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                  <text>10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday, April30, 1979

Mother, children murdered
MOORESVILLE . Ind .
( AP) - The person who
strangled ·a divorcee and
drowned her three children
may have been a passing
motorist who helped the
woman change a flat tire ,
state police said Sunday.
Two Wlidentified persons
hunting mushrooms on a

muddy trail in a heavily
wooded a r ea Saturday
morning stumbled upon the
the body of Terry Lee
Chasteen, 21 , of Indianapolis,
beneath heavy brush in the
creek. ·
Mrs. Chasteen's car was
later fotind abandoned along
Interstate 465, about 10 miles
away . A flat tire was in the

trunk, authorities said.
" We're theorizing someone

stoppL&gt;d to help her and
e)1an ge d the tire
then
somehoW disabled th~ car "
said Lt. Merle McKinney. '
" We think whoever stopped
there told her, ·come on, I'll
take you to work.· That's the
only wa y she could have
gotten to where she was."
The body of Misty Ann

more women enter their
childbearing years, a report
by
an
internatiOnal

population study group says.
Tt'e report also predicted
women would contin ue to
turn to abortions because of a
lack of alternative family

PEMBINA, N.D. (AP ) _
Residents
of
this
northeastern North Dakota
farming town feveris hly
"tore up ail of south Pembina
looking for dirt" to raise their
ea rthen dikes even more in

their battle against a sea of
flood · water more than 10
miles wide.

planning measures .

The Population Crisis
Committee's study estimated
that at least 40 million and
perhaps as many as 55

million legal . and illegal
abortions were performed or

induced last year . That works
out to about one in f our
pregnancies ending
in

abortion last year .
" In most parts of the world ,

the incidence of abortion is
expected to grow as a result
of wider

preference for

sma ller families , la ck of
alternative family planning
services and an increase in
the number of women of
childbear in g age, " the
privately financed group said
in the report released
Sunday.

VISIT

BAKER'S
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BUDGET SHOP

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INEXPENSIVE ALL NEW QUALITY

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Jundt directs the flood
fighting effort in this upper
Red River Valley community
of 850 persons two miles from
Canada.
"U a dike broke, we'd have
5 feet of water in town," . he
said.
The water comes from the
north-flowing Red River and
the Pembina River, which
divides the town.
Abou t seven miles of
concrete and ea rthen dike
form a permanent levy
around Pembina. To the
south , a three-mile-long dike
of earth and sandbags "is
being built higher and
higher," Jundt said as the
river's waters rose to 53.6 feet
- about 11.5 feet over flood
stage.
The Red, on its biggest
rampage of the century, has
innWldaied nearly 1 million
acres during the last two
weeks in the 20().mile-long
valley. The U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers estimates
damage at nearly $59 million
in North Dakota and
Minnesota. About 2,000
persons remain away from
their homes in the two states.
The Red's flood crest
pushed relentlessly into
Canada, where· Manitoba
Prem ier Sterling !,yon
ordered the evacuation of
about 10,000 people last week.
About 7,000 left their homes
and suught shelter with
friends
or
relatives
emergency officials said
Sunday.
About
4,000
persons

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Free Checking Account For You
~e invite you to use this preferred service with no serVICe charge. All those 65 years and over are welcome to
open an account any timt~o Stop in and see us now.

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Fai'ttters
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POMERQY-,OHJO
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and Mrs. Ruth Huber,
Danville, lll. , and several

creas ing to the mid 60s to

mid 70s by Fridays. Lows
mostly in the 40s Wed-

Sommers ·wheeler and a

Besides his parents he was

brother, Alex.
Surviving are her husband,
Glenn Wolfe, Washington ; a
daughter, Georgia Bell, Kent
Springs, Md .; and a
granddaughter, Cindy, Kent
Springs.
Mrs. Wolfe was a member
o( the Third Church of Christ
Scientest.
Funeral services will he
held at I p.m. Wednesday at
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Burial will be in the Plants.
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to. 9 p.m. Tuesday.

preceded in death by two
brohers.
Funeral serVices will be
held at I p.m. Thursday at the
Langsville Christian Church
with Mr . Gene Musser
officiating. Burial will be in
the Wright Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
church anytime after 2 p.m.
Wednesday until the hour of
the services. The family will
receive friends at the church
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday . The Walker
Funeral Home is in charge of

mcreaslng to the upper 40s
to mid 50s f'riday morning.

ROSS HOBACK
Ross V. Hoback, 88, 2216
Eastern Ave.,.Gallipolis, died
Sunday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant.
He was a son of the late C.
W. and Cornelia Awniller
Hoback and besides his
parents was also preceded in
death by three brothers and
his wife, Mary C. Hoback.
, Surviving are a daughter,
Betty Brickles, Gallipolis;
two sisters, Garnet Smith
Ervine and Josephine Smith,
both of Racine ; .live
grandchildren, nine gre~t­
grandchildren and . .several
nieces and nephews.
Fuileral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
Ewil)g Funeral Home with
Mr. Roger Allen officiating.
Burial will be in the Browning
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at
anytime.
mENEM.DARST

arrangements.

JAMES C. REEVES
James C. Reeves, 52, Wolf
Pen Road, Pomeroy, died
Saturday at University
Hospital in Columbus.
He was a son of the late
Clifford Marion and Ina May
Carpenter Reeves.
Surviving are his wife,
Dorothy Tuckerman Reeves;
a daughter, Mrs . Paul
(Linda) Darnell, Pomeroy; a
son, Robert L. Reeves,
Cheshire ; five grandchildren,
five great-grandchildren,
four sisters and two brothers
and several nieces and
nephews.

Mary June Hood; a sister,

MEETS TUESDAY
Pomeroy Cahpter 186, OES,
will meet Tuesday, May I, 'at
7:45 p.m. at the temple . All
mothers will be honored.

and ThursdaY,

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (A.P) - In
Rem, th e 1977 Ohio Horse of
the Year, won the $20,000
Kellogg Stakes in Sunday's
feature race at River Downs.
In Rem was the betting
favorite and covered the six
furlongs in I :11 to pay $4.60,
$3.40 and $3.20.
·
Grand Time finished
second, 21&gt; lengths back, and
returned $4.80 and $4.00. Go
Knobs was third and paid
$9.80.
Both the attendance and
mutuel handle at the opening
day of the track's 112-&lt;lay
thoroughbred mee.t set
records as a crowd of 10,803
bel $1,052,548.
King Q.B. and Flirting Boy
won the first two races, with
the 6-2 daily double
combination paying $104.20.

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By Charlene Hoeflich

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Cathy nas become another of the Blaettnar women to attend
Ohio University and be lni!lated into Alpba Delta PI Sorority.
A freslunan there, Cathy is enrolled in the nursery and preschool program. Her sister, Mary, a 110phomore at Ohio, is also
a member of the sorority, as Is the thlrddaughter of John and
Eleanor Blaettnar, Elizabeth, a graduate 'of Ohio now teaching
at the Lorain Catholic II!gh School.
It's interesting ......
Eleanor, mother of Cathy, Mary and Liz, Mrs. Marsaret
BlaeUnar, their grandmother, Nancy Blaettnar Lee their
aunt, Irene Blaettnar Hickman, their great-aunt, ~ all
graduates of Ohio University and all niembers of Alpha Delta

Weekend

BASEBALL
National League
NEW YORK METS Placed Pat Zacnry, pitcher ,
on the 21-day disabled li st.
Rea 1=tivated Kevin Kobel
pitcher, from the disabled

list.

Nettie Meeks of the Pratts Fork area, who has made her
home at the Mark Rest Center in McConnelsville for several
years now, celebrated her looth birthday Wednesday.
Several relatives from here went up for the observance. Ola
Smith and Clarence Story, niece and nephew; Bemlce Hawk,'
cousin and Aletha Randolph and Nettie BamhaM, granddaughters, were there along with Mr. and Mrs. Homer' Sinclair
of Colwnbus, son and daughter-In-law of Mrs·, Meeks, and her
granddaughter, Sharon, Blld a great-grandson, Hmter David.
Many of the patients joined the family for the celebration.
Cake and punch were served.
Mrs. Meeks got congratulatory messages from President
~dhesMrs. Carter and Rep. Clarence Miller, We join with best

a

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The report is that Ted Downie who underwent surgery at
University Hospital last week Is progressing nicelt.
He will be confined to the hospital for another two weeks and
we're sure that cards would be a day. brightener for him. His
wife, Dorothy, Is staying in Colwnbus blit has hopes of geUing
home for a day or two this week. Cards may be sent to Ted
Room 641 West, University Hospital, Col~ 43210.
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FOOTBALL
National Football League
BALTIMORE COLTS Acquired Greg Landry,

q ua rterba ck,

from

Dayton, and Alvin, Chicago;
a half sister, Evelyn Shuler,
Rutland, 13 grandchildren
and six great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Searles was a member

of the auxiliary units of the
American Legion and the
Disabled J\merican Veterans.
Funeral ser\lices will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday from
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with Rev. Robert
Bumgardner officiating.
Burial will follow in Kyger
Cemetery .Friends may call
at the funeral home from 4 to
9 n m. Wednesday .

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WHEELING, W.Va. (AP) Federal authorities are refusing · to
guarantee
that
construction
techniques to be used when work
resumes on the Willow Island cooling
. tower will meet proper standards, the
~ chairman
of the Governor's
Commission on Willow Island said
Monday .
West Virginia Labor Commissioner
. Stephen Cook, who heads the nineman panel appointed by Gov. Jay
Rockefeller to investigate the year-old
. industrial(fagedy, said officials of the
federal Occt~pational safety and
:Health Administration were being
uncooperative to the probers.
· Fifty-one workers were killed on
. April 27, 1978, when a scaffolding

inside the hall-completed cooling
lower at Willow Island,.W.Va ., pulled
away, ,plunging the men 168 feet to
their deaths.
Monongahela Power Co., owner of
the Pleasants Power Station, where
the disaster occurred, announced
Monday that work would begin in
early May to erect scaffolding and
clear away the final rin·g of concrete
on the tower. The actual pouring of
new concrete would be about a month
away, a spokesman for the company
said.
At a press conference In Wheeling
attended by three other· commission
members, Cook said the commission
also wanted assurances that OSHA

the

Detroit Lions for undisclosed
draft choices.

BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Association ..
CHICAGO
BULLS
Named Jerry Sloan head
coach .

SOCCER

BOOKMOBILE ScHEDULE
North American
Meigs Bookmobile
Soccer League
COSMOS Si gned Jack
schedule for Tuesday-Keno,
Brand, goalie, to a new
3-3: 30 ; Reedsville, Reeds contract
.·
Store, 4-5; Tuppers Plains,
COLLEGE
Arbaugh Housing, 5:3~:30;
SAMFORD - Named Dave
Chester Methodist Church, Hart and Michael Calhoun
.6:4;. 7:45; Riggs Addition, a. assis tant basketball coaches.
8:30.

an swered. He said a return letter had
been sent out Friday, but said an
OSHA official would not diwlge 'the
contents .
A spokesman for OSHA in
Washington said Monday the letter
pointed out that OSHA had
''commenced an inspection'' at the
site on April 16 and that the
inSpections would coritin ue until
construction of the tower is
completed.
"It is worth noting ·that the
responsibility for safety and health of
construction wotkers at Willow Island
as at other construction sites
nationwide, ultimately must rest with
the employers," the letter said. The

would conduct inspections before and
after work begins. •
" I think it is correct to say that the
commission members are incensed at
what they see as an arrogant
disregard by OSHA for the feelings
and concerns of West Virginians on·
this matter," he said.
The contractor, Research-Cottrell,
Inc., of Bound Brook, N.J., has agreed
to provide. OSHA with information
regarding the type of scaffolding to be
used, how it will be attached, and how
concrete will be hoisted .
Cook sa1d he had been in touch with
top OSHA officials as late as Sunday
to see why an April 12 letter to OSHA
Director_Eul.a _I:l_irlg~am had not been

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 12

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OSHA spokesman, Al&lt;io Konoshima, killed or injured.' If our request to
said he felt the lette.r answered the OSHA exceeds their mandate, so be
request for assurances that the it ," said Cook.
Cook said an OSHA lawyer earlier
governor 's commission has been
said OSHA would not issue. public
seeking.
In a tersely worded statement read assurances under any circumstances.
at the press conference, Cook pointed That was why the leUer was wriUen to
out that the magnitude of the Bingham, he said.
construct ion site disaster was
"We are unwilling to assume that
the construction teChniques to be
unprecedented in this country.
"The commission members are utili'led at Willow Island are safe. We
unsympathetic when OSHA whimpers want to he told. We want the public
that 'To certify .proposed construction told ," he said.
Sen.' William Gilligan, R-Tyler, a
techniques as being in conformance
with ex isting OSHA standards member· of the commisaion who ··
exceeds our statutory mandate.' What · a\(ended the press conference, called
they appear to he· saying is 'Don't on OSHA officials to "abandon their
llother us until somebody has been negative attitudes and start telling 118
something ."

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And the men are not to be completely exclt~ded - John
William Blaettnar, father of Cathy, Mary and Liz, and Fred
Blaettnar, their grandfather, also both graduated from Ohio.
Then there are others .......

The public is invited to view "Spring In Bloom'';'the Rutland
Garden Clt~b's spring flower show. The show Is being held In
the Rutland United Methodist Clmrch and the hours this afternoon are from I to 4 p.m. It's the first of several flower shows
to be held In the county.

Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press

Feds refuse.to guarantee tower techniques

Pi.

WIS

Mr. Reeves was a member

of the · Operating Engineers
Union.
Funeral services will he
held at 10 a.m . Thursday at
the Ewing Funeral Home
with burial to be in Meigs
Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after ' ~ .m.
Tuesday.

Mrs. Irene M. Darst, 64,

Maple St., Middleport, died
Sunday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Darst was born April
3, 1895 at Addison, a daughter
of the late Marlon and Ellen
Wright Daniel (cq). She was
also preceded in ~ath by her
husband, Ray, in 1971 ; a son,
Delmar; a granddaughter,

ROYGORBY
Roy Gorby, 72, Route I,
Langsville, died early
8
Monday morning at Veterans
t
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor " Memorial HJispital.
~ He was born March 19,1907
Member Federal Ueposit IQSUrance Gorporatton
~ in Salem Township, a son of
•IOCIOC-DODO.o::.ooa_;...,,o.;~;;;~~~~;.,:;;.;,;;_;;.;;;;;;;;;.;.;~;;.;~;:.;.IOC.J the late Ellsworth ·and Elsie
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Surviving are two sisters,
Mrs. Alma Nel.:j()n, Carroll ,

with a chance of showers

Thursday ··and Friday.
llighs in the upper 50s to
mid 60s Wednesday, in-

~esday

four sons, Paul, Cheshire;
Asel, Jr., Dayton.; John,

Because We Fumish A

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Goff Gorby . He was a farmer
and served in the U. S. Army
during World War II.

nieces, nephews and cousins.

ROSA SEARLES
Mrs. Rosa M. Searles, 80,
Beech St., Middleport, died
Sunday at Holzer Medical
Center.
Mrs. Searles was born Dec.
·19, 1898 in Meigs County, a
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Shuler. Besides
her parents, she was
preceded in death in• 1972 by
her husband, Asel Searles,
three sons, a half-brother and
a sister.
Surviving are three
daughters, Mrs . Agnes .
Elkins, Los Angeles, Calif.;
Mrs. Franklin (Ina Louise)
Wray, Baltimore, Ohio, and
Mrs . .William (Bernice)
Speck, Long Beach, Calif.;

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GEORGIA W.WOI.FE
Georgia Wheeler Wolfe, 81,
Washington, D. C., formerly
of Apple Grove, died
Saturday in Washington .
Mrs. Wolfe was preceded in
death by her parents, the late
James C. and Theresa

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday:: Fair Wednesday

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enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MAY I, 1979

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Replacement
is requested

atiOBWISe
ATLANTA, Ohio (AP) · - An
e.vly morning fire at the Sohlgro
fertillzer plant resulted In the .
evacuation of about 300 residents
of this Plckaw,y County comml!nity.
. . . .
Deputy John Monee said this
morning that the Ohio EnvironllleJltal Protecton Agency had advl8ed that the 350-400 residents of
Clarkal!w'g, just south of Atlanta
In RCIIs Coonty, might have to be
evacuated from their homes
because of "toxic chemicals drif.
'ling !lOUth."

