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                  <text>10- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 5, 1979

~--A~~~-ne;ths-1 Division managers named

Iran oil flows again
Associated Press Writer
TEHRAN , Iran tAP ) Iran resumed oil exports
today for the f1rst ume m
three months, ahd Ayatolla h
R uh ollah Kho me1n 1's
re v olutionar y

re gi m e

executed e1ght more of Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's
former off1c1als, mcluding
four generals and a former
member of Parliament
A spokesman for the
National !raman Oil Co sa1d
the
tanker
World

Ambassador started loading
110,000 tons of hght crude and
140,000 tons of heavy crude
lor the M1tsw Trading Co. of
Japan at the Kharg Island
termmalm the Pers1an Gulf.
It IS the fi rst sh1pment of
crude oil for export smce Decem ber, when the 01!
industry 's 65 ,000 workers
went on strike as part of
Kho me1m 's campa 1gn to
brm g down the shah 's
regune
Another tanker was sched-

I
uled to mTt vc Cit Khat g Island

un Wednesday to load crude
for Ashland 011, an Amencan
company.

I
Kj::NNE1'11 JENKINS

INDIANA

59. Indianapolis. ln d wn &lt;~ ,
sa1d 11 will not restore the 11ho died Feb 25. were held
previous export level of 5 4 Saturda) . March 3, m Inm11lion barrels a day because duma
Mr J enkin s. a fo rm er
it wants to conserve the oil
reserves for the. future. The Pomeroy resident. IS ~ur­
national 01! company said "ved by h1s wife, Juanita.
productiOn Sunda y was I 7 three ch1ldren , Crystal, Mark
m1lhon barrels, and mdustry and Kc11t all at home, his
sources predict 1t Will be pa rents , Mr and Mrs Lloyd
mcreased to 3 million barrels Jcnkms, 540 Zast Mmn Street,
a day, w1th about 2.4 million Porncro} ; one ststcr, Maxme
Moore. Pomcro; , and one
barrels bemg expcrted
Meanwhile, a communique brother . Luth er Jenkins,
from
Khome 1n1 ' s l&gt;t'!ro1t
Revolu t10nary Committee
WILLIAM WALKER, JR.
announced that seven more
BELPRE, Wilham
former offic1als died by firing
Walker.
Jr.,
19,
1804
squad at 5 am today after •
Ehzabeth
Street.
Belpre,
died
one of the ayatollah's special
Saturday
evemng
at
h1s
home
lslam1c courts found them
gmlty of killing or torturing as the result of a self inni cted
gunshot wound.
opponents of the shah.
Mr Walker was born in
Tehran Rad1o announced
Scotland
, the son of Wilham
the execution of a pchce
and
E1leen
Walker , 1804
off1cer today m Abadan.
Th1s brought to 24 the num- Elizabeth St , Belpre
He was a 1977 graduate of
ber of former offic1als whose
executions have been announced Several others have
been reported but not confirmed, and th ree men
accused of shooting anti-shah Veterans Memorial Hospital
demonstrators were stabbed Saturday admlSSlon s to death by a roob m the Anthony Vester, Pomeroy ,
cent ral I raman town of Danny Eads, Pomeroy ,
NaJafabad three days ago as Russell Rottgen , Letart, W
they were bemg taken to Va : Harry Wyatt, Minerspnson to awa1t tnal.
v11le: Manning Webster,
governme nt Pomeroy: Ervin Casto,
Th e
announced Sunday that 1t had Shad e: Rhonda Hager .
broken diplomatic relations GaUipchs.
w1th South Africa because of
Saturda) d1sch arges 1ts rac1al polic1es and Leland Clonch, Russell
confirmed that it will allow no Rottgen. Sharon W1lt. Bobby
more Iranian oil to be shipped Rathburn , Madeline Neece.
there.
Anthon y Vester, Danny
Before the shutdown Iran Eads,
Alice Holhday,
supphed an estlinated 90 per- Patr~cia Jeffers, Penni Clark,
cent of South Africa's 01!. The Herman Werry
So uth Afnean ~overnment
Sunday admiSSions has stockpi le d massive Hilliary Turley, Pomeroy,
amounts of od m recent Okey Bennett, Parkersburg,
years, and the mternatlonal Harvey Leamond, Racme ;
01! compan1es are expected to Goldie Roberts, Racme.
juggle their stocks so that
Sunda) discharges - Rick
deliver~es to So uth Africa will Wilson, Ross Kent, Cheryl
not be curta1led,.
Sellers. James Barton, Marie
Iran was also Israel's chief Custer.
oil supplier before the revolu- ·
Holzer Medical Center
twn and has announced that
Discharges, March 2
the Jewish nation is now on
Gusta Beckett , James Bing,
1ts .blacklist. The chief effect
m Israel has been a 32-39 Debra Buck, Mrs Wayne Cox
percent increase m the price and son, Mrs Stephen Crabof petroleum products to tree and son, Helen Dempsey,
reduce consumption , with Nora D1xon, Donna Dr~y ,
gasolm e Jumpmg from $1.70 Phihp Edrmston, Kimball
Ferns, Albert Finley.
to $2.35 a gallon
"
The government also an- Herbert Grealll, Wlll oughby
nounced that in keepmg w1th Hlll, Mrs Melvm Jeffers and
Islamic tradition 1t 1s abohsh- daughter , Ryan Johnson,
mg the drafting of women for Mrs. Robert Jones and
military service and 1s reduc- daughter, Rose Kurnat, Ruth
mg the conscription period Linville, Virg1ma M1lstead,
for men from two years to Elizab eth Mull , Myrtl e
one. Th1s was in line w1th the Neville, Jab ez Parsons,
Roett ker ,
new regune's abandonment Chri s toph er
Saunders,
Jeffery
Frances
of th e shah's ambition for
Sharp
,
Enca
Shelton,
Lenora
Iran to be the "policeman of
Sm1th,
Pa
tn
ck
Stanton,
the Pers1an Gulf "
James Starr. Shannon
Stobart,
Hazel Wnght.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Births,
March 2
The Southeast ern Oh1o
Mr
and
Robert
Garden Tractor Club w11l Workman, son,Mrs.
Gallipolis
meet Wednesday at 8 p m at
Mr a nd Mrs. V1ctor
the home ofDale Kautz, Rt 7, Counts,
son, Syracuse
Pomeroy New members are
Mr. and Mrs Jenmngs
welcome
Ferguson, son, Gallipolis
Discharges, March 3
In 1877, the 19th president ,
Lillian Arrington, Fred
Rutherford Hayes, was in- Blaettner, Becky Brown,
augurated.
The new government has

eek en d Storm ·
leaves 8 dead
By The Associated Press
At least e1ght are dead followmg a fur1ous two-fisted
weekend storm that belted
the Southeast with up to 15
inches of rain and stranded
several
hundred
Midwesterners under a foot
of blowing snow.
Hardest hit was Alabama,
wbere four persons, mcluding
a 5-year-&lt;Jld g1rl, drowned
Sunda y More • than 200
famihes were forced to flee
because of rlSmg waters and
tornados . Two drowned m
Georgia and Missouri and
two more d1ed m M1nnesota
and Iowa .
Most of the evacuees recfurned to their homes
Sunday. Ho"ever, some
Alabama nver dwellers were
told to start filling sandbags
in an t1cipallon of nsing
waters through Tuesday.
ln Washmgton state,
weathe r offlclals issued
avalanche warnings due to
heavy rain and rising
temperatures. Two mountam
climbers died in an avalanche Sunday on 11,000-foot
. Mount Rainier.
Florida counted 1tself
lucky. The storm dwnped up
to 14 inches of ram on some
areas of the Panhandle
around Pensacola . An
estlrnated 5,000 persons had
to be evacuated and damage
was estlinated m the rrulhons,
but there were no deaths
"I've lived in Pensacola 57
years. Never in my life - not
even during a hurricane did we get this much wa ter,"
said Escamb1a County
Comm issioner Ke nnet h
Kelson .
Ray Bidinger, forecaster at
the National Weather Serv1ce
m Miam1, sa1d Sunday mght,
"The weather system .. 1s
still up there m that same
area. R1ght now, 11 extends
from a low pressure area m
the Great Lakes to the
F1orida Panhandle and mto
the Gulf of Mexico "
Much of the storm 's wra!ll
was concentrated over northeastern Alabama The body
of 5-year-&lt;Jld Audrey Noms of
Birmingham was found m a
drainage ditch. Police said
she apparently wandered
away from her aunt's fro nt
porch on the 61ty's Norths1de
and fell into the rain-flooded
ditch.

A rescue team in north-

eastern Alabama watched
helplessly as Kathy Todd, 21i,
was thrown mto the seething
water from atop her car,
wh1ch had been stranded m a
fl ooded f1eld . Her body was
found three hours later
Coosa County authorities
said James Gardner , 18, and
Theodore
Brooks,
57,
drowned when the1r car was
washed off a br idge.
In northern Georgia, where
an average of 4to 6 mches fell
Saturday and Sunday, an 18year-&lt;J ld man drowned m a
flooded soybean held when a
boat overturned . H1s name
wa s w1thheld pending
notlf! cahon of relatives
Seven Georgia college cave
expl orers were r escued
Sunday night after spending
29 hours in an underground
cavern where they were
trapped by high water.
While the Southeast was
busy mopping up and filling
sandbags Sunday, portiOns of
the M1dwest from M1ssoun
and Iowa mto nort hern
M1ch1gan and Mmneso ta
were back groanmg behind
their shovels and plows
A foot of snow was reported
m parts of Mlchtgan.
"We've got about 1,000
snowmobLles runmng aroWld

and 1t's imposs1ble to catch
them w1th (squad) cars w1th
chams ," satd Sioux City,

Iowa, pollee Sgt. Tony
Sunclaves The vehicles are
•llegal ms1de the c1ty limits.
Iowa authorihes blamed
the

storm ,

wh1ch

was

accompamed by 40 mph
wmds, for at least one traff1c
fatality . Benita Hemck, 20,
was killed Sunday when she
apparently lost control of her
car on ice-glazed Iowa 146.
In so uthwestern Minnesota,
:J50 motonsts were stranded
by the storm. Near Albert
Lea, m southern Mmr!esota,
Elmer Grasdalen, 68, d1ed of
an apparent heart attack
when his. pi ckup truck
became stuck m the snow and
he wa s fo rced to walk a half
mile
CH ILD HOSPITALIZED
Heida Ann Caruthers, six) car old daughter of Mr and
Mr s. Bob Caruthers. Route 2,
Pomeroy, IS a pat10nt at
Holzer Medical Center. Cards
may be sent to Room 510-B.

Life styles change, costs of living-escalate,
children seem to rush through Infancy
@.~~;;&gt;ji~
into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate risIng college costs begin educational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings accountthat will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are.

Fai'ttters 8ank
•

POMEROY, OHIO

'4MOO Maximum Insurance For

t.:mplo) ed as a mcchum e at

McC linton

Chevrol et

in

l'arkcrsburg.

He was preceded m death
b) h1s w1fc, Nancy Ann
L'haffec Walker on Feb. 20 of
this }Car

In addition to h1s parents,
he is surv1vcd by two
brothers. Roy Walker and
Gordon John Walker , two
sisters. Lmda Mary Walker,
and Rhona Walker. all at
hom e, maternal grand pa rents, Mr . and Mrs.
Gordon Lockhart. Beverly.
paternal grandmother. Mrs.
Ehzabeth Walker, Scotland ;
one aunt, Mrs. Roger
Reynolds, Manetta
~'uneral serviCes will be
held Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the
Wh1te Funeral Hom e m
Coolville Wlth th e Rev .
Richard 'i'homas ofhc1allng
Burial Wlll be m Chr1st1an
Cemetery at Tuppers Plams
At the request of the
deceased there w11l be no
vtsttlng hours.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes
a Big Wheel on Campus

., • ..,U'

Funer al

scr vtecs' ror Kcnnl'th Jcuktn s,

Helprc H1gh School an d " "s

Eac~

Depositor
Melnber Federal Deposit insurance Corporation

Mrs.Floyd Coope r and
daughter, Patncia Crabtree,
Conme D-dvldson, Gabriel Ed·wards, Wanda Evans, Robin
Frankhn, Shade Franklin,
MArsha Gearhart, Scott
Greene, Ju amta Jeffers,
Robert Jenk ms, . Mar-vm
Jones, Mrs. Elha Little and
son, David McQua1d, Jr ,
M1chael McWilliams, Dons
Nolen, Lmda Saunders, Joyce
Sprague, Warren Stewart,
Dav1d Van Meter, Bnce
Ward, Helen Ward , Robert
Warren

Births, March
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Ward,
son, Oak H1ll
Mr and Mrs. Tedd y
Russell , son, Vmton

p o HT s MouTH
-Automobile Club of Southern
Ohio president. John P Irwm. rccmtly announced that
the club's management has
be en orgamzed mto three
se pa rate divisions With
division managers appointed
to provide better coordmat10n
of the 9 offices rcpresentmg
the club
lrwm stated the tremen·
dous growth m membersh1p
to over 55,000 members and
the vast t erritor y to be
covered has brought about
the reorganization to better
serve the membership and
traveling public.
The qestern div1sion has
AAA offi ces in Portsmouth,
Ironton and Waverly. The
Cent ral dlVlsion offices are m
Logan,
Jackson
and
Galli polis The Eastern
division has offices m Athens,
Belpre and Marietta
Jerome "Jerry" Freeman
of Portsmouth, Oh1o has been
appointed manager of the
w..tern diviswn. Freeman
was form erly associated Wllh
AAA m Athens, Oh10 and has
followed a ca reer m the
travel agency business. He
was formerly with the Travel
Shop, Inc. in Portsmouth and
lntern atwna l Travel Consultants m Cleveland He
reJoined the Auto Club of
Southern Oh1o m November ,
1978 as the Portsmouth AAA
Travel Agency Manager He
is a resident of Portsmouth,
Ohio.
Freeman is a graduate of
Bowling
Green
State

Wahama loses
last 2 games
\

The Wahama White Falcons
closed out their regular season
over the weekend by dropping
a 70-67 dee1sion to Spencer on
Friday night and then falling
to the Ravenswood Red_Devils
on Saturday evenmg by 80-53
score.
Ironically, one of th!!Sl! two
teams w11l be the Wh1te
Falcons next opponent when
they enter mto the sectional
tournament play on Friday
night.
,
Wahama, Spencer and
Ravenswood make up the
three-team sectional tourney
field in the Class AA Heg 1on
~lfne Section Three rournament. The bend area team
with the luck of the draw, wil)
receive a bye and meet the
winner of the Spencer·
Ravenswood match which is
to be held Tuesday night at
Ravenswood. Regardless of
who the eventual winner may
be, the sectional finals will be
played at Waharna on Friday
night With the locals of Coach
Homer Preece hosting the
event.
In Friday nights' three-point
loss to Spencer the W'hite
Falcons faltered in the waning
moments hefore fallin ~ by
a 70-67 margm. The Yellow
Jackets made good on 16 of 27
free throw attempts compared
to 9 of 16 for Wahama which
spelled the difference in, the
game. The locals outgoaled
Spencer by a 29--27 advantage
but fa1led to pull it out with
the1r foul shooting.
Four Falcon players hit in
double figures ·with Rick'
Barnitz taking game high
honors with 22 points on 10
' field goals and two of two from
the line. Todd Rawlings added
12 markers wh1le
VInce
Weaverchippedinwithll and
Kreig Sayre notched 10.
Spencer was led by Jeff
Boggs with 19 followed by
Brian Barker with 17 and
Mark Taylor with 15.
Wahama outrebounded the
Yellow Jackets 32-31 w1th
VInce Weaver grabbing 14 for

University with a degree in
InternatlOnal Studies and
served in the ·u. s. Army
attaining the rank of captain
He has 'traveled throughout
the world visiting Europe,
Africa, the M!ddle East,
South Pacific, the Orient,
Mexico and South America.
Charles "Chuck" Clark of
Jackson has J&gt;een appointed
th e
Central
division
manager Clark has an ext ens1ve AAA background
(Contmued from page 1)
beginmng lD 1973 as a
member of the staff of the Maumee city street.
SATURDAY
AAA club in Newark, Ohio
MORROW - Sonja L. PierHe later moved to the Valley
Automobile Club as manager son, 13, of Morrow 1 passenger
of the Bloomsburg, PA office. m the back of a p1ckup truck,
In July, 1976, he joined the m a one-vehiCle acc1dent on a
Auto Club of Southern Oh1o local road Just south of U. S
and has managed offices m 22m Warren County.
RAVENNA - Robert H.
Thomas, 28, of Mogadore, in a
two-car accident on a Portage County road
LONDON ,. - Harold A
Snail , 58, of Columbus, in a
two-car accident on U.S. 42 m
Madison County:
Guy
CLEVELAND
Andenoro,
56,
of
Parma
go on h1s old contract, but
both he and the Reds were He1ghts, in a two-car collision
known to be eager to extend on Ohio 237 m Cuyahoga
that pact before Foster had County.
CLEVE LAND - Stanley
the opportunity to become a
Gordon, 21, of Cleveland, m a
free agent
" Money was not the most two-car accident on a
1inportant thing, " said Cleveland city street
INDIAN IDLL - Eflc -A.
Foster. "It was not an ego
trip, not a matter of being the Swenty, 21, of Cincinnall, m a
highe st paid player in one-car accident on an Jnd1an
Hili city street.
baseball,"
COLUMBUS - Cathleen
Foster said the few extra
M.
Murnane, 29, of Columbus,
dollars he m1ght have
a
passenger
in an auto wh1ch
bargamed for as a free agent
struck
a
parked
truck on a
were not as important as
Colwnbus city street.
other factors
FRIDAY NIGHT
" I don't like to relocate,"
MEDINA - Lester G.
he said. "I feel like I'm
becoming established in the Brown, 45, of Ll!Chfleld, m a
city of Cmcinnati and I don't one-car acc1dent on a Medina
want to go just from one place County road
MEDINA - Michael S
to another."
Mills,
17, and a passenger,
Wagner said the !mal terms
Michael
B. Renner, 15, both
of the contract were
of
Wadsworth,
in a one-car
hammered out in a sevenhour session Sunday night accident on Ohw 94 m Medina
with Foster and h1s attorney, County.
Torn Reich.
BAKE SALE
Chester Cub Scouts, Den
- - - - - - - - - - 235, w1ll hold a bake sale
almost an mstant replay from March 10 at 9 30 a.m. at
the Spencer game with the Gaul's Store m Chester.
Rules reversed. The Little
Falcons were holdmg a slXpoint edge adding mto the DALE'S I{ITCHE N
!mal quarter before falling by
CENTER, INC.
a 67-62 score.
All that remains now is the
sectional tourney and the
675 2318
White Falcons have long been
noted for being a post season Sprinq Appliance
team and a victory on Fr1day
Cle;tritrlCP
night would salvage a great
deal out of an otherwise
Starts
dlSI!ppointing season. Game
time Friday night for the
March 20th
single game will be 7:30p.m.

the Whlte Falcons and Brian
Barker nine for the visitors
The bend area Falcons
committed 15 turnovers and
had nme steals whlle Spencer
had 14 miscues and eight
steals.
On Saturday night the W'hite
Falcons
journeyed
to
Ravenswood and were never
really in contention as the Red
Devils bwlt a nine-pomt first
period lead to coast to an 80-53
win.
After placing four men in
double figure s, the locals
failed to have any cons1stent
scorers save for Rick Barmtz
who had his second consecutive 20-pomt outmg with
21 tallies on the night.
Ravenswood was led · by
Mark Fowler with 22 markers
followed by Fleming with 16
and Miller with 12.
The consecutive defeats left
the W'hite Falcons w1th a 5-14
slate gomg into tournament
play with a make-up game
against North Gallia struck
from the books. Wahama
fmished out the regular season
by losmg in 1ts last six outings
and eight of the1r last nine
dates.
With the closing of the
regular season, the W'hiie
Falcon junior varsity finished
the year With a 59-50 win over
Spencer follow"&lt;! by a heart·
breaking 67·62 loss tothe
Ravenswood junior varsity.
Coach Lewis Hall's charges
ended the 1978-79 campaign
with a fine 13-6 record. The
Little Falcons beat everybody
on their sch"&lt;&lt;ule at least once,
except Southern and Point
Pleasant who hande&lt;l- tbe
locals two setbacks apiece.
Against Spencer, the Uttle
Falcons came from five points
down in the final period to
post a 59-50 triumph.
Larry Gibbs, Peanut Harris
and Mike Buzzard had 16, IS
and nine points respectively
for the winners while Spencer
.llOt...lS...markers from ~any
M11ler, 12 from Phil Scott and
10 more from Jeff Kincade.
Sa~urday n ights contest
agafnst Ravenswood was

Athletic fund raising
drive underway today
(__,

By BOll HOEFLICH
A $15 .000 fund dr1vc to
pr ov 1de
for
further
development of an athletic
compl ex at the Meigs H1gh
School - With emphasis on a
tra ck - opened today under
the chairm anship of il 1ll
Ch1 l d s, M1dd l ep o rt
busmessrnan.

