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10-TI!e Daily Sentine,l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apr. 2, 1979

Khomeini claims ~pp~oval

"'

I ~

..

TEIJRAt;, Iran tAP) A.YatoUah Ruhollah Khomeini
claimed unanimous approval
in the two-day referendum .on
his plan to make Iran an
Islamic republic, but his
revolutfonary regime
admitted one ethnic minority
was still fighting in the
northeast and trouble was
brewing with another in the
!lOUth.
Khomeini 's victory
statement p-oclaiming the
new Islamic republic was
~d by an aMouncer over
Radio Tehran .Sunday while
votes were stlll belrig counted·
from the balloting Friday and
Saturday.
The referendum amounted
to a vote of confidence in the
leadership of the 7$-year-old
Shiite Moslem patriarch who
engineered the revolt that
drove Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi irom Iran in
February.
..
The government radio-teleservice
said
vision
p-el:iminary results showed
18 mlllloo of the estimated
18.7 mllllon eligible voters
endorsed the Islamic republic.
But despite Khomeini's .
landallde at the polls, the
revolutioo he heads still faces
serious challenges from
ethnic minortties who make
up about a third of Iran's 36

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

·.

CALL

MutuiJIC\

,_.. .e,..ru. .

o/Omilhil~
Gregg Gibbs
992-3443

million people.
Radio Tehran said yet
another cease-fire had
shattered in the northeastern
town of Gonbad-e-Qabous.
Prime . Minister Mehdi
Bazargan warned rebellious
l'Urkoman 'tribesmen there to
halt their week-old revolt or .
he would send in the army on
Tuesday to que!! it.
The tribesmen have been
fighting pro-Khomeini
militiamen for control of
Gorgan Province, home of
550,000 Turkomans. At ~ast
SO persons have been killed
and more than 100 wounded in
the fighting. ·
'll(e Turkoinan rebellion
followed an uprising of Ktl1'ds
in the western province of
Kurdistan three weeks ago.
The Kurds, like other
mino.rity groups, saw a ·
chance for home rule in the
wake of the national uprising
that crippled the army, which
the shah had used for years to
put down the aspirations of
the minorities.
Besides their long-61anding
demands for greater political
autonomy, the Kurds, l'llrko-

mans, Baluchis and Arabs
are l)u!Uli Moslems and fear
the domination of Khomeini 's
Shiite sect, the religion of
most Iranians.
Khomeini curbed the
Kurdish revolt by promising
greater autonomy ·and
appointing Kurdistan's first
Kurdish ~overnor.
Negotiations are under way
on a simllar deal for the '
Turliomans.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial HoopiiJII
Saturday Admissions Naomi Bentley, Middleport;
Mary Nichols, Rutland.
Saturday Discharges _Virginia Musser, Donald
Greene, ·Darrell Hanning,
Mary Reynolds, Salty
Savage, Maynard Ellis.
Sunday Admissions Wanda Sprague, T-~ppers
Plains ; Doris Haynes,
Pomeroy; Daniel Talbott,
l'ortland,
Sunday Discharges H~rry Shain, Herbert Ailing.
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Clarence Thomas
Wolfe, 32, Rt. 2, Rsclne, and
Rosalie Durst, 34, Spring·
field; Martin Allen Shuler,l9,
Langsvllle, and Jennifer
Lynn Ohlinger, 16, Pomeroy.
. '

P.rakes fail,
driver cited
Two cars received medium
damage and a driver-' "was
cited to court as the result ol
an accident on Lincoln Hill
Road at 2::1Jl a.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy Police said a car
driven by Rick Taylor, 20,
Pomeroy, hit a second car,
also traveling northeast,
from the rear. Brakes on the
Taylor car failed to work,
police said.
Driver of the second car
was Kim Jarrell, 20, Rsclne,
Taylor was cited to mayor's
court on an -unsafe vehicle
charge.

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••••••••••••••••••••
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Pomer-oY, o.
•

·:

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Middle~~Grt.

DAIRY ISl£

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EVERY TUESDAY IN APRIL IS"

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FREE SUNDAE DAy

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

N~clear-at-a -glance

JAMFS K. HAGGERTY ·
James K. Haggerty, 73,
Middleport, died Sunday at
the Holter Medical Center.
Mr. Haggerty · was a
veteran of World War II. He
belonged to Feeney-BeMett
Post 128, American Legion,
the .- Disabled American
Veterans and the OH-KAN
Coin Club.
He was born Sept. 15, 1905
at Falnnont, W. Va., a son of
the late James S. and
Virginia Bartlett Haggerty.
He was also preceded in
death by a brother; Ed, and a
sister, LouiBe.
Surviving are hts wife;
Mary L. Nesbit HaRRerty:

By The Associated Press
.
THE BUBBLE - Atomic engineers were' encouraged with the apparent shrinking of a
hydrogen..-ich gas bubble in the reactor fuel core.
·
"It slops up and dol!l•tt', but the trend is de(initely downward/' said George 'l:roffer, ,
.
man$ger of generatioo quality for Metropolitan Edison Co.
Troffer said Sunday the potentially explosive bubble was about 400 cubic feet in size
doW!! from a maxbnurn ofl,BOO cubic feet since the accident occurred.
.
- '
EVACUATION - Pennsylvania authorities firmed up contingency plans for an
evacuation unprecedented in scope. All told, nearly a mllllon_pe~!ple in four counties would
be relocated in any mass evacuation. One local civil defense official said he expected Gov.
Dick Thornburgh to order a p-ecauti~ evacuation within the next day or so.
. •
Thornburgh and his ~ff may retreat to a radiation-proof-bunker Sil-leei 'beneaih the
state Capitol if an evacuation Is ordered.
The sealed ·command post in the basement of the state Transportation Building holds
en9ugh food to feed 240 people for aboutfour days, an air filtration system, communications
equljll~ent and Its own. w11ter well.
CARTE,R'S VISIT- President Carter and his wife, RosaiyM, paid a HI-minute visit to
the plant's control room after an on-site briefing from Nuclear Regulatory Commission
officials Sunday.
The president later spoke at a town ball in nearby Middletown, where he· said an
evacuation would be "strictly a precautionary measure."
"If it does become necessary, Governor Dick Thornburgh will asl&lt; you and others in this
area to take appropriate action to ensurl! your safety. If he does, I want to urge that these
·
instructions be carried out calmly and exactly," he Said. .
NATIONWIDE REACI'ION - Effects Of the radiation accident rippled through the
nalion as Gov. Jerry Brown of California sought a federal order to ahut down a power plant '
and anti-nuclear protestersl!ent a cry of "No Nukes" throughout the land.
"I think Harrisburg was a VefY bittersweet incident," said Mark Habn, a leader of
,MissouriBnB For Safe Energy. "We are all saddened by that people are being exposed to this
radiation, but I think It's wa~ up America."

LOCAL MOOD- Most of the women alid almost all of the children have left the town of'

Goldsboro, which lies in the ahadow of the crippled island powerhOuse.
·
Those who stayed behind were both curious and stubborn. They either prayed a lot' or
drank a bit.
'"111e day you come on this earth, your days are numbered," said tavern owner Bud
King. "lflt'sgoing to get you, it'sgoingtogetyou."

of the I&amp;;; persons ldlled and
50 injured patrons - will
want the jury to see and hear
frbrn some of those injured,
The owners of the supper
club, the 4-R Corp, and Its
principals, Ric~d Schilling
Sr. aildhls four sons, were released from further UabWity
in. the case after an out-of.
court seWement of S3 mllllon
was app-oved by Campbell

County Circuit_ Judge John
Diskin on March 23. Diskin Is
reviewing litigation Jointly
with Rubin.
As part of their settlement,
the Schllllngs agreed to be
available to testify for · the
plaintiffs in further Utigation
against other defendants.
The lrlsl is the first of several which will test the claims
of the victbns to about $2.9

•

:
billion in• damages. There are
more than 1,000 defendants,
including hundreds of
insurance !inns and p-oduct
manufacturers. The first 11-ial
will detennlne whether there
Is UabUity on the par! of
Union Ught. ·
Terminal boxes, conduits,
wires and other elements of
the electrical system torn out
of the ruins of the supper club
are expected to be introduced

.----.Nati.ODWI. se"---_, as~~~

the utUity com' pany were on the premises
fOllowing a 1970 fire at tb!l
supper club and during
various remodeling aild
expansion projects,
Judge · Rubin, designated
special judge to hear the Clll!e
by the Sixth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, Ia expected
to bring his entire staff to the
Covington courtroom for the
duration of the trial.

(Coniinued from page 1)

Excursions may be revived.
PORTSMOUTII, Ohio (AP) -Despite all the bard·

ships created by the closing of the U. s. Grant Bridge
over the Ohio River, cOIIIillunlty leaders in Portsmouth
still set! ooe possible loog-range ben¢11.

James Secrest, a Portsmouth Area Chamber of
Conunerce executive, said river excursions may be
reV-Ived In the Portsmouth area becau.se interest' is
being aroused by the tripa residents and visitors are
taking on a ferry. Theferry_has been in operation since
the ltridge closed for repairs last July.

Ambas~ors

IJVESTOCK

CIN CINN ATl ( AP)
Cattle !SO. Auction early. As
of 10:30 a, m. near SO head
sliort of early esthnate; not
enough slaughter . steers or
heifers to test. Cows _ftrm to
$1 higher. · Twenty percent
steers; 10 percent heifers.
Steers: few choice 2-4, 1025·
!ISO Ills., 71-73.40; good 2-J,
925·1075, 68.~70; standard 1·
2, 950-llSO, 61. 75-&amp;.25.
Heifers, good and choice 2
and 4, 875-1025, 65-70.
Cows generally 2-J, 850.1500, 56-$.SO; high dressing,

begin exodus ·

· . • CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - ' Arab ambassadors began
an exodus from cairo Sunday in protest oi Egypt's
treaty with Israel, but the govel,'lllllent of President.
Anwar Sadat saidJI would not be deterred from peace
by the Arab uproar;
Ari Arab summit conference in Baghdad, Iraq,
ended Saturday with the announcement that 18 nations
would punish Sadat by cutting all diplomatic and
economic ties with Egypt. By Sunday night the
ambassadors of Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Kuwait-;'lordan
and Bahrain had left Cairo, leaving their embassy
staffs behind.
.

•

U~ree step-children, Edward
Hughes, Wellston; John
Hughes, Tltuaville, Pa.;' and
Mrs. Charles (Carol) Moiwtv
CileMire; a brother, Ro~1 i
Middleport; . a slster-ilj·law,
Mrs._ Martha Haggerty, ,._
Middleport; five step·
grandchUdren and several
nlecea and nephews,
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
tlie Rswling..CO.ta F1111eral
Home with the Rev. Willtam
Uber officiating. Burial will
be ln Riverview Cemet~ry.
Friends may can at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday. ,

-

, ' The agency released ita annual tornado statistics
as the naUorrheads into another tornado season, Some
718 twisters were reported last year, well above the 28year mean of 867, but they took ooly 62llves compared
to a mean death toO of 111,

· CHI'CAGO
(AP)
caliceled ill flights at least
Contract talks are scheduled lhroll8h April 9. _
·
to resume Tuesday : in
Spokesman David Ostwald
Washington between United . said Sunday that United was
Airlines and a machlni8ts attempting to place Ita
union whose strike has ' passengers 111 other carriers,
grounded the nation's largest which reported ' heavy
air carrier.
'
bookings for flights that
United has said it Ia laying parallel United 'a. Eastern
off all pUots and flight attend- Airlines offlclala reported a
ants during the strllre, which 50 percent Increase · in
began at 12:01 a.m. EST reservations.
Saturday:
It wlllo be up to leaders of
•· The airline, which carries the San Frimclaco-based
an average of 130,000 International Alaociatioo of
passengers daUy on a system ·Machlnlsta .and Aerospace ·
connectln.l! 110 cities, bas Workers ''to define what they
wan_t" at the bargaining
l!e88ions, Ostwald said, "The
ball Is in their court right

Nmne••• ·

(Continued from page 1)
the Ohio Valley Improvement
Association, Cinclnuati.
The pubUc campaign Ia the
second phase of the
"Cilallenge for the Second
Century." Thus far, $2.3
mllllon hl!s been pledged in
the inltlsl intensive phase
which included support from
those who are closely
asaoclated and involved with
Rio Grande. Alumni, local
financial institutions, cor·
porate friends, faculty, ' ad,
ministration and students
have aU · made important
contributions thus far.
Other campus Cievelop'
ments continue in addition to
the campaign effort. ThroiJ8h
the college'• dual relation·
ship as a private and atate
assisted college, Rio Grande
will benefit With the con
- structlon of three new classroom facilities including a
technical careers building,
now under construction and
scheduled for a June I
completion, a ·fine and per-forming arts center and a
math and . science building.
Campus landscape changes,
including walkways and
better parking areas are also
scheduled•

now."
The union is seeking a
peMyan-ltour lnCreue when
the cOlt of Uvtng index rtsei
threetenlha of 1 percent, said
WIIUam Dengler, fJnanclal
secretary of .Chicago-area
Locall467.
"The-problem is there is no
p-ovlslon lor 1979," Dellgler
sAid. "The union feels It jlllll
can't llve without this
clause, ..
· He said United bad agreed
to an hourly wage lncreue of
17 cents in 1980 and 18 cents in
1981 to offset increases in the.
cost-of-living Index.
But union offlclals said they
expected the airline would be
reluctant to meet their cOlt·
oOiving d!!mand. A limllar .
ooe was rejected earUer -by
Trans World Alrlinee.
Airline spoktiiiMII refuaed
to ccmment about United's
position on the Issue or about
possible
problems
negotiators will face. Airline
officials have said the latest
rejected contract called for
wage increases totaling '32
percent over three year11,
MEETS TONIGHT ,
Eastern Athletic Boosters
will meet thts evening at 7:30'
p.m. at the high school.

. cfa~MIYRIST .

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Strong oppo_sition expected
cOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The sponaor Of a
modified no-fault automobUe insurance plan for Ohio
says be anticipates strong opposltioo to the let~islation,
which begins hearings in a House committee this week.
Rep. Vernon F. Cook, D-Qayahoga Falls, said
some .form of the no-fault plan has
before the
· ..Legislature without success four times in the past !ive
ye_ars.
.

Moot checkbook tlutcheo oew in their.checkbooko. But Rollo Ladies' Secretariat lets you remove the chttkboo!&lt; to make checkw.ritins eao!er. Ancl the
12-view windows are perfect for showins identification, All of ~ plus 7
credit card POcket~, protected by Rolfo exc!usivc Credit Guard, as well aa
pen and outs1de com Jlllrlt. So Y(herever you re headed, be oure to take alo111
tjle easy writer, Rolli Ladies' Secretariat,
'

come

.Bond hearing may be 'held

·Fai•nters·
sa-Dk_
If&amp;
POMEROY, OHIO .
'

$40,000 Maximum
Insurance For Each Depo,s. itor .
.
.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

.

000

,.

0

oooc~--~,0000

~~t;~tea~~ed~J~:,'

•

ROLFS.. , it ~how~ you care.

CLEVELAr1li (Ap) -

Abond hearlllg iOi'Anthooy
D, Liberatore, captured after being on the FBI's' ~·to
MO!l Wanted" Ust since May _28,1878, wlll be held today
in federal courl. Liberatore, 57, was arrested early
Sunday in a suburban Eastlake "safe house" by 15
federal agents and two local pollee officers.
Liberatore was in bed and offer~«! no resistance
when he '!as se!zed by a raiding party, said Stanley S.
Csamecki, FBI agent in charge fn &lt;:teveJana. No
weapons were found. But a neighbor, Donald A.
. Kernlskey,saldllethoughtaburglarywasoccurringat
where Ubecalore was

'

'

WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES-2ND FLOOR
Be sure to see our new -selection Women's
Rolls Wallets· Secretariat CigareHe Cases· .
Kev Rings:. etc. New stvles ·new colors.

POM
ER'
ELBERFELDS IN
0y
·

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'(

were.
In Washington, Sen. Gary
Hart, chairman of the subcommitte e on nuclear
regulation, said "it might be
more ·expensive to clea_n u_p
the plant than it was to build
it. It might be a $1 bilUon
mausoleum! '
. Rep. Morris K. Udall,
chairman of the House
energy subcommittee, . said
the contamination inside the

·
containm ent building was
"unprecedented in thf
history of nuclear power'
and was "so bad -it will b&lt;
months before any possible .
. ·r . deed
cleanup can begm, 1 tn
a '
cleanup is possible.,.
" Nobody's seen those fuel
rods, that's the trouble,"
Udall 'said . "You can't open
up the top of the reactor and
look in , it's just tO&lt;) badly con·
laminated in there. "ua
Meanwhile, scientists on
the scene near Harrisburg'
were studying the potentially
explosive and lethally

· · ·
· ·
·
. . ·
radl?acllvt• gas bubhlt• and
But another NRC .offwlal,
momtormg_ the sensitive In· Richard Vollmer, said of the
struments mslde the reactor . bubble, "We hehe~e It IS
"We k~ow many of these prudent to Sit and walt a h(tie
systems may be at or beyond while to make sure It 's .nut
th . d ·g
rform· nc "
. ba k ..
~" esl n pe
a e,
eommg c · .
.
sa id Karl Abraham, a
Vollm~r said the tospokesman for the _Nuclear st~ents and v1tal safety
RegulatoryCpmmissiOn.
eqUipment· were designed to
Denton also said the reac- withstand severe accident
tor 's t.•n:~ra· t ure· had
· 1udi ng high.
. d rop· . cond't'
I !ons,
mc
ped SlgOiftcantly, wtth only rad1at1on, and that "we would,
two fuel cells, out of 177' over expect .that those would be
400 degrees, $everal,hu_ndred capableoftakinglt," .
degrees below the pomt at · If some devices fmled, he
which an explosion becomes said, it would still be possible
likely.
to control the reactor and

15 CENTS

. TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1979

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

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

Council incurs debts
Hills-Hocking Vall~y.
are tickets that can be obCouncil, ·in other business, tained that will not be ruined .
approved a bid from when placed on a car when it
Pomeroy Motor Coh1pany 'tor is raining. CouncU also wants
· a cruiser in the amount of a meter report at each
meeting and the meterman in
$5,750 with trade.
· Council later rejected aU attenddnce.
Cillef Webster indicated he
bids. Bids will be readvertised and reopened will be retiring soon.
Aprill6. Thisisthethlrdthne . Council felt that a jobfor bids to be submitted. · description of the chief'.s
The issuing of parking position he obtained before
tickets was discussed at looking for a replacement.
Jane Walton, clerk, is to
length since tickets have not
b~en issued when . it is contact the M.unlcipalleague
.for a job definition.
raining .
Mayor Andrews reported
Councll felt this should be
changed. Council wants a that the .state, .weather
report submitted on how permitting, Is gojng to clean
many tickets are written on Main Street and patch it with
rainy days.
tar .
Co'uncibnan Harold Brown
O.ief Webster stated there
asked that if council has to
pave Main Street ftQm
Syracmore to Butternut Wliy
not put a weight )bnit on that
portion of !he street? It was
P'Jinted out that this was stm
~.r
partofu.s: 33. ·
·
I.JMA, Ohio (AP) - Fo..: Miami, Fla., private
The state does not pave this
investigators charged with conspiracy to kidnsp in
portion of . Main Street
connection with the dejlarture ofa Nicaraguan student
because of -.the re-venue
from the Lbna area were release&lt;! Irom custody
Pomeroy receives through
Monday,
('
parking meters. ·
"

BYKATlECROW
Due to the wiilter weatlier,
recent flooding and bad road
conditions, Pomeroy's street
department has incurred
debts totaling $13,000, but has
no funds to handle the deficit.
Monday ·night, Mayor
Ciarence Andrews suggested
that the street and finance
committees meet im·
mediately to determine how
the debts are going to be paid.
On the brighter sipe,
howeVer, Mayor Andrews has
been informed that $19,926
now has been approved ·for
the development of Sugar
Run Park (l,llnl-Park)..
_ ·Council must provide
matching funds. The flinding
was made through Buckeye

Nationwise ·

FolU' private o-ves releas
_ 00

-·· ot!Hn~l)' P.rolecllfDJ:,~~+-~.,.,., __ J.aru___~......l'~~;.....
'clfm~ft,''"i'e

.
.
,
'BAZAAR SALE - These articles in the window at the Dale C. Warner Insurance
Agency, on W, Main St., Pomeroy, are being sold by the Forest Run Methodist Cilurch on
April 6. The bake and baza_ar sale will offer such goods as comforters, Easter bunmes,
baskets and bak~ goods. The bazaar sale will be held at' the Warner Insurance Agency
office.
,..,
,

Appa •ent
. l0 -W . b l•dd
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.· e- d'.
.

Mour.er rgrwres sons

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If 111

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Rio projl!ct

approved but not awarded,
for amounts not to exceed the
state architect's .estimate.·
The building's gla~ front will
be rebid.
The second bidding
procedure was necessary
because the first set of bids
all exceeded architect 's
estimates . Rio Grande
Community
College
Secretary - Treasurer Dr.
Herman Koby noted a big
plus in the rebid procedure.
"General bidders reassess
costs and methods ·allowing
for lower bids which move
pr jects forward." .
Groundbreaklng for the
fered as evidence an amen- fine ar:ts center should be in
dllcl complain! the Cincinnati . May.
board was barred from filing,
a Supreme Court prohibition
order and a transcript of the
Common Pleas Court trial
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
proceeding.
·
Tbarsday . tbrougb
"Judge Riley said the trial
Saturday: Mootly fair
court felt under compulsion
I'huroday. RaiD potlllble
to take no authority to · do
Friday and Saturday.
anything further at this
Hi&amp;h• from the upper 401 to
time "Uoyd said. "The issue
mid 50s Thursday and
here' is whether the Ohio
Friday and In ,the 40.
Supreme Court prohibits the
Jaturday. Lows In the low
U. s. District Court from
hearing an issue that Is· not
to mid 30s Th¥r•day and
chal\engable before any
Friday aod upper 20• to
mid 308 Saturday.
sta\e.''
general contract low bidder
was Sherman R. Smott
Construction. A. J. Stock·
meister was the low bidder
for both the plumbing and the
heating, ventuatlon and air
conditioning portions of the
building,
Electrical contracts were

Financing issue ·
on court.docket

s::

T""'

-...

'

vy

Officials said the accident
did not . affect the en·
vironment and they said the
plant, built by Westinghouse
Electric Corp., would resume
operations Thursday.
.:.. The NRC ordered a Illday safety check at seven
plants equipped by Babcock
- Wilcox Co.; the firm that
designed the Three Mile
. ha s .
Island reactor. The firm
denied .-responsibility for the .
accident.
,,
- As ·a precaution, White
House officials said I million
(Continued on page 12)

A new salary schedule containing the 1.30 index
was adopted, as of March 19, when the Southern Local
School District Board of Education met in special
ses~im Monday night.
. ·
Diitrlct teachers were on strike last.month over the
index which had be~ app-oved when it was submitted
to binding arbitration, but was not granted by .the
bod
. .
..
The board named Dr. Thomas Coyne as chief
negotiator for ita negotiations wiui classified
employes. Negotiations got underway Monday night.
Sandra Hill and Valerle Johnson, faculty
members, were named to produce the annual variety
show at the high school.
The next board session will beat 7:30p.m. Ap-U 17
·. in the high school cafeteria. Board members present
last night included David Nease, president; Shlfley
Johnson, vice p-esident; Sue Grueser, Betty Wagner
and Dallas Hill.

Gas reserves
will -be used

"
1J!e mnr --·~na·
· MacFarland, SO, the owner of a detective agency, and
received two calls fr~m
three of his employees - Richard Magee, 39, Sergio
resident! of Laurel Street
.
Garcia; 22, and WUda Garrett, 20.
statmg they had nothing but
RIO GRANDE- Apparent
. .O:r:.
•
.
'
• h.
praise for the street depart· low bidders for Rio Grande
WlS ' '.
rpent for a "job well done." CoUege and Community
.. '
Wehrung also reported College's fine and perfonning
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -With time running 'out, the _
donations have been offered arts center were a!Ulounced
mother of John Louis Evans Ill has chosen to ignore
to help with the expense of today following a recent
her aon's wish to dle in the electric chair Friday and
cleaning the streets. He_also community college board
appealed to a federal judge to block the execution.
sugg~sted that addittonal meeting.
U. S. District Co uri Judge W. H. Hand was
cleamn~ be done on other
In this, the second bid
.scheduledtoreviewthepetitiontoday, Evans, who was
streets m the village.
opening for the building 'the
RFSIDENTS
'
sentenced to death for the slaying of pawn shop owner
E(bvard Nassar of MobUe in 1977, has said he has "'an
COMMENDED
ofiSession with freedom. If I can't have it, I'd rather be
- Council commended neighdead."
bors of Pleasant Ridge for
cleaning their street and
would 'like for residents of the
town to follow suit.
DAYTON Ohio (AP) - Investigations continued
It was indicated that if a
today into a jan fire at the Dayton Safety Building
little pride was shown the
which overcame 75 persons and hospitalized 28 others
town could be cleaned up with
after apparenUy starting in a padded cell inhabited by
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) residents' help. '
a prisoner wearing only his under-shorts.
The Ohio Supreme Court
TIRFS NEEDED
Police Director Grover W, O'Connor said Monday
scheduled arguments today
·Eight new tir~ are 11eeded on an appeal of a Hamilton
he wants to find out how the .matches used to start the
for the, two large trucks County Common Pleas Court
fire got in the jail, determine if a different kind of
belonging to the village . ruling that thestate·systemof,
padding should be bought for cells, and review the
Council voted to purchase financing public education is
evacuation procedure.
four tires and· tubes from unconstitutional.
Meigs Tire Center.
Meanwhile, U.S. District
Council lodged a complaint Court Judge Robert M. Dun·
FARMINGTON, Mo. ( AP) - Some of the 2l!
about
CETA
workers can has under advisement a
tesidenta killed in a boarding home tire could have
washing their cars when it is request to hear an injunction
been 8aved if there had been enough staff members to
raining when they cannot petition sought by the Cin(Continued on'page li)
work. Another complaint cinnati' Board of Education to
(Continued on page 12)
stop such expenditures under
present laws.
The CinciMati board filed
the original action , which .
resulted In Common Pleas
Judge Paul Riley 's ruling in
1977 that the present system
of slate educational aid is
unequal and therefore un·
constitutional.
Attorneys for the Ohio
Department of Educatio_n
told Duncan Monday that 1t
would be inappropriate for
him to consider the case now
because of ihe scheduled Ohio
Supreme &lt;;ourt hearing.
Attorney Thomas Hill,
representing the Ohio Depar·
trnent of Education, reviewed
the appeal route of the case
for Duncan and told of an un. successful attempt to amend
the . original complaint to in·
elude recently passed school
finance legislation.
''The plaintiffs are. asking
this court to entertain action
to void ~ statute that the Ohio
Supreme Court hal! said don't
void until that Supreme Court
has an opportunity to rule,"
Hill told Duncan. He said the
•ppeal sought to void all state
school financing slatutes on
i)oth state and federal con:
TEAM. AvAILABLE - The M-G-M OlaJter of the Thal~zya Lodge 457, Ord\'f of the
stitution•l ~rounds. ·
·
Arr0 w an Indian dance team is available to entertain for a~y scouting fl!nction in any phase
Attorney
John
Lloyd,
'
Tile dancers Ill'• all members of ~Y Scout Troop 249 In Pomer'oy. Thetr
representing the Cincinnati
of scouting. h·;,dmacie ·by the boys who have spent many hours of practice unde1· the
Boa"! of Education, pressed
cost ~me~ Fr'ank Casto. On March 26 the team danced at \he Blu,e and Gold Banquet at
~=!Ill the Cub and Webelo Scouts. Pictured are front, 1 tor, Cilarles Stone, Terry for a federal hearin~ on the
injund.ipn petitio?, and- uf·
~w:. ?~ck from the left, Brent Bolin, Dan Thorn"\ John Morris and Mike Edw•rds.

ch~tgel ~ had been ' ' ilro~ ~;:a)ritnit ' Patrict

power plants.
He said there was no real
way around nuclear power if
the nation wants to reduce its
he~
dependency on
Mideast oil "It's a question
.
of trading Iran off against
Three Mile Island," he told a
reporter,..
- In Seoul the South
Korean gover.{roent revealed
today that its .only nuclear
power plant hBs been out of
operation for a week because
of cooling system problem
that caused a leaking of
radioactive water
·

Adopts schedule

enttne

aty
'

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 246

complete its shutdown if
h h d .. .
enou•glt rt e~- ,CVICes con
II~&lt; to ~.~~-~ l_on.
. t' · 1
. ·t n on ~a~ -~ non£~en l ag
ms rwnflen . .or metasufntnhe
water ow m a par o
. t
ot ·
_ f· 'led
~.~ c ~r n d'~- u~~. ·/'theu~ . 0 ra :t::lJ':Iintnsl e
con mmen
h g.
h
Thei re were t ese ot er
deve
- I opments:
W· hE
S 11 , as '"~?n, ne'f
e~ r ~1 a r y .d ~m~ s that
~c es:ngerts;l on~~ (
Cespl c h ~d ~cr end
ong~ess s_ou fa P s';"e
up . censmg · or nuc ea r

•

•

e
(USPS 145·960)

could force plant's junking ·.

