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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

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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

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
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(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.

�J-1'he IJ•Uiyllentmel MmU1epor! Pomeroy U l'uesda) March l

Editorial
• •
opmtons

'Matchup Zone' too
much for Sycamores

COMMENTARY
k'!? Donald F. Graff
A problem with profits

'

Hy Don Graff

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

mdJcate that busmess for all the economic uncertamt1es of
the times IS domg very well mdeed An~ they would
suggest that a recesston later on m 1979ts not quite the sure
thmg some members of the pesstmtstJC (or reahsttc take
your ptck ) school of economic seers have been predicting

FEC's questionable lube job

On the other hand the earmngs threaten to make a
shambles of the admimstratJOn s antt mflation prograiJl

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

or what IS left of 11 There 1s no way that labor alrea'dy
preparmg to do legal battle 1n opposition to the volun
tary aspect of wage pnce gwdelmes ts gotng to overlook

WASHINGTON (NEA) Politicians aren I the only ones
gcanng up for next year s pres idential race The Federal
Electton Commtss ton has JUSt announced that 1ts machm
ery Is bemg mled m pre pa ration for the campa ig n

all that money p1hng up m corporate coffers
It may be true that a good part of the reported profits are
not real money but the reflection of tnflatton But even by

But that FEC lubncahon JOb mcludes the questionable

the Commerce Department s mflabon weighted reckon
mg the profit r.se comes to a sllll hefty 19 4 percent
And m any event the mflatwn argument also apphes to

expenditure of almost $2 000 tn pubhc funds by a sma ll
group of the comm1sston s semor staff members durmg a
2 1 day retreat a t a countrystd e mn more than 100 miles
fr om Washmgton

the 7 percent Increase tn wages worktng stiffs are betng

lhe F EC 1s responsible for admtmster1ng federal laws

"It's the house special

~ovc rnm g

pres1dentta J Campa ig ns and for author1zmg
pa) ment of mtllJOns of dollars to ~a ndtdates 1n both the
p11 1 ary

and general electiOn races for the Wh1te House

Chairma n Joan D Aikens and a warmng from the
conumsswn s mformat10n off cer t hat pubhc disclosure of
the a1rangements could be embe~ rrassmg to the agency

c HA'RLESTON
Va
(AP) _ The coal fields of Ap
palachla have been oddly
qu1et of late Bul the golden
and other ii1gh ranktng agency offtc 1als
age forecast a year ago ut the
The drtvtng Coree beh tnd the meetmg held at a rural 0
end
of a bitter wmter long
lodge called the Boar s Head Inn near Charlottesville Va
wa s W Utam Loughery t he commiSSIOn s deputy staff stnke hus not matenallzed
d irector
""~
and some observers are
!\fte1 returmg to Washmgton Loughery prepared a blammg Washmgton
typewntten mne page smgle spaced memo that hsts all
Before the llfktay stnke
the purported accomphshme nts of the rural retreat
the owners sa1d wildcat
But even the parhclpants who have defended the stnkes were stranghng pro
meebng on the grounds that tt provided a valuable forum ductwn Spurred by presJden
for= mforrnal discuss ions have charactertzed Loughery s
Although the retreat was des 1gned to Improve cooper a
tto n among the FEC s seven diVISIOns It produced mstead
a bureaucratu.: feud between the commtssJOn s lawyers

boondoggle

Most of the partlctpants rented $31 80 per mght rooms at
the countryside tnn for two mg hts while costs for the

conference r oom brought the Iota! hotel bill up to

$1 044

WASHINGTON (AP) When Sen Bob Dole the
250 m1l es w1th costs m that category totahng almost$375
Kansas Republican gets up
In addthon the pa1 hc1pants received a collective total of and starts talkmg about
$520 m standard government per d1em payments of $16 a
poor
blatant unreality
day to cover the cost of meals and mc1dcntal expenses The
actmimstratwn
and
rampant
total cost of the retreat was sl•ghtly more than $1 960
Aikens dechned to personally dtscuss her views on the dece1t b) the powers that be
m eetmg but a spokeswoman was a uthonzed to say tha t we assume 11 s another
the commtsslOn chairman exp1essed her reservations
denunciation of the Demo
a bout the Idea and questiOned the value of the semmar
crats
Dav1d Fi s ke the commJsswn s chief mformahon officer
After all Dole IS one of the
at the lime of the tnp also declined to discuss h1s attitude
Republicans
trymg to follow
!award the retreat But others at the FEC sa•d he warned
h1s colleagues that It could be pubhcly perceived as a the yellow bnck road to the
White House
pomtless Junket
But thiS tune h1s rhetonc
Such out--of town retreats are common In the busmess
world and do offer various be neflts to both the sponsormg was part of a tnbute to an old
orgamzation and the tndlvtduals who attend the meetmgs
constituent Dorothy Gale
fhey prov 1de an mformal setttng where c;:hfflcult long
the young girl from Kansas
1 ange problems can be disc ussed m a relaxed atmosphere
who
traveled to the Land of
free from the pressure of routmc daily busmess In

ta•payers of $10 000 to $50 000 or more
By that standard the FEC retreat was a modest affair

But comm isSIOn offiCials r ema m nghtfully sensitive about
the meetmg becaus e It was a questionable undertakmg for
the watchdog agency committed to ethical campaig n
fm a ncmg

Names •••
in the news
SACRAMENTO Calif (AP ) - Gov Edmund Brown Jr
who has sa1d he 1s closer to announcmg for a 1980 pres1den
llal b1d plans to fly to New Hampshire next week to testify for
a balanced budget measure there
The Democratic governor s press office sa1d Monday that
Brown would appear before a legJslative corrumttee heatmg
April 2 m New Hampslure the site of the nation s first pres•
dent1al prunary next year
He s had a long standmg mvttation to testify from the
leader of the New Ham~h1re Assembly on balancmg the
federal budget Browns office said
Whlle Brown has not specifiCally sa1d he 1s runnmg he has
bP.P.n PrlvmD rln~r tn an announcement 1n rP.r.ent weeks

TUCSON, Am (AP)- Bn!Jsh rock star Enc Clapton may
marry g•rlfr)end Pat11 Boyd when he IS m Tucson this week for

a concert a Tucson newspaper says
The Tucson Citizen quoted the Watts Agency a London
pubUc relatiOns fll'm as saymg Clapton was plannmg the wed
ding
It s tune for me to take the big drop Clapton was quoted
as saytng as he departed London to start an Amencan tour
With !he Tucson concert Wednesday rught
Patti IS already
wmtmg for me m Anwna for me to come to the altar
Claplon manager J\lphl 0 Leary who arrived m Tucson on
Sunday would not say when or where the wedding would be
and would not confirm !he report that the rock star planned to
marry m Tucson
Ms Boyd was divorced m 1977 from George Harr1son for
mer member of the BeaUes
MANCHESTER N H (AP)- Harold Stassen says 1980 IS
gomg w be my turn
He launched hiS New Ham!&gt;!hll'e campa1gn Monday for the
RepubLican pres•dential nommation wh1ch he has sought m
every prunary campa1gn smce 1940
There 1s an urgent need m America for what I can provide
and th1s tune I thmk I Uget the chance to prove 11 lie sa1d
The 71 year-&lt;&gt;ld Stassen a lawyer and former three-time
governor of Mmnesota called for umty WJthm the GOP but
eluded other GOP aspirants for trying to turn the Republican
Party mto the conservative party of Amer1ca
Eleven other GOP asp1rants have been campa1gnmg m the
state some smce January 1978
Bes1des Stassen s losmg streak as a preslilent•al candidate
considered the longest m Amencan pobt1cs h1s pollt1cal
career mcludes two unsuccessful b1&lt;ls for governor of Penn
sylva rna mayor of PhiladelphJa and a U S Senate seat from
M=esota

IIal support for greatly m home the1r employers are
creased coal productiOn unable to sell coal Thousands
operators said the mdustry of olhers are desperately try
could approach a golden age mg to make up for the months
1f only the labor force could they spent 1dle last surruner
be stabilized
when a stnke by ra1lroad
The operators huve gotten clerks stopped coal trams
their WISh - members of the
West V1rgm1a Gov Juy
Umted Mme Workers have Rockefeller beLieves that part
cut wlldcat stnkmg by 90 per of the blame can be pul on the
cent
Wh1te House
But thoUliands of Ap
The problem Is the
palach1an rruners s!Jll s1t at absence of a cohes•ve work
mg natwnal energy policy
Rockefeller smd m a recent
speech Only the president
IS m a pos1l10n to exert that
pohcy Rockefeller sa1d
The White House cannot
huve
1! both ways TI1e pres1
from Rep Dame! Crane R
dent
cannot
expect to keep all
U1
of
h1s
environmental
consll
The notice sa1d Crane
on
one
hand
and
dou
tuency
would greet a constituent who
ble
coal
producllon
on
the
had traveled the 900 nnles to
sa1d
other
Rockefeller
the Capitol on horseback
In southeast Ohw the coal
The last !me of the press re
1s
plugued with a h1gh sulfur
lease was
Unfortunately
content
Mme officials and
th1s IS not a Joke
mme•s ahke scored the U S
The federal goverrunent IS Environmental ProtectiOn
engaged m an unsuccessful Agency at a recent trw of
search for an area that would pubLic hearmgs complammg
welcome becommg the burial loudly that the tough pollutwn
hm1ts set by the agency were
ground for nuclear waste
costmg
jobs by forcmg
Addressmg a meetmg of
ut1hUes
to
sw1tch to a cleaner
governors recently Rep
burnmg
coal
Morr1s Udall
D Anz
Also both Africa and
referred 10 the controversy Australia
now are exportmg
over a plan to establish a steam coal to U S pm ts m
bunal s1te at Carlsbad N M
If you can t put the stuff m
New Mex1co where can you
put 1!? asked Udall Would
you like 11 m IllinOJs? he
CLEVELAND (AP) asked Gov Jun Thompson
Before
Cleveland s default
who crmged at the
no
one
could say w1th
suggestion
certamly
what the City s
At last UdaU hit upon a
fmanc•al
condition
was or 1!
possible solutiOn
11 could meet 1ts payroUs And
Maybe some state would anunos1ty raged among the
hke to have it .as a tourist at mayor City counc1l and
tractiOn It could advertiSe 1!
self as the only community m busmess commumty
102 days later that s
Amenca that glows m the allNow
sllll
true
dark
The only tangible s1gns of
Sen John C Stennis )). the fmancJai criSIS are hJgher
payroll taxes approved 10 a
M1ss chall'liUill of the Senate special
Feb Tl and
Armed Semces Cornrmttee default electwn
memorabilia
recently was presiding at a
There are default T-&lt;lhirts
hearmg on
the ad
w1th
slogans such as
m101strat1on s $122 7 billion
Defaults
Not Mine I Only
request for the Pentagon
Live
Here
and Oeveland
A group of h1gh school stu
-You
ve
Got
To Be Tough
dents entered the room and
as
well
as
default
postcards
Stenms quickly moboned
songs
and
even
square~nch
them to take seats All of
packages of Cleveland dirt
you are taxpayers or w1U be off
erect for sale
soon so come on over here
The
Greater Cleveland
and hear where your money
Growth
Assoc1allon
•s go10g
formerly the Chamber of
Commerce says the c1ty s
economy IS thr1V10g and !hat
nearly seven out of every 10
Cleveland compa mes
surveyed md1cated plans to
expand w1thm the next few
years Cleveland boosts that
11 has more corporate
headquarters than any other
U S c1ty except New York or
Ch1cago
Cleveland became the first
major US c1ty to default

Capitol ideas

Those who drove their own cars to Charlottesville were
1 eunb ursed for auto expe nses at the authorized govern
m e nt rate of 17 cents per m1le for a round tnp averagmg

addJtwn p.artJcipants can become better acquamted With
their coHeag ues
But the concept can be abused by both busmess and
governme nt g roups Some federal agencies for mstance
have nown ~core,s of officials to high pnced resorts
tho usands of miles from Washmgton e~.t a cost to the

Taiwan-drop soup "

Coal wstrike--a year later

The meehng to plan for the 1980 campaign was held far
fr011 the ca pital despite both oppos•hon from FEC

memo as an exagge rated acco unt possibly prepared to
ward off c nlicJsm that the tnp was little more than a

()z

Dorothy turned 40 last week
and Dole saluted her as a
paragon of conunon sense
and prame VIrtues
But 11 s difficult for a sena
tor especially one who
dreams of becommg the
W1zard of the White House to
refram from hndmg a
polll!cal moral m Dorothy s
JOUrney
So after referrmg to the
unreality
poor
actmmJstrallon and rampant
dece1t m the Land of Oz Dole
couldn t res1st saymg We
hope the analogy w1th
Washmgton D C IS apt
The best miXed metaphor
of the week comes from
Senate MaJonty Leader
Robert C Byrd, )).W Va
argumg against JegJslatwn
mandatmg a balanced
federal budget
I hope all of us go mto th1s
p1t w1t~ our eyes open and our
parachutes slrapped on
And the most honest press
release of the week came

the Gulf of MeXIco accordmg
to Carl Bagge pres1dent of
the Natwnal Coa l Assoc1a
twn It s largely because
they can dehver 11 at lower
pnces than U S coal
And U s exports of
metallurg•cal coul rruned
mostly m Appalachia have
been fa1bng partly because
of weak world w1de steel
market
That has put 5 000 mmers
out of work m southern Wesl
V1rgm1a alone accordmg to
the West V1 rg1ma Coal
Assoc1atwn
Bagge contends the poor
market cond1bons ure due to
federal regulabons on slr1p
mmmg coal leases and m
creased black lung benefits
He IS one of a number of coal
mduslry officials who have
been very vocal m the past
year m cntJcJzmg govern
ment regulatwn
He also blamed mmg
costs m part on the !978 con
tract wh~e h made coal
mmers among the most
h1gh ly pa1d mdustrial
workers m the Umted States
All these thmgs have nn
posed h1gher and h1gher costs
on the coal mdustry and
rendered us unable to cum
pete m world markels he
sa1 d

Berry's World

mE DAILY SENTINEL
USPS 145-MO)

@gJ, ~~- ~.-DEVl11'ED TO mE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City F.dlter
DAVID BUSKIRK
Adt~ertb:lq Mauaxer

Published daily except Saturday

by The OhiO Valley Publishing

Comp~:~ny

Court St

MuiUmedla Inc
lll
Pomeroy Oh o 45769

Bu.'l ness Off ce Pl)one 992 2I56
Editorial Phone 992 2157
Second dl:tSS postag11 paid al

Pumeruy Ohio.
National advertising representllllve l..andon Aasoc1ates 3101
EuchdAve Oeveland Ohio44115
Subscription rates Del Vllred by

smce the DepressiOn after 11
faded to pay s1x local banks
when $14 milhon m municipal
notes matured on Dec 15
Outspoken Mayor Denrus J
Kucm1ch says the earhest the
c1ty can repay the bankers 1s
July
The banks and other
pnvate creditors of the City
are remmnmg pahent
The only IIISJstent creditors
have been government uruts
A state penston fund for
pohce and firefighters seized
funds due to the c1ty earlier
th1s year when Cleveland
failed to make $5 4 milLion m
contribUtiOns And Cuyahoga
County
off1c1als
are
threatenmg to sue Cleveland
to collect more than $5
mJ!hon m debts
Meanwhile the OhiO
General
Assembly
IS
cons1dermg measures to
restore the c1ty w solvency
By the tune the leg1Slabve
hearmgs ended KucmJCh s
f1nance d1rector
acknowledged c1ty debts of
$93 5 m1ll10n but sa1d they
would be met over a periOd of
two years
We as taxpayers still have
no clearer p1cture of where
the c1ty stands than we did
last Dec 15 M Brock Well'
chall'Jllan of Cleveland Trust
the crty s largest bank s31d
last week
Tempers often have flared
Kucuuch has attacked the
banks busmess commumty
City council leaders and even
Gov James A Rhodes
allegi?g a conspll'acy to turn
over\;control of the c1ty to
greedy corporate mterests
The c1ty of Cleveland has
been put on the CEI
Cleveland Trust torture rack
and until we y1eld they will
keep beatmg us KuclnJch
sa1d shortly before the
February election
In that electiOn voters also
overwhelrnmgly dec1ded to
retam the c1ty s muniCipal
eleclrlc ullllty a pos1t1on
advocated by KucmlCh

curler where avall&lt;~ble 75 cents per

Guess what' There s NO INK IN THE PEN'

asked to ab1de by As these see 1! and feel 11 In attemptmg
to balance household budgets that amounts to voluntarily
acceptmg a declme in real Income
Alfred E Kahn the actmm•strat10n s field commander m
the campaign agamst mflatlon has suggested that
w•despread disregard of gu1delmes by smafler and
medtum s1zed finns IS contr1butmg s igmficantly to conbn
umg s trong upward pressure on pr1ces and to the swoiJen
profit figures H1s descriptiOn of these ts a catastrophe'
which puts busmess on trtallQ the eyes of the American

week By Motor Route where t:B rrier
.s"n IL&gt;t! nol llvailable One monlh
$3 25 By lllHII n Oh o tmd W VII
One Year $21 50 S1x montlu
$11 50 Three months S8 50
El ewhert&gt; $32 00 year Six months
$17 on
Thrt!e months $9 00
8 u!J.s(:rlpU n pr &lt;'C Include!!! Sundav
T mu-$en
I

Librartes are almost as
old aSJ c1v1hzatton About a
cenlury ago, an excavation
at Nmeveh unearthed clay

tablets md•cahng that the
anc1ent c1ty had a library of

Keiser nme M1ch1gan State
carved out a 37 28 ha Iflime
lead Then unheralded ferry
Donnelly sudden!} go! hot w
help the Spartans score the
first seven pomts after
mtermlSSion and mount a

commandmg 44 20 advantage
With 17 10 to play
In
the1r
unbeaten
storybook surge to the
threshold of greatness the
Sycamores had trailed by as
many as 11 pomts several
times and ralLied to wm But
never had they been down by
16 and never had they faced
Mag1c
Johnson and
SpecJal K Keiser And
hard as they tned to wnte a
happy endmg to what had
been a fa1ry !ale season for
!hem and B1ll Hodges the1r
rook1e head coach they never
got closer !han SIX

W1th 10 05 remammg and
Johnson shackled w•tl three
fculs and Keiser With four
l11rd muscled through the a1r
tog hi Spartan defenders to hll
a short jumper and make 1!

a
orne m tu help Om
lefcnse w rked well tomght
\\ t&gt; "anh;d l( fune the actwn
cmd ge l mtu an up tempo

&gt;246

llcathcote sounded Like he
was se1tously worned dw-mg

!lui a Johnson free throw
and a lot nson bucket made 11
55 ~6 and returned the
momentum to the Spartans
who never let go of 11
At the end Bird put h1s face
m h1s hands as 1! to h1de
tears He scored 19 pomts a
good game for anyone else
but a dreadful mght for a man
who averaged almost 29
through the seaso n and
became everybody s player
of the year
We would have one rnan
and a half on hun when he pul
the ball on the floor
Heathc ote ex plamed the
defense of B1rd We would

ha ve a rorward rn hun and
~-:u;,n cl t

only one stretch m the second

half
'A'hat hurt us nost \\as
r. rego r) gcttmg m foul
trouble he sa1d We got
cautious and conservative
but the Mag1c Man put us
back together
Johnson
a
6 foot 8
sophomore who may bolt
M1 ch1gan State to JOIIl B1rd m
professiOnal basktball nexl
season pumped m a game
h1gh 21 pomls and Kei ser had
19 Donnelly who seldom gets
mu ch attentiOn keepmg
compa ny With the I kes of
Johnson and Kei ser hit 5-&lt; f-5

