DEAR BERDEINA- Have
you t•.i ed sponging with
turpentine or a commercial
dry cleaning fluid, I'm guessing the fabric is cotton and
·washable as 'most quilt
fabr)cs are. Follow directions
on cleaning fluid carefully
and·..,xaclly. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When
making lemonade or other
powdered drinks pour boUing
water over sugar and boil un· til sugar is dissolved:. There
will be no gritty sugar left in
· !:he bottom• of th~'ogiass, This
is gOO&lt;!: for iced tea too. (Polly's note - Didyouevermake
iced lea by first brewing plain
hot tea and then just adding a
can of frozen lemonade 1 For
a quart pitcher of tea this
seems to add just enough
sweetening and lemon.)
Those four-sided tin graters
so many of us use in our kit·
chens can really . be
dangerous for both adults and
children. I keep mine in a
plastic bag Wider the kitchen
counter so that ifl accidentally rub against it I don 't get a
scrape or cut. Even a bread
bag would be a protecti on.
-MRS. G.J.
DEAR POLLY - I do not
agree with C.E.W., whose Pet
Peeve concerned mothers
biking children grocery shoP'
ping with them who
misbehave to the point of
opening packages on the
shelves . I think children
should go shopping with
mummy. After all, there are
grown-ups just as bad .
Recently, I saw a lady who.
looked to be around 70 bike
the lid off a jar of blackberry
jam , stick her finger in and
U!stc it. Evidently she did not
like it as she put the lop back
on and the jar back on the
shelf.
Now, for my own Pel

Peeve. A woman stands at
the market check-out cow1ter
doin g nothing until the
ca shier finishes ringing up
her purchase. Then she starts
looking in her large shoulder
bag for her check book. Next
she goes all through it find
her pen and then has to look
again for identification or her
driver's licence. She finally
writes the check and then
starts to visit with the
cashier. There I am behind
her with only a quart of·milk .
and in a hurry to get home. C.C.K.
DEAR POLLY - If you
have old scarves in the
drawer that you no longer
wear stitch two together and
stuff with polyester fi ber fill·
ing or old nylon hose. They
make pretty throw pillows.
Theytare also great to use for
lining purses or tote ba gs or
several could be stitched
together to provide yardage
to make a drawstring skirl. M.M.W.
· Polly will send you one of
he r s igned thank-you
newspaper cQupon clippers if
she use s your favorite
Pointer, Peev e or Probleffi in \
her column: Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of 'this
newspaper.

,.,

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SALE

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OTHER SINGER
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• Portraits will be
delivered to our
store

THE. FABRIC
SHOP

March 30, 31 April 1, 2
Daily: 11:00 to 8:00
Sunday: 1:00 to 5:00

THE JONES BOYS
700 W. MAIN ST!

2nd St., Pomeroy, o.

POMEROY OHIO
.'

1

Honored Masons Night was Ue, Jack Bechtle, Hank Van Maire Euvetta Bechtle,
observed at ~ recent meeting Johnson, Kathy Johnson, Glen Crisp, Chartie Baker,
ol the Evangeline Chapter Delbert Mitchell, Clarence state junior c ouncilor
172, Order of the Eastern Norton, William King, Naomi Demolay of Ironton, Beth
Star, held at the Middleport King, Roy Shepherd, Mary Ti nner, state Demolay
Masooic Temple.
Shull, Howa rd Shull, Maryln sweetheart, Rick Keller ,
Presented were Chester Wilcox, Kathryn Evans, Chester Hodges , executive
Hodges, past most worshipful Gle nn E vans, James director of Demolay in Ohio
Virginia and Past Grand Master of the
grand master of Ohio ; Buc hanan,
Howard Shull, past grand Buchanan , Glenna Crisp, Grand Masonic Lodges in
patron of the Grand Chapter James Clatworthy, Erruna Ohio.
The fihn "Our Precious
ol Ohio; James Clatworth, Clatw orthy , Jen evee
district deputy grand master Chesher, Harry Chesher, Bill Heriwge" was shown followol the 12th Masonic District ; Quickel, Ann Thomas, Betty ing the meal.
James Buchanan, high priest
of Pomeroy Chipter 80, Lee
McComas, Harry Chesher,
Bob King, Bm · King, and
Glenn Evans.
Also presented was Mrs.
Evelyn Lewis , 64 year
member of Evangeline
FED UP WITH Holly·
Chapter. She was given a corwoad's ima,;e Of women,
sage in recognition of her serShirley MacLaine lef!
vice to the chapter by Mrs.
tums nearly a decade ago
Euvetbl Bechtle.
THE READERS ALWAYS WRITE;
to concentrate on politics
Bessie and Bob King, wor- DEAR HELEN:
and a nightclub act. Now
thy matron and worthy
Thanks for reprinting the various sUite laws that are unfair she's back, co·starrlog
patron presided with Et- to wives.
with Anne Bancroft in "The
wmay Norton , conductress,
Did you know it was only very recently that California Turning Point." But
marshall; Marie Hawkins, abolished the " Petit Treason" law? This meant if a servant MacLalne makes no bones
conductress, and Bill King, killed his master or a wife kiUed her husband, they could be about the fact that she associate patron, all protems. tried under " Petit Treason" for "killing a superior.'' which
unlike the retired dancer
. The chapter was draped in might bring a tougher sentence. Get the connection: servant
she portrays in the film memory of Wilma Parmalee, and wife were the same in the eyes of California law. This
would never have given up
a member of Evangeline sbltute dates back to 1872!
her career for a man.
Chapter, Among the comHere's another still on the books: "Homicide is excusable ...
. municatlons read wer e when committed by accident and misfortWJe, in lawluUy corseveral inspection invita- recting a child or servant." or "in the heat of passion upon any
tions, a thank you note from sudden and sufficient provocation... " (As with a wife?) Also
Our neighbor says that one
Paul Darnell, and a letter 1872.
of the best ways 'to cure infrom the Ohio Lung AssociaThese laws date back to the times when men were con' digestion at his house is to eat
tion.
sidered monarchs of their homes, wives their chattels. All too supper before coming home.
Mrs. Kathryn Mitchell, many remain! -I..AWYER
ways and means -corrunittee, DEAR HELEN.:
thanked members for
As an adoptive parent and adoption caseworker, I bike ofassisting with the recent fense at your recent suggestion to a young wife un able to consteak dinner and discussed a ceive. You told her to apply for adoption and then, as often hal&gt;'
nmunage Sale, a MasOnic pens, she might become pregnant.
dinner, an Easter bazaar and
One does not decide to adopt as an aid to conception. The
bake sale, and noted that decision to bring a child into the home must be carefuUy
orders will be wken at the thought out. Think of the heartache to a hard·l&lt;&gt;-place older
April meeting for SU!nley child who thought he was slated lor adoption, but was then shot
products.
down because his prospective parents had sblrted a child of
Mrs. Behctle for .the cheer their own ! -JACQUEUNE
committee reported that DEAR HELEN:
Judy Miller and Paul Darnell . In our sUite the couple who were slow in conceiving wouldn't
bad been remembered ·and be able to apply for adoption of a newborn baby. They must
that an ·emblem had been prove by medical tests that conception is impossible or hazarordered for Mrs . .Parmalee. dous to the wife's health. Even then the wait is long. It took us
Clatworthy. announced a four years to rea.ch the approved swge and we'ye been there a
reception lor the worshipful year in April!
grand master of Ohio on April
The other options are a private adoption (hard to come by
!at Meigs High School.
legally); the black market if you have much money and few
Inspection date was an- scruples; or finding a handicapped, racially mixed or othernOunced for May 11 at 7:30 wise hard to place child" (Arid they're becoming scarcer too.)
p.m. with a dinner to be held
Having your own child doesn't require screening. For adopprior to, the meeting . Ann tion - financial, medical , m0ral and physical fitness must be
Thomas, Glen~a: Crisp, and proved. ·!'10T EASY
Betty Van Maire were a!&gt;' DEAR J . AND NOT EASY:
pointed to the dinner conunit- ,
I stand corrected. I should have said, "Start thinking about
tee. Mrs. Norton and Mrs. adoption . This may relieve the pressure; you'll begin enjoying
Thomas was named to ihe sex as. sdmething more than a baby-making chore; and
plaque conunittee and will perhaps you'll get lucky." Okay?- H.
check into its purchase.
Refreshments were served DEAR HELEN : .
by Kathryn and Glenn Evans,
About job discrimination: I like this quote by Florynce Kim- ·
, Erma Yoho, and MaryIn nedy : ·"There are v.ery few jobs that actually require a penis
Wilcox. Prior to the meeting, or vagina. All other joba should be open to everybody." E.R.A.
a bean and cornbread dinner FOREVER
was served for those Masons
who had helped with the r--·--~---------~-----·
remodeling project along
with their wives. Those attending were Katherine Mitchell, Lorena Ault , Clara
By Alma Marshall
\.
Criswell, James Criswell,
Bonita Ingles, George Ingles,
.
Lean Hatfield, Rodie Hal·
MASON "- Because of rain and more rain .- many an
field, Kathleen AnthOny, .
Willis Anthony, Farie Ken- Easter Egg hunt was held indoors this year in the hend arejl nedy, Robert Bumgarner, Ibis being the case at the Russell Capehart residence when Mr.
Lee McComas, Darrell Bech- and Mrs. Jack Troy and sons, Johnny and Timmy of
Lexington, Ky.; Chris and Todd Self of Colwnbus had to hunt
eggs in the basement of Mr. and Mrs. Capeharts' home. Others
joining in the fun were the John Sisson family and Chris
ffietner of Mason.
.

I Mason County News Notes

Pomeroy and
Middleport
Personal Notes

INTRODUCING OUR NEWEST
FASHION MATE ' MACHINE .

e~tro .

onored Masons .Night held

j

• Limit one free
portralt per family

~ 60"

..
.....

Polly Cramer

by Mrs. Eugene Atkins, Mrs.
Denison, Mrs. V. E. Nelson,
and Mrs. Harv~y Erlewinc.
At that time individual plants
were filled with begonias by
the residents for lheir rooms'
The table arran'gement was
provided by Mrs. Ralph
Turner, Mrs. Lewis made
Easter favors, and each pallent was given a gift.
Devollons to open the
meeting were given by Mrs.
Albert Woodard who read "I
Believe" and the "Ten ·commandments for People."
Members responded to roll
call by naming a famous tree.
It was noted that flowers had
been IBken to churches by
Mrs. Lawrence Milhoan,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, and Mrs.
Lewis. The traveling prize
was won by Mrs. Roy
Snowden, apd the c\ub agreed
to make 1o table· ~rrangement for the granglll.banquet
. to be held at the ~lisbury ·
!ichool in April.
•
For the progr~ , Miss
R b D' hi d'
d
·0 y
le
IScW&lt;s• tree
repair you ca-n make
yourself, using ma{erial from
John Haller's article in
"Flower and Garden." She
said that now is the time to
check the tree for broken
branches or split crotches.
She said that each season a
tree increases in height,
spreadandweighttherebyincreasing the chance for some
damage. Miss Diehl told of
how to repair crotch splits by
tying or bolting them
together and suggested that
tree dressiQg be applied to all
broken bark surfaces.
Mrs. James Nicholson talked about "Dual Purpose
Trees" noting that these are
the best buys for small lots.
Selection she said, should be
accordingtopurpose,beitfor
shade, privacy, lands~aping
effects, autumn color or fruit ,
and that all trees should have
a double use. Flowering trees
branch low, she said, thereby
making them a good lot
marker.
An exhibit of twigs, ineluding mock orange, pussy
willow, maple, yew,
dogwood , corkscrew, was
made for identification.
Refreshments were served
by the hostess.

,

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,
Social

7 - 1be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 29, 1978

i

I Calendar\
WEDNESDAY
, MIDDLEPO RT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesda)' al
the home of Mrs . James
Titus, Rutland. Mrs. Ben
Philson to review "My Name
is Asher Lev.''

WILDWOOD Garden Club,
8 p.m. Wednesday .a t the

home of Mrs. Vernon' Nease
with Mrs. Dwight Milhoan as
c&lt;&gt;-hos tess.
DON GENHEIM E R,
missionary to South Africa,
speaking at 7 p.m. Wednesday at Mt. Union Church
near Carpenter.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday 7:30
p.m. at Meigs Inn . Plans for
Regatta.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

PANCAKE SUPPER. 4 to 7
10 :45 a.m. Sunday. Publir
WEDNESDAY
p.m.
Saturday at Pomeroy
EASTER EGG h u ~. invited .
Fire Station, Butternut Ave.,
SATU RDAY
postponed from Easter, 6:30
REVIVAL, 7:30 earh 12. adults and $1.25 for
this evening at Chester Fire
o_epartment· station for evening Thursday through children under 12. Bake sale
a\ester rhildren only. Staged Saturda y at Trinity 1-bristian also in conjunction with
by ~e firemen and a uxiliary Assembly Church, Coolville, supper: Proceed$ to buUdin&amp;
with Joe BeaSley. evangelist; fund.
with prizes to be awarded.
Gilbert
Spencer, pastor.
THURSDAY
R ACINE
Base ba ll
Association Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at Racine Elementary
School . Money mak ing
pro jects to be discussed. All
interested persons urged to
attend .
P RECEPTO R BETA
BETA CHAPTEH, Bela
Sigm• P\11 Sorority, 7:45p.m.
Thursday at tht• Meigs hm .
FRIDAY
RACINE ER Squad spec\Pl
meeting Friday 7:30 p.m. at
fir e house. Members urged to
a tt end
lh is importan t

The sneakers they liked
on TV are the sneakers
·you'll like on their feet.

meeling .

SPECIA L YOUTH rev ival
at Sy racuse Church of the
Nazarene Friday, Sat urday
and Sunday with Rev. Steve
SuUiva n as speaker . Services
at 7 p.m . each evening and

The monUors at the

French Art Colony for this
weekend will be Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Murray for
the Saturday I tlli 3 p.m.
duty and Miss Maythome
Keeler and Mrs. Richard
Kosmo for the 3till S watch.
On Sunday the early duty
will be shared by Mrs.
William Sibley and Mary
Allison; the late duly by
Ella Condec and Mary '
Allison.

Watch For Our
Grand Opening
Celebration Sale

Om• lh1fl9 ~tli.J .:,tn be SUfi' bl lll01tH~IS tl IIHl\ IC tn,IO e l)y S lt t06 Atte
ltttJV ft''lld (IP rtQIII louyh OUif&gt;1dU !&gt;l •l lu&gt;~ dO Atld /.tpS ,ti e &lt;hiltllll bltl

1r1 mo ra wldth l and 1lz11 than any othet 11\lllttrl. Out cntltlren·s
'&gt;IIQ&lt;•

.._ p, •n ,t l,..,t~;

WI I Ill Ht t.r111 10 'fOUl Clltldt o•r1 .S ltJ HI 111('

w~ y

IIH''o' 00 &lt;.~ II S t tt CI&lt;" Rll t' 'i t'll1Ct. /tiJt.

Klda lowe l he ••~ thty run , corn1r 1nd jump.

Details in
Thursday ' s Paper

Mothers love the way they're made

by Stride Rite·~

Elliott Appliance II

CHAPMAN SHOES

220 East Main
997 'Ill

-----

;:;:;:;:;:;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;':;:;:;:·

!

.., .

An

.wtthour
ground.roast f

CLIFTON - Mrs. Helen Barker observed her birthday on
March 21 when her neighbors called during the day. For the
occasion Mrs. Frances Oliver baked a cake and those visiting
were Mrs. Qliver, Mrs. Mable Johnson, Mrs. Marie Smith,
Mrs. Katie Bass, Mrs. Wihna Blake, Mrs. Clara WIIUams,
Dawn and Jackie Blake, Evelyn Lockett, Mrs. Lester Johnson,
Mrs ..Helen WIIUams, Mrs. KatieOUver, Rev. and Mrs. 0. B.
Hatchet. She received many gilts and cards.
One of the highlights of the day was a phone call she
received from her grandson, Marvin Barker, Jr. of Marmet,
W. Va .

Mr. ahd Mrs. Bill Matlack,
Mrs. Carol Tannehill and
Mrs. Juaniw Bachtel were in
St. . Paris over Easter
weekend for a visit with Mr.
and Mrs. George Dallas and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack
MASON- Chris Bletner, one of Mason's oldest citizens of
McDowell, Colwnbus, Mrs, many years, will observe his 90th birthday on AprillO. Many of
Vena Whaley and Dana the family will gather at his borne on Third St.,lo celebrate the
Howell, Burlingham, and Mr. occasion.
and Mrs. Robert Grueser,
Mason and Area Personals
Kimberly and Todd,
Mrs. Mary Pickens of CIHton spent Sunday with her
Caldwell, spent Easter grandson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens, Jr. at
·
:weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Middleport, 0.
'Karl Grueser and son, Larry,
Easter guests of Mr, and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel and Chalky
Minersville.
were Mr. and Mrs. Calvin McDaniel, C. R., Chrlsline of Pl.
' Mrs. Robert Martin, , Pleasant~ Denise McDaniel, a student at West VIrginia
. Stephanie and Steven, Wesleyan; Mrs. Stanley Saunders, Cameron, Amber and
' Alliance, Pat Martin, Colum- Melanie of Collilllbus; Mr. and Mrs. James Loyd .and !ons,
:bus, and Leonn Martin, Kevin and Gregory of Nashport, 0., and Mrs. Wilma McDaniel
~ Pomeroy, were Easter of Pl. Plea!lant. Another highlight of the day was a call from
• weekend visitors of Mr. and the McDaniels' son, Curtis McDaniel, Jr. of Jenkinstown, Pa.
, Mrs. Osby Martin and son, wishing the family a Happy Easter.
' Adam.
·
Mrs. Dixie McCauley· has returned home from the
: Mrs. Belva Sloan is now at Pleasant Valley Hospital where she was hospitaUzed for
• the Pinecrest Care Center, several days.
; Gallipolis, Room 320.
, Guests of Mrs. Clara WIIUams on Easter were Mrs. Sarah
: Mrs. Carol McLaughlin and Willis and Mr. Reece WIIUams, both of Pomeroy, Mrs , Etbel
.
) daughter, Debbie, a senior Rayburn and son, Arthur of Letart, W. Va.
: student In the Holzer School
Mr. and Mrs. John Roach and sons villlted on Sunday with
• of Nursing, returned SWJday Mr. and Mrs, Jack Riley at Letart, W. Va,
; ·
Mrs. Lee Richardson of Mason Is visiting Mr. and Mrs.
; night from a 10-day visit in
: Orlando, Fla with Mr. and Leroy Metcalf and family at Colwnbus.
; 'Mrs.
Duane
Duane
On SWlday, Mr. and Mrs. Rusaell Capehart, Mrs. Lee
1
·· McLaughlin and Gary Cooke. Ricbardson,all of Mason, are going to Dana, Florida for a villi .
; They were accompanied to with Mrs.' Louise RosenbaQIIlal her winter home there. The
: Florida by Mrs. Phillip Cooke first of the month the above named will return home.
: of St. Albans. En route there
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Alexandm: and JeMlfer of Cambridge,
': and home they vilited points 0. visited over the holidays with his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
•. ol interest. Duane has recent- Dehnar Alexander and brothm:.
: ly completed his first 12 week
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Smith, Stephanie and Patti Jo of
; segment in naval nuclear Lexington, Ky ,, Mrs. Judy Persinger, Johany and Carlene and
• power with a 3.55 average. Rob Aken of Columbus, and Mrs. Helen Fell of Pomeroy,
: His .wife is the daughter of visited Mr. and Mrs. John Mar!llulU, New Haven, during thO
: Mr. and Mrs. Fred William- weekend. The Smiths abo visited his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
:, son of Rutland.
· Granville Smith and Tommy at Leon, w..Va.
.,

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·

-

12-piece coffee &amp; dessert service for only ss~
This complete dessert service for four, in
sparkling glassware from Fidenza Yetraria
of Italy, ts a regular SIS value. But you
can enjoy it for just $9.95 when you send
in the mner seal!: from 8 ounces of
Tasters Choice" 100% Freeze-Dried
Coffee, Regular or Decaffeinated. (See
order form below.) It's a great way to
serve up our delicious ground roast flavor
and to make tempting desserts look even
more tempting.
c 1976 Nftllt

r --------ORI&gt;£Jli'{)HM

I Dessert~ ·
1
offer.s~
I ·Ianenc8-0Z.
lose S9.95 and an mner se.l trom
tar lor anytOmbinatiooal inner
aeaiS epua l to 8 ounces) ot Taster' s
I Choice
100.% Freeze-Dried Coffee ,

I

I
I
II
I
I
I

L.

Rejular or Oeclfftinated.
Stncl cNck or rnoner order P~Pible to:
Cottet • OeMert s.rva

·-"'-'&lt;a,
P.O. Box912

NAM

tPront

MN """"'

pll,...,. ~ "'uw onclucl1!! np code)

ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ __

CITY'_ _ _ __ __
STATE

ZIP_ _

Otter eapireo Ju!IB 30,

"*

1978.

I'INw leN lft'l ~
tiiii/ Of lOCI! SIIH tim
Maw I -"s l e&gt;~ $h1P!Nfll 0!111 tOOl! 011tW ,. U S A
1nd " wo:i
prllhltJded.. llud "' tnlnc"-1 br ltfr.

....,!

--------1.

