<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15756" 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/15756?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:26:45+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48878">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c475d512603724feb9999467420bd3e3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>158ced93ff5bc06f67c6a03005d330f0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="50476">
                  <text>D-10- TheSunday Times-Sentinel. Sunuay. Apr .. J, 1!179

Cabell _County
jury
finds
"
Mason .Countian 'guilty'
.

HUNTINGT(&gt;N~A

Mason
County woman, Mary Jo
Stanley, was found ·guilty of
second degree murder in the
death of her father, James
Gibson, 64, on July 4· of last
yeat.
The verdict was returned
ThiD'sday by a Cabell County
· Circuli County Court jury
following a jhr~ay trial.
.· · Courthouse observers were
reported obviously shoCked
•• by the prooouncement of guilt
since testimony offered
•- during the course of the trial
• described Gibson as a brutal
and savage man who had
mentally and physically
abused his wife, Juanita, 62,
- since 1974.
Mrs. Stanley, 42, ·Ashton,
while on the sland, admitted
· · shooting Gibson in the head
.: · but said that she had· been
; afraid for her mother's
: ·_safety. Gibson, she said,
. dragged his wife down the
:- Stairs of their Huntington
' ;: hOme on the night of July 4
:: while yelling and hitting her.
: Mrs. Stanley said she feared
·: that her father would beat
' Mrs. Gibson to death.

The assistant prosecuwr in
the case, Hirlun Williamson,
brought out how, following
U1e shooting, .Mrs. Stanley
and her mother wrapped
Gibson:s head in a sheet and
hid the body in the deceased's
car for a day before obtaining'
t)le help of Mrs. Stanley's son,
Roger, 23, in driving the car
and bQdy to Wayne County,
where the vehicle was
abandoned. He .cited the

Beat•••

Sunda¥ vote last chance

Of the Bend

COI.UMIIUS, Ohio ( AP) - makes aousev.'lires and food
One' last chance is w~~~ the

_ (.ancaster Colony, which. happy with the contract,
claiming tliat Lancaste_r
products, is the third largest . Colony is asking .bers w
is the field; Federal Glass take what they consider
di~ision was ' conslCiered the .major cuts In pay llfld fringe
fourth largest.
·
benefits. ·
Earlier this· ·month,
Bl!sed · on · the man- ·
however,
the
agenct agerilent's rlghls clause
reversed its position based on In the propoaal, union
a' staff recommendation to
president John' Runyon said
permit the sale.
workets coufd not aPect fair
Although the
latest representation from ~ un·
contract offer b lower then ion.
what the glass : workers
Runyon
conced'e d,
previously received, however, -that it' the
Lancaster's Dlrector of' membership · signals
CorpOi-ate (;!Ianning Joseph approval of the contaet. tlie
I:.onderee was optiJnistic It union wjll also sign the wage
.. would ·he approved.
·
package.
·''When people are voting
wtJet!ler ~r nof they have a
J'ob, they'll vote 'for,' ,; he_
HEAVy ARTILLERY
said.
.
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) Looderee refused to ~ spe- Tanzanian artiUery pounded
cific about how much lower' the Ugandan · capital of
the three Y'li!r proposal b ' ' Kampala but paratroopers
than what Federal Glass believed sent by Ubya were
employees were previously dropped in to support '
making. He did insist the new President Idl Amln in a · .
wage package would be counterattack to defend his ·
higher than the former one in eight-year-old rule, witnesses
the second year.
and radio broadcasts said.
It would only· take a few
. "There afO explosions
we~ks to complete the everywhere. We are trapped
acquisition ,and start up In olir home. we pray for
operations if the pact is tomorrow. nie town Is being
approved, Looderee added. t
d ·
k
But union omciala aren't urne Into smo e," one
Kampala resident reached by
telephone said Friday.

former employees of Federal
Glass Co. wiU face Sunday
wl)en.they vote on whether 111
women ' s
behavior
as
By Bob HoeOich
accept a contract offer !tom a
evidence of deliberate
finn · wanting . to buy and
murder .
POME;ROY _ The public support shown
tne Meigs reopen the idled facility .
Defense lawyer William
High
School
production
of
''The
Sound·
of
Music"
prese'nted
Lancaster Colony Corp.,
Beckett has asked cabell
Circuit - Judge
Alfred Friday and Saturday nights in the high school auditorium was vlhich is trying to buy the
fantastic .
.
•
division from Federal Paper
~·erguson w set aside the
More
chairs
had
to
be
hauled
out
to
accommodate
the
Board Co., has made it clear
verdict. Ferguson has
crowds
attending,
apd
the
audience
as
evidenced
by
the
the
proposal represents its
scheduled AprU '1:1 as the date
. final offer.
·to hear defense motions on standing ovation it gave the cast - certainly realized the
If members
of · six
the verdict before sentencing tremendous task it was to do the musical. The students did an American FUnt _ Glass
is set. Meanwhile, Mrs : ex~Uent job untier the direction of their admired lnstrucwr Workers Union iacals turn
Stanley remains free on bor\d. and clirector, Mrs. Paige HIUII.
thuinblfdown on the contract
Incidentally, the choral mll$ic which was presented at.the · Lancaster Colony said it wui
start of the performance was actuaUy _the girls who played' · abandon efforts to purchase
nuns in the musical. They recorded the music at the Silcred the facUlty.
Heart Church a week ago,in order to get the impressive sound
In addition, Federal Paper
effe&lt;!l they needed. The sound qas quite professional. Who, but Board said it wi11 begin
Mrsc·Hunt would have thought to do it that way?
·
It was too bad that there wasn't some magical way in 11.quidating the plant's stock
which the many scene Changes rould have been made In order and equipment if the rontract
is rejected.
to move th e show along faster. However, there was no way on
The plant was closed Jan.
the limited bQdget involved plus the fact that the stage and the
auditorium at the school are tilled daUy for so many purposes 31 because Federal Paper
c1es1 ned fo
nd
Board said it was looing too
d all
::'a~~ _Y weren't
g
r plays a musicals in the first much money. Efforts to Sell
the glaas works to Lancaster
-&lt;;:olony for tbe paSI; 'two years
-ane of my favorite people, Martha Howell, Middleport were blocked by the Federal
t:!!~~tcber, is a patient in Pleasant Valley Hospital 'l'rade Commission which
o ""'6 surgery e,nd some medical romplications. Do send chargfd , the sale could
along a card. Marthli wUI he delighted to bear from you.
. pdssibly reduce c&lt;mpetition ·
--·
in the machine-made, sodaMn. Sharon.Hein has been' discharged from University line glaasware induStry.
Hospital where she has undergone a number of tests before
giving a_kidney to her son, Tracy, Eastern,Higb freshman, for
a transplant.
·
·
Well - let me ·c!jSf a little ray of sunshine into your lUe.
Tests indicate that Mrs. Hein cannot give the kidney so
This
is April! and in two weeks you have to have your annual
Tracy's lister, Mrs. Deborah Osborne of Chester, will now
enter the hospital to see Ushe can be the donor. When a donor income tax·· accounting au ready for Uncle Sam. Now what
Is located, 'J'rilcy will be taken to the hospital where both more entertaining could you find to do in the next couple of
weeks? You _keep sm!lin£, now.
kidneys will be removed.
·
.
Following 'surgery and confinement he will have to go to
Columbus three times a week - he goes now twice a week for dialysis IUittl the transplant Is done.
The COmmunity Wives Club baa headed a fund drive to
pro"de money for the many Columbus trips for Tracy and for
some medication. Operations will be quJie costly, but some
belp may he forthconling In that direction. .
·
Mrs. Lila Van Meter Is heading the donation project of the
club, and contributions can be sent to P. 0. Box 26, Chester.

You need a solid
background in business -it's
always safer to keep your
back to the wall.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-SPRING SALE

.
Gene Grate has returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs.

James Weber at Lakeland, Fla. He reports the Webers, longtime Middleport residents, are doing well in their retirement.

·.CONTI-NUES MONDAY

~ND

TUESDAY

**Girts' Easter Dresses
~

EL-BERFELD'S.;:1N _
P0Pt1 EROY
Jac-kson &amp; Perkins

ROSE BUSHES

-

Finance
(subcommittee
reports), Energy and
Environment (beverage
container ban), Economic
Affairs
and
Federal
' Relations• · (multi--county
correctional centers),
Highways and Highway
Safety (increases length limit
for loaded audHranli(Mll1el's),
Human Resources
(es\a bliahes Ohio Youth
Employment Program),
Local Government (au·
thorizes elected executive-leglalative forms of countY
government), Education
(JII'ohiblts school boards from

Stufdyt
Hardy!

Everblooming!
Two Year rleld· G~wn
.'

.