1s an order to withhold government contracts valued at $5

By HAL BOCK
AP Sports Wr1ter
It was a wonderful 1dea for
the Philadelphia Philhes to
package $3 2 m1llion of owner
Ruly Carpenter s petty cash
to s1gn free agent Pete Rose
On the surface Rose can
add
many
Important
elements to an already
unposmg Phlllle lmeup wh1ch
has won three straight
National League East !Jiles
There IS however a fatal
flaw m the plan
Pete Rose can t p1tch
It IS an m and-&lt;&gt;ut mound
staff complicated by UlJurles
that casts a long shadow over
PhJladelphJa s hopes for
repeatmg as NL East
kingpms And the team tnost
Likely to succeed 1f the
Phill1es can t overcome the
shorlage of arms IS the
Pittsburgh P1rates
The Pll'ates came w1thm a
whisker of catchmg the Rose
less Philhes a year ago and 1!
could be Philadelph•a domg
the catchmg th1s t1me
around After those two top
cats Montreal St Lotus and
Clucago are bunched m the
m1ddle of the Nahonal

percent lurnt on increases m wage settlements with their

employees

The umon asserts that contract demalts an enforcement
weapon that m effect makes wage controls mandatory
rather than voluntary If restramt on wages IS to be so

enforced so should 11 be on priCes
A dec1s10n favorable to the umon could weD mean the end
of the voluntary gUJdehnes and a long step toward the
mandatory program George Meany would hke to see
putting a hd on the pr1ce of everythmg and the mcome of
everybody
If one consequence of 1ts h1ghly visible prospenty should
be to hasten mandatory controls busmess would have no
difficulty dec1dmg whether that news IS good or bad

Progress, People's Republic-style
What w1th an estunated three·nulbon of them, Pekmg s
bJeychsts would appear to have enough of a traffic
problem JUSt keepmg out of each other s way
Now they re gomg to something new to contend w1th
automatic stoplights

-

The Western style hghts accordmg to a recent report
from the cap1tal w•ll be bmed to control the flow of traffiC
at two mmute 10 second mtervals durmg rush hours
But w1th only mne of them to be Installed on one major
shoppmg street 11 would appear that Pekmg traffic ls
gomg to continue to be more go than stop

HEALTH

Randy Lerch behmd h1m
Ron Reed may leave the
bullpen to bols ter the
starters That leaves Tug
McGraw
and
Warren
Brusstar m rehef
Pennants have been won
With a bullpen
and
Pittsburgh
tlunks
th e
three m a row
additiOn
of
Enrique
Romo
1970 Fuush - Ph1ladephla
acquired from Seattle giVes
Pittsburgh
Ch1cago
Montreal St ~u1s New the Pirates the reLiever they
need to go over the top
York
He ll reduce the work load
1979 F101sh - Pittsburgh
Philadelphia Montreal Ch1 which Kent Tekulve earned
cago St Lotus New York almost smgle-handedly last
Rose has spent sprmg year Add Grant Jackson and
trammg
learnmg
the Bruce K1son and the Pirates
10tncac1es of playmg first have sohd backup pitching
base and Manager Danny behmd the startmg rotatiOn of
Blyleven
John
Ozark has spent 1! trytng to Bert
Candelana
Don
Rob10son
keep Philadelphia s fragile
p1Ichmg staff mlact A freak Jerry Reuss Jun Rooker
b1kmg accident left Larry and Jun B1bby
The attack IS constructed
Christenson w1th a fractured
collarbone Prom1smg Jun around two lime NL battmg
Wnght threw a pitch m an e• champiOn Dave Parker m
hib1t1on game and fractured nght field 38-year-&lt;&gt;id W1lhe
h1s arm DICk Ruthven Stargell at frrst base and
complamed of a tender arm speedsters Omar Moreno
that sent shiVers up and down (the NJ basestealmg leader)
m center field and Frank
the Phillie hierarchy
shortstop
Steve Carlton remams the Taveras at
mamstay of the staff w1th Manager Chuck Tanner
Ruthven (1! he s healthy ) and hopes second baseman
League East Then come the
lowly New York Mets whose
reactwn to two strrught last
place fm1shes has been a
sland pat pos1t1on
ap
parently m an effort to find
oul whether the same
med1ocre lmeup can make 11

Lawrence E Lamb, M D

Tt•sltulw
hus•m•ss
DEAR DR LAMB - This
test t~be busmess has all of us
"omen talkmg We ve been
very mlerested m the com
ments you ve made about
surrogate mot hers and
bab1es born from arhfJcJal m
semmatwn We wanted to
know 1f an ovum was ferhhz
ed m a lest lube and then 1m
planted m some other
woman s uterus who would
really be the mother? I mean
1f the ovum comes from Mrs
Brown and then the fert1hzed
ovum 1s Implanted mto Mrs
Sm1 th s uterus would Mrs
S!mth be the mother or Mrs
Brown?
DEAR READER - Such
proble1ns have already been
studied m ammal breedmg
In many ways the ammal
stud1es are far ahead of the1r
htunan apphcat10n
Of course the uterus IS ab
solutely essenhal to any
pregnancy but 11 has nothing
to do w1th the genellc
charactensl!cs of the off
sprmg If the ovum came
from Mrs Brown 11 Will have
Mrs Brown s genes m 1! not
Mrs Sm1th s
Even though Mrs Sm1th s
uterus provides the environ
ment for the development of
the baby aJld Its eventual
bu th genel!cally the baby
WJII have none of Mrs
Smith s genes That means
the baby w11l not mhent any
of
Mrs
Sm1th s
charactensllcs However
emotional attachment and
bmdmg between child and
molher Will be between Mrs
Smith and the baby assum
mg that after b1rth Mrs
Sm1th raises the baby
Theorellcully, 1f Mrs
Sm1th couldn t ovulate at all
bu• had " normal uterus 11
m1ght be possible to ferllllze
an ovum from another
woman und Implant 11m Mrs
Smith s uterus so she could
have a pregnuncy That way
some othe" woman would not
need to be a surrogate mother
and to birth a child by her
husband for her

DEAR DR LAMB - Why
do you thmk m1ddle-aged people sllll chew or ptck the1r
na1ls 1 I would think they
would try to conlrol lh1s m the
presence of others as 11
usually d1sgusts those around
them How could one help
such a friend ? What should
one do to try to stop nat!
b1tmg or pickmg at the1r
fmgers? Is 11 a lack of
something m the person? If a
parent does 11 I presume a
child follows su1t and makes
the habit
DEAR READER - You ve
used the n ghl term 1t s a •
hab1t It may be cuused by
nervousness Regardless of
the underlymg causes II si!UJ
1
ISH habJ(
Chungmg habits 1sn I
always easy People g1ve up
one bad ha b1t und merely
subslltute another one It s
questiOnable whether 11
would be an Improvement or
nul to stop b1llng your na1ls 1! ' ,
you ended up stuttermg If we •
knew how to get people to
ehnnnate bad hab1ts easily
Life would be a lot eus1er for
such people and tbe rest of us ,
People tend to subslltute a "
new habit for an old one A
good method IS to develop a •
new good hab1t at the same
lime you are gelling nd of an
old one
We re ta lkmg about
behaviOr modificatiOn and
your fnend might get some •
useful suggestiOns from a
psychologist or psychiatrist
An evaluutwn of your frtend s
Lifestyle and habits rrught
suggest a sUJta ble ha b1t "
replacement or other means
"
to help ellmmate null b11lng
DOES YOUR personality
determme 1! you're gomg to
have a heart attack or not] ,.
Readers who want the facts
on lh1s can send 50 cents With
a long stamped self ~
addressed envelope for The r~
Health Letter number 4 I
Behavior
Pattern
PsychologiCal Factors , '
StressandHeartD1sease Ad N'
~

dress your request to

nr . .

Lamb 10 care of thiS
newspaper. P 0 Bo• 1551
Radw C1ty Stallon New
York NY 10019

"

"1

Coach Mayer says Demons
made too many mistakes
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) DePaul s Blue Demons had
1t then they dldn t
We made too many mlS
lakes
sa1d Coach Ray
Meyer and let Penn get
back mto the game

playoffs
rout mto a bout Monday
We had 15 good rrunutes at
mght and the Blue Demons the start of the game sa1d
had to f1ght for !hell' hves m Meyer whose team led by as
order to post a 96-93 overtune many as 23 pomts late m !he
VIctory over the Quakers m first half But we made so
!he natwnal thJrdplace game many errors at the end of the
at the NCAA basketball f1rst half that we put them
back U1 II
1 ony Pnce did most of the
damage for the Easl
Regwnal champwns scormg
21 of h1s 31 pomts to chop
DePaul s oncemounLamous
lead to II at the half 5443
Then some more desultory
He gave us a great game play by the West champiOns
plan
said Johnson who made It even more
guarded B1rd for part of the mterestmg Suddenly, Penn
game
had caughl up to DePaul and
Keiser
Johnson s U1e teams were tied at 85 at
teammate and off court the end of regulatiOn !hanks
buddy p1cked up his fourth w a shot by James Salters
foul early m the second half With II seconds left
and the Spartans hittmg on
DePaul though woke up m
only one g1ant cyhnder the overtime penod w1th high
mstead of two began to scorer Mark Agturre h1ttmg
falter
e1ght of hls team leadmg 34
When Greg went out we pomts AgUirre scored SIX of
tried to control the ball and his pomts m one flurry to g1ve
take some time off the DePaul a 9H9 lead and the
clock Johnson sa1d And ul!Jmate wmnmg pomt With
by domg that we kmd of lost 28 seconds left
the momentum for a little
'A e didn t feel Like playing
while So coach told me I had for th1rd place I guess sa1d
w Jake charge and do a lot Meyer
We struggled
more thmgs on offense So I through 11 but we are happy
hit a couple of baskets and w go home on a wmmng
Greg came back m and we note
got !he JOb done
Johnson a 6 foot-ll soph
omore had barely sat down
when he was asked the
questwn that w1ll cootinue to
be asked m commg days Will
he turn •mmed1ately to
professwnal basketball or
return to M1ch1gan State m
the fa!(?
Is this my last college
game? I stJII don t know Am
I gomg to apply for hardship?
I shU don I know When will I
dec1de? Oh no l 'Ve got to
enjoy this f1rst Then I 11
dectde later a couple of
weeks I ve got a lot of lime

Magic Man all
smiles after win
By VERN ANDERSON
Associated Press Wruer
SALT LAKE CITY (AP ) The MagJC Man Earvm
Johnson had played w1th
bew1tchmg grace but !here
was mag1c to spare m h1s
smile as he sat down w talk
about wmrung 1! all
There was a basketball net
hangmg like a laurel around
h1s neck and nothmg to do
but savor the sweets of
Michigan State s NCAA
basketball hUe
It was Johnson who had
scored a game-high 24 pomts
Johnson who had picked up
h1~ flaggmg teammates m the
second half Johnson who l1ad
scored a crucial four.pomt
play and most of all 11 was
Johnson who sent Ind1ana
State w 1ts f1rst defeat m 34
games and the Spartans to
the1r fll'st nabonal basketbaU
championship
The talk at the post-game
news conference was of
tact1cs and miSsed chances
how the Spartans had
defensed Sycamore All
Amencan Larry Bl!'d what
Gregory Keiser s foul trouble
had meant to Michigan Slate
But there was the Magic
Man smiling that 11-couldn t
havebeen-any-{)thet way
smile
The coach gave us a job to
do on Larry B1rd and all we
had to do 1s go out au~ do 11

'ut Wt! tn~d h slow It down
md Ia ke Sllllt! lunt: uff the

&lt;I k I lut a couple of
ba sket s

tht:n

( rreg came

bm k and we got the J&lt; b
dune
Hodges
an
obscu1 e
asMst (;l ilt

phol

S&lt;

a }ear

ag u

figures 1t made a
steal of a deal With the
Ph1lhes With the acqtus1t10n
of ca tcher Barry Foote
se co nd
baseman
Ted
Sizemore and outfleder Jerry
Martm All Will be reb'Ulars
for
Manager Herman
franks club commg ove1 tn
exchan ge
for
Tnllo
outfwlder Greg Gross and
catcher Dave Rader
Bobby Murcer and Dave
Kmgman flank Martm m the
outfield Bill Buckner the
Nl s No 2 hitter last season
IS at first base With Sizemore

...

wtt s

phJCal m dca lmg w th

fhe I u1 d blessed us With a
he sa d

11 emendo us year

"'~ \\ e ha~; e a great bunch of

pla yers II ey nc\er gave up

I don t thmk they ever w1ll
ilnl one d1sappomted w1th the
SU( cess we have had th1s year
has to be a lesser man than I
am They arc a team a umt
and a fam•l y and I love ever)

I o urn ament

earLier th1s month the Big
Ten can nghtfully daun to be
the tough est basektball
league m the countr)
'A e re ver) pleased of
scud Commi SSIOner

course
II ayne

Duke But we aren I
gomg to beat our chest and
boast becau se we know thmgs
I ke th1s run m cycles and

Cards slap 11-4
defeat on Reds
fly rF 1\R Y KINNEY
\P Spurt~ Wntl'r

! AMPA
ll a
lAP
( em ~e I ostei has I It pic

By The AssoCiated Press
Mondays Game s
Houston 3 Boston 0
At ant a 5 Montrea l 2
St Lou s 11 C nc nn at 4
Lo5 Angeles 2 M n 1eso ta 0
New York N ) 7 To onto 3
Detro
4 Pt lade ph a J
Kan sas C ty
P tt sburgh 0
Ct cago A) 11 N ew Yor k

Mondays

BASEBALL

Amencan League

KANSAS CITY ROYALS

Sent Ben Grzybek
Ken t
Cvetdl k and Ren1e M art n

Jer m a

Barranca

HOUSTON ASTROS - Sen!

M ke Mend oza and Gordon
Pad son p tche rs Regg e

Baldwm cat cher and M ke

Drum
e ld ers
to
of the
In

F schl n and
nght
nf
Charlestown

Ke th

t)

Exh1b1t1on Baseball
At A Glance

Sports Transactions
By The Assoc1ated Press

Da ve Cr pe
and Buddy
8 a n ca lan a
nf el der s to
th e r m nor league cam p for
reass•gnmenl
Nahonal League

stl ange as one Mondav m an
11-4 exh bnon game less to
lh e St I ows Cardmals

of home runs m h1 s bascUall
&lt;.arrer but none qu t1.2 so

sn meth1n g we m 1ght sa)
tomght w II come back to
haunt us

pitchers

tAl 5

Cleveland 7 San D ego 6 10
nn ngs
M l waukee 8 San Fran
c sea 3
Cat fo n a 8 Oakland 0
Ch cago (N) 5 Sealll e A
3
Te)(a S 2 Balt1mor e 1
Seattle B 11 Ar zona St
3

Tuesdays Games
New York (A} vs St Lou s
a t St Petersburg Fla
Boston vs Los Angeles at

at second Ivan DeJesus at
short and Steve Ontiveros at ternat anal Leag ue Sent Tom
W1denbau er
outf•elder t o
th1rd and Foole catchmg
Columbus of the Southern Vera Beach Fla
RICk Reuschel Ray Burns Leag ue
Sal nore vs Montreat a
M1ke Krukow and Denms
MONTRE AL EXPOS
Day ana Beach Fla
Lamp are Franks starters Sent Larry Horn p tcher
Ka nsas C ty vs P tsburgh
and the bulfpen 1s bUilt Jerry F r y ca t c her and at Bradenton F a
Edd e Gates outt elder to
Ch cago A
A
vs C n
around Bruce Sutter who •s Denver
of t he Ame r can c nnat at Sa aso ta F l a
the Nl s best reliever Assoc1aflon
Ch cago A B vs Tor on to
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS at Ound e n Fla
Donme
Moore
W1lhe
gned Bob Knepper
M nnesota vs
Tex as at
Hernandez I ynn McGlothen -p1t c Sher
and Ken Holtzman can also con tra ct to a thr ee year Pompan o Beach Fl a
Oakland vs Cleve la nd at
contribute
HOCKEY
Tucson Ar z
World Hockey
Montreal ha s the best
Ch cago ( N J vs M !wau kee
Assoc1af1on
at Sun C ty Ar z
yo ung outfield 10 the league
NEW
ENGLAND
Ca l forn a vs Seatt le at
perhaps m the maJors w1th WHALERS
Recalled Tempe Ar z
Andre

Dawson and Elhs Valentme
and the Expos did some
Jnlportant off season work
patchmg some other spots
prmlanly the pitching staff
Added was left-llander Bill
Lee who JOinS a startmg staff
led by Ross Gr1msley Steve
Rogers and Rudy May For
the bullpen free agent re
hever Ehas Sosa JOinS
JOUrneyman Woodie Fryman
The mfleld remams mtact
With Tony Perez at Ill's! base
Dave Cash at second
shortstop Chns Spe1er and
th1rd
baseman Larry
Parrish
The bench IS stronger with
free agent catcher Duffy
Dyer to back up Gary Carter
ouf1elder Jerry White and
infielder Rodne) Scott and
Ken Macha
St Louts has the NL s best
catcher day m day-out With
dependable Ted Sunmons
but the rest of the cast IS
unmsp1rmg especially the
p1tchmg F1rst baseman
Ke1th Hernandez shortstop
Garry Templeton and third
baseman Ken Re1tz are sohd
but the ou!Ield IS only soso
with broodmg George Hendr
1ck m center and agam Lou
Brock sharmg lefl with Tony
Scott and Jerry Mumphrey m
n ght

George Ly le forward from

Spnngf eld of th e Amer can
Hockey League
SOCCER
North Amenca n

Soccer League

ROCHESTER

LANCERS

S1gned Da ve
def en der to a
contrac t

D Ernco
one year

""""'

MATCHES 10 BF. HE! D - The Me1gs County Jaycees Will sponsor box1n~
matches 20 bouts plus a rnam event at Larry Momson Gym at Me1gs H1gh School on
Saturday Apnl 7 at 7 30 p m 1 a king part m the event w1ll be boxers from Zanesv1lle
Glouster Logan and the local area Forty percent of the profit w1ll be donated toward t1 e
Me1gs tra ck fund and p1 ceeds !rom refreshments sold by the Me1gs AthleUc Boosters" •II
also he donated to the track fw d Rmgs1de seats are $3 and general admiSsion IS $2 Ti ckets
are ava ilable from an) J I) cce 1hose w1shmg to purchase tickets may caiiBobArn1s a! 9Y2
548 Ken Ha1tley at 9n 7184 or Dav1d Jenkins at 992-&lt;)68 1 Shown dlspla) Ing a posler
advert1smg th e event are I&lt; Dav1d Jenkms p1 es1dent of the Jaycees Gerr) I 1ghtf0&lt;
president of the Gil ls AthletiC \ ssoc1allon and Charles Hamlitor pres1dent of the Meigs
1\thletJC Boost OIs

l is m ly loss as a head coach

I nv1ta t on

Ch~eago

i BOXING

l~&lt;o

MIChigan .States Vlclorv

Renme Stennett IS completely
mended from the fractured
leg that shalterect h1s 1978
season Ph1l Garner or Dale
Berra wlll play lhrrd With B1ll
Robmson or John Milner m
left and Ed Olt catchmg Free
agenf rickup l.ee Lacy can be
a useful handyman

Warren Cromartie
Those miStakes tutut:U a

we had

g1ves the H1g f en Conference
a rare basketball coup W1th
Indiana wmmng the Nationa l

