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                  <text>Israeli cabinet approves peace treaty today

Uallcy . If Bryan David wins, we 'H pt•i ntthc 110111Cs uf r.tH l·leVl'll
or his aneeslors, ind udin~ Ute parent.s .. I ~I~H~ s Dav1t1 Halley

and Kathryn Ro"" Sheets. There are nme hvmg grandparents.

Peeps. ··

One ~rand parent not living now was Ann .~ •ley; put seven
greafs in front of ~rttndmot _her for A1m ·Halley, a nd you have

•

By The Assoefaled Press
The Israeli Cabinet today approved the peace treaty ":ith
Egypt, leavmg ratification by the Israeli Parliament as the
only remaining step bef&lt;re a historic signing ceremony in
W311hlngton -as early as next Monday -ending 30 years of
conruct between the two nations.
The Parliament debate is scheduled to open Tuesday and the
vote may come Wednesdliy or Thursday. As with the cabinet
the Parliament's approval is considered a foregone con:
elusion .
Cabinet Secretary Arieh Naor said the Cabinet voted 15-2 to
approve the treaty, engineered by President Carter on his
Mideast peace mission last week. The Cabinet debated the
treaty for five hours before voting. It was ·not learned lnunedlately who had cast the negative votes.

U1is little boy's must prommenl ancestor.

A Gallipolis Diary

indirect relationship to him as has Ellen Tyler Thomas, who
loaned y.ou the 1907 Vinton Leader from which the article was
tak~n .
.
"The article stated that Gen . Samuel Holcomb married
Sarah Ewing, daughter of Indian John Ewing; he was the
brother of my great.great.great-great grandfather Wilham
Ewing, who founded Ewington, Ohio, and was a Revolutionary
War soldier. In the year 1759 at the age of 16 he was captured
by a tribe of Shawnee Jndi~ns near Lewisbur~ (now w.. Va.),
and taken to a tribal Village near the present stte of
Circleville, O~io. The white blood was washed out of him m the
waters of the historic Scioto Rive"r, and he was adopted as a
Shawnee Indian. He became proficient in Indian ja~guage.

Recommend nine
SEO cowtties for loans
MARY TRO'ITER also is seeking . any records that
belonged to Ann Bailey, such as bills, receipts, deeds, or
anything that belonged to her. She's also interested m gettmg
early copyrighted copies of the books Ann Halley or The Battle
of Point Pleasant by Mrs. LIDia Nye Poffenberger.
MRS. ALEX (HELEN EWJiirG) MacMiilan, 25 Woodland
Pl., Ft. Thomsas, Ky. 42075, sends a couple of photographs
made in Vinton's old Glen Cemetery. Her letter,reads:
"Recently received a clipping of your collllll? 'Peeps' about
Gen. Samuel Holcomb and was interested m 1t as I have an

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Nine ·
southern Ohio counties have been
recommended for federal Small
Business Admini stration Disaster
Loans by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
.
Ohio River floodingJrom Feb. 22 to
- March 7 resulted in extensive damage
to many bomes and businesses.
In a letter to the SBA today, Rhodes
said uninsured losSes will amount to
more than 25 percent of estimated fair
replacement value.
He requested that loans be gra nted
Athens, Belmont, C.1ermont, Guernsey,
Hamilton, Lawrence, Meigs, Scioto and
Washington counties.

Some three or four years later he was released by treaty and
returned to his home in Virginia, married, and migrated to a
spot in Galllii County, Ohio, wherehe lived out his life.
At a Ewing reunion in 1905 a collection was taken for the
purpose of erecting .a monument at the grave
of Indian John Ewtnl!. which was umnarked. and a tomahawk
appr.opriately engraved in the top of the monument.
.·
Gen. Samuel!lolcomb, Sarah Ewing Holcomb, "?d Indian
John Ewing.areall buried ,in the old Glen Cemetery m Vinton .
'The cemetery is now in a deplorable condition or was when I
saw it last in 1977. Sarah's tombstOne had fallen over and a
corner broken· off. One can barely make out Gen. Samuel
Holcomb's nameon his tombstone.~~

ESTATE AUCTION
TWO DAYS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MARCH 23 and 24, 1979
10:00 A.M.
The personal"properrv of the late Norma .E. Wilson of
Pomeroy, will be sold at the Meigs Co . Fatr_grounds on
Slate Route JJ iust north of Pomeroy, Oh1o.
"ANT IQUES OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Oval door china c loset , child's wicker rocker , pie safe,
r ound oak table, SleQged tabl es, wicker stands, chairs
and rockers, roll -top desk , wood &amp; meta-l ice bo xes,
car nival &amp; depression dishes , small glass basket,
mante l, buffet. trunks, iron bed s, dresser, 3 glass door
cupboards, spinning wheel, stands, dolls, wood .baby
bed, rockers, hall trees, wicker rocker and flower
stand. Iron banks , marble fop dresser , wood beds .
dishes, quilts, iron kettl es, cha irs, radio, record player ,
ail lights, flat iron and many items too· numer ous t o
·
mention.

"COINS"

Buick

See Bob Brickles, Gene
Johnson, Harland (Woody)
Wood, or Greg Smith at
the Sign of Quality New
and Used

Pontiac

1979 .GRAND PRIX DEMO
Low miles, balance of factory
warranty . Save Big, 3300 miles.

Fin ished in Mayi'ln red with wh ite
bucket seats. T hi s Trans Am has it
all. Ai r condit ioni ng, cru ise control ,
tilt wheel, AM·FM 8 track. Rall ye II
wheels and raised w hite lett er tires.
Th is new Bonnev ille tr ade is a local ·
ly owned automob ile. Only 4, 197 low,
low miles.
NOW

1978 OLDS ·CUTlASS .
lh is stunmng '.nTer rr'ledittte has it'
all . Beautiful Saffron exterior with a
buckSk in · landau top and matching
60·40 sea ting . Equ ipped witt1 llir con ·
dition ing, power window5, power
door loc ks, tilt wheel, cr uise c ontrol ,
AM· FM cassette. stereo syste m, and
chrome st y led wheels.

'6295

1977 OLDS 98 REGENCY 4 DR
Platinum finish w1th matching vinyl
roof and black velour 60·40 sea ts.
Full power incl udes windows, door
locks, sea t and tr i. band el ectric
antenna . AM-FM stereo with factory
installed Citizens Band Radio. New
8uic!&lt;- Trade .

Priced to Sell

'6295

1976 VEGA STA. WAGON
3 speed trans., burgundy , 4 ql. Gas
saver .

4 dr . family
automobile is extra dean inside and
out. Arctic white finish with air
conditioning. power steering, power
brakes, AM radio and radial t ires.
full

sized

THIS SPACE RESERVm
FOR YOUR

LATE MODEL TRADE IN.
48 MONlH FINANCING
SOUTHERN OHIO'S

NEW!

4 DR.

DEI!('O SPECIAL

.

'

T hi' ic.. inlt'rrnf'diilr&lt;' s•·•1.m , Nr1V1tlus
IJillf' (llJ ts irlc wi th contri'lS1i n9 hluf'

-10 in t&lt;'rior . Loe1rlccl w!t h lull
pawN l ikf"' s ett t ~. door locks , win
dow ~ p l u ~ ti lt wl1('f"' l, rrulsf' ro nt ro l
r1 0 CI r hrom f' sty l0r1 Whi'P IS. Onl y

flO

LJ.

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
The G .M . success car~ F ini shed in
plat inum wi th b lnc k 60 ·40 vinyl in ·
ter ior and a matching padded lan·
dau top . Air cond it ioned, til t wh ee l.
radio, and Ra lly e I I wheels. See it

Rallye wheels, fini shed in Firet~orn
,paint wit h a vinyl top. 38,_138 miles,
Expect the best .

'4395

'4195

1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD DUSTER

1974 OPEL TUDOR
E;.ccept iona lly ni ce,

miles,

&lt;~9,000

.

I

n,1 r r hrnw11 " " l l ' t i ll! ·:J 1!h .• . ''1n
. ,.,,nl'p'/ top ,, net cus tom ~ fl("lrf , v1 ny!
-4

speed. landau top . Check this today .

in lr•rior

F Quippf'd

with

:nH

V8

('n flinf', ,l ulomflti r tr,,nsm is sinn ;m rl
nnwN strrri n ~1. Nrw tir0s &amp; sllork f&gt; .

Only .40,000 miles. Local trade.

'1695
~

.

IDN PICKUP

Cross
Your Heart:

fl . r1" mi t... .,

1976 MONTE CARLO

Cruise con trol, P. windows, door

.

2295

Real gas saver, small V·6 engine,
factory ai r , rear window defroster .
Dark m etallic. blue. Less than 20,000
mil es. E~Cceptiona lly ·ni ce. ·

'5495

1976 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

1972 CHEV.

1

Ford ...

'5995

now .

LARGEST SELECTION .

'3295

This car is one of the cleanest, best
ca red for autos on the market . Four
.door sedan, air, AM· FM , new
premium tires. One local owner . E)( ·
pec1 quality.

1958

Ca sh
lunch
Pos1ttve I. D .
Case No. 22549
Dorinda Nordei- Administrator
D. Smith
·J . Carnahan .
T. Donohue
949-2033
949-2708
742-J04a
" Not res ponsibl e f or accidents or loss of prope_
r ty."
Auctioneer's Note : This estate dates ba ck to Civil War
vete ran and is the contents Jr om 5 houses which have
been moved to the fairgrounds, so there will be enough
room to have sale. Plan on l!ftending each day as small
and large ite ms will be m ixe d each day. Sa le wi ll be
under root.

•2395
1971 FORD LT.D. SEDAN

Seamless
Undercup
Support Panel Bras
Our newest Playtex Cross
Your Heart bra gives you
support plus smoothness.
Playtex has combined
undercup support panels for
uplift and better fit with smooth
seamless cups and smooth
new s!raps. h's the smooth
new.way to cross over to a
better figure!
/Cross over to • better figure'
now and get •

$2. CASH
00

REFUND
from Pleyttx I ./

(OIIer ..,... April

Good solid truck . Runs good,
au'tomatic . tran smi ssion. Worth
more.
1

1595

A super sharp older mode l. You
would · be proud to have this one
parked in your driveway .

'1295

BUICK·
PONTIAC
Phone 446-2282

Gallipolis

.

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ao. 1m. Proof ot

purct.M rwqulted.

Ntund

por cuatOmor.llllop tn - , lor 11 lite
deiiNol

COMMUNITY Q.UB
AWARD SPONSOR
ELBERFELD$
IN _
POMEROY

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

at y

VOL. NO. XXIX .NO. 235

autonomy in the occupied West !lank of the Jordan River and
the Gaza Strip. The negotiations are to start one month after
the treaty is signed .
Begin met NRP leaders Sunday to work out a deal to keep
the religious party in line and avoid a confrontation in the
coalition government. Details of the meeting were not
released.
·
The NRP has three ministers In the 17-member Cabinet and
12 seats in the 120-seat Parliament, or Knesset. The Ha~retz
newsp~per predicts the treaty package will win 100 votes in the
Knesset.
The date for sigping - pla!Uled for Washington - is not
likely to be announced until after the Knesset votes.
The Saudi royal family and Jordan 's King Hussein still de mand a "comprehensive peace" that would end Israeli

en tine

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 19, 1979

15 CENTS

.....-·Nationwise----.
Munler-suicide ruling given
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - The Butler County
coroner has ruled tl)at the shooting deaths of an
Overpeck couple fomd Friday in their home were a
murder-suicide. Dr. Garret J. Boone said results of an
. a~topsy indicate the woman, Mozelle F. Faulkner, 62,
died of two gunshot wounds to the arm and chest. Her
husband , James B. Faulkner, lj8, died of a gunshot
wound to the head, Boone said.
The coroner said he believes the hQsband shot his
wife and then turned the gun on hirilself. Sheriff's
detectives said the bodies were found in the bathroom
by the couple's son, 17-year-old John Stephen
Faulkner, when he returned home from school.

·Peace talk proposal offered
TOKYO (AP) ~ China proposed today that
Vielllam open peace talks with it March 28, five days
after the date proposed by Vietnam, to restore normal
·relations after their four-week border war, China's
official Xinhua Hsinhua news agency reported.
·
Xinhua said the Chinese Foreign Ministry sent a .
note to the Vietnamese Foreign Ministry proposing
that vice foreign ministers from each government
meet on a rotating basis in Hanoi and Peking.

5o applicants scteened
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - More tllan 50 applicants
by the Stark County Board of
Education in . a search for a county school
superintendent. A decision is expected by June 1, said
Dale Campbell, president of the hoard .
The appolntement of Olyn Boyle, who served as
county director of guidance, pupil perso!Ulel and data
processing services; as Interim superintendent
'"tplirked strong protests from·· the Perry, ~ack~n and
Fairless schOol boards, which felt the mterun slot
should have gone to Assistant Superintendent Harold
Hall.

are being screened

Moonies file court action

• Retail List S8068

'1895

economv here.

Slubebaker.

Playtex®

bucket seats. Sharp .

Finished in desert gold with maF
ching v inyl interior . This wagon is
equipped with an economical Slant 6
engine, automat ic transmission,
power st eering ,\ AM radio, and luggage r ack . Plenty of room It

1950

See this beautiful auto today .

locks. AM-FM-tape , landau top,

1976 DODGE ASPEN
STATIONWAiiON

Plymouth,

1978 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR

4 DR
This

"CARS"
1934

Platinum C)(ter ior wi1h bea utiful
crtrmin e clo th interior . Loaded with
op tions like air conditio ning , power
windows. power door loc ks, cruise
control, t ilt wheel , AM ·FM a trrtck
stereo. Rallye wheels. This stunning
coupe is super shar p in 5ide and out.

Only 17,080 mdes.

1978 TRANS AM

whether Deputy Sheriff
Forr est Powell 's actions
,
CHILLI COTHE, Ohio (AP ) were justified.
If an indictment is returA grand . jury ' will In·
vestigate the recent shooting ned, Powell could ask a petit
. death of a 17-year-old youth jury to consider the charges.
The
youth,
Ernie
under custody of a sheriff's
deputy,
Ross
County Alexander, all ege dly was
Prosecutor Richard Ward shot by Powell as Alexander
and another youth to whom
said Friday.
Ward sa id the grand jury he was handcuffed tried to
·
will determine · April 2 flee.
PROBE COMING

Si t&lt;Jei'· doiiar and qu~rters, 11:1 dime~, 3c piece,_ gold
pieces , lead penni~s. buffalo ni ckel s, World War II
tokehs, and silver certificate dollar bills.

Publication of the treaty text by the Israelis was expected
later today.
Over the weekend U.S. presidential envoy Zbigniew Brzezinski failed to win Saudi Arabian and Jordanian support for
the Egyptian-Israeli treaty, but he said he is "more convinced
than ever" the pact wlll be the "beginning and cornerstone" of
peace in file Middle East.
The Israeli Cabinet session was largely a formality, since
each article and clause of the treaty was studied and approved
during a half.year of negotiations capped last week by
President Garter's Mideast trip.
.
The National Religious Party- file second-largest in Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem Begin's governing cooalition - ha s
demanded fllat the Cabinet agree to affirm broad principles
protecting Israeli interests in negotiations for Palestinian

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Unification Church
preparecl to launch a legal attack against the city of
Niles today in the start of a federal court trial over Its
allegation that the Trumbull County community has
prevented church members from soliciting funds.
NOes Is the first of nine Ohio communities being sued
b)l the church to ~e to trial. U. S. District Judge
William K. Thomas 1s scheduled to preside over the
non-jury proceeding.
Cleveland lawyer Eugene S. Bayer, representing
the church fomded by the Rev. Sm Myung Moon said
Nlles has denied religious freedom by refusing to 'issue
permits for solicitation to the church .

I.Pgislation back to House.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Legislation prohibiting
employers from discriminating against pregnant
wcinen goes back to a House committee Tuesday so an
abortion amendment can be added without provoking a
Door fight.
"My fear has been · thai people would
misunderstand what the amendment does," said Rep.
Michael Stlnziano,' D.Columbus, the bill's sponsor.
Stirizlano said he does not want his legislation to die In
a confusing floor debate.

Wreck victim
hospitalized
Darrel Dlx Hanning, 29, Rt. ·
2, Albany, was admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
In
guarded
condition
following a single car ac·
elden! at 10 p.m. Saturday on
SR 692 nine tenths of a mile
east of 6a4 at Pagetown.
According to Sheriff James
J . Proffitt, Hanning was
,traveling east on 692 when his
vehicle ran off the highway,
crossed a ditch and struck an
embankment.
H&amp;nning will be cited for
~kless operation, operating
a vehicle without license
plates and operating a motor
vehicle without · having a
valtd operator's ltcense.
There was heaVY property
damage.
· At 9:51 . p.m. Saturday,
Thomas Lee, 26, Rt. 2, .
Albany, was traveling east on"
Union Ave. wben hi• vehicle
developed steering problems.
The Lee vehicle ran off the
right side of the road and
struck oo_wer pole.

a

Lee was cited to Meigs
County court for operatlilg a
motor vehicle while under
financial responsibility
s~nslon . The driver was
not injured. There was severe
damage.
A third accident In·
vestigated by the sheriff's
department occurred between 4 p.m. and midnight
Friday near the ·intersection
of SR 124 and 7.
Jerry Hubbard, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, reported he parked
his vehicle along '1'398 near
SR 7 and 124 at 4 p.m. and
rode to work with another
driver .
When he returned he
discovered that someone had
backed into the left door. A
tanker trailer was seen
backing In the area around
7:30 p.m. Friday and lt is
believed the tanker tru. k
bl!cked into the vhelcle due to
the height of the damage.
The Incident Is under In·
vestlgatlon.

STEEL GOING UP - Work continues at the site of
Meigs County's Multi-purpose building on ·Mulberry

SUPERIOR RATING
The Meigs High School
band received the highest
rating given a 'j l, "
Superior, Saturday when it
took part In the District
Concert Band Competllion
held at the Athens High
School. · Director of the
band Is Randy_Hunt. .

Otamher
speaker
named
Lois J . Rock, regional
preservation officer of the
Ohio Historic Preservation
office, Athens, will be the
guest speaker at the noon
luncheon. of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
Ms. Rock will discuss the
possibility
of placing
Pomeroy Senior High on the
National Historic Register .
A 50 percent grant may be
obtained if that action should
be taken.
Ms. Rock Is a native of
Ceiina and graduate of Miami
University, Oxford, Ohio with
a major In American History.
She served as assistant to
regional preservation officer
Mary Ann Brown at Western
Ohio Branch · Campus of
Wright State University,
Celina.
,
Prior to coming to Ohio
University, she served as
local records specialist for
the Ohio Historical Society
and covered a 19 county
region of northwest Ohio
based ollt of the center for
archival collections at
Bowling Green University.
She is with the department
of sociology and anthropology
at Ohio University.
The office ·of Southern Ohio
Regional
History Architecture PreservatiOn is
part of the Ohio regional
system of II archaeological
and 11, history • architecture
offices throughout the state.
· The region
Includes
Adams, Athens, Brown,
Clinton, Gallla, Highland,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Rj)ss, Scioto and
Vinton Counties. ·

Weather
Considerable
cloudiness
and continued mild tonight
and Tuesday with a chance of
showers tonight and showers
possible Tuesday. (.ow 40 to
45.

Heights . The $1,129,930 project will house a senior citizen
center, health department, mental health facilities and
other offices. Karr Construction is the general contractor

Merger .discussed by
Buckeye·Rural ·board
A spokesman for the Board
of Directors of the Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative,
Inc., annomced today the
board voted at its recent
meeting to explore the
possibility of merging The
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc., with the
South Central Power Com·
pany, whose headquarters

are in Lancast.er, Ohio. . , · service to Buckeye members
The spokesman stated that ·and enatile the Buckeye
advantages to !he members Rural Electric Cooperative,
of the Buckeye Rural Electric Inc. to provide service to its
Cooperative, Inc. in such a · members at a lower cost than
merger would be a stronger is presently possible.
system and would achieve a
The merger would result in
number of economi cs of better utilization of in·
scale.
ventory, eq~ i pm ent a,nd
The possible merger could personnel, th e spokesman
result in improvement of said.

14 die on Ohio highways
By The Associated Press
The death count on Ohio's
roadways over the St.
Patrick's Day weekend
closed at 14, according to the
state Highway Patrol.
Two persons were killed
Sunday.
The patrol counts traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday
until midnight Sunday .
The dead:
SUNDAY
HAMILTON-Glenn A. Barger, 35, of Dearborn Heights,
Mich., on a Butler County
road.
MANSFIELD - Larry E.
Stillion, 38, of Mansfield , in a
one-car accident on a
Mansfield city street.
SATURDAY
CLEVELAND-Robert J.
Corcoran, 27, of Strongsville,
when his motorcycle and · a
car collided on Ohio 82 in
Cuyahoga County.

FREMONT - Seetarama
Mattupalli, 31, of St. Louis, in
a one-car accident on the
Ohio Turnpike in Sandusky
County.
MEDINA - Andrew H.
Tochinsky, 15, of Medina, in a
onecar accident on a Medina
County road.
XENIA- Renee Cline, 8, of
Xenia, a passenger in one of
the cars involved in a two-vehicle accident on U.S. 68 in
Greene County.
LIMA - Lendell Foust, 25,
of · Delphos, in a one-car
accident on an Allen County
road.
CARROLLTON- David C.
Bray, 41, of Carrollton, in a
one-car accident on Ohio 43
in Carroli County.
CINCINNATI - Edwin P.
Brown Jr., 32, of Cincinnati,

in a one-car accident on a
Cincinnati city street.
TROY
Brian P.
Maggard, 19, of Tipp City, in
a one~ar accident on a ·
Miami County road.
TOLEDO - Conrad Stieb,
69, of Berkey, in a two-car
accident on U.S. 20 in Lucas
County.
BATAVIA - Jeff Ottaway,
10, of Batavia, a passenger in
a car involved in a two-vhicle
accident on Ohio 131 in
Clermont County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
CLEVELAND-John Burke.
18, of South Euclid, in a one·
car accident on a Cleveland

street.
CAMBRIDGE - Kev in
Larrick, 25, of Byesville, in a
two-car accident on Ohio 265
in Guernsey County.

occupation of all Arab land taken in 1967, including East Jerusalem, and would meet Arab demands for Palestinian self.
rule, officials in the capitals of the two countries said.
Brzezinski.- President Carter's national security chief, led a
U.S. delegation in weekend meetings with Saudi King Khaled
in Riyadh and Hussein In Amman. Then he Dew !o Cairo to tell
President Anwar Sadat about his talks.
Brzezinski said his talks with the two mon!![chs were "con- ·
structive and useful'' and he was "encouraged." He would not
elaborate, but there was speculation the Saudis indicated they
would not cut off their fmancial support of Egypt.
" We a~e more convinced than ever that the forthcoming
peace treaty between Egypt and Israel is both the beginning
and the cornerstone f&lt;r a comprehensive peace treaty in the
region," said Brzezinski.
Sadat had no comment.

