<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15738" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15738?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-30T02:32:52+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48860">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/48a43e3f03494c7d41fa51cfec9f3b3a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6aa5319c4184ab826704cec63cf4927f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50422">
                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepor!-Pom&lt;·roy, 0 ., ·ru,•sday; Mar. 13, 1979

.

President Carter confident, progress noted
By FRANK CORMIER
Assoelated Press Writer
CAIRO, Egypt (AP) President Carter said today
he is confident he has
"defined all of the main
ingredients of a peace treaty
between Egypt and Israel."
Reporting "substantial"
progress toward a treaty
before leaving Israel, Carter
then flew to Cairo and
conferred for more than two
hours with Egypt 's President
Anwar Sadat.
Emerging from that
meeting, Carter said he gave
a full report to Sadat on his
meetings with
Prime
· Minister Menachem Begin

and other Israeli officials in
Jerusalem.
"The United States made
proposals for resolving a
number of outstandng
iss ues/'
Carter
said .
"President Sadat has now
accepted 'these proposals."
The president also said
Begin had agreed to present
the U.S. proposals to the
lsraeh
Cabinet
for
consideration quickly.
Carter said he had
informed Begin by telephone
from Cairo of Sadat's
decision to accept the U.S.·
proposed compromise on the
last treaty issues.
Carter was expected to re-

turn to Washington wday either in Israel or in Egypt, of Egypt's lL'fniS, and "Now of
from Cairo, ending his six- the shape of the U.S.· course, it 's the turn of Egypt
day Mideast peace mission proposed compromises.
to reply.'"
without the peace treaty he
As he left Israel , Carter
Carter headed . home
had hoped lor, but reporting said "good progress was without the treaty he had
progress that had seemed made" toward a treaty and hoped to forge during his
Wllikely 24 hours earlier.
vowed, ''we will not fail."
Mideast mission, and before
Carter said he and Begin
Carter said progress was his upbeat statement at Tel
had narrowed the remaining made Monday night in a Aviv'sBen Gurion airport !he
issues in a breakfast meeting •meeting of U.S. and Israeli mood of Cart~r's party was
today . .
cabuiet offlcials, and further , gloomy.
These issues were believed progress was achieved. this
But at Ben Gurion .Carter
to be Israel's desire for Sinai morning in a breakfast vowed that negotiations
oil, Egypt's desire for liaison meeting between himself and would continue and said,
officials
to supervise Israeli Prime Minister ,"There are fewer differences
Palestinian self-rule in the Menachem Begin.
than when I first arrived. And
Gaza Strip and Israel's desire
Begin, also speaking at Ben those few differences which
for a quick exchange of Gurion airport, said Israel do remain have been
ambassadors with Egypt.
had now gone as far as it substantially narrowed.
Carter gave no indication, could go toward meeting
"Last night, there were
·
further
intensive
discussions ...on the two or
three most difficult issues.''
Carter said.

Energy saving pleas ignored
Barnes Lake Dam in Toceoa,
By JAMES PHU.UPS
Associated Press Writer Ga., collapsed in l!l'17, killing
39 persons.
WASHINGTON (AP) To date, the Corps has comThe Army Corps of Engineers
pleted
inspections on 2,119
.
has ordered emergency
private
dams across the
actions taken on '!7 private
dams to prevent their country. It hopes to inspect
collapse, r. &gt;w Corps statistics about 9,000 of the nation's
43,500 nonfederal dams by
showed today .
The '!7 are among 459 dams 1981.
The dams classified unsafe
that have been declared
unsafe as a result of the are not ncessarily in danger ·
Corps' dam inspection of imminent collapse, said
program that began after the Corps spokesman Ed Greene.

Teachers
(Conth1ued from ~age I) .
payment of the inde&gt;. !rom March 19 to June 30 will be
made with the $17,7~ saved in teachers salaries as
well as others not paid during the strike period.
In June, the finances will be reviewed.
The index was retroactive to September and would
run to March 19. Money due the employes for that
period will be made in three equal payments with the
'first to be made between now and Jan.1, 1980.
The second and third payments are to be made between Jan. I and July 1, 1980 it was reported.

Project goal
(Continued from page I)
Middleport Department Store, Lewis Sauer, Herb Moore,
Crow's Steak House, Dr. R. R. Pickens, Meigs Branch, Athens
County Savings and U&gt;an, Citizens National Baok, Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., Pomeroy National Bank, Bernard Fultz
and Jay Hall.
YES! You can count on me-us to support the Meigs High
School Athletic Building Fund.
Amo1111t

Name to be put io cooerete
Name•--------------Name--------------Name-------------Name--------------Nan.e ---------------

--$50
~100
~150
~200
~250

(Fill' in amount and attach list.)

M3ke cheeks payable to : Meigs Athletic Building Fund.
Mail to : Bill Childs, P. 0. Box 32, Middleport, Ohio.

In many instances, he said,

the Corps simply considered
a spillway WlSaf~ to handle
torrential rains.
The General Accomting
Office, an investigative arm
of Congress, said the Corps
inspection program
emphasizes the possible need
for continued
federal
involvement in establishing
an adequate nationwide dam
safety program.
In a study, the GAO said a
review of the Corps programs
shows many dam owners
refuse to correct deficiencies.
In additon, it said many
states do not have the legisla·
tive authority or money to
conduct their own programs.
Pools were lowered or
drained on 23 of the '!7 dams
that required emergency actions, the Corps said. On
three others, remedial
construction is underway, .
surveillance has
been
initiated or the owner notified
of the danger. These were,
respeetively, Barker Dam in
Ada
County,
Idaho; ..
Waltonville Lake Dam in Jefferson County, Dl.; and "No
Name - 448 Dam"in St.
Charles County, Mo.
Utigation has
tleen
initiated on Lakeland Lake
Dam in Montgomery County,
Texas, the corps said.
The other dams which re·quired emergency draining
were:
Alabama : Lakeo Springs,
Shelby County; camp Mack
Dam No. 1, Talladega.
Georgia: Silver Lake,
Dekalb CoiDity; Erin Lake,
Dekalb;
Black
Rock
Mountain, Raburn ; Manley
Estates, Mailison.
New York: Warwick,
Orang" 1.-nunty; Jam ~sville
Reservoir , Onrndaga;
Wa:ervliet
Reservoir,
ft ioany;
Boyf!3 Corner,
Putnam.

Middleport's

GIVE

YOURSELl=

ALIPT

Buy a New Car
Today With Our
Low Cost Auto Loan
We'll lend you cash in a hurry ... no hitches
.nvolved! Just call lor information about the
variety of easy payment plans we have. available. There's one to suit every budget So
don't delay buying that car .. . thumbing it
can get awful tough !

.. .

TRUCK FIRE
Meigs County Sheriff
.James J. Proffitt reported
deputies reeeived a report of
a vehicle fire that occurred
Sunday afternoon.
According to the report,
Otis McLintock, Rt. I, Racine
was east bound on SR 124.
After stopping and getting
out of his pickup truck he
noticed flames coming out of
the left hubcap.
McLintock quickly extinguished the fire with a
garden hose.

MEE'I'S TIIURSDA Y
Ohio Valley Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, will meet
Thursday, March 15 at 7: 30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Eula
Wolfe. Dues are now due and
potluck refreshments will be
served.

this

morning,

.

County Court
Sixteen defendants were
fined and four others for·
felted bonds in Meigs County
Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles
Knight were Crenson R.
Pratt, Middleport, $10 and
costs, failure to stop at stop
sign; Mark W. Hall, Chester,
Ronald G. BrookS, Coolville,
Mary L. swisher, Cheshire,
Carol A. Crow, Middleport
and Sonia Parsons, Pomeroy,
$15 and costs each, speeding;
Roy F. Boggs, Middleport, 90
day~ confinement, DWI, 90
days confinement, driving
under suspension; Douglas
Clonch, Gallipolis, $25 and
costs, three days con·
finement, no operators
license; Bruce A. McGilvray,
Reedsville, $25 and costs, two
days confinement, no
operators license; Jefferey
A. Russell, Pomeroy, $10 and'
costs, failure to stop for stop
sign; David L. Carnahan,
U&gt;ng Bottom, $10 and costs,
unsafe vehicle; Mark Rich·
mond, Pomeroy, $20 and
costs, assured clear distance;
Kenneth Wheeler, Dexter, $15
and costs, improper backing;
Mayme Manning, Racine, $10
and costs, improper starting;
Gregory Pratt, Athens, $100
and costs, leaving scene;
Max Whitlatch, Middleport,
$10 and costs, destruction of
property.
Forfeiting bonds were
Robert Qualls, Pomeroy,
George Schwab, Worth·
ington, Mack Howard, West
Uber\y, Ky., and Thomas
Mohler, Guysville, $35 .50
each, speeding.

Columbia Gas
hearing today

(Continued from page 1)
reference to his' request for .
funds for a playground and
ball diamond at the marina.
. He discussed damages to
the streets brought about by
the winter weather and asked
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) the street committee to study Consumers, realtors and
the problems. He also small businessmen are
discussed drainage In some scheduled to testify today as
locations in town and a police hearings continue on a
clothing allowance.
request by Columbia Gas of
He announced a meeting of Ohio to take on new custhe recreation committee for tomers.
1:80 this evening at Village
The Public
Utilities
Hall .. He reported that the . Conpnission of Ohio began
village must file any request the hearitigs Monday. They
for outdoor reereation funds are expected to last through
from the state by April 15.
the end of March, with
Council discussed problems Columbia's witnesses on the
with sccul,'lng parts for the stand this week and next.
traffic lights of the town.
The commission will collect
Dangers caused by m.anhole evidence on Columbia 's
covers dunng snow and a claim that once-scarce fuel
safety problem at ;toRace st. supplies are now large
enough to allow service to
intersection.
Council passed a resolution new customers beginning
commending Mayor Hoffman May I, and will decide
for his ·tireless effort and whether to grant the utility's
work in geiting the village . request.
.
into participation of federal
John H. Croom, chief of fuel
programs.
planning for Columbia, said
Attending the meeting were the company's suppliers
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Grate, claim that enough surplus
and Councilmen Dewey energy to allow signup of
Horton, Carl Horky, Mullen, IOO,OOOnew CustOfOerS a year
William Walters and King. will be available at least
through )988.
The
PUCO
banned
r-:R~E~G-IS::-JE-R_N_OW
Columbia from signing new
customers seven years ago
Policy holders may because of gas shortages. The
register at the office ban has never been lifted.
· of John Kauff for a
Lawyers
representing
more than two dozen
$50.00 savings bond to industries, government
be given away April agencies ahd consumer
13, 1979.
groups are looking into
Need not bo Present to win. Columbia's request and
trying to pi'otect their clients
frDfl1 possible higher prices
or lutur.e gas curtailments.
240 Lincoln MidiileP.rt, o.
Croom was questioned
992-J969
Monday by several of the
lawyers. Most of their
questions did not concern the
improved gas . supply, but
instead focused on Co·
hunbia 's reliance on certain
high-cost fuels such as
liquefied natural gas from

__!--;

"The Friendly Bank"
Wolk-up ltlltr window
ond outo-ltller window
open Frldoy Evenings s to 7 p.m.

Nevada: Squaw Valley,
Washoe CoWJty.
' Missouri: Tarsney Lake,
Jackson County; Indian Rock
Lake, Fraoklin County.
Oklahoma: Vettie Cooley
Lake, Tulsa County. West
Virginia : Mod Branch Dams
Nos. 1 through 5, McDowell
County; Four Sates WS Dam,
Marion.
Vermont : Lake Paran,
Bennington .
North Carolina, Flat Top
Mountain, Buncombe.
New Jersey: Untermeyer,
Morris.
Hawaii: Wahikuli, MauL
Arizona: Tsaile, Apache.
Texas: Kaufman City Lake
No. I, Kaufman County.
Utah: Hobbs Reservoir,
Davis CoWJty.

"And

building on those discussions,
Prime Minister Begin and I
were
able
to make

Algeria and synthetic gas
manufactured
from
petroleum feedstocks.
A related battle may
develop in the state Supreme
Court following a ruling by
PUCO hearing examiner
Randy Yontz. The ruling
barred John Bentine, an
assistant Columbus city
attorney, from representing
the interests of Columbus
households served by
Columbia.
The examiner said state
Consumers' Counsel William
Spratley already is a
participant in the case and
that by state law, he
represents all Ohio residential utility users.
Yontz said Bentine can participate only on behalf of Co·
lumbus' city utilities division
and the city's non-i'esidential
· gas customers.
Bentine said the ruling may
be appealed to the state Su·
preme Court because Yontz's
decision apparently
represents the view of PUCO

substantial
additional
progress," Carter said.
Carter did not elaborate
further on what he and Begin
discussed.
Begin said "We made real
progress in the peacemaking
process. Now, of course, its

the turn of Egypt to reply."
"May I say respectfully,
that you can leave this
country with satisfaction,"
Begin said.
Begin's spokesman Dan
Pattir today stro~gly opposed
the idea that the talks had
ended in failure . He said
briefings given by White
House spokesman on Monday
were "calculated to make the
picture look black, for
domestic reasons."
Asked on Monday whether
Carter's six-day Middle East
gamble could be. judged a
failure , White House press
secretary Jody Powell
avoided
the
political
temptation to claim success.
"You will have to draw your
own conclusions," he told

reporters.
"I have no way of knowing
what happens next," Powell
said.
New violence broke out

Marriages ended
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court two marriages
have been dissolved.
Dissolved
were
the
marriagenfDebbie Carl and
Rodney Carl and Andrew
Edward Lyles and Cindy
Morgan Lyles.
Theada Phillips was
granted a divorce from Or·
ville L. Phillips.
Cases dismissed were
Citizens National Bank
versus Howard Searles;
Citizens National Bank
versus Frederick W. Klein;
David Lynn Robinson and
Susan Jane Robinson;
Sandra K. Carl and Dwight E.
Carl; Sharon Lee versus
Tor :ny Abbott.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Lawrence
Babbitt, daclne; Mitchell
Holley, Minersville; Carolyn
Gilmore, Rutland; Susanna
Hubbard, Syracuse; Ruth
Mulford, Pomeroy; Charles
· Ward, Albany; Wesley
Cockran, Langsville; Tangle
·Wood, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Knapp, Otto U&gt;hn, Lesley .
Artrip, Robert Curtis,
Lawrence Babbitt.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad Monday answered a
call to Hemlock Grove for
George Logan, a medical
patient, who was taken . to
Holzer Medical Center.
SQUAD RUNS
The emergency unit of the
Middleport Fire Department
answered a call to Middleport
Hill at 5:26 p,m. Monday for
John Wilt who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 10 :59 a.m., the unit went
to the apartment of Vicky
Branham on Mill St. She was
taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
ASKS TOWED
A marriage license was
Issued to Michael Allen
Codner, 23, Racine and
Rebecca Lee Ord, 20,
Syracuse.

even as Carter's peace
mission was ending.
Israeli military spokesmen
said several shells fired from
Lebanon landed in northeast
Israel.
And Palestinian guerillas
said Israeli border gWJners
opened up heavy barrages of
artillery against the guerilla·
controlled
towns
of
Nabatiyeh and ·Aishiyeh in
South Lebanon. The report
was denied by the lsr aeli
army .
In the Israeli-occupied
West Bank, Arab riots
against Carter's visit entered
. (heir fourth day .
cAmo, Egypt: fourth day.
And police in Israel said
they had thwarted an
apparent attempt by antiCarter demonstrators to roll
flaming· tires in front of his .
motorcade as he traveled
from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv.

Delinquent
youth shot
by deputy
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP)
A 17-year-old rural
Chillicothe youth was shot
and killed by a sheriff's
deputy Monday, the Ross
County sheriff's department ·
said.
Ernest E. Alexander was
shot in the head outside the
South Central Ohio Regional
Juvenile Detention Center by
Deputy Forrest Powell, 50,
the department said.
Alexander had been committed to the Ohio Youth
Commission Monday after
being found to be a delinquent
clilld. He had been charged
with a Jan. 22 break-in at
Frankfort Adena High &amp;hool
and with aiding a March 3
purse snatchU!g.
Whe_n
Alexander,
handcuffed to another 17·
year-old youth , stepped out of
the deputy's cruiser at the
detention · center, the pair
bolted, refusing to heed the
deputy 's warning to halt, the
department said.
Poweil fired three warning
shots,
the
sheriff's
department said. His fourth
shot struck Alexander in the
back of the head, according to
the depariment .
The sheriff's department
said Tuesday that its
U!vestigation was continuing.

They said they seized cans of
fuel oil and several auto tires
stashed in the hills along
Carter's route; No arrests
were reported.
U.S. officials had been
clearly disappointed with
decisions reached by Begin's
cabinet at a 6'h.hour
nighttime meeting which
ended shortly before dawn
Monday . .
The American officials
were disappointed, too, with
Israeli responses to U.S.
efforts to negotiate those
decisions.
The United States was
Wlderstood to have·offered a
number of suggestions on
how to resolve remaining
differences between Egypt
and Israel. It was learned
Israel rejected them all.

WORKERS CLASS
The Willing Workers Class
of ihe Enterprise United
Methodist Church will meet
Thursday, March 15, at 7:30
at the home of Mrs. Agnes
Dixon.

f
·'

•.. .
Memlltrli.D.J.C. Dtposlll lnsw:tdloHO,OOO.OO.

INSURANCE

PRICE HIKEp
XENIA, Ohio (AP) - The
price of parking Is going up'
here, city fathers have'"·
decided.
About 150 parking meters
will 'be re-installed next .
month and the price per hour
will be increased from live to
10 cents.

'

ployment out of Meigs
County.
Roush , a · Meigs County
Commissioner since Jan.
1977, in submitting his.
resignation iss ued the
following statement:
"Since January of 1977, it
has been my privilege to
serve the people of Meigs
County as a member of the
Board of County Co mmissioners.
During this time, I have
made every , effort to
represent the people in an
honest and progressive
manner . I feel that the
construction of the Multi·
Purpose Health Center, the

e
(USPS 145·960)

VOL. NO. XXIX

NO. 232

construction of a nursing
home, the plannin g of a
school and workshop for the
mentally retarded , t he
esta blishing of a Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Service, and the new punch
card voting system are all
progressive steps that will
prove to be of great benefit to
Meigs County in years to
come.
It has been a pleasure for
me to have served on a hoard
· that has . undertaken these
many projeets.
"It is with sincere regret
that I must resign th is
position . However , the need
for stea dy employment

makes 1t necessary that I do th e · board to di sc uss a
so. My sincere thanks to all of problem with a culvert th at
those who have assisted me, was washed out due to
during the last (wo years." flooding.
Roush sta ted that he has
County Engineer, Wesley
accepted a Federal con - Buehl reported his departstruction in spectors job in ment would do everything
northern Oh io with the within the limitations of the
Ad· law to alleviate the probl em.
Farmers
Home
ministration tF HA) and will Est her Klin ebricl, Com·
beg in'llis duties March 19.
rnu nications Consultant , for
Commissioners Rich Jones Ge n e r a l T e l e phon e ,
and Henry Wells e•pressed discussed the possibilities of
their appreciation for con· installing
a
Cent ra l
tributions made by Roush Telephone System for the
while a member of the board. courthouse.
OTHER BUSINESS
Kiinebri ei wa s asked to
Mr . and Mrs. Leland submit a deta il ed cost
Clonch , Hysell Run Road , analysis of several proposals
Rutland Township, met with as compared to the present

•

at y

styles.
Probate Judg e, Robert
Buck, appeared before the
board to request permission
to post a notice of sale of a
cabinet in his office which is
no longer needed.
Also meeting with com·
missioner s were Syracuse

Mayor Eber Pickens, Her·
man London, pool manager
and Bob W·ingett. ·Th ey
requested assistance of the
county at the Syracuse
Recreation Park. The board
took the matter under ad·

Ohio will get

rain, flurries
By The Associated Press
A cold fr"''t conneeted to a
low pressute system now
over the upper Great Lakes is
on its way towards Ohio,
bringing colder air back into
the state.
The soutberly winds which
brought warm air to Ohio will
give way as the front moves
across the state.
Moist lire is beginning to increase through the central
states and as the front approaches a few showers may
develop over most of Ohio toward evening,
Showers will cha~ge to
snow flurries as colder air
moves in tonight. Wednesday
will see a return to nippy
weather with highs in the 31ls
in most sections.

Local calls placed by
GenTel customers also in·
creased in 1978, rising to 1.5
billion from 1.3 billion In 1977.
That represented a daily
average of seven calls for
each of the company's 547,300
customers, compared with
6. 9 calls in 1977.

RACINE SQUAD RUNS
The Racine Emergency
Squad was called Friday,
March 9, for George Cum·
mins, Letart Falls. The call
was cancelled, however.
Sunday at 7:50 p.m., the
squad was called for
Christina Branahm, Letart
Falls. No treatment was
neeessary.
The squad was called again
Sunday for Eutha McDaniel,
Racine, who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

ILBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

CARPET SPECIAL
•

•100% NYLON PILE FOR LONG WEAR
•DENSE RUBBER BACKING

·•12 Fr. WIDTH
•GREEN, BLUE AND RUST

El~erfelds

In Pomeroy

discussed a Zerox ·copier
which ha s long been needed
for the recorder's office. It
was decided to accept the
proposal from Zerox on a
tria l basis.
It was

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

15 CENTS

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 1979

Honor
Meigs
man

100 million
.mark passed

and visit.''

r epre!ientative and Eleanor
Robson, County Recordfr,

•

-

MARION
General
Telephone Co. of Ohio
customers last year topped
the 100 million mark in long·
distance phone calls for the
first time in the compy's
history. The calls totaled 107
million, compared with 97
million the year before. The
year-end total in 1974 was 79
million.
. A. W. Hughes, vice
president of marketing and
customer service, said
roughly 88 percent of last
year's toll calls were dialed
directly or done without
operator assistance. Rates
are chaper for direct-dialed
calls.
Hughes said General has
experienced a steady in·
crease in long-distance calls.
He cited several contributing
factors, including an increase
in . customers and . the
telephone's rising popularity.
"Nowadays, people find It
more • conv.enient to call
someone instead of writing,"
he said. "And instead of
traveling somewhere, they
can just pick up their phone

various aspects of the CETA
plat map program .
Hugh
Dalton , Zerox

reported th at
progress is continuing on the
construct ion of the Multi·
Purpo.se Building.
Attend ing wer e Jon es,
visement.
president Roush and Wells,
County Prosecutor, Rick co mmi ssioners and Mary
Crow and County Engineer, Hobstetter. clerk .
Wesley Buehl disc ussed

MEETS TONIGHT
Syracuse PTO will meet
this evening at the school at
7:30p.m.

JOHN KAIJFf .

I

JAMES ROUSH

Meigs
Co unty
Commissioners have been approached by a firm e•·
pressing interest in con·
structing 40 to 60 Townshouse
Apartment units.
During Tuesday's regular
weekly meeting, it was noted
that the firm is seeking five to
si• acres of land adjacent to
water and sewer facilities.
Commissioners ha ve
requested that anyone having
a parcel of land fitting that
description , contact their
office.
In mother matters, commiss ioner James Roush
submitted a letter of
resignation to accept em-

.

commissioners.
It has been the city's view
that Yontz's mandate does
not
preclude a city
representative from
represeniing the specific
interests of Columbus con.
surners in such proceeding~.

Firm seeks land, Commissioner Roush resigns

BY BOR HOEFLICH
Have most of us always
empha sized the ba d and
ignored much of the good in
life - or did it just happen ?
Well - whatever, it seems
that the Rock Springs
Conununity near Pomeroy
would prefer to emphasize
the good and did so Friday
night when it honored Harold
Blackston, a long-time

resident.

RESIDENT HONORED - All of these relatives of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Blackston , seated, were on hand
Friday night as tl)e Rock Springs Community presented a
"this is your life" program to honor Blackston for his
contributions to the community and the church. Mr. and
Mrs. BlarkSfJln are holding their granddaughters, Emily
HONOREE SURPRISED- Harold Blackston, seated, was completely surprised- and
no doubt pleased- as the Rock Springs community honore.d him with a "this is your life"
presentation Friday night. Standing from the left are Methodist District Supt. Wesley
Clarke, the Rev. Jim Corbitt, church pastor, and Bill Radford, who was master of
ceremonies. ·
'

Chamber given
unusual program
Something very unusual
was presented at the Tuesday
noon luncheon of the
Pomeroy Chamber
of
Commerce held at the Meigs
Inn.
Brian Mulliner, assistant
director of Southeast Asia
studies at Ohio University,
was the guest speaker. What
was so unusual was the very
interesting film he showed in
the life and religion of the
prophet Mohammed and the
Arabic people.
Mulliner, in his remarks,
said that according to
Mosleum religious beliefs
God is God and Iranians
recognize Jesus as a prophet.
He also stated there are more
students in United States
from Iran than any other
nation.
According to Mulliner,
problems in Southeast Asia

Wann weather
brinJ.{s out

con artists
With the approach of warm
weather - the conartists and
bunco pros may soon be
knocking at your door. These
shady characters prey on the
' elder)y, and anyone who is
uninformed.
Before you sign up for that
home repair job or a get rich
quick work ~t home scheme
-chedk it out, warns Meigs
County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt.
Make sure you are dealing
with a reputable company!
Operatlon Crime Alert
reminds you, "If a 'deal'
looks too good to be true - it
usually is. That chimney
repair or blacktop job may
cost you more than you
bargained for."
If you have any questions,
please contact the Meigs
County Sheriff's Office.

wi!i not be settled for a
number or years. He also
added that the Arabs are not
against the Jews religion, but
Israel as a nation for extending its boWJdaries.
The film shown by Mulliner
was entitled "Islam, Prophet
and People."
Fred Crow reported he had
received a letter from Perry
E. O'Brien, attorney at law,
Ripley, W. Va., stating that
he would like to attend a
chamber meeting to discuss
proposal s that could be
developed for improvements
of U.S. 33 to Athens. The date
when O'Brien will attend a
meeting will be annoWJced
Crow stated.
Crow also reported Miss
Lois Rock, Ohio University,
will also meet with the
chamber later this year
regarding the placing the old
Pomeroy
Senior High
building on the Historical list
for possible grant to restore
the building.

PATH CLEARED
JERUSALEM (AP) The Israeli Cabinet has
approved the last two
proposals for a peace
treaty with Egypt, Com·
merce Minister Gidon Pall
said today.
"The road is open to a
peace treaty, " said another

minister, Yitzhak Modai.
He said detalis remained to
be worked out "but there
will be a peace treaty."
Commerce chief Pall
added, however, that the
cabinet acceptance of the
last two proposals did not
complete the work it still
needs to carry out .
examioing the treaty In its
entirely.