Sulllr Rooted Roses. The
" and Best
Most·Popular
Growing Varieties.

..

:::"~;:~c f=0~

·425

., ARUNE FRANciS
Jackson &amp; Perkins
J" CHARLO~ ARMSTRONG REDI-PLAIU'JED
·, .
., CRIMSON GlORY
. . ~ •'.,
ECUPSE
PATENTED
.
.
., K· l MARSIWl
ROSES
., MIRANDY
..
""' CYNlHIA .
v.' WHITE QU~N
--·
""' P~FUME DEUGHT _
., BlAZE CUMBER
v -RED REFI.ECTION _
II' CRIMSON· GLORY CUMBER
v. SPEllBINDf;R
., AMERICAN PRIDE
., FIRST PRIZE

., _ANnGUA

v.'TEMPO. ·

., COLOR MAGIC

ELBE• R.'FEL.D IN . POMEROY'

11---------·---------------..;,-------'
·

.

·

,

From time to time, over the years, Hugh Leifh8.it, realiy a
colorful personality in hli own right, hu vlllted with me for a
few minutes. On Hugh'slast villi, be brought along a Hereford
magazine for me to read so that I would be knowledgable, to a
point, about cattle markets and so forth.
·
·
I didn't have the heart to tell Hugh that I (!Ould memorize
the book and still my COOJp_rehension of catUe and related farm
operatioos would still be onl)' a degree better than nothing.
YoWigsten exhibiting caUie al'tbe Melp CoiUity Fair have
always el(lressed with complete shock my igll()fance about
cattle. .
·
Personally, I think they.should come with. emblems like
automobUes. Then I'd know the breed, at least.

·

·

,

.

.

.

·

'

'

.

*Men's Summer Jackets
MHI En~ Carpets
,. Men's Fashion Jeans

*

*

* Boys' lnit Shir1s
.
* Men's Dress-Shirts
·* Men's SuitS ·
-

·~··

;

1
·
.J

'

*Utile Boys' Suits .
~~·s Spring Blouses

·*

,.
Save 30% ·Now on Custom Made Draperies

.,

'

'

;

MEN'S

. ..

-~

ar~

Oiamonds
but
thi;
Jlllymcnts goforever
·,m u litUe
.longe:r, J!rumps a recently

~·ngagedehuin.

'

.

WASHINGTON (AP) t)'ueking. executives • ·are
ordering an lndusttYroVIde
loc~out _In an escalating
dispute with the Teamsters
union over a ronttact that
involves President Carter's
anti-Inflation guidelines.
Trucking - Management
Inc., the bargaining arm for
more than 500 major trucking ·
firms, ordered the shutdown
Sunday after the union
-launched strikes against
dozens of COOJpanies In the .
Wlike of a collapse ef contract
talka covering _.about 300,.000
Teamsters. In a lockout,
employers refule to allow
their employees to work.
~..alioi- ~Pii•ll•ieiit officials
met -within · hours i!f
induatry's BDDouncement to
plan what IIepa, U any, the
admlnistratlqn would take.
Administration officials indicated afterwards ttrey
would not be able to asaeas
the ImpaCt {or several days,
meaning they likely would
walt before deciding whether
to seek a back-to-work order.
"We llrongjy beUeve that
the best way to resolve this
dlipute Is through the
collective b.llrgl!inlpg
(I'OCeSS," Labor Secretary
a&amp;y MarshaU said after tbe

meeting.
He said feder11l mediators
will continue to work with the
two sides "and we remain
hopefulthit a settlement will
be negotiated soon."
Chief federal medl•tor
Wayne L. Horvitz said the
negotiators
had come
"awfully close" to reaching
agreement before breaking
off talks.
The two sides had no lnunediate plans to resume
negotiations, but the union's
350-member bargaining
committee has scheduled a
meeting for Wednesday in
O!icago. .
The White House, which
haJJ been 'watching the
negotiations cloiit!ly, declined
conunent. "We're not having
anyrommenttoday (Sunday)
on
the
Teamsters,"
spokeswoman Linda Peek
said. The president has
indicated previously he would ·
not besitate to seek a back'-towork court order in the event
of 8 shutdown.
The industry said it ordered
the lockout "in defense
against the strike," which It
blamed oo union demands for
-a contract exceeding -the
administration's 7 percent
wage -hike standard.

200 demonetrate Sunday
PERRY, Ohio (AP) -About 200 demonatrators
called Swkiay for a halt to consi!'UctiO!I of the Perry
Nuclear Power Plant and urged that the currently Idle
Davla-Bell8e nuclear plant be closed permanently •
An an official of the Nuclear ReiUlritory
Coolmiaslon said over the weekend that the design and
construction of the Davis-Reese plant at PQrt Cllilton
will he illvestlgated after the emergency Is over a! the
Three Mile Island plant in PeMSyivania:

ON ·ANY-.,3 OF HANES MEN'S AU. COTtON,.WHITE KNITlED RED lABR
UNO£~ AND BOXERS - - INCWDES~ WHITE COTtON BRI~ T·SHIRTS,
V-"~S. A~I.ITIC SHIRTS, REGULAR OR GRIPPER BOxERS - PLUS BIG
MAN SIZES.

Hanes·

15 CENTS

Nationwide lockout ordered

(;A]RO, Egypt tAP) - Israeli Prime ~er
Menacbem Begin arrived In cairo today for a low-key
welcome aa_ Arab foes of his peace treaty wiih
President Anwar Sadat begin punishing Egypt .
Begin· said be was making the first ~t to the
. Egyptian capital by an Israeli prime mjnister "to open
my beart to every man, woman and child In Egypt" !.
and convince them the Jewlah nation wanta lasting
peace after four wars with theArabs. He also hopes the
visit will help persuade Israeli opponents of the treaty
that Egypt and Israel really are at peace.

\

'.

MONDAY, APRIL 2, 1979

.

Begin gets low key weloome

issues).
Health
and
Retirement (permits coror·
ners to remove eYes d\d'ing
autopsies for
corneal
transplants'), Small and
General BUsiness
(emergency'mO!IIcal services
and_training for miners).
THUI\SDAY
Both aeaslons at 11 a.m.
House committee
Elections (changes primary
election date).

CARTER'S BEEN TIIERE
WASHINGTON (AP) President Carter knows what
It's lill:e to don. protective
clothing and help dismantle a
damaged nuclear reactor.
Carter was a Navy 'Oificer
bi December 1952 when a
power surge through an
experimental Canadian
reactor at Chalk River,
· Ontario, caused what is
believed to · be the world's
first reactor acc_ident. '

.MIDDLEPORT·POMEROY,
OHIO
'

-

.--Nationwise----.

·UNDERWEAR

•=

VOL NO'. XXIX N0. 245-

·(USPS 145·960)

James Morrls, 24-year oid members of the Pomeroy
Meigs Count)' · resident has Fire Department were called
been charged In the alleged to extinguish the blaze.
ar'son of a car owned by
When deputy Osborn
Howard Searles of Fla2:'warrived, a wilness said he
Rd.
.
· s.aw a man "fooling around"
According to Meigs ounty and later saw names coming
Sheriff . James J. Proffitt, from the car's mterior. The
Deputy Loli Osborn and suspect was taken ihto

ELBERFELbS IN POMEROY
Hanes

'

TMI said its final contract
offer ''Was the absolute maximum permitted" ·under the .
standl!rd, which already l)ad
been relaxed somewhat to accommodate
certain
Teamster bargaining
demands.
·
·Union President Frank

Fitzsimmons, ordering the said the Council on Wage and
walkouts late SatiD'day night, Price Stability and the '
said "highlevel government _ lnterstat·e . commerce
bureaucrats played no small C&lt;lrlunis-sion had "made free
role" in his decision,
collective bargaining a
The 70-year-old union boss mockery."
blasted the administration _· There
were · strikes
for -Its enforcement of reported in more lhan a dozen
"voluntary guideUnes" and states before ·.the industry
made its aMouncement.

Eight killed on -~hways
By Tbe A"""'~led Preu
Weekend traffic accidents
killed at least eight persons In
Ohio, including a young
Cleveland man hit by a
vehicle on a city stteet
Sunday night, the Highway
Patrol said today.
Accorc)lng to the patrol, two
persons died In motorcycle
accidents during the week_end
period, whi.ch began at 6 p.m.
Friday and ended mididght
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY.._
.
CLEVELAND . - WUUam
Webb, 19, of Cleveland,
pedestrian struck by a
vehicle on a city street.
COLDWATER - Nicholas
J. Feltz, it; of Saint Marya, in
a motorcycle accident on

.

