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                  <text>0-10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mar. 4, 1979

New fire course
begins March 9
NELSONVILLE - George
Andrews, assistant chief of
the Lancasier Fire Department, will teach a new course
in fire dep,artment operations
and extinguishment at
Hocking Technical College
during spring quarter.
Aimed at volunteer and
paid firefighters, the class is
offered through the college's
Fire Science Department .
Classes will be held .from 56:40 p.m. on Thursdays
beginning March 29.
. The course includes
· principles of rescue, salvage,
ventilation , equipment
placement at the scene and
control of neighboring
buildings threatened by fire.
After classroom study of
tactics used in- fire extinguishment , class members
will practice the actual extinguishment of structural

fires and various other types
of situations such as pit or
auto fires. The class. which
replace s the basic fire
command course,· involves
addit.iona I practical a p· plication of . fire-fighting
skills.
Interested persons may
contact Bill Henestofel, fire
science program coordinator.
for more infoiTnation on the
three-credit l'OUrse.
Hocking Technical
College 's Public Service
department is also offering
evening courses in public
finance,
public
ad·
ministration. grantsmanship,
criminalistics and basic
photography .
Registration information
may be obtained by calling
John Locker in the evening
division office, 753-3591, ext.
204 .

View from StatehoUse I
II) State ltt·prcscntativc
Ron James

IU-Prortorvllle,
9tnd llousc District)
This week 's legislative
· activity included House
passage of Amended House
Bill 45 which makes the
continuation of health in·
surance coverage possible'
where a change in marital or
family status has occurred.
This measure will now go to
the Senate for consideration.
This proposal, if enacted,
would allow covered family
members the right to continue their coverage upon the
death of the subscriber or in
case of a divorce, a
dissolution annulment or
legal separation of the spouse
from the named subscriber.
Men and women who are
covered by their spouse's
health insurance policy could
no longer be eliminated from
coverage due to a change in
marital circumst.ances.
Under this pr0posal, these
1

OFFERING SEMINAR - The Home Economics Division of Adult Education at
Buckeye Hills Career Center will be offering a free Microwave Cooking Seminar at the
vocational center March 8 from I until 3 p.m. Ann Rieser, Home Economics Adult
Education Consultant stated that Lawrence County Extension Agent, Judy Burgess, will
present the program. Mrs. Burgess received herB, A. degree in Vocational Education from
Marshall University and Masters degree in Management Housing, Equipment and Home
furnishings from Ohio State University. She has previously taught Microwave Cooking
classes at the vocational center in Huntington. The material covered in the class will range
from safety tips in microwave cooking to basic microwave cooking techniques. Allison
Electric of Gallipolis will be furnishing the microwave demonstration models. Recipes that
will be discussed will include meats, vegetables, candies, and breads.

MARCH 1st Thru MARCH 15th

BUY ONE-GET ONE FREE
N(M $25 FOR 00 PEOPLE
Get a Friend to join with you ...
Menor Women
Saturdays-Women 8:30 to 12 :00-Men 1: 00
P.M.IiiS : OO P.M.

THE FITNESS CENTER
Ga IIi polis, Ohio

417 Second Ave .

program. In order to receive
a certificate . or .. approval,
existing state statute~
require that the participant
have not less than 4,000 hours
of employment.
House Bill 84 would change
the requirement to a
minimum of 2,000 hours.
Durtng the upcoming weeks,
both House Bill I and House
Blll84 will be introduced and
considered ln the Ohio
Senate.
I have received 30 pieces of
mail regarding H.B. 139· - .
the " bottle bill."·.There were
11 letters for the ·bUI and 19
letters In opposition; Keep
writing, and I'll keep you

$1 per hr. workout
$2 per w~lk-in visit·

Madge has the CoHee Pol hot- Come on in and visit ·

men ancl women would
reserve the option of con·
tinuing ttie insurance policy. I
am a co-sponsor of th e

measure.

cildangcr a number of jobs in
Ohio.
The committee is &lt;&gt;•peeled
to vote on H.ll. 1:19 this week
after concluding four weeks
of testimony ·on !he propOsal.
I have received&gt;75 pieces of
mnil concerning H.B. 139.
El\'Cn have been in favor and
64 opposed to the measure.
The Ohio House voted
Wednesday by a 62-36 vote to
restore the death penalty in
Ohio. Last July, the United
States Supreme Court ruled
Ohio's 1974 death I?•malty law
unconstitutional. Amended
Substitute House Bill 74 will
now go to the Ohio Senate for
consideration.
Wednesday 's floor debate
on the issue lasted nearly
three hours as members
proposed numerous amend·
· ments and argued the pros
and cons of the · capital
punishment question.
Last week , the House
Judiciary Committee considered over 50 propo~ed
amendments to the · original
blll. By the time the bill was
voted out 'of committee last
Thursday, the content of the
initial proposal had changed
substantially, the ' major
change being that persons
convicted of murder during
the commission of felony
arson, rape, burglary, robbery or kidnapping would not
be liable to a death sentence.
Once debate began on the
House floor , an amendment
· to restore the death penalty
for felony murder was
adopted.
The version of House Bi1174
which passed the house would
allow the death penalty for
persons committing ' a
murder during a felony, for
killing for hire, for killing a

The Ohio House also passed
legislation last week whfch
empowers township trustees
to establish speed limits of
not less than 2:i miles per
hour on township roads in
rural
and
suburban
residential. areas .
Amended House Bill 20
specifies (hat the existing 55
miles per hour speed limit on
roads could be ch~nged to a
· speed which the trustees feel
to be safe and reasonable ,
The safe and reasonable
speed would be deteiTDined
on the basis of engineering
and traffic investigation
reports. This reduction could
take place without the approval of the Ohio Depart·
men! of Transportation.
Under existing law, speed
limits on township roads can
be changed only by the state
department at the request of
the township trustees.
This proposal, Am. H.B. 20,
is presently awaiting the
. ,consideration of the Senate.
Also receiving the House
approval during the week's
activity was Amended Ho.use
Bill 43 which limits
representations made in
advertising materi8Is with
respect to tile cancellation of
sickness and accident in·
surance policies.
Under the provisions of this
measure, no insurer can refer
to
non-cancellation
provisions of a sickness and
accident insurance policy
without clearly describing
the
cancellation
and
renewing provisions of the
policy.
In committee action last
week, the House Finance
Committee continued its
review of the proposed
budget. Specifically, the lull .
House Finance Committee ,
dealt with the Department of 1,
Mental Health and Mental ·
Retardation budget. The
House Finance General
Subcommittee considered the
budgets of the Consumers'
Counsel and the Dtipartment
of Commerce.'
The Human Resources
Subcommittee heard the
budget of the Department of
Public Welfare, while the
!Education Subcommittee
dealt with the budgets of
Ohio's two year state-assisted
schools and the Cooperative
Extension Service.
Budget review hearings
will continue this week.
In further committee ac·
tion, the ·House Energy and
Environment Committee
continued hearings on Hous~
Bi11139, the "!lottie bill." This
measure, proposed by
initiative petition, would .
require a 10 cent mandatory
deposit on all soft drink and
beer containers sold in the
·state. The bill would also ban
the use of pull tab metal
containers. ·
Testimony heard last week,
headed by the Ohio AFL-CIO,
opposed the passage of the
proposal Oil the grounds that
the mandatory deposit would·

A

to fit your
Plan
Passbook
3 Month
1 Y~ar
2% Years
4 Years
6Year5
8 Years

Interest
5%
5'h%
6%
6Y,%

n.%
7%%
7'4%

Minimum

5.12%
5.73%
6.27%
6.81%
7.62%
7.90"k
8.17%

$1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000
1,000

Federal R'egulations require substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal on
savings cenificates.

See Bob Brickles, Gene
Johnson, Harland tWoody)
Wood, or .Greg Smith at
the Sign of Quality New
and Used·Cars.
CHRYSLER LEBARON

dove gray with a matching landau •
top and cloth 60-40 seating. Equipped
with air condition\
power

steering, AM-FM radio,
accent stripes and radial

1978 TRANS AM

NOW

This lull sized

4

automobi le Is extra clean Inside and

conditioning, pOwer steering, power

brakes, AM radio and radial tires.
See this beautiful auto today.

.

1978 OLOS CU11.ASS SU

'5995

The Sporty one from Pontiac.,
Medium blue finish with matching
custom
c loth
bucket
seats.
Automati c transmission, V·6 eng ine,
power steering, AM· FM 8 track
stereo, rear window defroster and
dual sport mirrors.

Silver Bridge Pl ~za _

Spring_Valley

Membor FDIC

'4995

1977 OLDS 98 REGENCY

Platinun111nish wlih matching vinyl
roof and black velour 60-40 seats.
Full power Includes windows, door

locks, seat and 1r1-band electric

antenna . AM-FM stereo with factory
installed Citizens Band Radio. New.

steering, power brakes, ' a 1r
conditioning, rear electrJc defroster
1

Buick Trade .

automobile.

Priced to Sell

'4495

1977 G.M.C.

Platinum exterior w ltti beautiful
carmine cloth interior . Loaded w ith
options like air conditioning, power
windows. power door: locks, cruise
control, tilt wheel, AM·FM 8 track
stereo. Rallye wheels . This stunning
coupe Is super sharp ·lnside and out.
Only 12,080 miles.

Local executive's ·car. Finished tn·
firethorn red with a white landau
top. Options include AM·FM in dash
CB radio, power seats, power win·
dows, cruise control, automatic air '
conditioning,1 chrome Wheels, and
much
more .
This
stunning
automobile Is on display . -~oiJifjiCIIII

1978 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

Thi s stunning intermediate has it
a ll. B e ;:~utiful Saffron e&gt;&lt;terior with a
buckskin landau top and matching
· 6(h10 seating . Equipped with air con ditioning, power windows. power
door locks , tllt wheel, Cru ise control,
AM-FM cassette ster eo system, and
chrome styl ed wheels.

Bright 'red ex teri or' , Renegac;le Pkg .,
custom soft top, roll bar, V·8 engine,
stet . trr~n s mi ss i o n , mi'ig wheels, wide
tires and A wheel drive . Only 27.622
mil e'S. Locall y owned . New Pontiac
tr AdC" .

Thi s 'h ton truck is equipped with an
economical 6-engine, standard:
transmission, long wide bed, r ear.
step bumper, ,'lnd rear sliding glass .
Only 24,043 miles .

.DE.!'\OSPECIAL

meodia&gt;resedan, Niwillus'
contrasting blue
60·40
i . Loaded with full
power like seats, door locks, w indows plus ti lt wheeL cr:uise ~ontrol
and chrome styled wheels . Onlv
6,115 miles.
-Retail Llsl$8068 SALE

1977 PONnAC GRAND PRIX
The G.M. sUccess caf. Finished In
platinum · with black 60·40 vinyl in·
terlor and a matching padded lan dau top. Air conditioned, tilt wheel,
radio, ano;l Rallye II wheels. See It
now.

'6295

1977 JEEP CJS .

'

'5495

1977 FORD LTD 2 DR.

1976

STATIONWAGON

'4895

.

1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD DUSTER
I

Finished · in desert gold With mat·
chlng vinyl interior. This wagon ·is
equipped witt:l an economical Slant 6 :
engine, automatic transmission,
power steering , AM radio, and lug·
gage rack. Plenty of room 11.
economv here.

Dark green exterior with ton vinyl
seats, V-8 engine, outomotlc,

. transmIssion, power steering and

. brakes, and AM rodlo. Would moke
excellent vehicle lor trol!er towing .
Prieed To Sell

'1

Dark 1 broWn exterior with a tan
.ca nopy top and custom sport, vinyl
interior. Equipped with 318 V -8
engine, r~utomatlc transmission and
power ste~ring . New tires &amp; shocks.

Qlly 40,000 miles. Local trade.

'1295

*48 MONTH FINANCING

*SOUTHERN OHIO'S
.
lMGEST SEI.ECJ10N

•2395
1968 BUICK SKYLARK Z DR
White exterior with bleck vlntyl lop'
and block clath seats. V-8 engine,
eutoma1lc

transmission,

air

conditioning, power steering, and
· AM radio, ·
stoeclol

'995

BUICK
PON.TIAC
1911 Eastern Aw.
"· .

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 225

Phone 446-2282·
'

i

One person was killed and
two others injured during a
one-vehicle accident Sunday
· on Roush Hollow Rd., three·
tenths of a mile north of SR
. 554.
Killed was Carl Cochran,
54, Vinton.
Called to the scene at 5:17
· p.m., the Gallia-Meigs fost,
Highway Patrol, reports a
· south bound jeep operated by
Danny R. Wood, 29, Vinton,
ran off the right side of the
roadway and struck a tree.
Following impact , the
vehicle overturned and
Cochran, a passenger, , was
thrown 'fi'bm · the' Jeep: ·Of.
fleers report the vehicle
rolled over on Cochran.
Cochran was pronounced
dead 'at the scene by Gallia
County Coroner Donald
Warehime.
Wood and a second
passenger, William Mitchell,
39, Bidwell, displayed visible
signs of injury, but were not
immediately treated . The
accident, Gallia County 's
first fatality of 1979, is still
under investigation.
Other traffic accidents
were investigated Saturday
by the Gama:r.:eigs Post,

Highway Patrol.
An auto operated by Harold
P: Jones, '26, Albany,' in·
curred heavy damage during
a two-vehicle collision on CR
I, six-tenths of a mile north of
SR 124 in Meigs County at
11 :30 a.m.
Officers report a truck
operated by Kenneth H.
Wheeler, 25, Dexter, backed
from a private drive into the
path of Jones' south hound
auto.
There was slight damage to
the Wheeler truck . . Wheeler
was cited on a charge of
improper backing.
S he' patroL in~estigated a
two-vehicle accident on U.S.
35, two-tenths of a mile west
of milepost 5, at 10:05 a.m.
Officers report an east
'bound pickup truck driven by
Gregory L. Carter, 29, Northup, had slowed in traffic on
35.
A second east bound pickup

operated by John w'.
Hanson,
55,
Patriot,
fail ed
to
stop . and
. struck the Carter vehicle in
the rear. Both pickups incurred moderate damage.
Hansen was cited on a charge
of assured clear distance.

.---Nationwise___,
Not considering controls .
WASHlNGTON (AP) - President Carter's chief
inflation fighter said Sunday the administration is not
considering mandatory wage and price controls for
implementatation in case the president's voluntary
program fails. "There is nobody in the administration
that I know of who is talking at ail about mandatory
controls," said Alfred Kahn, chairman o.f the Council
on Wage and Price Stability.
Kahn conceded that price rises in January, if
continued through this year, would mean inflation of
more than 10percentfor the year. But he noted that the
president's program of voluntary wage and price ·
restraint Is still getting under w~y.
·

Defense fund hits $105,000

This is,575 mile auto is ext;a cl;an '
inside etnd out. Equipped w1th v.nyl ·
interior, lat).~au tp, ra dio &amp; cru~se
control. This locally owned full s1ze
car is sure to catch your eye . New
Bonneville-trade.

•3795'·

C&amp;S Bank
25 Court Street ,

dr . family

out. Arctic while finisH with air

'6995

th e way you would expect a luxury
sport coupe. Mint green. Extra
clean..

.

wheel,

4 DR

Finished in Mayan red with white
bucket seats . This Trans Am has it
· all. Air condi tion ing, crui se control,
tilt wheel, AM ·FM 8 track. Ra llye II
wheels and raised white letter tire s.
This new Bonneville trade is a loca l ·
IY owned automobile . Only 4, 1971ow,
19wmiles.
1

Low m.iles, locally owned. Equipped

Be~nk

2 DR HT

This. medallion model Is finished In

1972

.The Commercial 8r Savings

(USPS 145-960)

i

and AM radio. GM factory olllclaf;s

Yield

e

Jeep wreck
kills man

Br·entwood brown finish with a gqld
vinyl roof and matching gold cloth
interior. Equipped with power

•

'******************************************************************************************************************************

FUNDS'RECEIVED
POMEROY - · State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
reports the February
distribution of gasoline excise
tax receipts.
Meigs County communities
receiving monies included
Middlepot, $2,153; Pomeroy,
$2,324; Racine, $604;
Rutland, $540, and Syracuse,
$754.

•

at y

•

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

'

15 CENTS

MONDAY, MARCH 5, 1979

wi~hdrawing

today

By DENIS D. GRAY
speedily hold negotiations to discuss ways of ensuring peaqe ---seheme ·of invading the Lao People 's Democratic Republic ." "every village in Vietnam should be a defense post, every
. .Associated Press Writer
Vietnam reportedly has up to 40,000 troops in Laos helping province a strong wall" against the Chinese.
and tranquility be:ween the two countries and then proceed to
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Chinese troops began settle the boundary and territorial disputes." ·
Kyodo quoted Chinese Vice Premier Li Xiannian (Li Hslenthe Communist government figh t rebellious mountain triwithdrawing from Vietnam today "after achieving the goals
nien) as saying in Peking: "We have already decided to withThe withdrawal was announced after Hanoi claimed that besmen.
assigned them," the official Chinese news agency reported China was planning to broaden the war by invading Laos,
The news agency claimed China was using 60,000 men and draw from Vietnam. Our purpose has been almost achieved."
today.
Vietnam's ally to the West, to give it a "springboard for hundreds of artillery pieces and tanks in attacks around the But he did not say when the pullback would take place.
Earlier, the Japanese news service Kyodo said in a dispatch attacks on the western part of Vietnam in coordination with provincial capital of Lang.Son, 11 miles from the border, which · At the outset of its invasion Feb. 17, China said it sought only
from Peking that the Chinese government announced all attacks from the nortb ."
the Vietnamese abandoned some time last' week. Hanoi re- to punish Vietnam for alleged provoc~tions and did not plan an
extended war . .The Chinese accused the Vietnamese of
Chinese troops were being withdrawn. ·
Vietnam also reported new fighting around the captured ported "fierce battles" still going on in the area.
The amouncement by Xinhua (Hsinhua) warned, however., north.east bor&lt;!er town of Lang Son.
The Vietnamese claimed 42,.000 Chinese killed and 259 tanks ·increasing attacks across the border, and they also were enthat "the Chinese side reserves the right to strike back again in
"According to many sources, many Chinese divisions have destroyed in the first 13 days of the war, up to last Friday . raged by Vietn~m ·s Christmas Day invasion of Cambodia to
self-defense" if Vietnam resumes the attacks across the been moved to the Chinese border area adjacent to Laos," said Western analysts considered this ~laim was probably highly overthrow the Khmer Rouge government of Premier Pol Pot,
China 's ally .
border which China said provoked its invasion on Feb. 17.
inflated .
Hanoi's official Vietnam News Agency.
The annoWJCement added: "The Chinese government pro"The Peking leadership, while brazenly intensifying the
The Vietnamese government put ita people on the alert for.
poses once again that the Chinese and Vietnamese sides agressive war again Vietnam, is preparing to realize ita more fighting. The Communist Party Central Committee sa.id

1978 CHEV.

plan

GoOd Luck Tornadoes in District Tournament

.ta~ing .

Chinese troops

PRICEDTOSELL
''

******************************************************************************************************************************

infonned in this column as to
the direction the mail is

Galpols

ClEVELAND (AP) - A defense fund for the six
present and two former City Council members Indicted
in a carnival ·kickback probe has raises a total of
$105,000, according to a fund trustee.
Arnold Pinkney, former president of the Cleveland
Board of Education, said Sunday that most of the legal
fund money was raised by complittees of .business
-le!!ders, political leaders, wodlen 's grouP6 and others.

Gasohol test .slated today
HU..UARD, Ohio (AP)- A service station run by
a statewide !alTO cooperative is scheduled to begin test
marketing a combination gasoline and grain-based
alcohol mixture called gasohol today.
The first tankfuls of the fuel were to be pumped
from the Franklin Landmark station in Hilliard this
morning following a ceremony attended by state
officials and representatives of Landmark Inc., the
fanner owned and operated cooperative.
G~hol is an alternative fuel once popular during
World War n that Is composed of 90 percent gasoline
and 10 per~!lt grain-based alcohol.
·

Annstrong now stepping out
I

CINCINNATI (AP) - Nell Armstrong made
hisl!'fY when he stepped onto the moon in 1969. Almost
10 years later, he Is stepping cautloualy out of his
.JX'Ivate life to appear in automobile commercials.
Since 1971, the 48-year-old Armstrong has lived in
seclusion on a fannin nearby .Lebanon, commuting to
teach aero-apace engineering and do .research for the
· University of Cincinnati.
·

Begin makes st1rprise
visit to White House

MUST TIE DOGS
Svracuse Mav Eber
Pickens announced today
that all dogs In the village
must be kept tied and
confined to the owner's
property. Residents who
fail to comply with the
will
be
ordinance
prosecuted he said.

Accident
leads to
problems
Timothy H. Pratt, 24, Rt. I,
Dexter, charged with fa ilure
to file an accident report by
Meigs County Sheriff's
deputies faces child stealing
charges in neighboring
Athens County.
. Pratt was sought · Sunday
morning following an accident on County Road 49.
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James J . Proffitt 'his
department received a report
at 6:25a.m. that a vehicle had
gone through a ·fence and
broke off a utility pole
sometime during the. night.
'!be vehicle was still· at the
scene.
Later Sunday morning,
deputies located its driver
who said he was travelirlg
south on County Road 49 just
inside Meigs County when he
hit a soft spot In the highway.
The man stated he made an
attempt to keep from sinking
in the mud when the gas
pedal stuck causing him to
lose control.
The vehicle went into a
ditch on the right, traveled
a pproximately 20 feet,
crossed the road and traveled
approximately 80 fe et, ran off
the road on the right going
through a fence before ·
striking and severing a
Buckeye Rural utility pole.
The vehicle was owned by
Shiela Gougeon, Chillicothe.
Pratt posted bond for appearance in · Meigs County
court.
Later Pratt's infoiTnation
was run through leads, and a
computer. It was learn ed that
Pratt was wanted in Athens
County on a charge of child
stealing.
Pratt was then placed
under arrest . He was transporte&lt;!, to the county line and
turn'ed over to Athens County
deputies.

NEW COUNCIL MEMBER - Rod Karr is a new
council member of the village .of Pomeroy. Karr was
named by Mayor Clarence Andrews to fill lhe vacancy
create(!· by the r~signation of Larry Powell. l'iarr is the
commander of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion
and the son of' Mr . and Mrs. Dick Karr, Middleport.

Voyager II
has problem

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)- Stone, "but we will be turning
Voyager I made its closest it . back on ... to determine
encounter with Jupiter after whether the instrument will
18 months in space today , recover.''
flying within 172,744 miles of
The failure occurred while
its colorful, cloudy surface. the spacecraft was inside
The spacecraft then began its Jupiter's very intense
radiation field, which may
20-rnonth cruise to Saturn.
Voyager's two television have caused the problem,
cameras were furiously Stone said.
Stone said the device would
transmitting . never-beforeseen pictures back to Earth in be turned back on around 7
the form of radio signals, p.m. PST tod~y.
Dr. Garry E. Hunt of the
which scientists develop first
into blackand-white, then Voyager photography team
said results of the historic
color prints.
However, a problem devel- approach were outstanding
oped within one of Voyager's and "the excitement is really
11 scientific instruments, and tremendous" among
scientists
ordered
a National Aeronautics and
temporary shutdown of the Space Administration scidevice, a photopolarimeter entists at Jet Propulsion
that measures chemical Laboratory.
Voyager's pictures showed
elements above Jupiter, the
largest planet cuuuuuu 're in great detail the swirling
always concerned when we clouds around Jupiter, and
have to turn an Instrument also producr.d several
that
were
off," said project scientist E d pic ture s
surprisingly featureless.
Hunt said the pictures were
closeups of brown spots, that
drift across the Jovian
surfac~: ..
"This may mean we are
looking at a very bland
Syracuse wa'ter"""" ......... By .The Associated Pre.ss
area," he said. " It may be
featurele'jS, but it may also
•
At least 12 persons were
mcrease okayed
killed on Ohio's roadways contain a great amount of
new information."
over the weekend, according
The Voyager, curving
Syracuse village council to the Highway Patrol.
around Jupiter less then
Saturday in recessed session
Most of the accidents ocpassed an ordinance under curred Saturday, when seven 200,000 miles above the
surface,
was
eme•gency legislation in - persons were reported killed, plane t's
of
the
13
examining
several
creasing water rates for including a 13-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl,
Jovian
moons
as
it
sped
away,
residents and non-residents. Sonja L. Pierson, of Morrow,
Attendin g were Mayor who was riding in the back of to Saturn. Before its closest
encounter at 4:42a.m. PST,
Eber
Pickens, Jan ice a pickup truck.
Voyager excited scientists by
Lawson, clerk, Troy Zwilling,
·The palrol counL' . traffic
Herman London, John Ar- deaths from 6 p.m. Friday un- photographing the ·tiny moon
known as Amalthea.
nott, · Mick Ash and Katie til midnight Sunday .
The pictures also showed
Crow, council members.
The dead:
churning clouds and several
SUNDAY
dark ovals.
GALLIPOLIS - Carl H.·
The pictures, displayed on
Cochran, 54, Vinton, in a one~
JPL televi sion monitors,
car accident on a Gallia
looked like snowdrifts rippled
Partly cloudy tonight and County road .
and swirled by the wind .
MAUMEE - Kirby Gene
Tuesday. Low tonight in ,the
Others showed the spiraling
Judd
16. of Toledo, a
low 30s and high Tuesday in
clouds inside Jupiter's Great
the mid 40s. The chance of pede;lrian struck by a vehi- Red Spot - a centuries-&lt;&gt;ld
precipitation is 20 percent cle while walking · on a feature much like a gigantic
tonight and Tuesday.
(Continued on page 10)
hurricane.

-Weather

12 killed
in traffic

By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
Wf\,SHINGTON (AP) Isr aeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin went to the
White today for a surprise
mee tin g with President
Carter after Israel's Cabinet
approved Begin's recommendations on a new U. S. plan
for breaking. the Mideast
peace deadlock.
Carter 's secret proposals to
salvage negotiations stirred
interest in Israel and optimisti c reports in that country's press.
Carter, holding a black umbrella aloft , walked from his
Oval Office to greet Begin in
a driveway. After a brief
greeti ng, the president
escorted the prime minister
into his office.
The White House said
nothing immediately about
t.he reason for Begin 's
unscheduled call but it ob. vious ly dealt with Carter's
last-minute effort Sunday to
avert a Iota I collapse of peace
efforts.

"I'm not sure that it'sd going to contribute to the process of the negotiations,"
Deputy Prime Mini ster
Yigael Yadin told reporters
after the cabinet meeting in
Jerusalem. He made clear he .
was referring to Begin's
recommendations and not
Carter 's proposals.
Neither side would disclose
details of Certer's plans for
breaking the Egyptian ·
lsr·aeli stalemate in negotialions on a peace treaty, nor
what Begin had recommended to his cabinet. But one
Israeli official described the
Carter plan as "important
and interesting.''
Carter gave Begin the new
suggestions at the While
House Sunday, when their
marathon talks appeared
near collapse.
The Israeli press published
markedly optimistic reports
on the suggesti ons. Begin was
quoted in one as saying the
ideas ' 'are important and are
a change for the better."
An Israeli official, who re-

quested anonymity, said
Begin hoped to have a reac!ion from Jerusalem before
hi s anticipated midweek
departure from th e. United
States.
The U. S. official cmphasized, however, that Ca rter and
Begin have no plans to meet
again . He said Israel's reactiun likely would come
" through more routine
means" - perhaps through
the Israeli Embassy he re.
Thi s went far toward
dispelling any speculation
that
a
negotiating
bt·eakthrough was at hand.
He said the U. S. suggeslions did not involve security
measures and would not lead
to a larger U. S. presence in
the Middle East.
Ca rler, after meeting with
Begi n for the fourth lime in as
many days Sunday, talked
·briefly by telephone with
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat and met with a biparti.san congressional delega·
tion .

Snow removal costly
Middleport Mayor Freel
Hoffman reported today that
street maintenance and snow
removal dur ing the · past
winter has been a very costly
but necessary operation in
the community.
Approximately 218 tons of
salt were used on village
streets at a co~t of over
$5,300. 1bat total docs not
inclurl£" employee overtime

and equipment fuel which
was necessary to keep the
streets open during the many
snowfalls during the past
winter.
The mayor sa id he felt the
limited number of village
employees did an excellent
job in clearing the snow and
keeping streets passable.
'!b e new backhoe endloader
was used eXtensively a nd

Mining engineer
on scene today
James Arthur, Project Engineer of the Office of
Surface Mining, Indianapolis, Inc ., has arrived in
Pomeroy regarding corrective actions to be taken on a
hill slip behind the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Arthur was in conference this morning with Meigs
Local School superintendent Charles Dowler and other
school officials about the.slip for which $50,000 has been
approved in Washington, D. C. for the corrective
action.
Following the conference, Dowler said that the
first phase of the 1'()rrection will be the installation of a
French type drain to dry out the hillside. This will be
handled as a federal project.
Second phase of the corrective action - a state
project - w111 be the installation of a permanent type
drain at-the· old mine shaft which has created the
problem.
.
David Bowman, Soil Engineer, has also arrived to
begin work on the problem. He is with the firm of
Benedict, Bowman, Craig and Moos, Columous, wmcn
will handle the first phase of the project at the school.
Dowler said he has been advised that it is not
necessary to move anything or to close Pomeroy
Elementary School.

. EXTENnED FORECAST
Wedn es day through
Friday:
Showers or
lhund e rstorms possible
Wednesday and Thursday,
ending Friday. Conlfnued
mild will! the high In the
mid 40s to mid 50s Wed· .
nesda~ and in the 50s to low
60s Thursday and Frld.ay,
Low In the mid 30s to mid
40s.

SQUAD RUNS
The Racine emergency
squad was called Thursday,
March I at 5:35 p.m. for
F'rances Hawthorne, Port·
land, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 8:30 the squad
was called for Harv ey
Lemand, Ra cine, and at II
p.m. for Steve Gradey,
Racine. Both were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

proved very valuable during
the heavy snows.
Ma yor Hoffma n added that
the winter weather has been
very hard on many streets
and that employees are now
in the process of repairing the
brick streets by relaying
several sections and will be
using cold mix in repairing
blacktop •treets until hot mix
becom es available.
Maintenance of streets is a
very expensive item for the
village on the limited amount
of fu nds available.
This year, some r ev enue
sharing money is being used
for maintenance and some
has to be used from the
general fund as not enough
money is available in the
street fund itself for these
repairs.
Funds from the I'&gt; mill
levy is used for resurfacing
only.
The mayor extended his
th anks to village residents
and bu sine sses for their
ooopcration with village
employees during the past
winter.
If residents beeome aware
of areas which may inadvertentl y be neglecte d,
please contact the mayor's
office.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
unit was called to the office of
Dr. James Conde Saturday
for Wesley Clark, Racine ,
,who was taken .to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
· REPORT DUE
The nominating committee
will .report when the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Middleport
fire department meets at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the fire
station.
White Elephant and ·bake
sales will be held during the
evening.
Hostesses will be Kathryn
Metzger, Sue-Metzger and
,Kathy Davis.