ordering that any action taken at the
scheduled April 21 meeting be ruled
null and void ..
.
According to that complaint,
petitions circulated to call the recall
meeting were. improperly distributed
and the. meeting, thus, in violation of
the
Cooperative's
Code of
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Regulations.
·
Leglalatlon allowing township
Approximately 250 members of the
trustees to charge for ambulance
cooperative
met on AprU 21 and voted
or emergency medical services
to
oust,
by
unanimous show-&lt;Jf-band '
has been passed by the Ohio
vote, the old board of truste&lt;~~~, and
Senate.
.
elected a new board.
,
Sen. Marcus A. Roberto, DOn
April
26,
the
old
board
!lied
an
Ravenna, Is sponsor of !he .bill,
amended
complaint
seeking
whicll cleared the Senate by a 28declaratory judgment, as well aa a
2 vote Monday ntgbt.
..
temporary and permanent injunction
Under .the measure, money
Monday at the Gibbs Motor Vehicle Registrar's Office
LAST DAY BUYERS- The waiting liile was long,
against the newly elected board.
charged wOIIId be placed into an
on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy. Beginning today,
but at least the weather was nice for Meigs Countlans
The new board filed motions Friday
ambulance and emergency
residents with the Initials L to Z may obtain thi!ir new
who waited until the last day to purchase their 1979
asking
that the complaint brought
medical services fwtd to be IISed
validation stickers.
motor vehicle stickers. Foot traffic was heavy all day
against
them be dismlaaed, and,
for the management, mainfurth~r, that a change of venue be
.
tenance and operation of the sergranted.
'vicea, Roberto said. The bill now
In an entry filed Monday, Judge
goes to the House.
Calhoun
asks the Supnlme .Court to
I
appoint another judge, " ... who may
· · CHICAGO (AP)·• ~ Sears, .
The latest survey showed ·that the food prices is declining and should checklist·store in six cities last month then rule upon the motion for change
Rciebuek and ·Co., the nation's
Associated Press
and dec lined in only two.
largest retaUer, Is reducing
Grocery bills continued their marketbasket bill increased at the continue to do so. Howard J . Hjort, the . Comparing grocery prices today of venue.''
the
Agriculture
chief
economist
for
checklist
s"'re
in
eight
cities
last
prices In Its CWTent catalog by s
seemingly . endless climb upward
with those a year earlier, the AP
percent starting today, in a move
during April, with meat prices leading month, risillg an average of 2.4 Department, said stepped up found
increases at the checklist store
production
of
pork
and
poultry
has
percent.
The
bill
decreased
in
five
to comply with President .Carthe way, an Associated Press
in
every
year. On the average, the
off
beef
helped
take
the
pressure
cities; the average decrease was the
ter's anti-Inflation guidelines.
marketbasket survey shows .
marketbasket bill at the beginning of
Sears announced the acrossThere are indica lions that the worst same as the average increase ..,... 2.4 prices.
The· AP survey · found the pork May was 10.3 percent higher than it
the.!Joard price cut for th~ spring
of this year's price increases may be percent. On an overall basis, the
was 12 months ago.
·
and summer 1979 General
behind us. But the AP survey showed marketbasket bill at the checklist picture mixed during April. The price
No
attempt
was
made
to
weight
the
Olarles E. (Doodles) McGrath, 19,
Catalog on Monday, three days
C&lt;?nsumers stUI have to shop carefully stores was half a percent higher at the of a pound of pork chops declined at AP survey resl!lts according to Rt . I, Rutland, was arrested Monday
after Seats officials met in.
to keep the family budget within end of the month than it was in the the checklist store in five cities generally by about a dime a pound. population density or in terms of what afternoon by Meigs County Sheriff's
beginning.
Washington with President Carbounds.
·
But the price increased in an equal percent of a family 's actual grocery deputies.
The
situation
was
an
improvement
ter's Council on Wage and Price
The AP drew up a random list of 15
outlay each item represents . The day
McGrath was taken before the
number
of
cities·
and
some
of
the
from
March
when
the
overall
increase
Stablllty.
commonly purchased food and
of the week on which the check was Court of Common Pleas to answ..- ~n
·
nonfood items, checked the price at in the marketbasket bill was 1.8 boosts were substantial.
made varied depending on the month. old charge of breaking and entering of
The
beef
situation
was
less
percent.
WASHINGTON (AP)
one supermarket in each of 13 cities on
The AP did not lfY to compare a building owned by Rod Walker in
Government officials have said encouraging. The price of a pound of
President Carter says Sen. EdMarch I, 1973 and has rechecked on or
prices
from city to city; comparisons December, 1978.
chopped
chuck
increased
at
the
ward M.Kennedy's criticism of
about the start of each succeeding recently that the rate ·of increase in
were made only in terms of
McGrath had gone before the court
administration on policies Is a lot
month .
perc;entages of increase or decrease. on a prior date on a bUI of information
of baloney. but the senator says
The items on the AP checklist were : and had entered a guilty plea. He hal
he'll stlll SIJilPOrl Carter In the
chopped chuck, center cut pork chops, been out on a pre-sentence
1911l prealdenttal campaign. "I'm
frozen orange juice concentrate, investigation.
not hurt or shocked," the ·
coffee, paper towels, butter, Grade-A
Judge John C.Bacon sentenced
Musachusetts Democrat said
companies, which he didn't name, concern ... .'' He said they are given medium white eggs, creamy peanut McGrath to serve a term of a1x
WASHINGTON
(AP)
The
first
Monday shortly after Carter
time . to respond and justify their butter, laundry deter gent, la~ric months to five years in an appro)liate
welcome slowing of the upward spiral could be violators imd are being prices, if they can.
called Kennedy's criticism of the
closely.
checked
softener, tomato sauce, mtlk, . state penal institution. McGrath waa
of food prices may be starting . The
administration's oil policltes ''a
In other economic developments, frankfurters and granulated sugar. A remanded to the custody of the
Carter
said
he
telephoned
Sears
Agriculture Department says the
lot of baloney."
the government said Monday its index
prices paid to farmers declined in executives last week to tell them that designed to point to future economic l~th item, chocolate chip cookies, was sheriff.
Then, gtvlng what has become
"in
my
opinion
they
were
not
in
dropped from the list at the end of
·
April for the first time in five months.
his standard response to
trends declined in March by 0.5 November 1977 because the
compliance
...
and
they
modified
their
.Consumer food prices increased 12.5 prices to come into compliance." ·
questions about the 191M! presidenpercent, the third monthly decline in a manufacturer discontinued the
percent in the year ending in March
tial race, Kennedy said he ex- .
With respect to the other row and an indication of a possible package size used in the survey. The
and the government has said they companies, Carter said, "We have recession . However , administration
Clear tonight with the low In the low
pecta Carter "will run, be rehave to start easing sometime soon. inqwred to the executives of those economists continued to maintain that cities were : Albuquerque, N.M., 405. Mostly swmy Wedneeday. Hlgb in
IKmlnated and re-elected."
Atlanta, Ga., Boston, Chicago, Dallas,
President Carter voiced optimism companies telling them about our a recession would be avoided.
Detroit,
Los Angeles, Miami, New the upper ~. The chance of rain II
at a news conference Monday.
CINCINNATI (AP) - A 12York, Philadelphia, Providence, Salt near zer9 percent tonight and 10 per"There is hope iii this area," he
year-&lt;Jld sixth grader who says he
cent Wednesday.
Lake
City and Seattle.
said. ''I think we've got good
waa prepared to lead picket lines
prospects in the future for food prices
to get a law pasaed against
to drop somewhat or at least not to
· juvenile Sll)oldng will receive the
rise
so rapidly.' '
·
19'79 Ohio l,ung Association Com·
carter also said he thinks his antiJllllllity Award in Smoking and
inflation program may finally be
HealIIi.
showing results.
Charles ''Chip" Skidmore,
He said the administration's
Two per!ions were injured early Charlotte Beach, 43, Vinton.
while doing a school writing
A passenger in the 13each auto,
Coilncil on Wage and Price Stability is . today in a motorcycle accident on SR
asstgnment, discovered that Ohio
Patrici~
Beach, 18, Vinton, was
aggressively purSI!ing companies that 7, two and two-tenths of a mile south of
and Cincinnati had no laws
by SEOEMS to Holzer
transported
might be increasing prices in excess SR 141 .
pre\'enttng children from bl/ytng
of what the price guidelines allow .
Called tothesceneat !2:30a .m., the Medical Center, where she was
cigarettes.
" We're doing the best we can; It's Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway Patrol, treated for a contusion of the left rib,
'lbrough his efforts and those of
not perfect, but I think we're making a reports that a south bound cycle and released.
a local weekly paper, the CinHalley was ·cited on' a charge of
great deal of progress," he said. He operated by James Collison, 26, Rio
cinnati City Council passed a law
failure
to yield .
told of his own role in winning a price Grande, passed off the right side of
against selling tobacco to
· The patrol investigated a onerollback
from
Sears,
Roebuck
and
Co.
the
roadway,
went
out
of
control,
and
children. Nqw Skidmore and his
vehicle accident on Roush Lane, four·
overturned.
that was announced last week.
frlendB would like to see the state
The Agriculture Department
Colli!Wn and a passenger, Helen tenths of a mile west of SR 7, at 10 :20
: follow Sllit.
reported Monday that prices received Kiesling, 41, Gallipolili, displayed p.m., Monday.
Officers report that a west boWld
by farmers declined 1 percent in visible signs of injury and were
April,. led by lower prices for hogs , . tran5ported by the dania Volunteer autO operated by Mary Searls, 22,
Bidwell, passed off the right side of
oranges, eggs, lettuce and milk .
Squad to Holzer Medical Center.
.
It was the first drop in farm prices
Collison was admitted for treatm~nt the roadway, recrossed the road,
rL-~trice November, and , whlle one offaciallacerationsandlacerationsof passed off the left side and struck a
uuu~OO} month doesn't establish a firm trend, . the hand , and is listed in guarded tree.
There w~s moderate damage to the
it could mean the steep climb in food condition.
·
auto.
No citation was Issued.
. Charies Chancey , Meigs High prices is about over. Consumer food
Kiesling was admitted for
School Athletic Director, will hold a prices increased 4 percent in.the (irst treatment of multiple soft tissue
meeting thili evening at 7 p.m . at Ute· three months of the year.
injuries and is listed in stable
FUNDS RECEIVED
hlgll school for the purpose of setting
With respect to the wage and price condition.'
)'tfarch
.gasoline eJII',ise tax checka
sctiedules lor the use of fields g~~idelines, Carter sliid neither he nor
COllison was cited on a charge of
totaling
$8,944,813, were distributed
PLAYS SCHEDULED - "Conscience" played by Rick Hovatter ad·
'(8\IIRJner programs) at Meigs High any of ·his key aides wants to be OWl.
'
justs the tlltof his halo in "Keep Your Halo Straigbt" which is just one of
athletic complex.
directly involved in wage negotiations
One person was injured during a Monday by the office of State Auditor
the dl'amas to be presented dl!ring "An Evening of Theatre" Friday, Ma)'
'lbe fields involved are Salisbury . IJetween unions and bliainess.
two-vehicle collslon on SR 325·, at CR Thomas E. Fergu!Wn. ·
, Amounts .received by .the villages
4, in the Meigs High School gymnasium. An Evening of Theatre which
.field, Meigs baseball diamo~d , little . Carter said his administration 57-B, at 6 p.m ., Monday .
beglna at Bp.m. featl!fes fol!f one-act plays; pr.esented by Meip High
league diamonds ll!nd 2, and the. T- .cannot now prove that ~ny business is
Officers report that a north boun&lt;\ include Middleport, $2,153; Pomeroy,
$2,324;
Racine,
$804;
Rutland,
$540,
School
jun~ors and seniors. Admission Is $1 for studenlll and fUO for
ball (ield. Anyo~e Interested in U8tng out of compliance Wlth the prtce auto operated by Wanda Halley, 45,
and
Syracuse,
$754
for
a
total
of
adults.
other perfonnances will inclt~de "So the Jury Was Hung," and
the facilities for the summer ~ui~elines. Rut he said Sears was out Addison , turned into the path of a
$6,375.
"Gross
Encounters of the Worst Kind ."
·programs should auend the meeting . of compli•nce for awhile and 13 other south . bound vehicle driven by
COmmon Pleas Jt~dge Ronald R'.
Calhoun has asked the Supreme Court
of Ohio to appoint another judge to
hear a case currently pending in the
Gallia Couniy Court involving rival
ooards of trustees vying lor control of
Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative.
The issue, which has resulted thus
far in the filing of a complaint for
declaratory judgment filed by the old
board and the filing of motions for
dismissal and change of venue by the
new board, stems from questions
surroWldlng the legality of a vote
taken on April 21 during which the
ooard of trustees of the cooperative
was allegedly 'removed and a new
ooard elected.
.
Prior to that vote, the old board had
filed a complaint with the court
seeking a declaratory judgment

•

.Grocery hills continue climb m April

R utJand

man·. booked'

At Farmers Bank

w

• I'

I

-------OOC&gt;OCIOOOCIOOOCIOOC:IOOOOOCIOCMMMMOOC:ooc-------ooof
Wilmetta
Stone,
X
brother, floyd
Daniel.and a
Surviving
are
two
daughters , Mrs. C. P.
(Kathleen) Williams and
Mrs. Jules (Ann) Biron, both
of Middleport; two sons,
Kenneth E. and Hobart M.,
both of Middleport; a. sister,
Mrs. Clyde (Clorice) Ranck
and a brother, Hobart Daniel,
both of Columblis.
Also
surviving
are
10
grandchildren, 18 greatgrandchildren and three
great-great.gandchildren.
Mrs. Darst was a member
of the Middleport Church of
Christ and was a member of
the Ladies Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert
Milton officiating. Burial will
he in Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

c;

...

! Area Deaths I

----

...

--]:
Communityl
Corner I

~.----

'

Are Preferred People

a

n

"We even dug up lawns to
get dirt because a lot of
splash is blowing over the
south dike," said Ed Jundt,

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

SENIOR CITIZENS

a

(
(

.'

to Ule creek bank.

registered at six emergency
reception centers in. the
province. Seven additional
reception centers were set up
in Winnipeg for the homeless.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
&lt;r

were found in the water next

1

HOME FURNISHINGS

I'

to U1e stream bank a few
yards from her mother .
About 300 yards downstream,
Ule bodies of her two sons,
Stephen Michael Chasteen, 4,
and Mark Lewis Chasteen, 2,

Flooding continues

Abortions will grow
WASHINGTON (AP) The use of abortions is
expected to grow in many
cowttries as families decide
to have fewer children and

&lt;.:lm steen, 5, was found next

.

SECOND PLACE WINNER- Twin City Gateway,
Middleport, had one winner In the Easter coloring contest
sponsored by Big Bend area merchants during the Easter
rea110n. John Greene, manager, presented Chris Noble, 7,
.~on, with his $10 prize. Chris was in the 4 to 8age group
andili the son of Mr. and Mrs. T..orrv Noble.

·CALL

First signs of price slowing seen

us ...

I f. your organization or
club needs a program.
We'll be happy 10 provide a
knowled geab le speaker a nd a n

WINNER - 'lbe Pomeroy National Bank had one
winner in the recent Easter coloring contest sponsored by
Big Bend area merchants during the Easter season.
(!dison Hobstetter, president of the Pomeroy National
Bank, presented Michele Zirkle, 10, with her third place
prize of$5. Michele 'Yasin the 9to 12age group and ts the
:daughter of Mr. and

Weather

presen tation a t no charge. Evert'
presenta tion is designed to
encou rage a question and

a.nswer period . Just ca ll us a t 992-3786 .

OHIO POWER COMPANY

Mrs.Miki!ZI:rkl:e~,:M:Id:dl~epo;.rt~.:--~~~;~~~:;::::=::::~~=

Hospital News

In Pomeroy

VETERANS~OIRAL

Saturday Admissions-Helena Brickles, Pomeroy;
Gerald Dill, Sr., Minersville;
Mildred Barnett, Pomeroy;
Bertha Spencer, !J.acine ;
Jeroml Dalley, Portland;
Woodrow Zwilling, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges-John
DeMoss, Jon Clark, Randall
Batey, Wanda Sprague,
Thelma Chase, Shirley
Tyree, Allen Mills, Thomas
Wolfe, Sharon Crouch.
Sunday Admissions-Robert Smith, Sr., Racine; '
James P. Roberts, Pomeroy;
Mildred Roush, LiUie
Hocking; Grace Gardner,
Rutland ; Ida Christy ,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharg...,.chad
Wolfe, Eddie Pullins, Myrta
Schaefer, Doris Miller .
PLAY SET FlUDA Y
An evening .or theatre
consisting of fwr one-act
plays will be presented at the
Meigs High School . by the
junior and senior classes
beginning at 8 )i.rn. Friday.
Admission will be $1.50 for
adults and $1 for Students
nie public Is invited.

FURNITURE DEPT.

·FLOOR
LAMP

!.t·
f
'\'

'

.
.

4 STV~S 10
CHOOSE FROM
DOWN BRIDGE, TRAY, f WAY,
SWING ARM, Ai.L IN POLISHED
BRASS RNiSN

.

Special

REG. '~3-

$5300

EI.BERFELDS IN POMEROY
)

I'

illustrated talk or fi lm

Two persons hurt
•
'cycle mishap today
m

Scb.ed.uled meeting
planoed by

II

,J

~

'I

�-

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May I, 1979

s- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Paneroy. 0., May 1, 1979

Editorial opinions,
comments

Hardly a ·one-sided deal

In Washington

SPEED

LIMIT

At pr\!S'!nt the Federal Govern·
conunon bapment's
Medicaid program provides
penlnc oo the Wuhlngtoo scene, and
subsidized
health care services for
tbat apparenUy Ia what Health,
Education and Welfare Secretary the poor. Wbile Medicare helps
Calllanb u ftoattng when he ouWned protect the elderly fran the threat of
a pht=4n national health InSurance financial ruin posed by protracted
JII'Oif8Dl earlier.thla month in a New illness. But what about the majority
of · Americans that fit Into neither
York speech.
category?
What about coverage for
· PtJued.in ill another way ri
deftnlna what Wuhlngtoo legislators them?
Granted, the vast majority of
commonly term catastrophic
Americans
hllve some form of
COfti'Bge, coverage for the kind or
medical
inSurance
coverage that they
~that can bankrujlt a family in a
either
indlvidually
purchased or obmatter ri monthll. Until recenUy the
tained
through
their
employer, and ·
Admllliltratloo, 1ille moat ri the
that
is
as
It
should
be.
Unfortunately,
· IMdtnc Coogreaiooal advocates ri a
. .ehenllve national health tn- approidmately 75 inilllon Americans
covered are. without adequate
-.nce procram,Jtu been unwi111ng so
against the type of Illness
protection
to ..we for IIUCh a eompromlse -In
we
are
talking
about.
. _ It felt ooee a catutrophlc .
.
T
he
llll;ellhood
that catastrophic
IIIDIIa JII'OIII•ll became law it would
Ulness
legislation
will
get acted upon
be ..,., dlfllcult to convlnee the
Matlin and the Coogress of the need in the 96th Congress is still
questionable at.best. For that matter,
fer allllll'e Cl1lllp'tlllenlve program.
. I IUIP'd 111eh fean are well foun- no one knows for sure what shape
ded, particularly since most · such coverage will take, if in fact, it is
iltlmatea for a comprehensive advanced. Will It be federally finan·
procram round out at a budget • ced and privately administered? Will
it be federally mandated, and
llaltin« 1100 bllllon annually. That's privately
financed and administered?
'filht: 100 bllllon dollars a year, ap- Until aD the
parts of the puzzle are
~..tely 10 percent ri our present
laid
out,
I,
for one; will reserve
rwt!CNI budget.
odgment
on
the merits of such
Wilen you weigh the alternatives,
egislatlon.
lt.'• ~ to lie why the catastrophic Though I want to see all Americans
__..., BJIIII'OIIeh has much more
Associated Press
protected from the type of medical
WASHINGTON(AP) -The House
IUPIJOI't ben in Wllhlngton. Not only billa
that can wipe out a family's of Representatives is well into its first
will lie prlc:e tag be COIIIiderably
savings,
I do not want to · see our television season and the ratings have
lower than the comprehensive
society
saddled
with yet another been a bit disappointing.
procram but It gets at the very area of
social
service
program
whose costs
lie pop.,let!IJII moat in need of such
Obviously, something has to be done
far
exceeds
its
benefits.
if telecasts of House sessions are ever
-.ge, the middle • income
to challenge "Mork and Mindy" or
Amlrlean.
"Laverne and Shirley" for the top
spols in the popularity ratings.
How·could House leaders have been
anything but bitterly disappointed last
week when the debate on the State
Department authorization bill failed
•J ·1~ 110. ' 1, •
to win audiences away from the soap
'
. ,-,~
operas and cartoon shows.
However, despite the consistent
"
failure to show· an~here but at the
bottom of th~ -ratings, there is no sign
of panic in the Ho1111e. Sources
involved in prograrruning vow there
•.·
fill
be no changes , in this season's
The prince said he decided to visit
CIUCAGO (AP) + Civil rights
lineup.
leader lbe Rev\ Jesae Jackson, who state authorities and try to locate the
But viewers can expect a readmitted tD a hospital 'alter he bird himself.
evaluation of the entire 'show next
comptained of weakness . and
when Congress plans to quit
dlain-, 1a rating ccmfortably and MOSCQW (AP) + American black October
for the year.
·
!lldercolD&amp; tests, hoi!Pital officiala activist Angela Davis has been
One
question
that
must
resolved
~·
awarded the Soviet Union's soon is whether the House be
will shift to
~. Andrew Thmlas, Jackson's International Lenin Peace Prize for three months of re-runs to fiU the time
pb:r~. aald Mooday the 37-year- ."strengthening of peace among
between October and the start of the
dil head ri Operation PUSH 1s nations."
second half of the session in January.
IIJiderloing a ''full and complete" . The Soviet news agency Tass
Here are some other lively
c!ieckuP at St. Joaeph's Hospital. said Monday that the Com· possibilities
change:
·
·'lbomai 881d Jackson, who was mittee on International Prizes, which A new set for
might help. The House
adlrJUted Sunday, 18 suffering from hands out the awards, cited Ms. chamber is a huge room designed for
Jlllylical and emotional emalllltion Davis, 35, for working toward use by 435 representatives, with some
and that further e:w:aminations ''friendship between the American extra room for staff and
tin
111n &amp;.tails
his
diti
and Soviet peoples, (and) for the functioilaries.
COl)
!I•·
W'":vc
on
con
on
development ·or all-around relations
were pven. , .
.
But the tnlth is, there rarely is more
Jacbon'sfatherdledMarch29,and between the United states and the than a handful of people on the floor.
aldtl aay that emotional strain, U.S.S.R."
The debates might have a lot more
c:oupled with two weeks of hectic
Ms. Davis, a professor in the ethnic appeal if they shifted tD a set that
travel, could account for Jackson's · studies program at San Francisco looks like someone's kitchen. The
Cllldltlon.
state College and a member of the members could sit around the kitchen
American Communist Party,
received
another high Soviet award, table, sip coffee and debate the bill.
MORGES, Switzerland (AP) +
Do all the programs have to be
Prince PbWp bas yet to see the the Lenin Jubilee Medal, in August House floor debates? Why not have
Aulrallan acrub bird. But he did get 1972.
She visited the Soviet Union in members show slides and movies
10 · heir Its lhrlek after he crawled
from their overseas trips. Not even
tllrouch brulh In a driving rain to help January.
the National Geographic Society has
DYe the nearly extinct species.
as
many people visiting exotic locales
WASHINGTON (AP) + Former
'1be prince 88ld In an interview
around
the world at any given
~ Mooday in the newsletter of President Gerald R. Ford stopped by moment as the House.
the World Wlldlife Fund that he the White House for an unofficial
Travelogues would produce more
per1111ded authorities in aouthern meeting with President Carter.
than
enough material to fill most of
Press secretary Jody Powell
Aultralta to shift a proposed
the
air
time between October and
town dewlopment plan to save the offered no infonnation about the January.
bini.. 'l11e species once was believed substance of the one4Jour discussion
A game show fonnat might liven
atinct -but has been spotted in the . Monday night.
for
a
committee
hearings . Imagine,
Ford was in Washington
·
members
of
the
Joint Chiefs of Staff
speaking engagement.
sitting in separate booths and

TrtaJ bllloons are a

Names •••

)

in the news

wu

w.-m

....,

Mtdthnedia buys three papers competing for shares of the defense
edited for the apparel industry.
California Apparel News, a weekly
tabloid of about 7JO,OOO circulation, bas
ieported on the women's apparel in·
duatry for 35 years. Men's Apparel
News, with a clf!'ulatlon of 18,000, Is
published 25 times a year.
Both are published at California
Fashion's headquarters in Los
Angeles. The newspapers also have a
88les office In New York City.
Levy will remain ·as publisher of
both newspapers, and he sa1d no .
changes in personnel will be made.
. Multlmedla publishes 12 dally
riewsp,.pers, and with the addition of
California Fashion, 25 non.1Jally
publications as well as operating five
VHF television stations and 13 AM
and FM radio stations. The purchase
ri a UHF televlsiOfl station in Nash~
ville and an FM station In Louisville,
Ky., await FCC approval.
Multlmi!IJB, Inc., also announced It
bad reached agreement in principle
to buy the West Orange Shopper of
Winter Garden, Florida.
Wilson C. 'ivearn, president of .
Multimedia, said the purchase is sub'ject to approval by the bo&amp;rd and to a
definitive sales contract. The price
was not dlacloaed.
'l1!e West Orange Sllopper,. owned
by Mrs.' Alllne Arney, has been In ,
bualness 26 years and circulates
prtmarily in Orange and Lake Coun·
ties in the Disney World area of Central Florida.

..

f

•&gt;·
•

' I

'

I

·

Capital ideas

l

, GBEENVILLE, S. 0. - The
jWalidents .of both companies an·
ID8ICed ~ tliat Multimedia, Inc.,
'-~~feed in principle to boy all outatualng CWIJIIllll1 stock of California
FublciD.Pllbllcati0111, Inc., based in
I:..'Anpies.
.
·WIIIon C. Weam ri Multimedia and
Ted Levy ri Callfornla-Fuhion aald .
1111 price will be appnl!dmately $12
miDioa. The clOIIInc Ia subject to the .
lli'IM ri a detlnltlve ~t and
i!ppi otal ri both boUds of directors.
Cdfornia FQhi.OIII publlahes two
..llanally • diltrlbuted newapapen

Eastem, Crusaders split tw:inhill Monday

The U.S. and You

budget.
Clearly, what the House needs is the
kind of stars tha~ will attract an
audience: It seems that. once a
congressman develops a little
charisma, some star quality, he runs
for the Senate, where members still
do not allow television camerlll!.
Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., is a
pretty good standup comic.
.
But if the House really wants to
challenge the networks for a share of
the viewing audience, why not
persuade Johnny Carson to run for
Congress.
With Rep. Car$0n opening each
day's session of the House with a 15- .
minute monologue, the ·show wquld be
on its way to the top of the ratings.