President
top aides
confening
WASHINGTON (AP) packaged in a proposed
President Carter, facing the " Iranian Response Plan,IJ
prospect of dwindling U.S. oil designed to cope with the oil
supplies and rising prices, supply pinch caused by the
summoned his top energy and Iranian revolution .
·
economic advisers to a
The president and his aides
secluded ·meeting at Camp also were likely to grapple
David today.
with the conflict between his .
The session was expected pledge to let U.S. oil prices
. to ·consider mandatory rise to world market levels
lhennostat controls and a and his top-priority policy to
long list of other ideas fight inflation.
Administration
sources,
who asked not to be
iden\ified, have said Carter
SPECIAL SESSION
would probably reveal his
The Rio Grande Com· energy plans in a national
munlty College Board of
Trustees will bold a special televisio~ address sometime
meeting at7 p.m. March 21 this month.
By then, the Iran-caused oil
at the college board room.
shortage
may be felt at gasoPurpose Is to recooslder line stations
where restricted
rebidding of the floe arts
for
March are be·
allocations
center.
·
ginning to dwindle .
Energy Secretary James
R. Schlesinger says the
Ir anian shutdown, which
started in December and has
only recently begun to ease,
fnay cost the United States 2.5
percent of its oil, or 500,000
barrels a day . And he says
that could eventually rise to
Pomeroy firemen ex· 800,000 barrels a day .
tinguished three brush fires
The Unitea States has also
on Saturday.
promised· its partners in the
The fires were on Bear- International Energy Agency
wallow Ridge, State Route 7 to c ut oil consumption,
near the intersection of perhaps by . as much as I
Township Road 207, and on million barre ls daily by
the four lane highway near year's end.
The question facing Carter
Long Hollow.
At 6:41 p.m. Saturday the was how to do that without
emergency squad was called sho cking the nati on's
to Liberty Lane for Albert economy.
He also face s a May 31 end
Keeton who was taken to
to
congressionally imposed
Holzer Medical Center.
price ceilings on U.S.The
Middleport fire produced oil. On that date the
become
department answered a call ceilin gs
to Gravel Hill Road near discret ionary, left up to
Cheshire, at 2:55 p.m. Sunday decisions by the president.
Carter could simply let the
to extinguish a brush fire on
the Merrill Briggs property. controls die, allowing the
At 4:55 p.m. Sunday the average price· of oil ·in the
sq uad transported Mrs. United States to jump about
Sarah McCarty of Middleport $2 a barrel to match world
to Veterans Memorial prices ·_ an immediate
increase of about 5 cents a
Hospital.
Monday morning at 7:57, gallon if averaged over aU
the emergency squad took petroleum products.
Because of the inflationary
·Mrs. Calvin Lane from her
home on Rutland St. to Holzer impact of such a move, other
possibilities have been proMedical Center.
posed, including a two-stage
The Orange Township removal of price controls to
volunt eer fire department gradually raise U.S. prices to
was ca lled to a brush fire world levels by late 1981.
Althou g h
the
Saturday at 1:46 p.m. at the
administration
was
not
James A. Bernard property
the
formally
publis
hing
Bob Tripp reported.
Two acres burned before " Irani an respo nse "
the fire was extinguished. proposals, many have been
Ten firemen answered the discussed publicly .
call.
. . •"

Firefighters

battle area
brush fires

Guilty ple&amp;
given court
Cora See, Middleport,
charged with contributing to
the delinquency of minors
and receiving stolen property
has entered goUty pleas in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
She appeared before Judge
John C. Bacon on a bill of
.. Information.
Judge Bacon released her
on personal recognizance
pending a pre-sentence in·
vestigation by the Adult
Probation Officer.
' Mrs. See Is currently
confined to Meigs county jail ·
serving time she received on
the contributing charge.
The arrest was the result of
the breaking and entering ·of
the Dairy Isle, Middleport, on
March 9.
I~

WORKS ON SUP - Bob Jeffers operates a bulldozer
for Jefrers Coal and Excavating, Pomeroy, subcontractor for the lanri slip problem behind . Pomeroy
Rl•me.nlarv SChool and Gertrude Mitchell's ho~se on
Mulberrr Ave., Pomeroy. The work is beina flnancod

through federal lunas. The Ohio Division of Reclamation
and Soil Conservation Service and represent:~tives of Soil
Con8ervation Service have worked hard on the problem
caused by underground water pressure from a deep coal
mine .

I

�r
l•

Editorial ·
opinions
COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

Whose victory?
By DoaGnoff
All we know about Indochina at the moment Is what we
read in the papers, and as a consequence we're not at aU
sure who's winning the current game there or even who
may .still be In it
.•
The Chinese, reports from Peking Inform, have llnnounced that they are withdrawillg from Vleinam.
But dispatches from Hanoi oay it lan't so. The Cbln.e se
~tre still in occupation of border area11 and VIetnamese
forces continue to do battle with them.
That does not, however, prevent Hanoi's ·Soviet allies
from preferring the Chinese version of eventa, playing up
the reported withdrawal as a victory tor themselves.
The confusion a11d apparent croa-purpo~ea are par for
the course nf a confilct that, aa it hu developed to date, ill
one of the strangest of the postwar period, one of pulled
PIU1chea on the parts of all parties involved.
It the Chinese really are withdrawing, they would appear
to be doing something alo11g the line of what was once
suggested aa an American option in the next most recent
Vietnamese conmct - simply to declare victory unilaterally and pull out. While that might have gotten U.S. ~
home, it would have left the field and all of Vietnam to
Communist forces, merely somewhat earlier than was
eventually to be the case anyway.
The Chlneae now seem to be in a somewhat almUar
poaltlon. , They may have slapped down the cheeky
Vietnamese and thereby made a point concerning the peril
of talldng back to major power. But they have had no
discernible effect upon the Vietnamese occupation of
Cambodlal the major event in the chain of provocations
leading to their own Invasion. The Vietnamese may be
having their own troubles as Invaders and occupiers, but
these are not of Chinese arranging and there are no lligns
that Hanoi ill contemplating a withdrawal from Cambo&lt;lla
soon, lf ever.
Thill In itself may be sufficient justification for the Soviet
declaration of victory from the Moscow point of view. The
slat1111 Is again almost quo and the Soviets have had to
commit only suppliea, not troops, In fulfillment of their
treaty ties with the VIetnamese.
·
The Sovieta stand to gain In another respect. The
prospects for a carter-Brezhnev summit, In which the
Kremlin ill very much lnterelled, are COIU!Iderably
Improved to the eztent . that prospects nf active Soviet
Involvement In the Chlnese-Vletnameae quarrel are Jeaaened. Washington, seeking a balance In Ita relationships
with MQIICOW and Peking and already embarrassed by the
Chlneae-Vletnameae confilct following ao rapidly upon
Teng Hala~lng'a highly publicized American vlalt, would
have little enth1111laam for a summit If Soviet troops were In
action or likelY Imminently to be so.
The Indochinese game Ia far from over. A period of
continulllg tension In the area - II baa been a Ioiii! time
since It has known anything else --'- ia to be expected. There
may be further Chineae-VIetnameae clashes and a direct
Chinese-Soviet confrontation ill not yet precluded. At the
very least, the Sovieta will carry on the propaganda war,
picturing China as an espanslonlat power threatening all.
·
·
ita neighbors.
Under the confusing and uncertain clrcwnstancea,
figuring out the "1'0re Ia, as a king o! neighboring Slam was
fond of saying, a puzzlement.
But there ill at least one thing we can be perfectly sure
about. The United States has not' been actively involved
thla time around. That may disqualify It from joining In the
claims of victory hut it ill certainly worth points.

a

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Advice on skin problems
DEAR DR LAMB

~

As

conunon as thia problem

may sound , I have yet to get
any helpful advice for It , and
I would appreciate any you
may have.

My daughter Is 12 now and
is moving into teenage skin

· problems . I have tried several of the skin products on
the market advertised for
teenage problems but nothing seems to work. My
daughter washes her hair
ever y day since most of her
proble m is in her forehead
and around her hairline . She
also uses alcohol after washing he r face . Is there anything she can do to help keep
blemishes under control un·
til she outgrows this prob·
!em ?
DEAR READER - As
you know, acne or pimples
and such related conditions
corrunonly occur at puberty
in both boys and girls. It is
severe more frequently in
boy s than it ill In girls, but
both sexes have their problems. It's directly related to
the active sex glands and the
!ormation of sex hormones
beginning at that stage of
life .
The skin undergoes a lot of
changes. Uterally , parts of
It get a lot greasier because
the oily skin glands start
secreting a lot of oil . Those
oil glands are really sex
glands. And you're right; the
forehead area is a favorite
location.
It sounds to me like you're
doing about as much aa you
can expect to accomplish on
your own. For additional
help, you will probably have
to lake your daughter to a
doctor. There are basically
three approaches to solving
these problems, all of which
may be necessary In dlffl·
cult cases.
The first Is to try to prevent the oily skin glands
from secreting so much oil

THE U.S. AND YOU

COMGRf\TUL-ATIONc;, 'SONI HE'f\R YOU PMSEP OUR
rH'(SICAL WITH FL'l'ING
COU&gt;RS-CLOSE TO 100~ -

William Steif

Working for Uncle Sam

RIGHT,PQC?