�3-'l'he OallySentrnel Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Mar 5 1979

2-The Da1ly Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomerov 0 , Monday, Mar 5 1979

~.~--~~----------------------

-

Trojans advance to district
with 74-50 win over Devils

Editorial

.
..
opmiODS

How to govern spending?

IN,WASHINGTON •

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Kennedy gets energetic
By Mntha Ao&amp;le aud Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) ·Sen Edward M Kennedy, OMasa , has made an important'but little-publicized move to
become an aggressive, active participant In the increasIngly crucial national debate on energy policy
Kennedy has quietly hired two of Washington s most
respected young energy ezperts for the profesalonal staff
of a relatively obscure congreaalonal panel he head&amp; The
energy subconunlttee of the Joint Economic Committee
The new Kennedy aides are David H Moulton, a 311-yearold native of Concord, Mass now working for Ralph
Nader's Congress Watch, and James M Cubie, a 32-yearold native of Lynn, Mass , who currently serves as
Washington counsel for the Union of Concerned Scientlam
Cuble, a fonner energy lobbyist for both Congress Watch
and New Directions, another public interest group is one
of the capital s most effective critics of the nuclear power
Industry Moulton ls equally knowledgeable about oU and
gas issues
Kpnnedy's chainnanahlp of the full Senate Judiciary
Committee and the health subcommittee of the Senate
Human Resources Committee are far better known and
already have markedly Increased hill political vlalbillty
He has headed the energy subcommittee for the past
several years, but It has been a low-key operation untU
now Kennedy's move to beef up ita staff Is seen by some as
another Indication that he could be positioning hlrnaelt as a
future presidential candidate

"Would you s1gn our pet1tion? It's
ra1se our allowances."
•
week (~ days) will be pa•d
ORDINANCE NO 501
t1me Hoi day that 1S
AN ORDINANCE 0 AMEND regular
off In the Poll ee
ORDINANCE NO
379 taken
Department Wi ll go by
0~ DINANCii.
NO
401 sen•orttv
each sh1ft It wil l be
ORDINANCE NO
407 the respons•b•l•ly
of the Chief
ORDINANCE
NO
431, to ascerta.n that there Will be
ORDINANCE NO
440, at least one ( 1) sen or off cer
ORDINANCE NO
451 In the VJI Ia ge on holidays for
ORDINANCE NO
454, stand by calls to advtce and
ORDINANCE NO
456 or ass1st 1Un1or off cers n any
ORDINANCE NO 485, ... TO s1tuahon that should rise
FIX
SALARIES
AND
help 1S needed
WAGES OF THE VILLAGE where
All vacat ons must be taken
OF POMEROY, OHIO
on a basts of at least f•ve (51
ve days at one t1me
BE IT ORDAINED as consecut
Regu lar employees wlll be

follows by The Council of the

pad double t 1me (16) hours
V•llage of Pomeroy Ohio for holiday work when a
two thirds of all members holiday falls n regular work
elected thereto concurring schedu le Regular time (8)
that Ordinance No 379 dated hours f not worked
6 1969 Ordinance
Extra employees will be
Because campaigning for the 1980 presidential election ls February
No 401 dated June 1 1970 pad one time and a half (1112)
well underway, at an elllraordinarUy early date, many of Ordinance No -407 dated when
holiclar,s
the country's politicians, voters and journalists ali'eady November I 1970 Or Regular work•ng
employees work ng
d1nance No 431 dated May other than regular Sh1ft will
have focused their attention on that contest
15 1972 Ordtnance No 4.40 only be pa1d t1me and a half
But virtually overlooked In the rush to 1980 are hundred&amp; dated
August 20 1973 Or
2)
of elections, many of considerable significance, scheduled dmance No 451 dated July l f P/Holidays
observed by the
to be held in 1979 Among them
1974 Ord nance No 45.4
V1 llag e will be January tst
dated
November
18
1974
Mlaslaslppl Kentucky and Louisiana voters will be
(Not 2nd) Memor 1al Cay
No
456
dated July 4th !Nol 5th) Labor
balloting for governor and most major statewide offices In Ordmance
February 3 1975 Ordinance Day Thanksgiving Day and
addition new state legislatures must be elected In those No 473 dated June 6 1976 Chr1stmas Day December
and Ordmance No 485 dated 25th !No! 26th)
three states, New Jersey and VIrginia
January 1 19711 Is hereby
New mayors will be elected thla year in almost 450 cities, amended
3 That Ordinance
to the extent that Nosect1on
379 dated February 6
Including seven of the nation's 10 most populous Sect on 1 Paragraph A anlj 1969 Ordmance No 401
Chicago, Philadelphia-; Houston, Dallas, Baltimore, San Section 1 Paragraph B dated June 1 1970 Ordinance
Paragraph C Paragraph 0
Diego, and San Antonio, Teus
No 407 dated November 1
Paragraph
E
are 1970 Ordmance No 431
Other major cities holding 1979 mayoralty elections and
as follows
dated May 15 1972 Or
Include Indianapolis, Phoenix, Ariz , Mempllla, Tenn , chan9ed
Section
1
That
the d nance No 440 dated August
San Franctaco, Cleveland, Boston, Denver, Nashville, tollowtng scale of salaries 20 1973 Ordinance No 451
Tenn , Minneapolis, Oklahoma City, Jacksonville, Fla , and wages for employees of dated July 1 1974 0rdmance
the VIllage of Pomeroy OHio No 454 dated November 18
and Kana&amp; a City, Mo
1S hereby adopted
Ordmance No 473
Finally, special elections will soon be held to fill
A STREET DEPART 1974 June
6 1976 and Or
vacancies in the House of Representatives caused by the MENT AND CEMETERY dated
d nance No
485
dated
DEPARTMENT
deatha of two members late last year - Rep William A
January 1 1978 and all other
Street Supef\IISOr
Ordinances 1n conflict w th
Steiger, R -W~:t the victim of a heart atiack, and Rep Leo
One to three months ser
the provts•ons of this Or
J Ryan, 0-Caw , slain by religious fanatica In Guyana
v1ce $1 781 43 3 mos
dlnance shall be and are
Three to six months ser
hereby repealed
vtce $1 921 99 3 mos
Sect1on 4 That th1s Or
Six to nine months serv•ce
dmance shalt be retroacfive
S2
087
35
3
mos
to January 1 1979
FaUure of the White House and organized labor to reach
N ne to twe l ve months
a~ent on a new Democratic member of the Federal sennce $8 680 13 Per Year
PASSED 2 19 79
Eledlon Commlaslon (FEC) has led former AFL-CIO
Street
and
Cemetery
ATTEST Jane Walton
CLERK
General Counsel Thomu E Harrla to reluctantly agree to Maintenance
ASSIStant SuperviSOr
APPROVED
a second term with the agency that regulates campaigns
One to S111 months service
Clarence Andrews
for federal office
S2 70 Per Hour
MAYOR
After s x months serv ce
Harrta hoped to step down when his Initial term expires
10 Per hour
later thla year But the AFL-CIO regard&amp; his post as a Sl Laborers
(2 26 (31 s 2tc
'labor seat" on the FEC and pressed the White House for
One to three months ser
acceptance of another union leader aa a replacement
v1ce S2 60 Per hour
But President Carter'a aides balked at the names
Three to nine months

Don't forget '79

Harris: stuck in the FEC again

S2 70 Per hour
proposed, expresalng preference Instead for a nominee service
nme months serv 1ce
whose credentiala Include being one or more of the $2 After
83 Per hour
following A woman, a member of a minority group, a non8 POLICE DEPART
Washington resident or a profeaalonal in the field of MENT
Ch1ef of POliCe
election law
One to three months ser
Among those whose namea surfaced In the fruitless v1ce Sl 635 79 3 mos
negotiations were former Sen WUllam D Hathaway, 0After three months servtce
153 73 Per year
Malne, former Interior Secretary Stewart L Udall, and $7 Captain
Patti Knox, a longtime Democratic party activist from
One to three months ser
MlchiRan
VICe Sl 553 11 3 mos
After three months serv ce

$683513 Per year

Names •••
~

in the news

Patrolmen
One to three months ser.
v ce S1 502 23 3 mos
After three months serv1ce
S6 543 17 Per year
Meter men
One to three month5 ser
v ce S1 419 55 J mos
After three months serv1ce
$6 212 45 Per year
Otspatcher
One to thr ee months ser
v ce $1 336 87 l mos
After three months servtce
S5 678 21 Per year
Extra
Patrolmen
or
Meter men $2 60 Per hour
Extra Dispatcher $2 60 Per
hour

, SEA TILE (AP) - R Buckmlnster Fuller sounds a little
vague about h1s current address, which may give the post
off1ce headaches m fmdmg hiS mailbox
C WATER DEPART
I live on a little planet called Earth," says the architect, MENT
AND
SEWER
mventor, philosopher "People don't live In smgle places You DEPARTMElH
Water
and
Sewer
find very few people herem town who were born here "
Otstrtbutton System
H1s comments came at a weekend news conference In wh1ch
Supermtendent $4 08 Per
he predicted that national boundaries would become archaic hour
Plant Super n
ljlld the concept of "country" will be obsolete by the 21st tenAsststant
dent S3 40 Per hour
century
Laborers
One to three serv ce $2 60
A new ''world man" will emerge on the global scene, said Per
hour
Fuller, deSigner of the geodes•c dome Large corporations and
Three to ntne mon ths
S2 80 Per hour
churches, realizmg 1t 's futile to confine the1r act lVIIIes to service
After ntne months serv1ce
national boundanes, already operate on a global scale, he sa1d $2 91 Per hour
After twelve months ser
Fuller enviSions future generations of human bemgs cross-

treedmg" mto a "world man

v1ce SJ 18 Per hour
0
Offtce Clerk Bookkeeper
S6 172 17 Per year
Asst,Jtant
Office Clerk
Bookkeeper S2 60 Per hour
Clerk of Board or Pubhc
Affalfs SJl 80 Per month

n

CINCINNATI (AP) - When fonner astronaut Neil Armstrong started making commerc18ls fOI' the Chrysler Corp , 11
may have seemed he was makmg a g1ant leap back Into the
public eye
E
MISCELLANEOUS
But 1t really was only a small step -Armstrong remains a EMPLOYEES
Secretary to the Mayor
very private man
Less than six months
in the 9~ years followmg his historic walk on the moon, servtce 12 552 90 6 mos
Stx months serv1ce
Armstrong has kept out of the spotlight In 1971, he moved to a SS After
678 21 Per year
farm and began teaching aerospace engineering and doing
SeCtiOn 2
All regular en'lployees ( 40
research at the UniverSity of Clnctnnsti
hours) must woriC;
the
"I have looked at a lot of opportunities without discounting schedu l ed
work
day
the entire f1eld," be said of his dedl1on to do the commercials prececrmg A holiday and the
work day follow ~no a holiday
"At Chrysler, they ve got a long history of solid engil\eermg, to
be el gib le for holiday pay
and .this IS the baSis on which they approached me to represent No Blue cross day or
Vacatton day can be taken on
their organization "
scheduled work day before or
But Armstrong refused to be Identified on the basiB of Apollo after
hol1day
unless

11

''He wanted to make sure nobody dressed him up m a space
suit," said Chrysler public relations manager Moon Mullins
"He said m no way did he want to take advantage of hls background"
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The announcement by Mayor
Dianne Feinstein was of a decidedly nonpolitical nature she's
getting married
Mrs Feinstein, 45, who took office as the city's first female
mayor after the City Hall asassinatlOIIB of Mayor George Moscooe and Supervisor Harvey Milk Iii November, says she's
engaged to Investment banker Richard Blum
•

'

'

qualif ied (5 days) vacat1on Is
betng taken A hotldav that
falls n a scheduled vacahon

wash•m gton
today•••
WASHI~GTON

(AP) Take 11 from the Wh1te
House there's no energy
criSIS nght\now
President Carter said the
other day that the current 011
pnce and supply situation Is
ser1ous hut not cr1hcal
He sa1d the other month
that energy shortages could
become catastroph ic,
threatening ragmg Inflation
and unemployment
That's the way lt s been bn
the government s energy
fever chart, up me season,
down the next Those
changmg diagnoses may
account, at least m part, for
the eVIdent public COnfuSion
and SUSpiCIOn about the
causes and handhng of

The Datlv Sentmel
IU•PS IIHtll l

DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
01)' Editor
DAVIDBUSKIR&amp;

Acfnrtfsbac MaDIJU
Published daily except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
ComJlKny Muhlmed111 Inc
Ill
Court St Paneroy Oh1o 45769
Busmess Ofri« Phone 9fl- 2158

EdlloriHI Phone 992-2157
Second class postage paid aL

Pomeroy Ohio

National advertlsmg npresen-

b!Uve

Landon A.ssodat.ea

3101

Euclid Ave Cleveland OhiD44JlS
SubscripUon rates Dellvered by
carrier "We available 75 cents per
w~k By Motor Route where carrierservice DOl avallftble One ~

13 1;5 By riWl m Ohio and W Va
One Yur 117"' Sill monlhi;
IJ4 50 ftree months $1 50
Elsewhere t32 00 year SIX monO..
00 'Fbrec month" 19 00
Sulw. ripllm price Includes Suncllly

'J7

Tlmeti-Ser!Unel

The mayor said Saturday she and Bluni, 45, plan a religious
ceremony before family and fnends 110metime after her
daughter's July wedding
Ms Fems\em, first elected a \)lty super,visor m '1969, ran unsuccessful campaigns for mayor In 1971 and In 1974
Her second husband, neurosurgeon ~am Femstem, dted
of cancer laat April Her first marrlafle to attorney Jack
Bennan ended m divorce They had one daughter, Katherme,
21 who IS engaged to bulldmg contractor Scott Morrison

Don't look back ' baseball immortal Satchel Paige
used to say "Something may be gaining on you "
These days members of Congress and the political
establishment In Washington are looking back, very
nervously And something IS gaming on the,m
That something IS a powerful grass-roots drive to cur~
the growth of U S goverpment and of the tax burden by
amending the Constitution to mandate a balanced federal
budget
Twenty-five of the required 34 state legislatures have
petitioned Congress to call a constitutional convention to 1
consider the amendment If nme more states act, which 18 •
considered likely Congress will have two unhappy choices.
It could head off a convention by Itself proposing a
budget-balancing amendment to the states Or it could
convene the convention the first one since the Constitution
was written In 1787, and accept grave risks
There are fears the convention couldn't be limited to
budget matters
It might take- up such controversial Issues as abortion,
gun control school prayers and equal rlghta for women, o•
produce a drastically rejlggered Constitution
Even If the convention only wrote an amendment to
balance the budget considerable hann could result Such 1
an inflexible order could lead to widespread budget
trickery on the part of Washington to evade .balance Or, If
for a referendum to make our folks blindly adhered to, It could tum a mild bualness slowdown
Into a full-blown recession
Recently the threat of putting the government in fiscal
hl!ndcuffs has stimulated the political thought process, and
better alternatives are coming mto view
One, worked out by Nobel Prize-winning economist
MUton Friedman, has won broad Republican support It
would shift the emphasiS from budget balancing to
NEW YORK (AP) -Conruct between the two agenCies run- constitutionally limiting government spending
rung the nation's om-commerCial radio and teleVISIOn system
Friedman proposes holding the growth of federal
can be resQlved Without coogress10nal act1on, says Newton N spending in any year to the -percentage that the economy
grew the year before Thus the government would not grow
Mmow, chau-man of the Public Broadcasting Service
"We're talking now with Robben F1emmg of the Corporation faster than the gross national product, and the specter of a
for Pubhc Broadcastmg trymg to anal)l2e what we can do runaway government expanding uncontrollably and crowthe people's freedoms would fade
wtthout changmg the law, ' says Mlnow, a former chs1r111an of IngThe
proposal contains needed flexibility
the Federal Commurucat10ns Conuruss1on who took the PBS
In times of rapid inflation an exception would be made
post last June
and spending would grow less than the GNP During an ,
"We want to know what stepa can be taken adminiStratively emergency or recession the spending limit would be
to reform our structures to enable us to work more harmo- raised Thus Washlngton could use its weight against
Inflation or stimulate the economy as required.
ruously," he says
But In general the federal government could not demand
• In fact, CPB and PBS have been embroiled for several years
an
ever-growing share of the nation's resources It would
m what amounts to a jurisdictional dispute Both were created
keep about the same relative size to the economy that it •
by the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, the corporation to now has
adminiSter flnancmg of non..:ommerclal rad1o and TV, PBS to
Certainly it seems wiser than rigid budget-balancing ,
oversee programming and station mterconnect1on
But amending the Constitution ought not to be done lightly, ,
PBS officials hsve ro:nplained loudly of CPB mterference m and the proposal should be the subject of congressional •
programmmg, and of the corporallon's failure to Insulate hearings, expert scrutiny and a national debate
Who knows, It just could be the answer to a federal •
programmmg from political pressure
The Carnegie COCIUillSSlon m the Future of Public Broad- spending machine and bureaucracy that Is beginning to
castmg, m Its report Issued Jan 30, exammed the troubled alann even thoughfulllberals
CPB-PBS relationship, and recommended an overhaul of the
Make-believe violence
system
ReviSion of the law governmg public broadcasting appears
Can It be that TV violence lsn t violent enough?
Inevitable, but 1t's Mitlow's pos1t1on a number of changes can
In a study done for the U S Conference of Mayors, two
be made m the meant1111e to protect both agencies' mterests researchers say much of the violence we see on TV Is
' The mam thmg I want, speakmg personally, Is to aaaure we "bloodleaa and therefore gives the impression that it's
are Insulated from politics," Mlnow says In fact, that was a hannlesa
pr1111e concern of the Carnegl~ Commission
As reported In Human Behavior magazine, Patricia
Documents from former President Nixon s Off1ce of Beaulieu Higgins and Marla Wllson Ray watched 73 hours
Telecommumcations Polley, opened recently to the public, of prime time TV programs and recorded the appearance
weapons on an average of nine times per hour
demonstrate clearly a failure of the CPB to protect public ofBut
84 percent of the shots fired from handguns missed
rad1o and TV from political pressure
- and when they did hit someone, they did't seem to hurt
'The 1dea at the start wss for CPB to msulate and protect us much
from the pobllclans," Mmow says 'We found they were the
With weapons being used ao frequently and ao cuually politicians ,
and yet hurting so few people - the researchers believe we
'
&gt;
'CPB should be the people who represent us before Con- may actually see a greater acceptance of real-life •
gress We shouldn't ever have to go to Congress They should violence
Well, maybe they have a point
be there protecting our Independence "
Those who doubt the need for an independent programming
agency should emnune carefully the admuustration papers,
Mmow says
"Many people thought we were be~ psranotd when we
complamed about political mterference,' he says "Ithlnk the
release of these papers confirms we had a right to be concerned
"There was a lot m those papers we didn't know about To
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D
see this camprugn agamst public affairS programmmg and our
mdependence laid out so flatly IS fr1ghtenmg "
'

No doubt about 11 Portsmouth Is the best team m
southeUt Ohio "
That's how Gallipolis Blue
Devil basketball coach Jim
Osborne described Coach
Dick Hopkms Portsmouth
Trojans foll0 wlng Saturday
rught's 74-50 Class AA Sectional Tournament championship victory over GAHS
before nearly 3,000 fans m
Ironton's sports arena
The defending state
champiOns, accordmg to
Coach Hopkms, "Played our
best game of the year
tomght "
It took the best to elunmate
the scrappy Blue Dev1ls who
bowed out With a fme 15~
season record
Meanwhile, Portsmouth,
now 20-0 on the year advanced to the Class AA
D1str1ct Tournament, to be
held m Ohio Umvers1ty s
Convocation Center this
weekend
The TroJans, who extended
the1r two-year wmnmg streak
to 28 straight 1mcludlng 10 m
a row m tournament play
over the past two years) Will
battle Waverly (15 5) m
Fnday's first sem1fmal
contest at 7 p m Nightcap
Fnday p1ts Southeastern
Oh10 League champion
Ironton
( 15-5 ) aga1nst

TV ... in Review

energy shortages
One wmter, factoc1es are
closed and people are
shivering f&lt;r lack of natural
gas ThiS year, natural gas Is
abundant and Secretary of
Energy James Schlesinger
says it should be used
wherever poSSible
Carter has asked, again,
for
voluntary
energy
conservallon
He said
Tuesday that the Situation Is
not senous enough to warrant
mandatory moves now
Schlesmger wd Wednesday
that before sununertime, the
government may have to
order weekend closings of
gasolme stat100s and order
fuel-savmg thermostat
setting In public buildings
That hardly sounds like the
moral equivalent of war, the
slogan Carter adopted In prQposmg energy legislation
nearly two years ago
AI the lillie, Carter ordered
the accelerated buildup of a
billion-barrel strateg1c oil
reserve, as Insurance against '
emergency
shortages
Accotdmg to the National
Journal, the government so
far has managed to stockpUe
72 millton gallons, little more
than ooe quarter of what was
supposed to be m storage by
now
U s oil 1111ports run to
about 8 mUllon barrels a day
Carter 88ld m his or~g~~~al
energy program that the
imports should be reduced to
6 million or 7 mUllon by 1985
Schlesinger has since sa1d
that won't be possible and
that, In fact, oil imports will
be up to 9 mUllon or 10 mUlloo
barrels a day by then
Under Richard M NIXm's
all-but-forgotten Project
Independence, 1985 was
supposed to be the year the
United States ended Its
dependence on foreign oU
Varying s1gna!S may be one
of the reasons Americans
giVe Carter low marks on•h1s
handlmg of t!nergy probl"ms
An Associated Press-NBC

News poll taken befoce the
!raman oll cutoff became a
maJ&lt;r concern showed 33
percent rate
Carter's
performance on energy as
poor
Only 19 percent rated 11
good to excellent, while 44
percent called it ooly fair
Four percent of the 1,600
people m the nationwide
survey said they weren't
sure
The AP-NBC News survey
and other polls have found the
pubbc
skeptical
of
government and mdustry
explanations of energy
shortages Generally, the
polls find that people suspect
energy shortages are ploys to
force up pr1ces
A survey m December
showed that 85 percent
believed gasoline shortages
were only a cover for price
mcreases
That kmd of suspicion
doesn't bode well for the
voluntary conservation
efforts Carter Is seeking

DEAR DR LAMB - I am
sufferu.g so badly from
cramps m my legs My doctor
prescnbed qu1mne sulfate,
and I take one tablet every
rught before I go to bed I st1ll
get the cramps occaswnally,
sometimes m the early mornmg or while I he on my couch
m the evenmg I would like to
know exactly the cause of this
temble pam, and 1f 11 has
anything to do With the diet
and what I eat
DEAR READER - There
are many reasons for cramps
In the legs and a complete
med1cal examma lion Is
usually Indicated IndiVIduals
who are def1c1ent 10 salt, hke
the heavy laborer who sweats
a lot, may have leg cramps as
an mdicat10n of salt dllJllellon I am sure that's not your
problem
'
I notice that you descnbe
aU of your Instances of
cramps assoclBted w1th
resllng, specifically while
you are lymg down m the
evening or sleeping at mght I
hope that means that you
don't have any circulatory
problem causing the leg
cramps;'but anyone who has
leg cramps needs to have an
exammatlon first before
deciding what to do about

Today Ill History
By The Associated Press
Today IS Monday, March 5,
the 64th day of1979 There are
301 days left In the year
Today 's hlghbght m
history
them
On this date In 1953, Soviet
Quinine sulfate Is frequentPremier Josef Stalin died m ly used to control leg cramps'
Moscow after 29 years m and It Is often very sucpower
cessful Many times we never
On this date
'really find out what causes
In 1770, there was a clash leg crampa, even when the
between British soldiers and doctor IS successful m cona crowd In Boston The trolling them
Incident became known as
Other things that are used
the Boston Massacre," and mclude vitamin E and
1t haalened the American Benadryl Just emctly why
Revolution
vitamin E should be helpful is
In 1766, the Spanish took unknown, but many doctors
possession of New Orleans do claim that It Is very
from the French
beneficial in some cases
In 1798, French forces
I have found very few
occup•ed Bern, Switzerland things that vitamin E seems
In 1849, Zachary Taylor to be useful for In human bewas Inaugurated as the 12th Ings, primarily because our
preSident
metabolic and enzyme
11

Sports World
By WID Grimsley
AP Correspondent

,

..

systems are QUite different
from ammals But there's no
harm m trymg VItamin E for
leg cramps if you choose to do
so or if your doctor wants you
to I am sending you The Heth
Letter number 4-12, V1tanun
E Miracle or Myth, to keep
my recommendallon m
perspective other readers
who want lnformallon on
Vltanun E can send 50 cents
•
mth a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for 11
Send your request to me m
care of this newspaper, P 0
Box 1551, Radio City Statwn,
New York, NY 10019
Benadryl, of course, IS an
antihistamine which means 11
mduces sleep and, for unexplamed reasons, 11 also may
help to prevent leg cramps
One of the home remedies
which seems to help a lot of
people IS makmg sure the feet
and legs are wann They are
the parts of the body farthest
from the heart and that
means they get the least clr·
•
culabon If you actually
measured skin temperatures,
you would find the
temperature over the legs
and feet IS usually cooler than
most other parts of the body
Good heavy wool socks that
come all the way up over the
calf of the legs are helpful In .the Wintertime, a person with ) r
leg craiJIPS might want to add
thermal underwear to this
The whole goal Is to keep
those feet and legs wann
I would caution against us- . , I
mg a heating psd or
'"
something that might result
m burning or mjury When a
••
person Is asleep, there IS
'"'
always a possibility he might
hurt himself before he
becomes aware of it

"
Today's birthdays Actor
Harrison IS 71 The
conductor of the Cleveland
Orchestra, Lorin Maazel lB
49
Thought for today A
decent provision for the poor
IS the true test of clvUizatlon
-Samuel Johnson, 1'/0f-1784
~

r

Sheridan (14-7)
In Saturday's Ironton
Sectional champiOnShip
game, the Trojans' two T's Cra1g Tubbs and Scott Taylor
- displayed all. their abilltles
to snap the Blu'l! Dev1ls' mnegamc Winning streak
Tubbs, speedy 5 10 semor
guard, hit from afar and
underneath and mtlmldated
the Gall1ans ,with hiS overall
quickness Tubbs hit on 11 of
19 field goal attempts and
was four-for four from the
foul line for a game h1gh 26
points
Taylor, 6-5 semor center,
connected on s1x of 11 from
the field and was two-of-four
at the foul lme for 14 pomts
He picked off 11 of the
TroJans' 24 rebounds
Kirk McMahon, 6-2 jumor
popped m 10 pomts from the
outside while burly Scott
Burrows 6-2 semor, who
entered the game for a 4 0
scormg average, surprised
the Galltans With IS points,
hlttmg seven of e1ght field
goal attempts from close
range
As a team, the TroJans shot
a s1zzlmg 57 9 percent from
the field, connectmg on 33 of
57 f1e1a goal attempts PHS
was e1ght of 11 at the foullme
for 72 percent The Trojans
had only seven turnovers

Today's

HEALTH

,{elieving
leg cramps

Tournament

•••

"
I "'

"'

ST PETERSBURG, F1a (AP)- The tall, loose-Jomted man
wearmg w1re-ruruned spectacles extend&amp; hiS celebrated nght
arm for a handshake, and says "My card "
It lSR 'tan ordinary card It IS a folded card as big around as
an official American Leagne baseball, which 1t dep1cts Open It
and you get an mtroduct1on to the bearer -Bob Feller
There IS a picture of a younger Feller and a br1ef biography,
detailing hls election to baseball's Hall of Fame, his three nohit and 12 m!Hut games and the notation, "Selected at the
Baseball Centenrual as the world's greatest livmg r1ghthanded
Pilcher "
In an age of fleeting legends, it Is hard to forget Bob Feller,
the Iowa farm boy whose blazing speed mowed 'em down m the
era of Joe DiMaggio and Ted Will18ms
DiMagg1o has managed to remam In the public eye as a dignif1ed huckster for an mstant coffee machme and a New York
savmgs bank WUllams plugs f1shing eqlUpment, hut, like
many of hls contemporaries, has drifted Into the shadows and
surrendered center stage to the Pete Roses, Dave Parkers and
Reggie Jacksons
Not Rapid Robert
Spnng trammg fmds h1111 Zlppmg from camp to camp He
never nusses a Hall of Fame ceremony at Cooperstown, N Y
He IS the most faithful regular at Oldtuner Garnes and other
functions
Have Indians Unifcrm No 19 Will travel
"Got to go to Appleton, WIS ," he wd after starting m the
annual Oldtlmer's Game at AI Lang Field here Saturday, and
striking out Willie Mays, the lu-st man he faced
"I go to about 90 to 100 functions a year to talk to busmess
groups and k1ds This IS 111 addition to my baseball appearances From the f1rst of May until Labor Day, there are not two
days m a row that I don't have a baseballm my hand. Most of
the time, 1 am m unifocm"
It's not the same un1form he wore for two decades with the
Cleveland Ind1ans, starting as a 16-year~ld prodigy out of Van
Meter, Iowa, In 1935 and ending ss the wmner of 266 gamesWith a four-year break for Navy duty m World War U That
one's m Cooperstown
FeUer, 60, reached mto his temporary locker and pulled out
an 8 x 11 mch Oyer with a full-length autographed picture on
th e fron t and a th oroug b histor1ca I record of hIS accom- the back
Pllshments ......
"I g1ve this to the fans who come out to watch me," he sa1d
"Cost me about seven cents each"
Then he hauled out another 1tem - a gold-embossed certif1•
cate that could have been a college diploma or a license to sell
booze
The certificate said, "This Certifies That (blank space for
name) Batted Agamst Bob Feller (blanks for date, place and
result),"followedbytheslgnatureofawltnessandBobFeller,
himself
' This 1s my new glnunlck- something special," he said "I
do a lot of stuff for banks, corporations and such For a fixed
amount, I agree to p1tch to some of the execut1ves a nd hand out
thiS certlfiCBte They love It "

with big win

.