•
Phils as NL East champs zn
'79

m•lhon or more from firms not In compliance With the 7

I ll1rd

men n h 1 1 \\I en (.reg went

one of them

arguments on corporate proftts are likely to be aired The

AFL-CIO already has filed su1t to mvahdate the basiS of
the controls program wh1ch the admm1strat1pn fervently
hopes to mamtam on a voluntary bas1s The speclf1c target

fH I I g iils most &lt; f 11 em n
lllL sN nd half \\hen lndiill a
S l l w rn 1k g Jl s chcu ge
d \.\ Ull! f \~!I ll t punts
\\ lul'HI he went
saul

hn s.

gdme

Pirates most likely to succeed

people
fl
The court of pubbc opmwn 1s not the only one where

Business mirror

some 10 000 works

•

By DOUG niCKER
\ P Sports Writer
SAlT I AKE CITY tAP ) Coach Jud Heathcote calls 11
a Matchup Zone and can t
e•plam how 11 works Without
a blackboard and lots of
chalk
But 11 succeeded where all
else had failed th1s season
1! beat I arry B1rd and
lnd1ana State and helped
make Heathcote s M1ch1gan
State Spartans the 1970..79
NCAA basketball champwns
We are elated the M1ch
•gan State boss sa1d m the
wake of a 75 64 VIctory
Monday mght over the top
ranked Sycamores defeated
for only the first tune m 34
games
I can I descnbe my feel
mgs
W1th Earvm Johnson
scormg 12 pomts and Gre~orv

QuestiOn Is the news that coi"J)9rate profits are up by
more than 26 percent (a ) good or (b ) bad?
Answer Both of the above
On the good Side the earnmgs reported by the
Commerce Department for the !mal quarter of 1918

IN WASHINGTON

I"•'

San D1eg o vs San Fran
at Phoen )( Ar l
Ph ladelph a vs De tro tat
lakeland F a (n)
New York ( N ) vs AI a Ia
at West Pain Beacl F 'l n)
C ISCO

I he Cmcmna t1 Reds
sl uggei had a ball bouoce off
the top of Cardmal center
fi elder George Hendn ck s
glove and over the center
f1eld \\a ll fo r h1s lates t

fill ng m for Ken Gr1ffev n
n ght f1eld whlle Gnffe) IS
bothered with shoulder
lightness had two hits In
three limes at bat for the
Reds
Ken Henderson

anot her

outfi eld er pinch h tter
hopeful
has been Ill

homer

Cmcmnah thts week be ng

Ne\ er had one hke that
before But I \e seen em
f oster sa1d It " "s on!)
I ~ter s set.:ond game m a

fitted for a foot supporter to
protect a toe that s bot he red
hml smce he crashed mto a
" all last year
The axe fell for l\\ O 'ther
players Monday as the Heds
sent mhelder Rafael Santo
Dommgo and non; ustered
pot cher DaVIs Mal to their
mmor league complex for

week bet.: ause of a deat h 10
e fam !y

ll

HendriCk blasted t" o home
un s for the Cardmals
h \ tn g m seven runs
He sure had the st roke to
d IV r bserved Cmcmnat1 r e
se rve catc he r Don Werner
He had 10 runs batted In -

seven for them and three for
us
~ oster
and Hendnc k
traded three run home runs

m the th1rd mnmg Hendnck
also unloaded a grand slam
shot m the seventh when the
Ca dina is scored seven tuns

reassignment

That left Cincmnat1 " th :l5
players In camp 10 more
than w11l go north with the
teC~m for the season opener on
April 4
Doug Bau contlnued hts er

fect1ve rehef for the Reds
p1tchmg one no hit mnmg
Dave Tomlw hurled the fmal
mnmg giVIng up two hils but
he got out of the UUJmg "'tl a
double play
C tn cwna ti s s ttik eo ut

ll 1 Bonham pitched the
s1x
1nn1ngs
for
( Ill ( Lilna tt He was neve r m
11 ouble except m the th rd

leader contmues to

mn ng when he gave up the
three runs to Hendnck and an
HBI smgle to Tony Scott
Tl e Cardmals unloaded on

young pitcher who e ther
won t make th e team or "111
be on th e startwg rotatiOn
h ank Pastore IS 2,{) w1t1

Manny Sarnuento wh o up tu

an 0 82 earned

that pomt had been havmg •
reasonably good spnng "'

He s on !) 21 and Manager
John McNamara has sad
he II e1ther make the team as
a starter or be back \Hlh the
lnd1anapohs lnd1ans of the

f st

the seventh Sarm1ento gave

up seven runs hve of t hem
ea rned before r et1rmg a bat

ter
( I a 1 r Summers

Class

sllll

AAA

r Wl

be a

a\erage

Amen ca n

/\sse ctatwn

Wedn esday s Games
Montrea vs Houston at
Cocoa Fla
Atla n ta vs
Te xas a !
4mPncan Soccer
Pompano Beach Fla
league
Detro t vs St Lou s al St
LOS
ANGELES Pet ersburg Fla
SKY HAWKS
S gned Kurt
New Yor k { N ) vs
Los
Sp 1erle and Car los Zava eta
Angeles a Vero Beach Fla
def enders
P ttsbu r gh vs Ph adelph a
SAC RAMENTO GOLD - at Clearwater F la
S1gned J m Amos goal ten
C ncmnat vs Kan sa s C l y
der
Danny Payne m 1d
at Ft Mye r s Fla
f1eld er
Mark
Br yant
Ba l l more vs Toron lo a l
de fender
and
Trevor Dunde n Fla
Oawk ns forward
Ch1cago (A) vs Boston at
COLLEGE
W nter Ha ven Fl a
HOFSTRA UNIVERSITY
San
Fra nc sco
vs
- Announced the res gnat10n Cleveland at Tucso n Ar z
of Roger Gaeckler head
Cal forn a vs M Iwaukee a t

basketball coach

Sun C ty A z

you
know tax
laws .•. you
need H&amp;R Block!"
We are tncome tax specialists Our pre parers
are carefully trained We II prepare the form
that tS best for you because we want to
make sure you pay the smallest legtttmate
tax Another reason why you should let
H&amp;R Block do your taxes whiChPvAr form
you use short or long

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618E Ma1nSI
.nd &amp; BROWN ST
POMEROY 0
MASON W Va

Open9A M lo
7 P M Weekdays
9 s saturday
PHONE 991 3795

OPEN TU ES
THURS &amp; Sat

9AM 5PM
Phone 772 9128

If you ever need to col lect on one of your insurance
pol c es t s good to know you a re workmg through people
who are ready to go to bat for you L ke our crew at
The Insurance Store
As ndependent agents we represent a number of 1 ne
1ke The Coni nental Insura nce Compan1es
nsurers
But we don t work tor any one of them-we work1or you
So when you need to buy insurance we can help you select
the prec se coverage you need at the best ava ilable pnce
And we II be r ght here to help you ga n a fast fa1r settle
me nt 1f you ever need to f le a cia m

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE
114 E MAIN ST

POMEROY 0
992 SllD or 992 5139
YOU DON T BUY A POl. ICY
YOU HIRE AN AGENT

�..•.•
•

• •
~

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome;oy, 0 ., 1'uesday, March 27, 1979

'

bu~ .

Games were played with

On-e-.. Won ..One Class installs officers
Officers were Installed at
the recent meeting of the
OneWon.Qne Class of the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church held at the church.
Mrs. Caryl Cook installed
Mrs. Audrey Young, president; Mrs. Margaret Bailey,
vice president ; Mrs . Maria
Foster, secretary ; and Mrs.
Georgia Watson, treasurer.

'

DRY IDEA
ROLL-ON DEOD.

Soft/Med/Hard
$.79 Value

Easter program plans were Mrs. Randy Hayes , Mr. and
, . discussed at the Saturday Mrs. Terry Smith, Miss Nannight meeting of the Young cy Stanley, Mrs. Adelle
Adult Class of the Middleport White, and Mr. and Mrs. Car ·
First Baptist Church follow - roll Cleland .
Lynn Kloes and Cindy
' ing a dinner held in the
1
Parker handled the nursery
• church social room.
: . Atte~ding were the Rev. for the children, David Riggs,
~ and Mrs . Mark McClung, . Casey Smith, Adam and Eric
; Mrs. Dreama HudsOn, Mr. White. and Dodie Cleland.
: ' and Mrs. Dan Riggs, Mr. and
'
VISITORS
The Rev. and Mrs. Carver
RUMMAGE SALE
'
' : Juniors of the American Williams and daughters, Bet. Legion AUxiliary of Feeney- sy and Dawn , Marion, are
; Bennett Post 128, Middleport here for a visit with Mrs.
~ : will hold a rummage sale Fri: Maria Foster. Sunday they
, . day and Saturday at Becky's were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
'; Grocery at the Crossroads. In Gene Yost of Racine for a bir·
· the event of rain the sale will thday observance pf their
daughter, Susan.
. be held inside there .

SCH.CK
PLATINUM PLUS INJ. 7's
$1 .95 Value

.

5/79~
MOUNTAIN LODGE
PANCAKE SYRUP

.

VASELINE PET. JELLY
oz. $1.29 Value

24 oz. $1 .39 Value

Southern honor roll
So uthern Junior High
School honor roll for the
fourth six week grading
period Is being announced. To
be named to the roll students
must receive a "B" or better
in all subjects. Those in
capital letters r eceived all
"As." Named to the roll
were : Seventh grade : Randy
Armes, Tony Deem, LEE
DILL, Corey McPaail, Linda
Proffitt, LAREN WOLFE,
Tony Wolfe, James Bush,
Jane Manuel, Alice Riffle,
Katrina Snodgrass, Dorothy
Warner, Debbie Michael,
Kevin · Curfman , Missy
stover·, Bill Gobel, Trevor
Cardone.
Eighth Grade: Kathy
Baker, Cindy Evans, Angie
Glenn , Bruce Johnson , Becky
Lee , Kim Maynard, Clair
Morris, Kim Morrow, DAVID
SALMONS, Lori Warden,
Melanie Weese.

· h
Racme
onor roll ·
The founn six week honor
roll for Racine Elementary
School is being announced by
Robert E. Beegle, Principal.
St udents named to the roll
mus t have maintained a
grade ol "B" or better in all
3Ub jccts, those nam es in
capital letters received all
·'As." Named to the roll
were: First Grade : Harold
Bird, Jennifer Evans, Amy
Harrison, Kathy Ihle, Angela
Manuel, Chris Murphy ,
Amrny Roush, Candy Smith,
Sha nnon Williams, Aimee
Wo lfe, Tricia Wolfe and
Brenda Zirkle.
Second Grade : Shawn
Diddle, Steven Grady, Angie
Hill, Chris Jewell, Sheryl
Johnso n, Billy Jones , Alice
Pa rsons, Mark Porter,
Melanie Va nMeter.
Third Grade: Toni An·
drcws, Angela Bostick,
Ann ett Cardone , Patrece
Circle.
Mary
Cleland,
Tammy Holter , Paula Justis,
Donald RifOe, Tina Sloter,
.Jon Tuttle.
Fourth Grade: MATT
JEWE LL, Debbie Murphy,
RACHEL REIBER, Diana
Simpson, Tammy Theiss ,
Tammy Wolfe, Wendy Wolfe.
Fifth
Grade:
LORI
ADAMS, Kerri Beegle, Dixie
Duga n,
Patty
Evans ,
ME LISSA !HLE, RYAN
OL IVER , Lisa Parsons ,
KELLY RIZER , Kenda

relatives ol the couple are invited to attend. ,
The Rev. and Mrs. Roush
have three daughters, Mrs.
Clay, Mrs. · Paul (Mary)
Moore, Lancaster; and Mrs .
Thomas !Geraldine ) Fauber,
Albany, nine grandchildren,
and two great-grandchildren.

The honor roll for the fourth
six week grading period for
the Rutland Elementary
Sehool has been announced.
To be n"amed to the roll
students must have received
a " B" or better in all sulr
jects, the names in aU capital
letters received .all "As."
Named to the roll were: First
Grade : Lisa Darst, Billy
Doczi, Kim EbUn, Tony
Miller, TERRA SCHOON·
OVER, Rebecca Stiltner,
NATALIE TROMM, Carl
Williams.
Second Grade: Shelly
Adams,
Laurie Black,
SHERR! BLAIR, Peter
Brickles, Chad Carson, Scott
Edmonds, Shawn Fetty ,
ABBY FRY, Rhonda Gomez,
Lori Frye, Jim Graeser; Joe
Hall, SHEILA HENDRICKS,
Janelle Hysell, Stacy Hysell,
Tracy Hysell, Tracy MiChael,
MARTHA NELSON , Mat' thew Peterson, PAM SMITH,
J . R. Walker, SABRINA
WILSON.
Third Grade : MICHAEL
BARTRUM, Cathy Blessing,
Tracey Halware , Patricia
McGhee, John Sisson, P . J .
Smallwood, Jae Tillis, USA
MILLER,
Fourth Grade: Sue Parsons, John Wolle, Mandi
Black, Janet Hysell, Randy
Birchfield, Regina Eblin,
Eric Priddy, MICHELE
PETERSON, . Ruth Porter,
Denny
Welsh,
DIANA
WILUAMSON, Paul Dailey,
Paul Brickles.
Fifth Grade : Todd Doczl,
Lucille Grover, Greta
Kennedy,
CHRISTINA
McGHEE, Deron Stafford,
. Sherry Wilson , D. R. Smith,
Rya n Mahr.·
Sixth Grade : Ryan Hall,
Bobby Spires, Bobby Geyer.
L. D. Class: Jimmy
Cleland, Kent Eads, Donald
Nickels, Robert Spears.
Int. Sp. Ed.: David Dunkle,
Larry Van Cooney, Eva Slek.
Primer Special Ed.: Joel
Porter, Tina Romine, Her·
bert Cromwell, Clair Swan,
Jenny King, Kim Barrett,
Charl ene Goodman, Joy
Anderson, Kevin Hutton.

A_merican Legion, annuai
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 cafet eria.
Alumni banquet plans will be
made.
AMERICAN ASSO CIA ·
TION OF UNIVERS ITY
WOMF.N, Midd leporl ·
Pomeroy Area Branch, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the River·
boat Room, Meigs Office of
the Athens County Savings
and Loan Co. Program by an
Ohio University exchange
student. Silent auction for the
educati on fund .

OHIO
ETA
PHI
CHAPTER , Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30 p.m. Tu esday
at the Meigs Inn . New officers to be elected.

chairman for the board, with
Mrs. Fay Sauer as the new
lay leader. Mary Culwell was
added to the activities planning commitlee.
The board took action
which prohibits U!king the
new tables and chairs from
the church. It was also decid·
ed that a charge will be made
for non-memhers using the
church facilities. A bake sale
for the benefit of the building
fund was set for April 7 with
Salem Center to participate

ParsOnage renovation was

Turns seven

and

Kenny

" Out of that land went
forth Ashur !descenda nt of

N9a h 1 and build e d
Ninu·ch." - Gen . 10 : 11

Th e se rg ea nt , a postal
speciali:it at Torrcjon AB,
Spain , serves with a unit o(.
the U. S. Air Forces in
Europe .
Sergeant Wagner is a 1965
graduate of Southern High
School.

SHOP

Mason Furniture
FOR THE BEST DEALS
INTHE

.

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon .• Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sa t .
8:30 to 5:00
Thursday till 12 noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY
Her man Grat e
Mason , W. Va.

773 -SS92

6 oz. Vln/Water

in that project. April 8 was
designated as membership
Sunday and a carry-in dinner
will be he held that day at
12:30 p.m. with a program
following . Good Friday services with communion will he
held al7 :30 p.m. and on April
14 there will be a general
cleaning fo the c~urch .
Daily vacation Bible school
wa s annollilced for June 20
through June 29 with a program on the closing evening.

$1.32 Value

65~

I

of Mrs. Eleanor Thomas.
Elected were Mrs. Mary
Morris, presid ent ; Mrs.
Roherta O'Brien, vice president; Mrs. Velma Rue, recor-

New Officers were elected
at the Thursday night
meeting of Preceptor ·BeLa
BeLa Chapter of Be!JI Sigma
Phi Sorority held at the home

.ttee met
Commt
.

'
The Meigs County Extension Ad~lsory Committee
met March 20. The meeting
was called to order by Dorsey
Jordan, president.
Dates were set for future
meetings.
John Rice report ed on
present personnel ana
budgets.
Diana Eberts reported on
the Expanded Food and
Nutrition Program and the
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp
fund-raising project. Con·
struction will start in June
and the lodge will he ready to
use next summer. It was also
reported that a new swim· ·
ming pool will he built at the
camp this spring to be
completed by June 1.
Pansv Jordan and Jeon

Spencer reported lhat 14
national report forms were
filled out by county 4·H
members. Thirteen of these
went to the area; 10 of the 13
were selected as area winners and went to the state. At
the state level, Patty Dyer
was one of four state winners
of a $500 scholarship from
McDonald's.
Programs for the coming
year were discussed.
The 1978 Meigs County
Popular Report was given to
each member present.
Attending were: Judy
Eichinger, Dorsey Jordan,
Roy Holter, Gary Michael,
Jlm Gaston, John Rice,
Diana Roberts, Pansy Jor·
dan, Jean Spencer, and Joyce
Bowen .

ding secretary; Mrs. June
Freed, treasurer; Mrs. Ruby
Baer ," corresponding
secretary ; and Mrs. Norma
Atnsbary , city council
representative.
A thank you note was read
from Jane Walton for a
yellow rose senllo her during
her recent hospi!JIIization .
The rriid-east conference was
announced for June 15-17 and
Founder's Day for April 26 at
the Meigs Inn.
Also announced was a party to be held at the h of Mrs.
Lillian Moore on March 31 at
8 p.m. for members and their
husbands. The Chapter voted
to sponsor Rick Williamson to
Buckeye Boy 's State. The
stale convention to he held in
Cleveland in Ma y was
discussed.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas and
.. Mrs . Leola Young presented
the cultural program on
negative and po~itive" auras.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs . Young and Mrs.
Thomas.

$279

FOLGER'S

'

VALLEY BELL

PARSON'S AMMONIA
FREE PARKING I ,.,.,
28 oz. $.44 V1lue
IN. THE REAR

OF THE ·STORE
ultra brite

~=~

.

2%

33~

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

ILK

69

Federal Food Slamps- We Resem The Right To Umit Quantities

FRYE RS~ ....................... ~.!:1!·.

I,JLTRA BRITE

0

TURKEY 5 .....................':~!:. 6 9 e

RAPID SHAVE

99~

15 oz. Irish Spring/Reg.
$1.72 Value

PERSONAL TOIIICI~I WHITE RAIN HAIR SPRAY
. 7.5 Oz. X. Hold/Regular/ Unsc.
RAZOR KIT #260
$2.99 Value

IJI

~

$1 .95 Value

FRIDAY

$109

KLIEI~IEX BOUTIQUE
$.87 VIIUI '

\

~-

ASST.

59~

Broughton

PEPSI

. ONLYI

PONDS CREAM &amp;
COCOA BUTTER LOTION

R. PEPPER

8 oz. $1.89 Value

8

\__)

PAK

16 OL BTLS.
Plus Deposit

LANACANI
BATH TREATMINT

79e

REGULAR .............. 99•

CHEESE
THURS. ONLY

PREMIUM

24oz.
Carton

ICE CREAM

$109

'-./

1!z Gallon
$129

RC or DIET RITE

8

16 or Bns.
Plus Depos~

99e

8 oz. $3.25 V1Iua.