Ohio 219 in Mercer County.
SATIJRDAY
BUCYRUS- Paul E. Yaussy, If!, Of Bucyrus, in a two·
car accident on Ohio 81 at
Ohio 309 in Crawford County.
COSHOCTON - Leslie Gilmore, 38, of Coshoctoo, when
he lost control of his
motorcyle in Coshocton.
.
CHARDON - Betty Ward,
35, of MeBOpolamia,ln a onecar accident on Ohio 87 In

Geauga County .
XENIA - Warren Blume,
75, of Dayton, in a two..,ar
accident on Ohio 444 In
Greene County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
XENIA-Archie E. Franks,
49, of Xenia, in a one..,ar
smashup on Hook Road in
Greene County.
WARREN - WUUam E.
Beidler, 25, of Warren, In a
one--car accident on a
Trumbull County road.

Weather
Showers_ possible tonight
and' Tuesday. Low tonight in
the lOll' tos and the high
Tuesday near 60. The chance
of precipitation IJ 40 percent
tonight and 30 percent
Tuesday.
·

MEETS TIJESDAY
APPRECIATION GIVEN -Mrs. Paige Hunt, left, was given an enthusiastic ovation bY
Pomeroy Chapter 186, the large crowd on hand Saturday night when she was introduced following the second ·
Otder of Eastern Star, will ·showing of "The SoiUid of Music" at the Meigs High School Auditorium. Mrs. Hunt, vocal
meet at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday at . music supervisor, Is pictured receiving a gUt fr61n the cast presented by Unda Eason, ,
the Masonic Temple.
student director. Mrs. Hunt planned and directed the presentation.
·

Arson suspect ch&amp;rged

'.

SPECIAL SAt£:··

__,

citizens was paramount and lin evacuation would be "strictly a
precautionary measure."
·
"If it does become necessary, Governor Thornburgh wW aak
you and others in this area to take appropriate action to enaiD'e
your safety . .If be does, I want to urge that these lnstructl0118 be
carried out cahnly and exactly," carter added.
There were lhese otl!er developments:
-In Hlirriaburg, tbe Hlirrlsburg Hospital and Her8bey
M!!dlcal Center asked for belp ftom the military to fUJ in for
workers who apparently had left.
-In Ca!Uornia, Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. asked federal
,officials to temporarily shut down the Rancho Seco nuclear
. power plant near Sacramento. The plant waa designed and .
built by Babcock lc Wll(!Ol&lt; Co., of Lynchburg, Va., the aame
linn thet c~~ Three Mile 111.!¢..
-Tbe·acctderit fueled a wa'Ve or antl.nucleir (II'Oieati:'
-In Washington, Gary Hart, 0-Colo., chairman of the
Senate subconunlttee with responsibility over nuclear power
matters, said he would recoounend that the NRC,order aeven
reactors with similar design to Three Mile Island "\»rate at
reduced power untU It could be determined 11 there waa a design fiaw.
'
- Aiao In Washington, the FBI said It _was checking out but
had found no validity to nunors of threatened sabotage to the
Three Mlle Island plant.
·
·

'

ELBERFELDS IN .poM-ER.OY
,,

-

. HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -Company officials at the Three 24 hours ago, continued all day Sunday and throogh the night, explosion and the subiec!uent release of radlatiori.
Mile Llland nuclear power plant said today that a dangerous said Troffer. "Now it's. essentially gone," he said.
If the bubble kept growing inside the reactor vessel, it could
gaa bubble haa all but disappeared_from tbe -nuclear reactor
Meanwhile, omcials finned up contingency plans for a pre- expose the uranluffi core- a remote chance that could trigger
and th!! reacto~ Is being prepared for a final cool.down.
cautionary evacuatiop of about a million residents.
the worst-possible catastroph,, a melt-down. In a meltdown,
· A BpOielman for the Nuclear Regulatory COIIIIIIilslon, Joe
Schools remained closed and the governor-extended his the core melts, burns the radloacllvUy. Ai Its worst, a melt· Fouchard, said when aaked to (!Omment on tbe report: "Thete advillory that (:li'Hehool children and pregnant women and .doWn would contaminate thousalldS ot square nules with
Ia 110111e encouraging sign on tbe bubble si1.e." But he wOuld not young children keep their d~ce. CivU Defense omclala estl- radiation.
elaborate.
. ·
.
mated that 50~000 persons have left the area.
While the risky work continued at the Island on the SusqueNRC and Metropolitan Edison utility offlciala were_to~
State government waa open as usual, but tbe governor ~ld hanna fUver, offlciala worked on precautionary evacuation
~ ~ to dl8cusa the cool--down operation.
· there would he generous leaves gran~ for "al!Bentees."
-plans covering a mU1Ion _residents in four surrounding coun!,• II:Ue. The blfbble Ia gone·from the pressure vesael," As a cold drizzle fell 'this morning, the atmoaphere In ties.
apo...11111an George Troffer of Metro~litan Edison told The downtown Hlirrlaburg waa one or quiet and _anticipation.
"We are In a pollltlon now thai we can respond to any forAuodated Pr-.
. .
.
Earlier, a apolresman for the utility that runa Three Mile seeable change. Welilusl be prepared to.roll wi!h the punch
He added that radl~ve gas emissions have apparently laland said the bubble, made up ol bydrogen and O"Yffen from when -and if - the situation changes for the worse," said
and
'The reactor 18 comp_letely stable and cheinlcal decOIJ!POIItion -Inside the reactor · core, wiiS Thornburgh, who vlllled the plant with l!'refldent carter and
~!~!!!~~~";', . ,- : ~·"" ~--· ·~ , . m; ±ell M allouHirNWe-r.et. 111 tlie ftft dll)nft•ce 11101 -fils W!fll; iWIMilyn:II;Oii'3iiidliy.
- · - • . · ·- · · : I'
not facing 811)' melt-down Jlll!nt- dlaabled by a cooling l)'llem failure, the bubble has _ In Carroll Township, about 10 miles southeast of the plant,
-:,~
•
.
o
swelled as high as 1,1100 cubic feet. In recent days, it averaged officials handed out l,OOOprinted notices on what to do Upeople
are no,unusual maneuvers required," for final cool- 600 feet.
.
· are ordered to leave. ·
down, he said. '!be bubble was the concern. Now that the
The bubble was being bled slowly by Jetting the gaa dissolve
carter; wearing a badge to measure radiation and plastic
bubble Is gone the normal cooldown methods will be used.
In the constan_tly ctrculating cooling water and then allowing It baga over his shoes to protect against any pOssibly con~ffer issued his slatement even though on Sundsy, John toesca(le from the water outside tbe reactor.
taminsted dust, spent ahout 10 minutes inslqe the control
Harrington, another uUU!r spokesman. said the company was
Scientists were concerned that oxygen will mill 'with tbe · room .
_
told by the ~te House that ail releases would be given out hydrogen in flarnm!lble proportions, inillde the reactor dome.
Carter, who was trained in nuclear pbysics in the Navy, la(!lr
·by the NRC.
.
Also, there.IJ a danger of increasing the eydrogen (!Oncen- apoke at a town hall in nearbY Middletown. Hundreds lined the
The size of the gas bubble slarted droppi!lg "dramatically" tration in the oute~ntalnment bWJdlng, prompting a possible streets an~ cbeered wben he arrived, He said the safety of
.

* ,.Ao&amp;el Tread Slippers .
~~

ent1ne

Gas bubble disappears, begin cooling process·

SAVE MONDAY, A~Rll 2ND AND 1UESDAY, APRIL 3RD
ON

*Women's Spring Coats
Jaenior _Slacks

•

•

at y

e

'

PupiJE get homework break
PuPiJB

CINCINNATI (AP) in . the CinCiiiiiati
school district may get a break from homework as a
result of a dispute between the teachers union and
sc~l · board a~atora.
·
· '!be negotiating team of the Cincimati Federation
Of Teachers' IJ asking teilcbers not to give out homework or essay aaslgnments to pupils, beginning today,
until the ~ of clais size In the pu)lllc schools Is
resolved at the bargaining table.
.
Roger Stephelll, president of the ~.7110-rnember ,
Union said the deciJion Is "the first step m a slowdown
that ~uld be expanded."
·

SALE ENDS APRIL 21

· Today'~ · best.buy!

ELBERFELDS
IN. POMEROY,
.
.

(Continued on page 10)
. ,,

.

