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                  <text>Trf!aty terms reached, signing slated today

'

D-12-The Sunday Timt'"'~''" ' i11!'l. Su11t1ay , Mar. 25, 1070

r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , ?#',..,,

Chorale performs for Shriner s

The Changing Face of GSI
The Growth of Activity -

ITS PURPOSE AND GO fiLS
BY JOHNNIE RUSSELL
flclivill' Therapy Adm.
UnitD
GALLIPOLIS - Thi• ar·
Saturday, March 24

·BRIDGE .
_ _O
_ s_wald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A super safety play wins
After this .though, Pete
played the ace of spades
from dwruny. Now he could

NORTH
4' A J

¥AK 6:1

count at least four clubs

• J 54

unless West held all four of

'+ 6543

WEST
• l0 8ii32
• Q9 8 7
• Q8 6

..

the missing ones plus two

EAST

spades, two hearts and a

• K 7
.. J I O

diamond .

leisure trips

Then he saw that if East
held all four clubs he could
get in trouble unless he
made the sort of safety play
that he . .Pete. was famous

and

picnics.

The y were mainly con-.centrating on activities for
fun .
SOUTH
• Q94
The Occupational Therapy
for .
• 54 2
Department concentrated on
At trick two he led a club
• A IO
from dummy and· carefully fl rts and Crafts. Items were
+ fiKJ8 2
covered East 's seven with made for fun and profit. Such
Vulnerable: Both ·
the eight. West showed out activ ities as weaving ,
Dealer: South
and Pete 's pessimism was painting, woodworking and
well-rewarded . He wound up various form s of crafts weft.e
West North Eas t South
making a n overtr ick on a included. Items were on sale
I+
hand that would have been to the publi c and were
Pass I•
Pass
l NT
Pass 3 NT Pass Pass
set without the super-safety presented at flea markets
Pass
play.
and festivals throughout the
state.
Opening lead : + 3
ASk lbt EXDti'IS The main concen trat ion
was set on a leisure activity
wor king with their hands.
A Wisconsin reader asks if The Phy sica l Education
we ever pass as dealer with Department had programs
By Oswald Jacoby
14 h1gh-card po~n ts.
.
designed toward developing·
The answer as a decaded
.
.
and Alan Sontag
"no" . When we have the our cll ents physica lly equiva lent of one ace more programs Included: basket·
Pe'ssimistic Pete looked
over the dwnmy happily. than an average hand, there baU, track and field, and
The hour was late. It was the is too much chance that a other areas related to Special
Olympics. These activities
last rubber of the evening pass will cost us a game .
t K 9/32
• Q IO 9 i

and Pete expected to win it

and go home.
"Can anything bad happen
to me?" he asked himself.
"Give East the king of
spades and five diamonds to
an honor . He can get in and
lead a diamond from five to
an honor. Then, if I have to
lose a club I can wind up tw·o

tricks-down ."

e
:
•
•

.
•

•
e

per

an

outlet for energy and help
d l
h . ll
. II
eve op P ys1ca y, socta y,
and mentally.
Purpose and Goals

lndMdual ques tions will

be answered rf accomoanfea
0)'
stamped. selr-addressed
.envelooes The mosr in terestrn g question s Will be used In
rh1s ·colu mn ana will feceive
copies ol JACOBY MODERN 1

Client With

Today we are one. All our
staff are now working toward
· ·
·
: ..
giV t.ng OUf ClientS BctiVItleS
designed fo r " nonnal" living.

The ma jor purpose of
Activity Therapy in our unit
• • • • • • • " • • • • • • • • • • is to develop socially ac~al
ceptable leisure activity
skills and knowledge.
We are achieving our goals
~
through activities that are
~ designed for .small groups.
( \,.; These ·groups require
minimal supervision and are
dope in the least restrict ive
•
: manner possible.
By
•
In the past our activities
Willis T. Leadingham • were planned around large
Rea ltor
• groupS and due to transportation problems we were
e forced
to use larger vehicles,

Todav •

e

e

PRIC.ING FOR BEST PROFIT

•
•

Without .1ny cl oubt, th e
most important el emen t of'
se lling a home" i s placi ng
• the righ t value on it . Wh en
• you ge t r ight down to i l. i t's
• th e pri ce , mor e lhc"!n
anything else, wh1 c h will
• dicta te how fnst {or slow) ;
how profitabl y (or un
• profi tably ) i t wil l sell .
•
W ha t is the best sell ing
• pr ice? N at ional exper ience
• has proven con clus ively
e th at if y our property is
• price d a t tncep ti on within
•
so-t,
above f ai r mark et
value range, th e t hancc of .
• maki ng a cl ea n, top . do llar·e sa le during th e earl y stages
• is TEN TIME S grc il l cr

e

• fha nofherwise

•
•
•

~
tDo you have a question for
th e experts " wme ·Ask rtle
Exoerrs . · care of tn 1s newspa -

provide the

. sta .. ·:·

e

:•

:-.:E WSPAPEH ENTERPRISE ASSN '

•:.

•

e

&lt;

Buyer s buy by com
pari son . Properti es not
co mpeting favOr ably do not

e

e
e

or

drop

in

at

LEADING H AM
REAL •
ESTATE , 512 Second Ave ., •
G,1 11ipoli s. Phone 446-7699. •
We' r e h er e t o help.
•

• • • • • • .-• • • • • • • • • e • • • • • • • • •:

e

The

Grande Chorale rrom th e Hio

Grande· Coll ege performed
before the Pat Wilson Shrine
Club hiday ni~ht at the
Moose Hall.
The Grande Chorale is a
singing grour made up of 16
st udents. The Chorale
rehearses a minimum of ~wo ,

(USPS 145-960)

The group does its own set
· desig ning an d building,
choreography , costume
design and an occasional
musical arrangement.
The Chorale has toured in
Ohio, Kentu cky, West

MARLENE BAKER

Southwestern
student named
vice-president
PATRIOT Marlene
Baker, a junior at South·
western High School, was
recently elected State Vice
President of Beta Club for the
state of Ohio. Marlene, along
with fourteen Southwestern
Beta Club members and th eir
sponsor Ms. Maxine Wells,
attended the Beta Club State
Convention at the downtown
Sheraton Hot el in Columbus.
Miss Baker gave a
prepared speech and was
given enthusiastic support by
her fellow Highlanders'
campaign skit and demon·
stration.
In addition to Beta Club,
her other activities include
FHA , volleyball team, soft ball team, Pep Club, Band,
Cora Campers 4-H, and a 1979
Gallia County Junior Fair
Queen Candidate. Marlene is
the. daughter of Marlin and
Janet Baker, Route 2,
Patriot.
pcrience in working, living,
and communicating with our
clients .
All of our activities are
planned around the clients
school and vocational
assignments. The trips are
vacations and each client
uses their own funds to pay
for these trips.
The client also helps in
plaMing these trips. They
choose activities and places
they want to see and we assist

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 240

Virginia, Tennessee, and

Florida, including Walt
Disney World. This group has
been a part of Rio Grande
Coll ege and Co mmunity
College fo r several years,
first under the name of the
Ensemble and since Merlyn
Ross has been director, The
Grande Chorale.
The primary purpose of
Chorale is to promote the
good will of the college at
civic function s, churches. and
schools. However, in the
heart of the Grande Chorale,
the purpose is to share the joy
of music with the audiences
for which it performs.
And that's just what the
grou~ did as they entertained
around 100 people, who at-.
tended the "ladies' night "
dinner meeting .
The Club would like to
thank the Grande Corale for
its fine performance.

fl Polish pharmacist at·
tempting to distill vodka from
oil seeping from the ground
produced kerosene, not liquor.. Ignacy Lukasiewicz
then went on .in 1852 to
develop a lamp to burn the
clea n, low-smoke fuel.

RECEIVING CHECK - Merlyn Ross, director-advisor of the Grande
Cborale from Rio Grande College is receiving a check from John Nibert,
president of the Pat Wilson Shrine Club. The money will be used by the Grande ,
Chorale to pay for necessities th~t the group may need.

Court News
GfiLI.IPOLJS - Two cases
were continued in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Friday.
Charged with criminal
damag ing , J ames Teddy
Lawson, entered a plea of not
gu'ilty. Bond was set at $1,000.
Clarence
Johnson,
Gallipolis, e nt ered a plea of
not guilty to a charge of nonsupport. Case continued.
Ni ne other cases were
terminated in Judge James
fl. Bennett's Court Friday·.
Thomas G. Coo k, 19,
Vinton , was found not guilty
w a charge of operating a
motor vehicle without a
license.

them.
fill activities are charted
and eva luated by the A. T.
Staff upon completion so each
discipline can gain a better
understanding. of our individual clients.
Things have changed and
we hope they are for the
better.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Arab foes of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty set off two
bombs outside the U.S.
Embassy in Damascus as
Arab governments opposed to
the pact prepared to
implem en t economic
sanctions and a political
quarantine against Egypt .
The bombs Sunday night
shattered windows at the embassy but there were no casu-·
alties or serious damage and
no one claimed responsibility
for ·the attack .
Syrian witnesses said one
bomb was hurled into the embassy garden from a passing
car and the other went off
near the rear of the building .
One witness said someilne in
the car shouted: "To hell with
the traitorous .agreement!"
The State Department al- ·

1

Waiving 122 on a charge of
operating a vehicle without
an exhaust system was
Tarpmy Potts, 18, Vinton.
Patricia fl. Lee, 48, Pl .
Pleasant , waived $22 on a
charge of assured clear
distance.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of

excessive sp eed

were James L. Niday, 22,

Ohio expects winter-like weathe1
By The Associated Press
today with hi~s from the
Winter weather returned to upper 20s to the mid 30s.
Ohio Saturday and today
It was cloudy and windy
according to the . National Friday night across Ohio with
Weather Service.
occasional rain accumulating
(\ stron~ low pressure . less than one tenth of an inch
syst~m was over southwest
in scattered parts of the state.
lower Michigan Saturday Early Saturday morning
morning and moving north· temperatures ranged from 54
east. Fairly strong winds degrees in Cleveland to 49 in
associated with the storm Dayton and Mansfield.
were causing much colder air
to be swept in behind it.
This system produced rain
SEARCH OFF
which was forecast to change
.
MERRITT
ISLAND, Fla.
to snow late Saturday with a
(
AP)
Florida
Civil Air
couple of inches of snow
Patrol
Capt.
Chet
Brogan
possible by morning and
says
a
statewide
search
for a
overnight lows from the mid
60-year-old
Ohioan
has
been
20s to the lower 30s.
called
off.
Snow flurries will continue
John Hlggley, a Toledo and
Archbold businessman, took
off in a twin-engine plane
Gallipolis, $25; Forrest w; from Boca Raton, Fla.,
Stephens, 19 , Leon, $25; March 7 and never returned,
Russell G. Mea ns , 52, Brogan said. Authorities
Columbus, $25; Charles D. have no leads in the disapCoen, 31, Dunbar, $20; David pearance.
C. Wright , 18, Ewington, $42; . Brogan said the search was
and Judith R. Love, 37, stopped until the patrol obtains additional information.
Gallipolis, $25.

Kim Hayman, 21, Ri.cine,
al'rested Friday morning by a
Meigs County sheriff 's
deputy while driving a truck
taken from a Pomeroy
; parking lot earlier that
:__.l]lorning, appeared before
Judge John C. Bacon
Saturday on a Bill of Information.
Hayman entered a guilty
plea to a charge of
unauthorized usc of a motor
vehicle. Judge Bacon accepted the plea, but postponed sentencing until
·Saturday, March 31.

other activities that provide
community ex posure. Our
trips and activities now take
us throughout our loca l

worshippers witness murder

'.

,I

~VELAND (AP)- Cleveland police said Renee

Cottingham, 22, was dragged from an East Side church .
by a man and fatally shot as worshipers and members
of her family watched in horror Sunday . .
Witnesses told police that the man kept them at
bay with hts gun while he dragged Mrs. Cottingham
about 50 feet from the church and then shot her. Police
were seeking a 2!&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld man who had dated Mrs
Cottingham before her marriage for questioning i~
connection with the shooting.

C~ims forces shelling again

)

ti

Hayman, recently released
from a state penal instit ution
where he was serving his
sent ence for the 1977
aggravated robbery of the
Five Points Grille, has also
been charged with parole
violation . He pleaded guilty
to that charge also . Sen·
tencing on that charge will
also be next Saturday.
As sistant
Prosecuting
Attorney Carson Crow
represented the State of Ohio.
Judge Bacon ordered
Ha yman to be remanded to
the custody of the Sheriff
pending sentencing .

· ··~Nationwise·-

Value paeked buys in
famotls,Kroehler Relaxers!
r.

ready had alerted U.S .
missions in the Middle East
to the posSibility Qf terrorist
attacks as the signing of the
U .S.-sponsored treaty
approached. Israe l and
Egypt also have taken
massive
security
precautions.
Almost every Arab government has scorned the pact
Egyptian President Anwar
Sad at and Israeli Prime
Minister ,Menachem Begin
will sign today on the White
House lawn. The other Arabs
are opposed to the treaty
because Sadat did not obtain
a state for the Palestinians,
the return of East Jerusalem
to the Arabs and the return of
the Golan Heights to Syria.
Iran's Moslem patriarch,
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
Khomeini, denounced the

Guilty pleas entered

1

than 5 and use more normal
means of transportation such
as station wagons and vans.
Our activities include
bowling , movies , theatre,
com munit y concerts,
shopping, gospel sings,
shopping trips, camping, and

BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) - Hanoi claimed
Sunday that Chinese forces shelled Vietnamese
territor~ and took up new positions as deep as 12 miles
InSide Vtetnam. Tbe Soviet Union charged that China
also was escalating "provocations" against Laos.
The official Vietnamese Communist Party newspaper Nhan Dan said Chinese leaders "are bebaving
contrary to their promises."

'

community and state. We
also travel to neighboring
stat es and communities .
Through these efforts our
clients become familiar with

Bread contains wood fiber

the community and th e
communit y will gain ex-

WASHINGTON (AP) - A popular bread that ha s
been marketed for its nutritional qualities must tell
c_onsumers in advertising that they are eating wood
fiber, a consent agreement with the government said
Sunday.
The bread is "Fresh Horizons," which has been
promoted by a part of the giant International
Telephone and Telegraph Corp, as having 30 percent
fewer calories than white bread and 400 percent more
fiber than whole wheat bread.

Arraignment slated today
UNIONTOWN, Ohio (AP) - Arraignment was
scheduled today for Leonard Moder on charges of.
felonious assault, resisting arrest and aggravated
menacing .
·. The charges stem from an incident Saturday night
when Moder allegedly barricaded himself in his home
with two handguns and three rifles and threatened to
shoot 10 police officers who were outside.

Elvis left $7.6 mUlion
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) - Elvis Presley's 11&gt;-yearold daughter, Lisa Marie, will inherit her late father's
estate, disclosed to be worth $7.6 million. The amount
of the estate became publlc Friday when Judge Joseph
Evans of Probate Court approved an accounting of the
singer's holdings. Presley died Aug. 16, 1977, at the age
of 42.
__
Presley left his estate to his daughter, his father,
Vernon, and his grandmother, Minnie Mae. The elder
' Presley is execuwr of the estate but Lisa wiU inherit
her father 's entire fortune when she turns 24 or after
: Vernon Presley and her great-grandmother die.

:·Teamsters authorb:e strike
,

CINCINNATI (AP) - Members of Teamsters
Local 100 Sunday authorized a strike if a contract

RICHLAND
AVE.-ATHENS, ·oHIO
.,
NO "-DMI S!i lo ("" C II A NGI: • SJ'ONSORED HY TH J: p AV ID WIUCERSON C Rl,IS ADB COMMI TTE..:

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1979

. !

*Furniture Department · 3rd Floor •Many, Many Styles Fabrics Colors
*Use Our Sensible Credit Service to Purchase Your Furnitu~e Free'oelivery

*

settlement between the union and the trucking industry
is not reached by midnight Saturday.
,
Some 1,090 of the 1,272 Teamsters who cast secret
ballots Sunday at the union hall voted in favor of the
lllrlke,·sald Joe C~~rlotta , vice president of !.oral 100.
LorallOO Teamsters were eligible to vote.
• About 61800
-

..

treaty Sunday, saying it was
"against the interests pf the
flrab world" and increased
" the dangers that have
always been posed by Israel
in the region ."
Khomeini, who engineered
th e Islamic rebellion that toppled Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi last month, severed
the shah's ties with Israe l, cut
off direct Iranian oil exports
ro the Jewish state·and a llied
Iran with Yasser ·Ararat's
Pa Jestine
Liberation
Organization.
Thousands of Irani a ns
massed outside the Egyptian
Embassy in Tehran Sunday
ro protest the pact, and today
scores of persons calling
themselves "Arab students"
too k over the embassy,
hoisted Palestinian flags on
the roof and put up poster
photos of Arafat· and ·
Khomeini throughout th e
building. Iran is not an Arab
country .
Four Egyptian members of
the embassy staff were held
hostage in the building . The
ambassador, Ali Samir
Savfat, reported by telephone
that a group of armed men
came to his suburban
residence at 4 a.m. and told
him they were putting him
Wlder &lt;~protectiv e custody"
beca\lse his life might be in
danger.
Within 24 hours of the
treaty signing, leaders of the
other Arab nations wiil meet
in Baghdad Tuesday to
implement a series of secret
resolutions censuring the
Sadat government. They
range from hardliners, including Syria, Jraq and the
.J&gt;LO,-whlch want Sadat overthrown and are threatening a
new war on Israel 's eastern

flank,
to
moderates,
including c-onservative Saudi
Arabia and Jordan, which
appear to favor economic and
political action .

fls a result, the text of the on April 2 to repay Sadat's
tr eaty was not to be made historic viSit to Jerusalem in
public unt il after Sadat
November 1977. fill U1ree
Regin and President Carte~ versions of the treaty would
met HI the White House and he signed at the White House.
sat down af a table purchased
The spokesmen would not
by Ulysses S. Gra nt to sign di.sciose what the two sa id
three version s m English
ab out t he oH iss ue, but
Hebrew and A;abic.
' Begin 's spokesman , Dan
Th ey planned to celebrate . Pattir, said the issue was still

NEW EAGLE SCOUT - Brent Bolin became an Eagle Scout in ceremonies held Sundav
at the Rutland Church of CP.risl. fllarge crowd of friends, family, scouts and scout lead er's
were on hand for the bestowing of the highest rank in Boy Scout work. Brent. a •enior at
Meigs High School, is pictured with his parents, Mr . and Mrs. Joe Bolin of Rutland . Mr. anti
Mrs. Bolin hosted a reception following the ceremomes. Brentis a member of '11·oo p 249. Se c
Page 6 for another photo.

OPEC members divided
GENEVA, Switzerland
( AP) - The members of the
Organization of Petroleum

market situation justi fi es an

Ex porting Countries were

increa se

reported divided roday on the
question of price increases as

ATHENS, Ohio (AP)
Teachers in the Alexander
Local school district in
Athens County went on strike
this morning to protest the
dismissal of two elementary
school teachers.
Members of the Alexander
Local Teachers Association
voted to walk out Sunday
night.
The Alexander school
board voted last Tuesday not
to re new the contracts of
teach ers Bonnie Wolfe and
Randy l.avendar and did not
~ive any reasons for the vote.
Teach ers asociation
President Richard Lindsey ·
saJtl tile union's 95 members
will remain off the job until
the sc hool board either
renews the two teachers' contracts or provides written explana tions for the dismissa l.

Two injured
in accident
Two persons were injured
during a one-vehicle accident
Sunday in Meigs County on
Eagle Ridge Rd ., eight-tenths
of a mile east of SR 7, at 7:35
p.m.
The Gallia -Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, reports a
west bound auto operated by
Mark Casto, 17, Pomeroy,
swerved to avoid a deer on
the roadway , passed over a
cu lv ert and struck a
telephone line case.
Casto and a passenger,
Bruce Halley, 25, Pomeroy,
v dl splay~d visible signs of
injury. and were transported
by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad to Vetera ns Memorial
Hospital.
Both Casto and Halley were
admitted for treatment and
arc listed in sn t iofactory
condition.
Th ere was
moderate
damage to the vehicle.

"I thirik many delegations,
including our own, believe the
in the pr ice of

market crude," said Nordine
AitL aou ss sine,
vice
chairman of Sonatrach, the

their oil ministers gathered
for a special meetin g. But Algerian
some informed sources said company.
U1ey did not expect a general
price increa se.

Sa udi flrabia ,. Kuwait , Iraq
amd Qatar seemed to fa vor
sticking to the schedule of
price increases adopted at
the December OPEC meeting
lettin g individua l
and
countries add surcharges as

th ey have been doing since a

Alexander
teachers
on strike

Negotiations
weren't easy ·
WASHINGTON l AP ! - Egyptian President
Anwa r Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin prepared to sign a trea ty today
to e nd :w years of war between their countries
and . they hoped . lay the cornerstone of peace in
the 1\1 iddle East.
. The t re11 ty they planned to sign did not come
eas il y. The bargaining lasted until late Sunday
evening as th e two ancient enemies haggied over
the final details of their new and fragile peace.

Treaty opponents set
off l'wo bombs Sunday

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

such as the school bus, . and
using the "herd effect.'' Now
we try to limit groups. to less

APRIL 5 &amp; 6 - 7:30 P.M.
O.U. COVOCATION CENTER

enttne

hours, three times a week.

•

s_c ll , Overprici ng J1 ince p- •
t1on c.::~uscs propcrt1 es to e
be co m e. s hopworn ;
valu abl e lime il nd ~uyers •
M e lost forcve~ . Ult 1mate
ly , _all propert1es se ll for •
th e 1_r true va lue. bY com •
pC~_r~ son - or leSS ifrxposcd •
1n1.11 c1 ll y a t nn 1nf_lated e
pr1 cc. How doyouarnve nt •
th is "5~o plus " key ':'a l ue_? •
Drop 1nl? ~ur Office. 1f •
'( Ou 're th1nKtn g of . se lling
your home o1nd we II show •
you .
•
_
.
......
If th er e t S ol'OYih tng wr
cnn do to hel p you i n th e"· a
fi eld ot reill cstntc plei'lse •
phone

I'T. l'I.EASANT -

These were : Recreation,

Occupational Therapy, and
!'hysical Education. These
departments were made up of
Activity Therapists and
teachers.
Although the department
had different titles th ey were
working toward . the same
goals.
Th e Recreation Department was responsible for the
leisure activities of our
clients. They included:
bowling. skating, movies, and

•

By Cindie Rlankcnship

tick follow~ a series on the dl•pcutmcnts on our Unit .
J.et me begin by giving you
operation and ;tructurp of
Un it D. In this it rticlr WL' will a history of Altivity Therapy
find wh&lt;tt the Activity at tho Gallipolis State lnThcr&lt;tpy Dept. is doing and ;titute.
Prior t'o unitization there
how it interacts with other
were three 131 areas that
made up the Activity Dept.

reduction in Iranian exports

created a shortage of crude
oil.
fllgeria , Nigeria and Libya
were the leaders of th e price
hawks, with fllg eria urging a
25 percent increase in the
current base price of $13.34 a
barrel of Arabian light crude
oil, Nigeria urging 15 percent
and Libya advoca tin g
diversion of oil from the longterm contract market to the
higher-pr iced spot market.

nati onal

oil

,:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:::::::::::;:;.

TICKETS UN SALE
Curtain time on the two
4'\'C Oing presentation of

" Th e So und of Mu si('"
t' riday and Saturday
ni ghts at the Meigs High
School "iii br i:30 p.m.
Advance tickets ln i.i}' be
pu n hast: d at Sw is hcr-

Lohse Drug Store and th e
New York Uothing House
in l'om crn y a nd th e Dutton
Uru g Stort• in Middl r port.
Advanct· tickets entitle

th r pun ·hascrs to sit in a
spt•dal block of chairs at

the front of th e auditorium
for thr mu sil'a l whkh is
ht'ing

gi\' cn

by

mu sic

dcpartV"\ent stud ents.
:::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:·

Announce increase
in subscription rates
The com bincd home stantial in creases that have
delivery price of the Daily been incurred in the cost of
Sentinel and Sunday Times- produ ction and newsprint as
Sentinel will be increased, well as the need to increase
eff ective beginning April I, to compensation to motur route
90 cents per week for drivers and youth carriers.
customers served by youth The carriers will receive a
carriers and to $3.90 per substantial portion of this
month for subscribers on in crease.
motor routes.
The single copy newsstand
price for weekdays will
remain at 15 cents, but the
newsstand charge for the
Sunday Times-Sentinel will
increase from 25 to 35 cents.
This rate adjustment is
necess it ated by the sub-

Sheik flhmed Zak i Yamani
the Saudi oil minister, said h~
woyld

not press for a price in-

crease but he felt prices
would rise anyway .

