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r

,I&gt;-10-The Sund•v Times-Sentinel, Sw1day, Apr. 8,1!179

:of the Bend
....

By Bob Hoeflich
. POMEROY - Agreat surprise party was planned for Mrs.
Joann Williams and was to be held Saturday night in tribute to
her 2a years of employment at The Farmers Bank and Savings
Co.
Joann's daughter, Terri Lynn; was to have been flown in
' from the University of Eastern Kentucky where she at(ends
school and JoaM's two brothers were to have been on hand
along'with their wives as a part of the surprise. As a highlight,
the group was also going to present Joann with a grand·
mother 's clock.
However, the death of Mrs. Mary Riggs, an employe of the
bank who was on leave of absence, brooght about a temporary
cancellation of the party and Joann was told of the planned
tribute which will lie held later. Joann and Mary were close
friends over the years so a party just wouldn't have been in
order at this particular lime.
CRAFT MAKING - Parents, teachers, and students
It's too bad that the beauty and sparkle of Mrs. Riggs have
of the Rio Grande Elementary School are busy making
gone. I, too, was one of the many people "smitten" by Mrs.
crafts to be sold,ln the craft boOth at the Spring Fling to be
Riggs . Many years ago, I oame to admire ber when she got
held April 21. Shown are students in Mrs. Vallborn 's 5throgether now and again with friends in Middleport for "jam
6th grade class working on a latch hock !11R. Tickets are
sessions" which were really a blast. Mary played a great
also on sale now at _the school for the spaghetti supper
piano:&gt;Probably few people knew that Mary had a treinendous . scheduled
f&lt;r the Spring Fling from f&gt;-7, $2.50 for adults,
· distaste for noisy fireworks. She accompanied a Big Bend • •1.50 for children 12 years and under.
Minstrel production at the Meigs County Fair some years ago
·an.d .the minute the show was o~er Mary took of[ in a dead run
.. io gel ali! of the fairgrounds before the fireworks which
..anrjually fo,lQwed the show were set off. Mary, it seems, had a
true. pitch ear and ·as a result fireworks drove her up the waD.
NELSONVILLE - An or even what is available ~re.
. · ' Mid&lt;lleport HighSchool alumni cim look forward to some evening open bouse designed a few of th&lt; uncertainties
real: treats ·at the alumni reunion this year . Mick Childs is especially lor women of facing the woman who has
. ·. h&lt;iaam&amp; the event and ·has it aU mapped aut. His program ·Southeastern Ohio has been been away from the
. · . plaris are .different from the traditional and alumni should scheduled at Hocking educational system for a
·· enjoy.. Mick will ·be unveilin.g. his plans as the reunion date Technical College April 30. number of years," said Ellen
Women who have not been Gerl, program coordinator.
· ·&lt;!raws. closer:
The April 30 program has
employed or ln school for a
Margaret Parker, who has taken such an active role in while are particularly invited been arranged to demon·. ·gettipg the Meigs County History promoted, reslorls that there to the evening session called strate that women of all ages
· . ni~. I* ,1,000' family histories in her hands now for the "Options for Women : An and backgrounds have had
·. .P!JQlicatiiln although she hasn't had time since the Thursday Orientation to Technical the same questions, that
solutions have been found and
.·deadline to dq an .exact count. The history should be a great Careers."
Included in the program that support is available, she
, ~eren.cebook.
'.
will be a panel of several said.
Discussion wlll also focus
· · .· · Joe McCloud of Middleport, who was the right hand man of Hocking Tech students
on some of the opportunities
:Mrs. Janies flarley as long as she was able to remain at her discussing how they felt and
and . directioos women may
~me in Middlepor-t, was in Springfield last weekend to visit problems they encountered
take. Participants will have a
. · Mrs ..'Jiarley. Joe says Mrs. Harley misses her many friends when they returned to school .
"Not
knowing
what
chance to talk with students
and exterids best wishes ro thOrn. Cards may be sent ro her at
and staff about the college's
· ·the Ohio Masonic Home, 2655 West National Road, Springfield, questions to ask, wbom to ask
· Ohio 4~ .

&gt;

.. LARRY COLEMAN, Village Marshall of Rio Grande,
visited recently with th&lt; first grade classes and the
visually impaired class at Rio Grande Elementary. The
children enjoyed his informal informative talk and being
able to see and sit in the police cruiS\!r. Mr. Coleman
· entertained, singing : many familiar "and fun songs,
accompanying himself on the guitar. Teachers are Mrs.
Sue Brandeberry, Miss Pam Mead, Miss .Ann Packer and
student teacher,' Miss Virginia Tirpak.

Open house scheduled at Nelsonville

It was " Panicville" lor Gene and Sherry Goodwin one day
recently when their 16-month-&lt;&gt;ld son, Nicholas, became
· .extremely ill running a high temperature and goin~ into
· convulsions. The Middleport Emergency Sq 0ad took the child
to Veterans.Memorial Hospital and later Nicholas was moved
ro Holzer Medical Center. The Goodwins jlre extremely
grateful to the emergency unit and the stalls of the two
hospitals for the care and consideration shown. Nicholas
remains hospitalized but is improving.
.
·
'
'
Louis DeLuz is conducling a one man battle against high
prices and although he admits being "past65" is conducting a
door-to-door campaign with a petition.
DeLuz says that he encounters too many people on fixed
incomes who cannot meet ihe high costs of fond, medicine,
utilities and other necessities. He plans to present the petitions
ro government officials -including President Carter. DeLuz
has 200 signatures now and invites anyone to help him secure
more names through the circulation of petitions. His address is
Portlalll,land he'dlike to hear from anyone willing to help,

Pleasant Eileen Clark gets involved every year in making
many candy Easter eggs which are delicious . Eileen starts
early, puts tbem in the freezer and has it aU together way
befQre Easter. Nothing like being prepared, is there? I mean,
you never know when that Easter Bunny might not function .
.
You can get about anyihing you want on credit these days.
However, those "easy payments" sometimes do get difficult
don't they . WeD- keep smiling anyway.
~

Cheryl Hudson honored
NELSONVILLE - Cheryl
Hudson, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George B. Hudson, 37896
· State Rt. 124. Pomeroy, was
one of 64 sccond·year nursing
•st udcnts honored recently in
cermonies

,at

Hocking

Technical College.
The stud ents received
bands signifying the begin·
ning of their seventh and final
quarter in . the college's
nursing program.
The students will receive
associate degrees in appl;ed
science when they complete
their training n June and will
be eligible to take the Ohio

•

.
:•

Some types of commercial
bottl ed water
include
drinking waters that come
from a well or spring,
specially prepared water.
with .minerals added, and
fluoridated water used to
prevent toot~ decay. ·

~ -

~-

Willis T, LNdlnglllm

•

Re•ltor

VACAnON HOME AND TAxES

If you bulld or b~y a 1n11estment : depreciation,
utilities ,
• vdcatlon horhe, you can let mainte nance.
e i t help your annual tax bill insurance, etc . tn' order to
,. anQ Sti 1 enjoy it for your take these deductions the
... fa m 11y • s pI e a _s u r e · tota l cannot e~&lt;ceed the
However , with the 1976 tax amount of rental Income
• reform bill , (effective 1-1· {less ta xes and interest)
• 17)
there have been and the home cannot be
e changes r:estricting some occupied by the owner for
e of · the deductions under more than two weeks or 10

e certain conditions.

•
•
•
•

e
e
e
•
•

.

Todav :-

•

~

•
•

••

•ar.e

•

•

•
•

e

e
•

deductions that also may
jUst as you
woUld If . you owned ~ an
apartment house for an ·

l EADINGHAM
REALe
F.:sTATE , 517 !'ccond Avc . , •
G~lli,n li s . .Pt'lnn r &lt;1 46 76Y(J . e
We're her e ffl h£1lp.
e

.............................
•

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be taken -

Day Seven·"fuesday AprU 3
The bubble had vanished.
But the reactor still had to be
brought ro a cold shutdown.
Tensions eased. .People
started trickling back home.
But there was sliD danger
that radiation could leak
during the shutdown process.
So Thornburgh advised the
children and pregnant
women to stay away. Met Ed
said its pregnant employes
'could stay away If they llkrd,
but without pay. The utility is
reported to have two
pregnant women on its local
payroll.
'
Speculation grew that the
reactor may never he fired up
again, that it might be fUied
with concrete and junked; a
monument to the !ail-safe
system that failed.
"It might be more
expensive ro clean up the
plant than it was to build it,''
said Sen. Gary Hart, O.COlo.

Dol'

1979
Snzith 's "NEW"

e301 V ·8 Engine •

e.Automatic
Trans.
ePower
Steering
• Power Brakes
• Tinted Glass
eBody Side

Molding

Conditioning
Whitewall
~.adials

Sport Mirrors
Deluxe Wheel
Covers
Radio Accom.
Pkg.

fumes over rural northwest

e

15 CENTS

.
Okaloosa County Civ il
having "the worst record of
any rallrD!'d in the country" Defense director Tom
in handling hazardous Nichols estimated 5,000
materials. Sixteen people ·. people had fl ed homes or
died last year when a campsites in the 00-squareLouisville &amp; Nashville train mile evacuation area. which
derailed in Wavery, Tenn. included several villages
of
and
about
half
Blackwater River State
Forest.
The Air Force sent a fire
control team from nearby
Eglin Air Force Base, and it
was not until they were able
to get their equipment
through the thick forest that
the fire was put out. The
railroad called In hazardcontrol , crews
from'·
Jacksonville and Mobile,
Ala.
"It's a rural area and
houses are ·scattered aU
through it," said ~tay
Belcher, a supervisor for the
Florida Highway Patrol.
"It's about half woods, baH
complete the offlclal analysis fanns .11
necessary to determine the The evacuees were placed
mutual benefits to the con- in schools, fire halls, a
sumers of each cooperative. National Guard armory and
· "Any merger must have as other public buildings for
its foundation, a stipulation of the night.
benefit to the membership of
both cooperatives. After the
analysis Is completed, the
scope of those benefits will be
announced to both mem-

Florida , . ·
. .
One injury was reported. A
fisherman trekking through
the woods near the wreck
inhaled some of the fumes
and was hospitalized for
observation.

The accident involved a
·Louisville &amp; Nashville
Railroad freight train . The
Federal
Railroad
Administration in February
described the railroad, a
subsidiary of Seaboard
Coastline Railroad, as

.Boards sign agreement

Final decision on
merger up to members
Boards of both South
Central Power Company
of Lancaster and Buck·
eye Rural Electric Co·
ooperatlve of Gallip.iollS,.
have formally signed an
agreement to ,merge the two

cooperatives, according to an
announcement by R. Dane
Swinehart, General Manager
of South Central.
"Thls does not mean a

Military plane gunned down

'

said Swinehart. "It simply
means •that a document ,
stated in legal language, has
been signed to · set the
machinery in motion to

merger has been effected,"

Nationwise-

BONANZA
' 6 1· 97Price
Includes
!lie Following
Equipment

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 250

.

CRES'IVIEW, Fla. (AP)Tank cars carrying acetone
exploded and burned .when a
train loilded with hazardous
chemicals derailed here
Sunday. and thousands were
evacuated as the wind
spread thick yellow sulfur

.-

~-~--

•

ousands evacuated Sunday

M,ANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -Anti-government
guerrillas shot down a heavily armed Nicaraguan
'mill,tary C-47 airplane early SUnday in a fierce ba tile
near the small town of Condega, 90 miles north of
Managua, reliable sources reported
.
The national guard, Nicaragua's armed forces,
declined to comment on the report. · No firm
. information was available on casualties in Sunday's
fighting, But one source, who asked not to ·be
identified, told The Associated Press, "It seeins that
guardsme~ ~ere kllled in the lighllng."

. Attorney seeks death stay
Ji\CKso~ . Miss. (AP)- Charles Sylvester Bell's
attorney. goes to U. s. District Court in Greenville
today in hopes of staying Bell's scheduled exe~:Ution
Wednesday in the Mississippi gas chamber.
sell, 22, was convicted in 1977 of decapitating .
Hattiesburg service station attendant Danny Hadev
with a blast from a sholg\ln. The Mississippi Supreme
Court oo Friday refused to· stop !be scheduled
execution in the gas chamber, which was last used in
1964.

65 percent went to military
I WASIDNGTON ( AP) - Some 65 percent of the
federal income taxes thai the average American
family paid in the 1960s and through much of the 1970s
went for military - related expenditures, a Michigan
research group says.
The siu&lt;ly released Sunday by Employment
Research Associates of Lansing, Mich., also shows,
however, that the percentage has been declinil)g
ateadily, from 68 percent during the Vietnam War
years to SO percent in 1976, tbe last year analyzed.

MBD;datory celibacy upheld
VATICAN CITY ( AP) - Pope John Paul IT upheld
mandatory celibacy for Roinan Catholic priests today.
He said the priesthood carihot be renounced because of
the difficulties and sacrifices asked.
In a strong reaffirmation of the 1,500-year-old ban
on marriage for priests, the pontiff rejected attempts

Thousands celebrated
JERUSALEM (AP) - Thousands of Christian
pilgrims, waving olive branches and palm fronds,
followed the winding path down the Mount of Olives on
Palm Sunday, celebrating Ch_rist's triumphant entry
into Jersualem,
Only hours before the procession, police found a
Katyusha rocket launcher on the outskirts of the city
overlooking the procession route.
'

·Committee formed Saturday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An independent
citizens' .commission to investigate and make
recommendations regarding the. use of nuclear energy
in Ohio was formed Saturday at a statewide antinuclear meeting sponsored by Ohioans lor Utility
Reform.
Members of the group, to be called the Citizens'
Commission on Nuclear Power in1&gt;hio, will be selected
within the next two weeks by the Columbus chapter of
the utility reform group from nominations received
from consumer groupe across the state.

e·

percent of the rental use. • :

olhe&lt;

slowly, very slowly, diffusing
hydrogen with coolant, then
releasing It like champagne
bubbles in another building.

engineering, health, public
ser vice
and
natural
resources.
Tours of the college
departments will be held on
the fol!owing thre~ Monday
evenings for women who wfsh
BOOKMOBILE
to see college facilities and
SCHEDULE ·
la bs: May 7, Natural
April 9 - Wolf Pen, 2:30-3
Resources and Public Service p.m.; Carpenter, 3: 15·3:45;
departments; May 14, Hea lth Dexter, 4·4:30; Langsville,
Ca reers; and May 21, 4:45·5: 15: Hutland ·Pomeroy
En~ineering and Business
Nat ional Bank. 5:30·6:15 ;
programs.
Hutland · Depot Street. 6:30·
The program will begin •t 7 7: 15.
p.m . in the auditorium. There .
April 10 - Long Bottom, 3is no ,fee or pre-registration 3:30 p.l)1.: Reedsville-Reed's
necessary for the April 30 Store, 4·5; Tuppers Plains .
program or tours.

VOL NO. XXIX

e

For starters - whether However , ren ts are not •
you use it for yourself or · taxable if the house Is
'n ot, there are always the re'nted less than lS days. •
usual
deducf!ons
for
·- e
mortgage interest a~d
_
e
proper't y taxes. The tn - • il 'thl'n' i s f'nythi1Hj w-t e
terest deduct ion ~an be cr~n do to h&lt;'IP y(lu in thfi e
considerable. duru1g the fi t!ld of rri'! l f;'Stiltf' _plr.;tsr •
early years of the loan .
·phone or drop in · iit ·

There

1Continued

career oriented programs

in the areas of business,

CANTON, Ohio (AP ) _ teachers. Malecek said 234 of
Police omcers came down the group's members are
with the "blue flu" Saturday honqring tjle work stoppage. ·
in an apparent pcotest over
.The Rev. John F. Murphy,
co ntrac t negotiations schools superintendent, said
between the pollee and tbe Friday the. strike was Ulegal
cfty .
and violates the contract the
Officers started caUing in association has with tire
sick just after midnight. By 6 Catholic Board of EduCation.
a.m., the entire day shift of 14 , Although the B1180Clatlon
officers reported they would has requested negotiations
not be in£o work. Supervisory resume, Father Murphy said
personnel assumed tbe duties . the diocese won't agree to
of the o!fieers who elected to meet until strlkingi teachers
stay off the job.
return -to work. ,
YO.UNGSTO.WN, .1. 10 (AP)
Bargaining sessions have
been underway since the
l./11
contract between the palice - Despite a decision by tbe
and the city expirrd Feb. 1, ·, Carter administration to
The
Canton
Police reject a plan by the Ma)lonlng
Patrolmen's Association, Valley Ewmenlcal Coalition
formed earlier this · year, to restore liOIJie of the Jobs at
presente!l new proposals ail · area steel plant, the
during the session which coalition wants to stay active.
included Mayor Stanley · Thecoalltlonwasfonned 15
Kmich. The mayor said tbe months ago when 5,000 .
meeting lasted about five persoi13 !oat their Jobs after
hours.
Youngatown Sheet &amp; Tube Co.
Another negotiat[ng session '~closed ·Its Campbell Worka.
was scheduled for . 1 p.m.
The Rev, John Sharlck, coTuesday.
'
chairman ot the · coaUtlon,
said !he organization would
CLEVELAND ( AP) - The receive, conunent · oo and
week long sirike by members -publicize the reasons why the
of the Cleveland HighSchool employment plan was turned
and Academy Lay Teachers down.
"We feel the need ... to
Association wiD apparenUy
continue indefinitely., report to our community, and
according to Robert P. to the nation, ho!f we
Malecek, association respo'nde&lt;l to our problem and
how and why are ef!orta
president.
·
failed,''
said the Rev. Mr.
The 10 high schools in ihe
. .
Cleveland Catholic Diocese Sharick.
The coalition raised I!Dd
einploy a rota! of 315 lay
spent nearly $350,000 to
Arbaugh Housing, 5:30.j):30; advertise and promote the
The
group's
Chester · Methodist Church, project.
"
o
!Iicers
admit
it
executive
6:45·7:45; Baum Addition, 8·
)Vould
be
almost
impossible
8:30.
April 12 - Head Start, to sustain such a financial
Racine, 2-2:30; Portland • level without.&amp;specific issue.
At the same lime, however,
Post O[flce, 3·3:30; Racine "'
Home National Bank, 4-5; . the Rev. Charles Rawlings,
Racine· Wagner's Hardware, coalition treasurer, sald he
5-9; Syracuse • Swinuqjpg believed an annual budget of
$50,000 was realistic as long
Pool, 6:15-8: 15.
as a
purpoee '' was

to "secularize" the priesthood.

~1 :
C£state~

:

•
,e,

from page D-1 J
He received nightly
briefings from Denton, with
charts and graphs turning his
office into something like a
war room. This night be
heard encouraging news . The
bubble was shrinking.
·
Day St.-Monday April%
Progress, sweet progress.
George Troffer, a spokesman
for Met Ed, broke a day-old
&lt;rder from the White HoE
that ita voice Willi the only one
to be heard. He told a
reporter, in so rnany words,
the danger had passed, at
least so far as the bubble was
concerned.
Not much later, at a news
cooference in Middletown,
Denton confirmed engineers
had achieved a "dramatic
decrease" in the bubble's
size. They still didn't know
why. "I am certail!ll Is cause
for optimism,'' said Denton .
Core temperatures fell and
radiation was being confined.
A hydrogen recombiner,
encased In lead bricks to
guard against leakage, was
fired up to siphon off more of
the troublesome hydrogen.

•••••••••••••••••

.

,.

State Board of Nursing
examination . to become a
registered nurse.
Ms. Hudson ls a !U74
graduate . of Meigs high
Schocl

First there was
•••
And the regular system was

~

at y . . . . enttne

e

Buckeye ·briefs •/

..

•

•

More drilling expected
CLEVELAND ( AP) - Oil P\'Ospector Ronald W.
Manus sars Ohio has -the potential to produce 18
percent of the fuel used in the state.
The former Kent State·University educatnr said he
~lleves the deregulation of crude oil prices wllllea·d to
more gas and oll drilling ln Ohio. Manus said 2,600 oil .
and gas weDs were drUled in Ohio in 1978. He said 83
. percent of those were drilled in tile Clinton area in
northeast Ohio. The Cllnron area Is particularly rich in
on because sand beaches of more than 300 million
years ago lie urider most of the area, Manus said.

Weather
Cloudy tonight with a low in
the lower 30s. Partly Cloudy
Tuesday with a high in the
lower 50s. The chance of rain
is 20 percent tonight and
Tuesday .

berships."

In the interim, progress of
the studies undertaken and
discussion of the general
areas covered in order to
determine the amount of
'-t&gt;enefit available in the form
of reduced .operating costs
wlll'be made available to both
memberships.
" It is important to

D
rtsmout
: h
.ro

·teachers
may strike

r e member, 11

Swinehart

stated, "that the two boards
of directors and the
management staff of each
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) cooperative, cannot complete
- Portsmouth teachers a merger. The final decision
scheduled a · late alternoon will be made by both memmeeting today to consider bershlpe, after the completed
calling a strike.
analysts
is
formally
J.lo!l9ie_V)l:ginla...m;!!.§ldent presented..to them. They will
01 ilie Portsmouth Education then vote for or against the
Association , ·said merger, based on the facts
representatives ·from the determined by the study. "
association and school
administration pave been
meeting for some time to
SQUAD CALLED
work aut a new contract.
The Pomeroy Emergency
But association members,
Squad was called to 130 State
,who are · seeking salary St., at 8:29p.m. Saturday for
increases, say they aren't
Kenneth White who was
satisfied with the talks taken to Veterans Memorial
progress.
Hospit~l where he was
Portsmouth voters have not admitted. Earlier Saturday,
approved additional taxes for the squad went ro Powell's
schocl. support since 1967, Parking lot for Charles Burt
narrowly defeating the latest of near Middleport. He was
levy last February.
taken to Holzer Medical
School officials say they'll Center.
try again for a 6.4 mUI levy In
,June.

ACTIONS FILED
. In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Mary Roberts, ;
Middleport, filed .suit In the
amount of $780 against
Earnest I..ee Welch, execuror
of the estate of Fletcher R.
Weleh , deceased, Romulus,
Mich.
The suit is lor services
rendered to the deceased
prior to his death.
Julie Richmond, Pomeroy
filed suit for divorce against
Larry Richmond, Columbus.
Granted divorces were
Deva Ann Cornwell from
Paul E. Cornwell; Mary E.
WAtson from Nelson Watson.

SQU.,_D RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
three calls on tbe weekend
. At5:5!p.m .Saturday,the
squad wel)t to 6591&gt; BrowneD
Ave., for one year old
Christopher Chapman who
was ill. He W.s laken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 1:46 a.m. Sunday, tbe
unit went to Route 1·,
Cheshire, for Doris Fife who
had fallen. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
·where she was admitted.
At II :36 a.m. Sunday the
squad went to Middleport Hlll
for John Wllt who ·was taken
to the Holzer Medical Center.

Jeputies .p robe
•
mznor reports
'

The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department checked two
wi'eeks over the weekend
Involving
deer .
Both
acci!(ents occurred on
Saturday. There were no
personal injuries,
A deer was kiUed when
struck at 7:20 p.m. when It
ran into the path of truck
driven by Randall M. Boston,
19, Rt. I, Reedsville. Tbe
incident occurred on SR 681. ·
There was· slight property
damage.
At 8 p.m. on U. S. 33 a deer
was struck when it ran inro
the path of an auto driven by
Stefanic Arnott, · Syracuse.
The deer could not be found
following the incident. Ther.e.
'was moderate property
damage. ·
Deputies are lnvesli~a tiug

the theft of a battery from a
vehicle owned by Karen
Markin&amp;, Rt . 4; Pomeroy.
Markins'car had run out of
gas and she had parked It on
the side of the highway, near
her residence. When she
returned Sunday she found
that the battery had been
taken.The incident is under
investlgution.
Sheriff Proffitt reported tbe
arrest of Gregg R.Boesch, 19,
Hudson, . Ohio. Boesch was
cited to Meigs County Court
on charges of reckless
operation of a IJ)otor vehicle
on property other than streets
and highways following an
incident In Bedford Township .
Saturctay .afternoon when he .
lost control of his lour wheel
drive and went Into a creek.

GROUP AVAILABLE - The M-G-M Chapter of Thal-coozya, Lodge 457, Order of the
Arrow, is pictured in action doing one of the Indian dances performed by the group which ls
available to appear at any scouting function. The group is under the direction of Frank
Casto.

Columbia Gas of Ohio to get
additional supply from ·Canada

Substantial supplies of
Canadian natural gas being
developed by another unit of
the Columbia Gas System
will increase Columbia Gas of
Ohio's ability to serve new
·customers, Columbia's
GaUia-Meigs area man~ger,
J , M. Koebel said today .
Koebel referred to an
application filed Friday by
Columbia Gas Development
of Canada Ud. to seek per·
mission from tire National
Energy Board of Canada to
export :!Jl4 billion cubic feet of
gas over a 15-year period to
the United States. ·
The Canadian gas would
increase flowing gas supply
to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., an Interstate
pipeline company which is
tlie primary-pipeline supplier
for Columbia of Ohio and 74
other afflllated and non·
affiliated gas dlstrjbution
companies. All the Columbia
companies are units of the
Columbia Gas System.
"As we look to adding new
customers this summer, the
availablllty of this gas

portant :" Koebel said. " It is
further evidence of a five·
year, $1 billion investment of
the Columbia Gas ·system
which has led us to the point
where we can again offer our
clean, efflcient fuel to homes,"
offices, and factories."
Columbia o( Ohlo has ·application to resume gas sales
pending before the Public
Utilities Commission.
The Canadian . gas wlll
come from the Kotaneelee
gas field in .the Yukon
'T~rritai'y :"~ 'l'he Kotaneelee
field is operated by Columbia
Gas Development for itself
and six co-owners, Including
Dome Petroleum Limited,
Amoco Canada Petroleum
Go. Ud., Esso Res~urces
Canada Ud., Abninex Ltd.,
Canada SoUthern Petroleum
Ltd. and Magellan Petroleum
Corp.
Columbia Gas Trans·
mission, which wlU need a
permit from the Economic
Regulatory Administration pf
the U. S. Department of
Energy to import the gas,
would buy the new supply
becomes even more im- from Columbia Development

of Canada at Huntington, B.
C., on the U.S .-Canadian
border.
The gas would be . ex·
changed with other trans-'
.mission companies for an
equivalent volume to ~e
delivered to a Columbia
.pipeline in the Southweb1.
Und er present plans,
deliveries
from
the
Kotaneelee fleld would bogln
in 1980. It is expected that
further reserves wlll become
available far export as the
Kotaneelee field Is completed. Government permits
to export additional volumes
will be sought at that time.
Production from the
Kotaneelee f•ield began
earlier this year. Gas from
the field currently is being
sold on a short-term basis to
Westcoast Transmission Co.
Ud .
Koebel
noted
the
Kotaneelee field is among
many Columbia supply
development programs, the
effects of which are just now
sta rtlng to be seen.
"B ut we're not stopping
th er e,"

he

.said .

" The

Two persons injured in
four weekend wrecks
Two pt!rson:-; were injured
during " four weekend ar·
cidents Investigated by the
C:allia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Officers were ralll•l to the
S&lt;'ene ttf ll one-veh!f'!P. BC'·
cident Friday on SR 5118, one·
tenth of a nnile west of
milepost~.aiiOp .m . '

The patrol reports a we'1
bound auto-operated by r.ene
F. . ·Hall, 29, Thurman, In·
Curred severe damaJ.!e wht:&gt;n

It passed off the left side of
the roadway and struck a f&lt;'n·
r.e.
Hall displayed visible signs
of Injury; and was transported by a passing motorist
to Hnlur Mrdical Cr:ntt'r.
Offirers invr~tlgaled an
autn-funtorcyele at·cld ent
Sunday in Meil(s County on
CR ~ . thrt•e •nd flve4 enths of
a milt• wesl ~~ SR 7, at 1:35
p.m.
At•t•nrding to the (&gt;&lt;ltrol ,- an
'past bnund auto driven by
Paul Kellt~r, 67, ,;.tiddlepnrt,
Hnd a weh1.bound molur l'Yt'le

opt•rated by Ronald Harrison,
20, Middlport , mllltletl at •
narrow sedlon of the r011tl ·
way at a railroad uncl.orpas.•.
Hnrrlson tllsplayrd visible
!-lig-ns nf injury 1 but was nnt

immedialt'ly treated.
There

dftmage

wa s

mntlt•rHit•

tn the Harrir-mn

t•yclr, slight da1Tlllge to the
Kt•ller auto.
Ail antn npt"ratt&gt;d by r&gt;ana
W. Ortni1•l ~, 19. GullipHii!-~ 1 incnrn•(l sevt•rt•rll-lmagt•lhu-ing
t-t S;~t urday H('f'icl1•nt nn . SR
Jf10, ,1-:t'VIm-f tinfh~ II( H

A mling nf ~uid dlo has been
established by r.allia Ct~1nty
Coroner 11nnalcl R. Warehime
in the Sunllcty morning dE"ctth
of Larry F.. Wilt, !16, Rt•lncy.
Callrd to the ~&lt;eene at I :45
a.m., the . r.alli11 CAmnty
Sheriff's fl&lt;,parlmt•nt rep&lt;Jrt.'
!hat Wilt ap(&gt;&lt;lrently lnck••d
himself in " rMin n....
bedroom, rested th" hut! of
.24~ callibre rtne on th•• n.m,
anti shnl hlrn•elf ln thP right
upper chl'lll.
Sheriff .Tames M. Mnn·
lgomery . Spe•·i~t) In ·
Vt•~tigl-tfnr

r.ur] J..ttngfnrd,
PrnSei'UiinJ.! Attclm£'Y .Jn.c.:eph
L . C:ain, an•l r.nrorlt&gt;r

Warehime investlK"ted the
•i&lt;"t•lh at the ,1\('l:'fW .
Th1•

~on

of KPmlf'lll a nd

nnris r.ramle1 ·Will , I « rry
Wilt , who

WH~ pmplnyPtl
LatJ&lt;Iin ~!
a~

by
a
~Hk:" rmm . was ·hom Aug . 7,
1941.. j: 1l "tm·l. O.

ment :
" These new sources won't
be cheap," he noted. ~&lt; As we
. i:ontlnueto go to more remote
locations and drill deeper into
the earl~ 'to flnd· gas, the cost
is naturally going to rise.
"The costs of Jll forms of
energy are increasing,
however, and we feel confldent natural.gas will remain
one of the best energy
bargains available, com·
pared to the price of other
fuel s. for years to come,'' he ;
said.