PRODUCE SPECIALS

'I

BANANAS

IIO'e $2.28 VIIUt

WHITE

~B""H WllniNQ SOLUTION

fir"

·-

::':"'·'-

0
"-

...

2 oz. $3.08 Value

CRACKERS

DIITILLID WATIR
GALLON IUPIRIOR

US Valut

49~

1-LB. BOX

All Star
'

4 LB.• , 00

GRAP£FRUIT
5 LB.
99e

59C .

DRIVE IN
WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT:

COITAGE

8-16 OZ. BOTTlES

Valley Bell

IP'IIIRDINT TABLITS

110 Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-3279

1-LB.CAN

FAMILY PAK

7.8 oz. Super Size
. $1 .64 Value

I ·~ '""
1~1

~~

COFFEE

-

LOW FAT

'

'fl

· 32 oz. 30e Off
$2.99 Value

Drive in to Bob Evans and take
home some finger lickin' good chick en from the Colonel. Pick up dinner
after work. You'll ~ee us on Eastern
Avenue. Don't drive by. Drive in.

FOOD SAVINGS

$5.95 Value

LISTERINE ANTIS.

DOlT
HAVE

•• •• BIG

POPEIL DELUXE
CHOP-0-MATIC

.Sorority elects officers for new year

_Optometric Vision Center

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

I

Johnson

Lane.
Cake, it'e c.rea m, sOft
drinks and potato chips were
served. Michella Johnson, II·
ana Lyons . and Sue Imboden
asxisted with the games.

7 MM lead P219
$1.69 Value

TWIN PAK

PREMIUM

Office Hours :
Monda-y - Friday
9-12 - 1-4
Examinations:
by Appointment

Social Calendar

nift•r

SCRIPTO PENCIL

Parsonage "renovation planned

planned during a recent
meeting of the administrative
board of ·the Rutland United
Methodist Church held at the
parsonage.
Authorized was the front
porch construction and a new
roof. fn conjunction with the
Rizer, Robin Savage, Becky roof, it was noted that pieces
of slate will be made
· VanMeter.
available
as souvenirs or to
Sixth Grade: Alan Crips,
people
who
are interested in
LOIS IHLE, James Leonard.
using the slate for crafts.
Harold Rice was named

Rutland honor roll"

Heu d at the meeting was an
lilies for the church on Easler
and Mrs. Burton Smith, card invitation to the fellowship
chairman, will senti ce~rds to tea of the Middleport First
Baptist Church on April 2.
out-of-town members.
Mrs. Young closed the
rm.:octing with a poem. Mrs.
Harietl Sterrett and Mrs.
Bailey served refreshments.
Next meeting will be on April
26.
TUESDAY
MEIGS AREA Holin ess
FREE CLOTIIING DAY
Association will meet at the
Free Clothing Day at The
Rutland Community Church Salvation Army , 115 ButTuesday 7:30 p.m. Lloyd D.. ternut Ave., Pomeroy, on
Grimm. Jr., pastor of the Thursday, March 29 from 10
Rutland Church of the a .. till 12 noon . All those in
.Eddie Williams
Nazarene will be the speaker. need of clothing in county and
The public is invited.
surrounding areas are
MEIGS LOCAL Schoo l welco me.
Distrid O.A.P.S.E. will meet
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
AFGHAN
Meigs J unior High School, ·
ON DISPLAY
A party was held recently
Middleport.
A red, white and blue at the home of Mr . and Mrs.
WEDNESDAY
afghan donated to Personal Raymon Sn ider, Racine ,
AMERICAN LEGION Advocacy by two advocates honoring their grandson,
AUXIL IA RY ,
Feeney- in the program is on display Kirk (Eddie ) Williams on his
Bennett Po~t 128. 7:30 p.m. at the New York Clothing seventh birthday .
Wednesday at th e hall foll ow- House,
Main
Street,
Attending were Kevin
ing a 6:30 dinner with the Pomeroy, through the Lane, Shannon Williams
legionnai res.
co urtesy of Kermit Walton. Cissy Lyons, Melanic Lyons:
AMERIC-AN
LEGION
Robbie Williams, Danny
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7::lO
Gheen , Kirk's g reat p.m. meet ing at the hall .
7 p.m . Friday with work in grandmother, Edna Pickens,
FRIDAY
the Master Mason Degrees: his aunt, Sue Imboden, Ollie
MIDDLEPORT Masonic all Master Masons invited. Mae Cozart, and his mother ,
Lodge 363, F &amp;AM, meeting at
fulmona Williams, Colum-

Stephen E. Wagner, SOl• of
Mr . · and Mrs. Edwa r d
Wagner of Rt . 3, Racin e, has
been promoted to technica l
sergea nt in the U. S. Air
Forte.

9 .9~

Anniversary celebration
The Rev. and Mrs. Ray L .
Rouse, Rutland, will be
celebrating their 45th wed: di n~ mmiversary on Sunday,
, April I. An .open house is being planned from 2 to 4 p.m.
allhe home of their dau~hter,
Mrs. Douglas (Phyllis) Clay,
Route 124, Rutland, and
neighbors, fri end s and

Program plans .discussed

'.

$.51 Value

TEK T. BRUSH

I

going to Cissy l.yons,

Ml'ianie Lyons, and Robbie
Williams. Sending gifL&lt; bUt
unable to attend were Jen-

r·- · - · - ·- · - · ---...-.-------·.,

'

DIAL
BATH SIZE SOAP
GOLD

1.5 oz. Scented/Unscented
$2.14 Value

She concluded with prayer. Prayer. s·he read th e
Devotions by Mrs. Ellen Japanese version of the 2.1rd
Couch included an article "I Psalm .
Am Not Arraid, I Am Safe"
Mrs. Watson will order
and poems, "Coming of Spring" and "When God Made
Fathers."
Mrs. Couch opened the
meeting with singing of the
class song, "He Keeps Me
Singing " and the Lord's
TUESDAY
DREW WEBSTER Post 39

priz~s

STEPHEN WAG NER

CHOCOLATE DRINK ............ GALLON

ROME ~EAUTY

3 LB.

APPLES .......~~~- 69c
ORANGES .
5LB.

.,09

KING SIZE

EGGS GRADE B 1.1\RGE................................. ................... Doz. 79'
TIDE KING SIZE ... ...·...... .. ................................... ............ Box '2.39

BREAD

DAWN LIQUID DETERGENT... .... .. ... .................. ......... ... , 22 oz. Btl. 89'

LOAF

AMOCO "MOTOR OIL. .......... ........................ ..............: •..• Qt. Can 59'
COKE • SPRITE • MR. PIBB •
TAB • FRESCA ..... ........ Reg. '1. tl .... ~ ................. 2 Liter Plastic Bottle 99'

39c
•

I

�'

'

I

COL·ORING CONTEST
'

.L

TWO

•

1. Just color om• or more• of the• drawings on the•se page·s , fill
in th~· blanks and l:tkt' your e•nlry In the• sponsoring l'itort'
lwfore• 5:1NI P.M., Aprilllth.
2. Entrie•s will lw judge·d in two ciiffe•re·nt age
4-8 and agt's 9-12.

catq~eirie·s,

•

TWO

age•;;
0

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

3. Children may entt'r ,as many pietures as thc·y like• hut &lt;'an
only win one prize·.

"'··

I .NAME _______________ _ ___
A DORESS ______~~--------AGE _______ PHONE - - - - - -

4. Crayons only may lw used l&lt;! eolor pielurc·s .
5. Dt'cisioi)S of the judgt' willlw final.
"

I

Sit down with your crayo ns, have a good lime
. . . Just fclio w the bunny and color designs.
NAME
•
AOORESS _____~~--------AGE
PHONE - - - - - .

·'

heritage house OF SHOES

POWELLS SUPER VALU

t-----:::;P::o=m=e~ro:y:::---~,,~=E~jf;jj!:i:;S\ii\r~~=~;;i;ji:ii::~=i:\11.---:::;~Middleport!!"',.oh.,io____,.

0

TWO

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

3rd

PRIZE

his. baby bunn y and mother ore on their way
ith bonnets and ba skets lor the Easter Day.

$5

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
ADDRESS ___~~-----~--AGE ______
· PHONE ______

NAME __________________
ADDRESS - - - - - AGE ______ PHONE _ _ __

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

'

I

I

I

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

His message of faith and peace will abide,
As an in spiration fo r all ... th is Eastertide.

NAME

A DDRE
~S~S-------------

NAME ___________________
ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
AGE _ _ _ _ PHONE ______

Easter' s the time for prayer and renect ion,
In joyou s remembrance of Hi s re surrection.

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

NAME
ADDRESS
AGE
--------::
P-:-:
H7
0 :-:
N~
E ----~

NAME ~------------------­

AGE _ _ _ _ PHONE - - - - - -

NE HOME NATIONAL BANK

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutland

Racine

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Middleport

AODRESS --~:-: -~-=----AGE
.PiiONE ______

.PAT HILL FORD

Middleport

Chicks in a puddle
·don't get wet,
With embrellas up,
they're all set!

Sing out, sing out
l~emennber the meaning of the Ea ~ter Occasion,

your prayers a nd hymns

lo

praise Him .

NAME ~~----------------

NAME __________________
ADDRESS ________~--------AGE _ _ _ _ _ PHONE ______

GOESSLERSPomeroy
JEWELRY STORE

ADDRESS ____________
AGE _ _ _ _ PHONE _ _ __

One of this Easter b unny · ~ fa vorite things,
Is to swing from a ba sket of eggs, as he sing s.
NAME ~~--------~-----­

ADDR ESS -----::c-=:-:-=-- - - -- - AGE _ _ _ _ _ PHONE ____

loud and clear,
The glorious
Easter day is here!
NAME __________________
ADDRESS ------~-:-::-----

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

Pomeroy

FARMERS BANK

Pomeroy

'I

___ _

AGE _______ PHONE

DAVIS QUICKEL INSURANCE

'

.

.'

'

We bless the palms
on Palm'.Sunday,
When Easter's
just one week away!

The Messiah has ri sen to heaven above ...
Celebrate Ea ster with kindness and love .

The bunn ies are hold ing the lily nowers,
To protect them fro m the April showers.

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

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

lilA ME _____ ,_____ _ _ _
. --~ ___ _
NAME
ADDRESS
· -- - - - - - - - - - AGE ____ ___ PHONE ________,_

lAne:

County Savings &amp; Loan
MEIGS BRANCH
•

ADDRESS .·-·----·- ··-- - --·--· - - __
AGE _ - ----- ·- _ PHONE __ .. . ____,

FABRIC SHOP

NAME ___ , -·~----- _ .
ADDRESS ____, _ _ -·-·--·------AGE
_ __ _ ,____ PHONE ..

FRANCIS FLORIST

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

ADDRESS ------==~---AGE _ _ _ _ _ PHONE - - - ' - - - - -

VILLAGE.
PHARMACY
Middleport

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ _

Easter bunny didn 't know how Ia catch,
baby ch icks, when the Easter eggs halched.
NAME - · - - - - - - - - - : - - - - ADDRESS - - - - _______
· ---AGE _______ .
PHONE __ _... ~- .. ,.. ~

The joy of thi s Holy Holida y bring s to mind ,
A renewed spirit of love fo r all mankind .
NAME ~-----

AODRESS -·----~-=:-:-::------..
AGE _________, PHONE - - - - ' - - --

ADDRESS ------~~--

AGE _ _ __

Pomeroy

I

•

NAME ~~---~

ADDRESS
AGE -~---·_,_ PHONE · · - - -

PHONE _ _ _
' _

KINGSBURY HOME SALES

Gifts of flowers,
Joy and laughter,
Remember this Easter
forever after.

BAKER FURN.ITURE

Middleport

MARGUERITES SHOES

Pomeroy

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

Pomeroy

...

&gt; • II

'

�~-The Daoly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesdav M• •ch 27, 1979
IN THE

WIOdneoclly, Morch 21 '

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Pla in11ff ,

·VS·

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF
EDWARD
FINDLING,
Deceased , et al .,

WANT AD

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

lnd chango the direction your

life has been taking . Keep your
ide111 high
yours

Success can be

ARIES (Morch

21-Aprll

19)

You ' re a bit too protective of
your aelf-l nteres•a today .

Adopt a philosophical view of
things and let your better Instincts take control You'll be
hoppler Getting along with
other signs Is one o f the
sections you ' ll enJOY In your

ld~:ty

2days

Dev ts ees of Edward F tn dling,
deceased .
The

Unknown

Heirs

Devtsees of Effie

Surfa ce, deceased;

3days

fltlayi!l

and

Findling

Carma n Hedricks, deceased ,
Unknown

Heirs

Th e Unkno wn Hetrs and
Dev 1sees of Jessie Findlin g ,

1
1

and

luck yourself away today You

Larry Spencer,
Clerk of Court.
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court

be In the mood tor

people bustling around you,
and might find their activity
Irritating.
AQUARIUS
(Jan. 211-Feb. 19) 121 " · 13 16. 13, 20, 27 141 3, 61C
Argumentative lndl&gt;~lduala will
weigh heavily on your dlsposl-

OHIO

t

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) It HAROLD .HUDNELL,
. Plalntolf,
would be time well spent today
-\S·
If you could make the necee- JUDY ANN HUDNELL.
ury efforts to evaluate and

your goals for the coming
weeks Assign priorities . Stick
with to them.
!NEWSP"PER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

Local Bowling
.,omeroy Bowung lanes

Early Wednesday Mixed
March 14, 1979
Team
Pis.
56
Young's Markel
Headquarters
52
Smith-Nelson Motors
42
No. 3
34
Zlde's Sport Shop
28
Longshots
28
High seroes - Bob Hensley
525, Carolyn Bachner 561;
Bob Couch 521, Betty
Whtllatch 557.
High game - Bob Hensley
199, Betty Whitlatch 203 ; Bob
Couch 198, Pat Carson 192.
Team

series

Young ' s

Team

game

Young's

Mllrket 2069.
Mllrket 726.

Early Sunday Mixed
March 18, 1979
Team
Pis.
3 In 01e
64
Jack 's Dafry Bar_
56
Tom 's Carry Out
52
Gibbs ' Grocery
40
Royal Crown
26
Meigs Inn
26
High series - John Tyree
587, Becky Kloes539; Ed Voss
581, Helen Phelps 509 .
High game - John Tyree
224, Stephanie Rought 212 ;
Bill Willford 222, Becky Klees

Defendant
No 16,893
NOTICE BY

Phone 992-2156

WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
ph ono graph r eco rds
Cal l
99'} 6370 or Conlact Morttn J=u r
mture

NOTICE

WANT TO buy old Jewe l ry Ca ll
99'] 526'J or wnle 'Kay Cee~ l 97
S :?nd Middlepor t OH •

Monday
Noon un Saturd11.y

You are hereby notified
tha t you have been named a
defendant tn a legal act•on
entitled Haro ld Hudne ll,
Platn t tff , vs
Judy Ann
HudnelL D e f endant
This
actton ha s b ee11 ass tgned
Case No 16t893 and Is pend thg in the Court of Common
Pleas of Me tgs County, Ohio ,
45769
•
The ob1ect of the complamt
1S the obtaining o f a divor ce
and the terminat ton of ll
marrtage contract between
the parti es an d the settlemen t
of the proper t y ri ghts of the
parties
You are reQuired to answer
t he complaint Wtthm 28 days
after the last publ iC ation of
thts notice , Wh1 ch will be
publi shed once each week .fo r
six success1ve weeks . The
last publtcation will be made
on Mllrc h 27, 1979, and the 28
days tor answer Wtl l com
mence on that date.
In c ase oL you r fa tlu re t o
an swer or otherwise resoon d
as required by the Ohto Rules
of Clvtl Pr oce dure. the ftnEII
hea r ing on thi s matter wilt be
held after the exptration of 42
day s after the la st day of
publlcatton of tht s no t tce or as
so on thereafter as can b e
scheduled by fhe Court
Larry Spencer,
Clerk of Court
ot Me tgs County,
Oh io
(2) 20, 27 (3) 6, 13 , 20, 27 , 6tc

Tuesday

Auto Salt's

tllru Friday

IPM
the day before pubbcKUon

Sunday
IPM
Fn_dlo~ ~~..""""'- · _ -

IN

LOVING memory of my
mo ther helyn le nders who
passed aw ay one year ago to
day Morch 77 1q79
No thmg 1s lost foreve r
The woiJ.. '"9 ear th at Spnng tt me
Remmds us 11 IS true
That no tht ng ever reall y dtes
T ~at 1s not born an ew
So trust God's al l wtse wiSdom
And doubt the lotl-t er ne~Jer
1-= or m ht s heavenly k •ngdom
'{here 1s noth•n g los t fo r e~Jer
Sa d ly m•ssed by her daug hter and
son m-lcw M r. and Mrs Ken
neth Sm1th and granddau ghter
K1m~erly S~e _
_

·P roperty
Transfers
.Kaymonn C. Cassady ;
Raymond Clair Cassady,
Nora D. Cassady to State of
Ohio, Dept. of Natural
Resources, 38'f.. acres, !)Jive.
Tamela Kay Smith, formerly Tamela Kay Bradford,
Cameron Lee Smith to
Wilbert J. McClain, Int. in
8.59 acres, 160 acre Lot,
Lebanon .
David Allen Sayre, Roma
T. Sayre to Jimmie W.
Johnson, Belinda J . Johnson,
Parcels, Sutton.
Marion Rose, aka Marion
W. Rose, Hester C. Rose to
Harold R. BIUips, Judith F.
Billups, 1.2 acres, (70 acre lot
117), OUve.
James A. Smith, Vada A.
Smith, Carl E. Smith,
Dorothy Smlth, Corrective
deed, Salem.
Lloyd Ward, Kathy A.

1978 FORD ' ', !on p1 ckup , 8 ft
bed Rodtal t1 res $3575 A 1
cond1110n Col l992 2:138

.

-

4-doo r outo

5800 992 -5114

19!5 FORD F 250 4 wheel dr• vc
Phone 9Ci2 5328

1976 TRAN S AM Excellent condt
lion S4300 992 7689

Mark Your Calendar!
Come Register a}

SPRING SALE

1975 XLT Ro r1 ge rFord truck 1'1 ton
wd h over l oad spr ing s 302
eng1ne oufo trans otr co ndt hon Exce llent condttlon Col/

100 PRIZES - FIRST
PRIZE 4-WHEEL DRIVE

992 S311

-

-

1970 F. 2SO- F~cd

;,~ck

and 1200 '-:,--.:..P.:H.:..·:.9"'9.:2:.·.:2.:..18:,1:__...J

1975 CUTLASS Supreme 2 door
350 V 8 E:wcel le nt cond1t1on
985 3970 after 6pm or any t 1me
weekends
1973 GRAND PRI X su n roof lope
powe r wmdows
Excellent
s lio~e _Call~ _5083

-------

YARD SALE 3 m• les west of Tu p
pers Ploms Morcl-t 30, 31 Aprd
1 6 7 and 8th V•n ce,)t Hawk
res 1dence

Will sell or trad e for boot and
motor of equal value 1975
Plymoutl-t Ou ster
slant stx
auto 27 miles to the gallon or
better on ga s
Wdl
se ll
reasonably Col i 843 2561

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

1962 OLOs SrARFtfu con~a;t~bie
Very good con dttton Stored
win ters 992 3273
1972 GMC PICKUP

6 C'( l

A C crutse contro l AM rodto
Less than lA ,OOO mtl cs $5200
99'1 3442
1972 DODGE DART Swtnger P S
P B . A C rod,ols , factory mag
wheels 54,()(X) mt les
Real
good cond ttton Betge w tth
be •ge v1 nyl top 992 5574 alter

-- -:.-- --·
:::.. :-

- .--

~h

.-:;..=-~:.