OPEC in December agreed
on a four-stage schedule of in·
creases totaling 14.5 percent
by Oct. I. The second
increa se, to $13 .84 , is
scheduled for next Sundav
and the October base price~~
scheduled to be $14.55.
The two-month stoppage in
exports by fr an, on ce OPEC's
second-l argest producer, and
the
new
Ir anian
government 's plans to ke ep

future exports at half what
they were pushed prices in
the spot oil market to record
hi ghs. Some OPEC membe rs
increased prices by adding
surcharges to the OPEC base
price. They also accused the
international oil companies of

making huge "windfall profits' ' by buying at the base
price and selling on the spot
market.
There is speculation that
th e meeting m ay consider

changing the type of oii used
for the benchmark price on
whi ch the prices of other
types of oil are based.
Arabian light crude, which
is used for gasoline, has been
th e standard . But it is
becoming sca rcer, and U1ere
IS

i&lt;&gt; lk of switching to a

heavier, more

abundant

crude such as the type used
for hea ting oi l.
This would all ow the price
of li ght crude to ri se more

fr eel y. Demand For the
he avier crudes i ~ more sta ble
and th e suppl y is more
abundant.

the occasion with a stc1te

open.

dinner this evening wiU1 1,300
guests under a red and yellow
tent on the South Lawn of the
White House. "This is the day
we hoped for. Let us rejoice,"
said Begin .
But until late Sunday eve-

fl short time lat er ,
Secretary of State Cyrus
Va nce arriveu at the hotel to
confer with Begin, repeating
a visit he had paid in New
York on Saturday night.
When Vance emerged, he

ning, there see med some

and · Dayan were smiling.

chance ton1ght 's ce lebration
mi ght not be held.
On Sund ay morning, J.raeli
For eig n Minister Moshe
Dayan said in a te levision
interview that the exact
timetable
for
Isra eli
withdrawal from the Sinai
oilfields had not been settled
·and that he did not think
Israel should sign the treaty
until t hat qu estion was
resolved.
·
Re gin arrived at Andrews

There would be a treatysigning, Vance said. flsked if
the oilfields problem had
bee n
settled,
Van ce
responded. "I believe it has."
Then Vance wen t to the
White House to report ro Carter , who had spent Sunday in
Texas and Oklahoma. He said
at a news conference in
Dalias that 50 or 100 years
from now , history may call
the achievement of peace
between F:gypt and Israel

Air Force Ba se outs ide " th e
m ost
signifi cant
Washin gton a few hours later occurence during my own
in a light rain and added a term of office as president."
ew more iss ues to the
But Carter added that the
agend a.
trea t y IS
· on 1y one step in a
He •aid he wanted to ta lk to long process that must
Sada t about a thr ee-part conlinue during the nex t
signin g ceremony in which he year ,
address ing
the
and Sadat wo uld leav e em otiona l and intra ctab le
Wa shi ngton to ..s ign the qu es ti ons surrounding the
Arabic and Hebrew verswns fate of the Pal estinian Arabs.
of the treaty in Cairo and
Carter broke an impasse
Jerusalem. He said Sadat and between the two countries
Carter had agreed ro this last Septembe r at Ca mp
idea.
David. where he persuaded
Begin also sai~ he wanted Begin and Sadat ro agree to a
w open the borders between compromise under which the
Egypt and Israel ·w mon ths lwo countries would make
afte r ratifica tion of the peace.
treaties so Egyptians might
Egypt would regain the
visit Israel and Israelis might Sinai and Israel also agreed
gaze at the Pyramids, " in · to begin negotiations on an
which their fore fat hers autonomy plan for the West
invested some labor."
Ba nk and Gaza Strip U1at
Shortly after 6 p.m., Begin would require the end of
arrived at the Egyptian Em- Israeli military governn1ent
bassy, where Sadat was stay- and the withdrawa l of Israeli
in g. The two leader s troops to specified areas.
conferred until 7:35, when
Negotiators
met
in
Begin, his expression grim, Washington to conclude the ·
got into hi s car and drove trea ty and in Nove mber
back to his hotel.
announced that they had
During the conversation, rea ched
a
te ntative
Begin apparently gave up on agreement. .
his plan to get Sadat to visit
But in the interim, the rest
Jerusa lem. Isra eli and of the Arab world condemned
f: g ypti a n spokesmen Sadat for making peace with
announced that Begin would Isra el wit hout gettin g a
make a one .&lt;fay visit to Ca iro
IContinued on pa ge 10 .1

Boat traffic nonnal
Boat traffi c on the Ohio River returned to normal
Sunday when two barges blocking a gate at the
Gallipolis locks and dam were removed.
The U. S. Army Corps of Engineers had been
unable to close the gate and had feared the wa ter level
along a 43~nile section of the Ohio River and a 31-mile
section of the Kanawha River , which feeds into the
Oh10 north of Gallipoli s, would fa ll seriously low.
The two barges sarik March 10. One was shaken loose
late Friday by a river salvage company, and the
second was flushed from the gate area Sunday
morning.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Lows
between 25 and 30. Fair
Tuesday. Highs from th e
upper 40s to the lower 50•.
The chance of precipitation is
10 per cent toni ght and
Tuesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wed nesd ay throu gh
t"rlday: Partly cloudy with
a warming trend through
the period and showers
possible each day. Hi ghs
from the upper 40s to the
50s Wednesday and from .
the 60s to the lower 70s
Thursday and Friday .
Lows from th~ 20s to the
mid 30s Wcd,ut·:r,day and

frnm the 40s to the lower
50s Thursday and Friday.
:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

NURSING CENTER - This is the front of the new
100-bed sk illed-intermediate care facility being
constructed by flmericar e Corp. of Columbus, scheduled
wopen this July. The new nursing care center is located
on 'Oid Sl . Rt. 33, approximately two miles north of th '

"

county fairgrounds, in Pomeroy. Information for patient
pre-admission forms and employment applications may
he obta ined from Mrs. I,.eafy Chasteen, director of the
Senior Citizens Information and Referral Service, Main
Street , or by calling 992-7oll.

I.

�~

1ne ua 1y :;ent nel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Mar 26 J!JI9
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Today's business mirror
Bureaucrats say the new , can be 50 percent or less about 52 cents per I 000 cubic
laws will prevent a shortage because of the abundance af fee
Ka I sard The new
by puling nt.astate gas nto resources there
wells they are dr llmg now
Krul s well IS classed as a come under a different
the mterstate marke S1tler
sn t concern ed about str pper well meanmg 11 pro headmg and some of tbem
markets yet because of the duces less than 60 000 cub c fellows are getting better
poor product an records of feet of gas a day Ka I sa1d 11 than $2 a I 000 cubic feet
Oh o wells but could be f the produces ,about 2 000 cub c
Produc on from Fillman s
surplus causes uti! t es to feet per day
wells s above the str pper
Nether Ka1l nor F llman evel
reduce purchase contracts
understand why the pr ce for
next sununer
The two new wells put out
Records rank Ohio among gas differs often from we l to the same gas as the old
the top 10 states m drillmg but well
ones F llman srud We get
The th ng I don t $1 54 (per 1 000 cub c feet) for
about 20th n production Be
cause of th s exploration s understand s that when these the old ones and $1 84 foc the
more cautious Oh o drillers wells were drilled m th s new wells The frrst gas we
had a 91 percent success ratio area the pr ce was held down sold was for 54 cents and then
m 1978 Sitler sa1d the success on the gas and we are still we got one pretty good raiSe
gettmg pa d at the old prices and some others but I was
rat o m southwestern sates
too low to start w th
The F llman s two new
wells produce 00-70 barrels of
o I a month while Kail s well
fills a !()().barrel o I storage
tank only once m about nille
months
The oil goeli out of state
Lawrence E Lamb M D
and I don t like that pr cmg
system Fillman smd That
frrst year It sold for $10 and
ellen! exerc se and f you
Firming Up The Flab
some
cents a harreland after
don t know how to sw m you
By Lawrence Lamb M D
that
1t
went to $14 28a barrel
DEAR DR IAMB I am a ougl t to lea n anyway
B11t
most of the product on
Jogg ng s wonderful to
15-year-old lllllle I am 5 fee\
came
m
that fll'st year at the
10 and we1gh 145 pounds A develop the heart and lower pr ce It don t make
year •go I went on a d et and vas ular system and for that sense
matter the enduran ,. of the
lost 25 pounds By mo t sta n
The lac we get free gas
dards I am at the r ght I g Itw not do the hi gs
on
the farm makes 11
we ght The problem s my you are nterested n for your
worthwhile
I unagme our
s oma h and chest are strll appearance m terms of your gas bill would run $300 per
h stand abdomen
flabby
not as much as
What about those stones month if we d dn t get I
before I would hke ta know 1f
free
I shou d lose mare we1ght and about people dropp ng dead
Kall agreed
when JOgg ng? People who
exer se o JUSt exerc se
I gel free gas m the house
Also l would I ke to knaw have heart d sease die m bed and if 11 wasn t for that I
n ar.; and 11 herever they
what k nds of exerc1se I cauld
happen to be and while do ng wouldn t put up with the well
do
on the place he sa d I
DEAR READER Yes by an unend ng st of th ngs
don
t know how much we use
most tables your we ght s The ones who gel m trouble
but ts for cook ng and
f ne The problem s that are usually hose who overdo heat ng
and try to beat the lock
tables prov de weight n
Sitler smd the rules will repour ds and are 10t des gned You wont have th s problem qurre continwng adjustments
to tell whethe " person s too a your age
JOGGERS AND THOSE because inflation and cost of
fa o not The only way you
livmg factors are computed
can tell 1f you are too f•l or who are con erned about the m determmmg the ceilmg
not s by haw much fat there problem can send 50 ents pnce for gas
w th a long s amped self
s underneath th e sk n
These factors mean that
Regardless of your we ght f addressed envelope for The the royalty checks probably
you have a reasonab e Health Leite number 4 2 will get bigger
amount of fat depos ts Jogg ng Exert on and Sud
But there IS something
underneath your sk n you de Dea th Send you request crunmal m all of this Sitler
to me m care of th s
are too fat
smd The taxpayer lS be ng
At your he ght we ght and newspaper P 0 Box 1551
duped Future general ons
age I would be reluctant to Rad o C ty Stat on New will have to pay for t
suggest that you try to d I York NY 100 9
anymore If your abdomen
and chest are flabby as you
say I would prefer to see you
gradually develap a good ex
ere se p ogram that w 11 help
bu ld up r.our muscles
As you use calor es for ex

HEALTH

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'I1IE DAILY SENTINEL

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6 06 25

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S 9 3
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MVN CIPAL RECEIPTS
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Names •••

-~-...._

__

DEVOTEDT0111E

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERTIKIEFUCH
City Ell lor
OAVII) BUSKIRIC
Am-crtilt.c MaUlt
Published da y excep Sa urday
by The Ohio Va ley Pub ~hlng
Compeny Multimedia ln
1
Court Sl Pomeroy Ohio 45789
Bu.slness Off ce Pt)one 992 2 56
Edi ona Phone m 2 57
Second ass postage pa d a
Pomeroy Ohio
Na or1a ad erttsing represen
taUve1 l.andon Auoc ates 3 0
Eu aA e Clevellnd Ohle 441 $
Subii.TipUon rates De vered by
canie whe avallllble 75 cents per
week By Motor Reate where carrier
urvi ~ no a 11 abl One month
$.125 Byma nOh oand W Va
One Y 11
S27 50 S x months
t 4$0 Th ee mon h! f!$0
Elsewhe e $32 00 y a S x mon hs
$700 Th ee mn h
$900
Subscript on pri ce n ud s Sunday
T met!i-Sen n

COMMENTARY
Donald F Graff

Old and new problems
By Don Graff
Pose a problem for Amer cans and they start look ng for
a def n t ve answer
Whatever advantages that nat onal nst net may have n

the elf cent conduct of pnvate and publ c affairs at home
t s m tself a national problem when t comes to fore gn

alia rs In the complex problems of natiOns there are
rarely def n t ve answers Fore gn pol cy n the long run lS
not a matte of str v ng for fanal solutions but an endless
process n wh ch to resolve one problem usually means
open ng the way to new problems

Tl b t of w sdom extens vely paraphrased s from one
Henry KISs nger as recently re ayed to us by The ~w
York T1mes James Reston It was de vered apropos the
Egypt an Israeli peace treaty and IS part cularly relevant
to the likely consequences In the M deast even should the
part es meet w th opt mum s uccess n unplemenhng the
sett ement
Suppose the withdrawal of Israeli forces from the S na
and evacuatiOn of settlements are ca rr ed through w thout
h tch Suppose Isra el ga ns access to all the 011 t needs
through Egypt Suppose Jerusa em and Ca ro not only
open diplomat c relat ons but effect vely coord nate
pol c es as the bas s of a de facto tr part te alliance
nclud ng the Un ted States Suppose Saudi Arab a and
Jordan go along and suppose even that some form of
acceptable Palestm an self rule s worked out for Gaza and
the West Bank
Should all th s come to pass would 11 resolve Mideast
problems and remove the reg on as a world problem

Hardly For the more than 30 years that the Palest n an
ssue has kept the M deast n o on the verge of war I has
a so prov1ded the mot vat10n for at least a pretense at Arab
un ty Remove t and nter Arab d1ffereces that have been

s nunermg or heat ng up could come to a sudden bo I

Cons der Lebanon V rtual Palest n an occupat on c vtl
war and Syr an ntervent on destroyed the country s

del cate Moslem Chr st a n ba ance Re-estabt shment may
be mposs ble But as an alternat ve absorption by Syr a
w th or without an autonomous Chr st an area under
Israel protect on would be unacceptable to many Arabs
Lebanon could be the cause of a new Mideast confronta
on among Arabs themselves

Or take the proposed Syr an Iraq merger It may never
get beyond proposals If a ll were qu et on the Israel front
Damascus and Baghdad m ght prefer to resume the r
feud ng w th renewed v gor But should they overcome old
d fferences the r un on m ght not be so welcome to the r
Arab neighbors 0 I r ch Iraq n the past has coveted even

cher Kuwa t sandw ched between it and Saudi Arabia
Saud support has been suff c en! defense for Kuwait But a
renewed threat from a Syr an Iraq union would be a more
ser ous matter
And then there s Iran the full 1mpact of Its revolution
st ll to be fell A cha n react1on of lslarmc fundamentallst
ant Western movements could shake and even overthrow

conservative and rad cal governments al ke
In world sens t v1ty to 1ts regional prob1elllB theM deast
today bears some resemblance to the Balkans of a century
ago The Cockp t of Europe was the focus of illlense
nterest by great power foreign offices throughout the long
decades when converg ng Imperial mterests of Austria
Russta and Ottoman Turkey compounded the squabbling
among the Balkan states themselves Eventually Austnan
and Turk sh power vanished and Russia sh fled much of 1ts
attent on to a higher stakes game As strategic and
econom c significance declined the Balkans became a
fore gn affairs backwater
It •s not nconceivable that somethmg sumlar could
come to pass in the Mideast That could be one
consequence of the lndustr al world s breakmg free of Its
dependence upon M deast o I
It s in such developments the products of t me and
changing c rcumstances rather than calculated pobcy
that the closest th ng to a del n I ve answer to a foreign
pol cy problem Is usually found
I

Pastore becomes Cincy's darkhorse candidate
TAMPA Fla (A P )
Frank Pastore qu etly and
somewhat surpr srng y has
become
a
darkhorse
candidate loc the Cincmnall
Reds starting p tchmg
rotation based on hlS per
formance m sprmg trarmng

in the news
MEMPHIS Tenn (AP)- ElvlS Presley s daughter father
and grandmother will get the bulk of the late s1nger s estate $7 6 mill on after taxes
Valued at $10 I milhon upon Presley s death m 1977 the es
tate grew to $15 million the followmg year wtth record royal
ties and other income according to probate docwnents filed
last week Expend lures ncludmg taxes left $7 6 million on
July 31 1978
Pres ey ass1gned the bulk of his estate to hiS 10-year-old
daughter Lisa Mar e his grandmother Minrue Mae Presley
and h1s father Vernon Presley
The s nger s former wife PriSCilla was not a benefic ary
But she has rece ved a total of $192 000 m alimony and child
support payments and also got $12 000 from an msurance pol
cy ElVIS and PriScilla Presley were married m 1960 and d
vorced m 1973
HAMBURG West Germany AP) - A former Nazt off1c1al
Wider Adolf H1tler "i'YS Sll' WIIISton Churchill was an un
reachable model whose courage was the envy of Naz
propaganda mm1ster Joseph Goebbels
In an article published by a local Sunday newspaper Albert
Speer the Naz d ctator s armaments nwuster sa d Britain s
wartime prune mmlSter and Hitler were alike ill many ways
but there were unportant differences
Speer who spent 20 years m priSOn for war crunes sa d that
Churchiil always knew how to surroWld hunself w1th a1des
who had mamtamed !herr mdependence Nat Hitler
When I wrote my memall's I used to read a few pages of
Churchill every mght to emulate the unreachable model
Speer added
BOSTON ( AP)
Arthur Fiedler got a rousmg welcome
when he clunbed atop the conductor s podrum for the f rst time
s nee Wldergomg bram surgery last December
The 84-year-old leader of the Boston Pops orchestra con
dueled members of the Pops and the Boston Symphony n a
four-rnmute rend t on of The Stars and Strrpes Forever on
Sunday and drew a standing oval on
The appearance at Symphony Hall came durmg a fund-ra1s
lng concert for the symphony that was teleVIsed m the Boston
area A symphony spokesman sa d Fiedler s return concert
w th the Pops on May I will be broadcast live nationwide on
public teleVIS on stations
DAYTONA BEACH Fa AP) -Entertainer Jerry Lew s
abruptly canceled a coocert at the Daytona Beach Jru Alai
Fronton sa}'lng he was unhappy With stage arrangements
made by the promoters
A spokesman for the event sa d more than 2 000 tickets sold
at $10 and $8 would be refunded today He said most of the
t cketholders unaware af the late cancellation showed up at
the scheduled startmg tune Sunday
Jac Flanders a spokesman for LewiS srud Jerry was here
and would have liked to have performed but 1t was unposs ble
Jerry IS sorry
He was JUSI unposs1ble to deal w th Concert Showcase
spokesman Bob Sava~e sa d

Royalties supplement income

any excess body fat that you
(169660 st ll have At the same t me
you II be develop ng muscles
63 J
6
9 s a
There w ll be a trade-off ef
4 550 00
8
fe t The end result m ght be
e
280 854 52
that your we ght would be
9
6 96
about
he same but more of
28 85
your body would be muscle
Fu d
53 0
4 625 5
9 22 56
and you would have less fat
ng
&amp;
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5
23 500 00
nd
32 92
that nvolve us ng the cl est
62 58
muscles and the abdo nen
6 a3
9 82 50
s nee that seems ta be your
560 64 96
greatest concern
a d Agen y
You mrght also take a good
F nd s
G an o a
look at your legs and see f
P e sona Se
63 3 00
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Gen e a F und
99 5 4 5
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those It sounds to me ke you
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30 SV 89
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An Re ess on Fund 3
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96 2 9
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Ad
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Wa
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98 530 89
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4 625 5
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0 3 2 38
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240 48
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6 4 90 strength This way you can
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369 35
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23 500 00
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shoulders for good posture as
Pe sona Se
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COO 00
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8 980 80
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-•

GNADENHUTTEN Ohio
AP - In the spr ng
Enunett Kail s thoughts turn
to e&lt;~llectmg maple sap for
syrup after a wrnter of
watchmg the deer and other
wildlife cross his 102-aere
homes te
Sprmg sununer or fall he
thinks little of the gas well 200
yards off his front porch that
prov1des the 70-year-old Kail
w th
$30 $35
monthly
royalties to supplement
Social Secur ty
In July the p1pe and
fittmgs will be hidden by corn
m the 11-acre f eld he rents to a
ne ghbor But m March t s a
rusty protrus on on the wmter
landscape a srgn of the
nation s energy needs
perhaps
an
unsung
monwnent to the claun of this
nearby village to being the
fll'st small town m Oh10 to get
a gas system m 1925
Kail retired from lumber
and o I f eld work, owns one of
Oh1o s 14 197 wellS which last
year produced a Iota
115 239 .,'l73 000 cub c feet of
gas
In 1978 for the fll'st time m
history these wells wh1ch
produce gas used wtthm the
state came under federal
control w lh enactment of the
Federal Energy Act and ts
comparuon the National Gas
Pol cy Act The laws were
designed
for
energy
conservat on and pr ce
deregulation
But the rules have the
effect of making all gas an
mterstate commodity and
~sting ts pr1ce They set
ce ling pr ces on gas and lie
them to mflation and the e&lt;~st
of livmg
Guy S tier partner m
Stocker and Sitler Inc the
explorat on firm that drilled
Kail s well sald most gas
from new wells m Ohto had a
pr1ce of about $1 75 per I 000
cubic feet liefore the law was
passed
Under policy act rules the
pr1ce of that Ohio gas rose to
$2 07 March 1 the deadline
the law set to apply for well
certification Ceiling pnces
among the elght categ&lt;r1es of
producmg wells range from
30 cents to $2 21 as of March 1
Kail said he lrles to follow
the laws on gas and oil but ac
knowledges he can t keep up
with them Ne1ther can
George Fillman 60 even
though the six wells on the
I 050-acre farm he runs With
his brother means more than
$10 000 annual royalty
Income For one thing Fill
man said he can I understand
why they are paid $1 54 cents
per 1 000 cubic feet of gas
from old wells and 30 cents

mare for
dnlled
produce
volume

gas from two wells
last year Both
about the same
from the same

reservoll'

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today s Monday March
26 the 85th day of 1979 There
are 280 days left m the year
Today s h ghl ght ill
history
On thts date in 1918
Marshal Ferdinand Foch of
France
was
named
commander of Allied anmes
m World War I
On this date
In 1793 the Holy Roman
Emp re declared war on
France
In 11104 land the United
States acq!fted from France
In the Lwisiana Purchase
was div ded into the Territory
of Orleans and the Territory
of Lows ana
In 1913 more than 1 400
people perished In floods In
Ohio Indiana and Texas

TRY OUR

EXTRA
CRISPY
KENTUCKY

FRIED CHICKEN

CRCM'S

FAMILY RESTAURMT
992 5432

Pomero

0

f nding the key that :uuld
make hun a Nat onal League
starte
Coach F1scher and 1 have
been workillg all sprmg to
cocrect my rushmg I rush
my lead shoulder when l sta t
my delivery

her p h ng ua hes
have worked on the p oblem
for three years He (F scher
has solved t n s x weeks
But that was ust a
mechan ca l change the
former Cal forn a h gh school
s a made He also co reeled

St. Henry upsets Mansfield
COLUMBUS Oh o AP Colwnbus East has rev ved
that old sports ax1om One
great nd v1dual player
camot be a good team
Clark Kellogg s 51 pomts
were the most a prep per
former had scored ill St John
Arena m 23 years but East s
deep T1gers
balanced
prevalled over Kellogg and
h s Cleveland St Joseph
teanunates 74-65 Saturday
The Class AAA state cham
pronsh1p was the fifth for
East and marked the runth m
the last 16 years for
Columbus C1ty League
schools
You can t beat the team
concept when everyone IS
contr buting We knew we

couldn t do that much to stop savor ng the1r f rst state
Kellogg so we concentrated basketball t Ues
on holdmg down the other
There s never bee n a
faur sa1d East Coach Larry more glonous o exc t ng
Walker
feel ng that I ve ever
Kellogg s 21 baskets and exper enced
Caach Jahn
pomt total Wiped out twa of Watkins sa d of Jefferson s
Jerry Lucas b g school 65-63 dec1s on over 1977 tr
champ1onsh p game recocds tleholder Cleveland Lat n
St II the 6-foot.a Ohio Player
Fran Gu lbault St Henry s
of the Year couldn t hide h1s
disappomtment
Defeat takes a~~:ay from
th1s performance said the
Oh o Boys H gh School
superstar who will attend
Bask elba
either Oh o State or
Bv
The
Assoc a led P ess
M ch gan Kellogg has_no
Stale Champ onsh ps
timetable on announcillg h!S
Safu day
AI 011 o Slate s
final college deciSion
S John A ena
Meanwhile
Dayton
Class AAA
Jefferson m Class AA and St
Co umbu s
Eas
4
Henry m Class A were C eve and 5 Joseph 65
CLASS AA
Je e so
C e e and La n 63

Exhibition results. ..
Exh b I on Baseball
AI A Glance
By The As soc a led P ess
Satu day s Games
Hous on 5 M nnesota 4

Sl Lou s 7 P I sb gh 6
Man ea 7 Lo s Ang e es 4
C nc nna
New Yo k
N) 4
Ph ade ph a
A
9
To on o A 4
Ba I mo e 3 Kansas C y
8os on

Ch cago A 6

New Yo k (A) 0 De o I 7
Oak and 5 SeaH e 2
Sa n 0 ego 12 Cle e and
Ca

o na

5

San

F an

• 0

Ch cago N 9 M waukee 6
Sundays Games

M nneso a 9 Housto n 4
LosAnge es 0 A a a9
0 nn ngs

De o

A

To on o

Lou s 6

S

J\1\on ea 9

Ph ade ph a

New Yo k

N

P sbu gh 7 New Yo k A)

2

Bos on 5 C nc nnat 4
Texas 3 Ba mo e 2
Ch cago A)
2 Kansas
ty 6
M waukee 9 Qakla d 5
N

7 Sea

e

C e eland 7 San 0 ego
San

F anc sea

10

CafonaB
Monday s Games
Boston s Houston a

Cocoa Fa

At an a
s N-on ea
Daytona Beach F a
S Lou s s C nc nna
Tampa Fa

a Sl Pe e sbur~ F a
Del o vs Ph ade ph a a
Fa

P t sbu gh vs Kansas C ty

aFMyesFa
Texas

s

a
a

M nneso a vs Los Ange es

Ba

mo e a

M am Fla
New Yo k A vs Ch cago
A a Sa asota F a
San D ego vs C e

e and

Tucson A
San
F anc sea

a

vs

M waukee a Sun C ly A z
Ca

o n a vs

Oak and a

Sco lsda e A z
Seat e A
s

Ch cago

NaMesaAz
Seatt e B a A zona S

n

Tuesday s Games

New Yo k A vs Sl Lou s
a!S Peesbug Fa
Boston vs Los Ange es a

Ve o Bea h Fa
Ba

m o e vs IW:Jn ea a
Day ana Beach F a
Kan sas C y vs P tsbu gh
at B aden on F a

Ch cago A

nn ngs

c

To on o s New Yo k N

c nna

A

s

Cn

at Sa aso a F a
Ch cago A B vs To on o
at Dvned n Fa
M nnesota
s Texas a
Pompano Beach F a
Oak and s C eve and a
Tucson A
Ch cago N s M waukee
a Sun C 'I A z
Cal fo n a s Sea e a
empe A z
San 0 ego s San F an
sea a Phoen x A z