PROJECT COMMITTEE - Th1s comm1 ttee
representing the needs for linprovements to Meigs High
School opened a $15,000 fund drive today for the
establishment of a track and other facilities. The group

12 killed

$750,000 yearly
contract signed

TAMPA , Fla (AP ) Slugging leftfielder George
Foster today signed a threeDischarges, M ~ rrh 4
year
extension of his contract
Wi lham Bush, Mrs Alvm
wluch
will keep him with the
Curtis and son, Pearhe McComas, Mrs . Patnck Cmcinnati Reds through the
McGraw and son , Robert 1982 season.
Ne1ther Foster nor Reds
Miller, Mrs. Ca rl Reed and
daughter, Charles Rowland, President Dick Wagner
Larry Sm1th, Ervm Warren, would disclose terms of the
Mrs. R1chard Yenan and agreement, which is reported
to be m the neighborhood m
da ughter.
$750,000 a year.
Births, March 4
The 30-year-()ld Foster led
Mr and Mrs. Emest Clark,
the Nat10nal League m home
Jr., son, Oak H1ll
Mr and Mrs. Shennan runs last year w1th 40 and m
runs batted in with 120.
Kemper, son, Galhpohs
Foster st1ll had one year to

BYGARYCLARK

"'
CHARLES CLARK

Jackson , Waverly and Logan.
Clark is a graduate of
Muskingum College , New
Concord, Ohio With a degree
in speech and drama
Prior to working with AAA,
he taught in hlgh schools m
the Zanesv11le and Cambridge areas. He and his Wlfe,
Catherine, reside in Jackson,
Ohio where he is active m
civ1c affair s and a member of
the Jackson Rotary Club.
James "Jim" Irwin of
Athens has been appointed
the
Eastern
divlSlon
• manager. Pr10r to this appomtment he was the AAA
manager in Manetta havmg
jomed the Auto Club of
Southern Ohio in April, 1976.
lrwm is a graduate of Ohio
State Umvers1ty with a
degree m journalism. He has
been actiVe m many civic
affairs in Marietta workmg
with their Tour1st and Convention Bureau, Traffic
commission and serves on the
Red Cross Board of Direc-tors He is a member of
,Rotary. Irwin and his wife,
Angela and one son, presently
reside in Athens.

aceenbi on Spring!:
*RINGS
*BRACELETS
*HEAD BANDS
*EARRINGS
*CHAINS
*NECKLACES
*BELTS
*HAIR COMBS
*MEN'S COPPER
BRACELETS
*MEN'S
NECKLACES
*CHARMS
2ND FLOOR ACCESSORY DEPT.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

includes seated, ! tor. Charles Hamilton. B1ll Ch1lds, not a
committee member, who will head the dnve : Mrs. Gerry
Lightfood: standing, 1 to r, Charles Chancey, Dw1ght
Goms, Joy Bentley and James Diehl.

(USPS 145-960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

Meigs Local

D~;tnct

tra ck wtll not he read y for use
thts sprm g, u ded1ca tton of

curbmg so that those who · thr planned fanhty IS exgave will be known for yc;;~ rs pected to be held before
cli:lsscs adjou m tht ~ sprmg
to com e
!'ledges may be made to
Na mes of cont nbutors "'tll
be published m 'l'he Da1ly &lt;Jn) com m ttt e-e me mber

was
establi shed by SupCllll·
tendent of Schools Charles
Scntmel and a rad10-t hon a nd
Do\\lcr
While th e fun&lt;l dn vc only ot her actt vtties re planned to
Fmal dnve plan s were began today. already $1 ,000 raiSe the 115,000 at once
1 he $15,000 will provide
compl eted Monday afterno on has been contnbuted and
monr y for the track farility
more
mon
ey
ha
s
be
en
when a specml comm ittee
which will be 24 feet wide.
selected for the development pl edged , Ch1ld s told the c1ght. three-feet \\I de
of athletlc facihtie s met at committee. He reported th e la nes. \\ ith concrete l 'Ur Meigs Lo ca l Board of
the high school
bing and a cinder track
Edu
cau on ha s app ro ved
Members of that complus the construction of
pl
an
s
for
the
dnve
and
each
mitt ee are Mrs li err y
re stroom fac ilities, a
has
contnbuted
at
least
$50
to
Li ghtfoot, pres1dent of the
refre shm ent stand, th e
G1rls
Athleti C the program
Mc1gs
purchast.• of \\ater fnun Und
er
th
e
plan
to
be
Boosters, Charles Hamilton,
tams , plus mstallatum nf .a
followed
,
rcs1dents
and
sports
pres1dent of the Meigs Boys
qnant1ty nf tcm·ing nnd a
Athlet iC Boosters: Prmc1pal ent hus1asts w1ll be asked to
ti('kcl honth
Ja mes D1chl , Charle s purchase at least one yard of
me ISshort for rmsmg the
Chancey, d ~rcctor of boys concrete at $50 for the track $15T1000
Anr1i o has been S" \
The

committ ee

Howeve r , t hose sendtn g
should send

c ontnbu t JO n ~

them to Bill Ch1lds P 0 Bo x
'1 2, Middleport Pl edges will
also be ta ken by phone and
the cont nbutor will be billed
for the am ount

1t IS st ressed that the
$15 000 111ll be used for the
purcha se of matcn als wtth
all l c~ bor bcmg don a(ed

Chec ks fo r the proJctt are
to be

Jn dtllo

out to the Me1gs

Athl ctll Booste1s whiCh w1ll
sd up a spec t ~ l f un d,
sepa t at cd from Hnj other
mom cs of the grou p

enttne

at

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 226

m1mstrat1 vc assist ant of the

as the dcadlmc Wh1lc the

In rrlum , the name of each
contrtbutor "'til be stcnctl cd
tnlo th e concr ete t r i:lc k

•

•

e

athl eticS , J oy Be ntley.
d1rector of g ~rl s athl etiCs.
and Dwight Go1ns. ad-

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1979

Eastern's superintendent resigns
Eastern's Local Board of
Education IS searching for a
new superintendent following
the rec ent resignatiOn of
Clark Lees .
Named to the post last
summer, Lees announced hLs
resignation recently Citing

personal and profes siOnal
reasons as the bas1s for
leavmg

Lees has md1cated he Will
be returnmg to the Mansfie ld
area. He succeeded John
!he bel who res1gned last year
followmg a long tenure as

contmumg tax mcr case fo r
local supermtend ent
In reslgntng , Lees sa1d he support of schools smce 1969
l..cl'S also pomted out that
has great concern about the
the
dtstr1 ct will not he able
future of the schoql d1stnct
be cause

of

co nt mum~

financwl problems. He
pcmtcd out that the distnct
has not passed any add1honal

Upset residents meet
with Pomeroy Council
BY KATIE CROW
Approximately 25 persons
met with Pomeroy V1llage
Council Monday n1ght
regarding poor road conditions in Naylor's Run m·
cludmg Sprmg Av o., Pleasant
R1dge and F1sher Street
Ke1th Smith, spokesman,
stat ed roads were 1n
deplorable cond1t1on and the
road in front of h1s home was
g1ving way.
He also stated there is a
bad drainage problem
Residents mformed coun c1l
"th at work on the roads must
be done properly or th ere
would be no need to do the
work at all ."
Smith said school buses
could not get to his home to
pick up h1s children. causmg
them to m1ss 15 days of
school.
Council agreed there were
problems
Larry Wehrung, councilman, asked 1! reSidents
would please bear w1th the
v11lage, smce repairs will be
done as soon as possible
It was pointed out that the
street department has its
hands full , pracllcally
working around the clock
trying to get as much done as
possible.
Wehrung also mentioned
that council was co n·
templatmg placing a one-mill
levy on the ballot. Revenue
from the levy would be used
only for streets, Wehrung
commented. " We will do
everything we can as fast as
we can," Wehrung !old the
group.
Smith stat"&lt;! 1! the road had
been repaired properly m the
first place , residents would
not have the problem they
have today.
It was pointed out that the
village spent $50,000 for a two
mile span of roads last year.
One resident stated he had
lived in the area 20 years, and
had never seen the roads m
such poor condition.
It was also noted that it was
the county's responslbihty
beyond the corporation llinit
People also use the road
during hi gh water, one
resident, commented
Mayor Clarence Andrews
stated that the problem was
getting the proper equipment
to do the work which the
village does not ,have. The
mayor also stated that the
county equipment is tied up
The mayor agreed to call on
the township trustees for
proper equipment. Residents
also asked for a "children
\

playmg sign" to be placed on
F1sher Street .
They were told to report
back at the next councll

TRANSFER APPROVED
Jeff Moms also met 1\llh
co unc1l regardmg a liquor

meetmg to mform council

Shamrock Mot el to the
Ra inbow Inn. The license is
fo r the sa le of SIX percent
beer and wine Council approved his request.
F' 1re Ch1ef Charles Lega r
presented a bill for fluslung
streets in the amount of
$869 40 and for a fir~ hose that
was destroyed totalm g $777
Legar also stated the fir e
department IS bad!) m need
of one and one half mch hose
He pomted out that 1! wa s
very hard work flushmg th e
street usmg a hose w1th JU St
120 pound pressure
He sa1d an additional hre
hydrant 1s needed on East
Main Street He said, " If
th ere was a flre in the upper
block, we could hav e senous

what and 1f all work had been
completed
it was agreed that 1! a fire
occurred on Pleasant Ridge,
a hre tru ck \\OUld not be able
to reach the area.
MORE PROBLEMS
Harold Brown, councilm an,
stated the village has had 1ts
share of problems th•s wmter
with the large amount of
snow and recent hlgh ,,. ater
He su ggested that Hon
James be contacted for some
assistance.

Mayor Andrews pomted out
that Governo r Rhodes had
declared Me1gs County ' a
d1saster area and 1t was now
up to Pres1dent Carter as to
1\hether or not federal or
state a1d would be g1ven.
Councll rece1vcd three b1ds
for a new pollee cru1scr . After
much deliberation. all b1ds
were rejected. It was agreed
to rcadvertisc for a medmm
srze car as well as a larger
car feat uring the same

eqmpment with or without
trade.
B1ds were submitted by Pat
Hill Ford, Smith-Ne lson
Motors and Pomeroy Motor
Company.

li cense

transfer

from

to rema in open throughout

1979 unless
monirs
durin g

additional

arc generated
the
current

. calendar year. Supt. Lees
warned that the fmancaal
s ituation in the Eastern
District will become \o cry
critical
durin g
this
calendar year. All money
received from last year's
emergency 10 mall le\'Y\\tit
ha\'C been u sed and
prospects for the continu ed
cx1stcncc of the district" ill

depend upon thl' ~ tllmgncss of the people m the
dtstri ct to contmuc s pport

of the

S) stem

one
of the poor est d1stncts in the
&gt;t ate He also pomted out that
the average teacher 's salary
m the d1 strict 1s approximately $1,000 belo" the
state average, and the
amount of money that the
schoo l district 1s able to spend
I ,ces reports Eastern 1s

on each student

1s

also con

s1derably below the state
average

Now facmg the d1str1ct 1s
mak e up tunc lor days lost
du e to flood and weather The

board has agreed that
students w1ll attend d asses
on Saturdays, Ma1 ch il and
31, and on Apnl 9. 10. 11 , 12
and 13 and on May 31
In add11lon , student s at
Eastern H1gh Wlll go June 1
and student s at Rtvervte''

Elementary w1ll be requ1red
to attend classes Jun1• 1 an d
three other days to be an

HONORARY CHAIRMAN - Da ve D1les. sportscaster

nounccd later

for ABC sports, lS the honurar} crusade ehan·man for the

REPORT REVIEWE()
The board rcv 1cwed a
report from the bu1ldings and

Me1gs Unit of the Amencan Cancel Soc1etj K1ckoff for
the cancer crusade will be held th1s evcmng m the Rtver
Boat Room of the Me1gs Bra nch of the Alhens County
Savmgs and Loan at 7 30 p m Guest speaker 1\ 111 be .1ohn

grou nds comm itt ee and
tdcnt1hed a" pnont y 1tems

Ely, vice prestdent of the OhiO D1v1s10n of the Amen can

were the rcp.m of the school

Cancer Soc1ety. The cancer C!Usade w1ll be held •\ pnl I
through April 15 All mterested persons are mv1ted to
attend . ,

tract or . rcp:u rs on th e
sewage systems at Tuppers

Plam s and Eastern H1 gh
Sch ool and co rrectiO n of

Teacher walkout
decision today

Teachers of Southern Local School D1stmt will
dec1de today whether they will go on str1ke, it was
reported late Monday by Jeff Westfa ll , Athens,
representatiVe of the Oh10 Educatwn AssoclatlOn
(OEA )
Two years ago, teachers at Southern Local School
Dlslflct entered mto a master contract calhng for a
1.80 md ex when money became available 1n the
district.
Westfall reported that due to additiOnal state a1d and
a levy bemg passed, the board now has lunds available
to grant pay mcreases.
The Southern Loca l School Board renewed the
contract m August , 1978, but refused to implement the
mdex accordin g to Westfall at that tune, the issue went
problems "
to bmdin g arbi tration
Roger Dav1dson discussed
A hea rmg was held in the C1ty Buildmg m Athens
a drammg problem due to
Feb 12 with Supe rintendent Bob Ord , board members,
wate r runmng down hi S
and Attorney Robert Baker of Colwnbus, along w1th
driveway into his basement
members of the OEA bemg present.
The matter was referred to
Arbitrator John Drotning rendered a decisiOn a
the st reet department.
week ago that the board must implement the 1.80 mdex
MAYOR COMMENDED
retroact1ve to September, 1978
Mavor Andre"s reported
Teachers of the d1str1ct w1ll meet today at 4 p.m.
he h3d received severa l _, - .l!lld the board will meet at 7 p.m .
letters from res idents
If the board refuses to unplement the I 80 mdex ,
commending htm on the
"teachers no doubt will go out on str1ke," Westfa ll
fine JOb he did during last
md1eated.
(Continued on page 2)

electncal \\t rmg problem s ut

Chester ancl Tuppers Plams
J1m Huff, Eastern coordm ator of fedcrul programs
and schoollibran es. report ed
on the outcome of the I cccnt
read1ng cont est held 1n the
school system
The board appro ved a
requ est from the 1' 1' A for

Two hurt in
auto crash

expenditures of money to

aos1st the "Crop" program
1'hc board agreed to par·
t1c1patc w1th other schools ln
Me1g s County 1n admmistcrmg a specw l competency test m the areas of

math and rcadmg with the
mformation to be used from
t he testing to make necessa ry
adjustment s m the acadcrm c
program at Eastern

The board also ,,greed to
tak e pa11m the usc of a multi
medta center for drtvcr· s
ed ucatwn mstruct wn a s

arranged by the county board
of

educatiOn

1'he res1gnauon of John
Pcrmc as h1gh school track
co ach wa s accepted and
approval was gtvcn fur the
adoptiOn of a spec1al parental
complamt procedure 'wh1ch
w1ll be submitted to Title l
personn el in Columbus
A reMgnatton letter was
read and accepted from Ktm

Montague , \ltle 1 rem edial
readmg teacher

Andrews
withdraws
• •
petition
•

Because of health reasons.
Pomeroy Ma) or Claren ce
Andrews has wlthdra\\n h1s
petlllon of cand1da cy to s.•ek
the Republican nommat1on to
run for reelection to t he

REPAIR STREETS - Middleport Village street
deparirnent workers were busy Monday repairing
problems with bricks making up Seventh St. near the
'I

corner of.Pearl St Wet weather had caused the bncks to
becomc~l aced and created a trafflc hazard at the spot

town' s top post.
Andr ews requested hi s
peUtlon be withdrawn in a
letter to the Me1gs County
Board of Election s.
In oth er dev elopment s.
Rodney Karr. recently appomted to serve 'On Pomeroy
Council. ha s filed Ius pet11lon
to run for a full term.
Karr . a Hepub l1 ca n,
replaced La rry PoMll. who
reslgn,ed when he was muncd
to the Me1gs Local School ,
Board Two council members
Will be elected m Pomeroy
th1s fall
•

Two persons m]urcd dunng
a one-vch1cl e accident th1 s
mornmg on SR 141 arc hsted
1n guarded condition m the
mtensave care uml of Holzer

'I he G,lli la- Mcl gs Post
mvl•st1g.a ted t \~ O acc idents
Monda\
Officers \\ ere called to the
scen e of a b \o·vehtcle m1shap
on U .S :\5 four-tenths of a

Medical Center
Called to the scene at 12 20 m1ic west of SH ibO at :1:25
a m , th e Gallia-MeJgs Post, p m
H1ghway Patrol. 1·eports that 111C p&lt;Jtrol reports that an
a west bound auto opcrHted auto npcrated bv W1lilam
by Harold numle) 26, Ht I. r- razcc. 22 Galhpo ils. had
Ga llpohs, was travelmg at an
excessive rate of speed when

stopped m traffic on 35
•\ vchl ch• dn vcn bv .Judith

the veh1cle passed off the left Blue. ~ li. H10 G1ande. fa1led to
s1de of the roadway one-tenth stop and st ruck the Frnzee
auto Ill the rear
of a m1lc west of CR ~ 0
Th er e \\ dS moder at e
Out of control. the veh1d e
ro ll ed over . e]cctmg Rumley d ;~ mage to the 13luc auto,
and a pa.sengcr. Jeffrey slight dama ge to the Fr&lt;tzee
Haskms. 22. Hedgewood Dr , vch1 cle
Blu e w&lt;~ s e1ted on a ch&lt;irge
Gall1pclis
of
fa 1htre to- m amtam an
Huml ey and Haskms
assured
cl ear distance.
di spl ayed mca pac1tat10g
Th e patrol mvestlgated a
s1gns of mjury, and wer e
transported by the Galha two-\' Chicle acc ident in Mmgs
Volunteer Squad to Hol zer Count) on Sl1 1 2~ . two-tenths
of a m1l c cast of CH 5
MediCal Cent er
Off icer• report that an auto
Rumley was admitted to
the mtens1ve care umt for oper &lt;~ t cd b1 J uha Mood!s·
treatm ent of a contusiOn of p&lt;l ugh. 21. Middleport , had
the k1dne; , multiple con· stopped m traffi c on 124
A \elud e dnven b) Mark
tus10ns and abras1ons of the
H1chmond
. 1'1 . l'omeroy,
nght lower leg, an d ba&lt;" k
fa
ded
to
stop
,tnd struck th e
mjury
Haskms was adm itt ed to
th t&gt; mtcns1vc care umt for
trea tment of severe head

Mooch spa ugh au to
rear ·

UlJUri CS .

to th e

Hoth men arc listed

Ill

guarded conditiOn
The acc1dent 1s still under
mvest1gat10n

There

\ \&lt;I S

th e

1n

severe damage

Hit hm oncl

auto ,

mod er ate damage to the
Moothspaugh vehicle. 11!chmond Ha !:! CJt rd on a charge
of ;JsS urcd dc&lt;Jr distanCe

Pair arrested
Jack Schuler, 19. Rt 1,
Portland . and Van Steven
Counts. 18, E. Mam St ,
Pomero y, were arr ested
Monday mght for the all eged
burning of a 1970 veh1cle on
Sa lisbury Twp. road 202.
According to a report f1led
With Meigs County Shenff
James J . Proffitt the palf
p1cked up the vehicle at the
Pomeroy parking lot after
pur ch a sing gasoline at
Landmark.
Schuler then drove the
stolen car and was followed
by Counts m another vehicle

,

I.
I.

They proccc rl ed to Old
Forest Hd , \\here Schuler

'pull ed the vch1 cle to the
roa d's edge nea1 the
Salisbur) -Chester Twp. line.
all ege dl y poured ga solin e
ins1dc it before scttmg 1t
aflame.
Schule1 then ]Wnped mto
Count s ' v.ch1cle, but wa s
unable to lc~vc the scene
because

Cqunts'

car was

stuck in the mud TI1c two
men then dec1ded to call for
help
When deputies and the
(Contmued on P" ~e 2)
~

•t

�.3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'Uesday, March 6, 1979
2 ~ The Daily SenUnel, Middle~-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March

Community college board
meet reset for March 14

Upset resldents ·
!Continued from page I)
w..k's flood.
1be ·Mayor reported that
the National Guard COlt the
village $191.39 which wu for
meals and gasoUne. He added, the -guards slept at the
City Hall.
Andrews said he does not
have to ask councll for
authority to bring in the
guard. He said hia authority
. came from Governor Rhodes
and that he has a rlghl to
declare an emergency.
ISSUES STATEMENT
Wehrung, in a statement to
the press, noted that if the
village is faced with beavy
snow or high water again, ID
emergency COI!IICll meetlnl
will be called. He added,
council members · were not
consulted when the guard '
was called in last week.
Bill
Bellamy,

•

Pair•••

of
the
representative
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company, met with
council discussing the
cbanglng of lights on Second
Street from mercury to
the
iodium.
During
~ussion, Mayor Andrews
left~ meeting.

Next meeting of the Rio
Grande Community College
Board of Trustees will be held
Wednesday, March 14.
Originally scheduled for
the third Wednesday of each
month, the date was moved
for the remainder of the year
to the second Wednesday of
each month .
Board meetings begin at 7
p.m. in the Rio Grande

MASON AND
AREA PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. WilHam
Zerkle and their daughter
and grandchildren, Mrs.
Gene Thomas, Chris and
Robbie visited over the
weekend with their other
daughter and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Reginald Hart, Regina
and Alllson at Wheellng, w. ·
Va.
1\frs. James Ulyd and sons
of Nashport, Ohio visited over
the weekend with her
parentll, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis
McDaniel and Chalky.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold has
returned to her home in
Hartford, .after
being .
hospitalized at
Holzer
Medical Hospital.

(Continued from page I)
Pomeroy Fire Dept. arrived,
the vehicle was engulfed In
names.
The two were taken to Jllil
COMPLETE BAN OUT
for questioning.
WASIDNGTON
(AP) - A
The burnt automobUe waa
·
eomplete
ban
on
saccharin
owned by Donald E. Guln·
would
not
be
a
good
move at
ther. Pomeroy.
Sheriff Proffitt 5ald other thla time , but Congress
charges may be filed pending llhould overhaul the nation's
completion of investigation. food safety laws to better deal
Assisting on the cue In with simDar controversies in
addition to Sheriff Proffitt thi. future, says a National
were
Deputies Robert Academy of Sciences panel.
The committee of scienBee gle, Manning Mohler,
Randy Forbes, Milford tltlts, lawyers and public
Young aad policy experts said Friday
Hysell, Joe
juvenile officer, Carl Hysell. · the current food regulation
Schuler and Countll are system "has become comlodged in Meigs Col!llty jaD plicated, inflexible and inpending hearings ln Mel&amp;&amp; · conalllent," as highlighted in
the aaccbarin controversy.
County Court today.