Lack Q/ staff blamed

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A.t')- GJUs industrY officials
say a vote by f&lt;nner workers at the Federal Glass Co
plant in Co!JIIIIbua haS enaured a perma~t ahutdowti ·
of the facillty. But union leaders and 'lrbrkers aren't
giving up hope. The plant's former employees·tumed
down a cootract offer from the company's prospective
buyer oo Sunday.
.
' Members from 'six locals of the American Flint
Glass Workers union voted 39~288 in a secret ballot to
back their bargaining committee in rejecting the \lifer
from the Lancaster Colony Corp, The locals rep-esent
about 1,200 of the plant's 1,500 former employees.

0

might fail because of intenseradiation - making it impossible to be sure what conditions inside the reactor

Investigation continuing

Vote assures shutdown

·STAR

·
By BOB DVORCHAK
Associated Press Writer
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP )
-Officials warned today that
the Three Mile Island nuclear
,
.reactor may be so con.laminated by radiation that
the entire facility will have to
be junked, becoming "a $1
billion mausoleum"
· assessment' came as
That
atomic engineers . continued
_to express optimism about
tbe shrinking gas bubble inside the crippled reactor. But
• they also worried that vital
'measuring
instruments

.resume Tuesday ·

ELBERFELD$

'

~ontamination

COntract talks ·

oFFfC'E' H l9:3hi 12, 2 to STCLOSE'
Cutter, 1-2, 800-1250, 46.50AT NOON ON
URS.) - EAST COURT;
56.50; high dressing, . 57c00-.
58.50.
jl_..f~~~~

WASHINGTON (AP) - '!Dere were more
tornadoes than normal in the United_States last year,
although they took f_.er lives than uaual, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminiatratloo reported
.

'

59.7lHI3 •

1978 ·year of tornadoes
Sunday.

·Area Deaths· I

1

.First.Beverly Hills trial begins
(X)VINGTON, Ky. (AP) A Bevedy Hills Supper Club
trial begins today in . U.S.
District Courl, with lawyers
for more than 250 plaintiffs
bringing suit against the
Union Light, Heat and Power
Co.
u.s. District Judge ·earl
Rubin will p-eside over the
11-lal, which Is apeeted to
take·one to two montha,
Union Light is the only de·
fendant. The utility was the
supplier of electricity to the
Southgate, Ky. supper club at
the tbne of the May 28, 1977,
fire which kllled 111;) pei'IIOns.
Experts who investigated
the supper club fire
attributed Ita cause to the
electrical system. Their
testimooy Is expected to take
up most of the trial.
But there will also be teatl·
mony • from survivors.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs' - ·
a group of about 250 relatives

)

..

"

'

'

The Orange Towns hip
Volunteer Fire Department
wns called Mpnday at 7:06
to search

for

Emergency service
,

'

• •
•
COmDllSSIOB tODIC

The future of emergency
medical service for Glillia
County was 'discussed Mon·
day night as the Board of
Commissioners met with
local buaine~ and medical •
representatives.
The discussion centered
around the operation of the
servlce system in Meigs
County, which operates as a
branch of county government.
,
Meigs County Emergency
Service Coordinator Bob
Bailey ,-who Is serving as' a
volunteer advisor to the
Gallia Conunission, detailed
the operation of the Meigs
Low tonight in the low to System.
·
mid 40s. High Wednesday in
According to Bailey, the
the upper SOs. The chance of Meigs service which Is finanrain is 60 percent tonight and ced by a '1 mill levy
80 percent Wednesday.

Weather

ChUdren safe
p.m.

Columbia Gas of Ohio, a area, including 31 new wells
unit of the Columbia Gas to be connected later this
System, announced today year.
that new reserves of natural
In addition to the new pipegas being developed 1f1 Gallia line, Columbia Transml~ion
and Meigs Counties will soon will Install two compressor
be br.ought to market.
engines 'to help move the gas
Columbia Gas Trans· to market in 1979_and two
mission Corp., another more engines prior to · 1982,
Columbia Gas System unit wlien . the program Is
and Columbia of Ohio's scheduled to be in full
primary pipeline supplier, operation.
wlll be~ln work soon on a $1.4
When fully operational, the
mllllon "pipeline construction · new field gas field and
project to serve the ·area.'
pipeline will ~eliver as much
- According to !;.olumbia . a6 4millioncublc feet•of 11&amp;1'8
Transmission, nearly 4.5 di!Y to wholesale customers
miles of Ill-inch pipeline and of Columbia Transmission,
more than 11 miles of 8-inch which supplies Columbia of
pipeline will be built, The line Ohio and 74 other gas com·
will accept gas under panles In eight states.
development by three in·
Work is expected to begin
dependent firms on roaghly on the pipeline within the next
17,000 acres lying primarily few days and is sch~duleli to
In South Central Meigs be completed by duly.
Counly and northern Gallia
Columbia Gas Trans·
County. · ·
mlsolon obtains about 10
Projected recoverable percent of the gas It delivers
reserves in the area are from Ohio. and elsewhere in
estimated to be in exc~ of ,Appalachia.
13.9 bllllon cubic feet, enough
Last year Columbia TranJgas to heat 93,500 homes for a mission spent more than $20
year.
million
finding
and
More than · 155 wells are developing new supplies of
scheduled to be.drllled in the . gas in the Appalachian Basin.

two

children losl in a wooded area
back of the Arbaugh Division
in Toppers Plains
The girls were fo,und S&gt;tfe
and sound at 7:15p.m.
Thirv-five firemen · and
helpers assi~ted and did . a
fine jnb, Chief Rob Tripp
r~port~'&lt;l .

SQUAD RUNS
The PO!neroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
residence of Mrs. Myrta
Schaefer, W. Main St. at 9:27
p.m. Monday.
· Mrs. Schaefer, who had
auffered a possible stroke,
was taken to' Vet~rans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.
At 10:19 p.m. Monday, the
squad was called to the
Flatwoods Road for Howard
Searles who had back and leg
difficulties. He too, was taken
to • v'etcrans M.cniorial
Hospital where he was ad·
niitted.

gener:tlng approximately
$100,000 per year, functions as
an all-volunteer, no charge
system.
.
Bailey further explained
that the Meigs service
openitea under the authority
of the County Commission, is
directed by_the_system coordmator, 1s advised by
medical advisory and con·
sumer groups, and receives
m~thly input from 1quad
representatives from the
units within the county,
. The Meigs County ,System
1s comprised of one SEOEMS
(Southeast Ohio Emergency
.Medical Services) squad arid
village volunteer units which
operate with their own
autonomy within the centralized sysll!m.

OSBA opposes federal board
I

Free clinics
are available

·The Ohio School Boards
Association (OSBA) Polley
and Legislative Committee
unanbnously vpted in opposltlon
to the creation of a
Meigs County industries
and businesses can take .separate Department of
advantage of a free hyper· E.ducatlon at the federal
tension (high blood pressure) level.
Dean R. Circle, school
. clinic for their workers
boa•d
member
Iron\
through the Meigs County
Gallipolis · City . School
Health Department.
The program, under the District, voted to oppose the
direction of Mrs. Nita formation of a separate
Wisniskl, R. N., has been department, after lengthy
active in Meigs County for. discussion at a meeting of the
OSBA committee this
two years.
During that period, a blood weekend at the association's
pressure screening program headquarters in Westervllle.
The following reasons were
was held_at the three mine
cited In the unanimous
site~ of the Southern Ohio
decision:
Coal Co. to two occasions.
(I) . Policy decisions arid ·
I!Qalnesses and Industries
. Interested are · asked to functions, now delegated to
eontact Mrs. Wlsniski at the state and local officials,
county health department should remain at the -local
level. With the. e¥bUshment
olflce.
&lt;¥
·

of a separate Department of
Education, more of these
decisions
relative
to :
education would he deter·
mined at the federal level.
(2) It is ·the belief of the
members of the Polley and
Legislative Committee thai
education remain under local
jurisdiction as. much •• ·
possible and und~r . the
sanctions of lOcal boards of
education. The formation of a
_separate department I~ in
direct opposition with this
concept.
The bill, S 210, was in· .
troduced , by
Sensto.r
Abraham Ribicoff (D-CoM.)
in January.
The delegate assemblr ,of ·
the National School Boards
Association will be debating
this Issue al Its - national
meeting in Miami, April ~
24.
110
'lj,

;.J

�'
"~-The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-P~meroy , 0 ., Tuesday, April J, 1979

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerqy, 0., Tuesday, April3, 1979

·IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

-,

MR. DEEP 111RORT_

Editorial
• •
opmJons.

llJIS IS AN HON~ 1 S1R ..
W'H~T OIRT Do YOU

AAVE FOR.. US
ilME~

n\~

Sport~ World

•

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters · •

climate," the

~troleum

I

COMMENTARY

industry can serve the country's

energy needs.
The lyrics never change. "Companies need added
income in order to accelerate domesttc production",'' says
the American Petroleum Institute in arguing for decontrol
of crude oil prices now regulated by the federal government.
Those controls currently impose a ceiling price of about
$12 50 per batrel for "upper bern domestic crude obtained
from " new" wells that began production since 1975. For
" lower t1er" crude from " old" pre-1975 weDs, the limit is
approximately $5.50 per barrel.
That s ubstantial price disparity is supposed to stirm,l late
exploratiOn for previously untapped sources of oil. But the
multinational energy corporations, as usual, aren't content
with a price that has increased more than fOO percent since
the early 1970s.
They want the " cartel price" established by OPEC, the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which
now stands at about $13.50 per barrel in the country of
ongin and almost $15.00 per barrel for oil landed in the
Umted States.
.
The petroleum industry has a penchant for portraying
itself as a bastion of free enterprioo which could aatisfy
much of the nation's euergy demand if onJy it were
unshackled from the artificial government price restrictions administered by inept bureaucrats.
But a recently released report, commissioned by the
Department of Energy, conclusively demonstrates that the
federal government - and the taxpayers who provide its
financing - has provided billions of dollars to prop up
companies engaged in the exploration, production, refin.ng and distribution of .flil.
The little-publicized report is the product of a two-year
study conducted by the Pacific Northwest Laboratory of
Richland, Wash., a subsidiary of the prestigious Battelle
Memorial Institute of Columbus, Ohio.
The Battelle analysts examined all federal incentives
provided from 1950through 1977 to stimulate production of
var1ous forms of energy, then assigned c011ts to thoae
mcentiyes based on 1977 price levels.
Inclui:led were bolh direct subsidies, usually in the form
of federal expenditures, and indirect incentives such as tax
deductions and other potential Industry payments that the
goverment foregoes collecting.
Federal incentives under the present system of control,

m the form of a premium price for

&lt;~new

oll," totalled

$23.94 billion. For low-production " stripper wells," the
mdustry received an additional $12.14 bllllon worth of
benefits.
The notorious tax deduction known as the "oil depletion
allowance" has been worth $36.23 bllllon to the Industry,
while another special tax advantage for "intangible
drilling and development costa" provided a $14.16 bonanza.
Additional billions of dollars in govennent incentives
have flowed to the oil companies in the form of federally
financed geological surveys, oil Import quotas and
artificially high tariff rates for oil pipelines.
There's more, including the Interstate Oil COmpact Act
of 1935, the Connally Hot 011 Act of 1935, the Jones Act of
1915 and the Deepwater Porls Act of 1974.
Not included, because it's technically not an incentllre
for domestic oU production, is a scheme that prior to 1975
allowed the oil companies to receive a lull credit against
their federal taxes for uncounted bllllons of dollars paid In
foreign taxes.
The 27-year total for all direct and indirect subaidles:
Almost '101.40 billion. But that hasn't satiafied the oil
industry, which now wants another round of Hfinancial
incentives" - at an additional cost of Sl3 billlon to $15
billion per year.

Donald F.Graff

On the job front
By Don Grall

Tornado hit Xenia five years ago
Xl'NIA. Ohio ( AP) - In afternoon of April 3, 1974, and
five years, lhe hands on Tom the clock hasn't worked
and ~ Sandy
Young •s since.
The Youngs have stayed in
grandmother clock haven 'I
moved.
Xen1a and rebuilt their horne,
The time still reads 4:40. A butlhey don't plan to fix 11\e
llJrnado hit lhe Youngs' home clock - it marks a special
at that exact time the time for them.
.,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;..._;..._ _.._........,..,.

Names •••
in the news
CHICAGO (AP) -A maid and confidant of Marilyn M~
says the movie sex symbol laughed at rumors that she was
having an e,ffair with Ptoesident John Kennedy or his brother
Robert. '
.
Lena Pepitone, who started working for Miss Monroe in 1957,
quotes the actress as calling the Kennedy brothers "cute" and
saying she liked them because they were ''funny and smart ."
"But I .remember her insisting, . 'Tiiey're not my type.
They're boys,"' Ms. Pepitone says in the May ISSUe of Playboy
magazine.
.
Ms. Pepitone said the actress told her John Ke.inedy did not
act like a president when he was around her. "He was always
teUing her dirty jokes, pinching her and squeezing her ... ," the
former maid said.
·
Miss Monroe met the 'Kennedys through actor Peter Lawford, who was married to a Kennedy sister, Ms. Pepitone said.
The article' was excerpted froin a Simon &amp; Schuster book
"Ml!rilyn Monroe Confidentisl," to be published this.month:

'
It is exacUy five years ago
that a tornado ripped a threequarter mile wide and seven·
mlle~ong swath through this
Southern Ohio community of
about 25,000 residents.
, Thirty-two persons were
killed "and about 1,000 were
Injured here. Death and
destruction were reporied in
eight
Midwestern
and
Southern states. Although
much of Xenia has been
rebuilt, the memory of that
day stU! lingers.
Each spring, Dick Rupert
turns the soil in his garden
and stili finds pieceS left
behind by the tornado. Once
he found the toy soldiers his
son played with before the
wrnado leveled their home .
They .also rebuilt, but the
memories were harder to
wipe away.
"The first night we moved
back liere, we set up a mattress on the family room floor
because we didn't have much
furniture then.
"The mattress was sitting
so that Jean could see outthe
back ·window - where she
had first seen the tornado
coming toward the house. She
couldn't sleep and said to me, '
'I can see that thing coming.'
I stili don't grasp what she

saw."
The Larry Mmnix family
has left Xenia and moved Ill a
DayllJn suburb. Their new
home has two rooms in the
center - the bathroom and
the furnace labeled
"lllrnado-safe."
!.Ike others m Xenia lhat
day, they , too, cannot forget
what they saw.
" Six people were killed on
our street whom we either
knew well or casually, " sa1d
wife
Donna
Minnix.
" Memories of them are too
clear, ev~n now. I think if we
had to walk out of that house
(in Xenia) every day, we'd
think about them every
t1me "
Mrs. Minnix admits she
often glances around her
living room, with its new
furniture, and remembers
"lhat all we car~ about were
the people that died. You
could take all lhis away.
After lhat day, it just didn't
mean a thing."
Many people felt anxiety
and trauma in the years
following the tornado. Some
still need professional help to
deal wilh their feelings .
Dayton psych1atnst Dr.
O.B. Cataldi said he is still
seeing people w~o. due 1!o the

If you' re looking for a job, don't overlook the significance
of geography. ·
·
Your chances of finding something, report&amp; The Conference Board, are currently statistically better in the Great
Lakes states than in other arellll of the country, wilh the
South Atlantic states least promising of all.
This is the New York-based economic research organization's reading of figures compiled during February for a
seasonally adjusted employment opportunity index.
It geta its Information from the newspapers - speclflcally, the help-wanted pages of 51 major papers across the
country. 11ie rise and decline in volume of job advertising,
it says, has proved a particularly sensitive barometer of
the changes in demand for labor and of general business
conditions.
·

Educational develnpments
Back in 1965,'there was no shortage of jobs in teaching.
'!:hat was when the postwar baby boom was echoing
through the nation's schools, faclllties were strained, some
schools' were on doub~ shifts and the demand for teachers
appeared inexhaustib e. To meet It more than 20 percent of
students enterln~c ege Intended to become teachers.
We all know wh
appened within a few years. 11ie baby
boom went bust expensively constructed but now surplus
plant had to be osed and the bloom has gone off teaching
as a promisln profession. Enrollment of woulil-be
teachers has dwindled by some two-thirds. ,
The current situation is not all had, however. Contrary to
the popular Impression of a teacher glut and a Job
shortage, a recent repori in the Council for Basic
Ed'ucatlon's "Bulletin" notes that the supply-and-demand
situation is actually spotty. Many openings are going
unfilled in certain specialized fields. This is particularly
· the case In mathematics and science. Vocational courses,
special education and bilingual education are also reported
to offer opportunities.
'
While a new teacher shortage Is discounted, an upturn In
teaching opportunities Is foreseen with a malor contributor
being the increasing popularity of the "life ong learning"
concept. Demand for continuing· adult education in
vocational and leisure fields as well as in traditional
academic subjects promises to open up a wide-range of
new teaching jobs. These wlll, however, call upon mj,re
than the usual basic education skUis.
For the professional educator, keeping up with the rapid
changes In education Is something of an education In itaelf.

About the bar
l

-

One profession that continues to grow in popularity and
TORONTO (AP)"- Margaret Trudeau says her husband,
employment opportunities Is the law.
Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau, once encourThere's probably no connection, but some interesting
aged her to visit a lover to end the affair and that she once at.
professional
statistics were reported in a recent edition of
tempted swcide because of it.
1
I
Ml's. Trudeau diselosed in her memoirs that she tried to 1
Lenen of oplnlon are welcomed. They should !le less 1 "Student Lawyer", monthly publication of the Law.
plunge a kitchen knife into her chest after Trudeau accused 1 lban 3011 words long (or sub jed to reductio&amp; by llfe"edltor) 1 Student Division of'the American Bar Association.
For one thing, the attraction of public-interest work has
her of being unfalthf\11. She said he told her: "You aresick." 1 and must be signed wltb the slgnee'saddress. Names may I appsrently passed into history with the '&amp;Oil. Polled
. The Toronto newspaper, the Star, reported Monday in the I lie withheld upo11 publication. However, on request, 1 recently as to their Intentions, only 15 percent of Harvard
first excerpts of a week-long serlalizlltion of the book "Beyond I uames wUI be dlsdosed. Letten should be In good taste, I Law School students indicated any interest In devoting
Reason" that Mrs. Trudeau said she feU madly in love with a I addressiDg Issues, not penoaalltles.
I their professional efforts to low-paying public service. For
"high-powered American" at a tennis tournament in New I
~
I a hefty 62 percent, lhe goal Is established law finns with
k~
I
I starting salaries in the $22-25,000 range and ultimately
When ber huband coofronted her with being unfaithful, Mrs. I
~
I partnerships drawing six figures.
Nice work If they can get'lt and most probably can.
Trudeau wrote, she screamed, "Okay! I've fallen in love!" She I
~,~.
•
I The
publication also noted that that while 10 jlercent of
said she grabbed a knife and attempted to stab herself -I • • •
11 drinking
Americafts are estimated to be alcoholics, wlthln
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
overcome with guilt.
·
'· I
the legal profession alcohol and simUar dependency may
She said in the book that Trudeaucfollowed her psychiatrist's
affilct 20 to 35 percent.
advice and allowed her to fly to lhe United states for a brief
I am sending you The meeting with .the man, who she described as a "Southerner "
Early graying
tornado, are exper~encmg iri opening wounds that may 1
Health letter number 12~. to bring an end to the affair, but the relationship did not end. Dear Editor :
Last Thursday, whUe my wife and I were sitting in oilr car "delayed reactions. One not even be healed yet. Just "!
is inherited
Hair Care, to give you more
which
was parked oo the main street in Pomeroy we were person experiences such fear let it be ."
infonnatlon about your hair,
MONROE, La. (AP)- Former U.S. Rep. Otto Passman
approached
by a neaUy dressed yliung man in a most pleasant during storms that he seeks
DEAR DR. LA.MB - Can why it turns gray, about dan- found Innocent of accepting bribes, says he and fol'llle~
and
courleous
manner. He commented about our car (a 12 shelter Wtder furniture no
Tuesday
· you please explain how hair druff and general problems President Richard Nixon have agreed to ~xchange visits. ,,
year
old
Thunderbird)
and chatted with us for a few minutes, matter where he is."
that
people
have
with
their
"I'm
going
to
visit
him
in
'callfotnla
in
a
few
weeks
and
he's
turns gray and is there
us he worked fer the Sentinel and upon leaving, gave us a
Some who lost friends say
Plowing the fields in the :'
anything a person can do to hair. others who want this cvming to Monroe later," said Passman, 78, following his told
copy of your ·paper.
· ·
. they find it hard _to talk about fall and winter was recog- ,
Issue
cM
send
50
cents-with
a
acquittal
on
the
charges
arising
frorn
alleged
congressional
inavoid this or slow it down• I
My reason fer writing is lb tell you how nice it was to be tlle tornado a gam.
nlzed as good husbandry in l'
am only 27 and find I have long, stamped , self- fiuence-buytng by Korean businessman Tongsun Park.
,
greeted in this manner and bow faltunate you are to have such
One yoiDig woman, whose Solomon's time.
addressed
envelope
for
it.
Njxon
called
Pas!man
shortly
alter
the
verdict
was
anquite a few gray hairs now. I
· "Tbe sluggard wlll not.l
a
person
working
for
you.
Sincerely,
H.
W.
Hwnphrey,
The
:Hnonth·&lt;ild
son
was
.
torn
Jove my natural )lair color Send your request to me in nounced.
·
from her ar~ ~nd camed to plow by rea11011 of the cold;:
"We worked well together," Passman said. "I think It's nice Plains, Ohio.
and would like to avoid dye· care of this newspaper, P. .O. that
he still thinks of his old coWltry friend."
·
(Editor's Note: The employe encountered was genial carl his death sa1d : Just let1t be . tberelere shall he beg ln1
harvest, aad have aotblng. '~ .
ing it but hate the gray hairs. Box I 551 , Radi o City Staboo,
Pa
cuaed f
.
•
Let the dead he dead1 and the - Prov. 20 : 4
":""'an was ac
. o acce~tmg as mu~h as $213,000 from Gheen of The Daily Sentinel's advertlslhg staff.)
a
Could certain vitamins help New York, NY 10019.
·
hurt be ·hurt. There. 1s no use
I wish I could tell you that Park m return for helpmg the Korean keep his j?b as sole agent
this problem?
DEAR READER - There there was something you . for ,both buyer and seller m U.S. r1ce transactions wilh Soulh
.
. .
are two factors which con· could take which would keep ·• Korea.
READING MA~R
~ssman lost a ;e-etect~on ~1d m 1976 after 30 years repretribute to gray hair The first you from being gray, but
Originally
a magazine was
is just pla,in loss or pigment. lhere isn't. Theye's.no way to senting Lowsiana s 5th Distnct.
a storehouse, not a
·
Your hair c-olor is dependent improve nutrition !hat will
periodical.
"The
upon pigment that's fanned help. It's true that In some •
GentJeman's Magazine,'' infrom pigment cells just as the animals with different
troduced to the public in 1731,
color of your skin is. The metabolic systems than we
was the first publlcatlbn to
amount of pigment deter- have certain vitamin dtfi- .
use the word in its new meanmines whether you have ciencies may cause g!'lly
,.
ing, stating In its introduction
\black hair, blond hair or red hair. That doesn't apply to
that the publication was inhwnans. Early graying is ·
hair.
tended to ''store ~p' ' a collec·
People tend to lose pigment usually an inherited
lion of various subjects, " as
as they get older, both from characteristic.
in a magazine."
DEAR DR. LAMB -Will a
the skin and from the hair. Of
course, there is a great in- woman enjoy sex after hav' dividual variation in this. As ing a hysterectomy with her
you probably know, some sex organs being rempved'
DEAR READER - It may
people, when they get older,
111Fl DAII.Y ~F.NTINF.I .
develop little brown spots or depend on with whom she is
fUS PS 145-9801
freckling and loss of pigment having sex. TJlat's not a totalin other areas ill the skin. ly facetious answer. Whetber
This represents a change in you enjoy sex or not has to do
DF.Vm'mTO THF,
· the !unction of the p1gment with your emotional and menINTERESTOF .,
cells which is to be expected tal attitude. Some women do
MFliG.~MASON ARBA
RORF.RTHOF.FI.ICH
not enjoy sex after a
in some people.
City F.dlh•r
The ·same thing happens to hysterectQmy and sometimes
DAVID RUSKtRK
Atlvf'rtlllln~ Maup:rr
hair, so at the graying stage they did not enjoy it before a
Pt thh~ hPd tlatlv ext't'PI Salunlay
WITH
you can have a ,variety of col- hysterectomy either.
br 'l'tw Ohi11 V111l1'y Publi "hin~
You see a comparable thing
Clltnpam•-Multlmi'dta , lr1f',
Ill
ors. Some hair may look
C"mtrt St , Pum~rov. Ohio 4!:176!1
darker lhari It did before and in men. Some men don't en011~illt'S!I Offlt'l' PJinm• ~':!· 2156,
F.1lilnrinl Phmw9!r.!-2157
olher is completely without joy sex, or avoifi it, after a
St't'(lntl d!l!-1.~ posl&lt;t~t' patti at
satlsfa.~tory
pigment. There are ali grada· completely
Pnm1•roy, Ohw.
recovery
from
a
heart
attack.
A sparkling musical.revue with
b,NEA
Inc
~
...
~
Nillitlnll l Hdwt1h:ing rt&gt;prtost•ntions in between. The other
lllh\'t',
l.&lt;1
ntlnn
A.!!llnt'iolt·k
:not
So
there
is
no
specific
answer
A super-talented cast from the R lo
factor that contributes to
F.JII'l hll\vt&gt; , Clt&gt;\•rlanll, Ohm44l15
Grande
College student body.
gray hair is air accumulating but I can tell you that
Suhqt·t'IJttilln r1th•s l'&gt;eli Vt•n'f.l bv
t'U!TtN W Wrt' liVIIIINbW 90 C'+'tliS pt.j.
in the hair shaft. Whenever anal.omically and as far as
' .
1\• 't•k R \ Mntnr Rnuk wiH-n• t'iltrh•r
this happens, graying will sensory nerves are concern~1'1 \ '1('1' IIIII ,1\III):J h)t' 0rlt' !lltl!llh ,
$2.50
' 'You may just be MORE DISORGANIZED
$~ ,~ R) 111r11 i 111 flhin 11 1111 W Va .
result. You see lhe same ed, there is no reason why you
1)11•• Vt•.tr, ~7 50
St:ot: lllflfl!l1s,
cannot
continue
to
enjoy
a
full
than
the
Islamic
revolution
In
Iran.
"
thing in cells from the skin.
"' 1 'ill
Thtt•r tn1'11!h s. tR,sn
fl ~ "who.• r• • tt·~ oo yt•11r : ~ I X m•&gt;Pihs
The white flakes from dan· and satisfying sex relatior.~l i ntl
l'hr·p,• nwitl hs ~(I no
druff appear white liecause ship.
'\111\..t'lfl!l"n pn•·•• mdurll"' Sm••t·' \
OPENING CURTAIN BP.M.
"~~' ' ' ,..,(;,.llltt •t·t
the scales coming off the
L___.___ _. . , __ _ _ _ _ __:_,__ _ .. . _ ._ __
scalficontain air.

r-------------------------,

HEALTH

''VI.•.