Ph ade ph a vs Del o al

Lake and F a

Ba be

on 66 C eve and
G en e 6
AI Oh oWes eyan

n

New Yo k ( N vs Af an a
a West Pa m Bea ch F a

n

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent
SALT LAKE CITY AP -Gary Garland Zipped a JWDP shot
through the basket cappmg an 11-pomt comeback that sent
DePaul mto a tie w th favored Indiana State and the
Uruvers ty of Utah s Spec al Events Center exploded into a
frenzy of wild excitement
A packed 15 410 spectators leaped from thell' red-colored
seats A priest began waving a program frantically A grand
motherly w0111an was ]wnpmg up and down She was the wife
of DePaul s revered 6!&gt;-year-old coach Ray Meyer
People waved pom poms Some threw streams of colored
paper out of the stands Cheerleaders did Dip flops The d n
was deafenmg
ThlS was just one of the scenes that marked the NCAA
basketball championships drawmg to a close tonight With a
match between No I unbeaten lnd1ana State and tough
pol sed Michigan State
College basketball IS back
It has weathered the ignomy of the gamHiravlng scandals
of the early 1950s and 1960s wh1ch tainted dozens of the na
tioo s fmest mst tutions destroyed All Amer ca players and
sent v olators to jail II has overcome the threat of bemg
smothered by the pro National Basketball Assocration with 1ts
million -&lt;Iollar paychecks and bemg reduced forever to second
class status m the public eyl'
Make no mrstake about 1t The college sport now has turned
fuU cycle Interest generally th1s past season reached perhaps
Its highest peak ever stoked by a banner crop of indiVIdual
talents and fluctuatmg fortWles of major teams
Upsets abounded The No I rankmg was passed aroWld like
a hot flat ll'on Nobody could get bored
Tl}e NCAA championshrp now must be rated one of the half
dozen top sports spectacles gammg a place alongstde foot
balls Super Bowl the World Series ill baseball the Kentucky
Derby Indianapolis 500 and Masters golf
While C&lt;lllege basketball is boonung the pros have been
sagging In public appeal
I think people generaily are getting fed up With the pros rn
all sports and are tummg mdre to the amateurs sard Don Oh
Imeyer executive producer for NBC Sports which 1s airmg the
NCAA final They read about these half-million-dollar sala
r es and then they turn the d al and get a ho hwn performance
The pros don t generate the excitement that the college games
do
The pros are too bland too stylized and predictable People
like human drama - kids playmg w1th a bandaged leg as
Curtis Watkins did for DePaul They en)oy the Win one for the
G1pper stuff
What Is happerung to the NBA •
There are many negative aspects to the pro game Ex
pansron has dramed the league of talent So blgh class com
petition has largely disappeared The season of 82 games is too
long Players get bored and the games become meanmgless
Wllil the fmal stage of the playoffs T cket prices are
exorbitant

Un ve s fy

A ko S V n en Sl Ma y
Newa k 25

AI Day on F eldhouse
C n

Hughes 20 0

Champ on sh p

Sa

3p

3

day

m

Af Canfon F e dhouse

Sa u day

Chag n Fa s 53
ess 49

Af Bow ng G een

0

Slale Un vers ty
De phos S John s
egon St ch 42
At Ofterbe n Co lege

56

Co umbus

46

Blue Jays
own 84-7
record

62

G eene ew
C ass A

ames ow

33

At Wooste Col ege
Pe e s 52
Mans e d S
Eas Ca on 42

A Bowl ng G een

CLASS A

State Un vers ty
Ho ga e
Ro k o d Pa

k

way 45

A Olle be n College

Fa t Lo am e 22 2

s 0 d

Wash ng on

Buc keye T a

ey

At Dayton Fe dhouse
No h Be nd Ta y o

F day

F dav

Ha

e Wes Musk ngum

44
23
2 2

Ma ns e d S Pe e s 22 2
s Hoga e 2 2
pm

Na a e

Fa

Zanes

s Co umbu s Ha ey
p m
hu sday
De oh os S Joh s 24 0
s Chag n Fa s 23 0 9
pm
hu sday
Champ onsh p
a m

5

CLASSAAA

p m

C assAA
t&gt;o h Bend Tay o

Hughes

na

Day on S ve s Patterson 5

CLASSAAA
Ak on 5 V nee S Ma y
92
s Ey aSeno 23
p m F day
Babe on 222 vs Cn

F day

SALT LAKE CITY AP
Th s s Larry B rd s las sho
and he hopes to make h s
best
We rea bun h of guys who
have stayed ogethe
says
Sta e s
g m
Ind ana
superstar and I fee l we can
wm th s champ onsh p
Ton ght s the n ght that
Brrd and h s Ind1ana State
p ayma es have walled for a
the f nals o the
season
NCAA baske ball playoffs
And t surely stacks up as a
sto ybook end ng o the 197879 college season p t ng
B d stop-ranked Sycamores
aga nst t he fourth ranked
M ch gan State Spa tans a
couple of h gh-ro I ng teams

At Canton F eldhouse

Oh o State

c nna

p m

6

38

2 2

9

pm

By The Associated Press
SALT LAKE CITY AP)
Fullerton State s Bobby Dye
and Dave Games of Det.ort
have reportedly nd cated
nterest n the basketball
coach ng job at San D ego
State Uruvers ty
The two were among a half
dozen potential cand dates
who met w1th Cedr c
Dempsey the Aztecs new y
named athletic drrector
Dempsey m Salt Lake C1ty
for the NCAA basketball
champ onsh1ps srud he would
meet w th s x cand dates over
the we ekend and would
mterv ew the f nalists next
week m San D ego
At frrst I wasn t sure
whether we were making
progress or not but now 1 am
As people hear more ahout
the s tuation m San D ego
the r nterest seems to
grow Dempsey sa d
The school1s seekmg a re
placement for Tim Ve21e
who was fll'ed earl er thiS
month after f1ve years
ATLANTA (AP
Cliff
Drysdale credited a new
serve Wllh helpmg h1m
overpower Rod Laver fo the
title m the Tenn1s Legends
Champ onsh p here
Drysdale 37 took the f rst
stop on the newly created
tour for players 35-and-over
with a ~ 6-3 6-4 v1ctary
Saturday rught over the 40..
year-old Laver
My serve was a little
erratic In the beglMrng I
wasn t getting enough first
balls m But I began putting a
lot of pressure on my serve
and t started gettmg better
S8ld Drysdale
It was a new serve and I
was wondermg if 1t would
hold up under the crunch he
S8ld explauung he throws the
ball h gher and Hfts hiS head
a b1t mare
I couldn t return h1s
serve sa d Laver He was
servmg very well It seemed
anytime I got him rn trouble
he d put two b1g first serves
m and I d be back to scratch
agam
The v ctary was worth
$6 000 to Drysdale Laver
received $4 000
Fred Stolle and Charlie
Pasarell captured the
doubles title by defeatmg Ken
Rosewall and Roy Emerson

6-36-4
STORRS CoM ( AP
The
Un verslty

•

Connec cut overcame a one

goal delle t w th 20 seconds
left n regu at on play and
then se zed a sudden-death
overt me v1ctory n the
champ onsh p game of he
UConn lntercolleg ate Indoor
Soccer Tournamen
Joe Morrone s overt me
goal gave UConn s Red
team the 2-1 Will Sunday over
Rhode Is and the defending
champions The Husk es had
tra led Rhode Island 1-j) un l
Elvm Comr e scored on a
header w1th 20 seconds left
Morrone s goal came w th
3 23 left m the second over
time

3

30

s

5

If you could v ew the zoo
scene f om he pe spec ve of
the hl ena s cage you d know
why he spends his day
laugh ng

Transactions
Weekend
Transac ons

Spo ts

By The Assoc ated Press

BASEBALL

Amer can league

ME TS

CH CAGO WH TE SOX
Sen

Va e

Bu ns p cher fo

B

o

owa

ne

Amer can

he

Assoc a on

DETRO T T GE RS

Pu chased he con act of Ed
Pu man
h d baseman
ca che
om h e Ch cage
C bs and ass gned h m a

e o

E a ns

Assoc at on

he Amer can

M NNE SOTA TWIN S Sen
Te y Sh eenan lJob Vese
Kev n S an e d a d B ad
Ha ens p he
Sa Bute a
ca che a d S e e Doug as
ou e de
a he
m no
eague camp fo
eass gn

ment S gned W e No wood

au f e de
and
Danny
Goodw n des gna ed h f e

NEW YORK Y.ANKEES
Ga y Sm fh au e de

Sen

and Rage S ag e p che
Co umbus
o
he

a

n

erna ona League Sent T m

Lo a p lche
wood F a
camp ex a

o he

Ho y

m no
eague
eass gnmen

TORONTO BLUE JAYS
C a med Bobby B own
ou f e de on wa ve s from
the New York Me s Re eased
C yde W gh p che Sen
Bu ch Edge Ma k W ey Jell
Byrd and M ke Da
p
che s B an M ne and
Gene Pe a
catchers

Bu ch A be

mghm

keasen na

p t h ng

Seaver was s hedule&lt;l
p tch Sunday aga ns Bos o
bu wake up w th a s f ne k
Pas or e sad
I d dn t know un

"'

Pastore ga e up a
nn ng home un to J tn

HOCKEY

Naf anal Hockey League

WA SH NGTON CAP TA LS
Reca ed M ke Ma son e
f om B ngham on o
he
Amer can
Hockey
League

w ng

COLLEGE
EASTERN KENTUCKY
Nam ed

J m

ass s an footba

Ta na a
oa h

an

COLUMBUS Oh o AP
1hey e toughe than most
boys earns says Chagrm
Falls Coach Bob Ohlr h
marve ng o e De phos St
John s powerful
g r is
haske ball squad
Oh ch must deve op
s ategy to dera the Delphos
express ha has rolled by 72
of ts last 73 opponents m
three seasons The Blue Jays
own an 84 7 reco d n the four
years that the sport has bee
plaY.ed on a ournament le el
n Ohio
The Blue Jays are 24-&lt;J th s
wm er go ng nto he 9 p m
state sem f nal
ga me
Thursday aga nst Chagrm
Fails 23-&lt;J
Defe nd ng c hamp on
Columbus Ha tley 21 2
col des w U North Bend
Tayio 23 I n the operung
Class AA sem f na game a 7
pm Thu sday
ln
he C ass
AAA
sem f na s F day Akron St
Vmcent St Ma y 19 2 plays
Eyra 23 a
pm and
Barberton 22 2 angles With
C nc nna Hughes 20-&lt;J at 3
pm
ln the Class A sem f na s
Mansf eld St
F day
Pete s 22-2 battles Holgate
21 2 at 7 p
while Fort
Lo a n e 22 2 and Old
Washmgton Buckeye Trail
21 2 co de at 9 p m
fhe Class AA
e game
w II be played at II a m
Sa urday fo o"ed by the
Class AAA f na e a 3 p m
and
he
C ass
A
champ on sh p at 7 p m
S ru hers won he 978
Class AAA tournamen crown
and Ada was he Class A e
holder Bo h we e elunma ed
ear er m post sea son ac on
th s season
Fran Voll who I as
developed S John s dynasty
sard af his cu ent squad
Th s s the most exper ence
we ve had We e very well
schoo led We pial good
pressure defense make a
good rans on to offense and
have good shoote s
The Blue Jay rmgleaders
are four year regulars Deb
E wer Jeanne Arnzen and
Sue Youngpe er A four th
player Laura Groihouse I as
bee a three yea star e

dom ma ed by th ee of he
f nes playe s n the game
Bo h earns ha e playe s
w h exti emely ta l p of es n
the h gh Oymg Bu-d and he
g I ed ead ng men rom
M ch g n S ate Ea n
Mag
ohnson and G eg
Keiser
And bo h teams have been
p ayu g ome of he r best
baske ba
of he lea
a hough lnd ana Sfate has
had a oup e of lose ails of
a e n th s tou namen

The Sy amo es vrr ua un
knowns a th e s art of the sea
son made a name fo hem
se l es desp e c t c sm tha
thev pla) ed a soft-tou h
chedule
R ding B rd s coa Ia s he
M ssou Vallel Confe en e
hamp o s had a tough time
p ovmg ti e nse es and had
o wm a 33 of therr games
nc ud ng a two-po n dec s on
o e A kansas ill he M d11 es
f nals and a wo poillt v c o y
o er DePaul n the na onai
s m f nal Saturday
The Spartans meanwhile
s uggied a th e s art of he
season los ng ha f of he r
f st e g B g Ten ga mes
was afte an embarrass ng
11-po n oss to conference
doorma No thwestern tha
Jud Heathco e s le•m
tra ghten~d tseif out
If any oss p obably
helped us
t was lhe
Northwestern loss
Keiser
sard Sunday at a pregame
news confe en e

I

Dwyer but after tha allo
us wu h Is str k ng ou
and wa k ng onlv one
I fe was n ontro a
I avmg John Ben
beh
thepa egavemea o of
f den e Pasto e sa d
the m no eagues you
WO k W th anybad)
really knows U a nu h a ~
se illg up hi te s the ~
John does only shook u
off we andboh u e
was for a s ke u

The Reds u ma te
4 g v ng up an unea

'&lt;I

n the nm h mrung o send
game nto extra nn g a d
~edi ng he wnnng un
he 1th Bu ha d d no d n
Pastore s co f denc
I can wa fo he sea n
to s a t 1only hope I " he p
he Reds he sa d
THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDAL Ohio
AP
Captam B lly Bud ed
a the way o w n the
eatu ed $7 500 a owa nce
ace a This iedow Sunda)
fhe 6- ea -old ge du g an
the 5" fu ongs n 06 on an
off t ack or h s 1 th v c or
n 33 areer s arts defeati g
Magn f cen Don by a ength
The w nner pa d $3 20 $3
and $2 20 Magn f en Don
eturned $6 40 and $3 60 a d
Flee Islander pa d $2 80 to
show
The owd of 6 328 wage ed
$826 444

DAY

wa s

ear y n tile season and y, e
had a chance to do th ngs It
p oba bly woke us up
Tl e Spa tans didn t res
un I they had a b d o the
l'i CAA tournament sewed up
And the) didn let up after
they 11 ere n the M deasl
Reg onal
overwhelm ng
La na
Lo u s ana State
No e Da ne and Penn and
a cumula ng a 25-j) reco d en
route o the nat onal f nals
fl e ha np onsh p game lS
a pub c ty man s del ght
rna hillg vo o he game s
bes p aye s n B r d and
Johnson
I could no bel eve The
B rd sa d Heath o e after
watchmg I m score 35 po nts
Jand ou rune ass sts and
g •b 16 rebounds wh1le
eading ln di•na States 76-74
v ctary ove
stubbo n
DePau
\\ as JUSt as
mag ca m M ch gao State s
01 6 emba assmen of
Johns on

Penn s
pun h ess
Ivy
Leaguers w h 29 po nts 10
ass sts and 0 rebounds

n

Pa
n
buu

Ask me about
Life Insurance
for10days

Families
MIKE SWIGER
49 S Th rd

M•ddleport 0
992 7155

~ ~'"""""'

Ped o He

nandez and W e Upshaw
and Don P ske outf e de to

he

m no

eague fa

y fa

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T a 68 La n as e F she 50
At Dayton A ena
Fa
La am e 52
Sou h
Webs e 4

Sports briefs.

because he was a one po t

•thlete

Spartans are
favored tonight

Class AAA
AI Sandusky H gh Schoo
E y a Se o 50 Ash and

S Hen y 64 Mans e d S
Pe e s 5
Oh o G Is H gh Schoo
Baske ball
By The As sot ated Press
S a e Tournamen at

Pas o e sa d he was neve

n good a around sha pe

l neve p ayed any u h
spor but base ba and the
never did anyth ng but p
fh s wm er though
en
on a s enuou
we g
Ira rung p ogram
Now l follow the Tom Se•
ver theo y on unn ng I
Ll
run as much as I an
He Soave ~o ks
hard and d 1 ke to pa e
myself after hun Jus w

hours before game une
was go ng to star
e adrl"'

Satu day s

65

I was always overwe gh
too I used to we gh 230
pounds bu I n a 206 now
he sad

The Daily Sentinel

Reg ona F nals

C ass A

a Ve o Bea h Fa

C ea wa e

A an a .a Texas 2

mentor sounded I ke an echo
Th s has to be the greates
feelmg ever and I d like to
make a hab t out of 11 Our
goal th s season was to be the
only remam ng undefeated
team m the state
The RedsklliS from Mercer
County achieved !herr aun
ro lillg up a fma 26-0 record

Champ onsh p
Sa day

some phys ca l problems
J had a roo problem that
bo hered me and I d dn
really star o h "" well un I
the latter par of 977 wh h
he spent w h he Reds Cla ss
AA club at Th ee R vers n
the F.as e n I eague

SPORTS

Tournament results

Day on

Ch cago

Sitler meanwhile lS con
cerned about the federal
rules and !hell' effect on the
600 700 wells h1s f rm
operates ill Oh o
The new federal rule~
haven t yet delayed any
royalty payments but S1tler
says
that s a distinct
poSSJbilty
There are so many gray;
areas m the law Sitler sa1d,
so many ambigUities theo
language IS so vague we don ~
know what to do
One problem for Sitler andJ
hls professional peers s!
gett ng wells classified
properly Well depth age
productiOn volume and
location f gure in determm
mg the claSSJf cation Some
wells may qualify for two or
more classifications Each
claSSification has a different
pr1ce scale
Explorers and producers
are also concerned that a
surplus of natural gas IS
developmg compared to the
af
national
shortage
emergency proportions two
years ago

He leads the pllchillg staff
ould U row str kes sa d
m strikeouts and Vlctones Pastore 21 who has spent
and has allowed JUSt one run four years n the Reds farm
m four appearances cover ng system I feel] can p ch n
11 nnmgs
the b1g eagues
I came to sprmg tra n ng
I ke several other Reds
w th the mtention of JUSt pitchers he cred ts pitching
showmg b1g league e&lt;~aches I coach B11l Fischer w th

Pomeroy, 0.

BUILDING SUPPLIES tnDI
HOME IMPROVEM

D

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO
The Department Store
Of Bu1Idrng
Since 1915

�..... ' -

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4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 26, 1979

Sports briefs.

•

a- u~e 1.111uy '&gt;I!Dun~t,

Poet's Corner

•

By The Associated Press

winter-tour championship.
GOLF
NEW ORLEANS - John
JACKSONVILLE , Fla. McEnroe pocketed the $30,200
Lanny Wadkins shot a par 72 winner's purse by sweeping
that produced a 5-stroke Roscoe Tanner 6-4, 6-2 for the
victory in the Tow-nament singles championship of the
Players Championship.
$175,000 New Orleans Tennis
Wadkins became the first Festival.
man in history to break par
McEnroe, seeded third in
for 72 holes on the marshy, singles, also teamed with
windswept SawgrMS layout. Peter Fleming to beat Stan
He finished with a 283 total, 5- Smith and Bob Lutz 6-1, 6-3
wtderpar. Tom Watson was forthedoubles
·
second with a 1-under 71 for championship.
.
288.
ATLANTA
Cliff
LAS VEGAS, Nev. Drysdale defeated Rod Laver
Naocy Lopez fired a 2-under- ~. 6-3 , 6-4 to win the Tennis
par 69 to climax an uphUI Legends Championship.
climb to the championship of
SAN JOSE, Costa Rica the $100,000 Sahara National Bernie Mitton of South Africa
Pro-Am golf tournament.
·defeated Tom Gorman 6-4, 6TENNIS
1, 6-2 to win the International
.'&lt;.~$;.'f..,~~ •..
NEW YORK - Martina Nav- Fciendship tennis
ratilova beat Tracy Austin 6- tournament's $10,000 prize.
·,) BOWLING
3, U, 6-2 to take the $275,000
RACING- The three top racing winners of the annual Pinewood Derby of
MILWAUKEE - Johnny
Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245 are pictured with their awards following the annual
Pet&lt;aglia finished with four
competition Thursday night. They are from the left Steve Cassell, first place, a large
strikes to defeat Bill Coleman
trophy; Tim Cassell, second place, and Richard Long, third place. Tim and Richard
206-203 to win a $100,000
received smaller trophies and desk flag sets presented by Cubmaster Jack Bacon.
Professional Bowlers
Association tournament. ·
AUTO RACING
NORTH WILKESBORO, N.C.
National
- Bobby Allison won the 400Basketball Association
AI A Glance
lap Grand National event, aJ.
By The Associated Press
lowing him to take over the
Eastern Conference
No. I spot in the point
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel. GB standings for the national
&gt;c . Washington
championship.
50 23 ..685
Allison, whose right front
. Phila.
41 34 .547 10
wheel
snapped off just as he By HERSCHEL NISSENSON including IOth~nning singles MarinerS.
New Jersey
35 39 .473 15111
by Pedro Guerrero, Vic
AP Sports Writer
Paul Hartzell, obtained in
New York
31 45 .408 20'1' crossed the finish line, beat
Davalillo
and Von · Joshua the Rod &lt;;arew trade, became
Young
Bob
Horner
is
going
Boston
28 45 .384 22
Richard Petty by 3.6 seconds.
Central Division
His victory was worth 180 back to his corner - which that produced the winning the first Minnesota pilcher to
San Ant.
43 32 .573
points.
.
... happeri. to be the hot corner run.
go seven innings, yielding two
Houston
41 32 .562 1
Don
Robinson
and
Enrique
for
the
Atlanta
Braves.
COLLEGE
HOCKEY
runs
and five hits as the
42 '34 .552 m
Atlanta
The
slugging
third . Romo scot~red six hits as Twins downed the Houston
Detroif
29 45 .392 lJlh
DETROIT - Neal Broten
Cleveland
28 46 .378 14'1&gt; scored the game-winner baseman, the National the Pittsburgh Pirates Astros 9-4. Doyle Alexander
New Orleans 24 52 .316 191/2
early in the third period as League's Rookie of the Year . tr immed the New York allowed one run and five hits
Western Conference
the University of Minnesota in 1978 after belting 23 home Yankees 7·2 and Greg in seven innings as the Texas
Midwest Division
Kan . City
43 33 .566
defeated North Dakota 4-'l for runs in just 89 games, has Lozinski's grand slam homer Rangers edged the Baltimore
Denver
42 33 .560 •;, the Gophers' third NCAA spent the spring at his Ari- highlighted a seven..-un sixth Orioles 3-2.
Indiana
34 41 .453 81!:~
zona home, locked in a inning and the Philadelphia
hockey championship.
Rick Wait.,_Yictor Cruz
Milwa ukee
34 41 ..453 8h
contract
dispute with the Phillies crushed the New and Sid Monge teamed up on
COlLEGE BASKETBALL
Chi cago
28 47 .373 14lf&gt;
. York Met. 11·1.
Pacific Division
GREENSBORO, N.C. -: loge Braves .
1
Seattle
46 27 .630 .
, Jorge Orta drove in 1five ~leJe\~~hi~~~~ansa~~oun~~~
But
he
planned
to
head
for
Nissen and Nancy Lieberman
Phoenix
45 JO .600 2
ignited a second-half rally . the club's West Palm Beach, runs with a grand slam and a the San Diego Padres 7-1,
Los Ang .
.t~ 31 .581 3112
that sparked Old Dominion to Fla., training camp today triple - he also had a double scoring all their runs off
San Diego
41 34 .547 6
Portl4!nd
.40 3.4 .5-41 6,12
a 7:Ml:i victory over Louisiana and said he would make a - leading the Chicago White Randy Jones in the first four
Golden St.
33 43 .434 w;, Tech for
the national decision later whether to Sox over the Kansas City innings.
x __, clinched division
women's
colJegiate · participate in any exhibition Royals !Hi.
Vida Blue allowed one run
Saturday's Games
games.
Dave Rozema allowed one · in five innings as the San
Chicago 1.48, New York 1.43, baskethall championship.
"I can be ready for opening riJn and five hits in seven in- Francisco Giants beat the
2 ol
FARGO, N.D. - Roberta
New Orlea ns 139, Cleveland
day
," Horner said. "I'm not nings as the Detroit Tigers california . Angels 10-8, while
Williams had 27 points to
117
25
pounds
overweight and I defeated the St. Louis Larry Hisle drUit!d two home
pace South Carolina State to a
Houston 120, Atlanta 116
certainly
don't
have a bad cardinaJs 11.0 and newly runs and Sal Bando hit one,
7U8
triumph
over
Dayton
Portland 100, Kansas City
Jim
Dwyer powering the Milwaukee
98
and the women 's small arm," he added, charging .acquired
Sunday's Games
that the Braves had spread homered as the Boston Red Brewers past the Oakland A's
college championship.
Boston 103, Philadelphia 94
SALT LAKE CITY - The nunors to that effect "to Sox edged the Cincinnati 14-0.
Denver 123, Los Angeles 113
National
Association of scare other teams off from Reds 5-4 in II innings.
New Jersey 99, Chicago 88
Otto Velez' three-run
Ken Holtzman, trying to homer in the eighth inning
Washington 116, Detroit 107 Basketball Coaches named trading for me."
Indiana 121, San Antonio
The Braves didn't miss pitch his way into the Chicago capped a 34-hit slugfest and
Indiana State superstar
11 3
Horner's bat Sunday, despite Cubs' starting rotation, enabled the Toronto Blue
Bird
the
winner
of
the
Larry
Phoeni x lll, Golden State
Eastman Award as the a Hl-9 exhibition loss to the surrendered one run and five Jays to outlast Montrealll-9,
95
hits in six innings of a 4-1 although Jim Mason of the
Milwaukee 122, Porfland nation's top collegiate player Los Angeles Dodgers. Barry
110, ot
of
Bonnell
collected
four
triumph over the Seattle Expos hit for the cycle.
and DePaul Coach Ray
Seattle lll , Kansas City 101 Meyer the Division I Coach of Atlanta's 16 hit. but the
Monday's GamesDodgers rapped out 17,
the Year.
No games scheduled

\

'lo'

I -.~~~--_..............,~~

·-----------,
I Pro l
IStandings I

Horner pl~ns to head
for training camp today

'

'

''

Tuesday's Games

Boston at Cleveland, n

Philadelph ia at

NBA's .west has
•
race .gomg now

Wash·

ington . n
Housfon at Chicago, n.
Indiana at New Orleans, n.