)

By Greg Bailey
The Me1gs G1rls cage squad
opens tournament play
Tuesday mght m the Athens
High School Sectional agamst
Alexander a team the
Marauders beat twice m the
regular season
Me1gs the top-seeded team
m the Class AA tourney
could advance to the fmals on
Saturday wltli a wm over the
Spartans
Game t1me
Tues¢ly 1s 6 30 p m
Meigs
IS
hampered
somewhat by a couple of
mJurles
Apnl Kmg suffered an
ankle InJury and 1s a doubtful
starter, and Sheri Ltghtfoot 1s
also m)ured Those IDJUrles
leave Me~gs w1th a seven g1rl
roster
Probable starters for Metgs
w1ll be KrlS Anderson, Ten
W1lson Dod1e Chapman,
Toma or Soma Ash, and
.(\ndrea Riggs
The g1rl Mmgs Will have to
stop IS Alexander's Debbie
L1ghtfr1tz who scored 27
points m her last outmg
other teams In the tour
nament are Shendan,
number two seed, Warren,
Nelsonville-York, and New
Lexmgton Me1gs has a 11~
record while all the other
teams are 9-4
Sbendan goes agamst
Warren m the second game
Tuesday, and the wmner of
that contest w1ll meet the
wmner of the Me1gs contest
for the right to advance m
district competition Those
finals w1U be played Saturday
at 4 30 p m

c

RUe

-e ·

standz"n:0D'.''S
GA~ELS P OP
20 o 1403 1012
16 4 1185 1045
15 5 1404 1097
'f,~~';[.1 ~
:; ;
1 i~~
Gall!pohs x 15 6 1297 1155
Wash CH x 13 6 1080 939
Fairland x 13 7 1356 1130
Rock H•ll x 11 8 1147 1104
Logan x
7 11 1050 1069
Ravenswood
e 12 1252 1233
Wellstbn x
6 14 1223 1471
Melgsx x
41510881390
Jackson
2 16 1028 1316
X- Completed season
Saturday's results
Portsmouth 74 Gal!lpolls so
Ravenswood BO Wahama 53
Frtday's games
Portsmouth vs Waverly 7
p m at OU
Ironton vs Shendan a 30
P m at OU
TEAM ALL
Portsmouth
Pt Pleasant
Ironton

:m

Meias wrestler
..,.,

in state event

Coventry 70
IRONTON SECTIONAL
Archbold 8~ Bryan 59
CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
Bellv•lle Clear Fork 58
GAL:LfPOLIS BL'Ut;, DEVILS (50)
Upper Sandusky 43
PLAY ER-Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TO TP
Bel01t West Branch 63
Mark Sm1th f
03
00
0
2 3 0 Petersburg Spnngf•eld 62
4 8

Jelt Cameron c
Jtmmy Harris g

B II Armstrong g

Jeff Lanham f
Rick Oatley g
Matt Sterrett c
Mark Weaver f
Greg Hamngton g
Nick Robinson g
Kent Pme c
TOTALS
PORTSMOUTH
PLAYER-Pos
Jack Bendo!ph g
Cra•g Tubbs g
Kirk McMahon t
Scott Taylor c
Scott Burrows f

10
5 10

22
00

5 11

34

2
2

1

6

7

4

0

1

1 3 12
I
13 00
2
0 I / 00 0
00
00 0
01 00
2
00
00 0
00
00 0
22 SQ 6 8 14
TROJANS t74l
FG A FT A PF
3 4 00
4
11 19 4 &lt; 1
5 11 0 0
1
6 11
78

Chns HeUer g
Ke•th Wilburn f
Mark Bendolph I
Cra1g Wr~ght g
Bob RICkman t
John M•tchell c
Kev A!lburn f
TOTALS
Score by quarters
Ga! hpolls Blue Dev•ls

00

6

24
11

2
2

13 00
0 1 00
00
I2
00
00
00
0a
00
00
00
00
33 57 811

1
0

1

8

3
2

14
10

1

13

2
1
1
2

1
0

0

0
0

3
2

0
0

0

1

0
2
24

0

0
0

0

12

SO

TP

RB TO
2 4
1 0
5
I
11
4

a

I
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
II
24
12 8 14

6
26

10

2
0
0
0
0

14
15

C1net nnat1

Read1ng

56

C1nC1 nnat. Made&gt;ra so
Cleveland Cathedral LaM

96 Pamesv!lle Harvey 53

Dayton Cham nade
Julienne ss Ham•llon Badtn
53
Dayton Jefferson 72
Dayton Oakwood 56
Qelphos St John s 53 El1da
46
Ham Iton Ross 75 Cln
cmnall North College Hill 63
Lora&gt;n Catho!tc 105
Oberltn 76
M!lbury Lak e 45 Rossford
44

Navarre
Fa~rless
78
Creston Nor wayne 75
Oak Harbor 66 Genoa 64 ot
Olmsted Falls 68 Columbta

2
0
I Sta t1on Columbia 58
0
Portsm oulh 74 Gall 1po i!S
0 Ga ll!a Academy 50
0
Sandusky Perk1ns 71
0 Bellevue 68
74
Steubenvolle Calhoi!C
Centra l 70 Hann1bal Rtver
50 69 2 ot

0
0
0
0
7

16Portsmouth Tro1ans
14 18 24 18-74
OffiCials - Ron Borden and Garv Smith Chilli cothe
chapter

Thornvd le Sheridan 70
stewa rt Feder al Hock mg 42
Tiltonsville Buckeye Sou th

57 Wellsvtll e 55

Ohto G1rls H1gh Schoo(
Basketball
By The Assocrated Press

Elementary
tournament Akron Buchtel 47
Akron Spronghe ld
MasSillon 32
Alltance Marhngton 38
results
Saturday's Results
(C lass AAA Tournaments

Mogadore F1eld Jl

36

In the fourth and fifth grade
tournament action at Me1gs
Junior H1gh Saturday
Pomeroy Gray defeated
Bradbury W1se 37 to 33 and
Harnsonville defeated Salisbury 26-24
H1gh scorers fer Pomeroy
Gray were Buffington with
19, Houdashelt 14, for
Bradbury, W1se had 18 and
Becker 10 For HarrisonVIlle
Cline and Howard had eight
each and Barrett and
Hendricks four each, for
Salisbury Harrison had 18
and Warth six,
Th1s evemng Pomeroy
Gray will play HamsonVIlle
at 6 30 and Bradbury Kitchen
Will go agamst Pomeroy
Green Machme at 7 30 p m
The t wo wumers tonight will
PIa Yfor the Champ1onsh IP 00
Thursday, March 8 at 6 30
pm
mif
In siXth grade se ma 1
Tu sda M h 6
action on e y, arc •
RutlandwtllplaySalisbury at
6 30 p m and Pomeroy
Cyclones Will play the
Pomeroy Devils at 7 30 p m
The two wmners will play for
the championship on March 8
at 7 30 pm
All games are played at
Me1gs Junior H1gh in
Middleport Admlss1on IS SO
cents
de adults and 25 cents for
stu nts

Licenses

ffiUSf

be purchased
Oh1o's 1979 fishing licenses
are now on sale at over 4,000
locabons m the state, according to the DIVISIOn of
Wildlife of the Oh10 Depart
ment of Natural Resources
(ODNR)
1 he new licenses are
reqmred as of March I to take
f1sh, frogs , turtles and
mussels from all Ohio waters
Licenses can be purchased at
many retail outlets, Including
most hardware and spormg
goods stores
The 1979fishmg license 1f $7
for Oh1o residents ages 16
Dave Dav1s fmished second
m the unlunlted class, and
Johnny Eblin captured
second In the 126 pound
dlVISlon The Mmgs team
hmshcd fourth In the distnct
m a fleln of 14 teams

All 1ance 31
Barberton

62

Canton

T1mken ~3
Chesterland West Geauga

Chardon Notre Dame 36
Eucl•d 34
Pa rnesvtlle
R1vers1de 24

41

35

Lyndhurst Brush 45 Solon

Macedon1a

Teavs

Va l ley
Grandview 47

60 Columbus
Columbus M1 fll!n

73

Columbus Bexley 55
Marysvtlle 47 Frederick
town 38
McArthur Vm ton 39 Hills
bora 34
P1ckenngton 50 London
Madison Pia ms 29
Spr tngf•eld Kenton R 1dge

51 Dayton Northndg e 47
Uttca 82 Hebron Lakewood
23
Waver ly 64

Washmgton

C H 36
W•lltamsport Westfall 52
Carroll Bloom Carroll 35
(Class A Tournaments)

Ba1nbrldge Pamt Valley 47
Lynchburg Clay 43
Canal Winchester 78
Summit

Statton

l• ck1 ng

Hetghts 8
Chtll!cothe Huntington
Ch1ll1cothe Flaget 38

~5

Cmcmnat1 Country Day 60
Clarksvil le Summ1t Country

Day 32

Coal Grove Dawson Bryant
48 F ranklrn Furnace Green

27

Dayton

Northrodg e 43

Sugar Grove Berne Union 38
Frankfort Adena 43 Rtch
mondale Southeastern 29

Hemlock Miller &lt;0 Crooks

vd le 39
Lew1sburg

The Daily Sentinel

By The Assoct1ted Press
Saturday~s Results
(Class AAA Tourna"'enh l

(Class AA Tournaments)
Akron Hoba n 72 Akron

E V Clarke f

SPORTS.

Oh10 Boys H1gh School
Basketball

Barherton 103 Barberton
IJown 26 20 with 2 24 left m Norton 78
Clinton T•mken
All ance
the ftrst h;Jif GAHS got t"o Marhnglon
57
straight tips on JUmp bull•
Celma 48 Ltma Scn1or t16 2
but the slick fubbs broke ol
C1nctnnat 1 LaSalle 60
through tho c1rcle and m•dc
two key steals rcsultmg m C&gt;nc•nna t• Elder 55
Cmcmnat W•throw 73
qu1ck Trojan buckets Ports C.ncmnatl
Hughes 63
mouth talltcd 10 unanswered
Cleveland He1ghts 44
pomts to take a 36 20 lead Cleveland John F Kennedy
With 7 04 left Ut the third 42
Cle,veland West Tech 78
period
Cleveland Rhodes 54
The Blue Devils fought
Columbus
East
58
back to cut the dcftclt to 46 34 Columbus North 47
Dayton Wilbur Wrrght 59
on goals b) Cameron Harr1s
Lebanon 46
and t.:larke w1th 2 II left m
Eastlake
North
55
the third penod
M•yf1eld Brush 42
Groveport 67 Grove C1t y 48
However, Tubbs got a
Kettertng Alter 88 Dayton
three pomter at the I 42 Roth
59
mark followed by a layup at
Lex&gt;ngton 63 Shelby 49
1 06 and McMahon popped m
Mansi 1e ld Mad son 70
Ashland 59
one from far out (0 411
Napoleon 60 F 1ndlay 52
1 ubbs got another three
Parma Semor 79 Parma
pomter With 15 seconds left m Normandy
4J
the period to g1ve the TroJans
Toledo St John 56 Maumee
a commandmg 56-34 lead 50 ot
Toledo Start 34 Toledo
gomg mto the !mal period
Rogers 30

had 12 ass1sts. f1vc by Mark
Smith Gallla had 12 tum
01 crs ftvc m the third per1od
Gallipolis never led m the
12 n.mute contest The score
was bed four times m the first
stanza, 2 2 4-4, 6-6 and 12 12
E V Clarke s short JUmper
10 07) m the f1rst per1od tied
11 for the last time Tubbs
came down court and h1t a
long JUmper at the buzzer to
g1ve PHS a 14-12 first per1od
lead
Portsmouth
outscored
GAHS 18-11 m the second
period 24 It In the th1rd and
18 16 m the last canto

Marauder f(als
play Tuesday

By Greg Bailey
Meigs wrestlers fared well
m dlstrlct competition over
the weekend and will send
Qvan Wllflord to the state
Ccompetltlon at St John's
Arena next Thursday
Willford captured first
place In the d1stnct m the 155
pound class He IS the son of
BUl and Charlotte W1Uford,
Rutland
by Rose Ann Johnson's s1x
Willford has a sparklmg 19points
2 record, and the stout junior,
Southern advanced to the also a standout football
fmals w1th a thrlllmg 31-28 player on the Marauder gnd
overtune upset of heavily squad, Will go agamst n
favored Kyger Creek last Southwestern Dlstnct wrestThursday
ler, Barry Hutzel, from
Southern has won five Cincinnati Reading Hutzel
games In a row now and was has a 24-4 record, but finished
not seeded Southwestern was third In his D1str1ct
the second-seeded team In the
This Is the f1rst time m
tournament
three years Me1gs has had a
The wmner of Wednesday grappler advance to state
mgbt's contest will advanc~ competition The last wrest
to district competition in ler to go to St John's was
Chl!llcothe The winner wUI Duane McLaughlm
play the \ ktor lD the HillsMeigs nearly placed three
boro Sectional on March 13, wrestlers at the top, but m
at 6 30 p m m Chillicothe
this district only the wmner 1n
each "eight c!nss '!.dvances

SWHS adVance
By Greg BaUey
Southwestern romped over
Hannan Trace Saturday mght
In the Class A Gu-ls Sectional
at Meigs High School thus
advancmg to the finals
agamst Southern That
contest will be held Wednesday night at 7 30 p m
Mecca Jordan led Southwestern In the victory with 14
points while Linda Edwards
added e1ght
A tight defense allowed
Hannan Trace only two pomts
the first quarter and four the
second as Southwestern
jwnped out to a 25-6 lead at
halftime
Hannan 1'race was paced

Gall1a Academy was paced
b} !Hi JUruor center Jeff
Cameron who talhcd 14
polnts and collected seven of
the Blue Uev1is 24 rebounds
l!tllll!tg John) Armstrong,
5-8 JUnior guard chipped m
w1th 13 pomts JUilllly Harrts,
5-8 senlpr guard added 10 and
E V Clarke, 6-4 seruor,
chipped m e1ght pomts and
SIX rebounds
Gallla Academy hit 22 of 50
field goal attempts agamst
the TroJans' 1-3-1 zone
defense for 44 percent The
Devlls were SIX of e1ght at the
foul line for 75 percent GAllS

scores

T ..v1 n Valley

North 37 Waynesville 33
New Alban y 38 Mount
G•lead 3&lt;
Rrpley Umon Lew1s 43

St

Bernard 35
T1pp City Bethel 53 Un•on
Ctty M tss•ssinawa Valley 22
West Al exandna Tw 1n

through 65 Non residents can
get a seven-day tourist's
hcense for $7 and an annual
hcense for $14 A Writmg fee
of 75 cents ts charged for each
hcense

Twmsburg Chamberlin 44
Chagr n Falls Kenston 40
Uhrtchsv1ile Claymon t 44
Coshocton 4 t
Y oungstown Nor th 69
Youngstown East 49

(Class ATournaments)

Ada 59 Spencennlle 58
Arcad1a 51 Mount Blan
chard Riverdal e 47
Bascom Hopewel l Loudon
71 Fremont Sl Joseph 69
Botkins 58 Stdney Lehman

42

Canal
Wmchester
85
Lan caster F1sher (athol c 74
Ctncmnat1 Summ1t County

Day 79 Middletown Fenw1ck
63

Co l umbus
Readv
Fredericktown 71 ot

73

Cont&gt;nental 80 Bluffton

62
Haviland Wa yne Tra ce 93

Oh•o C•ty so
Holgate 65
Spencer Sharples

Holland
63

Jackson Center 60

Ltberty Salem 52
Latham Western

West

59

Seaman North Adams so
Lucas 16 Old Fort 12
Mafia Stem Manon Loca l
61 Mmster 41
Mmeral R1dge 52 Cortland

Maplewood 51

New

New London 41 Colltns
We ster n Reserve 39
Plam CLty Jonathan Alder
77 Man on CatholiC 73
R1pl ey Un1on Lew1 s 63 St
Bernard 62

Stryker 76 Edon 51

Valley South 51 Pleasant Holl
Newton Loca I 39
Williamsburg 46
tev !lie 28

By The Assocl8ted Press
Baldwm-Wallace , the
season
Two Oluo college teams regular
OhiO-have been etlmlnated from Conference champion, hung a
national
tournament 68-66 setback on W1ttenberg,
basketball, but four others the league's tournament
are still ahve
VIctor m the fmals of the
Oh10 State, desptte losmg DIVISIOn III Great Lakes
SIX of Its last 10 Big Ten Regional
Conference games, and
Sophomore Ron Myers'
mdependent Dayton earned shot at the buzzer provided
National
Invttat1on the vtctory margm for the
Tournament btds Sunday, Yellow Jackets, 21~ gomg
)ommg Baldwm Wallace, an mto
the
natwnal
NCAA DIVISIOn III team, m quarterfinals th1s week
post-season elllllmatlons
Wittenberg fmlShed 2iHi
Toledo could be Oh1o s only
Wnght State also bowed out
representative m DIVISion I m DIVISion II, absorbmg a 73tournament play 1f the 68 defeat from St Joseph s
Rockets can beat Central (Ind ) m the Great Lakes
M1ch1gan Tuesday mght The Reg1onal championship Neil
Rockets and Chippewas clash Brown sank 13 stra1ght free
m
a
Mid-American throws en route to 21 pomts
Conference playoff at Ann for St Joseph Wright State
Arbor, M1ch , to dec1de the wound up at 20-11
league's
NCAA
repIn other Ohio college games
resentative, and the loser Saturday, Ohto UmverSity
will play m the NIT
trunmed Ball State 81 74,
Toledo routed Eastern Bowling Green fell at
M1ch1gan 79-43 Saturday Northern Illinms 95-82 and
rught after Kent State had Xav1er clipped the Air Force
upset Central M1ch1gan 7~ 67.;i2
creatmg a M1d-Amencan co
championship The Rockets
Weekend
and Chtppewss matched 13-3
Sports Transactions
league records
By The Associated Pr-ess
The loser of the MAC
Baseball
Amer•can
League
contest will travel to Purdue
Milwaukee Brewers
Thursday for a bout With the S1gned
Ed Romero mffel de r
Boilermakers
National League
Ch1cago Cubs - S1~ned
Oh1o State, 17-10 overall
muffed a chance to share the Ivan DeJesus shortstop to a
year contra ct S1gned Steve
Btg Ten IItle, droppmg a 74-66 sDav1
s mf1 elder
deCISIOn at Purdue Instead
Football
Nat•onal Football l eagu e
the Boilermakers Jometl
Denver Bron cos - S1gned
M1ch1gan State and Iowa as
ed Ste 1nf or t and Allan
the league's c~&gt;ehamp1ons at Fr
Leav tl k1 cker
13-5
San D1eqo Charqers The Buckeyes, 12-6 m the Named Wayne Sev•c r
conference, will host St Jo- spec 1a I teams coach
Hockey
seph s
College
of
Nattona I Hockey
Philadelphia, 19-10 m the
League
lust round of the NIT
Philadelphia Flyer s
Thursday at st John Arena Traded Don Salesk nght
to the Colorado Rock es
Jun Paxson poured m 30 wmg
for future considerations
pomts for Dayton but 1t
wasn t enough as the Flyers
su£fered a 69-68 loss at
OPENING
Ch1cago Loyola Dayton
fm1shed With an 18-9 regular,
season record and will host
NIT foe Holy Cross Thursday
rught

NEW

OFFICE

Ask me about
Ufe Insurance
for 'fo_(lay'5
Families

Fayet

Worthtngton Chr st1an 36
West Jefferson 28
Yellow Sprmgs 102 Dayton

John Kauff

Insurance

240 Lmcoln
Mtddleport, 0

CAU:

I offer a total program to he p
protect )Our fam ly s way of hvmg

Newa rk Catholic 49

Albany 35

Ohio State,
Dayton
NIT bound

and build flnan c1al secun y lor ~o u r
retirement yea rs Call me for deta1ls

992-3969
In The Old
Anthony Butldmg

MIKE SWIGER
149 S Thtrd
Mtddleport, 0
992 7155
l h f l IUM

A

l i NIIIUIItCI

.

""'~""

)late Farm l fe a 1d
Ace dent As surance
Company
Home Oft ce

BiOommg10n lll• no•s

M1am1 Valley 7

ANOTHER CRASH
ROCKINGHAM, N C
(AP) - Cale Yarborough and
Donnte Alhson seemed
wllhng to chalk up a
pulverlZlllg e1ght..:ar pileup
they triggered m Sunday's
Carolma 500 stock car race to
the breaf&lt;s of the game, but
some of their colleagues

weren't
Three drivers made tnps to
the hospital - all were
treated and released because of the crash early m
the race More than $200,000
worth of racmg equipment
was badly mauled Allison s
car owner, Hoss Ellington,
had two cars demohsbed

BUILDING SUPPLIES
u HOME IMPROVEM .......
POM

~OY

CEM T
BLOCK CO.

The Department Store
Of Butldmg
Since 1915

'

�S-The'Dally Sentinel Maddlepnrt Pom.rov 0

4-TheDallySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Mar 5 1!179

Monday Mar 5 1!179

Quilt National '79 deadline March 20

Heart diseases caused most deaths in 1978

Qmlt National 79 a major
)uraed show of contemporary
quilts will he held at The
Datry Bam m Athens next
June according to plans
announced this week by of
facers of the Southeastern
Ohio Cultural Arts Center
Inc and the Hocking Valley
Arts Council
Opening to the public on
June 15 and contmulng
through July 8 the ellhlbit
will feature at least 60 quilts
of strictly contemporary
design showing the graphic
evoluUon that has occurred in
this ancient folk art fonn
Requests for entry formJt
have already been recetved

Annual health
report released
Heart and Its related d1seases was the leadmg cause of
deaths m Meags County durmg 1979 according to the annual
health report released today by the Metgs CoWity Health
Department One-hundred and thirty-nine county residents
died last year A total of 67 persons died from heart disease
Other death causes were stroke 'Jf1 cancer 16 lung
failure 12 shock four kidney failure two pneumo1ua one
suffocatton one skull fracture one crab death one
leukerrua ooe hemorrhagmg one and others five
Tins past year (1978) was progressive for the Meags
County Health Department wtth many stndes made for better
health care
In preVIous years the health department faced staffmg
diffaculties and problems proVIding the needed health care
Rece1pt of federal grant momes has enabled the board of
DR LEWIS TELLE
health to add three regtstered nurses and a nursmg clerk
makmg the needed health care available to the cttizens of
ORDINANCE NO 1079 79
Me1gs County
ORDINANCE
TO
A total of 10 764 clients were seen during the year of 1978 AN
PROVIDE FOR
EQUAL
for some type of health related service
HOUSING OPPORTUNITY
IN THE
VILLAGE
OF
Not mcluded m that total are children and-or adults MIDDLE
PORT
receavme the followme unmumzat1ons DPT lllO DT 562
WHEREAS the poputa on
of the V llage of Middlepor
Polio I 126 Mumps 91 Measles 299 Measles Rubeola 81
Oh o
nc ude s people of
Measles MumJ!S Rubella 195
d tterent races
creeds
The total number of climes held durmg the year was 140 sexes re g ous bel e s and
on at or g ns end
Such clinics mcluded VIStOII Hearmg Curdiac Orthopedic naWHEREAS
the Counc of
Plasttcs Well ChUd Hyptertens10n Scoltosts Flu and the v age ot M dd eport
bel eves n th pr nc p e ot
Immumzattons
equal r ghts and pr v leges
In the sarutatton department 48 animal bites were tor a c t zens and
WHEREAS the Un ted
mvesttgated out of 62 reportmgs
Sta es Cong ess ha s adopted
Eleven anunal heads were subnutted to the lab In Logan as
he nat onal pol cy to
Ohio for rabies testmg AU eleven were negative Tlie total p ov de w th n co n!t tut onftl
m tat ons for fa r hous ng
number of dogs that were licensed m the health jurtsdicllon throughout
our country
totaled 2 888
Be
t ordained by the
Water plays an unportant role In everyone s life The counc11 of the Village of
ddleport as fallows
health department s role ts to ensure safety for drlnldng M Sec
1
Deslgnetlon of
That t s hereby
Thirty-nme public samples were taken with four being Pol cv
gnated to be the con
reported unsafe Forty pnvate water samples were taken with des
t nu ng po cy of the V age of
twenty.five reported unsafe This sampling ls done by the M dd eport to do all th ngs
necessary and proper
o
county samtar1an tree of marge
secure for all ts c t i zens the r
One of the largest problems In sanitation ts food servtce
gh
o equal hous ng op
and vending Inspections and licensmg mclude restaurants par un t es regard ess of
the r race color creed sex
bars schools ftre departments churches fatr booths
marta
status
re g ous
hospttal and other establishments wtth a food service bel ef nat ona orig n age or
hand cap
operation
Sect on 2 Det nmans That
Sewage sanitation ts another large program
as used n th s ord nence the
follow ng terms shal have
Metgs County ts 436 square miles m area and a majortty of these
mean ngs
the land IS rural Smce central sewage systems are not
a
Real Estate Agent
available mdiVIdual sewage systems are the mam method of Rea Estate Agen Includes
any ear estate broker real
sewage dtsposal
es ate sates man or any agent
A total of 202 applied for pernuts to mstaU prtvate sewage thereof or any other person
parln ersh p assoc a on o
disposal systems One hundred seventy-nine were mspected 1=orporat
on who for con
wtth 150 being approved for installation and approval to s derat on se s purchases
exc hanges ren s negot ates
operate
offers
or
attempts
to
Along wtth these duties the samtarian has other programs nego ate he sa e purchase
sdch as nuisance garbage rodent and msect control camps exchange or rental of real
property or holds h mself out
trailer parks and many more
as engaged n the bus ness of
In Vttal Statistics Department I 043 transactions were se ng pure has ng
ex
ng ng ren ng o o her
handled m regard to birth or death records Atotal of $2 034 35 cha
w se transferr ng any
n
was depostted wath the auditor m fees for VItal statistics
erest n real property
b Board Board means
TI: ~re were three births m the county durmg 1978 Two
the F a r Hous1n9 Board
males and one female
c ea ed by th s ordnance
c&gt;
Discrlmln~tlon
Total Health Department bUdget for 1978 $50 404 78 Total
D scr m nating
or
depostts r1 738 90 Total expenditures $45 057 68
Olscr mlnate The
erms

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD
Tough Competition
after her death he may
By Karen Blaker Ph D
wonder tf you had him as a
DEARDR BLAKER-Our replacement for her (Maybe
family suffered a tragedy you d1d ) He may assume he
rune years ago when our IS- has fatled to live up to his
year-old daughter was killed stster s reputabon Recogmz
10 a freak skung acctdent
mg how dafflcult th1s satuation
!Jnhke our 8-year-old son
must he for Danny why not
my husband and I have lun1t your discusstons of your
grown to accept that cruel daughter when he 1s present'
twist of fate
And when you do talk
Danny leaves the room about her
make a
every tune we brmg up his
concerted effort to pamt a
deceased stster If we ask realistic picture of her as a
hun to stay he reluctantly person
g ves m but doesn t par
I11s also poss ble that some
tic1pate m the conversat on
of Danny s discomfort dunng
And he has not asked one these d1scuss1ons comes from
questton aboqt her I would the dtfftculty all 8-year-olds
thmk he ought at least he have wtth the comphcated
cunous We love to talk about topics of b1rth and death He
her because she was such a may wonder Where was I
wonderful person How can when my s1ster died' And
we help Danny feel hke part where ts my sister now'
of the famtly dunng these
You trught help Danny by
diSCUSS !ODS?
prov1dmg explanabons con
DEAR READER
ststent wtth your religious
Because Danny was not part beliefs and s1mphfled
of your fam1ly when your especially for him
daughter died discussions of
Speaking of explanabons
the tragedy and what preced
do you think Danny really
ed 11 probably make him feel understands the car
alone and ISOlated There 1s a cumstances surrounding his
SIX year gap between the two stster s death? If he does not
children to our fam1
that may add to his aruoety
aly The younger child ts very when the subject comes up
sensJttve about early fanuly At some pomt tt would proexpenences
bably help all of you to wnte a
She remarked upon hearing family h1story Include the
about a tnp we had taken dasaster but put at mto
wath her older brother to perspective
Cape Cod years before she
Most Important of all Danny
was born How come you dtd needs to he shown often that
everything fun before I was he IS at least as unportant as
born' Was I m your tummy his dead siSter Learn to cope
then'
Her feehngs of wtth depression the conunon
separation from the fanuly cold of emotional difficulties
were mitigated only by the Wnte for Dr Blaker s new
possibility that she had ac
hollme
F1ghtmg Depres
tually been with us on that s1on Send 50 cents plus a
trip In one form or another
stamped
self addressed
All youngest children feel the envelope to Dr Blaker 10
older ones automaltcally care of this newspaper P 0
have stronger taes wtlh the Box 475 Radto C1ty Station
parents Thts IS one of the New York NY 10019
bas1c mgredtents 10 the
Wr1te to Dr Blaker 10 care
umversal phenomenon of of lh1s newspaper P 0 Box
s1bhng nvalry Danny s nor
475 Radto Caty StatiOn New
mal sense of compettt10n wath York NY 10019 Volume of
his stster IS compltcated ma1l prohibits personal
because she exists only as an replies but questaons of
general 10lerest wtll be
tdeal to your memory
Because he was born shortly dl scuSSP.d in future columns