Six die
on Ohio
highways
By The Associated Press
Six people died ln traffic
accidents on ,Ohio roads
Sunday, according to the
Highway Patrol, bringing
·the weekend traffic death
roll in the state to 11.
The patrol counts traffic
deaths each Wt!!'kend from 6
p.m. Frldsy to midnighi
5unday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
CINCINNATI - Mary
Eberson, 44, of Cincinnati, in
a

one -car

crash

on

Interstate
75
near
Cincinnati.
AKRON - Charles Wertz
Jr., 39, of Massillon, in a
two-car aeeldenl on an
Akron street.
COSHOCTON - DOrothy
Adams, 36, of Lafayette, in a
one-car crash on Ohio . 16
east of Coshocton.
EATON - Mary A. Decker,
36, and Janet S. Larson, 19,
both of Eaton, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 127 in
Preble County.
AKRON - Dan Cull, 39, of
Aurora , in a one-car
He mHni etl Rnhy r.annen, accident on Ohio 82 In
r.all[p&lt;iliS, on Tlet•. 24, )962. SWnmit County.
SATURDAY
.
Mrs. Wilt nnd twn Mmc,
Rryan . 1~ . anrl Rrt•U , 10, sur- PAINESVILLE - Paul F.
vive .
Wilcox, 22, of Painesville,
Wilt is als" survived by when his motorcycle
three sl/olters, Mr~t JHme[{ · crashed on a Painesville
([)nttil'l Pierce, Rutland ; street.
•
Mrs . F:mt•st IKathyl Rurk• .
UPPER SANDUSKY Navada, 0 .: and, Mrs. Dlln • Terry L. )llorris, 18, of
I Lind a l Hubbard, Syrac~C•e,
Marion , in a oneaear
and twn brothers. Rkk 1 Nnrth accident on a Wyandot
J.awr~n&lt;'t.' , 0 ., ancl Kenny,
County road.
Mincr~villt• .
FRIDAY NIGHT
· Funeral Sl•rvices will be TOLEDO - Gene Cril!t, 6t,
t•nnduded I p.m. Wednesday of Toledo, a pedestrian
at tht&gt; Mcroy·Welherholt- struck by a car on a Toledo
M('&lt;'rc Fu nera J Hom e, city street.
r.allipt•lis, with lht• Rev. 'ASHTABULA - Daniel R.
.Jnst•ph (;()(twin nftlcialinJ,! . Yonkers, 27, of Ashtabula, ui
Ruri:-tl will follow .in t1ravel a one-car accident on U.S. 20
Hill C:emelt•ry .
irt Ashtabula County.
Friends may t•a ll al tht•, ST. c·LAIRSVILLE rum'ruJ hnme, on Ttit~HtiRYI .Terry L. Secrest, 22, of
, (rnrn ~ tn 5 p.m. Hnd 7 to 9 Bethesda, · In a three-car
p.m.
accident on Ohlo 149 · inBelmont County .

SUicide ruled
in man's death

nlfh• 7inn' l-i

MIIJ'Ih of Uw C1ullipnli .~ r.~r­
Llm il ~. l' •f IO :f-.Op ,m .

rnnl li(lJl

The patrnl reports lmnicls' ninc-h~nths nf a milt' north nt
north bound cwtn swerved ln SR li54.
ayold an unidenlified on·
The patrol rerort.s that a
t'flming vehide traveling h•ft north hound rltl to operalt.'&lt;l by
of Pt&gt;nter.
.ft•ffrey I,, M~~ore , 17,
Thr J)anirls' aut.n r~-tsse(l rh..shi re. slid into the path of
off the righl side of I he r nad· u ,~.;oulh bnund tnwk driven bv
way Into H tlikh and nipped Danny J.. .Jrrikinli, 30, Miri.
over, &lt;'oming tu rest .. ril-!hf dlepnrt.
sicfe up.
Roth Vt•hkh•::; in('llfrNf
Officer.~ inVestigah~d a twti- mrlflerul.t• dafnagl'. Moo~
vehidc &lt;·~•llision Saturdriy HI wa!-1 dted on· l:l chnfl{e of ex·
5:40p.m. nn Paulins Hill Rd., Cl'lisivt• speed for t•onditi•m~ .

•
'
Columbia System has
pledged another $3 billion
over the next 10 years to
continu e supply develop·

�2- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., M011day, 4pril 9, ;19~
79:.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _-;;-- - - - - - . , . -- -- - - . ,
'\

IN

•,,.

.w0 rld. (May be omen'--Floyd SPORTS
-Sports
Today~

~

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

\ : Donald.F. Graff

t'X

Lesson: Be Prepared
By Martha A1111le and Robert

HARRISBURG , Pa . (t-iEA ) -In the tense days loUowing .
the nation's worst accident involving a commercial
nuclear reactor, none of· the institutions responsible for
providing guidance to a · worried citizenry covered themselves with glory.
.
Both federal lind state officials, the news media and the
utility corporation that operates , the trouble-plagued
generating station on Three Mile Island aU failed· to
jlroperly serve the public during that unprecedented crisis.
By far the mils! Irresponsible was the General PubUc
Utlllties Corp., whOSe su!Jsidiary power companies own the
sprawling plant on the Susquehanna River 10 miles
southeast of thiS state capital.
In the early days of the crisis, the company regularly
issued deceptive, misleading and inaccurate statements,
apparently designed to minimiu both the excessive
damage done earlier and the potential for far more
profound disaster in the future.
As a result, the utility finn was publicly rebuked and
repeatedly contradicted by senior officials of the Nucle81'
Regulatory Commission (NRC) dispatched from Washington to bring the runaway plant under control.
,
According to state officials here, direct pressure from
the White House was necessary to Ioree the company to
cease proclaiming unwarranted 0111imlsm.
·
. .
The NRC hardly distinguished -itself, providing oftenWant to fight inflation' way conswners spend their
conflicting infonnation from at least lour scattered
·
locations - two different sites in Washington, the . Yourbestweaponisyourown money will have a lot to do
with what happens to prices• .
generating station here and a regional office In King of buying power.
'.'1 believe the American
Prussia, Pa., a Phlladelpia suburb.
·
Government and Industry
Spokesmen for the federal regulatory agency variously spokesmen agree that the people will have to change
a. ) offered technical data without providing any context
some of their 'pattei'I)S or
enabling laymen to understand it, b. ) claimed they lacked
basic Information, and c.) were unavailable when critical
explanations wer,e most needed.
Stale officials, tricliiding Pennsy)vanla Gov. Richard
Thornburgh, clearly lacked the expertise necessary to deal
with the exceptionally complex problems encountered
within the troubled nuclear facility .
At one point, Thornburgh told residents living within a
lG-mlle radius of the generating station that they could
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) could be chosen on the basis
minimize the effect of radiation exposure by remaining The vice-&lt;:hairman of the of ability, integrity and
inside their homes 'or offices with all windows and doors Ohio State Bar Association's . e~perience rather than name
cl-.1. But he withdrew 'that advice only one day later, Modern Courts Colrunittee recognition and partisan
without offering any further explanation.
·
• ]' · 1
'de t•
th
The governor never acknowledged ·that his Initial says merit selection of judges po 1tica COIJSI ra 1pns, e
suggestion had been worthless because the xenon a_nd would prevent unqualified group says.
krypton nucleides released into the atmosphere emit beta persons from sitting on
The governor would have to
and gamma rays, both of which can readUy penetrate benches in the state's ~teet ·from three or more
virtuaJ!y aU conventional construction materials.
courtrooms.
persons nominated by
Finally, too many of the hWidreds of journallats wbo
"The best judges we have judicial nominating
descended on central Pennsylvania lacked even the in , Ohio
could
be commlssions, which would be
minimal technical background necessary to understand characterized as good, and 'composed of members of both ·
th~A fast-paced
events.displayed little Interest in learrung,
.
th e. worat as bad •" Willi'am political parties an.d of both
noisy minority
preferring Instead to constantly reach for "worat case" W. Milligan told a House attorneys and non-attorneys.
scare stories about core meltdowns, atmospheric expl&lt;&gt;- panel last week. " Under
The appointed judge would
sions and assorted,pther calamities.
merit selection, the best go hefllre the public in the
One nonnaUy reliable press association transmUted an would still be on the bench next general election to see if
erroneous story proclaiming that' "the gas bubble Inside and the worst judges would he or sit~ should remain in
the crippled nuclear reactor ... is showing signs of be gone."
office. If enough favorable
becoming potentlaUy expl011ive." The fact is -that the
c
b
·
t
cast the jfdge
bubble was being bled to prevent a volaWe buDd-up.
" M1111 gan • a · o1urn us vo es are
•.
· ,
Two television networks interrupted their .programs to lawyer and a former . u.s. serves the renlainder 0 ' .the
tranamlt that terrifying but Inaccurate lnfonnation, District Attorney for the term.
producing several hours of barely controUed panic in this . Southern District of Ohio,
Then tiYat judge, and any
city and Ita suburbs.
.
.
said the J;lar association and -appellate court judge,
None of the lndlvtduala involved in the cases cl1AJcrhere oth'l'_¥oupa are mounting an ' ·•
.,;·
'' ·
can be accused of malice. Almost au were weU-IntenUon_e d · initia9.ve petition ~paign
•

By Doo Graff
The latest foreign trade figures hold good news, sort of,
for a change.
·
,
The Commerce Department reports we went into the red ,
by only $1.3. billion during February, the lqwest. deficit
since May of 1977.
.
Surprisingly much of the Improvement can be credited
· to the biggest problem area - oil. A drop in lmpofl4, with
the cutoff of Iranian production a major contributor,
accounted for much of the savings.
· Considering the OPEC's price-hiking passion, however,
there's not much chance we'D be making this a habit.

'

These inflationary times are bringing back a bit of the
Old West which today's Western ,cattlemen could do
without - rustling.
PremiWII market prices for beef are believed to be
behind a sharp increase In missing cattle - lost, strayed
but more and more likely stolen. Texas officials report a 75
percent jump in cattle theft over a - year .ago. Slp&gt;llar
reports come from other major producing states.
Professionals, moving animals to distant markets, are
deeply Involved but much of the rustling Ia belie'&lt;(ed the
work of amateurs, even teen-agerS. Calves, the· easiest
prey, In some cases are reported to be butchered on the
spot and sold to unsuspecting local customer~~.
It's not petty theft, adding up to thousands of head in the
major cattle states and potentiaUy millions of dollar11.
When conswners complain that the high price of ground
rourid these days is a crime, they don't know how .r ight they
are.

'Ohio perspective'

~~e
who worked tert:!!JIY long hours lll!der t!m-"ori\1na~'U!':'is any lesson to ~learned from the,eVenis at

to

plac~

a

·atn~ndpr~t

~onsutuuonat ~,J.C..·u.s
; '··.·~.;p~,,a
n
, . ·e.·.·'s'·s
· · . m··.

to change the
'l'bree Mile Island it ia iluit the nation must be far better current method of selecting
prepared for nucl~ar " incidents" in the future. ·
·
' SUpreme Couli justices and
-appeUate court judges on the
November ballot.
But Milligan , who testflied
,.
at
~ House . Judiciary
' j
Coinnlittee hearing ~ , tw,o
resolutions that call for
same
virtually
the
ame11&lt;1ment to be placed en
the ballot in 1980, said his
gro\lp - Ohioans for the
Merit Selection of Judges ·has no pride of authorship on
the amendment.
"If the' Legislature is
willing to put merit selection
on the ballot, we would be
delighted," he said.
The merit selection group,
NEW YORK rAP) - Actress Viveca I jndfors says she has
formed earlier this month, is
put a message on her telephone answering l'fli!Chine just for
composed of representatives
burglars, telling them "no use comlng here, it's all gone."
of the bar association, the
Thieves broke into her F.ast Side townhouse Saturday nig~t
Ohio PI'A, the League of
and stole silverware, ornaments and a rarely awarded
Women ·voters of Ohio, the
Swedish royal medal, Miss I jndfors told pol ire.
Citizens League of Greater
· The Swedish-born actress said Sundlly that the stolen
Cleveland and the Ohio
medal was the Wasa Order, a 2-inch gold and enamel
Courts Institute.
awarded her four years ago. The medal is supposed to be
The group says the merit
returned on the death of the recipient.
plan is a nonpartisan appoinThe order is bestowed infrequently outside of Sw~den , !!"irl
tiv...,lectlve system designed
Miss Undfors, who began acting in films here in 1947 and
to eliminate the "name•
became a U.S. citizen in 1950.
game" in judicial elections.
Miss Lindfors discovered the robbery
returning from a
With the system, judges
performance of her one-woman show, "! Am A Woman," with
which she has loured off and on since 19T.l.

Names •••

in ·the news

'"os.'

J

nn

+++

SOUTIJ KINGSTOWN, R.I. (AP)·- Adress Mercedes Mt··
cambridge says the underlying cause of alt"holism is univer- .
sal rage.
·
Miss McCambridge, a ret•overed alcoholic, said ra!(!' is n&lt;t
always hidden deep inside a person; sometimes lt!s close to the
surface.
.
.
"That's how I was able to play the voice of the demon In 'The
Exorcist.' I just let aU of my rage t-ome out," she '"'id during a
series of lectures at the University of Rhode Island.
"All you need is a half-hour with any alcoholk and you can
find out the exact moment that his ra~e began," she said.
"It's the essential loneliness in all of us that accounts fur the
rage and frustration" of ourtimPs," sht said.

Berry's World

+++

NEW YORK ( AP) - Many people seek ouUilm stars so they
can get something from them, stx~h as an autograph . But a
New York medical student wants to find actress Ali MacGraw
to give somethihl( back.
.·
Gary .Nikolls, a :l!i·year:Oid senior at I Altheran Medi\'al r.enter, found a passport in the name of Alice Ma&lt;&lt;lraw i~ a
taxicab.
,
. •
"The passport must have been on the seat hrcause when J
got out, the passport fell to the ground," the '11Uienl ""id.
He turned the paSlopll1 over to the T&gt;ally News on Saturday
and asked for help in reunitin!( the al'lres.• with her missing
orooerty,
CAMP David, Md. (AP)-President carter IIBYB he thliJkB he
is too old to enter a marathon race, even though he jogged 3mlles from his mountaintop retl'elit to a state park and I hen
scaled rocks to the top of waterfalls .
Wearing a dllrk blue jogging suit, the president and his l.J·
year-old daughter, Amy, walkt'll up the large nx•ks Sunday
toward the tip of the falls as Rosalynn r.art~r. her hair pinred
up, sat on a rock atthe base. ·
.
. . .
carter skipped acm~.• a shalhiw creek on roek.' and bri&lt;ifly
greeted a small crowd that had gatl)ered lo watch him .
.
After the brief otiling at runningham. Falls State Park , h&lt;·
and his family ended their thrl'l'~iay holiday hen• and n•turned
to Washington.

•

.
,

~i

,,

·• NEW YORK ( AP) -,Jiy his
decision tq end price controls
:oo lJ,S.-produced oil, and •his
slmult.nllllll!l pr9j)Osal to tax
··a.way any so-&lt;:aDed windfall
profits. to oil companies, ·the
,president has &lt;eopened the
b!g debatll,·
. '
, .. It will involve the liberals,
the conservatives, the
neutrals, the producers, the
· CWJSWIIers, the retailers, the
informed, ,the confused, the
o~lraged , .the proponents,
opponents . It will be a freefP.f,-all.
'
, The surface issue is energy,
but it Ooats On deep waters
and strong currents. Less
conspicuous, but probably
more · important, is the
ongoing battle over how the
economic system should be
harnessed to serve.
On the far right are those
who defer decisions to the
market pricing system, It Is,
they feel, the supreme
monitor of supply-demand,
the' beneficent servant of
social good, an unseen hand
that mlght be God's.

, As if it's not intimidation &lt;'OoughjtL,11osend ~~1ys like! arry
. Hisle, Gorman Thomas, Hen ()Kiivie a nd Sal llltndo lnlhe
plate, the Milwauki'C Rrewel'!&lt; haV&lt;· to flaunt thl'ir mtL&lt;d t• hy
planting big Frank Howan l on the line as fir!&lt;! base ('()ach.
They !'Ould brol17.1' him and make him the symbol of the team
.. many predid eapable of uJL&lt;eatin~ the New YtJrk Yankl't's as
·. · Amr rican l .ea~ne ._ if nM world - •·harnpi&lt;lns .
Power, raw, balanced power - that's the tag for !&gt;fa na~(·r
George Bamb&lt;org~r 's bam-l»tm IX~ys, th&lt;• home nm -hitting&lt;~t
. , team in. the majors last season . Should they lose sight of thm
mission, they always t•an ~lao•·• over at f1rst and look at
.
.
frightening FrankforinspirHtion ,
He has shouldern as wide as a barn ll&lt;xlf, arms hkr w"gnn
.
ton~ues and hands hi!: as ham-h~&lt;·ks - 6-f•N&gt;I-7 and ?.95 JXmnd.&lt;
.
despite a strict &lt;'rash diet.
.
"I got up to over :100 pounds ," th&lt;·-j~argantuan &lt;"OIII'h •·nnCINCINNATI (AP) went four-lor -five In the
. fe~ . "Thirty or so JX•und.• over. I Wil'!i nwfully nnWillie McCovey is deCldediy Giant's 7~ loss Sundsy. "I'm
eomfortable. Not onlv that, I was br~inning to get womed
not happy about riding tbe watching the baD a lot'better
about the strain on this tieker here." Hethmnped his massive
bench alter 19yearsin the big this year and swinging at
h t
leagues. But the San anything even close. 'I love to
;.' c
more mature baseball fans will reinemher Howard as
Francisco Giants' record in hit. I could hit aU day - hit
their .opening series ·against until my ha~ bleed."
the man who, while with th!•l)Odgers and later the Washington
Sen~tors, made a baseball"batl&lt;xJk like a I&lt;X~Ihpirk . .
the Cincinnati Reds pleases
But
McCovey
also
him.
answered ' his person!ll
Qpposing pitchers mlsl have quaked in their cleated M&lt;li'S
wh~n they saw him lumber up to the plate and take a menHl'ing
"I feel good abouUhe wins challenge, crashlng two
stance .
- three out of four isn't bad doubles in two appearances
· 'lAw I don 't know aoout that ," said Howard, an All-Rig Ten anytime," McCovey said as a pinch hitter.
ba~ketball player as well as baseball star at Ohio .State. "I wben asked about his role
"I hope he gets a hit like
:presented a pretty big strike zone. "
•·
.
.
with the club. '.'I'll talk.about that every time up," !iald
Howard now is helping Harvey Kuenn, the one-lime hattmg
the team II you want to talk !vie. "I mean that sincerely,
king of the netnJit Tigers, mold the Rrewern into one of the
about ~~leap\, byt Jltat's aU __from the bottom of my heart.
most effective offensive units in baseball - 173 home nms la!4
I'U talk about."
He most certainly Is a part of
About losing the first base this team.''
season, 762 runs batted in a nd 2,390 total hases, leading both
Jeaguesinallthreecategories:
.
. ·job to Mike !vie, McCovey
San Francisco Manager
By comparison, the t·hampwn Yankees hit 125 horne nms, said, " That's a dead issue. Joe Altobelli said !vie has the
had 6!13 RBI and2,168total bases .
That's not news."
potential to become a
"We don'tintentionally go for the fences," sai~ Howa rd, who
But tacitly, he admitted the superstar In th(\ McCovey
used to .go for the fences. "Harvey takes every man in- hurt.
mold. HealsohopesMcCovey
dividually and tries to fit him with his capabilitie.. He doesn_'t
"You know any (major can do what !vie did a year
want anyone to strain. He strives to have eaeh ~n play Wllhm league player) who doesn't ago,
be
consistently
himself. It's a hitting technique once practiced hy Ted
want to play every day? " he productive as a pinch hitter.
..
_.
"Last year, Mike set a club
Williams .
asked.
"The home runs justt•ome na turally." ·
Ivie had seven hits, record with folD' pinch hit
Rig Frank learned his lessons at the great Williams' kll&lt;'e including two home runs, in home runs," Altobelli noted.
not on his lap - in the 1960s. Once it was predided that he was 14 tbnes at bat in the four- " Willie could break that
the man mostlikely to break Rahe Ruth's hnme run re••nrd . He game . series agaist the record. I think he can hit
·
Giants.
eight."
seitled for382.
"We've got a half-dozen men capable of hittin~ 20 nr more
"I hope there's a whole lot
Altobelli said McCovey was
· home runs," Sllid Howard. " Give us some pikhing and we more (hits ) where those "understanding" about his
shouldbehardtobeat."
came from, " said !vie, who demotion, a theory disputed

;i'..;

medical care to credit II you
shop carefuUy.
. "People really can get good
value
If · they
shop
intelligently," said Midge
Shubow, an aide to Mrs.
Peterson. "Go back to basics
... Take advantage of unit
pricing . .. You have a What a waste
responsibility and tbe Store
has a responsibility and one
If high food costs are a crime, it's a case of at least part
doesn't work without the of the bad deed beginning at . home, according to
researchers at Michigan State University.
QUter."
By their calculation, Americans do themselves out of
Supreme Court justice or the
Mrs. Peterson added: "We
about
137 million tons of the nation's total food supply
justice
if
the know that supermarkets are
chief
every
year.
The food is lost or destroyed In various ways,
amendment is adopted, must· arranged for attractive
in most cases simply thrown away. It works out to a
file a "declaration of Impulse buying. It's a real but
budget-breaking $31 billion 'llt today's prices.
candidacy" and face a merit test for us to go through there
Cljp It the high prjce of wasting.
retention election whenever and have a list and hold it
another term Is desired.
tight ... Let's have educated The economics of drinking
Voters in such an electloo conswners and let's watch
would not vote lor or against the advertising ... The best
Stlli on high prices, there's some good and bad news
the judge or justice, but way_to get rid of a product about beverages.
•
.
CoHee rose in price -280 percent during the period 1967-78,
would be.asked simply yes or (that is a poor value) is to
according to the Consumer Price Index review of the
no : Should the judge be leave It on the shelf."
retained in office?
The Office of Conswner American Council of Ufe Insurance.
That's the bad news. And If It's enough to drive you to
Rep. Paul R. Leonard,. D- Affairs puts
out "A drink,
here's the good news. During the same period,
Dayton, and Rep. Alan E. Consumer's Shopping List of . whisky prices went up only 23 percent.
Norris , R-Westerville, Inflation Fighting Ideas,"
sponsors of the two available, at no charge, from Swiss switch .
resolutions; propose to have the Consumer Information
the commlssions .rate judges' Center, Dept. ·625G, Pueblo,
Switzerland is about to make history,
· .
performance as "well Colo., 81009. Here are some of . It is preparing to apply for membel'l!lhip in the United
qualified, " "qualified" pr the tips:
Natiol18.
t
.
• . • "·
·"" .~
.,4
This may mean one 'of two things: Either :the Alpine
"not quaU!ied." The rating
2Check the newspaper for
would appear on the baUot. sales before you shop. nation js departing from the policy of stlict neutrality,
Compare advertlslid prices which lor almost two centuries has barred It from joining
any intemational political association, or the United
with regular ones; not aU Nations has come ·to count for so little in International
advertised Items are actuaUy politi"1! thai membership doesn't matter.
·
on· ·sale. There are bsuaUy
··l lT•
fewer specials at the
beginning of the month ;
change your shopping
Far, far to the left are those patterns to take advantage of
•·
' .
who denounce such notions as lowtll' prices.
, .• · I
economlc theology, 'who feel
'- Use coupons wisely. You
government
has
an won'tsave money II you use a
affirmative responsibility to .coupon to buy something you
control the market, to wrestle would otherwise skip. Check
it, !&lt;&gt; make it serve the prices of house brands or "no
greatest good,
frills" items with thOOie of
Lawrence~- Lamb, M.D.
And in between? You soon national brands. Even with a
Will hear every coocelvable coupon, the national brand
argument,- ~cause everyone may be more ezpensive.
has notions on wbat the
-Find out If your home
general guidelines about lowCholesterol RasiNI
economlc system should be. needa insulatioo. You eotild
fat
, low-&lt;:holest~rol diets, I'm
Rv I.a'wl't'nre J,amb, M.D.
It has ,always been so; the save20to30percentonutUlty
sending
you The Health LetDBAR DR. J.AMR - l
American system has always bills. Remember: Insulation
would like to know just what ter number 1-3, Diet Preven·
been changing.
helps keep you cool in
is cholesterol? Is there any ling Atherosclerosis. Other
What President Carter has summer as well as warm in
way ,you ran rid your body of readers who want this Issue
done is to twang that winter. II you can't afford
it om•e you have it' Would ran send 50 cenl• with ·along,
quivering· nerve and set off insulation, consider caulking
you u,t in two ~rcntp.&lt; · t.he stamped, self-addressed
'the ca~ooy again.
and weatherstripping
f1xxts that arf highest in envelope for it. Send your reUnder his plan, price windows and doors.
quest to me in care of this
controls would be lifted in
-Obey the - ~ limit. ehnlesternl and the f~N&gt;ds newspaper, 11.0. Box ·1551,
lnwrst in eholeslero1 ?
stages between June 1 of this Most . automobiles get about
Radio City Station, New
DF.A R RF.ADF.R
Y.ar and September 30, 1981. 20 percent better mUeage on
Chnlosl•nll is a yellow waxy York, NY 10019.
Since supply-demand rather ihe highway at 55 mph than
Since cholesterol is an
substan&lt;'&lt;' formed ehieny by
than goverJIPlenl edict will they do at 70 mph. With .
vour liver. It's emplie&lt;l with animal · product, it follows
then determine prices, those gasoUne nearing $La gallon,
i he hilt• from your liver into that none d the vegetables,
prices should rise.
you'U save money by slowing
fruits IT -cereals contain
vour small intestine.
At one and the same time, down.
· Cholesterol is an animal anycholesterol at all. People
the president praises and
-Prepaid group medical
pr;Hiuct. That m&lt;•ans that you sometimes get confused
denounces this aU but certain' practics
and
Health
get &lt;'hoJ ..terol from animal about coconut oil because it
Ol!tcome. It will, be says, Maintenance OrgaJ!i;@tions
has a large amount ' of
food ~
H~ well HS frnm
provide the companies with (HMOs) may cut dOctors'
saturdted
fat in it. The
r holesternl formed by your
cash to develop more bills. You pay a monthly fee
liver. Bnth foinun·rs are mixed cO&lt;•onut oil doesn 't contain
resoiD'ces. But it will, he and get treabnent when you
cholesterol but the saturated
says, enrich them too.
need it. Ask questions. If your . loJ!elher in your small in- fill enhances ab!lorption of
testine and ab.&lt;nrbto•l'through
The dllemma demanded doctor recommends surgecy
the intestinal wall back into · cholesterol and stimulates
compromise, or 80 it appear~ and it's not essential, get a ·
the liver to produce excessive
your
t'irculfltion. .
from the secmd major part of · second opinion.
,
amounts of cholesterol:
You
ran
help
tower
blood
•
the pr!llldent's plan, Rather,
-Shop aroQIId lor credit.
rhnlesten,J by det•reasing the Otherwise, you can consume
than the companies ~ . AU lenders are 1111t alike: Be cholesterol in vnur food. and mo.'ll of the fruit , vegetable,
rich unfairly, he. said, llll• wary of overdraft accounts
by dc!•reasing ·your fa.t t"n- &lt;'&lt;'real group without any contax away most of tbe lhataUow you to write checks
snmpthm . Tht&gt; fat in your rem about cholesterol and
"windfall."
~
far more than your balance. fiNKi enhances IIJ&lt;o aooorption very little t"ncern about fat ·-,
The money Obtained by a 50 J:ach overdraft Is a loan and
· of l'hclleslero1 into your dr- content. Of course, you
percent lax m ''the huge and " you'D have to pay interest.
ndatiori . Then if there's a mustn 'I add fatty-&lt;:holesteroll.
undeserved wlndfaU profits"
way
to block tbto ab.&lt;orptlon of substances to those foods . , ~:
would be channeled into in an
The most corrunonly used
..
the
ch
0 lesterol , that will help.
Energy Security Fund, which
THE DAJI~V SF.NTINEL
fond that contains . lots of-'
And
finally
ifth&lt;•re's
a
W'
d
Y
to
would then be used to finance
fUSPSiu.:-1·
en('nuragt&gt; your liver ln fonn cholesterol is the egg · yolk.:
development
of
more
les.
• ••holesterol , I hut help.•, .. Each egg yolk contains abOut
resources.
Ther:r are some .suh'd.ancrs 225 ings of cholesterol. If
The
criticisms
are
Jlf:VOI'EI) TO 1111':
on
the market that will hi~d yilu're trying to limit your lni
predictable.
.
INTEREST OF
the
cholesterol. Thero is ,a take to 300 mgs a day or less·.
Industry's argument Is one
Mfi!IG8-MASON AREA
'nrw
ni1 sub.~.o1.itute that isn't and use many egg yolks, you.
RORF.RT
HOEFI.ICH
,
that it has used tbne after
City F...dltnr
a
bsorbed
that dill'S bind with will quickly have exceeded;
time : The American system
DAVID IIUSIURK
.1
rart
of
the
rholesteml and · yonrlillottedamount.' ''
A.dnrti•~Ma
...
Kn
'
1.8 that of free enterprise.
Pnhll !~herl Mily" ext'l'pt Silturday ·
· As a general rule, 11»
then
it's
eliminated
with
the
Through free enterprise we
hy nw ONo Valley ~U shinM . rest of (he umlige,1ed food
grams . (three-and-one-half·., ,.,
C"ntnfVIny-Maltlrnedla, Int•. ,
llJ obtain the best aUocation of
ounces) raw weight of the edi- :::~·
material.
This
subaiHIK'&lt;'
has
f'unrt St., Ponwn .y, Ohl(.l 457ft.
the nation's reso=es.
,
Rmdn1 ~~ Offil't' Pboru• 992- 2156.
not been cleared for public hie portion only of meat, fish ~:~
F.1lifnrial PtltMit' !t!r.!-2 1~7.
The counter contention is
70' ~
8('(•nncl
t• lull.~ f)O:d.a.Ct' paid at , use yet and i ~ in the i!x- , and. poultry contains
that the marketplace doesn't
P1nnt•rny , Ohln.
milligrams ri cholesterol. ·--.:
pe
rimental
stage.
Meanallocate weD, and that it ofteil
Nn!lnnnl · tulvfrtis ln)l rept't'!it'nwhile, a low-cholesterol diet That's really not very high . • ...j
lntlvt•, l.1uvlon ASHndall-s. 3101
causes great expenae to those
F:uf'll!l Avt•., Clt'Vt&gt;lantl, Ollio441li. , and adeqnnte aJ!IOUnl• of exwhen
con s umed
in
least able to pay. The
~nl ll'l t'r_,.lon ril le~ : Tlelivt'red by
reasonable
portions
l~rdse.
are
mea!t'ures
that
you
l•tirrirr whrn IMi i~ble flO t~1s pt'r
marketplace is mindless, it is
:
Butter fat contains quite a
wt't'k. Ry Molnr Rmlh' wht·n t'llrrier
ran do whieh help in many insaid. It must be lead. ·
~·rvh ·~&gt; nut liVIIilllhh•, On!' mf1nth,
bit of cholesterol. Skim milk
.;
1
ances.
Ynu
muh1
,
,be
abThere's . probably no
1 1:1. ~. Ry m11tl In Oh!o arwl W. Va .,
solul&lt;•ly certain to keep your and · uncreani~ •.cotta~(~!
Otw Y¥ar W.5Cl: Six rnon1hs,'
such
resolution
of
$1 U fl : Thrt•f' month!, .11.50:
hndy Wllight down to prevent · cheese relathlely lair iri
differences; at · least there
F.l ~P.wht•r!" moo Y''llr: Six lllllllthl! I
cholesterol and provide a
,
obesity
if at all possible.
J1 7.flfl : 1'hrf't" rnt1nth!1 , $9.00.
hasn't been in more than 200
· goud .sourt-e of calcium for
Sull!«•rll'll"n l'f11,' indilllt&gt;" St.mday
Now
aoout
your
different
years of discussion. ·
Tlrflr ~~~~ ·t il !ru•l.
"'
f'"xl lists. To give you s&lt;ime · your diet.
living,"
said
Esther
Peterson, special assistant to
the . president for C(j(ISWiler
affairs.
The spotlight now is on food
and luel, but you · can save
money on everything from

