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· 12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Mao·. 21, 1!119

'

By The Associated Press
A common pleas court
judge limited picketing by
• striking employees of
· O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
,. in Athens Tuesday, while a
:: threatened walkout by nurses
:· at l}niversity Hospital in
•. Colwnbua was averted.
': Judge Lowell Howard
• Issued
a
preliminary
: Injunction ordering Local
· 12:i2 of the American
: · Federation of State, County
;: aridMunlcipaiEmplo)'ees not
" to Interfere with access to
· : O'Bleness and limiting
~ pickets to four at one
-: entrance and three at
PROBATE COURT OF
" · MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
" ESTATE OF RAV RALPH
:; sAR SON, oo;;c EASE 0
, . case No. 22617

APNP~1·~cTe,.o:NT

OF FIDUCIARY
. On February 23, 1979, in th e
Me igs County Probat e Cour t,
case No. 22617. Fred w.
0
486 ·
·• Pomero
Crown , Jr
·• P ·
· Bo x
'y , Ohio, was ap .
··painted
An cilla ry
Ad ·
' minisoraoor of the ~state of
",late
Ray Ra
. deceased,
of lph
631Sarson
Ament
street,
•owosso, M;ch;gan 48867 .
Robert
Buck
Probate
JudgE.
e .Cicrk
:m 7, 14 , 21, 3tc

e

Spring arrives early .today

-J udge's
order
.
;limits pickets
another.
A dO&lt;:tor told Howard he
was denied access to the
hospital after the walkout
bega n Tuesday morning and
there was a repcrt that eggs
were thrown at a car
attempting td leave the
grounds.
The union is seeking its
first contract with the private
community hospital. Talks
have stalled over wages,
fringe benefits and a union
demand for a union shop.
The hospital is . treating
only emergency cases and
there are less than 40 patients
in the 100-bed facility.
In Columbus, University
Hospitals Officials and !he
Ohio Nurses Association
THEPLACE
agreed to allow a third party
.
TO.be on the first day olsprlng is the speclacutar Kukul·kan pyramid on
to determine the nuinber of
Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. On ~rch 21, the rays of the setting sun create a
registered nurses who want
serpent-like form on the pyramid's ~rand staircase. The dazzling tribute to the .
' n as th e1·r
plumed
· I 10
lh 0 as SOCia
I serpent
h d worshipped
I
•by the ancient Mayas and · Toltees occurs only twice
bargaining
agent. . A year Yon I e ays o the equmux.
.
1
11
representation e action wi
be held· March
TO END MARRIAGE
divorce against David Shuler,
GET LICENSE
·
f 26.
h 636
Ama)Orltyo t 0
nurses
Onesuitfordlvorceandone Rt. I, Langsville.
A marriage license was
at the complex had for dissolution of marriage
Filing for dissclulion are issued to Samuel Pearl
threatened to strike unless have been file d on
· Meogs
·
Keith Black, Rutland and McKinney, 21, Rutlan d and
the hospital recognized the County Common Pleas Court. Me'lody
Black,
Point Sherry Marie Shiltz, 18, Rt. 3,
Ohio ba
Nurses . Association as
Belo'nda Shuler, Rt . 1, PI easant.
Albany.
their rgaining agent.
Langsville, filed suit for

ky l..lAVID L. LANGFORD wet and chilly in a lot o( have been heavy snows and
weathermen say they will ·
Associated Press Writer places.
But,
In
case
you
missed
It,
continue
through the week.
. It was an unsetUing winter.
the
vernal
equinox
occurred
But
It
was
springtime In
gven Hinckley's buzzards
at
12:22
a.m.
EST
and
that
New
York
complete
with
and Capistrano's swallows
means
it's
officially
spring.
sunny
skies,
mild
weren 'tssure .this was the
The buzzards, ri11ht on temperatures and tight, cool
week they were supposed to
schedule,
started returning winds.
return to their home roosts.
It was wanner Tuesday in
Snow plastered broad Sunday to HinckleY: Ohio,
stretches today, and many from their w!ilter retreat ln Chicago than In Los Angeles.
rivers were swollen and the 'Great Smoky Mountains. The temperature reached 62
acting up. It was just plain But their numbers hardly degrees in ,the Windy City,
.blackened the lilly.
while LA could claim no
And it's a 'matter of some better than 57.
dispute whether the swallows · If the · birds seemed
kept their traditional date to reluctant to travel, the
return to the mlssloo at San annual migration of college
·Juan Capistrano i'n California stu&lt;;lents to the beaches of
on Monday. Some claim they Florida was going full steam.
spotted
a bird or two, though
"There are a lot of bers and
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) wet
and
bedrasgled.
a
lot
of beautiful women, but
a
bit
James Seymour, former
Others
saw
not
a
feather.
better
weather, that's the
director of Mount Saint Mary
1n
Illinois,
rivers
swollen
best
thing,"
said Mark
Hospital In Nelsonville, was
by
rains
and
melting
StOW . SlnrJatr, 21, one of the tens of
indicted for grand theft
Moo day by an Athens County poured out of their banks. thouaands sapping up the sun
Families living In )ow-lying at Fort llluderdale. "When
grand jury.
areas
were forced to you 'leave five below fer 75
· The indictment charges
evacuate
their homes, degrees In 24 hours, that's
Seymour with stealing money
businesses
cloaed
and waters ; great.'~
from the hospital during his
swirled
around
a sewage
Sinclair, a · stUilent from
tenure as director froDll973 ·
plant near Peru sending · Central Michigan Univeralty
to 1 "~ 8• •
'
He quit Oct. 3, 1978, after workers scrambling for sand In Mount i'le~~~Bnt, Mich., is
o~e of. 140,1100 college-age ·
the hospital board ordered a .bags.
ln
Colorado,
folks
still
were
·
youths
expected to vlllit Fort
. directed
h
) finaudit of the dealing with snow, and lots of La~derda_l~ th1s season,
ospita 's ances.
The. indictment cootends it. Spring was greated by an which oftocially runs from ,
the alleged theft was in avalanche warning - ln Feb. 25 to Easter Sunday Cll
effect until Thursday. There April 25.
excess of $150.
County Prosecutor David
Frey refused to indicate how

I

.indicted

HOSPITAL

(USPS 145-960) .

PARKERSBURG, W.Va .
A regional planning
official says the govenunent
is starting from scratch on a
plan to link two sections of
U.S. 50 between Parkersburg
and Belpre, Ohio,
Hearings on the proposal which West Virginia ot'ficial
calls Co~ridor D in the
Appalachian Highway
system - are scheduled to
begin in mid-April.
"It's going to be extremely
boring and frustrating to a lot
, of people - not being able to
· walk. into the meeting and
. walk out knowing where the
, route will be," said Terry
~ Tamburini, executive
• director of the MidOhio
( AP) -

Mayor's Court

Valley Regional Council.
But a relocation proposal in
the mid-1960s touched off a
minor rebellion when the
state wanted to put the
highway through the middle
of Parkersburg.
· The stormy affair broke out
when some residents charged
that the proposed relocation
of the four-lane expressway
would cut the northern end of
the city in half and destroy a
prime residential area.
"Those days of somebody
making an arbitrary decision
- it's not going to happen
anymore, 11 said Tamburini.
Tam burini said a final
decision on where to put the
highway may be years away.

$648

00

ELBERFELD$

Easter's
Coming'

ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD

.
'

T~~~~~v~~~!~t~e~

"

POSSIBLE ARSON - The residence of Chuck Warden which was robbed and believed
to have been set on fire Tuesday night, reignited Wednesday morning, burning to the
ground. The house was the property of Jay Hail, Cheshire. The fire Is under investigation by
the state fire marshall and the sheriff's department is holding a suspect. The house was
located on Story's Run Road.
·

. The first choice of millions!

Twirling

Assocla1ion

.J •

The receipt of a check from
the Community Mental
Health and Mental Retar1 dation "648" Board as froht
loading for the construction
·of an administrative annex at
the Community Mental
Health Center, Jackson Pike,
was refused twice Tuesday
by the Gallia County Board of
Commissioners.
The check, in the amount of
$50,000, was originally
presented to the commissioners during their ·
morning meeting by Center
representatives Malcom
Orebaugh and Tom Gramley.
Based upon plans announced by "648" Board .
Executive Director Maxine
Plummer to transfer that
board's funds from Gailia to
Meigs County, the commissioners refused receipt of

the check until advice could the county auditor that she tie
be sought from Prosecuting up any funds for this
Attorney Joseph L. Cain.
project," Cain continued.
Acceptance of the check
During that . meeting,
would have placed the county Auditor Condee took exIn the position of serving as . ception to a statement made
funding agent for the con· by Plununer in a letter
struction of the ad- received by the commission
ministrative wing.
announcing the "648"
Contacted later in the day, Board's plan to move their
Center
Director
Tom funds to Meigs County.
Gramley met with the
That letter reads In part :
·conunlssion in the afternoon "Gallia County has had the
to present the check on behalf benefit In the fonn of Inactive
of the "646" Board. Also funds; the use of the Board's
present at that meeting were . funds. The board now feels
Prosecuting Attorney Cain that the pclitical subdivision
and Counly Auditor Dorothy of Meigs County he allowed to
Candee.
benefit from the use of these
At that time, Cain advised funds ."
the commission, "If they
" I resent that Maxine
want to move the funds, let Plummer has stated that
Meigs County front the Gailia County has benefited
building."
fro iii those- funds , when ac"(wouldn't recommend to tually Gallia County has

Two Middleport juveniles charged
Two Middleport juveniles dlepcrt.
- one 15 and one 17 - have
Middleport Police Chief J.
been cited to appear in the J. Cremeans said the two
Meigs County Juvenile Court youths allegedly broke into
as a result of a January the establishment Jan. 23 by
breaking and entering at the going through a rear door. He
Western Auto Store in Mid- reports that apparently the

Easter
Pin-Ons

sanc-

tioned contest, carnival rides.
Weather permitting, most
of the shows wilt be held on
the stage w.hlch witt be
constructed In the parking tot
on the site of the barbecue pit
(subject to approval of
council, the lire department
and American Legion).
Attending were Simon,
Crow, Quickel, Phil Kelty, N.
W. Compton, Bitt Grueser, E,
F. Robinson, C. E. Bla~slee,
Billy Joe Spencer, Bill
Mayer, Dale arner, Paul
Gerard, larry Brogan, Leo
. Vaughan, Ted Reed, Thereon
Johnson, Bob Miller, Den
Jenkins, Pat O'Brien. Rev.
Robert Graves, John Anderson, Joe Young, Kyle
Allen, Hank .Cieland and Jack
Kerr.

,

You'IITik"e.our Easter S.lection of Hlllmark
·Cards, Party Goods, " Gift Wrap and.
Novelties. Also see our big selection of
Fann.y Farmer ~nd Brach . Easter canditS.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

after strong opposition
surfaced, no progr-ess was
made on the proposal. In 1970,
the f~deral government
began requiring envi ronmental impact statements
and the project was stalled.
But lately, Tamburinl said,
the lack of a hookup between
the two states has become
more apparent .
"There .w~ the desire on
the part of a significant
number of people to get
things going," he said.
The
Akron,
Ohio,
consulting firm of Dalton,
Dalton and Newport has
started work on two projects
connected with Carridor D

15 CENTS

and the U.S. 50 relocation.
Both are funded by the state
Department of Highways.
Bobby Everhart, project
director , said there are five
proposed routes, but those
may he expanded after tbe
public meetings are held.
The proposals include a
southern bypass , possibly
over the southern tip of
Blennerhassett Island, a
route along the Little Kanawha River on the south ·
side of Parkersburg, the
original route, one through
the southern end of Vienna
near the mall, and another
that would overlap Ohio 7
near Marietta .

WASHINGTON
Representative Clarence
Miller has urged the . Ohio
Department of Transportation and the Ohio
Disaster Services Agency to
extend Meigs County relief
lor road damages resulting
from the Ohio River flooding.
In discussions with Meigs
County officials, Miller
learned that approximately
65 road locations throughout
the county were closed or
severely damaged by flood
waters.
One-third of the closings
were on state roads, which
forced heavy truck traffic to
use alternate county and

township roads .
Est imated damage' for
township roads and county
roads resulting from the
increased traffic and flood
water was placed at nearly
$500,000.
"This represents a major

portion of the local budget,"
Miller said, "a budget which
is already strained. These
jurisdictions just cannot
shoulder extensive repairs
without help.''
In an attempt to assist the
county and Meigs townships,
Miller contacted the offices
of Governor James Rhodes,
tbe Ohio Department of
Continued on page 9

REPAIR STREET - Pomeroy village workers are repairing Laurel St. Tu esday they
drove piling and were replacing the dirt and stone on the street Wednesd"y . II section of the
street collapsed recently and the roadway has been impassable for a couple of weeks.

Trustee seeks permission

Chester Wells, an Olive Jevy for the commission's
Township trustee, meeting review.
with Meigs County Com·
Wesley Buehl, county
missioners Tuesday night; engineer , discussed county
requested permission to road repairs.
'
place a one-half . mill
Following a lenght y
operating levy on the ballot discussion, Buehl ~as
for"Olive twp. residents.
authorized to advertise for
· Wells said levy proceeds bids on bituminous and
would be used to operate ihe aggregate materials, bids to,
Reedsville Fire Department. be opened on April 5.
Buehl was also given
carried the "648° Board Plummer, Director of the He was advised to submit a
the
county
has
not "648" Board could meet with resolution for the proposed permission to advertise for a
benefited," Con dee said them to exp!am the proposed
new pickup truck fur his
Tuesday afternoon.
department.
transfer of funds.
Records at the Auditor's
It was reported that the
Office show that from 1972
Ohio Bureau of Unem·
through 1976, th e county .
Midqleport Police Chief J . ployment Services, OBES,
carried the "648" Board by
J. Cremeans reports an has arranged a lease for the
covering deficit spending by
arrest in a breaking and former Johnson Masonry
the board during 34 of the 48
entering and a car threft at Building , located at the inmonths in that four year·
the Tom Rue Motor Co., tersection of Union Ave. and
period.
South Third Ave., on March 7. SR 7. As soon as renovation of
At the conclusion of their
The chief said that en- the building is completed, the
afternoon meeting with
trance to the establishment
Center Director Gramley, the
was gained by breaking out a
FIRE MEETING SET
commissioners refused acwindow glass on the north
All
persons interested in
ceptance ol the check from,
side of the building.
becoming
members of ·the
the "648" Board until Maxine
A 1975 Ford Granada in the Saler1\
Township
Fire
building for repairs was Department are asked to
stolen . Herman Henry, attend a meeting at the
Bureau of Criminal In- fireh ouse on Saturday, March
vestigation, was called in to 24, at 10 a. m.
EXTENDED FORECAST
assist with the case.
Saturday
through
Arrested and confined to
Monday:
Mild
with
the Meigs County Jail for
showers or rain possible
allegedly committin g the
Saturday and Sunday, then
Becoming cloudy ' tonight
offense was James P. Mcending Monday and turning
with
.rain and possible
Cloud, 20, Middleport. The
cooler. Highs Saturday
thunderstorms
late tonight
automobile was recovered in
EDWARD M. BLAKE
!rum lhe mid 50s to the mid
Friday.
Lows
tonight
and
Columbus, Chief Cremeans
60s, cooling to the mid 40s
near 50.
reports.
to mid 50s by Monday.
Lows Saturday In the 40s,
cooling to the mid 20s to ·
mid 30s by Monday.

·C6mmissioii refuses-To l,acc.ept.ch~ck

PLUS

((CHOOSE ZE~\\~

THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979

•

Miller urges
financial help

Register

ONLY

enttne

MIDDLEPORT·POMEROY, OHIO

In fact, he said, construction
of the highway may not hegin
until 1984 or later.
The hearings :ire designed·
to get comments from
residents on the effect of the
highway on the environment,
economic development, local ·
building patterns and
transportation.
The initial . series of
meetings will Include two in
Parkersburg and one each in
Vienna and the Ohio cities of
Belpre and M!lrietta. · But
Tamburini said Some people
who attend the meetings may
be disappointed at the
slowness of the process.
The state approved the
north end route in 1965, but

••

·BUYNO'H\

· of three
elegant slfles

at

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 238

.•.

NEWS

l'OIJR CHOICE

•

Highway officials holding
;hearing on. Corridor D plans

Seymour

muchinvolved.
money ndght ha~
: :·........................................................................................................... , . -been
Fined In the .court of
Middleport Mayor Fred
Arraignment was
Hoffman Tuesday night were
scheduled for April 2.
Jerry G. Poisson, 44, Porn·
Since resigning from the
hospital, Seymour has been Vetera01 Memorial Hospital pano Beach, Fla., $225 and
employed by Home Health
ADMITTED - Judith costs and three days in jail on
Service which recently Hood, Pomeroy; Augusta a DWI charge, and $25 and
nioved its offices from the Potts, Syracuse; Beatrice ·costs for driving on an exhospltal ,to Logan.
stewart, Middleport; Mavis . plred license, and Robert L.
The hospital was made Weaver, Mt. Alto, W. Va.; Snodgrass, Branchland, W.
aware
of
possible Phyllis Gilkey, Clifton; Va.; $200 and costs, tamirregular! ties in October Florence Musser, Pomeroy; perlnll with ·a parking meter,
when a Columbus bank William Powell, Middleport. iind $225 and costs and tllrile
refused to lend the institution
DISCHARGED - Ollie· .days In jail on a charge of
.·money because it was not. Young, Tanuny Btake, Reda driving while Intoxicated .
saiisified with an in-house
Harvey M. Willis, 53,
Spencer, Herman Warner.
audit.
,
Vandergrift, Pa., forfeited a
Mount Saint Mary Hospital
$350 bond pcsted on a DWI
is a private·, non-profit
charge.
hospital.
Holzer Medical Ceater
Dlscbar&amp;es Mareb 19
j Fined l,n the court of
Herman Borland, Mrs. Po01eroy ·Mayor Clarence
John Dailey and' son, Annlce Andrews Tuesday night were
Decker, James Dye, Carolyn Timothy W. Gibbs, Hartford, .
Hall, Michael Kuhn, Lynda - W. Va., $350 and costs on a
(Coniinued from page I)
Lee, Mrs. Michael McGinnis charge of driving while in· .
entertainers will be.
and daughter, freeland toxicated; $50 and COlts, open·
Quickel stated that more Norris , Paul Parkins, Oask charge, and 90 days in .
than 500,000 people will pass W!lmey Perkins, Lillian jail and Gregory Allen Roush,
·through the mall in the four Pottery, Brian Rippeth, New Haven, $150 and costs,
days the queen is at the Francis Rippeth, Travis possession of a controlled
festival. He added it would be Rouse, Edith Rush, Kristy substance, and $50 and costs,
a golden opportunity to tell Scott, Ralph Taylor, Mrs. public intoxication.
people about the Big Bend Leek Wallin and daughter,
Forfeiting bonds were
Regatta.
Wendi Young.
Grover K. Klein, Pomeroy,
Listed is a tentative
Blrtbs, March 19
$26, speedli:og; Carl 'Eskew;
schedule of Regatta events
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bowen, Pomeroy, $30, asaui'ed clear
prepared by Paul Gerard.
.daughter, Apple Grove, W. distance, and WUllam K.
Thursday, June 21
Va.
Hanshaw, West Uberty, Ky.,
12 Noon til n . P.M. Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
$200,
petty theft, and Robert
Carnival Rides Operatin'g
W. Qualls, Pomeroy, $50,
{bargain rides 1 to 4 p.m.). Pugh,. son, GaWpolis.'
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis passing on a double yellow
5 P.M. Tennis Tournament. ·
Scarberry, daughter, line.
7 P.M. - Kick-Off Parade
Hamden.
(limited to 50 units).
Discharges, March %0
7:30 P.M. - Opening
Verlon Back, Rickey
Ceremonies.
8:30 P.M. - Talent Show. Bailey, John Blake, Michael
Friday, June 22
RESERVATIONS DUE .
12 Noon til 11 P.M. - Drebel, Brian Francis, Ada
M8111bers
of the Ladies
Carnival Rides Operating. Greenless,. Malinda Howell, Auxiliary of the Middleport
11 A.M. - Frog Art ~Is Hunter, Coa Jeffers,
Judging at Pomeroy Library. Beatrice Johnson, Howard Fire Department planning to
attend the anniversary
4 P.M. - Eat-A· Thon at
Outdoor Stage sponsored by· McClure, Karen Meadows; dinner are ·to make
Richard· Mount, Barbara
Burger Chef.
The GOUNOD • K2516P
5 P.M. - Tennis Tour- Nelson, Garnie Riddle, reservations with Ethel
nament.
Mildred Ruston, Bette Lowery before March 26.
Modern styling. Pecan wood-grained
6 P.M. - Water Ski Show Sheets, Roger Shinn, WUllam
No Trad•ht
finish applied to durable wood products
by the French City Ski Club.
on top lind ends with select hardwood
7 P.M. "Grande Smith, Sr., Rebecca Thomas,
Required
Chorale" from Rio Grande Billy Ward, Jennifer Wor·
solids framing top. Front and base of
Coile!Je.
nick.
simulated.. wood. Casters.
MILDRED TUBBS
8 P.M. - Featur~d enBirths,
Marh
zo
Mildred
Tubbs, Pomeroy,
tertainment (to be anMr. and Mrs. Woodson · Is a patient at Veterans
nounced) or Fireworks
Ramsey, daughter, Lake, W. M81Ilorlal Hospital. Her room
Display.
The MASSENET • K2520
Al~o Excursions on the Va.
number Is 138.
·
P. A. Denny, Quilting
Mediterranean styling.
Swim
Meet,
Teen
hhlbitlon,
W!:!od-gralned finish
Dance.
applied to durable wood
Saturday, June 23
products on top and ends
10 A.M. - Kids Events:
Casting Derby, Big · Wheel
with select hardwood
Races, Hoop Shoot, etc.
solids framing top. Front
11 A.M. - Grand Parade.
and base of simulated
The CHADWICK • K2518M
12:30 P.M. - Introduction
wood. Dark Oak ·color
of
Visiting
Queens.
~i:i:d Early American styling. Maple woodCoronation of New Queen.
(K2520DE) or Pecan color
grained finish applied to durable wood
Jaycees Car Show In
(K2520P). Casters.
products on.top and ends with select
pr,ogress.
hardwood solids framing top. Wrap· 2:30 P.M. - USAF Rock
Banet "Flying Circus" per.
around gallery, front and bracket feet
forms.
of simulated wo,od. Casters.
3:30 P.M. - Kids. Events.
5 P.M. - "Flying Circus"
On Sunday, April 15,
~unny, chick and duck
second show.
remember
famUy
and
6 P.M. - Ohio State Frog
lapel pins add a bright·
Jumping Cha'mplonshlps.
friends with beautiful
• . One-Knob VHF and UHF
touch to any Easter
8 P.M.- Frog Derby.
Channel Selector
Easter cards by
outflt.
75¢ each.
Also - Excursions on the
• 100% Solid-State Challis
HaUmark.
• Picture Control
P.
A.
Denny,
Quilling
• Power Santry Voltage
Exhibition, Sidewalk Sales,
are electronic,
• Automatic Fine-tuning Control
Regulating System
Dance
Iby Fire Department),
they hiJ.ve no Internal moving parts to corrode,
carnival Rides.
Fireworks,
•
Brilliant
Chromacolor
Picture
• VHF/UHF Deluxe Spotllte
wear or cause picture problems.
Sund•y, June 24
Tube
Panel
12 Noon- Heritage Sunday
at Meigs Museum.
12:30 P.M. - Power Boat
Races . Lorain Boat Club.
Also - National Baton

•

BEE PARTICIPANTS - These are the 15 Meigs
County School Olamplons who participated in tbe annual
Mellis County Spelling Bee held Wednesday night at the
Salisbury Elementary School. The finalists and the school
represented included - Sean Grueser, Syracuse; Sandra
Foley, Southern Junior High; Lisa Parsons, Racine
Elementary; Kenda Donohue, Harrisonville; Jodi
'Harrison, Salisbury Elementary ; Teresa Jarvis, Salem

.

two planned to take a bicycle
and pocket knives but an
alarm
sounded.
They
allegedly took a hunting knife
and a pocket knife.
Last night, both were
Continued on Page 9

,

Man arrested

Weather

Blake seeking

::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:

OBES office will move to the
new location.
A request for a $500 transfer by Clerk of Courts office
was t"bled. Bids for
depository of public funds
were also tabled until the
March 27 meeting.
Roy Miller. Chester, was
appointed to a one-year tenn
on the Athens' County Airport
Zoning Board.
Jack Wolfe, driver of the
County Landfill truck met
with the board to discuss
various aspects of the landfill
operation.
It was reported that
progress was continuin g on
the multi-purpose building
and that ma sonry work would
begin toda y.
Clerk Mary Hobstetter was
authorized
to
make
arrangements for the printing of 500 county directories.
It was pointed out that due
to an incrase in printing
charges 1 the new directories
would sell for $1.50.
The Commi ssion ers endor sed the . Meigs County
Council on Aging as the offi cial local plannin g and
service ofganization of aging
In Meigs County. The meeting
was recessed subject to the
recall of the Rresident.
Att ending were Richard
Jones, pr esident ; Henry
Wells, commi ssioners, and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

mayor's po,!'t

Edward M. (Eddie) Blake,
55 S. Second Ave. , Mid·
· dleport, has filed dS an independent candidate for the
post of Middleport mayor.
As an independent candidate, Blake's name will not
appear on the ballot until the
November election when he
will oppcse any . Republican
and Democrat nominees for
the pest.
A 1959 graduate of Middleport High School, Blake
attended Rio Grande College
where he studied business
administration.
He has been a conductor on
the railroad, now Conrail, for
the past 15 years. He is a past
president of the United
Transportation Union, Local
860.
He owns and operates the
R, E. Tracy Fire and Safety
Equipment Co., South Third
Ave., In Middleport. Ue is a
member of Heath United
Center Elementary ; Brenda Bentz, C'oester b:lementuy., Methodist Church In Mid·
Back row, left to right, Rodney Roush, Pomeroy" dleport .
EleJIIentary; Christina Black, Rutland Elementary;
·-BlAke is the son of E;. M.
Melinda Hill, Letart Elementary; Tammy Landers, Blake, Sr., Middleport, and
Bradbury Elementary; Angie Spencer. Tuppers Plains ; the late Ruth Tracy Blake.
Rhonda Riebel, Eastern .Junior ffigh ; Angela Myers ,
Blake .and his wile, Joyce,
Meigs Junior High, and Brian Reed, Riverview have l'our children, Ruth.
Elementary.
Kathy, Max and Amy.

1llP SPELLERS - Rhonda Riebel, Eastern Junior High School Eighth Grader, center,
won first place honors In the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee Wednesday night at the
Salisbury School. She ,is lhe dat•.ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Riebel, Long Bottom. She
received a personal trophy, a plaque for her school and will represent the county at the state
event in Columbus next month . Runner-up on the right is.Jodi Hat·rison, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Harrison, Route 2, Pomeroy, a fifth grader at Salisbury. Jodi was presented a
trophy. Presenting the awards was Meigs County Supt. Robert Bowen, left. Judges were
Meigs County Local Superintendents Hobby Ord, Southern ; Clark Lees, Eastern, and
Charles Dowler, Meigs, with Dwight Goins, Meigs Local Administrative Assistant,
pronouncing the words. The contest ended when Jodi missed "dearth" which was spelled
correctly by Rhonda who went on to ;;poll the next word, "debase" correctly .·111rs. Grella
Suttle of the county office was chairperson.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar 22. 1979

PJRESU&gt;ENT fOlllFE

..