30 persons
arrested

by police

Paul Simon , president,

introduced guests, H_elen ·
Hayes, Nancy Reed, and
Jean Robbanna. Simon also
introduced the speaker.
Bill Nelson informed
chamber members that he
had talked with Dave Diles,
ABC sportscaster, just before
coming to the meeting and
everything is "go" for the
golf tournament to be held
July 30 at the Mason Golf
Course.
Nelson reported there will
be 30 celebrities attending the
$100 per person tourpament.
Qne hundred and fourteen
golfers are invited to par·
ticipate with 90 already
committed, according to
Nelson.
Proceeds will be given to
Meigs . Mason charities.
WSAZ will cover the event
live, according to Nelson.
~!tending were Simon,
Crow ,
Tam
Bearhs,
secretary, Nelson, Bill
(Continued on page 12)

Thirty arrests were made
by the Middleport Police
Department
during
February, according to the
monthly report of Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans.
01 the total, seven persons
were ~harged with disorderly
manner while there were
three charged with driving
while intoxicated and two
each on charges of rwming a
stop sign, speeding, reckless
operation and littering and
damaging property. One
person was charged with
leaving the scene of an accident,
assured
clear
distance , discharging
firearms in the village, petty
theft and assault and batt,ery.
Three cases were trans·
!erred to county court and
three others were dismissed.
The department collected
$963.50 in parking meter
co!iections and the police
cruiser was driven 4,060
miles.

and Heather Kane. The first row, standing, I tor, includes
Mrs. William Grueser, William Grueser , Mrs. Wilbur
Bailey, Wilbur Bailey, Charles Blackston, Roy Blackston,
Mary Shaeffer and Francis Shaeffer ; the back row, I tor,
Joseph G. McNabb, Lenora Spencer, Bob Blackston, Jack
Kane, Sherrie Kane, Bruce Blackston, Christy Evans,
Otis Bailey and Phyllis Bailey.

Gallia highway projects reviewed

What appeared to be a
normal fellowship supper at ·
the Ro ck Springs Un ited
Methodist Church turned into
a surprise presentation of
"This is your life. Harold
Blackston,'' with it came
some moving moment s.
A long-t im e friend of
Biackoton , Bill Radford, was
at ·the helm as master of
ceremonies. Working just as
hard behind the scenes was
his wife, L&lt;&gt;uise, herding in
and out the many friends and

relatives of Blackston who
appeared to touch on som e
ph ase or the honor guest's
life.
Dale . Kautz, Cheste r,
recounted early school days
with Blackston in Chester and
Mildred Betzing, who was a
teacher years ago in the Rock
Springs School, recoWJted her
memo r y
of
favor it e
l!lackston as a student.
Close relati,·es including
Wilbur and Lelia Bailey and
Lenora Spence r and Roy and
Charle s Bla cksto n fro m
· Sid ney and Columbu s,
respectively, traveled to
Rock Sprin gs to be a part of
the gesture.
Nora Harris Rice of Mid·
dl eport , a clas smate of
Blackston· at Pomeroy High
&amp;hooi. and Aaron 1Zeke)
Zahi, a former teacher at the
Pomeroy High School. were
impressive as they related
happy incidents in the early
yea rs of Blackston. Fred
Goeglein told of Blackston's
active role in the grange.
Helen Grueser Blackston
took her place beside her
husband . Harold, for the
occasion and their family was
introduced including Sherrie
and her husband, Jack Kane
and their two daughters;
Bob, and Bruce, the
Blackston sons, and Christy
Evans, the fiancee of Bruce.
Meigs Co unty Superin·
ten dent of Schools Bob Bowen
paid tribute to Blackston for
hi s per formance as a
member of the former
Salisbury Board of Education
and Dr. Wesley Clarke ,
district Methodist Superin·
tendent, and the Rev. Jim
Corbitt, pastor of the Rock
(Continued on page 12)

In addition, the department authoriz ed for " wetl and"
publication, II years and
eight months is the ailoted receives some state funds found in the area. That study
time necessary to get a high· and a little money from fines will be done by biologist.
Gifford sa id that once
way projeet completed from assessed to persons charged
the time of conception to by the Ohio Highway Patrol. approva l is received for the
Smith stressed thai due to pro ject' s e nvi ronm ental
actual traf£i c use.
the fact that th e state statement a r elocation
In answer to a question
regarding the exact amount gasoline taxes had not been hearing wiil be held.
Upon completion of that
of ti me
involved in raised since 1959 and because
prepa rat ion of plans, right-of· of high inflation his depart· hearing , the job will be
programmed for fiscar yea r
way purchasing and con· ment had been hit hard.
SR
554
Status
1980.
struction, the highway exGifford
reviewed
the
status
A second SR 554 project
pert s said about four years.
In other \\o'ords, six and one- of SR 554 west of Cheshi1·e . north of the Gavin belt line in
hail years are spent waiting .. The h ighway has bee n the vicinity of the old Blue
flooded frequently because of Sulphur Fa rm . The project
for EPA, archaeology and
other otudies that must' be silt problems from the neArby initiated last yea r is in th e
preliminary planning stage
undertaken when artifacts strip mines.
Gifford sa id artifa cts found even though surveys have
are fo und .
during an archa eology study been taken.
Glenn noted his department
have led to a more dctoiled
US 35 Progress
is funded through four and
Three proj ects arc un·
one-fo urth cents on eve ry study.
A survey has also been derway for SR 35 east to west
ga llon of gasoline sold.
of the SR 160 corridor.
Gifford noted current plans
are to .widen existing SR 35
where it narrows for the
routing of four lane traffic
' back to two lanes. ' .
'
'
Right of way
purchases
have been made for that
section of the project which
has been programmed for
sale in 1980. The first section
would be four lane from
existing SR 160 to the Bidwell·
Rodney Rd .
The middle section from
Rio Grande to the Bidwell·
· Ro dney
Rd . will be
programmed in 1981 and the
final scctioh- Rio Grande to
Thurman
has
been
programmed for 1982.
in the final phase, two lanes
will be added to the existing
highway between Rio Grande
· and the four-lane at Thur·
man.
Smith and Gifford made it
clear that most of the delays
were out of their hands . "We
tho ught we should come and
ex pla in just what our
department does, and what it
must encounter," Smith said.
Various committee reports
Hollie Green, a former
were presented during the
Pomeroy
co uncilman, filed
noon luncheon held at the
his
petition
of candidacy as a
chamber office on State St. in
Republican candidate lor the
Gallipolis.
mayor of Pomeroy '('uesday.
Green is the only candida(e
to fil e for the JWJe primary
elections so far.
Filing deadline is 4 p.m. on '
Clea ring tong iht with a low
March
22. An independent
111 the low 20s. Clear and cold
candidate
Roger M. Davidson
A COLUMBUS FmM is working behind the Pomeroy Elementary School to correct a
Thursday with a high in the
slip in the hillside. A large drain tile has been installed at t11e site in the 'firsl phase of the
uppe r 30s . Chan ce of filed earlier but his name will
corrective proce~ to dry out the hill before more permanent corrective measures are
precipitation 20 percent not appear on the ballot until
fall.
tonight.
taken. "-

Two long-awaited Gallia
Co unty highway proj ects
have been progranuned for
fiscal1980 (J uly I, 1979-July
I, 1980) according to an an·
noun ce ment Tuesday by
Howard Gifford , des ign
engineer for th e Ohio
Department o£ Trans-'
portation .
Meeting with directors of
the Gallipolis Ar~a Chamber
of Commerce. Gifford , a 30·
year veteran of the transportation department and his
boss, Glenn Smith, Director
of Division 10, Ohio Depart·
ment of Transporta tion
(ODOT) reviewed the status
of three road projects in
Gallia County.
Smith noted that accordin g
to a nationa l highway

a

Green seeking

mayor's post

\lScather

.j

�2- The Dally Sentmel, M•rldleport·Pom&lt; 1'" , 0 , Wednesday , Ma1 14, 1!179
3- The Dally Senhnel, Mlddleport-Pumcii •Y. 0, ·::cdncsday M"r 14 1979

'

.

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

Washington
•
By Clarence
Report Miller

'

WHERE JX&gt;
YoU WANT
IT, MR. ?RESIDmff

I

Arab unity and strength

By Don Gru ll

..

You'd never know It from front-page headlines, but
there 's more gomg on m the Mideast these days than the
!raman revolutiOn and escalating oil prices
In a development of potentially equally great unpact on
the regwn and beyond, two key nations - Iraq and Syria are talkmg senously about becoming one Followmg
through on the s1gnmg last October of a declaration of
mtent to create a "single Wllfied state," leaders are
exchanging v1sita and discussing pre11mlnary details of
econonuc and rruhtary cooperation
There are a number of Interested - not to SIIY concerned
- observers, not the least Israel Iraq has been a tough
talker but a token participant lri Aratrisraeli conOicta to
date The prospect that Iraqi Wllls might now be about to
JOin the Synans m force on the Golan Heights In their rear
IS one the IsraeliS could do without as they concentrate on
thetr mam·front diplomatic sparrmg with Egypt
It IS m fact mutual oppos11lon to the Egyptian-Israeli
negollat10ns that •• a prunary motivating faclor In the
Iraq•-Srnan move Another IS concern over the continuing
turmm m netghbormg Iran
Both countnes are also ruled by branches of the
soclahst·&lt;mented Baath (renaissance ) Party, but In the
convoluted context of Mideast politics that ls an obstacle to
be overcome rather than an advantage The two facttons
have been feudmg for years, on occasion resorting to
terrorist bombmgs and assassinations, and tt was not too
many months ago that the Syrian press and radio routmely
referred to the Iraqi president as a "murderer "
The Iraqi .Syrian rapprochement is the latest of a lengthy
but not encouragmg history of Arab unification attempts
Syria was lmked w1th Egypt ln the United Arab Republic
from 1958 to 1961, a Wlion notable chiefly for a bitter
leadership power struggle Egypt later tallced merger with
Libya , but they ended up shooting at each other. Libya also
flirted bnefly w1th Its western neighbor, Tunisia, to no
result Jordan and Iraq toyed with WllOn in the '50s, before
the overthrow of the Iraqi monarchy
The only effective merger bus been that of the cluster of
Persian Gulf sheikdoms which now compose the United
Arab Em1rates. and the basis of that IS not political but
economic - to maxlrmze benefits of their recently
developed oil resources.
Egypt Is currently fostermg low·key cooperation with Its
southern neighbor, Sudan, that is also essentially econom·
IC The two have a mutual defense pact, aimed at
countermg Soviet infiltration of East Africa. But that is
mc1dental, the emphasis is on expanding Wlderpopulated
but potentially productive Sudan's agricultural capacity to
help feed overpopulated Egypt The two countries have
been working gradually for the paat five years toward a
goal of broad economic Integration, stopping short of
political union It shows much more promise at this point of
bemg ach1eved than do the ambitious plans of Syria and
Iraq
If the1r merger should overcome the many hurd and
historic obstacles to realization and take on real substance,
lt would sigmf1cantly alter the Mldeust power balance The
two coWltrles could deploy, by Western military estimates,
as many as 400,000 troops, 450 tanks and 700 warplanes on
Israel's northern border
That •s the poss•blllty The probablllty Is something else.
G1ven the~r track record In making common cause, the
Arabs should be showmg more concern over this latest
effort than the Israelis
Or to put 11 another way , m Wlity there ls strength does
not translate well mto Arable

Hard sell may promise more
By WALTER R MEARS
AP Spec1al Correspondent
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter's hard sell
for a lid on hosp1lal cost
mcreases may prom1se more
than his bill can deliver
Whatever the ments of a

Business
•

m1rror

ceding on soarmg hospital

rates, 1t won't make an
lmmedlllte dent m the overall
rate of mflabon, and 11 won't
be a deciSIVe step toward
halancmg the federal budget

What it will do, 1f Congress
agrees, IS pot lun1ts on the fu.
lure pr1ce of hospital rooms
and serVIces, a dlfficult area
because the consumer buys
out of need, not choice, and

Names •••
in the news

By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK ( AP ) - Monl·
tormg pr1ces IS a grun JOb,
NEW YORK (AP)- H Mayor Edward Koch went home
and you need not ask Barry
from work wlth llpstickon hiS collar, blame it on Sophia Loren
Bosworth for verification
Mlss Loren went to City Hall to promote her new book TuesThe Bureau of Labor
day, and the event turned Into a kissmg bee She kissed Koch,
StatistiCS will g1ve you the
he kissed her , she kissed other c1ty offlcwls and City Hall
dismal nwnbers So will your
a1des
own pocketbook
When it was over, she sped to the airport, and Koch ex·
And there 1s another
clauned,
"There's never been a more beautiful woman than
source, too, one that has bad
Sophia
to
VISit City Hall She's a beautiful woman w1th great
news for Bosworth and hls
charm"
a1des on the Council on Wage
The mayor escorted Miss Loren, who carried an Italian flag,
and Pr1ce Stability That
mto
the ceremonwl Blue Room, packed With reporters and city
source IS the purchasing
off1c1als
agent, whose JOb demands
"She 1s beloved not only m New York City and the Umted
that he shave fractiOns of
States
but throughout the world as a great arhst," Koch de·
pennies
dared
And the bad news · There IS
Then he rec1ted several sentences 10 Itahan, wh1ch he sa1d
more than one way to
he
had practiced for a long time
disgUise a price mcrease.
"You
are the most beautiful woman in Italy, and also I and
There may 10 fact be dozens
all
the
Italian-Americans belleve that you are the most
of ways, such as changmg the
beautiful
flower mall the world !love you very much, " Koch
package s1ze, lowenng
satd,
according
to the offiCial translahon released by hiS press
quality and d1scontmumg
offiCe
•
volwne discounts
was
not
prepared
for
such
a
wonderful,
wonderful recep·
"I
Purchasmg executiVes
t10n,"
MISs
Loren
responded
"I
can't
fmd
tbe
rtght words "
know about such thmgs
MISS
Loren
avowed
that
New
York
was
"beautiful,"
and she
because mflat10n to them 1s
expressed
the
hope
that
"one
day
I
will
live
here
"
war
Wh1le
suppliers
By Dr. Lamar Miller
maneuver to get higher
MONROE, La (AP) - A group of h1gh school journaliSlll
pnces, the professional purstudents
got a classroom VISit from a maJor newsmaker 01J College of Osteopathic Medicine chaser must counter w1th Tongsun Park
- and found out somethmg about gag rules
thwartmg strateg1es
sa1d
he
couldn't discuss w1th them the trw! of former
Park
Of late, that job has been
congressman
Otto
Passman Park IS the key Witness m the
getting tougher; the supplier,
IN DEFENSE OF ESTROGEN
tr1al
Much adverse pubhclty, mainly from federally sponsored seekmg to cut lnflat1on 's un·
Park was spotted m the Monroe rurport last week by a group
researchers and other governmental sources, has ariSen pact on hun, has been seeking of students, and he offered to talk at the school
regardmg the use of estrogen m women These sources claun to pass 1t off on the buyer,
He spoke to aboul501students Tuesday and satd he would hke
arousmg
the
that an mcreased mc1dence of uterme cancer occurs m post· Without
to
come back Frtday, according to Hope Carroll, a journaliSlll
menopausal women takmg estrogen First, let me emphas1ze SUSp!CIODS of Bosworth's student jlt a West Monroe high school
that these stud1es apply to women who have already gone watchdogs
Surveylllg
readers,
through menopause, not to pre-menopausal women up to the
LONDON (AP) - Singer Olivia Newton.John says when she
Purchasmg Magazme found
age of 50 Also, I do not refute the fact that ID]Udlclous or
first
heard she was to receive the coveted Order of the Bnhsh
subtle changes that could
careless use of any drug substance can cause harm •
Emp1re,
"I thought 1t was a practical Joke."
Estrogen 1s a hormone normally produced by the body produce b1g effects
"I
had
to
check 1t up w1th my office people before I believed
Increasing repa1r or
begmnmg a few years before menstruation at age IOto 12. The
1t,"
she
sa1d
Tuesday after rece1vmg the award at Buckingbody continues to produce estrogen until menopause at about replacement charges, or ham Palace from Queen Elizabeth II
age 50, decreasmg gradually w1th age. Estrogen productiOn addmg {hem where they had
The Anglo-Australian star of the mov1e "Grease" was honmcreases about 100 tunes the usual levels dunng pregnancy not eXIs ted before, IS ored for her services ID Australian mus1c
This 1s a very useful hormone wh1ch the body needs to prevent apparently a common dev1ce
"I really appreciate the mcred1ble honor of gettmg the OBE
premature agmg of tissue, softenmg of the bone through So may be the pracllce of at the age- of 30,'' she said
ms1stmg a com ponent be re·
calcmm loss and ma10tenance of normal fertihty
Also rece1v10g the OBE was Gordon Jackson, who played the
Women gomg through menopause suffer from mental placed rather than repaired butler Hudson in teleVISIOn's "Upstairs, D(lwnstairs " Plarust
Assessmg a charge for for·
depression , arunety, hot flashes, backaches and headaches due
merly
free serv1ces or com· Moira Lympany was named a Conunander of the Br1tlsh
to the decreased productwn or absence of thiS honnone
Emplre and Olympic runner Sonia Lamaman was named a
Phys1c1ans usually supplement menopausal women with ponents has become fall'ly Member of the Bntish Emp1re.
estrogen to reduce or elimmate these compllctlons and common, as automobile
buyers have learned And
bothersome symptoms
others,
too
Have you
Robert B Greenblatt, M D , of the Medical College of
recently
found
the
key to the
Georg•a 10 Augusta has experunented with hormones
sardme
can
m1ss1ng
? It
extensively for 46 years and could very well be considered the
happens
best medical authonty on estrogens Greenblatt's findings
A change m payment terms
differ considerably from the negative reports on estrogen
also
can rruse prices And 11
which have been published lately
can
be
mshtuted so qUietly as
In fa ct, the women he has treated for up to 25 years w1th
to
be
wmot1ced Your b11l
estrogen actually have a decreased mc1dence of both uterme
Sim
ply
comes mmus the
and breast cancer
words
"Two
percent discount
Although many physiCians do not use estrogen as long
for
payment
w1thm 15 days "
after menopause as Greenblatt has chosen to, many
as consumers '
Packaglllg,
phys1c1ans are unpr essed w1th h1s work He emphasiZes the
know
,
can
d1sqwse
contents
prope'r use and dosage of estrogens and especially el!courages
And
so
can
changes
m
regular follow up exammallon w1th pat1enls Greenblatt
Not
uncommon,
packaging
always balances the estrogen w1th another hormone normally
produced w1thm the body, progesterone, and even uses the says Purchasing Magazme, 1s
the pract1ce of enlargmg both
male hormone, testosterone, w1th the estrogen on occaswn
pnce
and package - but
Many of Greenblatt 's patients contmue to have perwds for
price
more
so
many years after the usual menopausal perwd If they do not
Transportallon and mruhng
des1re to have perwds he will change the hormone comb10at10n
practi ces
h1de
pnce
to avo•d th1s Withdrawal bleeding or menstrual penod.
mcreases Products that once
The mam pomt to emphasize 10 usmg hormones or even
came postpaid now mclude
bll'th control p1lls at any age, 1s thst regular check-ups and
mal l charges. And more
routme Pap smears should be done every s1x to twelve months
restnct!Ve pollc1es on lost or
If unusual bleedmg occurs when usmg these hormones, many
damaged shipments ra1se
doctor s w1 1l do a "D &amp; C" (dilatwn and curettage) of the uterus
pr1ces
to be certa10 of what 1s takmg place
A populsr price disgwse m·
I have been asked frequently m the last two years about
volves quantity discounts It
the danger of cancer m young women wbose mothers took the IS sunple for the supplier to
synthetiC estrogen, diethylstllbeste rol (DES), while they were
maintain book price but ms1st
pregna nt w1th !hell' daughters ThiS IS a special cancer called
that in order to obtain that
"clear cell adenocarc10oma," wh1ch may or may not develop
pr1ce the buyer hss to order
10 future years mto the usual type of 'squamous cell" cancer
1111'1 I
larger quantities
of the cerVIX
Hut purchasmg agents and
Th e actual mc1dcnce of cancer among the daughters of consumers have iun1ts to the
1
DES users, however, IS not very high According to the latest
scope of their purchases The
Read me that part of your ntghtmare
stati stics, there are onI) about I 4 cases 10 every 10,000 women
council on Wage and PriCe
scenano agam whe re the S1no-Sovtet /:JOf·
1ltere 1s a new diagnostic procedure ca lled colposcopy wh1ch Stab1hty does not It must
hss greatly mded th e phys1c1an 10 d1scovermg cerv1cal cancer. momtor
der
war mvotves nuclear exchanges
thousands
of
I would therefore encourage these females to have re!!lllar compames, m1lhons of
pelVIe exams and Pap smears anytune after the age ol14
products
•
L -- -

Health Review

Berry's World

__jI

,,

because most bills are pa1d
mdlrectly
"In the past, hospitals have
had little mcentive to be ef.
flclent, " Carter sa1d in
proposmg his bill, a toneddown versiOn of one that d1ed
m Congress last year "Tbe
hospital
sector
IS
fundamentally different from
any other sector m our
economy Normal buyer·
seller relahonsh!ps and
normal market forces do not
ex1st ''

That's because people don't
usually choose to spend
money at the hospital And
about 90 percent of those who
are
bosp1tabzed have
msurance to cover the bills.
So Carter wants to set a
" national voluntary lunll" of
9 7 percent on hospital cost
mcreases m 1979, and then
put mandatory llm1ts on
hospitals that fail to meet
that goal
In 197a, hospital costs rose
12 8 percent, well above the
overallmcrease of 9 percent
In consumer pr1ces The
American Hospital
AssoclatlOn says that shows
the success of voluntary
efforts, smce pr1ces rose by
15 6 percent the year before
But 11 wasn 't entirely
voluntary. Nme states have
unposed their own hospital
cost controls. Carter sa1d
those controls have worked
w1thout unpa~rmg the quabty
of posp1tal care
The mdustry says 11 should
be allowed pr~ce mcreases of
11 6 percent m 1979. That's
nearly two pomts higher than
the admwstration wants, al·
though 1ts proposed lun1ts
could be relaxed 1! costs
exceed current forecasts
In proposmg the blll, Carter
sa1d hospital cost mflallon IS
umquely
severe ,
and
umquely controllable " It
offers us one of our best
opportumbes to brmg down
the rate of overall mflahon ,"
he sa1d
It could, 1f admm1strahon
forecasts prove accurate But
not qwckly, and not dll'ectly
The pr~ce of serVIces for
hosp1tal patients represents
363 percent of the overall
Consumer Price Index, the

government's baSic measure
of mflation Hosp1tal serviCes
plus health
msurance
represent 2.133 percent of the
mdex
So 1t would take a drast1c
change m hosp1tal costs to
show up as a change in the
cost-of-hvmg f1gures
That's not to say that the
savmgs aren't worth havmg
But they would not be as dra·
maliC as adm1mstrat10n
arguments suggest.
"Through this one p1ece of
legislation we can, ~t a
stroke, reduce lnflat1or c••t
the federal budget ann .... ve
billions of dollars of
unnecessary public and
pnvate spendmg," Carter
said

'OlE DAlLY SENnNEL
(USPS 145-MO)

DEVM'EDT0111E
INTERFSI'OF
MEl~ AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor

DAVID BUSKIRK
AdverUJiq MIID81j:er
Published tbuly except Saturday
by The Ohio Valley Pub\lshmg

Company MuJUmedla, Inc
Court Sl

111

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Business Office Phone 992 2100
Edltmi al Phone 992 21S7
St!cond chlss postagt' paid at
Pomeroy Ohkl

Nallonal advert1smg representative, La ndon Associates, 3101
F.uclld Ave Cleveland, Ohlt~~ll5
Sub&amp;riptlt~n rates Delivered by
ca rrier where 8Vaihtble 75 t:ents per

week By Motor Route where carrier
servit.'e not 8VI:tilable One month
$3 Z5 By matlln Ohio and W Va
One Ye~tr S2'7 SO S!x months
114 50 Three months 18 SO
Rlsc:w~e S32 00 :year She: months
$17 00 , Three months , $9 00
S\lhSL'tiphon pnce mcludes Sunday
Tillll's&amp;nlmt I

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

Nothing qulte st1rs the
emotions on Capitol H1ll as a
trade bill Members con·
cerned with the economiC
health of giVen mdustnes
within their distncts jump to
the defense of those m·
dustr1es Members such as
those from agncultural
states whose constituencies
are highly desirous of un·
proved mtemat10nal trade
markets,
are
equally
vociferous m promotmg those
mterests Thus, the next few
months should prove to be
very 1nterestmg here on
Capitol Hill, as the long
awaited 9a-hatlon trade
package emerges after five
years of negotiations in
Geneva The President 1s
expected to s1gn the package
of
multilateral
trade
agreements
a1med
at
reducing mternat1onal trade
bamers, sometune m April,
after which, the Congress
must act on ImplementatiOn
legislatiOn and e1ther approve or d1sapprove the
package m a straight up and
down vote, m so no amend·
ments are allowed
It 1s still a little too early to
tell what kmd of receptiOn
this legislation will receive on
the Hill, in that all of the !mal
details have yet to be worked
out A look at some of the
specifics of the trade package
being forged in Geneva
suggest that the agreements
are rather comprehensive m
nature Generally speaking,
the trade pact provides 30 to
35 percent average reduc·
lions m U S. unport dulles
and contams SIX codes to
lower mtemallonal non-tan!!
trade barriers The latter has
been the source of particular
' problems for American m·
dustry 10 that foreign com·
petltors have en]oyed
generous government subsidles ln the production and
promotlon of a w1de vanety
of products such as ferro
alloys and speCialized steel,
two Industries of particular
s•grilflcance to the economic
health of Southeastern OhiO
The competitive edge
' provided
the
fore1gn
producers by their govern·
ments has allowed them to
capture many of tho! markets
heretofore serv1c~d by
Amencan producers.
At present, the major code
modifications appear to
shape up as follows
Subsidies - The draft code
prohibits direct or mdirect

gover;~~ment subsidies on
ex port s of such " non·
pnmary"
goods
as
machinery and airplanes,
and on lrOfl ore, coal and
other ,"prunary" mmerals
Standards - The code IS
designed to discourage
d1scnimnatory
natwqal
mampulation of product
standards, product testmg,
and product cerllficallon
systems
Government Procurement
- This code would attempt to
reduce
d1scnmmat10n
agamst foreign suppliers
when governments are
buymg goods for their own
use Nat1onal secunty and
agricultural support Items
would be excluded
Customs Valuation - The
code would establish f1ve
methods, one prunary and
four secondary, to be used m
hierarchial sequence to
determine customs value
Import Licensing - The
code would simplify and
harmonize the procedures
unporters must follow to get
an import license
It IS d1fflcult at this point in
tune to judge the full impact
of these code changes
Negotlatmg ls a two-way
street and trade offs are
unavoidable' The
Ad·
mmistration mamtains that
• after allls said and done, the
United States wlll have
considerably strengthened 1ts
position in the world trade
community
The growing Importance of
fore1gn trade to our Nation's
economy cannot be un·
derstated World trade ln·
valves one Sixth of everylhmg
that Is grown or made on this
planet, and has an annual
value of over one trillion
dollars. Wlth our trade
def1cits constantly growmg.
because of our large
dependence on foreign oll
unports, we must do every·
thmg possible to enhance our
Nation's ability to export At
the same tune we must approach the CMsideration of
the forthcoming trade
package with appropriate
caution We must be alert to
our Nation's long·term
economic and national
secunty mterests In our
eagerness to expand exports,
we must be careful not to
wr1te off mdustrles whose
critical contributions to our
Nation 's defenses and
economic well-being cannot
be eas1ly replaced

"

..