;_

TWO BEDROOM mobtle home,
k1tcl-ten furm shed Prefer mtd
die aged cou ple or elderly cou

!:1~ p~t~ ?9~_27~9 ----

--

90

-

-~--

.

ROLLING AC RE S of good
posture Pl enty of woter Could
o tcomodote 50 plus collie.
6 14 b6! -33q8

W e have op enings for
tratnees now. Phone
Mr. Snodgrass at 992 -2111 to arrange for a confidential ,
personal mtervtew.
GOOD MI XED hoy SI bole Co li
after 5pm 99'1- ~5~3' _ • _ . *

300 West Second Str..t
Pomeroy, Ohio 457n
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
I

WILL CARE for twa 1nva l1d or
elderly persons m m.,. 1-tome
Twe nty year s ('l(penence
Reasonable rate s 992 6072 o r

~E

PIANOS __

992 5422

- - - -· -·-

PAINTING ANO sondblas tmg
Free estt mates Co il949 2686

:

Sa Jes Rep. For

Sundins
Hammond Organs

Au-&amp; Tru&lt;:k
'Repair
Also Transmission
,
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Tyree Blvd. Racine, ~hiD
Phone 949-2118 eventngs
after 5 p.m. Weekends

BORDER COLL IE-TYPE , short hair
3 fa 5 mon th s old female n•ce
loveabl e dog Spon lei-BeaglePek mese, 6 mo old fe male
ve ry cute lon g ho~red , good '
w1 111 ch1ldren Te r rier , long
hatred young lemole M txed
breed mole small red hotr
well -mannered Humane Sane ly 992-7680

IC 60 tdt-out fron tage ce ntral
A C l ooks os good as new. 2
bedr na tural ga s heat 8 X 2.f
porch Awmng on front Fur
nished 992 5457 or 949 2208&amp; .

.

1967 TOTAL ElECTRIC mobtle
home,
furmsl-ted
3 bcd r
washer and dryer. Atr condt
Honed 1 lof 210 It fro ntage
$12.000 Phon e 742 2826
1955 Prairie Schoon er , 281(8

hd,

1965 General 60xl2 2 bdr
1968 Elcono 52x12 2 bdr
1969 Buddy 60x12 4·bdr
1910Sylvo bQI(I2 'lbdr
1970Coslle 601(12 2 bd r
1973 Arl1ngton, 60ll 12 2 bd r
1973 RJdgewood, 10&gt;'1 4 3 bdr
197JKirkwooc1,50x l 2 2bdr.

1!&amp;5 MOBilE HOME SAlES
PT PLESANT WV

675 4424
FOR YOUR condy and co ke sup - 1973 FREEDOM MO BILE homE
riiPs come to 01 s, Spnng
Appliances
un d c r p1nntn9
Vo lley PloTO FREE Easter ca ndy
J•repl aC'e, q92 54 13 or 99'J 61 I!
clas ses Co l! 446 7134
SS100

I •

Answer: AT THEIR(
MO&lt;E 0'

1ER

HA r HE 'LL DO
WH(IT I SA'(

LIP, YUH LIHLE

AND LIKE IT,.,

Yesterday 5

YOU ' LL SEE·--

ACROSS
1 Jewelry
weight
6 Thespoan's
forte

Will Make

Real Estate for Sale

1970 RESEt RAfofR-12 )( 48 Very
ONE A( RE lofs nea r l ong sv dle
g ood co nd111on S3SOO 247 3875 '
Oh1o Co11742 2409
or 949 2643 af ter 4
·-- --- --FARM FOR Sole House, 2 barn s
trad er Lorge pond I 0 acres or
Real Estate for Sale
82 acres 742-2S66
REAL ESTATE Loons Pu rcha se an d
3 1J acres 1n Pomeroy SEcl uded
reftnan ce 30 year terms VA
wooded area on t op of hdl
No m oney down (e ltgtble
Overlook s nver Water elec' ve terans) FHA - As low a s 3
tnc ovot lob!e 992 JB8b
per cen1 down (non veteran s)
Ireland Mortgage Co , 77 E.
Stat e At hens 614 5923051
Sl: VEN ROOM 1-touse for sole J
bedroom s and bath modern
ktt c l-t en w1 th
ran ge and
d1 sl-twosher cor pehng up and
down ho i wa ter baseboard
heat up and d own oil d rap es
and sheers polio, 2 ca r gorage
and garden Seen by appo10 t
men I on ly 247 2401

MAIN
POMEROY, 'l.
NEW LISTINGS -

Good

s treet in Mtddleport. 2
stortes.
3
bedrooms ,

equipped kitchen, formal
dining, ntce ltving R . ,
garage ,
basement ,
remodeled
and
ntce

Lovely mobile located on 1
acre with creek through,
all fenced, loads of con crete park,ing , about 2

years old 516,500.00.
WANT- A FARM? a cres, newer 3 bedroom
ho me, barn , corn crib,
storage, located on the

rover A STEAL AT JUST
SJJ.SOO .OO.
WANT ACREAGE - 4B
mobile

home

on,

large

patio,

many 1

many features, GOING AT
JUST 548,000.00 (price of
ground) .

MIDDLEPORT -

Needs

some work , 2 story frame,
good location, J bedrooms,

bafh , formal dining , ·naf.
gas furnace . INVEST NOW
JUST $20,000.00
MIDDLEPORT 2-two
s tory
buildings ,
has
apartments
over ,
all
rented .
VEry
n ice
restaurant business in one,
old established bustness.

sss,ooo.oo
NEAR GRADE SCHOOL 1 story frame, 3 bedrooms,

low heating bill. 2 lots, full
basement Ideal for family.

S27 ,300.00.
YOUR HOUSE IS TOO
GOOD TO GIVE AWAY+
CALL US NOW TO SELL
IT FOR YOU.
f!EALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
991-2259
992·61'91

TRAILER SAl ES
27320 Montgomery Rd

3 -27

langsville, Ohio

GASOIJNE ALlEY

614-669-424S Evenings

2 Miles ~a~t of Wi lk,_~V! : .,

SUPER GOOSE
TRAILERS

STOCK
NOW

AVAILABL~

He's Slim's
doq riqht
enouqh!

Jumbles NOBLE

ESSAY

ALBINO

PILFER

They contnbute to whole spectac les-

LENSES

5 Feudal
tenant's fee
6 Have
nightmares
1 Race the

MISS Winslow &amp; Son

Loolo; bad
he'~ mix up with
--~,~ "Liqhtfinqers
Min

51im wouldn't
do nuthin' like
that.
Joel! F-..J!~

J.-~....

motor
8 Fatima's
13 1961 Italian
husband
~ film classic 9 Welcome ,.,-"' 15 O'Neill play 10 Bralunan
Yesterday's Allswer
16 African
title
23 Magicoan 's
35 Bound
worm
II "Thy kingword
36 Church
17 Familiar
dom "
24 Swerve
vestment
Italian
17 Kenya people 27 Satiated
37 Caddoan
phrase
18 Sports
29 Vegetable
Indian
Devastate
setting
31 Original
38 Decay
Redecorate 19 Get working
33 Cheshire
39 Suffix
Fat
20 Loved one
eat's
with
~~::_____....!:.!~-"'&lt;e,~"~··~?-!!•.!!:!.1!.!.::!.. 27 Carpentry 21 None better
trademark
Joseph
:..:
peg
22 Be
\14 Teener's
40 Spire
28 Region
footloose
worry
ornwnent
..-=-:-----:----:----... 29 Set on fire r:-"'1';'-r.~r.-"111'"Likel4
COUrSe. he do 30 Italian

he kin
explain!

be needin' mone4
latel4!

992-3325
"• E. Second. S!r~~­

GOLF LE SSONS shoes gloves
elc
Jo h n
Teaford ,
614 985-3961 •
-

BUY

-ELWOOD
-

3 bedroom

special for jusf 512,000.
INCOME - 5 apt&gt; in good
mvestment All utilities are

5 BEDROOMS - All have

PulliNS EXCAVATING- (~~p~c~~
ServiCe, Phone 992 2478

closets, modern kitchen

AUTO
_M
_ o _siiE- it:is"u'_R_A_NcCE: ,;;;;,:;

large

family

room

pool table, laundry room.
sun deck , 3 baths and 2 car

garage at $65,000.
NEW LISTING- 75 acres
of woods, some saw timber
with dozens of beautiful
building sites. Located in
Pomeroy . All
uttliftes
available
f or
only

$25,000.00.
NEW LISTING - 8 acres
plus

3

bedroom

ranch

home, bafh, full basement.
just out of Middleport a
couple of miles Redwood
deck , carpeting and lots o f
privacy. $32,000 .

WANT IT SOLD WITHOUT
AN UPSET IN YOUR
ROUTINE .
FA.MILY
CALL THE TEAFORDS '
TO TURN TALK INTO
TRANSACTION .
REALTOR ASSOCIATE:S
Gorden B., Helen L.' and
P. Murphy

Hnusinci
Headquarters

BeANBAG QtAIR Wf\S GONE!
l- Z?

.

THE ONlY THING FLUID "AOOUT
HEf3 WORK 1$ THAT
SHEL L HAVE UB
FlDAnNo IN A
SEA OFREOINK
BEFORE WINNIE
GETS BACK!

cance lled? l os t your operators
license? Phone 992 -21 43

with

ELECTRiCAL- Contr:;;jo~ -~e;;
tng Ol11o Volley reg ion S 1 ~e
days o week , 24 hours serv 1ce
Emergency co il s Ca ll 882 2952
or 882·2305
. - - - - c___:__ -~-MOBILE HOME repo1 rs Furnaces
electrical wo rk pipes 5awed '
plumbing . 992-5858
'

E(

-

GtJir'

£.0GoJC.f!D MYSELF INr ANt&gt;
WEN"r 'PO iED.
- - ANP wf-IEN .2: GOT UP
IN ,.HE MORNINGJ, M"f'

ExcAVATiNG , d~z~r~ -bockh;e
an d d•tcl-ter Charles R Ho f
l•eld
BlocJ..
Hoe Serv~ee
Rutland , Oh1o Pone 742 2008 '

condition with low Income.

Can be upgraded to a good

with disposal . dishwasher,

/

EXcAVATING- do-ze;. lo~d;.:-o~d
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for htre, will haul
fill d 1r t, lop sod ltmestone and
grave l Call Bob or Roger Jel
fers, day phone 992· 7089 rugh t
phon e 992 3575 or 992·5232

Varnoshed

~ID

Of ALL. THf:
fOOP IN 'r'HI:: HOUSI: r
:

vice , oi l make s qcn-2284 The
Fabri c Shop
Pomeroy
Author1z ed Smger Sol es ond
Servtce w e sharpen Sctssors

woodwork and the floors
are solid. Handyman's

to see what you c an do

FRANK&amp;ERNIE

sEWING -MAoiiNE Re p~,,;, - ser -

bedroom frame home but
has natural gas, city water

pa id by the renters WAnt

-

7

Askong only $23.000
BARGAIN - Old used 3
bath .

----

BOWERS REPA IR Sweepers toos rers 1rons, ali
sma l l o pp l1 onces Lawn moer
ne• t lo Stole H1 ghway Gorag~
on Rou te 7

frame,
c ompletely
overhau led mside and o ut
Modern bath , new furnace,
nice large kitchen. utility
building and 11;. acre lot

and

-

....

GR INDSTAFF PENNZOIL now has
full au to serv ice ond re po1r 404
E M~~ ~_!::lorr:.e~oy_ ?h10
BRADFORD
Auct1 one er Com
plete Serv• co PI-tone 9.49 2.487
or 949-':1000 Rocme Oh1o Crt It
Bradford

Large bloc k -stucco house
wtth 4 bedrooms, formal
dtn tng, equipped k tt c hen,
gas ftrepla ce m the living ,
full ba semen),
2 car
garage,
and
2 room
storage . Also 2 room
business building All for

only $35.000.
LIKE NEW -

--~

News 15.
1 20-Movle ' ' No Man Is an Island" 17; I ·sO-News 13
3' 50-News 17; 4 10-12 O' Clock Hogh 17, 5· 10Dragnef 17.
Tueaday,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Unblock the blocked suit
back to his hand to collect
that fifth doamond tnck .

- -- - - -----painting
-~·

1 (614) 698 7331

- -

-

--

;e;;;~
'

- - - r -- - - -

QUICKL'r' HE CON5LILT5
HIS PHRASE 800K

GVTEN MOR6EN ... WI!:
~S-IT ES Il-INEN ?

AUF WIEDE~SEHEN.
I GUESS

+QlOB 2

because you are a

•K 9 B2

head, " replied North "You
should duck the second club,
but win the thord Discard a
diamond from dummy on
that third club Cash a hogh
diamond to see if the queen
falls . Lead your last club to
West whole doscarding another diamond from dwnmy The suot would have
been unbloc ked and you
would hav e mad e the
game.''

• Q 10

+K

• 4 :1

+

B6 3

Q 10 4

SOUTH

• J 3
• J6
t

AK65 2

+A 7 52

Vuln'e rable: East-West
Dea le r : South
West North EaSt
Pass

1•

Pass

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass
Opemng lea d +3

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinele letters, By Oswald Jacob~
•postrophes. the lenct!o and formation of the words are all and Alan Sontag
hints. Eaeh day the eode letters are dift'erent
North was bitter. He said
' CRYPTOQUOTES
to South : " If you are going
to go out of your way to get
B U ZF V
TD
EZISV,
IBKHF- to play notrwnp contracts
you should learn how to play
them
."
FC
YTE
IS V
IDOUSTDRTSEF C
South's rebid to one notrwnp was a poor bid but II
YLIHOTKHF,
KZLJHLSOFC
ORZ .TFF- still led the partnership to a
normal notruJ71p game
TSE .
YHO
T
FUML
SLB
West opened a club. South
ducked one club and won the
second. Then he went after
VUZUORC
WTFEIFFLS
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: AS A WHITE CANDIE IN A HOLY dlamonda . The play of his
PLACE, S6IS TilE BEAUTY OF AN AGED FACE.-JOSEPH ace and king picked up the
suit but dummy's two last
CAMPBELL
dlamondB were both high
© om Kinl! Futures Syndleaoe, In&lt;.
and South had no way to get
R·IRNF.Y

TH' COOKIE JAR

\

3-27-8

• 64
• Q 76

• AQS43

+ K 10 9

A Pennsylvnia reader
asks what we rebid after
partner jwnps to two spades
in response to our one-diamond opening bid
We bid two notrwnp - the
most dlscouragong rebid
possible We have the barest
possible opener
!NE WSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN l

(Do you have a question for
fhe 9Xperts ? Write " Ask the
~xperts
care of this newspa.
per Individ ual questiOns will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, self-address9d
9nvelopes The most lnterestmg questions will be used In
this column and wllf receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN 1

WHAT DID YORE MAW
KETCH YOU DOIN'?

JUGHAID ---MV MAW
CAUGHT ME RAIPIN'

992 6121

I

block-

You hold ·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

TRAVEL MATE 11 loo1 trucjt
camper Steeps 6, both si nk,
stove ,
electric
or
gas
refngerotor and furnace SIS

___ _

any

•Q73

1976 ST AR CRAFT FOLD down
camper . Sleeps 8 $1800 Phone

iiJ42-2843
--Ca_,.__

Go

EAST

WEST

AXYDLBAAXK
Is LONGFELLOW

I

•9654

• J 9 8,7
+J9

Lat.

Dawn one '
" How co uld

better'" as ked South. " The
d iamonds blocked automatically"
"They only blocked you

I CAN'T COME OUT,

1-lERE'S THE WORLD WAR I
FL~IN6 ACE DOWN BEHIND
ENUW Ll NES... A I{OUN6
PEASANT.~ASS APPROACHE!i ..

2i 1\

• A 10 5 4

' - ----,

e;

covotmg , septi c systems
d02er, backhoe Rt 143 Phone
TR-EE -TRIMMINGo~d742 3167 or 742 2573

~

NORTH
... A K 7

cheer

c,uzw .

WALLPAPERING AND
Co l1742 2328

HOWERYA ND - MARTIN -

March 27

BRIDGE

32 Arena

hr-+--11-+-+-

How To Prepare Taxes

Movie "Topaze" 17.
12 : 4G-Mannix 6, 13; Kojak 8, 1.00--Tomorrow 3 ,

sauce

Italian
U Dorector,
Sergoo 42 Think
t3 Climbmg
pepper
44 Mulcted
DOWN
1 Colombian
city
2 U.S.S.R.
inland sea
3 Motored
t I love:

a, 10,

20
9 GO-Charlie's Angels 6.13. Dear Detectove 8,10,
Movie " In Like Flint" 17; Masterpiece Theatre 20
10 DO-Vegas 6.13 ; News 20
10 30-Footsteps 20
11 DO-News 3,6,8,10.1_3,15, Turnabout 20. Liloas. Yoga
&amp; You 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee Woman 6.13 ; Rockford File~ 8, ABC News 33, Movie " Paper Man" 10.

33 "Heater"
3&amp; Adieu, in

EXCELLENT

608

WHEN l NEEO oT!

3-7.'1 mo I Pd J

~b~ ~ ~~ SaJe

6·30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13; CBS News 8, 10;
My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20
7 GO-Cross-Wits 3. Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10,
Love, American Style 15, News 10, Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 17; Dick Cavett 20, Big Green Magazine 33
7 30-Dolly 3, Mafch Game PM6; Muppel Show 8; The
Judge 10; That's Hollywood 13, Wild Kingdom 15,
Sanford &amp; Son 17, MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33
8·0D-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3,15, Eight Is Enough 6,13;
Jeffersons 8.10; Shakespeare Plays 33, Edward
The King 17. Making The Scarlet Letter 20
8 30-Movle " The Dork Secret of Harvest Home" 3,15;

XXXI XI XI X)

Redolence
r'T":~;;-;:;,:;;;;;~;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;-:;:;:;;;;;:-"):==::::~:lfc:?J 11
12 Race

I 'lL JUST WI&lt;AP ~15 ViNE&lt;
ARI?LIND ~·eND OF ONE
OF ~E$1&lt; ~~EO SO
IT'LL BE HANDY

992-2356

form the surpnse answer, as sug
gested by the above ca rtoon

by THOMAS JOSEPH

18 Years Experience

Middleport. 0 .

Son 8, Elec Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17, Doctor Who 33
6:0D-News 3,8,10,13, 15; BC News 6, Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgepodge Loge 20.

Now arrange the ctrcled letters 10

ti&amp;'.._,.., .. r

ELECTRIC MOlOR
SHOP

992-6011

I

Jeannie 17
5 31&gt;---Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;

(Answers tomorrow)
Answer

ALIEYOOP

(almost new) , 14x36 add

1-2

[j

!.ITI'!.E ORPHAN ANNIE

T1105E DISHES
WAS HED···

651 Beech Street

WHEREAT 50M5

MU~ICIAN5 HAVE
'THEIR MU$1C..

'

PUNK••• GET

SMI'{H ,.ELSON
MOTORS, INC.

j
K

1 I

Servtce Calis

acres,
1972 All ELECTRIC trade r 12 &gt;c 60
Ce ntral air underp•nmng On
lo! m Mo~on 30~- ~73 - 5_4 38

\(JJfJIJJIJ0~

REYNOlD'S

•New Home
*Add-ons
•Remolding

'""' c'""""' '""""" ' ..... 4r.,."'