or'

··-·

HEALtH

'i';/

...'

•

by writers who travel with
the team.
"It wasn't an easy choice to
make," Altobelli said. " He
(McCovey) has had a long
career and still wants to play.
But he knows the secrets of
winning, and this is ·one of
them."
Two other
veterans,
George Foster and Joe
Morgan, powered the Reds to.
their first victory of the
season Sunday with help from
Dan Driessen.
Foster got his sevent h
career ~rand-61811l horne run,
Driessen hila solo homer and
Morgan , who had four base
hits, drove in the winning run.
"I don't remember aU my
grand slams, but! know I've
hitthreeagainsttht!Giants," ·
Foste~ said. "I was looking
for a pitch I could drive out of
the ballpark. I have the
power, but in a situation like
thst you don't want to
overswing ,
just
be
aggressive."
Morgan said after being
injured last season that he
was "pleased tD be able to do ·
aU the things Joe Morgan is
supposed to do - hit, steal,
iake an extra base.
"That's whjlt separates me
from a lot of other guys ," he
said.

Because of a sjrike by
. major league baseball
umjlires, amateur umpires
are being used in both the
National and American
leagues. ROger Grooms, a
school teacher, dramatist
and critic for· The Cincinnati
Enquirer, wrote this account
of his role in the opening
series betw.een the San
Francisco Giants and the
Cincinnati Reds.

profession.
hours with the volatile,
Since his retirement from outspoken supervisor, I can
active duty after the 1971 ssy the same thing.
seaaoo, he has beeen chief
Being associated, even
umpiring consultant to the briefly, with Barli~k is
Natlonlil League.
something even more special
During the current dispate to me. I was just 10 years old
between major league when my brother took me
ilmpires and management, down to old Crosley Field for
Barllck is one of several the July · 4, 1946, doobleretired arbiters who will go header with Pittsburgh.
from city to city acting as
adviser for .the men working
the games.
CINCINNATI -( AP) - It
Bruce Froenuning - in
was a great thrUl umpiring a peraooality, technique and
major . league ball game, , "no nonsense" approach
• being . part of the age-old closest to Barlick (among
major
league
panoply of a Cincinnati today's
opening day- something. to umpires)- once was quoted
·tell you grandchildren, as .saying he had learned
certainly
more umpiring in his rookie
.
.
t cha
did yearwlthBarllcklhanhehad
CANTON, Ohio (AP) , not
~eswaW:eooto in 10 years of previous ' Larry
Huggins
of
the field in cimpany with umpiring experience
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley
After spending jusi a few South and Larry James of
Paul Pryor (the only National
. ·
·
Youngstown Rayen were
·League umpire who had
sitting on the bench during
of the
signed a cootract) and my .......- - -.......--~- tit Cia A AA
two Queen City Umpires
LOVES THE TOUR
O~i 0 ssN Ut Sogamthe Ca
.
I atlon
.
WEWOKA, """'
"'-'·. (AP) ~. Classic Saturday
or - unight. ge
Assoc
par t ners,
squarely into a battery of 50 Gil Morgan, the golfing'.
"Hey, Larry. Why doo't we
or so photographers and TV doctor of optometry, see~ set up a dunk," James asked
cameramen.
great things filr the 1979 PGA, H gins
What knocked me back on Tour. GU h~ 11-big se111011 in
~K ~e'U do it " Huggins
my heels was being taken into 19;~.
replied. "Rob Koch will set a
We face chaU,es on the .. pick for you. You go in behind
the wnplres' dressing room,
cmtpletewilh security which tour evezy day, he said.. him. I'll get the baD theze ."
would have done credit to a "That's 011e of the main
pia
(James Bond) movie,. and reasons I enjoy It so much.
TheY· executed theirt baC::
suddenly recognizing a burly, It's a chaUenge year after shoJ;Iiy after being sen
· ' let do
the game.
bespectacled man with a year. You can never
wn. into
H"""'n• d 11 ed the ball
pepper-and-68lt crewcut.
· · "It doesn't matter what you
-~ e ver .
There sal AI Barlick. ·
did the previous year, you as promised pi~~::
To umpires - any umpires, have to go out and I perform perfectly - and James
in a IIJII!Ciacular reverse slam
amateur or professional - AI again. Thah, fin e with
. "!e. 1 dunk that brought oohs and
d
d of
Harllck is a legend. An love to play and I plan to keep
umpire's umpire, for 32 years right on playing a . Jot of aahs from a recor crow
027.wu the biggest response
Barlick was king of his to umament s every year·" 5'It
of th.e night for an Individual
perfonnance from the
speCtators, most of whom
were there to 8(le Class AAA
Player li" iiie Year Clark

Barlick, then 31 and
already ·a veteran, worked
the plate in the second game.
From then on, in ooe wa¥ or
another, I 'wanted IIi be an
umpire -not, I suppose, your
usual fourth grader's dream.
So, no matter what happens
during the remainder of this
series, I have been waUowing
in a whole lot of wish·
.fulfillment.

North All
Stars win

Bu.!::

Do it right
and save 75¢*

Kellogg of Cleveland St.
Joseph . But Kellogg had
another commitment and
didn't play in theAAA aU-alar
game.
James finished with 28
points in leading the A·AA
North squad to a 129-107
victory over the South.. That
gives the North a 3-1
advantage since the Classic
was separated into two
gamea lour years ago.
in the Class AAA c011test,
the South edged the North
IOZ-1011 in overtime with aD·
Ohioan John Pa:uon of
Kettering Alter providing the
heroics. 'The South and the
North each . have woo two
1111mes.
After the A·AA game,
Huggins, the Clasa A Player
d the Year, sounded like a
recruiter for Ohio· State,
where he has deCided to play
his college basketball ' and
where his brother Bob Is a
graduate aSilstant. Both are
sons of highly succeuful
Indian Valley South Coach
Charlie Huggins.

DAYTON, Ohio ( AP)
Antoine Carr, a 6-fool-9
leaper from Wichita, Kan.,
scored 24 points and was
named Most Valuable Play;er
as ·the AD-Aniericans dciwJied
the Midwest All-Stars 90-82 in
the · ninth annum Midwest
. Classic high school all-6tar
basketbaU game Sundsy.
Grant Robinson, a 6-2
guard from Newport News,
·va., also had 24, whUe 7-2
Randy Bre\Ver of Lake City,
Minn. , and 8-5 . Rick
Moorehead of Shelbyvute,
Ind., totaled 12 each for the
victors. .
•
The Midwest team was
paced by 6-11 Melvin Turpin
of Lexington, Ky., who had 21
polnta. Teammates Billy
Lewis of Cincinnati and
Rodney McCray of Mount
Vernon, N.Y., added 18and 17
respectively as a crowd of
3,200 looked on in Hara
Arena .
In a preibninary game, a
28-point, 20-reb,ourid
performance by Darrell
Jackson of DaytO!l Jefferson
High led the Dayton AU-Stars
to a 116-115 victory over the
Miami Valley AU-Stars.

.

The last · Holy Roman
Emperor, Francis of Austria,
died iii 1835.

•

shoot," he said.
And he did it.
Drawing on 17 years of pre
!toll tour exp~r1ence, he
1gnored the two-Iron shot the
par,H7th ceDed for and hit a
four-iron low, "right through
the wind," then birdied from
1JJ feet . And he birdied tbe
18th from 25 feet .
Then he had to wait for the
other chaUengers - Bobby
Wadkins, George B~~ and
Gary Player - to fmish.
" I knew that Ill could get in
the clubhouse, get · the
number posted, it would put
some pressure on them. It
canforceyoutohltsomebad
shots If a guy's sitting in there
'with a number on the board, "
he said.
From a share of the lead,
Burns bogeyed the lath in the
gusty winds that swept the
6,984-yard Forest Oaks
Country
Club
course .
Wadkins, hoping to join
brother Lanny on a trip to the
Masters, bogeyed two of the
last three holes . .
lBthAndneedPlaingyear bircam
,dieetotofor~.

a playoff. He hit his approach
to within sill feet of the flag,
but missed the putt and Floy&lt;!
was a. winner with his 282
total, sill under par .
,
Burns , with a 70, and
Player, with a 71, tied for
second at 283. Wadkins was
next at 74- 284.
Defending champioo Seve
Ballesteros of Spain never
was In contention and
finished 70- 290 . Lanny
Wadkins, the ooly twO'time
winner this year, was 77-296.
Floyd collected $45,000
from the total purse of
$250,000for his 11th American
tour ,victory, his first since
1977.

Trout stocked

'Le••

.,.

SAYRE

HARfMARE

NewHaven,VV. Va.

first title
By ALEXSACHARE
AP Sports Writer
The Kensas City Kings
ca pped thei( remarkable
comeback season Sunday by
winning their fil:st National
Bas ketball As sociation
division title in 27 years and
earning a week's vacation.
The Kings heat the. Indiana
Pacers 107-101 to win the
Midwest Division with a 48.34
record, finlshlng one gwne
ahead of Denver and 17
games better than their
record of a year ago, when
they tied Indiana for last
place in the division.
By winning, the Kings
earned a bye through tbe
best-of-three first round of
the playoffs, which begin
Tuesday night with Los
Angeles at Denver and
Portland at Phoenix.
The San Antonio Spurs also
gained a bye after beating the
Cleveland Cavaliers 117-101
Sunday Ill win . the Central
Division championship.
The Eastern Conference
first-rounders begin
Wednesday night, with New

Jersey at Philadelphia and
Atlanta a• Houston. Those
pairings were not set until the
final day of the season, when
the Philadelphia 76ers edged
the Denver Nuggets 112-111
and the Hou~ton &amp;ckets beat
the \VJiaRl!}gton Bullets 11:!100.

PREVENnON
IS THE
BEST POLICY.
As
an
Independ ent
In surance age ncy , our
prima r y fun ction i s to

pro v id e

In case of loss .
But. we also have a vital
Interest In loss preven tion,
as should our clients. We
encourage care, caution
and safety ... preventive
measures which tan keep

~me about..

Ufe Insurance
...__~-.'

--~,s

families

policies which

alford flnancl,ol protection

fhot car actldenf from
happening, that building
fire from starling, that
home burglary from being
com milled.
Prevention saves life .
limb and property ... and
helps control Insurance
costs and prem lum s.
When losses do occur,
our policyholders can count
on protecting and serving
In time and need. But we
still say - prevention Is fhe
best policy.

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992-2143
IOZW. Main

Pomeroy

..

DALE'S

KITCHEN CENTER, _INC.

2119 J1ckson An.

Point Plt111nt

675-2318

TR'AILER LOAD
SALE

50%

Custom full upper &amp; lower

OFF
LIST
FINISH

TIMLlL)~ OA~1...

COUNTfZY

(lA))(
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• Choice of p!lintable, white,
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'cartrldli• Now $5 .49
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Dow Corning Stlico'ne
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se41 ants an&lt;l silica~ r~bber balhtub c~ulk.

IKNH:f

I offer a total program to help
The Division of WUdllfe of
protect your femlly' s wey ol living
the Ohio Department of and build ftnandal securtty for yourl
Natural Resources has retlremenryea.r.s. Call me for details.
conducted the stocking of
rainbow trout in WUdllfe
District No. 4.
.
Fisheries personnel
149 S. -Third
'!locked trout in the · foUowMiddleport, 0.
lng public fishing areas
992-7155
throughout the district:
~tat e F8rm life and
·"·"
Barnesville City Reservoir
Accident Assurance
. (Belmont County), Belmont
Coropany
Lake (Barkcamp state Park,
Home 01hte
~klormogton. lllu'101S~~
Belmont County), Monroe
Lake (Monroe County), Wolf
Run Lake (Noble County),
New Lexington City Reservoir (Perry County),
Rose Lake (Hocking County),
and Dow L.a ke (Athens
County).
. AU trout stocked ranged 7
to I~ Inches in length and
were reared at the division's
Kincaid Fish Farm, which is
located in Pike County near
Latham. ''AD fish were in
excellent condition when
stocked," said George BIUy,
District No: . 4 Fish Mana"ement
Supervisor.
• l'hese stockings snouta
provide excellent llshlng this
Spring, as wen as increase
angler opportunity
throughout the summer."
Trout derbies will be
conducted at Jackson City ,
Reservoir on April 21 and. at
BUTTERNUT
Turkey Creek Lake near
Portsmouth on AprU 28 and
29.
Derbies are conducted in
cooperatiqn with the Jackson
Area Chamber of Commerce
and the Portimoutb Area
Chamber of Commerce
respectively. Trout will be
stocked in these lakes just
prior to de,rby activities.

with

'Offer applies to ca~rldges of silicone rubber

Then8 ilY Se·-~-~~

MIKE SWIGER

.

'j

'

rounds and when the beat
getsthere you canhandleit :''
He was in plenty of. heat m
the final round. W1th two
holes to play, he trailed two
golfers by two shots and
another by one .
''After the 16th, I looked at
the leader board . I was four
under (par). I told myself,_
'WeD, you've just got to birdie
II!• las~ two holes. 'It's that
s~ple_.
.
. . I figured s1x under par
was the number I had to

.Amateur umpire
gives
ac.
c
ount
.
Carr paces
Midwest win
of ·first job in big leagues

aboot

'•

winner .
"The re's ' certainly no
~eason I shoul,~n 't be a factor
m Au g ~~ta , . F loyd sa1d
Sunday. The year ! ·won (the
Masters) I did the same·
thing. I shot 66 in the last
round here in Greensboro.
Maybe it's an Ollfen.
"Just like then, I've been
playing better every week.
When you'~ striking the baD
weD, making some putts, you
get used to shooting good

Mc'C
l
d
. ovey p ease

Fortunes on the hoof

Buying power ·is best ·weapon·

GREENSBORO N C (AP)
_ Ray F loyd r_;.d · 8' little
something extra into his
dramatic victory in the
Greater Greensboro Open
Golf Tournament
" It may he ~n omen "
Floyd said after birdies ~n
the finaltwoholesgavehima
five-under-par
67
8
comeback fr!lll a sbt-shot
deficit and sent him to
Augusta , Ga. and the Masters
as pro golf's most recent
. ·
.

ByWWGrlmlley
AP Corrnpoadeat

Briefly noted . . .

Wallen~

('

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday . April9, 1979

RIV/ERR

Dr.Rhlere

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The

Depertment Store
Of Building
Si!ICI 1915

'

Here'l CQUNTRY CLASSIC, newest member of
Riviera'• family of fine cabinete. And what a beauty
ilia. The grace of arched cathedral doore, the eub·
tie glow of hand-rubbed hardwood and ttJe carefully coordinated hardware c o mbine to make
COUNTRY CLABSI.C live up to Its name. Countryetyltl go1141 elegant, h Is perfect wilh American
traditional furniture yet adaptable enough to be at
home with other etylee. Riviera craftsmen even deVeloped a ~lal etain to highlight the unueually
handsom• i;ltafri_
:clf the kllQtty aider hardW9Qd.

'

�5-The Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O:, Monday , April 9, 1979 •

4- T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-! omeroy, 0 ., Monday, April9, 1919

Pro Standings

Marauder gals impressive, .
sweep ,two games Saturday
.•..By Greg Bailey
from
visiting Trimble
The Meigs Girls fast pitch Saturday , 1A and 11-3.
softball team turned In im·
The Marauders of Coach
pressive performances as Rita Slavin pouqdcd out 21
they swept a doubleheader ·

Baseball poetry
UTTLE MAC'S lt791\'IENU

Corr&lt;ll yourself a Bench
before you get "Tom" atoes
at the salad Balr.
By George let's have
Cedar-Drlessen.
Neither woman Norman
Ken-Joe - wrong
with a Tom • Colllus.
After you Pedro Bill
get a life Seaver Kennedy.
You Moskaw to the Jolin
before you get your Cap (llla)

hits enroutc to their secOnd
and third victories againSt no
losses.
In game one, Meigs took a
2~ lead in the fits! Inning and
were never headed. April
King reached safely . on an
error, stole second, and came
home ori a single by · Sonia
Ash. Ash later stored 11n a
· ·
wild pitch.
Trimble got one run back In
the second, but Meigs plated
another in the third when
·
Tonia Ash singled and later
scored on Dodie Chapman's
single.

aa~lleave.

Open aU Knight
La Cosse Is low.
, With no Concepcion
: • come Auerback
next Summers.
Forget the Pastore this is 19'19.

,.

The locals won the game in
the bottom of the fourth with
two big rWlS on a walk, a
stolen base, a Trimble error,
· 1 b Ch
an d a bi g smg e Y apman .
Single rWlS In the fifth and
sixth gave winning pitcher
Terri Wilson some breathing

a

I

..
u

.
--

(

'

,.

necessary

San Diego a t San Fra ncisco
Baseball At A.Gia'nce
Cincinnaf l at Atlanta, (n)
By The Associated Press
Los Angeles at Houston, (n)
1918 Won-Lost Records
Chi cago at St . ·Louis, (n)
AMERICAN LEAGUE
. EAST
Only games scheduled
.W. L; Pet. GB
Baltimore
2 1 .66 7
Boston
2 1 .667
National
Milw.
2 1 .667
Basketba II 'Associatlon
· At A Glance Cleveland
1 2 .333 1
By The Associated Press
New YoFk
1 2 .333 1
0 1 000 1
Eas·t ern Conference ·
Detroit
Toronto
o 3 .'ooo 2
Atlantic Division
WEST
w I I pis gf gal
• -Wash .
~4 ~t! 6!JY
Kan. City
3 0 1.000
·Phila.
47 35 ,573 7
Minn.
3 0 1.000
New Jersey 37 .45
451 17
Te·xas
1 0 1.000
Cal if.
2 2 .500 111:. New York 31 51 · .378 23
Seattle
2 2 .soo 1•;, Boston·
29 .53 .354 25
Central Division
Ch 1cago
1 2 .333 2
x-San Ani .
48 34 .585
Oakland
0 3 ·.000 3
Saturday's Gaines
Houston
49 35 .583 1
Baltimore 6. Chlcag 0 3
46 36 .561 2
Atlanta
30 52 .366 18
Milwaukee 4, New York 3 , Cleveland
Detroit
30 52 .366 18
Cleveland 3. Boston 0
Ne.w Orleans 2~ 56 .317 22
Texas 8, Detroit 2
Minnesota 3, Oakland 1, 12
Western Conference
innlnqs
Midwest Division
x-Kan. City 48 34 .585
California 5, Seat11e 4
Denver
47 35 .573 1
Sunday's Games
38 4.4 •.463 10
Texas at Detroit. ppd., rain Indiana
Chicago 5, Baltimore 1
Mllw.
38 .44 .463 10
New York 2. Milwaukee 1 C hi ~ago
Jl 51 .378 11
Pacific Division
·Boston 7, Cleveland 6, 12
x-Seattle
52 30 .634
innings
Kansas City 8. Toronto 3
Phoeni x
50 32 .610 2
Minnesota .3, Ookland 1
Los Ang .
47 35 .573 l
California 7, Seattle 5
Portland
A.li 17 "i,Ao '
San Diego . 43 39 .5?4· 9
Monday's Games
Detroit (WIIcos tJ-12) af Golden St.
JS 44 .463 14
x - clinched division
Kansas City (Gale 14-BI. (n)
Oakland Johnson 11-10) at
Saturday's Games
Seattle (Bannister 3-9), (n)
Allanta 103, Washington 102
New Jersey -126, Boston 112
Only games sche~uled .
·
Tuesday's Games
Houston 123, San Antonio
Toronto at Chicago
106
Boston at Milwaukee
San Diego 120, Phoenix 116
New York at Baltimore, (n)
Los Angeles 99, Portland 98
Sunday's Games
Cleveland Texas, (n)
Detroit at Kansas Clly, (n)
Boston 127, New Jersey 101
Minnesota at California
Chicago 117, Detroit 107
(n)
'
Kansas City 107, Indiana
101
Oakland at Seattle, In&gt;
Philadelphia 112, Denver
NATIONAL LEAGUE
111
EAST
San Antonio 117, Cleveland
W. L. Pel. GB
101
.
I
· Golden State 89, Seattle 86
New York
2 0 1.000
Los Angeles 111, Phoenix
St. Louis
2 o 1.000
103
I
~r;rea 1
~ ~
:;:
1
Houston 112. Washington
Chicago
0 2 .000 2
102
Phlla.
o 2 .000 2
End Regular Season
Houston WE3ST~ l.OOO
Los Ang .
3 .f1 .7SIJ •;,
NBA Playoffs
San Fran.
3 1 :7SIJ '12
AI A Glance