By TERRY KINNEY
AP Sports Writer
TAMPA, F1a. (AP ) -Gene
Locklear works alone m the
battmg cage, sweat mattmg
down h1s w1spy hair, honmg a
skill he hopes to sell to the
Cmcmnall Reds
''I know I'm not gomg to be
playmg very much, so I have
to do my work on my own,"
Locklear explamed
He's 29 years old, a )().year
veteran of organized baseball
who somehow never seemed
to be m the nght place at the
r1ght tune He almost stuck
With a couple different maJor
league teams, but as he says,
"there was always something
that kept that from happen·
mg ,"
hke
rebu1ldmg
programs ,
or
youth
movements or maybe JUS! the
breaks of the game.
"Uke how I h1t 321 With
San D1ego one year and never
played the next year," he
satd " I thought I could play
at San Diego "
And there was th e
Japanese venture a year ago
that turned sour
Locklear left the New York
Yankees orgamzatlon after
1977 and s1gned a two-year
contract With the N1ppon
Ham Fighters
11
) didn 't hke 1t over there ,"
he S8ld ' Everyth10g was so
expens1ve you couldn't save
any money
"There
were
com..
plicabons, too, and one
thmg led to another They
were paymg me a certam
amowt of money and they
expected me to hit home
runs But I'm not that type of
hitter, so finally I got out of
my contract "

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

TRY OUT

Garlic won't help
DEAR DR LAMB - Will
garlic correct high blood
pressure? ~at are (he
symptoms of h1gh blood
pressure? What can cause
the top of your head to feel
as though there were a
we1ght on top of 11 and as if 1t
werebght?
DEAR READER - No, ,
garlic w1ll not correct h1gh
blood pressure I'm contmually amazed at all of the
fantasy around garlic As a
matter of fact, one of our
early health food promoters,
Adolphus Hohensee, urged
the use of garhc to treat low
blood pressure He also
urged people to put a p1ece
of garlic m the1r rectwn
each n•ght
Don't expect any health
benefits from garlic other
than 1ts ability to keep people away from you, when
you have garlic on yoW'
breath That might help proted you from contagious
diseases you rrught get from
oversoc1alizmg at close
proximity
H1gh blood pressure may
not cause any sym~torns at
all That's why 11 s necessary for people to have regu·
lar blood preiiSure checks to
flhd problems of this sort I
am sendmg you The Health
Letter number 1-8, Blood
Pressure, to give you more
Information on what affects
tl and how 1t affeclB you.
Others who want this ISSue
can send 50 cents with a
long, stamped, self-ad·
dressed envelope for 1t. Send
your request to me ln care of
thiS newspaper, P.O Box
1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.
You'll need a medical examination to flnd out what
causes your complaint about
your head It may simply be
tight muscles. Remember,
your scalp, back of your
head and neck all have muscles In that area that can get
tight and tellH} particularly
if you are tight and tense

.•

EXTRA
CRISPY

DEAR DR. LAMB - Sev·
era! months ago I noticed
some lwnps under my arms
Smce I have been doing a lot
of hoemg and d1ggmg m my
yard, I thought perhaps I
had overdone that Also, I
bave qUite an allergy , runny
nose, sneezing, itchmg eyes,
etc I had a complete phys•·
cal and the doctor didn 'I
seem to be concerned about
the lumps in my ann. He did
some blood tests wh1ch were
nonnal I was uneasy about
the lwnps so a month later I
had more tests done and
they, too, were nonnal The
doctor just sa1d to hang

KENTUCKY
FRIE-DCHICKEN

CRalfS

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

1.--Po,;;;.;m;;;e;;,r,;oOY'I'Oioiill.. .._.

streak to their fine 16-5
record
W1th the exception of one
game , all f1ve losses have
been by less than SIX pomts
Pomt Pleasant, a ranked
West V1rgm1a AAA power·
house, downed the Tornadoes
by e1ght and SIX pomts, but
only by pullmg away late 10
the game Another loss was a
one-pomt contest on a last
second shot
Coach Charlie Huggms'
Rebels are 2J.l and ranked
number one m Ob10 The1r
only loss was to nval
Ne¥.comerstown
,
Over the years, they have
been the most successful
team m OhiO ThiS year's
team relied on quickness and
strong defense

Then U&gt;cklear started w1th
the Reds' orgamzatlon In his
fourth year 10 the mmors, he
led the Amencan Assoc1at1on
m battmg w1th a 325 average
wh1le playmg lor the Reds'
top
farm
tea m
at
lnd1anapohs
But the Reds, who were Na·
twnal League champs that
year 1972, and Western D1v1·
s1on champs the next year,
had enough talent to send
George Foster down to
lnd•anapolls and to de al
Locklear to San D1ego along
w1th M1ke Johnson and cash
to get pitcher Fred Norman
Locklear glayed JUS! 96
games that year and divided
the next year between Hawau
and the Padres But then m
1975, he hit 321 10 100 games
w1th San D1ego
He played JUst 43 games for
the Padres the next year,
then went to the Yankees'
team m Syracuse and fmally
flmshed the season m New
York Th e next year at

LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohw (AP)
L W Omahs regamed the
lead 10 the stretch Tuesday
rught and won the $1,200
conditiOned pace at Lebanon
by a length, paymg $15 40,
$4 ao and $4
Fuzzy T Direct paid $6 60
and $3 for second, and Tender
Caress, th1rd, p8ld $5
Lumber Land Gal and
Bengal Tink , J.2, paid $24 m
the double The crowd of 1,302
bet $142,661

LATONIA
FLORENCE, Ky (AP) ObliVIOUS MISS captured the
$5,300 featured eighth race at
Latoma by a length Tuesday
mght and pa•d $2 ao, $2 ao and

$2;~parat10n

Gap was
second , pay1ng $7 40 and
$5 20, and Dr Betty, th ~rd ,
returned $3 40
The 3·9 double of Ricky's
Pet and P1stach10 Paul
returned $97 40 Attendance
was 3,085 and the mutuel pool
totaled $450,443

DALE'S

loose

Anywav, I've heard that
some lun1ps are normal in
that area. Is that correct?
Otherwise, I am a healthy
58-year-&lt;&gt;ld woman Please
g1ve me your opmlon of the
lumps.
DEAR READER You've done the most tmpor·
!ant thing by seeing a docto•
to let hun examine the
lwnps The only way anyone
can really determine
whether a lwnp IS Important
or not IS to examine it. Those
that are suspicious or larger
sometimes need to be removed and examined undeo
a microscope to be certam '
You can develop lumps
under the ai1IllJ that don'~
have any medical unpor•
lance. Doing , a blood tes{
was helpful to your doctor irl1
deciding thai the lumps,
weren't a seriOus problem. 11
The lymph IB!ands some-'~
times cause such lwnps!
They are literally a barrier
aga1nst Infection to the rest:
of your body. If you get a nj
Infection ln your finger, the&lt;
lymph glands filter the1
lymph that comes from yout,
arm and traJIII the bacteriBJ
so that they don't Invade th~:
rest of your bloodatream and!
Infect your whole body Inl
the process of trapping IIi;;
fectious organisms, theJ
glands get awollen an, •
110111etlmes tenller.
I NEWSPAPER &amp;:m:ERPIUSIE ASSN l

By Greg Bailey
The Class A RegiOnal
basketball game tomorrow
night between Southern and
Indian Valley South marks
the first tune these two
schools have ever met on the
hardwQOd, but both schools
have made their marks on the
tournament trail
The
Rebels
from
Gnadenhutten have been m
SIX state tournaments
Southern has never made 11
to Columbus, however the
Tornadoes have won three
straight league titles, three
straight sectional crowns,
and now have added a dlstr1ct
IItle to the1r credentmls
The Tornadoes of Coach
Carl Wolfe have relied on
speed and a stron~ bench to

The key to their offensiVe
punch has bee n 1 arry
Huggins, the 6-3 coach's son
The sen1or IS averaging 25
pomts per game and 1s the
team's leading rebounder
Oh10 State Coach Eldon
M11ler called him the second·
best guard m OhiO
Southern has been paced
th1s season by All..SE D1stnct
Tim Bnna ger who 1s
averagmg 13 4 po10ts per
game But the key to the
Tornadoes success hes m the
fact that five players are
averagmg m double figures
Besides Brmager's scormg,
semor Dw1ght H1ll averages
11 4 pomts, center Dave
Foreman hits at a 11 2 clip,
and ]Umor Jack Duffy and
semor playmaker Dave

Fmdley ooth are averagmg
nearly 11 pomts per contest
Round in g out th e first
seven on the Southern squad
are senaor J1m O'Br1en and
sophomore Dale Teaford
All seven of these boys have
had startmg assignments th1s
year
O'Bnen and Teafo rd have
been play10g t hm strongest
ball on the tournament tra1l
O' Bnen has h1t double hgures
10 four straight tournament
games, and Teaford, h1ttmg
double h gures fr equently
can hold h1s own agamst
anyone under the boards
Others on t he forna do
squad who have worked hard
and contnbuted all season
a re Jonathan Rees , Ed
Roush, John Dav1s, Steve

Locklear hoping to land job

HEALTH
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

Southern-Indian Valley South
to tangle for first time Thursday

I

.,

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
SALE ENDS
MARCH 15TH
Winter Months
Nothing To Do?

PUT IN
A NEW KITCHEN!

Syracuse he hit 290 and
drove m a4 run s, but then left
the Yankee orgamzat10n for
the stmt m Japan
"I've been w1th a wmmng
or gamzatwn (Cmcmnatl and
New York) and a loser (Sa n
D1ego l , and the atmosphere
1s so much better w1th a
winn er," I ocklear sa1d
" I• verybody JUSt has a better
attitude, and there's a chance
for some extra mane) at the
end of the

Locklear sa1d he talked to
several teams last w10ter but
" the Reds acted the most
mt e1ested "
' H they tlunk U~ey ll be m
th e (World ) Se11es , I'll have a
bett er chance of makmg 1l
With them because you've
got to have a strong bench
and ever) bod) can use a good
pmch h1ttcr 'hesa1d " I hope
I can latch on and last four or
fiv e ) ears '

SE'&lt;lAAn

Today's

Sports World
B) Will Grimsley
AP Correspondent

CASH &amp;· CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELf.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla ( J\P) - Ball players m sprmg
trammg camps are followmg th~ NCAA basketball playoffs
w1th the keen mterest normally reserved for the stock market
ticker, but none mor e avidly than the Yankees Tommy John
The rangy ex-Dodger With the b10mc left arm has a
leg•llmate rootmg mterest 10 the natiOn's No 1 team, un beaten
lnd1ana State
It 's h1s alma mater Terre Haute, Ind , IS h1s home town H1s
parents, plus a rash of uncles, aunts and cousms all sttll l"e
there Indiana State's Ali-America star, Larry B1rd. 1s a
golfmg compamon and one of h1s closest fnends
"Larry IS commg down to camp after the playoffs are over I hope to goodness the Sycamores are 10 the f1nals,' John sa1d
durmg a respite m the Yankee locker room "He loves
baseball He's commg down to watch and were gomg to play a
httle golf w1th Bob Tosk1 •
Talk of the college basketball showdown has saturated the
baseball tra10mg scene
Pete Rose 1s upset because the Ph!lhes' exh1b1hon sched!1le
may force him to m1ss the NCAA fmals on TV Almost ev·
erybody was shocked by the defeat of Duke and North Carohna
at the hands of a couple of Eastern teams, one of them -of all
thmgs - from the Ivy League
Who's gomg to wm the b1g one - Notre Dame, UCLA ,
M1eh1gan State, Indiana State?
"I sllli thmk the Allant1c Coast Conference plays the best
basketball In the country," John Sald "And there's not a better
coach anywhere than Dean Smith at North Carolina 1 don't
understand 11 They must have gotten over-eonf1dent But don't
count lndmna State out
"A lot of people don 't take them seriously They've st11l got to
prove themselves So you can bet they're gomg to be f1red up to
the gills "
The newest of the Yankees' free agent mllhona~res , whose
career was saved when a tendon from h1s nght arm was sewn
mto a ruptured hgament m his left elbow, bas been back home
m Ind1ana s10ce s1grung w1th the world champions last
November
' " There are the same
"Terre Haute never changes," he said.
number of people m town - about 70,000 - as when my father
was growmg up," he sa1d "What IS different 1s the enthus1aslli
shown for this basketball team
"It's a little ~rome For years, the merchants and
!Dwnspeople didn't do anythmg for the team A friend of mme,
an auto dealer named Bob McClelland, provided free cars and
spent thousands of dollars to help the recnntmg program
"We had a httle gym that seated about 6,600 The student
section was f11led The rest of place was nearly empty
'Now that lnd1ana State IS No I and has the best player m
the country m Larry Bll'd, everybody's saymg, "Our team and
'our man, Larry 'They JUmped on the band wagon
"Larry. Is not only a fme player but a great guy -modest,
loyal, completely honest Anyone else would have s1gned that
b1g pro contract a year ago "
•

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

BEL TONE Consultant Who W1ll Be AI
MEIGS INN , POMEROY, OHIO
THURSDAY , MAR 1S, 9am lo12noon

.

Anyone who h as troubl e hean ng IS wel come to have a

hear~ ng test u smg th e latest electronic equtp m ent to
determine 1f h•s loss IS on e whi ch lnay be helped Some

of the cause s o f heanng loss Will be e1&lt;pla 1ned a nd
diagrams of ho w th e ear work s w ill be shown
Heanng

Baftenes and Supplies For All M akes For Sale

us.;.:t11

Point Pleasant

STANDINGS
Na tional
Basketba ll A ssoc 1at1on
At A Glance
By T he Assoc1a ted Pres s
Eas t ern Conference
Atl antic OIVI SIOO
VVa sh

Ph•l a

J5 31 510 10

SEOAL
teams
battle

11
131
15

26 42

382 1412

41 27 603
40 28 588

Ph oen1 x
40 28 588
San D1ego
37 3? 536 41,
Portland
36 32 529 5
Gold en S t
30 39 435 11 12
Tu esd a y 's Games
New York 104 New Orleans
Wa shm gton 120 Los A ngeles
Ill

2

21

41

Ch tcago

91

565 )

Hou ston
39 30 552
Cleve
2.8 40 412
De trod
26 11
388
N Or leans
21 48 304
Western Conference
Mtd west DIVI SIOn
Kan u ty
41 28 59 4
Denve r
37 33 529

435 11

435 11

Seatt le
Lo s Ang

W L Pe t
GB
45 21 682

39 JO

30 39

30 39

P ac ifi C DIVI SIOn

N Jersey
33 33 500 12
N ew York.
29 11
4 14 18
Boston
26 40 394 19
Central DIVI SIOO
San Ant
41 26
617

Atlanta

lndtana

M ll wau

2

Phoen1 x 124 Clevela nd 120
lnd1 ana 122 Detro1t 120 OT
Ch1 ca go 105 New Jer sey 102
Portland 103 Atla nta 82
Wednesdav s Games
Ph oen1 x at Boston
Sea ttl e at Ph1 l ade lph1 a
New Or leans at Milwa ukee
Los Ang eles a t San An toma
Kan sas C1f y at Hou ston
New Jer se y at Denver
Portland at Sa n D1 ego
At lanta at Golden State
Thur sda y' s Gam es
Sert ttl e at Cleve land
New York at Detrml
San An ton1o at New Or lea ns

Pro Hocke y At AGlance
By The Assoctated Press
Nat10nal Hoc key league
Ca mpbell Conferen ce
Patn ck DIVISIOn

W L T Pis GF GA

IF YOU CANN OT COME IN
CALL FOR A HOME APPOI Nl ME NT
Phone qo2 3619

Highlander gals
eliminated 31-22
Coach Mel Carter's South

pomts m the first penod and
c1ght durmg the first half
Pamt valley too k a 19·16lead
gomg mto the fm al stanza
Lmda Edwards led South
"estern With 12 pomts wh1le
J ordan had fo ur Barba ra
Stc\\a rt th e tea m's onl)
sen1or member , failed to
score
Pums and Duff\ led Pamt
Valley With 11 and 10 pomts

west ern Highlander ... gir ls

team wmners of the Class A
Sect wnal Tournament at
Mc1gs H1gh Schoo l, " ere
ellmmated from further
actiOn Tuesday mght, 31·22 by
Pamt Valley
P laymg at Chilli coth e
Southwestern was 10 th e
contest until the fmal 44
sec onds "hen two costh
turnovers killed any chanc es
for a comeback Before those
turnovers Pamt Valley held
a four pomt lead
The game startly slowly as
both teams collected JUSt four

Middleport
sets dates
to sign-up

respecti vely

Pa mt Va lley sank 111ne of 22
foul shot s wh1le Southwcste&lt;n
hit fo ur of II
'Jlte wmners are lH on th e
season whi le Southweste• n
hm shed With a 7.£ record
Bo,.; Score
Sou t hwe ster n
(22)
Stewar t 0 0 0 Jeffer s 1 0 2
Halley 0 2 2 Jordan 2 0 ~
Edwards 6 0 12 and Fadely
022 Totals94 22
Pa1nt Va ll ey (3 1) - Pur vts
5 1 11 Duffy 3 11 10 Af1 de r son
3 1 7 Maur1ce 0 2 2 and
Ba1sden 0 1 1 Total s 11 9 J l
By Quarter s
4 s 16
Southw es ter n
4 8 19 31
Pa1 n t Valley

Th e Middleport Youth
League Will have then s1gn
up day Saturday, Ma rch 17
for youth part1c1patmg m the
summer baseball program
S1gn up \\ Ill be at Middleport
Cit) Hall 1downstairs council
room ) between the hours of 9
a m 3 p m Th1s w1ll be the
onl) s1gn up day held
A reg1strat10n lee of $5 lor
each youth mu:;t be pa1d at
the tune of reg1strat1on The
money 1s used for league
equtpment msuran ce, etc
The teams Will be T·Ball
(ages 5·7), Pee-Wee tages a
and 9), L1ttle League (ages
10·12) and Pony League (ages
13·15 ) How old a )OUth 1s
before Aug I determmes
wh1ch league the) w1ll pla)

An all-SEOA L D1stnet
42 13 12 96 305 180
Tournament \\Ill begm NY Rang 37 21 8 82 273 224
Thursday at Athens H1gh A tl anta 36 24 7 79 272 236
Ph Ia
30 22 14 7d 22 1 203
School
Smythe DIVI SIOn
Four SEGAL teams won Ch1cago 25 19 12 62 202 235 In
thetr respectiv e sectional Vanco u 19 39 10 48 190 267
Any g1rl age 3 and 9 who
tournaments, thus advancmg St LOU IS 17 41 10 44 220 299 would
hke to p1a) on a g1rl s
Colo
14
46
9
37
185
296
to the Athens D1stnct
softball team mav s1gn up on
Wal es Conference
League champi on Ironton
Adam s DIVI SIOn
th1s day The reg1st rat1on fee
goes aga mst Waverly at 6 30 Boston
37 19 12 86 270 221 Is also $5 and 1s used lor
p m Later nvals Me1gs and Buffalo 28 2&lt; 14 70 22&lt; 219 eQUipm ent. msurance etc
o 29 27 11 69 219 207
Gall1pohs battle at a 30 p m Toront
M tnn
24 31 11 59 219 229
If anyone Wishes additiOnal
Ironton w1th a 17·2 record 1s
Norns DI'¥'1 Sion
mform•t10n about the M•d·
favored aft er captunng 1ts x Mo nt 44 13 10 98 290 173 dleport Yout h I cag uc
29 28 9 67 232 24 1
distnct last yeat Wav erly 1s Pitts
Los An g 29 30 9 67 244 247 program they may call the
9-12, Gal11pohs 1s 13·5, and Wash
21 34 12 54 235 28• league preSident John Hood.
Me1gs IS 13.£
Defro tt
15 35 16 46 213 253 992-5064 or Pat K1tchen
Me1gs and Galllpohs spht
X Cl inC hed d iV ISIOn
(league secretary ) 992.£212
Tuesday 's Games
their two games dunng
r egular season, each wmn10g 2N ew York Islanders 7 Bos ton
on 1ts hom e floor
Sf Lou1 s 5 Colorado 5 tt e
GAHS downed Me1gs by Pd t sburgh 9 Vancouver 3
Wednesday s Games
NOTICE
mne and MHS down ed the
Atl anta at New York Rang er
Blue Angels by five Me1gs Detro 1t at Washmgton
downed Warren 10 the Athens Buff alo a t Tor onto
Sect10nal 46 45 to go to the Phllad~lph•a a t Chtcago
dist mi, and Gallipolis got by Montreal at Mmnesota
a t Los Angel es
So uth Pmnt 10 the Ironton P1tt sburgh
Thur sday s Games
SectiOnal
N ew Yor k Rangers at Boston
Now Open Saturday s
Startmg tomorrow mght for To ronto a t New Yo r k
Me1gs w1ll be All league Islander s
9ttl 1
Atla nta at Phll adelphta
Second Team select10ns Tern Vanco
992-5101
uver at Bu ffalo
W1lson and Dod1e Chapman
Spnng Av e.
E1ther Soma or Toma Ash
Pomeroy, 0
a nd Andrea R1ggs will be
CARAVAN PLANNED
handlmg the ball, and e1ther
There will be a car
freshman Knstm Anderson
Thursday,
or sophomore Apnl Kmg will c aravan
following the Southern
be the pomt guard
Basketball Team lo the
Kmg IS JUst commg off a
bad ankle InJUry , but she Athens Reg10nat Cage
should be full) recovered by Tournament.
If anyone would like to
tomorro11 Anderson filled m
]Om In the cara\&amp;D and
well for her dur10g her abhave their cars decorated
sence
W1l son and Chapman
please be at the Southern
High School bet\\ecn 4:15
control the boards for the
Marauders Wilson IS the
and 4:30 p.m. The Pep
team's leadmg scorer Soma
Club will help dec
Ash has been commg on
orate the cars.
The caravan wtll lea" e
strong lately, and R1ggs 1s a
the high school at5 p m. for
very aggressive player
Athens Game time Is 7
Me1gs IS coached by Joy
p m against rugged Ind1an
Bentley and Roger Brauer
The coaches have brought up
yall~Y. Squth.
three reserves to fill the
roster as Shen Lightfoot IS
out for the season w1th an
lllJUry Those r eserves are
Dana Neece, La ura Sm1th
and Lynn Oliver
Me1gs can play c1ther a
deliberate or runnmg game
Coach Bentley says her squad
Will have to stay out of foul
trouble and break the press
that GalliRQhs likes to use
Galllpohs likes to run w1th
the ball, and center Sarah
Evans 1s the Blue Angels h1gh
scorer Evans made the first
team All·league th•s year,
From Ohio Seed Company
and the Angels' Coach Jackie
Kn1ght was chosen Coach of
the Year
* PEAS *CORN * BEANS
Other starters for the
*LETTUCE * RADISHES * ONION SETS
Gallia squad are'Sara Abels
and J anet Groves at forwards
and Shirl Stoney and Kathy
BUY NOWDemels at the guards
A neutral floor Will dec1de
who has the best team, and
any fan who wants to sec
Mason . W Va .
some good basketball can
catch 11 11lursday mght

FuHon-Thompson

n

·'MAGIC CIRCLE'
KANSAS CITY Mo 1API
- Mumc1pal Judge I eo nard
Hu ghes Jr sca nned th e
tralf1e t1ckct of an elderl)
ma n r ecently a nd sa td ,
' You'1e m l he magu.: cu clc
No fme, JUst the pomts
W1th that, the man was
d1rccted out the m am door of

the courtroom penalt y pomts
ha \ mg been assessed agmn ~l
hts hcense but h1s \\ Hllct no

lighter

• F1shmg Tackle
and Rods
and Ree ls
• Guns and
Re load10g
e Ball Glove s
Campmg
EqUipm e nt
• Archer y
• Indoo r Games
• ·w e
h ave G!lf
Cerf!f!c afes
601 MaiO St.
PI Pleasant, W Va

Tractor Sales

VISA
Across from Courth ouse

PHONE
675 2988
Open Sunday

.. . .

BULK GARDEN SEED

Hearing Aid SpecialiSt

We Al so Serv1ce and Repa1r All Mak es of

2119 Jackson Ave.

JUmors and Ripley 1s a
sophomore Two boys who
sec lots of action off the bench
arc II~ V r n RPa } a

The Daily Sentinel

NOW IN

Will Be Gtven By
Mr. H. W. Mattmg ly

BRING IN
YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
EXPERTS WILL
HELP YOU!

semors, Emler and Gray are

sophomore, and scmor Jeff
Strucker at 5·a
The Tornado es Will be
conSidered the underdogs,
but when a team wms the
district t1tle, there's more
than luck mvolved
lnd1an Valley Will be a
g1cat test for the Tornadoes,
but With con fid ence, deter·
mw at10 n, and some fan
support from all over the
county, Southern could still
be 10 t he tourney come
Fnday mommg
Game lime IS 7 p m and
ti ckets a re on sale at
Southern H1gh School A car
ca ravan will leave the school
at 5 p m

N Y I slander s

HEARING TESTS SET
FOR MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

BIG 40%

F1tch and John Pa pe
Southern was the leadmg
scorer Ill the area thiS year as
they netted 70 a pomts ~e r
ga me while giVIng up 57 1
ln d1an Valley IS not as tall
as Southern, but IS somewhat
qu1cker Other starters for
the Rebels are 'I odd R1pley at
5·10 and Kevm Gray at the
sa me hmght
R1pley Is th e second Ieadmg
scorer on the squ ad
B1ll Mathias stands at 5·11
and Bryan Emler 1s 6 1
Huggms and Math1as arc

SPORTS

A1d s

PICKENS HARDWARE

1 p m 6 p 111
Monday Th r u Saturda y
~"' ..,... •"' 8 o m

l

�•

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Mar. 14, 1979

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Ponwn•y, 0 ., Wednes~ay , Mar. 14, 1919

Garvey says .Pete Rose

NCAA College Ba sketball

Tournament At A

tough man to replace
VERO BEACH, Fla . (AP)
- Cincinnati's loss of Pete
Rose is tougher on lhe Reds
than Los Angeles' loss of
Tommy John, accordng to
Dodgers first baseman Steve
· Garvey.
Both stars went to other
dubs in the re-entry dralllhis
year when they were Ul)able
' to get the contracts tliey
wanted.
"You hope your people can
replace a guy like that by
picking up a little here and
there ," said Garvey on
Tuesday.
"It's tough to replace a
Pete Rose. Ray knight will do
a good job (at third base) but

TRY OUT

EXTRA
QISPY
KENTUCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

CHaN'S

FAMILY RESTAURANT
9.92-5432 .
Pomeroy, 0 ..

you can't beat experience. Il
lakes a while to learn the
pit chers. Il too k me three or
four years to learn all lhe
pit chers," said the veteran
first baseman.

Even without Rose, Lopes
believes Reds still good

'"· Tournament scores
Alabarna 66
Sunday's Games

At Lawrence, Kan .