•

'Appr_eciates courteous chat

I

Berry's World

AN EVENING _OF MUSIC AND FUN

•

"RIO'S GRAND(E) REVUE"

FRIDAY, APRIL 6
8:00P.M.
MEIGS JR. HIGH

nams

BOX OFFICE OPE.NS 7 P.M.

lly K "N RAPI'OPORr
A P Spurts Writer
When you've stood tall on
the mound' during the World
Series. it 's tough being cut
down. That was Jim Beatt1e's
somber prospect today.
" ! just didn ' t visualize
going back to lhe minor
le ag ues ," the New York
Yankee right-hander said
Monday after learnmg that
he had been sent to Columbus
of the, International League
by the World Champions. " It
may have seemed inevitable
to other people, but 1t just'
didn 'l seem very real to me ,''

By Wlll Grimsley
A,P Correopondent

Another oil Serenade
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The nation once again is being
serenaded by the major oU companies, offering the latest
rendition of their theme song : With the "right economic

Majors reduce rosters to 25 nlen

Today's

,.1'1"•

NEW YOR~ ( AP) -Nancy Lieberman has never regretted
the times she sneaked out of the house and went down to the
playground to rough it up with lhe boys.
·
"I never played against girls until I got in high school "says
the f&gt;-foot-10 All America Pointguard, honored Monday ~ight as
the best woman player jn college basketball .
"My parents hated ll \\then they found out I was the one
jumping up and putting fmger marks all over the ceiling. The
guys all resented me at first and my girl friendS were envious.
You have to take a lot of abuse but it was worth it."
Now, Nancy says , boys who used to yell "Tomboy, why don't
you play someplace else?" greet her wilh a fr1epdly, "Hello,
Nancy- gee, we caught you on the tube. You're great.''
A statuesque redhead , Miss Lieberman is the 1979 winner of
the Wade Trophy, symbolizing No. I in the women's collegiate
sport. A 20-year-old Jumor , she led tl1j! Old Dominion team of
Norfolk, Va., to a Jf&gt;-1 record and the national championship.
Her contributions included a 17.4-point scoring average, 254
assists, 144 steals and 276 rebounds.
She was a combmation of Larry Bird and Earvin "Magic"
Johnson, so talented that Uncle Sam will build his 1980
Olympic team around. her and Carol Blazejowskl of Montclair
State. Carol won the award last year.
Nancy is not discouraged over the slow public acceptance of
a:o~en's basketball while the female gendet is thriving in individual sports, such as tennis and golf.
Chris Ever( collected another SIOO,OOO for a weekend of
tennis Sunday while Nancy Lopez, on a rival TV screen
mi~ in a bid .for her third straight women 's golf crown:
losmg m a rare five-woman playoff in a $150 000 tournament·.
"Eac h year women's sports have made greater
'
strides, "
Nancy said. "More doors are being opened to women athletes
in every field. They are makmg more money and generallng
more excitement.
"Women's hlisketball is the quickest growing Qf all team
sports. It is 100 times bigger than it was five years ago. At
Norfolk, we often play to sellout crowds."
This spectator appeal has not yet spilled over to the incipient
pro game in the Women's Basketball League. Salaries in the
lo.team league are said to range from $2,800 to F/,500 on ·some
teams. Karen Logan of the New Jersey Gems is the highest
paid at a reporied f.!l,OOO. Salaries in the men's National
Basketball 'Association average more than SI25,000 with big
name players drawing down $500,000 to $800,000.
Nancy and Carol both are looking to professional careers
·lifter the 19a0 Olympics in Moscow, but they won't come
cheaply.
.
"Olympic exposure should enhance our value," Uebennan
S81d. "!don't lhink f.!l,OOOwould get either of us."

Sports briefs•••
By The Associated Press
PRO FOOTBALL
GOLDEN BEACH, Fla. Los Angeles Rams owner
Carroll Rosenbloom drowned
wh1le vacatiOning in this
South Florida resort city,
police said. Rosenbloom was

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Writer
Baseball's bigwigs have
drawn the economic line at
last, and the poor souls who
happened to wind up on the
wrong side of it are the umpires.
Tired of paying large-sized
player salaries, the result of
contracts that they inflicted
upon themselves with some
old fashioned, hard-headed,
rather dumb bargaining,
baseball has decided to take a
stand. Oh, not against the
players. No, no . The players
wouldn 'I stand still for that.
No patsies there. The target
t)le bosses chose were the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) New Coach Earle Bruce calls
Ohio State's spring football
drills which open today a
learning process for players
and coaches alike .
"They (the players) have
to learn o•1r system of play

Meigs
Property
Transfers

BO~UNG

ODDS &amp; ENDS .
SHOP
CARPET

spo

Colors

(~~j~f. - BRING YOUR HEARING AID

,,..._~}r

BETTER HEARING WORKSHOP

I
I

FREE

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FREE

New tubing between
whenever required.

e.!lrmold

and
.

open ing~lay limit of 25 . Both
the Amencan and Nat1onal
leag ues start the season
Wednesday
Among the veterans to go
were reliever l;{en Brett ,
wa1ved by th e Califorma Angels. and right-hander Buzz
Capra, who was trying to
make a comeback w1th the
Atlanta Braves.
"I' m a little shocked - I
didn't expect it," noted the 24year-old Beattie, who won

calling - and numbering . We
( th~ coaches) will have to
learn about our players. It's a
big challenge, but I am
looking forwa)-d to 1t ," said
Bruce,
Wdody
Hayes '
successol"t
Hay.es, the Buckeyes'

Boston to John '1'. JJennls,
Yvonne Dennis, .87 acre,
Salisbury.
Larry S. Roberts, Mary
Lou Roberts to Richard lee
Stewart, Donna Darlene
Stewart, 4 acres, Salem.
Milford Leonard, Lois K.
Leonard to Milford Leonard,
Lo1s K. Leonard, Parcels,
Olive.
Mildred T. Beeson, Griffith
E. Thompson, Ally. in fact to
George E. Shuler, E~er
Lynn Sh~ler, Lot 107, P
Jones 3r4, Middleport . .

FREE

Hearing re.fest to find out II your heorlng loss
pattern has changed or stayed the Sljme.
Ask about our 30·day N\oney Back'' T'ot~l · ·

FREE

Satisfaction Polley now offered on all new

FREE

Free Gills to all that visit us during the
" Special Cl ean ing" so be sure to bring your
spouse. ·family member or friend with you

Bellone Hear ing Aids we sell.

THEC.S.A.
Forty-two delegates from
South Carolina, Georgia,
Alabama, MISSissippi, Lolli·
siana and Florida met at
Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 4,
1861, to establish the Confederate Slules of America.
The convention adopted a
provisional constitutiOn on
Feb. 8 and the next day
elected Jefferson Dav1s of
Mississippi president and
Alexander H. Stephens of
Georgia vic" president. A
permanent conslttutton was
adopted March 11 and on July
20, the seat of government
was moved to Richmond, Va.,
where
it
rema1ned
throughout the civ1l War.

"
.
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP)
- Th e 1981 Ohio State
B o wling Association
tournament will be staged in
Warren, announced ' Robert
Battista of Canton, the
assoctation 's new p-esident.
The 1980 tournament
already ha s been awarded to
Middleto.wn. Battista saul.

-. sHOP

Mason Futniture

One package of fresh batter ies at 1h price.

Where: LOWE HOTEL

..-c:--

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TRI-STATE AREA

·

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Mon .. Tues .• Wed .• Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30toS:OO
'
Thursd_!IY till12 noon

PT. PLEASANT, W. V~
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When: WED., APRIL 4
_QPEN EVENINGS IJY
APPOINTMENT ONLY ·.
Time: 9:00 a.m. · 6:00 p.m.
. .._,t~t~
_'J..,.,
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8[L10N.E. HEMlf!! ~!~ "C~TER ,~ . _: :~1· 773-ss•ll .. He~man Grate Mason, W. Va.

'J'!;"'

J

Hunl!nglon, W. v, .

- -

'

~;J-;\:' •. '?.
- ~

Th e
Cincinnati Reds
sh1pped mhelder Harry
Spil~ilan and catcher Don
Werner to ln&lt;hanapohs of the
Amertcan AssoCiatiOn The
San Francisco G1flllts sent
mhelder Curt1s Charles to
Lheir mrnor leag ue camp.
The Philadelphi a Ph1llies
optioned pit c h e r Jose
Martm ez, catch er Ke ath
Moreland and fir st baseman
John Poff to Oklahoma City
of the American AssociatiOn
and assigned pitcher. Dan
Larson outright to Oklahoma
City .

SPORTS

agr ee to a clause like that in a
contract doesn't exactly
sound like a negotiating
heavy weight.
Here,
1t
seemed, was a place where
the leagues t"Ould demon·
strate some muscle .
Umpires can be found
somep la ce ab ov e
groWJdskeepers in baseball' s
feudal soc1ety . They are the
serfs of the game, working or
traveling non -stop, da y after
day for lhe six~nonlh season .
UNCINNATI (liP) - For into Riverfront Stadium in
~·amill es are forgotten . AU
the i 1rst time in about four 1971, denied that the firing of ·
that m atters IS the game.
&gt;ears
t!te Cincinnati Reds Manage r Sparky Anderson or
And their reward for that
loyalty is a salary scale lhat still had a few ttckets for sale lhe departure of the popula r,
would send a frmge player's withm a day of their opening all-star Pete Rose was a
game , whi ch
is factor . ,Rose s1gned with the
agent mto a rage. In its day
Wednesday.
Philadelphia Phillics after
eternal ben evolence, baseball
The
Reds
had
about
30
the
Reds declined h1s salary
paid its most highly regarded
seats
available
early
lhis
demands
.
wnptres, the semor men in
mormng, while last year
Many fans had vowed to
two leagues, a lop salary
of just over $40,000 last year . there was not a single ticket ' boycott the games followmg
And they didr 't even have to left two weeks beforehand . both incidents.
After thm back-to-back
buy tickets to the games, , The Reds, who have had
se llout cr owds at every World Ser~es championships
coach for 28 seasons, was e~th er
openmg smce they moved in 1975 and 1976, th e Reds
dismissed after slugging a
Clemson player m a Gator
opener for 1977 was sold out
by ~'eb. 7.
Bowl loss in Dec ember .
Bruce, who ·left as Iowa State
SVAC MEETING
coach to take the Oh1o State
The , Southern Valley
assignment, once coached
Athletic Conference (SVAC)
ROSTERS DUE
Wlder Hayes at the Big Ten
will hold a meeting at 7: 30
Conference school.
LAKELAND, Fla (AP) Joe
Mitchem , Eastern
p.m. Wednesday at Kyger
Bruce says he wdi stick The Detroit Tigers got a Creek High School Purpose athletic director, announced
with an !-formation attack hom e run from Steve Kemp is to set the dale for the ail- today that teams will be
chosen al 7 p.m . Wednesday
and the 5-2 defense that and some tight pit ching league banquet.
Ha yes us ed la st fall in Monday mght to earn a 5-l
for the athletic boosters'
Independent cage tourcompiling a 74-1 record and a exhibition baseball victory
fourth,place fini sh in the B1g over the Cincinnat1.Reds .
nament. Rosters and a $40
OPENS FOR SEASON
Ten.
Kemp's second horne run of
per team entry fee are due
The Pomeroy Golf Club Wednesday night.
" We do plan to pass a little th e spring with two mates
more this year , though, we aboard climaxed a four-run opened for its new season ,
will spend-a lot of ti me this eighth inning to give the Sunday with John Thomas fs,.
spring worl\ittg on pa ss Ti gers the1r 14th victory
. . - - - - - - - -....protection and throwmg t he aga mst 10 losses in Florida. manager.
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
hall," said the Buckeyes' new
The Reds tallied in lhe first
coach .
on a double by Ken Griffey
Bruce d1v1d es spring and Dave Conc epciOn's
pra\lice mto three phases. smgle . Detroit tied the score
LEBANON , Ohio I AP) "We spend the first two m the sixth when Alan Bravo Lady , ridden by Gary
.
weeks working on fundamen- Trammell doubled I and Sullivan, won the $5,300 featals, getting the baSics down scored on a t wo-our error by tured elghlh race at Latonia
.USED CARS ·
and getting into shape," he Joe Morgan.
covermg the six furlongs in
said "Then the next e1ght
Ron Len ore's first hit in 17 1.13.2-5 Monday night paying
pra ctices are spent preparmg trips to the plate 1gn1ted the $19.60 , $9.20 and $4.
for our first four opponents wmmng rally.
Pick A Princess placed,
next fall .
Two walks loaded lhe bases paymg $5 50 and $3.60, and
"~'inally , 1 try Ill have fun a nd w1th Kem p at bat ,
Romoud's Toast , third,
th e last week, divide the team LeFlor e scored on a wild returned $7.60.
up for th e spring game and p1tch . The home run followed ,
Reverse Gently and Run
show the · players we giving the victory Ill Aurelib Ford Doc paid $246 in thO
appreciate how hard they Lopez for two innings of rehef do uble on lhe combination 2-7
worked durin g the fir st four work
and the crowd of 4,112 bet!
weeks "
Fred Norman, the second $589,359.
The annual Red-White Cmcmnat1 p1tcher , took the
game cubninates the spring defeat.
drills on Saturday, May 5, in
TI1e T1gers pay the Boston
OhiO Stadium.
~ed Sox at Wmter Haven on
Ohio State starts its 19JI( '11lesday afternoon before resehedule at home agalnst turmng to Detrmt.
Syracuse on Saturday, Sept.
8, and fa ces Mmnesota,
Washintjton State and UCLA Morris did not
m the next three contests.
I'DniiiiS
You' ll Like Our Quolity
Bruce inherits 42 lettermen report Monday
1
\11\VD
W•Y of Doing Business
froin Hayes, mcludmg II
RrMauaa11y·
GMAC FINANCING
regulars led by sophomore
CINCINNA TI ( AP)
WlftUIUUW
992-5342
Pomeroy
quart erba cking whiZ Art Star ting quarterback T1m
Open Evenings 'lili :OO
' 992•5432
&amp;hhchter . !Is a freshman , Morris, who won a fifth year
_rrioiTiillilspiii.mliii
. siii"ii".;·-...
Schlichter established a of football eligibility , did not . ._.Poioiimiieiiroiio•y•,
school record with l,-ll40 total report In spring practice
yards for one season.
Monday at the University of
To shor e up Schlichter's re- Cmcmnatt
'
ceivmg corps, Br.uce has 1 Coach 'Ralph Staub said
sw1tched Gary Williams and Morns wid him he was still
· Steve Lam b from defensive makin g up his mind .
.
However . quarterback coach·
back to w1de rece•rer
In another b1g position Dana Bible said "He told me
chan ge , starting ofrensi ve he wasn't com~g back "
tackle Ke1th Ferguson will
Morris set a school record
wor k at outs1de lineback~r , last season by throwing four
trymg Ill f1ll tho vac~nc1~s touchdown passes in a single
created by the graduatmns of game against Southwestern
Kelton f')ansler and Paul Louisiana Morris also comRoss.
pleted 139 passes for eight
Bruce has switched Mark tuchdowns and 839 yards last
We ask the right questions. We dig for every
l·:berts from split end Ill the season .
He won an extra year of
honest deduction and credit. We take the
secondary, Dave Phillips
from center to offensive eligibility because he did not
time needed because we want to be sure
tack,le and Joe Smith from' pl ay 10 gam es in his eorly colyou pay the smallest legitimate tax. That's
the defensiVe lmc t11 center. lege years

The D~Ur Sentinel

Opening day tickets

are still available '

Tigers whip
Reds, 5-l

so

·~~~·

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'4295

KENTUCKY
FRI_EO CHICKEN

-Karr &amp; VanZandt

au

FAMILY

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''We11take
all the time

.needed to

.the job right~'

anpther reason why H&amp;R Block should do
yotir taxes ... whichever form you use, short
or long,

IN THE

when you come.

earned run average. The\.31year -vid Capra was trymg to
r pgam his job after surgery
; hat side lined the nghthancler for most of la st
sea son
Elsewhere, the Boston Red
Sox sent p1tc hers Allen
H1ple) and John Tudor and
ouHielder Gary {Jancock to
Pawtucket
iii'
the
International League . The
Seattle Mariners sent first
baseman Charlie Beamon Ill
Spokane of th e Pacific Coast
League and at the same time
added outfielder Joe Sunpson
to c·om plete thr1r rostPr work

1976

.

FREE

Mu·etlw llu reup1 ent ot t ile
.latm.•s P Dawson award as
rill' Yanks ' outstand ing
fl •tr kl e 111 spring tratmng
('d iiiP thts season. 1,1ey' ve
Jumed a fonmdable staff th~ t
mcludes Cy Yowtg winner
Hon Gutdry ,-Ed F tgueroa and
Ca tfi sh Hunte r
Be attie wa sn't the only
Yankee In go. The World
l l1 ampions also sent rookie
p1tcher Ron Davis and
outfielder Tommy Cruz In
Columbus
Brett, an 11-year major
leetbrue veter an, had a J..5 ,
record last year with a 4.95

umpires, who have dared, ~I calL'" of some poor adv1ce,
last , to ask for their share of . they are in the middle of a
,
flve yea r
co ll ec ti ve
lhe pie.
It's fine with the men 'who hargainmg a gr eement which
rWt lhe sport that lhere ;,u-e mcludes such goodies as "Job
benchwarmers with $100,000 security," a tidbit the bosses
contracts earning more than llJssed their way in the last
twice lhe salary of the highest negotialtons
paid umpire. Benchwarmers
Do you know what their job
are , after all, players and m security clause reads'' It says
The New Baseball, you just that after the leag ue
don't mess with the players. president fires an wnp , the
Fooling with lhem is like tug- ump can appeal hi s d•sm•ssai
gmg on Superman's cape. lt to the league 's highe st
is~ll-adVIsed ~nd it gets you
the same
authority nothing but trouble . Umpires, president who just handed
on the other hand , are him the pink slip.
,
another story.
What could be fairer than
The umps are easy targets, that'
available and vulnerable . BeNow any union that colild

aid

' Computer Analysis of your hearing aid to see
11 If's operating according to Factory
Specification s.

"eptember stretch , added a
VIctory m the AI. playoffs and
U&gt;pped off the year with a
Wor-ld Ser1es trawnph over
the Ills Angeles Dodgers.
The dec1swn to drop the t&gt;foo t-6 righ t-hande r wa s
predicated more on lhe lop- ,
to-bottom strength of' the
Yankee staff. rather th an
Heatll e ' s modest sprtn g
record of 04 with an earnednm aver age of 6.25
Th e Yankees added three
pitchers to th elf staff m lhe
offseason - Tommy John ,
t.uis Ti~ nt and Paul

Spring drills un d erwaythc

·WINDSOR WCKS, Conn .
· - Marllhall Holman rolled
72.
,Harold -W. "&lt;;;ar~er, Neva
1,9!3 for eight games to grab
1 Police Chief William the lirll. round lead in the Gardner, Robert Fetty,
Henrikson said the football $125,000 BPAA U. S. Open.
Wanda Fetty to Robert Fetty,
executive was dragged out to
Holman leads veteran Dick Wanda Fetty, Parcels ,
sea by a heavy undertow. He Ritger by six points, while Rutland.
said police were called at defending U'l' S. Open
Fred Riggs, Lutchle Riggs
about 2 p.m. EST.
champion Nelson Burton Jr. to Roger ·Adams, Right of
BOSTON - New England is third with 1,855.
Way, Bedford.
Patriots
Coach Chuck
· Joe Berardi, of Pearl
Richard K. Douglas, Joyce
Fairbanks, who tried to quit River, N. Y., tossed lhe only L. A. Douglas to Roger
pnor to lhe National Football 300 game during the morning Adams, Right of Way,
U!ague play-offs, Is free to competituin and was tied for Bedford.
,
take the head coaching job at sixth at 1,826.
·
Ola St. Clair to Roger
the University of Colorado,
COLLEGE FOOTBALL - Adams , Right of Way,
Palriots owner William H.
BLACKBURG, Va.
Bedford.
Sullivan said.
H. C. Dawkins, Royal
Henry Smilh, a wide receiver
Colorado will pay an on the Virginia TecH football Carney to Roger Adams,
Wldisclosed portion of the team, was charged with rape, Right of Way, lebanon.
sodomy and forcible entry in
Pomeroy Forest Products,
connection wilh a March 8 Div. of Lyons Sawmill and
incident M a girls' dormitory. Logging, Equip. &amp; Supplies
No tr1al date has been set Inc. to Facemyer &amp; Sabnons
yet and no lawyer appointed Lumber Co., Ins., 12.7 acres,
for Smith, a freshman from Salisbury.
Rt 1, Middleport, 0 .
Danville, Va ., wbo is being
992·6173
held in the Montgomery
Carol Tannehill to Richard
County jail in lieu of $15,000 R. Smith, Jo Ann Smith; Lilt,
bond.
Middleport.
As low as
Smith earlier had been
WUIIam B. Boston. Edith L.
charged with an aUempted
Sq. Yd.
' rape
in the school's
New
architecture building the
'
same night as the other 11 · has been set oo that
Alriving )'leekly
incident. A trial date of April charge'
COLLEGE BASKETBAlL
COLLlWE PARK, Md. University of Maryland
campus police say they
arrested
senior
Larry
Gibson, a member of
Maryland's basketball team,
- ~ ,. ;,;:t
1
last Friday on charges of
' breaking and entering and
r:o-. ~':4 .:&gt;..~:malicious destructi on of
property .
The police sa1d lhat Gibson
just look at all these· FREE Services
was arrested at about 3 a.m.
I•'riday after pollee received a
Your hearing aid cleaned thoroughly usln'
Factory Approved techniques .
report of two individuals
erawllng through a window
Your earmotd cleaned Ultra-Sonically with
into a building on the College
special equipment designed for this purpose.
Park campus .

?::.~1,1

league roslers as team s
moved to get down Ill the

fo ur uf SIX dec iSIOil S down t he

•
Hard line taken · with umpires

remaining four years on
Fairbanks' $150 ,ooo-per sea901l Patriot contract as
pari of lhe aetUement,' said
Sullivan.

\f~.·,}~{fJ IN FOR A'SPRING Cl£ANING'
A.:':;;" · at our .

Ht•attlt.' wos u11c o~ severe:tl
players cnt fr om major

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OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp; Sat.
9 A.M.·5 P . M.
PHONE 173-9128

�I

.

,

5

4- The D~ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Tuesday: Aprll3, 1979

By BIU. VALE
Assuciated Press Writrr
CIN CINN ATl ( API
Game fish near Pittsburgh ?
Bass in the Kanahwa River at

c

Umrleston . W.Va .''
The . e ight -state ag-..n cy
which looks after water
quality of the Ohio River
foW1d them - and more -

SORRY!
Due to .activities c·onnected with the truck strike, the
following -Items on today's Fruth Pharmacy insert, either-

have NOT BEEN DELIVERED or are available only In
very limited quan11ties.

·

·

12" table top grill
18" circular grill
Masking tape .,,. x 60 yds .
Grass Mat

'

Sharp Calculator no. EL-1071

·, .•

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1
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Personal Care Appliances

caTgon· Bath Beads
Massengill DispOsable Douche

•

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.

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•

._,AN. SEWELL
1 · ed p·layer. B.ut they didn't have
.,
loyal· to Perez?" exp am
;\P Spart~ Wriler
· fellow expatriate Pete Rose. to treat me the way they did.
DAY'I'C&gt;NA BEACH, Fla. , 'Others agree tha~ , Pere2 The way they were treating
.(AP) ,.J IJ'cir&gt;y Perez, a clutch- held a unique leadership me, they let me know they
h •' tt·mg '"' " I ugger ,
was niche on the team be cause he. di'dn'l want me any more,"
·
I
'
k
f'
·
b
o VlOUS y a ey •gure m t he got along well with the Perez sa1'd ,· n a ,recent
· C\)l)cinnati Reds' rise to American
players
and interview at the Expos'
p(,wer. Bu't two years after exerted a fatherly, calming spring hOme here .
" I had a few words somehis
departure,
some influence on the Reds' yo~mg
, .obserV~rs ilow say he may . Latin players.
times . I
never
want
have been the most integral
The last two seaS&lt;lJis, the .. problems, but they hurt me.
cog of the Big Red Machine. Reds have fallen behind U&gt;s
"In the major leagues, if
The
C in c inn a t i Angeles early and neyer you aren't starting, you are
management, wanting to give made a truly threatening supPosed to come to the park.
young Dan Driessen full challenge, and with Rose and early for batting practice .. In
playing time, traded Perez to -.ager Sparky Anderson all my career, I didn 't have to
Montreal before the 1977 gone, they have the look of a
to the park early .
season . Neither of the rebuilding team.
_"But '!'Y last year in
pitchers received - Woodle
Perez, a senior citizen with ·' Cinomnatl, I would go at the
Fryman and Da]e Murray the promising _ yo~mg Expos, same time, )lnd some player
panned out in a Reds' said while he has many would come over and say,
W1iform .
friends on the Reds he has no 'Hey, Tony, you are late . You
Wliile Driessen has hit and · ~fmpathy
fo~
· the ar~ not playing today.'
.
fi~lded as expected (although management that phased
I have been rn the maJor
his average ' iailed off last him out painfully after 12 leatl,"es too long for that. I '
year after a pair of injuries), years of service.
don.! need S?me player
"The last two years I was in COJnmg to me w1th a srmle on
the loss of Perez seemed to
sap some of the Reds' spirit. Cincinnati, I wasn 't happy his faee and saying, 'Tony,
"When Tony was traded, with the · way they were you · are not playing to$y.'
we lost a good, clutch hitter. playing me. They were They could h;lve let me know
But we also lost a popular · playing me against certain the day before each day when
player, a team leader . Tony pitchers, or in certain I wasn'l playing, " P~rez said.
· had worked hard for the Reds ballparks they wouldn't play
a ll his career : and that me. In all my career. [ had l&gt;t\ Y fONA BEACH: Perez
showed how much ·they never heen played like that. . said.
appreciated it. Were the Reds
"Driessen is a good young
. Perez, batting in the
middle
of powerful lineups
!}- ..
.that resulted in four National
League champronships and '
two World Champi&lt;lnships,
LOS ANGELES (API "C arroll Hose h bloom didn't like being discarded.
Carroll Rosenbloom, the Los played · a major role in the But he's happy in Montreal.
Angeles Ra~' owner who L erqwth and success of the .
"! didn'fwant to leave Cindrowned while cacatloning in National Feotball League, cinnati until they treated me
Florida, was known by his both through the perform· like that. But l like Montreal,
friends and associates as a ·ance of • the teams be because this is a young team
Shrewd businessman, a rebel, groduced and through hlB that is going to be good. I
and a man " who never left active participation in the know I can help make it
any...stone untumed as lar .. as . !&lt;;ague's dec:lslon • making better," 'Perez said .
processes ,!: s~id
NFL
"In Cincinnati,
they
helping people."
Rosenbloom, 72, drowned &lt;;Ommissioner Pete Rozelle, showed me that I was just
Monday after he was dragged who had more than a couple here to do a job. When my
out to sea by a heavy W1der· of rW1·ins with the feiS!Y
tow in Golden Beach, Fla., Rosenbloom.
police said.
Rosenbloom and his wife,
One of the National Georgia, were staying at a
Football League's most rented house in the exclusive
visible and eontroversial Mi~mi-area resort city .of.
team .owners during. the Golden Beach. Pollee Chief
league's past three decades WllHam Henrikson said of·
of remarkable growth in fleers were called after
prominence, Rosenbloom Rosenbloom was dra81!ed out
owned the Baillmore Colts to sea by the undertow.
. from 1953 untll early in 1972.
Rosenbloom, a Baltimore
Then he trad!'d them outright native whose. love of the
for the Rams in a unique beach influenced his deicslon
sports deal.
to move to llls Angeles,
wasn't one to tiptoe around
controversy or avoid con· •

"

FRUTH PHARMACY
Point PINsant, W. Va .

GallipOlis, Ohio

- ~:::;::::::::::::::::::::
1

ANE ,

JEWELRY

go

for

ST. CHRISTOPHER .
·Sierling silver m~l with

stainlns steel ch~•n ,

two seasons , he made mental
errors he badn!t in the past.
"I have-beard people say
that , but 1 don't thmk it is
1 think th
1
1
rue
.
·
ose
peop
" p e
5 hollld ·as k Davey ,.&gt;,
said. " I think if the Reds erez
had
traded me in his first few
·t
ld h
years, 1 wou
ave hurt
Davey. But he has grown. He
is a star now . I don 't think he
needs me now ."
Pere2, a JQ.year..,ld native
of Cuba, has found that he
prefers the city of Monireal·to
Cincinnati .
''The people are warm
there, they are more like
Latins. I'm not ripping
Cincinnati, but Cinciimati is
an ilmerican city. The people
are different," he said.
Manager [lick Williams
noted
that
Perez's
, contribution s transcend his
averages of .2a3and .290with
169 RBI over the last two
years.