Editorial
•

.......
:·:

Irrelevant at best
~lartha

Phils lose third starting pitcher

· ·~

~pmtons

By Henchel Nlssenson
AP Sports Writer
The Philadelphia Phlllles
haven't been able to fmd the
pitcher they want but they
sure know how to lose the
ones they've got.
The Phillies seem to have
everything a baseball team
could want - except a sound

Angle and Robert Wallers

WASHINGTON 1NEA I - Anyone foolhardy enough to run
for pres ident needs a thtck skm and a sltH upper hp, but
there arc some mdtg mhes no human being - not even a
pnhlt c tan -- should be asked to endure
i\t llw lop of the hst 1s the sort of unsubstantiated prmled
.tssault that New Hampshire publisher Wilham l..oeb and
Ins Ma nchester Umon-Leader launched last week on the
pn v.utc hv&lt;-s and personal' character of GOP Rep . Philip
M CrHill' e~nd Ins w1fe. Arlene
In a p.m of arltcles and a sign!!d l.oeb editortal. the
twws pape r satd that the conservative Illinois congressman
and hts wtfe were hard-d,rmkmg, foul-talkmg phtlandermg
p~trty-g&lt;K•rs m dtrect contradictiOn of Crane 's pubhc tmage
as a d ean-cut fa mtlv man.
,
The' charges were attributed only to "former staff
me mbe rs. assoctates. frtends. colleagues. conservative
poltttcal observers and colummsts, ·· all of them conven~
tcntly anonymous. No spec1ftcs. let alone proof. were
offered
I he r eporter who wrote the articles md1cated to Crane
that hts sources had mcluded some Ronald Reagan
supporters and staff. but Reagan - challenged by an
.mJ;?:ry Crane - dented that anyone connect~d wath his
c o~rnpm g n was respons1ble
It doesn 't really matter where the rumors origmated
The ne ws paper had no busmess printmg them. Crane is not
Loeb's fnst vtclun. Sen EdmundS. Musk•e and his wife.
.Jane, a long wtlh Betty Ford, have hkew1se been subjected
lu the publisher's vttnol Nor IS Crane hkely to be the only
1!1!10 prestdenttal candtdate subjected to such treatment.
But that doesn t make it tolerable. And the Umon-Leader
1s not the on I\' pubhcatton m the country whtch IS wtllmg to
pl a\ fa st and loose wtth the facts for the sake of a ltlillatmg
.ston

In r ecent \ ears. the hne between gossip and good
repurtlng has all but disappeared Pohticians have
:,uddc nh become fa1r game for the most flagrant mvas1ons
of pr1\an . \\ 1lh none of the usual standards of proof
. l pph~d

'-: e \\ ~papers

and magazmes that wouldn't dare publish
about a candidate's fmancial dealings without
p.nnsta km g research and documentation blithely report 111 goss1p culunms and on the news pages - even the
fhmstes t rumors of personal peccadilloes.
Some clatm 11 IS all part of the "post-Watergate
morality .. Balderdash. Watergate had absolutely nothmg
to do wtlh the priv:.te conduct of pubbc offtctals. It was a
scandal of offlctal abuse of power - a far more
appropriate target for " watchdog" JOurnalism.
Back tn the "good old days," what a politictan dtd on hts
own t1me and money was h1s own business - unbl and
unl ess h1s conduct led to a brush with law enforcement
authonltes
Pe rhaps that was too lax a standard Maybe the public
does have a "rtght to know" if a presidential candtdate
~~tleS on drunken binges m the wee hours of the night, even
tf he doesn't wind up on the police blotter. But how does a
JOurnalist distinguish between a one-lime episode and a
pattern of behavtor when none of us spends 24 hours a day,
seven days a week, with anr politician' And how do you
prove someone 1s drunk?
What about sex' A candidate's sexual adventures may
legtlunately concern hts or her spouse, but are they really
anybody else's busmess' Are they many way relevant to a
candtdate s capacity to serve 1n the office he seeks?
Eleanor Roosevelt may have been deeply wounded by her
husband 's affatrs wtth Lucy Mercer, but does that mean
Amcnca would have been better off if Franklin D.
Rooseve lt had never been president? 0£ course not.
There's c;, long, hard road ahead between now and
election day 1980 There are enough legitimate hurdles
along the way to test the mettle of any would-be pres•dent
wtlhout forcmg candidates to run a gauntlet of personal
attacks that are Irrelevant at best 1 vicious lies at worst.
c~ll ega twns

('!'p HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.

DEAR• DR I..AMB - 1
read your column about panctealltis and what causes it,
other than alcohol I am a
person who hasn't had a
drink in a couple of years
and I still have had attacks
of it . I'd only been an occasional dnnker In the past. Is
It posstble that worry and a
nervous condaUon could
brmg on pancreatitis' What
type of diet do you recommend and how long should I
be on that diet until I can eat
all types of food?
DEAH READER - As
you know from my previous
column, the pancreas Is the
source of many of your digestive enzymes . Many people don 'I know what the
pancreas as, but the pancreas from ammals Is commonly used for sweetbreads.
An acute Inflammation of
the pancreas causes severe
abdommal patn and other
problems Some people have
recurrent attacks thereafter, regardless of what
caused the first attack .
Anyone who has had pancreatitis for any reason
should scrupulously avoid
all alcohol . For readers who
missed the first column, I'd
like to point out that a large
number of people whn have
panereatttls develop it because of eompllcatlons of
gall stones and many others
have undetermined causes,
10 you don 't have to be an
alcohollc or drink lots of
alcohol to develop pancreatitis tn the first place.
If the pancreas has been
damaged sufficiently that It
doesn ' t produce enough
enzymes , It wlll affect your
dlgesllon You won't have
the enzymes to spilt fat, so
you won ' t absorb fats very
well This may lead to large ,
foul-smelllng stools . Decreased ablllty to absorb fat
may also lead to decreased
ability to absorb Important
vitamins. particularly the
!at-soluble vitamins, as well
as some minerals. The poor

JULIAN BOND

·

Protection now easier
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) A new law malting it easier
for battered wives, children
and the elderly to receive
protection and legal defense
is sc~eduled to go into effect
Tuesday.
The measure, House Ball
835, will allow police to arrest
abusive relatives on receapt
of a sagned complaint at the
scene of an incident of
domestic violence Police
offacers previously had to
witness the crime before
makmg an arrest without a
warrant.

The law also allows victims
of domestic abuse Ill be
granted a temporary order of
protection within 24 hours
after a complamt is made.
This would give those victims
a legal means of protection
they presently do not have.
The order can provide
monetary support for the
victim of domestic violence,
as well as custody of children
and housing. It also may
require the abuser to seek
counseling and provide for
temporary visitation rights.
Law enforcement officials

Jimmy's

Whit~

Ms. Doar, a young veteran
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer of the president's 1976
campaign, was responsable
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter's action- for getting White House press
packed Maddie East rnisston corps "pools" to and from
gave
some
people varaous events in Jerusalem.
These designated pools
nightmares. Literally.
These people were not anti- represent the entire corps
treaty Arab rejectiontsts, ei- when space or transport
ther,
although
the limttations preclude what is
rejectionists were far from called "open coverage" by
pleased at Carter's success everyone.
On her secood night back m
The nightmares, alas, afflicted several hard-working Washington, Ms. Doar was
members of Carter's White telephoned at 11 p.m. by a
friend who asked, "Are you
House staff.
A prime example is Gael busy1"
"I'm frying to get some
Doar, administrative
assistant to Greg Schneiders, sleep," she replied. "I've got
who m turnt is deputy to to take an early mornmg pool
Gerald M. Rafshoon, Carter's to the King David" - the
assistant
for
commu- name of the Jerusalem hotel
where Carter had stayed.
nications

Health Review

digestiOn can result in
wetght loss
I am sendtng you The
Health Letter number 11-4,
The Pancreas Your Enzyme Organ. Other readers
who want this issue can send
50 cents with a long.
stamped, self-addressed envelope lor it Send your
request to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O Box 1551,
Radio Ctty Statton, New
York. NY 10019. This issue
wall gave you more detailed
information about the nature of acute attackS of pancreatitis and the chronic
fonn .
To help prevent future attacks and other problems,
you'd be wise to avoid fats.
If you're overweight, you
need to eliminate your obesity. Overeating can precipitate attacks. That also
means you want to eat small
meals or meals of mo(!erate
size and avoid eating huge
meals as some people do on
holldays or special occasions.
DEAR DR. LAMB When I was in my teens I
had very bad problems with
acne. My face Is now clear
but 1 have the deep scars left
by It I have heard about
dermabrasion treatments
which plane the top layeF of
skin and improve the
appearance I would like to
know how effective and safe
these treatments are or U
you could suggest something
else
DEAR READER - Yes,
such procedures are done
and, In some instances, they
are indicated. Vat. need to
have a consultation with a
plastic surgeon who does
cosmetic surgery. He can
give you a realistic appraisal of what you could expect
in your own individual case.
Such procedures are not for
everyone . If you tend to be
dark complexioned, this
may affect the pigment in
the skin. So, find out what's
best for you.
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN !

OU College o£ Osteopathic Medicine

have been given authority to
enforce the orders from both
criminal
and
civil
proceedings.
These protection hearmgs
may pose problems for
smaller communities which
do not have a MUime judge
to grant the orders within a
24-hour peraod, said Arlene
Lynch of the Ohio attorney
general's office. She also satd
domestic relations judges
from around the state are
discussmg ways to solve
those difficulties.
The law provtdes for a
separate statutory offense

House
The next night, another
caller wanted to set up a
tennis game with Ms. Doar.
she
mumbled
Again
something about having to
get to the King David, and
hung up.
On Saturday, Ms. Doar
went to bed at 1 p.m. and
slept until 6 a.m. Sunday.
That put a stop to her nightmares about the King David.
Ms. Doar and a lot of others
surely were pleased to learn
that Carter would not be returning to the Middle East to
sign the prospective IsraeliEgyptian peace treaty.
&amp;.tch journeys not only
mduce mmd.flumbing fatigue
but sometimes pose physical
hazards, real or potential.
Take the case of the Egyptian air force C-130 transport
that hauled members of the
!raveling press corps from
Alexandrl3, Egypt, to Cairo.
One of the plane's four engines failed durmg a critical
moment ill its takeoff.
Ed HOIIges of the Durham
(N .C.) Morning Herald, a reltred U.S. Atr Force
C011)1ll8nd pilot, immediately
headed for the cockpit to
assure himself that the craft
was not in inuninent danger
of plunging to earth.
An inspection of the cockpit
gauges put Hodges at ease until the Egyptian crew broke
out an English-language
operator's manual and
turned to the chapter on how
to cope with mechanical
emergencies.
Happily, the pilot made a
perfect thre~Hmgine landing
in Cairo.

