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14- The Dail y St•rltirwl. Midtllt•nori -Pnlllt'rll~ . 0 .. Wl·dn('S4I;:y. ":" \l'ri 14. 107!1

•

atzon raging..at highest lev.e l

Equal yield formula .decision slated in June
lly Klii! ElU K MIIJ.ER
Assudah&gt;d

Press

Writt•r

distrids.

Ohio's " equal yield". school

wlx:rt.&gt; eal'h sadc w.rts upheld

desli tute at'l' providing bare·

l'dr.bre:a.:l! !)Uggested

he

state etttorncy gtmeral reprc-

·
ar~ empowered by the
legislature to go further that
the state demands.
"The only solid thing we
have to go on are the
colleclive thoughts of the
legislature," Beave r said
contendi~g lhe ' 'thoroughami
efficient" language. in the
constitution ·represents "a
direction for the.Ohlo General
Assembly to undertake as. a

I

duty ."
CO LUMBUS, Ohio lAP )'- formula , whi ch reward s ih part and overruled in part. bones educati on . The does not think it would be senting the defendants, conHe said the rights provided
ltmaybea monthorperhaps S&lt;·hool distr icts for increased
The trial court had upheld buildings are fallin~ apart. " J&gt;Ossible to have uniform tended lhe,right of local disfor in the constitution are imas late as June before Ohio 's local tax elforts, has created two contenti ons by the
He asserted : " We ca lutot fin andal aid in all of Ohio 's tricls to go bt!yond state replemented by the legislature
Supreme Court rules on the some
problems
the Cincinnati bOard -· that equal toler;ile a constitution that 611i school distr icts under quireme nls . has
been
by
means of stqtutes. "The
constt'lu,.tonal't1 Y 0f '"
a stale deprives ch'ildren of these Jll'e,&lt;-~-"nt laws.
. other
u•e s1a1e .s lawmakers are atl~rnpling to ·yield · violates
1
sanet'toned bY t'Ourts m
.
rights
do not .necessarily flow
districts the· same
equal Y1·eld sc h00 1 at'd resolve - the court case 1cunslttutiona h requirement
h
· · type of · "You would havet•v abolt'sh stales ·
fr om the words. In the
notwithstanding. .
offr . a " l oroug
and ed ucation" as th ose in the right to vole (in local
He said, however, 'that
formula, attorneys say.
constitution," he said. .
tctent"
syst•
rn
of
schools,
districts
made
"wealthy"
by
.
elec
tt
'
ons)
to
make
something
Oh'
· ld ts
· unique
. 1argue
The cour t hear d fma
10 •s equa 1 yte
The Cincinnati Board of
Meanwhile, a . Senate
ments ' in the major case F.ducation cha llenged the andh that II violates pupils' industry and commerce, statewide," the chief justice because it is the first to put
education subcommittee
Tuesday and took them under formula in a case filed .April r•g ~~ under I the con- which gives them a larger commented.
into its . statutes a system
reswnes hearings Thursday
advisement . Earlier, the 5 1976 10
·
st•tulton's equa protection local tax base.
David H. Beaver, a5sistant under which · local distr.icts
on
a proposal .to distribute
jurists received more than 40
'
•
Halllillon County clause·
lit this point, Chief Justice
·
Common
Pleas
Court.
II
The
appeals
court
sided
Frank
D.
Celebrezze
inlerrecord $3.5 billion .in aid to ·
boxes
of
transcript s con tends . " equal y 1·eld ' '
r-----------~-----_:---,-..:_-,-------.:.--, · local
school dislxicts in the
rep rese nt'1ng a 1rta
· 1 th
with
the
local
board
on
the
rupted
IJo.
y
d's
testimony
to
at
results
in
unlawful
d1·s·
1979-1981
bienniwn.
_
· · tn
· Ci ncmna
·
t't crimi nati on
Spa nne d a year
t' n
the equal protection argwnent , inquire if the plaintiffs
As
currently
drafted,
its ·
·a d t
· 0f
but agreed with the believe voters in a local
·~al
n wo more,
years
apdistribution
of
b1'll1'ons
of
chief
sponsor,
Sen.
Marcus
A.
k
defendants that equal yield district should not have the
"
s
wor
·
·
dollars
in
aid
to
the
state's
2.1
Roberto,
D·Ravenna,
said,
it
· State Jawmak ers, curren tl Y million school pupils.
does not violate the ''through right to vote higher levies to
utilizes
a
"modified
equal
By
lbe
Assoelat~
Press
wri ting a new school aid bill,
Defendants are '"e state and efficient" language.
provide programs in ex~ss
yield" formula desig~d to
. COLO SHUTDOWN - Nuclear Regulatory Conunission officials were cautiously
are
vita
lly
con
ed
bo
t
u•
Both
sides
appealed
to
the
of
the minimwn required by
·the
cern
a
u
Board
of
Educatt'on,
Departcorrect
deficiencies in 'llie
optimistie that the Three Mlle Island reactor was approaching a cold shutdown phase but
I't'
h' h
slate's highest court.
the state.
1 tga ,.ton
w
tc
ment
of
Education,
and
other
they
stopped
$hort
of
saying
aU
danger
had
passed.
·
'
present
formula . It is
· a state officials.
Cincinnati attorney John
Uoyd replied he eould not
COn~
1· va bly co uld requtre
•&lt;
.
impossible
to IJ'y to write a
"There
is
still
a
potential
that
some
1098
of
cooling
mechanism
might
still
cause
the
core
· th
Lloyd, representing the answer Ute question. " I ho~
maJ·or overhaul 10
e
way
·
They
deny
Ute
local
school
""
bill
in
anticipation
of what \be
to
become
uncovered,"
NRCoperaUons
chief
Harold
Denton
said
Tuesclay.
h 1
plaintiffs, told the Supreme . we can reach the place in.Utis
Oht'o funds 1·ts 616
courts will rule , he said.
·
ll.;iiiiiiiii~ii,i;,.;;;;.~sc;;;;;oo:_ board's allegations and claun
·
After a week of laboring under Intense pressure, atomic experts finally rid a persistent
Qlurt that in some cases, state where we can find out/'
One problem caused by
gas bubble that endangered the dlsabled reactor.
Ladies
equal yield allows for reason- "the districts that are he said.
able differences in Jllpil aid,
equal yield has been that it
WiUt the bubble gme, workers were free to concentrate on lowering nuclear core
For That Specia 1
based on the right of the
results in varying amounts of
temperaiures below the boiling point. ·
'
·
•
legislature to allow it and the i----~----~---~--------~-state dollars within the
willingness of school district
minimwn 20 local property
EV.ACUATION .-Three Mile Island evacuees trickled honie; cabnfid by word of the
bubble's removal.
·
voters to provide ~r pupil
tal&lt; mills required to
aid ·above minimwn levels
participate in the school
State government and many OOalni!SSell repm-ted tbat employee absenteeism was
required by the state.
. foundation program.
dropping. Customers returned to stores and most schools reopened.
·
Slop by
Clyde Barnett
baugll, Virginia; Bertha
. Both sides reiterated argulbis is because property
Officials had estimated anywhere from 811,000 to 250,0011 persons had fled the radiation
Bullard, Florida, and five
ments they advan~ during
varies in value from district
·Utreat, built was not known how many had returned.
Clyde Barnett, 84, Route !, grandchildren.
the !rial in Hamilton County
to district,. the amount of
Langsville,
died Tuesday at
Funeral services will be
Common Pleas Court and
money a mill generate,s
GOVERNOR'S ADVICE- Pennsylvania Gov. Dick Tbor~burgh continued to advise
Veterans Memolial Hospital. held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the
118 E. Main
their appeals to Ohio's 1st
varies according to the value
Utat pregnant women and young children stay out of the live-roUe radius around the
Mr. Barnett was born .April Ewing Funeral Horne with
Pomeroy, 0 .
crippled plant.
Dis~ict Cow-l of Appeals,
of the. pro~rty, and the
5, 1891 at Pliny, W. Va., a son burial to be In Pine Grove
amotmt of state' education
He also urged that schools In the area stay shut.
ol the late James Allen and Cemetery. Friends·may caU
dollars varies according to
"Maybe the worst Is over," the governor said. But he added cautiously, "I wiU continue
Elizabeth Sowards Barnett. at the funeral borne from 2 to
the amount of the local tax.
to take every precautionary method that is warranted by the facts."
He was •lllso pl'I!Ceded in 4and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Roberto's bill equalizes the
death by a bnlther.
Sur.
FOOD SAFETY- AU food produced in more than 1,100 plants around the power plant
state grants.
vivors include his wife, EdiUt
were declared safe by the Food and Drug Administration.
Another llroblem has been
Nevllle Barnett, five
Though small traces of radloacilve indlne had been found in a milk and water sample
that some school districts get
daughters, · Mrs. Emezella
Herman Werry
around the plant last week, officials said there was no food contamination threat.
.
less state aid during one
Goodall, Michlgan ; Mrs.
Herman J. (Boob) Werry, L
year than
Uteydue
did In
Elwanda McKinney, Paint 82, 113 Pleasant Ridge,
· school
the previous
year,
to
Pleasant; Mrs. Virgipia Mae Pomeroy, died Wednesday
fluctuations in local tax
Athey, Lan~e ; Mrs. Judy morning
at Veterans ·
effortc
.
K. Parsons, Inez, Ky.; and Memorial Hospital.
R6berto's bill will be
l'tfrs. Ruth .Ann Loveday, Bid- He was a son ol the late
changed to prohibit this from
well ; four S&lt;li!S, Kennit C., Jacob ··and · Kathryn Durst
happening through an
Michigan; Wtlliam Richard Werry. He was preceded in
anticipated "hold harmless"
Bidwell; Kenneth N' death by his wife, Emma Ginamendment, Senate
•
Maysville, Ky.; Harold E.; ther Werry, two brothers and
President Oliver Ocasek, 0CLEVELAND · (AP) . Wilmington ; two sisters
sister.
llkron, has said.
·
Catholic
high
schools
will
be
Mrs. Edith ~yburn, Point
Surviving are two sons, ·open todily but officials said
WASHING~ON (AP ) Pleasant, and Mrs. Galena Charles M. and Henry ·J.,
parents should Wle discretion Beef prices, already setting lime, officials said beef
Smith,,
Virginia;
two
prices might rise an
both of Pomeroy; nine grand- ahout sending their children
' :Wr ~~·~ ~ 11 a:v of ~Ttaking Our Ea.srer Jlourers last aJI year /D'f1R.
records, wUI rise about 20 additional 14 percent this
. brothers, Harold, Napa, children,
Two defendants were glveri
13 great- to class.
Bec~I'St! t~·e Sena chtm m 50tnf'thing u.nfor8tuable. SJ, '\oOI.Ir /rie7ld.! u.nd
jail sentences when they all'
percent this year, probably year.
Calif. ; and Wilford B.,. grandchildren and several
· (~1m rl\uo". 'r be_~nil'lg ft!SI qnothcr bouquet.They ill be geuing the
Members of the Cleveland reaching their· highest point
Charleston, W. Va., and nieces and nephews.
On a brighter note, Agricul- peared In the court of MidBunny ~unch. A {loH 't'T garden enclosed [ry a channing p~ekrt {l!nct
· ' High
School and Academy
Toppe~ 01/ uuh, tr hat rLV! , an &amp;uur bunn~· !
several' grandchildren and
Mr. Werry was a Hfe mem- Lay Teachers Association this summer, the Agricultw-e lure officials also reported dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
great grandchildren ..
Tuesday that that retaU, pork Tuesday nlghl ..
ber of. the· Pomeroy Fire went ai strike Tuesday. The Department estimates.
Spring
Blossoms
The department said prices "will decline, but the
Homer S. ~1, 39, New
·.
Mr. Barnett was a · retired Department.
235 association members Tuesday Ute rise in beef extent of their decline will be , Haven, was fined $225 and
river captain and pilot.
Funeral services will ·be wanted Uteir starting pay
For Someone
Funeral servi""" wiD be held all p.m. S.lurday at the rallied from $8,755 to $9,800. prices "probably will. peak limited by the redu~ beef coots and was given a three
day jail sentence on a charge
sometime
during
the supply.'.'
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home with
The Roman Catholic swruner," when an increase
They predicted Utat 1979 of driving while Intoxicated.
You Love
Rawlings-Coats Funeral the Rev. W. H. Perrin ofDiocel!f ol Cleveland offered in P«k and poultry SUP.plies pork prices "are expected to Roy Neff,!8, Pomeroy was
Home with the Rev. Amos ficiating. Burial will be In the to
raise starting salaries to is expected to help stem the average just above " the 1978 given a 10 day jail se~tence
Tillis officiating. Burial will Minersville Hiil Cemetery.
$9,500.
. rise.
price of $1.44 a pound.
on a charge of lrepasslng at
• Lilies
be In Meigs 16emory Gar. In Ueu ol flowers friends are
The Catholic educators
But·that
still
means
the
aUThe
steady
increase
in
beef
the
Meigs Juruor High School.
dens.
Friends
may
caD
at
the
invited to 'give dQnations to teach a total of 8,488 students
• Mums
cut
heel
price
used
by
econoprices
funeral
hoine
fr001
2
to
4
and
7
ts.
blained
by
analySts
Forfeiting
bonds In the
the Pomeroy Emergency at 10 high schools iri Lake,
•Azaleas
mists probably wUI he about on an abundance of beef In court were Frank C. Clar.k,
to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Squad.
Friends
may
call
at
Cuyahoga, Lorain and $2.18 a pound by year's end - 19~6 and 1977. A record ' 42.6 Middleport, $100 poSted on a
•Corsages
the funeral home:
Sununit cotmties.
•Cut Flower
compared to last year'.s million
cattle
were charge ol possession of
Wilbur
L.
Frecter
record
average
of
$1.82
a
slaughtered
in
·1976,
sending
marijuana; Buddy McKin:
.\rrangemenls
Wilbur L. Frecker, 55, 264
prices
ARSON
CHARGED
pound.
for
a
poand
of
choice
ney, 62, Middleport, $50,
George Cooper
Park
Road,
Painesville,
died
DAYTON,
Ohio
(AP
)
The
all-cut
average,
$1.62
a
lleef
down
from
$1.55
in
'
1975
disorderly
~nner; Rebecca
George Carl Cooper, 33, Rt. 2,
Permanent Memorial
at his residence Tuesday.
Roderick
Trice,
20,
has
been
pound
in
February
1978,
had
to
an
average
$1.48
in
1976.
C.
Mc?aruel,
39, Pomeroy,
Racine,
died
Tuesday
at
his
Flowers.
He was a son ol the late residence
charged with aggravated soared to $2.14 a pound this
The large supplies of cattle $25, failure to yteld the right
David and Ella Frecker. He
Mr. Cooper was preceded arson in Monday's Jire at the ,February, when the, average meant smaller profits lor of way ; otmer Roy Cook, 53,
was preceded in death by in death by two brothers, Dayton Safety Building.
price was 32.3 percent higher ranchers :... and they Letart, W. Va., $350, tlriving
three brothers.
Pollee
said
Trice
set
fire
to
than
the same monUt in 1978 responded by cutting back on while intoxicated ; Burton
Clement Eugene Cooper and
his
padded
cell
with
a
book
of
.
and
4.4
percent ahove the the size of their herds. By DeWees, Dexter, $50, disorl
Surviving
his Kenneth Eugene Cooper.
1.:
wife,Hilda
Fischerare
Frecker,
matches.
Twenty-five
people.
average
price
in January of 1978, only 39.5 million catUe derly manner.
He was a member pf Salem
.
a son, Larry Freckel', Community Clrurch, West are still hospitalized with this year.
were slaughtered, compared
· · ,
Mrs. Millard Van Meter
Painesville; a brother, Roy of Colwnbia.
Injuries suffered in the blaze,
The latest estimate of a 20 ill the 42.6 million killed in
·
Phooe.!l92-2039
·
101 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy, four sisters,
per~nt hlke in beef prices for 1976. This year, government
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mr. Cooper is survived by officials said today .
. or992-5721 ·
·
Pomeroy,O.
Mrs.Olin (Mabel) Bailey
1979 outdistances Agriculture officials etimate t!tat only
Admitted·..Jon
Burns,
.his
wife,
Clarinda
Will
We. a~ept all major credit cards and we wire flowers
Euclid·, Mrs. . 'da Holter,'
Department estimates 36.2 million cattle will be Cheshire; Doq • Rea,
Cooper, one son, George
· everywhere.
'
·
"
released in January. At that slaughtered - the lowest Pomeroy; Sharon Wilt, MidDOLLAR ROSE
Cooper, Jr., one daughter,
level since 1973.
LONDON
(AP)
-1beU.
S.
dleport; MIUord Leonard,
Mf!i.:.Arlene ABh- Christina Cooper, both ,at
Cattlemen currently are Ree&lt;!'lville; Melvin Forester,
home, his parents, Clement dollar rose sllghUy on mosl
rebuilding the herds, but Utat Racme; Leota Cooper,
and ._Leota Matlack Cooper; European currency markets
means keeping animals for Syracuse; Ray Tryall, Danny
Syracuse, three sisters, this morning, while gold
breeding that otlierwise Kuhn, Cheshire; Everett
Karen Hood and Janet Com- prices. eased.
might
go to market. ' Experts Shuler, Middleport; James
In
Tokyo,
brisk
demand
pson, both' of Mason, and
say
it
will
take several years Meadows, Portland.
from
on
Importers
pushed
the
Irene Shaw of Point Pleasant.
to
build
the
herds back up to
dollar
ahead
in
the
morning
Discharged-Eugene Finch,
Funeral services wiD be
previ~us sizes.
Gladys Morgan.
held Friday at I p.m. at to 216.75 yen, but it slipped
Ewiug Funeral Home. Burial back to close at 214.425,
will be In Tuppers Plains . Tuesday's closing price. ·
Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
The British p&lt;&gt;und rose In
Christian Church Cemetery.
By The Associated Press
Friends may call at the London to $2.06800, compared
March-like
weather is here
with
a
closing
rate
Tuesday
of
Funeral Home Thursday
..
,
$2.06525. .
• in April.
from 6 to 9 p.m.
·
A low pressure center in
southwestern Tennessee was
Racine, Don of Pomeroy,
Sarah Diddle
Waid of Kentucky, and Ralph forecast to move into central
Sarah Elizabeth Roush Did- of Vinton, Oh., four Ohio by tonight, bringing
dle, 78, Rt. 2, Racine, died daughters, Adria Nelson, more rain to the state with a
Tuesday at her residence.
Marblehead, Oh., Marilyn threat of some snow in \he
Mrs. Diddle was the Powell, Carolyn Adams, and northwestern counUes.
Thunderstorms were
daughter of the late Waid and Ubby Fisher all of Racine, 24
Mary Sayre Roush. She was grandchildren, 11 great gran- forecast W develop in the
al~ preceded in death by two
dchildren, several nieces and southeast by afternoon,
ahead of the front.
brothers, two sisters and twin nephews.
As the low pressure center
daughters.
Funeral services will be
· Mrs. Diddle was a member held Friday at · 3 p.m: at moves northeastward, the
of the Antiquity Baptist Chur- Ewing chapel wiUt the Re:vs. National Weather ·Service
• '!14•
ch. She was a fonner mem- Earl Shnuler and Don Walker says colder air will spread
•••
•••
the
state.,
ber of Pomeroy Daughters of officiating. Burial will be in across
• ·.~~
•·~~ America·.
Letart Falls Cemetery.
· Temperatures are expected
• • • She Is survived by her Friends may caU at the to drop Into.the upper 20s !ali!
funeral home lifter 7 p.m. tonight in the' northeast and
• ••••
• • husband, Oval Piddle, live today.
.
Into the 30s elsewhere.
sons, Berrlt&gt;"&lt;l · and Tom of
· Under clear skies Tuesday
night, temperatures dropped
You shoUld see our new
· well into the 30. over most of
selection
of ufe curtains Auth.;&gt;·iz..t CATALOG
r"~'!'!!~----•1
the state . Readl~gs leveled :
rudy' mada
sheers
1
SALES MERCHANT
' Photos are
off early today as clouds ·
dro peries - cottogo ooll venetian 1h1des - window
11:'
began Ill move In ahead.of the
modes. We'll gladly help
rorever"
oncomlngllow pressure .
you pick out what you need
•P&lt;&gt;rlraits
sy•tem.
far your home .
1M E. Main St. .
•Weddings
Just
before
daybreak,
tern&gt;1'r'T\'Io.
'
• Special Occasions
peratures ranged from the
P~~y,o ..
()WNJ~RAnDIV '
• Pussporls
mid 30s In northern Ohlo to
HOME
· ·.Jock &amp; Judy Wiltlom,
~ Se.tior Porlrai.Js
the mid 408 in the eKixeme
F.URNISHINGS
. Open: Mon.lhru Wed. 9-5,
iloutheast,
·
Thur. f .J2, Frldor 9-5, Sol.
1ST FLOOR
I ~IUW
Mternoon
temperatures :
•
9-2.
.
.
(
Bob
HQeflich)
were
expected
to
range
from
-,.-- • -v-- . .~ .
. - . - - - -..,...
S.tW.t'IIM G,.,;,.tM
109 High St.
around 40 In riorthwestern
.
or Ycw.r ,.,Ofl~• Batlt
"Wh•r• only the best'food ls ·~ood •nough"
Pomerov
Ohio to near !10 in the extreme
7
suutheast.

a

._Nuclear~at-a-glance

' ByGREGORYNOKF.S
.
As:;ociated Press Writer
WASiflNG TON '( AP) + Wholesale prices increased another
I percent in March, the same as in February as inflation conUnued to rage at the highest level in moret...;n lour years, the
.
government said today.
Thj! Labor Department said wholesale prices which eventually are refl~ed in ltf!lric"" that conswners PaY, rose at a
seasonally adJusted annual rate of 14.1 ~rcent during the first
three months of 1979, It was the largest quarterly advance since the fourth quarter o( 1974.
But.a hint 'of some future relief-from rising food prices was
contained in the March pri ce repori. Conswner food pric-es
were up 1.2 percent, the smallest increase this year, and prices
of crude !~tuffs rose just 0.2 percent, down sharply from the
3.8 percent mcrease the month before
, The Labor Departrqent said whole.;,le prices were higher in
. March lor beef and veal, which were up shnrply for the fourth

and shoes .
tl
· Overall prices of non-food gocKls rose 0.9 pcrt'mt , lht• smnt•
as in February.
·
The price report showed inflation continuing at well above 10
percent, a rate that has the Carter administration seart:hing
for ways to stren0'1hen its battered wage and price guidcli lll'

EASTER '
OUTFIT

1

Area Deaths

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 248

prices.
However , council spokesman Joe Carter said Wednesday
at least one of the companies has justified its prices, it appears
a second may be a pie to justify them, and the other two are still
providing information to the government.
He said "more than eight" additional companies have
been informed they ate in probably non-compliance with the
guidelines, meaning they &lt;;o uld be publicly nwned if they can't
convince .their government they are within the guidelines.
But Carter indicated .it may be at least a couple of weeks
before any company is named, if any are named at all. "We
hi.ve not at this time told anybody they are in noncompliance," he said;
The voluntary price guidelihes call for companies to hold
price increases in 1979 to one-half of one percent below the
average price increases for the past two years.

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VOL. .NO. XXIX

~ompa nies would be made public if.they couldn 't justify their
'l

today, hul " news briefing on the program was called off Wedne.,lay with no newdate set.
A spokesman for Kahn didn 't give any reason for the
program.
change
in plans, but it ap~ared Kahn didn 't want his
The administration is expected soon to announ••e plans for a
announcements
to compete for attention · with President
conswner watch on price,'Increases at the local ·Jevel to supCarll'r 's energy speech tonight.
plement government efforts to restrain inflation.
The LabOr Department's ,wholesale prireJeport is now of,. ;: - Meanwhile, officials of the Council ,on Wage and Price
ficially called the Producer Priee Index, wlilcll ine~sur"" ' Stability, the agency headed by Kahn, said they have found
prices of goods at three levels before they are sold to con- that. &amp;Orne co!llpanie~ thought.· to be violating the
administration's price guideliDes may be ih compliance after
sillners and industrial users .
Prices in March were up I percent for all three levels: crude all.
Kahn has recently denounced companies he said were
goods, meaning before processing; Intermediate goods,
. meaninJ! Hfl.':r :mmr nrOC'P~c;inw :-tnrl f'inic: hNI ,l!Mfi&lt;' whif"h ~u·p violating the guidelines, warning that the names of four

•

(USPS 14S-960)

for sHle to tlw ('on~mner .
qv·l·rall wholesale prit·cs hat! risen l~y 1.3 pcn.·pnt in .J(:I nuafy
lx•fon• dipping slightly to une perecnt in F'cbruary and March.
CHrh-r's chi ef anti-inflation strategist, Allred F.. Kahn , had
hcL·n1sl'hedul ed to annount&gt;e the consumer watch on prices

· l't•&lt;Jd\'

consecutive month, ami for t'J.!J.!~-: home healing nil. g;nmlinP

•

THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1979

·,

·15 CENTS

f

TWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

----:----,-----------------,----,--_J

Cleveland ·

teachers
on strike

• .Long after Easter,
re711ember the flowers you

a

.

Beef prices
•
•
contznue rzse

DISPLAY PLAT M.AP - L-R Fred W. Crow, Ill,
proBeC!lting attorney. and project director of the CETA
Plat Map project, Dan Nease, workers supe~. and

Nationwise~DUSKY, Ohio

(AP) - Residents in a !o.block
waterfront area of northwest Sandusky were allowed
to return to their homes Wednesday night alter it was
determined that gas spewing from a burning waste pile
no longer pojied a threat. Sandu8ky Fire Chief Owen
Reed said smoke from the fire at the Vulcan Matrlals
.CO. -foumry conl@lne!l sulfur, 'ammmia and other
gases, but not lil·follic levels, And he said tha-threat of
u exp!OIIlon at the plant was ellmlnated when
firefighters cut through the floor of the plant to allow
gases to vetllate.

ev-a.

·STEAK HOUSE

·HEARTY HOME

AWAY FROM HOME.

At Bob Evans Steak House, we
'. serve a lot more than steak. We have
· hotcake~. fried mush, hot ·baked
biscuits, fresh farm eggs, and all the
goodlhings that go with Bob Evans
Farms country fresh Sausage.
So stop on in on your way to work.
And dp it right for breakfast. ·

.WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR.WE DON'T DO IT."

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Some 2,500 nonteaching employees of Colwnbuo )llbllc school system
will be asked by their union to stay off the job starting
AprU 23. Larry De Cresce, executive director of the
Columbus School Employees Association, said the
request will be made unless the school board states
that It has enough mooey to meet payrolls for tile pay
period starting AprU 21. lbe union represents
secretaries, custodians, bus and truck drivers, food
service workers, maintenance employees and school
aides.

..

CLEVELAND (AP) - John White Jr:, 17, wiU be
treated as an adult on charges that he .and his 14-y'!Brold sister' MicheDe hired another teenager tQ slay their
lather. Cuyahoga County Juvenile Court Judge John F.
Corrll!an Issued a ruling Wednesday ordering the youth
tried as an adult. His slater faces delinquency charges
In juvenlle court proceedings. Corrigan also ordered
White hound over to the county grand jury for further
acUon after earlier hearing a report that the youth had ~
a nonnaliQ and was competent to stand trial.

JSears 1·

COLUMBUS Oliio (AP) - Legislation that would
make elnployme'nt discrimination on the basis of age
unlawful ·has been passed by the House .. The bill,
·spoll80red by Rep.' Troy Lee James, !).Cleveland, was
approved 85-7 · pn Wednesday. ~ndet. the measure,
employers who lire or fall to hire someone between the
ages of 40.Snd 70 because.of that person's age are liable
for civUacUons. The bill was sent to the Senate.
.

Th Ph......, Place

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY'

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The report indicated that
Pol Pot and other leaders fled
24 miles south to the gemmining town .of Pa lin, six
mcles from the border. The
broadcast said Pailin was
capt,ured Tuesday, as Thai
military sources reported
then, and that Pol Pot, his

"cliQue" and some of thejr
troops fled across the border
into Thailan!l.
Ta Sanh is about 50 miles
west of Battambang; the
largest city In western Cam·
bodia , According to the ·
report tOday, Pol Pot and his
Khmer Rouge · forces

established a huge base
there . ,
Between March 'l7 and
Marcll"30, the VNA.SPK accoUnt said, Heng Samrin's
forces "killed, woanded or
captured 1,000 enemy troops
and seized thousands of ammunition depots.
·

Four persons hijured
in Rt. 160 ac·c ident

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
The . size of
instructional grants available to students whO attend
diploma schools of nursing In Ohio would be increased
under legislation on Ita way to the Selllite. The House
approved the measure 93-0 on Wednesday. Sponsored
by Rep. Frederick H. Deering, 0-Monroeville, the btu
would make diploma 1111rsing school students eligible
for the larger grants now given only ID students who
attend private institutions of higher educaUon. Those
' grants are generally !50 percent bigger, but the
amounts are based iln Ute gros5·income of the student's
famlly the number of dependent children in the family
and ~ type of educaUonal institution attended.

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EXTENDED OUTLOOK
By the .Assoclated Press
,Saturday
through
Monday: Partly cloudy and
cool Saturday. Mild with
. rain paoslble Sunday and
Monday. Highs mid 40. to
mid 50s Saturday and mid
$91 to mtd,.IIOs Sunday and
Monday. 'Lows mid 2fs to
low 30. early Saturday ud
mid 301. to low 4GI early
Monday.

Map_work
progress
reviewed ..