"He's a great person . He's
weiHiked , he 's good with the
young player s," Williams
said.
" He .isn 't a boisterous type
of person, but he is·a .Jeader.
He leads by example,"
Williams said. "I can see why
the. Cincinnati players were
so unhappy to see him leave.''

Rosenbloom drorming victim

CROSS PENDANT
Fil agree de s"lgn in

IDENT.8RACELEtS

Gold $34.95

Spai'~!ing .s erpentine

status

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From
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GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
court st.

Pomer~y, 0 :.

n~::::::::::::::::::~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.;-.,;,;;ii;j
'

/.

DOlT
HAVE

..,
·~

Drive in to Bob E~ans and ·lake
home some finger lickin' good Chicken from the ColoneL Pi~k up dinner
after work. You 'll see us on Eastern
Avenue. Don't .drive by. Dr.ive irl.
•

'&lt;t'

~

"

i

'DRIVE IN ·

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON~T DO IT;'
I

10 MIG

'

M

d

·

45

33 .577

43 34 .558

11/1

43 36 .544 2'1&gt;
30 48 .385 15

29 49 .372 16

New Orleans 25 54 .316 20lf'2

Western Conference
Midwest Division
Kan. City
45 34 .570
Denver
M 3~ :564

lf2

·
r. an Mrs. Arthur Orr of Milw.
37 42 .468. 8
·· Chestervlsltedatthehomeof Ind iana
36 43 .456 9
... Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and Ch icago
29 50 .367 16
PaCific Division
'family on . Sun~ay. .·
50 28 .641
Mr ; -and Mrs. Arthur Earl Seattle
Phoenix
·48 30 .615 2
. JohnsoncaUedatthehomeof ,LosAng.
44 33 .571 51f&gt;
44 34 .564 '6
•Jdr. llhd Mrs . Douglas Port.
Johnson of Racine on Sunday. San Diego
42 37 .532 8'12 ·

Angie Hill of Racine was a

i guest of Sheryl · LeAnn
Johnson Friday evening.
f" Mr. and Mrs. Donald
•. Pierce of Athens, Mr. and

: Mrs. James Circle of New
: · Haven, W. Va .,spentSW1day
• with Mary Circle.
'

Sheryl I.e' Ann Johnson
: spent· Sunday with her great-

•

; grandmother, Mrs. Dean
.• Brinker. So nice to have her

r to spend the day.

• There were 35 present for
~ Sunday school March 25.
~ M
d M
w·
• Ca !ret. anf Rarsin.
lllitarp
r on o
c e spen a
•

: recent evening with Mr. and

'• Mrs. Aithur Earl Johnson
•• and family and Betty Van·

~-t M~~~er~·"..
,,"

~:-~

....

Golden S1.
35 44 .443 1511'2
x- clinched division

Monday's Games
No ¥amos scheduled
uesday •s Games

Denver at New Jersey, (n)
San Antonio at Cleveland,

·(n

.

Was h .ong t on a t Mil wau kee.
lnl
.
Houston at New York, (n)
Los Angeles at Chicago, tn)
Boston at New Orleans. tn)
Detroit at Golden State, tnl
Seattle at Portland , (n)
WedneSday's Games

Milwaukee at Atlanta, (n)
Houston at Philadelphia.
In) ·
Boston at Washington, (n)

New Jersey at San Antonio,
In)
·
Los

Angeles

at

KanSas

Cl1_);· In)
·
Ieve Ian-d a t 1n dl ana. 1n)
Portland at Phoen ix, (n)

By The Associated.Press
Nationa·l Hockey League
'C~mpbell Con~[!rence
Patri(k Division.
w I t pU gf gax -NY

lslandors

l

47 15 14 10

·

38 20l

Phila . 39 23 15 9 · 74 234
NY Rangers
40 27 10 90 09 275

Atlanta 40 29 7 87 311 268
Smythe Division
x ·Chicago

27 3 4 15 69 230 2M

vancouver

·

24 42 12 60 2t3
St. Louis 17 48 12 46 241
Colorado 15 52 10 40 200
Wales Conleren.co
Adams Division
&gt;, Boston 42 22 13 97 304
Buffalo 35 27 15 85 264
Toronto 33 32 12 -78 255
Minn .
27 38 11 65 249

).

Ch icago (A) 12, texas 10
Ch icago ( N) 3, Milwaukee 2
Cleveland a, Qakland 7
Detroit 5, Cincinnati 1 .
California 11, San Diego 9

50 16 11 111 323 19'1
Pitts .
34 30 13 81 272 269
LosAng . 33· 33 11 77 279 275

Pittsburgh v~. New York
IN) at St. Petorsburg; Flo .
p hlladelphia vs. Minnesota

st. Louis vs . -(incinnati at
Tllmpa, FJa.

Detroit 22 39 16 60 247 287
Wa sh. 22 40 15 59 259 324
&gt;&lt;_clinched division

at Orlando, Fla .
Texas vs. Baltimore at
Miami , Fla .
,

Monday's Gam•
New Y~rk Rangers 5, Los

at

Angeles 4

Tuesday's Games
Los Angeles at washington .
(n)
Atlanta at New' York

Detrolt vs. Boston
Winter Haven . Fla.

Syracuse vs . Toronto at

' NEI\' Ili{EMI•:N, Ohio ( 1\PJ
Nell! llreonen Speedway,
City.
0
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS the lhird,,ldest continually
- Sent Curtis Charles; ln - used auto racing facility in
fl.elder, to the.i r minor league !he naiion, is again becoming
camp.
a dirt track for the 1979
FOOTBALL
ieas(ln.
National
Football
League
SfortMsTonradnasay'sctlons
Owner Earl llatles ·has orDENVER BRON c'OS By he Associated Press
Signed Larry Canada , full - dered the asphalt surface re·
BASEBALL
back. to a series of thr ee one- moved for replacement with
American League
year contracts. Signed Curtis
BOSTON RED SOX
Minor, cornerback, to a free a dirt surface. 'fhe irack,
Optioned Allen Ripley and agent Contract.
built in the 192Qs, was
John Tudot , pitch~rs ; and
ST. COUIS CARDINALS originally dirt before being
Gary Hancock, outfielder , to Traded Roger Finnie, of· paved in the mid-19608.
Pawtucket of the
In - fenslve lineman, to the New
· Baltes said t he cost of the
ternatlonel League.
Orleans Saints tor 1979 and
project will be $115,000, and
CALifORNIA ANGELS 1980 draft choices.
Asked waivers on Ken Brett,
he hopes to have it ready for a
HOCKEY
pitcher. ·
National
U.S. Auto Club spring car
CLEVELAND INDIAN S Hockey League
race
on Sunday, April 29.
Placed David Clyde, pitcher,
WASHINGTON CAPITALS
/
on the 21 -day disabled• llsl.
- Called up Craig Patrick .
NEW YORK YANKEES forward, from Tufsa of the '
Optioned J im Beattie, pit · Central Hockey League .
COLLEGE .
cher, to Columbus of . the
International League. Sent
DARTMOUTH - Named
Ron Dit!VIs, pitcher, and . Tim Cohane head basketball
Tommy Cruz, outfielder , to coach .
Columbus.
EASTERN MICHIGAN ·SEATTLE MARINERS Named Jim Boyce head
Sent Charlie Beamon , first baskelball coach.
baseman, to Spokane of the . SAN DIEGO STATE ·Pacific Coast League.
~=
Natlanalleague
ATLANTA
BRAVES _

Waived Buzz

Ca

.

Boston at Toronto, (n)

at Clearwater •. Fla.

Martinet.

Pittsburgh vs. Chicago (AI
a 1 Bra denton, FIa .
Georgia Tech at Atlanta,

Moreland, catcher, and John
Poff, first basem~n. ·to
Okl
h
Ct
f
·
a oma
I Y o the

Atlanta at New York
Rangers, (n )
Minnesota at Chicago, (n l
..

••

Did yoo ev~ feel that the
forgotten man was walking .
around in your shoes?

' .

..· TRY OIJR

pra, p itcher .

Wodnesday's Games
Detroit at Montreal, (n)

Chlcotgo at Minnesota, (n)
Pittsburgh at Sf. Louis, (n)
Colorado at Vancouver. tnl

crown .

Named Dave Gaines head

Sent Jamie Easterly, p itcher,
and Eddie Miller, outfielder,
to Rlchmond of the In ·
terCnlaNtlcon1NaiNLAeTagueR. ED. S _
1
Sent Harry Spilman, In fielder. and Don Werner,
catcher • to Indianapolis of the

Islanders. (n)

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) The Women's Ohio State Golf
Association is changmg ita
dates for the 1979 state· &amp;rna·
teur tournament to July 16-20
at Elyria Country Club.
.Jeannie Flockenzier,
secretary• reasurer for the
association, said the dates
were changed from July 9-13
because of a conflict with the
club. Joan Comisar of
Cincin nati won the 1978

basketball coach,

Dunedin , Fla .
Cleveland vs. Oakland at
Scottsdale, Ariz.
los Angeles vs. Chicago
( N) at Mesa , Ariz,
·
. San Drego State at ·san .
Diego, (n )
Wednesday's Games ·
Baltimore vs . St. Louis. at
S.t . Peter 'sburg, Fla.
Minnesota vs. Philadelphia

s.~a•tt•le•a•t•s~.a•n~D.Ieg~o•.••ln•l~ ~

........

Pitts burgh 7, Minnesota
•
Houslon 2, Minnesota " B" 0
New York (A) 2, Baltimore

" A" ·6

255
249
241
270

Norris Division
X·Montreal

288
341
320

1Monday' s Games
Atlanta 2. Kansas City 1
St. louis 2, Montreal 1
New York (N) 11 , Toronto 4
Boston 7. Philadelphia 6

San Franc isco 6, Los
Angeles 4 .
·
Tuosday's Gimes
New York (AI at Un lverslty of North Carolina
·Houston vs. Montreal at
Daytona Beacn. Fla .
Atla nla vs . Chicago tAl at
Sarasola. Fla .

EXTRA

CRISPY
....

_KENlUCK. y
FRIED
CHICKEN
· ··

American· Association .

PHI LADELPH lA
PHILLIES - Optioned Jose

I'Dftii!S
""~

pitcher. - Keith

f'au_
ILY RESli'nu
AIIRANT
lUll

Free· HBO 1•8 coming Apri17 w;
•- 8
tch
f
't!
-wa
Oll

. 9... 5432
...

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tn•l. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
A•m•e•r•lc•a•n. .•A•s•so•c•r•a•tl•a•n.
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-~~!~o'l\Th\u;)®~!X1
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nne insurers., like Tha .Contl~
nental Insurance Compariles.
And from the broad range of
policies they offer we ·can help
you select just the Coverage
you need. Bring votor lnosuo·ano'el
problems to the ·
'..•.at
The Insurance Store.

TRY OUR .

EXTRA

CRISPY

l~NTU«;;Y
FR 1_~0 CHICKEN

CRaN'S
' FAMILY RESTAURMT
. 992-5432

Pomeroy,

0.,

SUPER MARKET ':"';OPEN DAILY-9 10 JO,P.M.
SUNDAY 1o·m ·1o· '
&lt;'1

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
S£RVICE·

Federal food

We R-. The

MINUTE

'·

To limit

STEAKS

214 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0,
992-5130 or 992-5139
"YOU DON'T BUY A POLtCY,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

•1••

'.

BROUGHTON .

·

.

ICE.MILK.....................~.~~--99~
~

BROUGHTON

''

FRIDAY

'
'
'

...
••
'

•'
••

DR. PEPPER

~

••

-••
'

PAK
1&amp; oz. .ans.

•

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•...
•
.•

Plus Deposit

79°

REGULAR •• ,........... 99•

l

..

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-...,...
...
'"
"'.
~

GRADE

'

LARGE ··
EGGS

......

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-........

I

~

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••

.....
..-...
..
-.=. ·
....
...
~

with no protection written for you , yotir dream may fall on its face .
,
So how do you prevent such a thing from happening to you? It's simple. See a
lawyer before you sign an offer to purchase. He can make sure that the papers
fully protect you against wasting your hard-earned
money. His services cost far less to ke~p yol( out ofhot
water than to get you out once yol('re m.
· .
·
.
So, before you sign your life or your life's savings.
away, bring the contract to a lawyer. It probably will coat ..
less than you think.
UiJIMI\,N'
.
.

l

set your IMfYer. It Y,ou don't know a lawyer, call the Lawyer Referral Sei'Yiceln Ohio:
.

•.......... ~~ ...... ~.~- ..~ 159
All SeasOn Motor Oil •
QT. 5lk
AMOCO OIL ..• •.••...............•...•........••••
· 39
TIDE- ·K'1ng s·1ze· ...••••..•.•••••.••.••••••••••aox••• $2
~-

}.

.RC or DIET RITE
.

8

· Plus _Deposit

10 LB..BAG
6~
PARTY ICE ···············f·······················

HUNrS TOMATO JUICE ......... ~.PhJ:M •• 6~
KING SIZE

PRODUCE

-·

. .
LBM$
•••••••••••••••••
~

' '

990

1&amp;oz.sn.s. .

•

CARROT~····•·······················~-~~~~•.. •1 oo
MANGOES·········~·········~········· · 4/'1 DO

w

ohlo.· '
bat
stow
.-...1.-...lon

Call Toll Free t-800-~2-6500.

THURS. ONLY

"'••

A house may seem ideal in appearance and price. But if you sign a contract

·

119
CREAM ..........................

DAWN LIQUID DETERGENT••••••~U¥:.'!1!!'M. 894
HYLAND.
,
DOG FOOD ................,Pl!tsm... ~t~.. P!. 5399

w

Bet the purchas~ agreement never
mentioned-the
condition·of the house.
..

ICE

$

1/z .GAL

•

......
,..
.

fierce cpmpetiior, and , his
NFL teams were markedly .
successflil. The Colts bad the
league's best overall record
from 1958-11; · and won the
Super Bowl his final season·

...

VAllEY BELL FESTIVAL

l

at Penn, was known as a

BUTTER'MILK .............. ~.~-~.89 .

ONLYI

·1

v

~v~::~:,~~~~~t;::.

Assig11ed Dan Larson , · pit·
cher . outrigh t to Oklahon1a

Thursday's Game
Univers1ty of Houston at
Houston , (n)

"w•

, as owner:. Th.e Rams won six

8\'euar

45 34 .570 8

San Ant.
Houston
Atlanla
Cleve.
Detroit

*

frontations
In 1963, . an investigation
cleared Rosenbloom of
charges of betting on pro
j football games, but the
episode strained his relation·
Ship with Rozefie.
In 1970, ~ftm; Rosenb!Ojllll
and Colts' Coach Don Shula
· had a dispute and Shula V!'t
· to the Mlarili 'Dolphins, tJ\e
Baltimor.e : owner accused
"t Miami of tampering. In '1975,
Ro~nbloom was fined by •
I Ro(e!)~ fQr. prjtlcidnll .game
· officials. A year later, the .
· owner accused the com·
· missioner with deliberately
scheduling a Rams' game at
: the start of Yom Kippur, the
; holiest · Jewiab holiday.
· Rosenbloom', a former .
halfback and baseball pitcber

consecutive division titles,
but failed each time to sur vive the playoffs - a source
of great disappointment for
Rosenbloom.
- He was the major stock·
holder in Warner Com·
muhicatlons and had oil
drilling lllterests, but Rosen·
blOom's first love was foot·
baU. "That othet stuff is no
fun,'' he said.
Rosenbloom Is survived by
son Steve, 34, whose title with
the Rams is special assimant
to the presl!lent; sons Daniel ·
and Chip; ·and daughters
Lucia and •Mrs. Suzanne
Irwin, in additlon to his wife. ·
f'uneral arrangements are
pending. ·

57 25 .675

New Jersey
36 41
16
New York ...., 31 49 ,388 22112
Boston
28 49 .364 24
Central Division

:r~~~~~~~

3, 1979

.46a

.. C.rrn.el N,..,...·

differing water levels.
"I'm not saying that it will
return to what it was in the
beginning, but the fish are
coming back, " said Keyes.
1
But would he eat fish from
the h~vy industrialize&lt;i·Ohio
River VaUey? ·
" I certainly do . I'm no
health expert. There's no
evidence to show cause .why .
they Should be :banned ," said
the water biologist.

the Reds. Some observers
said that while Venezuelan

llv

Corning 20 pc . sets
Cheese puffs

Caramer corn

~-~:~h,

..

sampled were fowu.l to be examined b) the r'ood and
" It is a positive thing,' ,. back.
that the murky river is· mostly free of contaminants. Drug Adininistcation . The Keyes said of the improved
Wh y? B,etter management
Game and fresh water fish results showed not one fish quality of the r iver .
making a comeback .
of sewage, mining wastes,
.; It was quite a surprise, " species were found making a eontained organics or he ~vy
He said large quantities of fa rm runoff and industrial
sai d John Keyes·, senior comeback all along the · metals exceeding guidelines shad wer e sw3rming near .. wastes, · said Keyes. The
sur veillance specialist of the waterway.
for hwnan conswnption.
Evansville , Ind . There were water is getting cleaner.
For the first time in years
Ohio River Valley Water
The contaminates. sought s unfish and drUms spotted
" You know the Ohio River,
they foWl~ them in the upper included polycholorinated near Galipolis. And, bass evero before the rapid
Sanjtation Commission . . :.
Th e agency_ got two third of the river from West byphenyls- known as PCBs, were foW1d in the Kanahwa development .of the · 1800s,
surprises in its 1978 Ohio Virginia · to Pennsylvania . . pesticides arid mercury . ·
River , which feeds into the never was a pristine
The highest PCB level de- Ohio River.
River Fish Survey at Ia Keyes said pollution, silt and
stream," said Keyes. He said
locatio.ns of the 900-mile mine add had driven them tected in a fiSh was 2.1 parts . Paddle fish, a · species of it always was filled with silt,
waterway from Pittsburgh to away half a century ago.
per million, far below levels longbilled catfish which have muddied with floods and bad
. Experts took fiSh samples set by the U.S. Food and Drug
· Cairo, m.
.•
little or no bones, are also '
The', catfish ·and . carp at every pt'int ,anrt "'"'"' thrr
Adrnini~r Htifln
•
batting average goes down, I

.

.~ S AN"j}j1~G§Apru
Eastern Conferonco
All anII t: .Oivision
W. l . Pet. 8GB

Perez believed to have
::.~~::~~~~~Et~\a~~
h
•
·been mazn .cl?g·zn mac zne ~~~r~:~ :,~~icc;'~=~~~~

Rug Runners
Cl~lrol

&lt;~long with · other c vi den t-e

.

National
Basketbaii ·Associafion
• At A Glance
.By The AssOc;lated Press

Murky Ohio River making Comebac
.,

T

The Dail Se .

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Kids!Colof these pictures and you can win

0

COLORING .·CON:rEST
'

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lWO·
1st

I. Just ('olor one or more of the drawings on tht'st' Jlages, fill
in tlw hlanks and takt' your t'ntry to tht· sponsoring store
hefort&gt;5:00 P.M. , Aprilllth.

PRIZE

'

~

Let's celebrate
His resurrection,
With joyous prayer
and reflection.

'

2. Entries will ht&gt; judgi·d in two different agt~ categories, ages
4-8 and ages 9-12.
3. Children may enter as l)lany pictures as th•·y like hut can
only win one prizt•.
-

$15

'·~ __fu.

Sit down with your croyon·s, hove a good ti
. . . just follow the bunny and -color design

,
'•

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ ____

4. Crayons only may he tist·d to color pictures .

" ~:
ADDRESS --~-~----"'"--'-:o..•~
AGI; _ _ __ •PHON E --.,.---~-

i

ADDRESS ________________~__
AGE ---~-_,PHONE ----

5. Decisions of the judge will he final

o

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TWO

PRIZE

$5

NAME _· ____________________

l
t

Colorful eggs ..•
such fu,n to make,
How glad we are
they didn't break!

3rd

baby bunny and mother ore on their way,
I.Nith bo,nnets and ba skets for the Ea ster Day .
ADDRE$5 ____~~~---------AGE
'PHONE _ _ ___

heritage house OF SHOES

POWEUSPomeroy
SUPER VALU

•

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j

!

l

J

j

.!

l

ADDRESS ____________________

-

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

~GE -~-- PHONE -------

·,

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

:)

,,,,•

Plains

1----~

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This bunny's decked
in hat &amp; cane,
All set to prance
down Easter .lane.
.

When you color
this egg and chick,
Which shades do you.
plan to pick?

l&gt;:l,i s message of faith on_d peace wi ll abide,
As on inspiration lor all . .. this Easlertide.
NAME _~----- -----~

ADDRESS _·--------------~
ADDRESS
AGE

AGE ·

PHONE

--~P
~H
~O~N~E
~----

--~--

Easter's the time lor prayer and reflection~
In joyous remembrance of His re surrection.
ADDREss·_~---;~~:;-------­
AGE

PHONE - - - - -

RUTLAND FURNITURE

TWIN CITY GATEWAY ··

NAME __,··:.____ _ __ __ _ __
ADDRESS ____________________
AGE _ _ __ PHONE - - - -

ADDRESS _·----~~~--------~

}.

·,&lt;··,.

ember the meaning of the Easter Occasion,
.,....,,_ your prayers and hymns to praise Him .
NAME ~~-----------------­

NAME;:;:;.;:----------- - ---"-_:_
AGI: - - - , - - - - -PHONE _ ___

HOME NATIONAL BANK

Chicks in a puddle
don't get Wet,
With em,brellas up,
· they're all set!

_

PAT HILL FORD

.GOESSLERSPomeroy
JEWELRY STORE

ADDRESS ----...:,--------~
AGE
PHONE ---.,.-----

One of thi s Easter bunny' ~ favorite things,
Is to swing from a basket of eggs, as he's ing s.

. NAME ______________

---

~------

ADDRESS ___________________
AGE
PHONE _ _ ___

FARMERS BANK

.THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

Sing out, sing out
loud and clear,
The glorious
Easter day is here!

•'1
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•1

,.~

ADDRE$S ________~----~---AGE •____ _ PHONE _ _ __

••

DAVIS QUICKEL INSURANCE

I

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I.

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We bless the palms
Palm Sunda)',
When Easter's
just one week away!

on

The Messiah has risen to heaven above ...
Celebrate Easter with kindnf?SS and love.
NAME __. ---~-__:____

. NAME ..,.,-,,------~----­
ADDR~SS _ _~~~ ,-----AGE _ _ _ _ PHONE .

County Savings &amp;Loan
MEIGS

BltANC~

The bunn ies or!_3 holdi'r'lg the lily flowers,
Jo prqtect them from the April sho"fers.

.

______ PHONE

Pomeroy

'

•

!

After the-bunnies
get hats to. ...,ear,
They cut out two holes
for each ear!

____ _

The joy of thi s Holy Holiday brings to mind,
Easter bunny didn 't know how to catch,
baby chicks, when the Easter eggs hatched . . ·A renewed spirit of love for all mank ind .
ADDRESS ~ ­

~

NAME --~-- -- ,

I

- · ---·PHONE • __

_
_ __

'FRANCIS'fLoRIST ~ I

_

NAME ~,--------------~----·ADDRESS ________~~-------' AGE _.-_ _ _ ___,PHONE .,........----

.VILlAGE PRARMACY ·
Micfiltepon

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0

NAMif __ --------- __ ~--------~
ADDRESS . _ ... ~
______ -----------AGE
" _ ~ .. _ PHONE ------ ~--

NAME _ -~ ---~---­

_ • _

ADDRESS --·--AGE _ _ _ __

FABRIC SHOP

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ADDRESS ~-----~--.---~-_:__ _
AGE

J

On that miraculous .
Easter mom ••
Our beloWd Lord
was then reborn.

NAME
~-------- _
ADDRESS _____.,...:..______ _-_ ... _
P.GE
PHONE ____ ------·

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
· Pomeroy

AGE'

-

PHONE
' -,

BAKER FURNITURE

.MARGUERITES SHOES
Pomeroy

Middleport ·

•·

Gifts of flowers, '
Joy and laughter,
,Remember this Easter
forew:r after.