San Diego at Seattle, n.
By The Associated Press

National Hockey league
Campbell Conference

Patrick Division
w I . 1 pts. gf ga
)( -N. Y. Islanders
46 13 14 106 331 195

N. Y. Rangers

39 25 9 87 296 253
Ph lla. 36 23 14 86 254 225
Atlanta 38 28 7 83 295 257

Smythe Division
Chi cago 26 34 13 65 221 262
Vancouver
22 41 11 55 204 279

St. Louis 17 44 12 46 230 319
Co lorado 14 51 9 37 190 312
Wales Conferen(:e
Adams Division
Boston 40 21 12 92 288

Buffalo
Tor onto
Minn .

238
33 25 15 81 248 237
30 32 12 72 237 234
27 34 11 65 241 249

Norris Division
x-Montreal

47 16 10 104
Pitts . 32 28 13 77
Los Ang . 31 31 11 73
Detroit 21 36 16 58
Wa sh.
21 38 15 57
x -

304 187
255 255
259 260
237 268
250 310

clinched div ision

Saturday~s

Games

Boston 5, Detroit 2

~

Montreal 3, Washington 2

'• Pittsburgh 3, New York

~

Islander s 3, tie
.. • Chicago 3, Toronto 3, t ie
·~ Minnesota 3, Colorado ' 1
~'

i:

Buffalo 3, Los Angeles 2
Sunday's Games

Chicago 3, Colorado 0
Detroit 2, Toronto 1
Atlanta 8, St. Louis 2
Philadelphia 7, Wash ington

4

New York

Islanders 2,

Pittsburgh 2, tie
M ontreal

Rangers 0

1, New

York

Vancouver 2, Minnesota
Monday ' s Gamt!

Buffalo at St . Louis, n.
Tuesday's Games

Philadelphia at New York
Rangers, n.

Nlontreal at Atlanta , n.

Pittsburgh at Minnesota. n.
ChicaP,o at Colorado, n.
Detro1t at Vancouver, n.

NCAA Coltege
Basketball Tournament

Blance
By The Associated Press
National Semifinals

Saturday
At Salt Lake City
Michigan St. 101. Penn 67
Ind iana St. 76, DePaul 74
National Championship

Monday
At Salt lake City
Champiionshlp
Michigan St . (25·6) vs .
Indiana St. (33-0)
Third Place

Penn (25-6) vs . DePaul (25 6)

II'

t'

By ALEX SACHARE
scored a season-high 28 points
AP Sports Writer
against hisform er Los
Suddenly it's the wild, wild Angeles teammates. But it
West in the National was David Thompson who
Basketball Association with keyed a third-period surge
just 6\io games separatlng the with nine point s as the
top seven le81Tl8, one of which Nuggets erased a six-point
won't make the playoffs.
halftime deficit with a 43·
Seattle has the best mark in . point quarter.
the conference, 46-27,
following Sunday's 111·101
victory over Kansas City. But
Bucks 122, Blazers 110
the other six teams are
Brian Winters scored seven
bunched within 4\io games of of his 24 points in overtime as
each other, and a dogfight is Milwaukee outscored
shaping up for the final two Portland 17.,) to win only its
weeks of the regular season. seventh game on the road this
The Kings have led the season.
Midwest Division for nearly
SliDs Ill, Warriors 95
the entire season, but injuries
Phoenix outscored wtderto Tom Burleson and Scott manned Golden State 16-2 in a
Wedman sent them into a 5lio.fllinute span of the middle
late-season slump. The periods to break the game
Denver Nuggets climbed to open . Paul Westphal led
within on~·half game of Ph~nix with 25 points and
Kansas City by rallying to , Walter Davis added 23.
heat the Los Angeles Lakers
Bullets 116, Pistons 107
123-113 Sunday.
Washington clinched its
Portland, which lost to Mil- first Atlantic Division title as
waukee 122-110 in overtime frontc.ow-t stars Elvin Hayes,
Sunday night, now linda itself Bobby Dandridge and Wes
the odd team out in the West Unseld combined for 68 point.
race. The Blazers are oneSpurs 121, Pacers 113
half game behind surprising
Reserve Billy Knight
San Diego in the battle for the scored 33 points as Indiana
sixth and rmal playoff spot . handed slumping San Antonio
In other games Sunday, the its fourth. loss in a row at
Ph~rllx Suns beat the Golden
home and its sixth loss in
State Warriors 111-115, . 1he seven games.
Washingtoo Bullets topped
· Cellics 103, 78ers 94
the Detroit Pistons 116-107,
Rick Robey hit for a
the Indiana Pacers defeated seasonhigh 27 points and Bob
the San Antonio Spurs 121·113, McAdoo added 25 as the
the Boston Celtics downed the Celtics · snapped
Phl!adelphla 76ers 103-94 and Philadelphia's five,-game
the New Jersey Nets beat the winning streak.
Chicago Bulles m8.
Nets 99, BuDs 88
Sonlcs Ill, Klnga 101
The Nets raced to a 35-16
Seattle guard Gus Williams lead and were never in
matched his career high with trouble against Chicago,
38 points as the Sooics woo which was playing its third
their fifth in a row.
game in three days in three
cities.
Nuggets 123, Lakers113
Denver's Chatlie Scott

r·--r.-lr"COMPTON~-o:o~--1
' .

I

oi=FICE

OI'TO.METRISJ'

.

to 12,2 to 5 (CL.OSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EA~T, COURT
,sr., POMEROY:·
,.

L

rtOU.RS:9:30

----·-~ ·

CHEER UP
When the day is dark and dreary ,
And the clouds are hanging low,
When my heart is sad and weary,
And my soul is full of woe,
Then I need a friend to cheer me,
And I find that Christ is near,
And I know that He can hear me,
For He whispers in my ear.
Chorus,
Cheer up, cheer up my weary child,
Don't you know I wUI give you aid?
I hear His voice so meek and mild,
Cheer up, cheer up, be not afraid.

l' harll'l'
wa s drapt•d in memory of
Mrs. Erlit h Retzin~ at lht'
Tut!sday night met•ting of
Chesler Council 32:t
Daughters of America , hel&lt;l

Attendance at the morning '
services at the Free
Methodist Church March 14
was 81. Choir members
present were 12. Pastor Cecil
Wise wUI be the speaker at
the local church on March 18.
Mr. and Phil Phil Wise of
Beverly attended services
Sunday at the local church
d visited Swtdliy with his
pa ts, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Wis , Chester.
Mr. yatt Schaefer of Mt.
Vernon spent the weekend
with
parents, Mr. and
Mrs. rman Schaefer. .
Mt and Mrs.
well,
er
Mrs. Emma Fox were
guest Saturday
g of &lt;
Mr .
s. Johnny

feel sorry for your family and
friends.
To explain more effective
ways of dealing with depression like that experienced by
the unemployed engineer, I
am sending you a copy of my
new hotline, "Fighting
Depression." Other readers
can order copies of this
newsletter by sending 50
eents and a stamped, selfaddressed envelope to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 475, Radio City Station,

TRY OUR

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Engagement announced

Report given on·mission

Independent

provide policies which
afford financial protection
In case ot loss.

But, we also have a vital
interest In los·s prevention.
as should .our clients . We
encourage care, caution
and safety .... preventive
measures whlth can keep
that car accident from

Turns ·one

committed .
Flr:evention saves life,

limb and properly ... and .•

helps ·control lns'urance

costs and premiums.
When losses do occur,

our policyholders can count
on protedlng and serving
in time and need. But we

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best policy.

9P2-2143
102W. Main
Pomeroy

992-5432

.'

WA...RI·DRYBI
·:u,

r.OI

C:ONSOII

on Til
n;
·,l)

II

( IJ I I 1 1\IC.IIlJ\11:1
ii!O',J 1'1\0tll

Ill

f

Hll,IHI\101{
'• 111[1

Sl 'l f D OlJf f N
HI f\VY IHJ I Y
WI\SHFR {1 flllYrH

. 'Jil8
J', UJ II

J\fliVIIIl/\1

.."'
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fietback
in the
driver's sea
at City Loa~.

Stacy DaviS

When you need money 11 ' j
keep your car~' ;
ror
any good
tan. ,
to us. We handl
·
loans quickly, easily and \
with consideration. You ,
ciln borrow with trust : 1
\
where people ~ with i l
ti-ust. City Loan &amp; Saving
We find Ways to help. !i] S

•'·
aTY IDAN ··:c
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·,
EST: 1912

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and save 75¢*

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• Weather tight bond
• Choice of paintabla, white
clear or Bathtub Caulk
,

Cartridge Now ·$5,49
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Your Net Prlc:e $4.74 ·

125 E. Main Sc. • 992-2171

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Loans to 140,oo0 throup 1
The Cl1y Loan CompallJl

...

Upright wllh
8-way DIAL·A·NAP

$69!~EL,
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Dlat·A-I..pe rug heltllt
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dual beg prevonta clogs,
keeps auction atrong
• Brilliant headlight
• Power-driven 12~nch
beater bar brush roll

;:::=::::. • Long lasting

•, {qq

•

prac ti(' l',

all

Mrs. Emma Ashley thanked the t·ourwil for a gift and

ft:•a \ured a deror&lt;-tled c;,tke

With the gift, he reveal!- the
startling new way that lovers
have for proclaiming their
love to each other:
Since this is a first person
novel , Isabel describes the
experience: " ... He had read
it himself first; he wanted to
be sure, he said , of what he
was giving me. He told me I
must look very carefully
because he had plucked hairs
fr om the rims of his ears and
s.tuck lhem on the pages he
hked. He said it was a
nervous habit; he tweezed the
hairs in his ea rs when he
read, ... it would remind me
of him .
'" Ithinkthere's a little skin
on the end of th em that makes
them kind of adhesive,' he
satd . That made me love him
again."
Isabel gives Hugh a Swiss
army knife .
"He opened the blades .. .
and looked at lhem with .a

pure, material absorption
that would not have been
possible for me, for my
falher, Father Mulcahy , or
for anyone who had been
brought up in the catholic
ChW"ch. "

Right there you realize the
social, religious and moral
gulf tha t separates these two
ear hair-crossed lovers.
Some friends dropped by
lhe other night, and by way of
being provocative I took out
my Swiss army knife and
passed it around .
The good looking blonde divorcee did find the little pair
of tweezers.
Turns out she hates Jane
Austen. And everybody that
night talked about a different
book, one about the black
plague, a new international
best seller that everyone is
talking about.
I hate to think what they
used for book markers then.

I

..

'~&gt;

.'

1424

'Dtror applies to cartridges otaltlcQne rubber
M~lanta and silicone rubber balhtub caulk.

Ill tIll(;! HI\ 1OH

I
I

and punch were served. Pooh
invitations were sent out
prior to the party. Stacy wore ·
a pink rosebud pinafore dress
for the occasion.
At the party were Judge
and Mrs. Buck, Jenny and
Julie, Jean Davis, Clarice
carson, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Keebaugh, Janice and David
Fetty, Clara Redman, and
Stacy's parents, Jason and·
Tanya Davis.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Fritz Buck, Clarence
Davis, Dick Carson, Mike
Fetty, Bertha Randolph and
Clarestine, Levanchia Cain,
Mr. and Mrs. ~ddie Young
and Amy, and ll'tr. and Mrs.
Richard Roseberry, Scott and
Jeff.

\

lilt)', I PnOl Jl

I
1

nne

Cake, ice cream, mints, nuts,

'"

l

_,.IGIRATORS ·RANOa· tRIIUIS

Chun·h Educational httild ing, Fort St..
Marietta. SIIJC'l' then· will ])l'
Mt·\)Hftli st

l'i-!n ls d11r111g lwr ret·~·nl
h1 ·spit&lt;r li i'.at ion . fl WHS no1ed
thai tlwrc will ht• a s ile nt &lt;J Ut'~
t1"11 ;.1! tlw 1\ pril :I meeting to
f&gt;p Ctmclucfl•d br f]w C.! !CKI of
llw Onlt-r l'nln;nittt·l· . Tht..·n•
will al sn bt• Jli'Hdit..'l' at ttwt
mt·d ing for n •n •iving the
rwtirwl and stall· officers
Qu;rrtt•rly birthd;_ty s wt•n•
ohsL•rvcd with the t•(•]ehn:rnts
hl'ing l'ice~ lt..•d at a :-;pedH l
table. The n • was i:l gift &lt;:It
l'&lt;:teh plan• and the t&lt;Jble

Dance discussed

happening, that building
fire from starting, that
home burglary from belng

FAMILY RESTAURANT

. CMM'S

Mrs .. Lt·orw H(msley, cuun~

By HUGH A. MUUJGAN international best seller
AP Special Correspondent everyone is talking ·about."
RIDGEFIELD, Conn. (AP)
And no wonder. It lets read- From time to time I like to ers in on the new way lovers
dip ·Into the latest paperback have of letting each other
best sellers to find out what's i&lt;~Jow they're in love .
"Final Payments," as you
going on beyond the reach of
the daily newspapers and must know, is the story of
evening TY news reports.
Isabel Moore, a nice conventJimmy Carter, Den g bred Catholic girl who at 30
)Ciao ping ( Teng Hsiaoi&gt;ing) fa ces the world with "its
and Khomeini may grab the promises of passion and
headlines and the prime time pleasure" after looking after
Jennifer Ohlinger
exposure, but they're not her invalid father, who has
where it's at in the beauty just died.
. parlor or on the supermarket · "Hwtgry for life," she falls
checkout line.
desperately in love with Hugh
A columnist can't afford to Slade, a Quaker, a veterMr. arid Mrs. Troy Ohl- fiance 1s a paratrooper in the fall too far behind in the latest inarian, married to a ,
inger, .Jr., 103 Peacock Ave., U. S. Army, 82nd Airbourne trends if he intends to go on shrewish wife but devoted to
Pomeroy, are announcing the Dvision, Fort Bragg, N.C.
being provocative and on the his children. He is graying,
The wedding will be an payroll.
going bald but has "a classic
engagement and approaching
Which is why I am grateful back," whatever that is.
marriage of their daughter event of April6 at 7:30p.m. at
Jennifer Lynn, to Spec. 4 the Pomeroy Church of Christ to Mary Gordon's "Final Anyhow , it turns Isabel on.
At Christmas, the illicit
Martin Allen Shuler, son of with the Rev. 'John McArthur Payments." As the blurb on
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Shuler offi~iating.
the cover blurbs, this is "the lovers exchange presents. He
'
The CU$tom of open chureh
Lilngsville.
gives her "Northanger
Abbey" - ubound in green
· .The bride-elect is a student will be observed.
GARDEN CLUB
leather, wilh pa ges mottled
at Mei"s High School. Her
TO MEET
like a plover's eggs." He
The April meeting of the knows she is hooked on Jane
Middleport Garden Club will Austen.
be held on Tuesday, April3 at
the social room of the
A report on the Kagoshima scripture from the Psalms firehouse in Middleport, 7:30
Christian Miss ion in and devotions by LaDonna
p.m. Hostesses will be Mrs.
Kagoshima, Japan was given Clark were scriptures on joy.
Fred Kessinger and Mrs.
by Mrs. Holly McArthur at
Mrs. Thelma Osborne gave Rita Hamm. The program
the Tuesday night meeting of the secretary 's report, Mrs.
will be presented by · Mrs.
tbe Evangeline Missionary Janet Venoy , the treasurer's David Bowen and featured at
Society of the Pomeroy report along with a report on
the meeting will be a display
Church of Christ.
the mother-daughter banquet of Audubon bird prints by
The Society has not heard to be held in May. Naomi Ohl - Mrs. John Davis and an ar·
from Walter and Mary Max- inger was selected to take rangement by Miss Nellie
ey who are in Japan as yet, care of the sunshine box. Mrs. Zerkle.
but Mrs. McArthur did show Clark reported .on !he nower
several special gifts which ,.-fuijd and also noted cards
In 1953, a new vaccine to
she had received from Mrs. I which had been sent to the
inununize
against polio was
Maxey while they were in col- sick.
announcal
by Dr. Jonas Salk
lege together.
There was a reading ,
Mrs. Betty Spencer, presi- "Wilids in the Willows" by of the University of
dent, opened the meeting Mrs. Smith and a quiz on Pittsburgh.
In 1972, Malta and Britain
with a reading "In the Jon,ah by Mrs. McArthur.
Garden of Gethsemane" by [i'ollowing prayer by Mrs. signed an agreement keeping
Helen Steiner Rice. She read Osborne, dessert and coffee the Mediterranean fortress
were served. A towel shower island of Malta within the
was held for the church Western defense syStem.
In 1977 , the Chinese
camp.
marked the
Communists
Others attending were Mrs.
!50th
anniversary
of the
Gertie Bass, Mrs. Eva
0
death
of
Ludwig
van
A disco dance to be held on Dessauer, and Mrs. Pauline
Beetho~en by lifting a ban on
Kennedy.
April 28 at the Pomeroy
the composer's music.
Elementary School was
discussed by Mrs. Sonya Ohlinger at a recent meeting of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at
A party was held at the
the Meigs Inn.
home of Judge and Mrs.
Mrs. 'Ionya Davis explainRobert Buck of Pomeroy
ed about the community club recently in celebration of the
awards program of WMPO,
first birthday of their niece
noting that there is a 13 week
Stacy Talisha Davis:
period in which to ac·
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
cumulate points·. The contest
Reg. $19.95
Jason
Davis, Route 3,
ends on June 28.
Pomeroy.
6pc.-Tool Set
Cheryl Crow had the
A Winnie-the-Pooh theme
Included with
cultural report. She introducwas carried out with a Pooh
ed JoAnn Newsome who talk- cake, table appointments and
EUREKA
ed on diets and dieting. centerpiece with streamers
upright
Janelle Haptonstall · and all carrying out the party
Cheryl Crow were hostesses.
vac purchase! ~
theme. For her first birthday
wish a "I" candle with a pup·
py dog attached was used.

ins·u rance agency, our
primary function Is to

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

Hoffman , Rutland, daughh•r

of the Ia!&lt;· Mrs. Jlctzing.

ll'nd .

'

KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

t'hsPrVi:lm't' wa!" Mr~. RtTnin•

j ·tl •il' . presidl·d at ! ltt·IIH 'I'IIIlg
tl 11ring whidr liiiH' u pr~wtkc
for lhl' ( li ~l rie't rall y 0 11 i\pdl
21 w::rs annnum·t•d for April I
at 1 JUII . rtt tht..• Gilman 1\ Vt&gt; .

and offil'l'f'S in
Dislr'ict 13 are urgt..•cl \IJ at~

PREVENnON
IS THE
BEST POUCY
an

Pn•."•'llt for lht• lll('illor i;!l

o n] ~·

You know the elections are
over. All the campaign signs
still desecrating the land·
scape are a sure reminder.

As

HI llw hall.

member.-;

Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church on March
18 was 79.
Sunday evening, March 25,
the !ibn, "Tbne to Run" will
be shown at 7:30p. m. at the
local church.
Ms. Emma Fox, Mrs. lola
Howell and Mrs. Ruth
Douglas, visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fox of
Zanesville. Mr. Fox is very
ill.

When my journey here has ended,
And I dwell on earth oo more,
I'll see Jesus who ascended
To the Peaceful Golden Shore ;
He is ~ving there in glory,
And will come for me some day,
Till that time I'll tell the story
How I hear His sweet voice say Composed in March 1950, By Mrs. Riley Pigott, Long
Bottom, 0. 45743.
The above 50ng ,was gi_ven to me after I had visited a very
sick lady friend.
·

~

f'HF.STF.R·-'1'1~&lt;·

was 1
hostess to eleven members of
the Laurel Cliff Better Health
Club Thursday evening,
March 8.
Recently someone has ,
throw six full bags pf garbage
over the guard rail under the
bridge on the Rt. 7 by-pass.

Soon I find myself a singing,
And my heart does overflow,
For I hear the joy-bells ringing,
And, they cheer me as I go.
Jesus is my Friend and Saviour,
I will serve Him every day
While I'm living in His favor
I can hear His sweet voice -

VISIT FOR RIRTHDAY
Mr. cwd Mrs. J.t• wi:;: Hrtrris
anrJ Mrs. Nora RicP cmd Sun ,

Chester Council 323 met Tuesday night

Laurel Oiff
News Notes

[)o~~S~S, 2t~r,sv~:obs

When affliction overtakes ine,
And I suffer grief and pain,
Often-times temptation makes me
Sadly murmur and complain ;
Then I turn unto my Saviour,
For He, too, temptation bore,
He forgives my sad behavior,
And I hear His voice ooce more -

some answers from readers.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
don't (eel very s~rry for .that
qnemployed engineer who
called the hot line.
I know a lot of men who are
out of work . They make the
best of a bad situation instead
of sitting around drinking and
watching television. That
counselor should have told
the guy to quit feeling sorry'
·
for himself.
DE)Il;! . READER - That
p.\Jach never helps. If you
e il often, l.can only say 1
~ eel sorry for your family and
Karen Blaker PhD.
friends .
To explain more effective
Is Joblessness ACrisis?
central motivating factor ways of dealing withbest of a
By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
usually leaves a large void.
bad situation, instead of silDEAR DR. BLAKER - In
In fact, unemployment ting around drinking and watone of your recent hot-line even proved trawnatic for a chin g television. That
colwnns, a counselor lavi sh- man who fabricated the ex- counselor should have told
ed inordinate pity on an perienc-e.
the guy to quit feeling sorry
engineer who had been out of
In 1973, the 57-year-old for himself.
·
work for two years'.
president of Haverford ColDEAR READER - That
The man still had a lot go- lege took a sabhatical to work approach never helps. If you
ing for him. He had a wife, exclusively at menial jobs. use it often, I can only say 1
food to eat and a roof over his Here is hoW he reacted when
head.
he was fired as a porterIf he had rea lly been down di shwasher:
and out, I could have
"l 'd never been fired and
understood her reaction . But I'd never heen unemployed.
in this situation , I wonder For three days I walked the
why he even called a crisis streets. Though I had a hank
cenler. Iwouldhavebeen em- account, though my
harrassed to bother anyone children's tuition was paid,
unless I had more serious though I had another salary
problems.
and a job waiting for me back
DEAR READER - If !he at Haverford , I was
man had not chosen to demoralized."
"bother" the counselor wilh
But rather than relying on
his problems, he would ha\&gt;e these experts, I would like to
been "down and out" within a hea r from readers about their
few weeks- down on his luck unemployment experiences.
and out of his house. How did you lose your job?
Unemployment was a crisis What were your reactions?
for that man, whether or not How did you keep yourself ocyou think it should have been. cupied? What were the reac·
Experts say his severe lions of, your friends and ·
reaction to enforced leisure is family?
not that uncommon. Ev.en · Maybe unemployment is
though the trappmgs of hfe not as trawnatic as the exmay remain during perts say. But I have my
unemployment, the lack of a doubts. Watch this column for

CHOICES

•

New York at Portland, n.

CELEBRATE UFE
Make· every day a holiday,
Celebrate blue skies,
Celebrate the trets and grass,
The bees and butterflies.
Celebrate the birds that sing,
The flowers that smell so sweet,
The sun up high above your head,
The earth beneath your feet.
And celebrate the smiles you see,
The cheerful worda you hear,
Celebrate each moment,
You spend with loved ooes near .
Celebrate the happiness .
That frienda are always giving.
Make every d.!iy a holiday ,
~d celebrate ... just llving!
Mrs. Amanda Bradley

JWuuwepon-l:'omeroy, u .. Monday, Mar. 26, 1979

sAYRE

HARDWARE
New Haven. W.Va.

INGELS
FURNITURE
&amp; .JEwELRY
"Tun~

in One Store"

106 N. 2nd
Middleport,.O,

1

,..

-~

',.,..',f.,i 1
... ~

Hill , \\'t'rl'

111&lt;-tdl' hy Mrs. Margttn·t 'futlk. ThP honon·d group in-

dud&lt;•d Mrs . Marcia Keller,
:'vlrx Opal Casto, Mrs. Mabel
Van Mder. Mrs. T utt11· , Mr·.s.

Goldi e Wolfe.

and

Mrs

ra thcrint' Millr r.

