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•
. 12-TheDailylientin~I , Middleport-Pomeroy . O., Wednesday. MRr. ?11 1!1'1Q

'I

.

Gavin

Increase puts additional burden on exports
l!oth White House press
The rule allows retmers to set
gasoline prices more In line secretary Jo&lt;!y Powell and
with actual production costs Sen. Henry M. Jackson , a key
rather than forcing the member of the Senate
refmers to spread gasoline leadership .oo energy issues,
production costs among less are.prediCting the president's
costly products, such as proposals, to be revealed In a
uweek or so," may face a
· heating oil.

JAM~

GERSTENZANG cents this month to 73.25
Al....,laled Press Writer cents.
WASHINGTON (AP ) The oil cartel's decision in
· The 9 percent oil price Geneva raises the base price
: Increase voted by oil of Arabian light crude oil, the
- exporting counb'ies is placing industry benchmark, from
· an added burden m President $13.34 to $14.54 per barrel. .
: Carter and the energy
Carter must decide by May
: mvlsers he has told to rework 31 whether to cootinue con· oil pricing and conservation b'olling the price of domes..
. proposals.
licallyilroduced crude oil,
Deputy White House press impose partial controls or
lleCI'elary Rex Granum said allow all controls to expire.
.
the Increase approved
The average price of
By ltoliERT E. MilLER
Tuesday by the Organization domestic crude is now about
Associated Preu Writer
of Petroleum Exporting $9 a harrel.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) According to Energy A biU aUowlng voters to
: Countries "ad&lt;ls to the
. compelling reasons for Department
fi.g ures, prohibit
disposal
of
making" decisions about the decontrol could result in hazardous wastes In their
_ nation's efforts to stern its gasoline price increases of counties has been assailed by
· · energy appetite.
about 5 cehts a gallon.
a state official who says it
The Increase, which lakes
However, that would be could lead to disaster.
; effect Sunday, Is ~cted to ·· ooly one-It all cent above a
None of the 88 counties
: drive up gasoline prices In the revised projection estimating would vote to ailow dumping
· United States by two cents a that gasoline will go up an .oi hazardous wastes ''In their
· gallon - perhaps three cents · average of 4.&amp; cents a gallon back yards," Rex N.
If enough countries tack on a as a result of new pricing Sprague, assistant director of
SID'charge to the base price · regulations already the Ohio Environmental
set by OPEC.
approved.
Protection Agency, said
The average relail price of
The new regulation - the Tuesday.
.
a gallon of regular leaded . socalled "tilt" rule - was
The result, he added, could
gasoline at a full..service upheld Monday by a federal be a statewide ban against
filling station jwnped 3.68 district judge in Washington. disposal of toxic bY)II'oclacts
By

warmer reception than that
given his first energy
program 23 months ago.
In
other . energy
developments Tuesday in
Washington:
- Alfred E. Kahn, the
administration's chief

Waste. .bill assailed
poisonous lead and certain
toxic
chemicals were
desposited and poorly
covered over at a Clermont
County reclamation dump.
He said he had to go to the
federal government to get
some action, but the dump
now has been "pretty well
cleaned up."
,
However, the veteran lawmaker said he fears
deformed children and hlgl)
cancer rates could result
from the carelessness.
Several
mllilon-dollar

Columbus

Unbelievably
beautiful stripping on
an elegant heel height.
First choice will all the
pretty things you wear.
Many 9ther st·yles and colors
from which to choose

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
"Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy, 0."
9 a.m .. s p.m. Mon .

lhru. Thuro. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m. ~a p.m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

(Continued from page 1)
bond Issue In the district In 16
months . . Previous Issues
failed In November 1977,
April 1978 and November
1978.
-Voters In the Celina City
School District delated two
issues. A 3. 75-mill operating
levy lost by a vote of 1,445 to
1,378, while a l.lknill capital
il)lprovements levy failed by
a vote of 1,565 to 1,327.
-And In Antwerp Local
Scliool District In Paulding
County, voters approved · a
7.5-mill, tw~&gt;-year levy by 19
votes, with 590 persons voting
yes and 571 against.

BEGINS
TOMORROW

...

...... .,_,,,
te

.IESUII, fM HIS . . . HFS -

•'"-

S&amp;olldanl Veoc.ot1011 Bible Sdlool.

VBS

LEADERS,
TEACHERS,
WORKERS•••
You are invited to preview the all-new
1979 Standard Vacation Bible School
course. Come and learn and share!
DATE: Thursday, March 29, 1979 ·
nME: 1:00 P.M. and 7:00 P.M.

lawsuits are Pendmg, he said.
Malott said he Introduced
his bill because he thinks
Ohioans have a right to make
the decision as to ''whether
this stuff Is going to be
dumped In their back yards."
Sprague and James 0. Seymour, of the Ohio Manufacturing Association, Insisted
the bill would at least lhnit
the number of available
disposal sites and may have
the ultimate effect of
outlawing them statewide.

California hit
by mudslides

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , which
industries
and even
hospitals
are forced
to
generate.
Sprague told the House
Agriculture and Natural
Resources Committee the bill
By The A~lated Preas
would deal a setback to
Mudslides, · flooding, and
Ohio's fledgling hazardous lll9fe than two inches of rain
waste control program and were left behln&lt;l ·by the firBt
'Jll'Obably would encourage thrust of a blustery Pacific
illegal "midnight dumping." storm as it moved Into
He referred to a newly southern Callf«nia.
enacted law which requires
And fccecasts for today
EPA licensing of those who warned that Tuesday's
generate hazardous wastes, deluge could be repeated
transport it, or operate along with heavy snows in the
dlspo1181 sites. It cmtalns northern Rockies as a second
enforcement authority lor the front pushes southeastward.
EPA, and provides fmes that
Midwesterners,
meancan range up to $25,000 day while,
were
watching
for those who "knowingly" the storm closely, hoping for
· violate EPA regulations.
·an extended break In the wet
Sprague, who said he spoke weather that would ailow
for Ohio EPA Director James their swollen rivers to
McAvoy, urged defeat of the continue receding.
measure by Rep. Harry C.
Winter storm watches were
Malott, D-Mount Qrab, whose posted for northern partS of
southwest Ohio area has had Wyoming, Colorado,
major hazardous waste Monlana, Utah, Nevada and
disposal problems.
California. A · traveler's
Specifically, Malott ·said advisory was issued for North
Dakota, where snow and
Now in black patent

a

'

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

Area Deaths

I
I

brothers, Lorain ·:.terreu,
CORNEL" BAN~EAD
Po,meroy,
and Eugene
Cornelia Sterrett BankSterrett,
Point
Pleasimt.
head, Elkins, W. Va., forFuneral services will be
merly of Point Pleasant, died
Tuesday at the W. V. U. held at the Lohr Funeral
Medical Center, 'Morgan· Home, Elldnl, W. Va. at 7
p.m. Thursday. Graveside
town.
Mrs. Bankhead was born In services w.W be conducted by
Beech Hill, W. Va. , the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
daughter of t)Je late Charles at 2 p.m. Frldsy at the Lone
W. and Daisy Pullin Sterrett. Oak Cemetery In Point
She Is survived by two Pleasant.

Murder trial
begins~ today

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP)
- A jury of eight women and
four men began hearing
prosecution witnesses today
. freezing rain was ex- In the Thaddeus Lewlngdon
pected.At Los Angeles Civic murder trial after being told
Center Tuesday, the rain .... \Jlat Lewlngdon took part In a
measured 2.08 lnches~xmonth kWing spree.
Pasadena had a 2f-ltour rain
Dan Hunt, . assistant
tptal of 3.22 Inches, and Franklin COWtty proaecutor,
amounts near two Inches said in an opening statement
were· recorded at Santa Tuesday that Lewlngdon, on
. Barbara, Long Beach, Santa fl'lal here for siJ: murders,
Ana and Onlario.
and his brother Gary went on
Gale-like winds and high a crime rampage with only
seas knocked an oil tanker off . one thing on their minds, ''to
course as It was leaving Los kill and rob."
Angeles Harbor early
"You'll see that Thaddeus
Tuesday. The 1,000-foot Lewingdon, along with his
vessel smashed Into the dock brother Gary, went on a
and hit a ferryboat, severing killing spree that lasted siJ:
a fuel oil line.
months," Hunt told the jury.
Rock-and mudslides closed "When It was ·all over, nine
down some canyon roads and people had lost their lives."
pollee reported a 16-car

Talent show
p/ans t0 /d

~:e'::ay~n

the Hollywood
In the Midwest, muddy
Ooodwaters from the Illinois
and Rock rivers prevented
more than 2,000 people from .
returning to their homes,
according to the Red Cross.
Plans were released for the
Officials said It could be
Hospital News
Big
Bend Regatta Talent
. more than a week before
Show
scheduled Thursday,
Veteraaa Memorial H01pltal most of the homeless would
June
21,
by Ralph Werry,
Admitted - Sally Savage, be able to return.
chairman.
Racine; Wanda Findling,
The show will follow the
ReedsviUe; Mary Reynolds, Boating safety
mini-parade
and will be held
Pomeroy;
Vanedia
on
t~~e
stage
on the Pomeroy
Knight, Portland; Eloise course offered
parking
Jot.
Carver, Athens.
Prizes will be: $200 first
Discharged
Roger
RIO GRANDE - The place, $100 second place and
Starcher, ·MIIhceW Holley, Bossard Ubrary, Gallipolis,
Helen Slack, Carol Hayman, will be the site . of a free $50 for third place.
The !alent show Is open to
Wanda Neigler, Glen Cundiff, boating safety course,
anyone
that would like to
Florence Musser, Beatrlee
The course is offered as a partlclate..Deadline for entry
Stevens.
cooperaUve program of the is June 1.
Rio Grande College and
Anyone wishing tb enter
Community College Office of
Holzer Medical Center
should
their name.
Continuing Education, the address, send
,telephone number
Dlocbaqes, March !7
United States Coast Guard
Bessie Anderson, April Auxiliary and the GaWpolll and the type of act they will ·
be doing to Big Bend Talent
Blankenship, Abra Burris, City Recreation Board.
Show, P.O. Box 2, Pomeroy,
John Carey, Byron Cormiey,
April 2 will be the first of
Neva Denney, Arma Denny, seven class sessions which Ohio, 45789.
William Duncan, Paula will meet Mondays, 7-9 p.m.,
Gibbs, Mabel Grow, David through May 14.
ASK TO WEb
Hoover, Martha Hopkins,
Instructors from the U. S.
Marriage
licenses were
Emma Johnson, Karen Coast Guard Auxiliary will
ls8ued
to
Russell
E . Powers,
Johnson, Debra Lorbach, lead classes In safety,
30,
Polpt
Pleasant
and Uncia
&lt;llristopher Martin, Janet navigation, and other aspects
L.
Hanunack,
29,
Mason;
Matthews, Jeremy May, · of power boat operation on
Orville
Lee
Philllpa,
34,
Rt. 4,
· Wilber McCubbin, Charles Inland waterways.
Pomeroy
and
Mary
Alva
PaY,ne, Mrs.
Woodson
Certificates will be Issued Haning, 38, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Ramsey and daughter, Lori to those who complete the
Roberts, Martha Rucker, course and course completion
ENDMARRMG~
James Shields, William may qualify some boatIn
Meip County Common ·
Skidmore, . Karen Snyder, owners for lower Insurance
Pleas
Court Jacqueline K.
Wayne Thornton, Lura Wills. rates.
Carl, Pomeroy, and DwiCht
Blrtbs, March !7
To register for this free
Mr. and Mrs. Monte Bass, boating safety program, call E. Carl, Pomeroy, Wed for
dissolution of marrlitge.
daughter, Gallipolis.
Bernie Murphy, 245-5353, est.
Marriages dissolved were
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 255, or attend the first class,
Janet
M. Harrison lind
Kelly, son, Middleport.
Monday, AptiJ 2.
Ronald W. Harrison; Janet S.
Lightfoot and Jeffrey L.
Lilhtfool; Patricia L.
Chadwell and James Lowell
Chadwell.

Defense attorney Gary
Tyack, In his opening
remarks, told the panel, "If
everything Hunt has said was
Irrefutable, there would be no
need for a jurY, me « a
trial."

Tyack alleged that Gary
Lewlngdon, not Thaddeus,
committed the erlmes.
The U,year-old Thaddeus
Lewlngdon, of Glenford, WBI
convicted of three Ucklng
County murders last mmth
and received coosecutive life
sentences. Gary Lewtngdon ·
alllo Is charl!ed wltb the same
nine murders plus a lOth In
Franklin County, but baa not
been tried yet,
The string of slaylngs came
to be known as the " .22callber murders" beca- aU
were committed with a .22caliber weapon. Police said
robbery apparently WBI the
motive for the kDIInp.
Thaddeus Lewlngdon •s
trial was moved here beesof pretrial publicity In
Columbus. He is being tried
jointly for five Franklin
County murders and me In
Fairfield County.
The Mansfield trial
Involves the slaying of the
Rev. Gerald Fields last April
30, the February 19'18 deatha
of Columbus tavern owner
Robert McCann, his mother,
Dorothy, and his girlfriend
Christine Herdm.i~, and the
May 19'18 slaylnga of Jerry
and Martha Martin of Columbus ..

Awards presen/d

f

Urges boycott
.BAGHDAD, lraz (AP) Palestinian leader Vasser
Arafat urged Arab leaders
Tueaday to "stop buying bftl
American cars" and clamp
an ecoJICIIIIic boycott on the
United states and Egypt (or
"making a treacherous peace
with Israel."
Arafat, head of the
Palestine
Liberation
Organization, told the foreign
miniBters of the Arab League
that the Arab world lhoul&lt;l
wlthbold oil, trade and
"petrodollars" from the
United States becaUSe "It
plllbed Egypt and Israel Into
algnlng this deal...
.
"It Is laken for granted that
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat 's regime will be
punished, but don't. just
bit the tall of the snake, hit
the bead of the snake - the
United States," Aralat
said, shouting In Arable and
jabbing In the air with biB
finger.

Mayor~

Two defendants forfeited
bonds In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Robert Keys, New Haven,
W. Va., forfeltecl a $100 bond
posted on a charge of leaving
the ~e of an accident, and
Cllffo rd Whittington,
Pomeroy, IOJ;felted a $100
bond posted on a charge of
posseaalon of marijuana, an&lt;l
$50 011 a dlaorderly conduct
charge.

Awards were presented
Thursday night when Middleport Cub Scout Pack 245
met at Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion Home.
Receiving the bobcat
award was Jeff Acree; the
wolf ba&lt;lge, Pat Shrlmplln
and Gary Ra11ar; . gold
arrows, Ed Kitchen, Darin
Drenner; silver &amp;rroWII, Jeff
Nelson, (2), Don Stein, (2),
Ed Baer, Ed Kitchen (2),
and Darin Drenner.
SHOOTS CHANGE
'lbe Pinewood Derby was
The
Racine Gun Club,
held with Charles casaen In
effective
at once, will
charge and Cubmaster Jack
discontinue
the weelt)y Run
Bacon presided over the
shoota
on
Sundays.
Beginning
buslne111 session. The trl·
Friday
at
&amp;:30
p.m.
the club
state scout expo for 1979 was,
will
lltage
the
shoots
each
announced for June In
Friday
until
fail.
Kentucky. Judging th~ derby .
cars made by members and
their fathers were Larry
BOOKMOBILE
Baker and Dan Arnold. The
SCHEDULE
pack presented certificates
Thursday - Salisbury,
and corsa11es to past den : 2:15-2:45; Letart, 3:1~:45;
mothers, Pbyllls Balter and Racine, Home National
PaUy Amold. The cubby Bank, ~; Racine, WBIIJier's
award for bavlng the moat Hardware, 5-6; Syracuse
parents present went to Den ' swtminlng pool, 6:15-8:15.

n.

ELBERFELD$
MEN'S
.
WRANGLER
3 PIECE
·VESTED SUITS

'OF QuALITY ADMIRAL APPLIANCES
· I nAui.

South Third Ave .
Middleport, OH 45760

SPONSOR: Middleport Book Sture .
99 Mill St.
Middleport, OH 45760

PHONE: 614-992-2&amp;41
Plan to attend the Standard Publishing . Vacation Bible School
preview. It's your opportunity to examine the all -new, afl· Bible 1979
course and to discuss all aspects of Vacation Bible School with ·
Standard representatives. It's a great opportunity to share idea's and
experiences With others.
I

1 111

,

(USPS 145·960) .

if )

B.BERFELDS IN POMEROY

VOL. NO'. XXIX NO ..243

75 p&lt;·r cent of the two coun·

ties' total industrial employment. Total payroll last
year was over $30 million.
Hcfcrring to comments
made ea rlier about Ohio
Power "ripping off" its
customers, Blackmore
stated, " I respectfully submit
that Ohio Power customers
are fortunate to be served by
the historically lowest cost
electric supplier as opposed
to being subject to a ."ripoff".

How can anyone, who looks
at the record, come to that
conclusion when the Ohio
Power

avcrfl~t'

the lowest cost electric bill in
the State." Ohio Power's
average residential rate in
1978 was 3.6 cents per
kilowatt-ltour compared to a
national average rate of 4.3
cents per kilowatthour.
Blackmore, in commenting
upon the bills before the
committee to eliminate or
modify the luei cost adjustment said, "Eliminating
the fuel cost adjustment, or
altering the method of
recovering the costs, would
not relieve utility customers
of the burden of paying the
coal costs incurrPct

rustom"r hn~

•

at y

It would only delay the day
of reckoning . The costs arc
there whether they are paid
through a base rate or
thorugh a separate fuel cost."
He went on to point out that
changing the fuel cost adjustment would not reduce
the price Ohio Power must
pay lor its coal.
"We are negotiating the
best possible contracts today,
and changes i.n the method of
cost recovery will not lower
coal costs."
· In closing, Blackmore
asked "Where does the eoal
producer lit into this picture?

I would suggest that efforts to
reduce or eliminate fuel cost
recovery would tend to Work
to the detriment of the coal
industry. This state needs a
viable, strong coal indu&gt;try.
One could suggest that
imposing greater delay in
.f uel cost recovery would
oadversely affect the smaller
coa l operator, the backbone .
of this state's coal industry
for years. I would suggest the
committee look closely at
some of the broader effects
which might follow from
some of the proposals before
this committee."

•

enttne
THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1979

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

Birth thy
celebrated

FIRST RECIPIENT- Charles Swatzel, left, finance officer, on behalf of Drew Webster
Post, presented Kennit Walton, Pomeroy businessman, with a plaque as "outstanding
citizen" the first such award given by the American Legion, at the post's annual b1rthday
party ofuesday night. Mrs. Jane Walton, wife of the honoree and Pomeroy village clerk, is
pictured with Swatzel and h~r husband.

·~

CHECK PRESENTED - Mrs. Grace Pratt, president of the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, presented a gift of money to the post Tuesday night with Rodney Karr ,
right, post comrilander, accepting. On the left is Pomeroy-Middleport Elementary School
Principal Robert Morris who was guest speaker lor the annual birthday party .

Wells. appointed State's new license·
• •
to commzss1on plan hegins April 2
Chester Wells, lifelong resident of the Long Bottom .
Community, was named a Meigs County
Commissioner Wednesday night when the Meigs
County Democratic Central Committee met at
carpenter's hall In Pomeroy.
There were five other candidates for the vacancy
created by the recent resignation of James Roush, a
Democrat, who resigned to accept out of county
employment.
Other candidates for the vacancy Wednesday night
Wefe Bud Wilaon, who was runner-up In the voting,
William McKelvey, Norman Weber, Paul Simon and
Don Mullen.
The meeting presided over by Norman · Will,
chairman, and Bruce May, secretary, was reported as
Hquite hannoniousn .

Wells lOr the past three years has been chainnan
of the county ~ocratic executive committee. He is
currently an oklve Township trustee and will resign
that post today In preparaUon to beginning his work as
a county commissioner.
· Wells will serve in the unexpired term until Jan. 1,
1980.
The father of 12 children, WeU. has spent his life in
construction and has served as a construction
superintendent.
Wells has also served 8s an Olive Township central
·committeeman of the Democratic party for a number
of years .
Twenty-6lx committeemen and a number of guests
were present for Wednesday night's selection meeting .

Cleland heading
bike-hike event

nts or sponsors,''

·Just received shipment Wrangler men's
polyester Suits in sizes 36 to 46 In regulars end
longs - solid colors navy, brown end light blue.
excellent style. Be sure to He ell the other men's
_ "'-"_s urplt•asrtiannedi~t sport . coats. . Men's end boys'
- 1st floor.

been developed over the pa&gt;t derground min_es; the comsix years, arc expected to parison that is being made to
produce over 3.2·milli.on tons arrive at the wide cost difin 1979 as compared to 2.1- ferentiaL "
million tons In 1978.
He went on to point out that
In commenting on the coal costs, per ton, are
statements made earlier declining as the mine Inbefore the House Public creases its production.
Utilities Committee con· Costs In February were
cerning the high cost of coal down some $7 .00 per ton ·
coming from Ohio Power's . compared to the 1978 average
afrtliated mines, Blackmore cost and this trend is e•reminded
committee pected to continue, according
memb~rs that "you can't
to Blackmore.
compare coal costs from
In addition, those mines
older, cheaper capi·talized have created nearly 2,000
surface mines with the costs mining jobs in Meigs ·and
of producing coal from new, Vinton ('nnntie~ rPf!r~";c:::rnt i ng
high capital ro~t un·

e·

Henry Cleland Jr., local
realtor, has been named
Chairman of the Meigs
County 1979 Hike-Bike lor the
mentally retarded, it was
announced
today
by
Christopher C. Layh, Administrator of the Meigs
Board of Mental Relardation.
"On May ,12, resi&lt;lents of
Meigs County will have the
opportunity to take part in
this worthwhile · event. We
hnpe everyone will join us in
ke-Bike either as

saggs

REFRESHMENTS

ye~rs to meet earlier, more
stringent sulfur dioxide
emission standards.
A change In the standards
now aUows the company to
bqm the higher sulfur Ohio
coals and the company Is In
the process of phasing out
western· coal. Blackmore
stated that the phase-out is
·expected to be completed In
the early 1980s.
Much of the additional Ohio
coal to be used at Gavin will
come from the company's
affiliate mines In neighboring
Meigs and Vinton Counties.
Those mines, which have

bu1'1l more Ohio coal .during 1979

Court

Two defenclaJU were given
jail sentence, one was fined
and five others forfeited
bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
.
Charles ·Tyree III, 21,
Pomeroy, was given a 10 day
Jail sentenee on a charge of
trespassing on private
property and Donald Lovett,
55, Mi&lt;ldleport, was given a 15
dsy sentence on a dlaorderly
·mamer charge.
.
Fined $10 and costs on ·a
charge of falllng to yield the
right of way was Tina M.
Sheley, 19, Middleport.
Forfeiting bonds were '
Harold W. Young, 25,
Gaillpolll, 1350, posted on a
c:barge of drtvlng while intoxicated; Judy Coates,
Middleport, $25, parking on
the wrong side of the road In a
no parking zone; Joei
Wisecup, 21, Pomeroy, $25,
assured clear distance;
Thomas M. Bonadonna, 31,
Flushing, N. Y., ~. Bpeeding
36 miles In a 25 mile zone, and
Richard B. Blevins, 18,
Middleport, f29, speeding, 42
miles In a 25 mile zone.

'

PLACE: HeaU1 United Methodist Church

Ohio Power' Company will
be Ina-easing Its use of Ohio
coal by more than 2-milllon
tons In 1979 at Its Gen. James
M. Gavin generating plant
near Cheshire.
This projection was made
today by Gerald Blackmore,
executive vice president and
hea&lt;l of American Electric
Power's
Fuel
Supply
Department, speaking before
the House Public Utilities
Committee on beha.lf of Ohio
Power.
Ohio Power has been
supplementlnll western coal
with the Ohio coal burned at
that plant lor the past several

bad news for Western"
conb'ol."
-Jackson, a WBIIhlngtoo Institutions," he saki.
-The Gallup OrganizaUm
every American" and "can Democrat, said the OPEC
said
71 percent of. the owners
ooly complicate our pros- declsim rellected "greed and
of
lamlly
autos polled said
punitive doctrine."
peds of lryin6 to being In· a
they
would
reduce their
"Obviolllly
It's
going
to
be
. Dation in our economy Wider
&amp;-lvlng If ga•"tne prices go
to $1 a gallon and can be
bought ooly oo certain days.
lnflaUon fighter, said the
OPEC InCrease will "hurt

1I

•

eland !ltated.
Hike-Bike campaign
calli lor volunteer citizens to
either hike or bike for citizens
who are retarded over a 25
mile course.
Businesses and individuals
are urgecl to pledge so much
per mlle for each mile walked
or rlddeij by the participants.
The !!Jl&lt;e-Blke will take place
on May 12 at 10 :30 a.m.
~

Hikers and Bikers will rally
behind the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy and travel
the measured course from
there . Check points will be set
up at intervals along the
route to accurately clock the
miles that the participants
have covered.
" Hike-Bikes have been
very successful here In Meigs
County and many other parts
of the country, and · have
raised thousands of dollars
lor the mentally relarded. I
know we can count on the
citizens of Meigs County to
make this campaign an
oustandlng success," Cleland
said.
Interested walkers or
riders or sponsors are urged
to pick up sponsor sheets
available at all area high
schools, Oeland Realty Co.,
or to contact Clu'istopher ·
l.ayh, at the court house at
992~25.

