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'

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

I

~

[ __ _

(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.

'

�'

3-Ti'~ Daily Senllnel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0

, Tuesdny, Mat· 20. 1979

2;--The Datly Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomcroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mar. 20. 1979

Collins' Report

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

(

'Waste of time a'nd money'
By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHI NGTON (NEA l · The governors and state
legJs l'"..ators clamormg for fiscal respons1b1hty ui. Washmg·
ton would enJOY more c r edtblhty If they we ren 't simultaneously promotmg one of the least JUStifiable boondoggles
111 the federa l budget

A natiOnal network of a dozen federal·state agencies
known as regiOu.i::il development commissions currently
stands as a monument to the hypocrlsy of the selfproclaimed economizers m state cap1tals across the
country

Created by a patr of federal laws enacted

10

1964, the

conumss1ons ~::ene rally have faded in the ensumg 14 years
to accomplis h thear stated mass1on To foster economic
development , w1th s pecial emphasis on the creation of new

JObs

Instead, the commrss10ns have become a haven for high·
sala ried palronRge appomtees whO preside over programs

cllppled by pohhcal abuse, waste and inefftciency. In
some mstanccs , there also IS evidence of fraud and
corr uptton
The commiSSIOns are funded JOintly by the federal and
s tate go" ernments Washmgton's share to date totals
about $4 btllton, wtth approximately $3 5 billion of that

amount gomg to the btggest and best-known of the
agcnc1es. tht• Appalachian Regional Conunisston.
That comnusston 's dub1ous expenditures of pubhc funds
In the past tnclude $1 2 mtlbon for a " Hall of Fame " for
track and l~eld stars m West Virgmta and $42,000 for

expanswn of a boat manna m New York.

The Upper Great Lakes RegiOnal Commtsston spent
more than $100,000 on an •ll·fated expenment substituting
flsh for meat m sausages, cold cuts and other food 1tems

The resultmg product was so medtble that 1t was rejected
by both pr1son mmates and patients at mental msbtutlons.
The mystenous disappearance of more than $1 mtlhon
purportedly dis bursed by that commiSSIOn for various
other proJects m the nud-1970s has been the subject of a
federal cnmmal mvest1gat10n
The Four Corners Regional CommissiOn? m the Southwest, purcha sed $4,172 worth of ballpomt pens and felt·llp
markers A fonner Connecticut governor used funds
provtdcd by the New England RegiOnal Comnussion to pay
for news paper subscnpt10ns ($1,461 ), lapel pms ($6,800)
and adverltsmg agency fees ($15,500 )
The lcgis)ahon authortzmg the commiSSions exptres m
September, and President Carter imhally was mclined to
oppo~e a ny renewal of the agencies' mandate
Uut the cow1try's governors lobbted hard for White
House s upport of the comrmss10ns and the Carter
adnu mstratwn caved 1n to the state's demands at last
su1mner's meetmg of the National Governors' Association
In Boston
Not sat1s f1cd with that concessron, the governors then
pressed for the president"s approval of a scheme callmg
for wall-to-wall reg10nal commtss10ns spanmng the entire
country

Early thts year, Ca rter agam relented and authonzed
crcatwn of three new regional commissiOns But a Wh1te

House memo that madvertently became public included
the president's handwntten personal optnton . "I consider
the regwnal commiSSions to be a waste of time and
money.''
L1ke the governors, however, Carter has used the
comm1sswns as a patronage haven for erstwhile campaign
workers who now enJOY salaries of as much as $47 ,500 and

'Air of excitement' abounds
By DONAW M. RO'lliBERG
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) There's an all' of excitement
in Washington these days
about the remarkable record
of the 96th Congress.
Everyone
ts
asking
whether the new Congress
can make it through two
years without passing a
major bdl.
The 96th convened on Jan.
15, and smce then, three
items have cleared the House
and Senate
Gone are the mvttations to
btU-signing
ceremonies,
social htghlights of the
Lyndon
B.
Johnson
administration. And who can

expenditures are for mconclustve studies, consulting fees
and adm1mstrahve costs - but not for economic development

The proposed lederal budget for the 1980 ftscal year
mcludes $.158.6 mtlhon for the Appalachtan Regwnal
Commtsswn and slightly more than $74 mtlhon for the

budget - wtth cuts m mmd
Other than schools, few ex-

other 11 agencies

programs lm the new state

TI1at's less than I percent of the total budget but
pollttcians at both the state and federal levels ~ould
demonst rate their newfound commttment to spendmg
restraint by Simply allowmg th'e regLOnal comnussions to
dte peacefully thiS year

Names •••
in the news
By 11te As so elated Press
LONOON ( AP) - Faith healers failed to provide actress
Dmna Rigg relief from back problems, so the 40-year-&lt;Jid
performer says she will try more conventional pam-killing
treatment to postpone posstble surgery
After a month out of action With back trouble, Ms. Rigg returned Monday 1&lt;1 her starrmg role m Tom Stoppard's play,
"Night and Day" at London's Phoentx Theater.
NEW YORK (AP) -A "maliCious rumor " is being CII'CUIated to dele at the Equal Rights Amendment by preymg on the
"deep, unspoken fear· people have about bathrooms," says one
of Prestdent Carter's daughters-m~aw.
Judy Carter, wife of the president's eldest son, Jack, wrote
in Redbook magazine's AprillllSue·
"A few wlly political brains decided to make bathrooms a
pohttcal tssue Attaching an emotional issue to the Equal
Rtghts Amendment would hide the real issues of equal pay,
equal education and legal nghts for homemakers ... "
Mrs Carter said unisex bathrooms have existed for centunes and buses, trams and all'planes have used them effechvely lor any years wtthout infrmging on anyone's prtvacy."
NEW YORK (AP) - In a poetic mood 12 years ago, Pope
John Paul II wrote of man, htstory and death.
In "Easter Vtgill966- a conversation With God begins," the
Pope wrote
'"!be human body m htstory dtes more often and earlier than
thelree
"Man endures beyond the doors of death and catacombs and
crypts
" Man who departs endures in those who follow .
"Man who follows endures m those departed.
"Man endures beyond all eoming and going m hliDself and in
You"

Exerpts from three of the former Karol Wojtyla's works,
wntten under the pen name Andrzej Jawten, appear in the
April issue of Ladies' Home Journal with special permissiOn
from the Vatican.
BOSTON (AP) - Former San Franctsco Mayor Joseph
Alioto says he has made a dectston about whether to run agam
for mayor of the ctly by the bay Tune m agam in Ju "e to learn
what he dectded
" If I made my annoWICement m Boston before San
Franctsco, I'd be m big trouble, btg trouble," satd Ahoto, 62,1
addmg that he would reveal his plans in June
Alioto called a press conference Monday to &amp;Mounce the
candidacy of hiS stster~n~aw, Jean Sullivan McKelgue , 33, for
the Boston School Committee Alioto and his wtfe, Kathleen
Sullivan Alioto, 35, a school committee member who made an
un successful btd for the Democratic norrunatton to the U.S.
Senate from Massachusetts last fall, have been living in San
Francisco.
Mrs Alioto refused to disclose if she planned to resign from
the live-member Boston School Corrurutt.ee.

•

•

message?

accomplishment. Congress
rrught complete action on
legtslatlon deflrung the new
relations between the Umted
!"tales and Taiwan
Also likely to receive final
action is a biD to mcrease the
federal debt limit.
If Congress gets by those
hurdles, -11 will be clear
sailmg through April Senate
Majority Leader Robert C.
'Byrd, DW.Va., announced the
other day that he would slow
the pace of floor action and
av01d Fnday sessions at least
through April.

The new Congress roared
off to a deceptively fast start
on Jan 18, when 11 pa.iSed a
resolution g~vmg President
Carter an extra week to send
his economic report to
Capitol Hill.
Three
weeks
later,
Congress repealed a law
requirmg banks to notify
customers of their nghts
under the Rtght to Financial
Prtvacy Act.
The Ill's! substantive piece
of legiSlation, sent to the
Whtte House Feb. 26,
authoriZed pubhc sale of 3
A
senator
caught
million rare sliver dollars. speechless IS an OCCaSIOn
This week will test the worth notmg. The senator 10
96th's record of non-

Budget cuts sought •••
By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohto (API The legtslature's two fmance
chatrmen - Rep. Myrl H
Shoemaker, D-BourneVJIIe ,
and Sen. Harry Meshel, DYoungstown - are looking
mto the need for extsttng

$50,000 annually
In addttiOn to those payments, most of the corrumss10ns'

recaU the last_ vitriolic veto

DON JOHNSON
Spec. 4 Donald D. Johnson,
son of Mr and Mrs. Charles
F. Johnson, Clifton, W Va ,
recently completed training
as an armor crewman under

the One Station Unit Training
(OSUT) program at Fort
Knox, Ky.
OSUT is a 13-week period
whtch combines baste
combat .. Jralning with advanced mdivtdual trammg.
Dunng the trainmg,
students learn the duttes of a
tank crewman, mcluding the
hrmg of the tank's armament
and smaU weapons They also
receive mstructton m held
radio operations, map
readmg and tank mam·
tenance and repair
Johnson's wife, Edith, lives
in Germany

MILDRED TUBBS
Mildred Tubbs, Pomeroy,
ts a patient at Veterans
Memonal Hospttal. Although
she IS not aUowed vtsttors,
cards would be appreciated.
Her room number IS 138

pansions
of
existing
programs or addtttons of new
ones will be sought Those
judged worthy may get
modest increases in thetr
budgets to aUow for inflatiOn,
the chairmen say.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
and hts committee are now
combmg spendmg requests m
GOP Gov Jafnes A Rhodes,'
record $17 7 btlllon, "no new
taxes" budget
But Shoemaker also has
been
grtlhng
cabmet
members
and
other
bureaucrats about how they
spent thetr last budget allocahons, and m some cases,

suggesting they could have
done a better JOb.
Last week, for instance, he
came up wtlh a list of
concerns about the mental
health
and
mental
retardation department, one
of which challenged the use of
htghly paid psychtatnsts as
hospital admmistrators.
Meshel won't get the btll
unllltt passes the House, but
says he will begm spot checks
among the many agenctes
askmg for contmued funding
- apparently of a type
stmilar to Internal Revenue
Service audits of taxpayer
returns.

He said each of the 212
agencies is eligible for such a
probe. "It's tune to expand
upon our efforts to look at
some wasteful ongoing
government programs," he
says
Both chalfJDen accept that
the state won't be raismg
taxes, at least lor the next
several years, and they have
to make appropriations Itt

wtthin available revenues
In each of his random
aud1ls, the veteran Senate
chatrman s3ld hts committee
will determme If the servtce
continues to be necessary,
whether 1! could be reduced
or cut back, tf 11 could be
phased out by cerl31D date
or consolidated wtth another
state program, or tf
economies could be achieved
to operate the program at
lower costs
Last week, in his critique of
the mental health programs,
Shoemaker satd "I beheve
that it ts extremely unportant
that the commtttee ... , look
very closely at how the
department has spent lunds
appropnated m t he past ,"
addmg that such a revtew will
enable the panel to better
evaluate present and future
programs
In additton to the alleged
use of psychia trlsts as
administrators, Shoemaker
sald he was concerned about
"a possible mal-distribution
among
the
ol funds
mstitutions operated by the
diviswn ol mental health."
He also S3ld he fears the
diviston may be "dumpmg"
paltents m commumty
facllthes to expedite nattonal
a ccreditatiOn of t!s stat~
mstituttons
Meshel said he thinks the
budget revtews on Ohio in the
past have fallen short "m

a

cnttcal

review

lon gs! an ding programs."

of

this case was Joe Biden, DDel.
Durmg debate on the
Ta1wan bill, Btden was
caught w1th too httle time to
speak and not enough time to
do anything else.
Advised by the prestding
olltcer that he had only 20
seconds, not enough time to
ask for a quorum call or to
YJeld the floor to another
senator, Biden sald, "Then I
suggest I keep speakmg . I
do not really have much more
to say, espectally in 20
seconds I have difficulty
saytng my name in 20
seconds "
Treasury Secretary W. Mt·
chael Blwnenthal, a frequent
wttness before congressional
committees, has developed a
conststent pattern.
After readmg his operung
statement, Blumenthal invariably leans back in hts
chair, lights up a ctgar and
awaits questions.
On a recent appearance before the Senate Finance Com·
mittee, he was about to light
up when he realized there
was no ashtray on the table.
Immediately aware of the
secretary's problem, Sen.
Dan1el Patrick Moynihan, DN..V., spQtted an ashtray m
front of another senator,
whisked 11 away, walked
down from the committee
dais and plunked the ashtray
in front of Blwnenthal
"It's a pleasure seemg a
senator work so hard," said
Blumenthal.
TilE DAILY SENTINEL

(USPSJ4H60)

e ~-~·~"'·DEVOTEDTO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
DAVID 8USKmK
Advertt11lng Manacer

Published dally e11:cept Saturday
b) The Ohw Valley PubUshing

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Times-Senlmel

Berry's World

Poet's corner
The accompanymg poems were W!ltten by Mrs. Linda
Gilinore for her two daughters, four-year-&lt;Jid Shannon Lyn,
and two-month-&lt;Jld Kasey Jo who are staying in Meigs County
with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs Gardner Wehrung and
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Gilmore while Mrs. Gilmore recovers from
recent surgery.
FOR SHANNON LYN
Shannon Lyn, my little dear,
It seems you've been away a .year.
Although tl's only been two weeks or so
I just had to let you lalow,
Daddy and I rruss our shmmg lights
And can't wait to hold you in our arms tight.
We'D be there soon to hold you, baby,
And that's a promise not a maybe
So be good for Granny and Papa too
And remember, Shannon, we love you.
FORKASEYJO
Kasey Jo, you httle schmo,
We miss you more than you can lalow.
Your Granny takes good care of ~ou
And Papa cuddles you the whole night thru.
But Mommy and Daddy are lonesome at night
And can't watt till you're back m oltr sight.
You're much too young for a letter I lalow
So I had to wr1te this poem to show
I can't watt 'til you and your baby channs
Are right back here m Mommy's arms.

"What about the Alaskan oil pipeline?"

I

'

COLUMBUS- State Senator Oakley C. Collins (R·Ironton)
reports that earlier this month the Senate Republicans held a
caucus at which Dr. Franklin Walter, the Supermtendent of
Public Instruction and head of the Ohio Department of
Educatwn, discussed hts Department's priorities for the next
btenntum budget.
The major prtonty of the Department IS to improve the
students' bastc skills.
Even though the Department •ecognizes the need to
improve instruction on the basic skills, Ohio's high school
students continue to score well above the national average on
the college board examination scores.
Even with the current emphasis being placed m Ohio on
vocational educalton, the board scores still continue to
mcrease above the national average.
Those students takmg vocational education courses do
equally as well as the students taking college preparatory
courses on the college entrance examinations. Currently
Otuo's students on an average score 36 points higher in
mathematics and 30 pomts htgher on the verbal skills section
than the natiOnal average scores on the Scholastic Aptitude
Test.
The second major priority of the Department of EducatiOn
ts to provide equal educational opportunities for those students
wbo choose to go out and work rather than continue and go on
to htgher educatwn.
Currently Ohio's vocational education program IS the best
in the nation and serves as a model lor many of the other states
developing vocational education programs. In 1971
approxunately 22 percent of Ohw's high scbool students
enrolled m vocational education.
At the current tune 52 percent of Ohio's students are
mvolved m vocational educatton. A maJority of these students
are mvolved m spectftc job training programs
Ohto's vocational educatton program has an excellent
track record in providing students with the skills needed to
obtain employment Currently 91 percent of those high school
students graduating with vocatiOnal educatwn experience are
able to obtam jobs
,
Obtaining fiseal stability is a third priority of the
Department of Education. Ohio's schools have a 10-year
history of running out of money and school closings. Although
additional funding m the budget would help alleviate some of
these money problems, the Department is in support of
legislation which would eliminate some of tbe antiquated
restramts, such as the restramt which lorces a school dtslriCI
to close if 11 goes one cent mto the red.
The State Loan Fund has helped the sttualton to some extent,
but the Department of EducatiOn does not feel that thiS type of
arrangement is the answer.
While discussing the funding tssue wtlh members of the
Republican caucus, Dr. Walter pointed out that Ohio ranks the
third lowest in the natton in the amount of personal taxes
collected per person.
Only Arkansas and Alabama rank below Ohio, while the
remairung 47 states rank above
The Department ha~ also taken the position that the Equal
Yteld Formula, which is used to determine basic atd to school
distncts, should be elliDtnated and that this formula should be
replaced With a "foundation formula" which would guarantee
a set amount of dollars per pupil as long as 20 mills of property
tax were levied for the school district.
An inflation factor would also be butll mto this formula so
that tf the inflation rate mcreased, the dollars per puptl figltre
would also increase.
Another interesting fact is that the attorney fees m the
Cleveland and Colwnbus desegregatiOn cases have cost the
State Department of Education one-baH million dollars in the
Columbus case and one million doUars m the Cleveland case.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Getting rid of girth
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - I
read your colwnn about the
man who lost weight, but
still had a lot of loose skin
around the waist. I lost 60
pounds and went from a size
38 pants to size 32. I feel
great and look O.K., but I
have this extra skin I'd like
to get rid of. You sent this
fellow a letter on girth con·
trol and how to exercise to
help the problem. I'd be
grateful If you would send
this to me, too.
DEAR READER - I am
sendmg you The Health Letter number 3·7, Girth Con·
trol: Avoiding The Big Mtd·
die The two main points are
to get the fat off your abdomen and out of the inside of
your belly ca vlty. Many peo·
pie don 'I realize that there is
about as much fat Inside the
beUy cavity as there 1s out·
side. You stmply c;an't
squeeze that fat down with
any form of exerctse. You
have to eliminate It and It
sounds like you've elbnl·
nated a great deal of it.
The second aspect of girth
control is really tightening
up your abdominal muscles.
You can do this with sit ups
and leg Wt exercises that
are discussed In The Health
Letter I am sending you.
Others who want this Issue
can send 50 cents with a
long , stamped, self·ad·
dressed envelope lor it. Send
your request to me In care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
Now, I must tell you that
outside of getting the fat off
and out, and tightening up
yoltr abdominal muscles,
you can't really expect a lot
more. The skin Itself does
not contain any muscles that
will be benefited by exercise
In this way II Y0\1 haven't
completely overstretched
your skin, you may get some
gradual Improvement In
skin tone over the next sev·
eral montha.
If you truly have a lot of