C.ntee Wl.I S

asked by Mrs . Leona Hensley
and there was group singing

of " Happy Birthday." those
nmned were Mrs. Thehnct

Mr. Hiirt'IS' .sistlT, l n:&gt; ne bin ~
tmn;m . The ~ro up took a
dct·orCJt£' rl cake w1th them to
Srnithvilll'
pi cke&lt;t up tlw
other fuod for a dinner after
&lt;irrivi ug there . Thev
joined by Mrs. )int'""m'" ''/

""d

son, Hobert Bartels
for tlw ce lcbrdtion .

TRY OUR

EXTRA
CRISPY
KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

CR&lt;M'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

Pomeroy. 0.

Optometric Vision Center
110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
6 t4-992 -l279

Office Hours:
Monday - Friday
9-12 -1-4

Examinal;ons:
by Appointm ent

on St

""""e of the Hth birthd"v of

Wllit{', Mrs. Ada 1\'e utzling,
Mrs. 1\da Mol'ris, Mrs Erma

Cleland, Mrs. Helen Wolf
Mrs. Mary K. Holter. Mrs:
Dorothy Ritchie. Mrs .
Elizabeth Hay~s . Julie Rose,
Mrs. Ma e McPeek, Mrs. 1\da
Van Meter , Mrs. Esllll'r
Ridenour, Mr s. Doris
Grudscr, Mrs. Inzy Newe ll ,
Mrs. Charlotte Grant, Mrs.
7.clda Weber , Mrs. Laura
Mae Nice, Mrs. Goldi e
Frederick. Mrs. Ada Bissell,
and Mrs. Ca rolvn Holley.

in Smithville

PC~trick 's 0&lt;1y for tht• ohser-

Optometrists :

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

�,------"-4j'
So CI·a1

II

~

NO WASTE COOKED
CENTER SLICED

II

TAVERN
HAM

POLLYS POINTERS 1· Calendar 11

- Polly Cramer
Rusty Toilet Row I
By PnllyCramrr
POI.I.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POI .I .Y- There io o
ru ~t slt~in in t11e bottom of my
toilet howl and I would like to
know hi)Wto r emove it. -MRS.
R .W.B.

i

DEAR MRS: R.W .B. Havt.' Y!.JU trie d HcommerciHI

RANK CONFERRED - Pictured are the principals in the Sunday
afternoon ceremonies at the Rutland Church of Christ when the highest
rank in scouting was bestowed on Brent Bolin of Rutland. From the left
are Don Turner, Albany, and Roger Turner, Langsville, uncles of the
honoree; Hank Cleland, who presi~d over the ceremonies; Brent Bolin.

the honoree ; Pat Wood, Danny Will and Bob Arms, all of Troop 249, of
which Brent is a member. Arms is scoutmaster. The rank was conferred
by William Knight, Point Pleasant, M-G-M District Eagle Award
Representative.
-· -·-·----~·-··-

!

1

!?;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·&gt;:·:·:=:-:.:·:·:&lt;·:·:&lt;·:·:-:::} :

'!ji
·..i

Helen Help

I.,

·.. ·

.

.

'

It 's little' enough, as I won 't leave my husband: the children.
seem to lov_e .him. But' ·r · need at ' least one memory.
.SOUNDING LIKE A SOAP OPERA
·
DEARSLASO:
.
If I weren't a pure, upright eolumnist (sort of), I'd be tempted to say, ... Take a chance _: live dangerously; do something
wild and crazy jui;t once in your duty;filled existence."
But then corrunort sense and integrity prevail: Pedro might
feel less than thrilled at being hunted out in Puerto Rico
(perhaps he returned to a girlfriend there?) ; this fantasyisland flight could break up your family ; and consider other
dangers involved in traveling thousands of miles to throw
yourself at a man who can't even speak your language.
So .. . somewhat regretfully I must say:
I. See Pedro as a symbol of what you've Jacked in your life.
You aren't in love with him, but with the idea of being loved.
2. Try your darndest to vitalize your marriage.
3. If you can 't, don't stay together because of the kids.
They'll suffer as much as you and your husband do, in the long
run . -H.
READERS ALL:
Enough of soap opera scenarios; we need a ·bit of Ouff.
Herewith, anecdotes from my daily mail :
HELEN :
A somewhat oificious supervisor transferred to our office
from another plant, and one of the old-timers was given the
thankless job of showing him the ropes. After considerable
upstaging, O.T. said, "Tomorrow I won't be here, but if you
run into trouble, just call this telephone number."
Sure enough the snooty super found he wasn't as all-knowing
as he thought. He tried the number - and guess what he got
-Dial-A-Prayer! -DEN
DEAR HELEN.
As a Sunday school teacher, I hear some zingers. May I
share?
·
Asked to evaluate the class, a 6·year-old piped, " The teacher
must be Jesus' grandmother, because He's all she talked

CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY - Fred E. Larkins ol
Long Bottom observed his Blst birthday recently and his
family and friends honored him with a dinner party at the
Long Bottom Community Building. He received cards and
gifts. Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Larkins, Mrs .
Vera Weber arid Vida , Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkins and
Brent, Mrs. Donna Bogard, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weber
and Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. David Dailey and Rae Lynn,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weber and Mike, Mr. and Mrs .
Lawrence Johnston, Jr. and Jeremy, Mrs. Ethel Larkins,
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsal Larkins,
and Mrs. Sadie Larkins.
-

'J

Mr. and Mrs. Arland King
entertained recently with a
·party in celebration of the
. birthday of their daughter,
Marsha Beth King. Assisting
with the party were Mrs.
Karen Goins, Mrs. Sheila
Whaley, and Michl King.
A Holly Hobby theme was
carried out with cake, ice
cream and koolaid being
served. Games were played
with each child receiving a
favor.
Attending . were Heather
Goins, Melanie Beegle, Heidi
Caruthers, Traci Bartels,
Sandra Whaley, Kristin King,
. Tara Humphreys, Jay Humphreys, Aaron Whaley, Amy
Whaley,.and Neal Richmond.
A family · party was also ..
held at the King home ..with
. cake and ice cream . being
served . to Mr. and Mrs. Tony
Fowler and Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence, Middleport .

MONDAY
RACINE Summer League
program meet Monday at 7
p.m . at Racine Elementary
School for all adults
int~rested in program.
MIDDLEPORT PTA, 7:30
p.m . Monday night at the
school. Reading program to
be discussed. School pencils
and T.,shirts to be on sale.
RUTLAND GARDEN
CUB, 7:30 Monday, home of
Mrs. Vernon Weber with Mrs.
Lawrence Milhoan, cohostess .
Mrs.
Robert
Canaday to discuss "Salt
Injury to Plants" with Mrs.
Bernice Ledlie to give work
saving ideas, and Mrs.
Russell Little, current
gardening tips. Members are
to take flowering twigs for
identification and there will
be a demonstration on forcing
branches and ways to use
them.
OH KAN Coin. Club regular
business meeting Monday
evening at Riverboat Room
of the M~ljls Branch, Athens

vanilla and water, swish this
all around the ju~ smells so
nice. -FRANCES
DEAR POLLY- Do not be
too quick aboui throwing
away ol~lipover or cardigan

sweaters . A scar1 can .be
made by cutting off the botloin part and a pair of mittens
from the sleeves. The scarf
can be any width one desires.
To make the mittens open a
sleeve, fold it over on a table
or any nat surface and then
place the l1and of the person
the mittens are for on it.
Trace the outline of the hand
with the thumb only slightly
open. Cut out, sew on the
machine, turn over and the
miHen is finished. Do the
same for the other hand. MRS.F.G.
DEAR POLLY - I find it a
help to have a watering can
upstairs to use for watering
the plants that I keep there. I
have improvised one for this
by using an empty
dishwasbing liquid bottle that
has a push-down doser at the
lop. When plant food is added
to the water it does not spill
with this top. I find I am also
watering them more regularly. -BETTY
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank -yo u
oewspaper-coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her eolumn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

TUESDAY
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY
WOMEN, MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Riverboat Room, Meigs Office of
the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co. Program by an
Ohio University exchange
student. Silent auction for the
education fund.
OHIO
ETA
PHI
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the Meigs Inn . New officers to be elected.
MEIGS AREA · Holiness
Association will meet at the
Rutland Community Church
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Uoyd D. .
Grinun, Jr ., pastor of the
Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will be the speaker.
The public is invited.

$225

informatillf!
b;ochurt

The Young Adult Class of
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church met Thursday night at the Meigs County
Infirmary with Betty Will,
Leona Martin, and Etta Mae
Ellis as hostesses. Mrs.
Mildred Jacobs had the opening prayer. There was group
singing and Bible study. A
pienic in June was discussed.
Refreshments were served
by the hostesses to the Rev.
and Mrs. Floyd Shook, Mrs.
Jacobs, Steve and Becky
Eblin, Kathy Scarberry, Bobby. and Linda Foster, Randy '
and Darla Hawley, Riek and

CRISPY SERVE

LB.

TRY OUR

89C

IW.lARDS SAUSAGE ...........~.-.~1

SEED POTATOES
KENNEBEC 50 lbs; ss.29
IRISH COBBLER 50 lbs. ss.49
RED PONTIAC 50 lbs. ss.49

LB.

19

GARDENING AND HOME BEAUTIFICATION

KENTUCKY
' FRIED CHICKEN

THIS WEEK -IS OUR

CR(M'S

DEL MONTE SALE

FAMILY RESTAURANT
-

992-5432

· Pomeroy, 0.

o

w

1

of Success .

mal

SALE DATES MARCH 26-31, 1979

DEL MONTE

ASPARAGUS SPEARS .. ... ....................... ............ ...... .. '~;",;' 5 119
CUT or FRENCH STYLE
DEL MONTE

While you wait.

GREEN BEANS .............................................. .'........ 3 ~;:: 5100

P""· No Jlldden Cho,.••

DEL MONTE SPINACH. ;........................................... 2 ·~;::

full uppe r or lower denture.

791

Our One Low Pnce, No Hidden Ch•rges
for Custom Full upper &amp; f u/1/nwer de ntures.

DELMONTE

SWEET PEAS..........................................................J

•e-oz.
Cans

SJ DO

DEL MONTE TOMATOES .................................................... 2 ·~;::

Dr. Riviere pays for the coil!

Riviere Center

DELMONTE

VALUABLE
COUPONS
CLIP-N-SAVE

99c

STEWED TOMATOES.. :..................................................... .2 ~;::

Or. No11•l4 t'. Rl11tft
Dr. AJ . Staehli • Dr. G.J. StombauJh • Dr . C. W. lkal

Dt . G.W. Adam3 • Dr . G.A.. Moore
ilL- 949 [, Uwlnp1on Me.
Columbus, Oblo

89•

'

DELMONTE
3

SLICED. CRUSHED or CHUNK
DEL MONTE

g~~z.

69(

RES • CARDIN Al FOOD STORES

6

PINEAPPLE/GRAPEFRUIT •• PINEAPPLE/ORANGE
DEL MONTE

Diane Ash, Bob · and Patty
Baton, Ida Mae Martin ,
Charles and Dennis Mash
Mike and Sharon Wfight .
'

46 -oz.

JUICES·...... ~ ................................................. ..........................

Lim i1 ·~

.0.

59&lt;

z

can

The stale of Idaho entered
the Union on July 3, 1880. .

LB.

ROAST

'129

LB.

40 OL
Can

$139

99( !
~

0
~

~

0!1217700

06r§'

..\ l ~~
• CARDINAL FOOD STORES

$

FABRIC SOFTENER

'

79

BOUNCE ..................................................·~~· 1

'179

DETERG E NT

BOLD .....• !~:.

TnLEY TEA BA(js ..............................100-Ct$J7f
""•

79e

X!teliJ :lt•J:J

COCOA JIUFFS

15• off labal

COLLEGE INN

Can

•••

11D SlORES

BEEF STEW

GROUND
'BEEF

)"'l,tri ~oupell 15-oz.

cne coupOft t»*f l•mity

DINTY MOORE
. ROMONA WILLIAMS
Romona Williams of Columbus is at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray·
mond Snider, Racine,
recuperating from recent
surgery.

Jll!e}ij ;Jel:l

iiicwlfiArs- -- --~

PINEAPPLE ••••••··••·•·•••••••·····•••••...................... :............. ,........1• c~~oz. 49c

L1mlt orui 1'¥!tf1 cmrp!lll
Or'HI ccup;on P•r ,..,,11y

-.0.
z

12 -o:r.
8011:

!

99( 5:':

h~l··· 3/3 1/1 9
Good 11 C•li111l Aov•l IUu1 S1o•n

0921J700

00· 12 -0!i

0D ST ORE S

-

~

~

,_

£:J
~

CAROINA LI&lt;O"

'

STAR KIST

Heft¥
lAOS

• 30-count Kitchen
Bags

$lag
!'

HEAD LETIUCE
49~HEAD

FINE ASSORTMENT
• 40-count 2-ply
Trash Bags

OF STORE SLICED
LUNCH

MEATS

EGGS
Dozen

52e

PINE. MED . WIDE,X/WIDEorKLUSKI

..

ZESTA CRACKERS
1-LB:
59*

.·

8 -oz.

POMEROY BEN FRANKUN
Pomeroy, 0.

'2'·

• LIMIT2
WITH OlliER
PURCHASE

98e

1

$
Cartons
FRUIT BORDENS

.

DRINKS ...................................... ............. .";~;" 79'
BORDEN
SOUR CREAM ......................................... i:::; 79•

,,~

BOROENS

.

2% MILK•.-••••••••••••• ::~- ••• '1 69
VALLEY BELL

FROSTY ACRES

PLUS OEPOSI'T

CHOPPED BROCCOLI .

...

~~~~r:~~~ ~.~t 3 9 e

PWS TAX &amp; DEPOSIT

FROB TV

AcRES

COFFEE CI~AMER ............................. 2c'.·~~~.49 1
BORDEN
. TWIN

ll-CI. . , , .

.POPS ••••.••••••.• ::~ ••.•.

..

I

~ r oRE S • CARDINALFOOD ~ TOR E S

Jl{e)IJiJe):l

MRS. BUTTERWORTH&amp;

~

SYRUP

· 8 Pak 16 oz. Btls.

•

1IJ ~bring variety to'fl/PI

DAWN ...••...••.~~.z~. 99~

1-Lb.

•

00 BEN FRANKLIM ·

6. OL
Jar

PEPSI

. PEPSI
bcitlles

Can

494
Ill MAID NOODLES .......................... •••· . .
KEEBLER TUC CRACKERS .............. .'~;;~ 891

=~~-~~; ~~-~~:. 72~
=~::s~~~ ~.:.?.~:. 79~

8-16 oz

4 -Ct.
Pkg.

6%-oz .

Umft 1wo wi1h

....

$}59

SIRLOIN
SltAK ................ !.~~--

TU

.=~-~-~~~259

MEAT..................~~-••

,

FOR THOSE WITH GREEN THUMBS

WE ALSO HAVE AVARIOUS SELECTION OF SEEDS FOR

FRUIT COCKTAIL •• •••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••.... ,... ,, .... ,..... ,..,, .... ,,,....

BEEF STEW

200 East Main

APPLES·-··:··················-................ ~..~~-..~~~--- 79e
CARROTS........................................~. . ~~~ ... 2/39'

· TENDER AND CRISP

FRYER

BACON

MEIGS LOCAL School
District O.A.P.S.E. will meet
ai 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Meigs Junior High School.Middleport.

AN APPLE ADAY

Dr . W.O. Kimball • Dr. J .C . Murphy • Dr . w.,L . Stult7

::r. . . . . ~-~}149 ..

MEETINGSET
The Long Bottom Community Association will meet
Wednesday at 7:30 in the
Community building. Anyone
wishing to donate money for
the new chairs is asked to
telephone 985-3320 or 985-4275.

REO DELICIOUS

-

1-800-282-6410

your Frn ropy

POTATOES ..................................1.~..~=- ~~~- .. 89'

FAMILY PAK

Outsld• Ohio CoO Free 1-800-848-6478

of Dr. Rivitrt 's

HEAD LEITUCE ............................... ~.~-~----39'
SUPER JUICY RUBY REO AND MARSH WHITE
.
GRAPEFRUIT.............................. ~- -~~. }~~- .. 89'

99e
THIGHS ..•..•••.••••••.~~-.. 79e

EXTRA
CRISPY

FRESH TENDER LEAFY ICEBERG

FOR EVERY DIET U. S. NO. 1

For Complete Information Call FREE
Call today fo r

I

BREASTS•••..•...•.....L~;.

Dentures

[o r a

"SAVES YOU MONEY BY THE POUNDS"

CHICKlN PARTS

Custom full upper &amp; lower

$05

9

SUPERIORS WIENERS 12 oz. 89~

Young Adult Class met recently

And another corrected her: "No, sbe talked about God and
germs, and the t rouble is, I couldn't see either of them."
-Teacher
Got-a problem? An adult s~bject for di~ussion? You can
talk it over in her column if you write to Helen Bolte!, care of
this newspaper.

birl·hda. 11

I'

-

about."

iJ
11aS

County Savings and Loan Co.,
Main,_ Pomeroy. Oul-&lt;Jf.
town com dealers will
be
present
to
buy,sell.. trade collector items
durmg the social hour
preceding the 8 p.m . meenng.
Following' the business
session, a coin auction will
be 'heldandrefreshments will
be served. Anyone interested
in collecting coins or paper
money is invited.
REGULAR MEETING,
Eastern Local School Board,
7:30 pm. Monday in school
J;brary.
FRIENDS OF THE Meigs
County Libraries Monday
7:3() p.m. at Pomeroy
Library. A treasurer will be
elected due to Kathv Foster
leaving. The public is invited
to attend
TUESDAY
DREW WE:BSTER.Post 39,
American Legion, annual
birthday party, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at post home for
members of post, auxiliary
and families.
MOTHERS OF Southern
Local Junior Class Tuesday 7
p.m . at high school cafeteria .
Alumni banquet plans will be
ma&lt;le.

j _W.

Calendar 1I
1

US . . . By Helen Botteti!

T'msure.

I

1

!!

LANOTHERSOAPOPERA?
LIFE'S FULL OF THEM
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN:
.
I've fallen madly in love with a handsome Puerto Rican who
worked at my office and is 15 years my junior. My heart would
almost stop when I'd brush against him (accidentally?).
Sometimes I'd give him "motherly" hugs. We were mutually
attracted, very much so.
One night my car broke down and he took me home. He can't
speak English, but I gave the right "come-on" signals and he
turned into a little-used road. We almost made love until l
came to my senses, realizing I had a husband and three
children. After that, .he wouldn't speak to me- I don't blame
him for being hurt and embarrassed- and last week he left for
Puerto Rico.
·
Helen, I'm desolate and sleepless thinking of what I missed.
·You see, I can'.tstandmy husband . For 16 bleak years sex wilh
hirri has made me sick, but I'm a good pretender. !long for
someone to teach me what love is all about, for my marriage,
in all ways, is full of nothing. (It was a "have-to" l regretted
from the start.) ·
I've Saved sonie money. Would I be a terrible person if l
spent a week in Puerto Rico to fulfill my fantasies. (I know
where Pedro lives- through the office files.) He'd accept me

s0 Cl•a1

t&lt;&gt;ile t 'bowl l'leaner" That
should do il. As a word of warning, never · combine such a
clea ner with bleach or a
'ch lor i not er~
ho uoehold
deanser. Also, you might use
a paste made of hydrogen
peroxide and cream of tar·
tar.Rub in with an old
toothbrush and then
thoroughly rinse away the
paste. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY -- My
Pointer is for those who save
and use plastic jugs and containers. We use plastic jars in
our camper and they get so
smelly- especially after they
have had milk in them . When
I wash such " jug l rinse it
and then add a few drops of

I

Fresh Produce

•

'·

CHOC. DRINK .••••••••• ::~~.~ 159

0.11

Limit on•withCICIIfDOt'l

24 - o.J: .

on• coupon tlft, famll•

BOUle

0 STORES

i

/'

s1 09;=

ll!plr.. 3/ 31 / 7 9
~ · •t C1rdlnll Fl o~•l l! lu1 Su&gt;r11
00-1 ~-0~

:=
V&gt;

~

CAROINA LI~

�..'
-~

8- Tbe Dally Senllilel. Midill~i-"Jrt-Pornewy, 0 :, Moodily, Mar. 26 19'79

CHARG~

"

McKinley , who die

. ...

"I

I

I

I •

"

1967

2.25

1.10

3.00

1.75

l

BEDROOM ~n o bil e home,
lutchen fu rn 16hc d Pref er '"id
rl lr o g~d couple or elderly cou
r t(&gt; No pPts. 9'97 ·274Q

1975 CHEVROLET truck J SO V 8
Auto trans. , P. S .. P.B.. topper

New hres 26 000 miles $28.50
Each wt~rd over lht m:lnimwn 15
997-7596
wt:lf'tb 1.s • ctnLs per word per day . 1
Ad! runninl other than consecutive
t9 76 F-250 Ford tru ck and 1200 COUNlRY M081LE Home Po rk ,
days wtU be eharged .~~ot the 1 day
bol€-s m1xed hoy Call 9n -2877
RoutP. 3,J . north of Pomeroy
ra~te .

1ft memory, Card of Thanks lliKf'l
Obit\lllr}': I l'tnls per word, 13.00

rntnirnwn. C..h bJ 11dvaRL't1.

Mobile !tome sa•m And Yard ale!J
ate IU,.'Ctpt.ed only wtth cast! with
order. 25 t'i!f\t d&amp;IU'Je for ads carrying Box Nwnbe'r In Care of The St!nUnel ,

,.. Publlaher the r1ghl
lo l!dlt at "'je&lt;l any ods deemed ob-•
jed.IOIUII 'n]e Publisher wtll not be
resporuJible for more than one lneor-

rect inllertlon.

·

Phone f92..2156

1'/78 FORD

ion pickup. 8 It
bed Rod1ol tires $3575 A l
condition Co11992-1236
1

,

1973 DATSUN 610

sooo

4P.M.

Fr!doyafto1110011-

._

;

wakieat.&amp;.) ; ;- , - -.- -.
.

FOR YOUR candy ond coke sup ·
plies come to 'D1 's , Spnng
Volley Plaza . FRE ~as ter candr.
-classes. . Call446·2'134
. . . . RIDING HORSE and saddle 8
years old $250 9CJ2-7015 after

NEW LISTINGS -

OLD FU~NITURE , ic e boo:~s. bra ss
beds , iron beds, de!&gt;ks e t&lt; ,

households

Wrrte

M .O Mil ler , Rt. 4, Pom eroy or

pm of therr building in Basham

···"· -

Factory c.hpk4t guns only.

~ - - . ·- ~ -..,. . - -- - GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRlDAY 6:30
PM RAClNE GUN CLUB. FAC ____
____ __
_ ,..ONLY.
TORY CHOKE
GUNS

Tuelday, March rY

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~

coJI992 7760
OLD COIN'S, pocket watches .
class rings , weddmg ba nd! ,
dtomonds . Gold or silver , Coli

gan~ge.

$16,500.00.
CLOSE TO MINES -

WANT TO buy. Old jewelry . Ca ll
997 -5162 or write Key Cecil. 87
_S _2 ~d , ~~d~l~p~rt OH

Sli

3 to 5 months o ld , female nicE!
lov eab le dog Spaniel Seagle Pekinese 6 mo old, female
very cute, long ho1red , good
·with chrldren . Temer. long·
hott.ed young female Mr Med
breed . mole , small, red holr,
well-mohnered . Humane Socte

story ·. bulld 1n gs.

would be In trying to please
others. Be yourself. Find out
more of what lies ahead for you

for the next year starting fro m
your birthday by sendlnQ for
your copy of Astra-Graph Letter. Mail S1 tor each to Astra-

SS200..

Ce n h ol orr, u ndarprnn rrrq
lot 1n Ma son J0&lt;1 77:.1 54~tH

On

12 x 60 tilt out lr on tug•J , cpn trol
A.C Looks as good as new. 'J
bedr . natu ral gas heat a )( 14
po rc t-! . Awnmg on front . Fu r
mshed 992·5457 or q49-21088

-----

--·-

-

~-

Applian ces,
un d e rpinn1ng
f1rcpldce . 992-5413 or q92.fll HI.

$5200.

1967 .BANNER 19' Trov~l trailer
wittl
owning . $1350 . Call

.
-9'12-3S74
- - . - -- -- -

- -------

1967 HOLIDAY :21' se lf -contotned
with 18 x 10 owning. $1800 Se•
at Royal Oak Pork
Phon o
Mnneila 373 -9844

q9'} 6111

SAGinARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

1977

and

want to bt around 11 many fun
·and aettve people 11 poaalble.

room , large kitchen and
ut i l1 t y room . Home hd s
nat ural
g~ s
hea l
01Jibu !l ding is C)(lri't ntce
with lleat dnd ~l t'ct r tclfy
Si tua ted 011 (Jl)()d SIZP l(''tl'·l
lot on Sa !Cm Slrec1 1n
Rutland Out of floods.

5-10 -10, $11 3 Ton
1'2-1'2- 12, IS -15- 15, 5-10- 15 , 624 -24 , 3311 Pd. N1trate.
Al so Pioneer Seed Corn

PH . 256-647&lt;

GOTTA

EVI:RY1HING S

GO'

...

~

~

~

REDUCE SAFE and fast w ith
GoBesv·Toblet1 &amp; E· Vop " water
pills". Nelson Drug .

-

~-

.

-

---

. ~

--

AND Sondl,l oc. t, nq
FrP8 e&lt;&gt; !lrnotes Co li 949 2686 ·

CHE VY

Blorec

4x4
Cheyenne package 2q.ooo o c·
tuol m1les . Tdt steer , AM ·FM •
radio , A C . row pock age.
cruise , wt-!lte spoke wheel~ . Excellent condit1o n . Ahor 5. call

CAPRICORN (Dec, 12-Jan. 1tl
.'~'~? ?'1~7c -~~ __ ·-- . _ . __
Something from tHe put could 197S.XL TRoog&lt;&gt;rFord truck. '4 l~n .
be · terminated today ae your
with ovor Load ·aprlngs .. !102
lntereat.- ohlfl to • hi~ eltu!l- , '•nglno,' a~lci. iron• .', &lt;lor con·al- .'
lion: II YI'U"'dldn't lnl~lgate lhe . lloJI- · hcellent .toodltlon Call
e~onge, yOu'llllltllj/.ICOlllell . . 9'12 -~3 1! ,. ·. .
· ..
~OUAAIUS (Jflll, 20-Feb. 18) . 1ii3 io'l;;iiA,~Gr;;;;"dP";i, - Ex·
fackla ·correspondence

or

catch vo on paperwork toda y

V r-,.,~ ro &lt;JlPr ' ~mr l rr~~t i .,G ~ 1~1

...

&lt;

f·, .

: Fd'

J95(l I OfH' .1 dnor
1 ·~

?~ M~tft.h

2:0}

:~'l''·~··r

I J • ' 11'.,

u! ,V'

·- •t'1 nq.H?I lop C. ~lo dot"Jttrllllflll
1:.ood gtJ l&gt; m1 l&lt;&gt;o ge
$5AUO
9•N 20..\2 .

---- · -

1916 f . 250

·--- · ·----·
~onf truck and l 200

boles mi•ed hoy . Coii9'12-2B?7 1

after 6 pm. _ _

._

Wclr

'J Ur OJ-11 11•

11 ·I ll•"

....... ~ _

Ch ety l Lemley . Assoc; -~"!
WATI::R A ND mi!l&lt; hot1ling

992-5858 .
NOW -

Coil

li ~.:;t;n; -in·
M1ddleport·Poemrnv area . Coli
fer
etlimate. lbi' 7101

HAlniNG

free

~

.

. .

I

Phon£! /42-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Associate
Phone 949-2589

GeorgeS. H&lt;lbsteffer, Jr.
Broktr. "2-5739

~ 11\G ~

TR ~N5A':TION

Ro "'·I OR

-

Go rd~n

AS:.oc I

B ., I

Sue P. Muruh£h\..

Life to L1ve 6, 13.

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

2.3G--Another World 3, 15, Guid;ng Light a, 10, I Love
Lucy 17
3:QO-General Hospital 6, 13, Lil1as Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17, Cousteau Odyssey 33 .

I. [)

3.3D-Mash B. Joker's Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
4:()()--M!ster Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 6. Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33. Batman 10; Dinah 13.
Spa ce Giants 17 .
4. 3D-Bewitched 3, Gilligan 's Is . a, 17, Brady Bunch 10 ;
Pett1coat Jun ct1on 15 .
5:0G-I Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly Hiltbillies S,

rn

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33, Gomer Pyle
10, Bton1c 'Noman 13; Brady Bunch 15, I Dream of
Jeannie 17.
5 3()---Carl Burnett &amp; Friends 3; News 6 ; Sanford &amp; Son

I BOINALt

a, Elec Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd Coup le
15 : Lucy Show 17, Docfor Who 33.
6:QO-News 3,8.10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; And, Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6:3D-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

I I I J

1

• . l.ITTI.E ORPHAN ANNJR

'

.(

Friends 6 ; CBS News 8.10 ; My Three Sons 17 , Over

Easy 20.

ORPHAN ANNIE--UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
0~,

DON E ,., SNAP
TO lT- ..

JOHNI'IY 1
WHT DlD You
COM E BACI\?
WHY CAN'1 't'OU
1'&lt;4E ALONE?

Print answer here:

r I XI r I

7 oo-Cross-Wits 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13, Please
Stand By 8; News 10, Love, American Style 15.

Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17. Di ck Cavett 20.
Marshall U. Report 33.
7:3D-Hollywood Squares 3, Let 's Go To The Races 8;

]

(Answers tomorrow)

HO 1 SlUPID FARMER'S DtlUG&gt;i I"ER '
LEAVE YOU NOW~ WilY, THI S .
THIN G 15 A GOLD MIN E AND
I'M THE OWNER HERE .:.
HM HA' LlVELY, NOW1

Candid Camera 6; Price is Right 10, Donna Fargo

Jumbles HOIST BLESS GAMBOL DEAFEN
Answer

13; TV Honor Society 15. Baseball 17. MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20.33
8. QO-Ciifthangers 3, 15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Paper
Chase 8.10; Cleveland Orchestra 20 ; City Notebook
33

Overwetgh t - and 1t's noti ceabl e 1n such

ROBES ESPECIALLY 1-" 0BESE"

Jumble Book No 13, containing 110 puules, is a~ta1lable lor$1.7Spostpald
from Jumble, c/olhts newspaper. Bo11. 3&lt;4, Norwood. N.J. 07648.1ncluda your
nama, addren, llp code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooh

•New Home
*Add·oris
Remoldlng

B 3Q--MackenzJes of Pardise Cove 6, 13; Film Makers

33

9 :00-Movie " The Dark Secret of Harvest Home" 3, 15,
Movie " Moonshine County Express " 8, 10 ,
Methadone An American Way of Dealing 33 ,
Academy Leaders 20
9·3o-Three's Company 6, 13.
'
10 :00-Ropers 6, 13 ; World at War 17; News 20 .