Employees of the Meigs
County · motor
vehicl e
registrar's office today ex·
plained aspects for renewing
auto license plates.
Ohio's staggered auto
license plate sales pl an
begins April 2 with the firo1
big rush for renewals.
The Ohio Bureau of Motor
Vehicles has already sent
letters · to motorists explaining the new procedure
for persons renewing licenses
in ApriL Another fonn will be
mailed in May.
Each
vehicle
owner
receives a chart explaining
how much re-registration
stickers wiU cost this year,
pro-rated until the owner
must get new tags next year.
.Beginning next January,
registrations will be renewed

URGES FUNDING
COLUMBUS - Stale
Representative Roo James
(D-Proctorville) bas urged
the State Conlrolllng Board
to approve emergency

year round with about 850,000 ' For the most part,
plates expected to be issued registrars are expected to be
each month.
faced with some questions
Unless a newly purchased, concerning
the
new
unlicensed vehicle is being registration costs, which may
r eg istered in the next two slow lines some this year.
months, mor e than 600
As usual tbe bureau says
refistra~s . throughout the
long lines can be avoided by
state will be Issuing two registering in mid-month .
stickers.
Most plates or stickers are
Next year, new plates will sold on the first day or the
be issued.
last three days of i\pril and
The Columbus Automobile May, and usually there are
Club, which provides mail long, slow lines then.
registration to its members,
This month, permanent
said mail orders will be up registrars have been selling
about 2,000 over the ap- all but auto license stickers
proximately 12,000 last year. and the bureau says it has
Next year, when fewer than had few complaints.
300 registrars will be selling
March sales are very light
plates
a nd
stickers and are not indicative of how
throughout the state, all will well purchases wnr go In the
be required to offer plates by
next two months, they say .
mail lor an additional fee .
Temporary registrar
stations that will open. next
month will supply only auto
stickers.
Any
other
registrations or any license
· plates will have to be obtained from permanent
registrars.
Meigs' registrar' s office i~
located on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.

funds so that the Village of
Pomeroy can make needed
repairs to the collapsed
seclion of Laurel Street.
" I believe that Pomeroy
is in dire need of the money
to make this repair, and
common sense dictates

thai the slluatlon is really
an emergency with eertaln
sections being almost
totally Isolated, " James
said.
The request has been
submitted for the amount
of $101,800, the eslimated .
cost of repair to the street
and retaining
wall.
Emergency funds are
a.vailable under certain
se&lt;lioos of the Ohio
Revised
Code.
James has wrlllen the
members of the Controlling
Board urging their prompt,
favorable approval of

Presentation
of
the
Legionnaire of the Year and
an "Outstanding Citizen
Award" and a talk by
Pomeroy Elementary School
Principal Robert Morris
highlighted the annual birthday party of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
Tuesday ni ght.
Legionnaire of the Year
award went to Joe Zwilling,
, wh o is serving as post
chaplain.
Paul Casci received the
award on behalf of Zwilling
who was unable to be present
due to illness.
Pomeroy bu sinessman
Kermit Walton received the
legion's outstanding cit izen
award, the first such given by
the American Legion Post.
Charles Swatzel, finance
officer, who presented the
award saiii the presentation.
was to honor a resident " who
has given his time, talent and
energy for the betterment of
Pomeroy, Meigs' County and
the people who live here, but
not for money 0r personal
gain."

·

He citJd Walton's work In
the . Pomeroy
United
Methodist Church, Pomeroy
Masonic Bodies, the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad, the Boy
Scout program, at Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
frequently visits and helps
those who are ill, · and his
willingness to use his store

facilities for various community projects such as bake
sales and the sale of tickets to
public events.
Values of today a nd
yesterday were stressed by
Morris In his well-received
talk which compared the
change in population from
rural to urban and the
changes in life and the
assessment of education
these ·days co mpared to
earlier yea rs.

Morris pointed out that
parents going to work in their
early years without education
vo wed that their children
wo uld
rece ive
more
edu cation and made life
easier lor their offspring.
Howev er, he said the
parents have taken a position
where the children do not
have to perform any work in
exchange for the material
things they are '!liven·. ·
Citing incidents which he
finds distasteful such as nag
burning. too ma ny expectations from the govern:
ment, lack of knowledge of
American traditions such as
Memorial Day, Morris urged
tho se attending to look
towards tomorrow in terms of
values and t o get those
proven values before the
public.
Rodney Karr, commander
of · Post 39, extended the
welcome and introduced
(Continued on page 7)

Pomeroy's request.

Blakeslee

addresses
- chamber

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::.

MUSICAL STARTS FRIDAY - Kevin King and Unda
Eason will play the familiar roles of Max and Elsa in the
upcoming mwilcal, "The Sound of Music" to be presented
at 7:30p.m . Friday and Saturday nights at the Meigs High
School Auditorimn. The two are pictured rehearsing a
duet which they perform In the popular musical. Miss
Eason is also student director of the production.

.,

C. E. lllaKeslee, president
INCREASE APPROVED
of the Meigs County Pioneer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
and Historical Society, was
- Gov. James A. Rhodes speaker Tuesday night when
and legislative leaders the Middleport Chamber of
agreed today on a $784 Commerce met at the Meigs
million loerease In stale
Inn .
school funding · during the
Blakeslee reviewed the
upcoming Meigs County
blenlum starting July 1.
Senate President Oliver · history book and pointed out
Ocasek, 0-Akron, acting as
that families are welcome to
spokesman lor the group
submit their histories (up to
after the eighth In a series
500 words) free of charge
of education "summit
before the April 5 deadline.
Business owners may also
meetings," said the total Is
write histories about their
$148 million more than
what
the
governor
businesses lor a small lee.
.proposed in his State of the
Blakeslee displayed an 1891
State message to the
history and business review
of Meigs and Gallia Counties.
legislature Feb. 6.
Ocasek said the new
Blakeslee, executive
director of-the Meigs County
money, wblch would boost
the total outlay lor public
Regional Planning Commission, also spoke upon
schools to a record $3.&amp;
commission activities.
billion, would be taken
Candy Ingels presided over
from an expected $1.5
the meeting when a sid~walk
billion In stale revenue
sale was planned for Midgrowth during 1979-1981
dleport merchants on April 27
fiscal period - without an
Increase In state taxes.
and 23.
Mlcndin~ the meeting were
tConlin ~ed on page 7)

'

ACCEPTS AWARD - Paul C&amp;sci, right, accepted the
"Legionnaire of the Year" award for Joe Zwilling, post
chaplam, who was unable to attend the annual birthday
party of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Tuesday night . With Casci is Clarence Schmucker who ·
was the 1978 winner of the award. Both Casci and
Schmucker are past commanders of the post and both
received the "Legionnaire of the Year" award in previous
years.

Deputies probing complaints
Meigs County Sheriff farm at Reedsville. Rucker
James J. Proffitt reports said the generator was taken
deputies are investigating the sometime within the last two
theft of a hive of bees from week period.
It was reported two
the
Jesse
Dodderer
residence, Rt. I, Reedsville. · juvenile girls from Rt. I,
According to the report, the Reedsville, were picked up
bee hive was believed to have Wednesday afternoon by
been stolen around midnight. De,puty Dave Ohlinger. They
An experienced bee han- had left school (Eastern
dler will be contacted if the High) at noon Tuesday and
had not returned home.
hive is located.
The
juveniles
were
Deputies are also in·
vestigating the reported theft released to their parents.
of a generator lron1 a farm Hearings are slated later in
tractor at the James Rucker Meigs County Juvenile Court.
i\

�3-The Datly Sentttwl, Mtddleport-Pomeroy. 0, Thursday, Mat 29, 1979
2-

Th~Dc11lySt•nttnel. Mulcllt·J~H1·Pomt•Ju~

0 Tl11u ,d.l' \-',

t '''~

l " i !\

.,

ETTA f~ wa~ ~'""·"""&lt;£G1?.....,._

~UI.ME

IN

N.E.fl. ,.9

Girls start fourth tou1ney today

Editorial

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Ry GEORGE SrROI&gt;E '

• •
opmiODS
-·

Treaty allows tax haven

Mason Furniture

(Last of two related columns)

HEALTH
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

..

DEAR DR LAMB - What
causes a man's scrotwn to
hang about two mches lower
than normal and, at the same
tune, the r1ght testicle is
shghUy swollen•
After a few days of bedrest
this condttlon disappears and
everything is back to normal.
My doctor calls thts
eptdtdymitis. What is it and
why does 11 happen• I am 58
years old and m excellent
health.
DEAR READER - The
eptdtdym1s is the cordltke
aarea that attaches to the
s
1
d
e
of the body of the testicle. The
vas deferens, the tube that
carrtes sperm cells up to the
pems, ts cotled m this area.
There are also a large
nwnber of vems and arteries
tnstde lhe eptdt~ymts The

endmg, "ttts," means mflammatton When the eptdtdymts
ts mflamed, tl ts called
cp1dtdymttis
The eptdldymts and scrotal
area ts well below the level of
the heart when you are stttmg
up or slandmg up. Blood runs
downhtll. That means that 1f
there ts a dtsorder such as up
To g1ve you a better
understandmg of what causes
swelhngs and what to do
about them I am sendmg you
The Health Letter number
11-6, Swelhng Causes and
Management others who
want thts tssue can send 50
cents w1th a long ,stamped,
self--addressed envelope fot
11 Send your request to me m
care of thts newspaper, P 0
Box 1551, Radto Ctty Station,
New York , NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Thts
week I had a ternble experience whtch made me
angry and also womes me
Both of my parents had
cataraets and I went to see a
local ocuhst They put drops
in my eye and sent me back to
the wattlng room to walt until
my eyes were ready for ex·
ammat10n Then they put
some more drops m my eyes
and I was exarnmed.
The doctor tole! me I dtdn 't

.,

.

have any eye disease and I
didn't need to change my
glasses and to come back m a
year No one gave me a word
of warning, caution or adv1ce
to prepare me for what struck
my eyes as I opened the door
to go outstde.
It was about noon and the
sun looked hke br1ght hghtmng I could hardly keep my
eyes open and I had to drive
60 mtles home Happtly, the
Lord hears and answers
prayers I'm worried that
between the doctor's offtce
and home, the sunlight may
have done permanent
damage to my eyes. They
were uncomfortable a couple
of days, but my vision was all
rtght by the next mommg
Am I worrymg needlessly
about future eye problems
that may arise as a result of
this mcident?
DEAR READER - I can
understand your unhap·
pmess, but the danger was
drtvmg home m that condition. People who are gomg to
have an eye examtnabon
should plan on havmg their
eyes dilated The doctor uses
medtcme to dtlate the puptl so
he can examme the back of
the eye and other structures
adequately. That's unportant
to you because you do want a
good exammabon
There are no permanent
harmful effects from the pro·
cedure, but 11 can affect your
vtston when you ftrst go out m
the sunhght. After all, the
puptl dtlates or contraclll m
relation to the hght pnmartly
to Improve your vision. Peo-ple who have 't•ch an exammation sometimes fmd
that dark glasses after the exammalton are helpful
Don't worry about your
eyes bemg damaged They
weren't, but the next ttrrn: you
have an eye examination any
pla&lt;'c, prepan· for the
posslbthty that you may want
someone else to drlvf:' you

htlmt• Alsu, take alnng it pa1r
of dark ~lasses If you Will ;,.
&lt;&gt;ut m the sunhght after1\,trcls

leads all newcomers m the
~1ass AAII semifinals Fnday
mthefourthannuaiOtuogtrls
!ngh school basketball

SHOP

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WILLEMSTAD, Netherlands Antilles (NEAl •. The
"stnctly confidential memorandum" prepared by thts
city's largest bank candtdly proclatms that "foreigners
can avatl themselves o£ a sunny Investment climate" here
whtle buymg real estate m the United States.
Another bank's literature touts the "spectal tax provt·
stons and the vanous tax treaties" that have led to the
establishment of "quite a large number of offshore
Investment, holdmg, fmanctal, royalty and real estate
corporations ''
Despite growmg concern in the Umted States about the
tmpact of foretgn mvestment tn its agncultural land, the
Netherlands Antilles have established a booming tax
haven that enables purchasers of Amencan fannland to
evade vtrtually all taxes on thetr SIX· and seven-figure
transactions
On thts tsland of Curacao, the fmancial and polittcal
capttal of the Netherlands Antilles, one bank even
publishes a newsletter, called the "Tax Haven Review,"
that analyzes Internal Revenue Servtce rulings affectmg
"offshore corporations" mvolved in large real estate
operations.
Because of an obscure 1955 tax treaty between the Umted
States and the Netherlands Antilles, these tslands at the
southern edge of the Cartbbean now rival such traditional
tax havens as the Bahamas, Cayman Islands and Panama
Uncounted thousands of acres of United States cropland
already are owned by corporations based here. Moreover,
local offtctals say the investors com' not only from
Mumch, Madrtd and Mtlan but also from Denver, Detroit
and Dallas
Under terms of the tax treaty and the Netherlands
Anttlles' exceptiOnally generous tax laws, here are some of
the fmanctal advantages enjoyed by a Curacao-based
mvestor m Untied States cropland but dented to an
American farmer
- There is no capttal gams imposed by the government
here, whtle the tax treaty allows avoidance of the same tax
In the United States even though profits from trading
agricultural land can be 3Ubstantial (The prtce of
farmland more than doubled during five years m the rmd1970s )
- When an mvestor dies, the United States estate tax
ltabiiity 1s entirely avotded because the land is held In the
name of an offshore corporation. In addition, the Nether·
lands Antilles tmposes netther an estate tax nor an
mhentance tax on the financial holdings of non-residents.
- The Netherlands Anttlles tax on annual profits
realized through cropland transactions ts only about 3
percent, compared wtth 30 percent or more in the Untied
States
Slightly more than 2,000 mtles north of here, at an office
m midtown Manhattan's Rockefeller Center, the Netherlands Anttlles Economic Mtsston regularly responds to
requests from throughout the Untied States for infonna·
bon about those umque tax beneftts.
,
Since 1973, tbat offtctal has spent more than $835,000 In
1
'promobon of economic development such as banks,
offshore holdmg, shtppmg, hotels (and) industry" as well
as "counseling Amertcan lawyers and law firms on the
possibtii!tes of offshore acltvlttes in the Nether1ai!ds
Antilles," accordmg to reports filed wtth the Justtce
Department tn Washington.
"We always tell them (mdividuals who inquire) it Ia not
for Amertcans," says Paul G. M. Lowenthal, an official in
the New York office, when he ls asked about tax avoidance
tn farmland transactions. "You cannot get away with it if
the Internal Revenue Servtce knows about it."
But he acknowledges that detailed infonnation about the
tax loopholes, wntten in Engltsh, Ia distributed on request
from New York to lawyers and busmessmen thro1111hout
the United States.
When told that government offtcials in the Netherlands
Antilles believe that a substantial number of Americans
are buying offshore corporations to buy United ,states
fannland, Lowenthal says succmctly · "You could be
right."

luurnament
It's the only divis1on that
has no expertence wtth
a&gt;LUMBUS, Oht~ (AP) Unbeatl!n Cmc1nnat1 Hughes
pre.,.,u., playoffs m St John
t~~~~!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~-~-~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!~ fit ena
Former chamP 1on s
llelphos St John's and
Colwnbus Hart.iey dot the
L1ass AA semtf10als while
Mansfteld St. Peter's and Old
Washmgton Buckeye Trail
have been in the Class A
FOR '{HE BEST DEALS
ftelds
IN THE
St John's (2~). whtch
plays~ Chagrin Falls at 9
tomght,
and
1976-78
lttleholder Hartley ( 21-2).
tangling With 23--1 North Bend
TaylQr at 7, have reached the
semtfmals three of the four
Mon .• Tues ., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
tournament years
8:30 to 5: oo
Buckeye Trail was beaten
in last year's finals by Ada
Thursday tiil12 noon .
P&lt;;ter's was a 1977
while
OPEN EVENINGS BY
champtonshtp victim or St.
.Iqhn's when the school was
APPOINTMENT ONLY
sltll
Class A
Herman Grate
In
the
Class
AAA
Mason, W. Va.
1
semif10als Friday , Akron St.
Vincent-St. Mary (19-2) plays
.
'
Elyria (23-1) at I p m.
followed by Barberton (22·2)
and Hughes (2~) at 3 p m.
in the . Class A semifmals
Friday mght, St. Peter's (222) battles Holgate (21·2) at 7
wtth Fort lAramie (22-2) and
Buckeye Trad (21-2) playmg
The cars listed are a selected group, local
at 9.
cars, quality all the way and will give great
The
championship
gas mileage.
tunetable Saturdo'' call&lt; lor

, liP Sports Writer

COMMENTARY

TRI..STATE AREA

Donald F. Graff

MASON FURNITURE
.

Bad case equals safe law?
By Doa Graff

Lawmakers could revive fuss
COLUMBUS, Ohio
( AP)
Some
state
lawmakers are ready to
revive the bitter fuss of 1978
over measured rate telephone service.
The telephone companies
won last year's fight, bottling
up a bill to prohibit them
from chargmg businesses 9
cents a local call for every
call beyond 80 with a month's
btlling period.
Ohio's real estate lobby last
year spearheaded an WlSUC·
cessful drtve to end measured
rates, whtch Ohio Bell Telephone Co. now has applied to
its commercial customers
systemWide, on grounds they
result in exorbitant profits.
Ohio Bell and others deny
that this is the case, and
claim their rate base
otherwise will not permit
them to buy new equipment
and technology to meet the
state's future
commurucations needs
During stormy hearings
last year in the Senate, one
measured rate foe, Sen.
Harry
Meshel,
D·
Youngstown, satd he dtdn't
think tbe phone companies
documented their case
Meshel mtroduced last
week a bill that would require
the comparues to go back

before the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, which
has allowed measured rate
billmgs, to offer proof that the
rates are justified
"A telephone company
would have to document 1ts
need for measured rate
Imposition on business
customers tn public hearmgs
of the PUCO," the senator
sa1d
Meshel's btll con~uns
another major provision,
however
It
prohtbits
measured rate billings of
those categortes of customers
"who must pass on tbe higher
charges to taxpayers,"
Meshel s81d.
Protected by the ban would
be
state
and
local
governments, schools, non·
profit hospttals, hbrartes,
Wiiversities, and charitable
organizations.
Meshel clatms, among
other things , that Ohio Bell,
durmg the Senate hearmgs,
never explained the way tl
arrived at the charge of 9
cents a ca)l.
He said the company also
did not show that the use of
~~e telephone can be equated
wtth the us~ of other utijities
such as water and electricity
which reqwre the use of "a
fmite
supply of materials."
1

Sen .
Mtchael
Schwarzwalder, DColumbus, has mtroduced
two bills this year which
would have an effect similar
to the Meshel proposal.
One would requ1re the telephone comparues to make
quarterly reports to the
PUCO on the costs and
Income from that service.
"Ever since the PUCO
allowed Ohio BeD Telephone
Co to charge mandatory
measured
rates
for
busmesses, there has been no
procedure established by the
PUCO to see JUst how much

American family life threatened
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) The Americar. family is
seriously threatened by
declining interest in religion
and Increasing loss of
splrttual and moral values,
says pollster George Gallup
Jr
While surveys show levels
of rehgtous belief and
practice to be much higher 10
the United States than m
other nations, churches face
a major challenge in tenns of
developing "mature
Christians," Gallup told a
Baptist
conference
in
Orlando Monday night.

Jimmy's White House
By FRANK CORMIER
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
Guests at this week's state
dinner celebrating
the
Israeli-Egyptian treaty were
offered the option of kosher
food, but the menu itself
VIolated the dietary laws
observed by Orthodox Jews
The publicized menu featured, among other Items,
beef and cheese.eticks
Alone, either would be acceptable. Together, however,
they run coWlter to the Orthodox
practice
of
not
consuming meat and dairy
products at tbe same meal.
So some guests faced a
choice of leaving tbe beef untouched, or ignormg the
cheese product.
The Egyptian guests, as

Moslems, had their own
problems with the menu.
Three k10ds of California
wines were served - but
Moslems cannot touch alcohol.
So when the time for
toasting came, Egypltan
President Anwar Sadat
ra'ised to hts lips a
champagne glass filled with
water.
1
Throughout the treaty
ceremonies, Sada t always
took precedence over Israeli
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin. He met with President
Carter f~rst, stood and sat at
the U.S. Iresident's right
hand and, when all three
spoke or offered ' toasts,
preceded Begm to the microphone.

Berry's World

profit is being made ... ,"
Schwarzwalder said.
His second btll, hke part of
Meshel's legislatton, spells
out some exemptions from
those who could be charged
measured rates. These
lnclu~e schools, hospitals,
and libraries, but do not
mention state and local
governments.
Schwarzwalder also would
probtbtt telephone companies
from rnandallng measured
rates of residential customers They now may sign up for
them on a voluntary hasts.

Reason : Sadat IS a chtef of
state while Begin is a bead of
government, outranked m
protocol
by
Israel's
ceremonial prestdent.

"While the American gives.
the family an overwhelmmg
vote of confidence, there can
be no denying the fact that
the family 1s seriously

~~==.~~n~1u~~ :~~s

on all
The divorce rate has
doubled m 10 years, cllsctpliOe
ts the No. I school problem,
and drug and alcohol abuse
among teenagers are contributing heavily to the
breakdown of the family umt,
he said.
''The overwhelming
majority of teenagers have
developed a whole new set of
attitudes toward sex which
could have a very deleterious
effect on family life 10 the
immediate future," said
Gallup, whose Institute of
Public Opinion recently
joined with the Princeton
Religion Research Center in
conducting a national survey
the
"Unchurched
on
Amertcan."

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Thursday, March
29, the 88th day of 1979. There
are 'l/7 days left in the year.
Today's highlight
in
history.
On this date in 1867, the Act
of Confederation was passed
by the British Parliament,
creating the Dommion of
Canada.
On this date:
In 1632, French and English
clauns In America were
divided by the Treaty of St
Gennam.
In 1638, the ftrst Swedish
expedition to the New World
landed in Delaware.
In 1790, the loth American
president, John Tyler, was
born in Charles City County,
Va.
In 1847, American forces
under Gen. Winfteld Scott
occupied Vera Cruz, Mexico.
In 1967, France launched its
first nuclear submarine.
In 1973, the laBt American
soldiers left South Vietnam,
Congress members and 1ending the direct military
garment Wllon and industry rQie of the United States m
1
officials were meeting with th• Vietnam War.
Carter ~en Sol Chaiken,
president of the International
'mE DAILY SENTINEL
Ladles Garment Workers
(USP8145-IIOI
Union, effusively praised
White House trade negotiator
Robert S. Strauss
DEVOTED TO 'mE
"Bob, all our workers cerIN'I'EREIITOF
tainly owe you a debt of gratMEIII8-MA80N AREA
itude," said Chaiken
ROBEIIT HOEFLICH
Carter interjected: "I can
DA~~:IRJ[
always tell when a cabinet
AdftrdlbiCMaUier
•
Publlalted dolly n«pl Salulday
officer IS making progress. It
Ohio VaU.y Publt.hlng
stops being the Carter plan
ny MultliMdia, Jnc , lll
Sl , Pomen&gt;)\ Ohio 46~­
and becomes the Califano
Busl..,. Oll1re Pt1one 912· 21511.
plan, the Strauss plan. .. ."
F.dllurlol Pboot 11112-%1&gt;7

Rosalynn Carter faced a
challenge last weekend that
would have fazed many a
veteran politician. At the
annual dinner of the Grtdiron
Club, she was enlisted to
dehver a tradttional rtb·
tickling speech on behalf of
the Democratic Party.
Heightening the challenge
was the fact that she followed
the Republican speaker, the
undeniably wtlty Henry A.
Kissinger
Mrs.
Carter
proved
adequate to the !ask,
captivating her audience
from the moment she
drawled that 1t had been a
pleasure listening to the Ger·
manic accent of the former
secretary of state - because
"I love to hear you
Northerners talk."
The first lady also told
about a four-state trip she
made earlier in the week and
noted to much laughter that
one of the four doesn't even
hold a presidential primary.