,I

\'I.

custody shortly afte..Wards. be relied upon to hold even a
The aherlfrs department Is medium-sized IndiVidual who
investigating a hit-skip a~- wants in.
cident
that
occurred
If you look out and see a
Saturday morning at 2: 45 stranger, ask that some form
a.m on CR 75 (Highland of
Identification
andChutch 1_\d.).
credentials be sllpped under
According to the report, an the door. The test of his good·
unidentified vehicle was ness. Is his unhesitating ·
traveling north and. went le~ompliance with your
~f center striking a guardraU. request.
The vehicle left before
Any legitimate salesman or
deputies arrived,
company representative will
In other ' matters, Sheriff have no problem. If he makes
Proffitt cautions Meigs excuses, caD the police or ·
residents to he especially sheriff's office.
careful of strangers working
If you're not interelled, say
MILES T. EPLING
in the area. The sheriff so and return the credentials
stated, "Though the over- without opening the· door.
whelming majo~ity of Dun's respond to presSure or
strangers who appear jlt_our . impatience
at
your
.
.
doors have no criminal precautions.
motives in mind, many of us
If a stranger wants to uae
worry about robberY and your phone to summon the
aasault in our own homes." police or other emergency
Never automatically open assistance, take the message
FARMINGTON, Mo. (AP)
your door _when · someone and make the call yourself. If - Flam'"! swepl through a
knocks, have a peephole it's a trick the intruder will nursing home In this
installedforafew1iollarsand leave. If it's no trick, call southeast Missouri comuse it.
neighbors who might be able munlty today, killing at least
The popular chain -locks, . to give inunediate assistance. · 12 persons, authorities said..
even when secured to a solid
At night draw your blinds
Homer McBride, comrore door and strong door- and draperies so no one can munications chief at the
frame with bolts, should not watch you from outside."
National Guard Armory,
where the bodies were taken,
ronflrmed the hiunber of
dead.
Spokesmen_ for local
hospitals said at least three
· The Middleport Fire Roush, 6, Route 7; below persons - including one
Department was called to S. Middleport, was taken to the fireman ...:. were admitted for
Second Ave. at 11:33 a.m. office of Dr. James Conde treatment. The extent ol their
Sunday where a car driven by . with a laceration of the arm. _injuries was not known ··imMargaret Titus bad caught
mediately.
fire.
" It's a total loss," a
Mrs. Titus stopped the'
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
firefighter at the Farmington
vehicle on the street. There
Wedaetday tbrougb Fire Department said or- the
were heavy damages to the Frtdi'Y: Fair Wedlleiiday · Wayside Inn home, where the
motor area.
wltb showers pottlble fire broke out ahout 5 a. m.
Mrs. Titus, who suffered · Tlutraday aad Friday .
St. Francois 'County
shock, was taken to Veterans Hlgha illlbe mid 4h to mid Coroner C. Z. Boyer was
Memorial ·Hospital by the- Its Wedaaday aad Friday dispatched to the scene.
. Middleport Emergency aDd apper lOa to lower Mo
ills assistant, Phyllis
Squad.
·
Tbunday. LoWI upper ZOII Boyer, said the nursing home
On 'Saturday, the squad to mid lh WedDesday, has about 30 patients but it
t 09k Velma . Keller,' Mid- aear 40 'nuanday and In the was not' known how , many
dleport . Hill, to , Holzer 30s 'Friday.
. pe•sons were in the home at
Medical center, and Loretta ~::::::=:::::~::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::=:--:::::::::::::::::::.::::::::: the time .

12 persons
die in fire

Car's motor heavily damaged

Name M. T. ·E pling
campaign chairman ~

Rio Grande Coll~ge Capital space for the entire com• and.the executive committee
o( the Boy Scouts of America ·
• ·
Campaign officials .today munlty.
The
campa'
i
gn
also
hopes
to
Tri-State - Area Council,
announced that Mi1es T.
·
Epling, GaUipolis, will chair raise an additional $900,000 Hunting!Dn, W, Va.
He Ia a member of the
the public portion of the for the college's general
National Executive Com•
"Ch~llenge for the Second operating expenses.
Epling brings to the mlttee for the Propeller Club
Century" campaign.
.
Epling, president of the M. campaign a backgroiUid of of the United States,
T. Epling Co., and Moun- numerous area leadership· Washington, D. C., is a
City
Com·
. talneer Materials Cor- positions Including mem- Gallipolis
poration, will spearhead bership on the executive missioner. and has also
public efforts to achieve the committee of the Rio Grande served as vice president of_.
( Conilnued on page 10)
campaign's $4.9 million goaL College Board of Trustees
The pubUc campaign wUI
open with a kick-off dinner
for campaign leadership
Thursday, April 5, at
Fairgreens Country Club,
Jackson.
"The principal goal .of the
campaign is _th e improvement of educational
opportunities for the young
people of Southea&amp;(em Ohio, "
Epling said.
orncei-a report that 811
'l'wo persons were injured
The "Challenge for the during a Satl\rdaY morning unidentified vehicle struck a
Second Centruy" campaign accidenl on SR 7, three tenths parked auto owned by Paul
Pugh, 20, Bidwell, and left the
has three goals. The first is to of a mile west of CR 10.
increase endowment for
scene.
_Called to the scene at 6: 10
student scholarships by $1.5 a.m., the Gallia-Meigs Post,
There was moderat•
million.
Highway Patrol, reports that damage to the Pugh vehicle..
"Scholarships for a north bound auto operated
academic · achievement by Mark A. Llnkolis, 19, Elkrepresent our most important view, W. Va., went off the
SQUAD RUN
c~ncern,''
EpUng. said . right side of the roadway;
'lbe Pomeroy EmergiiJICY
"BuUdings are ~n important ~arne back onto the .
was caUed'to the Baum
sideUght as they provide the pavement, and fll ppe d '·oyer · Squad
addition on Route 7 at 1: 46·
. necessary environment for several. times.
·
Linkous was cited -·on a p.m. Sunday for Mary Rijga
learning. We hope, however,
·· who waa taken to Veter&amp;nll
that by providing additional charge of DWI. _
Linkous and a passenger' Memorial Hospital.
scholarship lltcentives to the
At 3:38 p.m., SaturdaY the
area's top students, they in Mark Stefan, 10, Martinswent to t)le Pomeroy
turn will inspire greater ville; W. Va:, dl sp Iaye d squad
Flower Shop' for Vera Van numbers of others towards visible signa of injury and Meter,owner, who had fallen.
academic excellence."
were treated at the scene by She was taken to Holzer
The second goal is a student the GaUJa Volunteer Squad.
'lbere was severe danlage Medical Center·
- conununlty center, slated
At 1:07 p.m. SIUiday, the .
for (!Onstruction in 1980 at a to the auto.
The
patrol
Investigated
squad
went to Bric\1 St. for
projected cost of $2.5 million,
8
hit-skip
accident
Sunday
on
Alfrejl
Duff
who wa~-bavtpga
to provide needed f~dlities
for the coUege's growing LeOrW&gt;de Blvd,, one-tentb of problem with his leg. He,.._
population as well as · a mile south of SR 141, at also taken to Hoi~ Medical
Center.
meetings,. dining' and study 11:15 p.m.

Two' injnred in

Rt. 7 accident

..

�•
2- The Da ily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apr. 2, 1979

3-TheDaily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Apr. 2, 1979
'"

---- ~

Editorial
• •

••'

COMMENTARY

-

Sports World

Donald F. Graff

opmtons

''