By Martha Allgle rmd Robert Walters theggregate limits set forth ·In the
treaty. Even though the Soviets con(Last of two related colUIIIDB)
WASHINGTON (NEA)·Ithassud· tend the plane is an intermediate·
den1y become conventional wisdom r811ge bomber designed for use in
that the Senate will never accept the theater warfare, rather than · interSALT n treaty in the form negot"iated continental attacks, the Backfire does
by the Carter admini8tration and have the capacity to reach the United
Soviet officials. Amendments and States on a one-way "suicide" flight
modifications of some sortre said to and unload its warheads.
be certain.
What SALT II critics never seem to
Such talk, however, should be taken · lllentlon, however, is the U.S.
with a large grain of you.Jmow-w~t. negotiators did not meekly accept the
As toUchy as the Senate is about 1ts Soviet' refusal to include the Backfire
own prerogatives, both political and under treaty limits. They got
constitutional, members are likely to something in exchange -a concession
find their maneuvering room on the of considerably greater import, in
particular treaty is decidedly llmlted. fact.
It was one thing for Senate Minority
The Soviets !wd originSlly insisted
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. and that U.S. forward-based systems in
others to tinker extensively with the Europe and the Pacific be included
terms of last year's Panama Canal under SALT II limits along with the
treaty. The P81!1UI)8nians may not missile launchers and bombers
liave been complete pushovers, but located in this country. After all, they
they were in no position, militarily or noted quite correctly, our F·llls
otherwise, to . resist the . 'changes could easily strllte the Soviet Union
sought by the Senate.
from their bases in England,
The Soviets are a very different ket· unloading nuclear warheads and
Ue of fish. Uke • it or not, they have returning. Ditto for carrier-based
attained over the past decade a posi· planes.
tlon of essential strategic equivalence
To · make a long story short, we
wiih the United States and they are agreed to leave the Backfire bmlber
not about to be shoved around by out of the treaty limits - but they, in
senators anxious to enhance their own turn, dropped their demand that our
reputation for toughness.
forward·ba~ systems be included.
As one SALT expert at the White A one-sided deal? Hardly.
House put It, "bargaining with the
The Senate can play around with
Russians in the 1970s is.not exactly the treaty wording all it wants, but
ilke negotiating with the Japanese on any attempts to force additional conthe battleship Missouri in 1945."
cessions from the Russis are almost
Critics of the SALT n treaty con- certain to meet with failure ,. unless,
sistently imply that the pact is more of course, we are prepared to give up
favorable to the R!llllllans than to the something in exchange... And that
United states, that our negotiators seems highly unlikely.
.
made concessions greater t11an those
It is difficult to believe that after six
extracted from the Soviets.
years or painfully slOW and ardUOUs
Such IISIIertlons, however, simply bargaining conducted under the
don't stand up under careful scrutiny. direction ct. three separate adTo .cite but one elUIJJlple, much has ministrations (two Republican, one
been made - in the Senate and Democratic), U.S. negotiators failed
elsewhere -of the failure of SALT II to Wring out all they might have from
to include lhe Soviet "Backfire" tnelr Soviet counterparts.
bomber under the limits imposed on
I~ Is even harder to imagine that the
each side's strategic weapons Senate, in a couple of months, could
delivery stems ·(land and submarine- · wrest advantages from the Rll&amp;'lians
based mtaslle launchers plus hvy that the Soviets consistently denied to
bombers).
official U.S. negotiators. More likely,
It is true that U.S. negotiators felt Senate tinkering would .. simply
the Backfire should lie counted under torpedo the treaty entirely.

Budgethighligh
. ' ts
' COLUMBUS, Ohio (.AP)
Following are highlights of the $16,3
billion 19'19.1981 state budget bill
approved by an 82-13 vote Monday by
the House:
'
-Appropriates a record $3.5 billion
for primary and secondery education,
an increase of $784 million from 1977·
1979.
~Provides all homeowners with a
2'h percent decrease in property
taxes.
-Expands homestead property tax ·
exemption for the elderly and
disabled, increasing maximum
allowable income to $15,000 a year
from $10,000.
- Increases college student
inatructional grants program by $4
million, making students of business,
technical, trade, and eorrespom:lence
schools eligible if their schools offer
associate degrees. ·
-Revises Medicaid program,
conforming eligibility standards with
federal law and requiring patients to
share in costs of prescription drugs
and eyeglasses.
-Increases Aid to Dependent
Otildren grants- for instance, by $31
a month for a family of four, bringing
it to about $221. Requires aD counties
to offer work 1elief jX'ograms for
clients who ran work .
- Freezes tuition fees for Ohio
resident students of state colleges and
universities at SjX'ing quarter 1979
levels.
'
-Requires the Board of Regents to
make analysis of the fiscal impact of

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb,M.D.

Problem with enlarged
tendons
DEAR DR. LAMB - About five
years ago.l had !I wrist operation to
correct a problem I was having. The
tendons had enlarged in the wrist and
were pinching the nerve that goes into
the hand. 'l1!e doctor scraped the ten·
don and enlarged the . hole where the
nerve passes Into the hand. He said
that the problem would not return but
I'm having this difficulty again. My
right hand is nwnb again and is worse
at night when I lie down. The doctor
said before that four of my fingers
and the thumb were affected.
I've been an upholsterer for 23
any state action upon state-assisted
colleges and universities.
-Creates a state subsidy for
community-based corrections
programs and jX'ovides for per capita
grants.
-Contains $220 million for state
employee pay raise to finance an
average boost of 7 percent, as
proposed by Gov. James A. Rhodes.

LIVFSrOCK REPORT

Berry's World .

PROGAASliAAlE

NOW

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) . _ Direct
Hogs (Fed-state): Barrows and gilts
steady, demand good U.S. 1-2, 200 230
· ts , 44 ............
... " 25 , few at
lbs . coont ry pom
44.50, plants, 44.50-45.00, U.S. 1-3, :m"'"' oo·,
250 lbs. country points , 43 ...........
plants, 43.75-44.75.
Receipts Monday: ACtuals 9700,
tO&lt;Iay's estimates 5000.
Cattle, from Colwnbus Producers
Uvestock Co.Operative Association,
steady to 2.00 higher. Slaughter steel'S
and yearlins, choice 74.00-77.75, good
70.00-74.00. Bulls market steady. Cows
market steady.
.
Veal calves, cholre and prime 119.00
and down.
Sheep and lambs 2.00 higher, old
sheep 32.00 and down.
MARKET ~EPORT

C.0979 oyNEA. Io~

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cattle 300.
Auction early. Hardly eoough steers
and heifers for test. Cows and bulls
steady.
Steers, choice, 2-4, 925-1200 lbs,
72.75-75.80; good, 2-3, 1®-1275 lba,
69.5().72.00.
Heifers, good and choice, 2-4, 75().975
lbs, 70.7!&gt;-73.00; individual, 75.50.
Cows, utUity, 2-3, 56.00-61.50; high
dressing, 62.00-64.00; cutter,1-2, 50.00Ji6.00; high dressing, 58.~.90.
Bulls, 1·2, 1000.1585 lbs, 68.00-75.25.
Vealers, choice, 240-300 lbs, 1!15:00114.00.
· ·
Feeders,. choice, 300-440 lbs, 98.00,108.00. Heifers, choice, 350 435 lbs,
. 90.96.00; good, 3oo-150 lb!, 79.00-34.00.

'

and use my hands constantly.
When I turn my and over I can feel the
tendons click over each other. What
would you advise? I may have to find
another occupation. Do you think the
operation can be done again?
DEAR READER - I '\Vi3h I had all
the answers to your questions but I
don't nor does anybody else.
One reason I wanted to include your
letter in the column is to remind people that simply because they have
readabout a cure for some disorder
doesn't mean It always works. You're
describing a ·condition called the carpal tunnel-syndrome.
At the wrist there are a number of
'Veoty Small bones that fonn the base
for the hand. In front of these bones
are • a group of watchband-like tendons and fibers. These tendons and
the bones form a tunnel. The tendons
that move the fingers, nerves and
some blood vessels must pass through
this • tunnel.
Whenever anything happens to
make this tunnel too small or Its contents such·as the tendons become too
large, you inevitably will have
pressui'e-:-'Itdoes cause pressure on
the nerves and can cause a variety of \
symptoms including numbness, pain
and tingling in ths thumb and fingers
and in in the arms.
One approach to treatment Is to
open the tunnel and provide more
r0m1 for Its contents. Apparently,
that's what was done in your case
and, apparenUy, You did get 'some
relief for some tlnie . .
If you have real swelling of~ tendons tnat doasn't mean that the tendon problem Itself will go away, but in
some instances thla problem does
disappear spontaneously. In other insnces, doctors use medicine which
combats lnfllimmatlonand helpe to'
decn;ase swelling in the area.
It's possible that you might benefit
from another operation, at least tern·
porarlly, but such a decision should
be made by lbe doctors who review
your problem 8lld know the specific
detailB ri your condition. On the basis
of all the facta, it might be important
to use an anthlnflammatory
medicine. Or if there •s no evidence of
inflammation and It's simply a recurrenee of the constriction ·
·phenomenom, mechanical relief
ti)rough aurgerymight be the anawer.
You should see a rheumatologist, a
apeclallst in arthrltla and joint pi'o:blerns. He can help direct you to a
surgeon If that ieems to be lbe proper
~or w1p treat you with anti·
lnflanuiilltorYtype medicines If that's
the preferred treatment In your cue.
READERS WHO WANT inforinaUon about osteMrthrltill can send for
The Health Letter number t-10. Send
your request with 50 cents and a long,
stamped, self-addreued envelope to
Dr. Lamb in care of !1J18 riewBper,
P.O. BOlt 1551, Radio City Statian
New York, NY 10019.
'
yeap~

BY GREG BAILEY
Eastern plated nine runs in the first
inning of the second game Monday
night to defeat Parkersburg Catholic,
~ thus gaining a split of a doubleheader. The Eagles dropped the
inltlalcontest,ll-10.
Rusty Wigal won the nightcap with
relief help from brother, Greg Wigal.
They emtbined to walk six and fan
one.
· Jim McFarland, the losing hurler,
got off to a rocky start by walking 10
batters in the first inning. He

Eastern sent 14 men to the plate, af·
ter Brian Bissell opened the frame
with a single. Goebel then reached on
an error, and then five of the next
seven Eagles drew walks. Then clime
that smash by Goebel capping the inning. The visiting Crusaders never
threatened the hosts after that big In·
ning.
The strong Parkersburg team
picked up a nm in the second and one
In the third before Eastern came back
with four in the bottom of the third to
put the game out of resch.
sttu~kout three.
Four walks, two errors; and a Rusty
In that second game, Jeff Goebel Wigal single pushed across those
stroked a bases-loaded triple in the ' Eagle runs. '
·
first inning pacing that ·nine riln at·
R. Wigal led that Eagle hit~ in
tack.

pick up the ll·IOv1ctory .
Eastern's seventh inning comeback
. The clever lefty fanned no one and just fell short. The Eagles plated five
walked no one as his pinpoint control runs on three singles, a Norton
forced the Eagles hit his pitch.
double, and two Crusader errors.
With one out, Eastern had the tying
Parkersburg picked up four runs in
the first inning and five in the second run on second, but a strike out by
fora~lead .
relieving pitcher McFarland and a
Two more runs in the fifth made the ground out to the second baseman
scoreboard read 11-6 before the dashed the Eagle hopes.
Eagles got their bats warmed up.
Norion led the hitting with his
In the .fifth inning Eastern pushed homer lind double while Greg Wigal
across one run, and then in the sixth, had a triple and single. R. Wigal and
Mark Norton drilled a three-run losing hurler Dan Spencer each had
homer to deep left field to get his two single, Goebel had a double, and
team back in the ball game. Another Johnnie Besver had a single.
Carpenter led the winners with
In the first game Crusader south- run came home on a single and a
psw Dan Kniskie held the Eagles at Parkersburg error, one of seven in three singles · while Kniskle had a
double and triple. McFarland had two
bay for six Innings before tiring to the contest.

the second game with three singles,
Goebel had his triple and Bissell a
single to account for the only Eagle
hits.
.
Coach Ralph Wigal was pleased in
the second contest that his team committed ·only one error after mishan·
dling five balls in the first contest.
Unescore'
PC
011 01- 3 3 5
E
904 OX-13 5 I
McFarland and Newell.
R. Wigal (wp), G. Wigal (3) and
Bissell.

Moskau 's performance may
Den Talk
have w~n starting position

BYGREGBAD...EY
PART DON 1979-1988
HUNTING REGULATIONS
Woodchuck Hunting- The season is ·
open statewide all year with no
restrictions on hours, daily bag
limits, or possession limits except
that it is closed during the deer gun
season. Woodchucks ~y be hunted
statewide with crossbows having a
wJrking safety and a ilne1'iece .stock
at least 25 inches long, except during
the longbow archery and gun season
for deer.
Crow Season ~ Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday of each week beginning
the first Thursday in January 1980
and continuing through the third
Saturday in March; and Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday of each week
beginning the second Thursday of
June and continuing through the last
Saturday of December 1960. Hunting
hours will be one-half hour before
sunrise to sunset. No daily bag or
poasesslonllmit. The limit Is one deer
~~on-

CINCINNATI (AP)- The way Paul
Moskau filled in Sundl!y for Tom
Seaver, he just may have pitched
himself into the Cincinrtati Reds'
starting rotation . At least he's back in
consideration.
"We're going to sit down · and talk
about it," manager John McNamara
said after Moskau 's 6 2-3 innings of
two-hit, scoreless relief against the St.
l.nuis Cardinals.
Only last Tuesday, McNamara had
told Moskau he'd be a long reliever
rather than a starter. But with
Seaver's recurring bark trouble and
Bill Bonham still not back from .a
shoulder problem, Mc!'lamara needs
somebody who can go the distance.
"I was very pleased with the way
Paul threw," McNamara said. ':All
we really wanted was three or four

innings out of him."
Moskau hado't appeared in a league'
game since April 8 when he pitched 3
1-3 scoreless innings against San
Francisco.
"I was beginrting to feel I had been
put on the shelf," Moskau said. "I felt .
1had to go see him (McNamara) , just
to ask him for my own sUite of mind
what was expected of me.
"He said I would be used in long
relief and I said fine, just as long as I
know."
Actually, McNamara said he might
.have let Moskau start a week ago
against Atlanta - the night Seaver
sprained his back - if Moskau hadn't
pitched the previous night in an
exhibition game in Detroit.
The gash Moskau got on the index

finger of his throwing hand opening a
can of snuff kept him out of the lineup
esrlier, McNamara said.
"The finger still doesn't have any
callous on it. It's just tender, soft
skin," Moskau said. "But it doesn't
bother me.'·
. ·
The inactivity did worry Moskau,
though .
"My endurance was what I was
worrying about, but I didn't have to
throw a lot of pitches," he said . "I
don't feel I did anything I'm not
capsbie of doing again, though."
He had just one strikeout but never
was in real trouble, allowing one
baserunner on a fourth-inning walk
and two runners in the sixth on barkto-hack singles.
" Everything just felt fine," Moskau
said: "It was probably the best I've
thrown this year , ali spring or

M ezg·Q
• . eUlr
•... l S bom b
:~~~~:~wi~~~r:~. Waverly euals,
16-1
'

anytime."

Part of the reason may be the
revival of a sinker he abandoned two
years ago to gain more control.
"Holding the bail different gives me
two different fast balls, one that goes
straight and one that sinks a little bit
at the end," Moskau said. ·
"I think hitters.have been going up
and just waiting for my fastball. Now
I've got something else for them to
look at ."
It was Moskau who predicted in
spring training that either he, Tom
Hwne or Mike LaCoss would he used
in long relief. Now he may join Home
and LaCoss in the starting rotation .

0

Longbow - Open statewide Oct. 12,

crossbllw and longbow hunting hours
are one-half before runrtse to·one-half
hour after sunset. The crossbow and
lmgbow seasons will be closed during
the deer gun season.
Primitive Weapons Season -Oct. 29
· through Nov. 3, 1979 for buck only at
Wildcat Hollow whieh includes Wolf
Creek Wildlife Area and vicinity in
AtheniJ, Morgan and Perry counties;
Salt Fork WUdllfe Area in Guernsey
County and Shawnee State Forest in
Scioto and Adorna counties. _Open
statewide Jan. 2 through Jan. 4, 1980
for bock and doe. Legal weapons are
a single shot muzzleloadlng rlfte of at
least .38 caliber, a muzzleloadlng
shotgun uslnc a single hall, cr~bow,
or lqbow and arrow. Hunting hours
are 7a.m. to 5 p.m.
Gun Season - Hunllng hours are 7
a.m. to ~ p.m. Legal w4'~pons &amp;l:e a
shotgun using a single ball or rifled
slug or Blngle-ehot munleloading rifle
riatleast .38callber. The state will be
divided into four deer gun zones as
follows:
Zone One- Nov. 26, 1979 through
Nov. 00,1979 for buck·on1y. ($inch an·
Uer minimum). Zone Two- Nov. 26,
1979 through Nov. 30, 1979 for buck
only. (5-inch antler mlnimWI1}. Zone
Three- Nov. 26, 1979 for buck or doe.
Nov. 'l1 through Nov. 00, 1979 for buck
orlly. (5-lilch antler minlmwn).'Zone
Four- Nov. 26, 1979 through Dec. 1,
1979 -for buck only. (54nch antler
mlnlmUIII ).
Antlerless permits will again be
available dUring the 1979 deer season
1n selected counties. Hunllng of all
wild animals during the daytime, ex·
cept deer and waterfowl, is prohibited

.

BY GREG BAD...EY
Terri Wilson pitched a two-bitter
and slammed a grand slam home run
last night as the Meigs Girls .con'
tinued their winning way&amp; with a 16-1
rm~p over visiting Ironton. The ganie
was called after six innings due to the
15-run rule.
Neither team could get untracked
the first inning, but in the top of the
second ironton scored Its only nm for
a short.IJved 1.0 lead.
In the bottan of that inning, Meigs
exploded for six big runstostartthem
on their way to their eighth win in ten
outings this year. Meigs is H in the
SEOAL.
In the bottom of the second, Beth

during the deer gun season, during
the primitive wespons season on the
three . special primitive weapons
11reas, and durillg the statewide
piimltive weapons season.
Young Hunters Season- Nov. 3 and
Nov. 10, 1979 for the young hunters
I!P'JCial upland game season. The
special hunts will be conducted at
DetaW~o;:;:, !)Ilion, Grand River, OX·
bow, Resthaven, Spencer, and
caesars Creek Wlldllff areas. Legal
game Includes all g&amp;r.le cprrently in
seiiSOII, plus all grme that will be
legal during the repular upland game
season. Hunting hours, daily bag
limits and possesSion limits are the
same as during the regular liplaild
game season. Participants must be
betWeen 10 and 15 years of age and
have succeBifully completed a hunter
salety course.
.

0.

·~"'",; ·

Bartrum led things off by getting hit

by a pitch. An Ironton error, and six
walks followed before Bartrum came
to bat again, this time getting a runproducing single.
In the bottom of the fourth, Tonia
Ash and Sarah Diddle each reached
on a single. April coaxed a walk, and
that set the stage for Wilson's
towering drive to left field.
. Two walks and singles by Bartrwn
and King gpve Meigs three more runs
in the fifth, and then two walks and
singles by Sonia and Tonia Ash gave
Meigs their fifteen-run lead in the sixth.
Wilson got a horner and single to
lead the Meigs attack,and fanned
eight Ironton batters and walked five.
Bartrum stroked two singles. T. Ash
also got two singles, and King, Diddle,
and s. Ash each had a single for
Meigs.
McDaniels took the loss, fanning
two and walking twelve. Riggs contrlbuted to those statilltics after
rellevinginthesecond.
Meigs entertains Wellston Wednesday, and next week gets into tour·
nament action by hosting Gallipolis
onTuesday,May8.
Unescore :
I
010 ~ 1 2 4
M
060 433-16 9 1
McDaniels (ip), Riggs (2) and
Kouns.
.
T. Wilson and Chapman, Bartrwn
(2).

Fa}cons d ump
·
SoU them,
· ·12~A

BY GREG BAD...EY
The host Miller Falcons exploded
for eight runs in the bottom of the first
inning last night enroute to a 12-4 win
·over visiting Southern.
.
Dave Burgess went the distance to
pick up the win, fanning nine and
walking just three. Four Southern
hurlers struck out three and walked
five while yielding 11 hits.
Southerntooka2-6firstperiodlesd.
Terry McNickle and John Pape led
things off with walks. With no one out,
Kent Wolfe singled in the first run,
and two outs later Dave Robinson
singled in Pape.
Miller, In the bottan of that inning,
bunched seven singles and four walks
to push across· eight runs. The
Falconsaddedtwomorein .thefourth
. and two more in the sixth to put the .
game away. .
.
.
Southern got Its final two runs in the
fifth. Mike Nance and Pape singled,
and then K. Wolfe knocked in his
Monday's Sports In Brief
second run of the night with another
single.
By The Associated Press
Chuck Michael then lined a single to
BASKETBAlL
plate the last run. , .
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (AP) - Wilt
John West took the loss as three
Chamberlain, one of the best big men Southern hurlers took the mound in
to play the game of basketball, the firstlnning.
Pape and K. Wolftlled Southern at
entered itS Hall of Fame along with
six other noni&gt;laying inductees.
the plate with two singles e~~rh while
Joining the 42-year'-old former Michael, Robinson, and Nance each
·Philadelphia, San Francis.co and l.ns had one hit to round out the hitting.
A!lgeles superstar were coaches Ray
Street and Burgess · each had a
Meyer of DePaul, Edgar Hickey of double and single to pace the winners.
Creighton, John · McClendon of Slnunonsaddedtwoslngles.
Tennessee, Pete Newell, who coached
Southern will host North Gallia
the 1959 NCAA champion California tonight. On Wednesday the Tornadoes
Golden Bears, the late Justin "Sam" of Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr. operi secBarry of Southern California and Uonal play at Meigs High School
referee James Enright
against Hannan Trace.
Game time is 2:30 with a second
WA TER'POLO
tourney game to follow.
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP)
Unescore :
The United States defeated Bulgaria, s
200 07J0 0- 4 7 5
6-3 in the second round of an M
1100 202 x-12 II ·0
international water polo tournam~nt .
West (lp), K'. Wolfe (1), Teaford
The Americans had suffered a ftrst · (1), B. Wolfe (4) and Robinson, M.
round 6-4 defeat at the hands of ·Nance (6).
Yugoslavia.
Burgess and Sturgill.