1111t 1
" K~nut 1M .,., ... .., lt~t ~t.t• eo,...... • ~
100 lloai'NI\IOIIe Road• .__ ~·. """ 'fofto oeos

•

•

'

•

�----..---

-

--------- ~

--------~__:__

- - - - ---

.

~~~~~~M~a~r~ch~~~·I:91~8------~----. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~

One

undred

ixth

•I

TV •••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER

UPI Televilloa Wrilft'

NEW YORK (UP! ) - If the American television audience
liked It the first time, cbances ore they'Dlove it in reruns.
~fore the over-tO crowd asaumes a superior posture. how
many remember slttlnil Unugh Saturday afternoon double
featurell at the local movie house as many. times as curfew
w~dallow?
.
lt 's110111ethlng In oW' natures to never gel enough of a good
thing - well, maybe good is the wroiJI! word, but thai's a
matter of tute.
Whatever the reuon, one of tbe peculiar truisms of · the
television blllinesa is that when popular ohows go into reruns,
they 1-Uttle In the ratings. The Nielsen ratings for the week
ending March 211 illustrate the point. In the top II shows (there
was a tie for tenth place) llli shOws are repeats.
AI the bottom of tbe list, amoiJI! the last II shows only two
are repqts and they are programs that haven't been scoring
well as first runs - "Hardy Boys-Nancy Drew" and "Kojak."
· The IGp two shows are ABC offerings as that network
·contlnues to lead in the ratings race, with CBS second and NBC

Store Hours:

third.

Mon,-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

CBS suffered mild disappointment on the reception of its
On the Air" 50th anniversary show opener March 26,
built could have been worse. Matter of fact , it looked worse in
' 1CBS:

·~ March 31, 1872

March 31, 1978

•;.

the Sky" In its share of audience, although "SST" edged out
"On the Air" by a tenth of a ratlng point.
Those familles. who make "The Wizard of Oz" an annual
event wW be pleased to see the golden oldie in 13th place in the
ratings, and dominating its time slot with a 'Sl percent share of
the audience.
. The importance of positioning in a program's ratings shows
up in a couple of instances in the past week.
"Happy Days," which has been a steady second placer and
occasional top-of-the~ist In the weekly Nieisens was shoved
out of its Tuesday slot by an hour-long "U.S," a~d went to an
hour format Thursday night opposite "The Waltons." Best it
could get was a tie.
On the other hand, ABC has surrounded "Barney Miller''
with Its relatives- "Fish" with Abe Vigoda in front and the
new "A.E.S. Hudson St." with Gregory Sierra following.
"Fish" has cllmbed Into respectable ratings since being given
lis new position, while "Hudson St." ranked 20th in the listings
lor its premiere. That's an excellent audience for a new show.
The top network television programs for the week ending
March 26, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co., were:

pomeroy
national
bank

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

the overnights from New York , Chicago and Los Angeles, in
which CBS took Its tbne period only In New York.
·
In the national Nielsen ratlngs, "On the Air" tied in its twohour time slot with the ABC Sunday movie, "SST: Disaster in

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, D.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU APRIL 1, 1978
We appreciate your business. Stop in Friday. March 31st and
Saturday, April lsi, from 10 -·7 P. M. ~ and have a free R.C. Cola and a
hotdog for
lOc. Our way of sa
Thank You .

FRENCH CITY 24 _OZ.

9: "SST: Disaster In the Sky"; 10: (tie) "Quincy" and "CBS :
On the Air."
·

.

and Saturday, April 1st for a piece of cake
and coffee. Bring the whole family and be here ·
•
when the party begins! Favors Fot All.
WIN OUR

'l06oo_
DOOR PRIZE
Register Thursday,
March 30th thru
Saturday, April 1st
Need not be present to win.

$1 29

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••
BALLARDS
SAUSAGE •••••••••••• !.t~~.

1: "Three's Company"; 2: "Laverne &amp; Shirley"; 3: "MPAS·
Hu; 4: "Charlie's Angels"; 5: "Eight Is Enough"; 6: "Little
House on the Prairie"; 7: "Perry Como's Easter"; 8: ' 'Soap";

You can have your cake and eat
. it too! At our
big birthd.ay celebration. Come, toast Pomeroy
National Bank on the occasion of its 106th
Anniversary. Be our guest Friday, March 31st

.

Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Fra..,la Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
The BOoster Sunday School Sayre and Mr. and M•s. Dave
Class held the March meeting Sayre spent Sunday with Mr.
at the home of Mrs. Marjorie and Mrs. Bryce Sayre and
Grlnun. Mrs. Helen Slack, children at Jackson.
Mrs. Marcia Ann Wells of
president, presided and
opened with devotions . Washington C.H. spent the
Scripture was Psabn 119:129. weekend with her parents,
The hymn, "One Day" was Mr. and Mrs. Harry Curtis
sung by. the group. The and visited Mr. and Mrs. !loy
subject of her reading was Riffle on Friday evening.
~'The Wonderful Wo•d". A
Mr. and Mrs. James
program followed presented Whitlatch and daughter of
by Mrs. Helen Simpson using Parkersburg, w. Va., visited
the topic, "Hallelujah What a .Mrs. Mabel Brace Thursday .
. Savior". Scripture was John
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe Theiss
31:1-18, followed by prayer · spent the weekend with Mr.
and
a · ·poem,
"The and Mrs. Vernon Harrison
Resurrection". Readings by and children and Mr. and
members were: "Jesus is Mrs. George Wallace and ·
Alive", "The Lighted Crosa", daughter in Cohunbus.
"That You May Know Him.''
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
"On Easter Day", "On Our "'""'
D •• • •ell , J r.,
· oI Mason, W.
Way To Heaven", "The Va., spent Sunday with Mr.
Resurrection of a Life", .and Mrs. Kenneth Turley and
"Christ Lives'~ "Triumph sons.
Over Death," and a poem,
Kenneth Swart of Akron
"Easter". The ·group sang, spent several days with his
"Christ Arose". The meeting mother, Mrs. James Swart.
closed 'With praYer by Mrs.
Wanda Powell. In the
business session the officers
elected were president, Helen
Slack; vice president, Helen
Simpson; secretary, Dorothy

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT

1 LB.
PKG.

SLICED BOLOGNA••

/s1

MEDIUM

3

Big Run
and Elk Run

BBidgley; treasurer, Gretta

pomeroy
nationalbank
·
the bank of the ·c entury- established ·1872

)'

'

•

•

Simpson. Potluck refreshMr. and Mrs. Jewell Story
ments were served during a • recently visited their son,
fellowship hour.
Frantis Story and famUy of
Among relatives from out near Athens.
of town ·coming for the
Denver
·Biggs
and
funeral . services of Mf· Margaret Province recently
WiUlam Woods included Ml's. called on his parents, Mr. and
Norma Oiler and children of Mrs. Dorset Biggs.
East Liverpool, Mr. and Mr•.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Paul Woods, Mr. and Mrs. VanMeter spent a weekend
John Woods, Mr~ and Mrs. with Pearl Randolph.
Bob Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Inez Randolph visited Mrs.
Clifford Via, all of Dayton; Edna Hart at Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Friday, March 17.
Woodgerd and son of
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Biggs
Marietta, Mr. and Mrs. Carol spent from Sunday to
Woodgerd of Carpenter •. and Tuesday with their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. John Ba!1lhart Mrs. Qeryl McPherson of
of Chauncey.
Marietta. Mrs. Biggs is quite
Mrs. Ronald Hart is poorly. She consulted a
recuperating at her home doctor in Parkersburg, W.
after minor surgery at Holzer Va.
·
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Jbn Hazelton
Mr. Frank Cleland is a apent Wednesday with Mr.
surgery patient at Holzer Hazelton's sister, Marie
Medical Centet.
Leifheit, who was Injured in a
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams fall at her home at Union
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dennie Avenue in Pomeroy.
Evans Sunday to see their
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day
new great"grandson.
and son, Jeff, called on Mr.
Mr. and Mrs . Dale and Mrs. Clarence Ra·ndolph
Woodgerd of Ashland, Ohio, • and Inez Randolph Sunday
are visltlng his mother, Mrs. afternoon to see their new
Wjlllam Woods.
grandson and parents, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed staley and and Mrs. Donald Randolph
daughter of Colwnbus, Mr. Sr.
and Mrs. Carrol W. Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
of Middli!Jl()rt and Mrs. Betty Randolph Sr. called on Mr.
Templeton of Pomeroy were and Mrs. Dorsel Biggs and
vlsl.tors at the home of Mrs. daughter, Janet, Wednesday
Margaret Johnson Sunday. afternoon.
Leota Smith of Hemlock
Larry. Molly and Amy
Fisher and Bambi Roush Grove recently called on
spent the weekend with Hazel Biggs.
Mrs. Opal VanMeter, a
friends In Syracuse, N.Y.
Mr. and Mri.•Pete Shields, former
Meigs County
Focle Hayman, Ann Radford, resident, entered University
Marlene Fisher, Phyllis Hospital In Colwnbus March
Younti, Linda jewel and 21 for ohaervatlon.
Bertha Roblnlon went to
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Day
Carbon HW Sunday to ~lp recently
visited their
celebrate the birthday of daughter, Mrs. Donald
Mrs. Frances Coe.
Randolph Sr. and family.

YELLOW ONIONS •• .!~~·.
2%

$1

GRADE A· .

.

59
CRISCO
X LARGE EGGS......~~
SHORTENING ••• ~ ••• ~A:••••
3LB.

SHOWBOAT .

PORK &amp; BEANS.~.~.2JS
L_COUPON

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
3 LB.

$799

-

.'

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires April I, 1978

4 oz.

VAN. OR CHOC.

1ICE CREAM ••••••••• ~.c!~.

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

CHEER

FLAVORITE

HI-DR I

BREAD

PAPER TOWELS

DDERGENT
5.LB.

.~IC

GOOD VALU

5
7

$199

W;c ·

16 OZ.

LOAVES

5/$1

W/(.

JUMBO
ROLL

3/$}00
w

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires April", 1978

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday, March 29, 1978

of Pomeroy visited the
Manuels Friday evenlna.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Warner,
Mrs. Pearl Norris •
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
sons Sunday. Mrs. Betty !!pent Monday with Mr. ll!d
Mr. and Mrs . Russell McGuire, Mrs. Lynn Arms.
Holsinger and children of Jeannie and Recka McGuire Mn. Hoyt Ferguson Monday
at Point Pleua~t.
Chester visited Mr. and
(
Mrs. Joe Manuel and

Fairview News Notes

Business today

'Spy' planes and satellites used
to find oil, conserve forests
By LeROY POP~
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UPI )
Space
sa tellit e
communications and ultra
high-flying aircralt are being
used by business and
goverrunent for ever bigger
roles in the discovery and
management of natural

says G. Robinson Barker, an
executive of St . Regis's
southern timberlands
division at Jacksonville,

Sensing does most of the
analytical work.
Barker said St . Regis
envisages the program as a
Fla .
fourstage affair, the first
"Ground level surveys by directed at data preparation
foresters and conventional and the establishment of
aerial photography simply. technical and measurement
don't
give
enough criteria.
information on which to base
Phase two consists of
resources.
a long range program." validation with known
Satellite technology and Barker sold. "They cover too technology to determine
aerial photography from limited.areas.''
whether it can be applied in
highflying planes, similar to
The satellite monitoring an operational situation and
the U-2 recoonaissance plane program, which is called phase three would represent
that gained international LANDSAT,
turns
up the transfer of the system
headlines when it was shot remarkably clear color from NASA to St. Regis.
down over Russia,
being photomaps covering 13,000
By the time the fourth stage
used to search for uranium, square miles in each pictw-e. rolls around, St. Regis will be
oil and other minerals.
High contrast .features with on its own. It will feed the
And space technology is dimensions as small as about satellite data through its own
being used to conserve 22Q feet can be distinguished computer at Dallas, make its
natural resources in a when the plctw-e is blown own analysis and send the
program being carried oui by up .
conclusions and supporting
St . Regis Paper Co., the
The ~atellite transmits data directly to the
National Aeronautics &amp; these pictures both to ground company's forest managers.
Space Administration a nd collecting sta.tions and to
It is hoped that in addition
Purdue University to monitor NASA Goddard Space Flight to replaCement programs,
continuously 1.1 million acres Center at Green Belt, Md. the satellite system will be
of valuable timber in the Purdue's Laboratory lor valuable to foresters in
southeastern states.
Application of Remote
The St. Reg is project is tbe
first by a large paper
company to use satellite
technology to assembly
information on which to base
NEW YORK (UP! ) - In carry 11 on strike'' posters if
a comprehensive longterm
forest management program. the next few days, New York an agreement on a new pact
City is threatened with a is not reached by then and
string of strikes that would rep·o rters have authorized a

are

fighting fires and treating
disease .
Among the scientists who
have worked with St. Regis in
this field of satellite forest
reserve monitoring and
infrared photography from
high altitpde aircralt is Dr.
Rex N. Paterson of the
University of Nebraska, a
noted geologist.
Peterson has used the
space technology lo explore
for uranium In Utah and
Wyoming for Classic Mining
Co. of Salt Lake City. He also
has pinpointed favorable
locations for oil drilling .
Classic Mining President
Galen Ross told UP! a well
drilled as a result of this
exploration · on a · tract
acquired !Porn Amoco flowed
at 100 barrels a day and may
Ultimately produce 400 to 500
barrels a day.
Pictures frorjJ a U-2 reconnaissance plane and satellite
pictures played roles in
selecting the site of the well,
Ross said.

New York braces for strike

Apple Grove

News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell und

Lorna spent the weekend with
Dr. and Mrs. Earl Grimm
and soils at Columbus .. They,

also visited Bruce Hint. Mr.
· and Mrs. Harold Grimm
joined them on Sunday for

dinner at Or. Earl Grimm's.
Mr. and Mrs. B.ill Hoback of
Portland visited Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin Gloeckner Monday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry
Badgely, chi ldren Danny,
Christi a nd Andrew of
Mannessa, VB . are visiting
Mr . and Mrs. Erwin Glockner
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
iladgely at Racine . On
Monday Mrs . Glockner , Mrs.

Badgely

and

daughter

Christi , Mrs. Sally Gloeckner
and daughter Carrie visited
Mrs. Paul Davis Bt P~rkers­
burg to see Mrs. Davis'

daughter, Mrs. 'Bill Cullen,
Ellsworth Air Force Base in

Sout h Dakota who

was

visiting Mrs. Davis.
Mrs. GfJrald Hayman , Mrs.
Bertha Robinson,
Mrs.
Marlene Fisher, Mrs. Ann

Radford, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields, Mrs. Phyllis
Young, Mrs. Linda Jewell
attended a · birthday dinner
given in honor of Mrs.
Frances Coe at her home in
Carbon Hill Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Lawson
of Middleport were dinner
guests of Mrs. Till Webb
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Wickline and .sons, Scott and
Kyle, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. James Price at

Columbus and attended the
basketball tournament.
Richard Wilson and fri end
and two sons of Detroit, Mich.
St~te

were called home due to the
hospitalization of his mother,

Mrs. Erma Wilson.
Mrs. Paul Hill returned
home Monday from Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Barnette

of Langsville, Mrs. Iva Orr,
Mrs. Herbert visited Mrs.
Ruth Parsons at the home of
he r son, Preston Parsons

. Sunday.
Steve Riffle of Syracuse
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp,
Steve Riffle, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Wagner and son
Ronnie, Mr. a nd Mrs. Russell

Roush, Ed Roush , spen t
Sunday at the Hupps' farm
at Portland. Mrs. Gladys
Hutton,

Mi-s .

impair its transportation ,

strike at the discretion of

shopping, health care a nd
even its te~ying habits.
The walkouts- should they
occur- could tie up transit in
the city and some of its
suburbs. hit New York's·
three
major
daily
newspapers ·and shut down
the
world's
biggest
department store and a

Newspaper
Guild
leadership.
And
thousands
of
employees at Macy's, which
bills itself as the world's
larges t department store,
may not have to worry about

how they will get to work in
the event of a transit strike.
. They are threatening to
number of nursing homes.
strike Macy's Herald Square
Unions representing ·33,())0 Store in Manhattan and four
New York City bus .and other stores in ou!lying areas
subway workers and 1,400 Saturday morning.
Long Island Rail Road
Still another union may
employees have scheduled jump on the bandwagon next
strikes at 12:01 a.m. Saturday week. That union represents
if they do not have new 15,000 nurses, orderlies and
contracts by then.
kitchen workers at 60 nursing
The city's three maj or homes in the metropolitan
newspapers - the Daily area and their strike deadline
News, the Times and the Post is 6 a.m. Tuesday if no new
- face the threat of a walkout contract agreement is
at 12 :01 a.m. Friday. Several reached . Some 10,000 patients
·c raft unions are ready to would be affected py that
·
walkout.
Samuel Pierce, a member
of the three-man mediation
panel involved in tbe transit
talks, said Tuesday some
progress was being made in

Meigs
Property

Transfers
Paul Eugene Harris,
Minnie Susan Harris to Paul
Eugene Harris II, Sharon
Renee Harris; .279 acre,
Syracuse • Suiton.
Virgil Casto, Thelma G.
Casto to James Casey, Connie
Casey, Pt. Lots 23, 25, Middleport .
Carol Gene Mowery, Dolly
Faye Mowery to Larry
Hoffman, Teresa Hoffman,
Lot 103\it, Behan's 3rd,
Middleport.
'
Gary R. George, Cathy L.
George, to Helen L. Bodimer,
2 acres, Salisbury.
Lowell D. Chevalier,
Bonnie Sue Chevalier to Paul
R. Johnson, Carolyn E.
Johnson, If• acre and ¥• acre,
l,&lt;Jt 30 McDole Torrence Add.,
Olive.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Billy H. Cretsinger, Sharon
K. Cretsinger, 1.015 acre,
Sutton.

FRAUD SUSPECTED
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Eighteen cases of suspected
voting fraud have been
referred to the Hamilton
County prosecutor following
a check of nearly 31,000
voters

wl}o

money ror pay raises unless
tlle extra cost is made up in

productivily gains.
has

Nc·w:-; Nok!'
Attendance

Methodist Church was 135.
Cboir members _present was

15.

IT SEEMS ITALIAN
Prime Minister Glulio An·

dreotU cannot live with the
communists aod caonol
live without them .

Andreotti, a Chris tian

Democrat, has been strug-

gling since December to
find a meaDs of accommudating his natJon's increas-

Twenty-five members of
the local church held Sunrise
service Easter morning at
the Roadside park, Route 33.
Mr. and Mrs. Ph ill Wise,
Beverly, Mr. and Mrs.
William Hochier, Belpre,
Mrs. Jenny Word, Columbus
attended church services
Easter at the local church.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Mathew,
Huron, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Bauer, Marioo, visited over
the weekend with Mr . . and
Mrs. Dick Karr.
Mrs . Sandy Dorst and

Ingly powerful Communist

children, Milan, visited over

party short of Us representation In the cabinet.

parents,.Mr. and Mrs. James

the

weekend

with

E70x14

SUPER 70
SERIES
WIDE TRACK
Tubeless, "blems"

RAISED WHITE LEITERS

ONLY $2895

her

·Mounted Free
Another Great Buy From

Andreotti's 16-month·old

Gilmore.
government, which re~
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
signed in January, was the . Higginhotham,
Columbus,
39th to rule Italy since- the
fascists were deposed in

1943.

Plus
$2.44 F.E.T.

MEI.GS Tl RE CENTER

Mr. and Mr·s. Jerry Whitaker,
Newark, visited over the

weekend with Rev . and Mrs.
John F. Fultz, Mgr.
Floyd Shook.
992-2109
· Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
SOO E. Main St.
Pomeroy,O.
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Karr, Mid·
H. D. Moran of Rocky dleport.
Mount, V~ •• was a weekend ·
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. Larry , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . ;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Rupe of Dyesvllle. Saturday
night, Mr. and Mrs. Rupe and
Mr. Moran visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Rupe and
Brenda.
.
.
:
Cl air
Parkerson
is
seriously ill in St. Mary
Hospital at Huntington, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. tdichae! Barr
of Syracuse ~nd Elvira Barr
visited on Sunday with Mr.

been

reluctant to extend further
financial aid to New York which has been on the verge
of bankruptcy for several
years - and what support the
city has among the
lawmakers would be further
eroded by an expensive labor
settlement.
The threatened strike of
conductors, brakemen anq
ticket collectors against "the
Long Island Rail Road - the
nation's largest commuter
rail line and the agency that
normally would get people
from Long Island as far as
the bus and subway lines was been· timed lo coincide
with the possible walkout by
city transit workers.
The railway carri~ 150,000

passengers a day. and while
most of them have cars that
could carry them to work, the
Long Island Expr ..sway already is reputed to be tbe
world's longest parking lot.
Other routes to the city
from the Island are equally
clogged - every rush hour,
raiiroad or not .
For those who can make it
into the city, there is the
dilemma of parking.
·
Those who stay home can
while away the day by
reading paperbacks. But lor
how long ?

'

Who11 guarantee

and Mrs. Duane Barr and
son, Shawn, of Jackson.

The state highway has
repaired and graded the alley
in LangsviUe which has to be
used as a road during high
water .

you a ·

averS GEdge?

Mrs. Elvira Barr received
word of the death of her
brother·ln·law, William Barr,
of Buckeye Lake, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Handley
and children, Becky and
Jackie of Pomeroy were
Sunday dinner guests of his
mother, Oorotha Handley.

additional calamity days for
school dist ricts with certain
conditions.
HB 1192 , R. James.
Changes SERS cost of lhting
calculation.
HB 1193, R. James. Raises
percent ' of final average
salary for SERS retirement.
House Concurs In Senate.
AmendmenR

COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Tbe
Ohio House. gave final legislative approval Tuesday and
sent to the govern9r bills to
allow counties lo establish a
microfilming board and · to
allow the partial payment of
delinquent real estate taxes.
The microfilming boards
would be empowered with
coordinating o county 's
paperwork.

Sub. HB 203, Lehman,

Permits
• payment
of
delinquent fi.rst hall real
estate taxes without making
payment of second half taxes
at the same time. 75·1.
Am . HB 329, L Thompson .
Allows counties to establish
microfilming boards . 78-7.
Bills Passed
',
HB 119, Deerin!iJ. Specifies
the manner in wh1ch a board
of township trustees may
lease or purchase land for a
township park. 38-1.

on

o~M 1on

qua1tefl~

IC a ll IIH! ...

1nume ,

lol.lf cr Sl-

~nr

~afel

department of adm inistrative
services to offer property in
Youngstown for sa le at a
public auction . 90·0.