:m

~!~cOiego

J ~ :~~ ~~:

at

Por tl and

•

rooTmo.n·,·a Ash a· nd Wilson led
the Meigs hitters In that first
game with a slngl.e and
do uble ea ch · Ch apman had
two singles, and King, S. Ash,
Bartrum, and Cheri
uArtur0 11 Beth
P.S. No Rose on the table .
Ughtfoot each had a single.
By Louise Gilmore
Gamc two was halted after
Pomeroy
six Innings of play due to an
injury to a Trimble player,
but Meigs had the game Iced,
at that time.
Bartrwn picked up the win.
She
also led the hitters with a
By The Assoelatedl'ress
defensive
back
froDl
single
and trl.ple. Chapman
GOLF
Schofield, Wis., had been in a
again
had
a big game at the
GREENSBORO, N. C. coma and was listed in
Ray Floyd capped a crjtical condition last week. plate with 11 home run ·and
three RBI's.
comeback from a 6-shot
deficit with birdies on the lust
'!'he visitors started strong
STALWART SWEDES
two holes, finishing a S-underin this game, plating a run In
NEW YORK (AP) - An· the first and one In the second
par 67 that lifted him to a !shot victory In the Greater ders Hedberg and Ulf Nils- forsh.a d3-G lead before lnMeihgs
Greensboro Open Golf son, the "Swedes" ofthe New pu e a run across
t e
York Rangers, are th\l best· second.
Tournament.
The hosts erupted for three
He collected $45,000 wtth paid players In the National
his 282 total, 6 under par on Hockey League and, ac- runs In the third for the lead,
the 6,984-yanl Forest Oaks cording to Coach Fred Shero, and Meigs never trailed after
Country Club.
they earn every penny.
that. The winners wrapped
" You have to watch the the game up In the sixth wtth
Gary Player finished in a
tie for second at 283 with Swedes every day to ap- five big runs .
I n that third Inning, King
George Burns. Player had a preciate them," Shero said.
no-boegy final round of 71 and "They pli\Y hockey the way it singled. Following a steal,
Burns had a 70.
was ~eant to 1&gt;1! played. They both Ash girls drew a walk to
fill the bases. Chapman then
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. do It au.
"They aren't fighters - Sandra Post won a tense
hit a sacrifice fly to score Olle
!ournament·IQDg duel with they aren't reaDy ~ig enough run, and then WUson hit the ·
Nancy Lopez as she shot a 70 for that -:- but they'll go In the big blow of the Inning, a two.
and captured the $305,000 rorners to dig out the puck run double.
Dlitah Shore Winners Circle "''d they'll .mix it up In front
In the last Inning, T. Ash
for the second consecutive of the net. They have reached on a two-base error
and scored on Cha!iman's
year.
courage."
homer. A walk to Slack and
Post, who finished at 12·
under-par 276, birdied three
CONCENTRATION
BartrlUD set the stage for
DE KALB, Ill. (AP )
two-run double by Klm Seth.
of the final eight holes. Lopez,
who had entered the final Dave Petzke of Northern Seth then scored on a single
.
round tied wtth Post for the lllinois won the NCAA pass' by Pam Crook.• '
.
lead, shot a closing 71, and receiving champlon.Vlip in
Seth also had two hitsln.the
lost ·her chance fer a victory 1971 wtth 91 catches, 2t better game, a single and double,
whUeCrookshadtwo singles.
with a poor tee shot and than the runner-up.
Petzke is a slow runner but Wilson had her double, and
bogey on the par-3 17th hole.
Insists the aecret of catching King, S. Ash, T. Ash, and '
TENNIS
Betsy Herald each had . a
BUENOS AIRES, a pass Is concentration.
"Anybody can catch a single. Weather pennlttlng,
Argentina B Jimmy Connors
scored a 7-5, 6-3, '6-3 victory football " he said "if he Mei~s plays Gallipolis tonight
'
and' ' keeps at the M1IS field and then
over Guillermo Vilas qf concentrates
Argeniina-Jimmy Coonors telling himself that he has to ·~9es to Ironton on Wedcatch th~t ball. You,might as nesday .
challenge tennis match.
Line score :
ROTTERDAM,
Neth- well catch It because you are
010 020 1-4 6 3
erlands
Sweden's going to be hit anyway and it . T
201 211 x-7 10 4
Bjorn Borg defeated John doesn't hurt as much when M ·
Holbert (lp), Van Holson
McEnroe 6-4, 6-2 in the men's you grab the ball."
(4) and Johnson. Wilson and
final of a · $17~,000 World
Chapman.
Championship Tennis
T
.
120000-345
tournament.
'
NHL PlayoHs
M
013 llf&gt;-11 11 2
TOKYO - Betty Stove of
AI A Glance
Netheriands and Francoise
Holbert,
Van
Holson (2,
By The As$0Ciafed Press
LP) and Johnson. Bartrum
Durr of France won a $150,000
Preliminary Round
and Chapman.
women's doubles tennis
But af ThrH Sarin
Series
"A"
tournament, defeating Sue
Tu..Uy'sGome
MEIGS ROSTER
Barker of Britain and Ann
Vancouver at Philadelphia,
Sonia Ash, Jr. ; Tonia Ash,
Klyomura, 7-5, i-6.
(n)
Jr .; Beth Bartrum, Jr .;
BASEBALL
Thurldoy's Game
Dodle Chapman, Jr.; Pam
Philadelphia at Vancouver, Crooks, Fr.; Sara Diddle,
HOUSTON - Ken Forsch
Jr .: Tammy Fergeson , Fr. ;
of the Hollllon Astros pitched (n l Saturday's Game
Betsy Herald, Fr. ; April
the earliest no-hitter of any
Vancouver at Philadelphia, King, So.; Cherie Lightfoot,
major league _,.,n, beating (n), If necessary
Jr.; Mary Miller, So. ; Kellle
· the Atlanta Braves CHI and
Rought, Jr.; Kim Seth, Jr.;
series '8'
Helen Slack, Fr .; Nancy
joining his brother Bob
Tu..Uy'sGamo
Smith, Sr.; Terri Wilson, Jr.
among no-hit hurlers.
Los Angeles at New York .
&lt;
,
It Is the first time that two Rangers. In&gt;
Thursday'1
G•m•
...
brothers have hurled major
New York Rangers at Los Meigs SChedule
league no-bitters. Bob, of the Angeles, (n)
· Aprii9- Galllpolls at Meigs
April 11- Melgs at Ironton
Si. Louis Cardinals, did It last
Saturday's Game
.
April 12- Southern at
Los Angeles at New York
April 16, beating the
Meigs
Rangers,
In&gt;.
If
necessary
Philadelphia Phlllles S-0.
April hi- Logan at Meigs
Fol'lch 's no-blUer Saturday
April 18- Melgs at Wellston
S.ries 'C'
April ;!()-Meigs at Jackson
was the earliest ever pitched
Tuesdiir'sGome •
April 2l-Waverly at Melg•
in major league history. The ' Toronto at Atlanta, (nl
Thurldoy's Go,... ·
April 25-Athens at Melg•
previous earliest no-bitter . Atlanta
at Toronto. ,(n)
April
26- Meigs
at
was pitched ori AprU 14, 1917,
Saturdoy's Go mo.
Parkersburg
Toronto at Atlanta. (n), if . April
27- Melgs
by Ed Cicotte 0f the Chicago
at
Gallipolis ~
White Sox, who beat the St. necessary
April 30-lronton at Meigs
Louis Browns li-G In St.
5eries 'D'
May 2-Wellslon at Meigs
Louis.
Tuesday's Game
May 7- Melgs at Logan
Pittsburgh at Buffalo, (n)
BOWLING
.·May I'-Jackson at Melg•
·Thursdiiy's Gamo
May 11- South Point at
WINDSOR LOCKS, ColUI.
~
lluffalo
at Pittsburgh, (nl Meigs
- Joe Berardi beat Earl
t Saturday's Game
..
May 14.:...Melgs at Athens
Anthony 232-195 in the final
Plttoburgh at Buffalo, -(n) , · Mey 16- Melg• at Waverly
round to win the $21,000 first If necessarv
~
prize In the $125,000 BPAA U.
S. Open. bowling ·cham·
pionshlp.
.
Anthony had gained the
top,seeded position by
beating his nearest com·
petltor by a margin of 578
pins in the qualifying round.
Berardi moved Into the flnnls
by defeating Pete Couture f!l
Windsor I,ocks 213·199.
GENERAL
MADISON,
Wix.
Unlv~~slty of Wisconsin
footbliJt'~t!laY.er Jay Seiler
died a w~'k after SUffering a
head Injury wbUe making a
tackle du~ spring practice.
Seller, 19;· a freshman
.

Sports shorts

Sunday 's Game

By The Associated Press

First Round

Atlanta
o 3 .000 3
Be~t of Three Series
Saturday's Games
Eastern Conference
Pittsburgh 7, Montreal 6
Wednesday's Game
New Jersey a1 Phila New York 9, Chicago 4
St. Louis 3, PHiladelphia 2 delphlli, (nl
San Francisco 4, Cincinnati
Fridav•s Game
2
l'hiladelphia at New
Jersey, (n)
Houston 6, Atlanta 0
Sunday's Game
Los Angeles 5, San Diego 2
Sunday's Games
New ,
JerseY:·
at
Montreal 5, Pittsburgh 4 Philadelphia, if neCessary
New York at Chicago, ppd.,
WednesdaV S Game
Atlanta. at Houston, (nl
rain
· Friday's Game
Cincinnati 7, San Fran·
cisco, 6 10 innings
Houston at Atlanta, (n)
Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 2,
Sunday's Game
su•pended. rain, 5•;, Innings
Atlanta at Houston , if
necessary ·
Houston 2, Atlanta 0
Los Angeles 6, San Diego 5,
12 Innings
.
Western Conference
Monday's Games
Tuesday's Game
Montreal ·(Lee 10-10) at
Los Angeles at Denver, (n)
Friday's Game
Now Ycirk (Falcone (2-7)
Denver at Los Angeles, (n)
.Cincinnati !Seaver 16·141 at
Atlanta (Mahler 4-11), (n)
Sunday's Game
Pittsburgh (Candelaria 12.
Los Angeles at Denver, If
11) at Philadelphia (Ruthven necessary
15·11l (n)
TUesday's Game
Los Angeles (Welch 7-4) at
Houston (Ruhle J-3), .In)
Portland at P~oenix, {n)
Only games scheduled
Friday's Game
Tuosdiir'• qamos '
P.hoenix at Portland, (n)
Montreal. at New York

Phoeni )(,

if

N Y Rangers

40 29 ;] 91 316 292

Alla nta 41 31 8 90 237 280
Smythe Divisi on
x .Chicago

$econd Round ·
Best of Seven Series

Dates and Times ~
to be announced
Eastern Conference
Phi ladelphia . New Jersey
winner vs . San Antoni o
Atlanta - Houston w i nner

vs. YVashington
Western Conference

Phoenix . Portland wi nner

vs. -Kansas City

29 36 15 73 244 277

Vancouver
~t I n11i~

25 42 13 63 217 291
18 50 i2 48 249 348

Co lorado 15 53 12 42 210 33 1
Wale s Conference

Adams Division

·x-Boslon
Buffa lo
Toronto
Minn.

43
36
34
28

23 14 100 316
28 16 ~ 88 280
33 13 81 267
40 12 60 257

Norris Division

Denver -Los Angeles .win ner

vs. Seattle

.

270
263
252
289

Pittsburgh 4, Detr.olt 3
Montreal 10, Washington 3
Toronto 6, Buffalo 2
St. Louis 4, Chicago 1
Los A~geles 7, Ml.nnesota 1
sunday.'t Games

Washington $, Pittsburgh 2
Chicago 3, St. Louis 2
Boston 6, Toronto J

Colorado 5, Buffalo 5. tie
Detroit 1, Montreal o
Philadelphia 4, Atlanta 2
New York Islanders 5, New
York Rangers 2

X·Montreal

t'rO HOCKey

AI A Glance
Nationa' Hockey League
Campbell Conference

Patrick Division

,

wltptsglga
x-NY ISlanders
"1 1'i l.t 11() 358 214
Philo . 40 .25 15 95 281 248

.
52 17 11 115 337 20~
Pitls. ~ 31 13 85 281 279
Los Ang. 34 34 12 80 292 286
Wash . 24 41 15 63 273 338
o ctroi t 23 41 16 62 252' 295
x- cllncheddivision
Saturday's Gomes
New Vork Islanders 9,
Philadelph ia 2 .

President John Tyler
narrowly escaped death ~ ..
tiutthe secretary of state and
secretary of the navy were
. kUled - when a gun exploded
on a ship in 1844.

Celebrate

this year's Oscars
by watching
last year's winners
today-for free!
A w~olt!' day ~,f ~-;n.,.•.tt muv ies-for fn:c! II incl udes many
of las t y~ar's most mcmur.1bl~· Osca r winners and it's ju st

a sampling of what Home Box Office is all about . (Arid
movies- uncut a nd uni n terrupted- are juSt part of it.
There are fa ntastic nig htclu b sp ec ials an d t•xd usiw sports
programs, 1oo!) Here's wh,11 you can see for free toda,y:
1:00PM ''Islands in the Stream .'' Brilliant performance
by Oscar wi nner George C. Scott. Nominated for Best
Cinematography.
3:00PM ''The Turni ng Poin t." Romantic story nl drked the
screen debut of Mikhail Bar\l shni kov. 8 Oscar nominations.
5:00PM ''House Call s." Stai-s Gle nda Jackson and Walt.;&gt;r
Matthau , botl1 of wh om have previously recci~cd Osca r
nomina tio ns.
7:00PM "Upcl ose-Academy A\..'ards ." Sam plings of the
best of '78 and intervi('wS wit h Nick Nolt e, jane Fonda,
and Warren Bea tty.
1:00PM "TIJe Goodbye C irl." Rich ilrd Dreyfuss won Best
Actor in' this Neil Simon comed y. 5 O sca r nominations.
10:00 PM "Coma." Terrifyi ng science- fiction tale of a time
when demand for org,ln tr tm sp lants has out stri pped (he

supply.
11:00AM "Juli a." Van essa R1.•dgraw won Best Su pporing Actress and Ja son Rob;'!rd s B1.•st Supporting Actor.
Of course, to receive HBO , you must lx• a cab le TV subseriber. So if you arc, don' t miss your
free preview! Today is the perf£oct d ay
to see what you've been mi s~i~g!

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Oscar nominees City council has gone to the dogs,
may· be
upstaged by Wayne

By HUGH A. MUWGAN
property of the Pullman
AP Special Correspondent
Company . ·
Ms. Sheraton of the New
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP)
-As near as I can remember York Times and Ms . Greene
It, the bridge was out. from New York Magazine
"Rampaging spring floods," ch ecked out the spice rack,
as we wordsmiths in the news which included among other
HOLI.YWOOD (AP) nominated for Oscar-s.
business always called it recherche con&lt;)iments, hot
No-shows among acting
when the Mississippi got dog relish , crushed chili Oscar nominees hoping to be
in
the
floodlights
at
the
Los
contenders,
a blight in soine
' uppity, had turned the Utile' peppers, a jar of vitamin
· strea~ at the foot of ow: hill tablets, a coffee can half fuU Angeles Muslc Center tonight recent years, should be
into "a raging torrent."
of pennies and a saucer of d~ring the 5ist Academy minimal. Of the 10 nominated
Awards . are likely to be actresses, only Ingrid
That's how Mimi Sheraton, light fuses.
. Stendahl, Gael Greene, the
John McPhee checked out upataged- not by each 'other Bergman has declined to
appear. The Swedish actress,
two Inspectors from ·Guide the bookcase, smiled to see but by John Wayne'.
The 'Academy Award- who could be the. first per!lon
Michelin and John McPhee his " A Far Country" on the
all came to our house on the middle shelf ne~t to the winner for "True Grit" 10 to win four acting Oscars,
· same historic night.
flashlight and a do-it-yourself · years ago was scheduled to was reported to be starting a
They were on their way to income tax manual and appear ·at the end of the new film in Europe . She was
the opening of a chic new contentedly fixed himself a telecast to announce the best nominated for the film ,
"Autumn Sonata."
. restaurant on the other side .double scotch . He pronounced pictilre of 1978.
Wayne, 71, whose history in
Others vying for best
. of the Interstate, and the the decor "intriguing,
of 1978 were Ellen
Hollywood
predates
the
actress
bridge· washed away just as · ambitious and original,"
they tried taking the shortcut ·which were the same words Motion Picture Academy , Burstyn, "Same Time, Next
· up ous: narrow winding road. Ms . Sheraton applied to the will be making his first public Year;" Jill Clayburgh, "An
appearance since cancer Unmarried Woman;" Jane
! Marooned and famished, appetizers. ·
The latter consisted of surgery three months ago, Fonda, "Coming Home," and
: the eminent food critics came
Presenters range from Geraldine Page, "Interiors."
· hegghlg at our door. ·
sliced raw carrots, potato
Cary
' Grant and Lauren
Of the candidates fll' best
Leftover meatloaf and · chips, an unidentified cheese
potatoes colCalUlon are not , dip and tartalette a Ia buerre Bacall to Robin Williams and actor, only Robert De Niro,
de de cacahuetes, which at first Brooke Shields. NBC's nominated for "The Deer
everyone's
piece
resistance, but they were our sight comes across as peanut Jolmny Carson will make an Hunter," was a doubtful
table d'hote specialty that butter bn a saltine cracker In unaccistomect a~arance on arrival. He told Haley he was
ABC as master of ceremonies too nervous to sit through the
night as they usually are on a any language.
for
the show, which starts at 7 ceremonies, whereupon the
.
Monday . And there was no a
Just before they left John
p.m.
PST.
producer offered to allow De
Ia carte menu. ·
McPhee took out a' Utile
"The Deer Hunter" and- Niro to remain backstage,
The chef, however, was .notebook and began writing
Besides Beatty, the other
prepared to meet dietary furiously . Had he discovered "Heaven Can Wait," both
laws and individual taste another favorite eating haunt with nine nominations, were candidates for best actor who
preferences if anyone had a which he would write up in generally considered have agreed to appear were
particular craving for the New Yorker? Would he favorites for best picture, Gary Busey, "The Buddy
. liverwurst, ·canned corned invent a fictitious name for with "Coming Home"- with Holly Story;" Laurence
beef hash, frozen pizza, the chef so everyone and his eight nominations - also a Olivier, "The Boys from
stewed prunes or cream brother-in~aw wouldn't be posslblllty. "An Unmarried Brazil," and Jon Voight ,
•cheese and jelly sandwicbes. beating a path to our door Woman" and "Midnight "Coming Home."
were
also
Jack Warden of "Heaven
' Under the · guise of once they repaired that Express"
nominated for the year's best Can Walt': was the only
freshening up for dinner, bridge•
film .
·. contender for supporting
Stendahl
who
does
I never did find out
If
"Heaven
Can
Walr
actor who declined an
Resl!lurant Reviews for the because right about there my
New York Daily News, radio alarm boomed in the scores a sweep, Warren Invitation. Other nominated
Beatty could be the firsi include Bruce Dern, "Coming
checked out the washroom .Happiness Breakfast Hour
facilities. The hair blower, and1havenotsincebeenabl~ person to win O.carsinfour Home;'' Richard
clothes hamper, kitty litter, to find any bridge at all on our categories. He Is nominated Farnsworth, "Comes A
econoll)y-aized jar of epsom road. Nor any stream either. as best actcr, producer, co- Horseman;" John Hurt,
"Midnight Express ," and
salts and two pair of drying But there were the remnants writer and C&lt;M!irector.
For
the
first
time
in
recent
Oiristopher
Walk en, "The
tights were all in their aUoted of potatoes colcannon in a
memory, all of the nominated Deer Hunter.''
places. So was a slightly uSed saucepan on the store.
songs will be delivered by
Nominated in the best
guest towel that seemed to be
those who sang them for the supporting actress category
films . The performers : were Dyan Cannon , "Heaven
Debby
BQone,
Barry Can Walt;"
Penelope
Mailllow, Jphnny Mathis and Milfcrd, "Coming Home;"
Jane Olivor, Olivia Newton- Maggie Smith, "California
John and Donna SIDJUDer. Suite;" Maureen Stapleton,
Sammy pavis Jr. and Steve "Interiors," and Meryl
Lawrence will sing.a medley Streep, "The Deer Hunter."
of hit movie songs . not
CLEVELAND (AP)
than 300 percent in the last
·Cleveland-area merchants five years.
· &amp;re doing a booming business
Euclid Police Sgt. John F,
In burglar alanns, Mace, Guarino, !he city's crime
whistles and hatpins even prevention officer, said he
thoogh the crime rate In only recommends burglar
An F.asler them• was •·ar· n.m .: nnod FritiHy {'()Jl1Jllllni·
CUyahoga County has fallen.
alarms. to those with gun, riet! '"'( at the Fridav alter- ty t&gt;Prvic•p at lht&gt; J.uthcmm
Most experts say the jewel or coin collections. He n'"'" meeting nf !he· Happy
purchases are probebly not said the best ways to prevent Harvesl&lt;•rs Class at Trinilv rhun·h. Pnm&lt;•rny , Frid&lt;~ y,
nnon tn ~ p.m.: F.asfrr
respoosible (rfPt the . crime burglaries are deadbolt ,.., h M'
'
• !'nnrisr st~rvic·t• at R::m p.m.
. ISS F.rma Smith
drop, howev,l. They's'lty the Iock s, e Iectrically limed "''""'
presided at tht• meeting followed hy a hreaklast in th&lt;•
decrease 'bl ' tb~ · ~ounty's 1 lighting system! that swttch whi&lt;'h o)l&lt;•ned wilh group
dining area of the !'hur&lt;•h, and
crime rate by more than 10 on when the house is empty,
· · f "J vf 1 J vf111 w wnrship st•rvkt• at 10:25 fl .m.
pereent since 1978 probably is leaving a' radio or television smgmg"
"· u " "· ' • with ('umm11ninn .
Thef"."
. because the number of on when no one Is at home, or AdorE&gt;
Miss Smith gave devntinns
. Tht' ('nmmunily C'll!h
persons In the crime:P,one keeping valuables lockM In a usinK "Prepal"t' for F.aster" awltrd~ pr.ngrmn uf WMPO
, ages of 14 to 24 has decreased closet.
·
as ht•r theme. Sht• spoke of wa~ rf"vit-wecl ~ncf lhr da!\:· since the mid-197Cs.
Figures re}eased by the the preparation mad&lt;' for new vntf"d tn participal t&gt;. Jt we~:­
Nevertheless, the security CrimIna I . Justice doth&lt;•satF.astPrwilhtheem· nnted that (he das. still h:~S
indusiry has been finding that Coordinating Council of phasis hein~ ,., fashion ~et·w&lt;•li ranis, hirlhday
crime prevention does pay. GreaterClevland show major rather Ihan lhe r.-&lt;IrrP&lt;·tfon cards, and vanilla fnr sah• .
One security firm owner crime In Cuyahoga CoWlty of Christ. Jl's nnt a &lt;'rimr to Mrs . Meinhart will have the
said recenUy that the annual dropped 5.7 percent in 1978. 1
dPvntion~ fnr the Mav
res~ up,ror "'
r.€i~ ter, she. SHI'd,
sales of burglar alarms are There were a totaI of 84,107 chut
the real &lt;"rime mmes in met-tinJ! at whkh timt.
expected to climb from the major crimes In Cuyahoga forgetlin~ the risen Christ. memhf'rH will t•njny e~ sur.present $97 nilllion to f203 County last year, compared Sh&lt;' &lt;'on&lt;'ludedwithprayer.
pri s~ lui~ . Mrs . F.va Tlessau!'r
million in 1915.
wtth 89,196111 1977.
Mrs . Phillip Mt•inhart read and Mrs . Henry Reilwl ·"""'"
The largest DIBrket seems . Crime now has dropped in ·t hr poem , "The CJ••·k Only Pd H sal11d r•ou~f' and ('nffrt&gt;.
to be In M'me security the Cleveland suburbe for stops 0n&lt;"e." J)urin~ tht·
Mrs. Tern•ll was pianist lnr
systeDls, which monitor three years in a row and in 1ru ·
ti M' Srni h .tht&gt;. mt•f'linJ! e~nd shr e~nd Mrs .
smess mee ng, Iss , I
homes while residents are the city for lw&amp; of the last exh•ndtod
a we)r(lml' . Mrs. Lilli!• HaJu•k wnn thP gamr
· away. H0111e owners also seek
th~~ht:"~:·
more
than
a
F.lla
Smith
. and Mrs . pri1.es.
; to foU thieveS with guanl dogs
Mrinhari
had
reports,
a
or tip wires and by hiding statistical variation," said f'nmmunic·~;~ticln rrnm and
M~.
EsKIMO ART
their valuables In their Fred S. Szabo, .law Floyd Sh&lt;M•k was read.
TORONTO
(AP) - A' gift of
kitchen freezer.
enforcement planner for the
Symp;lthy •·ards w••n• sign605
pieces
of
Eskimo
art was
· . "A good aecurity system Is council. "The downward
ed for (ht• Ren Neulzlin~
J;'I!Cently received by the Art
the lleJtt beet thing to having a ll"end has been established."
thr Ada Holler lami: policenwl or fireman altting . in addition to the decrease family,
ly. th&lt;• Ray Riggs family. and Gallery of Ontario.
The pieces consist of
right there," said Gerald D. m persons 14 to 24 years of the Chasleen larnily. fM-weli
'Marks,
president
of age, one expert noted that the ••anls were sign"'! for Mrs . sculpture, prints, drawings
' Beachwood Security Syl!lems number of persons at Ruby F.rh, Mrs.. r.tadw; and wall-hangings and some
;Inc.
retirement age Is Increasing '\. Cu&lt;·kler, Mrs. Frrda J)ufiy , of them are as much as 2,000
years old.
~ Marka' COJI!pany Is located and thus more . jobs are ~nd Mrs. Fran&lt;'es Reibel.
The gift was made by
in the amuent suburb of provided lor the young ,
F.asler !&lt;&lt;•rvit·es wt•n• anBea~hwood,
where ke.eping them away from nrmnPt•tl And in!'lude tahle Toronto collectors Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Klamer and
burgl8ries have juinped more crune.
('nmmnninn Thursclay at 7::l0 family.
by Gill Fox
SIDE GLANCES_

· Burglar alarm
. bu~iness booms

1

Happy Harvesters met

WATCH CABLE CHANNEl 4
HIO IIIOIUTHIIIO lUI

PolntVIew Ceiltl• TV

675~3391.

ofJf2:2so5
r::--------------------------'----'-----------'----------

C·

AFFORDABLE
ECONOMICAL
DRIVING

lllW F:A, Ohio (AP)
Berea City Council 's bite may
·be as bad as its bark.
The council is considering a

controversial ordinance to
limit the nwnber or dogs
residents may own.
The magic number is three .
The proposed ordinance
technically sets no maximum
number of· dogs in a
household, but for each dog In
excess or three, residents
would have to have 4,000 ,
square feet or property.
An opponent says that Is
like telling citizens how many
children they may have.
But Councilman Paul
Mifsud , chai Pman of the
council safety committee,
which recommended the
ordinance, said the proJlfiSIII
Is not as strict as similar laws
in effect in so me other
suburbs:
1f he were a bettillg 'man ,
Mifsud said, he'd predict the
ordinance will pass beeause ·
.'

people recognize that too
many dogs in too . small a
Sp;lce can bring noise and
odor problems.
Donald Kwaitkowski ,
president of the Northeast
Ohio Dog Breeders and
Fanciers Associatioo, said
the ordinance violates a
person •s
civil
rights,
discriminates against dogs
and is unenforceable.
"It's discriminatory
because it only ·goes after
dogs and not cats and birds
and goldfish,... he said. ·
Kwaltkowski says the
association has beell looking
for a test case on limiting
animals a person may own.
He maintains there are
precedents for ruling against
the limitations .
The association perfers to
convince the 22,000i&gt;ersoo
suburb not to pass such a law,
Kwaitkowski said, but has
hired attorney Anthony o.
Calabrese Jr ., a former state
legislator, to represent it.

The Berea ordinance huskies.
differs from those of a
An area resident said the
handful of other Cleveland "stench and the noise ,
suburbs because it says especially
In 1 the
animals may not be sheltered summertime, is out of
this
or exerc~ in a coofined World ."
area within 20 feet of another
Kwaitkowski contends
person's propeny.
Berea's nutsance ordinance,
''That means if y~ have a which the association helped
~0-foot · property
and wri te, is sufficient to
neighbors on eliCh si(le, it is prosecute negligent dog
only legal to exercise the dog owners.
within the 10 feet in the center
The proposed dog-limit
of
the
property," ordinance Wlderwent the first
Kwaitkowski saicj.
of three readings before the
Kwaitkowskl said. the law council on April 2. It could be
wUI also mean problems for en.~cted .by the sevenpeople in aparlinents and member colincil In . early
condominiums. Mifsud, May, Mifsud said.
however, said aparlment and
"I think It has aroused a lot
condominiwn residents may of interest," Mifsud said.
own the maxlmwn of three "But there is more Interest
dogs.
outside Berea than Inside ...
said
the The average Berea ciUzen on
Mifsud
controversy centers ·on the street is not Indicating he
Berea's Baldwin Hill area, Is o~d or favorable. But
where three families have ~t feel they don't want 24
owned up to 24 Siberian Siberian huskies nw door,"

'Double layette shower held
. A layt•ttc shuwer honoring J.ouise Thompson , F.lila beth
Mrs..James Crow and Mrs. Slavin , Mary Rrewer and
Mike Rarr was held recently Marybeth, Kalhryn Met•~e r,
at the First Rapti s( Church ~I Sut• Mt&gt;t7.gt&gt;r, Mary Ann McMiddleport. Given by the rJunf,!, .Jo Ann Haves Nrmt·v
Ymlng Ad11 ll Class, the Stanley ,ctnd r&gt;n•affia Hudson'.
ho~-ilt&gt;H/oiP!-i wen• Mrs. nan
S&lt;•mling vifts Wt•re Nadine
Ri ggs, Mrs. M r~ rvin Roush, RHrlon, J)oruthy An(hony,

anct Mrs ..JHmcs Thomas, Jr.

OuiciH f:hasr, Prttn&lt;'P~Smith ,

The t'hllrch ba sement, .fun~;~ Kloe:-:, Lori 1-1ncl Lvnn
df"l'nratcd in pink Hnd blue, Fran P•rk!'r, rindy P•rker:
carried nut H Wynkin , Frt•cla Hood, Nnnna Wilcox
Rlynkin an&lt;l N«l (heme, The ~-tncl Ht&gt;hJn Rndimlir .
'
two gilltabl&lt;•s r&lt;•alun•d large,
colorful

storks .

*EASTER
CANDY

A t'ake

dt&gt;c·nrHI Pd with large pink rtnd
hint' hu()tirs was :-;prvecl with
nnts. · mints, punch .-.nd enf1•~· .

A h!!mcW!llls ;lT1it ·lt· nn bahy
I'Hrf' was n•ad hv Mrs. Roush.
Gr1mt• .~-: Wl'rt• 'pi (IYl'd wit·h
pri7t'!i gc1i n~ to Micht'llt&gt; Rrtrr

and M" . rsah&lt;'l Wint•brPnner. Mrs. Tt•rry Smith wnn
tht• &lt;h1nr prizt·.
Oth&lt;•rs allending t h&lt;•
!-th!IWt•r wt•n• Rt•ttt• .Jt&gt;Hn
KrHwsc'7yn. rht•ryl rrnw lind
J.ori, Ke~tip" rrow, Mrs.
Harl&lt;'y Riggs. )\frs . Alpha
RHrr. Sh.1run Rarr, ])nt
Nt•ul7.1i!l}!. Rt•fhrm:v Roush.

·*FILLED

ERVING THE BEST
HOUSTON (AP) - Rick
Barry of the Houston
Rockets, recognized as one of
the great forwards of pro
basketball history, believes
that in a few more years,
Julius Erving of the
Philadelphia 76ers wm be
hailed as the best ever.
"t;rvlng Is still going to
have to perfonn as he has for
a few more years to be
regarded as the best of all
t-ime," BaiTy said, ubut he
has the potential of becoming
the greatest forward ever to
play the game.

BASKETS
*BUNNIES
*LAMBS
*EASTER TOYS

*GIFTS
Ear:~ter

r---,[vfooMrrori;o:o~--1
I

I1
l

,,01!110/t\_nRI$]'

,

POMEROY
BEN FRANKLIN
'

-

I·

OFFICE HOORS! 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (ClOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT
.ST., POMEROY:
.

1

I

POMEROY 0.

I

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

we reserve the right
to limit quantities

STORE MADE

SAUSAGE
LB~139 .

HAM ·,

$159
LB.
LONGHORN CHEESE ·

'169

. LB.

GROUND CHUCK

'1 59

LB.

MM ROAST
LB.

'1'9

GROUND BEEF
LB.