By Wllllam Steil
Almost everyOII\e knows that the federal government
Is one of the nation's biggest job market..
But a lot of folks don't know how to get a federaljpb,
and that the federal job market Ia very tight. ·
Ba~k In the 19608, when there was far more federal
hiring, the old U.S. Civil Service Commlsalon, now
known as the u.s. Office of Personnel Management,
started 113 federal job Information centers. Most were
attached to area civil service offices where there were
large concentrations of federal employees. There was a
toll-free phone service so that you could, for example,
phone at no cost from Alton, Ill. , and ask the job
Information center in Chicago how to go about getting a
job.
Now the Carter adminlatratlon's preaure for federal
economy is sounding a death knell for these toll-free
phone calla.
.
The reason iii evident In two simple statlatlcs ; the job
centers handled 12 million Inquiries last year but
federal agencies hired only 153 ,000 persons.
So Director Alan K. Campbell of the Office of
Personnel Management has decided to save $1.1 mllllon
a year by eliminating the free phone calla and more
millions by eliminating nearly all the job lnfonnatlon.
centers·that aren't tied to OPM's area offlc...
That doean't mean there won't continue to be job
Information centers; there wUI still be 88, at least one in
every state.
But it means, In the words of OPM officials, that the
federal government will stop "building false expectations" of jobs. It does not mean that all federal hiring
will stop.
WASHINGTON (AP) list of llBmes and addreases to reserves are 500,000 soldiers return to the draft.
Last October the federal government had 2.8 mllllon
and
if
the he used for military callups ln short of their authorized
When
civlllan employees, Including the poatal service, ConNevertheless, the draft is
greu and the judiciary. About 2.1 mllllon have come to
emerging as a ·poJltical issue
strength.
administration decides that a case of war .
federal agenclea through the civil service s)'stem. OPM
Rogers' civilian boss , - one Carter hardly needs In
return to the mllltary draft is
Carter has asked Congress
expects the "body count" In those agencies wll1 lllay
necessary, the White House for a $5 million appropriation Secretary of the Army the year before he seeks his
about the oame In the next year to 18 montha.
will propose a system . of to improve the current · Clifford
L. Alexander , second term.
But, obviously, aome federal emloyeea will retire,
universal service for young standby Selective Service disagreed, saying there is no
Public opinion is closely disome will quit, some will be disabled or die. So there
men , without student de- System.
need for any draft now. vided on the question. An
WILL be job openings.
.
ferments or other escape
The pressure for a reVIved . Alexander said It would he Associated Press-NBC News ·
Under l.a st year's Civil Service Reform Act, federal
draft was increased Tuesday "unnecessary, unfair and Poll showed 49 percent of the
routes.
agencies were required to notify alate employment
That \s President Carter's when Gen . Bernard W. counterproductive to the !jest people questioned support
offices (In almost every small, medium-sized and large
city) of federal job Dpenings In their areas. Some
attitude, shaped in part by ·Rogers," the Army chief ol interests of the Army ;•
reinstatement of the draft, 43
federal agenclea already had been doing this but many
personal experie11ce. His son, · staff, urged Congress to
There are bills in the House percent oppose It and the rest
hadn't.
•
Jack ,.. gave up a student reinstate It this year. Rogers andSenatetogotoa reglstra- weren't sure.
Now the notification will become much wider. OPM
Americans aged 18 to 28,
deferment to volunteer for proposed that up to 100,000 lion system, so as to Identify
says that lt'a puahi11g the notification program to the
men he drafted under a prospects for Induction In an those most likely affected
military service.
state job officea "as soon as poallible."
.
"He did so because he lottery system to spend six emergency . There also Is a directly, opposed the draft 62
But before you start finding out what federaljobl are
didn 't think it was right for months in military training House bill to set up a limited percent to 33 percent.
available, you've· got to get on a federal job register, a
Those young Americans
him to avoid the draft simply and six years In the Army's draft.
,
.
llat of all those qualltted for a certain kind of work.
because he had the money ready reserve.
None of the proposals is are potential voters in 1980. If
That means you have to take a teat. Some are actual
and
the
educational .
testa - typing speed and accuracy, for eltlllllple - while
Rogers said the volunteer likely to get very far unless they are also potential
other testa, In civil service jargon, really are compile'
background to stay in Army is falling short of Its re- the administration . decides draftees, they could he a
college," Carter recalled. crulting goals, and the · that the Pentagon needs a troublesome bloc for carter. tiona of education and experience.
Thill procedure takes time, anywhere from four to
"So he w~nt to Vietnam."
eight weeks. But It's a neceallity. In some caaea, OPM
There is no such proposal in ~
will try hard to reach YOU, aaaumlng you have the
the works now . Civilian
special skills that OPM thinks will be needed soon. In
leaders of the military insist
other cases, you may discover you're one of 100 persona
there is no need to revive the
qualified for a single job opening. And In stlll other
draft that lapsed five years
cases, the job regilltera may be closed, with no more
'
applicanta being accepted because there are too many
ago.
By TOM GIUEM
" I'm going to try to get the
" I feel I have an open qualified people.
carter has said that any
Associated Press Writer bill out of subcommittee and mind ," he said.
The 68 remal!llng job information centers lire the best
new registration · system
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) places
to go for detalla on how and where you take the
to
the
full
committee
in
However,
Cox
said
he
back
should include women as well
The task of molding three tD four weeks," James thinks legislation abolishing testa, and on what job register you ahould try to get on.
as men. But he also said that
legislation dealing with the said. "I plan for the full com- the clause which passed the You can find them llated In your phone book under "U.S.
he does not foresee the
.
controversial fuel cost mittee to consider it another • Senate last year did not Government."
induction of women or a
If you don't happen to be in a place with a job
adjustment clause will rest three or four _weeks:"
receive enough study.
.
return to the draft.
Information center, go to your local lllate employment
primarll~
with subcomCox, who will chall' a sub" I have . no intentions of office. OPM aaya It Ia going to "rely heavily" on the
Registration would at least
mittees of&lt;the House and Sen- committee to look at Senate taking a long time on the bill
give what is now a skeleton
state offlcea to make sure the Information Ia passed
ate .
bills relating to fuel clauses, just to slo~ It up " Cox said. along. And If your lllate office doean't have the detalla
Sel~tive Service system a
The chairmen of both the said his committee staffers " My objective ~ to get a you want, aak Ita employees to get them for you. That's
SellBte Public Utilities Com· are already gathering data . responsible
piece
of one of the thinga they're supposed to do.
mittee and the Senate Energy
" We're negotiating with the legislation that we can hang
and
Public
Utilities Department of Econ&lt;mies at our hats on. "
THE DAILY SENnNEL
Committee
plan
to
take
long Ohio State University to sort
(USPS 115-tiG)
The full Se!l&lt;ite committee
looks at a series ol bills that of give us a more objective - plans to hear opponent testipertain to the · clause, which analysls than we will receive mony on Wednesday night
allows
utilities
to from the public utilities com- · before
assigning ·
a
DEVOTED TO TilE
automatically
pass
fuel
costs
INTEREST OF
mission and the consumers' subcommittee to conducf the
-on to consumers.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
.
further hearings, Cox said.
counsel," Cox said.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
"! think there is significant
The Senate chairman said
Clly Edllor
feeling that something is he has no definite personal
DAVJI)Bt.JSKQU(
Adnrttatq Ma111cer
going to have to he done with feeling concerning the· fuel
Publbhed dally except Saturday
the fuel clause," said Rep. clause.
· PEKING ( AP) - French designer Pierre ~din has arToday iD Hlstery .
by The Otdo Valley Publishing
Company-MulUJnedja, Inc;,
111
Ronald H. James, DBy The Associated Preas · rived In Peking with what he calls "the Superman-Peking roof
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769.
Proctorville, the House
· ·
·
Today is Moo day, March look."
BtuitleP Offk-e Phone 992- 2156.
chairman and sponsor of a
Editorial Phooe !1!12-21;7.
19, the 78th day of 1979. There
On his third visit to China, Cardin is scheduled for three
to prohibit the ·clause.
LAFF ·A- DAY
are 287 days left in the year. shows to let the Chinese know what he has in mind for their
p,=·.u~: pootas• paid •t billBoth
James' committee,
National advert.l!lnM represenToday's highlight In export line.
1
and
its
Senate
counterpart
~~~fd !:.~reve~~6ft~44 1 fJ.0
history;
Cardin said during his last visit that he was bnpreased with
ID~ (S(!,~~OOl!:ll
chaired by . Sen. Kenneth R. " WE R£MO\IE SPOTS'
Subscription rates : Delivered by
On this date in 1920, the u. the ooaring roofs nf Peking's temples. He put that .type of .
carrierwhen~ avaiUable75cenll!lper
Cox, D-Barberton, have held
S. Senate · rejected the design together with the craze for Superman and the result is
week. Ry Motor Route where ca rrier
several hearings on fuel
Versailles Treaty which something "large and soaring."
. .
service not available, One month,
clause legislation.
$3.25. By mail in OIUo and W. Va.,
provided lor a League of
A member of Cardin's party wore one of his male creations ·
One Year, $27.50; Six months,
· James has appointed
Nations. The action set the a jacket with exaggerated shoulders that seemed to take off
$14.50; Three months, ss.so:
himself
chairman of a
tone for a decade ol
It resembled more the zoot suit craze of the 1930s than
Elsewhere
$32.00
year; St1 months
$17.00; Three months, $9.00.
subcommittee that will begin
American
laolationism.
·
Superman
or Peking's famous roofs.
·
Subscription price Includes Sunday
studying the bills in more
On this date :
Cardin brought four inale and four female models for the
Times-SentineL
depth this week.·
In 1628, the English founded shows, set for. tonight and Tuesday. He said he also will use
!,;'---''"·
three Chinese models to illustrate smaller Chinese sizes.. .
Massachusetts c 0lony.
In
1711, Russia and Turkey
1
"What have you done to my
declared wa~ against each . NEW YORK (AP) - Former first lady Betty Ford, who "
polka-dot dress?"
other.
overcame dependence- on tranqulllzers and alcohol, says
r----.:...-~· ------------~
doclnrs are too quick to prescribe pllla for women under stress .
"Doctors have a strong tende11cy to overmedi~te women ,; ·"
she said in an Interview with People magazine. "It 18 ea~y· ~
when a woman suffering from stress comes Into their office to •.
.
.
•lmE SINS 1: SOOOM
write a p~ription for a tranquilizer."
.•
Sodom and Gomorrah were in a sinful state
~~ently,
_w hat .18 bothering the woman 18 boredom or ~
The love of God was out of sight
alienation, she said. But 110mellmes the doctor •'is l'llll!llng an , :
They were led by their fleshly luata and loved not the right
' hour and a half behind with his patienta and It's a lot easier for ,:
they were a sick sinful fright.
him to say; · 'Take this prescription - It'll make you feel •
beUer.'
...~
Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed by the Lord tor they md
:
"
I
think
anY.
w&lt;menor
me11
-who
are
oo
prescription
;
.:
not follow After His Word.
· ·
drugs should sit down with their doctpr alld discuss exactly :·•
They chose whom they would follow and suffered for It by
what those drugs are for, what they're doing to them and what ••
dying the death
·
the side effects are," she said.
·
Led away from God's Holy Spirit.

Student defennents would ·he out

'Ohio Perspective'

Names •••

in the news

HEALTH
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

Den Talk

dry

- to literally
up the
skin. Of course, simply
washLng the Oil away and
usin@: alcohol ls 8 help, but
8 0 met i me 9 t h 8 t , 5 no t
enough.
·
'
The second approach is to
improve the proper drainage 0f these oily glands so
they won't cause acne and
skin blemlahes. This may
involve using a skin peeling
agenl which literally peels
off the surface of the skin.
and tn so doing opens the
drainage of the oily glands.
A good example here Is
v'ltamin A acid, a prescription item which can be ~p­
plied to the surface of the
skin.
By the way, it's not the
same thing as the vitamin A

you swalloW, so I 'm · cere

..

spao:e.

u;

-------.J

w
e
r
r
y
s
8
0 rId

3,300.
Once abundant in Ohio, the heaver was eliminated by 1830
after nearly 200 years of unregulated trapping. The beaver
population has steadily increased in Ohio since the mid-20th
ceutyr.
·
Today, more than 10,000 beaver can he found in the north·
eastern and souttJeastern watersheds.
The beaver sometimes get into trouble for doing what
corlles naturally to them. Besides man, heaver are perhaps the
ouly manunals capable of altering their environnient to suit
their own needs .
In some locations heaver dams have caused flooding of
farm fields, roadways, and timber. With proper harvest
management, the beaver should continue to provide an annual
fur crop while maintaining optimum population levels.
Save this year's hunting and trapping lkense. You must
exhibit a previous hunting license, from any state, to purchase
a 1979 license without taking a ·hunter safety course . in 1979,.
first-tbne hunting license buyers wiU he required to lake a
hunter salety course.
First-time trappers must take both the hunter safety
course and a trapper education course.

. s;.1an

t
_ ha

I

The Daily Sentinel

By Greg Bailey
The Fighting Ironton
Tigresses placed four of five
starters in double figures
Saturday ni ght defeating
Meigs, .54-42 to capture the
Class AA District cage
crown.
Ironton now participates in
regional competition.
Althou,gh
t he
SEOAL
regular season cage champions could never quite pull
away from Meigs, they
started strong and built an
early lead.
Jeanette Vinson, Ironton's
leading scorer for the. af. ternoon with 13 points, sank a
free throw with six minutes to
go in the first period to give
her team a 1-0 lead they never
relinquish ed .
By the end of that first
period, Ironton was in front
13-8, but by halftime Meigs
was still hanging on , 28-19.

In the first live minutes of points to get some breathing hii 19 of 44 shots for 43 perthe third quarter, Meigs room, 4&amp;-34.
cent, but that couldn't
seemed to be letting the game
In the next four minutes, compare to 60 percent .
get out of hand as Ironton Meigs committed six costly
The Marauders canned 4 of
outscored the Marauders 10- turnovers, with Ironton 6 charity tosses, but they
.4, giving the Tigresses a 38-23 turning four of ~hem into committed 20 big turnovers.
lead with just 2:33 to go In the baskets.
Dodie Cllapman and Wilson
quarter.
Riggs and Terri Wilson led the rebounders with eight
But then Meigs went on a kept the Marauders within caroms apiece. Wilson took
scoring binge, mainly behind ten points. Meigs was never scoring honors for the afthe key _shooting of Andrea really out of the game until ternoon with her 14 points,
Riggs, and by 'the quarter 's 2:20 to go when Ironton went and Riggs had one of ner best
end had narrowed th~ gap to up by 14.
days with 12 points. Tonia
4!l-30. ln that 7-2 scoring span,
The winning factor came as Ash added eight:
Riggs hit for six points to Ironton's shootin g perlroolon IS4l ~ Jayna Riggs
bring her team back within centage . The winners hit an 6·0-t2; Beth Rist 5-0·12 ; Lyon
range .
uncanny ~ of 42 shots for 60 Tnplett 4-3·11 ; Susie FitzMeigs picked up the fourth percent. They hit 4 of 8 at the patrick 4-0-8 ; Jeanette Vinson ·
Totals 25-4-54 .
quarter just like they ended foul line, and led th e 6·1-13;
Meigs (42) Dody
the third, and before the rebounding with 28 caroms. Chapman 1-0·2; Kris An Tigresses knew what . was
Besides Vinson's 13 points, derson 0·0-0 ; Sonia Ash J .Q.6 ;
happening, Meigs was right Jayna Riggs and Bet~ Rist And rea Riggs 4·4-1 2; Terri
Wil son 7-0-14 ; Toni a Ash 4-0 ·
back In the ball game within each added 12 and Lynn 8;
April King 0-0·0. Totals 19·
eight points, 42-34.
Triplett had 11.
4 -42.
Quarters:
Ironton then called a time · Meigs had a respectable
8 l9 30 42
out and hit . the next four night from the fioor as they M
I
l3 28 40 54

Today's

Sports World

OOPS, A CHOPPER ~ Dodie Chapman of Meigs is
apparently fouled by Susie Fitzpatrick (30) Ironton
during action in Saturday's final of the Class AA District
Tournament at Athens. Ironton won the rontest to ·
advance to reg ional competition.

By WID Grimsley
AP Correspondent
MIAMI (AP) - "The black .ball player might as well face
it," said a disillusioned Frank Robinson. "When he gets
through doing his thing on the field , he better look elsewherethere is no pther place for him in basebalL
"It's sad, but it's Q-ue/'
The words are an echo out of the past, from the lips of another man named Robinson - the late Jackie Robinson (no kin) .
A couple of decades ago, Jackie was ratUing' the game 's
foundations with the same explosive rhetoric .
It didn't change things then. It isn't changing them now.
Although most of the country's old racial barriers, in society
as well as sports, have been erased -largely due to Branch
Rickey's bold move of signing Jackie Robinson to a Brooklyn
contract in 1947- one bastion remains unsullied.
That, argues Frank Robinson, is that the black man was
created to toil -whether it be ,!lil the river levees or on the
.
athletic,field - and never to direct or lead.
• " Why don 't we have black managers and black general
managers in baseball ?" he asked rhetorically. " Why aren' t
more retired black stars In radio and TV? Why· aren't there
more black quarterbacks in pro football?
"I'll tell you. It's a throwback to the slave days. There is a
misconception that blacks don't have the intelligence to he
leaders. They have muscles and speed and natural skills When
these skills weilr out, they have nothlngj,lse to offer.
"So people think. That is what discourages me. "
Robinson, still a lean, sleek athlete at age 43, was a standout
player for the Cincinnati Reds for 10 years belpre joining the
Baltimore Orioles, where he played on four World Series
teams,
He iS a certainty for the Hall of Fame. He was named to the
all-star team 11 times. He is the only player to win the Most
yaluable Player award in both leagues .
He became the first black man to manage in the majors.
Late in 1974, he was traded by Baltimore to the Cleveland Indians and named to mallBge the tea!D. starting in 1975. He held
the post until June 18, 1977, when he was released. He had a
fling last year at managing Rochester In triple-A Internatioll81
League but was not rehired after a losing season. He rejoined
the Orioles. as a coach .
"!don't Intend to he a coach the rest of my life," he said. "If
nothing comes my way, I must look somewhere else. "
"Robby got a bad deal at both Cleveland and Rochester, " an
Oriole spokesman said. "He did a good job at both places with
lousy materiaL I thL~k the trouble was a clash of person-

Ohio Boys High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press
Slate Semifinal

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432
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Pairings
At Ohio State ' s
St. John Arena

CLASSAAA
Akron Centrai -Hower (231) vs . Columbus East (20-4),
11 a.m. Friday

Cleveland St. Joseph (22-2)
vs . Cincinnati LaSall e (21-3),
2;30 p.m . Friday
Championship 3 p.m .
Saturday
CLASSAA
Cleveland Latin (2 1-3) vs .
Uhrichsville Claymont (23-1L
6 p.m . Thursday
Archbold (22-2) vs. Dayton
Jefferson (22-2), 9; 30 p.m.
Thursday ·

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CLASS A
Mansfi e ld St. Peter's (23-3)
vs. Zanesv ille Rosecrans (2l ·
2), 6 p.m. Friday
Day 124-0) vs. St. Henry 1240) , 9; 30 p.m. Friday
Championship 8 p.m .
Saturday
CLASS A
Mansfi e ld St. Peter 's (23 -3)

.

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losses were in Class AAA
Cleveland St. Joseph and
Mansfield Malabar and Class
AA Canton Catholic thi s
season.
The other 1978 Ohio tournam~nt kingpins, Kettering
Alter in Class AAA and
Portsmouth in Class AA,
were beaten earlier. The
post-season eliniinations
begin their final three-day
run in St. John Arena

vs. Zanesvi ll e Rosecrans (21 ·

R ivi~rt 's

2), 6 p.m . Friday

if!/.ormatillt

Cincinnati Summit Country

/Noflntrt
Dr. Ro.~N F. Rl•"" .
Dr. A.J. Sllthli • Or. G. J. Stomblu1h • DL C.W. lkal
Dt . W.o . KlmbaP • Dr. J.C. Murptly • Dr. Wt.,L . Stult t
Dr. G.W. 'Ad1ms • Dr . G.A. M oo~e
E. LlvlftpiOR ..\l'f,
Colamhlls, nOlo&gt; 4ll"'J

,

Day (24-0) vs : St. Henry (240), 9: 30 p.m. Friday
Championship

, Saturday

,,

8 _ p. m 1

Thursday night.
In the Class AA semifinals,
1978 runner-up Cleveland
Latin, 21-3, tangles with
Uhrichsville Claymont, 23-1,
at 6 p.m . Thursday, with
Archbold
and
Dayton
Jefferson matching 22-2
records at 9:30 p.m .
In
the
Class
AAA
semifinals Friday, four-time
winner Colwnbus East, 204,
fa ces 1978 runner-up Akron

Central·Hower, 23-1, at . 11
a.m . and' Cleveland St.
Jo,.,ph, 22-2, plays Cincinnati
LaSalle, 21-3, at 2:30 p.m.
Then it 's the Class A teams
F riday night, with St.
Peter's, 23-3, and Rosecrans,
21-2, going at it at 6 and
Cincinnati Swmnit Country
Da y and St. Henry risking
their 24-0 records at 9:30.
All championship games
are scheduled Saturday, with

NEW YORK (AP) .=:·ohio
State Coach Eldon Miller
says a Buckeye basketball
team that has gotten smarter
all season will take the
Madison Square Garden floor
tonight against Indiana in an
all-Big
Ten
National
Invitation Tournament semifinal showdown .
"Our team is more knowledgeable now," Miller said.

Saturday' s Regional Final s

CLASSAAA

At Kent State University

Cleveland St. Joseph 82,
Cleveland Glenville 59

At Canton Auditorium
Akr on Centrai-Hower 58,
Warren Western Reserve 46

At Columbus Coliseum
Columbus

Eas t

74,

Napoleon 45

At Dayton Arena
Cinci nnati LaSall e
Dayton Meadowda le 46

70,

" Earlier , we won a ,lot of
games on emotion . Now
we've improved some in a
couple of areas, although tllis
(Indiana) is a good club to
find out just how much we
improved.''

Indiana , 2!l-12, a nd Ohio
State , 19-10, split their two
regula r season games ,
winning on each other's floor.
Both teams drew tllird..-ound
NIT byes and play in lhe
second half of a doubleheader tonight.
It 's a cinch the Big Ten
won't do a ny worse than
second in the tournament,
because fellow conference
member Purdue, 26-7 and
sharer of the Big Ten crown
with Michigan State and
Iowa, is also a semifmalist.
Purdue, rated 15th In The
Associated Press poll, the
only nationally ranked squad
.in the NIT, opens the twin bill

against

CLASSAA

At Canton Auditorium
Clevela nd
La ti n
65,
Youngs town Rayen 57

At Bowling Green

~~outsider" Ala~ma ,

22-10, which wound up tied for
third in tile Southeastern
Conference standings .

6-

4-16 ; Hodges 1-2-4; F it z-

patrick 2-l·5; Fletcher 3-4-ll ;
Harvey 0-0·0; Linn 3-2 8;
Gordon o.o.o. TOTALS 16-1244.
CLAYMONT
(S4)
Sp inne ll 5-6· l6 ; White 0·1·1;

Huff 3-2·8; Mills 4·3-ll ; Jinks

3-0-6; Mall O' Hara 5·2-l2 .

Ask me about
Life Insurance

retir ement years. Call me for details

MIKE SWIGER

this season's campaign in the
Big Apple, finishing third in
the
J oe
Lapchick
That,

~ James

I offer a total progra m to help
protect your family's way of livi ng
and build financial sec urity for your

The Crimson Tide · began

Tournament.

IRONTON (44)

tor'IOdays
Famllies

Bucks, Hoosiers clash
in NIT semis tonight

. State pairings

CRISPY
CR(ltfS

CRIME LOSSES

Claymont ousts ·Ironton, 54-44

EXTRA

~·05
~

Athens. Meigs' Sonia Ash (25) and Terri Wilson (52) andmoving in for assistance . .They are guarded by Jeanette
Vinson (32) and Susie Fitzpatrick (30). Ironton won 54-42
to advance to regional pla y. .

. READY TO SHOOT - Kris Anderson ( 33) gets. ready
to shoot over the Ironton Tigresses' Beth Rist (24) in this
action shot taken Saturday at the Oass AA District in

TRY OUR

lENTUCKY
FRI_ED CHICKEN

tlle Gla~s AA finale at 11 a.m ., TOTALS 20-14-54 .
Score by quarters:
the Class AAA showdown at 3
12 14 12 6---4 4
p.m. a nd tlle Class A wind-up Ironton
Claymont
l2 15 10 l/- 54
at 8 p.m .
· East ( 1951-03-68-69), Latin
(1977) and St. Peter's (196818) are the only schools In the
field tha t have won previous
state tiUes. Central-Rower
has been a runner-up twice
under veteran mentor Joe
Sieg!erth , coaching in his
sixth state semifinals .
The tournaments have he'en
rough on the state..-anked
You can help cut down On
powers this season, with The
crime losses .. losses that
dir ect l y
affect
you .
Associated Press poll's topwhether they happen to you
rated two•teams in all three
or not ,
divisions being upset ear)ier.
St. Peter's, ranked third in
Take the crime of arson .
Class A, is th e highest..-ated
Yo u' re
paying
an
increasingly heaVy subsipy
team among the 12 in the
for deliberately set fires
state semifinals.

Preventioo is the
best policy. • •
FOR QJRBING

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AJ')The formula used by
Mansfield St. Peter's for
reaching the Ohio .boys high
school basketball semifinals
keeps working. The Spartans
are In the Class A final four
for the seventh lime in 12
years.
St. Peter's, the only defending champion amon g the 12
semifinalists, takes on much
lar g~r schools during the season to hone its skills for the
small school tournament.
This year, St . Peter's
played two Class AAA
opponents and six in Class
AA, posting a 5-3 record
against
them . Against
schools· their own size, the
Spartans are 16-0 this winter.
"Sure, our schedule helps,"
alities."
said St. Peter's Coach Pat
Robinson indicates the motives ran deeper . They probably, Maurer, preparing for a
he hints, had to do with the color of his skin.
Friday semifinal meeting
"There are so many outstanding black guys in baseball who against Zanesville
would make good managers," he insi;rted. "Maury Wills, Bill· Rosecrans .
White, LarryDoby .. . I don't like to name anybody because I'd
"We want to beef up our
leave some worthy peFson out. But the talent is out there. It schedule, knowing this helps
ought to be tapped. "
us in the tournaments. It 's the
only way you can develop
your kids," said the coach of
the Spartans. whose only

The Poet's Corner

talnly not -recommending
taking vitamin A as a treatment for acne. Slime cases
of vitamin A toxicity have
been reported In \eimagers
who took large amounta,
thinking vitamin A would
cure their acn~ . It won' t.
'
The thlr.d · approach is to
America, Oh America,l8 In a sinful state sin running rampant . . NEW YORK (AP) - Avital ShcharllllBky was rebuffed by
eliminate tiny bacteria that
I just bear it.
' Soviet Mission officials in front ol several hundred ~rs
Uve In the pores of the oil
glands. That's why the tetra· '
I think of the sins In Sodom and Gomorrah and look In my when she tried to arrange for her wedding ring to he delivered
to .her husband, Anatoly.
·
·
cycllnes . are used. These
cotmtry and presently aee it.
bacteria split the lat that's
He ill a Jewish activist bnprl10ned in Russia on treason
Turning from God was their mistake
formed by the oUy gland and
·
charges.
:Will America turn back to the God o1 her youth?
in so doing cause the fat to
Guards at the·mlsslon told Mrs. Shchai'ansky on Sunday that
Think of Sodom and Gomorrah and turn toward the truth.
become an Irritating chemithe mission waa clo!ed and to make an appolnlment.
·
cal. This is part of what
"!want
to
send
thl8
(ring)
to
my
husband
because
the
KGB
America, God's blessed nation with more occults than I can
causes the inflammatory re(secret police) took his when he went to prlaon two years ago "
. mention
action of the skin .
said
Mra. Shcharanaky, clutching a box containing a simpie
I am sending you The
!,Satan Is trying to lake our blessed land
band.
.
gold
Health Letter number 8-2,
And we're laying carelessly asleep In the Isles letting Sodom
Acne Can Be Treated. Other
Before
attempting
to
deliver
the ring, Mrs. Shehai'anaky atand !lpmorrah spread In leaps and bounds.
readers who want this issue
tended a rally across the street from the Soviet mlwon that
can send 50 centa with · a
. commemorated the second anniversary ol Shcihai'anaky's ar·Harsh words you say rut they .-e true. •
long , sta&gt;;nped, ae If -adrest on March 15, !9?7. Ths 31-year-old mathi!IJUiticlan Is
_
j
And
there
Is
one
we
will
anawer
to.
dressed envelope for it. Send
. serving a 13-year term for trealon.
i
The
Lord
God
Almighty
Ia
looking
down
on·a
nation
where
sin
.
your request to me in care of
: does plentifully abound.
thill newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Statldn,
· Turn hack, AmeOcll, before we hear the aWful sound of God's
1
New York, NY 111019.
"Remember when, If people asked for coke,
wrath coming near. ·
·
America, we don't want to get In the wrath of God
I hope you get some help'
It meant they wanted a soft drink?"
· We want to.live right and be led by God'l'lioly Spirit.
:
from this Information but I
' God is full of love and c&lt;mpasslon too but if we take His Son
TurnJoward
the
truth
and
away
from
the
!alae
because
our
'
would, again, strongly .___-_------------~---_.J a_n•d.. the Blood
.
tHe shed, and atamp It In the mud a•A b}
. friend Jesus paid all the COlt.
· '
advlae that you take your vision m controlllrig her c1111 prevent ICllrrlng and
are led,
·
·
''"
daughter to your doctor so acne problem. Adequate problems that could concern
Patty Hensler - Bolt 368, Racine, ohio ~771.
she can have medical super- treatment at this age In life her for the rest of her life.
The love turns to Judgment and we aurely will reap It,

'

BY GREG BAILEY
Preliminary counts show a total of 1,246 beaver were
harvested in the 1978-79 beaver trapping season In District
Four here In Southeastern Ohio.
This is approximately three times the nwnber taken last
year.
Adverse weather conditions had hampered last year's
harvest , while opening the season In mid-December this year
permitted ·trapping before the ponds and streams froze.
Beaver harvest In local counties were: Muskingum 195,
Jackson 105, Athens 89, Vinton :;:;, Perry 54, Washington 46,
Hocking~. Meigs 10, and Gallla five . Morgan led the area with
297 beaver pelts taken. ·
Counties in the northeast, east, and southeast parts ol the
state were open to trapping. Statewide the harvest exceeded

Ironton whips Meigs, SPORTS
advances to regionals

in·

cidentaUy, was better than
the Tide's ever done in the
NIT . In two previous
'!ppearances, Alabama has
finished fourth.

)49 S. Third
Middleport, 0 .
992 -7155

-11All .....

Insurance
costs
adversely a ff ected
burg laries, robberies
car thefts
plus
cou ntl ess CB rad ios
b icy cl es thai turn
m iss ing .

are
by

and
the
and
up

One thing you can do is to
s u pport
program s
prov iding st iffer pena lties
for
wrongdoer s
a nd
proposals for strengthened
cr ime In vestiga t ion efforts .
You can also make it
tougher for crooks. Use
good strong locks. Mark
possessions with your
social securi ty number .
Ou r agency
prov ides
fi nancial protection and
ser vice when crime losses
occur ... but many can be
prevented . That' s why we
say - prevention is the

best pol i ~ Y .

)tate Farm Lr fe and
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DALE C. WARNER
INS.
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·While Indiana and Ohio
Sta te were re laxing last
Thursday night, Purdue was
defeating Old Dominion 67-59
and Alabama was whipping
Texa s A&amp;M 7U8 in thirdroWJd NIT games.
Ohio State ended its regular
season with three straight
losses, wiping out its chances
to win or shar e the
conference
championship.
But tile Buckeyes did an
aboul -facl! · once the NIT
began, downing St. Joseph's
80-&lt;i6 at home a nd Maryland
79-72 on the road In tourney
play .

State University

Arch bold 60, Willard 44
At Ohio University
Uhrichsville Claymont 54,
Ironton 44

At Dayton Arena
Dayton Jeffer son

63,

Ham il ton Ross 51

'CLASS A
AI Canton Fieldhouse
Mansfield St. Peter 's 64,
Sebring 47
AI Bowling Green
State University
St . Henry 81 , Arcadia 55
At Ohio University
Zanesville Rosecrans 57,
Gnadenhutten India n Valley

South 55 ·
At Dayton Arena
Cincinnati Summit Count ry

Day 56, Botkins 55

·

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store ·
Of Building
Since 1915

�.
'

By The Associated Press

State University

Regional Tournament

Le xi ngton 13·9 vs. Delphos

Sf. John 22-0. 7 p. m. Friday

Pairings

Oregon Strltch 17 -.:1 vs.

CLASSAAA
.ot Sandusky High School
Ash land (19-3) vs. Parma
Valley Forge {15-3) 7 p. m.
Friday.

Medina Hlghland (15-5). 9 p.
m . Friday
Championship 7: 30 p. m .
Saturday

E; ly r la Senior ( 21 -1} vs.
Toledo Central Catho lic (181) 9 p . m . Friday .
Championship, 7:30 p. m.

At OHerbeln College
Zanesville

Musk ingum

Salurday .
At canton Fieldhouse

Columbus

( 16-1)

West

Hamilton

vs.

Town -

ship (18-3) 7 p, m. Friday
Wesl Lafayette Ridgewood

Warr en Harding {2 1-1) vs .
Cleveland Glen vi.lle (20-1) , 7

(21 ·1) vs . Columbus Hartley

p. m. Friday
Eastlake North (18-1) vs .
Barberton (20-2). 9 p. m.
Fr iday .
.
CMmpionsh ip 7: 30 p. m.

(19-2) 9 p. m. Friday

Championship 7; 30 p .m .
Saturday

· AI Dayton Fieldhouse
Casstown Miami East (20ll vs . North Bend Taylor (21 1) 7 p. m. Wednesday
Ironton
(19-2)
vs .

Sa turday .

At Ohio Wesleyan University

Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary
( 17-2)
vs.
Columbus Jamestown Greeneview (21 Whitehall ' (1 6-6!. 7 p. m. 0)
9 p. m. Wednesday.
Fri day
Championship
&lt;: 30 p. m.
Newark (20-2) vs. Winte r sv ille ( 18 -J ), 9 p. m ., Saturday

''

Fr iday .
Championshi p 7:30 p.m.

Saturday

AI Dayton Fieldhouse
Cincinnati Oak Hills (20-2)

..

CLASS A
AI Wooster College

vs . Cincinnati Hughes (IB-0),
7 p. m. Fr iday

Rocky River Lutheran East

( 19-3) vs . East Canlon (19-3) 7
Springfield North (20-1) vs . p.
m. Thursday .
•''1
Dayton Stivers-Patterson (18Salineville
(Southern)
'.
2) , 9 p. m. Friday
Local
(19-2)
vs
.
Mansfield
St.
Championship, 7:30 p.m. Peter's (20-2) 9 p. m. Thur' • Sa turday
sday
.
CLASS AA
Championship 2: 30 p .m.
At Canton Fieldhouse
Campbell Memorial (19-3) Salurday
At Bowling Green
·vs. Chagrin Falls 2J.O). 7 p.
State University
m. Wednesday
I
Kalida
(18-1) vs . Holgate
..
Warren Champion (19-2)
(19-2) 7 p. m. Thursday
•
vs. Navarre Fairless {16-4}, 9
Rockford Parkway (17-5)
~ " p . m . Wednesday
vs.
Vanlue (20-2), 9 p. m.
Championship 4;30 p. m. Thursday .
Saturday
Championship 2:30 p.m.
AI Bowling Green
Saturday .
''
At Otterbein College
Strasburg (18-3) vs. Old
"I'
TRY OUR
Washington Buckeye Trail
!19-2) 7 p. m. Thursday
:: '.
Bainbridge Paint Valley

By BERT ROSENTHAL panel of sportswriters and
AP Sports Writer
broadcasters.
Talk about longshots ....
Of the four, only Indiana
Take the teams in . the State was seeded fll'st in its
NCAA basketbaU semifinals regional tournament, the
- Indiana State, Michigan unbeaten Sycamores being
tapped lo win the Midwest
State, DePaul and Penn.
Regional
. DePaul was ranked
Of the four, only Michigan
State ever has gone this far, second in the West Regional,
the Spartans finishing fourth Michigan State second in the
in 1957. DePaul was among Mideast, and Penn nmth in
the final four teams in 1943, the East Regional.
Of the team's four coaches
but at that time, only a Iota!
of eight teams were invited 1o Bill Hodges of Indiana State,
regional games in the East J uct Heathcote of Michigan
and the West, with the State, 65-year-i&gt;ld Ray Meyer
regional champions meeting of DePaul
and
Bob
for the national title and no Weinhauer of Penn - none
third-place game between the has ever guided a team into
losers,
the Final Four.
Of the four, only Michigan
In addition, no Ivy League
State_was rated among the school, such as Penn, has
lop 20 teams prior lo the appeared in the Final Four
season, ranking seventh in since 1965 when Princeton
The Associated Press poll. finished third.
Indiana State was listed
This year's Final Four
among the a)S(H'ans, and reached that plateau over the
neither DePaul nor Penn got
weekend.
even a single vote among the
Saturday, top-ranked In53 teams named by a national diana· State, 32~. won the

..

..

...

r'

•

' I'

'

..'.
".

EXTRA

(17-5} vs. lancaster Fisher

CRISPY

(17-5). 9 p. m. Thursday
Championship 2:30 p. n'l.
Saturday
AI Dayton Arena
Fort Loramie (20-2) vs.

CHaRS

Middletown Fenwick (13 -6) 7
p. m . Thu rsday

KENnJQ(Y
FRIED CHICKEN

South Webster (17-2) vs.
Lewisburg Twin VAl ley
Norlh (13-6) 9 p. m. Thursday
Championship 1:30 p.m.

FAMILY RESTAURANT •
992-5432

0.
1

Saturda~

$

By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sportl Writer
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Ray
Knight steps into the batter's
bo~, raps his spikes with a bat
Saturday's Resuhs

CLASS AAA
. TOURNAMENTS
At Parma Senior High School
Cleveland 'Glenville 57,
East Cleveland Shaw 50
AI Wright Stale
Springfield North 51 ,
Trotwood - Madison 28
AI Columbus Briggs
Newark 56. Columbus
Natterson 54 (OT)
Columbus Whitehall 42 ,
Gahanna 39

At Lancaster
Wintersvi lle 55, Marietta 40
At Dayton
Dayton Stivers . Patterson

531 Kettering Alter· 50

CLASS AA TOURNAMENTS
AI Kalida
Delphos St. Johns 62, Lima
Balh 46
AI Gahanna
Columbus Hartley 50
Columbus

and is introduced by the
public address announcer.
There is, tAl Knight's pleasure
and surprise, a smattering of
applause.
"I expected to be jeered,
but everything has been
positive," said Knight, whO is
one of the Cincinnati R.eds'
leading· batters with a .357
average after nine exhibition
games.
The Reds snapped a fourgame winning streak Sunday,
losing 6-&lt;i to the St. Louis
Cardinals in an exhibitiOI\
game In St. Peter~burg.
They're now 5-4 in Florida.
The new starter said: "I'm
surprised at how weD I've
been received because I know
how beloved Pete (Rose)
was. Maybe if I'd got off tAl a
zero for 10 start t_hey wouldn't
be so nice to me."

National
Baske1ball Association

AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W L Pel. GB

Lex ington 39 Mansfield

Malabar 32
AI New Concord
Wes I Lafayette Ridgewood
42 Martins Ferry 38 (OT)
Zanesville
West
Muskingum 57 St. Clairsville
39
At Athens
I ron ton 54 Pomeroy Meigs

Washington

Phila .

·

New Jersey

New 'i'ork
Boston