''

I

W:r-___;__ _ ____;_~--fP~I ,' ..
NAME ____ __
ADDRESS __ ___~c--~
· -·~--~--AGE _
_ _ ____ PHONE - - - - - - " -

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP .'
Pomeroy

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Tu&lt;!Sduv. A.ori13, 1979

,

Club ·diScusses assistance to crusade

'9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleix&gt;rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday ,llpril 3,1979

will do oral juding judging of the Holiday IM on April 26, 1 injury to plants and what can letting them settle. She said
the show be~lnnlng at I p.m. p.m., was read. Mrs. Roy be done about it presented by that seedlings need sterile
on Saturdav.
Holter will present the pro- Mrs. Canaday. She noted that material, that now is the time
Aa for ihe evergreens at gram.
salt Is toxic to growing plants ' &gt;divide perennials, aild that
Miles Cemetery, the civic
The spring meeting of und does much damage along if it is dry and windy, plants
committee will handle Region 11 will be held at the driveways and sidewalks will need water. She also
necessary replacements. Meigs Inn on April21, it was near homes. Spray with salt discussed fertilizer and sug·
Members agreed to make .aimounced. A report was mixtures, she . noted, will gested spreading.corrunercial
table arrangemimts for the given on the therapy program damage or destroy as far as · fertilizer over the entire
Pomona Grange banquet to at .tbe GallljJolis State In- 30 f~t along roads. Plants flower garden. April, she
be held at the Salisbury stitute on March 22 by Mrs. that are not killed are damag- said, is clean-up month and
Elementary School on April Harry Williamson, Mrs. ed enough to prevent full once the winter mulch has
20.
. Denison, and Mrs. Eugene growth. Mrs. Canaday been ~oved, then the next
An invitation from Olde Atkins. Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. reported that potting soil step is ·cl~an around each
Village Garden Club, W. P. JarreD reported on hav· which has beach sand in it . plant- removing the dead
GaUipolis, to attend a lun- lng attended the open house · will contain enough salt to foliate
and stalks .
cheon and open meeting at at Amblesldes Nursery on damage the plant. Some Evergreen.s should be set out
March24.
woody plants are more early so that there will I)JI
· M~ting at the home of susceptible than others and plenty of rain while they are ·
~f}:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;::::: ;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;::::: ;:;:;::::::: ::::::;: ;:;:~~:~ , - - - - - - - . , . Mrs. Weber with Mrs.
some siates are making laws establishing themselves. Soil
CELEBRATING 25TH - Mr. and' Mrs. ·BWy Slllilh,
Lawrence Milhoan as the co- of protection against the use preference by plants was also
Lotart Routo 1, celebrated their 25th w~dlng anniversary
hostess, !he 21 club members of salt because of the plant discussed by Mrs. Ljttle.
April !. Th~ couple has slx children; nine grandchildren
Mrs. Chris Diehl ·aild Mrs.
=l:
I answered roll call by naming groWth and the potential
and nine great-grandchildren.
their . favorite flowering damage to windows and Snowden showed nowering
'I
shrub. Mrs. Turner presided . bulldlngs, she noted.
twigs which had been forced:
·
and Mrs. Weber gave devo"Ideas to Save Work Time" The 'hostesses served.
tions using the Biblical ac- from Flower aM Garden refreshments using an Easter
TUESDAY ·
count of the resurrection were given by Mrs. Bernard motif in their decorations.
. SPANKINGSIIAK&amp;'ITEENUP: MAY EVEN
SHAPE HER UP!
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN fr1m Ideals, and an article l..edlie. She said that you can
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
.
Club, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at "The Song of Ongoing Ufe" speild less time mowing the
I have a problem and you caused part of It, but I like you ' the Middleport firehouse. · from t1!e Columbus Dispatch. lawn if the design is free of
anyway. You see, I'm usually in hot water lor some reason I Mrs. Fred , Kessinger and The1club creed and coll~ obetructlo(ls, there are curved comers negotiable without
· Mrs. Rita Harrun will be were given in unison.
1be semi-annual inspection Pauley, senior custodian; with my parents.
.I was grounded for smoking. I think a 14-year-old has the hostesses. Program by Mrs. · Thank you cards were read slowing or hacking the
of Bethel c2 . • International Amy Sisson, junior custonght
to smoke. They don't.
David Bowen. Display of by Mrs. Roy Snowden for mower, and if planting beds
Onle• cf .·~~ 's Daughters, dian; Laura Horsley, inner
That
was
the
weekend
of
tbe
sock
hop
and
I
snuck
out
of
the
Audubon
bird prints by Mrs. money contributions to pro- or mulched areas have a perwas held Saturday afternoon guard, with Kathy Johnson,
house
to
go.
Mom
found
out
and
when
I
returned,
she
said,
'
J
ohn
Davis.
jects of the OAGC. Mrs. manent demarcation to preat the Middleport Masonic pro tern musician, and Man"Young
lady,
I
have
a
good
mind
to
spank
you!"
Which
she
did
·CHESTER
COUNCIL
Turner
also read a thank you vent lawngrass from inTemple with Virginia Green, dy Sisson, pro tern, outer
323
-the
stul_
f
m'
out
of
me
yet.
.
Dau
hters
of
America
Tues:
·
note
from
Betty Mlzlcko for ·vading the cultivated zone.
grand guardian, 'as the in- guard, aild Sara Diddle, a
She satd that wa~ one of those rare .occasions when Rup day g 8 p.m. Practi~e for help received from the .club Mulches are great savers of
choir member.
specting officer.
of weeding and cultivating,
' BOOKMQBILE
Introduced were the guar- would approve . ~ ~td she was wr?:'g- you never approve of receiving national and state for her therapy work at the sbe reported.
Initiated were Unda Riggs
.
SCHEDULE
officers: Good of 6rder com· Athens Mental Health Center.
and Sherry Sayre. Guests in- dian council, Mary Wise, spa~g. She said W~te and:""'· ~I am.
Another
way
to
save
work
Tuesday,
AprU 3- Keno, 3Here
s
the
problem:
if
you
Stde
wath
Mom
and
I
ever
sneak
mitt
t
ha
.
t
t'
Mrs.
Mizlcko
is
retiring
and
troduced were Mrs. William guardian; Bill Quickie, .
11
time
is
to
plan
for
water
3:30;
Reedsville
• Reed's
Flotrdas.taSher aalsond
Hawkins, past grand guar- associate guardian; Sue out a_gain, l1l get another whumpin' .If you ~ide with me, she 'll Initi':ti~n '::i~l e~ .. u~~f,;: ~kedto 00
ouUets
near
areas
where
they
Store,
4-li;
Tuppers
Plains 1
admit
sbf
was
wrong
and
buy
rne
a
pants
swt.
Members
to
wear
white
dian; William Hawkins, past Starr, guardian secretary;
are
needed,
keep
tools
sharp,
Arbaugh
Housing,
5:~:30;
Thank
you
for
helping
me
oul.l've
seen
you
on
TV
and
think
·
,
RuUand
Clubs
for
her
pergrand a~late g~rdian; Audrey Wood, guardian
you are great. Good luck with your new book, Helen.- LOVE
XI
GAMMA
'MU sonal gifts received at a and for insect-prone Chester Methodist Chureh,
Donna Bauman, past grand treasurer; and Vickie Y
A, JUDY
CHAPTER, Beta $igma Phi farewell party given bY her vegetables, mulch with 6:45-7:45; Riggs Addition &amp;suardian; Paul DarneD, past Houchins, directress of DEAR JUDY:
Sorority, 7:30 Tuesday night Richland Avenue ·Club, aluminum foil. She also sug; 8:30.
1
grand associate guardian and music; and asociate guard
You
really
make
it
tough
(what
with
all
those
good
comat the Gas~· offi~' Cultural Athens. Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. gested using vegetation · Thursday, April 5 past associate guardian of council members, Carol
pllme~~ts) to dn you out of a pants suit, but we agr~ with your . program, K~pang Score" Nicholson and Miss Ruby killers early in the spring on · Salisbury, 2:15-2:45; Latari,
Bethel 62, and Kathy Sisson, promoter of sociabili- mother:
this is one time a last-resort spanking may be just by Mrs ..Carolyn Gruser and Diehl attended that party.
graveldrivesandpaths.
3:15-3:45; Racine - Home
Johnson, past guardian of ty; Merri Ault, custodian of
Ideas
for
April
were
given
Nat'! Bank, 4-4; Racine •
what
the
daughter
"ordered":
You
asked
for
strong
measures
Mrs.
Ins
Payne.
Marilyn
The program Introduced by
Bethel 62. Also introduced paraphernalia; Patty Hoff· and you got them. See that they aren't necessary next time! G~eser Anderson, Roberta Mrs. Virgil Atkins began with
by
Mrs.
Russell
Uttle
who
Wagner's
Hardware, 5-6;
were past honored queens of man, promoter of hospiiality; -HELEN
Matdens,
and
Janet
P~vley an an article from Flower suggested prepartion of the Syracuse • Swbnming Pool,
Bethel 62, Usa Morris, Angie Donna Dyer, Promoter of
hostesses.
' and Garden magazine m salt seedbedsbydiggingandthen 6 : 15-3:1~. .
·
Sisson, Merrl Ault, Mandy finance; and Angle Sisson,
SUTTON
TOWNSHIP
NOTE:
FROM
SUE
:
Smoking
at
14
is
dumb.
Why
risk
your
Sisson, and Jennifer Wise. chairman of Epochs.
Truatees Tuesday 8 p.m. at
Dorothy WiD and Bessie health on something that only makes you look like a little kid Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.
l'residlng officers for the
.
lnstpection were Dolly King were the registrars and showing off?
(Next
time,
"Judy's
Parents,"
insist
that
your
daughter S1G N-UP of Syracuse Rousey, honored queen; Julie the pinons were praying hand
study up on the hazards of cigarettes -while she's grounded. ) Minersville Baseball
Byer, senior princess; Susan- replicas.
Association Tuesday, from 5
Money from the coin march
'
na Wise, junior . princess;
p.. to 8 p.m. at Syracuse
DEARRAP:
.
' Brenda Chappelear, guide; went to the Grand Guardian's
Women from seven chur·
Miss Rhoda Hall of the tian 90cial relations.
I niet a guy tJie other night and he is old enough to be my Municipal building .
and Teresa Starr, marshall. project of scholarships. Amy
.
ches
attended
the
amual
Serving on the nominating
EJecta
Circle gave the devoRegistration fee $5.
Other officers in their sta- Sisson, Jeanna Pauley,' and father. He's been married aM divorced.
fellowship
.tea
of
the
B.
H.
Hons
using
"Hidden
committee
were Mrfo.
He wants me to go with him but I'd rather not. I'm afraid of
tions were Ruth Blake, Dolly Rousey were presented
POMEROY Chapter '186, Sanborn MiBsionary Society Treasures" from the book, Sigman, Mrs. Owen, and Mrs.
chaplain, JeaMie Welsh, awards by the grand guar- hurting his feelings though, as he;s reaDy nice. What should I Order of Eastern Star, of the Middleport First Bap- "Touch of Wonder" by Ar- Mary Brewer.
treasdrer; Angie Houchins, dian for obtaining pertitions do?- SWEET SIXTEEN
meeting 7:45p.m. Tuesday at tist Church Mmday nighi,
thqr Gordon. She also read
RefreshmentS were served
DEAR SIXTEEN:
'
first messenge; Cindy this year.
the Masonic Temple.
The guesta were from the the 43rd Psalm.
with .Mrs. ·Searles presiding
Tell
this
mail
the
truth:
you're
too
young
for
him,
so
"Let's
Refreshments of punch and
Parker, second messenger;
MARRIAGE
Discussion Pomeroy Baptist Church, the . The love _gift dedication by at the punch bowl and Mrs.
Jennifer . Wise, third cookies were served. Purple keep it 'just friends.' "Another good response (aild probably program sch~uled for 7:30 Cheshire Baptist Church, the Mrs. Martha Klein was entitl· Owen at the ocffee and tea
messenger;
Zandra and gold colors were carried true): "My parents wouldn~t approve."- SUE
p.m. tonight at Meigs Jwnor .,Heath United Melhodiat, the ed "Love Is ..... " and par· ~· service.
~
"
Vaughan, fourth messenger; out in the decorations of the
High
SChool
by
Rio
Grande
MiddlePort Church of Christ, ticlPQting were, Mrs. Leora
Kim
Pauley,
fifth dining room. A 12::J.l· lun- DEAR SIXTEEN:
College and Community Trinity Church In Pomeroy, Sigman, Miss Hall, ~nd Mrs.
It's
difficult,
turning
down
someone
"old
enough
to
be
your
messenger; · Stephie cheon was served preceding
College has been cancelled. and the Middleport Church of Louise Davis.
father" because young people are conditioned to treat adults
Houchins, librarian; Jeanna the inspection.
CORRECTION
WEDNESDAY
the Nazarene and the United
New officers elected [were
with deference.
MEMBERS of the auxiliary Presbyterian Church.
. JONES BOYS
Miss Hail, president; Mrs.
But wben this man jwnped out of his world into yours, he put of the Middleport Fire
Mrs.
Sarah
Dan
Owen
Klein,
secretary;
Mrs.
Sarah
himself on the level with your peers. So don't feel bad about Dep~rtment planning to
giving him the same ''No, thank you" a teen-ager would get If attend the anniversary presented Mrs. Betty Fultz Fowler, treasurer; Mrs.
.,
wM.elaborated on her trip to Janice Gibba, vice president
·
APRIL2ND
he wasn't right for you. -HELEN
'
dinnerare to meet at the fire Japan, Hongkong, and Korea of missions; Mrs. Katie An·
HOFFMANS
station at 6 :30 p.m. last year. Mrs. Dorothy An- thony, vice president of
2CU. FT. BAG
Wednesday.
thony had the prelude with leadership !ruining;. Mrs .
.
UNITED
Methodist Mrs. Elizabeth Searles, presi- Searles, love gift chairman;
Polly Cramer
Women. Letart Falls Olurch, dent, . giving the welCOIIIC. Mrs. Freda Edwards
SHOULD READ
Thursday, 7:30 pJn. at the 1be group sang "Showers of scholarship chairman; and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kelly,
·~
home
ol
Mrs.
Inez
Hill.
Blessings"
with
Mrs.
Searles
Mrs.
Frances
Smart,
Chris·
5
·'
ABAG
misfortune to break a storm · Middleport, are amouncing
Easter program will be having the prayer.
Keep merigue cool door
window so I slipped a the birth of tbeir fourth child,
presented. Mrs. Ernest
slimpter screen into a large a son, Unden John, born on
Shuler will have the
••
DEAR POLLY- How can I plastic garbage bag, replac· March '!/ at the Holter
THURSDAY ·
,devotion• .
slice a meringue pie without ed.this in the groove and had Medical Center. Their other
POMEROY Olapter 186,
SOUhiEASTEHN Ohio
having the meringue stick to insiant protection from the children are JeneU, Tom, and Order of Eastern Star, Garden Tractor Club will
the knife and ruin the looks of wiild and snow. -HELEN
Lori. The baby weighed seven rwrunage and bake. sale 9 meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the pit•' Also, should mera.m. to 3:30 p.m. ·Thursday the Scout Bulldlng behind the
DEAR POLLY - .To make a poullds, six ounces.
lngu&lt; p •• be kept in the string mop last longer tie
Grandparents are Mr. and and friday at the Masonic firehouse In Chester. All
refrigera.or?- MRS. J.R.
knots in the ends of the str· Mrs. Marvin Kelly, Mid· Temple;in Pomeroy.
interested persons are in·
DEAR MRS. J.R. - The ings before the mop is used dleport, and Mr. and Mrs.
FRIDAY
vited.
following letter from Mlldred thefirst time. I think they last Vincent Dabo, Largo, Fla. ·
HAPPY Harvesters, 1 p.m.
POMEROY LODGE 164, F.
wW answer your first ques- twice as long.- MARGIE
Trinity Church, Friday.
Hnd
A. M ., regular meeting
tion. Aa to the second one a · PoUy wiD send you one of
Wednesday,
7:30 p.m. ·Ali
Service Bulletin from the her signed thank-you
master
masons
invited to atDepartment of Agriculture newspaper coupon clippers if
tend.
says "Refrigerate cream, she uses your favorite
JOSEPH_HilL
THURSDAY
Cllllard or meringue pies and Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
C.u!ADA'S CAPITAL
Joseph
Hill
is
a
patient
at
LAUREL
CUFF BETI'ER
foods with custard fillings her column. Write POU.Y'S
Named after the Dl!taouac Veterans Hogpital not . Mr~. r HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 Thurssuch as cakes, .cream puffs POINTERS in care of this (or Outaouais Indian Tribe),
Hill as waS reported. day, at the borne of Mrs . .Poland eclairs. Do not allow newspaper.
ottawa was founded as Joseph
His
address
is Eighth Jy Eichinger. Mrs. Marjorie
them to stand at room
Bytown in 1827, Located on
floor,
Room
3911,
University Goett to be co-hostess.
temperature alter they cool
the Ontario side of tbe ottawa
SCO'IT TEXTER
.Drive,
Pittsburgh,
Pa. 15240.
slightly. If such foods are c~r­
Scott Texter, North Canton, River border with Quebec,
rled on swruner outings k~p OH, a sophomore at the ·the city was Incorporated · .,.~-...~~Y.il'-.!l&gt;'io...!lll'ii&gt;..!Jo~-!lo~~-...~~!W.
in a cooler with ice or University of Michigan has under its present name in
reusable cold packs until been named to the dean'slist. 1855. It became the capital of
oerved."- POLLY
He is the grandson of Mr. and the Canadian Confederation
DE~ POLLY - Sprinkle Mrs. Alfred White, Rt. 3, . in 1857.
GIFT~
SU88r over · your meringue Pomeroy.
pies before baking. It proSensor Perm
duces a golden brown color
and 'the · meringue will not
EAS'rER CANTATA
Reaular
stick to the ~fe when the pie
Sy·racuse Cluster Choir will
Is cut.
present an Easter Cantata,
00
Keep a clean sponge in the "l.ord of Ule ," by Don
vegetable bin of your Whitman, at the Syracuse
refrigerator and it will ab- Asbury Methodist Church
sorb any .excess moisture. llpril 8, at 1:30 p.m. The
Attendance at the Free
·MILDRED
public is invited to attend.
SPONSORED
BY:
Methodl&amp;t Church Sunday,
' DEAR READERS -I .sug·
.
.
April2
Thur
April
14th
March 25 -was 84. Choir
gest you cut out the following
NORA CROSS
'
'
two Pointers and save them
Nora Cross,l..etart Falls, is members present were 10.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
PhW
Wise
of
for nerl winter so they will be a patient at St. Anthony
Etta Rich1rdson .
handy when · the first bad Hospital. Her address is Belpre attended services at
weather' comes to your area. Room 1001, 1450 HaWthorne the local church slin..y.
Mary Gress
March 25.
-POlLY
Street, Columbus, Ohio.
Mrs. · Kathy PuWns Is a
DEAR POLLY- Most of us
Clthy TOURI
INSTALLA'nON
patient at Pleasant Valley
ate not lucky enough to have
FRIDAY
' J;Iospttal.
snow blowers but I
·Carol Lyons
discovered that gpraying a
Mary Shrilte number 37,
Mr.. Bryan Hysell visited '
snow shovel with furniture Order of White Shrine of relatives here recently.
polish and then wiping a rag ·Jerusalem,
will · have
Ms. Enuna Fo~ received
acrOSH the shovel will keep installation of officers word of the serious Illness of
'
Call Far Appointment
the snow from sticking. This Friday, April 6, at 8 pJn. at her brother-ln-linr, Mr. Ben
.
'
certainly made my snow the Pomeroy Masonic Fox. He is a patient in a
· shoveling easier and I hope It Temple. A business meeting hospital ilt Zanesville.
does the same for others. will be held at 4 p.m. prior to · Mr. Vern Story, who ,js
-CLAIRE
.
the installation . Pntluck · employed in Columbus, spent
77.3-5352
DEAR POU,Y- On a very refreshment s will be S.rved the weekend with his wife,.
..
'
7
cold winter day I had the follnwing ,,u dct ivities.
Fern Dora and John.
RUTLAND--AssiSta nee cent meeting held at
with the Cancer Crusade, Veteran.• Memorial Hospital
discussion on tbe spring where they reeeived the need·
flow ··r show, and ar· ed materials:
rangements for replacing
Mfl\. Margaret Ella Lewis
·shruijbery at Miles Cemetery explained the classes and
were among the topics divisions of the spring nower
discussed at the recent . show ''Spring in Blot)lll" to be
meeting of the Rutland held at the Rutland Methodist
Church, April 28 1111d 29. The
, .Garden Club.
Mrs. Rulph Turner, Mr5. show will be open· for public
James Nicholson, Mrs. viewing from I to 8 p.m. on
Robert Canaday, Mrs. Saturday, April 28, aild from
Harvey Erlewine, Mrs . I to 4 p.m. on Sunday, April
Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Carl 29. Mrs. Jal)et .Bolin, an acDenison, and Mrs. Vernon credited judge of the Ohio
Weber volimteered to solicit -Aasoclatlnn of Garden Clubs,
In Rutland. anrl .tt.... ~i-~ are-

- SPECIAL-

- SPECIAL-

MEN'S BULKY KNIT
STRETCH

,:.SPECIAL-

'

SOCKS

.PANTY HOSE

ME:n 's bulky kni t acry lic-nylon
knlf stretch dress socks in

your choice of a ssorted solid
fas hion colors . Stock up now ! ·

DISPOSABLE
CRICKET

CLEAN SWEEPING
STURDY CORN

LIGHTERS

BROOMS

ONE SIZE FITS ALL
LADIES STRETCH

Ladies' strefch 'nylon. panty
hose. One size f its all. F irst
quality . Comes in the season's
best shades. Stock up now!

.
1
0Q
3
'

'

T~o usands of lights from one
~ ~ lle tt e _
disposab le but ane

Clean sweeping sturdy

l1ghter . Ad jus table fl emes .
Great value. Hu.rr y .

sprtng house cleaning! Four
big days to save!

,,

PAIRS$
FOR

corn
Get ready for your

bro~ms .

39~

·

$157

~CH

Generation Rap :[:.t

-job's Daughters hold :
semi-annual inspection

::

By Helen and Sue Bottel

Social
: : I Calendar I

-APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

/

I.

:l'

Announce birth

r-------1

Social· II
1 Calendar 1

.I
I

FREE DOOR PRIZES
FREE
. FREE EVENING
OF ENTERTAINMENT

Easter Special

Laurel Oiff

'2s.• NO.W

$20

00

All '20 WAVES

$1~

News Notes

LEVI~S

_SHORTS

Men's famous name brand

April Shower of Savln9s!

'11 ~

Special sale . group
new spring and
sborts. Your choice
Shop early for best

~

1.

.•

..

\.-~

TOPS

SLACKS

Ml_sses' ~ I id color' and fancy
kn1t fash•on tops . Exceptional
v!ues . Four big days to save
during Stiffler's April Shower
o{ Savings.

of lad1es'
summer
of colors.
selection.

SPECIAL SALE GROUP ·
LADIES FASHION

Stiffler's April Shower of
Savings! A super selection of
well tailored pants that team
up beautifully with your
favorite tops. Save now!

00

t;r -'---,J \1-

PAIR

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
MEN'S FANCY KNIT

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
MISSES AND JRs.

PO~E~RqY

-

·,...r:.:.=~

ASSORTED
· · ~5" WIDE
-APRIL SI:IOWER OF SAVINGs-

SPECIAl GROUP MEN'S
I ·MAVERICK 1WIL1

JOG SHORTS

believe , large select ion of
miracle and designer cut
fabrics. 44-45" width- dired
from dressmaker workrooms
in . 1112 to 6 yd . pieces. Now's
the t ime to plan your summer
wardrobe.

7·

•4••

PAIR

You'd e&gt;cpect to fa~y $1 .99 yard
for these colorfu calico prints.
. Easy care poly-co tlon and

cottons, ~· · •5" width. Shop
early and save.

bolts.

full

WHITE TEE SHIRTS

•

RUMPLINS

POLYESTER

• INTERLOCK

MUSLIN

and pr ints .

SAVE NOW
FAMOUS MT. M1ST
81x96 COTTON

COATS AND CLARK
SPUN POLY

jNG5-APRIL SHOWER OF
SPEciAL SALE GROUP

MEN'S STRIPE TOP

TUBE SOCKS

THREAD

·QUILT BATTS

Chose. from
wh 'i te and
assorted coldrs. Coats and

Qua li ty f l ll)ng for quilt s.

Clark 100 percent spun poly
thread - 'l25 yard spools. Buy
several at big savings .

ling . Seam less , uniform
thickness - 81x96 quilt size .

Glazene finish for easy hand -

l177EACH

One special sale group of men's white stripe

2

·

PAIR
FOR

.

FASHION JEANS
your cholce of styles.

STOCK UP NOW
48" UTIUTY
UNBLEACHED

Sew ·up fashion savings from
this super select ion of 60"
wide interlock fabrics. Solids

225 YARD. SPOOL.

3 Ill pkg. f479

ONE SALE GROUP
LADIE·s DENIM

Apfll Shower of Savings! One special sale
group of misses blue denim fashion leans In

'

'5~
-APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
MISSES BETTER ,

Sr.eclal purchase! 48" Un·
beach ed utility muslin - at
these prices you ' ll want
several yards. Shop earl/!

NYLON JACKETS

49~

KNIT BRIEFS

save at the same time.

-APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

Slightly polished poly-O&gt;tton
glluze in 42'43" w i dths .
Naturals and . earth tones In
complementing sOl i d s and~;::;;:;.;;:.~
prints . Ideal for blouses ,
lounge and at home en sembles .

3 to pkg.'4"

top tube socks. Now is the time to stock

New for spring! Misses and jrs. tops thllt go
great with jeans or slacks . Take you r choice
now at this low price.

YARD

DOUBLEKNIT
Ever popular· doubleknit now
at budg et prices . Colorful
selection of 60" easy sew
double'kn i t fabr ics. Cut from

FASHION TOPS

$127

MILl ASSORTMENT '
' 60" SOLID COLOR

60" SOLID COLOR
· POLYESTER

:-APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

CAUOO PRINTS

YARD

MILL ASSORTMENT

UNDERWEAR

I

42-43" WIDE
POLY-COnuN
. SOLID &amp;PRINT

ASSORTED
45" conuN &amp;
POLY-COTTON

MIRACL£ AND
. DESIGNER CUTS ...
Values you must see to

April Shower of Savings Special! Men's
fcimous 11\averick twill Jog shorts. Four big
days to save at Stiffler's . .

SAVE $1.00 A PACKAGE
MEN'S FAMOUS HANES

STORE ONLY

sew-easy
.,or. spring
_

SPORT SHIRTS

L

F ·)

- APRIL SHOWER OF SAVIN(j5-

Special sale group or men's short sleeve "
Banlon knit sport shirts in your choice of
styles and colors. Slightly Irregular. Save
now!

'

,

/ \?

-.-APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

197

Best
,••

SPECIAL SALE GROUP
. MISSES SUMMER

8

SPIWiNUM PEAT

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES r ;:..:::.-::r
BffiE8 FASHION

MEN'S POPULAR
DENIM FlARE

blue denim flare jeans .
Special sale pri ce. All sizes in
stock. Hurry to Stiffler's and
save during this· sale!

ClB.CULAR FOR

POLLY·s POINTERS

.,

~evis

Churchwomen attend tea .

RIL SHOWER OF

uP and

'1

Stl ffl_
e r's Aprlt Shower of Savings special I

Misses better nylon lackets.

Gr ~at

for ·th ese

cool spring days . Hurry!

RIBBED FOR _
WAISTBAND ~..::....t.,
DUPONT SPANDEX
+4" NON-ROLL

,. ELASTIC

- APRIL SHOWER OF SAVINGs-

SPECIAL SELECTION
LADIES EARLY SPRING

~" · wide white non -roll
· dlastlc. Ribbed for waist ·
· bands . Made from Du Pont
Jycra spandex . Regular 49c
yd.
..
.

BETTER DRESSES

4~~:'81~

Save one -third. off r egular price during
·St if fler 's April Shower of Savings Sale. ·Four
Big days. Special . selection!

"

OFF

~~f.ULAR

.

..

GALLIPOLIS DAILY TRIBUNE
AND AREA MERCHANTS

TUESDAY, APRIL JOth
.7:00 p.M (DOORS OPEN AT 6:30)
· GALLIA ACA,DEMY
HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM

.

" Carol's Coiffures

'J,

-:- SHOWER OF

lNG5-

VALUES TO 116.00
· SPECIAL GROUP MEN'S

SLACKS
Special 3roup of famouS ·label
knit an . cord casual slacks.
Values to $18.00. Shop early for
.best selection. '

OF SAVINGs-

-SHOWER OF S'A ViNG5-

CANDY FILLED

EASTER
BASKKTS

Select a 'beautifully .decorat"e(j
· candy f illed Easter basket or
novelties to delight the klddles at
E•ster time .

$}99
.
AND UP

- SHOWER OF •SAV

G5-

- SHOWER

SAVING5-

FIRST QUALITY

SPECIAL GROUP
LADIES BETTER

JAI(E YOUR CHOICE!
ENTIRE STOCK

.KNEE.Ifl
. - HOSE

NYLON OONNS

LATCH HOOK KITS

ONE SIZE FITS ALL!

.

Q,e size fits all! Ladles' stretch'
nylon knee-hi hose In the season 's
best fashion shades . Stock up
now!

4

PAIRS

FOR

April Shower of ·sav!ngs ~ Special
group of ladies' ·better nylon
gowns in pretty pastel colo rs.
Save! ·

Save twenty per cent off regul~r
price on our entire stock of latch ,
hook kits . Take your' choice!

20%

OFf

-SHOWER OF

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES SPRING AND SUMMER

COATS

Special April ShOwer of Savings
, group of ladles' spring ·and
summer Casual coats. S-hop early
and save I

�..
'
•
11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, April3, 1979

lO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Apnl3,1979

Alfred

Socilll Notes
By Mn. Charles Woode
Sunday School attendance
on March 25 was 56, the offering was $34.35.
•
Worship
service
attendance was 29 with Rev.
Richard Thomas bringing the

I
I

•

Long Bottom
Newl Notes

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds
Sales
--- Auto
-- --

-Notices
- -- -

WANT AD

•

CHARGES

...,

'"

C.

R.·MAsH

TUNING

VINYL &amp; AUJM.
SIDING

lANE DANIElS

NOTICE

r

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

SMI1H

INC.

m-5612

~=.

.

- ---·-

Annstnlnl .~l
r

DJJOU

SPRING SALE

Jr.

-·

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

JEEP
APRIL 4-7

.ro.

1

Reedsville

TOteS

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

·-·

4

• •

-

-

. ,,..

4

-

.

-

-

· -

•

-

-

·-

6 631

-~-

-

4

....,.-,

-

·

~· -

•

•

VOU'RS 80.1N' SMA~T. CAI"TAlN!
JUST ~TAV lHAT WA'I-· AND YER.
SHIP AtJD PA!&gt;5EN6ER7 WON'T
SE ~ARME!D!

11·9·1 mo.

MR. lARSO!J.- D&amp;TAit. A
WORK PARTY lO START
OFF-LOADING THE: GOLD
&amp;UlliON IN OUt&lt;: STRON6
ROOM ONTO THAT
YOU
DESERT ISLAND!
HEARD

Ali- FOt&lt;: YOU·

Wll&gt;E eUY-.l'l.L

SETTLE AccOU~TfWITH 'fOU lATER

t-o'..__

------,___,--J ME.I.II,TEI&lt;:•
THAT'!&gt; AN
ORDER~

· Ohio VaiiJ Roofinl
.

llld
Home Mliltlnanee

I

f.. 16RRIRC.
1

l.-1~~

OF '(OU,

REYNOlD'S.
B.ECJRIC MOTOR

~e!

:I
·-

:t

·::•i

&lt;·

AHTEB

.