Is l;htna mentioned In the
Bible? Some modem commentators have idenUfied
· as Slntm, the land of

excess skin and want to get
rtd of it, it's probably going
to have to be removed surgically So, why don't l'ou walt
a year and do a lot of good
abdominal exercises of the
type described In The Health
Letter I am sending you and
see where you are then
At that time, if you still
have a lot of excess fat, talk
to a good plastic surgeon to
see if he can help you. If
you're lean and in good
phystcal condition, a compe·
tent plastic surgeon can do a
good cosmetic removal of
skin and significantly lm·
prove your appearance.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I
read your coiWIUI about the
surrogate mother, the one
who had the baby for her
friend who was sterile and
couldn't have children of her
own. You said the woman
who had the baby was really
the genetic mother, mea~tlng
the genes of the baby all
came from her. Now,l'd like
to ask if the same thing lsn 't
true about men. What about
women who have artificial
Insemination? lsn 't the real
father the man who provides
the sperm for the artificial
Insemination?
DEAR READER - The

~~~.~~:. ~h::l~~dec~!r~~~

teristics of a child Is the
result of the genetic combl·
nation of the man who provides the spenn cell and the
woman who provides the
ovum. In a child resulting
from artificial Insemination,
the legal father is the father
who is married to the
mother and ralaes the child.
But the genetic father Is still
the man who provided the
operm cells for artificial
Insemination.
This is one of the reasons
why an effort Is made to find
a sperm donor who haa characterlatics slmllar to the
legal father. If the sterile
husband is tall, blond and ·
blu&lt;H&gt;yed, tl!ere is usually
some effort made to find a '
sperm cell donor who Ia alao
tall, blond and blue-eyed.

"Behold theae abaD come
from far; and lo, tbeoe frol'u
the aortb IUid fnnD tile wen;
aacl theoe from the land of

Sports Desk
BY DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
While workmg on today's editorial page Monday
at.temoon,l !'ad a chance to listen to the Cincinnati Reds game
With the Philadelphia Phillies at Clearwater Fla
It soon became eVIdent that the $BOO 000 per year
"Sparkplug" who formerly wore the red and 'white untlorm
bearing a Cincinnati emblem was not playing against hts
former teammates
PersonaUy, I could care less, but one has to wonder why
~· the player who rarely rrusses a game, be 1t sprmg
lraiDIDg or the regular season was not on the f1eld .
Marty Brennaman, the Reds top broadcaster satd Rose
had taken batting practice at the PhtUtes' comple~. showered
and left for the afternoon
It seems that the milllonaire w•U not be present when his
team travels to Tampa later thts sprmg.
Could it be that Rose is upstaging hts appearance agatnsl
his former team for a bid weekend in June at Rtverfront?
Maybe, he doesn't want to face hts old teammates for some of
his outlandish remarks m recent weeks, or JUSt maybe, Mr
Rose feels he IS too proud to be bothered by a spring trairung
game played before some 500 Reds' Rooters some of whom
Just might boo hun a little.
'
I am sure he will have some great excuse should someone
else besides a small town news editor ask about hts
disappearance.
Frankly, as you can probably tell already, I've about had it
wtlh Rose.
No, not because he refused to stgn wtth the Reds. Because
his over aU attitude has become one of utmost ego and btg ctty
boastfulness. He should have signed wtth the Yankees. He and
Reggt.e Jackson could have Joined each other's braggmg team.
It's one thmg to feel you are the top player tn the game,
but, to say no one else should be gettmg close to what you're
makmg IS out of line.
Maybe, I listen to too many radio talk shows from
Cincmnati. It seems smce last July that the only questton bemg
asked centered around Pete Rose . Was Pete gomg to stay'
How come the Reds wouldn't get hun what he wants' How
come the Reds are so conservative wtth their money'
After early negottations,tt became evident Rose was gomg
to play out his option to become the htghest pnce player m the
game.
Well, I wonder if Pete wants to renegotiate smce three
other players, Jun Rtce, Dave Parker and Rod Crew are
apparently going to make more money thts year
I dQII't blame the Reds for thetr stand. Why sacnfice a
roanchise for a 33-year-&lt;Jid player?
Now, Jet me g1ve the Reds a "pat on the back" lor the
recent signing of outfielder George Foster. Ftgures put hiS
signature for three years between $700,000 and $800,000 per
year, surely, they can't caU the Reds' management cheap
anymore.
While on the subject of management, I must say, 1 dtd not
agree with the brmg of Sparky Anderson last November.
Maybe, it Will turn out to be a good move, but, the coaching
stall should have gone, not the main Spark.
Now, before I leave the subject. Dtck Wagner has been
catchmg enough llak that he won't need a minister at hts
funeral. However,tfthe Reds do not pull off a deal or two prior
to the opening game, he will be on my list too.
Cincy has not unproved 1tseH m areas needing help,
speciflcaUy lefthand pttchmg, a rtghthanded hitter or some
backup catching Get busy, Dick - The Dodgers and Gtants
are breathing down our necks, long belore the race starts.

McNamara real pleased thus far
1., I ERHY

KINN~. Y

AP Spuns Wr1tt•r

TAMPA. Fla . tAP) - The
Cmcmnall Reds have won

SIX

of thetr fir st 10 exhtbttion
ba seball games wtlh a merrygoround hneup, dtfferent
every day But manager John
McNamara and the front
offtre shoulrl start tnrnmmg

Sllllm." -loa. 41:12

I

e d es 1~11ed IIH.Irc to get
pl.1 ve r s mto a game,
all} whl!re , rath er tha n at

do some UHngs you wouldn ' t

theu I rue pos1tion

necessart ly do
tn
a
champtonshtp ga me," was
how Reds' prestdent Dtck
Wagner put tl.
McNamara has satd some

' Yuu'd itke tu wtn all the
g.,une s, but 1t 's mo1 e
101portant to see ali the
players." Wagner satd "I'm
real pleased so far
" I thmk you c:m ser ~ nPw

of the exhtb1t10n hn f'lm ('anis

w~ r

hfe and sptrt t on the club ..

Some of the nun&lt; ostered
people get moved back down
trnnmtng the squad , the tu the (mmor league 1 camp,"
mmal rmmner IS to pare away satd Jun Ferguson . the club s
early the younger players publluty dtrector "'n•e extra
wlto sttll have a future wtth catchers are the ftrbt to go ' '
the Reds but who wtll have to
Tiwse " re the mmor league
spend th e yea r 1n the catchers the Reds mvtted to
Cmunnat1 farm system
sprmg trammg to help handle

'
By fERRY KINNEY
1'1\MPA, Fla (AP)
Pedro Bor bon has appeared
m more ga mes for the
Cmcmnatt Reds than any
other pttch er, enough ca reer
appearances to rank lith
3lnong all active hurlers
He likes to work regularly.
"I'm more constslent tf I
throw every day. My arm will
be m better shape," .Borbon
satd after bemg tagged wtlh
the loss Sunday m the Reds'
exht bttton game wtth St
Louts
!lor bon spends about seven
months a year wtth the Reds,
and also plays wmter
baseball tn hts nattve
Dommtcan Repubhc
" I see my famtly four or
ftve months a year," he satd
"You have to work for a
hVJng."
But
like

countrymen Rwo Carty and
Manny Mota, IS captlahztng
on h1s name m the Domtmcan

Hepubltc He 's opened a
disco
" Baseball ts the hottest
sport m the Domtmcan ,"
!lor bon explatned "To have a
busmess m my country, you
have to have a name I know
a lot of people there •·
!lor bon. who sltllts more at
ease m Spamsh, sa1d

he

enJOYS bemg a host at hts
club
" I itke to talk to people. I
like s1gmng autographs," he
smd "But sometimes you'Ie
tired , or have to catch a bus
an d you 're afratd people
don't understand "
Borbon came to the Uruted
States to play baseball m
1966 He's see n a lot of
changes not only tn the
numbe~ of !.attn players tn

Herzog misses
friends in blue
By HAL ROCK
AP Sports Wnter
FORT MYERS, Fla (AP I
- Whttey Herwg , manager
of the Kansas Ctty Royals,
hopes baseball settles tts
current squabble wtth the
wnptres m a hurry because
he mtsses hts fnends tn blue
ReaDy?
"Sure I m1ss 'em, 11 Herzog
s3ld "The guys who are
filling m are trymg hard, but

man team," warned Knight.
"They (the Botlermakers 1
have some good guards who
can hW't you "
Sttll, Carroll was awesome
agamst Alabama . Hts pomt
productton equalled the stxlh
htghest total m NIT history the r ecord 1s 65 by Anthony
Roberts of Oral Roberts m
1917. In four NIT games ,
Carroll has accumulated 112
pomts, only 17 shy of the alltime record set by Bobby
lloyd of Rutgers m 1967
Netlher ts Indtana a one·
man team
In addtllon to Woodson 's
team-high total agamst Ohio
State, guards Butch Carter
and Randy Wittman each
scored 12 pomts and
combmed for 12 asstsls, whtle
center Ray Tolbert had 10
pomts and a game-high 10
rebounds
Kelvm Ransey led Ohio
State, 19·11, wtth 25 pomts
and center Herb Williams
scored 14
' But the Buckeyes' inabtllty
to get the ball consistently
into
Williams
agamst
lndtana's tight wne defense
was costly. The 6-10 Willtams,
a 19 9 scorer during the
season, took only eight shots
agamst the Hoosters
"Indiana's delen se
collapsed on Williams,'' satd
Oh10 State Coach Eldon
Mtller "We had no balanced
offense to overcome thts
Indiana plays as good a
defense as any team m the
country ''

NCAA College
Basketball Tournament

Glance

By The Associated Press
Reg1onal Champ1onsh1p
Saturday's Games
Midwest
At Cmcmnat1
Indian~ 51 73, Arkansas 71
West
At Provo, ltah
DePaul 95 , UCLA 91

they're JUSt not very good We
had a home plate umptre the
other day who must have
mtssed 50 pitches Most uf
them were ours because we
lost the game 14.() "
Herwg, never shy when tt
comes to deaitng wtlh the
tunps, says a manager must
lalo\\ when and how to argue
wtth them "Last year,
George Bamberger led the
league m getttng bounced."
the Royals' manager satd of
ht s counterpart wtth the
Mtlwaukee Brewers "You
know why '1 He didn 't know
how to do tl He never
managed befQre He never
was on th e coacHing hnes
belot e. He dtdn 't know how to
go about 1t."
In 1973, when Herwg was
ftred tn September as rookie
mana ge r of the Texas
Rangers, he left as the league
leade r 1n eJeCtiOns wtlh seven
lor the season "At the wmter

meet1n gs,

F.arl

Mide~st

At lndtanapohs, Ind.

M•c h1gan St

80 , Notre

Dame 68

National Seminfinals

March24
A~ Salt Lake Clly

Penn {25-5) vs

M1ch 1qan

at Moamo . (n)
New York ( N) vs P1tts
burgh at Ba yamon PR . n
Wednesday 's Games
Cocoa Fla
Bal timore vs Atlanta at
West Palm Beac h, Fla
St Lou 1s vs Toronto at
Dunedin , Fla
Los Angeles vs New York

Borbon satd Uu s year's
Reds have a pretty good
chance l! to wtn U1e National
League pennant but "need

INJ at St Peter sburg , Fl a
Ph1ladelph1 a vs Te xas at
Pompano Fla

more startmg pttchtng"
He satd after piaymg for

Mmnesota vs Cmc1nna t1 at
Tampa , Fla
Kansas C1ty vs 0 11 1cago
!A) at Sarasota, F!a
San
F r anc• sco
vs
Ca ldorn1a at Palm Sprmgs

McNamara two wmters m the
Dmmmcan league, he's convtnced that the soft-spoken
new manager can help the
team

Calof
Cleveland vs Seatt le at
Tempe. Aroz
Chicago ( N) vs San Diego
al Yu ma Am
Boston vs Detroo t at

" Everybody works very
hard for John He's a ntce
f ll ·• Bo bo
d 'H
e ~w,
r n sru
e
don t like to talk too much,
but he's a good, respected
man

Houston vs

1\'\ontreal at

Lakeland , F la , n

-6)

lnd1ana

Sl

DePaul (25 51

(32 0)

VS

Natrona! Champ1onshtp
March 26

AI Salt Lake Coly

Penn M1ch1gan St wmner
vs
lnd 1ana St
DePaul
wmner
\

the year at lndianapolts, ancl

The Heels ltkely wtll keep
two catchers One wtll be
Johnny Bench, and ve teran
Vte Correll should have an
edge as hts backup But other
p10spects mclude Dave Van
Gorder and Don Werner
The , vetera n tnf te id IS
pretty well set , but ther e ate
a half dozen young tnftelders
still m the runrung for spots
on the club
Harry Sptlman ha s been on
a htttmg tear , and cou ld
double as a backup at etther
thtrd or ftr st Another ftrst
baseman , Arturo DcFrelles,
htt 327 last yea r at
lndtanapohs and has been

Gene lncklear, a free "'gent

Ron

Oester

trymg to latch on wtth the
Reds as a pmch htt ter , bat
lefthanded Its unltkely tile
elub wtii keep both of thr1n
" Every few days, the squart
w1ll be trunrn ed down , on e 01
two at a tune ," F er gusun

srud " About 30, 01 mad&gt;e
only 28 usuatty sta) around
Wl!ll the ver) end "
For some youn g pla)ers

hoptng this IS the year the\
make the step to the rna Jor
leag ues, th1 s IS a vr 1~
ner-vo us week

Exhibition Baseball
At A Glance
By The Assoctated Pf'ess

seems

shortstop, as ts JW11or Ken-

nedy behmd Joe Morgan at
second ba se

Rtck 1\uerbach ts a thtrd
ba seman·pln ch httte r wh o

batted 327 for the Reds last
year , and he's gotten off to a
fast start thts spnng
The slattmg outfteld ts set
wtth Geot ge Foste1 , Cesar
Geronm1o and Ken Grtffe) the latter two h1t home runs
m Monday 's extra·J nmng

Monday 's Games

Houston 4, Mtnn esot a 3
New York (A) 2, At lanta I
Los Angeles 8, Bait 1 mor e 2
Detroit 2, Montr eat l
Cmc 1nnat1 4, Philad elph ia
3, 13 mn nmgs
Toront o 10, Boston 8
Te~as 6 Kansas C1ty 2
Oakland 8 Cleveland 3 7
1nnmgs ra1n
Seatt le 8, Milwaukee 3

Ca lofornoa 5, Chocago (NJ 3

Sa n D1eg o 5, San Fr anc1 sco
3

St Lou1s 5 Ch1 cago (A ) 3

New York (NJ 5 Pitt sburgh

'

$15,000 IS OUR GOAL
Cut down on juvenile delinquency
Give our young people a place to build heahhy bodies
Raise the spirn of our athletic programs
Insure the Future of our Community

argument w1th an ump1re

51

opener

PUT YOUR NAME IN IT

because tt mtght gtve you the
edge on the next close call "
Herwg satd the strangest

"I was gone ''

InJury

BUY A YARD OF CONCRflE
AND WE'LL

when you know you won 't wm

came last season "tth Ken
Km ser, a former professtonal
wre stler who JOmed the
Amencan League staff m
1977
" He had been wtlh us m
sprmg trammg and worked
about 10 games," Herwg
S3ld . "Now the season starts
and he blows a call at ftr st
base I come out and before I
ca n open my mouth, he's ali
over me , tellmg me how hard
he worked m our sprmg
games and how I had some
nerve argumg I hadn 't satd a
word and he's tellmg me off "
What did Hezog do'
" I turned around and went
back to the dugout," he satd
Managers are prohtbtted
from argumg ball-stnke caDs
wtth umptres but there's
nothmg that says they can't
discuss those calls wtth thetr
catchers On one apparent
foul t1p which was called a
ball, Herwg patd a vtstt to
Royals ' recetver Darrell
Porter.
"I came out and said, 'Darrell, I thought that was a foul
ttp ' He satd, 'It was .' Then I
satd . remember , I'm still
talking to my catcher ... 'I
lalew hts eyes were bad, but I
didn't know he couldn 'I hear
e1ther "'
The result"

Cha mp Summers , last
year 's mmor leag ue player u!

establtshed as backup to
Dave
Concepc ion
at

yo ung players came up from
the farm system

W CI YS,

number the club wtll take
north for the April 4 season

- slang
" IJke Pu erto Rtco , more
tourtsts go t~ere so the slang
ts dtfferent than tn Venezuela
or the Dom mtcan ," Borbon
satd
!lor bon has been m the Cmyears and has seen the Reds
change as playet s like Tony
Perez and Pete Rose left and

Henderson bC:Its bot h

hut he's stt ll bothered by &lt;l tue

unpr ess1ve m sprmg camp

em nab 01 gamzatwn for moe

a spot on the club
Dave Co llt ns, acqutr cd
fro m Sealtle tn 1977, spen t &lt;~ii
last season 111th the Heds an d
bats n ghthan ded
Ke n

the early camp complement
of 20 ptlchers, twtce the

one language barn er to
overcome among themselves

"The (e'ople are gomg to
mtss Pee To a lot of people
Pete and Johnny Bench were
the symbols of the Cmcmnatl
Reds ." Borbon smd

Weaver

(Baltimore 's manager ) came
up yellmg mthat high-pttched
votce of hts, 'I tied ya. I tted
ya ''He gol his seventh thumb
Ill that last month ."
Herzo g learned about
W11ptrebatlmg techruques m
that fir st year as a manager.
"You can't yell on every play
and every pttc h, " he satd
"And somettmes you holler

Sunday's Games

East
AI Greensboro, N C.
Penn 64, St John's 62

th e m&lt;~Jor leagues , but also m Spantsh, but off ·the fteld at
that Lattn ballplayers now hotels and restaurants "
nften learn Engltsh at home
Plaza, tromcally, now IS
" I used to have a lot of one of Manager John
trouble wtth the language," McNamara 's coaches w1th
Borbon satd " Not on the the Reds
held. because my hrst
.. A Jot of people 1m th e Domanage• . Ron Plaza, spoke mtnt can Hopubl tc 1 spea k
English In school, you ca n
learn any language now,"
Borbon satd I had to learn
Engltsh m the street and
ptcked tl up from other
ballplayers "
Today's Games
Houston vs Montreal ai
The Latm players on a
Daytona Beach, Fla
maJor league team sltll have

Atla nta vs Kan sas C1 ty at
Fort Myers , F!a
Toronto vs St Lou1 s at St
Petersburg , Fla
C1ncmn a tt vs Bos ton a1
Wmter Ha ven Fla
Detro1t vs Chtcago (A) at
Sarasota Fla
New York (A) vs Mm
nesola at Orl ando Fla
Chtcago (Nl vs Ca l1forn1a
at Palm Sprmgs, Ca l1f
Oakland vs Clevel a nd at
Tucson Ar1z
Seclftle vs Milwaukee at
Sun C1ty , Ar1z
San Fran c1sco vs San
Diego at Yuma , An z
Ph1ladelph1a vs Balt1more ·

VIC tor y O\oer Philadelphia but here 's "h er e thf'
1nf 1gh tmg co uld be fl f' l c t' f&lt;Jr

\\1wn 1t com es time for

Borbon likes to work

Purdue, Indiana
gain NIT finals
By BERT ROSENTHAL
"He has a real good touch
AP Sports Writer
for a big man," observed
NEW YORK (AP ) Butch Beard, assistant coach
Purdue Umverstty and of the New York Knicks of the
lndtana UmverSity are a Naltonal Basketball
mere 120 miles apart and Association
brothers m the Btg Ten
"He's good, very good,"
Conference, but now thetr noted Dan Qutlly, a former
baskethall teams are even player at New York
closer than that- rtght next Umverstly and one of
to each other m the ftnal Norton's compalrtols on the
round of the National NIT Selection Commtttee .
Invitation Tournament .
"He has a delicate touch
Thefll'stNITchamplonshlp Alabama couldn't keep hun
game between two schools outstde, and when he got
from the same state 1n 20 InSide, Alabama couldn't stop
years was set up Monday hun "
when
the
15thranked
The Crunson Tide, 21-11,
Boilermakers, 21-7, !rom used three players -Eddie
West I..afayetle, Ind., and the Phillips, Phtl Lockett and
unrated Hoosiers, 21-12, from Reggte
King ,
the
Bloomington, Ind., won Southeastern Conference
semifinal games at Madison Player of the Year - in
Square Garden. They play trying to defense Carroll. But
Wednesday night in the ftrst none could stop his sweeping
mtrastate NIT fmal smce 1958 nghthanded hook shots, hts
when X&amp;vter, Oh1o defeated soft layups or his one-handed
Dayton 78-74 m overtone.
slam dunks. PhiUtps and
Purdue, led by Joe Barry Lockett both fouled out and
Carroll's 42 pomts, destroyed Kmg was taken off Carroll
Alabama 87-611 and Indiana , after gettmg two qmck fouls
behind Mike Woodson's 20
Carroll, a 22 6 scorer
points and a suffocatmg durmg the regular season
defense, beat Btg Ten with a htgh of 36 against
Conference rival Ohio State Iowa, htt all eight of his field
64,15 Monday night ln the goals attempts and collected
semifinals of the 42nd NIT. 20pomtsm the first hall when
In their two prior meetings the Boilermakers, Btg Ten
this season, Indiana won at tn-champwns,
took
a
home 63-54 and Purdue took commanding 43-32 lead.
the second game on tis cottrl
He added 22 pomts after tn·
55-48.
terrrusswn as the potent and
"The Btg Ten is king in the potsed Botlermakers broke
M1&lt;lwest, it doesn 'I worry open the game.
"Joe Barry played a great