•

d scr m nat on
d scr m nat ng
o
d scr m nate mean o render
any d fference n treatment
o any person In he sa e
ease rental or f nanc ng of a
dwe I ng a
hou s ng un I
because of a pe son s race
co or creed se)(
mar tal
status
rei g ous
bel ef
nat anal or g n
age or
hand cap
d Housing Hous ng n
eludes any bu d no fac I t y
or structure or port on
hereof wh ch s used or
o cc up ed or
s ntended
arranged or des gned to be
used or occup ed as the hbme
es dence or seep ng place of
one or more persons groups
or fam I es and any vacant
and offered for sale or lease
for
he construct on or
oca on the eon of su c h
bu d ng fac ty or structure
e Lend ng lnsfltut on
Lend ng ns tu on means
any bank lnsu ence com
pany
sav ngs and loan
assoc at on or any other
person
or
organlza on
n the
regu arly engaged
bus ness of end ng money or
guarantee ng loans
( f Person Person means
one or more nd v dua s
corpora on!.
partnersh ps
assoc at ons
labor
o gan za
ons
legal
epresentat ves
mutual
com pan es
o nt
stock
compan es
trusts
un n
co para ed organ zat ons
ustees
trustees
n
bankruptcy
rece vers and
fdu ca res
Sect on
3
Unlawful
Hous ng Practices It shall be
an un awful hous ng pract ce
and a v olaf on of th s or
d nance
fa For any person or real
estate agent
(1 ) To d scr m nate aoa ns
any person n the sell ng
eas ng sub easing ren ng
ass gn ng or otherw se trans
ferr ng f any n erest n a
hous ng un t
U To d scr m nate against
any person by refus ng to
negot ate
making
fa se
representat ons
on
the
ava lab 1 ty of the hous ng
un t or w thdraw ng from the
rna ket a hou s ng un t wh ch
s for sa e ease sublease or
rental
(3) To nc ude n the terms
cond tons or pr v leges of
any sa e lease sublease
ran al ass gnmen or other
transfer of anv hous no anv
clause
condition
or
resrr ct on discr m natlng
aga nst any person In the use
or occupancy of such hous ng
(41) To discriminate n the
furn sh ng of an~ fac lltles
repa rs
mprovements or
serv ces or n the terms
cond tons
pr vileges or
tenure of occupancy ot any
person
(b) For any lendlnt In
st tut on to discrimInate In
tend ng money guarantee ng
loans accepting 1 deed of
trust or mortgage or other
w se m ak ng avllllble fUndS
fo the purchase acqu sltlon
cons ruct on
alteration
rehabllitat on
repair or
rna n enance of any housing
or d scr m Inate n the tiMing
of the ates terms conditions
or provisions of 1ny such
f nanc a I assistance
(c For any person or r:eal
estate agent Wltri respect to
any prohtb ted act spec fled
In th s ordinance to pub! sh
or c rculate or caustdto bt
pub shed or c lrcu ate
an v

DR SEUMBLAZEWICZ
not ce sta ement I st ng or
adver sement o to an
nounce a pol c y o to make
any reco d n co nnect on with
he prospe,;t ve sale ease
sublease rental or f nanc ng
of any housing which
n
deter
d ca es reliances
m nat on o dec son ba5ed on
race
color
cr eed
se)(
mar tal status age rei 9 ous
be ef na onal or g n or
hand cap
(d) For any pe son or relll
estate agent to ass st
n
com pel or coe ce the do ng of
any act declared to be an
un awful hous ng pract ce
unde
h s ord nance o to
obstruct or prevent en
forcement or camp ance
w th prov s ons of f h s or
d nance
or
o a tempt
d r ect v or
nd ec tly
o
com m t any act declarecl by
th s ord nance to be an
unlawfu hous ng pract ce
(e) For any person or real
esta e agent
(l To nduce or attempt o
nduce the sa e transfer of
n erest or s ing for sale of
anv hous ng by mak ng
represerJ at ons
regarding
the e)( s ng or potent at
pro)( m y 6f real property
owned used or occup ed by
any person or any part cular
race co lo c ee d e g ous
b el ef na anal or g n or
hand cap by d rector nd rect
methods
(2)
To
make
any
rep,-esen a on
to
a
rospect ve purchaser or
essee that any hous ng n A
part cular block
ne gh
borhood or area mlly un
de go s undergo ng or has
undergone a change w th
respe c t o
ac al co or
re g ous
nat ana ty or
ethn c compos t on of such
bock ne ghborhood or area
3) To nduce or at em pt to
nd uce the sa e o
s ng for
sate of any hous ng by
represent no
tt1at
the
presence or
ant c pated
presence of persons of any
part c ula
ra ce
coo
rei g ous ..be et or nat ona
or g n n the llrea w o may
esutt n
a The tower ng of p operty
va ues
b A change n he ra e a
color rei g ous nat ona ty or
ethnic compost on of the
block ne gliborliood o area
n wh ch
he p operty Is
located
c An ncrease n c mlna
or ant soc at behav or n the
area
d A decl ne n qual ty of the
schoo s se " ng the ar ea
&lt;t For any pe son or re~
estate agent to cause or
coerce or attempt to cause or
coe r c e re al at on aga n s
ahy person because such
person has l~wfully opposed
any act o fa ure to act tha
sa v olaf on of th s ordnan ce
or has n good fa th f ed a
com pian
test fed par
t c pated or ass sted n any
way n any proceed ng under
h s ordnance
(g) To deny any pe son
access or to membe sh p or
pa t c pet on n any mul pie
I s ng serv ce real estate
brokers
organ zat on or
ot her se " ce organ za on or
tac I ty relating to the
bus ness of se I ng o rent ng
hou s ng or d scr mjnate
aga nst a person n the terms
o condlt ems of such access
mem ber sh p or part c pa t on
(h) To do any other tt1 ng or
engage
n conduct wh ch
would
olherw se
make
un a va lab e equal hous ng
opportun t es
Sect on _.
Posting of
Nohces
(A Every real estate agent
shatl posl n a consp cuous
lo"at on n that port on of h s
place of bus ness normally
used by h m for negot at ng
the terms of a sale or lease of
hous ng and each person who
opera es
a
mu t unit
res dentlel bu ld ng con
fa n g more than two un ts
sh
post at all times when
ve tenants ctre be n.g
v ewed n a conspicuous
cat on n that port on of h s
hous ng bus ness norm ally
used by h m for negot at on
the rental of a hous ng un t
there n a not ce prepared by
the Board wh ch conta ns the
fol ow ng language pr nted
n black on a I ght co ored
ba c kground n no ess than
fourteen pont type
If s a
v olaton of the Fa Housing
Law of the VIllage of Mid
dlepor Sta e of Oh o for any
rea es ate agent or for any
person own ng or manag ng a
mu t un t
apartment
dwe og}h'~ 1 ~eny hous ng to any
person because of ace color
creed sex marital status
rei g ous be ef nat one
oriQ n aqe or handicap
2 o scrimlnate against
any person because of that
persons race .color creed
sex marital status age
rei glous be ef national
origin or hilnd cap w th
respect to the terms con
dltlons or prlv egu of
hous ng accommodation or In
the turn sh nos of fee I ties or
serv en
n
conn-ection
therew th
IF YOU BELIEVE Y01.1
HAVE
BEEN
DISCRIMINATED AGAI"'ST
CONTACT THE VI~LAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT FAIR
HOUSING BOARD
THE
OHIO
CIVIL
RIGHTS
tDMM ISS ION OR THE U S
DEPARTMENT
OF
HOUSIIiG AND URBAN
DEVELOPMENT
Sect on 5 Rettortj to ttl
filed
(a) On or peforo Julv I
1979 ttJfrY owner of twentv
f ve (25) or more ren at

r.

MRS MARYJ;IIltCIIFIELD
hous ng un ts toceted n one
or more bu d ngs n the
V llage of M ddleport she 1
f te w th the Fa r Hous ng
Board a written report
prov d ng nformat on se t
forth
In
the
follow ng
paragraphs for the three
month f.er od beg nn ng w th
April
1979 and for each
three
3)
mon h per od
thereat e every such owner
sha 1 f le with the Board
w th n th tv (30) t:Jays after
the end of the t hree month
period an lldd t onlll written
eport
(b) Repo ts fled hereunder
shll I be s gned by the owne
of the bu d ng or h s
author zed agent shall be on
a form o be supp ed by the
Board on request and shall
conta n the fo ow ng n
format on
{A} The name and address
of each bu d ng the name
and address of the owner the
nllme and address of the
manag ng agent the name
and add ess of the res dent
custod an the to 11 number
of un ts n each bu ldlng
(exclud ng un ts rented o
ava table for rent only to
em plovees of the owner or of
a m a nag ng agent
the
approx mate rental range for
a one two and hree bedroom
apartment
f the bu ld ng
Gonta ns such a un t) lind the
number of un ts occup ed on
the las day of the three
month per od by (I) one or
more Back persons and by
) one or mo f! Span sh
snurnamed persons
( B The total number of
appllcan s for rent a un ts n
eac:h bu ld ng dur ng the
three month per od and he
number of such app cants
who were II Black persons
and ( ) Span sh surnamed
persons For purposes hereof
an appl cant means a person
who personally appears
before the owne
or e
manag ng agent whether a
the bu ct ng nvolved or at an
off ce of the owner or of a
managing agent for the
purpose of rent ng a un t
whe he o no such pe son
subm 15 a
wr ften
ap
pi cat on
CC) The otal number of
units n each building wh ch
were ren ed dur ng the
per od and tne number of
such units wh ch were rented
to (I) one or more B ack
persons and to ( ) one or
more
Span sh surnamed
persons For purposes hereof
a un t s rented during the
per od f dur ng the per od It
bee om es occup ed by a new
tenant
who
had
n ot
previous ly res ded
n the
build ng
(0 Report forms suppled
by the Boa d shall nclude a
equ est for volun ary n
format on
concern ng
m nor tv
employment
p actlces of the owne or
agent s gn nQ the repo t and
concern ng adver s ng by the
o wner or agent n med a
pr mer y
o
d rected
m no ltv nersons
Sec on 6 Fa~r Hous ng
Board
(a There Is hereby created
he Fa r Hous ng Board to
cons st of threat (3 members
who are qual fled electors of
the V age and she nof ho ld
any pubt c off ce at the
mun c Pll county state or
federal evy at any t me wh e
a member of the Board Any
duly
appointed
Board
member who s running for
any publ c office shal
be
au tom a cally
d squallfled
from furft'~er membersh p on
the Board The day the Board
member files petit ens w th
the County Boerd of Elect ons
shall be he dllte of the
dlsquallf cat on
No Board
member shal be appo nted
who Is 'emp oyed In any real
estate or ending nstitutlon
(bl The Boar.d members
shall be llppo nted by the
Mavor Of the members first
appointed one sha I hOld
office for a term of one year
one for 111 te m o f wo years
and the other tor 1 term of
three years and the r sue
cessors st1all be appo nted for
terms of hree years The
Mavor shall f
all 11acancies
by appo ntmttnt for the
unexpired term
A Boa d
member whose term has
eMp red shall be el g ble for
reappointment to the Board
(cl
The
execut ve
secretary of the Board shell
be appoin l!d by the Mayor
and
tie tin employee of
!he V laoe of Middleport
(d) fhtt
MIYDf
may
rtcommtnd tt'l• nnoval of
any member of tht aoard for
neg ect
of
IWty
or
melf~esanct In office to the

•n•u

VIllage

cou~cll

T~

vmaae

council may removt ll
mtmber of the Board from
office bY' the vote of two
thirds (2 3 of the counc 1 only
after having first given to
suct'l member 11 copy of the
chlrges against him and an
opporlun ty to be publ ftly
htla;d n person or by counse
In h s own defense and any
such removal sl'lall be f inal
Ce) TWo meom bfra of the
Bo•rd stlall const tute a
Quorum for the purpose of
conduct ng the business
thereof A vacancv. on the
Board !ihall not mpalr the
rtvt)t .or the other members to
o~ci'St a I lh ' power of the

toll&lt;d

(fl Etoh member of the
Board shal !ierve w thout
aallry but sh-al be pa d
necessary and actua
e)(
nll!s eMpe11d nu
n per
rm lng the bYslness of the

t

lrd

(I I fhe Boll rd Is charged
with tn1 foUbw ng duties to

ALBERT lUlL
mplement the stated policy
of his ord nance
( 1)
To
nvest gate all
com p ants
of
unlawful
hous no pract ces wh ch are
fedwtht
{2 To nit ate camp ants
Of unlawful housing pract ces
on he bas s of aud t ng or
est ng carr ed out by Its staff
or volunteers author zed by
the Board
(3) To endeavor by con
c llat on to resolve such
com pian s
(41
To hold hearings
subpoena witnesses compel
the r attendance admln ster
oa hs take he test many of
an v person under oath and
n connection therewith to
requ re the product on for
exam nation of any books or
...l@.E.!2 re at n~ to any matter
under Invest gaf'on or ln
quest on before tt1e Board
IS) to render at least once a
year o the Mayor and to the
V II age Counc I a fu 1 wr tten
report of ell Its acllv les and
recommenda ons
(6) To recommend o the
Mayor
when
deems
necessary educatlona end
other pr'ograms des gned to
promote the purposes stated
n the ord nance
( 7) To adopt ru es and
procedures for the conduct of
ts bus ness
(8) To do such o her acts
that a e necessa v and
proper n order to perform
those dut es w th which t Is
charged under he terms of
this ord nance
Sect on 7 Procedures and
Enforcement
(a) Any person subjected to
an unlawful housing pra(lt ce
may fl e w thin l60 days of the
al eged violation w th the
Board a complaint In wr t ng
sworn to or affirmed wh ch
shel state the n~me and
address of the person e leged
to have comm t ed the
v otat on com pta ned of and
the part tulars thereof and
such other nform at on as
may be reqy red by the
Board The Board may also
corroborate
or
In tlate
compla nts on the bass of
test ng carried out by ts s aff
or vo unteers authorized by
the Board
(b) Upon the f ng of a
compla nt and executive
secretary of the BCJard shel
make such lnvestlgat on as
he deems appropriate to
ascer a n facts lind ssues If
the e)(ecutlve secretary sha
determ ne that ttiere are
reasonable grounds to bel eve
a v or at on has occurred he
sha attempt to cone! ate the
matter by methods of nit a
conference and persuas o n
nterested part es
w th al
and such represent at ves as
the partes may choose to
ass st them
cone 1 at on
conferences shall be Inform a
and noth ng said or done
during such Initial con
ferences shall be made public
by the Board or any member
of the Board or Its staff unless
the parties agree thereto In
wr ling
(c) The terms of con
c 1 atlon agreed to by the
par es sha I be reduced to
wr t ng and Incorporated nto
a consent egreement to be
signed by the partie! Wh ch
agreement Is for concll atlon
purposes only and does not
constitute an ad miss on by
any party tbat the aw has
been
v olatect
Consent
.agreements shall be s oned
on beha f of the Board by Its
cha rman
(d) The Board Is autho ized
to seek the cooperation and
ad of the Oh o Real Estate
Board or Oh o Clv 1 R ghts
Comm ss on
n any
n
vest gllt on under th s or
d nance
(f!')
If the
executive
secretary determ nes thllt the
com pia nt lacks reasonable
(!rounds upon wh ch to base a
vola on of this ordinance he
sha so nform the Board and
the
Board may In
ts
discretion d sm Iss such
compla nt or order such
further nvest gat Ol'l as mav
be necessary prov ded that
the Board !ihllll not d sm ss
such complaint without f rst
af ford ng the complainant an
oppor un tv to appear befora
the Board
(f)
If the
t)(ecut ve
secretary with respect to a
matter which ii'IVO!ves a
viotar on of this ordinance
falls to concl ate a camp aint
after he part es have In oood
faith attempted such con
G at on falls to effect an
informa
cone fat on
agreement or a form a
consent
agreement
or
determines that a complaint
Is not susceptible of con
c I ation he shall notify the
Board Immediately and the
Board
shall
thereafter
schedule a public hear ng to
determ ne
whether
ll
v olaton of this ord nance
has been com m tied The
Board shall serve upon the
respondent a statement of
charges and a summons and
shall serve upon all n
terested partes a notice of
the time and piece of hearing
The
respondent or his
author zed counsel may file
such statements with the
Board pr or to the hearing
date as It deems nectssary n
support of 1$ POSition The
hearing shall be opened to the
public
txcept that the
respondel'lt may request n
writ no apr vate heerln' the
determinat on
of
such
request sha I be dlscret onery
wl h the Board The hear ng
shall be held not leas ttlan
f fteen days after ttrvlce of
the sta temtnt ot charges and
summons The summons so

RALPH GRAV&amp;'l
ssued must be signed by two
members ot the Board and
the Issuance of such sum
mons shall requ re the at
tendance of named persons
and
the
product on
of
relevant documents and
records
The fa ure to
camp v w th a summons shalt
canst tute a v oat on of th s
ord nancl! The nterested
partes may a her option
appnr before the Board In
pe son or by du y ,author zed
representative and may have
the ass stllnce of an attorney
The parties may present
test mony and ev dence and
the r ght to cross exam ne
w tnesses sha 1 be preserved
A testimonv and ev dence
shall be gfven under oath or
by
affirmation
The
Execut ve Secretary shall
keep a fu 1 record of the
hear ng which record shall
be public and open to n
speer on by any persons and
upon request by any p n clpal
party to the proceed ng the
Board shall turn sh such
party a copy of the hear ng
record f any at such cost as
he
Board
deems
ap
propr ate
g) If at the conclus on of
he hearing the Board shall
determine
upon
the
preponderance
of
he
ev dence that tne per son
compla ned against has
v o ated tn s ordinance the
Board shall
after con
sulta on w th the Law
D rector
n
E xecut ve
sess on state ts find ngs to
and cause tt\e Law Director
to prepar~ end ssue an order
under
Board
d reef ve
equ r ng the person com
pia ned aga nst to cease adn
desist from such un awfu
conduct and to take su t h
affirm at ve action as wll
effectuate the purposes of
th s ord nance with not ce
that f the Board determ nes
that the person complained
agll nsf has not after f fteen
{15 calendar day &lt;~ follow nQ
se vice of the Boara s oroer
comp ed with the order the
Board will recertify the
matter to the Law Director
for enforcement
{bl Upon recert ficat on o
he Lew 0 rector for en
forcement he sha
seek
comp lance by appropriate
civ I action b ought n the
name of the Fa r Housing
Board of the VII age of
M ddleport before a cou t of
competent lu isdlctlon In
any such proceeding where
the court dele m nes tha
he e has been a viotat on of
h s Ordinance the court
shall award com penntory
damages and where ap
propr ate pun five damages
along w th a orney fees The
court may also order such
other re ef as Jf deems
necessary or appropriate
I
If at the conclusion of
he hear ng the Board $hall
determ ne
upon
the
preponderance
of
the
ev dence of he record that
the
person
compla ned
aga ns has no "alated th s
ord nanc;e the Board shall
s ate and publ sh ts f nd ngs
and ssue 1ts order d sm Iss ng
the compla n
Se ton 8 scope or or
alnance The prov s on of th s
ordnance shall apply to al
hous ng located w th n the
terr tor al
mlts of the
v llllge of M dd eport State
of Oh o
Section 9 Otfler legal
Act•on Noth ng contained In
th s ord nance shall prevent
any person from exerc s ng
any r ght o seek ng llny
remedy to which he m ght
otherw se be ent t ied or from
fll ng llny complaint with any
other agency or court of lew
or eQu ty
Sect on 10 SIVtrlblllty
section and sub sections of
th s ord nance and the
several parts and prov slons
thereof are he eby de~lared
to be ndependent of each
other
Sec
11
Th s Ordinance
shal take effect and be In
force
from
and
after
Febru1ry 12 1979
Passed the 12th day of
February 1919
Attest

Gene Grllte
Clerk
M L Kelly

Pres dent of Counc I
(2) 26 (3) 5 2tt

PUBL1C NOTicE

The Meigs county Board of
Mental Retardation
s ac
cept ng bids for a used school
VAN nametv
ONE 1969 FORD Twelve
Passenger
Club Wagon
Serlo Number E31AHE14354
S x Cylinder 240 CID engine
8 ds Will bf acctpted until
12 00 Noon
Wednesday
March 14 1979 The b ds will
be opened on Thursday
March 15 1979 Equipment
will be sold as Is with no
warrants expressed or m
plied and no add t ons or
subtract ons to the eqy pment
before or after the sale
Sealed bias should be ad
Chri~topher c
dressed to
Layh AdmIn strator Melg&amp;
County Board of Mental
Retardation
Court House
Pomeroy Ohio _.5769 Ti'1e
successful bidder must make
payment In full to the Meigs
Board of Mental Retardet on
before the equipment Is
removed and the remove
must be Within ten days after
the sale The Board reserves
the right to relect anv and a
b ds Van may be nspected at
the Meigs COUf1tY H IQhWIV
Department locattct at tht
Highway Garogo Roufo 7 •Y
pass Rock Springs Ohio

(21 19 26 (3) l

'

12 &lt;It

SOCIAl CAlENDAR
TUESDAY
I ADIES AUXII IARY
Pomeroy Eagles Club Aerte
2171 regular meetmg Tuee
day 8 p m There wall he
nommat1on for secretary at
the meeting

GENE JEFFERS

Business
•
mirrOr
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - At
some pomt the housmg pnce
Increases
become
m
tolerable
said Joseph
Benedtct a mortgage lender
He reflected Nobody knows
where that pomt ls he satd
I wlsh I knew
You mtght think Benedict
should know because he
heads a savmgs and loan
association as well as the U
S League of Savmgs
Assoctataons whose mem
hers make most of the home
mortgage loans But he
doesn t
About all he could surmtse
satd Benedtct was that prace
mcreases now at 10 to 12
percent a year mtght cool
gradually rather than
collapse Note the mcreases
mtght cool
not the pr1ces
themselves
The National Association of
Realtors estunates that the
median prtce for new smglefamtly houses Is around
$58 000 for resales $51 000
and that they re likely to
reach $64 000 and $55 000 thts
year
What Benedtct and most
otber housing people are
saymg in effect Is that
mtolerable
ts
tm
measurable They "e got a
fair tdea of the lunlts of
ability to pay
As consumer researchers
pomt out any buy dectsion
depends not just on the
money currently In one s
pocket but also on the
motavation 10 ooe s heart
Home buyers they say
sometames have
overwhelming desire
As Benedict sees tl new
housmg starts this year will
drop substantially from last
year to around 1 650 000 units
from 2 mlllion In 1978 No
collapse he says just a
logical and qutte ltkely
temporary !aU-off
Because of this cooling and
the anttctpated decline In
economtc actavaty generally
Benedict beheves we might
see 9 percent mortgage rates
late this year or early in 1980
compared wtth about 10 5
percent now
And then' Demographic
factors assert themselves In
the 1980s he observed 42
million people will move mto
the home buymg years a few
years etther side of 30 That s
10 million more than In the
1970s
Late last week the savings
associations voted support
for regulatory challjles to
permit variable rates
throughout the country In
stead of being restrtcted
mainly to Californta as they

SPEECH LANGUAGE and hearmg sel'Vlcss staff of
the Gallia-Jackson Meigs Commuruty Mental Health
Center are ~own They are left ro rtght first row

Community Mental Health Center
Announcement is being
made by the GaUls Jackson
Meags Communaty Mental
Health Center of the m
creased availability m the tra
county area of coordinated
speech
language
and
hearmg services The scope
of the servaces available will
mclude aU phases of speech
language hearmg Ieammg
disababt1es votce dtsorders
stuttermg and home vasits

for those persons who have
had strokes The staff m
eludes two a udiolog1sts and
sax speech
language
patholog sts At th s time the
foUowmg speech language
pathologists wall provade
these total functions Momca
Kuhn Chmcal Speech
Language Pathologtst Sue
Newman Clinical Speech
Language Pathologist Fran
McEwen Cbrncal Speech

__
.._..-...
-1
I

._.

!&gt;pectal smgmg Services
mghtly at 7 30 p m Public
InVIted
MEETING at 7 p m
Monday at Tuppers Plams
Elementary School to discuss
posstbtllty of formmg an
emergency medical servtce
MONDAY
MEIGS FAIR Board to serve Eastern Meigs
meeting 8 p m Monday at County Bob Salley of the
secretary s offtce on Rock county emergency medical
service wlli be present to
Sprmgs Fatrgrounds
answer questtons public IS
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN Invited
CLUB 7 30 p m at the home
MEIGS COUNTY Board of
of Nellte and Hallle Zerkle
Educabon 7 30 p m Mon
Members may call e1ther day office on Mulberry
Jeame Bowen or Betsy Horky Heights
for transportatton
TUESDAY
VOICES of Liberty vocal
HARR!SONVIU.E
PTO
group from Blcentennaal regular meeting Tuesday
year will meet at 7 15 p m 7 30 p m at school to make
Monday at Pomeroy Umted plans for spring camtval
Methodist Churcll to prepare parents are urged to attend
an Easter presentation new and take Ideas for carnival
smgers lnvtted
MEIGS HISTORY Book
SPECIAL l'EETING
Committee
Pomeroy Chapter 80 RAM Tuesday 7 p m meeting
at Meigs
7 30 p m Monday at temple County Museum
work In the Royal Arch
MEIGS Local Chapter I
degree all companions in OAPSE Tuesday 7 30 p m at
Vll•d
MONTHLY meeting of Meigs Juruor High
Friends of the Meags County
XI
GAMMA
MU
Librartes Monday 7 30 p m CHAPTER Beta S gma Phi
at the Middleport Pubhc Soronty 7 30 Tuesday at the
Ltbrary
all Interested Columbia Ga:; Co offtce
persons are mvlted to attend Rectpe auction, cultural proRACINE Chapter 134 OES gram ent1Ued 'Establish the
Monday 7 30 p m at Masonic Future by Lynn Shuler and
Temple If possible all of PhylliS Bennett Hostesses
fleers should be present and Dorts Ewmg and Donna
dues are payable
Dyer
REVIVAI.. service at Mt
POMEROY CHAPTER 168
Hermon United Brethren OES 7 45 p m Tuesday at
Church county road 82 the Pomero): Mas0111c Tern
Pomeroy now In progress pie Offtcers to wear gowns
through March 11 Rev Roy Elec!ton of associate con
Deeter Coolville evangelist ductess

1 Social 1
1 Calendar 1

As Benedtct sees at the
variable rate would provide
more security for lenders and
thus encourage them to lend
It would permit them to ralae
rates Instead of leaving them
fixed when their own money
ooasts rose
Hooey Factocy
Wtthout nectar there could
not be honey The flower nee
tar nuxed with enzymes
wtthin the bee s body breaks
down Into dextrose and
lewlose both simple sugars
'i'hls thin parrly ripened
honey IS stored In open cells
tn the bee hive The bees fan
thetr wmgs 10 front of the
cells to evaporate excess
water

peacbment to decide on
charges against Pretddent
Andrew Johnlon

Mootca Kulm Libby Cherrmgton and Fran McEwen
Back row Paula Cochran Keith Niner ADen Anderson
and Sue Newman Not ptctured ts Chris Campbell

Additional speech, language and
hearing services offered by

are now

In 1868, the Senate was or
ganized Into a court of 1m

from 40 states the District f
Columbia
Canada and
Swatterland according to
Nancy Crow one of theshow s
organizers Deadline for
entrtes IS Marcil 20
The Jury for the show In
eludes Michael James noted
authortty on quiltmg and
fiber arts Renee Setdel
managmg director of Gallery
200 m Columbus and Gary
Joseph Schwmdler associate
professor of fme a~s at Ohto
Universaty
Ms Crow also satd three
workshops that will be part of
Quilt Nattonal 79 and be
conducted by nallonal!y
known artists In con
temporary qutltylng are
begmnmg to !IIi up
Workshops scheduled are
Advanced Ptece d Qutlt
Destgn from 9 a m to 4 p
m June 16 wtth Beth and
Jeffrey Gutcheon Applique
for Quilts from 9 a m to 4 p
m June 23 with Jean Ray
Laury and Contemporary
Textiles+ Photo Slll&lt;screen
Techniques from I to 5 p

THE REV ROY DEETER Coolville wiU be
evangelist for revival services bein!! held at the Mt.
Hermon United Bretiren Church County Road 82
Pomeroy throuih March II at 7 30eacl! fflnlng There 1s

special singing and the public

IS

Invited

Language Pathologtst Ketth
Nmer Chmcal Speech
Language Pathologist Ubby
Cherrmgton Clmtcal Speech
Langage Pathologist and
Paula Cochran Chmcal
Speech
Language
Pathologist The audiologists
on staff mclude t:hrt s
Campbell and Allan An
derson Both are tramed to
perfonn complete hearmg
testmg as well as any spec1al
testing that might be m
dicated They recommend
and help the patten! select a
hearmg atd if necessary and
also have eqmpment which
will determme tf the hearmg
atd ttself as functtonmg appropriately As a part of the
total rehabilitatton process
for hearmg atd users Chns
and Allan strongly recom
mend aural rehabilttallon for
teachmg the cltent to use and
recetve maximum benefit
from the hearmg atd
Electronystagmography IS
another spectal test that
either Allan or Chrts can
perform They prefer that a
physacaan refer for thts
test10g so that the results can
be useful to the doctor m hts
diagnosts and trealment
At thts tune the speech
language pathologasts at the
Center provide servtces to aU
ages That as preschool
school age adults and Semor
C1t1zens may be m need of the
program It IS also very
unportant that the speech
language
pathologasts
coordinate thetr testmg and
therapy efforts wtth anyone
else who mtght be provtding a
similar service So tf the
chtld IS already rece1vmg the
servtces m the &gt;Chools then
the speech
language
pathologasts at the Center
stress the tmportance of
workmg together m order to
prevent duplicating servtces
In fact sometunes tl IS not
necessary for the child to
receive servtces tn both
locattons On the other hand
m some cases It may well be
of maximum heneftl that the
chtld receive as much as
poSSible
The restdents of the trt
county need to be aware that
the Center provides all
speech language learning
and hearing serv1ces lo all
age groups Those restdents
needmg this spectal at
tentlon regardless of mcome
or abtllty to pay can utilize
the programs available by
calling the Community
Mental Health Center s
Speech
and
Hearing
Department In each of the
three counties The mdivldual
county off1ce will then assign
a speech pathologast or
audiologist whtchever the
case requtres The Speech
and Hearing staff does
diagnosis and treatment of a
variety of speech language
learning
and hearing
disorders Several of the staff
also have special talents In
particular areas
For
example Fran McEwen
Clinical Speecb Language
Pathologist spent five years
working on a birth defects
team The team consisted of a
group of experts who
dtagnosed and treat ed
children with oral facta!
abnormalities Sue Newman
Clinical Speeeh Language

Pathologist has done ad
d!IIOnal
work
m
rehabilitating deaf and hard
of hearmg Momca Kuhn
Cltn!cal Speech Language
Pathologtst spent a year at
Veterans Adqumstrat on
Hospital and mcreased her
knowledge about stroke
v1ctuns head trauma v1ctuns
and laryngectomies She ts
also mvolved m dtagnosmg
and treatmg votce dtsorders
The total staff parttclpate
wath a team which mcludes
occ upataonal
therapy
psychometry
speech
pathology audiology soctal
work and an educatiOnal
spectahst Through the ef