lfiOnl~ly

on one. two. wu.

t•rlihtaln

ln\erul

pi~ ·

able' monthly !I you duirt on tertllic,\e&lt;J
w•tll lilt:e ilmount ol $5,000 00 or mort.

action is to relax smooth mus~

cle, the type of muscle that is
in the wall of coronary
arteries. Sometimes it helps
in decreasing angina pain,
but if the artery is too clogged
with
fatty-cholesterol
deposits that may not be
much help. It is relatively
harmless and is not a cause of
difficulty for your husband.
Persantine also acts by
dilating the coronary arteries
and increasing the blood flow
to the heart muscle. In this
way it may decrease anginal
pain and increase

a person's

ability to exercise.
Valiwn, of course, is a tran~
quilizer to relieve tension and

anxiety and il Is probably
responsible for your

DepreSsion is corrunon in

people who have had recent
heart attacks or have first
. learned they have serious
heart disease. That Is perfect·
ly understandable but it
should he recognized as a
complication to the illness.
Try to get him to lose every
last ounce of fat he has on his
body, regardless of what the
scales say he weighs, and
keep him on a low-fat lowcholesterol diet. I am sending
you The Hea lth Letter
number 2-12, Aller The Heart
Attack, to give you some
guide lines as to what he
mighl do. Others who want
this issue Can send 50 c'e nts

with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me in care of

~his

newspaper,

P. 0. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.

Am.

HB

826.

Oxley.

validate , some rules :\nri
correct omissions in th.~
department
of
tax
equilization . 30·0.
Bills Passed
Am.
HB 349, Aveni.
Eliminates gender.specific ·
words in the revised code .

Am . HB 577. Maddux. Sets

e&gt;ecluslve territories for
electric light utilities. 23-7.
Am . SB 314, Butts. Permits
cost control communications
to be made by third party
payors und~r immunity from

civil liability. 27-3.

BASEBALL MEETING
There will be a meeting of
the Pomeroy Youth Baseball
League at 8 p.m. Friday at
the American Legion Hall,
Porneroy. All managers and
assistant managers of teams
and parents interested in
helping with the baseball
programs this swruner are
asked to attend. Anyone
interested in coaching a pony
league team is asked to at·
tend the Friday meeting or
Don
Hunnel,
contact
president.

Exempts estate of less th~n
·ss.ooo tr:o m filing a tax
return. 92·0.

CASES" TERMINATED
Fined in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Revises child labor laws.
Andrews Tuesday night were
Motion to Reconsider
- Left Pending
Tanuny _Tyree, Middleport,
Am . SB 409, Hall. Provides $200 and costs on an assault
for filling ot vacancy on
charge, and Bill Reeves,
ballot.
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, on an
SENATE
Bills Introduced
intoxication charge.
-None.
'
Paul English, Pomeroy,
Senate·concurs in House
forfeited
a $30 bond posted on
Amendments
Am. Sub,
UB
321, . • speeding charge.

A FULL
SERVICE
BANI~

1

hus~

hand's lethargic state. You
might talk to his doctor about
this and ask if decreasing it
would help him.

Recommitted to Committee
Am: HB 883, Camera.

"absolutely immune" from

liability for his judicial acts
so long as he has jurisdiction
over the subject matter
before him .

The judge is protecl.t.-d even
if he makes a mistake, acts
_maliciously, exceeds his au·
thority or conunits "grave
procedural errors," Justice

THE ANCIENT ORIENTAL art of self-defense is
practiced by two not-so-ancient Chinese buys. Wreslling- unlik"e many practkes from China's past - hus
remained popular- under the cummunisl regime. Thcst.•
determined youngsters are kindergortn('rs from the
Huhehot area.

Byron White wrote .
The decision realfir'l'ed the
virtually total immunity of
judges, but it was a sad
defeat for Mrs. Sparkman of
Kendallville, Ind.
She had won a t977 u.S.

Toxic fumes force
1,700 to evacuate
LEWlSVILLE, Ark. (UP!)
- A train derailment behind
a petroleum plant caused an
explosion and fire today,
sending toxic fumes billowing
into the air and forcing
evacaution of the 1,700 residents of this Southwest

Will cvntinue
to use cards ·
despite error
CHARLESTON,

W.Va.

(UP!)- Admitting an error,

trustees of the United Mine
Workers
Health
and
Retirements Funds have
elected. to go on using the
280,000 health service cards
coal miners now use {or
medical care,

United Press International
was told by the funds Monday
the cards had
been
invalidated.
" We made

Arkansas town.
No one was killed but three
crewmen on the Cotton Belt
train
suffered
minor
injuries.
Four diesel engines and
five tankers on the 116-car

munitions but that could not
be conrirmed .
The derailment and fire
caused an explosion and fire

at the P&amp;B Petroleum Co.,
which was about two-thirds
destroyed.
The incident occured
car derailed . A spokesman
for the state Pollution Control shortly after midnight and
and Ecology Department the fire was still burning
said the deraiiment caused more thap eight hours later,
leakage of three flammable Lafayette County Sheriff
chemicals - vinyl chloride, Wade Tatom said. A State
butadiene
an d Police spok esman said
tetrahydrofuran, which are authorities hoped to be able to
used in making plastics and extingish the fire before noon .
"We did evacuate everyone
synthetic rubber
out of the town,' ' Tatom said ~
compounds.
"Strong fumes are being "We had them all evacuated
reported,'' the spokesman by 3 o'clock this morning."
''What caused the train
said. "The butadiene and
vinyl chloride are burning. derailment we just don't
The fumes are toxic bui the know," Tatom said . . 11 lt's
other two are not as bad ~s been a hectic mess with all
the lire and heat and all the
the vinyl chloride."
There also was a report the gas leaking on us there.:~
train was carrying

some

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPfl There's » television se.nes.

appeals court ruling allo,.ing
her to sue DeKalb County
Circuit Judge Harold Stump
for

approving

her

sterilization withou! telling
her what was happening ,
appointing a lawyer to
represent her interests or

fund
official Barbara
Moldauer said from her
Washington office Tuesday . .
Trustees planned to meet
today to decide what health

Justice William Brennan

did not take part in the case.
Powell said a tragic aspect
of the case was that tl1e girl
had no way to appeal the
judge's action - she did not

honored, she emphasized.

Through the new coal

of active miners, r~oving

them from health care
benefits under the UMW
funds.
Marvin
Black,
a
spokesman for the West
Virginia Public. Health
Insurance Fund, had no
concrete figures, but his

was

un~ergoin g

an

appendectomy.
Linda's mother, Ora
McFarlin, asked the judge lrl
1971to approve an operation
I&lt;&gt; sterilize the 15-year-old
girl.
Mrs. McFarlin said Linda.
though she had been
promoted each year with her
public school class, was
·•somewhat retarded"

apd

had begun staying overnight
with older youths. Without
donning his judge's robe or
entering the courtroom,

Stump approved the surgery .
Linda did not learn she had
been stcr llized until after her
marriage to Leo Sparkma n
two years later . They nied a
civil- rights suit.
Bruce E nnis of the
American Civil Liberties

Union in New York called
Tuesda·y•s
"outrageous."

decision

"I think they have given
judges far more protection
than the public interest would
justify," he said.

ups steel cost
PITTSBURGH . (UP!) The United States Steel Corp. ,
today raised prices $10.50 per
net ton for all steel mill
products to cover the cost of

the new United Mine Workers
contract.
The new prices, effective

April I and the second in·
crease this year, will amount
to 2.2 percent price hike on
total steel mill products. The
first hike, which was announced in December and
WHO SAVS women aren't as funny as. men'! Certainly
nobody who has seen lady laughmaker Terri LaPorte in
action. La Porte is one of !'!cveral female mcmbl:rs of
the "Clown Corps" in the Ringling BroS. and Barnum &amp;
Bailey Circus .

seven inches high . .
No cns ualtie~ or duma ge
were reported, it added, p&lt;r·
haps unnecessarily .
Japun is . .of ('oursc, recog-

nized us the world leader in
never seen a seven-inch tidul
wave to \'isuulize un

inundation of that magnitude.
I asked an orcunogrupher
in the ·U.S. Bureau of Billows
and Big Splashes if he L'Ouhl
think of unythin~ we might
use us
a
baSis
for
c·omparisun .
· " Picture in you r mind n bur

of snap accidentally slipping
out of your hand and falling
into the bathtub," he said .
"The impact produ ces 11
rlpple effect strong enough to

capsize your rubbe•· duck.
That will ~ive you some ideu
of what a seven-inch tidul
wave is like ."
Because the tidal wave
received so mueh publicity ,

j 'OU mi~ht think it was the
only .. rert&gt;nt
climatic
ilntidimax wo r th y of" a
televtsiOn ckH.1.1rne.n tary. Not
&gt;0.

A check uf vartOtL'i monitoring stahuns discloses that the
pnst week ha s bee n an

wmsually busy period for
such phenomena.

British seismologists, for
extunple, detected nn earth
tremor near South Bagatelle,
Wales. that registered .0003
oo the Richter Scale.
"That is n forL-e strong
enou~h to tip over u poker
f hip that wus bulanL'l&gt;tl on its
l'dgc on H ~lnss tabletop," he
suid, puttinK it in lay terms.
Mcunwhile, U.S . Nuvy
me teorologist s s topped at
Frct•bcc Ke y, a small
uuinhabltt.xl · islund in the

lkrmuda Triangle , to take
r e1tdln~s

MH.' IJ\ Oill ctc r

fro m
they

installed utnp a pubn tree.
They were unua1.cd to find
U1c instrument hud recorded
wind ~usts Of up to two miles
per hour during one 23-hour
period .
" This is Hpproximutely the
same whld velocity you \Yuuld
gel [rnm lhc bell o{ u tuba on
whlch smnt."Oill! wus playing
'In U1c Ha ll uf the MowJtain
King ,"' a Novy spokesmtm
sa lt!.
" At sea level, wind
currents U1at powerful would
wufl L1 feather more thun six
inch(!s.''
And last but not least, there
wu s ~mothel' e ruption of

Mount Bulderdl•sho. u fourvolcnno in northern
Italy .

foot~Ji~h

F\l ·~t reports indicuted it
spewed out mm·c luvu and
ash(•s thun th e uveragc
ltnllan Ci!-!ar.

One fined, two

Probe crash

forfeit Tuesduy

of 3 planes

Fined in the cou rt of
Middleport Mayor Freel
Hoffman Tuesday night was

an
had

within ·hours

Curtis F. Riffle, 41, Pomeroy,
$15 and costs on a speeding
charge.

SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - 11•e
He noted, however, that
Nllvy sHid Tucsduy the~ iB
Mrs. Sparkman may still be
Forfeiting bontls were no connection bet ween the
able to pursue a suit against
Thomas
D. Hopkins , Jr .. lhr oe jet ri~hter plune
other parties, such as her
·Mason,
W.
Va ., $50 on a crashes that occurred within
mother. The justices said
disorderly
manner
charge, · nine hour8 und u few milc9 uf
they were not ruling on that
$200
on
a
charge
of ench other Mu111bty .
und
issue;

New contract

office
believes
• •a
considerable amount" of

spinoff series called " Whrn
Mother Nature Laid an E~~ . "
A good pilot program would
be the tidal wave tha t hit
Japan lasl week .
As was widely reported in

miniaturization . E-ven so, lt is

drill ai 2:45 a.m. in an undersea canyon 100 miles east
of Atlantic City.

must enter the health
insurance field for thousands

recommend they start n

difficult for someon• who has

seas to calm, turned on its

agreement, · coal pprators

If ever the producers run
short of material , I

even know she was being

ATLANTiC CITY, N. J .
(UPI) - An Exxon drill in~
ship began borin_g a 254-foot
hole in the ocean floor today
to start the first search for oil
and natural gas off the East
Coast.
The Glomar PaCific, after
waiting four days for rough

Meantime, health benefits for
the eligible are covered.
Old health cards will be

disasters.

sterilized, but was told she

seeks oil at sea

cards to use, pending
issuance of pennanent ones.

"When Havoc Struck," U1at
features replays of famlJus

granting her a hearing .
The appeals court said to
sanction the judge 's action
would be to allow "tyranny . Ule mediN at the time, two
offshore ea r t hquu kc s
from the bench ."
Justice Potter StewaJ"t, in a prompted Japan 's cc ntrul
dissent Tuesday Joined by meteorologic al a~en cy h1
Justices Thurgood Marshall issue tidal wave wurnings for
and Lewis Powell, agreed the islands of Hakkaido a nd
Stump 's actions
went Honshu.
Subsequently , U1e agem.-y
"beyond the pale of anything
that could sensibly be called a duly rcJX.rted U1at Hakkuldo
had experienced a lidul wave
judicial act."

Drilling ship

a mistake,"

miners wives hired by state
government bave signed for
state health benefits.
Changes are being made
since the new UMW plan
carries a $200 deductible
provision, while the state
carries only a $100 deductible
section, and that only on
major medical procedw-es,
Black said.
The number of persons
activating state insurance
due to changes in the UMW
plans has amounted to "a few
hundred," he added.

When placidity struck

took effect in the first quarter
of 1978, averaged about 5.5
percent.

contrib uti ng
to
the
delinquency of a mino1·, und
l...awlon Templeton, Jr ., 57,
Pomeroy, $50, for disorderly
condul1. .

HI-LOW TF.MPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported

Tuesday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Ha:waii, was 94

degrees at Palm Beach ,
Calif. Today's low was 10
degrees at International
Falls, Minn.

'llJC fir::-1 at!t:h lcnt occurred
at 1 0 : 4~ a .!'n . An F· l4 Tomcat,
lh!:! 15th such JCt to crash
since the $16 million jet was
put in service four yearS ago,
turn ed vertica l ns it approuc hed the ru,,way ur
Miramar Nava l Air Sllltion.
It crashed and skidded into
Inters tate 5, hitting two
vehicles . Both Crt!wmen

ejected. Lt. Wall l.aski&gt;wskl,
25, of Cleveland, Ohio, was
killed and the pilot, Lt. Brian
Shaw, 25, Gurdcn Grove, N.

Y., was criti cally injured .
The automobile occupants
were not seriously injured;
Three hours later, an A-4
· Skyhawk
stationed
at
SQUAD MEETS
The Racine En-squad will Miramar
developed
hold a specia l meeting mechanical trouble over the
Friday, March 31 at 7:30p.m. Pacific 50 miles west of San
at the fire house. All mem~ Diego. The pilot, Lt. Evan
bers are urged to attend this · Cbanik of San Diego, ejected
important me~tin g.

and was rescued by a Coast

MEDICAL PATIENT
Heidi Caruthers, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, , is

a

medi cal

patient at Holzer Medical
Center. Her roOm number is
510.

Guard helicopter .
At 7:23 p.m., a civlllan
apartment dweller loo ked out
the window and saw "a ball of
fire or a nash of light ...
Personnel at North Island
Nava l Air Station, 16 miles
from " Miramar, heard

an

explosion.
A $10.5 million S.3A Viking
SUMMONED
had crashed into the ocean.
The Middlepr;rt Fire . The body of one tTewman
Department dispatched its was recovered and the other
tanker to Elm St., at 3: 44 crewman was missing and
p.m. Tuesday where fuel oil presumed dead.
was leaking from a trailer.
Their names were withheld
The area was flushed by the pending notification of
department.
relatives.

SUPER SAVINGS

The Ohio Valley Bank has a maximum
interest rate savings plan to fit your needs:
So when you think savings, think 9hio
Valley Bank savings and stop in to discuss
the benefits of all our savings plans. You'll
find out why we guarantee a saver's edge
with maximum. rates and a plan to fit your
.
needs.

SPRING
OAK

'

PANELING
jMIU HCONDI)

77,.,,.

anginal pain.
The second thing of interest
is your comment that he
could not be operated upon.
This opinion has to be based
upon having seen the special
X-ray studies of his coronary
arteries, but it is true that if
the blockage is extensive
_ ;-.rather than a local block that
• there is no way to detour
~around the disease. The
· bypass operation tbat is so
popular now is only useful if
you can attach a graft above
and below tbe local12ed area
of blockage. Wben the entire
artery is clogged there is no

HB 1191 , Kurfess. Provides

Grace

\

den worsening of recurrent

Tuesday in the Ohio General
Assembly:
·

TOGOVE~NOR

2.80 acres, Cheste.r.
Ronald K. Cowan, Judy
Lynn Cowan, Sheila A.
Miller, Michael Miller to
David D. Campbell, Ruth A.
· Campbell, Lot, Pomeroy.

ONLY

angina after being free of
pain for a long time or a sud·

A:t~~r~z~8 th~6~ire~;~~~nihe

; ·I

Jane L. Sizemore, 1.02 ·acre,

- applies to a recurrence of

HOUSE
Bills introduced

FACTORY OVERSTOCK

Larry L. Baker, Phyllis L.
Baker to Harold Sizemore,

, DUR DR. LAMB - My
husband, age 58, had three at·
tacks of angina within a
period of a mooth. upon exertion--during jogging and cut·
ling grass. He was hospitall2·
ed and had a heart catherization which showed he had
lilolesterol blockage of 60 io
!10 per cent in his coronary
arteries in such positions that
jt is not possible to ope'"te.
He has been taking fsonlil:
Persantine and Valium. He is
on a special diet and has
changed to a less stressful
job. He is not overweight and
has exercised faithfully for
many years.
~. The doctors seem hesitant
to leU us the adverse reactions to these drugs, if any. I
know my husband's pulse has
gone from a normal 72 to 52.
He seems lethargic and
somewhat depressed. Can
you tell me more about them]
DEA~ ~ADER - Your
letter Is a .gold mine of in·
formation about heart
disease. When a person first
develops chest pain (angina)
beeanse of a heart condition,
many specialists consider
that a heart attack. The same

WASHINGTON \UP!) Linda Kay Sparkman has lnst
a long and bitter fight to sue
the Indiana judge wh o
allowed her to be sterilized at
age
15
without
her
knowledge.
The Supreme Court, in a :&gt;-3
ruling that drew an outcry
from civil liberties lawyers,
said Tuesday a judge is

place to detour tbe blood flow
to.
It should also'be mentioned
that 60 per cent blockage may
not be critical and may not
justify an operation. A decision to operate or not has to
be based on the facts of each
individual case.
Jsordil is a nitrate and its

COLUMBUS !UP II - Here O'Shaughnessy . Permits the
is a glance at activity General Assembly to ln-

in a referendum on the

2.80 acres, Chester.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Legislation at a glance

November ballot.

Sizemore to Larry L. Baker,
Phyllis L. Baker, 1.08 acre,

..

Easter

morning services at the Free

election day last November.
Robert
Uth ,
county
elections board director, said
Tuesday he "would be
surprised" if any action were
taken against the voters.
One voter notified the
election board by letter he
voted twice to test the
system, while another
evidently voted twice out of
confusion, Uth said. The 16
other registrations could not
be authenticated.
The election day voter
registration law was repealed

Harold Sizemore, Jane L.

DAM OKAY
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) Federal inspectors declared
the Acton Lake dam safe
Tuesday, despite a crumbled
spillway wall that has
permitted minor erosion.
The inspectors, from tlte
Department
of Natural Re\ Mr. an~ Mrs : Vern on
sources
and
the u.s.• Army
Donohue, Mrs. Flossie
Corps
of
~nglneers,
said tbe
Badgely, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
21-year-old
earthen
dam
was
Wilford and children, Long
Bottom, visited Mr. and Mrs. ''perlectly safe," W'ldamaged
by the fallen concrete wall.
Arnold 1\nderson Sunday.
stale inspectors were dfs.
Mr. and Mrs. Everette
.Parsons of Negley, 0. visited patched to the dam site last
his mother, Mrs. Ruth Thursday following reports
from park employees that tbe
Parsons on Saturday.
.
dam
was deteriorating. The
Mr.. and Mrs. Ronald
state
Inspectors
also
Russell and children visited
no
concluded
there
was
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Russell at
danger of the dam ~ollapslng,
Wolfpen Saturday.

at

Ught1&gt;r side

Woman loses
legal .bout

HEALTH
After the
heart attack

reg!stered

Knighting also visited the
Hupps.
Rev. and Mrs. ·David
Harris of Sandusky moved to
Racine . parsonage this week
and he filled the pulpit at the
local Methodist church
Sunday evening.
•

'

"a long way to go."

The city says . it has no

Congress ·

(]jff

Langsville

negotiations, but there still
w~

l.aurt'l

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 28, 1978

'"

SitE!!

7 0THIR10P QUALITY
IIG. '1.10
PANaS TO atOOII FIIONL. ..................... !:5!~Sb•t

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
MASON, W. YA.

'Wiii OhioValley Bank
Gafl1pol•s. Oh•O

~l'mbc r

Fore

The Leading S~vlng1 Plana Are At The Leedlng Savings Bank

5th &amp; Pearl
-

·Racine, 0.

- .. HEii'i:'' STORE: .

ThursdaY, Ma-r. 29 thru April 1st
Right Reserved To Limit Quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamp•
Monday thru. Friday .
9:00til7 :00
Saturday 9:00·9:00
' CLOSED

CARROTS....................... ?.~~.c.~. 19'
NEW RED POTATOES .......... !:~.-.19'

-cHUCK ROAST
LIVER••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
BEEF OR PORK

(SLICED)

·

Cottone lie

Cash Saver

TOILET
TISSUE
4 Pk.
79c

DOG FOOD
25 lb.

$349

Bakers

PAPER TOWELS
Jumbo

LB

Roll

SMOKED HAM SLICES•••••••••••••••••• '!• .'1
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(SLICED)
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LB.
BOILED HAM

39

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69'

CHOCOLATE
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ll oz. pk.

Moist and Easy

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CAKE MIXES

SYRUP

bin

79e
CAT
FOOD
6'12 oz. Can

ROME APPLES ................~.~:.&amp;9'
LB
16 oz. 89'
-·~CA::~:BAG:::E:;.. ;"~..;..~·~"~"~"~"~"~"~..~-~·~~.~~:.~.1~5~'-J~..~~~;;~~~~~·.......·.·~·-·.·~·..·.·.'.·.·..·.·.•.•.·..·.·.·.•.•..•.•.·..~-~...............'.5.1.$.1~·.0.0..........~------~·

BRAUNSCHWEI.GER

. '

DRESSING

�•
provide a marlmum credit bureaucrats in aome far-&lt;&gt;ff
12 - The Daily Senhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, March 29, 1978
~== =c~=~=========o====== allowable amount ranging government agency to decide
anywhere from $200 to $SOil. which studedts or educaUon
Some apply to elementary, systemJ reeetve ald.
Diversity and competiUon
high school, and college costs
equal
to
that
of
romance
are
cherished American
while
others
only
include
Another
time
a
drove
of
hogs
Willia m Smith, who was
BY GAYLE PRICE
many
other
historic
islands
By
C
:
la··~ncc
values
that expand op·
post-secondary
edueaUon.
that
were
loose
on
the
Island
The followmg notes are bonded for $150. Searches
and
1!
is
regrettable
to
see
it
Tuition
tar
credits
also
give
portunllies,
enhance
for
harvesting
the
com
crop
believed to he reasonably have brought us the con~
Iiller
dug
away
for
gravel
and
thus
parents
the
muimum
freedom,
and
improve
aer·
got
caught
in
an
onC&lt;Jmlng
reliable . Some are fr om cluswn that William Smith
another
phase
of
.our
history
freedom
in
deciding
how
to
vices
to
all
our
people.
Tu
fl
ood
.
When
they
were
legend, however, and some was the brother of Caleb's
For some time Congress school tuition costs on their
are documented.
wife, Ann . Sarah and Charles bemg run up onto a nat goes into oblivion for the sake has been trying to find a way federal income tax returns . educate their children. It credits serve these values
The family of Joel Buf· built their first log cabin on brought IR to ferry them off of commerce. Buffington to help parents meet the However. the Administration provides benefits for all well and offer the II)Ost lm·
students
in
qualified mediate, unC&lt;Jmpllcated way