I I I

o.

i.JTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

VeSierday's

I

Business Servjces

0

Now arrange the drcled letters to
fortn the surpnae answer, as sug ·
gesti!d by the above cartoon

rI I ! I 1
(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles· YACHT VIRUS POORLY LEOGER
Answer Makes bodies attract tve to oth rsGRAVITY

~oHI.. .., • .t

BRADFORD . Au ctioneer , Com·
plete Serv1ce Phone 9"9-2-487
or 949-2000 Roc1ne, Ohio, Cntt
Brodlord.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters, Irons , all
small oppl1onc:es. lpwn moer ,
ne~el to Stole Highway Goroge
on Route 7
- --- SEWING MACHINf Repo1rs, sf!'r·
v1ce. oil makes. 992 2284 The
Fobr1c Shop , Pomeroy
~uthorir:ed Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors
- -EXCAVATING , dozer loader and
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo boys tar hire, will haul
WI d1rt, top soil. limestone and
gravel Coli Bob or Roger J~f ·
fers , day phone 992-7089, night
phone 992 3525 or 992 .S232 .
- - --EXCAVATIN&lt;i dozer, backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R Hot
f1e ld Black Hoe Serv1ce,
Rutland, Ohio Pone 7~2-200~PU LUNS EXCAVATING Complete
Service Phone 992-2478.
. --- AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? Lost your operators
license? Phone '992-21-43
- -·- - - E·C ELECTR ICAL Contractor serving Oh io Volley region. S1x
doys a week , 2-4 hours servi ce
Emergency calls. Coli 882 2952
or 882-3454 .
MOB[LE HOME repairs Furnaces.
electrical work, pipes sowed,
pl ~~b~~!CJ2· 58~ - - WAllPAPERING AND point1ng
Coll742·2328.
HOWERY AND MARTIN
covafl ng, sept1c systems ,
dozer, boc: khoe Rt. U3 Phon e
1 (614)698·7331 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

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

'

ACROSS
I Actor
Walter
5 Acted

----------

wordl~ly

10 Without
help
Paradoj •Ht
13 Hep one ,

-...----..,---..,=-------,u
"~(;~~~!
of yore
15 Fruitless

-

11 'Japanese
statesman
17 Digging
bonanza
18 Marble
19 Have
too
much of
Zl Union
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _...,.._,
or credit

----

I'll never steal
Help! Don't aqain! I promi ·
let her at

' w-.. (Gerdluan~Sti~~o;;eE~}j[-

me!

Services Offered .
Will CARE for tw.:o Invalid or
elderly persons In mv home
Twenty veers expenence
Reas onable rates. 992-6022 or
99'1·5•22
-:-:-:::--:WATER AND misc. haul1ng. Call
991·5858.
--;:-- ' - NOW HAUliNG limestone '"
Middleport·Poemroy area Coil
~o~ 1!ft.!_!_! fimo !.!_!6_!~~~- __
WILl CARE for two Invalid or
elder ly persons in my home.
Twenty years expertence
Reasonable rates. 992-6022 or
992 s•22.
1
PAINT!~ AND sondblast1;;-g·
Fre~ est1motes Coll949-2686
.
·-·----~
TREE TRIMMING and removal.
742-3167 or 7"2-2573
PAINTING AND repairing roofs,
house pointing haul ing Free
estimates Call 992 6309 or
742·2074 after 5pm .
-~
Wilt DO bobysittlng $1 SO on
hour or $20 o week Across the
street from Mason Dnve In,
~~ld_!~~e_r-'!.!._~m!d~blo ':_k :..t_

DOWN
I Stupbl one
2 Another
stupid one
3 Governor
Grasso
4 Dormouse
5lt loves
comP@ny

fA~
Papas

7- Dleu
8 Get it
over with
9 Of eaUng

and
drinking
12 Three,
In a
proverb
II Sag

Yesterday'• Attower
19 MIISical
works
!0 Israeli
airport
!1 "East of
Eden"
character
ZZ Omen
23 Noted
clergyman
!4 Time out

Z5 Set at
intervals
Z1 Seasoning
30 Sour
31 Instance
3% Building
wings
34 Vitality
35 Netherlands
river

NeTIN~
'fbU,.
-

--·----- --4

I ... I 5UPPO()E':·YOu'RE
RIGHT. I WASN'T
IHINKING'CLEARLY.
.,ERE: ... HERE~
THE 1\DDRE;.S.

TtoJA\1&amp;'-

Give Away
A GOOD watch dog ond wonder
ful pet very tome, 2 years old
F9mole To o good home,

.COlliE
- -- TYPE,
----·---block with brown
•

i•
•••

1

.•
r

Ignore unneeded finesses

4·J

I
EAST
• 86
.. J 10 9 2

tAKQJO

+ Bli

• 163
• 10 8 43

SOUTH

• .III:Jlll4

"'AQ6
.94

+

A7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Welt Nprtb E111t Saudi

p-

1'4+

pp-

Pau

One teller a1mply 11tands for another.. In this sample A is
used for th e three L's, X for the two O's. etc Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation or t he words are aU
hatts Each da)' the code letters are different.

Opening lead : +K

By Oswald Jacoby

oad Ali Soal&amp;g

Yesterday we saw deI!Jarer refu.oe three finesses
because he dldn 'I want to
CRYPTOQUOTES
riak giving the defenders a
chance to ruff something.
NORSVCOCH
J F W0 S
KQ
SJV
In today'• hand, S&lt;lulh is
looking at two line88eS but
XGVFLOCH refuses both ol them for the
KQ
LBROM · FClt:
SK
simple reason that he
YGVXORYKRVR qoesn'l need them.
. FWKS.S
0
West starts with three
rounda of diamonds. S&lt;lu!h
KCV
SK
NKP' V . - RSVCXJFN
ruffs the third and Is ready
Yesterday' a. Cryptoquole: . OONCEIT IS JUST AS NATURAL A for operation contract.
11iiNG TO HUMAN MIND6 AS A CENTE;R IS TO A CIRCI.E.He Is looking at that good
OI.JVER WENDELL HOLMES
club suit in dummy and sees
that he can afford to lose one
({) 1119 Kinl F•turu Syndical&lt;, Inc.

WHEN 1/ooR SHOeS ANO
SOCKS SET KNOCKfl' OFF
8~ A LINE DRIVE, '(OUR
FEET DON'T 6ET COLO!

HASTH'CAT
GOT 'lORE
TONGUE?

You hold :
+ KJI114

4-3-B

.. Q2

ltem

SMIF!! '

trump trick and, furthermore, that once trumps are
out, he is home with the
bacon So South prompUy plays
ace and king of trumps.
S&lt;lmetimes the queen dropa,
but this time it doesn't, so
South simply leada another
trump . West takes his
queen, but 'south is sure of
the rest of the tricks.
The play was really elementary, but the bidding
worthy of note. The hand
was r.Iayed In a fairly strong
dupl cate game and only
aholll 60 percent ol the
North-South pairs reached
the spade game.

3.•• •

p-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
"
AXYDLBAAXR
to LONGFELLOW

OUR
)

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

It

JUG HAlO
NOW I KNOW WHV
WE PLAY BASEBALL
IN THE SUMMER ...

BRIDGE

"'K84

• 38 Clocked
39 Hotel lobby

ond wn lte, female, 8 to 12 man
ths old Beogle, IT!Oie , young
~~~~e~o!1!tl: ~!~

,•

l'uesday, A.prU 3

::-+-+--1 I + Q 7 3

s

~----

Doctor Who 33.
"'
G !tilt 17 ·
6:0Q--Naws3,8.10,13,15; ABC News6; Andy r
•
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6·311--NBC News 3,15; ABCNews 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
• Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons11; Over
Eesy 20.
'
1
7·oo--tross.WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Por or
· wagoner 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15;
Dick Cavett 20; Big Green Mageztne 33.
7·30--Dolly J; Muppal Show 8; The Judge 10; That's
. Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Edward The King
11· MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20,33.
8·oo--:Disney Animated Celebration 3,15; Mackentles
· of Paradise Cove 6, 13; JeHenons 8,10; · Great
Performances 20,33.
8·30--Miss Winslow &amp; Son 8,10; ,NHL Hockey 17.
9:110-Wheels 3,15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Dear
· oetoclieve 8 101 Scarlet Letter 20,33.
10:110-Vagas 6,l3; Kaz 8,10; Black Men's Land 33;
News 20.
10·311--Foolsteps 20.
11;oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; Hogan' s Heroes 17; Tur·
naboul 20· Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
R k
11 · 311--Johnn~ Carson 3,15; Pollee women 6,13; Maocd·
· ford Flies 8; ABC Nows 33; Movie "A Fine ,
•
ness" 10; Movie "One Day Before Tomorrow 17.
12:40-Mannlx 6,13; Ko)ak 8; 1:110-Tomorrow 3.
• t :»-Movie ''Red SnoW" 17; 1 :50-News 13,
3:1o--News 17.
•
,
3 , 31)-Movle "Paloma Party 17.

WEST

i

l

f!L..L.A ~

· Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pvle•
USMC 10; Brody Bunch 15; I Dream?f Jeannie 17.
5 · ~erol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
· SOn 8&gt; Eloc. Ca. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Battle of
the Planets 13; Odd Couple 15; Lucy Show 17;

• 10 7 2

a1 cay

AND YOU f&lt;.NOW
;
.~
\NHI!Re THIIII'r Ll!Avf$ ~

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

s·oo--1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hlliblllies Bi

+ KQJ92

visit
J8Lead on

THe. -r~ura..e as
NetT' WITH Yo~
S!T' all ~1-r"H TH!

TV &amp;
Spills 17.
3:oo-Generol Hospital 6,13; Speed Racer 17;
Reading 20.
·
3:30--Mash B; Joker's Wild 10; Fllntstones 11.
4·110-Hollywood Squares 15; Bewitched~ ; Porky Pig
· &amp; Friends&amp;; Sesame St. 20,;13 ; Batman 10; Marlo&amp;
the Magic Movie Machlno13 ; Space Giants 17.
4 ·30--AHerschool Special 6,13, Gilligan's Is. 8,17;
· Brady Bunch 10; Petticoat Junction 15.

NORTH
• 82
.. 76 3

man's

- -----

WEDNESDAY, APRIL4, 1979
5:20'-World a1 Large 11; 5:4.s-Farm Report 13; 5.• PTL Club 13.
' .
s·55-Sunrise Semester 10.
6:0Q--700Ciub6.8; PTLCiub 15; 6 :1G-News 17 .
6, 25-Chrlstopher Closeup 10.
6 :~(}-Romper Room 17; 6 : ~.s-Mornlng Report 3;
6: -Good Morning, West VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck White Reports 10, News 13.
1 OQ--Today J,1S; Good Morning America 6.13;
Wednesday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17.
..._
7: 1.s-Weother 33; 7:3(}-F.amlly Affair 10 . .,. ·
8:00-rCopt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
8:3(}-Hazei 17.
9:GO--Bob Braun3, Emergency One6; Hogan' s Heroes
8; Match Game 10; Lucy Show 11.
.
9:3G-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
10; Green Acres 17.
10 ·oo--Card Sharks 3, t5; Edge of Nlght6; 1'\11 In Tho
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; Movie "Joy of
Living" 17.
10:3G-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; S20.000 Pyramid 13; Price
is Right 8, 10.
11 ;GO--High Rollers J3,15; Laverne a. Shirley 6, 13;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
11 :3o-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6,13; Love
. of Life B, 10; Sesame 51. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10; News 17.
12 :110-Newscenler 3; Password 15; Young &amp; 1hf
Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love America•
Style' 17.
12 ::10---Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec. Co. 33, Movie "Larceny, Inc.' ' 17.
1:0Q--Days of OUr Lives 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; I :~As The
,wor ld Turns 8,10.
2:110-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live 6,13.
2: 15-'-Baseboll 3; News 17.
2:3(}-Another World 15; Guiding Light 8,10; Banana

zz One
of
n-T."'~--r.:-the decks
Z3 Lacking
color
Zl Lakelel
Z5 Take
the offer
26 Emergency
::-&lt;rJ&lt;111LJI aid org .
Z7 Place to
r.ecuperate
· Z8lnd1an
Z9 Vaudeville
showcase
33 Repair-

-- - - - ------

EX111A

THE'Y OFTEN
HA\IE5HADY
PO!&gt;!&gt;Il"li..ITIE~.

Prlnranswerhere:

3-7·1 mo. (Pd . )

99'}.3.57

._,

I I I

. .

651 Beech Street

--

r

IMEUMI~I

,~

-------- ---

:o:.;.c::::.:..-••--•'&lt;

I I I )

18 Years Experionct

- ---

byHenriArhOidandBoblee

l.'£1lH6R

Sfi)P

992 -2356

~~ ®

tn
I I I

116'(, lHAT'~

3-7-1 mo .

Middleport.

\!!}

I RI;TEX

BORN LOSER

experiel'ct .
Free
Mtim1tes, Call; Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160.

,Will Make
Service Cit lis

\lfi~N}fi)'ft ~THATSCRAMILEDWORDGAME

~

Unscramble lhese to'u r Jumbles ,
one l ~tter lo each aquarit, to form
tout ordinary words

All tyjiis rooting, gutters
and downspouts. All ty~
home maintOMnce - • and repair. Storm doors
and windows. All work
guannteed. 20 ye1rs

--- - -

ASTRO'-=·G=-RA=-=P=H

I1

'
CAPTAIN EASY

APPLIANCE li ·

---

-

·I

•
Your Heldqullten For

..

I

TUESDAY, APRIU, 1919
7 3G-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camero 6; ; Price Is Right 10; Donna Fargo
13; TV Honor Society 15; NHL Hockey 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Reporl 20.33.
8· ro--cliffhongers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13; CBS
Reports8,10; Austin City Limits 20 ; City Notebook
33.
8:3(}-Laverne· s. Shirley 6, 13; Sneak Previews 33 .
9:oo--Jesus of Nazareth 3, 15; Three's Company 6, 13;
Movie " The Darker Side of Terror" 8,!0; Scarlet
Letter 20,33 .
9:3(}-Taxl 6,13.
10:110-Ropers 6.13; Block Man's Land 33, World at
War 17; News 20.
10:3G-13 Queens Blvd. 6, 13; Academy Leaders 20 .
11 :110-News 3,8, 10,13,15; Hogan's Heroes 11; Book
Beat 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,15; Movie "Delta County,
USA" 13; Movie "The Oscar" 6; Barnaby Jones 8,
ABC News 33; Movie " Escapade In Japan" 10;
Movie 'Asssanlnetlon In Rome" 17.
12:40-Madlgan 8; 1 :oo--Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 3G-Movle "The Golden Hawk" 17; l:ofii--News 3;
3: 1.s-Nel'ls 17.
'3:i.s-Movle " Island Affair" 11.

Business· Services

-

:1\.Tew,Q

TELEVISI,ON
VIEWING

.

By Me1ody Rooerts
Ernestine Ha)'lrtan arrived
back home last week after a
long vacation in de Land,
Florida with Mrs. Marlon
HaYJI1llll.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rebecca
and family were visiting over
the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Hensley.
Ted Hayman and children
were visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Bissell over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Holter
and family recently visited
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Holter
and family of Columbus.
Fred Larkins re~ently
celebrated his 81st birthday.
A dinner party was given to
the guest of honor by family
and friends at the Long
Bottom Conununlty Bullding.
Irene Starcher and son
Jerry are visiting relatives in
Georgia.
Congratulallons to Mr. and
Mrs. John Newlun and Cristy
on the arrival of a new baby
daughter named Carey.
A meeting was.held at the
Conununtty Building in Long
Bottom concerning the need
of a 4-H Club. Extension
officerS attended but as of yet
nothing has been decided. If
anyone Is Interested in being
a 4-H leader or an advisor or
. would just like SO!'le _Information please call 985-3320
or 985-t275.
Recent vlslt.lrs of Mr. and
' Mrs. Paul Hauber and family
' were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Sinclair and Chad, Mrs. Ora
Sinclair, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Adams and grandson.
Anyone wishing to place
Items in the Long Bottom
News notes please call 985-

NfW BATO N classes Beg1nne r ~ . DfCEMBER SALE
UP TO JO~ STOIU W IOf
mtPn11ed101e and o&lt;tvo nu&gt;d SAVf
'} PC liVING ROOM SUITf
Tnuqht hy Cmdy Pott cr~on at NEW
S I 119 95 . NEW 5 PC OINETlE
lhr Syracuse Crodc School
SF.TS , S-49 95, NFW SEAt V MAT.
15 Words or Under
Gym ror more 1nformahon
C.sh
TRESS'S TWIN SIZE INTfRSPR
Cha~
co
li
Qf'I'J
2088
"
100
I daY
lNG $45' , NEW 3 PC END TABlE
2da)'S
1.50
I ill
GUN SHOOT. Rocme Volunteer
SETS, $39 95 U HAUL RIC£ S
3da)'S
F1re
Dept
Everv
Saturday
6
30
NEW AND USED FURN'ITUR:E
message on "Fear".
3.00
6daYS
3.15
pm 01 the1r bu1fd1ng In Bas hom
854 2nd AVE PH 446 9523
Howard Flanders and
.
.
' Eacb woal over thtl minimwn 15 1
For tori choke guns on~y .
1977 CHEVROLET f)(4 short wheel
Florence Spencer sang a
words 11 4 cents per wt~rd per day. t
GUN SHOOT EVERY FRIDAY b 30
bose M1ssey Ferguson corn
special "The King Is
Ads runnlng otOO ~rr C'OI\lleCuUtte
PM RACINE GUN CLUB FA(.
plon1er
corn cult1 volor
days
will
be
charged
at
the 1 day ,
Conling", Janet Moore was
TORY CHOKE 'GUNS ONL V.
992·7084
rate
~4 Yr. Experie,ce
pianist. A generous offering
I REWARD FOR mlormotion of" 1972 GMC 1PICKUP 6 cyl std
Aural Method
In memot')l, Card ol Thanb ~
was r~elved including one
d1soppeoronce
of
a
~
tondord
5900
992
7376
Ob1tuary: I cents per word, p .oo
for "The Great Hour of
s1re block poodle long to1f.
minimum CuhJn advam:e
*New Home
needs chppong About 3 weelo. s 1970 OO~E DART Fair condt·
l
Sharing".
ASSOCI•fl Of
flo n S . 992-5147 ·
Mobl1e Item!! sal• and Yard aates
ogo
1n
Carmel
oreo
949-2360
Elberfelds of Pomoroy
1iAdd-ons
New carpet is being laid in
are ~ only wttb cub with
t:velyn Holter
19b6 G.T
Excellent condifmn
and Kimball Music center
1i Remoldlngs
e church basement. Easter
order 2$ cent charge tor ad8 cury- ~
H1gh_ p~rf_pr_mance 742·2?49 ,
of Athens
MEIGS
COUNTY
Fish
and
Game
lng BoJ: NUmber In Care r11be Sen·
unrtse services are to be
'iii
Free
Estimates
Phone 9'12-2581
regular meefing Fr1doy Apnl 6 1'174 OLDS CUTLASS Supreme
tJnel '
d here 011 Easter Sunday.
992-6011
or 992-10112
wagon $2700 . . . See at' C1ttz ens
7 pm ~h~de Vo lley ~l ~b ~~u ~e
n.t Publisher raen-es the rig!". 1
Charge conununfon will be
mo.
Notional Bonk or co11992. 7063
3-1~·mo_.
pd.
_
to edit or &lt;1!l«t on)' ads deemed 00.1
. ' .
)eld for all the churches on
jed.ional. ~ Publlaher will not be:1
1976 FORD EliT~ . s1 lver with blue
'1prU 12 instead of the regular
responsible tor more tba.n one inccr-1
v1nyl toP Good condition
Our
wife
grwnps
thilt,
red
lnaertton
1
time for each church.
32 OOOm1les 304 773 5615.
Pbone,.,.me
we pick up a ham·
' Rev. Thomas' father ill a
acllon represents 1973 IN TE RNATIONAL SCOUT
pallent In Mt. St. · Mary's
21,000 m1les fu lly equipped
$25 down-payment 19
air , wench, etc e)(cellent con·
Hospital at Nelsonville.
aprof 'onaltocorr&lt;rlwhBt
dition . m 2121 .
Mrs. Arthur Atherton
-····
.
----·
we've pall:ett'
1975 CADILLAC Eldorado. 25,000
accompanied by ber sister
mtles. tully equtpped Excellent
and brother-In-law, Mr. and
-cond1tlon
.
. 992
• • 2121
. ,.4 _ _ _
Mrs. Charles Woode went to
1977 BLAZER , 4)1:4, Cheyenne
Aua• 1rucit
Walton, W. Va. to see their
Lost and Found
package 29,000 actual miles
"Repair
brllther, Lawiton Taylor and
Tih steer , AM FM radio , A C ,
LOST
MEDIUM
s1
:red
dog
blonde
.
Aiso
Tr•nsmisslor
wife who are botb ill at their
tow package. cru1se wh1te
On Old Rt
33 Anytime
Mondat
spoke wheel!ll Excellent cond1
' ReiNIIr
home there.
N'OGn on Saturday
992 7668
ha n. After 5 , coli 992-2967
Several local people atPhone
P'-112~174 .
197.4 4-wheel dnve 3 '• ton
tended the county wide
Help wanted
Ranger . 32 ,500 mile•s V-8 . .ol
revival at Pomeroy, with
IP.M
speed 1973 Ford 31• ton 6 cyl
1be
day
before
publication
TRACTOR
TRAILER
dr1ver
steady
Curt and Charlotte Davis.
good gas. m1leoge 4-speM
employment, oil the hours you
The Alfred U.M.W. held Its
1970 Ford 3 ~ ton 8 1 outomoi1C
Sundar
wont home every night . Must
,. tP.M
factory
stoke body Harold
postponed regular meeting at
For Sale
Mobile Homes for Sale
be, 21 year!. old 667 3131 , Ohio
Brewer Long Bottom Oh1o
.....
l lc..,.....,.;
·· Fr"'"""';;;;:....-==-· ~
Valley Monufoctunng, Tuppers
the Follrod-Roblnson home
1q72 ALL ELECTRIC trailer 12 ~e 60
Phone 985 3554
Plains , O_hi? _ . . • __ . _
FIFTEEN FOOT Lowe lme
011 Tuesday evening, March
Centro! air, underp1nning On
IN THE
olummum bass boot 20 h p.
11
20, with an attendance as
lot In Mason. 30-4 · n3-5438
SOMEONE
TO
clean
and
coolc
1
For
Rent
COMMON PLEAS COURT
Mere , stick steering fully
.
-·-day. 2 to 3 days o week lor
follows: Osle Henderson,.
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
1967
TOTAl ELECTRIC mobile
equipped with trailer P,Pone
COUNTRY
MOBilE
Home
Porlo.
elderly
couple
who
li
ve
In
CHRISTINE BEEGLE,
Kate Rodehaver, Helen
home furn1shed , 3 bedr
~a: -~3~9 _
of!e!. 5pm ___ _ _
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy
Plllntlff,
Sy!~u~e- 3~- 6?5~6~6~ _ .•
washer and dryer. Air condi·
Woode, Anna Thompson,
1
·VS•
SEARS CUSTOM 7 ndmg mower
honed. 1 lot, 210 ft . frontage .
IMMEDIATE
OPENING . _Lo!g~ l_ot~ 5o~l ~ ~4~ ·- _
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF
Thelma Henderson, Osle
Good condition $475 Glenn
, $12 000. Phone 742-2826 .
Laboratory rechmcion
3·11 3 AND 4 BM furnished and un
EDWARD
FINDLING,
Follrod, Nina Robinson,
B1ssel\ , 949~2~0~ ___ ·- . _ _ 1 · - - - - - - • -~- - -- -furn 1s. heql opts
Phone
sh1ft E)(perle nced MLT (ASCP)
Deceutel, et 11..
Janet Moore, Nellie Parker,
992·5•3•
or equ1volent Excellent salary
Defend•nts
1q76H0NDA360 loodedw1thex
]970 REBEL RAIDER 12 J( 48. Very
NOTICE BY
and fnnge benefits Sh1ft dif qo ROLLING ACRES of good
rros . 992-3018.
good cond1t1on $3500 2-47 -3875
Emma Frencb, Florence
PUBLICATION
·
·
or949-26A3ofter
4
ferento1
l.
Con
tact
Personnel
4275.
posture
.
Plenty
of
water
Cou
ld
Spencer and Clara FoUrod
TO Effie I hie Shannon whose
CORN , S2 a bu Also hof. Coli · - - - - - - - - - - - - --·
Office
.
Pleosont
Volley
octamodote 50 plus cattle
last known address was 316
b67 3966 Robert Dorst
and Janice PuDins led the
Hospital Volley Dnve. Po1nt
. ·' - - - -- - - - ~ .
614 -667-3398
wa.ver lv Roag , Willoughby ,
program, "Aliveness with
Pleasant
,
WV
25550
Phone
..
--·-OhiO ,
_ _
FOUR GOOOYEAR 10 x 1.S AT
ONE
BEDROOM
opts
des1
gned
30A 675 4340. An Equal Op·
The Unknown Heirs and
God", the call to Pryaer and
Tracker fires. Four white spoke • ___!:R,:e,_,a.,_._I_,E:..:S~t'-'a:..!t'-'e:..f:..:O:..:r_,
S_,a,_,l,_e_
s p~KlfiCOIIy for wheelchair po·
Devisees of Edward Findling,
po_rt'!nlty_Employer .
wheels i9r Ford truck, Jeep or
Sell Denial.
t1ents Call between 9 and 6,
;
lnt 1971 Kawasaki 100 ~ARM FOR Sole House 2 barns
HN FOR spee~al programs Submit
If you tell us you never deceased
~n offering was takeq
tro1ler Lorge pond . 10 ocrcn or
The Unknown Heirs and
~27772
Motoc ross. 1972 l&lt;owosoki 250
resumes to Me1gs County
reveal a secret, we 'U tell you Oevlsevs of Effie Findling
for 11 and also one for the
82 acres. 742-2566.
dirt
bike
Exc:ellent
cond1t1on.
NEW
FOUR
bedroom
opts
. . - - -- - - - ---Health Dept } PO Box b31 ,
deceased ,
•
about something just as soon Surface,
World Day of Prayer, wbl.&lt;:b.
ju s l been overhauled 311, ocres 1n Pomeroy. SEcluded
ovo1ioble for fm01ly of 5 to 8
The Unknown Heirs and '
P~m~ roy: &lt;?h ~o ~y_Apr~IS_. . .
,742-3154.
was mlsaed during the bad
as we want word of It to get ,Devisees of Emma Find l ing
wooded area on top of h1ll
9 ond
.Call .between
. . .
.. fl. 992-7772
.
NEt:D SOMEONE to do houseworlo.
Carman Hedrlcks, deceased ;
Overloolo.s river Water elec·
weather. The hosteas served
around -fast.
TWO
BEDROOM
mobile
home
In
2 days a week and con drive
The Unknown Heirs and
tnc oval\ able. 992-3886.
delicious refreshments. The
Middleport , dose to schools . ,.---'----~-'--.,.-- ··':-!
Devisees of eeatFice Kauf
cor 992·2936
· -·
··-···-···
REAl ESTATE loons Purchase and
.man, dec: eased;
new secretary and other
ond
shappmg
.
U1
1lities
paid.
·Ma
&gt;
rk
Your
Calenda
'
rl
CARRIER WANTED FOR SYRACUSE
The Unknown Heirs and
refmonce. 30 year terms , VA.
$200 month plus depoSit.
ofllcers for 1979 acted. More Weclntodly, April 4
AREA PHONE 992-215b
Oevlsees of John Findling,
No money down (eligible
.s9•·2112,
_
_
_
_
.
_
.
.
1
Come
Register
at
will be BIIDOunced by the next
deceased ,
vet~rrons) FHA . As low os 3
The Unknown Heirs and
-:-::--c~~-::---- . TWO BEDflOOM mob1le home, :
meeting.
per cenf down (non veterans).
Devisees of Jessie Findling,
wanted to Buy
kitchen furnis hed Prefer mid·
Ire land Mortgage Co.. 77 E
Richard Swartz ol Salem,
d~c~ased;
die aged couple or elderly couStole, Athens 614-592·3051
0., spent a lew days with his
Bernice Bede Osol
The Unknown He1rs anct CASH FOR 1unk cars 24 hour
p!! 99? 2}~ 9 . . . . 1~0 PRIZES FIRST
Devisees of Sara F indling
wtecker serv1ce
frwe 's.
MODERN THREE bedroom house.
mother, Grace Swartz. We
lhle, deceased;
'
PRIZE
4-WHEEL
DR1VE
full baseme nt, fireploc:e , fully
The Unknown Heirs and _, Ru+tl~n~ _!)~ !~2-~1 _ _ _ _
extend ·our sympathy to
carpeted, central air., enclosed
Devisees
of
Frank
Flndllng,
CHIP
WOOD
Poles
mox
Grace In the recent death of
- For Sale
sun
porch , located on 6 1/1 acres
deceased,
d1ometer 10" on larges t end
ber brother, Cash Bentz, of
on'
CR
28. opprox 3 mdes from
Lyle Kaufman , addreas ,
chocolates d1obellc
512 per ton . Bundled slob s1o WE HAVE
Racine. If interested contact
unknown ;
'
1otes on d at her con dy •
Ravenna, 0.
o
choco
er
ton
Del1vered
to
Oh
1
P
Howard Kaufman, a dd res~
1 • F
d
lorry Wolfe 949 2836 weekends
Mrs. Michael, .mother of
Pollf!'t Co , Rt 2, Pomeroy
supp ies . ree Easter con y
unknown ;
~nd
O!.!_!!'.._~_!~~~l njJS_ _ _ _
Corrine Graf, address
992 2689
class Call Carousel Confec
Nellie Parker, remains quite
IS THE PLACE!
April
C,
1979
unknown,
and
·
·
•
·
tionery
1n
M1ddleport
SIX
ROOM
house on I ocre on
poorly, and als.o Ernest
Be sure to explore all avenues • Oa le Bf'aley,
address OLD FURNITURE , iceboxes ,, brass
992-6342
top
$15 .000 . Coli
block
1, q49.2232 or road
:
beds uon beds, desks , etc.
· · · - · - -- · - - - - ·
Taylor, ol this locality.
985-4274
0f opportun 1ty , no matter how ·unknown
JACK W_ CARSEY.
You
are
hereby
nollflect
complete
households.
Wnle
'
COAl
liMESTONE
sand
grovel,
Sunday ev""ing psts at . remote their posstbllltleS that you have been named as.
MD M1ller Rt 4, Pomeroy or
calcium chloride fertilizer, dog
FOUR BEDROOM rural home that
MGR.
the Charles
Woode home
appear. Somethtng unusual, defendants In a leo a I action
coli qq2 -7760
,food and all types of salt Ex·
w1ll meet FmHA standards ,
, PH. 9'12-2181
holding btg promtse , could un- entitled Christine Beegle,
· · ·- · · -- - -- · - cels1orSoltWorks Inc E Main
were Mr. and Mrs. Chester
742
3074.
e~~:pectt:td l y develop this .omPlaintiff, vs . The Unknown OlD COINS, pocket watches ,
s p0
9&lt;12 389t.
·- --~ ----..o.- - - ·-Frederick of North Bethel.
mg vear.
Heirs of Edward Findling,
class nngs, weddmg bonds ,
t_ - ~':r~y · · - · - TWO STORY 3 bedroom trome
ARIES (M h 21 A 11 19) B
decN,$~d , et al ., Defendants .
d 1omonds Gold or silver Co li 'EVERYTHING'S GOTTA GO '
house 1n Middleport . 992-3457
Mobile Homes for Sale
arc
• pr h
e·1 Th "•• action has been o••igned
House ond 11o.t
Iurn 1t ure,
f
h
"""
RoerWomsley , 742 2331
~HREE
BEDROoM- i7tA~ -h~,;e, ,
ore you t row m t e towe cas~ No . 17003 . and rs , · - - · ~ - · - -- · clothes. oil ' my household
Iorge
k1tchen and dr6i'ng area
'
today wa1t a bit longer and keep spend lng In the Cour t of WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
Drop
b,
y
760
loureiSt.
1955
Prairie
Schooner
,
28:o~8
,
tems
1
trying . There Is a good chilnce Common Pleas of Meigs
phonograph reco rds . Ca ll
M ddl
t
w1th new cabinets
fully
bdr
1
events will suddenly reverse County, Pomeroy, Ohio ,
992-6370arContoc1MortinFur~ . ep~r . - •- . . - . . - . 1965Generol, 60x12 2bdr
carpeted throughout Carport
ond cho ln link fence around
mture
themselves m your favor . Get- 45~~! object of the complelnt 1
HEAVY DUTY upho ls tery 1968 Elcona , 52x12. 2 bdr.
yard Beauty shop attached to
tlng along with other signs Is Is to quiet title against the WANT TO buy: old tewelry Coli . .machine
$250
Phon e 196'1 Bud&lt;fy, 60x12. 4 bdr
housf!' Co n be seen by appa1n t·
1970 Sylva, 60x 12, 2 bdr.
J\
one of the secUons·you 'll enjoy real estate and quiet title , to
992-5262 or wnte Koy Ceo I. 87
843-2542 . • - . ..., - - - - .
. :.'"1.
men!
992-3982
1970Costle
.
60x12.
2bdr.
J ~4
itn yoGurt new Abstro-G raph, Lfete rvea 1 estattep locatec:J cin th1e .
16 FOOT BASS boot soh p. Mer·
5 _2 n.d .. Middle. po. ' '. a_ H. _ . .
0 1 ~4
- 111!.JJie~ o.
er e yours y ma 11tng 1 or __
om eroy' oun ~
cury engme Mm ~;~ koto trolling 1973 P,rlmgton. 60x 12 2 bdr .
' . ~ ...
WANTED TO buy four bedroom ,
each to Astro-Graph, P.O. Box of Meigs, and Sta1e Of OhiO, WANT TO buy you ng fryer rob
motor ready for fish 1ng S2CXXJ 1973 Ridg~wood, 70)1'14 , 3 bdr
u.
rural home that will meet
By Mn. L Baldenon
489, Radio City Station , N.Y. ' ~~W~:;~ and described 85
bits 41 ' 1 to61~'- ~ol~~2: 3~1?
14ft Lone star rl.lnabout with 1973 Kirkwood, 50xl2 2 bdr
FmHA standards. 7-42-3074.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
Mrs. Verna Rose visited 10019. Be sure to specify birth
Being Lot No . 3-45 on the WANT TO buy one cow, or cow
tro 1ler and convertoble top ,
a::
SIX ACRES . 1 room house. 3
PT PLESANT, WV
and calf Co11 992-7604 or wrife
S600 24 It Riv1ero Cru1ser pannortherly side of Third State
recently with Mr. and Mrs. sign .
bedrooms forced 01r heat, 01r
675-4424
TAURUS
(April
28-May
20)
1n
sa
10
vI
II
age
of
Pom
~roy ,
39340
wt•
u
te
Oak
Rd
Pomerov.
loon
boot
oil
olummum.
lots
of
George
Genhlemer
al There is a problem brewing Ohio, and being the same
conditioner. Located m Cl'lester
Oh 1o
extras, 50 h p 78 model Mer · 1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home
-~:~
Village $35.000 985-3563 or
&lt;llester.
.
Appl1on c:es . underpinning ,
today among friends with property conveyed 1o E S
· · - • · • · cury engme engme. still under
·~I" :t·
985-4211 .
fire place, 992-5413 or 992-6118
Susie
Goebel
ol
Tuppers
w~om
you
m111:
soa&amp;l\y
!hat
2~if.l
t._,~~~
:~~h~if:e::l:e~~
worrenty
$4500
Would
coo
l-. ..- • •
"- '• . ~ ·
Plains and Jull Whitehead mtght put you on th~ defenstve. recorded in Volume 11 r, Page ·
Yard Sale
sider cor top •f1shing boot on • -55700
. - - - -- . i
- - - -.
:1no..
trade. 949-2013 Robert Hill
spent their spring break from However, one you d least ex- 123 of the Records of Deeds of VARD SALE lues , Wed. April 3
.I
r.tU!....
and 4 Single bed complete.
Racine
'
Oblo University, Athens, at pect to do so will prove helpful Meigs County, Ohio
!:} ~!
GEMINI ~May 21-June 21) Do
The pray~r Is to quiet title ,
clothmg m 1sc E11een Swan ELECTRIC GUITAR with case , like
Phoenix, Ariz., with tbe
• . new s tee I g01tor w1t h case
&amp; ! . .:
Your best to quickly reso l'e ~nd dforeclose
11
dany
t beInterest
ow ed !•
Dus ky St , Svrocuse OH.
Roger Rose family.
any problem that tnay arise at owne or a ege 0
n
· - · ·- .--- -- - - --- ·
goodco ndit1on 992-7453
b'JI
you
and
tor
casts
.
FOUR
F•MiLY
y
d
s
1
v
Donald
Putman
Is home today , or you may ha~e
You are required to answer
,
or o e ernon
. - .. - - - - •
Bing residence , Rt. 1~3 . 2 mi les · REGISTERED APPALOOSA Stallion
recuperating at home after to lace a chilly atmosphere tor the complaint wl1hl1" 21 days
a time.
after the last publication of
out . Wed . Thurs., Fri April .4 ,
Serv1ce Breeding lor con·
surgery at Camden-Clark CANCER (June 21~July ~2) If this notlclt which wil l be
5, b
_ _ _ _ _ _ _
~~~~~tjo;joo sposltion, color
Hospital, Parkersburg, W. you are too set on your own published once each we~k for
·
----·------·,
.
1six successive we~ks The
Va.
T
- d- - - · d . 1960 INTERNATIONAl d1esel 660
Ideas today you, II fatl to hear · 1~ 5 t publication will be made YARD SALE
· . ues oy on
form troctor $2500
New
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. the suggestions of another on April 3, 1979,, and the 28
Wednesday Apnl Jrd and 4th
holland 6EI Hayliner bo 11er
NEW LISTING - 12'x60',
Rose of Akron and their who is trying to he lp you- and days for answer wlll com - Glouwore,
clothes, etc Bake
s
oo . 992-7672 or 992-5c442
1972 mobile home, central
14
who
knows
how
to.
mence
o.,
that
date
.
1
daughter, Patty, a student at
Tuesday at 48.11 Pearl St .
- - - - - - - - air,
wood
burning
LEO ~July 23-Aug 22} Be e~~:tra • .In case of your failure toj sole
Oh1o.
From
q.s both THREE REGISTERED B! uetick
Mtddk!port.
Ohio
State
University,
·
answer
or
otherwise
respond
freestanding
fireplace,
~J. J ,,
216
E.
Se,cond
Sli'ttt
prudent in management of your as required by the Ohio Ru les \ days Sponsored by Southeast
coonhounds 985 4274.
range,
refrlg~r_at~r_,
Columbus, visited sunday money
''
and property today so of Civil Procedure , judgment 0~ 1 ~ J_~ ~l!s:. l~c ____ . _ .
stAMESE;obb~ts- 4 males. 2
freezer and other furniture,
with Mrs. Verna Rose.
MAIN ST . - Business
someone doesn 't ha~e to ball by default will be rendered
all underpinning and
SALE Bock porch sole
females 985-3555
location wlth residence up.
Mrs. George Buckley has you out If you get intd trouble . against you tor the r,tlief YARD
!i' • . '
Wed , April -4th r,.-4 at Jock
· · ·
~
bl()(kS. In excelelnt conAll
utilities
and
Ideal
VIRGO
(Aug.
23-Sept.
22)
It
may
demanded
in
tl'le
compleint.
returned home after being a
Moms residence In Boum Ad· COMPLETE TWIN bed 12 x B''1 ft.
dllon. $8,900.00.
location
for
a
new
business.
Larry Spencer.
d1t1on Rain or shme
_ ; o!~ 1 4 7~2:2 ~~-a!t!r ~ _ .•
' patient at St. Joseph's seem like everythmg you want
COUNTY HOME - Nice '3
to do at this lime is stymied by
R'ANCH
Excellent
Clerk
of
Court,
Hospital, Parkersburg,W.
HEAD of sheep. Rams . ewes,
bedroom modern like
something over which you have
condition.
3
bedroom
home,
'Meigs county YARD ·sAtE -Wed ." Tn~r;. · F.rl. 32 lambs
rw'l 7165 or 992-7880
home .
Large
eat -In
' Va.
c ommon Pleas Court
9 3 2 m1 les on 143 at Clarence
equipped kitchen, din ing
no control Be patient. It will
kitchen,
full
basement.
10 H P WHEELHORSE tractor w1th
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Young pass.
Jordon res1derxe
area, carpeted, carpOrt
front porch (enclosed), and
36 in mower and 36 1n snow
and 2 •storage buildings.
aad daughter, Lauren, of LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You 12 ) 27,131 6, 13, 20,2714 1 J, 6tc THREE FAMilY Yard Sole Beside
half acre lot , Good garden
blade and two wheeled cart.
Immediate possession.
Pomeroy RD, visited Sunday can achieve Success today If
Hubbard' s
Greenh o use ,
-.pot.
Only
$23.500.
I V ••
Phone 992 7477 .
m.soo.oo.
you
resign
yourself
to
the
fact
Syra
cuse.
Wed
and
Thurs
9
till
RECREATION
SPOT
with Mr. and Mrs. Maurice that what you 're working on
n; STORY FRAME 16 MM 8ell and Howell auto load
~ Apul4th &amp; 5th. Rom cancels
On the Ohio River. 3 acres.
\l H
Reed and family.
Natural
gas
h.eat,
LEGAL NOTICE
• may take some real effort on
sound mov1e projector 10 good
dri lled well , septic system,
CARPORT SALE- A.r,rl!'s &amp; ai
Middleport schools, 4
"
PUBLIC SALE
The CommunitY Bullders your part. Don't give up.
co nd ition Ideal for clubs, , electric and 2 concrete
Grant Sl , Midd eport Clothes.
bedrooms. 2 baths , part
The following described
group or civic organltollons
Club met witb Mr. and Mrs. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NOY. 22) You c:ouarera1
pods.
w111 M so1c:J tor cash
furniture , dishes lamps and
b~sement, needs some
$350.\Phone
7.42-2184
don
't
want
to
play
It
solo
today,
BUSINESS BUILDING Ronald Osborne recently.
at a public sale at 9 : ~0 on
repair. $13,000.00.
many
other
1tems.
Storts
at
f.l'o•• •
and you may push too hard Apr il 16, 1979 at 308 318 E .
In Middleport on the T.
CONDITIONED HAV for sole.
9am Phone 992 3347
MIDDLEPORT - All legal
Several comm~y projects tying to find people to share Main
St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
26'XU'.
Several room~ up
Good
quol1ty
W1ll
deliver.
Coli
license, business for many
were discussed. Refresh· your day . Aela~~: An unex- 45709 . written bids may be
with bath, resf room and
992·7201 or992-3309
years,
building
and
sUbmitted to GMAC at 318
menta were served to Mr. and
- - - . - - . . large biJISness room down.
pected call is on Its way.
business
with · an
Main Str~et, Belpre, Ohio. -- ~amplt!9._1;.!1.!!!2ment __ 1977 ARRbWGLASS boss boot
FAMILY HOME - Large
Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr. and SAGITTARIUS (NoY. 23-Dec. The s~ller reserves the right ,
apartment over, extra lot
w1lh 85 h p Ev1nrude motor
1975 11 FOOT tru ck e:omper, se lfcountry home with o1
21) Today's obstacle can be to bid 1976 Chevrolet, Monza
·Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mr.
for parking, excellent
992-2214
or
992-S.t78
contoi ne,:f, olr condition , ex·
bedroom\. living and
er 11s 1 No . )R07G2113150 .
Income. Citll Today .
and Mrs. Denver Weber, and overcome If you're-prepared to sAccount
cellent condition. 992-2121 .
No . 232-1604 -88155..
exercise a lot of stlck-to-lt
1978 FORD PICKUP super cob V·B ~lttlng rodfns, plus large
MIDDLEPORT
- 2 lots,
·
--·
·
·
·
·
Mr. and Mrs. " Warren
:recreation room with,
lveness. Don't give up the ship
with camper top. Good condi·
mobile home 10 ' xA5' ,
TRAVEL MATE, t1 fooh lruclc
GENERAL
MOTORS
fireplace
.
3
car
garage
and
'Pickens. Next meeting" to be
t1on Good gas m1leoge' $5400.
too quickly.
apartment, new kitchen,
camper Sleeps six, both, sink ,
ACCEPTANCE
workshop ' and 1'h acres.
9·9·20A2 .
at the Pickens' home.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jin. 19)
new heating system, 2
CORPORATION
r e fr~gerotor
and furnace.
....
Jusl $35,000.
Consider a hasty exit If you run 14 ) 3, He
bedrooms and a both,
$1500 Co\1742·2843
~,1
LAND
~ Lot.. acreage,
another
apartment
Into Individuals who have narriver
frontage
,
some
~ -~·
available. 1151000.00
...,
row
outlooks
and
begin
to
rub
SLUGG!SH
SALEs
I.
cleared, some wooded. In
Auto Sales
221 FOOT FRONTAGE you the wrong way. It's better
town and out.
On Rt. 1 within Pomeroy
than sounding off.
Retail sales were sluggish
~ROW
WITH
.
•THE
corporation llmlh, 111"
'.
AQUARIUS (JM 1 20-Fob. 11) in 1978. Buying was up by on- 1973GRANOPRIX , sun roof. tope
COUNTRY, INVEST IN
power . Good t~r es new fUoc·
acres In all , originally. had
:) - •
BIG WATER
Just boc.ouaa someone Is a Iy 2 P':rcent o,ver 1977 (after
REAL
ESTATE 'AT
two houses. $3,000 .00.
h~ust s_ys_te:n . ~2:~~
•• :;..
Tbe California legislature friend doesn't mean you ha'e adjustmg for inflation). AcTEAFORDS. CALL 992REALTORS
lend them something you
.
1972 Pl VMOUTH FURY Ill. P S
3121.
:~
named a large lake on the to
Henry E . Cl•lond, Sr.
know they may never retl)rn. cording to lb.e Conference
P. B rruisf! control S650 or
Gordon B.
" Henry E. C eland, Jr.
- ~· California-Nevada border Politely say. "No."
bes t offer 992-3717
'
· Board , many consumers
•92·2lS9
992-6191
Helen L.
Il l!'~ : Lakie Bigler, in honor of Gov.
PISCES (Fob. 2~orch 20) To lacked the cash to purchase 197i cOMEr 6 c;l -62~o0o rv·;1l;s,
Sue P. Murphy
!1 · -• • Wiw8m Bigler (1814-1880), gain the cooperation of others more. Between rapidly rising $1500. Ever:.ln_gs , 9?'J. 7133 .
Realtor As10ci•tes
~ •• &lt;, but tbe people Ignored the of- today you may first have to prices and the graduated in- 1974 GMC JtMM'( 2-wheel d~r vt&gt; .
llalen
to
their
plans
and
be
.
.
1!
flclal name and continued to wl!llngtogl,e1hema1ry , lfthey come tax, dtsposable ln"'!me
P S P 8 air sh('ICks In the
Ho11sinq
·~.· : · call H Lake TalKie, an lndl!"' loll, they'll try It your way.
n~or
Reese troller hitch. ij.
mcreased bylessthan3.5perHt!.Jdqu,u ters
trocl' an d CB rodi o 991 - ~SRO
"'4t · teJVI meaning "big water.: •
INEWSPA~ ENTEIIIPAISE ASSN J
eent last year. ,.