POMEROY - Mrs. Helen
Fell was honored with a
birthday party on_Saturday at
the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Judy Persinger in ·Columbus.

· team from the Meigs Sectional Tournament to win a game
at the District competition. The Tornadoes, 15-5, play
rugged Southeastern of Ross County Friday night. Brice
Hart photo.

JUMP SHOT - Tim Brinager (30) Southern senior
forward, goes up for a jump shot in Monday's thrilling two
point victory over Portsmouth Clay. Providing defense for
the Eagles is Andy Martin (;!'.2). Southern became the first

., •
·•
'•
·~

.. w

...
.,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted: Thomas McClung, Pomeroy; Beulah Hill,
Pomeroy;
Otto
Lohn, ""
Pomeroy; Helen Sauvage,
Pomeroy; Kathleen Clonch,
Middleport ; Justie Molder,
Middleport.
Clarence
Discharged :
Price.

EBB HAIR CONSULTANT
WILL EXPLAIN HAIR PROBLEMS FREE
AT
Holiday Inn, 450 Pike St.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Wednesday. March 7, 1979
Mr . J . W. West wi ll be back

in Gallipolis, Ohio again

Wednesday, March 7, 1979.

Study complet~d
by researchers

\:\!

IN
Carter's new complexity
WASHINGTON (NEA) • Prelident Carter, in a scramble to
recapture respect at home and abroad for his foreign policy
leadership, has taken to preaching the virtues of reason and
restraint in a complex and chanclnc world.
It is not a message to lltir the blood, and it is not what his
critics a re clamoring to hear, but the new Carter sermon. ~on­
tains the seeds of a long-overdue and badly needed clarifiCation of the philosophic underplnnlnp and practical objectives
of this administration's fonlen policy.
Carter as usual hulliloneto blame but himself for the confusion whlch has I~ so 11111ny Americans, and perhaps foreign
leaders as well, to quesUon his IP'IIIP of world affairs and his
capacity to cope with them.
·
.
In his two years as Pl'ftident, he hal failed to articulate m a
clear and comprehensible laahlon exactly what he believes the
United States can reallsUcaDy expect to accomplish on the
world stage today.
Carter does not try to 111e the White House as a "bully
·-pulpit. " Lacking eloquence, he simply abdicates hi~ rol~ .as
educator and opinlon-MIIper - Cftlltlng a vacuum his cnllcs
hasten to fill. He th1111 payw!! lllillvy price, as he is doing now,
when the public falls to flild the wisdom of his ways soHevident.
.
Twice in the last week .o. at Geargla Tech on Feb. 20 and here
in Washington on Feb. 22 before a conference of editors and
broadcasters- Carter llnally ltarted to explain his view of the
U.S. role in world affain.
He was driven to speak out by the rush of events in Iran, in
Afghanistan, in Southeast Alia which appeared, on the surface, to embarrass and perhaJll even threaten this country and
ils interests.
Wbat he said at those galherln,p made pretty good sense.
Carter cautioned against DV«&lt;ImpplfiC!Ition, a tendency, to
"see all change as Inevitably apinat the interests of the
United States as a kindof'-farusora victory for 'them'."
Cha nge and turmoil, he said, are the order of the day in
much of tne world - Africa, Alia and the Middle East,most
particularly.
· ··
The United States, he inlllted, remains "fully prepared to
protect our vital intereala wherever they may be challe.ng,&lt;;d,"
but the key test is dbcetnine ''1rilen our true interests lie.
So far, so good. The problem, however, arises at precisely
this point. Even in last week'l ..,eeches, his clearest foreign
policy pronouncements lo date, Cai1er stopped short of defining what constitutes lh,e ''vital Interests" of this coun~ry .
Exactly which countries are crucial to our own mterests•
How far are \Ve prepared to 110 to Influence internal political
develOpments ill those naU0111?
·
.
Under what cii'CUlTIItaneea 1.1 this president prepared to
commit U.S. military )JOII'er to the defense of our allies, and
which a llies? Thalland? Korea? bnel? Turkey?
Wbere, in other words, Ll the baUam line?
A generation ago, both the ....-ld and our own view of the
U.S. role in lt were simpler by far. Nobody had any doubts
what John F. Keimedy .,. sa,mi In hla 19!11 inaugural address: ''Letevery nation knonr, whether it wishes us well or ill,
that we shall pay any price, llellr any burden, meet any hardship, support any !~end,~ any foe to assure the suJ'Vlval
and the success of Iibert)',
.
. Vietnam has proven,IIOINfll,that we as a people no longer
will "pay any price" In the I1IPPOI'I of just "any friend ." The
·"success of libe{'ty" Ll of IICOildal'y linportance ln ~uch of the
world to the attairunent of a -.nlltandard olllvmg, and we
have been forced to acknowi8CIIe.the right of other nations to
.

It is both appropriate and illlportallt for Carter to convey the
new complexity of the world, 111111 the diBUnctlons between
"vital " U.S. intereafa and pellpheralMeS. But he has barely
begun the pr~ of aharlng.hll views on these matters and
seeking a consensuam suppart ol

••

"

through the game, hut the Tornadoes cOmmitted seven costly
turnovers in the first hall to stay bogged down .
The SVAC champs couldn't seem to contain Clay 's top
seorer either as Alxly Martin tossed in 14 first baH points.
The Eagles hit 10 of 24 attempts and committed only three
turnovers.
SECOND HAI;F
Clay hit the fir st two baskets of the second haH, and all of a
sudden they had the lead back, 24-23. Then Southern's depth
and team play of t he Tornadoes began to show as it did all

ooe, 42-41.
Martin hit two free throws opening the final period to give
his team the lead , but then Southern's Dwight Hill started
getting hot . He hit for lour fourth period points, Dave Findley
got two, and Tim Brinager got the last two points on an
important free throw situation with 1:47left in regulation time .
The senior forward hit both shots, and tied t he contest at
5(1.50 to send the game into overtime. Portsmouth had another
chance, but Martin was called lor charging.
OVERTIME
season.
Hill got the first two points of the overtime with 2: 45 to go.
Sophomore forward Dale Teaford came off the bench and Clay's Steve Glenn knotted the seore at 52-all, and missed
literally kept his team in the game, scoring the next eight giving his team the lead with just :45 to go when he couldn't
Tornado points. That seoring spree gave Southern a 31•26lead, convert a one--and~ne .
and things looked good for So11thern.
Hill then hit on a drive down the middle, and in the qext
With four min11tes remaining in the third period, Ports- twenty seconds Portsmouth lost starters Lieve and Riggs via
mouth had two of Its starters in foul trouble witli four personals foul s.
apiece, but the Eagles were still in the ball game. Then it was
With nine seconds left and Southern leading 54-52, Teaford
another Torn·ado 's turn, this time six~ man Jim "Olie" stepped to the llne, calniiy sank both ends of a bonus, wrapping
O'Brien.
up the game.
.
The senior center replaced center Dave Foreman, and
Brinager led Southern's scoring with 13 points and played a
promptly netted nine third quarter points. That scoring punch super game on defense . Hill ended the night with 12 points, and
by O'Brien gave Southern the biggest lead of the night with Teaford ended with 10 and had six rebounds .
2:10 in the period, 36-29.
Souihern, after that cold first half, had a 45 percent
Jack Duffy was the only Southern starter to seore in that shooting average, canning 20 of 44. ,shots. The Tornad oes
quarter when he dropped in a bucket in the last minute. Clay actually won the game with some excellent foul shooting,
k~pt coming back, and by the end of the quarter they trailed by
hitting 16 of 20 charity tosses while Clay managed only 6 of 11 •.

DOUBLE TEAMED - Two Portsmouth Clay
defenders, Richard Lieve (13 ) and Andy Martin (22 )
double teamed Southern's Tim Brinager late in the Class
A District game Monday night. Southern won to advance
to a second game Friday night.

HUNTINGTON
A
vegetation
study
of
navigation pool s at sites
along the Ohio River has been
completed by researchers at
Marshall University.
The $8,000 study, undertaken through a contract
with the Huntington District,
U.' S. Army Corps of
Engineers, is part of a
replacement study for the
locks and dam at Gallipolis,
according to Allan Elberfeld,
chief of the Corps' navigation
and economics branch.
Dr. Sam Clagg , professor
' and chairman of Marshall's
Geography Department, and
Dr. Howard L. Mills, MU
professor of biological
sciences,· directed the sixmonth project.
The endeavor included im
analysis of the kinds and
distribution of vegetation at
the live sites, Clagg explained. Clagg and Mills have
been engaged in vegetation
m apping for nearly 20 years,
including work in the Florida
Everglades and in Co sta

· so il, and produced · c!ilor
photography for the report .
Mills, a botanist, analyzed
the relationships between the
plants and other environmental factors . ·
Dr. Dan K. Evans,
assistant professor of
biological sciences at Marshall , analyzed specific plant
types and wrote a section
about endangered and rare
species listed by the federal
government. West Virginia
and Ohio, Clagg said.
Jirruny D. Rogers, MU
assistant professor of
geography, supervised
students during field work.
Marsha ll students who
participated in the study
wer e Doug Bunch, Madison,
gradua te student ; John
Furry,
Falling
Rock
graduate student; Ray
Rappold, Alloy graduate
student, who produced the
-black and white photography
for the report. and Dar.rell
Samples, Elkview senior.

Now is the time to act on

th is great opportunity .
Every man and woman
now losing hair should take

.,

Many conditions can
cause hair loss . No matter
which one is causing your ·
hair loss, if you wait until
you are slick Bald and your
hair roots are dead you are

!•

.,

· The Dailv Se ntinel
t USPS U~MO)

·~~~·~=·DEVOTEDTOTHE
INfERF..STOF

MEIG S·MASON AR E A
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cit) Editor
DAVID BUSKIRK
Adv~r11 slng Manager

Published da lly txeept Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
Comp~tny-Mulllm~tlia ,

Court St. .

Inc., • lll
Pomeroy, O hio 4~769 .

Business Office Pllone 992· 21S6.
Edi(or.lal Phone 992-2157.
Stcond

c blss post.age
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Nlltional

advertl.lllng

paid at

represen·

tatlve, La ndon Associutcs, 3101'
EudldAve ., Clevel{l nd , Ohln -44115.
SUb~c ription f!IIC!I: Delivered by

.c.·arrier whe re available 75 (.'ents peri
Wt!e~ . By Molor RuultJ'where c~:~ rritor·
~rvlce not Hv n!l~ble , One month,·
$3.25. By mall in Ohio and W. Va ..
One Ywr ,

$lUll ;

$27.50; Six

rnonths.

Three rnonths 1 $6.50;

Elsewhere $.12.00 ye11r; Six ;nooth!!

$1 7.00: Three mon th s. ~-s n . oo .
SubstTiplion prlt'l! includes Sunday1
'fl m• •~-~"ti m•l

service ... ''

In consultation with the
ph ysician ad visor y committee of 'the board, the
OV HSF will develop and
maintain medical treatment
pr oced~res appropriate for
prope r management of
victim care and consistent
with Ohio· Ia w.
The animal that drank up
a river was an elephant, .
according to some authorltles, but the Revised Version
says the "behemoth" was a
hippopotamus.
"Behold now behemoth · ..
be eatetb grass

Bl

an ox ...

March 7, 1979, and go to the
Holi day Inn, 450 Pike St., In

Gall ipolis, Ohio, between 1
p.m . and 8:30p.m . and ask

..'

..•

the Desk f lerk for J. W.
West , roorn number.

There is no charge or
obligation
...
all
consultations are private,
you
will
not
be
embarrasSed in any wav .

GRABS REBOUND - Portsmouth Clay's Andy Martin (22) outwrestles Southern's
Dave Foreman (40) for a' rebound in Monday's thrilling 56-54 overtime District Tournament
action at Chillicothe. Southern won 56-54 to advance to Friday's game against Southeastern
of Ross.

.,

I

...•

••
••
•••

Kenneth Ftyer Shows He ReGrew Hair. He Did Not
Have Male Pattern Baldness.

Sports World

••
•••

By WW Grimsley
AP Correspo11dent

"'
'"

We accept MASTER CHARGE and VISA.

~

.....
\

n

He drlnl&lt;eth up a rlver and
basteth not ... " - Job 40:l5
Bl!d 23

' "

t nt '\

..

~

......
·~·
' u"

--

'~ '

a student In our
Accounting &amp; Business

. •oh

.

Course .

••

..".

DEKAL·B XL-72b

•'

·'""'
t il ~

.....
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-·-

Here it is ... DEKALB XL-72b. A strong standing
hybrid with The Genetic Edge for big yields . Put it
to work in your fields.

: ·rrl
r uf

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...." ·
GERALD ROOD &amp; SON
RT. 2, LETART, W.VA.

It··-:
f tlr'

304-882-3144

-.
"...
·~

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Johnny Bench, his muscles seeming to
bulge beneath his longjohns, sat on a stool in front of his locker,
spat tobacco juice into a paper cup and pondered the future of
Cincinnati's denuded Big Red Machine.
·
" We've always had to win- we always expected to," he reflected soberly. "Now people are telllng us, 'You can't do it
with Sparky and Pete gone.' I'm not sure about that. The incentive has to be greater. We must motivate ourselves."
· The thick-chested catcher long has been the unshakeable
anchor of the Reds - well before the shocking «&lt;lsmissal of
Manager Sparky ,';nderson, who guided the club to four
National League titles and two world championships, and the
departure of captain Pete Rose to the $3.2 million greener
pastures of the Philadelphia Phlllies.
While the scrappy Rose was the Reds' inspirational leader, it
was Bench - more than Rose - who served as a liaison
·
between management and players.
"What some people automaUcally·put down as a minliS could
turn into a plus," Bench said. "For instance, we should have
more speed with a new leadoff hitter. Pete never was much of
a baserunning threat.
"But I think one of the most important factors could be the
boost that will be given to some of the younger guys. I say
younger. Gee, Ken Griffey and George Foster have been on the
club six years. And Dave Concepcion, he's almost as old as I
am . Would you believe it?"
·
Bench is 31 but preparing for his 13th season in a Cincinnati
uniform. Concepcion is 30, with nine years' major leaglle experience.
For years, the Reds' success under Anderson, a near .600
winning percentage, was attributed to the club's remarkable
chemistry which had Bench serving as sort of a scoutmaster of
the white players, Joe Morgan the blacks and Tony Perez the
Hispanics. Perez was traded to Montreal after the 1977 season.

Rose, as team captain, -was uMr. Dedication." He overshadowed almost everyone with his fierce competitive spirit
and unbridled exuberanee.'
"It wasn't intentional, I am sure," Bench said. "but a lot of
the guys -and I mean the real talented guys like Foster, Griffey and Concepcion .,.- must have felt overshadowed.
"I think, you 'll find these fellows coming out of their shell
more, feellng themselves an important cog on the team, and
their play may reflect it.''
The stolid catcher with 1,500 games to his credit and 1,lll
runs batted in, said' he could uuderstand teanunates getting
miffed when newspapermen continually congregated around
his and Rose's lockers after a game.
"I was sort of' a team spokesman," he added. "Pete is an
automatic 'interview, a great.conversationalist who likes to
lalk. He also is great in his knowledge of baseball. He is a
.
.
natural for the press.
"All players have egos. I think more of the guys will get
attention now and will gain in personallty and character. They
will feel more like a part of the family. All of us wear th~ Reds
l!lliform proudly.''

Class AA Tourna ments
At Steubenville Are na

'"

-•DEPEND ON DEKALB-

j

Central State University
will host Dyke College
Wednesday in the finals of the
National Association of In-

Geronimo,
Concepcion
late again
TAMPA , Fla. (AP) - Neither shortstop David Concepcion nor center fielder Cesar Geronimo had shown up
at the Cincinnati Reds spring
training camp by Monday
night.
The Reds said Concepcion
was late because of ''business
problems." Geronimo said he
had ''visa problems,'' the
team ann01mced. Both were
four days late reporting.
Pitch er Paul Moskau
pitched 12 minutes of batting
practice without any arm
troubles. He was bothered
.with arin problems last

Circleville 55

· Marion River Valley 73.

Columbus Centennia l 63 ·
Class A Tournaments

791

Moskau.
Injured th ird ba seman
Harry Spilman ran for the
firs t time Monday. He
suffered a pinched nerve in
his lower back in early drills.
Spilman hopes to start infield
practice Wednesday .
The entire team underwent
physical examinations
Mondav

mouth Clay 54 , ot

Ohio Girls
H. 5. Basketball

By The Associated Press
Mondav's Results
Class AAA Tournaments

H&amp;R Block preparers are carefully trained .
Bul if we should ever make an error that
costs you additional tax, you pay only the
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work . That's another
reason why we should do your taxes ... whichever form you use, short or long.

H&amp;RBLOCit

Ashland' 80, Sandusky 16
Marion Harding 56, Verm il ion 14

Class AA Tournaments
Cincinnati Taft 49,
ci nnati Reading 34

Cin-

Cincinnati Wyoming 34,

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
618 E. MAIN ST.
POME~OY, D.

Finney town 19

Deer Pa rk 35, E. Cli nton 30

Made ir'a

Ursuline

37

46 ,

Cincinnat i

17

South Point 61 , Portsmouth

Gallipolis 52, Rock Hill 32

.,
·'

Touch

(24·41 556
(21 ·61 d31
(25.J I d1 2
(20·7) 409
(21·71 361
I2J.71 255
122·51 241
f 23·71 221
121·61 164
(20·11 )
70

bySII/fl&amp;
~re a-heart with
an encnantlng gift of
~-halri. Elegant styles
for neck Ellild wrist . .. il'l
14 karat QOkl, !iter1ing
silVer and 12 karat
gold IHkid.

GAME SATURDAY
A donkey basket ball game
pitting Eastern students
ag ain st faculty members
playing will be held at 8 p.m.
Saturday at Ea•tern High
School.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY
STORE
Court St .
Pomeroy, 0 .
•

SHOP

Eric Mounts of Cedarville,
·Mark Meyer of Defiance,
Rick Bruns\\:ick of Findlay,

Lee Berry of Wllmington,
Tom Volnrich and Ed
Yarbrough of Malone,
Craig Luther of Walsh,
MarkBlankemeier of Tiffin
and Dan Bise uf Rio
Grande.
Here's the Rio-Central
State box score:
RrO GRANDE (791 -.B;se
6·5·11 ; Lones 4· 5·13 ; Phelps

Mason· Furniture
FOR THE BEST DEALS
-

IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

3-2-8; Purcell 10-4- 24; SWain
4-4 - 12 ; Wa sh ingt on 0-5 -5 ;

Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30 to 5:00
Thursday till 12 noon

Crafte r 13-0-26; Br yant 10-323; G r a y 3-5-1.1; Love 1-0-2;
Bla c k 4-0-8 ; Boone J. J. J ;
Walk er 2-2-6 ; J ones 2·0-.-1.

OPEN 'EVENINGS BY
APPQINTMENT ONLY

Royse 0·0·0. TOTALS 27·25-79.
CENTRAL STATE - 831 -

TOTALS 36-11 ·83.
Halftime score -

Ri o 46

Central State 36.

· Herman Grate
Mason , W. Va .

773-5592

_,

"If we ..... ,. ,.,. .-:;
an error,
we pay the
penalty. And
the·interest:'

. why I'm so happy ," said

At Canton Fieldhou se
Sebring 'i l , Gar fi el d Tr lnily

Tiltonsville Buckeye So uth ,42
Southington Cha lKer 87,
71 , Zanesville Maysville .66
· Martins Ferry -48, Bellaire Cleveland Lutheran East 60
AI Chillicothe
47
.
High School.
At Columbus Col•seum
MI . SterllnQ Pl ain s 61 . • Racine Southern 56, Ports.

•
tercollegiate Athletics
Besides Purcell's 24
District 22 playoffs .
points, Dan Bise chipped in
The Marauders won the
with 17. Steve Lones added
finals berth by beating Rio
13 and Mark Swain 12.
Grande 83-79 Monday,
Del Bryant added 23 for the
whil~yke squeezed past
winners. Venel Gray had 11.
Findlay College 72-71.
Rio hit 27 of 62 field goal
Central State, now 21-6, was attempts for 43.5 percent. The
led by forward Melvin Redmen wer e 25 of 38 at the
Crafter with 26 points. Guard foul line for 65 percent. Rio
Dan Purcell scored 24 for the had 38 rebounds, 11 by Steve
losers, who ended the year Lones. The Redmen had six
with an 18-13 record .
assists and 15 turnovers.
Rafi Azeez hit 14 points to
Central State hit 36 of 75
pace Dyke, 20-1;.
field goal attempts for 48
Findlay closed out the percent . The winners were 11
season with an 18-8 record. of 18 at the foul line for 61
Coach Art Lanham's Rio percent . Central State had 38
Grande Redmen held a 20- rebounds, lO by Gray. The
point advantage over the winners. defending District
Marauders in the first hall . 22 Tournament champions,
and were on top 46-36 during had 21 a•sists and 19 "turnovers.
the haHtime intermission.
The Marauders went ahead
At Findlay last night, it was
the first time, 73-72, on a announced Dr. Lu Wims, who
sensational shot by Mel guided Central State to a 20-6
Crafter, a 22-footer with Phil regular season record, has
Washington all over him. been named the coaches'
That was with three minutes NAIA District 22 Basketball
Coach of the Year.
left in the game.
Named to the National
The score was tied at 76-all
As sociation
of
In·
and 78-all befor e the
terrollegiate Athletlcs allMarauders pulled it out of the
district team were Melvin
fire in the final minute of
Crafter of Central State,
play.

season.
" My shoulder doesn 't..
bother me the next day , that 's

Tournament scores
Ohio Boys
H. S. Basketball
By The Associated Press
Monday Night's Resu lis

SOUTHERN HIL(S.
SCHOOL.OF
BUSINESS
-4t-42nd Ave. Gallipolis
Ph. 446·2239
RN0585B
·).. - -

J

''"

Stands Strong
For A Yield Edge ·

Central State stops R edmen

'foday's

••

•••

O'BRIEN SHOOTS - Southern's Jim O'Brien attempts a shot against Portsmouth
Clay's defender Kevin Craft (24). O'Brien and all other Tornado players were instrumental
in the team's two-point victory over the Scioto County club. With the win, Southern became
the first team from the Meigs Sectional to win a tournament game in the (.1ass A District
competition.