entitled "domestic violence"
and prohibits any person
from causing physical harm
to a family or hoUsehold
member. This covers lwives,
husbands, children, kamily
members Uving und~r the
same roof and perso~ living
together as man 1111d wife.
Violation of the statute
would be considered a firstdegree misdemeanor. A
second convicllon would
constitute a fourth-degree
felony, Ms. Lynch explained.
The law also requires aU
persons serving as peace
officers to receive at least 15
hours of lraimng in handling
domestic disputes. The
provision is not relroacttve,
so officers now on the job will
not be required to return to
the classroom for lraimng
The law sets up a recordkeeping provision whtch requires law enforcement officials to maintain records on
the incidence of domestic
disputes and forward them to
the
state
criminal
investigation bureau. The
bureau would then publish an
annual statistial report.
Ms. Lynch expressed hope
that the statistics would
present a more realistic
picture of the mculence of
domestic
abuse.
She
explained that presently,
domestic violence often goes
unreported and hence is not
reflected in crtme statisttcs.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSPS IU·MII)

~~~~·--d·DEVOl'EDTOTIIE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERTHOEn..ICH
City Editor

collarbon e snapped and
Carlton and Ruthven ha ve
had some shoulder-and-elbow
cracklmg , the ulna bone m
rookte Jim Wright's pttchmg
arm went " pop 1" during an
hhibltton game Wednesday
between the ' B' squads of the
Phtlhes' and the St Louts
Cardinals.

The Democratic Party's new delegate selection rules
wW give black Democrats a chance In 1980 to hit Jlriuny
Carter where it hurts.
The party has eliminated the old winner-take-aU system
under which a candidate might get all of the delegates
chosen on the congressional district level- no matter how
narrow his margin of victory. The new rujea wW Insure
that three, possibly four presidential candidates will share
primary delegates.
The strategy, often discussed but never Implemented,
calls for black favorlte-son-«-daughter candidate. in
selected congressional districts in the primaries.
Each candidate's slate would be pledged to a platform
reflecting the growing - and stW largely submerged black discontent with Carter's performance generaUy and
his budget priorities specifically.
As the president proceeds toward probable re-nomination, the campaigns can elect a body of del~gates whoae
uncommitted stance can make a ftrst ballot convention
victory difficult. Their candidacies can be a referendum
gauging whether the King connection and AUanta'a blsck
leadership can sell Carter again to an increasingly hostile
black electorate.
Since 1968 black Democrats have plotted ways to
impress their concerns on the party. But In each election
year, the lack of cohesion among scattered black officeholders, and the egotism that is WlfortWUltely not
reatrtcted to any single race has prevented any unified
black approach to party politics.
Thus Rep. Shirley Chisholm, 0-N. Y., ran for president In
1972 without the support of most of her colleagues In the
congressional black caucus. other attempts to rally black
voters behind a single or several black candidates
foundered through bickering over which of several self·
annointed leaders would take the plunge.
Here's how, In theory, the present plan would work: a
black officeholder, popular with his or her atate's home
voters, becomes a "favorite son" candidate in 1910.
Rep. Chisholm, for eliBIDple, could become a candidate
in New York's Democratic presidential primacy. Through
concenttittlng her efforta In New York City congresalonal
districts with heavily black populations and in other
districts where she or Sen. George McGovern did well in
1972, she could reasonably expect to pick up a minority of
the state's presidential delegates .
Those who are considering this plan believe that each
state which now elects a black representative to Congress
- New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illlnols, MIAourl,
Texas, Tennessee, California - Is a prime location.
Additionally, any other stale whose congressional districts
house a sizable minority of black voters Is a likely ataglng
ground for l!tls electoral attack on Carter's record.
None of the plotters expect their "favorite" candidates
to defeat the president. They note, however, that blaeltt
slates In '"1e districts of Rep. Louis Stokes, D-Ohlo, Rep.
Charles \\'rangle, D-N. Y., and Rep. Chisholm defeated proCarter slates in 1976, nearly tha:ee years before the current
se!!~nn of discontent began.
The favorite-son-or-daughter campaign won't be
launched untll a strong candidate can be recruited in each
target state, and until a set of principles can be agreed to
by all.
In an election which currently only California Gov. Jerry
Brown and Illlnols Sen. Adlai Stevenson are lll&lt;ely
challengers of Carter's re-nomination, black voters have a
chance to use the delegate selection process to send the
president they helped elect In 1976 a message.
"It's either that," one fonner carter supporter said, "or
four more years of hymns and homilies for the hungry."

By BILL BARNARD
stattstics," said Indiana
AP Sports Writer
Coach Bobby Knight, who
NEW YORK (AP) - The won the NIT in his seventh try
Indiana Hoosiers wanted to after coming to the tourstop Joe Barry Carroll and nament twtce as coach at
tliey succeeded, but that isn't Indiana and five times at
what gave them the cham- Army smce 1964.
pionshtp of the National
Woodson, whom Knight
Inyitation Tournament .
called "the best player ever
Carroll was held to 14 who dtdn't even get honorable
points after scoring 42 in mention AU-America," was
Purdue's semifinal victory supposed to take the fmal
over Alabama. But while the shot for the Hoosiers,
Boilermakers' all-Big Ten although Kmght said Carter
center was held in check, and Randy Witman were
Indiana's own all-conference alternate chotces if Woodson
perfonner, Make Woodson, was covered
got only 10 points, makmg
That was the case, so
just '5 of 16 shots.
Carter, who scored 12 pomts
Obviously, since the two for Indiana along with fellow
teams had already played Most Valuable Player Ray
each other twice this season, Tolbert, launched the gamethey knew exactly what to do winner.
A little more than a minute
to stop the other.
So in the end, one Indiana earlier and with Purdue
shot \hat went m and one ahead 52-51, Carter had
Boilennaker shot that didn't climaxed a 3'1..-minute stall
by Indtana that ran the clock
determined the outcome.
Butch Carter hit a 20-foot • from 4.30 to I :10 by throwing
jumper with six seconds left f a pass which was mtercepted .
to give Indiana a 53-52 vic- But he insisted he wasn't
tory, a triumph not clinched thinkmg of the error in the
until Purdue senior Jerry closing seconds.
Sichting's baseline shot , "I was taught that If you
bounced off the back of the make a bad play, you don't
think about it or you'll make
rim at the buzzer.
"They concentrated on another bad play," satd
Woodson and we obvtously Carter. "So I wasn't about to
concentrated hard on Carroll, redeem myself with that shot.
and it ' showed in the If you think about a bad play ,

J

OPINING APRIL 2

Optometric Vision Center
'

110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-3279

Office Hours:
Monday- Friday

Optometrists:
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes
Dr. T. Jay Bradshaw

9-12- 1' 4

Examinations:
by Appointment

you mtght make a bad foul or
another bad pass."
But Knight said of his 6foot-5 Junior guard, "I thmk
he was really upset after the
mterception, but he came
back and made two good
plays - the foul on Carroll
and the shot ."
The 7-foot-1 Carroll, who hat
only two of etght free throws,
was fouled by Carter near
mtdcourt after Carter 's bad
pass. But wtth a chance to
salt the game away for the
Boilermakers,
Carroll
massed the first shot of a oneand-one free throw opportumty and Indiana got the
rebound
Knight, talking ahout the
unorthodox stall, sa1d, "I 've
never held the ball like that
when I was behind. But with
us one point do\\11, I was
content to hold the ball and
reduce at to a 20-second game
instead of H&gt; minutes "
After Carter put lndtana
ahead, four seconds were left
to play when Purdue called
timeout near midcourt An
inbound pass hit Stehling in
the corner, but has shot
missed.
After the game, Kmght
walked over to the Purdue
bench and spoke to the
disconsolate 6-1 semor guard
Later he told newsmen he had
told Sichttng "that he had
been a great player against
us for four years and the fact
that he missed the last shot
should not detract many way
from h1s great career "
"It's amazing what a free
throw can do to change the
strategy of the whole game,"
said Purdue Coach Lee Rose
of his team's 6-&lt;Jf-13 performance from the charity
line
Rose, who lost an NIT final
once before whale at North
Carolina - Charlotte in 1976,
was asked if he thought
Carroll's
subpar
performance had cost Purdue
the game
" If we hit a few free throws

DAVIDBUSKmK

AdYertlsl.q M1u1er
Published dally e](cept Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
ComptuJy~MultlmedJa, Inc;.,
111
Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 4$76!.
Business Office Phone 992· %156.
Editorial Phone 992·2157.
Second class postage patid 111
Pomeroy, Ohio
NV~liorw.l iU.Ivertislng represen·
taUve, Landon Associates, 3101
Euclid Ave ,aeveland,Ohio44115.
Subsl'ript.ion rales · Delivered by

HERNIAS
QUESTION: What Is meant by the terms hernia and
rupture?
ANSWER: Although these are synonymous terms most
medacal professionals ~refer not to use the term "ruPtW'e,"
because 11 suggests a vaolent and life-threatening problem. A
hernia is the weakening of a muscle wall aroWtd a closed
space, such as Ute abdomen, pelvis or chest, which permits the
ca!"I'Wr where available n centa per
week ByMotorRout.ewherecamer.
conu:nts of the space to push to outside of the wall. Though
service not. available, One mooth,
herruas are generally thought of as male ailments Utey are
S3 2S By mall in Ohio and W Va.,
One Year, S27 50, Six months,
also common in females.
'
SH Ml , Three months, $8 50;'
When Utts process takes place in the groin,. the moat
Elsewhere P2 00 year , S1x months
$17 00, Three months, •9 00.
coounonly affected area, It Is called an inguinal hernia.
Subscrtpl1on pnct includes Sunday
Anywhere on Ute front of tbe abdomen this ·condition is
Tlmes&amp;ntioel
referred to as a ventral herma. Also, Ute surgeon's knife can
~-'-------·~
sometimes produce what is termed as incisional hernia.
Occasionally a hernia obtrudes through the diaphragm,
Ute large muscle separating Ute abdomen from Ute chest
cavity. Diaphragmatic hernias are most often situated
adjacent to where Ute esophagus enters Ute stomach and are , - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - . ,
referred to as "sliding hiatus" herruas. ·
Much more rarely hernias can occur in the brain stem
whi~h can cause a rapid loss of splnal•fluid pressure, or even
behind Ute knee joint where a fat pad in Ute jdint pushes
through to the outsidl!. The former condition is usually fatal,
while Ute latter only causes a "Baker's cyst" which is not
sertous at all .
QUESTION: What usually causes the most common type
of hernia?
ANSWER: There are two types of inguinal hernias. The
most common type :Which physicians call "indirect," is uSIIIIIIy
caused by a congerutal weakness in the ligaments and muscles
in the groln.lndirect hernias may be present at birth, and can
COMPLAINTS
be associated with undescended testicles in male babies. But
they most often occur as a result ol stress or exertion later In
life. In oUter words, the weakness may be present for many
years before the actual hernia develops. The "direct" type
which is not nearly as common, uaually resulls from ~ .
developing weakness in the muscle, due to aging, surgery or
lrauma.
QUESTION: How well do trusses solve a hernia problem?
ANSWER: First of all it must be understood that trusses
never cure a hernia. Their purpose is merely to hold the hernia
inward so It does not protrude through the weakened m~.
Only certain types of hernias are . helped by truss
appliances. Inguinal hernias are most often aSBOClated with
them, but people with such hernias should consult with their
famlly physicians before using one of these devices because
some hernias may be complicated by their use. Oro~slonally a
hernia can be !rapped or pinched off by a truss. If the
~ 1979 b~ NEA lt1 t
herniated part is a bowel or even a bowel covering (called an
omentum), strangulation and gangrene can occur. &amp;.trglcal
correction is usually the preferred pfocediU'e for hernias, and
"IT'S ABOUT THE AMERICAN DREAM ... "
as almost always curative.
Next week a word about urnbdical hernias and
diaphragmatic hernias.

's
Wo
rId
Be rrY

,

Names •••
in the news

VAN &amp;~EEL DRIVE SALE
1977 CHEV.
1974 CHM

1978 JEEP
CJ-7 HARQTOP
I

STOCKTON, Calif. ( AP)- A homecoming ceremony for a
World War II jeep drew an estimated 5,000citizens- including
Jamie Farr of TV's "M.A.S.H." series, and a congratulatory
note from President Carter. ·
Farr, better known as "Corporal Kllnger" In the CBS-TV
mllltary parody, joined a celebration Wedpellday which came
after the vintage AnnY jeep was found abandoned on a gJ'BfiSY
hillside on the Texas.&lt;Jklahoma border.
Two local veterans of World WarD, brothers Bob and Tom
McKeegan, bought the jeep for ~.500from a Tel88 car buff. A
former owner who found the jeep five years ago noticed a
plaque Identifying It as one of•the Stockton-donated Jeeps and
told Stockton residents.

SCOTJSDII E-10
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1
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w1ndow, auto, 2 tone paint.

1974 CHEVROLET

C-10

WEST LAFAYETI'E, Ind. (AP)- Tltlrty.fl-ve yeara ago,
A. Leon Higgenbotham Jr. was a 111-year-old frelhman at
Purdue University who dropped out when school omclal£ told
him that as a black, he WIIBD't entitkd to space In a heated
dormitory.
Now a federal judge on the 3rd U. S. arcuit Court of
Appeals In Philadelphia, Higgenbotham will retiU'II to Purdue
to accept an honorary degree fiS a doctor of lawa.
The 51-year-old jurist hu agreed to accept the honor at
colnmencement elll!rciaes May 12, accordlntl to the Purdue ,
board of trustees, which approved the award last Friday.
•
CONCORD, N. H . (AP) - Front-ntllllinl RepUblican :
presidential candidate John Connally hu ended a two-day visit
to New Hampshire with a 'W8I'Iling to aupportera to watch out 1
for Ronald Reagan.
1
Connally, campalgtdng Wednetltlay In the lllate with the
earliest of the 19110 presidential primaries, said Reag111 hu a I
"strong organization - ready to spring into action u 10011 aa ,
he gives the gHhead."
:
ConnaUy said he was enjoying recent po1ll 'which made j
him the Republicans' choice over Reagan for tile party'&amp;
presidential ncmlnatlon.

l

l
I

----

Th e 6-foot -6, 24 -year-old
righthander . one of the best
pros pects in the Phils' system
and a candidate for a startmg
job, suffered a broken hone 111
hts a rm and Dr. Phillip J
Marone, the club phys1c1an ,
said he would not be able to
patch thts year
Wnght , who hurt has arm in

!977 and was hm1ted to ftv e
appearances m the manors
last year before undergomg
surg ery , had patched two a nd
two-thirds mmngs when he
heard the bone crack as St.
Louis outfielder Tom Gr1 eve
smgled

" It was right on the spot
they opera ted on, or right
above, " Wright said wtth
tears m hi s eyes and hts a rm
in a cast from the wrast to
ahove the elbow " As soon as
I heard that loud pop I knew
an my heart that somethang

'

By Jullaa Boad

€rTA

and deep pttchmg rotalton
Steve Carlton had shoulder
problems a year ago , Dtck
Ruthven has had a touch of
bursttts in his elbow this
spring and, of course, there
was Larry Christenson's
broken collarbone in a
btcycle' mishap.
While Christenson's

Carter's jumper gives SPORTS
:Hoosiers championship..____Th_en_auy_Se_ntt-·nel__,

A shot in delegate race

By Dr. Lamar Miller

Avoid fats
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

.,

f.lU ~Mf fORI WOI!Jll S'llloit-TEt.EG~

{I

Maybe Pete can pitch?

.•*····
:

•

lly

3-~e Daily Sentinel, Maddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday , Mur 22. 1979

:·;~·:

.
eyetnc 'l

VATICAN CITY ( AP) - Pope Jolm Paul II Ia
Austria as the site for a poulble papal villi.
•
After a weekly general audience Wednesday, the pope met l
with a group of Auatrlan joumalilta and wu uked whell he :
would visit their country. He replied, "llcJpefally tbll )'Ill'/'
'lbe pontiff, who vlllted M'ldco and the DGmlnlcan
RepubUc In January,Is scheduled to make an elghW.y lOur of
his native Poland IIi June.
~

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!
,,

and Stchtmg hits the last shot,
then I'm not asked that kmd
of questwn."
Purdu e fmtshed the season
with a 27-8 mark whtle lndtana was 22-12
In the third-place game,
Alabama' s Reggae King
scored 21 points and set an
NIT scormg record of 132
By DOUG TUCKER
points m the Crtmson Ttde's
AP Sports Writer
96-86 vactory over Oh10 State
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) 1be old mark of 129 by Bob Mtchtgan State Coach J ud
Lloyd of Rutgers in 1967 was Heathcote sa ys he's got the
set m four games. while Kmg best team m the NCi\i\ Ftnal
played m ftve thts year m the Four, but he hates bemg
tournament's expanded favored and hiS players are
format
ofl-limtts to the news medta
Woodson, Carroll, King, until aft er thc1r scmiftnal
Sichtmg and Ohto State's game Saturda y agamst Penn
Kelvm Ransey were named
The Spartans arrived in
to the all-tournament team Salt l..ake Wednesday, a day
ahead of the other three
finalist s 1n th e NCAA
Basketball Tournament , and
Heathcot e Immedi a t e ly
served nottce their pracllces
would be closed
"We are out here early to
get a wa y froru all the
dtstracttOns surfacmg at this
ttme ," he satd Wednesday tn
a telephone news conferen ce
wtth the head coaches of the
other three fmahsts.
" We '\ e had a number of
columnists m our area m ~
dtcate there 1s no need even to
come out here . that we've
won it already. We hope
they'r e nght, but we don't
thank that's th e kind of
columns that we want our
players readin g at the
present tilDe "
When the Spart ans were
ranked No 1 durmg the
regular season for two weeks ,
Heatchcote satd, " we lost
SIX POUNDERS - Ron four of sax games."
Riffle, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
" I'm not blaming the aclanded two six pound bass colades heaped on the club at
at Hidden l..akes on March that ttme," he sa1d, " but I
19.
think there wa s a tendency to
thank we could wan Without
defense and intensity, which
have been our strengths the
Wednesday's
Sports-In-Brief
entire vear "

Michigan State
NCAA favorite

HOCKEY
MONTREAl~ The

Detroit
Red Wings have been fined
for
derogatory
$5,000
statements directed at the
Naltonal Hockey League
Players' AssociatiOn, NHL
Presadent John Ztegler announced .
The statement, made by
Ted
Lindsay,
general
manager of the Wmgs durmg
a teleVISion mtervtew March
10, was to the effect that the
NHL Players' Association
lacked mtegnty.
Ziegler said he advised the
Detrmt club that "the making
• of such a statement was
detrtmental to the welfare of
the NHL He added Ulat
Ltndsay had issued a wratten
retrachon of hts statement
and an apology for havtng
made it
BOWLING
MILWAUKEE Tom
Baker rolled a ~air of 300
games en route to a 75-pin
lead over Nelson Burton Jr.,
of St. Lr, ais after two rounds
of a 5100,000 Professional
Bowlers Association tournament .
Baker of Buffalo, N.Y.,
rolled a 300 in his second
game or the first round and
was second after that round
wtth 1,480 pomts . He started
his second round wtth 300,
followed by 209, 2'!/, 217, 242,
-203 for 1,398 and a two-round
total of 2,878 - a 240average.
Frank Ellenburg of Mesa,
i\rlz was third wtth 2,790
Bob Handley of Fairway,
•Kan. , had 2,773, wh1le Wayne
Chester of Calif ornta and
.fohn Wilcox of Pennysh·ania
hed for fifth at 2,764
GENERAL
KNOXVILLE, Tenn - Arnaldo Maura, an amateur
boxer mjured in a Golden
Gloves bout last week, dted
He was 19
Ofhctals at East Tennessee
Baptist Hospital said Maura,
an ~m1y soldi er slattoned at
For t llragg, N C., died of
hf'rHI miurll'~
I.

satd he's fi gured out how to
stop J ohnson and Keiser
" We're gomg to play three
on Mag1c and two on Greg ,"
he satd, " and try to leave
everybody else alone Qutte
honest!~ , I th1nk Johnson is a
great player He's a much
more dangerous person when
he' s puttting the ball on the
floor and trymg to make
somethmg happen. Keiser 1s
a tremendous leaper The
thmg I don 't like about htm IS
tt looks hke he shoots equally
well from the outside and the
UIS!d e . .,

" We have not settled on a ny
dtrect match ups as yet ,"
Wemhauer said " In fa ct ,
we'll probably zone more
than m an. The thmg that 's
tmportant
for
us
to
remember IS that they are not
a two-man team n
DePaul, which Zipp ed
through thr ee tournam ent
vtctortes wtth 1ts startm g ftv e
pl ayin g vartuall y ev e r y
mmute, may not have for·
ward Curtts Wat km s at full
strength, satd Coach Ray
Meyer
The 6-fooH sentor forward,
Meyer 's chot ce to guard
lndtana State AU-American
Larry Btrd. suffered stramcd
knee hgaments in the fina l
mmutes of DePaul' s West
Reg10nal vtclory over UCLA
last Saturday.
" He extended a ll th e
ligaments on the mside of hts
knee," satd Meyer . " It's very
patnful and he's been workmg
on weights trymg to build up
the strength He can run
a round the gym, turnmg left ,
but he has a lot of pam
turning to h1s raght But each
da y he says at's gettmg better
Desptte Heathcote's clatms
and better 1 don't know how
that top-ranked and unbeaten
Indtana Stat e should be well it will be by Saturday
favored, he feels hts 24-!i . Yesterday I would have satd
Spartans, cn ergazed by he would not play Saturday
But he ran today for the ftrst
brilliant guard Earvm
hm
e, and shot a ba ll today for
" Magic" Johnson and highthe ftrst time."
scorang forward Greg Keiser,
If Watkms can't go, hts
should wan.
will
be
"We're commg mto the r epla cement
tourn ament with the worst sophomore Dennas McGutre ,
won-loss record of all the 6-7, and freshman Ma rk
teams, but I honestly thank Agu1rrc wall be asked to
guard Bird
we'r e the best team," he sat d.
" I know we'r e takm g an
" But m a toum ~ment 1t 's not
how good you are , it' s how awful ga mbl e on Ma rk
good you're playmg You can foulmg out,' ' Meyer satd
talk about tough schedules " But Mark IS such a great
and tough leagues, but when athlete he always rises to the
you get to the Fmal Four, occas10n."
Indiana State's first-year
that's all behind you. I can't
believe lndtana State can head coach, Bill Hodges, the
come in here wath a 32.{) Assocaated Press Coach of
record , havmg been ranked the Year, admitted he feels
No 1 for SIX or seven weeks, ~trange domg battle wtth the
and suddenly we end up being esteemed Meyer, a 37-year
coachmg giant who wall be
the favorite
"No, I can't understand enshrined mlo the Naismith
that,.
Memorial Basketball Hall of
Fame
next month.
Heathcote's Spartans are
"
Ray
Meyer has probaby
favored by as many as 17
forgotten
m or e
about
points in thetr Saturday
basketball
than
I've
learned
tipoff against Ivy League
champion Penn, and Indtana yet," sa1d Hodges. " There
State as favored over D~Paul isn't anyone I've ever met ln
m thetr Semifinal. Saturday's coachmg who has more class
losers will play for third- than Ray does He 's probably
place Monday followed by th e the most renowned man in
Chtcago smce Mayor Rtchard
champtonSntp game.
Penn Coach Bob Wemhauer Daley

wa s broken "
Ea rli er In t he wee k,
Manager Danny Ozark satd
he planned to keep Wrtght
wtth the Philhes provided
he r emamed in good health
" I'll be back next year ,"
Wr ight sa id. " I'll go back
home and JOtn my famtly It
was JUSt something I had no
control over I'm a beltever m
the good Lord I'll keep my
fatth. I won 'I give up "
The Phtlhes have been
attempting to trade inftelder
Rtchte Hebne r for a startang
pttcher They may have to try
ha rder.
" Wbal can I say ?" inghed
playe r per son nel d1rector
Paul Owens. " I don 't ha ve
enough ha ir to get gray
anymore"
However, the Ph!lhes may
have enou gh pat chmg to
repeat as National Leag ue
East champs tf thetr hitters
keep bombmg. The "A ' squad
ha mm ere d
the
Texa s
Ra nge r s 10-4 Wed nesd ay .
Ruthv en pitched t hre e
sco r~l ess mmngs and Mike
Schm tdt hit two home runs,
Greg l..uzmskt dehv ~red two
smgles and a trtple, Hebner
drove In two runs with a
smgle and double and rookie
John Poff hom ered P et e
Rose, 2-for-26 thts spring,
collected ha s ftr~t RBI wath a
fifth-inning smgle
El sewhere, Don Sutton.
who was ftned earher n the
day by Mana ger Tom
Lasorda, allowed two runs
over the final sax mmngs as
the Los Angeles Dodgers
defeated the New York Mets
7-5 Lasorda ftned Sutton an
undtsclosed amount because
th e ptl cher rltd not a ccom pany the team from Vero
Beach to St Petersburg, Fla ,
and arrived late . Steve
Garvey and Dusty Baker
homered for the Dodgers
Sheldon Mallory's threerun homer and consecutive
e1ghth-mmng blasts by Ro~
Howell, John Mayberry a nd
Otto Velez helped the Toronto
Blue Jays defeat the St louts
Cardinals 7-3. Ted Sunmons
and Ken Rettz homered for
the losers, who got consecutiv e homers Tu esda y
from Terry Kennedy, Roger
Freed and Reitz tn beating
the Blue Jays
Th e
Seattle Manners
mauled Cleveland's David
Clyde for 12 runs m l and a

IS YOUR HOME

ADEQUATELY IN
Here's a stm pie test

Il l Multiply the length X

third mnings a nd outlasted
the lndtans 14-11 J orge Orta
hat h1s third home run of the
sprmg in the lith tnmn&amp; to
gtve the Chtcago Whtte Sox a
7-5 tnumph over the Kansas
Ctty Ro ya ls Rusty Torres
a nd Chet Lemon a lso
homered for the Sox.
Ozzte Smith, who has btl
safely an all of San Dwgo's !3
sprmg games , tri pled to start
the eighth ton ing and scored
on a sangle by Mtke Hargr ove
as th e Padres edged the
Chicago Cubs 4·3
Roo kte Ktrk Gtbson hlasted
a two-run homer and Steve
Kemp hit a solo shot whtle
Mtlt Wilcox pitched seven
strong innings as the Detroit
T1ger s defeated the Boston
!led Sox 5-J. Gtbson con·
ncctcd off Dennas Eckers ley
The Atlant a Braves got
two-hit pttchmg from Larry
McWtllt a ms
a nd
Gene
Garber a nd bla nk ed th e
Ba ltunor e Onoles 3-11 wh tlc
Scott Sanderson, Bo b James
and Davtd Pa hner ytelded
three hits as the Monti eal
Expos downed the Ho uston
Astros 4.{)
Cah forma's Chris Kna pp
allowed JUst two hits a nd one
run m sax tnnmgs "hile the
Angels pound ed San Francisco's Vtda Blue for five r:um;:
and sax ,hits in three tnntngs
and wh1pped the Gamts 9·J
Geoff Zahn allowed one r un
In rave tnntn gs an d the
Minnesota T win s scor ed
twice tn the ctghth on a
throwmg error and a dropped
fly ball to beat the Ctnctnnatt
Reds 6-4
In a nother development,
Karl Eller , head of Combmed
Commumcatlons Corp. , told
The Phoentx Gazette that the
purchase of the Oakla nd A\
from Charles 0 Flnlev IS
vtrtually compl eted ,; lt 's
just a matter of getttng the
paperwork done. " he sa td
Eller, has sa1d he pla ns to
keep the club tn Oakla nd

LOWEREU
THE COST OF
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If you are not adequatelY
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�;
5-The Daily Sentinel, Middlej!(lrt-Pomeroy. 0., Thursday, Mar. t?. 1979

...

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Thursday. Mar . 22. 197!1

·Tigers trying to protect toUrnamerit record
By GEORGE smooE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APIThe experiments are over for
Columbus East and now the
'ligers go about protecting
their
1.000
winning
percentage in the Ohio boys
-high school .basketball
tournament.
East has been to the state
semifinals four previous
times, winning the big school
titles in 1951, 1963, 1968 and
1969. And their coach, Larry
Walker, knows how to win at
the state level. He was a
guard on the last two
championship teams.
East (20-4) opens its bid for
a fifth crown at II a .m .
Friday
against
Akron
Central-Howe r (23-1).
Cleveland St. Joseph ( 22-2)
takes on Cincinnati LaSalle
1
(21-3) in the other Class AAA
.Jemifinal at 2:30 p.m. in St.
John Arena.

The Class All semifinals
launch the colorful three-day
spectacle tonight with 1977
champion Cleveland Latin
(21-3) playing Uhrichsville
Claymont (23-11 at 6 and
Archbold
(22-2) facing
Dayton Jefferson (22-2) at
9:30.
The Class A semifinals Friday night pair defending
champion Mansfield St .
Peter's
(23-3 ) against
Zanesville Rosecrans (21-2)
at 6 and Cincinnati Summit
Country Day and St. Henry
comparing 24~ records at
9:30
All title games are
Saturday, with Class AA at II
a.m., Class AAA at3 p.m . and
Class A at 8 p.m. Kettering
Alter won the Class AAA
champio nship
and
Portsmouth the Class AA
honors a year ago.
Walker finally settled on a
pair of se niors. 6-fnnt,1 Rie~-

ardo Hairston and &amp;-9 Lee "They're awesome. What do Cineinnati Moeller and
.Johnson , to go with his strong you do when your tallest finished second in its own
front line of 6-11 Granville playcor is G-2 and theirs is 6- league durin~ the season.
Waiters 6-S Kevin Castleman 11 ?''
ltut the l .anc1'rs, equipped
and 6-1 'oanny Thomas.
. St. .Joseph rides into its first with 6-11.10&lt;! Uampler aJKI !Hi
"With the addition of state tuurnament on the Ed Herwg, have hit full
Thomas and Hairston ," said prowess of !HI Clark Kellogg, slridc,in tournament play Walker, " we are a contender the state's Class AAA Player knocking off top-ranked
because defensively we are of the Year. "H~'s the best Cincinnati Withrow.
that much better. We just player I've ever seen in my
" We have great heigh\ •nd
look different now than we years of playing and good shooters and play good
did earlier."
coach~g;'' satd Bob Straub, ~efense," sa1d Cady. The last .
Centrai-Hower
coaching the Vtkmgs' eoach of 18 t1me LaSalle reached the
veteran Joe Siegerth has seasons .
semifinals it lost to Canton
reached the state semifinals
Kellogg 's kid brother, !Hi McKinley in 1977.
six previous times without sophomore Eric Kellogg, also
. St . Peter's, also the 1968
winning the title. The 24-year starts and averages II pomts titleholder, has two starters
coach of
the
Eag les and 7 rebounds. Clark carries back
from
its
1978
sidestepped the jinx by marks of V poiats and 18 championship te;un , !HI allsaying, "When you get down · rebounds.
stale forward-center Leo
here, you ' re with the best."
Bill Cady, who has_been La- Brown and 6-4 forward Chris
The Eagles return their Salle's only coach Ill Its 19 Kowalski . Brown averages 22
watchcharm guards, 5-8 years,hastheLancersm~be points and 16 rebounds,
.Jimmy Gooden and &amp;-9 Clay state semifinals for the thtrd Kowalski IS points and 10
Johnson from the 1978 team time
without wmning . rebounds . .
that fini~ed as the runnerup J.aSalle _ lo~t to Cincinnati
Rosecrans, a 1971 semifinal
to Alter.
Elder, Cmcmnati Bacon and ~o~r: has survt ved a strmg of
Of East, Sie,!fe.rth sn i~ .
InJuries to Its all-stater, G-3
center Bill McLoughlin , to
reach
the final four .
McLoughlin hurt an ankle

'Moskau feels Reds may
trade for lefty starting pitcher
By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla . (AP)- Paul
Moskau, working with a
revamped pitching delivery
and a new approach ioward
winning a spot in the Cincinnati
Reds'
starting
rotation , thinks one or more
of the Reds' righthanders
might be on the trading block
in a deal for a left-handed
starting pitcher.
'' There 's a surplus of
pitching, at least righthanders' ' on the Cincinnati staff,
Moskau said. " I don't know if
it makes that much difference, though. Around the
National League, teams are

pretty well balanced between
right-handed and left-handed
hitters.
"! don 't think ·there's any
team that has an excess of
iefthanders" that might
make it rough on the Reds'
predominantly right-handed
staff, Moskau said.
Moskau, who pitched five
innings and took the loss in a
6-4 defeat Wednesday against
Minnesota, has gone back to a
windup delivery that he
abandoned nearly two years
ago.
"It's helped my control and
eased my ann problems,"
said Moskau, who credits new
pitching coach BUI Fischer

with the insight to recommend the change. " He had
seen all the films of the
Cinciru\ati staff and thought a
windup would help work out
some problems I was having.
" I went along with him and
it 's working out so far ."
Moskau fac ed just 20
batters in his five innings
Wednesday, but the Twins
paired up their base hits to
score three runs, all of them
ea rned, before both teams ·
gave way to sloppy play.
Minnesota committed four
errors and Cincinnati three.
But the strangest play occurred in the Reds' three-run
eighth inning , when Minnesota's Ron Jackson, Bobby
Randall and Rick Sofield got
their signals crossed and
watched Ray Knight's pop fly
drop among them for a t.worun double.
The Reds had been jinxed
a field in !he Twins' eighth'

Bando highly
regarded Indian
By MIKE HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
TUCSON , Ariz . (AP) - It's
not really a surpise, considering his blood lines, but
Chris Sando is the talk of the
Cl eve land lndii!ns spring
training camp.
The young catcher is a nonroster player here to get
som e experience and give the
powers that be another
opportunity to watch him
develop .
Bando, 23, an Ali-American
at Arizona State University
and younger brother of
Milwaukee third baseman Sal
Sando, was the Indians' No. 2
pick in the June 1978 amateur
draft.
The yo unger Sando, a
native of the Cleveland
subur b of Solon, is not
expected to play in the major
leagues this season. But his
work in last winter's Florida
Instructional League .and so
far this sprin g have brought a
very positive reaction from
Manager Jeff Torborg and
General Manager Phil Seghi.
" I was happily surprised at
the way he handles himself
behind the plate," Torborg , a
former major league catcher,
said. "Especially the way he
blocks balls in the dirt and his
quickness."
,
Seghi said, "He's ~- fine
looking young man. I think
he •s the kind of player who
will eventua lly be able to help
us. And, with people on our
club like Gary Alexander and
Bo Diaz . as well as minor
leaguers like Bando, Ron
Hassey and Timmy Glass, it
puts us in a very strong
position at catcher."
Bando, 6-foot, 19f&gt; pounds,
was an infielder like his big
brother until his junior year
at Arizona State .
" That year, ali three of out
catchers signed in the June
draft, " he explained. "I went
to ~~hool as a shortstop,
played third and sec""~; I
had played infield all my life .
" I was reluctant to go back
thete behind the plate. But I
also realized it was the quickest way to enhance your pro
career. There just aren't that
many good catchers in base. bail .
"I 've watched Sal play for
a long time and I've always
wanted to be like hbn and
play pro ball.! saw how much
fur he was having and I
wanted to play it."
The older Bando brother
trains about lOti miles north
of here at Sun City. On a·
recent day off for Sal, it was
like a Bando family reunion
at Mesa, where the Indians
were playing the Oakland

A's.
The brothers and their patents, who travel back and
forth between the two
training
camps,
were
huddled near the first base
dugout before the game.
Bando has played little this
spring, being used mostly as
a batting practice catcher.
''I'm exceptionally happy
right
n ow
with
my
development - especially
my defense. I only played a
couple of months of pro ball
last year and I feel like I 'm
stronger now ," he said.
He played in 76 games for
Chattanooga of the Class AA
Southern League, hitting just
.228 with four homers a nd 21
runs batted in .
" I guess the big question is
whether I'll hit,'' Bando said .
" Hit ting is probably the .
hardest thing for any athlete,
but
I've
always
hit
everyw here I've ever been. I
feel I can do it."
'

too, givillg up two runs on
Junior Kennedy's throwing
error a nd Champ Summers'
dropped fly bali.
" I don't know what's going
to happen" with the Reds'
pitching staff, Moskau said.
"We have six starters, so I
don ' t know what they're
going to do. I'm not going to
worry about it, though.
"They could make one of us
a long reliever, or they might
want to trade for a leftbander."
Moskau started 25 games
last season for Cincinnati, but
got just 10 decisions for a G-4
record. He'd like to get more
decisions to show for his
work, but the Reds lately
have not been a team that has
scored a lot of runs early.
" We seem to score late,
from the fifth or sixth inning
on," Moskau said. "We're a
late-scoring club. and by that
time I'm out of there."

6~.

6-4.

NEW YORK -Top-seeded
Martina
Navratilova
whipped South African Greer
'Stevens 6-3, 6-2 and secondseeded Chris Evert defeated
Britain 's Sue Barker 6-3, 6-4
in the first round of the
$275,000 women's tenni s
championships.
In other matches, Tracy
Austin outlasted Australian

percent now," said Tom
Boehm, the Bishops' coach.
Summit Country Day, an
all-girls school until seven
years ago, has only 71 boys in
the upper four grades. But
there is some dandy
basketball ta lent in that
small group.
The young Silver Knights
average 88.9 points, have
been over 100 points seven
times this season and have
six players averaging in
double figures, led by 6-3
Dexter Bailey's 17 points and
13 reboWKis.
Coach Joe Cruse says his
philsophy ·on offense is, " to
get down the floor first the
swiftest with the mostest. "
St. Henry has reached the
state for the first time under
Frank Guilbaut, who has an
18-year record of 26&amp;-109 at

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Clemson 68. Kentucky 67 . OT

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Ohio Sl. 80, St . Joseph's, Pa.,
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Nevada.Reno 62, Oregon St,

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Purdue 97, Central Michigan
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.
Dayton los, Holy Cross 81 .
lndi&lt;~na 78, Texas Tech 59
Alabama 98, St. Bonaventure
89
Alcorn State 80, Mississippi
State 78
Texas A&amp;M 79, New• Mexico
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Exhibition
Baseball At A Glance
By The A•socialed Press
Wednesday's Games