Baseball AI AGlance
By The Associated Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Montrea l
" 5 .737
14 5 .737
Ph ila.
9 10 .474
St. Loui s
B 9 .471
Ch icago
8 10 .444
New York
7 11 .389
Pitt s.
WEST
15 6 .71 4
Houston
11 I 0 .524
Cincinnati
10 I&lt; .417
Los Ang .
9 I 4 .391
San Diego
9 14 .391
San Fran .
7 13 .350
Atlanta
Monday 's Games
Montreal 8, Lo s Angeles 4

singles.
Spencer fanned nine and walked
just five, but the senior righthander
yielded 13 hits.
.
Eastern hosts Kyger Creek toi!lght
and Southwestern Wednesd8y: '
Thursday evening they begin sec·
tiona! tournament play at Nelaonville.
The Eagles will be pitted against
Crooksville at 4 p.m. The other two
teams in that sectlonalare Mlller and
Glouster.
Unescore :
Pc
~ 07JO 0-11 13 7
E
000 014 5-10 1D 5
Kniskie (wp) , McFarland (7) and
McFarland, Newell (6).
Spencer and Bissell.

Waverly·

GB
5
S

s•.,

61/:z

'6 /2 .
1

,..

·defeats

Marauders:.
'

'

BY GREG BAILEY
··
7
Meigs'
Tom
Owens
struck
out
five
7
71h and walked only one Waverly batte'f
last night, but the host Marauders
still fell to the visiting Tigers, W .Ill
Ph iladelphia ·.4, San Franci sc o 1
the strength ol a three-run jJaner by
New York ;, San Diego 3
Steve
Dalton.
'
Houston 6. St. Louis 5
Only games scheduled
Waverly got 10 hits while Melga got
Tuesday's Games
saletles off winning piteher Rob
Los Angeles (Wel ch 2-0) at Montreal eil!ht
Holsinger.
Each defense conunlttad ·
(Lee 2-0)
San Francisco ( K:nepper 1-2) at only one error to leave runners straJt.&lt;
ded.
'
Philadelphia I Espinosa 3-01. (n)
Atlanta ( P. Noekro 2-4) at Pitts- It was a scoreless pitcher's duel WI"
burgh ( Blyleven 0-2), (n)
Ch icago !McGlothen 2-2) at Cin· tU the fourth inning when both teams
got on the scoreboard.
·
'
cinnati I Norman 1-21. (n)
San Diego (Perry 2-1) at New York
In the top of that inning with one
(Twitchell 0-01. (n)
.
out, Berkhimet· and Holalnger both
Houston '(R ichard 4-0) af St . Louis singled. That set , the stqe • for
(Martinez 0-1). (n)
Dalton's left field homer. That I'OillldWednesday 's Games
Atlanta at Pittsburgh, (n)
,tripper got some help.frrcn the ,wb!d
Houston af St . Louis. (n)
as Dalton lofted the ball high and t1!e
Chicago at Cincinnati, (n l
.
wind did the rest.
Onl y games schedul ed
. Meigs got right back into the game
AMERICAN LEAGUE
• with one big swing o( the bat in the
EAST W L Pel GB . bottornofthat'ftft•~
,
uu.....,•· '
I·
·
13
·
·
5o·
Jerry
Fields
reached
on
a
walk,
bUt
7 6
Boston
14 9 :609 v, was erased on a fielder's eholce ~
Baltimor e
13 9 .591 1 t1Je bat of Steven Ohlinger. Senidt
Milwaukee
New York
10 11 .&lt;76 31/, Ray Andrews then drilled a Holsinger
7. ?. ·~~~ 4 pitch over the leftfield fence.. 1t W81
n P.troit
Toronto
'7 15 ·318 7
also helped by the wind. The scot'e
Cleveland
6 14 300 7
'"'" •
·
stood 3-2 untu the sixth.
California
15 B .652
Holsinger reached on the lone
13 7 ·650 '12 Meigs error, and Dalton stroked a
Minnesota
13 7 .632 1
.
ed
Te)(aS
11 10 .524 3
hard double. Minor sing! in one
Kan . City
9 11 .&lt;so 4'/i nm,and then Prall blooped a single
Chi cago
Oakland
8 I 4 .36&lt; 6'1' over a drawn·in Meigs infield.
..
1
;::,eam e
Monday's Ga':n~~ .J•ij
Mike Triplett led the Meigs IJI~
Minnesota 6. Toronto 3
withtwoslngleswhileAndl'eWIIadded
Milwaukee 8, Cleve land 0
hlsround-trlpper.
·
Texas 8. Kansas City 7
Chris Taylor, Cllff Kennedy, Greg
California 2, New York I
Ed --"'·
Oakland s, Boston 4, 11 innings
Becker, Fields, and Dan
w....,..
Balt imore, 8, Seattle 7, 10 Innings each added a single to the cause.
Only games scheduled
Dalton led the winners with hlshomer
Tuesday's Games
and double.
Minnesota !Koosman 4-0) at
Melgsg'oestoWeDstonTuesdayahd
Toronto (Jefferson (0-1) (n)
M i lwauk~e (Sorensen 3-2) at then later this week enters Into tow:·
Cl eveland IPa.ton 0-1) , (n)
.
namentactlon . ,;, '.-l) •ll''
' ....... 1'
Detroit (Baker- 0-2) at Chicago
U
" ' • ) 1'' ! .
(Kravec 0-2) (n)
W nescore : ··' •io HI IJQ)&lt;Jj
' ·~
,"' IO i
Te•as (Alexander I· i) at Kansas M
""", J • 8 1
2
City (Spllttorlf 3-21. (n I
"""
Boston !Stanley 2-1) at Oakland · Holsinger and Lefler.
(Minetto 1·0) (n )
·
Ow
dEd rds
New York (Tiant 0-1) at Californ ia
ens an
wa ·
(Tanana 2-3) , (n)
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Baltimore (0. Martinez

Seattle (McLaughl in 1-01. (n)

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1-2) at

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policies, it's good to know you are working th~?ugh P,eopia
who are ready to go to bat lor you. Like our crew at
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As /ndo~ondenl agents WI represanla number of fine
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But we don't work lor any one or them-we work lor you.
So when you need to buy Insurance, WI can Mlp you lelect
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Oetro it at Chicago, (n)
Texas al Kans~s City, (n)
Boston at Oakland, (n)
New Yor k at California, (n)
Baltimore at Seattle, (n)

~

Opt~metric

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (AP) - Boonies led
wire-to-wire to capture ~three-length ,
victory Monday in the $4,500 featured
eighth race at River Downs, revering
the si~ furlongs in 1:12 1~.
The winner paid $3.60, $2.20 and
$2.20. Selke!, who put on a
-late charge, placed, returning
$2.20 and $2.7JO, and Russian Royalty .
was third, paying $2.7JO.
The 2-4 daily double of Mr. Lynx and
strike Involved paid $354 and the
crowd of 3,119 bet $352,691.
The track is d.U'k today.

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National Smoker ·Study_:

D-'1'1vo Oattv Sentinel. Mlddleoort-PomeroY. o.. May 1. 19'19

,

Wildwood Gardeners met, named committees
. Mrs. Kathryn Miller, Mrs. Peggy
Moore, Mrs. Carrie Grueser, and
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon were appolntedto
the nominating conunlttee when the
Wildwood Garden Club met recently
at the home of Mrs. Fred Nease.
Mrs. Dorothy Smith presided at the
meeting which opened with Mrs. Betty Milhoan giving devotions. She read
scriptures and two poems, "Help Me

to Help Others" and .. Let That lle My
Prayer." For roll call members named a tree In their yard. Plans were
made for a hike taken Monday.
Mrs. Smith read an annollncement
of the Meigs County Garden Clubs
Association meeting to be held Ml!Y 7
at the Pomeroy Library, 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Virginia Fisher, Mrs. .Ada
Holter and Mrs. Doris Grueser will

represent the club.
II was noted that four members of
the club attended the spring regional
meeting at Meigs Inn. They were
Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Ma Holter, Mrs.
Evelyn Hollon, and Mrs. .P&gt;ris
Grueser. Mrs: Hilda Yeauger w~the
door prize. _
Mrs. Moore had timely gardening
tips suggesting that members g•t

Church Women United mei;
made May Fellowship plans

'ff''l?SV?'' ;~~~:~;;~:,, :;
:;:;:: held in Columbus \:;:;,"

·

Social Calendar

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'

Poppy royalty named
man.
A report was given on the junior
conference held In Junction City with
Cheryl Johnson representing the
Racine juniors. She won three first
places in coloring books and received
$3. She also served on the placement
conunittee for the 1980 conference to
be held in Pomeroy. Mrs. Eunie
Brinker and Mrs. Betty Van Meter
also attended the conference.
Mrs. Leora Young presided at the
meeting during which time the unit
endorsed Mrs, Samuel Snyder for
candidate to the office of district
president. Conununications were
read from Mrs. Mabel Brown and Mrs
Jean WUson for reports.
The traveling prize brought by Mrs.
Thelma Walton was won by Mrs.
BY JOHN A. MALACOS, PH.D.
Leora Young. Several other prizes
Director of Rio Grande
were use In a money making project.
Community Educatlonlal
Mrs.
Frances Roberts had a program
Counseling Center
on
foreign
relations giving highlights
Have you ever had a word that
keeps flashing into your mind and you of Bolivia. She served cake, coffee
can't get rid of it? For the past and a native Bolivian dish.
several months, I have been
struggu~g with a word that has a lot
of mearung to me both personally and ·
•
professionally. The word Is COM·
MITMENT.
The Racine Alwnni Association
Rollo May, an existential banquet and dance will be held on
psychologist, has argued that one of May 26 at the Southern High School.
the problems of modern society is the
Ben Philson will be the speaker for
general lack of commitment. People the dlmer which will be served at 6
have forgotten !tow to make an .im· p.m. with a dance to begin at 9 p.m.
pact on our ever-changing world. and continue to midnight. MWJic will
They are fooled Into believing they be by Heather, a lour-piece group.
are powerless and they use this as an Since no letters were sent out locally,
excuse for doing nothing. Many tickets can be bought at Cr0118 SoDll,
people are afraid to take respon· Raelne, the Food Market, and
sibility for their life, and this fear Village Cut Rate, or by sending the
Inhibits them from making decisions money and a self-addressed stamped
and creating the conunitments that everllope Mrs. Barbara Pierce, Route
go along with fulfilling these 2, Box 44, Racine.
decisions.
· The ham dinner is $5.50 and the
There are many areas in people's dance Is $5 a couple. Singles at the
lives where commitment and follow dance to he paid at the door will be $3.
through are needed . The family is one Reservations are to be In by May 21.
good example.
'
The 14th annWil Paul H. Carnahan
People who choose to get married Memorial scholarship will be given at
often entertain the relationship . the bsnquet. The scholarship Is spon·
without a clear idea of whatlt takes to sored by the alumni with S1 being
make a marriage work. A lack of taken from the dues. Th011e who do not
commitment causes couples to give plan to atten the banquet or dance,
up on the marriage when things get may send their dues to the s~retary­
difficult. When the decision is made to treasurer.
have children, people often fall to
Officers for the year ~re Denny
realize that raising children is hard Evans, president; Libby Fisher, vice
work and requires a life long com- pre.!\ident; Allee Wl111ams, second
mltment of love, caring, discipline vice president; Gary Willford, third
vice president; and Barbara Pierce,
and adjWJtment.
It is difficult for many people to secretary-treasurer.
make decisions about how they want
to live their life. People often spend a
lifetime looking for the special person.
or the magic job that wiD make their
life better. People hop from job to job
BAKE ANDYARDSALE
or move from city to city looking for
The Olive Township Volunteer Fire
happiness. They will continually meet
failure, however, unless they are Department will sponsor a yard and
wU!ing to take responsib!Hty for bake sale Friday and Saturday, May 4
and 5, !rpm 10 a .m. toj. P!J!l;· a the
making their life better.
~'
What makes commitment difficult Reedsville Fire station:
is that people must make sacrifices.
•
Commitment Implies, as people
choose to commit themselves to a
relationship, a job, a god, an idea, or a
1
cause, the loss of some freedom to act ~-----In other areas. As people struggle to
SyracuJe, Ohio , · .
find a purpose in life, they must I
992·5776
,,
restructure their choices to those
Open Daily 9-8
.
situations where they can conunlt I
I
Sunday
l·S
themselves and grow with those
I c.:omplote assortment of bedding,
decisions .
plants, hanging baskets and
As I look at my own life, I find that I I loll
ago plants .
am most happy in those areas where I
"SEASON SPECIALS"
have directed much of my energy to
Bedding Plants 15c per dozen
make it work. Each commitment that
pack. Harty Azaleas 10" sprud
J.KEEP gives me strength to seek out
S1.25 each (10 or more $1.75
other commitments, and helps me 1..,._...,_.._
each).
_ _ _ __
define my purpose In life.

Rerson

to Pt3rson

Alumni Assn to meet

...

·-- "1
Hubbard's GreenhOuse
~

I·

I

· AT

, .

BAKER FURNITURE
IN

(;;ovenant players
to be church g~sts
The CoVenant Players, an In·
temational repertoire drama group,
·heaclquarterecj In Reseda, California,
will be the guest.. of Aabury United
Metodlst Church on May 12 at 7 p.m.
This will be one of 54 units In the
field thla year, whose journeys take
them not only throughout the United
Statei and Canada, but to Europe,
Allltralla and Asia as well.
· Using a variety of material, both
hmnocous and serious, the Covenant
Players 1111! drama to challenge and
lltlmulate people Into a searching look
at the ccmplex society they live In'
and the role they play In it.
Fronftheir.lnltlal start as a local
/ church drama group, they have
grown to the point where they travel
over a miWon miles each year. Per·
fonnances have been given In a
variety of places, from sanctuaries,
~lauditorlWIIS, shopping centers,
street comers, hospital wards,
aboard · navy ships, coffee llouses,
. half-tjple a' sporting events, and
~= offering will be received
to defray the expeMel!. The. public Is
lnvtied.

displayed a white hobnail basket fill·
ed with panzles and Mrs Evelyn
Hollon a glass container with
rosebuds, and a taU purple vase with
double yellow daffodils. All receive
blue ribbons' as dld Mrs. Ada Holter
for her low round container ~th large
jonquils and greenery.
Cake and coffee were served by the
hostess .

Poppy royalty was ·selected at the
recent meeting of the American
In celebration of National Volun· Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post 602
held at the hall.
teer Week, April 22·28, the Third An·
nual Statewide RSVP Recognition
Little Miss P_oppy Is Court~ey
Dinner was held . at the Sheraton Roush, Juruor MISS Poppy, Jenrufer
Colwnbus 0 Th rsda
Johnson, and Miss Poppy, Cheryl
Twenty.fi~e ;em;.:S of the Meigs Johnson. Poppy Day will be observed
.
he . ~Racine on May 19. Kathy Carleton
Coll(lty RSVP enJo~ed t ~nner
an Charlotte Wamslev wQI he chair·
the program foUowmg the dinne .
·
main speaker for this year' RSVP
- - - - - - -- - - ,

Middleport PTA chose
new officers recently

MERIT,
·F ilter

Arnold made the arrangement of the
month using a glass basket with
tulips, daffodils and jonquils of
several sizes to carry out the "Spring
is Here" theme. She was awarded a
blue ribbon as was Mrs. Virginia
Fisher who showed a tall white container of white and pink tulips, and a
smaller white vase of smaller white
and pink tulips . Mrs. Carrie Grueser

the plight of children and the elderly
is at the base of the family stability
planks. Child care facilitie which provide a comprehensive learning ex·
perience for children are positive In·
dications of our commitment to the
future. The increase in sing!e1lll!)lnt' Recognition Dinner was Woody
householdsandinfamilieswl)ereboth Hayes. Mr. Hayes kept the 950 perparents work makes the establish· sons attending enthralled with his
speech and stressed the importance
ment of child-care fac111ties a press· · of all attending to continue to share
lng need." ·
Church Women United has span- their experience with the youngsters.
sored May Fellowship Day since 1933. He told several stories about his gran·
. Each year the theme stresses the pro- dfather, his fath~r-ln-law, and old
motion of creative and healing rela· friends and their experiences with the
This younger generation.
tionships in every conununity.
Anne c. Johnson, ACTION State
year's May Fellowship Day celebra· Director, and Mlch~el Doyle, AC·
lion will call participants to consider TION Deputy Director for Region V
the needa of children In local com·
munities and to become advocates for located In Chicago, spoke briefly commending the Senior Volunteers of
children In this country as we11 as Ohio for their dedication and work in
overseas.
making the Ohio RSVP such a sue·
New officers were elected at the , ecutive board for sending her flowers
cess.
Monday night meeting of the Mid• during her recent hospitallzatlcln.
Speaking briefly was Richard F.
dleport Pl'A.
It Willi noied that pencils and tCeleste, fonner Ohio Lt. Governor
They are Mrs. Peggy Wood, pres!· shlrts are still for sale. The unit ex·
and recently appointed Peace Corps
dent; Mrs. Gall Hovatter, firs vice tended 6- vote of thankS to Kenny
Director. Mr. Celeste also presented
president; Mrs. Susan Baer, second Eblln arid his welding class at Meigs
awards to each of the RSVP Projects
TUESDAY
vice president; Mrs. Kitty Cassell, High SchooHor some assistance. Mrs.
. XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER, Beta in Ohio; accepting the Meigs County
~eeretary; Mrs. Maurisha Nelson,
Hovatter extended. congratuatioi)S to Sigma Phi Sorority, Tuesday night at award was Early Roush, a six year
u-urer; Mrs. Eleanor Burke, the right to read winners. Mrs. Rose'
the home of Mrs. Ruth Riffle. In· member of RSVP.
membership; Mrs. Donna Pullins d afternoon class won the room count.
A skit "Ohio Senior Citizens Beauty
stallation of officers. Cultural
Mrll. Susan Frash; ways and means;
For the program, the kindergarten program on man in the modern world Contest" was presented by Thespian
Mrll. Judy Crow, cultural arts; Miss ·classes had short plays. The after·
Troupe 2126 of Defiance, and several
Becky Triplett, legialation; Mrs. noon class presented "Ostrich by Texanna Well and Janet Peavley vocal nwnbers were presented by
Susie stewart, Mrs. Marilyn Poulin, Feathers." and the morning class, with Ruth and linda Riffle as Jack Cable, Toledo RSVP Director.
Mrll. !;lonna Gheen, Mrs. Nelson, and "The Elephants Chijd." Mrs. Adeline -hostesses.
Attending the ~ognition Dlnrier
ELECTlON of officers when the
Mrs. Brenda Haggy, county council Snowden, ai~e to Mrs. R~e, assisted. Ladies Auxiliary of Pmeroy Eagles from Meigs County were: Alice Wamdelegates; 'Mrs. Reva Bunce, Mrs.
Club meets at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the sley, RSVP Director, and Senior
Pat Gibbs, Mrs. Kay King, Mrs. Don;
Volunteers Malinda First, Lula Ham·
hall.
na Byer, and Mrs. Judy Crooks, alter·
.LADIES Association of Pomeroy pton, Frances King, Delmas Kerns,
nates to county council. The new of.
Golf Course Tuesday, 9 a.m. at the Early Roush, Mary Francis Bwngar·
fleers will be Installed at the May
Mr. and . Mrs. David Hensler, goll course. All ladies interested In ner, Garnet Ervine, Gene McElroy,
meeting.
Racine, are· ~ounclng the birth of.I! playing or those Interested·in learning Dayton McElroy, Louise Hall, Ulliall
Miss Triplett and Debbie Obllnger son, Nathan Allen, on April13 at the ·
Napper, Edna Kennedy, Clara Wells,
to play are invited.
were named to the auditing commit· Holzer Medical Center. ThE:. baby
Kennit McElroy, Ruth McElroy,
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN Elsie Roush, Bill Quivey, Dorothy
tee. The Rev. James Broome gave weigltiJI seven pounds, six ounces and
CLUB,
Tuesday night home of Mrs. Will, Marie &lt;llapman, Eliza Powell,
devotions. Miss Triplett's third· was :Ia Inches long. Mr. and Mrs.
Wilma
Terrell, 6 p.m. Roll call, Ora Carsey, Loretta Beegle, Mae
graders, Scott Harming, David Smith, Hensler .have a datightet, Racl18el;
favorite
iris. Margaret Parker to Weber and Frances Roush.
Betty Baer, and Brad Uttle, gave the .three. ·
pledge. Mn. Hovatter thanked the ex·
Mr. and Mrs. Rayrnood Hensler have the garden calendar for the
and Mrs. Betty Sayre, Racine are month. Alice Thompson to have
grandparents. Maternal great· program on herb gardens.
ANTIQUE FAIR
grandmother Is Alma WQOds, also of Arrangement to be a May basket.
Community-Scope, a noni!l'oflt
Racine.
WEDNESDAY
organization which supports the
SOUTHEAST OinO Garden Trac· restoration and revitalization of
banquetannounc~
tor .Club Wednesday 6 p.m: In the Athens, is sponsoring a three-day
building located behind the fire show, the Athens Antiques Fair, in
•
BIKE·A-mON
'lbe annWil mother~ughter ban·
station
In Chester. All interested per· Athens. .
SYRACUSE-The cystic fibrosis
quet was announced for May u at 6
sons
are
Invited to attend.
Dates of the show are: Friday, May
blke-a-thon will be held on May 26
p.m. In the fellowship ~ of St. beginning at 10 a.m. in Syracuse at ODDS AND ENDS sale at Chester 4, ~p.m.; Saturday, May5, !Oa.m.-9
Paul's Church when the members of the elementary school. Mrs. Martha Methodist Church Wednesday and p.m.; Sunday, May 6, p noon-5 p.m.
Thursday fr&lt;m 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Spon- The showwut be held on the main conSt. John and St. Paul's American
Lutheran Church Worilen met recent- McPhail Is general chainnan and her sored by Chester UMW.
course of the Ohio UniversitY Con·
assistants are Joyce Sisson, Mary
ly.
EVANGELINE
CHAPTER,
OES,
vocation Center on Richland Avenue.
Pickens, and Pat Philson. Members
Mrs. Barbara Fry reported on the of the CF team . will go to the 6:45p.m. practice for inspection. All Tickets may be purchased at the door
bimquet 'plana. The next meeting of
officers to attend.
and free parking is available. Lunch
the ALCW will be beld on May 8. Syracuse, Racine and Southern Local
THURSDAY
will be provided by the Athens
Junior High schools to talk a about the
Plans were made for a combination
EVANGELINE
CHAPTER,
OES,
Grange.
blke-a-thon and pass out lnfonnauon
bake and rwnmage sale to be held
inspection 7:30 p.m. with diniler at 6
Over 40 dealers from Ohio, Indiana,
on May 14.
Thursday at the church The sals will
p.m. Inspecting officer-, Marilyn . Michigan, and West Virginia will he
feature 110111e household items and
Gley, grand conductress. All Eastern participating In the show. Merspring clo~. Charlotte Evans,
·Star
members Invited
chandise will include furniture, china,
OMIMION
·primitives, and decorative acchalnnan of the altar committee,
In the account of the death notice of
FRIDAy
cessories lor the beginner and the ad·
cllllcussed with members the commit·
tee's selection of violet .altar clothes WUbur L. Frecker, Painesville, who AN EVENING of theatre, Friday, 8 vanced collector. Jim Reynolds, of
which ~ ALCW purci!&amp;Sed for the died on April 4, the name of ~ son, p.ril. at Meigs High School by juniors Colwnbus, is the manager for the
·Dona!H L., ~lio preced_ed him In .and seniors who will present four one· show.
"
church.
act plays; admission, $1 students;
Ann Grover is general chairman of
Mrs. Donna Jones presented the Bl· death, wasoniitted.
$1.50 for adults.
ble study entmH •"nne Bridge Back
the event. LaGuardia Anastas is in
charge of tickets. Other committee
to God" which emphaslzsd the eternal
members assisting are Jean Gall,
fcqlvenet111 of God.
Naomi Mayer, Bonnie Savage, Ginny
· Mrs. Rachel Downie had the cloelng
McNabb, and Marian Keller. For
meditation. Refreshments were serv·
more Information contact Ann
ed by Mn. Jean Coates to those nam·
CANCElLATION
eel and Mrs. Elva Cotterill, Mn.
The meeting of the Middleport Fire Grover, 125 Longview Heights,
VIrginia Thoren, Mrs. Kathryn
Department Auxiliary has been can· Athens, 45701, or phone (614) 593-8449.
Jacobs, Mrs. Margaret Blaettnar,
celled. The next meeting will be lleld
1/ld Mrs. Jean Braun.
the first Wednesday In June .