The
Final

678
61 2
610

.

--"''

- Thomas C. Breech, Qir.

( 2 3. 4)

15. Texa s
16. Purdue
17 . Detroit
18 . Louisv ille
19 . San Fra n.
20. Te nnessee

WE SALUTE ......

Tim will be glap to
discuss the quality of his
training with anyone
who Is Interested.
Call 446·2239 now for
Information. The new
Spring Quarter begins
March 20.

7. Ar kansas

Just take a few minutes of
your time on Wednesday,

••• rl

for its quality, s4~cess t
and achievement.'"

(29-0) 1,1 50
(23·41 1,077.
(23·51 1,034
121 ·61 932
(22·51 850
(22·71 810

13 . Te m ple
14. 1owa

~

pleased with their
training under the
direction of Mr. Breech.
t decided that, as a
young man looking for a
short route Into the
business field, I should
consider Souther,n Hills

(55)
2. UCLA
Il l
3. N. Carolina
&lt;. Mi ch . St.
5. Notre Dame
6. Duk e

You will be given a wri tten
guarantee on a pro-rated
basi s from the beginning to

for which no method is
effective.
Ebb
Ha·ir
Specialists cannot ·help ·
those who are slick bald
after years of gradl:Jal hair
loss.

Kraft 1.0.2;

10 23 42 5D--56
10 20 41 SD--54

P

12. Marquette

FREE CONSUL TAT ION

~w

and Mike; were very

s

t ime to do something about
it before It's too late.

Male pattern baldness is
the cause of a great
majority of cases of bald·
ness and excsive hair loss,

G.

11. Georgetown . D. C.

•

beyond help . So. now Is the

--.
·--

recommends,

R;ck s 3·0·6;

Totals 24·6·54.
By Quarters :

(22·4)
9. Lou isiana St. 122-5)
10. Syra cuse
(25·3)

• IlL'

Tim

2; Cla us ing 6-2-14 ; Glenn 2.0.
d,

advantage of this FREE
CONSULTATION .
GUARANTEED
the end.
CAN'T HELP

Martin

(54) -

8. OePaul

"'
·•

"My brothers, Steve

Portsmouth

10 -4-24 ; Kraft 1-0-2 ; La ine 1-0-

The Top Twent y teams In
The Associa ted Press college
basketball poll , w ith f ir stplace votes in parentheses,
se aso n reco r ds a nd total
points. Po inted ba sed on 20 .

'"
..

A 1978 graduate of
Point Pleasant High
School and a member of
the
Big
Blacks
~asketball squad, he Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Newberry, Route
2, Letart, W.Va .

0. Totals 20·16·56.

The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Pross

•'

Clagg mapped the areas,
studied the vegetation and

Management

13 ; 0' Bden 3.3.9; Duffy 2-2 6;

Tea ford 2-6-10; Forem an 0-0-

l. Ind ia na St .

Rica .

firing and purchasing. They
would run for three years,
1979-1982, unless terminated
on 60·day notice by either
party. F:xact dates within
tho se yea rs would be
determined. Should SEOEMS
· discontinue, so would the
contract.
This agremeent also Would
assure that the SEOEMS
board of tru stees "shall
determine the policies concerning the operation and use
of its emergency medical
system to assure accomplishment of the purposes for
which the corporation was
established."
However, if the agreement
is adopted , OVHSF " will
enact, or recommend for
adoption , all regulations and
,..rocedures necessary to
provide efficient service with
maximum economy tha.t is
consistent with quality care
and in the best interest of
SEOEMS and the users of its

Southern (S6,- Findle y 30-6 ; Hill 6-2-12 ; Brina ger ~ - S -

19 18 · 11 · 16 · 15· 14 · 13 · 12·
11 · 10 · 9 · B· 7 · 6 · 5 · 4 · 3 · 1:

Board to consider
contract Thursday
Board of trustees of the
seven - county Southeastern
Ohio Em ergency-Medical.
Service will meet Thursday
night at the Gallipoli s
Holiday Inn to consider a
contract which would give the
Ohio Vall e y Health Services
Fou ndation
c ertain
management controls over
SEOEMS .
Purpose to the contract
would b e to e xtricate
SEOEMS from its bankrupt
condition at a total cost to
SEOEMS of three pe rcent of
its gross annual inc ome or
$35,000, whichever is larger.
SEOEMS would p a y this
money to OVHSF.
The management controls
would · include hirin g and

Southern collected 25 rebounds, led by Foreman's seven.
Portsmouth was paced by Martin 's 24 points, but·th l only
other Eagle to hit double figures was Paul Clausing with 14
markers. The team hit a fine 24 of 48 shots for 50 percent, but
hauled in only 16 rebounds.
Southern 15-5 plays Friday against a tough squad fr om
Southeastern of Ross County for the right to advance to the
Athens RegiQnal. The Panthers are 20-1. Southeastern also
owns a two-point victory over Portsmouth Clay. The panthers
are taller than Southern but few teams can match the
Tocnadoes' speed. It should be an interesting and excitin g
match-up beginning at 7 p.m. at Ellis B. Hatton Field House 1n
Chllllcothe. All the way, Tornadoes !

Top20

....

!i!'!i:.

'!-'·

By Greg Bailey
The Southern Tornadoes became the first team from a
ll!elgs Sectional to win in District competition when they
knocked down the Portsmouth Clay Eagles last night in
Chllllcothe 56-5-1 in an overtime.
II was a team effort with a capital "T" that spelled the
vietoryfor the SVAC champs of Coach Carl WoHe.
The third time proved to be the charm for the Tornadoes as
this was the third straight year they had advanced to the
District.
SEE..SAW GAME
In the see-saw contest, the lead exchanged hands 20 times,
'
and the score was tied nine times.
Both ieallllj started slowly with Portsmouth's Richard
Riggs breaking the scoring ice with a basket.
Southern countered and took the lead on two field goals by
senior Tim Brinager, 4-2, before the Eagles knotted it on a
bucket by Andy Marlln. By the end of the first period, the team
had battled to a 10-all deadlock.
Southern held a slight edge in the second period, and by
intermission had taken a 23-20 lead.
The Tornadoes' shooting in the first baH was ice cold as
they connected on just 9 of 25 shots, but the team stayed in
front by hitting five of six charity tosses.
Clay, meanwhile, didn't go to the free throw line once in ·
the first haH. Southern eSsentially outplayed the Eagles all

·•

Hospital News

Attending in addition to the.
honoree were Mr. and Mrs. ·
Phillip Smith, Patti Jo and
Stephanie of Lexington, Ky.,
Mr. and Mrs. John Marshall,
New Haven , Judy and
Carlene Persinger.
Ice cream and cake were
served. She received several
gifts.

: : ,· opinions
~~t?: rr::::: :::::rr:::::t::;:::::::::g::rm::::::::J::::::::r::::r:::'???:{':':'t:::::l:l/lil

.

Coll ege and • Community
College Board Room ..
In other board action, a
new construction·bid deadline
for the Rio Grande Fill• and
Performing Arts Center was
announced. Bids for construction of the facility must
be submitted to the State
Architect's Office by March
20 at 2 p.m.
The new deadline meets a
state requirement for rebid of
construction for which all
ori ginal bids exceed the
state's estilnated costs.

Honored by party

INH1~®'i1%;1

~ ~~

Southern takes thrilling, 56-54 overtime win

6

Open 9 a.m . to
p. m . Weekdays,

9-5 Saturdays
PHONE 992·3795

2nd &amp; BROWN ST.
MASON, W. VA.
DPENTUES.
THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M..s P.M.
PHONE 773-9128

If you have an lreurance claim, vou aJretdy
have a problem. AI Thel,.urance Store wt
feel tttet complex claJn. prootdureeahould

not be' an addM prOblem tor you, so we

;lvt.our ~Uitornera "follow-ltlrougl'l ..rvlce."
&amp;KauM we areindeptndent agentl weoan
llld do work wtlt11M11f line 1nouro11 .. .
like Trtt COntlnentaltn~uranct CompaniM,

tor exampte.
you receive a fut, lflullable
your claim.•

0~ by lncl goucqualnled wtlli eur Jclow" .
W•'llltllr you on a ltrtJghtcouiUin.-ry ·
l,.t.lrai'IOI p,_,IHt-.-1nd help ball you Out In

roaghwee.ther.

?14 E . M Al N S I.

'· ·

POMEROY, 0 .

tt2-5130 or ." J-5139

"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY,
. .
· YOU
. HIRE AN AGENT ' .

'

�f

,._____, Sentinel, MiddleP'/rt-~omeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, March 6, 1979

4

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 6, 1979

Harvest Trio Singers to present program at
St. Paul's United Methodist Church Sunday
.

'

The Harvest Trio Singers
will present a program of
music at 2 p.m. Sunday a( the
St. Paul's United Methodist
Church.
At Sunday's services at the
church there was communion
with the Rrv . Ri~ho r ~

'

MICHAEL LAMBERT
Michael R. Lambert, son of
Mr . and Mrs. Raymo'nd
Lambert , Fourth and Brown
St., Mason , W. Va.; recently
was promoted to Army
Specialist Four while serving
as a welder with the 782nd
Maint ena nce Batta lion at

'

Thomas using scripture from
Genesis 26 with the theme
"Digging an Old Well." At·
tending the worship service
were 52 with 47 coming to
Sunday School. Bible studies
are being held ~ o nd a v

Fort Bragg, N. C.
He entered the Army in
September, 1977.
Lambert is a 1977 graduate
of Wahama High School .

evenings at 7:30p.m.
Committee assignments on
the County Coun cil on
Ministries have been announced hy the Northeast
C.1usfer. They ·are Esther
Mays
and
Marga ret
Gro ss nickle, evang elism;
Betty Chevalier, education ;
Thelma Henderson, Evelyn
Well , and Opal Har ris,
missions; Mrs. Earl Young,
Bonni e

Thoma s,

John W. Anderson, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Anderson, Rutland, has been
admitt ed to th e City of
Na tiona l Hope . Medical
Center· in Duarte, (:a., for
treatment of leukemia.

Lorea n

Marriage approaching
.,
'

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sidler
of 655 West Kerr Road, Troy,
are announc ing the approaching marriage of their
daughter. Sue Ann, of Elyria,
to Daniel A. Bush, also of
Elyria . He is the son of Mrs.
·Arthur Roush of Horton Ave.,
Mason, W. Va ., and the late
Robert Bush, Sr.
The bride-elect, a graduate
of Tippecanoe High School
and the Mount Cannel School
of Nursing, Columbus, is
employed by th e ElyrinMethodist Home, Elyria, as a
registered nurse supervisor.

Her fiance, who attended

Wahama Hi gh School, is
employed by the Ford Motor
Co. in Lorain .
The wedding will be an
event of April 14 at 2 p.m. in
the Elyria Home Chapel in
Elyri a. The Rev . John
Bensen will perform the

,------··-,
ceremony.

Social 1
I 1Calendar 1
I

DALE LEWIS
Dale W. Lewis, son of John
N. Lewis, Central St., Mason,
W. Va ., recently wa s
promoted to Anny specialist ~
four while serving as a body
repairman with the 82nd
Airborne Division at Fort
Bragg, N. C.
He entered the Army in
September, 1977.
Lewis is a 1976 graduate of
Wahama High School.

TUESDAY
LADIES AUXILIARY
Pomeroy Eagles Club, Aeri~
21 71 , regular meeting Tueeday, 8 p.m. There will be
nomination for secretary at
the meeting.
HARRISONVILLE
PTO
regular meeting Tu esday,
7:30 p.m. at school to make
plans for spring carnival;
. parents are urged to attend
l and take ideas for carnival.
day. Work in the third degree
MEIGS HISTORY Book with all master masons inCommitte e meeting, vited.
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Meigs
REGULAR MEETING ,
. County Museum.
Ladies Auxiliary Middleport
MEIGS Local Chapter 1'1 Fire Department, 7:30 p.m.
OAPSE Tuesday 7:30p.m. at Wednesday at fire hall with
t
'
· Meigs Junior High.
Kathr yn Metzger, Sue
XI
GAMMA
MU Metzger and Kathy Davis as
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi ho stesses. White elephant
7:30 Tuesday at the and bake sales will be held.
Anna McKinney Sorority,
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Columbia Gas Co. office.
Garden
Tractor Club WedRecipe auction, cultural proand son
nesday
8
p.m., home of Dale
gram entitled "Establish the
Kautz,
Rt.
7, Pomeroy. New
Future" by Lynn Shuler and
Phyllis Bennett. Hostesses, members welcome.
THURSDAY
Doris Ewing and Donna
OHIO VALLEY Com·
Byer.
Attending were the honored
POMEROY CHAPTERIOO, mandry number 24 will hold a
guest's grandparents, the OES,
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at practice session Thursday in
Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd D. the Pomeroy Masonic Tem- preparation for inspection on
Grirrun, Rutland, and Mr. ple. Officers to wear gown:s. March 17. Bring swords and
and Mrs. Raymond J . Smith, Election of associate con- belts.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. ArWESTERN STYLE square
chie Rose and son, Tyson, ductess.
dance
worksbop Thursday
WEDNESDAY
Long Bottom, Mr: and Mrs,
7:30p.m.
at Royal Oak Park.
AMERI CAN LEGION
Bill Hall , Langsville, Mrs.
Chad
Johnson,
caller.
Shirley Smith and son, David, AUXIUARY, Drew Webster
Middleport ; Janice and Bob Post 39, Pomeroy, 7:30p.m. ELEANUH CIRCLE, Heath
Grirrun and Jeremy Grinun. at the hall. Members to meet United Methodist Church,
Sending gifts were the Rev. with the legionnaires at 7 Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
and Mrs. Robert E. Smith, p.m. to plans for the birthday church with Mrs . Ruth
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Keith party . At the meeting the pro- Bumgarner and Mrs. BarKennedy, Angela and Greta, gram will be on Americanism bara Murray, hostesses.
RO C K SPRINGS
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Grate and and legislation.
GRANGE,
Thursday night,
POMEROY LODGE 164, F .
Jodi, Rutland.
7:30
at
the
hall.
and A. M. 7:30p.m. W~es-

f!"'

•~

A nnounce -birth

DO IT RIGHT
HAVE

•

..&lt;-.

IIER.

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

Israel Grimm

St. Paul's Church still has
cookbooks for sale and these
can be purchased from Mrs.
Lorean Gorrell at 007-3273.

He has undergone a bone
marrow transplant from his
brother , Jim. John is a 1972
graduate of Meigs High
School and his wife, the
former Gail Sizemore, is in
California with him.

He expects to be !X&gt;nlined to
the hospital for about · 110
days. His address is City of
Hope National Medical
Center, Third Floor, 1500
East Duarte Road, Duarte,
Callfornia.

Awards presented by cub scouts

'

REVIVAL CONTINUES
Revival services will
continue this week at the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church.
A youth revival started last
week with the Rev. Robert
Myre of Circleville as the
evangelist and due to the
great success, services will
CQntinue this week with the
Rev. William Knittel, pastor,
doing the preaching. There
will be special singing each
evening . Services will begin
at 7:30p.m. and the public is
invited to attend.

ce rtificats of honor from the
West Ohio Conference for
pay ing conference apportionments In lull for 1978.

john Anderson confined to hospital

Gorrell, and Gary Welker,
social concerns; and Nanna
Hawthorne, Dale Machir, and

Turns One

Dan Bush and Sue Sidler

Sue Suttle, youth .
It was also reported that
C.'hcster, Tuppers Plains and
Alfred have been presented

POMEROY - The first birthday of Israel Scott Grimm,
son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Robert Grimm, was
celebrated recently with a
party at the home, 231 Union
Ave., Pomeroy.
A Sesame Street cookie
lli,I)Mter theme was carriect
out with the cookie monster
cake being made by ¥rs.
Shirley Smith. Games were
played with each child receiving gifts. Cake, ice cream,
potato chips, koolaide and .
coffee were served with
suckers, gum, and animal
cookies being given as favors .

Awards were presented at
the meeting of Pack 235 Cub
Scouts held at. the scout hall
in Chester Friday night.
Ray Laudermllt, . cubmaster, presented a gold
arrow and a silver arrow to
Keith Karschnik and Kyle
Davis'; gold arrows to Scott
Starcher and Billy Scarbrough, and a bobcat badge
to Orville Hill.
Webelo~ receiving awards
were Dana Eynon, bobcat,
citizen, engineer, forester ,

outdoorsman; Andy Hawk,
citizen, engineer, forester,
and outdoorsman; Lee

Keney , citizen, engineer,
forester, and outdnorsman;
and Donald Maxson; citizen,
engineer, forester, and
outdoorsman.
Den 2 opened the meeting
with the pledge to the flag and
the song, " Cut Scout
Feeling." Den I presented a
. magician's skit. Kathy Davis,
committee chairman, announced that there will be a
bake sa.Ie on March 10 at
Gaul 's Market. She also
announced the blue and gold
banquet to be held on March
26 at the Chester Grade
School.

Attending the meeting were
those named and Mike
Young, Rod Newsome, Bril!ll
Holley, Randy Kesterson, J.
C. Ginther, Terry Newsome,
Ronnie Maxson, Kirk Fick,
Geneva Maxson, Jackie
starcher, Connie Karschnlk,
Jon Karschnik, Flossie Dill,
Ray Allen Maxson, Cheryl
LaudermUt, Robert Davis,
Kaye Flck. Mary Kesterson,
Diana and Penny Kesterson,
Frank Newsome, Jo Ann
Newsome, Sandy .Keney, ·
Carolyn Holley, Mitchell
Holley, Karen Young, and Jo
Ann Scarbrough.

.. ..'

., • f

'·

Charla Evans will chair the
1979 meqtbership drive for
the French Art Colony, according to an announcement
made by the trustees of the
organization. The campa ign
will contin ue
through
Saturday, Ma rch 17.
·
On Monday, Mrs. Evans
appeared as guest on the
Noon Newscenter program
on WSAZ, Channel 3 in
Huntington , W. Va., in·
terviewed by Mason Weaver
about the campa ign. Accompanying Mrs, Evans was
J anet Byers who chairs the
Education Department activities for the French Art
Colony. Mrs. Byers reviewed
the numerous classes that are
sponsored · by th e Colony
· throughout the year, with
specia l empha sis on the
series of four that begin this
week on Thursday.
The four new classes that
will continue for eight weeks

on Th ursdays
incl ude community. 'l'he ability to adults and children alike ,..
Grap h ics (Letter in g, appreciate art in its many . do not realize the facilities
Ca lligra phy, Basic Silk- and varied forms, whether an they have right here at home
screen.) for adults, instructed origina l oil pain ting, a in Gallia County through the
by Corinne Lund, each Thurs- muslca l composition, a poem French Art Colony. I am
·day from 7 p.m. until9 p.m.; or a quilt block design , is a convinced the Gallia County
Drawing for Adults, taught necessa ry skill for the area has a unique opportunity
by Mrs. Lund, each Thursda¥ ultimate expression of in- for any one at any age,
. from 9 a.m. until II a.m .; dividuality in today's com- whether through active inCreati ve Discovery for 4 and plex society."
vo lvement , such as taking
5 year old children, each
She continued, " Our classes or exhibiting an
Thursday aft ern oon from CQmm unity has resources of original piece of art work in
1:30-2 p.m. and Painting for creativity that go untapped the July 4th Hiver Hecreation
children age 6 and older, beca use perhaps, people
t··estiva) in the Gallipolis City
from 4 p.m. until 5 p.m. on
Park, or, on the other hand, to
Thursday, both also taught by
share a favorite piece of art
Mrs. Lund.
PA1TY LOCIIARY
from your own home in the
The theme for this year's .. Patty. Lochary, student at January Collectors' Gallery
drive to add members is ART Ohio .University , spent the exhibit at River by, attend one
IS FOH EVERYONE. In weekehd here visiting her of the many msuica l af- ,
commenting on the cam- grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. tcrnoons such as the concert ·~
pa ign, Mrs. Evans said, " In Patrick Lochary, Pomeroy.
chair in g the Membership Patty is the daughter of Mr.
Drive for 1979, I am par- and Mrs. Jim Lochary of New
ticularly interested In seeing Jersey.
the· opportunity for exposure
VlSil'S HERE
to all of the arts extended to
George Gum of Albion, In d.
One . year ago : President
the total Ga lli a County Car te r invoked the Taft- spent th e weekend here with
Charla Evans
Hartley Act in an effort to get his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
striking coal miners back to George Gum. He is with his
sister, J oan Perry, in Albion
work .
Application For Membership
Toda y's
bir t hdays : and is employed there as a
Conducter Julius Rudel is 58. welder. George graduated
The French Art Colony invites you to join us in enjoying and promoting the Art s.
TV personality Ed McMahon fro m Meigs High School in
1978.
is 56.
Date
(Membersh ip extends one year from this date }

Check Cate gory of Membershi p:
0 lnd1viduat . .
$12.00
F
I
0 am 1y .............. .20.00
0 Benefac tor . .
Name
Address - - - - - - - - - - - -

artistic expression and ap·

pr eciation to ail of the
citizens of all ages m this
area. After all, ART IS FOR
EVERYONE."