fmgton are: William; Philip the river bank near the head they scurried in one end and Island will always be skyrocketing
of opposes tuition tax credits educational institutions as to help parents finance their
cost
remembered
as
the
locale
for
C., Joseph born 1776 and who of Buffington's Island on the out the other mto the flood
educating their children. and wants to put more money opposed
to
allowing children's edueatlon.
is important to early hap- Ohio side and this first cabin waters and were swept off the " Battle of Buffmgton Despite
widespread in existmg student fmanclal
Island"
during
Morgan
's
where
many
drowned.
was butlt around a huge tree
p~nings around Lebanon
agreement that something aid programs. The sides then
Buffington's Island has a Raid.
stump which they used for a
Twp .; As a ; Magdalenei
must be done to ease this are drawn for a classic public
Jacob; Abraham ; Susan, and table . In later years the cabin
policy debate.
on average
families,
Richard. The Joseph Buf· was torn down and the logs --,:::_:::~~A-=-N~--("'['":·E--R---.·-------- burden
Average income families
.here have
been differences
fmgton mentioned above had were sawed into planks and a
on how best to deliver the pay most of the Nation 's
a son, Phillip Jefferson fram e house was constructed
financial relief. Now it ap- taxes. yet are effectively
Buffington who married nearby, wh1ch stood 1111 the
e
pears a majority in both "locked out" from programs,
Mary Sleath The little run lime when Mr. Rhodes
~.
Houses of Congress ravor such as educational loan and
that enters the OhiO River acqUired the property in the
~ WW'~J
allowing families to write off gra nt assista~ce, which their
near where Clarence and 1950s.
tax dollars make possible in
American Cancer Society
Catherine Barringer, Wife
Maxine Pnce live 1s called
the first place.
Sieath Run . David Sleeth Of Merideth Prtce, had a
Poor and near poor
A
regular
feature, rates for cancer patients
(SieathJ born 1789 died sister Elizabeth who married
families, on the other hand,
December 22, 1834 and has a Hezekiah Buffington. They prepared by the American because several years must
are favored wtth loans,
marker beside the grave of named their second daughter Cancer Society, to help save pass after cancer is treated to
~rants, scholarshipS, and
estunate survival. The most
Joel Buffmgt on on the Adams (b. 6 June, 1833), Cathenne your life from cancer.
Henry E:. (Hank ) Cleland, supportive Jobs. Funnelling ·
Prace Buffmgton . Mendeth
A woman writes : HJ am 55 recent assessment came
farm at Portland
Jr . has been appointed the more money mto these
Caleb Price (b. 1775 d. May Price was brother to Charles and my daughter IS 30. We from the National Cancer
categorical aid programs w1ll
general chainnan for the
6, 1821) purchased 50 acres of Price.
are both worrled about Institute hased on a com· Me1gs County fourth annual yield little, if any, benefit to
The Buffingtons. according getting breast cancer. Should prehensive survey of the 19511- HIKE-BIKE for retarded the majority of families with Westinghouse
land irom Joseph Buffington
mentiOned above. The deed is to Cathertne Barnnger Price, we have mammography?'' 1973 penod. This survey children . The event is slated children to educate and • 2o.s Cu. Ft. Capacity
ANSWERiine:
Before showed that survival rates
dated March 8, 1820 The "owned all the land" The
shrinkmg budgets to do It
Saturday, April 29.
Frost-Free
tract is on the Ohio shore near land along lhe Ohio shores in answering that quest ion, it is for SIX of the 10 most common
R1ders will depart the with.
the center of Buffmglon v1c1mty of the Island was important to point out that forms of cancer IR the U. S
Refrigerator
·Freezer
Another problem with
Me~gs County Senior Citizens
Island and was 90 rods called "Buffmgton Fields" both of you should learn and have improved grad ually
expanding
traditional
student
·Day Fresh Meat Keeper
Center at 10 a.m . for the 25square. ConsideratiOn was and there was a boat landing practice monthly breast self· smce the early 1960s. Better
financial aid programs is the
mlle
ride,
most
of
whlch
will
Model RT2177
$450. Caleb lived Jess than a there ca lled "Buffington." exammat10n to help detect survlval rates were noted for be through the country on enormous bureaucratic
pallents
with
cancers
of
the
year and was buried on his
In a census for the Ohio poSSible breast cancer. It will
good paved roads. A scenic overhead that will result. 0 Completely Frost-Free
property in the north east Country dated 1800 and for give you both the peace of bladder, colon, pro state. nde 1s assured.
Furthermore. there are 0 Equipped for Automatoc
Ice Maker (optional)
corner . A good monument GallipoliS , must have in· mind that comes from rectum and lining of the
serious
problems with the
Riders are encouraged to
was erected to hts memory eluded some of the area now knowing you are doing ut erus . For th~ overall pick up sponsor sheets from current programs. According 0 Free zer shelf
but 10 late years 11 was
Lebanon and Letart Town· sumethmg to help. Your relative surv iva l rate for all the three Meigs County high to a recent study by the 0 Two freezer door s~~~'::"~~----.3'-&lt;
0 Ice compartment With 2
removed by fanner s but has shtps because the names questions about mam· types of cancer mcreased
ls, the Meigs Jr . General Accountmg Office,
Model RT 2177
quick -release trays
been
recovered
and mcluded some men known to mography should be directed slightly from 30 per cent 10 schoo
about
one
qf
every
six
of
the
H1gh
School,
Cleland
Realty
' be m this area . Recognized to your personal physician. 19511-59 to 41 per cent for 1967· 1n Pomeroy, . the Meigs $4.5 billion worth of loans 0 Ice c ub e server
preserved.
The personal estate of were Edmund Pnce, Joseph who best knows your physical 73. Complete flv.,..year follow· Community Mental Health made to over four million 0 Spli t cantilevered
adjustable shelves
REG. $669.95
Caleb Pr1ce was sold by the Buffington, William Buf· conditions and medical up is not yet available for Center in Pomeroy, or by students
under
the
AdfUSiable
fresh
storage
cancers
diagnosed
after
1970.
court on August 10, 1822 and fington, Peter N i swonger, h1storles. H o wever, in
Guara nt eed Student Loan
callmg 992-3232.
pan
Program was not paid back
at th1s sale Joseph Buf· Ande Anderson, Aaron general, women over 50 This information well may
Each rtder must have a
7-Day
Fresh Meat Keeper
fmgton, the one who sold him Lashley, John Warth, Seth should have x-rays (mam· prove Important Please sponsor, and sponsors are after the student completed
Large
vegetable cnsper
the land, bought 3 heifers for Jones, James Smith and mograms ) of their breasts. remember that these rates requested to pledge a per or Withdrew from school. By
Butter
and cheese servers
$3.00. William H Buffington, Peter Shevelar.
because they are entering the are averages for large groups nul e amount or a flat amount October 1977, the government
Removable
egg server
Buffington Island has an age gro up where breast of patients and do not apply to to be collected after the ride . was estimated to have paid
Joseph's nephew, bo ught
door
shelves
AdJustable
an
individual
pat~ent'
s
mtcrestlng history connected cancer is a greater nsk . And,
another heifer for $7.121&gt;
In prevwus years, pledges out $436 million m clauns
Automatic mtenor l1ghts
Stop in and look over our
chance
of
survival.
Accordmg to Pnce fanuly t o the many people Who used any woman of any age who
from lenders and to have
Magnetic door gaskets
complete
line
of
A suburbanite expl ains· were not collected and it as collected only $33.8 million in
legend, "Lady Buffington," Il and lived aro und 1t. Pnor to notices breast changes should
hoped
that
both
rider
and
Full
length
Woodgraon
Westinghouse
Appliances
.
thought to be Joel's w1fe, the .Cavi l War slaves were seek an expert optnion and "My aunt will be staymg with sponsor wtll be mm::e diligent bad debts.
handles
Elizabeth, brought a younger kept there and · sec retly diagnostic techmques which me after cancer surgery, thts year.
The tax credit concept,
Sl im-Wall design-loam
SISter to the Isla nd We know brought to the Ohio side In may include mammography. How can I get a hospital bed
however.
avoids most of the
tnsulatt on
The
Meigs
County
REACT
that Joel's w1fe, Elizabeth low water a person could ron Unless your 30~year-old for her ?"
administrative problems
Separ ate tempe rature
::'\
'team
will
be
in
charge
of
ANSWERhne : If your aunt
Logan, carried Indian blood. up h1s brJtcht!S and wade daughter ha s suspicious
as~ciated with the current
con trol s
safety
again
this
year.
Full
requires this kind of equip'Jbc younger stster had a across the nver at a ford sa1d symptoms, she need ,not have
AdJUStable gl1de-ouf rollers
cooperation is asked by all loan, grant, a nd work~study
granddau ghter. who also to be nea r the head . One of routine mammography. If ment, please check with your riders
programs
.
Beca u se tax
The
committee
carried lnd1an blood, and her the btg~est carp ever !;;een in you want more mformation, loca l America n Cancer reserves the right to ask any credits work directly through
name was Sarah Sissel. At the OhiO was found dead on please speak with your Soctet.y Umt, which mam· unruly nders to leave the the I.R.S., nothing more is
You can De sure 1f ti SWeS' tno, ll ouse
this ume John Sissel was the head of the Island with a . , physician or the local tains a " loan closet" of course. A p1ck up vehicle will required than an extra line on
hvlng in what i s now Lebanon pitch fo rk sticking m 1t A dam American Cancer Society Sickroom s upplies a nd be provided for any rider who the 1040 form . No new or
equipment available at no
Townshtp and in the census was butlt to t he Ohto shor e to Unit ln your comm umty.
bigger bureaucracy is needed
cannot complete the nde.
An e ngmeenng student cost to yo u.
he ts listed as head of a family ratse the water on the West
to
pry lnto our private lives.
Approximately 200 nders
If you have a ny questiOns
wtth Wafe and one female
Vtrgmta s1de. Wht le fann ing asks: "Have we made any
Congress
has been con·
will partictpate. Anyone
ch1ld, so we reason that Sarah the \stand a fanner had a fine recent large scale progress in or wo u ld hke more m~ wantmg to sponsor a nder but sidering many differen t
forma tiOn on anything
was John Sisse l's daughter. team of horses ther e. the cancer fight?''
tuition tax cut proposals.
405 Fifth Street
ANSWERilne : It takes discussed call 992-7531 or cannot fmd anyone to nde is Some apply to 30 percent of '
Sarah Sissel at about the age He t 1ed the lines to
asked
to
call
992·3232
to
make
of 16 marrted Charles Pnce, the wagon wh eel and time for tmprovements in come to our Meigs County
tuitiOn costs, while others go
_New Haven, W. Va.
arrangements to get a rider .
aged 18, on May 22, 1828. In unnoll ced the lines got early diagnosiS and treat· ofnce at the Senior Citizens
as high as 50 percent. AU
Food and beverages will he
Building on E. Main St.
1825 Charles Price, son 'o f wound around a wheel and ment to show up in survival
provided at check pomts
Caleb Pnce, had been put thehdrses backed themselves
along the route. There will be
under the guardum•hip of mto the water and drowned
five ch eck points space d
approximately hve miles
apart to allow fo r rest and
refreshments as wdl as
punching the cards to verify
miles traveled. Any nonLetters of oplolon are welcomed. They sbould be 1
m otorized vehtcle or mode of
less than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by 1
Settlement ot the ll!klay produced 9.4 million tons of transportation ts permitted,
..
th e editor) aDd must be signed with the signee 's ad· I coal stnke IS good news for
the
34.9
million
tons
of
coal
even
horses.
dress. Names may be withheld upon publication. I customers of Ohio Power
used m AEP plants.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., April 1st
However, on request, names will be disclosed. Letters I Company, and the rest of the
should be in good taste, addtesslng issues, not per·
7-state American Electric
sonalities.
1 Power System
2
t
With the resumption of coal
I productiOn, Charles A.
I Hell er, Exec utive Vice
I President of the company.
I said today that Ohio Power
I
ByKENNETHR.CLARK
I was ltftmg its request that its
United Press International
electric power cu stomers
TARNISHED IDEAL: As far as the Ideal Toy Co. is
vo lunt ari ly curtail their
Looks forward to spring events
concerned, daredevil Eve! Kolevel became less than the ideal
usage of electnclty.
" While prudent use of model fcc kids when he went to jail for working a former press
electricity
should always be agent over with a baseball bat. As a result of the new
Dear Editor :
practiced
by
a ll customers at assessment, the firm no longer will market miniature
After a long hard winter, flu epidemJcs, a bitter strike,
all
t1mes,
we are today motorcycles and other items carrying the Knievel trademark.
missed sehoul days, the fear of utility shortages, continued
rescmdmg
our
call, made Says an Ideal spokesman in New York, "The company
lb. TEEN QUEEN
3 lb. Bag
nsmg pnces, tlte threats of floods. 1ce jams, well you name 11,
earlier
m
t
he
strtke, for recogniZes that it sells 1ts products to children and that it has a
and I think we've had it, here in the ol!j town of Pomeroy,
most of us weathered it, not all, but most of us. And so now, I vol untary cut back m usage.'' responsibility ID the children and thell' parents." Knievel is
doing six months m Los Angeles County Jail for the assault.
think perhaps it IS time to turn our thoughts to pleasanter Heller said.
. 16 oz. California
Po
inting
out
that
a
number
thmgs, hopefully with the coming of spring.
12 oz. Sliced
BIRTHDAY
BOYS:
America's
two
top
diplomats
sharea
a
of
the
power
plants
on
the
I would like ID take this opportunity to report on the "Big
Ce.llo Bag
4
Krall Plain or Pimento
$}29
Bend" C.B. RadiO Club and our activities throughout the AEP system are l ocated birthday party aboard Air Force One Tuesday, en route with
wmter. We are continuing to be of help and assistance to those adjacent to coa l mines , President Carter to South America. Secretary of State Cyn~s
Pkg .
in need and to those less fortunate than ourselves and to being Heller sa1d the coal stocks at Vance turned 61 Monday, and presidential adviser Zhlgnlew
an asset to our community. To the general public, many tend to these plants s hould start Bneztnsk.J was 50 Tuesday. carter, wtfe Rosalynn, and
think that a CB radio is a silly and useless toy, but more and buildmg up at a solid rate daughter Amy helped them celebrate with champagne and two
more are coming to realize what a valuable and useful thing it w tt hin the next few days and chocolate birthday cakes.
can be, in case of a stranded motorist needing help, in case of elsewhere on the AEP system
BIJf DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER: Perry Kerry says
fires where a phone is not available or tied up, emergencies, " w1thm a week or so."
10'1• oz . CAMBELL
there's
no way he'd go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. He'd
The
system's
coal
supply
at
such as sudden illness, or accidents, where medical help or
4
rather
go
across
m
a
snowmobile.
The
Jt).year.&lt;Jid
Portland
transportation must he summoned quickly, they are the start of the st rike on
invaluable. True, their use has been abused by some and that December 6 was at the ·105· Maine, daredevil says oo Aug . 18 he'll launch his modified
day level, based on normal steam11owered snowmobile into a 4,DOO-foot jump across the
IS why clubs such as ours have come mto being, One of the
200 Ct.
most pleasant things we can do IS to try to help and assiSt any usage . When the strike was Horseshoe Falls on the canadian side of the famed landmark.
With 4c Off
new CB'er in getting started. We have had the pleasant job of settled last Friday the supply He isn 't worried about official interference - says if he gets
any,
he'll
simply
start
the
jwnp
from
private
property.
But
one
was
down
to
about
39
days.
welcoming a dozen nrw members into our fold this past winter
" In recent weeks, 11 he thing does bother him. Says he, ''There's no way I want to land
and we would like to enroll many more, anyone mterested
141/2 oz .
11
come to one of our meetings held the second Tuesday and t~ explamed, We were able to anywhere near the water. I can't swim."
last Friday of th.e month at the Rock Springs Grange Hall, keep our supply of coal fairly
QUOTE OF THE DAY: Legendary hockey veteran Gordie
Meigs County FaU"grounda at 7:30p.m. Come meet us. we will constant , at about 39-10 days,
Howe,
tumllll! 50 Friday with no plans t~ retire after 30
thanks
to
a
number
of
factors
make you feel welcome and try and answer any questions you
20 oz . DEL MONTE
professional
seasons on the ice: ''I 've broken a wrist, rlbs, toe,
one
of
the
most
important
may have.
4
In closing I would like tu inform everyone that the "Big of which was voluntary collarbone, had tltree knee operaUons, one elbow operation
and
had
double
vision
for
three
months.
But
the
worst
was
conservation
by
our
Bend" C.B. Club is balding its second aMual coffee break, this
when they had to open up my skull to relieve some pressure on
customers."
16 oz.
IS where CB'ers from aUover the state meet for a good time of
"We are grateful to our my train ... (but) I still play because I enjoy it."
just talking and for the first time meeting those that they have
talked to on the radio, sometimes for as much as a couple of customers, large and small,
GUMPSES: Eric Sevareld Is out of retirement to do a 16years. Last year we entertained between 2,1Jlltl..3,000 guests. for their conservation efforts,
week
Tv series titled "Between the Wars,'' with narration by
24 oz.
as
well
as
·for
their
patience
Numerous door prizes will be given hopefully, donated throngh
Yale
University
Prof.
Robin
Winks
...
Bette
Mldler
and
Alan
and
understanding,
over
the
the generosity of mercbants and people of our viciruty. Our
4
main prizes to some lucky persons will be $500 first prize, $300 period of this unfortunate Bales will be m New York next month to film 20th Century's
e •• e ••••••••
second prize, $150 third prize, $50 fourth prize plus numerous strike. and we are grateful, "The Rose " ... Don Rickles .will do a week~lo~U! ene:al!;ement.
trophies. We will have free coffee, good food at a nominal as well, that the economy can April 111-16, with Helea Sehaelder at the Westbury Music Fair
16 oz. MUELLERS
in New York ... Producer Gene Roddenberry and Paramount
price. This will take place on Sunday, May 7 from 10 a.m. til' 5 get moving again."
The AEP system's power Studios made It official in Hollywood Tuesday - they are
p.m. There will be a good band with good mus1c. Admission of
supply
is about 90 per cent ~aking a $15 million "Star Trek" movie with all the leading
course is free. Come out and enjoy yourself at the Meigs Fair·
coal-base.
· The system f1gures from the original TV east, including WIIIJam Shatner
6 oz.
grounds. The main priZes will be donated by the club
operates
a
number of coal as captain Kirk and Leonard Nlmoy as Mr . Spock ... Danny
from available funds .
Thank you, mines, all of which were Kaye will receive the AFL.c!O's award for distmgniShed
"AI." White, RD 3, Pomeroy, Ohio closed down during t he cultural and philanthropic activities at an award ceremony
May 18 ....
~~The City Slicker" strike Last year these mines

Buffingtons contribute to county

Washington
Report

An Jor l1ne

Oeland named
main chairman

SALE PRICE

$49995
•

•

sure.
serv1ce

•

GREENE'S
SALES CENTER

---- --------- --------------,

Coal settlement
said good news

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
. Phone 742-2100

I

9~..1. ~~~
••• ~- uuarc,: ,.;,. ;: : : : :

peopletalk

FRENCH CITY WIENERS •••••••••••~ .:~·.~~;;, 7'1
FRENCH CITY RING PUDDING ••••••~i:~}1.19
FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM ........ ~:.'~~. s1.19
HOME MADE HAM SALAD•••••••••••••••~~~. 99~
ROME APPLES...... ~.~~ 794
2/49
CARROTS ........... .

MARGARI8E
QUARTERS

AMERICAN CHEESE

11 oz. MORTON TV DINNERS •••••••••••• ~ •• 69~
TOMATO SOUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/49
WHITE Puffs. ·····························••e·

594

SHOWBOAT PORK AND BEANS•••••••• 2/53~

TOMATO CATSUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••~~!~. 63

KRAFT MAYONNAISE ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 79•

ARMOUR BEEF STEW ••

~e••••eee•· 95

ELBOW MACARONI ••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••• S:r
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~ ••• s2.89
••

'

13- Tho Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomer~y, 0 , Wednesday, March 29, 1978
FINANCIAL REPORT '
OF TOWNSHPS
For Fiscal Ye•r Ending
December 31, 1977
Let•rt Tewnshlp
Me IIt C ounry
Rt.2Jtlclne.Ohlo
March u, lt71
I certify the following
report to be correct
Darrell Norris
Township Clerk
Ttl . No 614·247 ·2684
Summ1ryofC11h
llllnctl, Rtcelpts
And lapendlturel
BIIII'ICD Jln . 1,1917
Gen~ral Fund
2,680 ;3
Motor ~ehlcle License
Tax Fund
S71 .61
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,304.60
Cemetery Fund
9,0 47 85
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
2,875 .90
Totals
16,486.39
Toll! Receipts
Generel Fund
7,014 82
Motor Vehicle Llctnlt
Tex Fund
4~279 28
Gasoline Tax Fund 14,31'.00
cemetery Fund
8, 131 .95
Cemetery Bequest Fd . 390.26
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
3,048 00
Anfi . Rec .
319.00
Totals
37 ,569 31
Tot•l Receipts &amp; I I lances
9,695 25
General Fund
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
15,690.60
Cemetery Fund
17,179 80
Cemetery Bequest Fd . 390 26
Federal Re\lenue Shl!rlng
Fu nd
5,923 .90
Anti .Rec .
319 00
Tot.aiS
5.. ,0!iS 70
Expenditures
GeneraiFund
7,61908
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
3,811 85
Gasoli ne Tax Fund 15,161.21
A 98" 22
Cerne t ery F un d
' "
Cern etery Bequest Fd. 390.26
Federal Revenue Sharing
F und
5,517 71
Totals
37,.4 82.39
Balance D ec. 31. 1977
2,076 17
Genera l Fund
Motor Veh i cle License
Tax F und
1,045 .04
Gasoline Tax Fund
529 33
Cemetery Fund
12,197.58
.
Federal Revenue Shllrtng
Fund
406 19
Ant i -Rec
319 00
Total
16,573 31
C11• 8 a I•nee. R ece IPI 5
And Fxpendltures
ly Fund
General Fund
2•68 0 4J
8 a I " J an I , 1977
Recelp'ts
General Property Tax Real Estate and
Tra b11e r (PGross)
3,025.57
T ling 1 1e
ersona 1 Property
Tax tGross&gt;
8.4 3.76
Local Government and
Sta te I ncome Ta x 1,503.37
Ciga rette L icense Fees
and F mes t Gross)
18.75
Adjustments and
10.91
Refunds
Intangibles
t, 612.A6
Total Rece i pts
7,o 1A 82
Total Beginn ing Ba lance
Plus Rec~ipts
9 , 6 95 25
Expe-nditures
Total Expend 1tures
- Administrattve 6,8.45 09
- Town Ha lls, Memor ial
Bu ild 1ngs and Grounds
173 99
6oo 00
-Fire Protection
Grand Total Exp General F u nd
7,619 08
Bal, Oec . 31, 1977
2,076 H
Total E:Mp Plus Bal ,
9, 69 5 25
Dec . 31, 19,77
Motor Vehicle Lic ense
TI X Fund
57 7 61
Bal, Jan 1, 1971
Receipts
Motor Vehicle L 1cense
Tax
4,279 .28
Total Rece1pts
4,279 .28
Total Beginnin._ Ba lance
Plus Rece i pts
.4,856.89
1E1Cpendltures
Total Expenditures
- M iscellaneou s
3,8 11.85
Grand Total Exp.. Motor Veh i cle L 1cense
Tax Fund
3,8 11 85
Bat , oec 31, 1977
1,0.45.04
Tot al Exp . PIus Bel.,
