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                  <text>12-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Punu ·ro.v. 0 ., WL"Inesd:~y , M""· 14. 1!l7!'

i
Two killed in plane crash today .
COLUMBUS. Ohl·o (AP ) A twin-engine plane crashed
this morning hetween two
houses
·d ti in
1 a north
killi ,.,sidet
reSI en a · area
n5 a
least two •persons and
scorching nearby homes,
officials said.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
said a third person may also
have died in the crash shortly
after 9:30a.m.
Firefighters an'd rescue
squad workers arrived at the
scene minutes after the
. crashed in the back)•arc of a

ho=m~e~.~A~~.!~:O~~t~he:_

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EXTRA
CRISPY
•

KENnJCKY
FRIED CHICKEN
.
CR(M'S
aullY
FIUft RESTAURANT
992-5432

J

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

crash was quickly put under
control. .
The pilot w~s e~ro.ute 1D
OhiO
UmverStty
Scott State
air field
abouts Don
f1ve
miles west of the crash site.
Fed e r a 1 A v i a t i 0 n
Administration officials .said
the p1ane was enroute from
Indiana but could not give a
s cilic location .
~nvestigators from the Nationa! Transportation SafelY
Board ih Chicago were on
their wa to the scene, an
FAA 5 o?esman in Columbus
.d P
.
.
sa~~ g Acres chief of the
contr~ ~ower ~~ Doo Scott,
·d th plane had just been
~~ed ~ver to his tower by
the Port Columbus airport

· an d was· on
radar station
approach
"He didn't indicate any
roblems " Acre!l said " He
Pjust weni in: We .figur~d he
":as .about ftve mtles out o~
his fmal fo_r runway 27 left,
d th 1
Acres sat e ~ ane was on
an mstrument flight plan b~t
he d1d not know where 11
camefrom .Hesald hedtdnot
know how many persons were
QD the craft.
.
.
"We were talkmg to hun,"
Acres added. "He 'd been
cleared to ~nd, g1ven wmd
and
altimeter
and
clearance." He said the pilot
was told the wind was C?ming
from a compass readmg of
270degrees (due west) .at 15
miles per hour and gusttAA to

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 238 w.
Main St., at 8:51 p.m.
Tuesday for Thomas Crow
who was ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

MEETING CHANGED
The meeting of the Ohio
Valley Grange, 2612, Letart
Falls, has been changed from
Thursday ·night to Friday
night. They will meet at the
home of Mrs. Eula Wolfe at
7 '30 p.m.

22. m•"Ies per hour. "Th a t is came
the
. to "drest
M against
Be
k'
nght down the runway and garage, sa1 rs. mows 1.
we gave him an altimeier of
"It was gone ; it was a
"
mess,"
she said in describing
29 95
Th~ latter
figure
is
"
•"
"
'"""
' "l'hP on ly thing to.
.
bar.ometric pressure . wh1ch
p1lc_ts use m ad]ustmg
a1
t
tu ..e ers. .
.
"I heard kmd of a not se a~d
went outstde the shop, satd
Mrs. Pat Warren, .an
Ry The Assoell!ted Pressinstructor at Natwnwtde
Temperatures will continue
Beauty Academy, about a dropping late this afternoon
block and a half from the .as a fast-moving cold front
crash site.
. .
.
continues through the state.
"I saw the plane tilted stde- Temperatures will fall into
ways and heading for the the teens tonight, but will rise
ground. It was about 200 feet into the thirties again on
off the ground when I saw Thursday.
ti .Theplane thendtsappeared
behindsomehouses. Th~next
EXTENDED FORECAST
thmg I heard was a btg exF1iday through Sunday:
ploston and saw a lot of black
Fair through the period
smoke," she said .
"The pilot must have been
with a gradual warming
an awfully good one," said
trend. Highs In the 40s
Mrs. Cathy Bernowski, who
Friday, 50s Saturday and
ran to the crash ·site. "He
60s Sunday. Overnight lows
from the upper teens to low
could have hit at least two
homes, but he didn't."
20s Friday, warming to the
The plane crashed into the
upper 30s and low 40s by
of a home
Sunday morning.

-·

Some snow flurries are ex. peeled this afternoon in
' northern Ohio, and a few
flurries will occur tonight in
the Northeast. However ljl
accumulatiQII is expected.
Thursday will he sunny in
Ohio. Winds will remain
.northwesterly at 15-to-25
miles per hour Ulday but .
diminish tonight as the front
moves further east and a high
pressure center approaches.
l

Grants
Continued from page 5
positions. (If you are
unemployed, · please register
for employment with the
Employment Office. They
may he able to help you, and .
you will help us because the
federal funds coming into the
county depend a lot on the
unemployment rate of our
county). When we have a
position to be filled we must
list it with the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Servi'ce's ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
They · have the great
responsibility to the government of determining whether
a job applicant is eligible to
be on a federal program. The
people at the Employment
Office are to be complimented on the job they are
doing in carefully screening
the economically disad·
vantaged residents of Meigs
County for the federal
programs.
We must make a selection
· from applicants referred by
the employ'ment office, in this
selection we have federal
guidelines and priorities we
must follow.
.

·

Honor

MAYTAG
Halo-of-Heat

. DRYERS

gentle, even fieat
clothes
!surrounds

Av~ilable from the franChised Maytag dealer in u S

or Canada from whfch oUr~
chased. Free repair or Replacement from date of Purchase. 2 ,..,. on """' .
Complete apP'Iance. 5 Yhra

on t""s"' - .Cabinet against
ru.s ·. ,.,,. on PM11- Trans=~" of Washer. 1 y.., on

EVELYN WIQ)UM
Graham Cemetery, Point
Evelyn Deloris Turdum, 62, Pleasant, with Dr . John
New Haven, died Tuesday at Wildman officiating. The
the Lakin State Hospital. She Foglesong Funeral Home has
was born Sept. 15, 1916 in New charge of arrangements.
.
Martinsville, W. Va. to the
late Claude F. and Mary
Louisa Batten Turdum.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
.
Eleanore' Trembley,
Parkersburg, W_. Va., three ~·Thursday
nieces and two nephews.
Graveside services will be · The Watuima Band tmde~
Thursday, 11 a.m .• at the the direction of Charles
Yeago will present Its spring"
concert at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in the high school
auditorium.
One of the features will be
One defendant was fined on Concerto in B-Flat for Harp
four cha111es and three others which features hand and
forfeited bonds in the court of harp. The harp solo will be
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence played by Mrs. Lucille
Jennings , Associate
Andrews Tuesday ·Dight.
Bruce Bowman, Pomeroy, Professor of Music at Ohio .
was fined $36 and costs on University to Athens.
All proceeds from the
speeding cha111es; $50 and
concert
will go to the uniform
costs each on two counts of
fund.
There will be a
not having an oerator's
reception
after
the concert
llcense, and $50 and costs on a
and
those
attending
the
charge of rtuming over a fire
concert are invited.
hose.
Foefeiting bonds were
Patty Ann Boyles, Middleport, $50, posted on a
disorderly conduct charge;
•~
Pamela B. Theiss, Racine,
$28, speeding, and Clarence
Hospital News
J. Wil!larps, Rutland, $100,
leaving the scene of an acHolzer Mtdical Center
cident.
Discharges, March 13
Corey Armstrong, Barbara
· Four defendants wete fined Bailey, James Blair, Donald
and two others forfeited Boggess, Patricia Canaday,
not having any operator's Jane Coats, Don Farrar,
bonds Tuesday night in the Lawrence Fowler, Olita
court of Middleport Mayor Heighton, Mildred HumFred Hoffman.
phreys, Robert Jones, Jr.,
Fined were Marlene Max Kuhn, Sr., Harvey
Pooler, Middleport, $25 and McCormick, John Miller,
costs on a disorderly manner Cbrles Murray, Mary Oliver,
charge; Aaron Hysell, 48, Nova! Phllllps,
VIrgil
Pomeroy, $225 and costs and Phillisp, Misty Ratllfi, Marie
three days in jail on a driving Slone, James Tyree, Stacy
while intoxicated charge; Walker, Garnet Willlamson,
Ruth Lewis, Middleport, $25 Margaret Wilson, Sharon
and costs; disorderly man- Wolfe.
ner, and Paul D. Mitchell, 24,
Langsville, $100 and costs,
criminal mischief, and $100 Veterans Memorial Hospllal
and costs, possession of
ADMITTED - Kenneth
marijuana.
Wolfe, Rutland; Belinda
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffers, Pomeroy; Allee
Michel J. Stanley, 23, New Curtis, Long Bottom; Can·
Haven, $25, posted on a dace Lambert, Middleport;
charge of rtuming a stop sign, Carol Justis, Racine.
and Gale E. Wolfe, 36,
'DISCHARGED - IUuner
Pomeroy, speeding, 38 miles Neal, Carol Neutzling . .
an hour in a 25 mile zone, $25.

'

e

(Continued from page I) _ ·'
Springs cllllrch, extended
complimentary remarks
regarding his church work.
Tracey Jeffers spoke on
behalf of the young people of
the church and the influential
part Blackston has played in
the lives of the group.
There was a group of
teenage girls who had
"grown up" in the Rock
Springs church and they
presented a special vocal
number to honor Blackston.
Lindsey Lyons spoke on
Blackston's services to the
Tuppers Plains - Chester
Water District as a board
member and comedy was
injected into the presentation
as Fred Crow told of
Blackston's participation in
the Ohio Society for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs (he's
a past Grand Croaker) and by
Blackston's bowling buddies
of some 20 years, Roy Holter,
Roy Grueser, Bob Bowen and
Bob Haggerty.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold and
Ken and Peggy Harris.told of
Blackston's being a "great
neighbor" and Ray Whaley
recalled scouting activities in
which Blackston had played a
major part.
There were several impressive letters from former
residents who could not make
the 0 bservance and the
honored g~est was given
several gifts including the
book of information and
photographs used to "present
his life."
Blackston was taken by
complete surprise by the
presentation and it was
refreshing to watch a com·
munity take time o~t to
recognize "good" through
one of their residents, Harold
Blackston.

(Continued from page I )
Mayer, Wally Bradford, Phil
Kelly, Billy Joe Spencer,
Dale Wa mer, Scott Lucas, E.
F. Robinson, Walter Grueser,
Helen Hayes, Jean Robhanna, Boyd Ruth, Ferman
Moore, Bob Miller, bave
Jenkins, Hank Cleland,
Nancy Reed, Blll Grueser,
Wesley Buehl, Thereon
Johnson, Joe Young, Blll
Quickel, Kyle Allen, Pat
O'Brien, Mrs. Paul Simon,
Ted Reed, Paul Gerard,
Merrlt Ault, Annie Chapman,
Allen Richards, Barbara
Chapman and Katie Crow.

(USPS 145-960) ·

'

NO. 233

•

at y

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1979

15 CENTS

Schlesinger predicts heavier oil shortage
WASHINGTON (AF!)- The United States was reported today to be threatened with a much heavier shortage of oil
imports than that caused by the Iranian crisis because of a
change in the way oil companies allocate world supplies.
The report by The · New York Times quoted Energy
Secretary James R. Schlesinger as predicting the U.S. import
shortage would creep upward from the loss of a hoi!t 500,000
barrels daily to 800,000 barrels a day under the new
distribution formula.
The newspaper quoted unnamed Carter·administration and
industry officials as attributing the expected growing gap
'between U.S. petroleum supplies and demand to a decision by
international oil companies to distribute available oil on the
basis ol how much a nation normally consumes, rather than
how much it imports.
· The Times said this new allocation formula means the U.S.
share of the world oil supply shortage woUld rise from 25
percent to 40 percent. Because the United States produces
about half the oil it consumes, and imports the rest, It would
have its imports reduced more sharply to make its shortage
'

Charges. of criminal endangering and carrying or
using a firearm while under
the influence of alcohol or
drugs were expected to be
'filed this morning against
Bobby Vance, 27, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
'

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reported
today his department was
notified at 10:44 p.m. Wednesday that an unknown
person was attempting to
enter the Harrisonville

·Nationwise______,
No energy burdens inrol~
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter 's
negotiation of an Israeli - Egyptian peace agreement
apparently places no significant new burdens on U.S.
energy supplies, an administration official said
Wednesday. The United States already guarantees
Isr!!.el a rella_p_I~. ,SUPP,lY oJ oil '!l'der a 1975 agreement.
'The 6~an e"pert on infernational energy matters
who asWe.t"rlot to be Identified, took note Wednesday of
news reports saying that Israel would return to Egypt
the Sinai oil fields which now provide Israel about ·
30,000 barrels of oil daily.

ELBERFELD$

Police confiscate shotgun
&gt;

.,-

•

·\
.'

LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) -Lakewood police said
Wednesday that they confiscated a shotgun from a 19year-old Fairview Parkman who was questioned in the
slaying last week of Karen L. Michalski, 29, of Lorain .
Police said the shotgun was found during search of
theman'scar at a towing company, where it was taken
after a traffic accident on the night Miss Michalski was
killed. Police said no charges were filed but that the
man's account of where be was and his reason for
having the shotgun in the car were being checked.
Three shotgun shells also were found in the car, police
reported.

a

SChool levies approved
YOUNGSTOWN Ohio (AP) - Voters in two
Youngstown area ~hool districts approved levies in
special elections Wednesday. A 7-mill added levy
passed In Boardman by a narrow ma~gin,_ with 5,941 in
favor of the levy and 5;790 opposed to 1!. Liberty School
District voters approved a 7.4-milllevy by .a vote of
. 2,144-1,922. In both districts, levies had been defeated
at least three times before.

Confirms mmor
CLEVELEAND (AP) - Cuyahoga County
Commissioner Robert Sweeney confirmed Wednesday
night that he plans to resign to devote full time to his
law practice. Declaring !bat the office he holds is not
"a part-time job," Sweeney said he would like to leave
the post by April 1. However, he said the actual date
will depend on when the county Democratic pParty
picks a successor.

Pope iss~ strong warnings
5552

'

.

VATICAN CITY (AP) - In his first encycliclll,
Pope John Paul II warned Ulday that technologically
advanced, consumer spcleties threaten to make human
beings "the slave of things." He also assailed nations
that give 'only atheism the right of citizenship,"
pledged the church to defend human freedom ,
condemned the widehing gap between rich and poor
and denounced the arms buildup.

Conflict of interest noted

Sincerely Yours begins with this Nubby Double
Patch Pocketed Blazer of Poly-Colton S32, fashioned
with a matching poly-Cotton Pull-on Pant $15 . Stvte
these with polyester cap sleeve stripped V Neck Rib
Trimmtd Vest gently, covering your tong steeve
convertible cottar shirt of polyester Interlock $17.
Sincerely yours Jane Colby.· Blazer, Shirl and pent
White. Parchment: Pink and Btue. Vest In matching
Stripes.
Shirl In sizes 8·20
Blazer In sizes 8-20
Vest In sizes 8-20
Pant In sizes 8-20
Be sure fo see all the other styles women'•
coordl..,te sportswear - WomeR's Rudy
to Wear, znd fteor.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

commensurate with that of other importing nations that have
no domestic oil supply, the Times said.
Meanwhile, the General Accounting Office, the .congressional watchdog agency, was reported to have questioned in a
preliminary report the necessity of some oil comparues' big
cutbacks in jet fuel supplies to airlines. .
·
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said today the GAO had calculated, for example, that Texaco imported only 0.3 percent of its
total crude oil needs from Iran, yet blamed the Iranian crisis
for a 20 percent cutback in jet fuel shipments. . .
·
An unnamed Texaco official was quoted as saying the situation "does look like something fishy." But he suggested one
explanation might be that Te.xaco was diverting oil to com- ·
panies it operates internationally which were harder hit by the
Iranian oil cutoff than were Texaco's domestic operations .
On another energy..,elated issue, major automakers told a
HouSl!" energy subcommittee Wednesday that the government's schedule for boosting car gasoline mileage could trigger an economic .disaster for the industry and consumers,
while' saving little or no gasoline.
·

Industry spokesman testified they could meet the overall
goal of producing cars that average 27.5 111iles per gallon by
1985. But they criticized the Transportation Department's
step-by-step schedule for meeting that target.
The department administers a 1975 statute which
established a decade~o 0 g goal of d.oubling auto mileage from
the 1974 average of less than 14 mpg. The automakers are on
schedule so far, having boosted that figure to about 19mpg.
But the industry is upset that the department's recently-established schedule for the 1981-JI5 model years were "frontloaded"- meaning the biggest increases are required early .
The program calls for averages ol22 mpg in 1981 , 24 mpg in
1982, 26mpg in 1983,27 mpg in 1984 and 27.5in 1985.
"The American automobile industry will invest nearly $80
billion in new plants, tools, equipment and technology" to meet
the front~oaded schedule, said S.L, Terry, Chrysler vice
president for public affairs.
Terry and other industry spokesmen said the standards
should increase by a steady 1.5 mpg aiiJlually . .
Sen. Donald W. Riegle, DMich., testified that the fuel

Standards as now written would add $590 to the price of a car
by 1985.
Changing them to the annual 1:5 mpg increase would trim
that figure by around $150 per car for a savings of $1.3 billion to
customers, "even after adjusting for the cost of extra
gasoline," Riegle said.
Terry said a &lt;llase Manhattan Bank study showed that frontloaded standards would raise the nation's unemployment by I
per cent by 1984, and could "negatively affect our balance of
trade by $5 billion" by forcing the industry to rely more on
import sales.
"For that heavy cost, Chase estimates that the country will
reduce its annual oil usage at most by three-tenths of I per
cent," Terry said.
However, Clarence Dillow, director of the Center for Auto
Safety, a consumer group founded by Ralph Nader, said,
"Front loading is particularly important because of the projected fuel shortages for 1980 and 1981."
The administration has told the House subcommittee it will
review the pr ~gram in light of industry complaints .

Man facing multiple charges

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) -The Ohio HOUse Ethics ·
Committee said Wednesday that State Rep . Patrick
Sweeney, D-Cleveland, was in conflict of interest for
accepting $2,025 from a state mental health consulting
' job. Sweeney said he will repay the money, which is
being held in an escrow account. Sweeney and State
Sen. Jeronie Stano, 0-Cleveland, were hired last year
at S16.88 an hour to participate In a series of seniinars
on mental health . The Senate Ethics Committee is still
examing Stano's role in accepting the job, which paid

him·S945.

Crossioalk bill introduced
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Local officials would
have a new method of getting school crosswalks in
desired locaUona under a blll now pending in,the Ohio
Senate. Under the propoaal, the local authorities could
request the state Department of Transportation to
designate crotiiiWalks oo state highways that are not
adjacent to the school property. However, the bill,
approved 111;.,'! by the House on Wednesday, limits such
designations to a quarter of a mil~ from the school
property line.

' !

r .

·. VOL NO. XXIX

•

Mayor's Court

Olamber
-

'

Good luck, .Tornadoes, in tonight's Regionals

1

~--

DAVE, HERB, ARNOLD, WENDALL GRATE
OR GENE SMITH

MAYTAQ WARRANTY
AUTOMATIC WASHER
AND DAYEA

Area Deaths

Band concert

Cold front continues

For A Gr~te Deal on Furniture or
.
I
Appliance See the Grate Family
at Rutland Furniture.
.'·

gether
wascockpit.
the engme
and
t f the
The wings
par o
were completely off : so was
th e back uf the plane. !.t was
completely cur' L..! up .

---------I

station's front door.
Later the department
learned shots had been fired
at the station.
Sheriff Proffitt, Capt.
Robert Beegle, Deputy
Manning Mohler, Rutland
police and an OSP unit
responded.
While enroute, the sheriff's
office received another call
that '~'ere had been shots
fired in .:•e vicinity of the
recreation . center
at
Harrisonville.
Vance was taken into
custody while sitting in a
vehicle near the recreation

center. Vance had a slight
injury to his right hand.
Checking out the station,
deputies discovered that the
glass in the front door had
been knocked out apparently
after the suspect was unaple.
to pry off the padlock hasp.
A broken blade from a
hunting knife was found at
the front door.
Inside the station there was
a shotgun blast hole in the
ceiling, shotgun shells, candy
and cigarettes were strewn
about the store. A shotgun
with a broken stock and bood
on it was found lying against
a window which had been
smashed out.
Outside deputies found two
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through gasoline pumps had been
Monday: Mild through the dama,1ed by shotgun blasts.
period with showers Vance is lodged in Meigs
Sunday, ending by Monday County JaiL
The station . is ow•.•d by
morning. High sin the 60s
Larry
Vance, brother of the
Saturday aud Sunday and
suspect.
in the 50s Monday. i.ows in
Sheriff Proffitt also said the
the 30s Saturday and in the
front
door of the recreation
low to mid 40s Sunday and .
center had been kicked open
Mouday.
·:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;: but nothing appeared lo have
been bothered.

Spelling bee
Winners named

DRAINING WATER - This large white drain tile
behind the Pomeroy Elementary School playground is
draining water from the hillside behind the schooL The

State accepting bids for
four new cottages at GSI

MUST TIE DOGS
Spelling Bee winners from
Racine Vlllage Mayor
the Pomeroy Elem entary
Charles Pyles advises that
School hav~ been announced
all dogs in Racine must be
by Robert Morris, PrincipaL
kept tied or coulined to the
Rodney Roush; a sixth
premises qf the owners.
Governor James A. Rhodes retarded persons and have
grade student of John Arnott,
·Those who 'fall to confine announced today the state is bedrooms, laundry facilities,
will represeht Pom eroy
their dogs will be cited to accepting bids for four, 16- living room and acti~ity
Elementary School at the
court in violation of a bed cottages at the Gallipolis room. -Each cottage will have
annual Meigs County Citizen
village ordinance, the State Institute in Gallipolis. a dining room , training
Journal Spelling Bee which
mayor warned.
" Residents of the cottage kitchen and programmer's
has been scheduled for
will be able to live in a room.
Wednesday evening, March
residential and personalized
Old cottages on the site will
21, at the Salisbury
atmosphere and will have be demolished to provide land
Elementary School at 7:30'
access to individualized care for the new cottages. Bids on
p.m.
facilities,"
the Governor the$2.2million project will be
Clear tonight. Lows near
Rodney I~ the son of Mr.
said.
opened March 22.
and Mrs. Lee Roush, 215 20. Fair and warmer Friday.
Administrative
Services
This is the second new
Highs in the low 50s. The
Union Avenue, Pomeroy.
Director
Richard
D.
Jackson
cottage
project for Gallipolis.
The building runner-up was chance of precipitation is said each cottage will have The first involved conGary Coleman, son of Mr. near zero tonight and Friday. living space for 16 mentally structing four, 16-bed cotand Mrs. Loren Coleman,
1554 Nye Avenue, Pomeroy.
He Is a student in Mrs. Mary
Hysell's fifth grade.
Room winners from Miss
Tate's fifth grade were Lee
Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Powell, 220 Lincoln
Hill,
Nancy
J ohnson ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Johnson, 122 Union
Avenue; Buddy White, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward White,
208 Rock Street, Pomeroy.
Nancy and Buddy tied for
second place.
Representing Mrs. Hysell's
fifth grade were Chris
Kennedy,son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy,
246
Riverview Drive, Pomeroy,
and the runner-up, Coleman.
Roush and Karen Spencer,
daughter of Donna Spencer,
219 Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
represented Arnott's sixth
grade.
Room winners from Mrs.
Crow's sixth grade were
Vli.cent Knight, san of Mr:
and Mrs. Vincent Knight, Sr.,
312 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, and Glenda Gum,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Gum, Wolf Pen Road,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Barbara Shultz, Title I
Remedial
teacher
at
STRANGE IRISH FIGURE - Saturday is St. Patrick's Day, "Deer" . This deer head
Pomeroy
Elementary,
mounted
at the Headquarters Cafe in Midllieport has donned a plug hat and pipe to mark the
pronounced the words for the
upcoming
day for the wearing 0f the green.
·
building spell-off.

Weather

l

drain was installed by a Columbus firm as the first phase
of the corrective proce&amp;s to dry out the hill before more
permanent measures are taken .

tages, which are now occupied and will be dedicated
later this month.
Officials of the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation said
the new cottages are
designed in a residential style

to be compatible and blend in
with the adjacent residential
community. ,
Bids will be opened in the
Columbus office of the
Division of Public Works, a
part of the Ohio Department
of Adm inistrative Services.

Food program
Friday topic
Meigs County grocers
interested in increasing and
creating new business are
invited to a meeting at the
Meigs
County
Health
Department at 10:30 a.m.
Friday to hear aspects
concerning an upcoming
special supplemental food
program for women, infants
and children, known as WIC.
The
county
health
department will manage the
program locally, and will be
serving only children from
birth to five years of age at
this .time.
Client certification and
coupon distribution, a part of
the program, will be bandied.
by the nursing department of
the health department.
or
their
Grocers
representatives attending
Friday's session should note
that the health department
offices recently moved from
Mechanic St. in Pomeroy to
the Meigs Mental Health
Center , formerly Meigs
General Hospital.
Entrance to the health
department Is from Powell's
Parking Lot.
At Friday's meeting ,
merchants will receive information on reimbursement
and the score of the new
nutritional program.

rtspects of the program are
explained in the following
fact sheet from the health
department:
The Ohio WIC Program is a
special supplemental food
program for women, infants
and children. It is administered on the state level
by the Ohio Department of
Health, Division of Maternal
and Child Health and Is
fun ded by United States
Department of Agriculture,
Food and Nutrition Service.
WIC, unlike many other
food programs, is a health
program designed to operate
as an adjunct to existing lowcost prenatal and-or pediatric
clinic or physician services.
It is hoped that WIC, in
conjunction with these he'llth
services, will help to bfmg
about healthy course and
outcome of pregnancy and
optimal
growth
and
development of participants.
The Ohio WIC Program
serves approximately 60,000
low-income pregnant and
nursing women, and children
under five years of age, who
are determined by ah health
professional to be a medical nutritional risk. Eligibl~
persons are provided a food
package selected for its high
(Continued on page 16)

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0., Thursd~y. Mar. 15, 1!179•

BXArt;:f N/l..W..

·I

At.~ tte~ ~s

' I
I

f.l C4\Pl..NN

t
I

Den Talk

COMMEITAIY
\' !;&gt;

}" ,,

Donald F. Graff

yo~~::~·iouryoung

men from the area participated in
tlle Soutlleastern Ohio Golden Gloves Tournament at Glouster.
Three of these boxers came home with gold medals and one
captured a bronze.
.
, .• Thirteen-year-&lt;&gt;ld Randy Stewart, for t~ second year in a
, row, garnered a gold medsl In his division.
: :. Fif~n-year-&lt;&gt;ld Charlie Whittington did likewise, and Larry
Babbitt, a twenty-year-&lt;&gt;ld, also came home with a first place
4
finish.
Fifteen-year..,ld Chris Allen, entering tlle ring for the first
• ' time in organized boxing, captured a bronze medal. Not bad at
all! Those same fow- fighters will participate in a Golden
~·-· Gloves Tournament at Belpre.
;:, · Roger Adams of Racine has been generous with his time and
.,. has contriputed facilities for practice. Roger Stewart has been
. . acting as trainer, and a number of other folks hlive ~en
helping in and out of tne ring .
~-. Anyooe interested in perhaps getting a boxing club suirted in
tlle county or actually getting into the ring is asked to caD 992. • 5212 after 5:00. Fighters are divided by age and weight, so no
~ ~ one wlll be going against anyone lnore than seven pounds
' heavier or some pro.
,. Help is also needed to work on tlle program for ares youths.
•. The actual boxing is for those young men between 10 and 25
.. years of age.

By Doll Graff

-'.

....

.. .:.

Talmadge faces the music
By Rlohard E. Cohen

WASHINGTON \ NEAl - Sen. Herman E . Talmadge, D·
Ga .. is moving from the toughest physical battle of his life
to what may be his most gruelling political fight.
The 23-year Senate veteran, who was released recently
from a federal hospital treating him for alcoholism, faces a
Senate trial on charges that he Improperly haqdled
personal and political financial dealings.
·
long one of the Senate's most skillful Insiders, he will
have a tough time proving his innocence before the Senate
a nd Georgia's voters. He Is making re-election plans for
1980 despite statewide poUs that show him trailing Gov .
George D. Busbee.
The Senate itself is on trial as it awaits what could be one
. of its toughest internal battles In yeah· when its Ethics
Co.m mittee considers the evidence in April. If It recommends that the Senate punish Talmage for his offenses,
NEW YORK (AP)- Here
there could be a major impact on the nation's farm and
health-&lt;:are policies - areas where the Georgia lawmaker is the complete ten of the
audio tape lroadcast by NBC
wields considerable power .
Talmadge's problems stem from the bitter divorce from of the Rev . Jim Jones ,
his ex-wife Betty. Lengthy legal proceedings revealed the speaking to his .followers
Senator made highly questionable use of money from shortly before the mass
constituents and may have violated federal banking and murder-suicides In Joneselection laws as weU as Senate rules by falllng to disclose town, Guyana, ·on Nov. 17,
gifts and property holdings.
·
His main accuser is Daniel Minchew, his one-time top 1978.
staff aide who later became chairman of the International
Jones - What's going to
Trade Commission . Minchew is under Justice Department
investigation for his handling of Talmadge's funds from happen here in a matter of a
1972 to 1974.
few minutes is that one of a
Following review of Minchew's testimony as well as the few on that plane is gonna,
divorce records, the Ethics Committee voted H in gonna shoot the pilot. I know
December to accept a staff recommendation for a formal that. I didn't plan it but I
hearing. The inquiry is the most serious charge of
wrongdoing against a senator since Thomas J, Dodd of know it's gonna happen.
. Connecticut was censured in 1967 for misuse of political They're gonna shoot that pilot
and down comes tlle plane
·
funds .
The committee's trial-like proceeding was postponed into tlle jungle. And we had
Wlhi April because of Talmadge's intensive treatment for better not have any of our
alcohol abuse. His apparent return to good health set the children left when it's over
wheels in motion for final Senate action that could come by cause they'll parachute In
summer .
her~ oo us.
Although several senators have been the target of
. .. So, my opinion Is tllat
investigation for official misbehavior in recent years, none
we'd
be kind to children and
has suffered the fate of the four House members censured
by their colleagues and five others who have lost Important be kind to seniors and take
the potion, like they used to
chairmanships since 1975.
The two most recent examples are Reps. Charles C. take in ancient Greece and
Diggs Jr., D-Mich., who was chairman of the District of step over quietly, ·because we
Colwnbia Committee, and Daniel J. Flood, D-Pa., who are not conunitting suicide:
chaired the Appropriations Subcornmittee.controlllng the It's a revolutionary act.
budgets of the Labor and HEW Departments.
If the Senate determines Talmadge violated its rules, it
Woman (identified as
will face the question of whether he should retain hill
Christine
Mlller) - I feel like
position as chairman of the Agriculture Committee and the
Finance Subcommittee on Health. His probable replace- that as long as there's Ufe,
ments - Sens. George McGovern, O.S.D., and Gaylord there's hope. There's hope.
Nelson, D-Wis., - are more liberal and more likely to That's my feeling.
support President Carter's policies.
·
· ··
Jones - Well someday
Carter and Attorney General Griffin B. Bell may play an everybody dies. Someplace
important role Ill the Senate drama by their decision on that hope runs out 'cause
whether to indict Minchew for his alleged offenses. Justice
Department investigators are known to be considering everybody dies.
Crowd Noise - That's
some action; their bosses certainly are aware that an
indictment could undermine Minchew's effectiveness as a right, tllat's right!
witness against Talmadge . ,
Christine Miller - I said
However, Carter has never been close politically to the I'm afraid to die.
semor Georgia senator and there is some reason to believe
Jones - I don't think you
that the president would bre11the a sigh of relief if are. I don't think you are.
Talmadge goes down before the 1980 campaign heats up.
Christine Miller- But, ub,
Whatever the result, the Senate is preparing for a bitter
I look at all the babies and I
and acrimonious· battle.
think tlley deserve to Uve.
Jones - I agree.
Olristine Mlller - Yunno.
Jones - But also they deserve much more. They de' serve peace.
. (Noises of approval can be
beard from crowd)
Unidentified Man - It 's
over sister, it's over. We've
NEW YORK (AP)- One thing is perfecUy clesr -former · made that day. We made a
President Richard Nixoo will have to come up with another beautiful day. And let's make
crib at San Clemente if his two daughters visit at the same it a beautiful day.
time.
(Again, crowd shouts
Tricla Nixon Cox gave birth at 2:58a.m. to a 7-pound, 51'•- approval)
ounce boy Wednesday at New York Hospital-Cornell Medical
Unidentified Woman (sobCenter. Both mother and baby - named Christopher Nixon bing)-We'reaUready to go.
Cox - were reported doing weD.
If you leU us we have to give
Nixon's younger daughter, Julie Nixon Eisenhowe·r , had a 9- our lives now, we're ready.
pound, 4-&lt;&gt;unce girl - named Jennifer - last Aug . 15. Nixon
(Crowd shouts approval)
told reporters at tlle hospital tllat "Jennie is almost talkingat least she tllinks she's talking."
Another Unidentified
He said his grandson is "a very handsome lad" and that Mrs. Woman - So we might as
Cox was doing well despite "somewhat of a difficult time" witll weli end it now, because · I
tlle birth by Caesarean section.
don't ...
Nixon said he and his wife, Pat, would spend two or three
days in New York visiting the new mother and grandchild before returning to California.

--.:!'.

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Jones' transcript released

-

Names •••

in the.news

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Hf

Jjmmy's White House
By FRANK CORMIER
AB9ociated Press Writer
W~SHlf&gt;lGTON (AP) Wben President Carter
addressed
Egypt's
legislature last weekend,
somt\' members fingered
"wofry beads" while he
talked.
Ot(e American joined the
parUiunentarians Indulging
in t'!Jis Middle Eastern
pastime. He was Zbigniew
Brvlzinski, the president's
assistant
for
national
security affairs.
Seated on a front row bench
rese~ed for. distinguished
guest~,
Brzezinski idly
rotated a string of white
beads' from finger to fiilger.
----1.