-~...:no-·---·-

Bad cases, a truisin of the legal profession has It, make
badlaw.
,
That looks very much like the situation we have tn the
case the United States of America vs. The Progressive
rnagazlne.
It's a tough one, both for the courts to decide and for the
press, which itself Ia vitally affected, to take a position on.
Once over very UghUy, The Progressive, a publication of
limited circulation (circa 40,000) but pronounced social
consciousness, would publish an article on the workings of
a hydrogen bomb. The government, asserting the article
contains secret infonnation of beneftt to potential enemies
and additionally would "severely wtdercut the arms
control and disannament policies of the United States "
has asked the courts to prohibit publication.
'
So what we have Is a head-on between two basic Interests
of the American polity - national security and freedom of
the press, or an aspect thereof. What the government is
asking is restraint prior to publication, a fonn of
censorship which volwnes of previous decisions have held
constitutionally WlBcceptable.
The caae ls not like the recent flurry of First Amendment
confrontations between the courts and press, which for the
moat part have Involved the question of access by
governmenlal agencies to the wtpubll8hed material of
individual newsmen and the premtses of news organizations.
Nor is it in the pattern of the Pentagon Papers case,
although there the government also sought to auppreu
publication on the grounds of national security. But the
Pentagon Papers did not involve secret scientific detalla or
even current military Information. They were a history of
the Vietnam war which even the government's advocates
had dlHiculty demonstratin(l were a threat, rather than
merely an embarrassment for many public figures
involved, at their late date of publication.
Thts time the government has a fonnldable array of
experts - atomic scientlsta, anus speclallsta, sec:urlty
officials - to back up Ita case that the article is sufficiently
explicit to enable nations not now in the hydrogen club to
develop a fusion technology.
The Progressive contends that If so, they could have
gotten the infonnatlon the way it did - through a thorough
study of documents and publlsi1ed material available to the
public. The magazine says it had access to no classified
infonnation and would be revealing no secreta. Ita J&gt;III'POIIO
10 seeking publication ts to enable the public to make
mfonned declslons on arms control.
That's where it stands. Turning as it does on scientific
fact and detail which only experts can evaluate, the caae is
a conflict between principles m which It is lmpouible for
the layman, or commentator, to reach an objective
decision. Possibly the courts as well.
A large segment of the preas, usually so zealous in
defending freedom of expression against any abridgement
by governmental authority, wiahes this case had never
happened. The real danger foreseen Is not the poaalblllty
that tbe dectsion will go against The Progreaslve but In the
poaslb!~ 'lrecedent to be establlahed. It might well be such
as to str~ngthen efforts of authorities m some future issue
of restraint that could resemble the Pentagon Papers
situation - a case involv10g opinion and subjective values
rather than true security secrets.
As It is, The Progressive dectsion ls very likely to be an
elaboration of a crucial point in the Supreme Court'a ruling
on the Pentagon Papers. Justice Potter Stewart held that
the sole justification for prior restraint would be If the
material to be published would clearly reault in "direct
immediate and irreparable damage to our nation or lb
people.''
PreciBely the government's contention.
Possible. the most that can be hoped from the coming
decision is that it will be as preclaely explicit and as
specifically tailored to the case at hand as poaslble, that it
be structured so that It can not serve as a loose precedent
to be applied to future cases which do not Involve preclaely
tbe same points and ratse the same que~~tions cl national
security.
That still might not make It very good law, but under the
existing circumstances it would cerlainly be the 88feat
law.

Names •••
in the news
NEW YORK (AP)- John Wojtowicz, the real·Ufe desperado
portrayed in themovte "Dog Day Afternoon," 1s out of jail, out
of work and may soon be out of wedlock.
Wojtowicz, 33, said Wednesday that his wife, carmen, had
sued for dlvorce, accusing hun of adultery wtth a male lover in
jail and with Liz Eden since his parole last November.
It was to fmance the sex-change operation of Miss Eden,
then known as Ernest Aron, that Wojtowicz pulled the
celelirated 1972 bank holdup that cost hun six years m jail, be
says. But he claims he has not been with Miss Eden since then,
and says he will COWiter.eue.
BOSTON ( AP) - Boston Pops maestro Arthur Fiedler has a
11CW namesake - a liJO.foot~ong firetruck .
"I hope I deserve tt," said the beaming 84-year-&lt;Jid Fiedler
who makes a hobby of ftriH!ngine chasmg
'
Deputy Fire Chief John McCarthy S81d tbe truck will be
called the Arthur Fiedler Memorial Aerial Tower. In a ceremony Wednesday In City CoWlcil chambers, the Museum of
Transportation also named the ftrehouse holding its fire
collection after Fiedler.
Three days earlier, Fiedler had returned to the podlwn to
lead the Boston Symphony in a four-minute rendition of "The
Stars and Stripes Forever. "It was his first perfonnance since
Wldergomg bratn surgery m December,

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Comedian Bob Hope and 'his Wife, Do·
!ores, are getting honorary doctor of humanities degrees from
St. Louis University
Officials at the Jesuit school said Wednesday that the presenlations will be made May 12, durmg commencement ex·
erclses.
The Hopes' daughter, Lin~a, graduated from the school In
Sec.vnd c:lau poNce p~ld at
1960, Hope entertained at its 1959 foWlders day celebration and
Pumeroy, otliu
Nlllliunal autvertlalnt!: represen· receiVed the university's Spirit of St. I.ouls Award In 1968. The
tatlve, l.andon Auociata, 3101
Hopes have contributed to the school and to St. Louis
F:uclld Ave , Ck'veland.._Ohio 44lli
SubecripUon rates ueltvered by: Children's Hospital.

..
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GOOD PRICES

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1978 CHEV. IMPALA 4 DR..... SS495
Custom 2 tone green, 305 V 8, a• r cond

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Wheel. AM FM rad 1o, really loaded &amp; only 8,500 m1fes,
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1978 MONTE CARlD lANDAU.•••SS495
Light blue with wh vinyl top, 2ll V-6 engine, lull
power. 1ncl. windows &amp; door locks AM-FM stereo
radiO, cruise, tilt st. wheel. radial w slrtpe fires. air
cond, tots at ather extras Dealer Demo. SAVE

1978 IMPALA OOUPE.•••••••••••'6395
Local! owner &amp; only 11,000 miles; AM FM radio, power
windows &amp; D Lacks, crUISe control. tilt st wheel, air
cond. digital clock, lOS V 8, P S , P B , and sharp car,
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1977 PINlO 2 DR ••••••••••••• '2795
Local owner, clean mterlor, AM FM CB radro, good

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1976 MUSTANG II CPE. •••••••• '2795
4 cyl , automattc, good tires, blue f1nrsh. radto, good
economy &amp; real sporty

1975 FORD PINTO WAGON •••••. '2295
4 cyl , automattc trans , good trres, g&lt;Xjd economy &amp; a
local 1 owner car Radio, color whrte

1975 GRANADA FORD 4 DR•••••'2895
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Vtnyl interior, euckskm color, 6 cvl , automatic, P
steer1ng, good t1res, locall owner

Week Eod.Special
1972 Vega 2 Door. Was $495 ...... Now $269

1973 Chev. '12 Ton, was S1795 •. Spec. S1395

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POMEROY MOTOR CO•
Chevrolet
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992-2126

Pomeroy
Open Evemngs TilB:OO p.m.

Burelli top. Class A player
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohto (AP)Margaret Burell! 1s the only
gtr1 to make The Associated
Press first \e81n Class A AD·
Ohto squad two straight
years, and now the Bath Old
Trail star has added the State
Player of the Year laurels
of
Old
Dave
Lmn
Washmgton Buckeye 'li'ail
earned the Ohio Coach of the
Year m Class A girls
basketball
Burelli, a 5..foot.;i senior
forward, posted averages of
23 8 points and 11 6 rebounds
this season. She was worth
21 8 pomts and 9 ~rebounds
per game as a jWitor.
Lmn has gwded hts team to
the state semifinals while
complltng an overall record
or 42-3 lD the two years of the

WINNIPEG,
Mamtoba
( AP) - The Cincinnati
Sttngers lost thetr fourth
World Hockey Assoctalton
game in a row Wednesday
mght as MorriS Lukowtch
scored his 58th and 59th goals
of the season to lead the
Wmmpeg Jets to a 6-3 vtctory
The triumph moved the
.Jets to wt\hm one pomt of the
thirdplace New England
Whalers and was the fifth m
seven starts for the Jets
Cmc10natt leads last -place
Birmingham by only two
pomts m the race for the ftfth
and fmal WHA playoff berth .
Barry Long's tie--breaking
goal at 18 :~ of the second
period put the Jets ahead to
stay 3-2 Roland Eriksson
sent a pass back to Long, who
ftred a hard slap shot from
the center of the faceoff ctrcle
past Cincinnati goal1e Mtke
!Aut, who was distracted by a
maze of players around the
crease.
Rtch Preston and LukoWich
boosted the lead to 5-2 in the
first 10 rmnutes of the thtrd

ACE HARIMARE
MEIGS PLAZA
992-3662
!J.6 M-S 12-6 SUN.

ACE
IWIDWAAE

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" The congressman has stepped out of the
office fora moment. May/ takes message?"

'

c:ani~r

where HvallMble 71 cent.!! per

Wl"t"k Ry Molor Route where camc;.r.

1 ~t!rvlt..'t! not ttYHilablto, Onr month,
I 1.125 By nwilln OhJo and W Va ,

ATLANTA (APL..,..Blll(Carter is feeling fine and looking
forward
to tlle1!iidof his treatment for a drinking problem, his
Qn,. Year 12750. Six monlhl,
114 50. Three munth~. II ~o ;·· fr~ds say.
1
F.lst•wtwrt 132 00 year; Sb: monthl
have talked to him on the phone several times and his
tl7 00· Three month!! 19 ~~
vol
sounds great," Tandy Rice, his agent said Wednesday
~~~~~--~ rlplll1n prk't' Includes SundaiJ
Tl·nt~ ...~nlmt I
.
i "He snlUlds better thlin ever. He sounds 'like the old Billy.
Ca1'1er "
V•_
J

ONE COAT lATEX
HOUSE PAINT

•7•

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohto
( AP) -Sir Roger Scott won a
photo·ftntsh decmon in the
featured $5,500 Allowance
race
at
Thistledown
Wednesday 1 paymg $6.60, $3
and $2.80.
Second place Anga patd $3
and $2 40 and third place Bar
H's Indtans patd $3
Trtfecta winners were
Aurora (9) , Bobover (7) and
flusty Jtver ( 3) The 55
winning ltcket holders
collected $629 each

"An Is the plan ~ilh

'f91
\,/

pertod Enksson also assisted
on Preston's goal, sending a
soft pass to Preston, who
fltpped the puck high Into the
net from the edge of the
crease
LukoWich, who also scored
m the operung pertod, tallted
a power play goal when he
picked up Kent Nilsson 's
deflected drive and slapped
the puck Into the corner of the
net
Lukowich said Winnipeg
Coach Tom McVte has been
stressing " the main thing
that's gomg to wm us games
ts that goals-aga10st colwnn.
Tonight we let three in, I
guess we're cuttmg 11 down a
httle bit. "
Robbie Florek, Peter
Marsh and BtU Gilligan
scored for Cincinnati while
ilobby Gumdon got the Jets'
!mal goal with five seconds to
play and Willy Lmdstrom
scored, first for Winnipeg

•h., H•lpful H!!dwart' Man ...

lATEX HOUSE ONE r lATEX
PAINT
Wlllt PRIMER'

..

Guernsey County
consolidation of Zarle Trace
and Madison.
Burelh led a young first
team of f1ve JUniors and three
seniors, selected With the
recommendations of a
statewide panel of sports
writers and liroadcasters.
The other seruors on the
ftrst unit were ~ C10dy
Rosselot of state semif10al1st
Holgate and 5-10 , Casey
O'Connor of Akron Our Lady
of the Ebns
The juniors were led by ~ 7
Shana
Robertson
of
CIOCIOiljlb Swmnit CoWitry
Day. The daughter of former
pro basketball great Oscar
Robertson- averaged 22
pomts, 8 rebolUlds and 5
ass1sts this season.
The other ftrst-team
jumors were !;.9 Mary Lynn

Stingers lose
•
fourth zn row

&amp;::;

When Carter convened an
energy conservation brain·
storming session at Camp
David, Md., last week, two
extra helicopters were
assigned to haul his advisers
to and fro
The two choppers burned
something In exooss of 300
gallons of fuel for the
rounrltnp.

~nppfl,~'1hi"~c:!('"•'rorthe

Pt11ne•rs •wtlh
.luanne to us a little 111 th~ 1 cgwnal
lhnkdfer, Glona llarbee , finals we had a 17 ,,,mllead
1
Betty llalhburton and ·.ma and ended up wutmng by
Brown comprlsmg
the 1wu
s. ·h,.Jl's second-j)lac e slate
u.. lgat e 's 'I 1ger s r1 0 m
mtle relay team 11\st sprmg
llenry County have the tallest
' 11te fact they've been m team tn ail three classes, led
competition has brought us by 64 Vtckt Hoops , 5-10 Dtane
alone," satd F.lyrta Coach Mangas and 5-H all-stale
Margaret Cough " Utey ;tay Cmdy Hosselet Hoops, wtth
cool and go out and do what averages of 14 pomts and 16
they have to The expenenc-e rebounds , ts bound for
they have is not basketball Te•nessee State Hosselet,
expertence,
but
tis worth 22 pomts and 10
compettttve experience"
rebounds, wtll attend lndtana
St Vmcent.St Mary, whtch llmverstly
numbers Barberton among
St Peter 's strength 1s ti s
tls 19 victnns, has a patr of twms, 5-9 Juan Cowdery and
all sf aters, 5-11 JUmor Oebbte 5-11 .Jane Cowdery, holdovers
Marshall
and
6-foot from the 1977 stale runnerup
sophomore Carla Chapman
" They
cltck so well
L11apman averages 22 potnts together. " satd Sister Sondra
and l4reboWldsand Marshall Davts, the Spartans' coach
at a 19 pomt cltp
Buckeye Tratl has the most
In Class A, the major con- expertence wtth all ftve regu.
cern of Fort IAramte and Iars back !rom the 1978
Holgate ts thetr mexpenence runnerup squad , led by 5-l!
going agamst tournament 1\11-0htoan Lon Heady The
oldtes St. Peter's and JUntor averages 14 5 pomts
Buckeye Tratl.
and 9 reb~unds for the
" The advantage has to be Guernse1 Co un ty consolwtth Buckeye Tratl wtth thetr tdatwn of Madtson and Zane
expenence," said Fort Trace.
Loramte
Coach
Jane
What dtd Dave Lmn, the
Poeppelman. "But we've had Uhto Class A Coach of&gt; the
a rough tournament road to Year, learn from the fmals
go Hopefully, that wtll help loss to Ada last year ' "They
us "
hurt us wtth pressure We're
Coach Duane Sheets of Hoi· smar ter tht s time, " he
gatesaid, "Thepressure j:!ot replied

1978 CHEVY MONZA CPE ...... '5495
radtal wh

.

Class fill at 11 am Class
IIIII\ at 3 p tn and Cl;ss A al
7 I'·"'
lltmhcs unbeaten status
wtll be threatened tf Rarvema
\l'110len, the B1g Reds' i;.foot-11
Oass 1\f\f\ State Player of the
Year, cannot sllirt. Wooten
sprained an ankle m the
regtonal finals last week
agamst Dayton Stivers·
Patterson
"Our game ts a little hampered when Barventa IS out of
there," said Hughes Coach
.lane ~'alrall
Hughes wtll face a vartety
vf pressmg defenses from
Barberton. " We try to set tbe
tempo early," said Jeff
.Jamga, the Magics eoach.
"We want the other team to
play our type of game."
Jamga, a nmth grade boys
coach last season said on offense, "We get it ~nd go w1th
tt That 's most of our game"
The Magtcs are led by !;.7 aUstater Darlene Lewts a
splendtd ballhandler and' 1!;.
point scorer
Elyrta has made it to the
semtfinals Without one of 1ts
best players Oebbte Btyant,
a 6-1 senior center averaging
131JQmts and 9 rebounds qwt
the sport when the Pio~eers
were m sectional tournament
play

Today's

LATONIA
FLORr,NCE, Ky . (AP) .Jelly Bud, rtdden by David
McKee , won the $6,200
featured etghth race at
Lalonia Wednesday mght,
pa) mg $1U 20, $4.60 and $3 40
Play Behavmg placed, returmng U 80and $3 20and No
Fthber was thtnl, paying ~3
Th&lt;· ~-7 double of Amber H
and Wouldn '' Chuck it
returne•l $21 20 Altendance
was 2,/Um and lhe mutuel
l1,mrlle was $Hio,lllll

Abell
of
Mtddletown
Fenwick, 6-foot Lon Heady of
Buckeye Trail, 5-11 Juhe Bell
of Cleveland Lutheran West
and 5·11 Chrts Howell of
Jackson Center
Robertson moved up for the
1978 second te81n Heady and
Abell werethtrdteam chmces
last season

Horvath of Bl oomfte ld ,
of
Donna
Domzal skt
Cuyah oga Hei ght s, Ctndy
Gar) of Bndgeport and Cmdy
Ahle of Old ~'ort
COLUMBUS Oh1o (API The Assoc1ated Press 1979
Oh1a Class A girls high school
basketba ll ail sta te team,
selected wit h the recom

mendat1ons at a sta tew1de

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent
There was a tragtc as well as potgnant note to the courtstde
;cene last Monday mght amtd the wreckage of Indiana State's
&lt;haltered perfect basketball record.
How can one forget the ptcture of Larry Bird, Stttmg on the
bench 10 utter dejection, hts tears buned m a towel' Yet tt was
m understandable reaction, d~&amp;appomtrnent of a great warner
~ho had fought his last bsttle and lost
Less Widerstandable was hts f81lure to lighten hts Jaw and
shu.v up for the postgame press conference- a slight that renected on hiS team, his college and hnnself He had proved
more accesstble after the Sycamores' ftrst-game victory .) '
Hts tearrunates showed, as did the stout-hearted ktds of
DePaul and Penn, whose hurt and disappointment certamly
were as deep.
ExcUse us tf you thmk thts ts a cry--baby whunper from a
woWided press. The media (a ghastly label) have been ex·
posed to worse mdigmlles and survtved It ts Btrd's rtght, as a
free man m a free soctety, to take the press or leave tl, except
m this case there are underlymg obligations .
In B1rd's case, the most demandmg obhgat10n ts to himself
He ts a marvelous talent wtth a fantastic future, tf he doesn't
blow it He has proved hunself one of the great basketball performers of our generation - a strong, naturally gtfted young
player capable of earnmg a kmg's rtches as a pro.
He hatls from a rural commumty, French Ltck, Ind , population about 1,000. He preferred to remam m his home state
and play wtth a relatiVely httle known school m Terre Haute
fllmost solely because of hts sktlls, this team swept through 33
games and gamed No .I natiOnal rankmg before bowmg to
Mtchtgan State m the NCAA fmals
No one ever accused the "B1rd" of being sophisticated.
Acclaun and myr1ad honors fell upon hiiD wtth such sudden
tmpact th at he found tt dtfftcult to cope As the No I college
basketball player m the natton, he was swooped down upon by
strangers from everywhere seekmg to peek mto every nook of
his life - the pnce of fame.
Th1s 1s a cymcal and often caustiC world Not every report
stuted the young man's fancy He became bitter, susptcious
and - In the end - a sullen recluse.
ThiS maJesttc gtant of a man, although a campus tdol, shows
no trace of bemg spoiled Mtsunderstood? Yes. Arrogant ' No
He plays the game unselftshly He ftghts like a t1ger . '
Teammates and assoctates hold hun m the highest esteem.
The kmk m hts r~mged annor IS naivete. He must doff the
cloak of campus hero . He must move mto the hard--bttten
world of pro sports- perhaps as a mtllion-dollar bonus baby of
the Boston Celttcs.
Now hts skills go out on the market shelf -to be admtred,
bought and sold hke a can of beans. People who buy a ticket
feel he ts part of their property He must relate He can't lock
lmnself m an ulVlstble tsolatton booth. He can't be an tsland

Second team members oanel of soorts wr 1ters and
were Chert Ftehtz of West broadcasters
Umty Htlltop, Joan Cowdery
FIRST TEAM - Margaret
of Mansfield St. Peter's, Bureii1, Bath Old Tra1i, 5
Ctndy Harper of Frankfort foot 5 Sr • 23 8 pamts per
game,
C1ndy
Rosse let.
LEBANON
Adena , Tma Hiles of Sugar Holgate 58 Sr , 22 o, Mary
Ll~BANON, OhiO (AP)
Grove Berne Umon, Linda Lynn Abell. Middletown
Krtder of East Canton, Shen Fenw1ck 59 Jr, 17 0, Lon Byline Tune ied wtre-to·" tre IWE''O'E LOWERED
Heady , Old Wa shi ng ton
THE COST OF
F.uban k s 0 f Ctnc Innatt Buckeye Tra1i , 6 loot Jr . f01 a I -length VICtory 1D the
Sumrmt Country Day, Mary 15 o, Shana Robertson. $1,100 featured mil e pace
CARPET CLEANING
Tonjes
of
Sherwood C1nc1nnatl Summ1t Country Wednesday mghl at Lebanon
~'atrvtew Marge Basilettt of Day , 57 Jr . 22 0 , J ui1 e Bell ,
Ill 2 06 2-5
Deemer of Cleveland Lutheran West. 58
The wtnner patd $8 60, $5 20
St r asburg• and ltz
'
, Jr , 18 o, Casey O'Connor ,
Portsmouth East
Akron Our Lady of the Elms , and $3 20 Jerse) Stlk was
On the thtrd tea m were 5 10 Sr . 24 2 and Chns second returnmg $17 80 and
Sandy Bergman of Mmster, Howell. Jackson Center. s 11 $9 20 a nd Pretty Pam was
2
Lynn Carpenter of Yellow Jrs'E ~~ND TEAM - Chen lh1rd , paymg $4 60
1~ 1 Magmftco wtth Lmworth
Sprmgs, Joni Wtlkm of Ber- F1elitz, West U01ty Hilltop 5
gholz Sprtngfteld, Robtn 7 Sr, 23 o, Joan Cowdery, Tune m the double for a $54 20
Hagen of South Webster Mansf1eid St Peter"s, 5-8 Jr , payoff on the 3-2 combmatwn
19 0 Cmdy Harper, Frank
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Umon , 59 Sr . 23 0, Linda

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Marauder
baseball
schedule
Anyone wishing to get an
early glimpse of thts year's
Meigs High School's baseball
team is Invited to tonight's
scrimmage with Ravenswood
at the Marauder diamond
Game tune ts 4:30 p m
Regular season play begins
tomorrow mght when Metgs
plays host to Jackson, and
that game also will begin at
4·30 p m.
•
Following is the rema10ing
schedule for the 1979
Marauders. A roster and full
report on the team will be
available tn the next few
days.
MEIGS SCHEDULE
tw.r 29 Ravenswood
4· lO
p.m
Mar lO Jackson
4 30 p m.
Apr l at Waverly 4 30 p m
Apr 5 Warren
4 30 p m
Aprt. 6 Wellston
4 JO p m
Apr 9 Kyger Creek 4 30 p m
Apr 10-atlranton 4 30 p m
Apr 12 at Gallipolis 4 30 p m
Apr 16 North Gall Ia 4 30 p m
Apr 17-Athens
4 lOp m
Apr 20 Logan
4 30 p m
2 00 p m
Apr 21 Wahama
Apr 24 at Jackson 4 30 p m
Apr ~5 at Rovenswood 4 lO
p.m
Apr 27 Waverly
4 lOp m.
May 1 at Wei Is ton 4 lOp m
11M y 4 Ironton
4 lOp m
4 lOp m
May 8 Gallipolis
May 11 at Athens 4 lOp m
liMy 14 at Worren 4 lOp m
4 lOp m
liMy 15 at Logan

Soph , 22 6, Shen Eubanks
Cmcmnat1

Day

Summ1f Country

j

5 10 Jr , 22 0 Mary
Ton,es, Sher wood Fa1rvt ew,
5 10 Jr , 27 o, Marg Bas1ietl1,
Strasburg, 56 Sr 20 0, and
l1z De emer , Port smo ut h
East, 5 7 Sr , 20
THIRD TEAM - Sandy

J

l

Do-1t yourself
and get professional

Bergma n, Mmster , 5 11 Sr ,

18 0, Lynn Carpenter Yel low
Spnngs, 59 Sr, 14 0, Jom
W1ik1n , Bergholz Springfield,
57 Jr , 23 o, Rabin Hageo.
South Webster, 57 Sr, 21 2.
Nancy Down1ng , Millard
Center Fairbanks , 56 Sr ,
14 0. Ktm Horvath , Bloom
f1eid, 58 Sr 19 6, Danna
Domzals k i , Cuyahoga
He1ghts, s s Jr . 18 9, Cmdy
Ahle, Old Fort , 59 Sr, 18 0,
and Cmdy Gary. Bndgeport.
53 Saph, 242
PLAYER OF YEAR Marraret Burell!, Bath Old

Tr~OACH OF
Lmn ,

Old

Buckeye Trail

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Casey Kasem
WMPO
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Lane , Day ton
Lora Stapleton,
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Kate, Sugarcreek
Garaway, D1ane Lancash 1re,
Malvern. Susan Fuchs,
Beallsv 1lle , Terri Ha1nes,
&lt;!hlil1 c othe Hu ntington .
Teresa Ruby , Frances Montgomery, Portsmouth Cl ay ,
Mary Moore , Lucas v ille

Valley

Anne
Burns ,
Newark
CatholiC, Teresa Messer ,
Johnstown No r thrid ge
Susanne Van Scoy, Canal
Wtnchester; L1sa Pre rce,
Mille rsport. Mary Bram
schre1ber, Ba lt1 more L1berty

Un1an , Cathy McCullough,
Colleen Mulroy, Lancaster
Fisher , Kel ly Hammon ,
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He1sler , Edgerton . Jane

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could cost
you money!"
If you don't know tax laws, you need H&amp;R
Block to rev1ew your tax srtuation. You want
to be sure you are using the proper tax
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At H&amp;R Block, we·ntake all the time necessary because we want to be sure you pay
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Open 9 A.M lo
6 P.M. Weekdays
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OPEN TUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9AM.-SPM.
PHONE 77l 9128

Appotntmenr Avatlabio But Not Necosury

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5-The,Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday . Mar. 29, 1979

4-The.Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomt•my. 0 .. Thu,-,;day. Mnr 29. !979

.

Pomeroy PTA discusses improvements .

Yankees easy pick in AL Eastern division
~· f

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.,.

·'

.'

Ry HAl. BOCK
Baltimore,
L&gt;elroit.
A.P Spurts Writt•r
Cleveland, Toronto .
With Ihe add ilion of John
The. rich got richer in the
Amertcan League East over and Tiant. the Yankee;'
thS e wbmter as owner George pil ching picture is crowded.
tetn renner sought to C) Young Award winner R..n
solidify the New York r.uidry, 20-game winner Etl
Yan kdeesh· hoi~ on baseball 's Figueroa and Catfish Hunter
wor1 c amptonship.
are the other starters, with
The Yankees · dipped intn .Jim Beattie, Ken Clay and
the free agent marketplace , Dick Tidrow available for.
important ;-pot duly.RichGossageisthe
adding
two
veteran pitchers - Tommy No. 1 man out of the bullpen
John and J.uis Tiant. .
with feft-hander Paul MiraJohn is important .because bella, acquired from Texas,
he throws a devastating to share the work.
Manager Bob Lemon's
sinker and will fit right in
with the spacious dimensions starting lineup is intact. First
of Yankee Stadium. Tiant is baseman Chris Chambliss,
important because by signing second baseman Willie
hin~ for New York , Randolph, shortstop Bucky
Stem brenner took a psy- Dent and third baseman
chological swipe at Boston, Graig Nettles are all potent
and
defensive
where the veter an right· hitters
hander was one of the most standouts. The outfield is
popular members of the cr owded with newcomer
team.
Juan ~niquez likely to pu$11
The Red Sox. as usual, Roy White for the starting job
seem a little short on in left fi eld . Mickey Rivers is
pitching, especially with in center and Reggie Jackson
Tiant gone. They also are in right, with Paul Blair, Lou
deep!~ concerned ahout the Piniella and Jay Johnstone
c~nd!tron of catch~ Carlton' allavailable.OneofthemwiU
Ft~k s elbow. Baltunore and be the designated hitter.
Milwaukee could make lt Thurman Munson is the
ti~ht at the top of the division , catcher .
With De!rmt i'"d Cleveland
Milwaukee made an intersitU a year or. two away and esting run at the top under
Toronto brmgmg up the rear . first year Manager George
1978 Finish - New York, Bamberger a year ago The
Boston, Milwaukee , Brewers were conte~ders
BaIt i m ore • Detroit • with no help from one of their
Cleveland, Toronto.
best pitchers Moose Haas
1979 M
Pr.ediction
- 'New ,who was st'de.lm
' ed by arm'
k
1
York, t wau ee, Boston , problems. He's back this

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COACH NAMED
CINCINNATI (AP) - Bob
Staak, an assistant at the
University of Pennsylvania .
was named basketball coach
today at Xavier University .
Xavier officials confirmed
that the 31-year,old Staak will
succeed Tay Baker, who quit
in FebrUary.
. Staak was scheduled to
appear at a news conference.
later in the day.
Staak has spent four years
as an assistant at Penn·
sylvania, which this season
made it to the !iemiflr\lils of
the National Collegiate
Athletic
Association
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STA-78

'Gartg preacher' to visit ~rea
A . man · who is known Boone, recounts Wilkerson's
around the world as the experiences in working with
"Gang Pr.eacher", as the toqgh street gangs in New
result of his work among York ghettos.
gang members and drug
Wilkerson recalls that
addicts in New York Ghettos, when he first met Nicky Cruz,
will be coming to Athens next ·leader of the Mau Maus and
month.
one of the most feared and
David Wilkerson wilL bring hated.street fighters in New
his crusade to the Con· York. Cruz spit on him ,
vocation Center April 5 and 6 slapped him across the face
with meetings .at 7:30 p.m. and told him to "go to Hell" .
each night. Dallas Holm, Cruz later became Wilker·
former rock group member, son's first convert and one of
will be crusade soloist.
his most trusted assistants.
Wilkerson is the author of
seve~al books. His first, "The
Cross and the Switchblade",
hils passed the 16 mtllion
mark in sales and is in its 28th
printing and has been trans·
lated into 4,2 languages.
The book , made into a
movie which starred Pat
Approval for the purchase
by
of new television sets for the
patient rooms at Veterans
CI\LORIC
Memorial Hospital was given
when the Auxiliary met Tues, I
day afternoon at tbe hospital.
Mrs. Louise Bearhs presid· ,
I
ed
at the meeting with Shorty
.I
Wright
leading the Auxiliary
•I
prayer.
A hi&amp;1ory of the Aux·
I
i)iary has been submitted to
I
the Meigs County Historical
I
I
Society for inclusion in the
history book. Members gave
a s~cial welcome to Mrs.
Nettie- Hayes who has been
absent for several months
due to illness. ,
Six new pairs of curtains
have been purchased for the
hospital, it was noted, and
Carrie Kennedy, ways and
means chairman, explained
the Community Club Awards
of WMPO for the group.
Mrs. Nita Wisniski, R. N.

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children were treated Wednesday to a "Fun Meal" and
popsickle, courtesy ~f the Pomeroy Burger Chef and Grell .

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ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

inclurled National Basketball
AP Sports Writer
Commissioner
Association
DALLAS (APJ - Umpires Larry O'Brien and National
will be .making a "serious r'notball
League
mistake" if they fail to go Commissioner Pete Rozelle.
back to work by the season· Roone Arledge, of ABC
openers next week, says ., SpQrts, '"9derated the panel.
Bas eball Commissioner '
The 51 umpires who work
llowie Kuhn .
for both the American
In his first at4ength state· League and National League
·menton the umpires' boycott have yet to sign their
of spring exhibition games, individual 1979 contracts .
national With the wnpires boycotting
Kuhn
told
broadcasters Wednesday at exhibition games, substitute
their annual meeting that Umpires have worked the
baseball owners are ready in exhibition ga,mes in Florida
case the arbiters stay away . and Arizona.
"We have plans for an
The umpires want more
a lternate approach . The money
other
and
wnpires would be making a improvements in a collective
serious mistake if they do not bargainin g
agreement
·show up for work," he said. negotiated last year. They
" I hope these decent men are in the second year of a
see the errors of their ways. five-year agreement.
It is unfortunate we have the
The owners asked a federal
problem we ha ve, but in this judge to order the umps ba ck
case they (the umpires) are •to work , but the judge
way off base," added Kuhn. declined, saying he has no
Kuhri spoke to the National authority to order them back. ·
Association of Broadcasters
"There is no question in my
as part of a panel that also mind they are entitled to bargain as individuals," the
judge said Tuesday.
American League
President Lee MacPhail
said : "If these umpires do
want to work for us, we 'll
have to find umpires who do .
Now Showing
The season will open on time,
and we'll have umpires when
GILSON TILLERS
it starts."
Umpire
Bill
Kunkel
watched an exhibition game
between Texas and Atlanta
Wednesday at Pompano
Beach, Fla. He said
Mac Ph ail sent him a telegram which said: "If I didn't
sign my contract by Friday, I
' would be out of a job. I'm not
going to sign unless he gives
me the money I want. "
The starting salary for a
maj or league umpire is
$17,500. Kunkel makes $32,000
and said he's asking for
$51,000.

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BULK SEEDS NOW ON SALE

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AUFHORIZID

Hy DENNE H. FREEMAN

.'••'
~

\• 1Ung taknl in tl1ei1' plus ~\ncln: Thurnt(•ll ana
is st•l at the corners With lJH .
lineu 1, : hea ded by ·first · !;ary Alexander gt,·e · the
slugger .John Mayberry at
.Jim
Clancy,
Yom
~~~i~: · 1.~:~ 1 a:C~s~~~n~~:; baseman .Jason ·niUmpsou, Tribe S&lt;ome lr,ng-ball tale nt. first base and Roy Howell at Underwood, Jesse Jefferson
Hiee are the regular rnoki e of I he year Lou
11_1e defense. anchor~ by
third base .
and. Mark .Lemongello.,
oui fie lders with Dwight \l11ilaker al second. shor tstop rcv1ved shorts top rom
Bob llailor and Rick Bosetti acqutred from Houston, form
E\ans also available to share .\I nn
Trammell
and Veryzer . ' slick
second own lwo of the outfield jobs 'Manager Roy Hartsfield 's
thai work and [)H duties.
uu1fiefder Steve Kemp. Ron lmscman lluaMe Kuiper and with the third one wide open starting rotation, with Dave
II Ballimore Manager Earl l.eF!ore and newly acquired SJ&gt;l'cdy Kiek Manning in and Willie Upshaw and A1 l..emanczyk and Jerry Garvin
Weaver has anything to say .Jerry Morales complete the cenler . should be strong . And
Woods among the leading also available. The bullpen
about it. the Orioles will. as outfield.
wilh
Aurdio Ted &lt;.:ux. who played little candidates. Rick Cerone will belongs to Bator Moore, Don
usual . be a cootender with Ht• lri guezor Phil Mankowski after comi ng over from be the r.atcher and veteran Kirkwood and Tom Murphy.
snme solid talent.
at third base and Lance lloston last year. could take Rico Carty, retrieved from
The pitching. once more, Parrish and Milt May w uver in left.
the free a~ent draft, Is the Nc·xt: American i.ea~e w..t
centers around perennial 2(). share the catching.
.
Hick Waits, Mike Paxton
game winner Jim Palmer.
Moss
must find
a and former Texas phenom
Behind him are Mike designated hitter now that llavid Clyde anchor the
Hanagan, Scott McGregor, Husty Staub has decided to starting staff. l..en Barker !)ennis Martinez and free become
a
full time live a rm ' ques tiona ble
agent pickup Steve Stone, restaurateur .
confi,ol - Rick Wise and
with Tippy Martinez, Don
C1evefand, a disappointing rookie Eric Wilkins will
Stanhouse and Joe Kerrigan sixth last season, has added batt le for the other spots. Vic·
ticketed for the bullpen.
speed and power this time tor Cruz. obtained fr om To·
FOR
Ken· Singleton , AI Bwnbry . aroWld. The Indians should ron to, figur es to replace the
and Larry Harlow are the score some rlHls. How far departed Jim Kern as top
likely outfield starters, with they can go will depend on a man out of the bullpen.
PHONE H2-7113
first baseman Eddie Murray, relatively inexperienced
The Blue Jays obtained
Rich Dauer at second, Mark pitching staff.
sho rtstop Alfredo Griffin
Belanger at shortstop and
The Indians pick ed up from Cleveland in the Cruz
third
basemal1
Doug muchtraveled slugger Bobby trade and he is battling
DeCinces manning th e . Bonds and third baseman holdovers Luis Gomez and
infield . Rick Dempsey is the Toby Harrah from Texas D~ve McKay for. a job in the
catcher and I..ee May handles over the winter .
rruddf~ of the mfteld. Toronto
DH duties.
-----------------------~---.._
Detroit has a new manager
and I..es Moss brings with him
a positive attitude . " I think
the Tigers have a good
chance to make a run for the
pennant in 1979," he said,
•'or that to happen , Detroit
needs a health y Mark
The Nat1onw1de
Fidrych . The Bird had a fe w
t t t'
fl' ht
d ·
Supermarket of Sound
en a tve
tg sbut urmg
spring
training,.
Moss
isn ' l counting on him
il![mediately
a nd
has
pen cilled in a starting
rotation of Dave Roztma,
.Jack Billingham, Milt Wilcox
and Kip Young, with John
Hiller and newcomer Aurelio
Lopez in the bullpen.
The Tigers have some ex-