Glance

By The Associated

Garvey said he believed the
loss of John as a starting
pitcher would be less of a
problem for Los Angeies.
"It's tougher to lose an everyday player lhan il is to
lose .a slarling pilcher who
Ohio High School
goes every fifth day. Pete
Girls Ba sketba II
Rose is a bigger loss lhan
By The As sociated Press
Tommy John.
Tuesday Night
"Plus, we're a pitcher·
Class AAA Tournament s
At Wright State
oriented team. We've always
University
had the No. 1 or No. 2 staff in
ingfield Nort h 62. Xenia 26
the league. Hopefully we can Spr
Troy 45, Bellefonta ine 48
replace Tommy.' '
At Columbus Briggs
The Dodgers are hoping Newark 45; Columbus Ea st 43
that Andy Messersmith, who Columb u s Wat er so n 66 .
A.rlington 52
once left the Dodgers, will fill Upper
Cla ss AA Tournament s
the bill since his return. ,
At Uniontown Lake
, Garvey compared · Rose' · Uniontown Lake 61, Woo ster
loss to the Dodger's problems Triway 59
Navarre Fairless 66, Rittman
withoul team leader Maury 50
Wills seven years ago.
Class A Tournam ents
AI Findlay
"Pete was such a dominant
·part of the Reds," Garvey Old Fort 56. Arlington 28
Van lue 56, New Ri egel 51
said .
At Whitehall
"He had the lendency to he Canal Winchester 41. Galion
- how can I say il - the nu- Nor thm or 36
L anc as t e r
Fi sher
61,
cleus. Everybody revolved Cardington
50
aroUI)d him .. Players would

~ress

Indiana St. B6. Virgin ia
Tech 69
Arkansas 74, Weber St . 63

First Round
Ma rch 9
East Regional

rather be on tile uutside and
not get involved.
"Now Joe Morgan 's got to
lead. George Fosfer has to be
a learler. Ken Griffey has to
be a leader. I don 't think it
has to be just one guy . They
had that before, " Garvey
said.

At Raleigh, N. C.
St . John 's 75, Templ e
Penn 73. tona 69
Mideast Regional

70

At Murfreesboro, Tenn.

West Regional
Saturday 's Game s
At Tucso.n, Ariz.
San Francisco 86, Brigham
Young 63
Marquette 73, Pacific 48
Sunday's Games
At Los Angeles
UCLA 76, Pepperdin e ~ 1

Lam ar 95, Detro it B7
Tennessee 97, E . Kentucky

81

DePaul

Midwest RegiOnal

At ~awrenc~. Kan .
Weber St. 81. New Mex ico
St . 78, ot

Virginia
T e~ h
70,
Jacksonville 53
Wes t Regional
At Los Angeles
Pepperdine 92. Utah 88, ot
Southern Cat 86, Utah St . 67
Se(ond Round
East Regiona I

Saturday's Games
At Providence, R. I.

Rutgers
D.C. 58

64,

'

Georgetown.

89,

Regional SemifinalS

~

East
Friday's Games
At Greensboro, N.C.
Sy racus e (26-3) vs. Penn

123·51

Rutgers (22 -8) vs . St.
Jo hn's (20· 10)
Mideast

Friday's Games
At Indianapolis. Ind. ·

At Raleigh, N. C.

Penn 72, N. Carolina 71
·st: John' s fiO, Duke 78

Mideast Reglona I

Michigan St .

Sunday 's Games
At Murfreesboro, Tenn .
Michigan St . 95, Lamar 64
Notre Dame ):3 , Tennessee

vs.

122·6)

'

vs .

C21 -9)

diana St. ,(30, 0)
West

vs .

h~s

team's

pennant · plans as th e
subtraction of Pete Rllse
from the cincinnati Reds .
The IllS Angeles Dodgers'
captain and de facto spokesman said Rose's mullimillon®llar jwnp lo the Phillies
"could be a blessing for lhe
Reds.
At New Concord

Old Wa shington Bu ckeye
Tr a il 59, Freeport Lakeland
Guer ns e ,y
Latholl c 74, Shadyside 55

In -

FOOTBALL
National Football league

PHILADEL PHIA EAGLES

Thursday's Games

At Provo, Utah
Marquette (22 - 6)
DePaul (23 -5)

vs .

.San Franc i sco (22 -6 ) vs.
(24-4)

UCLA

Regional Championship

Na med L ynn St i les an
admin istr ati ve assis tant and
tight end coach .
Canadian Football League

TORONTO

ARGONAUTS

- Reh ired Chuck Dickerson ,
defensiv e li ne coach .

East

Saturday's Games

AI Oaffas

Okla homa 90, Texas 76
L ouisv il le
69,
Sout h

•

bothersome to

32
~ am~ridge

67 .

Midwest Regional

i\ P Sports Wrih•r

(24· 4)

Ok la homa

At Bloomington, Ind .
Toledo 74, Iowa 72
...
Lo u isia na St. 71, Ap palachian St. 57

(23-5)

Midwest
Thursday 's Games
At Cincinnati
Lou isv ille
( 24 -7)

Arkansas

Saturday's Games

St .

'· I think a lot of their people

FORT LAUDERDAI.F.,
Fla . tAP I - Davey li&gt;peS
suspects that the addition of
Pete !\ose tothe Philadelphia
Phillies won't be as ·

Toledo (22-7) vs . Notre
Dame 123 5)
Louisiana

Syracuse 89, Connecticut 81
Sundav•s Games

South ern Cat 78

Ry UAN SEWELl,

Sunday's Games
At Greensboro, N.C.
· Syracuse -Penn winner vs.

National·lnvitationa I
Tournament Glance
By The Associated Press
First Round

Rutgers-St. John 's· winner

'

Mideast
Sunday's Games

i

At Indianapolis, Ind.
Toledo-Notre Dame w inner
vs . Lo uisi~na St.-Michigan
51. wi nner

Midwest

Saturdav 's Games
At Cincinnati
Lo uisv ille
Arkan sas
winner vs. Oklahoma . In dian a St. winner

,_

West
Saturday's Games
At Provo, Utah
Marquet t e-DePaul winn er
vs . Sa n Francisc o -UCL A
winner
National Semifinals

March 24

At Salt Lake (ity
National Championship

March 26
At Salt Lake City

•
t

National NAfA

'

Tournament
By The Associated Press
At Kansas City, Mo.
First Round
Briar Cliff 83, Loui siana
College 69
Cent
Washington
83,
Dakota Wesl 62
Drury 69, Hanove r 60
High Poin t, N.C. 91, Oregon
Tech 62
Kearney State, Neb. 98,
Lem oyn e,ONen 1 Tenn . 79
Midwestern St . ~4 , Grand
Valley 63
Qu incy, Ill. , 77 , ·Bir ·
ming ham Southern ·75
Southern
Tec h
75 ,
California St. - Doming uez
Hills 66

''

t

I

'

Wednesday's Games

Virginia

79,

..._f

North east

Louisiana 78
Clemson 68, Kentucky 67 , of
Old Domin ion 83, Wagner

81

· Ohio St.80, St. JoSej)h' s-:Pa ., 66
Maryland 67, Rhode Island
65, 3 ot
Nevada -Reno 62, Oregon
St. 61
Thursday 's Games
P ur due
97 ,
Central
Mich igan 80
Dayton 105, Holy Cross 81
Indiana 78. Texas Tech ' 59

Alabama
98,
St.
Bonaventure 89
Alcorn State 80; M ississippi
State 78
Texas A&amp;M 79, New M ex ico
68
Second Round
Monday's Games
Alabama 90, Virginia 88
Indiana 73; Alcorn St . 69
Old Dominion 61, Clemson
59, 2 ot
Ohio St. 79, Maryland 72
Purdue 84, Dayton .70
Texas A&amp;M 67, NevadaReno 64
·

.

got good balanCill and wilh
lhe righl intangibles, they
could win it all."
-"San Diego is a very
much improved ballclub. You
don 'l walk inlo their ballpark
anymore and expect an easy
time. They slill need a second
baseman and a third
basema n. I don 'l think
they're ready to challenge
yet."
- " Houston
has
a
tremendous amount of talenl.
But if lhey trade Bob Watson,
lhal will hurt. They traded
Mark Lemongello. Their
starting rolation after James ·
Rodney Richard isn 'l the besl
rolalion they've had in the
lasl few years. And a lol
depends on whether Cesar
Cedeno's healthy.",
-"Atlanta is a very young
ballclub. A lol of question

are going to be playing
harder than ever. Afler all
the publicity about Rllse, I
think they're going to have
extra incentive, to show that
they weren't a one-man
team ," Lopes said.
He said losing Rllse and
fired Manager Sparky
Anderson might have stunned
the Reds at first, "bul I lhink
lhe shock wears off.
"They still have some gre·
garious guys over lhere ,
namely Joe Morgan and
Johnny Bench. And I hear
!hal George Foster is starting
to come out of his shell.
"I really don 't know what
their situation is. Pele Rose is
a greal ballplayer who gives
you 100 percenl. Bul maybe
lhose guys lhoughl he was ·a
pain .. . lo have around .
Maybe they feel like they're marks."
And t he learn he 's
beller off withoul him . I don'l
predicting
will win all :
!mow.
1'( Wilh Gary Thomasson,
· " I know this : their firsl si~
hillers are as good as any Darrel Thomas, and Von
team's iii baseball. They 've Josh ua) we 've got more
got good defense up the depth . We don'l !mow yel
middle. They've got some about Andy Messersmith , but
good young pitchers and if the way he pitched in the
Doug Bair was good coming · first game ·Is any indication,
he's going to he a help.
out of the bullpen.
"We've been there 1 twice
" If anyone takes them for
and
we're tired of being
granled, lhey're in for a sursecond-best.
We're out to
prise," he said.
prove
that
we're
No. I. We're
"The Phillies are hoping
·going
lo
do
whatever
it
his huslle will rub off. He's
takes."
World
been on lwo
Champions, they're looking
al lhe intangibles.
LEGAL NOT IC E
"But I'm not sure how you
c;m help that ballclub. They
The Publ 1c Utiliti es Com·
win 100 games, lhey've got
m ission of Ohio h as se t for
plenty of ballplayers," he
pub lic hearing Cas ~ No
said.
78-627 ·EL·FAC S,ubfite A.
l.&lt;Jpes, accelerating his disto review th u fu t!l procure course the
way
he
ment pra ct ices and policies
accelerates on lhe basepaths,
of th e Colu mbus and
ran down lhe other National
Souther n Oh10 Electr ic
League Western Division
Company , th e operat io n
teams :
of its Fu e l Cost Adju st·
-"San Francisco has the
ment Clause, and related
bCst pitching staff In the
matters. This hearing is
league top to bottom. They've · scheduled to begin at
10 :00 a.m. on March 19,

Domi nion at

By Mrs. Naoma L. Brluller
Grants Admbdstrator
The Meigs County Com·
missioners have asked me to
inform county residents
about our CETA programs
and the new guidelines.
The Meigs County Com.mtssioners CETA (Com·
prehensive Employment
Training Act) programs
start~ in September 1974,
with a Title II grant and six
job positions. We now have
three programs, Title liD,
VIA, and VIB which is a
special project grant.
He!ll"y Wells Is the Com·
IDISSIOner in charge of our
Federal Programs, Naoma
Bnnker Is Grants Ad·
mlnistrator, Carson Crow is
E.E.O. and Complaint Of·
ficer.
Last fiscal year one
special project receiv~ was
a Winterization Program that
supplied the labOr for winterizatlon of any public
buildings in the county. The
project was well received,

69•
CHUCKWAGON &amp; FRIES

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
570 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.

Co lumbus,

continue this work after Sept.
30, 1979.
.
Through our regular T1tle
liD and VIA grants we have
been able to provide the
needed workers and services
that the county has to provide
~ut cannot afford. Some of
the worksites that have been
helped by CE'fA are: court
house, sheriffs department,
Pomeroy Pollee Department,
Middleport Police Depart·
ment, probation depart·
ments, . prosecuting at·
torney,
heaJth
de·
partment, Veterans Ser· .
viceOfflce,county inflnnary,
mental health center,
emergency medical services,
family plaming, Pomeroy .
Middleport Libraries ,
welfare department, Ohio
Bureau of . Employment'
Services extension office
soil con~ervation, Aorta:
Senior Citizen Center,
community action agency,

schools, county garage,
la~dfiU, vll!ages and town·
ships of Me1gs County.
In addition to the advantages for the County
Departments, CETA
Programs have provtded
needed emplo~ment for
residents of Me1gs Countv. ,
work for the long time
unemployed, and work e~perlence for people having~
go Into the labor market. Th1s
has meant a great deal to our
participants, and we are
proud to have been able to
help . so many that were
unemployed. .
.
CETA is b1g busmess and
has been of enormous help to
our county. WehavereceJved
a total of $1 , ~70,421 m grants
since ~974 . Smce C~TA IS so
blg, ~t has rece1ved ~d
publicity, most In the b1g
cities.
As nol'!llally happens, the
people, congre~_smen,

senators, and President hear
of the bad things that happen
more than the good. As a
result of the bad publicity, the
government has developed
stricte~ guidelines and
regulations for the programs,
also budgets haye been ~ut
due to the present inflatoon
and the government trymg to
balance the budget.
Meigs County CE!A
budgets were cut on our T1tle
liD and Title VIA Programs.
For the present g~ant, 1-2779 thru 9·30-79, we did not get
hurt as much as the majority
of the cou~hes .. Many
counties and c11les will have
many layoffs as of March 31.
Our county recetved enou!lh
money for .•D but three
people.• but stnce there ts a
v~natton of hours, and some
w1ll go to other jobs between
now and October, . with
careful plannmg we do n~t
anhclpateal!ylay-offsatthts

Electnc
• ·Ily
• Ie ak hiarned
·

COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) An expert witness' testimony
disclosed Tuesday indicated
that the inner walls of the Be·
verly Hills &amp;lpper Club were
heated 1IP to 1,000 degrees by
leaking electricity before the
May 18, 1977 !Ire in which 165
died .
The statement by Robert J.
Kelly, an electrical fire
investigator· with lhe U.S.
Consumer Product Safety
Coounission was · Wed wilh
the U.S. District Court.
The testimony was taken
.ian. 31 by attorneys for the
owners during pretrial
discovery for civil suils
totaling more than $2.9
billion .
Lawyers for 4-R Corp. and
Richard J . Schilling and his
four sons, the owners, questioned Kelly, who had been
named as an expert witness
by lawyers for surivors of the
dead ahd the 50 injured.

The owners since have
agreed to a $3 million out-of·
court settlement and have
been absolved of further
liability by victims or their
heirs. However, suit.$ alleging
negligence continue against
state
officials,
manufacturers, Insurers and
the Union light, Heat &amp;
Power Co.
Kelly 's testimony dealt
partly in theory and partly in
evidence taken from the fire
scene, witnesses and workers
who Installed lhe equipment.
Kelly
said
leaking
electricity from an outlet box
whose grounding failed
jumped to wire mtsh inside
plaster walls and heated
lhem up to ),000 degrees
before bursting into flames.
In detail, Kelly said
improper connectors in a
basement pull box resulted in
a failure of the neutral parl of
the electrical :~:~Prvif'P A

ground wire attached to the
neutral bars in an electrical
subpanel on lhe second floor
also failed.
He said a currenl began
leaking from an outlet box on
lhe norlh side of the Zebra
room, moving through metal
wire mesh in lhe walls' to sleel
columns or airconditioning
duclwork .
The current began lo arc
and eventually sel lire to
wood fitrlng and sluds inside
a wall in the Zebra Room. ·
However,
under
questioning by utility
lawyers, Kelly said there was
no evidence of electrical
arson, that the Zebra Room
was the only area in which
the primary fire started and
lhere was no evidence that
"old technology" branch
ci rcuil aluminum wiring
caused the fire or made it
spread.

time.
NEW GUIDELINES
The new gutdcllncs, as of 1·
27-79, for liD and VIA require
a minimum of 84.2 percent be
spent on participant wages
and fringe beneflts, a
m~imum of IO.S percent on
trat~ing and services, a
max~um of 5.3 percent for
admmtstration.
~IB.wiU be underthes~ new
gmdelmes by 4-1-79. Tr.ainlng
and Services is something
new for our programs.
Up to the amo1111t allotted
for training and services, .we
must try to provide. trauung
for P!'rtiCip~mts desoring and
needing trammg. to Increase
thetr employability. Priority
will he gtven to participants
~ho will leave the .program
!Jr~ .. Participants may be In
trammg less than half of their
work.~ hours.
This IS a great opport1111lty
to workers desiring training
or education, because many
cannot afford the training to
mcrease their abWty to find a
good job. Maximwn Ceta
wage'may not exceed $10,000
per year. Most important to
us, is that the average wage
of all participants may not
exceed $6,818 per year, so
most of our new hires will be
a minimwn wage.
Time in tbe CETA Publlc
Service Employment will
now be limited to 78 weeks
(I \oZ years) in a five year
period. On present employees
that have been with us, or

other CETA program ~ more
than 78 weeks, only 26 weeks
prior to 9·30·78 will be
counted therefore all par·
ticlpant~ who w~re hired
AprU 30, 1978, or prior, will
have to be translsted placed
or terminated Sept. 3o, 1979:
This will . affect 26 par·
ticipants.
Hopefully some of our
people will he picked up by
their worksites, and others
will be able to flntl other jobs.
we wiD do everything we
can to try to aSSist our people
in finding jobs, help· them
with job applications,
resumes,
training
education, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services will

TIRE CHANGE OVER

WINTER'S

•COMPUTERIZED
BALANCING
•GOOD SUPPLY
OF RECAPPED
TIRES

EXTRA
CRISPY

CRaNS

FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432
Pomeroy, 0.

I:Re"~nJer---"1

1

700 E. Main

All intere sted parties will

in Hous ton
Semifinals

Monday
At New York

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Richard L. Smilh.

Thi rd round w inners
Indiana vs . Ohio St.a te

Finals

Secretary.

March 21

At New York
Championship and

Third Place

BEGINNING
THURSDAY, MAR. 15, 1979
1 WEEK ONLY
All REDWING

SHOES &amp; BOOTS
ALSO

r 3s¢ ~t=i- --N~noJ3?Jrus - - - - - 35¢,
c The Nestle Company, Inc. 1979

\

I

Save35¢

Leftlo right, Laura Smith, Deena Nee&lt;:e, AprU King, Tonia Ash, Sonia Ash, back row,
left to right, Krllltla Anderson, Cherie UghUoot, Lynn Oliver, Terri Wilson, Dodle
Chapman, aod Andrea Riggs.

1 GROUP OF JAR,.,ANS

. I

SHOES.

I

J

Priced Speci'a l for
this sale

I

on Sunrise"instant coffee mellowed1wilh chicory ~ I

District To.u rnament

i!'l
0

§I

Thursday, 8:30 P.M. Athens

r

~I

.HARREY'S SHOES,. INC._

I
I
I

"Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, 0 ."
9 a.m ..s p.m. Mon.
thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m .-Bp .m . Fri.

Sonia Ash

Closed Sunday

FOOD BUYS

FRENCH

SlAB
BACON

CITY
5th &amp; Pearl

Racine, 0

WIENERS

.. J'.HEilE'S ·sTORE
Thursday, Mar. 15 through Mar . 19

We Gladly Accept Fed.·Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:001i17 :DO
Saturday 9 :00-9:00
CLOSED
SUNDAYS

20 CT.

$}79

APPLES
3 lb.

69

4

KNOCKWORST BIG

FRANKS......... ~~: ..~l
CHUCK
29
ROAST .................. ~:.~
39

1

CELERY
BUNCH

494 .

Sliced

LB.
Chunk _

LB.

Hilton

.

OYSTER .STEW....................'~:~~-~~~ . 59'

WIN· AT ATHENS

Duncan Hines

99~

BROWNIE MIX ................ ~~·.:.~:~.'l.l9
SNOW DRIFT SHORTNING •••• J.!~: U9

$119

Sliced

-.

I

' '

This Ad Sponsored By:

LIBBY'S PEACHES ..........~~?.~~~~ .2.~.. 65'

Fat•mers 8 ank

PARKAY MARGARINE ••• ••••~~.;.~~~t.•:.s 49'

CARROTS
· LB. BAGS .

2/49$

.., a o •

ORANGES

2/25

4

POMEROY, OHIO .
$40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

•
T'

'

Roger Brauer, co-&lt;:oach

' AprllKing

.Joy Bentley, co-&lt;:oach

I

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

be yiv en an opportun ity to
be h eard . Fu rth er in for·
.
.
I
mat1 on may be obtamed
by con tact i ng th e Com·
mission .

Purdue

Studded Tires

J.-~ Apri 115, 19,!8 _j

Good Luck Meigs Against Gallipolis

Ohio

432 15.

Ala5ama vs. Te xas A&amp;M,

OVE~

WE FEATlJRE

TRY OUT

KENTlJCKY
FRIED CHICKEN

also be assisting them by
sending some on job in·
terviews.
we now have 51 approved
(Continued on page 12)

'•

1979, at t he Commi ss ion 's

Street ,

carpenters, helpers, and
, laborers were kept quite
busy.
This fiscal year we
received a grant fo~ the
Plat Map Update Project.
County plat maps have not
been undated for fifty years
due to lack of funds.
Proje~t supplies wages
and fringe benefits for eight
workers for one year , plua
supplies and equipment. We
have a floe group of workers
on this project. They are all
interested in the research and .
~apping work necessary to
this update, and are doing a
fine job.
Director of t~is project 1s
Rick Crow, Prosecuting
, Attorney, supervisor of plat
map work is Wesley Buehl,
County Engineer, and Don
Nease · supervises the
workers.
In one year, we cannot
possibly complete this great
undertaking, but It is a good
start, and we hope ~o be able
to receive another grant to
·

.DiUCKWAGON

offices, 180 Ea st Broad

Third Round
Thursday's Games
Old

Grants administrator·reviews .CETA program

Oodle Chapman

Pomeroy, 0 .

�~

••

'-~'""'-"·""'""(;;;;·;,;;;;·;~~ices

•

r~~ ii~i;;;"'ii;i~"'l

planned by Grace Church:-: U

Good Friday services were
planned at the Monday
· Co unty
· of the Me1gs
meetmg
Ministerium held at the
Grace Episcopa I Cburch,
' Pomeroy, with the Rev.
"

.
J
J

•1

.;
••
'

~

. !.::,•

....

.

.·•

'

. ...
,,,..
I•

~

;

1 il'\
~ .•.

..

'I

'1

...•
.••
'

EXTRA
CRISPY

•

''
'
)

.'
.'•

.

Robert
Graves,
host
minister,
giving
the
devot IOns.
'
The Good Friday services
w1'll be held at St · Pau1
Lutheran Church in Pomeroy
with county ministers par·
ticipating in "The Seven Last
were Mrs. Nina Macum· Words From the Cross." The
,ber, Mr. and Mrs. Ricky . service. will be on Apr ill3 at
Macumber, Mrs. Neva
Nlchoison, Waid Nicholson, noon.
.
Also discussed during t~e
Mrs. Pearl Ogdln, John meeting wa s the Easter
Holliday, Mr.· and Mrs. cantata whi ch is to be ·
Larry Montgomery, Mr. presented at the Pomeroy
MRS. ORA PROFFITT
and Mrs. Ray MJdkHI, and United Methodist Church on
was presented her 75 year
Mrs. Ruby Lambert.
Easter Sunday afternoon,
certificate of membership
April 15, 2:30 p.m. Th e
in Star Grange 778 of Meigs
·
d h ·
rt
mmlsters note t elr suppo
County by Ray Midkiff, New pews discussed to
Mrs. June Van Vranken
master, at the Mark Rest
The possibility of I pur· who is directing the cantata
Center,
McConnelsville,
chasing new pews for the with members from churches
where she resides. Mrs.
church wsa diScussed at the throughout the county. It was
Proffitt wbo is 9G joined tbe
reported that Mrs. Van
recent meeting of the Young Vranken
Grange on Feb. 20, 1904 and
.currently holding
Adult Class of the Bradford practices isat
has remained a faithful
7:15 ·p.m. on
Church of Christ.
member since lhen. Those
Monday
and
Thursday
Mrs. Bonnie Pickens will
· presenl lo see her receive
·
dth
· h' t
evenmgs an ose WIS mg 0
get together some in· sing
her certificate were ber
with
the
group
are in·
two
sons,
and
formation on church pews vited to attend the rehear·
and report back to the class.
daughters-In
Ia~.
ts
Tentatively, the mother - saAiso discussed at the
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Nelson
daughter banquet was set for meeting was the opening
and· Mr. and Mrs. Downie
May 18 with the theme to .be worship service at the Meigs
Nelson. Also attending
"Daisies Tell."
County Fair in August and
Mrs.
Janice
Haggy also
the possiblllty of having
TRY OUT
presided at the meeting with a booth at the fair.
Steve Pickens giving prayer,
Speaker next month will be
and Mrs. Bonnie Pickens a representative from the
having the devotions. She Athens County Ministerium
_
read a poem, "What Then" who will talk on a group or
..K.ENTUCKY
and scripture from Romans cult called "The Way." The'
14. Several projects were
FRIED CHICKEN
·
discussed. Next meeting will meeting will be held at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodi~
be April 2 at 7 p.m. at the
Ch
urch 9' 30 a.m. on April 9·
church with steve Pickens to
The
closed with
FAMILY RESTAURANT have devotions. Present were prayer.meeting
All
clergy
of Meigs
992-5432
Bonnie and Larry Pickens, County are invited to
attend
--oiP.Iollmliieilrlioiiyoio'.IO;.;·--·
steve
and
Dreama
Pickens,
the
meetings
and
become
1
Janice
Haggy,
Doris members olthe Ministerium.
Swanson, and Nancy Morris.

CRatrS

.

'

;

•'
'
'

..•
\.

PLATFORM
ROCKERS

''•

A
00
L
'6
E .

'

.•
'

•

.•

The early Jews excelled in
the art of dyeing. Scarlet
was a color of dtstlncllon
and prosperity. A scarlet
thread from a window once
saved a woman and her
family.
" ... thou obalt bind thlollne
of oearlet thread In the
wladow ... and tbou obalt
brtng thy father, and thy
mother, and tby
brethren... ud they broiQibt
out aU her ldadred and left
them without the camp of
:~~el."- Joshua 2.:18 and

--------------~.

RUTLAND
.DEPARTMENT STORE

•

•

••

"'
•

Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., March 17th

•

,...

'•

Eckrich

'...

NEW ENGlAND LOAF. •••••••••••••••• ~ •• ~~~ $2.49
.
.PEPPER LOAF ..............................~b~. $2.49

. .'
•

E~krich

..'

•

..,,,,

"

'

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••• !~~.$1.19

,,••,
'•
'

.

·~

•
•
•

69
$
SLICED CHEESE~~~:; •.1 39
I

•••
•

••

•••
••
••

••
'
·~
••:

.•'
•'

·!' I
;.'•

•'••••

••
&gt;'
••
.•
.,••
•

.,' '

.'

'

lDO

GREEN PEPPERS ........ 212'1
Vine ripe

.

TOMATOES ......... 2 LB. '1.49

oz.

BIG VALLEY SLICED PEACH

bag

•

9f

STAR KIST TUNA. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $t29
10 oz. Folger'~
.
.
$.
INSTANT COFFEE. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~ •• 4.39
4 pak. 5 oz. Hunt's or Del Monte

HUN SNAK PAK PUDDING••••••••••••••••• 97$
46 oz. Del Monte ·

TOMATO JUICE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 75$
12 oz . Hormel canned

...

SPAM LUNCH .MEAT••••••••••••.••••••~ •••••sl.39
32 oz.
HUNTS KETCHUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99~

PO.LLY·s POINTERS

&gt;

VIETTI CHILI..::i!~.:e.a.n:.......................... Sf
,!.umbo

...,
'

·7 -'rhe Daily Sentinel, M:ddleport-Pomerpy, 0., WcdnesdHy, M11r·i.