about the rest of the
country," said Indiana Coach game, an exceptiOnal game,"
Bobby Kmght.
S3ld Purdue Coach Lee Rose.
If the Btg Ten IS as "But he's played like thiS all
dommating a conference as year I don't think he's played
Knight suggests, then the any better, but he has played
individual king ln the thts well ."
Midwest Is the massive, 7"We tried to double up on
foot- I, 24().pound Carroll.
Carroll," satd Alabama
In scdring nearly hall hts Coach C.M Newton, "but we
team's points and reaching a had trouble because their
career
high
against guards played so well."
Alabama, the third~eam AU·
Of the Boilermakers'
American junior center awed guar , Jerry Sichting scored
a crowd of 14,632, including 20 pol ts and had seven
many pro scouts, general asstst , and Bnan Walker
managers an
es.
co
uted rune assists.
"He's
very
ail!tte,.!."V""'tKtlm~g and Robert Scott
marveled Ken Norton , the scored 21 pomts ap1ece for
long-time
coach
at Alabama, which faces Oh.o
Manhattan and now a State m the third-place game
member of the NIT Selection preceding the title contest.
Committee. " And what a
"Don't make the rrustake of
touch he has "
thinking that Carroll Is a one-

the Nattonal League club s
rost cr by the end ol tht s week
"To ~et everybody m, you

Every (tax deductible) dollar donated to the Meigs Athletic
Building Fund Is worth two dollars to our school because
every dollar will be spent for material only. Labor will be
donated. The best Investment you can make.

CLIP OUT AND MAIL -

DO IT NOWI

,---------------------------------------------,
YES, YOU CAN COUNT ON ME/US TO SUPPORT THE MEIGS HIGH
1
I

SCHOOL ATHLETIC BUILDING RJND

00

AMOUNT

D
D

$5(r

D

$10000

NAME TO BE PUT IN CONCRETE
NAME __________________
NAME--------~~-

.J

NAME ________________

$1SOOO

D
0 $2S«r
D ..........
.
$20000

NAME ______________
N~E

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(FILL IN AMOUNT AND ATTACH LIST)

L------------------------------------------MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO: MEIGS ATHLEnC
BUILDING FUND
MAIL TO: BILL

P. 0. ·BOX

M

OHIO

'

.

�5-T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-?omeroy, 0 ., Tuesdav. Mar. 20 1~7~

Whites report on African trip

R E AD MOST BOOKS ... The fourth grade class at
Syracuse Elementary School took first plac-e honors in a
reading contest held at the school. TI1 e class read a total of
410 books. Front, 1-r, Tim Willis, Kellie Mullen, Mary
Hudson , Mary Flagg, Doug Owens, Karen Cook and Mike

IJr. and Mrs. Craig White of
Stockport, 0., reported on
th ei r trip to Kenya-East
, Africa at the Ohio Valley
Gem and Mineral Society
meeting held in Marietta.
Ohio on Monday evening.
Among lo cal person s attending the meeting were Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Nolan,
Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs.·' · R.
Marshall, New Haven.
Mr. Nolan is vice president
of the group and program
leader .
Dr. White is shown serving
as auctioneer and auction ed
hand cut gem stones which
were donated and sla bs of
rocks for making jewelry at
the meeting held in the
Washington Electric Bldg.,
Marietta.
The guest speaker and
auctioneer was a Chemical
researcher for the U. S.
Quartermaster Corp., Anick,
Kloes; second row, Alicia VanMeter, Terri Roush, Kim
Mass. His wife, Joyce, was an
Adam s, Lori Grueser, Cindy Arnold, Angie Davis, Chris
art
teacher, in Texas and her
Deemer, John Riffle, David Deem; third niw, Heidi Cobb,
husband
was ~ l~o !'! prnfe!iisor
'f. J .. Robbana, Traci Hubbard , Sandra Hill, teacher,
Candy Staats, Kenney Riffle, Harvey Martin and Tammy
Staa ts.

at
Southwest
Texas displayed many, m.a ny items
Uni ve rsit y, before his purcha sed in Africa and
retirement.
included many wood carvings
Th ey reported that Kenya of animals, and a colorful
is a \'ery wor cO untry. The shield which the tribes use in
people live in mud huts and battle as well as knives used
diet consists mainly of meat, in combat. Ther e are five
blood and milk from cattle. tribes in Kenya .
Being rock hounds, Dr. and
On their sightseeing tour on
Mrs. White had hoped to go to the reservation she saw wart
several mines looking for hogs, flocks of birds and
rocks. Since some of the reported that the herds of
mines go into Tansania, the elepha nts are terribly
hunt was called off because depleted . She reported that
the people living along the ther e a re only
five
borders were not speaking. rhinoceroses left (apparently
They did bring back some on the reservation) .
Kenya jasper and other nonAt the conclusion of an
pr ecio us rocks.
interesting program, refreshOne of the highlights of the ments were served to those
visit was to go to an open air mentioned and Ada Cullen ,
market where Mrs. White 'Mr . and Mrs. Charles
bargained for a string of Bradfield, Mr. and Mrs. E:arl
~ads and apparently did
Bender, John and Helen
well, because the seller gave Heye, Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
her two strands instead of Trotter, Steve, Tom and
one. She also acquired a Charlene Kidd, Mr. and Mrs.
strand of am ber and Nell Selvey , Mr. and Mrs.
ma lachit e bea ds . They Jack Lauck, Mr . and Mrs.

Mrs.
Marjorie Ater ,
executive director of the Ohio
H et i r e d
Tea c h er s
Association, wa s guest
speaker at the Saturday
luncheon of th e Meigs
Polly Cramer
Cha pt er attended by 42
persons.
TRY VINEGAR ON TILE
pewter'!
Mrs. Ater spoke on pending
BY POLLY CRAMER
To pound a nail without legislation for
retired
POLLY'S PROBLEM
smash ing your fingers place teach ers, noting that the
DEAR POLLY - Our the neil between the teeth of a ORTA is the only group
house is eight years old and comb. - VIOLE:T
whose sole aim is to benefit
the sunken tub in the
DE:AR POLLY - I would retired teachers. She said
bathroom is made from the · lik e to pass on a Point,er that that the ORTA is· older than
same tile as the floor. The will help people who live in the national organization and
floor looks like new but the houses without ba sements that all counties have
tu b alwa ys looks dirty . from having frozen water associations. Only California
Plea se give me some pipes during extremely cold has mor.e members than
suggestions for what I might weath er. Th e plumber we Ohio, she reported. Mrs. Ater
use to clean the white film off called in such a situation had
my dark tub. Its dirty look · to saw a Ml e in the floor of
ruins what would otherwise the back porch to get to the Attends Workshop
pipes but he gave me a tip for
be a beautiful bathroom . DIANE ·
the future.
Mrs.
Mary Skinner,
DE:AR DIA NE - You are
He said not to let the Coordinator, Personal Adde aling with floor ,tile so the water drip in th e kitchen but vocacy Pro gram , Meigs
norma l remedies fo r such a to go to the bathroom and Count y attended a workshop
situation occurring in a turn on a vei'y small drip in at the University Inn, Athens,
porcelain tub doubtless are the bathtub from the cold March 19 a nd 20. The
not applicable. One authority water faucet. Next turn on a workshop was sponsored by
suggests using a brush dipped very sma ll drip from the hot th e D eve lopm e nt a lly
in ·a vinegar solution .. for water faucet in the wash Disabilities Council of
removing soap scum (which basin as this eliminates the Columbus, Ohio.
your film doubtless is) from a water coming from a double
Th e Indiana Univer sity
shower stall. Since stall t iles or mixer fa ucet and you can Developmental Tra ining
·are often. likc vours 1 would check on two distinct drips. A Gente r
presented
th e
trv that. Test. iirst in an in· sponge or cloth should be program on public images.
c~nspicuous place. - POLLY placed to protect the tub and
This
workshop
was
DEAR:&lt;POLLY ~ If you basin. "- MRS. J .A.L.
stressing 'the importance of
need candl e holders for a
Polly will send you one of making the citizens in the
birthday cake use miniature her signed thank-you news- community aware of th e
ma rshmallows to hold them. paper coupon clippers if she numb er of handicapped
Ha ve you ever tried using uses your favorit e Pointer, people and how they could
.a cabbage leaf to .clean Peeve or Problem in her best be served by such
column . Write POLLY'S programs as Personal AdPOINTE:RS in care of this vocacy or other Human
newspaper.
Reso urce Agencies.

POLLY'S POINTERS

FIRST AND SE:OOND PLACE WINNERS at Syracuse E:lementary for hav ing read the
most books Eh!ring a contest held by the school were 1-r, first grade, Kev in Burgess, second
place a nd Chastity Jacks, first place, second grade students, Chris Stout , fir st place winner.
and Todd Lisle , second place.

Students have 'Read-A-Thon'
The students at Syracuse
Elementa ry School recently
participated ih the Ohio
MC!Ital Health Association
Read-A-Than.
Each student rea d as ma ny
books as possible within the
one month contest period
(January) and collected
pledge tnoney. All proceeds
of the Read·A-Thon event
went to the Ohio Mental
Health Association .
.~II those competing in the
Re ad-A-Than r eceived an
autographed picture of Tom
Seaver _ In addition, those
student s who
collect ed
pledges of more than $25

received a Tom Seaver . T~
shirt.
The fir st a~d second
graders . were also bu sy
during this time period. Th ey

cont est to see which class
could read the most books
within the contest period.
The

winners

wer e t he

other to see which class could
either read more books or

foU!t h grade. The students
read 410 books. For a pri ze
the en'tire fourth grade class
will be taken to Burger Chef

have the rrt'ost books read t o

for a free big chef, com-

were competing aga inst each

them .
pliments of Burger Chef.
The secon d gra de students Mrs. Mickey Hoback is the
won the contest by reading' Title I reading teacher
513 books. At the close of th e
contest both classes .enjoyed
a reading pa1ty compl ete
with st ories, pri z&lt;!s, and
refreshments.
The third . fourt h. fifth and
si xth grade classes also ha d a

Rio Grande Dean 's List
RIO GRANDE: -

E:leven

Middlep ort ; Deborah
Musser, Rutland ; Kimberly
Grande College and Com- Grueser, Mi nersv ille; a nd
munity Coll ege are among Shirl ey ·Sayre and J ean
153 students honor ed for Ritchhart , Syracuse.
outstan d ing
academic
achievement by being na med
to the Dea n's Honor Roil and
the Dea n's Merit Roll fo r
CUB SCOUT
winter quarter.
PACK235
Th e honor roil recognizes
Chester Cub Scout Pack 235
fu ll-time st ude nt ~ who earned
averages of 3. 75 or higher and members are selling light
the merit roll recognized full- bulbs to raise money for pack
The
bu lb
time students who earned operations.
averages ~twee n 3.40 and packages containing one 60W ,
2 75W and two ltlOW bulbs sell
3.75
Meigs Co untians on the for $2.50.
honor roll include : Mik e
DANCE 9 P.M.-I A.M.
Nesselroad and Robin
The
Royal Oak Ballroom
Snowden, Pomeroy: J~nnifer
Dance
Club
will hold a dance
Wi se, Midd lepo rt; Vi cky
Saturday,
· 9 p.m. to I
party
Hysell , Minersvill e.
Meigs Countians on the a.m. at Royal Oak Park for
merit roil 'incl ude: Re becca members and guests. Mark
E:ichinger and Mary Mora. Ill will provide music for
Pomero;; Michael Childs, dancing.
Meigs Countians from Rio

LAZY MEXICAN TOURISTS enter a torpid narcoticizefl
IN SliAHK SKIN SUITS
state induced by the natura l
By H U !OH A. MULUGAN condition s fow1d in Ult! caves
,\P Special Correspondent
beneath the reefs. Scientists
ISLA
de MUJERE:S, have found that the seas off ·
Mexico ( AP) - This is the the peninswa have a strange
place where Jaws snores.
tranquil izing effect on these
In 60-foot deep Carib~an man-ea ting monsters.
caves off the Yucatan coast
For one th ing, the quality o!
man-eating Requiem sharks the sea is different a nd soothand othe r finny fie nds doze a s ing to the shark . Fr esh water
docile as tourists or the seeping fr om the mainland 's
!atives at siesta time in the . water table lowers the the
shade of a sombrero.
salt conte nt of the water,
Macho Mexican divers with which seems to help the shark
names like El Zorro - the fox breathe . The water also has a
-and El Canon - the cannon higher oxygen content;
- swixn up alongside the higher acidity and higher
sleeping 10-foot mon sters to carbon dioxide, all of which
nudge them and even try io enable the shark to take a ·
11ft them .
break f rom his con stant
Occasionally a tourist with swimming. Some scientists
diving experience will strap think the fresh and salt water
oo an oxygen tank and take . current moving through the
the plunge to eyeball the caves activate the sharks
basking carnivores.
gills enough to allow him to
Most
vis itors to th e snooze without gasping for
. Yucatan , however, content air .
themselves with the purchase
There is another theory
of a T -shirt with the that th e coming together of
caricature of shark logging z- fresh and salt water has a
z-z.z.z's o r hang around tbe hallucegenic effect so that the
diving shacks waiting for the shark actually gets high. In
professionals to r eturn in his comatose state, the sl1ark
their lobster boats from the is rarely bothered by the
shark caves.
powerful lights turned on him
Marine biologists are r.ot
by marine pho togra phers,
quite sure why the sharks although a sudden flash from
choose the ocean caves off the a camera ,,,. ill ca use him to
Yucatan for their slumbers, wake up and move on to
altlwugh pregnancy may be a another siesta spot with an
facillr . It was previously angry, sand-ehurning swish
thought that the shark was of his tail.
nature's No. 1 insomniac,
The caves also serve as a
that he was fated to swim kind of a car wash for sharks.
unceasingly with his mouth
Parasites that attach themopen and his powerful fins selves to the shark 's body
and tail constantly churning seem to loosen their hold in
in order to keep th e ol!)'gen: waters with a lower saline
rich water flowing over his content. Sharks in the caves
gills.
also get cleane&lt;1 quicker by
Now it a ppears the sharks the remora , their slave fi sh
come to Mexico for the same also known as the sha rk
r easons as the winter sucker, which are better able
to nibbl e at the free-loaders
tourists : to get away from it
all, catch a little rest and · attached to the shark's gills,
eyes and nostrils when tbe
maybe like the ma rijuana
great
beast is not in motion
crowd zon ked out on reelers
roving the deep.

"The si
_your ,return,
the less
we charge~'
If you qualify for the Short Form, we charge
a very low price. But even if you need the
Long Form, the simpler the return, the less
we charge. That's another reason why you
should let H&amp;R Block do your taxes.

H&amp;R BLOCK;

A representative from the disco dancing. The American
American Cancer Society and Cancer Society class spoke at
a physical education teacher . the Middleport classes.
have been among the Slin- Twelve new members were
derella Diet Class speakers in welcomed into those classes
the past week .
.
and Jean Trussell and
Kend a Chaney Williams Charlotte E:rlewine were the
who teaches at Meigs Junior biggest losers of the morning
High School spoke to the class, and Betty Van Matre
group and then conducted and Fay Sauer lost the most
exercises and gave a lesson in weight in the eveing class.

also announced that the little
red school house at Ohio
Village is now under construction.
Bertha
Smith ,
vice
president , presided at the
meeting held at the Meigs Inn
in the absence of Thelrila Dill
who is in Florida.
The district meeting to be
held at Marietta on Sept. 12
was announced. Wendell

Dr. Craig Wbite
Bob Ca!endine, F. F. Stanley,
Joe Lawson, Joe Blackford,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Summers.

Wagner, new district director
was introduced and also
spoke on legislation. Also
recognized were Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Davis of the
Gallia . County Retired
Teachers Asso ciation and
new members, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Housh, Kathleen Scott
and Roberta Wilson. A past
officers pin was presented to
Ira Wolfe, J13st president.

9-5 Sa turday
Phone 992 -3795

Appointm~ i11

Available qut Not Necessary

:·:::::;::;

at t he recent meeting
By He 1en and Sue 8 otte1 :,::\:: officers
held at the Syrac use
E:lementary School. E:lected

slim and-trim program.
At th e Point Pleasant class
Patsy Ross lost the most
A'f SO.CAU..ED "SINGLES BARS"
we ight a nd three new
'nfERE'S OFTEN A "HITCH"
members were taken into the
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTIEL
weight loss program. At the DEAR HF. LF.N AND SUE :
evening class. Sally Walden
We 're two 21-year-old office workers. We've lost touch
was the big loser. The lesson with high school friends, so dec ided to try the bar and disco
was on nutrients and why . scene, hoping to meet fairly decent guys .
they are needed.
. What we met were married men on the prowl or single men ,
ditto , who think marriage is the pits. The "singles" were

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
E. Court St.

Pomeroy , 0 .

•

"We're redoing our home
•
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1nexc1ting
Styleline®
Phone .colors!'
Whether you're redecorating your present home or moving into a new one, you might
wont to stop into a GTE Phone Mart for some
colorful new ideas.
Our Styleline Phone Line is inspire.. . tiona I. Not only does it offer you
·
the biggest selection of colors
anywhere, but also the most
fashionable ones.
With all the latest
decorator colors (like tangerine, espresso brown
ond electric blue) to
match or accent your
wildest color 'schemes.
Then once you
choose the colors that
excite you most, you
can just take your
new phones home
with you . And feel
extra good about
them when you do .
Because,
more than just a
phone store, we're
your phone company.

Put a ne•~ phone in your life.

(fi i :I G.':.'lae

16 West Washington, Athens

were
Mike
Swisher ,
president ; Sharon Stewart,
vice president; Cathy Moore,
and
Terri
secretary ;
Michael, t reasurer.
Painting of the gym floor

made

to Susan Burgess or Chris
Jacks .
Room count was won by
Mrs. Mike Struble's first
grade . A play was presented
by th e first grade, and
refreshments were served
foll owing the program.

was discussed and it was

decided to postpone th e
GIRL SCOUT
proJect until the sununer
COOKIES IN
vacation . Cindy Patterson
sca rcer.
Mrs.
Pa t Philson, Meigs
will be offering baton lessons
We quickly learned to look at a fellow 's left hand ~fore we at the school on Saturdays, it Co. girl scout cookie chairlooked in his eyes ; and to spot the untanned circle if he'd taken was reported,
man , announced today that
his ring off for U1e night. We also learned that if a guy buys you
girl
scout cookies are in and
The pl edge of allegiance
be delivere~ . sometim e
will
?.~ ~~i~~a~: ~~.:;~!?~~ owe him the world. His next line is, and devotions opened the
this
week . People who or·
A
basketball
acmeeting.
•
E
We enj oy dancing but we hate this being constantly hit on. tivity party was discussed der ed the cookies should
preparmg the ground for flowering vine . Mrs. Octa held Sunday at the Ohio
planting seeds, and talked Gillogly was a guest for the University Inn. Mrs. Mizicko So we quit the discos. All are men obsessed by sex with the with trophies to ~ awarded expect a visit from a scout
nearest warm body - so long as the w.b. doesn't expect any to the players and the any day now. For those who