0

0

Yes

TV's

Admiral
Quality
Color
ADMIRAL
QUALITY
COLOR

No

A GOOD CHOiCE OF
MODELS AT A VERY
SPECIAL WW PRICE

WITH OUR ANTI·INFLATION PRICES
ECKRICH

12 oz.
PKG.

SMOKED

FRESH LEAN CENTER CUT

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BOLOGNA

Your Blue Cross
and Blue Shield Plans
believe that regular
dental care is a very
important part of
good health.
Now, there are a
number of group dental
care programs on the
market, but your Blue
Cross and Blue Shield Plans
have some advantages that
you may not find in other
programs . .. advantages that
make it easier and more
economical for you to receive
the kind of dental care you
need. As a matter of fact,
these are advantages for both
the employer and the employee:

'149_

ECKRICH

PORK JOWL
89~
BRAUN SCHWEIGER
~
79
LB.

ASSORTED CUT

$}59

PORK CHOPS

LB.

SUPERIORS

FRANKS

SPARE RIBS

DUTCH"" tOAF

12 oz.

LOIN END

MARKET SLICED

19

PORK ROAST

LB.

$1

59

PICKLE LOAF

llz~L

.

BROUGHTON'S BUTTERMILK.••••• 79e
VALLEY BELl

1% MILK .•••.•••••.••••••••••••• ~~~· ~ '1i•

ALL STAR DAIRY•••••••••••••••~~•• '1 59

MALlO CUP &amp; SMOOTHIES

Ge.n eric

4 pak ~

4 LBS.

CANDY BARS. ................~.~.~~.:. 69f'
FIFTH· AVENUE

CANDY BARS .................~..~~-~ 694

oz. Btls.
DEW.............~~~~.~!: ..
8 PAK 16

TOBACCO -~~~~ '5 ,,

99¢

·'

.
FRIDAY
ONLYI

'

,.'
I

THURS. ONLY

l

'

'i
t
•..
'
I

•A dental progra m is available to Blue Cross and
~ Biut: Shield t P~rol~d groups of 10 or more
employee.s. l!ntnroUed groups of 25 or more

may acquare 1t on a separate basis.

il

- ..
•

...... PEPPER

RC or DIET RITE

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AMOCO OIL .................. :..........~~ : .. 5~
Zest a
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I lb 6~
PREMIUM SALTINES .....................
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PEPSI COLA &amp;

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®' Aegis!erect M4!11(s Blue Shield Anociation

-PORK -&amp;·BEANS..................4 cans su)Q

MOUNTAIN

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All BRANDS

Show Boat

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Value added. ·

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MARKET SLICED

TROPICANA

right in as part of a group health
care package. *
To keep the cost affordable, most
dental benefits are designed so that the
employee shares in the cost of care. For
·companies of 25 or more employees,
first-doUar coverage for preventive care
and several cost-sharing options are
available. These options can help achieve
··"that all-important balance between
needs and budget.
This is the kind offlexibllity
that you should talk to your
Blue Cross and Blue Shield
representative about.

-

COUNTRY STYLE

PKGS.

Blue Cross ®
.Blue Shield ~

•

public belief, these membership fees are not sufficient
to support the French Art
Colony. Unknown to many is
the fact that more than 6,000
hours of vo lunteer time,
annually , are invested in the
CQntinuing program of the
French Art Co lony."
Mrs . Evans co nclu ded ,
·'The French Art Colon)
offers a great opportunity for

Donor
.. $ 50 to$ 99
Patron
. .... 100 to $499
500 or more·

Number in family _ __

-Dental benefits
with real advantages··
for-employer and
employee.

Direct Claims Payment , Through our simplified claims
filing procedures, we've made it possible for your dentist to
be paid directly, which reduces paperwork for both
employee and employer.
.
Predetermination of Be11efit s. This is a system that lets you
know in advance of treatment, how much your benefits will pay.
Recognizing that there may be more than one approach to
treatment, ~ternatives are reviewed to assure the patient of
appropriate an.d quality care at the most reasonable cost. ·
Immediate Benefits. There are no waiting periods for treatment
of conditions that existed before the effective date of coverage.
Consultation. Practicing dentists in the community act as
consultants to routinely review claims. They make sure treatment
is cost-effective and consistent with good dental practice. ·
·
Peer Re view. A formal review system has been
established in partnership with the dental profession to handle ·
difficult-to-resolve claims.

Sa ndra Wilk in's voca l
stud ents will present at
Hivcrby on . Sunday afternoon , April 8, open to the
public, or visit the Galleries
that are open four days a
week at River by with exhibits
changing monthly.
To have such an opportunity afforded us lo,
cally comes also the
responsibility for its support . The French Art
Colony's on ly fina ncial
so urce is th rough membe rship fees and special
events. Contrary, perhaps to

Mail to FRENCH ART COLONY, P 0 Box 472, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Contributions or Membership gifts are deductible for income tax purposes to the extent
. provided by law.

Dental care, America's fastest growing
group health care benefit:
.

WE DO .ITRIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO_IT:

0
0

Are you wi lling to help wi th
French Art Colony prOJeCts?

Telep hone

Whether.you have 10 or 10,000
(or more) employees, Blue
Cross and Blue Shielddental
coverage can be designed

•

Charla Evans to head French Art Colony membership drive

.

,.

8

l&amp;oz.ans.

Plus Deposit

99$

-

-

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

Federal Food

We Resent The Right To Umit

8

PAK

16 OZ. BTLS.
Plus Deposit

79';'

REGULAR .............. 99'

�f

11- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesday, March 6, 1979
cs 1 Rev 1-30 71
NAI\IE 01' STREET Wnt
M•in Streit
ROUTE NO U S R n
OROINANCE NO 504
OATE OF ENACTMENT 221·1f

An ~mergency enacted by
the Vlttaoe ot Pomer oy,
Meigs County Ohio m the
matter of tl')e hereinafter

descrtbed

improvement,

under the superv•s•on of th e

Otrector ot Transportatton

WHEREAS . the D1rector of
Transportation Is cons i dering
lmprovtno a portion of the
public highway wh• ch tS

described as follows.
"By applying an

asphalt

concrete surface course on
U S R 33 !West Main Streell

between a pomt 0 OS m de
north of Butternut Avenue
and The Pomeroy Mason

Bridge Length 5385 6 feet,
wtdth 43 teet 1 36 teet , and 26
feet appro1umete thtckness

shall be and •s hereby saved
harmless from any and all
damages or clatms thereof
ar.smg from or QI"OW1ng out
of
the
certlf!Cat•on
or
obltgat•ons made or agreed to
tn Sec t1ons (al lb) (c) {d)
and (e) heretnabove
Th1S ordmance Is hereby
declared to be an emergency
measure bv reason or the
need for e•pedlttno h •ohway
tmprovements to promote
h•g h way safety and pcovtded
tf rece•ves the afftrmat1ve
vote of two fhtrds ol the
members elected to Council ,
11 shall take effect and be •n
for ce tmmed iately upon •tS
passage and approval by the
Mayor otherw•se Jt shall
take effect and be tn force
from and after the earliest
penod allowed by law

Mavor

NOW THEREFORE Be tt
orda tned by the council ot the
V •II age of Pomeroy Oh 10
SECTION I (Consent)
That It IS declared to be In
lhe public mterest that the
consent of sa1d Vtllage be and
such consent Is hereby g1ven
to the Otrector of Trans
portat 1on to construct the
above
d~scr•bed
1m
provement, 1n accordance
wtth plans , speclf•cattOns and
estamates as approved by the
Director
SECTION II (Cooper11tion)
That satd v•llaoe hereby
proposes to cooperate wtth
the Stare of Ohio. '" the cost
of the above descnbed 1m
provement n follows
A lump sum of Two
Thousand F1ve Hundred
Dollars ($2,500 00) which
tnc1udes the cost of ra tstng
the el(• stl .,g c E"~tl ngs

H 0 Brown , Jr
Prest dent of Counctl

mtles

SECTION Ill
Sign)

(AUI~orl1y

to

That the Mayor of satd
V•llage IS hereby em powered
and d•rected on behalf of the
V1t1age
to
enter
•nto
agreements wlfh the D1rector
of Transportat1on necessary
to complete the planntng and
constructiOn of this •m
provel'!1 ent

SECTION

IV

(TroffiC

Control Signals •nd Devices)
That trafftc control stgnals
will not be 1nstalled on the
pro lect without prior ap
proval by the State
SECTION V (Maintenance
and Parking)
That upon complet•on of
satd Improvement, satd
Vtllage wtlt thereafter keep
sa•d highway open to traffiC
at all times, and
(a) Matntam the
•m
provement an accordance
With the prOVISIOnS Of the
statutes relattng thereto and
make ample ftnanc •ai and
other provts•ons for such
'maintenance, and
{b) Maintain the rtght of
way and keep tf free of ob
strucftons m a manner
sat •sfactory to the State of
Ohio and hold satd right of
way lnvtolate for public h1Qh
w~y purposes •nd perm 1t no
stons. posters. billboards
roadside stands or other
pr ivate tnstallations Wtthln
the nght of way l•mits and
(cl Place and matntaln ali
traff•c control devices con
forming to the Ohio Manual of
Untform Traffic Control
Dev 1ces on the Improvement
tn compliance w1tl"' the
provtstons of Sectton 4511 11
artd re l ated secttons of the
Ohto Revised Code
(d) Regulate park1ng In the
followtng manner
Parallel parking on one
stde on l y between a po10t 0 05
mile north of Butternut
Avenue and a poin t 0 06 m 1le
south of Butternut Avenue on
west Main Street
No parkmg on West Main
Street between a potnt o 06
m tie south of Butternut
Avenue and the Pomeroy
Mason Bndge

SECTION VI

(Right of

Way, Uflltty Rearrangement
and Saving the State of Oh•o
Harmless of Damages)
(a) That all extst1ng street
and public way nght of way
Wlftnn the Vtllage Wh tCh IS
necessary for the aforesaid
improvement shalt be made
eva Hable therefor
(b) That the Muntc.pahty
wtll ecqu~re any aadtttonal
nght of way re(IUifed for the
construction of the aforesa 1d
lmprovem ent
(c) Th a t arrangements
have b l'~"' n or Will be made
w1th t'lf ' ~' ag reements ob
talned f "ln a ll public tJttllty
compan1 d
whose lines or
structures wt ll be effected by
the satd 1mprovement and
satd complln1es have agreed
to
make any
and
all
necessary p lant removals or
rearrangements tn such a
manner as to be clei!t of any
construct ton called for by the
plans of said 1mprovement
and said companies have
agreed
to
make
such
necessary
rearrangemer1fs
Immediately
after
not•ficat•on by satd Village or
the Department of Trans
portatlon
(d) T hat It 1S hereby agreed
that the VIllage shall at tfs
own expense, make all
rearrangements of water
ma~ns,
service lines, fire
hydrants.
valve
'boxes,
san1tary sewers or other
muntcipallv owned ut•l•ttes
and or any appurtenances
thereto, which dO not comply
w1th
the provls tons
of
Dtrective 28 A. whether 1n
stde or outside the corporate
lim Its as may be n ecessl!lry to
conform to the said im
provement
and
sa1d
rearrangements shall be
done at
such t1m e as
requested by the Department
of Transportation Engineer
(e) that the construct1on,
reconstruction.
and or
rearrangement
of
both
pUblicly and privately owned
ut1llttes. referred _to In sub
sect1ons (C) and (d) above,
shall be done In such a
manner as not to interfere
unduly with the operatton of
me contractor constructing
the Improvement and all
backfilling of trenches made
necessary by such utility
rearrangements shall be
performed In accordan ce
wtth the proviSIOns of the
Ohio Department of Trans
portation Constructton and
Matensl Specifications and
snail be subject to approval
by the State
(f) That the lnstallat•on of
all utility tactiJties on the
r:tght of way shall conform
w1th the requirements of the
Federal
Highway
Ad
m inlstratlon
Poltcy arid
Procedure Memorandum 30 •
Uttllty Relocations and
Adlu,tments"
and
the
Department
of
Trans
I)Ortation s rules on Utlltty
Accom modat.on
(g) That satd VIllage
hereby agrees that the satd
Department
of
Trans
portatlon of the State of Oh1o,

'

CERTIFICATE OF COPY
STATE OF OHIO
Vrtlage of Pomeroy ss
County Metgs
1 Jane Walton as c lerk of
the Vtllaoe of Pomeroy, Onto.
do hereby cert1fy th at the
foregotng Is a true and
correct copy of ordtnance
adopted by th.e Jeg ts la t1ve
Authortty of the said Vtllage
on the 21st day of Feb • 1979
that the publlcat ton of such
ord~nance has been made and
cert1f1ed of record accordtng
to law, that no proceedmgs
looktng to a refer-endum upon
such ordtnance have been
taken
and that such or
dmance i!lnd certtft c ate of
publ lc atton thereof are of
record m Ordtnance Record
No so~

IN WITNESS WHEREOF,

I have hereunto subscrtbed
my name and affJXed my
off•ctal seal thts 22nd day of
Feb 1979

(SEAL!
Jantce Walton
Clerk
V•llage ot Pomeroy Oh10
The atoregomg ts accepted
as a basts for proceed •no wtth
the 1mpro\lement herein
descr•bed
For
the
Village
of
Pomeroy Ohio
Attest Jane Walton
Clerk
Clarence Andrews
Contractual Off1cer
Oate22179

(21 27 (31 6, 21c

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
CHRISTINE BEEGLE,
Pl•lntlff,

··-

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF
EDWARO
FINDLING,
Dece•std, et 11,
Defend•nts

~

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VELMA V
NEWELL, OECEASED
C~se

WANT AD

CHARGES

On February, 1979, In the
Me•gs County Probate Court
case No ~2610, Clatr Newell,
8198 Sad te Thomas Road.
Johnstown Ohio, ,.3031, was
appo•nted as EKecutor of the
estate of Velma V Newell,
deceased. late of Route 1,
Reedsvtlle. Oh10 .45772
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge Clerk

!ll 27 !31 6 13 31c
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
HAROLD HUDNELL.
PIa lnttff,
VS

JUDY ANN HUDNELL,
Oefenct1nt

No 1'-193
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

Quh

Street,

on March 27, 1979, and tha 28
days for answer will com
mence on tha t date
In cne of your failure to
answer or otnerwlse resoond
as requ • r~d bv the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure, the fln•l
hear~ng on th1S matter will be
hel d after the exp •rat •on of •2
days after the last day of
publicatiOn of th1s notice or as
soon thereafter as can be
schedu led by the Court
Larry Spencer.
Clerk of Court
of Meigs County

Ohio

(21 20, 27 !31 6 13, 20. 27. 61c

1110
3110

Z.l$

19t

11117 OlOS OHTA Bl:l oulomotiC
A C P S P 8 V fl rru •se con
tr ol AM f M rnd1n &lt;I door
(/(~'} !b33 ntlor Spm

l!$

19'/3 MERCURY MONTEMH Go9d
\o ndltton Almost new fire s
SO 000 m• lc~ ! 1200 Phone
614 6'16 1001

In memory, Cant rl Thanks amct
Obl1..ry 6 cenls per word. 13 011
minimum Cash in advant.-e

l'ne CJS Jeep Mog wheels 1200
w 15 fire s 16 000 m1les 55200
for
furth e r
mformotton
'1'17 3750

Mobikllome salea and Yard Niel
an! at."tYpt.ed ooly with cuh trilh
order 25 c.nl ehli"8e for ads earrylnli Bo1 NIIITiber In Care &lt;JI Tbe SenUnel

1977 CHEVY 4K4 short wheel
hose Mo ~sey Fergu~on corn
planter Cvlhvators 99'1 70fl4

The Publisher .......... the rlghl
1&lt;1 edllor releclony ads deemed objedlonal The Publiltler will nol be
reiPOIIIible for 1'nl:n than me incor·

NOTICE

3 AND 4 RM lurntshed and un
furntshed
opts
Phone
992 504

I

-

TWO BEDROOM k1lchen furn1sl'l
ed opt Coif before 8 om
'192 7288
LARGE HOME 1n
992 2205 before 5

PIANOS

~~

, ' MOBILE HOME Complelely lur
ntshed 3 bedroom Burlmghom
or eo 9CJ2 71. 79

.L-L--...;.="'-';.;;...:;.;;c;.;;..._ _.~.,.~, .

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of Russell P
Pamter who possed awoy Feb

27 1972
Tho you are gone you shall
ne\ler be forgotten
Sadly m1ned by chtldren grand
children
ond
greot
grandchildren

I

FURNISHED APT 110 ' 1 Mulberry
Ave No ch1ldren or pets
depos1l ond rent 1n advance
Reference requtred
Ca ll
A.Cb 1788
TWO 8i:ORROOM tro1ler

only

m

Adults

332•

TWO LOTS out of htgh water
Aqua Vtsto Mobtle Court
Syracuse
S35 per month

'192 2897
ONE BEDROOM tra1 ler Adults on

ly 992 2598

NEW FOUR bedroom opts renled
occordmg to your mcome we
poy water sewage and gor
GUN SHOOT RaCine Gun Club
boge piCkup Far o fom•ly of 6
E11ery Sunday 1 pm Foclory
to 8 people CJ92
choke guns only
62 OR OVER? See n new 1
GUN SHOOT Roctne Vo'11nteer
bedroom opt rent ts based on
F~re Dept Every Saturday 6 30
your 1nco me We pay water
pm ol the1r bu1ldmg In Boshon
sewage and garbage piCkup
Foclor1 choke guns on ly
'1927772

Notices

POMEROY
lANDMARK

SALE PRICES

m

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
!STATE OF HENRY ER·
VINE, DECEASEO
C11se No 22519

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
On Februorv 11th 1979, In

the Me•gs County Probate
Court, Case
No
22579,
Raymond Carpenter, P 0
Box JO Route 2 Flemings
burg, Kentucky, was ap
pointed EKecutor of ttte
estate of Henry Ervtne ,
deceased . late of Racine
Me1gS County, OhiO
Robert E Buck
Probat.e Judge Clerk
(21 27, (31 6 13 3tc

m Pans
Five years ago President
Richard Nu:oo, m a televised
news conference, demed he
had ever approved hush
money or clemency for the
Watergate defendants.

t

-

1917 H t•AMINO,(Iossic SS Auto
trons P S P B AM FM 8·
trodo, stereo Rolly wheels ton
neau cover ~wcellent tondt
tlon 985 4281

TWIN SIZE soltd mople canopy
bed mattress and box spnngs
included 5100 Excellenl cond t
lton 9fi2 7805

21

SONY TRINITRON color por
table
L1ke
'192 7805

new

S~35

SEVERAl USED chotn sows good
condition One fde cob•net
damaged
tn
sh•pment
Pomeroy Home and Auto 600
f Ma1n St Po~eroy
LOWifEV

GENIE

.44

organ

2

keyboards but It tn tope pi oyer

Henry C Traute, the gogetter who Fathered matchbook advertlstng, also
thought up what may be the
world'!! most 1gnored safety
suggestion· "Close Cover
Bcrnre~rlklng "

New, repair,
gutters and
downspouts.
W1ndow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

Trailer Sales

·

2-5-1 mo.

ROGER HYSEU
GARAGE

'
27320 Monlgomery Rd.
Lang•villt, Ohio
614-Uf-4245 Eventngs
2MIIes Eul
of Wilkesville
2-1 4-1 mo,

CAPTAIN EASY
WH ILIO YOU WERE FACIH6
OTHE~ ROOM . l
WAf!' MO'-IITORI'-1 6 '/OUR PUt...SE
BLOOD PRESS URE A'-10
RE.SPIRAT f0 '-1!

AS "1"RANSMITTED BY THESE
TE LE METEI'.I'-16 DEVICES .SHE;
ATTACHE;Dl MAY I ADD•• THERESULTS WERE HIGHLY
&amp;ATI!OFACTORY!

DEATH 1'-1 THE

949-2862, 949-216.0

THEY"VE CO'-IVINCED ME 'YOU'RE
!:)(ACTLY THE SORT OF TOU6H, COOL
CU.STOMER l NEED FOR A CEllTAIN
CIIPI!:!l ON MY AGE'-IDA!

2-7 mo

'

0.

.

Auto&amp; Truck
Repa1r
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

--...

- ...
.

.

Homes for Sale
-Mobile
----------1967 TOTAL EL~CTR I C mob1le
home
furn• shed
3 bedr
washer ond drye r Atr co ndt
11oned I lot 210 ft frontage
$11000 Phone742 2826
~ro 1ne

1955

CltlllltMY
lweoptGIIllol

Insured

~=•llntE

PT

~LEASANT

s 1000 992 n5•
'I x 9 O\'al brown hooi'!Pd rug
99'1 J.t09 after Orm
'

19'1/ GS SOO Suzuk1 Run s good
See M•ke Imboden Wclchlown
Hdl
MmNs&gt;Jtlle
Phone

'1972'177

MEEP

lttll Centii"ry Senko with
Zftft Cennory KIMW·HOW.