HE'S FEELING DOWN AND OUT
BECAUSE SHE'S ON THE UP AND UP
DEAR
HELEN '
'•
My wife Ruby's first husband must not have taught her
much. When I want sex, she's always "tired," except,
reluctantly, about ooce a mooth. Then it's "Don't muss up my
hair, 1 just got it done," or she implies, "Must you go through
th e pre 1·1mmarses;
. . Iet's ge t 1't over wt'th ." (MYftr' st wife Ioved
my "loving.")
As 1
'thappens, Ruby.s.ex
'
11ves
'
" Whens he sees h'un
ups. ta trS.
she gets very animated and happy. She's always worrying that·
he dQ!!Sn 't eight right alone, and taking food up to him. Sbe
stays a while but since I know how she feels about sex, I don't
worry on that score. However, we fight a lot about a number of
things.
At age 40 , 1s
· th ere hope sh e •n become 1ess an ti -sex •. JOHN FROM WYOMING
DEAR JOHN:
I'm not convinced your wife is anti-sex. Maybe she's just
selective (as in "Ruby, Don 't Take Your wve Upstairs.").
If she's still torching for ber ex.IJusband, the big question
is:Whydidshemarryyou?Askher!-H.
DEAR HELEN:
My new next~oor neighbor is better off than we are.
They'rerichenoughtotakeforeignvacationseachyear.
Yet tbe other day I saw her coining out of a second.IJand
"thrift store." With packages! Sbe says they're fun: 1 say
that's being cheap. What do you say?
(Please change this so she won't recognize herself of me.)
- Kimberly
DEAR KIM:
Thrift stores are fun if you're a devotee of.lunk, junk, or
grandma's attic hunts ... and you have plenty of time to
'rummage through sometimes overpriced trivia. As with
garage sales, you might find real buys here, or even genuine
antiques. But don't count oo them.
·
... And don't call second-hand freaks cheap. They come in
an varieties and financial brackets these days.- H.
DEAR HELEN:
The women who cried crocodile tears because parents
were always rescheduling their lives (or their children but said
the kids wouldn't change plans for them -whose fault is it? I 'II
wager nothing bas come into the American home but spoiled
brats since the 1920s. And then these pointy.IJeaded parents
howl because they themselves have brought the family down.
They think it's more fun to mal&lt;e babies in this sin-cursed
wicked world than to care for them when they're born.
We are approaching the days of Sodom and Gomorrah.
Why? The media, no censorship, everything goes; teaching
sex perversion (they call it education) in schools, while paying .
teachers outlandishly high salaries.
Dad ins'l boss anymore. Mom has abdicated for a job or
the women's rights movement. if he should try the front end of
his shoe against the Sl!at of her pants, as she deserves, she'd
holler wife-beating and di~orce him, taking all his possessions,
plus "support," while the kids grow up to be prostitutes (it's
good money!), and she gets herself a gigolo.
Yes, we've come a long way since I was born 65 years ago:
an down grade!- ROY
DEAR READERS:
Above are highlights from Roy's eight-page celebration of
dooma nd gloom.
And here's my little prayer: Lord, I've been a pretty good
person. Please deliver me from more Sodom and Gomorrah
for anyway a couple of weeks. Okay? -H.

Debbie Wt son honored b~
,

·

Berries left their mark ·
up the next morning. It is
DEAR POLLY - Young great for removing the odor
readers who use curling irons of mildew from drawers and
might find my Pointer useful. closets. Try it lor removing
The ribbon used to decorate that stale cigarette smoke
ooe's ponytail wrinkles very odor that so often lingers in a
easily. When your curling car. It really works. ~ MRS.
iroo is hot, just slowly slide B·A·
the ribbm underneath the
DEAR POLLY - You
clasp of .th e iro.n and it . is recently advised the reader
smooth again.
·
who had a doggie odor in her
My problem is with a white · carpet to sprinkle dry salt
cot f on
table c I o t h thickly on the rug, leave
(embroidery 'in the center
only) that has a berry stain in 1
one corner. Tbe stain has
be
en there since Chrisimas
and I have been afraid to do·
anything for fear it would
make the stain a permanent
on;EA:E~;NA _ Fruit

stains are often very bard to
remove. stretch the stained
part of your cloth over a big
bowl, fasten with a rubber
band and pour boiling water
·.through it. When fabric is not
On gootl terms with hot water,
sponge with cool but your
cotton cloth should take it aU
right.
.
If stain still remains spooge
with peroxide or a lemoo
juice solution. Another
authority suggests working
glycerine into such a stain
and letting it remain for
several hours. Add a lew
drops of white vinegar and
then rinSe thoroughly before
laundering as usual. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I am
replying to Val who has an
annoying urine· odor in her
carpet. We use ground cloves
for the removal of many
odors. Sprinkle it generously
on the spot and then vacuum

I

~f

Debbie Wilson, bride-elect Powell, Mrs. Lee Gibbs, Mrs.
of Terry Coffman, Marietta, Jack Rottgen, Mrs. Donna
and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fowler.
Robert K. Wilson, was
Mrs. Mel Clark, Miss
honored at a bridal shower Barbara Clark, Mrs. Blll Sim,
held at the Trinity Church, Mrs. Benny Dent. Mrs.
Pomeroy, March 9.
Lester Zerkle, Mrs. Homer
A blue and white color Noble, Mrs. James Diehl,
scheme was carried out In \he Mrs. Max 'Eichinger, Miss
decorations of the church Becky Eichinger, Mrs. Bill
social room 'and the refresh· Perrin, Mrs. Jeff Ridgeway,
ment table. Games were Mrs. Tim Massie, MJss Liz
played with prizes going to Edwards, Mrs. Marvin
Mfs. Ralph Ross a.nd Mrs. White, Mrs. Maxine Miller,
Harry MUJer. The door prize . Mrs. Ralph Coffman, and
was won· by Mrs. Marty Mrs. Robert Wilson.
Yeager.
.
After the honoree opened
her gifts, refreshments were
served by the hostesses, Mi'.
Roger Karr, Long Bottom,
Mrs. Joe Mitchem of Tuppers
Plains, Mrs. Den Eichinger,
Rio Grande, Mrs. Jeff
Bradford, Belpre, and Miss
-LOCALBeth Wilson, Pomeroy.
The guest list included Mrs.
James Nelson, Mrs. Jon
2 DAYS
Karschnik, Mr•. Kenneth
Harris, Mrs:· PauTD. Nease,
FRI., MAR. 16
Mrs. Mike Sanders, Miss
Jane A"nn Karr, Mrs.
SAT., MAR. 17
Clarence Andrews, Mrs. Jo
Ann McLaughlin, Mrs .
Barbara Offutt, Mrs. John
12 to 8 O'clock
Payne, Mrs. Tim Baum, Mrs .
Opal Eichinger, Misa Laura
Groups or Singles Same
Prices.
Eichinger, Mrs. Herschel
Join our Club Plan or have
McClure, Miss Jea!lnle
your portraif taken on our
McClure, Mrs. Charles
special offer.
Yeager, Mrs. Ralph Ross,
Extra Portraits available.
Come in and inquire.
Mrs. Joe Llsh, Mrs. Larry
Noble, Mrs. Martin Yeager,
Mrs. James JarreD, Mrs .
Dayton Raynes, Mrs. Chris
Kearns, Mrs. Ray .Me·
Farland, Mrs. Bob stewart,
Miss Robin Stewart, Mrs.
George McFarland, Miss
Mary McFarland, Miss Carla
McFarland, Mrs. James
' Proffitt, Miss Terri Proffitt,
Miss Angle Proffitt, Mrs. ·
Gary Gibbs, Mrs. Randy
Spangler, Mrs. Nolan
Swackhamer, Mrs. Danny
Yonker, Miss Lelah J.

Middleport fire Hal
Fri. &amp; SAt., Mar. 16· 17
1210 I o'clock

.,

Mon.·Sat 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Pointer,
Peeve
or Problein
lh
her
column.
Write
POLLY'$
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

.,

SOAP
PADS

t·
t!~: :•
"

"~•;

...,,
il&lt;;

,

Charlotte and Curt Davis

I

60'' STRETCH TERRY
60" CHINO
60" SURAUNE
60'' POLYESlER

"•

:)

Musicians to appear
at revival here

l
\

•
••
•

KNilS
45" POPUN
45" STRIPES

•
''

Curt and Charlotte Davis,
nationally known musicians,
will be taking part in a
~y-wide revival March
\13-25 at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
The services '!'Ill begin at
7:30p.m. each evening, and
are sponsored by the Meigs
CooP!'ratiYe Parish of the
United Methodist Church In
conjunction with the 28
United Methodist Churches in
Meigs County. A different
minister will bring the
message each evening.

I
l

..

I

SOLIDS &amp; PLAIDS

I

i
l

115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio

"

On Sunday, March 18, the
speaker will be Dr. Wesley
Clarke, District Superintendent of the Athens District
of the United Methodist
Church. On Monday, March
19, the speaker will be Rev.
Richard Thomas, pastor of
the Northeast Cluster of the
United Methodist Church,
Tuppers Plains. On Tuesday,
March 20, the Rev. Harvey
Koch of·the Syracuse Cluster

.FLOWERING
BUSHES

pack tor
clunup
Chores. Regul.- 99&lt;: .

79~

"Or
25

RtJUIIr

CREAT BUYS!

And

Womens &amp; Teens
SALE
OF
JEANS
lttw StriRJ Styles
Prewashad denim two ·
atyln. 511ft 1 to 16. Spring
Fuhlon JNns. Save $4.99

Extr1 1Jr11

Slm

TOPS
AHUGE SELECTIOIII
New stytn arrive almost
dally.
Short
sleeve .
Sllevllell ahelll, tank
topl,. halterS, IIIICifll'lg 1~1
and colot11 tc:-- sp"lng. '11.

;

,,

Come, Seel

.

')69$

·~

..
PLANTER
SISAL ROP.E

HEAVY CAIIIIOII

POT

VELOUR
KITCHEN
TOWELS

· HANGERS

-·

·colora.
w· Length.Big Severer
Knot ,

TO

·,,,...tact. you'd ~y
'' ·"· BrlgM bold
pattwn1.

papvllt" ttrlpt trim. Some heve piddleS
con., andtounga. 6 colora. Sizes for toddltr 5to
mens 1~.

mJlJU
CAR CCI fi1"E
With

C'.UWbold~

$1' 33

·· Till! · role of Planned
Parenthood In services to
Meigs County women was
discussed by Mrs. Mary
O'Brien at the Monday night
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of Heath
Church, Middl.eport.
Mrs. O'Brien talked about
the counseling and in·
formation to women and the
social services provided
through the federally funded
agency. She showed a film
entitled "Hope is What We're
All About" and gave
examples of women ard their
problems dealt with through
Planned Parenthood. It was
noted that clinics are held
every Thursday at Heath
Church by the agency. She
distributed literature on the
Jrogram.
Mrs. Betty Fultz presided
at the meeting opening with a
reading "Recipe for a Good
Woman." The self-denial
collection was taken and Mrs.
Nan Moore reported on where
the money goes and how It is
used. Mrs. Maxine Philson
~'&lt;'!"'rted on the last district

· The February meeting of
the Riverview Garden Club
was hosted by Mrs. Denver
Weber,
Mrs.
,Ernest
Whitehead, and Mrs. David
·Chailwell at the Weber borne .
The devotions were presented
by Mrs. Weber. President
Mrs.
Donald. Putman
welcomed the guests, Mrs.
Carl Buckley, Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Jared and Janel
Spencer
and
Charlee
Chadwell.
Roll call was answered by
each naming a favorite herb
and how they used it. Minutes

TENNIS SHOES

lepllr
'Ut

~~Proclaiming

Chicken Breasts

TH IGHS~ ...............L:·.
.GRADE_J

WHOLE FRYERS.~8~.
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST ........ }}

SPONGE
SALE
3 a11 siiii far vour Spring

Welhlng netell. Stock Up!

4 PIECE

CANNISTER
~
SET
Wlth Lids. D..,ol pintle\.
. Slvt Sl ,11 Nt. Gold or
. Avaeoda.

TIYOUT
EXTRA

WOIIIIIS

SHOE
BAG

Hcilcll 6 Pllr.'
Qullt..,t pl..tlc.
Hen;~

l

'"
·~

on door or

Wl'f·

99~

•
'

...

•

.

'
• •
•

~

CRISPY

!
'

· KENJUCIY
FRIED CHICKEN

1

FAMILY RESTAURANT

1 •

':'

CR(M'S
992-5432
Pomeroy. 0.

39

Christ in '79,"

and the public is. cordially
invited to attend.

meeting. The Woril Day of
Prayer services to be held
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy First Baptist
Church was announced.
A letter was read from the
district officers about the
retreat to be held at Camp
Otterbein in April. Mrs.
O'Brien stressed the im·
portance of giving for the
Cancer Fund of which she
and her husband, Pat
O'Brien, are co-chainnen.
A prelude by Mrs. Beulah
Jones, pianist, opened the
meeting . Mrs. Kathryn
Knight gave .devotions using
the topic, "Be.Tbanklul." She
talked about things to be
thankful for and had scriP'
lure from Exodus along with
an article "The World is
Mine" and prayer.
To conclude the meeting
Mrs. Fultz read "Plans for a
Good Dajr" by Norman
Vincent Peale. Spring flowers
were used on the refreshment
·table. Hostesses were Mrs.
U,rena Davis, Mrs. Ruth
Bumgarner, and Mrs. Terri
Byer.

and treasurer reports were
read and approved. Mrs.
Walter Brown extended
thanks to the club lor the gill
which had been purchased for
Naomi Pickens.
Plans were made lor a
household party to be held at
the next meeting.
Mrs. Carl Buckley con·
ducted the program. She
demonstrated to the club
members how to make silk
flowers, also how to make the
calico or gingham flowers,
with each one making a
flower .
Mrs.
Putman
presented Mrs. Buckley with
a gift.
The door prizes went to ·
Mrs. Donald Myers. Refresh- •
ments using the patriotic
theme were served to the
above named and: Mrs.
Frank Bise, Mrs. Okey
Connolly, Mrs .. Ronald 1
Cowdery, Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle, Mrs. Claremont
Harris; Mrs. Roy Hannum,
Mrs. Thomas Spencer, Mrs.
Gene Wilson, Mrs. Gene
Young, Mrs. Ray Young and
Mrs. R. JI. Hannum.

LB.

CHICKEN

Your Choice at Three Exc;ulsihl Pattemfi
• Summer Time • Spring T;me • Foliage Time

CHUCK STEAK.............
.

GROUND

lahPooc.ooOnl-.

.

. $}49
CHUCK.....~~.. .
THIS WEEK'S FEATURE:

SALAD PLATE
YELLOW

ONION SETS.....
FRESH FLORIDA

TOMATOES........~. 2

Riverview Garden Club met

With

Alto hoi* lfliCkl, I trec:k •
f11pe1. litter. WIU ttt In moat
·env ear, truck or van.

United Methodist Church will
speak. On Wednesday, March
21, the speaker will be the
Rev. Steven Wilson, pastor of
Southern Cluster II, Racine.
On Thursday, March 22, the
Rev. ' Robe.r t T. Bumgarner,
pastor of the Heath United
Methodist Church and
director of the Meigs
Cooperative Parish, will
speak.
On Friday, March 23, the
host pastor, the Rev. Robert ·
McGhee will speak . On
Saturday, March 24, Youth
Night will be observed with
the Rev. David Harris, pastor
of the Southern Cluster I,
Racine, will be in charge. On
Sunday, March 25, the
speaker will be the Rev.
Wilbur Hilt, pastor of the
Rutland • Salem Center
United Methodist Charge.
The theme for the series of
meetings
will
be

Planned parenthood
discussed by UMW

• DRAIN TRAY
• Mllll DRAIII MAT
• CRYSTAL ROUIID TRAY

Jumbo
1prlng

,••.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
MARCH 17, 1979

PRICES EFFECTIVE

••
•••

· ARTIFICAL

No appointment ntcessarv
No ago limit
Package consists of

Billfolds

Store HoutS:

;

¥&amp;R STUDIO

Bx10, 2-Sx7's-9

·J

'' '

PLASTIC
HOUSEWARES
STEEL WOOL

r'

'

Sew Your
Sportswear Now

FONTAINE.

APPLICANTS SOUGHT
The
Meigs
County
Rehabllitatlon program Is
stlll taking applications at
107'1.. Sycamore St., through
the month of March. The
office is open from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. or phone 992-034!,

:

attention. That warning Is
always put at the end of this
Pointer and must have gotten
lost along tbe way this time.
Polly will send you ooe Qf
her
signed
thank-YQU
newspaper couponclippers qf
she uses your favorite

'/.

bridal shower March 9 ·

.~-

JJ

S • • • By Helen Botteli!i ,_·:=..._;::.__..:.._Po~l-ly_C~ra~m-e_r_______ . cor;~~CAR~tROL
Thanks
for calling this to . our

PEANUT BUITER ••• ;•••••••••••••••••••• ~a:.• !,l.69
07 .

Lsan:.;~d ca~~f~~~.:
sweeper bag for lear

28 oz. Jif cream

15'1•
I

Rmct.RADISHES........... 212'1

9'14 oz . .

•
•

'

MARGARINE .•.~~-a-~~~~-s••

12 oz. Kraft pimento

•
•
•

•
'I

e

1 lb. Parkay

6 oz.

}

,~~'ll.•1".;,~:'=~~=~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;----~-.,--••Iilllil••••••••••••••••lll"•'

•

VALLEY BELL
FlAVORITE

.

..

FlAVORITE

PINTO BEANS.~.4 /
COUPON

PLASTIC

GRAPE JELLY

1 ICE CREAM ••••••••• ~.:A:.

99¢

. W!C

Limit i 'p er Customer
~ Good only at Powell's
Offer E
s Mar. 17, 1979

L _ COUPUN

TIDE DETERGENT
10 LB.

11

oz.

$429

$ 69

FLAVORITE

CO UPON

SMUCKERS

3LB.

$

•

DIAL SOAP
BATH SIZE

w;c•·n•oJ 018~

Limit 1 per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Ofier Expires Mar . 17, 1979

2/49¢

Limitl per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Expires Mar. 17, 1979

L~

c O UP '::'I'&lt;_~

CRISCO
SHORTENING
3LB.

$169 W

limit 1 per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer EKpires Mar. 17,1979

�9-

'fhe Daily_Sentinel, Middleport -Pomer,oy, 0. , Yi «lnesday, Mar . 14, 1979

model-yea r

' 'is
John
DinKe ii , D-Mic h., told
anot her House hea ring.
While th e indu st ry ha s
complied th us far with the
graduated schedule, which
began its climb with a 14 mpg
requirement for 1974 mode ls,
auloma kers have wa rned
that the tougher mileage
requireme nts ahead could
brin g severe ecoriomic and
tec hnological problems.

Oil .firms expected to·work hard
be modeled , along with
and
moth er-of-the -bride
brides!llaids' gowns and'
accessories.
A.A.A. Travel Agency can
be helpful in planning your
honeymoon so that your first
days together can be happy
and carefree . The flowers for
your wedding are of utmost
importance enhancing th e
church and your special day.
No one can be more helpful
than Mr. Haffelt of Amyl's
Floral Fashions.
The Bastille is the perfect
place for the groom to be
outfitted in the latest in
formal wear. Where else but

By Pat Bastl;ml
and Dale Lear
Brides-to-be - bring your
fiance, mother, bridesmaid
- whoever you like and enjoy
a program of exhibits and
free refreshments. You may
walk away tlie winner of
Honeymoon accommodations
in Florida.
A Bridal Faire and Fashion
Show will be held at the
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis
Sunday, Mar. 18. The Bridal
Faire will 'be from 1-4 p.m.
with fashion shows at 1:45
and 3 p.m. The latest fashions
in bridal gown and veils will

Bernadine's lor the wedding
dress of your dreams. The
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis will
assist you in planning your
reception down to the
smallest detail. It's a time to
remember and the easiest
way to preserve the beautif•·l
memories of your happiest
day is with professional
portraits from
Lear's
Photography.
Marilyn. Blexa is famous
for her wedding cakes and
·silk flower creations. The
bridal consultants at Pedd]er 's Pantry would like •to
help every bride and groom
choose the dining and cooking

accessories they will treasure
for years, .add your name to
th eir bridal registry.
Simms Printing can
provide you with socially
correct wedding invitations,
your registry book and thank
you notes. Tawney's expert
jewelers can provide you with
a complete selection of
diamonds and wedding '
bands.
There wiU be a grand prize
drawing for honeymoon
accommodations in Florida..
Prospective brides that
register will be given gift
certificates by each sponsoring merchant. .Musical

Mary Shrine 3 7 elects officers
BRIDAL F AJRE - Jane Morgan of Bernadine's
assists model Sally Swain with the selection of a bridal
veil for the fashion show March 18.

A spring luncheon and card
party sponsored by Thea
Court 5 Patrol, Ladies
Oriental Shrine of North
America, will be held April 5
at 12 noon at the Aladdin
Temple Mosque, 3850 Stelzer
Road, Columbus. Donations
of $6 .50 are being taken with
the luncheon by reservation
only.
Tickets are available from
Mary Brush, 1511 Pemberton
Drive, Columbus, 43221 , or
Helen Cassell, 1117 S.
Champion Ave., Columbus,

TRY OUT

EXTRA
CRISPY

KENTUCKY
FRI~D CHICKEN
CR(M'S
FAMILY RESTAURANT
992-5432

Pomeroy, 0.

43206. Reservations must be
made by March 31.

stallation, an afternoon
business !lleeting will be held
at 4 p.m.
. .
Mrs. Jacque Fowler,
worthy high priestess, and
Edward s, watchmim of
shepherds, presided at the
meeting during which time

Officers were elected at the
Friday night meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of tl)e White
Shrine ·of Jerusalem, held at
Pomeroy Masonic
the
Temple.
Elec;t.ed were Vivian May,
worthy high priestess;
Thomas Edwards, watchman
of shepherds; Barbara
Dugan, noble prophetess ;
James Sou)sby, associate
watchman of shepherds;
Erma Yoho, worthy scribe ;
Midgie Abbott , worthy
treasurer; Ann Blake; worthy
chaplain; Leslie Ingles,
worthy Shepherdess, and Sue
Soulsby, worthy guide.
installation will be held on
April 6 at 8 p.!ll. with a
practice to be held on March
25 at 2 p.m. Prior to the In- .

Otester News Notes
The Ladies Auxiliary of
the lire department met
Wednesday evening at the
firehouse with the president,
Karla Chevalier presiding.
The !lleeting opened with The
Lord's Prayer . Minutes of
the previous meeting was
read by Clarice Allen ed the
treasurer's report by Opal
Wickham. Con\mlttee reporu
were given, cardii were ordered and several projects
were dllcussed. Puea were
collected lllld bilil were paid.
.Due to bad weather n.o
meeting was held in
February. Mrs.. Ada Morris
was accepted as an honorary
!llember and Darlene Newell
was welcomed as a new
member, Others · that answered roll call were Clarice

MEETING SET
Monthly meeting of the
Southern Hills District of the
Ohio Nurses Association will
be held Thursday at 7:30p.m.
at Grosvenor Hall, Ohi o
COFFEE AND
University
College
of
DOUGHNUTS
Osteopathic Medicine.
Dougmull! ll1d fiOlfee wW
Speaker will be Dr. Robert be served In front of the
Woodworth, pediatricia n. Racine Home NatiOnal Bank
Topic of the meeting will be Satu rday , March 17, by
the "International Year of !llembers of the Racine
the ChM - Child Health in Emergency Squad.
.
Southeast
Ohio."
All
Donat1011s will be aceepted
registered nurses are invited. with proceeds going toward
Special guests at the meeting the construction of . a 11ew
will be members ol the squad station. Serving wW
Licensed Practical Nurses begin at 8 a.m. and lait IUIIII
Association. Hostesses for the the supply is exhausted. Free
meeting will be nurses of blood pressure checks wUJ
Planned Parenthood of also be taken.
Southeast Ohio.

Tlluroclllr. lll•cl! 15

ASIRO•GRAPH

®

OPEN
9-' Mon.-Sal

12-6 Sunday

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
FREE RADARANGE

COOKING
SCHOOL

KENTUCKY ·
FRIED CHICKEN
FAMILY .RESTAURANT

·'''

992-5432

Pomeroy,O.

•
"

Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
John Wickha!ll.
Denzel Cleland called on
Mr. and Mrs. George Abbott,
Mt. Herman, Wednesday.
Mrs . Don Willia!lls,
David and Deanne, Columbus, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keller.
, Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
Laura Jean were Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Eichinger and
Suzannah, Columbus ; Mr.
and Mrs. Don Eichinger, Rio
Grande; Mrs. Mabel VanMeter and Dennis Eichiilger.
The dinner was in honor of
Mrs. VanMeter's 90th birthday.
Allen Weber, Akron,
called on Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen , Monday
evening.

12 1 28, Ill 7, 14 , 3tc

-lb.

Can
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
II
MilCH 11.

Potatoes

!!;ft.29c
Am111 ••••ronce Popcorn .Popper ...... . .. . . . . . . .. $29.95
Coffee llaker
29.95
Ktoker Kit u~•tlldl• .o.. Otow"""''~w ... ~"'"" g, ;,t., "';';t, ~""' . • . • . . . 29.50
Country Cooker ••• _ , _, .. . .. .. . ...... . ... 12.50
2 Cookin1 Schoals - (O oe basic, One ad•anced) .
. . 20.00
Total Value of Bonus Eltras ..... ...... .... .. ..... $121.90

CO,.YIIGHT lt7t- THE KIOOU CO . IUM5
AND ,.11(11 GOOD SUNDAY MAI(H 11 THIU

l ....rwelc-•
Y-fedeNI

SATUIOAY MAICH 17. lt7t IN

GALLIPOLIS&amp; POMEROY noRE S
WE IISUVI THI liGHT TO LIMIT QU&gt;&gt;NTif!05
NONE SOLD TO DEAlliS.

hHS-pa

••

Corn

••

Corned Beef
Brisket

c

''

•'

•
; 1-----~---!~----1

••'

Grape Jelly
••

DALE'S
KITCHEN CENTER, INC.
Home Of Beautiful Kitchens
2119 Jackson Awe.

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Steak ............

c

Quart

.'

·Boneless Beef
Rib Eye .................

...
KROGER WHOLE

A~;ndale

5

:

-lb .
'Pkg.

1
I

I
I
I

tb.

·29c

~DI;

,.,,

....-~ ·'•'
I'

I ',

.:

I :

AND S750 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(EXCLUDING THIS ITEM)
•

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
COU'Il• cooo SVIOII MUCH 1' IMIU IIIUIOII MAICN 17 Il l!
SUI/[C l TO U'PLICAI LESUr! &amp; LOCALlUES

Frying
Chicken Th

•

I ·:

LIMIT 1 PKGS. WITH
12
OF

98

ON 2

Fresh
Cauliflower

I :·

I.
I .·
I :.

....-.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A.
INSPECTED GRADE A .

Potatoes

$

I

SLICED
FlEE ·

SAVE
spo
01 4

"

ASSORTED fLEECE

Bath Tissue

ROUND TOP

c

Krog,er 20-oz.
White Bread ........
H•I NU 20//0
. M•lk
1. ,; ,
LOWf at

; to your advantage to deal with
household issues today . Con. ditions favor anything you de~
: sire to do in this area.