Plat maps for section one
and section two of Bedford
Towlishlp for 1979 have been
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: completed · according to
county
Low in the upper 20s to low Wesley Buehl,
30s. Mostly · cloudy Friday. engineer and Fred W. Crolf,
High In the mid to upper 40s. Ill , prosecuting attorney and
The chance of precipitation is project director.
There are 38 total maps in
40 percent tonighi and 20
Bedford
Township, whi ch
percent Friday.
36
sectio ns plus
include
1RIIPJIRRI!RMRAL"ftiiiiiW'.."XA«r~A¥-M!
Burlingh-am and Darwiil. •
BOMB EXPLODED
CE TA employes hav e
JERUSALEM iAP)- A
compl eted six months
terrorist bomb exploded
research on six townships
today near a bus stop in •
..._and are now ready to proceed
Arab East Jeru sa lem , ·
in making maps of other
wounding four Arabs and
townships .
two Jc\\·s, none seriously ,
Letart Township will be the
authorities repohed.
next
goal of the Plat Map .
Four persons claimed Erwin auto, and l'ersa Lewis. a west bound vehicle driven
The . blast occurred on
project.
injury following a two-vehicle 8. Bidwell, a pa ssenger in the by Huth Mlller, 65, Gallipolis.
. Sallahadln Street. a main
Dan Nease, workers
accident
on SR 160, at Click vehicle, claimed injury
Both vehicles incurred ·supervisor,
thoroughfare ncar the
who has a degree
mil epo st 12. inve stigated but were not immediately moderate damage. Taylor In mapping
Ucro,l' s Gate entrance to
from Ohio
Wedn esday by the Gallia- treated.
was cited on a charge of
Jerusalem's Old City.
Uni
versity
and
Bowling
Meigs Post, Highway Patrol.
Both vehicles incurred impro~r backing.
Asso c iated . Pre ss
Green
University,
anticipates
Called to the scene at 9:05 · severe damage. No citation
An auto operated by Julia that project personnel wiU
phot~graph c r
Rina
p.r.1
..
officers
report
that
a
was
Issued.
/\
.
Will, 24, Pomeroy . In- now be able to produce ap-.
Castclnuovo, who "':as at
south
bound
auto
operated
by
Officers
investigated
a
curred
severe damage during proximately four to five maps
the scene a lew ·minutes
Ronald
Click,
37,
Gallipolis,
second
two-\'chictc
collision
a
two-vehicle
accident in- per week until Bedford
alter the 4 p. m. explosion,
attempted
to
pass
a
vehicle
Wednesday
on
Georges
Creek
vcstigated
this
morning by Township Is completed.
sa id the sidewalk . was
driven
by
Jerry
Erwin,24,
Hd.,
nine-tenths
of
a
mil.c
cast
the
Gallla-Meigs
Post.
stained ll'llh blood and shup
The CETA administrator
Bidwell,
jlll&gt;t
as
the
Erwin
of
Bulaville-Porter
Rd
..
at
Called
to
the
scene
at 7: 40 evaluated the project and
windows were broken.
auto started a left turn. The I :55 p.m·.
·
·a.m .. officers report that a seemed plea sed with the
A large Ioree of pollee
vehicles
sideswiped.
The
patrol
reports
an
auto
.
south bound auto operated by progress . being made. The
n1oved In quickly to block
Both
drivers
and
two
operated
by
Patrick
Taylor,
Daniel K. Wallace. 40, stock: original CETA grant will
off the street and searchJor
passengers,
Michael
Lawson,
18,
Gallipolis.
backed
from
a
.port
, 0 .. had slowed in traffic expire Sept. 30 of this year.
other explosives.
19, ViRion. a passenger in the private drive into th e path of to turn left off of SR 7 at th e
Buehl, who has been ofJ:tiQ,.~,~~%.~---- RAIIIIl
·
junction of Little Kyger Rd.
fering
technical advise and
Will's vehicle failed to stop
assista·nce
and Crow, Inand struck the WaUac.c auto
dicated
there
Is a great need
ln the rear.
'
for
ibis
project
since the last
There wa s moderate
.·· .
county
tax
maps
were updamage to th e Wallace
dated
in
1928,
but
should
·
\'Chide. Will was cited on a been updated yearly.-have
1\dc h ~.r gc o£ [tssurcd clear
dltlonal tax properties are
distance.
being picked up on tax
records which wVl increase
Meigs County's .Oix-1ecelpts.
EmergeDCy Runs
The emergency unit of the
Middleport Emergency
Hensley chosen
Squad was called to the Blue
Tartan .at I :37 p.m. WedneSday for Cloyd Brookover . The Olive Township
who receive&lt;l a head Trustees hav~ named Henry
laceration in a fall. He was Hensley to fill a vacancy on
treated at the scene . the board of trustees created
· At8:09p.m. theunitwentto by the resignation of Chester
the Goodwin residence on Wells Monday.
Wells resigned to accept an
Hudson St. for a 16-month-&lt;&gt;ld
appointment·
by the Meigs
Infant who 'was running a
County
Democrat
Central
high tem~rature . The child
Committee
as
a
Meigs
County
wa$ taken to Veteran•
Commissioner.
·
Memorial Hospital.
He replaced James Roush
who resigned to take out of
Special board meeting
county. employment.
The Eastern Local School
'&gt;
District Board of Education
· will meet In special. session at
10 a.m. Saturday at the high
Bloodmobile
school.
Tlie meeting is called
Stewart,
Melinda
Mankin,
Benetta
Deeter,
Lori
Hudson
CHESTER SAFETY PATROL - These are the
specifically
to
Interview
ca
nThe
bloodmobile
will he at the
and Kevin Fi~k . Third row,! to r, Tim Showalter, Todd
members of _the safety · patrol at Chester .Elementary
Pomeroy
Elementary
School
didates
fo~
·
t
he
superinSchool ,this year. They are, fi rst row, left to right: Jerry · · Tripp, Joh~ Tripp, John Edward'f, Mitchell Holley; Tim
April
16,
.from
I,
30
p.m.
to
tendent's
pooition
and
no
Lawrence, Kevin Venoy, Sherry Ritchie , and Deloris
St. Clair, Billy Bobo, John M11ler, Jimmv Schaekel, Max
5:30
p.m.
All
types
of
blood
other
business
will
oo
con.
Mams.
These
students
will
tr~vel
!o
Washington,
D.C.
for
Eichinger, Renee Buckley, and Brenda Bentz. Second
are needed.
dueled :
their good work · this year .
.. row, 1 to r. Jennifer ~;rover, Sandra John:;un, Lindo.~

BANGKOK, Tbtiland (liP)
-Former Cambodian Pre·,
mier Pol Pot and some of
his followers Oed across the
border to Thailand after their
remote guerrilla headquarters and their last stronghold
at Pailln were overrun, the
Vietnam News Agency said
today.
.
.
There was no independent
confirmation of the report
broadcast from Hanoi three
months alter invading Vietnamese troops .drove Pol
Pot's pro-Chinese government from Phnom Penh, the
Cambodian capital, and installed a pro-Vietnamese
regime of Cambodian Communists headed by President
Heng Samrin.
Since then, Cambodian arrhy troops still loyal to Pol
Pot and his associates of the
Khmer Rouge, have been
waging a guerr!IIB war against the Vietnamese and their
Cambodian allies.
Quoting SPK, the new Cambodian government's official
news agency, the Vietnamese
agency said the headquarters
of the "disbanded Pol Pot army" in Ta S!lnh, about sl•·
miles from the Thai border,
was overrun last week.

ATMORE, AJa , (.AP) - Condemned murderer
John Louis Evans Ifl, seeking to end "a heU on Earth
In prison," awaiting electrocuUon tonight while his
mother pleaded with the governor and the U. S.
&amp;lpreme Court ID save him. In Washlnglon, attorneys
!or the mother, Betty Evans of Beaumont; ~s.
planned (to ask a U. S. Supreme Court jusill:e,
apparently Justice WUUam Rehnquist, ·to stay the
electrocution pending a hearing on Evans' mental
cm\peteilce.

Ohio gets
March-like
conditions ·

Former premier Pot
flees across border
•

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - Robert Stephens,.
Kentucky's attorney general, said he will go to the
state Supreme Court If necessary to .oppose the state
paying some $12.5 million In claims stemming from the
Beverly Hills SUpper Club fire dlsaater. The Southgate,
Ky. fire In May of 1977 took the lives of !55 and Injured
50 more. Most of the 250 claims filed with the Keqtticky
Board of Claims came from vicUms and their
survivors.

POMEROY
F 'OWER SHQp

=~~~~~~~~~~~S~~~~i~~~Po~m~e~roy;

map, Pat Thoma and Wesley Buehl; back, Roger
Michaels, Fred W. Crow ,III, and Dan Nease. Absent were
Naomi Brinker, CETA grants administrator, and Cheryl
Burdette.

lfJ'

Mayor's Court

-

CETA PLAT MAP WORKERS- CETA Plat Map
workers are front,l-r, JeMy Craig, Gloria Manuel, Janet
Korn, Jim Hudson, who is inking section three of the plat

Wesley Buehl, county engineer, who hllll been offering
technical advice and assistance, display one of the plat
maps that has been completed.

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2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 6, Thw-stlny, A]ll'. 5. 1!179
-,

Er-r A Rlltrwol!no~·'1'i.~~,._ ·

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"~ ·E.I\, :rg

HUliVIE

-Editorial
• •
oprmons

Martha Angle and"
Robert Walters

...

By M artha Anglt' and Ro.be.._, Wallrrs

as death and taxes is the existence, somewhere or ·other, of
a poll purporting to measure publiC' opinion about both.
No aspect of mode rn living , no comer of the American
psyche is safe these days from the probing curiosity of the
professional pulse-takers. ·
•
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The polls ters a re everywhere. and they're ready and
As

~':;t~g~~~r;96~ ~";~dth: ~~~.~u:~!l ;;:~~ ;2~ ~~ $~::~!~~

.....

·~double

Wednesday night at

:'::)
:':·

J.ebanon on the combination
7-1.

Queen
placed,Pence.
$14.20
and
$5 .80,LuLu
and RC'ed~

1ma Dilly won the £irst rac-e

third, paid $4.60.
Attendance was 1,195 and
the mutuel pool totaled
127,658.

COMMENTARY

V.W.-AMC-JEEP

the old

Dt•ler That Cares About Quality

The IRS tries harder·

responses? Well, of course they dd ~ and why not, when ·a

I

survey by George Fine Research, Inc. shows only 20 ·
percent of the public in favor of such a pact?
·
Should Congress adopt tougher gUn control laws? One
would think so; judging from Gallup and National Opinion .

·'

Research Center polls which have shown, for nearly two

decades. that upwards of two-thirds of the public favors
move .

' 'Come on in - we're watching Congress on, television.·"
But then again, why be hasty? A new Decision Making
Information survey shows an identical two-thirds majority
opposed to additional gun eontrois. ·
·
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,.r:'-.
.producing
The example~
· could
on indefinitely.
every poll
~. a
~. ,.,
a rna
ority go
opinion
In favor ' For
of something,
another ca n be fo d to yield exactly the opposite realliL .
· Which might be harmless enough fun, not to nientlon
lucrative employment for pollsters, were It not for the
I
tendency of eleeted public offlcla~ and policy IJIIIkers to
ByJolmCaallf
bualneise8 311 tlriles more employment
rose
by. come remedial legislation:
APBu±m Awyst
thin the verY; large~! cor~ 9,583,000, · the 1,000 largest refonn of taxes, government
put so much faith in survey data.
)IOI'atlons. . ~ .
·~
oompanlesaccountedforonly regulations, (iaperwork and
Politicians, who are paat masters of the art of · NEW •. YORK (AP)
manipulating warda · to produce a desired reoponae from Everyone seems to love smaH · Labor unlonli haven't \'4,1197, whl!e.state and federal international trade.
their audiences, should be the first to recognize myriad bqslneas, · and well they always beerl· sympathetic, governments aceounted for 3
But why, he was asked, has
ways in which poll questiqna can be rlued to :vie~ a . shollld 1'hen they loo~ at its Qften applying to small en- mllllon. Srnaner finns em· small business - smaller
particular
res~.
Instead,
they
the reaulls record ,•01'&gt; new .......,
d tA.rpr1sea the BBme wage ployed the rest.
business would be the correct
without
so much
as a grain
of salt
andswallOw
bappUy rep.m&gt;•ta
,.~eta an
those which buttreu their own blaa..
•..-new jobe. Bill nobody seems standards ' as for giant In· · Will lack of appreciation tenn, because as generally
Opinion """'arch, notwithstanding the cialma of Its t8 do very mueb for II. ·
dllltrlel, even though small give way to support?'Artbur useditexcludesonlythel,OOO
practitioners, is far from an exact oclance. While II Ia
Rarely 1Ja its voice' heard I:M'I,Ioesa doellt't enjoy the Levitt, Jr. thinks so. Levitt IS largest concerns - been
indeed possible to select a atatlatically 80W1d NJJll))e lbat above the shouts of Blc I8Qie ' IConomles of volume. head of the American Stock unable or unwilling to state
18
representati~., of the population aa a whole, It lalt~ ' B1181ness, Bill Uniona and Jllc ' Ail three tllld to ~verlook Ezehange, which has Its its case?
more than a fall' sample to produce a Bood poD.
· . , · Go\!emment. Sometlrilts it ~ ~ liualneta coiatrlbutloiUI share of smaller companies,
Based otr his atten&lt;!ance at
As responsible
will
aeknoWledlle
. ,theY
the ·-•·•·
•~.·
·
but .b'e ba s· a ddlt.lona1 input ma ny o1 the stat'e hearm
· g·s,
wording
of survey.pollal:ers
quesllona'
andreadUy
the order
In WbiclJ
. - {m• fr dslratlon, but it tp .....
'"" .""vnomy.
.
are preliented can drastically aJ&amp;v the - - elldted. runs out of b,reath and r!:mf:tut by the House . too,
:·
and on "hundreds of con·
Th
f
·-.-·
"nc1
et•~it
Small
B
·
·,
AI
chaliman
of
the
White
versa
!loris wlih small •
e format o a poH - personal lntarvlewa venua pa ....,ce, a
aom uu~
.
ee on
QSmess
telephone queries - can likewise lnOoience the outCGme, fighta with Itself.
last year, it Ia the cutting Houae Qmunlaslon on Small business people," the
since complex multipl...,hoi!'&lt;lquestionaC8DDGieffedlvely
Squeezed by the big three, . edge of competition; the Bualneu, Levitt Ia charged chainnan
reduces the
be asked by phone.
·
II shrinks In size. Between iDliovator • Inventor, the with the job,· elf picking the various explanations to two
A carefully constructed poll conducted for a client~ 1950 aild 19711, biil ftnns In- solll'CI! of leadersbip, the brains of · small business · vital onea:
· as a newspaper which baa no PArticalar u to IP1Dd can be cteNe&lt;J tba•• Mrcenta•e of entrepreneurial olitlet the peo. pie, 25;000 of .thelll In SO . I. "F·ear of goverrunent
aissue,especlaUyifthe
"'eful, lf limited, gUide
to public thln1dng OllB putlcu1ar .lllllll1lfaetllrlngaiaetsto
· ..,.. ,e 45.5
'
'
•- " Th ey fear, he
..mequestlonlaukeclov..-aperlod
lOb creator. · · ·
· atates and Puerto Rlco. · • retribut.....
of years. . . ·
perceat fnmi 311.7 percent,
':It Is s~g to some
By August, 2,1100 delegates said, that the government
So-&lt;:iol!ed "advocacy" polling, undertabn by
according to Congreillonal tluit between J96t and 197&amp;, will have be,elo selected, and will "get even" if they shout
.slonal survey flnns but ""'ft« qnen¢IGDI dktatecf In w11o1e ...........,
·
small buslnelses •ccounted In September Levitt and his too loudly.
·
in
-•
.,,_ ~..~
·
or partbytheiupeclalintarutclienls,illar'-alllraly
Onerous government for What c.an be considered oop!rplssloaers,willreport to ' 2. "It doesn't make any
to produce an unjllaaed result. U you IIDDw wbo CWIIIId• teculatory and tax policy vlrtuaHy aD the new private · the Presldelltt1D JanUllry the · difference."
pndlct helped move tiW trend along. sector employment In this
PrtlSid!lllt convenes the Wbite
stoned a poU of this sort; you can al!nOit
what It will show - wilhoqt wen looldnc at 1111 dafa. ·
'
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·
Ho
Con! ·
s n
Opinion poHa make delliihtftnd ~ for pol!tlcWia Gov eroment reporting country,. said the comuse
erence on ma
.
1
Joumallata, ~nand indeed tile~
reqllirements, for esample, mlttee.
.
Ilusineu. .
r-----------·
!lut let the reader beware. Pollio, like CGmpnhr.. 8Ufter are said to cost some sman ' It found that' While total
Dut oH!; Levitt vows; will I LETTERS to II
extensively from the "GIGO" ~ - Gubap In,
·
·
I
·
Garbage Out
·
~
1
EDITOR
I

Sm
.

bus lh. e.s s·.es

nothelpe4

..-ore.

Ill_,.

PnbHe:

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·
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;
Wh
H
·
.· tm.'Dt. s- . ' it.e. ouse

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~dltor,

Running into problems with your lox return?
· The Internal Revenue Service has a suggestion as to
wnere to look for !&gt;elp: the IRS.
·
.
The tax people reporUhey are extending themsehies·this
year to assist taxpayers who have lost their way in the
focest of forms. Employees charged with fielding queries
from the public have taken spedal IJHiepth training
courses in some of th~ more conlplex tax provisions. These
Include tbe new energy tax ~;redlt, employee lox plans,
community property law, fann toxation and the like.
Theoretically, anyone ringing up his local IRS office with
a tough question - the number of such calla across the
.nation typically runs Into the milljorw by the· mid-April
deadline each year - will be getting an answe.r from· the
tax eltJlCrt's expert.
That's the good news about IRS polbllc relations.
The not so good riewsls that the effOrt Ia badly needed. In
the past, the IRS has' not been aU that accurate in advising
the public. According to some ct:Itics, Ita overall error rate
exceeds that · of both private tax consilltanta and do-it-.
·
.themselves taxpayers,.
Well, at least the IRS should find encourasement in at
least one aspect of its publlc-aaslatance effort. It has
~bere to go but up.
American wage-earners do not keep their beads· abuv,e
the economic waters by salary alone.
· Swpptementary compensation In the fonn of health and
!Ife Ins
___ ~..e a
. urance, pena1on p Ians and the Uke have ._
,...,,_..,.
maincojomer .a nd .still growing contributors to total ·et?ployee
According to a survey of the Cbunber of c..m.ne':'Ce of
the United States, such fringe benefits have been increas1ng at aJJno.t twice the rate of actual wag~. For · large
companies surveyed, monetary value of benefi~182
went up
162 percent between 1987 and 19'17 ColnJN!ted with an
average 98 Pet-cent rise In wages . .· .
.. '
The pa._.....ges
-Ltend to be 'more fully pileked In Iarger
·
,Irma than smaller operations. Among Industries, the moot
beneficial Ia petroleum with an average of ...481 In
benefits. At the otber end of the acalea, the BVFI'IIIF for
textile manufacturers Is $2,839.
Overall,thebenefltsahareofavenigeemployeelncome
has lncreaaed from about a quarter of wages In 1987 to
more than a third CIIITentiy.
Tha
t's aome fringe.

cyl: eng.

,!;.:.

i' ... . .

.

•..
..
".

~

'-11 I

ear

and wheels, We sold It
new onlY.

'4995

·1976 AMC
.MATADOR

1977 MERCURY

COMET.

'

1'\ r

~

'2995

. •.
AMATEUR BOXERS who will be taking pa~t ·in
Saturday night's boring program at the Meigs High
School are pictured working out at the Pomeroy Senior
High Auditoriwn. Saturay night's matches, Sll!'nsored by
the Meigs Jaycees, will begin at 7:30 p. m. Over 20
matches will be featured during the evening and four
·
trophies wiU .be awarded. .
·~·'

195 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.,._....______________.
446-9800

•t..,j:

).

.

.,,

•

'

•

1

t

MIDDLEPORT
~

OPEN
Mon.-Sat.

12-6 Sunday

"2-3662

..'•

----&lt;.....---"-'.,.. •

Todd· Mayes, athl etic
trainer at Kyger Creek High
School, recently attended the
Eighth Annual Medical
Aspects of Sports Symposium
at Lexington, Ky .
The sports symposium was
sponsored by the University
of Kentucky office of Medical
Education and the Kentucky
High
School
Athl etic
Association.
Instruction was given in the
areas of non-trauinatic sport·
related conditions, care of

••
•

A whol e weekend of great m~;~*~~~~
It's just a sampUng of Wh&lt;~t H
is 'all about. {And movies- uncut ·
termpted-are just part of it. there

tas tic nightclub specials and ex.clusiw
rograms, too!) Here's wh~t you can st•t•

f.tee th is weekend:

~APRIL?

tt30 PM "1-J.orpcr Va lier I'TA .' ' BEJ:oc~ on th e
hlt song, this hilahou s comedy starnng Barbara Eden tells th e real story.
~
4ri0 PM "Standi ng Room Only: Darry Momilow." Two houl'5 of great entertainment. the kind you find cvcry month on H801
6:30 PM "SportSceOC'." joe NA math is the
host of this ··magazine" specia l, with pre·
view~ of the baseb&lt;~ll sc&lt;1son and of lht&gt; hasI 100IIM
ketball and hockey pla yoffs.
.
fu s$ won
Actor
7130 P'M'" Thl.! Grea t Brai·n." G-ra ted. fi1m il y
Simnn ~.:omcdy, Wh ich ' ""lv('&lt;!
·. . fun ,, starring: jimmy O~ mond·- Donny &amp;
n\1mination s.
· Marie's Ut11e bro ther.
1():00 PM "Coma:·· Terrifying
9:00 PM "Revenge of the Pink Panther." · talc of a ti me when th e
Peter Sellers is as hilariously incompetent as ·
transplants has outstri pped ~~~.~~~TZ
ever, as he's joined by Dy.m Cannon, star uf
11:00 AM " Ju lia ." Va nt•ssa. I
.
··Heaven Can Wait."
· Bli!st Supporting Actress and Jason
11:00 PM •·Wild Gt!cSe." Th is d r,lma of mer·
Best Supporti ng Actor in thi s $lory of a
ccno:~ry soldiers in Ahica .offe rs he-man
friendship ~ t""'oel.!'n two women.
ac tion st:ming Richard 6urt~m . ROF,t'r
Of
course, to i'j!ccr&lt;;·e HBO, you must be a
Moore and Rkha.rd Ha rrjsl
'.
'cableTV subscribtir. So if yuu are, doTl"t miss
'h 15 AJA·••f..fcan Dog blues ." OsCar winner
your free preview. This wccktmd is. the perGcorSe Kennedy portrays" sadistic w~rdcn
fect time to see wha t yuu~becn lnl!ii!llng! .
in thi sstory of a young map fal~ly conv•ctt:d .

fan shouted as he walked to-

had turned his back on his
felloW umpires .by sigrUn'g a
contra ct with the league.
" I feel sorry for · Paul that
he sold his soul like that ,"
Froemming said.
•
Aller the game, which San
l'rancisco won 11-li, Pryor
wid hi s side or the story.
" I signed lor personal and
financial reasons," he said.
"lf 1 hadn 't had those two
reasons, I'd be with them (the
striking wnpiresl. I walked
the picket line in 1970 during
playoffs
between
the
Pitt.sbw·gh and Cincinnati."
Pryor said he hopes. th•
contra ct dispute will end

members of a lo ca l
pipefil.ters union joined lhe
march.
Umpir e
Harty
Wendelstedt, a 13-year major
lcab'Ue veteran , said he felt
th e umpires' marc h had

musculoskeletal and heat
problems, head and neck
injuries , a nkle injuri es ,
jumper 's . knee, weight
training programs and
techniques, management of
shoulder-ann Injuries, the
child in athletics, the female
athlete, fl ex.ibility in the
prevention of sport injury,
skin care in athletics,
ophthalmic
Injuri es , ·
management of abdominal
injury, care and transportation of injured athletes ,
teaching proper tacklmg and
blocking techniques , and
techniques for spinal cord
and head injuries. ·
Following the various
presentations , the participants were ·given an opportunity to ask questions
from a panel cpmposed of the
speakers.
On Monda y, Lee Rose, head
basketball coach of Purdue
University gave a lecture on
the· · Importance of athletrc
tra lners t o his athletic
program. He gave several or
the training techniques that
are used In hi s basketball
conditioning program.
Mayes is completing his.
second yea r · as athletic
trainer at Kyger Creek High
School. Many changes in !he
health care of all students
have been implemented since
his position was created .
Students may rec eive
immedi at e first -aid treatment in' cases of cmcrgen·

ward the stadiu m.

a~

th"v

REBATE
SPECIAL
GET EASY SHINE
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751;

Some

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BACK FROM
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On Other Dupont
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CUAII$•SHIII:S ·-PEJirn
CMII'ICIII-1-.1 um-..

"r:verything that ,has been
said (about the slrike) has
been put out by the major.
league people. We wanted to
tell the public how poorly
we've been tr eated," he said.
"There's no way We can go on

the way they're treating us .
We just had to take a stand."
Major league ump ires
make from $17 .~oo to more
!han $40,000 . a year and
rece ive $53 a day expense
money.
Wende lstedt sa id his OWil

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father , who is retired and

lives on a fixed income, had
trouble understanding the
umpires' dema nds.

·

"He found it hard to understand that I couldn 't get·by on
$53 a day when he has lo get
·him ," said umpire Ed Vargo , by on $200 a month ,"
who would be starling his 20th Wendelsted t said. "But wilh
season. "My feelings toward hotel rates $40-$45 a day in
Paul will never be the same ." major league cities, that
The umpires . wore signs doesn 'l leave much to eat
say ing "Baseball unfair to on."
umpir es' 1

SPRING
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wn lk,.fi

Indians open
~season today

RUBBING COMPOUND
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BOSTON ' (A P) - The dians from the Texas
Cleveland Indians are hoping Rangers in a winler trade,
to ·be charged with grand .said, " We're going to be
th e £1 'this season - the leading the league in stolen
gra nder the theft the better. bases wh.en this series is
The Indians, staled wopen over. This ~am has the
the American League season ' capability to run very ~ell .
today at ~pston w.ith Rick And when you run, thmgs
,Wise goin!l\ for the (J1dians happen. .
" 1 fully mtend to run a lot
aga inst Dennis Eckersley or
the Red Sox, are banking on and I hope to lead by
team speed-and stolen bases example. I know what Toby
to help them turn around can do from when we played
after a frustrating 1978. ·
!ogelher (in Texas) ~d we
Cleveland which finished have other guys on thiS team
Easl last sea- who can run. It' s just a
sixth in the
so n has added offensive question of whether they will
spe~ and power by aequiring do it," Bonds s~id . .
Bobby Bonds and Toby
Bonds stole 37 bases for the
Harrah.
Ra.nge rs la st year after
In fact , Bonds - a 33-yea'r- swiping seven for the Whott
old veleran who holds a Sox before an early.&lt;Jeas_on
maj or league record or trade. Harrah came up wath
stealing more than 30 bases 31 stolen bases for the
and hilling more than 30 Rangers.
homers in five di£ferenl
seasons - re~ls the Indians
could t~rn out to be an \
exc illn g tea m on th e .
basepalhs.
Bonds, who came to the In-

surfa ce scratches and sta ins

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AL

WHY
.PAY

prior to the fall school term .
The Kyge r Creek · Athletic
Boosters and school ad•
ministration have supported
the trainer's progr am .
Currently , pl ans ·are being
formulated to purchase a
whirlpool modality ro'r the
next school term .

MORE ·
FOR
CARPET

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cil!s, ~dvicc-on tho· care of ·.
minor inju rie s. and in·

formation on proper con-

.

d itio nin g'

·e x e rci ses,

fl exibilit y programs, and
personalized tr aini ng
· programs . for the non-group
sports.
·
Assisting ~rc three student

' · ,

l~~~tj~::J,

KC trainer

RADIO SHACK completes
407 PEARL ST. symposium
•

.,

" We're with you guys,' ' one

colledi ve bar g aining
ag reement two years ago but

But Pryor may not £ind the
otller league umpires willing
tii forgive and forget .
' 'I have no sympathy .with

Riverside V.W. • Amc • Jeep is pleased
to announce that Pete Somerville has
been added to our sales staff.

.... '

wcrtt SL"heduled for Thursday .

well ."

.. . ._ . . , ; ; _ . . ;_ _ _ _ _. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. . .

'i'' .

h&lt;ld received on $8,000 raise

beCHUSC Of lhc umpir es '

over and everyone would go
ba ck to work," he said. "I
hope they understand . If they
come bac k, I'll wish them

6 cyl . engine, 3 speed
transmission, local, one
owner.

~-

.. ·'2695

Pryor and reel good...
·Froemming said Pryor. 51,

outside the stadi~m . They left
&lt;:ts soon 1:1s t he game started,
w1tn man~ of them headin g
for other cities where games

··· l·here·s no way
I ('ouh.l stc:mQ next to Pa ul

l'rtH'IIIIlll!lg .

soon .
" 1 wish the thing could get

- .

.

picket. .
" I wouldn't want to be in a
foxhole with the guy 1Pryor 1
with the enemy · coming,"
sa id
mnpire
Br uce

Gumbo " Mudder" tires

'4195
Small '304' V-8 eng . PS,
PB, .AM -FM .s tereo,
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Low Miles.

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control,

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from

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cruise

For American nrm. anzloUa to keep a Step BliNd 1n the ·.

in the news

eo
·. rn.er

OJ

Edition"

mar ched outside Riverfront
Stadium in an informational

1977 JEEP
CJ-5

Wti..:
b
.
nat a out the warranty?

Names •••

n
,s
roet
.