Dec 31, 1977
4,856.89
Gasoline Tea Fund
Sal , Ja n 1, 1977
1,30.4 60
Receipt!
Gasoline Tax
1.4.200 00
Other
186 00
Tota l Receipts
14,386 oo
Tota l Beginn i ng Bala nce
Plus Receipts
15,690 60
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Miscellaneo us
7,848 5B
- Malnteno!lnce
7,31 2 69
Grand Total EICp . Gasoltne Tax Fund
15,161 27
Ba I , Dec 31. 1977
S29 .33
Total Exp Plus Ba l.,
15."690 60
Oec 31. 1977
cemetery Fund
Bal.. Jem . 1, 1977
9,0.47 85

FINANCIAL REPOIIT
OF TOWNSHIPS
Far Fisul Ynr Ending
December :n, 1f77
Sutton Township
Meigs county
8 axlJ R •cine, Ohl 0
March U. 1971
I cert tty the following
report to be correct
P.ul S. Moor.
Townsh tp C t ~rk.
Tel No . ,,_. 9.t9 llf4
summarvorcash
Blllnces. Receipts
And Expenditures
lila net Jln , I, 1977
General Fund
S 2, 336.30
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
2,034 .02
Gasoline Tu Fund
2, 71 3 IO
Road and Bridge Fund 627 3•
Cemetery Fund
3,616 A1
Federal Revenue Shar i ng
Fund
.( ,419
,51
Ant
6..• 1 00
1 Recess;on
Totals
16,367 7A
Toll! Receipts
General Fund
10,966 08
M.lor V. •" lcl o Locense
TaK Fund
6,o26 79
Gasoline Tax Fund 1.4,200.00
Road end Bridge Fund
3,14 1·' 2
Cemetery Fund
3,891 .62
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
8,985 .00
Anti Recenion
822 00
• 8•033. 11
Tol.l.
Total Recetpts &amp; Bill nUS
General Fund
13,302 .38
Motor VehiCle License
Tax Fund
8,060 81
GMoline TaK Fund 16,913.10
Road and Bridge Fund
3,168.9
7.508
096
Ce metery Fund
Federa l Revenue Sharing
13 04 51
Fund
·"
1•443 00
Ani! Recession
Tot al s
64,.400 85
Expenditures
Gener o!ll Fund
9,672 56
Motor Vehicle License
Ta x Fund
6, 49 2 13
Gasoltne Tax Fund 15,626 80
Road and Br idge Fund
2.610 80
Cemetery Fund
,. ,258 37
Fed eral Revenue Sha ring
Fund
12,373 .13
Anti Recess1on
L4•J 00
Tota ls
52,476.79
Bllince Dec . 31 , 1977
General Fund
3,629 .82
Motor Vehic le License
Tax Fund
1,568 68
Gaso ltne Tal&lt; Fund
1, 286 .30
Road e~nd Bridge Fund
L1 58 16
Cemetery Fund
3,249 72
Federa l Revenue Shar 1ng
Fund
1,03 1 38
Total
11, 924 06

Thursday, March 30

Not~ '.538 John Deere

Grader S70A
Outsland !no Jan I , 1977
5,59\ .00
Redeemed Dur ing Year
1977
5, 59 1. 00
Rate of 1n1
6
OateofF inaiMat ,
Mer . n
Note 13133 Cu b Cadet

Outstendin~
Jan l,
\977
478.00
... d
d o ·
v
~"~~ ;~me
urtng eer,.BB.OO

9

Reteot lnt

6

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~ V)(!)IJJIJ

w

M
1
Date of F ina l at.
May B
March 30, 1978
Note \JI34 Cub Cadet
Outstanding Jan , I,
Car
efull
y
e valua te all !he poss•·
1977
.HB 00 bdllte s tor wo1k or ca1 e e1 ad·
R~~;~med Dunno Year478 00 vance me nt 1h1 s co mmg year
Rate of tnt
6 Yo u s ho ulct have marly U se
Date of F1nal Mat
M a y 78 sou nd sel ec l1v11y
~ote 13135 Cub Cadet
ARIES ' (March 21· Aprl1191 The
0 t d 1'
J h 1
uts en ng a
'
ove
r-all 1ss u e mus t be mo1e
78 00
1977
llliPOIIant to you tlla!, a narrow
R ed eeme d 0 ur 1ng y ear-"
1977
478 00 v1 e wpo mt today It ~ o u try to
Rateot tnt
6 graSIJ eve ry small cJ e laii yo u II
0 t 1 F ' 8 1M 1
M
79 mt SS th e whole p1 c ture Hav1ng
a
a eo
'"
ay
Note 1966S Ford Truck
. tro uble se1ec t1ng a ca r ee r'~
N ew 1nues o url n g
Send tor yo ur COIJ Y o f Ast raYear 1977
1,666 67
Graph Le tl e1 by mat ti ng .~50
Redeemed our1ng Year
ce nts tm eacll and a long self~, 666 67
1917
n
1 f 1 1
6 addr es sed stamp ed en velope
""eo "
Date of Final Mat
Apr 78 to Astr a-Graph P 0 bo K 489 .
Note 19666 Ford Truck
Aadta C 1ty Stat10n . N Y 10019
N
Issues Ourong
Be sur e to spe c1fy b utn stgn
ew
Year 1977
1,666 67
TAURUS (Aprol 20-May 20) Th e
R ed eem ed D Urln g Year
1977
1,666 67 sp1n t o f adven ture ts sl ro ng lfl
Rate of Int .
6
Date of Ftnal Mat
Aprt l 79
96 7 F d T
k
Note 1 6
or
ru e
Total - New tss u es
N~w Issues Dunno
During Year 1977
5,000.00
Year t971
1,666 66
Total - Redeemed
B a1ance 0 uI san
I d mg
'
During Year 1977 10,358 34
1,666 66
Dec "1 1971
• '
Total ._ Balance Outstanding
6
Rateotlnt
Dec . 21 , 1977
1,666 66
Apr 80
Date of Fmi!tl Mal
Total - Outstandmg
1.025 00 (3 ) 29 , \t c
Jan 1, 1977

Meigs 4-H Club News

demonstration on fittin g
steers will be given.
The Country Kids 4·H Club
met March 16 at the home of
Mrs. Rita Maust with 15
members and three ad·
vivtsors in attendance.
Projects were decided ,
t•ommtttees were selected,
and a new member drive was
diSCUSSed.
The next meeting will be
held on March 23 at the Maust
residence. A demonstration
Will be g1ven by Reginu Snuth
and Jenny Meadow s on
Politeness and Marmcrs.
1lte F1ve Point Star Stit ·
chers J L 's 4-H Club met
March 13 at the Pat Holte!'
restdence, with 17 members d1sc ussed.
Hcfrcshments were served
and two advvisor s in ut·
by
J cnmfer Anderson
tendance.
11lC
next meeting will IJe
Items of business discussed
held
April
17, at the homo of
were election of offK-ers and a
Penny
Miller
bake sa le to be held on
Saturday, March 25, at Gaul 's
Cnm·er Risk Checklist
Store in Chester.
Dunn~
this
year's
Officers elected were Mary American Cancer Society
Mora, president , Denise L&gt;ducatwnal and fund raising
- White. first vice president ; Cr usndc . volunteers will
Tammie Starc her, second distribute u leanct ll slln~ risk
vice president ; Paulu Hysell, fact or s ror different forms or
secretary . April Parker,
ca ncer .

The Meigs County Better
Uvestock Beef t ·H Clijb met
Wednesday, March 15, at the
County Ertension Office with
21 members and three advisors in attendance.
Items discllSSed were a
bake sale and plans for the
next meeting. Advisor Byron
Miller used a member 's feed
ration as an example and
figured amount of protemThe next nu.&gt;t:ting wtll be
held Thursday , April 20 , at
the Roger Gaul residence
wllen plans fur a bake sale
Will be completed and a

pen

LEO puty 23 -Aug. 22) Guard
tea lously what you have and
anyth1ng othe1s entrust you
w1\h l oday tt yo u squander
th e m. d o n 1 e •pec t to rec oup
Qutc kly and easil y
YIRGO (Aug 13-Sepl 21) Eval
uate yo ur a!Jiil lles 111 a sh alghl forwar d and ! &amp;ai1 S\1c manne r
10da y Un less vo u do yo u w•ll
es labhsl1 goal s yo u co uh;ln ' l
e ~ e 1 po ss1bly attam
LIBRA (Sepl 23· 0ct 23) f Oday
you co uld be hke tne l1she rman
whO tust wo n t \)e be sted wh e n
11 co mes 10 bragg1ng abou t th e
b1g cat c h Tell 1l l1k e 11 1s
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 221
Avo1d th ose te nd e nc1es to m ·
dulge )' Our e xtravagan t ta s1es
\Oday 0\lle iW ISC , yo u II Q O IIi
the ho le lor th1 ng s yo u rea ll y
do n 1 need
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-0ec
21) Go 10 llw horse ' s mouth d
yo u neeo to lino w somet hing
toda y An yt11111 9 yo u ge t from
othe r so ur ce s wil l be wq rl h
ex actl y no\h1ng
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan . 19)
Bewa1e of mooc t1ers toaa y

assistant secretary ; Becky
EdwardS. treasurer ; Carolyn
Bowen, assistant treasurer ;
Lori Louks, news reporter;
Pam Riebel aod Lori Louks,
recreation leaders; Becky
Elchln~er . historian; Tami
Samos. health leader; and
Raeleen Oliver. safety
leader.
Refreshments were served
by Jackie Starcher, Denise
White, Tumm1e Starcher, and
April Parker.
1lte next meeting will be
held April 3 at 7 p.m.
The MeigS County Pleasure
Hiders 4·H Club met March 20
at the home of Kri&gt;ten An·
derson with 16 members and
four Hdv1sor s 111 uth.'•ndance .
Offt cers were elected and
thi:! bull ding uf a 4-H barn was

Co ncentratl? 011 th OSI" vou
k.n OW to bf' WOIIh y Of YOUI
co nce 111 anti ct1a t1 ty Sl r~ v dwa y
11 0 111 \ti P CQJI .t.l liStS
AQUARIUS tJan 20 ·Feb . 19) Be
b roactml n&lt;1c cl amt l ofe r ..lo t 1n att
~ o ur QIOliP aC t1 v 1 1 1e~ Ju day It' S
no \ hk e yo u to tr y to hog \IHl
show Let o tht ' l ~ have th c u

say

PISCES !Feb 20-March 20)
Oon'l c spo ust:J w tu~t you do n ' t
beli eve IJ\ \O(I&lt;IY jUSt to &lt;I VOid
be1ng peg ged a to fl owPI II s
not so bad to be o ne ol til e
group
1NEWSPAI'l H I N 11 llP I II~ I o. •,•, N I

Y'OU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER

c::~~~:.~a~~~·

Expenditures
fly Fund
General Fund
Bal , Jan 1, 1977
2,336 30
Receiph

Genera l Property TaK Rea l Estate and
Tra il er (G r oss&gt;
3,46175
Tangible Personal Proper t y
Tax ( Gross)
12 ss
Es tat e Tax (Gross)
2,925 .84
Loca l Government and
State In come Tax 2.078 .23
Ad Justments and
Refunds
141 .98
Intang ible Ta ;w;
2,285 13
Tot a l Rece 1p ts
10,966.08
Total Beg1nnl ng Balance
Plus Receipts
13.302 38
Expenditures
Total E)(penditures
- A dm in istrative 8,872 56
- F1re Protection
800 .00
Gra nd Total E)(p Genera l FUnd
9,672 56
Ba l., Dec . 3l, 1977
3,629 82
Total EKp Plus Sal ,
Dec 31 , }977
13,302 38
Motor Vehicle L1cehse
Tu Fund
2,034 02
Bal . Jan , 1, 1977
Receipts
Motor Ve h1c1e L1cense
Tax
6,026 79
Total Receipts
6,026 79
Total Beginntng Balance
PIUS ReCeipts
8,060 .81
E)Cpend ltures
Total Expenditures
- Mtscellaneous
4,899 .59
- Maintenance
1,592' 5.4
Grand Total E:Mp Motor Veh1c le L1cense
Ta x F un d
6,492.13
Bal. , Dec 31, 1977
1,568 .68
Total E"-P · Pl us Ba l.,
Dec . Jl, 1977
8,060 81
Gasoline TaK Fund
Balance, Jan . 1. 1971 2, 713 10
Rece1pts
14,200 00
Gasot 1ne Ta~t
Tota l Receipts
14,200 00
Tot a l Beomning Balan ce
PI US Receipts
16, 913 10
Expenditures
Total EKpendltures
-Miscel laneous
9,S43 38
- Ma l nten ance
6,08 3 42
Granct Tota l Exp Gasol meT aK Fund
1
Bal , Oec 3l. 1977 '
Receipts
Total Exp Plus Bet ,
General Proper ty Ta:M Dec 31, 1977
16,9 13 10
Real Estate and
Road and Bridge Fund
Tra iler (Gross)
2,46A 32
Sal , Jan 1, 1917
627 .34
Sate of Lots
1,650 oo
A ecelpts
Fees
4,017 63
General Proper ty Ta x Tot a l Rece1pts
8,13 195
Real Estate and
Tota l Beg 1nn lng Balance
Trai ler (G ross)
3,077 .12
11,119 80
Pl us Rece ipts
Tangible Personal Property
Expenditures
Ta"' CGro ssl
6J so
Sa !aries
3.S82 20
Total Rece1pts
3, 1A l 62
Employer's Reflrement
Total Beginning Ba lance
Contribution
..(49 .48
PIUS Recei pts
3,768 .96
Tools an d Equ ipment 565.81
'Expenditures
supplies
2o.so
Total E :Mpen dll ures
Othe r Expenses
36.4 .23
-Miscellaneous
1.86.4 99
Total Exp
4,98 2 22
- Ma1nlenance
145 81
Bal ., oec 31, 1977
12,197 58
Grand Total E ,;p Total Exp PIUS Bat ,
Ro ad an d Bridge
Dec 31. 1977
17, 179 80
Fu nd
2, 610 so
Cemetery Bequest Fund
Bal , oe c 31, 1977
1.. 158 16
Receipts
To tal E ~t p Plus Bet ,
BequtsU
390. 26
Dec 31, 1977
3,768 96
39
0
26
Total Receipts
Cemetery Fund
Expenditures
Ba t , Jan 1, 1977
3, 616 .47
Expenditures Receipts
Nonrestricted
390 26
General Proper ty TeK Total Exp .
390 26
Real Estate and
Federal Revenue Shtring
Trailer (Gross&gt;
3,077 12
Fund
Teng1ble Personal Property
,
90
2 875
Bat , Jan 1. 1977
Tax {G ross &gt;
6" 50
Receipts
sa le of Lots
6SO oo
Grants-Federal
3,048 00 .Other
100.00
Total Receipts
3,0A8 00
Total Rece ip ts
3,891 62
Total Beg inning Balanc.e
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
S,92 3 90
Pl us Rece 1pts
7,508 09
E x penditures
E xpenditures
Se tarles -E mp loyee s 427 .75
Sa lar 1es -Trustees
304 .80
Advertising and
, _..
Sa laries
1,853 76
21 1
Printing
Em p 10 Y e e s
Employer's Ret 1r ement
Pub II c
Contribu t ion
70 86
Retirement
Tools &amp;nd Equipment 1,628 53
Sys tem
SO 60
Repatr s
299 35
Other Expenses
5,011.52
Other E:Mpenses
101 57
Totetl Exp.
5,517.71
Total EKpendltures
4,258 37
Bal ., oec 31,1971
\.406.19
Sal , Dec . 31, 1971
3,249 72
Total Exp . PIUS B81,
Total EKP Plus Bal.,
oec . 31, 1977
5,923 90
Dec . 31,1977
7,508 09
Miscellaneous Funds
Federal Revenue Sharing
Rtctlpts
Fund
Antt -Rec. .
319 .00
.4,.ot19 51
Bal. , Jan. 1. 1971
Total Receip ts ;
319 00
Receipts
Balanee , Dec 31 , 1977 319 00
Grants- Federal
8,985 oo
'Townthlp Debt- Bondi
Total Rece1pts
8.985 .00
Purpose For Which Bond
Total Beglnn 1ng Balance
Debt was created
PIUS Receipts
13,40.4.S1
New Motor for Grader
Expenditures
Ou ts t•ndlno Jan 1,
Equ ipment
121373 13
1917
2,497 so
To1al Expenditures 12,373.13
Redeemed During Year
Bal •• Oec . I , 1977
1.031 38
1977
2.&lt;97.50
Total E xp t=alus Ba t ..
Rateotlnt .
7 pct
Dec . 31, 1977
t3,.t0• .51
Date of F ln1 t Mat
78
M iscellaneous Funds
Total - Outstanding
Batance 1Jan 1.1977
621 .00
Jan . 1, 1977
2,497 .50
Rece i pts
Rect,eemed During veer
Ant! · Recess1on
822.00
2,m.so Tot at Recei pts
822 00
Total Beg1nntng Ba lan ce
(3) 29, IIC
Plus Receill tS
1,443 00
Expenditures
S•larles
1.443 00
Total Expendl1ures
1,443 00
Total E x p. Ptut Bal ,
Dec . 31,1971
1,443 00
Township Debt- Notes
New Issues ourtng
If yous.fety
prefer tiling a safety
Year 1971
5,000.00
ruor ,when lhaving lep, be Balance Outstand lng
Dec 21. 1977
1,66,.66
careful around llllkles and Purpose
For Which Note
Debt Was Create d
IINfW which ue eully nicked.

TOTA l SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
~IWfiG I'OU

Oo.l'l II K•~ 11 111111.,.1-' Ill' ~0&lt;1' !Oid l
Nf,./...,loon •trgooodleM ol on..,ulloC iuoel U •uu 11e nu t
oWl
~our rl.,. w rlll Ill~ same b&lt;ln d
Df e C: l)mpefltllli btln&lt;l Of •elur.a WOII ' P~IC I\IIt.41 P"tt

,...,.,_, I(,...,

•ecMc•

Armour
Star
1 lb. roll
Pork Sausage lb.
Mixed
Fryer
Parts ............. lb.

HOLLY FAIMS, U.S.O.A. INSPECTED

DOGII

Chunk
U.ht
Tuna

12

Pork
Roast ............... lb.

I

PIICUII

urmu
'"" 1
HIOIIU

!79C

Boston Butt

I
I

-,-..-,-,-!t-... I .

Sugar

FlESH lONE IN WHOLE OR HALF

Of fOUl CIS1
Clml CII'"S

I
1
I

I

.
I
I

ttMillllC llllH COIII'OI AID IIIIIOOITIORU PUICUSI
illCtUDIRG THIS ITIM)

t~~:· ~~

lliiOGII

HiNu2%
Gal.
Lowfat ,.,.,
MRk .. ......... Ctn.

Serve 'N' Save

1
1
I

Wieners

I -Ib•

Fresh
California
Strawberries ........ Guort

:

79c

011

001

e
l

COIIPOICOCIUUtllltte•fiU !UOUIPIIII 1111

•• - -

Ulll tiiDII'I'I ICIIU IIlii . IICAIIIIII

I

~:f::~·~:r·
:~ ~
""' " '"

liMIT ONE COUPON Put FA Mil v
OF

:

"Sf

PlltiUI

LIM11 3 P~CS WIIK COUPON IND SilO IOOtliONIL PURCMISI
illCtUOIHG TKIS IT!M i

I
I

12

Pkg.

I
I

$

Dei'Monte

:
:
:1

$

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

...

'

'

...
•

II

I
I
I

WASHINGTON STATE 138 MEDIUM SIZE

Golden or
led Delicious

Catsup .. .'...

Apples ..

Each

NEWctOP

Florida
Sweet
Corn

Eara

-- ·

"""
vdiVJtt44&amp;e S~au
l,.illbleln Stores IIIIth Oeli Ptplrlmtnt 5

"•t ,..~ ~...;,.~~ 1111, r•

$ 19

"V

~·-

[JO~~W\'/

you bu t d on t e). tend 11 to any
to1m o l specutat• o n Today IS
no t you r dav 10 gamble
GEMINI (M1y li -June 201 All
persons ar e C1eatct.1 C Q~ra ! 1n
anv deal s you mahe tod ay It
N u leel ltll!H" II Cd to pu t mo re
1nto 11 than your co unterpar t 11
JUSt won 1 worh
CANCER (June 21 · July 2Z1
Don t g o mto some lh1ng w1th
the 1dea you II ga1n greate r
la vo r !han vou g ra nl, becau se
you s tep pe d forward to h elp
someone tOd ay It won ' t hap-

Easy

Dinners

•••

Country
Ice Cream
KIOOII
Grade A

Large

')..

..

CCinnamon
f iUH IAICED

Eggi .............. DII.

MAliCIT IAUIT QbDI AA

9·o&amp;. Rich 's
\Vhlppod
Topping
With Each
Strawborry Plo

sggc

Sweet Rolls For

FRESH

Strawberry
p•18

$2 99
Each

79c

"MIIICAN 01 MUST"ID

Potato
Salad .. · lb . .....:...;:...J

�I

14-T~;:~:n:,Middlepo~:::roy,o .• w~..my,March29Want
THE

CHARGES

RACINE

Volunteec

their bu1tdrng in Boshan . Foe-

11)WI}I"ibvrUtw:kr

100
11&lt;1
110

3llays
6tl.ll.ys

CLEAR AN CE SAll::: begtns Mon.
Feb. 13 or Sew -N-Sew Outlet ,

JOO

Moin

F.&lt;!ch wvrd uvt:r Uw mmunwn lfl
~·url.b: IS 4 t~nl !i pt'f word IX'' tl.lay
Alb rumlllll~ utl~r tlJHH l'Uils.:'\'Ul!Vt:
dilys Will t.w.. dlllr )(t'd at Lhe 1 dill)'

raw.

In mertwr)'. CHrd u( TI1ank!

t~ nd

s;~leti ill k.l

.lll.'l.'t!pl~ onl~·

are

with

Sfor$1.

2 w1ll be lost Gun Shoot until
further notice .

"PPLIANCE
SERVICE

with

on.lcr. ~ c~ nt chantt' fur ad.s ~earry­
UI~ Hox Number lr1 Carc uf Tht• St:n-

llnd
T l~ PuUIIslk!r n.·~rvc:-; t~ right
to 001l or rc)ccl cml .&lt;tds dc~med u!J.
jcl'llunal The Pub LS!It.'r wd l not be
rc:.pon.silllc fur more than une U!l'Orrct·tmst!rtlon.
Phcmc99'!-2156

All

RAC INE GUN Club. Sunday , A pri l

Y1ml sales
ce~.sh

Ro cme

polyester double knits reduced
40''• and so• • Thread b•g spool

Olutuary . 6 n•nt.&gt; !Jt'r wul'\l. $3.00
mu!Unurn, Cilsh ltl ;;ti\'H!II'e .
Mubtk' HOme

Street ,

We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
,other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Muntl&lt;l)'

Noon on Sclturda)'
T u~·stlay
thru Frh.l&lt;~y

4 P.M.
th~

day befllrt! publicati lln
Sw1day
-4P.M
Frida)' ilfk'rnoon

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS. COUNTY , OHIO
Lou Irene Roseberry ,
Pllin11ff ,
V$.

Betty lou Roseberry Caver
e1 al.,
.
Defendants .
No . 16, 462
- NOTICE OF SALEPursuant to an Order of
Sale issued by the Com mon
Pleas Court of Meigs County ,
Ohio, I will otter for sa le at
public auct ion on th e 22nd d·a y
of Apr l l, l978, a t 10 : 00 A .M . on
the Court House Steps at th e
Court House in Pomeroy,
Ohio , the following described
real es tate :
The following r ea l estate
situated in th~ Township of
L E!ba non , County o f Me igs
an d State ot Oh i O, a nd
bounded and described as
foll ows :
. The north half of t he west
eighty acres of t he southwest
quarter of Se ction 3.4 , Town 3,
Range 11 of the Ohio Com ·
pany's PUrcha se, be the same
more or less
Also eig ht
~B l
acres
des c r i bed
as
follows :
Prev iously
en t ered
f or
HIMBflon in the name of
Samuel Baker , Range 11 ,
Town 3, Section 3.4 , Lot 64 0
No . 3.4 , acres 90 va lue $100
quarter E, part of southwesr
II• . The said e ig ht acres being
a part of the above described
lot t o be la id otr by me tes and
bounds in the no rt h west
corner Of said tra c t In as near
a square for m as practicable .
Be ing also two rods in w idth ,
beginn ing at the northeast
corner of the north h alf of the
southe-a st quarter o f Section
.4, Town 3, Range 12, situa te in
Chester Township , Meig s
County , Oh io, and rvnning
west to the co unty road
leading from Adams M i ll to
Ra c ine , supposed to contain
about 28 rods be t he same
more or less .
Reference Deeds : Vol. 268 ,
Page 263, Vol 23 1, Pag e 327
and Vo l 269 , Page 681 , De ed
Records Meigs County , Ohio
Terms of Sa le . Cash, for
not len than two thirds of the
appra ised value, and subiect
to r ea l estate ta xes for 1978 .
Property appraised a t
$5 ,53'3.00
James J , Proffitt ,
Sheriff of
Meigs Cou nty , Ohio
(3 ) 12.

29 (4)

s,

12, 19 , 51

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,

OHIO

ESTATE OF

CHESTER L. TANNEtULL,

DECEASED ·

Case No. :Z2344
N01'1CE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
t
On March 21. 1978, in l he
Meigs County Probate Co urt ,
1
Case No. 223-4.4 , Carol J .
v Tannehil l , 315 So uth .4th
Street , Middleport , Ohio 45760
was
appo i nted
Ad ministratr ix of the estate ot
Chesler
L.
Tanneh i ll ,
deceased, late of 315 South .4t h
,, Str1!et , Middleport. Oh i o
•5760.
Mann ing D . Webster
Probate Judge -Clerk

13)

~9 .

(4) 5, 12, 3tc

9._ _Jack W. Carsey , Mg~
lA'it Phone997·2181
LOST : RED 11ck hound. Wed . in the
Bosho n·Keno vicmi ty . Call
985·4232

~~..a~~~=:-'::_
AVON
HA VE 4 hours a day? I
need 3 people to sell quali ty
products in their own Terr itory.
EKcel!en t
eorningli .
Coli
742-2354 .
MAN AND wi le with e•per cence
ond ability to serve 1n a paren ta l and supervisory ca pac ity !01
o sm all Children 's Home
Benefits negot1obla . Send reply
to Bo• 729 -W. c: -o 'rhe Do1ly
Sen tinel. Pomeroy, Ohio .

SALESMAN WITH management
opportuniti es. Hospi ta liza ti on,
re tiremen t, ond di sabili ty
benef11 s pr ovi ded by company .
Starting salary up to $200 . lm·
mediate openmg in Pomerqy
area Not ionally kn own com·
pony . Ph one 614-446·127 1,
oficr II co ll614 ·4.46· 76-40.

-----

------~-

~Iii~,;_=====
f iMBER. Pomero',' Fores t Pro duc ts.., op price for standing
sawtimber . Call 992 5965 or

.~e~~~n.!1~4.46~ 857~-COINS, CURREN CY , tokens , old
pocket wa tches and ch ain s
si lve r ond gol d We need 1GI64
ond older s1l ver coi ns Buy , sell ,
or trade' Call Roger Wam sley .
742-233 1
·--;-OLD FURNITURE. icc boKes. brass
bed s, iron beds, etc ., comp lete
households. Write M . D. M1ll er,
Rt . 4, .Pomeroy , Ohio or ca ll
992-7760

-----

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or !oo small.
Will buy l pi ece or comple te
household. New , used , or anti ques Marlin 's Furn1lure . 20 N
2nd St .. Middleport . Phone
Q92 -b370
CHIP
WOOD . Po le s moK ,
diameter I 0 · on large st end . $8
per ton . Bundl ed slob, $6 per
ton. Deli ve red to Ohio Pol let
Co .. Rl. 2 Pomeroy . ..?_9_3:~!J...:...__
GOOD USED tra ctor w i th
hydraulic. 3 p t. hitch 7.42-3074
$CASH$ for 1unk cars Fry~' s
Truck and Auto Por ts. Wrecker
Servic e. Tir e sole and Repair
Rutland . 7.42 -208 1 or Pennzoil .
7o42 -9575 .
WANT TO buy : Pigs . Eve rell
Holcomb , Albo ny, 61d-698-5025
or 992 -2737 .

STARCRAFl

FALL Sole. Mcnc·
motor~
20' and 21'. TraVel
Tr01len , 18 S." $3,799, 25 T
Bunkhou se $4.875 Fold -down,
$1 ,700 up. We sell service and
quohly Open Sundo~~ Camp
Conley Starcraft S~les , Rr. 62,
N. of Pl. Pleosonl.

1973 FRANKLIN TRAVEL Trailer .
28'. A .C , awning , AM -FM
rod1o
tope , o th er e•tras..
Dallas Walker , Mason , W Vo
304 -773 SbBb
17 FT . Coachman Camper . Sleep!.
b . Self -c:onlolned: 992 -7513.

ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all at
lochmenh . Ulo.e new, asking
$2250 Phone (614) 698-3190
RUGS, WALL Hongmgs and
ofgans. Nice tor Chnstmos
Reasonable . Coll99'2-2214 ,

N EED A WATER
SOFTENER?
!AI PomerQy Lendmork
soHen &amp;

(Ondllion your
with Co-op water

w•ter

soHenor, Model UC-SVI ,
Now Only
Let us test your w,ater Free

3 AND -4 RM . fur nished and unfurn ished opts. Phone 992 S434.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
Rou te 33 , nor th of Pomeroy
Large lo ts Co l~ 993·7479.

Pomeroy Landmark
9a-JackW. C.rsey, MIJr.
Phone"2-2181

Ail

12 • bO M08t~ E HOME neor De11 ·
rer . Phone992-5BS8 ,

197 1 2-dr fiat 850 Special. 1974
Kawasaki 90cc cycle. 992-3 173
or ~2 · 5 1 31,

APT.
FOR
r ent.
Rentals
ossisstonce rates l or Senior
C1 llrens Contact V1lloge Manor
Apts .. M l~d lepo!_!:..?!.2:_!787 .

QUARTER
H ORSE .
Phone
614-388 -8777 .
.
100 BALES MI XED ho',' . $1 .50 a
bole . ( lmton Piher , 9.4Q -2083 .

------

12 x bO MOBILE HOME in Ra cine
ore'a . Phone 992-5858.

-

THREE , BEDROOM r anch style
home with 3 acre s ol Proper!',' .
lease and references required
! 1, 1 miles ov t side of Ches ter
Ohio. 985-432 1.
/""
THREE ROOM opt with both in
Pomero~
After b ,
call
992 -5621 .

___ -

----

THREE ROOM furnished apt. Air
conditioned and with garden
space Low rent for Senior
Cll cLen s. In Burling ha m .
992 -616 1.

~-

SMALL ENGINE Porh . Mowers ,
Idlers ond etc We stock parts
and shari blocks for small
engcnes G &amp; J Auto Ports , 144
W. 2nd St . Phone 992·2139.
TWOJ9o5 Ford cars . 2 t9b7 Ford
truck s. J• and 1t ton. 8f t. bed
l or 1967 ond 1972 Ford trucks.
Gold couch. Hoover washer.
Solo bed . 1953 Ford p!clo.up
body . Metal detector 742· 2174.

-------- ---

REDUCE SAFE &amp; lost wit h GoBese
table ts 8, E- Vop ''wate r pdl s ..

Nelso'!_P ru~----

COAL. LIME STONE. sond. grovel.
calc ium chlori de , fer1 il1 zer, dog
food . ond all types of salt . h ·
ce lsiar Sol r Work s, Inc.. E. Main
St , Pomeroy. 997·3891

---------............,..--1974 DATSUN PICKUP. $2100.
992 -7453.
FORD 8 N Tractor EMce llent
mechan ical cond1110n . New
~_:s r i m~ and poi~:_?~~~~!..:_
GOOD EAR corn ond hoy for sole .
Locus t posts. M odel 12 Win·
chester shot gun 7A2 -2359 .

----HA Y FO R sole , Alfolla . t lover ond
l1mothy. Al so crop ground lor
rent or $hOres. Phone 7.42 -2566.

--------