Cart~i"s departure from
Jerusalem tllis week did not
go like clockwork. Israeli
authorities went on the
assumption the p.resident waa
leaving'
as
o~iginally
schedul'ed at 3:30 p.m.
Monda'y'. Instead, he departed Tuesday afternoon.
That 'didn't stop the Israeli
\

~·

_ _ _...::__ _ _ __ _ __ __;_::.__ _ _ _ _~
"1

•m

government from shutting
down tlleir country's only
international airport for four
hours Monday, just in case
Carter took to tlle skies oo
schedule.
Perhaps the shutdown time
was not entirely wasted, however. Israeli troops and · a
band went through two dress
rehearsals for the departure
ceremony.
The . president's wife,
Rosalynn, nonnaUy wears
contact lenses. Wben she and
her husband . went to a
Jerusalem museum Monday
night to see the Dead Ses
Scrolls, however, she made
one of her rare appearances
in glasses.
Mrs. Carter did not wear
the horn-rimmed spectacles
throughout tlle museum visit.
She put them on from time to
time as she peered intenUy at
the scrolls, sealed In air-proof
glass showcases.
Standing almost in ·the
shadow of the Pyramids
during Carter's visit to Cairo

~af":;.u~es:~ ~0=

reporters by declaring
publicly tllat work on 59

C 1171 b~ NEA , Inc:

•'
.
I
'
"Ys know, son, It was not too m•n~ years ago
when It was YOU who was aftt' ME not to

L

smoka "
V•

t''

...

percent of a proposed peace
treaty with Israel had been
concluded. Although Sada~
made this seem like progress,
he · had put the completion
quotient earlier at 95 percent.
Reporters finally
concluded that Sadat, though
speaking in English, was
thinking in Arabic. In tllat
tongue words are written
backwards, even though
figures are not. Sadat simply
got mixed up. ·

A world half ice, half rock and so cold that a natural
process known oq earth may be reversed - II10W may
come up rather than down, oozing out of buried'sluah to
crystalize on the frozen surface.
Another world resembling, in the irrevere nUy memorable·descrlptlon of one sclenU.t, a pW..
·
A never before suspected ring around the solar sylllem's
largest planet.
,
These and many other wonders and mytteries have been
recorded by the Voyager I spacecraft ID Ita brief ftyby of
Jupiter. Brief because althOugh the dlleoveries radioed
back to earth have•been making newe for weeki, thle Ia no
time at all compared to the almolt two years the 400mllUon-mlle journey required.
It was a long way to go for something, but preeieely what
scientists may require a much longer time to detennlne.
What is Immediately apparent from the mlaalon,
however, is that the more we learn about our ttnmedlalll
celestial neighborhoOd, the stranger place It becomea. No
.
two worlds yet scrutinized are preci.sely alike.
The Jupiter revelatioDB •111111est that no ma~r how
fanciful may be our earth-based speculation on what lies
, out there, the actuality Is likely to be even more dl'llinaUc.
. With the spacecraft now on the nest leg of ita Journey Into
infinity, the 20-month, 528-milllon-mlle fUght to Satum,
expect~d to yield an even richer sclimtiflc harvest, we can

only as.c:

middle age. While tbls
condition has existed for
some time, tlle government Is
only now beginning to
conslde'r what to do about it.
Given the option, most
middle-aged
Americans
would just as soon let nature
take Its course and make
them older Americans.
, House subcommittees oo
'ljing and retirement have
set about studying the
proble~ of middle-aged
women, with the suggestion
that . there ought to be
gov.emment programs to help
tbem over midllfe hurdles.
"They are now being 'discovered' much as the elderly
and their problems w:ere 'discovered' during the 1960s,"
said. Dr. Robert N. BuUer,
director of the National
.Institute ,on Aging . "A
gener~ pattern may be found

"'

"'
,

There are two interesting sidelights to tonight 's Class A
•· Regional Cage game between the Soutllern Tornadoes and the
Gnadenhutten Indian VsUey Soutll Rebels.
Gordon Fisher, a Soutllem graduate, was a starter on his
1965 telim that was the last Soutllern squad to reach the
Regionals. That team was beaten in the first round.
Gordoo Is now assistant and freshman coach for the
Rebels from Gnadenhutten .
. The other interesting Ingredient is that today is Tornado
" Coach Carl Wolfe's birthday. We at the Sentinel and the
.~Tornado squad know just what would be the perfect present .

t

What now, Voyager?

The joy of pulsating
Not everything that gleams in the night ill a distant moon
or planetary ring.
Back here on earth it could be a jogger.
A .brief business Item informs that a New Jersey firm 'Ia
marketing an Illuminated body belt. To be lltrapped over
chest and back, it Is fitted with battery-powered miniature
colored lights. ·
Thus decked out in pulsating ,lights, joggers .out lor
· evening runs are clearly and safely visible In the traftll:
ftow, not to .mention possible traffic stoppers. The 1lo'ir
bells are also suggested as useful accessorta for cyell8ta,
hikers, skaters and disco dancers .
~n other words, anyone Interested in being llteraUy light
on the feel.
·
.

0

~ . G~tim~~:·m.atthe:,tllensl Cohnvocation&lt;'£nter.

•

lly ,\Nl)Y LIPPMAN
Press Writer
CINCINNATI ( AP) Larry Bird is back In Dave
ffiiss' life and tlle reunion
couldn't have come at a
worse time for the Oklahoma
basketball coach.
Bird is a big obstacle in
Oklahoma's path in wnight's
NCAA Midwest semifinal
tournament game against
top-ranked Indiana State.
l.ouisvUie plays Arkansas
in I he other semifinal cootest.
Bliss, while an assistant
coach at Indiana, helped
bring Bird into the Hoosier
nest.
Bird dido 't even stay at Indiana a year, and eventually
found h\s way to Indiana
Stale, where this season he
has led tlle Sycamores to a 360 season.
Bliss modestly admits that
Bird may not remember any
more about him than that he
was an Indiana coach, but the
Oklahoma coach certainly
remembers wbat attracted
A~sau•iatt."CC

HEALTH

'

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

.,

~~~=-----------------------~"

",.
'"
' ~·

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB _

manufactured in your owtf
intestines that there is three'
to six tln\es as much biotin
Carter's week-long journey Some years ago I read in a in the urine you eliminate as:,
produced a full quota of British medical journal that there is 1n all the food you ,
raw eggs were unsafe for ea.
t
t(
hyperbolic rhetoric.
human consumpt i on beEven
though I'm r\ot feThe president, noted for lacause of a substance they aUy worried that a few raw.
vishing effusive 11raise oo contained
known as avidin, egg whites are going' to'•
some of the leaders he toasts , which has a devas.t atmg ef- , cause vitamin or mineral :
at state dinners, seemed to f~ on ~e vitamins and • ·deficiency in anyOne 1 do
outdo himself in Alexandria, mmerals m the human body· not really approve ol their •
Recently on some TV com- use. Incidentally, the avidin • ~
Egypt, when he said that in
the case of Sadat, "I look . mercials I observed that in egg whites is Inactivated •
~
upon him as a brother." raw eggs added to bever- by cooking
ages
or
drinks
were
being
Eggs
ar~
a
good
f~
for
.
Carter continued :
May.
I
know
bacteria.
Raw
eggs
can
be
a
recommended:
"I would certainly hate to
your opm~on ts about good source for salmonella I
run against him for publlc of- w~t
usmg raw eggs .
food poisoning So 1 think It
fice in Egypt. Bull would add
DEAR READER - If you is best that aU ~f the eggs we :
very quickly that I would also want my personal opmion, eat be ·cooked, at least suffl- :
hate· to run against him for just looking at a raw egg cienUy to destroy the hann- f
public office in the United would he ~ough to keep me ful bacteria that migJit be "
States of America. I tllink it Is from adding it to any drink. present in the raw state. ,
This is not Just a,~' indict- accurate to say that he is per- The fo;et of the raw egg white
haps the most popular person doesn t tickle my palate, , ment of raw eggs, for that. £
either.
reason. Many of our f~
in our own country."
But I suspect you. want my · sources, Including the mea~~
professional . opinion. tbere group are potenUal breed •I'
Is '!Orne basla of truth in your ing arid growinl pillces f~! ~
letter, although I'm afraid It genns.
development of ;
• •
.is a little exaggerated. The cooking habits haa done a lot E
relationship of raw eggs to more for man tlian Jual ;
·in this country whe,n a .vitamin deficiencies ill please his palate. ~ o
particular group is perceived based on the egg white and water haa historically been' :
as a 'problem.'" ·
not the yolk. The raw egg one of the best ways to :
There's no question tllal
white contains an anti-vita- prevent the spread of water- ~ ·
middle age brings problems,
min called avidin. 11 is able borne diaeasea
~
personal, psychological,
to inactivate biotin which is
For infonnatlon on what •
a vitamin and is Important vitamins and minerals you ~
professional. and sometimes. in human metabolism.
should have, send 50 cents ~
economic, and that they can
In fact, biotin was first with a long stamped'· self- "
be particularly difficult for
discovered because of the addressed envelo to'r The "
women.
effects of feeding raw egg Health Letter n.!:tber u,l ;
But there Is room ftr doubt whites to rats. Fortunately • Balanced · Dl t R 0 • II.
that the government can do' we are not rats so we don't mended Daily e ~ ~-i
anything about it, or that it ~:~~ much of the same iowances (ROA). Address ~
should try.
Now ~aw egg white will your ~t to Dr. Lamb In
Actually, Congress got into not, aftect any of the other :': ~
ne~per, P.O.
tbe act five years ago when it vitamins or miner~ that New y orl.~~1
Station,
created the National Institute
you consume. That's what I
'
;,
I!
oo Aging in a bUt that alao de- . ' mean by saying your letter
;
clared "recent research :~ exaggerate t,he case a . .- - !!'l!!!!!!l••iiii
efforts point tlle way toward
In man you'd have to
iC
alleVIation of the probteins of consume ~ Jot of raw ea
li!V'PB a
;
old age by extending the
whites to produce such an
- I lUll ... ,
iii
heillthy middle years of Ufe."
effect. Biotin deficiency can
BuUer said his Institute has
cause loaa of appetite.
"
not bad the mopey or the per- na~~~e~~, voiiilting, a shiny
sonnet to conduct major
tongue, pale complexlo~l.~:
fRI~E~
studies of the midcDe years,
preaolon a'!d dry, ecaly
.
but "middle age will bi=.J:f'~..::W:11
certaillly beccme ·a priority Whff Because the ba=:;
v R-••••T
area as resources ~ nonnally .., 111 nt 1n our own
.,, Wl..,ftM
avallable within the nell! lnleltlne manuf•cturea it. 1n
992-5432
•J ;
several yesrs."
!act, there Ia so much biotin

t

COLUMBUS
The recipients of an Arbor Day
Division of Forestry of the Award . The committee
•Ohio Department of Natural consists of individuals iiiResources (ODNR) will terested in conservation and
' \honor individuals, com- tree planting in Ohio .
·~munities or o.t her groups who
lndividUllls ·or groups in' ')lave made significant con- teres ted In submitting a
tributlons to tree planting nomination for an Arbor Day
efforts in Ohio during its Award may . obtain a
annual Arbor Day Awards nominating form and adceremony scheduled April T1 dltional information from
'In Columbus.
local Division of Forestry
: Nominations for a 1979 offices throughout the state
Arbor Day Award must be or the Division of Forestry
Submitted to the Forestry Ohio Department of Natural
Division 's headquarters in Resources, Foantaln Square,
Columbus by 5 p. m . April 9. Columbus 43224, phone (6i4)
Winners will be notified prior · 446-7842.
to the ceremony.
· "The At'bor Day awards
are designed to recognize
outstanding
work
in
promoting
and
accomplishing reforestration,
windbreak planting or
community beautification
through tree planting," said
Ernest Gebhart, Chief of the
By '~ERRV KINNEY
Forestry Division.
AP Sports Writer
Nomination for awards
TAMPA , F1a . (AP)- Mike
may be submitted by any
Grace "amazing Grace " he
person or group who has
dubbed himself, was the last
direct knowledge of the ac- of tlle Cincinnati Reds to
complishments
of the
shower after driving in the
nominee. A brief written winning run in the lith inning
statement explaining the
Toronto
6-5
to beat
person's accomplishments Wednesday.
should accompany the form.
Grace was relishing the
. An awards committee is rare opportunity to rise from
appointed each year by the goat to hero in the same
Chief of the Division of afternoon . Earlier he had
Forestry to determine the tllrown a double play baD Into

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
Announces Its March

JEEP RENEGADE
SALE

t

a

0C:fe

5

OUT

·

=

KENTUCKY

-

fAM••

' .

pass.'.'

·

Bliss said he was getting a
lot of advice on how to handle
the Sycamore attack.
"I'm getting all sorts of
suggestions on how we should
defense Larry Bird," Bliss
said . "Right now, J he
.
suggestions are ~.
"Everyone is all excited.
Ali of a sudden, we're a
basketball state."
.I f tlle excitement is being
felt in Oklahoma , it's
certainly in evidence in Terre
Haute , Ind., home of lhe
Sycamores.
Once
again,
during
practice Wednesday, Bird,
stili wearing a bandage on his
broken thumb, spent much of
the time off tlle court trying
to avoid th• &lt;notlight.

By 'fhe Associated Press
Cleveland St. Joseph has
emerged as tlle favorite in
boys Class AAA high school
basketball tournament play
arter tlle top three ranked ·
teams fell by tlle wayside
Wednesday night.
Fourth-ranked St. Joseph,
beginning regional
tournament action · tonight
against unheralded Toledo
Macomber, saw the path to
its first state championship
cleared considerably when
top - ranked Cincinnati
Witllrow, No. 2 Kettering
Alter and third-rated Canton
McKinley suffered upsets.

Unranked
Cincinnati
LaSalle
( 20-3)
tripped
Witllrow 7~ in the Dayton
· regional, despite a 38-point
performance by Withrow's
Lasalle Thompson ' It was
. Withrow's first losS in 23
games this season . LaSalle
was paced by Ed Herzog witll
21 points .
Also in the Dayton regional,
Dayton Meadowdale
surprised defending Class
AAA champion Alter 52-51.
Alter ( 21-2) had a chance to
salvage a victory when Mike
Crotty was fouled as time ran
out, but Crotty missed the
first shot of a 1-and-1

right field to allow two runs to

score.
"After that play I was @lad
to get tlle chance to redeem
myself," Grace said. "I've
got to learn to drive In more
runs Ulan I let in."
Grace, 22, Is trying to win a
spot witll the Reds again this
year. He was carried on the
roster the last two years but
was taken off last season .
"Sure, I was disappointed," Grace said. "I
was told management had
made tlle decision to protect
some young ballplayers.
"But I stlll think I have a
shot to make the team in a
year or two as a backup to
Ray (Knight, who is
succeeding Pete\Rose at tllird
base) ."
Grace was acquired by the
Reds as their No. 2 draft
choice in June 1974. He
worked his say up through
.Billings, Tampa and Three
'Rivers and spent the last two
seasons with the Reds ' top
farm club in Indianapolis.
He also was with ancinnati

=

i

I
J

for a while last season as a
replacement for Knight, tllen
Rose's backup, when he was
hurt.
The Reds had a 5-\1 lead
when Toronto got four
unearned rlDis in the sixtll
inning Wednesday, two of
tllem coming when Grace
fielded what could have been
a double play ball to end the
inning.
Instead, Grace hurrried his
throw to second and the baD
went into right field.
"It wasn't a bad throw. I
just dido 't let him (second
baseman Joe Morgan) get to
second base," Grace said . "I
had time to wait and make
tlle tllrow and I should have
waited. "
Grace bided his time after
that, waiting for the chance to
get back tlle runs he had lost.
That chance almost didn't
come . .
"Mac (manager John
McNamara) had said George
~'oster would bat for me if we
had two men on base or a
man on ltrst," Grace said.

TIRE OIANGE OVER

Jeep CJ-7 RenJII!Iadlel

WINTER'S OVER

From now throu1h March 3i, 1979
Riverside Amc-Jeep will deduct the price
the Renepde packa1e from any new
Jeep CJ-5 or CJ-7
Rene1ade they hne in
stock:-

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BALANCING
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.

His coach, Bill Hodges,
rtidn 't make the spotlight 'IllY
smaller with his praise .
"He's a simple, down4oearth young man who has a ll
the qualities of a guy you
would want on your side if
you were fighting a war ,"
Hodges said. "He's loyal,
hard.flosed, mentally tough
and intelligent beyond his
)'ears."
Bird, in a television
interview with a local
television station, said tllat
much of the credit went to his
leammates .
"~'ar too much attention
has been given to me," Bird
told television station WKRCTV. " I feel much more
publicity should be given to
my teammates . They have
just as much to do with the
success as I do."
Meanwhile,
Louisville
Coach Denny Crum and
Arkansas Coach Eddie Sutton
were aware of the contrasts

in tlleir respective team's
styles.
"They do an excellent ,iob

Chillicothe amo'n g

n.e

1 1

him I&lt;&gt; the now-sycamore
center .
.
"He's got a great pair of
handS ," Bliss said. "Alvan
Adams and Blll Bradley had
hands like that.
"The aspect thai he's improved the most is his ability
to anticipate and his ability to

Grace turTJ-S from goat
to hero in 6-5 victory ·

.,..

Boiled would be better

.

'

.,

'

'

wz onor
·
.
··persons, groups AA~ tour11ey victims

OU Is not the only liquid import AmeJ:)c~ are
consuming in record quantities.
There's also champagne. A release from the Cluunpacne
News and Information Bureau brinp the news thai 19'l8
was another record year with shipments from France
reaching 7,169,224 bottles, up 48.5 percent over 1977, which
itself was up 20 percent over the prevloua year.
That's the way it's been going since 1984 when the threemillion boiUe barrier was first broken.
.
Despite the escalating American taste for the stuff, there
is no danger of a shortage In the foreseeable future. French
producers (lOCi bad they aren't also in the oil busineaa) are
laying down huge stoclts in anticipation of demand, More
than 650 million bottles are reported presently aging In ~
cellars. At current rates of world conawnptlon, that's •
three-year supply.
.
,
There's no connection in any of thb with the oilllhortaae'
of course, except possibly suggesting a way to forget It (;t
a while. But at least there's one thing we have no need tO
worry about. There'll be something available with which to
toast the occasion should ~e crisis ev,r and. 0 _ ;,.
,,

'

.

Indiana State faces
SPORTS
Oklah · f
DaUy
0 ma . IVe tonight

v1 '.n

Bubbles for Americans

..
Washington today.'
'

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Spe,clal Correspoodent
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
congressional panel has
solemnly declared old age to
be "a direct outgrowth" of

BALTIMORE ( AP) - President Carter's mother, Lillian
Carter, says she worked to overcome the loneliness she felt
after her husband's deatll in 1953 "by being a mother to 105
boys.''
She became a fraternity hou!jeiilother.
" If any woman at' age 46loses her husband and wants' to find
something to do to take up her whole life- well; tllat was it,"
Mrs. Carter told a colloquium on aging at the University of
Maryland.
Mrs. Carter said she left the fraternity "after P~v'n and a
half years of not getting a sin@)~ full night's sleep;• and came
home to Plains, Ga., to find herself "bored to death."
" I got tired of doing nothing but going to church, to tell the
trutll," she said. So, at age 69, sqe decided to join the Peace
Corps.

are
socialistic
who
communists to die. No way
for us to die. We must die with
sdme dignity.
... Children, it's just something to put you to rest. o,
God!
(More
crying .
In
background)
... I teD you, I don't care
now many screams you hear,
I don 't care how many
anguished cries, death is a
million times preferable to
ten more days of tllis Ufe.
... If you'll quit telling them
they're dying. If you adults
wUI stop tllis nonsense. i call
oo you to quit exciting your
children when all they're
doing is going to a quiet rest.
... All they're doing is taking a drink they take to go to
sleep. And that's what death
is, sleep.
... Take our life from us . We
laid it down. We got tired. We
didn 't commit suicide. We
committed an act of
revolutionary- suicide
protesting the conditions of
an inhuman world.
(No more talking oo tape,
just noise of music from
speakers at Jonestown, going
on for another several
minutes)

,

Be rr. y's ·w o rl..,.

NASHVll.LE, Tenn. (AP) -Country music singer JohMy ,
Paycheck says his business affairs were mishandled and has
asked a court to dissolve his management contract with city
offical Glenn Ferguson.
Paycheck, best known for his 1978 hit, "Take This Job and
Shove It," also said Ferguson oversaw his affairs for six years
during city office hours and through the use of city employees.
Grant S~ith, Paycheck's la)Vyer, said the singer's statements are mcluded m an answer and countercomplaint filed
Wednesday in respoose to a Chancery Court lawsuit Ferguson
filed against Paycheck last January. Ferguson brought suit
· demanding tlle return of a $10,000 gold necklace he said he
loa ned to the singer.

HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Singer Natalie Cole and her huSband,
the Rev. Marvin Yancy, have filed for a legal separation, according to Ms . Cole's attorneys.
Ms. Cole and Yancy were married July 30, 1976 in &lt;lllcago .
They have a 1%-jear-&lt;&gt;ld son, Robert Adam Yancy, born. Oct.
14, 1977.
The singer wouldn't comment on the reason for the separation, whicllwas filed In Los Angeles Superior Court.

Jones (interrupting) tlley're not crying out of any
Keepipg
talking,
the ~ pain.
congr,~ssman
has been
Another Unlden tified
murdered
the con- Woman - I just wanta say
gressman 's dead. Please get something to everyone that I
us some medication. It's see that is stancHng around
simple. It's simple, there's no and, ub, crying. This is
convujsions with it, it's just nothing to cry about. This is
simple. Just please get it be- something we could all
fore it's too late. The G.D.F. rejoice about. We could be
(Guyanese army) wiD be happy about this.
here. I teD you, get moving,
Jones - Please, for' God's
get moving, get moving ...
How many are dead? Aw, sake let's get on with it.
God all-mighty, God all- We've liv~ ... Let's just be
mighty .... It's too late, the done witll it, let's be done
congressman's dead. The with the agony of it.
(Noise, confusion and apcongressman's aide's desd.
Many of our traitors are plause)
dead. They're aU layin' out
... Let's get calm, let's get
tllere desd.
calm.
Schreams in background)
Nurse- You have .to move,
I don't know who fired the
and the people that are stand- shot, I don 't know who killed
~ tllere in the aisle, go stay the congressman. But as far
m . tlle radio room yard. So as I'm concerned, I killed
everybody get behind the him. You understand what
table lllld back tllls way, OK? I'm saying? I killed him. He
There's nothing to worry had no business coming. I
aboUt. So everybody keep told' him not to come.
cain!, and try !If keep your
... Die with respect. Die
children calm. And the older with a degree of dignity. Lay
children are to help lead the · down your life with dignity.
little' children and reassure Don't lay down with tears and
tneni: They aren't crying agony . Stop this hysterics.
from pain. It's just a little This is not the way for people
bitter tasting but that's ...
'

.

.
By Greg BaUey
·
BolWig anyone? If Golden Gloves Boxing &amp;ounds like your
cup of tea, then tllere are a few Meigs Countians who share

, Briefly noted . . .

IN WASHINGTON

I

siluation. Meadowdale, 18-5
and also unranked , was led
by reserve Derek Bunch with
14 poinis.
Akron Central-Hower, the
Class AAA runnerup last
year , pulled out a 61-59
·victory over McKinley in
overtime in the Canton
regional on an 18-foot jump
shot by Kevin Cherry .
Maurice Reddick paced the
12th-ranked Eagles with 18
points. McKinley all-stater
David Green scored a gamehigh 21 points.
LaSalle and Meadowdale
will meet Saturday afternoon
for the Dayton regional title .
The same day, McKinley will
face the winner of tonight's
clash between No. 11 Warren
Western
Reserve
and
unranked Cleveland St.
Ignatius in the other
semifinal at the Canton
AuditoriUm.
·
Elsewhere in &lt;;:lass AAA
tournament
action
Wednesday night, potential
dark horse Napoleon edged
Chillicothe 34-33 in the
Columbus regional. A threepoint play by Barry Sonnenberg witll more Ulan two
minutes to play provided the
winning margin .
Sonnenberg's points gave
Napoleon a 34-27 lead before
Chillicothe, closing at 1114, '
began a comeback effort that
fell short.
22-1,
Napoleon , · now
advances to Saturday night 's
regional finale against the
winner of the Columbus
Linden McKinley-Columbus
East semifinal tonight.
f red Church, Napoleon
coach for 23 years who has a
team in the regional linals for
the first time, said his squad
has advanced so far because
"we play well together . We
haven't let the pressure
·bother us and people have
been looking by us ."
Cleveland Glenville held off
Lorain King 49-40 in tlle Kent
State AAA regional as Nelson
Johnson popped In 25' points
and pulled down 17 rebounds .
Glenville , 18-3, now awaits
the winner of the other i
semifinal clash between .
Cleveland St. Joseph and ·
Toledo Macomber .
In Class A regional action,
Arcadia rolled over Pioneer
Nortll Central 81-56 behind
the 32-point performance of
senior forward Toby Bickel to •
earn a shot at the Bowling
Green regional title against
either Miller City or St.
Henry.
Arcadia now is 20-3 while
North Central finished at 214.

The

•

of controlling the tempo of the
game," Cru,m said. "Personally. I don'l like the tempo of
their game, but they're doin g
what they can t" win and
after winning 13 straight, I'd
say tlley were doing it quite
well. "
Arkansas' control might be
an advantage, Crum said .
" You can't run without ihe
ball," he said .
The Louisville coach
admitted that his team had
done better than he might
have expected at the
beginning of the season.
"I guess not ·over 200.300
teams would like w be where
we are and have our record,''
said Crum, whose team has a
24-7 record going into
tonight 's game.
Sutton was impressed with
Louisville's offensive
strength.
" Any one o( their starters
could have a 20-point night .
They're explosive ," Sutton
said . " They've got as much
talent as anyon e we ' ve
played.
" With their ability to
rebound, the defensive board
play is going to ' be as
important as controlling the
tempo of the game."
Sutton said tllat during the
second half of the season , his
Rawrbacks have been able to
ease their reliance on Sidney
Moncrief, who is averaging
21.8 points.
"We've deve loped to the
point where we don 'I have to
depend quite so much on
Sidney," Sutton said.

Sentinel

Yanks.lose seventh
tilt in row, 3-2
By

H~;RSCHEL

NISSENSON

AI' Sports Writer

Ro n Guidry

and Tom

Seaver are in midseason
form . Unfortunately , the rest
of the New York Yankees and
Cincinnati Reds aren't.

Guidry, the hard4hrowing
lcft-hander who wa s the
American League's Cy
Young recipient last year
with a 25-3 record and a 1.74
earned run average, made
his spring debut with three
scoreless innings, but even
that couldn't prevent the
world champion Yankees,
winless against major league
opposition , from dropping
their seventh exhibition game
in a row, 3-2 to the ~ansas
Cily Royals.
Meanwhile, Seaver went
fi ve innings, allowing just
lhree hits and no runs as the
Reds edged the Toronto Blue
Jays 6-5 on Mike Grace's RBI
single in the lltll inning . It

was their second victory in
five games.

Guidry walked one, struck
oul two and said he had no intent ion of "trying to blow
anyone away. I don 'I want to
leave it down here. I just
want to work on my rhytllm
and my release points. "
The Royals scored twice off
Tommy John and won the
game in the bottom of the
ninth on Willie Wilson's twoout single off rookie Ron
Davis .
Steve
Busby,
attempting a comeback from
serious shoulder surgery,
worked four innings for
Kansas City, allowing one run
and two hits.
MESA, Ariz. (AP) Seaver , meanwhile, proCleveland Indians' pitcher claimed himself " pretty
Mike Paxton batted for muc h on schedule. I'm
himself against the Chicago throwing as hard as I can.
Cubs and hit a double to start However, I'm not throwing as
his team on their way to its . hard as I'll be able to thro w.
I'd say I'm about 80 percent. I
first run Wednesday. •
· Then Paxton , who said he can't move the ball as well as
hadn't swung a bat since last I'll be able to move it. My legs
year in sprin g trainin g, just aren 'I strong enough
repeated the performance in yet.,
Elsewhere, the long baD
the next inning.
Paxton's second d ouble was very much in evidence
came in the fow-th inning off that the hitters were starting
Chicago left-bander Dave to catch up with tlle pitchers .
Geisel and drove in a run . Pittsburgh's Willie StargeU,
Paxton scored a few Milwaukee's Ben Oglivie,
moments later on Jim Norris' Seattle's John Hale and Dan
Nocman of the New York
triple .
On the mound, Paxton gave Mets all had two-homer
up four rWls ln fow- innings, games.
Slargell hit a solo homer
but the National League Cubs
went on to win 5-4.
Paxton said that despite his
heroics at bat , he wasn't
ready to abandon the
American
League ' s
designated hitter policy .
"I like the DH," he said.
Full circle protection

and a three-run bla st,
powering the Pirates to a 10inning ·7-0 triumph over the
Philadelphia Philiies. Oglivie
r e versed Stargeil 's ord er
with a three-run homer and
tllen a . solo shot as the
Brewers downed the San
Francisco Giants 6-3.
Hale drove in five runs w1th
his homers off Nolan Ryan
and Ken Brett and Danny
Meyer added five more RBI
with a bases~oaded triple and
a pair of doubles, leading the
Mariners to a 17-9 rout of the
California Angels.
Norman, a power-hitting
rookie who is trying to win the
punchless Mets' right [ie ld
job, matched Hale with two
homers and live RBI in a 10-7
slugfest over the Montreal
Expos.
The Chicago White Sox got
consecu tive homers from
J orge' Orta and Lam ar
Johnson off Boston rookie
.John Tudor and downed the
Boston Red Sox 6-4.
Reggie Smith hit a long
home run off Jim Palmer as
the Los Angeles Dodge rs
coasted to a 7-1 victory over
the Baltimore Orioles .

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"yo u don't have

to

worry

about
hittin g.
You
concentrate on pitching.
"I'd rather face a good
hitter than a pitcher," he
added. "Wben you .face a
pitcher , you try to do
something different and you
wind up grooving a fast ball
like he did to me ."
Paxton's third-inning
double was the first of five
straight Indians hits which
produced only two runs. The
Tribe rally was hurt when
Rick Manning was picked off
second base and again when
Ted Cox was called out at
third.after trying to advance
on a Chicago miscue.
Later in the game,
Cleveland Manager Jeff
Torborg succeeded in talking
the Indians out of a run. Paul
Dade had tripled down the
right field line, scoring Ron
Hassey from first base. But
Dade was out at tlle plate
·a ttempting to score when the
relay was mishandled .
Torborg pointed out to the
umpires that tlle hit should
have been a ground rule
double. They agreed, but tllat
meant Hassey had to go back
w tllird, and both runners
ended up stranded after no
ooe could drive them in.

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�'
4·~The Daily Senlin••l. Middlcpo1·t-Pumer11y , 0 ., Thur..lay,

Today'•

Sports World
By Will Grimlley
AP Corre•pondent

.JJtt
:;(.J

. • _,r

.·'
' I

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Bucksiset new:
club pOint mark
'

'

By lbe Assoelated Press
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla . (AP)- Two elderly vacation·
According
to Milwaukee's
ers, queuing up earlier this week for a spring faceoff of the 1978
World Ser!es baseball rivals, were overheard in an intriguing Junior Bridgeman, the best
offense is a good defense.
conversation.
''The key was our pressure
"The Dodgers have got more class but the Yankees always
defense," Bridgeman said
win, " commented ooe of the gentlemen.
"Yeah, they're tougher," said the companion. " It's the soft Wednesday night after
life of these Californians- you kno15 all that sun and leisiU'e scoring 2li points and leading
the movie crowd."
' the Milwaukee Bucks to a
"Read it in the papers after the last World Series "said the club-point mark as they
original sneaker-llhod observer. "Why don't the LA
ever played a 1~102 tune on the
win the Super Bowl? The Kings and Lakers are never very hot . hapless New Orleans Jazz.
"We got them down and
Don't even have good golfers and tennis players out there any
wouldn't let up," Brldgeman
more.''
"You're right, must he the easy llving," agreed the second added. " It became a fun sort
of thing."
man. '~You lose your aggressiveness."
The Bucks scored the
The fragile, feather-bellied Los Angeles Dodgers, champions
of the National League, then proceeded to skin their World game's first seven points and
Series conquerors. Later a few key figures on the team gradually stretched their
addressed themselves to the aspersions cast on their moral lead to 48·27, 71-47 at half·
and physical fiber.
The Dodgers have come under some fire because of their
affinity with the people of Hollywood's never-never land.
Manager Tom Lasorda 's office walls are festooned with pic·
lures of show business friends. People whose faces are familiar on movie and TV screens wear Dodger hats hang over the
railings and have free access to the Dodger lock~ room.
The No. 1 Dodger supporter is ol' blue eyes, Frank Sinatra.
He rarely misses a game. One whole wall on Lasorda 's office is
dedicated to the great warbler '
But don't start bad~outhing Sinatra in front of the exuberant, emotional skipper of the Dodgers unless you want to pick
Ry GEORGE S'I'RODE
hickory out of yoW' teeth.
I\ I' Spurts Writer
"Le~ ,me tell you what happened last we~k, " Lasorda reCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) lated. Fr~k was domg a show at the Valley Forge Theater in Michigan Coach Johnny Orr
Pennsylvarua. He knew my mother lived in Norristown 10 to says of Clark Kellogg, The
15 miles away.
'
Associated Press' Class AAA
:'Mom is 71. She has been very sick, confined to wheel chair. Ohio prep basketball Player
Without any adv1111ce notice, this big black limousine drives of the Year, "There isn't a
up in front of the house on Buttonwood St. Out steps Frank. He college team he wouldn't fit
goes up and knocks oo the door.
into- immediately."
"My mother is overwhelmed. Frank takes off his coat sits
Orr and Ohio State Coach
down and visits for two hours. He even stays for dinner. They Eldon Miller are involved in a
cooked Italian escarole.
tug of war over the 6-foot-a
"Neighbors heard about it and pretty soon the street was Cleveland St. Joseph star's
clogged with people. The police chief, who lives next door services.
'
called six patrolmen to block off the area."
"l've never seen a player
That happened Thursday. On Saturday, two big limousines with better feeling for the
agam drew up to the modest Lasorda home. This time a ·doctor five-man game t~an Clark
and nurse were brought along.
"Mom and my four brothers were whisked away to valley · ~B- ~
~orge," Laaorda said. "Sinatra dedicated the show to her. He I~
I:
n
mtroduced her as my mom and sang her favorite song, "My
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP))Way. 11 •
•
The ASsociated Press' 1979
Aii ·Ohio Class AAA boys high
school basketball selections,
based on recommendations
by a statewide panel of sports

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seasons.

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••

SEEKS NOMINATION
FORT THOMAS, Ky. (AP)
- Former major league
pitcher Jim Bunning, who
won election last year to city
council, has announced he
will seek the Republican
nomination to the Kentucky
Senate from the lith District.
Campbell County has been
represented for a number of
years by Sen . Donald
Johnson, a Democrat who
was first elected as a
Republican. .
Bunning, the ooly pitcher
who has won more than 100
games ill both the National
and American leagues, Is now
a stock broker In Cincinnati.
Bunning also works as a·n
agent for major league ball
players
in
contract
negotiations.

Atlanta Hawks I 13·98, the San
Diego Clippers downed the
Portland Trail Blazers : JO.
105, the Seattle Super Sonics
shaded the Philadelphia 76ers
99-96, the Denver Nuggets
defeated the New Jersey Nets
120·110 and the Phoenix Sunds
eclipsed the Boston Celtlcs
126-117.

There were 33 holes·in·&lt;me
on the PGA tour in 1978, three
being made on the last day of
the Disney World Tour·
manent by Orville Moody,
Randy Erskine and George
Cadle.

t

sho! sat this.stage. He has as .. straight re~ular season
much potential as any young victories and the AP state
man I'v e seen in high poll title won the Ohio Coach
school," said Miller.
of the Year laurels In Class
"He could play guard, AAA .
center orforward in college,"
The selections, ·based on
said the Ohio State coach, regular season play, are
"But he belongs on the made With the · reconunen·
pelimeter. He has to face the dations of a statewide panel
basket."
of sports writers and
Kellogg nipped another top broadcasters.
college prospect , Notre
Kellogg, a senior, averaged
Dame-bound John Paxson of 26.8 points and 17.6 rebounds
KeUering Alter, for the Ohio as well as being a top assist
honors.
man for St. Joseph. His play
Mike l:erone, who led helped the Cleveland school
Clhcinnati Withrow to 18 to a 16·2 record and the
state's No. 4 ranking,
,,
Paxson, a 6-2 playmaking
senior
guard, also :;cored at a
Urt:tl
~~
23.4
point
clip in helping Alter
'l
loa
17·1
season.
The Knights
· 1 SPECIAL MENTION
:Jay
McHugh, Geneva ; were
second
ranked
Tonv Caoasso, Cleveland statewide. Paxson was the
West Tech ; Mel Pollock, Mpst Valuable Player in the
New Philadelphia ; Rob
WOQ&lt;Is , Dover; Jeff Gilliam, 1978 state tournament finals
Sfe'Ubenville; Art Chonko , for champion Alter.
Ati\ens; Dave Lehman,
~·erone guided Withrow to
Logan ; Brett Cordle, Lan - the first Ohio ratings title for
caster; Scali Jones, Mans field
Madison ;
Bobby a Cincinnati school since
Ha,r,ris, Columbus South; and Elder accomplished the feat
Howie Siemons, Hubbard.
liONORABLE MENTION
Todd· Blac~ledge, North
C~riton
Hoover ; Dave
JeMkins, Warren Western
Reserve; O.car Wilmington,
Rayenna; Kevin Doakes,
A~ron
Kenmore; Mike
Strdde, Canton McKinley .
Jack Willis, Grove City;
Mark Regan , Whitehall ;
Jer&lt;,&gt;me Fraley, Columbus
Marion -Frank Iin; Tracy
Penn , Columbus Linden
McKinley; Sam Cherry,
Col~tmbus Brookhaven.

broadcasters :

Bruce's coaching decisions

Terry Teachout,

w. Geauga,

T~acy

Col stan ,

Pairings,
Ohio Boys H.s. Basketball
By The Associated Press

Thursday's
Regional Tourn•ments

ClassAAA
AI Kent Stale University
Cleveland SL Joseph 20-2 vs .
Toledo Macomber 15-7, 7:30

p.m .

,

At Canton Auditorium
Clevel!nd St. Ignatius 17-4 vs .
Warren Western Reser ve 19·

Latham Western 14· 11 vs .
Zanesville Rosecrans 19·2, 9

p.m.

Wednesday's Results
CLASS AAA
At Kent State University
Cleveland Glenvi lle 49,
Lorain King 40
AI Canton Auditorium
Akron Central · Hower 61,

19-3 vs. Coiumbu; East 18·4,
7:30p.m .
CLASSAA
At Dayton Arena
Jefferson

20-2

vs.

M11ton Milton .Uhion 11 -11, 9
p.m.

CLASS A
At Bowling Green
State University
Miller City 20-4 vs. St. Henry
22·0, 7:30p.m.

MF.Ir.~ASON

skating title in 29 years

AREA

Dayton

0.4VJDIIU8KIRK

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PubliJ;ht'tl dally except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publl shln~;:
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Editorial Phone 992-2157.
Si!l'Untl da.'!!i pll!lbige paid at

Meadowdale

52,

Kettering Aller 51
CLASS AA
AI Bowling Green
State University
Arcadia 81. Pioneer North

Central 56

NatiOMI advcrtisln~ot represe n'·
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$17.00 ; Th rl:'!e mont hs, $9 .00,
Sub.~R"ripliun pr1cc lncludt.os Sundl:ly
Timcs-Senllnet.

Ohio High School
Girls Basketball
By The Associated Press
Wednesday Night
Class AAA Tournaments
AI Middletown
Oxford

Talawanda

FOOTBALL
HONOLULU
. The
Sllverdome at Pontiac,
Mich., became tbe first
northern Super Bowl site
when the National FootbaU
League voted its cham·
plonship game for 1982 to the
home of the Detroit Uons.

By GEOFFREY MILLER Angeles pair its chanCe
AP Sports Writer
and they seized it amid
VIENNA (AP) - They feverish scenes of excitement
started akating together as at Vienna's StadthaJJe.
small kida.' Now they are the
Ai&gt;9ut 200 Americans were
· world champions.
in the crowd, waving the
"And we haven't finished Stars ami Stripes and
yet," said dark-eyed Tal I cheering every graceful
Babtlonia alter she and figure.
Babtlonia and
Randy Gardner had brought I Gardner totaled 14U4 points •
the world figure skating pairs and were way ahead of
title to the United states for ·Marina Cherasova and Sergei
the first time in 29 years.
Shahrai of the Soviet Union ,
"We want to win the second with 142.22.
Olympic .gold medal next
Tal was 11 and Randy .;as
year. We hope Irina Rodnina nine when they ftrst went
and Alexander Zaitsev will be shyly w to the ice together
back then, and we shall stlll and learned to be partners.
hope to win."
John Nicks, former English
The legendary Russian star who won the pairs tiUe
pair, champions for slx years himself with his sister
in a row, missed the current Jennifer · in 1953, coached
world championships in them.
Vienna because Rodnina took
They first got into the world
a break from skating to have championships in 1975 and
a baby. It gave the younR Los finished lOth. The next year

Pornemy , Ohi o

At Columbus Coliseum

At Ohio University
Racine Southern 16 -5 vs .

in 1961.
Besides Kellogg and
Paxson, first team members
are 6-10 LaSalle Thompson of
Withrow, 6-7 Dave Rieker of
~'indlay , 5-11 Johnny Davis of
Steubenville, 6-li
Pete
Williams of Columbus West,
6-5 Kevin Castleman of
Columbus East, , S-11 David
Greer of Canton McKinley
and 6-S Kevin Gaffney of
Alliance.
All are seniors and range in
scoring average
from
Kellogg's 26.8 points to 14.6
for Greer, the hub of thirdranked McKinley's
powerhouse.
Second team all-state
selections are 6-1 Bill .Ross of
Marietta, 5-10 Pete Carrillo of
Stow Walsh Jesuit, 6-1 Terry
Teachout of West Geauga, 611 Granville Waiters of
Columbus East, 6-7 Eric
Salter of Xenia, 6-8 Mike
Reichert of Celina, 6-foot Joe
Glassco of Chillicothe and 6-5
Chris Thomas of Zanesville.
On the third squad are 6-2
~'red Carson of Springfield
North, 6-1 Ron Laraway of
Westlake, 6-2 Bill Lewis of
Mount Healthy, 6-2 John
Jones of Toledo Start, 6-4
Mike Peddicord of Newark, 6foot George Clayton of
Groveport, 6-7 Mitch Adamek
of Copley, 6-4 Ken Byrd of
Toledo Scott and 6-8 Bernard
Johnson of Toledo Scott. · '

ABC holds key
••
• •
ln ·negotiations
•

OF.VOTt:O TO TilE
JNTF.:RFSI' OF

RORF.RT HOF.FIJCH
CtlyF..Uior

Napoleon 34, Chillicothe 33
At Dayton Arena
Cincinnati LaSalle 70, Cincinnati Withrow 66

Dayton

S. elaints first_world figure

Gnadenhutten Indian Valley

South 21 · l, 7 p,m .

Canton McKinley 59 OT

Columbus Mifflin 19·3, 7 p.m.
Hamilton Ross 18-4 vs. West

I

IVSPSJU-*1

3, 7:30p.m.
At Columbus Coliseum

Columbus linden McKinley

U.

I

'ftiE DAILY SFNI1NEL

. .....
'

'

'

l

57,

Middletown 54
Cincinnati Oak Hills 74,
Cincinnati Princeton 55
At Wright State
Trotwood Madison 64, Sidney

:r. :'
'I

1

45

Dayton . Stebbins
47 ,
Tecumseh 37
AI Massillon Perry
Barberton 70, Canton Central
Catholic 63

Bean may have

.
extra zncentive

Massillon Perry 62, Canton
McKinley 56
Class AA Tournaments

'

At New Concord
Martins Ferry 52, Toronto 34
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 58,
Dresden Tri -Valley 52
At Chillicothe
Huntington 50, Portsmouth
"Clay 45
At Kent Roosevelt
East Canton 61, Bloomfield 40
At Dayton
'
Lewisburg Twin Valley r-lorth
27, Franklin Monroe 25
Tipp City Bethel 45, Yellow

'

I

Springs 39

AI Chillicothe
South Webster 64, Peebles 61,
2 OT

•

'-~\
'

'

'•

TRY OUT

'

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'

Port

Cl inton;
Tim
Reiser,
Napoleon ; Edd ie Frieson,
Toledo
Libbey ;
Andy
Aderzack, Toledo St. John's;
Steve McCilfon. Fremont
Ross.
Ci\ris Snow , Trotwood·
Madison ; Barry Turner,
Wilmington ; Tim Reed,
Hamilton Taft; Donald .
Edwards, Middletown; Eeir
Sradi1'Y• Dayton Wright.
John Persinger, Miami
Trace;
Garin
Verls ,
Chillj,c othe; Jeff Stafford,
Mar,[~tta ; Gary Bentley ,
Athens; Charlie Spindler.
Marietta.
.
Joe
Franczak ,
East
Liverpool; Steve Shade, New
Phil'ldlllph ia; Joe Cernava,
Carrii!Jton; Jack PooL
~~~~~-J~'!~' Jeff Seckman ,
Ton McDaniel. Cleveland
West •, ech; Nelson Johnson,
Cleveland Glenville; Bill
Amherst ; Mark
Conneaut ; Craig
IWv&gt;r•. Sha.ker Heights.