11bout seeds that should ~ · meeting presided over by is moving to Florida.
kind
of commitment? - CITY MICE
planted indoors.
were not contacted when the
cheerleaders.
Mrs. Henry Turner.
Also announced was the
Mrs. Stout also told of the
A committee was appointed t'ookies were ordered earlier,
An invitation to the Rutland Garden Club 's
method of starting tomato reception honoring Betty flow er show to ~ held April DEAR MICE:
to take suggestions on ways boxes are available from any
Most men who hit the so-called singles spots ( w~t a to spend the balance of scout and several troops plan
plants indoors and the kind of Mizicko, the Good Luck '1:1 and 28. Members were
soil and containers to use. Garden Club chainnan at the asked to participate. Miss misnomer! ) aren't there merely for dancing. Most women too. mon ey in th e treas ury. booth sales in the area .
Arrangements of dried Athens Mental Health Center, Diehl won the traveling prize ( Be honest: you know bar-discos are "meet markets " ). But
flowers were on display with was read . The reception was by Mrs. Norman Will, and where female~: want more subtlety and dream of lasting
mvolvement, many males - .especially the married kind Mrs. Virgil Atkins taking first
Mrs. Chapman won (he have only ' scores" in their eyes.
and Mrs. James Nicholson,
hostess gift.
If you want commiiment (or a meeting of minds - first)
second.
The club aim wa s read by you'll bave more luck at college night classes, politica l
Devotions were given by
the program chairman, Mrs. organizations, hobby clubs or youth-oriented churches. - SUE
Mrs. Lawrence Chapman
Jame s Nicholson - " To
++++
entitled "Source of Mercy
stimulate the knowledge and DEAR MICE :
and Grace" and " The
Jove of gardening amateurs."
But if you enjoy dancing , why scratch discos just ~cause
Seasons. ~ ' Members anRefreshments were served you're "hit on ?" Master the pleasant brush-off, polish your
I
swered roll call by naming a
by the hostess assisted by her repartee, have fun, and stay hopefw. Really , you can find nice
sister-in-law , Mrs. Nicholson, ;;uys in the weekend "singles" scene: they're back on the
TUESDAY
JOHN
JESBERG , and Mrs. Chapman.
fringes waiting for nice girls to discover them.- HELEN
mi ssionary
of
Pocket
+++
Testa ment League, will be
DEAR RAP :
guest speaker at Antiquity
How do you start a conversation with someone you'd like to
Baptist Church Tuesday, 7:30
know? SHY BUT WILLJNG GUY
p.m. He will also display
DEARS BUT W:
·
flags .
Try a question - almost any question will do, from
XI GAMMA Mu Chapter
"What's the homework assignment?" to "Mind if I sit here?"
Beta Sigma ?hi Sorority, 7:30
(in the cafeteria), followed up with the truth: "I only asked
in behalf of those who have p.m. ·Tuesday at home of Mrs.
because I want to know you. " - HELEN
given years of dedicated Carol Me Cullough. ·Karen
++++
S BUT W:
service and for those who are Stanley and Maurisha Nelson
responding to the call of the to have the cultural program
Or you could give a compliment, as in, "Hey, you've got a
great backhand" which could start a tennis discussion . An
future . She said that this does on " Retiring Gracefully ."
Plans for hosting the South even more direct approach : " You've got beautiful eyes!"
not end with the observance Sue Zirkle , co-hostess.
Central
District conference really gets to a girl. - SUE
but continues to be a daily
GROUP TWO of the First
on
May
19
at the Meigs Inn
P.S. Sudden idea 'department : How about it, you readers
call for knowing and sharing. United Presbyterian Church
were
made
when the Mid- out there ?- Please send us the best conversation openers you
Mrs. Shuler had readings of Middleport will meet
on prayer and also conducted Tuesday at home of Mrs. Joe dleport Child Conservation ever used - or experienced! What do you say when you want
a discussion on prayer and Bailey with Jean Moore and League met Thursday to meet someone of the opposite sex' What has ~en said to you
self-&lt;ienial. Mrs. Hill con- Kathryn Hysell as co- evening at the Riverboat that really works ? What is the most unusual approach you can
dueled the Bible study from hostesses. Devotions by Room of the Meigs office of remember and how did you feel about it '
We'll welcome contributions from females as wen as
Matthew 8 and 9.
Helen Sauer. Thank offering the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co.
males, for nowadays the girl doesn 't sit ba ck and wait for
Reports were given on sick to be given.
Jean Gillispie, Ohio CCL
and shutin persons visited
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, district president, was a "him" to make all the moves.
Thanks in advance for a lively future column. - SUE:
during the past two months. A , Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 guest for the meeting. Theme
donation and a letter from ·p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs for the conference will ~
Yo u'll lind a " crew " of
Mrs. H. B. Powell of Valrico, Inn, with Janelle Haptonstall "Taken Time to Stop and
special ists at The Insurance St ore .
re ady to help should you ever need to l1le a claim. We work
Fla. was acknov.:Iedged.
and Cheryl Crow, hostesses.
with several line i nsurers, like The Cont inent al Insu ranc e
the Flowers" . Becky
J~ss
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, Sme11
Refreshments were served
Tannehill , Susie Abbott, and l l j
II
CIU
Companies, and we kn ow how to he lp you obt ain a last,
by Mrs. Shuler. Next meeting Daughters of America ,
eq uitable clai m settlement.
Corky
·
Kennedy
were
apMr.
and
Mrs.
Willis
Anpresided at the meeting with
will be April 5.
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at t he
We don 't ju st sell you and fo rg et you . We 're here to se rve you!
•
hall. Charter will be draped pointed to design a cover lor thony hosted a meeting of the Edison Baker giving th e
program and to make the Hearthstone Class of the devotions using a tho,ught on
in memory of Edith Betzing the
.
name tags . The enfrom
Eddi e
and m~mbers are to wear tertainment will be by Jen- Middleport First Bapllst pray er
Rickenba
cker's
"
Seven
Church
recently.
•
white. Quarterly birthdays
Plans for the year were Came Through."
.will ~ observed. Potluck . nlfer Sheets, Mary and Roger
Gilmore
with
a
program
of
discussed
and it was decided
Refreshments were served
refreshments.
Appalachian
music.
There
to
buy
lilies
for
the
altar
at
by
the hosts. Attending were
ANNUAL
INSPECTIOI\
Bass, Downie, ·Houdashelt,
will.also
be
.a
spe~ker.
Easter
.
Mrs.
Edison
Baker
Mr.
and Mrs. Baker, Mr, and ·
N1ta W1smsk1, R.N .,
Garen, Gintear, McCloskey, Racine Lodge 461 F&amp;AM
Mrs.
Harold Chase, Mr. and
,
Holter, Titus, McKelvey , Van Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Work in hypertension nurse for Meigs
Mrs.
John Werner, Mr. and
Meter, Blake, Ward, Yost , EA degree . Refreshments . County, was speaker at the
214 E. MAIN ST .
POMEROY , 0 .
Mrs.
Bob
Campbell, Mr. and
992 ·5130 or 992-5 139
.
Wolfe, Turnbull, Stearns, All master masons urged to meeting. She talked about the
Mrs. Harold Hubbard, Mr.
"Y OU DON 'T BUY A POLICY,
effects of high blood pressure
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Roush and Mrs. Milton Hood , Mr.
Stampfle, Spencer, Smith, attend.
Y9U HIRE AN AG E NT "
LOIS ROCK, the Ohio on the brain, kidneys, heart of 809 3oth St., pt. Pleasant,
Shumway, Relyea, Nease ,
and Mrs. Allen Hughes, and
Historical
Preservation
ofand blood vessels. High blood are announcing the birth of the hosts.
Morris, Longsworth, Louks,
Karr, Hysell, Illle, Howell, ficer at O.U. will be the guest pressure has no symptoms their first child, a little girl,
Hill, Hanun, Ervine, Duskey, speak_er at the noon luncheon many times, she said, and named Christina Ann .
Dunlavy, Dobbins, Darst , meetlng of the Pomeroy therefore it should be Christina weighed nine
Crow, Cogar,
Brooks, Chamber of Commerce routinely checked at least pounds, eight and one-half
once a year or more often if it ounces and measured 21 %
Bradford, Bentz, Beegle , Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
runs in the family. For roll inches. She was born on
Beaver, Bays, Arnold, Bush,
call each mem~r had a blood March 11 . The mother is the
Duck worth, Henderson,
pressure check.
former Marie Lambert.
Lisle, Nolan, PhiJJips ,
WEDNESDAY
The flag salute and the
Maternal grandparents are
Teaford, Babcock, Rose ,
AMERICAN
Legion mother's prayer opened the Mr. and Mrs . Raymond
Sayre, Winebrenner, Gilkey,
and
Clifton, Fry, Jacobs , Mc- Auxiliary, Drew Webster meeting with Clarice Ken- Lambert, Mason;
Post 39, Pomeroy, both junior
Cabe, Meier, Malone, Curtis, and senior members, 7:30 nedy giving devotions en- paternal grandparents are
Sisson, Thompson, Reed, Wednesday night at tbe ha.ll. titled " A Uving Recipe. " Mr. a!jd Mrs. Jackson R.
Nancy Norris reported on a Roush, l't. Pleasant.
Harris,
Outerbridge,
Juniors to show slides on luncheon at the Holiday Inn
Great-grandparents are
El~rfeld , Keffer, Murray,
Bolivia for Mrs. Iva Powell ,
Mayer, Schaefer, Browning, foreign relations chairman. on the Community Club Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Awards program of WMPO . Lambert, Catlettsburg, Ky.;
Keller , Slagel, Siddall, ({arr,
Mary Martin . to have a
Perry, Morgan, Baker, program on energy, and Mrs. Kennedy will contact Mrs. Lucille Simms, Ashland,
Green, Downie , Goeglein , Ruby Marshall, a program on · Jean Will, director, for more Ky .; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith,
infonnation . Mrs. Morris will West Columbia.
Daniels, Pfarr, Ebersbach,
community service.
purchase a flower for Ann
Horky , Hoffman, Klein,
MEIGS Muzzleloaders Club
Wells.. Story , McComas , meeting, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Colburn who is confined to the
Blackston, and Mrs. Eloise
O'Brien, Still, Stiles, Skinner, Tewksbary's Barber Shop, S. Holzer Medical Center.
Scott, Rice, Reuter, Reibel, Second St., Pomeroy; all , Members will attend a White.
Workshop on wood flowers at
Radford, Pickens, Marshall, sportsmen welcome.
'In Febrary, husband's
the Crafty Ladies Handicraft night was observed with a
Martin, Downing, Hysell,
Shop. Susie Sowsby won the dinner at the Rio Vista
Howell, Harden, Hines, .
traveling
prize, and Mrs. Supper Club in Marietta.
Heilman, Grueser, Gilmore,
Gillespie,
the
hostess gift.
Geyer, Gettles, Fell, . Davis,
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
THURSDAY
A
St.
?atrick's
Day theme Jack Seidenable, Mr. and
Compton, Brown, Arnold,
ST. PATRICK'S Day card
was carried out in the Mrs. Roger Abbott, Mr. and
Blakeslee, Austin , Diehl, party at the Sacred Heart
Gibbs, Meinhart, McMurray, Catholic Church, Pomeroy, refreshments served by Mrs. Mrs. Mark Tannehill, Mr.
Niemeer, Romine, Howley, Thursday,
7:30
p.m. Morris. Others attending and Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
Rupe, Quivey, Davis, Ewing, Refreshments
served . were Mrs. Peggy Harris, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Foster; Haggerty, Hartung, Tickets available at the door . Mrs. Peggy Houdashelt, Mrs. Blackston .
Janet Duffy, Mrs. Tonda
Wamsley, Ralston , Smith,
A gift was presented to
SPECIAL MEETING, Seidenable , Mrs. Helen · Mrs. Wisniski.
Barton, Bearhs, Russell ,
Deem, Dye, Folmer, Smart, Thursday, 7:30p.m. ?omeroy
King, Krautter, Webster, Lodge 164, F&amp;AM for the
Here it is .. .DEKALB XL-72b. A strong standing
Wells, Will, Barnitz, Lochary, annual inspection ; all Master
hybrid with The Genetic Edge for big yields . Put it
Mitchell, Painter, ?arker, MaSons invited.
WISHING
to
RESIDENTS
Richard , Chase, Sloan,
to work in your fields .
donate clothing, rag rugs,
Thomas, Ingles, Payne.
These names represent homemade items and other
to
Racine
many families from these two articles
FOR THE BEST DEALS
townships. However,- there Emergency Squad contact
IN THE
are many families whose Charlotte Wamsley, 949-2028;
names are missing, Will you Linda Diddle, 949-2533 ;
be left out? The deadline is George Cummins, 949-2470 ,
April 5, 1979. If you don't Jeanette Lawrence, 949-2228 . .
begin your story today, you Proceeds from sale wiJI go to
will not have it finished in squad building fund .
WESTERN STYLE Squate
time to be included. Once
Dancing
Workshop Royal
again, let me stress that if
Mon., Tues ., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .
Oak
Park
Thursday
7:30p.m.
you don't write your story, it
8:30 to 5: 00
wl!J not be written. The Chad Johnson, Caller.
Thursdav till12 noon
SOUP SUPPER by the
Historical Society will only
Rutland
Firemen'
s
Include stories that have been
OPEN EVENINGS BY
submitted. We will not "' Auxlliary, with serving of
APPOINTMENT ONLY
writing any additionlilo nes . vegetables and bean soup,
Herman Grate
It ~ up to you, tbe residents , sloppy joes, pie and coffee at
Mason, W. Va . .
773 -5592
to· see that your family is in 4 p.m. at the firehouse,
Thursday. ·
the history book.

0

r------··- ·1·
I
I
I

1

Social II
Calendar II

Mrs. Shuler hosts

Methodist Women

PkJns made
to· host
conference

lJea.,.thstone

met

Meigs Museum Notes

2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON , W. Va .
OPEN TUES.
THURS . &amp; SAT.
9 A.M.- 5 P.M .
PHONE 773·9128

Members of the Star
'Garden Club
meeting
recently at the home of Mrs.
G. A. Radekin took a look at
spring gardening plans
during the program.
Miss Ruby Diehl talked
about quic~ climbing vines,
how to grow them from seed
and the many varieties
available. Mrs. Virgil Atkins'
topic was "Hedges that Give
You Yards of Flowers" and
she told of how to grow and
space them and named the
many uses for hedges. Topic
of Mrs. C. E . .Stout was
gardening In March and she
discussed composting,

Mrs. Ernest Shuler was
hostess for a meeting of the
United Methodist Women of
the Letart Falis Church
Thursday evening with a
program on the call to prayer
and self-&lt;ienial.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Bert Grimm with Mrs.
John Hill and Mrs. Harold
Roush
presenting the
scripture reading and pray.e r.
Mrs. Grimm then presented
an article on the meaning of
prayer and self&lt;lenial noting
that it is a way of expressing
our dedication to meet
specific needs • worthy of
doing. The observance is
essential, she said, to being
part of tomorrow. The offering objectives for the year
gave 'opportunity for sharing

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E . MAIN ST.
POMEROY , C .
Open 9 A.M. Io
6 P .M. Weekday s,

Mrs. Sauer also received her
20 pound ribbon .
At the Mason class eight
new members ·were taken in
and three 20 pound ribbons
were presented to Betty
Russell, Carolyn Beaver , and
Martha Newell. Clara Roney
received her 35 pound ribbon
and Alma Jeffers and IA&gt;is
Dudding were tAk Pn into the

Star Gardeners look at spring plans

Retired Teachers hear speaker

.

lr:: : :'(;;~;,;;ii~~: 'ii;~ 'i'!! :.:~se~~~:~d ~f!~~~;owd ~

Slinderella hears guest speakers

By Margaret Parker
Meigs Museum
Coordinator
To further infonn you as to
families that have submitted
stories for the Meigs County
History Book, the following
from Olive, Orange, and
Colwnbia Townships have
submitted.
Andrew,
Balderson,
Barber,
Barringer, Bennett, Blake,
Buchanan, Chevalier, Connolly, Cowdery, Dodderer,
Ferrell, Young , Hensley,
Osborn, Parker, Pigott ,
Sisson, Stout, Rader, Reed,
Kerwin , Whaley, Founds,
Gerlach , Gennan Hensley,
Hetzer, Hill, Mc?eek, Noble,
Owens, Rector, Rupe,
Schultz, Stethem , Swan,
Grimm , Vineyard , Timmers,
Green , Brown, Whitehead,
Williams, Simpson, Chambers , Cuckler, Brewer,
Bissell, Kimes, Jeffers,
Lawrence, Rice, Ritchie,
Weiner, Meredith, McCullough, White, Arbaugh,
Heiney, Gilliland, Newland,
?ower, Poole, Smart, Ingles,
Baker, Newell, Watkins,
Pullin, Pullins, Bailey,
Tuttle , Young, Weber,
Mulligan, Coffman, Gillilan,
Walker, MaUack, Guthrie,
Griffin, Gaul, Cook, Smith,
Cole, Atherton, Vale, Wood,
Crabtree, Frank, Smith,
?arker, Starkey, Carpenter,
Dailey, Denison, Dye, Jordon, Kennedy , Nease, Ogdtn,
Rawlings, Throckmorton,
Turner, GaJaway, GiUogly.
Also
some
recently
rec'eived from townships
which have been published
are Combs, Duffy, KlUingworth, Cooper, Krootts,
Welsh , Haning, ?ickett.
Deadline for submission of
stories is April 5. If you have
questions, there will be
someone at the museum
Wednesday, Thursday, and
Friday from I to 3 to assist
you.
The followong families
from Sutton and Salisbury
Townships have submitted
stories for the Meigs County
History Book:
Jones, Ables, Scott, Cross,
Crary, Neigler, Hood, Lee,
HU!clore, Galbreath, Smart,
Bush, Simpson, Shuler,
Roberts, Roush, Russell,
Hall, Jewett, Theiss, Cottrill,
Frank,
Buck,
Morris,
Lawson, ?hilson, Sylvester,

•

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE

Announce birth

DEKALB XL-72b
Stands Strong
For A Yield Edge

SHOP

Mason Furniture
TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

GERALD ROOD &amp;SON
RT. 2

LETART, W. VA.

(304)882-3144

--•DEPEND ON DEKALB - - •
"

'•

�6- The Da1ly Sentmel, Middle port-Pom eroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Mar 20, 1979
Wednesday , March 21

"-'flo~ D811V Sentmel, Middleport-Pumero, , v., Tuesda~. Mar 20. 1979

IN THE

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Be de Osol

DJCJ('TRACY

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIG5 CO UNTY , OH 10
CHRISTINE 8EEGLE ,
Pltltntlff ,

·\; sUNKNOWN HEIRS OF
EDWARD
FINDLING ,

IS HAPPENING'?
Z.Z. !&lt;OWE
FAC:E WITH HIS

T~E

'Your
'Birthday

D e f endan ts

NOTICE BY

PUBLIC ATION
E ff 1C lhi C Shanno n Wh OSC'
la st k nown aOdress was J16
Wave r l y Roa d W•lloughby ,
TO

Oh10 .
The

Ma rc h 21 , 1979
Goals yo u may have had trouble accomp ll shtng m the past
should be reachable thrs com
rng year Si tek w r\h what you ve
sta rted and put for th the same
honest effort

ARI ES (March 21-April 19) Hard
work. unselfishly motivated rs
the only thing that wrll pay off
for yo u tod ay Subdue personal
am b1 t1 ons F1n d _ou t m ore a t
what Ires ahead for yo u f rom
now u nt il your next b rrthday by
sendmg tor your copy of Astra
Graph Le tt er Ma il $1 for each
to Astr a-Graph P 0 Bo)( ~89
Radi O City Statio n N Y ~ 0019
Be sure to spec1fy brr th sr gn

Unknown H e•r!• and
D evisees of Edward F•n dl 1ng ,
deceased .
T he Unk no w n H e •r s an d
Dev•sees of Etflc F•n dl 1ng

Su rfa ce , deceased ,

The Unknown He1r s and
De v .see5 of Emmit F •nd l 1ng
Carman H edrr c k s, d eceased ,
The Unk now n H e •n• and
Oev, sees ot B ea tr, ce Kauf
man d eceased.
The Unknown H er r s a nd
oev, sees o f John Frnd t rng ,

deceased.

Th e Urdc. nown H e1 r s and
D evrsees of Jess•e Flnd l rng,

deceased ,
Th e

Unknown

H e1 r s and
Frn dltng

De v•sees of Sara
l hte ,

dece a sed .

The Unk nown He•r s and
Oev1sees of F rank Frnd l rng

TAUR US (Apnl 21J..May 20) If dec ea sed ,
you re 1n a nega tr ve mood
today 11 would be far betl e r to
let go and let someone you
trust a r d feel to be competen t
manage your affans

GE MIN I (May 21-J une 201 The
resul t s yo u hope to o bta 1n may
be d1fl1cult to ach reve bu t
you It never re alr ze the m w rth
underhanded met hod s Keep
ptuggrng on the stra rght and
narrow

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) You
may have to put up w rth some one who bores yo u to tears rn
o rder to get another s cooperatron The end result w1ll be
worth 11

LEO

(J uly

23-Aug 22)