KROGER

Pears
.
29-az.

c.

you to lollow through .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 231 Conditions are ripe to launch carefully considered plans, Get the

•••

•, o:

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.

the

CAPRICORN (Dec. 32-J•n. 19)
Something you thought has
only been wlshlul thinking on

tive .
jNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

=~'-b I-UiwlftJ
fwk StD6eed
·~,;?~--- '
ForTh•LontonSouon

'
''
Doa.

'R- -~

$199 ,

Tab, Sprite
or·Coca Cola

Polar Pak
Ice Milk

need loday. Seek out those

You should bEl able to see
thi hgs quite clearly today because of your healthy, optimistic outlook . Unimportar:n negative s will be kept In perspec-

g_c

sq. ft.

I

'·

$ 19

IMPORTED

PLUS DEPOSIT

. '·

21'

•
'&lt;

AVAILABll ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl DEPT'S
HOT FOOOS AiAILAilE UAM.7PM

I

Grade I
Large Eggs ....

Serve 'N'
Save Wieners. ':i.~~·

'

21) Large gatherings are the
types of Involvements you

your part may manifest Itself

KROGER

.t:,\Ocean Perch Fillets .... ... .. .. .. .. ..... ...
'"""
Dressed Flounder. ..... .... ....... ... . $199

ball rolling today while lhis

., "•" favorable time exists .
.., •"' •. SCORPIO (Oct. 2~Nov. 22) Us• "' 4 •
ing your shrewd insights and
• • o "' hunches today you should be
• t able to get what you go after.
":, • . • 1 You won't come out second• " ., best If . you exercise these
ptuses .

know

'DefiwteMe. ·S~ecio~

KIOOII D.S% LOWFAT MllK , .. GAl . "L.Ii5TIC CTN . 11 .61

1 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep1. 221
Someone Wit~ whom you have
close ties wil l be responsible
for presenting an opportunity
for financial gain . It'll be up to

you

75

Ctn . .

appreciated .

places here
action to be.

$

Gal.
Paperor
Piae1ic

mood Is warm and hospitable
• today . You'll go out of your way
to try to please everyone within
earshot Thi s will ~ be most

today. This neat lillie surprise
will make you q~l1e happy .
' AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 191

\,._

25' OFF LABEL

Bright
Det ergent ...... -. .. ···01..
Box ·

\

'

Banquet . SAVE
·Fri Chicken spo

18

; CANCER (June 21-July 221 It's

'

COUPON COOO SUIIDAf IUCII ll TMIU UTUIOAY lilt II 17. I t1!
SUIJICT TO m•UCIIH SliT£ &amp; LOCAl TAUS

FROZEN

French Fries .~~~

lb.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CH
. OICE, 10· 12-LB.$
AVERAGE WHOLE

. Point Pleasant

675-2318

49

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE, BEEF CHUCK$

•' Jar

· which you couldn' t get done
yesterday can now be accom·
plished in llckety ~s plit time be.cause everybody 's pulli ng
together.

'

,·

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
12

harmoniz~

HEARTY HOME
......, BREAKFASIS:
AWAY FROM HOME.

.

LIMIT ON£ WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM)

,$J89

•"
•••

Tli(S

Gal.
Juq

Salad
Dressing

"LAJ IXTlA LIAN
n'OGr• 01 ktlll"

· LEO (July 23- Aug. 221 Your

·,

I

$

Golden Ripe
Bananas ............... ..

'
'
AVONDALE CREAM STYLE

I;

WE DO IT RIGHT.
OR WE DON'T DO IT."'

.........

COUI'ON GOOD SUIDIIIUCH

TAURUS (April 20-May 201 That

Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

\

Pomeroy

LIM IT ONE CAN WITH
$7.50 ADDITIONAL PU_!~~
(UCLUDINC THIS ITEM)

warmth and sociability you'll
; experience today will restore
those good feelings you
lhought you had lost. It pays to
. keep the faith .

Yfr1':'&gt;.

109 Hi ~ h St.

9

I 11011,01
'ldltAJTICSAVINGS
ON ltiOGII llANO
,IODUCTI
USTm AllOW All JUif
I AnWIIAWUS

GEMINI (May 21-June 2301 The

1

I Bob Hoefli ch 1

ing eftect. Th is is a good time
fo r negotiati
has
· a soothing.
ng and

____-______.-:

I
At Bob Evans Steak House, we
serve a lot more than steak. We have
hotcakes, fried mush, hot baked ·
biscuits, fresh farm eggs, and all the
good things that go with Bob Evans
Farms cduntryfresh Sausage.
So stop on in on yourwaytowork.
And do it right for breakfast.

Rle Photo Place

Vac Pak
Kroger
Coffee
ritlouoMour fHI

CD:rthday

Robert E . Bu ck
Probate Judge .Cier 1&lt;

l et u s record fo rever
your beau t iful weddin g i n
lu ll &lt;Oior photogra ph s.
Feel free to visit us to
vtcw sa mples and di scuss
our rea sonab l e prices
w1fh out obli ga t ion .

".

IJ..POITIOSSION

Ojbur

0 . Bo x 486, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 was appointed An cillary Admini strator of the
estat e of Ray Ra l ph Sarson .
Dec eased. tate ot 631 Ament
Str eet , Owo sso , Michigan
48867 .

Wedding Bells?

''
•

consideration you show today

.

positively,' '

Bardin allowed tha t federa l
price controls on gasoline
have been a burden to the
indu s t ~
and
ha ve
discouraged the building of
new refineries, but he added:
" It would. he an outrage if
this industry failed to meet
the need for unleaded
gasoline.''
The expected tightening of
gasolin e supplies is another
In 1978, Pen n State
reason why the government's defea( ed five teams that
fue l-eco nomy pro gram , ' played m bowl games but lo·st
requiring an effi ciency level . the big one to Alabama in the
of 2i.5 miles per gallon in Sugar Bowl.

March 15th, 6:30 p.m.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 The

eva-.
STEAK HOUSE

ltep. Hob Eckhardt, DTexas, the panel's. chairman,
said the rule would cost
consumers a total $5 billion a
year. And he asked Bardin if
there was any sig n oil
companies would use the
extra money to expand re- .
finery capacity.
"No Jaw requires refiners
w use this money in any
part cuia r way," Bardin
replied . "But it seems fair to
expect tha t the refinin g
will
respond
industry

'

Box 489 , Radio City Station.

i~iii~~~;~~~~~~~~i~~i~~=-~L:
~

generally be tight, bu1 that
the industry should be able w
satisfy U.S. needs:
Bardin testified in defense
of a recent Energy
Department rul e all owing
refineries to pass through to
consumers
~a
large r
proportion of the cos1 of
manufacturing gasoline.
Officials estimate this rule
will add about 5 cen1s a gallon
to the price of gasoline this
year - on top of expected
price increa ses reflectin g
higher crude oil costs.

Quart erback Ch uck Fusina
set 18 school passing and
total-offense records in his
ca reer at Penn State.

ICROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
birth sign . ·

992-3662

\r

EXTRA
CRISPY

By TOM RAUM
Administration , told a House
Associated Press Writer subcommittee.
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
Bardin's comment came
top U.S. energy official said amid growing predictions
Tuesday
that
despite fr om governme nt and
burd e n s ome f e d e ral industry officials of shortages
regulations on gasoline, "it of unleaded gasoline this
would be an outrage" if oil summer - due both to the
companies failed to meet lo ss of Iranian oil and
growing
demands for because demand for the fuel
unleaded fuel.
. is beginning to overtake
" We expect t.he!ll to roll up supply.
their sleeves and get the job
He told the Ho~se Comdone ," David Bardin, 'head of merc e' s oversight and
the Energy Depart!llent 's investigations subcommittee
Economi c Regulatory that gasoline supplies will

,.'

fulfill several secret ambllions case No . 22 617 , Fr ed w.
wn , Jr .• P . 0 . Bo x 486,
thi s coming year . As these Cro
Pom er oy, Oh io , w as ap ·
avenues open, explore each poi nt ed
An ci ll ar y
Ad ·
one vlgnrou sly .
m ini slr ator of th e estat e of
PISCES (Feb. 20-M•rch 201 Ra v Ralph Sar son , deceased ,
You ' ll have no trouble enlisting la te of 631 Am en t Stre et ,
Mic higan 48867 .
the aid or people today but )'Ou Owosso,
.
Rober tE . Bu ck
will tomorrow . Don ' t put off
Pr ob a te Judge .Cierk
asking il you 're in need of a (3 ) 7, ld , 21, :Jt c
favor . Find out more about
yourself by sending for your
new Astra-Graph letter. Mail $1
for each to Astro-Graph , P.O.

MIDDLEPORT

•TRY OUT

CRaRS

DALE'S
,

l

Rep .

J

PROBATE COURT OF
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
MEij;S COUNTY. OHIO
~
ESTA TE OF RAY RAL PH ESTATE OF RAY RALPH
SARSON, DECEASED
SARSO N. DECEASE D
NOTICE OF
,. Case No . 2261 7
APPOINTMENT
NOTICE OF
OF FIDUCIARY
APPOINTMENT
On February 23r d, 1979 , in
OF
FIDUCIARY
.
llorch 15, 1171
On Februar y 23, 1979, in t he the Meigs County Probate
You 'll haYe opportunllie s to M eigs Coun tv Probate Cou r t , Court. Fred w. Crow . Jr ., P.

407 PEARL ST.

-

Allen , Enna Cleland, Clara
Conroy, Karla Chevalier,
Marcia Keller, Darlene
Newell, lnzy Newell, Cleo
Smith and Opal Wickham.
Mrs. Letha Wood underwent surgery for a broken
hip at the Holzer Medical
Cen1er, Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen vislted in Ashland, Ky.,
Friday, with Mrs. D. B.
Martin, Robert and Chester
Allen.
Mi ss Debbie Taylor,
Columbus, spent Thursday
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
Laura Jean.
Allen Weber, Akron,
spent a few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Keller.
Mr. and · Mrs. Warden
Ours were Sunday_ dinner
guests of Mr . .and mrs .
Richard Gaul and sons in
'honor of Mrs. Ours' birthday.
Afternoon callers were Mr.
an&lt;l Mrs. Hennan Carson,

2:30 ,p.m. Bethany Shrine,
ParKersburg, W. Va., March
16, 8 p.m.; Nazarene Shrine,
Chillicothe, March 24, 7
p.m.; Rosa Shrine, Zaneso
viUe, March 17, 7:30 p.m.;
Lakewood Shrine, Rocky
River, March 24, 8 p.m.;
Ralph K. Shrine, Wilmington,
March 17, 8 p.m.
.
At the close of the Shrine,
potluck refreshments were
served in the dining room.
The door prize was won· by
Jesse Brinker.

friends to gather ideas from
the sponsoring merchants
who are experts in their
respective fields and will be
most helpful in providing
information.
PlaMing a wedding can
and llhould be fun ...

Bernice Bede Osol

RADIO SHACK

... .1o

a nnual
reports
were
presented.
Communications included
invitations to attend the installations of Hocking Valley
Shrine, Logan, April 5, 7:30
p.m. ; Charl eston Shrine,
Charleston, W.Va., MIIJ'ch 25,

selections will be presented
by Mary Lucas• of Ward's
Keyboards.
Refreshments
will also be served. There will
be no admission charge. ·
This will be a !llarvelous
opportunity for prospective
·brides and 111'001111 a ·their

1985 ,

e:sse ntial ."

Corned Beef ................... lb. $239
COOKED COINED BEEF OR
Peppered Beef ............... lb. $399
NATURAL
Swiss Cheese ....... ......... lb . $3~9
FRE5H lAKED
6
Cinnamon Rolls .......... For

ggc

,

'

~··

�'
11 :-The Da(ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pnml'rny, 0., Wednesda.v, MHr. 14, l!r.9
DICK TRACY

TELEVISION
VIEWING

10- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Mar. 14, 1979
' ORDINANCE NO . 2l6
An ordinance f i xing a nd
regulii t ing the price that may
be charged bv the Villag e of
Syracuse, or its assign th e
Village o~ Syracuse 8qard of
Public Affairs , for wat er .
Be
it orda in ed by th e
cou n c il of the vi llag e o t
Syracu se as fo llows :
Sectio n I. T hat beg inn in g
M ar ch 1, 1979 Resid en t s
lo cat ed w i t hi n th e V i ll age
co rpor ation whose h ead o f
ho u seh old is u n d er the ag e o f
65 sh a l t pa y a f ee o f S5 .75 p e r
month to o e supp 11 ed wa t e r .
· R esi d ents loca t ed w i th in
the Vi ll age cor por ation w ho se
hea d of houi ehol d i s ov er 65
y ear s of ag e shaH p ay .;l f ee o f
$5·. oo per month to be supp l ie d

water .

R esi d ent s
not
l o c at e d
W i th in th e
V ill aq e co r .
porat io n .sh a ll p a y 'a f ee of
$6 .75 per mon t h to be sup p li ed
w at e r b ( t he V ill ag e o f
Sy r ac u se .
Comme r ci al
estab l lsh !Tlent s bei n g pr ov ided w at er
b y the Vi l l ag e o f Syrac use,
and be ing d et ermi n ed bv the
Vi llage as b ei ng hi gh er th an
nor m al r esident u sers o f
water sh a ll p a y a f ee o f $15 .00
pe r mon t h to b e sup pl ied with
wa te r .
Comm er cia l
es t a bl is h .
me n t s bein g pro11 ided w ater
by t he Vi llag e of Syar cu se,
and be ing d et er m in ed by t he
V i llage as b ei n g lowe r th;;~n or
equal t o a no r mal res ident
u se r of wat er sh all pay a f ee
S5. 75,
Sc ho o l s bei ng s upp l l e t;l
w a ter b y the Vi .l ! a g e of
Syra c use sh a ll pa y a l ee o1
$ 15.00 p er month fo r thi s
ser v ic e .
Sect ion I I. Th e Clla r ge fo r
a n yone desiring a new wa.ter
tap s hall be S\ 50 .00 .
A n ew ta p is h er eby defin ed
to b e t he in stallat ion of a
wa ter t ap to p rovi de water
serv 1c e to a r esi d en ce wh er e
no n e f o r me rl y e )(is t ed .
Sec t i on Ill . A d ela y e d
pa y ment c h arge of 10 p er cent
of th e f ees du e wil l be
charg ed if t he mo n thly b ill i s
not paid within th e t im e
p r es ~:r ibed b y the rule s an d
reQulations of th e V i l lage o f
_Syra c use or i t s ass ign t he
Syracuse Village Bo ard of
Public Affair s.
Sec t ion IV . This or d inan ce
is
de c lared ,to
be
an
emer gency me a·su r e in tha t
the publ ic pea.c e . he a lth ,
safety and we l fare r equir e
th e i mmed i ate estab l is hment
of rate s in the f inan c ing of th e
co st of sa id wate r sy s te m a nd
t he operat ion th er eof. and , ·
the r efo r e , thi s ord i n an ce
shall tak e ef f ect immed iat e l y
upon its pa ss ag e.
Section V . This Ordinan c e
sha ll tak e e ff ect and be in
f orce from and aft e r Mar c h 1,
1979 .

A !test : Janice Lawson
Clerk
Eber P ic k en s
M a yor
(3J 8, 15, 2t c

DOCTOR·LAWYER
CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(AP) - Rich~rd Lindsay is
one of an estimated 250
persons in the nation who
have both a medical and a
legal degree and the only one
in West Virginia to be actively
practicing
both
professions simultaneously.
He received his medical
~egree in 1974 and Jaw de~:ree

.For Best Results Use Sentinel C-~ssifieds

WANT AD
CHARGES
!day
2days
ldK )'ll

lida ys

15 wvrds or Un(ler
Cash
1.00
1.50
1.!0
3.00

Chur~e

1.!5
1.01
2.!5
3.75

F.at:h word uver the rninimwn 15
words b 4 ce nts per word per 'day .
A.tls runnifij( other than consecutive
dclys will be t•harged a\ the I day

rat e.
In memory, Cltrd of Thllnks undObltuary : 6 cents per word , SJ,OO
minimwn , Cash inadvam:t!.

·

Mob!ltt ltume sa les and Yard sales
are llct•cptcd only with c~:~sh with
ort!er. 25 cent dll:llge for ads c~trry­
ing Box Nlunber Jr1 Care of The Sen·
tine!.

The Pulllislu~ r reserves the right
to t!dit or reject Jtny 1:1ds d~med objd:tional. The Publisher will not be
responsible for more than Unt! int'O r·
rt!CI insertion.
Phone 992-2156 .

· NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mtmda~

Noon on Saturday
Tuesday

lhru Friday
4P.M.
the day l&gt;cforc publiCHlion

Sund1:1y
4P.M .

Fr idlly aft.erllOOil-

IN THE
COMMON PLE A S COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
PAULINE .._.on EBEINSTEIN
4J Cote Street
Middleport. Ohio,
Plaintiff.
0S ·

• 1

KARL von EBEINSTEIN
Route 2. Box S6J B
West
Columbia,
South
Carolina 29 169
D efe nd a nt
. No.17,082
NOTI CE BY
PUBLICATION
To Karl von Ebein st ei n ,
whO se la st known · addre ss
wa s Route 2, Bo x 56:1 B. Wes t
Colum bia , South Cal"olina
29169 ; yo u ar e here b y not i fi ed
th at y ou h ave been n amed
def en dant In a l ega l act io n
ent i tl ed
Pauline
von
E bein s t ei n vs
Ka r l vo n
E be in st ein . ThiS actio n has
been a ssign ed case n umb er
17,082 and iS pen d ing in the ·
Co urt of Common Pl eas,
M e ig s
Co un t y ,
Ohio,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
The ob j ec t o f til e ComP lai nt
i s f or divorce , a l imo n y and
costs . Yo U are QUa l if ied to
an sw er th e Complain t w ithin
28 day s aft er t he date of the
last pub lic a t ion of th i s notice,
which will be published once
eac h we ek for six conse cu t ive
week s . The la st publicat ion
will be mad e on Apri l l l , 1979.
In ca se of your failure to
an s wer or· to o th erwise
r espond as re qu ired by th'e
Oh i o
Rules
o f . Ci vi l
Procedu r ·e , i udgment b y
default will . be rendered
aga ins t you for th e relief
dem a nd ed in t he Com p laint .
Dated : Februa r y 26, 1979.
La rr y Spen cer
Cterlto f Courts
M eigs Cou nt y Com man Pleas
Court

OJ

7, 14, 21, 28 (4) 4 , 11 , 6tc

in 1978, both from West
Virginia University.
He Is now employed by a
law finn. He also puts in 40
hours a week practicing
medicine in emergency
, rooms at hospitals.
Lindsay, 29, is the father of
three.
:.

WANTED

••...

...

SENTINEL CARRIER
..,

FOR LINCOLN HEIGHTS
AREA POMEROY
PHONE 992-2156

'

THE DAitY SENTINEL .

Yard Sal e

IN MfM O ~V of my bdnved wil e
o nrl rnnthN Hdrn fo r l ey, who

U: VOU hnv&lt;" o '&gt;rn1iu· I f' o ff ,...r ,
wn11t t o h u y or &lt;;t: ll :.om et hir1g.
o r lnn k inq lor wnr k
or
w hnh'V&lt;'I · . yo u'll ge-t r c ~ ults
fo '&gt; IN w ith a Sent ine-l Wont Ad .
Co11997 -21 56.

pos-. Prl qw oy ') yc or s a g o to ·

Will CARE for the e ld erly in our .

BABYSITTING in my h ~ me ."Soc on
hour . Mvst be a t lea st 4 years
o ld . Syracu se . O hi o . 992·5449 .

H~l!_Wa.!'l_e.\!...

burning fireplace, 2 car
garage, and 1 acre plus lot .

NEW LISTING and

PAUL ORR

----- ---

r iver . Onl y $17,500.
SPRING IS NEAR. SELL
NOW AND MOVE TO A
NEW LOCATION , CALL
992-3325.
HELEN L., GORDON B.
AND SUE P. MURPHY,
REALTOR ASSOCIATES.

Housing
Headquarters

MERCURY MARQUIS , lull
power, good condit ion . S650.
949-2042 .
-----·· ...

--

CU TLASS SUPREME . Ex·

cellent
condition.
985 -3970
olter6 p .m .
. .
.
- - 1974 CHEVROLET MALIBU 2·door
hardt op , good shape . SI 400 .
19i' J Olds Stati onwogo n. 9
pa ss , go od shape, no rust ,
51200. 304 -773· 5471 .

-

Wanted to Rent

-~---------

For Rent

1

99 2 3
- :" hr~~- ¥ .2·? ~ :

USI::D

. - - - . FRIGIDA IRE refrigera tor .

5 992 7354
S"/ .
.
.
. CLEARANCE SALE . Meigs Humane
So ci ety . Thrift Shop . M os t items
S.25 or S.lO including dresses,
blous es. pants, men' s and
childre n's clo1h ing . Thur s.. Fri ..
Satu rd ay

KAWASAKI KZ 050. 94?-2735 .
GOOD MIXED h oy. $1 bale. Call
afte r 5 pm . 992·7513.
. - . . . .
. - . - ·

TRJ\CTORS
l-87100 16 hp FARM TREAD 4 WD
UST 14625.00 NOW'3700.00
l-Ll85 17 hp FARM TREAD 4 WD
15230.00
'4 184.00
1-Ll85 17 hP TURF TREAD 2 WD
14695.110
'3756.00
1-U8U7 hn FAJtM TREAD 2 WD
1
~50.00
'3720.00
l-L245 25 hD FARM _TREAD 4 WL
'6335.110
'5068.00

3 AND 4 RM . fu rnished and un ·
furni s he d
op t s .
Phone
992.543.4 .
TWO BfDROOM, Kitche n fu rni sh·
cd, opt. Call befor e 8 om

.

992-7286.

.
NEW FOUR bedroom opts.. rented
according to your income , we
poy wa ter , sew age- and go rboge pickup. t=or a fornily of 6
to 1:1 peo p~e : 9f!2· 777~ .

62 OR OVER? See a new 1
bedr oom op t. , rent is based on ~:]~!!J~!!!!E!!:J~~[e~~your in co tnP . Wr: pay water ,
sewag e an d garbage picku p . THREE
BEDROOM
I'On c h .
Ca r pe ted . air conditioned . Pric·
99'2·
7777
.. - .
cd
ve r y
rea so nably . In
TWO APTS . for w hee lcha ir po .sy_ro c u~e . 992-5348,
. tien ts. Ren t is ba sed o n yo irr In MODERN THRH ' bedroo m house.
co me . 992· 77 '17.
full bo se rn ont, f ire place, ful ly
TRAilfH
IN Midrl lc po rt w i th
carpeted , .co ntrol oir , e ncl os ed
utilit iP.s . Close to downtown .
so n po rch, locot ed on 6 10l oc re5
~100 m onthly. 997 -5578
on CR 78. opprox . 3 mi les l rorn
51r EPING Q UAIH fRS for 3 me n .
Racine . If interestP.d contac t
Rofrige ra to r and TV . Call
lorry W o lfe 9.4'1-7836 w e eke nd s
QQ'/ 77 9 1.
and ofto r 5 I"Vf'll i llg S.
I

1

'

~ 'bU OOIJ0 10 TliALH

PIANO

rJ

ORPHAN ANNIE-AU r.AT'URAL
50 WliAT? IT ' S A

HEAL1HY

SMELL· ··
THE SME"LL OF
THE SEA~

ACRES

~

Lots

of

home and n ice leve l lot'
50x120. All set up and fur -

nished. $B,500.00.
.
MIDDLEPORT Nice
home, 3 bedrooms, balh,l
enclosed porch, storage
bldg . &amp;
garage . Al s o "
mobile home, (rented ) lots

of ground . 521,000.00.
WALK TO SHOP ~ Very
nice . 2 story · frame, 3
bedrooms, form·al din,i ng,
large rec. ·room, fireplace, I
1
2 Car garage and workshop.

$23,500.00.
LOTS OF REMODELING •
- 2 or 3 bedrooms, nice liv ·
lng room , utility, part base·)
ment,
.56 acre, Meigs

SchOoi ·District. 514,900.00.
THE EASY WAY TO SELL
-LIST WITH US.
REALTORS
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
HENRY E. CLELAND JR.
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
9'12-2259, 992-6191,992-2568
·

A :m·.
.

.·

··

R~ALlOR

&lt;ll

New listing -

ll.ving at its beSt. ThIs home
has 3 bedrooms~ family
room, living room with
fireplace , utility room. 1f2
basement. Large 2 car

~~"ATMOSPHERE/'

MY

CHILD ••." HOW COULD
ONE EVER OUPI.ICATE
THIS AROMA"'

fence
and
blacktop
driveway . Situated on
almost 2 acres on State

0.

3-7-1 mo. [Pd.)

Business Services
------------

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers. toast ers. tron s. al l
smal l appliances . Lawn mower .
ne~r~f to State Highway Goro ge
on Route 7.

~e_rv!c!· ~~ s ~o!P! ~ S~is~o~s ._

Home has l.lh baths, family

on
On 2'12
acres . · Shown·

oy

appointment only.

gro,ery businessanda nice

apartment, too. All stock
and

equipment

· are

included In the sale price.
Call for more Info. AskiiiQ
$29,500.
.
.
We need listings!!

Cheryl Lemley, Asso~ia!e
Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Associale
Phone 949-2519
GeorgeS. Hobs!etter, "J r.
Broker
992-5729

•

h

- I -

-

-

-

•

CENTRAL REALTY
YEARS

co

0

I

FIVE
OLD - Beautiful 4 bedroom home with
large eat-in kitchen, 2 baths, TV room, all nicely.
carpeted, large utility room and many more extras. t
Natural gas forced air furnace. Plenty of garden spa,e'
on 1 acre of land. Pr ic~_rlght $36,000.
.
,

CHESTER - Good 5 bedroom house with full
basement and 2 baths. Nat. gas heat, approx. 1 acre
land and Iorge storage building. Price $21,500.
.'ACREAGE - with large beef born near Pc&gt;meroy.
SPACIOUS--BI-LE.V EL - This may be your dream ·
home 11 has o large kitchen with lots of cabinets, .
' stove ' refrigerator and dishwasher. Beautiful dlnl"'l
room' with "sliding glass doors . Large living room and ,
family room , and to finish this well-laid out home we
have live bedrooms, ullllly room and garage-. Very IJ: .
healing bill . Red barn-like storage bulldl"'l· H~ 1
abounen m lnutes north of Pomeroy lutlt o
· ·
Asklnq $55,000.
JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedroom house about 10 yrs.
old, mostly carpeted with attoched ga'rage &amp; utility
room. All Insulated. Appro•. 'I• acre land. Located
aboul15 minutes north on R! . 33 . Priced for quick sale,
$22,500.
LOTS '- 1 Acre and up ne&lt;ir Pomeroy. .
50 ACRES FREE GAS -,. Good 1V2 story house with full
basemen!, Large pond stocked with fish . Priced for
.
quick sale. $.40,000.
SYRACUSE - good 2 bedroom home, almost nllw
kitchen cabinets, all nicely carpeted. laundry room, ell
Insulated, notural gas heal, ullllty bulldl"'l, 2 lots
.
.
1$21,500.00.
Just Listed - 1 acre on Co. Rd . 32 S. 28. Nice home site
Water and electric available. $3,000.
WANTED
WE NEED NEW HOMES&amp; FARMS.
CALLJ
or

-

-

-

·-

·-

·-

-

RISING STAR Kennels . Boarding
and grooming. all breeds.
Cheshire. 367-0292.
-

-

-

...... _ . . J _ _ - · - · - - - - - · - -

HOOF HOlLOW . English and
Western . Saddles and harness.
HOrses and pon ies . Ruth
Reeves. 6t4 -698·3290.