they finished fifth, and in t9n
and 1978 they were third .
1111 that time Rodnina and
Zailsev continued their
mastery over the world .
When news came that Rod·
nina
was temporarily
retiring, the California pair
stepped up its ambition ,
"We have worked harder
and harder to build up our
fitness." Babilonia said. "We
have done jogging and
weightlifting , and we have
added new elements to our
skating."
Gardner said they plan to
add a few triple moves w
their skating before the
Olympics at Lake Placid,
N.Y., next year.
"We could have done a
double -axel tonight, but it

wasn 'I necessary,'' Gardner
said.

'

By BOB GREEN
AP Golf Writer
MIAMI (AP) - Although
none is needed, Andy Bean
may have a little exira incentive this week in the
$250,000 Doral-Eastern Open
golf tournament,
A high finish, preferably a
victory, could put him in the
rich World Series of Golf this
!aU.
The Dora! event, which
started today on the 7,065yard mue Monster course, is
the last tournament on the
tour's winter schedule. The
top three finishers on a point
list at the close of this
tournament will gain a spot in
the World Series.
Bean , who has had an exceptional winter without winning, is fourth on the list with
126.4 points. The three
leaders - Lon Hinkle, Fuzzy
Zoeller and Larry ,Nelson are not competing, Bean
needs only 13 points - a
finish of eighth or higher- to
pass Nelson.
His sights are set higher
than that, however .
"Winning Ia the only thing
you really think about," said
Bean, who scored his first
tour triumph here in 1977. He
won three times last season
and, at 26, is considered one
of the tour's brightest young
stars.
"I've had a chance to win
three or four times this
year," the enormously
powerful Bean said. "It's just
that I always seem to have
one round that's ju&lt;t not·
qmte-so1!ood, j~st not good
enough to keep me from
winning.
,
"All you can do is hope you
keep on playing good and go
on to the next one. If you're
playing this good, you 've got
to win evenlually.

"I've just got to keep it all
together for four rounds
instead of three."
·
Bean lost a playoff at the
Blng Crosby, has been third
in two other tournaments and
fourth in another,
· "I'm just gll!d to be back in

lloth agreed they reached a
peak in Iheir free skaling
Wednesday night.
lis they finished, the crowd
did not need to wait for theresull . Everyone knew ~
llmerlcans had won and stood
cheering- and the Stars and
Stripes were being waved in
every corner of the hall.
One judge, from West Germany. gave the Californians
lhe maximum 6.0 points for
arlistic presentation. Four
olhers, including a Russian
judge, gave them 5.9.
Sabine Baesz and Tassilo
Thierbach of East Germany
were third . The next
Americans in the final
placings were I wo more
Californians, Vicki Heasley
of West Covina and Robert
WagenhofferofFontana , who
were sixth.

STANDINGS
National
Basketball Association
AlA Glance
By The Asso&lt;iated Press
Eastern Conference

•'

Class A Tournaments

Atlantic Division

Wash .
Phlla . .
N. Jersey
New York
Boston

W L Pel.
45 21 .682
35 32 .522
33 34 .493
29 41 .414
26 41 .388

GB
10'/2
12'12
16
19112

Centrill Division

San Ant.
Houston
Allanta
Cleve.
Detroit
N. Orleans

42 26 .618

JB 30
39 31

.559 4
.557 4

Colo.

14 46 9 37 185 296

Wales Conference
Adams Division
Boston
37 19 12 66 270
Buffalo 19 24 14 72 228
Toronto 29 28 11 69 220
Minn .
25 31 11 61 223
Norris Division

x-Mont.
Pitts.
Los Ang
Wash
Detroit

44
29
29
21
16

14 10
28 10
JO 10
35 12
35 16

98
68
68
54
48

293
235
247
236
217

221
220
211
232
177

244
250
288
254

X· CI inched

division
Wednesday's Games

niERE IS MORE than one way to duot off bome plate,
•• demoutraled by baoeball great Bobby Tbomooa
(left) aad umpire Neator Cbylak. Tbomoon, famed for
ellncblall the 1951 N atiollli League peiiiUial for U.e
Glaal.l, demotlltratea tile tradltlou1 whlok-broom
method, wbDe Chylak trleo a new cordleH vaeuum,
called U.e Dllllbuoter.

Sport shorts.
By The Assoeiated Press
HONOLULU (AP) - Los
Angeles Rams' Coach Ray
Malavasi, suffering from the
effects of. high blood
pr'e ssure, is expected to
remain at St. Francis
Hospital for a few days of
observation.
Dr. David Fergusson said
Tuesday that Malavasi, 48,
bad shown no signs of a heart
attack .
Malavasi, who had heart
by-pass surgery in 1977,
asked to be taken to the
hospital Monday night after
he felt dizzy and had dif·
ficulty breathing. The Rams
coach was attending the
National Football League's
annual meetings here.

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Both ABC and NBC have been lining up people for their
Olympic coverage teams in preparation for 1980. ABC has the
Winter Games from Lake Placid and NBC will cover the
Summer Games from Moscow.
There bave been no official announcements yet, but many of
the key spots have been filled . Jim McKay, the man who set
the standard for this sort of thing, will again anchor 1\BC's
effort. The network will do 501'.. hours from Lake Placid aU of
it in prime time and Saturday and Sunday afternoons.' Keith
Jackson, Frank Gifford and AI Michaels will be involved as
will ABC' s "experts" such as Dick Button on figure skatlng ,
Bob Beattie on skiing, etc.
Howard Cosell will probably not be there because winter
sports are not his thing .

NEW

YOU GET ALL THIS
AND ALL COLOR

(

NBC is stiJJ heating the bushes for a successor to Maury
Wills as commentator on its backup baseball Game of the
Week this season. Wills was quietly dropped recently.
'lbe top candidates appear to be Wes Parker the former
Dodger first baseman who has turned to acting, ~nd Earl Williams, the former catcher who starred With the Atlanta Braves
as a rookie, then bounced around for a few seasons before
dropping out of sight.
•
.

CliCM'S

Fashions ahoy! Our nautical looks for boys
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I

By HOWARD SMIDf
1\P Spurts Writer
Negotiations between major league baseball and the net·
works over a TV contract to replace the one that expires at the
close of the coming season continue to drag on with ABC
holding the key.
• ~sebaU is holding firm to its demands for more money,
which tt Will doubtless get, and more quality exposure, which
is the sticky point. By quality exposure, baseball means prim~
time in September.
At present, baseball is replaced by Monday night football in
September and that galls the baseball people no end. just when
the pennant races get hot the sport disappears from prime
tune.
ABC is not about to tinker with Monday night football, so
much of the current haggling centers on whether ABC would
go for, say, Thursday night baseball. With its crack Thursday
night lineup of entertainment shows, the network is reluctant
w commit that time to baseball. And with its desire for prime
time exclusivity, it may not accept any arrangement that
g1ves NBC or CBS a Thursday night package. ·
The big drawback wdropping basebaJJ entirely is, of course,
losi?g out on the World Series, playoffs and All-Star Game, the
mam 1tems that make the baseball package attractive.
So the negotiations, mostly with ABC, drag on. NBC and CBS
remain more or -less in limbo.
A clue to the network's thinking may be forthcoming shortly .
ABC has not yet announced its plans for this season. The
network may decide to try out a couple of Thursday night
games to see what develops. If so, that would indicate that
ABC may try and accomodate baseball's demands for prime
time in September under the new contract.

Alianta 6, New York Rangers
28 40 .412 14
4
learned the. game in this
26 41 .388 15'12 Detroit 4, Washington 1
21 49 .300 22
state. "I think I read the
Buffalo 4, Toron1o 1
Western
Canference
Ph iladelph ia 4, Chicago 0
greens a little better here ."
Midwest Division
Minnesota
4, Montreal 3
The 6-foot-4 , 210-pound
Kan. City
41 29 .586
Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 3,
Bean faced major opposition,
Denver .
JB 33 .535 3112 tie
Mllwau .
31 39 .443 10
however, in the chase for a
Thursday's Games
Indiana
30 39 .435 10112 New York Rangers at Boston
$45 ,000 first prize. Chief
Ch icago
26 42 .382 14
York
Toron1o at New
among them are two men
Pacific Division
Islanders
who , at one time or another,
Seattle
42 27 .609
Allanta at Philadelphia
41 28 .594 1
hadn't planned on playing . . Phoenh&lt;
Vancouver at Buffalo
Los Ang .
40 29 .580 2
Friday's Game
Jack
Nicklaus,
LEBANON
San Diego
38 32 .543 4112 Vancouver at Colorado
disappointed with his play in
LEGAL NOTICE
Portland
36 33 .522 6
LEBANON , Ohio (AP)
the last two events, made a
Golden St. 31 39 .443 l1 '12
DoubleR Russ won the $1,500
The Publi c Util1t1e s Com:
Wednesday's Games
late entry. "I'm a little
featured
claiming mile pace
BANGKOK,
Thailand
(
AP)
mission
of Oh 10 ha s set fOr
Local
Bowling
Phoenix
126,
Boston
1
t
7
behind schedule," he said.
Wednesday night at Lebanon,
- World Boxing Association
Seattle 99, Philadelphia 96
publ
ic
heari.1g
Ca se No
Pomeroy
BOwling
Lanes
"My game isn't as sharp as it Milwaukee 158, New Orleans
paying
$4.40,
$3
and
$2.60.
junior
featherweight
78-627
-EL
FAC
Subtile
A,
EARLY SUNDAY MIXED
should be at this time . It just 102
Noble Silrook returned
champion Ricardo Cardona
March
3,
1979
to
rev
1cw
the
fuel
procure·
San Antonio 125, Los Angeles Team
needs more work."
$3.60 and $2.40 lor finishing . ment practices and ~olic tes
of Colombia will meet
And defending champion 112
One
52
second and McArnie was ·
Thailand's
Vichit
Muagroi·Et
Houslon 129, Kansas City 107 lin
o f ' the Columbus and
44
Toin Weiskopf once withdrew Denver 120, New Jersey 100 Ja ck's Oairy Bar
third, paying $3.20.
in
a
15-rqund
title
Saturday
South ern Oll io Elcc tn c
Carry
Out
Tom's
44
then, early this week , re- San Diego 110, Portland 105 Gibbs Grocery
The 7-1 double of Stoney's
bout at Rol Et, about 260
Company , the operation
32
entered. He's been forced out Golden State 113, Atlanta 96 Royal Crown
Blossom
and
Right
Much
24
miles
northeast
of
Bangkok.
of
its Fuel Cast Adjust ·
Thursday's Games
of the last two tour events by
Meigs Inn
20
paid
$48.
The
mutuel
pool
Cardona,
26,
who
won
the
ment
Clause, and related
Seattle at Cleveland
High Team Series
some stomach problems and New York at Detroit
totaled
$125,489
and
the
title
in
1977
from
South
matters.
.. Th1s hearmg is
Crown 2004.
told officials he would be San Antonio at New Orleans Royal
attendance was 1,17ll.
scheduled to begm at
Korea's Soo Hwang Hong,
High
Team
Game
Friday's Games
unable to play here. After
Meigs Inn 712.
arrived in Thailand. a week
10 ·00 a.m. on March 19,
another
medical
ex- Detroit at Boston
High Ind . Series - ·{Menl
ago for gym work and
1979. at the Comm1ssion 's
Indiana at Philadelphia
Darrell Dugan 576, A. L.
amination,
however, Milwaukee at Washington
offices, 180 East Broad
sparring sessions with Thai
Phelps, Jr . 554 ; {Womenl
TRY OUT
Weiskopf was given the okay Phoenix at San Antonio
Str ee t , Co lumbus. Ohio
boxers at the national
Charlotte
Willford
536,
to defend the title he won by a Kansas City lit New Orleans Stephanie Rought 522.
43215 .
gymnasium here.
single shot from Nicklaus last Chicago at Houston
High Ind. Game - (Men )
SO
far
the
champion
has
New
Jersey
at
Golden
State
A. L. Phelps, Jr. 208,
All in tere sted pa r t 1es will
year.
Atlanta at Los Angeles
sparred 80 rounds and intends
Darrell
Dugan
201 ,
be QI\IC n an opportu mty. to
Among the other standouts
to continue for another five
{Women)
Charl otte
be hea rd. Furth er infor·
l~_NTUCKY
were Hubert Green , Ben
Willford
211,
Stephanie
In 1978, the New England
rounds before the fight .
Pro Hockey At A Glance
mat1on may be obtained
Crenshaw, U.S. Open champ
Rought
201.
"It's pretty hot here, but Patriots were the first team
FRIED atiCKEN
By The Associated Press
by con tac ting the Com
Andy North, Ray Floyd,
National Hockey League
I'm feeling fine. I'm not in NFL history to have four
mission .
Tommy Aaron, Mark Hayes,
Campbell Conference
excited about the fight 500-yard rusher s, Sam
Patrick Division
Grier Jones, Gil Morgan and
because I know I'll win," Cunningham, Horace Ivory,
THE PUBLIC UTILITIE S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
W L T Pts GF GA
Spain's
Severlano
Cardona
said.
COMMISSION
OF OHIO
Andy
Johnson
and
quar·
N. Y. Islanders
·
992-5432
Bruce Harper of the New
Ballesteros, who Is making
42 13 12 96 305 lBO York Jets led the National
terback Steve Grogan aJJ
By
;
Ri
chard
L. Smith ,
Pomeroy, 0.
his first start of the year in NY Rang. 37. 22 B 28 277 230
SALISBURY,
N.
C.
(AP)Secre
tary
,
topping
that
figure.
Atlanta 37 24 7 Bl 278 240 Football League in total Movie star John Wayne will
this country.
31 22 14 76 225 203 yardage ill1978with 2,157, the
CBS will provide national Phlla.
be inducted into the National
Smythe Division
television coverage of Chicago 25 30 12 62 202 239 result of kickoff returns, punt
writers ana Sports- · r~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----------,
portions of the final two Vancou. 19 39 10 48 190 267 returns, pass receptions and sports
casters HaJJ of Fllffie . next .
St. Louis 17 41 10 44 220 299 rushing attempts.
rounds.
month at the group's annual
•

1&lt;1orida,' ' said Bean, who

Children 's Fashions by BRYAN

•10 SPEEDS
•DRAGSTERS
•3-SPEEDS
•5-SPEEDS
20" ntRU 27''

• •

meeting.
Wayne 's son, Patrick, will
accept the award for his
ailing father, and comedian
Bob Hope wiJI preside over
the ceremonies April 9, in
Keppel Auditorium on the
Catawba College campus.
Wayne Is being honored
because of his patriotism,
contributions to the entertainment world and out- .
standing footbaU career at
the University of Southern
California, according to Dr.
Ed McKenzie of Salisbury,
NSSA president.
The Hall of Fame was established in 1961. Two new
categories were added in 1977
- lor an individual team
moment or event that has
proved inspirational and lor
an Individual who has made a
significant contribution to
sports, then gone on to outstanding achievements In
other fields .
Wayne is the first inductee
in the latter category because
no winner was named last
year.
Wayne was a star tackle at
the University of Southern
California, but was forced to
drop out for financial.
reasons. The HDuke" then
devoted his time to acting
professionaJJy.

Sh-ip-Shape
.Baster Mates

"

'

ll
ll

and

" Anne is a very special during a game. "It helps 6-1 Sr., 26.7; Eric Salter,
person,"said"'•s. Bruce. "I towardsuccess. Earlefeelsif Xen ia, 6-7 Sr., 19.0; Mike
..,.
1 · 't t lk'
d Reichert , Celina, 6-6 Sr., 19.6;
wo uldn't think of trying to peop e aren
a mg an
Granville Waiters, Columbus
take her place."
criticizing, they're not East, 6-11 Sr., 21.4; Joe
Jean has a personality of interested in the team," she Glassco, Chillicothe, 6-foot
h
She h
said
Sr., 17.4 ; and Chris Thomas,
er own.
as a wide,
·
Zanesville, 6·5 Sr. 15.3.
warm smile, a quiet
Jean says all of her girls
THIRD TEAM
Fred Carson, Springfield
friendliness and directness. develop crushes on the
And don 't expect her at very football players for their North, 6·2 Sr .. 23.2; Ron
many club meetings or father . "They get all excited Laraway, Westlake, 6-1 Sr .,
fashion shows.
about the boys coming to the 25.2; Bill Lewis, Mount
Healthy, 6·2 Sr., 22 .1; John
She admits she 's a home- !muse. Then they just stand Jones, Toledo Start. 6·2 Sr .,
body, convinced her place is around shyly and don't say 20.4;
Mike
Peddicord ,
in the couple's 8-month-old much," she said.
Newark , 6·4 Sr., 13.1; George
Mrs. Bruce doesn't know Clayton , Gro~eporf, 6-foof
Tudor style home in a
.
Sr., 16.4; M1lch Adamek,
Columbus suburb with their many of t he Oh to State Copley, 6-7 Sr .. 16.7; Ken
four children.
players, but has met Art Byrd, Toledo Scott. 6-4 Sr..
Mrs, Bruce is delighted the . Schlichter, the team's star 18.2; and Bernard Johnson,
~~esveland Glenville, 6-6 Sr.,
four all are girls - Lynn 18 , quarterback .
Michele, 16, Aimee, 8'1.., 'and l "I went to a recruiting
PLAYER OF· YWAE Noel, 4. "Nobody expects breakfast and made a point of Clark Kellogg, Cleveland St.
them to be athletic," she said. meeting him. H I hadn't, the Jos~h .
Earle and Jean Bruce gtrls wouldn't have formven
C ACH OF YEAR - Mike
, sh
'd
ea
Ferone, Cincinnati Withrow.
enjoy eating out and going to me.
e sa1 ·
ausually
moviewhen
occasionally.
"But'
Earle is home

I

writers

FIRST TEAM
CLark Kelogg, Cleveland
COLuMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ he's spending time With the St. Joseph, 6-foot-8 Sr .. 26.8
Je.an Bruce does not pretend girls," she said.
points per game ; John
Paxson, Keltering Alter, 6·2
to be an expert on college
Hers is an exciting, yet, Sr., 23.4; LaSalle Thompson,
foolball.
lonely life during the season. Cincinnati Withrow, 6-10 Sr .,
"I feel the Jess I know the
"1 don't think people 22.4; Dave Rieker, Findlay, 6·
better," sat'dthe wt'feof Earle realize how much time those 7 Sr. , 17.0; Johnny Davis,
•
Steubenville, 5-11 Sr. , 22.0;
Bruce,
Ohio
State men (coaches) spend on their Pete Williams, Columbus
University's ne" football jobs," she said.
West, 6·6 Sr. 22.6; Kevin
coach. "That way 1 can't get
Jean, 42, gets excited when · Castleman, Columbus East,
too critical."
she au~nds her husband's 6·5 Sr .. 20 O; David Greer,
"I
d
Canton McKinley, 5-11 Sr.,
And she has no intentions of games.
just on't show it 14.6; and Kevin Gaffney
emulating Anne Hayes, the much., I'm the quiet type, " Alliance, 6·5 Sr., 17.2.
'
colorful wife of Woody Hayes, she sa1d.
SECOND TEAM
fired in December as the
And she has learnect to Jive
Bill Ross. Marietta, 6-1 Sr.,
'th f 11
f
h
19.6; Pete Carrillo, Stow
Buckeyes' coach after 28 WI e ow ans w O yell at Walsh Jesuit, 5·10 Sr., 26.9 ;

'I
'

time. 11~·7 4 after three
periOds and 142·95 on a fourth·
quarter basket by Lloyd
Walton.
The old single-game
scoring record - m points in
a triple-overtime game
against the New York Knicks
last season -- feJJ by the
way~de as the Bucks shot
65.1• percent and poured in a
club record 69 field goals.
Elsewhere in the National
B~l!etbaJJ Association, the
San:Antonio Spurs beat the
Los Angeles Lakers 125-112,
the
Houston
Rockets
trounced the Kansas City
Kil)gs 129-107, the Golden
State Warriors trinuned the

9 AP All-Q•Lw· ·. TL.--m "'eam

'"'

I

'

Clark K~llogg
named
,,
AP's 'Player-of-Year'

.',,II

S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 15. 1979

,. -

Mar. 15. 1979

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Pomeroy,o:

992-2516'

ABC KIDDIE SHOP

, BEm OHUNGER
102 E. MAIN POMEROY, 0.

992-3639
f

�Ruth Circle met March 8 Parent-Teacher Forum .

6- The D&lt;tily Sen Iind. Mi&lt;lrllepr •r1 -P~&gt;ont•r"y. 0 .. Tlnu·Si i&lt;t)'. Mar. 15. 1 ~;~

Eastern Star initiates Beverly Bishop
Initiation was held for
Beverly
Bishop
when
Harrisonville Chapter 255.
Order of the Eastern Star.

met Tuesday night at the
Masonic Temple.
Participating
in
the
initiatory work was Doug

Bishop and be and his wife
presented a gift of jewelry to
their da ught er . Dallas

DeBord presented a white
Bible to Beverly from the
chaJllcr.

Delta Kappa Gamma ·chapters met
Three chapters of Delta " What is Your Role in Delta founder , ev~luated and
Kappa Gamma Society In- Kappa Gamma?" On May 11, elaborated on the seven basic
ternational met Saturday for 50 years ago in Austin, Texas, purposes and spoke of
a joint meeting and luncheon Alpha Delta was founded. scholarships ,and fellowships
· at St . Paul's Methodist Miss Hall mentioned tqe available to members.
i! : Chur•ch in Oak Hlll .
Beta Alpha, the host
chapter, bella Epsilon, and r·-·-··--·------~-~---,
- Alpha Omicron, were served
: a luncheon by the women of
f the church. Margaret Lewis
1 of Beta Alpha gave .t he table
THURSDAY
GI{ACE Episcopal Church
grace. Present from Alpha
MIDDLEPORT
Child
Women
Thursday 12:30 p.m.
Omicron were Meigs County
, members, Dorothy Woodard, Conservation League, 7:30 at home of Mrs. A. R. Knight.
" ' Maxine Whitehead, Mary V. p.m . Thursday at the Call reservations to 992-2433.
Reibel, Maxine Philson, Riverboat Room, Athens
BRADBURY PTA TJturs, ,Nellie Parker, Nan Moore, County Savings and Loan Co., day 7:30 p.m.
.... Mildred Hawley, and Ruth Pomeroy. Nita Wisniskl, R.N.
OHIO VALLEY Grange
- ~E uler . Favors were in to talk on blood pressure. 2612, Letart Falls Thursr11'y
f.'keeping with st. Patrick's Clarice Kennedy to have the at home of Mrs. Eula Wolftl"at
devotions and also to provide 7:30 p.m. Members to pay
''jDay.
the traveling prize.
'~
· The program chairman, ROCK SPRINGS Better dues. Potluck refreshments.
· ary Walker , introduced
WILLING WORKERS
Health Club, I: 15 p .m. Thurs- Class of Enterprise United
~Norma Prior, who presented
the mixed ensemble and girls day at the home of Mrs. Methodist Church Thursday
,,sextet of the South Webster Jackie Zirkle . .Phyllis Skinner 7:30 p.m., home of Mrs.
,JHigh School. Mr?, Prior was will have the contest. Agnes Dixon .
- . FRIDAY
r"ccompanist fo...,. the group
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
1:Who entertained with a. Faith Tabernacle Church,
SOUP SUPPER at Bethany
rvariety of numbers including Bailey Run Road, Rt. 4, Church social room In Dorcas
~ · AmazinK Grace", "White Pomeroy, 7:30 p.m. starting Friday with serving starting
Q;wan", "Four O'Clock" and - Thursday with Damon at 5 p.m. Bean and vegetable
::t:oncluded with "God Be With Adams,
Marietta,
as soup, pie and sandwiches;
:~ou."
evangelist; public invited. bring containers for carry:: Phyllis Hall, president of
DEMOCRAT
Centra( out service. Sponsored by
•Alpha Del
ate, was guest Committee women Thursday Dorcas Women's Fellowship.
•lpeaker
g as her theme 7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn.
PAST
MATRONS,

l . Social Calendar I

I

,,

.

~

'l

stern Star drapes
rzltar for Mr. Lash
r.
~

'l 1'he altar was draped for
..
Alden
Lash, past grant
Jlatron .and a moment of silent
Jlrayer was held when the
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
· t:)1e . Eastern Star, met
t;ecently. Donna Johnson,
worthy matron, and . Ralph
febb ,
worthy
patron,
esided at the meeting.
'lbank you note was read
m Maxine and Ben Philson
f9r the remembrances sent
for Mrs . Mina Lewis by the
ruficers of the chapter.
~vera! invitations to the
annual inspections were
r.ad. Joan Wolfe \vas appointed to work with Sylvia
Midkiff on the ESTRARL
c~mmittee
and Gretta
s·!'JlPSOn on the home project

~

with Violet Knowlton.
The history of the Racine
Chapter written for the Meigs
County history book was read
by the secretary. Agnes Price
was reported seriously ill and
Mildred '· Donohew and her
husband are both confined to
a convalescent center in
Marietta. Freda Duffy was
reported
in
Veterans
Memorial Hospital with a
broken hip. Members were
asked to remember them
with cards.
A practice session was
announced for
Sunday
evening at the Temple with
the deputy grand matron.
Refreshments were served
by Micky Hoback.