SlitclllliiOIIO
Woofltove, 011 P•rn•c•
·~ irtP'-CI fiUII
,,.•••• 142-3111
_ Kim Wftlll, P'rtprlotor_

IGOMORI

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BORN LOSER

IDID\J'T

'!'OUR SIZC:

EWOTT
APPUANCE II

•New Home
•Add-ons
•Remoldmg
992-6011
2 11 1 mo Pd

1970 VINDALE 12 w 60 fotol elec
tnc lwo bedroom Iorge ltp aut
l1vtng room loca ted just off
Rocme Boshon Rood on I acre
Ohto Power TP woter Call
949 2190 Also one ocre of
lond located IU5t off Rocme
Bashon Hood

Pomeray,O

0

J.JTTJ.E ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-MEDICINE MAN
1, . . - - - - - - - - - . · · - - - •

1191mo

Business Services

IF YOU hove o serv1ce to offer
wont to buy o r sell somethtng
ae looktng fo r work
or
whatever
you It get resulls
foster wtlh a Senttnel Wont Ad

BRADFORD
Aucttoneer Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 949 2487
or 9-49 2000 Rac~ne Oh o Cntt
Bradford

•;&gt;"'--=========='"""~
HM M I'T WAS A LONG TIME
AGO, /1MAZ11'1Ci HOW MUCH
O NE CA N LEARN ABOUT
HUW\N NATURf THAT WAY

WILL CARE for the elderly tn our
home Phone 992 73l4
WATER WELL dnll1ng Wdlmm T
Grant 7~2 2879
WAT~R

AND m1sc houhng Col i

'192 5858
GYMNASTICS
BALLET
10u
balance beom floor exerc1ses
10 45 om Saturdays Orch td
Hoom over Sears Glono Buck
Wa llace 99:2 7316

FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
trade r Lorge pond 10 acres or
82 acres 742 2566

J , ocres tn Pomeroy Secluded

• ·-- ---- •

NOW HAULING limestone en
M,ddleport Pomeroy arec Call
for free esttmote 367 7101

BEGINNERS GOLF lessons John
Teoford 6 I A 985 39b 1

Real Estate for Sale

THREE BEDROOM house tn 90 d
locoflon wall to wall carpel• g
ce ntro! 01r cond1tton1ng screen
tn pot to ond front porch fenced
tn yard
W1th tro1ler spoce
Pnce 17 500 Phone 985 3511

--- ----- ----THREE BEDROOM RANCH slyle
home

Solem

St

Rutland

992 5769
SEVEN ROOM house 211• ocres of
lond
garage wttn utd1ty
budd tng 1 mtle above Raetne
Dam 2.47 3123

HOOK· ""IOO"THED
DINOSAUR WI&gt;S
HEADINIS THIS

WA'I?

BATHROOMS AND tl:1tchens
remodeled ceramiC hie plum
bmg carpentry and generol
momtenonce
13 years ex

_

PULLINS EXCAVATtNG Complete
ServiCe Phone 9'12 2&lt;178

GASOLINE ALLEY

Oh, hel lo. dear!
M11 pup seems to
have wandered
1nto !.jour hal l '

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
cancelled? lost your operators
ltcense? PhoneqCJ21 143
C ELECTRICAL Contrac tor serv
tng Ohio Volley regton S1x
days o week 2... hours sen11Ce
Emergency coils Call 881 2952

MOBIL!: HOME r~pa1n Furnaces
electriCal work pipes sowed
plum_l&gt;~l!. 99~ ~85.:..
9:..___

AND

po1nttng

Caii7A2 2328
HOWERY AND

MARTIN Ex
covat•ng
septtc :system!&gt;
dozer backhoe Rt 143 Phone
I (61')_6!9 _?3~1_ _____ _

TWO HOMESITES near Me1gs
Mme No 1 and ruro l woter
OIIOIIOble 742 274¢

Home

3

bedrooms,

llh

baths, flreploce, nice k•l
chen.
full
bosement,
garage, 1 acre &lt;really
nice) 546,900 00
NEW LIST1ti"G -2• acres,
2 year old b1 level home, 3
bedrooms (large master
bedroom), family room
with Wood Burner, 6 mtles

from Racine $39,500 oo
POMEROY 2 story
frame, 3 or 4 bedrooms,
some carpeting,
bath,

basement. storage building
and workshop $8,000 00
M1DDLEPORT-1'h story
frame, duplek, nat gas
heat, part basement, cor
ner lot, need some repajr

513,000 00
HAVE
YOU
CONSIDERED• SELLING
YOUR PROERTY? M~Y
WE SUGGEST THAT YOU
CALL ONE OF THE
QUALIFIED PEOPLE AT
OUR OFFICE
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR
HENRY E CLELAHD JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
"2-2259 992-6191 992-2561

HOLLOW

c:7 ~
L::J
(i:J

----

English ond

WHAT DID Al-L.

~ ~~'I

Western Saddles ond harness
Horses and
pontes
Ruth
Reeves 614 b98 3290

'41

--------~-

water,

for less than replacement.

COUNTRY HOME- Has3
bedrooms. modern bath,
large eat-In kitchen, full
basement, oil furnace, and
garden Not far from town
3.33 ACRES- River front
land with drilled well and
5pace ready for 2 trollers
this

now

or

you'll miss II
PLEASURE Want • II
river front lot or one In the
woods 1 lo s acre• now
availab le Don ' l wa•t and
pay more
ThInk what a S30.000 00 •
HOME WILL COST YOU S
YRS FROM NOW, WITH
10 PCT
INFLATION
THINK AND BUY NOW
CALL '192 3325
Gordon B.
Helen L.
Sue P. Murphy
Re•ltor Auocloln

Housin[l
Headquarff!rs
i

10 O()-Card Sharks 3 15 All In The Fam1ly 8 10 @odge
of N1ght 6, Dating Ga me 13 Mov•e
Dar k
Passage' 17
10 3().-AII Star Secret s 3 15 $20 000 Pyramid t3 Pr ce
IS Ri ght 9,10
11 oo---H1gh Rollers 3 15 Doctors 4 Lowe ll Thomas
•
Remembers 20 Happy Days 6 13
11 3G-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 Fam1ly Feud 613

Restless 8

M tdday Magaz tne 13

12 3Q-Ryan's Hope 6,13

Search for Tomorrow 8 10

Elec Co 33 Mov1e '" Stallion Road 17 Not For
Women Only IS
Oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15 All My Chi ldren 6 13
Young &amp; the Restless 10 , News 9
1 30- As The World Tu rns 9 10
2 DO--Doctors 3 15 One L•fe lo Live 6 13 2 25-News
17
2 3().-Another World 3 15 Guiding L gh t 8 10 I Love
Lu cy 17

C t/11&gt; NU "'

l=t:J~·

U

Reg IJS l' o Olt

fH .....&amp;S

!·'

Lll 1as Yoga &amp; You 20

Cartoon 3
Hollywood Squa res 15
Bewitched 6 Porky Ptg &amp; Fnends 8 Sesame St.,..
2(),33 Balma n 10 Cur ioSi ty Shoppe 13 5.pacl

Giants 17
4 Jo- BewltchedJ Allerschool Specla l 6 13 Gilligan s
Is 8 Pett1coat Junct1on 15 Brady Bunch 10
G1111gan's Is 17
5 oo--- 1 Dream of Jea nn 1e 3 17 Beverly H•llblll• es 9
Gomer Pyle USMC 10 Brady Bunch 15
5 3().-Carol Burnell3 News 6 San fo rd &amp; Son 9 Elec
Co 20 Mary Tyler Moore 10 Battle of lhe
Planets 13 Odd Couple IS Beverly Hillbillies 17,
Doclor Who 33
• 6 oo---News 3,6 8,1013,15 ABC News 6 Andy Grlffllh
17 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 3()-NBC News 315 ABC News 13 Carol Burnell6
CBS News 9,10 My Three Sons 17 Over Easy 2()
7 oo--Cross W1ts 3 New lywed Game 6 13 Parler
News 10~

Wagoner 8

Love Amencan Style IS

Carol Burnell 17 Dick Cavett 20 B • ~ Green
Magazine 33
7 3()-Dolly 3. Malch Game PM 6, Moppet Show 9
The Judge 10 That s Hollywood 13 W1ld Kmgdom
15 Sanford &amp; Son 17. MacNeil Le hrer Reporl 20 33
8 oo---Cher 3,15 E•ghl IS Enough 6 13 Mamed The
F1rst Year 8 10 Great Performan ces 33
terrupt T h1s Week 20
8 3D-Wodehouse Playhouse 20

9 O()-Studs Lon1gan 3 15

Ch~r il e ' s

Day At A T1me 8 10 Movte

Hogan s Heroes i7

Yesterday's Answer
19 Slow
mus
20 Italian
City
22 Candle
23 Used a
harpoon
24 O'Hare
tenant
29 Mushroom

30 Social
group
31 Reg1ster
33 Pharaoh
after
Rameses l
:IIi Chmese
pagoda
37 New Gumea

3 15- News 17 3 35-Movle " Huk

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.,.........,.....,....,.,--,r-:::-""T.":,....., Mo r e on sa f e t y
J.&lt; A

+ J 9 B3

.. 10 7 2
• J 5
t J1086
• Q 743

• Q6
• 95
• J 1095 2
SOUTH

+

K

Q 54

• A3

.AK

Pass

~:ore

Pass

-...L-...JL-...L,,.,..II Pass

North East
Pass
lt
Pass
Pass
4+

,.
6•

or

the hrst hear l lhe s Uit can't

Pass

break 4·0 a nd South makes
h1 s slam wtlh out the o ve r ~

South
2•

4.

lrtck

Ask lbti!XDCPIS

5 NT
Pass

You South , hold

Pass

apostrophes, the len gth and formatwn or the words are all
hmts Each day the (lOde letters are different

Openmg lead • J

• A J 10 54
North opens one spade A

By Oswald Jacoby

Texas reader wants to kn ow

and Alan Sontag

whaL we b1d w1th the SouLh
hand
The correct response IS
two clubs We have a good
hand and want to b1d our
longes t s u1L f1rs t We mtend
to s how s pades later

CRYPTOQUOTES
UWKE

3-0 B

.. A Q 8 7
• 4
t K65

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how to work It :
AxvuLBAAxa
LONGFELLOW

1r

ouL South w11l b e able to
gua rd agamst Eas t s four

both oppone nts foll owe d lo

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North

shaped

dumm}' s seven I h 1s g uards
agamst fmd1 ng a ll four
trumps tn th e West hand
co urse
Wes t shows

ll umps
East gets au unex pected
h tck w 1lh h1s Ja ck, but smce

¥ K 10 B 40

West

ha s played lhe h,md b adl y
1 he 1cason 1s that he can use
a safety pia) to tnsurc h 1s
cont1 " ct d ~ dln st any 4 0

At tnck two he leads a
trump &lt;tnd s t1 c ks In

EAST

WEST

pI a y

trump bre.:~k

t KQ 742

.86

:18 Sword-

17

Tuesda) Mar ch 6

town

37 Enwnerate

USED CARS

Tur

ford Ftles8 Mov te Fate Is The Hunter 10 Mov1e
"St Mart1n s Lane " l7
12 4D-Mannix 6 13 Ko1ak 8 1 oo- Tomorrow 3
15-Mov le Under Ten Flags l7 I 5D- News 13

NORTH
.. A 6

ENA

Angels 6 13 One

The Barbary Coas t

nabout 20
11 3().-Johnny Carson 3.15 Pollee Woman 6 13 Rock

• A 972

WR

We ln

17, Country Mailers 20
9 10- John Curry
33
9 30- JeHersons 8 10
Celebration of Strauss 33
10 DO--Vegas 6,13. Kaz 8,10 News 20
10 3o-Four Freshm en 1n Concert 33 . Footsteps 20

used for the three L's X for the two O's, etc Smgle letters

·,

Lo\le American

Syle 17

GROTTO

One letter s1mply stands for another In th1s sample A ts

..c

Love

of L1fe 8 10. Sesame 20.33
11 55-CBS News 8 House Call 10 New s 17
12 00-Newscenter 3 Password 15 Young &amp; the

LHRRH-

e l ectric,

loading dock and parking.
ol.if of high woter Wi ll sell

Better see

17

9 JQ-Brady Bunch 8 Hogan s Heroes 10 Green Acres
17

''

Is

TlfiS WEEK'S SPECIAl
'

EXPEND

Sounds lt ke 11 s needed whe n a submanne
breaks d own -AN UNDER TOW

Forwa1d
23 M1t1gate
observer's
statiOn
4 Dutch
commune
5 Slavtc
tongue
6 Start over
7 " Adam's r1b"
HClose by
9 !ron Curiam
country
10 Least
corpulent
16 Begm

•

FRONT ST Business
bu•ldlng 1n Pomeroy
Excellent location for a
bus1ness w11n upstairs apt
to rent oul Opportunity 15
knocking
STORAGE - Need a good
building with concrete
floor,

T"Hf ANI~&amp;...$
£)0 Te CE.,.
&amp;uSTEP~

992-3325
216 E Second Sir"'!

9 00-Bob Braun 3 Phtl Donahue 13 Emergency One
6 Hogan 's Heroes 8 Match Game 10 Lucy Show

11 00-News 3 6 8 10 13 15

II Football
yam
mfraction
12 Emend
13 otherwise
14 Folk
songstress
15 Insurgent
• Turner
16 Samt Port
17 Dearie
18 Mask
openmg
20 Fork prong
21 Profit
r-...,--...,----;-.......,_ 22 An Afncan
cap1tal

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

HOOF

An swer

..-~--~--~--~~------------,---~------~~--~--------------------------------,35Brawler

Pets for Sale

Leave It To Beaver 17

Sesame Sl 33
B 3()-Hazel 17

Fernando
3f"Sped

RISING STAR Kennels Boordtng
and groomtng
o il breeds
Chesh•re 367 02CJ2

NEW LISTING F!ve
Points Area 3 bedrooms,
living room, dining.' full y
equipped k•tchen, drapes
and rods Aboul7 yrs old 2
large lots S29,100 00
NEW LISTING - BUildmg
site in Wildwood SubdiVI
s•on, utilities available 2
acres 56,000 DO
NEW LISTING New

Jumbles PURGE WOMEN

-~"' 23 Beat1hed
one
25 Buddhist
cloud mne
26 Horse or
bean
Bakery
goody
2ll Therefore
29 Threat
.;- _ _,_ 32 Lofty
mountain
,_......_---'- '----!:.----- 33 Composer,

or 982 2305

WALLPAPERING

(Answers tomorrow)

r~~~~~~~0~~~~~~~~~~[~1
A RESOUNDING
YES' WOULD BE
MY 6lJESSI

D ID YOU SAY

l:XCAVATING dozer bockhoe
and dttcher Chorles R Hot
f 1eld
Back
Hoe Service
Rutlond Ohto Phone 742 2008

~

I

"( I XI I XXXJ'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Particular
I Shopper
U Czech r1ver
stopper
DOWN
5 Embroidery 1 Make the -

ALLEY 00"'

backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h1re wtll haul
ltll d~rt to sotl limestone and
grovel Co li Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992 7089 mght
phoneJ9J ~535_o~992 5232

pert!n~e- 9_!2_:1~~--

Yesle&lt;day s

Now arrange the ctrcled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

&amp;uew:a'

-

- --- - ---- -- -EXCAVATING dozer loader ond

- ---- -- - - -

REAL ESTATE Loons ~urchose and
refmonce 30 year terms VA
No money down (eltgtble
\'eterens) FHA As low os 3
per cent down ( non veterans )
Ireland Mortgage Co 77 E
State Athens 614 5923051

i l' f&gt; C.ERIAINLY
'THE FI:EVE~SE OF
MAR:R:IA&amp;E!

Jumble Book No 13 containing 110puzzles Is available tor 51 75poatpald
from Jumble c/o thi s newspaper BoK34 Norwood N J 07648 Include your
name add tess zip cod~:~ and make checks payable to Newspaperbooka

LOOT1 EH :;.

SEWING MACHINE Repot rs ser
VICe all makes 992 228tl The
Fobr~c
Shop
Pomeroy
Authortted Stnger Soles ond
Ser&gt;Jtce We shorpen Sc•ssors

wooded area on top of h1ll
Overlooks n&gt;Jer Waler elec
tnc ovatlob le 992 3886

BATON TAP dance morchtng
BEDROOM
ranch
THREE
parade routmes
mo1orette
Carpeted otr condtttoned Pnc
donee tw1rl Glo Ette Bolon
ed
very
reasonab l y
In
Corp
23• Motn St
Gfono
Syrocu:e_
~~
5~4~
•
_
_
_
Buck Wolloce 99:2 731b
HAULING
LIMESTONE grovel ,. MODE THREE bedroom house full
C'Ool mise By ton or hour Carl
basement
ftr eploce
fully
carpeted centra l atr enclosed
9
495
Long b6 3
sun porch located on 6 ' ceres
WILL DO general housework spr
on CR 28 opprox 3 m1fes from
tng cleon~ng work done by I or
Roc me If mterested co ntact
2 persons hourly or do•ly ho11e
lorry Wolfe 9-4'1 283b weekends
reference
Bo okmg now
ond after 5 evenmgs

985 3571 or985 3839

BUT I REALLY AM
DOCTOR • PllACTIC£0
FOR YEARS
AH WELL
, NOW TO DW1DE' THE

A

Sweepers toasters 1rons all
small cpp l1 ances Lawn mower
next to Stele H1ghwoy Garage
on Route J.

Real Estate for Sale
Services Offered

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

Kangaroo 8 10

8 oo-Capt

4 OO-M1ster

••

Prtnt answer here

tall 992-7113
"For F'"" Estimates

Yard Sale

Coli q92 2150

XJ

t
J I I J

•'

.

WV

tnc 12 x 60 742 2068

r

I I

~ICOPY

.
'

220 E Main Street,

nesday Morning 8 Schoolles 10 Three Stooges 17

7 15- Wealher 33 7 3().-Famlly A!falr 10

Speed Racer 17 Cousteau Odyss~y 33
3 3Q-Mash B, Jokers Wil d 10 Fltntstones 17 Over
Easy 20

ISHRAID I
KJ I

075 4424
1919 BAYVUE TRAILER Tolol elec

~

Your HeadquarteiS For
Armstrong Carpeting

SIDING

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1979
5 4()-World at Large 17 5 45-Farm Reporl 13 5 5().PTL Club 13 S 55-Sunrise Semester 10
6 oo---PTL Club i5 700 Club 6,8 6 1().-News 17, 6 25Chrlstopher Closeup 10
6 3().-Romper Room 17. 6 45-Mornlng Report 3
6 5().-Good Morning, West V•rglma 13 6 55-Chuck Wh1te Reports 10 News 13
7 oo---Today 3 15. Good Morning Amema 6, 13 , Wed

3 GO-General Hosp1tal 6 13

"'m-2174

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; AUJM.

Schooner 28 x 8

1965Generof b0)(12 2bclr
1968 Elcono 52x 12 1 bdr
196'1 Buddy 60 )C 12 4 bdr
l970'Sylva bO )("t2 1 bdr
1970Castle Wx12 2bdr
I 973 Arl1ngtbn bOx 12 1 bdr
1973 R•dgewood 70 ~ 14 3 bclr
1973 K1tkwood 50 )C 12 2 bdr
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES

-----. -

Unscramble these fou1 Jurnf:)les
one letter 10 each square to form
to ur ordinary word s

Service

cnllmtltY fire put
• dl mper on
lift

Nell Lehrer Repor l 20,33
8 oo--Cilffhangers 3 15
Happy Days 6 1l CBS
Reports 9 10 Wor ld at War 17 Auslm City L1m1ls
20 Cous!eau Odyssey 33
B 3().-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6 13. 9 oo--Movle Gold of the
Amazon Women' 3,15. Threes Company 6, 13,
Movie 'Coach ot a Boys" High School • 9,10 Movie
' The Philadelphia Analyst" 17, Academy Leaders
20
9 3().-Taxl6.13. 10 oo--Starsky&amp; Hutch6.13 News20
10 3().-Lock Slock &amp; Barrel 20
11 ()()-News 3 6,8 10,13 IS Hogans Heroes 17 L1ke II
Is 20 Book Beat 33
11 3().-Johnny Carson 3 15 Movie Cailforn(a Sp lit '
6 13, Barnaby Jones 9 ABC News 33, Movie' Man
W•lh the ley Eyes' 10, Mov ie "The Eag le &amp; the
Hawk' 17
•
12 4().-Movle ' Nolorlous B. 1 3().-News 13 Movie
"T he Lisbon Slory' 17
3 Jo-News 17 3 50--Movie Bra ve Warrior • l7
';1''jt'jt~ fi;}lt ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~~~ ~
byHennAmoldandBobLee

IWietllfler Of

"• mile off Rl 7 tY·pllll on
51 Rt. 124 towor Rutl•nd,

-

1CJ74 DATSUN TRUCK w1th mot
Auto
chtng blue topper
54 000 AM FM couette Reol
nice $2275 9Q2 7805

I.

Montaum~

nn

Auto Sales

e

7S,OOO walls

bdr

MAI&lt;E YOUR own Easter condy TWO ~APTS for wheelchair po
Its eosy ond fun'
Freettents Renr is based on your 1n
demonstration or workshop
come q«J2 7772
For mformollon call Carousel
Confectionery 992 6342

became Soviet premier after
the death of Joeef Stann
In 1957, the former British
Afncan colonies of the Gold
Coast and Togoland became
the mdependent state of
Ghana.
In 1968, North Vietnamese
gunners shot down a U.S. Air
Force transport plane, killing
4-4 passengers and five crew·
men
Ten years ago The price of
gold soared to a record $47.51

H. L Writesel
Roofing

I

from 1S,OOOto

Tales Rep. For
Sundins
Hammond Organs -,~ :
Tyree Blvd
Roclne, Ohio
Phone 949-2118 even~ng•
alter s p m Weekend•

Pomeroy

SUitable for four construct1or
workers
Coli after b pm
304 882 2506 or 992 5434

friLr

Sundl)'

TRACTOR DRIVEN
PTOALTERNATORS

PETE SIMPSON

noon

, ... . J

[

ORGANS

~URNISHED HOUSE on Moddleporl

Monday
NoononSaturdly
1'uadl

lheday~MpobllcaUan

'

&amp; Famous Name Braud·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Coll992 7479

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
thnl

.