_

___

p

_

__

___

_

BAH;fROOMS AND Kitchens
remodeled . ceramic t ile, plum·
bing, carpentry . and general
maintenance. 13 year s ex·
petience. 992-3685.
. _,
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete
Se ~vice . Phone 992·2478.

CARPEIING
DRIVE_Alfi1lE
&amp;

'

- -I· - - - - - - ---- - -

MOBI ~E HOME repairs Furnaces ,

-

AND

- - --

-

Yesterday's Answer
22 Super
29 Make •
Bowl
drunk
team
30 Ax handle
23 Operatic
3i German
song
city
24 Refined
32 French
25 Bound
river
Wednesday, March 14
27 Free
. 34 Mulberry
from
cloth
care
35 Old dance

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

- -- -

Inviting defense to err
NORTH
+ AQIOiil
• A QJ 2
• 4

, 36
37
38
;

s
i

'

$1 OMAc..H URQtNLct&gt;

24 Rolls of carpet In Slock
100's of S.mples lo
Choose From.
BUYNOW&amp;SAVE

&amp;

~IGH,. WH~

HI:

WAS TE!J.ING J\BOUT"
DANif:L IN "rHE

. C.lt"i42·221 ·,TALKTO
Wendell or Herb Onte
or Gene Smlltl

X

• 75

process
Relaxed
Otherwise
Trample
Ceaseless
Winged

+A 9 6 4

Vulnerable: North.South
Dealer : East
West North Ear~t South

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

AXYDLBAAXR
fa

2+
Pass

Dbl.

~.

••

2t
Pass

Pass

2+
Pass

Pass

LONGFELLOW

One l etter simply stands for another. In this sample A is

Opening lead : t 3

used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single lellers.
apostrophes, .t he l ength and formation of the words are all
hints. Earh day the rode lelters are dift'erenl.

By O.wa1d Jacoby

CRYPTOQUOTES

. WINNIE

:J.H

WEST
EAST
+7
+K2
•&amp;43
•K109 7
t Q93
t Hl01 75
+KJII!l!
+Q
SOUTH
• J B6 4
• 85
• J62

Printing
~~~---------r~~~~~-y~~~~~------------------------------------------- 33 game

•

aod Alao Sontag
QPATEYA

IWAWUVP·

Here is an e&gt;&lt;cellent hand
K from Easley Blacllwood's
G K
PH
RYA
KGAPEK
y · delightful book on play. It
shows the late John Craw·
HQEUI.
AWVBWUWI
X T P K W H W ford, one of the greatest
players of all ttme, in action .
East won the first trick
B U E I'J W U R
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IN BUSINESS DEALINGS A MAN with the king of diamonds
WHO IS NOT CAtiTIOUS IS VERY APT TO GET INTO and shifted to the queen of
SERIOUS TROUBLE - CHARLES GOW
clubs. John was looking at
·
•
one loser m each suit unless
(C) 1979 King Features Syndicate, Inc.

·,

2.

in contention
5 Primates
6 Blemishes
7 Rose essence
8 Incentives
9 One of 100
12 Break one's
word
16 French city
20 Brown kiwi
21 Wally of the
late show

"'

ROOR

WE OFFER YOU ...
1. Two full floors of all

consonant
DOWN
I Saw
2 Rich cake
3 Waikiki
greeting
4 It 's often

' FRANK&amp;ERNIE

IJA9. . --&amp; .'199 Sq.. yd.

RUTLAND
FUiNITURE
·742-221 f •
Rutland.

•

H Smooth

/,

VGK

furniture.

JAILED

Arthur
f; Go' 30 Hawaiian

I

' &amp; 12' QJSHJONB)

pointing

co vOtl ng, se pti c -s ystems
dozer, backhoe . Rt . 143. Phom
I [b 14) 69U·7331.
-· - .
-- -

COMEDY

V])SO

.

UNIDBII RUGS
'12.95 &amp;UP

eleCtrical work, pipes sowed.
pl~~b~ng_. ~~5_85_!J :__ ___ _

Coii742·232B.
-------------HOWEj!V AND MARTIN Ex·

FORUM

~~::lOill 26 Region
';8:::::::=-1 27 Kind of
1 appeal
28 Author,
D "\' - Yutang
1-1 29 Actress
I

A GOOD SELECTION OF
END&amp; ROLL BALANCES. •

coQcelled? lost your opera tors
_lic~n_:;~?.~h_o~e _!9~·.!_1 ~3:._ __ __
E-C ~ LECTRI C AL Contractor serv·
ing Ohio Vol ley region . Six
do~s o week , 24 hours service .
Em l'!rgency coils. Coli 882-2952
or 882· 2305 .

(Answers tomorrow)

river

SAVE AlDT

-- . ------··- - - ·-

-AUTOMOBILE
- -·- - - . INSURANCE
- ·- - - - - -been
-

XI I XI J

THOMAS JOSEPH

20 Cey of the
Dodgers
Obstruct
Philistine
god
France's
longest

SAVE ON

•

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hot·
Bock Hoe Service ,
f ield ,
Rutloild , Ohio. Phone 742· 2008 .

,~~~·~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii. -WALLPAPERING
•

I Jumbles : BASIN

14 Astolat
beauty
15 Broadway
IWTJinary
17 Goddess:
Lat :
18 Of course
19 Colorado
~~~ot::::.... _ _A
India n

Pets for Sale

EXCAVATING , doze r , loader and
boclo:hoe work : dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire: will houl
fill dirt. to soil. limestone and
grovel. Coil Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phone crn.708Q, night
phone 992-3525 or 99'1- 5232.

___

Business Opportunity - In
Rutland. Here's a chance
to own a we.ll-es!abllshed

vesterday·s

·-

·~.J····-------

won ' t have this one long .