'Evangeline Chapter 172,
Middleport, Friday evening,
7:30p.m. at the Temple.
SATURDAY
SIGN UP DAY for youth
wishing to participate In the
Pomeroy Youth League
swrimer baseball program
Saturday in upstairs of city
hall from IO a .m . to 2 p.m. Six
dollar registration fee must
be ~id at time of sign up.
ME,IGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Association, noon
luncheon Saturday at the
Meigs IM. Speaker to be
Marjorie Ater, Coluxbus,
executive director of the Ohio
Re t Ir e d
Tea ch er s
Association.
ANNUAL
INSPECTION
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knights Templar. Degree
work at 3:30p.m. and dinner
at 6 p.m. Full form opening at
7:30 p.m. All Sir Knights
urned to attend.
. AMERICAN Legion Racine
602 birthday party at the hall,

)}':: : : : : : : : : : : : : :-:;: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ;: : : :::: : : : : : : : : : : : : :::: : : : : :::: : : : : : : ::: : : : : :: :{ ~:iii:~~· mS::.:~Y n~~t~
to

During separate meetings
the chapters, Margaret
Benson presided at the Alpha
Omicron session. Viola
Gettles was in charge of
voting on new members. It
was aMounced that the AprU
22 meeting will be held at the
Meigs Office of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.,
I: 30 p. m. The 40th anniversary of Alpha Omicron
wiU be celebrated with the
theme being ·"Honor the
Past" and members are
asked to wear old fashioned
outfits.

I of

Lois A. Pauley and Paul J.
Paule), worthy matron and
patron. presided a t th e
meeting. Pinons were large
shamrocks. All of the officers
wore their silk corsages from
installation . Past matr1ns
and past patrons were
presented, escorted to the
East , and given a welcome by
the worthy matron and
w~rthy patron. In the group 1

By Hugh A. Mulligan
AP Special Correspondent
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP)
- The shortage in our time of
truly creative cursing is
another sure sign . of our
culture's decline,
· People have lost the gift for
invective , the talent for
imaginative malediction .
The last decent curse I
heard uttered was on the
streets of caiio (Egypt not
Illinois) after a do\&gt;ntown
fender bender between a
An April Fool's Day dance
taxicab and a tourist bus.
"May the fleas of a
was plaMed for March 31
thousand camels infest your
from 8 p. m . to midnight for
Eastern students when the
first-born," the cabbie
Eastern Future Homemakers Invoked Allah's wrath on the
held their regular meeting
bus driver .
Tuesday.
The bus driver's response,
Disc jockey for the dance sworn on the eyes of his
will be Dave Brown and the I mother, traced the party of
price will be $1.50 each. Also the first part's lineage
discussed were the rules for through a python and a
King Fool, degrees, Chapter crocodile on his mother side
FHA Week, and the FHA and a scurvied dog and a
banquet. Junior fair hoard bloated Nile buzzard on the
members selected were other with ill-disguised
DoMa Bennett and Diana allusions of rampant and
Rice. Named as delegates to couchant illegitimacy in
the state convention were these liaisons.
One reason why the Irish
Donna Bennett, Kathy Pooler
and Tanunie Starcher with. have so dominated English
Sberri Myers as the alter- literature for ' the past couple
nate.
of centuries is that the
Program for the evening everyday denizens of tMt isle
was on the stale project of haveneverlostthefacultyfor
" Health Babies, Chance or lacerating foes with the sharp
Choice."
Cindy
Pitzer sides of their tongues. Even
presided at the meeting. the clergy turn the other
Attending were Brenda . cheek, when cheek is offered:
Ballard, Donna Bennett,
" Don't see you at Mass
Tammie Starcher, Kathy anymore, Kevin ... "
Pooler, Cindy Pitzer, Helen
" Ah, the church is full of
Myers, Margery Myers, hypocrites th ~ se days,
Connie Rankin, Tammy Father."
Spencer, Kathryn Pierce,
"Oh well, always room for
.
Tammy. Curtis, and Mrs. one more." ·
Kestner.
Profanity In the dull, uninspired, vulgarly repetitive
'American fashion . n~ver
really has caught on in
Ireland
because
oldfashioned cursing hasn 'I
quite gone out yet.
I am indebted for that

April Fool's

Day dance set

. May Van Inwagen
celebrates birthday

were Pearle Canaday, Donna patrons.
Nelson. Ruth Erlewine,
The landmarks were read
Sharon Jewell, Pauline by Mrs. Canaday, and two
Atkins, stella Atkins, Elsie petitions were read. The altar
Housh, Marjorie Rice, was draped In memory of
Frances Young, Lois Pauley, past grand patron, Alden Usb
Betty Bishop, Lois Thomp- of Napoleon.
son, Gracie Wilson and Joan
Communication was read
Kaldorc, past matrons; and from the DeMolay Mothers
Doug Bishop, Charles King, Club regarding DeMo lay
Harold · Rice, .Norman Will Week . Also read was a
a nd · Paul Pauley, past. comn:IUnicati~n from the
Hospital Circle in Columbus '
and the chapter voted to send
a donation. Roberta Circle
was amounced for April19 at
Stockport with Howard ' s
Stars to be guests. Inspections announced were
Lowell, March 26; Albany,
information to Patrick C. April 23; Valley, April 26;
Puwer, the author of "The Eudora of Nelsonville, and
Book of Irish Curses," a Minear of Guysville, all with
f!l&amp;rveUous compendium of Mrs. Pauley, deputy grand
Celtic imprecations.
matron , as the Inspecting
Powers lists a nionber of officer.
picturesque maledictions,
It ·w as
noted
that
some of them still in use, that Harrisonville Chapter Inhave 2,.000 years of Gaelic spection wt11 be held at the
clout behind them.
Middlep&lt;irt Temple on April
Powers' invocations to the 't1 at 7: p. m. with SUSBMe
powers of darkness brought
to mind the old toast of the
Protestant Orange Order .
which can still provoke a
decent sized riot In a Third ·
Avenue bar if recited after
the parade breaks up on St.
Patrick's Day:
"Here's to the pious and
immortal memory of King
Billy (William of Orange)
who saved us from knaves
and knavery, slaves and
slavery, Popes and Popery,
brass money and wooden
Todoy's active
shoes. And if ·a ny man among
sportswear looks
us refuse to rise to this toast,
start at your feet.
may he be slammed,
Just-off-the-track or
crammed and januned Into ·
out-of-the-backthe Great Gun of Atblone.
country
And may the gun be fired Into
performance
the Pope's beUy, and the
features ore
Pope into tbe Devil 's belly,
transformed
into
and the Devil into the
roasting pit of Hell, and may
lightweight.
the doors of Hell be banged
comfortable
shut and the key kept In
casuals. Make the
pocket of a brave0rl1Jl8e boy.
most out of your
And may there never lack a
wardrobe at a
good Protestant hoy to kick
comfortable price.
Hell out of a Papist." •

Pearl, worthy grand matron,
as the inspecting officer.
Birthdays celebrated were
those of Doug Blshp, Lois
Wyant and Norman Will. A
sales table display wu set up
In the dining room with
members donating items ·for
sale.
Members
were
reminded to take items to the
next meeting night.. Ruby
Diehl, Stella Atkins, Pauline
Atkins and Sharoo Jewell
served refreshments.

TRYOUT

EXTRA
CRISPY
KENlUCKY
FRIED atiCKEN

CIDIS

992-5432
Pomeroy, 0.

Announce birth

"TilE FLASH"'

active sports
on the run

FLAG PRESENTATION - F rankle HuMel, left
center, was presented a flag from the .American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39, for the Salisbury Cub
Scouts, Den 2 of which she is the den mother . With her

PH. 992·2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Flonst

----·---.------

J

Mrs. May Van lnwagen
celebrated her 85th birthday
. :. '
:·:·
at her home in Pomeroy on
:::: ·
::::
March 10.
j.j
Joining
her
for
a
~.
~·.
celebration were Edgar Van
WANTED: ORGANIZATION TO AID
Inwagen, Mr. and Mrs. ErSTEPCHILDREN, STEPPARENTS
FILM SUNDAY
nest Van Inwagen, Mr. and
RAP:
The film,
"Pilgrims Mrs. Paul Marr, Mr. and
Why doesn't someone start up a Stepfamilies Anonymous Progress'', will · be shown Mrs. Carroll Smith and
organizati()Jl? There's so much we have to learn about being Sunday at 4:30 p.m. at the Natalie Sigler. Here for the
_ "steps," and no where to go for learning it. '
Middleport First Bpatist weekend to visit her were her
. - I read recently that 35 million Ame~can people are either Church under sponsorship of grandson and his wife, Mr.
· stepparents or stepchildren. Probably baH of them are having the deaconesses of the and Mrs. ·Leroy Wince of
S&lt;Jme kind of problems. Mine aren't serious yet, but I'd swe church. The public is invited. Cleveland. Other grandlike to discuss them with others In the same boat.
A dessert smorgasbord will children attending the obDo you get lots of "step" mail? - ·NEW MEMBER follow the film.
servance were Unda, Laurie
OF THE GROUP, age 16
and Judy Slgier.
NMOTG:
Mrs. Van Inwagen received
Do we ever get-"step" mail! That's why I Included a
gifts and cards along with a
CANCELLATION
chapter, "Divorce, Singles and Steps," in my new book,
The birthday party of the floral arrangement from her
''Parents' Survival i&lt;it." It's probably In your local library, as
American Legion, Racine grandson, Charles Briggs and
are other books and magazine articles on the subject. Start
wife,
Phyllis
of
Post 602, scheduled for his
researching! - HELEN
Saturday night bas been PequaMock, N. J. Refreshments were ·served.
cancelled.
.NE:W MEMBER:
Stepfamilies Anonymous? Good idea. ~
· Why don't you start things going with a "Stepteen" group?
~ut be careful it doesn't degenerate into a "Mine is worse than
yours" thing . You should share positive suggestions, not
slams. - SUE

'

I,Jelp lor table top
, ' DEl.\_R POLLY - My
dining room table has a
laminated plastic top. It was
accidentally sprayed with a
ol••ner that made a dull
streak. I would like to know
what will cover this streak. MRS. C.R.
DEAR MRS. C.R. - I have
a couple of table tops that are
dark brown laminated plastic
with a leather look. I use
genuine lemon oil furniture
polish on a soft cloth to go
over them each week and
they keep a nice satiny glow.
You might try this on an
inconspicuous spot and see
what It does for you~ table
top.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Before
di8801vlng a gelatin dessert In
hot water I rinse the howl and

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

DEAR CONCERNED :
But "The Way to Go" is only a first step. If yow friend
"drinks a lot ," he may become (or might already be) an
alcoholic.
Discuss his situation with an adult you can trust - and do
·
it now, before the problem becomes chronic . - HELEN
HELEN AND SUE:
My folks were first married by a justice of the peace. This
year, on their 20th anniversary, they had a real wedding, with
reception and all.
.
It was great, but I got to thinking : What if they split up?
Would they have to get two divorces, one for each marriage? WORRIER
DJCAR WORRIER:
(You certainly are!)
One divorce will suffice. But why hassle a problem that
will probably never happen to two ~year-married nelyweds?
-- HEI.EN AND SUE

..

•

Whether you're 1edecoro.1ting your present horne or moving into a new one, you might
want to stop into a GTE Phone Mat for some
colorful new ideas_
Our Styleline Phone Line is inspirational. Not only does it offer you
the biggest selection of colors
anywhere, but also the most
fashionable ones.
With all the latest
decorator colors (like tangerine, espresso brown
and electric blue) to
match or accent your
wildest color schemes.
Then once you
choose the colors that
e!(cite you most, you
can just !tJke your
new phones horne
with you. And feel
extra goad about
them when you do. ·
Because,
more than just a
phone store, we're
your phone company.

Shorts- Tops-Pants
Reg . $13.00 Now $810

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SHORTS Reg .
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.
PANTS Reg . m.oo NowSlf'
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OPEN FRI. TIL 8

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,,

..

lijilctlr

-··

16 West Washin,ton, Athens

:·

,)
L

SOFA • LOVESEAT • CHAIR

KENlUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

498 5598

5

CRCM'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432
-Pomeroy, 0 .

JOHNS-M~NVILLE

ROOFING

fiBERGLASS

SHINGLES

SELF~SEALING

SHINGLES

'·. •

Mason aod Area
Penooals
Mr . and Mrs. Frank
Hudnall, Hansfork, W. Va.
came over the weekend to
visit their daughter and sonIn-law, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Petry and family, and to
' celebrate their daughter's
birthday.
The women of the Mason
Assembly of God also took '
Mrs. Petry to eat out at
Sboney's on her birthday.
Another birthday honoree,
Carolyn Demosky, of Middleport wu also honored by
the churdl group.
Mrs. Joan Bennett and
daughters, GaU and Christl,
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. "and Mrs.
Chester Oliver at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Posey
have returned home after
spending. the winte~ at
Tampa, Fla.
Eric Petry, second year
student at Mason Grade
School, injured his head wben
he leaned back while :
swinging at Mason Grade
School. He was taken to the
Bend Area Medical Center
where stitches were required
to close the woWtd. He is the
10n of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Petry,
.
Muon Senior Citizens are
meetlnc again at the traDer
meetinc place near Muon
Grade School. Thirteen attended and quilted and aewed
on COIIIfort topa. Thunday
wu the flnt time they have ·
met since January.

spoon before putting the dry
powder in the bowl. This
k~eps the gelatin from
clinging to the sides.. of the
howl and the spoon. Saves
time, too.
DEAR POLLY- C. E. M.
wanted to know what to do
with leftover coffee and some
of us like it bot rather than
iced. Pour it into a glass jar
and keep In the refrigerator.
Reheat one cup at a time In a
small stainless steel pan over
low beat or In the microwave
oven in a mug for two
minutes on high. Tastes
better than badly made instant coffee. - THERESA
DEAR POLLY- My useful
suggestion is for car owners
who do not carry matches or
a lighter. a"d have their door
locks freeze. Simply expeU
air from your mouth over the
keyhole and key. Do this
several times and it should do
the trick. If the key hole is ice
covered _you must first
remove the ice. MRS. G.P.
DEAR POLLY - I bad the
same problem as one of the
readers has with black heel
marks on my no-wax kitchen
floor. My· wise mother-In-law

Donations were made to the
nurses scholarship fund and
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, chairman,
reported on two girls interested in applying for
scbollirships at the Monday
night meeting of the Eight
and Forty, Meigs County
Salon 710, held at the
Riverboat Room, Athens
County Savings and Loan.
Mrs. Iva Powell, chapeau,
opened the nieeting in
ritualistic form with Mrs.
Catherine Welsh giving the
prayer, and all of the
members recitln~ the pledge

told me to dampen a clean
cloth or sponge and sprmkle
it with baking soda. I just
rubbed gently , rinsed the
spots with water and it
worked. - BARBARA
Polly will send you one of
her
signed
thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper .

3'5
'
2
~

'$2}98

to the flag . Money was
collected for knives and date
books sold by the Salon
members.
Mrs. Jean Will was a guest
and spoke to the group on the
' Community Club Awards
program. Reservations for
the aMual supper of Vinton
County Salon 752, Wilkesville,
were made.
Next meeting will be on
April 2 at the home of Mrs.
Julia Hysell with Mrs. Eileen
Searles as co-hostess.
Refreshments carried out a
St. Patrick's Day theme .
Hostesses were Mrs. Knapp,
Mrs. Welsh, and Mrs . Marjorie Goett.

.

SQUARE

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PLYWOOD

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"ADd God aald, Behold, I
have given you every herb
bearing oeed, which lo upon
the face of all the earth, and
every tree In whlcb Ia the
fruit of a tree yielding aeed;
to you It ohaU be lor meal."
-Gen. 1:29

now

While
Supplies
Last

266

REG.
16.29

Quantities Limited

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PRUNING SHEARS

Co mpact-size pruner features one-pi ece stee l blade

and handles . Non -stick Teflon -S"'coa tin g helps
red uce sap build-up and prevent ru st . Slu rdy col i
sprin g and soh vinyl grips for easier more comfort68

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CASH &amp;CARRY

PRICES
EFFECTIVE
THRU
3·24-79

5

WIND SONG COLOGNE

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DELIVERY
AVAILABLE

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Reg. $6.50

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NOW ONLY ...................$350

VILLAGE PHARMACY

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abl e cutting . Handy lock.

$ 9S
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923 S. THIRD

992·2709 OR 992-6611

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

OP~N: 7:00 to 5 Mon. lhru Fri. -7:001o J : oo Saturda)l

"Two Locations to Better Serve You"
Middleport,

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WINDSONG or CACHET
GIFT SETS

1.8 fl. Ol. -

•••~ 't,Itl~ )Jf)N'rlt

4'X8.' x'l2" CDX

Vegetarianism is a modern word but before the flood
all men were vegetarians.

~eg. $17.00

SQUARE

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2"X4''
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Class A, Fire &amp; Wind Rating --:- 20
Year Warranty . Available in Black,
Brown · &amp; Bark.

Green.

Polly

COLORS:

Phone COlors!'

JR. &amp; MISSES
JOGGING SETS

9 til Noon

CONSISTS OF

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Self-sealing·
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Available in Black.
White &amp; Pastel

Eight and Forty
POLLY$ POINTERS
k
·
J
t'
Cramer
ma eS u0na tOnS

' · By Helen and Sue Bottel

Red i

from the left are Pam Powers, junior Americanism
chairman, Miss ·Erma Smith, senior unit. Americanism
·chairman, and Robin Campbell, secretary-treasurer of
the junior unit.

'

.

salads. Games will be played
:::: With prtzes to be awarded.

flAP:
I have a friend who driilks a lot and thinks he can drive
•
while boozed up because "he can handle it. " (He's 19.)
• Where could I find some good arguments that will prove
alcollol and gasoline don 't mix? - CONCERNED TEEN
DEAR CONCERNED:
.
A good free booklet is "The Way to Go," available from
Communications and Public Affairs Department, !)..!, Kemper
Insurance Companies, Lmg Grove, Dl., 60049. It describes how
alcohol messes up the system, bow it affects driving; and gives
· the legal limits on consumption before one takes to the road. SUE

SATURDAYS

UVING ROOM SUITES

G.A.F. Asphalt ·

•Combination Sand/Tan
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FLORIST

WMPO .

3 PC.

lmt'lM~'An"

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Casey Kasem.

at 1he Top with Home

------1·

Your " Extra Touch"
· Florist Since 1957

The Meigs Junior High
School Parent-Teacher
Forum will sponsor a dance
for the junior high students
Saturday night at the schooL
Ron O'Neil of WPAR will be
the disc jockey for the dance
to be held from 7:30 to 10 p.m.
Volunteers to chaperone are
asked to contact Mrs .
Florence Snowden, Mrs. Judy
Cooks, or Mrs. Carolyn
Grueser. .
The Forum operated the
conc ess ion stand at th e
recent elementary school
basketball tournament with
the junior high mothers
working those evenings. A
vote of thanks has been extended by the Forum to the
mothe r s
who
worked , •
Powell's Super·Valu and R.
C. Bottling Co. for donations,
John Mora, principal, and the
janitors at the schooL

EXTRA

Syracuse, are announcing the
birth of their second child,
Jessica Erin. Jessica was
born on Feb. 23 and weighed
six pounds, 13 ounces. She
was 19 inches long. Mr. and
Mrs. Sayre have another
daughter , Stephanie.

Hush PuP91t., "

sponsors Saturday dance

T8Y OUT

Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Sayre,.

:: Generati•on Rap I
::::,

queen, Bethel 62, accept the flag from Lori Wood, Eighth
District American Legion Auxiliary junior president. Also
pictured are Erma mith, Americanism chairman, and
Anna Wiles, vice president of the jtinior unit.

FAMILY RmAURANT

ao

i

BETHEL 62, International Order of Job's Daughters ·
received a flag from the American Legion Auxiliary of
Drew Webster Post 39, Wednesday night. From the left
Julie By_er, senior princess, and DoiUe Rousey, honored

''

The Ruth Circle of the been met and will be sent in
Racine Baptist Church met at shortly.
the home of Mary Kay Yost
New officers will take their
on March 8 with nine offices in May. They are :
members present.
president, Phyllis Bailey ;
The meeting was opened by vice president , Naomi
Phyllis
Bailey,
vice Stobart ; secretary, Martha
president. Scripture reading I.ou Beegle; treasurer,"Helen
was Mark, chapter 10, verse Slack ; White Cross, Marjorie
44 and a reading Joyous Grimm ; L()ve Gilt, Ollie·Mae
Service. O!Ue Mae Cozart Coza rt.
gave the opening prayer. I'.oil
The program, by Garnet.
call was answered with a Ervine , was I J ohn 3: ito 17.
scripture
verse .
The
The prayer was by Nondus
secretary and treasurer's Hendricks. A reading, "How
reports were read with a Much Have I Grown '',
balance of $28.33 in the composed by Mrs. Ervine's
treasury.
daughter, Maxine Shain, was
Thank-you notes from Mrs. read by Mrs. Ervine. A poem,
Swartz, Lela Easterday, Mrs . "A Moment to Remember"
Watson, Elizabeth Vigar , was done by Mary Kay Yost .
Leona E bersbach , Bessie
"Surprise at Sunset", was
Ervine and Deloros Wickline read by Doris Hensler ; " He
were read thanking the circle Was Wounded for Our Transfor the fruit baskets they gressions"
by
Emma
received. Also a thank-you Adams ; "Consolation " by
letter from Sue Curtis for a Ollie Mae Cozart ; " Two
gift of money and a thank-you Directions", by Ph ylli s
note from Shirley Roush for a Bailey;
" The Joy · of
gift when she was in the Belonging" by Nondus
hospital were read. Gifts of Hendricks, and " The Country
money amounting to $7 were Parson Ponders" by Martha
received which were placed L()u Beegle.
in the love Gift.
The next meeting wiU be at
The group is to begin a Nondus, with Marie Walker
project of making roses.
having the program.
The White Cross quota has
Delicious refreshments
were served by the hostess.

. ,;

o.

c'

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·I

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�.

• 9- The O'dily Scntinl'l. Milldit•Pf •rt-Pmm·•·"y, 0 .. Thurs&lt;l~)' . Mar. 15. 1!'79

'

:''1-The Daily Sentin~l , Middlepurt -Pmnt•!"I'Y , 0 ., Thursday, M"r. 1·5. 1970

.. CANCER

•

•'
;,

...

Answer line
Americ111 Cancer Society

A
regular
feature ,
prepared by the American
Cancer Society, to help save
your life from cancer.
A book illustrator asks:
"How are cancer • causing
• substances identlfied?"
· : ANSWERIIue: There · are
: :several ways. The first · Is
: through epidemiology, the
. · study of human population
: groups and how they relate to
; disease. This is important
: because we can't test substances on humans but
. epidemiologists can study
population groups, including
- cancer patients, and then see
• If there was anything com·
· mon in their habits, diet,
· health history, occupation,
: etc. that might have caused
: the disease. Cancer • ca1.1sing
· substances are also tested in
the laboratory, either in
animals or in test.tubes when
bacteria are exposed to a
. suspicious chemical. This
. last kind of testing is a fairly
' recent development and has
; caused much
interest
,because it can be done fairly
· quickly and at low cost. ·
:. A concerned husband
writes: "A year ago my wife
-had a mastectomy, and while
.:She has recovered her
·Jihysical strength, she no .
.longer goes out socially and
,her spirits are low. What can
I do?"
·
ANSWERliie;. -'l'he ad·
.lustment to a mastectomy
(breast removal to treat
· 1:ancer) can be more difficult
for some women than others.
Each worn¥ must set her
own tlmetalile for that ad·
justment but your wife may
need some added help. A talk
with her physician or the
Reach
to
Recovery
representative
of
the
American Cancer Society
Unit in your community
should result in some positive
eff~s on her behalf.
· A gym teacher writes:
','Many years ago I had X-ray
treatments for acne. Could
this have banned me?"
ANSWERIIne: Any person
who has had any fonn of
~adiation treatments directed
at . the face or neck may
pollllib\y develop a lonn of
thyroid cancer that is slow·
growl!lg and treatable. From
1921i to 1960 it was medical
practice to use x-rays to treat
conditions such as acne,
in·
enlargement
and
flammatlon of the tonsils and
adenoids, an enlarged
:thymus, deafness from
lymphoid tissue around the
Eustachian
tubes
or

rtngwonn of the scalp. It was
later discovered that this
kind of treatment could lead
to thyroid cancer and It was
discontinued. It· is now im·
portant for you to see your
physician for a checkup. If
you or any other reader want
more information please
contact your local American
Cancer Society Unit.
·
A printer's assistant explains: "My aunt is going to
8omeone who says that he has
a secret cure for cancer.
What do you say?"
ANSWERIIne: A reputable
physician who has been
trained in the scientific
treatment of cancer does not
offer "secret" cures because
in
medical·
science,
. knowledge is · applied to i
benefit all patients. If your·

1\1 ~ n't:~n l J(Hthcring of
Beatie fu11s in New York at
the fifl h annual Reallefest ,

Today's Topic:
Beatles: still big business

· half !he c:rowd appeared lobe
y oung er than the ueatle

'revolutionized music in the
lly MARK PO-rfS
1!100! - Paul . McCartney,
1\1' Hustnr~s Wrib•r
.John
Lennon,
George
NEW YORK ( AP)
Fifteen years after they were Harrison and Ringo Starr Introduced to America on the made millions In the first
flush of success and now have
~:d Sullivan show, 10 ~ars
separate,
successful careers.
al!er they last entered a
But
now
their
work together
recording studio together, the
is
making
loads
of money for
llealles are stili big business.
other
people.
It 's not exactly that the
Their label,
Capitol
Bealles need it. The four
Records,
reports
that
the
members of the group that
group's records still sell
millions of copies a year.
aunt ts herself a cancer · ' 'Beatlemarlia,'' a stage show
patient, she may be risking using Beatie look-and sound- ·
her life by wasting precious alikes, is doing well on
time and avoiding treatments Broadway and , on a
that could help. If your aunt nationwide tour. And Beatie
does not have cances;, by memorabilia is highly prized
giving "word of mouth" by collectors and commands
publicity to a fraud she might impressive prices.
influence potential patients.
The Bealle boom is not just
You can check the creden· attributable t~ nostalgia.
tlals of people offering Many of the fans are
"secret cures" by contacting teenagers, some of whom
your local medical society or weren 'I born when the
American Cancer llociety group's . long hair was
Unit.
'
shocking the nation in 1964.

lcg~.mu .

"This is weird - I really
feel old," said fan Walter
Winnick . Winnick is 23.
"Half the crowd is adult s
and half .the crowd is
teenagers. They're secondgeneration Beatie fans ," said
Mark l.apidos, organizer of
the New York Beatlefest and
similar events in Chicago and
f.os r\ngeles .
!.apidos won 'I say how
much he makes from
organizing· Beatlefests, but
it's enough to ailow he and ·his
wife , Carol, to make a living
doing it lull time. ·
Lapidos put together his
first New York Beatlefesl in
1974, and they 've played lo
capacity crowds ever since .
With a minimum of
advertising, this one drew
more than 6,000 Beatlemaniacs at an average
price of $8 a head.
And that was just where
their spending began. Inside,

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

•hen· were 1 large meeting
rt•,ms and a huge ballruom 1
full uf llcalles ' films, artwork
· by fans, guest speakers and a
flea market, the latter the
event's most popular area .
There, devotees of the four
Uverpudlians could buy anything from buttons to trading
cards to records to movies all a! impressive J&gt;rkes.
Acupy of the rare "Yesterday ... And Today" .aJbum
with the rare cover showing
the Beatles holding what
appear lo be dead babies can
fet ch $7-:iO - 50 times what it
cost new . Reproductions of
. the . cover photograph were
selimg for $3 each - and
were also available on T. shirts and posters.
Bob Iuliucci. who was
selling films and videotapes
of old Beatie performances,
said business was "great."
Juliucci also would not say
what his annual income from
Beatie memorabilia was, but
he would admit lo il being " in
five figures ."
Iuliucci got into the Beatie
business three years ago by
combining two hobbies -

Beatlr wusic and film. Now
he Ira,:·is the ro untry selling
his wares to Beatie fans whether they need them or
not . " in Houston I sold over
$.'l00 worth of films to a
woman wbo didn't even own a
j,rojeclor," he said. "She just
wanted the films."
~'o r the most hardcore
Beatie fans, Beallefest is
heaven . And the fans r ead to
the goings-on with fervor ·
reminiscent of the height of
Beallemania in 1964; girls
still scream when their favorite Bealle's face appears
during one of the endless
string of movies being shown.
And .Beatie sound-alike
contests are perennial
favorites .
The less devoted partake. of
more moderate celebrations.
The "Beatlemania" stage
show is scoffed at by a lot of
Beatie fans who resent the
slick presentation of ersatz
Beatles, but it's heading for
its third year on Broadway,
And the real thing, or at
least recorded versions of .it,
keeps Capitol Records'
financial affairs healthy.

1llcmr for thf' ninr week

EXTRA
CRISPY
IENlUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN
.FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432
Pomeroy,O.

teams will be played and a be a ball gove. second prize, a
picnic dinner will be held.
ba t, an d thi rd prize, a
Thr ee prizes will be baseball.
·
awarded to the individ uals
Attendance goal for Ea;t er
bringing in the mo;t new Sunday is 358. Pastor Wiliam
people during the nine weeks Knittel extends an invitation
of the contest. First prize will lo all

AUTHORIZED
RCA and WHIRLPOOL
DIALER

TRY OUT
SPEVIAL SERVICES
REIIEARSAL CANCELLED
Life Science· Church will
A rehearsal sessions of th e
Voices of Liberty scheduled sponsor spcciaJ services
for this evening at th e Saturday. March 24 at 7:30
Pomeroy United Methodist p.m. at the old Syracuse
C.'hurch has been cancelled Mission building. There will
due to the illness of Mrs. Jun e be special singing . Regular
VanVranken , the director. services will be held Sunday
Regular rehearsal sessions evening . The Rev . Bob '
will resume at the usual time . Persons will be guest speaker
Saturday evening. The pbuiic
Monday evening.
is invited.

TRY OUT

CRCM'S

contest is "Winning In Every
1'hc obj ect is to see which
Inning." The church has lx:en tea m ca n bring in the mo&lt;&gt;1
divided into two teams. the new people to. the Sunday
Tigt•rs and the Sluggers. with· . School over the nine week
Oann y Lambert be in~ period. For each new person
sel ected as captain for the brought in , five runs or five
Tigc (s. and .Mi chael Zirkle, points will be recorded.
for the Sl uggers.
Allhc end of the contest, a
ball game between the two

EXTRA
CRISPY

FOR

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

SALES &amp; SERVICE
PHONE 992-7113 ...

CRaNS

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432
Pomeroy , 0.

INTE.RNATIONAL FLAVO~- Meigs High School home economic students of Mrs.
Karen Goms. are bemg treated th1s week to some international flavor in food , costumin g and
~nee. Rahunah Yeop and her hu~band ldris Buang of Malaysia, both students in
mternatlonal affall's at Oh10 Umyers1ty, were at Meigs yesterday and today. Wednesdav
lhe.y prepared a main course dish, "me goreng," and showed attire of the Mal~ysian lady,
w_hile today they prepared a dessert, danced, and told of the male Malaysian attire . Here
Lisa Becker models the wedding costume of Rahimah Yeop, left.

I STARTING 9:00A.M.

FRIDAY, MAR. 16th and 17th
COULD SAVE YOU PLENTY!
PROCTOR SILEX

BEVERAGE BREWER
GREAT FOR COFFEE, TEA,
ICED TEA AND GIVES
HOT WATER

(2 ONLY)
REG. '25.95

NOW
ONLY

1ST FULL YEAR OF BUSINESS
A'1
OUR EXPERT DIAMOND
~
SUPPLIER WILL BE IN
~
OUR STORE WllH
$500,000.00 OF
DIAMOND PIECES.

S

J

Something to Sea: Never before will you actually see
this many clusters. solltaras, wedding sets. ect...
dlamonciL Navar priced this low agalnl ·

Clusters

ificentl
Masculine

14iSTGold

Diamond
Earrings

Serpentine
Chains
""""""

7Diamond
Clusters

Dawn Blake

·rums nine

•"

Th e Middl eport Unit ed
Pentecostal C'hurch began it s
first week of the annual
spring Sunday School contest
under the direction of Mrs.
Unda Knittel, Sunday School
promotional director.

THIS WIIKIND ONLYI

14 KT Gold

CLIFTON - The ninth
birthday of Dawn Blake was
observed with a birthday
party at the home of ·her
grandmother, Mrs. Clara
Williams.
The birthday cake featured
a shaggy dog decoration. Ice
cream, cake, and candy were
served. Dawn is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Blake, Clifton.
Games were played and
prizes won by Kevin Peters,
Melissa Kearns, Matt
RlckarJ, Sheila Stewart,
Becky Hoffman, Tammy
Kennedy, Michell Young and
Kay Robinson.
Attending were Chris
Grogan, Shelia Stewart,
Becky and Susan Hoffman,
Carl and Tina Kearns, Darin
Young, Tammy Kennedy,
Kevin Peters, Brandy and
Michell Young, Melissa and
Scott Kearns, Brian. Varian,
Matt Rickard, Jackie Blake,
Richard and Phyllis Gilkey,
I!fark Gllkey, Kay and Mike
Robinson, Clara Williams,
Denver and Ann Blake.
, Sending gifts were Helen
Barker, Marie Smith, Andy
and Martina VanMeter and
Laura James. .

Sunday school contest underway in church

Rarely is a Beatie album out
of the list of 200 besto&amp;!lling
albums, and any time new
interest in the group nares ,
several of the albums re·
enter the ranks of I~OP·
selling albums.
' The Beatles themselves are
still highly commercial.
HarrisQn's latest album and
single are heading up the
charts , and McCartney
recently signed a recording
deal with Columbia Records
said lo be worih $2 million an
album plus $2 for each record
sold - the most lucrative
recording contract in history.

Never before in this area such a dazzling array
of diamond jewelry... all at substantial savings
A policeman will be on
guard at 1!111 times, lit
order to bring you such
a selection of quality

'

.

20% TO 50%

'

INGEL'S

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

goods.

MIDDUPORT, 0.