Montreal 4, Houston o
Atlanta 3, Baltimore 0
Toronto 7, St. louis 3
Los Angels 7, New York (N) 5
Philadelphia 10, Texas 4
Minnesota 6, Cincinnati 4
Chicago (AI 7, Kansas City 5,
i 1 innings

california 9, San Francisco 3
Seattle 14, Cleveland 11
·
San Delgo 4, Chicago (N) 3
Detroit 5, Boston 1
.T hursday's Games
Detroit vs . Houston at Coc01.
Fla .
Los Angeles vs. Atlanta at
West Palm Beach, Fla.
Minnesota vs. Pittsburgh at
Bradenton, Fla .
Cincinnati vs. Chicago !Al at
Sarasota, Fla .
·
Kansas City vs. Tor onto at
Dunedin. Fla .
Baltimore vs . Te•as at
Pompano, Fla.
NY (A) vs . Boston at Winter
Haven. Fla .
California vs. Cleveland at
Tucson, Ariz.
Milwaukee vs . Oakland at
Scottsdale. Ariz.
Chicago. (Nl vs. San Diego at
Yuma, Ariz.
Seattle vs. San Francisco at
PhoeniX, Ariz.
St. Louis vs . NY !Nl at St.
Petersburg, Fla ., ( Nl
Friday's Games
Houston vs . Atlanta "A" at
West Palm Beach. Fla .
Atlanta "A" vs. Texas at
Pompano Beach, Fla .
St. Louis vs . Philadelphia at
Clearwater. Fta .
Los Angeles vs. Cincinnati at
Tampa, Fla.
Boston vs . Montreal at
Winter Haven, Fta .
Pittsburgh vs . Detroit at
Lakeland, Fla .
Toronto vs. Ch icago (AI at
Sarasota, Fla.
Baltimore vs. Kansas City at
Ft. Myers, Fta .
Cleveland vs. San Otego at
Yuma, Ariz;
Oakland vs . Milwaukee at
Sun City, Ariz.
California vs. Seattle at
Tempe, Ariz.
San Francisco vs. Chicago
( N) at Mesa, Ariz .
~IY (Al vs. NY INJ at St.
1-'etorsburg, Fla., (N)

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Alabama 96, Ohio St . 86

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Reg. Separate
Items 301 75

Second Round
March 12
Alabama 90, Virginia 88
Indiana 73, Al~orn St. 69
Old Dominion 61. Clemson 59,
2 OT
Ohio St. 79, Maryland 72
Purdue 84, Dayton 70
Texas A&amp;M 67. Nevada· Reno
64
Third Round
March 15
Purdue 67, Old Domlnfon 59
Alabama 72, Texas A&amp;M 68
Semifinals
March 19
Purdue 87, Alabama 68
Ind iana 64, Ohio St . 55

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·NEW YORK (AP) - If you were on center court at
:' Wimbledon, behind 1-5 and 30-40 in the final set and could
: • select me tennis player to try to battle you out of the jam,
• • whom. would tt be?
~~
"Billie Jean Klng," said France's Francoise Durr without
~: a moment's hesitation. "Chris Evert is steadiest but Billie
Jean is toughest in a tight spot ... "
•.
"I agree," added Rosie Casals, Billie Jean's longtime
~· doubles partner. "No one is better at turning a match around
~' on a single shot."
,
!'
"I would have to pick Billie Jean at her best," said
;; Martina Navratllova. "Consistently, Chris is hardest to beat
' but for one occasion, one big match, one. crucial point, yes it
, , would have to be Billie Jean."
'
\
Chris Evert and her friends were lolling around Madison
: Square Garden, awaiting their turns in the $275,1100 Avon
'. Championships, and the talk tlaiurally turned to tennis, with a
: · few detours involving love and marriage, slwnps and the
: game's fierce new tigresses.
~
It's now one of the best shows in sports - the ladies' tour.
. , The competitors are attractive, bright, personable.. They have
National llasketball
' a splendid organization. When they elect to put on a -show Association
, unlike themen's1our, which is fragmented by selfishness and'
Af.AGt.nce
.
inflated egos - all the stars show up.
IIY The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
'
Fans who buy tickets to see Martina Navratilova and Chris
Atlantic Division
, Evert see Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert, with their full
W l Pet.
GB
· supporting cast. No AWOL!i as in the case of the rich Grand Wash .
49 22 .690
Prix MaSters this winter when Bjorn Borg, Guillermo Vilas Phlla.
3'1 33 .542 10'12
N..Jersey
J4 37 .479 15
and Vilas Gerulaitis ail chose to ignore it.
New
York
31
44 .413 20
Chris Evert, the No . 1 women's player in the world for tbe Boston
27 43 .385 21';,
last five years, is here, intent on defending her position despite
Cent~al Division
one of ille biggest distractions that can afflict a lady - an San Ant.
43 30 .589
40 31 .563 2
impending marriage. Soinelime in the next few weeks the Houston
Atlanta
41 33 .554 21h
court JEincess from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., will take her prince Cleve
.
28 44 .389 14'/2
- young John Uoyd of England.
Detroit
28 44 .J89 w;,
Billie Jean, the court bulldog who has won six New Orleans 23 51 .311 20 112
Western Conference
Wimbledons, now a1 3S and with two fragile knees, is more
Midwest Division
speetatorthan competitor.
Kan. City
43 30 .589
"I'm phasing myseH out," she said. "There are too many Denver
40 33 .548 3
good players aro.Wtd now. It's getting tougher and tougher." Milwau .
33 40 .452 10
Indiana
31 41 .431 11'12
Billie Jean left her mark.
Chicago
26 46 .361 w;,
"No matter how far down you gother, you never could he
Pacific Division
sure of beating her,". said Rosie . "She might nuike one shot Seattle
44 27 .620
and suddenly catch fire. She is very emotional - up and down . Phoenix
43 30 .589 2
42 30 .583 2•12
Chris is not as flashy . She is more level, cold and consistent." Los Ang .
Diego
41 33 .554 4'1'
Women's tennis remains largely a Chris and Martirui San
3'1 33 .542 5'h
Portland
show. Martina has beaten her rival in two of their three Golden St.
32 42 .432 13'h
meetings this year but Chris has an overall edge over the
Wednesday's Games
Atlanta 111, Detroit 104
strong, left-banded Czech defector.
119, New York
"We both enjoy playing each ~ther," said Chris. ''It's a Washiligtor
106
challenge. We realize every time we meet, No.I is on the line."

lOUISiana 78

SAVE s1o

WEENNORE

1

10

Reg. 59" Pair

WEED KILLERS'.

By WW Grlallley
· AP Corret~poadeot

u ••

By Tho A•sociated Press
·
First Round
March7 . .
VirQinia 79,
Northeast

•

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11.&gt; dll·:u ltll lii~:N llEltl.i
Al, Spo'"l:; Wrih•r
Major league baseball
locker rooms are raucous,
lJawdy, crowded and sweaty.
't1tey are possibly the most
uncomfortable place.s for
juurnaiists to interview
athletes.
Samantha Stevenson wants
to see ali this for herself
because she's a writer and
that's where the athletes are.
Stevenson will soon see what
male writers have been
seeing for years - lots of
c~rd games, lots of shrugs
and
some
downright
surliness.
Stevenson and the Philadelphia Phillies recently
reached an out-llf-court
settlement of her SUit against

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lht..• Nurlhll.d Ll'ltf.!U ~ f.'lub fur :-.·al !le wilt a llow. all prnperly \'ankL·es wen• also contacted
b.aning lu•t' from lhe locker .t:rcdl•ntialed reporters inlv hut said they hadn 'I reached
mom last y~ar. Althuugh tiM! chc du~house without any a pulicy position yet.
wcl("me mat is not out. the liint• rest riclions.
And Milwaukee and Clevedc••J· is definitely open. And
The St . Louis Cardina ls land said special interview
that's all Stevenson wan!$. .said they would open the areas ouL~ide the locker room
" Now we can get on with l&lt;x:kcr n••ms to everybody would be set up to accomthe reporting of baseball for ;!0 minutes immediately modate women reporters .
from the viewpoint of after the game, then dose Only this approach would be
women," Steverson said .. them to all reporters.
contrary
to
baseball
"Now women reporters · in
Minnesota , Gincinnati, . Commissioner Howie Kuhn's
Philadelphia can finally Kansas City, California, Los polic) statement suggesting
compete equally with men Angeles and the New York that the clubs initiate a nonand finally show what we can

ao.··

Most of the tea(llS surveyed
.in a random study by The
Associated Press will be like
tt&gt;e Phliiies, allowing women
Wednesday Eorlybirds
to tread in the previously allFeb. 14, 1979
WL
male locker room . Among the
0 18
contacted teams , Atlanta, -Riebel 's Used Cars
New York Clothing
27 21
T~xas , San Diego, Boston and
Royal Crown
26 22
Jack's Club
24 24
. King Builders
20 28
Swisher &amp; Lohse
13 35
Team High Game - Royal
Crown 800, Riebel's Used
cars 788. Royal Crown 718 .
Indiana 114. Chicago 105
Team High Series - Royal
San Antonio 1~3. Kansas City Crown 2151, Riebel 's Used
116
Cars 2078, King Builders.
Philadelphia 114, Houston 108 1994.
Phoenix 134, Boston 113
High Ind . Game - Debbie
San Diego 106, Golden State Hawley 234, Donna Mc ·
103
.
Farland 194, Betty Whitlatch .
Portland 114, Los Angeles 110 190. Drema Roach . 190.
Thursday's Games
Hlng tnd . Series - Debbie
Indiana at Cleveland
Hawley 571. Betty Whitlatch
Baston at Seattle
508, Pat Carson 468 .
Friday's G1mes
New Jersey at Philadelphia
[completion of . Nov . 8
Friday L•te Mixed
suspended game I
Feb. 16, 1979
New Jersey at Philadelphia
WL
Wash ington al Detroit
Coleman's
40 16
Houston at Indiana
Young 's Carpeting
33 23
Atlanta at San Antonio
Roush.WIIson
32 24
New Orleans at Chicago
Capeharts
24 32
Boston at Denver
Young's
Gull
Station
21 35
Kansas City at Phoenix
20 36
Milwaukee at Golden .State Clark's
High Team Series
San Diego at Los Angeles
Young's · Carpeting 90'9 ,
Roush-WIIson ,
814 ;
Pro Hockey At A Glance
Coleman's, 800.
National Hockey League
High Team Game
By The Associated Press
Young's Carpeting 322,
Campbell Conference
Young ' s Carpeting , 319 ;
Patrick Division
Roush . Wilson, 279 .
W l T Pis GF GA
Men's High Series - Mike
N.Y. Islanders
Capehart.
495 ; Butch Roush.
4S 13 12 102 321 187
Chuck
Hossler 418;
467;
NY
Terry Seldenobel 418.
Rang.
3'1 24 9 87 296 252
Men's High Game - Butch
Phlla. 34 23 14 82 243 220
Roush
171; Mike Capehart
Atlanta 37 21 1 81 286 251
167; Mike Capehart 164.
Smythe Division
Women's High Series Chicago 25 34 12 62 215 259 Marlene
Wilson 491 ; Edith
Vancou. 21 40 11 53 199 274
364 ; Kelly Wilson 347.
St. Louis 17 43 11 45 225 308 Hall
Women ·~ High Game Colo.
14 49 9 37 189 306 Marlene
Wilson 179; Marlene
Wales Conference
Wilson 166; Marlene Wilson
Adams Division
. 147.
Boston 39 20 12 90 282 233
Buffalo , 31 25 15 11 241 232
Toronto 30 31 11 11 233 229
Minn.
26 33 11 63 237 246
POMEROY LANES
Norris Division
Wednesday Early birds
X·Moot . 45 15 10 100 297 181
Feb. 17, 1979
Pitts .
31 28 11 .13 247 249
WL
Los Ang . 31 30 10 12 254 254 Riebel's Used Cars
28 12
Wash . 21 36 15 57 245 300 Jack's Club
22 18
Detroit 20 35 16 56 233 262 N.Y. Clothing
21 19
x-clinched division
Roya I Crown
20 20
Wednesday's Games
King Buclders
14 26
Washington 2, Pittsburgh 2. Swisher &amp; Lohse
11 29
tie
.
High Ind . Game - Melanie
Detroit .4, Toronto 2
Barnett 22'1, Jean Norton,
New York Rangers 7; Betty Whitlatch, 189.
Chicago 6
High Ind. Series - Bess
Minnesota 7, Philadelphia 3 Hendr i cks, 519, Melanie
Buffalo 3, Colorado 2
Barnett 510, Debbie Hawley
St. Louis 1, Vancouver 1, fie 502.
Thursday's Games
High Team Game . Plltsburgh at Boston
Riebel's Used Cars, 808, New
New York Islanders at Mont. York Clothing, 788, Riebel 's
real
Used Cars, 788, King
St. louis at Los Angeles
Builders, 762.
'
Friday's Games
High Team Series Philadelphia at Atlanta
Riebel 's Used cars 2337, New
Buffalo at Vancouver
York Clothing 2259, King
Builders 2159 .

1
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discrumnatory policy and
provide "identical access in
one way or another to all
reporters .'·
That positio n did not eome
easily to Kuhn, who ·only
reached it after baseball and
the Yankees lost · a discrimination
case
last
September brought against
them by Melissa Ludtke
Lincoln, a reporter for Sports
Illustrated.
District Court .Judge Constance Baker Molley ruled in
tha t suit that the locker room
ban against women reporters
was unconstitutional. She
548; (women) Isabelle Couch
said the Yankees could could
516. Pat Carson 504.
bar all reporters or no
High Ind . Game - (men)
larry Duga n 207, Bill Porter · r eporters. They could open

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Sports World

Tournament Glance

.Wendy Turnbull 5-7, 6-1 , 6-3
and Britain's Virginia Wade
beat Dianne Fromholtz of
Australia G-4 , &amp;.1.
The
eight-women
tournament is a doubleelimination event.
BASKETBALL
NEW YORK - Butch
Carter hit a 20-foot jump shot
with six seconds remaining,
giving Indiana a 53-1;2 victory
over Purdue in the National
In v it at ion . Tournament
championship game.
Carter's dramatic shot
from the top of the key came
· after Indiana Coach Bobby
Knight
called
three
consecutive time outs with 16
seconds remaining . .Then
· Indiana brought the ball into
the forecourt and Carter got
open for the winning shot.

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start tor the Redskins.
" We have a real fluid team
with switching defenses. We
even press a little," said
·Guiibaut .

SUPERB AUDIO SYSTEM
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Sports briefs
TENNIS
NEW ORLEANS - Tom
Gullikson, winner of only two
singles matches this .year ,
upset' top-rank ed Jimmy
Connors 6-4, 3-1!, 6-2 in the
$1 75,000
New
Orleans
Festival of Tennis.
In other matches, South
Africa n Ray Moor defeated
countryman Johan Kriek 4-1&gt;,
6-4 , 6-4 a nd Ferdi Taygan
beat Deon Joubert of France

and 1hen a knee during the Mercer county school.
tl,urnament play.
· Two of former Cincinnati
" We got here on a wing and Reds' slugger Wally Post's
a prayer. mostly prayers nephews, 6-4 all-stater Mike
with
our
injuries. Post and 6-3 Chuck Stahl,
McLoughlin's about SO

Women will be allowed in some lockerrooms

Today's

Transactions

Sunday Mhiors
February t8, 1979

WL
Country Bumpkins
42 14
Sunday Duds
34 22
Hot Shots
32 24
American League
Plnbusters
30 26
DETROIT TIGERS - Sent
30 26
Ted Blair, Dan Rucker and Alley Cats
0 56
Dave Steffen, pitchers, Ted Team6
Men's
High
Game
Rick
Brazell , Steve Patchin and
John Upshaw, catchers, to Martin 175 ; Rick Martin 166;
their minor league camp lor Rick Martin 165.
¥en's High Series - Rick
reassignment.
MILWAUKEE BREWERS Martin 506 ; Ralph Gibbs 441;
- Sent Willie Mueller, pit· Jeff Martin 3'/3.
Women's High Game cher, to their minor league Gwen
Martin 159 ; Sheryl
tamp for reassignment.
Gibbs 150; Rhonda Gibbs 149.
National League
Women's High Series ATLANTA BRAVES Sheryl Gibbs 411; Gwen
Sent Moro Giello, Tony Martin
402 ; Ann MOrris 386.
Brizzolara, Roger Alexander
Team
High Game - Hot
and Joey Mclaughlin, 'pitchers, Mark Martin, Matj Shots 324; Hot Shots 311;
280 .
Slnalro and Blane McDonald. Plnbusters
Team
High
Series - Hot
catchers, Ken Smith, Perry Shots 908 ; Plnbusters
780;
Harper, Gary Cooper and
Larry Whlsenton. outfielders, Country Bumpkins 750.
to their mInor league camp
Sunday Miners
lor reassignment .
February 25, 1979
CtN.CtNNATI REDS - .
W
1
Sent Mike Grace, ·tnllelder, Country Bumpkins
50 14
and Steve Christmas, cat.
Hot Shots
40 24
cher, to their minor league
Pinbusters
36 28
camp for reassignment.
Sunday Duds
34 30
International League
Alley Cats
32 32
ROCHESTER
RED
Team 6
o 64
WINGS - Named Thomas E.
Men's High Game - Rick
Marlin 191 ; Ralph Gibbs 176;
Farrell president.
FOOTBALL
' Rick Martin 164.
Nation•! Football League
Men's High Series _ Rick
GREENBAYPACKERS- I
Signed Duane Thomas, . Marlin 504 ; Ralph Gibbs 478;
running back .
' Jeff Martin 3'/5 .
NEW YORK GIANTS _
Women's HIQb Game Ann "Morrls158; Gwen Martin
Named Dick Scesnlak an
1~9; Gwen Martin 148.
assistant coach.
Women's High Series ·Canadian Foolboll League
Gwen Martin 4J8 ; Ann Morris
TORONTO ARGONAUTS
- Signed Mark Jackson,
417; Sheryl Gibbs 354.
quarterback , · and John
Team High Game - Hot
Kinch, running back , to lwo·
shots 332; Hot Shots 312;
Plnbusters 301 .
year contracts.
Team High Series - Hot
SOCCER
NorthAmerlcon
Shots 942 ; Plnbusters 829 ;
Soccer Luguo
Alley Cats 802.
PHILADELPHIA FURY Signed Keith Van Eron, goal
. tender.
American Soccer League
Pomeroy Bowlin9 Lanes
LOS
ANGELES
Early Wed. Mixed
SK YHAWKS - Signed Billy
March 1, t979
Millen ; lorwa rd.
Team
SACRAMENTO GOLD 48
Young's Market
Signed Neill Roberts and Headquarters
46
Chuck Huntington. forwards . Smith-Nelson Motors
40
COLLAGE
Zide's Sport Shop
28
ORAL
ROBERTS No.3
28
UNIVERSITY - Announced Loogshots
26 ·
the resignation of Lake Kelly,
Team High Series - Zlde's
head basketball coach .
Sport Shop 2030.
UNIVERSITY OF TULSA
Team High Game - Zidc's
- Named Jay Cain and Lerry Sport Shop 697 .
Coker to Its football coaching
High Ind . Ser ies - (Menl
staff .
larry Dugan 582, Bill Porter
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL

(women)

203;

Caro lyn

the doors or close the doors.
1\lld they could even provide
swinging doors or curtains
lor each cubicle or direct all
ballplayers to ll'le towels or
bathrobes. But they could not
discriminate.
Most of the Yankee players
grudgingly accepted the entrance of women reporters
last season.
"I'm not uncomfortable ,''
said .Jay Jollnslone. "But
when I take my clothes off,
there won't be any ladies it)
the locker room. Hey, if the
ladies are allowed in here,
why can't men writers go into
the s howers to interview
C'hris Evert and Billie Jean
King? "

Bachner 195, Isabelle Couch
188.
Early Sunday Mixed

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
58 I API - Majestic Flash was
Tom's Carry Out
SO
just one second off the track
Jack's Da iry Bar
49
Gibb's Grocery
34 mark as he won the $6,500 alRoyal Crown
26 lowance
feature
at
Meigs Inn
24 Thistledown Wednesday,
Team High Se ries - Tom's
rtl!Jning the 5'1% furlongs in
Ca rry Out 2012.
I: 04 4-li.
Team High Game - Tom's
Carry Out 695 .
Maj estic Flash paid $5.60,
High Ind . Series - (men) $4and$2.20. Vino Veritas was
Ed Voss 543, Bill Willford 511 ;
lwomenl Helen Phelps 513, · second, paying $8.80 and $3.
Flying Hitch paid $2.20 to
Stephanie Rought 504.
· High Ind. Game (men) Ed show.
Voss 192, Ed Voss 185 ;
The crowd of 4,109 wagered
(women) Stephanie Rought
$493,000.
i99. Helen Phelps 186.
Team
3 In One

Tuesday Triplicate
March ll, 1979

Team

Reuter Bragan Ins.

70
58
46

Friendly Ta vern

Royal Oak Par k
Royal Crown Cola

46
Robert Robie Con st.
24
Doug's Marine Sales
20
High Ind . Game - Betty
Smith 22 1. Pat Carson 196,
Betty Smith 193.
High Ind . Series - Betty
Smith 559, Helen Phelps 536,
Maxine Dugan 489.
Team High Game
Friendly Tavern 526 .
Team High Series
Friendly Taver n 151 2.

LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio ( APJ
Plaza Chuck posted a career'
best time ol 2:05.1 and caught
Dr's Golden Knight at the
wire in · a photo finish
Wednesday night to win the .
$1,600 featured mile pace at
Lebanon.
The winner returned $7. 40,
$4 and $3.20 and the secondplace horse paid $6.80 and
$3.20 while McArnie finished
third and returned $3 .60 .
The 2-5 double of Nable
Cloud and Tru Gait Boy paid
$22.60 a nd the crowd of 1,179
bet $120,296.

LATONIA
FLORENCE, Ky . (AP) Angeline, r idden by Michael
Bryant, ca ptured the $6,200
featured efghth race at
Latonia Wednesday night,
paying $6, $3 .40 and $2.40.
Amber Bio was second, returning $3.60 and $2.40 and
.Jelly Buck finished third,
paying $3.20.
Attendance was 3,084 and
the mutuel pool to taled
$400,766.

.

SATURDAY SIGN UP
Sign up for the Racine
Surruner League Program,
pony league, girls' league,
little league, pee wee lea~ue
and T-ball, will be held in the
Kindergarten room at Racine
Saturday, March 31, from 10
a. m . until nopn. Registration
fee is $5 per child. Any adult
interested in assisting in the
program should contact Bill
Porter at 949-2009.

SIUICERS

FORYOURJUIIOR

MEETING SET
There will be a meeting at
the Racine Elementary
School at 7 p. m. Monday,
March 26 for all a dults interested in the Racine
Surruner League P rogram
(pony league, girls' softball,
little league, pee wee league
and T-ball) .
LATONIA
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) Jockey Pete Glenn rode
Domile to a driving finish
Tuesday night at Latonia to
capture the $5,300 fea tured
eighth race.
The winner covered the six
furlongs in I : 13.1-li for a
return of $14 .40, $3.40 and
$2.40 ..
Siler Blessing paid $2.80
and $2.10 for pla ce, and
Patarctic Prince paid $3 for
show.
JR's Bandit combined 9-6
with French Commotion in
the double for $77.60.
Attendance was 2,9116 and
the mutuel pool totaled
$437,741.

·Now the exciting star of television, comics ,
and comic books can be with you everywhere! New Spider-man Sneakers from
Kid Power®are Red and Blue - the same
colors as Spidey's costume!- with webbing
and Spidey's face on the side. Run and
jump like never before ... in your
Spider-man Sneakers!

heritage house
OF StiOES
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
Open Friday til 8 p . m .
· 1979 Marvel Com1cs Gt'Oup

REFRIGERATORS - RANGES - FREEZERS
WASHERS - DRYERS

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursduy, Mar. 22, 1979

Your Social .Security

The Mysteries of Microwaves

...

)

•

.7-111.: Dally SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 22, 1979

~;g::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;!;!;:;:::x:::::;:;:;:;:;:;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;:::::::~:=:=:::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Today's Topic:

~

Mending fences

Birthdays I"~G;;;;;tl~ri':R;~ ll Circle~ of the First Baptist Church met

~

~:l Humane Spciety

11

By Diane Ebllis
Local businesses will be
Are
you
considering
the
providing
microwave ovens
X
~
Social Security regulations effective May 15, 1978, provide purchase of a microwave
and accessories for display .
By Marion C. Crawford
,
that everyone who applies for a Social Security nwnber must oven?
lly MARt: WILSON
regulars end up rwmlng City '
Ma ybe
you ' re Topics to be discussed will
If you've been wondering why there basn't been any news
submit evidence of age, identity, U. S. citizenship, or lawful dissatisfied with the results include how a microwave
Associated Press Writer
Hall, "I won't be happy," in the paper recently about the activities of the local Humane
MliiiSSion status bef&lt;re a Social Security number can be you get from the microwave oven operates, advantages
CHICAGO (AP l -· It has Rose says. "But It's just too
Issued. The new procedures were implemented to deter fraud oven you presently own. Or and disadvantages of Its use, been widely reported that the early to make predictions." Society, it is because we hav'e been too busy to sit down and tan
you about ali of it. First of all there has been a rub of Injured
and misuse of the Social Security number and to make the you may just want to learn features to look for when Chicago Democratic machine
Alderman Dick Simpson, animals and very sick ooes, too. One poor animal was thrown
system's records more reliable.
more about microwa'le buying a microwave ·oven, _ is dead - slain with ballots an independent, said he never over a fence on HyseU Run - a very young, black and while
The best proof of age is a public or religious record of birth cookery.
and
proper
cooking by an unsmiling blonde lrisb- viewed Mrs. Byrne as an Border Collie, about two or three months old. We toot her to
~de before age five. This proof will also serve as proof of
If you find yourself in any techniques. Copies of various woman,named Jayne Byrne. independent. "If someone is the vet immediately but even after several days under medielil
Cltizenslup for U. S. born persons. If this type of proof is not of these situations, then you recipes will be provided and
Those reports, as Mark going to kill the machine It's care she dled ...cause? Neglect, which in turn cauaed ulcers
available or not easily obtainable, other evidence of age may
preparation techniques wiD Twain once said about notices going to take someone else to over her mouth, tongue, throat, and even into her Intestines.
should
plan
to
attend
"The
be used including a school record, church record census Mysteries of Microwaves" be demonstrated.
.
.of his death, may have been do it," he said.
Another animal, a !Dale Collie type was picked up from the
record, physi~ians statement of birth, Bible or family record, program on Thursday, March
In order to help me plan for "greatly exaggerated."
Simpson, who did not seek road after, being hit by a car. We had it treated, a cast put oh Itil
msurance pohcy, marriage record, voters registration record 29th. Afternoon and evening the size of the audience,
"We're going . to have to reelection , predicted Mrs. leg, and after several wild goose chases around West Virghila
military record, delayed birth record, or any other docwneni
the
Meigs
County
show
the world that what Byrne wm "make alliances· to two different locations, we finaUy found It a home neil.~
please
call
sessions
·
will
be
·
conducted
which shows the applicant's name and date of birth or age and
_,. which
from
1 p. m. to 3 p. m. and Extensio!l Office at 992-3895 happened here in the primary with Democratic regulars, Pomeroy. We went on several other pet ambulance runs, most
is at least one year old. All proofs should be original
from 7 p. m. to 9 p. m. Both by Monday, March 26 and tell · election Is like a fight in the but it will be on her terms - too late to save the animal, some we lucked out and the
doclll!'ents o~ certified copies; uncertified photocopies or sessions
will include the aame · us if you are planning to family, where you always after all she won the elec- animals got away.from the hospital alive and are now In gOOd
·
·
notanzed cop1es are not acceptable proofs.
types
of
so that attend the afternoon or make up," Mrs. Byrne told tlon." ·
homes.
·
Evidence of Identity is also required in addition to you mayinfonnatlon
choose the most evening session. Or you can Democratic Party precinct
In the meantime, Simpson
We
are
stlll
being
asked
to
"do
something"
about
privately
evidence of ag~. Evidence of identity should provide the name, convenient time to attend.
stop by or write to the Meigs captains.
added, her victory has owned animals and we must still repeat - we deal with
a~e , date of btrth, address, signature, physical description,
County
Extension
Office,
Box
Mrs.
Byrne,
long-time
aide
"fragmented control of city homeless animals only unless there is neglect or cruelty
. ,,
will
be
The
program
picture, or any other identifying information.
32,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
to
the
late
Mayor
Richard
J
.
government.
There's much involved. Those of you who take pets without thoroughlf
conducted
at
ihe
Meigs
All applicants initially requesting Social Security numbers
This program, as well as Daley, was the victor ·in the more room for maneuvering realizing your full responsibility to that animal and thus decide
Extension
Office,
County.
will be required to submit two documents : one for age and
:f" another
for. identity. For example, children under age seven located m the basement of the other activities conducted by Feb. 'J:l Democratic mayoral now, a chance for ·decent after a y~r or two that you don't want it - must aaaume tl1!'
County Home ' BuDding on the
Meigs
County primary. The loser was in- legislation to come out of the responsibility of finding it a new bome . Most certainly the
w~d requtre proof of age and evidence of identity such as a
Mulberry
Heights
in
Cooperative
Extension
cumbent Michael Bilandic, city council. I'm sure the first chore is made easy for you . by the Sentinel offering free
clinic or d~tor 's r_ecord, hospital wristband, baby book,
••
Service,
is
open
to
anyone
on
who headed the· Democratic 100 days of the Byme ad- advertising and with the program on WMPO called SWap ShoP,
Pomeroy
near
Veterans
newspaper birth notice, vaccination certificate, .day care or
a
non-discriminatory
basis
·
machine
alter Daley died.
ministration will tum out you have another means of doing "right" by your animal. So
Hospital.
A
50
cent
Memorial
nursery school record, etc. Older children age '7-18 would
without
regard
to
race
six
Bilandic's
defeat
was
some
good legislation."
regist.ration
fee
will
be
don't ask your Humane Society to take on an even greater load
require proof of age and identity - other possible docwnents
color
or
national
origin:
'
viewed
by
some,
at
least
at
Mrs
.
By,rne's
candidacy
charged
to
cover
expenses
for
"1;
by doing "your" work. We are but a handful of women and one
m addition to those mentioned above include a report· card,
first, as defeat for the has been endorsed by both the man, trying to take on the inunense task in this county Of
the
food
demonstration
.
school record, school L D. card, yearbook driver's permit or
machine.
Democratic Central Com- transferring dogs and cats from one location to lll!other with
•, license, Boy Scout or Girl Scout membership card, etc. Other
But Mrs. Byrne is still mittee and the Independent th~ best interest of these animals first and foremost in Ollt
~
exa:npl~ of evidence of identity are: state I. D. card, voters
courting the machine's Voters of Illinois. The two minds.
·
·
registration record, mamage record, divorce decree work
~
power, even thougl) for more organ izations have never
.There are a lot of nice people who ask us daily ''what can
badge, draft card, passport, etc. These are only exampies and
A contribution was made to Mrs. Schmoll was noted. The than 50 years the winner of before endorsed the same do to help you when I don'thave the time physically to assist?!':
are not all-inclusive.
the Lena Huber Memorial recent Illness of Mrs. W. H. the Democratic primary has mayoral candidate.
There are two things that you can do to help us out, If you w!Jt:
Applicants not born in the United States should also submit Fund by the Friendly Circle
~
won the general election. And
The Jane Byrne band•••
evidence of their U. S. citizenship or their immigration of Trinity Church · meeting Ferrell, mother of Mrs . her Republican opponent, wagon is filling ' up and so far We, of course, always need money - it COiltS us a lot to
Donald Hauck, and the
maintain our vehicle which acts as ambulance, and taxi fbr
~
documents showing their lawful admission status.
,I
Tuesday night at the church. hospitalizatioo of Mrs. Ray stockbroker Wallace John- aU the riders seem at least animals. It costs us money to board animals temporarily
Persons requesting duplicate or corrected cards will have
Miss Elizabeth Fick Riggs were reported, as was son, trails badly- by a 7-to-1 mollified if not happy. Or as our vet bills are astronomical. Donations or membt!rship ~
~
to submit _eviden~ of identity when applying. For example, if president,
margin according to a Alderman Vito Marzullo, a
had charge of tb~
~
a w~an IS chan~mg her name due to marriage, the marriage business meeting when the wedding of Miss Debbie Republican poll taken last long-time party leader, says, be obtained by writing PO Box 682, Pomeroy, Ohio 4576t
;.a
Wilson at the church
Another thing that you can do to reaUy help us Is to think of Ull
14
certificate showmg the previous and new name would
reports were given on the Saturday, 2 p. m.
week.
"Everything will be alright. when you do your spring cleaning this year. Any clothes you
establish both identities and should be easily available.
cookbook
and
basket
Since the primary; Mrs. She's coming back. No one have outgrown or tired of that are in good shape, appllance'li
Miss Mary E. Chapman
Most applcations for Social Security numbers can be projects. Mrs. Thomas
Byrne
has promised to share walks alone in this world." that still work, furniture tbat is In good shape, boukl shoe4
used readings and poems ·
conducted in person or by mail, except for applicants who are
Young
reported
on
ill and relating to spring and Easter patronage appointments with
MVP AGAIN
etc., are all items that can be sold In our Humane 'Socletf
18 or over. They must apply in person.
bereaved
members
during
George
Dunne,
Cook
County
·
DAYTON,
oliio ( AP) ~ ' Thrift Shoppe and keep us able fmancially to help these paoio
during the program hour.
A free explanatory leaflet, "Applying for a Social Security
B Nwnber" is available at the Athens Social Security Office. H the past three months and Devotional period Included Democratic chairman.
Jim Paxson is only the third defenseless animals that end up coming to our attention In one
d you have any questions about evidence requirements or the notes of thanks were read an interpretation of the 23rd She told 400 precinct player h\ University of sad way or another.
·~
~
Lastly, you can help us by getting on our list of peo~
application process, please call the Athens office at 592-4448 from Mrs. Fay Pratt, Mr. and Psalm. Miss Mary V. Reibel captains on Monday that they Dayton basketball history to
Meigs county residents should caU 99U622. Please remember: Mrs. James Fugate Carl received the offering and are part of the "greatest wm . the Flyers' Most seekmg pets. That way, when we come across an animal that
Bilikam, Mrs. Ger'atdine prayer closed the meeting. Democratic Party in the Valuable Player award for needs a home badly, we have the list of people waiting to take
tn order to protect your Social Security program no Social
three straight years.
Mrs. Roy Mayer served a United States."
care of them. With no shelter in the coWity, this Is the only way
Security nwnber will be issued unless all requirem'ents of the Young and Mrs. Hilda Schmoll.
A
contribution
from
She
urged
them
to
tum
out
The
6-foot~
senior
from
dessert
course
to
the
12
the Humane Society has of )lelping to eliminate the hug~
law are met.
.the vote for here iii teh Apr. 3 Kettering joins Henry Finkel :mimat explosion in Meigs County that Is caused by
members attending.
general election because "it's {1964-65-66) and Donald Irresponsible pet ownesr who do not believe in neutering males
been written up :oil over the Smith {1972-73-74) in winning nor spaying females. If you want now, or wlll in the future - ii
were callers at the home of
world what happened In the the laurels that many times dog, puppy, cat or kltten,docall us at 992-76M. We welcome aU
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant,
prlmar_r.
A lot of people, although ·Finkel and Smith calls between 10 a. m. and 10 p. m. - please no other time as
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs. and Kelly, The Plains; Bob Debra and Dave, last week.
mclubd t.ng
alii belot k of , each shared the hdnor for one we are getting worn out unnecessarily, particularly by "e~riy
R. R. Durst recently were ·Ritchie, Belpre; Jim Ritchie,
Tom Durst spent a week's
Repu 11cans, w
••
loo. ing season .
Mr. and Mrs. ·Bill Berry, Ronnie
birds" . Emergency situations excepted.
.
.
and
Brian -vacation at Key· West, Fla.
I.
here
to
see
whether
or
not we
Paxson led Dayton to 19Lexington; Mr. and Mrs: Burkehammer, Minersville; recently .
In closing, ~on't forget to get new flea and tick collars for
•••
10 record and a berth ;; the your pets. It's that time again .. .and thank you so much all of
Sunday School attendance can get our .act together."
Mrs. Mike Evans and MatMrs. Famie Durst visited
'1 Victor
Democratic regulars who National Invitation you wonderful people who have adopted animals from us lately
threw, Lawrence Ritchie Jr. Mrs. Nell Middleswart on Feb. 25 was 38, the offering
$23.15 . On March 4 at- cursedh~r in the primary are Tournament this year. He - because of you we have not had to euthanize one health;r
and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Tuesday afternoon.
lj
Morehead, local.
•
Mr. and Mrs. Louis DeLUz tendance was 43 with $32.05 now _kissing h~ cheeks and paced the Flyers with :;Bo animal in months.
I
hangmg her p1cture where points and 53 steals
·
Mrs. Earl PoweU, Torch, called on Mr. and Mrs. offering.
l
·
Worship services were held Bilandic's once hung.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch, Richard Abels, Long Bottom,
"These
people
are
at 11 · p. m. with the Rev.·
Racine, Mrs. Bonnie Willford on Sunday.
~
Tbomas
bringing the professional PQliticians and
and Mrs. Maxine Durst,
~
"Digging
Old Well" ·Democrats - they have no
message
Portland, called on Leota
}
(a
Communion
message ) real choice but to go with the
Birch during the past week.
winner," says Don Rose, the
from
Genesis
26.
Attendance
'•
. Mr. and Mrs.. Henry
anti-machine
political gadfly
•
at
the
service
was
26.
Johnson of Steubenville were
who
became
Mrs. Byrne's
County'
Council
was
held
. recent visitors of .Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Talbott and family . . Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Bigley recently. Attending fr,om campaign manager in early
-~
Laura Ohlinger of Pomeroy are announcing the birth of a Alfred were Thelma Hen- January.• Rose was credited
was
a weekend guest of Alicia son, Michael David, weighing derson and Nina Robinson. with taking a disorganized
COMPLnE STOCK
••
campaign
and
putting
Mrs.
Charlotte
Van
Meter
and
and
Cindy
Evans
.
•
8 lbs., 6'n oz. He was born '
•
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Dailey March 11 at the Camden- Helen Woode were unable to Byrne over the top.
Despite his years of
and sons, Reedsville, visited Clark
••
Hospital
· in attend.
fighting
the machine, Rose
Charlotte Van Meter is a
Mrs. Gussie Dailey and Mrs . Parkersburg. Maternal
said
he
isn't
upset that Mrs.
in
Camden.
surgical
patient
Betty Triplett, a recent af- grandparents are Mr. and
Byrne
is
mending
fences with
Clark
Hospital
in
ParkersWMPO
ternoon.
Mrs. Frank Bise, paternal
party
regulars.
burg.
Mrs. Violet Ritchie, Lori grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
••
SATURDAYS
"She's talking concUlation.
Word has been received
Cornell, Donnette Talbott, · Sol
Bigley.
Great9 til Noon
It's
the kind of posture she
has
that
Elsie
Sydenstricker
Delbert Patterson, Wade grandmothers are Mrs.
has
to asswne before the
been
a
patient
in
St.
Joseph
Connolly and Troy WArd Mabel Hetzer and Mrs.
•
election,
it doesn't mean
Hospital,
.
Parkersburg.
Martha. Holsinger.
'~
changing
colors," Rose
she's
:Apri\11
will
be
Holy
Week
Mrs. Bigley was honored
added.
Service
at
Alfred.
April
15th,
with a sto~k shower Friday
~
Rose , noted that Mrs.
evening at the Eden Parish Sunrise Services. , .
'~·~
Byrne's
transition team Is
Hall with Mrs. Fannie Bigley,
Sunday School attendance
controlled
by anti-machine
Mrs. Virginia Carter and on March 11 was 60. The
•"·
DIFFERENT
independents.
II Mrs. Byme
Mrs. Mary Ailee Blse as offering was $33.09.
hostesses. Games were
Worship attendance was 32 follows its recommendations,
played with prizes awarded. with Rev. Thomas speaking Rose said , independents
;· ~