-'

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dtu1~

mistake··Kuhn

''I
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•••
•
{
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off elhnw ~urger) ,' Uack at

u,_,ps making

,.i,Jj

.•,·.

~ea.sun. juwmg :w.game
winner Mike Caldwell . Lary
Sor:«'nson and Bill Travers.
'lbe llrewers also added lwo
other pil rher s. signing free
agenl .lim Slaton and lrading
for
veleran
Reggie
l.leveland.
offensively , you dun't ha.ve
to worry about the Brewe rs.
They led the league in seven
hitting departments la st
seascon and the lineup packs
plenty of punch . with
outfielders Larry Hisle,
r.orman Thomas, Sixto
l..ezcanoand Bert Oglivie. and
an infield composed of Sal
!lando or Don Money • Robih
Yount . Paul Molitor and Cecil
Coope•. Charlie Moore and
Buck Martinez divide the
catchir.6, with Ray Fosse also
available.
The Boston Red Sox,
frustrated by two nearmisses at the division title in
·the fast two seasons, did
nothing to improve th eir
outlook this yeor.
That means, with Tiant
gone, the pitching burden
fall s sq uare ly . on the
shoulders of Mike Torrez,
Andy Hassler and 2().game
winner Dennis Eckersley.
Manager Don Zimmer would
like to move !lob Stanley out
of the bullpen to pick up the
slack but he won 't be .able to
unless
reliever
Bill
Campbell 's ann comes ba ck.
Toni Burgmeier and Dick
Drago are the other
bu!Jpenners.
Fis k's elbow has been a
spring training headache and
may force rookie Gary
Allenson into the starting
lineup. Svelte George Scott is
at first base with Jerry Remy
and Rick Burleson a slick
second-short combination
and Butch Hobson . coming

purchased for the library and
Hober1 Baker o[ . the Ohio
parents were asked to con- Natural Resources Division
tribute books to fill the of Recfamatiowspoke on the
shelves. Robert Morris. prin· hill slip behind' the school and
dpa l, called lor the book outlined the ·various procorrunittee of Hank and cedures to correct tbe pro·
, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Kathy Cleland, Delores Long blem. A program of Apand Linda Mayer to be reac- palachian musi c wa s
• tivated to screen the books to presented by Roger and Mary
be put on the shelves:
Gilmore.
It was noted !hat the Camp·
The pledge to open the
bel! soup labels have been meeting was given br
redeemed and that a set of Pomeroy Brownies I 27 1
children 's encyclopedias whose leader is Janie&lt;
have been obtained for the Haggy. Grandparents' nighl
. library .
was observed with Morris
, ' Mrs. Car ply_n Reeves, Mrs. giving a tribute to grand·
Debbi Buck, and Mrs. Judy parents and tbe first grade '
Jewell wl!re named to the winning the room count.
nominating corrunittee. Mrs. Regular room count was also
Susie Soulsby reported that won by the first grade.
the PTA now has a total of 101
Sharon Mattox and Sharon
members with Mrs. Carl Smith representing the seRoach, president, noting tbat cond grade were hostesses.
the figure should be higher in The April meeting will
view of the school enrollment. feature recognition of the
An award was given to Mrs. school patrol. There will be ·
Gattrell, manager of the Burger Chef. The children.
Carol Ohlinger's 'first grade election of officers and the
ANYONE LIKE PUPPIES????
pictured, ages three, four and five, were also given a tour
which had the most,member- first grade parents will be
was abandoned by my owners at a time when I
of the restaurant .
ships,
a total of 22.
hostesses.
n':.::f~.•someone most. When I was younger I was not
sr
so now I am going to have puppies anytime.
P.,etillle_ say . an English Springer Spaniel - maybe,
lots of beautiful puppies. The Hwnane
~iety says they will. help place them when they are
Maybe They Can't Read .
enough.
BOSTON (AP) - George'
'Please, won't someone give me a permanent )lome
A Spring Fair is to be sponsored by the New Haven
Gloss says he is worried
where I can move about. I am not a small dog , I have
Recognizing the need , about the literary values of
Woman'sctubat
the New Haven Community Building onlong nice black and white hair and I love people Wilkerson also formed one of
April
7,
10
a.m.
to
4 p.m.
today's criminal.
despite the way I've been treated by some.
the world's most successful
Gloss, the owner of the
All
manner
of
items for display and sale will be
Note from M.C. Crawford, Hwnane Society :
programs for drug addict
featured
during
the
event.
·
Brattle Book Shop, a five- ·
Anyone desiring this really nice, big,. beautiful girl,
rehabiliiation, Te e n· story browser's paradise
is
available
for
bootha,
and
any
groups
or
S[lllce
who is about! or 2 years old- call 99:1-76110 or 99:1-7853.
Challange, .which claims an crammed with over 400,000
individuals from anywhere 'in the surrounding area
The
dog pictured in Tuesday's paper was adopted by
amazing 74 per cent cure rate vofwnes, says the shop has
interested in participating are asked to call one of the
nice Gallipolis family .
.
among heroin users who have been burglarized nine times
following nwnbers : 882·2189, 882·2040 or 882·2738.
completed its program.
in the last 18 months. But the
For the benefit of the kids, the Easter Bunny will be
He now travels arollnd the thieves haven 't touched the
present.
world speaking to ·around store's books, and some are ~~~t~~w:r~;r~:ti~Wl?~r~I?~~!r~:t~~: ~::~~r::~::1:1:)t!?~:~1:rtvr]f}J?1:k®f
50,000 people each month. His valuable collector's items.
mes sage is simple and
" Ali they do is empty the
:::_j·l
relevant. His topics include cash register." Gloss said
drugs,
sex,
rebellion, Wednesday after the latest ~
~
loneliness and fear.
break~n . "They don't touch a
By HUGH A. MULLIGAN couldn't abide the Brillsh
single book although there
AP Special Crrespondenl sense of humor. Some droll
are great treasures all
SALAD WITH
RIDGEFIELD, CONN. chap probably nailed his
around them ."
( AP) - Since April 1 falls on galoshes to the wardrobe
in the latest break ~n the a Sunday this year, there floor or put a live guppy in the
EVERY 3 PIECE OR
thieves netted a transistor ra- won 't be ~s many calls as pocket of his waistcoat.
. dio and abou.t $75 in cash. previously for Mrs. Sharkey Perhaps they asked him to
5 PIECE CHICK 'N
Gloss said he leaves a small and Ms. Perch at the phone
Vicky
or
AI
amount of money in the shop Aquari\[IIl, and the switch- imm ediately for an im·
OUT I)!NNER
talked to the group on high for just such occasions.
board at the Botanical portant personal message ,
blood pressure, what it can do
"I leave a little something Gardens may not be besieged and the number turned out to
MA.RCH 31 and APRIL 1
to the b&lt;Jdy. and how to treat so they don 't get indignant with inquiries fQr Theresa be the Victoria and Albert
it:
and destroy some of the Greene.
·
Musewn . .
(Saturday and Sunday Onlyl
Sandwiches, cookies, relish books," he explained. "! !eel
With offices closed for the
The British go absolutely
dish, and beverages were that' unless we raise the day, executive types won't be. bonkers on April Fools' Day.
served by the hostesses, . cultural level of our criminal returning from a long lunch The big London newspapers
Janice Daniels; Emogene element, our society is to find messages on their outdo themselves and each
Simms, Shorty Wright, Don- doomed."
desks urging them promptly other in trying to hoax their
na Abshire, Helen ·Jeffers,
to return the calls of these readers. Alew years back, on
Janice Jeffers, and Louise
Bonded Despite No Bond
very important people who April 1, the august Guardian
Bearhs.
MOUNTAIN HOME . Ark . visit only one day ofthe year. put out an entire special
(AP) - The Baxter County
Things may gang agley, section purporting to be an
,Jail isn't the most romantic however, at the country c!~b economic report on a tiny
place in town, but Jean and the town recreational island republic in the Indian
Erickson and Billy Joe Welch facility . The net may Ocean , which had lately
were married there be~ause suddenly collapse on the . gained its independence but
Get on the right track and keep things rollWelch couldn't raise $2,500 tennis court or the judge's , actually existed only in the
ing with these super new Skateboard
bond .
chair topple over on one gullible minds of the
Sneakers from Kid Power®. Special gripceremony
wa s shortened leg .' The hole will subscribers.
The
tight soles help you stay on your board.
, performed Wednesday in the be too small to receive the
llodoni was the capital of
Royal blue nylon and blue suede trim is
main hallway of the jail by gollball or the flagpole on the these mythical islands,
where the action is. Free Skateboard Safety
the Rev . Lynde! Harberson. A green may flutter a pair of "shaped like a semicolon,"
'Tips in every box.
blaring police radio served as lacy briefs. Someone will which should have provided
accompaniment .
have stitched up the rietting the first clues to the joke,
Weich. 17, of Mountain beneath the basketball hoop since all proper names in the
View, was jailed Feb. 23 on a or introduced bubblebath article, even the leaders of
second-degree forgery salts into the swimming pool. the ruling military junta,
charge. The new Mrs. Welch ,
The April Fool joke is alive were common printing
20. is free on bond on an and sick as ever, which is terms.
identical charge . The bride 's probably why T.S . Eliot
It was all jolly good fun,
brother. Robert Erickson, called it the cruelest month . rather like the "Not The New
who is being held on burglary He was an American, from York Times" parody newsMr. and Mrs. Gary Chap- and theft charges, was the St. Louis, working in a paper that appeared during
pel, Pomeroy, are annoWlc- best man .
London bank and no doubi last October's pressmen's
ing the birth of a son, Jason
strike and perhaps fooled
Scott, born Jan. 30 at the lim· A Chick, lbere A Chick
some New Yorkers into
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens.
thinking that the Roman
DECATUR, Ga. (AP) The baby weighed nine Schools like to mold yoWlg
Catholic Church had elected a
ALUMNI REUNION
pounds, five ounces.
Pope John Paul John Paul I
minds, but what can you do
PLANNED
Maternal grandparents are fur 2.000 baby chickens?
who died after 19 minutes in
The annual reunion of the office.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Police said Wednesday that
DeLong, Pomeroy, and the the chicks were found Pomeroy High School Alumni
From
a
spectator
paternal grandparents are roaming the halls of Association was set for 6:30 viewpoint, there is a lot to be
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chappel, Avondale Hi gh School and p.m. on May 26 at the Meigs said fQr the practical joke as
Salem. Maternal great- Columbia Seminary on High School when officers a morale bullder and a
and the executive committee tension re1iever1 in our
grQndparents are Mr. and Monday morning .
Mrs. Lando Clay, Chester,
hypertense society.
DeKalb County animal con- met recently.
Providing music for the
'
and Mrs . Karmel DeLong, trol director John llodie said
Pasting a dollar bill to the
be
held
in
con·
dance
to
Pomeroy, and the paternal pranksters broke into the
floor and watching the office
great-grandparent is Mrs. school and dumped some junction with the reunion will miser discreetly try to kick it
Meta Holt, Salem.
chicks in a hallway . before be "Whiskey Riverr". · The Wlder his desk can make your
N. 2nd Ave .
. apparently tripping the association will hold another whole week· any April I. An
Middleport , 0 .
burglar alarm. Another load meeting at 7: 30 p.m. audience is a must, of course,
of chicks was dumped at the Saturday in the basement of for this type of humbfin~
Trinity Church. All alwnni playlet , and the more
near by seminary, he said.
OPEN FRIDAY
" I'm sure it's considered are invited to attend and help elaborate the joke, the better
with
the
planning.
the
enjoyment
all
aroWJd,
humorous, but I personally
TIL 8 P. m•
This year's officers are Ed except for the victim.
don't feel that way," said
Avondale Principal Ames Kennedy, president; Joe
The Wahama Band are Kitchens. "This was a Struble, first vice president;
having a Minstrel, Friday, violation of school rules and George Korn, second vice
presid e nt ; Pauletta
April 6 and Saturday 7 at 7: 30 we plan to pursue it."
Harrison,
sec r et a ry
p.m. in the school gym.
llodie said he believes the
treasurer,
and
Marlene
Tickets will be $2 for adults chicks came from a local
Harrison,
assistant
secretary
and $1 for students. The hatchery .
But
police
tickets will be sold in advance spokesman Chuck Johnson treasurer. Executive com·
by band members, but will said, ''We've had no missing mittee members are Dan
Morris , Kenney Wiggins, Phil
.
also be available at the door. chicken re ports. n
Harrison, Linda Mayer,
Johnanna Shuler and Jane
Bourne.
SehcXtl library improve, F:femcntary School.
.
ment was a metin lnpie at a· James Soufsby reported on
recent meeti ng of the the ca rpet which the PTA
Pomeroy PTA held at the

. ...

..

heritage house
OF SHOES

Minstrel Show
Is Scheduled

Optometric V"asion.Center
liO Mechanic Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
414-992-3279
Office Hours:·
Monday -Friday
9-12-1·4 .
Examinations:
by Appointment

Optometrists:

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

'

VICKI FINK
Mrs. Vickie Fink, who was
Injured in ~n automobile
accident on March 22 is
confined to Pleasant Valley
Hospital where she is
scheduled to undergo surgery
today . Mrs. Fink was injured
in an earlier auto accident
last .June and was still
recovering from those in·
juries when the second accident occurred . Cards may
be sent to her at Itomn 130.
Pleasant Valley Hospit al,
!'oint Pleasant. W. \'a .