EASTER CANDY, ANYONE? Angie Sinclair, left, and Sonia Ash, display some of the
Easter candies being sold by the Future Homemakers of America, Meigs High SchooL Ail of
the candy is being made by the FHA students with the proceeds to be used for their various
projects. Orders may be placed with any student, Mrs. Karen Goins, Miss Leda Kraeuter , or
Mrs, Jackie Brooks, teachers.
·

Esther Circle met Friday
The Esther Circle of the
Racine FIJ:Iit Baptist Church
met at tile church on Friday
evening, March 9, with
Wanda Powell as hostess.
The meeting was opened with
devotions by Ora Hill with the
topic being "How Do You
Know God?" Prayer and a
song, "How Great Thou Art';
was sung by the group . .
Scripture reading was from
John I: I through 4 and also
17 and 18 verses.
The meeting was brought to
order by Gretta Simpson.
Roll call was answered by 10
members.
Birthday gifts and cards
.are to be presented to four
people in the Meigs County
Infirinary. A birthday card

Powell.
A program was brought by
Helen
Slack on Missions and
and gift was sent to the
Missionaries
. Readings
Scholarship boy, John Kevin
Kennedy·, who is a scholar at were: . " The Greatest Thing
Judson Baptist College and t~ Come Out of America
resides in Ironton, Ohio. Also ha s been the American
a gift of money was sent to Missionary Effort' ~ , by Helen
Miss Sue Curtis who attends Simpson; "Missionary Books
Fort Wayne Bible College in of the Bible". Accordi(Jg to
· the apostles the missionary is
Fort Wayne, Ind.
Reports were given by the highest expression of
Lillian Hayman, secretary · Christian life. This was read
bv Velma Taylor ; "What
treasurer .
Price,
Discipleship''' The
The nominating report was
price
Jesus
' disciples paid for
given with these new officers
serving
Him
, by Lillian
elected for next year:
Hayman;
"
Christ
as a
president, Gretta Simpson;
secretary · treasurer, Lillian Missionary". This reading
Hayman ; Love Gift chair· told us the kind of missionary
man, Frances Wilcoxen ; Christ was, by Gretta ; and
White Cross chairman, " We Must Never Give Up, We
Dorothy Badgley; flower Must Persevere."
The program closed with a
fund, Ora Hill; cards, Wanda
letter of encouragement from
the
American Baptist
Magazine written by Helen
Baird, presdient of American
Baptist Women of Ohio. She
gave
10 beatitudes for
back more things .than I leave
Christian
women, the last one
off," Zeller said.
read,
Blessed
is the woman
Town
selectmen
who
looks
constantly
to her
recommended house4o~Jouse
Father
for
garbage pickup, fearing Heavenly
injuries and possible lawsuits guidance, for she shall be
from the dump. But they given strength abundantly."
Delicious refreshments
faced about an hour of
were
served by the hostess.
opposition from residents
Decorations
were in
who attended the Tuesday
keeping
with
St.
Patrick's
night \own meeting .
Day.
.
Selectmen said lhe dump
The
WhiteCross
quota
was
was becoming dangerous,
filled.
with son'le residents falling in ·
with their garbage.

On the light Side "

. Paying for a Free Ride
NORFOLK , Va. (AP)
Tidewater Regional Transisl
is $2 richer and a World War
II veteran from Pennsylvania
has a clear conscience.
An anonymous letter addressed to the "Norfolk Bus
Company" arrived at the
TRT offices here late last
month. Inside were two $1
bills.
"While stationed in Norfolk
during World War II I
cheated the bus company out
of a fare by showing my pass
lo the driver, then passing the
pass to my friend louse," the
letter said . "I haven 't been
able to forget it.
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
"Will the enclosed pay my
United Pentecostal Church,
debt?"
"There was no name and no South Third Ave., Mid·
return
address,"
Lee dleport, met Tuesday for a
Carlson , finance manager for covered dish luncheon at the
the TRT and Tidewater church. Mrs. Jean Will of the
Transportation District WMPO Radio Community
Commission, said Club Awards spoke to the
.Wednesday. "The post mark ' group. Bible games were
was from somewhere like played with a gift going to
Mrs. Virginia Vitatoe.
Millsboro, Pa."
The $2 went into the bus • Several money making
revenue fund, Carlson said. projects were discussed by
the 19 attending . Prayer
Don't Dump the Dump
concluded the meeting ,
DUNBARTON, N.H. (AP)
- Dunbarton voters have
decided not to dump their
BAKE SALE SATURDAY
dump, saying it is a social
The Middleport Youth
institution.
''The dump is a meeting Baseball League will sponsor
place. It's a spot where we a bake sale Saturday, March
get a chance to see other 17 in front of the Citizens
people," said resident Walter National Bank beginning at -9
a.m.
Smith.
Any parent wishing to
Fellow resident William
Zeller said he enjoys meeting donate baked goods are asked
people at the dump as well, to have items at the bank
but he said the dump was before 9. For additional In·
fonnation call Kathy Hood at
even more to him.
."I find thai I often bring 992-stl64 .

Auxiliary set

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ll2
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COMFORT TOP

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REG. 69'

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CANDY

34¢
REG.
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ASPIRIN
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Kennoet~ MotCiil~ ::·~ . Ph. ·
~unday

10:30to 12 :30ond 51o 9 p.m.

PRESCRIPTIONS

I' H. 9f2-2955

Friendly.Servtce
E. Main

ap.n Nights till9

If

Pomeroy, O.

�10- The Ortity St:-nlirwl. Michllt&gt;p11rt - Pou~t• roy . ( 1., 'l' hu r~d ily. Mar. 15. 1 !17~ 1

.

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Your social security

Minersville resident
gives town's history
By VIc Brown
Minersville has been a
This was one of the four
, At the present time a strong and healthy com- stores that I mention in this
history is being written and munity in the past, con· letter. After· this company
compiled about Meigs County tributing a vast amount of abandoned its works here this
and its communities.
power and growth to the building stood for years and
Recently, I went searching upbuilding and growth of burned down around 1950,
to see if I could find any Pomeroy and Meigs County. Fleming and Job had a
history about Minersville. I
In my time, it has produced chicken and egg business in it
found none at au.
three doctors, two dentists, at that time. The present
Only lhe name was men· two druggists, two Meigs building housing the recent
tioncd. This greatly disturbed County sheriffs, one county Provico Feed Business now
me and a member ·of the a uditor ,
one
county stands where this company
Historical Society that was tre'asurer, one clerk of courts, store stood.
helping in my search. He two recorders, one comWithin the boundary,
asked if I would try to write mission er , one superin· eastern and western, of this
something about out town . tendent of Pomeroy High village of Minersville are
I have determined to do so School, one minister, one fourteen or more abandoned
if I can get some help and foreign missionary, several coal mines of past cominformation from present and bankers, nurses, school board mercia I and household
former citizens.
members and a large number purposes. Some of these were
'lbe time is short and I am a of teachers.
sealed durtng WPA days. Is
very busy person. Deadline is
At one time it had two salt this where Minersville
April 5th.
·
plants.
derived its name? I for one
TRACI'OR TROUBLE TEAM -Steve Kinzel and Henry Hart were members of the
Will you kind people,
The one where Brown's think that it was. At one time
Meigs
High School FFA tractor trouble shooting team which took part in the district
natives or others, please send Trailer Park i's presently there were four grocery
competition
held at the Buckeye Hills Career Center.recently.
me any information of located had a boat landing stores, four churches, several
'
hi stori cal value that you where coal and salt Was blacksmith shops and shoe
might have. Please search loaded on barges and shipped cobblers.
your memory, treasure on the Ohio River. A barge
During the early 1930's,
chest, trunk or attic.
· once sank here and was never there were four service
Any pitiures that you will recovered. I have lost many a stations. In the 1920's, Grant
MA~IETTA - The Ohio alteration of the present five 153.84, $3,749,725.60.
loan will be receipted and trot line snagged on this Hood built a coal tipple at the Dep.
, rtment of Trans- year program) is being
other Rehabilitation and
returned to you. Minersville barge.
west end of town in front of portation (ODOT ) District 10 facilitated by providing a list Improvements (29 projects ),
has contributed too much to
I have a large picture of the George Daniels property. Five Year (5) Transportation of "Types of Improvements" 110.71, $3,571,825.56.
the world to let it all be this plant, when it was in Coal was loaded here on flat Improvement Program is to which readers ma y
Total - $16,042,239.71.
fo rgotten. I want our village production before the turn of deck barges and many packet
being
reviewed,
adjustments
respond.
In
comparison
with
to be long remembered in the century. It was known at boats made regular stops
made;
and
the
1984
Fiscal
This
list
is the same as ' previous yea rs, the 1978
hi story and I for one am glad one time as the Zahl Salt here to take on coal for fuel.
Year prQjects added.
provided the public in 1974. At ResurfacingProgram was
to have been born an.d lived Works.
Among some were the
Procedures,
as
outlined
in
that
time the jlUblic gave high more than double and other
here. I am proud of MinerThe payroll book states that · Betsy Ann, Gordon Green, ODOT 's Transportatiqn priority to resurfacing, and rehabilitative costs were
sville's contribution to the rate of pay ranged from Senator Cordill and others.
De v e lo pmen t Pro cess other rehabilitative types of more than seven (7) times the
society.
seventy-live cents to a dollar
The excursion boat Homer
At the present time, there Is andhalfperday. The name of Smith frequently stopped iTDP), require citizen and work such as bridge average of previous years.
While the exact cause for
not too much activity in the other plant was "White here for that purpose. Coal other , public participation. replacement, shoulder im·
The
Process
stems
from
provements
and
obstacle
this
shift which is in part a
Minersville. There are only Rock Salt Furnace."
was shoveled by hand into Fede'ral requirements and removal.
matter
of National and State
three businesses and one
Only several weeks ago, an wheelbarrows ·and wheeled was'' initiated In 1974 with
In
subsequent
years,
the
policy
cannot
be assigned. it
church.
article in the paper stated onto the deck of these boats. Public Meetings in each of district's program began
Ashland Oil and Refining that in an auction at
The packet boats carried the nine (9) counties com- shifting emphasis from new
Company's distributing Charleston, West Virginia,
cattle, chickens, hogs and prlsing District 10. These construction to this type of
plant, Brown's Trailer Park bundle of 1935 calendars and produce as
well as
TOKYO (AP) _A Britishand Karl Grueser &amp; Son's salt bags of this past firm passengers. These were all include :· Athens, GalHa , work · with the results as
Hocking,
Meigs
,
Monroe,
shown
in
the
following
built
Trident aircraft crashed
Plumbing make up its list of were sold on the auction sternwheel boats..
Morgan,
Noble,
Vinton
and
tabulation
for
contracts
into
a
factory on the western
businesses. This has not blocks and brought a high
Late1', this tipple was Washington. Results of these completed in the 1978 outskirts
of
Peking
always been the size of the price.
..
moved downriver a short way meetings and other public Calendar Year.
,
Wednesday,
killing
about
200
town 's activity,
At the east end of Miner- beside the Pomeroy Water input aided the development
Type
of
work,
length
in
persons,
Japan
•s
Kyodo
news
The
community
of svllle, was The Pittsburgh Pumping Station. Mr. Hood
service reported ,
Minersville was once a Coal Company, where a large ·also had a towboat that was oftt/e first five year program miles, contract amount :
and
-'
o
ther
long-term
priority
New
construction
(9
The dispatch from the Chihustling and thriving town . It tipple crossed over the high~ used to transport some of his
.
projects ) 9:343, $8,721,~61.01. nese capital quot!)d witnesses
Is located on the Ohio River, way, fro!ll which coal was coal by river . This boat sank con~derations .
In each of subsequent
Resurfacmg (19 proJects), assaying about a dozen crew
stretching along its' b~n~s for loaded and shipped on the along the bank in high water
years, Department personnel
a distance of one and seven· river.
but was later recovered.
resppnsible
for
the
tenths mile. It is sandwiched
The cement abutment still
Before the auto, Iran - Preliminary Development
Types of Improvements To Which
in between Pomeroy and stands of this past business. sportation in and out of the
pha~~s of transportation
Planning
Erforts Should Be Directed
Syracuse on State Route. 124.' 'On the hill back of this mine village was by wagon or imprbvements conducted
TYPI&lt;;
' RANK
It consists of four ruris or the company buUt a large street car. A person could
pubil~
discussions
at
hollows: · Welchtown, Dut- nllmber of houses. This was catch a street car to Pomeroy locations
(
1
l
Bridge
Replacements
throughout the
chtown, Pamunkey and ahnost a community within every 20 minutes. The district to supplement public (2l Resurfacing
Carleton Run. The Welch itself. The attendance of the through car from Racine to . involvement participation in
settled in Welchtown and had· Callaway S,:hool was made · Hobson, wa; scheduled every selet!lnli projects to add to (3l Widening Improvel]lents
(4l Intersection Improvements
their own church and up mostly from chUdren from hour and twenty minutes.
and lieep current a five year (5l Signing Improvements
ccmeter yo and the Dutch these families: This kind of a
School children going to program.
settled in Dutchtown and had housing project in those days high school at Pomeroy could . Thl~ y~ar, publi~ par- (6) Removal of Roadside Obstacles
th eir own church and was called a coal camp.
purchase 30 tickets for a ltctpatlon m lnfluencmg the (7) Shoulder Improvements
cemetery.
1984 p~ogram year (as well as (8) Alignment and Grade
Becaus.e of the lack of dollar.
The Dutch were workers in transportation in those days
A switch was located here
Improvements (new construction)
rock and at one time there people· had to live close by in Minersville for the cars to
stood seven stone houses ·their work in order to be in. pass. With our river bank writtim about Minersville . (9) Pavement Marking
hewn out of the solid rock wlaking distance. Forest Run eroded away as It presently Thai is where you are needed ( 10) Traffic Signalling
from the
surrounding and Dark Hollow mining is, it is hard to make a person and can play a part. All the (II )'Lighting Improvements
hillsides. At the present time industry at about this same believe that a street car track above information is from my ( 12) Drainage Improvements
two of these have been time had housing projects of . threaded along the river side
own personal memory exremodeled and are modern like comparison. This coal of the highway through cept a·few of these events. If I c 13) Scenic Enhancements
· homes. It has been said that company also constructed a Minersville. Later the auto stand;to be corrected in any ( 14) Rest Areas
in building a home, the Dutch large retail store building of and bus provided service.
of the. above please feel free ( 15) Access Control Projects
first looked for a place to brick and this was known as
Much more can be said and to correct me, because when ( 16) Public Transplirtation
build a stone wall.
the ,Comnanv Store.
events are Written for our. ( 17) Bicycle Paths
lown:s history, I want it to be &lt;18) Access to Recreational Areas
correct . Please send me
information to the following &lt;19) Noise Abatement Projects
address : Vic Brown, 42950 SR (20) Guard Rail Improvements
124, Box 26, Minersville, Ohio C2ll Other
45763. (Phone 614-992-3324) .

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Social Security regulations
effective May 15, 1978,
provide that everyone who
applles lot' a Soclal Security
number
must
submit
evidence of age, identity, U.S.
citizenship, or lawful admission status before a Social
Security number can -be
issued.
·
The new procedures were
implemented to deter fraud
and misuse of the Social
Security number and to make
the system's records more
reliable.
. The .best poof of age is a
public or religious record of
birth made before age five.
This proof will also serve as
proof of citizenship for U. S.
born persons. ·
If this type of proof 'is not
available Or not easily obtainable, other evidence of
age may be used including a
school record, church record,
census record, physicians
statement of birth, Bible or
family record, insurance
policy, marriage r ecord.

voters rf11iltratlon · record,
military record, delayed
birth record, or any other
document wblch shows the
applicant's name and date 0!
birth or age and which Is !
least 1 year old.
All proofs should Be
original documents or c..
tified copies; uncertifii!II
photocopies or notarlzl@
copies are not acceptab!J!
proofs.
~·
, Evidence of identity Is alill
required In ,addition (O
evidence of age. Evidence of
identity should provide the
name, age, date of · blrt6':
address, signature, physical
description , picture, or aot
other
Identifying
\4;
formation.
"
All applicants lnltiallt'
requesting Social Security
numbers will be required W
submit two documents: one
for age and naother fdr
identity. For example,
children under age seven
would require proof of aie
and evidence of identity su~h
as a clinic or doctor's recorj!,
hospital wristband, bally
book, newspaper birth notice,
vaccination certificate, day
care or nursery school
is nevertheless Important record, etc.
that the District's 1978
Older children age 7-t8;
Construction Year results would require proof of ag~
reflected the public's interest and identity - other possibl~:
in 1974.
documents In addition .t~ 1
Therefore, the public is those mentioned above m·
urged to participate by elude a report cartl, school;
completing the form and record, school I.D . card,
forwarding It to District yearbook, driver's penni! o~.
Deputy Director, Glenn A. license, Boy Scout-Girl Scout·
,.•
Smith, Ohio Department of membership card, etc.
other examples of evidence~
. Transportation, Muskingum
Drive, Marietia, Ohio, before of Identity are : state
the first of April, 1979.
card, voters registration:;
record, marriage record,:
divorce decree, work 'badge:'
draft card, passport, etc.•
These are only examples and '
!. '
are not all inclusive.
"
members and passengers
Applicants not born in lhe
aboard were believed killed United States should alsrl
wben the aircraft ploughed submit evidence of their U. S.
into an assembly plant near citizenship or their 1man airport at8 :S2 a.m . (7:52 migration documents
p.m. EST Tuesday) shortly showing their lawful adafter takeoff .
mission status.
.•
Other victims included
Persons requestln~ ;
workers at the factory, Kyo do duplicate or corrected car~ ..
said, adding that a will have to submit evidence
government press officer of identity when applying• .
said he had no knowledge of For example, U a woman i5 ;
the crash.
changing her name due tQ_,
Kyodo said it was unable to marriage, the marriage
identify the passengers but certificate showing the .
said Trident aircraft often previous and new nam e-:
are used in China to transport would establish both Ideo·'·
government leaders and lilies and should be easily,,,
other high ranking officials. available.
A French correspondent · Most applications for Social
said he saw many Chinese Security numbers can be_ )
soldiers engaged in rescue conducted In person or by .•
work late into the night, mail, except for applicants
according to the Kyodo who are 18 or over. They must,,,
report.
apply in person.
·;,.
Kyodo said the French re·
A free explanatory leaflet,
porter saw debris but was " Applying for a SociaL,.
unable to provide more Security
Number"
ls, 1,
details because it was so available at the Athens Social
dark ,
indicating
the Security office. Anyone...
journalist was not allowed having questions about::;
into the crash area .
evidence requirements or the , ~
China's last major air dis- application process, please:
aster occurred in January can the Athens office at 592-1.. ;
1976 when a Chiilese airliner · 4448, Meigs County residents
crashed near Changsha, should call 992-11622., Please,
capital of Hunan province, remember , in order to .,,
killing aU 45 persons aboard. protect your Social ~ecurityr:;
The Soviet-made Antonov, program, no Social Security&gt;
type aircraft was en route number will be Issued unless ,.
from Canton to Shanghai all requirements ·of the law '"
when it went down.
are met.
"'"
,.

llDOT reviews five-year plan ·

C h Ia •
ras c r.ms

a

Who
Knows More

About

BUY

Sports
briefs.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.......iiiiiiiiiiliiii--.iiiiiiiiiiiii ""'

TENNIS
BOSTON - Top-seeded
Chris Evert scored a 6-2, 6-2
opening round victory over
Pam Teeguarden while
fourth-~eeded Wendy Tum:;
bull took a 6-3, · 6-2 victory
Cha~rnan
over Diane Desfor in the
second day of opening
matches in a $150,000
women's tennis tournament.
Whoever
you
are ,
In other matches, Rosie
Chapman' s has a bareback
Casals defeated Jeanne
for your looks, your likes
Duvall 6-3, 6-4 ; Australian
and your lifesty le. Because
Kerry
, Reid beat Renee
no one knows more about
Richards 6-2, 6-4; Linda
bareba c ks
.than
Chapman' s.
Siegel scored a 6-1, 6-2 victory
~
over Sandra Collins; Bet,sy
unmistakably
Nagelsen defeated Pat
Medrado of Brazel 6-7, 6-1, 61; Betty Stove of The
Netherlands beat Anne Smith
6-4, 6-1, and Terry Holladay
had to retire· from ber match
with Sue Barker of Britain
due to a cyst.
WASHINGTON -Fourthseeded Roscoe Tanner
eliminated Deon Joubert of
South Africa 6-2, 6-3 in the
first roand of the $125,000
Washington men's pro tennis
tournament.
"Tonight?
In other first·round matI'd Love To!"
ches, second-seeded Brian
Bone. White or
Gottfried easily defeated
Keith Richardson IHJ, 6-3; No.
Black Patent
8 seed .Stan Smith ousted
Carlos Klrinayr of Brazll6-1;
6-2 ; Geoff Masters · of
Australia downed Francisco
Gonzalez of Puerto Rico 6-4,
7-li, and Hank Pfister won
" Next to Elberlelds in over Colin Dowdeswell of
&amp;.:;Po.;:.:;m:;•;.;••;.:Y.;.·.;;0;;.:.·_ _ _ __, Rhodesia 6-1, 6-2.

Than

No One!

52 GAL glass lned

ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER
30 Gal. •115.95
difmeter 20•12", htlght from lloor Includes

nipples J21f, nipple size """ " , between nlpplts 1", ·
height ot electric outlet 241fo'', immerolon ty" 45GO
wall lower and u_.- twin elem101h. Capacity 52
gal., well insulated white enameled out.r jacket. s.
YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY.

GAS MODELS
30 GAllON

40 GALlON

EBERSBACH·
HARDWARE
Phone 992-2811
110 W. Main
Pomeroy. 0.

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1
1

,

onn1e®

'13895

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ENJOY FRESH FROM ·
THE FARM FAVORITES.
RIGHT FROM THE -FARM.

••

Barebacl&lt;s

M.OR-FLO

Jackel

200 victims

" · •,

Shoes?

ONLY

ur:

•IU

YOU
BEST

"':d

Bring your family to the Bob
Evans Farms Sausage Shop. Here
you'll find homey atmosphere, warm
friendly smiles
and all the whole,
some goodness and hearty eating
you'll need to get you through the
chill of winter .. Come see us soon
and often.

..
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':Z

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to ii.J

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CHAPMAN

:I ~

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.

· SHOES

•

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WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DONIJ DO IT:

i::W
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11-Tne Lllluy ~&gt;enttner , Jvtllltl&amp;"P" ''t •l"um eruy. v., J uu r"''"Y, tvt Hr. J3, W/01

Brown criticized by Hance

IT'S A SLOW joanaey for Alaallall oO from Prudhoe Bay 1brouJb tile Trau-Aialb
' PlpeiiDe to lbe port of Valdez. Movilll at a rate of 1 mpll, lbe oD takea more tbaa a
•motdh to travellbe 800-m.Oe leqth of lbe plpellDe. On lbe way, It crouea about 800
riven lllld atreama aDd paaaea lbrolllh three moiiDtala ra1111e1.
.'

IV IISHIN GTON ( AP J The Sta ndard Oil Co.
Callforuia fl&lt;&gt;v. Rdmund G. !Ohio l announced Tuesday it
Brown
Jr .
punished has abandoned its plans to
consumers across the nation ronst ruct a pipeline that
with
"negli gent · and would pump 500,000 barrels a
irrespoo sible" actions con- day from l.oog Beach, Calif.,
nected with the scuttling of a to a national distribution
proposed $1 billion crude !lit center in Midland.
pipeline,
a
Texas
Sohio Chairman Alton W.
congressman c ha r ged Whitehouse credited "endless
Wednesday .
governm ent
p e rm it
''Gov. Brown shQirld quit pro cedures, pending and
running for president and threatened litigation and the
start running his own state if prospective unavailability of
he cares anything about the two natural gas lines," with
consumers of the nation,'' 1\illlng the project.
said U.S. Rep . Kent Hance,
But Hance, whose district
D-Texas.
includes Miilland, laid the
"He and the bureaucracy of blame on Brown and other
his own administrative California state officials who
agencies have killed a project he said have " failed
which would have saved con- miserably in their duty to the
sumers _more t han $500 country.''
l!lilllon per year in energy
'~Governor Brown's narrow
costs. "
vision and incomprehensible

inaction killed the project," fornia, which relies on the
Permian Basin of Texas for a
said Hance .
major
portion of its natural
A spokesman fo r Brown
said Tuesday the decision to
cancel the project may have
been based on more complex
reasons than publicly slated.
" We don't think a
JACOBS, COATES
reasonable man could argue
RETURN HOME
delay was their reason when
Katherine Jacobs of Linthe penni! process would be
completed in eight days," coin Hill recently .returned
from an extended visit to Sun
said Brown's top aide, Gray City,
Arizona . J ean Coates,
Davis.
Syracuse traveled with .Mrs.
Hance, said the project Jacobs to Phoenix where they
would have added to the parted company to visit their
domestic supply of oil and
va rious relatives. Mrs.
signif icantly reduced the Jacobs
visited with Mr. and
nation 's depend ence on
Mrs.
M.
J. Taylor, her sister
foriegn supplies. He said ·and brother-in-law.
Mrs.
Alaskan crude could have
Coates
visited
with
her
son,
been refined at plants near
Nick
and
his
wife
and
family
most of the fuel-starved
who are formerly from the
regions of the country .
area.
Pomeroy
" I cannot believe th at Cali-

Jlelaxing day changed by twin•engine crash
tearfully.
By TIIOMAS J. RIZZO
She said she was on the secAssociated Press Writer
ond
floor of their two-&lt;rtory
(X)LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
home
when the plane ·
~ relaxing day arowxl the
crashed.
" I looked out the
house is wbat Maureen Van
window.
I
didn 'I know it was
Syckl_e
had
planned
a
plane
that
bad hit, but the
Wednesday morning - just
whole
backyard
was in
~fore ' a twin-engine plane
crashed into her back yard flames. "
Killed in the crash were
killing all on board. .
. She didn't hear the sound of pilot John Wright, 50, of
tlie plane as it dipped toward Phoenixville,' Pa ., and his
the densely populated passengers William F.
subdivision where she lives. . Bigorty, 54, and son David W.
23, both of
BUt the two quick explosions Bigo11y,
Wanninster,
Pa.
following the impact shook
The
Piper
Aerostar
took off
her with a fear she will
Wednesday.
morning
from
always remember ,
Logansport,
Ind.,
and
was
en
"All I could see were
route
to
Ohio
State
flames outside the window ,"
said Mrs. Van Syckle University's Don Scott air
"

Capital briefs
' (X)LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tbe House Energy and Envi·
ronment Committee will conduct a hearing in st. Clairsville
March 26 to determine the economic impact of Ohio being
unable to burn and sell its coal.
Rep. Thomas P. Gilmartin, [).Youngstown, the committee's
chairman, said testimony is eX)lected from laid-off miners and
persons experiencing difficulty marketing and transporting
Ohio coal.
Gilmartin named Rep. Wayne Hays , D-Belrnont, Wednesday
tO chair a clean air subcomittee which he said will further consider the problem after the St. Clairsville hearing.
Other subcommittee members are Rep. John Bara, D-Elyria, and Rep. Thomas Johnson, R.Cambridge.
roLUMBUS, Oldo ( AP) - Gov. James A. Rhodes has urged
Columbus voters to approve an 8.3 mill levy for ·the state's
second largest scbool district on March 'J:/.
"The state administration Is fighting hard to preserve local
control of our schools," Rhodes said in a statement released
Wednesday.
"Passage of the 8.3mllllevywhich will be voted on March 27
in Columbus is essential U we are to protect that local control
from those .who would like to take it away."
The governor said he has determined through the state
school superintendent that the Colwnbus school system is
being managed efficiently ''With fat being cut out of school
budgets."
·
Colwnbus voters have not passed an new school levy since
1968.

field about five miles west of
the crash site .
The plane was on a routine
approach just before the
crash about 9:30 a.m. and
there was no indication of
trouble, said George Acres,
chief of the control loWer at
Don Scott.
Wright, pari owner of a
Valley
Forge,
Pa .,
advertising flml, had been in
Indiana and was planning to
stop in Columbus on routine
business.
"It was strictly a business
trip ," said Joseph Newman,

vice president of Wri ght
Associates, in a telephone
interview ,
"John had been a pilot for
as long as I've known him,
and that's been over 13 years;
he never had an accident as
far as I know, " Newman
said,
The plane crashed into the
backyard of the Van Syckle
residence, ripped out a
section of wooden fence and
bounced into a yard
separating the Van Syckle
house from one belonging to
Wanda Wedemeyer.

out how he managed to avoid
hitting anything."
Wri ght
managed
to
maneuver the plane between
two rows of houses in the
quiet subdivision and a void
slriking several ne arby
maple trees.
Most of the children in the
neighborhood were attending
an elementary school about a
block away.
Except for a . propeller
blade, it was difficult to
recognize lhe r ubble of
broken and twisted, smokeblackened metal as a plane.
.............. j

pipeline , " said Haoce.

"Where is Jerry Bro1&lt;11's
common sense ? How can the
state of California allow their
own selfish alms to supplanl
the energy needs of our entire
nation?" asked Hance .
"There Is no room for se:rishness , divisiveness o•·
factionalism on the part c!
any member of this unton."

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$150 funerals being offered
VANCOUVER , British
Columbia (AP ) -Maverick
mortician Ken Tirnlick, who
· says he's been Sllarching 20
years for ways to cut funeral
costs, is offering burials for
as low as $150. Part of his
formula is a $6 cardboard
coffin .
The coffin is made by MacMillan Bloedel Ltd., a locallyproducts
. based wood
company which produces
cardboard boxes for $3 each.
Timlick's wife, Jean, sews
plllows and linings for the
boxes, using a satin-like
fabric, for another $3.
"Those are all my costs for
labor and materials," said
Timlick, 54. "It's clearly a
triumph. It is a $6 coffm."
Since some people might
object to ~eing encased in a
cardboard box, Tirnlick came

up with a solution. Last year, ethics committee, said the been used about 100 times in
five funeral parlors, four in
he acquired the Canadian catafalque is deception.
franchise of a Florida
"It doesn't make sense for British Colwnbia and one in
company that markets a person to fool all his friends Winn ipeg . One Van couv er
catafalques.
into thinking he ha s spent a funeral director said th ey
A catafalque is a fancy wad on mother,'' he said. constitute nearly one-third of
"bottomless coffin," sort of a "It's like renting a limo for his business.
Catafalque . renters in
reusable sheD which Is placed the night and trying to
British Columbia have be en
over the coffins. The pretend that you own it."
bereaved family buys only
Executive director Brian able to cut the average $1,000
the cardboard coffin and Fondrick said the association cost of a funeral by almost
rents the catafalque.
maintains that anything that half, Timlick says, and h"/
said
the goes to the cemetery should maintains he can further
Timlick
undercut fun eral costs. He
catafalque, which resembles stay there .
some of the more expensive
''I don 't know if a has just opened his own fu.
coffins priced at $1,500 or cardboard box reflects an nerai parlor to prove it . Using
more, stays in place through appropriate degree of the cardboard coffin and the
vie wings , processions and success for a IUe that has catafalque, he said, he .can offer a full funeral for as little
services !rut is removed after been Jived."
·
as
$150.
the ceremony.
· Timlick disagrees : "Those
The B.C. Funeral Servke lily-white puritans are afraid
Association is unhappy about of losing sales of their high
Timlick's new system. Brian priced units."
Winther, association vice In the last four months, be
president and head of the said , the catafalques have

THE GOOD TIMES ROll,
Available in White or Camel

heritage house
OF SHOES
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport
Open Friday filS p.m .

Geography alive
in junior high

€0LUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - l.Algislation aimed at
Geography is alive and
strengthening Ohio's non-support law was introduced receiving visitors in the
Wednesday by Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord.
classes of Diana Williams,
Speck said passage of the measure would boost non-support ~eigs Junior ffigh.
statutes in three ways. _
Besides the students'
"First, it would. make abandonment or failure to support development and presenone's family a fourth-dagree misdemeanor," he said. "Second, tation of special projects that
the bill requires anyone under a court order of support to demonstrate the movement
inform the court of intent to move from the slate and to provide and complexity of our planet
tf;Je court out-of-state residence address."
and solar system, outside
•Failure to do so would constitute a first-degree mJs. speakers visited the class to
"
demeanor,
he said.
share their knowledge and
; (•Finally, leaving the state while in arrears in court-ordered experience.
stlPport and falling to provide the court the new out-of-slate
The Rev. W. H. Perrin,
a4dress would be a fourth-degree felony," Speck said.
pastor of the Trinity Church
•Under Ohio law, a fourth-degree felony Is punishable by a and world traveler as a
prison tenn of six months to five years and a ma:rimum fine of merchant seaman in his
$2,500. A person convicted of a flrst-dfllree misdemeanor could younger years, spoke to the
r~ive six months in jail and a $1,000 fine .
class about his travels to the
equator.
!PLUMB US Ohio ( AP) - A bill 10 increase the allowable
Rev. Perrin's vivid exlepglh of auio transporters traveling Ohio roadw:ays to 65 feet planations revealed a new
has gained unanimous Senate approval.
understanding to the students
:rhe measure, sponsored by Sen. Harry Meshel, [).Young· about the complexities of
stown was passed~ Wednesday and sent to the House.
time changes on our planet
Meshel said the bill places into law an attorney general 's during his crossings of the ·
opinion of 1975 that permits auto carriers to be that length.
International Date Line.
The measure also would allow the carriers \O have an
His talk was spiced with
overhang that extends three feel in the front and four feet in interesting anecdotes inth~ rear.
'twenty-six stales, including Michigan, Kentuc:ky and Indi~na, . already penni! . the seven-foot overhangs on auto
transporters, Meshel S8ld.
'
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Persons convicted of miscleineanors could have their sentences reduced by the number
of days they ~re jailed prior to conviction under legislation that
bas cleared the Senate. ·
.
Sen Marlgene'VaUquettl!-, 11l'oledo, sponsor of the measure
appro~ed 312 Wednesday , said persons convicted of fe~onies
are already allowed to deduct the time they served prtor to
· thelr coovlctlons.
'Die measure now goes to the House for consideratlQn.

LATONIA
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP) Spider Lady, ridden by Gene
Solomon, captured the $3,400
featured eighth race by a ·
neck at Latonia Wednesday
eluding the mysteries of the night, paying $4.80, $3.20 and
great pyramid of Egypt and $3.80.
the fascinating correlation of
The place horse, Bronze
the pyrainids alignment with Genie , paid $5.60 and $4.80,
the compass points. Mrs. and Sheer Delight returned
Perrin Is also a teacher with $5.40 to show.
the Meigs Junior High and in
The 6-7 combination of Key
the English ucvttnut~n", To My Heart and Big Hot paid
teaching creative writing and $134.20 in the double and the
grammar.
. crowd of 2,682 bet $394,480.
Following the solar eclips;
Myriam Ruthchlld, author of
several books of Astrology
and Pyramldology and free
lance contributor to national part of a continuing effort of
magazines, explained the our schools to involve the
scientific · principles of community with our students
education.
astrology to the students.
Principal John Mora would
Using the entertaining side
of astrology to capture their like to ha'fe more parattention, Ms. RuthchUd, wife ticipation from members of
of magician and pubtslber the community who feel they
Lee Jacobs, described the have something they could
origin of astrology and share with the students.
planetary observation wmd Those wbo have a special
the complexities of the solar knowledge that they would be
system. (Ms. Ruthchild is willing to share please call
avaUable for local lectures.) Mrs. Williams or Mr. Mora at
These two speakers are 992-3058 or 992-5583.

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(X)LUMBUS, 0 . (AP)-Ohloans who receive disabWty
benefits because they are totally and permanenUy disabled
would no longer have to lose workman's compensation benefits
under a Senate-passed bill.
. . .
hi
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers Jr ., D-Dayton satd hts bill, w ch
gained 'J:/-6 Senate .,proval Wednesday, seeks to correct a
court's misinterpretation of a 1967 law.
ztnuners said the law said persons receiving benefits for
being temporarily disabled could bave their . wo~km~n 's
cmlpj!OSBtion benefits reduced by the amount of the dlsabrUty
payment.
,
A Springfield judge ruled that somone who ts permanently
disabled could also lose workman's compensation benefits.
"If this ruling Is allowed to remain, there would be no reason
for a W«ker to have a dillabWty plan," Zl,mmers said.
The bill was sel\l to the HoliR.