· Mrs. Bigley received many on "Jesus' Journey From should be happy.
•••
H~"""'"
The real test, Rose and
t~
gifts. Refreshments were Jerusalem" from Luke 9:51.
,
other
analysts say, will be tbe
MIDDlEPORT, lJ.
served to 51 guests.
Holy Week services will be
·' ~
appointment
of top city ofMr.
and
Mrs.
Roger
held
here
on
AprU
11.
Easter
•
••
Meredith and daughter, Sunrise services will be held ficials. II Democratic Party
,:.
I ~ ~~
Terry, of Nauvoo, Ill., visited here with the Rev. Thomas
with Mr. and Mrs. Denver leading .
.
Weber and Mr. and Mrs .
AHred church has been
Day
or
night.
this
elegant
dress
••
presented a certificate of
sandal co-stars with yQU and
1 Warren Pickens.
• Mr. and Mrs. Zenith Jionor for having paid conI •
the season's best names In
.~
Chevalier of Belpre Rd. are ference apportionments In
casual fashions. Enjoy great
'
announcing the birth of a son, full for 1978. It has been
'.
reviews for g ood looks.
Eric Lee, born at Camden• announced that new car''I ,
performa nce and comfort.
Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg: peting is to be installed In the
I~
Standing ovation fo r a cameo
They have another son, Allan, church basement soon.
pric e.
who is 5. Grandparents are
Mrs. Charlotte Van Meter
Mr. and Mrs . Edward is now home recovering from
I•
Chevalier.
surgery.
.
I•
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
1~
spent a few days at Paden Buckley have become
City, W. Va. with Mr. and parents of a daughter
Mrs. Howard Young .
recently. Our sincere .
•
Mrts. Rose Thomas has congratulations go to them.
4'Xl'x%" CDX
!:
returned home after visiting T)ley ate a wonderful couple
••
with her sister and brother, and an asset to the Alfrejl
Mrs.
Gladys Baughman 'and Community. Grandparents
I•
.
.
Jack
Gale of Gshanna.
are Mr. and Mrs. Paul
:.
SHEET
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ernest
Buckley.
I:
)I
Whithead were weekend
Mrs. Ella Yost Is visiting
I'
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Genevieve Guthrie.
•
I
Hensch of Cuyahoga Falls.
Word has been received
Mrs. Kathryn Dietz of here of the death of Serena
Belpre,
Mrs .
Gladys Campbell and the illness of
PRICES
CASH &amp; CARRY .
Willianui, Mrs. Ruth Anne her hUSband, John Campbell
Balderson
and
Kay of Sugar Grove, Ohio. They
EFFECTIVE
DWVERY
Balderllon villted with Mr. are former residents of
THRU
and Mrs. Bill Dietz and Mr. Sumner.
AVAilABLE
Mrs.
Roy
Flck
at
.and
Sunday
visitors
of
Mr.
and
EMPRESS
3-31-79
Colwnbus recently .
Mrs. Charles D. Woode were
Mrs. Ruth Tuttle ft Texas their son, Clair Woode und a
Road spent an evening with friend , Richard Daniels, both
Shiny Black
Mrs.
Helen Archer.
of Day1on .
· ·
Shiny Bone
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gene
WilBon,
Shiny White
Mrs. Vlrgnla W~ltoo and ·
Susie Cowdery visited with
Mrs. Gay Young at
MllllEPORT,
992-2709 OR 992-6611
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Ables
923 S. TIIIRD
Chillicothe recently.
of Canal Winchester were
OPEN : 7:00 to S Mon. thru· Fri. -7:00 to 3:00 SaturdfV
Mrs. Dorotha Riebel of · weekend guests of Mr. and .
· Middleport, Ohio
Belpre was an · overnight Mrs. K Ables.
guest of Mrs. Verna Rose .

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Bobbi Price ·

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Contributions made to fund

ana

~

Brett Price
· A party was held recently
honorlog Bobbi and Brett
Price, children of Bob and
Penny Price, Long Bottom.
Brett was four on March 20,
and Bobbi will be eight on
March 26.
.
~uests
were Teddy,
' . Chester and Lori Mundry,
, Ruth, Roger and Scott Dillon,
. Jeannie and Jinunie Starcher, Paul, Carolyn and
· Kenny Whaley, Jackie, Eddie '
.· t and David Bigley, and Grace
Price.
· Cake, Kool-Aid, potato
chips, and ice cream were
served. Brett and. Bobbi are
the grandchildren of Grace
and Charles Price.

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Stiversville News Notes

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Reedsville
News Notes

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Kasem.

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REHEARSAL SET
The Voice of Liberty choir
will rehearse Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church for the Easter can·
tala.

*ACME
*JUSTIN

.,

*TONY LAMl

OFF

''·''
•''

150
SiflES

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DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm 15 and eight months pregnant. My parents threw me
out and I've been supporting myself for the past three months,
guess how?
My boyfriend Is 17 and is enjoying his life. He won't
support the baby and he's walked out on me. You don't know
how scared I am.
Morn always said she'd "be there in times of trouble."
Bull! They don 't want me back. I have no place to go. Please
help! - RUNNING OUT OF TIME
DEAR R.O.O.T.:
You have many places to go! There's always help waiting
for troubled teens,lf they only reach out and ask for it.
.
Contact one or more of these : Birthright, the Health and
Welfare Agency, The Salvation Army, a clergyman, Child and
Family Services, a teen hot line (where .you 'll be given
addresSes of other aid groups ). But first,-eall your parents. we·
can't believe they'd turn their backs on a Iii-year-&lt;lid pregnant
daughter. - HELEN AND SUE

Western
Winners

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TIMEX
WATCHES

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GRADE ..... ~~~.~.~~~~~.tY. .. :....

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FAMOUS. fliAME

COLORS: -

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·Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Corporation ·

I,

MA.~ERS

ARfHJW • MANHATI'AN ·• VAN HEUSEN

j

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

THE SHOE BOX
·'

THURSDAY
ST. PATRICK'S Day theme
card party, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at Sacred Heart Church ;
$2 a person.
WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
Fellowship meeting, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Zion
Church of Christ .
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Pack 245 meeting 7 p.m.
Thursday at Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion
Home; Pinewood Derby to be
held.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at home
of Mrs. Claremont Harris
with Mrs. Herman Grossnickle and Mrs. Donald
Putman assisting; household
party to be held.
REGULAR MEETING,
Southern Local School Board,
7:30 p.m. Thursday in high
school cafeteria.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:45p.m. Thursday
at home of Eleanor Thomas.
WESTERN STYLE square

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2"X4"
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8'
STUDS
SND
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POMEROY, a.

126 E. MAIN ST.

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"

"

Werner and Mrs. Elizabeth
Searles.
ELECT ACIRCLE
A report .on a visit to
patients at tile Pinecrest
Nursing Center last week was
given by Mrs. Mary Brewer
at the meeting of the Elects
Circle at the home of Mrs.
Gwinnie White.
.,
Mrs. Brewer, Mrs. Clara
Bell e Riley, Mr s. Fr eda
Edwards, Mrs. Lillian
Demosky, and Miss Rhoda
Hall visited the Center with
cookies, candy and diabetic
treats for every patient. .
During the meeting con·
d ct d b M' H ll
u emadeto
Y ISS
a 'Athens
plans
were
visit the
Mental Health Center on
Wedn esday. Cookies and

candies will be taken.
Texanna
Well
had
devotions using " Extra
Ordinary Extravagances"
from Christian Life. For the
1 ey had the
program, Mrs. R'l
White Cross dedicat1'on.
Attendin g besides tho se
named were Mrs. Elizabeth
Slavin,
Mrs.
Florence
Rbodes, Mrs. Bernice Baker,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner,
Mrs. Ethel Hughes, Mrs.
Freda Edwards, Mrs. Mary
Brewer and guests, Mrs.
Judy Riley and Amber Well.
Mrs. White and Mrs. Well
served refreshments.
·
LOVE JOY CIRCLE
Following a potluck dinner
at the church the Love Joy
Circle heard devotions by

.
' Mrs .
Janice
Gibbs,
ch a irman ' en ti I I e d
"Prescription f,;.. LI'VIn
' g".
~
11
was reported that
valentine
remembrances
been oriven
to shut-'·s· had
and
.,..
u•
that remembrances w1·ll be
provided at Easter. A bir·
thday gilt will be sent to a
mi ss ionary1 and
d d members
t
k
1weretet retm n e tho ta e
ay e IMrs.
ems Lillie
to Hubbar•
e nex·'
meeting.
and Mrs.
Owen ha&lt;,.
the
whiteSara
crossD. dedication.

p~~sg.r a~w, ~~Brf~~s ~dme· ~~.e.·
Others attending were Mrs.

Frances Smart.,_,Mrs. Golda
Roush
Eva. Hartley,
Mrs H, 1Mrs.
Bodim
dM
. e en
er an
rs.
Elizabeth Searles, a guest.

.for

&amp;Summ._,,.

- -Sii; ~SHOESDressy Strap
Sandals,
Donuts and
Patry Shoes
·accent spring
and summer
"1979. Open
looks with
''Disco' ' ·
theme
bottoms.

. PRESENTS' RING- Candy Ingels, right, pretenta a 14-K diamond dinner ring to Mrs
Sandra Hender~n , holding he_r daughter, Suzanna, at Candy's Classic Collection, located i~
the Ingels Furmture Store, Middleport. Mrs. Henderson received the ring which was given
away as part of a f1rst anmversary diamond sale staged recently in Miss Ingels' jewelry
storeF..shNo puSrtchaMs~dwdl~s required to take part in the competition. Mrs. Henderson resides at
404 1 er ., 1 eport.

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I Calendar l

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PLYWOOD

,.

1 Social

lmpectable. Short sleeve
styles you're iookill(l
for ••• Ia plaids
or stripes.
Add a ·few to
your SprlJII wardrobe!

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Magazine ·to th e shut-ins.
Mrs. Kathcryn Met zger
reported on valentines sent to
h 1·
Th k
s u ·Ins.
an -you notes
were read from the family of
theThlate Mrs. Eloise Wison.
a silent
m d'tere1· was
b
e Ibea 1oo 'thY M
the cir cle
mem rs WI
rs. Freda
Hood reading the 23rd Psalm ·
in memory of Mrs. Wl' lson.
Mrs. Kloes had devotions
using "Costly Salvation" with
scripture from Luke 22 as her
topic.
·
The program by Mrs. Katie
Anthony included excerpts
from
. a letter
J .from her great
mece,
amce Tovy, a
missionary serving in Sierra
Leone, Africa. Refreshments
were served to those named
apd Mrs. Sarah
• Fowler, Mrs.
Leora Si~mon . Mrs. Alwilda

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I
B&amp;PW hears Carson -Crow Monday

••ress Shirts

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n_ight lill8 p.m.

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9 -S Mon.lhru Sat.

Fr;,~,v

1I

Put PRl!~ ·
s ar
opening night

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Middleport

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VILLAGE PHARMACY

Plans for th e annual
fellowship tea of the B. H.
sa,·nbothrn Missdlonary Society
o
e M1'd leport F ' t
Irs
Baptist Church to be held on
April . 2 wereI ma
meeltngs
th de during
· 1
0
e
c1rc
es
Tuesda y night
·
The c1'rcle membe
1
rs a SO
made arrangements for
remstem bering
shut-ins at
E
.
ahlter tune and dedicated
w e cross
special
. . supplies . for
miSSionary proJects
at home
and abroad.
DORCAS
CIRCL
E
At the Dorcas Circl e
meeting held
Mrs
Ju at the home
Kl . of
·
nc ·
oes,
arrange ments wer e made to
take a basket of fruit to the
Mestgs
I t.
Co unty Infirmary at
E
a er uneand to give Ideal.

BI'ITER:
The Rev. must have some kind of liberal congregation . Or
don't church members know the facts? Why dream of doing
hilil and.Thresa in when you can do them dirt a safer way? II
he won't stop seeing his 22-year-&lt;lld, then tell the board of
deacons about her and their plims: He may end up with a piece
of land, an easy piece, and no money to keep either ... which,
unless your mother is a saint, should give her a pleasant glow.
- SUE

r.

a

t:~:

"'"I
•n S GIRL'S FATIIER DOESN'T
PRAtTICE WHAT HE PREACHES
DEAR RAP:
father,
who calls himseH a "Reverend, " has taken up
'thMYlittle
slut F
wt a
. or two years they've bejln going on weekend
s,
even
on
trip
two-week vacations to Florida and the
Caribbean. Now they 've bought !lind together and he plans to
co--habit, livmg
· three days a week with "T~--aa"
and four wt' th
•u~
Mom and me. Threaa is 22 and divorced· he's more than twice
her age.
.
'
The Rev . thinks he is doing_nothing wrong. He compares
hlmseH with David 1n the Bible. Mom woo't divorce •••wu after
all these years, but she's going through pell. She's a good
woman who helped him make the money he now spends on
Thresa.
·
'
so
upset
and
depressed
I
think
about
killing
these two
m
I
heartless
people all the time. How can a supposed Man of God
hurt his wife so? - BriTER
·
DEAR BriTER:
Probably because his wife allows it.
. She should have made an ultimatwn two years ago, but
1nstead she "accepts" those weekends and vacations her
husband spends with another woman. Now she's evidently
accepting a three-way marriage as well.
·
For Pete's sake, why doesn't sbe tell him to choose be·
tween her and Thresa? If he takes the younger woman, what
bas she lost except a man who wasn't really hers anyway?
She'll adjust - with your help. - HELEN

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.By He'len and Sue Hottel

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Carson Crow was guest
Mrs. Frances Louise Davis
speaker at the Monday night presided at the meetin g
meeting of the Middleport during which time the club
Business and Professional made plans for ' the cancer
Women's Club held at the fund drive in Middleport .
Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio Mrs. Grace Pratt is chairman
offices.
and the club members will be
Crow spoke to the group on collecting in the village the
the Heart Association ac- first two weeks iii April.
tivities and extended conThe club voted to send a
gratulations to the club for letter to the Farmers Home
their role in the heart fund Administration endorsing the
drive in February In Mid- construction of low income
dleport . The club has handled housing in Middleport. Mrs.
solicitation In Middleport for .Jean Will met with the club to
the past 29 years. Mrs. Grace ·explain the WMPO com·
Pratt, heart fund drive munity club. awards.
Mr s. Alwil~a Werner
chainnan, on behalf of the
club presented a gift to Crow, reported on the young .
who also spoke on his bowling careerist program and the
league fund drive activity.

First Baptist hears .programs
"Let Your Light Shine"
was the devotional topic by
Mrs. Lillian Demosky at the
Thursday night meeting of
the Busy Bee Class of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church .
·
Mrs.
Mary
Brewer
danc\llg workshop Thursday
7:30p.m. atRcyal OakPark.
Chad Johnson, caller.
TWIN CITY SHRINETTE
Club Thursday 7:30 p.m. at
home Of Mrs, Emma Clatworthy . Members to wear
homemade Easter ' bonnets .
- FkiDAY
ROUND AND square
dance, Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy, 8:30 to 11:30
p.m. Friday. Open to the
public with admission being
$1 for adults and chUdreri
under 12 free with their
parents ; mllllic by Stringdusters.
DEMOLAY
sp ecial
practice meeting Friday 7:30
p.m. at Middleport Masonic
building .
SATURDAY
ROYAL OAK Ballroom
Dance Club party, Saturday,
9 p.m. to 1 a.m. lor members
and guests wllh music by
Mark III .
RUTLAND
Baseball
League will hold sign-up day
Saturday from noon until 2
p.m. at the old Rutland High
School. Reglstratlon fee of $5
to cover insurance and hats.
The sign-up Is for teams from
T-ball through pony league.
MEETING Saturday to
.organize new 4-H Club in
Pomeroy at home of Michael
and Brenda Ncutz!ing, 124
Peacock Ave. Call 992~077
for additional Information.
: LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH
will hold special services
Saturda~ 7: 30p.m. in the old

district competition held in
Nelsonville recently. Rhonda
Dailey, R.N.,- was the club's
representative.
.
A memorial tribute to Mrs. ·
Eloise Wilson was given by
Mrs. Janet Korn . Donna
Davidson was In charge of the
foundation program and gave
members a short quiz and
then distributed pamphlets
on the fed eration . Membership will be the program
topic at the next meeting. It
was noted that the third
quarter payment had been
ma de on the nurses
scholarship and that the
fourth and final payment on
the scholarship will be made
in June.
Assisting with serving
refreshments following the
meeting
were
Donna
Davidson, Mrs. Edith Forest,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Mrs.
Pratt, and Mrs . Linda
Stobart.

presided at the meeting with
Mrs. Leora Sigman giving the
secretary's report , and Mrs.
Freda
Edwards,
the
treasurer's report . .Mrs. Eva
Hartley bad the flower and
card report .
Members sang "Happy
Birthday" to Mrs. Freda
Edwards and Mrs. Nelle
Werner. There was a belated
birthday gift for Mrs. Brewer ·I
from her buddy. The
proiram topic used by' Mrs .
Brewer was "The Quarrel
Among the Tools" .
Refreshments of a jelio
salad, crackers, colored
candy Easter eggs and coffee
were served by the hostesses,
Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner,
Mrs. Eva Hartley and Mrs.
Demosky. Others attending
were Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin,
Mrs. Clarabelle Riley, Mrs.
Goldie Roush, and aguest,
Mary Beth Brewer.
BARBARA FRY
.Mrs. Barbara Fry is
confined to the Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Room 105,
for traction and therapy
relating to a back aliment.
Syracuse Mission building.
Special singing. Regular
services Sunday night.
Speaker is the Rev. Bob
Persons.
SUNDAY
MARY Shrine No. 37 Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
will meet for r ehearsal
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Pomeroy
Masonic Templ e for the
purpose of installation of •
officers.
'
TUESDAY
SYRACUSE·- MINERSVILLE Baseball Association
Tuesday 7 p.m. at Municipal
building in Syracuse. ' All
interested persons are urg ed
to attend.

~

Marguerite's Shoes
BEllY OHLINGER
102 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

ENJOY FRESH FROM
THE FARM. FAVORITES•
RIGHT FROM THE FARM.
Bring your family to the Bob
Evans Farms Sausage Shop. Here
you'll find homey atmosphere, warm
friendly smiles and all the whole some goodness and hearty eating
you'll need to get you through the
chill of winter. Come see us soon
and often.

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

P'ARMSilll

SAUSAGE
SHOP
Rou te 35 • Rio Grande. Ohio
I.

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�Simultaneo~s

&amp;-Th~ Dally Sentinel, Middle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Mar. 22.

revivals set for April

Coal use tax ruled unconstitutional

"Good
News
Ohio" Cumberland Association - of
simultaneoWJ revivals.
Baptists In Kentucky will be
More than 100,000 Baptists the evangelist at the
affiliated with the state Burlingham Chapel. Dale
convention of Southern ColbUrn will lead the sblglng
Baptists have been' working and be In charge of services.
for abnost three, years In Paul Silvus, pastor of the
· preparation for tbe most Pomeroy . First Southern
concentrated effort ever Baptist will host the Rev.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - · attemptedlnOhlotobrlngthe Carroll Medley. Rev. Medley
"
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"Good News of the Bible" to is the pastor of Buck Creek
P O I I T E R S i people In all walks of life. Baptist Church, Calhoun,
•
.
: Rev . Don Black, pastor of . Kentucky . Sonny McClure
Polly Cramer .
Hope and Burlingham will lead the singing..
Baptists Chapels will host the
·A nursery will be provided
_..,;.:=-....::;;;;.;.;;;.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.__ _ _--:-.-~:. Rev. John Wade at the at all three churches.
.
Suede ·bas a tear
take the coat to a cleaner who Middleport Church. The Rev.
The public is invited to
DEAR POLLY - My cleans suede (not aU of them Wa.de is pastor of the attend any of the three
husband tore a small hole In do) a!l(l perhaps they can Greenland Baptist Church, churches.
his quite expensive new suede repair it. I! Ibis Is not possible Whitley Co., Ky:
sport jacket and I would like the only suggestion I have is
The Rev. Nasby Mllls,
to know if there is any way I to st~ the jacket on your director of Missions, Upper ,
can fepair it I would ap- ironing board wl&amp;b the edges
•
preciate . any advice from of the tear just meeting and
your or the readers. then awly fabric tape that
BARBARA
. ~an be ironed on to the back
DEAR BARBARA ...: The of the tear. ,
most desirable solution -is to
Cover with a thin preaslng
cloth so there Is no danger of
the iron tou- the coat.
Tbla ii a painstaking job but
A tte.nd services
the only way I know - any
Mr. and Mrs. Wlllls An· pin· or needle holes .would
thony, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald · doubless be there to stay.
Anthony, and Mrs. Barbara Perhapa some of the readers
White attended graveside have found a better solution.
services at Creola Wed· - POLLY
nesday afternoon for Mrs.
DEAR POLLY ~ As lOon
Charles Anthony of Hlllsboro, as I llnlslt sewing buttorul on
sister-ln·law of WWis An· any new garment I put a dab
thony . The funeral was held of clear naU pollahin the
at Dayton before Uie body center of each button ao it
was brought to Creola for covers the thread and holds
interment
the button. They stay on
much longer.
·
When buying celery I try to
PARTY SET .
select a buncli that bas a lot of
FOR FRIDAY
NAKUMA TYREE
Eli Denioson Post 467, leaves. I cut the leaves off
TURNS
ONE- Nakuma
American Legion, will hold and dry them In the oven so
Tyree eelebrated his tint
aq aMiversary party at 7 they can be used to flavor
birtlulay 011 Mardi I. He II
p.ln. Friday night. A soupa and stews. I do the
the
sou of Shirley ud
spaghetti dinner will be same with parsley and gret!ll
Clluek
Tyree aDd tile
served free of charge of onions. lJWAN S.
graDdaoa
of Jo1epblne
DEAR POLLY- I save my
members and their families
Tyree, Pomeroy, Charles
at the Legion farm. Those empty vegetable ahortening
Tyree, Mldclleport, 1111d itlr.
planning to attend are to cans with plastic Uds and use . aDd
Mrl.
Burwell
make reservations by calling them for storing 'd ry foods.
MeKbuley,
Mlddlepol1.
742·2279.
. When .a can Is empty I
remove the label put it In the 1 oven to melt the last bit of '. ~~~~~~~~~~""~~~~~~-­
shortening and then wuh the
AGAIN-A RIDDLE!
Where was · The Grand can.
Brown sugar is no longer a
Dllcher Hotel located in
Pomeroy? Meigs History problem since I put it In a
Book free story deadline plastic bag, close with a
April 5.
twister and store It In one of
these cans where it stays soft.
FOR
-WLA
Polly
will
sned
you
one
of
the coming year. Ed Kermedy
signed
thank-you
will be assistant coach. Sign· her
newspape(
coupon
cllppers if ·
up will be May 13 at the post
PHONE M2-7113
she
uses
your
favorite
home. American flags were
presented to the library and Pointer, Peeve or' Problem In
the Chester Cub Scout Pack. her column. Write POLLY'S
Refreshments were served POINTERS In care of thia
newspaper.
by Charles Hayes.
,
Simultaneous revival
services will be held at three
local churches from April 1
through the 8th at 7 p.m.
nightly. First Southern
Baptist Church of Pomeroy,

282 Mulberry,

Pomeroy,
Hope Baptist Chapel, 570
Grant st., Middleport and
llurllngham Baptist Chapel,
Burlingham. wW be par- .
ticlpatlng in th~ st!lle wide

By Stevea P. Roacnfeld
Asaoclated Presa Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - A
" state tax favoring the Ohio
high-llulfur coal industry over
producers of low-sulfur
content coal In neighboring
states has been struck down
.. as uncoostitutional.
U.S. District Judge.William
K. Thomas on Wednesday en,, joined Ohio tBJ: officials from
. enforcing the tax, which

POLIJ 5

READ-A-THON -Darin Wolfe, seated center front,
finished first in the money in the Mental Health
Association Read-A-Thon held at the Bradbury School in
February. Other participants who helped bring in the total

of $287.11 were front row, left to right, Wayne Shrimplin,
Roger Manley, 11m Wamsley, Usa Snyder and Polly
Chadwell; and back row, Sheila Pullins, Steve Crow, John
Bacon, Tammy Clark, Traci Waiker, Sballl)on McCarty,
and Lisa Hoffman.
·1 '

Students earn money for mental. health
Thirteen fifth and sixth
graders at the Bradbury
0

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TINY TOT5 PHOTO

School
"pitched"
for
emotionally disturbed and

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TINY TOT5 PHOTO

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SCENICIACICOROUNDUSID

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One Special per family .
Additional subjects $1.95 each.
(Groups or individuals)
All ages; babies, chil_d ren, adults
Additional prints at dis~ount prices.
Color t:harms available.
Minors must be accompanied
by parents.

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Racine Food Market
~

Racine, Ohio

Saturd'&lt;l~. ~arch 24, 1979
Hours: 10:00 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.

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special . "I'm Pitching with
Tom ,Seaver for Mental
Health" T·shirt.
The Read·A·Thon worked
like this.
Each student volunteering
to pa~icipate was given a
pledge .fonn which he took to
family and friends. .They
were asked to pledge an
amo~ ~Yhich they would pay
lor eac)l book read by the
student. The contest went on
lor a month and last week
Don H8Jjlling, principal of the
Bradbus;y School. made the
a.wards.
·The
Mental
Health
ASsociaMon of Ohio benefitted
financially by the Read·A·
Thon, as did the student
through reading practice.

Birthday party se.t ·by
Drew
Webster Past 39
.
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mentally ill children and
adults by participating in the
Mental Health Read-A-Thon.
And those 13 students
raised $287.11 for the Mental
Health Association of Ohio.
Five collected over $25
from their sponsors, while
Darin Wolfe brought in $73.95
to place first In the school.
The Bradbury school was
one of over 450 in Ohio who
took part in the project which
was designed to stimulate the
reading of·books, as well as to
raise funds for programs on
behalf of the mentally ill.
As an incentive each
student participating· in the
project
received
an
autographed picture of Tom
Seaver while students raising
$:15 or more received a

TINY TOTS PHOTO

•

TINY TOTS PHOTO

The 8MUa! birthday party
for post and auxiliary
members and their families
was set for 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, March 27, when
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, met In
regular session Tuesday
night.
Refreshments will be
served at the conclusion of
the annual party.
Vice Commander Don
Stivers was in charge of the
Tuesday night meeting with a
guest, the Rev. Floyd Shook,
serving as chaplain for the
evening. Membership was
reported at 324 and donations
reported for the "Gilts for the
Yanks Who Gave" program
included $50 from the
au&lt;iliary and $10 from the
junior auxiliary. A total of
$360 was sent to the state as a
result of the successful
content.
It was announced that the

post has two new life mem·
bers who are Mickey
Williams and Guy Guinther,
both past r;l)mmanders of the
local unit~' Reported ill were
Carl Jelll)ings, Joe Zwilling
and Tom.'l':row. ·
Homer 11iiiith, coach of the
Legion l't)aseball team,
reported oq the progress for

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~ NEWS

ElliOTT APPLIANCE II

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1230

Russell Stover Candies are the
finest in quality, freshness and
goodness. Choose from many
assortments of delicious can·
dies especially decorated for

"

Bill faces opposition

By TOM GILLEM
- A s s i g n
t h e limited legislative authority
enacting
township
SIX FINE, 1 FORFEITS
Associated Press Writer administrative and executive by
Sis defendants wre fined
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- county functions to an elected ordinances that do not
• veterans Memorial Hospital
conflict with the state con- and one other forfeited a bond
Teresa Bills to .grant limited executive .
Admissions stitutlon or general law.
• lnthecourtofRutlandMayor
legislative
powers
.
for
the
Assign
the
legislative
Canterbury, Mason; Gilbert .
Trustees
or
commissioners
E . Eugene Thompson
to
county
and
functions
to
a
board
of
county
first
time
· Cooper, Athens; Roy Brown,
.Langsville; John Brogan, township governments are commissioners consisting of would not be allowed to levy ~ednesday night. ·
Fined were Shirley Hysell,
Rutland; Clara Humphreys, being considered by the three at-large commissioners taxes unless the state govern. 1, Middleport; Burton H.
~ Point Bank, Va .; Scott House Local Government and two; four or six district ment granted the authority,
Mott, Jr., Huntington, and
. commissioners, depending on Mrs. Fix said.
Johnson, Pomeroy; Pearl Committee.
Rocco said ' his committee Lawrence Hysell, Rt. I,
But Committee Chairman the county's population.
• Nixon, Rutland; Jessicia
Kenneth A. Rocco, O.Parma,
The legislation requires will conduct hearings again Middleport, $IS and costs
qonger, Dexter.
each, speeding; Danny . L.
Discharges - Brett Korn, sponsor of the measure counties with populations of . next week on both bills.
Walker,
Main Street,
Connie Manley, William dealing with counties, said :250,000 or more to operate
Rutland
,
$15
and costs,
Wednesday
night
his
blll
under
the
elected
executivePowell, Roy Brown.
assured clear distance;
faces substantial opposition, Jeg islative
government ,
Dennis E.
McKinney,
especially from township unless the county adopts an
Rutland,
$25
and
costs, un·
officials.
alternative
form
of
Holzer Medical Center
secured load; William D.
"I have a monumental task government or voters decide
Discharges, March Zl
Zeigler, Albany, $15 and
Trina Bachtel, Mildred just trying to move the bill to retain their existing form .
costs, towing violation.
Bornd, Virginia Brooks, Mrs. out of committee," he said. Ohio has 10 counties that fall
Th e Racine Emergency
Ralph Leesburg, Vinton,
Rocco said he may 'try to into that classification.
Nonnan Byler and daughter,
has been dept busy forfeited a $50 bond on
squad
The remaining 78 counties
Maxine Callicoat, Virgil combine his measure with the
since last Friday answering
Caudall, Linda Clarke, township bill, sponsored by would be permitted to adopt five calls. The fire · depart· charges of speeding and
Christal Cornell, Teresa Rep. Helen H. Fix, R-Cincin· the new government if they ment also answered to brush fail ure to appear.
Coteilow, Betty Craig, Sarah nati, to gain a wider base of wished, Rocco said.
Mrs. Fix said her measure fire calls.
WARNING GIVEN
Eblin, Virginia Fink, Ginger support. Both bills were preOn Friday, Charles Bailey,
Fisher, Travis Forshee, sented to the House panel is only one answer to RaciPe, was taken 'to
With good weather, the
problems township trustees
number of bicycles an_!}
Ricky Gibbs, Leotha Guin- . Wednesday night. ··
Senators
scheduled
a
face
because their powers, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
motorcycles
on the roadways
ther, Janet Hogg, Winifred
On Saturday Wanda Evans,
Hurst, Gladys Jordan, Shawn morning session today, but like county commissioners, Racine, was taken to Holzer will increase'
primarily
ad·
Sheriff James J . Proffitt
King , Welda Kuhn, Otta placed no legislation on their are
Medical Center and Maxine requests
calendar.
The
House
planned
ministrative.
motorists to be on
Little, Glenn Montgomery,
The Cincinnati Republican Sellers, Racine, was treated the alert.
Linda Myers, Bf'tty Nitz, votes on two minor measures.
The Senate passed a county said she considers the legisla- at the scene. On Sunday Doris
Bicycle operators are
HatUe l'iorris, Mrs. Lester
Deeter, Long Bottom, was
Parker and daughter, reorganlzation bill last lion only "a model" and ex- taken to Plea5ant Valley teminded if they ride on the
Katherine Plymale, Nancy session similar to the one peels it to be altered.
HospitaL On Tuesday, Cora highways they are to ride In
introduced
by
Rocco,
but
it
The
bill
as
offered
would
a!·
Radabaugh, Charlene
Marr, Racine, was taken to the same direction as·trafflc.
died
in
a
House
conunittee.
low
trustees
of
townships·
Be alert .and prevent bicycleRhodes, Clarence Ross,
Rocco's
me as u r e with populations of more than Holzer Medical Center.
auto
accidents.
Charles Rowland, , Margaret .
The fire department was
Russell, Bessie Saunders, establishes an "elected 1 6,000 persons or the county called Saturday for a brush
BRUSHFIRE
Opal Saunders, Robert executive-legislative form commissioners to exercise fire at the Charles Foster
The
Pomeroy
Fire
'ofgovernment"
with
limited
Skidmore, Melvin Sorrell,
residence at Letart Falls. On Department was called
legislative
powers
as
an
August Trapp, Martina Van
REJECT REFERENDUM
Saturday they were called to Wednesday at l :08 and at 5:32
Matre; Mark Waid, Tressie alternative to· Ohio's present
VICTORY GARDENS, N. the residence of Pat Roush, p. m. to Forest Run Road to
Watts, Bessie Wilhelm, three-member county boards J. (AP) - Voters In this tiny Racine, to fight a brush fire. fight a brush fire.
Clarence Williams, Ruth of commisioners, which have borough may have given the
Wineka, Joe Woodall, James 'no legislative powers. The bill heave-ho to the community's
would :
Wyatt.
lull--time municipal em·
Births, March %1
ployees by rejecting a $50,000
Mr. and Mrs. Randy
referendum to pay their
salaries.
Redmond, son, Pedro.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Mayor Wlliiam Gratacos
.(Continued from page I)
Reeves, son, Chester.
said he is notifying municipal
Mr. and Mrs. David questioned imd admitted the employees they will be laid :
FMhions ahoy! Our ll/llllic•llooils for boys -"'~· ..,.,
Johnson, son, Middleport.
off at the end of the month incident.
•ml girls.,.. becoming tbe most popul.r
They were turned over to if the town council agrees.
looks aroum/1
the custody of their mother
until the court hearin'g. One of
Children's Fashions by BRYAN
PLANNING SESSION
the knives was recovered, the
~--BOARD TO MEET
The Pomeroy Youth
chief said.
A regular meeting of the
Meanwhile, Meigs County League (Summer Baseball
Eastern Local School Board Sheriff James J . Proffitt Program) will hold a plan·
'of Education will be held at reported his department ning meeting on Friday,
7:30 p. m. Monday evening at investigated a two-car ac- March 23. The meeting wiil
the high school.
cident in Rutland Tusday be held at the Pomeroy
The board normally meets morning. No personal In· American Legion Hall at 7 p.
on the fourth Tuesday of each juries wo.re reported.
m.
month, but the March
All present or prospective
TerriL. Walker, White Hill
.meeting was changed to Road, Rutland, pulled her managers and coaches are
accommodate the spring vehicle from a side street and· urged to attend the meeting.
sports banquet which will be struck a westbound car Interested parents are also
held March 'tl at the high driven by Loretta Clark, welcome. Plans for the 1979
school.
summer baseball program
Cheshire.
There was slight damage to will be discussed.
the Walker vehicle and
moderate damage to the
SPEciAL MEETING
vehicle.
MEETS TONIGHT
other
A special meeting of the
·
Walker
was
cited
to
Meigs
Syracuse
Village Council Nltr StiHitrl
2nd Street
Meigs Local School District
Pomeroy.
o.
will
meet
In
special
session
County
Court
lor
disobeying
a
In
fllmeroy
. KIDDm SHOPPE
Board of Education wW be
this evening at 7 p. m.
held at 7:30· p. m. Tuesday.· traffic control device.

of go1ng without one.
1 lb. Assorted Chocolate.s
$3.50
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MIDDLEPORT; 0.

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the coat oflegalaervices to be spread .o ver the
JI'OUp•.Thia ·arrangement lets the group provide

r•.;. • .;•••••••••••••••••••••••• ., coverare to ita members at a

Now, 'think about the times in
Ohio State ~-AIIOdallon
your life when a lawyer'li aaais· 33 WNt e•eMh Avenue
tance can be invaluable. You
Columbut, Ohio 4320 1
may need hell? writing a will or " ' - Hnd
lnfonnallon about
buying or selhng a house. You
the.Group~~
may just need a contract ex·
plamed to you in plain English. . N You could even get sued some·
day. Or, your kids could get in
trouble.
City
Stolt- Z i p A Group Legal Plan can pro- ·
teet your entire famtly against
such unforeseen costs. Under ·
such a plan, legal advice and
1.;.:....0.
other important services can
- ' - UUI
be secured through a small
• -..t.
monthly payment or other pre·
~-of\
payment method which al1owa ••••••••••••••••••••••..:........

ohio

stQtl

d

low per·m.ember C&lt;?st. So, when
learal Bl!rvtcea covered,by the
plan are neede~z they re al·
ready paid for. YOur group c!ln
~elect': level of co~erage sutt·
able Wtta members needs.
A Group Leeal ~an al~o offers
you aaaiatance m locatmg a
lawyer who handles the kind of
problem you're trying to solve.
And, of couraeJ you can always
uae your own family lawyer, or
any lawyer you choose.
Find out how you, too, can
avoid untimely expenses
through a Group Legal Plan.
Fill out and mail the coupon
today.

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have cost the utility $432
million in capital investments

;tate to erect trade barriers
its borders upon the

in lhe first year for the
installation of scrubbers to

justification that economic

meet env ir onmenta l regu.

lations if it continued to burn
high-sulfur Ohio coaL
State, tax officia ls had
argued that the burning of
high-sulfur coal would he so
expensive, because of the
need for in stalling scrubbers,
thai low-sulfur coal sales
would not diminish because
of the ta·x .
But Thomas said the Conslilution "does not allow a

necessity
will
force
commerce to scale Uwl:ie
barriers."
GE l and other utilities were
also challenging the tax in
state co urts.
Proc'Oeds of the lax were to
he used to pay !he expenses of
the Ohio Department of
Energy and to finance coal-.
re lated resca rc)l projects
designed to remove sulfur
from coal and w develop coa l
as a substitute for other fuels.

I July target for nursing home

I

KERMIT L. JOHNSON
Kermit L. Johnson, 55,
Route 1, Coolville, died
unexpectedly at his home
Wednesday evening.
He was born at Frost, a son
of the late Clarence and Olive
Unscott Johnson. He w.as a