SPME RIBS

'1 39

OF STORE SLICED

•

See one of these courteous salesmen: Pete Burri1,
MarVin Ketbaugti c:w ,George H~rris .

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

'Obio'Ibw.er
. Working together is the only way.

"You'll Like Our fuatity Way of Do~9 Business"

GMC Financing

4--9

"Tox Foundot.ion, Inc., "Moatlily Tu Feotuno" VOlume 22, Number 3, April, 19711.

•

1\

992-5342
C?pen

POMEROY
Ev~air19s

urtil ti . &lt;. J •· : .

· • Sat.

LUNCH MEATS

89$

LB.

HAMS

CUBE STEAK

'1.69LB.
SLICEO

LB,

11.19 LB.

'1 ~

ROUND STEAK

'1"
T-BONE STEAK
LB. •2"

Small-Grade A

LB.

EGGS .
Dozen 52C

- DIET PEPSI

FINE ASSORTMJNT

· Ha\e one built for )UU!

is April 15th

OR

MOUNTAIN DEW
t ·16 oz.

bolltn

$109 Plusdeposit·
tox
·
&amp;

�Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, April9, 1979

Today's Topic:
Siberi4ns: in to be out .

U.S.D.A. CHOICE STANDING

KYSYL SYR , U.S.S.R. fish eggs "'e whipped Into a
(AP ) - For Siberians, it's tasty paste. .
" in'' to be out.
The fishennen set ID work
Outdoors, tha t Is. And cleaning the catch. One man
nothing drives away the with a gold-toot11ed smile
winter time blnes ·better, used his bare hands to stroke
Siberians say, than going for a knife up and down the flah,
a picnic out on the tee.
trimming off the. head and
Bundit'd In their warmest scales.
·clothing, these hard,y souls of
Within minutes, reporters
the Far North trot to the were ushert'd Into a nearby
rivers on weekends ID squat tent, where a wood-burning
in tiny tents and nibble at raw slove had been carted to lend
frozen fish chased doWn with a little heat to the outing, and
Rus~Uin vodka.
· to keep the kettles warm aa
It's a cold way to sp11nd an they bu!Jbled up fish stew.
afternoon, as group of
Rounds of vodka were Drat
American correspondents on the menu, and even the
learned on a recent visit ·to slight moist.ure from drinking
this Siberian settlement.
lips created a frosty ring oo
Yet In a land where man Is each glass. Then, nutty
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs.
forever
battling
an tasting brown bread emerged
Inhospitable climate, to sit from a sack, followed by foot. Roger Joh!tson entertained
through a Siberian picnic can long strips of a · Siberia~~ recently with a party in
be as satisfying as a appetizer of raw frozen flah. celebration of the eighth btrmountain climb, a parachute The flah tasted like soggy th&lt;tay of their daughter,
jump or even a marathoo cardboard. To eat it Dawn Michelle.
A Holly Hobbie theme was
.nm . .
I:OI'l'ectly, the strips nwst be
The cold does something ID dlPped In a salt and pepper carrit'd out and cake, ice
food. It makes it taste better. blend, wblch bring out the cream, clfips and punch were'
servt'd to Mrs. Ethel Johnson,·
Even the most ordinary meal ]Ullgent flavor of the diBh.
Mr. and Mrs. · Aaron Sayre,
suddenly
becomes
While Siberians and Stephanie and Jessica, Mr.
NEW HONOR SOCIETY MEMBERS -Eleven new llleDibers were
left to right, Cindy Lee, Jearmle Johnson, Amy Souder, Melissa Ihle, Amy
. extraordinary - bread Is ·Americans toasted eacb .
Inducted Friday lnlo Southern's National Honor Society. Advisor Jolm
Fisher and Lori Chapman; and hack row, l tor, Richard Furbee, Jack
cruStier, fish fisbler, spirits other's health, way of Ufe and and Mrs. George .Cooper,
Durl ling •nd members of the Society conducted an impressive tapping
Georgie and Christina, Mr.
Duffy, David Foreman, James Meadows and Brian Johnson. Brice Hart
tinglier.
love of outdoors, large metal
c.,;emooy before faculty , students, and parents. Shown are, front row,
photos.
·
·
Asteaming hot bowl of Dsh cups of fish broth were. and Mrs . .Roger Deem and ·
·'
soup served up In doubiW!git passed around. The boiled Teresa, Tricia and Sheri
'
minus temperatures beats Dsh ' mlied with potatoes and Roush, Becky Roush, Becky
anything a cozy kitchen co!lkl a hint of green&amp;, was served Evans, Tony&amp; Meadows,
Michael Bn'IO, Greg Weddle,
produce.
up In separate plates to be and
Larry and Annie Sellers.
. A Slberilln picnic takes the ladled Into the soup.
Overnight
guests of the
entire day - a mornlllg's
Daylight began to slip away'
worth of 'preparation and an and the temperatures started honored guest were Becky
"NATURE'S NEW SONG"
afternoon full of eating. The their evening dip u the cold- Roush and Becky Evans.
I took a walk ooe spring, windy day .
evening, of course, is spent numbed reporters headed
··:· Hoping for a glimpse of the sun's hopeful ray.
MONDAY
recovering from IDo much back ID haated jeepo, But the
I saw In surprise that winter had fled ,
REVIVAL now In progress . blii&lt;Jd-wannlng vodka.
And Dowers were ready to pop out of bed.
at Hobson Church of Christ In 1 On the recent picnic, a jeep fishermen were stW buay at
A C.RF.AT RIRTIIDA V PRF.~F.NT
Christian Union With Keith caravan
brought
the their picnic, ladling out yet
FOR MAN WHO HA~ F.VF.RV1111NC.
Mrs. Maxine Jordan
The trees were aU hopeful that soon they would bloom,
Eblin, pastor as evangelist. reporters "several mlles out another bowl of stew before received her 50 pound ribbon
RV HF.I .F.N RII'I'TFI .
Since winter had parted with its despair and gloom.
Serv!ces .7:30 p.m. nightly. onto the ice of the Vllyuiy calling it a day.
DF.AR HF.I.F.N:
at the Middleport' morning
The glistening dew on the freah morning ground
F:very yt-ar I'm stumpt'd on wlutt fu hny fur my wPncleorful
Special
stnglng
b~
Co~try
River
here.
The
picnic
fmngs
dass of Sltnderella Tuesday,
Seemed to hold promises In store all around.
husband '~ hirth&lt;tay.
H~timers. Public Invited. already were underway:
Mrs. JoAnn New5ome,dlrector,
reports.
What do you h&lt;ive lhepr&lt;&gt;vPrhial rrum "wh&lt;&gt; ""' evrr,1hing" • The trees bowed and swayed ather majesty'sfeet.
1WIN CITY Shrine Club Dshlng holes were drilled,
Bookmobile
Monday 7:30 p, m. AlL nets hung In the bluish-grey
Three
new members were
- WANTIN(; TO Slffi PRISF: mM
• The Dower buds opened to Innocence so sweet.
The bookmobile schedule
members are urged to attend waters, and · Ores started to for Tuesday, as announced by welcome and m pound ribOF:AR WANTJNC. :
Gleeful and joyous, so happily alive,
1know a wom•n who ' "lvr&lt;l thi' pr&lt;&gt;hlrm handily.
· All things seem SO happy: on freedom they thrive.
bons were presented to Maxto discuss
important boil kettles of stew· stock.
Jeanne Robbana , librarian, is ine
Wht&gt;n hor hushanrl &lt;·ame·horn&lt;• fr1•m work. lht•rp sht• wa~ 1)'Kester son aild Mary J.
business. Refreshments.
The purpose of picnicking as follows:
in~ on tht bPd, .drapPCI urih• in fi nl1f -~4 •lll rJ..(t• hirlhrlay lx'w.
Roush.
Mrs. Keste~ lost
ORGANIZATIONAL meet- here Is ID ID get away from
Small birds and chipmunks make tlieir grand debut
Lon!( Bottom, 3 to 3:30
Thl'y had a latt' dinner .. . - H.
the
most
weekly weight and
lng
for
establishment
of
a
.
wha~ver
little
.
clvtllzation
Earth's Door covered with shapes and colors of every hue .
p.m.; Reedsville - Reed 's J ean Trussell
was her
junior
garden
club
In
Meigs
~l!e~
has
to
offer,
and
one
The sun peeking through the topmost leaves,
Rtore, 4 to 5 p.m.; Tuppers
PF.RSONAL tn "S.K in rAlS Angt•lrs": Shilll\{' nn yuu :
COunty at 7:30 p,m. Monday f1rst-hme visitor noted: Plain.•, Arbaugh Housing, runner-up.
While aU sorrows are forgotten , and no one grieves.
'rliP snmPwh(ft hi7JHTt~ lt&gt;tfl'r ynu srnt ml' f ('t't'nll y ir-: an llXThe ~venin~ class met and
at the .home of Mrs. Bunny "This is what I bnaglne the 5:30 to 6::10 p.m.; Olest~r
R('t duplkatr nf nnt' publisht'&lt; l in Dr .. TI•YI't' R111fhl:•r.. ' l't•IJunn 2
took
In two new members.
Kuhl, county road 26, west of !ll&lt;)On to be."
There'safeellng all around, no one can explain.
Methodist Olun·h, 6:45 to
month" ago .
.
Five Points. Youth between
It's easy ID see why .·Mlles '7:45: and Jtaum Addition, 8 Kay Logan lost the most
Butooce you have felt it, it seems simple and plain.
WhPther it 's yuur hon1•st -to1Ju~o:h prnhh•m ~mfl ynu wctnh"O(I a
weight for lbe week with
seven and 17 invited. Those . of .flat, snow-blanksted Ice p.m. !o8:30p.m.
You feel somehow a strange, but yet a big pert.
set•ond npinion , nr ynu simply 1'11pit&gt;d ;tn int rr~linJ.! qm•stion, ·You .feel close to Mother Nature, near to her'heart.
Avice Bailey being the
with questions are to call crunched aoftly under the
hung ic• sre ynur r.rrnrt in print. you riictn't dn rlghJ hy nur,
runner-up. At the Mason
Mrs. Kubl at 992·7537 or weightofhumansstepplngm
H•l~n :
class, four new members.
Yet, 11 is always so peaceful; lt'no quiet here,
Margaret Parker at 992-2264. its surface. The "crunch,
Had your lrtter app&lt;"Hrt'd in my cohurm, rra&lt;lt•C$ mi~ht havl' You can think by yourself, withonlywoodsnear.
were taken into the class and
SOUTHERN "i wilor il!gh crunch" of winter boots
IU.'C'US~ me of pJaghuism- or ttt ht•st , uf ht•inJ.! nlUnmnxRf hy
three m pound ribbons were
The wind whispers his secrets, but can't stay for long.
Athletic Boosters Monday. walking on drY • packed snow
a hoaXt'r.
awarded. They were received
Yet It is all apart Of nature's new-song.
7:30 p.m. in the gym. All echoed off the water that lay
Pll'ltSe do JoyO.. Hn&lt;llllt' " favor , S.S. Next limP Y••nf&lt;'t'l H
by Frances Parsons, Jane
8
By Gina Johnson, 13, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry . parents who~ c.hildr~ will ~ldd'i::r =~ !~· so~:
ropy-fit t•nming tm , Jlic'k up yn11r pt&gt;n- cmrl .slil'k it in ynur t'ar!
Tucker,
and Jane JohnsOn,
Johnson, Route 1, RuUand.
tw attending JUniOr high are
epord Ia ed
back for the
-H.
with
Carolyn
Beaver and
11
Invited. ·
an P Y
The Meigs County Shep- Rosa Green receiving 35
CHURCH · SERVICES at group. It could easily have
T&gt;F:AR HF.I.F:N.
been N~U Annstrong taking herds 4-H Club.met February pound ribbons, Mrs. Janet
First Olurch of God Monday his first step on the moon.
Our son C'Hmt' hflmt' on 1Pfl VP from ftH• st•rvil&gt;t&gt; Hnd mt&gt;t this
5 and March 5 at the Meigs Needs, a 50 pound ribbon, and
By Mn. Herbert Roub
'Mrs. Dale Perkins and family through AprU 14, nightly at
SUddenly a shout broke the Extension Office. with 16 Mrs. Alma Jeffers, a 75 powid
girl who Sl'emt'd nice oin&lt;&gt;tiJ!h. All&lt;•r, ho Mt, :•he 'howrd up ~~
Robert Smith Sr. is a . at Orlando, Fla.
7:30 p.m. The Rev: C. P. . solittide. A'catch!
our home drunk, "'' I askt'd herto ~pt&gt;n&lt;l lh•• mght a~ she wa' m
members and two advisors in robbin.
RogerDui-st Is employed as Conley, Galllpotls, will tw the
Six Siberian fishermen In atteodsnce. Items of business
medica( patlent at Veterans
no condition t&lt;&gt; drive. Shr left early next morning,
Kathryn Meadows lost ihe
a security guard for the city speaker. On Thursday, April charge of theplcnlc burst Into discussed Included correc- most weight with Edna
'l'lwn she called and told me my hnshand trtt'd to mPs~ Memorial Hospital.
'Joey HW, Columbiana, and of Columbus.
12, c~mmunton and or - activity. They rolled up the tions and additions for the Matheny as runner-up at the
'around with her durin~ tho night r cl&lt;&gt;n't holit•vt&gt; it : ho is afint•
a
friend
visited
with
Harry
Sunday
guests
of
Mr.
and
dinances
of-the ctuu:ch. .
nets strung between the two 1979 fair book, members · Point Pleasant class Thursand upri~ht Jl"I'$On. We've hoen'!TIIlrrit'd :&gt;:! yeHI'$.
Hill
and
Dallas
Hill
families
Mrs.
Edward
Hupp
and
son,
POMEROY
Elementary
ice
holes, and started fllppinti decided to tak'e turns 1 day, wi.th Unda Wamsley and
She also!Piephont'd rotr sm and J!avr him •II this garbage,
over
a
recent
weekend.
Joey
Jeremy,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arnold
School
PTA,
7:30
Monday
fiSh
left and right onto the bringing refreshments, Donna Elliott being the
He says he loves her and thPv'll bt&gt; ~etting marri'"l n••xl
month. His last words to us
if sh!' i&gt;'ll'l Wt'i&lt;'&lt;1nr in nur HW is now confined to a Hupp were Mr. and Mrs. night at the schooL Safety river where the small decided to have all meetings members showing the most
hospital In Pittsburgh.
Kenneth Bass, Kendra and patrol to be recognized, new crea~es froze the 'Instant at tlie Extension Office and weight lost at the evening
·house, he isn't r ilht•r. He ft't'ls w r,• hilh•r ami sidrs ";th ht•r .
Michelle
Johnson
of
Racine
Corrlnne,
of Clifton, W. Va., officers to lw elected. Cub they hit the air. In this area fairgrounds, dues are to 'Je · class. Seven new members
Hr and hi ~ dad have always hr&lt;•n very cl'""'· If Wt' &lt;•alltht•
is.
staying
with
her
arandMr.
and
Mrs.
Russell Rouah, $cout 249 to have pledge with· where the ice is three feet paid by May 1, mem bers were.taken in.
J(irJ 8 Jiar, we'IJJ&lt;lSt' IRif htiy; if WP cle&gt;n'l, wr1) a]S!l )m&lt;e him.
mother,
Mrs.
Florence
Michael
and
Mandy
Russell. first grade parents to be ' thick some two dozen fish must attend 80 percent of
What can we do? - Rli'I'H,
,
Smith,
while
her
husband
host':'llles. A nursery wiU be were ' caught.
T&gt;F:AR RUTH :
meetings to be eligible to sell
Robert
Smith,
Is hospitalized.
nroVIded.
Write your son " ~aim , th&lt;&gt;ughtful letl ~r staling the exa&lt;•t
market lambs and project
Mrs.
Linda
Jewell,
SOD
('
.. .
WE'!DAY
h"lstnl't ,,thts kk~d :f · books were handed out to the
tmth .- nu rt'f'riminatinn~ , ~no a«•t•usatinn!-1 - ju~t H suggt·~linn
daughter
Barbara
of
Letart,
WINDING
TRAIT,
Garden
c
ea ng.
as e , o e members. Sonia Carr gave
!hat pPrl.aps his girl 'St'nnditi&lt;&gt;n fng~e&lt;l her inemnry, and yon '&lt;!
Tony and ~r\d,y Jewell,
Sa
d
e!y
e\VS
·
f
M
p
t
American
who
had
likt&gt; :t llH nt't' tu tti!"«'l!SR lhjR l-1!-&gt; H four!'omP wht~n hP «'&lt;lmt·~ W. Va., spent . a
tur ay
. Club, ho~e o
rs. a
ID see hooks and linesl!1lpeCied
Instead the yearly treasurer's report son of Mr, and Mrs. Raymond
horne.
night with Mr. and · Mrs.
Mrs. Louella Haning and Thoma, 7.. 30 p.m. Tuesday. 0! busines8llke nets.
and John Rice, County Agent, Jewell , were confirmed durThen, count nri hi~ J.!nod .!'t&gt;n~ . ~ nd rt month '~ :O:Pilfl~fion Gerald Hayman and Keith . Mts Leatha Cowen were For roll call mem~rs are
"No no , a Siberian host gave a talk on Management i n~ the morning worship serfrom a woman lw doesn't n•allyknnw.
.
Mrs. Jewell and Mrs. Belva Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. ' ask.ed to display a picture of reass~red .. "This is the of Breeding Ewes. Charles vice at the Trtn{ty CongregaMv J.G.A.P. (''T'm f1uessinf! Again Pt•n&gt;t&gt;ption'' ) !*l~S I hi ~ Fisher assisted Mrs. Hayman Cowen's son, Mr. an~ Mrs; H; !herr fawil~o nbete planArbot.
TbeDapro- , modern way."
Carr showed a fUm strip of tional Olurch Palm Sunday:
marria~e won 't Mpjl&lt;'n. I .rt me kn&lt;&gt;Wwhother i&gt;r n&lt;&gt;t I'm rip.hl . with housecleaning on R. Jewell in Minersville.
gram
on
r Y·
Modernltrnaybe, butthere the Sheep Show at the fair.
Anthem by the choir was
-H.
Officers elected were: "The Palms" with Gerald
Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Lease, Th~ arrangement of · the are · still hundreds of
Mr. &amp;"'! Mrs. Steve Chaney Kenton, were Sunday guests month is to be abstract.
Siberians who sit beside their Scott Beams, president; Tam .Hoffner at the organ and I-ori
PF:AR HF.J.F:N:
.
~
Ml~dlepo.:l
"':~aMreca".:'~
of ·their grandparents, ·Mr.
SYRACUSE PTO meeting, little holes the old-fashioned Beams, vice president; Tam Ann Wood at the plano, Ser- ·
I a~ree )00 pt&gt;n·ent with Ad•rn's Applr I jh, Nt'&lt;'ktie' wo•re ~n ~Bell g
r.
i.and Mrs. K. C. Welsh.
7:30p.m. Tuesday at school way. Ice filhillg remains a Ervin, · secretary ; Angie mon topic by the Rev. W. H.
ortglnally worn by foppi sh. genllernen ""they would~'! _sl&lt;&gt;p on
·Spencer, treasurer; Rodney Perrin was "Will You Pay the
~ nd Mr~ Bruce Hart'.· . Mr. and Mrs. Earl Erving, with Installation of officers po)iular winter sport.
their shirts. They are now non-fun!'linnal, ar!'hak. asrmnl' 11nd
Tripp, news reporter; Todd . Price."
ba
t.
the
k
d'
Mason,
W
.
Va.,
and
Mrs.
and
a
student
an
display
to
Three
types
of
fish
were
·
·
I
usspen
wee en
1
' k .P
be f
rven unSilfe. The onl)o' way they will 'IM'&lt;'&gt;rn&lt;' &lt;»ttm.-lf(t is if Coum
Candlell~ht communion
lth Mr d Mrs Don Bell Virgin a Bur e, omeroy •.
· eatured.
caught: perch, pike and a Tripp , recreation ; Danny
enouJlh men stancl up arid refu~e to wt·~ r them . Only wh••n W&lt;' . wMr. a~d8 ::m. B~tch Ables: visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob · RACINE LODGE 461 , northern fish that belongsiD Leonard, health; and Nickey will be observed at 7:30
deddt&gt; that lies are pas.w will thrlx&gt;J)&lt;I' lx•I&lt;M&gt;senrd. .
Leonard, sa(ety.
Thursday evening at the
Paul Ables and friend Alkire Sunday.
. F&amp;AM Tuesday 7:30p.m. All the saim.on famlly.
r even I&lt;~·· out '"'a joh hr&lt;'au~ I dlrln 't W&lt;·ar . th· tot ~·· lnlf•r- Evelyn
·
Market
Lamb
Weigh-In
wlU
with the sunrise serchurch
Swart Canal Win:
Mr. and Mrs. Vinton master masons invited.
Siberlall'! take their fish
vlew. Thal'svidimiz• lion ! ~CHOKINC:
·
be
May
26
at
the
County
·
vice
to
be at 6,30 a.m..A
.chester were ~eekend guests Hodge,, Lancaster, called on
WEDNESDAY
seriously, aft~) often eat it at
Fairgrounds,
9
a.m.
·to
12'
breakfast
will be served in
of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables. Mrs. Leatha Cowen Sunday
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, aU three dally meals. Even
flnt ~ prohlem ? AtJ ffcfult ~uhjt•('t fnr di/'i(·u~c.; inn~ Vun «'fi n
noon.
the church dining room for
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dorsa
Parand
Mrs
.
Louella
Haning
RAM
Wednesday,
7:30
p:m.
tlt1k it over in ht&gt;r ('nhnnn if yqu writt&gt; tn H~•h•n Rnth•l ; «'fl r t&gt; nf
members and visitors foliO)&gt;'•
sons vlslttid Mr. and Mrs. Otis went home with thwithem =r Bosworth Council 46, R&amp;SM
this Dt&gt;wspaper.
lng
the sunrise service. The
, Hussell at Millwood and Mrs. spending a week
· at 8:15.
worship service at 10:25!1.m.
Iva Durst at Leon on Sunday. CoJ"::~ Gibson Athens Is·
SYRACUSE . • MINERSwill also be followed by Holy
.
'
ding a wei.k with 'her VIU£ Baseball Association
Lisa and Kim Wll(ord
Communion. On Frtday there
visited Mr. and Mrs. Owen ~ d th r Mrs Lana Wednesda y at Syracuse ·
will be a union Good friday
Sund
.gran
mo
e
'
,
M
nl
.
I
B
ild'
t
7
And.erson
ay.
Glblon while her parents, Mr.
u c1pa u mg a p.m.
service atSI. Paul's Lutheran
,t!OOfll,llE
Mrs. Don Meadows and
d Mrs G0 rdon Gibson are All coaches are urged to
Church from noon to 3 p.m.
IH CIIAR AUoml&gt;le
children
of
Portland,
Chuck
::'
Fl rids
'
· attend.
DI!I'T'. 011&gt; M{
A bridal shower was held . Opal r..asto, Opal Wlck]1am ,
Craig visited Mr. and Mrs. · T~a CJark, Middleport,
MIDDLEPORT Amaleur
"'OC···
?
1\efreahrnents wei-e served,
Arnold Anderson Sunday. spent a weekend with her Gardeners, 8 p.m. wecmes- recently honorin!( Pamela Sherrie Tis.'lell, Brenda RlfDon Meadows was returned gran~rents, Mr. and Mrs. day In the Riverboat Room of Jeannene Rlfne, brtd~led. ne, Frona Rlfne, T&gt;ebbie by Danny and Nickey'
,to his home after being a Robert Clark.
.
theMelgsOfficeof.theAtlloos of C:reg Rut•hanan. H~llnK O!&lt;borne, T&gt;ehbie HoLqlnger, Leonard, Scott and . Tam
patient at Grant ,Hospital in
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Couaty Samgs and LGu Co. the · shower were Karen Oebbie Dlivls, Tammy Beams.
Special plans for the next
ColWI!bus.
Sheets visited recently with Mrs. Grace Pratt lmd Mrs. C:rate, Betsy Rifne, •nd Mr!i. LaComb, Tammy Pitzer,
Owlg)lt Bissell
meeting · lnclude demon. Mrs. Don Bell is asst~ing in Hattie Stiles, Columbus.
Veda Davis will be ]l(Jsteuei.
Sonia While and M•ry Wells.
Pink anrl yellow slre•mrrs
the care of Mrs. Nora Cross . The Lend-A-Hand met THURSDAY
Others presenting gifts ·stratlons on castrating,
at Holzer Medical Center·.
Tuesday eveiung at the home GALLIA COUNTY Human ' and wedding , hells were in- were Jane Wa!(l1er, Audrey docking, and . selecting
Edward Morris of Bowling of Mrs. Pauline Atkins and · Service Council, 12 'noon, ~lU!led in the .decoratlon.q T&gt;a,'fnPQrt, Joy!:!' ll!rtmison, ·market lambs. The next
Green spent Sunday nip!t Mra. Ruby Halliday.
Community Mental Health alon~ with a bridal renter- Naom i. Bi s sell , Nora meeting will be Apr119 at the
Buchanan, Macel Jtarton, Fairilrounds. - · Rodney
and Monday with Mrs. Aiu!E
Mr. and Mrs , Elwood• Center , sp eaker, Jack pie&lt;•e on the tahle.
C:ames
were
played
with
Lenora
Betzing, Freda Trtpp, reporter.
~~er ·D id s
is 8 Howard are vacationing In : Roderus, Housing Authority
" """· · av
ayre
'Florida.
.
Dir ector, lunch ,2, for prtzes ~olng to Araka C.rate. Miller, Sue Bissell, Sally
surgical patient ~t Holzer
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald reser vations call Phyllis Maxine Hoffman, and Mrs. Bissell, Patty HySI'II, Mary
·T&gt;&lt;M1g Ril&lt;'lell . The d&lt;•or prize King, Janet Je(ferr., Mudred
-.; 3rgg•:,.L-l MedJ,cMa~~entMr.cr.Ro . ...... . Brown of Ray, Ohio were Mason , 446-5500.
ANI)EJISON NAMED
was won by Ruth C.rate.
T
.
" ' a...
s. ger nouou Sunday guests of Mr. and
Arnold, Helen C:arveri&lt;;"k , · WASHINGTON [AP)
A eake det&gt;orated with pink T&gt;onna and Delbert Bissell, Walter Anderson, director of
and daughter, Kimberly, and Mrs. Mike Epple. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
and yellow r&lt;•'les was "&lt;'r'vt'd Joe and ·Ada Bissell, Mr. and the National Endowmeat for
.. visl"'d Mr.· arid Mrs. Dana ·
with pun~h, .&lt;"Offet•, rnl~ts • Mrs: Benny Perry, Mary the Arta' Music Progrun, has
LeWis ol CUlton Sunday.
mrt~ and &lt;'hips. Oth&lt;'N ntf!,...
Zeuxis, a· 5th-century B.C. ding twsido"' ih'"'" named Morn, Dorothy Rirne, Ruth been named special ••staqt
·· Mr. and Mrs.' George
Greek painter, laltgbed so . \V v.r e Mar~Hrel Ri sst' Jl , and Jim Riffle, Sarah to the endowment c:halrm8n.
Morris and
daug)jter ,
SpanJ!Ier , the Rev. and Mrs.
.In hll new POit.- Andenon
1Tammy Cleland •. of Medloay, · The Reicbstag burned hard at his own painting of an N~tClmi ·Prkt'. ("Arnl Pooler, Curtis .Randolph, Norman wlll serve ·u advllor to the
old
hag
ihat
he
broke
a
blood
Vkki Wnnd!&lt;'. . Tara and
=UJ&amp;.-..1 ' aod Mrs. Ralph Durst 'Spent a down In Berlin in 1933.
Hawthor;ne
cbairman In a broad range of
vessel and di"!!.
,_ and F.dnn I Jfe.
·week's vacation wtth Mr. and
V:~ k rill W(MKL"', Ftva rln1l un1
activities. ,

T~rns

HelenH~lp

Poet's corner

Us ... By Helen Bottel·i!

Pou_nd

RUMP OR BOTTOM ROUND

~

•

8-10 lb. Average

LB.$}39

18 Lbs. 8o Up

Pound

79~

::=:::::::=:::::=·A Quality Produce Place

=====t
7'1

CELERY ...1-~H~.~~. ~.~ -~~~~.L ..,..............................:............. ~.~..~~.~~.~r.A.~t
Y.ELLOW CORN )w.~r..~!!-!\YJ~.~~~~....~~.~t .........................~..~~.~!..~~~.......8'1·
IDAHO POTATOES .~~..~~.~~~................................................... }~.~:.~~..... s1 29
DON'T FORGET THE EASTER BUNNY WITH CARROTS .................................. ~..~:.~ .... Sl 00
BANANAS .R~.A.~!!:':.~.~.!!!L~~~.~~..................................................... 4 LB. FOR $100

-~ ... UST &amp; PEARL STREETS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASt!INGTON STATE RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS QUALITY

..

6 CT PKG

AVG.