WEDN&amp;'lDAV
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXIIJARY Drew Webster
Post 39 Pomeroy 7 30 p m
at the hall Members to meet
wath tile legtoMalres at 7
p m to plans for the birthday
party At the meel!ng the pr~r
gram wtll he on Ameracamsm
and leg1slallon
POMEROY LODGE 164 F
and A M 7 30 p m Wednes
day Work m the !hard degree
w1th all master masons m
vtled

m June 30 with Wenda von
Wease
The workshop fee IS $25 for
full-day sessions and $15 for
the half day
The Gutcheons are the
authors of many articles and
of two books The Perfect
Patchwork and The Quilt
Destgn Workbook
Beth
Gutcheon bas also exhibited
her work ell(enstvely
Jean Ray Laury a
Cslifom1an ls the author of
10 books on faber arts and Is
wtdely recogmzed as one of
the nallon s foremost
designers and lecturers m
the quilt held Her latest book
IS
The Creative Woman s
Gettmg It All Together at
Home
Wende von Wease a fabrac
arttst and quilt destgner bas
exhlbtted wtdely and as a
former edttor and art
director of the art quarterly
Today

forts of this team a total plan
as available for the famtly
schools or any otfter referral
source
Charges for dtagnostlc
testmg group or Individual
therapy are based on mcome
and the number m the family
No person shall be refused
servaces based on an mabillty
to pay For more m
formatton call 446 5500
Galha County
286 1626
Jackson County 992 2192
Me1gs County

r--lflfooiPlori;o:o~--~
I

I1

OPTOMETRIST

The Gutcheons will also
give a free public slide lee
lure Contemporary Quilts
on June 15 and Laury will
gave another Quiltmg and
the Breakfast Dashes on
June 22
Quilt National 79 s fmal
event ts an aU-day demon
stratlon oftrad!(lonal quiltmg
techniques on July 7 by
Amish qualters from Holmes
County
A full-color catalogue of the
60 qu1lts chosen for the
exhibit wall be designed by
P.orter Smtth Thayer and
publtshed m con)unctton wtth
Quilt National 79
Karen Adams ts ad
mmistratlve dtrector of the
show and Hamet Anderson
IS chatrman of The Da111'
Bam organization and head
of openmg arrangements To date Quilt National 79
has been supported by a
$2 500 grant from the Ohio
Arts Counctl a $750 award
from the Athens County
Commlsstoners from federal
revenue shanng funds and

Adm1ral
Quality
Color

ADMIRAL
QUALITY
COLOR

by contributtons frQm m
divtduals area banks and
)Qcal busmesses
A funding project now
underway IS a rarfle of a
contemporary qu11t by
Francotse Barn~s With
ttckets available m Athens at
the TriSOima Gallery or the
Fabr1c Store
An yone w1shmg further
mformatlon on Qualt Nattonal
79 or wtshmg to regtster for a
workshop or purchase raffle
tickets may do so by wrttmg
Quilt National 79 P 0 Box
747 Athens Ohto 45701

TV's
AGOOD CHOICE OF
MODELS AT A VERY
SPECIAL LOW PRICE

I

1

OFFICE HOURS 9 30 to 12 2 to 5 (CI..OSE
AT NOON ON THURS) - EAST COURT

I

!_!!....!2~.!!2!.----------------1

Meigs County Pioneer
and
Historical Society, Inc.
144 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, Oh10 45769
Here s a progress report on t h e Meigs county History Book proJect
As of today

p~ctu res

we have rece1ved mo r e than 600 fam ly histories and
we feel that many fami l les who have played an

However

lmportant part 1n the past and present of Me1gs County have not
responded ! For that reason coupled ~ th numerous r equests for
an extension we are pleased to 1nfor m you that our publishe r has

qr~nted a f na l deadline of APRIL 5

1979

The number of books sold

at that date will determlne tho number of pages in our bookJ
please make certain your order (accompanied by cas h o r check
family history are in by APRIL Sl

so
and

Many western Oh1o count~es have recently had their his tory success
fully published
The farnLlies who have seen their cou n ty s book
but faL led to res~ond b efore the dead l ine truly regret that they
were lef t out Of the book
Yo ur c h ldren and grand ch1ldren will
wLsh that you had taken advantage of t h1s opportun1ty too

REMEMBER THERE IS NO CHARGE FOR HAVING YOUR FAMILY HI STORY (500
words ) AND ONE PICTURE INCLUDED I N THIS HISTORIC BOOK I Your story
shou ld concentrate on your 1mmed1a te household
I t would be well
to 1nc lude so~ of the really interest ing events of your l1fe
Try
to wr1 te as 1f speak1ng to f uture generations 100 years from now
IMPORTANT
Si nce we must advis e Taylor Publishing Company of the
quantit y of books t o produce you are requested to complete the
order form b elow an d return 1 ~ TODAYI
Due to l~m1 te d product on
these books will undoubtedly become c ollec t ors items
Each of t he
books will be individually numbered and of course the l ower the
number the greater its value t o a collector
Naturally the sooner
you order and pay for your b ook the lower y our number wi l l be l
WE WILL PjiNT ONLY THE NUMBER OF BOOKS PRE ORDERED AND PAlO FOR
therefore you may want to order add1t1onal books now for g1fts or
other family members
A sample b ook from an other 6hio county is on d1splay at the Meiqs
County Pioneer and H1storical society Museum 144 Butternut Ave
in Pomeroy
If you have any f u ther questions please contact
Harqaret Parker Book Co~ttee Cha1rman
992 226 4
REMEMBER

AP RI L 5 IS NOW THE DEADLINE

THE FINAL DEADLINE!

·---------------------------------------------------------------

DEADLINE: APRIL &amp;, 1979

ORDER BLANK

THE HISTORY OF MEIGS COUNTY
$2500 each
1 00 tax
2 00 postage

PLEASE ENTER MY ORDER FOIL

_ _ _ COPIES

( f ma1led)
Name-- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - $2800

Send Check or
Money Order to
Me gs County H story Book
Pomeroy Oh o 45769

0 In odd1t1on to order ng

'

Address--------~----------

Town

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ state·_ _ _

z P·- - -

a book I am enclos1 ng my fom1ly household h story 1 p cture and
_ _ _ _ _extra _p ctures to be ncluded If space s ava1lable

�r-········"' ·".
6-TheDaOySentinei,Middleport·Pomeroy, O., Monday, Mar. 5, 1979

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday, Mar. 5, 1979

Happy Harvesters prepare for Lenten breakfast
In preparation for the
Lenten breakfast to be held
Wednesday at Trinity
Church, Miss Enna Smith
gave a meditation on
fellowship when the Happy

Today's Topic:

Harvesters Class met l"riday
evening at the church.
Using the 20th verse of the
18th chapter of Matthew,
Miss Smit ! Smith commented
on the content "for where

ever two or three come
together in my name, I am
there." She spoke of the I'
feliowship of man with God
and of the women of the
church with other organiza-

lions within and without tile
l'hun·h. To conclude her program Miss Smith used a
series of questions regarding
making visitors welcome, be·
ing concerned about others,

and cnj oyin~ the fellowship of meetings were read. Thank
others. She then had prayer. you notes were. read from
Members sang '' What a , Mrs. Gladys Cuckler and
Frit&gt;nd We Have in Jesus".
Mrs. Ruby Erb. It was noted
Durin g the busi ness that Mrs. Freda Duffy is a pa·
meeting minutes of previous lien! a( Veterans Memorial

Hospital and had been
remembered by t~e class ..
Cards were sent to Mrs.
Cuckler at Pine Crest, Mrs.
Erb at the Young home, and
Mrs. Marie Dailey and Mrs.

Other energy sources

POLLY·s POINTERS

By MARK PO'rl'S
States : oil shale and coal.
AP Business Wrller
And large deposits of tar silnd
NEW YORK (AP) ·
lie just over the border in
Higher oil prices and spot ·Canada.
shortages lrought on by the
Known in the trade as syn- .
shutd~wn of Iranian oil fuels - short for synthetic
production are focusing fuels - the three processes
interest on several alternate involve producing ordinary
forms of supply· that a few types of crude oil and natural
years ago were little more · gas from unlikely sources.
than ~l-earns.
Shale oil production involves
While commercial solar, mining oilbearlng shale and
wind and geothermal power using heat to squeeze the oil
are decades away, other out of tbe rock. Experts
alternate sources - like oil · estimate tbere is enough oil
from tar sand and shale, and shale in ·wyoming, Colorado
natural gas made from coal lind Utah to supply the United
-' may be practical in the States' oil needs foc nearly a
next few years.
century.
·
To get oil out of tar sand"The Iranian situation
points up the United States' also known as bitumen- the
vulnera ~;li t )'. " says Gary heavy, sticky S8l11l is washed
Ross, · an'Ioyst foc the with hot water to separate the
Petro te urn Industry sand and oil. In coal gasificaResearch Foundation, an lion, the coal is smashed tO
industry group. "Therefore, bits and heated until it turns
from both economic and into a mixture of gases. The
political considerations, we better quality gases can be
have to look more favorably mixed with natural gas to
on alternate energy sources." augment supply of that fuel.
The sources ·of two of the The low-quality gases
three most pracUcal sources produced can be used to
are plentiful in the United power the gasification plant

itself.
.
Although the technology for
synfuels has been In place for
Polly Cramer ·
several years - small-acale
coal gasification projects
existed before World War II
DEAR POLLY • When I
Tarnished
~ the cost has been seen as
was
unsuccessful in trying to
prohibitive. The price tag on
porch fixture
open
a jar of jelly I tried
extracting crude oil from
holding
the jar top under the
shale, for example, is
DEAR
POLLY
.
Our
old
running
hot water for a
estimated by most experts to
brass
porch
Ughting
fixture
is
minute
or
so and then it openbe about ~ a barrel.
tarnished
and
some
areas
are
ell
immediately.
Next I tried
That's 50 percent higher
painted over so J would like · this method on.a new bottle of
than the $13.;15 a barrel OPEC
some suggestions i::oncerning oil and found 11, too, opened
began charging Jan. 1. But
refinishing it. ·T.J .M.
right off. -MRS. W.W.
the Iranian situation is
DEAR
T.j
.M
.
·My
decision
DEAR POLLY • When
narrowing the margin.
would
be
determined
by
dusting
under very low fur·
Independent price Increases
.
whether
or
not
the
fixture
is
niture
or
the refrigerator I
1
by many oil-producing
brass
or
brass
plated.
You
,
use
a
thin
car window brush
nations have raised their
could
remove
the
paint
with
a
that
has
a
long handle and a
prices to nearly $15 a barrel.
commercial
paint
remover
·scraper
on
one end. It is also
And the Iranian-caused
and
then
try
cleaning
all
the
handy
for
comers and any
shortage of supply on the spot
brass
with
a
regular
brass
hard-to
-get
places.
oil. market has pushed some
cleaner or a paste of salt and GLADYS.
prices there up over f'A) a
vinegar but do rinse off well.
Polly will send you one of
barrel. General crude-oil
If this does not Improve the her signed thank-you
prices may not be far behind.
PERSONAL ADVOCACY Program Advisory Board
fixture's looks you had better newspaper coupon clippers if
"If we end up In that range,
members
:
newly
elected
officers,
Maureen
Coughlin,
left,
take it to a brass refinisher she uses your favorite
it will send the right signals
and
Paula
Viacekauskas.
and
have it rep!a ted and lac· Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
through the private sector
quered
OR repaint the entire her column. :Write POLLY:s
and maybe we'll get some on ·
fixture
black
or whatever col· POINTERS m care of this
from shale out of the ground
or
you
would
like.
• POLLY
newspaper.
in about five years," said
DEAR
POLLY
•
I
never
Arnold E. Safer, an analyst at
discard the tops to the type of
Irving Trust Co.
LAFF-A-DAY
air freshener I use as they
The cost of getting oil from
The Advisory Board of the handicapped · persons on a make great coasters for
tar sands is several dollars Personal Advocacy Program weekly ba~is .
glasses when on.e is entertainmore per barrel than with of the Gallia ·Jackson· Meigs
The major link between the ing. -ELEANOR
shale. Gas produced from Community Mental Health program and the board is the
DEAR POLLY· For many
coal costs a bout $5 per 1,000 Center held a meeting on chairperson. Suggestions
years
I have kept all my
cubic feet, some three ttmes February 21 at the Holiday and'()r comments for the
spices
in alphabetical order
what natural gas now costs. Inn. During the meeting, improvement of the program
in
my
cupboard
thus making
But Eugene Nowali; who officers were chosen for the in Gallia may be mailed to
it
much
easier
and
faster to
TillS M\TfHER NEEDS LESSONS IN
analyzes energy for the Blytb cominj_year. Pictured above Maureen Coughlin, Buckeye
find
what
I
am
looking
for. I
THE FINE ART OF LE'ITING GO
Eastman Dillon brokerage are (left) Maureen Coughlin, Hills Career Center, Rio
put
two
shoe
boxes,
one
on
top
DEAR RAP:
house, feels these methO&lt;ls
I'm atmOBt 24 and have a fairly good job. Each ttme I men· may be practical soon, too. the new chairperson and Grande, or phone Juli Orms- of the other, on a shelf with 1
(right ) Paula Viacekauskas, by, Coordinator at 446·5537.
lion getting an apartment of my own, Mom has a fit. She says I ''Eveiy ttme the price of a the
open ends (tops) of the ~1iefirS:tij;UtiO~~~~~
new recording secretary.
The Personal Advocacy. the
boxes facing out. The tins and '
don't love her, and I'll never come back to visit.
majoc fuel like petroleum Other
members of the Ad· · program ls one in which boxes of spices are placed elevator. The second one
Lately we've fought a lot. She expects to know exactly where . rises, it does bring · us
vocacy
Advisory Board in· responsible citizens volunteer sideways in the boxes ·so I starls World War .Ill ."
I go, how long I'll be, and If I'm not home by midnight, she somewhat closer to ' de·
elude Rev . .Robert Kuhn, on a one-to-one basis to work have four layers.
starts calllng arotmd.
velopment of other energy Rev . Hughes Price, Mrs. with ' a handicapped inWhen separating the yolk
· She still tries to choose my friends and condemns anyone I sources," he said, "At some Addle Wuerch and Dr. individual. This program has
from
the white of an egg
Bugged King
bring home. She thinks I'll live in sin if I move out, even th~gh point it could trigger a Bernard Niehm. The function two fold responsibility: to
break
the
egg
int.
o
a
funnel
In
the
13th century,
I'm still a virgin.
substantial effort in one of of the Advisory Board is to provide the handicapped
over a glass. and the white England's King John hunted
For quite a while I passively took this, but I can't be a child these fuels."
forever. Trouble Is, she's very strong-willed and can outshout
Opposition from some parts aide the Gallla County individual with a special will pass through the funnel game near Kingsclere, in
me. What to do? -ALWAYS CAVING IN
of the oil industry and a mea- coordinator in planning and friend and to assist the in- but the yolk will remain In it. • Hampshire, forcing the inscheduling the functions divldual In finding resource
habitants to feed and house
DEAR ACI:
ger amount of · encour- connected with Advocacy agencies within the com· MRS.J.R.
him and his retinue each time
Stop being a bowl of warm jelly! Rent ·an apartment, an· agement_
from
the
such as working with the munity that can best meet
he came. On one visit, he was
Department of Energy, handicapped. For example, . their individual needs.
nounceyou'removlng-anddoit! -HELE;N
so badly bitten by harvest
ACI:
.•
analysts say, has retarded the "phone friend" program
l"or more information
RETURNFROMTRIP
bugs he hastily departed.
Here's an idea : Why not go on vacation to establish growth in the technologies
was
introduced
as
a
possible
about
the
program,
or
if
you
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harry
Davis
Gratef!JI
townspeople erected
"separation"? It won't be so difficult moving into an apart· that could bring prices down
a·
v
enue
for
advocacy
at
a
know
of
someone
han·
have
returned
after
a
visit
in
a
weathervane
in the shape of
ment when you've already been out of the house several still further.
recent meeting of the board., dicapped who could use a Springfield and Columbus. the insect, and it still tops the
weeks. -SUE
And production of these The board advised that this friend call Juli Ormsby at They spent a day at Orient
church there.
forms of fuel on a fuU-acale kind of program would be 446-5527 .
with Miss Dorothy Leifheit
RAP:
commercial basis Is still at
My father and I were arguing. I said it's never right to . least a decade away, beneficial for. this area. 110P.C' ekcts 0 n;~er; and were joined there by Mrs.
v
'JJ"' J
Alma Johnson and grandson,
search through a child's dresser drawers. Dad said it's the although pilot plants are l"orms and gwdelmes from
other
phone
friend
programs
·
.
New
officers
were
elected·
Curt
· Leifheit, Springfield.
parent's house and if he suspects something wrong, he can try already in operation.
across
the
country
were
when
TOPS
(Take
Off
Pounds
From
there they all went to
to find it.
. "It's a
longer-term
examined
and
criteria
was
Sensibly)
met
Friday
morn·
Springfield
where they were
The question came up because my friend's mother found her proposition," says Ross. "It
established
by
the
coor·
ing
at
the
former
Meigs
entertained
by Mr. and Mrs.
birth control pills hidden in her bedside stand and fiushed can't help us today, but it can
dinator
for
this
type
of
General
Hospital
building.
Richard
Leifheit
at a family
them. Dad thinks that was okay. I say "No! " What do you say? help us in the future."
program
In
Gallia
County.
Mrs.
Wilma
Tillis
was
dinner.
Others
attending
the
-GEORGENE
Says Nowak: "We ought to
Presently
there
are
two
elected
leader,
Mre.
Marion
dinner
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.'
DEAR GEORGENE:
be thinking about these things
Generally speaking, I'd say a parent has no right to snoop in· very hard very simply phone friend volunteers Michael, co-leader, Mrs. LOis Davis, Mrs. Jolu]son, Mrs.
to a child's private property - which includes the contents of because of the long ttme lags working In the new "phone Clelland, secretary and Mrs. Garnet Runyan, and the
friend" program in Gallia Jo Stalnaker; treasurer. Miss Leifheit children. On Wednes·
dresser drawers, letters, diary, etc. But this doesn't hold when involved."
.
· danger is involved; i.e., if a father suspects his son or daughter
Nowak says that tbe large County;These ···phone friend" Kathy Rizer was appointed day the Davises visited in
of hiding hard drugs or Illegal weapons, he'd better call a amounts of capital Involved volunteers call several the weight recorder .. Mrs. Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.
Ellen Rought, outgoing · Robert Lehew.
search 1 - SlJE
in
starting
full"!!cale
will install the new of·
leader,
production of synfuels may
ficers
at
the first meetiilg in
DEAR GE0.lGENE:
be more than one c&lt;mpany gasification can cause
April.
Getting specific, I'd say, your friend 's mother shouldn't can bear. "One of the pollution.
Miss Rizer was awarded a
have flushed her birth control pills. Far better to discuss the problemll, of course, Is tbat
Similar, but more acute certificate
for taking the first
situation openly, accepting a decisioo if there 's no hope of these are massive· projects, problems, are dooming a
place
award
in her division
change. -HELEN
these are billlon-&lt;lollar pro)· much more cmunon fuel
for
the
year.
Area Recogniects," he says. So he suggests source, coal, which has been
tion
Day
was
announced for
RAP:
that it could take a all but written off by the
April21
in
East
Liverpool.
I got out of the bathtub and dripped to the ringing phone. A consortium of companies - energy
Industry
and
tiJII!Y voice asked if this was such and such a number, and or government incentives - govenunent as a long-term
when J said it certslnly wasn't, the guy yelled, "Why did you to bring synfuels into answer to energy problems.
TUESDAY ·
answer then, dummy?" Was he pulling my leg or did he really commercial production.
BOOKMOBILE
But backers of synfuels
wanttoknow?- R.T.S.
. In addition to price con- think their problems are
The bookmobile schedule
DEARR. :
·
straints, synfuels bave other surmountable. Arid . at the for Meigs County Tuesday is
He's probably first cousin to tlie hoaxer who calls three problems, many of them right price, analysts say, as follows:
ttmes with, "Is Betty there?" Then on the fourth round comes, environmental. Strip-mining synfuels could play a
Keno, 3 to 3:30 p.m.;
"Hi, I'm Betty. Any calls forme?" -HELEN AND SUE
to get at shale and tar sand is significant part in the Reedsville (Reeds Store), 4to
not looked on favorably by nation's energy picture. "It's 5 p.m.; Tuppers Plainsenyironmentalists, and the just a matter of trying to get Arbaugh Housing, 5:30 to6:30
manufacturing proce1181!8 for them out," says Nowak . p.m.; Chester-Methodist
those fuels and coal u'lbat costs money."
Church, 6:45 to 7:45; and
Riggs Addition, 8 to 8:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Steven, the president, was
Mrs. Dale E. Walburn of 560 escorted by his mother who
South Third St., Middleport, was presented red roses .
were the guests of their son,
Chapel services on Sunday
Steven, for parents' weekend, morning concluded the
Feb. 24, 25 and 26 at Virginia weekend acUvitles.
Intermont College, Bristol,
Steven was recently elected ·
Va.
to represent Intermont in a
Theme for the weekend was nationwide
contest,
"It's Our World and Welcome "Outstanding Young Men of
to It." Steven was a member America." He was also
of the planning committee for chosen by the student \)ody to
the weekend activities and reign as king of the May
senres as the Student Govern- Court actlvitle.s during
ment Association president.
graduation week, a tradition
25'{, Off Purchase,
Among the numerous ac· as old as the college. Steven
tivltles enjoyed by the has also been elected as one
Just Present Your
Walburns were the teacher of the top five outstanding
Golden Buclleye Card
education open house, faculty senior students at VIC. At
mini-lectures, art exhibits, a graduation cine will be
When Ordering.
disCo fa!hion show, one-act presented the president's
plays, the students' fine art award for outstanding
recital, 11 riding exhibition, scholastic work as well as
the Brliltol Concert Ballet Co. contributing toward . com·
There was a candlelight munity betterment for the
dinner and dance honoring college's benefit.
Walburn l• a !975 graduate
the Jlllrents with the highlight
of this being the presentation of Meigs High School and is a
of the the Student Govern· business administration mament Association. For the jor at VIC.
recognition ceremony,

Personal Advocacy program
elects ojjicers recently

a

Spelling Theft

SALE

.

•'

BATTER DIP FISH................~. $}99
99~
HIUSIIIRE FARM

SMOKED SAUSAGE •••••••••:~A:~~~~s...... .t~·.
KAHN'S LUNCH MEAT

SNAK PAK•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •.•~B~

·

KAHN'S LUNCH MEAT

BEEF EATER

ENGUSH CUT

BONELESS CENTER CUT

$

2

9

2

99
2
PAK••••••••••••••••·•••••• ! .~:.!

1

VAUGHAN'S

ardinal

29

CHUCK ROAST. .. :~·...1
$}49
ROAST.................L!~ ••
CHUCK

$}69
ROAST... ~8~
••

SWISS STEAK ...........L!.~l

U. S. NO. 1

Five years ago: Israeli
Premier Golda Meir formed
a new cabinet, Including
Moshe Dayan as defense
minister.
One year ago: Miners voted
by about two-to-one against a
coal strike. settlement.

59

WHITE OR PINK

POTATOES ••••••••••••••••••~~-L.~s~ •. s1 39

GRAPEFRUIT•••••••••••••••••••••••••. s LBs.

FRESH CRISPY

WINESAP

99~

CARROTS .••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2149e APPLES ••••....•.••••••••••••.••••••••. 4 LBS.

79~

TOMATOES ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2LBS. ggc ORANGES. ............................. 5 LBS.

Sli9

RED RIPE

·FLORIDA ·

YELLOW

Rro

~

·

ON IONS•••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• 3 LBS. 99e GRAPES ••••••••••••••••.••••..••••..•.•••••. :. 69e

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

PREVENTION

IS lHE

DOMINO

BEST POLICY

SUGAR

As
an
Independent
Insurance agency, our
mary function Is to
provide policies which
afford financial protection
in case of loss.
But, we also have a vital

SALE

Lb.

Bag

DATES

Interest in loss prevention,
as should ou• ·cllents. We

MARCH
5-10, 1979

encourage care, caution
and safety ... preventive
measures which can keep

limit one with

that car accident from

'10.00 purchese

happening, that building
fire from starting, that
home burglary from bellllQ
committed .
Prevention saves
limb and prooper·l~
helps
lns,uranc••l

1

PET

46 -oz.

DRill$,,·

Can

.

EVAPORATED MILK ............
2 'i~~: 75c
.

BROOKS

FOLGERS

costs

KETCHUP. ......................~~.~~-~~·..39¢

COFFEE

When losses do occur
our policyholders caonn ~~~~~
on protecting and 5I
in time and need. But
still say - prevention Is
best policy:

0

KIDNEY BEANS ..................
SILVER FLEECE
SAUERKRAUT. ............._
;.• 2 CANS 89~
DID RITE OR

REG. DRIP or ELECT. PERK
Umit one with $10.00 Purchase

992-2143
102W. Main

40 OZ. 79~
CAN
29 OZ.

JOAN OF ARC

$ 99

Lb.
Can

DAlf C. WARNER
INS.

SKIPPY

.

CRUNCH\'
- or
'
. ,·

CRI!AM\'

R. C. COLA 8B~~~~s• ·1 °

9

Pomeroy ·

INSTANT SANKA ........................ ·~:

4

5 19

ta.oz. ,
Jar

Plus Deposit

PRINCE

ELS

MEALor CHUNX

PRINCE

Roll

OZ.
PKGS.

]If,

•

DADS DOG FOOD .............................. 5

•

10

SPAGHETTI or MACARON 1...... ~~~· 45¢
.
4'
$100
MAC &amp;CHEESE DINNER
¢
314
SPAGHETTI ............................... -.' 79

Jumbo

WHITE It DEC. or COLORED

fiet
• back ·

..,

$119

lb .

FRANCO AMERICAN

.

I '

PENNINGIDN
Potato
BUDS

12 CT. PKG.

GLAZED TWIST DONUTS •••••••••••••

,
When you need money to ;

NABISCO SALTINES

·keep your car running, or
for any goQd reason, talk .
to us. We handle Personal
Loans quickly, easily and
with COIISiclmtlon. You
can borrow with trust
where ~e save with
trust. aty loan &amp; Savings.
We find ways to help.

1-LB. BOX
n.n,..,FT CHEESE

SIIGLES

MINUTE MAIO

·

·

·

'C

·

COnAGE CHEESE .............. :............ 1:~0:.:. 5 109
Borden's

·. .

CHOCOLATE DRINK ...........~ ........... .c~~:;.,

$

159

.
NUMA1D
2 $ 00
MARGARINE .................. c!~~. 1•

'
•
••

'I'

'

':-

....

POTATO BUDS
Limi t

one

one Mtti

cou~n

c~o

per krnlt:¥

2a.o,'
80

'%

.' .,'

~

SJI 9 ~ }
::

~, E~$/10/7 9
Gooel •t ·~ Acyel ll lue

., •· ,..

~
Stor..

~ t ...
t ~

:;;;

:

oo ... o 04 ~
I AlfG

09217100

'[)StORES
SIORES. • CAROINALFOOD STOA ES
KEEBLER FRENCH
.

.___..a

69

2
ORAIGE JUICE ................................. 1.;."~
5

Borrten'~

'!:.: --.....

'

RG.V'I
FROSTY ACRES

l

o

10 ·oz.

PEAS or CORN.................................... •••·
Ffi08TY .I.Ciil!l

CAULIFLOWER ........................................ ~·:

99c

ilte11lilteJ:I

FROSTY SEAS

.

~~

FILLETS~~:.-

~. ~

C

39

~

'·

'

• ( 10

'-

89&lt; ~

·~

11

""'

~

"o.:::
~:~~.-... 3!10179
OuOd ~ c.dlnej Roy•l l lu• Suuu

~
~

'

en

.. ..

00· 10 ·05 ~

CAHDINALIG

.
10 pack '1 29
HEATH BAR$....................... . • ·

BORDEN'S

'&lt; .•. 16-ot.
'
with~
ont coupon JHir',..,. \ Pkg .
Limit one

.

.. : f

VANILLA CREMES:

2% .MILK ......... --~~~.~....~.1

''

Loans to 1-40,000 llu'oup
The Oty Loan Company ·

Pkg.

• CARDI NAL fOOD Sl~RES
'II
I,
""'P:!"::TIT"!'l"="
BETIY CROCKER
..............
~

'

Valley Bell

'

Main Sl. • 992·2171

$ 19

12-oz.

59¢

OJ

AMERICAN. PIMENTO or SWISS

aTYLOA.N
&amp;.SAVINGS

125 B.

% OZ.

CANS

seat

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAU£Y

49

.

.

Before Noah Webster com·
piled his dictionary, he produced one of the most useful
volumes ever printed In
English, the Blue-Back
Speller . Unscrupulous
publishers pirated the Speller
and reprinted it without pay·
ment or credit. This fed
Webster to devise and cham·
pion the federal copyright
Jaw which Congress enacted
in 1790 to protect the rights of
authors. An 1870 law made
the Library of Congress the
first central agency for the
· registration and custody of
copyright deposits _in the U.S.

Attend parents ' weekend

SENIOR CmzENS

BEEF CHUCK STEAK. l1

'Frances Reibel.
Plans were made for serv·
ing · .the Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution on Friday. It was
decided to re-order birthday
and get-well cards to be sold
by the members. Vanilla is
still available.
World Day of Prayer was
announced for March 16 at
the Pomeroy First Baptist
Church. The Lord's Prayer in
unison closed the meeting
with refreshments being
served by Mrs. Ella Smith
and Mrs. Edith Lanning.

$

USDA CHOICE BEEF

BLADE CUT

•

./;.