~~~
Own Your Own Business!
Area Distributor for Rand

McNally Maps. No selling.
Servi(e pre -established
aecounts .
Investments

52,700 to 515.450 secured by
inventory and equipment
Write ,
in(lude
name ,
address , telephone and
three
references
to
Personnel Director,

HOBSTETIER
REALTY
GeorgeS . HobsteHer Jr .•
Broker
107 lft Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONEm·6333
Office Hours :
9a .m.tosp . m.
Closed Thursdays
Saturdays at noon .

i9'6:t JQ-;

Muffler
Brakes
Tires
Shocks
Battery .
Installation Service
Pomeroy, 0 .

3-15-tfc

10: To Tell The Trulh 13;
Characterltstlcs at Learning

CAPTAIN EASY
H~'6 TH~

81llllN5

THE PHOTO PLACE

l!llfH I ~D THE
.
S~OT.

e;AIJG ... NOT A VERY GOOD MU6

ISUT IT'S ALL WE HAVE TO GO ON!

10,33 : The Judge 10: In Search ol13 ; Wi ld
15.

FrH Estimates
Work Guaranteed

CARTER

ROGER HYSELL

PWMBING &amp;

GARAGE
~" miles off Rt.

1 by. pasa on
St. Rt. 143, toward Rufl•nd,

HEATING INC.
Pomerov 992-6282
or 992-6263

8 A.M. Io4 :30 P.M.
$ALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9·tfc

'i1111'1Nl ID11

.

'
..
...

I PRAVO

•

10

BORN LOSER

HURRY !
Li mited Su pply

3 16· 1 mo .

One 3 bedroom , new, Crow
Su bdiv is io n, near Five
Point s.

Cheryllemley

'~om

ltMI•tor

c.,..

Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton WDife, Sr.
Associate

tn.

to

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Home Phone 949-2589
Georgft S. Hobste"er Jr.
0

EXPERIENCED
Radlat~r~
Stn.et.re-t
r vTrudli c
eor luiiiAo•..-

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE ·

Broker

Pld92·ZI74

Pomeroy

Home Phone 992 -5739

-Save Fuel &amp; Money-

General Contracting

LAVENDER
Syre(use, Ohio
Free Estimates

Phone 992·7119
2-24-lfc

Phone "2·3993

3-J.Ifc

;..A~L~LE~Y(OO;:;MP~""')';::::JH;r:\'p;;;;i::Ei)Ji;~~~i(iii~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I HE~ COMES ,
"TH' FOOD, GIJZ.
NOW WATCH !

NEW LISTING -

Modern

business building f or the
r etail or Wholesa l e of meat .
All equipmen t will go with
the sale. Out of high w ater .

Only 555.000 complete.
INVESTMENT
4
apar tm ents · on
nice
locat ion for good rentals
near shopping .

NEW LISTING - 25 acres
in Rutland Township on
good count ry road. $12,500
9r S acres for $37 50.

LARGE OlDIE -

But in

good shape, 3 bedroom s,
c l osets
galore.
li vi ng
across front, dining, 1'1~
baths, nat. gas furnace, full
basement and garage .

In Sulton

Township on co untry road .
Ai l minerals, spring water.
and sma II barn . $20,000.

45 ACRES - With waler,
electric, and septic: tank .

Asking S13,500.
SIX YRS. OLD -

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
JUST LISTED - WON'T
MAKE MILLIONS - (bull
will

make

you

a

good

living, building and lor)
buisne ss, good location,
establ i shed
10
years,
train ing prov ided. Call now
for particulars.

JUST LISTED - ONE
WOODED ACRE in new
addition ( restr icted) , Ideal
for better home, this you
must see. $3,500.00.

JUST COMPLETED New home with 1 level
acre, 3 bedrooms, bath ,
d ining , modern kitchen ,
firepla ce, carport, storage

room . carpeting. S35,900.00.
LOVELY 2 YR . OLD - 3
bedrooms,
bath ,
nice
kitchen , utility, carpeting ,
finished garage, at the low

8 H.P. rid ing tractor. Elec tri c
start . Briggs and Strollon
engine. Excellent cond ition.
Call 992 -3366.

SALE - 2 story frame, 3
bedrooms, bath, basement,
H.W . floors ,
porches,
overlooks r iver and out of

1960 CHEVROLET ~ ton. Needs
some mechanic )work. Ho s a
newly built 6 cylinder motor,
$300 1962 Ford V-8 pi ckup. 352
motor . Runs good, $300. Coli
614-698-5213 after • pm .

lloods. 510,000.00.
LOVELY - LOVELY -

price of 525.900.00.
REDUCED FOR QUICK

Split entrance , 2 car
garage, mud room , utility
room with tubs &amp; comode,
large recreat ion room w ith
stone
fireplace,
open
stairway , large living ,
formal dining room . 2
baths, 3 large bedrooms,

all carpeted. $.45.000 .00.
THE REASON WE SELL
HOUSES ... is bee•use we
know

who

wants

what!

LIST WITH US AND SEE
FOR YOURSELF.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES

IB

992-2259, 9f2-til91 · JH .At lOll

3

bedroom ranch home with
beamed cei lings . Colored
bath fixtures. family room
with
wood - burner .
Equ i pped kitchen and 2
lots

BE Sl!RE TO BUY WHAT
YOU CAN SELL AT A
PROFIT LATER .
HELEN l. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
GORDON B. TEAFORD
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths.
all elec . , 1 acre, M iddleport ,
close to Ru tl ond . Ph one 9927481.

-

-~-

~-

-

~--'--

CO UNTRY farm land wi th seclu dBd woods , water and good ac cess 1n Monroe County , W Vo.
$1 .000 down , call (304) 772~ 02o ~( 3~4 )_772 - 3227 . ___
Commercial proper ty oppr ox~ 17·
ocres. level land , loca ted at
Tupper s Pla ins on Ohio , Route
7. Phon e (614 ) 667-630.4 .

---------VA- FHA , 30 yr. fmonci ng also

refi nancing. Ireland Mor tgage ,
77 E. StO le , Athens . phone (61.4)

. 592-305 I.
NICE HOME in rurol oreJ w1rh 26
acres. New aluminum siding,
co mpl e t e!~
1nsu loted and
remodeled . Storm wi ndows.
L~rge ca rpe ted li v1ng room and
both . Co ll 985 -4111 or 992 562 1.
RUS11C HILLS. Syracuse . Nice
three bedroom home . torol
&lt;:!l e c tr c~·. carpe ted , wit h car port
and air co nditioning . Phone

992-5348. .

TWO HOME sites for sole near
Salem Ce nter. Rural water .

7&lt;2-2746. ·-:-~-.,.-:--:
BY OWNER : 5 acres wit h 9 room
hou se, FREE GAS . 2 car garage .
summer kitc hen and bordered
by ? c~ee ks , Coli 985 -3827 .

JU ST COMPLETED new house in
Middlepor t For more in forma tion, call992-2238 or 992 -530.4 .
SYRACUSE 0 Hf0 . Total elec tr ic
three bedroom home. Ru st1 c
H1ll s 9q2 ·2063.

BRADFORD , A uctioneer, Com plete Service . Phone 949-2.487
or 9.49-2000. Racme , Ohio, Crill
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR - ·
Sweepers, toas ters , irons . all
small appli ances. La wn mower,
nex t to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61.4) 985 3B25.

CENtRAL REALTY CO.
57 ACRES wllh a nice 1'h

story hquse with 3 bedrooms and 1112 baths. Mostly
carpet. This house has been remodeled Inside and out.
It has a big central firepla ce with heata lator and is
insulated . Small barn and about 20 acres fenced . Nice
cou ntry setting . off blacktop road . Shown by
appointment only. Pr iced $42.000.00.

13 Bolt;
hook
14 Fire debris
15 Hall a
sawbuck
16 Asian

FEMALE PUPPY, 11 mo. old . Small
to medium in size . Block,
white, and brown . 985-3808
alter 5.

I

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
back hoe work ; dump truck s
and lo-boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt , to soil, lim estone ond
grovel. Coli Bob 01 Roger Jef fers, day phone 992 -7089, n1ght
ph one 992:3525 or 992 , 5232.
EXCAVAT ING , dozer , bockhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot
field , Bo ck Hoe Serv ice ,
Rutlonrt . Oh 1o , Phon e 7.42-2008.

GASOUNE ALLEY

SAVE ON
'CARPETING
DRIVE A LlffiE
&amp;
SAV;.;E.;,;AoiiiiW~TAn

1knew it would

I apart the minute we qot

it paid for!

l!I

As Low As

'4• 88

sq. rd.

&amp;

up

TURLE Y'S WRECKER Service.
Racine, Ohio. Day or night.
949 -2657 .

')

'.
iL
"'

.

9' and 12' Vinyl

FRANK&amp;ERNIE

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED - 1'12 acres nice
lay ing land w ith a nice 12x64 all carpeted mobile home
completely furnished . 2 bedrooms built on with nice
family room with fireplace . Garden space, work shop,
block cella r and ci ty water . Nice country setting .
O.Vner may take nice mobile home as part payment.
Price now $1.4,300.
·

Large pond Slocked. Prleed only 142.500.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR,

LOOK HERE -

Five

shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area, 2
full balh1, 2 bedrooms down Md 3 upstolrs. Completely
Insulated with F 1 A. nat. gas furnace. Large porches &amp;
g~·age . Loc. In Chester. Price S19,800.

We Need listings
"
We h•vo buyers for m•ny typos of proputy.
CALl JIMMY DEEM, Assocl•le, 949.2318

hospital?

we are it
didnt wait

then'

Squares 3.4; $100,000 N ame That
Tun e 6 ; Ta ttlet a l es 8; Mac Nei l-Lehrer R~port
20,33 , T hat 's H o ll .... wnod ! 10.
Ch ip s 3,4, 15; W el com e Back , Kot ter 6. 13; Once

a·oo-

UponA Cl•sslc 20,33.
6, 13: Originals 20: Amlolle 33.

41Gcker~s

B c 3~F i sh

gadget
5 Fellow
creature
6 Sea eagle
7 Taste

q· QO-----B iack Sheep Sq ua~ron 3,4,15, . Barney Miller
· 6r13; Hawaii Flve -0 8, 10: Advocates 20. 33 .
9 : 3o---A . E .S. Hudson Street 6,13.
10 :oo---Po ll ce Wom an 3, 15; Barelta 6,1Ji
N ews
Do cumen tar y d ; CBS : On Th e A ir 9, 10; Anna
Karenina 33; News 20.
10 ·30- l ock. Sto ck
Barrel 20.
Eas y 33. .
11 · Jo---J ohnny Car son 3, -4, 15: Slarsky &amp; Hut(h 6, 13 i
Mash
ABC N ews J3 ; Mo\lle " But Nol For Me':.lo.
12:00- J anak 13 3; 12 ;05- M.ovle " Design ing Woman 8 .
1·2· 40- Toma 6. 13; I oo-Tomorrow 4; 1: 5():-News 13 .

e:

~Finishing

+ •I
•

+

• B G 52
• J 7 :1 2

A1

+ AH

SOUTH

+

+ !I R 5

V ulnerable : Nor lh · So utll

••
Dbl.
Dbl.

North

t-::ust

Pass

Pass

South
2+

2 ..

:1+

PW)!'i

Pu ss

Ope ning lead ; • K
and Alan Sontag
West 's firs t double sh ow ed
that h e had more t h an a

('RVPTQQUOTF.S

minimum opening bid and

su

NFURK

QUJK

FRKU
RPE

cJ

G F Y U F·

VP

RK
KG

OGPIVYUFRSZU

G H

ZURFPVPN . -

FGSUFK HFGIK
' ' Yeater... y's Cryptoquole: HE WHO DOESN'T THINK TOO
MUCH OF HIMSELF IS MUCH MORE THAN HE THINKS.JOHANN WOLI'GANG VON GOETHE

© Hr7!l K!ng f'eaturet

'
Syndiule, Inc.
'·

YOU
BARNEY

GLORVBE··
TATER FELL ASLEEP

IN HIS TIRE SWING

By

Jacoby

that he wanted his p ar tn e r to
com pete, p r e Fe rably in the
major suits. His second double w as pena lty oriented.

West's second double wa s
a borderline a ffair, but thi s
wa s a matc h -point ev ent and
he was shooting for the
ma~i c

licu rt opening bi~. had th e
king of spades. It was a l ~o
unlik ely that South who bod
to three dmmonds by him wuuld have done so

without an exce llent dia-

+ K Q .I 10 !l :1

We~l

tricks -West cou ld now see
fou r tri cks for the defense th e ace of duiJs , ace of
diamonds and a ce-king of
hea rts . It was unllkc ly that
Eas t, who had passed the

se lf

K5

Y !Oii

RXGCPK

ANO SEE A WHALE
SWIM 81( ...

+QIIl4 :1

• Q

¥AK fl ~H

RSIGFS

MA'IBE WE'LL 6E LUCK'f,

EAST

One lct! c r s1fnply slands ro r ;mother. In th is sa mp le A is
used fo r th e three 1 .'~;_ X for the t wo O's, e tc . S in gh! letters.
nrostrophcs, the lengt h nnd fo rma ti on of t he IA.Ords nre all
hint s. E;1c_h day the code letters are differen t.

R

•

K (l 1\1 -l

WF:S1'
.. J !1 7 2

XCI K

'•

!':t l'rl "

Ill' .I !1 7 :1 2

e.g.
Refuse ;
drainage
:15 Printer's
term
Desk item
37 Sharpen
38 Stratwn
39AI3
distance

742-2211 '

A SOFA THAT
MAKES A
BED FOR

Good britlge p lu yers count
Tlw y n1'-irl r•o unl

NOll Til
+ A 1\ I!

line
Z5 Saintiy
headwear

DAILY CRYPTO(jliOTE - l~e re'&lt; hnw to work it :
AXVDJ, BAAXR
is I, 0 N G F E I, I~ 0 W

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

15 IN STOCK

a.

11 :00- News 3, 4,6,8, 10, 13,1 5: Dick Cavell 20 ; Over

-+-+--+-+--~ ·save your partner's' entry

inventor

Bard's
~~~i~:: offering
Venial-,

If CJORNeR i.IIOf SfORE WINI)OIN ~

Call742-1211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

Largest Selection In The Va llev

bedrooms, nice l'h story house. large living r oom wffh

qet to the

HOtN . MuGH DID .,- C::.Q.Str••• atvc LUDII\IG

50 ACRES - FREE GAS . Why worry oboullhe highcost of heating your home, drying your clothes, hot
water etc. We .have a 1112 story house with 3 bedrms.,
and bath, dining room with fireplace. Full basement.

7 ~ 3~Hollywood

.-------,,.-----------------------------------all

Aooring In Stock

4 ACRES of nice laying land not fa r from Southern
High School. Nice building si tes . Ideal for new home
builders. Call now for Info .
$11,700 will buy a good 2 bedroom house with bath .
Garage and storage building . Nat. gas heat . Driveway
\ Is elect. heated . Nice Oh io River view . ' Furniture can
be bought extra. Price reduced for quick sale.

4· 3o- Little Ras c als 3, 15; Gi ll igan ' s I s. 4; Brady Bunch
8,10; Mary Tyler M oore 13
s ·oo-Bonan la 3; Slar Trek 4; Gunsmoke 8; Mister
Rogers' N eigh borhood 20,33; Hogan' s Heroes 10;
Emergen cy One ! 13; Petti coa t J unc tion 15.
.
5· 30- News 6; E lec . Co. 20,33; Mary Tyl er Moore 10,
· H oga n's H er oes 15; 6 ;oo-News 3.4.8. 10, 13. 15; ABC
News 6; Zoom 20.
6 ·30- N BC N ew s3,4. 15; ABC New s IJ; Carol Burnett &amp;
. Fr iend s 6 ; C BS N ews 8,1 0, Ove r Easy 33 .
7·oo-C r oss·Wil s 3,4 : Liar s Club 6; .Gong Show 8;
· N ews tO ; T o T ell The Truth 13 ; Gi ll igan ' s Is . 15;
Hocking V a lley Bluegras s 20; Mar shall U. R e port

Letu!r
Car
gear
~~~~~;~~30Decree

carpet installed with
at no charge.

where you can come in
·what you're geMing
BATHROOMS AND Ki tchens .... _ • ._ selections - Fully
remodeled , ceramic tile, plumbing , carpentry , ond general
I 3 years ex·
maintenance
perience. 992-3685.

WINTER GET to your hou se?.let us l
make necessary re pairs . AI :
Trom m . Cons tru cti on. 742 -2328.

duel

to break

Rubber Back Carpet

HOWERV AND MARTIN b ·
covo tin g, septi c system s,
dozer. backhoe. dump truck ,
limes tohe, grove't. blackt op
po vmg, Rt. 143 . Phone I (61.4)
698-733 1. · - --c:--c:-:--

Just
babLJ is almost

down

llallon.

WIL L do roofing , construction,
plumb1ng and heotmg. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742-23.4 8

· Son s 4; For Richer, For Poorer lSi Merv Griffin 6;
Gi lli gan 's Is 8, Sesame St. 20,33 ;
Gomer Pyle,

Veoterday's Answer
18 Carry
. 27 Ainnan 's O.K.
21 Individual 28 St. Cathd~feat
22 Insides
erine's city
le~tival
'8 Away from 23 Own
29 Inviting
17 Assembly
camp
~ Rodentword
19 Exclamation 9 Cut one's
34 Peer Gynt's
hunter
Z5 Jewish
mother
~d;;~JJU.f.~=~~::....ll~:..,~.....,~l..LL...J ZO Put on
molars
.:
21 Delicacy of
11 Backbone
3.1 Tibetan
religioll3
15 Enkindle
wine: Fr.
school
sheep
...-- - ----.,22 Show of
banda
t he How will we
how luckLJ 23 American

SMALL MALE dog. 5 to 6 mo. old.
Pori Beagle, port Terrier, Very
fr iendly. 992 -7663 .

SEWING MACHINE Repa1rs . serllice, all makes, 992-2284 . The
Fa bri c Shop .
Pom e r oy.
Au!honzed Singer Sol~s and
Ser"ice. We sharpen Scinors . '

3:31&gt;-A IIIn The Family 8,10: You Bel Your Llle 20.
4 ·oo-Mis ler Carloon 3: Edge or Nlghl 13: My Three

32 Confidence
To an
edreme
degree

12 Conffr.

WILL CARE for the elderly· 1n our
home. Phone 992-731.4 ,

REMODELING. Plumbing, healing
end all types of general repo1 r.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex - · ~~~~jO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;t
perience . Ph one 992-2409.

PULLIN S EXCA VATING . Complete
Service . Phone 992-2.478 .

LOOK WHAT WE GOT -

105 Sired
Volcano peak
II Inexcitable

Geog~aphlc 33;

US MC 10.

WHEEZE BUNKER
What 1hey found when the pillow f~tctory
burn ed down - BURNED DOWN

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Roasting rod I Seal !

mation, e.g .
HOMESI TE S for sol e , I acre and
up. Middleport near Ru tland .
Coll992 -7491 .

"( 11 I I I]"

Jumbles RODEO TUNED
Answer

Nationa l

3 : QO-Anolher Wor ld 3, 4,15,· General Hospllal 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

~atorel6td'

CONSTRUCTION .

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Estimates by Appointment -

·I

The tates1 JUMBLES are here !n JUMBLE BOOK 110 end JUMBLE
BOOK jttl , Available !01 $t 35 EAC H, postpaid tram Jumble, c/o tMls
newspaper, P.O. Boll 3•, N orw o~, N.J. 07£48. Make checks payable to
Newspaperbaok!:l.

Blown Into Walls
and Attics

DAVID BRICKLES

I

8;

2: 30--Doclocs 3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8.10 .

(Answers tomorrow)

Cellulose Fiber

R~modeling _,

2 : ~ne Llf.e to Live 6, 13:

Now arrange the circled lette•s to
form the surprise answer as sug·
ges1ed by th e above car1oon

Print answer here:

Blown _Insulation

Kifchen Cabinets, Roofing,
Concrete
Patios,
Sidewalks,
New
Construction
&amp;

iHE 'i0551 N6' OF A
COIN'5 SOMEiHINGo
5AM !5LER:5 ENJOY.

[J

~:·-'

9:00iil 9:00 Mon.-Friday
9:001il6 :00 saturday
12: 001il6 :00 Sunday
2·2-lfc

Grlflllh

d

f

13.

IG!R(IHtj

!,ocaled In The

Sale Priced Now
Thru April20tt'l

:Z-16-1 mo.

J KJ

I

dge o

11:Oo- Wheel a t Fortune 3, 4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Anna Kar en ina 13.
11 .JO- Knockout 3. IS; Family Feud 6,13; Partr idge
Farn lly4 ; Love of Li l e8.10; SesameS t . 20
11 . 55--CBS N ews 8. Loving Free 10.
..,
12 oo--,.. Newscenter 3: S20.000 Pyramid 13: News
4,6, 10; T o Say The Least 15; Gambll B; Coustea o
Odyssey 33 .
12 : 3()-Rya n 's Hope6, 13 ; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15 ;
Search for Tomorrow a, 10.
1:oo-For Ricker . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
N ews 8; You ng &amp; th e Rest less 10; Nol For W omen
Onl y 15; James Mi chener ' s World 33 .
I : Jo-Days ot Our Lives 3, 4, 15; As The Wor ld Turns

I
[]

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
Open

&amp;

I

INTEF

t NESTOL

E

9 : JO- Emcrgency One! 6 ; An V
Family Affair 10 ; Zoom 33 .
·
.
tO ·OO- San lord &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Ta l t lelal es 8; Joker s Wild
tO: Not For' Wom en Only 13: E lec. Co. 33 .
tO ·Jo- Holl.,-wood Squares3,4.15; Andy Grl fllth 6; Price
ts Rtght 8, 10: tntl nlt y F actory 3J; Ri ck FoucheuM

; oiN"' ·.. '""co" ,,...,... "'"V" - -

ACE HARDWARE

BOLEN MULCHERS

Nioht 6: .

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble 1hese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, 10 torm
tou r 01qinary words.

WALLPAPER,
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

WILKINSON

St. 33 .

9 ·00 - M erv Gr iffin 3; Phil Oont~hue A,l3, 1S;

~THAT SCR'-MBLEO WORO GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

3-12-1 f'Jio .

LAWN BOY MOWERS

Bob Hoellith

4; News 6. Sunrise Semester 8: 6 : .cs--Mornlng
Reporl 3; 6 SO- Good Morning, West VIrginia 13;
6 : 5 Chuck White Reports 10,· News 13.

~ l ngdom

N ews 8; Bullwinkle 10.
7: 30 Schoot les 10; 8 ,00 Capt . Kangaroo B, 10; Sesame

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

498 Locust Street
Middleport, 0 .
Phone 992· 3092

Speci•l Occ•sions

Sunrlse Semester 10.

b:2.s.--For You .. Blftck Woman tO ; 6 :31)-0octors ,on Ce ll

7:110--Tod•y 3,4,15: Good Morn ing America 6.13; CBS

0.

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1978
5;45-Farm Repocl t3; 5·51&gt;-PTL Club 13; SoS5-

IS ;

2-10-lfc

Small Engine
Sales &amp; Service
Wedding5
Portrails
Passporls
Anni•ersaries

Gilligan 's Is.

Ulsabilitles 10; Big
Green Magazine 33.
7· 30---Funny Farm :) ; Sha Na Na 4; When Havo&lt;!:
Struck 6; Family Feud 8; Ma cNeiJ . L eh rer Report

and

4 bedroom, ranch,
ve r y modern, West Shade,
near Chester, Ohi-o.