"Specl•l

The lengthening fringe

Dear
• ::..
baa.)
~
In 1973, I asked. for .help
It • • ~~ b-pewdtar,lbe real tiiiJII fl'lliD
~ ·
· •·
l
·
about water being run across and eqllifll*!.wltb 2,DOO chanden, prw 'wNr
t ·
Jiy fltANltCOUrma
· rllilnlhg on t~ of jruSbuJia." . KOVI!l'!lment circles, were -124 road. It just runs to 1--.1 aU the steel milia, l!otela, 11oft ~ uc1 GUier
•
Auoetased P.!ul Wrijer ·
· ·Billy, describeil by the : available ·around town before evernvhere in an eight acre \Yes~em wonden the ma1nlaridera ant ao ..... to bUy.
WASHlNd-TON (AP) ~ newspaper ai a refonned reach~ the desks of the field. You can·~ plant corn..
Av.ililable for ,1,710, It Ia eapable of IIR'ItiDC forward,
The wOrd .froin Georgia Is !'professional drinker •• Is Carter people.
Water takes over half of it. r backw~ up -..cl down; Al that price, lbat .....uld ~
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
that bo~pllallzed Biny Carter belrig treated for . akoool
. Now the White House has was told the backhoe was about the eul that OUiht to be expeded ~ IL .
·
Ia "feeling lllie a Marine abuse at the - 1:.ong Beach, achieved parity with the worn ·aut.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can tom . .It can be cau!ed 'by· a again."
Calif., Navalllospital.
· de~s 81\d agencies.
In February, 1979, I was
you Jell me if there is number of different factors,
The monthly Plains
By ordering the Tlriles direct told It would be looked at and · ..-.-.--..,;,.,.;....,;,...,;._,.;.._..;...,.._...,.._......_.,
anything l,can do for ringing one of which Is. medicine. Statesman, a hometown · President Carter's early from the local ·distributor, I guess that Is all that was
in the ears? They also sound Simple aspirin can cauSe the tabloid bo~n of brother · rlslilg aides have aoiVed. ll .bypassing the. middleman done.
like birds chirping all the problem in some people. Of Jlrhmy's successful cam· problem that had proved an news dealer • presidential·
It looks to me that Meigs
time. I have had this problem course, If it ls caused by pailo for prealcleucy, reports embarrassment In dealings aldea no longer · ha~e to Ccrunty is out of luck for
for several yea'rs. I take something specific like that, that Billy Is following an with counterparts at the c;onfess they.don't know what anything:
various kin~ of medicine and your doctor can detennlne . arduous exercise regimen P!llltagon, SUite Department early monung caners are
Electric Is going up, gas is
I think some of them ,nay ·be the cause and&gt;correct It for. that Includes " miles of and Central Intelligence talking about when they cite· up and rtsing milk Is $2.16 to
the cause.
·
you . Otherwise, take .heart,
·
Agency.
articles In the 'llmes.
$2.36 to wi)at? You can get
DEAR READER
there
·are
some
methods
Almost
routinely,
Carter
·
milk
of the same grade at
Welcome to the club. Well · available that could provide . means about 4() percent of the folks get near-dawn calls
PrlDclpal Carier assistant $1.&amp;:1 a gallon elsewhere. Why "
over 00 million adults in the youtheyou'reseeking..
people with cirrhosis of the
bureaucrats oUtside the .HamiltonJordanmadeoneof In )'delgs County only? 1 can
United States have similar
BONN, West' Germany (AP) - Marlene Dietrich wun't
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read liver have it for some other · Whlte House who want to his rare local speaking ·ap- beat it by moving ·~nd go
symptoms. Go see an ear your coiUJM about cirrhosis reason. Obviously, you fall in discuss articles appearing In pearances at the National where it does not cf&gt;st so lrilpressed with many of the American actors she worked with
in the movies. Many of thepi were "not richly blelllled" witli
specialist for an examination: of the .liver. I have been told the40 percerrtcattgory.
morning editions of the New ·Preas Club a few weeks ago much.
brains, she says.
A couple of years ago there that I have cirrhosis of the
How serious cirrhosis of the York Tlriles. ·
-and 'Bounded like a standup · In Lebanon Township you
were a limited nwnher of liver, but I have never even liveri~lllerallydependsupon
"I will not say that there were no Intelligent actors In
Until quite recently, comic.
can get to the store only by
Hollywood, but the reaHy great actors were regretlably never
things that could be done for tasted any alcoho.lic how much permanent however, copies of the Tlriles
Jordan began •With a truck because of the bad
people. with this problem. beverages of any kind nor damage to the liver has oc- which, along with the reference to Carter's mention roads. It sure Is bad 'from my my partners," the. 74-year-old actress says In her mell\olrS,
which are being serialized In the West G«man magazine
Now there are some things have I ever smoked.
curred. That Is exti-em~ly Washington Poet, are must of "Mantezuma's revenge" home to County Road u. The Stern.
,
.
·
that can help.
DEAR
READER
AS you yariable. .
.
bre~ast
reading
In
high
dllringesl
'
dental
dillnf
Mexler
toast
to
the
first
of
March,
there
was
a
People who have noises in
She says Jimmy Stewart, Otie of her leading men, played·
PI'
.0
co.
private owned tractor and love scenes "as If he bad put on only one shoe and couldn't find
the ear asociated with hear- know, clrrhollis of the liver
·
"I had to rua to make it · drag used - no grader and no · the other. ~~
·.
ing loss often benefit from mearu scarring of the liver.
-~
here," Said Jordan, "but
Mlsa Dietrich was.~esse!~· however, .by Spentier Tracy.
proper fitting with a hearing
,unlike the president In gravel.
aid. Incidentally, some peo- to the llver. There are many
.
Signed
"It
was In the fUm 'Judgnlent .at Nuremberg,' $1c1Jy, my
Metlco last. month, I had'the
ple have hearing l&lt;iss and ways that the llver e~~n be' inrole
was
ooly small. But working with this partner was for me
John
P.
Pickens,
Sr.
_
GREAT PARENTS
good taste not to tell you
a great experience."
don't know it because the loss jured, even as a result of . I heard Illy~ calling IJit
,
.
•
why." i
doesn't involve the range of
She also recalls meeting' John Wayne . while he was
right heart failure. Fluid ac- IwenttomyhCIIIle~liH!ejustto-1'11ymotberwaacalUngme
sounm used for normal1 cumulates
supporting
a Will! and two sons on a meager saJary - "when
in the liver, stret- My Daddy sat upoo a .chair he dl!ln't wonder why I was there
be worked."
human conversation.
it and results in injUries. He~ I oftan did ceme by to say hall9 so he didn't ask why. ·.-------=---·-----------....:.....,
Peple who liave no hearing ches
She said Wayne "could bal'l!ly say his noes. I helped blnl as
Also, the liver can be Injured · :I asl!ed for Mother and I ill&lt;!n.'t say l had hear'd Mother calling
much
as I could. He told me that he never read boob. Today,
defeet can .have the sounds from a variety of toxins, in- me. tb8t day . , .,
·. . .
,
_
John Wayne is one of the most inlporqnt pei'IOIIBIItles In
masked, ih "your case, mask~ fectious agents and ftom . illltil ,nade.tt)e wonder ho!r loiJI!It~l'Ouldbe, thai we could go,
America and rich'as Croesus. He doesn't nl!ed.ll\Y good wishes
ing lhe chirping. A little disorders of the formalion. our Plltl!ills to ~anym91:e.
He bas made, it .- Without teadlng books, But one
device that IO!&gt;ks·exaclly like -' and drainage of bile.
They ga~ ua· Jove and a warm hclme
should
not
take that as an example."
.
a hearing aid can be attached
About 80 percent of all the They gave CGiltenlrilent, '!"had no cail!le to roam. . ·
Her book, "Marlene Dietrich, My Ufe," Ia published InGer·
to the ear to' provide a con- cases of cirrhosis of the liver They made bUr clj(dhoocl, out BvenventaU happy ones.
man bv C. Bertebmann of Murueh.
tinuous Qroad spec!rwn noise are caused fi'OIIl the exThey ral8ed three daqhtars-ancl five ~e~ns.
that is not nearly so ir· cessive use of alcohol. That
NEW YORK (AP) -SyndiC.~ talk.flhow bolt Phil Doritating. Tliis external noise,
Each me of ua now has a mate
rather than making matters
nahue
wW beconle a regular on NBC's "Today'' program
Children ofll11t own tbru love not hate
beginning
next month.
.
worse, helps because it
We're older ~ lind we can '!" , .. •
masks the ·annoyiilg . sound.
"[!onahue
on
Today,"
In
elghtof1!inute
segment&amp;,
wW be a .
Just whal 911!' parl!nta allowed 111 to be
three-Gay-a-week feature of the early morning nen and en·
Very ,"good resplts have heeri
We llld no ·'lhlm'. of What We'd eat ·.
reported . with this devil'!!.
tertalnment prGgram, Lester Crystal, pl'llident of NBC
- We~
)16tile Would,ahra)-a·W ~~e~~t
'.
·called a tinnitus masker.
•News, said \Yedneaday. Most of the 11111Dl8tlta will be
kR.W IIIII' Dad 1rlluld 10 to 'lrark, we knew his duty he;d
prOduced In Chicago, although some wW be recorded on
r am sending you The f
nevtr-llhlr!l
•
.~
· · '
·
location In varlo111 clUes, ~llal said Wldbeada.f.
Health Letter nwnber 12-10,
ltwainotdul}lbllllovelbatma!lil\lmgo
, ,
Donahue, an Enuny·Wlnner; baa been h!NII of "The Phil DoHelp For Tinnitus, Noise Or
Mother w..tted and cooked lhru' Joy., we know
nahue Show"- now "Donahue" - .since Nov. 8,1987.
Ringing Of The Ears. It will
Until We were ·OOfer we did not aee:.--,
, ,,
discuss this common problem
Butnow:We-andkriowwha•ltmeant
~
'
TlilRONTO (AI') ....: Margaret Trudeau IIIYI that ,ifter her
in more detail for you and will
I wonder ho_w~'IY ttm. we ~urtlind tbelr hearts we rent
first yean of llllltrlage !D canadian Prime Mlni8ter Pierre
give you more informadon
t'or, belltg ~ 'ft 11!1 Ume .pent
EUott Trudeau, they lost their llrong attractkll for each oth·
abont too new ,method!&lt; of
To atop ~ ~ \mat It, mlaaa
management !hat have pro~
To cut' aU ares at1d trOilbiel tG6:
. • -·
From 19'14, "until the day I walked out ... tine yell'S later,
vided relief for a large
Th~ looM bol all,'!UIInow not wtiat.Utey W~nt t1fru
it
buUt momentiDR 1n fits and llarta. Plen-e 11epn to !Ina my
nwnber of people. Other
But now we undel,tand and b'ibut~ pay ' .
.
rebeHion
tedio111 - and so did the canadian public." ·
readers who want this issue
For we know many others did nol halie life thluasy way.
r~
, _,.
· In .the fall of 1976, on a visit to ilo!ne, abe saya, Trudeau
. can send 50 ,:ent• wjth a long,
lirged her to talk to the late Pope Paul VI about their probstamped, self-a chh·essed
Sp to uur l)ad, William Collnolly aha Mcither: Ern\8, we&amp;ay
lems. .
.
enveloP&lt;' for il. St-ml your reThan~ you and may lung be the days fhat we can com• home
The
pope
asked
the
prime
miDllter
whether
1M wilbed to
quest lo mt• in cart of this
and '*'"JOur stn~ •nd ooar .YOU say •
.
dlsctlll
any
per..W
problem~,
bu~
wben
be
lllraed
lo ber .he ~
newspeper, P.O. Rox · 1551 ,
Brln&amp; Ylliil' fllmUy and IJI'II!Idclllldrai, for a1)e8111 aU hollilays.
commented
111ly
on
her
chllchn,
lild
Mn.
Trudeau,
30.
·
Radin City Station, Nt-w
M8.Y1te i\.f\'f'rf~get ~ ~ illd li1ght11fe you gave as we
··"'This Is ANOTHER fine mess you've gotten
In the latest aerlaliled lnltallmeat of ber autoblop-iph)',
1favel down ollr llf~'s hig)ni-ay.
·
•
us frlfo!"
"Beyond Reason," she says that after the audience Trildeau
You NV
should
realiz•• that tlli.•
Cotnposeci~Bifd · lj'rlt.!en by oldest, daughler, ()oris, Marc~
,York,
10019.
laughed and Sllid ' "Bad luck, you di&lt;kl't get to •• your quea29. 1.979. •
I '
.
.
·anhoying prublem is 0:1 ~ympUons."
-----;-:---,-'--;---,-'--,-,-:"":;--.,.._.--7'--'·
~: ~ ·. . .
.
.. l .l,_
' "' """ 1-'""-",:.."'-"&lt;

HEAIIJH.

1977 DODGE
. ASPEN WAGON

By Doo Graff

strikes in the major lea~ue
sea son
opener
he re
Wed1iesday · whil~ 25 other
major league · umpi ~es

•' l n ; 1un KI."'NI::\
AI' ~ports Writer

CINCINNATI ( AP)
Striking . major league
wnpires · say they've been
sold out by Pau l Pryor, the
only umpire who has signed a
contract with the National
Leagu e for this baseball
season .
Pryor called balls and

RIVERSIDE

Donald 'F. Graff

administration's forthcoming .Strateg\c Arms Umitation
Treaty with the Soviets• Then he shall find it - In polls by
CBS a nd the New York Times (63 percent in favor) and by
NBC and Associated Press Ill percent support).
Do opponents of a SALT II treaty question such

...

.

· :::..

aphorism goes, fi gures don 't lie but liars sure can fige,~re.
· Is President Carter loo~ing for public support for the

such a

$6.

•

WASHINGTON \NEAl· The only thing in life as certain '

able !o prove anything you'd like them .to.

0

·:'
and a ~9-1 shot , Harr~ tn ,
:;:: · captured the second. paying
$120.40 to win .
Crawford, driven hi' R'lph

Let the .poll reader beware

"

ii:f '..7;:;;~:::""'~;;~~;;~~~~~Strz
.
kz·n
·
g. · ..u.m
...
·
pir.
e
.
s
unset
. ..
.
r
wz.th Pry'o r 's· .d·ecz·s z·.o n

.

.

trainers who have acquired

J
WAT CH CABLE CHANNEL 4
KIO IS SOMITKIIIeiUI

PolntVIew:caltle. TV
675-3396 or 992-2505

..

thei r first-ai~ car~s and CPit
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Jack Matthews and Deke
Henson .

Ail ;t ud&lt;·nt trainers will be

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t~aint r"l'l tU III jlS ~~ ~i ~,, ::i lllll lll ,•f'

~·· PARTS
Parts
Plus.

WEST M~IN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO .

�•'

5- The Daily Sen~el , Middleport-P~meroy, O.,'Thursday, Allr. 5, 1979

''

4=-'!'h~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
-~

o.:Thursday, Apr. 5. l!r19
.

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent

'

.

.

Peanuts, popcorn, · predictions, popoffs ·and. preSsure th~t 's t)Je ha,rbinger of'the major league baseball season,
, beginning its long, hot summer run this week. ·
.!... .,·: •How many rash words will have to be eaten by the end of the
•• ~ six-month grind? How many boasts wiD be fulfilled and how
many regrets will be drowned in a cold glass of beer at the end
of the 16~ame season?
Take careful note, then walt and see :
Sparky Lyle, the New York Yankees' castoff Cy Young win·
ner, now a Texas Ranger, who got partial revenge with his
kiss-and-tell " Bronx Zoo" tome: "I can't wait to face the
Yankees. I hope to break George Steinbrenner's heart the
way he broke mine."
' Dave Parker, the Pittsburgh Pirates' $900;()()()..a.year
Gohath, who must prove himself worthy of tpe game's highest
price tag: " I'm not worried. I think I am the best, hardest
working player in baseball . I don't ·see any reason I can't win
the Triple Crown (batting average, home runs, I'UII8·batted·
in) .t l
'
'
'
Reggie Jackson, Yankees: "I will hit 40 home runs this
year . I would have done it last year if Billy (Billy Martin
replaced in mldseason as manager) had given me th~
chance."
Earl Weaver , manager of the Baltimore Orioles: " I'U bet
the family estate ·that we hit more home runs than the
Y""kees." That wouldn't be news. Last year the Orioles out·
homered the world champs t53-125. The Milwaukee Brewers
led the American League with 173. '
Bill Veeck, president of the Chicago White Sox: "The Brewers have been more successful in the free agent draft than
anybody - the Yankees, Callfornlil ¥gels, you name 'em.
Larry Hisle and Sal Bando have been great additions. Outside
of Reggie Jackson and Rich Gossage, the Yankees haven't got
much use out of their free agent guys, and there's no way to
prove Sparky Lyle wouldn't have done the job If the Yankees
hadn't got Goose Gossage."
Pete Rose, justlf}'inghis break with theCincinnatiReds and
his $800,()()()..a.year cmtract with the Phillies, as told to
P&lt;;nthouse Magazine: "Loyalty is a two-way street. I don't
think the Reds showed Sparky Anderson any loyalty when
they fired him ... The Reds sure as hell didn 'I show me aAy
loyalty."
On value to the Phlllies:
"I think I'm real good for morale and spirit and things like
that. I've been told I can wake up a couple of guys on the team
who are really super players (Mike Schmidt, lor example)."
George Steinbrenner, Yankee owner: "Billy Martin will he
· back as manager in 1980 If he keeps his part of the bargain."
Bob Lemon, Interim Yankee manager.:. "I get tired of pull·
ing on this uniform every day. I don't want to manage after
1979."

.

Lou Brock, St. Louis cardinal outfielder and speed
merchant: "There are two plateaus in baseball I would
naturally like to attain -3,000 hits and 1,000 stolen bases. '.(he
first I feel sure I can reach, the second is out of the question. "
The 39-year-old BrOck starts the Season with 2 900 hits· thus
~eeding only 100. He would need to add 83 stole~ bases io his
all-time .record of 917.
'

·Sports briefs
By The Associated Press
PRO FOOTBALL
ATLANTA-Andy Spiva, a .
middle linebacker with the
Atlanta Falcons, was killed
when his car ran off a rainslick road north of the here
and struck ' a tree, Fulton
County
police
said.
Teammate Garth Ten Nape!
was critically injured.
Spiva died of massive head
and chest • injuries at
Northside Hospital.
'Ten Nape! was listed in
critiCal but stable condition
. with head, chest and pelvis
injuries.

Spiva, who was obtained by
the Falcons after bein~ re·
leased by the Cardinals in the
final preseason cut in 1917,
was listed as the Falcons' No.
l middle linebacker In
preseason camp last year
before injuring a knee.
TENNIS

ROTTERDAM, Netherlands
- Bjorn Borg of Sweden and
Vilas Gerulaitis and John
McEnroe scored victories in
the first round of a World

C hamp i onship

Tennis,

tournament .

,

The top-seeded Borg '
downed Britain's Mark Co• 64, 6-2; Gerulaitis beat Peter
· reigl of Austria 6-1, 6-4, and
McEnroe defeated Swit·
zerland's Heinz Guent·
hard 6-2, 6-1.
In other first-round action,
Gene Mayer beat Dutchman
Tom Okker 6-3, 7-1;, Peter
Fleming defeated Anand
i\rmitraj .of India 6-3, 7-ll and
Brian Teacher fell to
Australia's Geoff Masters, 62, 6-4 .

Poland 's Wojtek Fibak
downed Ulrich BiMer of West
Germany 6-1, s.-2; Jose Luis

Clerc of Argentina advanced
with a 7-ll, 6-3 victory over
Australian Robert Reiniger.
and Vijay Armitraj of India
beat Andrew Pattison of
Rhodesia 7..1, 6-2.
NICE , France - Italy's
Corrado Barazzutti defeated
Vladimir
Zednik
of
Czechoslovakia 6-4, 6-4 to
advance to the men's singles '
quarter-finals of the Nice

•

.

Veteran pitchers bombed in season

.

Giants, Blue, errors defeat ·Reds
best thing than tan happen to he Su icJ . "'i'hll t'S the 'way yOU
,Joe Altobelli.
}un."
win ball games."
AI' Spurt;.; Writt•r
" We tried to keep it in their
1
t:iisl
year's
nosedive
was
a
. Vida Blue, who pitched a
CINCINNATI (AP I - The rninils Ulis sprin~ ," he said ,
bitt~
r
disappointment
for
creditable
complete game ,
~.av
u
ririg
an.
ll-5
victory
over
'· Sari FranCisco Giants led the
Na t1 onal League so long last l.he Cincinnati Reds in the some San FranCisco players , allowing jusLnine hils, wasn't
season and then fell so hard major lea1,'Ue baseball season but Altobelli hopes it may happy that he'd let some runs
the playe rs must have opener Wednesday. "Some- have bred a killer instinct . slip away.
"Sooner or later, somebody
"I wish I could have shut
learned something from the limes the worst thing that
has
to
win
it
(the
National
thern
out,'' he said. " I would
experirnce. lii.!UrPrl manager happens to you can be the
League West) besides tbe - get two strikes on a lot of hit·
Reds or Dodgers,'' he said. tets aud end up making a bad
" We want it to be San pitch .
t'rancisco." ·
"But I don 't give a damn
Mike !vie, who heat out vet- , what \he critics.say. I just try
eran Willie McCovey for the to pitch the way Vida Blue
first base job, delivered a can pitch."
single and a home run in the
The game featured a
Giants' eight-run second mat.chup of Cy Young
inning. He also reflected on wiMers, bu\ the duel didn't
last long. The Reds' Tom
last season.
By FltEO RO'fHENBERG baseball
a . lot,"
said
"H
we'd
only
played
a
14().
Seaver
gave up seven runsAP Sports Writer
Garagiola . 11 He's more of a
game schedule,. we ":?uld four of them eamed - in the
Joe Garagiola, a witty bull- baseball purist than I am. He have won the diVISion, he second inning and left the
pen catcher once banished to hates the designated hi iter; I said . "Maybe it (the · game the loser. ·
the bench because he could ·love it. He thinks infielders nosedive ) wa~ an omen in
"I had some balls hit hard
bring. life to the dugout , will ·· should be prot~cied arollild dis!!uise b~cause we left and got the ball out over t~
be bringing his unique brand second base; I think they're s.prmg tratnmg. With the at- plate too much,'' Seaver said.
of banter to the broadcast fair game.
titudewe can wm ball games. " It's something I'll have to
"We're like two guys sitting
booth when NBC begin.s
"We try to btlry people. work cin the nexi couple of
another season of baseball on the bench who disagree on When we get a break, we try days."
coverage Saturday.
baseball strategy and to capitalize on that break,"
It was an inauspicious '
In his final season in 1954, philosophy. I think it's great
'
·
Garagiola played in only five stuff."
games but proved invaluable
One widely circulated
to New York Giants Manager report last year concluded
I~ Durocher as a bench that Kubek and Garagiola
jockey extraordinaire. Since were indeed like two guys on
then,
Garagiola
has the bench -!,lilly Martin and
sharpened his tongue, Reggie Jac·kson at their
moving from ballplayer to feudin' best.
•
, announcer, a route taken by
But everyone connected
Where Your Dollar
many former athletes. But he .with
NBC's
baseball
Means More!
did it a little differently broadcasts calls that report
and with a different result. ludicrous . ."1 couldn't believe
First, he wasn't a star it when I saw that story,' '
player or a big name, Garagiola said, his voice
appearing only once in more cracking with anger. "Tony
than 81 games during his 12- and I have never had any
year National League c~reer problem at all .. It was just
with St. Louis, Pittsburgh, · ridiculous''
ChiC'ago and New York, while
Garagiola, also seen on the
, compiling a lifetime batting tube as car huckster and a
personality on the Today
average of .257.
Second, he began his Show, bristles at suggestions
broadcasting career as a that he is more show biz and
color man but eventually less journalism.
became top banana as a
"That'snonsense," he said.
respected
play-by-play "I like to consider myself an
announcer, which is a little announcer who 'tells what I
like playing shortstop after know and what I find out. I
tell the facts with a light line.
,years behind the plate.
Garagiola shares the NBC But I still tell the facts .
booth with Tony Kubek, a for·
," 1 just don't happen to
mer shortstop with the New think that the Super Bowl or ~
York Yankees. But the booth . the World Series'.should be
is about all they. share. '
treated as high Mass."
"Tony and I disagree on
'
I.
·
Ill I'EKitY KIN NEY

debut for new Reds' manager
.John McNamara .
" There were so many
things going on I didn't have
time to think about ii " he
said. "Those things happen,
whether it's opening day or
whenever."
...1 ·
One bright spot for
Cincinnati was·the pitching of
2I -year-oill rookie Frank
Pastore, who allowed just one

TV Sports
Column. • •

By Herschel Nissenson
AP Sports Writer
A funny thing ·happened
Wednesday to Tom Seaver
and Fr;utk Tanana, two of
baseball's
best
pitchers ... only it wasn't very
fuMy to Seaver and Tanana .
Seaver got through thi! first ·
inning all right, but was
kayoed with two . out in the
second as the San Francisco
Giants clubbed the Reds ll-5
in the . traditional National
League opener in Cincinnati.
Tanana fared a little better
bot still came away a loser.
He served up home runs to
Larry Cox, Willie Horton and
a tiebreaking two..-un shot to

hit in three scoreless innings.
11

! wasn't scared, nor was I

intimidated," said Pastore.
"But me replacing Pedro
Borbon In Cincinnati is like
Ray Knight replacing Pete

Rose.,, ·

.

Borbon has been suspended ,
for two da'ys ' for "in~
subordination" and the Reds
are oolieved to be trying to
trade the veteran ' reliever.

AUTHORIZED
RCA and WHIRLPOOL .

-

FOR

PHONE 992-7113

Associated Press · preliminary hearing Friday
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - For- on charges of aggravated
mer major league baseball murder and armed robbery
player Harry "Suitcase" in the shooting death of
Simpson ls1 dea.d of ~ heart '-'~rmer Cleveland Indians
at~ck at age 53. •
Shlgger Luke Easter.
·
Simpson, who gained his
Euclid Municipal Judge Chicago 28 35 15 71 240 271
Vancou. 25 42 12 62 215 219
colorful nickname while Robert Niccum set bond St.
Louis 17 19 12 -46 243 344
playing for 17 teams in an 11· Wednesday for Victor Colo.
IS 53 10 40 201 322·
year career in organized Pritchett 32 and Roderick
Welts Conferon"
Adams Division
baseball, died Tuesday night Thomas '31 ~t $400 000 each
•·
Boston
42 22 1~ 9li :107 258
after being stricken at his on charge~ of awavated Buffalo 35
27 IS 8S 'W 249
Akron home. He had been a murder and $100,000 each on Toronto 33 32 13 79 258 244
resident of Akron for the past armed robbery.
Minn. 28 39 11 61 ~~ 280
Norris Division
20 ye~s, workfug in the
Easter, a slugger with the
•·Monl.
51 16 11 l13 327 220
rubber mdustry. ·
Indians from 1'949 to 1954 was Pitts.
35 30 13 83 275 271
Simpson was in the major shot and killed in a robbery · Los Ang. 33 34· 11 77 281 281
leagues fi'OOI 1951 through Thursday outside a Euclid Wash. 23 40 15 61 265 326
~!roll 22 40 16 · 60 248 291
1959, playing for Cleveland, hank.
• ·clinched division
the Kansas City Athletics, the
Wed!IISchly's Gom11
Chicago White Sox, the New
KENT, Ohio (AP) -Kent · Montreal 4, ~troll 1
York
Yankees
and State University has named Boston 3; Toronto 3, tie
Pittsburgh : His best season 25-year.&lt;Jld .Tom Katovsky Atlanta 3, New York Rangers
tie
·
was 1956 when he hit .293 with head
tennis
coach 3,
Chicago 7, Mlnnesoto 1
21 home runs a'nd !OS runs . silcceeding Blan Fuller.
'
, Thursday's Games
batted in for Kansas City.
Fuller' who has held the Buffalo at Boston, (n)
,post for the past six years, , New York Islanders at
Philadelphia, (n)
.EUCUD,Ohio(AP) -Two resigned last week for Colorado
at Los Angeles, (n)
Cleveland men · face a personal reasons.
Friday's Games
N&lt;!w York Rangers a! ·
MIAMI (AP) - Barry Col· Atlanta, '(n)
lege officials are denying Minnesota at Vancouver, (n)
' baseball Coach Red Berry's
claims as · he resigned that
Natlollll Bar.lletlllli
they
interviewed
Association
replacements behind his back
At AGlance
and interfered with his wock.
By 'rhe Assoclattcl Press
Athletic Director Ken
E1~J:.11~c:;l~~::•
Stibler said he "Interviewed a
W L Pet.
Gl
couple of people" last • ·Wash.
5-4 25 .68~
wijh
sununer after recommending Phlla.
-46 34 .575 IV.
N. Jersey
36 43 .~56 18
Berrybe·replaced.Butschool New York 3t 50 .3113 24
administrators decided til Boston
28 51 .354 u
keep Berry another year and
Centro! Division
Stibler said Wednesday he · San Ani.
41 33 .588
44 35 ~ 57 w,
hadn't made a decision on his Atlanta
Houston ·
44 36 .550
3 .
•AWNING
job this .year.
· Cleve.
30 50 .315 17 ·
· ·~we thought the guy had ~t~oit
29 so .367 i7'1•
worked hard and htid the pro- N. Orleans 26 54" .325 2t
Western Conference
gram headed in the right
Midwest DIVIsion
•GCT.
direction," lhe athletic Kan. City
-46 3~ .m
director
said.'
"His
contract
~nvor
45 3~ .570 . 'I•
Best on the Market.
· t th
d f the Indiana
37 43 .-463 9
was up a
e en
Mllwau.
37 44 .457 9'1•
Ask about our 48 mo.
season. and his job was going Chicago
29 51 .363 17
Home . Improvement
to be re-&lt;!valuated. Whatever
Poclflc Division
Financing plan.
· problems there were last Seattle
51 29 .637
PhoeniK
19 30 .620 1'12
d
t
b
year seeme
o e cor· Los Ang.
45 34 .s 7o S'l•
reeled."
Portland
45 35 ' .563 6
Be r r Y r e s i g n e d San Olego ~2 38 .525 9
Wednesday saying· "They Golden St. · 36 -14' .450 15
basically d~'t really want a . •·clinched division ·
,
Wednesday's O.m11
!'rogram. There s been Atlanta 11,8, MliwaukH 109
mterfer~nce constantly."
Philadelphia 121, Houston 120
Stibler . said assistant Washington 145, Boston 1\9
coaches Steve BOIDSY and San Antonio 110, New Jersey
Greg Jo.zzo wiU take charge ~;nsas Clly liS, Los Angeles
1.100 E. Main
for the remainder of the m, OT
Pomeroy, 0.
season. Biscayne is 18-11 and Indiana .t02, Cleveland 95
992-7034
·has 20 games remaining.
Phoeni• 106, Portland 95

ELLIOTT APPLIANCfll
~"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"'-"-~~~1\i~~

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struttured and I didn 't do
Uml !&lt;&gt;night. 1 thou_ght I threw

jamm~

well, cmd that's encoura ging
to me.''
~

He probably hit it off
the trademark, but it got over
that 316-foot fence . You have
Ill pi(l:h the way the park is

1\oberts preferred to talk
about the relief pitching of
.John Montague, who allowed
two hits and one run over 'the

CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Cincinnati Reds, known
during recent years for their
hitting more than their
pitcbing, may be moving
toward a new image, ac·
cording to club president
Dick Wagner.
''BasebaU seems .to go in
cycles," Wagner said during
a recent Interview with the
Dayton . Journal Herald .
"Orgam~tions find them·
selves with problems at
certain poaitions, a surplus at
others. We have been aiming
at develaplng pitching, and
we think the caliber of pit·
chlng we 'II )lave at In·
dlanapollB and Nashville this
seaaon will hold great
promise for the future.
"This could mean' a dif·
ferent type of Reds team in a
few years, say more like the
~ Angeles riodae'rs where
you buDd around· bnpressive
· plldllng and win witb less

from our players."
The Reds president talked
about what he perceived as
the dangers of increasing
high salaries for som e
players.
"We've got to have some
consideration for the have·
not teams in the big leagues
that can't pay those salaries
even if ·they wanted to,"
Wagner said . " In other
, words, let's say a ·team like
ours that draws lot of people
doesn't have an opponent to
play on a given dsy or
weekend. Then hRRPbRll is

here;• he said . '-'I
ltoberL~.

17

fin al 6 2...1 innings.
The umpir ing cre w in
Ci nci nn a li included Paul

Pr yo r , the only veteran
niojor league ump who has
signed lor 1979. He worked
with three amateurs while 25
other big league umpires

picketed&gt; outside Riverfront
Stadium protesting salaries
and working conditions.
Th~ game in Seattle was
.offi ciated by rookie Ted
Hendry, the only A!. umpire
under t'llnlract for 1979, and
three amateurs.