�9- The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomero), 0 , M unday, Mar 5, 1979
8-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 5,1979
OR OINANCE NO . 10711'
IN THE
An Ordinante 10 establish
COMMON Pl!EAS COURT
Vill•ge Jobs and Wave Rites ,
MEIGS C'OU NTY , OHIO
and
uhbhshtng
legal
hOIId•ys , \'IUtions and sick
AT H E N S
C 0 U NT Y
IIIVe.
SAV INGS &amp; LOAN COM ·

Dlr.KTRACY

TELEVISION
VIEWING

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Be 1f orda med by the
Cou nc •l of the VIllage of
Middleport as follows
SK I That the following
wage scale is hereby adopted
for employees of the V1llage
of Mil!d leport
Ch ief of Pollee, $782 00 per
month
Regular Patrolman
5 years or more serv •ce ,
$3 53 per hour
1 year to 5 years serv 1c e,
S3 37 per hour
Less tnan 1 year serv )ce.
SJ 21 per hour
Extra Pol•ce $3 16 per hour
Str eet Employees
5 years or more servtce,
S3 35 per hour
1 vear to S years serv •c e ,
$3 20 per hour
Less than 1 year serv 1ce.
$3 OS per hour
Po ol &amp;: Park. D irecto r ,
$404 25 per month
Lifeguar ds. S2 00 per hour
Secretar y to Mayor , S33 6 00
per month
Extra CleriCa l Help , S3 28
per hour
Cler k , Ce metery Trustees,
$96 00 per month
Volun tee r F rem en, $29 00
per year
Counc 11men elected before
1978 S4 00 pe r meetmg (24)
Councilmen elected for
1978 S8 00 per m eetmg &lt;24 J
Pres •dent of Counc11, stO 00
per meeting {24)
Board of Publi c Affa~rs
$.4 00 per meet 1ng (12)
Cler k , Board of PubliC
Affairs, $531 00 per month
o.spat c her , $107 00 per
month
Clerk , Water Department,
$3 04 per hour
Water
8.
Sewage
Super.ntendent , SJ 96 per
hour
(11!~ t1mes over 40 hours ),
$5 94 per hour
Water &amp; Sewage Asst
Superint endent $J 3~ p er
hour
Meter Reader , $3 35 per
hour
Water &amp; sewage Dept
Ex tra Help
5 years or mor e serv.ce,
Sl 35 per hour
1 year to 5 years serv1ce,
S3 20 per hour
Less than 1 year serviCe
SJ 05 per hour
Mechanic , SJ 12 per hour
cemetery
5 y ears or more serv1ce
$3 35 per hour
1 year to 5 years serv1ce
SJ 20 per hour
Les s than 1 year serv1ce
$3 05 per hour
Re l 1ef DISpatcher. $2 90 per
hour
Sw i mming In structor , $3 25
per hour
$43 00
Custod1an
per
mont h
All eKtra hours for hourly
employees wil l be at the
hourly r!!lte
SEC 11 That secretarial.
clencal and or bookkeep ing
record -keepmg hour I v em
pl o vees be emp loyed at a
ma xim um of 35 hours per
week,
except
for
an
emergency tha t shall arise,
sa ld emergency of extra
hours to be approved by
Council
SEC I l l The following are
hereby declared as lega.l
hol •day5 for the employees of
the Village of Middleport.
New Year's Day , Memor ia l
Day , Independence Day ,
Labor Day , Thanksg•vmg
Day , Cl'lr.~tmas Day
SEC IV That said satartes
w il l be 10 effect retroact1ve to
Jo!lnuary 1, 1979
SEC v
Each full t 1me
employee of the Village Shall
be entitled to sick leave In the
amount of one and one four
1111•) days per month and
shall be ent1t led to accrue
said sick leave up to on e
hundred twenty (120) days
SEC VI Each fu ll t1me
emp l oye e of the VIllage.
Including full time hourly
rate employees sha ll be
entit l ed durmg each year
after the t1rst year to two
weeks vacation, exclud1ng
legal ho l •days, w1th pay
Em ployees w•th f •fteen or
more years serv 1ce sha ll be
entitled to th ree week s
vacation w1th pay each year
SEC VII Elich employee
of the Vllli'!lge ent1tled to
vacat10n shall
use th e
vacation t1me m th e year of
entitlement or shall be pllld
for any unused port1on
vacat1on at the1r preva •l•no
wage rate at the time of
payment If at the end of any
year any such employee hes
an accrued and unused
vaca tion time, the Clerk shall
make payment to t he em
pl oyee for such unused time
w1thm th1rty days CJ Ol after
the end of the vacation year
Vacat1on year shall mean
each 12 months pe flod
foHow.ng the ftrst full yea r of
employment
SEC V III That a gro up
hosp.tal and med• c al In
surance plan be prov1ded for
all employees of the V 11!age
of M iddleport who Elect 1n
wrlt1n,g, to part1c1pate 10 the
!)a me, and that the prem1ums
th erefor be pa •d by the
VIllage up to the amount of
th e prem.um quoted for the
pre sent co ntract
Sec I X That all employees
des•r lng to part1c1pate m the
plan shall file an elect.on w1th ~
th e Clerk w1thm ten day!S
after the effect1ve date of th is
ordmance
Sec
X
That salar~ed
emp loyees who do not elect to
pertlc!pl!lte be pa 1d an extra
S40 00 per month 1n addtt1on
to
the
present
Salary
schedul e, and those em
ployees plud on an hour l y
bas1s who do not elect to
participate m the Insurance
plan be pa•d an add1t1onal 20c
per hour Anv employee mlly
at any t ime elect to Withdraw
from the plan, and 1n such
even t su ch el ect1on for With
drawlll shall hkew.se , be
Hied In writing W1fh the
Clerk An y e mplo yee~
elects not to partiCipate In the
plan may f1te a sub sequent
election to part1 c1pate, and , If
o!lcceptab le to the msurl!ln ce
compan y on a non rated
basis, then such employee
may beco m e a part1C1pant .n
the plan Upon partiCIP.llflon
In th e plan tne add 1t1onal
com pen sat•on
shall
be
ca n cellett
L lkewlse, any
emp loyee who part•c•pates In
the plan may f1le an etect1on
to Withdraw from tne plan, m
which event h1s wages or
sa lary , as the case may be,
shall be adjusted as prov•ded
In th 1S paragraph
Sec )S 1· All Ordmances in
conflict wi t h this Ord10ance
are h~ r eby repel!lled
Sec XII lhi s Ord 1nance
shall take effect and be In
for ce
from
and
after
Febr uary 12, 1979
Passed the 12th day of
February 1979
Attest Gene Gra te
Clerk ·
_
M L Kelly
Pres1den t of Counc• l
(2)

26, (3 1 5, 21c

.,......_ _ _ _ _----..r :

PANY
PlAINT IF F

vs

WANT AD
CHARGES

JAMES SEE , whou address
ts unknown . CORA SEE, 1003

Soutl\ Second
'dleport,

Street,

Ohto,

and

Mid
RUTH

GOSNEY , 171 South 6th,
Mtddleport . OhiO. 45760
DEFENDANTS

I day
2d&amp;ty¥

NO 11 010
LEGAL NOTICE

3dlty!l

Pla •ntdf has brought l h1S

6days

act 1on nammg you as one of
the defendant s '" the above

named court by ftl•f10 h1s
complamt on J anuary 17

1919

The ob tect of the comp latnt

•s to fore cl ose a mor tgage
agams t

the

followtng

descr ibed real estat e and the
pr ayer •s to forec lose a mort

gage executed by you as
mortgagee on the fo llow •ng
descr1bed real es tat e t o
Ath en! Coun t y Savings &amp;
Loan Company and for 1n
terest. costs and fo r other
rei eta s may be proper The
real estate 1s descr.bed as
follows
S• tu ated In the VIllage of
Middleport . county of Me1gs
and Sate of Oh•o
Being Lot No 33. the nor th
part of Lot No 34 and 10 feet ,
mor e or l ess off th e ea st s1de
of Lot No 36, fo r a depth of 80
feet All In Behan 's Add1 t 1on
The to ta l of th e &amp;bove p&amp;rcel
of la nd be1ng 55 teet . more or
less, on Short Street, and 80
f ee t , more or less, on Front
Street
Reference Deed Vol 271,
Pg 935, Deed Records Me1 gs
Co unty Ohio
Yo u are requ 1red to answer
the co mpla1nt w1thi n tw enty
e1 ght days after the last
publ1cat•on of this notice,
wh•ch Will be pu bl1shed once
ei'!lch week for SIX success 1ve
weeks .
and
the
laut
pub l•ca t•on Will be made on
March 12, 1979
In cllse of your failu r e to
answer or otherWIS.ft respond
as perm 1tted by the 01110
Rules of C1vll Procedure
w •ftlln the t1me stated
rudgment by default w1 11 be
rendered agamst you for the
rel1ef demanded 1n the
com plaml
Larry E Spencer.
Clerk of
Common Pleas,
M e.gs Co unty Oh 1o
(2) 5, 12, 19, 26 (3) 5, 12, 6tc

Tuoodey, Merch I

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

l5WordsorU_ndtr
C.sh
Clw.rge
100
I~
150
100

1110

300

·~

!?S

Each word over the minimum 15
wonb la f. cenls per word per d~y.
Ads rwmlnB other than consec:uhve
days wUI be chall!ed al the 1 dlly
rote

In memory, Ca rd of Thank:! 11ontt

Obituary 8 cents per wurd, $3 00
nummum C'.Msh in advam.1!

Mobile fforne sales and Yardsalea
are accepted only wilh cash with
ordtor 15 cent chlu'ge for ads carry·
lng Box Nwnber In Care &lt;II The Sen·

lincl

The PubUaher reserves the riHht
to edit or reject any ads dremed ob-

}ectlonal 11\e Publisher wUl not be
responrible for more than one incorrect insertioo
PhoneWZ-2l5e

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Moodat
Noon on Saturday

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl.23) Adv1ce
g1ven by you or offered to you
will fall on deaf ears today
Netther yo u nor 1he other parties are lls1entng, so nothmg
can be resolved
SCORPIO (Oct 2'-Nov 22) tt
won't be the btg things that can
give you fl1 s today but bunches
Don t
o I mc1d ental Items
spend more on them 1han
they' re worth
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23,-Dec.
21) Before making plans lnvolv1ng ano1 h er , b e tl er c h ec k I o
see If this person Will go along
w1th you You could get caught
holding an expenstve bag
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jon tl)
Touchy I am Ity Issues co u ld
create unnecessary fncbon
today rf you voic e them wtthou t th •nkmg of the conse·
quences Leave them at rest
AQUARIUS (Jin . 20-Feb. 19)
Before f1nd1ng fault today, be
double sure your o wn sk1rts are
clean • You may start the crittque bu1 someone else could
d II,
en
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

On Febr uar y 13, 1979, m the
M e1gs County Probate Court,
Case No 22599, Ber nard v
Fu ltz, Box 7'23, Pomeroy,
OhiO 45769 was appomted
Executor of the estate of
Phyll•s I Rowa n, decease d,
late of Tuppers Plams , Oh10
45783
Robert e Buck
Proba te Judge
(21 19, 26, (3 ) s, ltc

1'177 FORO VAN • Completely
Insulated
tx
custom11Crl
rcll('nf o., hor(' Con be M'!'Cn at
S1mth N~ l ~ on Motors 9"/'J 785/

won t to huy or sell so•-noth1ng
nf' IClokiPQ IN work
CH
whn t('V('I I
~ n ul l grt rC' s u l t ~
l oqN wllh n Sf' nlin('l1 Won t f\ ,
l otlyq'/ JI Sb

11177 OlDS OHTA 8a outomo t1r
AC P S P H V tt rru 1se ro n
trol AM f M rod •o 4 door
9q-; 7b33 afte r 5pm

1973 CAMARO 350 Cl 4 sp $1650
'192 7869 of ter 5 pm
1973 ME~CURY MONTE REV Good
cond1 t1pn Almost new 11res
50 000 m1les S I :/00 Phone
6'14 6% 1001

-

Your HeadquarteiS For

Hammond

WILl CARf In• thf" f'lck·rly (( ou'

Armstrong Carpeting

&amp; Famous Name Brand·

.,.f

(l ll C

0~7

f IJ.d

WATfR WH L r!rd lmg Wdlmm T

houlmg Coli

GYMNASTICS
BAllET
ron
hnlonrr bC'orn fl oor eKerc •sc!.
IU 45 om Sa tu rdays O•rh•d
Ronm ovN Sear~ Glor o Buck
Wol lnrP qq') 7376

1978 CJS Jeep Mag wheels 1200
xIS t1res 1b 000 mde!. $5200
for
fur ther
mformollo n
992 3750

!:lA TON TAP rlo .,ce morchmg
parade ro utmcs
mo1orelt£&gt;
donee tw1 rl Glo Eil e Seton
Corp 734 Mom St G lono
Buck Wallace W2 732b

1917 CHEVY 4)(.4 short wheel
bose Mossey ferguson corn
plan ter Cu lti ... Dfors 99"} 708.4

HA UliNG liMf STONt grov('l
cool m1sc By ton or hour Carl
Long b69 3495

1&lt;174 DATSUN TRUCK with mot
ch 1ng blue topper
Au to
54 000 AM FM cassette Ree l
mce $2275 992 7805
1977 H CAMINO Classic SS Auto
AM FM 8
tran s P S P 8
track stereo Rally wheels ton
neou co... er Excelle nt cond1
lion 985 4287

ELLIOlT
APPLIANCE II

Grant 747 '/Bl9
WA HR ANO m1sr
99? 5858

WILL 00 general housework ~pr
mg cleonmg work done by 1 or
') persons hourly or do1ly hove
Hook1ng n ow
ref er ence
985 352 1 or 985 3839
NOW HAULING limestone 1n
M1ddleport Pomeroy area Co li
fo r free est1mote 367 710 1
BEG INNERS GOLF lessons John
Tea ford bl4 985 390 1

220 E . Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call 992-7113
For Free Estimates
tl9-1 mo

'

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repatr.
gutters and
downspouts .
Wmdow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

949-2862, 949-2160

lhruFrlday
4PM

Mobi_l.e _H.11mes fo_t:_S~ I!

Sunday

1967 TOTAL HECTRIC mobile
home fu rn1shed
3 bedr
washer and dryer A1 r cond1
floned I lot 210 It fron tage
$12 000 Phone 742 282b

4PM

Friday af~moon...
Card of Thanks
WE WOULD l1lc.e to el!press ou r
s1ncere thank s and oppree~aflon
to the Ewmgs Funero' Home Mr
Gerold Powell the m1n1ster Rev
Lowell Lew1s the pallb earers
lr1ends ne1ghbors ond relatives
lor the flowers food cords and
kmd words dunng the loss of our
loved one Anno Mae Thomas Ter
rell
The fam•ly Mr and Mrs Joe
Guess Mr and Mrs B1ll Spoun
and Shannon M1ss Juon1to Ter
re/1 Mr a n d Mrs John Thomas
Rolph and Mane

1955 Pro1r1e Schooner 28 ,.. 8
bd,
19b5Generol 60,.-12 2bdr
1968 flcono 52,.. 12 2 bdr
19b9 Buddy 60,.. 12 4 bdr
1970Syl vo 60ll12 2 bdr
1970Cos tle 6/Jx12 2bdr
1973 Arlmgton 60 x 12 2 bdr
1973 Rtdgewood 70 ,.- 14 3 bdr
1973 K•rkwood SOx 12 2 bdr
B &amp; S MOBILEHOME SALES
PT PLEASANT WV
675 4A 2.4
1976 BAYVUE TRAILER Toto l elec
Inc 12 x bO 742 2068

-

GUN SHOOT Roc•ne Gu n Club
!:very Sunday 1 pm Factory
choke ~u_ns_ o~ l t __
GUN SHOOT Rocme Vol unteer
F1re Dept Every Soturdoy 6 30
pm at the1r bu ddmg 1n Boshon
Factory chok!_ guns only
MAKt: YOUR own Easter can dy
, It s easy and fun•
Free
demonstration or wo rkshop
For mformot1on coli Carousel
_Conf~:._t1~n~ r~

!93 ~-:2 __ _

ATTENTION CLUBS1 Need o
money maker? Make co ndy
and sell l or Eas ter
Free
demonstrol 1on 10 per cent d1s
co unt on supplies
Call
992 0342
TH£ EASTERN H1gh School year
book staff 1s now tok mg orders
for the 1979 Easterner For
more mfo coli C1ndy P1tzer ot
9aS 3329
INTERMEDIATE coke decorotmg
Morning class starts March 30
Evemng doss starts March 27
Coli 992 6342 or reg1ster or
91;154 134

- ---

- --- -

CAKE DECORATORS'
Eoster
Workshop
learn panoramic
eggs co lorflow bunn1es end
many oth er Easter 1deos Marc h
21
Coli Carouse l Confec
t1 0n_!ry ~9~ ~42
Pets lor Sale
RISING STAR Kennel s Boord ng
and groom•ng oi l breeds
Chesh1re 367 0291
HOOF HOLLOW English end
Western Sadd les and harness
~uth
Horses and pomes
Reeves 614 698 3290
ORDINANCE NO . 1080-IV
AN
ORDINANCE
TO
REGULATE
PARKING
DURING
EMERGENCY
SNOW COND ITIONS

Be 11 ordained by the
Counc 1t of the Village of
M 1ddleport as follows
Sec 1 That an emergency
snow condlt•on shall exist at
such time during snow or
other severe winter w eather
cond 1t 1ons as the Mayor
determmes that the nature or
quant 1ty of snow or weather
condition
constitutes
a
serious hllzard to persons
t raveling on the streets and
highways The Mayor shall
1mmed 1ately upon mllklno
such ~eterm inatton ISSue a
proclamation In wr ltl ng and
not i fy the PvbiiC of the
ex •stence of such cond1tlon by
llny ava i lable means
An emergency snow con
dlt!on shall cease to ex•st
upon the determ 1nat1on of th e
. Mayor that such condition no
longer e)( Jsts The Mayor
shall notify the publ ic In the
same manner as above
provided
Uec
II
Durlno
the
existence o_f an emergency
snow cond•tlon , no person
shall park a mo tor vehicle
upon a publ ic street 1n any
other area of the City except
as follows
On streets where legal
parking Is permitted on bOth
sides, parking shall be on the
even numbered side of the
street on even numbered
days and upon the odd
nu mbered side of the street

dus!~g lrlddV~h~~~:r::rk~~y~

vio lation of th is section w ill
be towed at the expen se ot the
owner
Sec IV During declared
snow em erge ncy , th is Or
dmance supercedes all Other
par1&lt;.10g regulatlons Any
per so n found guilty of
vlolatmg this section shall be
f•ned Twenty -f ive Dollars
($25 00 1
Section II Th is ordinance
shatl take effect ar'ld be 1n
force
from
and
etter
F ebruary 12, 1979
Passed the 12th day of
February 1979
Attest

Gene Grate
Clerk
M L Kelly
Pres•dent of Co unc il
12) 26, IJI 5, 21C

I

1970 VINDALE 12M bO to ta l elec
tr1c two bedroom Iorge flp out
l1v1 ng room located 1usl off
RaCine Bashon Rood on I acre
Oh1o Power TP water Call
9d9 2196 A lso one cere of
land located jus t off ~acm e
Beshan Rood

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD
Pol es moll
d1ometer 10 on largest end
$12 per ton Bu ndled slob $10
per ton Delivered to Oh1o
Pallet Co
Rt 1 Pomeroy
992 2689
TIMBER POMEROY
ducts Top pr•ce
sow f•mber Co li
Ken ~ Hanby 1 4&lt;16

Forest Pro
for standing
992 5965 or
8570

PETE SIMPSON
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd.
Racme, onlo
Phone 949 2118 evenmgs
alter s p m
Weekends
after 12 noon.
2-5:1 mo.

'I'• mile oH Rt. 7 ~Y-PIIIS on
St. Rt !24 towora Rotlonct,

0.
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
ll:lso Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

·-

Real Estate lor Sale
COAL LIMESTONE sand grovel
c o fe~um ch londe ferhhzer dog
THREE BEDROOM house 1n good
food and oil types of sa lt h
locol1on wall to wall carpeting
cels1or Soh Works Inc t Mo1n
ce ntral mr cond1t 1on ng sc reen
St Pomeroy 992 389 1
m pol o and front porc h fenced
FRQSTV S C8 Rod•o Equ 1pment
m yard
W1th lro1ler spoce
Pme 17 500 Phone qg5 35 11
t:veryth1ng 10 two way rod1 0
antenna ond o ccess or~es THREE I)EDROOM RANCH sJyle
Phone Portland 843 2181 Open
home So lem St
Rutland
evenings unt1l8 Sundoy 2 11 11 6
992 S769
MI XtD CONDITIONED hoy Very
good guollty
Oe l 1v e r y
ovo•loble Phone 992 72 01 or
992 330'1
EVERYTHING S GOTTA GO
furnit ure
House and lot
cloth es co r ell my household
1tems Drop by 760 Laurel Sl
M1ddleport
ROUND HAY
843 2S24

bole s for

GOOD MI XED hoy
843 2432

for

sloe
sol e

Rt:OUCE SAFE and fast w1th
GoBes.e Tablets and E Vop wo ler
pills Nelson Drug
KITCHEN AID d1sh washer cop
per lone good co nd11ion S 150
Con be seen ot landmark
992 2181 or992701 5
1978 750 YAMAHA SPECIA L Ex
ce llent cond1flon
very low
m•leoge 9C/2 5013 alter Spm
DUE TO fl ood we wil l e,..tend our
sole I more week Buy your
1979 Gravely now and save up
to S600 S 100 dowJl holds td
Ap nl 15th Grave ly Tractor
Soles and Serv iCe 20d Condor
St Pomeroy 992 2975
19b3 INTERNATIONAl Scout Ad
t xcellent cond1 t1on No rust
992 7a57

-

bed moltress and bo x sp r~ngs
.ncluded S 100 Ellcellen t con di
f1 00 9&lt;12 7805

For Rent

21

-

POMEROY

Mulberry
FURNISHED APT l l 0
Ave No children or pets
depos1t ortd rent 10 ad vance
Reference requHed
Colt
44b 1788
1,

LANDMARK

Headquar1ers For
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

--- -- -- - FURNISHED TRAILER 2 bedroo m

SALE PRICES
JACK W .
CARSEY
Mgr
Phone 992-2181

Adults only no pets $155 per
Depos 1t
requ~red
me
949 2253
TWO BEORROOM tro1le r Adults
only 992 3324
TWO LOTS out of high water
Aquo V1sto Mobile Court
Svrocuse
$35 per mon th
992 29q7

27 ll 9 ova l brown hooked rug
992 3409 ofler b p m
Real Estate for Sale

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

SLEEPING QUARTERS for 3 men 3' , acres m Pomeroy Secluded
woodPd area on top of h1ll
TV and re fr1g erot or
Coli
Overlooks nver Water elec
992 7792
tnr ov01loble 992 3886

-

Help Wanted
HARDWORK ING
DEPENDABLE
he l p
needed
sawmill
Mechomcol oboil•ty hEtlplul
'1'12 596S

YOU'D FA ILED TO REACT
FA5T ENOU6H TO 5 TOP THOSE
TWO .. BELIEVE ME YOU'D BE

27320 Montgomery Rd
Langsville, Ohio
614-669-4 245 EvenJngs
2 Miles East
of Wtlkesv•lle
_2:! 4-1 mo.

A DEAD MAN BY NOW:

'IO U SEE. CAPTAI~ -- THE TE!&gt;TS
HAO TO BE REIIL .. IN ORDER TO
ACCURATELY DETERMINE; YOUR.
PHY~/CIIt.

COOL:

Momborot
Clllmoov
SWII'S GUild

,

'\1\1'\11.\.fl fii}lf W

Don't let a chlmn4y' fire put
• e11mper on your lift -

~=·n·nl
20th

1 '

ce~tvry

BORNLOSF.R

Know -How.

tli!ICIIIIllftl In

wooatovt, 011 ll•r:lf.ece
flfflroploco Fluor

'hone: Jn.:nll

K~m

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lener to each square to lorm
four ordinary words

SWEEP

jltftil Century Service wnr.

White, Proprl.,.
25-1mo

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHennArnoldandBoblee

~ ~ ~~~ ®

1n1uret1 '

!SAID
tr)! ~-00!

II

KI

I

~'A'r'IF- 'OJ ¥J,4lf tN:J.?E.

IJ{))~~ 1 0() ~"

REAL ESTATE loons Purchase and
refmonce 30 year terms VA
No money down (elig•ble
ve terens) FHA As low os 3
per cent down [ non veterens)
Ireland Mortgage Co 77 E
Sta te At hens 6U 592 3051

BEDROOM
ranch
ATTENTION RN AND LPN WITH THREE
Carpeted air co nd1t1oned Pnc
PHARMACOLOGY We now hovo
ed very re ason abl y " In
open• ngs m the 3 11 and II 7
Syrac u se~ ~2-SJ-4~
sh1fts ln(lu1r e ot Pmecrcs t Core
Center - A skil led nurstng fac• t• MODE THREE bedroom houSf full
ty 555 Jo(lc.son P•ke Goll lpol •s or
f1r epiOce
fully
bos.ement
r-n l l bl.A 446 71 I '}
corpeted centra l 01r enclosed
sun porc h locnted on 6 1 , acres
Cl!'l CR 28 opprox 3 m1les from
'
Ror •ne If 1nteresteci contact
WANTED Port hme LPN for doc
lorry Wolfe 949 2!:136 weekends
lor s a t t~cc Coli qq2 b633 bel·
o""d ofl er !:i eventngs
, \''""n ll on('! 4

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

I I rJ [J

SIDING
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ITORTOGt

_ I K)

•New Home
•Add -ons

*

J

992-6011

Answer here

LITTLE ORPHAN AIOIII'-UJIEAIUIED INCREMENT

NeS.DeD WHE N A
5USMA~INE
B~EAK~ DOWN.

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug
gested by the above ca rtoon

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIF.

Remoldmg

50UNDS LIKE IT 15

AN "[

XI I I )-[ I I ]"

2111moPd

9•2-JJ25
216 E. Second Street
FRONT ST BusiRess
bu1ldmg
tn
Pomeroy
Excellent locaf 1on for a
busmess wtth upsta1rs apt
to r ent out Opportun •tv 1s
knocking
STORAGE- Need a good
building w1th co n c rete
floor
water. elec t r te.
loadtng dock and park1ng.
out of h1gh water Wtll sell
for less than replacement
COUNTRY HOME- Has 3
bedrooms modern bath,
large eat tn k1tchen , full
basement oil furnace , and
garden Not far from town
3 lJ ACRES - R1ver front
land w 1th drtlled well and
space ready for 2 tra ilers
Better see this now or
you'll m1 ss tt
PLEASURE, Wan l a
nver front lot or one in the
woods 1 to 5 acres now
available Don't wa 1f and
pay more
Th1nk what a SJO 000 00
HOME WILL COST Y OU 5
YRS FROM NOW, W I TH
10 PCT
INFLATION
THINK AND BUY NOW
CALL '192 3325
Gordon B
Helen L.
Sue P Murphy
Realtor Associates

Housing
Headquarters
FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
tro 1ler large pond 10 acres or
87 acres 742 2566

SONV TRINITRON co lor por
t abl e
l1ke new
$435
997 7a05

3 AND 4 RM furnished ond un SEVERAL USED cho1n sows good
furn 1s hed
opt s
Phon e
cond1 hon One fd e cob1net
992 5434
damag ed
1n
sh1pment
Pomeroy Home and Auto bOO
TWO BEDROOM k•tchen lurmsh
E Mo1n St Pomeroy
ed opt Coli before 8 om
992 22aa
LOWREY GENII: 4-4 argon 2
LARGE HOME 1n Pomeroy
rd s bu1lt m tope play er
keyboa
992 2205 before 5
$1 000 992 7354
FURNISHED HOUSE 1n M1ddleport
Su1toble for four construct1on
workers Call after b pm
304 Ba2 2566 or 992 54J4
MOB ILE HOME Completely fu r
ntshed 3 bedroom Burlingham
area 992 7479

a

CAPTAIN F.ASY

'~~--

-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route JJ north of Pomeroy
~orge lots ~ ol ! :!9~ 7_47_9_ _ _

J

MonlgomeiJ
Trailer Sales

Sales Rep. For
Sundins

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

1

TRACTOR DRiVEN •
PTOALTERNATORS
from 1s,ooo to
75,000 watts

PIANOS

For Sale

OLD FURN ITURt: 1ce bo xes brass FORSALE 1b game pullets tay:1ng
Gelnn E Je well Rt 2 Albany
beds 1ron beds desks etc
Oh1o
[Pog ev dle )
Ph one
complete households Wnte
098 52 IS
M 0 M1! ler Rt 4 Pomeroy or
call m 776(J
RtDI HAUL TRIPLE duty (flatbed
gro 1n
catt l e) Gooseneck
OlD COINS pocke t watches
fro lers Montgomery Trader
class r1ngs weddmg bonds
So le s'
l on gsv 1lle
O h1 o
d1 amonds Gold or silver Coli
669 42-iS even1ngs
N ear
R o g erWom sley _ 7 42_2~31
W•lkesvtlle Oh1o
WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
Co li BEA UTY SHOP Equ1pmen f dryers
phonograph records
hydroul1c cho1rs bowls co lor
992 6370 or Con tact Morl1n Fur
mochme suppl1es h01r spray
n1ture
sys tems Ruth s Beauty Shop
WANTED TO buy old 1ewelrv
Mason WV 304 773 5686
Call 992 5262 or wnte Kay
CeCil 87 S 2nd M 1ddleport )970 INTE RNA TIONAL Tra va il
S350 Phone 985 3373
OH
CASH FOR 1unk ca rs 24 hour lS CU FT Gibson refngerotor
E)( ce llen t con d1t1on 742 2667
wrecker
serv 1ce
Fry e s
Rutland OH 7d2 2081
TWIN SIZE sol1 d maple conopy

-

[

.

ORGANS

2 7 mo

the day befare publlcaUon

,....

..