San Ant.
At Dayton
Houston
Jamestown Greeneview 39 Atlanta
Cayton Jefferson ·30
Detroit
CLASS ATOURNAMENTS Cleveland
AI Kent Roosevelt
New Orleans
Kirtland 39
ill Chillicothe

Bainbridge Paint Va lley 28

Coa I Grove 27
56
South
Websler
Chillicothe Hunlingfon 39
AI Kent
Salineville Southern Local

Kirtland 39
At Chillicothe Huntington 39
AI Dayton
Lewisburg Twin Valley
North 23 Tlpp City Bethel 19

44

At Bellefontaine
Fort Loramie 46 Russia 30
National' lnvitiition
Tournament Glance

By The Associated Press
Semlflila Is
Monday's Games
AI New York
Purdue (26-7) vs. Alabama
(22-10)
.
Indiana (20-12) vs . Ohio
State (19-10)
Finals
Wednesday's Games

AI New York

Championship and

Third Place

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NCAA College
Basketball Tournament
Glance

By The Associated Press
Regional Championship
Saturday's Games

Midwest

At CinCinnati

Indiana St. 73, Arkansas 71
West
AI Provo, Ulllh
DePaul 95, UCLA 91
Sunday's Games

37 33 .529

IQI;,
33 37 .47) 14V2

30 43 .411 19
· 27 42 .391 20
42
40
39
28
28
23

29
30
33
42
43
50

.592
.571 l'h
.542 3'1•
AOO 13'12
.394 14
.315 20

Western Conference
Midwest Division

Salineville Southern Local
44

A7 22 .681

Central Division

42

MICRO TOUCH
CONTROLS

The winners meet for the
national
collegiate
championship next Mooday
night.
Perhaps the happiest coach
of the surviving teams was
the long-frustrated,
grandfatherly Meyer , in his
37th season at DePaul, a little
school in Chicago.
Asked if he was shocked at
having beaten proud UCLA,
the Pac·19 ch~mpion, Meyer
replied: "Quite frankly, yes.
. So much so that I had lo pinch ·
myself."

Questioned about DePaul's
matchup against unbeaten
Indiana State in the national
semifinals, Meyer said: "We
play Indiana State? WeD, the
l!ird will fly. We'D have to
devise some defense for
him ." He referred to the
Sycamores' Larry Bird, the.
Player of the Year in college
basketball.
DePaul, decided underdogs
against UCLA, a .team that
crushed the Blue Demons 1()8.

Knight, who is taking over ' bases and I'm not going lo get
third base after backing up 200 hits,II
Rose for two years, said the
"In the past, I tried 1o be
transition would have been a Brooks Robinson when 1went
lot tougher if he had come 1o in for Pete Rose at third base,
work one day and found out _or Hank Aaron at the plate so
that Rose had.been traded in somebody would recognize
-lhe middle of the season and me and give me a chance to
right away people expected play every day ."
·
Knight logo out and play like
Knight said he an.d Rose bePete,
came close friends during the
"They
(Reds'
man- past two years, and they
agement) made It as easy on spent an hour and a half
me as po~ble," Knight said. together after the Reds '
game Sun$y. Knight said
"You can't replace a Pete Rose did not expect tn n1Av
Rose, but people have been took in the first Reds-Phillies
kind to me. The mail has been contest of the year.
"He's .been 3 force in my
positive. The best advice I've life
. He
helped
me
received is to be myself.
tremendously
,
especially
"I can only do what Ray
Knight can do. I can't expect · with his positive outlook oo
'lo achieve things that are the game," Knight said of
impossible to achieve. I'm Rose, who left the National
not going to steal 20 or 30 League club last winter as a
free agent. "I .was probably
closer to him than anybody.
He's a great guy and l respect

Pro Standings

Hamilton

Township 66 Ashville Teays
·valley 48 .
·
AI Shelby

BIG
SAVINGS
ON ALL
MODELS
IN STOCK

Midwest Regional · at Cincinnati, edging No. 5
Arkansas 73-71 on reserve
Bob Heaton's field goal with
two secondsremainlng. No. 6
DePaul, 25--5, captured the
West Regional at Provo,
Utah, upsetting secondranked UCLA 95-91 as Curtis
Watkins and Gary Garland
each scored 20 points.
Sunday, third-ranked
Michigan State, 2~. took the
Mideast Regional at Indianapolis, beating No, 4
Notre Dame 80-68 behind
Greg Keiser's 34 points and 13
rebounds
and
Earvin
Johnson's 19 points and 13
assists. And 14th-ranked
Penn woo the East Regional
at
Greensboro,
N.C.,
defeating No. 17 St. John's 64-62 on James Salters' tWo ~ee
throws with 23 seconds
remaining.
This Saturday in the
national semifinals, Indiana
State faces DePaul and
Michigan State piay5 Penn.

Knight top man at plate

Columbus Centenniel 45

by

100 donation ·made to Tracy Hein unc,t

Spartans,. Penn.advance to finals

Girls tournament
results, pairings

Kan. City
43 29 .597
Denver
39 33 .542
Milw.
33 39 .458
Indiana
· 30 41 .423
Chicago
26 44 .371
Pacific Division
Seattle
44 27 .620
Los A'\9.
42 29 .592
Phoenix
42 30 .583
San Diego
40 32 .556
Portland
37 33 .529
Golden St.
32 40 .444

Saturday's Games
Bos1on 4, Ch icago 2

2
2'1•
411&gt;

.6'h
12'1,

Saturdav's Games

New York 103, Philadelphia
101
Washlnglon 117, Cleveland

,.Detroit 105, Indiana 98

Sea tile 106, Chicago 88

Houston 'lJA, Phoeni)( 122
·oenver 118, Atlanta 111

San Diego 107, Golden State
102
Portland 124, New Jersey
113
.
Sunday's Games
Milwaukee 147, San An1onio

Philadelphia 5, Buffalo 3
Detroit 3, Sl. Louis 1
Pittsburgh 5, Washington 2
New York Islanders 5, New
York Rangers 2
Toronto 6, Minnesota 4

Los Ange les 3, Monlreal
Sunday's Games

Delroit 4, Chicago 2
Montreal 3, Colorado 1

Washington J, Buffalo J, 1ie

Philadelphia 5, St. Louis 3
Pittsburgh 5, New York
Rangers 1
New York Islanders 5,
Minnesota 3
Vancouver 2, Atlanta 1
Monday's Game

Tuesday's Games
New - York Rangers at
Washington
Chicago at Detroit
Atlanta at Los Angeles
. Exhibition Baseball
AI A Glance
By the Associated Press
Saturdav's Games

Houston .4 Montreal 2
Atlanta 5 Minnesota 1

!)lew York (N) 3 Sl. Louis 3,
tie, 11 innings
. Los Angeles 11 New York
tAl 9 ·
Philadelphia 3 Chicago (A) 2
Pittsburgh 7 Toronto 1
Cincinnati 4 Kansas City 2
Baltimore 9 Texas 6
Boston 3 Detroit 0
California 1 Milwaukee 0
Seattle 10 Cleveland 2
Chicago (Nl 7 Oakland 3
San Francisco 5 Dan Diego 1

Sunday's Games
Atlanta 7 Houston 6, 10 in-

127
Philadelphia 106, New York

nings

90

Montreal 7 Los _Angeles 1
New York (N) 3 New Yorko

Washlnglon 126, Cleveland
112
Kansas City 114, Chicago
103
New Orleans 121, Phoenix
117
San Diego 110, New Jersey
98
Los Angeles 122, Boston 111
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games

Milwaukee at New York
Cleveland at Atlanta
Detroit at New Jersey
Philadelphia at San An-

tonio
•
East
Washington
at
New
Orleans
AI Greensboro, N,(,
Golden State al Denver
Penn 64, St. John's 62
San Diego at Portland Mideast
AI Indianapolis, Ind.
National Ho~key League
Michigan St. 80, Notre- Campbell Conference
Dame 68 '
Patrick Division
wltplsgfga
National Semifinals
N. Y. Islanders
March 24 ,
4S 13 12 102 321 187
AI Salt Lake Coty
Penn . (25-5) vs. Michigan N. Y. Rangers
38 24 8 84 287 244
St. (24-6)
Phila.
3-l 22 14 82 2&lt;10 213
Indiana St. (32 -0) vs, Atlanta 37
26 7 81 283 247
DePaul (25-5)
Smythe Division
Nationa'TCham'iilonship
Chicago -25 32 12 62 206 247
Mlrch26
Vancouver
AI S..lllJoke City
40 10 52 198 273
Penn -Michigan St. winner St. Louis 21
17
43
44 224 307
vs. Indiana .St. DePaul Colorado 14 48 109 37
187 303
winner.
Wolos Conference
Adllms Division
Josten :is 20 12 88 278 230
Buffalo 30 25 15 75 238 230
Toronto 30 29 11 71 228 221
Minn .
25 33 11 61 230 243
Norris Division

St. louis 6 Cincinna1i 5
(A) 2

Toronto 12 Philadelphia 4
Pittsburgh "A" 5 Baltimore 2

Texas 4 De1rolt 4, tie, l4
nlngs
Minnesota 6 Boston 4

In~ ·

Chicago (A) 14 Kansas City 0
Milwaukee 8 California 4
San Diego 12 Cleveland 4
Qakland 7 Chicapo (Nl 4
San F'rancfsco 5 ~eattle 3
Monday's Games
Minnesota vs. Houston at

Cocoa, Fla.
New York (A) vs. Atlonto
at West Palm Beoch, Fla.

Baltimore vs . Los Angeles

al Vero Beach, Fla.
Detroit vs. Montreal at
Daytona Beach, Fla.
Cincinnati vs. Philadelphia
at Clearwa1er, f:la.
Boston vs. Toronto a1

Dunedin, Fla.
Kansas City vs, Texas at
Pompano Beach, Fla.
Chicago (N) vs. California
at Palm Springs, Calif.
Cleveland vs . Qakland at
Scollsdale, Ariz.
Milwaukee vs. SEattle at
Tempe, Ariz.
San

Francisco vs.

this."

FOR THE SOUND OF MUSIC

him ."

Toronto at Bos1on

4
10
121f&gt;
16

85 in the season opener, raced
"We're going to be:
1o a SJ-34 halftime lead, Uten underdogs in Ute Final Four,
withstoOd a second-half but 1 don't mind at all," said
Bruins ' comeback, led by All- Weinhauer, in his second
American David Greenwood. year of coaching at PeM, -a .
Greenwood scored a career- school in a league more
high 37 points.
renowned for its academic
UCLA closed 1o 93-91 in the accomplishments than Its
closing minute, but a basket athletic· feats,
'"'
by Garland clinched the
Price led the Quakers with' :
viclory.
21 points, a total equaDed by~
Another proud coach was Ron Plair of St. John's, w~
Hodges, in his rookie year at hit his first nine field goal&gt;;
Indiana State , ·a team attempts before missing witll::
maligned all season because three seconds remaining 0!1 a.;
of its socalled easy_schedule. shot that would have tied the~
"All year long, we haven't score.
~
cared what people said,"
Michigan State's Johnaon7
Hodges said. "We didn't let was proud of his team•&amp;:
the press or critics distract us accomplishment.
:
or make us lose focus of our
"It feels great - I can't•:
goal. We're going to Salt Lake even say how great," sal&amp;:
City 1o win - and we're not Johnson, the Spartans ,
going in awe of anyone."
ballhandling wizard. "It was
Tl)e Sycamores finally a dream of mine lo make the
gained respect after beating Final Four and · now we're
Arkansas, one of the nation's there."
lop teams .
Johnson and Keiser
"We didn't think we'd gcl combined to dazzle Notre
this far and now we're here," Dame on offense, while
Bird said proudly.
Michigan State's zone
The Sycamores got uhere" defense throttled the Irish's
mainly because of Bird. He vaunted inside game,
scored 31 points, grabbed 10
"Our defense never broke
rebounds and had three down as it has at tinies Utls
assists
against.
the season," said Heathcote, In
Razor hacks.
his third season as Michigan
They also got " here" State coach. "This is the best
because of Heaton, Bird's we've played for some time."
unheralded but clutchshooting roommate, whose
In 1917, the first territorial
last..second field goal broke a
7),71 tie,
legislature of Alaska granted
"Once the ball went in the suffrage to women.
hoop, it was like the whole
world crashed in on me," said
Sidney Moncrief; the Razorhacks' scoring leader with 24
points.
Another team gaining
unexpected respect was
.
PeM.
"We're in the Final Four in
the nation, " said Tony Price,
the Quakers' high ~scoring
forward, his voice filfed wilh
awe . "I just wanted peaple lo
respect us. I didn't expect

Sari

Diego at Yuma, Ariz.
Chicago (A) vs. St. Louis at
St. Petersburg, Fla., n
New York (N) vs. Plllsburgh at San Juan, ( PRl. n

Knight, who talks easily
and without affectation, is an
extremely likeable guy. He
has been patient with the
endless queslions that focus
more on Rose than on him.
He's secure in. the
foundation he's built as a
third baseman in the Reds'
farm system,
"I've had nine years to prepare myself. I'm 26 years old,
so I'm not a baby any more,"
Knight said. "I've always
been the 'kid' playing third
behind Pete Rose.
"Then all of a sudden, you
come to the realization you're
not a kid any more. You've
got to put things on your
shoulders and l;lke them on .
"I -know I'm going lo fall at
times. But I couldn 'I be
happier
about
my
. performance so far, I don't
see how anybody could have
Bl!ked any more of me."

•

Electrophonic &amp; Channel Master
Some with 8- Track Players, Recorders,
Turn Tables, Etc .

\

r---------·----~-~J
I .
RE~~LAR_

25%.___
.OFF
L____
. _. . . . . . . ._......,.w:;

4S 15 '10 100 297 181
Thought lOr
today :31 28 10 72 245 247 Intellect is invisible 1o the
- ~ - 30 3010 70.2.411 .253
Wash.
21 36 13 55 241 296 ·man who has none Arthur
Detroit 18 35 16 52 224 257 phll'osopher
x- clinched division
:· ~hopenhauer, 1788-1860.

Peabody caine up with the Smuggler" who took Bibles
idea of having women unite into Communist COWltries,
for a foreign mission and of Mrs. F'lora Downie, the
program in 1890. World Day organizer of the Church
of Prayer was started in 1919. Women United of Meigs
Mrs. Cook commented on County . She concluded with
the
theme
"Spiritual the thought to church
Growth" and listed several ·members tha t they will
women ' who had the experience the greatest
knowledge of love, faith and spiritual growth and unity
hope . She commented on when they become involved
Corrie Ten Boom who helped in serving God logether.
the Jews in World War II, 'or
Mrs. PhyUis Skinner was
Brother Andrew, the "God program leader for the
afternoon, and Mrs. Georgia

Past Councilors install officers
Mrs. Ada Bissell, president were given in unison. Mae
of the Past Couilcilors' Club McPeek had the secretary's
ol Chester Council 323, report, and Leona Hensley,
Daughters of America, the treasurer's report.
installed new officers at a
It was announced that at
recent meeting of the Club at the Tuesday night meeting of
the lodge hall.
Ute Council, the charter will
· Installed were ' Thelma be _draped in memory ~f
White, president; Goldie Edith Betzing. Members are
Frederick, vice president; 1o wear white. Quarterly
Erma Cleland, secretary; birthdays will also be
Mary K. Holter, news observed and
potluck
reporter;
Opal Casto, refreshments 'will be served ~
sentinel; lnzy NeweU, flower
Members sang "Happy
committee.
Birthday " to Margaret
Mrs. Bissell read from 13th Tuttle . Hostesses were Goldie
chapter of Corinthians. The Frederick and Mary Hayes.
pledge and the Lord's Prayer Games were conducted by

Erma Cleland and Opal
Casto, and Marcia Keller won
the door prize.
Others present were Ada
Neutzling, Elizabeth Hayes,

Laura Mae Nice, Pauline
Ridenour, Mabel Van Meter,
Ada Morris, and a guest,
Margaret Ilmberger.

RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP)
-" A buck a head for lettuce,
and James Schlesinger says
buck-a-gaUon gasoline is just
around the bend."
That 's how the great
inflation seminar began. The
lady- up the road had just
come back from the
supermarket and no'way was
she going to invest that much
lettuce in lettuce.
Strawberries were also
going for a buck a tiny
basket, her neighbor, first
Polly Cramer
house
back, put in. "And
'.
asparagus is out of sight."
embroidery or similar work.
From there on out, the
Shower Won't Wash
- NELUE LOU
problem became global.
By Polly Cramer
·
DEAR POLLY - I think I Someone recalled paying
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- We have have a wonderful "invention" $1.90 "for a Coke in Oslo,"
hard water and my husband and that is making book ends and somebody else swore she
does not like a water softener. out of expired automobile paid $6 "for a simply blah
What in the world can I use to license plates. I used con- cheeseburger in Gstaad."
Just back from a trip to Ja.
· :. clean the glass shower doors struction paper cut to the size
: : :. and the molded glass fiber of the plate - one sheet pan, the electronics engineer
·. ; " shower stall • I have tried am· makes both backs. Next cut in the Hong Kong Country
·:!: monia, vinegar, toothpaste, heavy-weight durable plastic Club golf cap said he had paid
· ' ' liquid cleansr and nothing twice the size of the plate, $120 for a single room in a
allowing added width for Tokyo hotel.
•; seems to help, - CONNJE
seams.
Stitch the three sides
Then the two retired school
DEAR CONNIE - Have
using
a
long
stitch
adjustteachers
who go to Majorca
you tried elec,lric dish-washer
ment
on
the
machine.
Hand
every
winter
told how
·;detergent? Do wear rubber
stitching,
buttonhole
stitch
or
shocked
they
were to
, gloves if you do. It should
other
trim
could
:
be
used
.
discover
that
this
time the
remove soap or mineral
deposits and not harm the Bend the plastic over a locals were indifferent, even
surface, Never use harsh straight side of a table or hostile, to their traveller's
abrasives or steel wool, but a stout board. Hold it fiomly to checks . Few people appeared
nylon scrubber can be safely make a clean bend. - out of an alley to offer them
FLORENCE.
best friend, black market
~ used oo such materials.
DEAR
FLORENCE
rates
for their dollars.
, Automotive 'polish will add
Your
idea
is
indeed
ingenious
It
reminded
me that after
'luster and preserve the finish
Pope
John
Paul
II was
but
the
directions
for
making
but do not use on the_floor of
are
a
bit
vague
to
me.
Neverelected
in
Rome
last
October
the shower or someone may
_ _· slip and hav DEAR POLLY theless, I am passing the idea 1 was checking out of the
- Do tell Anna that plastic on to the other readers as 1 hotel with a film crew from
television.
The
.-loops that ·are on six-pack am sure many of them will ABC
cans are great for holding find this interesting for a cameraman discovered that
sorted colors of yarn or em- boy's room or den and his credit card was out of
.broidery floss. Handy when especially so when one has date, so he agreed to pay for
doing needlepoint, crewel personali'-" '' li cense plates the three-week stay in dollar
are metal and could not be travellers checks. Thenstitched. Why not bend the · ·someone suggested he go
TRY OUR
plastic, put double-faced across the street to the bank
carpet tape around the back and change the checks mto
edges of the plates and then
stick finnly to the plastic side
that stands up against the
---- - books? -POLLY
K£NnJCKY
Polly will send you one ol
FRiED CHICKEN
her signed thank-you
I'_Dftlll
___
newspaper coupon clippers if
\11\VR
she uses your favorite
A donation of $25 has been
FAMILY RESTAURANT Pointer, Peeve or Problem in made to the Middleport
992-5432
her column. Write POLLY'S Public Ubrary by the Mid--.!::=::~~~.Jk
POINTERS in care of this dleport Uterary Club, it was
'0.
newspaper.
noted at a meeting of the club
Wednesday night at the home
of Mrs. Harold Sauer.
Mrs. Sauer presided at the
meeting with members
showing and telling about an
·.old treasured book. The book
reviews were "Days of
Winter"
by
Cynthia
Freeman, reviewed by Mrs.
Carl Horky, and "Anna
Hastings" by Allen Drury,
reviewed by Mrs. Arthur
strauss.
In her review, Mrs. Horky
told of the love story of a
wealthy
and
socially
prominent British Jew with
the g,irl, Magda, a woman of
the streets. The fal!lilY soans
the quarter century between

Italian lire there, since the
hank undoubtedly paid a
better exchange rate than the
hotel.
The whole tran saction
turned out 1o be a thrilling
experience.
"The hotel bill came 1o
more than a million lire," he
told everyone he met that day
and probably for a week
thereafter. "It's the first time
in my life, I ever had to count
out a million in anything.
Actually in dollars, it came t.o
only a little over $1,200, but.
have you any idea how high a
pile one million lire makes?"
To all of us that was a
lesson in what happens when
a currency declines in value,:
but la st week I came across
an even more chilling one.
John Toland in his riveting
biography, "Adolf Hitler,"
provides some harrowing
details on the plunge of the
German mark in the days of
the Weimar Republic after
World War L On Armistice
Day 1918 the mark was
pegged at 7.45 to the dollar.
On Jan . !, 1923, it was 6,750 to
the dollar but within three
weeks had plummeted to
50,000.
By October 1923, it took
"6,014,300 marks to equal a
single prewar mark and the
price of one egg was equal to
30,000,000 in 1913."
It is a sign of German's recovery from two disastrous
world wars that the mark is
worth so much today that
wheelbarrows are used in Bavarian bierkellers only lo
haul off the drunks during the
October fest. With lettuce
already at a dollar a head, Jet
us hope the day never comes
when they will be needed to
haul American dollars to the
cash register for a round of
beers.

POLLY'S POINTERS·

EXTRA

$25 donation inade
to library in Middleport

CRISPY

SAYRE HARDWARE

S

New Haven, W, Va.

_

1

The house
that Jack · .
built can send
Jack Jr. . :
to college.
Your house Is wordl

moret!WJel'eftoday.And
wllh a Homeowner's Loan
from the City Loan Cotnplll);
you can turn that Sleadlly Increasing wlue Into money.
Up to $40,()()().
:Enough to send your
son or daughter to college.
Or remodel the house from
basement to altic. Or to make
a speCial dream come true.
Since 1912, City loan
has earned tbe lr1151 of Ohio
people: Trust lti wllh your
loan. We 6nd ways to help.

CITYLO\N .

COMPANY
'

FLOWER and
VEGETABLE
SEEDS

..,.,
eilllll

l&amp;f·7+

Plrt-

II'

·POMEROY BEN FRANKUN

.

IZH. Main St. •992-2171

200 Easf Main

·•

Pomeroy, o.

The Eighth District ,
American Legion Auxiliary,
held a community service
party Friday at the Athens
Mental Health Center with 52
men and women attending.
Mrs. Hazel Grant, Eighth
District community service
chainnan, Wellston Unit 371
had charge of the party.
Assisting were Myrtle
Thacker of Unit 371, and Mrs.
Dorothy Jenkinson, Veda
Davis, Unit 39, Pomeroy; and
Nellie Coolie, Athens 21.
Games were played ·with
prizes going to the winners,
and 12 door prizes were
awarded.
'
Refreslunents of ice cream,
shamrock cooki~s iced In

W t:tl~on ,

Mrs. Audrey Yow1g,

and Mrs . Bu rton Sm ith
registered the guest s and
disl ributed the programs.
Mr~. Margaret Blaettnar was

organist. The offering taken
by Mrs. Kathy Corbi tt, Mrs.
Ann Sauvage, Mrs. Audrey
Young, and Mrs. Ellen Couch
was
$77.
Mary
F.
B4umgardner had the
oftertory prayer . The
welcome to open the program
was given by Mrs. Cordelia
Bentz, president.
Having readings and
prayers on the program were

,--·Social
----·--·,!

1
I

I
I

I

Calendar II

MONDAY
RACINE Elementary PTO
Monday 7:30 p.m. at
e l eme ntary
school .
Spokeswoman from 4-H will
be speaker. Father's night
will be observed. Homeroom
mothers of fourth grade to
serv e refreshments .
Babysitting will be provided.
MEN'S Fellowship ol
Meigs County Church es ol
Christ Monday at Pomeroy
Church of Christ 7:30p.m.
TUESDAY
J E 5 BE R G'
J 0 HN
mtssoonary
of
Pocket
Testament League, will be
guest speaker at Antiquity
Baptist Church Tuesday, 7:30
p.m. He will also display
flag s.
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m . Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Carol Me CuUough. Karen
Stanley and Maurlsha Nelson
to have the cultural program
on "Retiring Gracefully ."
Sue Zirkle, co-hostess.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Inn, with Janelle Haptonstall
and Cheryl Crow, hostesses.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America ,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall . Charter will be draped
in memory of Edith Betzing
and members ar~ to wear
white., Quarterly birthdays
will be observed. Potluck
refreshments.

Mrs. Hilda Yeauger , Mrs.

Bertha Smjth , Mrs. Lula
Hampton , Miss Enna Smith,
Mrs. Beuna Grueser, Mrs.
Florence Richa rds, Mrs.
Cla ra Thomas, Mrs. Ada
Titus, Mrs. Bernice Baker,
Mrs . Marcia- Denison, Mrs.
Elva Cotterill, Mrs. Helen
Blackston, Mrs. Cl ara
Cri swell, Mrs. Ollie Mae
Cozarl, Mrs. Rachel Downie

the two World Wars. Their
daughter's love triangle, the
rise of the Nazi regime and
their determination to
destroy Jews, and the fierce
will to survive, according to
Mrs. Horky, make the book
worthy of reading.
Mrs. Arthur Strauss's
review of "Anna Hastings," a
newspaper
woman
in
Washington Is a true account
of Mrs. Hastings who
married the very wealthy
senator from Texas, the late
Gordon Hastings. Her ambition to own newspapers and
further her career deprived
the two children of a close
relationship with their
mother , and instead turned
them to their father, who
later killed himself.
Mrs. Sauer. served a
dessert course.

green , and green punch and
nuts were served. The
napkins, plates, and cups
carried out the St. Patrick's
Day theme. The Pomeroy
unit made a cash donation,
and the juniors provided a
box of prizes for the games.

and Mrs. F'aye Wallace. Mn
Downie had a solo , "Th-·
Lord's Prayer ,' ' and the
benediction was given tJ;
Mrs. Mary Kunzelman .
TI1e World Day of Prayer
service was prepared b\
Students in the Pan-afric ..
Leadership Course fv•
Women
at
Mindol
Ecume ni ca l

Th e Racine Firemen' s
AuxUiary will begin card
. parties on F'rida y ni ghts
starting thi s week, it was
announced at a meeting of the
unit recently al the firehouse
annex.
Chris Sl1ain presided at the
meeting with Debbie Lyon s
leading in the pledge to the
flag, and Beverly Cummins
the Lord's Prayer.
The George Washington
cherry tree bake sale planne&lt;1

by the Auxiliary was
cancelled due to the weather
and high water. Donations
are now being taken on a ham

to be awarded on April 6. The
door prize was won by Mrs.
Cummin s. Refre shments
were served to those named
and Ruth Shain, Beulah
Authers on, Mae Cleland ,
Gene Lyons, Maxine Rose,
Kay Roberts . Alana Lyon s,
and Jean Johnson .

REFRIGERATORS ~ RANGES • FREEZERS
WASHERS • DRYERS

ANNUAL INSPECTION
Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM _
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Work in
EA degree. Refreshments.
All master masons urged to
attend.
. LOIS ROCK, the Ohio
Historical Preservation officer at O.U. will be the guest
speak.er at the noon luncheon
meeting of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.

ROAST
LB.

LB. $119

::r. . . . . ~.~:~~

BEEF STEW
$}59
MEAT..................~~·..
-SIRLOIN
$}89
Sl'tAK....•........... ~~·...

HEAD LEITUCE
sge EACH OR 2f 1
FINE ASSORTMENT
OF STORE SLICED
LUNCH MEATS

$139

~::~ .~~: ~259

}49
1

::~. ~........1.~-~~:. 72~
Small-Grade A

EGGS
Doz en

52e

FRENCH CITY 12 oz. ·79~
WIENERS ................ .

ZESTA CRACKERS ·1-LB,.

59~

PEPSI • DIET DrD~
OR

MOUNTAIN DEW
8-16 oz
bottles

•
99

Plus
• Tax&amp; ·
Deposit

WEEKEND VISITORS
Visiting their mother, Mae
Cleland over ihe weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Cleland of Weirton, W. Va .;
Mr. and Mrs. David Cleland
and children, Belpre; and
Mr. and Mrs. Buzz Sloter and
daughter, Racine.

'

Fou ndatio

Kitwe, Zambia .

Card parties begin this week

GROUND
BEEF

American Legion Auxiliary
holds community service party

'lil BEN FRANKLIM
llJ Ke bring variety to·lf/ef

x-Mon11-eal

Pills.

Meigs County Church' with Mrs, Joseph Cook giving
Women United meeting the meditation for the
Friday at the Pomeroy afternoon. She spoke of the
Baptist Church .for a World three women who are linked
Day of Prayer service voted with the World Day of
to make a $100 contribution lo . Prayer, Mrs. Darin James,
the Tracy Hein Fund, The Mrs. William Montgomeroy,
Meigs County youth is and Mrs. Henry Peabody.
scheduled to undergo a
Mrs. James, according ID
kidney transplant soon.
Mrs. Cook, made a trip ID
Approximately 7S women foreign missions in 1887 and
from churches over the then returned 1o organize in
county gathered at the her own church the World
Pomeroy church for a Day of Prayer. Mrs.
program on spirituPl growth, Montgotneroy · and Mr. .

\

�. ------·--- . - 4

r-------------------------1

·Legislative workshop set
Mrs. Dorothy Woo&lt;!ard ,
president of the Middleport •
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
Ameri can Association of
Universit y Women , has
announced a legislative day
workshop of the OHio State
Division of the AA UW to be
held Wednesday in Columbus.
The ftnance chairmen of
both houses of Ohio's General
Assembly will speak. Topi c of
Senator Harry Meshel and
Rep. Myrl Shoemaker ID-

Youngstown and 'D-Boumevi lle res pectively) and
cha irmen of the Senate
Finance Committee and the
House Finance
Ap·
propriations Committee, will
discuss "School Financing:
Where Do the $$$ Make
Sense?''
Keynote address wUl be
given by Senator Marigene
Valiquette on the topic ,
" J uvenile Justice Legislation
in Ohio." other representatives will speak on " A

Over 100 persons
attend March meet
of Riverview PTO
.Qver too people were in
attendance at the March
Riverview PTO meeting.
Marlene Putman, president,
was In charge of the business
meeting with attention being
given to projects completed
and j.lan. ·1 for the school.
'·. ~ o:
Collins, rep·
re_senll ve of the Meigs
Count y
Tuberculos is
Association presented a most
informative meeting on
Cancer
and
services
available in Meigs County.
Huff, Read - A • Thon
Chairman, attended the
meeting to recognize students
with outstanding achievements in this reading
program. The following
students were recognized :
For most money collected :
Mike West, Travis Newlun,

Ang ela Collins, Betty Jo
Hunt, Kristi Sheppard, Jeb
Zartman anct Mike Putman.
For most books read : Zeb
Zartman and Travis Newlun.
Hulf commended the
faculty of the school for an
outstanding job completed at
the school.
Mrs.
Black,
school
librarian, has been conducting a Book Fair at the
school. Parents participated
in the Book Fair at the conclusion of the meeting.
Volunteer mothers who
assisted with this prjoect as
well as regular daily library
se rv'ices are Margaret
Cauthorn , Marlene Putman,
and Virginia Newlun.
Plans were made for a
Variety Show to be staged at
the school later. Refreshments were served.

N~W HAVEN - Mrs.
David Russell and Mrs. Sam
Longanacre were hostesses . at .
the
March
m ~ etmg of the Neh.achma Garde!! Club held
at the New Haven ·Public
Libr~ry . The table was
beautifully decorated using
the St. Patrick's Day theme.
Mrs. ·Roy Jones, president,
called the meetmg to order
after which the club song,
collect and pledge were
given.
Mrs. Jones reminded
members to plant yellow
flowers this year due to the
5Uh amiversary of West
Virginia Garden Clubs. She
also announced that Course
III Flower Show School would
be held April 9-11 at Cedar
Lakes.
Mrs. Pete Burris reported
that Donald Roush, a student
at Wal)ama High School, had
been selected to be sent to the
1979 Conservation Camp at
Camp Caesar.
Mrs. Roy Jones will be
attendlng the 49th Annu il
State Garden Club Convention to be held at The

Greenbrier Hotel on March ·
18-20. She urged members ·to
attend.
A letter was read concerning a Spring Getaway to
the Gardens in the South and
Nashville, Tenn. being
sponsored by the West
Virginia Garden Clubs. This
will be held May 22-27.
Reservations are to be sent in
by March 15.
A very
informative
program was presented by
Mrs. Michael Merritt on
"Forcing Bulbs."
The door prize was won by
Mrs. James N. Roush.
Those attending the
meeting were Mrs. William
C. Gibbs, Mrs. David Fields,
Jr., Mrs. Michael Merritt,
Mrs. Roy Jones, Mrs. James
N. Roush, Mrs. David
Russell, Mrs. Harold Moxley,
Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Pete
Burris,
Mrs.
Harold
Bumgarner, Mrs. Hobie
Lowe, Mrs. Larry Wiley,
Mrs. Douglas Miller, Mrs.
Damie Harbour, members,
and guest , Mrs. Roger
Estergaard.

Women's Legislative World :
Is Ohi o th e Stat e of
Tranquility?" and there will
address ing issues, nul persona lities.
be a panel on school fin ancing
to in clud e Rep. Patrick
Sweeney, Senator Marcus
.f)~
Ro berto, and Willi am A.
Harrison, Jr., staff director
of the Education Review
.J-1111!11
Committee.
The afternoon will feature a
tour of the State House and
attendance at the flo or
sessions or a me~ia talk by Dear Sir :
Judith M. Tieman of the Ohio
So often when dealing with business people, we call ba ck
Citizens' Council on " A Guide afterwards only to complain, but seldom to complimen t · I
to a Woman's Political Ef- would like to publicly thank the good people at two local
fectiveness."
businesses - the Sentinel anrl Rll rlio Sts1t.ion WMPO.
As a "working" member of the Humane Society I am asked
The workshop begins at
8:30 a.m. at the Neil How;e in so often to help people find homes for stray animais.
Inasmuch as we have no shelter in the county to keep
Columbus.
an imals and most people don't want to sentence any animal to
death at th e county pound, we keep lists of those who want dogs
and cats and try to match th em up with those who have
animals they don't want or can 't keep.
Sometimes people who call us are in no position to take
care of an animal even temporarily and it's either the Humane
Society comin g up with a permanent home real qHick or the
animal is picked up by th e Dog Warden and it goes to tbe
Cut Scout Pack 235 pound.
Thanks to the Sentinel and its free advertising for "giveparticipated in the Polar
Bear· activities recently at away animals," we are able. to help people who will care for
Camp Kiashuta near Chester. animals 'for us a few days.
Thanks to WMPO we find homes in a matter of minutes or
The cubs finished first ,
hours
for animals that can only stay a short time where found.
second and third in their
· I just don 't koow what we'd do if it weren't lor the really
events, with the webelos
coming away with a first , great people who always cooperate with the Meigs County
Humane Society. For this reason I thank them for their efforts
second and third also ,
The pack was presented a on behalf of the homeless, negle cted, and abused animals. green
ribbon
for MARION C. CRAWFORD , ISG (Ret) US Army, Rt. 4 Box 326,
participation. Participating Pomeroy, Ohio.
were Scott Starcher, Mike
Young, Kyle Davis , Keith
Big Bend CB Club makes plans ·
Karschnik , Brian Holley, J .
C. Ginther, Billy Scarbrough ,
Plans for a safety break on Bend Citizens Band Radio
and Terry
Newsome. Memorial Day weekend were Club. The committee will
Webelos taking part were made during Tuesday night's check into a place and also
Dana Eynon , Brent Norton , · meeting 'of the Big Bend see about th e electrical
Lee Keney, Andy Hawk, and Citizens Band Radio Club hookups .
Matt Harris.
held at the grange hall on the
Reported ill were Margaret
Rock Springs fair grounds. Wyatt, home from Holzer
The time and plans for the ·after surgery ; Patrick Aiker,
safety break will be an- also home from Holzer, and
J
nounced
later .
The Betty Wilson at Veterans
resignation of David Pratt as Memorial, and Robert Goldspresident of the club was berry at University Hospital
noted and Mike Capehart in Columbus. It was noted
moved into that position. that dues are now payable
"When You Are Caught in Pratt has had health and the door prize donated by
the Middle" was the program problems. It was decided that Shirley Gibbs was awarded to
topic presented by Mrs. the coffee break scheduled Mary Bacon. Hotdogs, chips
Joseph Cook at the Thursday .for May 7 will be postponed and Kool-Aiu and coffee were
night meeting of th e due to the illness of several secved.
Missionary Society of the members.
Pomeroy Bapiist Church.
Betty Wilson rece ntly
Mrs. Cook noted that the underwent surgery at
One year ago: The Israeli
purpose of the program was Veterans Memorial Hospital.
army
took control of
to help those caught between It was reported also that
practically
all of Lebanon
the demands of their parents Robert Goldsberry who
south
of
the
Litani River.
and the needs · of their suffered a heart attack two
Writer
Today's
birthdays:
families and to help all of us weeks ago has been transPhilip
Roth
is
46
year~
old .
caught in interpersonal ferred .from the Pleasant
Former
Nazi
Germany
conflicts with our family to Valley Hospital to University
government official Albert
become more aware of the Hospital.
Speer
is 74.
resources of Christian · faith .
Members were reminded
Mrs. Phyllis Skinner that dues are payable now, $0
presided at the meeting per year.
TRY OUR
which opened with the Lord's
Next meeting will be March
Prayer. The Love gift was 30 at the grange hall.
dedicated by Mrs. Ellen Refreshments were served
Couch. Mrs. 'Betty Wiles by the Auxiliary and · door
white cross chairman: prizes were awarded to Mary
reported that the white cross Bacon, Patrick Aeiker, and
KENTUCKY
quota has been sent both Marie Thomas,
FRIED CHICKEN
overland and overseas.
Mrs. Ellen Couch and Mrs.
The safety break to be held
Burton Smith served refresh- on Memorial Day weekend
FAMILY RESTAURANT
ments. others attending were · was discussed at the Thurs992-5432
Mrs. Hariett Sterrett and day night meeting of the
Pomeroy
, 0.
Mrs. Georgia Watson.
· Ladies Auxiliary of the Big

.

.,

••• ?1/t. Fdltit:

Appreciates assistance

Dodson, Mrs. Aaron Hysell,
Beth Hysell, Penny Hysell,
Jennifer Weaver, Toni Sisk,
Mrs. Dexter Erwin, Mrs.
Russell Maynard , Mrs.
Kenneth Greene, Mrs. Henry
Johnson, Mrs. David Fields,
Jr., Mrs. George Reed, Mrs.
Fred Taylor, Mrs. Cecil
Cunningham, Samantha
Maynard, Rusty Maynard,
Mrs. • Revna Kind, Mrs. Ray
Stanley, Mrs. David Frye,
Mrs. William C. Gibbs and
the guest of honor, Mrs. Greg
Vining.
Those sending gifts were
Mrs. Wyllis Davis, Jr., Mrs . .
Doc Fields, Mrs: John Carpenter, Mrs. Lee Jeffers and
Mrs. Louis Bush.

CDS

. 675-2318

Point Pleasant

SPRING CLEARANCE
March 20th Thru 24th
Medicine Cabinet Cloieout

DALE'S

••
•

Haven ·Women met

•.!!

• TRY OUR

..
••

EXTRA
CRISPY

&lt;

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

~

:•

:•
~

•

•~•

CRCM'S

RESTAURANT
••..• FAMILY992-5432
•

••

Pomeroy,- 0 .

NEW HAVEN - · The New
Haven Womeri of the Church
of God held the March
meeting in the Missionary
Bu ild in g with Mr s. Fred
Tay lor and Mrs. George Reed
ser ving as hostesses:
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Orpha
Fields. Prayer was given by
Patty Maynard. Roll call was
given by reading a fav orite
jioem.
Finance Director, Sarah
Gibbs, reported that a
Stanley Party would be held

before the next meetmg m
April. Members will take
orders. She also received the
Million-for-Missions offering .
Stewardshi p Director.
Patty Maynard, distributed

21.• nnd that iin Executive

Committee Meeting will be
held on Friday. March 16, at
the Missionary Bui ldin g
beginning at 7 p.m .
The nex t regular meeting
will be held on April 5 instead
of April 12 and the hostesses
will be Fay Carpenter . Rena
Johnson and Pansy ~'ry.
Program Ill on China was
presented by
Missionary
Education . Director , Becky
Reed. The t heme was
"Christians in Chin a Today."

mater ial for member s to cut

out qu ilt blocks for t he
Mission Stations. She also
reported that the WCG had
taken food for a family during
their bereavement .
Members were reminded to
bring Easter gifts for a
pati ent at Lakin State
Hospital. It w a~ announced
that the installation of officers for 1979-30 would be
held at the church on March

Members were dressed in

Oriental clothing and the
room was decorat ed in
keeping with the Chinese

theme. Prior to the program,
refreshments were served by
the hostesses consistin g of
&lt;..:hincsc reci pes which incl uded Lemon Fried Chicken,
Hicc l' udding, . Almond
Cookies and Iced Tea. The
program closed with prayer
led by Delores Taylor.
A display of Chinese items
were shown by Sarah Gibbs
that belong to Mrs. Peggy
Anderson. She acquired them
during· her trip to China and
Thailand while visiting hec
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Bumgardn er and
daughters.
Those attending were Rena

CARDINAL

39

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· They 're all on sale now at clearance prices.

w. COMPTON, o.o.

LBS.

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A GREAT AFTER MEAL SNACK

BANANAS ............ 4

gg~

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6 ct. pkg.
~~~~ 21/z LBS.
THIS IS THE LAST WEEK FOR THESE .APPLES
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LBS.