~~~«t&gt;td

992·6011
i

ALJ.RYOO?

. l'fl.lt2-ltl4

t C Et fCTR ICAL Con t ror_tor sc rv·

lj,._..._.___...,.....__,._

mg O h o Valley rt'8 1') "
Sn•
n "'''' j, ~'J! 110\lf', &lt;,r.-r•,. IC C
Em erg1•n,y c:l ·, r,o ll H8~1 :l9S?
o r Bf:l2 2305

MOB IL E HOM!: ra pdir! Furr\0(6!.,
e l ectriCOI work, pip~!. ~Wed.

't! o -v ~

plumbing 992-5858.

-- --

· ·· · ,' '

--- ---~ · · .:·

WALLPAP,ERING AND
GOLF LESSONS. shoe s. glcves.
etc .
Jot-!n
Teaford .
6J4.q85 -396l
GR INDSTAFF PENNZOIL now has
full auto service and repair 404
E. Mo1n St , Po meroy, Ohio, '
BRADFORo-. ·-t.Au,t'i~~;~;: ·- C6;:;
plet e Service . Phone 949·:2487
or 949·2000. Racine, Ot-!lo, Critt
Bradford.

Co117A2 ·232B

-

-.~

fXt:AVAtiNG~ -da7e;- -b;~khoe
ond ditcher . Chotlea R. Hot field. Block Hoa Service,
• ~utland, Oh1o. Pon'e 742·2008.

-PULLINS
- ---· --EXCAVATING

~- ~ ---··------

-.

Complete
Serv ice? Phon f) 992 24?8.

·, .

CRISPY
KENTUCKY
FRiED afiCKEN

,

"THEN l'D BEllER
GET MY ESCAPE
LINE REAPY!

.

:

- ------~-

HOWERY

AND

MARliN

.b·

covoting . septic &amp;yst•mi ,
dozer backhoe. Rt ' 1lll3. Pt-!Gflfit

I (614I69B-7331. .

-

·

-·- --.-·- --'----...::::::.:;::;

AUTOMOBilf lNSURI\NtE IHlen

cohc•lled~ l.oat yOur'. oper'Otors

Phone 992·2143 .
-lk•nse?
-------- --- -- - _ .._ .

· SAVE ON

GASOLINR A!.!.RY

CARPETING

Th' paper
what was
in this
bas kit

DRIVE A Um.E
..'
&amp;

EXCAVAT1NG. d~1.e~. -~a~d-er-o~d
backhoe work, dump trucks
and lo-bovs for kire , will haul
fdl d1 rt, top soil. ltmestane and .
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jet·
fen, day phone qcJ:Z·(089 , night
phone 992·3525 or 992-5232 .

p&lt;llnU~

HEV,OOP!
OI!H~­
TOOTH
COMIN'.

Minn4

A GOOD SELEC:T,ION · OF
END &amp; ROLL BAU,NCI£5;

Loot'

.All CARPET
NCMON
SALE
FROM $"79S .
,-·sq.••.

\
FRANK&amp;ERNIR

.,

~QW&amp;SAVE

/

,· GOMPLAIN THAT AfTER

, · .· . :··

TW!L.\IE YE;I\R'$, :r
PRAG,.IG.AL\..Y 11.1-aTEttA,.f: •

'I"HfY 't'OLD ME '!'b PuT
.,. IN Wf&lt;!I,.INGo •

FAMILY RESfAURMl
992-~32

Pomero , Q.

'' . . .. .