... ....

DICK TRACY

• Q
+A J 4 3

You open one spade and
rebid two spades over your
partner's two hearts .
He continues to three
clubs. A Texas reader wanta
to know what we do ·now.
We make the simple bid of
four clubs. We have no Interest in three notrump and
Intend to pass if partner's
next bid is four hearts.
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRJSE ASSN)

(Do yov hsve. a question lor
the BJtperts ? Write ''Ask the
Experts ," care of this newspaper. Individual quBstlons w/11
bfJ answered Jf accomt~anfed
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes . The most mterestlnu question s wfll be ussd In
this column and will receive

copies ol JACOBY MODERN I

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. TUesday, April3, 1979

March' indi~ators ~show
Ohio· marketbaskets Up
Jy

JOE McKNJGIIT
Asaoclaled Press Writer
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (AP ) The Ohio Associated Press
Marketbasket survey has
again followed the nalfonal
trend by indicating another
rise in grocery prices.
As an experiment, the
survey included gasoline
prices in the enlk!f-March
price check and it showed
name brlind gasoline was still
available - in some places for 68 cents a gallon . Fuel
prices were sampled in· 17·
clUes and grocery prices in 18
clUes.
Am o·n g regular
supermarket Items, the price .
. check showed costs or
surveyed groceries were up .7

Commitments
up slightly"

percent at the end of March,
after a slight drop the
previous month . That
depline, of .5 percent, was the
first since last October.
Average costs on the J7.
grocei'y survey items among
the 18 cities was $21.66, up
from $21.50 a month earlier.
The prtce watchers folDld
some name brand serVIce
stations in Cohunbus and
Toledo sold regular gasoline
•

History
deadline
Thursday

at selfserv!ce pumps for 67.9
cents per gallon. Top price
(or unleaded.gasoline at fuD· '
service pumps was 79.9 cents
In Cincinnati. Averages of
regular gasoline at self-serve
pumps was 69.9 cents and 72.9
cents at fuUservlce pumps.
Averages on unleaded
·.gasoline was 74 cents at selfservice pqiQps and 76.5 cents
at full-serVice pumps.
The 11verage grocery
markethasket went up 16
cents over the month in the 18
cities surveyed. That was
four cents higher than prices
on the same ItemS at the end
of January.
Among Individual Items,
prices advanced on nine and
beld ste~dy on seven, with
me, a can of tomato soup,
holding steady at 22 ' cents.
Oniy slight changes occurred
in a pound. of slick
margarine; which dropped a
cent to 66 cents, and an Illounce container of namebrand peanut butter, which
advanced a penny lo $1.13.
Head lettuce and fresh to.
matoes were the most
volatile items priced. Cost of
a pound of tomatoes rose 25.3
percent over the month, from

rt.'('eivlng complaioh: of

phone calls ... obscene and
DOD lolkers.
.
SherUI Prollltt advises
residents to use the
telephone on ·their own
terms. Ask callers to
Identify themselves. When

63 to 79 cents, while the price a voiCe asks, "Who is
of lettuce dropped 31.3 this?" don't tell him, 10.
percent, from 83 to 57 cents on
stead ask, uwhat number
average.
did you Call?'; or "Whom
The price of a l.Q.pound do you want?" If the caD
sack of Idaho potatoes Isn't legitimate, that very
declined 3.2 percent over the
likely will end II- If It's the
check period, from $1.54 a
kind of caller that remains
month ago tO $1.49.
silent after you answer,
Cost of a dozen grade A hang upl If he makes any
large .eggs went up 13.4 · obsceae or suggestive
percent over the month, from
remark, bang up! He'd like
82 cents at the end of
oolhiDg better lhan lor you
February to an average of 93
to demand lo bow who he
&lt;;ents,
It, or to ask repeatedly
what he wants.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorui.! Hospital
Admitted - Janies Webb,
Guysville ;. Golda Lawson,
Minersville; Rebecca Cole,.
Pomeroy; Maggie Gllrilore,
Racine;
Aaron
Zahl,
Pomeroy; Virgil Day,
Middleport; Opal Zerkle,
Syracuse-; Timothy Hayden,
Croton ; Ge~rude PeUegrlno,
Middleport; Howard Searles,
Pomeroy; Myrta Schaefer,
Pomeroy; Clyde Barnett,
Langsville.
, Discharged - GeorRe
Hackett, Sr.

A·r ea• ea·
. th s

Prosecuting attorney, Rick ask if there would . be a
Jones, board .president,
Crow, acting as director ci possibility. that the Jaycees · declared ' t.he · meeting
the CETA Plat Mop program, could lease part d. the old recessed until noon on Thur·
and county engineer, Wesley Chester · Courthouse. The · sday, AprilS, at which ttme
Buell!, met with lhe Meigs board decided to contact the bidS will be opened on
county .Commissioners present ies8ee, the O!ester blttimlnous · and ·aggregste
TUesday eveiUng to discuss Grange , · 2809, · about ter· materialS and a plckuptruck. ·
the program and its progress. mino ting its lease.
. . . Attending w~re Jones, :
Crow presented two comto letter from Sheriff James Henry Wells, Cheater WeDs, ,
pleted sections of Bedford . J. Prdfitt. was received .and Mary Hobstetteer', clerk.
ToW118hip . and stated that reqq-esting that . contracts
· rapid progress could now he with the various villageS for
m~de since th~ Initial
boarding villalle prisoners In
EXTENDED FORECAST
training Is complete.
lhe county jail he reVised.
Friday lbrouch Sunday:
Buehl also discussed the The board will toke the matShower~~
or snow flurries
CETA Title VI B program ter under adviBement with
possible
In lbe north
that is being transferied from lhe proeecutor.
Friday.
Moatly fair
the Leading Creek Watershed
The foUowing persons were
Salarday
111d
rain po~slble
Association to the collnty appointed to the Melgs CounSUJiday.
Hl.lba
from lhelow
commissioners.
This ty Tuberculosis Board of
40s to low iiOa Friday and
program will consist of 23 Trustees: Marilyn Spencer,
Salnrday, warmlug to lbe
participants who are Maxine Philson, !len Philson
mid 508 1o mid 80s by
. assigned a8 laborers with the and Barbara Knight.
SuDday.
Low• ID tile upper
county highway department
Co.mmiasioners Richards
ZOs
and
low
30s Friday ·and
Victor Gaui,Gary Dill, and Jones and Henry Wells
Sa11u'day
and
mosUy In the
Bill Ollborne, members of the welcomed newly appointed
30. Sunday.
Shade River Jaycees met board member, Chester
with the commissioners . to Wells.

· SALE ITEMS READY - Charles David is pictured with wood work and other items
that will he sold at the Meigs Senior Citizens Easter Bazaar on Thursday, AprilS from 9:30
a.m .-3 :30pm. Friday, April6from 9:~p .m . with a pancake supper from 4 tD 8 p.m. lind
Saturday from 10 a.m.-! p.m.
·
..
·c

$56,171 contract awarded

Gillon and son, Laura Duffy, .
·
John Felton, Stephanie
By ROBERT E. MIUer
the old shafts so it can see
Fowler, William Gilbert,
Assoctoted Press Writer
they are effectively filled and
Mrs. Frank Goble and .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - closed.
daughter, Herbert Hen- State controllers have apHe said timber and various
derson, Charles Justis, Lydia proved a $56,171 contract types of other matter - inKendrick, Raymond Kerns, under which the state natural eluding debris used to close
Sheila Lanham, Frederick resources· department will the shafts off originally,
Lewis, Anthony McGuire, try to find Ohio's unrecorded perhaps around the turn of
George Molden, Mrs. Ricky coal mine shafts.
the century - are rotting and
Moody and daughter, John
The shafts are described as causing the ground to sag and
Morrow · Edwin Neal
potential safety hazardS and fall ln.
Sen . Harry Meshel, D·
William' Norman, Phillip they already have. caused
Parsons, Pamela Pasquale, • property damage m three ·Youngstown, said the fill was
Georgia Pike, Terry QuaDs, countnes. Some have been washed out of a sh!ilt under a
Jr ., Rita .Randolph, Ed· caving In, Including one in a scho~l-yard In hts district,
ward
Reese
Michael schoolyard and nother . leavmg an open hole. He sa1d
Richards, · Mary Rutledge, beneath a housing project, another
shaf~
caused
problems under a housing
Mary . Stanley, ·Amanda the board. was told.
'rhievener Thomas ThornThe seven-member board project In the same area.
ton, Mae Venekamp, Patricia gave its unanimous approval
Midden assured the board
Ward, Roger Waugh, Morris Monday for a oohtract to be that the oerial photographs
Webster, Norman Wright, funded by the federal govern- will enable the division of
Andrew Yeager.
ment Qetween the natural geological· survey to locate
March 38, Discharges
re~urces department and a most of t~e abandoned
Vern~ Birchfield, Ralph prt.vate Painesville firm working&amp; by pinpointing
Clark Nora Cross Seth whtch will make detailed ground sags. But he said he
David, GlendQra Gilllam, aerial photographs of does not think aU the sl)altA
Roy Gladman, Joyce Harris, Mahon!ng, Trumbull, and can be found. .