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QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
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Since 1904, we've been finding
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7

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1 0-oz:

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-"'

MONARCH

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16-oz.

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Can

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COnAGE CHEESE ........ ~~~.~~. }

09

2% MILK .........:.~~: ... 59

elec triCi t y. M u lti-leve l w;ull leh yo u

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di spe nse r helm ·pr~vent sp ollin~ Model KDI-18

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Bin• Doo r IS
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b.ttp hd u,ive . -·" ...,,..
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t&gt;lim inat l!'s odo,. ~_,o.-~
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food~ itnd d r1n ks.

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.

KltchenAid

Disposer

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Handles lougll
stu ff w~e neak
bones and corn
husks with e ase.
hclusfve Wh•m
Ja m 1"' Br eake r helps
clear jam s- saves
~e ry il: e ca ll~

..... " ....... KWs 200
s..tnp
$155.00
KWI 200

$145.00

KWE 200

$115.00

Because k's worth k.

..

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Saves wa ter an d

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~~· _IJ jltJ;I

REG., LEMON or WOOD SCENT

· KITCHEN CENTER. INC.

trash compactors,

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16 1020 /b s.

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DALE'S

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CLEARANCE PRICES GOOD
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* COMPACTORS

To celebrate the
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59

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~'~~~~...................~..:~..]
:~~~. . . . . . . . . . .:. ! . ]

In 1966, the United St&lt;Jtes
and the Soviet Union signed a
two-yea r cultural exchange

militar y duty .
Ten years ago: A Unileu
In 1962, relative calm re- Arab Airlines plane crashed
turned to Algeria after a at Aswan airport in Egypt,
cease~fire ended seven years
kilh ng Bi persons. injuring
of warfa re between th e ten.
French and nationa lists in the
North African country .

__________

·

IDAHO POTATOES .••.••••••• 10

ordered tu register for

l
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w_lE_N_ER_s_.··-··._
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C
amR~

In 1942, during World War
II , American men between
the oges of 45 and 64 were

Five
yea rs
ago: ~---------------------- -- ,
Conserva t ive Re pu blica n
I
Senator ·James Buckley of
New York called on Preside nt
OPTOMETRIST
:
Nixon to resign, saying Ute I OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12 , 2 to S ( CL.OSE 1
Watergate affair had become 1 AT' NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
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Johnson. Sue Erwin, Bonnie
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Mayna rd, Bcc~y Heed,
De lores Tay lor. Grace
Cunningham, Eleanor Davis
Sa rah Gibbs, and O r ph ~
Fields.

$

CENTER CUT LOIN

* DISHWASHERS

Kit chenAid dis hwashers.

and Mrs. R. G. Abels, Long'
Bottom and Louis Lane and
Gene, Belpre.
Mrs. Jerry Northway and
family of Grand Rapids,
Mich., visited her mother,
Mrs. Ada Van Meter a recent
weekend.
Ryan Evans was an
overnight guest of Artie
Humel at Pomeroy recently.
Mrs. Ruby Bryant called on
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Ritchie , Jr. , Portland,
Tuesday afternoon.
.
Tom Durst spent a week's
vacation at Key West, Fla.,
recently.
Donnette Talbott visited
Debra Bryant on Wednesday
afternoon. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Wilson and son· and Paul
Dean E yans spent a few days
in Canton recently.

2119 Jackson Ave.

EXTRA ·.
CRISPY

disp oser&gt;. and hOI·water

!&gt;Jr. and Mrs. Bill Berry,
Lexington ; Mr. and Mrs.
Victor Durst, Scott, Jason
and Kelly, The Plains; Jim
Ritchie, Ramie and Brian
Burkhanuner, Minersville;
and Lawrence Ritchie, Jr.,
Portland, visited Mr. and
Mrs. R. R. Durst and Tom,
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Birch, Waterford, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Wallace,.
Letart Falls, and Leota
Birch, local, Sunday.
Mr. a0:d Mrs ~ Richard
Abels, Long •. Bottom, called
' on Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLuz
on Wednesday afternoon.
A dinner was hel.d at the
home of Mr. 11nd Mrs. Harry
· Richard receptly to celebrate
the birthdays of Floyd and
Lester Rl ~hard. Invited
guests wer~ Mr. and Mrs ..
Douglas Cirel~, Racine, Mr.

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

Cub scouts
win awards

Mrs. Vining honored by shower ·
NEW HAVEN - Mrs. Greg
Vining (Vicky Hysell ) was
hon &lt;:n·d recently with a
misr•'l l"·,eous shower held in
the • · ~, ioQary Building at
the New Haven First Church
of God.
Games were played and
prizes were won by Mrs.
Russell Maynard, Mrs. Ray
Stanley , and Mrs. Cecil
Cunningham. The door prize
was won by Rusty Maynard.
Two beautiful cakes were
baked and served by Mrs.
George Reed and Mrs. David
Fields, Jr.
The punch was served by
Miss Toni Sisk and Miss
J emifer Weaver.
Those attending were Mrs.
Glen Weaver , Mrs. Lester

~• 1'/ew

DALE'S

Letters ol opinion are welcomed. They should be less
than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
and must be signed with the signee's address. Namf s may
·be withheld upon publication. However, 011 request,
J~&amp;mes will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,

Mr.·". Cook
Nehac/ima Gardeners met recently has program

1

7- The Daily Sentiru•J, Millrllt·purl-Pnmt•r'cly , 0 .. Mclflday . M;.1r .1!1: 1!1!~

00-10-0fi

@

CAR DINAl f\1

�8- The Daily Sentinel. Vllu&lt; u c p u o \.-,

Racine
Mrs. Ura Morris is now at
home after spending several
days in the Jackson Care
Center, Jackson, Ohio. She
has had many visitors since
her return home.
Mr. and Mrs. Brice Sayre
and children of Jackson and
Mr. and Mrs David Sayre of
Antiquity were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush
of Fairview, Ohio visited one
evening with Mrs. Caroline
Miller .
Mr . and Mrs.
Robert
Beegle of Dorcas returned
home recently from a
vacation in Florida . They
visited in Florida with Mrs.
Beegle 's
aunt.
Mrs .
Josephine Stiff who resides m
West Palm Beach, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Beegle in Inglis,
Fla ., Mrs Mildred Mercer,
Baco Raton, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale McGraw in Sebrmg and
Mjnd Mrs. Charles Mallory in
Atlanta.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Smith ,
' Mrs. Garnet Ervine and Mrs .
Maxine Shain visited with
Ross Hoback who is confine~
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr . Hoback is brother of Mrs .
Smith and Mrs. Ervine.
Mrs. Marie Roy and Mt .
and Mrs. Bob Roy and Betty
attended the funeral of Mrs.
Roy's sister, Mary Thompson
at Moundsville, W. V a. last
week.
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Farra were their
son and daughter-in-law, Mr .
an~ Mrs. Floyd Farra Jr. of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs
Ray Heiney of Fairview.
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson
and son, Bruce and friend
from Seymour, Ind ., VISited
with his mother , Mrs. Gretta
Simpson in Racine and Mrs .
Simpson's mother , Mrs .
Marguerite Winebrenner in
Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill Jr.
(Babe) celebrated their &gt;1st
anniversary last week. Those
present were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Hll, Jeff Hill, Bill Hill Jr. and
wife, Joy and Tim Hill,
Debbie Imboden and Jarod
,
Hill.
.

v ~a n· •

VJ. ,J .•

l~Willlily.

9-Tue Daily Sentlllel, Midilleport·Pomt•roy . il., MmH~&lt;Y , Mm· . 1 ~. 197n

Mar. 19, 1979

Ti511oc~GRAP-H

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Bernice Bede Osol

- -- - --·
Notices
-- - - --- - - - ~---.

~

'-Your
'Birthday

DICK TRACY

-- -

GU N SHOOT. Ronne Gun Cl ub
Cvery Sunday I pm Foclory
rho lo. e guns only

~-

'

~-

.