Ironically , the aircraft
came to rest between the only
two homes in the subdivision
separated by an ample
amount of footage. Most of
the homes in the area have a
required 15 fee t between
them ; the Van Syckle
residen ce and the Wedemeyer home, however, are
about 60 feet apart.
.''He must have been quite a
pilot ," said Douglas R.
Martin, a neighbor who
echoed the thoughts of the
Van Syckles and ot her
bystanders. "I can't figure

CLASS K-12

Eastern Loc al School
District will hold :classes
Saturd ay lo r · grades kindergarten through 12.

gas supply, would refuse to
l'OOtribute Its fair share to
solving the nation 's energy
dilemma by eliminating its
permit and pro cedur al
obstructions to the Sohio

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•One pint of salad
.Six dinner rolls

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GOOD THRU SUN. MARCH 18

BAHR
CLOTHIERS

"

(REG. '6.10)

•

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.•

•

13- The Daily Sent in&lt;•I, Middleport-Pmner"y. 0 .. Timrsday.Mar. 15. 1!170

JZ- The Daily Sentinel, Mid(!lepnrt·Pnnwrny, 0 ., T~ursday, Mar. 15. 1979

1

Committee takes 'ac,tion to set up debt fund
.

CLEVEI,.AND ( AP) - For
the first time sinee Cleveland
plunged into default Dec .. 15,
a City Council committee has
moved to set up a fund to pay
off the $14 million-debt held
by six local banks.
The finance committee
amended Mayor Dennis J.
Kucinich's $137.5 million 1979
general fund budget on
Wednesday to set up a fund
with new tax revenues to pay

'

•

,J

' '

off the nates.
"This is the first act (for
d eveland ) to come out of
default, " said Council
President George Forbes.
Further budget work was
scheduled for today . The
Kuclnich administration now
says it has debts of $75 millibn
to meet In the next two years.
The council committee has
estimated a $102 million
deficit this year.

The money to retire the rtf&gt;.
faul ted notes would come
from a [&gt;() percent increase in
the city 's payroll tax , which
too~ effect March 1.
Meanwhile, Kucinicb disagreed with the Federal Reserve System Board of
Governors, which reported
Tuesday there was no
evidence that the ci ty 's
largest bank and a private
electric utility violated laws
or enga ~ed in IH'1snunfi

·· --.""'
q .; • _

Artificial insemination
practices .study ·released

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,,•••
••
••
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recent floods. The drying mud has created a dust problem
in the business section of the town.

WORKERS BUSY - Pomeroy Village workers were
busy with hose and shovels Tuesday afternoon cleaning up
the lower parking lot along the Ohio River following two

lly DANIEL Q. HANEY
Associated Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - Doctors
who practice . artificial In·
semination sometimes use
the sperm of one man to
impregnate dozens of women ,
raising the danger of
accidental incest among
offspring who unknowingly
have the same father, a study
warns.
The repor t also chastises ,
doctors for failing to ensure
that the men who donate
spenn are genetically
healthy so that the risk of
birth defects will be as low as
possible.
The study, prepared by re·
searchers at the University of
Wisconsin In Madison, estimates that between 6,000 and
IO,OOOchildren are born in the
United States each .year to
women who are made
pregnant with spenn from
anonymous donors.
The Investigators surveyed
379 doctors who practice arti·
ficiallnsemlnation. Their re·
suits were published ·in
today's issue of the New
England Journal of Medicine .
The researchers said their
survey was the first major ·
one on artificial insemination
since 1941.
The study found that over
95 percent of the women who
receive artificial
insemination do so because
their husbands are sterile.
However, 10 percent of the
doctors said they also provide
the service for single women .
Three-quarters of the
doctors said they never use
the spenn of one man to
father more than six babies.
However, 6 percent said they
had used one donor f oc 15 or
more pregnancies, and one
doctor replied that one man
had produced 50 children.
The doctors keep secret the
identities of men donating
sperm, and this can lead to
inadvertant inbreeding, the
researchers said.
"This complication can
occur if two people mated
who unknowingly shared the
same genetic father or if a
recipient was Inseminated
with the semen of a relative,''
the researchers wrote.
Doctors use sperm from
donors who are the same race
and build as the recipient's
husband.
"Asingle dmor may make
a large conbibution to a local
ethnic community, " they
sald. "Intra-marriage within
such a commlinity would
result
in
increased
inbreeding ·due to artificial

completed the building will house the health department, '
senior citizens center, mental health center, and other
offices that are still available to be filled. The cost of the
structure is $1,129,930.

BUILDING'S FRAMEWORK - These steel beams
are the framework of the multi-purpose building being
constructed on Mulberry Hts. beside the Veterans
Memorial Hospital, by Karr Construction. When

~t !

,:

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••
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~

Egyptian cabinet approves new peace treaty
By . The Associated Press
The Egyptian Cabinet
today approved the proposed
Egyptlsrael treaty, but, as a
peace pact neared, violence
mounted on the West Bank of
the Jordan River where
· Israeli troops killed two Arab
student protesters in the
week's bloodiest clash.
In Israel, Foreign Minister
Moshe Dayan disclosed that
~nder
terms of the
compromise engineered by
President Cartel' Egypt ~
take early control of the Sinai
capital of El Arish, Dayan
spokesman sald.
The Israeli minister also
reportedly disclosed that
Egypt has demanded fW'ther
"goodwill gestures" from
Israel, but for now has
dropped its demand that
Egyptian
officers
be
stationed in the Gaza Strip to
oversee autonomy.
In
Cairo,
Egyptian

!President Anwar Sadat said
~ thinks "we have achieved
peace thanks to Jimmy" and
J'he praised President Carter
far his "marvelous" job of
peacemaking.
The Egyptian Cabinet's approval of the treaty had been
expected. Prime Minister
Mustafa Khalil announced
the 32-member body had
voted unanimously in favor of
it after a four-hour debate.
The Egyptian Parliament's
approval is considered
certain. The Israeli Cabinet is
expected to endorse the full
treaty Sunday, and the Israeli
Parliament soon afterward.
In announcing the Cabinet
approval today, Khalil said
he hoped that soon "the past
enmity between the two
nations wUI be something of a
memory."
But he added, ''The
Palestinian question can

1

never be ignored."
Palestinians in Israeli·
occupied territories fear that
their chances for statehood
will be eclipsed by the
proposed treaty.
Ar a b
pr ot e s te rs
demonstrated today in
Halhoul and five other towns
in the occupied West Bank.
The military command said
Israeli troops opened fire
when "a group of soldiers and
civilians was caught in a vio·
lent outburst by hundreds of
students on the main road in
Halhoul," 20 miles south of
Jerusalem. ·
A 21-year-()ld Palestinian
man and a 17-year-old
schoolgirl were killed and
another Palestinian was
wounded, it said.
It was the second day of
demonstrations against the
peace treaty in the West
Bank.

Dayan
briefed
ambassadors to Jerusalem
on details of the negotiations
during Carter's dramatic
Mideast trip , and a
spokesman then reported his
remarks
to
foreign
correspondents.
The Israel foreign minister
did not say when Israel would
pull out of El Arish, a town of
30,000 some 100 miles east of
Uie Suez Canal and 30 miles
west of the Israeli border, his
spokesman said.
The agreement to evacuate
El Arish and northern Sinai In
the first phase of the Israeli
withdrawal was included in a
timetable Israel granted
Egypt In return for Cairo's
acceptance of an early
exchange ilf ambassadors,
Dayan was quoted as saying.
Israeli Defense Minister
Ezer Weizman flew to
Washington today to work out

the details of the timetable
with ·
his
Egyptian
counterpart, Kamal Hassan
Ali.
Dayan also was quoted as
saying the Egyptians had demanded a series of gestures
from Israel to improve the at·
mosphere - the release of
political prisoners · held
without trial, freedom of
movement for Palestinian~ in
the West Ba~k and . the
.Israeli-occupied Gaza, the
right f,or Palestinians to hold
political assemblies, and the
shifting of Israeli military
_government headquarters in
Gaza out of Gaza city.
The spokesman said the is'
raelis replied that the
Palestinians already have
freedom of movement: The
Israeli Cabinet made no
decision on the otHer
requests.
Dayan was quoted as

saying a problem over the
Gaza Strip was resolved
during Carter's final meeting
in Cairo with Sadat Tuesday.
Until then Egypt bad
demanded Israel's
agreement to carry out the
plan
for
Palestinian
autonomy in Gaza first if
snags developed In implementing the self-rule plan in
the West Bank.
Dayan reportedly said
Is.rael did not object to the
Gaza.first idea, but it refused
Egypt's demand to station
liaison officers in Gaza to
oversee the plan . Sadat
decided to drop the Gaza
issue ftr the time being, the
Dayan spokesman said.
Sadat, meeting with
reporters on the lawn of his
country villa north of Cairo
todsy, said he hopes the
treaty can be signed in
Washington next week.

"My dear friend President next week by the Knesset, the
Carter ... we owe him a lot, so Israeli Parliament.
I think it -is quite natural that
Radio Israel said the
we
make the main Cabinet also told Weizman to
celebration
there
in discuss U.S. financial aid and
Washington, especiaUy after political commitments to
the man has done the whole ·Israel.
thing , really, in such a
U.S. congressional leaders
marvelous way," Sadat said. briefed by Carter said the
Egyptian Defense Minister pact will cost American
Ali is to leave for Washington taxpayers $4 billion to $5
Friday. The two defense billion in additional aid to
ministers are expected to Israel and Egypt.
spend about two days In
Sadat drafted messages to
Washington winding up the moderate Arab leaders to try
military annex spelling out to convince them a treaty
such specifics as the lines to with Israel would not be a
which Israeli troops will fall sell-()ut of the Palestinians.
back in the Sinai.
. Sut Algeria called ihe proThe Israeli Cabinet on posed pact " an act of
Wednesday approved the last treason ." Iraq, Jord&amp;n, Syria
two compromises proposed and Kuwait called for
by Carter for the treaty draft . sanctions against Egypt This along with support presumably including a
voiced previously by leaders cutoff of Arab trade and oil of the opposition Labor Party if Sadat . signed the peace
ensured the treaty's approval treaty.

300 Cincinnati poliCe
wives
march
Wednesday
l
.
By BRIAN FRIEDMAN
ASiodated Preu Writer

CINCINNATI (AP) Some 300 angry police wives,
including the widows of two
recently slain officers,
marched on City Hall
Wednesday, blaming city
leaders for not supporting
their husbands · and threat·
ening a lawsuit if ~heir demands for better pollee
safety are not met:
In an emotion-charged
scene, Mrs. Robert Seiffert
and Mrs. Dennis BeMingtori,
widows of the sixth and
seventh policemen killed in
the line of duty here since
1974, broke into tears as one
of t!1e wives delivered a

stinging rebuke to City robbery. suspect. The suspect
'·we will not let Chief Leist·
Council.
also was killed.
· ler!s prejudiced public con;
"We insist you take
"We are here to say that if deQillltion of police officer
responsibility to stop these the community Is appalled by Oe! l's performance of his
senseless murders," Pat the death of a criminal, it duly go unanswered," she
Kremm, one of the wives who should be outraged by the
Mf.s. Bennington and Mrs.
organized the march , told death of two policemen," said
council. ''They (the police) Mrs. Kremm, referring to Sei!Jfrt, who said they were
deserve more than this. They Police Chief Myron Leistler's asketi to attend the rally by
have served the city well." criticism of a policeman who the 1'1tives who organized the
Although the widows did fatally shot an unarmed prollst, tried to restrain their
suspect
last emo\ions throughout.
not speak, Mrs. Bennington robbery
unfurled a small sign hl\fld· December.
"I wouldn't have missed
lettered in crayon which
l.eistler had said officer this meeting ," said Mrs. Ben·
rea.d ,''Give the police a Michael Detzel committed a nington.
chance to live." It was signed "clear-cut violation of
Mrs . Kremm demanded
'"nna and Tim," the slain
dehepartmrteednt1alshpootli1cy
" whe1nd Leistler meet with a group of
7-year-o
officer's children.
repo
Y
the wives, and called for per·
Bennington and Seiffert Herman
Beasley
of manent tw(HJ)an patrols and
were shot and killed last week Cincinnati on Dec. 1 as other proposals to review polas they tried to apprehend a Beasley fled from what pollee icies concerning police fire·
sald was a stolen car.

sai..

arms, including that shotguns
be placed within easy access
to policemen in cruisers,
rather than kept in trunks of
the vehicles.
"If you (council) cannot
make these (proposals) law

House commi•ttee.
told 0 f prohlem
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _
Despite
Ohio's
open
admissions policy , giving
high school graduates the
right to attend statesupported
universities, large numbers
of students are denied access
anyway, a House Finance
subcommittee has been told .
The testimony came
Wednesday from Jsmes M.
from income taxes and by Kittelson · of Ohio State
having a presidential summit University, representing a
meeting with labor and newly formed group known
busioess leaders to increase as the Committee of
productivity.
Professors at Regents' Jn.
He describes himself as a stitutions.
. "constitutionalist,"
thinks
He said lack of access is not
"more life should be breathed due to a scarcity of campuses
into the lOth Amendment" to or classrooms, but a result of
limit the powers of the underfunding by the state,
federal government to those forcing higher student fees,
areas where the states caMot . and Jack of preparation of
successfully operate, and students for college careers
believes the Equal Rights in the high schools.
Amendment is unnecessary
Kittelson told the finance
because women already are committee's education
protected by the Constitution. subcommittee that Ohio has
19-20 percent fewer high
Wtidnesday's College
school graduates who go on to
Baskelba II Scores
By The Associated Press
co11ege than tbe nation a1
National NAIA Tournament average.
At Kansas City, Mo.
That, he said, translates
!Second Round)
into more than 110,000
Cameron St. l4 , Tri -State, students a .year "who would
Ind . 73. OT
'
b
.
I d in
Henderson St. 84, Wis-Eau
e IRVo ve
higher
Claire 78. OT
. education if they lived
Midwestern St .. Tex. 73. Cent. somewhere else."
r~sh\-'~.~~ ~. St . John's,
With ~egard. to student
· Minn . 75
preparation, Kit~lson cited
Briarcliff 76, High Point 65 . an OSU example mwhich 26
Marymount, Kan . 87, Norfolk percent of the freshman class
St. 77
in the fall of 1978 based on
Drury,
Mo. 72, Kearney St., test sh
Neb. 69
s, owed "the'y could not
Quincy Colleg e 61 , Southern do eighth grade arithmetic."
Tech 57
· · He said if the students who
come to college are not pre.
Veterans Memorial Hospital pared, many do not stay and
Admitted - Lois Little, "access becomes an empty
Pomeroy; Fred Chapman, formality."
Pomeroy ; Clara Paulsen,
The professors and other
Hemlock Grove ; Tammy witnesses
testified at
Lynn Blake, Middleport ; hear~gs they ho~ will result
Rick McKnight, Middleport. in funding increases for
Discharged - · · Manning higher education in the
Webster, Thomas McClung, state's 1979-l!Jl!l budget bill.
Arthur Price, Carol Justis . As drafted, tt.c, ~c.iu U1c ~ill

Kay hopes to 'build up wave'
NEW YORK (AP) Richard B. Kay believes
Democratic voters are
looking for "a new type of
person" for president and
thinks "either I am going to
lead this .movement or lead
the way for somebody else."
The Cleveland attorney admits he is running upsiream
in his quest for the
presidency, but hopes to build

up ua small wave

11

of

following to bec&lt;me a viable
contender for the Democratic
nomination.
Kay has campaigned in 10
states, holding news confer' ences and addressing local
party meetinjls, since he an·
nounced his candidacY in
Washington last Oct. 4. He
plans to hit a total of 30 to 35
cities by the end of the
summer.
"I've been asked to Speak
at the Democratic state committee meeting in Augusta,
Maine, Sunday. It 's my first
invitation to officially
address a state Democratic
party," he said with some
satisfaction of
accomplishment during an
interview.
Kay, 59, a bachelor, was
one of two clvWan attomeys
who defended Army Lt.
William Calley Jr . In 1970
during his trial in the My La!
massacre.
He said the feedback be
gets from meeting with
Democratic party members
Is : "They're unhappy with
the present occupant of the

.

White House. I think they
would be very much against
Senator Kennedy in that
arena. I think they would
approach Governor Brown
with skepticism."
"I'm rwming upstream,"
he said, adding his goal was
"to see 400 members of
newspapers and working
members of the political

aparatus in states, so I will be
able to have that small wave
in motion for the Democratic

convention."
He said he was concerned
about what he called
President Carter's "strong
lack of leadership," He said
that while be gave Carter an
'A' for effort in the •Egyptian·
Israeli negotiations, he was
concerned that the president
did not let Secretary of State
Wants coroner's ' C)'rus Vance go to the Middle
East instead.
ruling changed
A former Republican, Kay
sald
he ''never cow-towed" to
RAVENNA, Ohio (AP) any
GOP leader because he
Betty Kearns bas fUed suit in
was
more independent than
Portage County Comm.on
they
liked
arid that be was in·
Pleas Court to try to force the
active
in
that party for
county coroner to change a
several
years
before joining
suicide ruling in her .
the
Democratic
party In 1976.
husband's death last August.
He
thinks
inflation
should
Mrs. Kearns' lawyer,
be
fought
by
encouraging
Timothy Ludick, has charged
that the investigation . by savings through exempting
Ravenna police and the the first $000 or so of interest
coroner was superficial, that
GIRL KIIJ.ED
there was no autopsy or
MEXICO
CITY (AP) - A
ballistics test, and that neigh·
major
preda\fll
earthquake
bors who reported bearing
and
18
aftershocks
jolted vast
someone fleeing the house
areas
of
Mexico
on Wed·
were not interviewed.
nesday
,.
destroying
' or
Police said Jobn Keai'IUI
damaging
buildings
in
the
was found dead of a bullet
capital.
There
were
reports
of
wound In the bead. A rifle was ·
beside the body, and a half· four deaths.
Police said a lt-year1!1d
empty bottle of whiskey and
girl
was killed by debris
an apparent farewell note to
falling
from a building in
Keams' son also were found,
Mexico
City. Ham radio
pollee reported.
operators
r~ported
two
Assistant Prosecutor Louis
deaths
in
remote
areas,
and
a
Myers flled a brief saying '
girl
wu
reported
crushed
to
that investigators "under the '
ctrcUJJIIIIances, did what was death by a wall in a town near
. the center of the quake.
necessary.''

r

.
I

within 21 days, we are pre·
pared to file suit in the courts
to determine whether we as
taxpayers deserve equal supportunderthelaw," she said.
Councilman
Gerald

Jl .

"

will necessitate .increases in
student fees and tuition at
virtually all state-assisted
universities.
Kittelson said osu students
face tuition hikes over the
next biennium of $95.

Arraignment~

Springer, who met with police
wives Saturdsy, proposed a
mandatory set of safety
precautions, including two·
man patrols in high crime
areas, bulletproof vests for
police, and floodlights and
loudspeakers for cruisers to
allow officers to remain in
their cars until a suspect has
stepped out of his.
"We don't have that much
fury right now," said Mrs.
Bennington calmly when
asked if she and Mrs. Seiffert
shared the anger of the rest of

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP)
Seven penitentiary
inmates indicted by a Seioto
County grand jury are to be
arraigned in Porllmouth on
Friday.
All are inmates of the
Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility at Lucasville.
One inmate, John Ramey,
34, of HamUton County, was
indicted for the stabbing
death of another prisoner,
Baby Joe Cannon of
Montgomery County.
Facing arraignment on
charges of escaping from the
institution are Richard
Tingler, 38, and Cleo Vernon
Keaton, 41. They are accused
of trying to escape Aug, 22.
Keaton, serving life for two
counts of murder, was caught
on the prison grounds.
Tingler, also serving life for
two slayings, had hidden in a
ventilation duct in the prison
before being found~
Two Inmates were charged
by the grand jury with trying
to smuggle homemade zip
guns out of the prison. They
were identified by the panel
as Jo8eph Kinaszczuk, 38,
from Lorain County, and
James King, 28, from licking
County .
Da11id Morgan, :ti, from
Cuyahoga County, and Major
Williams Jr ., 49, from
Mahoning County, were
indicted on felonious assault
charges.

4

.

: •

police, then it makes me
happy ."

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"6

rese~rchers, said in

an
interview. " The average
practitioner who just grabs
the closest male available is
doing less than adequate
servii:e to his patients."
Most sperm is donated by
medical students and
hospitalaffiliated doctors.
However, some physicians
said they also acquired it
from patients' husbands or
their personjl) friends.

Murder charges filed Wednesday
AKRON,Ohio (AP) -A20year·old water softener
deliveryman was charged
with aggravated murder
Wednesday In the bludgeon
slaying of Susan Cushing, 60,
in her Batb Township home.
Sheriff's investigators said
Marshall Cowans of Akron
was charged after he led
detectives to Mrs. Cushing's
body in a wooded area in
Medina County. The woman
had been beaten over the
head with a !;dft-&lt;lrink bottle,
Sheriff's U. Larry Mom·
chiiov reported.
Momchilov said Cowans
admitted killing Mrs.
Cushing on Tuesday morning
during his regular visit to the
home to service its · water
softener system. He quoted
Cowans as admitting the
killing but saying, "I don't
know why I did it. It ruined
my whole life."
·
Mrs. Cushing 's husband
Frederick 'called police after
returning home Tuesday and
finding blood on the floor .
Detectives said Cushing had
planned to retire in two years
and the couple plaMed to

build a home in Minnesota,
where a son lives.

FUND DRIVE SET
The Rac'ine Volunteer
Emergency Squad is _plan·
ning a fund-raising yard sale
for the building fund. Anyone
wishing to donate clothing,
rag rugs, homemade items or
ariy other articles Is asked to
contact Charlotte Wamsley at
949·2028; .Linda Diddle at 949·
2533; George Cummins at 9492470 or Jeanette Lawrence at
949·2228.

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773-5592

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RECORDING TAPE

by R.e allstlc

1978 MERCURY

review disclosed .no evident~

to indicate the investment
decisions were based on other
than
sound
financial
practices.

AM/FM STEREO RECEIVER
WITH AUTO-MAGIC®FM TUNING

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1976 AMC
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percent of the outstandirog
CF.I stock.
The report said Cleveland
Tr ust's
in v.e st m ent
committee made the decision
on a sixpoint sta tistical
analysis . It said the bank 's
directors are not apprised or
trust department investment
procedures and t ha t th&lt;

1···47

cyl. EconomY"
One Owner.

'2995

mayor to solve the city's
deep-seated fina ncial
problems.
Kucinich also referred to as
"peculiar" an item in the re·
port which showed Cleveland
Tr ust
pu rc hased
an
additional 91,230 Shares ·of
CF.I common stock on Dec.
26, the first working day after
the City Council scheduled a
Feb. 27 election on the sale of
Muny Ught. That increased
the bank's holding of CEI
stock to 782,798 shares, 2.2

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before default, the committee
said that a proflosal adopted
by the City Council to tie a tax
hike to the sale of Muny I .ight
would provide a basis for
temporary renewal of the
notes.
Kucinich refused to sign
that measure, and the council
and mayor failed to agree on
any other action to avert
default.
Kucinich claims the items
in the report show Cleveland
Trust wanted to force him to
sell Muny Ught, a proposition
vote r s
r e j ec t e d
overwhelmin gly last month .
Hut the report salil Weir 's
and Cleveland Trust 's actions
could easily be interpreted as
seekin g any agreement
between the council and the

SAVE $100

EM'i' INFORMATION
All persons of the Racine
area wishing information on
the emergency medical
training classes which will be
given beginning March 20 are
to contact George Cummins,
Jr., at 949·2470 or Charlotte :
Wamsley at 949-2028.

318 V·8, Auto. P-S. P-8.

'1995
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disease and the sickle cell
trait, by questioning them
about fllmily histories. But
only 29 percent of the doctors
performed any. tests on the
men , and these were
primarily for communicable
diseases.
"I think more screening
should be done than the aver·
age pra ctitioner is per·
forming ," Dr. Sander
Shapiro, one of the '

practices in connection with disprove. ~nd in ma ny ways
the default.
provided support
for
U.S. Rep. Benj amin S. Kuci nich's allegatio ns of
Rosenthal , IJ.N.Y., also took wrongdoing,
issue with the report on the
And U.S. Rep. Ferdinand
acti11ities of the Cleveland St . Germain , D-R.l., said his
Trust· Co. and. the Cleveland subcommittee on financial
Electri c Illuminating Co. institutions would contir ue
Rosenthal, chainnan of a work on its own independent
subcommittee on monetary evaluation of the role of
affairs, had asked the Fed for Cleveland Trust and CEL
the report.
Kucinich alleges Cleveland
He said the report failed to Trust sought to force the city
to sell its Municipal Electric
Light System as a condition
Patients RO to party for
a verting default. He
alleged
Cleveland Trust had a
Forty-eight patients at the
close
financial
relationship
Athens Mental Health Center
with
CEI
and
that its
attended the party of the
decisions
on
default
were
Homebuilders Class o[ the
unrelated
to
the
credit
·
Middleport Church of Christ
worthiness
of
the
city.
Tuesday night. Mrs. Nora
Cleveland Trust and CEI
Rice and Ed Evans went to
have
repeatedly denied the
Athens for the party . Games
claims.
,were played with prizes going
Kucinich said the Fed's
to each one. Evans had
conclusions
we re
nat
prayer, and refreshments of
substantiated.
ice
cream,
cupcakes
He cited a statement In the
decorated with shamrocks,
report
that M. Brock Weir,
bananas, potato chips, candy
Cleveland
Trust chairman ,
and koolaid were served. The
said
on
the
day
of default that
class missed two months of
if
the
City
Coun
cil and the
having the parties due to the
r each an
mayor
could
weather conditions.
agre em ent,
he
would
volunteer to help the city
raise $SO million.
Kucinich al so cited a
Cae College won every passage in the report that
home game in football in 1978 citedminutesofthe executive
and lost every game on the committee of the bank 's
road.
holdin g company. Just hours

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15. !979

15- ThP n•ilv Sentmrl, Mtddleport-Pnmeruf. 0 ., Thm·sda y. Mm . I~. 1!170
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'Birthday

Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES

---~-~

GuN SHOOT Koone Gun Club
Eve ry Sunday I pm Facto• y
r hoke guns only
·

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b1 ds Will be re cei ve d
15 word" ur Upder
m th e off 1ce o t fhC V1f1agc
GUN SHOOT Rodne Volunteet
Charge
C.sh
Cle rk , Pomeroy . Oh10. unt1l
F1 re Dept Every Saturday 6 30
1!$
100
I day
12 o 'c loc k noon on April 2.
prn at the.r bwld1ng '" Boshon
2day!&gt;
1."'
19 79, on any of the foll owmg
Factory choke guns 011ly
2!$
3days
111&gt;
proposals
March 16, 1979
, 1~
300
lidays
1 For th e purchase by the
-~
There IS a stro ng pa ss•b•lll y
Village of Pomeroy of a new
- __ . ~a.nt~d_t ~ ~11.1 __ _
that you may profit th1 s commg, 1979 lntermed•ate tour door
Eoch word over the rntnlmwn I&amp;
words Ls ; cents per won.l per dBy
yea r from some th•ng ongmated
ftve passenger sedan wtth th e
CHIP WOOD
l'o les mow
Ads runnin~ other lhun L'tlnsecuuve
follow1ng added e q u1 pment
by another Luck w111 have an
d 1ometer Io· o n larges t end
days
writ
be
churtJed
at
the
1
dtty
305 Cubtc Engme . 4 barrel
!17 per lon Bundled slob $10
uvportant role In bnngmg thJs
rate
car buretor , Mm VB
pe r ton Oeh\lered to Ohto
about
Power Steer1ng and Power
Pollet Co . Rt 2 Pomeroy
In memory, Card o£ Thanks and&gt;
P,JSCES (Feb .20-March 20~
Brak es
9•2· 2689
Obituary 6 cen!.S JM!r word, $3 00
Sched ule your t•me today so
5 black l1res
nunimwn Ca:ih m advuncc.
Foam rubber tront seat
that your respons•b •ll t•es ta ke
OLD FURNITURE tcc boxes brass
Spo tli g ht on left h and side
pn onty over your pleasurable
beds •ron beds , de sks, etc
Mobile Home !l\ale!! tmd Yard sales
Heavy
dul
y
batlyer
BO
AMP
pursu•ts Without an agenda
are aL'Ceptt!d only with ca::sh wllh ,
complete households Wnte
Hea11y duty oil filter
order 25 c.'t'nt charge for ads carry·
your hours could be dawdled
M 0 M1ller', Rt 4 Pomeroy or
A1 r Cond•l•oner &amp; 51 AMP
tri Box Number rn Care of The Senaway unproduct1vel y D1 scover
coll992· 7760
Alternator
tmel
Pos•l •ve tract 1on rear axle
w1th whom you ro mantically get
O LD COINS , pocket watches
Au tomat iC
tran smissio n
along be st by sendmg lor your
The Publt.Sher reStrves the right
class nngs, wedding bonds,
Electnc Door locks
copy of Astro· Graph Letter
to edit or r!,!Jet'll:my lids c.Wemed obdtomonds Gold or silver Coli
V1 nyl upholsTe ry
Jectional The Publisher WJU not be
Ma1 1$1 for each to Astro·Graph ,
Roof Dnp Moldmgs
Ro;ger yv-~ms ley _ 742 - 233~ _
responstble ror more ttum one incur·
P.O Bo• 489 , Rado o Coly SlaCa librated
Speedometer
tnsertioo
rect
WANT
TO buy old 45 and 78
Po t•ce body package
tlon, NY 10019 Be sure to
Phone 992·21S6
phonograph records . Coli
B~ck gla ss Defroste r
s pec1 ly btrth s1gn
Transf e r Pol1ce Rad1o ,
992 6370 OT Contact Morfin Fu r
AR IES (March 21-Aprll 19~
S• r e n , Flash•ng L•ghts, Fife
mture
The re I S a danger today that
Ex t ingu•sher and protective
you may base your judgment
WANTED TO buy old jewelry
sh•eld trom present ca r to
upon faulty mtormat1on Before
Coli 992 5262 cr wnte Kay
new ca r
2 For sale by the Vil lage of
Cec tl , 87 S 2nd, Middleport
agr e e1ng to any thing , go on a
Pomeroy tis 19 78 Pontia c,
OH
.lactM
fmdmg m1ss1on
four door , B c yl tnder, without
TAURUS (April 20-May 20! A rad•o equtpment, f1r e ex CASH FOR fUnk ca rs 24 hour
task yo u ha 11e set fo r yourself
tingu •she r , s~ren, f lash tng
sennce
Frye s ,
w recker
may not t• •r n out as easy as it
s1gna ls a nd protecl1ve Sh• e ld
Rutland , OH 742 2081
Th e btdd er may state e •ther
----- -~-----looked on th e draw1ng board
what he w ill give for th e 19 76
WANT TO buy Good bunk beds
Don t use thiS as an excuse to
Mondat
Pont•ac or what amount he
or twm beds 992· ~434 o r
ss:ran th · ·11 1 .,.r t
Noon on Salunluy
w111 allow as a trade 1n tor the
304-682-2566
GEM•'·•· Mt . . 1-June 20) F1M ne w police c ru 1ser des c r.bed
!
Tuesday
11anc 1&lt;:o~
- .sc1 plme must be
above
Utru Frlde~y
Ea ch b1dder may bt d for
mamtamed today or your exYard Sale
I PM.
e •ther the pu r chase of t he
'travaga nt r ages could
the
day
before
publication
1978 Pon ttac or for the sa te to
IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer .
ove rwhelm you Buy o nly that
th e Vil la ge of Pomeroy of a
won t to buy or sell so me th1ng ,
which you absolutely need
SunWty
new pol•ce cr u tser des cr •bed
oe
lookmg for war~
or
!PM
CANCER (June 21-July 22) In
above or both Each b1 d mu st
whatever
you'll get results
con ta 1n the fu II name of eve r y u~
_ _;.;Frc::"'""'Y"•-rte_MIOOII
__•_
. ___ ._ foster
order to get others to do yo ur
w1lh o Sentinel Wo nt Ad
person or com p any tnlerested
blddtng today yo u may promise
Call '192·2156
m
the
same
and
th
e
b1d
must
or g •ve them more than yo u
-----4·---be accom pan ted by a check .:. _ _!.. ost a'!9..Found_ _
should Be gene rous, but at the
PORCH SALE Thursday Fndoy
or bond in the sum of S100 00
and Saturday. 9 5 On Norlh
same lime be sensib le
to th e sat •sfa ct •on of th e FOUND WHITE female robb1t
Mom m Rutland Baby and little
V•llage Council as a guaranty
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22~ Slnve IO
992·3882
that If the bid is ac c ep ted .
d1stmg ulsh today th e differ-~y ~ ~o~h~s _ ~0~':_7~2.:_2~-t~
co nt ac t wil l be entered mto
e nc e between pos1ttve thmkmg
and its performance property
COUNTY·
MEIGS
Help Wanted
and unrealistic optimism The
secu red .
PUBLIC NOTICE
fo rmer s pells success, the latThese checks or bonds will KITCHEN HELP and watt ress App
The follow .ng documenl.s
ter fa1lure
be r et urned at once to a ll
ly m person Crow s Steck were rece1ved or pre pared by
except
the
successf
ul
btdder
Th e Ohio Env.ronmen1al
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Male·
House
Hi s checks or bond s w ill be
Protect1on Agency during th e
nal o pportunity contmues to
held until !he co ntra ct or b1d ATTENTION RN AND LPN WITH l)r evtous week The e ffective
hover about you agatn today ,
is prop er ly execu ted by him
PHARMACOLOGY We now date o t eac h f•nal action is
but httle wtl l result 1f you take
The right is reser11ed to
1ect The 1ssuance date of
hove openings m the 3- 11 and sta
thmgs for granted . Pu t your
r e tec t any and all btds 90 day
eac h proposed act1on 1S
sh1
tls
lnqu•
re
at
Ptnecrest
11
7
de l1ver y from date of ac
possibi lit ies to wo rk
sla ted Anyone aggr ived or
Core Center A skill ed nursmg a dverse Iy affected by a final
cep t a nce
liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Don'l
Jan e Walton , Clerk
faCility 555 Jackson P1ke acl•on to 1ssue , deny, modtfy ,
look to others to do thmgs fo r
V ILLAGE OF POMERO Y
Goltp~ l ·~&lt;:r ~o~6_1 4_ 4~~__! ~ 1 ~ _ revoke , or renew a perm1t ,
you toda y that you could more
lic ense, or vl!lnl!lnce , or to
competently do for yourself
(31 15, He
approve or disapprove plans
r he, only person you can really -&lt;~
and spectftcat•ons, may fil e
an a ppeal with Th e Environ co lmt on is No 1
ORDINANCE NO . 236
mental eoarct of Re v 1ew,
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22~
PROBATE COURT OF
An ordino1nce fl~eing and Sut t e 305, 395 E Broad St,
Norma lly you're an extremely
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
regulatmg the price that may Columbus, Oh10 43216 Wtth.n
dtscern mg person , but today
be
charged by the VIllage of th•rtv (30) days of the efyou c ould be taken on by ESTATE OF EDITH ORA
Syracuse, or its assign the fec t•v e date, pursuant to OhiO
BETZING, DECEASED
accepting al face value lhal Case No. 22416
Village of Syracuse Board of Rev tsed Code sect1on 3745 07 ,
unless such f.nal act1on was
whoch os to ld to you .
Public Affairs. for water .
NOTICE OF
Be •I orda •ned by !he pr eceded by the same or
SA GITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
APPOINTMENT
th e
sam e
COUnC il Of the Vt ll age Of subs tan t ial ly
OF FIDUCIARY
21) Be. wary of taking financial
proposed act 1on In addittcn ,
Sy
ra
cuse
as
fo
llo
ws
On
February
23,
1979,
tn
the
nsks o n ventures wh1ch you ~o
Sec tton 1 Tha t begmrung pursuant to sec t1 on 3745 04 of
not personally co ntrol You Me1gs County Probate Court ,
March 1, 1979 Residents the r ev1sed code , notice of I he
Case No 22616, Bernrce
don' t want to h!ve to pay for Hottman , Sa lem Stree t ,
located w1thin th e Village f1lmg of the appea l shall be
another' a mla\akea.
corporation whose h ead of filed with the dtrector of The
Rutland . Ohlo 45775 was
Environmental
household IS under the age ot Ohio
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) appointed AdmlnlstnHrlx ot
i15 shall pay a fee of $5 75 per Protec1ton · Agency, 36 1 E
Not eve ryone you'll be dealing the estate of Ed1th Ora
month to be su pp lied wa ter Broad Street, Colum bus , Oh1o
Betzmg , dec eased, la te ot
wolh today woll abide by your Tuppers
Res1dents located with1n .t3216, wtlhln thret (3) days
Platns, Ohro
high s tandard s Keep lhls In
the Village corporat1on whose after the appea l IS filed wtth
mi nd and select assoctates
head of nousehold ts over 65 Th e Environmental Bo ard of
Robert E Buck
years of age s hall pay a fee of Revtew . All su ch final act tons
accordtngly .
Pro bate Judg e .
S5 00 per month to be s upplied are so td ent ified . Su c h per
AQ UARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 19)
Clerk
sons may request an ad water
Yo u have a sharp eve for 131 1, 8, 15, Jlc
R esi dents not located IUdtcation hearing before The
w•th1n the Village c:or . Oh to EPA on --a proposed
porat1on s ha ll pay a fee of acl10n to Issue, den y, mod tty ,
PROBATE COURT OF
56 75 per month to be supplied r evoke, or renew a p er mit,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
water by the Village of license, or var1ance , or to
ESTATE OF ELSIE M.
approv e or d1sappr ove plan s
Syracuse
CHAMBERS,
DECEASED
Com mert~al
es tabltsh and spectflca tlons , wtlhin
case No 22,613
men ls being pro v id ed water tt11r tv ( 30) days of the
NOTICE 0~
by the Vtllage of Syracuse, •ssuance dat e, ORO 37 45 07
APPOINTMENT
and bemg det e rmin ed by the does not prov tde for ad
OF FIDUCIARY
V1 1tag e as bemg htgh e r th a n IUd lc at ton hear 1ng requ es ts
On February 22, 19 79, m the
normal resident us ers of or appeals on orders, venfled
Metgs County Probate Court ,
water shall pay a fee of S15.00 co mp lam ts, or en fo rcement
Case No 22,613, Robert M
per month To be su ppli ed w1th compli anc e schedule le tt ers
Chambers ,
8007
Zim
Wtt h tn 30 days ot publica ti on
water
mermann , Houston, Texas
1n a new s paper 1n th e aff ected
Commerc
tal
establiSh
77088
was
appotnted
co unty, any perso n may also
m
e
nt
s
bemg
pro
vi
d
ed
wa
te
r
Exeucutor of th e estllfe of
by th e Village of Syarcuse, (I) s ubm1t wr ttten comments
Elsie
M
Chambers ,
and
be mg determm ed by th e r elat .ng to acllon s, pro po sed
deceased, late of 243 North
V1llage
as be 1ng low er than or act.ons , ver~f•ed complamts,
4th Str eet, Middl eport, Ohio
equal
to
a normal resident or enforcement co mpltan ce
&lt;151 60
user of water shall pa y a fe e schedule le iT er s (21 re q uest
992-5432
Robert E. Buck
a pub lic m ee t mg regard tng
S5 75
Probate Judge
Pomeroy, 0.
Schools bemg supp l ied proposed act tons . and or ( 3)
Cle rk
water by the VI ll age of request not tee of furth e r
131 8, t5, 22. Jlc
Syracuse shall pay a fee of a c tton s or proceedtng s, All
SIS 00 per month for thi s requests for ad tUd1cat1on
hea ring s
and
public
.
ser vice
Sectton II . Th e charge for m ee ting s, and other com
concer ning
anyone des 1ring a new wat er mun•cattons
publ1 c meetmgs , adjudication
tap shall be S 150.00
com A new tap is h e reb y defi ned hear•ngs , ver tt1ed
to be the Installation of a \ platnts , and regu lat to ns ,
water tap to pro vide water shou ld be addres sed to The
servi ce to a residence where Legal Records Section , Oh io
EPA , P
0
Box 10.t9 ,
none form e rly extsted .
Secflon Ill
A d elayed Columbus, Oh to 43216 (614 )
pay ment charge of 10 percent 466 6037 Unl ess o th e rw ise
of th e tees due w ill be sta ted m pa rlt cu lar not1 ces,
Equipmen1 &amp; miscellaneous of the
charged 1f th e monthly bill is all other com munications
comme nts- on
not pa td withm t he t1m e 1n c iudmg
Gibbs Grocery Store Business . Terms :
prescrtbed by the rule s and proposed actton s, should be
regulat 1ons ot the Village of addressed e1t he r to Th e Air
Cash Day of Sale.
Syracuse or Its assign th e Perm its a net Compliance
Mr. &amp; Mrs . William A . Gibbs, Onwer
Oiv•sioii
or
Syracuse Village Board of Mon.torinQ
Perm 11 and Approva l Section,
Public Affatrs.
Gene
Oesch.
Auctioneer
I•
Section IV Thts ordinance whichever is appropriate , at
PH. 614-446-7440
is
declared
to be an Th e Oh io EPA, P 0 Box 1049,
'
emergency measure 1n t hat Columb us , OhiO 43216 .
Proposed
issuance of
the publi c peace, health, '
safety and welfare require permit to install
Rave Hockmg Coat Corp
the immedt&amp;te es tablis hm ent
Minersv il le , OH , Iss ue dele
of rates in the f tnancmg of th e
cost ot sa1d water sys tem and OJ 07 79
Facility Description . A1r
the operation thereof , and , •
Application No 06 470
therefore , this ordinance
Coa t crush 1ng &amp; barge
shall take effect immedia t ely
lea ding terminal at Mile
upon 1fs passage
Sec tton V ThtS Ord ina nce Pom t 247 3 o f the 01'110 R1ver
Issuance of NPOES permit
shalf take effec t and be m
While Rock Co M1n e No 1
force from and afte r Mar c h 1
Sut to n TownShip, OH,
1919
'
Effec 1i ve date 03 ·05-79
Recetvtng waters . Oh10
Attest Ja nice Lawson
River
Cler"
Permit No UlOJ.A(i)
Eber Pickens
Th1S ftnal act 1on no t
Mayor
preceded by proposed action
and is appealable to EBR
IJJ 8, 15, 21c