Your

melnods today co uld be q urte
an noy rng to co-workers You
probably wou ld be bet ter a ll
tac kling large tas k s b y you r
sel f

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) Ask
yourself 1f 1t s worth al ,enat1n g
frie nd s to get what you w ant
today before yo u employ procedu res th at knock them o u t o f
the p rc ture

LI BRA (Sepl 13·0cl 23) No malte r ho w trr v1 al somet h mg
appe ars don t d1scuss family
Issue wrth ou tsrde rs A loved
ones feel rngs could be deeply
hurt

SCO.AP,!O

t0c1.24 - Nov 22)

The re rs no easy way of do1 ng
th1 ngs today In fact you ma y
even have to go back to anti quated ways rn o rd er to accomplish yo ur arm s

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 13-Dec 21)
You m ay have to be f1rm With
you rself rn o rd er n ot to succ umb to ex travagant Impu lses
today Th o ugh you m 1ght no t
lik e 11 11 s the smar tth 1n g to do

CAP RICORN

(Dec 22-Jan 19)

Once yo u make up y ou r m1nd
the re tsn t a n ythtng you can t
accom plrsh today
H owever
take c are not to ste p o n any
to es 1n your d ete rm1natt o n to
do so

Lyle Kaufman . address
unk no wn ,
Howard Kau f man , address
unknown ,
Corr tn e Grtt t
adGr ess
un k nown, and
Date
Bral ey ,
add r ess
unknow n
You a re her eby notrft ed
t ha t yo u hav e bee n nam ed as
d e f endant s rn a l egal ac tron
en tilled Christi n e B eeg l e
P l amtilf vs Th e Unk no wn
He rrs o f Edw ard F tndlrng ,
deceased , et al , D efendant s
Th rs a ch on ha s been ass1g ned
Case N o
1700 3, and 1S
sp end rng rn th e Court ot
common Pl ea s of Me1 g s
County
Pom ero y , Oh10 ,
d5769
The Obtec l of t he com pl arnt
rs to Qu ret t 1t 1e agam st th e
rea l estate an d qu1e t IItie to
r ea l estate located rn the
Vr ltag e o f Pom eroy Co un ty_
of Mergs , and State of Ohro ,
.)OUnded an d desc r rbe d as
fo ll ows
Ber n g Lot No 345 on th e
northerly s1de of T hrr d State
rn sa 1d v rlla ge ot P om er o y,
Ohro, a nd oe rn g th e same
property convey ed to E S
B eegl e a nd Arthur Beeg l e by
A D We ed and wrt e by d ee d
r ecorded 1n Vo lu me 11 7, Pag e
123 of the Reco r ds of De eds of
Met gs Co un t y , Ohto
The pra yer tS to qu 1et trfl e
and for ec lo se any rn te r est
o wned or alleged to b e owne d
by you a nd for cos t s
You a r e requ 1red to answ er
t he com p l a1nt w rthm 28 day s
a ft er th e las t pubtrcatr on ot
thr s not 1c e whr c h wrll be
publ1sh ed on ce each week to r
s tx su ccess 1ve we e ks Thl"
la s t publr ca t ro n wrll b e ma de
on Apr il 3 , 1979 and t ne 28
days fo r a nswer w ill com
me n ce on that date
In case o f your failure to
a n swer or oth erwr se r espon d
as requ1red b y the Ohr o Ru les
of Crvil P r o cedure, t udgment
by defa ult Will be r endere d
agarn s t you for t he re11 ef
d ema n ded m th e co mpl a1 nt
Larry Spencer ,
Cl erk Of Court ,
Merg s Cou nt y
Common Pl eas Court

AQUARIU S (Jan 20-Feb 19)

Discuss things tod ay on l y with ( 2 ) 27 , (3) 6, 13, 20,27 (4) 3, 6t c
persons 1nvolved rn yo u r bu srness Outs1der s could con f use
•
the fac ts an d do a good JOb of
m essmg t h in gs up for yo u

DALE WALBURN
Dale Walburn of Midpost e)(pertence to cont ro l yo ur
actions today
especially II dleport is con!med to the
yo u re wt th free spendmg P lea sa nt Valley Hospital ,
acqua1ntances Do what s best Room 110 He 1s a surg1cal
lor YOU
patient there.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN
PISCES (Feb 20-Marh20) Allow

Rose-less Phils
lose 4-3 battle
By RALPH BERNSTEIN
AP Sports Write r
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP )
- Baseball fans mobbed the
Phil ade lphia
Ph1lhes '
stadium Monday to see Pete
Rose play lor the first tlme
aga 1ns t
his
former
teammates, the Cincinnati
Reds
But Rose, who performed
16 yea rs for Cincinnati before
s1gnmg a re ported $3 2
m11lion four -year contract
with the Philhes, didn 't play.
He was two miles away
ta king batting pracllce and
wor kmg on h1s defe nse at
f1rst base.
Fans started hn mg up
outside Jack Russell Stad1wn
well before 9 a.m And by
10 ·45 , the lme outside the
stadiUm encircled three
quarters of the ballpark
Later , the Phillies began
mformmg fans outside the
park that Rose would not
play. And 2il minutes before
the game , the public address
announcer m the ballpark
announced that Rose would
not play .
There was no booing, just a
buzzi ng throughout the
crowd , which by that tune
mcloded fans standmg behmd
ropes m the foul lme and
outfield area
" He
( Rose)
needed
add1t1onal battmg practice,"
sa1d Phillie s ' Manaager
Danny Ozark of Rose , who
has had one h1t in 18 offic1al at
bats so far this spring. " I sent
him to the complex (the
Phlllies' fa rm team a r ea ) to
take batting practi ce and to
work on his defense "
Upon his return to the stadium, Rose said he had his
best hi tting prac t1ce of the
spring, hitting for a n hour
and 15 mmutes .
Rose, of course, was also
asked how he felt about not
olaving against the Reds

WANT AD
CHARGES

Dec eased . et at ,

"It do esn't make any
differe nce to me," he replied .
" Anyway, it's not up 19 me
whether I play, 1t 's up to the
manager "
Durmg the game, Champ
Summer s homered w1th two
out m the top of the 13th
mning to give the Reds a 4-3
VIc tory over the Phillies
The victory was the Reds'
s1xth m 10 games , while the
Phillies ' record dipped to 5&lt;i.
Jim Kaat started for the
Phillies,
pitching
six
scor eless
innings
and
allowing four hits. The Reds
scored single runs off rookie

Jose Martmez on home

runs

by Cesar Geromino m the
seventh and Ken Gnffey m
the e1ghth .
Grez Luzmsk1 ' s third
homer of the sprmg gave the
Ph•ll•es a I-ll lead in the
fourth . The Phillies tied the
gam e in the eighth on runscoring s mgl es by Peter
Mackanin and pinch-hiller
Keith Moreland.
Cincmnat1 sent the game
into extra innings in the ninth
as Dave Collins hit a fly ball
to score Vic Correll , who
started the inmng with a
smgle
BROWNS TRADE
CLEVELAND ( AP)
Cleveland Browns offenSive
nght tackle Barry Darrow,
28, has been traded to the
New Orleans Samts for an
tmdiS&lt;;losed 1980 draft choice,
a te am s pok esma n sa 1d
today
Darrow, a five-year pro
who was a regular Browns'
starter for most of t he past
National Footba ll Leag ue
season, was hampered by an
arch mjury after returmng to
the lineup following knee
surgery in early 1978
The &amp;-foot-7, . 260-pounder
was acqwred by the Browns
as a free agent in 1974

'

1:; word,. or Umh·•
C&lt;~~h

Strndny I
1 l1n k1"' fW "' nnly

Charlo(~:!

Eou:h wo rd U\er Llw mmnnum U
wurtll; Ill 4 ctmts ~r wunl ~Wr d&lt;t_Y:
Ads runmng uth~ r Lhu n tlom;ccutive
days wr ll bt: c ha r~cd nt the 1 day

Rnrrr1c• Vn ltr ri i('C' r
l1 rp OC'p t ~ v f' • y So turrln y t&gt; :!O
pn1 n l thc·rr bt• r' !~t•q 1n 8o!.hon
I nr tor v c h0k C' gu11 ~ ' o r1 ly

&lt;)N pf' lrm.
M nmiay
Tt &lt;''-rloy nnd W C' rl11 P5rloy Se n
'n r PC'IIll r&lt;'gu lor SJO and S/5
now
50 ond sn so rol l
:.104 1!3 !&gt;404 Jon{' l ~ Hot t Gn
Rnu nd Mo s(H1 WV

Sfl ! (I AI

sn

r&lt;tte
In mcm11ry , C.tt rd nf Thanks i:llld'l
Obil-'ary 6 cents per word, $3 00
nummum Cash m HdvH nct•

Mobile Plume sale:i and Yt~rd ~ les
llte llcccpt ed only wrth cush w1th
urder Z5 cent t ha,n:t! for ads carrymg Bux Num~r In Cart&gt; or The Se nlmel

The Publisher reserves the nght
to ~hl or n&gt;:Jetl &lt;I ll)' ads dL&gt;t!lned obJed!Onal The Publlsher will nul bt!
rcspomablt for more \hun one rncurra l tnstlrt wn
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING '
DEADLINES
Mood&lt;~Y

Noon on Scr turdity
Frid a~·

S unde~ y

.
Lost and Found
4p M
L.J.._ _;_F':..'"::•;:Y::•::fk::'.:.."~;_';,'__...l..J j LOST ~ f MALE Beagl e Bl oc h a nd

wh1 te a nd br ow n Hyse ll Hun
area 99'1 Jl:l].d o r 99') 5570

IN MlMORY of our son Ry a n
Roger Rou sh w ho dt ed a t b1rt h
two yearS ago to day March :.'0
1Q"/7
WC! l oo ~ u p 1n rhe hoa vem d ay
an d n1gh t
Anrl fee l con ten t that you or e otl
rrghl
I! " hee n lw o y0 or s how tr me
does fl y
We mr ss you mor e as lrr ne g oes

by
We kno w you ore happy wr lh

Jes us above
And hnow he hold!&gt; you rn hr s
arms ol lo&gt;ve
Sad ly rnr ssed hy Daddy and M o rn
my (Roger on d Ch r r5ty ) sr!&gt; ter
1&lt; 11r.bed y grandpar ent s a nd
l a rn l ly

IN THE
CO MMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
HAROLD HUDNELL ,
Plamhft ,

-v s-

JUOY ANN HUDNELL ,
Defendant
No 16,893
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO Judy Ann Hudnell, whose
l ast known address was 141
Warner Street. Man e tta ,
OhiO

THJH l
I AM ILY Goroqt• Sa le
Mo1r h 71 '11 'I:J 9 :J Snl f' m St ,
!olu l lnnd (Hou c; p by lht&gt; bnrlg e)
!olorn 0 1 ~ h1110 Clo t hu1{1 oi l ~ r 1es
~ ~ ~•d
111 0ny
01 l 1 d r&gt; ~
to o
lltrrnf'IOU "i to men tr nn Che-a p

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

/ 1'):.'006

'

the da y befor e pul.lhcittllln

l'!'_e_m _ory _

LOST

fl fDUI SH b rown pe krnese
w ilh o nf' w hrt e fr ont pow bl1nd
rn r oghr eye A nswe rs to R1 {h
R!"'wa r d $15 cosh Co l1 74'1 2698
or ca nton V1rg te Burf ord
Bcc{ hgrov(' Hd Rt 1 Rutl a nd

__

!::1~1' ~a.!'t~c!_ __

KITC HEN HHP ond w ar tress App
ly m person Crows Sl ee k
House
A TT fNT IO N RN AND LPN WITH
We now
PHARMACOLOGY
hove open1ngs u1 the J 11 e nd
11 l shrft s InqUi re a t Pmeu es t
lore Ce nter A skrlled nur ~ m g
lon h ly
555 Jo ro ~ so 1' Prke
Go ll rpo lr s or {0 11 6 14 4db 71 11
WOMAN OR m an to represent
lor ol frh;•- rA.&lt;; u ro n{ e agency 111
M..e ,g s Cou r1ty Sal ary {O m m iS
s1ons an d benelrt s
unlrm1 te d
o:&gt; orntngs poten tial
rn 1nr m urn
age 11 Call 997 b67tl We pro
,..,d e lromrng and prospects
SOMEONE 1El yea rs o r ol der tor
res ta uran t work Doyor n1ght
shrlt 985 :.11:1:.12

-

__ -~a_!lt~l!_ t!li!UY __

l HIP
WOOD
Po les
ma x
You are her eby notJf1 ed
clrmne ter 10 on larg est end
that you have b een nam ed a
def end an t 1n a leg a l actr on
S1') per I on Bun d led slo b S10
entr t led Har o ld Hudn e l l,
pe1 ton D e h ven~d to Oh 1o
Pl a ln llff. vs
Judy An n
Pall e t Co
Rt 1 Pomeroy
H udne ll
D e fenda n t
Th 1s
9'12 7689
actron has oeen assr gn ed
Case No 16,893 and I S pend
OlD FURNITUR ~ 1ce bo xes b rass
1ng rn the Cour t of Co mmon
bed s IrOn b ed~ desks el(
Pl eas of Met gs Co unty Oh10 ,
com pl e te house holds
Wrrt e
45769
M D M1ll er fH 4 Pomeroy or
The ob1e ct of the com pl a int
col i 992 77b0
1S t he obta m m g of a d1vor ce
an d t he te r mm a hon of a
O LD COI N S poc ke t watches
marrrage con t ract between
dos s nn g5 wedd1ng b ond s
l h e part1es and the sett l emen t
d1omond s Gold or st lve r Ca ll
of th e p ro p ert y rrg h t s of th e
Rog e r Wa msley 74'1 23Jl
pa rt1 es
Yo u a r e r equ1 r ed to answer
WA NT TO bu y ol d 45 a nd 78
th e comp ta rnt wrth.n 28 d ay s
phon og r ap h reco rd s
Ca ll
a fter the l ast publr ca t ron o f
9'1'1 6310 or Co ntact Morl1n Fur ·
th1 S no tt ce, w hich wilt be
mtu rl"
p u b l rshed on ce e ach week for
S IX success rv e weeks
The
WA
NTED TO buy o ld 1ewe lr y
la st pub l tcat1on wr ll t:le mad e
Coli 99L 5262 or wnte Ko y
on Ma r ch 7.7 , 1979, an d th e 28
days for an swer writ com
( f'frl 07 5 Lnd M rddl eport
men ce on t h at date
OH
In case of yo ur f a rlur e t o
CASH I O R 1u rl k cars 24 hou r
answer o r otherwrse resoond
a s r equ1 red by th e Ohr o R ules
wr e ck er
~e r &gt;v i Ce
fry e s
of Crv ll Proc edure. t he frnal
Rutl a nd OH 742 2081
he arrng on thi S matter w 111 be
h(! ld a ft er the ex p1r a tton of 1!12 ,
days a fter the last day o f
p u b t, ca t1o n o f t h1S no ti C·' or as
soon thereafter as can be
scheduled b y t he Cou rt
Larr y Spence r , ----- Auto
- - -Sales
- -----Cl erk o f Court
196:J C H~ VY NOVA II new m
of Me1gs Coun t y ,
len or new sn ow l r1 es Needs
OhiO
body wot ~ S300 949 272f:l
( 2) 20 , 27 (3) 6, 13, 20, 27, 6tc
1975 CHEVY TRUCK 992 5335

SIDING

1'1

1975 CHEV Y TRUCK 4• 4 992 5335
Nationallnvitaflon
Tournament Glance

By The Associated Press
Semifinals
Monday's Games
At New York

Purd ue 87, Alabama 68
lnd1ana 64, Ohio St. 55
Finals
Wednesday 's Gam es
At New York
Champtonshpi
Pur due { 27-6) vs . Indian a

(21 12)
Third Place
Alaba ma ( 22 - 11) vs

Sl 119 -11 1

Ohto

-

b:: cel le nl co nd1t1 on

19 76 CHEVRO LET lUV
low
rnrleoge w rth camper top , new
lr res A I co nd1t10n 992 513 1
doy tr me
FOR SAL E 1971 Che&gt;v y Nova 4 d r
&lt;192 2000

-

' 1910 MUSTANG 6 cyf 250 Runs
good S600 All e r 6 pm, cal l
992 3952
1975 CHt:: VRO l ET truck 350 V 8
Aut o I rons P S , P 8 toper
New t1res 26 000 m1les $2850
C/91 25 9b
1976 t-= 750 Fo rrl truck and 1200
bo les m uted hoy Coli 992 2877
al ter b pm

MtMbtr 6f

Clllmnoy

Insured
Don't Itt •

fire put

a

dtmper
~Ill
'

lift -

THE_SWEEP .

1ftll century Strvlct wtt,.
2tth century Know-How.

Sfoclalltfnlln

WoOft,tovt, 011 ~wrn•c•

Rad

.........

Service
..._

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
P1L H%·!174

Very
Pnced to sell

$)700

PIANOS

PETE SIMPSON

after

For Sale
- - - -' - - - - -·

949-2118

5 p.m.

even~rtgs

Weekends

after 12 noon .
2-5· 1 moCOAL LlMf STONf sand grovel
wk rum ch lon de 1erhlller do~
load and ell types of sal t be
ce ls1o r Sa lt Work s , Inc E Mom _ Cam_pin.l!_ ~i~ment
Sr Pome roy 991 Jl:l9 1
19b7 BA NNER 19 Travel t rader
w1 th owmng
51350
Co li
~Vf R YT HING S GOTTA
GO
992 [)574
H ou~e
on d lot
furn1ture
doth e s cor oil my hou se hold 1q67 HOliDAY 21 sell con tam ed
rte ms Dr op by 760 l aure l St
wrlh 18 1(10 ownmg $1800 See
Mrdd leport
a t Royal Oak PorK
Pho ne
Mone tt a J73 98.44
COOO MIXED hoy f or sol e
l:ld:J 2432

• mUCE sAf f 0 nd I0"
I h _.:_:
R,_.e,a,_,I:..:E
=S:.:
ta,_t,..e::..-'.:
fo"'r'--"
S~ac-:1e.,__
GoBese Tab lets and E Vop wa te r MODERN THR EI:: bedroom house
prlb Ne l so n Drug
lu ll basement lrreploce , ful ly
USED f: RIC1 DAI RE refrrgero tor
ca rpe ted cen tral 0 1r enclose d
sun porch located on b ' 1 acres
S75 991 7354
KAWASAKI KZ b50 9-49 27J5
on CH 2H opp rox J rn rles I r om
Ronn e II rnt er ested contact
GOOD MI XED hoy $1 bol e Coli
larry Wo ll e 949 2B3b weekend s
after 5 pm 992 7573
and aher 5 eve nmgs
.
18 FT Fronkl m camp1ng tro rler 25 ACRI::S ') bed room hou se
1970 For d S375 6 r oom house 1n
S50 000 Ches ter 614 qas 437 1
Rut land 7d'l 2874
o r 304 343 6789 '

w'

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

PIANO
TUNING
14 Yr . Experience

Aural Method
- · AsSociate
Elberfelds of Pomeroy
and Kimball Mus1c Center
of Athens

Rt:DUCE SAFE on d fast w ;th
GoBe se Tablet s and E Vop
wa ter pdls Nels_on Drug
APPl ES WE hO\Ie Ro me s a nd
Wrnesop appl es Utrhty grade
ot $4 pe r bu h:cellent lor coo k ·
rng Will close our storoge on
March 73 Fitzpotrrc k Orchard,
SR b89 Phone 669 -3785
.
fiEGISTERED three quor ler Aro
b1an more 7 years o ld Thr ee·
quarter Arobto n Gelding 3
yea rs old See Esk ey H1lt Flat
woods Rd
Pome roy Oh10
Phone 9q2 38El5
.
- .
RIDING HO RSE a nd saddle 8
yElor s o ld $250 992 7015 aft e r

Spm

JUST LISTED - Beaullful
brick wlfh 1 a cres . 4 ,
bedrooms, 21h baths , lovely I
krtchen , dining, 21arge ret
rooms. fireplace, many ,
many other features
.

REA L ES TATE l oo ns, Purchase o nd
refmonce 30 year term s VA
No money down {e hg1b le
A s low as 3
vete rens ) FHA
per cent down ( no n ve teren s)
Irela nd M ortgage Co , 77 E
Sto re , Athens 014 597 3051
.
. . . THHEE
BEDROOM
r an c h
Carpe ted , o rr {Ond tlroned Pn c
ed
very
reoso nob l y
In
Syracu se 992 5348

·--- ·

'

Sweepers toast er s iron s all
sma ll oppl1onc~s Lawn mower ,
nex t to St ole t·hg hwoy Garage
on Route 7
SEWI NG MACHINE Repmrs , ser
v1ce oil makes 992-228 4 Th e
F obrrc Sh o p ,
Pome r oy
Au thorrzed S1nge r Sol es an d
Ser v1ce We sha rpen Scrssor s
.
EXCAVATING d ozer loo de r a nd
bo chhoe work , dump trucks
a nd Ia boys for hrre wtl l hau l
f1ll d 1rt to sot l lr mes tone and
gro vel Coli Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers cloy phone 992 7089 , night
phone 992 3525 or 992. 5232

- - --

--------~

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

BATHROOMS
AN D Kitchens
rem odeled cera miC fil e, p lum
bmg carpentry o nd ge nera l
mo1ntenon ce
13 yea r s ell(
pe n ence 992·3685

----

~---

----

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
ServiCe Phone 992 2418

_,

$35,000
STURDY - 3 or 4 bedroom
village home, 2 baths, 2 kit ·

~

-

-

-

- - --

--- -

t C ElECTR ICA L Conlroclor serv
mg Ohio Vo lley reg• o n S1x
days o week 24 hours servrce
Emergency coils Call 882-:NS2
or 81::12 2305

Ex

cellent built building, con ·
c rete floor, natural gas ,
r unning water, r estrooms ,
large overhead doors on
each end a nd lots of prk1ng

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

AU TOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca nce lled? Lost yo ur operators
liC ense? Phone 992 2143

MOBILE
~~o~r; fu-;:-n;c;s
electncol work p1pes sow ed

HOME

plu ~b~n~ 992- ~85~--~ --­
WALLPAPERING

AND

paintmg

Coll 742 2328
- -----------

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
Ex
ca v otmg ,
septi c systems
dozer, backhoe Rt 14 3, Ph o ne

floor plan
remodeled ,
aluminum siding, new roof,
Pomeroy
E lementary,

neighborhood. S29,500
SMALL - But handy , Has

bath, kitchen, c1ty water,
and business room for only

WATER AND m1sc ha ulin g Ca ll
992 5858

excellent
neighborhood.
$14,900 .00 .
HANDYMAN SPECIAL se.ooo will buy this home
with building and 4 lots .
BRICK-RANCH
:t
lot, wood burning fireplace,
air condl11onlng , patto, new
roof. ONLY $30,600.00.
rtE HAVE QUALIFIED
IIIUYE RS
FOR
ALL
PROPERTIES . CALL
TODAY
FOR
OUR
LISTINGS
PR ESENTATIOIII .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland , Sr
Henry! . Cleland, Jr .
ASSOCIATES
Kathy Cleland
Leona Cleland
992-2259, 992 -6191 , 992-2568

$11 ,000
4 ACRES - in lhe country
on school and mall routes. 8
room house , bath, rural
water, garden , and 2 car
garage A fam1ly home for

$27,500
NEW LISTING -

Aboul 3

d ozen young p each and ap ples trees, ba rn, 2 car
garage, 7 room house, drilled w e ll , small stream and
g ood garden
A1tra ctive

place for iust$17,000.
GARDEN TIME IS HERE.
4 OF •T HESE HAVE EXCELLENT SPOTS. CALL
992-3325.
NEED SMALL FARM
WITH TOBACCO BASE IN
GALLIA COUNTY .
Gordon B.
Helen L.
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates

Housing
Headquarters

---

I (61 4) 698 7331
- -.

------

-- -

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

NOW HAULING hme:s tone rn
M rddl e port Pome roy orea Co li
for free es trmate J67 7101

r XX :t: X J

I

Jumbles CABLE SAUTE
Answer

VASSAL

ABACUS

Durrn g a wate r shortage, thr s advice - with
so me p eople- 1s of ten u sele ss-

by THOMAS JOSEPH
~~~~~~E~AS~E~'-EM--0U~T-A
~--~--------~ACRO~
2Famed
MOI~AN ' we OOT IT!
I Mold
fabuli st
•
5 Malmo nat1ve 3 Scoff
C1ty on the
4 "Ode Truckee
Nigh\lngale"
11 ~rt of P .T.A. 5 Rapid
13 Cru1smg
6 Reqmres
14 Do battle w1th 7 Work un1t
" El Dorado "
8 Apportwn
poet
9 Overeat
As1an
12 Offer
hoilday
formally
CamlJcxha 's
16 Pungent
- Nol
19 Fencmg
18 Ranches
foil
GASOLINE ALLEY
. , . - , - , - - - - . . , 11 20 Fort -,
22 Keep
Call!.
secret
Snoop
Z3 Boot camp
.---&lt;7::
Colossal
command
all
/ ':...:::;:: :~~ Resource
26 Bishop 's
cap
27 Head. Fr
28 Performed
29 Go astray
'-'::'-¥4\Lc 30 Of all
34 Imitate
35 Urge on
'Ji~~Vt 36 Milwaukee
product
37
Bird
dog
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
r-----------------------~-------------------39 Domzetti
opera
40 Box up
o 41 Consumer
42 Tnad
W~R"'(aNGo
1 43 Sw1ss city
•
!
DOWN
I Las Vegas
game