FiDe S..riDI
Weu:iq Apparel

For .Men and Women

At:

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
0pe11 All Dey
Thurs. and

�. 7::-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Mar. 29, 1!179

il l· · · · · · (;;~;·;;ti~·;;·· R;r;·· :·Jl

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By Helen and Sue Bottel . .::

SUP IN'I'liSOMF.'1111NG NF.W:
NATIONAl. 'LOVF. VOllRSELFDAY'
DEAR READERS:
Have you heard of the new "National Love Yourself Day,"
m·iginated last year by Forum Magazine? It sounds like a winner.
My friend, Dr. Joe Feinstein (who teaches "Singles Living"
"Death and ljving" and other sociologlcally orientt"&lt;l classes
at Grant High School, Van Nuys, Calif. ) was so impressed by
....
the holiday thai he asked his students to celebrate it in their
own special ways.
Their reports make you slop and think, "What would I do on
a day devoted strictly lome ? "
1;
One of Joe's students went' sailing by herself and indulged in
"thinking about bow my life has been and the things 1have accomplished ... I'd like lo live on a boat and sail around the
world.''
Wrote another, "I called my former fifth-grade teacher.
Then !look the freeway to my old house,. and saw some old
neighbors that we'd given our dog to. Not only could 1 not
believe they were still living there, but my dog was still alive.
It was fantastic to see Prince, and hard to say good-bye again.
Then I went to the park where we used to have Boy Scout
IMMUNIZATION TIME-These nurses gathered al the Meigs County Health Department · meetings. I sat on the swing and just thought about what a
•
great childhood I had. I felt like an adult."
offices in Pomeroy Tuesday to discuss iJTllllunizations in preparation for kindergarten roun•
dups in the three school districts. They are JoyGe Thoren, R. N., Southern School Local
A young ffi!in who had been working at a fast-fOQJ! fried
chicken restaurant decided he didn't like being burned by hot
School District: Opal Grueser, R. N. , Meigs County Health Department clinic nurse ; Mrs.
Mary Price, R. N., Eastern Local School DiStrict, seated, left to right, and Sharon Birch,
fat and dealing in grease, so he quit and got a better job. He
Meigs Local School District, standing .
might not have found the nerve without that day of self·
•
&lt;'
searching.
One introspeCtive girl took her horse out on lonely,
dangerous trails and discovered she was not afriad. She said,
"It was one of the best days I've ever had. I learned to enjoy
my own company and not need a hundred people around me to
fill in the gaps. I filled in my own gaps."
•
Then there was the young woman who · "let go of my
boyfriend. I finally realized nothing held me to · him
anymore .. .If he can't love me (for me), why am I wasting my
time-sexis not love. Thank you,Mr. Feinstein." •
Some people climbed mountains, others went to the beach,
Clinics are held at the
· Immunizations required. the state.
to places near and distanl, played out their fantasies,
drove
When parents take . their Health Department on every
for children entering
visited
relatives and friends. All threw themselves into "Love
kindergarten in tha,fall were children for the kindergarten Tuesday from I a.m. to It
Yourself
Day" with a vigor seldom evidenced on homework
in
their
respective
roundup
a.m. and from I p.m. to3p.m.
outlined by school nurses and
assigrunents.
1
school
distri
cts,
records
of
and the first Saturday of each
. a nurse of the Meigs County ,
Dr. Feinstein's favOrite response? A woman student wrote
Health Department this the children's immunizations month, ~:45a.m . to It :45a.m.
simply,
"I decided since I'm buying roses for everyone else all
must be presented. Nurses of No apppintment is required.
week.
the
time,
The nurses noted that the district Will be present to Parentll are requested to br- -HELENI'd buy myself some on my special day." And she did.
., children
must have the four evaluate the records and ing witli them whatever shot
diptheria, pertusis (whooping · make necessary recoinrnen· records they have. While all
immunizations can be gotten NOTE FROM SUE: Okay, readers, why not try ii? Give
cough ) and tetanus shots, dations.
The required immuniza- at the Health Department, yourself an "I Love Me Day ! " - then write and tell us how you
three for polio, measles and
rubella , and a recent tuber- tions can then be gotten the tuberculosis skin test is enjoyed it. Meanwhile, Mom and I will do the same and then
. culosis skin test • before they through a private physician, handled through the Tuber- we can exchange experiences. All righ
can
enrolled
for or at the Meigs County Health culosis and Health Associa- DEAR RAP :
Department free of charge.
tion on Mulberry Heights.
~ kindergarten. The immunizaReading about some of these children who boss their parents
tion program is required by
around (and the parents sit and lake it, then how I to you), I'd
say they should learn that child guidance is for parents to provide, notsubritit to. -J.T.S.

1
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SPECIAL SINGERS -The Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness Cliurch on Route 143 will be
holding a revival meeting from MarCh 30 through April 8 starting at 7:30p.m. nightly .
Providing special singing will be Rev . Billy Watts and Family of Seymour, fnd . (pictured
above) . The pastor, Rev. Dewey King, invites the public,

. To

EASTER FINERY
ITS ALL AT TliE KIDDIE SHOPPE
r~ou;;;y;--~~--

Children 's immunizations
..
outlined by school nurses

,.

jennifer Ohlinger honored by shower ·

Jennifer Ohlinger was
honored with a bridal shower
recently. Hosting the shower
were Shelly Roush, Susan
Swann, Gail Pierce, Shirley
Roush, Sue Walker, and ·
· Gwen Ferguson.
Cake, punch, nuts and
mints were served. Games
were played with prizes going
'

.

to Pam Imboden, Rhoda Erma Booth, Susan Sprague,
Nelson. C~thy Cremeans won Brenda Neutzling, Cindy
the door prize.
Haggy, Margo Martin, Ida
Others attending were Sal- Martin, and Wendy Swiuli\.
ly Pierce, Terri, Kim and
Sending gifts ·were Angelo
Lori Roush, Naomi Ohlinger, Martin, . Rose Ohlinger,
Sue Grueser, Edna Green, Gladys Walker, Crystal
Vicky Cundiff, Gwen Folmer, •Glaze, Sarah Dawson,
Jill Well, Lynn Mowery, Ann · Elizabeth and Conrad OhlObitz, Geri and Sean Walton, Inger., and Anna and Betty
Wiles.

r·-··~··-·-·-·-----------,

I

Social Calendar.

THURSDAY
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION,
United Presbyterian Church,
Middleport, 7:30 Thursday
night at the church. Mrs.
Joseph Bailey to have devotions ; Mrs. Joseph Davis to
show film on Egypt. Overseas
se sewing to be dedicated.
Group
I
to
have
refreshments.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, meeting at
7 p.m. Friday with work in
the Master Maspn Degrees;
all Master Masons invited.
SATURDAY
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters, 2
p.m. Saturday, Middleport
Masonic Temple, for the annual inspection . Dollie
Rousey is honored queen.
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Chapter, Beta Sigma ~
Sorority, 8 p.m. Saturday at
the home of Mrs. Lillian
Moore for a spring fling.

MIDDlfPORT DEPT. STORE'S

WEEKEND
SPECIAL
PRE-WASHED DENIM
WESTERN STYLE

JEANS
Sz. 28·42

Re g. pr ice$11.95
This
weeke nd
only

I

SUNDAY
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
rehearsal, 2 p.m. Sunday at
the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY SALON
710 • E'"hl
16'•. and Forty • home of
Mrs. ~uha Hrsell, 7:30 ~onday mght Wllh Mrs. Eileen
Searles, hostess.
B. H. SANBORN Missionary Society, 7:30 Monday
evening, Middleport First
Baptist Church, annual
r.llowship tea. Mrs. Betty
Fultz to be the guest speaker
on her trip to China and
Japan last year.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN
Club, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
the Middleport firehouse .
Mrs. Fred Kessinger and
Mrs. Rita Hanun will be
hostesses. Program by Mrs.
David Bowen. Display of
.Audubon bird prints by Mrs.
John Davis.

· PollyCramer
Ink stain-

won't wash

J.

DEAR POLLY - A ballpoint pen accidentally got in
with a load of colored clothes
and the main target was my
husband's wash-and-wear
work pants. I tried hair spray
but it did not work so would
appreciate other suggestions.
·DORIS.
DEAR DORIS - If .the
water were hot you may have
set the stains but you might
try placing the pants with
stains down on some paper
towels •. spri~kle the back_of
the slams WJ!h a dry clearung
· solution and hopefully
transfer them to the towels. If
·
ta'
..
b ·h
any s IDS re~ln ru wit

bar soap, rinse and launder.POLLY
DEAR POLIN -- My
da·ugl)ter ta ugh! me
something that I should have
known myself if I had used a
bit of common sense. After
washing wooden handled ·
utensils drain them with the
wooden part up - otherwise
the water runs down into the
wood and causes it to rot. HATTIE

•

!

·--..------

BULLFROG KNIT SUITS

Aiso see 1
Boys' '&amp; Girls'

Kristen Pape, daughter of
Jim and Judy Pape,
celebrated her eighth birth·
day on March 27 with a party ·
Sunday.
A pink, blue and white Hoi'
ly Hobbie theme W'IS carried
out. Attending were Shelly
Connolly, D. J . Harden, Todd
Usle, Cheryl Pape, Usa
!'ape, Sarah Philson, Shan·
non Slavin, Chris Stout,
Becky Wihebrenne
Refreshments of cupcakes,
ice cream cups, koolaid, and
potato chips were ser.oed. A
family party was held SlUiday
evening.

and Jackets

........

Low heeled for all day comfort ...
refreshm~ leminine styling for the fashion Wise.

THE SHOE BOX

,WEEKEND GUESTS
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Harrison Smith and
family of Racine were Jim
Smith, Armond Beach, Fla.;
Edugene, Cindy, Tina aod
Kelly Smith, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Curtis Smith and
Kristi; Weston, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenny Smith and
Dale, Letart, W. Va.; Mr. nad
Ml"ll. Danny Vannes and Kim
S!nith, R.llvenswnod, W.Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Smith
~nd twin ""ns, Middleport;
Ge11e Hondashelt and
llrph••w, Pomeroy, and Miss
r.,mi&lt;• Smith, Chillkolht•.

,.

·- •

estern ·

."

•

...•

SERVICE • SALES

J

des

Whether you're at home on the
range. on campus. or in town ... the
styles you like best point West!
Find those rugged and dis·
tinctive looks here;

f
r

•

"••
~

18" MOWER
3 HP

$5.
SQUAD CALLED
Teh Middleport ER Squad
was called Wednesday at 9:37
p.m. for James Wolfe, 355
Ash Street, who was having
difficulty breathing. He was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

VULCAN
'-21" MOWER

•'

~an's
••
•,.',,
,, .

. a3oot · 5~op

MTD TOP FLITE

'9995

··-•
•
••
'

0

·only "10495

~

Middleport

•

Bats

••

Western &amp; Dress
by •JUSTIN
•CHAMBERS
•TONY lAMA
•NACOMA

1008.

SIGN-UP SET
Sign up for the Racine
Summer League program,
pony league, girls leagti~.
little league, pee wee leagu~.
and T-ball will be held at the
kindergarten
building
Saturday, March 31 from 10
a.m. until noon.
AI'Y adult interested in
ass1sting in the program
should contact Bill Porter at
. 949-2009. Registration fee is

c

SHOPPE
.......
.
.-nov. o.

Defense cutbacks hit
Ohio's labor market

•

•"r

~DIE

CLYDE SMITH
r.tarine Gunnery Sergeant
Clyde R. Smith, whose wife,
Stella, Is the daughter of
Jesse Farrell· of Hysell Run
Road, Rutland, bas reported
for duty at Marine Corps Air
Station, Cherry Point, N. C.
A 1958 graduate of Rutland
High School, he joined tlie
Marine Corps In September,

~

~

•"'

t:• ,, .,..

UNDERWRITERS MEET - The Meigs-Galla-Mason Ufe Underwriters Association
met Wednesday at the Meigs Inn with Kenneth C. Mlekush, eJ&lt;ecutive vice president of
marketing, Columbus National Life Insurance Co., and a member of the board of directors.
Mlekush spoke on insurance trends for the future and how-they will affect the buying public .
All local life insurance agents are invited to join the association. Meetings are held the third
Wednesday of each month at noon at the Meigs Inn. Attending were Gene Ri~s. Bill
Russell, Don Stanley, Walter Gtueser, Don Thomas, Ron Toler, Andy_Toler, Garland Davis
and Bill Quickel. Mlekuilh, centel', is shown with Walter Grueser, left, and Bill Russell,
rildlt.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio will be asked to shoulder
26.5percen,t of a)l the Defense
Department cutbacks nation-

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EXTENDED WEATHER
Saturday through
Monday: fingering·
showers possible Saturday.
Partly clou~y Sunday.
Rain . possible Monday.
Hlgbs tborugh the period
averaging from the 50s In
the oortli to the 60s In the
south, Lows averaging
from the upper 30s to the
mid 40s.

I

'
•f

Sz. 2T-14 as well as other fine Windbreakers

- · """ lot.

Cour.ty Board of Education
received a direct allotment of
$16,565.70.

f

•••
•

SQUAD RUN
The , Pomeroy ER Squad
was called at 11 :46 a.m.
Wednesday to the William
Justice residence on Willow
Creek Road. A small boy had
a laceration of the finger . He
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Other mowers available at:

MOORE'S
POMERoY~ C •

~

'

'

.." .
..

"

•
I
I

.ENJOY
FRESH FARM COOKING
RIGH-T AT THE FARM.

•Bone
•Camel
•Brown
•Black

""

..I•

..... ...

a

•

SATIN JACKETS

DEAR POlLY - To preDEAN'S LIST
vent an odor when' cooking
Mary
A. Tucker, Rt. 2,
sauerkraut and other su&lt;-h
Danville,
has been named to
vegetables place a piece of
at
the
Dean's
List
fresh white bread on the pan
Muskingum
Area
Technical
lid and the bread will absorb
College (MATC) in Zanessteam and odor.
ville,
for the Winter Quarter.
DEAR POLLY - When goName Stamped Free
ing to a club meeting or fami- To be placed on the Dean's
ly gathering put a brown Ust, a student must attain a '
· Open 9-5 Mon. thru Sat.
store sack in your purse and · minimum grade point
Frid;,y nighttill8 p, m.
,• .,_
when you take off your bool~ average of 3.50 for the
Ten years ago: A mree..:tay put them in the sack that has quarter.
state funeral for former your name printed on it. The
P r e s i d e n t D wig b t noor stays clean and you will
Eisenhower
began in have no trouble finding your
Washington.
own boots when ready to .
Five years ago: The Nixon leave.- MRS. M.B.
f:.
White House agreed to . DEAR POLLY - Shirley
surrender all the Watergate wrote that she removed the
materials subpoenaed by odor of fresh fish from her
Special . Prosecutor Leon hands by washing them with
Jaworski.
soap and sugar but my way is
One Y~r ago: President less expensive. Prepare your
Car_ter arnved in Brazil for a dish water for cleaning the
two-day visit and indicated he tools you have used and
wanted to discuss the touchy , moisten your hands with cold
iss~es. of human rights and water. Put one-fourth teas·
Eating good farm cooking is always great,
nUclear limitations.
poon either dry o prepared
but there's something special about eating
mustard on your hands and
. use as if il were soap. Rinse
farm fresh food in a restaurant that's located
off in the dish Water and wash
the tools. No fish smell. Some
right at the farm .
may prefer using a bit more
At Bob Evan's Sausage Shop you not only
mustard. -VERA
Polly will send you one of
get delicious farm -size helpings of your favorher signed thank -you
ite farm dishes, but you get true farm atmosnewspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
phere and trlendly .service to gq with them .
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
So pack your kids in the car and drive on
POINTERS In care · of this
over. We hope to see you soon.
newspaper.

•WMe

..
..

l-~~:.~~~-Y!~::'_!~~!~-Turns eight

••
•

i.

IN, SIZES INFANTS, TODDLERS AND 4-8
HAVE ARRIVED. STOP IN SOON

Kristen Pape

The March state school
foundation subsidy payment
• of $73,672,259.85 to 611 Ohio
~
• cities, exempted village and
•" local scho!ll districts and 87
county boards of education
•
X was reported by State
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
•• Wednesday.
~ '
Meigs County's three local
•• diStricts
received a total· of
•· • $264,148.74 which 1included
!'13,348.43 fo r EaMstem LoLocal ;
~
ol27,759.50 1or e1gs
ca1,
..
and $63,040.81 for the South,, • em Local District.
••
•·
In addition, the Meigs
~

JOGGING SUITS

Granville Windom of Canby,
Ore; a grandson , Wilbur V.
Reed, Jr., Mansfield; two
granddaughters,
Arlene
Wisebaker and Carllene Jepp
of Marion; three greatgrandsons and several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death
by sister, Violet Scott. '
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the
White Funeral Home In
Coolville. Rev. Walter A.
Carney will officiate. Burial
will be in the Heiney
Cemetery at Reedsville.
Calling hours will be held at
the .funeral home after noon
Friday.

Meigs schools get 1264,148

-••

From

I

DELCIAREED
Delcia 0. Reed, 64, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, died Wednesday
afternoon at her home
following an extended Ulnllllll.
She was born at Dille, W.
Va., a daul!hler of the late
David and MIMle Windom. ·
She was a member of !he
Joppa United Methodist
ChurCh and bad resided .in the
Joppa commwtity for the
past 50 years.
Surviving are her husband,
George W. Reed, a son,
Wilbur V. of Marion, three
brothers, Coleman Windom,
Cox Mllls, W. Va.; Millard
Windom, Widen, W. Va., and

{

Lawyers assume roles

Area Deaths !

I

•
·'••'
•
•

•••

•

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

;

••
•
•'

wide. to be announced today
. by the Pentagon, according to
the state's congressional
delegation.
Ohio's 23 congressmen and
two senators sent a letter
today to the White House
asking for a prompt, detailed
of
Defense
analysis
to
Department
plans
eliminate 5,300 defenserelated jobs in the state.
The de legation said the cut
hacks will affect militaryfacilities in Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Columbus,
Dayton , Youngstown and
Springfield.
fn a letter to Stuart E. Eizenstat, the White House's
domestic affairs advisor,.the
delegation said anticipated

of 174 counts by the grand
jury in 1974. Cases against
five were disposed of earlier
and U.S. district Judge
Robert M. Duncan has
.thrown out all but 15 counts of
th e indicbnent, most of them
against the corporation .
With Chaifetz taking the
role of Justice Deparbnent
lawyer Robert Courtney and
Mrs. Kahn on the witness
stand they read through
grand jury statements by
Zitko and Marks.' rn the
testimony, the two denied
knowledge of tampering with
filters used to gather
respiratory dust sarpples and
denied any roles In the
destruction of records the day
U.S. marshals raided mine
offices seeking evidence of
false data sampling and

reporting.
The testimony included Zit·
ko 's statements about laying
off Paul Bobak, an employee
i n Consolidatio n 's
environmental offices In
eastern
Ohio .
Bobak
repertedly was the first
per9:m to approaCh federal
official s with reports of false
reports after he was laid off.
Zitko said he was ordered to
make cutbacks and Bobak
was just "One of several
persons affected.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight .
Showers possible by morning.
Lows in low 59s. Mostly
cloudy , windy and mild
Friday.

Blakeslee
(Continued from page I )
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dutton,
Mr. and Mrs. John Werner,
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Baker, ·
Mr. and Mrs. Tim King, Mr .
and Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Owen, Blakeslee,
Miss Ingels, Mr. and Mrs.
·George Ingels and Mrs.
Audrey Davenport .

consideration of non..:lefense
local, state and federal Free course offered
government costs.
The Bossard Library.
Among those costs are In- Gallipolis, wlll be the site of a
c~eased unemployment bene- f
bo tin
f
fits, food stamps and welfare, ree
a g sa e1Y course.
decreased tax revenues ,
The course is offered as a
impact on local schools and cooperative program of the
R1'o Gra de C liege
d
the overall toll on property Co
'tn Coli g Off! an f
tax basesJ n the state .
nunuru Y
e e
ce o
The Defense Depa~·nent is Continuing Education, the
'"
U 1't d St t s Co st G d
ae
a
uar
exempted from President 1 n e
Auxiliary and the Galliprilis .
Carter's •order that any c· R
. B d
lty
oar ·.
government reall'gnJ!Ient be
A .1ecrea.tlon
2 ll be th f st f
accompanied by urban and .
Pfl WI
. e IT . o ,
comm.unity impact analys.fs:s, .':. se.ven class sess1ons which
"
ill
tM d
7!!
and the Ohio ~elegation w mee on ays, • p.m.,
criticized this positi6n.
through May 14.
"We request that you (EiInstructors from. the U. S.
zenstat) initiate urban Coast Guard Auxil~arr Will
impact analyses 'Qf the lea~ ~lasses 10 safety,
reallgnments immediately navlgabon, and other aspects
and that these studies tie of power boat operation on
:,:v~f;!o:;th;/~%~~~~ completed and forwaroed to mland ~aterways. .
losses throughout Ohio and us within 30 days, " the
CertifiCates will be Issued
extra governmental costs .a( delegation asked in its letter. to those :Who complete the
and course
let'
l'f comother levels of government · Meanw h1'l e, sen. Ra 1Ph course,
·
R
1
R-Oh
'
·d
P
1on
may
gua
TheOhioanssaidtheywere
egu a,
IO,
sal
b t
· fo 11 y some
·
~Wednesday
the
Air
Force
had
oa
ow
~ners
or
ower
mdeepIy concerned about l ~ ~..)
.
suranc rates .
"narrow focus" of the confirmed that the Q\lfense
'st . f th' f
'
Departmen t
" 1s boToreg1:er
or 1s ree
Defense
Department's
rea ugnmen
. 8af
11
analysis of the realignnients, . would include th_e pullmg out Be~~egMu
P~:~;~· ~~
which did not include · of the 301st Air Refuelmg
rp y, .
• ·
Wing from Rlckenbacker Air • 2!i5, or attend the f1rst class,
·Force Base near Columbus . . Monday, April 2.
Regula said units of the
RIDDLE FOR TODAY
301st will be disbursed to
In what present day other Air Force units around
buUding in Middleport was the country, resulting in a
the S. M. Hysell business, loss to the central Ohio
(Continued from page I)
(establis!i~d 1863) Wholesale economy of 1,716 military
and Retail Dealer in Hard- jobs and 396 civilian posts . guests and past commanders
and Grace Pratt, auxiliary
.ware, Stoves and Tinware
president introduced
located ? Meigs History Book
auxiliary
guests and past
free stqry deadline April '5.
NO MORE
presidents and on behalf of ·Yesterday 's answer - at
GUN SHOOTS
the auxiliary presented the
Greenler near Horner Hill in
Meigs residents are ad- post With a gift of money.
Scipio Township and at vised that the Racine Gun
Life memberships were
Leonard about two and one- Club will not hold anY.more
half miles southeast of gun shoots oh Sunday until in presented Guy Guinther and
DanvlUe in Salem Township. the fall. Effective this Fdday Mickey Williams.
Refreshments were served
a shoot will be 'held at 6:30
••1
at the close of the meeting.
p.m.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Dana
Covert, Pomeroy; Betsy
We.aver, Middleport; Martha
Bailey, Reedsville;
Lawrence Ritchie, Portland;
'·
Herman Jacob Werry ,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Rober
Riffle, Charles Eads, Freda
Duff, Mark Casto, Alice
Clark, Mary Siders, Naomi
Bentley, Teresa Whitlock.

New fdr spring
from Vogue ... ,
the classic
- dress sandal.
Super comfort
and fit on just
the right heel
height.;

t

Birthday

SPEAKERS NAMED
A meeting of the Salem
Center
Educational
Organization will be held at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Salem Center School .
Speakers , will be Dwight
Goins and DHn Morris of the
central office of the Meigs •
Local District. Refreshments
will be served. The public Is
invited.

•I

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"

~ - ~· ~~

New York

Clothing House
126 E. MAIN

S®

SAUSAGE SHOP

POMEROY, 0.

Route 35 • Rio G~ande. Ohio

r

·'

I.

CORRECTION
New Haven assistant police
chief, Larry Duncan has
issued a correction on a
reported drug arrest made
Saturday by his department.
Duncan said William F.
Fry, Jr., 25, Mason, bas not
been legally charged with
possession of marijuana, as
the Sentinel was Informed
Wednesday, j&gt;ut was arrested
for driving while under the
' influence only.
·

-

..

.) ·

White
Black Pate nt
Camel

) MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Betty Ohlinger
-102 E. Main

Pomeroy , 0 .

IDpplty-hop

your way lrito
's
heart with

an Easter

Card!

r--/fJnA~fff~A
Creative excellence Is an American tradition .

--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-t 'Ktnne!IJ Mc!;ullougb,
~. I'll.
C!Yrlu Riffle, R. Ph
Ranalcl Hanning, R. Pll

•

Mon. lllru Sat. 8:00 o.m. tof p.m.

Sunday 10:30 to 12 :30 and 5 io 9 p.m.

GUEST SPEAKER
Richard Long will be the
guest speaker Friday at 7:30
at the Nease Settlement
Church . The pul&gt;lic is invited. ·

PH. 992·2644

Melissa

1

ti

FLORIST

°

..'

DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON't' DO IT.~

IP'A

Hy JOE McKNIGHT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Two government lawyers
· have assumed roles of grand
jury wi\ness and coWISelor in
federal court in order to give
a trial jury portions of grand
)ury testimopy by two
defendants.
It hawened Wednesday in
the trial of Consolidation Coal
Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa., and
three of its employees. AU are
charged with conspiring to
submit false reports to the
government on resplrab'le
dust particles In the
atmosphere in underground
coal mines.
Government attorneys
Lauren Kahn and Richard
Olaifetz read into the.record,
and for the benefit of the
three-man, nine-woman jury,
portions of testimony given to
a federal grand jury nearly
fiveyearsagoby Raymond J .
Zitko of New Athens, a safety
director for the coal firm, and
Francis Leo Marks of St.
Clairsville, chief
environmental technician for
Consolidation.
They, along with Robert
Lasick of Bridgeport , an
environmental
technician,
and the corporation are
charged with violating
portions of the Coal Mine
Health and Safety Act of 1969.
They were among eight
employees indicted on a total

PH . ,z.am

PRESCRI PTJONS
Friendly. Service
E. Miin

.,

Open

Nights till9

Pomeroy; O.