1

t~ % LBS. $ 09

APPLES .............................................................................................2. ......... . 1
~........... STRAWBERRIES ..~~~~~~.~~~~!..................................................... ~!~.! .... 69'

Receives ribbon

WE ~LSO CARRY A FINE SELECTION OF EA.STER
FLOWERS AT A BEnER THAN LOW PRICE

MED., WIDE or X( WIDE
DUTCH MAID

EGGS

NOODLES
20-oz.

DOZEN

Can
ifOLGERS

REG. DRIP or ELECT. PERK

Z

TAYLOR

lb .

SWEET
POTATOES

Can

FRESHLIKE

BORDEN

YOUR CHOtCI:

2 .~/o ·

VEOETB.E SIIE.
.

1 2 -o:r Fren~" Stvle Green Beene , .
14-oz . tiiiCta ClltrCII I
+ •·&lt;'
16-o r .• v. Q.~u Mi xed"Vegetable's \
14 ;o z ~ 1 P8as A Cer.rotl
12 1h · OZ Spin ac h
'

MILK

23OM:, Syrup or
18oz. Vac Pak

GAU.ON .

MIX or MATCH

C

' rffll

.

~~~

BATHROOM TIELlE

ans

ROLLS

J

Pllll

BORDEN

ASSORTED FLAVORS

'

ICE

$119

%-Gal.

Carton

: DIWMifiCKS OR

I -Ct,

·NUnY BUDDY BARS ............................ •••

BIRDS EVE

1

$

)t

2

Cl
z

'

99&lt;~

C

MONARCH ·

Cans

,

30· Off lo..l

59
.

EGG NOODLES .........................................•,;:~

~.-

ORE IDA

REG.

Bag

$ 49
Can

•
\;!
~

!;!

z

'"'oo STORES

BORDEN .

y,

Gal

CHOCOLATE DRINK .....................~ ... .. ·
1BORQEN

. 24 .,.

COnAGE CHEESE ...................................... ..;

B9C
$Jot

ORANGE JUICE ... t.;:::~ $1 19
VALLi!;Y BELL

PUSH UPS....... .,;.............~~~. 89c
!&lt;RAFT
8-oz.
Pkg..

.,

~

_..$»

CARDINAlllr'
'•,

~

I DAIRY VALUES I

lto-r"
00-10·01

or CRINKLE CUT

Lb'.$1"·

59'

I

16-oz.

79«

"'~

tte,..

00 -20· ot~#

REYNOLDS FOIL .............................. :::,~·· 79 ·

FOODS

REAMES

$J2'

HUYY DUTY

14Y2-0Z.

8 -oz.
Bowl

llut

KLEENEX ........................... }~~-~-':.~~~.. 69~

PEAS
. $,.••

WHIP

••• Offlo..l

F4B IETERGENT ....................,.........":~:·

FRESHLIKE

r;.ow, J

ijij'C"~

LIQUID DYNAMO .............................~!~~

12 ct. Pkg.

1

Cl
limit two with

· LIQUID PALMOLIVE .............:......... :!~~ '1 2'

· BROWN 'N SERVE

Sons confirmed

79~

4-Ct.
Pkg.

FRESH LIKE

werr

Pamela-Riffel honored
by recent bridal shower

$·199

89

'

BREASTS

SWIFT
BUTTERBALL

rRS.......... .................................~·~:;:.~ }69

VAUGHAN'S·

1
I Calendar
I

Bani viJI.
Soci N .

TUR_KEY_

ROAST................. .
FRENCH (ITY TASTEE
. CHU"K LB.
801 ·OGNA ..............•.
WHOlE, HALVES or QUARTERS
. LB..'1
TAVERN HAMS .•••••••••••••••

WHOLE

,-------,
Social

Apple Grove News Notes

z·'

RIB STEAK .................................................... S"M9
,. · ·
USDA CHOICE ·

eight

4-H Club
News

~

59'
.

'

. - ...

�9- The Dai!Y Sentinel, Miudlep()rt-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, April 9, tm!l

'8- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePQrt-J:'omeroy, O,,.Mooday, AprilS, 19'1!1
PROB"TE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ROSCOE C.
COZART , DECEASED

-

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On April .t, 1979, In th~
Meigs County Proba te Court.
case . No . :12660. Robert R .
Cozart , Route 1, Box 525-A ,
Gu lfport. Mississ ippi 39501
was appointed · Exe cutor of
the Estate of Roscoe ~ ­

Cozart ,

deceased ,

late

of

------

·

WANT AD

Bridge .

- - ---------19t.7

TOTAL

£l fCTR IC"

1$WordoorVCuh

mn.,_ilr

·t.OO

furni!IOhM
~ . hl'&gt;rlr
wn ~ k er nnci ciryc&gt;r. Air ("nn d i
t inned . I lo t. ? 10 ft fr nntngr

1'1nme.

-

517 .000. Pho n r H?

lze your thinking to theirs, you
can turn this aroUnd.

The Sunbeals 4-H Club met
,·,. March 22llnd 29atthe Ritchie
· residence. Items of business
" discussed were projects
•, available, dues, and the
' ·election of officers. Refresb·
mEills were served by Mrs.
·.· Ritchie . Members will
·;., receive their project books
. ,and dlsciiiS projects at the
,~. next meeting • ..:. Usa Collins,
. , : reporter.
The HlllbiWes 4-H Club met

AFA(';lf . lt:'metiC" hrcwm
w ith t&gt;l nd• ~r... , whiiC" C'ln du!'s t
nn·ct rnwc. . M tc.~i ng si nrt&gt; Mrirrh
'JQ .
Br Prh St., Micldlr&gt;rnrt.
Qq] 7ti80

1.10
1.»1
1.'11'

I OST· MAN··s h illfnld n~ar l&lt;:r()9f!-t
StnrP. NII'M r&lt;JpPr!i in Hil lfn H
, t orly Pou~h. ~47 ·?! ?'J .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 11-Feb. 11}
Material dem8nda may be high
tOday, but you'll not be wllhout

waya to meet them . In fact, this
could push you toward something quite rewarding.

PISCES (Feb. zt.Manoh 20) Be

rtady to bend with persona
with whom you share a close
relationship and you'll come

out far better than doing things
your way.

Carmel Net~JtJ,
By the Day

---Yard
- ... Sale
-----

rwn ·FAMII,V Yon~
&amp;

11

ltlility l

ti-oilN . . dnthp &lt;: ,
~ prrnd s .
irnn~tonp rli~h r1. . rnrli or. . toys
oncf lots more . 1 1 , milr ~ wf'Sf
nf C t.r- ~ter CN 25 .

I

11111"

l'l1cSay

lhldly~MPutt&amp;auon
Slln:!ay
4P.M.

*"~=~l"rr=
·~-~-~·~··m:•:~~:~·:·~~~
':'
In Memorv

~·

- -· - - - .L.. - - - - - tN MEMORY. of Ellen Richards f itchpalrick , who passed away
April9. 1978.
If I hacf oil the worlci to give
rdgi ve if. yes , ondmore
To see her and see her smile
And greet her at the doar
But all I can da , dear dougtlter
Is go and tend you grove
And leave behind , os tokens of
love
To the bes t dm,oghter. that God
E'ver mode . Sodly nliued by
Mom, Dod, Br othe r a nd Sisters
and your two children. Charlie
and Tora Down .

b

ld

pm at t eir ui ing in Basham.
.Fact? ry c~o.k~ g~n.s only.
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY b:30

PM RACINE GUN CLUB: FAC·
TORY CHOKE GUNS QNl Y.

.ASTROlOGY ClASS. Starts April
16. It&gt;. 7 pm. Athens Co . Saving
oocf loon Community Room .
S15 . Myriom Ruth(hild Jacobs .

m -5708 .

,
.- __ - .,- - · __ __ _
.. . !~Y_!c;!!S_OJI~.r_~d- .
WATER AND misc. houl ing . r ol l

'1'12-5858 .
NOW HAUliNG limeston~ in '
Middlepprt-Poemro y area . Call
for free estimate. 367·7101 .
WILl . CARF fo r two in..,.ol!d or
Pld~trly perso ns If! my home ..
Twenty yeors ewper lence.
RP.Osonoble roles 992-0027 or

w2.5,22.

PAINTING AND sondblo sting .
Free estimates. Coii9A9.2686.
TREF TRIMMING and removal.

..,. -

'

fLFCTRIC GUITAR with q1 ~P. like
nt&gt;w Slef'! Quitor with rose
.g~od r~n{ii~IO.n ..9~1- ?4~3:
SfARS CUSJOM 7 riding mowPr ,
Coorl Cond1tion. 5475. Glenn
Bi ssell, 9&lt;~9 · 2fl01.

Phonp 985·~385

197B STARCRA FT 1ft ft . hoot .
apply
BUCKFV£ COMMUNITY Servicf"s [$
lnhoa rcl ·nutboord wi th Mer·
lonJ...ing foro ~:oordinator for its
mri!&gt;N . 71fl h.p .. complpt"' w ith
Gnllio· Meiw.; Foster Core Net·
all c 11tras oncl197~ Troil· r·nafl
wodc ro ~•nve dEOve lopmentally
trni iN. Also indodt'$ nil ac ·
cl isable d clients . The :;olnry for
ri"Hnrif'l ~ . ~ki$ ,
jodu•ts, rtc .
th is positio ~ is $10,400 yen r .
Prio•rl
upon
in spec tion
Please sned resume to 8uckeyf'
Q9?.3E:I?Q
Community Services , 680 F.
CoprNtane
Main St .. Jade son , 'o H 4Sb40 o~ l iK F t1FW .
F r i~idnirf'
n 'l frigerat o r
Buck oyc;o Commu11ity Services is
fro ~ tl ro;~ 1 roprf&gt;rtnne S.Pars
0~ e~ u.al _o~p~rt.u~it~ e.mrt~Y'7'·
cnnlininus r l!::'!o ninfJ sto ve 1
gnlrl FrigirloirP refrigPtolor .
'J4 7· 1b.41 .

HELP WANTED

SlfRFO JVC , rereivf&gt;r . BIC turn·
tnhi P. '} BosP speakers . 1~!
thon o year old. 997·2b79.

Ex~ced ·
b

.

. .

. ...

.

Mechanic

9·

-- -for Sale
- -· -. -Pets
-- ------'---'------~

H. L Wtitasel

. Y"IIIJI ~d Aluminum

Roofing

S!di'a
.. ,

:TUNI86'·

'14 Yr.'Experlllnct

Aural Mtltll!d

._4-1 mo. :

All fypeo rooRng, rutters
and downspouts. AI types
homo malnhn.nn - now
and repair. Storm doors
ond . windows. AU - "
guannteed. zo yea'rs
experience.
Free
estimates; · Call: Tom
Hoskins, 949-1160.
3-7·1mo•.
DI CK SMITH'S ' garage. Retail
motor , lune · up . wash lo bs.
9'12· 77bll .

. .

·'

.

.

Sarvlce C.lls

'

I'

. 651 Beech Street

'

992-23$6

'
'

FIVE ROOM how~e end bath with
goroge. Outbuilding. Re a l nice
garde n spot. located at l o ng
Botro m , Ohio. 985·4267 .

'

$900 . 992.7376.

'

'

__,_

·~

·-

EXCAVATING, dozer, !ooder and
backhoe work : · dump truck!i
and lo-boys for hire, will haul
fill dirt . •toP, soil. l i m~nfo~e and
g rovel. ~oil Bob 9f Rt?Qer Jeffer s . doy p~one 992-7089, night
.P~O~e ?9?· ~5?5 .or. ~-.52_32_.
EXCAVATING , doz er. bodchoe
and ditche r, Chorles R. Hat· ·
field . Block
Hoe Service .
Rutland, Ohio . Pone 7.42·2008.

. .

NEW LISTING ·- Cozy 2
bedrooin home with almost
2 acres. eath, furnace,
around ten · vear:s old.
Need! a little finishing but '
only S17,000.
YOUR CHANCE- Here Is
a business tor the price of
the tlxtures and Inventory.
Retirement

reason

for

s\olllng. W&amp;nl1o work Inside
for vourSP.If.
NICE AND QWET - .New'
3 bedroom home w1th . 2 :

.

IN STOCK for immedio,te delivery ·
various sizes of pool kits . Do-it·
yau r:setf or let us lf\Sioll for you .
0 . Bumgardner Sales, Inc .'

'1'17-sn• .

. lull basement, flrepfpce , fulfy ,
rnrpeted , c~ntral air , enclosed
sun porch. located on 6 11• acres
on CR 26. ·appro11 .' 3 miles fr o m
Raci ne . If interested conto&lt;t
larry Wo lf e 949-2836 week e nds
~n.d ?f~er 5 .e~e~in~s: .
•
TWO STORV 3 bedroom frame
hou se in Middle~rt . ~: 3.45~ .

Print answer.liere:

fJTI1.E ORPHAN ANNIE

ICmOrrOw)

Saturday's

I SAWED TH' CIIOSSPIECES

NEARLY THROUGH ...

·. -

Real Estate (or Sll_l_e_
FARM FOR Sale. House . 2 barns. .
troiler . L,91ge pond. 10 acres or
81 acres . 7~2· 2566 .
. . : ,;;,_·_ -' :. . - . :.._;_ ·.. :..._

~

- ·-

1e

RIDGE

GASOJJNE ALLEY

~VI

ON
CAIPniNG
DRIVE A LITtLE .
l

Don't put 40ur h21t

M4 qrand·

on the bed!

dauqhter
will be

Oh!

Riqht!

a~r

old on

Friday?

A GOOD SELEtTION Of'
-

'

SMI
FROM~ ·~~' ••· ·

arbiter
33 Snoop

'

.

'A PERFECT MATCH fVERY TIME '

.

BUYNOW&amp;SAVE
caiT74i:Hn
.
TALKTO
· WondtH or He,. or•t•
.. Glne Smllll, .

.tiUTLAND
PUINilUB

Ht!iU/qu.u ters

.R1mMD RIIIDURE
WE OFFER YOU ...
1, Twtl full fktort•of all new
furniture·. ·
.
·
2. Nice Mit~ Ill ulad
tumltur•.
.
· .
3. A larte buildl~a 1ull 'of

. fltauf!~l COl~.

~ ~- ~

fRJWI(.L"(, :. Pol\!•,.

·: : / WAM!a A P~Ec,.
MAT'G.H.

··

~ ·

. Fully
TRAILER .
equipped all furniture ,
12'&gt;&lt;60', 1970 · can rent lof
&amp;1!0. 18,500.110.

.

Wt. HA.VE BUYERS,
FINANCING &amp; A NEW :
HOME WARRANTY.·
PROGRAM. WE . NEED·
LISTINGS NQWI
.. REALTORS '
Henry E. Cltl8nd, Sr:,
. Hanrv E. Clel8nd, Jr.
192-2259
992\J

EAST

• KJ72

• Q95

a

AK3

aso
•se

• QB754
SOUTH
e · KJ 1053

6:-4-+-

•AKQ
• A 84

• 102
Vulnerable : Eut·Weat
Dealer: South
North Eliot

35 Free of
cost

37 Display
light
38 Tempt

Pua z•
Pua Pau

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to ~ork It:
11

!DO

••a
•1o8o

WEST

"What - · m--t--t-r•F:.,:R~ANK=~&amp;~E:::R::;NIE:::;:_,--------------------~---:---- 34 My
Love" bH-+-

COMPUTER DATING SERVICE

4-9

"J752
. • 1063
• J 98

seaport

up lnat•ltttl
.__,_,..,
24 Rolls of tlrjlet In 5toc1c
a 1110's of S.mplto to
...

CllaoM From.

NORTH
• AQ 7

of garlic
25 AtUred
H Loathe
27Uama
country
21 Girl's

~:!f!JJ~ 32 Pugilism's

doif

caught napping

Pi!:bozo

29 Italian

M1. CARPET

-

wo~rker"""''!!'-r:!"ma"''ll'""rshaTo;l~ Defenders

order

name

END&amp; RO.~L BALANCES.

'

n

-=______;:....,____

Pau
P110

Opening lead : +K

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One ieuer simply stands .to~ another. In thla nmple A Ill By Oawald Jacoby
used lor the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters, ud Alan Sontag
1 ;;~~~~~~~T~,.,..~VIl~~~'f~-~~~:_ apostrophes, lhe length and formation of the words are all
;;
""t" '"' "'',_.,u s
hints. Each da)' the code letters are dift'erent.
Alan : "We have fre ..
quently pointed out lhat ·any
CRVPTOQUOTES .
lime you give a player a
chance to make a mistake he
ZDLVUIW
UB
Q J Q I W will make it."
Oswald: "It doesn't matV ~ Q ter how good the player is.
EQPDML
DM
Looking back on 60 years of
X
U
F
C
M
,
_
bridge, I can recall plenty of
FCM
c
ur
UB
my own Idiocies In spite of a
natural deolre to forget
blunders and concentrate on
X D R R C r· H C V Z Q I '
~'\~JJJ,.;;,yes..,
•-rday' Crypt
•- DON'T WE OFTEN HAV·E-·ro
· A
. C1 brilliancies."
.
.
•
oquo.. :
.
· Alan · " Here' Is a steal
UNTiiiNKINGLY WHEN WE WANT TO STIMULA~ LUCR made PoSSible because both
DO SOMETiiiNG FOR US.-:G.E .LESSING
defenders nodded. The de·
renee llfarted ·with thr ee

.

MVMAN
SNUFFY
TOOK UP

carport, · nice yard, good

neighborhood . ONLY.
$28.500,00.
FARM-70 acres, 10 year
old ranch type home (needs'
repairs), large barn and
other buildings. Cheap at
S33,500.0Q.
BUILDING SITE -, 2 acres
of ian~ In Wildwood·
subldlvl!lon,
beou.tllul
homeslle. ~.OOO.QO .
' YOUR OWN CAR WASHGood part time Income and
e plaCe to wash your own
car. Call tor -details.:
. .
.

QOROUROYS

z

- - - .-r·- . ·- .

~-

SAVE .AlDT

Housing·

HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL
REJ\L NICE RANCH - 3 - Only $11,000, and a few
bedrooms, . equipped repair~ 11'111 make you •
kitchen, oarpellng, nloe Inexpensive home.

Answer: MIQht be ribbed for wearing them -

5: 55-Su~rlse 'Semester 1o.
6:1l0-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15; 6: 10-News 17.
6 : 2~oncerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:30-Romper Room
17.
.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck While Reports 10;' News
13.
•
7:110-Today 3,15; Good . Morning America 6,13;
Tuesday Morning 8; Schoolle~. 10; Three Stooges·
Little Rascals 17.
·
'
·
7:15-Weather 33; 7:30-Famlly Affair 10.
8:110-Copt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Suame .St. 33.
8:30-Hazel 17.
9:1l0-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Emergency
One 6; Hogan'! Heroes 8; Matoh Game 10; Lucy
Show 17.
·
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
.
IO :IlO-Cord Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Doling Game 13; l,'iovle "Mildred
Pierce" .17.
.
10 :30-All Star Seorets 3, 15; S20,000 Pyramid 13: Andy
Grlltlth 6; Price I! Right 8, 10.
11 :llO-Hlgh Roller~ 3, 15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13;
Consumer Survival Kll 20.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune j,t5; Family Feud 6,13: Love
ot ·Life 8, 10.
11 :5~BS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :1l0-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10; Password 15; Young
&amp; the Restless I; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,)3; Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10;
Elec. Co. 20,33; Not For Women Only 15; Movie
"The Roaring Twenties" 17.
1:110-Days of eur L.lves 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1:30-As The World Turn! 8,10; 2:110-Doctors 3, 15;
One Lite to Live 6, 13.
2:25-News17; 2:30-Anothor World 3, 15; I Love Lucy
17; Guiding Llghl 8,10.
3:1l0-General Hospital 6.13; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You ;10;
Banana Spills 17.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllntatones 17; Dick
· Cavett 20.
·
4:1l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Grlltln 6; Addams Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
, Batman 10; Mike Douglas 13; Speoe Gina!! 17.
41:!0-Bewllched 3;; Glllloan's Is. 8; Brody Bunch 10;
Lucy-Show 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
5:1l0-l Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies ,8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Blonlc Woman 13; Brody Bunch 15; 1
Dreemt.of Jeannie 17.
5:»-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore tO; Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17; Doctor Who 33 •
6:1l0-News3,8,10,13, 15; ABC.New56; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6:30-N BC New! 3, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Frlencta 6; CBS News 8,10; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
· 7·:110-Cross-Wlts 3; stoo,ooo Name That Tune 6;
Newlywed Game 13; Pleose Stand Bv 8; Nows tO;
Love American Style 15; Carol Burnett &amp; 'Frlendo
17; Dick Cavell 20; Morshall U. Report 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go To The Races 8;
Candid Camera 6; Vf : Price Ia Right 10; Donna
Fargo 13; TV Honor Soclely 15; Baoeball 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Ripor.t 20,33,
8 :IIO-qlfthangars3, 15; Happy Days 6,13; Here Comes
Peter Cottontail 8.10; Austin City Limits 20; City
Nolebook 33.
8:30-LeYerne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Film Maker• 33.
9:1l0-Movle "Legend of the Golden Gun" 3, 15; Three's Company 6, 13; Movie "l)eadman's Curve" 8,10i
Library of Cong•ess 33; Academy Leaders 20.
9:,30-"(axl 6,13. ·
1D:Il0-Ropers 6,131 World at 'War 17; News 20.
10:30-13 Queens Blvd. 6,13; Hamper McBee: Raw ·
Mash 33; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Hogan's Heroes 17; Llkt It
Is 20; Book Beat 33.
"
11: 30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Movie "A Matter of Time"
13; Movlt "Interval" 6; Barnaby Jones I; ABC

ACROSS
39 Gaelic
I Gun fodder, 40 Took
for short
!lrile out
5 Jane, Helen n WWI battle
or Henry
slle
\ w~:~,~-- ~-~~N~.., 11 Domestic
DOWN
Disinclined I Store up
13 One of the
French
' Nawa33; Movie "Kona Coast" 10; Movie "The P~
painter
.; . Brontea
and Haw to Use II'' 17.
Yealerdaf'l Alllwer
12:40-Madlgan 8; 1:110-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
!:' If Exclusive •aFamous name
10 lrrllBted
25 Count on
1:30-Baseball 17; 1:o45-NeW1 13; 4:1l0-12 O'Clock
' 15 Wash . .VIP
in pool
High 17; 5:1l0-Dragnel 17.
Florida
Analyzed
II June
fPoem
cOIUlty
a ~~e~~tence .,
beetle
5 Hebrew
19 Spun
2t Add zest to ' 111
__011_d_•.:...y,_A..:.p_ru__
,_
· O.T. notes
Garfunkel
7
James' last, 8 Manifest
2%Dullard
!ltGaUows
•.
23 Credit
ilem
Granger's
7 Devout:
card user
31 Proprietor
first
abbr.
The "8 11 in
8 Beanery
:u TV
,. Item for tat· _ __:O:..:s:.:.w:.:.a=ld.:::...::J.::a.::.co.::.b.::.y!....a::.n:.:.d::....:..A:.:.:Ia=n.:..S::.o::.n:.:.t=a:..;:g!..._~
R.S.V.P.
brewery
3'7 French
cooks
9
Impute
,--.,.,.-·--,----:----:--.. 21 Fountain
....

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice. oil makes. , 992. 22B4 , T.he
.Fabric Shap ,' Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Servlqe, We shoroen Sdssars.
- --·,

porch and one wooded acre,

features . $60,000.00.

I

Jumbles: DIRTY CROWN QUARTZ STUCCO

HA•HA•AA ..•GUESS
THAT 'U. FIX HIS

Sweepers , tooaters , irons: oil
small oppUancu . Lown moer ,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7.

area, sundeck,

baths. ·family rOQm, . rec.

"( XX-(Anowero
I XI I )"

by THOMAS JOSEP.H

2 car garage, large front .

room , . wocldburnlng
fireplace . and
other

gealod by lite above cartoon.

~DN.."t.'

familY room With
flrept'ace . Nice kitchen !

BEAUTIFUL, BRICK
RANCH - .country living
·In a truly nice home.· 8
yearS old, .f bedrooms, 2'h

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the aurprlae anawer, 11 aug·

WAGOI'I ···

baths

with dining

t
I I j

j

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR ·

. . . . - .

Wt-1EN Hie; &amp;U61NEe&gt;~
&amp;EGAN TO 61.11".

tBRISCE

·r--"-------'"11

BY OWNE'R
4 BEDROOM
TRI-LEVEL HOME

.

-·

''

'

W~1cl'l;r: iHE "T!I:OI"ICAL.
FRUI"T "T't'C:.OON WEN!

I

(J

;.

ft2-6011. .. ,.
, , 3-16-mo, ad, ,
..

· 3-7' 1 ino.J.Pd.l ·

.

----

'

-· .

wf\lew Home
1fiAdcl·ons
~ Remoldlngs ·
'if. Free Estimates

Mlddiepilrt, 0.

HOWERY AND MARTIN · Ex ·
ca.vot ing , septic: systems .
dozer , backhoe . Rt. 143. Phone
1 (o1•l 698-7331.
·

. .

OWNER SELLING: 'l bedroom
frame house . fxcetlent in tow n
· location : Ca11Y97·3073.

1971 GMC PICKUP. b cyl , std.

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'
i'

Coli U2·2328 .

WANTED TO buy · fo ur bedroom.
rural home that will meet
FmHA stal'ldords . 742 · 307~ .

85.. 7nd AVE .. PH. 4&lt;116.9523

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.. .

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv. ing . Ohio Volley region. Six
day s a week . 24 houn serwice. BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com- .
Emergency coils . Coli 662· 2952 · plete Service. Phone 9~9·2487
ot 949-2000. Roclne. Ohio. Crltt
or 882 ·3~ 54 .
. .
. . .. .· . . . . . · - .
Bradford.
WAllPAPERING AND pa inting.

0

1

. . . . . .

·

El.ECiliiC:MOTOR_ .~ · VINYL i AWM.
,.
.
.SHOP
'11 Ynrs EXIMf'IIIICt
·SIDING
· - ,Will Make

.,'

byHonrtArnoldondBobloe

Unscr&amp;mbfe these lour Jumbles.
one letter to each squar,, to form
four ordinary words.

c. _R. MASH

.~

REYNOlD'S

'

Jjl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

of

calls.

Ohio Vlley Roofing
and
Home Mlinllnlnce

\1\li}Nf fii)'il

~ ~ ~~~~

Elberlelds of Pvmtr0y .
and Klmboll Musk Center
otAihlno
Phone 991-2511
· or 992-2012
3-1

Estimate, 949!%801 Dr
949-2860. No Sunday

4:5-tlc

WILLCONFIKM
ITI

IMEIUim:.
Associate

'

Ca II for a Free Siding

949-2862. 949-2160

TUESDAY, APRIL 10,1979
5:45-Farm Reporf 13; 5:»-PTL Club 13; World&amp;!
Large 17.

PA5!&gt;EN6ER!'

'· .

1

SIDING co~
~

5TO!itY. 51R-·
THE CREW AND

.,

plus.
RIVER VIEW - Above all
. . . . . . . . . . .
flOOds, beautiful panorama
1973 BUICK CENTURY, 55.000
slle. Has 3 bedrooms, bath,
miles. Good tires . $~50 .
-----------na' gas furnace, city water
FOR SALE
. __wanted_!~Buy __ _ 985·3857
and block garage. OnlY
.
.
517.500.'
CASH FOR jun... cors. 24 hour 1971 CHEVFbLET ' ', ton 4· wheel
Qtly $17,5e0.
'
wrecker
tervlce .
Frye' s ,
dri ve pickup. E~tro Iorge too l
NEW LISTING- Here's a
Rutland , OH. 747-7081 .
box . white spoh• wheels , long
. - .
. .. . . '!bargain or wrlleott, 2
wide bed, .. Speed. $2500. Will
CHIP WOOD . Poles moM .
bedroom home on the bus
deal. 985-3510.
diameter 10" on largest end.
llneln
town. Has a bath tor
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. SIO 1978 JEEP CJ5. b cyl. !5000 .
only $7,50Q.
'1'12·3750.
pe r ton . Delivered to Ohio .
NEW LISTING - 6.01
-Pollet Co ., Rt . 2. Pom9roy . MUST SELL. 1977 Mal ibu 2-doar .
·acres, 6.JO acres. 7.12 acres
9'12-2bll9 .
'
'192-5786.
All brick, Ileal pump and
- - . - .
Jor 20 acres near Meigs Sr.
OlD FURNITURE, Ice bo.-e!i, brass
cHtral air, 112 acre tot In
HIQh.
. .
1973 BUICK GRAN Sport . Good
be-is , ·Iron beds , desk s. etc. . ,
lower Mldd leport. Only 3 · I CALL 99z-3jZ5, WE'LL
radiol fires. Rally wheel s ,'
Complete households. Write
years old. For appointment ' •OUR BEST.
outo .,
P.S., A.c.: $1600.
M.D. Miller, Rt . 4 , Pomeroy or
· phone 992-4055 any1imo.
Helen L. ,
985·•226.
. .
coltqq2-77b0.
'•
GCifdOII
B.
1975 CHEVY 4x4 truck . Call
'
'
Sue
P.
Murphy
OLD COINS . pocket watches.
. '1'12·5335 .
. MOOEPN..THREe bedroom h·ouse.
doss rings. wedding bands.
Rea1or AsiMiclates '
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ATLANTIC!

1:llO-Tomorrow 3; lron!lde 131. News 15.
1:30-Movle "The Unholy Wile" 17; 2 : ~News 13.
.3:30-News 17; 3:50-Cpen Up 17.

I'ELIEVE YOU!'!,·

~eAl

BI$SFI!

New, r~pair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cle,ning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

Real Estate for Sale

Auto· -Sales
- - ·--~
· ---:-- --·
DECEMBER SAlE
SAVE UP T030' STORE WIDE.
NEW, 2 PI= liVING ROOM SUITE ,
SU9 . ~ . N~W S PC DINEITE
SETS, $49.95 . NEW SEAlY MAT·
TRESS'S TWIN SIZE INTERSPR·
lNG S•S .. NEW 3 PC END TABlE
SETS. $39.95 U·HAUl , RICE'S
NEW AND USED FURNITURE ,

1

WANT TO buy: old -45 ond 76
phonograph recc·rds . Coli
997·b370 o r Contort Mortin Furniture .

CHA~TSD
f~'ET IN MID·

HIJACI&lt;ED AT

ONE MALE German Schnau7er
~ith poper.s 4 years old. Coli
after 5 pm . 7~2 · 3117 .

1975 PONTIAC ACTRE hatchback,
~ ~Y': a.ut.o ..q.c.9 -?1~3 : . .

UTTEIUV UN·

THEY'LL

1:/dYi; TO

.

729:M, c-o The Dolly Sen·
tlnal, Pomeroy, 45769.

THREE BEDROOM modll!'rn home ,
. 7•2·3107 o•742·2573 .
8 acres , 1'1 mile out pf Roc-ine on
1973 .IIOTERNAI'iONAl SCOUT
. · · · · · . . . .
Ook Grove Rd. For more in·
21 .000 mlles , tu lly equipped, .
Will· DO bab~s itting. 51 .so an
formation co ii949-'140S.
oi r. wench . etc , exrellent con·
haur or S70 o wee~ . Across the
dition . W2-712l.
SEVEN ROOM ho use . 2 ~ acres .
street from , Mason Drive- ln.
Rl . 338 . I mile above dam . ,
1975 CADILLAC Eldorado. 25,000
.g~ld. tr ~ il.trr. tr~m.m~d. in. bl.a~k ..
2-17 · ~ 123.
m
iles
;
fully
equipped
.
f
Helt'e
nt
POOl CHFMICAlS. Season packs.
conditio n . m.1111
· l"' VILLAGE of Chester: 4
Free dft'l ivtry . D. Bumgordner
'
bedroom home , o11oched ,
Sales . Inc. Fquipment and sup· 1974 GMC JIMMY 2-whP.el dirve ,
goroge , smot! utilitv building.
pl~e~ ~~- 5?2_4 .
P.S .. P.B.. air shocks in the
located on choke 1 acre of
rear . Reese lraiiE&gt;r hitch . 8 .
HOUSE E&gt;&lt;T.ERIOR paint ing . Roof
ground . Small fruit trees . Plentrade" ond CB radio . q92.3590.
painting and repairs. Call
ty garden spor•. S,.,own b)! OP· .
qq7.b309 or 74~· 7174 for fre e ., 1974 CHEVROLET 4x4 for sale Of
.
P
~in~~ent c:n~y ..6~.d ._98.5·~5?1 :
estimnte .
trode . 7d'J.'J789.

diomonds . Gold or silver . Coli
Roer Wamsley , 742-:1331 .

CA$TAWAY5
FlitOM AN

REAL EsTATE L~nr;, Purchase ond
refinance. 30 yeor term s. VA.
No money down (E!IIgible
. . . . .
. - 11eterans) . FHA ' · As low as 3 'PUlliNS EXCAVATING: Complete ,
per c~'nt do wn (non· veterans) .
~erv!ce . ~h ~ne ~· 1oi7B
lrelnnd Mortgage Co., n , E.
AUTOMOBILE
INSURANCE bee1
State . Athen s. 61~ · 592 ·305 1 .
cancetleCI? Los t your o pe rnton
lice'nse? Phone 992·11.43.

and salary histarv to Box ·

'

0~ •• IIIITH'IT5
SAFE AND IT5 CAPTAIN RVI~ED!

WHO'LL S&amp;LIEV&amp;
·SUCH A. ;TORY~
TEN MILLiON IN GOLD
AND DIAMONDS.

Real Estate for Sale

For farm machinery &amp; .
small engines. Send
background quallflcallonil

.. I'Y TWO

TH5 • CR:IJI~f Lll-lfR SAIL5

ASPtN·s VERMFf~ Bale r s nt ~ nod
~ rr vi ( e . eolf! n ip !'l tod~ for im ·
mediatt" · cWiivery. Even ing$
phone74? ?8?7 : o.c)ller ..
FAWN CIGARFTTF marhinP . 21