WINNIE

~~~~E~~~~+ou
WEL~CATCH

UP WIT!-1
'rn t= HUMAN R'\CE .

SHOP AT.. ..

'.

'

WE OFFER YOU .
t. Two lull floors of •II now
furniture.
2. Nict Mlections o1 uslll
lumiture. .
..
'
3. A lll'fl building full nt
..autlful urpot,

·.
See the Grate Family at

.'

... ,.
.

Pompeii

'

,, .

Frozen in Fire 33

11.00-News 3,6, 13,15 ; Hagan 's Heroes 17, Book. Beat

33: Ltke It Is 20 .
11.3G-Johnny Carson J,\5; Mov1e "Having Babies II"
6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8; ABC News 33 . Movie
" Hostrle Guns" 10; Movie " Savage Wilderness " 17.
12 ·30-Movle " Royal Wedding " Bi I :oo-- Tomorrow
3,4; News 15.

J·Jo-Movie " Flame of Calcutta" 17; 1:41}--News 13

Yesterday's
21 Talk show
name
22 Large
clam
23 Tolerate
24 Guarantee
25 Antler's end
27 Carried
29 Quotidian

Answer
30 Modem
inn
31 In the least
32 Actress
Talmadge
37 Pheasant
brood
38 Shinto
tempte

3·5D-News

17;

ID-12 O'Clock High 17; 5·1D-

4

Dragnet 17.

Monday, March 26

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Defense dodges end play
NORTH
• Q J 52
• 10 84
t A 82

WEST
• 73
• J 96 3
• Q 10 7 6 5
+K B

ror

~

3

Vulnerable · North-South
Dealer : South
West

North East

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

another. In this sample A is

used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

Pass

South

I+
4 NT
5 NT

Opening lead : +3

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands

• .J

• QJ751

t K 9
•• 9 3 2

l DAJL Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
g

• 98

• 7 52

•AKQ

'

Is

EAST

SOUTH
+ A K 10 6 1

i

'
1

'1·26

+ A 10 6

' -..:)..:~1~~_._:.;.;_,:_,..:;:,_..;....:;_.,.=:.-:...;:.:,;,...:,.;.,;,.._:..;~.-.-----------------":.."':.."'_"_E.;.S....;J:..
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
•

Ru1(1ftd

RUltAND)\JRNnuRE

10 3D-13 Queens Blvd. 6, 13; Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20,

.:t wENT 'Tb THE &amp;OARD

Choose From ,

BIJY

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Hebr~w
1 Church
..--.
,
.
.
dry
measure
instrument
1
HERE DO ME A i=AVOR AN ' TIE A
OKAY!
5 Port in
2 Big game
LOOP Qi= VlNE AROUND 'rniS 50 I
RlGHT
1
CAN CARRY IT OVER MY SHOULDER!
AWAY!
Brittany
anima
Funclwn
3 Some
r---::.::: Laborer
lovers do
12 Luck
4 Fez color
Snake
5 Overcome
.. _ been bad! "
by ennui
16 Govt. bldg.
6 Decay
17 Goaded
7 Evasive
19 Harem room
8 Adjourn·
20 "-the
ment term
f1eids . "
9 In one's
21 Bluenose
youth
L-_ _ _ _ _.......JL............I'- 2% Perfume
11 Conceal
;.-:-,----- , - - --,---..""' 25 Cash
13 Tender meat
I declare! You recle.on
recipient
11 eompteted
Slim's qot hisself mix up 26 Quality
in pupnappin'
of sound
rinq? 27Halfa
b1kini
28 Terminate
29 Hotel
employee
33 Commotion 1
34 Pnnce
Valiant 's
son
35 Ear : prefix
.· . 36
·, .-.-""Early
heavenly
sight
39 Store,
as fodder
, 40 Position
OF e:DUGoATION TO
of power
41 Frail
; 42 Miss
WitS
Nazimova

a

b'lonq t'

SAVE ALOT

l arge

AN UPSET
FAMILY ·
CAL L TftE lEAF OS'
TO TURN TAL K INTO

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.

3D-As The World Turns 8.1 , 2 OD-Doctors 3, 15, One

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surpnse answer. as suggested by the above canoon

BE

w 1lh dJspo~al, dishwasher ,

1

"Chain Lightning " 17.
1 QO-Days of Our L.ves 3.15; All M, Child en 6,1 3.

I YASESJ
I

lhe Restless 8; Mtdday Magazi ne 13; Love

American Style 17 ; Consumer Survival Ktt 33
12 .30-Ryan' s Hope 6, 13, Search for Tomorrow 8, 10,
Not For Women Only 15; Elec . Co 20,3" Movie

1

UP! WORK 10

l BEDROOMS - All have

available
lor
only
$25,000.00.
NEW LIStING - 8 atres
·bedroom ranch
lull b&amp;sef!lent,
MiddlePOrt 11
.Redwood.
'"""'''Ir1o and lots of

:~~~~'=

GRIS1D TO

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

closets, modern kit chen

N!;W LI ST ING ·- 75 acres

C.~U:~D

11\S I.D.

CC\Jt.JT
/ri.~~~ 1\1B
01' ,t,AD)STl3

tlLL RIGHT YOU
TWOI BREAK IT

can do.

Asking_only $37,000.

Q;! ( h ll•.!Jnq

!

vou

of wood :s, som e s.; w t1mber
w1 ~h dozens of bealJiiful
build1ng sttes. Located in
Pomeroy . All utilities

need list ing s and we do our
besl to se r v1c::c you ,u ff

C.nr l •horor

.•t!

to see what

A -f • r~me

If you are thinking or
serting, give us a call. We

qq7 , ~q 37

,. ,• j!d (

,r,,

:

tros

are solid. Handyman's
special lor just S12,doo.
IN(OME .- S apts In good
cbndltlon with low himme .
tan IHl upgraded to a uooa
lnvesfrtlonl. All utilities are
paid by the renters. WAnt

fam 11t ronm W1th
fable, liiund ry roo m ,
sun deck . 3 balhs and 2 car ·
garage a t $6':i,OOO

RUTLAND - Grocery
butl.ness with upstairs
apartment. Buslnesa does
very welL All stock and
equlpf!ltnl ere Inet uded In ,
safe price, Call lor more
Info. Asking $29,500.

Hammond Organs

14 Rolls of Carpet in ~TOt...C
&amp; lOO's of Samples lo

Varnished

'bU SllOOI..D HA~~

I&gt;Gt&lt;ll.lrt&gt;

---

Tyree Blvd. Racine, llliti, :
' Phone 949-21tB evenings!
alter 5 p.m. Woe"nd~l ·
alter ll noon.
-5-l ino ,

Tom

EXTRA

bath.

&amp;

Sundins

buddi ng oJnd 11 , uue lo1
Asking o n I y S2l000.

woodwork and the floors

home wi t h 3
bedroom5, 1 1 ' ~ bat hs, lar ge
famil y r oom. ul ilily r oom
a nd nice
outbuil di n g .
Si1uated on 2112 acres.

PAIN , lNG

.a. -" •

. ·sa lis Rep. For

e-nd up IOstallea

Old used 3

Wife 8; Ironside 13.

I I .;;··I........ '

I~UJ'T~ .ml-'11MA'{SS

LEAVE'..'?

TRY OUR

and

fir eplace). utility roo m and
1 7 bnscmenl
Large 2 car
detu c hed garage wtlh
works hop There 's fllOrr- so
rail l or more info

\VIIl CARt for two tiWOftrl or
Plrl"' l lv r ~r \ Oil~ tn ot•y lw rnf'
Twenty
yeu1 ~
t•)'po riencl'
RPasonahle rates . 991 6022 0 1

'Z

1

Modern bath . new furnace,
n i Le large k i tchl·' ll, uftl1ty

bedroom frame home but
has natural gas, city water

WEST RUTLAND
Beautiful 3 bedroom
country home with family
room, living room lh••

~ - - ----

block-stucco house

BARGA IN -

POMEROY - Nice 2
bedroom home with beth,
L-shapad kitchen end
unfinished attic. Prlctd to
soli $20,000.

G\)00 MIXED ho, for solo.
\M3-2432.
- ... "----·- -- - - ' -

•I

\bu,&lt;S\R 1 ARE

. ·PwtOS · ,
PETE' SIMPSON

ve•rs
F r ee

fram e.
co rn plele ly
ove rhau led 1nside and out.

Sells for only $39,000.

House and
lot,
furn1ture,
clothes, cor, oil my hou se hold
items Drop by 760 laurelS! .,
M-~~le_P~_r.!:_ ___ :.._ __ -· ___._. _ __

Larg~

BUY

wlfh 4 bedrooms. fo~mal
dining, equipped kitchen.
gas fireplace In the living,
ful l basemor\), 2 car ·
garage, end . 2 room :
storage. 'Also :! room
business building . All for
only $35,000.
LIKE NEW - 3 bedroom

NEW
LISTING
Extremely nice 3 bedroom
home with both, family

Manufactured Fertilizer

&lt;

o

r----..-...,.-----~ I NELOB

RORN f.O~P.R

''I
'

:a:. Famou N•me llr8il

HCpcm ", · ~cr
v1ce a ll makes. 99'1 12H&lt;I . The
fobr 1r
Shnr
~'n m0 ro y
A utl oorll &lt;-'r.l ~ tJHWI ';;roles a n'd
Servtte We ~hat pi-Ons, 1o.son.

EXCELLENT

&amp;

I :4D-News 13, 3 : 0~ws 17; 3 : 2~p•n Up 17
TU ESDA 'r .MARCH 27, 1'79
5.25-World at Large 17: 5·45-Farm Report 13. 5 51&gt;PTL Club 13.

ORGAfl$ ,

~lWli'J G MACHIN~

216 E. Second Slreo1

ll ·OO-H 1gh Ro llers 3,15 , Hapyp Days 6,13 ; Consumer
Survi val Ktt 20
11 · 3G-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Fam•ly Feud 6, 13, Love
of Lite 8,10, 11 5-C BS News 8, House Cal l 10 ;
News 17.
12:00-Newscenter 3; News 6, 10, Password 15; Young

lj'JI\jlN'} ie)lt ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

'

Langsville; Ohio . .
614·"'·4245 Evonl,.a
2 Mltn Eaat
or'WilkHYIIII
2•1 J .lrl

, ~------~~~.

Swcc&gt; p (~r!: , l onst&lt;ns 'irons oi l
-,,no ll nn l)ltnn&lt;"oo; lawn mocr ,
m.~~&lt; ' tn S!,1 1t&gt; ll1qhwtly Co rage
1) !, flou te 7

~--

10 :31&gt;-AII Star Secrets 3,15, S20,ooo Pyramtd 13; Price
is Right 8, 10; Andy Gri tf1th 6.

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

17320 MOntoomlry. Rd~

ElWOOD -BOWERS- iEPAlR___ _

Phone 74i-200J

In Crown City

992 5422

Sn lt•c;

· -·- --··"--

HOBSTETTER RliAL TY
New Llms Rolli
Rull•nd. OhiO

b"/5 -44 24

1q73 FRHOOM MOBILE home.

3', acres 10 Pomeroy. SEcluded
Wooded ore6 on top of hill
Overlooks river Water , alec ·
tric available 992 -3886

R!: A l tS TA ff I o ons l-'l1rcho\ C ond
reftnonce 30 yf:'or l t?ttn s VI,
No money down (e l 1gible
vete rans ) . FHA - As low os 3
per cent down (non veterans) .
Ire land Mortgage Co . 77 E.
Stol e ~t!'e.ns_ fl_14: 5~2:3q~ ~ • _

1969 Buddy. 60xl2. 4 bdr .

1q7o Syl~a. 60~e 12 2 bdr
1q70 Castle 60 w1?, 2 bdr
1973 Arlin gton , 60JI:l2 , '} bdr
1973 R1dge wood, 70111&lt;1 3 bd r
19/:!Kirl..wood. 50&gt;&lt;: 12 7bdr
U8S MOBil[ HOMl SALt: S
l'f Pl !:S ANT WV

2 barns
trOl ler . large pond 10 acres or
82 acres . 742-25b6 .

992 lt 191

·---·--

FERnUZER ·

-

------· ·
FARM FOR Sole House

y E. Cl ela nd Jr

99? £259

StWFER'S

bdr.
1965 G•neral , 6011:12, 2 bdr .
1968 Elcono, $2xl2 , 2 bdr.

Auto

day you'll do an abOut face

~~ ~111

At

$12 OOO _Phono742-2826
1955 Prairie Schooner. 28x8 ,

lo ts ne ar La ngsvil le,
Oh1o. Co11742 2409

1 story frame1 3 bedrooms,

CIIECK TiiE PRICES
AND
THEN CHECK WITH ME

heme , furmshed
3 bedr
washer and dryer. Air cOndl ·
tioned 1 lot 210 ft . trontoge .

o NF ACRE

all

Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie " Government
Girl" 17.

1· DO-Tomorrow 3, 1:25-Movie "Stromboli " 17.

lirailer ii!II'A
c.-.......

2 11 I mo Pd.

fl~a I _~ 51 ,; t c_l _or~ai~­

ha s

over,

12 4D-McMillan

~ ~ ~~ ®

) -7·1 mo.

*

17.
IO :O!l--Card Sharks l ,15, Edge of N1ght 6. All In The

Files 8; ABC News )3 ; Movie "Guns at Batasl " 10:

t

lia~t~

9:3o--Brady Bunch 8, Hogan' s Heroes 10; Green Acres

Movie " Paris Does Stange Things" 17

:~ .

·- --- - - - - '

' _ ___.,_

low heating bill. 2 lots. full
basemen! . Ideal for family.
$27 ,JOO.OO.
YOUR HOUSE IS TOO
GOOD TO GIVE AWAY +
CALL US NOW TO SELl
IT FOR YOU .
REALTORS
Henry E. C lc lilttd Sr

Pomeroy , 992-JBQl

. - -- . . - .
~967
TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile

'·"*'

$55,000.00
NEAR GRADE SCHOOL-

, •

197'2 All HI::CTRIC tro•I E&gt; • 1:1 x 60

Toda y, there Is a strong possibility you 'll come up with a
better wa~ of doi ng somethlf1Q
to make your JOb a wh e lP. lot
eas ier.
21) Wl'lereaa yesterday you
may have been withdrawn, to--

St

Phone 992-5682

rented .
VEry
n i ce
restaurant business in one,
old established business .

DUE TO th e d eoth of my hu sband
I ha\le for so le o 1978 Dodge l
ton wrecker ·r'etriever , wench .
Dollies , 250 ft . cable, mileage
$)7,417. Ask ing $8500 Con be
seen at 342 Beech St
Mtd·
. fil~p~r! c:?~ 9?2:2~7~ ._ ___ _

underpinning ,

large patio, many,

apartments

:-:~

Appliances

new), 14x36 add

Qils lurna ce IN VEST NOVV
JU ST '20.000 oo
MIDDLEPO Rl - - 1-IWO

t rrno n l oud
d,~p l rJy Wyo tt pr e! te l 01 p1u o
o'&gt;~en NCR co sh reg1ster Pop
' corn ca ndy f loss carme l corn
m och mes 614 -237 4402

lire place 992-SA 13 or 991-6Tla

home

some work . 2 story fram e,
good locat ion. 3 bed roomo; ,
bn l l1 , l onna ! di ning, n~t .

March 27, 1171
This coming year you will put
your mind to work In a wiser
dl_rtctlon tnan you ma_y have In
ty , 992-?680
· ··~ ·- ·--- -- --tne P'lt. Many new doors will
•
beopened. Your elforti will not
COAl. LIMESTONE . sond. gravel.
go unrewarded.
&amp;Qll~~zf'ii~
calcium chloride . fert1hrer. dog
::.
.. ::.:- ··::;.::-:-: --=-=--: ·ARIES (March 21·A(Iftt 111 You
food . Ond all types of soft Ex ·
are more clever and bold In the 1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home.
ceh,ior Salt Work s Inc , E. Main
way you handle your own paraonal Interest&amp; today than you

Au•&amp; TrucK
'Repair
·~ISO Transmission
' ltepalr

St. Rl. t24 tewoi'a Ru1Lind,

o.

many features, GOING AT
JUST $48,000.00 ~price of
ground).
MIDDLEPORT - Needs

! c~·

r:&gt;\']

mobile

on,

FOtDI NG c-h n •1s IIP&lt;Q rww

100 or ·not ~I s-:1 50

GARAGE

rover . A STEAL AT JUST
$33,500.00.
WANT ACREAGE - 48
~a l most

~

"O

ROGER HYSEll
'V• mll10 oH R1. 7 bY·P811 on

acres,

IJH U~: W&amp; MAP&amp;
IT MHORj;!

I

70

One 6 ; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Matc h Game 10; Lucy

11 .00-News 3.8, 10. 13 ,15: Crockett's VI ctory Garden
20 , Ripping Yarns 33.
11 3G-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Pol tee Story 6, 13, Rockford

\':...,

All typos rooting, guitars
and downspout!. All types
home maintenance - new
and npair. Storm doors
and windows. All wal'lo
estimates 1 Call:
Hoskms, 949-2160.

Sesame St 33; 8 3D-Hazel 17.

9 OD- Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13.1 5; Emergency

20

10 : 30-Aimanac

OUR TA"t&lt;:E;R
W&amp;NT DOWN••
WITH AU HAND'

, .~

and
Home Mairitenance

e x p e r i e.n c e .

f'APT AIN RASY

v--

11-9·1 mo .

guaranteed . . 20

•

&lt;

9· 3D-WKRP In Cincinnall 8,10
10 oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20; Up In Rosebud County
33.

l

Cafl'l'I2·7!Jl... _
r cir F"rn Eshmales

2-7-mo.

acres, newer 3 bedroom
home, barn. corn cnb,
storage, located on the

Cr (,.'Oit1 {Ohlncl c.

80RDER COLLIE · TVPE , short hair ,

~'Birthday

years old. St6,500.00.
WANT A FARM? -

-- -

- .

M El.~!

J&gt;;e~ fo~ ~:1J -~ c . '·::

Lovely mobile located on 1
acre with creek throvg h,
all fenced, l oads of con
crete parktng, aboiJI 2

997 6342

HOSPITAL BED Wooden head
fool boards Vi nyl moltn.•s'i
co .... e r
Ch romP s1 de
ro d~
Good $60 992 :l5i!O ·

, .

basement,
and
nice.

remodeled

W E HAVI: rho colotes. dto bet1c
thoco lote ~ Ortd ot her candy
suppl1es Fr ee Ea ster candy
doss Co li Carousel Confec
t1 ane ry
1n
M1ddleport

WANT TO buy old .t5 and 78
phonogrdph
re c; ord~t
Call
992-6370 or Contbcf Martin Fut·

_R~er_ ~a':."•!er ?•~· ~3~1._

downspouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Esti males
949-2862 , 949-2160

dining. nice living R.,

!"or lll fnr m afiOn

1977 GlAST RON TRI HAUL open
front boot 55 h p. Evinrude
motor trail er q49-7537 after
Spm _ . . . • .
GOOD USED relngerotor Coli
alter 5. qaS-;1922

New. repair.
gutters and

street in Middleport, 2
stories,
3
bedrooms,
equipped kitchen, farrl1al

en d Run -a bout 80 h .p MN·
cury motor Full cOn\IO'i top
G ood shape 9Q2.6678
WOOD DOO R
t o il 985 A2?7

Good

t

I1·

Ohio Valley Roofing

after 5pm 992 7573

·6, 13, Mash 8, 10. A cademy Leaders 33; MoVI e
" Serenade" 17: Grow l ng Years 20 .

I ,,
'•'
•t

H. L Writesel
Roofing

POMEROY,O.

GOOD MIXED hoy , $1 bole Coli

~

:

B 00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17;

Show 17

'

I
I

J---~----"--'

60S E.
MAIN

7 JG-.Family Affa ir 10

Wom~n

9.QO-NCAA Basketbad 3.1 5, AII -Ameman

~--~~~~

3!11 mo.

Righi 8; Wild Kingdom 10; Sl 9B Beauly Show 13;

Journal 20,33; Let' s Go To The Races 17
8 :30-Children of the Th 1rd World 17

Pomeroy, 0 .

AIhens
Phone 992-258 1
or 992-2082

-

Tenni lle 6.13; White Shadow a,lO. Bill Moyers '

220 E. Main Street,

of

5p.m
1977 STA RCRAFT 15' open front

GUN SHOOT Reine Vo lunteer
F•r.e Dept Every Saturday 6:30

APPLIANCE II

Elberfelds of Pomeroy

4P.M

complete

LANE DANIELS
and Kimb all Mos •c Ce nter

the day before pubUcaUon

.

Aural Method
Associa te of

? doot
:JSO V 8 E xcell~ nl cond1 i t0/l
Y8S &lt;J970 after 6pm or ony t1me
wee kends

'-

MONDAY,MARCH26, 1979
7 30-That Nashv tl le Mus 1c 3. M uppet Show 6; Pri ce is

I

EUJ(lrr

1975 CU TlA SS Supre-me

., .)

HE 15

6: 1Q---News 17; 6.25-Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 3D-Romper Room 17; 6 4$-Mornlng Report J .
6 : 51)-.Good Morn ing, West Virgin ia 13 ; 6 55-Chuck
·White Reports 10; News 13.
7 00- Today 3.15 ; Good Mornmg Amer ica 6, 13;
Tuesday Morning 8, School ies 10; Three Stooges.
Ltttle Rascals 17.
7: 15- Weather ' 33 .

Nashville On The Road 15. Sanford &amp; Son 17;
MacNeil Lehrer Repor1 20 ,33
8 DO-Li ttl e House On The .Prairie 3.15, Captatn &amp;

Your HeadquarteiS .For
Armstrong Carpeting

14 Yr. Experience

4-doo t out o

N0W ...

*
*

992 -2356
3-7-1mo. (Pd .)

PIANO
TUNING

IT's TOO LATE
T O HELP "''-"'"~- ~

•.

•Add-ons
Remoldings
Free Estimates
992-6011
J-16-mo. pd.

Middleport. 0 . .

9{!7 -5114

-

*New Home

651 Beech Street

Exce-l le nt W tlclt
!1011 .$4 300 qcr; 7689

lltruFoiday

.

Servt ce Ca lls

19"/b TRAN S AM

l'unday

"

W1I I Make

The Great Sphinx was constructed of masonry and
carved limestone near the
present Giza, Egypt,around
2lKJO B.C.

19?5 Rto PONTIAC Venture hat chback . d new t ir es Good condition q49 212q

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

l8 Years £xpenence

1974 CHEVY Z128, shorp $3000 or
best offer 304 773 · 5969

blo ck interior Good cond1t1on
949 2129 .

NOTICE

SHOP

SOMEONE 18 year~ or o lder lor
re 5tourant work . Day or nigt-!t
sh tfl . 985-3832.

:

C. R. MAsH
.'
VINYL &amp; AUJM;
SIDING

ELECTRIC MoTOR

a l ter 6pm
L01 ge lo i s Cot199'1·7479
1917 CADILLAC ELDORADO l: x ·. :1 AND 4 BM -furrHshf'd ot1d un
re llent
con dih o n
Phon e
furr~i s h E:&gt; ct
opt5
Ph on(&gt;
9Q2 7db'2
1/(/'J 543 4
.
.
1977 CHEVHOLH 4x4 short w heel
bo se Mo.so;ey Ferguson corn
plante r
corn
cultr v ot o r
992 -7084 .

1975 CAM ARO , darlo. blue wtlh

As yean roll on and days pass by

:VV~Ie_. ~o~s ~n~ ~o~ g~t!r _

REYNOIJ)'S

SFNIOH ( ITtl !:NS' Apts . 1 bedr II
you oto 0 11 55 or D1 so bll lty SS .
r(' nt ba sed on income" W'J 7772
bf'hNeen 9 om ood 6 pm

I

:•. . ~

'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

SiAY BACK!
THAi'S HI6H
VOLTA6E!!

!

Business Services ._...,__..

fWt)

1970 MUST ANC b cyt 750. Ru ns
good SfiOO Aft er b pm . call
qq2.J952.

5:5}-Sunme Semester 10. 6:Q0-700 Club 6,8: PTL
Club 15.

f&gt;lf1&lt; TRAC'Y

• .l

t·

ONf BfDROOM hm1sl' futnish('d .
"192 759CJ

f wcpl lt•nl ('nnrltl•nn

Stm&lt;boy

In our hearfs o memory rs kept
Of one we lo~ted and will never
forget

••

1 I

1.1!
190

1!11

Loving memories never dre

:-;·,; ,.,t,, wy
Yo ur cl1anc:e fo r getll ng a lot
Mary Patterson, M. T. more mileage out of what you
· Patterson to Rei Cheadle; · have to apend are greater
Jr.; Sara Jo Cbelldie, Par· today than they'll be tomorrow.
Toke ldYontage of thea• good
, eels, Columbia.
conditione.
tJ t t'J,

100

March '1.? ,

SCORPI O (Oct. 2Hlov . 22)

','.

r.v ;mt., J

Under
Clwrge
Caah

receive cooperation , this Is the
day to do so You II find people 1976 ~ TAR C RAH FOlD dnw n
receptive
corn p e• ~I Pf' p s 8 $ 1800 Phot •f'

Mildred Jean lienstey to
John W. Ritchhart, Jean Ann
Ritcbhai't, Brian Clark Ritch·
h•rt. - ..Cert. of · Trans.,
Syracuse.
Arnold Jord8n to Bernard
V. · Fultz, 58.75 acres,Columbla.
BEJ1118rd V. Fultz, Betty. J.
F~l~t . to AtnolcJ". ·J ordan,
Harold it. Jordan, 58.75
acres, Columblat ·
· ·
· M~· ~Ail~~!~&amp; to ·James
· D. MciJougal. Patricia A.
McD &lt;1;V,:il r nt !'sl:·lf'•-r,y
&lt;

1~ Words or

0 E

Graph, PO .Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
birth sign .
measures, emergencies or specify
TAURUS ~April 211-May 201 Your
' ' conservation literature in beat ideaa will come to you
order to qualify.
today If you're oil aomewhere
After the conclusion of alone, where tMre 11 peace
'·
.. proponent testimony, I and quiet and you can aet your
own PICe.
placed H.B. 287 and H.B. 163 GEMINI (May 21-June . ZO) A
Into a sub-committee chaired · friend of long atandlng cOuld ·
by Representative Dennis Introduce you to a new and
Wojtanowski for further Interesting person today who
could fit comfortably Into your
consideration.
future plans
In addition, a sub· CANCER I June 21 ·July 221 Be·
committee of th e Public caus e people are pay1ng attenUtil ities Committ ee held tion to you today and your
hearings last week on three wo rds carry weight. be sure
what you say leaves the imbills whicb deal with the pression
you want to make .
controversial fuel adjustment LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 221 Spend
clause. The three bills con· time on mental projects today.
sidered were House BW 21, You are eapeclally sharp In this
House Bill 57 and Houae BW ·····and could como up with.
new wilot to 1 tired alluallol).
125.
VIRGO (AIIfl. U-a.pt.'221 Dlgg•
H.B. 21, of which I am the lng beneath lhl aurface and
. sponsor, is a measure to getting down to the root oauae
. or problema will be 1 anap lor
you today Direct your ll!lnd to
thlalalk.
LIBRA (Sept 23·0ct. 231 II
you're looking to make your
thoughts understood end to

Meigs
Property
Transfers

11106 Go T.O

742 2249.

~~:i;fG~i&gt;fH 1 -~ J..
memorJ of

9- The D"iiyScnt incl , Ml!ldlepurt -Pumt•ruy. 0 .. Mund")'. M;~r . 2H 197!1

t'or Hmi

Auto ~~l'~

WANT AD

Mondaf
Noon on S!lturdlly

LOVING

, '

(

prohibit the fuel adjustment
clause. Speeiflcally, the bill
would prohibit the pass·
through to customers by an
electric light company of fuel
acquisition costs, delivery
costs and the cost of
acquiring purchased power.
H.B. 57 , sponsored by
Representative Wayne Hays,
would require an electric
light company to rebate to Its
customers the excess cost of
any fuel purchase that was
not the lowest cost fuel
avaUable at the time of
purchase .
H.B. 125, co-sponsored by
Representatives Wi!Jiam
Hlnlg and Arthur Bowers, is a
proposal to limit the pass·
through by utllity companies
to consumers by prohibiting
pass through under certain
circumstances. The 113th
Ohio General Assembly has
and will continue to deal with
a nwnber of bills concerning
public utilities.

IN

'

For Best Results. r'Use Sentinel Classifieds

View from
Statehouse .
HY STATr;
REPRESENTATIVE
RON JAMES
( D-Proclervllle,
92nd House Dlalrlcll
Committee hearings
highlighted the activity last
week at the Statehouse. The
Public Utilities Committee,
of which I am chatnnan,
considered two bills wbloh
, would regulate what charges
would be allowed to be passed
on 19 the utility customer.
, Considered were House 8111
163 and House Blll Z87.
. Testimony was given In favor
of both~H.B. 163 would prohibit
public utUities ftom passing
on to the customers the costs
of charitable contributions.
Under the bill, contributions
by a public utility to tax·
exempt
charitable
organizations must be subtracted ftom the C0$1 to the
public utility of rendering
service. In other words, the
cost must be Paid for by
stockholders rather than
recovered through public
utility rates.
Supporters of H.B. 163
argued that the cost of
· charitable contributions is a
non-&lt;&gt;perating expense and
should be disallowed on this
basis. To date 23 $1ates have
outlawed the practice of
recovering \he cost of
charitable contributions
through pubUc utillty rates.
The second bill, H.B. 287,
,would limit a utuity eompany
from passing on certain
11
8dvertlsing expenses" as a
cost for Inclusion In its rate
setting formula before the
Public UtUities Commission
of Ohio. This bill appUes to
gas, natural gas and electric
companies.
H.B . 287 prohibits two
specUic types of advertising
- "motivational" and "goodwUi" advertising.
"Motivational" advertising
is advertising addressed at
lnhuenclng public opinion on
controversial legislative,
administrative or electoral
questions. Also Included In
the definition of motivational
advertising is advertising
aimed at inducing the use of ,
selection of utility services.
"Goodwill" advertising Is ·
advertising aimed at directly
creating, enhancing or
sustaining the image or good·
will of a utUity company in
the eyes of the public.
Under the provisions of tlils
bill, the only types of advertising co$1s that a utility
could Include as operating
costs in setting Its rates,
· fares, tolls, rentals and
charges are those associated
with the publication and
distribUtion of rate schedules,
legal notices, employment·
opportUnities and public
Information. Under the bill, a
substantial majority of the
public information provided
would have to pertain to
service interruptions, safety

~.

By Oowa1d Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Oswald: " North's three·
spade
jump was a mlml·
CRYPTOQUOTES
mum even lor a limit Jump
rat.e and no one can blame
TW
T
N P Z IF
ATUSHF
Z U South for going to the slam."
Alan : "Actually, South
T
PJHX
1 p F .J'ihowed interest In a grand
OHTAF,
WJ
slam, but stopped at six
after North showed that he
MFTKIX
JB
TU
TQFS
BTAF
didn't hold a king."
Oswald: "South was dis·
R J .w F 0 P
ATCOMFHH
appointed when he saw the
Yesterday's Cryptoquole : BUT THE; TENDEJ:t GRACE OF A dummy. It appeared that he
would have to lose two club
DAY THAT IS DEAD WILL NEVER COME BACK TO ME.tricks ."
TENNYSON
Alan : "South wasted no

zw

I

I.AII\I'T RAiSiN'
NO 'iOUNG· UN

OF MINE TO BE

A DADBURN
FLATLANDER

time in head shaking. There
was one chance to bring m
the slam South had to strip
the hand and hope that one
opponent would be end
played in clubs."
Oswald "South won the
ftrst trump in dummy and
led a second trwnp to hls
ace At trick three South led
his deuce of clubs. At this
point the trap was set and
ready. West held just king
and one club. If he had been
careless and played the
eight, South would have
risen with dummy's ace ,
played out ail the diamonds
and hearts, ruffing dummy's
last diamond and throwing
West In with that king. He
would have made his slam
because West would have

had to g1ve him a ruff and
discard."
Alan
" West almost
played that eight spot. Then
he went into a huddle, saw
what South was up to, played
ht. king and had avoided the
end play "

Ask liM I!XMPII
A Rhode Island reader
asks what Is meant by the
"Pone."
In the game of Bridge the
opening leader was sometimes called "The eldest
hand ." His partner was
called the "Pone ."
, NEWSPAPER ENT ERPRISE ASSN l

(For a copy of JACOB Y MODERN. send S1 to " Win a1

Bridge ," care of this newspaper, P 0 Box 489 Radio City
Stst1on. New York . N Y. 10019.)

�•

10- The Daily S('ntim•l. Miclttlt•pori-Pnm&lt;' l'o)', 0 .. Monday. Ma1 . 2H 1979

OPEC raises crude oil prices again

Airport bomb explodes
NEW YORK (AP I - A
•uilcase on its way to the
belly of an airliner c-drr)ing
181 people blew up and two
New Jersey buildings were
bombed in what was
allegedly a new terrorist
assaul t by anti-Castro
Cubans.
The blasts Sunday night
were the responsibility or an
anti-Castro group known as
omega 7, according to a
telephonl} call received by
The Associated Press. The
male caller, speaking with a
Spanish accent , promised
11
Similar
actions
will
continue."
Police said a ba g
containing at least three
sticks of dynamite exploded
In the Trans World Airlines
haggage area at Kennedy
Airport at 8:48 p.m. The
suitcase was among luggage
workers were preparing to
take to TWA Flight 17, wailing on the runway pri or to its
scheduled departure to Los
Angeles at 9 p.m. , officers
said.
Four baggage handlers suffered minor injuries from the
blast, which police and
airline officials said probably
would
ha ve
caused
substantial damage had it
detonated inside the jet's
baggage compariment.
Witnes ses
said
the
explosion sent worker s
sprawling and that hags and
clothing were strewn ov&lt;!r the
area. Part of an outside wall
also was damaged.
Passengers
were
evacuated from the plane as
local and federal authorities
searched for additional
explosives and for the person
who checked the bag onto the
flight . Passengers reboarded
and the plane left five hours
late.
Several calls warning of the
bomb were rece ived by
various police agenCies and

TRY OUR

E.AiRA
CRISPY
KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

CRaRS

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

Pomeroy , 0 .

TWA. but all the call s came ag reement with the tyra nny
aft er the deviee alreadv had of Fidel Castro." the caller
exp loded . pr omptin g said .
speculation U1al it triggered
TWA has fl own to Cuba , the
prematurely.
Cuban Program ib working to
" It was our intention to free political prisoners in that
blow up the plane and not country and Elmaceen Pharinjure anyone," the caller to rnacia e&gt;ports medical prodthe AP said.
ucts to Cuba.
In New Jer sey, explosions
"Similar actions will
about two hours after the continue until we shut down
Kennedy blast damaged the this source ol cash in the
offi ces of the New Jersey U.S.," the ca ller said.
Cuban
Program
in
Omega 7, a terrorist group
Weehawken
and
the made up of Cuhan exiles, has
Elmaceen Pharmacia in been active in the New York
Union Ci ty.
qty area during recent
The three sites were months, most recently on
attacked because they were Dec. 29, 1978, when it claimed
"operati ng
in
mutual responsibility for explosions

By The Associated Press
At least nine persons have
dted on Ohio's roads over the
weekend, the Highway Patrol
said Monday.
Thr ee of the deaths
occurred
in
separate
accideniS Sunday, with one of
the victiti1s from Indiana and
another from Minnesota . A
third out-Qf-stale driver was
kill ed in an acci dent
Saturday.
The patrol counts tra ffic fatalities fr om 6 p.m. Friday
until midnight Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
BRYAN - Robert Bottoma,
45, of Worthington, Minn., in
a one-ear accident on the
Ohio Turnpike in Williams
County .
ST. CLAIRSVILLE
Carol D. Neukom. 26, of
Auburn , Ind., in a one-car
accident on Interstate 70 in
Belmont County .
BOWLING GREEN
Jesusita Hale, 23, of
Wauseo n,

in

a

two-car

accident on a Wood County
road.

SATURDAY
BOWLING GREEN - John
.J. Wagner, 19, of Cygnet, in a
one-ear accident on Ohio 281
in Wood County .
COSHOCTON - David W.
Ofbun, 27, of
Newcomerstown , in a two-car
a cc ident on a Coshocton
County road .
HAMILTON ,.- Columbus
B. Menninger, 40, of
Hamilton, in a one-c ar
accident on Ohio 128 in Butler
County.
CLEVE LAND - Michael

Stoll, 17, of Cleveland, in a
onecar accident on a
Cleveland city street.
ZANESVILLE - Robert E.
Denton , 20, of·Zanesville, in a
two-ca r
accident
on

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital Donald Greene, Racine;
Saturday Admissions - Grace Stobart, Pomeroy ;
~' recta Durham, Middleport.
Robert Riffle, Pomeroy;
Saturday Discharges Mark Casto, Pomeroy; Bruce
Eva Gardner, Clara Paulsen, Hawley, Pomeroy; Alice
Gladys Sigler, Effie Watson, Clark, Middleport.
Judith Hood, Teresa CanterSunday Discharges
bury, Patricia Wood.
.Francis Schaefer.
Sunday

Admissions

0
0

0

Fai'Itters
POMEROY, OHIO

%'

$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Uepositor

~000

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

0
OOOc'-----.&gt;0000
(

-

Nettie Moore, Snacuse;
Robert Smith, Racine; Roger
St a r c her. Miner sv ill e;

Until this little slugger makes the bigtime, you may need some extra finan·
cia I security. Our ,highest ioterest savings accounts can help! Find out!

000

A

MIDDLEPORT - Pledges
The latest list ot pledges ·