Reds moving toward n~w i:lnage(

I

a

..1.' rting to fall apart. .
"The sala ry platea u you 're
talking about is a very
dailge rous one, I don't see
how ba seball can pay many
salaries like these, without
radical changes in our ticket
price, say $10 io $12, which up
to now is unheard of in
baseball."

Wagner said he was also
still
against
giving
guaranteed contracts.
"But guaranteed contracts
are a way.. Of life in our
business now and it's a very
tough hurdle to exist without
giving them." Wagn~r said.

"Too many players have
them for us to ignore
dema~:~ds for them."
The Reds president said he
was impressed with "the
ucellent morale and real
good working atmosphere" in
the National League basebaU
club's training camp this
year.
"Let me emphasize that I
think that John McNamara
has conducted an outstanding
~amp and I think our fans are
going to appreciate him as
they observe him and get to
know him," Wagner said.

s

for
Spring &amp;East~r
WOMEN'S .......:
Dresses, pant suits; slacks,
blazers. Excellent selection of
ladies sportswear by Catalina,
Jantzen, Coddington and Lori
Lynn.

~EN'~ ............. .
· Suits, Sport Coals, Dress Shirts, Ties; siacks
. and Hal~.

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Wednesday's O.me
Seo»le 5, C.lllomla ~
(Only game scheduled!
· ThundaY't Gimes
TeKalal Detroit, ppd .• rain
Milwaukee (C.Idw'll 22-91
at Ntw York (Guidry 25-3).
ClevelaJICI (Wise '·19) a!
Boston &lt;Eckersley (20·81.
Toronto (UnderwQOd 6' 1~)
at Kansas Clly (Leonard 21·

)/~iy games scheduled)

COME ON IN.NOW DUIDNGOUROPEN HOUSE.

Frldly's O.m11

Texas at Detroit
·
Chicago at Baltimore
Minnesota at Oekland, lnl
C.lilornla al Sea»le, (n)
(Only games scheduled)

110 E. Main

ly The Assoclaltcl Pross
lAS !BAll
American L.ee~ut
CHICAGO WHITE SOX Assigned Bob Moll~aro,
outfielder, outrlghtlo Iowa of
the Amerl~n Assoclotton.
Sent Kevin Bell, Infielder, to
Iowa on 24-hour rec:ali. Added
Dewey Rollinson, pllcher •
and Alvin Ml&gt;or'e, lnlleldtr·
outfielder, to their roster. •
l&gt;lotlollll League
LOSANGILESDODGERS
- Gave Pete Brobert, pll·
cher, his unconditional
releaae. Senf Bobby C.sllllo '
and Gerold Hannahs, pll·
cller&amp;, and Pete Guerrero,
ln'lltlder-outlleljler, to
Albuquerque of the Pacific
Coast L~ll\le.
PHILADEPHIA
PHILADELPHIA PHIL·
LIES- Sent Rudy /Moll end
Jim Morrison. lntlelders, to
their minor league camp for
reasslonment.
FOOT8ALL
Nallonol LH1111 Foolllall
HOUSTON OILERS Signed Vernon
Ptrrv,
defensive back; Wilbert
Cunningham,

TO

waler rnlttenct.

SiLVER BRIDGE PLAZA
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923 S. 3rd Ave. .
Middleport, 0.,
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Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to
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CORPORATION

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011 fastballs.
"You have to make them
hit the ball on the ground

Pro Basalllll
At A Otilnce
By The Associated Pross
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W L Pet. 08 offense."
0 0 .000
Chicago
Wagner during the In· .
0 0 .000
Monlrtal
said he had been
tervlew
0
0
.000
Now York
confident that the off-season
0 0 .000
Phila.
0 0 .000
Pills.
departW"OS of third baseman
0 0 .000
St. Loul•
Pete Rose and manager
WEST
Sparky
AAderson would not
Sen fran.
1 0 1.000
Atlanta
o 0 .000 Vo create attitude problems
Houston
0 0 .000 V. during spring tralnlrig.
Los Angeles o o .000 v,
"If anything, I came to
Sen Olego
0 0 .000 V. Tampa thinking the at·
Clncln.
0 1 .000 1
mospbere would be the exact
WtciMI.day's Oamt
San Francisco 11, Clnclnnall · o~te of your question and
5
'
I think you'll agree that's the
(Only game scheduled)
way it Is."
Tllunday's O.mts
Wagner also once again, as
New York (Swan, 9·61 at
Chicago (R. Reuschel. 1~-,tSl. he has In earl!~ interviews,
N.
.
San Diego (Perry 21-6) at took responslbiUty fQI' An·
Los Anweles (Sutton 15· 11 or derscin'a ouater !Ill manager.
"I 'II a.uwne responslbiUty
Hooton 19-10), N.
(Only games scheduled,)
for Anderson but Rose's
Friday's 04mas
declalcn to leave was his,"
Montreal at Pittsburgh
Sen Francisco at ClnciMall, Waaner said. "I think we'll
have to show the fans we
(n)
Atlanta at Hauston, (nl
. made the right move, and I
Philadelphia al Sl. Loulo, (n) was confident ~e would not
San Olegoal Los Angeles, (n)
have a negative reaction
(Only games scheCiuledl

Wedlllsday'o

'

Chronomatlc • ·116 by Realistic

(n)

Cleveland at Houston, (n)
San D'- at Phoenl•, (nl
Portland at Golden Slate, (n)
SeaHie at Los Angeles, (n)

homers t·~n.e

op~ners

FUTURA (wflh 2.3111re engine)

._._...___.._·.;.; .;:fo;. .:_r I N DOOR 5

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Sea Hie 115, San .Diego 117
Thursdlly's Galllll
Denver at New York; In)
Detroit at New Orleans. (n)
Friday's 0 . ~nver at Boston, (n)
Atlanta at Detroit, (n)
Phlltclelphla at Indiana. (n)
Washington at Chicago, (n)
New J - y at Kansas City,
(nl
· W.
Milwaukee at Now Orleans,

SIIOMI Tranucllons

·'''
·'.·.

19.95

hits .
S..aver. who began . the
seasnn with • 21!J.117lifetime
n'I(.'Urd and a 2.!H earnec:t run
average, said he felt good,
but in getting the baUover the
plate he made it too eliSy to
hit. .
"That's something I'll have
to work on the next couple of
days,'' he said.
Tanana, who yielded rune
hits and five runs - one of
them unearned because ·of hill
throwing error - in 5 2-3
limini!S, said all three Seattle

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KINGSBURY
HOME
SALES &amp;
ACCESSORIES

CB-FONE 1" by Realistic

by Re.listlc

~~i:~.

Pro Hockey At A Ollnee
By The Assoc:loted PrHI·
Notional Hodcey lftgue
C.mpbell Conlerenct
' Patrick Division
W L T Ph GF GA
• ·NY Islanders
48 15 1~ 110 3~1 :10'1
Philo . 39 23 rs· 93 27~ n.
NY
Rang . 40 21 11 91 312 278
Atlanta 40 30 8 88 316 274
Smythe Division

By· The

Reg. 69.95 Pair ,
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Comm1s·
sion of'Oh1o has set lor pub·
lie hearing Case No.178·629·
EL·FAC Subtile A. t9 review
the rue! procurement prac·
11ces and pol1cies ot,1he Ohio
Power Company·. r~· opera~
11on ol 11 s Fuel Cosl Adrusi·
menr Clause. andl' .related
mailers , This Manng 1s
scheduled lo begm al 2 00
p.m. on Apnl9. 1979. al the
C1ty . Council Oll1ce. 218
Cleveland Ave . S.W.. Can·
ion . .O,hio 44702 . An evening

day

STANDINGS

Sports .shorts

SALES &amp; SERVICE

STOREWIDE
SAVINGS DAYS!

Open Tennis Tournament.
In a battle of Frenchmen,
.Jean-Louis Haillet downed
Patrice Dominguez 6-3, 7-ll.
In other matches, Brian
' Fairlie of New Zealand
defeated Frenchman Gilles
· Moretton 6-2, H, 6·1, and
Carlos Kirrmayr of Brazil
downed Werner Zirngibl of
West Germany 7..1, 3-ll, 6-4.
MANILA , Philippines (AP)
- Pancho Gonzalez beat
Australian Mal Anderson 2-ll,
7..1, 7-ll and top-seeded Frank
Sedgman 6f Australia
overcame Vic Seixas 6-1 , 7-ll,
6-1 in the opening round of the
$20,000 Manila Grand
Masters Tennis Tournament.
BOWLiNG
WINDSO!l LOCKS, Conn.~
Pete Couture took a 5&lt;l-pin
lead over Earl Anthony after •
two rounds of the $125,000
Bowling
Proprietors
Association of America U.S.
Open tournament.

~"mes. The schedul~'ll
inning as the Seattle Texa•.... t·fletroit · Mfternoon
Matiners stunned the highly contest was postponed by •
regarded California Angels 5- rain and snow.
The rest '0r the openers, In·
4 in the A!1lerican. !."ague
eluding Texas-Detroit, are
inaugural.
Today's NL schedule has set for ~·riday .
Seaver was charged with
two day games, with the New
seven
runs, four of them
York Mets playing the Cubs
earned
in I 2-3 innings. Mike
'in Cllicago.and the San Diego
Padres visiting the Dodgers Ivie sjngled and homered in
San •·rancisco' s eight-run
in Los Angeles.
In the AL, tbe Toronto Blue secon~ inning while Terry
Jays play a night game ' Whitfield collecl!!d four hits.
against the RoyalS in K;utsas Vida Blue went the route for
City while the Milwaukee the Giants. scattering nine
Brewers meet the world
champion ·Yankees in New
York and the Boston Red Sox .
entertain
Cleve.land
in

1""n Roberts in the sixth

DIAUR

Talk-Bar to
speak. FM reduces static.
·
U.L. listed. 43-212 .

.

Open Thurs. Aflernoon

o.

offensive

tacklll and Mark Cahill,
.
quarterback.
NEW YORK GIANTS Rec:elved 1 sixth-round 1979
. draft choice from . the
Philadelphia Eagles u part
of an agreement to terminate
the contract of Jerry
Wamptlor, aulstant coach,
so he may loin Philadeiphlo.
SOCCER
North American
Soccer League
CHICAGO STlNGS
Signed Peter Ressel. tor.
ward .

Amtrican Sotcer LIIDUit

· NEW JERSEY
AM·
•EijiCANS • ' Si~ned Eri
Kelly and Juan Canllllo,
mldfleldero, and Carlos
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compar~ 10 tra(jilionll llJQflltlled

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F.().R-0. Tailgate Leneta. Power Steering. SelectShlft Automatic
Tranemlnion,1TIIt SIHrlnQ Wheel, Tinted 01111, Air Cond11lon ing,
Convenience Group and Oelult• Plc:k~p Box Cover.

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.7~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday;Apr. 5,1!119

kf.~~!:-~:"'~~~!!. ~~· Garden

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apr. 5, 1979

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-.Elizabeth Hayes .reports to
i -;" ·Daughters of America recently

· Library
Letters

IP"''

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y ,,.._ ·

CHESTE R--Report
on .-ilnr, HI lht• TuesdHy night
plans fop the Daught...-s of . meeting nf Chester r,oundl
America, District 1 ~. r.lly 323 held at the hall.
Mrs. Hayes _ noted that
was ma~e by Mrs. 'F.Iizalll'th
Hayes, deputy stat~ conn- registration will l)egin at 9

Dear Jeff:

Yes, you're right, we have neglected you. And we have
much to thank you for.
. .
The libraries are always looking lor people who are willing
to present programs without charging. We have movies
because the Ohio Valley Area Obraries (OVAL) provide them
through the State Library Service Center at Caldwell. But
there Is no room in our budget to pay anyone for presenting any
other kind of program. So we are always grateful when
someone like yourself offers to s)lare his (or her) enthusia811'
with the children on Satur.days, the famiti,~s on Friday nights
or adults any time.
·
. I'm sure you realize that the many comic bjloks you donate
have received an enthusiastic welcome from our young
readers. Although you have given several hundred to the two
libraries, it is often diffleult·to ·flild more than a handful in.
either wilding at' one time, a 9ure sign of success..
·
It's because of people like yourseH that the Pomeroy and
Middleport Libraries are such s)le!:il!l places. W(thout
communities like those in Meigs County, libraries become
more warehouses fer books. Your involvement with your
·
library helps us stay warm, friendly, and inviting.
Thanks, Jell
Ellen Bell, Ubrarian
P .S. Jeanne and I learned a great deal in Denver. We'll be
sharing what we learned with you and all our friends ln tbe
weeks to come.

.

Several reported ill
at Royal Bereans Class

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Several members were
reported ill at the recent
meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class of the Middleport
Church of Chrtst held at the
church.
Devotions to open the
meeting included scripture
from Job and an article
~~God 's Numbers. " Officers
· reports were given with Mrs.
Ella Mae Daugherty reading
the minutes in the absence of
Mr8. Lena McKinley ,who has
been ill. Reports of the of·
fleers were given and cor·
respondence read.
Among those reported ill
were the Karrs, Cynthia
Gohring, Mal"lin Kelly, Hattie Swift, Mabel Walburn,
Bessle A:~hlev, Ilea Stewart.

I

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For

the

best possible
coverage at the lowe~t

price

JOHN KAlfF
INSURANCE
240

Phyllis Gilkey, ana Mrs:
McKinley. Areport was given
on shutln boxes at Christmas,
and a discllll8ion was beld on
a new assistant teacher.
Regina Swift and Clyda
Allensworth
served
refresrunenlll to Gertrude
Miller, Alice Robeson, Flora
Gibson, Kathem Ervin, Mar,
tha Haggerty, Grace Hawley,
Martha Childs·, Mrs .
'Daugherty, and Clarence
M~eaL

ERIC PARKER
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber
Parker, Chester area,
re&lt;;elved word Frlday that
. their son, Eric, had been
injured at his work on the
telephone line near Coos Bay,
Oregon, on Wednesday. He
has fractured heels, left knee
cap, and left wrist. He Is
recovering at. Bay A-rea
Hospital, Room 210, ' 177S
Thompson Rd., Coos Bay,
Oregon 97420.

Lincoln Middleport, 0 .
992-3969

of Rio Grande Qlllege and
Con\niunlty C!&gt;Uege student,s
will present an evening of
song and dance Friday, Al&gt;ril
6 at 8 p. m.
Nearly 30 different performers will take the stage at
Meigs Junior High School in
thls, -the first of four commun!,ty visits by the group.
Other
one-night
perlonnances are planned in
GaUla, Jackson and ,Vinton
cowtles.
Dori!· Ross, coordinator of

·

a.m. on April 21with the rally
to start at 10 a.m. Each
member is lo take a covered
di sh and table service. The
District will furnish the meat,
mils and beverages. Also

:' ;: : ::: : ::: ::: : : : : : :·: : : : : : : : : : : : : : :::: : ::: : ::: : : :::: : : : : : : : : ::: : : : : :::: : : : : : : : : : : : : : :::;~:;·h1::;;e~: i~:oJ:;,k~!~

{;: .Generatton
· • R ap· :;: the "~;u~ss what?" table ~nd
:=::
:=::

·

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By Helen ~d SU.e Bottel

)\

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table, the country store table,

:::
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the d1tm1 deputy's proJect
table. Those not planning to

11

: : ~~~n8,!~~~~YJ~a,t~~~

meeting of Chester Council.
INCONCLUSIVE!
Mrs. Leona HeMiey, counIS 111ERE A LACK OF INTEREST?
. cilor, presided at the meeting
DEARHELENANDSUE :
attended by 36members.
A few months ago you published a letter from a rabid ERA·
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie and
hater who challenged you to ask-teen-agers how -they felt about Mrs. Mary Hayes . were
the "equality amendment." You asked, but we haven't heard reported ill, and it was noted
the answer. Dldtheprosorcons win? -FOR ERA
that J qe and Ada BisSell have
DEAR FOR:
a new great-granddaugiJier.
Counting your letter, exactly ~-agers voted on whether Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, recoror not they approved of the Equal Rights Amendment, and ding secretary, read a thank
would you believe-35wrote "Ye$.,''"33, 1'No.!' This is scarcely you card from Mrs. Dorothy
enough to malli a valid study. We can only assume that young Law so n, thanking th e
people aren't especially Interested in ERA, for our usual members for cards, a gift
survey responses nwnber Into the thousands.
from the lodge, and prayer
Sorry, but we'll have to call the ERA vote an InconcluSive while she was hospitalized.
Draw.- HELEN
Mrs. Betty Roush thanked
the members who brought
TO TEEN-AGE READERS:
food to .her home following
We hateto think young people aren't Interested In something the death of. her brother-inthat may strongly affect your future ; so in .case you missed our law, Gerald Violet. r.frs.
tsst request, here's one more chance to i'eglsler your vote.
Letha Wood sent word of her AU you need is a postal card. Write either "ERA -Yes" or appreciation for cards" and
"ERA - No " on it and.address to Helen and Sue Bottel, care of the gift sent her and noted
this newspaper. Of course,ll you prefer writing a letter, please that she is coming along line
do.
·from her hip injury.
Meanwhile we give you one pro and one con mi:ument:
A silent auction was conducted by the Good 'of the
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Order Conunittee. Initiation .
I am 19 and a supporter of ERA. I doubt that co-ed was held for two candidates,
restrooms, women's takeover of constroctioo jobs, etc. are ln· Virginia Newland, Long Botevitable consequences of passing thi! amendment. The tom, and Jean Kresge ,
restroom thing, just like the draft, has been exaggerated as a Athens.
"scare" toplc,tand COIIIIll!ll sefiBC will prevail. Most women
Keith Ashley was pianist.
won't gravitate to " heavy" labor, and no~ will Ioree them Refreshments were served
into it. These items are beSide tbe point.
·
by Zelda Weber and Ada Van
I woo, elaborate oo how much my career dream means to Meter. Next meeting will be
me. By achieving this career (conservation scientist) I can April 17 at which time thefl'
contribute signillcanUy to society. I am capable ol being a will be a . practice for
scientist, but without the ERA I will have a much harder time balloting and receiving naof it: Without equality lis law, I fear that I and other women tional and alate officers.
may once again be put in a vulnerable and in ferlor position Members going to the rally ·
to a larger extent than before, for II the conservatives win, It's are urged to attend the
·possible a greater effort will go toward k..,Ptng us
meeting.
"William, ' ' who blasted the ERA and ''wom-()ut broads" ln
Those present besides the
general, hurt and angered me. I Intensely l'@SCDt men's ready ones named were Erruna
dismissal of a woman's valqe as she gets older. Both males Ashley," Catherine Miller,
and females have much to.glve - in intelligence, love, sex - .Ada Morris, Doris Gruser,
throughout the years. The difference between· their old and Mary Showalter, Mary K.
young selves Is a matter of subtleties which gradually produce Holter, Goldie WoHe, Julie
a wise person . .
Rose, Mae McPeek, Esther .
I love men, b~t not the "Wllllams" ol the world. -BE'ITINA ·
Ridenour, Erma Cleland, InDEARHELENANDSUE:
zy Newell, J~an Frederick.
I am IS and am not withheld from anything I want to. do Pauline Ridenour, Alta
because I am a girL I probably couldn't go on the school foot- Ballard, Charlotte Grant, Joe
ball or wrestllngt~ams but I wouldn't nntto. ;,
Bissell, Ada Bissell, Ethel
Women already have equal rights; why· do we need ERA?
Orr, opal Hollon, Goldie
·Men and wtmen are dillerept and should be treated that way. Frederick, Marcia Keller,
ERA will open the way for more llberal abortloo and IKinosex- Thelma White, Carolyn
uallaws. lthlnkitis tryingtocutourllvesoutfarus,and while
Holley, Ihla Fae Kimes, Nina
It will do some good in protecting women againlt rape arid be- Windle, and Thelma McMan·
ing battered by their mates, I'm still against it. Maybe ail · nis .
women aren, treatad equal to men, but that's because we are
women! -SATISFIED YOUNG ADULT
TE~ ERA VOTE

SYLVANIA
MAGICUBES 3s

$2.77 Value ·

. $3.39 .Value

$139
•

STEP STOOL
w/STORAGE

DUDLEY'S SHAKE
AN EGG
,_,$ 2.49 Value

PLASnC
SU9 Value

.
498

$

~
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1•:•
't
t;

-~-~ -

-..::
JO t •. .•: I.~Fl/

•

..

;

.

1r ll

$1.69 Value .·

99"'

II

55¢

!f
I;
I'
1I

•l
p

\:

down.

".•'

CURADS "!.'' 80s
PLASTIC
$1.44 Value

sse
LITTLE GIANT
ROTARY STRIPPER

~ '

EASTER

••

.

DRESS UP·DOUBLE STRAP

I I

l,--,--~!!!,11 or Fine $5.00 Valu1el

••

..:
•'

$233
'

.'

•

Bunyan
will be shown·
at
1:30 p.story,
m. Saturday
at the Pqmeroy Seventh-day _Ad-'
ventist Church ; public invited to free presentation.
WESTE RN BOOT CB
Radio Club regular meeting,
7 p.m. Saturday at lhe club
house.
MONDAY
REVIVAL now in progress
at Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian Union wlth Kelth
Eblin, pastor as .evangelist.
Services 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Special singing by Countcy
Hymntimers. Public invited.

I'

I'

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•'
,,1
'I

.' I'
•1

EASTER BASKET
ASSORTMENT

FLICKER LADIES
SHAVER SINGLES

$6.99 Value

$1.00 Value

-~~

BUNTE .
·JELLY BIRD EGGS

SALE TIME

20 oz. 99C Value

66¢

QUALITY

HOME
FURNISHINGS

MILK CHOCOLATE
NOVELTIES

_. J

CRUSADER - Curtis' Jenkinson, right, Middleport, Is shown chatting with Marlin
Perkins at the recent CUred Cancer Assembly in Columbus.
.

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Party held
Rela x h) this take -it.easy caSual by Thom
Me An. It' s rugg ed, l i ght weight and
Incredibl y com fo rt .~ b l e. Just the rlg~t shoe
for your lei sure t :r•. es. And just the r ight
prl&lt;:e.

heritage house
OF SHOES
· N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M:

Terry and Sara Warner,
Keith Ann and Mike
Whitlatch, Charlotte and
Julee·Wolfe, Jacque and Nan-·
cy Gaddis, Joyce, Tim,
Charles, Joy, Sherry, and
Patcick Sauters, Mary and
Brian Bowers.

REEDSVIhLI!:-A sweet
sixteen party was held in
honor of.Joe Bowers, son .of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bowers
of Reedsville, Saturdsy night.
The ·guest of honor was
presented with gills. Games
were
play e d
and
refreshments of Ice cream,
cake, chips anrl Kool-Aid
·were served. The. cakes lor
-the party were baked and .• . ,A Riddle For Today
de&lt;•orated by Mrs. Unda
What present day store In
Wilson.
.downtown Pom eroy had
Attending the party were about seven Inches of water
Connie Rankin, Gene Cole, . on the floor In t~e flood of
Brett Mlltthews, · Della Mareh 21, 1936 and has a
JOhnsqn, Crista Beegle, bronze marker on the front of
Brian llls.ell, Greg Cole, Son- the building placed by the U.
ja Hill , Kmmy Larkins, Tim S. Engineers Office, Hun·
Dill, Rodney Keller, Kelly tington , W. :Va., Corps o(
Whitlatch, Mar.k r.addis , Engineers, U. S. Army
Kri sti Gaddis,' John, Ch!'ryl• reading Elevation 574.11
a&lt;HI ntris Rw.1&lt;in. &amp;1ndra and Iabove sea level). Meigs
Mar&lt;•y Hill. Tam ami Tim Hi story Book fr ee story
Rt•Hrhs, .PIIm and .lim Alley, deadline April 5. Yesterday's
Vida Wt&gt;ht• r , J:tnP1 nt'nnk.'i. ansY.•er' - Racine:·

•'I

ROYAL GELAnN
STRAWBERRY,
RASPBERRY
AND CHERRY

''

"

~
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Utn.E GIRLS
SIZES 8% to 12
5% to 8

Methodist Church as a lund
raising project was com.'pleted a few weeks ago.
It is currently on display at
the chUrch and for many who
view it, there is a feeling of
nostalgia.
·
Many of the people whose
names are embroidered in
red on the white blocks which
·make up the wheel design are
now deceased or long gone
from the conununity.
There are 400 names on the
quilt - 20 blocks with 20
names on each block - with
each name in the handwriting
of the individual who psid the
10 cents to put it there. Once
the individual had written his
name on the block, It was
then embroidered by ·one of
the women of the church.
The late Mrs. Frank Bean

a oz. $1 .29 value

I : ..,
... ' .

99¢

.

~

.

ATKINSONS FRUIT &amp; NUT
PECAN EGGS
. 3 oz. 79e Value_

·THE SHOE BOX

55¢
.

Middleport .
Open 9-5 Mon. thru Sat.
Frid•y night Iiiii p.m.

L-------------------------~--~ ·

.

"

2/33¢

KAOP£CV!TE
Ia&lt; fltlotl el
II ...... I II

i~gg

"""'"~~

'359

NoOtl CH

()~ r ~ Pfrct

hr .... ,..
Ln1 Sdlitll

1\t~te

110 VII
t .ll
5 00

.....

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~OHC!-i

,.

Ow "" Pr.a
..... Nil

liiN ktti

""*'

113 W
• .•
5.0\)

17.•

•DINmES

·

PLUS

WITH

.

·"RIO'S .GRAND( E) REVUE"

•
•"'

-.•

..•
-,-.......
-..-..-.

·FRIDAY, A~RIL 6
8:00P.M.
MEIGS JR. HIGH
•

:

FREE GIFT COUPQN . . -

M.D.

~ .. , ....... 01

1
I
I

~ DIJ SIOl iOIII

~PIIu

I1

Mod~~ DS·IO lhr 11M"'*'
LHI SGIIICII "*'t

·
·

...

ICERI LOnON

"--or bill.

_if(;g '".

I ... M - luOGIIll D ,t, D"

~TIO!w. "" ' ~ '~I'ITIC••IflroiQ

I_N.!J::.u!.t!a.!.eJ~n,!t_!S~.!..Y~--- - --~- -~-_1

~

~

Pen and Pencil Holder
With useful Pencil Sharpener

.1
1Entities bearer to free Sha rpener ond Holder)
I NAME
:
:ADDRESS .
I
I To be valid, coupon must bedeposlteil by an adult only.)
1 Limit one per .custo,mer . Off•r good only dUr1ng sale. I .

A sparkling musical_revu e with
A super -tal ented .caslfrom lhe Rio
·Grande College student body.

--..

1
I

I $.83
HAUY'S
Jlllg L4111 :tt

----------- ~
rI---- - -----FREE -Coming
Just For
I
In!

MUSIC AND FUN-

TICKETS $2.50

BOX OFFICE OPENS

7 P.M•.
'

OPENING CURTAIN 8 P .M.