Church Women United In Meigs
County will celebrate May Fellowship
on Friday with a service at the
Pomeroy,United Methodist Church:
, The day will begin with a brown bag
luncheon at noon followed by a brief
business session. The afternoon program will begin at I :30 p.m.
The needa and rights of children are
the focus of .the May Fellowship Day
celt!bration: "Our.Children, Our Promlsi!." The United Nations has proclaimed 19'19 as the · International

Year of the Child, during whiCh many
nations are eumlnlng their programs !Or children In light of the UN
Declaration of the Rights of the Child.
Concern for childr.en and for family
stability has long been a priority for
Church Women United. This concern
surfaced most recently in 19'16 PeoPie's Platfonn for a Global Society
which lncorp6rated priority Issues
from the 2,000 local units of Church
Women United all over the country.
The platfonn reads: "it. concern for

started after the crabgrass in .their
yards , that they keep beds weeded,
and watch for bag worms which can
he sprayed with Seven. She also talked about pest control materials and
vegetables to be planted and
.
houseplants to be repotted.
Mrs. Virginia Fisher had a contest
with prizes going to Mrs. Mary Nease
and Mrs. Betty Mllhaon. Mrs. Marcia

'

wiJO'S WHO - Muy ColweD, Rt.
1, VID!oo, hal ~n umed for
pabUcalloaiJI the 13lb BDDDal ~11011
of Who's Who Amoag American

CARD PARTY
The Episcopal Church will sponsor

MIDDLIPORT, 0.

REVIVAL UNDERWAY
a benefit card party with a salad bar
Revival
services will get underway
Wednesday, May 9 at I p.m. In the
at
7:30
this
evening at the Middleport
River Boat Room at the Melgjl Branch of the Athens County Savings"and First Baptist Church and will run
through Sunday, May 6.
Loan.
Gary Griesser; a song evangelist
from Burlington, Ky., will be at the
church Thursday through Sunday In
RtlMMAGE SALE
,
conjunction with the revival. The
A nurunage sale will be held at the Rev. Mark McClung, pastor, will be
Episcopal Parish House Thursday, speaker at the .evening services and
Friday, and Saturday, May 3, 4, and5. the public Is Invited.
·

AT THE BRIGHT PICTURE AND
COMPARE FEATURES THAT SET IT
APART FROM ALL OTHER TYo.

'

)
WE'RE RUNNING A SPEC AL VALUE
SALE ON THIS EXCITING ADMIRAL
CONSOLE THAT YOU'LL WANT TO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF. 10 TAKE A
LITTLE SOUND ADVISE-COME IN
FOR SPECIAL IAYINQII

Hlp Sebol Staden!ll for 19'78-79. She
11 tbe daugbter of Mr. 81111 Mn. Jobn
Colwell, Rt. l, Vbltoa. Mary II a
!lellfor at Melp Hlgb Sc:boel, a member ol the Rutlalld Ulllted Melllodllt
Church, where she serves aa Sllllday
Scboolteaeber, hal lleld several of.
flees 81111 alto serves u plaDJII. Slle
Is 8 member o1 the Nallooal Honor
Socle~, aeboo1 aew~p~~per ltaff,
aeu1or DOE 1tadent 81111 member of
!be Steao Club. She Is alto a member
of tile HIDbiDies f.H Club, Melfi•
Coauty f-11 Dairy Club, Mel&amp;a Cowl·
ty janlor fair board 4-11 Junior
• Leaden Club 81111 a m~mber Or Star
Gl'IIJIIe. Sbe abo lei'Vell on tile ad·
viJory board of tile Melp Coullty
E:dealloa.offlce.

Admiral
Super Solarcolor
When you compare the features and beneUts ofan Ad..
mira I TV to all the re1t , you 'll

choose Admiral .because it's
bestl Why? Because Admiral
engineers were teamed with

Rockwell International aero-

space scientists an" top· lurniture designers you get the
latest technology for bringIng the finest quality picture.
co lor and sound into your
living room .

Special Price
Only

'578
II

..
•

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May I, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in
Notices
GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
6:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.

WANT AD

CHARGES
15 Words or Under
cash
Charge
. lday

1.00

2da}'ll
3da)"s

!days

LAST WEEK of complete sell·
out of household goods . Stop
by 760 laurel St. , Middleport.

U!i

l.to

1.00
1.110

2.15

3.00

3.75

TO WHOM it may . concern:
Trustees of Tuppers Plain•
Christian Church Cemetery
wi II put in to effect May I ,
1979, the following : Grove
plots will se ll for$12S each . oil
plots mus t be paid in half and .
balance in 90 days ; after 90
days unpaid ploh will be
resold . Plots spoken for now
but no t paid will have 90 days
in which to pay in full.
Boord of Trustees . Hermon
Block , Howard Caldwell , Daryl
Well , lindsey Lyofls .

Each word over the mtnimwn
l~ words ill .4 cenll per word per

~y .

Ad:l ruM ~of; other than con·
secutive days WJ.l1 be charged at
the 1 day rate.

In memorY, Card of Thanks
and Obituary : 6 cents per word ,
S3.00 mlnimwn. Ca11h in ad·

vance.

Mobile HOIIW! sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with
·cash with order. 25 cent charge
for ads carrying Box Number In
Cart of The SentineL

OP EN ON Mondays . 9 om to I
pm.. Kay's Beauty Solon. 169
N. ~nd · Ave., Middleport.
Phone m -2725.

n.e

Publisher reaerves tht
right to edit or reject any ado
deem ed obj ectional. The
Publi!her will not be responsible
for mort than ont incorrect ln·
aertlon.

Camping Equipment

COU NTRY MOBILE Home Park ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots . Call 992·7•79.

1975 11 FOOT truck camper ,
salt · contained, a ir condition .
e)(cellant condition . 992-2121 .

CHIP WOOD. Poles mox .
diameter 10" on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled ~ lab . $10
per ton . Del ivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy.

J AND • BM furnished and ~n­
furn is hed
opts.
PI-lone

CODNERS CAMPERS located

'1'12. 2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ;co boxe• ,

brass beds , irl)n beds, desks,
etc ., comp lete households.
Write M:D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy or call992-n60.
OlD COINS. pocket watches ,
class rings , wedding bands ,
diamonds. Gold or silver. Call
Roer Wamsley, 7•2·2331 .
WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78
phonogrqph
record11 . Call
992-6370 or Contact Martin
Furniture.

WANT TO buy: old jewelry.
Call 992-5262 or write Kay

Cecil , 87 S. 2nd, Middleport .

Pets for Sale

near Five Points. Call after 5,

992·3955.

DOG OBEDIENCE Classes for·
ming now. Caii6U-367-0SSO.

pasture. Plenty of water.
Could accomodate 50 plus cot·

614-843-3011.
1972 MODEL

tie. 61~ ·667·3398 .
SLEEPING ROOMS lor werk;ng

FURNISHED APT. st.~ltable for 3
or • construction workers .
After ·spm coli 992-54:... ;
992-3129, or 992-S9U.

OFFICE SPACE for rent in
Pomeroy. $75 per month, all

614-667·3920.
.
AKC REGISTERED mele St. Ber·

nard . 1 yeor old. Gentle.
Needs home · In country with
room to run . $100. 992·7819 or

Monday

992-2192.

Noon on Saturday

RISING STAR Kennels , boor·
ding and grooming, all
breeds . Che11hire. 367·0292.

Tuesday
thni Friday

4P.M.
the day before publication

HOOF HOLLOW , English and
Western .
Sadd les
and
harness. Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves. 61•·698-3290.

SWlday
4P.M.

Friday·afternoon

In Memory
IN LOVING MEMORY of our
deer mother and grand·
mother , Elizabeth Duckwor th,
who passed away May 1,

.

Chester Fire Dept.
Chester Safety Patrol .

Lost and Found
~

at

9 -4.

OODS AND End• Solo. Chester
U.M.W. May ~ &amp; 5. Che•tor

Me.thodlat Church. 9-~ .

GARAGE SALE Mey 3 end

~

Auto Sales
1973 INTERNATIONAL SCOUT
21 ,000 miles, fully equipped,
a ir, wench, e tc ... excellent
condition . 992·2121 .

1m 2-door Chevelle malibu .
Excellent condit ion . 305
engine. 992·5786 or 992-2529.

Card of Thanks

1972 DODGE CORONET 4·
door , P.S. , P.B. , air. 1972

197~

CHEVROLET

three-

Walker Hounds betw•en Dar.
win and Tuppers Plains. Phone

quarter ton pickup. $2000.
992·272~

or 992·2143.

Chevy lmpola , •·cloor; P.S..
P.B., air , Wing back chair. All
in good condition. 7•2· :252•.

1977 FORD 4x4 F-150. 20,000
miles. 614·367·0203. ·
1973 CAMARO 350, auto.
992·7869.
1975 FORD E·JOO von . Good
point. New fires . Carpeting,

\I·S auto. 992-7876.
1977 DODGE \IAN 6 cyl. A.T.,

P.S., P.B., AM-FM stereo
cassette. Customir.ed Interior.
low mileage. $38(() . 9•9-2621 .

1979 FORD F-150 4x4. P.S.,
P.B.. auto., topper . 985-•339.

'CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds President Dick Wagner says he
is still being patient with ailing pinch·
hitter Ken Henderson, )&gt;ut he
indicated the team might be nearing a
decision soon on Henderson's future .
Henderson, whose long-standing toe

YARD SALE . Herbert Hoover
residence, Bradbury Rood .
Wed. and Thurs. 9 11112.

VARil SALE. May 3rd and

~th .

lOam to• pm. 413SprlngAve.
lots of clo.thing ond misc.

BASEMENT SALE. May 3, ~ . 5.
9. am to 3 pm. Boys' clothe•.
sizes U -20 and many · other
items at 105 Wright St.,
.Pomeroy, Ohio.
Yard Sole, 2 faniily between
Meigs Fairgrounds and Church

on Old 33. May 2·3. 9·3.
MOVING SALE: ' Plano,
freezer, 2.S cu. ft. gas·ele&lt;;tric
refrigerator, dressers , bed.
couch, choirs. ladder with
stand-off,
picnic
table ,
clothing. toys , household
Item•. Sat. , tlvJy 5. 9-5, 387 S.

pot. 7~2-2336 .

injury has kept hun on the disabled
list for 28 days, met Sunday with
Wagner .
"I met with '... (Manager) John
McNamara, (trainer) Larry Starr
and Henderson. We tried to get an
update on hlS status, " Wagner said.

Sports World
By Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent
flying high.
His free-6pirlted musketeers were
the scourge of baseball in their
beards, bright-colored uniforms and
white shoes.- Charlie's mule, Olarlie
0 ., ffilll"tlle nin of the house. Olarlie
0 ., the man, was daily feeding tbe
flames
of feuds
with
the
. establislunent, Conunissioner Bowie
Kuhn, Congress and his own fans .
Then the botton feU out. Erasure of
baseball 's reserve cTause wa. the
principal factor, but Olarlie O.'s bullheaded stubborness had a lot to do
with the A!s sudden demise.
Today there's not a !ihred left of the
great team Finley fashioned with his
shrewd knowledge of talent and clever
wheeling and dealing.
Where did they all go?
You can lind .most of them by
· reading the agate boxscores in your
favorite newspaper. The best ones
have signed million~ollar contracts
and are toiling with rival teams. Some
got as far away as possible, the
Meilican or South American Leagues.
Others retired and - poof - were
gone .
Outfielder Reggie Jackson ($2.9
million) and pitcher Catfish HWlter
($3.511!illlon) wound up with the New
York Yankees, where they conUnued
collecting World Series rings. Pilcher
Rollie Fingers ($1.5 million) and~
Tenace (c·lb, $1.2 million) ....,.
acquired by San Diego with some of
Ray Kroc's hamburger money ,
Outfielder.first baseman Joe Rudi
($2.09 million) went to the California
Angels.
.
And what of Olarlie's favorite
mule ? Dead, and - Uke the A's buried in a C8lifornia graveyard.

Wilt Make
Service Catls
651 Beech Street
Middleport, o.
992-2356
3-7·1 mo . (Pd.(

1974 and 1975 Pete Conven·
tlanol Tandem tractors . 1963T
Caterpilla r:. engines set up to
haul coal. Also .197• City and
196• Fruehauf Tri·Axels .

laboratory Technician, 3-11

.shift. Exporlonced MLT (ASCP)
or equivalent. Excellent salary
ond fr inge benefits. Shift differentoll. Contact: Personnel
Office , Pleasant Volley
Hospital, Volley Drive, Point
Pleasant, WV. 2:5550. 'Phone
304·67$.4340. An Equal Op·
portunity Employer.

days a week . 3 yr. old boy and

6 mo. old girl . 992-5035.

Clos•out at cost . AI! small
electric appliances Including
toaster~, blenders, hair dryers
and many other Items. Brand
names: Sunbeam, Protor Sile)(

endothorquolltynemes.

742-2255.
197~ SUZUKI, 9400 milo•.
$1100. 992-351 1.
1978 JEEP CJ5. Silver, 6 cyl.
Rear seat wi th extras. After 5,

•New Home
*Addons
• RemC!Idings
*Free estimates
992· 6011
4231 mo. (Pd .)

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ._...~
Service

BKI41NLEt;5

GUE55WORI&lt;
15 OUr. CAPTA IN

EMY.- liS NOW

A MERE MArTER

l&lt;lli.EI(5.-6UE$$
AGAIN,6ANA~~IS!

OF ELECTRONIC
PROS RAMMING!

DCJ

Headquarters for
Hotpoint and
General Electric
Appliances

SALE PRICES
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
• Phone "2·2181

Real Estate for Sale

veterans). FHA · As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
· State, Athens . 61•·592-3051 .

MODERN

THREE

bedroom

SE\IEN 'ROOM hou•o and bo•e·
menf In Mlnervllle. 992·5823.
FROM 5 to 80 cern, 3 mile s
out of Rutland. 7•2·2"'51 .

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.

JAKe'S Ml~llo.TU!&lt;P
...___ cZOL.F?
_

NORm

Ph. 992·2174

Pomeroy

Specialist In Home and
Schoof Plano Tuning
and Repairing . ·Serving ·
Athens, Meigs, Gallla &amp;
Vinton

counties,

ove~,

"'\·formal

Mason &amp; Jackson coun-:
ties In W. Va.
Ph. 992-2581 or 992-2082
4·10·1 mo.
Real Estate for Sale
OWNER SELLING: 2 bedroom

location with river view.
$12,000. Shown by appoint-

ment. 992·2082 or 742·232B.
FIVE ROOM house on College
Rd., Syracu•o. '1'12· 2~67.

room, stone f ireplace,

business room on State

Route. 40x60 now con·
talns a Grocery Store
and gas pumps, these
can also be bough!. All

3 • blonde with white mark·
lngs, 3 • brown with some
block, will be meet 1ize. Tar·
rior ~gle , female, b lond
with 4 white feet and blaze, 1
or :2 years old. Pup, · 3 ·or .,.

are close to mines.

months old, all blond, lemele.

business In the same

blend, malo dog,

9~9- 2303

or 992·76110. Boogie

type , fema le, housebroken ,
good with children. See at 224
Walnut, Middleport.
Colli e, black with broWn and
white female, about 10 mo.
old, nice gentle onlmi:::ll.

992·3736 er 992·2064. Collie
male , black ond white, 1 year
old, and a 1hepherd male 8

mo. old. 742-2252. Callie,
·mi niature , malo young .
949-2160.

"-'-=" - - - - - -

Mobile Homes Sale's
1965Gonerol, 60x12, 2 bdr.
1970Skyllne, 12x65, 2br.
1.970 Sylva, 60&gt;&lt;12, 2 bdr.
1970 Castlo. 60w12, 2 bdr .
1973 Nobility , 12x60, 2 br.
1973 Ridgewood, 70.14, 3 bdr.
1973 Nashua, 60K12, 2 bdr .
1973Governor, 60x12, 2br,

Mark line, 50x12, 2 br,
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT. PLESANl, WV.
675 · ~~24
.

197~

- - -- ---

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
'

AthettiArH
m -2745 or 71N7S2

ORPH.Uf ANNIE

SIMILAR TASTE

1-'30·pd.

THAT CRACKT I
LIKE YOU LO S
BFTTER·"

. MONlGOMERY

TRAILER SALES
.
I.
2P320 Monttom.rp Rd.

Len.. ..,Uie, Ohio

ll,-tlf·U4!1•v~nlngs

2M 11ft E ..tofWIIkH\IIIIo

ALLEYOOP

SUPI!Hi
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER NOWAVAILAILE .

· mo.

Business Services
BRAOFORD, Auctlon"r, Com·
plote Sorvlce. Phone 9~9-2487
Racine , Obio,

.

MAKE MONEY - Here
Is an old . established

location 25 years. owner
retiring. LOW pr[,ced tor
a qu ick sale.
HERE IS A BUY - 2
building sites ot 1 acre
each. Located In new
addition, all utilities, al l
new hOmes. Going at
just $6,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT ...._ 2
family, both rented, you
could very well live In
one side and rent the
other. 1'12 story frame
with part basement.
Close to schools and
stores. S13,000.00.
WE HAVE ~ANY
OTHERS - CALL US
FOR ·YOUR NEEDS IN
REAL ESTATE .
This office stands ready
to serve you whenever
you ' re buying or selling.
We Inspect, appraiSe,
advertise, negotlat~ .