•

The hazards of Hussein

· By WID Grinllley
AP Correspoudeut

ByDoaGnlf
Read any sood lnterviewa with Kin&amp; H....,ln bitelY?
Il'a not easy to avoid them. The Jordanian monarcll, to
judge by a opate ot dlapatchea In~ U .S. papers,
baa taken to taJidng with American WI hiBJIOIIdenla In
wholeaale loll alnce Israel and Egypt committed 'themMartha Angle and
selves to gobli all the way with a peace U..Oty. '
He 1111, he makes It clear In terma more vehement than
Robert Walters
diplomatic, very unhappy with the Mlde&amp;lt sitUation In
ge11eral and the United States In partlcular. He
Waahln8ton with being arrQgant and .,.~veInto pressure Jordan Iilio participating In the larae • .
Egyptian seltlelnent and now rasoi-ting to "arm-twlllltln8." '
Tbe twiat bslllllintbnatlona that U.S. aid to Jordan-miWon a year In economic aaa!Aance and, _Jut year, •1110 .
By Martha Angle and Robert Wallen
miWon wOrth of 111'1111 - might be affected u he d - not at
WASHINGTON (NEA) - President Carter's stunning
lbe very lout keep his objectlona to lbe deal illrgety to ,
success as chief architect or an IsraeU-Egyptillln peace
hlmaelf.
·
treaty should . significantly enhl!nce his prospeds lor
strong stuH coming from the leader Waalllnlll9n had '
selling a new Strategic Anns Limitation Treaty to the
hoped would run Mideast litterference for the U..Oty and "
Senate.
long Ita moat dependable adherent In lbe realon- weU, ··
Carter has gamed more than the obvious polltical ·
"Gentlemen, Start your engine.
after Iran'• CW'I'entiY elliled shah, that Ia. lluaaelit cloM
momentum which any president enjoys after a spectacular
•
have legltbnate cause for complaint. He has
foreign policy triumph, although that lit ltaeU Is nothlitg to
been asked to play a IIIIPIIOI'IInll role ·- a "humlllating ' ·'
sneeze at.
such, ha It 1 aa a pillicenuin In tho JaraeU-oeeupied
He has also acquired, thanks to the well-publicized
e .f e
West bank. ADd ne Ia In a difficult altuaUon with hla Arilb .
workings of Israel's ratification process, a perfectly '
~ou
nelghbon,veryfewbeingofthefriendlyperauaalon.
.;
splendid case study to hold up to lhe Senate when It finally
But 'that he has always been. HuaaeiD 1i11ea a chunk ol.
begins debate on a SALT II treat).
·
largely arid real utate,left over from lbe JI!IIR-World War
All's well that ends well, of course, but just lrnaglne•what
I dl.unembennent ol. the Ottoman Empire, that waa · '
the reaction in this country - litcludlitg the U.S. SenateBy ROBERT E. MILLER . Judiciary Committee.
of highway safety, which now
StatistiCll show, he said, decreed a country by the Britilb Foreign Office. More than
would have been if Israel's parliament, the Kneaaet, had
¥11C1clated Press Writer
Seventy-five of Ohio's 88 has relaxed its stand, and that 68 percent of those who half the population ot today's Jordan Ia Palestlnillln In ',
refused to approve the peace treaty with Egypt.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ counties now have counter- endorses substituting spent three days in jail, origin and would glildty oeultle the land of their refuge to '
Shock · .. anger ... dismay ... disgust - take your pick. By A tough Ohio law that sends measure programs, and they education for jails lor first having not been glveri an regain their homeland. Hussein remalna lit power through ·•
any name, the reactloiJ would WIQuestlonably have been
.
have shown that they are time offenders.
.
option for education or the loyalty ot the native bedouins, a weU-equippe!larmy
overwhelmingly negative. And would anyone have stoppoi(l drunk drivers to jail for three
and diplomatic smaris.
to pinpoint the culprits with precision? Not a chance. The daysa~enUy wiD be modi- more effective than jaU in
Tranter said he thinks the rahabilitation, returned to
On the subject of arm-twisting, he can be CGIIIIIdered an ..
headlines would simply have said: "Israel Rejects Peace lied so that first time preventing drunk drivers department's position can the highways drunk a second espert. He has been taking lessons In II for yean from hia ·
Treaty."
offenders can get off the from repeating their crime , make the difference this time time.
Arab associates. He waa E = Gamal N - ' •
As administration lobbyists will no doubt politl out, the hook.
says Rep. Terry M. Tranter, in getting his bill passed. ·
At the same time, he said favorite rel!lonall'W111ing dog.
tant Pal....u.u.na had , ,
rest of the world would react lit alrnllar fashion to any
However, the first timers [).Cincinnati, the bill's chief
G. Stephan Jupinko, the de- drivers whotuid the chance to virtually taken over Jordan until he drove them out lit two ,
Senate rejection of a SALT II treaty.
might be required by the sen- sponsor.
partment's legal counsel, take
part · in
a brief wan In the early '7011. That made him even
18 leas '
Other nations- our NATO allies in Western Europe, tencing judge to enroll in a
Tranterwasco-oponsor of a said his department being countermeasure program popular locally,
particularly
with
Syria
which
now .
88
8
Japan and India, to cite jLUt a few - are watching the "countermeasure" prnaram similar bill two years ago less adamant about the showed a recidivism rate of dlaeuaalng merger with Iraq that could be
mucll or
SALT negotlatlona with acute interest and concern.
..,
more of a threat to Jordan than It is to
oatenalble ·:
seems a safe bet that none of them would be much of education or rehabllltatlon, which p'ssed lbe House but mandatory jail term because 10 percent and even less.
opponent: larael. In 1974, the Arab l.e&amp;Jilll! told him he ,
11
impressed by careful lectures about the separatlon-&lt;&gt;f- under a blll now being died in the Senate.
national statistics show "It
John Lewis, who represents . waan't needed to speak for the West Bank,
he had
wers doctrlite and the constitutional role of the Senate In ·considered by the House
One reason it faDed was the doesn't do what it is supposed a center in Athens known as once governed, and conferred that responalblllty on the
po treaty-makmg process.
the
oppositlon ·of the department to do."
Residential Treatment Pro- P.L..O.
.
~
•
lndeed,the reaction abroad would be quite simple: "U.S.
• ·',
•·
gram, Inc., told the Ju&lt;liciary
There is=lbillty that had he UIOCiated hl'inseU "
Rejects Arms Umltation."
•·
·· '
Committee his program has a with the
IsraeU negotlationa early on, Egypt's
theconsciences.
kind or haadline most., u.s. senators wish
recidivism
of a little situation
beenlit easier.
Cairo
would
to That
haveisonnot
their
more
than 2rate
percent.
been compli!telyhave
Isolated
the Arab
world.
Butnot-bilve
poealbly ..~
the often heated and emotional battle 1a1t year
Husselit
clearlY
thought Jordan
had more to 1 - than .,.
Some judges arowid the not.
'"'Jiain
'"' ---•
commltme
t
over ra !cation of the Panama Canal treaties, Carter and
~Hue "' """'' a
n•
round -the club Of world opinion a very potent
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ missing in action or declared (making uniform real estate
b'fJf
"'
A number of senators, nervous about constituent . Following are highlights ol dead from estate ·taxes), lending authority of national because they have local deterioration In Jordan's reillltlona with the United ~tes '·
1
ul"-- 1
ed
· ·
Local G
u
drunk driving ordinances "for a long Ume to come:''
.
.•
opposltlontothecana treaties, were ..,,_te ypenuad
actiVIties this week in the
overiJIIlent (a owing and state bankS), Financial
Thatwoilldbelntheeventofa"'--'poat-trea... Arab ,,
to vote in favor of the pacts by administration arguments 1;,•i•lature: .
toWilSI\IP \rystl!ea to establish' (Ohio Youth GO!Ill1lission which may or may not summit for the purpose of e~tlng E~ from
that failure to do so would drastically undermine the
MONDAY
speet~JlirtltV,C~eand subcpmmit)ee report) , State includeamandatoryjailsen- the Arab leque, severance of diplomatic relitiOna and"'
presldent'scredlbUlty as a w~rld leader and the reputation Senate floor session at 7:30 Labor (pu61ic building Government
(exempting tence .
poeaibly an economic boycott. Jordan, which d -'not Uve
of the United States Itself.
pm
accessability to hand!- elected state officials from
Rep. Thomas A. Pottenger. by U.S. aid alone and 1a countln&amp; on oome ~ miiUon '
th!'!::'::"n~~~~~~':I:~~,'!'.trJ:~~t.J:.!:f..~r"!'ter
. H;,.... not in ~ion.
capped), F;lections, F~ncial · registering as lobbyists), Rof-Cinclnnati, is a C0-6Jl0~
~ promised by Iraq this year, will abide by any aQIIUIIIt
Thus far in the absence of a-completed arms ag~eement
Senate committee
lnstitut101111 and Insurance· Ways and Means (sales tax
Tranter's bill which he'"'td dectalonl. ·
· opponents 'of a new SALT pact have held the lnltlatlve: Finance (budget review of (state deposits .in mlnortty ' on motor vehicle. fuel), is supported by llamilton
Under the clrcwnatancea, Husaeln Ia under so much
They have been busUy picking away at apedflc, narrow state pJ'Ilt!rams).
banks).
Finance education
County's municipal judges. pressure, In the reported deacrlp&amp;lon of one Western
elements or the developing asreemeJ;II, and forcing treaty
HoU8e committees not
House committees - Inter- coounittee (changing school
He said there are economic obeervor, that he II paraiJzed. It could be that, although
su&amp;porters to • ~- In kind.
scheduled.
s t a t e Coo p e r· a t ion district . fiscal
years), reasons
his grievances
mayto be
weU-enough
he 1a ·
.._
. to support it· Last currently
~peaking
a · great
extenr founded;
for the record,
ut once the final pact Ia actually before the Senate, the
nJESDAY
(eliminating special police Commerce
and Labor year m Hamilton County, denuJIIstratlng himsaU at this delicate ~&amp;age of Mldeaat
nit-picking will become Increasingly Irrelevant. Unllke the House Door session at 11 authority in Chautaugua (eliminating female labor · Pottenger, a former judge, .....uanu-t to be the Arab'a Arab.
·
Panama Canal tl'eatlea, a SALT II aQreenwnt will not be a.m . Senate at 1·30 p.m
Assembly) Agnc
' ulture and law), . Insurance (no-fault"" said 2,000 persons recei.ved , He lllllllntendat;d be aaya, to folllnr lbroucb on a pl•nn-1
&lt;&gt;gen
SenatePanamantsnstoacceptsome
amendments. Carter and hla
negotiators
·• committees
·
· - Ways
·
'
•- sente nces .
"'-•-Jater In"'"
·~~ apring;·~l eOUid be
cOuld to
fo~the
niodlflcatlons
Senate
,, Natw;pl Resow;ces
(disposal auto insurance), Public, the thr, '""""y
, ·•·•
· - t to. l'·· ,Unl
--:by the Senate· the Soviets are not Ukely to be so and ·· Means (exempting of
hazardous wastes), Utllltles (Uniform emergency
At a cost of $37 each per poat-Arab oumndt and post a lot ol. ileftkipnenta. ·I lia 1
accommodating:
_
r
military pay ol veterans F,inanclal
Insti,utions phone number for Ohio) .
day, the taxpayers paid
then coulll weD make even more lnteretltinll ,,
When push comes to shove, the Senate will have to
.
WEDNESDAY
$800,0001orthe
re!'!! ·
chooSe between the SALT pact negotiated by the pealdent
Ilolb floor sessions ,At. ,1:30 incarcerations w~ich did
"'
and his advisors or no treaty,,
~.1.
•
~.1 , • , : r. p.IIJ.
no~ing ~ rehabilitate the