�•

8- Th&lt;&gt;D6tly Senttnd,
Friday , M•rch 30

M
211 !liill
Mttldlepor\-Pumt•t "l' 0 , Tl tilt'' ' I,t) . .u

As'Ro GRAPH
•

Bernice Bede Osol

'-Your

'Birthday
March 30, t979
F'rogreas wil l come th is comm g
year by set1mg deflntte goa ls
and sticking to them Don ' t be
tempted to make change for
change 's sake
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
You re a bi t too apathetic concer ning you r possessions
today It's th is kind of attitude
that creates carelessness and
loss Be careful Discover with
who m you best get along romantically b~ sendmg for you r
new Astro·Graph , P 0 8011.489
Mall $1 lo Astro-Graph , P 0
Box 489 RadiO City Slatlon,
N Y 10019 Be sure to srec 1fy
btrth s ign
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Springing last· mlnute ch anges
on people today wil l not only
disrupt their plans but also give
you a headache you dtd n t
ba rga in tor
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Try
not to look for an e~tcuse to put

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr. and Mrs Kenneth
Limmg of Xema, Oh1o v1s1ted
with Mr and Mrs Homer
C1rcle, Verna and Wavle,
recently.
Mr a nd Mrs.
James Ctrcle of New Haven,
W Va spent Sunday w1th
Mary Circle.
Mr and Mrs. Arthur E .
Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl
LeAnn spent Sunday evening
with Mr and Mrs Douglas
Johnson of Racine.
Cathy Johnson and son ,
Margaret Tuttle of Eagle
Ridge and Julie Rose of
Bashan v1sited a t the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
on-Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Glen
Ables of Bald Knobs were at
the C1rcle home on Sunday.
Mr and Mr s Douglas
Ctrcle attended a birthday
party for Margaret Tuttle of
Eagle Ridge on Fnday night.
Mr and Mrs. David Stwnp
of Bidwell, Oh10 v1sited wtth
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas C1rcle
recently.
Mr and Mrs W1lltam
Carleton of Racm e called at
the 1\rthur Johnson home on
Monday evemng.

off something you promsed to
do tor another today. even
thOugh you probably could

For Best Results Use Sentinel Oassifieds.

come up wit h a lulu
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be
care ful you don t lnadverte n
hurt someone s feelings today
because you ' d rather be wl
someone else 11 won t
e
worth It '" th e long ru'n
. LEO (July 23-Aug. ZZ) If others
aren 'l producing as yo u thmk
they should today. II JUSt may
be your fault Make ce rtain to
give cl ear mstructions and to
define your goals
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept 22)
Going against what your common sense tells you IS right Is
always a mistake Don 't be
enticed today Into doing something you'd rather not
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) In

actlVIt!es where teamwork is
requ~red to reach the goal ,
patience will be needed You
couiQ suffer a loss If you get
edgy and push prematurely
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
mig ht be fo rced to put the
priorities of others abo ve your
own toda~ It you can 't change
thi ngs don ' t add to your trustatlo n Cooperate with a smile
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) If you have a spectflc JOb to
do you 'd better organize the
steps or yo u' re likely to create
a lot of unnecessary work for
yourself
,
CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19)
Social plans could be changed
a\ th e last minute today Take
things In stride Don ' t demand
friends conform to a rigid program Go along with the group
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19) It
you feel li ke your back Is up
against the wall loday take a
second look Chances are t he
way you're going about things
Is all wrong
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Unless you plan an Iti ne rary
today . you re likely to do a lot
ol needless running around
Map out a route Don t head oft
on a wild goose c hase

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 words or Under
C'..Hsh

ChHrge
\25

I tluy
2r l~:~y~o~

\50

190

Sodly m1ssed hy mollw1

Jtlays

\80

225
375

Thr Goorlwtn

300

r"
h1 n~mory, Curd uf Thanh aru.t.;
Olllluary &amp; ctnls pt'T Wl)!d, $3 00
rmmmwn Cl:lsh In udvan:t.e

•

'

,.
,.

fom1ly

to t't!Jt or reJect any ads deemt!d objec:hunal The Publisher Will not be
~spwlsl hl t' lor more than one tnL"Orr'ft I mser11on
Phone 992-21~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mondtty
Noo11 on Saturdot}

Tuesday

lhru Fnday
IP M

the day before publu.: allon
Sund1:1y

IP M
Fn dwy a l~At moon -

Monthly
Flnanc1al Statemen1
January 1979
Balances Df;!C . 31. 1978
Co unty Genera l S 254 329 23
Ju\1' Probation
1 000 00
Auto L1 ce nse &amp; Gas 87 339 78
Board of Educa1ron 71 42 4 51
Trr County Men tal
126 08
Health
9 238 04
Bd of He a ll h
Assessmg Rea I
P r operty
30 111 22
Me1g s cou nt y Alc:ohol rc
Program
249 82
Food Serv •ce
1 468 70
Stat e
129 l 2
SchOOlS
2,559 89
Co r poratro ns
7 37
Townshr ps
16,5.45 80
Und C1garettes
270 10
Und General Real
Estate
19 2.55 1 89
Und Tr ailer Ta x
5,871 47
Und Genera l Pe r sona l
Ta x
38,355 19
Und General Cla ss1 fr ed
Ta x
138 30
Men t al Reta rded
T rtl e I
699 04
Estate Tax Charge 76,764 99
Local Govt In ta ng ib les
45,605 38

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF OMAH B
SMITH , DECEASED
Case No. 12639

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
o n March 24, 1979, rn th e
Meigs County Proba te Co urt.
Case No
22639. Ph ylltS
Van tnwagen . 1684 Lmcoln
HerQ hts, Pomero y, Oh1o 45769
was appomt ed E:.c.ecutrtx of
the Estate of Omah B Smith,
dece ased, late of VIllage of
Pome r o)l, Me1gs Coun t y,
OhiO
Robert E Buck
Prob ate Judg e
Clerk
(3 ) 29, (4) 5, 12, 3tc

•

YCCtP LE~~~~~~~c,;OR
PROPOSALS
YOUTH COMMUNITY
CONSERVATION AND
IMPROVEMENT
PROJECTS
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
ADMINISTRATIVE
SERVICES
The Off rce o f Manpo wer
De\l e lopm ent 1S a r1noun c tng
pla ns for a B1dd eJs Co n
fe r e n c e to be h e ld 1n
Columb us on Apnl 9, 1979
Th e purpose of thiS co n
ter en ce 1S t o distr1bute "
proposals on Youth Co m
mun •I Y Con se r v atr on a nd
Im p rovem e nt
Pro 1ec t s
{YCCI P) un de r T1tle IV of the
comprehensrve E mpl oyme nt
an d Trar ni ng Act of 1978
(C ETA J E m p loyment a nd
tramtng op por tun1t1es Will be
offered un der th ese work
e)( pe r ie nc e pro te c ts to youth ,
ages 16 to 19 , rn c lusrve, who
ar e econom rca ll y disad
vantaged and o ut of sc ho ol
Appro prt ate e ff orts sha ll be
made to ms ure that )IOu th s
partr cip a tt nQ
1n
th ese
prot ec ts sha ll be made to
tn su r e that youths p ar
11c1 patmg .n these protec ts
shall be those who are ex
pe r. c n c 1ng diftiCu ltt es m
ob tamrn g emp loymen t those
who req urr e subs tantral ba s te
and
r emed ia l
Ski ll
development, tho se who are
women , m rnor rt1 es, \l'ete ran s,
off en ders handr capped o r
those w th d e pendents All
opportun 1t rres will be made
ava il able wt thout r egar d to
race cr eed cojo r nat rona !
orr g rn sex . age, hand1cap,
po lrt rca l atfr lra tr on , or be liefs
YCClP
will
pr ovtde
comm unrt y
se r v 1ce
op
portu n rh es thr ough labor
rntenst\l'e co m m un i t Y con
serva tron and 1mprov eme nt
protects
wh1ch
. wou ld
athe rwt se not be ear n ed ou t
Th• s progr am wtll s up
plemcn t , but 1101 r eplace
progra m s and act.vttre s
availa bl e und e r T1tle II B of
CE TA The geograph tc area
serve d 1S th e Balance of Sta te
(80S) Protect du ra t1on may
range fro m 7 to 12 months.
beg tnnrng Octobe r 1. 1979
through Sept embe r 30, 1960
1 Pro jec t size wrll be irm1ted to
1 between SSO,OOO and $200 ,000
The Brd ders con fe r ence Wi ll
'provrdc rnte r es t ed applican ts
With prog ra m and app lrca t ron
1mtorm a t ron and for ms These
proposals ar e to be subm ttf Cd
to the Offtc:e of Ma n powe r
Developme nt on or before
Ap ril 27 , \979
Add rt ro nal
1nformatro n may be obtatncd
fro m Douglas B Ma rt rn ,
Spec ral Plannrng , 30 East
Broad Street. 27 th Floor ,
,col umbu s, Ohro 43215 at
(6 14)466 8326 or 1 800 282 2050
{tol l free)
Rese r vations
must be made by March 30,
197 9 and may be made
thro u gh Che r yl E ns len a t th e
same address and ph on e
numbe r s
Marc h 29

We hav e openmgs for Manager tram ees now Phone
Mr S nodgras~a 1992 2111 to arra ng e fora conftdentt~l ,
per sona l tnterv1ew

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES
l

300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Oh1o 4S76CJ ,
AN EQ UAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

ElliOTT

lANE DANIELS

APPLIANCE li
220 E. ~In Street,
Pomeroy, 0.
C.lf 992-7113
"For Free £stlm'ates

_
_... _
..... .

GARAGE

Service

st.

,-.

o.

~

~--

1'1

OLD FURNITURE rce bo•es bras s
beds •ron beds deslo.s etc
co mple te houSeholds Wnle
MD Mrtle r Rt 4 Pome roy or
coll992 7760
~ ~ · · OLD COINS poc ke t we lches
cl ass rtn~s , wed dmg ba nds
d1omonds Gold or s1lve r Call
Roe rWom sley 742 233 1
WANT TO buy old 45 a nd 78
pho no graph records
Coli
992 6370 or Contact Mor lm Fu r
mtu re •
_ _
WANT TO buy old tewelry Coli
992 5262 or wr rte Kay Cectl 87
s 2nd Mrddleport OH
. .
~
WANT TO buy you ng fryer rob
1
brts &lt;1 1 to6 1bs Coll99230 17

SMitH r,IILSON

MOTORS, INC.

Registered
Polled
Hereford Dispersal Safe of
Wayne Jtvoden, Gallipolis,
0 on Saturday, Aprol7th at
6:30 PM, Gallia Co.
Fairgrounds. Sellong bulls,
cows with calves open and
bred hoofers

CO UNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Rou te 33 north of Pomeroy
l0! 9! l~t~ ~~199'!_ 7 -4~9
J AND 4 BM fu rn 1shed and un
furnr s hed
opts
Ph one
992 5434

FOR CATALOG WRITE :

--~------·

. .

90
C

-- - -- ·-· · --

ROLLING ACRES ol good
pos ture Plen ty of wottte r
o

u

I

o cc omodote 50 plus
6 \4 667 3396

d

cattle

CARL BIRNEY

Real Estate lor Sale

YARD SALE J mr \es wes t of Tup
pers Plorns March 30 31 Aprrl
1 6 7 and 8th Vtn cent Hawk
res1dence
~~--·~--GARAGE SA LE Ja mes Mays
go rage 11, mrl e off Rt 7 on CR
25 at Chesler 9 5 Fr r and Sot
12 5 Sun March 30.31 Aprrl 1
fr-,..e fomrlres Wot:h_f ~ s 1g~s~
YARD SAl E Bacl(yord sole Satu
day March 31 9 trl 4 ol the
Boum Addrtron the Jock Morrrs
, restdence Rom cancels
YARD SALE Odds and ends
Satu rday Ma rc h 31st 9 lo 5
930 Logon St Mrdd l e p~r~ .

Mark Your Calendar!
Come Register at

SPRING SALE

JACK

W.

CARSEY,
MGR.

PH . 992-2181
;

~-=

==

_-::.:

~·~;. ~

LIME STONE sond gro"el
Aulo'S&amp;fei _ ~ :. ~ ::;.:= ~ COAl
calCi um ch londe ferhlr zer dog
fo od a nd all types of soli E•
celsr or Salt Works In c E Morn
1977 OLDS CUTLASS S P 5 P B
St Pome roy 992 3891
A C crut se conlrol AM rodlo
Less than 14 000 m1les $5200
EVERYTHING S GOTT A GO
992 34.42
House a nd lot
fu rn rture
clot hes co r oil my household
1972 DODGE DART Swmger P S
rtems Drop by 760 laurel S!
P B A C rod rols factory mag
M1ddlepc:rt
whee ls 54 000 mr les Real
good cond1h on Be rge wrt h DINETTE SET marble table top 6
be 1ge Yln yl lo p 997 557 4 oher
cho1rs brown and whr le Used
5
I mon th 5200 Four 16 tn
wheels Best offe r 992-7762
1973 BUICK CENTURY
Low
mrlea ge 55 000 mdes Good O NE USCD goroge door One
ttrcs $950 985 3857
sl1 ghtly damaged f1hng cobrnet
Several used chorn sows
I978 FORD BRONCO .tOO eng1ne
Pomeroy Home a nd Auto 600
-4 speed 8000 m1les New l1 res
t:ost Mom St
l ois of e)( lros $7000 843 3053
1970 DODGE DART Fo1~ condt 1975 FORD F 250 4 wheel drtYe
Pho ne 992 5378
lron $300 992 51 47
1966 G T 0 Excelle nt cond1flon 17 FOOT fr be rg loss boot ond
trorl er
Three fourth h p
H gh perform a nce 7.42 12-49
mola r Call7.47 253b

INSURANCE
~EAL ESTATE

;&gt;'
Surrouno y o urself w1th success. Call us
lnr all y o u r tnsurance or real estate
problems .
Established 1868
Phone 992-2342 Eve . 992 -2449

DOWNING-CHILDS
B1ll. Be . Mgr .

10

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOtOR

I

Route 1
Freeport, Ohoo
43973

AUC TION FRIDAY 7pm
B1g
truck load from Ctnncrnnotl ot
Oh ro RIVer Auction 537 Hrgh
St M1ddleport Oh1o

r

SHOP
651 Beech Street
Middleport,

0.

lfft~~ fi)1} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

'•

BORN I.OSF.R

"- .

Real Estate lor Sale

AJJ,,P6 Wf.G M'f
FAmE;R !%FORe
IJf, I A0FJ:.AT

608E.
MAIN

0.

NEW LISTINGS - Good
slreet In Middleport , 2
stories,
3
bedrooms,
equ1pped k1tchen, formal
dining , ntce ltving R ,
garage,
basement,
r e modeled
and
ntce
St6,SOO.OO
CLOSE TO MINES lovely mob1le located on 1
a cre wtfh creek through,
all fenced, loads of con
crete parktng, about 2
years old $16,500 00.
WANT A FARM? 70
a c res , newer 3 bedroom
home. barn , corn crib,
sto rage, located on the
nver A STEAL AT JUST
S33,SOO.OO.
WANT ACREAGE 48
acres,
m o b tle
home
I almost new), 14x36 add
on, large patio, many,
many features, GOING AT
JUST $41,000 .00 (price of
ground).
MIDDLEPORT Needs
some work. 2 story frame,
good location . l bedrooms,
balh, formal dining, nat.
gas lurnace. INV£ST NOW
JUST 520,000.00
MIDDLEPORT 2-two
slory
butldlngs.
has
apartments over,
all
rented .
VEry,
nice
restau rant bus iness In one,
old established busmess

sss,ooo.oo

NEAR GRADE SCHOOL l story frame, 3 bedrooms,
low heating b&lt;ll , 2 lots, lull
basement . Ideal for family
$27,300.00
YOUR HOUSE fS TOO
GOOD TO GillE AWAY+
CALL US NOW TO SELL
IT FOR YOU.
REALTORS
Henry E Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992~992-6191

EXCELLENT BUY
Large block-stucco ho&lt;JSe ' l
with 4 bedrooms,
dlmng, equipped kotchen,
gas fireplace In the lhnng,
full basemenJ, 2 car
garage, and 2 room
storage
Also 2 room
business building All for
only 535,000
LfK£ NEW- 3 bedroom
frame ,
completely
overhauled Inside and out
1Aadern bath, new furnace ,
n ice large kttchen , utility
building ancJ 1 1/o~~ acre lot
Ask1ng only $23,000.
BARGAIN - Ofd used 3
bedroom fr arne home but
has natural gas, city water
and
bath
Varntshed
woodwork and the floors
are solod. Handyman's
spec1al for just $12,000 •
INCOME - 5 apts In good
condition with low Income.
Can be upgraded to a good
investment. All uttl ities are
pa1d by the ren1ers. WAnt
to see what you can do
5 BEDROOMS- Ali have
closets , modern kttchen
wtth dtsposai, dishwasher,
large family room with
pool table, laundry room,
sun dec k, J baths and 2 car
garage at $65,000
NEW LISTING - 75 acres
of woods, some saw timber
wolh dozens of beautiful
building sties ~ocated on
Pomeroy . All utilitie s
available
for
only
$2S,OOO Oil
NEW LISTING - B acres
plus 3 be droom ranch
home, bath; full basement,
jusl out of Middleport a
couple of m lies. Redwood
deck, carpeting and lots at
pnvac~$32,000

WANT IT SOLD WITHOUT
AN UPSET IN YOUR
FAMILY
ROUTINE .
CALL THE TEAFQRDS'
TO TURN TALK INTO
TRANSACTION.
REALTOR ASSOCIATES
- Gorden B., Helen L. and
Sue P. Murphy