~FORTIP

2-5-1 mo~

VINR &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

$16,500.00.
CLOSE TO MINES -

:=

1

I_

"'' mile oH Rt. 7 bY·P"'• on
St. Rt. l24tow•ra Rutlond,
0.

C. R. MASH

PAINTING AND Sondblosttng
Free es ti mates Call 949-2686

WILL CA RE fo r two mvo l1 d or
elderly persons 1n my home
Twe nty years
ex penence
Rea sonable rot es 99'1 6022 or

WHICf.\ ~)( IS

ROGER HYSELL

ORGANS

after 12 noon .

I.._........I _tJ tJ

JtY.;T I\Kl00ef2.

2-7-mo

Hammond

PETE SIMPSON

992 5422

-.

=- -

3 AND 4 BM furnt shed and un
furntshed
op ts
Pho nt&gt;
992-5434

·CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES

==---

s

SENIOR CITIZENS ' Apts I bedr If
you ore on SS or Di sability SS,
rent bosed on •ncome 992 -7772
be t ~een _9?m_~~-6__p~ - - · COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 n or tl-t of Pomeroy
Lorge lo1~ ~a ll ~9? ~4~9

'
Manager

-"--

std

S900 992 7376
1977 OLDS CUTLASS S P S , P B

pi!

With Capttal, betng a Branch Manager is almost like
betng tn business for yourself You furnish the ability
and the imtiattve capital supplies you wtth the oHke
framing , the know-how, the oHlce location and
equtpment and all the money needed to build a
successful branch

~il'~~ ~- ~

19 !4 OLOS CUTLASS Supreme slo--- -~
t lon wagon S2500 or best off er
AND m1sc ha ultng Call
Con be seen ot Ctttzens No- WATER
992
5858
l 1onol Bonlo: Mtddl epor t or co li
992 7663
NOW HAULING l•mestone m
Mtddleporl Poemroy oreo Call
1972 F(!RD PICKUP F 100 w tth top
forfreeesflmate 367 7101
per 302 V 8 auto P S P B

PORCH SALE Movm g out of sta te
Fu rn1 ture and m•sc TV, w ash er
and dryer Dusky St , Syracuse
Thurs thru Su n

Become a Manager of a
Consumer Finance Office

JACK W. CARSEY,
MGR.

bol es m111 ed hoy Cp ll 992 2877
after 6 pm

Yi.id~-~
~ ---·
~ J- ' -' c ~ i
- --

FORGE AHEAD

IS THE PLACE!

1978 FORO PICKUP super cob V 8
w tl h mper top Good cond•t1on
Good gas m tl eoge
$5400
949 2042

GUN SHOO T RaCine Vol unt eer
Ftre Dept Every Sa tu r day b 30
pm of thetr bu1l d tng 1n Bo shom
Fodo r ~ c h ok~ gun s on ~y

Ward to Uoyd Ward, Kathy Enevoldsen to Gregory L.
A. Ward, 1 acre, Salisbury. Bailey, Jo Lynn Bailey, 5
Junmie Dillon, Violet acres, Olive.
DIUon to James Morgan,
Gregory L. BaUey, Jo Lynn
Thelma Morgan, 2.3767 acres, Bailey to James S. Stettler,
Scipoo.
Pamela S. Stettler, 5 acres,
Darwyn E . Enevoldsen, Olive.
Eleanore K. Enevoldesen,
Virginia T. Nease , Afatty. ln fact , Eleanor K. fidayot, Racine .
.-

I:.
:::::o=. APRIL 4-7

1950 FORD 4 doo r Good shap e
$1500 Call992-58 14

-

BA SEMENT SALE at the l orry
0 8r 1en
r es td e nce
Wed
Thurs , Fn (28 29 30) 9 7
Ha ve lots o f n1ce vlotht ng
(es pec toll., g1rls s1zes 6X to 16)
Also
ho ve
cu rfa t n s
bed sp reads r ugs Many tl ems
too numerous to men t•on Go
post Letart Fo ils s1gn tur n le ft
at ftrst lone 2nd house on
ngl-tt

JEEP

Ex

tro s 992 3937

-

2-14-lmo~

work

I'CJR IEAYBI.J\5 5AKE., IF YoU OOIJ'T
LIKE': "6"-TTI..S a: lH~ 'S&amp;Xf;S," 00
DOf-l'T I{OU '5WITC:.H GHAIJfJ8l.S?

949-2862, 949·2160

2 11 1 mo Pd.

1977
CHEVY
Bl aze r
Ax4
Cheyenne po ckoge 29 000 oc
tual m tl cs l•lt steer AM -FM
rodto
A C , tow package
rru1 se whtte spok e w hee ls h
cellent con d,hon After 5 coli
99'1 2967

NEW BATON cla sses Begtnner s
tnterrnedtote and advanced
Taught by Cmdy Patterson at
the Syracuse G rode School
Gym Fo, more tnformoflon
co lt 992-2088

ol'

All types roofing, gutters
and downspouts. All types

--

ONE USW garage door One
sli ghtly dama gf'!d f,lmg cab tnet
Se..,.ero l used choln sows
Pomeroy Home ond A uto 600
East Mom St

New, repair,
gutters and
downspouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

'

. ,&amp; ~amous Name Brand

'' TON CHE VRO LET ptckup std
Irons w tth topp er Good cond 1
flon Sears Rota fill er 8 h p , ':1
sp forward and reverse E&gt;c
cellenl cond1ho n 9.49 24 49
DINETTE SET marble table 1op 6
cho trs brow n and wh1te Used
1 month $200 Four 16 1n
w l-t ee ls Bes t o ff er 992 776'2

1975 REO PONTIAC Ventura hot
ch bocJ.. 4 new f1res Good con
d1h on ' 949 2129

URGI::NTL V NEEDED Lac at 1on to
r oom and board Indoor and
outdoor dogs for Me1gs Co
Humane Soete ty wh,l e homes
ore sou ght for them 992 5427
o r 992 7680

•

guaranteed!.
20
years
experrence .
Free
est•mates.
Call: Tom
Hosktns. 949-2UiO. .
3-7· 1 mo .

1973 HONDA CB 350 8700 miles
Excellent cond1t10n 74.? -2(W5

Langsvtlle, Ohio
614-669-4245 Evening•
2 Miles East
ofWilkesville

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance

and wondows. All

'

1975 (AMARO dark ' blue wtth
block 1nten or Good cond ttt on
949 2129

1973 PONTIAC Grond Pnx

-

" Teheran " 17

!. DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15, All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1: 30-Days of Our Lives 4, As The World Turns 8,10.
2:0D-Doctors 3,15. One Life to Live 6,13 ; 2 25-News
17.
2.30-Another World 3,15; Gui ding Light 8.10; I Love
Lucy 17.
3·DO-General Hospital e.1 3. Lollas Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17; Studio See 33.
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10, Fll nfsto nes 17; Over
Easy 20; Congressional Outlook 33.
4 : 00--Mister Cartoon 3, Hollywood Sauar es 15. Nterv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33
Batman 10, Dinah 13, Space Glanfs 17_
4 30-Bewlfched 3; Gilligan 's Is. 8, 17; Brady Bunch 10,
Pett icoat Junction 15
5 OQ-1 Dream of Jeannie :jj Beverly Hillbillies 8,
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Si x
Million Dollar Man 13, Brady Bunch 15; I Dream of

Roofing

' '7320 Montgomery Rd.

home matnten.an(:e - new
and repaer Storm doors

19 77 CADILLAC ELDORADO E1c
ce ll ent
cond1t1on
Phone
992 7462

1973 DATSUN 610

~'

American Sfyle 17.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6.13; Search for Tomorrow 8,10,
Elec. Co 33; Not For Women Only 15, Movie

H. L Wrilesel

M~tgomety
T~ailer Sales

11·9-t mo.

1974 CHEVV Z228, sh arp $3000 or
best offer '304 773 -5969

WANT to tha nk everyon e
especial ly those on L1ncol n
Hts for the flow ers etc at my
rnother tn low s funera l Mrs
Omo Bel l Sm1t h
Edgar Vanlnwago~

*

I

--~ .::JI

TRACTOR DRIVEN •
PTOALTERNATORS
from 15,000 to
75,000 walls.

220 E. Main Street,
Pomtroy,O,
C.ll992-7113
For Free Estimates

.

1976 F 250 Ford !rude ond 1200
bale s mtxed hoy Coil 992 2877
after 6 pm

[

EWorr
APPUANCE II

85.:1 2nd AVE , PH 446 9523

IN M EMORY of Evelyn Lander s
who possed away Morcl-t 27 th
Lonely IS th e doy God coiled you
away
You told us all 1t was meant that
way
You so•d tim e wdl 1-teal all sorrow
and pom
But my moth er dear home w ill
never be th e so m e
We have shed many o tear
We all k now tf has only been one
sod year
Wando Adams , daughter and
Joel.. Lan ders, son

~

.

&lt;

1977 CHEVROLET 4x&lt;l short w heel
bose Mossey Ferg uson cor n
pl anter ,
corn
cult1 voto r
992 7084

Thomas Remember s 20
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15, Family Feud 6, 13; love
of Life 8,1 0, Sesame 51 20,33
11 : 55-C BS News 8; House Call 10; News 17
12 00-Newsc:enter J ; N ews 6,10; Pa&amp; sword 15. Y ouna
&amp; the Restless 8. Midday Magazine 13; Love

of Athens
Phone 992·2581
or 992-2082
31 1-1 mo.

Armstrong Carpeting

NEW 2 PC liVING ROOM SUITE
S149 95, NEW 5 PC DINETTE
SETS S49 95 NEW SEAlY MAT
TRESS S TWIN SIZE INTERSPRING S4S NEW 3 PC END TABlE
SETS $Jq 95 U HAUL , RICES
NEW AND USED FURNITURE

Ll~~ ~;:,.

Assoctare
Elberfelds of Pomeroy
and Ktmball Music Center ,

..
Your Headquarters For

SAVE UP TO Jas STORE WID!: .

0..,

LANE DANIEI,.S
ot

.

DECEMBER SALE

.

Aural Method

3-16-mo pd

'

1969 CHEVY PICKUP Phone after
b JO pm b9tl 3809

14 Yr . Experience

992-6011

GOTT A GO

-House and lot
furn 1tur e
clothes cor oil my household
1tem s Drop by 760 loureiS t
Middleport

BAR HELP needed 992-3860 bet
ween 8 30 and 9 30om

J In Ole

2140
Team game - 3 In 01e 770

EVERYTHING S

Sesame St 33
8·30-Hazel 17.
·9 DO-Bob Braun 3, Phil Donahue 13,15; Hogan's
Heroes 8: Match Game 10; Lucv Show 17
9:30-Brady Bunch 8; Green Acres 17
lO :OD-Card Sha r ks 3,15, Dating Game 13 ; All In T/1e
Family 8,10; Movie " John Love s Mary" 17.
10:30-AII Sta r Secrets 3, 15 ; S20,000 P yramid 13, Pr ice
Is Right 8,10; Andy Gnffllh 6
11 :OQ-High Rollers 3.15; Happy Days 6,13; Lowell

nJNING

lnsurtil ' -

*

I hove for 5ol e a 1978 Dodge 1
ton wrec l.. er relrte~Je r , wench
Doll• es 750 ft ca ble, m tl ooge
517 4.27 As kmg S!l500 Con be
seen at 347 Bee&lt;: i't Sf
M1d
dleport OH 99'2 2!76
COAL LIM ES TO NE sa nd grovel
calc1 um ch lo nde fcr tli1:rer d og
food and all ty pes of salt Ew ce ls1or Sa lt Work s II"~" E Mom
St Pomeroy 9Y'J :189 1

Clitmnoi
Swoopo GIOIN

Kanaaroo 8,10, Leave It To Beaver 17,

s : oo-Caot

PIANO

MttnHror

*New Home
itAdd-ons
Remoldings
ii Free Estimates

DU~ TO the dea th of my hu sband

WANTl:D TO buy S foo t br ush
hog Note Vanaman Rut lond
Ohto 742 2761

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

207.

Team series -

pocke t welc hes
doss' nngs wedd1ng bonds,
d•arnonds Gold o r si lver Coli
Hoer Wamsley 74'} 233 1

The Publisher reserves the right
to edit or reJect any ads deemed objecUDrl.ll.l 'l'fte Publisher wiU not be
responsible for more than one lnt:orrt!Ct Insertion.

PUBLICATION

TO · Judy Ann Hudnell , whose
last known iiddress was 141
warner Street, Marietta ,
OhiO .

MnAL FOLDING cha1r s like 1.1ew
$d oo 100 or more $3 SO eo Ice
crf!orn r abtne ts. f ro1en f ood
d1 !;ploy Wya tt pret:rel or p1z10
oven NCR cosl-t reg1 ster Pop
corn can dy fl oss , carme l corn
mochmes 614 -237 4402

OLD COINS

N THe
1

lion Seek the company Of COMMON PLEAS COURT
thole who 'll keep things llghl
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
and breezy

Mobil e Plome ~~Hles and Ylll'd sales
are at't'epted ooly with cash With
urdl:!r. 25 cent chlu"ge for ads t'fltrying Box Nwnber Jn Care of The SenUnel

C. R. MASH
VINn. &amp; AUJM.
SIDING

19!7 GLASTRON Tf!l HAUL op('rt
l1 0 111 hoot S5 li p t:vtnrude
motor trat ler 949 'JSJ! al fFH
Spm

2689

OlD FURNITURI: 1ce b oxes bro:.s
herls lfOn beds rlesks etc
comp le te hou seho ld s Wr1te
M D Mtller HI 4 Pomeroy or
co ll991 77b0

nummum Cash m advance

deceased ,

Dev1SE'es of Sa ra Flndlrn q
lhle, deceased ,
The Unknown Heirs and
Devisees of Frank Fi nd ltng ,
deceased .
Ly le Kau fman, acldre ss
unknown ;
Howa rd Kaufman, address
compaeaion ru le your actions unknown ,
and you won 't be annoyed If
COrrtne Graf, addr ess
someone Inconveniences you unknown . and
Dal e
Braley ,
address
today . Its more your nature to
unknown
be sympathetic, anyway
You ar e h ereby notified
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Taco that
you ha'Je been named as
and diplomacy can achle¥e de fendants in a legal action
things for you today that fle xing entitled Christine Beegle,
your muscles or raising your Plalnttff, vs The Unknown
voice could never do. Try It , He tr s of Edward Findlmg ,
d ece ased, et al. , Defendants
you'llllke lt.
Th is action ha s been assigned
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Case No 17003 , and IS
Stick to your high standards In spendtnQ In the Co u rt of
an honorable and responsible Common Pleas of Me ,gs
matter today. Don t be tempted County , Pomeroy , OhtO,
45 769
to try underhanded methods
e obJec t of the complaint
LEO (Jul~ 23-Aug 22) If you 'll is Th
to qu te t title agamst the
let .. them , others can be a relll estate and quiet f ttle to
aource of Inspiration to you real estate located m the
today , as well a! bolstering Vtllage of Pomeroy, County
your spirits Con '! be too of Meigs , and State of Ohi o,
bounded and descnbed as
proud.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You 'll fo llows
Betng Lot No 345 on the
only become more confused If northerly stde of Third State
you try to unravel the threads in said vt lla ge of Pomeroy,
that have been holding your Ohio, and betng the same
budget together. Walt till property conveyed to E S.
Beegle and Arthur Beeg le by
tomorrow .
A 0 Weed and Wtfe by deed
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You recorded
In Volume 117, Page
can make a fine Impression 123 of the Reco rds of Deeds of
today If you 're willing 10 forego Meigs County , Ohto
your own Interests and try to do
The prayer ts to qutet title
thlnga others would like to do and forec lose any tnterest
or all eged to be owned
SCORPIO (Oct_ 24-Nov. 22) If owned
by you and for costs
your Instincts send a warning
You are required to answer
signal about another person, the co mplatnt Wtfhtn 28 days
heed them, especially If the after the last publicatton of
situation Involves money Dou- th ts notic e wh1 ch w ttl be
ble-check before becoming pub liShed once each week for
S1:.: successive weeks
The
Involved.
last publication W1 fl be made
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Cec. on April 3, 1979, and the 28
2t) Find a cozy corner to tuck days for answer will com youraelf away In today. You mence on that date.
In case of your fatlure to
won't be In the mood for
answer or otherwtse respond
people bustling around you, as
required by the Ohio Rules
and ' might find their activity of Civil
Pro ce dure. 1udgment
Irritating
by default w •l! be rendered
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) aga inst yo u for tl'le re11ef
Find yourself a cozy corner to demanded tn th e complaint .
won ' t

'1'1~

6 OD-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15
6: 10-News 17, 6·25-Chrlsfopher Closeup 10
6'30- Romper Room 17; 6 · ~5-Morn ln g Report 3
6 50-Good Morning, Wesf VIrg inia 13; 6 · 55o--Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13
7 DO- Today 3, 15, Good Morning America 6,13;
Wednesday Morn ing 8, Schoolles 10; Three
Stpoges-Lottle Rascals 17.
7 15-Weafher 33; 7:30-Famoly Affair 10

Business Services

For 1nfo rmot•n1

WF HAV~ r horolo te&lt;o d10brt•c
chocolot..-.s and othet candy
&lt;ou ppi• P" Free Easter candy
doss Call Carouse l ConfN
t1onery
111
Middleport
99') 6342

CHIP
WOOD
Poles
mo11
d1amefer 10 ' o n larges t end
$17 per ton Bu ndl ed slob $1 U
per ton Oelt vered to 0 1-tta
Pollet Co , Rt '} Pomeroy

Obttuary 6 cents per wurd, t;J.OO

T he Unknown He 1rs ilnd
Devisees of John F1ndling ,

WOOD DOOR
roll YBS 41')7

s tand ard~

FMHA

CASH FOH 1unk car!&lt;. '24 1-to~&lt; r
wrecker
S IHIJICC
Fry(&gt; s
Ru tla nd O H 742 1081

In memory, Card of Thanks and"!

new Aatro-Graph Letter Get
yours by mailing $1 for each to
Astra-Graph , P.O Box 489. Radio City Satlon , N Y 10019 Be
sure to specify birth sign
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) Let

f .

'1 41 '1074 ,

rt~le

and

Devisees ot Beatr•c e Kauf
man , deceased

deceased,
The Unknown H e ~r s

meet

Euch word over the mJnlmLlfll IS
wurds Is 4 cents per word per W.y
Ads running uther than consecutive
days will be chltrgt!d wl the l day

Th e Un~nown He1rs and
Devisees of Emma Fi nd ling
The

WANTED
TO
HU Y
FOUN
tlfOilOOM rural 11om" l~al will

IS Words or Under
C.sh
Charge
1.00
1.25
150
1.00
110
2.25
300
3 75

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1979

5 40-World af Large 17, 5 · ~5-fa rm Reporf 13.
5 50-PTL Club 13, 5 55-Sunrise Semester 10

l'or Sale

Wnnll'd to Buy

CHARGES

TO E ff•e I hie Shannon whose
last known aeldress was J 16
Waverly R oad, W llloughb'( ,
OhtO ,
The Unknown HetrS and

Thla coming year you could set
•bout to establish new goals

1·30-Movle "Flame of Calculla" 17; 1:-News 13.
3.50-News 17; ~ 10-12 O'Clock High 17; 5:10Dragnet 17

'For Best Results Us~ Sentinel Classifieds

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CHRISTINE BEEGLE ,

Defendants

Morch 21, 1979

9- The Daily Sentinel, Moddleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Tuesday . March 27. 1' 17\J
DICKTRACY
.