Call the EXPERTS TODAY . NO CHARGE

·unless we complete the

d@ll you )Nant.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Sr.
Henry E. Cleland Jr·.
992-2259 '1'12-6191 "2-2568

How lonq i5 Mr. .

We'll forqet
the 27¢!

I come

fpa4

Pert been sick?

mlj .

rent.
Mr.

Pert!

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com."
plefe Service. Phone 992-2478.

INSURANCE

been cancelled? lost your
operators llcena•? Phone

WINNIE

serving Ohio Valley region .
Si)( days o w . .k. 24 hours service. Emergency calls. Coif

11

THINK? Q

THEY COULD GO IN AND
EXTRACT THE RJREIGN

Votl MEAN
THEY'RE NOT
SURE!'

882·2952 01" 882·3454.
HOWERY ANO MARTIN Ex·
septic

~:f~&amp;~~~ ;J~~R
ntE OPTIC NERVE!

syttetns,

dozer, backhoe. Rt. 143.
Phono1 (614) 698-1331.
IN STOCK for lmmedlato
216 E. S.cond SlrHt
GEN .
APPLIANCE
STORE - All stock and
fixtures at Inventory.
Wonderful locallon for
an Interested couple.
Call if you want to-go In·
·to the business venture .
IN THE COUNTRY- 3
bedroom nice older
home with furnace;
large modern eat·ln klt.chen. Moderr:- bath, and
targ,e lot . Hemlock
Grove area . $23,000.

BUSINESS BUILDING
- In Middleport on the
T: 26'x96' . Several
rooms up with bath,
restroom and large
business room down .

RIVER

VIEW -

l.n

Pomeroy. 6 room house

with storage building,
cellar, a~d garage.

delivery: vorfous 1lz•s of pool
kits. Do-lt· yourself or l•f us
install for you. D. Bumgardner

Sales , Inc. 992-5724.
GRAVELY TRACTORS

ond

Equipment. Experienced ser·
vice . 20.a Condor, Pomeroy,

Ohio. 992-2975.

I

Services Offered
WATER · AND misc. hauling.
Call992·5858.
NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport·Poemray area .
Call for free "tlmote.

367-7101.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimates. Call9.t19·2686.

POOL CHEMICALS. Soasan
packs. Fr" dollvery. D.
Bumgordn•r Sole•. Inc. Equlpm.nf and supplift . 992-572-4.
ond mise Items. 7.C2·2909, ask
far Rick Imboden.

bedrOoms.

out. GoOd reference. For
mot•
Information,
call
99:2-6331 Mfore noon or after
8:30pm.

and on Ohio Power. Just
$17,500.
IN THE COUNTRY Nice older home with ~
Enormous

WUZ ELVINEY MAD
AT VE FER STRAGGLIN'
HOME AT
SUN,UP
THIS
MORNIN'?

NAW··SHE
EVEN FIXED
ME A COUPLE
OF EGGS

SUNNV-SIDE

FER

BREAKFUST

WILL 00 polnllng lnsldo and

family room with wood burning fireplace. 3 car
HOUSE REPAIR and remodel·
garage and workshop.
I'll acres. Great for a r lng. Careful work. R.C.tonabt.
rates . Erny Davtes. 742·2090.
large family for $35,000.
LOTS -. Acreage,
woods, cleared land,
campsites and hOme
sites. All sizes, all·
·prices.
Real Estate for Sale
LIST IT WITH US AND
FARM FOR Salo. · Hauso, 2
WE WILL ADVISE
borna, trailer. large pond. 10..
HOW TO GET TME
ocret.o r 82 acres, 742-2566.
MOST FROM A SALE.

Housing
·
Headquarters

BARNEY

HAULING! limestone, grav•l .

Natural gas, city weter,

PEANUTS

HOW CAN I DO AREPOIU
ON HANNISA~ . MARCIE?
I'VE NEVER HEARD OF I-IlM!

3~ oCres In Pomeroy. SEclucf.

an

ed wooded area tap al hill,
Overlooks river. Water, efec·
trlc available, 992·3886.

.I

•AQJ
Vulnerable: North-south
Dealer: South
West North East
South

North's second bid of three
dubS is Stayman. He wants
to be in game and is looking
for a 4-4 major sui t fit. South
has four spades . and bids
three . spa des whereupon
North closes the bidding a t
the spade game .
South wins the club lead
a nd goes after trumps. In a
match-point game, declarer
would have to do a lot of
studying in order to find the
best play for a n overtrick .
Here all roads lead to
Rome. Trumps break 3-2;
the king of heart is held by
West so South can set up
dummy's queen. Eventual·
ly, South discards one of his
diamonds on the queen of
hearts, ruffs the other and
makes his over·trick.

Tuesday
6:00-News 3,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News
6; Andy Gri ffith 17: VIlla Alegre
20.
6:31&gt;-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 6; CBS
News 8, 10; My Three Sons 17;
Over Easy 20.
,
7:00- Cross -Wlts 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13: Please Stand By 8;
NewslO; Love American Style
15 ; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17;
Dlck Cavett 20; How To Buy A
Home 33.
7:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3; Candid
Camera 6; Gong Show 8;
Hollywood Squares 10; TV Honor
Society 15; Baseball 17; Mac.
Nell -Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:OO-Cil lfhangers 3,15; Happ_y Days
6, 13; CBS Reports 8, 10; Evening
at Pops 33; Austin City Limits 20.
B: 31&gt;-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9:00-Movle "Stay Hungry' ' 3,15;
Three's Company 6, 13; Movie
"Fraternity Row" 8,10; One of
the Missing 20.
9:31&gt;-Taxi 6, 13.
10: 00-St arsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 :
America 17: News 20; Global
Paper 33.
10: 31&gt;-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :00-News 3,8,10,13,15; Hogan's
Heroes 17; Like It Is 20; Lowell
Thomas Remembe~s 33.
II : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,1 S; Movie
"J unlor Bonner"

\

DOWN TO TkE USRAIN, MA~SE IT'LL SNOW
AND ~OOK HIM UP IN iOMORROW, AND ALL THE
ENC~CI.OPEDIA ,,
SC~OOLS WILL ee CLOSED.•

WHAT I DID..

UP

13;;

Mo"VIe

''Vendetta for the Saint" 6;
Barnaby Jones 8; ABC Ne.,;s 33;
Movie "12 Angry Men" 10;
Movie "Incident at Phantom Hill

' 17.

12:41&gt;-Movle " The Love Boat" II" 8;
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1:25-Baseball 17; 1:41&gt;-News 13;
3:55-News 17; 4:15-12 O'Clock
Hl,gh 17.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 2,1979
5:15-World at Large 17: 5:45- .
Farm Report 13; 5:SG-PTL Club
3.

5:55-Sunrlse Semester .10; 6:00700 Club 6,8; PTL Club is; 6: 11&gt;2+
News 11: 6:25-Chrlstopher
Pass 2•
Pass 2NT
Closeup 10.
Pass . 3•
Pass 3+
6:31&gt;-Drag net 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Pass 4•
Pass Pass
Report 3; 6:51&gt;-Good Morning,
Pass
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3, 15; Good M0rnlng
.You
hold
:
, Openlng.Jead: .+ 3
America 6, 13; . Wednesday
S+B
Morning 8; Schllolles lOt Three
• QJ199!7
Stoqges-Uttle Rascals 17; 7:15¥A 8 7
By Oswald Jacoby
Weather 33.
+A 9
and Alan Sontag
7:31&gt;-Famlly Affair 10; 8:0f&gt;-Capt.
+3 2
Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It To
An
Iowa
reader
asks
us
if
North's two-heart reBeaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
sponse to the tw&lt;HOlub open- we open with a weak two
8:30- Discovery 17; 9:00- Bob
spade
bid.
ing shows that he holds some
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15;
No . We have 11 high-card
"high cards and has nothing
Emergen cy On ~ 6: Hogan 's
points
including
two
aces
to do with hearts in Jacoby
Heroes 8; Joker's Wild 10; Lucy
method ol responding to the and open with a normal one
Show 17.
spade.
The
hand
is
too
good
forcing two club. With a
9: 30-Brady Bunch B; Hogan's
good heart suit he would for a weak two.
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
!NEWSPAPER ENTF:HPHJSE ASSN . I
ha ve to respond three
10 :00-Card Sharks 3,15; All In The
hearts .
.
Family 8,10; Edge of Night 6;
(Do you have a question for
In other method$ North the e1&lt;pe rts ? Write " Ask the
Dating Game 13; Movie "The
would have respnd~d with Experts, .... care of this newspa·
Perfect Furlough" 17.
an artificial two diamonds . per. Individual questions will
10:
31&gt;-AII
Star Secrets 3, 15; S20,000
With this hand it makes no be answered If accompanied
Pyramid
13; Andy Griffith 6;
difference because South by stamped, self-addressed
Whewl
8,10;
10 :55-C BS News 8;
happened to have a 23-point envelopes. The mos t interest·
House
Call
10.
notrump-type hand and his · ing questio ns will be used in
11 :Do-High Roller. 3;15; Laverne &amp;
tw(}&gt;-notruinp rebid "shows this column and will receive
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)
th.at.
Lowell Thomas Remembers 20."
11 : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame St.
20,33; 11 :55-News 17.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
12:00-Newscenter 3; Password 15;
Young &amp; Restless 8; Mlddoy
ACROSS
44 Family
Magazine
13; Love American
I " - the little
member
Sty le 17.
·children . .. " 45 Unfailing
12:31&gt;-Ryan's Hope 6. 13; Search for
DOWN
7 Baggage or
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec. Co. 33; Not,
for Women Only 15 Movie "The
freight 1 Julie
Strange One" 117.
10.Menagerie
. Andrews
1:00-DaysofOur Llves3,15; All My
expert
movie
Children 6, 13; News B; Young &amp;
12 " 2 Roman
the Restless 10; 1:Jo-As The
World Turns a, 10.
pro nobis"
liquid
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live'
13 Roof sight
measure
Yesterday's Arulwer
6,13; 2:25- News 17.
14 Pinch
3 Destiny
20 Before
30 Styx and
2:31&gt;-Another World 3,15; Guiding
U Gordon
4 Shame
spread
Lethe, e ,g.
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 11.
Mac on you!
or spring
3% Game
3:00-General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
16 " Master
5 Glorify
21 Old nOte
Item
17.
Melvin"
8 Leased
22 Excitable
33 Matrix
3: 30-Mash 8; Razzmatarz 10;
17 Rested
7 Faithful
person
34 Concept
Fllntstones 17; Over Easy 20.
18 Beauty's
. 8 Cotrubas 23 Fencing loll
30 Known
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Hollywood
Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6;
lover
rendition 25 Call - day
· facta
Addams Family 8; Sesame St.
20 Gazed upon
9 All caught 26 Qulet..flowing
37 Not new
20,33; Six Million Dollar Man 10;
~ Reimbursed
up in
river
38 Unearthly
Mike Douglas 13; Space Giants
27 Save wed11 Pro 26 Lerner and
U Deneuve's
17.
~ :31&gt;- Bewllched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8;
19 Tiff
I.Alewe musical
swruner
ding costa
Lucy Show 15.
28Poem
S:OO-l
Dream of Jeannie 3; Beverly
division
Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers .
28 Comer20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Six Million
stone
Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15;
figure
5:31&gt;-Carol Burnett 3: News 6: Elec.
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
:W Chair
Odd
Couple 15; Lucy Show 17;
material
Doctor Who 33.
31 Obscure
6:00-News 3,8, 10, 13,15: ABC News
33 Wire
6: Andy Griffith 17; Villa Alegre
20.
..
measure
6:31&gt;-NBC
News
3,
IS;
ABC News 13;
35 Neronian
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News B, 10;
greeting
My Three Sons 17; Over Easy 20.
36 Unpaid
7:00-Cross-wlls 3; Newlywed Gome
6, 13:" Porter Wagoner B; News
39,French
10; Love American Style 15;
king
Carol, Burnett 17; Dick Cavett 20.
441 Press
7:Jo-Dolly J; Match Game PM 6;
statement
Moppet Show 8; The Judge 10; .,
42 Zodiac
That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; Boseball 17 ;
sign
MacNeil-Lehrer Report · 20,33.
43 Race
8:00-Rea l People 3,15; Eight Is
horse
Enough 6,131 Jeffersons 8, 10;
Live from Lincoln Center 33;
5"- 1
Masterpiece Theatre 20.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE '- Here's how to work It: 8:31&gt;-Miss Winslow &amp; Son 8,10;
Movie "Torn Between Two
AXYDLBAAXR
Lovers" 8, 10; Charlle's Angels
Ia LONGFELLOW
6,13; F.Y.I. 201 10:00-Vegas
O~e leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
6, 13; Fall ol Eagles 17; News 20;
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters.
10 :31&gt;- Footsteps 20.
apootrophe1, the length and formation of the word• are all
11 : DO--News 3,6r8,10, 13,15; HOgan'$
hints. Each day the code !etten are different.
' Heroes 17; Turnabout 20; Llllos
Yoga &amp; You 33.
CRYPTOQUOTES
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,15: Pollee
ZLZS
I
VRRE
VIS
FZ·
Woman 6, 13; Rockford Files 8; ·
YZGLZ .
I ·· TIS- GV
UZ
AZ
I
ABC News 33; Movie "The
Seven Minutes " 10; Movie
AGHHZN
VRRE
WUIS
UGTOZEV .
"Station Six-Sahara" 17.
TINXRNGZ
.ARCZS
12 :~1&gt;-Mannlx 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0
Yeller!lay'• Cryptoquote: TRUE FRIENMHIP IS LIKE,
8; 1:00-Tomorrow j; News 15;
SOUND HEALTil, mE VALUE OF IT IS SElDOM KNOWN
1:35-Baseball 17 .
UNTIL IT IS LOST.-C.C.OOLTON
.
1:50- News 13; ~:05-News 17;
(llt7f Kl"l F..tvres Syndlce... Inc:,
4:25-12 O'Clock High 17.

Ask tiM I!XMPII

~-"tal

Rutland, Ohio. Pane 742·2008.

cavatlng,

• 9:; 2

• A9
t AK 6 4

estlmettl. Cell

AUTOMOBILE

• 10 8 7 4
• Q 10 8 3

SOUTH
t KQ87

Mt-2160.

or 9~9-2000.

• 63

• KJ 5
• B6 4 3

I WILL OFFER FOR SALE AT Crltt Bradford.
10:00 AM , MAY 5TH, 1979, AT ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR THE OFFICE OF CROW, CROW Sweepers, toasters, irOI)I. all
8 PORTER , ATTORNEYS , small appliances. Lawn mO.r,
POMEROY , OHIO , THE next to State Highway Garage
GERALD 0. VIOLET REAL on Route7 , 985-3825.
ESTATE LOCATED IN TUPPERS
PLAINS, OHIO. TWO HOUSES SEWING MACHINE Ropalrs,
ON REAL ESTATE. PROPERTY se('Vice, all makes, 992·228A.
APPRAISED AT $20.000 AND The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
TO BE SOLD TO THE HIGHEST Authorized Singer Sal• and
BIDDER. PROPERTY IN EX- Service. W• sharpen Scissors.
CELLENT LOCATION AND ON· EXCAVATING, dazor, loodor
l Y TWENTY MINUTES FROM and backtloe work; dump
PARKERSBURG, WV . THE ,. trucks and to-boys for hire,
RIGHT IS AESER\IED BY THE EX- wlll haul 1111 dirt, tap soli,
ECUTOR TO REJECT ANY ANO Ume1tone and gravel. Call Bob
ALL BIDS. FOR INFORMATION or Roger JeHen, day phone
CALL \IIRGIL ROUSH (614j 992·70B9,
night pheno
985·3379 OR FRED W. CROW 992·3525 or992-S232.
(614) 992-2692.
EXCAVATING , dozer ,
TWO STORY 3 bedroom hpuse.
bockhoe and dltchor. C~arlos
100 x 150 ft . lot. Excellent
R. Hetfleld. Block Hoe Service,

dining ,

roofed patio and
carpeted sun deck .
$39,900.00.
NEW LISTING - 9
years old, large

~EDDISH

~rn

EAST

• A 105

• J 72

also

NEW LISTING - Mid·
dleport, 2 story frame &amp;
brick. 3 bedrooms, kit·
chen is lovely range and

Sportster. Contact Mike lm·
baden , Welshtown Hill ,
Mlners.ville. 992·m7.

GiveAway
PUPPIES, 8 weeks old, fomelo,

f&gt;. I-A

• J 94 2
• Q63 2

WEST

and
Home Maintenance

Hel~lns

(Answers tomorrow)

AH EA D BRUTAL GYPSU'M
Answer: Made a hit on the green!-PUTTED

• 95

Ohio Valley Roofiiig

Tom

"r r 1 r I 1 )"

BRIDGE

949-2762- 949·2160
4·Hfc

ptrltnn.

608 E • • ...wi!QII~..
MAIN
POMFRDY.O .

l.arge rec. or family

HARLEY

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug .·gested by the above car1oon.

I Jumbles : MUSTY

BORN LOSER

992·2143.
E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor

DAVIDSON

1977

(]

Tuesday I May 1

New, repair~
gutters and
down spouts. •
Window cleaning
Gutter clei!nlng
Free Estimates

Storm doon •IMI wtnctows. All
work guanntHCI. 20 Yllrt IX·

frame house. E ~c.e llerit in
town location . Call992-3023.

go, potted. SM Don Stobort,
Rt. 2. Racine, Ohio.
BlllDESMAID'S gown with veil.
51zo11 ·12. $30. '1'12-59SII.
NEW SAVAGE Fax B double
borroll 12 guago. $150. Call
992-6093.
197~ KAWASAKI
125. h· . , .
ceUent condition. low ·miles ."Best offer. 992·2722:

II

"ICRANDII
I I I
Yesterday's

All typts rooflnt, tUtftn eftd
c1own1povb. All ty,.. helm•
melnt.nence, new eiMI NtNir,

Vegetable plants, all ready to ·

.young ,. housebroken. Rac ine

CINPNNATI (AP)
The
University of Cincinnati announced
Monday that two junior college
transfers, Lonnie Camper and Clinton
Sutherland, had .signed national
letters of intent to play basketball for
the Bearcats.
· The 6-foot-8, laG-pound Camper was
a two-year starter for Los Angeles
Valley Junior College where last
seasol) he averaged .16 points and 10
rebounds pef game.
Sutherland, a S.foot-8, :zoG.pound,
forward attended Oxnard, Calif.
Junior College where he was also a
two-year starter. He aver~ed . ·19
points and nine rebounds per game
last season. He is also a two-yenr
Navy veteran, 81)d a native of 1British
HondUras.

·Roofing

LANE DANIELS

992-3705.
HANGING BASKETS , all kinds.
Bedding plants, blooming.

Socloty.

2 players

VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

'"" 14-Yr. Experience

POMEROY
LANDMARK

house ,
full
basement ,
FtnEEN FOOT lowe Line
fireplace , fully carpeted, cenaluminum bass boot. 20 h.p . . tral air, enclosed eun porch,
Mere.. stick steering, fully ' located on 6'/r ocres on CR 28,
equipped with trailer. Call
approx . 3 "'lies from Racine. If
985-4339.
interested contact larry Wolfe
9~9· 2836 weekends and after
NCR CASH. register for grocery
5 evenings.
store. Separate total• for
meat, produce, groceries,
TWO STORV 3 bedroom fromi
mi sc. and taxes. Excellent
house
in
Middleport.
condition . $125.
Phone
992·3457.

992-7853·or 992-7680. Humane

UC signs

H. L Writesel

PIANO
TUNING

TRUCK DDRI\IER. Cell 742- Reasonably priced.
REAL ESTATE Loans. Purchase
2455.
·RUTLAND
HARDWARE , and refinance. 30 year terms ,
BABYSITTER IN my home 5 Rutland, Ohio. 742·225S . , VA. No· money down (elig ible

Cubs.

t; R. MASH

·For Sale

•o

··He's had these special instruments
or devices (in his shoe), but he's still
not up to 100 percent; which is where
he has to be," Wagner said.
" I understand he may go back to a .
regular shoe and device number
three," Wagner said.
"He's asked for a few more days of
work" before any decision is made on
his future, said Wagner of the 3:1-yearold switch-bitting outfielder.
Henderson has been taking batting
practice and working out on an
exercise bicycle while trying to
overcome the foot injury he suffered
two years ago when he crashed into a
fence.
"In our conversation, I told him
we've been patient," Wagner said.
. "He has experience, he has power,
he'sa proven ballplayer, he's a switch
hitter, he can catch and he can throw.
What more can you ask of a player?"
Wagner asked.
·
" It's kind of a baffling case," the
Reds ·president said. "The patience
we've .used is because he has all tbe
tools you look for in a fourth
outfielder.
"He has ever)\thing y~u want except
nwnber seven - that l.'e's healthy,''
. Wagner said.
The Reds, who were off Monday,
open a tw011ame series tonight at
Riverfront Stadium with the Olicago

1• YOU THINK
VOU'RE 601N6 TO
TU~ t.J I.IE' INTO
ONE OF YOUR

WELL I AF'JER.

Phone 614· 753:3661 .
RUTLAND
HARDWARE ,
~utland ,
Ohio . 7~2 -2 255 .