HOttsins/
Hc.u /quarters

ARB

~~~:r.'i=~-

~00{/.JCUS .

•
'•,

,

11New Home
iAdd-ons
1i' Remoldings
Free Estimates
IJTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

ORPHAN ANNIE-LEGAL FENAGLE
IT SAYS I
Oi'IN THIS
BAI!CtE, ALL
~EGAL ...

E C ELECTRICAL Co ntractor ser"ll'·
1ng Ohro Valley reg1 on Sue
day s o week 24 houn servrce
Emergency call s Coli B82 2957
or 882·3454
~ MOBilE HOME repatrs Furnaces
electrtcal work p•pes sawed
plumbing q92 5858

' '

~·

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug
gesled by the above cartoon

Pnntanswerhere · (
/l{':-;:~,.,:;":: Yesterdays

---,,---.--wfl'\"1'

.'

I

IN WHICH C.HfLDR'EN
MAY l;lE'T ~U~HED
A~OUN~

IWARMO~
[J [

992-6011

GRINDSTAFF PENNZOIL now has
full auto service ond repatr 404
E Ma1n St , P.omeroy Oh1o
BRADFORD, Auctio neer Com·
plete ServiCe Phone 949-2481
1
or 949 2000 Roc rne, Ohio Crill
Bradford
- - ::O:C"'" ':=::::::--::::::-:;;ELWOOD BOWERS RE.PAIR ~weepers, toaster s trons, all
·'_-::-::-:-:-:~--,- ---small appltanc:es lawn moer ,
SEVEN ROOM house for sole 3
next to State H1ghwoy Garage
bedrooms and both modern
on Route 7
':.::C~:::..C'--::-:::-::---:--­
k 1tch en wtth range and
d•shwosher carpet 1ng up and SEWING MACHINE Repotrs se r
vrce all makes 9&lt;»2 2284 "fhe
down hot water baseboard
heat up qrfd dow n oil drapes
Fobr1 c Shop
Pomeroy
0 and sheers, pat 10 2 cor go rage
Authorrzed Stnger Soles and
and garden Seen by appotnt
Service We shorpen Scissors
.!"!n~o~lr__?47 2401
EXCAVATING, dozer loader and
MODERN THREE bedroom hous~
backliae work dump trucks
ful l basement ftreploce fully
and lo·boys for h rre wtll haul
carpeted central a ir enclosed
f1U d1rt top sari limestone end
sun porch located on 61 1, acres
gra"ll'el Call Bob or Roger Jef·
on CR 28 approx 3 miles from
fers day phone 992·7089 mght
Roc~ne If rnterested contact
phone 992 3525 or 992 5232
lorry Wolfe 9.49-2836 weekends EXCAVATING , doze r1 backhoe
and after 5 evenings
and dttcher Charles R Hat·
Block ' Hoe Servtce,
freld
STANDING TIMBER on Metgs
Rutlond
Oh ro Pone 742 2008
_ !~~~~.md Coii949 · 2B2~ __ _
PULLINS EXCAVATING Complele
Service Phone 992 2478.

992-3325 •
216 E. Second str;..l

I CAIBSh
I I t.. - ..... ... j
I GUSET I
KJ K) I
~ORRAMt

ALL Of M'(
COIJTRIBUTIQI.JS

M'( DUIR t;IR ...I

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

*

byHenrtArnotdandBoblee

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

•

992 -2356

acres rn Pome roy SEcluded
wooded ar ea on tap of htll
Overlooks r1ver Water elec
tr1c a vo1lable 992 3866
REAL ESTATE loons Purchase and
refrnance 30 year terms VA
No money down (ellgtble
vetera ns) FHA As low as 3
per cenl down (non Yeterons)
Irelond Mortgage Co 77 E
State Athens 614 592·3051.

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

El

.. FllOM
WHAT !Vt;
5 EEN, HE'S
AS WfaiNG
T' 8~0W HIM~ELF UP A~ Ht;
15 TO WIP~ OUT
EVEil'IONE
AfiOAilD!

J

1

00\&gt;J'T COUNT 0\&gt;J THAT,
CAPTAIN! THt; GUY'S A
I&lt;~MIKAZE NLITI

18 Years Experte)lte
Will Make
Service Calls

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled' lost your operators
lrcense? Phone 992 2143

POMEROY.

!&gt;HIP APAtzn. ALL t HAF'TA DO
l!!i FLICIC THI5 SWITCH I

O3 11

JEEP
JS THE PLACE!

Tom

THERI!'f' eNOI.I6H EXP~051VE'

IN H15 LIFE VEST T' &amp;~OW '(OLIR

FARM FOR Sole House, 2 barns ,
tra der Lorge pond 10 acres or
82 acres 742·2566
Q___

100 PRIZES FIRST
PRIZE 4 WHEEL ORIIIE

APRIL 4-7

'

J-16-mo. pd.

TWO BEDROOM mob1 le hom e
~du ~s ~ly_ ~2 759~ _
PORCH SALE Movtng out of sla te
Furmt ure ond mrsc TV washer
a nd dryer Dus lo.y 51 Syracuse
Thu rs th ru Sun

estomates, Call :
Hoskins, 949 2160.

J7'1mo(Pdl

ONE YEAR old colli e mole to
9~~3.me 992·7766 .·: --:--:
TWO PUPS 1 mol~ 1 female 9
weeks old 11, b1rd dog Phone
992 34~0 _ _
__ _ ___ -·
LARGE
SANDSTONE
rock
1
992 5552
- ----- - - - --

SALE

TWO BEDROOM mob1le home
krtchen furnr shed Prefer mrd
di e aged cou ple or elderly cou "
p lQ.: No Pets 992 2749 ,
SENIOR CITIZENS' Apts 1 bedr If
you ore on SS or D1sab1ltt y SS
rent based on 1ncome /jq2 7772
between 9 om and 6 pm

CAPT AlN F.ASY

Free

e~per•ence .

,.,_ H!-2174

·

C~!·i!iM.~~F~ ~=

All types roofing, gutters
and downspou1s. All types
home mainten1nce - new
and repoor. Storm doors
and windows. All work
guaranteed . 20 years

S 4()-World at Large 17; 5 45-Farm Report IJ, 5. 50--

THURSDAY, MARCH 29, 1979
7 oo--C ross-Wi1s 3, Newlywed Game 6, 13, Marty
Robbins' Spotlight 8, News 10. Love, Amertcan
St yle 15. Ca rol Burnell &amp; F r iends 17, Dic k Cavell
20, Wild , Wild World of Anomals 33
7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3, Bonkers 6, Ma1ch Game
PM 8, SIOO.OOO Name Thai Tune 10 , Nashville On
The Road 13 , Dolly 15 , Sanford &amp; Son 17, MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33
B QO-Harns &amp; Com pany 3,15, Mork &amp; M ondy 6, 13,
Chlsholms 8,10 . Nova 0,33. Ulf lmate Weapon 17
B 30--Angle 6, 13
9 DO-Quincy 3, 15 Barney M&lt;ller 6 13, World 20.33,
Mov ie " Harlow" 17
9 30--Carter Country 6,13
10 00-Mrs Columbo 3,15, ABC News Closeup 6,13,
Barnaby Jones B, 10,, Oh1o Project 20, Footsteps 33
10 30--Area Showcase 33
11 QO-News 3.6.8.10, 13, 15, Best of Groucho 20, Over
Easy 33
11 30--Johnn y Carson 3, 15, Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13,
Mash 8, ABC News 33, Mov&lt; e "Pi rate s of Tortuga "
10, Movie jj Breakthrough " 17
12 05-McCioud B, 12 40--Manno x 6. 13
1 00--Tomorraw 3, News 15; 1 3G-Movte " Ten Ta ll
~ Men" J7
I 50-News 13. 3 30--News 17
3 50-Movie " The Flyong Fontalnes" 17

Ohio Valley Roofin&amp;
and
Home MaintenanCe

J 7-1 mo

ROGER HYSEll

BLUE FO HD van rear seot
985 3857
DUTY upho ls tery
mochtne
$250
Ph one
B43 2542

R11 dney , Broker

14 Yr. Expereence
Aural Method

'

locohor to

Become a Manager of a.
Consumer Finance Office
Wtth Ca~•tal, betng a Branch Manager ts almost hke
bemg m bus mess for yourself You furmsh the ability
and the tnrttat•ve Ca prtal supplies you with th~ off1ce
tr a1 nmg , the know how, the otflce locatton and
equip m e nt and all the money needed to ~u1ld a
successful branch

Armstrong Clrpeting

1971 CHEVROLET 4x4 short wheel
bose Mossey fergu son ("Orn
room a nd board Indoor and
planter
cor n cullr voto r
outdoor dogs for Mc1gs Co
· lssoc1afe o"f
Humane Soc1ely wht le homes
•n 70B4
Elberfeldsof Pomeroy
ore sought lor the m 992 5417
1978 fORD '1, to n prckup 8 II
and Kemball Music Center
or 992 7680
bP.d Rodrol tr res $3575 A 1
of Athens
NEW BATON classes Begrnners
cond111 on Coll 992 2238
Phone 992 -2S8t
rnte rm edta! e and odvo nced
or 992 2082
Taught by C1ndy l'otter~on at 1976 TRANS AM Excellent cond1
hon S-4300, W2 7689
3 11 l mo
the Syracuse G1ode Sc hool
Gym For more rnformohon 1977 CHEVY
Bl azer
4x.4
Cheyenne pock age 29 000 oc
co ll992 2088
tuol mr les Ttlt steer AM FM
GUN SHOOT Roc1ne Volunteer
rod •o A C
tow package
F.re Oepl Every Saturday b 30
cru1se, wh 1te spo ke wheels Ex
pm ot thetr b01ldrng rn Basham
cellent condrtton After 5 call
Focl ory chok e gu ns only
992 1967
JONES BAR feotunng Edd1e and 1975 XLT Ronge rFord truck 111 ton
'~'• mile off Rt. 7 ~Y·PII•• on
the Despera does 3 mrles so uth
Rt. 124 towanl Rutlalld,
w
1th
over
load
sprrngs
302
of Pomeroy Bndge on WV
en
grne
aut
o
trans
01r
con
d1
Route 62 Fr tdO)I nrght 9 30 IO1
tr on E~tcell e nt condrtr on Call
am
Auto&amp; Truck
'1"2 531 1
GU N SHOOT E~ERY FRIDAY 6 30
'Repair
PM RACINE GUN ClUB FAC 1973 PONTIAC Grand Pnx Ex
tros
~2 3937
(lso
Transmission
TO RY CHOKE GUN S ONLY
Repair
1950 FORD .4 door Good shope
0
$1500 Call992 58 14
Phone 992-5682
1978 FORD PICKL.tp super cob VB
wrl h mper to p Good cond 11ton
Good gas m1leage $5400
NOW INTER V IEWING for clerk
949 2042
posrt1on Full or por t tr me
Work b days a week E• 1976 F 250 Ford truck a nd 1200
boles ml)fed hoy Coli 9C»2 2877
pertence prefe rred
Phone
FOR YOUR candy and coke sup
after 6 pm
992 2179 tor 1ntervtcw be tween
pires co me to 01 s Spnng
9 ond 5
1975 CUTL ASS Supteme 2 door
Volley Plaza FREE Easter condy
350
VB
Excelle
nt
condr
t.
on
TRACTOR TRAILER drtver steady
clas ses Call44b 2134
985 3970 afl er 6pm or onylrme
em ployme nt al l th e hou rs you
-HAVt: . c.ho-c~l o~e~ - d~bettc
WE
wee kends
wont home e11ery nrg ht Must
chocola
tes and a ther candy
be 21 yeor$rold 667 3131 Ohto 1972 FORD PI CK UP F 100 wrth top
supplies
Free Easter candy
Vol ley Mon uloctu rmg Tupper s
per 302 V 8 auto P S P B
class Colt Carousel Conlee
Ploms Ohto
W1ll sell or trade lor boot a nd
lr one ry 1n
M1ddlep or t
motor of equal value 1975
992
6342
Ply mout h Dusler sl ant Stx
auto 22 mrles to the ga llon o r 1977 GLASTRON TRI HAUl open
·' be tt er on gas Writ se ll
front boot SS h p Evm rude
reaso nably Coii84J 2561
moto r trad e r 949 2537 after
5pm
WANTED TO
BUV
FOUR 1972 GMC PICKUP 6 cy l s ld
BEDROOM rural home Ihot w1ll
METAL FOLDING cho1rs ltke new,
$900 9'12 7376
mee l
FM t-tA
st andards
$4 eo 100 or mor e $3 50 eo Ice
742 3074
crea m cobmets frozen food
d1sploy Wyatt pretzel or p1zzo
CAS H FOR 1unk coor s 24 hou r
ove n NCR cos h reg15ter Pop
wrecker
servtc,..
Frye's
corn candy floss carmel corn
TRAVEL MATE 11 foot truck
Rutland OH 742 2081
_m~c~~e!. ~ 1~ 1~:._ ~0~ __ _
camper Slee ps 6 both smk
CHIP WOOD
Pol es mo)(
s tove
elect rrc
or
gos
dromcter I 0 on larges t efld
refngerator and fu rn ace $15
$12 per ton Bundl ed slob $10
Cal l7 42 28 43
pe r ton Delivered to Ohi o
Pollet Co
Rt 2 Pomeroy
992 2689

URGENTLY NHDEO

The PubW;hcr reserves the nghl

1

alter bpm

Your Headquarters For

PIANO
nJNING

!976 f 250 Ford truck and 1700
boles mt•ed hoy Call 9Q2 2877

Notices

Mobile Home sa les cmd Y~:~nl sales
are I:ICL't'pled ool) wtth CH.!lh wath
order 25 L-e nt ctwrge for &lt;Ids t'U try·
ang Box Nurnbt&gt;r In C1mt of Th~t Senlane!

FORGE AHEAD
:

nnd hrothers

F.ach word O\ er lhe mtnhnum 15
words Is 4 L&gt;ent.ll per wurtl per dliY
Ads running other Hum L'U nsec uttve
""(.s '&gt;'Ill be ch&lt;trged o11t the I dBy

TRESS S TWIN Sin INTERSPR
lNG $45 NEW~ PC FND TABLE
SHS $39 95 U HA UL RICE 5
NFW AND USED FURN ITURE
H54 7nd AV E f'H 446 95:23

.-. ,stm

TELEVISION
VIEWING

\

SflS $.1995 NEW SEALY MAT

l f.Jl[)

FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1979

DICK TRACY

Business Services ,

IN LOVING memorv of our bclov OlTfM B~R SA LE
rei !.on and brother Olon E SAVF UP TO 30 ~ STORE WIDI:
G0or-lw1n who pn~srd away NIW 7 PC liVING ROOM SUITE,
$149 95 NfW 5 PC DINETTE
nltH' years ogo today M01ch 30

100

fitl~:~ys

Publ1c Assrs tance
63,639 49
Ce ntral HoSP i f ~l
.
,
165 c 5
Insurance $
Globe In su ran ce
52 90
State Income Tax
1..412 94
Public Employees Rettre
Sy!item
15,137 53
Soli Conserva tron
3,697 65
NOTICE
Un clar med Moneys 27,303 88
No11ce 1o Aggregate
Memo rr al Bldg Bond
Vendors
Reti r e
7,825 28
Sealed b1ds will be rece1"11' ed
by the Boar d of Me 1gs Co unt y vetera ns Mem Has p ·
Facrlltres
239 08
Comm•ssroners at the Co unty
J7, 152 80
Comm1SS1oners
Offrce , Tuberculosrs
loc ated rn the Co urt Hou se, 1n Real Es ta te
Assessment
31 650 30
th e Vrllage o f Pome ro y, Oh 10
196 90
untrl l 2 OOnoon on the 5th day Adv Re a.l Estate
504 10
of Aprd , 1979 , an d the brds Commun rty Co ll ege
20 118 01
wdl be opened at 12 00 noon Landf ill
7785 1&lt;1
on the 5th day of Aprrl, 1979, CE T AII
10 901 22
for the turn1 sh rng ot all krnds C E T A VI
Un ron Du es
26 50
and srzes of aggregate that
54 57
may be requr r ed b y the Mergs P W E
SCG
5,59&lt;113
County Hrghway Depart
HCP
3,21 76 1
me nt
Estimated qua ntlt res of a ll Mr Bond Reftr e ment
243,382 73
agg r ega t e requ re d
ap
Mr Sc hoo l Facilltres 46,998 25
pro x1mate ty 40 ,000 tons
sees
•
245 B9
•
Spectflcat1ons for the
Jatl Ren ova t1 on
2,7 16 30
Bids as Follows
CE TA Spt
4,375 61
1- Brd prrce per ton fa b
WCSP
6,052 99
loa d ed at the vendor's plant
22,923 36
tor the varl oUS kr nds arid SliF EMS
722 27
of aggrega tes t~ at may be CE TA PM
1.393 679 10
reQui r ed, wh1ch w ilt conform Total
to t he Pert ment State of Ohro Ba lan ce less
o\l' erdraft
1. 388.975 55
Depar t ment o f Hrghways
Outstandu;g-W ar r a n f -Cons tru ctr on and Matena ls
Spec if iCations, e)(ceptmg pea
Account
170,426 56
or shot gra ve l, wh1ch IS a n
Total
1.559,402 11
un graded ma terral
County Tr easurer
18.65113
2- Wr t h respect t o the
Co unty Oepos1tory
aforesaid , es t tma ted quan
1.540.•750 88
ttl res th e \l'endors sha ll un
Total
1,559',40 2 l1
derstand that no guarantee rs
Overdrafts
g 1v en to the actua l quantrt1es
Dec 31 , 1978
of aggregates to be tur n tS hed
Dog &amp; Ken ne l
931 97
but each vendor shall be Men tal Retarded
293 52
requ tred to furnrsh any part
Educatio n
of the ac tual r eq u rrement s
Co m pre he ns r\l'e
Heanng
10 9B
a s orde r ed durmg the b rd
year
Reve nu e Sha nng
1.854 36
J- Pr1ces on thts b1d shall
All Amertcan
be firm and rn effe ct fr om
133 35
In su rance
Aprrl 1 1979 to April 1. 1960
15 00
Colonia l In su rance
.t- All brdder s must agree
764 61
Payroll Ta)(
to furnrsh any aggregat e workmen's
mater 1a ts as requested rn
Com pe ns a tron
B 53
!t ern 1, at the same prrces to Ca prlol Insur ance
B 20
allt ownshrps of Meig S Coun ty
Cer"ll'rca l Cancer
863 03
durrng the brd year
&lt;1,903 55
Total
5- On th e envelope con
tamtn Q the brd the name and
IT IS HEREBY CER
T t F IED, That the toregomg
address of the vendor m us t be
Shown and plarn ty marke d 1S a true and accurate
" Aggr egate Brds"
state m en1 of th e fma nces of
6- Proposals are t o be Mergs County, Oh10 for the
r eturn ed on brd for ms sup
month o f Ja nuary
1979 ,
plted by the "ll'endo r , and Will
s how rng the bala nce on han d
be o pened on the date and
'" each fu nd and a ccount a t
pla ce specdred above
the beginnmg of the month,
7- The Mergs Cou nt y Co
th e amount r ece i"ll'ed to each,
mm rss roners reser"ll'e the
th e amoun t diSbursed f r om
r rght to accept or retect any each , the balance rema lntng
or a ll brds , and or any part
to th e cre d1t of each and the
th ereof
balance of mone)l rn the
Marv Hobstener, Clerk
trea sury and deposrta ry
Board of Mergs County
Meigs County,
commts s1oners
Howard E Frank
C3) 21, lO, 2tc
Aud1 tor

'

1'\ulo Sal•·s

In Memory

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

0

· 9- The Daily Sentinel. Multllcport-Pmm•I'O)' .'O . TIIUrodU) . M,or !'\, t•l&lt;o

l I I 11 XX1 )
(Answers tomorrow )

J umbles PILOT CRIME FUTI~E GOBL ET
Answer Very d1 s tanr form o r meteo r-" REMOTE "

~~..,by THOMAS JOSEPH

"
ALJ.EYOOP

OOPS ESCAPE 1VINE
15 NOT 'THERE' IT'5
HANBtNS LOOSEl-Y
IN 'THE AIF't~

,.
&lt;

,,
GASO!JNE AI,I.EY

I'll have m4 dime

back.
pet.!

l can't Pd4 40u to
find somethin' I
alread~ found for
myself,
hon!

Do 40u see what I
sees in th' rearv;sion mirror,

Rufus?

ACROSS
' DoWN
1 Dtplomacy
I Mex1can food
5 Degrees
2 Macaw
II Sandarac
3 Explam
tree
4 Three,
12 Insecl
m Messma
13 Instance
5 Leafy
H Come out
vegetables
15 Scrap
6 Forg1ve
16 Wahine's
7 Frwt' drmk
garland
8 As Afnca
17 Suez
was known
1sthmus
9 Etch
Leaping
10 Ship or clam
Enghsh
16 Anagram
nver
of nall
Eye part
19 Cafetena
Poet's toptc
1tem
23 Heathen
r.-""1'!:""'1~.,..,...25 M1stake
26 Palhd
27 Army
28 Cmffure
gadget
29 Bnt1sh
afternoon

Yesterday 's Answer
22 Bewildered
23 Breastwork
24 Almost
always
25 Gravy 27 "Roscoe"
29 " - Foohsh
Things "

30 Dog's

s km
problem
31 Join in
36 Marker on
Thunday, Mareb 211
the links
37 Capuchin
monke y

Avoiding an obvious trap
NORTH

WATER AND mtsc houlmg Coli
'1"2·5BSB
NOW HAULING limestone m
M1ddleport Poemroy area. Call
for tree est1mate 367 7101
WILL CARE for two 1nvol1d or
elderly persons In my home
Twenty years experience
Reasona ble roles 992·6022 or
9'12 5422

EAST
+ A 10 9 4 2
"'7 3
"' J 10 8 2
• 9765
t A 10 3
• J 10
+8
SOUTH
• QJ653

VETERINARY
CLINIC

lAD NEWS,
ERNIE ....

THe veT

He

SPr'f$
NeEDS

IRAces.

+K

Plaza
JUvemle
39 Angel · Fr
40 Two ftns
Old
h1ghway

•KQ954
t KQ8
+ K Q65

:41

Vulnerable : Ne1ther
Dealer : West
West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for anoLher ln thts sample A lo
used for th e three L's, X for th e two O's, etc Sm gle lette r s
apostrophes, the le11gth and f orm a tion or t he words are all
hmts Each day th e code le tlers are dtfferent
CRYPTOQUOTES

PAINTING AND sandbloshng
Free es hmotes Coli 949-2686,

WB
1972 A~l ElECTRIC trorler 12 x 60
Central air , underpinn ing. On
lot m Mason 30-4 773 5498 .
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobole
home, furmshed , 3 bedr
washer and drye r A1r cond1
honed . 1 lo t 21 0 ft frontage
$12 000 Phone 742 28'.26
1955 Protrte Schooner 28x8,
bdr
1965 G~nerol 60x 12 2 bdr
1968 E\cona 52x12 2 bdr
1969 Buddy 60x 12 4 bdr
1970Sylvo , 60x l2 2 bdr
1970Costle 60x12, 2 bdr
1973 Arlington, 60xl 2 2 bd(
1973 Rtdgewood, 101d 4 3 bd r
1973 K.rkwood so,.. 12 2 bdr
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT PLESANT, WV
67S-4424
1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home
Appl1onces , underprnnmg ,
fireplace 992 5413 or 992.6118
$5200
------~-

1970 REBEL RAIDER 12 , 4B Very
good cond1t1on $3500 247· 3875
or 949 2643 after •

3-29

• 87
¥ A6
• J42
+Ail! I!

TREE TRtMMING and removal
742·3167 or 7_,4.;:
2_:
·2;:_5;_
73" - - - - -

PAINTING AND Sandblostrng
Free eSI1motes Coll949 2686

BRIDGE

WEST

FRANK &amp; ERN IF.

CPGTJ,

I U Q K 0
T
1Yesterday's Cryptoquote :

QGQTAK

P Y K B

rnE WORW IS GRAND,
AWFULLY BIG AND ASTONISHINGLY BEAUTIFUL,
FREQUENTLY THRilLING. BUT I LOVE NEW YORK ®~"j'Ji DOROTHY KILGALLEN
~'f'A~hd
(t?1979 K.lng Features Syndtcate, Inc

I BETTER
60 WAKE
HIM UP

\

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WALLPAPERING AND pomtmg
Call742 2328
HOWERV AND MARTIN E•
covotmg
sepllc S)IStems
dozer, backhoe Rt 1A3 Phone
I (614) 698-7331

Will CARE for two tnvoltd or
elderJy persons 1n my home .
Twenty years expenence
Reasonable roles 992 6022 or
9'12-5422

PTL Club 13
5 · 55-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6 :00-700 C lub 6,8; PTL
Club 15
6 10--News 17 ; 6 25-Socletles In Transition 10.
6 30--Romper Room 17, 6 45-Morning Report 3
6 :50--Gootl Morning, West 1/lrglnla 13 , 6· 55-Chuck
White Reports 10, News 13
7 00-l'oday 3, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; Friday
Morning 8; Schoolles Little Rascals 17
7· 15-Weather 33, 7 JG-Famlly Altair 10
8 Oil-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10, Leave tt To Beaver 17,
Sesame 51 33, 8 JG-Haze l 17
9 Oil-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15, Emergency
One 6, Hogan' s Heroes 8, Match Game 10, Lucy
Sl,lpw 17
9 30--Br~y Bunch B. Hogan ' s Heroes 10, Green Acres
17.
10 oo-&lt;:ard Sharks 3, IS . Edge ol Nigh I 6, All In The
Family 8,10; Dating Game 13; Movie " An
American Dream" 17
10 JG-Ait Star Secrels 3, 15; szo,ooo Pyramid 13, Andy
Griffith 6; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 QO-High Rollers 3,1S . Happy Days 6,13, E lec Co
20
11 J{}--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 , Family Feud 6, 13, Love
of Life 8, 10; Sesame St 20,33
11 55-CBS News 8, House Call 10, News 17
12 oo-Newscenter J; News6.10, Password 15 ; You ng
&amp; the Restless 8, M idday Magazi ne 13. Love,
American Style 17
12 3G--Ryan's Hope 6, 13 , Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ,
Etec Co 33; Not lor Wome n Only 15, Movie " We
Joined the Navy " 17.
1·00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15, All My Chil dren 6, 13,
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1 JO--As the World Turns B, 10, 2·QO-Doctors 3, 15, One
Life to Live 6,13; News 17 .
2 · 30--Another World 3, 15 , Guiding Llgh1 B, 10, I Love
Lucy 17 .
3 QO-Mash B. Joker's Wild 10, Fllntsfones 17 , Over
Easy 20
4·00-M&lt;s1er Cartoon 3, Hollywood Squares 15, Por ky
Pig &amp; Friends 8, • Sesame St 20,33, Batman 10;
Dinah 13, Space Glanls 17.
4 30--Bewltched 3, Gilligan' s Is 8, Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15 ; Gilligan' s Is 17
5 00-1 Dream at Jannle 3, Beverly Hollblll les B.
Mister Rogers 20.33 ; Gomer Pyle 10, Six Mil lion
Dollar Man 13, Brady Bunch 15, I Dream of
Jeannie 17
S 3D-Carol Burnell &amp; F rlends 3, News 6, Sanford &amp;
Son B; E lee Co 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10, Odd
Couple 15, Lucy Show 17, Doctor Who 33
6 Oil-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Andy Griffith 17 ;
On Nature' s Trail 20. One Studio See 33
6 30--NBC News 3, 15; AB C News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Frlends6 ; CBSNews8,10, MyThreeSons17 , Over
Easy 20,33
7 oo-Cross-Wlts 3; Newlywed Game 6, 13, Sha Na Na
8, News 10; Love American Style 15; Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 17; Dick Covell 20, Big Blue Marble 33
7 30--Hee Haw Honesys J , Pop Goes fhe l.ountry 1 ~,
$1 98 Beauty Show 6; Family Feud 8.10;; $100,000
Name That Tune 13; Sanford &amp; Son 17, MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33
8 QO-DIII' rent Stroke&gt; 3, 15; Family 6, 13, Incredible
Hulk 8, Washington Week In Revtew 20,33:
Celebrity Concerts 10, NBA Basketball 17
8 30--Wall Stret Week 20,33
9 · QO-Brothers &amp; Sisters 3.15; Movie " You Light Up
My Life" 6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10, D&lt;plomatlc
Style of Andrew Young 20; Money, News &amp; VIews
33
9· 30-Turnabout 3, 15 , 20; 10·00- Sweepstakes 3, 15 ,
Dallas 8, 10; News 20, When The Boat Comes In 33
10 15-N ight Gallery 17 , 10 30--Consumer Survival Ktl
20; 10 45-Love American Style 17
11 QO-News 3,6,8,13,15: Hogan's Heroes 17, Monty
Python' s Flying Ctrcus 20, Lilias, Yoga &amp; You 33
11 30--Johnny Carson 3,15, Barella 13, Movie " Lucky
Luciano" 6, NBA Basketball 8, ABC News 33,
Movie 11 The Mummy's Revenge" 10, Movie "The
Monster That Challenged the World" 17
12.40--lronslde 13 ; 1 QO-Midnlght Speclal 3, 15, Movie
"They Saved H iller's Brain" 10.
1 30--NBA BAsketball 17, 1 4()-News 13, 1 4(}--News
13
2 30--News 3.
3 Oil-Movie " Torn Curtain" 3; 3 45-News 17.
4 .05-12 O'Clock High 17 .
5 oo-Movle "Work Is a Four Letter Word" 3
s·05-Dragnet 17

Pass
2+
Pass
Pass

Nurdo East
Pass I+
J+
Pass
4¥
Pass

Opening lead : • Q

South
DbI

3¥
Pass

had to decide whether to
continue spades and force a
r uff or switch to diamonds
He played a spade, whic h
was the correct defense, and
declarer had to ruff
II declarer now had

routinely drawn trump, an
accurate defense would de·
feat the contrac t Declarer
would have to leave the hlgh
trump outstanding in the
East hand and try to run the
club suit II East ruffed the
fourth round of clubs and
played a spade, South would
have to ruff lvlth his last
trump East would then get
on play wlth the ace of
diamonds and cash two
spade tricks .
Declarer could see this
trap The key play was made
al trick three when declarer
led the king of diamonds
from his hand , and from

then on there was no
defense

Whenever East choses to
win the a ce of diamonds,
South Is in complete control.
By Oawald Jacoby
If East leads a third round of
and Alan Sonta&amp;
spades, it can be ruffed in
Eaat opened the bidding dununy The defense will get
Ught, as most players do in only their two aces and a
third position. Although trwnp trick .
North-South could have (NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN 1
made five cluba eaally (Do you ha ve a question for
loalng only two aces - they
the experts ? Wnte Ask the
not unreasonably arrived et
Experts , care of th1s newspathe major suit game that per lndlvtdual questions wlfl
superficially depends on
be answered '' accompanied
lrwnp breaking no worse by stamped, seff·addressed
than 4-2
ehvelopes The mos-t mteres1After East won the open- lng questio ns wJ/f be vsed In
spade lead with the ace, this cofumn and wff/ receive
South's king , he

�·--

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlcport-Punwroy, 0 .. Thu1·s&lt;la)'. M a r · - - - - - , ; ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

~l~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy.

~

;;j
lj

$1,492,058 appropriation measure approved

''''
••••

"
1
}

l

Eastern's Local Board of Education has approved
permanent appropriations for 1979 totaling $1 ,492,058.
According to figures r eleased by the district 's boa rd clerk •
Eloise Boston , the budget Is as follows :
Instruction, $542,684 ; specia l educ a tion, $66,588 :
vocational instruction , $74,192; support services, $260:
guidance services , $19 ,449 ; health services, $10 ,033 .
psychological service, $750; support service inst ructiona l
staff , $8 ,070 ; educational m e di a, $19, 472 ; gener al
administration, $5,045; executive administrative services,
$36,295 ; other sypport services , general administration