___________

..___

_ ._~!!aJ_ ~.sta_te _lo_r ~a.!_e__

For Rent

Business Services

~

COU NTR V MOBilE Ho1ne Pork ! P f'I&lt;' I'X IWi f-11 1( l' l' " C&gt;r l I lui
Reule 33 north of Pome roy l'.rP Pd ' l-lcood~ wolr, oru-1 r-lo:&gt;rll 1('1
ly "'"'' I •,j. "Y Hill Pn rn~roy Ohic
t orge lots . Co11 9&lt;n-7479 .
.
o• phn1lr 49/ ·mfiS
3 AND 4 RM lurnished and un ·
furnis h ed opts
Phone
992 5434 .
FARM fOR sole House 2 barns
trml pr Lm gf&gt; pond 10 acres or
'
TWO BEDROOM , ki tchen fu, nish
81 ac res 742·1566
ed opl Co li before 1:! om
992 2188
3', acres Ill Pomeroy Secll ded
TRACTOR DRIVEN e
wooded area on top of hdl
NEW FOUR bedroom opts ' enled
PTOALTERNATORS
Overl
ooks
r111er
Wate
r,
e
lec·
orco rd1 ng lo you r income we
from 15,000 to
tm o ~o~ a1lobl e 992 3886
pay wa ter, sevvoge an d ga r·
7S,OOO walls.
boge p1ckup For o fa mily of 6 RfA L ESTATE l oon"s Pu rc hase a nd
lo 8 people 992 7772
refi nan ce 30 year te rms VA No money down (el igible
62 0~ OVER? See o new I
*New Home
veterans). FHA As low a s 3
bedroo m opt ., renl IS based on
:120 E. Main Street,
*Add· ons
per c'ent down ( non ve tere ns ).
you r 1ncome We pay water .
27320 Montgomery Rd.
Pomeroy, 0.
Ire land Mor tgage Co , 77 E
Remoldings
sewage and garbage p1ck up
Langsville, Ohio
Call992·!113_
'
Slole Athens b1&lt;1 ·592 3051
9Q2 7772
614-669-4245 Evenings
"For Free E sll mates
-i: Free Estimates
- - . - - - 2 Miles East
THREE
BEDROOM
ra nc h
992-6011
TWO APTS for wheelcho1r po
of Wilkesville
11 -9-1 mo.
Ca rpeted, o1r condthoned Pn c
•
t1 ents Rent 1s based on you r 1n
2-14-1
mo._
.
3-16-mo.
pd.
·
ed
ve
ry
re
a
son
ably
In
come 992 7772
.
.5yr 0c u ~e- ~2- 5~48
PARTIALLY FUR NISHED opl. I
bedr $125 mo AU ulll1t1es MOOfRN THREE bedroom house.
ful l basement. ft reploce full y
M.,...berOf
pa1d $50 depos11'. See ol 307
corpeled.
cent ral air, enclosed
CIIUnoey· .
Sp_r1~g A ~ e : Po~~r~y . __
1
1
sun porch, located on 6 / 1 acres
hte~llklltl
on CR 28, opprox 3 miles from
lnsurld '
Racine. If interes ted co ntact
fOR LEASE Town Hou ~e opl , 4
'I• milo off Rt. 7 bY-Pill an
Lorry Wolle 949 2836 weekends
room
Inc l ude~
s l o11 e ,
51. Rt. t24 towara Rutland,
e11er:m~s___
~
•
ocWt•t
Itt
a
Chlm'!4Y
flrt
pul
and
after
5
relngerolor water No pets.
18 Years Experience
0
.
d•mper
on
your
lffl
a
$195 pe r mo. plys security
Will Make
deposil Vou pay eleCir tc and
Service Calls
Auf.Q&amp; Truck
HC!usiny
yea r lease Located lOth and
·Repair
I
...
Mom Coolv1 1fe E.R A. Affolt e r ~
1lfftl Century Service with
Headquarters
Re alty .
Ph o ne ' V1rgin io
65 I Beech Street
Also Transmission
2oth C!Wttury Kaow-How.
Ha ymon
Soles
Assoc
. .ICIIIillntln
Middleport, 0 .
Repair
985· 4197
W-tove, 011 Furucc
992-2356
Phone
992-5682
Iol
li=
freptece
fllves
·
73'' acre fo rm at Reedsville ,
hone : 7C2-S110
Oh1o Contact Goldie Berry
3-7·1 mo. I Pd .l
Kt Wlllte, P.roprt•tot
Phone 423 · 7663
VIRGIL B. SR. ,RE Atro•
2-5-1 mo.
992-3325
216 E: Second Street
Auto Sales
LARGE ROOMS 3
1975 CUTLASS SUPREME Ex ·
bedrooms, closets, 1 t;,
cellen l cond1tion
985·3970
Radiator~
ba ths, natural gas forced
ofler 6 p m
a1r furnace, full ba sement,
1974 OLDS CUTLAS S Supreme slo
and 2 porches, very well
All types roofing, guHers
New, repair.
l1 on wagon $2500 or bes l off er
located in town living Will
and downspouts. All types
..,...., to the
Ca n be 5een al C1ltze ns No
fake $25,000.
gutters and
home maintenance - new
11 onol Bo nk, M1dd leporl or call
BLOCK STORAGE - Ex
and repair. Storm dOors
downspouts.
992 7663
ce llent built building, con
and windows. All work
Window cleaning
crete
floor, natural gas,
guaranteed. 20 years1963 CHEVY NOVA 11 , new m 1
running
water,
restrooms,
Gutter cleaning
eKperlence .
Free
ter1or. new snow ti res Needs
large overhead doors on
body work . $300. 949 2728
estimates
.
Call:
Tom
Free Estimates
eac h end and lots of prking
Hoskins, 949·2160.
949·2862, 949-2160
1975 CH~VY TRUCK 992-5335
$35,000.
3-7-lmo
I'UH·Z174
STURDY - 3 or 4 bedroom
1973 LTD FORD Brougham 59 ,000
2·7-mo.
village
home
,
2
baths,
2
kit
m1les $1,000 992-2789
chens, fu ll basement, very
. ---------· 1975 CHEVY TRUCK 4x4 992 5335
nic e mod ern kit c hen ,
garage, and nearly 2 acres
Hammond
of green grass . $48,500.
RANCH - Family room, 3
For Sale
bedrooms, bath, nice kit
COAL, LIM ESTONE , sand , grovel ,
,&amp; Famous Name . Brand
chen . bea ut,fu llc-rge tot, c i
calcium chlor1de . fe rtd1zer. dog
ty water 10 good reside nt ial
14 Yr. Exper.ence
food. ond all typ es of soli Ex·
neighborhood $29,500
Aural Melhod
cels1or Soli Works Inc., E Mai n
SMALL - But handy. Has
bath, kitchen, city wate r ,
~~ - ~om-:r~y _9~2-.38~ 1 . . _
and bus iness room for only
)llles ·Rep. For
MIXED CONDITIONED hoy Very
.. Tssoclafe Of •New Home
good guollly
De live r y $11,000
Sundins
Elberlelds of Pomeroy
4
ACRES
1n
th
e
country
o)ladable Phone 992-7201 or
•Add-ons
and Ktmball Music Center
Hammond Organs
on school and mail routes . 8
992-3309
" ~
h
I
*Remolding
of Athens
room house, bath, rural
Tyree Blvd. Racine,'? ""
· ~VERYTHING ' S
GOTTA GO"
Phone 992·2581
water, garden , and 2 car
992-6011
Phone 949-2.118 evenmgs
House and lot , fu rn iture ' garage. A family home for
or 992-2082
after s p.m . Weekends
2 11 1 mo Pd .
clothes , ca r all my household ' $27,500
3· 11 ·1 mo.
after 12. noon.
1tems. Drop by 760 la ure l Sl ,
NEW LISTING - About 3
1
5
o-_, BRADFORD. Auctioneer Com·
~~d~le_p~!__
~ _ _ _ ~ __ _ doze n young peach and apE C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv L-------....:c2·..:,;·,;m,;;.;,
plete Serv1ce Phone 949-2.487
ples
t
rees
,
barn,
2
car
tng
Ohio
Vol
ley
reg1on
Six
GOOD MIXED hay lor sole
EXCAVATING , d1~1edr, loader o~.d
or 949-2000 Raci ne, Oh 1o, Crill
garage, 7 room house, drill days a week 24 ho urs serv1ce
8&lt;13 2432 .
ump tru c~~. s
Bradf ord
back hoe wa r"'
ed we ll', small stream and
Emergency col ts Colt 882 2952
a nd lo-boys lor htre, w11f haul t:==~===-=:-::::-REDUCE SAFE and fast with
good garden . Attract1ve
or 882-2305
1111 dtrt , to so t! !1mesionc and ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Go Bese Table!!&gt; and E·Vop 'wafer
- - - - ----place for justil7,000
grovel Ca ll Bob or Roger Jef·
Sweepers , toa sters , irons oil
MOBIL E HOM E rep01rs Furnaces
p1~s '~ ~l son ~ r ~ g- __ _ __ ~
GARDEN TIME IS HERE .
lers, day pMone 992-7089,. ntght
small oppl ionces lawn n1ower ,
e
lectri
cal
wor
k
pi
pes
sowed,
4 OF THESE HAVE EXRE DU CE SAFE and fas t wtth
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232
next to State Highway Garage
?. ' ~~bi n~- 993_- 58~ ---~
CELLENT SPOTS. CALL
GoBese Tablets and E-Vop
on Rout e 7,
EXCAVATING
,
doze
r,
back
hoe
992-3325.
WALLPAPERING AND pointing
. 'v:o~er_ p~ll ~". _N_!I~o~ ~~ ·- __
ond ditche r Charles R Hot- SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
Colt 742-2328
NEED
SMALL
FARM
LOWREV GEN IE 4 organ 2
l•e ld, Back .Hoe Ser~o~ice,
viCe, oil makes , 992.2284 The
WITH TOBACCO BASE IN
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
keyboards bu1ll-in lope play er
Rutland , Oh to Phone 742-2008 .
Fabri c Sho p
Pomeroy .
GALLlA COUNTY.
covot.ng , se pli c systems
$1000 992-7354
Authomed
Smger
Soles and
dozer , back hoe Rl 143 Phone BATHROOM S AND Kitch ens
Serv1ce . We sharpen SCissors .
Gordon B
USED FRIGIDAIRE refr1gerolor
remodeled , ceramic lite, plum_! ~61_4l69B- 73_3 1 : - - - - - Helen L.
$75 9q2. 7354
.
bi ng, co rpenlry , and general
Sue P. Murphy
mo.nt enon ce . 13 years e)(KAWASAK I KZ 650 q49·2735
Realtor Associates
per~ence . 992-3685
Real Estate lor Sale
-----GOOD MI XED hay $1 bale . Call
PULliNS EXCAVA TING . Complete
Housing
~f~5__p~:_9~ !.~!__3:..__ - - - Service . Phone 992-2478.
FARMS 16 a cre form w1th 2 stury
VELLOW VELVET cho1r. Blue foiC
Headquarters
frame house 1n Solem Twp , 6 AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
m iles
fr o m Wt lkesvi ll e .
~S h!__~· ~~ ~2~3.:
- - _ - -ca ncelled? Los t your operolors
$17 500. Starkey Realty Vic
FOUR NEW aluminum wheels, 15 25 ACRES , 2 bedroom houSe
l1cense? Phone 992· 2143
Woll e . 949 · 2286
Loretto
1n . fo r Chevrolet 742-3154.
$50,000, Chester 614-985-4371
McDade J-592 2419:__ _ _ _
Of
or 304-343 8789.
REGISTERED three-quarter Ara------r"--0- - - - -- .. - - - - - ---~s,
e,_
rv
,_,_,
ic,e'-"
s=c.c
l'e='r
,_,e"'--d
THREE
BEDROOM
two
s
tory
older
.
bian mare 7 years old Three- APP'ROX . TWENTY ocres on Flat
home w1th three lots . Located WILL CARE fo r the 91derly m our
quarte r Ara bia n geldrng 3
woods Rood . water and e lec
at 14 Hdl Street Pomeroy .
home Phone992 73 14.
years old. See Eskey H1 IL Flat·
lf1 CIIy . See Eskey Hill ,
$4500. If Int erested
call WATER AND m1sc. hauling Call
Pomeroy , ' Oh1o or phone
woods Rd., Pomeroy, OH
A GOOD SELECTION OF
Phone 992 - ~ 885
992-388::
5;__ ____ ___ ~26_
26___ _ ______
992 5858
END &amp; ROLL
- BALANCES.
19 HEAD FEEDER p1gs overage SEVEN ROOM HOUSE . 2' 1~ acres ONE ACRE lots near Langsv1ll e . NOW HAULING limes tone 10
Oh1o Call 742 ·2409
of land garage w1th uti l1ty
we1ght 46 lb Been worm ed
·---::--:., Middleport-Pomeroy ar ea . Call
Shots and la ds doclled $760
, budding I mile above Raci ne
for free es timat e. 367 -7101
FOR -SALE BY OWNER
for all Tup pers Pl01ns, Oh1 o.
Dam 247 ·..3123 .
3
yr . old. 14 x65. 2 bdr .. oil elec
Wi
l l CARE for two in valid or 1
614 -667-3368
!ric , centra l 01 r, 36 acres born
elderly ' pe rsons in my home.
18 FT Franklin camping tra iler .
cellar, storage buld1ng tobacco
Twenty years ex pe riP.nce.
1970 Ford $375 6 room house 1n
bose , so me limber
Co lt
Reasonab le rat es . 992-6022 or
Rul!ond 742·2874
245-5348
9q2 5422.

-

CU N SHOOT ~anne Volu nteer
f1 re De pt hcry Saturday b 30
pm ot lh e11 bu•ld1ng 1n 8oshon
March 20. 1979
Fod ory choke guns only
Several of your heart's des1res
W.
VA
He reford Breeder'
can be fulfil led lh1s com1n g
Assor10tion Annua l Spr ing
:;ear A 1ong· t1m e Investm en t of
Show a nd SOle I 0 b ull s 14
pat1ence will finally pay o ff
femal es , Satu rday Ma rc h 31
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 201 The
Show 10 om, sole I pm ol
Jackson 's M1 ll Wes ton , WV
compaSSIOn vo u always snow
For Catalog , wnte Marjone
to oth ers 15 the e)(act 1ngred~
Ours Rt 3 B o~t 310 Buc kho n
1en1 yo u need tod ay to win A
nM WV '2620 1
gen tl e stream can wea r down
t h e hardest ro ck F1nc;i out more SPECIA L ON per ms Monday
of what l1 es ahead for you fro m
Tuesdoy and Wednesda y Sen
no w until the nex t bi rthday by
sor Per m regul ar $30 a nd $25 ,
send1ng for yo ur copy of Astra- '
now $17 50 an d $22.50. Coli
30d 773 ·5404 Ja nel's Hoi r·Go
Graph Leller Ma1l $1 for ·each
Round , Mason, WV
to Astra Graph P 0 Box 4H9
Ra d10 C1ty S tati on N Y 10019
A 1973 Nashua 60x12 mob1le
Be s ure to s p ecify birth sign .
home wd l be sold at public ou c·
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You
tion on Monday , Apr1 l 2nd
bel1eve in yo ur id eas and show
1979, 019 om al Cop1tol Sovlt'1gs
such fa 1th in your ca pa bili ti eS
&amp; l oon Co .. JOO W. 2nd St ,
Pomeroy . Oh1o, starting al a
to Impl eme nt them that others
mm1m um bid pnce of $1,000 lo
c an 't help but be supportive
the highes t bidd er So1d 1tem is
today
ova1 lable for inspec tiOn by op
TAURUS (Ap ril 20-May 20) Th e
pinlme nt by conlocfln g Cop1tol
tenderness and generosity yo u
Sovmgs &amp; Loon or sa1d add ress
display toward all whom yo u re
Monda y lh ru Fndoy from 9om
Involved with toddy returns to
to 5pm ot 992' ·21 11 The above
yo u ten fold What you ~ow wi ll
collat era l item IS bei ng sold
yie ld a fine harvest
·
1mder th e te rms of certom
GEM INI (May 21·June 20) Let
Secunly Agreemen t between
those you ca re about have then
Ern es l and Carol Tnpl efl , 47630
way toda y . It'll give you mu ch
Greenwood Cemete ry Rd
pleas ure to watch th em have so
Ro cme , Oh10 4577 1 and lhe
much enioyment from such a
unde rs1gned
Simple gesture
Copllol Sav1ngs and Loon Com
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
pony 1812 Wo shmglo n Blvd
Spend your t1me a.nd ene rgy
_Belpre , ~hi e ~5? I ~
over labors o f love today A
fu lllllmg day ca n be yo urs when
GiveAway
you comb ine that which IS both
HOUND HOUSEBROKEN Good
creati ve and constr uctive
w11h chi ld ren Female 22-4
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) Yo u fe e l
Wolnul , Midd leport aft er 5
so re la )(ed today . there 1sn 't
- . - .
too much that co uld upse t you
FRH COW manure J1mmy Mar
In fact. you II turn the workaday
ton W1l i1s Hdl
world into an en toyable one
HMALE Peek o-poo . block and
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) ThiS
ton housedog Good wilh
1s a good day to put tho se
adu lts 147 2676
lovi ng hands of yours to work at
home Your creat1v1 ty could
Lost and Found
save the fam1 ly a ti dy sum
LIBRA (Sepl. 23·0cl. 23) FOU ND WHITE fe mal e robb1t .
There· s a good chanc e you ' ll
992-3882
be see 1ng s om eo ne you LOST AUSTRALIAN Shepherd
haven 't been m touch wi th for
Block wtt h wh1t e spots. bob
awhi le Eith e r th ey 'll pop in on
toi l Goes by nome of Peppy
you or you ' ll get the urge to
Reword H A Cole 667 -3405 or
contact them
667·3131
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22)
Somelh1 ng that co ul d be p rofitMobile Homes lor Sale
abl e an d that 's been ng ht un·
der your no~se all th e time may 1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mob1le
show Itse lf today Be respo n·
home furnt shed 3 bed r .
stve
washer an d dry e r A1r cond1
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
t1 oned I lol, 210 It fron lage
21) Matters c lose to you r heart
$17 000 Pho ne 7d2·2B26
have a very promising chance 1955 Pro1ne Schooner. 2ll x B. I
for success today . provided
bdr '
Sunday guests of Mr. and . you ha ndle them yourself
1965Generol 60x 12, 2bdr
Mrs. Hilton Wolfe were their Don 't trust the m to others
1968 Ekona , 52x 12, 2 bdr.
sn and daughter-in-law, Mr.
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan . 19) 1969 Buddy 60 x 12 , 4 bd r
Gu1de your affairs w ith kmd 1970 Sylva , 60x 12. 2 bdr
and Mrs. Duane Wolfe and
1970Costl e 60 x 12, 2 bdr
children, Lori and Bruce, of words and gentle ways today
You r associates w111 be more 1973 Arlington . 60 x 12. 2 bdr
Tuppers
Plains .
They
responsive to these tact1cs 1973 R1 dgewood .'?Ox 14 , 3 bdr
celebrated Bruce's birthday.
1973 Kirkwood . 50 x 12, 2 bdr
tha n to dem ands
B&amp; S MOB IL E HOME SALES
Those from the Racine
AQUARIUS [Jan. 2!J-Feb. 19)
PT•. Pl'l:ASANT WV
Your wlnnlng way s cou ld
Baptist Church who attended
675·-4424
c
ha
rm
eve
n
th
e
m
ost
hardthe
Spring Fellowship
nosed
today
Yo
u
do
all
the
meeting of the Rio Grande
n ght thing s to evoke a pos1t1ve 1973 FREEDOM MOBI LE home
Baptist Association held at
reac tion from others
12&gt;:52 2 bedroom, firepla ce
the Vinton Baptist Church on
at r conditiOning , Ullder pmnmg
992 6118 afte r 4 or 992·5413
Saturday were Mrs. Gretta
an~ l1m e.
Simpson, Mrs.Oilie Mae
1970 REBEL RAIDER 12x4tl Ve ry
cozart, Mrs. Doris Hensler,
good cond1t1 0n Pnced to sel l
Mrs . Mary Kay Yost , Mr. and
2-47 3875 .
Mrs. Roderick Grinun, Rev.
Don Walker and Mrs. Carol
d ____
---~H~e~l~p~W~a~n~t~e~
I
Cook, Pomeroy.
KITCH EN HELP and w01 tress App ·
Visitors one day last week
ly '" person Crow s Steak ,
House .
·
of Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
By Mr. Herbert Roush
Grimm were Mrs. Kely ayre
Mr. and Mrs. Don Stephens ATlENTION RN AND LPN WITH
of Pataskala and Mrs . of Culloden, W. Va., visited
PHARMACOLOGY We now
have ope n1 ngs m th e 3·11 an d
Alberta
Saunders
of Mr . and Mrs. Clifford Hill
11 7 shif ts lnqu1 re at P1 necres t
Gallipolis.
Sunday and attended Sunday
Core Center. A skdled nursing
, .
Sunday visitors of Rev. and School and church services at
fo c1lity 555 Jackson Pike ,
mrs. FUWalker were Mrs. the Letart Falls Methodist
~~ 11po 1i ~~~~ 62 4:_4~6-_7 1_1 ~
, . Walker 's mother, Mrs. Gay Church with Mrs. Pauline RELIABLE BABYSITTER w1 th fleld ble ho urs in Racine Syracuse
·· , Cogar of Dixie, W. Va. , and Hill. They were dinne r guests
area Call 992 ·2257 or 949·20 14. ,
bver and sister-in-law, Mr
----- ------- - - (
of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill.
and mrs. Darrell Cogar of
Mr and Mrs. Don Barnette WOMAN AND man to rep resen t
local life insurance agency m
Charleston.
of Langsville visited Mr. and
Mei
gs County Salary , co mm1 s· t
Mrs. Garnet Ervine en- Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Saturday
s1o ns and benef tls - unlimttcd '
tertained with a
birthday evenin g.
earnings po ten1iol m1n1mum
age 21, Coli 992-6678 We prodinner for her daughter, Mrs ..
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert
vide lramtng and prospect5
, Ralph Shain of Antiquity. Roush visited Ott Boston at
Those attending were Mr. Racine.
Pets lor Sale
RE DUCE SAFE a nd fa s1 w1th
and mrs. Ralph Shain, Mrs.
GoBese To bl eis and E Vop wa ter
Mr . and Mrs. Dorsa ParRISING STJ,R Kenn els . Boordtng pd ls" Nelson Dru g
Mildred Spencer of Antiquity, sons, Mandy and Michael
and graommg . a ll breeds
·' - Mr. and mrs. David Shain of Russell visited Mr. and Mrs.
~~es ht~!.: ~~7...:_03_93 ~
APP LES W ~ hove . Rom es and
' Antiqui~y and son, Jason, Mr. Eddie Hupp and son, J eremy,. HOOF HOLlOW Eng l1sh a nd W1 nes op apples Ut1h 1y grade ol
'
and Mrs. Thomas Reed and at Portland Friday even1ng.
Wes tern , Saddl es and ha rn ess $4 per bu !:Keel lent for cook1 ng
Horses and pon ies
Ruth W1ll close our sloroge on March
daughters, Sherri Jo and
Mrs. Norma Morris and
Reeves 614 ·698-3290
13 Fitzpatrick Or chard SR b8Y
... Theresa,
Logan,
Ohio, chidren, Jason, Erin and
- - - ....! - - - - - - - " - - -- ; Phone669·37B5
• Dwight Hoback of Belpre and
Rachel of Bowling Green
Yard Sale
·' Mr . and Mrs . Raymond were weekend guests of her
REG ISTERED thr ee·qua rt er Ara.
IF VOU ha ~o~e o service lo offer , b1on more 7 years old Th ree· Carpenter of Flemingsburg,
mother, Mrs . Anna Wheeler.
wo nl to buy or sell so methmg , · q uarter Arob1o n Geld1ng 3 ~ ea rs ·
Ky.
Mrs Addie Norris and
ae looking lor work .. or old See Es key H1ll Flatwoods
'·
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Sunp- daughter ,
wholever
you' ll get res ul ts Rd , Po me roy . Oht o Phone 1
Debbie,
of
fos 1 "'r w1 t h a Sen tm e! Wo nl Ad 991-:'1 885
son and children, Darin and Syracuse visited Mrs. Eula
Call992·2156.
, Lisa, of Bahimorf,' Ohio were Wolfe and Aaron Sunday.
. . : weekend guests
of ~lr
Mr. and mrs. Bill Catron of
Simpson' s mother , Mrs . Columbus s pent two weeks
Wanted to Re:!'n~
t ___
- Helen Simpson and Me- w ith Mrs . Edna Parsons and
WANTED
lo
ren
t
~r buy NICE! SIZ ·
. Simpson 's parents, Mr. and son, Mark, and Preston
ed tro lle r lot near Pomeroy ·
mrs. Ralph Badgley .
Parsons .
Ma son Bridge 30.4 -882·2562
-·---------··
Those from out of town here
Mrs. Edna Parsons a nd
to attend the funeral of Mrs. son, Mark, and Preston
wanted to Buy
Faye Wilcoxen included Mr. Parsons of Antiquity spent
and
Mrs .
Frederick Sunday evening. with Mr . a nd CHIP WOOD
Po le s ma x.
d1ome ter 10 ' on larges t end
· Wilco xen, Johnstown, Ohio;
Mrs . Carroll White and
$1 7 pe r ton Bundled slob , $10
Mr.and Mrs . Floyd Jones and family .
per to n Del1vered to Ohi o
landmar~
daughter, Irene, Mt . Vernon,
Poltel Co
Rl 2, Pomeroy .
Mrs. Gerald Hay man a nd
q92.26aq
· Ohio ; Mrs. Veda Krzton,
9a_Jack W. Carsey,Mgr.
Mrs. Robert Hart spent ·
Chicago ; Mr. and Mrs Rock Friday evening with Mrs. OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , brass
Phone 992-2181
beds , iron beds , desks etc.,
· Young and son, Ande, Larry
'
Phyllis Young at Middleport.
complete households. Wri le
and Helen Wilcoxen, all or
Mrs. Foc1e Hayman visited
M 0 Miller . Rt 4, Pomeroy or BASS BOAT, Thunder Croft. 35
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Wallie Stover
h p. Chrysler. Elec tri c trolling
coll992 ·7760.
Edwarcj Brown and son, Ted, Sunday afternoon and Mrs.
mo
to r and dept h fmder With
OLD COINS , pocket wa tches,
trader. 992-5067.
__.._
· Dayton ; Joe Wilcoxen of Bertha Robinson at Racine
doss rings , wedd1 ng bonds;
Charl es W. Monda y afternoon.
; Worthing ;
d1amonds. Gold or ~i lve r Cal l H &amp; N Day old or sta rted leghorn
pull ets, both fl oo r or cage
; Wilcoxen, Cleveland , and Mr.
Mr . and Mrs . Herbert _ _R~~rW'!_~S i ey 742- 233~ . __
grown ovo1loble Poultry Hous·
· and mrs. James Thompson,
WANT
TO
buy·
old
45
and
78
Roush visited Rev. Freeland
1ng ond Aulomotion , Mod&amp;rn
phonograp h reco rds . Co li
: Botkins, Ohio.
Poultry , 399 W Main , Pomeroy .
Norris at Holzer Medical
992·6370 or Contact Marlin Fur·
, Mrs. Marilyn Po well has Center on Sunday afternoon.
Phone 992-2164 .
nilu re
· return ed
hom e
from
Mr . and Mrs. H erb ert WANTED fO buy old fCWelry MAYTAG WRINGU washer, like
Veterans Memoria l Hosp1tnl
new ,
SJ15 .
Frigidaire
Roush a nd Mr. a nd Mrs.
Ca ll 992-5262 or wri le Koy
refr igerator , $75
Portabl e
Miss
Robin
Fos terof Roge r Roush and d a ughter,
Ceci l, 87 S 2nd , Mtdd lepo rt ,
-~~~-~ry_
~~~~·
7~2
·
2_!9~.:_-~·Livonia , Michigan, visited Kimberly and Cindy Roush
OH
several days .-!Jere with .her were shopping at the Silver cAsH-FOR. ju"~-;;; --2dhdu ~. FO.R YOUR condy and coke suppiles come to Di's , Spnng
· grandparentsf'Mr. a nd Mrs. Bridge Plaza Sunday afwrecker
se rvicv . Fry e's ,
Vo lley Plo1o. Free Ester condy
Rut lan d, OH . 742-20t1 1.
l Pat Webb.
classes . Call4&lt;16 2134
ternoon .
-- _,.
·-

-

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I[

MUM.- ]

.

MonlgomelJ
Trailer Sales

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

MONDAY, MARCH 19,1979
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; Hollywood Squares 6: News 10,
Pop GOEts The Country 8; Love , American Style 15;
Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavett 20; Know
Your Schools 33 .
7:3D-That NashvilleMuslcJ ; Muppet Sho w6 ; Pr ice Is
Right 8; Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98 Beauty Show 13 ;
Nashvi lle On The Road 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17 ;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
B 00-Liltle House OnThe Prairie 3; Billy Graham
Crusade 13, 15; Jerry Reed 6; Peanuts a, 10; Bill
Moyers' Journal 20,33 ; Let's Go To The Rces 17.
8 . 31)-Whlte Shadow B. Billy Graham Cursade 10,
Dragnet 17.

Your Headquarters For
Annstrong Carpeting

EU.IOTT
APPUANCE II

w

-

REYNOlD'S

•
CAPTAlN EASY
THE ~DIO OPE'RATOR OF THIS
SHIP THAT JU5T DOCKED 5&gt;AID
HE'P PICKED UP AN ~0~, CAL.L.
FROM WA!7H .. AT ~EA \

CONFOUND IT:, ,
W~AT 'o; I'IA~H

POIN&amp; AT

~EM

THE '7. 0~. SAID

YES ... AND TH EY
WERE' ~E I NG HELD
PRI50 NER'. THEN
THE CAL.L. &amp;ROKE.
OFF SUDDENLY-WITH !70UND5
OF VIOLENCE!

HE AND EASY
GOT SfjAN6HA IEP
AT MEXPORTi

ROGER HYSEll

ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

·GARAGE

'it\

Ohio Valley Roofing

and

Horne Maintenance

...

tru.D M'SI~UR CARE RlR WIIJ~ ............,

I BLACE

;~~IJT...
W6'LLT~~

A HALF-

I USEAT I

rJ KJ []

Roofing

......

Service..._
.... ....,..., .......,

.....

BORN LOSER

ILAVASS I

I KJ

J

Apple Grove

News Notes

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

C. R•. MASH

.VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

-----

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

JAii1

--~

....

-

__

_________

II I

l.l'IT!.E ORPHAN ANNIE

PETE SIMPSON

8UT A THI~CO

f TOI.D YOLJ

RfALCLASS
IT HERE··•

~II'!DtK
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ALLEY OOP

ACROSS

:=-:::::-----:----:--------, r';;i,ilu~~---:-:J:TT--:---------,

I Scottish
WS'L.L CUT 'THE l't)LES WHIL.E&lt;
group
'IOU FEU.AS ARe MAKIN' n!'
NETS! 1H~ ~·T MI.JCH TIM!:, &gt; Shoe parts
SO LE;T$ SET I!!US'Y •
10 Jack rabbit
1
' " .,_,.__
11 Cruel one
12 Profess
13 Show
Short race
.""):il.t\!115 Pantry
contamer
'Misgwde

- ---

8P.O.W.
Choose
on the lam
Large truck
9 Loud-voiced
Role for Liz
person
21 Furnish
11 Beset
food
17 Patnotic
Boo-boo
group
Algerian
l
port
Aries
10
symbol
Czarist

GASOLINE ALlEY

&amp;

SAVE .AlDT

REALTY

PAINTING AND Sandblasti ng.
Free estimates . Call949-:2686.

New Lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 742-2003
New list10g - 2 bedroom
home in Pomeroy . Home
has new gas furnace, living
room . kitchen, bath and
unfinished attic. Priced to
sell $20.000.
New Lis1ing
Coun1ry
living af its best . This home
has 3 bedrooms, family
room, living room with
fir eplace, utili1y room, 1h
basement Large 2 car
detached garage with
workshop. Extra good
fence
and
blacktop
driveway . Situated ,on
a lmost 2 acres on State
Route 124. Ca ll today, we
won't have this one long .
New Listmg - Modern 3
bedroom A·frame home,
located on Slate Route 143.
Home has ll/2 baths, family
roo m with free-standing
t1replace, utility room and
ni ce outbuilding Situated
on . on 2'12
acres . · Shown
by
appo~ntment only .
Business Opporlunily - In
Rut land Here' s a chance
to own a well.established
grocery business and a nice
apartment foo . All stock
and
equipment
are
included in the sale price.
Ca !1 for more info. Ask lng
$29,500.
We need listings!!
Cheryl Lemley, Associate
Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolle, Associate
Phone 949-2589
GeorgeS . HobsteHer, Jr,
Broker
992-5729

JUST LISTED- Beautiful
brick wllh 2 acres . 4 ,
bedrooms, 21!2 baths, lovely I
k itc hen , dining, 2 large rec.
rooms, fireplace, many,
many other features .
HOMESITE 2 acres,
electric
and
water
avai lable .
Wildwood
subdivision. $6,000.00.
POMEROY - .56 acre, 1
floo r plan remodeled ,
aluminum siding, new roof,
Pomeroy
Elementary,
excellent
neighborhood .
$14,900.00.
HANDYMAN SPECIAL $8,000 will buy this home
with bu ilding and 4 lois.
BRICK- RANCH
3
bedrooms, l lf2 bath , level
fat, wood burning fireplace,
air condl11onlng , patio, new
roof . ONLY $30,600.00.
INE HAVE QUALIFIED
BUYERS
FOR
ALL
PROPERTIES. C'ALL
TODAY
FOR
OUR
LISTINGS
PRESENTATION .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr. ·
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .
ASSOCIATES
Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992-2259, 992-6191, 992-2568

.

Monday, March 19

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.......,~.,.....,.,.....,-:::-"'1

---+-+--+-+---1

Good strategy goes amiss
NORTH

3-19

+ K QJ 7
•AQJ
t KQJ

+ K .1 10

R.OOR
'3.49 &amp; '3.99 sq. yd .
24 Rolls of Corpet in Stock
lOO's of Samples lo
Choose From ,
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE
Call7•H&gt;Il
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

DAILY

RUTLAND

-

FURNITURE
Rutland

4CHILDREN#?'I'OU
MEAN I HAVE

CHilPRENi'

RUilAND FURNRURE·

- -OH 131LL 1
1HE OCTOR
7DJ.O ME NOT
TO 5RIN6' UP
1HE PAST

6

••
~

..

-·
UNTIL
WHAT. ..'???

0 1119 ~~

T.....,as 1-11

"'~&amp; l~e

1 W ~.G U $

~M

0H

UNTIL YOU WERE
WELL ENOUGH ID
'
HAN DLE IT.

WEST

• 864
• 98 7 3

• 974 2

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

One letter stmply stands for another In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for t he tw o O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, th e length and formati~n of the words are all
hints. Each day t he code letters are d1fferenl.
CRYPTOQUOTES

ZQEN

PQAADFWNRGW
C WOOQL

A R Y .·

LDGU
UWOH

FQENPW

EYSYQLY

'

Ye1tenllly'• Cryptotptole: NO TRUMPETS SOUND WHEN
11IE IMPORTANT DECISIONS OF OUR LIFE ARE MADE.
,..J.,..l,o. DESTINY IS MADE KNOWN SILENTLY.-AGNES DE
MIUE

LET ME SEE THAT
BOOK! Wfo!AT 15 IT 7

P~OOtEq ! I

WOUI.ON '(.
,,.o..v TillS F~ AN'r'THING!

• Q 6~
SOUTH
+ A 10 9 4
• K 10 3
t A62
+A 85

C RYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

J Q y 'G

EAST
• 632
• 9 7 52
• 10 54

+ B&gt;

I

WE OF FER YOU ...
1. Two full floors, of all new
furniture .
2. Nice selections of used
furniture.
A large building full of
. boautiful carpel.

)ee the Grate Family 9t

marriage

28 French
nver
29 Spanish
city
30 " !'II Sm1le
Again"
32 Drudge
34 Adolescent

Lazy
Sunder
Hofbra u
serving
needs
38 Old World
bird
39 Jockey
Sande
40 Be paid
DOWN
1 Mrican
country

9' &amp; 12' aJSHIONED

142-2211

20 Trade
21 Indite
22 Operatic
song
23 One
Iingermg
24 Exclude
26 Baptism and

Pilot
Accede to

&amp;

•01 E.......
I"'AtN
..,...
,P-.OMER'OY, .Q

Y~terday's Aaswer

4:31}-.Gilllgan's Is . 8,17 ; Brady Bunch 10.
5:00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies B;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady Bunch 15; 1
Dream of Jeannie 17.
5:3G--Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33
6:00-News3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Andy Grfffllh 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6:31)-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8.10; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
7: 00-Cross-Wits 3; Please Stand By 8; Newlywed
Game 6, l3; Love, Amer ican Style IS; Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavell 20; Marshall U. Report 3
33.
7·JO.-Hollywood Squares 3; Let' s Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6; Price Is Rlghl10; Donna Forgo
13; TV Honor Society 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; Mac.
Nell -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:00-Cilffhangers 3; Happy Days 6; Billy Graham
10, 13, 15; Paper Chase 8; World at War 17 ; Austin
Cily Limits 20; City Notebook 33.
8:311-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6; Sneak P reviews 33.
9 :00-Superslunt 113, 15 ; Three's Company 6, 13; Movie
" Red Sun" 8,1 0; Grand Jury: An Institution Under
Flre33 ; Movie " The Stooge" 17; Academy Leaders
20
9 · 31)-1 3 Queens Blvd. 6,13; 10:00-Ropers 6,13
10 Jo-Pllot 6,13 ; Movie "The Cocoanuts" 20; Islander
33.
.
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; NHL Hockey 17; Book Beot
33.
ll:Jil-Johnny Carson 3.15; Movie " That Man Bolt"
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC News 33: Movie
"Che! " to.
12 :4o-Banacek 8; 1:00-Tomorrow 3.
l ·JO.-Movle "Count Three &amp; Pray" 17
1 :35-'-News 13; 3:31l-News 17; 3:51l-Movle " Drums of
Tahiti" 17.

conunWle

UNEOWIM RUGS
'12.95 &amp; UP

HOBSTETTER

2 Vichy
premie r
3 Onginated
4 Conn.
Clty
5 Evergreen
shrub
6 Norse
deity
7 Nebraska
city

;1,. ' " •u

DRIVE AUTILE

.

j I"

Jumbla Book No. 13, containing 110puults, Ia avallablelorS1 .7Spoatpald
from Jumble, c/o this newspaper. Bo" 34, Norwood,N.J. 07648.tncludtyour
name, lddreu, zip code and make checks payablt to Newspeparbooka.

-

~-

"r X I )( 1 1 I

(A nswers tomorrow)
Saturday's ! Jumbles TAKE N CARGO PHYSIC BECKON
Answer What the garage ty coon called him s elf THE " PARK KI NG"

likE THAT COULD
IIAVE RUINED
TH' JOfNl•••

WOULD LOVE

lANE DANIELS

SAVE ON
CARPEl lNG

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer as suggested by the above cartoon

Print answer here:
YfAH ... HE JUST
FIGGE!!ED SHE
WAS A RICH
SNOB• .. WOW'

PfAHOS

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

.

ISCUABAI

PIANO
TUNING

ORGANS

byHenr~ Arnold andBob Lee

Unscramble these four J umbles
one lener 10 each square. to form
!our ordinary words

H. L Writesel

EXPERIENCI.D.

9 00-Movle "Fast Friends" 3, 15 ; How The West Was
Won 6,13. Academy Leaders 33; Movie " Deadly
Game" 17; Growing Years 20.
9:31)-WKRP in Cincinnati 8, 10.
10 .00-Lou Grant a, 10; News 20; Einstein's Universe
33
10 . 31)-Movfe "K londike Annie" 20.
11 :00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15 ; Hogan' s Heroes 17.
11:31l-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee Slory 6, 13r Rockford
F1les 8; Movie "Great Day In The Morning" 10;
Movie " The Brides of Fu Manchu" 17.
12:41)-McMlllan &amp; Wife 8; Ironside 13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; I ·311-Movie " Battle Stations " 17.
~~~~News 13; 3:211-News 17; 3·40--()pen Up 11.