$27,500.
40 ACRES -

900 KAWASAKI Z1 ~ hoppe r ports
Amen Savior softoil frame and
12 in. over twis ted springer.
Every th ing complete except
engine ond drivetrain . phone
1-667 -3856 Of 949 -2232

Ail

MOORE'S

Ph .99H848

992·33:ZS
216 E . Second Street

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN, ·
POTASH, FERJ.O-PELS

9 . -Je&lt;k W. Corser, MIJr.
PhoneHl·l111

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

Frien ds 6;; CBS New s B, 10; Over Easy '20.
7·QO--.--.C r oss Wits J,c; Liars Club 6; Sha Na Na 8; News

742-2321

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

Koiak 8; l : oo-Tomorrow C; 2: 1G-N ews 13.

6;30---NBC N ~~s 3,4, 15; ABCNews 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

Rd., Birmingham , At .
35213, or call toll free 1-B00633-8441.

Check our low, low
prices on

Landmark

" The Oricinltlm

•ot The ImitatoR

lstanbul" 10.

12 :110--Janekl 33 : 12 :41&gt;-Mystery ol Ihe Week 6,13;

6·110--News 3 &lt;8,10,13.15: ABC New• 6; Zoom 20.

'

AI Tromm
Construction

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice .
Box3,

8,10:

" :()1}-News l ,-4 ,6,8, 10,13.1.5, Dick Cavett 20: Ullas.
· Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 ·31&gt;-Johnny Corsonl,4.15: Pollee Story 6,13: Howa 11
. Five 0 8; ABC News JJ; Movie " Thai Mon 1n

s ·oo-Bonanza 3: Star Trek 4; Gunsmake 8; M ister
Rogers' NeighbOrhood 20,33; Hogan' s Heroe-s 10;
. Emergency One! 13: Petticoat Junct ion 15
s - JQ- News 6 ; • Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10 :
Hogan 's Heroes lS

.

Room Additiciils
Garages

Phonl!'9a5-3806

torman ces )J ; Prevln !. the Pittsburgh 20 .
&amp; Hutch 1&gt;.13: CBS ; On The Air
News 20.
10·3 You Bet Your Llle 10
·

10·110--Siorsky

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 2t. 197a

..JAo.

NAMCO, 3928 Montclair

------

Pom~

AI
992·2206 01992-7630

One

~

If you want the
lowest prices on
Baler
. . Twine now's
the time to buy.
CaH us today.

, .... 3 , ....roy. 0.

'

"
''

x-~
Remodeling

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estima te , 24 hour service.
Anyt:t.y , anytime.

Cupet &amp;Uphotsleoy
Phone Mike Youn1

BY OWNER , 3 bedrooms wi th lorc ed air gos heal o11d o1r condi
t1 oning 1 acre level lot '"
Rutlan d .
51 8.000 .
Phone
742 -3163 .

,...

&lt;

Vester days

HQUSE TRAILER B K .43 f urn1 shed
In good cond1tlon . $!BOO or best
1968 350 HONDA . $250 Plus
olfer. For more 1n l ormoh on
Suzuki for po rts, $40 . 7-42 -23.49 .
phone 992 -2365 .
NICE PIGS l or sole Alt er 5, colt
55 ~bile hom-e wi th
949 -2857 .
e~epondo 1n co untry on 3 acres
of land . Drilled we ll . Sep ti c:
NEW
AIR
c o n dit ioner
tonk , storage buil ding . N1ce
We stinghouse never been us·
level fron tage. som e woods .
ed . A lso a 1970 Volk swogon 2
Plenty of garden spa ce . Furdr·. Moke me on offer. Both of
nished, cenrrol air . Ready for
them ore A -I . l ew is Scorbe,
immedco t e
possess 1o n.
West Point Rd .. Hartford, WI/ .
.
$10,500 . Only interested por·
SEVEN ROOMS and both on 2
ties ca ll 7.42 -3074
acres. Old Rt . 33 Shown by op ·
1971
MOBILE HOME 12 K 52. 2
po1ntm ent on ly . 992 -75 13 .
bedroom . gas hea t ed ce ntral
1975 KAWASAKI 100 l1k e new
air . Completely equipp ed . EKOnly 425 miles plus helmer
cellent cond1t1on. 992 -3900
$450. Phone 614 -667 -3333.
----~----

1976 HONDA CB 570. 2700 miles .
E ~ece ll ent condition , some oc·
cessortes .
Four 14 K 7 Crogar Mag Master
Slot Wheels . good condition .
2 new G60- 14 Super Charger
tires . Mr. Gasket Traction bars,
Ross stereo system includes
AM-FM stereo rod1o, 8-trock
lope, record player ond stand
Call 985 -391Qafter 7 pm .

Young's
Carpeting

•921377 .

One three beCiroom home, 2
acres of ground on Rl. 7,
T uppers Plains, Ohio.

992·578;:..:5..:_
. ~-,~---

Pomeroy Landmark

TANK
CLEANING

$3500

1976 FORD F-100 300 CIO 8' bed .
Tw in swing-loclo. mirrors. Radio.
Rear slep bumper . h ce llent
co nd11 1on. Aft er 5, Co li

------

~EPTIC

Superior
Slum Ellr1ttion

HOU SE FOR sale m Pomero'f 5
mmute walk lo town ond
~chool , aluminum s1dmg storm
wmdnws and doors . woll to
wall corpe!lng th rougl1oul. '1 or
3 bedrooms . Comple 1ely
remodeled k1tchen wi lh buclt -m
opphonces . IQrge bath , large
lronr ond bock porches , fencec
~ard , bos:emen! and lois ol
st01oge space. OH stree1 po rk·
1119 . Shown by o~poinlmen t on ·
ly Roger Abbott , 997-6114 or

TEAFORD[H
-----.-----SEVEN TRUCK toppers. i~~~ L - - - - - ' - - - - VIRGIL 8 . SR .
RHIIO~

9-.

GARAGE SALE . 109 Spring Ave ..
Pomeroy . Hove G.E. stereo irl
eKcellent condition . for 550.
Thursday · Friday . Stort s at 9 00
om . Ro1n or sh1ne.

Ileal ulale lor Sale

Your Full T i me
Real Estate Broker
1112 ·Acres of wooded land
Ideal for tra iler or home.
Located 1 mile off of Rt . 7.,
near Tuppers Pla ins, Ohio.
Already ap pro ve d for
septic tank , and planning
commission . Wi l l se ll
under land con tr act tor

B &amp; S MOB ILE HOMES, Pt. Plea san t, W, Vo. beside Heck 's.
197 3 Broodmore 14 • 6.4 2
bedroom
1913 Dorion I A • 60 2 bedroom
1972 V1 ctorion 14 M 67 3 bedroom ,
2 bath
1972 Coven try 12 x 65 3 bedroom
IQ69 Sta tesman 12 • 60 2
bedroom

&amp; BLEND

g•• '"'""'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~

Business Services

AUCTION fr1doy and Sorurdo~ . 7
pm Loh al new ond used mer
chond1se a!l well as good he~h
candy ol Ohto R1ver Aut!con
Me•gs Plozo . M1ddleporr

9·110--PIIot 3.4,15; Charlie's Angel• 6, IJ: Greal Per·,

'

~--~------------------------~ '
'

Auction

'289.95

IF VOU hove a servcce t o olfer ,
wan t to buy or sell some thin g.
or
oe looki ng l or wo• k
whotevec ... you·:1
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coll992 -2t56.
_Jack W. Caney, Mgr.
PORCH SAL E. March 30 ond 31 , 9 . . . .
Phone 992-2181
to -4 . Men's. women s and t.===:......---~-~-J
children 's clothing . guitar . toys
and lots of mls(: . 1tem! . F.rs! FOR SALE : Children 's Western
houSe on right post Fire Station
Boo Is . $8 95 - $13.95 . Bailey 's in
ol Boshon on Tw~ d . 1.49 .
Middleport

The Almanac
United Prea1lnternatloaal
Today is Wednesday,
SALE , Thu rsd ay - Saturday ,
March 29, the 88th day of 1978 VARO
9-5 On New l1mo Rood,
with '!17 to follow.
Rutland . Old book s. Call
742-2t..t8.
The moon is approaching
the last quarter.
There is no morning star.
The evening stars are
Mercury, Mars, Venus, HOOF HOLLOW Horse$. Buy , sell
trade or tra in. New and used
Jupiler and Saturn.
saddles . Ruth Reeves , Albany .
Those born on this date are
(6")698 ·3290
under the sign of Aries.
RI SING STAR Kennel , Boarding.
John Tyler, lOth president
Indoor and outdoor rv ns.
Grooming oil breeds . Clean
of the United States:Was·llorn
son1 tory foc111ties . Ches hire.
March 29, 1790.
Phone
(614 )367-0'192.
On this day in history:
'~-'---In 1812, the first wedding
Willi perfonned in the White
.House. Mrs. Lucy Payne 1971 FORD TO RINO Gl' . $800.
Washington, sister-in-law of
992·3219.
President James Madison, 1976 MONTE CARLO. Like new.
was married to Supreme
inside and oul , 41 new steel
Court JUBtl•e Thomas Dodd.
. belted rodioh , looded . Cruise
con trol. power locks. air , AMIn 1971, Anny Lt. William
FM Tope, rear wi ndow defog·
Calley was found guilty in the
ger. Phon~ 949-2480. alter 3:30
murder of 22 civilians in
pm.
Vietnam.
1971 FORD LTD Goad runn ing
In 1973, the last U. S. troops
condit1on $750. Coli after 6
pm ., 949-27 47.
left South Vietnam and the
laJt. American prisoners of
war were freed by North
A thought for the day :
. Vietnam.
In 1975, President Ford Scottish novelist Robert
signed a $22.8 billion . tax Louis Stevenson said, "It is
reduction bill enacted by better to be a fool than to be
dead."
Coogresa.

' .

Camping l!:quipDJenl

E~~fO~g_~~""~ ~-€~
--- ·WACK ENHUT CORPORATI ON will

.P.::~~y E ·~~O!:~--

Carol Burnett 8, 10; Nova 20,33 .

••
•

......

be accepting applica ti ons ond
conduchng 'interv •e ws on
March 29 th and 30th fr om 8:30
am to 5:00pm in Room 103 ol
the Pt . Pl easant Inn f or full ·
li me and port -lim e security
posi tion s 111 th e Pt. Pleasant
oreo . M d 1tary backgro und
preferred but not requ ired . Ap ·
ply 1n person. no phone coils
p lease. We are on Equal Op -

8.110--Grluly Adams 3,4.U : Elghl Is Enough 6, 13;

DICK TRACY
·~

tory choke guns only .

ra~h

1~ - ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , March 29, 1978

Hco

Deportment wdl ~ponsor o gun
shoot every Sotvrdov ot 0 pm at

I day
2llaY!f

Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash·

200-point penalty .

When East contributed the
heart queen on W est 's open·
ing king l ead, W est kn ew
that East was now void and

tha i South had one more .

rnmH.I su it.

West sol ved h1s problem at
trick two. He r ea lized tha t
the fifth and setting trick
wo uld only come from a club
ruff.
·
At tnck two West played
his ace and conthlued with
anoth er club . South had no
counter. South played a
trump 1the right play I but
West immediate ly took the

ace and led a low heart,
forcing f:ast to ruff . East
returned a club , giving West
his well-earned r uff .
This defense was made
possible by West's realization that East 's entry (the
heart ruff) could be used at
the key moment lor the
defense . These are the tricks
the defense ultimately won :
king of hearts, ace of diamonds, ace of clubs, heart
ruff and club ruff. The derense never did score its ace
of hearts .

�16- The-Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , March 29, 1978

Carter outlines five-point program.,

Qujckel ·
(~od from page 1)

On

By HELEN THOMAS
CARACAS, Venezuela
(UP! ) - President Carter
today outlined a five1JOinl
(X"ogram to help the world's
poor, but warned wealthy oil(X"Oducing nations they would
have to put up some of the
cash.
,
·
" We need to share a
responsibility for solving
(X"Oblems - not to divide the
blame for ignoring t~em, "
Carter said in a speech to the
Venezuelan Congress.
Carter, winding up a 22hour visit to one of the two
remaining democracies in
South America, discussed the

AtfU

10, Mrs. Shirley
Lewis, jlelcome wagon field
re prttentative from
Charle&amp;en will meet with the
cham bet;
It wl!llf'JPOited one or more
repre1illltatives will be
selec"4 in the area by
welcod). wagon , to visit
homes fl. new residents to
- welco~ them to the com·
munity, :.to d!Jtribute civic
and socl&amp;llnformatlon, and to
present . housewam~ing gifts
from local business sponsors.
Buotnl!ises in tbe area will
be invlf&lt;ecl to participate as
·sponsor». An introductory
gift and an invitation card for
a store ~ will be presented
by tlie welcome wagon
representative
as individuallled information is
give n +-- recommending
busineslb for quality service

and products.
EaCh .ipOnsor will provide
gifts an• cards and is billed a
small fp· for the services of
the rtpi'Uentatives for each
visit iDW:e. A sponsor in
Pomeroy could expect an
averas•
financial involvemet of approximately
$200 a F.Ur.
The ;:'ebamber voted to
endou•• welcome wa gon.
ServiiiJ. on the welcome
wagon '-eommlttee are Pat
O'Brien.Kyle Allen and Boyd
Rilth.

-••lso

Crow

&amp;rutounced

a

cleanuat:Campaign will be
held •Pin this year with
Simon beading tlie project.
· Crow stili a ranger from the
forestt:T
division
had
suggeoted they
plant
crabaPI!!e trees along the
river~Simoll, suggested the
forestrydlvision be contacted
to see where trees should be
planted.
Simon alSo pointed out that
signs will be removed at the
intersection of Nye Ave., and
E. Main ,Street.
Attending were Crow,
.Simon; '!;rnmogene Holstein ,
secretary, Joe Young, Bill
Gruese1!j' Stim Houdashelt,
Leo Va!iihlin, Phil Kelly,
Mark Mi(;oy, Fred Hatwell,
Bill Mlf.., Pat O'Brien,
Hank Cleland,
Walter
Grueser, Vernon Weber, Dale
Warner, Mr . and Mrs. Virgil
Teaford, Boyd Ruth , Quickel,
Merri Ault, Allen Richards,

Beulah. Jones and Katie
Crow. :,;·

•'
FAI;II CONDITION
Mro.·' Alma
Hoeflich
Thom~n. formerly of
Pomeroy-. -critically injured
last Weclllesday when she was
shot dur:fiig a robbery at the
Kenmore Cleaners In
Cotumiiua, is in fair condition
at St. 4jnlhony Hospital,
Colum!IJi. She has been
moved ' hom the intensive
care sedlon into room 315.

PRESIDENT CARTER today presented a live-point
plan during his trip to Latin America.

.'

c:£iT LICENSE
A mUrlage license was
issued 1o Johnny Dwight
Evans 1 .~1J, Portland , and
Debbie.l:!'y Hatchett, 18, Rt.

2, Raci~Ji.

.....

~N

MEETING
Steel Local 6197
will m~: Frlday , March 31,
at 7
at Foote Min
_ era!
Union
In Mason. Purpose
of the. •"IJieeting is for a
ratification vote on .· a contract. ...
Mid!V~

p&amp;i
' ••'

Ofll' Interest is
Far You

G~Wattr

~t~75%

o,.
" 90-Day
r,

• '1

.

¢t'rtlflcates

...
5.75 per cent paid on
90 da~ Certificates of
DeP,oslt.
$1 ,ooo.oo
Minimum.
Interest
Payllrile Quarterly.
'

~

·~-

A lllliltlntiol penoHy is
in~..... all certlfiCit•
acC116 wlthdr.wn prior
to ._..,, of moturity.

•

Meij.Ca. Branch

r~@
••
T.he Altrons County
• )('!"':

5avtngs &amp; Loon Co.
'.jN Secand 51.
.....,eroy,Ohlo

and . de~e·

e .,

JERUSALEM (UP[) Prime Minister Menachem

Sen . Harry Meshel, D· the first pay period following
Youngstown, committee enactment of the bill. He said
Commit t ee today chairman, said plans call for this would be about May I.
unanimously reported out a a floor vote on the measure State workers will receive
pay raise bill covering 620 Thursday . The House would their increase starting July I.
state and local judges and then have to concur in
The bill calls for a 40-rent
amendments , chiefly the hourly Increase for state
75,000 state employees.
The bill gives judges salary addition of the state employees earning $10,000 a
hikes ranging between 25 and employee raise. at a cost of year or less.
45 percent. It provides for $3!i million to the general
Those earning between
. $10,000 and $20,000 a year will
hourly wage increases of 20 to revenue fund .
Meshel said the judges w\11 receive between 20 and 40
fO cents for ·state workers
earning $20,000 a year or less. receive their increments for cents an hour extra,
depending on their salary.
Higher brackets will receive
less of an increase.
. Employees earning more
I
I than $20,000 will receive no
EVELYN LANOERS
Church of Christ in Christian increment.
The pay raise will cost an
Evelyn Landers, 62, 104 Union.
additional
$22 million from
Union Ave ., died Monday
Funeral services will be
afternoon at Veterans held Thursday at I p.m. at special funds to pay highway
Memoriai HoSpitaL Mrs . Ewing Chapel with the Rev. workers, unlversity
county
Landers was born Dec. 14, William Knittel officiating. employees and
wel{are
workers.
1915 daughter of the late Joe Burial will be iP Gibnore
Cost of the judges' salary
and Meda Imboden. She was Cemetery . Friends may call
hike
is estimated at $6
also preceded in death by her at the funeral home any t'i~e.
million. That portion is
husband, William Henry
topped hy an increase for the
Landers, two, sons, Orville
chief
justice of the Ohio
Silas M. McCullough II
and Robert, one daughter,
Supreme
Court from $43,000 a
Word has been received of
Janie, one sister, Lilly Imyear
to
$60,000. Municipal
boden, live brothers, Ernest, the death of Silas M. Me·
court
.
judges,
now paid
Vance, Clarence, Calvin and Cullough II of a massive
between
$22,583
and
$31,000,
Webb.
coronary· March 27 at his
would
go
to
a
range
of
$3(),333
She is survived by the home in Richmond, Va.
to
·$38,750.
. foll owing children, Jack
Mr. McCullough was the
State employee groups are
Landers, Wanda Adam s, son of Roy E. and Charlotte
Penny Smith, all of Pomeroy; Nye McCullough, former dissatisfied with the amount
Shirley Landers, Minersville; Pomeroy residents, and a
Delores
Summers, grandson of the late Dr. S. A.
Charleston and WilHam and Margaret Hensley McLanders, California. Two Cuilou~h, also formerly of
brothers; Luther Imboden, Meigs County.
·
RuUand and Oscar Imboden,
Surviving besides his
Minersville; one sister, Mrs. parents are his wife, Judy,
Paul Swisher, Middleport, 13 two sons, Silas A. If! and Lee grandchildren two of whom A., and a sister , Ann.
resided with Mrs. Landers,
Mr. McCullough was
Velvet Justis and Ray Justis, president of the Bingham
Jr.,
one
great-grand· Truck Lease Co., Richmond,
daughter, . Kimberly Sue Va. His parents are residing
Smith.
at 2920 Clarendon Drive, Bon
She attended Hobson Air, Richmond , Va.
Finan ce

---------------------------,
! Area Deaths !

Begin faced a showdown in
the Israeli Parliament today
over his Mjddle R1t~ nr&gt;l;,...,,

but he had a sufficient
majority to ride out the crisis.
Begin was addressing the
Knesset on his abortive talks

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital Sharon Martin , Vireta
Admitted- Judy Barrows, Mitrikov, Frances Nietal,
Albany; Bertha Zamorano, Joseph Rhoades, Johnni~
Shade; William Weaver, Russell, Mary Schwartz,
Middleport; Mary Bostic, Carroll Shockey, Sella
Middleport; Linda Martin, Snavely, James Soulsby,
Middleport; Thomas Cum· Mary .Spear, Donald Taylor,
mins, Racine.
Donita
Tucker,
Edna
Discharged - Earl Grif· Wayland.
lith, Wanda Adams, Robert
(Births, March 28)
Chaney, Ralph Clark, Nell
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie
Klein.
Henson a son, Jackson. Mr.
and Mrs. James King, a son,
Holzer Medical Center

( Olscharges, March 28)
Katherine Bentley, Gladys
Brown, Roxanne Cooper,
Wilmer Halfhill, Linda
Johnson, Mrs. Allen Lee and

Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
William Ramsey, a son, Oak
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Whittington, a son, Grimms
Landing, W. Va.

daughter. Samuel Lewis Jr.,

·in the bill for their members.

Weather

The American Federation
Partly cloudy and cooler
of State, County and · today, with highs between 55
Municipal Employees is and 60. Clear and cold
asking for a flat 20 percent tonight, with lows in the mid
across~he-board increase for
Sunny and becmlng
state workers. ·Meshel said 30s.
milder
Thursday, with highs
there is not enough money for
in the upper 50s or lower 60s.
that.

with ·President Carter last
week that produced a serious
crisis
in
U.S.·Israeli
relations.
The opposition Labor-Party
was Introducing a bill
indecrying
Begin's
terpretation of U. N.
Resolution 242, the busis for
Middle East peace efforts
since 1967 and one of the key
disagreements between
Israel and the United States.
Begin maintains the U. N.
resolution does not call for
Israel's wilhdrawal from the
occupied West Bank of
Jordan, a reversal of the

fronts in conformity "'ith the
U. N. resolution.
But
Begin
Tuesday
reiterated at a meeting of the
Knesset's prestlg'lous
Security and Foreign Affairs
Committee Israel's right to
its own interpretation of
Resolution 242. Political
. sources said Begin came
under attack during his
briefing, · but rejected the
criticism angrily.
Despite Labor's maneuver,
political sources said Begin's
coalition, which normally
holda a 17-vote edge in the
120-member

Knesset,

(Continued from page I)
International econo~ic order by proposing a five-point plan to
improve global eConomic conditions and to raise living
sta'ndarda.
He told the Venezuelan Congress the United States wiU
lead the way, with a $28 million increase in bilateral foreign
aid he has requested of the U. S. Congress. But he sard wealthy
oil producing nations also would have to put up some cash.
LANSING, MICH . - CITING 55 suspicious deaths
nationwide in the past year - including six in Michigan state Health Director Maurice Reizen has asked Michigan
doctors not to anow their patients to go on so-call.ed liquid
protein .diets.
.
"Until federal studies determine tbe cause of the
increased death rate, we cannot recommend that our citizens
use protein products to supplement a fasting diet," Reizen said
In a state health advisory issu~d Tuesday.
"Because medical knowledge with regard to diets of this
type is so Incomplete, we urge physicians in Michigan not to
recommend these products for their patients or become
Involved with programs using these products until answers are

known.''
TOLEOO,OifiO -JOHN PURTELL, 14, Daniel Riling,!&amp;
and Paul Choate, 17, have finally won permission to keep
$13,000 they found in a cigar box on a street corner two years
ago.
Judge Reno Riley Jr. decided Tuesday the money should
be divided up between the three youths - minus $3,200 in legal
fees and court costs and about $1,000 the three boys spent on
10das, cilndy and other goodies before they turned the money
in to pollee.
,
·
The boys agreed to spend the money on education and
fixing their cars. Riley specified Choote's and Purtell's shares
Of $3,200 each be pot into trust until they are 18.
The judge noted the boys initially ''threw the money ri8ht
and left ill a riotous spree of glutony and waste" when they
flrll found It. The spree included huge ice cream sundaes and
~ tiP!! to waitresses.
PoUce believe the money was payment for illegal billings
lllat somehow was lost on the street.
HARRISON ARK. - THERE WAS one last praver
session over th~ frozen body of Gladys Rogers, but it didn't
work, and now she asiPrenUy is going to be burl~ .
Evangelllt Daniel Aaron Rogers has been trying to
resurrect his mother for the past several weeks, but Tuesday
he ran out of time. Rogers' wife, Elizabeth, said her husbilnd
would decide today what to do with the body, but he had said
earlier he would bury her if the last resurrection attempt
failed.
Returning home just before midnight Tuesday, Mrs.
Rogers reported "nothing spectacular bappened" at thO
fllneral home where Gladys Rogers' body was being kept in a
freezer.
Rogers had begun praying about 8 p.m. It was his third
attempt to bring his mother hack to life.

•

CINCINNA~:~~tgJP~?::r~~::~eCourtrullng

thatpolicemaysearchanautoWtthoutawarrantwhenther~is

•

·at y

'1.