She's been out

there

Show 17.
9 30-Bra dy Bunch 8, Hogan's Heroes 10, Green Acres
17
10 110-Card Sharks 3, 1S, Edge of Night 6, All in The
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie "The Great
M a n " 17

10 31J..--AII Slar Secrels3,15; 520,1100 Pyramid 13; Andy
Gr iffith 6, Pr ice Is Righi 8, 10.
11 DO-H1gh Rollers 3, 15 , Happy Days 6. 13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20.
11 31J..--Wheel of Forlune 3,1 5, Family Feud 6,13; Love
of Life 8, 10. Sesame St 20,33
11 55-CBS News 8: House Call 10; News 17.
12 oo-Newscenter J, News 6,10, Password 15; Young

&amp; fhe Reslless 8, Midday Magazine 13; Love
American Style 17 .
12 30-Rvan 's Hope 6, 13, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;

Elec . Co 33: Not For Women Only 15, Movie " Or.
Ehrl ich ' s Mag ic Bullet" 17
I 110-0ays of Our Lives 3, 15, All My Children 6, 13;
News 8: Young &amp; lhe Restless 10.
1·31J..--As The World Turns 8,10, 2·110-0octors 3,15;
One Life to Live 6, 13.
2·25-- News 17 ; 2·31J..--Another Woold 3, IS; Guiding
3 DO-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17, Studio See 33
3 31J..--Mash 8, Joker's Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over
Easy 10, Congressional Oullook 33.
4 flO-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15;
Bewitched 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends a, Sesame St.
20,33, Salman 10; Mario &amp; the Magic Movie
Mach ine 13, Spa ce Giants 17
4 31J..--Bewilched 3: Gilligan ' s Is, 8, 17; Allersc hool
Special 6, 13, Brady Bunch 10, Petticoat Junction
15.
5 DO-l Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Brady Bunch 15; I Dream of Jeannie 17 .
5 JIJ..--Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3, News 6, Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec Co 20, Battle of the Planets 13: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Lucy Show 17: Doctor Who 33
6 DO-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Andy Gr iffith 17,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 30-NBC News 3, 15, ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Fri ends 6; CBS News 8,10, My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20
7·110-Cross-Wfts 3, Newlywed Game 6,13; Porter
Wagoner 8; N ews 10, Love, American Style 15 ;

D1ck Cavett 20, Big Green Magazine 33.
7 31J..--Oolly 3: Match Game PM 6, Muppet Show 8, The
Judge 10, Thai's Hollywood 13; Wild ~ l.!lgdom 15 ;
Sanford &amp; Son II, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 flO-Killers of the Plains 3; Eight Is Enough 6, Bil ly
Graham 10, 13, 15, Marri ed The First Year 8: Great
Perfor mances 33; Edward T he Krng 17,

Yesterday's Answer
24 Satan's
a lter ego
25 Tall one's

nickname
26 Chmese
dynasty
28 Grade
30 Gaggle's

members

Tuesday , March 20

31 Earnmgs
boost
32 Change
33 Memorize
Oswald
- -- 38 Roof
covenng
39 " Ay ,
there's
the - "
NOKT H

BRIDGE
Jacoby and Al a~onta9

Six card suit not rebid

.'

t wo
l·lO

• AQ.J4

• Q4
·~ J8652

WF.ST
... 9:1 2
• K9 76
• Q 9 43

+ K7

EAST

+K

875

• 8 ,I 2
• 10 6 5

• Q 10 4

SOUTH

• 10 6
't' A J 10 5
t AK.I87
• 93

Vulnerable Nei the r
Dealer South
West North East South
It
Pass 2+
Pass
PaSs 2 NT
Pass
Pass Pass
Pass
Pass

IT, eRNI!
IP
.SI'-YJ../18'.S GoiNG. "l"o

Ope nmg le ad • 6

0

l

V.

~

'()I

TO ....... IOU. -~..r-;..~.~~

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work
AXVDLBAAXR
Is L 0 N G FE J, L 0 W

·..;.~.:,,;.;..;.;...;,.;.;.;..;.;;.~.:;:_::..;;:;::;:.;.;,;,;;:::..;~;.,.,::!!~!!~!.;!~.J usedOnefor the s1m ply
l __________...;...;..,;_.:,..,;,.;_,:_;.·_-,;;:.;,
•

stands fo r another. In this sample A is
three L's, X f or the two O's , et~ Sin gle l etters.
apost rop hes, the length and formatio n of t h e w ords are all
hmts Each day the code letters are d ifferent

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

l etter

" )OU MEAN YOUR MOM1S
BACK IN CENTWIL C ITY
AND SHE HASN'T
Dr.l:JPPED BY 1141"'
OFFICE ...OR EVEN
CALLED?

SHE AND DAD HAVE
TAKEN AN APARTM~NT SOMEWHER~

...THEY HAVE TO
BE ALONE FOR A
WH ILE ACCORDING-

TO MOM.

CARE-

WILLf;;~-;;~ ~;;-;;;~;
elderly pe rsons rn my home
Twenty years exper ience
Rea sonable rates qq2 6022 or

17 ;

Drivers" 17.

l

HIT YOU, IT'$ GOINc;

G lory"

11 41J..--Mannl x 13, Kojak 8; 1:110-Tomorrow 3.
1 31J..--Movie " The Killer That Stalked New York" 17 .
1 51J..--News 13, 3 11J..--News 17
3 30---Movie " P1rates of Tripol i' ' 17
5 IIJ..--Dragnet 17.

THeile. 'S NO Po aNT

A80uT

Price

10 ~20 20 6, 13; Kaz 8, 10, News 20
11 DO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15, Hogan' s Heroes 17 ; Lll1as
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 31J..--Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pollee Woman 13; Nit
Basketball 6, Rockford Flies 8, ABC News 33 ;
Movie "for Me &amp; Mv Gal " 10; Movie "Hell

da4?

IN

We ln -

terr upl This Week 20.
8 31J..--Wodehouse Playhouse 20
9 · ~Siuds Lonlgan 3, 15, Charlie's Angels 6, 13. Jeffersons 8,10; Movie " What
Mas1erpiece Theatre 20 .

~

WINNIE

Services Offered

Now arr ange the crrcled leners to
form the surpr rse answer. as sug
gested by the above cartoon

Jumble Book No. 12, containing 1 tO puzzles, 1s a~altable lor$1 75 poBtpald
I rom Jumble , c/o th !s new&amp;paper, 80)(. 34, Norwood , N J . 076-48. Include your
name, address, zip code 11rnd make checks pay able to Newspaperbooks

ALLEYOOP

HWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

IF 'YOU

. USE LESS' '

MontgomeJJ
Tlailer Sales

- ---

3
l 'h

Yesterda )' s

TRACTOR DRIYEN •
PTOALTERNATORS
from 15,000 to
75,000 watts.

2-14·1 mo

~ECAL'L

HAVE A !!!lAD ONE.

(A nswers tomo rrow}

C AWOII,-]

614·669 -4245 Evenings
2 Mtles East
of Wllkesvtlle

I'T'5 1/IFFIC\.I!.."T "TO

Pnnt answer here : [

HOU SES ' FORE MY JOE
HIT I

,

EX CA VATING
dozer back hoe
ond drtcher Charles R Hot
f1eld
Bo r: k
Hoe Se rv iCe ,
Rut land Oh1o Phone 742 2008

992-3325
216 E: Second Street

r 0

I

tilE , I WAS WORKlN ' HASH

BRADFORD
Auctioneer, Com
p lete Serv1ce Phone '149·2487
or 949-2(X)() Ro cme Ohro Crttt
Bradford

-

I

ORPHAN ANNIE-DOUBLE TAT.J.f

2 11 1 mo. Pd .

27320 Montgomery Rd.
La11{1svllle, Oh1o

0

One 6, Hogan's Heroes 8; M atch G ame 10; lucy

Light 8, 10; I Love Lur v 17

'"'

IPERRIMj

ORPHAN ANNIE

.

WILL CARE fo r th e elderly m our
ho me Phone 992-73 14

electric
and
water
available ,
Wildwood

J•ck W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone "'2-2111

--- - -- -·

T.ITILE

subd iv ision . 56,000 .00
POMEROY - .S6 acre, 1

2 acres,

bedrooms, 11f:z bath, level

•
'1

•New Home
•Add-ons
•Remolding

byHen rr ArnotdandBobLee

j

I I I

SIDING
992-6011

--~·

"'

IREVOODI

c hens, full basement, very
nice
modern
kit che n ,
garage, and nearly 2 acres
of green grass $48,500
RANCH - Famtly room , 3
b edroom s, bath, nice ki1·
c hen , beautiful large lot, c i ·
tv water in good residential

HOMESITE -

lHE: 30-DA'{
Pll;i"f COMIOO'?

I I I

Business Services

:! 1 1 acr es m Pomer oy Secl ude d
wooded a re o M l op of h1ll
Overl ook s nv er Wor er e lec
tr lc ova1 loble 992 3886