retired employe of the
Pioneer City Casting Co. at
Belpre and he was also a
fanner.
He was a veteran of World
War II and was memb&lt;&gt;r of
the Athens Chapter of the
Disabled American Veterans.
surviving ' are his wife,
Juanita Yeager Johnson, two
daughters, Mrs. Philip
(Debra) Wood, Parkersburg,
and Carolyn J ., at home; two
sons, Clarence Johnson,
Vienna, w. Va., and Mike
Johnson, at home; a stepson,
Ralph B)ake, Parkersburg ;
two brothers, Oden and Merle
Johnson , Athens; three
sisters, Mrs. Gertrude McClain, Mrs. Ellen Gabriel,
both of Athens, and Mrs.
Mildred Bryan,' Columbus,
and five grandchildren. He
was preceded in death by
three brothers.
Funeral services will be
held at I p. m. Saturday at the
Fairview Chapel near
Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Rose officiating.
Burial will be in Coolville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
White Funeral. Hom e in
Coolville any time after noon
on Friday. The body will lie in
state at the chapel one hour
prior to the funeral service.

Elderly residents and other
individuals in the greater
Meigs County area requiring
extended nursing care and
rehabilitative services will
·soon be able to obtain this
care in their own hometown
environment .
A new 100-bed skilled ·
int ermediate care fa cility
operated by Americare Corp.
of Columbus, is scheduled to
open this coming July.
Americare's effort s to
receive a Certificate of Need
from the Ohio Health
Department and to construct
thi s new facilit y were
assisted and complimenfed
by the cooperation and active
involvement of the Meigs
County Commissioners ·and
other interested residents of
Pomeroy.
The new nursing ca re

center is located on Old St.
Rt 33, approximately two
miles north of the county
fairgrounds, in Pomeroy.
In addition to a qualified
administrator,
Americare
will soon begin their staff
recruitment activities and
will be seeking to hire some
60 persons to provide nursing
( RN , LPN , and nurses'
aides) , dietary, maintenance,
hous e ke e ping ,
ad·
ministrative and cleri cal
services.

Further informati()l1 as
well as patient pre-admission
forms and employment
applications may be obtained
, from Mrs. Leafy ·Chasteen,
Director of the .,, Senior
Citizens Information and
Referral Serv ice, Main
Street, or by calling 992·7311.

SERVICE • SALES

MTD TOP FLITE
18" MOWER
3 HP

'99 9~

Miller
(Continued from page I )
Transportation: the Federal
Disaster. Assistance Administration and the Ohio
Disaster Services Ageney.
In addition, a representative of Miller's office met
with local officials shortly
after the flooding to review
local road damage.
Officials of the Slate and
Federal agencies with whom
Miller discussed the Meigs
County situation infonned the
Congressman that they would
be in contact with local of·
ficials on the situation.

VULCAN
21" MOWER

Only '10495
Other mowers available at :

MOORE'S
POMEROY, 0.
••

Be Ready For
Summer
SPECIAL ASSORTMENT

SUNGLASSES
PRICED UP TO

~.00

'

Ship-Shape
Laster Mates

Two

The time has come when you need both.

Multi-color Bam
Basket $4.95

Thirty years agq, few of us thought much about
group medical plans. 1bday, nobOdy would think

106 N. 2ND AVE.

asked that the building be given to them for use as a
community center. However, the board appea1ed to be
inclined to seD the structure along with several other
unused buildings in the district. The final tax collection of
the construction of the gymnasium will not be completed
until June, this year.

She was a member of the
Glenwood Methodist Church,
Thompson Valley, Va., at·
tended the Pearl Chapel
United Methodist Church,
Albany, member of the
Albany Senior Citizens, and
was a former nurse's aide at
East Manor Nursing Home,
Albany.
.
She is survl ved by one son
and daughter·ln·law, Dale
,and Lois Haning, Rt. 2,
Athens; one grandson, Ed·
ward, of Athens; three stepgrandchildren, William
Easterling, Albany;
Catherine Easterling, Ft.
Lauderdale, and Jacqueline
Easterling, Athens; one
brother, · Henry Wyatt,
Sandusky.
Funeral services will be
held Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
Bigomy • Jordan Funeral
Home, Albany, with the Rev.
Edward Mingus officiating.
Burial will be In Wells
Cemetery at Pagetown.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 on Friday.

has busy week

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CO.

ELIZABETH HANING
Elizabeth Haning, 77, 16
Morton Ave., Albany, died
Wednesday at her residence.
Mrs. Haning was born In
Smyth County, Va., daughter
of the late John M. and Carrie
Blevins Wyatt. She was also
preceded In death by her
husbsnd, Alva Glen Haning In

Racine squad

DANIEL

·DUTTON DRUG

FLOOR "HOOVED" - The floor of the Rutland
gymnasium has "hooved" several feet high in various
locations as a result of pipes freezing and bursting during
the past winter. Several citizens from Rutland aweared ·
before the MeiRs Local Board of Education Tuesday and

HOSPITAL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.'I

!tow-sulfur coal, which is
net'Ossarily out~·f-state coal,
is subjected to the higher tax
rates of up to 40 cents per
ton," tile judge said.
CEI, which hailed the
ruling, faced an additional
'"c tax of $1.4 million a year
if it filled its aMual coal
requiremen ts with low-Sulfur
coal.
Charles Barry , a CEI
Spokesman, said it would

Area Deaths

1976.

AUTHORIZID
.RCA and WHIRLPOOL
DIALIR

I,

Multi-color Basket

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Easter.

sulfur content of 1.5 perc'Ont
or grea ter lo 40cents a ton for
coal with a sulfur content of
less titan 0.5 percent.
"Virtually all Ohio coal enjoys the tax rate ol 15 cents
per 1on because Ohio does not
have any significant l,•wsulfur coal production,"
Thomas said.
"Though out-&lt;&gt;f-&amp;tate, high·
sulfur coal is subject to only .
the 15 cents per ton rate , the

1 .

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dioxide emissions.
The lawsuit was brought by
Mapco Inc.. a Kentucky c'Om1pany that sells cual to the
Cl evela nd Electric .
Illuminating Go .
Mapco said the burden of
lhe tax on its Ohio customers
placed it at an economic disHdvantage to Ohio coa l
pruducers.
The tax ranged from 15
cents a ton for coa l with a

I

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Happy Easter!
,......

would have fallen heaviest on jobs uf coal miners in other
electric utilities buying low. states, an understandable
sulfur coal, unavailable from purpose but a local interest
Ohio mines.
that is inconsistent with the
"Though the language of commerce clause 1of the U.S.
the Coal Use Tax does not in Constitution)," he said in his
so many words impose a 3(4Jage opinion.
burden on out-&lt;&gt;f-&amp;tate coal to
Ohio coal companies and
the favor of Ohio coal, the miners say thousands of jobs
operation of the act does," in Ohio will be lost if electric
Thomas said ..
companies turn to low-sulfur
"The act'.s plain lnten't is to coal for fuel to meet federal
preserve the jobs of Ohio coal · clean-air standards for sulfur
miners at tlw expense nf lh•

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

',. ~

SUNDAY, APRIL 15

1979

4.

0

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PAIR

.•'

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/l'&lt;llnne'lhMcCullolltlfi, r.. l"n.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph
Ronal~ Hanning, R. Ph
' Mon.lhru Sat. B:OOa.m. lo9 p.m. .
Sunctav' 10 :30 to 12 :30 and 51o 9 p.m.
PRESCRt PTIONS
PH . 't2-29S5
Friendly. Service

E. Main

Open

Nights till~

Pomeroy .O

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�11 - Tne Daily St-ntinel. Mlddlcport-Puntt't'U\ . 0 .. Thu rMIH~·. \1;" ·· ~- 1~i! 1

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday . Mar. 22, 1979

LAFF -A- DAY

KIT CHfN Hfl I' ouci w o1ht ".., App
I;• in PC" ' ' "" C1nw., StPolo.
H n LJ ~ f'

· ·· · - .. ~-

-

-----

J 11

C AS STA liON ottr ndont high
!-rhool groduaiC' WrttE' Boll'
1f.Y) E
c a Dotly S(lnt 1nel
Pomeroy Oh1o

"I'm £rom Acme Insurance,
s1r. I understand you've had a
minor accident "

WANT AD
CHARGES

I day

1.50

ldays
Adays

1.110
3.00

I.:!
1.90

2.25
3 .~

F.ach word over the minimum 15
words 11 4 ~nts per word per W.y.
Ads

runnln~

()ther thtin

days will be ch11rgl'll

cun.!~cutive

t;~t

the 1 day

rate.

LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC SALE
Tl'1e following descr1beef
collateral will be sold for cash
l!lt a publi c sale at 9 · 30 A .M .
on Apr it-4, 1979at 500 E . Ma 1n
St , Pomeroy , Ohio Written
bids may be subm Jtted to
GMAC at 318 Main Street .
Belpre , Ohio The seller
reserves the right to bid . 1978
Pontiac, Firebird , Seria l No

Friday March 23

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Aq'our

ZUS7Z8N100210 .
GeNERAL MOTORS
ACCEPTANCE
CORPORATION

~'Birthday

{March

21-April

OHIO ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION AGENCY
PUBLIC NOTICE OF THE
ISSUANCE OF PROPOSED
MODIFICATIONS
TO
NATIONAL POLLUTION
DISCHARGE
ELIMINATION SYSTEM
PERMIT(S) TO ALLOW
DISCHARGES
(5)
TO
STATE WATERS

19)

You 'll enjoy hobnobbing with
new people today
Be ing
around fresh thinkers will offer
you a different approach to an
enigma that has been on your
mmd Fmd out more about

yoursell by sending for your
new Astro~Graph Letler Mail $1
for each to Astra-Graph . P 0

Box 489. Radio City Station
NY 10019 Be sure to specify
brrth s1gn . .

TAURUS {April 20·May 20) Do
things your own way and In
your own time today With your
quiet . undemonstrative manner
you can thus achteve much
more

GEMINI {May 21·Ju_ne 20) You
need to be around many different kinds of people today to
sattsfy your cunosity Avoid the
dullards Seek out the mtellec-

tuals .
CANCER {June 21-July 22) You
Know how to take what other
people have to offer and effec-

tively put II to work today

Because of this you 're held i n ~

high esteem .
LEO {July 23-Aug . 22) Open up
and be frank today when discussing Issues Important to
you Things c~n work out quite

beneficially If you don 't pull
any punches

VIRGO (Aug. "23-Sept. 22)
Tackle any rob or project requiring concentratton and
brainpower today You ' re more
i than up to the task . and won ' t
even be winded by it

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Living
up to your sun

sl~n

Is easy tor

you today . You turn all dealings
Into congenial. fun affairs .

SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Now. 22)
Family matters will take top
priority with you today You
won't mind doing little chores
that you know will please . Your

efforts will be rewarded
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec.
2t) You'll enjoy friends drop·
ping 1n on you . or doing a little
table-hopping yourself today
You are both sociable and
restless
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 19)
A fine day to shop for all those
little Items for the home you ' ve

been wanting . You may find
lust the right articles at bargain
prices .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
The chances of th is being a
productive day are quite e•cellent . You know how to think

" win " today, even If you suffer
a temporary setback
PISCES {Fob. 20-March 20) If
you think you're onto some-

thing today , follow through
Your hunches or Insights are

working and could lead to a
gain .
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ELSIE M .
CHAMBERS,
DECEASED
Ciue No. 22,613

"

On tne bas1s of preliminary
staff review and application
of standards and regulations,
the Director of the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency has Issued a proposed
modificatiOf\ for th'e follow ing
d.ischarge subject to certain
effluent
conditions
and
speci~tl
conditions
The
proposed modificatiOn is
tentative but shall become
final on the effective date
unless (1) an adtUdlcal lon
hearing is requested, {2) the
Director wittldraws and
revised
the
proposed
modif ic ation
after
con
sideration of the record of a
pu btic meeting , written
comments or statements or
(3) upon disapproval by the
Administrator of the U S
Env1ronmental . Protection
Agency .
Within thirty (30 ) days of
publication of this notice any
person mav submit w.-itten
comments, a statement as to
why
the
p.-aposed
modification
should
be
changed. a request for a
public meeting
on
the
proposed modification and .or
ell request for notice of fu.-tlier
act1ons
concerning
the
modificat ion .
All
com munications timely rece i ved
will be considered 1n the final
formulation
of
the
mOdlftcatton . If SIQntftcant
public interest 1S ~hewn a
public meeting will be held
pr ior to finalization of the
modification
W1ftltn thirty (JO) days of
the issuanc-e of the proposed
modification any,otficer of an
agency of the state or of a
political subd ivision, acting
in h is representative capac1ty
or any person aggr ieved or
adversely
affected
by
ISSuance of if may request an
adjudication hearing by
subm ltting a written request
in accordance with Ohio
Revised Code Section 374.5 07.
Followtng the finalization of
the modification by the
01rector, any person who was
a party to an adjudication
hearing may appeal to the
Environmental Board of
Review .
All
comments
or
statements on the J)roposed
modification and all requests
tor notice of further act 1ons
~hould be submitted in person
or by mail to : NPDES Permit
Records Section . Ohio En ·
vironmental Protection
Agency, P .O Box 1049, 361
East Broad Street. Colum .
bus, OhiO 43216. Applications,
fact sheets. proposed perm its
including proposed effluent
lim it at ions, special con ·
ditlons, comments received
and other documents are
available for inspection and
may be cop ied at a cost of 15
cents per page at the Ohio
Envi.-onmental
P.-otection
Agency at the above address
any time between the hours of
8 a .m and 4:30p .m ., Monday
through Friday . Copies of
public notices are available
at no charge at the same
address
Requests for and com .
mun i cations
concerning
adjUd i cation hearings and
public meetmgs should be
addressed to Legal Records
Section, Ohio EnvirOnmental
Protection Agency. P . 0 Bo&gt;e
10.t9, Columbus, Ohio &lt;13216,

(6141 466-6037 .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On February 22, 1979, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No . 22 ,613, Robert M
Chambers ,
8007
z 1m
mermann , Houston, Te~as
77088
was
appointed
Exeucutor of the estate ot

All communi cat ions should
specify the 0 EPA perm It
number
d public notice

Ali ACross America
EXTRA

NICE

2

bedroom 1 floor plan house.

beautiful batt&gt; with shower,
all built-In kitchen , dining
area, living room , 35)(25,
alum. siding. J;.,. basement,
forced
air
oil
heat,
Insulated , nice concrete
patio, excellent country

view, city water and septic
tank, 1h!1l shed, beautiful
location . 1 mile from
Chester, Ohio, 25 acres of
nice land, 23 acre fenced ,
very nice woodland. Only

SS5,600. Call
Shell• J . Whaley
992-6119 or
Bill Stewart
374-7311

.\

1"ne Publlsher 'reserves the right
ad!! deemed objtt11onal. 'I'M Publisher wiD not be

to edil or reJed any

responsible for more Uum ooe inl.'OI'recl Insertion.
Ph()ne 992·2156

79 .03 -004M

Date of Publ i c Notice :
March 22. 1979
OEPA Permit Numbet :

8019-BD

Effec t i ve
Date
of
MOdification : May 21, 1979
Name and Address of
Appl ic ant :
Ohto
Power
Companv,
Racine
H)ldroelect.-ic Project , 301
C l eveland Avenue S W .,
Canton , Ohio .4.H01.
Name and Address of
Facility Where Discharge
Occurs : Ohio Powe.- Com .
pany, Racine Hydroetectnc
Plant. State Route 338,
Racine, Ohio
Receiving Water : Ohio

River
Note : The purpose of thiS
m odlficatlon ls to add a
sanitary outf~ll to the permit .
The discharge will be ap
proximately 6,000 gallons per
day .
The public noti ce number
of tne original perm1 t 1S

OEPA 78 -01 -003 .
(31 22. ltc

f Moi11

REYNOLD'S
ElfCJRIC MOTOR
SHOP
IB Years Experience

Pets for SalE\_

Will Make
Service Calls

Nr&gt;l o;on Drug

p tll ~

GOOD Mt)(fO hoy $1 bol e Call
oft rr 5 pm 99'1 7513

M01xill'

Noon oo Saturdl:ly

--·-Auto
- - --Sales
- --

19bb C .T 0
7411'149

hcellenl condtllon
..
.

1976 CHl:VROlET lUV
low
tn1leage w11h camper top , new
11res A I co ndtt1on 997.5131
doytune

Fridcty aft.ernoon-

Notices
GUN SHOOT Roc1ne Gun Club .
Every Sunday 1 pm . Foctory
chok.e ~u.ns o~ly
GUN SHOOT, Racine Volunteer
F~re Dept E'lery Saturday b 30
pm at their buildtng tn Ba shon
,Foe tor~ c_hok~ guns only

1976 F '150 Ford tru ck and 1200
boles ll'l)(ed hoy Call 992·21377
after b prn
1977 CADILLAC ELDORADO

cell e nt

con d 1tion

Ex·
Pflone

CHIP WOOD
Poles
ma x .
d1ometer 10 ' on largest end,
Sl2 per ton. Bundled slob SlO
per tan . Delt vered to Oh 1o
Pallet Co . Rt . 2. Pomeroy.

992-2669
OLD FURNITURE. 1ce bol(es brass
beds , iron beds, desks. et c
complete households Wrtle
M 0 . Miller. Rt 4, Pomeroy or
coll992· 7760

.
watches
.

POMEROY,-0, ·

19b7 HOLIDAY 21 ' sell -ronta 1ned
with 181(10 ownmg $1800 See
-.!I! Royal Oak Pork Phone
Monetta 373·984.4 . •

_ ~ ~Wa_11t~d to Re..::
n ::_
t _
NICE HOME with acreage or
form . Phone 6B2·66t:l9.

COINS, pocket
clo~s rings, wedding bands
dtomonds . Gold or stlver . Call
Roger Wamsley . 742-2331 .

.

~ mall

-For
-· -Sale
--

WANT TO buy old .tS and 78
phonograph record s
Coli
fOR VQI.)R candy and coke sup
992·6370 or Contact Marlin Fur ·
plies came to D1's. , Spnng
n1ture
VolleV' Piozo Free Ester candy
cla ss es. Coll44b 2134 .
WANTED TO buy : old 1ewelry
Call 992.5262 or wnle , Kay
RI:DUCE SAFE and fast .with
~~il 87 S 2nd Middleport ,
GoBese Tablets end E Vop
" wot er pill ~ ' Nelson ~ru.g .
CASH FOR junk cars . 24 hour
APPLES WE hove Homes and
wre cker
service
Frye ' s
Wine~ap apples Utility grade
Rutland, OH . 742 .7081 .
at $4 per bu ExceJient for cook·
lllQ . Wil l clo se our storage on
March 23 Fitzpotnck Orchard,
SR b89. Phone b69 37!l5
RIDING HO~SE and saddle 8
years old 5250 992 7015 after 1
Spm .

Yard Sale

IF YOU have o ser'liCe to offer
wont to buy or sell someth1ng . 1977 STARCRAFT 15' open f.-ont
ae lookmg for work
. or
and Run·about 80 h p Mercury
whatever .. you'll get results
motor . Full canvas s lop Good
shope . 992 6678 .
faster with o Senlil" el Wan! Ad.

with

2 acres.

4 ,

kttchen, dining, 2 large rec .
rooms , fireplace, .many,
many other features.

HOMESITE electnc

2 acres,

and

water

available.
Wildwood
subdivision. $6,000.00.
POMEROY ~ .56 acre, 1
floor plan remodeled,
alum1num siding, new roof,
Pomeroy
Elementary,
excellent
neighborhood.

$14,900.00.
HANDYMAN SPECIAL ~
$8,000 will buy this home
with building and 4 lots
BRICK -RANCH
3
bedrooms, 111'2 bath, level
l~t • wood burning fireplace.
a1r conditioning, patio, new

roof ONlY $30,600.00.
HAVE QUALIFIED
IIUYERS
FOR
ALL
PROPERTIES. CALL
TODAY
FOR
OUR
LISTINGS
PRESENTATION.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
ASSOCIATES
Kathy Cleland
~E

Leona Cleland

992-2259, 992-6191,992-2568

FAMILY

Garage

1 JOU Want the

Rutland (House by th e bridge )
Rotn or shme . Cl othmg all sizes
and
many
art1 cl es IC"O

lowest priCes Of1
Baler Twine now's
the t'Ime to buy.
Call US today.
Pomenw
Landmark
"""I

~~;;Q(Ms fo mention Cheep
TWO FAMILY yard sol e Thurs .

and Fn on Foshe' St . Pome my

off Sprmg A'l e. Wof ch for

FtVE FAMILY va'd ; ote

ctoih~s

dishes , tor,s B 30 until 5, Solur:
day, Col ege Rd. Syracuse

W~t~h to~ s~gns .

z,.

Mgr.

Jack W . Carsey,
Phone992-21Bl

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale ot 3q4
Beech St in Middleport . Thurs·
day and Fndoy 9.3 We have
WOOD DOOR. For mlormot1on
flower pols typewnter record
coll985-4227
plover, d1shes and lot s of
1972 GLASTRON . Tri·houl ~p~n
clothing
front boot . 65 h p Mercury
YARD SALE . Oct. 26 only . 9om .to
motor Troller . 985 3335 $1800
. .
.
?
Tools cloth es etc 274
YOUNG ' 1 Sem 1ntol beef cow
Wal~ut St . Middleport
P~one 843 · 2b~3 .

ESTATE AUCTION
1WO DAYS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

MARat 23 and 24, '1979
10:00 A.M.
The personal property of the late Norma E. Wilson of
Pomeroy, will be sold at !he Meigs Co. Fairgrounds on
Stale Route 33 jus1 north of Pomeroy, Ohio.
"ANTIQUES OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
Oval door china closet, chili:fs wicker rocker, pie saf4:t.
round oak table, S legged tables, wicker stands, chairs
and rockers, roll -top desk, wood &amp; metal ice boxes.
carnival &amp; depression dlshes, small glass basket.
mantel, buffet, trunks, ir'on beds, dresser, 3 glass door
cupboards, spinning wheel , stands. dolls, wood baby
bed , rockers, hall trees, wlcker rocker and flower
stand. iron banks, marble tap dresser, wood beds,

dishes, quilts. Iron kettles, chairs, radio, record player,
oil lights, flat Iron and many Items too numerous to
mention .

''COINS''
Silver dollar and quarters, 'h dimes, 3c piece, gold
pieces, lead pennies, buffalo nickels, Wdrld War II
tokens. and silver certificate dollar bills .

"CARS"
1934 Plymouth , 1950 Stubebaker , t9S8 Ford .
Cash
Lunch
Positive f. D.
Case No. 22549
Dar1nda Nordai-Admlnistrator
D Smith
J . Carnahan
T. Donohue
949-2033
949-2708
7~2-3048
" Not responsible for accidents or loss of property."
Aucfloneer' s Nole: This eslate dates back to Civil War
•veteran and is the conten1s from 5 houses which have
been moved to the fairgrounds, so there will be enough
room to have sale. Plan on attending each day as small
and large Items will be mixed each day . Sale will be
under roof .

I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
~Hz.%171

FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1979
at Large 17; 5:45-Farm Report 13.
5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6·oo-PTL Club 15, 700 Club 6,8 ; 6 · to-News 17.
6.25-Socletles In Transition 10; 6 : 3~Romper Room
17.
6 45-Mornlng Report 3; 6: 50-GoOO Morning, West
VIrginia 13 ; 6 .55-Chuck White Reports 10; News
13.

\1 ~~~rut fii)l]

Sales Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd. Racine, Ohlo :
Pllone 949-2111 evenings
. alter 5 p.m. Weekends

'

e

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square to form
tour ordtnary words.

RJR 'bJR ~110011\l611:00D
FAIRV LBFT w;, ALDI&gt;5'( IJIGI$!.
FORM&lt;~ ...

LEKAN

I llUIJl. 'IOU SHOULD ~
HIJRRI~'S ~ LZFT
H6r. A

10
..... ..................... ... . . . ..
, "

from 15,000 to

75,000 watts.

Montgomery
27320 Montgomery Rd.
Langsville, Ohio
61~ - 669-42~5 Evenings
2 Miles East
of Wilkesville

LARGE

ROOMS

-

3

lake $25,000.
BLOCK STORAGE -

Ex -

village home, 2 baths, 2 kit·
c~~ns, full basement. very

ntce
modern
kitchen,
garage, and nearly 2 acres
of green Qrass $48,500 .

RANCH

~

Family room, 3

bedrooms, bath, nice kit·
chen, beautiful large lot, ci·
ty water in good residential

neighborhood. 129,500.
SMALL - Bul handy, Has
bath, kitchen, city water,
and business room for only

$11,000.
~ ACRES - in !he counlry
on school and mail ro~tes. 8
room house, bath, rural
water, garden, and 2 car
garage. A family home for

127,500
NEW LISTING - Abou1 3
dozen young peach and ap·
pies trees, barn, 2 car
garage, 1 room house, drill ·
ed well, small stream and

good garden . Altraci1Ve
place for just 117,000.
GARDEN TIME 15 HERE.
~ OF THESE HAVE EX·
CELLENT SPOTS. CALL
992 -3325.
NEED SMALL FARM
WITH TOBACCO BASE IN
GALLIA COUNTY.
Gordon 8 .
Helen L.

Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associales

Housing
H t!. ulquartc: r::;

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

Real Estate for Sale

Servtces Offered

FARM FOR sale. House. 2 barns.
trail er Lorge pond 10 ocres o r
tl2oc res. 742·2566.
3 1, ceres in Pomeroy . Secluded
wooded area on top of htll
Overlooks r1ver . Wate r, elec·
fric ovcilcble 992·3886

WILL CARE for the elderly in our
home Phone992·7314

REAl t:ST ATE loans Purchase and
refinance 30 year te.-m s VA ·
No money down (eligible
vet erens ). FHA · As low os 3
per ce nt down ( non ·veterens ).
Ireland Mortgage Co 77 E.
Stole. Athens. 614 592 3051

·-··- -

- -

THREE BEDROOM two ~tory older
home w1th three lots . located
ot 14 Hill Street , Pomeroy
$4500
If tnl ereste d, coli

WATER AND m1sc. hauling Col!

Y92-S656 .
NOW HAULING limestone in
M1ddleport Pomeroy area . Coli
lor tree esttmote . 367·7101 .
. .

.,~~---

-~-·--

Will CARE fo'- two invalid or
elderly persons in my home
Twenty years experience.
Reasonable rates 992·6022 or

9&lt;12-5422
PAINTING AND Sandblasting
Free estimates. Coll949-2b86

GiveAway
BORDER COlliE type.m short
hoir . 3 to 5 mo . old , female,
shy Beagle . female, 10 mo.
old . Pekinese Spaniel type. 6
mo old . female ,' brown wtth
white marking, cute smell dog
Two calico. one Iter cot.
Humane Society , 992-7680.

· - - ·.....

----~--

For Rent

---

... IF '11HI5 tS 60NNA

•'

"1"--- ~----.-'12 Plan

I

Business Servtces &lt;

20 Super-

,GASOLINE ALI F.V

He's qoin' out
to scout for

--~----'-1..

EXCAVATING, dorer, loader anP..
bockl'lo~ work ; dump trucKS
and lo-boys lor hire will haUl
fill dirt. to sot!. limestone ond
gravel. Call Bob or Roger J~l­
fers , doy phone 9,92-7089 , n •gli't
phone 99'1-3525 or ~2 - 5232 , '
-

-----

~--

------~ ,

- ---·- - ---- -AND

Kitchen$

remodeled , ceramic rile, plum~
bing , carpentry . and gener~l
maintenance 13 yeors ex~
perience 992 3685.

- - -- -

--- ·- - - ·- -

5

•!

.'
i

formal dining room, full basemen1. garage. Owner

relocating. To build this house today would cost
over three times the market price. $49,900.
Call us- We have more
J

LAND
ONners will finance these :

78 .8 acres on St. Rt. 124- $15,750.
18 acres In Pomeroy - S22,000.
1 acre Corner Lot in Pomeroy - $35.000.
3.5 lltcres in Pomeroy &amp; S6,000
.9 Acre Corner Lot in Middleport - $7S,OOO.

10 Acre Building Lot Site on 143~$10,000.
Phone 992-2342

992-244'1

NING.CHILDS
Rodney, Broker, Bill. Br. Mgr •
Middleport, Ohio

Call742-2328 .
- - - --~ -·-

__,

painting.'

- -- ·--- ....l

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Ex·•
cavoting. septic systems .!
dozer , backhoe. Rt. 143 Phone..

1 (614) 6Y8-733t.

-~ --~~-~- - ~

--·
•

GOLF lESSONS, shoe5 , gloves~
efc
John
Teaford ,

614-985-3961.

4

----,

i

Mobile Homes for Sale
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC

mobile ':

home, furnished. 3 bedr ' I
washer ond dryer. Air condi· ,.,:
t1oned. I lot,' 210 ft frontage . ,.,

$12,000 Phone742·2826

. ----

\

--~-----~I

1955 f!ro1rie Schooner , 28 )( 8,
bdr.
1965Generol 60x 12, 2bdr .
1%8 Elcona , 52x12, 2 bdr.
1969Buddy,60w12 , o4bdr.
1970Sylvo, 60w 12,2 bdr.
1970Costle, 60x 12, 2bdr.
1973Arlington. 60x12 , 2bdr . .
1973Ridgewood, 70x lo4 , !'Jbdr.
1973 Kirkwood, .50,.. 12. 2 bdr.
B&amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES

PT. PLEASANT. WV
675-&lt;&lt;2&lt;

-----

1 ~~
•r'
.... ,~
l
~~

,

~)..t

' 1

'

i
I

I&gt;

"''I

1973 FREEDOM~MOBiLE -h~m~:'" !
Appl1onces. u•derpinnlng
fireplace. 992·5413 or 992-6118,
$5200 .
'
-

-

--

·~

- --

1
I

- - _ _ _ . . ! ....

1q77 All ELECTRIC trailer 12x60 •
C.::entrol air, underpinning. ~_J
_lot in Mo~on. 30:4-~73- 5438.

-- --·- .

BRIDGE
Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Card reading at its best

......

was able to make the con-

NORTH

3-22

•AJI0973
t K J 10 6
• Q 52
EAST
WEST
• J 10 6 3 2
• 8704
• 862
•KQ

for vmo

•54

•• 4 3

• 73

• 82
• 10 9 8 6 4
SOUTH
+A K Q 9
t A

Q9 7

tract even though both heart
honors were In the East
hand.
After winning the opening
lead, declarer led a heart to
dununy's jack which lost to
the queen. East returned a '
spade to declarer's second
honor.
Declarer realized that the
opening lead of the spade
jack showed that West had
the 10 of spades. Since that
was

the

case,

declarer

cuhed his four diamond
+AKJ
tricks, his three club tricks
and hill third spade honor.
Vulnerable: Both
Now he was In s two-&lt;:ard
Dealer : South
end position. North bad the
West North East Soutb
ace-10 of hearts. E4st's hold·
Z NT
lngs were unknown. South
3•
Pass 3 NT
had the nine of spades and
4t
Pass 4+
rtve of hearts. West bad the
5t
Pass 6 NT
10 of spades and a heart.
~-L~~._Pass Pass
At trick 12, South led his
remaining heart to dummy's
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
ace-10. West followed with
Opening lead: J
AXYDLBAAXR
the eight and declarer
lo LONGFELLOW
played the ace, dropping
East's ktng and making the
One letler simply stands lor another. In this sample A is
slam. Declarer had been
used for the three L's, X Cor the two O's, eLc. Single letters. By 01wald Jacoby
lucky tllat East had started
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all aDd Alan Soalag
with juat the king-queen lr.
hints. Earh day the code letters are different.
hearts, but be alao had dis·
South's
two-notrump
openCRYPTOQUOTES
Ing bid waa sllgbtiy off beat covered that fact .
Since West was marked
becauae he lacked a stopper
QXNWX' In hearts, but It moat clearly with the 10 of spades, deGNEHEBAA
VXB
ORR
ducrtbed In one bid hlll high- clarer knew that a flnesae
NEVM card atrength and dlatrlbu- Cor the heart king at trick 12
MDV
LDVA
YOE
Uont North lhowed both hill could not work.
aulta
and hiJ five-spade bid !NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE 1\SSN 1
VXB
ME
QMIRH
' QMIGA
VXB
ahowed first- or second(Oo you h1ve a question lor
MU round control In spades : In the expt~rts? Write "Ask the
VXMDPXVA
OEH
tbla •caae, a void. Although Experts, ' 1 care of this newap•alx dlamonda was cold, alx per Individual questions wm
notrwnp was not a bad con· be •nswered if •ccomp•nled
tract. It aumed to depend by stamped. se/1-•ddrossed
on Weat having either mfaa· envelopes. The most lnferestlnll heart honor.
mg questions will be used In
After the lead of the Jack this column •na will 1ece1ve
ofapades,however.declarer copies of JACOBY MOOERN.)

1::-:-+-+-+-

+

1

992-6118
alter 4 o' 9'12-5&lt;1 ""'
I
'
~.. I

---

34 German c1ty
Tbunctay, March 22
3li Famous tea
party guest
27 Slippery
28 Alienated 37 "Die Fleder·
maus" maid
29 Island in
Oswald
N.Y. Bay W Copied
44 Chosen :
31 Looked
abbr .
closely
clock

25 Hold out

GLORV BE!!

• •'

l~x52. ~ . bedroom fireplace, ;
Oil" condtt1onmg, underplnnir191' • 1

any' 1me.

23 Ship-fonn 33 Fervor

R·II1NEY

10

- -·- ~
·---~· '
1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home •
"

10 Poisoned air
16 April's
trademark
21 Haul

Yesterday's Allawer

mvahd
Requirements
311 Opening
32 Dart
33 At last!
36At {confused )
38 Fruit

39 Kindred
U Rest
42 Trickle
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
43 DweU
.-------------------~----~-------------------------------------------------45Fonner
46 Dice throw
47 Mouthpiece
• 48 Crossed out

iNsuRiiNc~"be~.

WAllPAPERING AND

DOWN
1 Post
Exchange
2 Craftsman
3 You: Ger.
4 Dance for
Valentino
5 Belgian
vegetable
6 Food fish

4 :0G-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St.20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
·
4 : 3~Bewltched 3; Beverly Hillbillies 6; Brady Bunch
10; Gilligan's Is . 8, 17; Petticoat Junction 15.
S:OG-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10; Six Million Collar Man 13; Brady Bunch
15; I Dream of Jeannie 17 .
S: 3o-Carl Burnett II. F rlends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp; Son
8; Elec . Co. 20; Odd Couple 15; Lucy Show 17;
Doctor Who 33.
6 :0Q-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6;; Andy Griffith
17; On Nature's Trail 20; Studio See 33 .
6 3~NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; My Three Sons 17; Over
Easy 20,33.
7:0Q-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Love,
American Style 15; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17;
Dick Cavell 20; Btg Blue Marble 33.
7 : 3~Hee Haw Honeys 3; Sl.98 Beauty Show 61 Family
Feud 8, 10; 1 SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
The Country 15; Sanf~rd &amp; Son 17; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8:00-Diff'rent Strokes J, 15; What' s Happening!! 6, 13;
Movie " The Wizard of Oz" 8, 10; Washington Week
In Review 20,33 ; Night Gallery t7.
8 : 3~Hello, larry 3,15; Boxing 6,13; Wall Street Week
20,33; NBA Basketball 17.
9 :0G-Brofhers &amp; Sisters 3,15; Making The Scarlet
Letter 33.
9:30-Turnaboul3, 15; Fluorocarbons The Unfinished
Agenda 33.
10 :00-Sweepstakes 3,15 ; Dallas 8,10; News 20; When
The Boat Comes In 33 .
10 . Jo-Movle "Duck Soup" 20; 10 :45-Love American
Style 17.
11 :DO-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 1S; Hogan' s Heroes 17; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3.15; Baretta 13; College
Basketball 6; Bonkers 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"Point of Terror" 10; Movie "Porlratt of a Mobster" 17 .
12 :00-Gong Show 8; Monty Python' s Flying Circus 33.
12:3o-Juke-Box ' 8; 12 .4o-lronslde 13.
1 :OQ-Midnlght Special 3, 1S, 1 3~NBA Basketball 17 .
1: 4o-News 13; 2·30-News 3; 3•00-Mavle "This
Savage Land" 3.
3:45-News 17;' &lt;:05-12 O'Clock High 7.
S : ~Movle " Three Into Two Won't Go" 3.
5 ;05-Dragnef 17.

-,r-..,-;_---,~24 Declare

food!

electncal work. pipes sowed ~
plumbing. 992 -5858 ,
'

Big beautiful brick older home on a large double lot
In Middleport. One of the finest, well built homes
you will find 4 bedroom, 21;, bath, eat-In kitchen,

market
section
22 One, in
..------------~
Berlin

EXCAVATING, dozer, backh~ .
and ditcher Charles R Ho~
field, Back Hoe Ser.vice:,
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 7&lt;42 - 2008 ~

BATHROOMS

JIGG ER

How the nch wt dow lurned bookie
adv erti sed her bu smess -" DO·WAGERI ''

star

-Note''

]

(Answers tomorrow!

9 Swordsman

Sweepers, toasters, irons, ~II
small oppltonces. lawn mower '
next to State Highway Goro9e
~""- R?u~':! _ _ _ _ ____ ...!_
SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs . ser·
vice, all makes, ~2- 2284 . The
Fabric
Shop
Pomero'y .
Authonzed Smger Soles and
, Serv1ce. We sharpen Scissors.
-- - -

r X XI

GRO IN ADRIFT

8 "Bananas"

ELWOOD BOWERS~ REPAIR-";

---

Now arrange lhe ctrcled leners to
torm the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

1 Casals'
instrwnent

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Cofn·
plete Service . Phone 949-2.t87
or 9.49-2000. Roctne . Ohio. CMtt
Bradford.
;

•

.I

THOMAS JOSEPH

lo\ORK, 01.! HOOK· 'TOOTH
·I
HAS tSOTTA ZEI&lt;O IN ~ gtr
.1usr ONS 11-itNa.. , Ma:.ll Hades

'
11-9-1 mo.1

.

MAY :OlAND AT "THE
END OF "THE ALLEY.

Jumbles CRAWL

ACROSS
1 Social
group
6 Strikebreaker
10 Robin Hood's

AI.! F.Y 00."

1

MOBilE HOM-E~e;o~rs- fu~-n~c;:

HOMES

sI

Answer

by

Pomeroy,O.

tall992-7113
'For Free Estlm1tec

I

~,.v.ne~

Service Phone 992-2.478
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
lo~g~ l~ot~ , ~o~l !~· ~41~9. ___ _ AuroM'osli:E'
643·2626.
cancelled? lost your operatorl
3 AND 4 RM. furnished and unfurnished
opts
Phone . ~i~~e_? !h~n~_!92·~~3
:
ONE ACRE lots near langsville.
-~ ,
9&lt;12-5434 .
Ohio Call 742·2409 .
E· C ElECTRICAl Controcfor ser 111
ing Ohio Valley .-egion Si)lf
days a week, 2.4 hours service~'
Emergency calls. Coli 882-295
or 882·2305.

Over 100 years of serving Meigs County.
Surround yourself with success. Deal
with us.

WATCHIN' THAT

y esterday

.
.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pa,k . PULLINSEXcAVAliNG..Co;;,;lete

INSURANQ
REAL ESTATE

JUS'T SITTlN'
BARGE ..

-

220 E. Main Street,

3-16-mo. pd .

cell~nt built building, con ·
crete floor, natural gas,
running water, restrooms,
large overhead doors on
each ~nd and lots of prking.

$35,000.
STURDY - 3 or 4 bedroom

•

,. . .a

Print answer here:

I SEEN HIM A lOT

Your HeadquarteJS fOt: ·

992-6011

2-14-1 mo .

"

'

0

COFFEE C:LATC:H

WHfRf'S HE 60
IN THAT DINGHY'

3· 11 ·1 mo1

I

I I

LJITI F. ORPHAN ANNIE

ORPHAN ANNIE

~,

IHASFI~

"'

Elberfelds of Pomeroy
and Kimball Music Center
of Athens
Phone 992-2581
or 992-2082
•

~

r

I I

LANE
DANIELS
- A"s5oc1afe of

*New Home
ifAdd ~ons
'li Remoldings
-li Free Estimates

Trailer Sales

.......

,

I PROUG
I I I

Aural Method

Armsbong Carpeting

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

7:00-Today 3, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; Friday
Morning 8, Schoolies 10; T.hree Stooges-Little
Rascals 17.
7 :15-Weather 33; 7 : 3~Famlly Affair 10.
~ : 00-Caot . KanQaroo 8, 10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesame Sl , 33.
'
8 ; 3~Hazel 17.
9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15 ; Emergency
One 6; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Match Game 10; lucy
Show 17.
9 :30-'-Brady Bunch 8, Hogan 's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
tO :OO-Card Sharks 3, IS, Edge of Nlghl 6. All In The
Fam ily 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie "Shock
Treatment" 17
10 · J~AII Star Secrets 3,15; S20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6 ; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Happy Days 6,13; Elec . Co.
20
11 3~Wheel of Fortune J, 15; Fam ily Feud 6, 13; Love
of Lite 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33 .
12 :0G-Newscenfer 3; Password 15; Young &amp; the
Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love American
Style 17.
·
12 : 3~Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10;
Elec. Co . 33; Not For Women Only 15; Movie "A
High Wind In Jamaica" 17.
t: oo-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
·
1: 3~As The World Turns 8, 10; 2 :00-Doctors 3, 15;
One Life lo Live 6, 13.
2: 25-News 17; 2 3~Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17.
3: 3~Mash 8; Joker's Wild tO; Fllnlstones 17; Over
Easy 20.

)

14 Yr. Experience

2-5-1 mo.

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

1C. MUM

.

bedrooms. closets , 1'h
baths, natural gas forced
air furnace, full basement,
and 2 porches, very well
located in town living . Will

noon.

'-----------.....J

MOOI:=RN THREE bedroom house ,
full bo ~ ement . fireplace fully
carpeted, central air; enclosed
sun porch, located on 6 11, acre~
on CR '18 . opprox 3 mdes from '
Rac ine . If interested contact
l orry Wolf e 949·2836 weekends
.on.d ~f~e r 5 : '~_en}n§Js. . __ _
25 ACRES , 2 bedroom house
$50,000 , Chester 614 ·985-4371
or 30.4 ·343·t:I7B9

992-3325
216 E: Second Street

after 12

7-1) ·1 mo. Pd .

TRACTOR DRIVEN
PTQ ALTERNATORS

Brand':

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~U;:l(.!a ®

PIANO
TUNING

PETE SIMPSON

992-6011

· · --·-

Sole . · r---,--~------:---,

Mo.,h21 , 22 . 23 Y-3. Sale m$1 .,