{lilt'"''

~~~-­
. . . .1

•LAMPS

25C V1lue

.....•...

·--

~v­

•TABLES

,...

AN EVENING

'

IUFF£RIN
..,,

SALE ON

.-..

DIET CAPSULES .

s.sg

As;~w

$239

f&gt;a11' 5
a3oo• ·s~o~

.......

Paper

BEDROOM
SUITES . -

40.5 oz. $3.19 Value

SIZES2-48
'

· Supplement in
Monday's April 9

53C V1lue

TANG ORANGE
BREAKFAST DRINKI

*-NON-WASHED

Watch For the

R!••

~ ~-

B(M)J

ceveR

LIVING ROOM

ASSORTMENT

* CUT
* STRAIGHT LEGS
* PRE-WASHED

MmMUCIL

RUBBER QUliN
KITCHIN GADGET aAII.II:.I

:::::.::•

belonging to Mrs. Hanun
were used. Mrs. Hamm and
Mrs. Kessi nge r we r e
hostesses and were assisted
in serving by Julie Hamm' a
guest. Mrs. Howard W. Dunn
was also a guest at the·
meeting.

ried out in the table decorations wiih a nest of Easter
candies being presided over
by a group of Easter bonnie
figurines made by Mrs. Kess·
.inger being used in the
center. At each end of the
table, antlque china eggs

IWLAXRIVE

~
- 2/49¢ "
"'l' ,....,,...

~~r..._.

was presdident of the
Women's Society of Christian
Service . (later changed to
.United Methodist Women )
when the project was started.
When she died it was found
among her things and the
church women decided it was
time to finish the quilt. So it
was quilled out this winter at
the parsonage.
The quilt will remain on
display at the church for a
time. But then what will·happen toil'
The church women plan to
use it for a money-making
project. Just how, they're not
sure, but they are hopeful
that somewhere there's someone interested in taking a
sentimental journey to the
-1930's via a friendship quilt,
and willing to pay a high fare.

1'he reglonal garden club
meeting to be held April 21,
and a flower show to be staged at the May meeting were
discussed at the Tu!!Sday
night meeting of the Middleport Garden Club held at
the Middleport firehouse.
The regi onal meeting will
be held at the Meigs Inn, and
members were reminded that
reservatlons are due no later
than April 14. ThesC can be
made either through the club
secretary ·&lt;r Mrs. Doyle
Knapp'; 38762 State Route 143,
Pomeroy, 45769. The fee is
$5.50. The Middleport Club
will host regional meeting.
Leaflets listing the
categorieS and materials to
Ill' used for the club nower
show were distributed during
the meetiog. Mrs. Loui!e
Thompson was welcomed as
a new member.
An invitation was read ·
from the Rutland Garden
Club inviting members to attend the flower show. to be
held April 1JI and 29 at tbe
Rutland Methodist Church.
For roll call members told
· of birds they had Observed
during the winter. A book of
bird prints showing birds
native to North America was
displayed by Mrs. Irene
Davis. Mrs. David Bowen
gave a lecture concerning the
different materials and items
praeticai for bird batha.
An Easter. theme was car-

CHOICE

p:~:

.

PROlAMINE

1 oz. 39c V1lue

MILK CHOCOLATE
FOIL EGGS

the prize. The door prize provided by Mrs. Smith was won
by Mrs. Hollon.
·
Mrs. Smith was hostc'SS nnd
served Hawaiian pie and coffee .. A card ol appreciation
for use qf the Riverboat
R0001 Will be sent to the
Athens County Savings ;md
l.oa n Co.
F'or the arrangement of the
month '~Mttrch
Winds Blow ''
.
Mrs. Ada Holter received a
blue ribbon. She used large ·
jonquils, fantail wi llow in a
round large green contai ner.
Mrs. Hollon also received a
blue for her arrangement of
daffodils, corkskrew and
pussywillow "vine in a black
vase.

geraniums noting th:1t tall
plants should be cut back _to
four Inches, that the old soli
should be removed and a
frec.h mixture used. She also ·
said 1hat cuttings can he
taken 8Dd rooted in perlite,
much preferred over tap
water, being sure to sterilize
the knife or razo~ each time a
cutting is taken. This can be
don, she said, py dipping tile
instrument In a l~oho) or'
household bleach.
She also talked about making a nower pedistal from the
stump of a tnee which· has
been cut down. A contest on
nowers was conducted by
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon with Mrs.
Mildred Phillips receiving

w----------------•-....,
GREATEST

3 oz. 254 V1lue

'

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AREHEREI

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49¢

Forty years of q!u.ilting finished
fecently to aid in fund drive here

RUTLAND-A ~olorful
POMEROY Chapter 186,
friendship
qUilt started more
Order of Eastern Star ,
than
forty
"years a ~o by the
rwnmage and bake sale 9
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Thursday women of the Rutland United
and Friday at the Masonic
Temple .in Pomeroy .
. FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 31, Order
·. HAPPY Harvesters, I p,m. of White Shrine of Jerusalem,
Trinity Chur c~ . Friday.
installatlon of officers Friday ,
BAKE SALE and Bazaar 8 p.m. at Pomeroy Masonic
Friday at Dale C. Warner Temple. Business meeting at :
l.nsurance Agency, Pomeroy, 4 p.m. Potluck refreshments
beginning at" 8:30 a.m. rollowing both events.
Sponsored by Forest Run
SATIJRDAY
Methodist Church. ·
· EASTER Bazaar at Meigs
Senior Citizens Center
Thursday, 8:30 to 3:30p. m.;
9:30 a. m. to 8' p. m. Frlday
and 10 a. m. to I p. m.'
. Saturday. Public pancake
supper, 4 to 8 p. m. Friday.
ANIMATED COLOR
version of · " Pilgrim' s
Progres" based on John

Stowe

I

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F.m~ h·t· n

''hnrc•h.

On Super

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"I ,

FRIENDSHIP QUILT-This quilt displayed here by Edith Williamson, Marcia Denison,
and Hazel Hilt, left to right, was started 40 years ago, but not completed until this winter.
The United Methodist Church Women will use it for church fund raising.

f'V ANGEI.INE r H{I PTER
172. Or&lt;lt•r nf tlw

Star, 7::l0 p.m. at lhl' Middl&lt;•pnl't Msoni &lt;' . 1'l'mph• .
Mc1snnit·
rATHOI.fr WOMEN'S
ri .( TR. Sac~" I , H&lt;•a rt ('hnrcl1.
A p.m. Thnr&lt;da)·' at lh&lt;'

10% DISCOUNT

I

4 Pk. 98C Vlliue

I

Ad ForA

"I: l
I

PAINTBRUSH

66¢

Cl

old soil and dt•ad fnli age, and
p rt•ptm.~ and st.'4.?i:l m~w
lawns usin ~ manure alicl peat
moss. She said it is also time
to sj•t o11t hardy perennials,"
IPtlU&lt;'e, and pla nt .marigold
and phlox in cold frames, put
out shrubs, and strawberry
and rubarb planlll.
A-program on houseplanL•
was given by Mrs. Doris
Grueser. who noted that you
should wait until the weather
gets about 65. degrees in the
middle of May before taking
the planL• out. Then, she said,
they should be taken out a few
hours each day before being
taken ·out and put into the
flower beds .
Mrs. Gruser talked about

Middleport Gardeners met recently

'I.

I M&lt;-l n ' O'Rrit•n a!' ho~tt•!.;!&lt;'t'!'.

. Return THis

t'' ' lt

W!ERSENE

8.5 oz, $1.. 26 VIIUe

for

Plans were made for

nature.• r1nd wild nower hike..
M'•·s. Ma&lt;• Holter opened the
meeting with devotions tL~i ng
a meditation entitled "[)own
the Road of W e" with S&lt;'riplure from I Peter 5 and an
Easter pot•m.
Gardening tips for April
were given · by Mrs. Mary
Nease who said that now is
the time to ~tart prunning and
fertilizin~ roses, to remove

1' ly Eichinger. Mrs.

aro•wli1a children.

.
i~ I

7 oz. $1.78 Value

nntP~

lht rri~ .
11

HEALTH CLUB, 7:30 Thurs-

Save· on the wardrobe of

••
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COLGATE
DENTAL CRIEAIIIII

vnu

Mn; . S;~d i c Jlrown, and Orris

I day, at the home of Mrs. Pol-

65% POl,YESTER
35% COTION

I

~

12 oz. $2.41 Value

r::;:::=~CLEAN$ER 20.
$1.08 Value

Th a nk

rt•~o:~d

,-----·
,
So "al

Marjorie
Goett
to
Ill'
co-hostess.
1
I ELEANOR r iR r i.E. 7::l0
Great lor kids, durable lor I p.m. ·Thurs&lt;l1ly nt Ht•Hth
play, classy tor dress.
I tlnit" l Mt•lh«list r!mrdt.
I with Marilyn An&lt;h•rson rtml

.•
l ..

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,I

LYSOLSPRAY

;, C110·12 • C126·12

willlw Mrs._Gillx•rt C.ulhnns,
Mnl'it'ttu, em . OACiC ;lt'''"•tli!t•tl jutlgt•. Middlt•port
Chih will be host for the day .
AlSo an nnunen:i Hl the
meeting w~s the Rutland
r.arden Club nower show to
Ill' held A'rril 28 ami 29 at the
Rutl&gt;ind United Methodist
Church._;:Spring in Bloom "
w\ll bellhe theme of the show
chaired by Mrs. Marg1lret
Ella Lewis.

rt·mcmlwam:es wt•re

fr•1m Mrs . Vernon N&lt;'ANt&gt;, · to

, . LAUR~~:~E'i'TER

SEWING
• With
SUPER
ST'O\'IE

,••
-

Rlp's G~8nd(e) Rev~ e,"

St~l&lt;' Huuh• J4:l . Pnmt•ror, h~·
April 14. r.nP~1 dcmnm~t rat nJ'

=-suMMER___ !I Calendar I ·

•••

FUJI FILM

Annuu nn •ment . of tht•
Region 11, Ohiu J\s."icK·iatiun
of r."rden Cluh&lt;, '""''ling to
be hel&lt;l Rt" tlw Meig&lt; Inn on
April 21. wa&lt; trutde :~t the
Wl'&lt;hws.lay •night mt'Cling nf
th•· Wildw&lt;Kld r.arden Club
held in the Riverboot RO&lt;im of
theMeigs Officeoftho Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
Mrs. Dorothy Smith , president , read a letter from Mrs.
CharlesKuhl! regional diri!Ctor, announcmg the meeting
Fund
Raising
Drive. and askmg that reservations ·
· Proceeds from the oer- be sent to Mr.. [)oyle Knapp,
forma nce will increase
those funds available lor the
campaign' s t)lree major
goals : An increase In student
scholarships, construction of
a student-community center,
and faculty enrichment.

leetsthegrouphas something
to Qffer everyone:. uwe will
have country and · pop
singers, lnstrwnental music,
lnt_e rpf etatlve dances and
_even ilome clowns."
"Although this will be the
group's first community
outing," Ross said, umany of
these performers pa rticipated In a Parents
Weekend concert that was

WIJi

.SYLVANIA
FLIP FLASH 1 Os

holiSe on campus in October."
1'lckcts for Lilt.' vci
formancc arc $2,50 and will
be avilalne at the door the
night of the show. '11Jey will
go on sale at 7 p.m. Advance
ti ckets ca n be ordered
thro ugh the 'Rio Grand c
College and: Community
College Offi ce of College
Relations, 2~5-5~3.
"Rio's Grand (e) REvue" is
a student activity irl the
college's current Capital '

clubs m:eeting announced her~

INGE'LS FURNitURE
&amp; JEWELRYMiddleport, O.
lOu N 2nd Ave .

VILLAGE

MIDDLEPORT,. Of NEW H_AVEN, W. VA.

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Apr. 5, 1979
FINANCIAL RIEP'ORT
OF TOWNSHIPS

Fo~

FlsCII Yea r Endi"g

Decem~er

Jl , 1911
Olh·eToownship
~~,
M'igs County
Long Bottom , Ohio
March 11. .197'9
I certi fy t he followin g
report to be co r re c t .
Ada Bissell
To w n sh ip Cl erk.
Tel . N o. 61 4-985-3544 1
summary of Cash
B•l•ncn , Rltceipfs
An Expenditures
B•l•nceJ•n . l , 1978
General Fund
S 1\,571.56
Motor Vehicle. L icen se
Tax Fund
- 2.368.60
Gasolin e Tax F und
502 .75
Cemeter y Fund
- L 167 .62
Federal Re ve n ue
Shar in g Fu nd
~ 17 1. 19
Anti -R ec ession
23 .23
.T otals,
8.390 1J
Totill Receipts
Geheral fund
14,370.21
Motor Vehicle Li cense
Tax Fu nd
9,4.:1 7. 13
Gf!IOiine Ta x F und 14,400 .00
RQad and Brid ge
Fund
2, 680. 10
Cemetery Fund
3, 171 . 77
Federal Re\i en ve Shar ing
.
Fund
5,658.00
Anfi .Rece sSio'n ·
2t! 1.00
Totals
50,008.21
Total Receipts &amp; Balinces
General Fund
25,94 i 77
Motor Vehi cle L i c ense
Tax Fund
7,078 .53
Gasoline Tax F und
U ,902.7 5
Road and Br id g e
Fund
2,680 . 10
Cemetery Fu nd
2,004 . 15
Federal Re..,.enue
Sharing .Fund
. 5,486 .81
Anti -R ecessron
304 .23
Totals
58,394. 34
Expenditures
Gener-1 Fund
18 ,ij4 .27
Motor Vehi cle Lic ense ·~ .
Tax Fund
6,279 . 47

G a SO l in e TdK Fund ~ 16,668 .80
Road anp Br jdgc ·.
.
Fulld
1;843. 69
C&lt;'mctc ... y Fund
3,341 . -tO
Federa l Rc~cnu(' Shari n g
f&lt; und
4 , 95 &lt;~. 86

Sal . Dec. J l , 1978
7. 767 .50
lo lttl E• p . Plus Bel ,
Dec. JL 1918
15 .94 \. n
Motor V e h ic le licens e
J~1 n .

Ta~e

Fund

D ec · :n. 19 78
?.6tiO 10
" C(.' met c;'fi Fund
t;lal. . Jan . I. 1978
1. 16 7.62
R.t!Cfipts
Gen er al Proll ert y T a ~e
R~al E sta te &lt;
lhd
Trail er (G r oss )
3.0.:11. 70
T anq i bl c P er sp na l Pr op ert y
la )( ( G ro ss)
; 130.07
Tot al R ecei pt s
3. 171. 77
"To ta l Beg inn in g Ba lance
Ptu s Recei pt s
2,004. 15
Expenditures
Salar ies
3, 272. 50
Other E x pe ns es
68.90
To t al EXP .
.
3,1.41. 40
Ba t., l? ec ._3_L • f'.~
1.337 .25

t. 1978
1. 368 .6()
An ti Recessio n
301.91
ReceipJS
Tota ls
52 ,565.40
Mo tor Vehicle Lie e n S€'
BalanceDec . 31.1918
Ta)C
9,447 . 13
Gener a l Fund
7,761 .50
T o ta l Rec('ipts. '
9,447 . 13
Mo tor Vehic le License
Tota l Be.g inni nQ Dala ncc
1 ax Fund
799.06
Plu s Rece ipts
7.07 8.53
Gasol ine Tax Fund ·* 1.766.05
·
Expendi tures
Poaef a n d Bridge
To t o:tl E•pcn d i t u r es
Fun d
·- 163.5 9
Miscellaneou s
1. 163.99
Ceme t er y Fund
- 1,3 37 .25
Ma inten an ce
s-. 115.48
Fed'era l Rell'en ue Sha r ing
Gran d Tot al E ~ep . Fu nd
531.95
M otor V eh ic l t' Lice nse
T ot al E x p~s· Ba l..
A nt i Recessi on
1. 32
T a~e Fund
6.279 .47
Dec . 31 , 1978
2,004 : 15
Total
5, 832 .94
Bat .. Dec. 31. 1978
799 .06
Federal Re\·eitue
Ba sh Balance,
Tot al Eic p . Plu s Bal..
Sharing Fund
Rece ip1s And
O ~c.- 31. 1978
7.078 .53
Bal. , Ja n . 1, 1978
- 171.19
Expenditures
Gasoline Tax Fund
Receipts
By Fund
Bal. . Ja n . 1. 1978
502.75
G
rants
·
Federal
5,658. 00
G eneral Fund
·
Receipts
5,658 .00
Ba l. , Ja n . 1, 1978
11 ~ 571. 5 6
G asoline Ta x
14, 400.00 · T otal R ec eiPts
T otal Beginning Ba lan c e
Receipts
Total ~ec e i pts
1.:1.400.00
Plus Receipts
5,486 .81
Gener a l Prop ert y Ta x Tot&amp; I Be gi nni ng Ba la nc(.'
Expenditures . ·,.'
Rea l .€-!~'tat e a nd
..... ·
Plu s Rece ipts
·.· 1.4 ,902.75
· Maint . and Operation
Tryi!e r ~ G ros s)
3, 698 .63
Expendl1ureS
Suppl ies
4,954 .86
Ta ng ib ~ e P er sonal Pq-.perty
Total Expenditu r es
Total ~xp .
4.954 .86
Ta x IG r oss l
130.07
· ~-~ Miscellaneovs
16,666 .80
Bal.
,
Dec
,
31.
1978
531 .95
Es tate T a x
Gr11nd Total Expenditures Total EICp, Ptu s Bat..
( Gro ss)
· 2.834 .24
Gasoline Ta)( Fund
D ec . 11 , 1978
5,486 .81
Local Go..,.ernment a nd
·
,..
16,668 .80
Anfi · RectUion
Slate Inco m e Tax
3. 772 .26
Bal. , Dec. 31 , 1978 - 1,766.0S
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1978
23 .23
Ci_gar ette Ta)(
71 .86
Total Exp. Plus Bal. ,
.
Receipts
G1ftsa nd DonatiOn s
40.00
Dec . 31 , 1978
14,902 .75
Other
281.00
Intangib le
3, 644 .1 8
Road ilnd Bridge Fund
To~at Rece ipts
281 .00
Refund
178 .97
·
Receipts
Total Beginning Balance
To tal Rec e ipts
14, 3"70 .21
General Property Ta x Plvs Receipts
304 .23
Total Beg inning Balance
~eat Es t ate and .
Expenditures
Pl us R eceipts
25,941. 77
Tra iler (Gross)
2,589.04
Salaries
15 .00
Expenditures
Tangible Personal Property
Supplies
227 .91
Tot al E x penditures
Tax ( Grossi
'1.06
Total
Exp
.
302
.81
- Admin istrative 14,869 .80 Total ReceiptS
2,680.10
Bal .. Oec . 31,1978
1.32
- Tow.n Halls, Memoria l
Expenditures
Total Exp . Plus Bal .,
Build ings and
·
Tota'l Expenditures
Oec . 31. f978
304 .23
Grounds
1.625. 38
- Miscellaneous
2,8.43 .69
-- F= ire Protection
302 .00 Grand Tot a I Exp . 5, 1tc
l ota l Expend i tures
Road and Gridge
- U ghtjng .
1,377.0'
Fund
2,843.69
Grantl Total E·xp . Ba l., Dec . 31 , 1978
- 163 .59
FINANCiAL REPORT
Genera l Fund
18,174.27 :Total Exp . Plus Bal .. ·
OF TOWNSHIPS
Far .Fisc'al Year Endin'g
December 11,. 1?78
· Rutland Township
Meigs County
R uttand, Ohio
Ba l.,

&lt;•&gt;

March 21, lf71

ENJOY
FRESH FARM COOKING
RIGHT AT THE FARM.

-~ht't ·t .

POLLY'S POINTERS!
f Polly Cramer
Sliding satin
sheets
OF:i\R POLLY - We haw
!-iOmt~

satin sht•ets just tclking

up spaet.• in the &lt;'Inset bt!f..•ause

t•very timt• we usc them they
slitlt• onto the floor [s tht,.e
some way to keep such sht-cts

·,., lht• bt'll?- RRF.NJ)A
DF:!iR RRF:NDA - The on·
ly suggestion I can offer is to
rnunrl ull four ramer.; of the
bottom sheet, guther t'Oi'ners
and tlwn stiteh very narrow
elastic all around the edges of
the sheet so it will stay under
the mattress. Round the
lower eorliers only of the top

Social security notes
People who received at
least one Social Security
check In 1978 and who earned
more than the aM ual exempt
amount last year have until
April 16, 1979, to file tbe
arulllal report of their 1978
earnings.
The 1978 aMual exempt
amount w.as $4,000 ·ror people
age 65 or over and $3,240 for
people who were lll)der age 65
aU of last year. A person who
was age 72 or older in all
months of 1978 does not'have
to make an annual report
regardless of earnings.
Neither do .people who
receive disability benefits
because different rules apply.
However, the aMual report
regulations do apply to a
disability
beneficia~ies'
dependents who receive
benefits and have earnings.
A per!Mln who did not
receive any checks In 1978
because of expected earnings, does not have to make
•n annual report. However, if
those earnings were less than

~a tht•r &lt;~omcrs

and ·II also helps cool down ex·

9:-:Th.e Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 :, Thursday, Agr. ~. 1979

tht•n slill'h nm·ruw elastic tremely hot water.
a(·russ th(~ bottom and arutUld KATHLEEN
DEAR POIJ.Y - I use a
the ••ornt•rs. Perhaps some of
lht! readers have found a bet· night light in lhe bathroom ·
·t.l'r solution Hnd shan• it with and find replacing a bulb is
surprisi.ngly expensive. So
u.&lt;.- POI.I.Y
.. DF.AR
POLLY
now r use Cluisbnas tree ·
Wh&lt;,ncver r prepare dishes , light bulbs in clear or white
RU&lt;!h as ookt'll beans or and can buy about eight of ,
seailoped potatoes r leave them for the price of one
what is left over in -the dish night light refiD kll .
.
and put it in the refrigerator 'j'IIEI.MA
DEAR POIJ,Y - I save
overnig)jt. The next day I
lake the dish out and it empty salad dressing bottles
scrapes clean very easily and fill them with cooking oil: .
because the cold softens what The ones that have a plastic
sticks to the sides. This saves disc in the top (with a small ' '
a lot of time spent scraping hole ) are reaDy handy for this
with a knife before it Is ready becanse only a f~ drops can . ,
for the washer;- F.:RMA
be put' in a skillet without • ·
'
DEAR POLLY . - When mess or waste. -JOAN
lemons . are a special at the . Polly wiD send you one of '·
signed . thank· •
grocery. store r buy several, her
cut them into slices, put in younewspaper coupon clip·
plastic sandwich bags and pers il she uses our favorite ·'
·freeze them. When I want just . Pointer, Peeve or Problem In ' '
one sllce.of lem011 for a cup of her coiWM. Write PoU.Y'S ''
tea I can remove it from the POINTERS in care of this
freezer Hnd drop it.In
the tea. . newspaper.
.

Talks collapse

contract
by "the In·
Association or
and Aerospace
a~ negotiations
under the auspices

.

expected, It would be to that
person's best interest · to
make a report . This is
because just $1 In Social
Security .benefits is withheld
for every $2of earnings above '1!!~~~!!:!!~~~~~~~~1!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!1!!!1
the exempt amount.
\~
Therefore, if some benefits
'1 :•
8~~ . -~be~
I

bargainers, who
union represen·
Jative•• fa•oe to face, were said

~

_SHO
. p

-

amual report is
Most people who have to
make the amuat ~eport have
already
received
the·
necessary fonn In the maU.
Those who did not receive the
rorm or who misplaced the
011e that they did receive can
get a copy at the Athens
Social Security Office,
located at 221\0 Columbus

FOR THE BEST DEALS

·

IN T
-· H"'
"'

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FU'.RNI·Tu RE

I certify the following
•,
report to be correct .
Edna M . Swick
.
.
.
Township Cterk
Tel. No. 614 -7.f2 -2812
Summary of Cuh
Road.
Tues.,
Friday &amp; Sat.
Balances, Receipts
If you have "any questions,
An E)(pctndlturu
8:30to 5:00
Blllance Jan. 1, 1911
please contact the office. The
Thursday t_!U 12_n_oon
General Fund
$6,969 .23
t~ephone number is 592-4448,
Motor Vthicle License
Tax Fund
1,420.22
Meigs County 992~22.
Gasoline Tax Fund
1.964.91
Please
remember that the
Road and ~ridge
aMual report is required by
Fund
852.03
Herman Grate
Cemetery Fund
1.381.73
law BIJd penalty deduction
Federal Revenue
Mason, W. Va.
773-5592
may be imposed if the aMual
Sharing Fund
i '.' .
1,222.95
Fed . Assistance
not
made
on
time.
report
is
Anti -Recession
32.15
I
Totals
13,843.22
Total Receipts
General Fund
. 15,443.09
o
·
Motor Vehicle License
ec . 31 , 1Y7tl
.4,171 .86
Tax Fund
Cemetery
Fund
,
8 309 02
Gasoline Ta-. Fund ·. 13,200 . 00 Bal. , Jan . 1, 1978
1,381.73
A eceipts
Road and Bridge
General Property Tax Fund
3,919 .83
R 1 Esl t
d
Cemetery Fund
J 20 7 16
ea
a e an
•
•
Fd
Trailer (Gross&gt;
2,404.10
•
F .~re p ro 1ec 1IOn
2
5
·
,4 6. 1ll Tangible Personal Property
·Federal Revenue
Tax (Grossi
52.06
Sharing Fund
7,318 .00 S I
f l I
475 .00
Fed . Ass i stance
a eo
o s
Anti - Recession
539 .00 Other
276 .00
Totals
·
3,207 .16
54 , 392 . 26 Torat Receipts
' Total Receipts &amp; Balance•
Tota l Beglnnin.g Balance
General Fund
Plus Receipts
4,588 .89
22 , 412 . 32
.
E xpendltures
M o I or V eh1cle License
Salaries·
2.,6!l6 .09
Tax Fund
9,729 .2.4
Easter Greetings Box
GesolineTax Fund 15 , 165 .91 Tools and
Road af'ld Bridge Fund
EqU ipment
393 .30 ,
Supplies
123 .75
.:1,771 .86 Repairs
243 .71
Cemetery Fund
4,586 .89 Other Expenses
213.71
Fire Protection Fd .
1
2.4156. 6 · Tot~l Expenditures
3,620 .56
Federal Revenue
Bal ., Dec . 31, 1978
968 .33
Sharing Fund
8,540 .95 To ta l E)(p. P lus 8!!11.,
Fed . Assistaf'\ce
Dec . 31 , 1978
4,588 .89
Anti -Recession
S71 . 15
Fire Protection Fund
Totals
.
68,235 .48
ReceiptS
Expenditures
General Property T8x General Fund
15,441.46
Real Estate and
Motor Vehic l e L icense
Trailer (Gross)
2.4l-"._ 10
Tax_Fund
8,678 .94 Tangible Personal Property
Gaso line Tax Fund 13,748.03
Tax (Gross)
• 52 .06
Road and Bridge
Tot~! Rece ipts
2,456". 16
a
Fund
3,813 .65
Expenditures
Russell StDver Candies are the
Cemetery Fund
3,620.56 Contracts
2,242 . 45
Fire Protection Fd.
2,456. 16 Other E~epen5es
finest
in quality, freshness and
213 .71
.
Federal Revenue Sharing
Total Exp .
2,456. 16
goodness. Choose from many
Fund
7,778.04
Federal Revenue
Fed. Ass .i stance
.
Sharing Fund
assortments of delicious can·
565 . 30 B'al.. Jan . 1. 1978
1.222 .95
Anti -Recession
\Ill
Totals
56,102.16
dies especially decorated for
·
Aecetfls
G'rants ---. Federa ·
7,318 .00
T'TI::!
A
Balance
Dec.
31,
1971
General
Easter.
•U i:aftl
Fund .
·
6,P70.14 Tot al Receipts
7,318 .00
Multi-color Bamboo "
,
Motor Vehicle License
Total Beginning Balance
Route 35 • Rio Grande. Ohio
·
· Tax Fund .
1,050.30
Basket $4.95
Plus Receipts
8,5.:10 .95
Multi-c:olor Basket
~
~ xpenditures
I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Gasoline
T
a)(
Fund
1,
416.88
..,
Road and Br idge
Equipmen t
4,8,6.00
Fund
958 .21 Other Expenses
2,912.04
Cemetery Fund
968 .33 Total Exp .
7 ,718 .04.
Federal Revenue
Bal., Dec . 31, 1978
762 .91
Sharing Fund
762 .91 Total Exp . Plus Bal.,
Fed . Assistance
Dec . J 1. 1978
8.540. 95
Anti -Recession
5.65
Federa l Anti Recession
Totals
12,133.32
lb. Assorted ChocDiates
Bal .• Jan . 1.1978
32.15
Cnh B~lilnce, Reulph
R~ceipts
$3.50
And Expe.,dlturu
General Property Ta)( By Fund
Rea 1 Estate and
General Fund ,
Trailer (Gross)
539 .00
Bal., Jan. 1, 1978
6,969 .23 Total Receipts
539 .00
·
Receipts
Total Beginning Balance
General Property Tax Plus Receipts ,
571.15
Real Estate and
· Expenditures
Trailer (Gross)
6.914 .60 Salar i es
565 .30
Tangible Persona l. Property
565 .30
Total Exp .
Ta)( (Gross)
l21..46
5.85
Bat.. Oec . 31, 1978
EsrateTaxiGrcss &gt;
529 . 12 Total Exp . PIUS Bal. ,
· Local Government and
571.15'
Oec . 31, 1978
StatelncomeTax
3,747 .41
wnship Debt..,- Notes
Cigarette License Fees
Purpose For Which Note
and Fines (Gross )
75.00
Oebt was c;reated
Other
4,055 .50
Backhoe
Total Receipts
15,443 .09
Outstanding Jan . 1,
Total Beginning Balance
1978
2, 166.00
Plus Receip"ts
22,412 .32
Redeemed During Year
,
Expenditures.
1978
2,166.00
1='otal Expenditures
Rate of Int.
6 Pet .
-- Adm in lstrative 15,441.48
Oate of final Mat . · Ape . 1978
f&lt;enrillll Moocut•~iie~ •. 'Ph.
Grand Total E)(p , Grader
R..,tld Hannl"', Ph
General Fund
15.441.48
Outstftnding Jan . 1.
Ba·h.-Dec. 31, 1978
6,970.8A
Mon.
lllru Sat. 1:00 a.m. hi 9 p'.m.
•
1978
7,000.00
Total Exb . Plus Bal.,·
·
Redeemed During Year
Sunday
10:3Gto
12:301nd
5to9
p.m.
Dec. 31, 1978 ·
22,412 .32
1978
3.500.00
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH.
MotOr Vehicle License
Ba lance Outstanding
Tax Fund
Frltndly.Sarvlct
·
Dec . 21, 1978
, 3,,00 .00
Bal .. Jan . 1. 1978
1.420.22
Rate of In t.
7 Pet.
E.
Main
Pomefoy,
0
Receipts
Oateof Final Mat. Aug . 21,79
Open Nights till 9
Motor Vehicle License
Tax
8,309.02
(4) 5 , He
Total Receipts
1,309.02
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts .
9.729. 24
E xpendltures
T.otal E)(penditures
H~me
- Miscellaneous
6,030. 37
- Maintenance
0 2,648 .57
Grand Total E~eP . ''WELCOME TO THE WONDSIFUL WORLD OF REAL ESTA~"
Motor Vehicle License
· T!!IX Fund
8,678 .94
Bat.. Dec. . 31, 1978
1,050. 30
Total Exp . P lus Ba l. ,
Dec . 31, 1978
9,72"9 .24
Gasoline Tu: Fund
Hla credentlaltln~lude:
Bal ., Jan . 1, 1978
1,964.91
Ricelph
• Conduction or Salat Training Programator II
~
~
Gasoline Tax
13,200.00
• Weyna Oanarll College tnttructor for Real Eatata Law and Rul Eatate
;
Total Receipts
13,200.00
Ptactlcea
and
Prtnclpltl
Totil Beginning Balance
· • Former Management Broklt for FH-. for 8tartc, TU~C~VawQ and
Plus Receipts
15, 164.91
/
. C.rroll Countlaa
. E xpendlturu
'"I
• 19112 Pretldent of 8tartc County Horne IJulldera -.taoclatlon '
Total Expenditures
Member or Board of Olrectora er1d yJc•p,..Jt»nt prtor to that
·.
• · Mlstellaneoys
6,938 . 33
• ~ M !!l lntenance
6,809 . 70
' Pill Prttldent of the Stark County ANI Eetate Boen1
·
Grand Tota l Exp . -.• National Director of Ohio Homt Bulldert AIIOCiatlon from 19118 through
Gasoline Tax Fund
11184,1110 urved -raJ termtQ atruetll
13,748.03
• Lltatlme mllllberthlp .. Senator, Jey-Jntemellonal

Eating good farm cooking is alyvays great,
but there's something special about eating
farm fresh food in a restaurant that's located
.
.
right at the farm .
At Bt;&gt;b Evan's Sausage Shop you not only
get delicious farm-size helpings of your favorite farm dishes, but you get true farm atmosphere and friendly service to go with them.
So pack your kids in the car and drive on
qver. We hope to see you soon. ·

Mon.,

m

Wed.,

OPEN EVENINGS BY
APPOINTMENT O.NLY

Happy Easter!
.

SUNDAY, Al'RIL 15

WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON'T DO IT."

. ·.

SA

e

•.&amp;filMS
' ""
r.-.

.

.

•G E SHOP. .

r..

Now's the time to stock
up on casual slacks for
Spring. We have a vast ·
selection of plaids and
solids, in belted styles.
Take a look ... you're
sure to find your.
preference and savings, .
too.

•The board released $5,480
f~Om state emergency funds

•

Pfllbe ComplalniB
A buc~ deer was killed early

Wednesday morning on SR
1~, near umg Bottom, when
it ran Into the path · of a
vehicle drivllJ\ ·by Clarence
Atherton, Long Bottom, the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department reported.
Deputies · are also in·
vestigating vaqdalism done
to a section·of, a fence at the
Meigs CountY Dog Pond. Apparently the wire screen was
cut to remove twli dogs that
the ward~n had placed In the
pond
on
Tuesday.
The incident is under in·
vestigation. •

Marriage llceD&amp;eS •
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Monte RBy WoHe,
29, Syracuse, and Shirley BeD
Vinning, ·32, Pomeroy;
Douglalj E. Warden, 19,
Racine 1 and Belinda G.
McGraw,l8, Racine.

.

Dec . 31 . 1978
1.416 .88
Dec . Jl. 1978
15. 164 .91
Road •nd Bridge Fund
Bal. . Jan . 1. 1978
852.03
Bal..

·(

'

Area Deaths . I
I

Susan M.Manley
Susan M.Manley,64, Reed·
sville, died TUesday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
1'00111·
Mrs. ManleywasbornNov.
''These are serious charges
21,, 1914 in Middleport, a
and we want to get to the bot- ·daughter of the late Earl E.
tom of them. If we find that
and Izora Eblin Mason. She
the charges are sustained, we
was a member of the Silver
believe they should be · Run
Baptist Church.
presented to a grand jury,"
Surviving are her husband;
Rhodes said.
Walton A. Manley; a
daughter,Mrs .
Marvin
(Janet) Bayler, Whitehall;
two sons, VIrgil J., North
SIGN-UP
Olmstead, and Carol W., Mid·
Middleport girls' softball
dleport; four sisters, Mrs·
sign-up wiD be held Saturday . Paul (Ellen) Conkle, Tuppers
April7, from 9a.m. until noon
Plains; Mrs.Leonard
at the Middleport Pool for
(Mildred) Wyman, Mid·
persons age eight through 18.
die port; Mrs . Robert
Registration fee is $5.
(Marguerite) Tignor, Clear·
water, Fla., and Mrs. Janet
S0FTBAIL ~EErested'l'ING .
Snyder, Middleport: a
AI1. parents mte
m
brother , W1'lliam Mason ,
girls',softbau ~ .~sked to at- ,. Hamlin, W.Va. Sev111.grandtend a meeting SatuJ:d'!Y.
daughters, ooe grandson, two
Apnl 7. at 5 p.m. a~ .Mid·
great-grandsons and several
dleport Pool. For additional
nieces and nephews also surinfonnation call 992-5064 or
Vive.
·
992-ll212.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday atthe