•
I

�10-The Daily Sentmel, M1ddleport·Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday. March 27, 1979

One killed, 20 injured I,..~~~~ ~~aths ITeamsters
take
unusual steps
.as PLO bomb explodes
He
satd
guerrillas
throughout Lebanon went on
maxtmum alert agamst
Israeli retaliation
It was the second explosiOn
set off by Palesllmans
angered by the EgyptianIsrael! peace treaty signed
Monday m Washmgton. A
band grenade wounded nme
persons, two of them
American tounsts, in a hostel
in Arab F;ast Jerusalem
Monday night.
Despite the threat of Arab
terrorism, Israelis sang,
wept and danced the bora
Monday after watchmg the
s1gnmg of their peace treaty
With Egypt.
About 60,000 braved cold

By ARTHUR MAX
Associated Press Writer
JERUSALEM (AP) - One
woman was killed and 20
other persons were injured
lnday when a bomb exploded
under a vegetable stand m an
outdoor market in Lod, 15
miles east of Tel Aviv, pollee
S31d.

Two of the injured were reported in serious condition.
A Palestine Liberation
Organization spokesman m
Beirut said a PW untt from
the West Bank of the Jordan
River was responsible and
said· "The blast IS part of a
plan to escalate antt-Israei
warfare in protest against the
treaty of treason."

and blustery weather to cheer
the ceremony as it was shown
on a huge TV screen m a Tel
Aviv square, then burst mto
spontaneous song and Iolk
dancmg under a forest of
peace banners and Israeli
and Egyptian flags
Pubhc festivities also were
held m dozens of towns and
farmmg villages, as Israelis
put aSide thell' fears for the
future and welcomed the first
peace treaty ever signed with
an Arab state.
Thousands
more
celebrated quietly at horne
wtth a few friends. One of
them was Uri Bar-Ner, an
Israeli Foreign Mmistry
official. After watchmg the

Cutbacks forces layoffs

r•

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio
(AP) - Thousands of Ohio
coal miners have been Iatd off
or put on thr~ay work
weeks because utthttes are
cutting back on thetr use of
Ohio's htgh-sulfur coal, a
commtttee of state legtslators
were told Monday .
Ralph Patton, of Consohdation Coal Co. , told
members of the Energy and
Environment Committee that
Consolidation sold 10.7
million tons of Ohio coal m
1973, but "we'll be darned
lucky to sell 4 million tons in
1979 ..
Consolidat1on has latd off
307 persons so far and plans

Chairman named
HARl'FQRD - Kim Neal
has been named Hartford
Chairman for the "Breath of
Spring" Btke·A·Thon for
Cystic FibroSIS.
Accordmg to Charles
Thayer, • Bluegrass Chapter
prestdent of the CF Foundation, Neal wtll coordinate
thts year's Bike-A·Than to
ratse funds for research and
care programs for chtldren
affected by Cystic Ftbrosts
and other lung-damagmg
diseases.
The Bike-A-Than wlll be
held during the month of
April Riders wtll soon be out
seeking sponsors.
In order to contmue the
fight against CF, everyone 's
help will be needed, "so
please gtve generously of
your tune and money when
you are contacted,'' Thayer
sat d.
Cystic Fibrosis is the
number one genetic killer of
children, occurring in one of
every 1,500 births An
inhertted, incurable dtsea'se,
CF destroys lungs and 11
destroys life

to furlough more tf the power Clairsville, m contrast to the
compames swttch to non.()hio hundreds who have packed
coal, Patton said.
previous coal hearings.
" In another two or three
Peggy Graham, of St.
months, tf tt's not too late al- Clairsville, said the low
ready, lhts action will be irre- turnout was because the
versible/' Patton said. "Ohio miners and thetr families
coal will have lost the war " have become frustrated and
The Environmental "pretty well tired out" by
Protection Agency estunates their year-plus battle to save
a total of 16,000 JObs could be their JObs
lost if the utthttes are allowed
Bob Houston, a member of
to switch to low-suller, non- the UMW Polittcal Action
Ohio coal to meet the Cornmtttee,
told
the
strmgent pollution limtts of committee, "I'm not a
the federal Clean Atr Act. · radtcal or anythmg, but tf
Davtd Osborne, vice presi- they take our jobs away, they
dent of the Youghiogheny and are going to ba ve to bring
Ohto Coal Co. said the that coal m by parachute "
compan~ has 1,500 workers
on three-day work weeks and
may have to close some
mines if the swttch is allowed
Several committee
SQUAD RUNS
members
said
the
Three calls were answered
Legislature may retnstate Monday by the Pomeroy
Ohio's coal tax at a uniform Emergency Squad
rate and use the money for
At 11 : II a.m. the squad
coal research.
went to 860 Logan St. for
The prevtous, graduated Louise Stders who had fallen.
tax
was
declared She wsa taken to Veterans
unconstitutional last week by Memorial Hospital.
the U.S. Dtslrtet Court m
At 12·04 p.m., the unit went
Cleveland The court satd the to 175'iz N. Second Ave., for
,tax, which was heavter for Karen Thacker who was
low-sulfur l'Oal mined out of talten to the office of Dr.
state, had the effect of ' James Con~e
erecting unconstitutional
At 12 ·18 p.m. the unit was
mterstate trade barriers
called to Naylors Run Hill
About 50 persons attended near Pomeroy fQr Vietor
at the meeting In St Letfheit who was takeri to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad
CANCER MEETING
was called Monday at 11 03
The
Metgs Umt of the
a m. for Eugene Fmch,
Amen
can
Cancer Soctety will
Township Road 245, a
meet
this
evenmg
at 1:30 p.m.
medtcal patient, who was
m
the
east-west
dining
room
taken to Veterans Memorial at Veterans Memorial
Hospital
At 2. 23 a:m. today they Hospital Interested persons
were called to Minersville for are urged to attend
Mtchael Salser, Racme, who
ASK TOWED
was involved in an accident.
Marnage
were
Salser refused treatment and tssued to J .licenses
B.
Self,
50, '
transportation
Glendale, Calif., and Laure J.
McGraw, 36, Rt. I, Racine;
Salem A. Yates, 59, Rt. 2,
Racme, and Donna Joyce
Haley, 34, Rt. 2, Racine ;
Jacob E. Schuler, 19, Portland and Pamela S. Stobart,
18, Pomeroy; Joseph Eugene
Kropka, 44, Middleport and
Cheryl Lunn Colligan, 24,
Mtddleport

FIGURES ...

BOARD TO MEET
The Eastern Local Board of
Education will meet in
special sesston to discuss
fmancial matters Thursday,
March 29 at 1:30 p.m

CHARLESTON - A. L.
Kmg of Middleport, completed the two-week 1919
Trade Union Internship
Program in Charleston
recently. Kmg Is chairman of
the Safety Committee of
United Steelworkers of
America Local 5668
The program was spon
sored by the West Vtrgmta
Department of Labor tn
cooperation wtth the lnslltute
for Labor Studies at West
Vtrgmta Umversity.
Kmg was one of 13 trade
unionists chosen to participate in the program. The
selection was based on in·
formatiOn provided by applicants with regard to their
labor activities, educational
background and community
involvement.
The Interns spent every day
and several evenings in m·
tensive sessions of classroom
mstructton and observation
of state government and the
agenctes and departments of
concern to unions, workers
and their families. The interns were each assigned to a
legislator whom they accompamed for one day. King
spent the day with Delegate ,
Sattes
(D)
of
Lyle
Charleston.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Larry Bailey,
Mtddleport; Herbert Ailing,
Pomeroy; Mary Siders,
Middleport; Henry Cunningham, Pomeroy; Archie
Rife, Cheshire, Teresa
Whitlock, Coolville; Eugene
Finch, Dayton; Glen Cundiff,
Syracuse.
Dtscharged
Rick
McKmght, John Brogan,
Mildred Tubbs, Ruth Hawley.

Fine G1ft
for a I I proud
MOTHERS and

FATHERS ..
(great for the
gra ndparents.
tool I

"The Friendly Bank"

12.50
eac h

Walk-up teller wmdow
and auto-teller window
Open Frtday Evenmgs 5 to 7 p.m .

mg .
Hea rt -shaped
SCARFPIN
for MOTHER
,,

.....

lUI ILl~

Srerl mg ,
Tree-shaped
STICKPIN
for FATHER

WHAT A NICE WAY w remember the btrthmont hs of
c hildren- grand chtldrenl Room fa up to 6 stmulated
bnth s to nes t o represent btrthmonths . Cttstom -sAt to
your order, usua l ly the same day . Nt ce ly Gift Bo)(ed.

01110

f
."

union training

""""-

Member F. D. I C Deposits Insured lo 54u.ooo.oo

Leaders
(Conhnued from page I )
ceremony on the front lawn of
the Whtte House, mingled
with the chants of 2,000
protesters shouting "Long
live Palestme 1"
Carter's medtation efforts,
clunaxed 13 days earlier at
meetmgs wtth Begm and
Sadat m Jerusalem and
Call'o, contmued almost until
the moment of the ceremony.
As a result of differences
expressed by his guests at a
prestgning luncheon, Carter
appended a note to the official
record of the agreement: " I
have been informed that the
expression 'West Bank' IS
understood
by
the
government of Israel to mean
'Judea and Samaria "'
In addition, he promtsed
Sadat and Begm he would
t~ke
steps to ensure
deployment
of
a
"rnultmational force" m the
Sinat Penmsula if the U.N.
Securtty Counctl fails to
station a force there.
After the signmg, the three
leaders grasped each other in
a three-way handshake .
Carter said softly, " I'm so
proud of both of you."
Under the treaty, Israel
agrees to dtsmantle Jewish
settlements and return to
E'gypt the vast Sinat Desert
seized in the Six-Day War of
1967 Egypt agrees, for the
ftrst time, to formally
recogmze
her
Jewish
netghbor as an independent
state.
Carter, in his speech, called
on the rest of the Arab wor)d
to jom in the peace process.
Without nammg any of the
treaty critics, Carter satd
those "who would callously
sptll more blood" should be
aware
of
a
JO!Dt
determiniatton by the Uruted
States, Egypt and Israel to
"vigorously wage peace."

Cost•••.

That's one thing I was never very
good at. That's wh~ - I opened a
savings account at Citizens National
Bank. If my bills run a little more
than I counted on, I have funds set
aside for emergencies . It' s the way I
keep my finances in shape.

'

t::harlcs William Cornell,
Sr.,19, ill. I, Racmc, d1ed this
mornmg at the home of his
son, Charles W. Cornell, Jr .,
Racine.
He was preceded in death
by his parents, Charles w.
ceremony, he turned off his and Lucretia Davis Cornell
TV set, ratsed a glass· of His wife VIola Fox Cornell
champagne and proposed a and one ;.,n, Malcolm Wayn~
toast "to life, to peace, to Cornell also preceded hino m
death. '
.
. hope.''
He was a retired employee
In tribute to the 12,000 VIC·
tims of Israel's four major of Columbus Gas, Inc , and
wars and countless border was a member of the Racine
skirmishes, soldiers placed a Masomc Lodge
In addition to his son
smgle flower on each military
Charles,
he is survived by tw~
grave
grandsons,
Charles w.
"Peace was my husband's
Cornell
Ill,
Fort
Bragg, NC
deepest des1re," one war
and
Michael
W.
Cornell,
Ne~
widow said as she VIsited her
Mexico,
and
two
greathusband 's grave. "He always
granddaughters, Jennifer
dreamed of peace."
Some
2,000
Israehs and Kinobelry Cornell, also of
gathered at Jerusalem's Fort Bragg.
One brother, James CorWailing Wall to mark tbe
Slgnmg wtth songs and a brief nell, and one sister, Anna
concert by violintst Yehudt Cornell, both of Pomeroy also
survive.
Menuhm.
Funeral services wtll be
Thursday, 3 p.m. at the
SUSPECTS SOUGHT
Ewing Chapel.
NEW YORK (AP)
Burtal will follow Ill the
Authorities , are Gillmore Cemetery.
"desperately" huntmg two
Fnends may call this
alleged members of an anti· evemng after 7 p.m. at the
Castro group as prime Chapel.
suspects in born bings at
Kennedy International
ROSCOE(PETE,COZART
All'port and in New Jersey,
the FBI S31d Monday.
Roscoe (Pete, Cozart, 70,
The group that claimed Racine, died Monday at the
responsibility for the three Holzer Medical Center
explosions Sunday also was 1 He was preceded in death
involved in a 1916 bombmg by hts parents, Joseph R and
that killed a former Chilean Estella Pease Cozart. His
ambassador in Washington, wtfe, Gertrude Paramck
D. C., the FBI said.
Cozart, also preceded hun m
death. Mr. Cozart was a
retired employee of the
King completes
Dravo Corp. after 25 years of

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
COURT STREET
POMEROY,O.

(Contmued from page I)
help can be forthcoming from
the Ohio Department of
Natural
Resources.
"Something must be done at
the levee this year," the
mayor warned.
Off1cials discussed a traffic
light at Locust and Pearl Sts.,
and stressed the Importance
of the light operating for the
protectt0n of school children
crossing the streets.
Mayor Hoffman mdtcated
that psrts have been hard to
obtain, but he believes some
have been located and will
know for sure this week.
It wsa noted that Police J.
J. Cremeans is patroling at
the area frequently since the
tralfic light is not working.
Council took under advisement a request for
limited parking made by
John Kauff on Lincoln St.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Grate, and
council members Allen Lee
King, Mullen, William
Walters, Carl Horky and
Dewey Horton
I

Survivorsmcludef1vesons,
Robert, Gulfport, M1ss. ;
John, Lawton, Okla.; Paul,
Toronto, OH, Ed, Pomeroy;
and Ron , Columbus; one
daughter, Wilma Smith,
Portland; three brothers,
Alfred Cozart, Youngstown;
Hobart, Portland, and Edwm,
R?cine; four sisters, Audrey
N1ce, Racrne; Garnet Roush,
Gallipolis; Vera Van Meter,
Pomeroy, and Elizabeth
Willford, Racme.
Seventeen grandchildren,
six great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews
also survive.
Funeral services will be
Thursday, I p.m. at the
Ewing Chapel. Burial will
follow
in Stlversv11le
Cemetery
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m. thiS
evemng.

Saturday or " reasonably
By OWEN UlLMANN
soon thereafter,'' the union
o\P Labor Writer
'sa1d, 1'some form of
WASHINGTON lAP )
The Teamsters union, economic recourse will be
reportedly armed with resorted to by the parties" overwhelming
strike a strike or an mdustry lockauthorizatiOn from its rank- out.
The suit was filed as scatand-file, ts takmg unusual
legal steps it hopes will stop tered union locals around tbe
President Carter from country reported their memballing a possible nationwtde bers had overwhelmingly
voted this weekend to allow
trucking strike next week
The union asked a federal leaders to call a strike.
Union officials here said
judge Monday for permission
to question government they had not yet completed
offictals in hopes their the tally, but elQII!Cted a
answers will prove that lopsided vote favoring strike
Carter cannot use the Taft. authorization. Teamsters
Frank
Hartley Act to order workers President
back to their jobs should the Fttzsimmons said a decision
union order a walkout after on whether to strike would be
made later this week.
nudmght Saturday.
Administration officials
In a $uit filed in U.S.
District Court here, the say Carter almost certainly
nation's largest union raised would use Taft-Hartley,
the threat of a strike by up to under which the government
PATRICK MIRGON
drivers
and can ask a federal JUdge for a
Patrtck Leo Mirgon, infant 300,000
son of John T. and Debra Ann warehouse workers wtthin a back-to-work order if a strike
"unperils the national health
Fitch Mirgon, 1617 Bluff St., Week.
or
safety."
The
suit
said
tt
"appears
Zanesville, died Thursday at
The
administration views
unlikely"
bargainers
will
birth at the Bethesd~
the
contract
talks as a key
settle
on
a
new
agreement
by
Hospital m Zanesville
test
of
Carter's
largely
Saturday,
when
the
curtent
Survivmg bestdes the
voluntary
antiinflation
pact
expires,
in
part
because
parents are the maternal
grandmother, Mrs. Wtlma of government mterference program, which seeks to linoit
Ttllls, · Reedsville; paternal m the talks, whtch were wage increases to 7 percent a
year.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs resunung today.
Without an agreem•nt by
Leo Mtrgon, Zanesville, and
maternal
great·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Fitch, Long Bot·
tom, and Mrs John Lawson,
Portland.
Private funeral services
were held at II a.m. Saturday
By The Associated Press St. Louis, the nver was
at the Mt. Ohve Cemetery in
Flood waters in Illinois and expected to crest at 33 feet
Zanesville with the Rev . Missouri were receding today Thursday, three feet over
Father Walters offiCiatmg. but Civil Defense offictals flood stage.
The Rilles Funeral Home was warned that the worst may
Meanwhile, officials said
in charge.
sttll be ahead. Most of the the Rock, Des Plaines, Fox,
2,000 riverfront residents Kankakee and Klshwaukee
evacuated by the rising rivers continued to recede
Holzer Medical Center
waters were still in Monday following
the
Discharges, Mareh 23
temporary shelters or with weekend freeze and light
Armmda Anderson, Paula
fnends.
SlOW.
Baisden, Jesse Beaver,
"I really don't think we've
The Red Cross estimated
stephen Cook, Jeffrey De
seen the last of tt," said Gene more than 2,000 persons had
Long, Sheila Deal, Ltly
Burchett, emergency evacuated their homes along
Duncan, Eva Faulkner, servtces director m Fulton a IOIJ.rnile stretch of tbe
Bridgett Garrett, Harold
County south of Peoria, Ill. Dlinots between Beard.town
Gibbs, Bessie Hartley, John
"We're going into the spring and Hennepin. Most have
Hill, Tara Htll, Erwin Kin·
rains with a full river and moved in with friends and
cade,
William
Lee,
that could be bad."
relatives on higher ground.
Christopher Lyo11s, Barbara
The swollen Illinots RIVer
Minor flooding was also reMagneson, Carol Masters,
had fallen a foot m Peoria, to ported in the northeast. ForeGeraldine Mayo,
Lois
27 .1feet or 11 feet above flood casters early today issued
Monroe, Mrs. Charles Pugh stage, and was elQII!Cted to flooding advisones for
and son, Wtlliam Ramsey, drop another two feet by northern New Hampshire
Nancy Rothgeb, Margaret Thursday, according to the through Marne. ·
Rowe, Mabel Shirley, National Weather Service.
Elsewhere, the Paciftc
Wtlliam Shumate, Linda Van
The Mississippi River was Coast was wet and windy thiS
InWagen, Linda Van Meter, over its banks virtually tbe mornmg as a cold front off
David Warnock, Roger length of Missouri's eastern the Califorma coast spread
Warren.
border Monday, but officials ram through all but the northBirths, Murch 23
report no ufunment danger to ernmost parts of the region.
Mr. and Mrs. George homes or property.
Gusts up to 40 mph were reMcKinniss, son, Rio Grande.
The river was expected to ported
in
southern
Discharges, March 24
crest today at Hanntbal at Cahfornia's high desert
James Brockerick, Carolyn f1ve feet above flood sta~e. At region .
Buckley, Genevieve Cole,
Rebecca Cotterill, Jeffrey
Dav1son, Mtldred Evans,
Jack Ftelds, Lowell Flowers,
Jr., Allred Graham, Jane
Karr, Todd Kemper, Kelly
Kinser, Hel~n Leienberger,
William Marshall, Mathew
Mayes, Mrs. Gilbert Mullett
and son, Betty Mooney,
Daniel Moms, Jason Rader,
Mrs. Robert Reeves and son,
Anna Robmette, Roy Sansbury, Ethel Sayre, Darus
Scraggs, Margaret Smith,
Ruby Spurlock,
Alvte
Swann, Eumce Thomas,
Palmer Trimble, Linda
Webb, Lisa Wolle.
Births, March 24
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Kincade, son, Bidwell. Mr.
and Mrs. Rickey Moody,
daughter, Gallipolis. Mr and
Mrs David Lusk, son, South
Webster. Mr and Mrs. James
COMBINATION UPRIGHT
Dtllon, son, Kitts Hill.
Discharges March 25
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER
Davtd Bocook, Mrs. Clyde
Bowen and daughter, Sam
• Exciuolve &amp;-way Dial-A-Nap&gt; INCLUDED:
6 PC.
Gray, Waldron Herdman,
l'Ufl height adJuotmenl
ATTACHMENT
Mrs. David Johnson and son,
SET
Florence Lengar, Janna
• Top-filling dlopouble duot
bllll prevenla clogo, kHpo
Manuel, Charles Miller, Ray
1uctlon &amp;lr')ng,
Mullin, Mrs. Randy Redmond
and son, Mrs. Dennis Scar• Edge KfHM' cle1n1 IIIII
berry and daughter, Imogene
Joel tough !nell along tho
Skinner, Mrs John Thompbuoboorcla
son III and son, Mrs. Robert
~
Wells and son.
• Brilliant headlight
(--: )~
Births, March 25
Mr. and Mrs. Steven
. Upright $89.95 "C) -~
Jenkins, son, Jackson. Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Goble,
Tool Reg. $19.95 ~
daughter, Ewington.
Total Reg . $109.90_::::--Discharges, March 26
Mary Basham, Anna
Blackswood, Mrs. Joseph
Boggs and son, Gladys Davis,
Chelsey Dodson, Debra
prummond, Eva Durst,
llean Evans, Jr , Tammy
Handley, Stephanie Houck,
'
INCLUDES 6 PC.
Julie Kitchen, John Lucas,
ATTACHMENT SET
Mary Morris, Bobby Searls,
•
Mrs. Dewey Slone and son,
Marcta Ttpton, Charles
• Turley, Vernte Van Dyke,
HOME FURNISHINGS-1st FLOOR
Todd Walters.