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

IURYM~
I'"......
I. ... . ....... .... . 0
"""'"'""

~~~

'

FARM FOR sol e ~ o u se 2 born s
troll e r Lo rge pond 10 ac res o r
82 acres 742 25b6

lake 515,000.
BLOCK S:rORAGE -

BORNI .OSER

37-1mo.

Real Estate for Sale

ROOMS

'\l'Jt\IN'} fe}'\l W

Unscramb le these four J umbles
one letter to each square to form
lou r ordtnary words

-

POMEROY,~·

8; 1 oo--Tomorrow 3
1·31J..--Movle "Count Three &amp; P ray" 17
1:35--News 13; 3:31J..-- News 17, 3 51J..--Movle " Drums of
Tahiti" 17.

home maintenance - neW
and repa1r. Storm doors
and wtndows
All work
guaranteed .
20 years
expertence .
Free
estimates .
Call :
Tom
Hoskms, 949-2160

3-11 -1mo

b edrooms, c tose1s,
baths, natural gas forced
a 1r furna ce, f ul l basement,
and 2 porches, very well
located 1n town living Wtll

FOR YOUR condy and c~ e sup ·~
pltes ' --c ome to D1 s Spnng
Va.J iey Plo:zo Free Ester {a ndy
classes Call-446 213 4

" Che! " 10.
12 40-BanacE;k

~ ~ ~~~~ ®

Phone 992-2581
or 992-2082

LARGE

BASS BOAT, Thunder Croft, 35
h p Chrys ler El ec tnc troll mg
motor and deplh fmder W1th
tra der 99'1.5067

WE'~E' ON~

Home Maintenance ,

lANE DANIELS
of

ONE ACR~ lo1S near longsv dle
O hr o Ca ll 7t1 2 2409

9'11 3885

IN ·

TRAW LE R \

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

THR EE BI::DROOM two sto ry o lder
home w1th thr ee loi s Loca ted
at 14 Hrll St ree t Pom er oy
$1!1500
II
rnte res ted
coli
843 2b'16

APPROX TWENTY acres on Flo!
' wood s Rood water ond el ec
Hdl
l rrc rty
See
Eshey
Pom eroy
Ohr o
or phone

CAPTA ! ~~

PAI&lt;ALYZE'D WITH NE'RVE GAS t

All types roofing , gutters
and downspouts. All types

. 949-2862. 949-2160

ORGANS

THE

WHI LE ON THE 6 1ANT OCTO ·:&gt;U!l IN
MI D- ATLANTIC.. EMY HAS SEEN

and

New, repair,
gutters and
downspouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

&amp; Famous Name Brand',

Phone

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

Pomeroy, Ohio 45"9

-

Hammond

Sales Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd . Racine, Onoo

19/J ~ Rt:: E DOM MOB IU home
App hances
u nde r p1nn rng
f1replo("e 997 5d1J 0 1 99') b118

Wtth Capt1al , being a Branch Manager 1s almost like
be tng tn bu s-ness for yourself You furnish the abthty
and th e tnrtlatrve Cap1tal supphes you with the oHice
tr a mtng , the know -how, the offrce location and
eq uipment and all the money needed to butld a
succes sful branch.

300 West Second Street

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

NAMeD

2 HA/?K -- WITH
50 ME '5A 0 !?TIC

1 LL CALL WAS HIN6 TON RIGHT
NOW! THE' COA'5T GUAI'&lt;O OR
NAV Y SHOULU E&gt;E Ae&gt;Le TO
RUN DO WN THAT CO N FO U ~DE O

Ohio Valley Roofing

2 7 mo.

lf.J!() HEBEL MAIUU~ 12xot8

Become a Manager of a
Consumer Finance Office

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES

towara Rutland,

A TP:AWLER

3-7-1 mo. I Pd.)

H. L Writesel
Roofing

. . . . tor t. tfwt

1Q/J FRHDOM MOBILE hom e
11x 51 2 bedr oo m fireplace
a tr {O ndlt ron tng u nderprnn rng
'1'1£611!:! ofrer 4 or 992 5413
rmy lt m e
goo d con d1t1on
'147 3875

992-2356

GARAGE
st . Rt. t:l4
0.

.

MY !iorA~~ ~ WHEON WA?H
!lROADCA?T T HAT $.0 :; , ,
~AYIN6 THEY' D !!E'EN
5HAN6HAIEO.. DID HE
TELL WHAT SHIP TH E')'

6Sl Beech Street
Middleport, 0.

,ROGER HYSELL
'lo mile off Rt. 7 ~y-pass on

'

'

33
7 31J..--Hollywood Squares 3, Let's Go To The Races 8,
Candid Camera 6, Pnce is Right 10; Donna Fargo
13; TV Honor Society 15, Sanford &amp; Son 17, Mac
Neff -Lehrer Repo rt 20,33
B DO-Cliffhangers 3, happy Days 6, Billy Graham
10, 13, 1S; Paper Chase 8; World al War 17, Ausffn
C1ly Llm 1ls 20 ; Cily Nolebook 33 .
8;31J..--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6: Sneak Previews 33
9·110-Superstunt II 3, 15, Three' s Company 6,13: Mo vie
" Red Sun" 8, 10, Grand Jury An Inst itut ion Under
Flre33, Mov ie " The Stooge" 17, Academy Leaders
20
9 31J..--13 Queens Blvd . 6,13 ; 10 OIJ..--Ropers 6,13
10 JIJ..-- PIIot 6, 13; Mo vie " The Cocoanuls" 20 , Islander
33.
11 OIJ..--News 3,6,8,10,13,15, NHL Hockey 17; Book Beat
33 .
'
11 · 31J..--Johnn y Carson 3, 15, Moyie "That Man Bolt"
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, ABC News 33, Movie

CAPTAIN EASY

Will Make
Service tails

119-1 mo.

kim Whitt, Praprlttor
2-5·1 mo,

.....

18 Years EKperience

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy , 0 .
Call992-7113
_
'For Free Estimates .

SWIIPI Gtlllf

Flues
rhant : 742-JllO

1% 5 Pr o1ne Schoon e r 18 x 8
hrl•
1965 Gene ral 60 x I '1 2 bdr
196~ flc o no 51x 1'1 '} bdr
1969 Budd y 60 • 12 4 bdr
lY"/OSyl va bOx 12 1bdr
19/0 Co s tle 60 x 11 'l bdr
IIJ73 A rl rng ton 60" 1'l 'l bdr
1973 R1d gewood 70 x 14 :J bd r
t &lt;nJ Krrk wood 5 0 ~ 1'l 'l bdr
B &amp; S MOBil f HO ME SALES
PT PLf AS A N T WV
675 4414

1977 STARCRAFT 15 ' open front
and Run obour 80 h p Mercu ry
motor Ful l canvass top Good
shape 997 bb7B

We hav e openmgs for Manager tramees now. Phone
Mr Snodgras s at 992 -2111 to arrange for a confidential.
per sonal mtervt ew

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

Mobile Homes
- - - for
- - Sale

-

FORGE AHEAD

.

3·16-mo pd

,

19M TOT At Ht::C fR 1C mob rle
hc. me
l urn1she d
3 bed r
wos her and dryer Au ca ndr
Ironed 1 lot 210 ft frontage
S. 11 000 Ph on e '/4 1 2a2o

TUESDAY, MARCH 20.1 979
7 ·QO---Cross -Wtt s J. Please Stand By 8, Newlywed
Game6,1 3, Love, Amencan Style 15; Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 17 ; Dick Cavell 10, Marshall U. Report 3

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

Your Headquarters For
Armstrong Carpeting

992 -6011

&amp;~lnptact

o cr e form ot Ree dsv1lle
Oh ro Confect G o ldt e Berry
Phone 413 f6 63
1

*New Home
•Add-ons
* Remoldings
*Free Estimates

l973 LTD FORD Br oug hom 59 000
m il es $1 000 992 2789
1966 G T 0
742 2'l d9

SNAPS!

Business Services

JCIIJ

4PM

_II!

It VOIJ ho"'' o '-f'l ... , a~ to ntfer
\lOrd lo huy u r -.p i\ .,OIIII"IIu r1{J
(1 1'
In n ~ uog fo r work
n
••ArCl f C"VPr
yott lt ~£" 1 rt•qolt•
ln'-1,-,r wt l h a Senf ln.-.1 Wnn l Arl
CnU ~en 11Sb

Nnshuo b(hcl:.' mohrl£'
P e ts for Sale
hnme w rll he "o le! o l pub l1c aur
P I ~ IN C ~ T AR Kennel!&gt; Boordrng
Iro n 11 11 Monrloy A p1rl ?n rl
11J79 o l 9 om o f Cnp rtn l Sovrng.,
011 rl qroorn mg
al l b1 eeds
Chr., h rr£' 367 07Cf'l
g Loon Co '100 W ?n d St
Pornr&gt;r oy O hr o slort mg o r o
HOOF HOllOW
fng l1sh a nd
nm1rr nu m btd p11{P ol S1 000 to
Wr ~ I C"1 n S orldl e~ ond ho1ness
lh&lt;' h1 ghf.&gt;&lt;.t htdder So1rl1 1em 15
po m P ~
~uth
Hnr"f!"" CJnd
ClYOr loblr lo r 1n sppc lt on by op
h
Rr-rvr&lt;, f,1&lt;1 690 37qo
ptn tm en l by ron tocimg Co p1to l
~ o v1 ng~ 8 l oon oi ~ or d addre&lt;; s
Monday th ru h 1doy from 9om
For Rent
to 5prn o t Qq'J :n 11 Th e abo ve
{ol lo lprol •tu rn IS bemg so l d (OUNTR V M081lE Hom e Par k
Rnu tc:;&gt; :J:J nor th of Pomeroy
11nd e r th~ term s of certom
Lo rge Ia rs Colt qcr; 7479
Sccur tty Ag r ~e me1H be tween
fines t o nrl Ca rol l1rplert d/630 J AND 4 RM furn1 sh ed ond un
C rre nwood Ce metery
Rd
lu 1n1 s hcd
o pl s
Ph o ne
flor111P O hr o 4577 1 a nd th e
l.j q'} 5434
1111de r "'9r1e d
Cop1t o l Sovmg~ a nd l oa n Com TWO 8EOROOM klt { hen l urn1 sh
r:&gt;d o pt Co li befo re !:! o m
pony 11:!1'1 Woshm g ton 8l &gt;v d
l.jQ'} 7288
BC'Irr e O hro 4 ~71 4
URGE N TLY Nnm D l O(O II On 10 PARTIAll V FURN ISHED ap r
hed r S175 m o All util 1f 1eS
roo m an d board rnd oor a nd
ro rd sso depOSit See ot 307
ou tdoor dogs for M e1gs Co
Spnng A ve Pomero y
Humane Sanel y whr le h ome s
A

Cl r e so ugh t fo r the m 99'1 54TI
or 'Nl 1600

ru ~:sdllY

thru

Gun Cl11h
f nc1n ry

rm

GUN SHOO!

12&gt;
190
22&gt;
375

\00
\0&lt;1
180
300

l d&lt;Jy
2duys
J days
h d&lt;rys

R n~ t~r{'

l • ~&gt; r y

MIND

Yard Si!le

Notic es
Clln ~ H OOI

FACE TO

TELEVISION
VIEWING

WITHIN

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21 , 1979
S 21J..--World at Large 17 ; 5 45--Farm Report 13
5 50-PTL Club 13; 5 55--Sunrise Semesler 10
6 ~PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8
6 IIJ..--News 17
6 2s-{;hrlstopher Closeup 10; 6:31J..--Romper Room 17.
6 45--Mornlng Reporl 3, 6 50-Good Morning , Wesl
VIrginia 13, 6·55-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13
7· ~ Today 3,1 5: Good Morning
America 6,13;
Wednesday Morning 8, Schoolles 10, Three
· Slooges-L1Itle Rascals 17.
7 15--Wealher 33 , 7:31J..--Famlly Affair 10.
8 OD-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Leave It To Beaver 17:
Sesame St. 33.
a 31J..--Hazef 17
9·110-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15 ; Emergency

One of th e problems w1th a
bridge column 1s that yo u
start out on one subject and
find some other problem
CRVPTOQUOTES
showing tts ugly head as you
go along on your merry way
J B
GYQT
PQJRDTCV
Th1s hand was designed to
show when a player not only
BAy· G R Q
shows a four-card sult beBIQJDL
fore re bidding a s1x c a r d er,
but never gets around to
XBBJWD
BWVJDL
rebidding
that six-card suit
~Jj)f:'!;,~ y,,stelrda,,'a Cryptoquote: DON'T COMMISERATE WITII YOUR
South gets to a normal ,
FEILLO'W MAN . HELP HIM.--80URCE UNKNOWN
sound thr·e e·notrump con«) 1919 Klnl! Features Syndl&lt;ale, Inc .
tract afte r North ' s key bid of

w

w

spades at h1s

s econd

turn

South won the heart lead
w1th hi s Jack and led h1s 10 of
spades for a los mg f inesse
East return a heart. won by
West 's kmg West led a third
heart and South wound up
w1th th ree spades, three
hearts two diamonds and a
dub for the nine tricks he
needed
West asked South how he
would have played the hand
1f East had led a diamond
when he got in w1th that king
of spades . South refused to
answer , except to comment
that he would ha ve found
some way to get his nine
tricks .
We agree that South could
and probably would have
managed nme tricks against
that defense, but that he
would have had to really
struggle
I

Ask tbc I!XDCPII
'
A Delaware reader asks If
you rebid a good five-card
suit before bidding a fourcard s u1t

We can answer a finn
or no" You show the
four -card su1t if convenient
- otherwise, you ignore it
" yes

~
!NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

and rebid the fiVe-card

(Do you nave a quesrton for
the experrs ? Wnte 'Ask the
Experts care o f thiS newfipaper fndw1dual quesrtons w111
oe answered If acco mpanied
Oy stamped self-addressed
envelopes The most m teres tmg ques tio ns will be used m
this colum n and will rece1ve
cooies of J ACOBY MOOERN I

9'12 5422

-- - --

----~~--

PAINTING AND Son dbl ostmg
Free es trmotes Coii9Aq 2686
-~----------

WHV, OH WHII, DID I LET

Give Away

WHAT IF ROLLIN6 '
THESE DICE LEADS ME TO
A LIFE OF 6AM!JLING?

FREE COW manure. J1mmy Mor .
ton Will 1s Hlll

- - . -· ----·--·--FEMALE Peek O· poo black and
-

ton hou:sedog
adults 247 2676

Good

w1th

--- -- · --' - -· ------

• BORDER COLLIE type m short
hai r 3 to• 5 mo. old femal e,
shy Beagle female, 10 mo
' old Peldnese Span ret type , 6
mo old fema le, brown wit'h
wh ite marking, cute small dog .
Two collco, one tier co t
Humone Society, 99'1-7680

-

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

I

WHAT IF I CAN'T STOP?
WHAT IF I BECOME A
COMPL1L51VE 6AM8LER '?
WHAT IF I,,

THAT fLATLAND PEDDLER
5ELL ME FOUR PAIRS
ROLLING DICE CAN RL11N OF LAVENDER
I{OLJ ... SO CAN NOT
SHOELACES?
_ _...,r

ROLLING DICE!

'-IE OUGHT TO
BE'SHAMED
OF "'ORESELF,
MAW

YO'RE OLD ENUFF
TO"NQ"BETTER !!

�.8- The Datly Sentmel, Muldlepnrt-Pomeroy , 0 , Tuesday, Mar 20, 1979

~--A~~a-rr~ath;-1
NOEL CHANDLER
Noel Bernard Chandler, 65,
West Columbia, died Monday
at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital. He was born Aug. 9,
1913, in Johnson City, Tenn,
to the late John and Etta
Henderson.
He was rehred from the
Reuben
H.
Donneley
Publishing Corp., Oak Brook,
Ill.
Survivmg are his wile,
Patricta Ann, and four
daughters, Ginger Lynn Rich
and Susan Kinder, both of
Chicago, Ill., and Joanna and
Tina, both at home; and a
son, David Noel, Dresden,
Tenn.
Two ststers also survtve,
Mrs Floy Haruufen and Mrs.
Fay Derga, North . Miami,
Fla., along with a brother,
Craig, also of North Miami.
The funeral wtll be Thursday, II a m at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, W.
Va . wtth the Rev. George
Hoschar olltciating.
Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call Wednesday 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
at the funeral home.

MAYWOOD C. JOHNSTON
Maywood C Johnston, 83,
Rt. 1, Portland, died Monday
afternoon at Selby General
Hospital, Martetta .
Mr Johnston was born
March 21, 1895 the son o( the
late Arthur and Margaret
Powell Johnston. He was also
preceded in death by hts wife,
Goldie Hilton Johnston, four
brothers and one sister.
He is survived by four sons,
Harry of Mounds, Ill .,
Lawrence of Portland,
Robert of Woodville, Fla.,
and Hubert of Columbus,
three daughters, Mtldred
Icenhower, East Liverpool
and Evelyn Icenhower, Portland , one sister, Sylvta
Carpenter, Portland, 21
grandchildren, several great
- grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Thursday at 1 p.m at the
Bald Knob Church . Bunal
w11l be in Bald Knobs
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home
after 7 p m this evening.

Jerusalem future basis of clash
lly rh&lt;· Associall'd t'rcss
Israel and Egypt clashed
t.odav over the future of
.J er~salem
and
the
Palesltmans m thetr first
public dtsagreement smce
Prestdent Carter's VISit to
iron out final obstacles to a
r&gt;&lt;&gt;are treaty.

But Egypttan Prime
Mmtster Mustafa Khalil satd
he doubted the dispute would
unpede the treaty signmg .
Prime Mtmster Jl!enachem
llegm told Parhament in Jerusalem that Israel would
nevf&gt;r ~ now (4 Paleshman

po ~sih! n "

transactiOn s "did not resolve
all factual and legal issues."
" Therefore,
the
department has carefully
considered available courses
of actton to pursue the
mquiry,'' he said. ''It is in the
besl mterest of the administration of justice and the pubhe's perception of the
fairness and impartiality of
JUstice that an independent
special
counsel
be
appointed."

Curran was U.S. attorney

for the southern district of
NewYork!rom 1973until1975
and ts now a member of the
law firm of Kaye, Scholer,
Fierman, · Hays &amp; Handler.
He was a member of the New
York State Commission of
lnvesttgatton lor flve years
and was app01nted its
chatrman m 1969 by former
New York Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller, a Repubhcan.
There have been no formal
public accusations that Presdent carter or his brother,
Billy , have engaged m
wrongdomg
A federal grand Jury that
has been mvesllgallng the

Hospital News

Rain expected
in Ohio today

ACTIVE ...

The two of us are always on the go.
We have lots of things we want to do
and we don't want to spend time on
finances. That's why we appreciate
Citizens National Bank. We have our
checking, savings and safe deposit
box all in one place. It makes things
fast!

"The Friendly Bank"
Walk-up teller window
and auto-teller window
Open Friday Evenings S to 7 p.m.

liiilens ~alional Ba·ftk
lliiiU"*'

,~ 01110
A?YU- - . . a.£4(!2
.~--

,N'IIII...
..

··~.

/

.-!JIIII!l..._
......

~

1,.&lt;.-l • -'tl•

l1
~b

_.

County Court

follow-up study
A follow-up report to an
earlier comprehensive site
review of Portsmouth
Receiving Hospttal has been
released by the Jomt Mental
Health and Mental Retardation Advisory and Review
Commission, the State
Agency
charged
with
momtormg the operations of

Ry rhe Associated Press
A near statwnary ridge of
htgh pressure extending from
western Quebec south along
the Ohio-Pennsylvania
border to the Carolinas
controls the weather over
OhiO tnday .
Wtth the ridge holding near
statwnary , the eastward
movement of a cold front that
extends southward from
Lake Superior to east Texas
is almost snail4ike. Moist air
is being drawn up from the
south between the two
systems.
Shower activity will gradually increase today tonight
and Wednesday .
Temperatures will remain
mild .

Livestock Report
CINCINNATI (AP)
Cattle :roo. Auetton early.
Slaughter steers untested.
Heifers steady Cows firm.
Bulls steady. Ten percent
hetfers, 50 percent cows.
Steers, few standard and
good, 2-3, !075-1350 lbs, 61.5066 75
Heifers, choice, 2-4, 9501070lbs, 67.50-70.10; good, 2-3,
775-!175 lbs, 65 00-67 00
Cows, utihty , 2-3, 975-1700
1bs, 53.00-58.50;
htgh
dressmg, 59.00 60.75; cutter,
1-2, 75().1Z75 lbs, 46.50-55.00;
few at 56.00-li7.00
Bulls, 1·2, 1000-1600 lbs,
62.75-69 00.
Vealers, few prune, 250-270
lbs, 130 00-135.00.
Feeder steers, choice, 350425 lbs, 96.00-104.00; 775-950
lbs, 66 .00 70.50; heifers ,
choice, 325-450 lbs, 80-85.00.

Ohto 's mental health and
mental retardation services
The CommiSsion staff
completed the revtew as a
follow-up to its report issued
In
Aprtl, 1978, WhiCh
recommended changes in 22
of the Portsmouth facility's
administrative and dtrect
patient care areas.
The latest report reveals
overall progress at the state
hospttal, and states that the
hospttal's admmistration bas
dtligently addressed the
mttial concerns of the earlier
findmgs.
The new repnrt commends
the Actmg CommisSioner of
Mental Health, WtUiam H ·
DaviS, lor recommendmg
shortly after the lirst report
was made public that the
facillty do a complete
analysis of each of the
crtllctzed areas and take
whatever
action
was
necessary to brtng about
compliance
with
the
recommendations.
The new document also
applauds the steps taken by
all concerned persons, includmg the hospital's
Citizen's Advisory Board,
Central Office personnel of
the Diviston ol Mental Health
in Columbus, Portsmouth
Recetving
Hospital
management , the chapter of
the Ohio Civil Service Em·
ployee's Association, and
other Portsmouth Receiving
Hospital employees, to bring
about needed improvements
in the quality of patient care.
The Commission report
recommends that
the
lollowwg hve areas be
evaluated agam wtthin the
next six months: (I)
discharge planning; (2) peer
revtew; (3) pharmacy; (4)
staff development - inservice
traming ;
and
(5)
psychologtcal services.
Although several changes
were made in these areas
after the hrst vtsit by the
Commission's
momtoring
team, a complete evaluation
of these services at this early
stage of their development
and implementation was
thought to be premature.

Monday's

Sports Transactions
By -The Associated Press

BASEBALL
National League

Montreal

•

REFRIGERATORS • RANGES - FREEZERS
WASHERS • DRYERS

Expos -

Op.

tioned Roberto Ramos,
catcher, and hander Randy
M•lfer, pitcher, to the Denver
Bears of the American
Associat ion. Ass1gned out
right Joe Keener, p1tcher;
and Tom Wighaus, catcher,
to Denver

Philadelphia PhiJiies -

Released

Dave May,

llegm said he was replying
ilJ a statement by Khalil that
Israel would have to
wtthdraw to the borders that
exiSted before the 1967 Arab·
Israeh wlli', surrender Arab
.Jerusalem and accept
Palestmian statehood.

i~vestigated

Loans will be
lly JAMES H. RUBIN
Assoctated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Attorney General Griffm B. Bell
announced today the appomtment of Paul J Curran, a
New York lawyer, as a
special counsel to mvestigate
bank loans made to President
Carter's family peanut
busmess by the National
Bank of Georgia.
Bell satd a Justtce Department mvesttgation mto the
Car ter
family
loan

state in the occupted West
Bank of the Jordan River or
the naza Str1p or return East
.Jerusalem to the Arabs.
"It wtll not happen, " Begin
told the Knesset, opening de·
bste on the treaty. ''We won't
agree to it , we won't aUow it,
we won't make it

Agency releases

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admttted - Helen Harris,
Syracuse; Wanda Neigler,
MEETING PLANNED
Syrac use; Effte Watson,
A meetmg wtll be held at 7 Coolvtlle ; Allee Wolfe,
p m. Tuesday m the Senior . Pomeroy; Guy Neigler.
Citizens Center, Pomeroy, for Racme , Harry
Wyatt,
all people who would be In- Mmersville.
terested m amateur boxmg
Discharged - Lois Little,
This is bemg sponsored by the Kathryn Lambert, Don etta
Metgs Jaycees
Talbott.

·Regatta program given

out-

ttelder ; aAd Butch Metzger,

pit cher Sent Larry Anderson , Fred Beene, Cardell

Camper and Kevin Sauc1er,

pitchers ; Don McCorma'ck

and Ozzie VirgiL catchers ,
Jose N.oreno , Louis Aguayo
and Ramon Aviles, in
fielders , and Orlando lsales,
outfielder , to their m ~nor
league facility for reasstgn -

ment

KEY CASE FOUND
A key case with three keys
and some personal items was
found Tuesday morning neat
the office of Dr. R. R. Ptckens
m Middleport.
The finder turned in the
case to the Dally Sentinel
office . in Pomeroy and the
own~r may have the case by
makmg proper Identification
at the Sentinal Office.

Eighteen defendants were
fmed and eight others lor·
leited bonds in Metgs County
Court Monday.
Fmed by Judge Charles
Kmght were: Frank Gulas,
Cleveland, Michael W. Kelly,
Middleport, Wayne E. Leech,
Parkersburg, Mary E.
Christy, Pomeroy, Redina
Pratt, Mtddleport , Tim
Brinager, Racine, Charles
Gleckner, Pomeroy, Michael
Scarmock, Athens, all fmed
$15 and cost, speeding; Mila
J. Davidson, Pomeroy, stop
sign, $10 and costs; Harold
Smith, Reedsville, disorderly
conduct, $15 and cost; Wayne
Powell, Racine, $150 and
costs, license suspended 30
days, conhnement three
DWI;
Eugene
days,
Erlewine, Long Bottom, $50
and costs, violated burning
permit; Samuel Alexander,
Belpre,, $150 and costs, three
days confinement, operators
licenses suspended 30 days,
DWI; Thomas L. Lee,
Albany, $150 and costs,
driving under suspension;
Stanley G. Wells, Long
Botton, $150 and costs, 30
days confinement, DWI, cost
only, 15 days conlmement,
driving under suspensiOn;
Brenda Petrie, Pomeroy, $50
and cost, disorderly conduct,
Mandy Darst, Cheshire, $10
and cost, hve days con·
finement
suspended,
crimmal miSchief; James
Garnes, Pomeroy, 30 days
conhnement
suspended,
disorderly conduct.
For!etting Bonds were
Linda Ferrell, Hartford, W.
Va.,
Davtd
Boggs,
Chesapeake, Susan Yost,
Racine, David Reedsvtlle,
Cortlandt Barry, Colwnbus,
$35.50, each speed, Denzil
Higgins, Belinont, W.Va., $35
speed; Kathryn Wiseman,
Gallipolis, $35.20 speed;
Thomas Evans, Lancaster,
$35.50,
assured
clear
distance.

banking practices of former
budget director Bert Lance
opened an inquiry late last
year inti&gt; $6.5 milhon in lOans
made to the Carter peanut
warehouse by the National
Bank of Georgia ut 1975 and
1976 when Lance was bank
preSident .
A spectal report issued by
two bank directors in
January concluded that the
bank did a poor job in
handling the warehouse
loans.
The president's 63 percent
share of the business is in a
blmd trust while he is in
offCBS
ice.
News reported '
Monday night that the Justtce
Department will ask the
grand jury in Atlanta to indict
Lance and three umdentifted
associates next week.

Weather
Partly cloudy wtth chance
of showers tonight, low 40 to
!5 Wednesday with showers
possible, high in the mtd to
upper 60s.

Money

(Continued from page 1)
to hire Harten bach, who wtll
begm his dulles March 21.
Council passed a resolution
calling lor re1mbursement to
the village for expenses tn·
curred in traming police
officers if olftcers should
leave the post before they had
completed three years of
training
II an officer would leave the
first year he would have to
reimburse the vtllage 75
percent ol money paid on his
schoolmg, after the second
year 60 percent and third
year 50 percent
NO ACTION TAKEN
Council took no action
Monday night on an ordinance increasing the salary
of the mayor and clerktreasurer. CoWlcil will meet
m special session Wednesday
at 6 p.m. to act on the
measure.
Council, at the suggestion
of Fire Chief Charles Legar,
agreed to purchase a ftre
hydrant to be installed above
Sycamore Street on East
Mam Street and also to
purchase 500 feet of hose for
the hre department at $1.11 a
loot. The department ruined
several hundred feet of hose
cleaning streets, followinl!
the high water.
MAYOR'S REPORT
The mayor's report for thr
month of February showing
receipts m the amount of
$2,621 was accepted. Harold
Brown, councilman, opened
the meetmg with prayer.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews , Mrs. Walton,
Wehrung , Barontck, Blll
Young, Brown, council
meml)ers, Don Ward, Jack
The First Step Mothers' Krautter, Hartenbach, Chief
Club is sponsoring the TGIS Jed Webster , Tom Werry and
dance which is Saturday, Charles Legar.
March 24 at the Elks Hall.
Jack O'Shea of WKEE will
be playing favorite tunes of
. the 50s through the 70s from 9 Market Report
p.m. to I a.m.
There will be door prizes COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) and free food.
Eggs - Prices patd to
Ttckets are available at the country packing plants for
Bastille, Amy's, and Baby eggs dehvered to major Ohto
Land .
cities cases included con·
For more information call sumer grades including u.s.
2!5-5636 and 446-4255. The grades, minimum 50 case
pnce will be $7 a couple and lots.
$3.50 a single.
'
Carton Large A 76·80,
Mediwn A 72-76, Small A 4852.
Sales to retailers in major
Ohio
cities,
cartons
HIJACKERS SOUGHT
delivered: Large A whtte 85BURLINGTON, Ky. (AP) 94 mostly 85-l!7 medium 81·
- Police, bloodhounds, an oo: mostly 81-83:
airplane and a helicopter Poultry prices at Ohio
were used Monday in the farms, hens light two few to
search for two men who report.
hijacked a truckload of
cigarettes north of Cincinnati
and abandoned the rig after
overturning it off Ky. 237,
MEETING SLATED
Boone County police said.
The
Riverview Garden
James C. Huff, 36, CinClub
will
meet at 7:30 p.m.