~~~~·

MEAN? IT'S TIME FOR.
TO €10 'J.EEPY-8YE!

5 : 4~World

gutters and
downspouts.
~
Window cleaning '
Gutter cleaning ,
Free Estimates .
949-2862, 949-2160 •

.PIANOS

THREE
BEDROOM
ranch
Carpeted. otr conditioned Priced very
reasonably
In
Syracuse 992·53.48.

Ca ll9&lt;12-2156.
THREE

THe MOMEIJT OF TI!UTH
I? NOW APPROACHIIJ6,
CAPTAIIJ EA?Yl

Au'I'O &amp; Truck
Repair
1(1so Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682 ,

New.rep~ir,

&amp; Famoas Name

•New Home
*Add-ons
•Remolding

1977 CHl:VHOLH d )( 4 ~ hart w heel
bose Mossey ferguson corn
corn
culti v at o r.
p lanter

bedr.o oms, 2112 balhs, lovely I

.

SWEEP

ORGANS

992 7462

JUST LISTED- Beautiful

.

0.

Hammond

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

brick

.

St. Rt, l24towanl Rutfllncl,

lift -:-

H. L Writesel
Roofing

3-7-1 mo.

997-7064

.

I ~·"·tHE~

and repair . Storm doors
and windows. All work
guaranteed.
20
years
experience.
Free
estimates.
Call:
Tom
Hoskins. 949-2160.

I 975 CHt:VROli=T truck 350 V-8
Au la Iron-; ~ S P 8 toper
New tires l'b.OOO mrles S2850
992 2596 .

I P.M.

.

1 a•mPtr on vour

99:J ,3957

Sunday

OlD

¥• mile oH Rt. 7 "Y·PIII 011

Don't 1•t a chfmnliy fire pu1

All types roofing, gutters
and downspouts. ,All types
home maintenance - new

992 -706{)

lhe day before publication

lnoored

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance

I Q70 MUST ANC b cyl. 250 Runs
good SbOO AftN b pm , coli

IPM

SANKS
THE

trader 992 5067

FOR SALE 197 1 Ch evy Novo .t dr

liJesday
Ulru Friday

,

.!~~£.d

a"

Country 6, 13 .
10 :0G-Mrs. Columbo J , tl; Family 6, tJ; Barnaby
Jones 8,10; News 20 ; Footsleps 33; Area Showcase
33
It :oo-News 3,6,8, 10.13 15; Over Easy 33.
11 : ]~Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13 ;
Mash 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "The Resurrection of
Zachary Wheeler" 10; Miss Teenage America 17.
12 05-McCioud 8, 12 ·30-Movle "Dino" 17
12 . 4~Mannix 6,13, t;OQ-Tomorrow 3.
1 50-News 13; 2: 3o-News 17.
2 · 5~Movle "The Stranger Wore a Gun" 17, 4·4o-12
O'Clock High 17.

MEMO~Y

ROGER HYSB1
.GARAGE

651 Beech Slreel

111 F1 h onlo.lm comptng trailer
1970 f ord 5375 6 room hou sC" in
Hu tland . 7 47-73/4

1975 CHfVY TRUCK 4&lt;4 992 -5335

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

______,-,

17
9 : 3~Carler

19111 Ctntvry .ltrYICe wltll
21th · C111tvry ICMw·HOw.
'
SJtclalllflll·ln
·
M .ddl
I
eporf' 0.
WOO!Ittovt, 011 l'orliac'
992-2356
a t•l,.plect 1'1Engli sh and
HOOF HOllOW
·l'nont: 742·1110
We!&gt; te rn Saddl es and hmne., !o BASS HOAT, Thunder Croft 35
3-7-1 mo. 1Pd .)
Kl18 Wlllto, l'roprftte•
L'------...:·;:~!!!:;1
h p Chrysler Electm trollrn g
Hor srs Olld p o nt e~
Huth
motor and depth finder With ' - - - - - - - - - ' ' ' - - ·-_
- ----"'--5~··1w;!;.,~o......_...J , '
RN~V P S . 614 698·3790.
RISING SlAR Kc nnC'is Boorrli11g
ond groomrng , al l hr ecrl s.
( h p ~hne . 367 07(/')

1963 CHl: VY NOVA II ne w m
!£.&gt;nor. new sn ow fires NPeds
.body work 5300 949·2728 ..

WANT-AD

THE

,........

l~ Angie

8

DISGUISEO

'

C.o fk &lt;; o f ohi Ptr. and f Vo r waf er

num~er .

Mailing
sts are main
ta ined ff!r p spns or groups
who destre t receive public ,
notice of pro osed and fln~tl
actions taken on applications
for discharge s located in the
Els ie
M.
Chambers , state
in
certain
1 o.d e ceased , late of 2.43 North
geographical reas . Persons
4th Street , Middlepor t. Ohio
or groups
a'; have their
45760.
names put o such a list bv
Robert E . Buck
mak ino a
Itt en reqUest to
Proba t e Judge
the NPDE Pe.-mit, Records
Clerk
Section P sons or groups
(3 ) 8, 15, 22, 3tc
may also r quest copies of
fact sheets , pplfcatlons ar
other docum ts pertaining
. . - - - - . . - - ' - - - - - - - - - , to a spec ific C\ lication .
Date
ot
suance
of
Proposed Modification :
March 1.5, 19:79
Public Notice No . OEPA ·

STROUT
REALTY,
INC.

cent

NOTICE

fret You won 't want 11 any
other way

ARIES

Mobile "ome sale:Jand Yard sale!!