hrond . Coli 997-9902 .

News JJ ; Movie "Without ReServations" 10; Movie
1
' Funeral In Berlin" 17.
12 :30-News 6, 13; 12 : 4~McMlllan &amp; Wlle 8.

CAPTAIN EASY

·

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"fVFRYTHING 'S GOTTA GO" .
Hnu sfl and lot. furnit ure ,
cl o thas . all ' my household
Items.. Drop by 7biJ loureiSt .,
Middleport.

TfMPORARY light delivery o pr n.
Neat
appearan ce.. Good
transpo rtation necessa ry .. On ly
thou~ tomillar with on~o nee d

l-11 March 27 at the Dyer
. c;amJii.!l9. E~uiP'!'.ent_ ..
· residence with 12 members
' . and · two advisors lo at·
1975 11 FOOT truck camper . se lf·
contoined. a ir condition. ex·
· tendance. Business dllcuased
WANT TO buy: old jewelry . Coli
cellent condition, 992· 2121 .
• · included the Community Club
992·5262 or write kov CB&lt;il , 87
· Award Program, projects
.s.?~d ._M_id?lt;.P?'~- C?~· _
and the Plan-o.-Rama .
WANT TO ,buy: ,one cnw. or cow
_...:F
c.:or .Rent
. DemonstraUoos were given
and call . Call ~2· 1604 o r write
393~0 White Ook Rd .. Pomeroy, · COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork ,
, . oo !\ow to make refrigerator
Route .3 3. no rth of Pametoy ..
Ohi o .
·
. rolls by Mary· ColweU, a
.Lo.rg~ l~t ~ . ~a!l ~?· ~A~9 ..
WANTED: POWER woodworking
- safety rePort by Dawn Bing,
3 AND ·4 BM furnished ond u n·
tool'S . 9q2. 7501 .
. . . '. . . . ·
You and Your Money by
furni s h ed
op ts .
Phon e
REFRIGERATOR · FOR CAMPER .
'192·543.4 .
.' Patty Dyer and the parts of a
....
...
. ••2.7100.
· rocket by Mark · McGuire.
90 ROlliNG ACRES ol good
pOsture.' Plenty of water . Could
) , Recreatloo was enjoyed by
Mobile Homes for Sale
· accomodat"' SO ~us cattle.
, the members. Refreshments
61 &lt;-667-33'18.
. wes-e served by BW llj!lcomb. were :
Cindy
fluer, 1955 Prairie Schoone r. 28x8.
oNE. ·e EOROoM ·o~ts·. d~signed
Special plans for the next president; Renee Riebel, vice
bdr.
.
specifir:nlly for wheelchair po·
1965
General
,
b0111
l
'1
,
'1
hdr.
meeting Include demon· president: Beth Riebel
tienh . Call between 9 ·and 6 ..
1968
Elco
na
,
5'1x11.
7
bdr.
· !llrattona by Deari Colwell on secretary; Rllonds · Riebel . 1969 Bllddy , 60111 12, 4 bdr .
'192· 7772.
Weedlnc and Kenny Barnett · treasurer; Henee 1ruaseli 1970Sylvo, 60x1'}. 2bdr.
NFW FOUR bedroom opll .
• oo Health. The nest meeting news • reporter;
Angle 1970 Costle , 60xl '2 . '2 bdr .
ovailoble for fmally. of S to B.
. ' will be April 9. - Richard · .Spencer, safety] Brenda 1973 Arlington , 60xl2, 2 bdr.
_(all be_h--:_e !n _9 c:_Jnd6. !'fl.·7!1,1.
. 7.0JtlA 3 bdr.
MOBilE HOM£. Adu lts onlv.
Bubam, reporter.
lleDtz, health; Robyn PJm.er, 1973 Pldqewood
l&gt;f u ltwood 50,.. 1'1 . 'Jbdr .
·
·
• :recnatlan; and Torrtl'lllllils, , l~ 'l:iB&amp;S
MOBilF HOMF SAlES
'1'!.7.25'18
· The Merry .Milkers .U 'llllloriBR.
Refreshments
PT. PlESANT, iNv.
APT . IN Middle port . Newly
675·.4414
rl' deco roted . . All utilities
Club met March 29 at the were served by Mrs. Pullins ..
ovoilobl~ . No pets, prefera bly
Terri. Pulllna residence With Special Plans for the next, ~ 973 FREEDOM MOBILI: home .
Appl iances, undarpin rJ ing..
.noc~il~r~n 991.286ot .
·nine members' · and three ; m~ will be to decide on
lirl!'plorf! . 992-S413or997·6118 .. . IN SYRACUSE 009 . bedroom,
adviiOrs In attendance. Items Iprojects. The nest meeting
S5'1&lt;:J?.. . . .
traiiE!r with hicle·a ·hl'!d Max . 1
of bualnes8 dllcusaed were 'Iiiii be April II at the Terri !970 PFBfl RAIDER 11 x ~8 . Very
~pie nr .couplo with I child.
• dues, project~, taklng Stanley Pullinll residence. - Renee
QOorl r onct iiion. $3500. 247.3fl75
utilitie-s ·and TV ~et furn . ,No
or. 9~9- 2b.l3 (1f•N 4,
pels . Coli '1'1?·3?69.
.• orders. Officers elected TriiiSell, Reporter.

•..

·

cr.lsior Solt Works . lnr . . !=. Ma in
St .. Pomeroy. m ·3691 .

AREA. PHONE 992·21 ~ .

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

h

-

COAl , liMfSTONf. sa nd . grovPI,
ro lcium chloridP. fp rtili7e r, :rlog
foorl . a nd a ll lypPs of salt . fit .

I MMFDIATE
OPfNING .
tahorat o ry Tf'fhnkion , 3· 11
s,hih . hpetit"ncf"d MLT (ASCP)
or equivalent. Excellen t salary
ond fr inge bftnefil5 . Shift dlf.
fenmtn il. Contact: Personnel
Offi ce .
Pleasant
Volley
Hospltol . Valley Drive, Point
PIPasont. WV . 15550. Phon ~!'
304·675· 4340. An Equal Op·
.~rt~m.ity E-:n~toye_r
CARHifR WANTED FOR SYRACUSF

. ____Npt~ces ___ _

GUN SHOOT, Rocine Volunteer
Fire Dept . .Every Saturday b:30

-- -.--

Sale
R---For
---

TFMPORARY TElEPHON E soles
' pos ition open 'from our office.
Day
and · e "e ning
shift
ava ifable . Phonf' 985· 4384 .

....~.I)'

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PA~tN6ER!7

- . . fi~lp_ ~a_nt~_ . .

WANT·Al&gt;
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES ,
.

-

MONDAYAPRIL9,1979
8:1l0-Llflle House On The Prairie 3,15; Perry Como
6, 13; Pea nul! 8, 10; Bill Moyers' Journal 20,33; Star
Trek 17.
,
8:30-Whlte Shadow 8; 1978 Senlo~ OlympiC! 10.
9: llO-Movle " Deliverance" 3,15; Cheryl Ladd 6, 13;
~cademy Le&amp;ders33; Movie "A New Kind of Love"
17; . Growing Year~ 20.
9 : 3~WKRP In Clnclnnoll 8, 10.
10 :00-0scor Award! 6, 13; Lou Grant 8, 10; New! 20;
Palestine 33.
10 :30-Almonoc 20
11 :llO-News 3,8,10~5: Gong Show 20 .
•
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Rockford Flies ·&amp;; ABC

..

AIA SKIAN HUSI&lt;Y p.u p !; to g nnrl
hom~..rw7.61J57 .

·-----

NOTICE

~

TELEVISION .
VIEWING

.B uszness
.. . ··~~
· ~~· · ·
.~

'

Helen and BW Bickers of
Bidwell called ·at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee on
Friday.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson and ·son, Patrick,
called at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglaa JohnJon of
Racine on Saturday.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Dwl!,lhl
Swepston of Columbus spent
Saturday night and SWlday
here at tbe Lee home and
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee
and family.
Eunie Brinker's great·
granddaughter, Sheryl
LeAnn Johnson, . spent
Saturday with ber.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Pierce of Athens called at the
home of Mary Circle
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George ·
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James
Circle of New Haven were at
the home of Mary Circle over
the weekend.
·

DICK.TRACY

Give Away

Sol ro . Apr il 10 .

C o nie · A · l o n g~ ,

-

Wc- k h'r. nnd o t h('r fnmh u r.
hrnnd C'l l putf' fr11it juirf" !&gt; Srr·
vi r ll' rom pony r!l tohli ~ hM nr ·
rnu nl of hrii F&gt;r mntl!' lt.
hnr;r itnlc. t"lr Minim11m irn1r!1t:
mr nt ~1700 . r;rcurerl hy invtm·
tn. r~ .nnd r(1uiJ1"tP.nl Wrilt' in·
rfurlr nrlrlrr o;~ ; tei.Pphonr nnrl
,,.fNf"nr p~ l fl NUAG f . 11?1
MnniPvolln Pel S W. Rirm
inf1hnm·. Alnhnmo 35?11 n r.c-o11
Mr Ha ll to ll frrf' l · flOCJ·633· 4545

.F.aCh ward Oftr the mlnilmab. lb
per-won! por day.
Ado rumlni lhan COIIIeC\IU'(t
~ will be dllrpd ol lht I daJ 1 .
lrt•IDIIIlOI')', Coni &lt;i 111111
Olllluory &lt; f cdll por won!, P,OII[
minimum. Cuhk1artfance.

.

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PROFIT AHI £ IJI ~T RIHU TO ~SHIP for

~ II 4 .....

Tulldly, Aprii1D

I'()MEROY - The Meigs
County 4-H Plan-0-Rama was
held Thursday evening at the
Pomeroy E;lementary School.
The program inCluded the
April 10, 1171
introduction of .4-H advisors A quieter you may emerge this
and members. A 4-H film, coming year. This could prove
"As A Clover Grows,'' was to be ew:tremety advantageous
presented. Scholarship iutd In both your personal lite and
Sometimes when
Polter Cclntest winners were careefNise.
we walk slower we don't miss
announced, and · slides, 11 much.
.
featuring 4·H activities · ARI!S (March 21-Aprlllll Don't
dating back to 1944 were lrellf a job you are allemp11ng
llhoWII. Alao, Chris Clover, 10 do Isn't going at all well .
Help Is on Its way and wilt
the newest member of the f·H arrive in ptenty of lime to solve
family In Ohio, was In· your problem. Find out more of
troduced.
what lies ahead tor you In the
Four·H displays consisting year lollowlvg your birthday by
of items 4-H members made . sending tor your copy of Astro-Leiter . Mall Sl tor each
In projects last year were set Graph
to Astra-Graph , P.O. Box 489,
.up for new members and Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019 .
advisors to view. Clubs In· Be sure to specify birth sign .
valved in displays we're the TAURUS (Apr1120-Miy 20} Luc~
Is on your side tOday , so don ' t
'Hillbillies 4-H Club, Merry let
your temper flare over an
'Makers 4-H Club, CoWllry lrrltallng Individual. This perChicks 4·H Club, Meigs son won 't be 'ble 10 disrupt
!·
Coumy Sbepberds Club, Irish th1nga.
Leprt!Chauna 4-H Club, Mi:l:ed QEMINI (May ZI·Junt 20) Go
and dig Into your purse
Up lllltsbots 4-H Club, Sun· ahead
for the family or loved ones
beams 4-H Club, Alfred today, but draw the line with
Angela 4-H Club, Five Point outsiders . Keep freelo"-ders
Star Stitchers 4-H Club, Busy out of the picture,
Beavers 4-H Club, and the CANCER (June Z1.July ZZ} This
Is one of those days when
· Five Point Bucks 4-H Club. you'll be far more adept at
The door prize was handling larger Issues than you
awarded to Patty Calaway, will be In coping with smaller
advtsor of tbe Alfred Angels ones . Think big .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A confl·
4-H Club.
denttal arrangement, wellRefreshments were served. ·screened from othera, will be
The Extension Office would• working tor your benefit today .
uke to thank Francis Florist Don 't think you hl¥8 to pay a
for donating the door prize, high price. for It, however. .
Mrs. Greta Suttle for judging VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22)
SOmeone may not be holding
·the posters, tbe 4-H clubs for up
his end ol an agreement
.helping with relreibments . today, but don't let thiS get to
.and The Dally Sentinel fnr . you. The carda are stacked In
your, favor. He won't matter,
!taking pic!lll'efl
anywoy.
,
.
LIBM (Sept. 23-0ct. U) SomePOMEROY -' The AHred lhiOQ very good I. going Ia
Angels f·H Club met happen today . It will give you
March 24 at tile DorothY cause to celebrate. The only
Ciliway remaence with 10 bad thing: You probably .won 't
your work done.
members and three advlaors get
SCORPIO (0&lt;:1. 2'-Nov. Hilt's
.1n attendance. Officers were not a day to be out aoclallzlng .
ielected and projects were The .good things h~ppen In
areas Involving your work or
~selected. Dorotby. Joann and
~reer. Don 't get sidetracked.
Patty Calaway served re- SAGITTARIUS
(Nov. 23-Dec.
freabmEilts.
Special · Z'1) Singular purposes should
· plans
for
the
next be avoided today. Your luck
meeting are teaming . how Ilea lrr areas that Include the
to pin oo a pattern; girts. welfare of othera. Car:e about
are to bring !belt patterns. them and they'll care about
'The nelll meeting will be ·. ~~PRICORN (Dec. 22.-Jan. 11)
April 21 at tbe Usa Hen· Things may not go IS smoothly
.der10n residence. - T8111111)' u you planned, bul II you
ilaten to others and aynchron.Calaway, reporter.

;~

1.15 1

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Business
.. . . Opportunities
.
. . . '

- ·-· --·-·

.I

Meigs4-H ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
Club News

The Saddle Sitters 4-H Club
met March :it at the J. R.
&lt;&gt;,' Kennedy residence with four
,._,., members and one advlaor In
., , attendance . Members
ln' dllcusaed dates f«. practice
,.,,. sesalon and project books.
"... ,' Officers elected were:
Robin
.
·C Ritchie, president; Mlkkl
. )• ' Conley, vice preildEIJI; Tony
.,.,,, Kennedy,
secretary
'·?' treasurer; and Jeannie
. Welah, reporter. The next
.....· meeting will be beld April3 at
oli the Kennedy residence. •c·· t' 'Jeamle Welllh 1 reporter.

tn~T

Clorl•

uo
1.10
s.oo

?~?to

-

·Lost a'nii Found

CHARGES

- . - . Mobile Homes for Sale

Yellow Bush Rolll d , Racine ,
fOh io .

Ro bert E . Buck
Probate J u dge .Cierk
(4) 9, 16, 2:- Jtc

---~ ·

AUCTION FV£RY Sundny .· lpm .,
.AI ~n . ouctiQn every W~ d nes doy
e11oning ' 7pm. Hor tlorcl Co1n
munity Cen!Pr . Hn rtlord. WV . .t
miles lip frnm Pomeroy· Mo:&lt;&gt;C"In

c a5e No . 22.660

'

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

· • •. · Auctions- - - ·

See the Grate Family ·at

9VT WHAT MAI(ES I(OV
iHINK 1(00 COVL.D 8e
A GROCER!( CLERK ?

'IEP··I CAN
SEE THAT,

HE'LL HAVE TH' HEALTHIEST
MULE IN TH' HOLLER

LOWEEZY

JOGGII\J'

.

·.

rounds of clubs. South ruffed
the third club and saw that
he needed tour heart tricks
'to make his

contract,

and

because of entry probfems,
he had lo establish hearts
before clearing trumps. He
was home 11 the suit broke 3·
3 and could also succeed If ·
hearta were 4-2 and the man
.with short hearts was also
, short In trumps."
Oswald : "Then, I ~sswne
he took an added chance. He
cashed the jack of spades
and ace-king of hearts, led a
low trump to dummy's ace,
played a third heart and was
home when East didn't
bother to ruff."
Alan : "West made the
first defensive mistake. He
followed to the fiut heart
with the three spot to show
on odd nwnber of carda In
the suit. These defenders
were In the advanced player
class. Also, East should really ruff that third heart. His
little trump wasn't going to
be worth anything later."

AsktiMixDaats
A New Hampshire reader
asks If Important bridge
topmamenla UBed to be
played at Dartmouth Col·
lege .
The A!Jlerlcan Whist
League ran occasJonal sum-

mer tournaments there and
added contract events from
1931 until1937. ,
1NEWSPAPF.I1 ENTERPRISE A!ISN. I

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send $1 lo: " Win al
Bridge, " care of this newsps·
per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio Cfly
Srarlon , New Yor~. N. Y. roor9.)

�•
10 ~ The Daily Sentinel, Middlepon-Porn c~oy, 0 ., Monday, April9, 1!17!1

Tornado damage heavy ~--Ar~ap-~aihS-1 "~;~..~e~!~~~~~e~~'=day ·
·zn
•- th ree st a· t e area·
'

HtAIIitES W!Lt;OXEN

.

By The Associ ated Pres5
Tornadoes struck in three
aouthern states, causing
neavy damage in one
Arkansas town, while winterlike weaU!er persisted in the

·

severely damaged a shopping

trying earl y today to restore

center, a school and another

service,

a

com pany

75 homes , said Trooper Jerry spokesman said.
Bradshaw, a state police
The fatal traffic accidents
spokesman.
occurred within a mile of
Some looting occurred at each other in western
North, where an ice storm the shopping center before Michigan , In both accidents,
left 80,000 Michigan homes a uthoriti es a rri ved, the drivers lost control of
without electricity today.
Bradshaw said.
their vehicle on icy patches,
Snow, sleet and freezing . Authorities estimated that pollee reported .
rain . fell Sunday from damage would amount to
EIS1!where, showers and
northwesiern Ohio and millions of dollars . In Little thundershowers stretched
souU!western Pennsylvania · Rock , Gov. Bill ClintoQ from northern Mississippi
into southern New Eng]and. deciaredCamden-a town of into southeastern North
A winier storm warning was 16,000 .,. a disaster area, Car olina and also from
in effect today for western making affected residents eastern Arkansas into the
New York, and travel eligib le
for
special middle Ohio Valley. In the
advisories were posted for assistance.
west, showers were scattered
most of southern New . Most victims of the over northern California and
England and the ce ntral Camden tornado were southwestern Oregon,
portion of lower Michigan. treated for minor injuries at
Temperatures around the
A tornado ripped through Ouachita County Hospital. ·nation at 2 a:m. EST ranged ·
. Camden, Ark., on Sunday and released. At least five from nine in Warroad, Minn.,
night, · injuring at least '1:1 were admitted; some to 76 in Laredo, Texas.
persons, inflicting heavy suffering from broken bones,
Today's forecast called for
damage along a five-mile- Bradshaw said. One was in snow from western and
long ·path and leaving critical condition.
northern New Yor)l Into
hundreds homele ss,
At least 19 other persons northern N""' England and
authorities said.
were injured when tornadoes rain from southern New
The tornado - :one of nine hit in other parts of Arkansas, Englaml and the Middle
in Arkansas and Louisiana - authorities said.
Atlantic states into the upper
destroyed about 75 homes and
.A tornado also touched Ohio Valley,
down SWJday in Mount Olive,
La ., des troyin g a house
Hospital News
trailer and injuring its two
HOW'S YOUR
occupants . Twisters also
Veterans Memorial Hospital
were
sighted
in
Mississippi.
Saturday Admissions-HOSPITALIZATION?
An ice storm swept across Floyd Riffle, Syracuse;
southern Michigan on Sundsy · Richard Vaughan, Pomeroy;
CALL
night, leaving some 80,000 Roberta Musser, Pomeroy;
suburban Detroit residents Dwayne Dowell, Racine;
without electric! ty and David _Dowell, Raciqe;
causing
three
traffic Kenneth White, Pomeroy.
fatalities on ice-glazed
Saturday Discharges-highways.
Mary SmlUI, Harry Wyatt,
PH,IP'" c:o~- ceu•r on...
Those without power were Opal Zerkle, Timothy
Gregg Gibbs
customers of Detroit Edison " Hayden, Doris Haynes,
992 -3443
Co. Aboul 500 workers were Everett Shuler, Goldie
Lawson, Mary Esenhuth,
William Buckley, Mary
Nichols, Belly Weaver.
Sunday Admissions-Mark
Cielinski, Athens; Doris Fife,
Cheshire ; James Braley,
Pomeroy; Perry Try all,
Pomeroy; Philip Null,
Inexpensive
Tuppers Plains; Herman

MunmiC\

o/()milhil~

Home Furnishings
Visit •••

Warner, Pomeroy; Karen

Gilkey, Middleport.
Sunday . Discharges-Kenneth White, Floyd Riffle .

Baker's Budget Shop

·BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

)100STERS TO MEET
Southern Band Boosters
will meet the new band
director at a meeUng to be
held at 7:30 this evening at
Ule high school in Racine.

Thornburgh was expected to . "He's just. waiting for a
announce today whether he little bit longer period of
will lift his ' 10-day-old furU!er sustained progresa,"
advisory that pregnant press secretary
Paul
w~men
and presch~ol . Critchlow said SUnday night.
children stay at least ltve
He said Joseph Hendrie,
miles from the crippled chairman ':!-~--~ucleailr
Regulatory '-""'"'""""'"• an
NRC aperatiODI' chief Hll'old
Denton told Thornburgh
SUnday night that conc!ltions
were safe enough to lift the
advisory soon . .
Engineers worked Sunday
to. plug radiation leaks at the
reactor, a contaminated
unwilling to participate In an ·cauldron · that won't be
appeal that Challenges his brought to a ·cold shutdown
mental COII)petence. It · was for at leaSt -five, more days,
just such an appeal that lead . Cold shutdown is the point ~t
Supreme _ Court Justice which temperatures In the
Willjam Rehnquist 'to block reactor fall below Ule boOing
Evans' execution hours point of water, and Ulere Is no
before ii was scheduled to more riskofthe reactor going
take place Friday.
out of control.
"H Ule Supreme Court will
Meanwhile, .In voices
hear and rule on the Alabama echoed at 10 oU!er weekend
death penalty law, he wiU join demon.straliODJ nationwide,
on that only," Ule attorney angry and
frightened
said.
neighbors of Ule disabled
, The U.S. Supreme Court nuclear reactor chanted "No
twice has refused to consider Nukes!·No Nukes!" at a rally
the constitutionality of the on the state Capitol steps.
Alabama death statute.
The near-disaster· fresh In
their • minds and their
attention riveted on speakers
from as far away as West
Germany,
the
1,000
protesters gathered on an
.
overcast Palm Sunday to
conduct Ule plant's "last
rites."
"We come here not to
praise Thfee Mile Island but
·to !my It," said William
possible, contact Ponney. Vastine, coordinator of 'lbree
Cisco ·
for
special Mile Island Alert, an antiarrangements. His phone nuclear organization.
number is 682-6625 or 245"We are no longer going to
5336.
put up with ibis kind of flsalon
Sale order will be deter· folly," added Va,ttine, whose
mined by picking from 5-10 group opposed Metropolitan
animals, selling those ran· )i:diaon's construction of the
domly and selling the atomic plant and arranged
remainder randomly. Sale Ule rally.
,
catalogs will be made up sale
Things were much quieter ·
day by Ga11la County Ex- at Ule plant site, where
tension Office. Information to workers Ulled chemicals to
be listed InClude sale orcler, immobilize radioactive
consigor lot number, and iodine contaminating waste
weight.
· · ·
water in an auxiliary,
. lf more information is building.
need~. please contact Jim
OU!er anti-nuclear protests
Clay, Animal Science Ex- w,ere held Sunday In Groton,
tension Specialist at the Cohn.; San Francisco;
Jackson Agricultural
ttl~; .
A~ngeles;
Research Center, phone Sea
Phoenix; ' DWUllW'I!IUn, lnd,;
nwnber 286-3803 or call Tom Ithaca, N.Y .; Brooksville,
Balmer, Chairman of the F1a.; Lancaster, Pa., and
Improvement Committee at Toms River, N.J..
phone nwnber 643-2198 .
:
•
•
~

Hoi sting hand-made signs
reading "No Nukes Is Good
Nukes,"
1,000 people
demonstrated on the steps of
Pennsylvania's Capitol while
engineers
tried
to
decontaminate a simmering
reactor at Three Mile Island.

.0

Friends may call at !·;wing
t' ran ces Wil coxen , 00 , t'uneral Hol]le after 7 p.m..
Hadne, died SWJday evening lhisevening. The body wiD be
at Veterans Memorial taken to the church
Hospitill.
Wednesday at 11:30 a.m.
Mrs.
Wilcoxen
was
preceded in death by her
parents, Earl ' Clinton and
Cecil Fae carpenter Shain,
one infant son, David Eric
Wilcoxen, aod one sister,
. EU!el McMiUan.
... ·
Mrs : Wilcoxen was an
MEETWEPNESDA:V
employe of Ule Racine Home . Trustees ' of the Meigs
National Bank and a member County
Pioneer
and
of Rilclne Baptist Church.
Historical Society will meet
She is survived by her at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
husband, Martin Wilcoxen, Meigs Museum, Butternut
Ulree daughters, carol Young Ave., Pomeroy. All persons
and Helen Wilcoxen both of inte.rested in Ule society and
Columbus, and Dortha the history book being
Brown, Fairborn, Ohio, one compiled are welcome to
son, · Larry
Wilcoxen, attend the meeting.sd
Columbus, two grandsons,
and several nieces and
DAV TO MEET
nephews.
Meigs Chapter 53, Disabled
tuneral services will be American Veterans will meet
held WedneSday at 1 p.m. al at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Ule Racine Baptist Church Chapter Home on Butternut
with Ule Rev, Don Walker Ave., Pomeroy. Election of
officiating. ·Burial will be In officers will be held. · All
Letart Falls Cemetery. membersarelirgedtoattend.

wz•ltr•n·g
. rssue
• ··.
*o ~nnea
· 1
.
.1:'.1:'
Ev~ons

u

I,. I

0

ATMORE, Ala. (AP) John Louis Evans lll, who
narrowly escaped deaUI In
theelectricchair last week, is
now willing to appeal his
death
sentence
on
constitutional grounds, the
condemned killer's lawyer
says.
But 'Evans reportedly told
attorney Reggie Stephens
during a conference Saturday
that he would not agree to an
appeal based. on alleged
errors at his, trial for the
slaying of a Mobile pawnshop
owner.
Stephens sai,d Evans also is

Market lamb and pig sale set
April_21 at Gallia fairgrounds
'

The
second
annual
Southern Ohio Lamb and Pig
Sale wiD be held on Saturday,
April 21, at 7 p.m . . at the

GaUia County Junior Fair
grounds. The sale is being
sponsored by Southern Ohio
Lamb and Pig Improvement

Senior Citizens '
Day May 15

COLUMBUS - Governor
Gov. Rhodes urged Ohioans
James A. RhodeS has an- of aU ages to get Involved on
nounced May 15 will be the May IS so no older person is
third annual observance of forgotten . "If every citizen of
Senior Citizens Day In Ohio. this state will visit a nursing
The Ohio Commlsaion on home on Senior Citizens Day
Aging wUI again coordinate or call on . an elderly person
the event through a statewide whocan•tgetouttojolnlnthe
planning committee activities, lwe . can begin to
representing senior citizens fight the loneliness so many
from all areas of Ohio, the older people face," he said.
Governor said:
'
" Let,'s make sure all our
From tiny villages to senior citizens know we care
metropolitan areas, com· aboutthem on Senior Citizens
mun)Ues in every county join
togetfler . on Senior Cltltens Day and every other day of
year."
.
Day eacli year to recognize theThis
year's theme, "Older
· their older residents.
Ohioans - Partners In Ule
Community," represents the

Liv~stock

Report

Athens Livestock Sales
Saturday, April7, 1979
(Cattle I
Slaughter SteerS! Grade 67 .
Slaughter Heifers : Grade,
56-64.50.
Feeder Steers (400-800 lbs.)
Choice 30-97; Good 60-80.
Feeder Heifers (400-700
lbs .J Choice 71.50-83.50; 'Good
52.50-71.
Feeder Bulls 1400-800 lbs.)
· Choice B0-91.25; Good 51.4079 .

'

Slaughter Bulls lover 1,000
lbs .) 52.75-59.25; Cows back to
farm 48 .50-59.25.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities

Comnilttee who have seen a
growing need for promotion
of high quality lllmbs and
pigs to be exhibited at the
local souUJern Ohio county
fairs.
Four-Hand FFA members
from Gallia , Lawrence,
Jackson, Pike, Scioto,
Meigs, Athens, Vinton and
~ocking counties will be able
to bid on top quality animals
that have been preselected on
the farm prior to .the sale.
Approximately 70 lambs
and 35 pigs representing
various brl)eds will be consigned by the )eadlng
producers .1n southern_. Ohio.
Lambs will weigh 35-70
, pounds and pigs, 40-90
pounds. Auctioneering ser·
vices will be provided by Lee .
Johnson and Tommy Joe
Stewart, both from Gallia
Count y,
Animals must he at Gallla '
County Fairgrdunds between
8 a.m. and 12 noon on sale .
day, April 21. If this Is not

· Prices taken from

the

auction. of Saturday, April 7,
1979.
Trends :

Feeder

•