Martln· Senour paint, pro-line
exterior white , $8.10 gal. ·
Plastic water !lewer drain gas
EXPERIENCED
SHOP line and fitting•. We also corry
FABAICATOAS . WLEOERS . plastic wafer line, some aizA
AND LAY·OUT PERSONS with fittings to match
NEEDED. GOOD BENEFITS. galvanized pipe. Automatic
gal.
CONlACT L &amp; H METAL gas water heaters
WORKS ,
INC
at glass linec:i 5 year warrenty
$129.95. Automatic, electric
1·JO.I · A28-~200.
water· heaters, 52 gal . glass
NEED SOMEONE for sewing
lined 5 year vvarrenty $139.95.
work . 992·2021 ·
lakewood window fans , metal
FULL TIME · bartender , exblades, S yr .worrenty, prices
perience preferred but not
start at $31.74 , stands and
necessary. Apply In person , , window panels extr~. King clr·
Meigs Inn .
culating cool ~nd wood
heaters. Cabinet models 9900
SOMEC?NE TO keep an Jlderly • 'tor $329.95 with blower . King
.m an •n thei,r ~me, Roy
circulating go11 h.afers, thermostotically contrail~ with
Donohew. For .nformotion
radiance and gloss front ,
contact Jeff Dono hew , 6S oak
Dr iv e , .little Hock ing .
70 ,000 B.T.U.,
$329 .95 .
989-2819. Racine-letart area.
Gorden seed and supplies.

~

YOU REVIVED JU5T IIJ Tii.Ae,
CAPTAit.J EA5Y! ! DO WANT
VOU TO KNOW WHAT, A!IOUT
TO HAPPEt.J TO YOU!

Pomeroy, Ohio
. "2-5.5-47
4·25·1 mo.· Pd.

592-3051
-- 4·2]: ; mo.

18 Years Experience

calll - ~ · 5883 .

Help Wanted
IMMEDIATE
OPENING .

•

f!'&gt;UT CONSCIOUS
. AGAI"J-I;;H"f

r-::====----.

Rt.l

77

Shop

TWO USED pianos and us •
organs for 1ole In your arec For mere information· write
Credit Manager, 15• W. 'Main
St., Lancaster, Ohio. 43UO or

...
Qon
unload R ende

Today's

Shed a few tears- salty ones, if you
must - for Charles 0 . Finley. Tbe
"0" stands for "Oh , No, No, No! " Or
maybe, "Oh, my Goodness!"
It's hard to visualize how things
could be worse for the snow-haired
baseball maverick . With the season
less than a month old, his Oakland A's
are settling inro their familiar pits in
the cellar of the American League
West. Olarlle 0. has to be on an
aspirin diet. Every day !rings a fresh
headache.
.
Fans are staying away in droves.
Average attendance is around 4,000 a
game. Sometimes there are fewer
fans than employees in the ball park ,
such as the 653 that showed up for a .
recent game against Seattle. Now the
Collsewn has filed a $10 million suit
against the Oakland owner, charging
that since 1975 he has not lived up to
his agreement to field and promote a
big league baseball franchise on the
premises.
Technically,. Olarlie 0 . can't run
· and can't stay. His original 26-year
lease runs through 1987. When he says
be'd like to move - there have been
gestures toward Seattle, Denver and·
Washington, D.C. ·- the landlord
responds, "Nothing doing ." So the
mad, sad circle goes on.
The saga of Olarle• 0. Finley reads
like a Horatio Al!jer paperback cluslc
in reverse. , It's sports'· most
compelling "riches to rags" nonthriller.
Five , years ago, the Oakland A's
were coming off their third straight
World Series championship and were
being proclaimed . a " diamond
dynasty" compared to the old
Yankees.' ' Oiarlie 0. was defiant and ·

Electric Motor

two dve in July and August.

Adult Bible Closs.

.1976 FORO VAN Econoline
100 . low mileage, good tires,
Fourth, Middleport. 992-2788.
Excellent condition. Suggested
ODDS AND Ench Sale. Chester
retail, $3600. First come, first
serve, $3000. Ingels Furniture, • U.M.W. May • and 5. Chester
Methodist Church. 9·• ·
Middleport.
·

Reds may

Reynold's

Also kid• . Shedo. 690.1234.

SIX family Yard Salo." Mey

~H, GOODi DAZED

KJ

• K 10 7

1974 GMC JIMMY. P.8., P.S ..

LOST: GERMAN. Schnauzer,
mole, CR 18. Reward . Family

~

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4·30·tfc

A.C., 2-wheel drive . Priced
reasonable. Coii992-3S80.,

Tuppers Plains , s«ond house

3rd and 4th at Rod Grimm's,
Come to fire house In Racine .
Go straight up hill , turn ilght
on Broadway. Baby clothes
and Iorge sizes; misc. items.

Rutland.

Hogorty's. 825 Beech Sl .. Mid·

GOATS. SOME just freshened .

William St., Middleport .
Acorss from the RC Plant. Lots
of children'$ clothing.

MORTGAGE
CO.
E. State, Athens

IFLORAM

'
:cAPTAIN EASY

CONTRACTOR

I I

dleport.

949-2466 .
LOST: REWARD, 2 female
:JO.I-675-17'1'1.

YARD SALE. May 2 &amp; 3.

'4 mile off Rt. i by-pass .
on St. Rt. 124 toward

trailer. Stove, refrigerator,
A.C.. , teeps 6. On display at

8 :3()..5 at Guy Spencer's home ,

behind st. Paul's U. M.

Roger Hysell
Garage

22 FoOT DELUXE Storcroft

LOST: MALE Iris h Setter. Ap·
prox . 2 yrs . Old. Area of
Bashon on 8oshon Rd .
Children' s pet . Reword .

Church. Spon1ored by St. Paul

Mom , it ha s been 10 years
since ·you wnef away
Our hearts !till . ache with
sad ness
We min you more each ond
every day .
L&lt;?ve you always .
Children ond"Grandchildren .

WE WISH to extend thank s to
everyone who offered sym·
pothy during the Il lness and
death of our father and grand·
father . A special thanks to
Ros al ie Story , Edna Clark, the
Eastman .. Family, everyone
sending food and all the
Beautiful flowe rs . To Dr.
Kemp , Dr . Walker , Or .
Danie ls , the home care
nurses . the nursing staff at
Holzer Medical Center ,
thaemergency vehicle staff, to
tha minister Duane Warden
for the very comforting words ,
Benny Ewing and 1taff at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Most
especially, to Ginger Collums,
who was by his side when he
needed her most. For the
prayers anP encouragement,
our hea rtfelt thanks to all.
The Family of George Logan.

Yard Sale
YARD SALE . May 3 &amp;

I

BLOCK &amp; BRICK .
WORK, GENERAL

I

IOEGOS

Print answer here:

CCiullflower, brunets iprouts,
head lettuce, tomatoes , and
Io rge selecfion of bedding annuals. Pots of flowers and
hongin9 baskets . Cleland
Greenhouse .
Geraldine
Cleland, Racine.

ONE BEDROOM homo. Adults
only. 992· 25~8 .

down

N. L Constnr.tion

IRElAND

Cali tor a Free Siding
Estimate, 949·2801 or
949-2860. No Sunday
calls.
~ · 4 · 1 mo.

PLANTS, CABBAGE, broccoil ,

AKC REGISTERED Old Engli•h

WANT-AD

SIDING CO.

1975 HONDA 175 Els inore.
New tires , chain and sprocket.
bcellent cond ition . 742-31S..

HOUSE , .C rooms and bath. Unfurnished. 992·3090. .

money

(eligible veterans&gt;
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non-veterans)

992-3891 .

·

and

Refinance
A- No

BISSEll

gravel , -colclum chloride , fer·
tllh:er , dog food, and oil types
of salt. Excelsior Solt Works .
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy.

ut;iltles paid. Ce11992·6009.
PASTURE FOR RENT. 992-5616.
FURNISHED ONE bedroom opt.
$125 mo. $50 depo•lt. All

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
30 Year Terms

For Sale
LIMESTONE, •and ,

COAL,

and Aluminum
Siding

.
AMERICAN

Her itage travel trailer . 22 'ft.
long. Call Roderick Grimm's
residence in Racine . Phone
9~9- 2834
:..:.:...- - - - - -

men only . Breakfast If
desired. Reasonable rates .
Phone 992-S-422 .

pm , 992-207B.

Vin~

Television
ViPwing

I

Business Services

I

Bashan . Salas; Mo tor homes
to toppen 1 rentals, trave l
trailers , service and supplies.

Sheepdog puppies. 8 weeks
old. Shots and wormed.

AQJERTISING
DEADUNES

•'

992-5434 .
90 ROLLING ACRES of good

o. May 1 1979
' '
'

Sentinel Classifieds

on RainbQw Ridge. 1 mile from

utilities paid . Phone before 3

WANTED: ONE ocre el land

NOTICE

1969.

For Rent

OH .

Phone lm-Zl56

~he

CASH FOR junk con. 2• hour
wrecker s,e rv ice . Fry.e ' s~
Rutland . OH . 7•2-20fll .

wanted to Buy

DICK TRACY

m+-i-

'·•

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May I, 1979

Motorists face
long gas· lines

NSCA won't support agreement
By The.A)lsociated Press
The National Steel Ca rriers
Association and several other steel
and iron haulers will not support a
tentative agreement with the
Teamsters Union , according to ·an
association spokesman.
Robert Coopes Said representatives
of the Detroit-based association and
other companies met Monday in
Cleveland.
Coopes said the group , which
employs a total of 8,000 drivers in the
Midwest and East, would continue to
.balk until the Interstate Commerce
Commission approves a 5 percent rate
surcharge to offset improved health,
welfare and pension benefits for
Teamsters.
Coopes said benefits and wages
force the trucking firms to pay drivers
88 cents on every dollar brought in ,
leaving 12 cents for the firms to pay
cargo insurance, terminal expenses,
other employees and administrative
costs. He said the firms need at least
17 cents on the dollar to pay their
overhead.
The NSCA was tile lone holdout
among the four truck~ associations
representing steel hauling firms. The
NSCA represents 50 companies, but
some members have signed their own
Interim agreement with the
Teamsters .
Coopes
said

representatives of 65 companies were
at the Mo.nday meeting.
.
Meanwhile, Cleveland steel haulers·
agreed Monday to start returning to',
work . But in Youngstown , d(ivers
voted unanimously to continue their
walkout. They said they would picket
and patrol to bottle up steel
shipments.
The conflicting actions came as the
month-long walkout by Teamster
steel carriers began running out of

gas .
.
More than 1,000 strike-related
layoffs continued at Republic Steel
Corp. and U.S. Steel Corp. facilitieS in
Youngstown, Canton, Warren and .
Cleveland, however.
Ted Taylor, a spokesman for Armco
Steel at Middletown said, "We're
seeing more carriers each day, but 1
it's not up to what we consider our
normal volume." He said, however,

that earlier layoffs of 1,060 workers
ended with the start of the work week
on Sunday.
In Cleveland, 155 striking steel
haulers told Teamsters Local 407
leader C James Kinney they would
return to jobs at companies which had
signed interim agreements with the
Teamsters, but wquld continue to
boycott flnns that have refused to
sign.

"We figure when the companies
who haven't signed see somebody
else's steel going down the road,
they'll sign too," said Frank Nichol, a
member of the dissident Teamsters
for a Democratic Union.
· A Cleveland Teamsters union
source said, "The strike is folding
up." He said steel shipments are
returning to Ohio. " It's not moving
fast, but it's moving," said the source,
who ask~!~! tllat his name not be used.

Drug smuggling ring cra~ked , ,:;,~g~a~s,;;,,
estimated to be about $300 a-pound, or
$300 million.
Federal agents said the drugs
amounted to about 8 percent of the
tqtal marijuana smuggled into this
country over that time.
The 40-count indictment, unsealed
today, alleges violation of 12 federal
laws, including one that carries a
maxlmwn life sentence.
' AttOrney General Griffin B. Bell
said in a statement, "This is the
largest case brought by the
department in the drug trafficking
field since I've been attorney
general.''
He said it was the fir.t ~ASP that is

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
goverrunent said today it had cracked
a $300 million drug smuggling ring in
Miami run by two owners of an
automobile dealership.
The Justice Department announced
that 14 persons, including the two car
dealers, were indicted Monday and ·
have now been arrested.
Federal officials said the drug ring
smuggled 500 tons of marijuana in
from Colombia over a llknonth.
period. They said the value of the
marijuana was conservatively

the result of a combined investigation
by the FBI and the Drug Enforcement
Administration into majo.r drug
trafficking.
The indictment charged ·that the
drug ring was organized in August'
1974 by Robert Jay Meinster, 37, and
Robert Elliot Platshorn, 36, both of
Miami Beach and partners in the
South Florida Auto Auction in Miami.
They began 'running tons . of
Colombian marijuana frQIII South
Florida to storage facilities in
Philadelphia before relocating the
operation in the Miami area by mid1976, the indictment said.

Friday and Saturday evenings for
lbe purpose of reglaterlag voten.
. Tbls wlll be the final reg!JtraUon
before the June primary eleeUoua.
uestdel being open from 9 a.m. to t
p.m. on Friday and 9 a.m. to l% noon
Saturday, Cbe board office wD1
remain open from 8 to g p.m., botb
daya.
Special boon are especially for
volen of lbe Eastern aod Soiltllern
Local School Dlatrlc!B aod Pomeroy
VIllage where primaries will be
beld. Saturday Ia tbe deadline for
regulerlng · for tile primary elec·
Uoua.
·

Construction worker
RUMMAGE
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A rummage and bake sale wlll be
Thunday lltrougb Saturday: . faces munler charges
held at St. Paul's Lutheran Church
Thursday, 9 to 3 p.m. Plants will also Showers poulble each day. Hlglulln
This
lr's Special
MARTINSVll.LE, Ind. (AP) - A MARION - Three Athens area
be for sale.
·
·
tbe upper . . ud '181 011 'l'banday,
fallla&amp; to tbe mid 5811n tbe north aod 22-}'ear-old Indianapolis man was General Telephone Co. of Ohio em·
ployes bave cqmpleted a course ofmid IGII In tbe aoatb 011 Salarday. being held without bond in the deaths fered
TERESA FERRElL
at the company's technical
of
a
woman
and
three
children
who
Ovendgbi!OWJin lite 3011n the aortb
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Teresa Ferrell, daughter of Mr. and aod In tbe 4GB In tbe IIOIIIb tbrGugb were killed after their car was training school.
Admitted-Elsie Forbes, Pomeroy;
They
were
Andrew
E.
Batey,
Rt.
1,
Mrs. Dilford Ferrell, Syracuse, is now tbe period.
disabled, authorities said.
Joan
Weyersmiller, Pomeroy; Mary
Middleport;
Thomas
E.
Hysell,
.
employed
at
Kay's
Beauty
Salon
ln
Pollee think the woman and her
USED CARS
Russell,
Poinervy; Wilbur Fetty,
Billy
J.
Spencer,
174
Pomeroy
and
Middleport. Miss Ferrell completed
children were slain by a passing
Langsville;
PJul Andrews, Long
Mulbery
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
'
her cosmetology at Meigs li!gh School
motorist who offered them a ride after
·
in June 1978.
Students learned how to test and Bottom.
he helped change a flat tire on their
Discharged--Jennifer McKinley,
car on . an interstate highway repair "carrier" equipment. Carriers
can transmit several telephone con- Unda Bailey, Jessie White, Stella
surrounding
Indianapolis.
THREE MORE EXECUTED
ENTERTAIN
Steven T. JU:dy, a construction versations over a pair of wires by use O'Bryan, Helen George, Burwell
TEHRAN,
Iran ( AP ) - Three
4500 miles, loaded with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter entertainMcKinney, Otis Olapmail, Jeromi
worker, was held Monday in the of radio frequencies .
many otions including CB
. ed Sunday with a family dinner party. former ·police officers were .executed Morgan County ·Jail on four
·
There are more than 90 courses and Dailey.
radio.
'
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Huber early today after an Islamic prelimiruiry counts of murder, said · seminars at the technical training
Fulton, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thomp- revolutionary court in the northern Prosecutor G. Thomas Gray. Formal school. Classroom training helps emSQUAD CALLED TWICE
son, Mr .. and Mrs. Joe Thompson, city of Gorgan convicted them of arraignment was scheduled later in ployes develop job skills and keep
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
Emmett Thompson, Cheshire, Mr. being "corrupt on earth," the state the week.
pace with changes in telephone direc- answered a call to Union Ave. at 6:15
·
and Mrs. Robert Thompson, and the . radio said.
a.m. Tuesday for Mrs. Mildred Morris
tory.
Judy had been free on bond for one
The broadcast did not say how they
hosts' SOIIll, Eddie and Alan.
who was taken to Holzer ·Medical
were executed, but every previous week ·while awaiting trial for armed
Center.
'
execution on which details were robbery. He was arrested at his home .
SQUAD CALLED
At 6:41 p.m. Monday the fire
You'll Like Our Quality
Sunday after his pickup truck was
reported
was
by
·firing
squad
.
.
The
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
FLEA
MARKET
departnient
went to. ROute 143 near
Way.of Doing Business
The executions brought to 164 the identlfied as one seen near the scene was called to Spring Ave., at8:17 a.m. Jack's Cafe to extinguish a brush fire.
GMAC FINANCING
A flea market will be held at Grace
of the slayings, said Gray.
' m -5342
Pomeroy
•
Episcopal Church Thursday, Friday number of people reported killed on
Mushroom hunters Saturday found · Monday for Joan Weyersmlller, who
Open Evenings 'til 6: 00
violence,
political
and
morals
charges
and Saturday fnm 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
ADVISORY MEETING SET
Tll5 p.m. sat.
the bodies of Terry Lee Chasteen, 21, was taken to Veter'ans Memorial
since February.
by the Church Women.
Hospital.
There
will be a Title 1 Parent
Indianapolis, and her children, Misty
The squad went to I..Qng_Lane near Advisory meeling Wednesday at 12:45
Ann, 5, Stephen Michael, 4, and Mark
Lewis, 2, in a creek near Mooresville, Pomeroy at 7:57p.m. Sunday for Ida p.m. at · .the Ponoeroy Elementary
Christy . who was also taken to School.
·
about 15 miles from Martinsville.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
AU
interested
parenlli
are
invited
to
REPORT OF CONDITION
Gray said autopsies showed Mrs.
attend
tomorrow's
meeting,
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the
Chasteen was strangled and the
especially parents of students
children were drowned.
participating iil the Title I program.
ASSISTANCE RENDERED
[t appeared Mrs. Chasteen had been
The
tanker
of
the
Middleport
Fire
This
program is designed to lmrrove
· sexually ·assaulted,. the prosecutor
·Department
was
called
to
assist
the
reading
skills and reading scores for
said, but laboratory tests to confirm
Mason
Fire
Department
at
a
brush
students
in grades 1-6.
that were incomplete.
fire
on
Lieving
Road
at
2:45
p.m.
of Middleport in tbe state of Ohio, at the close of business ori March 31, 1979 published In
Services were planned today for
PANCAKE SUPPER PLANNED
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Stales Code,
Mn. Chasteen and her daughter. ·A Monday. ·
Men
of the Racine United Methodist
funeral for the two boys was
Section 161.
BAKE SALE CANCELLED
" Church will hold a pancake and
National Bank Region Nwnber 4
Charter nwnber 8441
scheo;luled for Wednesday.
A bake s.Ue to be held by sausage supper in the church annex
Harrisonville Senior Citizens on May 3 from 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday. There will
and · 4· has been cancelled, however, be free entertainment including music
Statement of Resources and Liabilities
ADVERTISEMENTS
the rwnmage sale to be held at the and songs by the Rev. and Mrs. David
camCJZED
·
same time will be held as scheduled at Harris. The supper is on an "ali you
Cash and due from depository institutions .. . .....••................ . ... .... 1,396,000.00
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - 4J!d- tile town hall.
can eat basis" with the jrice at $2 for
U.S. Treasury securities .... . ..... ........... . . ... ... . ...... ............. 2,428,000.00
mark, Inc. advertisements urging
..
·
adults
and $1 for children.
Obllgations of States and political
'
fanners to "call us today for a fill-up"
SURGERY
SCHEDULED
subdivisions in the United States .. . ... ... ... ... .. .. ....• . ............. ...: 1,963,000.00
were criticized by state energy ofSharon Smith, Pomeroy, will
BEEF CLUB TO MEET
All other securities .. .. ... ...... ........... . ............. . .......... . ...... 30,000.00
ficials because the wholesaler had to under go surgery Wednesday ai · The Meigs County Better Beef Club
Federal funds sold and securities purchased ·
obtain ·emergency gasoline University Hospital, Columbus. will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday !II the ·
under agreements to resell .......... ... ............. .. ..... ..... ....... 1,200,000.00
allocations.
Roger Gaul residence.
Ulans, Total (excluding unearned income ) ........•..... .. .•....... 7,112,000.00
In a letter. to Landmark, Ohio
Less: Allowance for possibl&amp;loan losses ..... ............ . ...... ..... 84,0(!0.00
Deparlment of Energy Director
Ulans, Net .......... . . .......... ............ ......................... 7,028,000.00
Robert S. Ryan said, "At the very
Bailk premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
tlme this advertising program is ap·assets representing bank premises.
91,000.00
pearing, Landmark Inc. has a
desperate shortfall in product."
Allbther8:5:!ets
. 12,000.00
Landmark sales manager Steven
,;._---f_TOTALASSETS. : . . .. ......... ... ...... .. . .. ....... ..... ...... .. .. .... 14,148,000.00 - - Westfall said Monday that the com·
pany has advised local cooperatives
Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps.,
to discontinue such advertising. He
.andcorps .... ... .... .. ...... .. . ... : .. .. . ... ....................... .... 3,618,000.00
said similar radio commercials have
Time and savings deposits of individuals
already been halted, but . some
prtnshps., and corps . ........... . .... . ... ... . ...... .. . . ........... . .... 8,213,000.00
magazine ads probably can't be
DepositsofUnitedStatesGovemment ... .. '. .... .. ...... .. ........ ...... .. .... 7,000.00
removed because of advance copy
· Deposits of States and political
Ill
deadlines.
subdivisions In the United /Aates . .. .. ......... . ........ . . ...... ........... 698,000.00
All other deposits .... . ............... ... ......... .. ... . ... .... . ..... ... ..... 5,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ....... .. ...... ... .. ......... . , ....... ... .. ... • 43,000.00
NAMED MISS USA
Total Deposits ................................ .. ................... ~ ... 12,584,000.00
BIWXI,
Mills. (AP) - Mary
oC
Total demand deposits ... ..... ...... .. ................. ..... .
There,ote
Friers
college education hB.s
::;
Total time and savings deposits ............................. ..
been
interrupted
for at least a year,
HOME FURNISHINGS - 1ST FLOOR
All other liabilities .. . . ..................... , .. . ................ ... .. . ...... 11,000.00
now
that
she's
been
named Miss USA. .
TOTALUABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
.
The green-eyed blonde from
COMBINATION UPRIGHT ·
notes and debentures) ................ . ...... . .. ...................... 12,595,000.00 _ __
Rochester, N. Y.,' will have to cut
(;ommon stock
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER
short her studies in pre-law and coma. No. shares authorized 2,000
munications at St. John Fisher
INCLUDED:
b. No. shares outstandings 2,000 (par value ) ...... .. .. .. ...... .. ........ . 100,000.00
College, but she said Monday she .
• EICiualve ..WIY Dlef.A·Napt
6PC.
Surplus ......... . .. ... ..... .... .... .... ...... ................ . .. ........ 900,000.00
rug height acliuotment ..
would eventually return · to the .
AnACHMENT
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
classroom.
SET
and other capital reserves ... .......... ......... .. .............. ......... ~··'""'·IJU
• Top-filling dlopoilble duo!
"I'm going to be a lawyer, so that's,
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ............... .. .. . ........ .. .. .... ........ ..
bq prevento clogo, ke,po
~
deflnltely a priority," said ,Miss Friel.
euctlon otrong.
---+-TOTAL LIABIUTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL . . .... . ... .. ...... ......... = = = - -

Course completed

w..