Hammond

after 11

7 JG---Hollywood Squares 31 Let 's Go To The Races 8
Candtd Camera 6, Price IS R1ght 10 Donna Fargo
13 TV Honor Soc 1ety IS Sanford &amp; Son 17 Mac

For Rent

redtrwertton
"""""112-21Stl

.5169
The object of the complaint
1S the obta1mng of a divorce
and the termination of a
marrtage contract between
the part .es and the settlement
of the property rights of the
part1es
You are required to answer
the compla int within 28 days
after the last publication of
this notice. whtch will be
pubf tshed once each week for
SIX successive weeks~ The
last publication will be made

Chl.'j;

ra1e

M•riette.

You are hereby notified
that you have been named a
defendant In a legal action
enf tfled Harold Hudnell,
Platntlff, vs
Judy Ann
Hudne l L Defendant
This
act1on has been assigned
case No 16,893 and ts pend
mg- •n the Court of Common
Pleas of Metgs County , Ohio,

1110

Elch ward over the minimum 15
wonlli II 4 cenls per word per day.
Ads running other than conaecullve
days will be dsarged .11l lhe 1 day

TO Judy Ann Hudnell, whose

.

11177

uo

2t!My•
lda)'l
tdlyfl

.. laif known addrns w•s 141
warner
OhiO

FORD VAN Compl etely
r usto,mued
ln.,ulot('d
~~
cr. llenl shape Con bC' .,r.r.n ol
Sm11h Nel ~on Motors 997 7857

15 Words or Under

IW.y

TUESDAY , MARCH 6, 1979

Business Services

1II 'It&gt; (AMARO l T 305 cu 111 V tl
~ !oi P 8
AM FM tarP 43 7000
1111 qq'J 5CJSfl

No 22:610

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY

.

Auto Sales

ORDtANNCE NO 503
TO Effie lnle Shannon whose
AN ORDINANCE TO FIX
last known address was 316
THE SALARY OF OF
Waverly Road, Willoughby.
FtCERS
Oh iO,
An Ord•nance to amend
For Sale
The: Untc.nown Heirs and
ATTENTION CLUBS• Need a
Ordtnance No 298, to fix the
Devisees of Eelward Findling,
money maker? Make candy COAL LIMESTONE sond gro&gt;Jef
Salry of the Fire Ch1ef of the
deceased
ond sell for Easter Free
V1llage of Pomeroy
ca lc1um chlonde fer tdJZer dog
The Unknown Hetrs and
demonstration 10 par cent d11
Be 1t ordatned by the
food and oil types of salt E•
Oev•sees of Effie F1ndhng
CounCil of the V•llage of
co unt
an suppl 1es
Call
Surface, deceased
celstor Soh Works Inc E Motn
Pomeroy.
State
of
Ohio
all
'192 b3.2
The Unknown Heirs and
St Pomeroy 992 3891
members el ected thereto
Dev1sees of Emma Flndlmg
concurnn;
THE EASTERN H1gh School yeor FROSTY S CB Rad1o Equ1pment
Carman Hedrtcks, deceased,
Sect •on 1 That the Salary
book stotf ts now tokmg orders
Everythtng tn two woy rod1o
The Unknown He~rs and
for the 1979 Easterner For
Devisees of Beatrice Kaufr 1 of the Ftre Ch ief, Village of
antenna
and occessones
Pomerov . State of Oh10 shall
man, deceased ,
more tnfo call Ctndy P1trer at
Phone Portland 8_.3 ll B1 Open
be F1ve Hundred l$500 00)
The Unknown Hetrs and
995 332'1
evemngs unt•l a Sunday 2 11116
dollars per annum , payabl e
Dev1sees of John Ftndltng,
Sem1 Annually
deceased.
INTERMEDIATI;; coke decorating
Sect ton 2 That Ordinance
The Unknown Heirs and
Mornmg class starts March 30
No 298, dated January 12
Devtsees ot Jessie Findltng,
Evenmg class starts March 27
195,.,and
all
other
Ordinances
deceased
Coli 992 6342 or reg1s ter or
or
parts
of
Ordinances
•n
The Unknown Hetrs and
965 •t34
consistent
herewith
be
Oevtsees of Sara F tnd l mg
repea led and thiS Ordinance
lhle. deceased
CAKE
OECORATORS 1 Easter
take effect from and after the
The Unknown Heirs and
Headquarters For
Workshop
learn panoramiC
earliest
pef!od
allowed
by
Devtsees of Frank Fmdllng,
eggs
colorflow
bunntes
and
Hot point and
Law
deceased,
many other Easter 1deos Morch
Section 3 Retroactive to
Ly l e Kaufman l!lddress
General E lectric
January 1, 1979
21
Col i Carousel Contec
unknown
Apphances
t1onery ~2 63•2
Howard Kaufman, address
Passed
2
21
79
unknown
WANTED TO lease cool property
ATTEST Jane Walton
Corrtne Graf, address
APPROVED
For deep mtnmg 50 1nches or
unknown and
Clarence Andrews
htgher
30 ones or over
Dale
Braley
address
JACK W
Mayor
unknown
367 7593
CARSEY
(2) 27 (3) 6 ltC
You are hereby notified
Mgr
that you nave been named as
Phone 992 1111
Help Wanted
defendants In a l egal actton
ent1tled Christine Beegle,
'
DE~ENDABLE
HARDWORKING
Plaintiff, vs The Unknown
sowmtll
help
needed
He1rs of Edward Findling,
MIXEO
CONDITIONED
hoy Very
PUBLIC NOTICE
deceased, et al , Defendants
Mecl-lan•cal obatltty helpful
good
gua l lfy
Oe l1 very
R epossesslon for sa ie 1973
Thts act •on has been assigned
'192 5965
avotlable Phone 992 7201 or
Ford,
Ga
laxle
Mmtmum
bid
Case No
11dOJ, and o~ s
'192 3309
SlOO 00 We reserve the right ATTENTION RN Ai'iD lPN WITH
spendtng tn the Court of
to re1ect any and all bids
Common Pleas of Meigs
PHARMACOLOGY
We now
EVERYTHING
S GOTTA GO
cap tt at Savmgs &amp; Loan Co •
County , Pomeroy, Ohio,
hove opentngs m the 3 11 and
House and lot
furmture
300
West
Second
Street.
•5769
11 7 shtfts lnqutre at Pmecrest
clothes cor al l my household
Pomeroy. Ohto
The ob1ect of the complaint
Core Center A sk tlled nurStng
1tems Drop by 760 Laurel St
Is to QUtet t it le aga1nst the
foc tltty
(3) 6 ttc
555 Jackson Ptke
M1ddleport
real estate and qutet title to
Goll1polts or coli 6~4 _.~6 7112
real estate located In the
ROUND HAY bales for sloe
V1llage of Pomeroy , Countv
WANTED PART hme LPN for doc
8•3 25,.
of Me1gs and State of Ohto,
tors off~ee Coli 992 6633 bet
bOunded and descr•bed as
GOOD MIXED hoy for so le
ween 11 ond_.
c
follows
a•3 ,.32
Today
In
Hlatory
Be •no Lot No 345 on the
REDUCE SAFE and fost wtth
northerly Stde of Third State
By Tbe Associated Preaa
GoBese Tablets and E Vcp water
m satd &gt;Jillage of Pomeroy,
Today
Ill Tuesday, March 6,
Oh10 and bemg the same
CH IP WOOD
Poles
mo•
p•lls Nelson Drug
the 65th day of 1979. There are
property conveyed to E S
d•ometer 10 on largest end
a,egle and Arthur Beegle by
$12 per ton Bundl&amp;d slolJ $10 DUE TO flood we w1ll extend our
300 days left m the year
A 0 Weed and wtfe by deed
sole 1 more week Buy your
per ton Deltveted to Of'uo
Today's
highlight
In
recorded in Volume 117 Page
1979 Gravely now ond save up
Polloi Co
Rt 2 Pomeroy
123 of the Records of Deeds of
hi8t.ory·
to $600 $100 down holds til
9'12 2689
Me1os County Ohio
Apnl 15th Gro11ely Troctor
On thlll date In 1836, the
The prayer Is to quiet t11le
OLD FURNITURE tea bo~•• bross
Soles and Servtce 204 Condor
and foreclose any Interest
Alamo In San Antonio, Texas,
beds •ron beds desks &amp;tc
St ~ Pomeroy CJ92 2q75
owned or alleged to be owned
fell to a MeXIcan force after a
complete households Wnte
by you and for costs
INTERNATIONAL Scout ·h4
13-day siege Davy Crockett 9 " M 0 Mtller Rt ~ Pomeroy or 19b3
You are requ1red to answer
E~cellent cond1flon
No rust
coll992 7760
the comp111nt wtthin 28 days
and the other defenders were
'1927857
after the last pub l teat•on of
killed.
OLD COINS pocket watches
this notice which Will be
REDI HAUL TRI~IE duty (llalbed
doss nngs weddmg bonds
published once each week for
On this date:
gra1n
cattle) Gooseneck
dtomond:s Gold or :silver Call
StX success1ve weeks The
In 1475, Rena1Sa811ce artl.st
tro1len Montgomery Tro tter
last publicaJion wtll be made
Roger Wamsley 1•2 2331
Soles
Langsville
Ohio
Michelangelo was born m
on Aprtl 3 1979, and the 28
WANT
TO
buy
old
•s
and
78
b69
~2,.5
eventngs
Near
days tor answer will com
Caprese, Italy
phonograph
records
Coli
Wtlkesvllle Ohto
mence on that date
In 1857, the U.S. Supreme
In case of your failure to
6370 or Contact Morhn Fur
BEAUTY SHOP Equtpment dryers
answer or otherwise respond
Court ruled that a slave, Dred
ntlure
hydroultc cha tn bowls color
as reQuired by the Oh10 Rutes
Scott,
could
not
sue
for
hl.!l
WANTED TO buy old 1ewelry
mochme supplies h01r spray
of Civil Procedure, tudgment
Coli 992 52b2 or wnte Kay
freedom In a federal court.
~Y default wilt be rendered
svstems Ruth s Beauty Shop
agamst you for the relief
Cecil 87 S 2nd Middleport
Mason WV JO• 773 5b86
In
1945,
during
World
War
demanded •n the complaint
OH
II, the German city of
1CJ70 INURNATIONAl Trovall
CASH
FOR 1unk cars 24 hour
$350 Phone qas 3373
Larry Spencer
Cologne fell to the U.S First
Clerk Of Court
wrecker
ser111Ce
Frye s
Army
15
CCJ FT Gibson refngerotor ,
Meigs County
Ru tland OH 70 2081
hcellent condlt1on 742 1667
Common Pleas Court
In 1953, Georgi Malenkov

0

TELEt'ISION
VIEWING
'

•

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

(21 27, (316 13 20 27 &lt;•I 3, 6tc

DICK TRACY

For--Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Passed 2 21 1979
Attest Jane Walton
Clarence Andrews

1 25 Inches Total tength 1 02

SE C't• N , , '"~
Tha t t;:' S~ ::~uO 00 Is hereby
appropr1ared for the 1m
provement of the highway as
descr~bed herein above

7- The Da1ly Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, March 6, 1979

tNEWSPAPEKFNTFHPHISF.ASSN J

SGDE

1974

HK

98 LS. S~N
'2595

JUST A MINUTE,
MRS. WRIGHT,
I'LL HELP YOU

"

EW

EW

DAKKWJK
UHJL

W J A 'K

WFJ

DAVTJ
P G KH •

JAKK
SNVTDAK
S.
SWDEWJ
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE FUTURE HAS A HABIT OF
SUDDENLY AND DRAMATICALLY BECOMING THE
PRESENT -ROGER BABSON

'-:":"i.Rl~

© 1979 1\ini Features Syndicate, Inc

1975

(Do you have a ques110n for
the experts? Wnte Ask the
Experts care of fh1s newsoa
per lndrvrdual qu eS tiOns wr/1

be answered '' accomp;,med
by stamped sel f addtessed
envelopes The most nterest ~
mg qu eS IIO!l"&gt; Will be used m
/h1s column and will recetve
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN )

R~RNEY

IMPAlA COUPE

TE:LL SNUFFY TO

'2395

NO, M~AM ... I CAN'T
SPELL INSCRUiABLE

-Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll Like Our QIHihly
Wey af Doing Buslneu
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings '1116:10
_ TIISp m 5•1.

1

~OU

SAID, I~ I TOOK
PA~ IN THE SPELLING
BEE, ALL I'D lolAVE iO
DO IS 5Pm WORDS ...

~OU DIDN'T SA'.{

r HAD

TO 5PELL 'EM R16HT!

COME OVER AN'
SEE M'-1 NEW
LITTER OF iUPPIES,
LOWEE:ZV

.
'"

." '
'

.·
"
-,

"'
'"
''

I'M AFEERED
HE CAN'T
MF\Kt: I I

TODAY,
WILFERD

SHUX ··TELL HIM
TO FEEL FREE
TO DRAP OVER
ENNV tiME

HE WON'T BE

FEELIN' FREE
FER TWO DA'/S
'/ET, WI LFERD

�·,

8 - Th~ Daily

\

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday. March 6, 1979

wm tr~sfer funds

~---Ai_:~-a-Dea~h~-~

from Gallia to Meigs
Ga llia Co unty Auditor
Dorothy Condee and Paul D.
Niday, President of the Gallia
Co unt y Board of Commissioners, received letters
this morning fr om Maxine S.
· Plumm er,
Executive
Director of the Community
Mental Health and Mental
Retardat ion 648 board .
;tating that the board int ends
to transfer its funds from
Gallia to Meigs. Count y.
The body of the letter
ceads :
"The Conununity Mental
Health and Mental Retardation "648" Board, over the
past eig ht years, ha s
designated Gallia County
Auditor and Gallia County
Treas urer as its auditor and
fiscal officer and as custodian

for its Board per Section
340.10 of the Ohio Revised
Code .
"Gallia County has had the
benefit in the form of inactive
funds, the use of the Board's
funds . The Board now feel s
that the political subdivision
of Meigs County be allowed to
benefit from the use of these
funds . The Board would like
to transfer these funds im·

Racine child

htirt Monday
Nine-year old Kevin Spaun,
Racine, was taken to Holzer
Medical Center M&amp;nday
afternoon after being injured
when he ran into th e side of a
car on East Main St. in
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Police said a car

driven by Randall Moore, 23,
Syracuse, was approa ching

th e traffic light near the
Sears Store when Spaun ran
from between two parked
cars into the side of the Moore
vehicle.
No citation was issued after
two
witnesses
\\'ere
questioned. Kevin is the son

of Mr'. and Mrs. Charles
Spaun of Racine.

..

mediately after the February

books have been balanced
with our Hoa rd. The Board's
Fiscal Officer will be working
with you in order to make the
transfer to the Meigs County ·
Auditor's office." .

aftern oon

at

Vet e rans

Memorial Hospital.
Mr . Hrown becam e ill
Monday while driving on
Ha iley Run Rd. The Middleport Emergency Squad
tra m;ported Brown. a former

tADIES NIGHT
The Tri-state Section of the
Am erican
Institut e of
Chemical Engin ee rs wi ll
have l.adies Night at its
regular March meeting on
Thursday, March 15 at
Young's

Restaurant

in

Huntington, W. Va . The social
hour will begin at 6:30 p.m.
with dinner at 7: 15 p.m.
· The speaker for the evening
will be Dr. Eric Ja mes,
Ass oci a te

Pro fessor

of

Bioch emistr y
at
the
University of Kentucky . His
topic will be "Genes a'nd
Cance r ". Reservations may

be made with Hichard Krock
of Ashland Oil. Inc. phone
)6061 329&lt;!730.

member of the emergency
unit and fire department, to
the hospital.
He was born July 8, 1944 in
Charleston. W. Va. Brown is
s urvived

by

his

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, March 5
Mrs. Dale Adkins and son,
Pennie Br eakiron, Sand ra
Buckley, Lura Burnette. Mrs.
Victor Counts and son, Ada
Crisp, David Eblin, Alma

wife ,

Charlotta A. Brown, his
parents, Samuel and Janet
Hodge Brown of Charleston ,
W.- -Va ., a son. Jeff and
daughter, J odi, both of Rt. 1,
Middleport; four step-sons,
Steve . Jeff , and Greg
Peckham, all of Middleport,
and Timothy Wamsley of
Middleport; two sisters,
·Betty Teaford . Charleston,
and Laura May Bailesy,
Dayton; two brother ,s Sam
arid Ri ckie, · both of
Charleston; an aunt, Mrs.
Mary Moles, Mason, who
reared Mr. Brown.

,

He graduated from Kyger
Creek· High School and was
employed as an automobile
salesman. He was a mem her

MAHY LIPPINCOTT
Mary ·Arnold Lippincott, a
native of Ponicroy. died
Monday in ~·rcdcrick, Md.
She was born in Pomeroy,
daughter of the late John
Arnold and Helen Koehler
Arnold.
· She married Edwin Kirk
Lippincott in Pomeroy. He
preceded her in death .
One son suFVives, Harry A.
Lippincott, Frederick , Md.
One grandda ughter, Nora
Lippincott . of Maryland,
survives.
One brother . and four
sisters survive: Alfred Ar·
nold, Gallipolis ; Dr. Edna
Gettles, Gallipolis; Mrs. M.
T. !Hortense ) Epling, Sr.,
Gallipolis, and Zelda Healy,
Walnut Creek, Calif: One
brother, John Be,rnard
preceded her in death.
She was a 50-year member
of the Pomeroy Eastern Star.
Funeral services will be
held at the Warehime
Funeral Home, Gallipolis, on
Thursday, at 10 a.m. with
Rev . Frank Hayes officiating . Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery in
Pomeroy.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Wednesday
from 4 until 8 p.m.
Pallbearers will be Miles T.
Epling, Jo~n A. Epling, Dean
Epling, Clare. Gettles. Dick
Roach and Charles Roach .

(USPS 145-960)

River .
As

a

precautionary

meas ure, Pomeroy village

workers removed all of the
heads from parking meters
·running along the river side
of the lot.
The river stood at 40.4 feet.
Last week's flood reached
51.4 feet.

The formula

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturd~y :
Showers or
thunderstor ms possible

Thursday. Showers coding
Friday and fair Saturday.
lligh in the mid 40s to mid
50s Thursday and in the
mid 50s to mid 60s Friday
and Saturday. Low In the
mid 30s to mid 40s.

man said .

Walker suffered the injury
in the Cavaliers' 106-102
Na tional Basketball
Association loss to the Portland Trail Blazers on Sunday.
He will not play in Wedneday's game against the
Golden State Warriors or in
San Diego on Saturday, the
spokesman said.
The injured guard was
returning to Cleveland for
treatment , the Cavliers said .

•

IS •••

by stork shower recently

STREET COLLAPSED -Motorists who parked their
cars on Pomeroy's Laurel St.' over the weekend will
· apparently have to leave them on the street for a while. A

NEW YORK (AP) - Industry sources said today
that Algeria- one of OPEC's
smallest members - is
threatening a 25 percent
boost in oil prices. The
increase would be the largest
of all the hikes announced so
far by .members of the oil
cartel.
Libya said meanwhile that
it was doubling - from 5
percent to 10 percent - the
size of the increase it
announced last week, and
Venezuela increased prices
on
several
petroleum
products .it exports to the
United States.
There was no immediate
indication as to what 5Uch in-

lllhllf'Oia'
·ottJO

••
Member F. D. I. C.
Deposits Insurance to $40,000.

The Salem Community
C.'hurch, a very active church
in this area, voted to donate
th~ Sunday School collection
of$250tolhe Heart Fund . The·
·presentation to be made by
Mrs. Lucy Johnson in
memory of her husband,
Home~hnson, who until his
death a number of years ago,
had been a life long mem~er
of the Salem Community
Church.
Mr s . . Sandra Fowler' s
l'oung Adult Class is span· '
so ring • a skati ng party on·-March 22 at the New Haven
Ska ting Rink .. All the
members of the church arc
invited to attend.

creases - should they materialize - might mean to
American serv ice station
prices.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
had ocheduled total 1979 price
hikes in its base price for oil
of 14.5 percent. But several
nations

have

taken

advantage of the supply
squeeze caused by the
Iranian revolution to impose
additional increases. Most of
the rises have been in the
neighborhood of 9 percent.
Theoil price increases and
the cutback in supply already
have caused problems for
American consumers. The
price of gasoline has gone up

Book fair planned at
Riverview Elementary
The Riverview Elementary , East em Local School
District in Reedsville will
sponsor a student book fair
from March 8 to 12. Students
will be able to browse and
purchase books. The book
fair will be open at the PTO
meeting on March 12 at 7:30.
Books will be on display in the
gymnasium.
The. book fair committee
invites aU students, parents
and visitors to attend the fair .
Th e fair will encourage
student interest in reading
and in building home
libraries, and will also

Partly cloudy tonight and
Wednesday. Low in mid 30s.
High Wednesday in upper 40s.
Chance of precipitation 10
percent tonight and Wednesday.

contribute to a worthwhile
project . All profits will be
used for the Hiverview school
library.
Melody Black, elementary
libraria n, is serving as book
£air chairman. The com·

mittec includes Marlene
Putnum, Jenny Newlun, and
Margaret Ca uthorne .
The book fair display will
include attractive new books
from many publishers in all
popular pric e ran ges: wonderful books to r ea d or to
give as gifts. All reading
interests will be represented,.
including cla ssics: fiction,
bi og rap hi es, adventure
storie s, science, nature ,
crafts,
mystery
and
reference books. The committee is working with
Educational Reading Se rvice, a professional book fair
company, to furnish an in·
dividual selection of books for
th e fair.

convenience

to

major

markets.
The Algerians reportedly
want to push the price up to
about $18.50 a barrel. Sources
said Algeria also wants to cut
production by 10 percent to 15
percent.
Iran resumed exports on
Monday, shipping its first
::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of
Education will be held at
7:30 p.m. today at Meigs
Junior High. Reports from
c ngin e~rs in Pomeroy to
study the hill slip behind
Pomeroy Elementary
School will be presented.

be shutoff

in Racine
Racine residents must
practice an extension water
conservation
program
Wednesday.
The Ohio Power Company
will be doing repair work in
the community Wednesday,
· therefore , shutting off
electricity to the water
pumps for most of the day.
Urrless conservation is
practiced, the storage tank
will go dry, leaving the
oommunity without water.