Servtces Off ered
h o me

MONDAY, MARCH 5.1919
6 JO--NBC News 3,15, ABC News 13. Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8.10, My Three Sons 17 Over
·Easy 2ct
7 oo-Cross W1 t s 3, Newlywed Game 6 13. Pop Goes
The Country 8, News 10. Love Am encan Sty le 15.
Carol Burnett 17 D1ck Cavetl 20,, k now Your
Schools 33 7 3o- That Nashvtlle Mustc 3 Muppet Show 6, P ric e IS
R1ght a, Wild K i ngdom 10, $1 9a Beauty Show 13
Na shville On The Road lS , Sanford &amp; Son 17.
MacNeil Lehrrer Report 20,3J
a OQ--L itl l e Hou se On The Pra1r1e 3 15 Salvage 6, 13,
B1 1ly 10 Bill Moyers' Journal 20,33, Leis Go To
The Races 17
8 31)--F iatbu sh 6,10, Las! Ot The Wild 17
9 oo-Movle " Jenntfer A Woman 's S1ory 3.15, How
The West Was Won 6,13, Mash 8,10 Academy
Leader s 33, Mov1e Tw1tigh for the Gods" 17
Growmg Year s 20
9 31)--WKRP In Cm clona!1 B,10
10 DO-Lou Gran t 8, 10, News 20, Mov 1e ' Mon1y Python
&amp; the Holy Grall" 33
10 31)--Ai manac ~
n ~oo- News J,s ;fill.l3 ,15, Crockett ' s V 1c1ory Garden
20
11 3D-Johnn y Car son 3, 15, Pol1ce Story 6, l J , Rockford

Business Services

H VOU hove o serv1re to off• •

1Q 7bCAMAR0lT305 culn VH
f' !. P ll AM fM IOJ'IC' 43 7000
1n1 99"J S95H

Tu.....y

Notices

Merch 6, t971
Tak e advantage o f s1tuat•ons
thiS comtng year where you
ca n make busine ss contacts
soctally Something very benehc•al co uld develop from such
an arrangement
PISCES (Feb. 2G-Morch 20) You
will be adept a1 keeping the b1g
expenses under control today,
bul the smaller outlays m1gh1
damage your budget severely
Be pennywtse , too Ftnd ou1
more of what 11es ahead for you
•n 1979 by sendmg for your
copy of Astra-Graph Le1ter
Mall It lor each to Astro-Graph ,
P 0 Box 469, RadiO C1ly Station, N Y 10019 Be sure to
speclly b~rlh s1gn
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) II you
are not sure of what you want
to do or what your motives are
put oft domg anythmg unttl
tomorrow You'll then have a
more pos1t1ve direction
TAURUS (April 2G-Moy 20) Gettmg your fa cts stratght should
be your No 1 prlortty today
You have a stro ng tendency to
1ump to conctus1ons because
of laultv tnformatton
GEMINI (May 2t-June 20) Your
head may not be all·together
today and you m1ght have
troub le lrylng 10 add two and
two Take spec 1al care w1th
fmanc1al matters
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Important goal s could Slip
throu gh your ftngers today beca use of yo ur lack of atten11on
Negligence will take 1ts to ll
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) The ways
and means to say what ts on
your mtnd may not be prese nt
today Rather than talkmg m
Circles and makmg little or no
sense keep qutet
VIRGO (A
23·Sept 22) AI
ug
·
though somehmes we may be
1ustif1ed In telling others what
we thmk of them tt ts rarely
w1 se to do so Turning the
other c heek wil t get you farther
m the long run

Yard Sale

Auto Sales
-191b -CAMAPO AUTOMA TI C b
cylinder 14 ooo m•lr.s S3b00
Cnll'¥1'} i'SI 2ollerS 30pm

F1te s 8, Movie "G rand Hotel "
10
M ovie
" Assa ssmat ion " 17
12 .to-McMi llan &amp; Wife 8, Ironside 13, 1 ooTfi 'T•Orrow 3
30---Movle " Hold Back l he Night" 17 , I • I)-- News 17
3 15--News 17, 3 35--0pen Up 17

POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTING F1ve
Pomts Area 3 bedrooms,
hv1ng room , dln 1ng, f ully
equipped kitchen, drapes
and rods About 7 yrs old 2large lots. $29,100 00
'
NEW LISTING - BU 1Id 1ng
s1te in W1 tdwood SubdtVI
stan, utlllt•es ava1table 2
acres $6,000 00
NEW LISTING New
Home 3 bedrooms, 1112
baths, fireplace, nice kit
chen ,
lull
basemen t,
garage, 1 acre {really
nice ) $46,900 00
NEW LISTING- 24 acres,
2 year old bi level home, 3
bedrooms (large master
bedroom), family room
with Wood Burner, 6 m 1tes
from Racine $38,500 00
POMEROY 2 story
frame, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
so me c arpet1ng, bath,
basement, storage bulld1ng
and workshop . $8,000 00
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 story
frame, duplex., nat gas
heat, part basement, cor
ner lot, need some repa ir.
$13,000 00
HAVE
YOU
CON SIDERED
SELLING
YOUR PROERTY? MAY
WE SUGGEST THAT YOU
CALL ONE OF THE
QUALIFIED PEOPLE AT
OUR OFFICE.
REALTORSHENRY E. CLELAND SR .
HENRY E . CLELAND JR
ASSO CIAT E S
KA T HY CLELAND
LEONA CLELA ND
992-2259 992-~ 191 992.:llf8

PULLINS EXCA VA TING Com ple te BRADFORD Au cti oneer Com
Serv iCe Phone 992 2d 7B
ple te Serv1ce Ph one 9d9 2497
or 9d9 2000 Rocme Oh10 Cntt
AUTOMOBill: IN SURANCE been
Bradfor d
cancelled? lost your operators
liC ense? Phone 992 2143
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toa sters 1rons all
f C ELECTR ICAL Contractor serv
small appliances Lawn mower
1ng Oh1o Volley reg1on S1x
neKt to Stol e H•ghwoy Garage
days o week 2d hours serv ce
on Rouie 7
Emergency coils Call 882 2952
or El 82 2305
SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser
v1ce all mak es 992 2284 The
MOBILE HOME re po1rs Furnace~
Fobr1c Shop
Pom e r oy
e!ectn col work p1pes sowed
Aut honzed Smger So les ond
plumb•ng 992 5858
Ser viCe We sharpen Sc1sso rs
WALLPAPERING AND po 1nt1ng
EXCAVATI
NG doze r loader and
Coll742 2328
backh oe work dump trucks
HOWERY AND
MARTIN
on d lo boys l or h•re wd l haul
covotmg
se pt1 c sys tem s
f1ll d1rt to s01l limestone and
dozer backhoe Rt 143 Phone
grovel Cot! Bob or Roger Jef
1 (614) 098 7331
fer s day phone 992 7089 n1ght
phone 992 3525 or 992 5232

(Answe rs tomorrow)
BUT TH AT EXTRA 20
PFRCENT 'tOLl &lt;\DIJED
TO EACH CHECK·
WHAT WAS ~AT

-

- - - - -- -

Real Estate lor Sale

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY
Newhma Road
Rutland, OhiO
Phone142 2003

YOU SEE, AHNI E,
COtHENlfD CUSlOOERS
Will S'TA "'' D fOR.
ALMOST ANYTHIN&lt;i

Salu,day s

AGAIN&lt;'

Jumbles FROZE PAGAN STURDY MARLIN
Answer He s not the on ly one m ht s bu s •nes s~
A PARTNER

Jumble Book No 12 contalni ng 110 puzzles lsuallablefOIS 175poslpald
fromJumble,clothlsnewspepar,Box34 Norwood N J 07648 In clude your
nama, addrea~_zip code and make checks payable to Newapaparbooka

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
AI.I.EYOO"

TH' DA!&gt;IG THII'IG'$
BACK! V'BETTEt:;: FIND
'&lt;OURSELF SOME COVEI::t!

2 Caustic

I South
HEV SLOW DOWN!
HOLD lT! WHAT'$
COM1N' SACK?

3 StL!I LO the
pennant

Afncan
assembly

TH ' SIG OL- HOOK-TOOTHED
TYRANNOSAUR!

race
4 Like Gold-

5 P 1tfalls
lllronwood
12 Like Abe

- - - --- --

-

I

snuth 's
vLIIage
5- Tuesday

13 Eye part

EXCAVATING do7er backhoe
and d1tcher Ch arles R Hot
f1 eld
Bock Hoe Serv1ce
Rutl and Oh10 Phone 742 2008

'-""l:j. 14 T ake turns
15 E ndured

"-\'P.ft'l-'! 17 Omar

BATHROOMS AND Kllchens
remodeled cerom1c tile plum
b1ng carpent ry 011d general
momtenonce 13 yea rs ell
pen :!'~e 99 ~3~85 ___ _ _

Shanf ro l e
18 E hc1t
19 - AVIV

New Ll sling - M odern 3
bedroom A frame home,
localed on Slate Route 14&gt;
Home has 1112 baths, family
room w1th free standmg
fir eplace, utility room and
nt ce outbUilding Situated
on 21/:z acres Shown by
appointment only
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
In
Rut land Here's a chance
to own a well-estab l ish ed
grocery bustness and a nrc e
apartment, too All stock
and equipment are mdued
In the sa le price Call for
more Info Ask1ng $29,500
We need listings!!
Cheryl Lemley, assoc1ate
Phone 742-2003
H1lton Wolfe. assoctate
Phone 949-2589
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Jr ,
Broker
992-5739

SAVE ON

GASOL INE ALI.F.Y

22 Noted US

So there
!.lOU are!

CARPmNG
DRIVE Aurn£
&amp;
SAVE A lDT

Army
s urgeon

Corne, dear r
Mama'G here to
take I.JOU home!

24 Put on car go
25 Mamtam

---0
:;;;-s_
w_a-:-ld-;-;Jac ""
o~
by_
a_n~
d=-A;-.::1=a- n--=s:-o-n_t_
a_g_ _

of suff

Using a slam safety play

t.-;---t-+--t-

up by us mg a safety play
NORTH

+ K4

EAST

• 95

• Q8

r----------------- 38

SOUTH
Al01432

+

:tf lT'S A

C::AT,

IT~

IN

FINS .SHAPe

,,.o;s-

IF
A
TIG.ER, l"r'~ A
I.I,.,.L! .SLUGGa$H.

""''PI;;-;c--t----t40 Belasco
b;c+-t--+-lr+-

Vulnerable North-south
Dealer South

Jason's

39 Cyhndrtcal

West

DOWN
I Complain

Pass
Pass
Pass

bLtterly

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's

how

to

work

POWER/

HE CANT BE UP
AND ABOUT

oo BE n; oocroR 1
WITH THE NURSE '-5
HELP, I'LL GET HIM
OUT OF BED AN D

One l etter simply stands for another In t ht s sample A IS

DSK

J Q

SYN

QZDZtK
NZOOKHEM

YHO

y

SYU XD
OLYGYD -

EXERCIS!: HIM
MYSELF !

RlmMD RJRNnuRE

UKTJGXHR
FLKNKHD

wE OHER YOU ,
1 Two lull floors of •II new
fumtture.
2. Nice select1ons of used
furntfure.
3. A large building lull of
btaullful carpet

LJRKL

D S K

UYUNJH

Yeslerday'sCryploquote: !TIS THUS WITH MOST OF US WE
ARE WHAT OTHER PEOPLE SAY WE ARE WE KNOW
OURSELVES BY HEARSAY -ERIC HOFFER
R \ llNF.Y

SOME FO LKS GOT
THEIR MONEY
TIED UP IN STOCKS-

NO, MA'AM .. NOT UNLE5S
'1'0U 5AY I ~AVE TO

GO AHEAD, FRANKLIN...
~OU CAN D.O IT...

MM6E I COULD
6E IN THE PRO-AM

Pass
Pass

Pass

club lead a llows a hea rt
dascard and a ruff m dummy A red-sUit lead ma kes
one of dununy's ted Ja cks a
winner The hand as over a nd
lhe slam made '

Opemng lead

CRYPTOQUOTES
AFTER ALL;
THERE'S NO REASON
PHX5/CA£i.Y WHY

3 NT

I+
4+

He JUSt leads a

second spade West pla ys
low and dumm y's 1ack IS
fmessed
East tak es h1s
queen and IS forced to g1ve
declarer h1s t welfth lnck A

+J

Ask tbc EXDCI'II

LONGFELLOW

used for the th re e L' s, X for the two 0 s. etc Smgle letters
aposLrophes , the l ength and formatiO n of the \\ ords are all
hmts Each day the code l etters are different

WINNIE •

South

it:

AXYDLBAAXR

•s

North East

6+

sh ould

m Lght trwnp It, but once lhat
ace goes through South has a

Alan

t K6
+ A6

an uproar

" South

wm the club l ead m dummy .
lead a s pade to his ace, then
cash h1s ace of clubs That 1s
a very slaght n s k Som eone
sure thmg ··

• K 92

37 Created

VETERINARIAN'S
WAITING ROOM

• 10 7
• Q 10 7 2
.. Q6532

• 8 54
• J 10 97

SI X •

Oswa ld

WEST

• Q 543

that w11l only let h1m make
Alan ' ln othe1 words, the
best pla y a t S IX \ '1. on t produ ce an ove1tn ck '

• AJ 86
t A J 93

" - Nome" t:;:;,..;&gt;------t-

FRANK &amp; E RN IE

J&gt;

+ KJ 7

'~~'ij- 36Gilda's
port
,,

IPi.IKElDSEEHIM
WALK OliT OF HERE
ON HIS OWN

See the Grate Family at

33 Dtvmg btrd

BRIDGE

35 Restdent

26 July 4th
highlight

:::::~~ 34 Hamburg's
nwnber

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

SHOP AT ...

30Bogarts
"Key - "

__,_

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

Rutland

Monday, March 5

l ake

" 32 Type of

UNBlEUM RUGS
112.95 &amp; UP

742 2211

Bob
16 Passed
ou t of favor

28 French
pamter
29 Fmmsh

or Cerdan
_ 31 Cistern

9'x 12 ' -12'X12'- 1l'X1S'

24 Rolls of Carpet In Stock
&amp; IOO's of Samples to
Choose From.
BUYNOW&amp;SAVE

21 Absurd
22 Nelson
Eddy movte
23 Voter
24 Fat
25 Australian
City

for aSSISt
8 Resp onded
9 Lover

4 31)--Bewltched 3, 1 Gilligan ' s I s 8 17, Brad y Bunch
10 Pet1 1coat Junct 1on 15
5 01)--1 Dream ot Jeann1e 3 Bev erly H i l lbilli es B,
M1ster Rogers ' Nei ghborhood 20 33 , Gomer Pyl e
USMC 10, Bionic Woman 13 Brady Bunch 15
5 31)--Carol Burnell 3 News 6, E lec Co 20 News 6,
Mary Tyler Moore 10 Odd Couple 15 Bever ly
Hillbil lies 17, Doclor Who 33
6 00---News 3,8, 10,13, 15, ABC News6. Andy Gn tfith 17,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 31)-- NBC News 3, 15, ABC News 13 Carol Burnetl6,
CBS News a, 10 My Three Sons 17 Over Easy 20
7 ~Cross Wtts 3 Newlywed Game 6 13 Please
Sland By a, News 10, Love, American Styl e 15,
Cara t Burnett 17 Marsha ll U Report 33 DICk
Cavett 20
7 3o- Hottywood Squares 3 Let ' s Go To The Race s 8,
Ca ndldCamera6,, Pr~ce1s Right 10 Donna Fargo
13 TV Honor Soctefy 15 Sanford &amp; Son 17, Mac
Neil Lehrer Reporl 20.3J
B 01)--CIIIIhangers 3,1 5, Happy Days 6,13
CBS
Reports B 10 World at War 17 Austm C1l y L 1m1ts
20, Cousleau Odyssey 3J
8 30--La verne &amp; Shirley 6 13 9 oo-Movi e Go ld of the
Amazon Women ' 3, 15 Three's Company 6 13
Mov1e "Coach of a Boys" H igh School a,10 , Mov1 e
" The Philadelphia Analyst " 17, Academy Leaders
20
9 31)--Tax l 6,1 3, 10 01)--Starsky&amp; Hutch61 3 News20,
10 3()-Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
II oo--News 3,6,8 10, 13, 15 , Hogan ' s Heroes 17, L1ke II
Is 20, Book Beat 33
II 31)--J ohnny Carson 3,15, Movie Cal1forn1a Spi ll
6,13 Barnaby Jones 8 ABC News 33 Mov• e " Man
Wllh the Icy Eyes" 10. Mov 1e " Th e Eagl e &amp; l he
Hawk " 17
12 -4o----Mov le ' Notonous 8. l Jo-News 13 Mov 1e
" The L1sbon Story" 17
3 3D-News 17 3 so--M ovie " Brave W arner 17

~= 26 Average
27 Full of

A GOOD SELECTION OF
END &amp; ,ROLL BALANCES.

9' &amp; 12' WSHIONm
ROOR
'3.49 &amp; '3.99 sq yd

Yesterday's Ans"er

of beauty
10 Cowboy

'"'"'-""' 20 KLcker's

~~ih:='-..:.!=~~:__-l__jc..J_....LJL.J:.{{:.~~~ '--"'-"---'-'-....L-L-.J.IJ"""-'--'----'---'......J'---'---L..L..L..J.---L...JJ 21 Egadget
"'
ntertam

New Ltst1ng Coun try
ltving at 1ts best Thts home
has 3 bedrooms. fam 1t y
room , llvmg room with
ftrepla ce, ut1lify room, 1/ 2
basement Large 2 car
deta c hed garag e wdh
wor kshop
Extra good
fen ce
and
b l ack lop
driveway
Si tuat ed on
almost 2 acres on State
Route 124 Ca ll today , we
won't have th1 s one long

6 Not a
soul
7 Ending

TUESDAY MARCH6 , 1919
5 35--Worldat Large 17, S 45- Farm Repor l l3, S 5().-.
PT L Club 13 5 55-Sunnse Sem ester 10
6 OQ-- PTL Club IS , 700 Club 6,a 6 !().-News II
6 25-Concerns &amp; Comments 10, 6 30- Romper Room
17 , 6 45-Morn lng Report 3 6 5D-Good Morntng ,
West Vlrg1n1a 13 6 55- Chuck Wh1te Reports 10,
News 13
7 oo-Today 3 15, Good Morntng Amenc a 6, 13 ,
Tuesday Morn1ng 8, School1es 10 Three Stooges
17, 7 15--Wealher 33
7 30- Fam ll y Affatr 10, 8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8,10
Leave It To Beaver 17 Sesa me St 33
8 30-Haze l 17, 9 DO-Bob Brau n 3 Phil Donahue 13
Emergency One 6, Hogan s Heroes B M atc h Game
10 Lucy Show 17
9 30-Brady Bunch 8 Green A,crf!!&gt; 17
10 IJO--Card Sharks 3,15 Edge or N1ghl 6 Al l In T he
Family 8, 10, Dat 1ng uame 13 , Mov1e ' The Bartling
Be ll hop" 17
10 31)--A II Star Secret s 3 IS po 000 Pyram 1d 13 Andy
Gnf ftth 6 Pnce 1s Right 8,10
11 DO-H igh Roller s 3 15 Happy Days 6 13 f"onsumer
Surv1val K1t 20
11 JG-Whee1 or t-or1une 3,15, Fam1 ty Feud 613 . Love
of L 1fe 8, 10
11 5$-CBS News 8 House Ca ll 10 News 17
12 oo--Newscenter J , Password 15, Young &amp; 1h e
Restless 8 M1dday Magazme 13 Love Amen can
S1yle 17. Consumer Surv tva l K1t 33
12 30-Ryan ' s Hope 6,1 3 Sea r ch f or Tomor r ow 8,10
Elec Co 20 Not For Wom en On ly IS Mov1e " The
Bache lor Party " 17
OQ--Davs of Our Lives 3 15 Al l Mv Childr en 6 13
Young &amp; the Restles s 10 News 6
3D-As The Wor td T urns 6 10 ~ OQ-Ooctor s 3, 15,
One L 1fe to L1ve 6 13, 2 25-News 17
2 3()-Another World 3 15 Gu1dmg L1ght 8 10, I L ove
Lucy 17
3 ~General Hosp1 t al 6 13 Lll1a s Yoga &amp; You 20,
Speed Racer 17
3 30-Mash a, Joker ' s Wi ld 10, D ICk Cave1t 20
4 oo-Mtsfer Carreon 3, Hollywoo d Squar es 15 Porky
P1g 8 SesameS 20 33 Batman 101 D1nah 13 Sp ace
G1ants 17

SOME FOLKS GOT
THEIR MONEY
TIED UP IN LAND --

By Oswald Jacoby

A New York reader asks
whal the " No better place

and Alan Sontag

for It " pla y 1s lt 1s a spec1f1c

Oswald " A look at all four
hands shows that North and
South can make a grand
slam at etther spades or

when a loquacious player
holdmg ace-10-small overruffed decla rer's km g wtth
the ace while remarkmg,

bad play lhal gol 1ls name

No better place for 11 ' Of

notrump ''
Alan

Not that seven ts a

good contract

Declarer

must start by picking up the
queen of spades Then he
must dec1de to take the

heart fmesse

place If h e d1dn 'l r uff he
wou ld ha v e ta ken two t1wnp
tricks anstead of one
fNEWS PAPFJ il EN1F RPRI SF 1\S.'\N 1

He needs a

red-sutl finesse and onl y the

heart flnesse works ''
Oswald " Six Is a very
good contract and any ex·
pert w orth his salt will wind

I

course, the1 e \\ as a better

GOT MINE
TIED UP IN
SHOES

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD
ERN ser.d $1 to
W1n at
care of fh 1s ne wspa
Bndge
per P 0 Box 489 RadiO City
Statton New York N Y 100 T9 J

�10- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 5, 1979

~--A~~~-ne;ths-1 Division managers named

Iran oil flows again
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran tAP ) Iran resumed oil exports
today for the f1rst ume m
three months, ahd Ayatolla h
R uh ollah Kho me1n 1's
re v olutionar y

re gi m e

executed e1ght more of Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's
former off1c1als, mcluding
four generals and a former
member of Parliament
A spokesman for the
National !raman Oil Co sa1d
the
tanker
World

Ambassador started loading
110,000 tons of hght crude and
140,000 tons of heavy crude
lor the M1tsw Trading Co. of
Japan at the Kharg Island
termmalm the Pers1an Gulf.
It IS the fi rst sh1pment of
crude oil for export smce Decem ber, when the 01!
industry 's 65 ,000 workers
went on strike as part of
Kho me1m 's campa 1gn to
brm g down the shah 's
regune
Another tanker was sched-

I
uled to mTt vc Cit Khat g Island

un Wednesday to load crude
for Ashland 011, an Amencan
company.

I
Kj::NNE1'11 JENKINS

INDIANA

59. Indianapolis. ln d wn &lt;~ ,
sa1d 11 will not restore the 11ho died Feb 25. were held
previous export level of 5 4 Saturda) . March 3, m Inm11lion barrels a day because duma
Mr J enkin s. a fo rm er
it wants to conserve the oil
reserves for the. future. The Pomeroy resident. IS ~ur­
national 01! company said "ved by h1s wife, Juanita.
productiOn Sunda y was I 7 three ch1ldren , Crystal, Mark
m1lhon barrels, and mdustry and Kc11t all at home, his
sources predict 1t Will be pa rents , Mr and Mrs Lloyd
mcreased to 3 million barrels Jcnkms, 540 Zast Mmn Street,
a day, w1th about 2.4 million Porncro} ; one ststcr, Maxme
Moore. Pomcro; , and one
barrels bemg expcrted
Meanwhile, a communique brother . Luth er Jenkins,
from
Khome 1n1 ' s l&gt;t'!ro1t
Revolu t10nary Committee
WILLIAM WALKER, JR.
announced that seven more
BELPRE, Wilham
former offic1als died by firing
Walker.
Jr.,
19,
1804
squad at 5 am today after •
Ehzabeth
Street.
Belpre,
died
one of the ayatollah's special
Saturday
evemng
at
h1s
home
lslam1c courts found them
gmlty of killing or torturing as the result of a self inni cted
gunshot wound.
opponents of the shah.
Mr Walker was born in
Tehran Rad1o announced
Scotland
, the son of Wilham
the execution of a pchce
and
E1leen
Walker , 1804
off1cer today m Abadan.
Th1s brought to 24 the num- Elizabeth St , Belpre
He was a 1977 graduate of
ber of former offic1als whose
executions have been announced Several others have
been reported but not confirmed, and th ree men
accused of shooting anti-shah Veterans Memorial Hospital
demonstrators were stabbed Saturday admlSSlon s to death by a roob m the Anthony Vester, Pomeroy ,
cent ral I raman town of Danny Eads, Pomeroy ,
NaJafabad three days ago as Russell Rottgen , Letart, W
they were bemg taken to Va : Harry Wyatt, Minerspnson to awa1t tnal.
v11le: Manning Webster,
governme nt Pomeroy: Ervin Casto,
Th e
announced Sunday that 1t had Shad e: Rhonda Hager .
broken diplomatic relations GaUipchs.
w1th South Africa because of
Saturda) d1sch arges 1ts rac1al polic1es and Leland Clonch, Russell
confirmed that it will allow no Rottgen. Sharon W1lt. Bobby
more Iranian oil to be shipped Rathburn , Madeline Neece.
there.
Anthon y Vester, Danny
Before the shutdown Iran Eads,
Alice Holhday,
supphed an estlinated 90 per- Patr~cia Jeffers, Penni Clark,
cent of South Africa's 01!. The Herman Werry
So uth Afnean ~overnment
Sunday admiSSions has stockpi le d massive Hilliary Turley, Pomeroy,
amounts of od m recent Okey Bennett, Parkersburg,
years, and the mternatlonal Harvey Leamond, Racme ;
01! compan1es are expected to Goldie Roberts, Racme.
juggle their stocks so that
Sunda) discharges - Rick
deliver~es to So uth Africa will Wilson, Ross Kent, Cheryl
not be curta1led,.
Sellers. James Barton, Marie
Iran was also Israel's chief Custer.
oil supplier before the revolu- ·
Holzer Medical Center
twn and has announced that
Discharges, March 2
the Jewish nation is now on
Gusta Beckett , James Bing,
1ts .blacklist. The chief effect
m Israel has been a 32-39 Debra Buck, Mrs Wayne Cox
percent increase m the price and son, Mrs Stephen Crabof petroleum products to tree and son, Helen Dempsey,
reduce consumption , with Nora D1xon, Donna Dr~y ,
gasolm e Jumpmg from $1.70 Phihp Edrmston, Kimball
Ferns, Albert Finley.
to $2.35 a gallon
"
The government also an- Herbert Grealll, Wlll oughby
nounced that in keepmg w1th Hlll, Mrs Melvm Jeffers and
Islamic tradition 1t 1s abohsh- daughter , Ryan Johnson,
mg the drafting of women for Mrs. Robert Jones and
military service and 1s reduc- daughter, Rose Kurnat, Ruth
mg the conscription period Linville, Virg1ma M1lstead,
for men from two years to Elizab eth Mull , Myrtl e
one. Th1s was in line w1th the Neville, Jab ez Parsons,
Roett ker ,
new regune's abandonment Chri s toph er
Saunders,
Jeffery
Frances
of th e shah's ambition for
Sharp
,
Enca
Shelton,
Lenora
Iran to be the "policeman of
Sm1th,
Pa
tn
ck
Stanton,
the Pers1an Gulf "
James Starr. Shannon
Stobart,
Hazel Wnght.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Births,
March 2
The Southeast ern Oh1o
Mr
and
Robert
Garden Tractor Club w11l Workman, son,Mrs.
Gallipolis
meet Wednesday at 8 p m at
Mr a nd Mrs. V1ctor
the home ofDale Kautz, Rt 7, Counts,
son, Syracuse
Pomeroy New members are
Mr. and Mrs Jenmngs
welcome
Ferguson, son, Gallipolis
Discharges, March 3
In 1877, the 19th president ,
Lillian Arrington, Fred
Rutherford Hayes, was in- Blaettner, Becky Brown,
augurated.
The new government has

eek en d Storm ·
leaves 8 dead
By The Associated Press
At least e1ght are dead followmg a fur1ous two-fisted
weekend storm that belted
the Southeast with up to 15
inches of rain and stranded
several
hundred
Midwesterners under a foot
of blowing snow.
Hardest hit was Alabama,
wbere four persons, mcluding
a 5-year-&lt;Jld g1rl, drowned
Sunda y More • than 200
famihes were forced to flee
because of rlSmg waters and
tornados . Two drowned m
Georgia and Missouri and
two more d1ed m M1nnesota
and Iowa .
Most of the evacuees recfurned to their homes
Sunday. Ho"ever, some
Alabama nver dwellers were
told to start filling sandbags
in an t1cipallon of nsing
waters through Tuesday.
ln Washmgton state,
weathe r offlclals issued
avalanche warnings due to
heavy rain and rising
temperatures. Two mountam
climbers died in an avalanche Sunday on 11,000-foot
. Mount Rainier.
Florida counted 1tself
lucky. The storm dwnped up
to 14 inches of ram on some
areas of the Panhandle
around Pensacola . An
estlrnated 5,000 persons had
to be evacuated and damage
was estlinated m the rrulhons,
but there were no deaths
"I've lived in Pensacola 57
years. Never in my life - not
even during a hurricane did we get this much wa ter,"
said Escamb1a County
Comm issioner Ke nnet h
Kelson .
Ray Bidinger, forecaster at
the National Weather Serv1ce
m Miam1, sa1d Sunday mght,
"The weather system .. 1s
still up there m that same
area. R1ght now, 11 extends
from a low pressure area m
the Great Lakes to the
F1orida Panhandle and mto
the Gulf of Mexico "
Much of the storm 's wra!ll
was concentrated over northeastern Alabama The body
of 5-year-&lt;Jld Audrey Noms of
Birmingham was found m a
drainage ditch. Police said
she apparently wandered
away from her aunt's fro nt
porch on the 61ty's Norths1de
and fell into the rain-flooded
ditch.

A rescue team in north-

eastern Alabama watched
helplessly as Kathy Todd, 21i,
was thrown mto the seething
water from atop her car,
wh1ch had been stranded m a
fl ooded f1eld . Her body was
found three hours later
Coosa County authorities
said James Gardner , 18, and
Theodore
Brooks,
57,
drowned when the1r car was
washed off a br idge.
In northern Georgia, where
an average of 4to 6 mches fell
Saturday and Sunday, an 18year-&lt;J ld man drowned m a
flooded soybean held when a
boat overturned . H1s name
wa s w1thheld pending
notlf! cahon of relatives
Seven Georgia college cave
expl orers were r escued
Sunday night after spending
29 hours in an underground
cavern where they were
trapped by high water.
While the Southeast was
busy mopping up and filling
sandbags Sunday, portiOns of
the M1dwest from M1ssoun
and Iowa mto nort hern
M1ch1gan and Mmneso ta
were back groanmg behind
their shovels and plows
A foot of snow was reported
m parts of Mlchtgan.
"We've got about 1,000
snowmobLles runmng aroWld

and 1t's imposs1ble to catch
them w1th (squad) cars w1th
chams ," satd Sioux City,

Iowa, pollee Sgt. Tony
Sunclaves The vehicles are
•llegal ms1de the c1ty limits.
Iowa authorihes blamed
the

storm ,

wh1ch

was

accompamed by 40 mph
wmds, for at least one traff1c
fatality . Benita Hemck, 20,
was killed Sunday when she
apparently lost control of her
car on ice-glazed Iowa 146.
In so uthwestern Minnesota,
:J50 motonsts were stranded
by the storm. Near Albert
Lea, m southern Mmr!esota,
Elmer Grasdalen, 68, d1ed of
an apparent heart attack
when his. pi ckup truck
became stuck m the snow and
he wa s fo rced to walk a half
mile
CH ILD HOSPITALIZED
Heida Ann Caruthers, six) car old daughter of Mr and
Mr s. Bob Caruthers. Route 2,
Pomeroy, IS a pat10nt at
Holzer Medical Center. Cards
may be sent to Room 510-B.