cinnati, said he was
at
the home of Mrs.
Thursday
delivering the cigarettes to
Claremont
Harris
with Mrs.
the Kroger Co. terminal at
Herman
Grossnickle
and
Woodlawn, Ohio, when the
Mrs.
Donald
Putman
men forced their way into the
cab at gunpoint. He had been assisting. A household party
stopped by traffic on Ohio 74i. will be held.

makeshift settlements in the
northern Sinai Desert,and a
shouting Communist member
was expelled from the
Knesset alter accusing Begin
of "selling Israel to the
Americans." But observers
predicted at least 100 of the
120 members would endorse
the pact Wednesday at theend
of the two-day debate, which
was being broadcast live on
television and radio. ,
Begin planned to leave Friday lor Washingtoo to sign
the treaty, and AI Abram, the
semi-official Egyptian newspaper ; said
Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat would
leave Saturday. The signing
at the White House is
expecled Monday .
AI Abram said Sadat would
spend live days in th United
States, then return to Egypt
to submtt the treaty· to the
360-member National
Assembly for ratification.
In Washington, Defense
Ministers Ezer Weizman of
Israel and Kamal Hasan Ali
of Egypt failed to agree oo
when Israel will give up the
......
...·.·:·:·:·:·.·.·:·:·.·.·.·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
:·:·:·:·:·: :-:·:·:·: :. offshore Smai oil fields, the
.. ...........................
last tssue in their negotiation
RIDDLE
of a timet
What do the Remington
Bust It
Hotel, The Martin Hotel
aud The Meigs luD have In
common? Meigs History
Book free story deadline
5.
(Answer
April
tomorrow).
"My dear, honorable Dr.
Khalil, " said Begin, "write
this down: Jerusalem, the
one Jerusalem, 1s Israel's
eternal capital. It will never
be divided again."
In Cairo, Khalil said
Begin's statement "spoils the
atmosphere" of the treaty
and said lt was "an
unsuccessful beginning to a
period iit which we had hoped
that all parties would work ...
lor a just and lasting peace
and a comprehensive settlement m the Mtddle East ."
Khalil S3ld: "As lor the
Paleshman queshon, the
Camp David accord clearly
sttpulates the necesSity , of
solving the question from all
its aspecls, thus taking mto
constderation the legal rights
of the Palestinians It is along
this prmciple that they will
dectde therr future."
When asked if the dispute
could block a signing, Khalil
satd, HNo, I don 't think so "
As the Israeli debate
opened, r~ght-wmg opponents
of the pact set up two

Register possibilities exist
The possibility exists that
the former Pomeroy Senior
High School could be lis!ed in
the National Register of
Historic places.
This was mdicated Tuesday
by Lcils J. Rock, regional
preservation ofltcer of the
Ohio Historic PreservatiOn
O!lice, Athens. She was guest
speaker for Tuesday's lun·
cheon meeting of the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce at the Metgs Inn.
Mtss Rock, who is with the
&lt;lepartment of sociology and
anthropology
at
Ohio
University, told members it
would I ake at least six
months to ooe year to do all
the work necessary to get the
former building approved.
Upon final approval, the
chamber could apply for a 50

percent grant to renovate the
buildmg
Miss Rock explamed there
are hundreds of applications
from all over the state, and 1t
is very competitive to get a
building listed with the
National Register
She indicated she would
assist with filling put the
necessary forms to be submitted.
Paul Simon, president, who
introduced Mtss Rock said tl
was a shame to let such a
beautiful building just· stl
there and deteriorate.
Fred Crow asked if the
butlding would have to be
restored as orgmally built
Miss Rock replied no, addmg
that a building should be at
least 50 years old to be listed
in the Register.

CLUB MEETING SET
Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet at 7:45
p.m. Thursday at the home of
Eleanor Thomas.
DANCE SCHEDULED
A round and square dance
will be held Friday from 8:30
to II :30 p.m. Friday at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
The dance is open to the
public with admission $1 for
adults and children under 12
admitted free with their
parents. Music will be by the
String Dusters.

Inn.

BASEBALL SIGN-UP
Rutland Baseball League
wtll have sign-up day
Saturday, March 24 between
12 noon and 2 p.m. at the old
Rutland High School.
There will be a $5
registration fee to cover
insurance and hats. The sign·
up will cover teams from T·
ball through Pony League.
MEETS THURSDAY
The Twin City Shrinette
Club will meet Thursday at
the home of Mrs. Emma
Clatworthy at 7:30 p.m.
Members to wear homemade
Easter bonnet.

CRUSADE KICKOFF SPEAKERS- Marlin Perkins,
famed zoologist and TV personality, and his wife, Carol, a
noted author and lecturer, will be the featured speakers
for the 19th Cured Cancer Assembly, Sunday, March 25 at
Ohto State UniverSity Several officials of the Meigs
County Cancer Society wtll be attendmg.

Cured .cancer
assembly set
The 19th Cured Cancer
Assembly and Crusade
Kickoff for the Amencan
Cancer
Society,
Ohio
Divtsion, Inc , will be held
Sunday , March 25, at the Ohio
Umon on the campus of Ohio
state University.
Featured speakers at the
statewide fund-raistng
ktckoff meeting wtll be
Marhn Perkins, the lamed
zoologtst and TV personality;
and his wife Carol, a noted
author and lecturer.
Perkins is star of the award
winning program " Wtld
Kingdom", sponsored by

School year
ends

June 7

The school year lor
students of the Meigs Local
Distrtct was extended
through June 7 when tbe
Board of Education met
Tuesday night ln Middleport.
The
extension
was
necessary due to days missed
over the five normal calamity
days permitted by the state.
According to the new
calendar, the fifth six weeks
grading period will end April

D'anee

slated

20.

The final six weeks period
will begin on April 23 with

school
dismissed
on
Memorial Day, May 23.
Final day of classes will be
June7, teachers will meet to
complete reports and records
on June 8.
Graduation exerctses will
be held as origmally
scheduled.

Men's

and
Boys'

Dept.

1st FbJr

athletic loOkls a sure
winner J~ boysweor. Hete,
Pro
I
by CampUs
athletic T-shtrt
'19

a crossover V.

neck and a touch of shiny

satin In the numbers on the
Plus, of course,

contrast stripes to add to

the effectl In never-Iron

Dacron and cotton Sizes 8-

20.

You'll wont to see all the other styles boys shirts now
ready for your selection plus a big new selocHon boys
jeans . shorts . western shirts.

nommation to run lor village
counctl, according to the
county board of elections.
They are Carl Horky, R.,
incumbent, and Jack Sattcr!teld, a Democrat Both Blake·
and
Satterfield
are
newcomers to the pnhtical
scene of the town.
A fourth filing announced
Tuesday evening by th e
board of election is the
petttionofE. F. Robinson, R.,
lor reelect ton to a seat on the
Pomeroy Board of Pubhc
Affatrs

GO OVER PLANS - Mtss LoiS Rock and Paul Stmon, prestdent of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce are shown gomg over plans for the hs!tng of the former Pomeroy
Seruor Htgh Schoolm the National RegiSter of HIStone Places.

•

at

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 237

•

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21 , 1979

15 CENTS

Meigs Local board plans auction

h~e ~:~M~~~ Wednesday

MEETS THURSDAY
A regular meeting of the
Southern Local School
District Board_of Education
will be held at 7. 30 p.m.
Thursday in the high school
cafeteria.

ent ertainment.
lt IS not known who the
(Contmued on page 12)

Blake seeking mayor's post

(USPS 145-960)

;:;:;·' ';:~:;· collection
Janet Bohn will be
collecting for the !lean Fund
in the Village of Rutland on
Wednesday, March 21, Lois
Kelly, heart fund chairman
for Meigs County, annoWlced
today.
The Heart Fund will hold a
balloon sale on Saturday,
March 24 from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m. m the villages of
Pomeroy and Middleport.
Lois Kelly and Mary Wise
will be in Pomeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. Robert King in
Mtddleport. Children selling
the balloons will be members
of Meigs County Order of
DeMolay
and . Jobs
Daughters.
There will be a meeting of
the Heart Fund on Thursday,
March 22 at noon at the Meigs

queen '.s v1s1t and $5,000 for

e

Heart fund

Highway Patrol, investtgated
an accident Monday in·
volvlng a pollee cruiser
owned by the Village of
Racme.
Officers repnrt that at II :30
a.m., an auto operated by
Guy Metgler, 85, Racme,
traveling east on ' Third St.,
Racme, went left of center
and struck the parked
cruiser.
Meigler was ctted on a
charge of reckless operation.
Both vehicles incurred
moderate damage.

It was also pomtcd out that tertammcnt on ~' rtday, June
Pomeroy Village olfictals will 22
The chamber approved
have to make the request to
have the building hsted m the allocation of $400 lor the
Nattonal Historic Register.
Dave Jenkms reported he
had asked counctl, on behalf
of the Jaycees, to lease the
E . M. Blake, Jr , has ftled
butldmg provtding they do his petition as an independent
some cleaning and pamting. candtdate for mayor of the
The matter was taken under Village of Middleport.
advisement by council
As an mdependent canMonday night.
didate, Blake's name wtll not
BtU Qutckel, chatrman of appear on the ballot until fall
the Btg Bend Regatta when he will oppnse the
scheduled Thursday, June 21· Republican and Democrat
24, gave a resume of the nominees if there are any.
program. He asked the
So far, with the lilmg
chamber for money to send deadlme at 4 p.m Thursday,
the Regatta Queen to the Ohto only Republican incumbent
Pageant of Festivals to be t' red Hoffman has !tied for
held at Randall Park Mall, nomination.
near Cleveland, May 3-6 and
In Middleport, two can·
to secure a big name en· dtdates have fil er! for

C lt1i by N£~ l~c I M R~11 US f• l 0!1 '

SO DO WE,
AND IT'S
HERE!

Mutal of Omaha. The Perkms
served as National CoChatrmen for the Amencan
Cancer Society Crusade m
1978
Speakmg on the advances
being made in the treat·
ment of childhood cancer will
be Milton H. Donaldson,
M.D., vtce prestdent for
Cancer Control, Trammg and
Education, at the Fox Chase
Cancer Center, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvama.
Eva Ball, a recovermg
cancer
patient
from
Phtladelphia, Pa., who is
featured in several of the
American Cancer Society's
television advertisements,
will address the expected 600
volunteers attending the
luncheon meetmg.
Also speaking wtll be Vtcki
Lt Wttham Prttchett, the 1966
poster child lor the Amencan
Cancer
Society,
Ohto
Divtsion, Inc.
A highlight of the day's
program will be the mtroductions of cured cancer
representatives from Obto's
8B counties. These people of
all ages are living proof that
cancer can be beat.
The lund-raismg Crusade
goal lor the American Cancer
Soctety , Ohto DiviSion, Inc.,
in 1979 is $6,325,000
More than 170,000 volunteers m Ohio will be con·
dueting the house·to·house
Crusade in April , dtstnbutmg
mlormattonal pamphlets on
cancer and asking for contr~butions to continue the
Soctety's research, educatton
and service programs.
Members of the Metgs
County Unit who will attend
the kickoff meetmg are:
'-C{{rtlS Jenkm son, cured
cancer representative, office
manager for Pat Hill Ford,
who has been free of cancer
symptoms for 10 years; his
wile, Dorothy, Mary O'Bnen,
co-chairman of the crusade,
Bernadette Anderson,
president of the Meigs County
Umt, Joan Anderson, vice
president of the umt and
Debbie Smith, Miss HOpe of
Meigs County.

Weather
Clear and cooler tonight
with the low In the low to mid
!Os. Increasing cloudiness
Thursday with the high in the
mid to upper 60s.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Faced with many problems - most of whtch re&lt;jwre
money - the Metgs Local Board of Educallon ts leaning
towards placing all unused buildmgs on the auction block.
That was the consensus followmg a long discusston at
Tuesday's regular monthly meetmg at the JUnior htgh school in
Middleport.
The board dtscussed dtstnct bUildings whtch are not used
as schools and authorized the bwldmg comnuttee to secure
some ftgures on the appraised value of the structures.
They spoke on putting all such bwldmgs on the auctton
block in order to stop expendtture of funds for upkeep of such
structures.
These bUildings would mclude the Rutland gymnasium,
Rutland Htgh School, the Pomeroy Junior and Semor Htgh
Schools and a former church building which the district owns
near the junior high school.
Pomeroy village currently has the Pomeroy Senior High
bUilding and secured it lor a new village hall.
However, the village must occupy it as such wtlhin a few
years or the building reverts back to the school distrtct.
A delegation of some 10 Rutland conunumty residents
attending asked that they be given the Rutland gymnasium.to
use for community activities. They said tbe gymnasium has
been heavily vandalized and they charged negligence in that
water pipes froze and then burst causing the wooden floor of
the building to buckle "knee htgh" m spots.
Mrs. Joan Stewart and John Jacobs were the spokesmen
for the Rutland delegation.
They were told that attempts for Rutland Village to secure
the Rutland gymnastum as a Vtllage Hall some months ago,
were dropped at the request of the village.
However, Mrs. Stewart and Jacobs said that the board's
stipulations were too severe and that the town could not abtde
by them.
They parllcularly objected to a sllpulatton that the
buildmg could be taken over agam by the board vpon short
notice.
Mrs. Stewart and Jacobs said vandalism at the
gymnasiUm would be greatly reduced by bemg occupied
through communtly activities
They said that the building IS m terrtble condttion "You
name tt- and the butldmg needs 1t, " Stewart commented.
Mrs. Stewart satd she assumed the town is behind
attempts of the group to secure the butldmg but added that the
group of Rutland citizens feels that it can secure financing to
put the bmlding mto good condition. The gymnasium will be on
the Rutland tax duplicate through June of this year.
It was the opinion that the board's general discussion on
the unused buildings and the apparent forthcoming action to
put the structures up lor bid mcluded the Rutland gymnasium

even after the earlier request by the Rutland delegation
The land involved wtth the buildmgs was also brought into
tlie discussion by br. Keith Rtggs, who satd Rutland and
Pomeroy ftelds should not be sold because of their uses m the
respective communities.
He said the Pomeroy football field will eventually be
abandoned because football will be played on a field at the high
school.
When that happens, he wants the Pomeroy fteld offered to
Pomeroy Village as a park.
COMMITTEE REPORTS
A bUilding commtttee composed of carol ?terce, board
prestdent, Larry Powell, member, and Dwtght Goms,
admtmstrattve asststant, reported on a recent building
tnspection last mght.
Speakmg for the commtttee, Pierce satd rools on all of the
butldings are m need of repatr. However, the roof on the high
school bwldmg, he sa1d, ts "horrtble."
Pierce sa1d that the roof IS gomg to have to be replaced
wtthin a year or the high school butldmg is going to be heavtly
damaged.
Goms has gtven estimates that the cost of the roof work at
the high school w1ll cost some $60,000
However, Goins did state that there ts a possibtlity that
legal action could still be taken agamst the firm that installed
the roof on the relattvely new building. Gotns will confer wtth
Prosecutor Rick Crow on that matter. He also satd he will meet
with a contractpr on the bmldmg this week to diScuss the
matter.
The building committee was authorized to proceed in
securing the professional advtce of an engineer on the roof
work at the high school.
SECOND DELEGATION
Asecond delegation appeared before the board made up of
mne parents of the Salem Center School area.
Carol Phillips, speakmg for the group, charged that proper
custodtal work is not bemg done at the bwldmg and that
playground supervtsion ts lacking.
Mrs. Phtllips and her group were told to set up an appomtment to dtscuss the problems wtth Prmctpal Melvm Felts and
Admtmstrative Assistant Goms. Then any unsolved problems
are to be taken to the board.
Barbara Lester submttted a hst of questtons tD Goms on
bus problems m the Salem Center area and these too wtll be
answered by Goms.
BUSINESS ACTIONS
The board entered mtD an agreement to cont mue provtding
a facthty lor the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy, the former
JUruor htgh structure, until Nov. I when a new center ts
expected to be ready lor occupancy.
Mrs Eleanor Thomas, exeucltve director of the Metgs

County Counctl on Aging, discussed the contra ct
Accordmg to the agreement, the board wtll recetve $50 a
month April I through Sept I on the utthty bills and $400 a
month after that time and the board wtll recetve $50 a month
from now on from the Commumty Actton Program lor use of
the kitchen for the nutrition program
A discussion brought out that utihttes at the juntor high
building, used for the Senior Center and a mirung class, have
been running some $24,000 a year
Board Prestdent Pierce commented that the board has
spent a lot of money at the bUlldmg and could no Iunger afford
such spending.
Mrs. Thomas expressed her app1 eciatmn and commented
Uta! the Center could not have been e•tabltshed and progressed
had tl not been for the Metgs Local Board of Educatwn
The board discussed wtth B1ll Childs, the distnct's Agent
of Record, rnsurance on the high school for the next three
years. The board decided to purchase a poli cy wtth $1 ,000
deducttble clauses. There IS no glass breakage msurance since
rates covermg that phase of damage are prohtbt!tve.
Chtlds was authortzed to proceed wtlh the msurance on the
remamder of the buildings m July. He explamed that the
covered 1s divtded among the msurance a ge nc les o£ the

district.
RESOLUTION OKAYED
Two resolutions were passed commenthng Charles

Chancey, Athletic Director and Head Football coach, and
Homer Hysell and Operating Engineers of Local !B for thetr
work in contributing endless hours of their ttrne and securmg
volunteer help and eqwpment lor estabhshment of an athletic
complex at the Metgs High School valued at more than
$500,000.
Plaques Will be placed at the entrance of the ft eld to
provide public recogmtion for the two men and the eng111eers.
The board acknowledged a thank you note from the
Pomeroy ChanJber of Commerce for use of the Meigs H1gh
cafeteria lor the recent Chamber dinner
The resignation of Jesse R Vall as boys' reserve
basketball coach at the end of thts school year was accepted
along wtth resignalton of Wtlham S Shultz, subslltute bus
drtver

Several teachers were granted professtonalleave requests
mcludmg Mtchael Wtlfoog to an mstructton semma r on the
new mulll-medta dnVJng equtpment , James Sheets to the Ohio
State Wrestling Tournament m Columbus wtth one entrant;
Joy Bentley and Roger Brauer to the Sl&lt;lte Basketball
Tournament m Columbus.

Pay lor employes who mtssed work due to the flood was
left to the discretion of Supt Charles Do" le r
The board worked out payment changes fo r Uoyd J ohnson
and Esther Scragg lor transporting students to out of county
schools .
GRIEVANCE LEITER
A letter fr om Joy Bentley was read regardtng a sex
discrunmatton gnevance and Supt. Dowler reported he had
John son of Pairiot Star net gh bor, who watched reported.
not seen the grievance at thts point
Johnson is currently lodged
Johnson take thmgs out of the
Route, Galltpo!ls.
Robert Moore was employed as a substttute mechamc for
The 23-year-old Galha house, held Johnson at gun m Meigs County Jatl wtlh the remainder of the year and the position of Dtrec tor of
Counttans was se~n allegedly point while deputies and the charges of breakmg and Transportation now being filled on an actmg basts by Leland
breaking into the Warden Middleport Fire Department entering and arson expected Parker
residence by a neighbor The could be summoned tl ts to be filed agamst htm.
A repnrt was given on correcttve action taken at the site of
a
slip
behmd the Pomeroy elementary school and Boyd Ruth,
··.. .:· ··:·:·:· ··=· ···.·····:·· · ··....· ·....··,·.
local Soil Conservatiomst, was conunended for hts role in
getting tmmediate help lor the dtstnct
EXTENDED FORECAST
The annual appropriations resolution , the sa me as the
Friday through Sunday:
temporary one adopted recently, was adopted by the board
Mild with rain or showers
wtth no changes except in areas of expendttures
possible Friday and
Aletter from the Leading Creek Conservancy Distnct was
Saturday. Turning cooler
read announcing a price increase for water and Unda Morrts,
Sunday. Highs Frida) and
a busdnver, was given a leave of absence.
Saturday In the 50s to lo"
The board took no action on a work schedule change
60s and In the lOs to low 50s
Four persons were injured was not inunediately treated.
made by Alan Hunt and Mrs. Patge Hunt of tbe musJc
request
Ohver was cited on a
Sunday. Lows in the 40s
during two acctdents tn·
department
. Leta Hall and Juanita Lambert were named
Friday and cooling to the
vesttgated m Meigs County charge of assured clear
substtlute bus dnvers for the remainder of the year.
mid 20s to mid 30s by
Tuesday by the Galha-Meigs distance.
Supt. Dowler announced negotiating sessions wilh the
One person was InJured
Sunday.
Post, Highway Patrol.
Teachers Association and the non-certified employes for April
Three persons were injured durmg a two-vehicle acCident
II.
and two vehtcles heavily on CR 20, at the mtersection ::.:-:::·:···:·::;.-.;.;:; ·.·.·.;.··....::· ;...··:·· .:
Nancy Black was added to the ~ubslttute teachers hst and
damaged durmg an accident of CR 26, at 8:30 a.m.
a tnp to Sea World and Geauga Lake of Ohto on May 31 and
Officers report an auto
on SR 7, at Laurel Cliff Rd., at
June 1 was approved. Some 57 students and six adults will
operated
by Judith Hood, 23,
12·01 p.m.
SQUAD RUN
make the tnp.
Ofltcers repnrt a south Pomeroy, pulled from CR 26
Hazel Board, 929 Hysell St ,
Jane Bourne, Sabra Momson, Wendy Halar, Barbara
bound auto operated by onto CR 20 into the path of a was taken to Holzer Medical Schultz and carolyn Smtih were granted pro!esston leave to
Stephen Hysell, 18, Pomeroy, north bound vehicle driven by Center Tuesday by the attend a Title I workshop at Ohio Wesleyan Universtty on Apnl
had slowed m trafftc on 7 to Richard Caruthers, 19 , Middleport Emergency !. lt was agreed to attempt to work out a plan to pay Donna
Pomeroy.
turn rtght
Squad. She was having dif· Frye, $20 a month for Aprtl and May to work at the new
Following unpact , the Hood ficulty in breathmg.
A second south bound
Rutland elementary school hbrary.
vehicle driven by Lance auto traveled down an emArequwred Title I complamt procedure was adopted and
Ohver, 18, Pomeroy, failed to bankment and overturned.
the board approved apphcattons lor 1979.W Title I and
Hood diSplayed visible
stop and struck th e Hysell
Dts•dvantaged Puptl Program funds.
EDITOR GOOFED
signs
oE injury and was trans·auto 1n the.rear.
Dan Morris, director of cumculum, also announced that a
Due to an editor's error, the Youth
Both drtv ers displayed ported by the Pomeroy
Employment Traming Program has been approv ed.
vtstble signs of Injury and Rescue Squad to Veterans word Laurel was omttted The program will give freshmen and sophomores an
were transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital, where from the account of a opportumty for pre-vocallonal sktll tryouts .
delegation mectmg Monday
Memortal Hospital , where she was admitted.
It will b• helpful for students m determining what they wtsh
with Pomeroy Council 'to study m vocational trairung durmg their last two years of
There
was
severe
damage
th ey were treated and
to the Hood auto, moderate rega rdmg the deplorable htgh school
released
damage
to the ·caruthers road condtttons on thetr
A passenger in the Hysell
The board moved mto executive session after four hours to
auto , Joyc e Hysell, 15 , vehicle . Hood was cited on a street. Lanny Jenkins served discuss "personnel n
as spokesma~~o r that group.
Pomeroy, claimed mjury, but charge of !allure to yield.

Accident claims truck driver
David A. Zimmer, 52,
Marietta, was fatally injured
at approximately 6 21 a.m.
today at Landmark Servtce
Station in Pomeroy. Zunmer
was employed by Ford
Brothers and was debvermg
fuel at Landmark.
According to Shen!f James
J Proffitt, Zimmer was
under the tanker attempting
to tighten the packing to the
rump when he became entanged in the pump's pnwer
take-off shaft. He was found
by James Huff, another Ford
Brothers driver, who also
arrived at Landmark to
deliver fuel.
At the scene were Sgt.
Randy Forbes of the sheriff's
department, Harry Lyons of
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department, Dr. R R.
Pickens, Meigs County
Coroner, Sheriff Profitt! and
Gary Wolfe, investigator for
the sheriff and the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad.
In other matters, Shertff
Proffttt, Carl Hysell, Metgs
County Juvenile O!!icer,
Deputy Manning Mohler and
Investigator Wolle along with
Sheriff James Montgomery
and deputies from Gallia
County were called to the
scene of a breakmg and
entering, and possibl~ arson
at a Story's Run residence.
The residence of Chuck
Warden was reported to have
been broken Into and then set
on fire. A suspect taken tnto
custody was Terry L.

Four hurt in

two accidents

;'

...

•

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