Rawlings-Cqats Funeral
Home with the Rev. George
. Hoschar officiating. Burial
will be in Meigs Memory Gar·.
dens. Friendsmaycallatthe
funeral home until 9 this
evening and friXll 4 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

WALTER SHASTEEN
Walter Raymond Shasteen,
65, Land-()..Lakes, Fla., died
Tuesday. Mr. Shasteen was a
former Pomeroy resident . .
He was preceded In death
by his parents, Walter L. and
Ada Buchaman Shasteen;
two sons, Tom and James R.
Shasteen.
Mr . Shasteen was a
member of the Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, and
Boilennakers Local lOS.
He is survived by his wife,
Ethel ·Shasteen, Land-O·
Lakes, Fla.; two sons, Ray N.
Shasteen, Cincinnati, and
John Shasteen, Middletown,
Ohio; one daughter, Mrs .
Thomas (April) Smith,
Pomeroy; seven grand·
children; two brothers, Carl
of Winchester, Tem., and C.
L. Shastee n, Ch'1pIey, Fla .;
three sisters, Nettie' Holt,
Atlanta, Ga.; Mary Knox,
Livennore, Calif., and Mrs.
R. W. O'Neil, McMinn viDe,
Tenn., and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services' will be
held Saturday at 10 a. m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev ..
Wilbur Perrin officiating.·
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Frlendsmay call
at the funeral home after 9 a.
· m. Friday.

York subsidy publishing firm will be Interviewing loca l

authors in a quest for finished manuscripts suitable for

book publication. All subjecls will be considered,

including fiction and non -fiction,

poetry,

rellglcns books. elc.
He will be In Athens In late May.

juveniles,

If you have completed a bCJok.length manuscript for
nesrly sol on any subject, and would like a professional

• appraisal (without cost or obligation), please wrile
Immediately and describe your work. State whether
:

you WOf.! l ~. prefer a morning, afte.r noon, or evening
appointment, and kindly mer,tlon your phone number.
You wUI receive a confirmation by mail for a definite
time and place.
Authors with completed manuscripts uriable to
appel!lr may send th_
e m directl y to us for a free reading
a nd evaluation. We will also"be glad to hear from those

Who'se lllerary works are still In progress.

Mr. John G. Long
Carlton Press, Inc.
84 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
L..------P-h_o_ne_(2_1_2_&gt;_24-3"'!-a_a_o_o______.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal
Admitted-Robert Parsons,
Racine; Anna Grim, Mid·
dleport; Mary Layne,
Cheshire; James Ohlinger,
Middleport; James Thompson, Racine; Eli David
White ·,
Minersville.
Discharged-Leota Cooper,
~on Burns, Larry Bailey,
Rebecca Cole, Wanda Fin·
diing, Damy Kuhn.
Holzer Medical Cealer
Janet Baker, J . William
Brown, Paul Claar, Patricia
Colegrove, Elmo Corvin,
Russell Cotterill, Amanda
Cox, Nellie Denney, Angela

Elliott, Tracy Evans,
Jerimiah Fox, Cecil Garvey,
Wendy Hamill, Megan
Hartley, Rod Hartley, Deena
Hawks, Donald Henderson ,
Oscar Imboden, Karry
Johnson, Rose Johnson ,
Catherine Little, Sherry
Marcum,
Ruth
Me·
Mannaway 1

James · Mc-

Mannis, Forrest Moss ,
Monica Pennick, Glenn
Roush ,
Vicky
Roush ,
Breadon Schuler, Evelyn
Scltes, Wyoma Smith,
· Mildred Stone, Cynthia
Taylor, Andy Tredway,
Kimberly Walker, James
Watson, Helen Williamson,
Angela Wilson, Thelma
Woodward, Mrs . Anthony
Ward and daughter.

~I

Metropolitan Buyer-Seller
Protection Plen,lnc.
· pr111enta

Total Exp , Plus Ba l.,

POMEROY, 0.

I

Amin-makes
dramatic reappearance
.
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP- capilal of Kampala today and
Uganda governllll'nt radio · told a group of soldiers, "I'm
said President Idi · Amln still going strong and am
made a dramatic reap- physically fit."
The account could not be in·
pearanrP in hi~ hPlt&gt;~guerM

Bill returned
•
to committee

Firemen meet
All Pomeroy firemen 8{e to
meet at 7 p.m. Friday at .the
fire station before going to
the Ewing Funeral Home to
pay respects to the late Herman Werry.

. Farmers of America banquet !list week at Meigs High
School. The trophies were presented to the students with
outstanding achievements.

Sen. Anthony 0. Calabrese,
0 -Cleveland, noted that the
Youngstown area faces other
possible.steel induslty layoffs
In the near future, and said he
feared "ripple effects
throughout other major cities
in the .state ... " '
Calabrese sent President
Carter a · letter In which he
appealed for ·•extraordinary
help ... I urge you to reevaluate the decision lhat
apparently has been made,
and give approval to the
project request by the
Ecumenical Council o[ the
Mahoning Valley."
In other business, the
Senate approved two bills
without dissent and sent them ·
to lhe House.
One was a housekeeping
blll making changes in the
reporting requirements of the
Ohio
Air
Quality
Development }..uthorlty,
which assists in the financing
of pollution abatement
projects.
The other strengthens the
administrative structure of
hea l th . maintenance
organizations, through which
individuals unable to join ·
group health plans can obtain
~erage against non-chronic
illitesses .
Senators in a 3~ block vote
confirmed 34 appointments
by Gov. James A. RhQdes, .In·
eluding the reappointments
of Highway Safety Director
Robert M. Chiaram011te !llld
Agriculture Director John M.
Stackhouse.
On Individual roll calls,
they also approved Rhodes'
reappointments
of
Transportation Director
David l. . Weir (by a vote of
31-1) and Public Utilities
Commission Chairman C.
I.uther Heckman (:z:&gt;.7). Also
confirmed
was
the
appointment of former Rep.
Michael Pel Ba~e. Hubbard
GARY HAYNES
Staff Sergeant Gary R. Democrat, tQ the utilities
Haynes, son of Basil L. commission for an wiexpired.
Haynes of 144 Mulberry Ave., term which ends in 1980.
Pomeroy, has graduated
from the Air Force Systems
Conunand NoncommiSSioned
Officer Leadership School at .
Kirtland AFB, N. M.
The Sergeant, who was
trained
In
military
managemenr and super·
vision, is a maintenance
management supervisor at
Peterson AFB, Colo.
Sergeant Haynes is a 1967
graduate of Rutland High
School. His wife, Joyce Is the
daughter of Mr~. Emma J .
Wilson of itt. 1, Shade.

By ROBERT E. MilLER
Associated Press Writer ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A bill containing a $10 million
state grant to help a Youngstown group open a
mothballed steel plant was
returned Wednesday to a
committee which may be its
final resting place.
However, Senate Finance
Chairman Harry Meshel, D·
Youngstown, still held out
hope the state can somehow
assist In reopening of the
Campbell works of the shut
down Youngstown Sheet &amp;
Tube Co., he said.
Meshel is chief sponsor of
the bill whi&lt;Jh was part of a
plan by a 'Voun~stown area
church
group,
the
Ecumenical Council of the
Mahoning Valley, to reopen
the sprawling plant in phases
over the. next ·several years.
. How~v.er , the plan also was
predicated on obtaining up to
$248 million in federal loan
guarantees . The Carter
Administration late last week
rejected the plan as not being
economically feasible . It
reaffirmed , its decision
Tuesday, Meshel said. ·
However, he noted that the
federal government remains
committed to about $100
million in loan guarantees for
.an alternate project, and said
he plans to keep his bill
pending in the rules
committee In the anticipation
of one being developed .
Meshel and others have
mentioned the idea of making
lhe Campbell plant, which
had 4,100 employes when it
shut down in 1977, Into a
national steel research
center.
In a related development,

dependently 'confirmed, but it
fitted An'lin's flair for the
flamboyant gesture. A1l Tan·
zanian and Ugandan rebel
forces closed Jn ·on Kampala
in recent days, speculation
had grown over ·· the
whereabouts of Amln, who on
Tuesday was reported
touring towns In eastern
Uganda.
Kampala
residents
described the city as a deserted and silent n1Hll8n 's land
today, with Amin's Libyan
allies retreating 011 one side
and the invasion force
massed on the other.
The \)gandan news .broad·
cast, monitored in Nairobi,
quoted the group of soldiers
as telling Amin they were
ready to fight to the last man
to drive out the invaders.
The broadcast suggested
Amin remained unflustered
by the reported desertion of
most of his anny, the Right
from Kampala of its Libyan.
defenders and the presenc~ in

the s9uthwestern suburbs of
an overwhelming force of
Tanzanians and rebels.
Amin was said to have lefl
the reported meeting with a
group of high-~anking' aides,
presumably to direct the war
he has been losing virtually
since it began five months
ago.
It was not known whether
the station was broadcasting
from Kampala or some other
location.

Your " Extra Touch "
Floric:.t Since 1957

!

FLORIST

PH. 992-2694
352

_

________ __ J

E'. Main , Pom(lroy

Your
_.....;.,_,

FTO Flonst
f

"We can
help save
you money
on taxes~'

·

We are income tax specialists. We ask the
right Questions. We dig for every honest
deduction and credit because we want to
be sure you pay the smallest legitimate tax.
That's another reason why we should do
your taxes ... whichever form you use short
or long.

H&amp;RBLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
BROWN ST.
MASON, W·. VA.

2nd &amp;

618 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY,D.
6

OPEN TUES.

Open 9 A.M. Io
P.M. Weekdays,

THURS. &amp; SAT.
9A.M. -5 P.M.

9.5 Saturda~

PHONE 773-9128

PHONE 992·3795

Appointment Available But Not Necess.ry

by

auditions,
MADE IN US A

"EJpen't~nc•l~

DiHe,.nc• "

,.

y....

126 ~. MAIN

1

. MANY TROPHIES- James Deihl, left, principal of
Me1gs High School, and Patty Dyer, right, are shown with
the 20 trophies that were presented at the recent Future

'

Mr. John G. Long the field editor of a we ll-known New

•

-....

Ht:RE WED~ESDAY
On April 11 a represen·
tative from Congressman
Clarence E. Miller's office
will conduct an Open DoOr
session from 10 to 12 noon In
the Court House In Pomeroy.
If anyone has any questions
concerning the Federal
Government, please stop by
to discuss them with the
representative.

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

WRinEN A BOOK?

.

9'12-ms ·

after being asked by Gov.
James A. Rhodes to authorize
the amount needed to pay
patrol investigators.
Rhodes asked for the investigation Wednesduy
following charges of patient
abuse at the hospital made at
a public meeting by a Columbus police officer, Sgt.
Charles Beeler.
In one case, Beeler told a
panel at a mental health
seminar, a patient died after
being strapped to a bed and
left alone in .. an isolation

of the National Mt•diation
Bosrd had mana~L'&lt;I to btin~
about a resumption in
bargaining sin!'e the walkout
began last week.
Amajor issue in the dispute
is a union demand for im·
proved cost-&lt;Jf-Jiving benefits,
sources said. OffiCials say I he
second rejected . contract
called for ct&gt;st-of-living in·
creases in the second and
third years of a three-year
contract, with a maximum
boost of 17 cents the first year
and 18 cents lhe second.
Union officials are believed
to be pressing for a cost-of·
living adjustment In t~e first
year of the new contract, In
addition to seeking unlimited
cost-of-living adjustments.
The shutdown has forced
United to cancel all flights
through April 16, Including
the busy Easter holiday. In
additi!m, the company has
laid off 13,300 pilots and flight .
stewa~ds and placed about ·
15,000 other _non-union em•
ployees on shortened ·work
shifts. All15,000 are expected
to be laid off beginning Wednesiiay.
In addition, about 7,000
supervisory personnel are
receiving half salaries for the
duration of the strike.

HAVE YOU

.,
'·

E. J. Plott, aemlnar leidet, Ia a Real Eatate Broker ·
and 811111 Trainer

New York
·Clothing House

~

t:OLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP)- ·
state Controlling Board
funding today of
Highway Patrol
Into charges of
at Central Ohio
Hospital in

..."'

SPRING
.SUPER

SPORT
SLACKS

to have left the Washington
hotel where negotiations
were being held for Chicago,
where United is headquartered .
More thari 18,000 union
members struck the airline
Saturday; two days after a
rebellious union rank aod file
reject~d a tentative accord
worked .out by negotiators. It
was the second tentative settlement torpedoed by' the
· membership.
Sources, who asked not to
be identified, said the departure of conipany officials
from Washingtpn made it
. unlikely the negotiations
would resume quickly. The
breakdown in the talks came
on the first day pu.t officials

unds
approved
.for OSP probe

Ma·son·· Furnl·ture

~!~~v!~

IIAKE SALE

· Th e wa ys ilnd means
committee of Evangeline
t:hapt••r t72, Order of Eastern
star. is amounclng an Easter
liazaar, bake sale and Jun.
cheon on ~·rida y and
Saturday, April 13 and 14 in
the basement of the Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple.
Tlie luncheon will be from
11 a.m. to 2 p.m. each day.
Sandwiches, soup, chili, ·
desserts and beverage will be
available. · The bazaar and
bake sale will be held from 9
a .m. to 4 p.m. both days.
All members are asked to
donate to the three events.

.
Receipts
General Prope r ty Ta)( -Reel Estate and
TraiiC'r (Gross)
3.859 . 10
Tangible Personal Property
Tax (Gross )
60.73
Total Receipts
3,919 . 83
Total Bcoginning Ba lan ce
. Plus Receipts
4,171.86
·
E xpendlturn
lata' ex·penditur~s
· · MisCellaneous
· 575 . 15
. · MalntenBncl!
3.238 .50
Grand Total EMp .
Ro!ld and Bridge
Fund
.
3,813 .65
Bnl.. Dec 31.1978
.
958 .71
lotc"l E:wp PI U'!i Oat. ,

•

·

,..
=•·
........•••·
•.
•I •

• Faatur.a IIHiaktr lorOillanlzatlont tlncettee

~

• Author or lfMore Power to You"· Here'•·TO The Gc:pod Ute".
11

• Pretldent, Ohio Jayc_, ttei-67
.
• Charter Mamt.er, Ntllonal8peaktra Aeeoclatton

·

·

·

·

E. J. Plott

Are cold calla for Elklmoa? Suapecta. Proapecta. Cllenta. which do you hiM?
.
The Telephone· Your Frllncl or Foe?
DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY. LEARN THIS, AND MOREl
For mQre lnformation.and raervatlolll', CALL: (419) 424-Ui94
Saiu'rday. April7, 19799a.m.-4p.m . .

VM.I.EY HOUSE .RESTAURANT
666 Central Center
Chillicothe, Ohio 45601
Off Route so
·

:'·

...•..,
...,...
I•

HUFFY

•10 SPEEDS

BRAND

•DRAitSTERS
•3-SPEEDS

•5-SPEEDS .
20'' lHRU '27"
BICYCLE REPAIR

••
•

..;..:

..:: :

·•.

See ihe fresh, new, exciting line-up
of styles by Auditions 1.They're designed especially for t 0 day's more
femin ine ·fashions. To look your best
this Easter and after choose Audi·
lions footwear. And you know If its
Auditions it has to be comf.o rtable.
See them tod~vl

WANTED
CARRIER FOR
THE DAILY SENTINEL
IN
SYRACUSE.
AREA

'l

Easter
Is

l

.l
•

April
15th

CRESCENT

.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

·~ ·

Beth Ohlinger

•••
••
••
••

1112

•

o.

E. M.1in
l

'.

j

J

Contact The
Dally Sentinel OHice,
Court St., Pomeroy
· or calla 992·2156
.

'

••

I

�11- The Daily Sentinel , Middlrpo1t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursda)', Apr. 5.1!170
nlr.KTRM'V

10-The Daily Simtinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'hursday, ~pr. 5, 1979

II

WANT AD

CHARGES
IS Words or Under
c..tt

Charge ·

"!day

].00

"t.Z5 '

2dayl

1.50

].91)
2.:5

] .Ill
3.00

3dltyJ

8dayl '

this

· highlight

in

date in 1792, J4'eSi-

dent George Washington used

IJr rnernctr)'. Card ol Thanks and)
Ob!tuary: 8 cents per word, $3.00
nVntmwn. Cubliladv~ .

. hi!~:;·s
On

3.7$

,

I

· · Mcbue Home saitl and Yard sales
.,.. •""'P'&lt;d only wiUt cult wiUt
order. ~ cent chlrge for ada eany-1
inti I!Gr Number In Can: ol The SOn·
UneJ
I
The: Publlaher rtSetves the rt(lht
to edit &lt;11 n!J&lt;;d any ods doemed ob-&gt;
te&lt;Uonal. "l1le Publisher wiD not be
~blc for more than 111M! incor·l
reet iuerUon. .

For Best ·R-e sults Use Sentinel Classifieds

' Today lo History
By The Assodaled Press
Today is Thw-sday, AprilS,
t.he 95th day of 1979. There are
210 days l eft in the year.

his veto for tile rtrst time, refusing ill sign a congressional
bill affecting representation.
On this date :
In 1621, the Mayflower

sailed from Plymouth, Mass.,

m its first return irip to
Elll!land.

In 11169, ihe last known sw-Vivin•
SOldier of
the
f!l
Revolutionary War. Dam·e· l

Pakeman, died in Freedom:
N.Y., at the purported age of
109
•

Ih 1951, Julius &amp;00 Etbel

Phone 992,1156

Rosen berg of New Yrx k Ci..,_,
,1

NOTICE

were sentenced to death as
atmdc spies for the Soviet
U ·
ruon.
,
In 19$5, British Prime

WANT-AD

Minister Wiilston Oturchill,
·
WhO was 81 years old ;

I n-

~e!_no-ry .::...::....::::..::.~· ~- ~~ft~p_Wi!i!iecL~ ~

And lovi nf you o litt le more

Dear mom for each and every
one
Sadly ;,issed by childrl!'n . Harold,

Vir9inla. lawrence end Ger·
trude.
. .. _ . •
_ _ _ - --~
Notices
NEW BATON classes.
· d Beginners,
d
d

intermediate· on
o vance ·
Taught by Cindy Patterson at
tf"te Syracuse Grode School
Gym. For more informotion1
call m -2086.

.

-- - - -- - · --

GUN SHOOT , Racine Volunteer
Fire Dep t. E..,ery Soturday 6: 30

pm of their building In Basham ,
Foc,ory choke guns only.

·

~-

- - ----- - ·---

GUN SHOOT , EVE RY FRIDAY 6:30
PM RACINE GUN CLUB . FAC·
TORY CHOKE GUNS ONLY.
· - - - ~ - - - - - · --.- - ·
MEIGS COUNTY Fish ond Game
regu lar meet in~ Friday April 6.

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Submi.tted his resignation to
Queen Elizabeth II.

! E~ ~h'!_~ Y!! _ley ~~~b !'~u~e_:

Mondof
Noon on Salurday

Hughes died at the age of 70

ond So tun~y . 9,30 to 2 om. 3
miles so ut H of Pomeroy· Mason
Bridge. wv Rt. 62 .
.
- • -- - ~ -- · · • · - - -

~~y
4P.M.

the day bef~:n publication

. Sundoy

• P.M.

L.Li_..;Fri&lt;loy..:;;
· ;;;;.;-==-;:... ~.,i

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
E5TATE OF OMAH B.
SMITH , DECEASED.

case No. 22ut

NOTICE OF
·APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on March 2-4, 1979, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No . 22639, Phylli s
vanlnwaQen . 16U Lincoln

In 1976, billionaire Howard · BAND AT the Jones' Bar. Friday

while being · fown in a
chartered
plane
from
Acapulco, Mexico to a
hospital in Houston.
In 1973, an advance party of
American officials amved in
Peking to establish tbe first
filrmal American presence in
China in mrxe than 20 years.
Ten years ago: A !ow--man
British expedlUon reached
the North Pole after a 14month, 1,300-mlle trek by
dog sled.
Five years ago : The United
States and Saudi Arabia
agreed to expand economic
and military cooperation.

Lost j nd Found

OhiO .

Robert E , Buc;k

CJ) 29, (A)

Probate Judge ·
Clerk.
5, 12, l tc

Today's birt.hdays : Actress
Bette Davis Is 71. Actor
Gregory Peck Is 63. Actor
Michael Moriarty is 38.
Writer Arthw- Hailey Is 59.

•••••••••••••••••••··~·~

WE WANT TO

~

- --· - ··-

CONDITIONED HAY for sole.
Good quality. Will dellv~r. Coli
CASH FOR junk ca rs. 2.. hour
'1'17·7201 or 9'12-3309
wrecker servi ce . Frye's. . - ~
~ - ~ .
1977 ARROWGLASS boss boot
Rutland, OH. 742·2061 .
- - - ·- ·with 85 h.p. Evlnrude motor.
CHIP WQOO . Poles mo ~e.
992-221&lt;4 or992·5478.
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton. Bundled slob. $10 1978 FORD PICKUP super cob V-8
with ca mper top. Good condi·
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet ~o .. Rt . 2 . Pomeroy. · tion . Good gas mileage. SS-400.
9A9-20A2.
9'12· 21&gt;8'1.
. . -OLD FURNITURE. ice bo~ees , brass FIFTE EN FOOT lowe line
aluminum boss boat. 20 h.p.
beds, iron beds, desks . e tc ..
Mere , stick steering, fully
comp lete households. · Write
equipped with trailer. Phone
M.D. Miller , Rt . .. . Pomeroy or
.call
__992_-7UJ).
--__ __ _ _
~'!_5-~ 3~_?~e:~ Sp~. ____ :....
OlD COINS. pocket watches . . SEAAS CUSTOM 7 riding "\Ower.
doss rings , wedding bonds, · Good co nditi on. $.. 75 . G~nn
diamonds. Gold or silver: Coli . _Bl,!s~ll:. 9~9: 2~~-." ____·-. _ .
. ~~e~\t'!o.~sley,_?~·~l~1 :... __ _ 197~HONOA360, loaded with ex·
WANT TO buy: old -45 and 7.8 . !r~s-. 9!? -_~1 ~. • __ .., _ --phonograph records . Call CORN , $2 o bu . Also hoy. Call
667-3966. Robert Dorst .
992-6370 or Contact Martin Fur·
.
-- -·- .,
nlture.
Wanted to .Buy

- ·-

- ·- - ·- - -

-

~

-~- ·

~-

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Office of Co"'mlssloners of
Juror!, Melos County. Ohio
March 1979
To All Whom . It May Concern :
,
On Saturday, the l(fh day ·
of Aprll1971il.'at 10:00 o'c lock,
A .M .• af the office of the
Commlsslor1ers of Jurors of
Me igs Courity, Oh io , Jurors
w
ill be publicly drawn tor the
May , 1979 Ter.m of the
Common Pleas courl or said
County .

Business I

Your Heldquartm far

.

- ----

-- -~

WANT TO buy: old jewelry. Call
992·5262 or write Kay C.c:il. 87
S. 2nd, Middleport. OH.
.
WANT TO buy: one cow. or cow
and &lt;olf. Call 992-760-4 or write
39340 Wh ite Oak Rd ., Pomeroy,
Ohio.
WANTED :· POWER woodworking
tool s. 992· 7501 .
- - --- - - - - - - - -•

~29

'

5, ltc

Klngswood, 1owner, air rack. v.a, auto., P.S., P.B., .
market value $1095. Our Price

REDUCED TO '399
1974 VEGA 2 DR ••••••••••••••

..

1973 CHEV. 1h TON VB .••••••• 51395
Automatic. ·w as $1795.

.1967 QfEV. 1h TON •••••••~~~:.$495
6 cyl .. auto.

,., 1

•:

..~···

.,

''"

'Cebrlolet vinyl roof , 305 V·8 engine, automatic, Ft.S.,
P.B., tilt wheel, cruise custom , custom s port inte r ior,
radial wh . tires, air cond ., console, AM· F/1(1 stereo
radio. II'S loaded, less than 9,800 miles. 100 pet.
guarantee 90 days . Never tit led. Priced to move.

1978 MONTE CARLO lANDAU.•••'6495
Light. blue with ;.,h. vinyl top, 23 1 V-6 engine, full
power. Incl . windows &amp; door locks. AM-FM stereo
rad io, cruise, 1111 st . wheel , radial w-slrlpe llres, air
cond., lots of olher extras. Dealer Demo. SAVE .

i978 IMPAlA OOUPE.•••••••••••'6395
Local I owner &amp;only 11,000mlles; AM-FM radio, power

11 ·9· 1 mo.

'ft\11}"'-fi je}'i]

Ohio Valey Roofing
Md
Home Maintenance
All types roofing, guHen
and dOwnspouts. All typeo
home maintenance - new
an~ repair •. Storm daon
and windows. All work
guarentted. 20 years
e x p e r i e .n c e , F r e ~
estimates, Call : Tam
'Hoskins, 949-2160.
1
'
3-7· 1 mo.

'&gt;.

'

.. 1976 MUST~NG II CPE. •••••••• s2795

. . ·-

..

.~.

·.~:

• cyl., automatic, good tires, blue finish , radio, good
economy &amp; real sporty .

1975 RJRD PINTO WAGON •••••. $2295
4 cyt.. automatic trans., good tires, good economy &amp; a
local 1 owner car. Radio, color wh ite.

'

1975 GRANADA FORD 4 DR••••• s2395
6 cyl. e ngine, a ir cond ., automatic, P . stE!erlng,.good
w·wtires, radio, vinyl roof, color green .

.

'

1975 NOVA CUSTOM 4 DR. ••••• $2595
VInyl interior, Buckskin color, 6 cy l. , a utomati c, p ,
steering, good tires, loca ll ow n~ r .

SAVE MONEY, SAVE GAS, NEW

LUV

2 Wh. Drive &amp; 4 Wh . Drive Pickups .

POMEROY MOTOR 00.
"Your Cltevy Dea,_.
'

...

·~ 992~2126

l .·

·
. ,
Pomeroy
_!Jpen Evenings Til&amp; : OO p . m ~ ·.

~

.ISHOP
.

18 Years Experience
,Wi'l Mike
Service tails

1

ii'New Home .
*Add-ons
iii Remoldings
-Free Estimates
992-6011

651 Beech Street
MidclleP&lt;Irt,
992-2356

o.

'

·- .

(•Pd.)

-1 I

. 3· 16-mo. pd.

PIANO .

BISSEll
Free Siding
Estimate, 949-2801 or
949-2860 . No Sunday
calls.

LANE DANIELS"
- . Assoceate

I I I

Roofing

14 Yr. Experience
Aurol Molllod

SIDING CO.
ca 11 for a

H. L- Wtitesel
..- ..

: ~TUNING
I

or

Elberfelds of Pomeroy ·
and l(imball Music Center
of Athens
Phone 992-2511

or992·Z082

rJ

New, repair.
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862, 949-2160

--

Mobile .Homes for Sale

Real Estate for Sale

1%7 TOTAL ElECTRIC mobile
home, furnished , 3 beck
Washer and dryer . Air condi:
tloned . I lot, 210 ft. frontage .
$12.000. Phone 7A2· 2B26.

FARM FOR Sole. House. 2 barns,
trailer. Lorge pond. 10 acres or ;
82 acres . 7"2·2566.
1
31ft acres in Pomeroy. SEcluct.d
wooded areo on top of hill.
Ove rlooks river. Water, electric available . 992-3886.
·
REAL ESTATE Loans , Purchas8 and
• refinonce . .30 year terms , VA.
No money down {eligible
veterans) . FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co ., 77 E.
State , Athens . 61.. ·592-:3051 .

Yard Sale

Lauren Hoffman·
Com m Iss loners
of Jurors

•

Yesterday·s
.

'

_J.

-

-

-

· ---

-

r:a IJuf~

~~r~:f~6~iH~~~;ii:Ps.

~

(B,
Mf.~IYQII:

SO I

DOWNING-C~ILDS

ASS~ . )

sailor

the ship
15 MGM's lion
CA-N. CLIMB OU"111d ·t&amp;Rii?! i.&amp; Soolewl;l.at

•

---

offered to qive

IOC ,TIll

"-9. U I ,II

011

·

ones
IZ Execute
16 Cows '
housing
19 Lift
20 Decorate
21 Italian

8Lena

Home's

23 Dock

24 Arbor

U Skeletal

9 Cow-ageous

.

~i~~~~=~ 22 Force
hostessunit

=~==·

Y"!'lerday's Alllwer

and
Dolls"
star
&amp; Spoil
by not
using
7 Powdered
lava

~

. .,.fS

part
• 28 Acute
30 State : Fr.
. 3% Verdi
warhorse
33 In the
same -

island

35 SUBan Hay- ·

soundly : sl.

ward movie
36 - Glory

· 23 Thrash

song

periods

26 Body
ailments

27 Mine

He alao had

~miij:j

31 Flap
34 Eastern
Christian
36 Neighbor
Kentucky

37 Greek poet

36 Mother

1....-+-+---,1-+-+-

r.

of Castor
39.Marbie
·40 Mild oath

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Here's how lo !\'Ork it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LON "GFELLOW

One letler simply" stan ds for another. In Lhis sa mple A Is
used lor the three L's, X for the 1wo O's, elc: Single 19Jters,
apos trophes , the length and rormatio.n of the words are all
hints. Each day the code !otters are dlft"ere nt. ·

·'

CRYPTOQUOTES

WJNNJF:

•

lOOK PARL ING-/

YOU'VE etEEN AWAY
FOR MANY YEAR{} ...
YOU'VE BEEN IN A
MINE EXPLOS ION ..•
Reet:IV!:D A HEAD
INJURY.

)OJ fNDED UF- ON A TINY

151.AND AND LIVED LIKE
A fiEI&lt;?NII'r. I UNDER - ,

MIOW...

STAND 11-iAT ALL

POWN

iFe;HE FOUND

.

US HE":~E.

THI5 IS. NEW AND
FRIGHTENING-

I KNON l'&gt;UT 0\N

ANYONE BLAME
U5 FOR WANTING
10GETAGLIMP5E
OF OUR OWN
FATHER?

U A P L H 0 Y,"

" L 0 I

V MD' TOM F,

I A0

SE L

OUAOY

1'0 vou.

ZOOT

I A 0 L
SOYOMF

PT

LOU

BOOBMO

HLOI
AEWO

UAORXAU . - GYEL. H
SOOYO
VDMJF
Yealerday'a Cryploqanle: EVERYONE IS II MOON AND HAS
DARK SIDE WHICH HE NEVER SHOWS TO ANYBODY. -

;m'""'. TWAIN

..

•a

r. li!NEV
UH··HOW
MUCH ARE
~ORE

~M~E

NOT

THII~TI'· FIVE
~~R5 OLD

rlj1m
,,

• .ue 5 .

f-+--t--!-·.1

Ume

of

•

a sure diamond

loser, and unless ,the queen

of heirta fell s ingleton or
doubleton,
that would be the
•A
setting'
trick
.
• A 10 a 3
East returned a trump at
+QJH
trick two to dummy's slnflleWFB1'
EAST
ton ace. Declarer then em+12
aKQI04
barked on a line of play
•Q72
• 43
which effectively switched
+QU
•KJH
· his loaers : H.e intended to
•KI0973 •182
lose a club trick, but no
SOUTH
diamond tricks and only one
• J7 3
spade trick.
·
• KJIUIU
Declarer played a club to
+12
his ace at trick three, castled
the king of hearts tO&lt; leave
•A
the queen outstanding, and
Vulnerable: Both
layed a diamond to the ace
Dealer: North
n dummy . He next · led the
queen of clubs from dummy
Weot North E . .l
and when East played low
Puo
I•
pitched h is diamond loaer.
P111 Ia
Puo
West won this tric k with the
Pill Pill Puo
club king.
West returned the spade
Opening lead :
deuce. Declarer was not
tempted to finesse. He took
the ace of spades and cashed
L---~....: - - - - - ' the jack of clubs, discarding
By O.wald Jaeoby
his spade loser .
oad Alu Sontag
Declarer lost one spade ,
one club and one heart. By
Most textbooks advise losing his losers in the right
when holding H+ I dlatrl· places, he had limited them.
butlon to open . the ault be- (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
neoth the singleton. This
makes it more convenient to · (00 you have a question fo r
·'
/he experfs? Wrlfe ··Ask fhe
lhow the three suits In an Experfs, ·· care of mts neWSPIJ·
economical bidding way· per. fnatv/duat questions w/11
South had a strong uven· be •nswerell 11 accomPIJn/ed
ellrd oult and he simply bid by sflmpea. sell·allllressllll
pme on hil aecond turn.
envelopes. The most InterestThe opening lead of the ing questions will be u•ed In
o_pode eight waa ducked to fhls column and wlfl receive
Eaot'o queen. It was obvious poples of JACOBY MODERN./
to declarer that the king of

. '

29Sesame

WENDY, MOM
WOULD etE
VER'I UPSET

---=o=-s_w_a...,.ld-:-:J:-aco
-':b:-y.::.a
..::.·n-d~
A:-'Ia-n-':5=-o-n-':t_a_
g_·-

NORTH

30 Holiday

WHILE.

BRIDGE

Playing losers on losers
r+--lr-+--lr-+- r---------.. . . spades was behind the ace.

.

entrance
28 Sicilian
city

FRANK &amp; F.RNJF:

Tllurod.oy, April i

..---:--...: 2li Historic

us the mother. too...
forameasi4S&amp;OO! ,

-----. ~ .

, __s•:· ~ ~~d~!r?.!.!~&lt;?~~:.___j--

motber

5 "Guys

5how

usc-r•~l

-·--

t Chicks'

of boxing
18 Comparative
word·
In the center
21 TV talk

- ~----

···-

for a

17 Lyle

Housiny

Surrou!~o!~f

Little - "

3 Send-&lt;&gt;ff

WIW. 50M5IIOOV 1..0WiR 1&gt;. VINE

APRIL 4-7

.A •·

!Lade
2 !!God's

r--------------------Br~e
~~~~~.~~ U Off