~ l!J, ~lli~ ®

;•'l.1Ht MEEP .

EAFORD[B

TUESDAY, MARCH20, 1979
5:41)-World ol Large 17; S:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:S5-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:00-PTL Club 15, 700 Club 6,8 ; 6 : 1o-News 11.
6 : 2~oncerns &amp; Comments 10; Romper Room 17.
6 ·45-Mornlng Report 3; 6: 50--Good Morning, West
Virg inia 13; 6 55-t huck While Reports 10; News
13.
7: 00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13;
Tuesday Morning 8; Schoolles 10. Three Stooges.
Little Rasca ls 11.
7. 15-Wealher 33; 7:311-Famlly Altair 10.
B:OO-Fam11y
8 . 00-Capt Kangaroo B, 10; Leave II To Beaver 17;
Sesame St. 33 .
8:Jo-Hazel 17.
9·00-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15 : E mergency
One 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Match Game 10; Lucy
Show 17.
9:31l-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green
Acres 17.
10 :00-Card Sha rks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie "F lamingo
Road" 17.
10 ·10--AII Slar Secrels 3, 15 ; $20,000 Pyram id 13;
Andy Griffith 6 ; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, IS; Happy Days 6, 13 , Consumer
Survival Kit 20 .
11 :31)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 , Family Feud 6, 13; Love
of Life 8, 10.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10 ; News 17.
12 00-Newscenter 3; News 6.10; Password 15; Young
&amp; the Reslleu 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17; Consumer Survival Kit 33.
12:31)- Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec. Co. 20; Not For Women Only 15; Movie " The
Fuller Brush Girl" 17.
1.00-Days. of Our Lives 3, 15 ; News B. All My Children
6, 13; Young &amp; The Restless 10.
1.31)-As The World Turns 8, 10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live 6, 13; 2:2£-News
11.
2·311-Another World 3,15; Guiding Light 8,10; f Love
Lucy 17 .
3· 00-General Hospltal6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17; Once Upon A Classic 33.
3 31)-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fflnlsfones 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
4.00-Speclal Treat 3, 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
friends B: Sesame St . 20,33; Batman 10: Dinah 13;
Space Giants 17.

West

North East

South

Pass

7 NT

INT
Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead: • 9

Oswald
" Alvin Roth
played this hand some years
ago in an important match
against a really. great player
in the East seat and a fme
player with a somewhat devious mind in the West . He
never got a complete COWl!
because East's one discard
made on the fourth spade
was a low dub ."
Alan : " From what I know
of Alvin he made the hand
and West must have given
something away to him."
Oswald : " That is just
what West did . Alvin started
out by running the four
spades. West had to make
two discards. The first one
was very painful, but West
finally parted with a low
diamond. The second was a
low club accompanied by

even greater distress."
Alan: " So Alvin decided
that West jus t c ouldn 't have
that club queen ."

Ask liM I!XMPII
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Alan : "What is there to
disc us$ about today 's hand?
South gets to seven notrwnp,
only to find that he has to
locate the queen of clubs In
order to make the grand
slam. -He can run out his ten
tricks in the other suits and
find out that West started
with four clubs to East's·
three, but he will still have to
find the que~n . "

A California reader asks if
lt ls ever proper to show a
four-card sult before rebidding one of six cards.
The answer is that there
are many occasions when
the six-card suit is not rebid.
See tomorrow 's article for
an example.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN send St to · " Win at
Bridge . · care of thts newspaper. P.O , Box 489, Radio City
Station New York N. Y 10019 )

'

�.

'

lU-Tne uauy ~ntmel, MtOOJ eport~Pomerny. u .• MundfiY. M;1r. H•. !!17!1

Inflation leads to higher food prices
By LOUISE COOK
Associated Prest Writer
Trying to figure out who or what - is to blame for
inflation a nd ri sing food
prices is a little like trying to.
solve that old riddle about the
chicken and the egg: Which
came first ?
Infla lion leads to increases
In food prices. And increases
in food prices lead to
inflation . Which leads to
more increases. AnQ more
inflation. And on. And on.
wa s
The
problem
spotlighted recently at a
conference sponsored by the
Food Marketing Institute, an
industry group. Speaker after
speaker , from cattle rancher
to supermarket executive,
talked about how inflation is
boosting prices.
And William T. Boehm, a
U.S. Agriculture Department
economist, said that "as long
as the food system continues
to rely so much on inputs purchased in the general
economy,
food
price
increases at about the rate of
Inflation can be expected," he
said.
Agriculture Department
figures show that in 1978, the
farmer got about 32 cents of
every dollar consumers spent
on food produced on U.S.
farms . (The statistics don't
cover imports or non-farm
foods like fish .) The
remaining 68 cents went for

marketing costs - 32 cents
for labor , 8 cents for
packaging, a nickel for transportation and 23 cents for
ta xes. re nt , adve rtising ,
profits, interes t expense,
repairs. etc.
The USDA expects food
pri ces to rise about 8\l!
percent this year. Ahout one·
U1ird of the boost will be due
to a 10 percent to II percent
rise in prices paid to farmers,
according to Boehm. Most of
th e rest will stem from an
anticipated 9 percent boost in
marketing costs.

Food prices went up ahnost
12 percent last year and
Boehm says that preventing
the same kind of double-&lt;ligit
boost this year depends on
"some progress in the overall
fight to control inflation ."
Controlling inflation , however. depends on con trolling
food prices.
Goods
and
services
measured in the Conswner
Price Index are weighted
according to what proportion
of a family 's budget goes for
each it ~m . ~""(_)Orl prirP~ arP

third. behind shelter and
f&lt;an, portation. ~· ood , eaten

at l10ine and in restaurants,
accounts for about 18 percent
of the overall index, meaning
that a 10 percent boost in food
prices adds 1.8 percentage
points to the CPl.
In a speech late last year,
Howard W. Hjort of the USDA
said that from 1950 through
1978, food prices - on the
average - contributed less
than one percentage point a
year to the rate of inflation .

Th e picture s ince 1972,
however , is much less
encouragi ng. "Only once
since them - in 1976 - have
food p~ices contributed less
than one perceritage point,' '
Hjort. said.
· He noted that the Conswller

Price Index does not take into especially sensitive to price
account changing buying movements. And ... changes
habit s that follow pr ice · in food prices are often used
increases. But he added : by many as a psychological
"lleca use food purchases are bell weather to signal the
made weekly and because stre ngth of inflationary
changes in food prices are pressu res i n the general
highly visible, consumers are economy."

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedaesday: tbrougb
Friday:
Showers or
thuadenhowers ponibie
each day. Mild through tbe
perfed but tunrlllg a Utile
cooler Friday. High Ia tbe
60s Wednesday aad Ia tbe
SO. to low 60s Friday. Lows
In tbe 40s.