i~
And"'henthesenatorsflnaUylaceuptothatcholce,they
' .
, ,
, Senate commiUees _ drivers or try to . change
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) penalty. Passed by' House: Highways
and
Trans- their attitudes," . Potte.nger
""
would do well to remember· the events of the ~few
weeks - Including the Israeli Knesaet vote. What would Foilow)ng is the status of
nd111 g in Se te Judi •··
said
theyhavesaldhadthatvote'uoneauaJnstaueacetrea"'?
•
na, . _,c..,.y po~tlon
(interstate
high·
.
a
a
••
major 1eglslatlon pending in pe
Committee.
speed
rail
compact)
WhilemOstofthetestrrnon!'
the 113th Ohio General . PRISON BOND ' ISSUE _ 'Judiciary (eliminating ag~ on Tranter's bl~l has been faLawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
•.
AsS~~~~ : BUDGET
Authortz~!s
million hond distinction between males vorable, the highway safety
issue,. f~ Jlr~,· facilities. and females for marriage department and others did
"'
Gollernor's budget proposal Pendllig in House Ways an4 licenses) Energy and Public caU lor a major amendment. ~Lean heel beats veal
lor ' 1980-1981 biennium. Mea!ij .Coinmittee.
Utlllties(probihitlngdlsposal
They asked the ~ttee
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am you're interested in the fat ~
Pending In House Finance
BEAVERAGE GPNTAIN- of radioactive wastes in delete lrom the bill a
confused. Is this statement content, there 's no particular
Com m l t t ee
a n d ERS . ROCjllires
10- Ohio Education and Health provision lbat would allow
correct? Veal is naturally a advantage to U8ing thin class - •
subcommittees; hearirigs cent
deposits ,on
all (pernrlttlng school boards to judges a third opli"!' very young animal and the veal rather than the _"
Tues4ay, Wednesday and he\1\f.Wlf ~mta~rs, , Hear-. hire
communications letting a driver go With Juala meat has practically no fat, separable lean from round ,-:;;
Thursday·
ing ,j~ ~OI!j" , J"nergy and coordinators).
fine. GenerallY, Jupenko and
even though he may have just steak. Beyond that, if you use ;;
.
SCHOOL MANAGEMENT Environment Committee
House committees
otheJS agreed lbat would be
come off his mother, Usually the round of rump in ~ •
·
Finance
(subcommittee going too far in relaxing the
SEATTLE ( AP) - Valerie Harper may be withoUt H leie- - Changes school district Wed!Jii~y.
extreme fat and heavy medium fat class of veal, 9 t.
fiscal ye11r and revamps
CITY .fll:lAN~ -;- ,Two reports), Energy
and law.
r
vision show, but the star of "Rhoda" is not without a cause.
marbling come only after a percent of its weight Is fat :
man age men t bills spelling out· procedures Environment
(beverage
Ms. Hwper has been Involved with political issues such as s c h o o I
long time in the feedlot and it and in the fat class, 12 per.',.~
support for the United Farm Workers and the Hunger Project, procedures. Hearing in House for ,hancDing fiscal crises in container ban), Economic
Is difficult to get enough cent of its weighPart of the
subcommittee municipal
governments . Affairs
and
Federal
and has campaigned for clean air and racially integrated flnanpe
"QIE DAILY SFNI'INEL
marbling unless you carry fat • in
beef
or '::.
l
(liSPS 115-111)
Tuesday.
H011ring in House Ways and Relations (multlcounty
televisi.- commercials,
them to around 1100 pounds. veal is in the muscle fibers ':
SCHOOL SUBSIDIES - Means
subcommittee correctional
centers),
"It's not that I'm suddenly jumping up and getting into it ~ ·
This is why it is very hard to itself, the kinds of fat .that you ' ·
Modifies
equal
yield
formula
·Wednesday.
Highways
and
Highway
11
she said. l've always been lnvolved."
get proper marbling in very can'{ cut away when you trim
NO-FAULT INSURANCE Safety (increasing l~ngth ·
Ms . Harper, in SeatUe to appear at a "speakout" for the for distribution' of state fWids
DEVOTEDT0111E
much smaller baby beef car- away fat for food prepara- •
proposed Equal Rights Amendment on Saturday, said: "Per- to school districts. Hearing in - Establishes a state plan ol limit for loaded auto
ME~~
casses. This is why baby beef tion. The fatter the beef to ··,
Human
sonal cmduct is not \ouched by ERA. Men opening doors for Senate education and health nolault automobile transporters),
RORERTRoEn.Irn
I
·
labeled meat also appears begin with and more marbl-., '.
UISurance. Hearing in House Resources (establishing Ohio
women and whO does the cooking are not addfessed In It, It just subommlttee Thursday .
etty EdUor
more lean.
ing, the more fat it will con· ,
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT Insurance Committee · Youth Employment ProDAVID BtJSIIR&amp;
makes the law equal for men and women."
Alh-Ma111er
I am a heart patient and tain. But I'd like to stress ·
Re-establishes death Tuesday.
gram) Local Government
Published daUI/exctpt Saturoay
have always. bought veal again lbst If you use lean cuts ·
·
f
(authorizing
elected
CALHOUN,Ga.( AP) - NorthwestGeorgianswillhaveto
:t.!!'::y.:l~~:? ~~~15hl1':1! when it was available and the of ordinary beef and remove '
wait until next December to lind out whether they'D. get a ·
executive-leglslatlvei01'I111of
eo.rt 91.• Pomeroy, Olilo 46~.
less fat, smaller baby beef. all visible fat, you can do jLUt, ;
chance to vote for another carter.
county
government)
~=~~902~7~ 992- 2 ~·
Have I been wrong in think- as well . with mature beef as :
President Carter's 3!-year-old son, Jack, says he'D wait that
Education (prohibiting
Second cia" poo~age paid •\
ing tllat the damaging, · with veal or baby beef. Both '
, long before announclitg whether he will run for the
school hoards lrorn using
Pomeroy,Oiilo.
saturated fat comes almost have about the same amount' "·
congr~onal seat representing that section of the state.
.,
public funds to support or
.acr:!~"'1' ,;!,"""~1a~; entirely in the excessively fat of cholesterol.
·
If he makes it to capttol Hill, with his lather down the street
oppose school mooey issues)
EucUdAve~Cieveland,Ohlo44m , covering and marbling?
Part of the trick In aU of ' at the White House, Jack Carter says he believes he could still
Health and Retiremeni
Subsert oo rates Delivered by:
Some of your statements this is how you prepare the
" "''' w re available 75 cents pe•
maintain his independence.
·
·
(permitting cororners to
week. By MoiOt' Route""''" camot.
would lead me to believe tl)e food. For that reason I am : '
"I don't think that I am duty bound to vote as my father tells
remove eyes during autopsies
,."""" oot available, One month,
fat is 10 the fleshy parts as sending you The Health Let- ~
$3.25. By maU in Ohio and W. Va.,
me. carters are just not naturally agl:eeable as a group." he ,
for corneal transplants),
One Y•••· 127 50 : Sli - ..
well. Of course, I know when ter number 9-12, Kitchen • said.
,
SmaU and General B\Winess
111 50 , · Th••• monih•. ••·••:'
we measure cholesterol in the Power For Weight Control. It .
Ebewtlrf'E P2 00 year: SJx months
(emergency medical services
111.00: Th"'e month•, p OO.·
blood, lbst the blood largely will give you. some tipS on
and training for miners).
. BUENOS AqlES, Argentina (AP) - Shah Mohanunad Reza
subo&lt;:rilllloo prtce indud&lt;s SW&gt;day, comes from the fleshy areas preparing meats so they will ·
1_ _ _ _ _ . of the animals.
Pahlavl, a man without a country since the revolt in Iran, is
1-.-TI_mes_&amp;_'"-'1_,.._
contain the least amount ofi ~
4
'r eportedly considering settling In Argentina.
'
DEAR READER - I am fat and, hence, the least
~ newspaper La Nacion said Sund•y that friends ol the
not sure where you got lbat amount of calories · whUe
deposed monarch h&amp;JI contacteJ govenment officials
statement about veal, but it is rri8intaining all the important
• concerning the move. Government sources refused to
not from me. To start from nutrient values .
comm.ent on the article .
Cancer bronght misery to hwnans long before man began the beginning, veal is a calf
Other readers who went
La Nacion said President Jorge R. Videla was consulting
• the systematic loulmg of his environment. Even the dinosaurs. anywh~re from four to 14 this issue can send 50 cents
other nations to losl International reaction before deciding
·
'
weeks of age. If the call 1s with a long, stamped, selfhad it.
.
whether the shah would be ellowed to move here.
. Now we 're confronted with an interesting and encourag_lng older, it is not veal, it is baby addressed envelope for lt.
The shall and his family have spent most of their exile in Mopa~adox . Although cancer death rates are co.ntinull)g .to riS.~~ .. beef.
Send your request to me In
l'occo since leaving Irw1 on Jan . 18. The royal family flew to
more patients than ever are being curecj of the disease. Weu
There are three grades d care of this newspaper P 0
the Bahamas on Friday and is expected to stay about three
over a third of those whQ get cancer are able to. conquer lt,.!f!d veal. The fat class, the l!ox 1~1, RadioJ;ity~li~:
weeb.
many ?f th~ can resume h~lthy, normal lives.
·
mediumlatclassandthethln New York, NY 10019. A:iJ this
The revolUtionary government in Iran has Said it will ask the
Tins pdsilive change hasn t come about by ~ccident. Our class. Let's start with t.'Ie Issue I am sending you points
government of whatever nation the shah setUes in to extradite
naO.on and generation are beneficiaries of the b1~gest attack round of rump, thin class. Six out, a 'lot of the important
him to Iran to he tried for alleged crimes against the nation.
ever mounted against a single disease. The Amencan Cancer percent of its weight is fat. aspects of weight cantrol and
Society began ~e program several decades ago, and is a That means lbat more than avoiding rat intake are
loader in the cancer fight today·
one-third of the calories in related to kitchen power and
· True, most of us have had at. least one relative, friend or this class Is . lrm~ fat and not will power.
Monday
•, 19791&gt;~NEA ~~~ ~~
acquaintance :Who was a victim of cancer. But now moet oha nearly hall lbst . fat is
Incidentally, much o' che
Farmers since Biblical ' ye shall dweU In tile land IIi
can also point to persona we know who have o~rcome it. Thll saturated fat.
'
blood ~iume in your body Is
days have known that the safety. And the land ahiD
i'
wasn't always the case. Think about this livmg evidence of
As a point of comparison if in the blood vessels of the abtaws of nature muat be yield her frail, and ye aball
"In my day, come spring a 'young man 's
P,rogress against cancer when the American cancer Society you took ordinary round ~~ domina! viscera and thorax
observed.
eat your WI and dwell
fancy lightly turned tq thoughts of love .
aska you to support its 1979 Cancer Cru~~ I Although the figl)t and separated a,il the visible rather than skeletal muscle
"Wberefore ye ohaD do therein in safety." ~ L.!v.
agam~ ~ncer has been partly won, tls far from flitlshed. fatlromit,only4 .7perceritof which you refer to as fleshy
What
's
the
deal
these
days?
"
my atatutes allll keep my 25:18-11
- this weight would be fat. So, if areas.
L __ _ _ _ _.:__ __ _ ,_·--'----,---- l llelp IS still needed I rom you .
llld1monta •nd do them; allll