'

''
\

'

Anll•bl• In Following Slnl
Including Fringe :

"FaDure on the part of
the Southern Local Scbool
Board to accept a binding
,arbitration award has
forced teachers from their .
classrooms.
"Parents are advised
that the regular teaching
staff will not be In class·
rooms today and that
students should be kept
home.
"This is a clear cut case of
a school board failing to live
up to its 0\\11 contract with
teachers. The negotiated
increase which was to have
taken place September 1, 1978
Is fundable. Teachers, the
arbitrator and the school
board realized that at the
hearing last month.
"With the integrity of the
contrat'l at stake, teachers
have no alternative, but to
withhold professional ser,vices until agreement is
reached and the contract is
respected.
1,100 AFFECTED
Some 1,100 students in the
Southern Local School
District are affected by the
strike. While schools were
"open," actuaUy according to
reports, there were few
students in the six buildings
of the district.
Southern Supt. Bob Ord
said that there were students
in every building. However,
one source reported the high
school had IS students in the
building this morning, while
·an elementary building of the
district had only four .
students on hand.
Baer said that non-certified

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•

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has the look of textured fabric and the easy-care of vinyl, It even· has custom
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beautiful solid decorator colors: Avocado, Blue, Citron, Gold, Gray, Lime, Orange,
Pink, Red, Ecru, White. Machine \l'ashable and · Rever needs ironing.

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY
'

The Southern Local Board,
according to Westfall,
renewed the contract in
August, 1978, but refused to
implement the index.
The issue went to binding
arbitration with ·a hearing
being held on Feb. 12 at the
city building in Athens.
Supt. Bob Ord,' board
members ·and Attorney
Robert Baker , Columbus,
along with members of the
Ohio Education Association
attended.
WestfaU r~ports that arbitrator John Protning
rendered a declsioq that the
board must impletnent the
1.80 index retro~ctiv e' to
September, 1978.
~- Dlstrlct .. toa&lt;:loers" met '
Tuesday evenJ4k•and voted to
strike, If the bOard did not
grant index last night. The
beard did not do so thus the
strille was announced by
Baer. ·
ISSUES STATEMENT
In a statement to the
Sentinel, he said :

..

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

54" • 54" Square
54" x 72" Oblong
62" • 15" Oblong
62" x IS" Oval
62" x 104" Oblong
62" x 104" Oval
62" • 126" Oblong
54" lltaunlla
12" lll:ounda

increases.

Water will

with .
VELVET-TOUCH
Finish

•

Two years ago, teachers
entered into a master con·
tract caUing for the 1.60 index
when
money
became
available in the district,
WestfaU said.
He insists that due to additional state aid and the fact .
that a levy was passed in the
· district, the board now has
funds available to grant pay

load of oil since December.
But Energy Secretary
since Jan. 1 and new
gove rnmen t pricing James R. Schlesinger said In
regulations are expected to Washington today that it is
add 10 cents at the pump over "quite possible" that other
the next two years. Prices for OPEC members "will cut
regular, leaded gasoline at back production gradually as
full-service stations now Iran comes back on stream."
average about 70 cents a
Iran is selling its oil at auc·
gallon although the price lion, with bidding starting at
varies widely with location. $18 a barrel. And the Los
A federal judge has been Angeles Times said today
asked to halt implementation · that several major U.S. oil
of the new rules until the . companies have decided to
government
determines boycott this week's auction
whether
they
would because it would force price
encourage motorists to use boosts. The newspaper
an
unnamed
cheaper, leaded gasoline quoted
which
could
increase spokesman for Standard Oil
of California as saying: "We
pollution.
Industry sources, who believe tbese prices are exasked not to be identified by cessive." It said Gulf,
name, said that Algeria Atlanti« Richfield and other
which accounts for abeut 3 oil companies which it did not
had
similar
percent of total OPEC oil identify
production - wants to raise reactions. Ashland Oil, which
its price on April I. Algeria last week purchased some
now gets about $14.80 a barrel Iranian crude, said, however,
for its oil, higher than the that · it · would , buy oil at
OPEC base price of $13.35 auction.
because of the quality of
Algerian crude and ·its
by about 2 cents a gallon

~eacocl:::_

"THE FRIENDLY BANK"
Walk -Up Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings, S to 7 p .m.

section of the street has collapsed onto nearby Mulberry
Ave., making it impossible to move vehicles from the
street. Meantime, it's one-way traffic on Mulberry Ave.,
where the stones and road fell from Laurel.

PRINTED VINYL

Vonate to Heart fund ·

Fifty-six teachers in the Southern Local
School District went on strike early today.
The strike was announced by Bill Baer,
president of the Sputhern Local Teachers
Association. It followed a meeting of the Southern
Local Board of Education Tuesday night in which
the board .failed to impleme?t ·a 1.80 index salary
increase for instructors. ' · · ,.,, '
Jeff Westfall, Athens OEA representative,
had announced earlier Tuesday that teachers
. would vote whether or not to strike contingent on
what ac~ion was taken by the board.

Algeria threatens price.hike

prizes won by several.
Refreshments were served.

A loan from Citizens National Bank.
That's how I've bought my car, my
boat and fixed up my house. Now
I've got this idea for a wonderful
cure. I'm working on · it nights and
Citizens National Bank's lending me
the money for it, too. How much
water, George?

·MIDDLEpORT-POMEROY, OHIO

NO. 227

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1979

15 CENTS

causes walkout

PT. PLEASANT - Mrs.
Robert Roush, the former
Marie Lambert, was honored
with a stork shower at Krodel
Park on February 16, with
Janie Roush, Ethel Burris
and Barbara Bordman, all of
1-'t. Pleasa nt as hostesses.
Games were played and
flttending were Mari e
Edwards, Barbara Mallette,
Debbie Roush, Barbara
McDa ni el, Mayme Noble,
Avancllc AI shire, Mary
Lieving , Beverly Shultz, Mrs.
, Don Gillespie and Oawri,
Belinda Clark, Jewell Bordman , Nora Lewis, Guyla
Roush, Cookie Lanier, Eulah
Bellamy , Kenna Adkins,
Addie Baker, Peggy Jones,
Donn a Hannon, Jerrie Beam
and Dust y, Wanda Belcher
and the honoree's mother,
Mrs. Mary Jo Lambert, and
"hostes,:es,, Janice Roush and
Barbara Bordman.
Several sent gifts.

VOL NO. XXIX

enttne

Salary dispute

Weather

Mrs. Roush honored

at y

•

Southern teachers on strike today

of Siloam Lodge 456 F&amp;AM of
Cheshire.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Eaelma nn , Dennis F'oreman, Home with Rev. Dana
Cynthia Fulkerson , Annte Ramsey officiating. Burial
Gee, Lester Hawk, Sheila will be in Gravel Hill
Le nham , Dorothy Layne, Cemetery. Masonic services ::::;.;.;:;.:.:=:·:·:·:·:·::;:;.;:;:;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;.
George Loga,n , Melani e · will be held at 7:30 p.m .
APPEAL MADE
McCa rtney, Bertha Snyder, Wednesday at the funeral
An appeal for clothes and
Bertha Tedesco, .Jean Ten- home.
household items has been
nant , J ames Wildman,
Vis itation will be held at the nadc for the Avis Lawson
Hebecca Woolum.
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
family. Rt. I, Bidwell. The
Births, March 5
p.m . Wednesday.
family of five was Jell
Mr . and Mrs. Marvin
homeless following a
Cutlip, son. Jackson.
F'riday morning tire. The
Mr. and Mrs . Ro bert
&lt;·hildren are 11, 17 and 19
Campbell. son, Jackson.
WOMAN FINED
J'l'ars
of age.
Mr. and Mrs . William
On Monda y, Betty Stewart,
Taylor, daughter, Gallipolis. operator of Betty'S Carry-out,
appeared in Meigs County
Court before Judge Charles
Knight on charges of sale of
Thought for today : The alcohol to a minor. She was
ornament of a house is the fined $200 and costs.
'OUT OF ACTION
friend s who frequent it
Mrs. Stewart was arrested
RICHFIELD, Ohio I API Ralph Waldo Emerson .
by juvenile officer Carl R. A badly sprained ankle will
Hysell on Feb. 21 when he put. Cleveland · Cavaliers
apprehended three youths guard Foots Walker out of
with possession of beer action at least through the
leaving the carryout.
weekend, a Cavaliers spokes-.

No flooding expected
Although the Ohio River
was again rising this morning, no serious flooding is
expected.
The river was rising at the
rate of two tenths of a foot an
hour and had moved into the
dip between th e two parking
· lot s running along the .Ohio

JERRY E. lliiOWN
Jerry E. Brown. 34, Beech
St . Middleport , died Monday

•

e

•

•I

J

employes including bus
drivers, cooks and custodians
would honor the strike and
would not cross picket lines,
set tip at each of the
buildings.
ON STRIKE - Teachers of Southern Local School District went on strike Wednesday
Buses did not run and these
morning. Pictured are. some of the teachers at Syracuse Element.ary . Thi s is one of six
employes did not report for
schools in the district where picketing began Wednesday morning.
work today.
·
Baer at 11 a .m. today
.. ...·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.•.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.. ·.·.·.········ •'•
issued a second statement in
.·.·,·.·,·,·.·,·.·,·.. ·.·•······•···········•·················•·
reference to the strike.
It reads, "Only lour regular
EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday:
teachers reported for work
Fair rriday and showers
today in the Southern Local
possible Salurday and
School District. With no buses
running, student attendance
Sunda y. Near sea sonal
t_rmpnatures li'riday. then
is less than five percent. For
warming Sa turda y and
all intent and purposes,
Sunday. High in the 40s
education has come to a halt
Friday and risin g into tlw
in Southern Local and the
By Bob Hoetlich
Th ey stated th at th e fir;t
50s
and lo" 60s by Sunday.
association has called for
Students
attending step taken will_ be the inLow in the 20s ea rly Friday
schools to be offlciaUy closed. . Pomeroy Elementary School stallation of a French drain
and warming to the 40s
"Teachers refused to face no immediate danger ncar the shaft of an abanSaturday and Sunday.
report for work this morning from a hill slippage problem doned mine behind th e
following school board behind the school.
school. This will dry out the
refusal last night to accept a
This was the professional entire hillside and then action
binding arbitration award dpinion of several engine ers will be taken to in;tall a more Student nurses
calling for a new salary attending a special meetin g permanent type drain so that
schedule index. The strike of the Meigs Local School the mine will be dramed save infant boy
marks the first in Ohio where · District Board of Education consistently so water will not
a school beard has refused to Tuesday night at the junior build up.
Ct!FTON - Two second
adopt a binding arbitration high school In Middleport.
It is reported that drain tile year student nurses from
award.
Some parents had ex- was installed in the mine
"The award was made pressed concern for the when it was sealed a number Ohio State University have
been credited with saving the
following a special hearing in safety of their children at- of yea rs ago.
life
of a six-month-o ld baby.
Athens last month before tending the school after it was
However, in the passage of
Qui
ck at'lion by Cheryl
John E. Drotnlng, arbitrator recently reported that a slip time th e til e has disinRobinson
·and her friend ,
with the American Ar - is taking place in the hill tegrated and weeds have
Patty,
also
a second year
bitration Assn. The award behind the school.
grown up in the tile, cutting nursin g student, saved the
called for implementation of
The Office of Surface off most of the drainage, thus
Article 17 of the Teachers' Mining , Indianapolis, Ind., allowing the mine water to life of Marvin Edwards, Jr.,
Master Agreement which has been granted $50,000 for build up. As a result, flow son of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
provides for a new 1.60 salary corrective action. Several thr ough th e hill side ha s Edwards, Sr.
The fUture nurses were
index to be paid retroactive to federal and state engineers caused th e slip problem.
vis
iting
Mrs.
Evelyn
September, 1978.
have been in Pomeroy this
Meeting with the board and Nicholson , Cheryl's grand"An index is a salary week to view and study the some 15 concerned parents
mother at Clifton , wh en the
schedule structure designed site.
were James E. Arthur, a neighbor called seeking help
to attract and keep exParental fears
were project officer fo r th e Office
perienced teachers in a calmed at last night' s of Surfa ce Mining assigned to . when the chil d st opped
schoqj · district. The school meeting when the engineers the Pomeroy problem: David breathing.
Miss Hobinson gave mouth
board has challenged the stated there is no' immediate Bo"man, associated with the
to
mouth resuscitation and
legali!Y of binding arbitration danger,
firm of Benedict. Bowman, with th e hel p of her friend ,
despite a 1975 Ohio Supreme
Engineers stressed that no Craig and Moos, Columbus,
Court
ruling
(Dayton work would be done on the hill which will handle the first th e child started breathing
Teachers Assn. vs. Dayton while students are in session. phase correction at the aga in . He was taken t o
Board of Education) finding Work will be done after the school ; Bob Baker and John Pleasant Valley Hospital by
such a provision not only dismissal of classes in the Hyland, Ohio Department of the Mason Emergency squ ad ·
and remain s hos pit a li zed
legal but desirable for school daytime or on weekends.
1Continued on page 141
there.
districts.
The court said, in part ...
" A beard of education has
been"' granted
board
discretionary powers in its
duel role of' managers of
schools and employers of
teachers.
"According to Drotning,
'The answer is clear - the
conditions of Article 17 have
been met and the 1.80 index
should be implemented as of
&amp;eptember 1978. Both the
~ssoci!ltion and school board
·submitted evidence to substantiate that funds were
avaUable 'lo meet the new
'
index.
"What we have is a school
beard refusing to live up to its
own contract with teachers.
More than the salary
schedule is at stake; the yery
contract, itself, is In
jeopardy."
The , Southern Board of
Education had no statement
at all to issue this mol'lling.
However, Supt. Ord indicated
that a statement would
probably be forthcoming
later. He also advised that
additional 'beard meetings
will probably be set.

GLASSES FOUND
A pair of men's eyeglasses,
heavy shell frames In a
·sear's brown leather case has
SQUAD RUNS
been found on the streets of
Pomeroy. The owner can pick " The Middleport ER squad
up the glasses at the Pomeroy· was called TUesday ~t 12:48
Police Oe(artment in Village p.m. to the Guigmg Hand
HaU.
. School. Cheshire, but no
trea\ment. was necessary.
At 3:47 p.m. they transported Brownie Stewart to
CREST EXPECTED
the office of Dr. Conde.
The Ohio River this mor·
At 12:42 a.m. today John
ping in Pomeroy had reached Taylo•, 782 .South §,econd
a level of 43.2 feet . A crest of Street, was dead on arrival of
'43.5 -is expected today.
the squad.

KICKOFF FOR CANCER CRUSADE- The kickoff meeting for the annual Cancer
Crusade of the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society was held TUesday night at the
River Boat Room of lhe Mei gs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan. Guest
speaker was John Ely, vice president of the Ohio Division of the American Cancer Society.
The chairmen of the crusade are Pat and Mary O'Brien . The crusade will be held April 1
through April15. The meeting TUesday night was well attended . Pictured 1-r are , Pat and
Mary O'Brien and Ely.

Hill problem

Ely addresses cancer

not dangerous

kickoff drive session
John Ely , vice president of
the Ohio Division of the
American Ca nc e r Soc i ~ty
( J\CS) was guest sp eaker at a
Canc er Cru 5arl e Kickoff

Meeting Tucsd")' ni ght in the
River Boat Hoom of the
Meigs Branch of th e Athens
Co uhty Savings and Loan.
Ely gave a ve r y en t hu s ia st ic and in s piring
message. He wa s introduced

by Mary O'Brien who noted
that Ely has been with the
ACS 23 years and with the
Ohio Division 19 years.
Ely told the group that the
total amount given per year
in philanthropy a c ross the
country is 42 .~ billion dollars
half of which goes to churches.
C~nce r' s share of that
amount is 126 million doll ars

Ely said.

"

Ca ncerAssembly will be held
at · Ohio State University ·

organizatiori's

t hat we re· cxa mine our
priorities
and
give

Union in Colum bus . One

hundred and fift y cured
is estimated that the average Cancer patien ts from all over
spending for whiskey and Oh io wjll be honored.
toba cco is $185 per capital
Ely .commented that the
Ely said.
service program of the ACS
"We spent $26 per capita on rea t·hcs out as no other
the Lottery wh ere our service program. " It's the
chances are 500 to 1 of win- hand of huA1an need reaching
ning a little chan ge.
to the human heart ," Ely
ln Meigs County last year , said.
we gave 36 cents per capita
Ely urged volunteers to
when the chances are four to stay committed to the Cancer
one that we are going to get Society.
cancer and six to one that
Mary O'B rien announced
we're going to die from it," that this year's go al is $8 ,625
Ely commented.
as compared to last year 's·"·
Ely
spoke
of
th e total of $7,810. She stressed
s piritu a ll y

oriented society. "Cast your
bread on the water and it
comes back double," Ely
observed.

On March 25 the Cured

generously now to help
prev ent unnecessary sU f·
fering from ca ncer in the
future.

Grass, forest fire season
arrives ·in Meigs County
Spring foresi fir e season is
occurs
during the month of Marcil.
April, and May, s ince the
here . The sea son

I

the following Forest Fire
green~ th e
winds are gusty, and th e, Wardens in Melgs county:
ground is usually dry .
BEDFORD TOWN SH IP vegetation is not

An aver age of 35 grass or

(orest fires occur in Meigs
County during spring forest
season,

fire

according to

Donald R. Braun, forest
manag er . Most fir es ar e
caused by careless debris
burning such as trash barrel!
fires. ground trash fires ,
dump fire s, and brush pil e
fires.

From March I thru May 31,
persons burning openly
outside a city limit much
- obtain a Division of Forestry
burning permit as required
by law.
The burning permit is
issued free to the public and
is

required

to

Bu r son's
Gu lf
Burlingham.

Stati on ,

CHEST ER TOWNSHIP Ri d enour Sup pl y, Ch es ter
and Ralph Trus sel l , Bashan .

COLUMB IA TOWNSHIP Reed Jef fer s, Route 2, Alba ny
and Jean Swett, Route 3,
Albany
LE E TOWNSH I P - Dale
Scott , Albany .
LE BA NON TOWN SHI P Proff i It s Grocery Store.
Port !and .
LETART TO~Nb H IP Randall Robert s, Le t art
Falls .
OLI VE TOWNSH I P Forked Ru n State Park ,
Reed svi lle and Shade River

Sta te Fores t, Joppa .
ORA NGE TOWN SH I P Doro th y

Robinson,

Alfred :

Ro ber t Tripp , CR 46, SR 7;
cr eat e . Nor man Weber, SR 7, Tup-

awarene ss of forest fir e per s Pl a in .
RUTLAND TOWNSH IP hazards and allow burning Rose
Carson, CR 12 and CR
under the safest and most 13.
ideal conditions.
5&lt;.\LEM TOW N SHIP Open burning is restricted 1-larley' Grate, SR 124, and
E ugene Holl iday, TR 3.
to the folloWing:
SALISBURY TOWN SHIP
(I I Burning cannot start
- Nat han Biggs , 38960 SR
before 4 p.m. daily and the 124. Pom e roy and Howa rd
Dai ley , 570 Grant SL Mid fire must be out by G a.m.
.
12)
All inflammable dl eport
SC IP IO TOWNSH I P materials m~st be cleared M yrtl e Stanl ey. SR 68 1,
away a safe distance around Snowv i lle.
SUTT ON TOWN SH IP the area in which burniii'g is
George Cumm ins, Ra cine ;
to take place.
Vernon Nease, CR JO and CR
(3) A person must be 34 a1 N ee~se Sett lement and t
prcsent.at all times while the Woodrow Lwi ll1ng , S.yr ~ cuse .
Gallia County
fire is burning.
MOR
GA
14 I No burning shall be l-..enne1h WNardTOWNSHIP
, CR 19 (up
conduct ed when
wind Creek Road ).
velocity is over 10 miles per
WI L KE SVIL L E TOWN .
SHIP - Dean Burns , SR 124
hour.
Wilk esvi lle, and Wilk esv ille
(51 A burning permit must
Post Off ice, Wilkes vil l"' .
be present while burning.
(6) All local, state, and
federal regulations must be
!:&gt;cattercu snowers or snow
obeyed.
·
flurries tonight and ThursFailure to comply with the day. Low tonight in the low
permit law may result in 30s and high Thursday near
fines ranging from $20 to $500. 50.
Th e
chance
of
A burning permit ma y be precipitation is 30 percent
obtained lfree l from one of tonight and Thursday.
.
·--...

WPather

..

J

In examimng giving patterns in Ohio, the average is
55 cents per capita for cancer
based on the overall total. It

WILL WATER BE BACK AGAJN? - Pomeroy
merchants undoubtedly would be happy to join for a vocal
rendition of "River Stay 'Way from My Door" if they
thought it would help. Businessmen ;-vere keeping an eye

on the Ohio River which started to rise again Tuesday and
ca me into the area between the two rivet parking lots.
However , according lo present predictions the water will
reach on!y 42.5 feel today' loW' feet unde_r flood stage .

•

••

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