Energy bill
offered by
Cong. Miller

Support effort -fails

CAffiO, Egypt (AP ) - U.S. Anwar Sadat about his talks. Diplomats, here predict that
WASIUNGTON, D. C.
Brzezinski , said ·his talks the Saudis 'will cootinue to
presidential envoy Zbigniew
---------~-----------~---- Brzezinski failed to win Saudi with the two monar&lt;,;hs were "straddle the political Respondiitg to the pressing
need for energy alternatives,
Arabian and Jordanian "constructive and useful" -fence."
Tenth
District Congressman
support for the EgyPtian- and he was "encouraged."
In Washington, Sen. Frank
I
I
Qarence
Miller today in·
Israeli peace treaty but says He would not elaborate; but Olurch, the chairman of the
GET LICENSES
troduced
legislation
directing
he is "more convinced tMn there was speculation that Senate Foreign Relations
Ma rriage licenses were
the
Secretary
of
Agriculture
GERALDO.
VIOLET
issued to Olristopher Wayne
Mr. Violet was a retired ever" that the pact will be the the Saudis had Indicated tllat Committee, ·Warned that the
Gerald 0. (Tobe ) Violet, 73, employe of Colwnbia Gas of "!leginning and cornerstone" they would not cut off their U.S. supply of arms to Saudi to carry out research,leading
Hill, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy and
Plains,
died Ohio and a member of of peace in the Middle East. financial support of Egypt. Arabia and financial aid to to the commercialization of
Brenda Kay Lewis, 19, · Tuppers
Saturday
at
St
.
Joseph
"We are more convinced Jordan will be endangered if alcohol derived from sweet
The Saudi royal family and
Quarter Century Club.
Racin e; Terry William
ever
that
the they work to undermine the sorghum and other hydro
He is survived by three Jordan's King Hussein .still than
Coffman , 25, Marietta, and Hospital. ·
carbon
containing
Mr. Violet was born Oct. 16, brothers-in-law and two demand a "comprehensive forthcoming peace treaty · treaty.
Deborah Lynn Wilson. 22, Rt.
agricultural
crops.
3, Pomeroy; Gregory Edwin 1905, son of the late Thomas sisters-in-law and several peace" that would end Israeli between Egypt and Israel is
In Jerusalem, Priine
, The legislation, titled the
occupation of all Arab land both the beginning and the Minister Menachem Begin 's
Buchanan, 18, Belpre, and and Mary Jane Midkiff nieces and nephews.
Pamela Jeannene Riffle, 18, ~iolet. He was also preceded
Funeral services will be taken in 1967, including East . cornerstone for a com- Cabinet was expected to Alcohol Fuel Additive Act of
· in death by his wife, Gladys held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at Jerusalem, and would meet . prehensive peace treaty in endorse the full treaty after a 1979, is designed to facilitate
Long Bottom.
demands
for the region," said Brzezinski. debate today. The Knesset, the utlimate production of
RoUsh Violet, four brothers, Ewing Olapel. Burial WIJ\ be Arab
.
Palestinian
self-rule,
officials
Sadat had no comment.
Herbert, Raymond, Vinas in Chester Cemetery. Friends
END MARRIAGES
tile Israeli Parliament, opens gasohol, a gasoline substitute
ln
the
capitals
of
the
two
Brzezinski
was
flying
back
and
Harry
Violet,
two
sisters,
In Meigs County Common
may caU at the funer~l home
its debate on Tuesday, and comprised of 90 · percent
countries
said.
to
Washington
today,
while
Yelda
Perry
and
Mabel
Hart.
ratification is expected by unleaded gasoline and 10
Pleas Court, Debra Lynn
Tuesday from 6 to 9 p.m.
.
Brzez
inski,
Pre
si
dent
Deputy
Secretary
of
State
percent ethanol.
Estep, Rodney, and James
Wednesday .
Carter's
national
security
Warren
Christopher
was
The potential for producing
Vandalism
wave
forces
closings
Earl Estep, Pomeroy; filed
The treaty could be signed
U.S.
delegation
in
going
to
Western
Europe
to
chief,
led
a
ethanol
(ethyl-alcohol) from
as
next
week
in
as
early
for dissolution of marriage.
LANCASI'ER, Ohio (AP) vandalized rest stop on Ohio weekend meetings with Saudi brief leaders there on the Washington , but Egyptian graln, · has been receiving
.
Donna J ean Williams
King Khaled ln Riyadh and proposed treaty.
Grueser was granted · a -A wave of costly vandalism 37.
Defense Minister Kamel considerable attention from
Authorities say they have Hussein in Amman. Then he
·
Although foes of the treaty Hassan Ali and Israeli independent researchers
divorce from James Robert is forcing state-maintained
rest stops to close, and stepped up surveillance of flew to Cairo to leU President are calling for a pan-Arab Defense Minister Ezer around the country. For the
,
Grueser, Sr.
officials
admit they don't rest stops around the state,
processors' and retailers'
economic boycott of Egypt if Weizman were still haggling ·most part, such research has
know how to stop it.
bl!t add it Is a .limited effort at
Sadat signs the ,pact with in the U.S. capital over the been focused on the W!e gf
Hospital
News
"They're stealing tile trees · best.
Israel, it would hurt the timetable for Israel's pullout corn as the grain most
OtJTOFICU
as fast as they can be planted , The state did implement a Veterans Memorial Hospital Egyptians only if the Saudis from the Sinat Peninsula.
practical for producing the
Mrs. Edythe Hazelton and have just taken the last program to upgrade rest
joined in .
gasoline
additive ethanol.
Saturday admissions Diplomati c sources said
Policy holders may
Welch who has been in the crab apple tree in the park," stops, but the effort has now Recta Spencer, Cheshire;
Less than 4 percent of they were arguing about
However, experimental
lniensive care unit at Holzer said Robert Tatman of tbe been shifted to include only Donette Talbutt, Portland; Egypt's exports go to other when Israel would give back work in Ohio by the Battelle
register at the office
Department
of stops along interstate Mary Smith, Middleport; Arab countries, and Egypt is the offshore oil wells it Institute suggests that sweet
of John Kauff for a Medical Center for II weeks Ohio
Room
206.
has
been
moved
to
Transportation
's
Bureau
of highways, according to Virginia Musser, Mason, W. itself an exporter of oil. But developed off the southwest sorghum would not only work
SSO.OO savings bond to
Maintenance
in
discussing
a Tatman.
be given away Apri I
Va.;
Darrell Hanning , Saudi Arabia gave Egypt coast of the Sinai Peninsula as well as corn, but would
nearly a billion dollars in aid and when it" would withdraw offer distinct raw materials
Albany.
13, 1979.
Authorized CATALOG
Need not be present to win .
last year and keeps about $1.6 from El Arish, the chief city savings thus making ethanol
SALES MERCHANT
Saturday discharges Tangle Wood, Kenneth billion in Egyptian banks. in the Sinai.
a much more economically
Hoffman , Betty Wilson, Ruth
Competitive fuel additive.
Miller feels the unique
Mulford, Hurley Hutton ,
Sylvan Cleland, Norma
properties of sweet sorghum
240 Lincoln MiddlePOrt, 0 .
234 E. Main St.
Goodwin, Charles Ward ,
992-3969
are so significant that a
Pomeroy, O.
By The Associated Press
By Tuesday morning the
Alice Curtis.
con.centrated U .S . D,. A
Ohio's
weather
is
expected
front
wm
extend
from
Lake
Sunday
admissions
research
program could
I OWNED AND OPERATED BY
through. provide a key breakthrough
Helen Slack, Racine; Francis to remain mild but rather un- Michigan
Jack&amp; Judy
By The A..oelated Press on St. Patrick's Day parades Schaeffer, Pomeroy ; Bret settled for the next few days southeastern Missouri. As the
in gasohol production.
Williams
Sure, and Mother Nature around the state.
Korn, Pomeroy; Sarah Dunn, as a weak cold front moves front approaches Ohio, the
Sali8fartWn Guaranlnd
amount of clouds and. the
must be a wee bit Irish , as
Temperatures rose steadily Middleport; Oscar Klein, slowly toward the state.
DANCING WORKSHOP
The eastward progress of probability of rain will
Dl' You,. ,tfonrfl 8tu'lt
warmly as she smiled Sunday across tile Buckeye State Middleport; Connie Manley,
Western Style Square
the front is being impeded by increase.
during the afternoon once the Middleport .
Dancing Workshop will be
a
near stationery ridge of
Sunday discharges
sun broke through li blanket
held March 22 at 7:30 p.m. at
of clouds. Highs for the day Candace Lambert, Carolyn high pressure, the National
Royal Oak. Park. Caller will
ranged from 75 in Cincinnati Gilmore, Fred Chapman, Weather Service said.
TB TESTS SLATED
be Olad Jolmson.
to 58 in Youngstown . and Floyd Barnliouse.
Tuberculosis skin testing
Zanesville.
will b&lt;i held at the Pomeroy
An estimated 200,000
elementary
school Tuesday
TRY OUR
Holzer Medical Center
MEETS TUESDAY
persons and a collie which
for both sixth grades, mor· ·
Discharges, March.!&amp;
Group Two of the First
had been dyed green
Shelvia Adkins, Thomas United Presbyterian Olurch, ning and afternoon kin·
crammed into downtown Anderson, Dorothy Boggs,
dergarten classes and all
Cleveland to watch the Cathy Bradeberry, Lynn Middleport, will meet · school perBQnnel and others
paradin' of the green and Br.lr; Ethelyn Coughenour, Tuesday, March 20 at 7:3() with permission slips signed
_KENTUCKY
were greeted with 62-&lt;legree Olarlotte Davis, Effie Durst, p,m . at the home of Mrs. Joe to be given the test.
Bailey with Jean Moore and
FRIED CHICKEN
temperatures.
All students of Bradbury
Hattie Ferrell, Wil)iard Fitz- Kathryn Hysell serving as co·
And in Cincinnati, a crowd patri ck, Anthony Forte,
school as well as personnel
estimated at 127,000 people Robert Gray, Beatrice hostesses.
wlll also be tested Tuesday.
Devotions will be by Helen ·
jammed downtown streets Haller, Lawrence Harmon,
Tests will be given WedFAMILY RESTAURANT
for the Queen City's 13th St. Heath Hoffman, Joan Howell, Sauer. A thanks offering will nesday at Harrisonville and
992-5432
Patrick's Day parade. The Vivian Hurlow, Amy Hut· be taken .
Rutland Schools.
Ponn .. r.o•, 0.
Irish and their cousins batlled chins, Brenda Hysell , Velma
under sunny skies as 300 Keller, Lawrence Lewis,
hands, floats and marching George Logan , James
groups snaked through tbe McGood, George McHaffie,
city.
Allie Miller, Nanette Moddy ,
Elsewhere, Dayton had a Arnie Murray, Verna Potts ,
high of 71, Columbus and Linda Pugh, Harry Raines,
Findlay shared official high James Ramey, Jennings
s;;;ii!
temperatures of 68, and Robinson, Jr., Juanita
Akron, Canton and Toledo Saunders, Renford Skeens,
had highs of 62.
Fay Slone, Evalee Snodgrass,
Many Ohioans took advan- Ronald Stiffler,
Betty
tage of the respite from Sturgill, Eula Waldron,
winter to walk their dogs, jog Melody Waugh.
around the blOck or take off
Listen in to the excitement of Public Service Band
Births, March"16
and go bicycling.
.Mr. and Mrs. Leek Wallin,
Officials around the state daughter, Wellston.
Radio With This Special Rebate. There's Never Been
reported parks filled to overDischarges, March 17
flowing as residents dug
A Better Time To Bring Home the Action.
Lester Akers, Ra elene
tennis and baseball gear out Bass, Grace Bradbury, Ann
of tlleir closets and headed Burnette, Howard Campbell,
outdoors to renew their Brerida Couch, Karen
favorite warm weather
Ellison, Opha Fitzwater,
games.
Alzada Halfhill , Marioq
The spring weatller also
Hawk,
Philip Heneman II,
brought out a canaeit.v rrnwrl
Donald
Kirk, Clemmie
. _to watch the finals of the
Lawson, John Lee, William
North American Zone tennis
Mc Dowell ,
Michael
REBATE
championships. The crowd McWilliams; Joseph Miller,
saw the U.S. team roar past Odana Montgomery, Ro ald
0
the Colombian team 5-0 in the
Patton, Ricky P etrella,
indoor matches at the
Teresa Rake, Edythe Reibel,
Cleveland Skating Qub.
Tonya Reid ; Jo Ann
THE TOUCH
And the good news from the Rohrbough, Mrs. Hollis Rupe
National Weather Service and daughter, Mrs. Edward
was that Ohioans could Saunders and daughter, Mrs.
expect the warm and dry Mark Siders and son, Joyce
You don't have to wait for a rainbow to cash in on this one. Before
weather to continue through Salter, Charles Stewart, Fern
late today.
you know it, you'll have your own little pot of gold. All you have do
Stroth, Mollie Wamsley,
is place a little green - a minimum of $1,000 or more - into one of
Edith Yates.
lf.&lt;OOt:• ACT-A I
Births, March 17
.our high interest savings accounts for a speCified amount of time and
TUESDAY SCHEDULE
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
your money can earn up to 7. 75 Pet. .a year! As sure as there are
The Meigs bookmobile Davis, son, Patriot : Mr. and
leprechauns, this is a fine opportunity!
schedule for Tuesday is: Mrs. Lester Parker ,
Keno, · 3-3:30; Reedsville, daughter, Pomeroy.
Reed's . Store, 4·5 p.m. ;
Discharges, March 18
Tupper
Plains, Arbaugh
Kith Baker, Mrs. Terrance
housing area, 5:30 to 6:3(); . Brennan and sort, Kathryn
Olester, Methodist Church, Christian, Anna Colburn,
REBATE
6:~ to· 7:~ p.m. and the
Wendy Hamill, Mark
Riggs Addition from 8 to 8: 30 Jolmson, Tina Justus, Erp.m .
s kine Kight, Lazzie '
Knightstep, Marianne Knox,
MEETING TUESDAY ,
Todd "Marcinko, Reymon
2ND FLOOR
The cbarter will be draped Morris, Dwayne Napper,
In memory of Mrs. Edith Worthy Nibert , Cia ra Powell,
'p ~· , ,
MUSIC DEPARTMENT
Betzing when the -Daughters Mr s. David Ray a nd
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
of America 323 meets at 7: 30 1\au~hter , Joseph Rou•h,
p.m. Tuesday. Quarterly MarvWolfc.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
birthdays will be observed
· Birth&lt;, Marrh 18
and members are asked to
Mr. and Mrs. NorrnHn
wear white . .
Ryh-r, daughl&lt;"r . .IHck''""

! Area Deaths I

REGISTER NOW!

JOH,N KAUFF

INSURANCE

f Sears f

,

'

Mother nature
smiles Sunday

Mild weather will continue

Here's a Golden
Opportunity
for You!

EXTRA

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[ __ _

(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX

./'

BYKATIECROW'
Pomeroy Council
is
plagued with problems and
not enough money to cure all
the ills.
' During a regular meeting
Monday night council was
again faced with the terrible
conditions or streets in the
village.
At the last meeting, a
delegation from the Naylors
Run area met with council
regarding ,deplorable road
oonditions.
At Monday night's meeting,
street residents presented a
· petition regarding conditions·
there .
Lorry Jenkins, spokesman
for the group, asked if the
road would be repaired.

Mayor Clarence Andrews,
who is right on top of the
situation , told the residents
the street department would
start on the street Tuesday.
The mayor pointed out that
. Pomeroy had been declared a
disaster area and it was now
up to President Carter as to
whether or not Pomeroy
would receive federal or state
aid.
The mayor r eported it
would cost $102.000 to repair
Laure Street the way it
should be paved. The mayor
ha s had several persons
check out the street.
Residents also said they
needed an additional fire
hydrant. Council will also
take that under consideraton.

Nationwise

Jury ·being chosen for Flynt
ATLANTA (AP) ~ Jury selection was on the
agenda today as the heavily guarded Fulton County
obscenity trial of sex magazine owner Larry Flynt
continued after a brief hearing Monday.
State Court Judge Nick Lambros, during Monday's
two-hour session, gave defense attorneys permission to
present a writtn~ questionnaire to prospective jurors
asking their "attitudes on sexual material . Lambros
earlier had denied a motion to have t he jurors
questioned privately in the judge's chambers.

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - The first civil trial in
connection with lawsuits for more than $2.8 billion in
the Beverly Hills Supper Qub fire disaster will begin
April 2 in both U. S. District Court and Campbell
Circuit Court.
The U. S. Supreme Court Monday denied without
comment an emergency request for ·a delay by the
Union, Light Heat and Power Co. and _the Sterling
Lighting Division of Scovil Manufacturmg Co . The
same request was denied March 2 by Justice Byron
White. The request was _then made to Olief Justice
Warren BUrget who refeiTed it to the full cOurt.

Crime crackdown coming
NEW YORK (AP)- Mayor Edward Koch, vowing

CR&lt;M'S

is sending a wave of blue uniforms underground in the
clty'sfirst major offensive against subway crime since
the 1960s.
Koch's $10.5-million crackdown began late Monday
afternoon with more than 900 uniformed transit and
city police officers patrolling the subway system.
Previously, the trains and stations were patrolled by
300 uniformed men and 200 plainclothes officers.

-&amp;

~~~

Parliament opens debate
JERUl!ALEM (AP) - Israel's Department opens
debate today on the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty a~d
is expected to ratify it Wednesday.
Prime Minister Menachem Begin 's Cabinet
approved tbe Ml treaty Monday, then passed it ort to
tile Knesset, or Parliament. Although a stormy,
emotional debate "I" as expected, observers predicted at
least 100 of the 120 members would endorse the pact.

Wants to resume talks
CINCINNATI ( AP) - The Cincinnati t 'ederation
of Teachers, following a one-day sickout Friday, wants
to resume contract negotiations with the Crnc111natJ
Board of Education.
Mary Schloss, hoard president, said she had ~o
objections to negotiating limits on the number of pup1ls
in class rooms as Indicated by Roger Stephens, union
•president. The ~ion walked out of negotiations ln midJanuary when the board said it could not legally grant
pay increases whUe lacing a $9-10 million deficit.

before the voters or to place a
city tax on the working
public.
The one and one-half mill
would only bring in $15,000 a
year. This would affect
people on fix ed incomes
whereas a city tax would just
affect the working public.
Council debated the issue at
great length , Members
finally decided to have Jane
Walton, Clerk , contact the
village of Gallipolis to obtain
inform ation on a city tax.
Larry Wehrung and Betty
Baronick, council members,
indicated thei r desire to have
sidewa lks and streets
cleaned. Wehrung st ate d
there are two things residents
wa nt mo•t of all, streets
repaired and clean streets.
Baronick co mmented
streets could be cleaned and
. maintained with the work
being done once a week.
Following a
lengthy
CLEARING LAND- Land is being cleared near the
American Painting Company location below Middleport
discussion, Mayor Andrews
Inmate visiting days and sa id that as soon as employes
visiting hours at the Meigs of the street department
County Jail have been completed the work on Laurel
changed according "to Meigs Street they would st art
Co unty Sheriff J ames J. cleaning the streets.
However, street cleaning
Proffitt.
began
this morning.
By THOMAS J. RIZZO
related functions of existing
Rules for the Operation of
Also
meeting with council · Associated Press Writer state agencit!s int o the
the County Jail and Rules for
Dave
Jenkins,
COLUM BUS, Ohio (AP) ·Dep artm ent of Ener gy,
the Guidance of Inmates of was
repre
senting
the
Jaycees.
The core of a massive ener gy Environmental
Protection
the County Jail were recently
revised and approved by Jenkin s asked permission to . bill proposed today by Ohio Agen cy and a proposed Offi ce
Judge John C. Bacon of the use one of the rooms in the Attorney General William J. of Hearing and Appeals. A 4Court of Common. Pleas as senior high building and also Brown is the abolition of the pag e vehicle bill to which
the auditorium. He said the Public Uti lities Commission amendments will be added
required by Ohio law.
will be introduced by Cox in
Jail rules were revised to Jaycees would paint the room of Ohio .
"Between three and five the Senate today .
bring them in line with the and indicated they would
Under the plan , a Commu·
requirements
of
the clean up other port ions of the years of work has gon e into
this leg islation," Brown's nicati ons Authority
to
minimum standards for jails building.
Council,
following
a off ice told The Associated supervise telephone utilities
-in Ohio.
Visitation at the Meigs disc ussion, took the matter Press prior to a 10 a.m . news and a Common Ca rriers
conference today .
·
Authority
to
govern
county jail has been changed under advisement.
OFFICER RESIGNING
" It is truly th e most fa r transporta tion would be
to 6 p.m . to 9 p.m. Wednesday
Mayor Andrews reported reachrng plan for energy created in the ener gy departnights and from I p.m. to 3
officer
Roger Durst is management and energy ment.
p.m . Sunday afternoon. Each
resigning
effective March 23 regulation that has come
But ·the heart of the consoliinmate is entitled to
and
the
meterman
has been before th e legislature," Sen. dation is the hear ings and apminimum of ,30 minutes
ill.
Kenneth
R. Co&lt;,
D· peals office, which would
visitation per week .
The mayor presented an Barberton, the sponsor of the ta ke over most of the
Visitors are subject to
security controL They must a pplication s ubmitted by bill, said in a prepared state- function s of the. PUCO.
"This office would be under
show proper identification Steve Hartenbach for em· ment.
The entire bill - between the direction of five . full-time
and sign visitor' s hook. They ployment as meterman .
must be over 18 years of age Hartenhach has had his basic 1,-IOOand 1,200pages thick - administrative law judges,"
unless accompanied by police training . Council voted is designed to consolidate and .James Gravelle. spokesman
(Continued on page 8)
streamli ne th e energy. for Brown. ex plain ed. '"They
parent or guardian, or is the
spouse, child , or ward of the
inmate.
Under the jail standards,
the Sheriff can deny
visitation under the following
conditions: (I) Visit ors
represent a clear and present
danger to security; (2)
Visitor has a past history of
disruptive conduct at the jail;
(3) Visitor is under the in·
fiuence of alcohol or drugs;
(4) Visitor refuses to submit
to search, or show proper
identification ; (5) If inmate
refuses visit.

Sheriff.
changes
rules

to

$·1oooCASH .

ON THIS 10 CHANNEL

5 BAND SCANNER.

Elberfelds In -Pom
'

15 CENTS

on , business loop 7 "near county road. 3. The land may be
used for future expansion , Larry Whobrey, Sr ., Addison,
owner of the company says.

REIDA·TIION WINNERS - Julie Houdashelt , si..th grade student at Syracuse
Elementary and Scott McPhail, third grade student, were the top winners in the Ohio
Mental Health Association Read-A-Thou. The two students collected the largest amount of
money. Julie collected $160 and Scott over $25. Each received a Tom Seaver T-shirt. See
story and additional pictures Page 4.
·
I

would be recommended by a
public service nom inatin g

HOUSE WILL BE RAZED - This two-family house at th e former d~n site in Apple
Grove is one of four tllat is scheduled to be razed . Sources report that mtenor vandalism to
the four buildings has been extensive over the years .

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Apparently, nobody wants
the dam houses.
For at least 10 years, two
two-family dwellings at both
the Apple Grove and Portland
dam sites have been passed
around like the proverbial
·"hot potato."
The homes wer e abandoned
ahout the same time that
• those dams were taken out of
operation . The homes, well
built and attractive, were
used by employes of the
respective dams over the
years.
Th e U. S. Corps of
Engineers had the homes at
first . It was suggested that,
perhaps , they could be taken
over by some organization
and at one time Cong.
Clarence Miller v1sifed the
locations.
At that time one of the sites
was being considered as an
exce llent
lo cation · for

scouting headquarters.
H o we v e r , n o I h in g
developed.
The im pressive homes
were given to the Meigs
Co unt y Commissio n ers.
Again nothing happened, so
they were returned to the
federal government.
Now the properties have
been given to the Department
of Natural Resources.
Since they were vacated
some years ago, the homes
ha ve been extensively
vandalized . One so urce
reports that beautiful wood
floors were taken up and
apparently burned.
The water systems, heating
units, wiring and sewage
systems arc probably non·
functional since the houses
have been unoc~upied for so
long.
According to long range
plans of the Department of
Natural Resources , the
hom es are to he razed .
The department has · no

funds even to pay lor having
them razed and is hoping to
secure individuals or com·
panies to tear them down .for
the salvage involved.
Repair of the hou ses, according to sources, would be
prohibitive.
If the houses ar e razed and that loo ks pretty certain
- land on which they arc
lo cated will be used to
· provide park-like areas with
picnic tabl es and boat
launching facilities.
Some Jesldents in Meigs
County are suggesting that
the houses be preserved for
t heir historical value and be
put into' practical use for
river museums and similar
facilities as has been done in
nearby West Virgin ia.
Those wishing to join in
that suggestion are being
askedtowriteCong. Clarence
Miller in Washington, D. C.,
to see what" can• be done
towards preserving the
homes at the dame sites.
·

,,

confid ence." he added.
The reorganization would

committee and appointed by pr o vid e gre ater
the gove rn or and the accountablity to the public,
Senate."
he sa id.
The judges would serve for
The state's presn t ener gy
five-year terms and would bureaucracy is not geared to
function as a totally impartial be responsible to energy
judicial panel. Gravelle said . problems. he contended.
"The PUCO is highly politi"This proposal will lead us
cized. It 's lost all public towards a more uncredibility; it has no public dersta ndable,
controllable
::::;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

and manageable ·system for

energy
planning
and
regulation in the state o!
· TWO KILLED
AKRON, Ohio tAP) - A Ohio,·· sa id Brown Ln a
prepared statement. " And
IO· foot section pi the Grant
for
the first time ever, it will
St r eet Bridge over In·
tersta te 76 in Akron "provide us wit h a mechanism
to balance our concerns for
collapsed at about 10 a.m.
U1e environment and for the
this morning, killing two
economy of this state with our
people and injuring two
energy needs.''
others, polic~ said.
In addition to abolishing the
The bridge fell while it
PUCO. the bill would
was being r epaired, aceliminate the Environmental .
cording to officers.
Board of Review, the Oil and
Police said a man and a
Gas
Heview Boa rd, the
woman driving beneath the
Hecla
mat ion Board of
bridge were crushed and
Review
and the Underground
that two truck drivers who
Gas Storage Board of
were injured had to be cut
Revi ew. It would also abolish
from th e wreckage of their
th e slat e Power Siting
vheicles.
;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Commission.
The legislation . llrown
hopes. would provide for a
'~si ngle. separate. impartial
TO PARTICIPATE
mechani
sm to de a I with
St udents at Southern Junior
regulation
and a separate,
High who will participate in
single
accountable
agency to
the 52rd annual spelling bee
sponsored by the Columbus direct policy matters."
Wh en asked how the
Citizens Journal in Columbus
on Saturday, April 28, will he attorney general expected
champion Sandra Foley, the legislature to accept the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. proposal, Brown 's office said
"this isn't et~hed in stone,"
Gary Foley, Syracuse.
Alternate is William Gobel, hinting that th e attorney
son of Mr. and Mrs. John general would be willing to
accept some alterations in
Foster, Syracuse.
the reorganization effort.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
T hursday through

Houses will be razed

ON THIS 16 atANNEL
NO CRYSTAL SCANNER

POMEROY, OHIO .

TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 1979

Keith Smith, · Naylors Run
. area, extended his thanks for
the work _, ouncil had said it
would do and did. He said
residents are pleased.
Smith stated the road is
passable and school buses are
able to go over the street by
his house. He told council that
any time he could be of
assistance, it M~ his full
support.
LEVY DISCUSSED
Council discussed at great
length the possibility of
placing a one and one-half
mill levy for streets only

WARNING ISSUED
Mayor Qarence Andrews
Monday night warned all dog
owners to keep dogs tied in
the city limits of Pomeroy.
Any dogs found running loose
will be picked up and the
owner will be brought ipto
court the mayor warned.

$3Q00CASH_

Far·tners

MIDDlEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Brown's bill abolishes PUCO

First civil trial slated

to wipe out the "ghouls" who stalk the subway system,

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

NO. 236

ent1ne

Pomeroy council beset
by financial problems

CR_
.SPY

-

•

e

L

Saturday, rain or showers

possi ble Thursday and
agai n about Saturday.
Continued mild, but turning a littl e cooler
Saturday. Highs tn the mid
50s to mid 60s Thursday
and in the 5os Saturday.
Lows in the mid 30s to mid ·
40s.

Mason County
bridges will
be repaired

CHARLESTON - Two
Mason County road bridges
were a mong nine construction projects totaling
$1,252,787 awarded recently
by the West Virg inia
Four juveniles
Department of Highways.
Two contracts for widening
charged in B&amp;E
bridges on Mason County 12
have been awarded to Inter· ·
Four Middleport juveniles Action lndu•tries, Inc. of
have been cited to county Charleston.
juvenile court as a result of a
The Robinson Run Bridge
breaking and entering at and the Potter Creek Bridge
Wilkinson's Small Motors will be widened to 24 feet at a.
storage building on N. Second cost of $49,774 and $78,751
Ave., Police Olief J. J. respectively.
Cremeans reports.
Olief Cremeans said parts
and other items valued at
about $700 were taken in the
WANTA POTHOLE?
breaking and entering.
Does
anyone want to buy a
The lour juveniles range
pot
hole?
Mayor Qarence
from 11 through 15 years of
oUered
the
Andrews
age. A large part of the it ems
following
suggestion
at
the
taken have been recovered.
meeting
o!
council
Monday
Herman Henry of the
Bureau of Criminal In· night. Does anyone want to
vestigation was in Middleport buy. a pot hole for $5 .
If you do we will put your
working with Police Olief
Cremeans and other mem· name on pot hole that you_fix .
bers of the Middleport Police Cont act Mayor Clarence
Andrews.
Department on the case.

'

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