(USPS 145-960)

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1979

Dowler resigns Meigs post
Charles L. Dowler resigned
as superintendent of the
Meigs Local School Dtstnct
when the district's board of
education met in spectal
session Tuesday night.
Dowler, who has been
superintendent since 1975,
will become superintendent
of the Wilmington City
Schools. His resignation at
Meigs Local is effective Aug
I He will start in Wilmington
immediately thereafter.
Dowler expressed regret
while
tendermg
his
resignation
"However," he com·

mented,

11

this was an ex-

cellent offer and I couldn't
afford to tum it down. I want
to take thts opportunity to
thank the board of education,
co-workers and the public for
all of the

they've shown me since I
became superintendent."
Dowler reportedly wa s
chosen from among 37 applicants to take over the
Wilmington schools. He
succeeds Supt. Rodger 0 .
Borror, 60, who is retiring
after 30 years with the
Wilmington schools, the last
seven as superintendent
Dowler ts currently
enrolled in the doctoral
program at Ohto Umversity
having been admitted to
candidacy this month
A graduate of Galha
Academy Htgh School, class
of 1960, he recetved hts
bachelor of sctence in
secondary educatiOn from
Rto Grande College in 1964.
He recetved a master of arts
degree m history in 1969 from

rnn~irlrrntinn

Colu~bus

Nationwise
tJ

Residents approve renewal
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Renewal of Dayton's 1.75
percent city income tax for five years was approved
m.a whelmingly Tuesday by voters. Final unofflcla1
results showed the levy pasSing 20,:;:;~ to 6,~19.
Officials of the Montgomery County Board ol
Elections said about 32 percent of the eligible voters m
the city cast ballots. Renewal of the levy had been
defeated by voters last November.

Won't permit debriefing
GREAT LAKES, Ill. (AP)- The ctvihan attorney
for Marine Pic. Robert Garwood said Tuesday he wtll
not let his client be debrtefed by mihtary interrogators
trymg to learn what went on durmg his 14 years wtth
the Viet Cong.
Attorney Dermot G. Foley of New York City also
told reporters he may tell Garwood not to talk to
psychiatrists at the Great I:akes Naval Training
Center hospital, where the Marine has been confined
since he returned to the United States on Sunday.

SAVE

CAA

Fruits, vegetables pushed
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)- A government
cancer expert says Americans should try to eat more
fruits, vegetables and natural grains m light of recent
reports linking colon cancer to a low-ftber diet.
Dr. Guy Newell, director of the National Cancer
Institute's program on nutrition and cancer, said the
evidence suggestmg a cancer link was too inconclusive
to set a formal policy now. But he said people should
use "common sense" m trying to eat more foods wtth
natural fiber and linoit their intake of animal lat.-

Cease-fire reJKJrled toclay
TEHRAN, Iran ( A.P) :... A cease-fire was reported
jn effect today between rebellious Turkoman tribes-

men and government troops after two days of fighting
in the northeastern city of Gonbad-E-Qabous. Some 30
dead and at least 10 inJured were reported.
A government statement said tbe cease-fire took
holdJ Tuesday night after a meeting in Gonbad-EQabous • between government officials, Turkoman
representatives and the local revolutionary
committee.

Accident claims 4 people

~~

DELPHIS, Ohio (AP) -Four persons were killed
Tuesday in a two-&lt;:arcolliston on Ohto 309 near Delphls,
the Highway Patrol said.
The victims were identifted as Mabel Bell, 60,
Dortha Wittwood, 70, and ber husband Donald Wtttwood, 75, all of Spencerville, and Matthew Stocklin, I,
of Delphos.

Nei(Otiations will resume

$6995

.,

SHELBY, Ohio (AP) - Representatives of Shelby
policemen, who have been engaged in a work slowdown
for five days, will resume negotiations with the city
Thursday in an effort to reach a contract agreement.
The two sides remain at odds over vacations, clothing
allowance, base pay and a cost of living increases.
During the work slowdown, tbe 18 members of the
department have been answering only emergency
calls.

Deputies assigned to cover
. 'MANCHESTER, Ohio (AP) - Adams County
sheriff's deputies were assigned to cover this small
Ohio River town after the village council fired its last
two polfce officers. Manchester lost four other officers
in January because of budget problems.

DRAWING SET
There will be a drawing of
jurors, for the May term, on
April 14, at 10 a.m. m the
office of the commissioners of
jurors, Meigs County Courthouse.

ELBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY
I
·•

•

rece1ves
project funds
The Gallia-Metgs Com·
mumty Aetton Agency has
recetved notification that it
will recetve $199,910 m CETA
Title IV youth funds These
grant monies wtU be used for
a demonstratiOn Youth
Conservation and Com·
mumty Improvement ProJect
(YCCIP).
YCCIP is designed to
provide skill training for 16 to
19 year old high school drop
outs. Emphasis will also be
placed upon participants to
work for their General
Equivalency Diploma
(GED).
A Resource Action Council
has been established to
prov1de needed technical
direction and guidance to the
C.A.A. Staff responsible for
YCCIP implementation.
Members of this team are
representatives from the
GaUia ·and Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation
Districts, Sotl Conservation
Servtces, Cooperative Ex·
tension Services and the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources Forestry Service
Area agricultural experts
have stated that 500 acres go
out of agricuhural productivity each year as a result of
the uncontrolled growth of
multlfloral rose. In addition.
250 acres of timber land
deteriorate yearly because of
a skilled labor shortage.
C.A.A. considered the large
number of high school drop
outs in GaUia and Meigs
Counties and the shortage of
skilled natural resource
workers in developing YC·

.)

the Eastern
Kentu cky
University where he served
as a graduate asststant under
Dr. Mtchael Duzak. He has 36
hours of post master's work
at Marshall Umversity m
secondary and elementary
school admtmstration.
Dowler was a htgh school
teacher at North Gallia, 196468; a graduate assistant at
Eastern Kentucky University, 1968-69 ; a htgh school
teacher at North GaUia, 196911; elementary prmcipal at
the Btdweli-Porter School,
1911-75, and became Metgs
Local Supermtendent m 1975.
The new Wilmmgton
supermtendent ts a member
of Phi Delta Kappa, the
Amencan Assn. of School
Administrators, the Buckeye
Association of School Ad·
mmistratnrs· th• Oh1o School

Boards Association, the Ohto
Association of Local School
Superintendents, and the
Southeastern Ohio School
Admmtstrator Assn.
Dowler ts a former
member and director of the
Gallia County Historical
Society and was co-chairman
of the Gallia County Bt·
Ccntenntal Commission He
is a member of all Gallipolis
Masonic bodies, the Ancient
and Accepted Order of the
Scottish Rite, Columbus, and
a member of the Kmghts of
the York Cross of Honour,
Ohto Prtory 18.
Dowler ts marned to the
former Donna Jane Phtlhps,
Galltpohs, and the couple has
two daughters, Berheny Ann,
5, and Crtstin Lea, l'h. They
reside m lower Mtddleport.

voters reject levy

By The Associated Press faces a posstble shutdown
Columbus voters again re- later thts year because of a
Jected a school operating levy lack of funds. Davts said he
Tuesday, and Supermtendent will name a spectal ad hoc
Joseph L Davis satd they commtttee to tnvesttgate
were sending a message to ways of obtammg addiltonal
funding, mcludmg possibly a
state lawmakers.
" It is obvious some drastic bank loan or advance on state
changes need to be made in subsidy money
Fmal unoffictal ftgures
fundmg urban education in
from
the Franklm County
Ohio," Davis said after an
Board
of Elections showed
8.3-mill levy was narrowly
the levy losing by a 1,207-vote
defeated.
It was the fifth tinoe in eight margin , 41 ,-595 for the
years Columbus voters have proposal and 42,802 agamst
Davts satd he had not
turned down additional operdecided
yet whether to seek a
atmg millage And DaviS
recotu1t
noted that 25 of 21 levtes put
The last tinoe Columbus
to voters m the state's eight
voters
approved an mcrease
largest ctttes smce Jan I,
m
school
taxes was m 1968.
1971 have been defeated.
Smce
1971,
ftve attempts to
"That must have to say
get
increased
get mcreased
somethmg
to
state
millage have fatled. Last
lawmakers," he satd.
Davts srud the state has the November , an 8.8-mill
''ultimate responsibility" for proposal was reJected by a
educating children and m- slim margin.
In voting on other school isdicated !hal urban districts
sues
around the state:
might have to rely much
of the Bloom
Residents
IIJOre on the state in the
Carroll
Local
School
District
future.
in
Fairfield
County
defeated
"Ohio has too much at
stake in educating 400,000 a 1-rnill, 5-year tax levy by
chtldren to allow them to be 258 votes, with 997 residents
neglected any longer," he votmg against the proposal
and 739 votmg in favor . A $2 6
said.
The Columbus system million bond issue failed by a

DANCE ROUTINE - Jayoe Hoefltch and Greg Bush
str1ke a pose from their dance routine done to "Sixteen
Going on Seventeen" in tbe upcoming production of "The
Sound of Music" to be given at 7· 30 Friday and Saturday
in the Meigs Htgh School Auditorium. Jayne and Greg
play the roles of Lies! and Rolf in the musical which is
directed by Mrs Paige Hunt.

ELBERFELD$

MEETS TONIGHT
The Midd1qi0rt Chamber of
Cjlmrnerce will meet at 6:30
p m this evening at the
Metgs Inn.

enttne

at

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 242

Flood waters receding

NOW
ONLY

•

•

e

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

CIP.
YCCIP has been developed
to address the inomediate
problems of the 16 to 19 year
old drop out With no em·
ploymenl skills Field experience, combined with
basic educational goals wtll
allow the program par·
ticipants to develop their
individual potential 11hiie
becoming responsible adults
and commumty members.

stmilar margm, wtth 142 to
1,028.
- A 6.82-mill, 2-year levy
sought by the Mmster Local
School Dtstricl m Auglaize
County, apppaently was defeated bv onlv 18 votes.

Bike-hike
discussed
Hank Cleland, chairman,
updiscussed
the
coming
bike-hike
for
mentally retarded with the
Meigs County Jaycees
Monday night
Accordmg to
plans ,
Jaycees wtll provtde the
safety patrol for the annual
btke event
The group . dtscussed
ratification of a new con·
stitutton and by-Jaws and
election of offtcers on Aprtl
23. The state convention was
announced for May 18-20 m
Dayton.
.
The Me1gs Jaycees now
ranks second m Ohio m
populatiOn dtvision and
etghth m the state and eighth
in the nation for all
populatiOn divisions.
A charter night banquet for
the new Shade Rtver Jaycees
was planned for April 21 and
a boxing event slated April 1
at Meigs High School under
Jaycee sponsorship was
announced
It was reported that the
Metgs County Jaycees won
four out of five awards gtven
at a recent distnct com·
petitiOn
Wmners were Bob Schmoll,
Speak up I; Jeff Russell,
SPOKE; Carl Gheen, Jr.,
speakup II and Bill Young,
sparkplug.
Also attending the district
event were Mike Mullen,
Dave Jenkins and Vic Gaul.
The next local Jaycee
meetmg will be April 9

Unofftctal returns showed 559
persons voted agamst he levy
and 541 m favor
- In Springfteld Local

~~~~~da ~·:~:~~\y:aor'~~

levy by a vote of 1,383 againSt
to 1,155 in favor
- In the Mad River District
in Montgomery County, a
$2 15 mtllton bond issue
passed by a vote of 1,359 m
favor to 1,160 agamst It was
the fourth attempt to pass a
(Contmued on p•ge 12 1

$1,080 raised
from telethon
A total of $1 ,080 was
pledged by area restdents to
the 1919 Easter Seal Telethon
last weel&lt;end, armounces
Metgs Telethon Chairman
Carl Demson whtle $12
milhon was raised nationally
in 112 televiSion markets
coast to coast.
The 20-hour show was
broadcast locally by WSAZ
TV Channel 3 from Hun·
tmgton, W Va. and nationally
from Hollywood, starnng
Jack Klugman, Nati&lt;1ltal
Easter Seal Chatrman.
Last year, the local WSAZ
Telethon stgned off the atr
wtth pledges of $95,1100, while
the National Telethon raised
$8 million on 87 stations
Local host for the marathon
fund-ratsmg event was Bud
Oatley · and special guests
were Easter Seal Chtld Brady
Blackburn of Portsmouth,
Ohio and 1979 Easter Seal
Chairman from Athens, Ohto
Don Dillinger.
Funds raised by the
telethon will help provtde
rehabilitation services for
handicapped children and
adults in the local com·
munity. More than 95 percent
of aU funds raised by Easter
Seals in Ohto stays in Ohio,
said Telethon Chairman
Demson.

RESIGNS POST -Charles Dowler, supermtendent of
the Me1gs Local District for the past four years res 11~ ned
that position Tuesday mght to accept the supennte11dem·y
at Wilmmgton Ctty Schools

Applz·cants

are sought
The Metgs Local School District Board of F:ducallon
meetmg in special session Tuesday night voted to advc r·uoe for
a replacement for Charles Dowler, superintendent, who
restgned durmg the meeting
Applicants are to contact Mrs Jane Waguer. dclk·
treasurer, at the Meigs Junior High School m Mrddlepo r1
The board also accepted the resignation of J:uw Whr te
Lang, a business teacher at Metgs High School who had been
on leave for the past year working on her master s de p.;rce m
Huntington, W.Va.
The board acknolwedged tfie receipt of secunt1es tr nm the
Wells Fargo Bank in Caltfornia
The securttles, worth about $35,1100, are from a trusl lefl by
the late Catherine E. Sefton to the Middleport schnols and
became a part of the dtstrict's assets m conso!1datrou The
securities will be handled locally smce admmJStratiOn fee&lt; tn
California were hitting heavily mto the Interest pa) rn.&gt;nl&gt;, thus
reducing considerably the amount of money received by the
distr1ct
A discussiOn was held on mcreasmg the houri) rate for
substitute auto mechantcs, but no action could be wl&lt;e n at the
special sesswn.
·
The matter Will be brought up agam at the next 1r&gt;gular
meetmg.
All board members were present for last mgh t's sc.son
County Supt Robert Bowen was also present and offered to
help many way m the fillmg of Dowler 's positiOn .

Pomeroy National Bank
'

gets 2-year contract
The Pomeroy National
Bank was awarded a twoyear contract as depository of
macttve and mterino public
funds when the Meigs County
Commtsstoners met Tuesday
mght. Acttve funds were
awarded to aU four local
banks on a percentage basis
In other busmess, com·
miSSIOners entered mto a
l'Ontraet with the ctty of
Columbus for boarding Metgs
County prisoners in the
Columbus Workhouse when
necessary.
Meeting wtth the com·
mtssioners were Einnon
Plummer, Ohio Valley Health
Services dtrector, and Dan
Uoyd, SEOEMS'director who
revtewed with the board,
billmgs of December 1978 and
the ftrst four months of 1919.
The need to negotiate a new
contract was also discussed.
Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, discussed the high·
way department operations.·
Buehl reported he had
received word that Gene

Patrol checks
minor mishap

St'ECIAL AWAIID WINNERS - Members of the Eastern varsity ~uad whi~h finished
9-9 overall and m a second place tie with Southwestern In the SVAC recetvedspectai awards
at Tuesday's annual cage banquet Honored were Brett Matthews, most unproved ; Dan
Spencer, best rebounder; Brian Bissell, best foul shooter, best defensive player and most
assists See more pictures and story on page J.

An accident mvolving a
Meigs County Local school
bus
was
investigated
Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post, Htghwuy Patrol, at 4.30
p.m .
Officers report a north
bound bus operated by Gloria
Oiler, 26, l..angsville, hit a pot
hole on TR 15, two miles south
of SR 689, traveled right and
struck a concrete bridge.
There were no injuries. The
patrol reports moderate
damage to the vehtcle.

..

~·

Rtggs has agreed to provide a
road through H1ggs Crest
Manor subdtviston, P"'l the
Freese residence.
It' was reported that seedmg
at the landfill s1te would
begin toda) under the
direction of Boyd Ruth
Jim Kauff. Jack Wolfe and
Don Folmer. employeR of the
county landfill discussed the
operatiOnS of the landflil and
thetr respective pos1t1ons and
the responsibilities of each
Commtssmers announced
they had rece1ved nc\\ cou nty
maps which arc on sale at
thm office at $2 each 1
Attendtn g were H1chhd
Jones, president, and Henry
Wells , comm tss10nc r s and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk
EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday ·
Rain possible Friday and
Saturday . Fair Sunday.
Highs mostly 10 th e 60s
Friday and from the 50s to
the lower 60s Saturdav and
Sunday. Lows from the
upper 40s to the low cr 50s
early Friday and m the 40s
Saturday and Sunday.
::::·.::::·.·::::-. ::.-··: .· ..·· .··· ::.. ::-

Weather
Windy wtth rain and
possible thunderstorms
tonight and Thursda). Lows
tonight m the lower 50s Highs
Thursday in the lower 10s
FREE CI.OTHING DAY
The Gallia - Me1gs Commumty Adiun Agent•;• will

hold its free clothing day IQr
low income persons Fr1day
from 9 a.m. untti noon. The
agency's clothing bank ts
located in the old high school
building at Cheshtre

..

•

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