':,'-W.

.

INSURANCE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPftiSE

DOWN

5 Impudent
!:11!110 Apex
11 Shine
· 13 'Age after

-~ -

-

. ..,,...,

ACROSS

~~

--

Jum bles REBEL VOCAL HANGER GARLIC
Answer: What being accused of body snatching
mighl be-A GRAVE CHARGE

~

SPRING SAL1

--- ---

l I l I ]
(Answers tomorrow)

1 uBlowout"

-- -- - - -

-.

-

I

(

by THOMAS JOSEPH

-

- -- - --

tJ

1

11i

Now arrange the circlecl letters to
form the surprise answe r, as- sug·
gesled by the above canoon.

Print answer here:

ASTRO•GRAPH

---.-- ·- . - - -

iHcY ENCIRCL-E
I'"EOPLE.

. J,ITII F. ORPHAN ANNIF:

• ~-5-tfc

3-11·1 mo ...

J

I

.

1:3C&gt;-As The World Turns 8,10; 2 :00-Doctors 3.15;
One Lite to Live 6, 13 ; 2:25-News 17.
2'3o-Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding Llghl 8, 10; Banana
Spills 17.
3:00-General Hospital 6, 13 ; Lilla• Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17 .
3:3C&gt;-Mash 8; ~aumatazz 10 ; Fllntstones 17 ; Ole!
Cavett 20.
.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares IS; Men
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
• : 30-Bewllched 3; Gilligan ' s Is. 8; 17 Brady Bunch 10;
PeHicoal Junction 15.
5:00-1 Oream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers Nelghborhood20,33; Gomer Pyle 10;
Six Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 1S;
Dream of Jeannie 17.
5 :30-Carol Burnell 3; New• 6; E lee . Co. 20; Mar•
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15 ; Lucy Show
Doctor Who 33.
6 :00-News3,B, 10, 13, 15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Studio See 33 ,
6:3C&gt;-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett 6;
CBS News8, 10; My Three Sons 171 Over Easy 20,33 .
7:00-Cross-WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Night Flight
8; News 10: Love American Style 15; Carol Burnett
17 ; Dick Cave! 20; Big Blue Marble 33.
· 7:3C&gt;-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Pop Goes The Country 15;
$1.98 Beauty Show 6; Family Feud 10; Name That
Tune 13; Sanford &amp; Son 17.
8:00-Diff' renl Str.okes 3,15; - Family 6,13; Incredible
· HulkS, 10; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Night
Gallery 17.
8 :30-Hello, Larry 3.15; Wall Streel Week 20,33;
Baseball 17 .
9 :00-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3, 1S; Movie "'The little Gir l
Who Lives Down ·The lane" 6.13 Dukes of Hazzard
B, 10; .National Geograph ic 20; Money, News &amp;
Views 33.
·
9 :3C&gt;-Hall of Fame 35; long life&amp; Pro5perlty 33.
10 :00-Dallas B, 10; News 20; When The Boat Comes In
33 ; 10:~Consumer Survival Kll 20.
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Hogan's Heroes 17 ; Monty
Python's Flying Circus 20; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :3C&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,15; Soap 6, 13; NBA Basketball
8; ABC News 33; Movie " Gorgo" 10; Movie "Red ·
Planet Mars" 17.
12:00-Monty Python's Flying Circus 33; 12 :4(&gt;-.
Baretta 6, 13.
1 :00-Midnlght Special 3,15: Movie " The Witch " 10;
I :30-Basebatl 17; 1 :5()-News 13.
2:3C&gt;-News 3; 3:00-Movle "Angels with Dirty Faces"
3.
4:00-News 17; 4 : 2~12 O'C lock High 17; 5 : 00-Movl~
41
ln Enemy Coun1ry" 3.

1FEAMED ,.

P-~--------~--;n
· ' r---~~~~----~

Vinyl and Aluminum
. SidlnI

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriAmoldandBob Lee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one lener to each square, to form
tour ordinary wo rds.

.~

1977 PIN10 2 DK ••••••••••••• '"2795
.. Local
owner, clean interior, AM-FM CB radio, good
·

ELECJRIC

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

17.

10 :00-Card Sharks 3, \s; · Edge ol Nlghl 6; All In The
Family B, 10; . Dallng Game 13; Mov ie "The Vlsll"
17.
10 :3C&gt;-AII Slar Secrets3,15; $20,000 Pyram id 13; Andy
Gr llfllh 6; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :oo-High Roll ers 3,15: Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; E lee.
Co. 20.
·
11 :3C&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
of Life 8,10 ; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :'55-CBS News 8; House Call 10; News 17.
12 :DO--Newscenter J; News 6,10; Password 15; Young
&amp; Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13 ; Love American
Style 17.
.
12:3C&gt;-Ryans Hope 6,13; Search tor Tomorrow 8,10;
Elec . Co . 33; Not For Women Only 15: Movie
" Bride of Vengeance" 17.
1 :00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.

l.9 ~~ ®

~

--

cond ., dlgllal clook . 305 V-8, P .S., P. B., and sharp car,
sliver with red winy I top.

llr,es.

. Repllr

I DOU&amp;T

WOI&lt;I:D~

i97i

Windows &amp; D. LoCks, cruise control, tilt st . wheel, air

~

YER

....... 9ft.,..

4-4-1 mo.

----

.1978 atEVY MONlA CPE •••••• ~95

~HOUL~

- ----·-------- -

. --.-

.

4 speed trans., radio, QT Pkg. Special Price

Yoli: AN OFFICER
AND A ~E;\IITLE'­
MAI&gt;J•• R\GHH WHY

· Also TranlintssiG

-

-

1972 VEGA 2 DR •••• ;•••••
~:~. $269
.

CAPTAIN f:_,SY

.

Aua·•rruck

roi' Frli "Eilfriiifts

1

1972 QfEVROI.ET STA. WGN •• ~ '695

... •,.,,

o.

E, Moln SlrHI,
Pomtroy, O.

"C.11992-71l3

..

~lt..-IIAff
lt. 114 :~--lwl'ltd

EWOTT
· APP.UANC£ li

- -- -

. - - - - WffKfND SPECIALS---,

•

Alinsb011g Carpeting

YARD SALE. Wed ., Thurs., Fri.
'
WANTED TO buy: fou~ bedroom
9-3. 2 miles on U:3 of Clarence
rural
home
that
will
meet
JordOn residence.
• FmHA standards. 7"2·307-4.
. ----··- -·...--CARPORT SALE . April 5 ond b. 9
'
SIX ACRES, 7 room house, 3
)~
am to .. . 2:3 in. TV, console
.
.
I
bedrooms , fo rc&amp;d a ir heat, oir
Frtdoy, Aprtll
record Player, mef11 ladies',
conditioner. l a&lt;ot•d in Chester
·
ch ildren's clothing ond shoes.
lmo.
Village . $35.000. 985·3563 or
Many items. some new. TWP. FOUR GOODYEAR I 0 x 15 AT
9BS,m1.
MODERN 1HREE bedr09m house, _L=~=~=~=~~~~
Rd. -79 . First mobile home on"
full bo!lement , fireplace, fully
.Tracker tires. Four white spoke
left. Behind Rock Springs
OWNER SELLING: 2 bedroom
carpeted , cen tral air. enclosed.
Business Services
wheels
for
F
.
o
rd
truck.
Jeep
or,
Bernice Bede Osol -·~r~r~~nds .
_____
frame house. Excellent in town
sUn porch, located on 61!, acres
Int. 1971 Kawasaki 100
location. Call 992-3023 .
on CR 2B , opprox. 3 miles from BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
Motocross . 1972 Kowosak i 250
TWO FAMILy. New Limo ROod ,
plele Service. Phone 9-49-2,.87
Rac ine. lt interested &lt;ontact
dirt
bike,
E~ecellent
coodition,
Rutland. Boys' doftt.s. size 6 to
MODERN THREE bedroom tota l
or 9-49·2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
lorry
Wolfe
949·2836
weekends
just been over haul ed .
10. Thursday and Friday. 9 till .. .
electric home situated on large
Bradford.
'
and after 5 evenings .
7 .. 2.315&gt;11 .
7&lt;2·2•06.
·-"'--- ·- ·- - ----·---·--- - THREE BOYS' suits. Two size 12 . lOt. 7"2-20 .. 7.
ElWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
SIX ROOM house on 1 acre on
YARD SALE. lewis and Alice Ken·
Sweepers, toosters. Irons, al l
block
fop
road
.
$15,000.
Call
Boys and one size 14 . $5. eoch. r--...,-..,.---'---:---'""""--i
nedy's, College Ave., Rutland . .
small appl iances. lawn moer,
949· 2232 or 985-427• .
Co li 985-3581.
Antiques , very nice clothes.
ne~et to State Highway Garage
.
--~=:....-_
Aprile, 1111 ·
on Route 7.
INT. THREE bottom plow. Pull type
Tighter bonds can be drawn
on rubber. 14 in . plow chief
Auto Sales
SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser·
bottom. Notch cutters. Points .
this CO!lling year wllh those
vice, all f!"Okes , 992-228-4 . The
ond plow in g~ col')ditlon.
you love or th9se you feel play DECEMBER SALE .
FobriCl Shop , Pomeroy .
UP
TO
30°
STORE
WIDE
.
SAY(
Rposoncbly
priced.
Paul
Sayre
an Important role In your life.
AuthoriZed Singer Soles ond
NEW
2
PC
liVING
ROOM
SUITE
.
Form . 1 mile
bel o w
Mutual benefits will be derived .
• Service. We s~rpen Scissor! .
$1A9.95. NEW 5 PC DINETTE
Ravenswood landing. Great
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll II) You
SETS.
$A9.95,
NEW
SEALY
MAT·
EXCAVA~ ING , do~:er, loader and
Bend
Rd.
,
SA
338.
Portland,
have a marvelous way of manTRESS'S TWIN SIZE INTERSPR· '
Ohio 8-t3 ... 59,1.
backhoe work; dump trucks
aging situations and people
- ·.
lNG SAS .. NEW 3 PC END fABlE .
and lo-boys for hire, will haul
today without anyone getting
SETS. $39.95. U-HAUL. RICE"S ASP IN's VERMEER Boler soles and
NEW L"ISTING. - 12' &lt;60',
fill dirt, top soil, limestone ond
ruffled or knowing you're pull·
service. Balers in stock for im·
NEW AND US(D FURNITURE .
1972 mobile home, central
gro'olel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
lng the strings. Learn mOre
mediate
delivery.
Evenings
BSA 2nd AVE .. PH , AAI&gt;-9523
air ,
wood
burning
fen . day phone '992-7089, night
about yourself by sending fo r
phone 7"2-2877, Oe~eter .
fre estand ing fireplace,
phone 992-3525 or 992·5232.
your copy ol Astro-Graph Let· 1972 GMC PICKUP . 6 &lt;yl. std.
Zl6 E. Second SlrHI
range,
refrigerator ,
TRIUMPH ~~~t;rcy;te-SOckc~
ter. Mall S1 tor each to Astro$900. 9'12-7376.
EXCAVAliNG , dozer. backhoe
$800. 7A2·204.7 .
freezer and other furnitUre,
on,d ditcher , Charles R. Hal·
Graph, P.O. Box 489, Radio City 1976 FORD- EUT_E_
- ,;Iv;r -w-lth- bi;.;
MAIN ST . Bu5\neS5
all underpinning and
flekt. Block Hoe Servh:e,
lOCation
with
residence
up.
..,inyl top. Good condition . liVING ROOM · suite traditional
Station , N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
blocks. In excelelnt con·
Rutland , Ohio. Pone 742-2008.
beige color. luffed bock. 2 blue
All utilities and Ideal
apec lly birth sign.
32.000 m;les . 304-n3-561S.
dllon . $8,900.00.
TAURUS (April 20.Moy 20) This
. - , ··- - - ·- - - -· - - .• ,
ve lvet chairs with coned bock.
locatiOn for a new business.
fUlLINS
(XC&lt;'iVATING. Complete
Ia an excellenl day to tie all 1973 INTERNATIONAl SCOUT
1 blue flower French Pro'olinciol
COUNTY HOME - Nice 3
RANCH
Excellenl
Service. Phone9412·2,.78 . ..
loose ends together and bring
21 ,000 mile!l , fully equipped,
chair, 'olery goQd condition.
condition. 3 bedroom home.
bedroom modern like
projects to a close . Your selfair. wench. et&lt;., excellent con·
992-3..24 after Spm o f see Joe
AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
equipped · kitchen, dining
home.
Large
eat-In
Struble, Mulberry HeightS,
concel_led? lost your operators
fulllllment will spur you on to . _ditlo_n._99_2:?_1_2 1~ _____ ~ - ·area, carpeted, carport
kitchen, full basement,
license? Phorie992-21A3.
front porch (encl05ed), and
greater things .
·
1975 CADILLAC Eldorado. 25 ,000 . !~m.!~Y..:. ~h~o.:.. ___ ·... ____ and Z storage bulldlng5 •
Immediate possession.
ha If acre lot . Goo.d garden
GEMINI (Miy 21-June 20) The
mil es , fully equipped. Ex&lt;ellent PUREBRED SHORTHORN bulls. 1
E·C ElECTRICAl Contractor serv·
$28,500.00.
. .
spot. Only $23,500.
diversion you've been looking
condition. 992-2121.
mile •ost of Wilkesville, SR 12...
ing Ohio Volley region. Six
1'1• STORY FRAME · RECREATION SPOT for could ~ happen today and · - - ~ - --days o week; 2.. hours !lervlce.
Tel669-3654. Hol lis Grote .
. . _, .. . . - - give you ttie opportunity to kick 1977 BLAZER -tx4. Ch8yenne . .. Natural
gas
heal,
On the Ohio River. 3 acres.
Emergency calls . Coli 882-2952
Middleport schools. 4
up ~our heels a little. It should
package. 29,000. actual miles. ONE 5 piece bedroom suite . If in·
drilled well, septic system,
or ~-345 ...
terested,
coil
after
5pm.
be. 8 fun da(..
Tilt steer. AM·FM rodio. A.C..
bedrooms, 2 baths, pert
electric and 2 concrete
m-7866.
,
tow pockoge. cruise. white
MOBILE HOME repairs. Furnaces ,
baseQ1ent . needs some
pad$ .
CA,.CER J une 21..Jul~ 22)
!poke wheels. bcellent condi· . . - .
' . - ·-- -·--electrical work , pipes sowed ,
repair. $13,000.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING You'll fare better with your
tlon . After 5, coll992-2967,
plumbing. 992·5856 .·
MIDDLEPORT - All legal
In Middleport on the T.
material affairs today If you
• - - - - ·- - - -- ·-- - -- - license, business for many
26'x96'. Several rooms up
deal directly with the top man. 197:3 GRANO PRIX. sun roof . tope.
WAllPAP(RING AND pointing.
Mark Your Calendar!
years.
building
and
with bath, rest room and
Avoid Intermediaries If posalpower. Good tlr•s. new e~e ·
Coli 7&lt;2-2328.
Come Register at
business
· with
an
large bulsness room down .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
apartment over, exira lot
FAMILY HOME - large
23-Aug. 22) Go In
covoting , septic systems ,
for parking. excenenl
country home with 4
expecting to win and there Isn't
p .B.. cr uise control . 5650 or
doter. bock hoe. Rt . 1..3. Phone
Income. tall Today.
'bedrooms , living and
any Challenge you're not up to
best offer. 992-3717.
1 (61.)1&gt;'18·7331.
MIDDLE PORT .,..- 2 lois,
~l ttlng rooms, plus large
meeting today. Some of the
100 PRIZES .FIRSf
mobile
home
10'xA5',
.r ecr.eatlon room with
19"'
1
..
COMET.
6
cyl.
62,000
miles.
solutions you'll come up wllh
PRIZE 4-WHEEI nRIVE
apartment, new kitchen,
fireplace. 3 car gcuage and
Services Offered
• ~1~ ._Ev_eni~~ -!l~n~.:.....-.
will surprlae you . .
•
new heating system, 2
workshop and 1112 acres.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) Take. 197 .. GMC JIMMY 2·wheal dirva,
Jusl $35,000.
bedrooms and a bath.
WATER A'ND misc. hauling. Cal~ .
adva~tage of others being In
P.S., P.B!, oir .\iloc:ks in the
another
apartment
lots, acreage•.
'192·5858.
.
LANO your corner and supporting you
rear.. Reese trciiler hitch, 8·
available. $15,000.00.
river frontage,
some
NOW
HAUL,NG
limestone
in
all the way today. The material
tro&lt;k and ca. radio. 992·3!80 .
221 FOOT FRONTAGE cleared, some wooded. In
-~- ----·-- - ~
Mlddlepori- Poemr~ area. Call
problem that's been bugging .197 .. CHEVROLET
On Rf. · 7 within Pomeroy
town and out .
.. ,.... lor so le or
for frH estimate. 367-?101 . t
you can now be worked out.
CR.OW.
WITH
THI!
~ orporatlon . limits, . PI•
IS THE PLACE\
trade. 7-42· 2789.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Some·
-···---·- ------acres· in all , originally had
COUNTRY, INVEST IN
Will CARE for l\_¥o Invalid or
thing may happen today_lo give 1973 BUICK CENTURY. 55 .000
lwo houses. S3.ooo.oo.
REAL
ESTATE
AT
elderly. persons In my home .
miles. GOod !i res. $950.
you a better perspective on an
JACK W. CARSEY,
REALTORS
'
TEAFORDS. CALL "2 ·
Twenty years e~eperlente .
985·38S7.
3J25.
Issue Important to you , SLIC·
Henry E. Clel•nd, Sr.
ReQso noble rates. 992-6022 or
MGR.
cesafu l negotiations can now 1971 "CHEVROLET :IJ. ton 4-wheel
'" Henry E . Cltlorid, Jr.
9'12-5&lt;22.
Gordon
B.
PH.-992-218i
begin.
•91-2259
992-6191
drive pickup. Extra Iorge tool
PAINTIN";G~-:A::N::D:--,-o-nd-:b:-;1-o,-,t"lng.
Helen L.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NO¥. 22) Acbox. 985·3510.
Sue P. Murphy
Free
estimates
.
Call9
..
9-2686
.
.
. . . .
..
tions you 'll take today will call
Reoltor Anoclotas
Mobile
Home~
fnr Sale
forth tovorable attention from --=--- -'-;;;-::--;;;:-;--;-.::_- TREE TRIMMING ond removaL
.
.
persona who ore In a position
For Rent
7"2·31 67 or7.. 2·2573.
1955 Prairie Schooner. 28X8,
to help you carfierwlae.
COUNTRY MOBILE Hom• Pork ,
AND repairing roofs ,
P-AiNTING
bdr.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
••
I
'
Hcadqllilrturs
Route 33. north" of Pomeroy . 1965Generol, 60x12, 2bdr .
house ~ointin g, hauling. Free
21) Your popularity Is at a high
Larg"e lots . Coli CJC/2·7.. 79 .
estimates. COli m -6309 or
1968Ei cono, 52•1:J, 2 bdr .
polnltoday . Yqu'll be the cen.....2~~!!.er Spm.
f
~ANO
A OM. 1:r~i;h~d . o~d· ~n· 1969 Buddy, 601e 12, .. tx:lr1
ter &lt;&gt;f attention whether the
· furnisHed opts
Phon e · 1970 Sylva. 60 ~e 12. 2 bdr. ·
Will 'DO babysitting , S 1.50 -;,;group Is la~ge or small.
9'12-543• .
1970COSfle, 60~el2 , 2bdr.
hour or $20 o w"k. Acrou the
BAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon. 11)
street from Mason Drive-In ,
The . pieces will Ill ~eatly to- 90 ROLLING ACRES of good 1973Arlington . 60~el 2 2bdr.
19?3.Ridgewoad, 70)114 . 3 bdr.
gold trailer tr!mmed In black.
gether today. You should be
posture. Plen ty of water . Could 1973 Kirkwood . .50)112 . 2 bdr.
- - ·___
·- -_M-able to make a. change you've
accomodote 50 plus cattle.
B&amp;S
MO.BilE
HOME
SAlES
614-667-3398.
been contemplating that will
camping Equipment
PT. PlESANT. WV
have an effect on your family. ONE. BeDROOM "aPts~· de!li gn~
b75- A42A
1975 11 _FOOT truck compw, seNAQUARIUS (Jon. zt.F.e.. 11) II
!ipe&lt;iflcolly for wheelc hair po · 1973 FREEDOM MOBILE hom•.
contained. olr condition, . ex·
you nova tline to think lhlnga
App liances , underpi nning ,
tlents .' Call between 9 and 6.
!,f!!!tll
cellent condition. 992-2121 .
through you can come up with
fireplace , 992-5413 or 992-6118.
9'12-7772.
T~AVE_L_MA
_T::E.--;1-;1---;-loo
-..,1-:,r-uc7k
sOiutlono both lair and gener·
for ail your insurance or real .estate
$5200,
ous to those with whom you're NEW FOUR bedroom opts .
S'"P.
the,
both.
•Ink.
camper
prnhtems .
Established 11l18
ovoUoble for tmolly of 5 to 8. 1970 REBEl RAIDER 12 x 48. Very
dealing. Don't be rushed Into 1
refrigerator and furnace.
good
co
ndition.
$3sop·.
247·3875
Phone 992 -2342 Eve. 992-2449 .
decision.
C~ ll ?!t~e~n _9 ~n~ ~ · ~9~- ~77_2 .
$1500. Co\17&lt;2-28&lt;13.
or 94q.1643 after A ,
.•.
..
PISCES (F.e.. 1.. Morch 20) Be· TWO BEDROOM mobile hOme.
cause ·you have the loner
kitchen fur nished. 'Prefer mid· 1'66 N ~ W MOON, A· I condition .
Auctions
10 IC 52. $4000 . qf12,50J8 ,
resolve, today you can com- ·· din aged couple or e lderly ( au ·
Rodney, Broker
IIIII, Br. Mgr.
. . .
.
AUCTION FRIDAY 7 pm. Big
p ie . 992-2749._ '·· . . . .
plele a task that had "bogged
1Qe,o~· SCHULTZ MOBILE home .
truckload of new merchandise
down others, giving you the , MOB.Ilf HO.ME . Adult• only .
at
Ohio Rive" Auction, 537 High
~~;~
!O
~rn:es.~;~~oom
,
Call
prize lo take home,
•9? 2~•a . ·
(4)

THURSDAY. APRIL 5,1979
7 : 3Q-Hollywood Squeres 3; Bohkers 6; · Ma tch Game
PM B; $100,000 Name Thai Tune · lo:· Noshvllle On
The Road 13 ; Dolly 15 ; Sanford &amp; •Son i7; MacNeil Le hrer Rcporl 20,33 .
B:DO-Harris &amp; Company 3,15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13 ;
Chisholms 8,10 ; Nov a 20,33; M ission : Impossible
17 .
8 :Jo- Oelta House 6, 13.
9 :00-The Duke 3,15 : Barney Miller 6.13; Hawaii Fivea 8,10; Scarl et letter 20,33; Movie "The Killer Who
Wouldn' l o ;e" 17 .
9 :3D-Carter Country 6,13 .
10:00- 0octors· Private Lives 6, 13; Black Man'·s Land
33 .
10 , 3C&gt;-Hocklng Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 : ~News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Hogan's Heroes 17 ; Bes1 of
Groucho 20; Area Showcase 33.
.11 :3C&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,15: Slarsky &amp; Hutch. 6.13;
Mash .8 ; ABC News 33: Movie "Can'tllle" 10; Movie
"Force of Arms" 17.
12 :05-McC ioud 8; 12 :4C&gt;-Mannl&lt; 6, 13 .
1:00-Tom orrow 3; News 15.
1:3D-News 13; 3: 1o-News 17.
:1:30-Mov le "Gideon of Scotland Yard " 17.

---·---.

--- -·-------- -·- ·

Freeland Norris

SAVE YOU
MONEY ·

--

.