room with free-standing
fireplace, utility room and
nice outbuilding. S!!ua!ed

COMe CLOSf ···

~~~~ ~13 Pig or cast

BRAOFOII:O, A ucfioneer , Complete Serv ice. Phone 949-2.487
or 949!2000, Racin e. Ohio. Crill
Uradford.

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abo~Je cartoon.

Print answer here: (

by

27320 Montgomery Rd.
la"!!SVille, Ohio
614-669-4145 Evenings
2 Miles Easl
ot Wilkesville
1
2-14-1 mo.,,

Route 124. Call today , we

located on Stale Route 143.

WITH A
BARREl o· DfAD
F!SH 't'UH COULD

ACROSS
1._-k~CL...h!ll Bayonet
thrust
5 Put
together
10 Equestrian
sport
11 Ceramicist

MontaametJ
Trailer Sales

SEWING MACHINE Repair!! , ser vice . o il mokes , 992-2284. The
Fobf i c Shop ,
Pom ero y .
Authorized Singer Soles and

New listing Modern 3
bedroom A -frame home,

"THIN&amp;~.

6£MMr~-

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

992-2356

detached garage with
workshop . Extra good

I

wo rk-A DOORMAN 'S

651 Beech Street

Country

HANDY WHI!N l i

C:OMI5S TO F"'INCHIN0

Answer : There a re frequen t open ings In thi s kind of

Will Mike
Service ca lis

sell S20,000.

1

I [J

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

18 Ye8rs Experience

Middleport,

byHenri_ArnoldandBoblee

!j

MIESED

SHOP

'I

r

IGOIBLE I

'

REYNOlD'S
EL£CJRIC MOlOR

FARM FOR sale. House. 2 ba r ns,
t rail er . Lorge pond. 10 acre s or
82 acres. 742· 25b.b .

c

evetJ FOI2. "SSM~nm.J(O'?

I I

·--- - - - - - - -- . ....-------,
_ ~!~ Estat~o_r_
S~e_-

B:31)-Hazel17.
THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1979
5:25-Wor ld ot Large 17; 5:45-Farm Report 13.
5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6:QO-PTL Club 15; 700 Club 6,8 ; 6: 11)-News 17 .
6:25--For You ... Biack Woman 10.
6:31)-Romper Room 17; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
6:50-Good Morning , West Virginia 13.
6:55-Chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
Thursday Morning 8; Schoolles 10; Three S!oogesLIItle Rascals 17; 7:15-Weather 33.
7:31)-Famlly Affair 10.
·
8:oo-&lt;:ap!aln Kangoroo 8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesame St. 33.
·
8:31)-Hazel 17.
9 : 00-Bo~ Braun 3; Phil Donahue 15, 13; Hogan's
-Heroes B; Matc h Game 10; Lucy Show 17.
9:31)-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan's Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10 :oo-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,·15; Edge of Nigh! 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13; Movie " The Sisters"
17.
10:31)-AII Star Secrets 3, 15; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Grlfll!h 6; Price Is Righi 8, 10.
11 :00-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love
• of Life B,10; Sesome St. 20; Nova 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10; News 11.
12 :00-Newscenler 3; New.s 6, 10; Password 15; Young
&amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Love
Amerlcon Style 17.
12 :31)-Ryon' s Hope 6, 13; Search lor Tomorrow B, 10;
E lee . Co. 20,33; Not For Women Only 15; Movie "13
Rue Madeleine" 11.
·
1 :QO-Doys of Our Lives 3,15; All My Children 6, 13;
News B; Young &amp; !he Restless 10.
1:31)-As The World Turns 8,10.
2:QO-Doctors 3,15; One Life To Live 6.13.
2:25-News 17.
2:31)-Another World 3, 15; Guiding Light B,10; Love
Lucy 17.
_3 :QO-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnts!ones 17; Dick
Cavett 20.
4:QO-Mis!er Cartoon 3; Hollywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B; Sesame Sl. 20,33;
Batman 10; Dinah 13; Space Giants 17.
4:31)-Bewl!ched 3; Gilligan's Is. 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Petticoat Junction 15; Gilligan' s Is. 11.
5:00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3,11; Beverly Hillbillies B;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10: Bionic Woman 13; Brody Bunch 15.
5:31)-Carol ~urnett 1!. ~rlenas J; News 6i -s.nford &amp;
Son 8; Elec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:QO-News3,8,10,13,15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
Hodgeodge Lodge 20.
6:31)-NBC News 3,15; ABC News13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B, 10; My Th~ee Sons 17; Over
Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-WI!s 3; Newlywed Game 6,13; Marty
Robb ins' Spotlight 8; News 10; Love, American
Style IS; Carol Burnett &amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavett
20 ; Wild, Wild World of Animals J3.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers 6; Match Game
PM 8; $100,000 Name That Tune 10; ,Nashville On
The Rood 13; Dolly 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 20,33 :
.
8:00-Harrls &amp; Company 3,15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13;
Waitons 8,10; Novo 20,33; NHL Hockey 17.
8:31)-Angle 6,13.
9:00-Qulncy 3,15; Borney Miller 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0
8, 10; World 20,33.
9:30-Soap 6,13.
10:00-Mrs. Columbo 3, 15; Family 6, 13; Barnaby
Jones 8,10; News 20; Sarah Vaughon In Concert 33.
10:l0-Ra! Patrol 17; Hocking Volley Bluegrass 20 .
11 :QO-News 3,6,B, 10, 13.15; Hogan's Heroes 17; Best of
Groucho 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3, 15; S!arsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Mash 8; ABC News 33; Movie " A Boy Ten Feel
, Tall" 10; Movie " Ten Seconds to Hell" 17.
12 :05-McCioud 8; 12 :41)-Mannl• 6, 13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; I :31)-Movle "Seminole Uprising"
17.
.
1:50-News 13; 3:11)-News 17; 3:31)-Movle " A
Woman of Distinction ." 17.

I

NOIBS

...OR m 'tbU JUSr W~mlf.J0

lH~ ~I){ A~...

Elberfelds of Pomeroy
and Kimball Music Center
of Athens
Phone 992-2581
or 992-2082
'
J-11 -1mo.

Hoskins, 949-2160.
·
3-7·1 mo.

Files 8; 12 :Mi-Mann lx 6,13.
12 :45-Movle "The Pelly Girl" 17; 1:co-Tomorrow 3.
1: 11)-Kolak 8; 1:50-News 13 .
2:35-News 17; 2:55-Movle " Copacobana " 17.
4: 55-Dragnet 17.

Unscrample these !our Jumbles,
one letter to each square to form
four ordi nary words .
'

BORN LOSER

" Revenge Is My .Destiny" 10.
12 : 00-Ro~kford

1f fi'\INf fi;)'\t W THAT SCRAMBLEO WORO GAME

~ ~ ~~~ ®

lAN'AsSociate
EDANIELS
af ·

and windows . All work
guaranteed20
years
experience .
Free
estimates.
Call : Tom

unfinished attic. Priced to

good features. GOING ATI
$23,000.00.
MIDOLEPORT - Mobile·

GtNIE 4 o r ga n. 2
keyboar ds . built-in tope player.
' $1000. 9&lt;n-7354 .

PAIR- of· Pr~vi~ c iol- li ving room
choir s.
gr e en
brocade
upho l st er y. white
woo d ,
~o u ght
ot
W e dg ewood
Ga ll e rie s in A shla nd
Also
yellow velve t choir . Blu e fo)(

'

and repair. Storm doors

JUST LISTED - Beautifu l

building sites. Old barn,
utilities available. many

4 LOWREY

TRUCK . Ru n~ good,
Good body . $300. 949-2545 .
.
.
1976 FQR D ELIT~ , silver w ith blue
vi nyl top . Good condi tion .
32 .000 mi le s. 304 -773 -56 15
. - . - . . -

''

nJNING

All lypes roofing, gutters
and downspouts. All types
home maintenance - . new

brick · with 2 acres. 4
bedrooms, 2 '1:~ baths, lovely
kitchen, din ing, 21arge rec.
rooms , f ireplac;e, many,
many other features .

21

REDUct SAFE and fm,t with
GoB ese Tabl ets an d E-Vop
~·~o ~e r_ p~ll ~"· N el ~o n ~r uJ' · ~ ~

1 ~52 DOOG~

'

'

room, kitchen, bath and

EAR CORN . $2 bu . 985-3510.

1 ~72

'•
•

2·11 ·1 mo., Pd.

2·7 -mo.

Ohio Valley Roofing
and
Home Maintenance

.

992-6011

~tw-2174

New listing - 2 bedroom
home In Pomeroy . Home
has new gas furnace, living

CA SH FOR junk ca rs . 24 hour RUTLAN £5 HA,RDWARE 2 drs from
Ru tland Pos t Offic e. 742-2255 .
w re cke r
ser vic e
f=ry e' s ,
King circul a ting coo l a nd wood
Rutland , O H . 742; 2081.
heate r w ith bl ower, ' $282.95.
WANT TO buy: Good bu nk bed s
Als o, o the r wood , coal and gas
or tw in bed s 992 -5434 or
heaters (good prices) . Sfove
304 -867-7506.
buyer s a re eli g1ble for 10 per
_cent d i sC '?lJ_nt _o~ s~o~e f?i~e .

Sales
----Auto
---------

.•'

•New Home
•Add·ons
•Remolding

SMIYH
MOTORS, INC.

REALlY

CH IP WOOD . Pci l e s
ma x .
diameter 10" on larges t end.
S l2 per ton . Bundl ed !dab. $10
For Sale
----~- -....
pe r ton . Delivered to Ohi o
Pallet Co .. . Rt . 2, Pomeroy . COAL . liME STONE , sa nd , grovel.
col ci1Jm chl orid e, l ertili;r er , dog
992·20U9 .
food , a nd oil types of salt . Ex ·
OLD r: URNITURE . ice bo xes , b rass
celsior Salt Work s, Inc. . E. Main
bed s, iron beds. desks , e tc. ,
St .. Pomero y. 992-389 1.
cornplel e hou seholds . Wr i!e
MIXED.
CoNDITIONED h.oy. V~r Y
M .D. Mill er , Rl ~ · Pomeroy o r
good
guoli t y .
D e li ve r y
co li '192 -7700 .
ava ilabl e. Phone 9C12·720 1 or
O LD COINS , pocket wo tches .
992-3309 .
cl ass ring s, wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or silv e r. Calf " EVERVTHING '.S GOTT A ' GO" .
ond la C furn iture,
House
_Ro_g~r Wa~sl ~y: 7~ '1 : 7~3~ .
clot he s. cor oil my household
WANT TO buy: old 45 and 78
i tems . Drop by 760 lau re l St.,
phonogr aph re co rds . Co li
Middlepor t.
992 ·6370 or Contact Martin f ur·
GOOD Ml)r(W hoy l o r sole.
niture.
843-2432 .
WANHD TO buy : old jewelry
REDUCE
SAFE and fa st wi th
Cal l 992· 526'1 or wri t e Kay
Cec il . 87 S / nd. Middleport , GoBese Tab le ts and f -Vop " water
pill s" N elson Drug.
OH.

-

SIDING .

New Lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
Phone 74M003

RAIDER 12)(48. Ve.r y
good .cond i tion Priced to se ll .
247 -38,75

CAPTAlllj EASY

C. _R.MASH
VINYL &amp; MJJM.

HOBSTETTER

1970 ~·ijEBH

___Wante!!_to Bu_y __

1975

3

1973 FREEDOM MOUILE home
1']/( 52 . 2 bedroom. firep lace.
ai r condi ti oning. underpinning.
992-6118 alter 4 o r 9Q2.54 13
_ar~ yt_i m_e ..

Long Bottom or Basham
949-2193 or 9BS-35B6

I 973 CAMARO 350 4 bbl. .
speed, S1b50. 992·7869 .

available .

b edrooms with closets, din ing , bath , natural QliS fur ·
nace, nice
livtng
with
fir eplace and view of the

1955 Prai r ie Srhoo ne r. 7B x 8,
bdr .
19b5Generol, bOx 12 , 2 bd r.
1968 Elcono . ~2 x 1 2 , !1 bdr.
19b9 Buddy . 60 • 12. 4 bdr .
1970 Sy lva . bO x 12 . 2 bd r .
1970 Cosfle, 60 1x 12 . 2 bdr .
1973 Arli ng to n. 60 l( 12. 2 bdr
1973 Ridge w ood 70 11 14 , 3 bdr
1973 Kirkw ood, 50)( 12 , 7 bdr .
B&amp; S MOBILE HOME SA LES
PT. PLEA SANT. WV
675--4424

a

electric

want ss.ooo.
NEW LISTING

19!&gt;7 TOTAl ELECTRI C mobile
home. fu r nished . 3 bedr ..
wa sher and dryer . Air condl ·
ti oned 1 lot . ?10 ft . fron ta ge.
~12 . 000 . Phone742-2926.

Couple or lady to do
light
housekeeping
for
retired man.
Live in. Contact

2.56 ih··

Chester Township , Water

Mobile Homes for Sale

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

l'RACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE

heat (Budget only SB9.951,

11 -9-1 mo.

949-2862, 949-2160

3

family room with wood-

220 E. Mlln Slreet,
Pomeroy, o.
C:.ll"l-7113
"For Fm Estlmites

.

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

large

b ed roo m luxurious home.
Front porch, nice kitchen ,
dining', bar, all electric

qcn .fbl:lO.

- ·- - -

3

$15,000.
NEW LISTING

AVA ILABLE to good home: 2
ca li co cot s. long hair . fema le. 1
tiger
lo ng he i r ,
femal e.
H111T10n e Soci ety , 742-2609 . Cal ,
ve ry Iorge c•eom , mo le, good
mouser , Co lli e Terr·ier , bl ond,
sho rt hair mole, 9 or 10 months
old, gent le. Br itta ny Spom el .
youn g mole . H11mone Soc1e ty ,

-

ROOMS

1
,,

..

Sales Rep. t-or
Sundins
ltammond Oraans
1
T ree Blvd. Racine, Olilo .
~one 949.2111 -evenlllltS
alter 5 p.m. Weekends
of!er 12 noon.
2·5-1 mo,

H. L Writesel
Roofing

bedr ooms ,
Jlh
baths,
natural gas, privat~ back
yard, and 2 car garage.
Near
stores.
Asking

BROWN AND whi te a dult fema le
Borde r Co l l i~ . v ·ery gentl e.
1192·20 11.

HELP WANTED

COUNTRY M OBILf Hom e Pork '
Rou te 33. nor th o f Pom eroy
Lo.rg: l? ts. ~o.ll 99? · ~4~9 ._ • _

210 Condor St.

7

.

PEn SIMPSON .

o.

Home

~RGA8S

PfANOS ·.

milo oH Rt. 7 ~y-peu on
St. Rt. f24 towara Rutlond,

cessory store. Will sell at
inventory for $2-4,500.

~91 - 5 ?00 .

ATHNT!ON RN AND LPN WITH
PHARMACOLOGY . We now
have op e nings in the 3· 11 ond
11-7 shi ft s. Inquire at Pinecrest
Care Cen ter . A sk illed nursing
faci lity . 555 Jackson Pike ,
Gollipoli '5 or co ll 6 14-il.4b-7 112 .
.
. .

.

&amp; Famoaa Name .BJ:81111
1

'~'•

BUSINESS - Small ap·
pliance, TV, and auto ac ·

DALMATION , 4 yea r o ld mole too
good
h om e
in
cou nt ry .

KITCHEN HELP and wa itress . App ly 1n pe rson. Crew' s Steak
House .

HYSEll
GARAGE

and business location . Has
1111 baths, and natural gas
he at. Wilt work out fine for
small offices and apt.

-

RI:SPONSIBLI: BOY fo r mowtng
w? s~. ~9?· ~496 :

WANTED to rent or buy : Nice siz·
ed tr ai le r lo1 near Pomeroy·
Mason. B r~ d~e . 3_04: 8~2 · 2~6 ~ .

GRAVELY

COMBINATION -

- ---- - ..... --·- ___ G_iv~ ~"i_ay _ -·- .

__ _

Hammond

~ER

216 E. S.cond SlrMI

WILL CARE f or two invalid o r
elcje rl y person s ir1 my ho me.
· Tw e nty
ye a rs
e xperienc e .
Reasonab le- rn les . 992·60'12 or
&lt;197 -54?7

Notices
-------------

'

"Repair
--Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

NOW HAULING limes tone in
M iddleport-Pomeroy area . Colt
for !f ee es timol&lt;&gt; . 367 · 7101.

--

Business Service&amp;.·

Auto &amp; Truck

HAUliNG . LI MESTONE , grove l .
cool. mi sc. By ton o r ho ur . Cor!
l ong 009 3495 .

·GU N SHOOT . Recine Gun Club .
t very Sunday 1 pm . Fac tory
chok e g uns on ly.
.
. . .
G UN SHOOT , Racin e Volunteer
Fire Dept Every Scr turdoy b:30
pm at the i r building i n Bo sho n .
Foc tQJy cho.k~ g~ ns ~n~y . _

__ _

RfAL ESTArt: l oons . Purcha ~e and
rdtnonce . 30 yeor terms. 1/ A .
No mon ey down (eliqihle
vc&gt;le r en!&gt;). FHA
As. low as 3
pt&gt; r cent down ( n on -veteren s ).
h l2.'1and Mortgage Co. , 77 E.
Stain, Athens. 614 -5q2-3051 .

WAHH AND rn isr . ho1 ding . Col!
991-5856 .

IN MtMORY o f our fTIOihe r , He tti e
Whi te, who lef t u&amp; 9 year s ago
on March 13.
1Sa dly m1s sed by family , fri ends
and ne ighbor s.
.
'
- .
.....-'-

h r'rl1 nom hflu !•('
sso ono rh f"" ' ~"'! to14 9HS -4:J 71
o r :J(l-1 :til :1 fr!fl Q
J'

' hnm e. Pho r,e 997 -7314 .

I t' s the lo v ing memory we ho ve
l or you .
Tho ugh absen t. ymJ or e cl oys
near
Still loved , !.! ill mi ssed and eve r
de:o r.
Sa dly missed by hi s wife Alt o .
daughters Freda Larkin s. Con ·
ni P Conne l y , sons· in -low s and
gran dch ildre n .

- ·- - - - - -

_

1

low

-

...

- - - .
__ _ ,. _____
Services.Offered

ACR ~S

3 ' · o ne ~ in Pomero y. Sr-cluded
w ooded or co on top o f hill .
O v~ rlo o k s 11ver . WaiN . P ll' C"·
tr rr ovo dobl e. 992·3886.

POR CH SALE Th ursday , f r iday
o11d Sa t urday , Q.S. On North
Main in Rutland . 8a hy and little
b o y ·~ cl o thes, Phonl: 7 .12 .2641:1.

IN LOVING memory of ~ ll sw01 th
V . Dill . who posed away 3
years a go , March 14 . 1976
I t' s r1o l th E&gt; w o rd s. they ore bu t

! _

:/5

•

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 14,1 979
5:oo- l Dream of Jeannie 3,17; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Six
Million Dollar Man 13; Brady Bunch 15.
5:31)-Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; Elec . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Beverly Hillbillies 17; Doctor Who 33.
6: QO-News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News6; Andy Griffith 17;
HodQeoodae Lodn" 'KI.
6:31)-News 3.8, 10, 13, 15 · ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B.10; Edward The King 17;
Over Easy 20.
·
7:QO-Cross-Wits 3; N•wlvwed Game. 6, 13; Porter
Wagoner 8; News 10; Love, American Style 1S;
. Dick Cavell 20; Big Green Magazine 33 ."
7:31)-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6; Mup~! Show 8; The
Judge 10; That's Hollywood 13; Wild Kingdom 15;
HNHL Hockey 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:QO-Super!rain 3, 15; Eight Is Enough 6, 13; Married :
- The First Year 8, 10; Shakespeare Plays 33; We
Interrupt This Week 20.
B: 31)-Wodehouse Playhouse 20.
9: co-Studs Lanigan 3, 15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; One
Day AI A Time B, 10; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
9:3Q-Jellersons B. 1a; 10:oo-Vegas 6, 13; All-Star
Sa lute : Pearl Bailey 8, 10; Between Games 17;
News 20 .
10 :31)-NBA Basketball 17; Footsteps 20.
11 :QO-News 3,8,10,13,15; Turnabout 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;

_Real Esta!e_for Sale

_I'! ty\e_m_ory

day , Morr h 14
1 Cod ~ ow yo u ge tt ing W (!Ory
Hl' d id w ho! he t hor rg ht be st
H P f'l LII Hi!&gt; arm s a rou nd you.
And whi 5pcrcd come a nd res t
l hP Gnldf'n G ot C' stood opPn
O r1 that he a rt br eaking day
And w rth l e~:~ l in gs un sr ol&lt;. e n
Yo u gentl y Slipped ow oy
Snrlly mi:..se d .by her hu sband,
r h i[ dr c n .
gro11d r h il dr e n .'
dou g h te r · r r1 · low , br o t her~ .
., is t e r ~ and f r ienci s.

•

You 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson J , tS; Pollee Woman 6,13; Your
Turn : Leiters to CBS News 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie

new ·

·

Nlct selections ot used

fumlture.

:3. A largo building full 4! •.
,bf•utlful carpel.
,.

MAW!!
~EY, CATO!ER,HOW ASOIIT

AN

INTE~VIEW F~

SCHOOL PAPeR?

he could drop a singleton
king. East was marked with
both major-suil kings for his
opening bid .
Easley points out that
Johnny worked out a line of
play that would give East' a
chance to make a

mistake

and lei him make his contract.
•
He took his ace of clubs
immediately, ruffed his silt
of diamonds and played a~e
and a small spade. East was
in with the king and wasted
no time thinking . He cashed
his ace of diamonds !

East assumed that John
would ruff in dwnmy, but
East was wrong . John discarded dununy's last club.
East had gotten himself
caught in an end play at

trick six.

If he led a heart he would
Jake care of John's heart
loser for htm, so East led a
fourth diamond. This aJ..
lowed John to discard Q
~art and take a ruffins
fmesse against East's king
to get his 10 tricks.
.
If East had stopped tq
think he could have Jed a low
diamond instead of the ace·
but all defenders are not
perfect and East had gone
wrong.
;
(NEWSPAPElR ENTERPRISE ASSN. )•

(For a copy of JACOBY Moo:
ERN, send S1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of this newspa.:
per, P.0 . Bo• 489, Radio City
Station, New York . N .Y. 10019.) :

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middlepurt-Punu ·ro.v. 0 ., WL"Inesd:~y , M""· 14. 1!l7!'

i
Two killed in plane crash today .
COLUMBUS. Ohl·o (AP ) A twin-engine plane crashed
this morning hetween two
houses
·d ti in
1 a north
killi ,.,sidet
reSI en a · area
n5 a
least two •persons and
scorching nearby homes,
officials said.
The Ohio Highway Patrol
said a third person may also
have died in the crash shortly
after 9:30a.m.
Firefighters an'd rescue
squad workers arrived at the
scene minutes after the
. crashed in the back)•arc of a

ho=m~e~.~A~~.!~:O~~t~he:_

TRY OUT

EXTRA
CRISPY
•

KENnJCKY
FRIED CHICKEN
.
CR(M'S
aullY
FIUft RESTAURANT
992-5432

J

..,;.~~!.':~:.0£:..__

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

crash was quickly put under
control. .
The pilot w~s e~ro.ute 1D
OhiO
UmverStty
Scott State
air field
abouts Don
f1ve
miles west of the crash site.
Fed e r a 1 A v i a t i 0 n
Administration officials .said
the p1ane was enroute from
Indiana but could not give a
s cilic location .
~nvestigators from the Nationa! Transportation SafelY
Board ih Chicago were on
their wa to the scene, an
FAA 5 o?esman in Columbus
.d P
.
.
sa~~ g Acres chief of the
contr~ ~ower ~~ Doo Scott,
·d th plane had just been
~~ed ~ver to his tower by
the Port Columbus airport

· an d was· on
radar station
approach
"He didn't indicate any
roblems " Acre!l said " He
Pjust weni in: We .figur~d he
":as .about ftve mtles out o~
his fmal fo_r runway 27 left,
d th 1
Acres sat e ~ ane was on
an mstrument flight plan b~t
he d1d not know where 11
camefrom .Hesald hedtdnot
know how many persons were
QD the craft.
.
.
"We were talkmg to hun,"
Acres added. "He 'd been
cleared to ~nd, g1ven wmd
and
altimeter
and
clearance." He said the pilot
was told the wind was C?ming
from a compass readmg of
270degrees (due west) .at 15
miles per hour and gusttAA to

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 238 w.
Main St., at 8:51 p.m.
Tuesday for Thomas Crow
who was ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

MEETING CHANGED
The meeting of the Ohio
Valley Grange, 2612, Letart
Falls, has been changed from
Thursday ·night to Friday
night. They will meet at the
home of Mrs. Eula Wolfe at
7 '30 p.m.

22. m•"Ies per hour. "Th a t is came
the
. to "drest
M against
Be
k'
nght down the runway and garage, sa1 rs. mows 1.
we gave him an altimeier of
"It was gone ; it was a
"
mess,"
she said in describing
29 95
Th~ latter
figure
is
"
•"
"
'"""
' "l'hP on ly thing to.
.
bar.ometric pressure . wh1ch
p1lc_ts use m ad]ustmg
a1
t
tu ..e ers. .
.
"I heard kmd of a not se a~d
went outstde the shop, satd
Mrs. Pat Warren, .an
Ry The Assoell!ted Pressinstructor at Natwnwtde
Temperatures will continue
Beauty Academy, about a dropping late this afternoon
block and a half from the .as a fast-moving cold front
crash site.
. .
.
continues through the state.
"I saw the plane tilted stde- Temperatures will fall into
ways and heading for the the teens tonight, but will rise
ground. It was about 200 feet into the thirties again on
off the ground when I saw Thursday.
ti .Theplane thendtsappeared
behindsomehouses. Th~next
EXTENDED FORECAST
thmg I heard was a btg exF1iday through Sunday:
ploston and saw a lot of black
Fair through the period
smoke," she said .
"The pilot must have been
with a gradual warming
an awfully good one," said
trend. Highs In the 40s
Mrs. Cathy Bernowski, who
Friday, 50s Saturday and
ran to the crash ·site. "He
60s Sunday. Overnight lows
from the upper teens to low
could have hit at least two
homes, but he didn't."
20s Friday, warming to the
The plane crashed into the
upper 30s and low 40s by
of a home
Sunday morning.

-·

Some snow flurries are ex. peeled this afternoon in
' northern Ohio, and a few
flurries will occur tonight in
the Northeast. However ljl
accumulatiQII is expected.
Thursday will he sunny in
Ohio. Winds will remain
.northwesterly at 15-to-25
miles per hour Ulday but .
diminish tonight as the front
moves further east and a high
pressure center approaches.
l

Grants
Continued from page 5
positions. (If you are
unemployed, · please register
for employment with the
Employment Office. They
may he able to help you, and .
you will help us because the
federal funds coming into the
county depend a lot on the
unemployment rate of our
county). When we have a
position to be filled we must
list it with the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Servi'ce's ,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
They · have the great
responsibility to the government of determining whether
a job applicant is eligible to
be on a federal program. The
people at the Employment
Office are to be complimented on the job they are
doing in carefully screening
the economically disad·
vantaged residents of Meigs
County for the federal
programs.
We must make a selection
· from applicants referred by
the employ'ment office, in this
selection we have federal
guidelines and priorities we
must follow.
.

·

Honor

MAYTAG
Halo-of-Heat

. DRYERS

gentle, even fieat
clothes
!surrounds

Av~ilable from the franChised Maytag dealer in u S

or Canada from whfch oUr~
chased. Free repair or Replacement from date of Purchase. 2 ,..,. on """' .
Complete apP'Iance. 5 Yhra

on t""s"' - .Cabinet against
ru.s ·. ,.,,. on PM11- Trans=~" of Washer. 1 y.., on

EVELYN WIQ)UM
Graham Cemetery, Point
Evelyn Deloris Turdum, 62, Pleasant, with Dr . John
New Haven, died Tuesday at Wildman officiating. The
the Lakin State Hospital. She Foglesong Funeral Home has
was born Sept. 15, 1916 in New charge of arrangements.
.
Martinsville, W. Va. to the
late Claude F. and Mary
Louisa Batten Turdum.
Surviving are a sister, Mrs.
.
Eleanore' Trembley,
Parkersburg, W_. Va., three ~·Thursday
nieces and two nephews.
Graveside services will be · The Watuima Band tmde~
Thursday, 11 a.m .• at the the direction of Charles
Yeago will present Its spring"
concert at 1:30 p.m. Thursday in the high school
auditorium.
One of the features will be
One defendant was fined on Concerto in B-Flat for Harp
four cha111es and three others which features hand and
forfeited bonds in the court of harp. The harp solo will be
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence played by Mrs. Lucille
Jennings , Associate
Andrews Tuesday ·Dight.
Bruce Bowman, Pomeroy, Professor of Music at Ohio .
was fined $36 and costs on University to Athens.
All proceeds from the
speeding cha111es; $50 and
concert
will go to the uniform
costs each on two counts of
fund.
There will be a
not having an oerator's
reception
after
the concert
llcense, and $50 and costs on a
and
those
attending
the
charge of rtuming over a fire
concert are invited.
hose.
Foefeiting bonds were
Patty Ann Boyles, Middleport, $50, posted on a
disorderly conduct charge;
•~
Pamela B. Theiss, Racine,
$28, speeding, and Clarence
Hospital News
J. Wil!larps, Rutland, $100,
leaving the scene of an acHolzer Mtdical Center
cident.
Discharges, March 13
Corey Armstrong, Barbara
· Four defendants wete fined Bailey, James Blair, Donald
and two others forfeited Boggess, Patricia Canaday,
not having any operator's Jane Coats, Don Farrar,
bonds Tuesday night in the Lawrence Fowler, Olita
court of Middleport Mayor Heighton, Mildred HumFred Hoffman.
phreys, Robert Jones, Jr.,
Fined were Marlene Max Kuhn, Sr., Harvey
Pooler, Middleport, $25 and McCormick, John Miller,
costs on a disorderly manner Cbrles Murray, Mary Oliver,
charge; Aaron Hysell, 48, Nova! Phllllps,
VIrgil
Pomeroy, $225 and costs and Phillisp, Misty Ratllfi, Marie
three days in jail on a driving Slone, James Tyree, Stacy
while intoxicated charge; Walker, Garnet Willlamson,
Ruth Lewis, Middleport, $25 Margaret Wilson, Sharon
and costs; disorderly man- Wolfe.
ner, and Paul D. Mitchell, 24,
Langsville, $100 and costs,
criminal mischief, and $100 Veterans Memorial Hospllal
and costs, possession of
ADMITTED - Kenneth
marijuana.
Wolfe, Rutland; Belinda
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffers, Pomeroy; Allee
Michel J. Stanley, 23, New Curtis, Long Bottom; Can·
Haven, $25, posted on a dace Lambert, Middleport;
charge of rtuming a stop sign, Carol Justis, Racine.
and Gale E. Wolfe, 36,
'DISCHARGED - IUuner
Pomeroy, speeding, 38 miles Neal, Carol Neutzling . .
an hour in a 25 mile zone, $25.

'

e

(Continued from page I) _ ·'
Springs cllllrch, extended
complimentary remarks
regarding his church work.
Tracey Jeffers spoke on
behalf of the young people of
the church and the influential
part Blackston has played in
the lives of the group.
There was a group of
teenage girls who had
"grown up" in the Rock
Springs church and they
presented a special vocal
number to honor Blackston.
Lindsey Lyons spoke on
Blackston's services to the
Tuppers Plains - Chester
Water District as a board
member and comedy was
injected into the presentation
as Fred Crow told of
Blackston's participation in
the Ohio Society for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs (he's
a past Grand Croaker) and by
Blackston's bowling buddies
of some 20 years, Roy Holter,
Roy Grueser, Bob Bowen and
Bob Haggerty.
Mrs. Maxine Arnold and
Ken and Peggy Harris.told of
Blackston's being a "great
neighbor" and Ray Whaley
recalled scouting activities in
which Blackston had played a
major part.
There were several impressive letters from former
residents who could not make
the 0 bservance and the
honored g~est was given
several gifts including the
book of information and
photographs used to "present
his life."
Blackston was taken by
complete surprise by the
presentation and it was
refreshing to watch a com·
munity take time o~t to
recognize "good" through
one of their residents, Harold
Blackston.

(Continued from page I )
Mayer, Wally Bradford, Phil
Kelly, Billy Joe Spencer,
Dale Wa mer, Scott Lucas, E.
F. Robinson, Walter Grueser,
Helen Hayes, Jean Robhanna, Boyd Ruth, Ferman
Moore, Bob Miller, bave
Jenkins, Hank Cleland,
Nancy Reed, Blll Grueser,
Wesley Buehl, Thereon
Johnson, Joe Young, Blll
Quickel, Kyle Allen, Pat
O'Brien, Mrs. Paul Simon,
Ted Reed, Paul Gerard,
Merrlt Ault, Annie Chapman,
Allen Richards, Barbara
Chapman and Katie Crow.

(USPS 145-960) ·

'

NO. 233

•

at y

enttne

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1979

15 CENTS

Schlesinger predicts heavier oil shortage
WASHINGTON (AF!)- The United States was reported today to be threatened with a much heavier shortage of oil
imports than that caused by the Iranian crisis because of a
change in the way oil companies allocate world supplies.
The report by The · New York Times quoted Energy
Secretary James R. Schlesinger as predicting the U.S. import
shortage would creep upward from the loss of a hoi!t 500,000
barrels daily to 800,000 barrels a day under the new
distribution formula.
The newspaper quoted unnamed Carter·administration and
industry officials as attributing the expected growing gap
'between U.S. petroleum supplies and demand to a decision by
international oil companies to distribute available oil on the
basis ol how much a nation normally consumes, rather than
how much it imports.
· The Times said this new allocation formula means the U.S.
share of the world oil supply shortage woUld rise from 25
percent to 40 percent. Because the United States produces
about half the oil it consumes, and imports the rest, It would
have its imports reduced more sharply to make its shortage
'

Charges. of criminal endangering and carrying or
using a firearm while under
the influence of alcohol or
drugs were expected to be
'filed this morning against
Bobby Vance, 27, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.
'

Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reported
today his department was
notified at 10:44 p.m. Wednesday that an unknown
person was attempting to
enter the Harrisonville

·Nationwise______,
No energy burdens inrol~
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Carter 's
negotiation of an Israeli - Egyptian peace agreement
apparently places no significant new burdens on U.S.
energy supplies, an administration official said
Wednesday. The United States already guarantees
Isr!!.el a rella_p_I~. ,SUPP,lY oJ oil '!l'der a 1975 agreement.
'The 6~an e"pert on infernational energy matters
who asWe.t"rlot to be Identified, took note Wednesday of
news reports saying that Israel would return to Egypt
the Sinai oil fields which now provide Israel about ·
30,000 barrels of oil daily.

ELBERFELD$

Police confiscate shotgun
&gt;

.,-

•

·\
.'

LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) -Lakewood police said
Wednesday that they confiscated a shotgun from a 19year-old Fairview Parkman who was questioned in the
slaying last week of Karen L. Michalski, 29, of Lorain .
Police said the shotgun was found during search of
theman'scar at a towing company, where it was taken
after a traffic accident on the night Miss Michalski was
killed. Police said no charges were filed but that the
man's account of where be was and his reason for
having the shotgun in the car were being checked.
Three shotgun shells also were found in the car, police
reported.

a

SChool levies approved
YOUNGSTOWN Ohio (AP) - Voters in two
Youngstown area ~hool districts approved levies in
special elections Wednesday. A 7-mill added levy
passed In Boardman by a narrow ma~gin,_ with 5,941 in
favor of the levy and 5;790 opposed to 1!. Liberty School
District voters approved a 7.4-milllevy by .a vote of
. 2,144-1,922. In both districts, levies had been defeated
at least three times before.

Confirms mmor
CLEVELEAND (AP) - Cuyahoga County
Commissioner Robert Sweeney confirmed Wednesday
night that he plans to resign to devote full time to his
law practice. Declaring !bat the office he holds is not
"a part-time job," Sweeney said he would like to leave
the post by April 1. However, he said the actual date
will depend on when the county Democratic pParty
picks a successor.

Pope iss~ strong warnings
5552

'

.

VATICAN CITY (AP) - In his first encycliclll,
Pope John Paul II warned Ulday that technologically
advanced, consumer spcleties threaten to make human
beings "the slave of things." He also assailed nations
that give 'only atheism the right of citizenship,"
pledged the church to defend human freedom ,
condemned the widehing gap between rich and poor
and denounced the arms buildup.

Conflict of interest noted

Sincerely Yours begins with this Nubby Double
Patch Pocketed Blazer of Poly-Colton S32, fashioned
with a matching poly-Cotton Pull-on Pant $15 . Stvte
these with polyester cap sleeve stripped V Neck Rib
Trimmtd Vest gently, covering your tong steeve
convertible cottar shirt of polyester Interlock $17.
Sincerely yours Jane Colby.· Blazer, Shirl and pent
White. Parchment: Pink and Btue. Vest In matching
Stripes.
Shirl In sizes 8·20
Blazer In sizes 8-20
Vest In sizes 8-20
Pant In sizes 8-20
Be sure fo see all the other styles women'•
coordl..,te sportswear - WomeR's Rudy
to Wear, znd fteor.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

commensurate with that of other importing nations that have
no domestic oil supply, the Times said.
Meanwhile, the General Accounting Office, the .congressional watchdog agency, was reported to have questioned in a
preliminary report the necessity of some oil comparues' big
cutbacks in jet fuel supplies to airlines. .
·
The Cleveland Plain Dealer said today the GAO had calculated, for example, that Texaco imported only 0.3 percent of its
total crude oil needs from Iran, yet blamed the Iranian crisis
for a 20 percent cutback in jet fuel shipments. . .
·
An unnamed Texaco official was quoted as saying the situation "does look like something fishy." But he suggested one
explanation might be that Te.xaco was diverting oil to com- ·
panies it operates internationally which were harder hit by the
Iranian oil cutoff than were Texaco's domestic operations .
On another energy..,elated issue, major automakers told a
HouSl!" energy subcommittee Wednesday that the government's schedule for boosting car gasoline mileage could trigger an economic .disaster for the industry and consumers,
while' saving little or no gasoline.
·

Industry spokesman testified they could meet the overall
goal of producing cars that average 27.5 111iles per gallon by
1985. But they criticized the Transportation Department's
step-by-step schedule for meeting that target.
The department administers a 1975 statute which
established a decade~o 0 g goal of d.oubling auto mileage from
the 1974 average of less than 14 mpg. The automakers are on
schedule so far, having boosted that figure to about 19mpg.
But the industry is upset that the department's recently-established schedule for the 1981-JI5 model years were "frontloaded"- meaning the biggest increases are required early .
The program calls for averages ol22 mpg in 1981 , 24 mpg in
1982, 26mpg in 1983,27 mpg in 1984 and 27.5in 1985.
"The American automobile industry will invest nearly $80
billion in new plants, tools, equipment and technology" to meet
the front~oaded schedule, said S.L, Terry, Chrysler vice
president for public affairs.
Terry and other industry spokesmen said the standards
should increase by a steady 1.5 mpg aiiJlually . .
Sen. Donald W. Riegle, DMich., testified that the fuel

Standards as now written would add $590 to the price of a car
by 1985.
Changing them to the annual 1:5 mpg increase would trim
that figure by around $150 per car for a savings of $1.3 billion to
customers, "even after adjusting for the cost of extra
gasoline," Riegle said.
Terry said a &lt;llase Manhattan Bank study showed that frontloaded standards would raise the nation's unemployment by I
per cent by 1984, and could "negatively affect our balance of
trade by $5 billion" by forcing the industry to rely more on
import sales.
"For that heavy cost, Chase estimates that the country will
reduce its annual oil usage at most by three-tenths of I per
cent," Terry said.
However, Clarence Dillow, director of the Center for Auto
Safety, a consumer group founded by Ralph Nader, said,
"Front loading is particularly important because of the projected fuel shortages for 1980 and 1981."
The administration has told the House subcommittee it will
review the pr ~gram in light of industry complaints .

Man facing multiple charges

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) -The Ohio HOUse Ethics ·
Committee said Wednesday that State Rep . Patrick
Sweeney, D-Cleveland, was in conflict of interest for
accepting $2,025 from a state mental health consulting
' job. Sweeney said he will repay the money, which is
being held in an escrow account. Sweeney and State
Sen. Jeronie Stano, 0-Cleveland, were hired last year
at S16.88 an hour to participate In a series of seniinars
on mental health . The Senate Ethics Committee is still
examing Stano's role in accepting the job, which paid

him·S945.

Crossioalk bill introduced
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Local officials would
have a new method of getting school crosswalks in
desired locaUona under a blll now pending in,the Ohio
Senate. Under the propoaal, the local authorities could
request the state Department of Transportation to
designate crotiiiWalks oo state highways that are not
adjacent to the school property. However, the bill,
approved 111;.,'! by the House on Wednesday, limits such
designations to a quarter of a mil~ from the school
property line.

' !

r .

·. VOL NO. XXIX

•

Mayor's Court

Olamber
-

'

Good luck, .Tornadoes, in tonight's Regionals

1

~--

DAVE, HERB, ARNOLD, WENDALL GRATE
OR GENE SMITH

MAYTAQ WARRANTY
AUTOMATIC WASHER
AND DAYEA

Area Deaths

Band concert

Cold front continues

For A Gr~te Deal on Furniture or
.
I
Appliance See the Grate Family
at Rutland Furniture.
.'·

gether
wascockpit.
the engme
and
t f the
The wings
par o
were completely off : so was
th e back uf the plane. !.t was
completely cur' L..! up .

---------I

station's front door.
Later the department
learned shots had been fired
at the station.
Sheriff Proffitt, Capt.
Robert Beegle, Deputy
Manning Mohler, Rutland
police and an OSP unit
responded.
While enroute, the sheriff's
office received another call
that '~'ere had been shots
fired in .:•e vicinity of the
recreation . center
at
Harrisonville.
Vance was taken into
custody while sitting in a
vehicle near the recreation

center. Vance had a slight
injury to his right hand.
Checking out the station,
deputies discovered that the
glass in the front door had
been knocked out apparently
after the suspect was unaple.
to pry off the padlock hasp.
A broken blade from a
hunting knife was found at
the front door.
Inside the station there was
a shotgun blast hole in the
ceiling, shotgun shells, candy
and cigarettes were strewn
about the store. A shotgun
with a broken stock and bood
on it was found lying against
a window which had been
smashed out.
Outside deputies found two
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
through gasoline pumps had been
Monday: Mild through the dama,1ed by shotgun blasts.
period with showers Vance is lodged in Meigs
Sunday, ending by Monday County JaiL
The station . is ow•.•d by
morning. High sin the 60s
Larry
Vance, brother of the
Saturday aud Sunday and
suspect.
in the 50s Monday. i.ows in
Sheriff Proffitt also said the
the 30s Saturday and in the
front
door of the recreation
low to mid 40s Sunday and .
center had been kicked open
Mouday.
·:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;: but nothing appeared lo have
been bothered.

Spelling bee
Winners named

DRAINING WATER - This large white drain tile
behind the Pomeroy Elementary School playground is
draining water from the hillside behind the schooL The

State accepting bids for
four new cottages at GSI

MUST TIE DOGS
Spelling Bee winners from
Racine Vlllage Mayor
the Pomeroy Elem entary
Charles Pyles advises that
School hav~ been announced
all dogs in Racine must be
by Robert Morris, PrincipaL
kept tied or coulined to the
Rodney Roush; a sixth
premises qf the owners.
Governor James A. Rhodes retarded persons and have
grade student of John Arnott,
·Those who 'fall to confine announced today the state is bedrooms, laundry facilities,
will represeht Pom eroy
their dogs will be cited to accepting bids for four, 16- living room and acti~ity
Elementary School at the
court in violation of a bed cottages at the Gallipolis room. -Each cottage will have
annual Meigs County Citizen
village ordinance, the State Institute in Gallipolis. a dining room , training
Journal Spelling Bee which
mayor warned.
" Residents of the cottage kitchen and programmer's
has been scheduled for
will be able to live in a room.
Wednesday evening, March
residential and personalized
Old cottages on the site will
21, at the Salisbury
atmosphere and will have be demolished to provide land
Elementary School at 7:30'
access to individualized care for the new cottages. Bids on
p.m.
facilities,"
the Governor the$2.2million project will be
Clear tonight. Lows near
Rodney I~ the son of Mr.
said.
opened March 22.
and Mrs. Lee Roush, 215 20. Fair and warmer Friday.
Administrative
Services
This is the second new
Highs in the low 50s. The
Union Avenue, Pomeroy.
Director
Richard
D.
Jackson
cottage
project for Gallipolis.
The building runner-up was chance of precipitation is said each cottage will have The first involved conGary Coleman, son of Mr. near zero tonight and Friday. living space for 16 mentally structing four, 16-bed cotand Mrs. Loren Coleman,
1554 Nye Avenue, Pomeroy.
He Is a student in Mrs. Mary
Hysell's fifth grade.
Room winners from Miss
Tate's fifth grade were Lee
Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Powell, 220 Lincoln
Hill,
Nancy
J ohnson ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Alan Johnson, 122 Union
Avenue; Buddy White, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edward White,
208 Rock Street, Pomeroy.
Nancy and Buddy tied for
second place.
Representing Mrs. Hysell's
fifth grade were Chris
Kennedy,son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Kennedy,
246
Riverview Drive, Pomeroy,
and the runner-up, Coleman.
Roush and Karen Spencer,
daughter of Donna Spencer,
219 Union Avenue, Pomeroy,
represented Arnott's sixth
grade.
Room winners from Mrs.
Crow's sixth grade were
Vli.cent Knight, san of Mr:
and Mrs. Vincent Knight, Sr.,
312 East Main Street,
Pomeroy, and Glenda Gum,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
George Gum, Wolf Pen Road,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Barbara Shultz, Title I
Remedial
teacher
at
STRANGE IRISH FIGURE - Saturday is St. Patrick's Day, "Deer" . This deer head
Pomeroy
Elementary,
mounted
at the Headquarters Cafe in Midllieport has donned a plug hat and pipe to mark the
pronounced the words for the
upcoming
day for the wearing 0f the green.
·
building spell-off.

Weather

l

drain was installed by a Columbus firm as the first phase
of the corrective proce&amp;s to dry out the hill before more
permanent measures are taken .

tages, which are now occupied and will be dedicated
later this month.
Officials of the Ohio
Department of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation said
the new cottages are
designed in a residential style

to be compatible and blend in
with the adjacent residential
community. ,
Bids will be opened in the
Columbus office of the
Division of Public Works, a
part of the Ohio Department
of Adm inistrative Services.

Food program
Friday topic
Meigs County grocers
interested in increasing and
creating new business are
invited to a meeting at the
Meigs
County
Health
Department at 10:30 a.m.
Friday to hear aspects
concerning an upcoming
special supplemental food
program for women, infants
and children, known as WIC.
The
county
health
department will manage the
program locally, and will be
serving only children from
birth to five years of age at
this .time.
Client certification and
coupon distribution, a part of
the program, will be bandied.
by the nursing department of
the health department.
or
their
Grocers
representatives attending
Friday's session should note
that the health department
offices recently moved from
Mechanic St. in Pomeroy to
the Meigs Mental Health
Center , formerly Meigs
General Hospital.
Entrance to the health
department Is from Powell's
Parking Lot.
At Friday's meeting ,
merchants will receive information on reimbursement
and the score of the new
nutritional program.

rtspects of the program are
explained in the following
fact sheet from the health
department:
The Ohio WIC Program is a
special supplemental food
program for women, infants
and children. It is administered on the state level
by the Ohio Department of
Health, Division of Maternal
and Child Health and Is
fun ded by United States
Department of Agriculture,
Food and Nutrition Service.
WIC, unlike many other
food programs, is a health
program designed to operate
as an adjunct to existing lowcost prenatal and-or pediatric
clinic or physician services.
It is hoped that WIC, in
conjunction with these he'llth
services, will help to bfmg
about healthy course and
outcome of pregnancy and
optimal
growth
and
development of participants.
The Ohio WIC Program
serves approximately 60,000
low-income pregnant and
nursing women, and children
under five years of age, who
are determined by ah health
professional to be a medical nutritional risk. Eligibl~
persons are provided a food
package selected for its high
(Continued on page 16)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="814">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11463">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="50424">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="50423">
              <text>March 14, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7726">
      <name>turdum</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