Life styles change, costs of living-escalate,
children seem to rush through Infancy
@.~~;;&gt;ji~
into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate risIng college costs begin educational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings accountthat will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are.

Fai'ttters 8ank
•

POMEROY, OHIO

'4MOO Maximum Insurance For

t.:mplo) ed as a mcchum e at

McC linton

Chevrol et

in

l'arkcrsburg.

He was preceded m death
b) h1s w1fc, Nancy Ann
L'haffec Walker on Feb. 20 of
this }Car

In addition to h1s parents,
he is surv1vcd by two
brothers. Roy Walker and
Gordon John Walker , two
sisters. Lmda Mary Walker,
and Rhona Walker. all at
hom e, maternal grand pa rents, Mr . and Mrs.
Gordon Lockhart. Beverly.
paternal grandmother. Mrs.
Ehzabeth Walker, Scotland ;
one aunt, Mrs. Roger
Reynolds, Manetta
~'uneral serviCes will be
held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the
Wh1te Funeral Hom e m
Coolville Wlth th e Rev .
Richard 'i'homas ofhc1allng
Burial Wlll be m Chr1st1an
Cemetery at Tuppers Plams
At the request of the
deceased there w11l be no
vtsttlng hours.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes
a Big Wheel on Campus

., • ..,U'

Funer al

scr vtecs' ror Kcnnl'th Jcuktn s,

Helprc H1gh School an d " "s

Eac~

Depositor
Melnber Federal Deposit insurance Corporation

Mrs.Floyd Coope r and
daughter, Patncia Crabtree,
Conme D-dvldson, Gabriel Ed·wards, Wanda Evans, Robin
Frankhn, Shade Franklin,
MArsha Gearhart, Scott
Greene, Ju amta Jeffers,
Robert Jenk ms, . Mar-vm
Jones, Mrs. Elha Little and
son, David McQua1d, Jr ,
M1chael McWilliams, Dons
Nolen, Lmda Saunders, Joyce
Sprague, Warren Stewart,
Dav1d Van Meter, Bnce
Ward, Helen Ward , Robert
Warren

Births, March
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Ward,
son, Oak H1ll
Mr and Mrs. Tedd y
Russell , son, Vmton

p o HT s MouTH
-Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio president. John P Irwm. rccmtly announced that
the club's management has
be en orgamzed mto three
se pa rate divisions With
division managers appointed
to provide better coordmat10n
of the 9 offices rcpresentmg
the club
lrwm stated the tremen·
dous growth m membersh1p
to over 55,000 members and
the vast t erritor y to be
covered has brought about
the reorganization to better
serve the membership and
traveling public.
The qestern div1sion has
AAA offi ces in Portsmouth,
Ironton and Waverly. The
Cent ral dlVlsion offices are m
Logan,
Jackson
and
Galli polis The Eastern
division has offices m Athens,
Belpre and Marietta
Jerome "Jerry" Freeman
of Portsmouth, Oh1o has been
appointed manager of the
w..tern diviswn. Freeman
was form erly associated Wllh
AAA m Athens, Oh10 and has
followed a ca reer m the
travel agency business. He
was formerly with the Travel
Shop, Inc. in Portsmouth and
lntern atwna l Travel Consultants m Cleveland He
reJoined the Auto Club of
Southern Oh1o m November ,
1978 as the Portsmouth AAA
Travel Agency Manager He
is a resident of Portsmouth,
Ohio.
Freeman is a graduate of
Bowling
Green
State

Wahama loses
last 2 games
\

The Wahama White Falcons
closed out their regular season
over the weekend by dropping
a 70-67 dee1sion to Spencer on
Friday night and then falling
to the Ravenswood Red_Devils
on Saturday evenmg by 80-53
score.
Ironically, one of th!!Sl! two
teams w11l be the Wh1te
Falcons next opponent when
they enter mto the sectional
tournament play on Friday
night.
,
Wahama, Spencer and
Ravenswood make up the
three-team sectional tourney
field in the Class AA Heg 1on
~lfne Section Three rournament. The bend area team
with the luck of the draw, wil)
receive a bye and meet the
winner of the Spencer·
Ravenswood match which is
to be held Tuesday night at
Ravenswood. Regardless of
who the eventual winner may
be, the sectional finals will be
played at Waharna on Friday
night With the locals of Coach
Homer Preece hosting the
event.
In Friday nights' three-point
loss to Spencer the W'hite
Falcons faltered in the waning
moments hefore fallin ~ by
a 70-67 margm. The Yellow
Jackets made good on 16 of 27
free throw attempts compared
to 9 of 16 for Wahama which
spelled the difference in, the
game. The locals outgoaled
Spencer by a 29--27 advantage
but fa1led to pull it out with
the1r foul shooting.
Four Falcon players hit in
double figures ·with Rick'
Barnitz taking game high
honors with 22 points on 10
' field goals and two of two from
the line. Todd Rawlings added
12 markers wh1le
VInce
Weaverchippedinwithll and
Kreig Sayre notched 10.
Spencer was led by Jeff
Boggs with 19 followed by
Brian Barker with 17 and
Mark Taylor with 15.
Wahama outrebounded the
Yellow Jackets 32-31 w1th
VInce Weaver grabbing 14 for

University with a degree in
InternatlOnal Studies and
served in the ·u. s. Army
attaining the rank of captain
He has 'traveled throughout
the world visiting Europe,
Africa, the M!ddle East,
South Pacific, the Orient,
Mexico and South America.
Charles "Chuck" Clark of
Jackson has J&gt;een appointed
th e
Central
division
manager Clark has an ext ens1ve AAA background
(Contmued from page 1)
beginmng lD 1973 as a
member of the staff of the Maumee city street.
SATURDAY
AAA club in Newark, Ohio
MORROW - Sonja L. PierHe later moved to the Valley
Automobile Club as manager son, 13, of Morrow 1 passenger
of the Bloomsburg, PA office. m the back of a p1ckup truck,
In July, 1976, he joined the m a one-vehiCle acc1dent on a
Auto Club of Southern Oh1o local road Just south of U. S
and has managed offices m 22m Warren County.
RAVENNA - Robert H.
Thomas, 28, of Mogadore, in a
two-car accident on a Portage County road
LONDON ,. - Harold A
Snail , 58, of Columbus, in a
two-car accident on U.S. 42 m
Madison County:
Guy
CLEVELAND
Andenoro,
56,
of
Parma
go on h1s old contract, but
both he and the Reds were He1ghts, in a two-car collision
known to be eager to extend on Ohio 237 m Cuyahoga
that pact before Foster had County.
CLEVE LAND - Stanley
the opportunity to become a
Gordon, 21, of Cleveland, m a
free agent
" Money was not the most two-car accident on a
1inportant thing, " said Cleveland city street
INDIAN IDLL - Eflc -A.
Foster. "It was not an ego
trip, not a matter of being the Swenty, 21, of Cincinnall, m a
highe st paid player in one-car accident on an Jnd1an
Hili city street.
baseball,"
COLUMBUS - Cathleen
Foster said the few extra
M.
Murnane, 29, of Columbus,
dollars he m1ght have
a
passenger
in an auto wh1ch
bargamed for as a free agent
struck
a
parked
truck on a
were not as important as
Colwnbus city street.
other factors
FRIDAY NIGHT
" I don't like to relocate,"
MEDINA - Lester G.
he said. "I feel like I'm
becoming established in the Brown, 45, of Ll!Chfleld, m a
city of Cmcinnati and I don't one-car acc1dent on a Medina
want to go just from one place County road
MEDINA - Michael S
to another."
Mills,
17, and a passenger,
Wagner said the !mal terms
Michael
B. Renner, 15, both
of the contract were
of
Wadsworth,
in a one-car
hammered out in a sevenhour session Sunday night accident on Ohw 94 m Medina
with Foster and h1s attorney, County.
Torn Reich.
BAKE SALE
Chester Cub Scouts, Den
- - - - - - - - - - 235, w1ll hold a bake sale
almost an mstant replay from March 10 at 9 30 a.m. at
the Spencer game with the Gaul's Store m Chester.
Rules reversed. The Little
Falcons were holdmg a slXpoint edge adding mto the DALE'S I{ITCHE N
!mal quarter before falling by
CENTER, INC.
a 67-62 score.
All that remains now is the
sectional tourney and the
675 2318
White Falcons have long been
noted for being a post season Sprinq Appliance
team and a victory on Fr1day
Cle;tritrlCP
night would salvage a great
deal out of an otherwise
Starts
dlSI!ppointing season. Game
time Friday night for the
March 20th
single game will be 7:30p.m.

the Whlte Falcons and Brian
Barker nine for the visitors
The bend area Falcons
committed 15 turnovers and
had nme steals whlle Spencer
had 14 miscues and eight
steals.
On Saturday night the W'hite
Falcons
journeyed
to
Ravenswood and were never
really in contention as the Red
Devils bwlt a nine-pomt first
period lead to coast to an 80-53
win.
After placing four men in
double figure s, the locals
failed to have any cons1stent
scorers save for Rick Barmtz
who had his second consecutive 20-pomt outmg with
21 tallies on the night.
Ravenswood was led · by
Mark Fowler with 22 markers
followed by Fleming with 16
and Miller with 12.
The consecutive defeats left
the W'hite Falcons w1th a 5-14
slate gomg into tournament
play with a make-up game
against North Gallia struck
from the books. Wahama
fmished out the regular season
by losmg in 1ts last six outings
and eight of the1r last nine
dates.
With the closing of the
regular season, the W'hiie
Falcon junior varsity finished
the year With a 59-50 win over
Spencer follow"&lt;! by a heart·
breaking 67·62 loss tothe
Ravenswood junior varsity.
Coach Lewis Hall's charges
ended the 1978-79 campaign
with a fine 13-6 record. The
Little Falcons beat everybody
on their sch"&lt;&lt;ule at least once,
except Southern and Point
Pleasant who hande&lt;l- tbe
locals two setbacks apiece.
Against Spencer, the Uttle
Falcons came from five points
down in the final period to
post a 59-50 triumph.
Larry Gibbs, Peanut Harris
and Mike Buzzard had 16, IS
and nine points respectively
for the winners while Spencer
.llOt...lS...markers from ~any
M11ler, 12 from Phil Scott and
10 more from Jeff Kincade.
Sa~urday n ights contest
agafnst Ravenswood was

Athletic fund raising
drive underway today
(__,

By BOll HOEFLICH
A $15 .000 fund dr1vc to
pr ov 1de
for
further
development of an athletic
compl ex at the Meigs H1gh
School - With emphasis on a
tra ck - opened today under
the chairm anship of il 1ll
Ch1 l d s, M1dd l ep o rt
busmessrnan.

PROJECT COMMITTEE - Th1s comm1 ttee
representing the needs for linprovements to Meigs High
School opened a $15,000 fund drive today for the
establishment of a track and other facilities. The group

12 killed

$750,000 yearly
contract signed

TAMPA , Fla (AP ) Slugging leftfielder George
Foster today signed a threeDischarges, M ~ rrh 4
year
extension of his contract
Wi lham Bush, Mrs Alvm
wluch
will keep him with the
Curtis and son, Pearhe McComas, Mrs . Patnck Cmcinnati Reds through the
McGraw and son , Robert 1982 season.
Ne1ther Foster nor Reds
Miller, Mrs. Ca rl Reed and
daughter, Charles Rowland, President Dick Wagner
Larry Sm1th, Ervm Warren, would disclose terms of the
Mrs. R1chard Yenan and agreement, which is reported
to be m the neighborhood m
da ughter.
$750,000 a year.
Births, March 4
The 30-year-()ld Foster led
Mr and Mrs. Emest Clark,
the Nat10nal League m home
Jr., son, Oak H1ll
Mr and Mrs. Shennan runs last year w1th 40 and m
runs batted in with 120.
Kemper, son, Galhpohs
Foster st1ll had one year to

BYGARYCLARK

"'
CHARLES CLARK

Jackson , Waverly and Logan.
Clark is a graduate of
Muskingum College , New
Concord, Ohio With a degree
in speech and drama
Prior to working with AAA,
he taught in hlgh schools m
the Zanesv11le and Cambridge areas. He and his Wlfe,
Catherine, reside in Jackson,
Ohio where he is active m
civ1c affair s and a member of
the Jackson Rotary Club.
James "Jim" Irwin of
Athens has been appointed
the
Eastern
divlSlon
• manager. Pr10r to this appomtment he was the AAA
manager in Manetta havmg
jomed the Auto Club of
Southern Ohio in April, 1976.
lrwm is a graduate of Ohio
State Umvers1ty with a
degree m journalism. He has
been actiVe m many civic
affairs in Marietta workmg
with their Tour1st and Convention Bureau, Traffic
commission and serves on the
Red Cross Board of Direc-tors He is a member of
,Rotary. Irwin and his wife,
Angela and one son, presently
reside in Athens.

aceenbi on Spring!:
*RINGS
*BRACELETS
*HEAD BANDS
*EARRINGS
*CHAINS
*NECKLACES
*BELTS
*HAIR COMBS
*MEN'S COPPER
BRACELETS
*MEN'S
NECKLACES
*CHARMS
2ND FLOOR ACCESSORY DEPT.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

includes seated, ! tor. Charles Hamilton. B1ll Ch1lds, not a
committee member, who will head the dnve : Mrs. Gerry
Lightfood: standing, 1 to r, Charles Chancey, Dw1ght
Goms, Joy Bentley and James Diehl.

(USPS 145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

Meigs Local

D~;tnct

tra ck wtll not he read y for use
thts sprm g, u ded1ca tton of

curbmg so that those who · thr planned fanhty IS exgave will be known for yc;;~ rs pected to be held before
cli:lsscs adjou m tht ~ sprmg
to com e
!'ledges may be made to
Na mes of cont nbutors "'tll
be published m 'l'he Da1ly &lt;Jn) com m ttt e-e me mber

was
establi shed by SupCllll·
tendent of Schools Charles
Scntmel and a rad10-t hon a nd
Do\\lcr
While th e fun&lt;l dn vc only ot her actt vtties re planned to
Fmal dnve plan s were began today. already $1 ,000 raiSe the 115,000 at once
1 he $15,000 will provide
compl eted Monday afterno on has been contnbuted and
monr y for the track farility
more
mon
ey
ha
s
be
en
when a specml comm ittee
which will be 24 feet wide.
selected for the development pl edged , Ch1ld s told the c1ght. three-feet \\I de
of athletlc facihtie s met at committee. He reported th e la nes. \\ ith concrete l 'Ur Meigs Lo ca l Board of
the high school
bing and a cinder track
Edu
cau on ha s app ro ved
Members of that complus the construction of
pl
an
s
for
the
dnve
and
each
mitt ee are Mrs li err y
re stroom fac ilities, a
has
contnbuted
at
least
$50
to
Li ghtfoot, pres1dent of the
refre shm ent stand, th e
G1rls
Athleti C the program
Mc1gs
purchast.• of \\ater fnun Und
er
th
e
plan
to
be
Boosters, Charles Hamilton,
tams , plus mstallatum nf .a
followed
,
rcs1dents
and
sports
pres1dent of the Meigs Boys
qnant1ty nf tcm·ing nnd a
Athlet iC Boosters: Prmc1pal ent hus1asts w1ll be asked to
ti('kcl honth
Ja mes D1chl , Charle s purchase at least one yard of
me ISshort for rmsmg the
Chancey, d ~rcctor of boys concrete at $50 for the track $15T1000
Anr1i o has been S" \
The

committ ee

Howeve r , t hose sendtn g
should send

c ontnbu t JO n ~

them to Bill Ch1lds P 0 Bo x
'1 2, Middleport Pl edges will
also be ta ken by phone and
the cont nbutor will be billed
for the am ount

1t IS st ressed that the
$15 000 111ll be used for the
purcha se of matcn als wtth
all l c~ bor bcmg don a(ed

Chec ks fo r the proJctt are
to be

Jn dtllo

out to the Me1gs

Athl ctll Booste1s whiCh w1ll
sd up a spec t ~ l f un d,
sepa t at cd from Hnj other
mom cs of the grou p

enttne

at

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 226

m1mstrat1 vc assist ant of the

as the dcadlmc Wh1lc the

In rrlum , the name of each
contrtbutor "'til be stcnctl cd
tnlo th e concr ete t r i:lc k

•

•

e

athl eticS , J oy Be ntley.
d1rector of g ~rl s athl etiCs.
and Dwight Go1ns. ad-

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1979

Eastern's superintendent resigns
Eastern's Local Board of
Education IS searching for a
new superintendent following
the rec ent resignatiOn of
Clark Lees .
Named to the post last
summer, Lees announced hLs
resignation recently Citing

personal and profes siOnal
reasons as the bas1s for
leavmg

Lees has md1cated he Will
be returnmg to the Mansfie ld
area. He succeeded John
!he bel who res1gned last year
followmg a long tenure as

contmumg tax mcr case fo r
local supermtend ent
In reslgntng , Lees sa1d he support of schools smce 1969
l..cl'S also pomted out that
has great concern about the
the
dtstr1 ct will not he able
future of the schoql d1stnct
be cause

of

co nt mum~

financwl problems. He
pcmtcd out that the distnct
has not passed any add1honal

Upset residents meet
with Pomeroy Council
BY KATIE CROW
Approximately 25 persons
met with Pomeroy V1llage
Council Monday n1ght
regarding poor road conditions in Naylor's Run m·
cludmg Sprmg Av o., Pleasant
R1dge and F1sher Street
Ke1th Smith, spokesman,
stat ed roads were 1n
deplorable cond1t1on and the
road in front of h1s home was
g1ving way.
He also stated there is a
bad drainage problem
Residents mformed coun c1l
"th at work on the roads must
be done properly or th ere
would be no need to do the
work at all ."
Smith said school buses
could not get to his home to
pick up h1s children. causmg
them to m1ss 15 days of
school.
Council agreed there were
problems
Larry Wehrung, councilman, asked 1! reSidents
would please bear w1th the
v11lage, smce repairs will be
done as soon as possible
It was pointed out that the
street department has its
hands full , pracllcally
working around the clock
trying to get as much done as
possible.
Wehrung also mentioned
that council was co n·
templatmg placing a one-mill
levy on the ballot. Revenue
from the levy would be used
only for streets, Wehrung
commented. " We will do
everything we can as fast as
we can," Wehrung !old the
group.
Smith stat"&lt;! 1! the road had
been repaired properly m the
first place , residents would
not have the problem they
have today.
It was pointed out that the
village spent $50,000 for a two
mile span of roads last year.
One resident stated he had
lived in the area 20 years, and
had never seen the roads m
such poor condition.
It was also noted that it was
the county's responslbihty
beyond the corporation llinit
People also use the road
during hi gh water, one
resident, commented
Mayor Clarence Andrews
stated that the problem was
getting the proper equipment
to do the work which the
village does not ,have. The
mayor also stated that the
county equipment is tied up
The mayor agreed to call on
the township trustees for
proper equipment. Residents
also asked for a "children
\

playmg sign" to be placed on
F1sher Street .
They were told to report
back at the next councll

TRANSFER APPROVED
Jeff Moms also met 1\llh
co unc1l regardmg a liquor

meetmg to mform council

Shamrock Mot el to the
Ra inbow Inn. The license is
fo r the sa le of SIX percent
beer and wine Council approved his request.
F' 1re Ch1ef Charles Lega r
presented a bill for fluslung
streets in the amount of
$869 40 and for a fir~ hose that
was destroyed totalm g $777
Legar also stated the fir e
department IS bad!) m need
of one and one half mch hose
He pomted out that 1! wa s
very hard work flushmg th e
street usmg a hose w1th JU St
120 pound pressure
He sa1d an additional hre
hydrant 1s needed on East
Main Street He said, " If
th ere was a flre in the upper
block, we could hav e senous

what and 1f all work had been
completed
it was agreed that 1! a fire
occurred on Pleasant Ridge,
a hre tru ck \\OUld not be able
to reach the area.
MORE PROBLEMS
Harold Brown, councilm an,
stated the village has had 1ts
share of problems th•s wmter
with the large amount of
snow and recent hlgh ,,. ater
He su ggested that Hon
James be contacted for some
assistance.

Mayor Andrews pomted out
that Governo r Rhodes had
declared Me1gs County ' a
d1saster area and 1t was now
up to Pres1dent Carter as to
1\hether or not federal or
state a1d would be g1ven.
Councll rece1vcd three b1ds
for a new pollee cru1scr . After
much deliberation. all b1ds
were rejected. It was agreed
to rcadvertisc for a medmm
srze car as well as a larger
car feat uring the same

eqmpment with or without
trade.
B1ds were submitted by Pat
Hill Ford, Smith-Ne lson
Motors and Pomeroy Motor
Company.

li cense

transfer

from

to rema in open throughout

1979 unless
monirs
durin g

additional

arc generated
the
current

. calendar year. Supt. Lees
warned that the fmancaal
s ituation in the Eastern
District will become \o cry
critical
durin g
this
calendar year. All money
received from last year's
emergency 10 mall le\'Y\\tit
ha\'C been u sed and
prospects for the continu ed
cx1stcncc of the district" ill

depend upon thl' ~ tllmgncss of the people m the
dtstri ct to contmuc s pport

of the

S) stem

one
of the poor est d1stncts in the
&gt;t ate He also pomted out that
the average teacher 's salary
m the d1 strict 1s approximately $1,000 belo" the
state average, and the
amount of money that the
schoo l district 1s able to spend
I ,ces reports Eastern 1s

on each student

1s

also con

s1derably below the state
average

Now facmg the d1str1ct 1s
mak e up tunc lor days lost
du e to flood and weather The

board has agreed that
students w1ll attend d asses
on Saturdays, Ma1 ch il and
31, and on Apnl 9. 10. 11 , 12
and 13 and on May 31
In add11lon , student s at
Eastern H1gh Wlll go June 1
and student s at Rtvervte''

Elementary w1ll be requ1red
to attend classes Jun1• 1 an d
three other days to be an

HONORARY CHAIRMAN - Da ve D1les. sportscaster

nounccd later

for ABC sports, lS the honurar} crusade ehan·man for the

REPORT REVIEWE()
The board rcv 1cwed a
report from the bu1ldings and

Me1gs Unit of the Amencan Cancel Soc1etj K1ckoff for
the cancer crusade will be held th1s evcmng m the Rtver
Boat Room of the Me1gs Bra nch of the Alhens County
Savmgs and Loan at 7 30 p m Guest speaker 1\ 111 be .1ohn

grou nds comm itt ee and
tdcnt1hed a" pnont y 1tems

Ely, vice prestdent of the OhiO D1v1s10n of the Amen can

were the rcp.m of the school

Cancer Soc1ety. The cancer C!Usade w1ll be held •\ pnl I
through April 15 All mterested persons are mv1ted to
attend . ,

tract or . rcp:u rs on th e
sewage systems at Tuppers

Plam s and Eastern H1 gh
Sch ool and co rrectiO n of

Teacher walkout
decision today

Teachers of Southern Local School D1stmt will
dec1de today whether they will go on str1ke, it was
reported late Monday by Jeff Westfa ll , Athens,
representatiVe of the Oh10 Educatwn AssoclatlOn
(OEA )
Two years ago, teachers at Southern Local School
Dlslflct entered mto a master contract calhng for a
1.80 md ex when money became available 1n the
district.
Westfall reported that due to additiOnal state a1d and
a levy bemg passed, the board now has lunds available
to grant pay mcreases.
The Southern Loca l School Board renewed the
contract m August , 1978, but refused to implement the
mdex accordin g to Westfall at that tune, the issue went
problems "
to bmdin g arbi tration
Roger Dav1dson discussed
A hea rmg was held in the C1ty Buildmg m Athens
a drammg problem due to
Feb 12 with Supe rintendent Bob Ord , board members,
wate r runmng down hi S
and Attorney Robert Baker of Colwnbus, along w1th
driveway into his basement
members of the OEA bemg present.
The matter was referred to
Arbitrator John Drotning rendered a decisiOn a
the st reet department.
week ago that the board must implement the 1.80 mdex
MAYOR COMMENDED
retroact1ve to September, 1978
Mavor Andre"s reported
Teachers of the d1str1ct w1ll meet today at 4 p.m.
he h3d received severa l _, - .l!lld the board will meet at 7 p.m .
letters from res idents
If the board refuses to unplement the I 80 mdex ,
commending htm on the
"teachers no doubt will go out on str1ke," Westfa ll
fine JOb he did during last
md1eated.
(Continued on page 2)

electncal \\t rmg problem s ut

Chester ancl Tuppers Plams
J1m Huff, Eastern coordm ator of fedcrul programs
and schoollibran es. report ed
on the outcome of the I cccnt
read1ng cont est held 1n the
school system
The board appro ved a
requ est from the 1' 1' A for

Two hurt in
auto crash

expenditures of money to

aos1st the "Crop" program
1'hc board agreed to par·
t1c1patc w1th other schools ln
Me1g s County 1n admmistcrmg a specw l competency test m the areas of

math and rcadmg with the
mformation to be used from
t he testing to make necessa ry
adjustment s m the acadcrm c
program at Eastern

The board also ,,greed to
tak e pa11m the usc of a multi
medta center for drtvcr· s
ed ucatwn mstruct wn a s

arranged by the county board
of

educatiOn

1'he res1gnauon of John
Pcrmc as h1gh school track
co ach wa s accepted and
approval was gtvcn fur the
adoptiOn of a spec1al parental
complamt procedure 'wh1ch
w1ll be submitted to Title l
personn el in Columbus
A reMgnatton letter was
read and accepted from Ktm

Montague , \ltle 1 rem edial
readmg teacher

Andrews
withdraws
• •
petition
•

Because of health reasons.
Pomeroy Ma) or Claren ce
Andrews has wlthdra\\n h1s
petlllon of cand1da cy to s.•ek
the Republican nommat1on to
run for reelection to t he

REPAIR STREETS - Middleport Village street
deparirnent workers were busy Monday repairing
problems with bricks making up Seventh St. near the
'I

corner of.Pearl St Wet weather had caused the bncks to
becomc~l aced and created a trafflc hazard at the spot

town' s top post.
Andr ews requested hi s
peUtlon be withdrawn in a
letter to the Me1gs County
Board of Election s.
In oth er dev elopment s.
Rodney Karr. recently appomted to serve 'On Pomeroy
Council. ha s filed Ius pet11lon
to run for a full term.
Karr . a Hepub l1 ca n,
replaced La rry PoMll. who
reslgn,ed when he was muncd
to the Me1gs Local School ,
Board Two council members
Will be elected m Pomeroy
th1s fall
•

Two persons m]urcd dunng
a one-vch1cl e accident th1 s
mornmg on SR 141 arc hsted
1n guarded condition m the
mtensave care uml of Holzer

'I he G,lli la- Mcl gs Post
mvl•st1g.a ted t \~ O acc idents
Monda\
Officers \\ ere called to the
scen e of a b \o·vehtcle m1shap
on U .S :\5 four-tenths of a

Medical Center
Called to the scene at 12 20 m1ic west of SH ibO at :1:25
a m , th e Gallia-MeJgs Post, p m
H1ghway Patrol. 1·eports that 111C p&lt;Jtrol reports that an
a west bound auto opcrHted auto npcrated bv W1lilam
by Harold numle) 26, Ht I. r- razcc. 22 Galhpo ils. had
Ga llpohs, was travelmg at an
excessive rate of speed when

stopped m traffic on 35
•\ vchl ch• dn vcn bv .Judith

the veh1cle passed off the left Blue. ~ li. H10 G1ande. fa1led to
s1de of the roadway one-tenth stop and st ruck the Frnzee
auto Ill the rear
of a m1lc west of CR ~ 0
Th er e \\ dS moder at e
Out of control. the veh1d e
ro ll ed over . e]cctmg Rumley d ;~ mage to the 13luc auto,
and a pa.sengcr. Jeffrey slight dama ge to the Fr&lt;tzee
Haskms. 22. Hedgewood Dr , vch1 cle
Blu e w&lt;~ s e1ted on a ch&lt;irge
Gall1pclis
of
fa 1htre to- m amtam an
Huml ey and Haskms
assured
cl ear distance.
di spl ayed mca pac1tat10g
Th e patrol mvestlgated a
s1gns of mjury, and wer e
transported by the Galha two-\' Chicle acc ident in Mmgs
Volunteer Squad to Hol zer Count) on Sl1 1 2~ . two-tenths
of a m1l c cast of CH 5
MediCal Cent er
Off icer• report that an auto
Rumley was admitted to
the mtens1ve care umt for oper &lt;~ t cd b1 J uha Mood!s·
treatm ent of a contusiOn of p&lt;l ugh. 21. Middleport , had
the k1dne; , multiple con· stopped m traffi c on 124
A \elud e dnven b) Mark
tus10ns and abras1ons of the
H1chmond
. 1'1 . l'omeroy,
nght lower leg, an d ba&lt;" k
fa
ded
to
stop
,tnd struck th e
mjury
Haskms was adm itt ed to
th t&gt; mtcns1vc care umt for
trea tment of severe head

Mooch spa ugh au to
rear ·

UlJUri CS .

to th e

Hoth men arc listed

Ill

guarded conditiOn
The acc1dent 1s still under
mvest1gat10n

There

\ \&lt;I S

th e

1n

severe damage

Hit hm oncl

auto ,

mod er ate damage to the
Moothspaugh vehicle. 11!chmond Ha !:! CJt rd on a charge
of ;JsS urcd dc&lt;Jr distanCe

Pair arrested
Jack Schuler, 19. Rt 1,
Portland . and Van Steven
Counts. 18, E. Mam St ,
Pomero y, were arr ested
Monday mght for the all eged
burning of a 1970 veh1cle on
Sa lisbury Twp. road 202.
According to a report f1led
With Meigs County Shenff
James J . Proffitt the palf
p1cked up the vehicle at the
Pomeroy parking lot after
pur ch a sing gasoline at
Landmark.
Schuler then drove the
stolen car and was followed
by Counts m another vehicle

,

I.
I.

They proccc rl ed to Old
Forest Hd , \\here Schuler

'pull ed the vch1 cle to the
roa d's edge nea1 the
Salisbur) -Chester Twp. line.
all ege dl y poured ga solin e
ins1dc it before scttmg 1t
aflame.
Schule1 then ]Wnped mto
Count s ' v.ch1cle, but wa s
unable to lc~vc the scene
because

Cqunts'

car was

stuck in the mud TI1c two
men then dec1ded to call for
help
When deputies and the
(Contmued on P" ~e 2)
~

•t

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