...

----------

NOTICE

-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES ·

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

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

TRY OUT

EXTRA

CRISPY

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

CRCM'S

FAMILY RESTAURANT

PUBLIC AUCTION

I ~·

SATURDAY, MARCH 17

'STARTING AT 11:00 P.M.

,.

TRACTORS

·i-87100 16 hD FARM TREAD 4 WD
UST .14625.00 N0W'3700.00
l-ll85 17 hp FARM TREAD 4 WD
15230.00
'4184.00
1-L185 17 hD TURF TREAD 2 WD
14695.00
'3756.00
l-U85 17 hn FQM TREAD 2 WD
1
4650.00
'3720.00
l-L245 25 hp FARM _TREAD 4 WD
'6335.00
•5068.00

GRAVELY
210

•

TRACTOR SA• FS &amp; SERVICE

(JJ 15, He

WANTED
.

SENTINEL CARRIER
FOR Ll NCOLN HEIGHTS
AREA POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

Condor St .

THE ,DAILY SENTINEL

-

-

-

.

THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1979

-...,

Auto Sales

19'/t, FORO EliTE sd11er wdh blue

..... uyl tor Good cond1t mn
:.J1 OCIO mt lc!&gt; 30-t 77'J 5b15
CUTLASS SUPREMt:: b
C(' ilent mndtl 1on
985 3970
oltc t 6p m

19 15

)(17 .f CHE VROLET MALIBU 2 door

hardt op good shope S 1400
1Q73 Olds Slottonwcgon 9
pass good sh ape no ru st
Sl 200 304 773 5471
1971 DODGE Df'.RT '} door hord
top 318 e-.,gtne P S A C
new rcor snow 11res good
bod y Cor bought new so me
fmn• ly $400 Tuppers Ploms
Oh•o 614 6tJ7 3493
1974 OLOS CUTLAS Supreme slo
11on wagon $7500 or bes l offer
( o n be seen ol Cll•1ens No tional Bonk , Middleport o r coli
992 7b63
19b3 CHEVY NOVA II , new tn ren or new snow t.re s Needs
body wor k $ ~00 949 27'2_8
1&lt;n5 CHfVY TRUCK Qq'] 5335

Your HeldquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

EWOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E. Main Street,

Pomeroy,O.
C.ll992-7113
'For Free Estimates
11 -9·1 mo.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
P~ H2·2174

P.IANO
lUNING

Co il before B om

NEW FOU R ·b;dro~m o~ ls

ren ted
occordmg to you r 1ncom e we
pay water sewage a nd garbage p1ckup For a fom1 ly of 6
to _B ~e_o~le_ 9?2 777?
62 OR OVER? Sec o new 1
bedrOOITl a pt , rent IS based on
your •nco me We pay wa ter
sewage and gorbqge ptckup
'1927772
TWO APTS f or w heelc ho tr po
t1ents Rent is based on your m
co me 9Q2 7772

-------

-

-

-

- -

~

-

-

- ~-

--------

REDUCE SAFE a nd fas t w1th
GoBese Tablets and E Vop
--~aler p•II~~~C:~~~rl!_g __ _
LOWREY GENIE .t1 organ 2
keyboards , bUill m tape playe r
$1000. '192 735 4
PAIR OF Prov mc•ol l1 vmg room
c ho .rs,
green
bro c ad e
uphol s tery
w htte wood
bought
at Wedgewoo d
Golle nes m Ashla nd Also
yel low vel\le t cho1r Blue fol(
_:h_! ~ 992 ~2~~ - -- ~ - -USED FRIG IDA IRE refngerato r
$75 992.7354
CLEARANCE SALE Me1gs Humane
Sow~ ty Thnfl Shop Mos l Items
S 25 or S 10 1ncludmg dresses ,
blouses pa nt s, men s end
ch1ld ren 's clo th•n g Thurs , Fn ,

_

KAWASAKI KZ 650 949 2735

--- -- -hoy , $1 bale Coil

-~-

~~o f!e~S_pm _q_J_2 -~~3__ ·- _ -~
YELLOW VEL VET cho1r Blu ~ fo x
_shru_g _992 ~2_!1~ __ ~ __ _
FOUR NEW o lummum wheels 15
1n forChe11ro le l 742-3154
Rt:GISTEREO lhree·quorter mare 7
years old Three-quarter Aro
bton ge ldmg 3 years old. See
Eskey H1 ll . Flatwoods Rd ,
Pomeroy . OH . Phone992·3885

--

-

~--

new

BORN LOSER

and repair. Storm doors
and windows. All work
gu.ranteed. 20
years
experience.
Free
estimates. Call:
Tom
Hoskons, 949·2160.
] .J .1mo.

992-6011

El FCIRIC

tiJ

I

DRUFA

I

I LOUTTE

t

I

REYNOLD'S

MtMIIerOt
CltiJIIooy
SWIIP•GIII..
tnsutlll ·

M010R

I I rJ tJ

SHOP

Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
form the su rprtse answer, as sug
gested by ttie above cartoon

LITTIE ORPHAN ANNJF:

651

Beech Street
M.iddleport, 0.

Printanswerhere "(

992-2356
PLUS THE 20
PERCE tiT
PSYCHOLOGICAL

3.7.1 mo. (Pd. )

Yes le rday s

J

St. Rt.

t24 tow1nl

Rutlllncl,

0.

M111taomerv

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
12 Choos e

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

I lnte rJ ectton
5 Importune

ALIEYOOP

Business Services
REAL ESTATE Loons Purchase and
ref1nonce 30 year lerms VA
No money down (eligib le
veterens) FHA - As low as 3
per ce nl down ( non-veterans )
Ireland Mot lgoge Co , n E
Slate, Athens 614·592 30Sl
THREE
BEDROOM
'onch
Carpeted, otr condttioned Pnc
ed very reasonab ly
In
Syracuse ~1 · 5348
MODERN THREE bedroom house
full basement fneploc e fully
€arpeted , central air , enclosed
sun porch, located On 6% ocres
on CR 28 , opprox 3 miles from
Rocme If interested conlod
Lorry Wolfe 949-2836 weekenr+~
ond after 5 evenings
25 ACRES 2 bedroom ht .se
$50,000, Chester 614 985-4 371
0' 304·343·8789
APPROX TWENTY acres on Flat·
woods Road water ond e lec·
See Eslcey Htll
tnc1ty
Pomeroy, Oh•o or phone
'192-3885
SEVEN ROOM HOUSE, 2 1/4 acres
of lond garage with utility
bu1lding. 1 m•le obove Racme
Dom. 247-3123

BRADFORD Auctioneer , Com·
plete Serv1ce. Phone 949-2..C87
or 949·2000 Racine, Ohio, Crllt
Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters , irons oil
sma ll appliances Lawn mower.
next to State H1ghwoy Garage
on Route 7
'
SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·
v1ce. all makes ~2 · 228,. The
Fobr 1c Shop . Pomeroy
Authom:ed Stnger Soles and
Service We sharpen Scissors

GASOLINE ALl EY

Here.Sieq,
baby!

EXCAVATING, doter , loader ond
backhoe work , dump trucks
and lo boys for hire . w1ll houl
fill d1rt , to sotl, limestone and
grovel Coli Bob cr Roger Jeffers . day phone 992-7089, night
phone 992·3525 or '192· 5232

JUST LISTED - Beautiful
• 992-3325
brick wllh 2 acres . .4
216 E. Stc:ond Street
bedrooms, 2112 baths, lovely
kitc he n, din1ng , 21arge rec
COMBINATION - 1101ne
rooms, fireplace, many,
and business location . Has
ma ny other features.
l 1J1 baths, and natural gas
2t ACRES Lots of
heat. Will work out fine for
bu ilding sites. Old barn,
small offices and apt.
utt1 1t 1es available,. many
BUSINESS
Small ap·
good features GOING AT/
pliance, TV, and auto ac·
$23,000 00
cessory store. Will sell at
MIDDLEPORT - Mobile·
onventory far $24,500 .
home and nice level l()t'
1 ROOMS 3 large
50xl20 . All set up and fur·
bedrooms,
l'h
baths,
ni shed r $8,500 00.
1
natural
gas,
private
back
MIDDLEPORT Nice
yard, and 2 car garage.
hom e, 3 bedrooms, bath, !
Near
stores
Asking
enclosed porch, storage
$15,000.
bl dg
&amp; garage
Also·
NEW
LISTING
3
mabole home, !rented ) lots
bedroom luxurious home.
of ground. $21,000.00.
Front porch, nice kitchen,
WALK TO SHOP - Very
dining, bar, all electric
ni ce 2 story frame, 3
heat ( Budget only $89. 95~ ,
bedrooms, formal dining,
fam
ily room with wood·
large rec . room , fireplace, !
burning flrt!place, 2 Cl!lr
2 car garage and workshop. :
garage, and 1 acre plus lot .
' $23.500.00 .
NEW LISTING - 2.56 In
LOTS OF REMODELING•
Chester Township. Water
- 2 or 3 bedrooms, n 1ce liv ·
and electrtc available.
ing room , utility, pari base ·J
want $5,000.
m ent, .56 acre, Meigs
NEW LISTING
3
School District. S14,900.QO ,
bedrooms with closets, din·
THE EASY WAY TO SELL I lng, bath, natural gas fur
- LIST WITH US.
nace, nice living with
REALTORS
fireplace and view of the
river. Only S17,500
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.,
SPRING IS liEAR . SELL
HENRY E. CLELANOJR.
NOW AND MOVE TO A
ASSOCIATES
NEW LOCATION CALL
KATHY CLELAND
992 ·3325.
LEONA CLELAND
992-2259, 992 ·6191. 992-2568
HELEN L,, GORDON B.
AND SUE P . MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES.

HP/1\'illlf.

Hu.ICICfu,ntet s

rr-+-+-+-f--+--1 Careless

28 Clangor

BATHROOMS AND Kilchons
remodeled, ceramic tile, plum.
bmg, corpentr~ . and general
maintenance. 13 years ex·
perience 992-3685.

r:F~R~A~NK~&amp;~E~R~N~!E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~----r;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;-----WOMEN

MEN

.',

29 Peer Gynt 's
m other
30 Remem -

Msur e
36 m
Prefix
for gram
31 Hire
39 Football
mfract10n

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavoting. septic systems,
dozer, backhoe . Rl. 1-43. Phone
I (614) 698·7331

SHE WANT:O HI IV\ 10 HERSELF/
Tl-IAT\? WHY! OR El?E:
IT'S PART OF e&gt;oME.
KIND OF PJ.OTl

I THOUGHT WE'D SPEND
A FEW DAYS ON OA~ U ...
GtT SOME. SUN . ..
SWIIV\ ..• F I?H •..

•

It:

S L I' Q

GM Q

Nortb East
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2.
4•
5t
Pass

TO Mil. GRANDMOTHER

limestone in
Mladleport-Pomer~ area. Call
for Irea estimate 367-7101 .

BABYSITTING In my home.' 50c on
hour Must be at lecnt -4 VMrt
ald. SyracuM, Ohio, 992·5.149.
"

.

.,

Q

By 01wald Jacoby

oad Alao Sontag
CBX

XCNQ

WMEC
ZBM

ZBM
TUQ

FIB X,

•

dumm y's fourth heart. The •
contract hinged on whtch ·
order h e chose to make these
plays
Wothout giv ing the ha nd ;
suftictent thought, declarer '
played t he ace and ktng oC
clubs and ruffed a club tn dununy. He then played the
ace, king and queen of ... t
hearts and was rudely awak- '
e ned when East ruffed the ,
queen of hearts and cashed '
the queen of clubs.
~
Declarer had ruffed that ••
c lub too early . Once both ~
opponents followed to the ~
second trump lead South ~
should have gone rtght after
hearts. If East ruffed in on :.,
the third heart lead that last' :•
trump would still have been.
there to ruff a club and get: '
him In dummy to disca rd the · '
last club an the fourth heart. · ~
If East refused to ruff :;:
declarer would get -his club ··'
discard early and his club ~
ruff later. Either way, the ~
defense would JUst get the ir : ~
one trump trtck
~'

t

.
-'

~

Slam depends only on a 3. 2

A 8 I U trump break, almost

DRAPPED BY FER A

WE 501.0 ONE' TICKET

HAULING

4 NT

6t

Pass

Opening lead : •

ME AN' MY RAG DOLLV

'

HAULING, LIMESTONE, gravel,
coal. misc. By ton or hour Cart
long 1169-3495 .

3.

Pass
Pass
Pass

•

!

South
I•

Pass

••
'

8

68

£NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J ~ \

(Do you have a questton for ~ ~
fhe experfs? Wnoe " Ask fhe· · !,
Experts," care of ftus newspa~ .' =:
per. fna/vtaua/ quesf1ons w,IJ • ~
be answerer! tf accompanted : ~
by sfamped, self-addressed ·-.
envelopes. The mosf lnferest- : ~
mg questions w11/ be usect m - \
. tfJIS cofumn and will recetve ~ ~
copies of JACOBY MODERN 1 : :..

.

..
~

~~-------,----~--------------~------~--~---=--------~ · ~

~

.

SQ

tK94 2

percent likelihood
Q C NQ
Even though___declarer got
QCU
XBJPA
JUXNJAL
NIA
the needed 3-2 trwnp break,
careless play on his part led
JUWUWGUJL . - ABINPA
PNSJA
to defeat.
Yesterday' s Cryptoquote: A MAN . WITHOUT DETERAfter winning the opening •
"117""=-=~ MlNATION IS BUT AN UNTEMPERED SWORD.-CHINESE lead, ·declarer drew two
H-£~'1-.-~ PROVERB
rounds of trumps and saw
that he would be able to ruff
(f) 1979 K1nli Features Syndicate, Inc.
RilllNF:Y

...

WILL CARE for two Invalid or
elderly .,.non• In my hom8.
Tw• nty years ••perlence.
Reasonable rates. 992-6022 or
992·5422.

how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRVPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

.

•Q 532

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : North

One letter sirftply stands for another. Jn th1s sample A i11
used for the lhree L's, X for the two o ·s, etc Stngl e letters,
apostrophes, the length a nd formati on of the words are all
hants Each d.iy the code letters are differe nt

Auction

tQJJ06
.JI07

SOUTH
•K643 2
"' A J 9
t A
• A K 86

Ia

AUCTION, FRIDAY 7 pm .
Trut:koods of new merchandise
including 3 piece living room
set, swivel rockel"', box springs
and mdttresses, fishing rods
and reels. lots of misc. ol Ohio
Rtver Auction, 537. High .st ,
Moddleparl, OH.

EAST
• J 10 7
"'53

West

l

J.l5

WEST
• Q9
• 8742

,,

a club in dwnmy and d1s~!
card h1s remaining club on~

• 8 7 53

,

WALLPAPERING AND painting.
Ccll742·2328 .

NOW

play costs game

• 94

j

MOBILE HOME repairs Furnaces,
electrical work , pipes sawed,
plumb1ng . 992·5858

WATER AND misc. houllng. Call
992-5858

BRIDGE

• A85
"'K Q 10 6

bermg
31 D.C. leg1s
35 Land

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Comp lele
Service. Phone 992.211178

Services Offered

,.,,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Kappa

h ---4.

"A ,

',.

NORTH

EXCAVATING, dozer backhoe
and d1rcher Charles R. Hot·
field, Back Hoe Service.
Rutland , Ohio Phone 7.t12-2008

WILL CARE for the elderly In ouT
home. Phone992-73t4 .

DOWN

10 Book jacket
I Fragrance
blurb
2 Refuge
11 Crap
3 "Count · shooter
Star"
13 Ptzzeria
' 4 Coeds'
fixture
classmates
Yesterday's Answer
14 Indtan ctty
5 Monastery
15 French sea
6 Type style i9 Companoon 28 Gu1d e
16 Place
7 An cient
22 Affthahon
30 Mandrake's
for peas
days
23 Torments
forte
11 Place
8 Drool
24 Mea ning
31 Fatlhless
for storm g
9 Set up m
25 Baseball's
32 Amalg a m ate
18 Now
a sertcs
"01'
33 Rabb1t fur
ThurSday, March 15
20 Drac ula's
12 Property
Perfesser"
38 Chemica l
pet
mcome
26 EKploSJve
suffix
21 Some
16 Wee equme
device •
39 Skon the 22 Phi -

kerous
26 Mushroom
27 P unta del

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor ser..,..
ing Ohio Volley region Sue
days a weelc , 24 hours service.
Emergency calls Call 882·2952
or 882-2305 .

MAIN
• POMEROY,O.

43 Adolesce nt

3 :3o-Movie

FR IDAY , MARCH 16,1979
5 15-Wo rld af Large J7 ; 5:4s-Farm Report 13.
s 50-PTL Club 13 ; 5:55-Sunrlse Semester 10
6 ~700 Club 6.8: 6 . JQ-News 17
6 25- Soc lelles In Transition 10; 6 30-Romper Room
17 ; 6 4s-Mornlng Repor t 3.
&amp;· SO-Good Morn in g, West Vorg lnla 13: 6 :55-Chuck
Whote Reporfs 10; News 13.
·
7 : ~ Today 3, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; Friday
Morning 8: Schoolles 10, Three Sooges· Liflle
Rascals 17; 7 Is-Weather 33
7 · 3o-Fa mliy Affair 10, 8 ~Capf Ka ngaroo 8,1 0,
Lea ve It To Beaver 17 , Sesame ST 33
8·3Q-Hazel 17
9 ~Bob Bra un 3. P hil Do nahue 13 ,15 , Emergency
One 6, Hogan 's Heroes 8: Match Game 10, Phil
Dona hue 13, Lucy Show 17
9 30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan ' s Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10 ~Card Sharks 3, J5; Edge of Noght 6; All In The·
Family 8,10 ; Dating Game 13; Movie " Wall of
Noise" 17
J0 · 3o-AII Star Secrels 3, IS; $20,000 Pyramod 13; Proce
IS Right 8, 10 .
11 ·00-Hig h Rollers3 ,15; Happy Days6,13, Elec Co
20.
11 · 3Q-Whee l of Fortu ne 3, 15 , Family Feud 6,13 , Love
of Life 8, 10 , Sesame Sl 20,33
11 55-CBS News 8. House Call 10
12 00-New6center 3, Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, Midday Magazine J 3, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec Co 33 ; Not For Women Only :
15: Movie " F ove Weeks In a Ba lloon" 17 .
00- Days o f Our Lives 3,1 5; All My Children 6,13,
Ya ung &amp; lhe Rstl ess 10
30-As The World T urns 8,10, 2 00-Doc tor s 3,15;
One Lofe to Live 6, 13.
2 25-News 17.
2·3o-A nothe r World 3, JS; G uid ing Light 8, 10;
love ·
lucy 17.
3 ~General Hosp ital 6, 13 , Li lias Yoga &amp; You 20; ·
Speed Racer 17
3· 3Q-M ash B. J oker's Wild 10 : Fllnts!ones 17; Over
Easy 20
4 · ~Mister Carfoo n 3; Hollywood Squares 15 . Merv
Griffin 6, Porky Pig &amp; Froends 8. Sesame St 20,33,
Batman 10 , Dinah 13 ; Space Goa nt s J7
-4 3D-Bew olched 3: Gill igan ' s Is. 8, Brady Bunch 10; ,
Petticoat Ju nction 15; G ill igan 's Is 17
5 oo- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3, Beverly Hollblllles 8;
Mister Rogers' Neoghborhood 20,33, Gomer Pyle, '
USMC JO; Sox Mllloon Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunc h
15.
S· 3o-Carol Burnell &amp; riends 3, News 6 , Sanford &amp; Son
B: Elec. Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couplo
15; Beverly Hillbillies 17 ; Doc1or Who 33.
6:~News3,8, JO, 13, J5 , ABC News 6 ; Andy Griffi th J7;
On Nature's Trail 20, St ud io See 33
6 :3D-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News J3 , Ca rol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8,1 0; M y Three Sons 17, Over
Easy 20,33
7 · 00-Cross.Wifs 3; : Newlywed Ga m e 6, J3, Sha Na Na
8, News 10; Love, American Style JS, Carol Burnell
&amp; F r iends 17. D1ck Cavett 2() , Bog Blue Marble 33.
7 3D-Hee aw Honeys 3; $1.9B Beauty Show 6; Fam oly
Feud 8, 10; $100,000 Name Thai Tune 13; Pop Goes
The Country 15; Sanford &amp; Son J7 , MacNeil Lehrer
Reporf 20; So The Peoople May Know 33.
8 ~Dill ' rent S1rakes 3, IS , Mak in' 116, 13; Incredible
Hulk 8, 10 ; Wash ingfo n Week in Rev oew 20,33, Nlghf
Gallery 17.
8:3Q-flello, Larry 3, J5 . Whaj's Hap pe nong! 1 6, 13, Wa ll '
Street Week 20,33 , Night Gallery 17
9 :00-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,1 5 : Movie " The Cracker
Factory" 6, 13 . Dukes of Ha zzard 8, I 0, Mo vi e "The
Scars of Dracula" 17 ; Mov1 e u Am c rica at th e
Movies" 33 .
9 3Q-Turnabout 3, J5, 20.
10 ~Sweepstakes 3, 15 ; Dallas B, 10 , News 20 .
10 3D-Consumer Survival Kif 20
ll·~New s 3,6,8, 10, 13,)5 , NBA Basketbal l J7; Mon!y
Python' s Flying Circus 20 ; T hree Men In A Boat J3.
11 JQ-Johnny Carson 3,15; Barella 13, Movie " Where
.~ove Has Gone" 6; Wings Over The Wor ld 8; Movie
The Curse of the Fly " 10
12 :4Q-Ironslde 13 ; J ·00-Midnlght Speclal3, 15, Movie
" Los! Women " 10
1: 15-Movle " Apa che Territ ory" 17; 1 3D-Juke -Box
B; J :4Q-News J3
2:3G-News 3, 3 Oo-Movle " Rough Ni ght on Jencho"
3; News J7.
3. 2o-Mavle " The Amazing Dr Cllllerhouse" 17 .
i
5 · ~Movoe "The Sunshine Palrlof" 3
S· 1G-Dragnet 17 .

23 Cantan-

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your operators
l1cense? Phone992 2143 .

608

Jumbles BI SON MOUTH OBLIGE DE MISE
An swer Ha ndy when 1! comes to pmching thmgsTHUMBS

~

¥• mile oH Rt. 7 ~Y-111111 on
watts.

I XI l I I I I )"
(Answers tomorrow)

ROGER HYSElL
GARAGE

- - ---

~~---

NOI Di&lt;:ES5ED?
C.OULD 6EA
NUDE TRAil!

18 Years Experience
W1ll Make
Service Calls

Mobile Homes lor Sale
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile
home, furms hed, 3 bed{ ,
washer ond dryer Air cond1 _
hone d 1 lo t 21 0 ft frontage 1-----~-...:2:.·:_
1-4:_·:_:.;
1m;;a:;.J
S 12 000 Phone 741 2826

----

--~-

-

home maintenance -

•New Home
•Ada-ons
•Remolding

EAR CORN $2 bu 985 3510

----

Home MaintWIICe
All triM• roofing, gutters
and downspouts. All typH

27320 Montgomery Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
614-669·4245 Evenings
2MIIes East
of Wilkesville

----------

-GOOD
. - - -MIXED

and

Trailer sales

Very gentle

_S?_!~d?r_ __________

~Oh::io:;Va;ley=;:Roo~fin:;l~

---- --

1955 Proine Schooner 28 x 8 .
bd'
1965 Genera l, 60 • 12, 2 bdr
·1968 Elco no 52x l 2, 2 bdr
992-7680
1969 Buddy 60 x 12, 4 bdr
1970Sylvo 60 1( 12, 2bdr.
For Sale
1970 Castle, 60 x 12 , 2 bdr
1973 Arlington 60 x 12 2 bdr.
COA L, LIMESTONE send, grovel , 1973 R•dgewood 70 x 1.ol . 3 bdr
cotcium chlor•de , fer hli ter , dog 1973Kirkwood, 501( 12, 2bdr
food and oil lyp es of soh Ex- ,
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES
celstor Sof t Works Inc E Mom
PT PLEASANT WV
St , Pomeroy 992 389 1
675 4424
MIXED CON DITION ED hoy Very
go o d g uoltty
Delt\lery 1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home
a11odoble Phone 997 7'20 1 or
12x52 . 2 bedroom , f1rep loce ,
'192·3309
on co ndit 1omng under pinn tng .
9926118 ofle r 4 o r 9925413
'EVERY THING S GOTT A' GO
House ond lot, furn1tur e ,
_anyt~~e _____ - -- - - clothes co r all my household 1910 REBEL RAIDER 12x.t8 Very
tle ms Drop by 760 La ure l St
good co nd1tlon Pmed lo sell
Mtddle porl
247 3875
- -- GOOD MI XE D hoy for sole
843 2432
Real Estate lor Sale
REDUCE SAFE ood la S! wolh
GoBese Tablets ond E Vap water FARM FOR sale . Jiouse . 2 barns ,
trad er Lorge pond 10 a cres or
pt~~o n Drug -~
_
~2
ocr_e_s _7_
42_·_
2~ · - - RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 dr s from
3 •1, acres tn Pomeroy Secluded
Rutlond Post Off1ce 742 2255
wooded area on top of h• ll
K1ng drcu \otmg cool and wood
Ove rlooks n ver. Water, elecheate r w1lh blower $282 95
lnc available 992·3886
Also, other woo d cool ond gas
heaters (good p r•t:es) Stove
buyen ore e l1 g1bl e for 10 per
~e_nt d 1sco unt on s tove~• pe

- --

MEANWHI LE -WASH 15
6EHING THEe
FULL CU~T
TllEATMENT!

EVER.YTHIIJ6 •• &amp;LJT DO NOTHING!...
ALl RI SHT, ANoELS-YOU MAY PROCEED!

CHARGE J EH, DOC?

-

AVAILABLE lo good home 2
cohco co ts, long ho1r lemale 1
t1ger long ho ~r
fe mal e
Humane SoCiely 7 42 2608 Col
very Iorge cream , mole good
mouser Collie Terner, blond
short ho1r mole 9 or 10 month )
o ld gentle Bntt ony Spon 1el
young mole Hu mane SoCiety

YOU'L~ &amp;E A&amp;LE TO SEE AND HEAR.

2-7-mo.

1

Elberfelds of Pomeroy
arid Kimball Music Center
of Athens
Phone 992·2581
or 992 ·2082
3·11-1 mo.

BROWN AND wh 1te adu lt female

Bo rder Collie
992 20 11

FEELIIJ6 QUITE LIMP 1ARE WE .••
GOOD! ... I'M AFRAID THAT STUFF
YOU JU!;r IIJHALED,CAPTAIIJ, IVM
A PARA~YZIIJ6 NERVE GA$!

949-2862, 949-2160

LANE
DANIElS
Al5ociate of

-

- -

Sales Kep . For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
1
T ree Blvd. • Racine, Ohlo
.,:;one 949-2118 evenings
alter 5 p.m . Weekends
alter 12 noon.
2-S-1 mo ~

CAPTAIN EASY
New. repair,
guttersand
downspouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaninv
Free Estimates

14 Yr. Experience
Aural Method

PARTIALLY FURNISHED opt I
Pets lor Sale
bed r $125 mo All ut1ilt1eS
po1d $50 dcpos 1t ' See at 307 RISING STAR Kennels. Boordtng
Spnng A"'e Pomeroy
ond groommg , oil breeds
--~
Cheshire , 367 0292
~
·- - --· .
_ _ _ _Give Awa~v~­
HOOF HOLLOW English ond
Wes te rn Saddles and harness
DALMATION, 4 yea r old mal e to a
Horses and po n1es
Ruth
goo d hom e in country
R~e ~e~.-~ 14 6_98..:.3?9~ ·- ___ _
'192 5906

- -- ·

Pffi SIMPSON

II

211-lmoPd.