IN WASHINGTON

clw':; '

Club of world opinion

CCIIIIiatentlr,

Toug
· h 1aw

ld b e modI Ied

~
which

Cav,·ta· ~-4 ~~.~1. -gla~· c~

Durln:fr

~~=~:ists

~~:~~Y

l~

~

;,~

T ......:station -at·g'-.;..ce

I

'

HEALTH

+
'

l
'

m.s

Name_s ••••

i

in the news.
.~

~

Berry s World

..

1

.·..

Lana

feur ."
.
"Lana and me - we're the only ones left " added Bundini
looking like a man going to a wedding or a iuneral in his pin:
striped vested swt, white shirt and black tie.
"The others, they're long gone."
Lana and Bund101 were the lone members of the old Ali
stable who showed up over the weekend for a fancy Park Avenue shindig announciii'g plans for a "Muhammad Ali Roast"
Friday, April 13, bene(ittlng the Youth Communications and
Olympic Training Programs.
Even Alididn 'tmake it. Stricken with a heavy cold, he spoke
to the guests by teiephooe from the West Coast.
·
"They have given me 'til Sept. 15 to announce whether I'll
defend my title," the champiOn said huskily over 2,000 miles of
Ma Bell's wires. " I'm gonna milk it as long as I can. I'll make
my a!'"oun~ment maybe Sept. 13."
Everybody present knew what his decision would be. Now 37
years old, three times winner of the heavyweight crown Ali
wouldn't chance disappointing his fans by going out a loser:
Both Bundini and Lana have been with All throughout his
reign, the former joining the champ just before and the latter
JUst alter he woo .the crown from Sonny Liston in Miami Feb.
25, 1964.
Lana not only was the cook but was chief bottle washer at a
Harlem eatery where she met Ali , andrarely fraternized with
the customers.
" When Ali came in, I had to come ouialde," she said. "I fixed
him the finest spread you ever saw - Muslim soup, barbecued
lamb, fresh string beans,lresh buttered squash, fresh cabbage
·
and Muslim bean pie ."
Lana was persuaded to jmn All's aunt, Coretta Clay, now
deceased, in the kitchen . They supervised the champ's meals
from Kinshasa to Manila. Lana mamed Ali's chauHeur, Otis
Shabazz. "Soon I was cooking lor 20or 30," she said.
With All no longer active in the ring, most of these aides have
now drifted away to pursue their privatelives - Gene Kilroy ,
one of the lone whites in the group who was road secretary;
trainer Lloyd WeDs, Wally Muhammad, captain Sam ,
Jeremiah Sshazz (no kin) and photographer Howard
Bingham, now busy in Hollywood.
.
Both Lana and Bundini now work lor Ali's amateur sports
gf!&gt;up.

Weekend
Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL

American League • · .

BALTIMORE ORIOLES -

Sent Andres N\or&amp; , outfielder,
to Ro ch ester of the In·
ternat1 o'nal League, who '

optioned him to Saltillo of the

Mexican League. Sent Carlos
Lopez and Mark Corey ,
outfielders, and John Flinn,
pitcher, to Rochester .

KANSAS CITY ROYALS -

Cut Bob Robertson, first
baseman
Opt io ned Jim

Gaudet. cat cher, Randy
Mc GIIberry. pit cher , and
Luis Sil ver io, outfielder. to
Omaha · of the American
Associati on.
'

MILWAUKEE BREWER S
- Optioned Andy Replogle,
and Randy Stein, pitchers ,
Ed Yost, catcher, and Lenn

Sakata and Tim Nordbrook .
Inf ielders ; to VancoUver of

t~e

Pacifi c Coast league Cut
Clay carroll. pitcher
NEW YORK YANKEES Asslgne8 Bruce Robinson,
catcher, to Columbus of .the

lntern.atlonal League .
TORONTO BLUE JAYS Optioned Joe Cannon, out·

!Ieider. to Syracuse of the
International League.

National

Leogue~

,.

ATLANT~ BRAVeS Traded Oavld Campbell,
pitch~r , to

the Montreal

Expos.for Pepe F=r!as, short·
stop . Placed Blff Pocoroba,
catcher ;
• and
Brian
Asselst ine. first baseman ·

outfielder , on the disabled
list . Sent Hank Small, first
baseman; Odco Rulz, second
baseman·; Jerry Maddox ,
third baseman ; ~nd Larry
Bradford, '""pitcher , to their
minor league camp for
r eassignment.