~~~Y ~~.~~~~8ts {~e;on~~~: .

3 IN ONE

a

'

!

"It's symbolic that· Ohio's
senior cftizens chose "Part-1
ners In the Community" as
their theme for this year's
celebration,'' Gov. Rhodes
said. "Older Ohioans do not
want special treatment. What

::.d i.~::;~•Y and In the

•

~td,dripq.t,· o.

DAIRY ISLE

Wedoesday ' through , ·•
Friday: .Showers Wedil~sday and Thursday,
eliding Friday. Highs in the
upper 50s aod 68s through ·'
the period. Lows ID the 30s •
and lower lOs Wednesday •
.

Pomeroy, 0.

EVERY TUESDAY IN APRIL IS
FRE
.

·

•

BUY ONE SUNDAE ·
.

..

=

E SUNDAE DAY

AND

GO ONE FIE~

.

.

Journalists
killed Swtday

ELBERFELDS
· lgnMe the nlghtl Vicky vaughn
fires up your romance with this

empife beauty. Lace'n satin

ribbon trims spaghetti-tied
flounce top elasticized to form
so~ness .

In bright poly

higher . Veal calves steady to

tho

IBJDBBdB

8

-·
.
L.Jntil this little slugger makes the big
time, you may need some extra financial security. Our highest interest savings accounts can help! Find out!

0
0

'

0

0
"

r;w;.

.•a-

!';~:::::~
fib-

,, • . t

~

Far'ltters 8a.n k
POMEROY, OHIO
$40,000 Maxim urn Insurance For Each Depos~or ·
. Mem ber Federa I Deposrt Insurance eo·rporat'.1on
C)

l~::::~O~OO~·-~~:::==~lO~O~O~&lt;~=~~JO~O~O~c~~~~·~&gt;O~OO~~cLJ ~.;..s
•

I,~~

Jury probe
is ordered
PAXTON, Ill. (AP) Puzzled by what set off a
freeway shootout, authorities
said Monday they will ask a
grand jury to Investigate the
weekend gun battle that left
five people dead, Including
two policemen.
Two
brothers
were
arrested and two were slain
after a state trooper stopped
four speeding vehicles
Saturday on Interstate 57 In
easkentral lllinois. Police
described all four broUiers as
p:ofesalonal car thieves.
The trooper, his brother-inlaw and a Paxton city
policeman also were fatally
shot, and a third officer was
'woanded. About 30 rounds
were fired during the gun

.

....

,1 !{ 0

I

1"1 ~ '

Wc~ r ,

see

·2nd Floor.

Elberfelds In Pom

•
Ready

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Three police officers were
found guilty Monday on departmental charges of
kicking a dying assailant.
Columbus Safety Director Bernard Chupka found Of.
fleer James Kneup, 28, Officer Willi8111, Capretta, 31,
arid Sgt. Penn is Clevinger, 36, guilty of kicking Rolien
Aldenderler after he had been shot by police at the
scene of an attempted robbery on Feb. 22.
Chupka suspended the penalties for all three officers.
fie said the kicking incident did not aggravate, accelerate or complicate the gunsot woWJds which
caused Aldenderfer's death.

I

•

at y

e
(USPS 145-960)

. VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 251

;

p~ ~ .

• ..-..... ,, ... .._..

'·

storm watch was posted for
the mountains of Colorado
and northwestern Wyoming.
Showers
and
thundershowers were
scattered over Arizona, New
Mexico, Utah, southwestern
Oregon, portions of the lower
Rio Grande Valley to
northeastern Texas, most of
Oklahoma and southw~stern
Texas.
Temperatures around the
nation at 2 a.m. EST today
ranged from 10 degrees in

'

Marquette, Mich., to 77 in ;
Key West, Fla.
Today•s forecast called for
snow ending in the Northeast,
with clearing skies and cool •
temperatures from th e Grest
Lakes through the MidAtlantic states. SUnny skies
were expected from the
upper Great Lakes through
the Ohio Valley and middle
Mississippi Valley, while rain ,
w&gt;ls expected in much of the
Southeast.

f

1;

•

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

TUESDAY. APRIL 10, 1979

15 CENTS

First reading.given
for p~rmissive tax
MiddlepOrt Village' Council
meeting Monday night gave a
first reading to an ordinance
which would Invoke a $5
permissive auto license tax In
Ule community.
Council took the action
following a closed discussion
on Ule financial condition of
Ule village and ttie need for
additional monies for keeping
streets in good order. .
The permissive auto
license tax would provide an
estimated additional income
of $10,000 annually for the
village.
Going along wiUI the plan
for the special auto license
tax was a resolution passed

EASTER DECORATION- Pomeroy's East Main St. is attractive this Easter season
where a number of homes are featuring outdoor decorations in keeping with the season.
This is one of Ule more attractive lawns, that of Mr. and Mrs , Franklin Rizer.

. by village council setting up a
plan for expending funds
collected
through
the
measure. According to the
resolution, money would be
used for street care :
maintenance
(resurfacing
and-or patching materials)
as necessary ,and, ice control
materials.
• Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grat~ pointed out there is
currently a balance of $87.22,
in Ule street maintenance
fund of the town citing the
need for additional monies.
The village currently has a
1.5 mill tax levy In effect for
street maintenance. This
brings in about $12,000

.
tJnnextJtton mtJp
'

annually. The levy will be in
effect for five years with
about three of those years
already passed._
The permissive auto
license tax would be In effect
indefinitely,
In other matters council
received one bid on the
purchase of a new fire engine.
That bid was from the
Johnson Co. of Columbus and
was turned over to firemen,
Bob Fisher, Wayne Dav,is and
(Continued on page 8)

i
'

.

Board approves appointments

come on aiMomatlcally,
making the accident worse
than it otherwise might have
been.
The NRC had already noted
tlie problem In bulletins
advising reactor operators of
this and oU!er problems found
in the Three Mile Island
accident.
Inside the isolated plant,
engineers gingerly worked to
bring the simmering reactor
to a cold shutdown.
Though the tedious process
is at least several days away
from completion, officials
said the atomic cauldron hlld
been tamed and only traces of
radiation were being emitted
from the site.
"( consider the crisis 'over
with regard to the status of
the core," Harold Penton, the
NRC's chief of operations,
said at a joint news
conference with Thocn.burgh.
About an hour after the
press conference, monitoring
teams detected a slight
increase in radiation ~ to
about 4 to 5· millirems per
hour, less than Ule dose of an
average chest X-ray - at a
site east of the plant. Officials
said Ule level rose because
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - It "Heaven Can Walt," which there was no wind to disperse
was a fine bit of Hollywood bad nine nominations but won Ule radiation, and repeated
irony - John Wayne and only for art dlrectio~ .
. assurances that "there is no
Vietnam . "Duke," the
Wayne, 71, thin but tanned threat to the public healUI."
legendarysuperpatrlot,anda and jaunty , received a
At the height of Ule crisis,
war Hollywood had ignored Ulunderous ovation from the considered
the
most
for a decade.
audience
at
Dorothy dangerous · nuclear power
· They were Ule heroes of Chandler Pavilion, then plant accident ever In· the
Monday's 51st Annual presented the makers of "The United States, Thornburgh
A c a d e m y A w a r d s Deer Hunter" Uleir Oscars. advised the evacuation of
-presentation, with twry Wayne, the Hollywood pregnant women and young
Vietnam films winning the personification of the tough- children . living . within the
big Oscars . and· Wayne guy patriot, starred i~ five-mile area. They are most
making an emotional first Hollywood's last Vietnam vulnerable to low-level
public appearance since movie prior to 1978, the radioactivity.
cancer surgery Jan. 12.
baw~ish ''Green Berets" in
"This means it is now
"Coming Home," a film 1968.
. considered
safe,"
depicting the physical and
Besides Wayne, another of Thornburgh said.
emotional
wounds . of the academy's livihg legends
Vietnam, earned hest acting appeared to a standing
Oscars for 1 Jon Voight and ovation - Sir Laurence
Jane Fonda , w)lo portray~ a Olivier, who ivas presented a
paraplegic veteran and the special Oscar by his longtime
Three cars were damaged
officer's wife who falls in love friend, Cary Grant.
with him. Miss Fonda had ' "The Peer Hunter" was the and a driver was charged
while
won a p:evious Oscar playing big winner of the night, with · driving
a hooker in the 1971 film copping_ five little statues In intoxicated as Ule result of an
"Klute "
· aU . Besides best picture and accident on Henry St. In
"Th~ Deer Hunter,"
director, Ule picture took Pomeroy at 7:18 p.m.
violent depiction of the war's awards for supporting ~ctor, Monday.
Pomeroy Police said a
effects on three young Chrislojlher Walken; editing,
vehicle drivel! by John Jones,
Pennsylvania mill workers., Peter Zinner, and sound.
was picked best picture by
"Coming Home" won Ulree . New Haven, W. Va., went out
the Academy's 3,400 voters ()scars - the top acting of control striking parked
and won best director honors awards and a screenwrlting cars-owned by Mr. and Mrs.
for Michael Cimino.
Oscar · for Waldo Salt and Leslie Price.
Medium
damages
were
incurred
to the
Virtually shut out In the Robert ~- J~es .
.
competition was Warren
Maggie Smith was the onley vehic.les ' and Jones was cited
on the OWl charge,
Beatty's comedy-fant-asy
(Continued on page 8)
Associated Press ,
"I'm so glad to be home, "
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) said a sobbing Justine
- Jo)ful women aod their Stauffer, a mother of two who
young children, told that the heard the welcome radio
nation's worst nuclear ''crisis bulletin from a motel room
is over," are returning ' to , where she had taken shelter.
their homes in tlie shadow of
''My brothers were with
the disabled Three Mile me, and I jumped up and
Island power plant.
screamed at Ulem, 'Oh, my
Relieved and tearful God, I'm going home!'" ~id
mothers cheered Monday's Mrs. Stauffer, who .like Mrs.
announcemellt by Gov. Dick Black is not pregnant.
Thornburgh and Nuclear
In Washington, meanwhile,
Regulatory Commission a federal advisory corrunittee
officials, who II days earlier on reactor safeguards said an
had urged pregnant women instrwnent reading problem
and pre-&lt;~chool children living may have contributed
within a five-mile radius of heavily to the accident at
the plant to leave because of Three Mile Island and could
Ule exposure risks to pose a similar hazard at 43
radiatiop emanating from it. other reactors,
"It's like breaUJing a giant
NRC officials said the
sigh of relief," Yvonne Black instrument may have fooled
said alter she and her 18- the plant operators into
monUI old daughter stepped shutting down an emergency
into Ule living room of their cooling system which. had
Middletown home.

Oscar winners
annou,ced last night

DAYTON, Ohi9 (AP) :- Jury selection was expected
to be completed today in a $22 million civil suit brought
by Dayton property owners against the city's
firelighters.
The suit, filed in Montgomery County Common Pleas
.Court by 13 residents and property ollioers., alleges that
Dayton firemen conspired to allow homes and property
to burn during a two and one-half day ~trike in August,
1977.
.
'
The sull names as defendants Ule firefighters, their
union, International Association of FlreOghters Local
136. and national and local union officials.

•
ceremomes
scheduled

MASON
American
Legion Post 140, NeJV Haven,
Racine Village Council
Council discu•""d water on. and Veterans of Foreign
recently received a map of the sidewalk at the Wars, Post 9926, will be
'the planned annexation to . Recreation Center following 'dedicating a memorial April
28, at I p.m. at the United
each rain.
The owner will be asked to Methodist Church in Mason.
The Memorial honors all
have repair work done to the
Road and In between the drain and the curb built up in ,those who served their
Forrest Neigler property front of the estabUshment. country from the bend area.
over Pine Hill to the earner of
The American Legion will
II was approved to have a
the Dave Cleland 'property, four Inch curb poured from distribute 125, 12 x 18 Inch
(with that property being ,the bank drive-In from the flags
among
the
Included), across to Southern window down the street.
congregation.
Local High School, and
It was decided to ask Dale · Kenny Bonds will sing the
across the road to the Jake Warner, insurance p.gent, to . National
Anthem
acLee property.
companied
by
the
W
ah~ma
meet with council to discuss
Maxine Winge£!, Earl village Insurance and It was High School Band. The unCleland and Ben Petrel voted reported that two members of veiling will be done by John
In favor of the presentation counoll tlll meet with Blake of New Haven and Carl
with Mayor Charles Pyles Lebanon, tetart and Sutton Dugan of New Haven, sons of
also giving approval. Albert · Townships soon regarding legionnaires.
Hill voted against the an· fire contracts.
· Speakers include, Denver
nexation as preSented.
Council voted to raise from Gandee, past department
It was reported that an $60 to $100 the opening and vice commander of the
application has been made · closing of graves at the American Leg io n; Donald
through FHA for fWJds for Greenwood Cemetery ef· Smith, Eighth District
water lines, a new water tank fectlve at once.
Commander of Veterans of
and meters for the an·
Foreign Wars; Clarence
nexatlon area. Any funds nol
Grow, vice commander of the
granted will be secured CAA see)Qng place . Department
of
West
through HUD at S . percent
Virginia;
Richard
M.
Interest, it is reported.
to store materials Dawson, senior vice com·
Council gave a first reading
mander of Veteran of Foreign
to an ordinance increasing
The Gallla-Meigs · Com· Wars, and Herschel Woody
salaries of officials in 1980. . ·munlty Action Agency Is Williams, who has served the
The new salary figures seeking buUding space to rent state of West Virginia for 32
would be $450 yearJr for the near Cheshire for storage of years while working for the
mayor; $600 annually for the Insulation and materials for Veterans Admlnlstratlon. He
clerk-treasurer; $144 yearly use in the Weatherization is also one or two veterans in
for council members; $175 Program. ,
that •tate who holds the
.
monthly for the marshal;
The amount of space Congression al Medal of
$144 for board of public af· needed is at least 1,000 square Honor.
fairs members, annually; . feet under roof, easUy ac·.
At the conclusion , a
$600 yearly for the clerk of the
cesslble, and secure for memorial service will be
board, and $300 monthly for storage.
offered by Richard Dandury
the str~et commission.
Anyon e having such ahd the Rev. Donald
it was reported that dogs storage space available or Coleman.
must be kept confined ,to the needing further information
A three-gun salute wiU be
owner's property. Dog should contact Ron Crawford, presented by the VFW drill
owners whose animals which Weatherization Program team. The public is Invited
are not a.nfined will he cited Coordinator, at 992-7000 or and are asked .to bring lawn
to mayor's court.
367-7342.
chairs:-

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STOW, Ohio (AP) -A 2&amp;-year-old Stow rtian has been
charged In connection with the death of his mother 14
years ago, after a routine employment check turned up
retiorta that her death.was a homicide.
.
Officials had ruled in 1965 that Nonna Hume, 40, of
Cuyahoga Falls, had drowned herself in Mud Brook.
Her husband; Marion, had said she was despondent
over her Ill health. But when her adopted soo, David C.
Hwne, applied recently for a job as art Ohio Hlghwa)
Patrol officer, the employment investigation turned ur
reports that he had killed hi s mother

'

Dedication

' child
•
. ren ret urnmg
Women,
home ·after .near disaster
;:~J~io,~1~~E;it!E

. WASHINGTON (AP) - Federill mediators say the
Teamsters union and trucking industry made progress
In c-ontract talks that recessed early_today, but have "a
long way to go" before agreeing on terms to end a tOday trucking shutdown that has hit hard the auto industry.
, Chief federal .mediator Wayne L. Horvitz sent
bargainers home after 11 hours of negotiations that
lasted past midnight. He said Ule two sides, agreed to
resume the talks later today. "We have made some
progress," Hor\lilz said. "I'm pleased by that ; but we
do have a long way to go."
Asked about reports that he offered the two sides new
proposals, of his own to break the dispute, Horvitz said,
"That's possible." He declined further conunent.

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,

Council receives

Mediato1'8 making progress

' -

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'

tWisters in,1nrNi ?.7 nPror;"n"' ;n

,_ ,,,,

Camden and 25 in Hamburg. official put the damage at a
Only one injury was listed as minimum of $500,000,
serious, however.
High winds~ possibly from a
Authorities sealed off tornado, caused about $75,000
Camden on Monday to keep , in damage early Monday in
out sightseers. 11That's our DeKalb County in northwest
big gest problem - just Alabama. In south :b.labama,
keeping the people out," said authorities say, an Arkansas
state police Trooper Jerry man was killed Monday when
Bradshaw.
his small plane crashed
A tornado toppled trees, during a thunderstorm.
damaged several buildings
Elsewhere around the
and caused several minor nation, a storm systein was
Injuries Monday south of developing over .the western
Savannah, Ga. Acivll.defense. mountain s. ~.nti ~· winter

Three police found guilty

Charged With mother's death

~

schools were closed again
today,
Most sections of upstate
New York received 4 to 6
inches of snow Monday, but 9
inches fell on Rochester.
About 3 more inches were
expected in some parts
before Ule storm's expected
end early today.
Officials In Arkansas
estimated the damage caused
by tornadoes in Camden and
Hamburg at $13 million. The

Nationwise

· Jury selection completed

''

to diminish as about 400
worl\ers 'worked to repair
lines Ulat were severed by
falling, ice-covered tree
Umba. They said it would be
two to four days before power
wa s restored to all
customers.
At least five persons were
killed SWJday and Monday on
ice-glazed highways,
Michigan State Police said.
All Detroit public schools
, and most suburban schools
were closed Monday and city

battle.
Clay
Boyer,
chief
Investigator- for Ule Illlnois
Department
of
Law
Enfor.cement, said he tried ,
wiU!out succesa, to question
!Jle two suspects, one of
whom was wounded In the
exchange Of bullets.
One suspect, · -Monro~
Lampkin, 43, of Gary, Ind., is
charged with murder. He was
taken into custody late
Sunday after police spent the
day following a trail of blood
Ulrough farm fields.
Police said Lampkin, who
was shot in Ule wrist before
fleeing on foot Saturday night
after the gun battle,
remained hospitalized.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Howard M. Metzenbawn, Mhio, told AFI,QO leaderS Monday at ·a
conference on prices that the Carter administration
has given in to the oil industry by its decision to decolllrol crude oil prices.
He urged volunteer lllbor price monitors to take their
job seriously and "make everyone in the administration from the president on down know that you
will not serve as window dressing for ineffective
policies. "

interlock, machine wash~ry.

cattle

LONDON (AP) - Four
journalists - two Swedes and
52.50 to $3.50 higher.
two West Germans - were
Total Head: 304
captured by Ugandan
Feeder steers: (good and
choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 90 to' President Idl Amin's. secret
104; JODto 400 lbs. 87.50 to 104; police ·and shot to death as
400 to 500 lbs. 85 to 99 ; 500 to they tried to sneak into
600.1bs. 84 to 95 ; 600 to 700 lbs. Ugahda, Ule London Dally
68.50toBO; 700to8001bs. 67.50 Express
reported
in
to 80; 800 lbs. ·and over 65 to
Monday's editions.
7R.
Feeders :
{good
and
Other sources said Ule four
choice! 250 fo 300. lbs. 90 had, hired a boilt. and were
to 99 ; 300 to 400 Ibs. 85 to attempting to enter the
~2 . 50 ; 400 to 500 tbs . 80 to 90 ; ·
500 to 600 lbs. 75.50 to ·a7 ; 600 country by CfOISSing Lake
to 700 Ibs. 70 to 82.50; 700 to Victoria, which . Ues on
BOO lbs. 60 to 7t ; BOO lbs. and Uganda's eastern border.
over ~5.50 to 67.
Express reporter John
Feeder Bulls )good and
cholce) .250 to 300 lbs., to 103; Ellison said he had been told
300 to 400 lbs., to 100 : 400 to by sources In Uganda Ulat the
500 lbs., to 99.50; 500 to 600 four had been shot.
lbs., to 98 : 600 to 700 lbs., to
Western newsmen have
76 ; 700to BOO lbs .. to 72.50: BOO
been unable to enter Uganda
and over, 55 .so to 70.
Bulls 11,000 lbs. and over) which has been torn bY war
58 to ·66.40:
since last October when
Slaughter Cows: Util ities 48 ·Amln 's troops invaded
to to 57.50; Canner and
Tanzania · only J.o be driven
Cutters -42 to 50.
Springer Cows (by the out two weeks later and now
~.,.,, ci J 250 ~ 42S ; 'Cows . Calves
to the outskirts of Kampala,
lb\1 the. head) 450 to 750;
Ule Ugandan capital.
Veal Calves.-90 to 111.
Baby Calves, 45 to 120.
Hogs
lop Hogs (210 to 230 lbs.)
4J.so to 47. .
The General Grimt tf1'C In
Boars 34 ,5o to lll.so.
, Pigs (by the head) 20 to Sequoia National Park could
supply enough wood to build ' ·
47
50 six-room house5.
&lt;•so
lbs.
and
over
· · to .C3.75 .

recovering from a string of
tornadoes that Monday hit in
Arkansas , Georgia,
louisiana and Alabama.
The Detroit Edison Co.
reported thai 190,000 homes
In Detroit and its subUrbs
were still without power early
today. At one time Monday
night, Ule utility said, 230,000
customers · were without
electricity.
Company spokesmen said
Uley expected Ule.number of
customers wiU!out electricity

Met:enbaum bombs Carter

its own ruftle ... merges it to tiers

of floating

.

1 The Associated Pres
Nearly 200,000 homes in the
Petrol! area were still
wiU!out electricity today, the
result of a storm that dropped
l~oated tree limbs onto
power lines with a hatchl!tllke ,effect. Wintry weather
also ignored the calendar in
upstate New York , where up
to 9 Inches of snow feU.
·Residents of Ule South got a
taste of spring-like weather
and Ule results were also
unpleasant. · They JVere

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP) - The Ohio Board of
Education on Monday approved appointments of four
persons to its assessment and annual progress report
advisory committee. Named to Ule panel were Ann
Frost of Lima, Richard Flowers of·Portsmouth, Polly
Hamlin of Cincinnati and Ira Turpin of Canton.
The hoard also adopted a resolution encouraging
schools to actively participate in the ot.&gt;ervance of
April as Youth Arts Month. It encouraged local hoards
of education and elementary and secondary schools to
consider recommendstlons in the state plan for comprehensive arta in education andto seek additional support and patronage from local civic and business
organizations.

steady. Cows steady to $2.50

SJI

.1

al~:;:.~e:·:r~~~~~e::~f:::~ ww~mtt===~=~i:~i~~=~:=:~:::':'::::::;:;::::r:::::: ......................

Sale every saturday at 1

St. ,

a e e e e ••
• ·• ·• •••• a e a e ..
McCLURE$·
·

f~!~~:t:1ai~\~!~ : ~=~=!:;::~::=~=~~;:;:~=r~ :

to all artists 60 years and
older. The Fourth Annual
51.70; Canners and Cutters Governor's Art Show, sale
and.auctlon,ln the Statehouse
42-50'.15.
Veals !Choice ond Prime) Rotunda, Aprll21·29, is for all
88-98. ' '
Ohio residents. Artwork
B~by Calves !by the head I
representing every r~nge of
70-112.
(Hogs)
experience has been entered
Hogs (No. 1, Barrows and · In past shows. General entry,
Gilt~ ·200-230 lbs'. I 44-45.30.
rules are printed in your
Sows 38.50-45.10.
April newsletter or may he
Boars 34-37.
Pigs (by the headl 19-50. o btalned at the Senior
(Lambs)
Citizens Center on Jackson
Slaughter
Lambs. 63.
Pike. Bring your paintings to
'
the Center no later than
Thursday, April 12.
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
p.m.. 52, Vinton
Gallipolis. Oh io 45631.
Market Report

Wih"L.-...:

Ice .storm leayes homes without .electricity

"RIP VAN .WINKLE,'' a ptay, w~s P,erformed Monday night at the RuUand PTO
meeting by students In Mrs, Donna Jenkins' class. The girls In the play were left to right,
Charlstlna McGhee, Lucy Grover, Sh~rry Wilson, Christina Black and Greta Kennedy.

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