--- -- - ----

Heights, Pomeroy, Ohio 4576"9

Was itppolnted Executi"IK of
the Estate ot omaha. Smith.
deceased , late of Villag~ of
Pomeroy , Me igs County ,

-- -- --

COAL. l1Mt-:ST0NE·.· sa nd. grovel .
calcium chloride, ferti lizer, dog
food , and "all types of salt . E~e .
celsior Soft Works. . Inc . E. Main
St .. Pomeroy , 992·3B91.
and fringe benefits. Shift dif:
.
. . . - . ferentail . Contact : Personnel "" EVERYT HING'S GOTTA GO"".
Ofti ce ,
Pleasant
Volley
House a nd lot, ,furniture ,
HospitQI , Vo tley Drive , Point
clo thes. all my household
. Pleasant , WV . 25550. Phone
items . Drop by 760 loureiSt. ,
. 304-675-AlAO. An Equal Op·
.M~d~lep~rt : .
_
p~rt~ nyty_ E~ ~loye_r ·.
16 FOOT BASS boot . SO h .p. MerCARRIER WANTED FOR SYRACUSE
cury e~i n e , Minnkoto trolling
motor. ready for fishing . $2000 .
. _A ~EA . _P~O.NE 9'12: 2156 . . . .
l ot ft . lone star runabout with
BARTE NDER . CLUB. Must hove
N
H
trailer
and co nvertable top ,
·
transportati on.
ew
oven,
$600 . 2-4ft . Riviera Cruiser pon ·
WV 1·30"·882·3377 .
. • . . • • . . • . . · •
tOOIJ boat , oil aluminum, lots of
BARTENDER OR b&lt;ir mold. Nice
extras , 50 h.p. '78 model Mer·
oppeOr.once ,
re sponsi bl9 ,
cury e ngine. e ngin e. still under
de pendalbe, ca pable of helping
worrenty, $.. 500. Would con·
in the business. Five Poin ts Bar
sider &lt;ar top fish ing boot on
d
G
II
o l p
o n . rl. -.. ..,."'·- .- -ome
roy .
trade. 9"9-2013. Robert Hill.
- - ·- · Racine.
TEMPORARY TELEPHONE so les
. position open from our office. ElECTRIC GUITAR wifh case, like
Day
and evenil\ g shift
new. Steel guitar with case,
a vailab le. Pl-ione985-.. 384.
. _g~o~ ~n~!_!io_n ._~:?~~ - _ .
•.•... - . · · • - · ·
TEMPORARY \;ght de\;very open . REGISTERED APPALOOSA Stallion
Ne at appearance . Good
Service. Breeding for &lt;on ·
transportation ne&lt;essory . Only
formation , sposiHon, color.
those familia r wi th oreo need
biA-797-2300.
------ -- - - - - - - - ~~PI!' .,_Ph~~~e ?9_5-~lf!S:
THREE REGIS TE RED , Bluotlck
coonhounds. 985· .. 27...
SIAMESE rabbits. 4 moles, 2
females. 985-:3555. ·

--

TELEVISION
VIEWING

NEVER MIND D
• ,JUST
IT's GOOD PUI6LIIC

For Sale

IN MI::MORV OF our mom who tell IMM E OIATE
OPENING ,
u~ 2 years ago.
Laboratory T&amp;chnidan , ' 3-1 I
Thinking-of the t houghtful thing'
shi ft . ExperienCed Ml T (ASCP)
That you hove sl ad and done
or equivalent. f,;cell ent salary

FRIDAY. APRIL6. 1979
5 :30-Worldal Large 17; S:45-Form Report 13; 5, 5(&gt;-.
PTL Club 13; 5:55-Sunr l•e Semesler 10.
6 :00-700 Club 6';11; PTL Club 1S; 6: 1C&gt;-News 17 .
6 :30-Romper Rool!l 17 ; 6 :45-Mornlng Reporl 3,
6 :5()-..Good Morn ing, West VIrginia 13 ; 6 :55-Ch uck
While Reports 10; News 13.
'
7:00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; Friday
Mor ning 8; Schoolles · 10; Three . Siooges-ll)tle
Rascals 17 .
7:15-Weother 33; 7:3C&gt;-Famlly Affair 10.
8 :00-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10: Leave It To Beaver 17 ;
Sesame St. 33; 8 :3C&gt;-Hazel 17.
9 :00-Bob Braun 3; Ph il Donahue 13,15; Emergency
One 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Joker's Wild 10; lucy
Show 17 .
9 . 3~Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres

. ...

SCRUB
BRUSHES?

F\ DOLLER
SEVEWTV-FIVE

�'

I
.~

'12.,-The Daily Sentinel, Middlcjlurt-Pumerny, 0 , Tlnu·sday. Apr .~. 1979

Mayor's-Lourt

·P ossibility of melt-down
· apparently eliminated
I

By Larry Ewing
Although reports remain
' contradictory, the. gas bubble
that · had threaten ed to
displace the reactor's cooling
water at Three Mile Island
Power Plant, exposing the
core and raising the
possibility of a catastrophic
inelt·down ha s apparenlly
been eliminated.·
Authorities · are still
waiting, however. for ,.the
smoldering reactor core to
reach a cold shut-down before
declarmg all danger is past in
the nation's most serious
nuclear accident.
Boiling water reactors su.ch
as the one ·at Three Mile
,Island cannot explode
because their fi ssionable
'materials are too dilute to
form the critical masses
·needed for runaway chain
:reaction.
The great danger of the
boiling water reactor lies in

a

~/'~II

'l!ttlt/'lj ns?
IV~ f•, !!"
•

"8111'1",1:

111

the

court

nf

Pom eroy Mayor Clarenc e

Andrews Tuc'Sday night .
The
group
included
Patricia Ccrbes:l.'hicago, $35
posted on .a speeding charge: ·
Susan Lochary , ~len Ridge\
N. J., $30, speeding: Jeffrey
Newell . Middleport, $50

the
accumulation • of
radioactive wastes, including
plutonium. as the reactor
oper ates.
The lon ger ihc rea ctor
. operates, the greater the .
amount of waste products.
These "aslies" are a mixture
of
many
radioactive
materials each decayin'g at a
different rate.
Thehalflifeofplutonium is
2.400 years. The half-life of a
radioactive element !'s the
time necessary for half its
radioactivity to disappear.
If the bubble at Three Mile
Island had kept growing
inside the reactor vessle, it
could expose the uraniwn
core - that could trigger a
melt-down. In a melt-down.
the core meiUj burning the .
radioactivity and spewing it
into the atmosphere.
It has been calculated that .
should · a " loss of coolant
accident" (L0CA ) occur, the

•

•

bono s

temperature of the; reaLtor
would rise rapidly.
The wa;ics generate more
heat than can be radiated so
that the fuel rods in the
reactor cqre wo.uld .soon melt sq'uealing tires; Connie
and after that the reactor Haskins , Gallipolis, $37,
speeding: Jacob Norwood,
vessel itself. ·
Depending on how long the GaUipo)is, $30, speeding ; Gail
$25,
reactor has been in service Arnott , Rutland,
without relueling, apd the . speedigg; Ricky Taylor ,
accumulation · of waste Pomeroy , unsafe motor
products, this process could vehicle, $50, and Thomas
continue until not only the Tucker , Pomeroy, $30,
reactor, but all the structures speeding.
immediately surrounding it
would become a molten mass
that would begin to melt into
the earth.
The "melt " could sink
hundreds of feet into the
Theodore
T.
Reed,
ground. This situation has
rome to be known as the Prcsiden\ of The. Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
"China Syndrome.11
was
among 40 Ohio bankers
The. melting plant would
participating
1 in a White
spew . radioactive ashes,
House
briefing
· April 2
including plutoniwn .waste,
!Monday).
into the air by the ton. At its
Orin Kramer, President
worst, a meltdown would
contaminate thousands of . Carter's staff director for
square miles with radiation. ·domestic policy, conducted a
Plutonium is one of ' the briefing on ~conomic policies
most dangerous substances and issues of interest to
known. Weight for weight, it's bankers. The Roosevelt
35,000 times more lethal than Room, located in the
cyanide. A speck the size ol a executive wing of the White
dust mote will eventually House, served as the briefing
cause lung cancer if inhaled, site.
The meeting was part of a .
. A small .amount of soluble
three-day
trip sponsored by
plutonium salt lodged in an
the
Ohio
Bankers
Association
open wound would con·
!OBA
),
designed
to provide
centrale In the bones,
destroying the bone marrow, .Ohio bankers with an opthe source of white blood portunity to meet with
federal regulators, ranking
cells.
·
of Congress and
members
. The vi~im might die in a
administrative
executives to
week, might linger for
discuss
important
financial
months, but cell destruction
issues.
would clintmue. Death would·
come; perhaps after years, of
aplastic anemia. There is no
Rullaud court
antidote.
Three defendants \\Cere
There is no such thing as a fined and one other forfeited·
safe or "threshhold" dose of a bond in the court of Rutland
radiation . This is strictly a Mayor E. Eugene ThonJi,son
statistical concept. Radiation Wednesday night.
exposure is cumulative; any
Fined were Joseph E.Rile,
damage keeps addiilg up.
Rt. I, Middleport, $15 and ·
Many medical experts costs, .high rear bwnper; Jen·
· contend that prolonged ex· ny Duff, Locust St., Rutland, ,
posure to even low leve.ls of $15 and costs no taillights or.
radiation can hav.e slow· . stop lights; Stephen
developing but serious health Cockerham, Jackson, $15 and
effects.
costs, speeding, $20 and costs,
As of Wednesday, radiation no operators license.
inside the iop of the reactor
Del Odgin, Langsville, for·
building at Three Mile Island felted $30. bond on charges of
was · meuured at 30,000 speeding.
roentgens
hour, a nite at
which a fatal dose would be
absorbed li1 30 seconds.
Gingerbread Nursery
In such cases, where the
There will be a meeting
whole hody, dose can run as Saturday, April7, at 3 p.m. at
high as 3,000 "r" or m'ore, the the Middleport Jieath United
exposure victim can die .in a Methodist Church for parents
day and a half. Known as the whose childi'en are attending
. " central nervous system the Gingerbread Nursery
deatli", the nervous tissue School.
functions simply break down,
At 1,000 "r:• and up, a
Meellngcbanged
person might live as long as a
, The. meeting of the
· week, but would die the Syracuse Fire · Deparlment
"intestinal death." The most and Emerg·ency Squad
common Is the ''marrow . · scheduled for this . evening
death", which occurs after a haS been changed to Tuesday,.
minimum.lethal dose of 600 Aprll10.
"r".

People ·

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Racine, Ohio

Unemployment rate remains. at 4¥2.year low

IIPRIL

'

FRIDAY, APRIL 6TH AND SA"n.IRDAY, APRlL 7TH.
.
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.
.

~

.

·•

UNDERWEAR

GIRLS TOPS
New
Spring
. Summer Styles
Colors.

Carter aide

(USPS 145-960)

SALE PRICES
START AT ONLY

and

boxers.

Includes

while colton Btleh, f.
Shirts,

V-Necks.

Athletic SbiHs. Rotular ,
or gripper bo~ers.

$219

MEN'S.
DRESS SLACKS

1

JEANS SALE
Straight Legs and Flares.
Junior, Missy and Extra ·
Sizes.

Sizes 29 to 42 waist plus
extra sizes 44 to 50. Mostly
100 percent polyesters. ·
Some cotton polyester ·
Qlends. 'Big selection ol

REG. $12 .00

solid color
Patterns.

SALE '10.19

and

n!at

59. 9~2.LA~Ks ·
SALE $8.79

REG. $16.00

SALE '14.39

511.95 SLACKS

' REG. $21.00

SALE $10.59

SALE '18.89

$15.95 SLACKS
SALE $14.09

R!:G. $23.00

$19.95 SLACKS
SALE $17.59

· ··~·

'

WOMEN'S

MEN'S

PURSE
ACCESSORIES

WESTERN

SAVE 40%
Checkbook
Billfolds,
French

Purses

~~~~~mmer

clutches.
Cigarette

Cases.Eyetass

C utches,

in~~~~.-M·L-XL

Our new .
selection
Long
and short sleeve styles. Cotton
polyester blends and 100 percent
palyester knits. Stock up on wh1i
you need during this sale.

Cases,
Coin

REG. $2.50

SALE '1,50
REG. $5.00

111.95_~E~TERN

SALE '3.00

SHIRTS 11G.l5
114.95 WESTERN.. '
sHIRTS 112.70

REG. $12.00 ·

SALE •7.20
REG. $16.50

SALE '9.90

116.95 WESTERN

SALE '12.00

117:95 WESTERN

SHIRTS 114.40

REG. $20.00

REG. $25.00

SHIRTS 115.25

SALE •1

.TOM'S ·

The Labor Department
,,
said total employment
increased by about 200,000
during March, 1\l a total o£ ·
96.8 million, while unem·
ployment remained at

.

SALEI

GE
. .
LIGHT
BULBS .
.

Fresh as eyer In easy care
cotton -palyester.
Regular and extra sizes.

Four soft white bulb$
in a package. Select
so, 60, 75 or 100 .watt
size.

REG. S9.00 ...... SALE $7.69
REG; $10.00 .... SALE $8.49
EG. $11.00 ... SALE' $9.39
EG. $12.00.
. SALE $10.19

VOL. NO. XXIX

ATMORE, Ala. (AP) ~John Louis Eva"!' Ill was
spared irom death in the electric chair Thursday night
· when U. s. Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist
stayed the sentence for one week on an appeal by
Evans~ mother.
·
'
Evans·burst into tears when he heard Rehnquist's
decision and appeared ready to fight for his life, sind
the Rev .. Kevin Duignan, a local Catholic priest.
Duignan, who was with' Evans when he heard that the
electrocution was postponed, said he feels Evans will
take the stay as "a message from God" and will
cooperate fully in appealing his death sentence for the
·murder of a Mobile. Ala. pawn shop owner. ·

Ke:mledy acted improperly
WASHINGTON (AP) •- The Senate Ethics
Committee ruled Thursday that Sen. Edward. M.
Kennedy acted Improperly by writi~g fund-raising
letters for two national gun control · groups on his
·
. .
official Senate stationery.
The decision &lt;ll&gt;e• not subject 'the MaSBachusetts .
Democrat.to any disciplinary action. The com111ittee
found his use of official stationery violated an advisory
opinion - not a Senate rule.
·

Rates will be increased
UNCINNATI (AP)-Conswners may have to pay
higher rates if an operating license is not approved for
the Zimmer Nuclear Power Station being built by three
Ohio utilities, an official of the Cinci!UI3ti Gas &amp;
Electric Co. says. .
The $664 million nuclear plant is nearing
completion on the bank of the Ohio River at Moscow,
Ohio, some 20 miles upstream from Cincinnati in
Clermont County. The 12-y.e ar project is ~ing built by
CG&amp;E, the Dayton Power &amp; Ught Co. and the
Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
·

Supply may bring relief
.

WASHJNGTQN (AP) -Larger supplies of fresh
vegetables this spring may soon bring some price
' ~eUef to shoppers, an Agriculture De.partment report
indicated Thursday. Production of fresh market
vegetables this spring is expected to rise 6 percent
from the Aprii.Jime quarter of last year, the .
department said.
No price focecast was included, but officials have
said food prices over-all are expected 1o slow down
from thetr rapid climb of the winter months, including
some seasonal declines foc fresh vegetables.
·

Order stops free parking
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter ordered
an end to free or subsidized parking for tens of
thousands of federal employees across the nation
Thursday night as a means of conserving energy. He
called on private employers and state and local
governments·to follow suit.
Carter aides estimated that in the Washington, D
~· ·
(Ccmtinuedonpage 10)

B~LBS

ENTIRE SYSTEM

'479
JD~ ·. ·

95

CEHJER

SAVE 30% NOW ON CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIEs
...:. .SALE ENDS APRIL 21
.
.

.'

"Eib·e rfalds In Pome
. ,.

'

SALE
Sofa by Day.- Bed by Nigh!. Famous Kroehler and
Simmons Quality Twin. Full ahd Queen Sizes. ·
REG.$398 . 00~ ••• ;,.,, ....... , ... SALE$319.00 ·
~ EG $449.00 .................... SALE $359.00
R E.G. $498.po ..... , •• , ...... , ... , SALE $3,,00 .
R
$588.00 .......... ; .......... SALE 5469.00
R
S659.00 ......... , ...... ; ... SALE $529

. .

Phone: '614 446·7886

I

JRO FLOOR FURNITURE DE

HIDE•A•BEos·.·

•

4563i

' t

1

SALE PRICE

The
administration
predicted in January tllat
unemployment would rise to
6.2 percent in the final
quarter .of this year,
reflecting
the
slower
economic • growth
the
~overnment

is tryine to

•

PROJECT PAl!TICIPANTS ~ These students at
Hiveryiew Grade School who participated in the Read·A·
Thon program received prizes for a job well done.
Pictured are, left to right, Trace Weber, Principal: Kristi
Sheppard, collected ov'er $20; Angela Collins, collected
over $20; I'!! ike West, collected most money, $60.60; .Travis

wh olesale price s r ost I
percent in March and were up
i4.1 per cent at an annfial rate
duri_ng the fir st three months

of th e year , t he larg es t
quarterly advance in more
than four years.
~·ood prices increased ·1:2.
percent in March - down
j hghtly from a 1.6 percent
mcrease in February and a
1.8 percent rise in January Inflation continues to he the · but still substantial. Prices of
major preoccupation o[ food ready for .consumers
administration economists:· increased'l2.8 percent during
The Labor Department the 12-month period ending in
reported Thursday that March.
'

Plants hit

y ....,.enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

engineer to help control
infl ation .
The problem in the last few
month.s, however, has been
U1at the economy showed
more strength than expected,
especially in tlle final quarter
of 1978 , when it grew at an
annual rate of 6.9 percent as
measured by th e gross
national product.
-

'

·FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1979

15 CENTS

· Newlun, second most money, $46.20, secon~ most books
read ; Jeb Zartman, most books read, collected over $20:
Mike Putman, collected over $20: and James Huff,
I .ihrary Coordinator who . presented the prizes to the
students. The money mllected by.the students was used
to purchase books for the library.

Variety show
set tonight

by layoffs
Worker layoffs aQd ·shortened Ohio Truck Plant in Avon
shifts hit 1i1ore Ohio plants, Lake and the Lorain
squeezed
by shipping assembly plant.
cutbacks resulting from the
And about 3,000 Akron
Teamsters strike-lockout, as workers have been laid off in
lhe strike entered its sixth various factories, along with
day .
about 600Canton workers and
However, a Cleveland 2.000 in Toledo.
The violence that marked
Teamsters source, who asked
not to be identified, said there the strike-lockout earlier this
was optimiSOI that an emf to week appeared to be cooling.
The Highway Patrol reported
the strike might be near.
Until the dispute Is settled, that two drivers said they
Chrysler Corp. said it wol!)d were forced off roadways
halt . "virtually
aU" • Thursday, but neither driver
operations Monday at its waf injured.
.
One driver said he was
plants, including six in Ohio.
That ·. would affect 3,600 forced off the road about 3
workers at the Twinsburg p.m. near Defiance. He said
· stamping plant - ChrySler's the occupants of the other
largest operation in Ohio. vehicle .brokc his windshield
Other Chrysler plants are and headlights and disabled
located at Dayton, Fostoria; his citizen's band radio. The
·Sandusky, Tpledo ·and Van driver told police he was
Wert.
·
warned to stay off the road
General Motors Corp. until the strike was settled.
In the second incident, a
reported that layoffs at three
Ohio plants now. total 12,150 patrol officer heard a trucker
. Workers. The latest GM CQ01plaining o\'er a citi~en's
layoffs idled . 150 at the · band radio of being harassed
- Sandusky bearing plant. by occupants of another
'There were 7,5110off the job at truck. The man, who had
GM's
big
Lordstown been driving a dump truck
assembly complex and northbound on Ohio 4, said he
another 4,5110 at the Packard was stopped by the · other ·
.Electric ·Division in Warren. truck but was not injured. A
In addition, 4,5110 workers patrol officer accompanied
were on short hours at GM's the driver to Wakeman.
· Norwood plant.
There were no arrests
FQrd )llotor i ·Co. has · made in connection with
trimmed production shifts at either incident.
its !Jma engine plailts, the

TICKETSAYAILABLE ·
Student tlcko!ts for boxing
matches to he staged at'tl\e
Meigs Junior High School at
The Chester Safety Patrol 7:30p.m. Saturday will be on
variety show will be staged at sale at · the dQQr tomorrow
7:30p.m. tonight (Friday) in night at $1 for students six
the Chesler Elementary through high school.
School auditoriwn.
.
·.There are 400 ring side
'
Proceeds !tom the shoW . seats available for the matSyracuse Council agreed to and patching potoles In
will be used on ~nses of ches tomorrow night at $3
. · amend the w~ter rate or· village streets beginning next
taking the .sa{ety patrol to each. General admission is
dinance for non-residents by week.
Washingtlin, D. C.
$2 and doors will open at 6:30
reducing the amount from . Clerk Janice Lawson was
Admission is $1 for adults . p.m.
$6.75 to $6.25 during a Thur- authorized to direct a letter to
persons who have · junk
and 50 cents for students.
The main evA!nt will pit
.
sday night meeting.
vehicles
on their properly.
Mrs. Patty Scbaekel and Mrs. Willie Johnson, Zanesville,
Council, In approving the
.Junk
vehicles
on private
' Becky Mankin are in charge against Larry Babbitt,
amended action, agreed non·
is
in
violation
of a
property
of .the show. Tickets will be
Racine. Both are undefeated
residents. do maintain water
sold at the door. . ·
in earlier ring appearances.
lines in their respective areas village ordinance.
Robert Wingett, grants ad·
Emcee will be Jimmy The fights are sponsored by
and therefore should not pay
ministrator,
discussed the
Schaekel and nwnbers will
the Meigs County Junior
more of an Increase than the
proposed
boat
niarlna. Coun·
Include country-western
Chamber of Commerce.
apportlonate hike for in-town
ell
authorized
Wingett to
mus(c. guitar numbers, selee· ·
users. · · ·~
make
application
for a grant
!ions by the Eastern f!igh
Harry Clark · and Roy Ar·
School Chorus of Gayle
BANKS NOT OPEN
mes met with council in for the proposed project.
Council agreed to make im..
Douthitt, Chester Grade
The Fanners · Bank and
regard to amending the
provements
at the former
School chorus · numbers, Savings Co. and the Pomeroy
recent rate hike.
Park
by
installtng a
State
plano selections, band National Bank will not open
Council also approved the .
waterfountain.
students of James Wilhetni, until 10 a.m. Saturday in
sale of the town's o)d police
PURCHASED BOOKS - Mlcl]ael Mariln, left, a
Police Chief Milton Varian
instrumental and VOC'dl duets tribute to Mrs. Mary Riggs.
cruiser, a tractor, gang
second grader at Riverview Grade School plirchased
thanks to Tom
extended
and solos, Francis Andrews Mrs. Riggs 'WIIs an employe
mowers and a transformer
.
books
for
the
school
wltlihls
own
money.
Michael
is
shown
Werry
and
Carl Hysell for
and daughter ii. instrumental of the Farmers Bank and was
.d~ring a public sale ten·
1
presenting
the
books
to
Mrs.
Grace
Weber,
principal
at
nwnbers.
transferring
equipment from
·
'on leave of absence at the
tatively set for April 21.
Riverview
Grade
School.
the
old
cruiser
to the new one.
I
time.of her death.
Sealed bids will also .be in·
Council
also
extended ·
vited and a legal notice regar·
thanks
to
Lawrence
Manley
ding· the sale will · be
Clear and cold tonight.
for
'making
daily
pick
up of
published.
l.o.ws mid to low 20s. Partly
garbage
during
the
high
Clarence Hill, Rustle Hills,
cloudy Sa~urday. Highs upper
water.
Council
transferred
met with council requesting
40s to mid 50s. l'hance of
aSBistance
in laying a culvert $300 from the general fund to
precipitalion 10 pt·rccnt
"It's tough. Once they're elaboFate. ~The discussions near his property. Hill will current expense.
WASHINGTON (AP)
tonight. Saturday.
· Attending were Mayor.
Bargainers for the Teamsters out on .strike, it's tough, " . marked the · first time purchase the material and
Eber Pickens, Mrs. Lawson,
union and trucking industry chief federal mediator Wayne mediator$ 'called the two council wUI offer assistance .
met for more than five hours L. Horvitz said of efforts to sides to the bargaining table·
Council also approved pur- George Hoiman, treasurer,
Thursday searching for an . forge a settlement after the since the work stoppage chase of a new diesel tractor Troy, 'Zwilling, Hennan London, John Arnoit, Mick Ash ·.
agreement to end a five-day two sides recessed for the began.
Discussions wer e to be used throughout . the and Jimmy ·Joe Hemsley,
shutdown that threatens to night.
village and the park area.
Earlier, one source close to scheduled to resume .on · It was also agreed to haul
council members and Chief
paralyze the auto industry by
the talks said the parties Friday.
next week.
gravel to he placed in alleys Varian.
were "moving~: but did no\

Council amends
water ordi,nance
.

Weather

No agreement reached

·carter's energy proposal facing ()pposition

• JVC JR-SitWAM/FM

• JVC JL·A20 Semi-AuiorMtlc
Turntable wllh ·B•N a Dust
Cover

Most of the March job gains
among adult
women, th~ department said.
It reported a big increase in
jobs in wholesale and retail
trade. And it said there was a
gain of 70,000 jobs in
manufacturing
industries, most economists follow,
notably in' electrical and should mean a rise in
transportation equipment unemployment.
and machinPrv ,
Althoul!h ~ ii P.('\in P. in
oc c ~rred

Evans given late stay

WRANGLER
BASIC JEANS

Size 29 to 42 waist .Lengths 30 to 36-14 ounce
. pre-washed. Np Fault blue
denim. Straight leg and
boot flare styles. Our
Regular price $14.95.

NO. 249

sa ys · i::;

necessary to hel'p control
inflation .

WASHINGTON (AP) - In a move which eould
lead to the overriding of a controversial Supreme Court
· ruling, the Senate agreed 47 to 37 Thursday to allow the
r.eturn of voluntary prayer in the public schools. But
members then set the stage to reconsider that vote on
Monday.
·
·
.
Senate action came on an amendment offered by
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N ,C., to legislation establishing a
separate Department of Education. The presence of
the school prayer amendment reduces the chances of
passing the Education pepartment bill sought by the
Carter administration.

M~N'S

Stereo Receiver. 11 w•Hs/ch.
min. RMS, I oh~. 20·20,000 Hll
with no more then 0.8% THO

at

~~mini s tration

joblessness would seem t&lt;i be
good news. the administration has reacted with
Irs.s than c 0mpletc en·
thusiasm. It feels the jobless
rate has been at a level that"
reflect s inflationary con·
ditions .

The department said the
number of persons in the
labor for ce in creased by
190,000 during March to a
re('ord ·102. 7 million. The
labor force includes both
persons with jobs and those
who are seeking them.
Th e Carter administration
ha s been trying to slow the
economy's growth to help
restrain inflation . That,
according t0 the scenario

Volwtteer prayer pennitted. "

PACKAGE ·

OF 4

REG. 5.14.00, SALE S.ll .

Adventl2'a make the music In this system.
·and come within a hall-octave of the
New· Advent Loudspeaker In fre·
, .
quency range.
I ,..,.,-- - - - - -

•

a slowdown in economic
growth that the Carter

Nationwise-------.

..

9AYTIME
DRESSES

"'·

~rsons .

the ~·ebruary level of . 5,9
Tnillion .
The unemployment rate of
5. 7 percent , the same as in
February; was the lowest
since August 1974, when it
was 5,4 percent. The number
of discouraged workers was
the lowest since the ·third
quarter of 197( when it was
617 ,000.
The increase in ern·
ployment . or 200,000 in
March compared with
. substantially larger· gains in
the first two months of the
year. and ajlpf'r~rPd to rPFI"•'l

Ori any 3 of Hanes Men's
· all cotton while knitted

Rell Label underwear

SALE '20.69

none Is available .
Th e March employment
report showed the economy is
maintaining sufficient
strength to provide jQbs for
newcomers to the labor force ,
altliough the economy did not
make any further dent in the
number of previously joble.ss

e

OFF PER PACKAGE

Terry
· COtton
Poly-Cotton Knits .. Sizes .
2to4, 4to6Xand7to 14.,
14.

\

I

.WASHINGTON (ill') The nation's unemployment
rate remained at a 4'h-year ·
low of 5.7 percent in. March,
. while the number of persons
who have abandoned the
search for jobs fell to the
lowest · lev.el since t974, the
Labor Department said
today.
The department said tllcre ·
were 725,900 so-Called ·
"discouraged workers'' in the
first three monihs of the year
- those wh,o want jobs but
have given up looking for
them because t.hPy hp1ip,,p

and
and

WOMEN'S

You won't find a better
I
stereo ~ystem at
this price• .

.

~-·-·-----w~---------·~
' SALE ~EN'S HANES

SALE

Banker meets

SYSTEM OF THE MONTH

.

.

·an

Meigs County

0

ELBER

I

l&lt;:ight defendants forfeited

'

.'

'

WASHINGTON (AP) . decontrol by mid-1981 ~ a
President Carter's new goal long sought by the U.S.
energy plan to couple higher ·on-industry;
Administration officials
domestic oil and -gasoline
prices with a " windfall said the plan would add 4 to 5
tax" is already facing cents a gallon to the price of
,_____"" opposition Iii ·congress: gasoline and'other petroleum
Top administration allies products by mid-1981. But
on Capitol Hill predicted an other unofficial estimates put
uphill battle for the tax .the total increase at up to 15
propos a,! t~e president . cents a gallon , ·
announced Thursday night,
Carter's addres:s came two
"It's going. to be tough," years after he sont his first .
said · Sen'a te . Energy energy plan to Congress as
Committee 'Chairman Henry · "the moral equivalent of
M. Jackson, D·Wash . . ·
war," a package of proposals
•
In a nationally broadcast · . that' took ('.{Ingress until :last
·
address, th~ president said he · fall to pass.
PINEWOOD DERBY WINNF.RS- Winners In the Pinewood Derby held by f.'ub ,&lt;;c·m11
would gradually lift price lids
Carter .said the action
Pack 249 were, 1-r, Steve Musser, first place, Kevin King, Si!oond 'place, Tim .leffers. third
on domestically produced would help conserve oil by
place and Eric Gryszka, tooli fourth place and also had best of show. The boys &lt;iesig11ed
crude oil. . le~ding. to total , inaking it lnore .expensive
their own cars for the Pinewood Derby race. Musser too.k fourth place in the Mr:M eli Hi ric: t
·
race held last Saturday al Point Pleasant. ·
· ·

.

.

'

~

.

and .al..; would provide · ·a
U.S.-produceu 011 is now
Under existing law. Carter
.financial incentive to U.S. oil held at about $9 ror a . 42- has the authority to lift oil
companies to seek and gallon barrel.' Carter's plan price·controlsbeginning June
develop new oil fields .
would ' allow it to rise I without having to submit
And he told Americans: gradually to the world lhe plan to Congress. His
"Each of you will have to use market price of about $15 a proposed "windfall-profits
less-oil and pay more for II ." barrel.
-·-··
tax,' ' however, requireS
He said this would help move
Administration officials House and Senate approval.
the nation away from its . said the decontrol plan wao · And that 's where the plan
heavy reli1111ce on imported designed [rt such a way as to could be in for rough going.
qil.
dampen its inflationary
Rep . John Dingell, D·
To keep oil companies from impact this yea!'.
Mich., chairman of the Hollse
get t in~ too rich from . The offieialsestimated that energy . and
)lower
decontrol, Carter proposed decontrol would add one- s ubcommittee,
sa1d
the "windfall prof[ts t~ " on . tenth of I percent to livln~' "prospects a~e · not good for
half the extra revenues .that · costs that have , bee ' passage" of the tax, noting
oil companieswobld get from increasing at ,an annual ra · tha!' Congress last year
h1~her prices.
of· about 10 percent in 1979. reJecteq a prev1olis attempt
Pro.ceeds would be used to
They added that the by the Carter administration
aiel poor (amilies, for mass increase would be about tw,o- to tax cru~e oil. "The ·
lrunsi • Jlrojects a~d w help tenths .to three-tenths ·of 1 . situ~tio~. may~ better but I
develop new en.ergjo sources. percent 10 1980 and 1981.
. don t thrnk so, Dmgell sa1d.
&lt;\

·~

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