totaling $9,350 towards a being announced at this time
$15,000 goal for improvement include Harold and Virginia
to the athletic complex at Hubbard, Radio WMPO, Ohio
Meigs High School have been Valley Publishing Co., Paul
received to date, BiD Childs, Simon, Charles Chancey,
fund drive chairman, an- Nathan Roush, William
nounced. Primary source of Stivers, Richard and Ann
the pledged money has been Rupe, Fred Blaettnar,
through the sale of concrete Cleland Realty, John W.
at $50 a yard with the name of Blaettnar, Frances and the
the donor to be stenciled in late Paul Smart, "Swack· ·
the concrete to be used in the hammer ," Uoyd D. King,
development of a track Karry and Patty Brofacility . Other act iviti es, gan. Edison Saker, Don
however, to bring up the total and Edna Wilson, Cross
are being planned.
Hardware, VaUey Lumber
Residents wishing to and Supply, Dutton Drug
contribute may send their Store, Vaughan's Cardinal in
checks made out to the Meigs memory of Bill Vaughan, and
Athletic Boosters to Childs at one anonymous contributor.
Box 32, Middleport.

may nood abond along the way

,

Interstate 70 in Muskingum
County.
TOLEDO
Lillian
Pritchett, 54, of Detroit, a
pedestrian struck by a car on
Interstate 75 in Toledo.

TOOK TOP HONORS -Scott VanMeter was awarded
the Star Greenhand award and Rocky Pitzer the Star
Chapter Farmer award at the annual FFA banquet held
Friday night at Eastern High School. pictured are, 1-r,

$9,350 pledged

0

. ,L -

that caused e•Lensive
damage at the Cuban Mission
to the United Nations and
lesser damage to Avery
Fisher Hall al Lincoln.
Center .
John Hanlon, assistant
agent in charge of the FBI's
Brooklyn-Queens office, said
he did not think there would
be any immediate arrests
and refused to speculate
whetller the ~ombing was
politically inspired or carried
out for other reasons.
On Dec. 29, 1915, a still unso lved
explosion
at
LaGuardia Airport killed 11
people and injured 75.

Nine die on Ohio high_ways

SUPIR SJAR
0
0

By MARK POITS
AP Business Writer
GENEVA , Switzerland (AP)- The Organization of Petroleum E;xporting Countries decided today to raise the base price
'of crude ~iiby 9.05 percent as of next Sunday, to $14.54 a barrel,,
the ml mmiSter of Qatar told reporters. That would increase
Amencan pump prices for gasuline by about two cents a
gaUon. ,
The new price is t_he_ base price the oil cartel originally had
set for ne_xt Octobe~ &lt;n tts quarterly increase schedule.
The rruruster Said the OPEC oil ministers also authorized
new ~urcharges of up to $4 a barrel over the base price depending on market demand.
'
Analysts said if aU 13 OPEC. members add the maximum
sw-charge the r_esult would b~ an additional six cents a ga llon
added to Amertcan pump pnces for a total increase of eight
cents.
·
The cw-rent price for Arabian light crude oil, the so-called
benchrna~k of the mdustry, is $13.35 for a 42-gallon barrel. A 5
percent mcr:ease 111 OPEC prices usually increases the
Amencan pnce of gasoline about a penny a gallon.
Analysts here estimated the new base price will add about

Negotiations
(Continued from page I J
guarantee
of
Israeli
withdrawal from all the
territory It had taken in a 1967
war. Sadat requested tighter
links between the peace
treaty and solution of the
Palestinian problem, while
the Israeli Cabinet raised
objections of its own.
From the verge of peace,
the two sides again stepped
back. The negotiations
became more rancorous this
time and threatened to break
down altogether. Finally,
Carter went to Cairo and
Jerusalem earlier this
month. His mission seemed
about to fail before a
dramatic breakfast meeting
with Begin resulted in the
final compromises.
Under the final agreement,
Israel wiD begin withdrawing
from the Sinai within three
the
months , vacating
principal city of El Arish.
Within nine months, Israeli
troops are to withdraw to a
line drawn between El Arish
in the north and Ras
Muhammad in . the south,
giving Egypt two-thirds of the
Sinai, including its oil fields.
After 10 months, Egypt and
· Israel are to exchange ambassadors 'and Israel must
withdraw to its 1967 border
, within three years.
Meanwhlle, the two sides
must begin talks on the Palestinian autonomy plan within
a month. They have agreed
on a "goal" at completing
those talks within a year,
paving the way for the
election of a Palestinian
council to govern the West
Bank and Gaza.
The extent of !hat council's
power is only one of the difficult questions to be solved.
Others include the fate of
Israel's settlements in the
area, · the status of East
Jerusalem, aitd the role of
hostile entities like the
Palestine Liberation Organization and Jordan. ·
If they cannot be solved to
the mutual satisfaction· of
Egypt and Israel, another
crisis is-possible. "The treaty
is vulnerable,'' one American
official, who asked not to be
identified, said last week.
Meanwhile, the American
role in the region seems
certain to grow. Part of
Israel's bargain was a new
bilateral agreement with the
United States in which the
Ca rter
administration

$13.5 billion to OPEC &lt;-o ffers this yea r from industrialized
Western nations.
The new base price apparently was a victory for the suca lled
Arab moderates such as Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi over
more militant members such as Algeria, Iran, Jjbya and Iraq .
Iran sought a base price increase of 29 percent.
The militants apparently settled for the smaller increase in
the base price in ••change for the surcharges, analysts said.
OPEC m December agreed on· a four-stage schedule of increases totaling 14.5 percent by Oct. I. The price went up 5 percent on Jan. I, to $13.35, and the secund increase to $13.84 was
scheduled for April 1.
,
OPEC in December agreed on a four•stage schedule of increases tola\ing 14.5 percent by Oct. I. The price went up 5 percent on Jan. I, to $13.34, and the second increase to $13.84 was
scheduled for April 1.
. Meanwhile, a number of the members look advantage of the
otl shortage caused by the suspension of Iran's exports and
raised prices by putting on surcharges, generally in the neighborhood of 9 percent. The Geneva meeting was called to try to
formulate unified price and production policies.
Iran, with more than two months of export revenue lost

Alan Holter, vocational teacher at Ea~n. Scott, Rocky,
and Okey Woodard, vice-president of the Ohio FFA
Association, who was the guest speaker.

Presentation of awards VanMeter was awarded the
hi ghlighted the annual star greenhand award while
Eastern High School FF A Rocky Pitzer was given the
hanquet Friday night. Scott star chapter farmer award.

·
I
--------------------------

1

! Area Deaths !
EVELYN JEWELL
Evelyn Jewell, 56, 225
Union Ave., Pomeroy, died
Sunday at her residence .
Mrs. Jewell was born Nov.
24, 1922, dau~hter of the late

Mishap results in
minor damage
Two-cars were damaged in
an accident on Beech St. in
Middleport . at 2:10 p.m.
Sunday:
Middleport police said a
car driven by Judith A.
Johnson, Middleport, backed
into a parked car owned by
Martin
M.
Debellis,
Columbus. There were ligh~
damages to the Debellis car
and medium to the Johnson
vehicle.
Police also said a car
driven by Tina M. Shelley,
Middleport, failed to yield the
right of way at Hudson and
Second Sts. at 3:42 p.m.
Friday and collided with a
car driven by Margaret B~ rr.
Route 1, Syracuse.
There were medi urn
damages and Shelley was
cited on a failure to yield the
right of way charge.

pledged $3 billion in military
granf.ol and loans to pay for
the Sinai withdrawal. It also
promised to accelerate
delivery schedules
of
sophisticated F-16 fighter jets
•to the Israelis.
Moreover,

the

administration guaranteed
Israel a 15-year oil supply if it
cannot obtain oil on the world
market and . promised
political support in case the
treaty breaks down.

BOOKMOBILE
SCHEDULE
Tuesday
Keno, 3-3:30 p.m.; Reedsvllle - Reeds Store, 4-5 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains - Arbaugh
Housing , 5:30-6:30 p.m.;
Chester-Methodist Church,
6:45-7:45 p.m. ; Riggs Addition, 8-1!:30 p.m.

Corbitt and Gaye Rice
Manl ey. She was also
preceded in death by one
brother, Charles Manley and
one daughter, Rustina
Jewell.
She is survived by her
hu sba nd , Pearlie, seven
daughters, five sons, one
brother, Walton Manley,
Tuppers Plains, one sister
Teresa Aileen, Pt. Pleasant:
24 grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at I p.m. at
Ewing Chapel. Burial will be
in the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. this
evening.

Other awards presented
and the recipients respectively, were crop production,
Robert Henderson;
agricultural electrification,
Ed Scyoc; dairy production,
Bill Frederick; ·home and
farmstead improvement,
Scott Chevalier and Larry
Ha~ris ; forest nl'imagement,

Money actions
filed in court

Dean Hawk; turf and land·
scape management, Ed
Scyoc; outdoor · recreation,
Dennis D11rst; star agribusinessman, Don Eynon;
fruit
and
vegetable
production, Larry Harris;
fish
and
wildlife
management, Rick Boring;
poultry production, Rocky
Pitzer;
placement
in
agricultural production, Eric
Schmucker, Dennis Durst,
Darrell Henderson, Rick
Putman; soil and water
management, Robert Henderson; sheep production,
, Nick · Leonard;
swine
production, C. J. Morlan;
beef production·, Rocky
Pitzer .
New officers named for
197~ were Nickey Leonard,
president;. Scott VanMeter,
vice president; Greg Scar·
borough, secretary; Charles
Ritchie, treasurer; Rick
Putman, reporter; charles
Massar, Sentinel; Bill
Fredrick, student advisor
and Alan Holter, advisor.
Master of ceremonies was
Don Eynon and Greg Scarbrough gave the invocation.
The welcome was given by
Rocky Pitzer, introduction of
guests and parents by Larry
Harris,
careers
on
agriculture by Dean Hawk
and the FF A creed by Scott
VanMeter. Guest speaker
was Okey Woodard, vice
president of Southeast section
of Ohio,
Ohio
FFA
Association. A buffet dinner
was served.

In Meigs County Common
Pleas
Court
Jackson
Production
Credit
Association and Ohio Corp.,
Columbus, filed suit in the
amount of $35,040.26 against
Bradford Lewis, Rt . 1,
Rutland, Hazel Lewis and
George Collins as treasurer.
The suit is for money due on a
promissory note.
Delmar Baum, dba Baum
True Value Hardware, fUed
three suits for money. One
the amount of $685.36 against
Henry Johnson, Portland;
against
Dan Talhott in the
RIDDLE FOR TODAY
amount
of $576.69, and
According to the Geological
$2,113.25
suit
against Grant
Survey where are the highest
points in the county located at Newland, Coolville.
Filing for divorce were
1012 and 1011 feet above sea
Ri,chard
Shuler, Rt. I ,
level? Meigs History Book
Racine,
against
Anna G.
free story deadline April 5.
Shuler,
Rt.
·4,
Pomeroy,
and
Ye•terday's answer - At
Dorothy
Louise
·
Hysell,
Darwin.
Pomeroy, against Lawrence
Elmer Hysell, Rutland.
SERVICES SET
Roger Lee Atkins, MidA missionary service will dleport, and Loretta Atkins,
be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday Pomeroy,
filed
for
at the Pomeroy Wesleyan dissolution.
Holiness Church with Keith
Schwarz as speaker.
MEET TUESDAY
,The
Ladies
Auxiliary
of
Vehicle owners
DUE TUESDAY
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Meigs residents wishing to will meet Tuesday, March 27
•
• d
tum in their family histories at 2 p.m; at the hospital. Nita giVen remm er
for the upcoming history book
will speak on
POMEROY - Avoid the
may do so from I to 3 p.m. Wisniski
hypertension.
Tuesday at the Meigs
rush and get your licenses
Museum, Butternut Ave.,
now for non-commercial,
Pomeroy.
motor homes, motorcycles,
house
traDers and travel
MEETS TUESDAY
trailers
Sarah Gibbs, motor
SQUAD RUNS
The Meigs Area Holiness
vehicle
registrar,
suggested
The
Middleport Association will meet at the
Saturday.
Emergency Squad was called Rutland Community Church
Passenger plates· and
to Route I Middleport, at 6 Tuesday, March 21 at 7:30
p.m . Sunday for Nellie p.m. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., slickers will go on sale Aprtl 2 ·
Watkins who was taken to pastor of the Rutland Church for-owners whose last names
Holzer Medical Center.
of the Nazarene will be the start with A through K.
In May passenger plates
Saturday at 7:36 p.m. the speaker. The public is in·
and
stickers wiD go on sale
squad was called for Eugene vited.
for
owners
whose last names
Roush who refused treat·
with
L
through Z.
start
ment.
SEEK LICENSE
Mrs.
Gibbs
also advised
At 1:43 p.m. Saturday, the
A marriage license was
residents
to
check
their
unit went to 692 Plum St., for issued to Gary Lee Smith, 20,
driver's
license
for
an
exBonnie Ebersbach who was Rt. 2, Pomeroy, and Kathleen
piration
date.
Licenses
are
on
taken to Pleasant Valley Marie Smith, 18, Pomeroy.
sale
at
the
Gibbs
Grocery
Ho•1&gt;ital.
Building.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

·BOY"

QUALITY LAWN MOWERS

* POWERFUL 2 CYCLE ENGINE

* QUIET RUNNING

* .SOLID STATE IGNITION ELIMINATES POINTS
AND CONDENSERS

* 19 and 21 INCH PUSH MODELS AND
' 21 INCH SELf-PROPEu.ED MODELS
IN STOCK

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
,

(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 241

and the House were invited to
question Begin and Sadat at
separate sessions in Capitol
Hill offic.e buildings today.
· Congress will be asked to
authorize the $4.8 billion
package of grants and loans
Carter is proposing for Israel
and Egypt, in furtherance of
the treaty.
Immediately after th e
treaty signing, which Carter
hailed with the cry, "Peace
has come," he conferred with
more than a score of
Democratic and Republican
congressional leaders on the
aid proposals.
Throughout a day of
celebration, however, Carter
did not minimize the hurdles
facing full implementation of
the accord.
As if to underseore Carter's
statement that "differences
sti ll
separate
the
, signatories," both Begin and
Sadal touched on their
conflicting viewpoints in
public utterances.
At the signing, Begin
recalled his joy at the seiztire
of East Jerusalem by Israeli
paratroopers in 1967 - a
seizure Egypt and the Arab
world still chaUenge.

Shunning topcoats in chilly
if sunny weather, Carter,
Begin and Sadat - partners
in 15 months of negotiations
- quoted from the Bible and
the Koran in solemnizing the
treaty.
" Let there be no more

bloodshed between Arabs and
Israelis," Sadat declared.
' "No more war," agreed

Begin. "No more bloodsh ed.
Peace unto you . Shalom , salaam, forever .''
The Hebrew "shalom " and

KINGS MilLS, Ohio (AP)- Some 18,000 persons
clogged Interstate 71 seeking unskilled job applications
Monday for the new Ford Motor Co. transmission plant
now under construction near Batavia .
AI Sexton, Ohio Bureau of Employments Services,
Lebanon, said Ford officials set up trailers at th e
parking lot of the College Football Hall of Fame to
hand out applications.
Last week, more than 10,000 applications were
given out for skilled positions.

Town's entry
is evaluated

WILLIAM N. BELLAMY

Bellamy
Rotary
·s peaker

SANTA FE, N. M. (AP)- New Mexico won't put
regulatory obstacles in the way of the Pacific-Texas oil
pipeline that would cross southern New Mexico, Gov.
Bruce King pledged Monday. He sent letters to
California Gov. Jerry Brown and top e•ecutives of
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) and El Pasu Natural Gas Co.
urging that the proposal be expedited. Sohio has
proposed that it take over one of two El Paso 3().inch
pipelines across the Southwest. The pipelines now
carry natural gas to California.
Alaskan crude oil barged to Long Beach, Calif.,
would be pumped across southern New Mexico to
Midland, Texa.s .

Explosion injures 26 people
PARIS (APJ - A violent explosion in a hostel for
students in the heart of the Paris Latin Quarter
lllJured at least 26 occupants today, police reported .
Two of the injured were reported In very serious
condition.
There was immediate speculation the blast was
caused by a bomb planted by Arab terrorists as an act
of revenge against the Egyptian • Israel peace
agreement.
J~wish

Voters deciding school levy
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -' Columbus school
district voters headed to the polls today to decide the
fate of .an 8.3-mill, three-year emergency operating
levy.
·
The last time Columbus voters approved an
increase in school taxes was in 1968, school officials
said, warning that teachers .would face checkless
paydays if the latest · levy loses. But school
Superintendent Joseph L. Davis said he remmalns
confident the levy will pass.

'·

gasoline prices , while the surc harges were fi g ured to mean

anothe r 1-&lt;:ent boost.
But prices ha ve jumped by more than a dime a ga llon in
the past year, partly due to a sharp increase in demand for
hard-to-refine unleaded gaso line and partly to a change in
federal price rules a Uowing r efiners to pass on increased

processing costs to conswners.
The average retail price of a gallon of regular leaded
gasuline at a full-service filling station jumped 3.68 cents this
month to 73.25 cent, _

en tine
TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1979

· of the marina facilities.
·!There will be no charge to
the V·tllage for th e cost
estimate and desi gn.
If the village decides to
proceed with the development , it would pay one-half of
the cost with the corps paying
the other half.
.
It was deci ded to proceed
with the design and cost
r~gul a r sess ion
Monday eotimates.
night .
•
Gene
Clerk -Treasurer
Mayor Hoffm an sa id he had Grate read a letter from the
conferred with a represen- Ohio Department of Liquor
tative of the corps and had Co ntrol r eportin g t hat a
been told · the corps will hearing will be held at the
design and make a cost Meigs Co u•thouse on April 17
estm1ale on the development at 9 a.m. concernin g the

15 CENTS

services area will address the

Middleport Rotary Club at
their meeting Friday, March
30, at the Middleport
Methodist Church at 6 p.m.
Bellamy 's a vid interest in

company 's archives we re

tra nsfer of the licenses of the
Hitching Po•t to the McFann
Market.
Co unc ilman Charl es
Mullen will attend.
A leiter was also read from
il,shland Oil Co. announcing
an incr ease of two cents a
ga llon on a ll grades of
gasoline.
A communication was read

from the Bureau of Work·
ma n 's Co mpe nsa tion

an-

the Bureau of the Census. The
estimated populal&lt;on in July,
1971 was 2,751 co mpared to
2,764 in Ju.l.'f, 1976. Mayor
Hoffman .feported that
Housing and Urban Development representa tive had

a

visited the community to
cxmnine sewage projt·cts on

Broadway and Hai1road Sts.
A dedsion on the ,;il lage
application for funds will be
forthcoming.
Mayor Hoffman reported
no help can be expected from

nouncing the awarding of
$3,082.22 to one former employe.
the U.S. Corps of Engineers
Gra te also reported a on the badly deteriora ting
decrease in th e town 's levee, but he wilJ see if soine
population has been noted by
1 Cvntun tt'd un pa~e 101

:::::::::;:::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:·:::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:.:::::::::::·

MEETING CANCELLED
A special meeting of the
Southern Local Board of
Educat ion schedu led

Delinquency charged

Wednesday eve ning has
been ea ncclled. The next
board meeting will he held

Meigs Count y She riff
James J . Proffitt reports two

juveniles had all egedl y
skipped school Friday and

at 7:30p.m. April 2.

Harrisonville area youths

have been charged with by Hysell. .
at th e Riv ervi ew School
delinquency in th e vandalism
The entry was discovered occurring som e tim e after
at the Harrisonville Grange lat e Sunday evening . No 3:30p.m. Sunday.
Hall. Meigs County Juvenile dollar amount of damage has
According to the report
officer Carl Hysell following been set. The t wo juveniles r ecei ved from Principa l
extensive ques tionin g, ob- were released to the custody Grace Weber. the back board
t a in ed sworn stat ement s of their parents until hearings
pole on the outside basket ball
from th e youths. The are held in Meigs County court was pushed part way

had been picked up after noon

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

William N. Bellamy of
Col umbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company's energy

used to develop the slide
program.
As a member of Columbus
MASON - Mason's " All and Southern's volunteer
West Virginia City" report Speakers Bureau, Bellamy
was reviewed in Charleston has appeared before a
o[
service ,
thi s week as one of 25 entries number
profession
al
and
church
in finals judging by the West
Virginia -Chamber of Com· groups.
Since joining Columbus and
merce.
Mason 's
ent ry
was Southern in 1957, Bellamy has .
eva luated by professionals in held various positions in the
community a nd business company 's muni c ipal
development from Virginia, relation s, civic and governKentucky and Pennsylvania. mental affairs, and energy
Co mmittee memb ers services areas.
He is a member of German
contributing to the report
Village
Kiwanis , Lamp·
were Fred Taylor, Charlotte
lighters
, Illuminati on
Jenks and Lois Test. The
Engineering
Society a nd
chairman of Mason 's " AU
West Virginia City" project, several historical soci'eties.
Catherine Smith, traveled to
Charlesto n with other
community members to Mason man cited
present the report and audio·
A Mason man, William F.
visual presentation to the Fry, Jr., 25, was charged with
panel of out-Qf-state judges. possession of a controlled
Results of Mason's effort sub s tance (marijuan a)
will be announced at the " All following his arrest Saturday
West Virginia City" Alvards at 12:25 -a.m. by New Haven
Luncheon in Charleston, May police on another charge.
2. Tickets to the program and
~'ry origina Uy was arrested
luncheon will be available on a charge of driving under
from the West Virginia the infl uencc, a police
Chamber office, P. 0. Box spokesman sa id , but a second
2789, Charl eston , W. Va . charge was added after the
25330, or by phone (30~ 1 342- marijuana allegedly was
1115. It is hoped by supporters found in his possession. ·
of the Mason entry that
Mason
will
be well
, represented at ·the Awards :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::;:; :;:::;:;:;:::::::::·:::::::::::::·:::·:::~;::.::
Luncheon. May 2, at the
Charleston House Holida y
EXTENDED FORECAST
Inn .
Thursday through
Mason's report covered
Saturday:
Mild with rain
community activities an d
possible
through the
involvement in the categories
Highs
from the
period.
of Community Planning,
upper
50s
to
the
lower
60s in
Recreation Culture, Health
the
north
and
from
the
and Education Medical. This
uppe.r
60s
to
the
lower
70.
In
Is the foutth year of the state
the
south.
Lows
from
the
cham h er's sta tewide
40s to the lower 50s.
development inc entive
program and the second year
:·:·:·:::·:-:;:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:
Mason hus entered.

No obstacles will be forced

Analysts sa id a 29 percent increase in the price of OPEC oil
would rmse U.S. gasoline and heating oil prices 6 cents a

Th e U. S. COrps of
Engineers will pay one-half of
the cost of a playground and a
ball diamond at the Middleport Marina, if Middleport
Village decides to ·develop
such facilities.
Thi s was the report of
Middl eport Mayor Fred
Hoffman when Middleport
Village Coun cil met in

history led to the development of hi s program,
"peace."
" Looking Forwa rd From
The so und of celebratory Backwards ." Th e presenbells at St. John 's Church, a tation traces the history of
block aw ay from th e Columbus and Southern from
IContinued on page 101
the mid 1650s, paralleling the
company's growth with
hi s tori c al · events.
Ph otographs fr om the

18,000 clog I -71 Monday .

1

. OPI·.C ln D~cember agreed on a four-stage schedule of
mcreases tolahng 14.5 percent by Oct. 1. The second increase
to $1 ~.84 a barrel. is scheduled for April I, and the October bas~
pnce IS scheduled to be $14.55.
. Mea nwhile, a number of the members took advantage of the
otl shortage caused by_ the suspension of Iran's exports and
ra~ sed prtces by puttmg on surcharges, generally in the
netghborh ood pf 9 percent. The Geneva meeting was called to
try to formulate unified price and production po licies.

gallon . But the precise impa ct of a price r&lt;Se on inflation rates
is difficult to pinpoint because "the limes when OPEC raises
pri ces in general are times when the world economy is
booming and inflation rates are rising ," according to Leon
Taub, an analyst firm of Chase Econometric Associates Inc .
.John Mugno, an anal yst for Citibank, estin1ated a one-shot,
2 5-percent OPEC increase might raise the U. S. inflation rate
this year by one-ilalf of a percentage point.
One place where OPEC actions have been easily observed (
is at the American gasoline pwnp. OPEC's 5 percent increase
in .January was expected to add aboul 3 cents a gallon to retail

Costs woUld be shared

.'iJle Arabic "salaam" mean

Nationwise

m crea~se.

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

And Sadat, in his toast at
the dinner, spoke of
Palestinians soon being able
to "take the first step on the
road of self determination and .
statehood." Begin and his
goverrunent firmly oppose a
Palestinian slate.
Carter, in his toast , seemed
intent on urging that aU parties, perhaps including the
Palestine
Liberation
Organization, join the search
for a comprehensive Mideast
settlement. He declared:
&lt;~ J welcome and invite
those who have so far held
back - for whatever mot ive
they might honor - to join us.
The way is long and the way
is hard - but peace is the
way.n

~11lu~tcrs :- ~ut ot he r sources reported stiff opposition (rom

Sa udi Arab1a and Abu Dhabi, who they sa id want a smaller

at

Leaders taking peace
idea before congress
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Israel's Menachem Begin and
Egypt's Anwar Sadat, having
jointly proposed President
Carter for the Nobel Peace
Prize, are taking to the
Congress their sometimes
divergent visions of a
peaceful Middle East.
The lsr a eli prime minister
broached the Nobel prize idea
at a gala dinner in a tent set
up behind .the White House
Monday night. Th e Egyptian
president rose quickly to
support llle idea.
Nine hours earlier, they
had signed a treaty ending 30
years of hostlity between
their two nations, a treaty
nurtured by President
Carter.
Responding
to
th e
suggestion, Carter, at least
partiaUy serious, declared :
"If the next nine months of
negotiation s (on
implementing the treaty) are
completely harmonious, ...
then I might consider
accepting their nomination .
But otherwise, they've made
their toasts in vain."
All members of the Senate

meeting &lt;•pened Monday . This would have raised the hasic
ttrice of Arabian light crude to $17.45 a barrel.
Cyrus Ebrahimzadeh, an economic.adviser to the lrartian
dde_gat1on, claimed the proposa l was favored by most of the

•

e

d. s highlight FFA banquet

wa~

because of its revolution against Shah Mohammad Reza

Pahlavi and pl e~ns to reduce the pre-r evolu tion export level in
tl1e future, urged an immediate 29 percent increase when the

Preparations
underway on
cooling tower
WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va.
(AP ) - A New Jersey cons truction

company

over by an unkno wn veh icle.

Regulations upheld

says

preparations are being made
to resume work on the giant
cooling tower from which 51
men were flung to their
deaths last April . And the
company says it will use new
scaffolding techniques to

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
federal judge Monday upheld
federal regulations that are
expected to allow gasoline
prices to rise more than 19
cents a gallon in the next two

prevent a reccurence of the

U.S. District Judge Aubrey
E. Robinson Jr . ruled that the
Department of Energy adequately cons idere d the
envirorunenlal impact of the
r,egulalions before they were

1978 disaster.
A spokesman for ResearchCottrell Inc. of Bound Brook,
N.J ., confirmed Monday that
intial prepa rations to reswne
construction were under wa y.

Philip
Cocco,
the
company 's public relations
off icer ,

said

companies

involved in the project have
begu n to hire workers.
"The hiring wou ld be
f&lt;lking pla ce now," Cocco
said.

Juvenile Court .
ln other action, deputies
are investigating v andalism

years.

issued.

Attorneys for consumer
advocate R&lt;ilph Nader had
asked Robinson to postpone
the pricing rWes on groWld:::
that their environmen tal
impact had not been carefully
studied.
The Nader attorneys con-

LOTS OF NUNS - Camille Swindell, center front ,
plays the role of the leading nun in the upcoming musical,
"1,•e Sound of Music" t4 be given at 7:30p .m. Friday and
Saturday at the Meigs High School Auditorium . Among
Miss Swindell's voca l numbers will be the well known ,
" (~im b F:v'r)· Mountain." Miss Swin~ell and some of her

tended the rules would cause
" p er man e nt
and
irre versible" harm to air

quality because they would
increase the price spread
between more ex pensive, but

•cleaner. unleaded gasoline
and cheaper. but dirtier,
leaded fuel. The attorneys
argued that the increasing
price differential would cause
motorists to switch to leaded
gaso lin e.
Robinsun ruled lh a.t it 's up
to the Department of Energy
to determine the in1pact of
fuel sw itching on the
environment, not the court.
The court, he said, " must
acco rd deference t o an
age ncy 's reliance on its own
expertise ."

Marks indicate that the
pole on the other end of the
court had also been struck .
'lbe incident is under invostiga lion .
Deput ies are also in-

vest igat ing vandali sm of a
gas meter va lued at $400.
According to Roger Adams
of Adam s Drilling Co.,
H.acine, a gas meter was torn

off the gas pipes at the Doris
Jackson fa nn at Great Bend.
Simon J . Jones, 47. Chester
Road ,

Pomer oy,

was

arrested following a 6: 40p.m.
accident Monday on US Rt.
33.
According to the report,
Jon es was traveling north on

US 33, went off the road on the
right and smashed a mailbox
owned by Norman Price.
Jones · was lodged in the
County Jail on DWJ charges.

supporting nuns pictured include, front, I to r, Vi ckie
Boyles , Miss Swindell, Tracey Jeffers; back, I tor, Robin
Kitchen , Jo McKinney, Shetrie Osborne, and Carrie Beth
Bearhs. lid vance tickets may be purchased at the New
York Clothing House and Swisher-Lohse Drugs in
Pomeroy, and at Dutton's LJrug Store in Middleport.

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