· '
and foliage hide the ground
sags from view:
In other business, be
board:
,
- · Approved a ' $~~.000 ·
development department
grant for a ·water and sewer
line extension In Bellevue:
- Released $224,000 for an
e n v I r o n e n ta I I m provements project a,t the
University of Cincinnati.
-APProved expenditure of
$1~,000 by the College of
Osteopathic Medicine at Ohio
University for a microwave
system at Its regional clinic
facilities.
- .Released $230,000 for
roof repairs on . Miami ·
University's Irvin Hall.
- Permitted the ad·
ministratlve services
department to 'purchase
$250,000 worth of certain
types of papers which are not
available froll\ Its regular
contractors.

Family · histories · not
submitted for publication by
the Thursday deadline will
Meigs County Prosecuting not he accepted ·for the new
Attorney, Fred W. Crow, III, Meigs County History Book
announced today that the tieing compiled.
To aid people In turning in
Department of Rehabilitation
the
histories,
several
and Corrections issued its
locations
have
been
set up
1978 annual report.
this
week
to
receive
lhe
The report shows 6,930
The
new
locations
stories.
prisoners were committed to
state prisons during the year, lilclude the Pomeroy and
compared to a slightly lower Middleport Public Ubrarles
' Holzer MedlcaiCCI!ter
and the Meigs County Senior
figure of 6,867 last year.
FUNDS RECEIVED
Dlllcbarges, March 29
The 1976 commitment Citizens Center In Pomeroy.
State
Auditor Thomas E.
Edward
Adamson, Harvey
will
be
at
the
Personnel
figure of 6,930 is far higher
Ferguson report.ld the March Barr, Sara Bricker, Mabel
Meigs
Museum
on
Butternut
than the figUre reported for
distribution of $12,44~,297.19
the first haU of this decade, Ave., Pomeroy, from 1 to 3 in local government fund Brown, Maxine CaUicoats,
when commitments averaged p.m. through the Thursday money to Ohio's 88 counties Linda Dalton, Mrs. James
deadline to receive the
less than 4,800 per year.
and 408 cities and villages
histories.
All except one of Ohio's 88
levying
local income taxes.
Families may submit up to
counties contributed to the
County received
Meigs
number of prison commit- 500 words free of charge for $12,500.
publication
In
the
book.
ments in the fiscal year and
• !". ··~
again this year the state's six
Betty ·Henderson, Mrs. ~~umbl~na cotUJties.
He said · : the aerial . - Approved $90,000 for
largest urban areas were - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~
I A suit in the IIJDCjunt of Thomas Kelly, Sr. and son,
That s
where
the photographs probably will architects' fees for lm·
responsible .for over half the I
I $29,900.17 has been IUed · Iii Michael Mathews Francis problems are," said Richard require abolit five g\'Od flying provements at Apple Creek
total number of .commit- I
I
·
·
.
·
·
·
I Meigs County Conunon Pleas McCulloch, Arnie' Murray, .H. Midden, .the departmeni's days. The depal'\menl will State Institute. ' ·
ments.
I
·
·
·
I Court by First Financial Carol Pierce, Goldie Red- deputy director. He added start tbe project as soon as
Meigs County rlinked '61st
. .
· Savings
and , Loan · man Edmund Reed Marian that the state needs to locate possible, before the leaves
in number of commitments,
FORRFSI'
KELLER
Survmng
are
a
brother,
·
.
G
· R ''Ids E 1 R' ' 1 J
while Gallia County ranked
Forrest G . fBoob)· PaulK. Keller Route! Mid- Assoclation,Downers, rove,
eyno ' ar
lege, r .,
8!st.
I
Keller,86, 2660 Wells Road, dleport ; a slst~r, Mrs. 'o. T. Ill., again~ John L. Davis Wa~da Scarbrough, Wendy
Ashland, Ohio,, died Monday iVeva ) Beck of Ashland, and and Mehnda J . Davis,. Smtih, Jane Teaford, Bertha
UDC •••
TRY OUR
at the Colonial Manor Con- several nieces nephews and Pomeroy.
Thompson, Emanuel Wears,
(Continued from page I)
valescent Center In Loudon- cousins
'
F.Uing for divorce were Jack Wheatley.
involved policemen in the
ville following a lengthy
Fune~al services will be F!orlne Ginther, Chester,
Births, March 30
(COntinued from page I ) , Island.
.
office rather than out on the
illness. ·
held at 1 p.m. Thursday atthe against Jack ~· Ginther, .. Mr. and Mrs. Antho~y , streets.
doses of a chemical intended -:- In Portland, Maine,
Mr. Kell~r had been a Rutland Church ·of the Chester; Earl A. Smith, Ward, daughter, Gallipolis . . Council wants the com- to reduce the effects of Rtchard Lewsen, head· of
CK.Y
resident of Ashland County Nazarene with the Rev. IJoyd P~meroy, against Edna A.
Discharges, March 31
plaints stopped . Chief radiation on hwnan thyroid Cumberland County's civil
KENTU
for the past 30 years. He was Grimm officiating . Burial Smith, Pomeroy.
Patrick Akers, Jeffrey. Webster said he would take . glands were being sent to the emergency p.rogram,
FRIED CHICKEN
a retired farmer and a will he in the Miles Cemetery. . Jani~s R. Neal, et al, Austin, Mrs. Monet Bass and care of it.
Harrisburg area.
su~gested that people In the
veteran ofthe u.s. Army oi Friends may call at the chur- · Cheshire, filed suit for daughter, Donna Bnggs,
- In New Jersey, about 14 southwestern area ci the
It was also reported that
. ..
.
World· WaF I. He was born chanytimeafter2p.m. Wed- dgecilart·atDory ljudgEmenht ~::: B~~~~u:.,arenByB::- there is a constant . disrega~d ·demonstrators were charged state stoy out of the danip, ·
fAMILY RESTAUAANT Feb. 25, 1893, a son of the late nesday. The family will a a ns oug as noc ,
.• .
• for speeding on Union Ave. with trespassing after they ra1~y . weather because of
Charles E. and Addie McHaf- receive·friends at the church ·Gallipolis.
Rebecca Call, Carolyn. The Mayor stated several blocked the entrance to the rodi~tion that appeared to be
992-5432
fey Ketler.
. from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
Ricky Lee Deeter, Rt. 1, Carbtree; Lowell Crabtree, arrests have been made.•
headquarter's ., of General blowmg in f~ Harrisburg.
• ..,;.Po;;,m;,;
· ileiiriioy"';.O;;,·;..~•
p.m. Wednesday
Portland, . and Sherry Lee Phyllis Cramer, Ray George,
Public Utilities the con- He emphasiZed that the
GRANT APPLICATION
. The Walker F~neral Home Deeter, Columbus, filed for Lunn Harris, Mrs. Steven
It was pointed olit that a sortium that 0~ Thret! Mile 1situotlon "is not serious." ·
is in charge of services.
dissolution of marriage.
J~nklns and son, Tamml grant application has been
'
Kmg,
Charles
Lew1s,
Lswrence Lewis, Barbara made to Housing lind Urban
Uoyd, Mrs. ROger McKinney Developent In the amount of .
ond daughter, Shirley Miller, $101,800 to repair the
Roddy Moore, Pamela Oiler, collapsed .road and retaining
Charles Perroud, William wall on Laurel Street,
Poling, Sr., Beverly Queen, deeming it an imminent
Anna Robinette, Dorothy threat to public heal\h and
(Continued from page I)
Sayre, Patricia Shafer , safety. A grant In the same
lead them to safety, authorities said.
George Stover, Mathew amount hos been requested
The lone woman on duty was asleep when the fire
Upton, Ralph Waugh, Ken- from the State .Controlling
started early Monday and was pulled from the building
Board.
neth WUson.
·
by two ejderly residents alter she was trapped trying to
Chref Webster·~ repo~
Marcb U, Births
. awaken everyone, they said.
_..,
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie showed the .department mad~
29 arrests, investigated 29
Jobnson,son, Letart, W. Va.
accidents,
drove 4,~88 miles
Dlscba~ges, AprU 1
and
collected
$1,570 from the
George Bates, Kat(ly
KERRVILLE, .Texaa (AP)-A Kerrville man has
Bowen, Nina Brumfield, parking meters.
been charged with murder foUowmg the electrocution
Kimberly Greenlee, Pauline Meeting with council was a
of a 4-year..ld boy who touched a metal trash can that
Harbolt, Josephine Hurt, representative of Rish
the man had connected to an electric outlet police
. Mrs. John Jackson and son, Equipment Co., Parkersburg
~d.
'
Eric Kemper, Mrs. Larry regarding a vibrating plate
·· Officers said Monday that the man Vernon ·Houston
Lane and daughter, James compactor to be used in
Smith, apparently was trying 1o pr~ent dogs from
McFann, GIK&gt;rlel Scott, patching streets at a cost of
g~ttlng Into his garbage:-Btt Travis Fry, 4, who had
Frank Schriver, Clyde Smith, $1,090. No aclion was taken.
slipPed oway from home Sunday while his mother was
•
Betty Baronlck, ·council
Mrs. Dannie Sturgill and son,
taking a nap; leaned his bicycle agalilst the cans, pollee
woman, reported she is
William
.Swan,
Timothy
ssid.
.
.
.
meeting witl1Edith Sisson on
Tennant.
'
·
.. ,
·
·'
,.
lv
a proposed plan lor handling . \
Births, Aprill
' Mr. and Mrs. Charles parking meter receipts.
Hudson,
daughter, Galllpoli,s . The meeting was opened
'•
MANSFIELD,
Ohio
(AP)
-Thaddeus
Lewlngdori,
Citizens National Bank is my kind of
with prayer by Lou Osborne.
on
trial
for
the
~ailed
central
Ohio
'
'.22-&lt;:illber
Ferry,
W.Va.
bank. The te'llers are all so friendly.
Attending were, Mayor
Discharges, AprU 2
killings," took the stand Monday and claimed he was
And if 1•m tired at lunchtime, or don 't
Andrews,
Brown, Wehrung,
not invoJ.ved in any of the shootings, Including three for
David brandeberry, ·Arlen
Osborne,
Baronick, Bill
•
which he already has been convicted.
have the car. I can bank by mall. It's
Brown, Lucille Burris,
.
Young,
and
Rod
Karr,
C!Oimcil
Jeremy Buskirk, Mary CathHe. ~d he admitted Involvement in the killings only
all so convenient! Here comes my
because of a death threat made against his wife and
man, James Crisp, Sr., members, and Mrs Walton.
J
thank you memo ...
children by a masked man,.adding that he oow fell free
William Davidson, Linda
·to give what he said waa the correct story because his
Fields, . Avanell · George ,
fat:nily.!s in seclusion. Lewingdon said be did not know
Millard Halstead, Lee Houck,
LEGAL NOT ICE
where the family had reloc.ated, but that ItS members
Sandra ·McKnight, Larry ·
The Public Ulililie s Commis·
were safe.
Mayes, Melissa Nance,
si
on of Ohio has s¢11or pub·
T.
.l
• ·
· Norman Rayburn, Sarah
lie
hearing Case No . 7il-629·
e&amp;ecfjOn
Rlrn~. Larry speakrrian n,
EL-FAC Subllle A. lo review
"The Friendly Bank"
Charles Stephens.
the fuel procuremenl prac·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - John E. Jones of
Births, April%
flees and policies ol T~e Ohio
Gohanna has been appointed to a vacancy on the
Walk-up teller window
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas
Power Compan1 . lhe opera·
Franklin County Board of Elections by Secretary of
i!nd i!ufo-teller window
Cremeens,
daughter,
ol ·its Fuel Cost AdjuSI·
lion
State Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr. He will replace Nelson ·
Open Friday Evenings Sto 7 p.m.
. menl Clause. and relaled
Gallipolis.
Mr:
arid
Mrs
.
Lsncione, who recently resigned. The term explrea
fnatters. This hearin'g is
'.
Hullng Greene, son, Hartnext Feb. 29 and the salary ls$10,000a year.
scheduled 10 begin al 2:00
lord, W.. Va.
Celebrezze · appointed Jones after the county
p.m. on Apnl9. 1979. al lhe
Oemocratlc ~arty failed to nominate anyorie within the
Cily Council Olllce. · 218
Action is the word of the. 70 's ... and here 's the wa·y to
Cleveland Ave. S.W.. Can·
. required ltklay period.
~'
DEER KILLED
be active In style with a short sleeve, V·neck knit top
1on. Oh io 44702. An evening
with triple. striping down both ~hOulders , The poplin
A vehicle operated by
session will be conducted
,
shorts pick up the stripes on the sides for a coorJeffrey Kbnes, 17, Reedslrom 5.30 lo 7:00 p.m.
dinated look for active or casual wear. From the
ville,
Incurred
hellvy
damage
All
inleresled
parties
will
be
.
COLUMBUS,, Ohio. (At') - Olllo IJei,lutment of
Pro Action c: ollecti.on by Campus .
- .
durlilg an auto-deer accident
given an opportunil1 lo be
Rehabilitation an~ Corrections Dlrector George
qcua;
. .! I .
heard . Further intormalion
Many other stYles men.'s an~ boys' shorts and tops
Monday . on . SR 681, four·
Denton says Ohio and New Jersey are the only two ·
,may be oblaifMld by conlacttenths of a mOe west of CR SO,
slatell where no new prison con.structioh is planned.
lng the Commiss1oo.
··
- MeA's and BoYs' Department 0:~ the .1st FlOOr. ·
at 7:20 P·IIl·
· The state Is under court orders to relieve ·prison
T~ E PUBLIC UTILITiES
The
Gallla-Melgs
Post,
'
.
over-crowding, but efforts to obtain more money for
COMMISSION OF OHIO
Highway Patrol, reports that
building prisons have been turned oown by both the
Member F..D~ I.C. Deposits Insured ·to S40,000.00.
B1: Richard L. Smilh .
KIIpes' vehicle struck and
· .
legislature and Ohio voiers.
Secrelary
kUied a deer,Jllllhe roadway.
il&gt;

$29,956 court
action filed

Co

n

m

,.

(USPS 145·960)

ELBERFELD$

d

Plan mav neecJ insurance too

Cilber\s ,1alional Bank
'

£6

'

.

-i

]\To pnsan planned in Ohio.

ELBERFELDS .IN ·POMEROY .

(

,.

•

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1979

. plant expansion would do
much to help the welfare
situation ..
"The few that we've placed
so far go into janitorial or the
guard Ioree," he said. "The

15 CENTS

~

"

priority seems to be Vieblam

people locaUy "made any are going to train some of our
money out of the boom" when loc;al unemployed people," he
people would be the last .
tl]e plant was bullt. "Most of S8ld.
"Most of our people aren't the people who got jobs came
highly skilled," he added. · ' from oui of state.
Jenkins said very few
"This time, we hope they
veterans, then the welfare

Clyde because of shipping
problems.
General Motors Corp. said
about 2,000 wdrkers were laid
off ' at the 'Packsrd'"Eleetr!c
DIVision plant at Warren
because of the strike.
I..ordstown and Cincinnati
Gill plants cut shifts io four
hours.
Procter &amp; Gamble Co.
spokesman William Dobson
said the firm has built up supplies and is switching to rail.
transportaUon

where ,

feasible.
Meanwhile, a Teamsters
spokesman in Cleveland said
the pnion was continuing to
sign interim contracts with
some trucking . firms to
continue operations until a
new
master
freight
agreement is reached .
The spokesman, who asked
not to he identified, said 40
trucking firms . had been
signed to Interim contracts
Monday by Teamsters Local
407. and that statewide, 100

companies had signed
contracts out of 1,200
employers.in Ohio.
. Tht'signings ·W~&gt;re reported
to be another move In the
strategy employed by union
leaders and management.
. "The Teamsters' effort to
counteract the lockout Is
making · progress, as far as
Ohio is concerned ," the .
spokesman said.
The Teamsters struck only
selected trucking firms when
the walkout started at 12:01
a .m.
Sunday,
but
management counlered by
locking out Teamster
employees nationwide.
The Teamsters are asking
for 9 percen..,raises in each
year of the three-year
contract, improved mileage
allowances for nonhourly
drivers, impro.ved frin ge
benefits, cost of living raises,
severance pay , additional ·
sick leave and increased
lease rates.

Commissioner Wells sworn In

Sanctions put on district

...

post

'

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Nationwise---.

Man charged with mUrder

JOnes name to

NO. 247

r

at y

•

OSP checks strike incidents

-.u

Clt(M'S

•

VOL Nil XXIX

e

•

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) - · construction workers They ·just live on welfare."
The county has a labor
The future of nuclear power; swarming into the area.
Coufi\Y Welfare Director force of 10,198, with 1,749
which is being debated in tl)l!
"We had 768 people here .Harold' Jenkins said 446 unemployed - 17.2 percent
wake of the accident at the when they began to build the persons were on his Aid to -compared to the state
Three Mile Island generating plant in 1950," said former DePendent Children rolls and average of 6.5 percent.
Jenkins doesn 't ,tl)ink the
plantnearHarrisburg, Pa., Is ·Mayor Ernest M. Osborne. anotber 1,045 on Medicaid.
li matter of vital concern to
"It grew gradually for
lbe economically deptessOd about three months and then
Piketon area in southeaslern really turned on. The biggest
Ohio.
income of the city then was
nuclear power opponents liquor and beer licenses for
are successful, It could mean the three taverns," said
By 'rhe Associated Press Wilke was charged with
cancellation of o $4.~ ii!Won Osborne.
Some InCidents of violence criminal damaging and
expansion of Pike County's
" We had one policeman, have been reported on Ohio endangering after a truck
·.uranium enrichment plan( , and every Friday evening I'd roads as the impact of the was . vandalized at a
. II would mean theiQOS 01 up deput.ize , tbree ·· special •Te.amsters
strike · and warehouse.
•
to &amp;,:;oo ·new jobs, which Is policemen for each of the trucking Industry lockout · The driver, Randy CUmnine more than tbe number three bars where they cashed SPreads across the state.
mings, 28, of Clarksburg,
people presently employed in checks. Now we've got about
The Highway Patrol W.Va ., was treated ·at
the entire county.
14 policemen," he said.
r,..-ted a truck w~s:fired at .. Bellaire City HoSPital for
And it would make some
The plant now employs With a shotgun as 1t left the facial cuts.
native residents of the area about 3,000, and the village Armco Steel Corp. plant · In Stark County James L.
population is 1,600.
very happy .
Tuesday in MiddletoWn, but, Davis 24 of Canton a nonWhat concerns the old•
"It was 10 times better be· the ~iver was uninjured.
striki~g d~iver, was ~rrested
timers is not the danger from fore the plant came here. I . Patrol officers refused ~ and charged with criminal
nuclear materials but a don 't like saying It, but It's tdenllfy the driver or hts endangering following . an
recurrence of the wild boom true," said Osborne, 71, who company.
armed confrontation with
times of the 1950s when the workS as a c~penter and
Georgia lruck~r Robert striking Teamsters. Sheriff's
Goodyear atomic plant was cabinetmaker.
Taylor, traveling .near deputies said Davis told tbem
buill , bringing 30,~00
"Everyone worked then ; Ravenna .TUesday, sa1d a he was forc~d at gunpoint by
now almost nobody does. heayy obJect was dropped four Teamsters to unhitch a
from . an Interstate 76 trailer he had just picked up
overpass onto his truck. Tay- at a truck terminal.
lor W8S'treated and released
Davis went hqme , got a .22from a local hOSPllnl. .
caliber rifle and fired one
At least two arrests were shot in the air before he was
reported in ~onneclion with arrested, deputies said.
picket-line 1n~ldents and
Whirlpool Corp. said it had
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter's "real
vandallsm surrounding the laid off 3,600 employees.at its
wage" insurani:e plan may soon need life Insurance
four-day-old strtke.
plants in Findlay Marion and
after a House cmunlttee vote to delete $2.5 billion for
Bellaire pollee said Charles·
'
the anli-inflatlon proposal.
· The House Budget Committee voted 14-11 TUesday
to remove all mooey f&lt;r the program from the
tentative congressional budget lhe panel is preparing
for fiscal198d, which starts Oct. I.
'
Chester Wells, Long Bot- fill that vacaflcy.
The new commissioner said
tom, Tueadoy was sworn in as
a Meigs County Com· he will devote all the time
missioner filling the vacancy necessary to work for the
PAINESVIlLE, Ohio (AP) - 'lbe Pain~e
Township Education Aaaoclation has voted
created by the resignation of peop\e of Meigs County. "The
professional sanctlms against the scbool district
.James Roush. Wells was commissioner's position
because the .assoclaUoo says "undesirable condltlona"
appointed by the Democratic comes flrst," Wells· stated.'
Wells has been in conhamper a quality education program.
·
party's central committeestrucl!on
for 33 years having
Association president Kathleen J. Riley said the
men. .
"group will ask the Ohio. Edl!calion Asaoclatlon .to
Wells was an Olive Twp. last worked at Kyger Creek.
Wells further stated . he
impose statewide Sanctions agalnot the district. The
trustee befoce his recent
OEA already baa sanctions agalnot six ' Ohio school
·appointment.
·He
has would like to see lmdistricts, meaning teacbers are advised not to seek
resigned that post. Henry provements made to CO\IIltY
Hensley has been named to
jobs in the districts.

CRISPY

Lewingdon claims· innocence

LARGE BOUL'DERS are falling from the base of .large rocks behind homes on Spring
Ave. It is feared that loss of support at the base·may cause a major slide of the huge rocks.
Several government agencies have been advised and are looking into possible solutions to
the problem.
. .
.
.
.

Nuclear power vital concern in Piketon area

Contamination

Nationwise---.

'

...

EX1RA

Just my type.~.
..

.(

Rapid progress
seen on program

· WARNING GIVEN
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. ProiCIII reports
his department has been

roads, the Multi· Purpose
Building and nursing home
projects completed and
improvement to access
roads.
" I have been involved in
industrial construction as
well as road construction and
feel that my background will
assist me in the repair of
highways in the county,"
Wells commented .
Wells Is county chairman of

the Meigs county D~mocrat
party, and a veteran of World
War II. He and his wife,
Dorothy, are the parents of 12
children, eight ~lrls and four
boys.
·
Wells further Stoted, "I wUI
do my best to serve the people
lo. make things better In
Meigs County and cooperate
with the other commissioners
and will devote full time to
j.he position i£ necessary."

SOHIO gas going up again

. '.'

CLEVELAND (AP) - Standard Oil Co. (Ohio)
raised gasoline prices TUesday hy 2 cents a gaBon on
both retall and wholesale levels becfuse of Increased
processing coats, said Ron Ka[lCSOI, manager of
pricing for Sohlo.
Effective TUesday, prices at company-owned
stations.were 81.9 cents a gallon for Boron, 78.9 for
unleaded Catron and 74.9 fOI' Octron at full aervlce
pumpa. In the last tlve weeks, Soblo•a prices have rtaen
5 cents, with 1-cent Increases on .March 13, March 2l'
and March 29.

Fonner leader banged
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan (AP)- Former Prtme
Mlnlater Zulllksr All Bhutto, Paldatan'o dominant
poUUcal fllure from 11711o 18'17, wa.1 hanged today at
Rawalpindi'• central jail after the general who oualed
him re!ecled clemency appeals from Preald«tt Carter .
and oth« farel&amp;n leaders.
President Mollamrned Zta ui-HliQ'• military
go'l!lrnmanl aald the body of the ~1-year-old leader of
the Pakistan Peoplea Party was Down by the air force ·
to Naurdro, his birthplace lil 1011thlm Pakistan, ·and
burled tbere eight houra after the 2a.m. -cuUon lil
the presence of two uncles and one of his two wivea,
Amlr Begum.
' \'flo

WARNING GIVEN
Numeroua complalnt,a
are being received at the . Two persons were injured
Middleport Mayor's olflee during two accidents inregarding tioga and cats · veatlgated Mooday in Meigs
runalng loose In tbe County by the G!illla-Melg.•
village. .
1"011, ~'1!11¥ ~trol.
Mayor Fred Hoffmaa
. Offlcera were CllDed to the
remlads relldeau that lcene of a two-vehicle
there Is • vUJage Ordlaance collision on SR 7, at the juneprohlblllnllbla alljl warns tlonofU.S. 33:at8:25a.m.
thai aU violators will be . The patrol reports that an
cited lo mayor'• court.
auto operated by Ann Ogdln,
Residents are advised to 79,l-angav1De, pulled fmn 33
keep their pels conflaed lo onto 7 Iillo the path of a north
their own property.
,.
bound vehicle driven by Van
.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::::::::~::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::
A. Willford,l8, Middleport.
. Ogdin , dlspillyed visible
signs of injury, but was not .
.
inunedlatelytreated.
·
Both vehicles incurred
~ound
slight damage. No citation
11
waa Issued.
Officers investigated a twoMeigs County Sheriff vehicle accident on SR 124, at
James J. Proffitt reports that milepo8t 17, at ll:40a.m.
he and his deputie. were
The patrol reports that a
called to the residence of parked auto 0)\'lled by Rita
George C.Cooper, 34, Rt. Maust, J.angsville, rolled on- .
2,Racine, TUesday at 4:35 to the pavement into the Mth
p.m.
of a west bound vehicle
Upon arrival they found operated hy Cla.renee Cor·
Mr. Cooper with a gunshot neD, 88, Middleport.
wound to the · head. The
A passenger in lhe Cornell
Racine Emergency Squad auto, Robert Bailey, 61,
was on the scene and sqUad · LangSville, claimed Injury,
perSOIUiel ad~ that Mr. but was not ~ately
Cooper wos dead.
treated.
The Incident is still under
Both vehicles Incurred
investlgaUon by lhe sheriff's moderate damage . No
department and th!' county citation was issued.
comer. Mr. Cooper leaves a
wife and two children

Racm·e man

dead

Bike-a-thon

RETURNS TO WORK
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio ( AP J
- Rosa County 'Deputy
Sheriff Forrest Powell was
scheduled to return to work
Tuesday night following 11
decision by the county grand·
jury not to indict him In the
shooting death of a !?-yearold prisoner.
The grand jury spent 3\\t
hours Monday conslderlilg
evidence surrounding the·
death of Ernest Alexander of
Frankfort. Alexanller was
shot lil the head by Po'!'ell as
he ran, handcuffed to another
juvenile from the deplity near
a detention &lt;:enter.
.
"We're grateful," aald
Sheriff Thomas Hamman. "It
will help lift the cloud over ,
this sheriff's office."
Cow1AciiIn Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Jean Cof·
fey ,Rutllnd, IUed suit . for
divorce agalnit James T. Cof.
fey, Uma.Henry J. Werry,
Pomeroy , wu 11(811ted a
divorce from Ethel L. Werry.

Weather

1\aln endlni tOnight- Low In

SWORN IN 7 Chisler Wella, rlibt, wu IIWOI'Illn aa
Meigl Co101ty Cmunlsaloner TUesday by Probate Judge
·Robert E. Buck. Wells fills tbe unexpired term of James

II

Roush who reaigned. The term !1 tor one year and nine
, months. Wellllotated tbatat the end of his present term he
will run for a four y~r teml.

Two hurt_
in mishaps

, ;::::::~::::::::~:::::::~::::::::~:::~:=:::::::::~::::=:;:::::;:::::::::::

the upper 301. Partly cloudy
Thunday. hlih tn low to mid
50s. Chance of rain 50 percent
tonight, 20 poteen~'nlursday.

•

chaw1M'&gt;DPfi&gt;OnS
.. ~~~·
0

,

named today
The Central Ohio Chapt'er

of the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation announces the
appointment of several
chairpersons lor the 1979
spring blke-a-thon campaign
In Meigs County.
Blke-a-thons are to he held
on any weekend from Aprll 21
- May 19. FundsTataed Will
support research to lind a
cure for cystic fibrosis, the
aecond leading killer among
Am lea chUdr
er n
en.
The event also brings more
public awareneu ret~ardlng
the symptoms of this genetic
k~~ tn every 20 Americans
Ia an unknowinll carrier of the
recessive aene.
Hall of aU chUdren with the
disease die before 19 and lung
• damaglns dlaeueo otm take
the Uvea of more chUdren in
thla country than any other
disease ezcept cancer.
Three chalrperaona named
today Include Syracuse and
Raclne-Mra. Mary Plcll:·
ena, Second St., Syr,a .
cuse:
POIIMi'oy,
Mid· ·
dleport, Rutllncl, and Raeda- ·
viDe, Raip!l Werry, ·Pomeroy,
Mlnenvtue - Mrs. ·Tonya
Davia, Ro"'f 3, Pomero&gt;:t

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