$16,020; support services, school administration, $47,235;
support services business, $28,579 ; operati ons a nd
maintenance, · $123,462.39; transportation, $162,818 ; food
services (retirement, workmen's comp.), $4,510; staff
services, $500; extra curricular activities , $10,020; debt
services, $102,476.20; non-program charges, $18 ,000 ; transfer s,
$10,000 and other function s, $100. Grand total Sl ,311.5f·H.59.

4 BIG DAYS

'

FRIDAY
MARCH 30

SATURDAY
MARCH 31

I

TUESDAY
APRIL 3

MONDAY
APRIL 2

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
WOMEN'S

SPRING COAT SALE
EVER GRATEFUL - Mrs. Richard (Dot) Neutzling,
Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy, is ever grateful to the Meigs Unit
•of the American Cancer Society. In Februar-y of 1976, Dot
took advantage of a cancer clinic, sponsored by the Meigs
Unit of the American Cancer Society, for a routine
checkup. The attending physician, Dr. Roger Daniels,
upon exannination , found a lump in her breast. The clinic
immediately made an appointment for her with a surgeon
at Holzer Medical Center. In March of 1976, she underwent
a radical mastectomy. After three years she is doing very
well b\lt goes regularly for check~~ps . Dot stated "I will be
eternally grateful to the Ainerican Cancer Society for the
care and concern given to me . When a volunteer knocks at
your door give till it hurts in order that the dreaded
disease of cancer can be cured," Dot commented . She
added "If they could do for cancer what was done for polio
it would be a prayer answ~red . " Dot's husband lost his life
to the dreaded disease on Oct. 13, 1978. Her brother~n-law,
the late Dan Thompson, also died of cancer. There are not
eno"&amp;h words for Dot to express her gratitude to !lie
American.Cancer Society other than her sincere thanks.
. The cancer crusade will be held Apr. I through Apr. IS at
which time volunteers throughout the county will knock on
your door . Dot asks "please give - so others may be

If you're shopping for a coat, th is
season offers a great variety of styles ...

JUNIOR SLACKS -

In neck sizes 141f2 through 17,

terns. Our entire stock Included
Junior sizes 3-13-14
Missy sizes6-20
Half sizes 14h-24'12

Reg. $40.00 •••••••••••• Sale $35.99
Reg. $52.00 ........... Sale $45 .99
Reg . $64.00 ............ Sale 556.99
Reg. $76 .00 ............ Sale S66.99
Reg . S86.oo ............ Sale $75.99

REG. '11.00 ....................... SALE '9.35'

for this sale.
Men's $7.95 Drt51 Shirts

REG. '13.00 ...................... SALE '11.05
REG. '16.00....................... SALE '1160
REG. '22.00....................... SALE '18.70

Men's SlO.OO Dress Shirts

BOYS' SHORT SLEEVE
KNIT
SHIRTS
'
AND TANK TOPS

cured ."

A tremendous selection of
new spring and summer
styles. sizes 8 through 20.

Meshes.

terry

polyester-cotton

cloth,

blends.

/

Boys $3.95
Boys $4.95
Boys $6.95
BoysS8.9S

Shirts ........................... $3 ..49
Shirts ••••••••••••••••••••••••• $4.29
Shirts ••.••••••••••••••••••••••• 6.09
Shirts ••••••• , •.• ••••••••••••••• $7.79

'6.10
'8.50

•11.00

Men's 515.00 Dress Shifts

•

LimE GIRLS

Easter Dresses
Dressing up is always a treat ...

prints, lacies . Sizes 2-4, 4-6X, 7-14.

Reg. ss.oo.............. Sale $4.55
Reg. sa.oo ............. Sale $7.25
Reg.SII.OO . ......... Sale$9.95
Reg . $14.00 .......... Sale $12.75
Reg. 517 .oo ........... Sale $15.45

'7.99 FUU. BED SIZE!!!~.t..~~.!i.'.t.~!..S4.00
'5.99 lWIN Bm SIZ£~!~~!.?~..'!!!~!.'3.00
'5.99 PR. PILLOW CASES......... -~~:. '3.00

END OF THE MONTH SALE

30% OFF SALE

Buy the jackets you need now and
save. Ovr entire stock on sa le in

MEN'S 3 PIECE
VESTED SUITS

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES ·

sizes small (34-36), medium (38 40), large (42-44). and extra large
(46-48) .

Solid color-s and neat patterns.
Sizes 36 to 46 In regulars and
longs, good selection .of styles.

BUY YOUR CUSTOM MADE DRAPES

'13.95 Jackets ........112.27

NOW AND SAVE 30 PER CENT

15.95 Jackets .. ~ ..... '14.07
119.95 Jackets. ........'17.57
'24.95 ·Jac~ ........ '21.97

Our Decorator Industries and Corlley
drapes. Big selection of fabrics, colors,
bring in your measurements and see how
much you'll save.
'

1

ByTOMRAUM
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) The Carter administration
deliberately and grossly
exaggerated the effect of the
Iranian oil cut-off on the
United States, a new
congressional study contends .
Energy Secretary James
R. Schlesinger was expected
to be questioned today on
allegations that oil imports
actually
increased
in
February
despite
administration claims of a
SOO,OOO barrel-a--lla y shortage reflecting the Iranian
cutoff.
An aide, Jim Bishop, said
Schlesinger was prepared to
deny the study's conclusions
in his testimony before the
House energy and power
subcommittee.
Bishop said the information
obtained by the committee is
· suspect and disputed the
increase in imports claimed
by the report. "I can assure ·
you this will be clarified, " he
said.
The study by the subcommittee staff asserts: " U.
S. imports during the month
of February surged by I
million barrels per day."
The report said it based its
conclusions on oil exportimport information recently
compiled by the Paris-based
International Energy
Agency.
Rep. Albert Gore, D-Tenn.,
a subcommittee m ember,
charged that Schlesinger's
agency kept the alleged incr'e ase in import s secret

when the styles are as pretty and
nice as these! Select tiers, floral

.

'89.95 SUITS ....'JAlE '77.35
'99.95 SUITS ......SAI.£ SBSJ5

'

OPEN HOUSE OBSERVED - Approximately 150
persons attended the open house held at Meigs Equipment
Co., Monday. Pictured with one of several tractors that
was on display are Mark Smith, manager and' Mrs. Harold
(Evelyn) Sniith , bookkeeper. Door prizes were awarded
and refreshments served.

SPECIAL GROUP

SEWING TRIMS
&amp; RIBBON

ANGEL TREADS
SLIPPERS
S-M-l-XL
REG. '4.00 ......... ;•.· .. ·.. ·.. •........ SALE '2.79
REG. '4.50 .............................. SALE '3.19
REG. 15.00....... -..... ·....... -.. -...... · SALE '3.49
REG. 15.50 ...................... · -..... SALE 13.85
REG. '6.0().. ....................... ~..... SALE 14.19
REG. '7 .00.............................. SALE '4.89
LimE BOYS'

You can now put aside part of your
Income tax-free .. .. and ,the Interest
It earns Is tax-free until you cash In
at retirement. Ask about our
special RETIREMENT PLANS for
Individuals and self-employed
persons .

Two and three piece suits in
sizes 2T-4T and 4 to 7.

REG. '15.00 ........ SALE 113.88
REG. 18.00 ......... SALE 15.88
1

1

REG. '21.00......... SALE 118.88
REG. 128.00 ......,.... SAlE 124.88
WOMEN'S
Polyester -cotton blends, sheers,
.

'

Sale $6.29

BANK
Racine, Ohio

TAPE SALE

Nice group

Special 2-day sale of 8-track and cassette
tapes. Nice selection of all the popular
slyles of music.

REG. '3.79.......................... SALE '2.95
REG. '5.79 ......................... SALE '4.65

•
REG. '7.79 ... ;.................·..... SALE '6.25
REG•.'10.79......................... SALE '8.65

Easter

candy this

year.

and

Community Club Award t,OOO bonus point• for each

Reg. $20.00 Sale 517

•

Brach ' s,

I

summer

Reg. $6.00

SALE •4.19
Reg.

sa.oo
SALE '5.59

•

Reg. $11.00

SALE '7.69
Reg. $16.00

SALE '11.19

MEN'S
FASHION JEANS
Waist sizes 28 lo 42, lengths 30 lhru
36. Blue denims, twills, hopsackings.
Our entire stock of denim&amp; and other
fashion Jeans Included for this sale.

baskets , jelly beans. Fonny
Farmer,
Palmer .

of

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

chicks, bunnies, eggs, filled

Reg. $15.00 ~ Sale

it

was

em-

Contributing charges filed

weight gowns, robes and
paJamas. Sizes S-M-L.

.

You 'll like our fine selection of

Reg. 512.00 Sale

" because

barrassing to administration
policy ."
The staff report did not
dispute the reality of the
three -month
Iranian

Ungerie Special

EASTER CANDY

Peoplf_!

HOME NATIONAL

MUSIC DIPT.

EACH •1.00
PURCHASE

Reg . $9 .00

RACINE

9'Xl2'.......................... ONLY '69.00
12'112'......................... ONLY '89.00
12'115~ ....................... ONLY '109.00
12'118~ ... .. ... .. .. ... ... ... .. ONLY .

1,000 BONUS
POINTS FOR

polyester dressy styles. Sizes 3246.

Meigs County

Our warehouse has just received another
shipment of popular mill end carpets. Hurry
in while stock is good .

from Now To laster .

Spring Blouses
Reg. $7 .oo

MILL END CARPETS.

production halt . But it
claimed the cutoff had ·a
minimal impact on U. S.
supplies - at least in
February.
" Claims of a shortfall have
been used to justify ha rdships
for the American consumer
in the form of higher prices as
well as a reduction of
gasoline supplies," the report
said .
In other energy deyelopments :
- Sen. Abraham Ribicoff,
D-Conn., introduced a bill
Thursday that would allow
users of home-heating oil a
$125 a year tax credit if
Carter removes oil price
controls. Ribicoff said that
with deregulation, heating-oil
prices which now average 60
to 64 cents a ga lloq could soar
to 80 cents a gallon by next
,
year.
- In New York, Phillips
Petroleum Co. and other oil
industry sources confirmed
that Nigeria has imposed -a
$4-a-barrel surcharge on top
of the regular base price of
$14.54 a barrel set by the
Organization of Petrolewn
Exporting Countries. Several
other OPEC countries including Kuwait. Libya and
Algeria - a lread y were
attaching a s urcha rge to their
oil. A general round of high
surcharges could boost U. S.
gasoline prices by as m uch as
7 cents a gallon.
Weldon V. Barton,
director of the Agriculture
Depa rtment's energy offi ce,
told a House subcommittee
Thurs da y
any
federal
gasoline rationing plan would
insure that farmers get fuel
a lloca tion s "suffi cient to
meet lull food and fib er
production goals approved by
the president. "

I , ..

EASTER SUITS

Individual
Retirement
Account

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

A BIG SELEcnON, PA~RNS
AND COLORS.
USUAllY 35c YD.

Sl.OO purchase.

Men's '11.95 Jeans:...... '10.39
Men's 113.95 Jeans ....... '12.19
Men's t14.95 Jeans ....... '12.99
Men's 116.95 Jeans ...... .

.OPEN SATURDAY, MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pome

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

Oil cutoff
distorted

'

Men's SlJ.OO_j)ress Shirts

Attractive butterfly patterns on light
background, discontinued pattern . While
they last ..

NO. 244

The boar d approved incr easin g t.he price of an extra one-

hal f pint of 1nilk to 15 cents.
.
. .
Supt. Cla rk l.ee s was a uUwrized to s ubmit an a pphcatton
to the State Department of EdUcation requesting 60 percent
reimbursement on the purchase of typewriters for t he business
·
department.
Lees explai ned that if the st ate appro vet! some amoWJt for
future expenditures lite local boar d could participate at the
rate of 40 percent depend ing upon the fin a ncial condition of the
school at the time.
Christy Caldwe ll was officihlly approved as a remedial
reading teacher fur the remainder of the school year. She
replaces Kim Monague who resigned last montl1. Approval fo r
home instr uction· for Tra cy Hein, a high school student, was
approved .

15 CENTS

FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1979

.

'9AO

NO IRON
MUSLIN SHIRTS

VOL NO. XXIX

Carol Crow, business ofFi ce education t eacher. was l!iven a
one year maternit y leave for the J97!hl0 sc h rol year.

enttne

l

(USPS 145-960)

Men's Sll.OO Dre~Sh1rts

CLOSEOUT SALI

MEN'S SUMMER WEIGHT

JACKETS

at y

solid colors, while, fancy pal-

$6 ,0()(J will be neetled to take care of these projects .
lluk c Pu ll ins gave a report on buildings and grounds and
Arch ltose , tr ans portation coor dinator discussed bus routes.
He as ketl board approval to submit necessary applications for
purchase of new school buses for the next school year . The
board approved .
The board , at the request of Mike Will , head teacher at
0 1este r, agreed to pay $1 50 on the purchase of new curtain at
the school.
SEt: K NEGOTIATIO NS
Tom Gumpf , head tea cher a t Tuppers Plains , requested
that the board beg in negot iations with the Easter n Local
Teachers Assn .
· ·
A date of AprillO wa s set for the meeting .
J a mes Huff, district coordinator of federal programs,
rece ived a pproval from th e board to submit an application for
renewa l of the district remedial reading, Title I progr am for
the next yea r.

•

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e

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
DRESS SHIRTS

3 TO 18

Classic reefers, wraps, tents, and more.
See our selection first and save. ·

ln addition , th• budget contains $42,825 in · bond
r etirement ; $98,600 for the IWlchroom, $20,010 . ~7 for Tille I :
$5.:!63.16 for uniform services ; $4,84J .7! in Title IV and DPPF .
$8,1157.:17. Tota l all funds, $1 ,492,05.8.60.
lt was reported the budget reflects only the necessary
fund s needed to operate the distr ict. No extra money with t he
exception or the usual increment in&lt;.:reases for instr uctors .
Mary Hose discussed t he fina nc ial status of the cafeter ia ,
oper ations and J ohn Riebel discussed with the board t he
fa ilure to employ a boys track coach . He was a dvised tha t no
one on the staff is inter e sted , but that the board will keep
tr ying to fill the position .
The board met with County Supt. Robert Bo wen to discuss
personne l matters in executi ve discussion .
BUILDING PROBLEMS
Later . the board disc ussed the problem of completing
improvem ent to t he sewage treatment plants of the Tuppers
Pla ins School and Eastern High School. It w~1 c;: PSti fTI ~ t Pri thRt

END OF THE MONTH SALE!

STYLED SLACKS IN COOL SPRING COLORS

I.

;

Linda Wilkinson , 30 ,
Mechanic St., Pomeroy, was
arrested Wednesday on a
warrant filed by Cynthia Mill
of the Meigs Co unty
Childrens Services on
charges of contributing to the
neglect and unruliness of her
three children, according to
Meigs County Juve nile Of.
ficer Carl Hysell.
Mrs. Wilkinson appea red in
Meigs County Juvenile Court
before Judge Robert E . Buck
on Thursday and was sentenced to six months in county jail with five months of the
sentence s uspended and'
placed on six months
probation .
The charges reportedly
stem from Mrs. Wilkinson's
failure to send her 13-year-old
son to school and to provide
t:1e necessary needs for her
children.
'
At present, the children are
in temporary ca re of the
Childrens Services and
disposition on neglect and
dependency of these child ren
will be heard by Judge Buck
within IS days.
Investigating the case wer!!
Cynthia Mills and Mary Birchfield of Childrens Services .
Sheriff's Investigiltor r.ary
Wolfe, Attendance Officer
Otis Knopp and Hysell .
I

In another juvenile matter,
Wednesday, a 17-year-old girl
was picked up at a local lJw
by Pomeroy Police Officer s
Henry Werry and Russell
Eshelman. The youth wa s
reportedly from Canton and
without supervision or attending school. The girl was
held in detention overnight
and returned to Canton Thursday.

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/
CHECK FACILITIES - Dr. Lewis Telle and Scott Luca s, administ rator of Ve ter ans
Memorial Hospita l, check out t11e emergency room fa cilities at the local hospita l which
Monday will begin providing a 24-hour, seven day a week physician service.

Emergency physician
•
service now offered
E ffective Monday, 24 hour
emergency physicia n service
will be available at Veter ans
Mem oria l Ho spita l. Admini str ator Sc ott Lucas
announced today.
" This 24 hour ser vice is
long overdue and t he people
of Meigs County are entitled
to it. It has been a n age old
complaint from our people
that ther e a rc not doctors
her e aroun d th e c lock .
Finally we will tr y to offer
this service, " Luca s sa id.
The loca l h os pita l ha s
contracted
with
th e
Ph ys ic ia n s
P l a ce m e nt
Group , Columbus, for a fourmonth period. The Group will
provide doctors for the ni ght
em er ge ncy duties a t t he
hospital.
This will give the local
hospital around the clock
servi ce , plu s r eli e ve th e
burden on local doctor s.
The only loca l doctors who
will be filling the nig ht time
em er gency slots arc those
register ed for servi ce with
th e placement group .
Th e r eg ular em er ge ncy

entrance at the hospital will
be used for the new service .
All equipment necessary to
is
ha nd le em er gencies
available to a ph y si~ i a n ami
two nurses .
A four-ued facility has also

Minor mishap
investigated

been established .
It is stressed t hat the
situa tion need not be a "t rue
em er gency situation" . This
means people who a rc ill or
ha ve had some sort of a
·minor accident can visit the
new ser vice facility. They
need not be taken by an
emer gency vehicle.
All of the doctors assigned
to the local hospita l on a
monthl y schedul ed ba s is
have had special tra ining in
h a n d li ng em e rg e n cy
situatioris.
While Lucas spoke on th e
new ser vice as a " giant step"
he did stress. of course, that
unless t he service is put into
good usc then it cannot
continue as a perman ent
situation .

Th e Ga lli a -Me igs Post ,
Highway Patrol. investigated
a t wo-vehi cle accident Thursday in Me igs County on SR
124 at t he junction of CR I. at
2:15 p.m.
Offi cen r eport a west
bound a uto opera ted by
J ay ne Smith. 20, Pomeroy .
struck the rear of a second .;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::
west lJo und vehicle driven by
INSPECTION SET
Da nn y Ba r r ett . 19. MidA . volunteer
motor
dleport . while attempting to
vehi cl e inspection will be
pass.
held llpril6 lnim 8:30a.m.
Smit h wa s cit ed on a
to 1:30 p.m . at the Syra cuse
ch a r ge of passing at a n in·
Pa
rk. It is sponsored by the
tcrsection.
·
Ohio
Uighway Patrol.
Both ~ c~1 i cles in c urr ed
moder ate da ma ge .
;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;·

Suspect
booked
LOGANSPORT, Ind . (AP )
- A young truck driver,
described a s troubled over
problems at work , was
booked on pr e limi nary
murder charges Thursday in
U1e shooting deat hs of his fathe r a nd fo ur relatives,
authorit ies said .
The s hootings were on
Wednesda y night, the same
day that the defend a nt. John
R. Wall, 22, began a three-day
suspen sion from his job wiU1
a
Loga ns port
movin g
company, where he worked
L!J1der the s upervision of his
fa ther .
After a br ief court he aring,
Wall was ta ken to th e Indiana
Reformator y at Pendleton to
be held pending filing of
formal cha rges, said Cass
County Prosecuto r Thomas
Kraugh .
The victims, sla in in their
hom es about two miles apart ,
were identifi ed as Wall 's father , John R. Wall , 54; his si ster , Robin Musselman , 18:
her son , David Scott
Mussehnan Jr., 2; young
Wall's other sister, Nancy
~llanks, 21, and her husband ,
Thoma s J . Shanks Jr ., 25.
All five were shot " at least
·once in the head with a ninemillimeter handgun, " Sta te
Police Sgt. Fred Biggs said .
Police said Wall had a gun
matching the description of
the murder weapon in his
po sse ssion when he was
arrested .
Wall and his father worked
for Be ck 's Transfer , Inc., a
local moving company . Mrs.
Musselman also had worked
there the last two weeks as a
parHime packer .
Th e owner of the company
saul he and the elder Wall ,
who as dispatcher was in
charge of his son' s work
ass ignments , dec id ed to
suspend young Wall for three
days beginning Wednesday
after he had failed to report
for work Tuesday .

CLEVELAND tAP) Here are th e numbers
drawn Thursday in the
Ohio Lottery: blue 340,
white. 60, gold 8, winathon
49964 .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
Tuesday: Turning colder
throu'gh the period. Rain
possible Sunday and
Monday. Becoming fair by
Tuesday. Low In the lOs to
lo\1· 50s Sunday and
dropping into the upper 20s
to 30s by Tuesday. High in
the 50s in the north tu 60s in
the south on Sunday. Highs
dropping into the 30s in the
north to 40s In the south by
Tuesday .

.

LE A6ING ROLES - Eric Scites and Lynella
Whittington, standing, will play lhe leading ro les in "The
Sound of Music" which opens at 7:30 p .m . this evening in
the Me igs High School Auditori wn . The second show ing of
the musical will be at 7:30p.m . Salurday n ight. Wi th Eri c.
and Lynette who play Capta in Von Tr app and Maria is
Lori Wood, who is accompani st for the populal- musical.

5,000 positions
niay be chopped
By The Asso ci a te ~ Press
Nearly 5,000 military a nd
civilian jobs in Ohio could be
on t he Pentagon's choppi ng
block over the next two years
as pa rt of the latest roWld of
military base closings and
consolidations .
The latest base r eduction
pa ckage proposed by the Defense Depa rt me nt if
carried ou( - would tr im.
som e 44 ,5 00 civi li a n a nd
mil itary
jobs
at
17
in sta llati ons ac ross th e
countr y , saving $474 million a
year.
Rep. Tony Hall, D-Dayton ,
said there "is still some fi ght
left , but it doesn't look good.' '
Hall
said
Oh io's
Congr essional delegation will
contin ue to ask that impact
studies be co nducted in
connection with the moves.
But he added " the Wh ite
House has not listened to t he ·
arguments put forth" by t he
delegation and " won't even
r eview the various options offer ed."
Thur sday's announcements
bro~~ght Conflicting figures
from
va riou s
mil it a ry
sour ces. A spokeswoman at
Ric ke nba cker Air For ce
Base, near Colwnbus. sa id
the base had r esorted to
merely pa ssing on the figw·es
released by \he Pentagon .
The Pentagon used "cost
avoidance" £igures, which in ~
dicated U1e savings in jobs
lite cutbacks would a ff ord
over the present level of
service . Also, it used job
authorization fi gures instead
of
ac tua l e m ploym ent
fig ures .
In Ri cke nbacker 's ca se ,
some fi gures applied only to
the Str ategic Air Comman d
compon ent lodge d at the
base , a nd other s to a ll Air
For ce units on the base , the
spokeswom an said.
As .near ij S could be dete r.mined, th ese a r e t he approx•mal&lt;' number of milita ry and ·.
civilian j obs tha t eould be lost•
aroWJ d Ohio:
-- Loekbourne - Rickenbacke• S AC for ces to be ·r elOca ted , with som e 439 milita ry
person nel and 25 civl,lians to
be tra nsferred, a nd 1,277
milita r y a nd 371 civiliiUl jobs
to be cut, making a total of
1,716 military and 396 civilia n
jobs lost.
- Columbus - De fense
O.lnst r uct \oo Supply Cente r ,
a st udy to determine its
closing could result in the
transfer of up to 882 civilians
and t he loss of 183 others.
,. - 'Jpringfield .;- Muncipa l

.

Weather
Cloudy, windy and mild
with showers and thund er storms., Low tonight in the
mid to upper 50s. Mostl y
cloudy with sho wers and
po ssibly a few thunderstorms
Saturda)' .

.

MARY HOBSn :·l· t·cR, clerk.. for the Meigs Co unty
(&lt;nnmissioner s, displays U1 e ne w county map which
includes road names and num bers , Cis well a ::; locations of
ehur rhes . Sl'hor)!!' a nd ."it reams. The tlJc-~p wa s r ecent ly

'

completed thro~~gh funding fr om the Depa rtment of ·
Housing and Urban Development. Copies may be obtained
j;j f the office of the r'ntlllnissioncr··s in the courthouse for
$2.

•

I

Air po r t .

to

swit ch to
c o n t r ac t
for vario us suppor t services,
culling nine milita ry jobs .
- Vienna - Youngsto\\n
\1unicipa l Air port, Air Force
Kescrve t o convert fr om 24 A37 aircraft to eig ht C-130
planes . cut~ 75 milita ry jobs
and adds 18 civilians.

co rn m e r ci a l

- Youn gstown
Six
civilian and 75 militory jobs
w be cut al'the Air For ce
Reser ve Ba se, and 24 AllForce Reserve technicians to
be added .
- Cleve la nd
Naval
Finance Center to s witch to a
commercia l contract for .
keypunc h operation s , cuttmg
34 civilia ns .
- Cleve land - Defense
Contr a c t
Admi ni s t ration
Region o ffi ce to be closed,
eli rnlnat i ng 440 jobs .

IIAWH EE

RETIRESve teran
Wa\'(· rl y nthl l't ic coac h.
&lt;rnntmrucd hls re tirement
Thursday. Hawh ec, who
bt·gan c oadting a t Waverly
in 1947. compiled a 477-214
WU ll w l os ~
rt• c o nl
in
ba ske thall. Hi s football
teams \\'on 110, los t 43 and
tied :l and his ba ..:ball
teams compii&lt;'d a 193-109
mark with the 1954 squad
&lt;'apturing the Class B stale
t·hampi onshi.,. Ha·-,·hcc
also c oa &lt;· h ~rl g•lf a nd ·aek
al Wa verly. During the
past nine years, Ha whee's
Wa~,erl y basketba ll teams
&lt;'ompile d a 105-21 r e cord In
SEOAL play, His teams
won lh rec Suuth e as tcrn
Ohio L eague ca ge lilies
a rt cr joining th e con C.

0.

Hm\' ht~ c .

Icrcnl'e in 1970. ·

•

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