1979 OLDS 98
SEDAN

'9600

Red;~ed

Karr &amp;·vanlandt
.

THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

010 0

0 0

0 Ito t

o 0 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 1 0

0 0 0 I

I

0 0 0

I

010 0 0 0 0 0 0 I

I

0 I

I

I

0 0

0 0 0 I

o o o o

.,

-~
•-

UPRIGHT

SWEEPER SALE

Amounts outstanding Ill! of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denminations of
.
$100,000 or rnore . . . ... ...... .. ...... , ............. .. ..• •....... ......... 200,000.00
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Total!leposlts......... ..... .. . .. .. . , ................. .... ... ........ . 12,584,000.00
I, MannlDg Kloes, Vice President and Cashier of the above-named ba!!k do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true.and correct to the best of my knowledge and )lellef.
Manninl! Kloes
Aprll3l, lf1?9 - - -

We the undenligned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
Uabillti~. We declare that it bas been examined by us,' and to the best of our laiowledge and
belief Is true and correct.
·
ROdney Downing
RoseS . Reynolds 7 Directors
Dale M. Dutton

THANKS EXTENDED

. The Charles (Chuck) W. Warden Ill
family extends Its thanks to all the
men of the Motintaineer pr~ject for
their kind support given it during his
recent loss. The Warden residence at
Cheshire burned March 31. ·

• Edge KI"Mr .creono thll
rut tough Inch olona the
' l\lc, O .''Jl

blllbolldl

• Brilliant heodllghl

I!~W

C~d~
.

'6995

MEETSMAY7

LIBRARY CLOSING
The PomerOy Public Ubrary will ·
cl011e at li~n Friday in preparation
for painting of Ita intertor. The
librarian will open for regular hours
at noon Monday.

•

~
· ,.,
. .

Reg. Upright 189.95 ~ ~
\- ·'-\
Tool Reg. $19.95
~ •
Total Reg. $109.90 ~

· The Meigs County Board ol Mental
Retardation will meet May 7 at 7:30
p.m. In the office of the Meigs County
Commiaslooers.

NOW
ONLY
.

.

e

N~W YORK (AP) ::_ Motorists, who
are . using more gasoline ·despite
higher prices, closed stations and ,
occasional Unes, face a longer walt to
get to . pumps in May as many oil
companies further reduce the amount
of gasoline they sell to service
stations.
The companies say the cutbacks are
due to tight supplie!! of crude oil and
tile government's request that !bey
emphasize production of heating oil at
the expenSe of g880llne production.
·Oil companies have been limiting
the allocations of gasoline to dealers
for several months, generally to about
95 percent of the amount of gas the ·
stations got a year ago. Demand for .
gasoline is about t percent higher than
a year ago ..
But many companies recently have
been quietly announcing more drastic
cuts.
Standard Oil Co. of California,
maker of Chevron gasollne,ls cutting
its allocation of g880llne to dealers
from 95 percent In AprU to ao percent
in May. Atlantic Richfield has cut
from 95 percent to 86 · percent,
standard Oil Co. of Indiana (Amoco)
has cut from 100 percent to 90 percent ·
and Exxon {('om 95 percent to . 80 .
percent.
·
·
·
The cutllacks will probably e~~use a
replay of the "closed" signs and
occasional lines that popped up at the
end of April as gas stations used up
their monthly allotments, according
to analysts.

'

INCLll&gt;ES 6 PC.

' ·•

ATTACHMENT SET

.

J

Elberfelds In Pomero

•

VOL XXVIII NO. 13

•

at

e11t1ne

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CEN:rS

WEDNESDAY, MAY 2, 1979

Meigs board hires educational consuliant
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Following an executive session
Tuesday night, the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education hired a
consultant to help study the 42
applications on file · for the

superintendent's position created by
the resignation of Supt. Charles
Dowler last month.
The board, while. in executive
session last night, reviewed the 42
applications before coming out to take

professor
of
educational
. administration at Ohio University, to
help screen and study applicants. The
new employe wiJI replace Dowler who
resigned recently as superintendent to
head the Wihnington schools.
In open session, the

act ion hiring Dr. Max Evans,

boArr1 rli c:,..,,o;:u:

the nee d for replacement of the roof at
the high school building and was
advised by Supt . Dowler to look into
several types of roofing products
before taking action. It was agreed to
have representatives of several
roofing companie. •Item th~ nrxt

regular board meeting to discuss what be at the school today to look at the
action they would recommend for the roof and interior problems that ha.ve.
developed in the structure.
roof at the high school.
The board recently advised Dwight
Supt. Dowler told the hoard that the
original architect and consultin g Goins, administrative assistant" to
engineer on the Meigs High School check into possibl~ legal actioo re!IB(- :
when it was built nine years ago will ding structural defects.

Communication group named
Principal John Lisle has instituted
a new program at Salisbury Elementary School. Known as "Salisbury's
Communication . Council," the
program Is composed of (iarents of
the Salisbury School and community
reslde11tli organized for the purpose of
assistance to the public for schoolcommunity contact.
Council members are made up of
adults who have children attending
the school, an adult who dnes not have
children attending the school, but
does live in the school district, a
representative of the faculty at the
school, president and secretary of the
Pl'O and the principal of the school.
Goals are to inform, discuss,

respond, inte~ret and assist the community to become fully aware ofthe
total school operation.
The councU meets once'during each
of the six weeks period.
Members of the council are: Mrs.
Shirley Kauff, Lupe Stegall, Mrs.
Bruce Zirkle, Margaret Parker, Mrs.
Christine Sauters, Darlene Hayes,
Yvonne S. Young, Barbara Beegle,

appointed

W.. SHINGTON (AP)
President Carter has passed over
15 more senior generals to pick
U. Gen. Edward C. Meyer to
become the Army's ·next chief of
staff, Pentagon sources sold
Tuesday night.
Only two weeks ago, Carter
named Meyer, now the Army's
deputy chief of staff for
operations, to become commander in chief of all U. S. Army
forces in Europe. There was no
explanatioo for Carter's action,
the first time in 15 )ltars that a
president has reached so far
down on the seniority list to pick
an army chief.
Maye~. 50, probably will be the
youngest general to hold a top Army post In modem times.

Onlered to jail
BATAVIA, Ohio (AP)- Pierce
Township Pollee U. Thomas
Hemsath was ordered Tuesday to
serve 14 days of a tbree-10 year
sentence for · conviction on
charges of perjury and tampering with evidence.
Judge Louis J. Schwartz sentenced Hemasth to three-tO yeats
in prison on each charge to run
consecutively and lmposed a
tli,OOO fine on each charge.
However, the judge suspended
the fine and all but 14 days of the
sentence, to be served in the Clermoot County Jail.
A jury convicted Hemsath
April 10 a.fter Dexter Amburgy of
Milford charged he was entrappj!d on a burglary charge In
October 1978.

Carson low man
NEW Y.ORK (AP) - Johnny
Carson may leave NBC 's
''Tonight Show," but he woo'! be
moving to the board of directors
of RCA, tbe televisioo network's
parent company.
RCA stockholders on Monday
voted down Carson's nomination
to be a director, He received 302
votea, considerably below the
fi9,957,('J:I votes received by the
lowest winning candidate.
Carson was, nominated by
. Evelyn Davia, a corporate gadfly
who said the RAC board needed
someone · who· was "not ambitious" and would not try to take
over the company.

Make ag1eement
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United States and the Soviet
Union have agreed to complete
the essential parts of a new strategic weapons limitation
treaty before President Carter
and Soviet President Leonid I.
Brezhnev hold a summit
IJieetlng.

.

.

But there is stU! no word on
(Continued on page 16)
I

ch~ges

:·:·:·!·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·"''·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·

McART!iUR, Ohio (AP) - Vinton County voters turned out in
nearly record numbers Tuesday
to defeat a proposed $4.2 million
bond Issue for a new high school.
The bond issue was rejected by
a 2,283-1;510 vote. Election offictals said the total vote of 3, 793
was just 35 short of the county's
record turnout for any .election.
~boo! Bord President Andrew
Adelmann could not say whether
the proposal would be put to the
voters again.

M~yer

Satterfield
faces

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday tbrough Sunday: Sbowen
Friday and fair Saturday and Sunday. Hlgbllln tbe Ms. Overnight l'ws
In lite mid 40s to low 50s Friday, In
the mid 40s Satnrday and In tbe upper 30s to low 4GB Sunday.

.
.
NatiODWISe ' ' ''''' ' ' ' "'""'' ' ''' ''' ''' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ' ' ' ' '
Probation
Bond issue loses
· k d
·
revo
e
e

Mrs. Frances Goeglein, Karyn - D.
Davis, Martha Husted, Judith A.
King, Floyd F. Shook, Pastor, Mrs.
Robert (Sheila) Whaley and. Mrs.
Norman
(Judy) Humphreys;
president of Pl'O, Barbara Fry;
secretary of PTO, Martha King; principal, John Lisle, and staff representation.
·

The probation of a Gallipolis man
who pleaded guilty to charges
stemming from the June 12, 1977
robbery of the . Burger Chef
Resta urant , Eastern Ave ., was
revoked Tuesday.
In a journal entry filed by Judge
Thomas Mitchell, sitting on
assignment in Gallia County Common
Pleas Court, it was ordered that the
probation of John L. Reynolds, aka
Squirrel Reynolds, be revoked and
that he be sentenced to the Ohio State
Penitentiary for a period of two to 15
years.
According to the entry, "Based
upon testlmony presented by the
probation officer, the Court finds that
the defendant was arrested and found
guilty to DWI. Further, additional
testin\ony was indicated that the
defendant violated his probation by
being out after curfew, drinking
alcoholic beverages, and committing
a traffic offense."

Kanauga man
dies Tuesday
A Kanauga man who sustained
severe burns to the upper body when
gas grenade cannisters ignited a
house from which he had kept area
lawmen at bay for two hours Saturday
died Tuesday at Cabell-Huntington
Hospital.
Tommy Damron, 62, was forced
from the frame dwelling when
extreme heat from the gas cannisters
ignited the contents and spread
through the house .
Armed with a 12-gauge shotgun and
barricaded inside the one·story
residence at 375 Pike St., Kanauga,
Damron shot two lawmen and held
officers at bay Saturday before being
driven from the home by the fire .
r&gt;eputy Alva Sullivan said Saturday
that fire from the use of the cannisters
is common because of the extreme
heat released as the noxious gas is
expelled.
The
Gallipolis City
Fire
Department had been called to the
scene Saturday because of the danger
of fire.
Following Saturday's incident,
Damron was transported by SEOEMS
to Pleasant Valley Hospital where he
was !reate&lt;! for first, second and third
degree burns to the face, neck, arms
and back.
He was then transported to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington for
Intensive burn treatment.
According to a report filed with the
Gallla County Sheriff's D&lt;ipartment
by SEOEMS, all of the intensive care
units at St. Mary's were occupied so
Damron was taken to CabellHunting!On for treatment.
Sheriff James Montgomery said
this morning ·that he was Informed of
Damron 'S· death by hospital personnel
Tuesday afternoon. '

ATTENDING THE NEWLY formed Salisbury
Communication Council Monday evening were, front,
1-i', Margaret Parker, YvOMe Young, Barbara Fry,

The Gallia-Meigs Post State High·
way Patrol bas charged. a Racine
man with aggravated vehicular
homicide following completion of its
investigation.of a fatal accident April
12.
Marvin Satterfield, Racine, was
charged in the accident which
WASHINGTON (AP) - Federal
claimed the life of ro-yeaNld Klma Reserve
Board Chairman G. William
Lee Jarrell, Rt. 2, Racine . The
Mlller
Is
calling the plays for an
mishap occurred on SR 338 in Letart
economic
policy
he hopes will help
Falls.
beat inflation by giving businesses
Satterfield was bound over to the
grand jury Monday after appearing more incentive to raise capital.
Miller wants the government to
before County Judge Charles Knight. speed
up the rate a( which businesses
Bond was set at $1,000.
write
off
capital expenditures "to give
Others fined or forfeiting bonds In them every
incentive to modernize
county court were Therlee Randolph,
their
facilities
and expand their
Reedsville, Harclel L. McMillan, (production) capacity."
Zanesville, Ray S. Foster, MidThe modernization, he said Tuesday
dleport, Thomas Theiss, Racine, night,
would lead ultimately to more
Daniel Surbaugh, Washington, W. . products
made more efficiently. And,
Va., and Scott D. Wolfe, Racine, $15 as the theory
goes, that would temper
and costs each, speed; Jon M.
Freeman, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
failure to yield; David J. Williams,
FUNDS RELEASED
Athens, f5 and costs, defective
The Ohio Controlling Board throUgh
exhaust; James W. Windell, Flatwoods, Ky., $1~ and costs, speeding; the Environmental Protection Agency
Franklin Imboden, Raclne, $25 and Tuesday released funds totaling
costs, left of center; Carolyn L. Chap- $11,925 to the VIllage of Rutland, Sen.
man, Belpre, $11i0 and costs, three Oakley Collins said thi~ morning.
The hmds wlll be used to help pay
days confinement, DWI; Jeffrey
Proffitt, Syracuse, costs only, five . for engineering studies, plans and
days .confinement, no operator's specifications for Improvement to
license, $150 and costs, five daya con- Rutland's village water system.
finement, DWI; Randy Ebersbach,
Rt. 1, Minersville, $100 and costs, no
operator's llcense, $200 and costs, 10
days confinement, DWI.
Partly cloudy tonight. Low near 50.
Forfeiting bonds were Emmett R.
Burcham, Cleveland, and Luther Cloudy Thursday with scattered afBlevins, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $300.50 each, ternoon showers.' High in the mid 706.
DWI; Edna King, Albany, $62.55, lit- The chance of rain is 10 percent
tering ; Larry L. Drake, Pomeroy, tonight and 50 percent Thursday.
$37.55, speeding, $37.55, expired
operator's license; Richard Combs,
Parkersburg, Walter J. Herrala,
SEARCH CONTINUES
South Lyon, Mich., and Dale E.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Planes
Thompson, Washington, Pa., $35.50 of the Ohio Civil Air Patrol have
each, speeding; Dale E. Knapp, begun a search of eastern and
Syracuse, $35.50, no valid southeastern Ohio for a missing
registration; Tony W. Cunningham, single-engine aircraft containing two
Athens, $35.50, no operator's license ; persons, a CAP spokesman says.
Sherr! L. 'Clark, Pomeroy, f60.50 ,
The plane was en route from .
speeding; Carl Eugene Smith, Langs- Easton, Md. to the Ohio State
ville, $35.50, no registration; John S. University airport last Thursday but
Thomas,Rt. I, Middleport, $37.55, no failed to reach its destination. Its
cycle plate.
· occupants were not identified.

Miller calls

Weather

economi~

rapid price increases.
Miller suggested that Congress
begin studying such a plan now "so
that in 1980 we can put in place this
powerful policy weapon of investment
to bring us back in the next growth.
pattern."
Not only did Miller explain his plan
to a dinner gathering of . the
Advertising Council. He illustrated it,
adman fashion .
At the close of the speech, the
usually reserved central banker
laughin\!lY presented his hosts with

Explosion kills cop
BESSEMEH, Ala. (AP) - An
explosion thought to be caused by a
bomb rocked an office at the City Hall
of this Birmingham suburb today,
killing a police lieutenant and injuring
the police commissioner and the
mayor's
executive secretary,
authorities said.
Police U . John Knight said U .
Clifford T. Hill was killed in the blast,
which occurred in the office of Police
Commissioner Max Williams. .
Williams was reported critically
injured . Gene Lint, Mayor Ed
Porter's secretary, was listed in fair
condition .
The blast shook the building and
scattered glass across a street.
Knight said Williams apparently
was meeting with tile other two men
when the explosion came.
Knight, asked if the blast could ha ve
been natural gas, said it "smelled just
like" a bomb.
· The explosion caused major
damage to the offices of th e
commissioner and the mayor and to
other parts of the fourth floor of City
Hall.
Federal officials were summoned to
, investigate .
There was no apparent connection
between the explosion and a stike by.
pollee and other city employees under
way in Birmingham.
·

plays ·

red and ye llow footballs. each
inscribed with the numbers I, 5 and 10,
"You now have the ball,'' he told
them. "I hope you will run with lt."
The council spbnsors public service
ads on topics from Savings .Bonds tO
forest fires.
Miller explained that the numbers
on U1e footballs were meant 'to
illustrate his proposal. The policy b!
is pushing woulB allow businesses :to
write off their investments for
goverrunenl·mandated
environmental , safety and health
expenses in one year ~ for equipment
and processing machinery in five
years; and for structures ahd other.
permanent facilities in 10 years. : :
The poli cy, he said, would
compliment Carter administration
efforts to stem inflation, which has
heen at an annual rate above 1.0 :
percent so far this year.
ln a speech earlier in the day, Mille~
warned that no one should be.
surprised If the Federal Reserve:
pushed Interest rates up further ·to
slow inflation .
He did not, however, confirm .
market experts' analyses that the ·
Fed, which does not reveal its actions'
until a month after they are taken,
had acted Friday to raise rates.·
Higher rates discourage borrowihg·
and takes pressure off the prices of
business and consumer goods.
A Carter administration supporter,
Rep. Uonel Van Deerlin, [).Calif., had
left the session by the tlme of the final
"110-recommendation" vote. But hu
presence likely would have only
broadened the margin to 22-20.
The "no-recommendation" vote
came after supporters of the plan
fa iled for second tlme within a week to
win eomrnittee approval of it. A
motion seeking that endorsement died
Tuesday on a 21·21 tie vote.
At the White House, press secretary
Jody Powell said "it would be
absolutely foolish for this country not
to be prepared for the posalbility of an
emergency" and called such a failure
" ludicrous."

'

__.. Powell expressed encouragement,
however ,
that
the
"norecommendation" vote did not defeat
the Carter plan. He said that on
Capitol Hili as well as in the public In
general , "t~ere appears to pers,lst
some confusion about the the plan
means.

'

-,/
I

•

Sohio stations get :
95 percent of gas

Otemical spill
..... .... ._,._.. •·

'· ",
- ----···....

not dangerous .
A chemical tank car on a Chessie
system train ruptured Tuesday night,
spilling toxic hydrogen chloride along
the tracks behind Krodel Park near
Point Pleasant.
Railroad officials have assured
local authorities, however, that no
evacuation Is necessary since there
are no residences in the immediate
area of the spill.

Martha Hoover, and Judy King ; back, John Lisle, Mar; ·
tha King, Frances Goegleln, Judy Humphreys and
Barbara Beegle.

TAKING ADVANTAGE of the warm weather, that
hopefully is here to stay, were children of the Mid-

LIMA, Ohio (AP ) - Standard 011
Co. (Ohio) Stations in Ohio, Michigan
and Kentucky in May will receive ·1'5
...,.li!\l percent of the gasoline they sold in
May, 1978, while stations to the east
are on 85 percent allotments.
Robert Griffin, Sohlo vice president
for marketing, said in disclosing the
allocations Tuesday that scl\eduled
and
unscheduled
refinery
maintenance is responsible for tlie
short fuel supplies at its stations.
Griffin also told reporters who
Loured a Sohio refinery here It u
foolish to attempt to forecast gasoll,ne
price increases but attributed then\
mostly to the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Griffin said demand for gasoline
increased 3.4 percent nati.;hally, 'Iii ·
dleport Elementary School Tuesday. The warm
1978 and 1.6 percent in Ohio. He said
weather has also brought on the spring sports and
the industry· expeC\s demand to
recreation in the area. ·
increase by 3-3.5 percent this year.

·t

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