TWO BEDROOM k. 1lchen furn t5h -

ed opt
992 2288

PIANOS

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

wanted to Rent

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pome roy
Lorge l,?t~ Co11992 -~4 ::9 _
3 AND 4 RM furn 1shed and un P hone
fu r nished opts
992 5434

ORGANS

&amp; Famous Name Branii'' I

C. R. MASH

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

----- - - - - - - For Rent
-------------

Hammond

rr-----------r

- ----------WA NTE D to ren l or buy N•ce s ized trade r lot near Pome roy
Mason Bndge 304 882 2562
- - - -

I ~Cross - Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6,13 : Marly
Robbins ' Spotlight 8; News 10: Love , Amer ican
Style 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends J7: D ick Cavell
20 : Wild, Wild World of Anima ls 33
7 3G-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers 6, Match Game
PM 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 10, Nashville On
The Road 13; Dolly IS . Sa nfor d &amp; Soo17; MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20.33
8 :~Harrls &amp; Company 3, 15, Mork &amp; Mindy 6, 13,
Wallans 8, 10, Nov a 20,33, NHL Hockey 17.
8 :3G-Angle 6, 13 .
9 :oo-Qulncy 3,15: Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0
8,10 : World 20,33
9 · 30-Saap 6, 13
lO : ~Mrs Columbo 3, 15, Family 6,1 3: Barnaby
Jone s B, 10 ; News 20; Sarah Vaughan In Concert 33
10 3G-Rat Patrol 17: Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20
Jl ~News 3,6,8, 10,13, 15: Hogan' s Heroes 17, Best of
Groucho 20 : Over Easy 33 .
11.3G-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky &amp; Hufch ~ . 13;
Mash 8, ABC News 33 : Movie "A Boy Ten Feel
Tall " lOr Movie " Ten Seconds to He ll" 17
12:05-McCioud 8; J2 :-4G-Mannl• 6,13
1 : ~To morrow 3; 1 30-Movle "Seminole UpriSing"
17.

Business Service&amp;

1g52 DODGE TR UCt&lt; Runs good
Good body 5300 949-2545

I ·so-News 13; 3 : 1D-News 17 ,
, Woman of Dlstlncllon ." 17

11

TICKET SALE5
ME WAif UP OVE({
~MT ~EAR 11

VISIT,

MIZ SMIF

;~

�16- The Daily Sentinl'l . Middleport-Pnmt·rny, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 15, 1979

Hinckley buzzards return
fame and the first SUnday
after March 15, the chamber ·
holds a yearly pancake
breakfast . which draws
hundreds eager to view the
birds.
' ·
.
. The buzzards arrived late
in the afternoon last year,
aimosi disappointing a group
of observers - some ,from
hundreds of miles away who had begun gathering
soon after dawn .
The Hinckley Olamber of
Commerce nurtures the
tradition that the birds return
March
15 .
However,
naturalists have said the
birds actually may start show
up in·February, depending on .
weather conditions.
The birds, who are shy
around people, are believed
oo have been attracted oo
Hinckley by the Sharon
Conglomerate ledges in the
park system which are full of
caves. The birds' yearly
arrival is alsc believed by
some oo date to Dec. 24, 1818
when about 475 persons lined
up on the four sides of the 25·
mile-square township oo drive
out or kill the wolves, bears,
foxes and other predators in
the area.

By I\IANCY VARLEY
Associated Press Writer
HINCKLEY, Ohio (AP) As temperatures hovered
arotmd the freezing mark, the
first of Hinckley's famous
buzzards was officially
sighted today at Buzzard's
Roost in this northeast Ohio
community.
A group of about 40 persons
was gathered for the annual
arrival of th e celebrated
birds, and the first spotting
was officially recorded at
10:20 a .m. in the Cleveland
Melroparks roosting area.
Mertroparks. Ranger Bud
Burger, designated official
buzzard spotter, first caught
sight of the bird as it flew
across an open field and
circled a nearby tree before
landing.
Burger said he believed it
was a pilot bird and that the
Dock would gather in the area ·
·later in the soring.
The birds, also known as
turkey vultures or carrion
crows, reportedly · return
each March 15 to spend the
season in the stretch of the
·Metroparks system near
Whipps Ledges. They are
· Hinckley's ,chief claim to

unwanted
~ame
slaughtered in tile drive and
left frozen might have
attracted the flock of
buzzards 0\1 its way north the
next spring, area naturalist
Harold E. Wallin said.
Another theory, however, is
based oo an old manll8cript
which contains an accooot by
William Coggeswell, one of
the first white men to set foot
in the !Qwnship area in 1810.
Coggeswell tells in the
manuscript of finding the
vultures on an expedition in
the area.
The buzzards have a wing
span of 5'h to 6 feel and are
black, mottled with dark
brown near the head. Part of
the bird's neck and its head
are covered with crinkled red
skin with a few hair~ike
feathers .
Most buzzards winter in the
seacoast states as far south
as Florida, in .Cuba or South
America. But tile Hinckley
buzzards probably spend the
winter in Kentucky or the
Smoky Mountains, said
William Scheele of' the
Cleveland
Museum of
Natural History.

during
a
visit
here
Wednesday.
"I feel like I can put a
strong organi~ation in every
metropolitan area of the
state, with the exception of
Montgomery County," said
Brown, who was the top
Democratic vote-getter in
GAME ON RADIO
Bill Gray will lii:oadcast
tonight's Southern · Indian
Valley South Class A
Regional Tournament game
live from the Ohio University
Convocation Center, Athens.
Pre-game activities will
begin at 6:45 p.m. over
WYPC (101.5 ) FM.

BAKE SALE
The House of Prayer and
Praise will hold a bake sale
Saturday, March 17 at Jones
.Boys Store in Pomeroy from
11 a.m. to ·! p.m.
SEEK LICENSE
. A · marriage license was
issued to Dennis Eugene
McKinney, 31, Rutland and
Mary Louise Jewell, 25, Rt. I,
Rutland .

statewide elections last year.
He defeated Franklin County
P,rosecuoor George Smith by
more than 700,1100 votes.
"Last year I received the
endorSement of every major
newspaper in the state," he
said.
Brown said he was not worried about the possibility that
Lt. Gov. George Voinovich
might be the Republican
candidate for governor in
1982.
"I'm not sure that (Gov.)
Jim Rhodes is going to
annoint him as his successor
or give him that much
visibility in the next three
years," Brown said.
·

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

! Area Deaths !
I

I

EXTRA
CRISPY

CR&lt;M'S

-.. ,_
1
"""""'

FINAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES••.• MEN'S, WOMEN'S, CHILDREN'S WEAR, ODD LOTS, BROKEN SIZES. SALE PRICES
LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND. AI.!- SALES FINAL NO EXCHANGES, RETURNS OR REFUNDS.

CHILDREN'S

FINAL SALrt

WINTER SLEEPWEAR

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
DRESS AND SPORT SHIRTS

REG.' $9.00 to $10.00...................... SALE $3.00
RE~ $11.00 to $12.00 .... ................ SALE $4.00
REG. $14.00 to $21.00. .. ... ... ... .. .... .. SAlE $5.00

~

-~ • •

Q. -

,;( ·'

.-t-.

REG. $8.00 to $12.00......................
SALE ' $3.00
.
REG. $13.00 to $16.00 .................... SALE $4.00
REG. $17.00 to $26.00. ..................... SALE $5.00

REG. $3.75 TO $5.00 .............................. SALE $1.00
REG. $6.00. TO $9.00...... .... .. •.. .. .. .. .. •.... .. SALE ~00
REG. $10.00 TO $1-2.00 ........................... SALE $3.00
REG. $13.00 TO $16.00 ........................... SALE $4.00
REG. $17.00 TO $23.00 ... ,... :.................... -SALE

CHILDR
WINTER COATS
REG, ·$28.00 ............ ·.... ·.. •SALE $8.00
REG $38 00
·
SAL£ $11 00
REG $42.0()
SAl£ $12 00
SALE $13 00

$5.95 TO $9.95 KNIT SHIRTS .................... SA_LE $3.00
. KNIT. SHIRTS................. SALE'· $4•00
$10.95 TO $14.00
$14.95 TO $20.00 KNIT SHIRTS ................. SALE $5.00

JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR

WINTER
TOPS
AND
SWEATERS

REG. $4.00 to $10.00................ SALE $1.50
REG. $11.00 to $14:00............... . SALE $3.00
REG. $15.00 to $17.00 ................ SALE $4.oo-·
REG. $18.00 to $21.00 ................ SALE $5.00
REG. $22.00 to $26.00 ................ SALE $6.00
REG. $2S:OO to $34.00................. SALE $7.00

SALE S]OO

SALEs4oo

SALE ssoo

R·

Reg. SB.OO to s12 .on ..•. t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sale $2.00

Reg. SlJ.OO to S1S.oo.;................................ Sale SJ.OO
Reg. $16.00 to $18.00 ••••••••••••••••••••• ·••••••••••••• Sale $4.00
Reg. $19.00 to $21 .00 ................................... Sale $5.00
Reg. 522.00 to $24.00 .••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $6.00
Reg. 525.00 to S27 .00 •••••••• ······~·······•····-- •••• Sale $7.00
Reg. $28.00 to $31.00 ................................. Sale $8.00
Reg. $32.00 to $38.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale $9.00
Reg. $46.00 to sso.oo ................................. Sale 510.00 ·
. $52.00 to $68.00 ................................ Sale $12.00

BANK

J

REG. $26.00 to $30.oo ............... SALE $7.00
REG. $34.00 to $40.00 ............... SALE-$9.00
REG. $42.00 to $46.00. ............... SALE $11.00
}-·--·--·--·-c-L-E"A--R--A-N,-c._r·----·--~

REG. $41.00 to $48.00.............................SALE $11.00

•

'

'.
..

Reg. $64.00 ..........................................
Reg . $72.00 to $78.00... ................. ............
Reg. $82 .00 to S88.00. ........ ·~ .......................
Reg- $92.00 to$94.0Q ............................ , ...
Reg. $104.00 to $114.00..............................
Reg. $118.001o.$128.00 ..............................
Reg. $158.00 to $198.00 ........ ~ ......................

.

•

Sale $20.00
Sale $25.00
Sale $30.00
Sale $35.00
Sale $40.00
Sale $45.00
Sale $50.00

· WASHINGTO!i (AP) - A. high-levei U. S.
delegation is heading for the Mideast in an attempt-to
persuade Arab leaders to change their minds and
support a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel.
The fOur-H)an U. S. delegation will meet with leaders ·
of the moderate Arab states, Saudi Arabia and Jordan,
sources confirmed Thursday night. The sources, who
asked not oo be identified, indicated the team would
leave today,

Not gullty plea entered
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Harold E. Redfeairn, 26, of
Dayoon, pleaded innocent by reason of insanity Thurs·
day to charges related to the March I shooting of
Dayton pollee officer David Koenig.
.
A pretrial conference was scheduled for March 22
in Montgomery County Common Pleas Court.
Redfeairn was indicted Tuesday on charges of
attempted aggravated murder and aggravated
robbery. Koenig was' shot three limes after stopping a
vehicle on a routine traffic charge. The officer remains
hospitalized.

ON THE ·1ST FLOOR
LIMITED QUANTITY , ·

Instructions acknowledged

$8.95 PAJAMAs.,........................... SALE $3.00
$10.95 PAJAMAS .................. ;....... ; SALE $4.00

MEN'S SWEATERS
Slipovers and cardigans. Just 76 sweaters to sell, ail sales
final, slipovers and cardigans.

.MEN'S $9.95 10 -$14.95 SWEATERS ... SALE $4.00

MEN'S $15.95 TO $19.95 SWEATERS.:. SALE $5.00

y

NASHVILLE, Tenn·. (AP)- A federal grand jury
has indicted four members of former Gov. Ray
Blanton's administration, alleging thousands of doll~rs
and expensive gifts changed hands in a four-year
scheme that allowed Tennessee convicts to buy their
freedom.
·
A Nashville lawyer and a former Democratic
Party committeeman also were indicted Thursday by
the padel, which has beeh investigating allegations of a
clemency-for-&lt;:ash operation since May 1978. .

Delegation going to Mideast

$1.69 to $1.95 TOBOGGANS .... .. .. •.. SALE $1.00

Junior, Missy, Extra Sizes

.

Cabinet members ·indicted

()

WOMEN'S COATS

.

Nationwise-

\

$2.95 TO $3.95 CAPS &amp; TOBOGGANS SALE $1.50

OPEN SATURDAY TIL 5 P.M.

ERFE

"•
..
.'

$4,95 TO $6.95 HATS. &amp; CAPS, ........ SALE $2.00

WHILE THEY LASTI

REG. $18.00 to $23.00 .............................. SALE $5.00
REG. $26.00 to $32.00 ............................... SALE .$7.00
REG. $34.00 to $40.00.: .................... ~ ........ SALE ".·00
REG. ~tOO to 548.00..... ;..................... ,.. SALE $11.00
REG. $52.00 to $6,2.00............................ r. SALE $15.00

-~

MEN'S DEPARTMENT 1ST FLOOR

WOMEN'S.

REGULAR SIZE DRESSES

.,.

WINTER CAPS &amp; TOBOGGANS

.

REG. $34.00 to $40.00.. .. ... .. ... ... . .. .. ... ... .. SALE $9.00

HOME NATIONAL"

REG; $18.00 to $23.00............... SALE $5.00

REG. $18.00 to $23.00............................. SALE $5.00

MARCHI7

. . CERTIFICATE PRESENTED - Dave Fox, left, on
·behalf of the Meigs County Jaycees presents a certificate
to C. Tbomas Hamm, Minersville, who has been named
Meigs County's Outstanding Young Farmer. The honor is
given in recognition of young farmers based on their
progress in the agricultural career, extent of soil and
water conservation practices and contributions to
coinmunllies.

JUNIOR DRESSES

EN'S HALFSIZE DRESSES BOYS' FLANNEL PAJAMAS
REG. $26.00 ~ $32.00 ............................. SALE $7.00 -

I

I

'

to $24.oo

ST. PATRICK'S DAY

RACINE

·
$17.00

SALE ssoo

I)

..

WOMEN'S

·sPORTSWEAR

I;~.

at y

VOL. NO. XXIX . NO. 234

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1979

15 CENTS

Commission wants Judge Calhoun
to step aside in $1 million suit

Not every size in every style, famous makes, limited
quantity.
.

to $13.00

REG. $32.00......................... •• SALE $8.00

CONCERN EXPRESSED - Roy Miller, left , of the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisors discusses concerns rela (ing to the Abandoned Mine I;'rogram
project on Mulberry Ave ., Pomeroy, with Don Dorst, job superintendent for the cons ulting
firm of Benedict, Bowman, Craig &amp; Merchant of Columbus. (Photo by Boyd Ruth , S.C.S.U.S.D.A.)

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

.MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
· KNIT SHIRTS

SALE Sz-'

SALE '23.00

I
I

SI.IPPAGE PHOIJLEM - Land slip against Gertrude Mitchell's hou;;. on Mulberrv
Avenue, Pomeroy, was caused by underground water pressure relating to previous deep
coal mining activities. Bob Jeffers, on bulldozer, and Ron Epling, shovelling soil away from
house, are with Jeffers Coal &amp; Excavating, Pomeroy, sub-&lt;:ontractor for the job. Superb
cooperation between the residents affected by tlie deep mine water, Office of Surface
Mining, Ohio Division of RE!(;Iamation 'a!lQ Soil Conservation Service representatives have
worked oo remedy the problem. (Photo by Boyd Ruth, S.C.S.·U.S.D.A.)

CLEAN UP SALEI

CHILDREN'S
WINTER SPORTSWEAR

SALE '17.00

nutrient airitent. Examples
of authorized foods contained
in the package are: iron·
fortified infant formula, milk,
cheese, eggs, frllit juices and
(J iron-fortified cereals. Foods
are provided thorugh dairy
delive.ry or through the
redemption of coupons or
local grocery stores.
NutritionaJ,Educatlon Is an
important part of the WIC
Program. It is felt that,
~
~-' through education, positive
and permanent changes in
eating patterns will be made
c_ - and health status improved.
~ ·' Certification for the program
requires height and weight
measurements,
an.d
hemoglobin or hematocrit
tests to identlfy anemia.
Children are re-evaluated
once
every six months;
A Home
women are certified during
pregnancy and evaluated
Bank
following delivery.
Ohio's first WIC project
For
began in January of 1974,
Today, WIC services are
available in 60 Ohio counties
through approximately I~
People
clinic sites.
The Ohio WIC Program's
FY 79 budget will be approximately 25 million
dollars.
Ohio has the largest
operating WIC Program in
the Midwest Region and
ranks fourth in lbe nation.
Requests for additional in·
formation should be directed
RACINE, OHIO ' to the Meigs County Health
Department.
~·;· -~,

..

REG. $7.00 to $12.00...................... SALE $2.00
REG. $13.00 to $15.00 .....................SALE $4.00
REG. $16.00 to $23.00 .................... SALE $5.00

corn and 112 acres of hny
each year.
Most corn is minimum
tillage, part of the cropland is
farmed in contour strips and
erosion and water pollution
have been lessened by spring
developments and sod
waterways.
Hamm received an Out·
standing Conservation Farm
Award in 1975 from ·the Soil
.and Water Conservation
District.
Among his community
activities Hamm is President
of the congregation of the St.
John Lutheran Church,
former vice president of the
board of the Meigs County
Farm Bureau, president of
the Farm Bureau Mvisory
Council, treasurer of the
Meigs County Dairy ServiCe
Unit, on the Meigs County
Extension
Agronomy
Committee and is. Chairman
of
the
Agriculture
Stabilization and Conservat.ion Community
Committee
in
Sutton
Township.

.

•a.oo

(!n~~mpage

'

LITTLE GIRLS DRESSES

to $9.00

cousins survive.

TO YE

~

MEN'S $5.95 TO $9.95 SHIRT$ ...................SALE $3.00
MEN'S $10.95 TO $14.00 SHIRTS ................ SALE $5.00
MEN'S $14.95 TO $20.00 SHIRTS ............... SALE $6.00

to $30.00

TOP O' TilE MORNJN'

I

Sport shirt sizes S, M, Land XL. Dress shirt sizes 14112 to 17
neck .
·

WOMEN'S BLOUSES

to

Cl;, -

f~mer

C. Thomas Hamm, 32091
Amberger Road, Minersville,
has been chosen the Out·
standing Young Farmer for
1978 by the IY!eigs County
Jaycees.
Out:;tanding Young Far· .
mer is a recognition program
run by the Jaycees to
reci&gt;gnize a young fanner ·t8
through 35 years of ~ge.
Judging is based on his
progress in agricultural
career, extent of soil and
water conservation practices
on his farm imd on his con·
tribution to his community.
Hamm is a 26-year-old
dairyman who farms 368
acres of land in Sutton
Township. He is married to
the former Linda Hollop and
they have two children.
Tom lita,rted farming with
his father in 1971 after his
graduation from Southern
High School and now has
purchased the dairy herd and
machinery from his father.
They presently milk about
75 cows, grow 65to 70 acres of

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

parents, Dewey Cochran of
Cleveland, and Glenna
George Cochran of Vinton
o
, .... .. ... .. ... .. .. ..
,
Route 2. He was a mechanic
and worked in .the lumber
,
...... •............ •
·
•
busmess, and was a veteran
~.00
of WW II.
"""
.. ... ... ... .. .......
,
Cochran is also survived by. 1-~"~~=-~~o::..-:--::..--::-":".:''::::':."::":::..-"-:":~:".=:".:".::'\
his wife, Mary Zell Mitchell ·
Cochran, a stepson, Danny
. Reg. $7.00
Wood, step:.ctailghter Jennie
Wood of Vinton; four
$29.95 JACKET
brothers, DeWie Raymond
(Ray) of Vintoo, Charles
Wesley (Jake) of Cleveland,
5 ONLY MEN'S $59.95 AU WEATHER COATS
Reg. $10.00
Merrill Wade (Jim) of
Columbus, Orlyn Robert
(Bob) of Vinton Rt. 2; five
7 ONLY MIN'S $79.95 FUR TRIM DRESS COATS
sisters,
Mrs. Burgess
(Louise)
Mullins
of
Reg. $14.00 to
Cleveland, Mrs. Edward
(Jane) Kruskamp and · Mrs. ~--~-"w.-o.-M.~E~N.~'s·-E--x"T~-R·A--5·-.z-Es·--·--~
Clifford (Mary) McCiintoch,
both of Columbus, Mrs.
Wiliiam (Margaret) Mitchell
Reg. $18.oo
of Bidwell, Mrs. Carl (Feida)
Klaiber of Vinton Rt . . 2. A
REG. $14.00 $15.00 ............... SALE $4.00
nice,
Mrs. , -Theron
(Sharon) Durkam
of
g • • 0 H~rri50nville, and several
REG. $16.00 .. .... •.. .. .. •.. .. .. .. .... SALE $5.00 Reg. $27.00
Jt'&gt;
cJ!I' other nieces, nephews_ and

CARL H. COCHRAN
Funeral services were held
March 7 for Carl Herman
MONDAY COLLECTION
Cochran, 54, Rt. 2, Vinton.
· Racine residents who have
Mr. Cochran was killed in a
bad trash collection service jeep accident in which his
on Monday and Tuesday are step-son Danny R. Woods, 29,
advised that beginning next
also· of Vinton Route 2, was
week the collection will be driving. Another passenger,
made only on Mo~days.
his brother-in-law, William
Mitchell, 49, of Bidwell, was
in the . accident also, which
occurred March 4, at 5:15
TRY OUT .
p.m. on Roush Hollow Road,
north of Route 554 in Gallia
County.
Services were held March 7
at 3:30 at the McCoy Moore
KENTUCKY
Funeral Home with Rev.
Noah Burgess and Rev, Clyde
FRIED CHICKEN
Ferrell officiating. Burial
was in the Pine Grove
Cemetery, Vinton.
FAMILY RESTAURANT
Mr. Cochran was born in
992-5432
Gallia County on Dec. 14,
Pomeroy, 0.
1924. He is survived by his

TomHamm
top

JR. and regular sizes .

Bill Brown announces candidacy
CINCINNATI ( AP) - Ex·
hilarated by his lopsided re·
election to a third term last
November , Ohio Attorney
General William J . .Brown
says he plans 00 run for
governor iri 1982.
urm rwming for governor
in 1982, bull don 'I know about
anybody else," said Rrown

El·berfelds In Pomeroy

Th~ .

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The pilot of a private ·
plane which crallhed into a northside residential area
had acknowledged that be understood landing
instructions from Ohio Stale University's Don Scott
field before he went down, aviation officials say.
Investigators Thursday were attempting to
determine the cause of the crash that killed pilot John
A. Wright, 50, of Phoenixville, Pa., and passengers
Wiqlam F .. Bigony, 54, and his son David, 23, both of
Warminster, Pa.
·
, Wright, owner of . Wright Associates, lin
advertising firm in Valley· Forge, Pa., took off from
Logansport, Ind., shortly after 8 a.m. Wedne~day for
Columbus, where the men had a business appointment.

A resolution requesting Common Pleas Court Judge
Ronald C. Calhoun to step aside in a $1 million suit brought
against the Gallia County Commissioners was unanimously
passed by that board late Thursday evening .
Charging that the death of an inmate found dead in the
Gallia County Jail on Nov. 2, 1977, was due to the negligence of
Sheriff James Montgomery and the Gallia County
Commissioners, the $1 million suit was filed on Feb. 16 in
Common Pleas Court.
In that action, which names Sheriff Montgomery, former
commissioner John Belville, and current commissioners
James C. Saunders and Paul D. Niday as co-&lt;lefendants, Betty
L. McCune, Chauncey, the wife of deceased Terry Wayne
McCune, formerly of Langsville, charges that the death of her
husband was caused by a failure, " to maintain adequate
security standards for inmates who fear their personal safety
is in jeopardy while an inmate in the Gallia County Jail."
The resolution passed last night, following a meeting in
' executive session with Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L. Cain,
states:
"Whereas, there is a case pending in the Court of Appeals
between the Court and the Prosecuting Attorney, our legal
counsel, and ... there is still presently pending a matter between the Court and the Sheriff of Gallia County over jail rules,
and ... there is.a considerable amount of taxpayers' money
involved in the case which has been filed against us, and ... to
insure justice and fairness in this case ... We, the Board of
County Corn!TJissioners respectfully request that Judge Ronald
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::·::::::::·

SPECIAL MEETING
The Meigs
County
Commissioners wlll ·meet
in special session Monday,
March 19 at 6:30 p.m. for
the purpose of opening bids
from financial institutions
on depositories of publi&lt;:
funds.
·

Wreck leaves
elderly man
hospitalized
Gerald 0. Violet, 73,
Tuppers Plains, was listed in
serious condition' Friday
morning . at St. Joseph 's
Hospital in Parkersburg
where he was admitted
following an accident at I: 10
p.m. Thursday on SR 7 in
Meigs County.
The Gallia · Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Violet's vehicle ran off the
left side of the highway
striking a guardrail. . The
vehicle re-crossed ' the high·
way, traveled off the left side,
struck a guardrail and
overturned.
Violet who had in·
capacitating Injuries was
transported to the hospital by
SEOEMS. His car was
demolished. The accident is
&amp;ill under inve&amp;igation.

Firestone faces
another suit
'
.

AKRON, Ohio (AP)- The U. S. government has
filed a ~.I million civil suit against Firestone Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. over alleged illegal gold transactions in
. 1973 and 1974.
The suit filed Thursday in U. S. Districi Court
· charges that ·Firestone illegally acquired more than
f31 million worth of gold in violation of laws in force at.
lhat lime. '111e ban on owning gold was lifted by the U.'
S. government Dec. 31, 197f.

.

R. Calhoun please step down as judge (in the case) wherem we
are named as defendants ."
.
The case pending with the Court of Appeals between Judge
Calhow1 and the Prosecuting Attorney centers around the
question of the right of the Court to appoint a City Solicitor to
serve as defense counsel in a criminaLcase.
That controversy began on March 5 when Judge Calhoun
. moved to appoint City Solicitor William Eachus to serve as
defense counsel for Forrest Jones, Crown City, who was
secretly indi.cted by the Galli a County Grand Jury on a charge
of murder . The case did not appear in the Municipal Court of
the City or Gallipolis.
Following that appointment, Prosecutor Cain filed a
complaint in prohibition with the Appellate Court against
Calhoun claiming thahs City Solicitor for Gallipolis, Eachus
has county-wide jurisdiction over criminal matters, and, "as a
result of his position, he does represent' the Sheriff of Gallia
County in criminal matters."
Cain claims that such an appointment is unauthorized by
law by reason of sectioos of the Ohio Revised Code, and an
Attorney General's opinion .
.
In his action against Judge Calhoun, filed last Tuesday,
Prosecutor Cain asks that a writ of prohibition be issued
permanently prohibiting the court from appointing Eac hus as
defense counsel to represent Jones .
The complaint also seeks the issuance of a temporary
restraining order against the Common Pleas Judge from
proceeding with the appointment until final disposition of the

CLEVELAND (AP) Numbers drawn In the Ohio
lottery Thursday:
Bltte 719; white 84 ; gold
~; wlnathon 91650.

Schools hit by 'sickout'
CINCINNATI (AP) Ci ncinnati's public school
system was hit by a sickout
by
teachers
Friday
protesting
wages and
working conditions at
elementary, junior high and
high schools.
Raymond J. · Brokamp ,
assistant superintendant of
schools , said
teacher
absences ranged from zero in

some schools to 8()..90 percent
of the staff in other schools.
He added that substitute
teachers have been sent to
the hardest-hit schools and
that none were closed.
Tom Mooney , a vice president for the Cincinnati Federation of Teachers, said the
"chalk flu " was the result of
the "terribly low morale
teachers
have
been

experiencing lately ."
· The federation, which
claims I,700 members, is the
bargaining agent for the 3,000
teachers in the Cincinnati
School District.
" Tea chers are fee ling
overworked because of the
size of classes and because
we have been operating on a
fixed income since 1977,"
Mooney said.
Mooney said that teachers
last received a raise of 6 percent in May 1977. He added
that their contract does not
expire until the end of this
so desire, according to Elmer year.
L. Dunaway, state president.
Negotiations between the
union and the school board on
salary and class size began
last May , but broke off early
this year.
Four other sickouts were
at
various
reported
ancinnati schools in the past
few weeks, bu I were not as
widespread as Friday's
action.
Brokamp said the school
Middleport firemen an·
board
became aware of the
swered a false alarm to the
teachers'
planned absences
Bradbury area at 5:55 p.m.
when
Thursday
night
Thursday.
teachers
began
.
ca
lling
According to a call
principals to inform them
received , a car was on lire at
Bradbury . Firemen . an· they would not be coming lo
work.
swering the call, however,
·
found no such vehicle.
At 10 :14 p.m. the firemen
went to the William Slater
SQUAD CALLED
residence at 173 Hudson. The
The Pomeroy emergency
Slater home had filled with squad was called to Capitol
smoke. Firemen found that a Finance at II :25 a.m. Thursfurnace door had become day for Ollie Young who had
ajar permitting smoke to fallen . The victim was taken
escape into the home .
to Veterans Memorial
At 10:25 p.IJl., Thursday, Hospital and admitted.
the emergency unit 'Vent IQ .
. the William Plants residence, ·
!p5 Maple St., for the couple's
baby. :The child was choking,
but whatever caused the
MEETS TONIGHT
problem was dislodged when
The Meigs Association for
emergency men arrived.
Retarded Citizens .will meet
The infant Was taken to this evening at the office of
Holzer Medical Center by the Ueland Realty at 7:30 p.m.
parents
for
further Plans for the annual Hike·
exC:~ mi· nation .
Bike will be made.
\

Suit filed for patrol
The .. Fraternal Order ·of
Police of Ohio, Inc., today
filed suit on behalf of the Ohio
State Patrol officers.
The suit is a declaratory
judgment action of the
troopers in regards to : WageRights
for
Overtime,
Counsel, First Amendment
Rights, and Physical Fitness
Requirements.
The action was undertaken
at the request of a majority of
all state patrol troopers in the
State of Ohio and seeks to
secure .for them the same
rights and benefits enjoyed
by other law enforcement
officers In the State of Ohio.
The State ·FOP and
Troopers are willing to meet
and discuss the resolutions of
this suit with the' Patrol
Administrators, should they

ACTIONS FILED
A suit in the amount of
$1,044.68 bas been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court ' by Ingels Furniture,
Middleport, against James L.
Hubbard, Middleport.
Sharon
Ann · Burns,
Pom eroy, filed suit for
divorce against Douglas
Allan Burns, Pomeroy, and
Rhonda G. Jones was granted
a divorce from Keith A.
Jones .

'\

False alarm

answered by
firefighters

proceeding .
ln a "Cross-romplaint in prohibition " filed last Friday
with the Court of Appeals by Judge Calhoun against
Prosecutor Cain, the Common Pleas Judge asks that the
Appellate Court consider whether or not a j udge, .county
pmsecutor, city solicitor, village solicitor or similar official
would have a conflict of interest which would prohibit them
from representing criminal defendants.
Last Wednesday, Judge Calhoun sent a letter to the County
Commissioners asking them to approve a resolution
authorizing him to obtain counsel for representation in the
matter.
No action on the Judge's request was taken during the
·commissioners'. regular Tuesday meeting, or on Thursday
when the board reconvened:
.
The condition and operation of the county jail stirred
·controversy early in 1978 when, following an examination of
the jail by a Gallia County Grand Jury, Sheriff Montgomery
requested an updating from the Court of th e regulations which
govern the operation of the facility .
On Sept. 5, Judge Calhoun issued a document specifying a
new set of rules for the operation of the jail and the conduct and
treatment of inmates lodged therein .
Following the issuance of the regulations, Montgomery
stated he had requested the updating, hut had not expected a
document as comprehensive as the one he received from the
Common Pleas Judge.
(Continued on page !O J

Troop withdraw
continues today
By DENIS D. GRAy
t~e village of Muang on
Associated Press Writer · March 10. Both are in the
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP ) rugged northern province of
- Chairman Hua Guofeng Nam Tha . which · borders
says the last CtJjnese troops China 's Yunnan proVince.
have withdrawn
from
The broadcast also charged
Vietnam, but the Vietnamese that Peking continued to send
government reported today an increasingnumber of spies
that Chinese forces were still and agents into Laos to overshelling and looting inside throw the Vientiane governVietnam and Laos reported ment.
Chinese troops crossed its
"These actions and words
show the Chinese rulers' inborder Jasl week.
Hua, China's premier and tentions oo violate the soverCommunist Party leader , ~n- eignty of Laos and reveal
nounced the end ' of the China ' s
anta go ni stic
invasion China began Feb. 17 behavior toward the Lao
m a meetilih in Peking people and its inhuman
Thursday wi~e governor designs to overthrow the
of Tokyo, Ryokichi Minobe, government, " it said.
Japan ·s Kyodo news agency
Laos already has ordered
reported. But Hua did not say the expulsion of all Chinese
if Chinese troops had pulled aid technicians in Laos .
out of areas in which Vietnam Peking expressed "immense
clainned the Chinese put up , regret" Thursday over the
new boundary markers.
deCISion and warned its
Despite the reported with- southern ne~~hbor not to
drawal , Hanoi Radio said move furthe,~ down the anllfierce fighting was still going Chma road.
.
on in Cao Bang and that
Western analysts . m
severa l hundred Chinese Bangkok have been skeplical
troops were killed in the Ta of recent charges by Laos,
Hu Xin area of the province. Vietnam and th eSov~et Umon
Both China and Vietnam tha t . the Chmese were
have called for negotiations mas~mg troops along the
but analysts say problems Laotian border. Ther reamay arise if Peking's troops soned that 1f the fighting
don't pull 9UI of areas spread to Laos, all of
claimed by Vietnam. Hanoi lndochma would have been
reiterated Thursday it was engulfed by conflict w1thm
ready to hold negotiations one the past three months.
week after the ootal pullout of V 1 e t ~a m
I n v a de d
Chinese troops.
Cam bodia Dec. 25 -and
Laos, meanwhile, accused mstalled a
proHa~o1
China of sending two Cambod ian Commumst
battalions more than a mile go~ern'?ent ~ Phn"'." Penh
into Laotian territory on which IS still ftghtmg the
March 7 and said three days re'?nants Of !he ousted
later other Chinese troops reglDie of Prem•er Pol _Pot.
"nibble.' " along. a silCIIIile The Pol Pot guernllas
front a~d penetrated some claimed today they had killed
two miles inside Laos.
or wounded more than 250
The official Voice of Vien- VIetnamese.and k~ocked out
Iiane charged that Chinese three. tanks m f1ghtmg March
troops encroached on the vii· 8-13 m Widespread areas or
lage of Boa on March 7 and at the country ·
J

•

't

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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