@

Gallipolis Dam
•

•

'

Measurements

BEGINS THUR-SDAY MARCH 30th
Save 30% on Custom Draperies for Your Home or OHic:ea--aL.aarge
Selection of Fabrics and Colors
•Bottom and side seams are blind-stitched- no visible
stitching to mar drapery's beauty.
• Covered weights sewn into each corner - draperies hang
gracefully, evenly .
• Generous 5-inch . bottom hems - giving the Iuxurlous
decorator look. ,
• Draperies are neatly fan-folded and carefully box.ed draperies arrive ready to hand.

SAVE 50% ON CUSTOM MADE BEDSPREADS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Friday and 8 p. m. Saturduy in the Meigs High School
auditorium by the vocal music department. Advance
tickets In a reserved sec Uon may be purchased at
Swlsher'Lohse Drug Store or tbe New York Clothing
HOUS\1 in Pomeroy.

Floor vote to
betaken soon

"''
••

"

•
•••

Plana for the Big Bend
Regatta were discusaed at a
opeclal meeting Wednesday
night called hy Bill Quickel,
chairman of the event, slated
June 23, 24 imd 25.
It was suggested hy Em·
mogene Holstein that a
contest for a Regatta theme
be offered to school children.
A ps bond will go to the
·winner. Paul Gerard will
donate the oavings bond.
The Regatta is aponsored
annually b)' the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commtrce.
· At a meeting Tuesday, It
was decided that an ex·
cut'alon boat, the P. A. Denny,
will be available providing
rides for senior citizens,
children and the general
public.
1n other developroents, it
was reported the Jaycees will
1p01110r an eat-.-t!Jon at the
Burger Chef and the
Fraternal ~of Police wi!l
polllbb' lpolll()r the "biB
wt-1" nee for four and five
)'MJ' olda with prilea for all
children.

The ·GaiJipolis Locks and
Dam is among 12 water .
projects in Ohio requested to
·be terminated by Rivers
Unlimited, an Ohio statewide
group representing farmers,
landowners, conservation
and recreation Interests
concerned with
river
preservation.
The organization has
contacted President Carter
asking hIs assistance to
terminate and to . enact
sweeping policy cluinges to ,
reform
the
dishonest
promotion of destructive and
wasteful water projects.
The group cited a 1973
letter from then Governor
Carter, asking Rivers
Unlimited's help in keeping
Georgia's Spewrell Bluff
Dam stopped.
Rivers
Unllmited
asked
the
President to:
-Provide Independent
review of ArmY Corpa of
Engineers and Soli Conservation Service projects to
Insure · lirtegrlty In project
promotion •.
-Keep the benefit and cnst
analysla but to Include an

The Regatta otflctally
opens on Thursday, June 22,
with a talent Show, location to
be announced.
.The annual frog jump, which
. wiU be held on Saturday at
the Meigs football stadium, ·
will be sponsored hy the
Meigs Band Boosters. The
chamber is Inviting local
groups and organizations tO
sponsor other programs
during the 'three day event.
The Pomeroy Fire De-·
partrilent will aeU barbecue
chicken on Saturday.
Other events dlacussed, but
not acted upon, were a Frog
Ball, teen dances, flea
market, helicopter ride• and ,
flower show.
Attending were Mrs.
Holstein, Quickel, Ralph
Werry, Barbara Pratt, Dave
Pratt, Terry Seldenabel,
John Manley, Charlea Legar,
!Mry Hudoon, Ray Manley,
Robert
Beegle,~ James
Proffitt, Paul Gerard, Bob
Hunt, Bill Young, Bill
Gruaer, Waher Grueaer, Pat
Wood· and Pat O'Brien.
COlli.

-Make the discount rate
equal to the opportunity cost
of capital.
-Institute cost sharing for
navigation projects including
dams for streams to feed the
Ohio River In dry months;
also for aU flood control and
agricultural benefits.
- Not sacrifice water
quaUty in · any project, · as
dams and channelization
worka btvariably pollute.
Provide oversight of and
appoint persormel reapo~slve
to' publlc, not private in·
terests, to the Ohio River
Basin Commission.
-Seek~ deauthorlzatlon of
old projects, l!llCh as Salt
Creek Utica, Mill Creek (near
Columbus), Darby Creek and
Whiteoak Creek, so t:ealdents
near these can proceed with
orderly long range plans.
Other projects requested
for termination were Mill
Creek Local Protection
(Cincinnati, a '100,000,000
Channelization which Is not
moving), Pine Creek, Tiffin
River, LltUe Auglalze, RU811
Creek, Beaver Creek and
Logan-Nelsonvlll
(all
ChannelizatiODI ).

duys for dosing in addition tu
UJC five cstabltSt100 In pennanent law for cnlamtues,
providl.•d

schoo h~

try to mnke

up any in excess of U1e total of
13.

To reccivt~ forgiveness for
the lost days, schools must
remain open until June 16 if
necessary to make up the
excess, glvlng them at least
167 attendance school days

for the year.
·
If they opene&lt;L school
before Labor Day, condut·ted
Sessions on Saturdays or
during Easter vuca tion, UJCy
may dose earlier Umn Junt•
In and still receive the

makeup-free days.
Rep . •James E. Betts, R·
Hocky Hiver, oppes&lt;'&lt;l the
bill, saying it could cau.•e
problems for dl•trlcts who
huve a lready mude up the
days desigilated lL'i forgiven

under the legislation .

I:Q.vestigations
are continuing

liieigs · County Sheriff sported to City Hospital ut
James J . Proffitt said this Parkersburg by pri vate auto
morning dpputics arc con· and was admitted for
tinUing investigation into the treatment .
Tuesday evening, Meigs
vandalism of a ca r owned by
Richard Caruthers, Ht. 2, County sheriff's deputies
that no where in his Energy
Regulatory Pomeroy.
investigated an accident for
statement did Mr. White
Commission.
Deputies
are
also
probin~
the
Pomeroy Pollee on East
dispute the Vindicator's
The
newspaper
also
the
theft
of
a
battery
ta
ken
Main
Street.
tati
f th ·
compu ons o e mcrease reported that the FERC gave from a car owned by Milton
to the report ,
.Ac&lt;"(lrding
In elecricity prices," she White and many board Roush', Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
around
4:19p.
m. Kathryn V.
concluded.
members
of
Amerian
parked
near
the
trash
boxes
Hall,
Wolf
Pen Road,
The articles detailed the
Electric special permission on SR 7 near the .by-pass. PomerOy, was stopped at the
prices utilities pay when to hold their same positions of Roush toid deputies l1is car ca r wash to make a left hand
buying power from one leadership on subsidiary . was there from 11 :15 p. m. turn and her vehicle was
another and detailed the public utilities. Th,e federal Tuesday until 8:30 a. rrt. struck ln the rear by an auto
American l;;iectr-ic Power government prohibits Wednesday.
also traveling east operated
empire of which White is inter lo cking officers and
A juvenile has recently by John E. Mcl..nughlln, Itt. I,
P!"esident and -chief executive directorships without its been cited to the Meigs Shade.
officer.
permission and
some County Juvenile Court for
McLaughlln was cited to
The Vindicator . reported demonstration there is no operating a motor vehicle Meigs Co unty Court for
that massive amoUhts of conflict with public Interest. without a driver's license fnilure· to mointUln us8ured
electricity were bought and
uThe story represents the when he w.as ca ught sPinning clear distance.
sold in 1976 and that prices classic case of adding apples the wheels on his auto in the
Deputies also Investigated
were Increased abnost each and
oranges;''
White parking lot and front lawn at an accident on SR 692, one
step along the way, claimed. ""Investigative the SOuthern High SchooL
and a half miles west of SR
ultimately resulting in reporting
serves
an
The juvenile has posted 143 at 9:30p. m. Wednesday.
residential customers paying Important purpose but, for It bond and the parents are Robert L. Snowden, 24, Rt. 1,
higher fuel adjustment costs. to do so, two things must be being held liable lor Rutland, was traveling west
All the rates under which present: First -something to damages. .
on SR 692 when he struck and
the power is sold are investigate and second, a
Friday evening deputies killed a doc deer. There wus
governed by the Federal respect for the facts. This investigated a one-car ac· slight damage to the auto.
story falls on both counts." ciderH at Reedsville . Ac- The driver was not injured:
cording to the report, at
approximately 9 p. m. =:~=: :;: ;: ;: ::::;:;:;:;:;:::~:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Monday, Rosie Niday, 56,
Reedsville, was eastbound on ALLOWANCE RECEIVEO
Employees
of
the
SR 124 (upriver ) and lost
Southern
Ohio
Coat·
Co.
control of her 1975 Ford after
mines
began
recelvlol
hitting
one of the bad spots In
Probate Judge Marming D.
1978
clothing
the
roadway.
Her vehicle slid their
Webster, silting in for
allowance aa provided by
off
the
road
and
over
a
15
foot
Common Pleas Judge John C.
the new coal contracl
embankment. There was
Bacon Tuesday in the trial of
: .
Wednesday.
moderate damage to the
the State versus Delbert ·Two persons were Injured
Under provlsiooo of the
auto.
Fridley, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and a car heavily damaged in
Mrs . Niday w.as Iran - new contrael eacb miner Is
declared a mistrial when an accident near the
to receive UOO and
jurors failed to come up with Pomeroy-Masop bridge at
payment would have been
a verdict.
6:37 p: m. Wednesdlly.
made about April 13.
There were 10 jurors for Pomeroy Pollee said a
However, a spokeam,ao
Partly cloudy and mild said that the compan)'
conviction and two againSt. westbound car on West Main
tonight, with lows between 40 decided to make the
Prosec.uting attorney Rick st., driven by Cyrus Gardner •
and 45. Partl)&gt;"cloudy, breezy payment earlier tban
Crow, commented that 89 Parkersburg, attempted
and muCh warmer Fr-Iday necessary. Some 1,950
Fridley will be retried.
a 'teft turn onto the bridge
with highs between 65 and 70.
Fridley was on trial for when the gas feed pedal
miners were to re«lve tbe
ProbablUty
of precipitation Is payment yeoterday and
possession , for sale of stuck
Th~ car ranuned Into the ' 10 percent today, tonight and
marijuana valued at ap·
today.
20 percent Friday.
right side of the bridge and
proximately $60.
;:::::::::::::;.;:::::::;:::::::::::::;:;::::::::=:=:::::;::::::;.;::·:·:=::;.
then crossed the roadway and
struck the left side of the :::::::::::::::;:;:~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;::
ACCEPT APPLICATIONS
NO SUCCESSOR
.
The Meigs ASCS office is bridge
Mr. and Mrs. Gardner were
WASHING STREET
CINCINNATI (UP!)
now taking application• to aid taken to Veterans Memorial
Middleport's Fire Dept.
Democrats were unable
in repairing fences that were Hospital hy the Pomeroy
wUI be washing down North
Wednesday to choose a
damaged hy ice and flooding Emergency Squad. Gardner
successor for Councilman
Second Ave. throu•h the
during high water In was treated and.released and · baa!nesa rllatrlet oa Frida)'
James C. Cissell, who will ba
January.
Mrs. Gardner was admitted
evealug. Resldenls are
sworn in Monday as U.S.
Fanners with damage that for further treatment of In· . asked aot to (18rk on North
attorney for southern Ohio.
they will not be able to repair juries.
Second Avo. from Mill St.
Democratic leader• held a
without help are requested to
Traffic was delayed along
to Rutland St. betweea the
caucll'l
Wednesday morning,
contact the ASCS office West Main for a time whll~
bonn off p.m. and 11 p. m.
but
could
not agree m a
located In the Farmers Bank
Tbey
have 60 days
successor.
BuDding, Pomeroy, hy Aprll the couple and the vehi~rtday ·
to make a choice under the
If.
were .removed.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: city charter.

story complete nonsense

Regatta theme
•
among proJects
still needed

Bring
In Your
Window

MAKING up the "gossip group" in the small town of
River City, loaw, the setting lor the Broadway musical, _
"Music Man" are these students of Meigs High School.
From the left are Camille Swindell, Carla Smith, Lynda
Black, Kathie Qulvey, Tammy Miller, Sandy MUler and
Carrie Bearhs. The musical is to bepresenterl•t 7:30p. m.

en tine

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio lgnoranceofthenatureofthe
evidence it was used Ina crime has been lauded by local police (UP!) . _ _ Willis White Jr., American Electic Power Co.
and legal officials. "It's a step In the right direction," president of American system."
Cincinnati Pollee Chief Myron Leistler said Wednesday. "T.be
Co N
"The Vindicator made no
· t
ted intrusion
Electric Power
., ew
.
d
pllbUcstillissafeguarde agams anyunwarran
' York, has called copyrighted allegations of profiteering as
but still the perpetrators of the criminal activities will now find articles
published
in Mr . White suggests," said
Itmuchmoredifficulttoescapethroughalegalloophole."
Sunday's
Younstown Anastasia Przelomskl,
CLEVELAND- AT'rORNEYS FOR FIRE&amp;TONE l'lre &amp; Vindicator detailing electric Vindicator managing editor.
Rubber Co. are claiming victory In their effort to prevent purChases among utilities, "The article in question
release of a government study critical of the company's steel- "complete nonsense" and merely traced the route
belted radial tire, but thevictorymayonly be temporary. U.S. .said the paper made electrlcitytakesandtheprice
District Court Judge John M. Mario bas agreed to continue a "anegations of profiteering.'; increases along the wliy. Tbe
White, In a telegram to the consensus of electric industry
temporary restraining order barring the report's release untU
transcripts of a three-day hearing on the dispute Is completed newpaper and to United spokesmen that profits were
and lawyers on both sides have 14 days to file final written Press lnternational, which not a motive in the price
also carried an account of the fluctatlons was reported high
arguments.
articles, called the stories up in the article . The
· NEW YORK - AIR CANADA'S U. S. regional "garbled" and said they consensus was ampllfied
a
complete througout the article by
headquartersamounced Wednesday night that the airline was showed
''misunderstanding
of the utility spokesmen, including
laying off 84 aircraft servicing employees at International
of interchange oneforMr. White's company,
·a irports In New York, Cleveland and Chicago effective riature
Immediately. The airlines said it had decided to subcontract electrical transactions" and American Electric Power.
" It is interesting to note
,aircraft handling and servicing operations at the three clabned they showed ''total
'
alrporta, Including Kermedy Alrpolll, to reduce operating costa_
bt the. United States by more than 7 mUUon a year by 1979.

®

• 4-incb tops are doubled and buckram headed- tops wili
not buckle or sag.
• Hand -set bulterfly pleats are triple-tacked - pleats hang
uniformly and will not pull apart.
•Side hems are doubled- adds "body" to drapery to hang
smoothly and evenly.
•Seams are hidden behind pleats - no lines or fabric face to
mar the drapery's beauty.

Those earning between

$10,000 and $20,000 a year will
receive between 20 and fO
cents an hour extra,
depending on their salary.
Higher brackets will receive
less of an Increase.
Employees earning more
than $20,000 wlU receive no'
Increment.
·
The pay raise will cost an
addillonal $22 mllllon from
special funds to pay hl8hway
workers, university
employees and county
welfare workers.
Cost of the judges' salary
hike Is estimated at $6
million. That portion Is
topped by an incre!ISI! for the
chief jll$lice of the Ohio
Supreme Court from $43,000 a
year to $60,000. Municipal
court judges, now paid
between $22,583 and $31,000,
would go to a range of $30,333
to $38,750.

(N';;;~~~~~ AEP ~resident calls . UPI,

SAVE 50% ON

MATCHING
BEDSPREADS

percent from two years ago
when the last pay raise was
enacted.
The House approv\!d the
judges' pay raise last
November but has not yet
acted on the Increue for
state workers.
Altholll!h state employee
groups are unhappy with the
amount granted state
workers, the Senate Finance
C&lt;lrnmlttee reported the bill
out Wllnlmoualy Wednesday.
Meshel said the judges will
receive their Increments for
the first pay period following
enaclment of the biU. He said
this would be about May 1.
State workers will receive
their increase starting July 1.
The bill calls for a 40-cent
hourlY btcrease for state
employees earning $10,000 a
year or less.
,

Church assumes union operations

is

Israeli government's sufficiently strong to beat
previous interpretation. The back any Labor challenge,
U. S. administration wants even if several Democratic
Begin to change his mind.·
Movement deputies defect.
Labor Party strategists
On the eve of the
originally sought to press a parliamentary debute, Begin
no-confidence vote on Begin's sent a letter to Egyptian
11-month-old government. But President Anwar. Sadat
they dropped the idea in favor , . proposing resumption of
of the indirect challenge In parallel military and political
the hope it would draw ialks with Egypt that broke
support from some deputies off in January.
of the moderate Democratic
Begin also indicated that
Movement for Change, a key Defense Minister Ezer
partner in Begin's. coalition. Weizman might go to Cairo
Apparently attempting to for talks with his Egyptian
stem such defections, counterpart, Gen. Moharn..
Democratic Movement med Gama'Ssy, and that
leader Yigael. Yadln, who is Foreign Minister Moshe
Begin's deputy, told his Dayan might go
to
faction earlier this week he Washington for a new round
believes Begin is prepared to of talks with the U. S. ad~egotlate withdrawal on all
ministration.

f,

30%

The American Federation
of State, Count)' and
Municipal Employees Is
askbtg for a Oat 20 percent
acrtl88-the-board Increase lor
state workers. Meshel said
there Is not eno1111h money for
that.
The Ohio Cl vii Service
Employees Association
called
the
amount
"ludicrous" and urged an
employee groups to unite for
"an equitable pay raise for
state workers." OCSEA said
It wanted $1 an hour across
the board.
Patrick R. Sorohan,
executive director of OalEA,
said the proposal would
11
destroy careeer
employees." He said an
eight-year ca~eer worker
making $11,500 a year '!ould
get a 5.7 percent increase
while the cost of living is up 13

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
floor vote is scheduled for
Tuesday ln the Ohio
PRICE FIFrEEN CE~TS next
VOL XXVIII
NO. 244 POMEROY-MIODLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1978
House · on
emerg ency
------~_::__:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _......__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _""_ _. , - - - - - - -leglslation giving Ohio school
districts an additional eight
mal&lt;eup-free days if U1ey hud
to close this year bt'Cause of
hazardous winter weather.
The measure, approved on
an 11-1 vote of the House
Education Committee
WASHINGTON (tlPI) ~
The union chief was impeaching him.
ratification.
numerous mines.
Wednesday, was devised by
injunction.
Sam ChurCh, a tough former stricken only buurs before a
He said at the time the
"It's a pretty good
1n Illinois, pickets kept
In other action Wednesday, majority Dem oc rati c
mine electrician from UMW bargainitjg council move was futile since the contract," said. Don Lawley, about 12,000 of the state's UMW district presidents legislative le~rder s and
southwestern Virginia, is approved a new mine constitution provides for tbe a council member from the 15,000 miners off the job were presented with relief . education groups, Including
conducting the day. to·day construction contract.
line of succession. Church is IOklahoma-Arkansas district. Wednesday and in Indiana, checks designed to speed up representatives of school teaoperations of the United Mine
The council action, by a 37.0 Miliet;s protege.
. "They got more than the coal an 21 union mines were shut the flow of money to the chers, emp loyees and .
Workers union .
vote, cleared the way for
Church replaced Miller in miners got. ''
down by plckets, idling about coalfielda from the union 's administrators.
Church, 41, was (hrust Into 14,000 rank-and-file mine presiding over the four-hour
The construction contract 3,000 llllners,
. The bill forgives schools for
miners relief fund.
the position when UMW . construction workers to vote bargaining council meeting, is similar to one approved by
The Peabody Coal Co., with
"Most members .wUI not three days when Gov . James
· President Arnold Miller, .54, Tuesday on whether to ratify and lack of dissent raised the union's 160,000 coal eight lndlana miries, com· receive \heir first pay for · A. Rhodes declared Ohio ln a
was hospltall2ed Wednesday the contract.
' hopes construction workers miners last Friday, including plained to the National Labor another month," Miller had state Of emergency becaW!e
with wbat Church called "a
Under
the
UMW would ratify the contract and a basic $2.40-an-hour wage Relations
Board
in said in referring to the of heavy snows lu~t January .
mild stroke."
'
constitution, ChurCh asslDDes bring peace to the soft coal Increase over three years.
Indianapolis
that
the distribution of funds donated Few schools remalnerl open
Miller was listed in stable Miller's duties In his absence mines since the miners went
Union leaders earUer urged picketing was an illegal by other unions, before his , during those days.
condition in the intensive and would succeed to the on strike Dec. 6.
construction . workers not to secondary boycott. An NLRB stroke. "I am urging the
The bill also permits five
.careunltofMt.SinaiMedlcal presidency in the event of a
Bargatnlng
council picket mine sites and to aUow spokesman said it would be at di~tricts to work swiftly
Center ,In Miami Beach, Fla., vacancy .. Miller made this members said they expected miners to return to work, but least Friday before lt decides within the (union) guidelines
trouble
with · some refused and closed whether to seek an
according to Or. Philip point himself when he little
to administer this ~id .' '
Samet.
referred during th~k ton~

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE
SAVE

News .• in Briefs

•

B)' LEE LEONARD
UPI 81atela01110 RepGrter
COLUMBUS (tlPI) - The
Ohio Senate was schedllled to
vole today on a Jropoaed (lily
ralle foc 620 state and loeal
judgl!8 and 75,000 atate employees.
The Senate session was to
begin at 11 a.m.
The measure was reported
out of the Senate Finance
C&lt;lrnmlttee Wednesday after
the alate employee hike was
added at a cnst of $35 million
to the general revenue fund.
State employee groups
were dissatisfied with the
amount in the pacllage,
saybtg the state could spare
more.
The b!U gives judges 25 to
46 percent salary hikes and
provides hourly wage
Increases of 20 to 40 cents for
most atate workers.

e

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

R~PITALIZED

Mary·jle. Butcher, 961 S.
Secoild-~ve., Middleport, is a
patlentc.l&amp; the Holzer Medical
Center: c'ards may be sent to
room 211.

conservation

outside world.
"We have a policy of not
intervening In the internal
affairs of other naliona, but
we have a right to ezpreos
ourselves forcefully," Carter
said.
Separately, Perez said the
commission
probe
in
two
also had discusaed CUban
Nicaragua and expressed
their joint concern for Cahan military intervention In the
military intervention in Horn of Africa. Venezuela
had to put down CUban·
Africa .
With Perez beside him supported guerrlllas In the •
nodding agreement, 'Carter early ' 196()g and does not
told newsmen after his first welcome the prospect of a
two hours of talks with Perez : victorious Cuban Africa ~
"We both feel a delegation corps returning In triumph,
for
military
from the U.N . or OAS ready
(Organization · of American adventures closer to home.
"I don't have to hide my
States) should be welcomed
In Nicaragua and other profound preoccupation at
countries where human the Intervention of military
rights are threatened, to forces of the Republic of CUba
provide the facts to lbe in nations of Africa," Peres
said.
'
scholarahlp program named
after the late Minnesota
Senator
Hubert
H.
Humphrey .
On their first day of talks
Carter and Peres jointly·
called for a human ri8hts'

BeUJ•n. facing:showdown

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Senate

the human needs of the

world 's people."
lopment, a~d strength~rung
Carter said he had already • of the techmcal capacities of
asked the U.S. Congress for a developing nations.
28 percent increase in
The
Pres1dent
also
bilateral foreign aid and propos~d , a "U.S. aid
explosive issue of oil prices promised
to
support foundation to cbannel pubUc
with Venezuela's President- legislation to increase the and pnvate ald.
Carlos Andres Perez before U.S. contribution to the
ln a dinner toast Tuesday
heading for Brazil, the seeond International Monetary he also announced ~h~
stop on hiS South American- Fund ease credit to creatlon of a foretgn
•
African tour.
developing countries. support
Venezuela is one of the
leading voices in the
,. Organization of Petroleum
Exporting ·Countries
demanding higher petroleum
prices and Perez warned in a

Committee okey.'S pay increase
Ohio

dinner toast Tuesday night prices of basic comm&lt;XIities,
lllat he would use his posi:ion and hike U.S. technical
in OPEC to get concessiOns ass~st~ce ·
.
.
for the developing nations.
LISting a J1ve.pomt
"I •applaud the efforts o1 • program for "a more just
Venezuela
and
other mternational economic
developing nations to expand order," Carter called lor
your own pr ograms of Increased flows of c~pilal to
economic assistance " Carter the developmg nations; a
told the venezuelan ~ongress. •· fairer and more open
"All of the OPEC nations system ~f world trade;"
have a responsibility to use world pr1ce stabiilzatlon;
their surplus wealth to meet cooperatwn on energy

Senate votes on
raise
.
for judges, employees

Mistrial

declared

Two hurt
in wreck

Weather .·

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