Business Services

'&gt; Oilrl r! lltV('I,

u•m ( hlor ulC' fC'II tf l! (. , rl og
l1''" ' t1•'d ol llypr'' of ~ all f ,

1 rtl(

l OS T Rfi&gt;DISH h ~t1w1 1 pr kinl"'&gt;e&gt;
wi th m1'"' wht!(" l rnn t row. hlmd
. I Vl-HYTHING'S GOTTA
GO"
tll l lghl fl Y(" All!-wC'rs to " ~ ir h '
How.l" 011rl lnt
l urn1lurr .
~ l"w mrl S?S cmh Coli 741·?09H
{ ln !ll(l&lt;; , cnr oil my hou-.r•h olri
nr conlod Vlr!=JtC' Burlmd
1lr&gt;m., Dtnp hy 760 lo t• rt 1 St
8N'r hgtO'IC' ~d . R.! 1, Rul land
Mlrlrl 14"p("HI
, l OS T· All whiiC' ro t OIH' h lue Pyr
and 0114" grC"en ~YC" Fuhott GOOD MI XI:D ho y lor ~ alP
H 1:.! 743"1
Thomp$011 'fq u1ptnen! o reo
Small reword 997 &lt;1580.
Hf DJJ( f SAI"f &lt;J nd last wl!h

.

are ji(.'t:eptetl only with cash with
order. 25
ctwt~e for ads carrying Boll Nwnber In Cut rl The SenlineI.

[ IM ! "iT() Nf

ff) fl [

t P I ~ i ru So t! Wotk s. tnc
~t
l''ln 1r1 r.y IJ'!? :JWJI

In memory, Cl:lrc.l of 11umk."' amdt
ObllUllry : 6 cents ~r word, 13.00
1111nimwn Cash ln adv~tnt"e

{ 3 ) 22 , He

March 23 , 1979
You'll be In a fortunate cycle
this commg year where thmgs
could get very active for you
physically and mentally Don 't

Lost and Found

s. . ont.... Bind• ond
wh lt4" cmrl hnn-111 Hy!.r ll H(J tt
CH ("n "'Q"J 7H:!A n1 9 1J') SSi'(l

2da.y~

OF GRAND
IU.OGIC,
MISTAKEN

For Sale

l n s.T I fMI\L f

15 word.~ ()r Umltr
Charl(e
C.lih
100

THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1979
6, 13
9 00-Qvi ncy 3, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Hawaii F lve-0
8, 10; World 20,33 : Movie " Five Miles to Midnight"

'

--'--~----------------~

WOMAN 0~ mo n to rPpt PsPnl : r
lof n l l 1f r ln!'&gt; 111 0 11CC' agr nry 111
Mr&gt;ig'- Counly Solnry r om mt ~
'i.I OJ1., nml hPtw lit..
unlimll e&lt;"i
("O ifl in g ~ potr nt1 ol · mllllnHnn
age 411 . Call 997 b078 WC' pr o
vtdC' troin1ng nnrl pr o&lt;..p(IC' I ~ .
SOMt:ONf 18 y(IOI ~ or oldf't f o 1
r C"~ touront wor lo.
Doyor night
~ h ift 985 J831 .

TELEVISllJN
VIEWING

.For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

. . Help Wanted

06

, Jll(l('TRArV

IF ~OU AAE,

t.{OU'RE
ROU. THE · SU~ THIS
DICE!
ISN'T
6AM8LIN6?

THIS IS A KID'S
6AME! ROU. THE DICE!

HOW IN TH WORLD
DID 'IE GIT TATER
TO EAT HIS
MUSH, MAW?

I TOLD HIM I

GROUND UP A
VALLER CRAVON
IN IT

�..•••.~

..
~

12- 1 ne Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Punwroy, 0., Thursday , Mar. 22, !979

New ruling would be
costly for employers

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Weekend Specials

'

By RICHARD CARELLI
AsS&lt;lciated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
new Supreme !':ourt ruling
could lead, as thtee justices
view it, to states requiring
employers t.o entirely finance
strikes by their workers. '
That sharp . warning was
sounded Wednesday as a sixmember majority of the high
court told states they are free
to
pay unemployment
benefits to striking workers.
The court ruled that a New
York law allow ing such
benefits for strikers in work
stoppages lasting longer than
eight weeks is not preempted
by federal labor law .
Justice John .Paul Stevens
acknowledged for
the
majority , however, that such
laws do affect "the relative
strength of the antagonists in
a bargaining dispute."
New York Telephone sued
the state six years ago,
co ntending the statute
conflicts with federal laws
mandating governmental
neutrality in labor disputes.
Providing benefits to
strikers has the effect of
encouraging prolonged
strikes, the telephone
company charged.
During a seven-month
strike in 1971-72, about 33,000
members
of
the
Comnnunications Workers of
America collected some $49

million in unemployment
benefits .
All but a small percentage
of those benefits were paid to
the state by New York
Telephone.
In a dissenting opinion,
Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr.
said the court 's ruling
"sustains a New York law
that requires the employer,
after a specified time, to pay
striking employees as much
as 50 percent of their normal
wages."
What's more, Powell
claimed, the majority's
reasonirtg leaves states free
to require that employers pay
their striking workers 100
percent of their salaries. as
soon as a strike begins.
He said the ruling "distorts
the core policy of the NLRA
- the protection of free
collective bargaining."
''The court's sweeping vie•.,:;r

of (the Nalionai Labor Relations Act and the Social
Security Act) thus lays open
the way for any state to
110dermine completely the
collective-bargaining process
within its borders," Powell
said.
He was joined in dissent by
Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger and Justice · Potter
Stewart.
The d_issenters' apprehensions, however, did not sway
the majority.
''There is· no evidenrE' th:~t

the Congress that enacted the
Natonal Laber Relations Act
in 1935 intended to deny the
states ttie power to provide
unemployment benefits for
strikers," Stevens said.

The NLRA and the Social
Security Act, also a 1935 law,
imply ·through omission of
any direct statement on the
subject " that Congress
intended the states to be free
to authorize or to prohibit
such payments," Stevens
said.
Only Rhode Island has a
law duplicating New York 's,
but, according to Stevens,
most states provide benefits
in various forms to striking
workers.
In
other · decisions
announced Wednesday, the
court:
-Ruled 5-4 that parochial
school teachers have no legal
right, Wider federal law, to
unionize.
. The ruling, affecting some
110,000 lay teachers in nearly
10,000 Catholic schools, also
hinted that any federal or
state law providing such a ·
right may violate the
Constitution's freedom-ofreligion protections.
-Upheld, 6-3, a New York
City Transit Authority policy
that automatically refuses
employment to former heroin
users currently being treated
with the drug m~thadone.

.Firm plans to continue
rapid expansion program
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bob Evans Farms Inc. is
banking that Americans'
penchant for eating out will
override any future gasoline
shortage, a nd plans to
continue the rapid expansion
of the fa mily restaurant
chain, its chairman says.
"We recognize that fact (of
a possible gas shortage ), but
we aren't slowing expansion
because of it," Daniel 'E.
Evans said.
The firm produces pork
sausage and currently
operates 44 Bob Evans
.restaurants. Plans call for
opening 12 to 15 additional
restaurants during the fiscal
which ends April

1980. That is even greater expansion thaA in the current
· fiscal year, during which nine
new restaurants were
opened, and the previous
fiscal year, when seven were
opened .
One reason the company is
forging ahead with its restaurant expansion plans is that
the restaurant business is
more profitable than the
sausage side of the operation,
and Evans expects it will take
an even bigger share in the
future.
The company buys hogs on
the open market and doesn 't
expect sa usage · produ ct
profits to increase on a

percentage basis·in the near
future.
Evans said that unless
there is a severe gasoline
shortage, one that requires
gas rationing, it won 'I hurt
the firm much because
Americans still will want to
make short trips to eat out.
A company survey last
summer found that a high
percentage of its clientele
live within 10 miles of its
restaurants. And although all
Bob Evans restaurants are
and will continue to be built
off interstate highways,
Evans doesn't forsee much of
_!;I drop-off in business.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE'.REDUCED PRICES

TWO DAYS ONLY
FRIDAY, MARCH 23rcl AND SATURDAY, MARCH 24th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT nL I

COVERS

REG. s12.00 ........... SAI.£ · ss.98
REG. s14.oo.:..........SALE s10A8
REG. s11.00........... SALE s12.18
\REG. '21.00 ........... SALE s15.78

Big selection of colors,
materials, patterns in
oblongs, ovals, rounds,
square table covers,
arranged for your easy
selection.

REG. s30.00.........-- SALE s22.48

SAVE

REG. s36.00............SALE •26.98

20%

From Now To Easter
1.000 BONUS
POINTS FOR
E~CH '1.00
PURCHASE

Spedal

.

Weekend Sale#

MEN'S s7.95
SHORT ~EVE
SPORT SHIRTS

EASTER CANDY
You'll like our fine selection of
Easter candy fh is year,
chicks. bunn ies, eggs, fined
baskets, jelly beans, Fanny

(USPS 145-960)

INFANTS
STRETCH
SUITS
of nylon and terry cloth one

SALE PRICES

RCA AND GE CONSOLE

FURNITURE THROWS

,SAVE '50.00 ON ANY 25 INCH COLOR
TELEVISIONS
IN STOCK.
•
ELBERFEUDS WAREHOUSE

Special purchase and sale, for sofas and
chairs.
..~ssorted rancy patterns !n
s1zes small (14-14'12 neck)
medium 05-ISlJ:d, larg~
06-16 117 } and extra lar9e
(17 -17 1J, ) .
Long latl ,
polyester -cotton blend ,

$17.99 Size 70xl40 inches ................ $10.77
$15.99 Size 70xl20 inches ................. $8.77
$.1 l. 99 Size 70x90 inches .................. $7.47
S7.99 Size60x99 inches •••••• ~ ............ $3.A7

permanent press.

REV LON

0

Natural Wc,nder Make Up

•••
Regu lar prices $14.95 to $17 .95. Jean styles
for the younger men. regular full cut styles
for work wear. not every size, limited
quantity .

MEN'S 111.95

PREWASHED
BWE DENIM
JEANS

••

Late filings force primary

,"•
•..

Y2 PRICE

~

QUiLT LINING

•.••'

Seamless 81 inches wide, bleached snowy
white, regularly $2.89 yard. Weekend
special.

••
•
••

~~---..-·-·~·-·~·~·--·--·----~·----·--·------:••
81 INCH WIDTH

Nylon and cotton

REG. s1.79 ·-------·---·-............ SALE 9!r
REG. •2.00 ........................ SALE '1.09
REG. '2.50 .........................SALE s1.29

•2.25 YARD
$1.69 yard, 45 inch width dotted swiss,

~
~

•••
•

99c yard
$1.59 yard, 36 inch width, flannels, 89c yard

••'
•
~~----·--·-·----·------------·-·~
·
w
$PICIAL
¥

MEN'S LEATHER

STEREO

WORK BELTS

1 Friendly Bank

Regular price $3.95. Sizes 32 to 50 in black or,
brown. Full grain cowhide, bridle leather.
Popular. lll• inch width. Weekend special.

.

1 Checking Account

styles,

heavy

denim ,

true

styl ing, flare leg

Regular $4.98 black leather p;., inch width
Garrison belt .

loans of all types, at very
low rates

s3.99

Sale-Dinette Sets

BANK .
RACINE, OHIO

SPECIAL $27'P

•

•••
••

•
'

'

WOMEN'S

,.

"

Machine washable, velour and polyester&gt;i cotton blends, navy and r~d, regular sizes
-6 to 14.
. __,

.REG. $16.01L ............ SALE sn.99
REG. '20ll0............... SALE 114.99
REG. s24.00............... SALE '17.99

MEIGS COUNTY PEOPLE

SERVICE
BANK •

to

••"

JOGGING SUITS

A HOME BANK FOR

HOME NATIONAL

~9

-Channel Master AM-FM stereo radio .
- 8 track and cassette player-recorder
- 3 speed record change.
- 2 deluxe speakers
- Stereo stand.

••
•..

r-~~--~----·----·---~-~---·-~----,~--~---~----·----·------------~ •••,.~

All accounts insured to $40,000

A FULL

Special

wee;~Sa~~

Savings Certificates of all kinds

RACINE

weight

western
sizes 29 to ·

42, straight leg sizes
38, Iengths 30 to 36.

'2"

1 Savings Account

Flare and strai ght leg

COMPONENT
SYSTEM

Maple and pine finishes. metal
dinettes, all with laminated tops.

SAVE 20%

....J

REG. 128.00.............. SAU '20.99

REG. s40.00 .............. SALE 129.99

COMMUNITY CLUB AWARD SPONSOR

Elberfelds In Pome

NO. 239

by attorney ..Frank W.
BY KATIE CROW
$29,700 each from the State
The proposed Syracuse
Porter, Jr., legal counsel,
Rotary FWid.
Racine Regional Sewage
for all three towns, it was
Ed Tinkle and Claude
revealed that the EnvironDistrict received a "shot in
Quillen, engineers from
mental Protection Agency
the arm" Thursday night
Common wealth Engineers,
has issued a commitment
Greenwood, Ind., explained
when Milton Rowh, district
that 75 percent grant funds
manager for the Farmers'
that the money they asked to
will be made available for
Home Administration anborrow from the State Rotary
•nowtced a letter of condition
both the Syracuse - Racine
Fund would be used to
and the Rutland projects
has been issued for a $659,300
finance a controversial arproviding the necessary
chaeological study that will
grant.
paper work is completed by
Roush armounced the grant
cost an estimated $23,000,
April 1.
steps
one
and
two
during a joint meeting of
While Rutland did not have engineering costs of the
SyraQiJS~ and Rs.cine council,
members of the Syracuse - a quorum of its council villages and the charges of a
Racine Regional Sewage present at last n_\g ht' s rate consultant.
Following considerable
District and a delegation session, Racine and Syracuse
representing the Villag~ of coWicils took the necessary discussion over the merits of
steps to seek completion of borrowing from the State
Rutland.
Roush also announced a the paperwork to make their Rotary Fund, which would be
a 10 year period without intotal of $900,700 would projoct eligible.
The main item on the terest, both Racine and
become available in loan
funds for the $4.7 million . agenda, which was tackled by Syracuse councils agreed to
the towns of Syracuse and sign the forms requesting the
project.
_
Racine .before they could funds .
MAJOR_-ACTIVITY
qualify to continue with loan
It was pointed out by at."
-Ia - ulber slgnUieanl
and grant procedures, was torney Porter that loan funds
activity durlag the two
authorizing the bcrrowing of sought from the State Rotary
hour sessloo, presided over
Funds would be repaid from
the FHA loan money once the
step three fWids are obtained.
Porter, as well as Quillen
Two Republicans filed Brown, D. E. F. Robinson, and Tinkle, noted that if for
petitions of candidacy for the incumbent ,
filed
for some reason the proposed
mayor's post at Pomeroy reelection to. the board of project would not be built the
two towns would be obligated
prior to Thursday's 4 p.m. public affairs.
deadline thus assuring a June
Middleport will have no to pay the money back to the
Primary election in that primary election since the State Rotary FWid in ten
village .
filing deadline brought no equal instalbnents beginning
after the second year of 'the
Filing were Hollie Green contests.
loan.
and Robert K. Anns.
Republican incumbent
Winner of the primary race mayor, Fred Hoffman, will · Rutland is J,eing asked to
will be opposed in the be Opposed in the November borrow $38,635 !rom the state
November election by Roger election by Edward M. Blake, Rotary Fund. It was inM. Davidso~ . who filed as an Jr., who filed as an in- dicated Rutland's council will
Independent candidate.
dependent candidate for the meet within the next week to
formally make a decision on
Earlier this rnont.h, in- mayor's po~'l.
cumbent Pomeroy Mayor
Incumbent council their part of the needed
Clarence Andrews, R , filed a members, Carl J. Horky and Rotary FWid obligation.
The archaeological study
petition to seek nomination William G. Walters, both
and eventual reelection, but Republicans, will be opposed
he withdrew the petition In the fall by Jack Satterfield,
because of health reasons. a Democrat, who will be
FAIR FUNDS
Pomeroy has one clerk- attempting to unseat one of
State
Auditor Thomas E.
treasurer candidate and that the two incumbents.
Ferguson
reported that
is Jane Walton, "Republican
Two seats are to be filed on
incumbent, and two council the Middleport Board of annual distributioo from the
Ohio Fairs Fund with a total
members, both incumbents, Public Affairs this year.
filed for . nomination and
Filing for those seats were of · $2,011,658 going to 87
reelection.
incumbents, Thomas R. county and eight independent
They are Rodney C. Karr, Anderson and Freddie agricultural societies.
Meigs County received
R., appointed to council Houdashelt ,
both
$23,804.
recently, and Dr. H. D. Republicans . .

REG. '4.25 ........ SALE 12.99
REG. 14.50......... SALE

WAREHOUSE

VOL. NO". XXIX

•

at y

I

of three new classroom facilities , including a technicai..:areers
building now Wider C!J'lstruction, a fine and performing arts
center and a math-BCience building. Campus landscape,
changes, including walkways and better parking areas are
also scheduled. ·
For Rio Grande, it will be a major facelilt. It comes at a time
when the college is experiencing a growth in admissions in
spite of national trends of decreasing enrollments.
Last year's 1,107 student total was the lar_gest in the
college's hiStory .
The 1979-80 total seems destined to surpass last year's
figure s as admissions statistics show marked increases in
applications to date .

....... I

Remhtder issued

All girls participating in the
" Queen
of
Hearts,"
"Princess of Hearts" and
Junior Princess of Hearts
Contests are reminded that
money collected for the week
can be turned in Sunday, between 3 p.m. and 4:30p.m. at

the Meigs Inn Banquet Room,
126 1&gt; East Main Street,
Pomeroy.
Final count will take place
April 22 at the Meigs Inn
Banquet Room with a
reception and the crowning of

I

tile three winners .

•

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1979

,_

15 CENTS

Project receives 'shot-in-arm'

Sizes : birth to 131bs . and 14 to 171bs.

COLOR TELEVISIONS

e

•

REG. '5.25.........SAlE 13.69
REG. '6.25 ... ;••.. SALE 14.39
.REG. '6.75 ......... SALE 14.69

Uttle Girls Half Slips

RECIPE

Daniel Evans, General Campaign Chairman

Ole group
piece stretch suits, assorted colors.

Farmer ,
Brach ' s,
and
Palmer .
Communitv Club Award 1,000 bonus points for each
Sl.OO purchase .

30% OFF

MONEY

TABLE

One_rack of quality Devon apparel in
blue, coral and beige. Regular sizes 8
to 18 and extra sizes 38 to 46.

l . l . --

.~&amp;_%
T4r

SAVE 20\

RIO GRANDE- Acampaign to raise $4.9 million over the
Campaign efforts actually began a year ago when Evans
next five years for campus renewal and to provide increased was named chairman and Robert S. Wood was appointed
scholarship opportuntiies has been announced by Rio Glllnde associate chairman.
College.
Wood is exet-utive vice president of Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
A total of $2.3 miUion has already been pledged during the Other campaign leadership includes four honorary
campaign's initial phase according to Dan Evans, chairman of chairpersons: Mrs. E. E. Davis, Oak Hill; S. S. Davis Sr.,
the board, Bob Evans Farms, Inc., the campaign's general Columbus; Emerson Evans, Gallipolis, and Mrs . Esther
chairman.
Greer, Knoxville, Tenn.
Announcement of the college's Challenge for the second
A national campaign comnnittee, formed August 1978,
century campaign loilows an initial effort among those who chail;ed by Bob Evans, president of Bob ·Evans Farms, Inc.,
are closely associated and involved with Rio Grande.
included in its membership persons from seven·states and ten
Alumni, local financial institutions, corporate friends, cities.
faculty, administration and students have all made important
Bill McDonald, Jackson, serves as chairman of the alumni
contributions to this impressive beginning," Evans said.
campaign committee and Linda Bauer, Oak Hill, heads the
A public campaign to generate additional conuilunity college's family contingent.
support is now being organized -in Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and
~·-~
Vinton CoWities.
total of $579,800 to the campaign so far. Area financial
One goal is a new student - commWiity center, slated for institutions have also responded favorably with.gifts totaling
construction in 1980 at a projected cost of $2.5 million, to $139,850. Advance· gifts total $300,500.
.
provide needed facilities for ·the college's growing population
Rio Grande College alumni responding thus far, have
as well as meeting, dining and study space for the entire raised $5(237. A faculty and administration organization has
community.
been developed. When its fund-raising is completed, more than
The campaign's second goal is to increase endowment for $40,315 will be surpassed.
student scholarships by $1.5 mi!Uon.
Thus far, $900,000 in grants and $300,000 in bequests have
Dr. Paul C. Hayes, Rio president, said, "We are been committed to the campaign : Other campus developments
committed to serve those students who · need and deserve continue in addition to the campaign effort.
financial assistance." The campaign also hopes to raise an
Through its dual relationship as a private and state
additional $900,000 for the college's general operating expense. assisted college, Rio Grande will benefit with the construction

,........- ....-

w-1cenc1 Special

DEVON
SPORTSWEAR

Liquid makeup, blush. ··eye shadow, lip
g loss, mascara, eye liner, pressed powder.

THE

Rio's fund drive 'in full swing'

•·

•

••
•
"• •••
•• •

t'LANS MADE - The Meigs Unit of the American
Heart Aasoclation at a noon luncheon Thursday at the
Meigs 1M made plans for the sale of balloons to be held in
' Pomeroy and Middleport Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

required by federal law, on
the proposed sites of the
treatment plant in both the
Syracuse, Racine and the
Rutland systems, again came
under fire during last night's
session.
A letter from Congressman
Clarence Miller was read by
Porter. Port er has taken
exception with the need-for
the method that the archaeological
study
is
required and has sought the
aid of Senators Glenn and
Metzenbaum and Rep.
Clarence E . Miller.
Porter praised Rep. Miller
for his efforts on behalf of the
Syracuse - Racine Sewage
Project. Miller 's letter.
written to Dr. Tom Smith,
director, Ohio Histori cal
·
Society, follows:
"Dear Mr.. Smith:
"During the past several
weeks, considerable in·
formation has been brought
to our attention regarding the
proposed Syracuse - Racine
Regional Sewer project in
Meigs County.

wastewater treatment ser- from EPA the additional
vices they need and deserve, funds necessary to complete
I would like some assurance the archaeological survey.
from the Ohio Historical Even under ideal review and
Society that the phase two processing conditions, it is
archaeological su..Vey will estimated that approval of
fulfill the applicable joint the grant amendment and the
requirements of the 1966 archaeological survey would
Historic Preservation Act take
four
to
five
and the 1969 National En- months
to
complete.
vironmental Policy Act. The Without permitting the
prompt conclusion of phase project to go to bid while the
two work this spring will archaeological study is being
allow project sponsors and completed, a construction
the Ohio Environmental season will be lost and costs
Protection Agency to take an will increase. If the project is
importamt step toward ac- allowed to go to bid within the
tual construction. With an next 60days, it is possible that
assurance from the ' Society actual construction could get
that
phase
two
ar- Wlderway late this summer.
"If, however, the bidding
chaeological work will
finalize the historical process is forced to wait out
requirements associated with the approval of the funding
the project, we are prepared request for the survey, and
to ask Ohio EPA lo allow the completion of the survey
Cominonwealth Engineers , itself, then construction of the
MiLTON ROUSH, district dir~ctor of the FmHA
(project consultants) to go to · facility will be pushed into
annoWICed
Thursday night at joint meeting of Syracuse,
bid on the project on the winter. Considering inOation,
condition that the ar- the project cost would in· Racine and RuUand councils that a letter of condition has
chaeological survey is crease by about 10 percent been issued for a supplemental grant of $659,300 from the
completed before con· across the board as a direct Farmers Home Administration. He also announced that
the Federal agency he represents bas issued the letter of
result of such a delay .
struction begins.
11
conditions
for the grant funds as well as $900,700 in loan
We have discussed the
" As you know, the project
"The key to success in the
funds
for
the long sought Syracuse-Racine Regional
project at length with Bert consultant will soon request
(Continued on page 10)
Sewage
project.
Drennen of your staff and we
have underscored our deep
concern in wanting to see this
p.-oject move ahead without
further delay.
"In the interest of moving
this project toward conMeanwhile, two other men
Richardson and Lewis, 28, truck taking on fuel at the
IRONTON, Ohio (AP) -'- A
struction and, more imWilliam Pack of l.avalette,
time
evidently
exploded
first.
portantly, toward providing thin pall of smoke hWig above were taken to Cincinna li
W.
The
heat
and
flames
from
the
Va., and Glen Lewis of
the families of the Syracuse - this Ohio River community General Hospital where both
ignited
the
storage
truck
Ashland,
Ky .-also were set
Racine district with the today, a dark remin,der of a were reported in serious
by the burning
aflame
tank,
he
said.
tremendous gasoline storage condition. Hospital officials
gasoline.
They
were rushed to
Ironton
Police
Capt.
Robert
·
said
Richardson
had
burns
tank explosion that left three
the
hospital
by
ambulance.
Johnson
said
authorities
had
over
80
percent
of
his
body
men badly burned and sent
All
three
of
the
men were
received
a
caU
about
the
and
Lewis
had
burns
over
60
roaring , flames leaping
burned
over
at
least
80 per
leaking
fuel
and
were
enroute
percent
of
his
body.
hundreds of feet into the air.
cent
of
their
bodies,
hospital
·to
the
site
when
the
blast
IrontOil Fire Capt. Carl
But like many Ironton
Whitt,
who took part in a four- occ urred . One policeman, officials said . After unresidents, Sherry Elswick .
WJdoubtedly needs nothing to hour fire-fighting effort by who arrived first at the scene, dergoing emergency treatremind her of Thursday's several area fire depart· received a mild concussion ment at the Ironton hospital,
they were transferred to
. explosion and fire at the Rich ments, said the blast was from the impact and was
treated
at
the
hospitaL
caused when a spark ignited intervewed at the hospital. special burn treatment
Oil Co. terminal.
Mrs. Elswick, 28, was the fumes from the leaking "This other guy and I just centers .
Pack, 38, was flown by
working in the terminal office gasoline. He added that the helped him Into the car and
helicopter
to Univ ersity
CLEVELAND (AP) -Here when her father, Douglas origin of the spark was not got him out of there as fast as Hospital at Columbus,
where
·
are the numbers drawn Richardson, received word known .
possible."
he
was
listed
in
serious
Whitt also said a tanker
Thursday in the Ohio that one of the terminal's
condition .
Lottery: blue t94, white 39, giant gasoline storage tanks
was spewing fueL He went
gold 6, winathon 83788
outside to check on the
problem.
A moment later the terminal was ripped by a series
of explosions.
Mrs. Elswick and Ron
Bacca, another office worker,
were · nearly thrown from
their chairs by the violent
blasts. Then as flames and
smoke rose abcve the shattered tank, they peered
through the office window
and saw a heart-stopping
sight.
"We looked out the window
and saw Mr. Richardson
staggering toward the of·
flee," Bacca said later. "He
was smoldering and It was
obvious he had been burned." ·
Mrs. Elswick and Bacca
raced down the stairs. When
they got outside, they found
Richardson, the president of Rich Distributing Inc., rolling
on the pavement, his clothes
PRESENTED PLAQUE -Mrs. Raymond (Elmora) Boice Thursday was presented a
aflame.
'plaque hoooring her late husband, Dr. Raymond Boice, by the American Heart Association,
Wrapping a coat around
Meigs Chapter. The award recognizes the late Dr. Boice for his outstanding serl'ice to the
'her 65-year-old father, Mrs.
Meigs CoWity Heart Association, branch of the Central Ohio Heart Chapter. Dr. Boice was a
Elswick, who is five months
past president and medical advisor of the Meigs County Heart Branch Board of trustees . Dr .
pregnant, bundled him into
Boice worked faithfully and was a devoted member of the heart movement and contributed
her car and drove him to the
·significantly to the development and continued growth of the American Heart Association.
Members of the DeMolay and Job's Daughters will be on
emergency room at nearby
Shown, 1-r, are Walter Grueser, president of the Meigs County Heart Association, Mrs.·
the streets taking donations for the balloons. Shown 1-r,
Lawrence General HospitaL
Boice and Debra A. Ranlanen, field consultant of the Central Ohio Heart Chapter, Inc., who
are, Nancy Reed, Ralph Werry, Lois Kelly, Janet Bolin
"The amublances hadn't
pre~nted
the plaque. The heart association met at the Meigs Inn for a noon luncheon.
come yet," she said when
and Walter Grueser.

Smoke hovering over Ironton

.,
·t

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