CHICAGO
CUB.S
Assigned Bill Caudill, Dave
GeiMI. Derek Botelho and
George Riley. pltcrers ; and
Steve Davis , Infielder, to,

1nfielde.s ; to their minor
.Jeague camp fo• reassign ment .
Released
Gene
Lock lear . outfielder. .
MONTREAL EXPOS As•lgned Oav•d Campbell ,
pitcher. to their AAA'roster .
NEW YORK METS - Sent
Dan Norman, outfielder , to
Tidewater of the
In
ternational League .
, ST. LOUIS CARDINAL S Optioned Ken Seaman, pit·
. cher. to Springfield of the
Amer ican Assoc iation
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS
- Sold A•t Gardner. outfielder, to Denver of · the
Ameri can
Asso c iati on .

Assigned Tom Heintzelman.
infielder~ outr ight to Phoenix

of the Pacifi.c Coast Lec;pue.

Optioned Phil Nastu an Ed ·
Plank, pitchers ; Joe Strain,
infielder , and Dennis Little·
hn, cMcher. to Phoenix.
igned Joe Coleman and Tom
riff1n, P•t~hers.
HOCKEY
World Hockey
Auociation
NEW
E N G LAND
WHALERS - Fired Bill
D1neen,
coach.
Don
Blackburn
coach Named
.
·
BA~~~Jn~~LL
Basketball Association
DENVER NUGGETS
Placed George McGinnis,
. fo•ward, on the lnju•ed list .
~;~~~~ed." Gell . Cr ompton,
FOOTBALL
canadian
Football Looaue
J'JBNE~J P! ~lgn~d'::.~o~
Bob .
Oisonoskl
and
McEachern. linebacken.
•COLLEGE
ST LOUIS UNIVERSITY
- Named Rick Starzeckl
assistant basketball coach,
effective May 1.
VANOERBIL T - Named
Ri chard Schmidt J\ead
basketball coach .

~

6

W1chlte of the Amer 1can
Association .

CINC INNATI REDS Sent Ma•lo Solo and Manny

' Sarmiento , pit ch ers ; Don
Werner , catcher, and Harry
Sp11lman and Ron Oest er.

Nothing IS more chilling to
some women lbsn another

gal's new fur coal.

OSCARS

The evidence is all around

\

and kept U1em 21.&gt; games
ahead ol San Diego in the
race lor the last. playoff spot
In the Nationa l Basl&lt;etbal!
Assoc iati on's . Wes t ern
Conference .
othe r - NBA games
Sunday , the Philadelphia
J6ers edged the Los Angeles
Lakers 112-111, the San
Antonio Spurs mpped the
Boston Celtics 112·110, . the
Cleveland Cavaliers beat the
Houston Rockets 114-105, the
Washmgton Bullets defeated
the Denver N ugge~
'" 1=
•
~9,
the San Diego Clippers
toppcJ the New York Kmcks

.In

126-116, the Phoenix Suns
boa t the DetrOit Pist ons 116105, the Seattle SuperSomcs
edged the Go ld e n Sta te
ll'.&lt;~ rn ors 102-97 a nd the
Atlanta Hawks defeated the
New Jen;ey Nels 109-98.
Lucas fini shed with 30
points. for the Blazers. His
short bank shot with 27
seconds left gave them a 108107 lead and his lree throw
with 11 second~ to play
produced the !lila! margin.
76ers 112, Lakers 111
Los ~ngeles, trailing 109100w1th 1:38left, reeled otf 11
IR a row to take the lead
before Philadelphia bowced
·
'

back to win on Darr vl
Dawkins' three·pomt play
With five seconds left.
·
"Somebody's got to shoot
it ," Dawkms sa id of his
wmmn g play. " If I make 1t
l'm the hero, if I m iSS It I get
boos. Bul I don 't care, J'ii
always try il . The foul shot I
made was the biggest one of
my life."

The La kers' Kareem
Abdui.Jabbar led all scorers
wilh 38 points.
Spurs 112, Celtics 110
Ssn Antonio erased an 18point third-quarter deficit
and won on Ja mes Silas' 20loot jumper over Chris Ford

OldWas h•mgton
, Class A champ

Transactions ·

~·

I

lly Al[,;X SACHARE
AI' Spurts Writer
Prolessiona l pride IS nice ,
but Maurice Lucas had a
moretangibleexplanationlor
his 14-point burst in the lina1
4·02 that ga ve the streaking
Portland Trrul Blazers a 109107 vi ctor y over
the
Milwaukee Bucks Sunday .
" I wanted t?,e bal~. I
wanted Il badly, explamed
the veter~ forward. " I want
to ge t mto the playoffs
because I want the extra
mcome."
Lucas' spurt helped the
Blazers to their eighth
vict&lt;&gt;ry 10 the last nin • games

.

One of them satisfies his ravenous ap!ietite, the other tickles
his funnybone .
That's the reason Muhammad Ali moving nearer the end of
his historic career as the on-and-off heavyweight boxing
champion of the world , has been reluctant to part with two
members of his now raptdly scattering entourage .
Lana Shabazz IS the champ's favorite cook. Drew "Bundini"
-Bt:own'is the court jester who has been at Ali 'selbow _ in arid
outside the ring _ for as long as many of us can remember
· deliance or weeping unashamedly as'
altema t ei Y screammglortunes fluctuated .
•. "The champ really loves my victuals,"
says. " First
time, I set a plate for him, he said, '•Lana, I'm going to marry
you He was just joshing, of course. So I married his chauf-

su~

~d

'

do~~r~~ sggra~be="!,.~E~::"t!:.~~ ~~

Portland edges Milwaukee, 1 09~107

Today's

•

.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Add Delphos St. John's girls
to the Waterloo Wonders,
Middletown and ColwnbLU
East boys as the foremost
baskelbaU powers in Ohio
high school history.
"This Is the best team ever
to play gir Is basketball in
Ohio. I think people will look
back and use this team as a
standard lor comparison in
the future. It's a tough act to
follow ," satd Fran Voll, St.
John's coach . .
Indeed it is. The Blue Jays
lost only one game in 75 over
the last three years. They
won the Class A state tiUe in
1977 and the Class AA
championship Saturday with
a 57-53 decision over
defending champion Colwnbus Hartley. .
" Just think," said Sue
Youngpeter, a four-year
starter for Delphos, "three
more points and we would
have been unbeaten in 75
games " The Blue Jays lost
66-M in the 1978 semifinals to

'"

Springboro .
Deb Eiwer , twice all-state,
fired the Blue Jays to a 26-0
record this season by pouring
in 23 points, ending Hartley's
dream of a third title in lour
years . The • Hawks, led by
Nancy Wiiliams' 21 points,
fmished at 22-3.
· Mea pwhile, Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary in Class AAA
and Old Washington Buckeye
Tra il in Class A became fir~time state champions in girls
play .
St . Vincent-St. Mary
trinuned _ neighbormg rival
Barberton for the second
time this season to replace
·Struthers all the big school
titleholder. The Irish, 22-2,
prevailed 35-27, shutting
down lhe Magics' gifted
outside shooters.
Buckeye . Trail, the 1978
runner-up to Ada,&lt;used a ' :!.'!
zone defense to foil Holgate
51-32. The Warriors lrom
Guersney County, 23-2 this
season, have a 44-3 record in
their two
seasons ol
existence .
Barberton could make only

15 percent of its first half committed seven turnovers
shots and St. Vincent-St. and was outscored 16-2. By
Mary Coach Mary Jo that time, Buckeye Trail was
Chionchio said, " It was our ahead 38-19.
hest defense of the year. Our
"It was because o[ our
team knew there are not quickness off the press - our
many · teams with the ex- quickness and their lack of
treme inside and outside balihandlmg," said Buckeye
shootmg' strength' Barberton Trail's. Dave Linn, the Ohio
has ."
Class A Coach of the Year.
Jell
Janiga,
whose , Lori Heady's , 23 points
Barberton team finished 23-3, came within one of the singlesaid, "They didn't make the game Class
A slate
mistake &amp;.
They
were tournament scoring record.
disciplined . They held us to Cindy Rosselot led Holgate
our two worst offensive with 15 points .
"I thought it would be a lot
games this season. "
A nightmarish third closer," said Holgate Coach
quarter ruined Holgate, 22-3. Duane Sheets. "They turned
The Henry . County team out to be a good outside shootmade only I of 7 floor shots , ing team."

r-------~----~-----­

1

1.

SPORTS
'

'·

The Daily Sentinel

. a..-----,...,....,......:~--~---~-1
-.

Capitals edge Islanders, 6-4
By The Assoolated Press Islanders.
"We owned them in the
Washington Coach Danny
Beli~e says his capitals Wei'\' third period, " said ' Resch,
just plain tired of being " but it was ton late . We have
hwnilialed by the New York lost our aggressiveness and
we'd better get it back soon ."
lslanders.
So, lor the first time in the
Canadlens 3, Bruins 3
team's live-year history, the
Boston led • I in the third
07capitals beat the Islan&lt;jers 6- perlpd before Montreal pulled
4 SUnday night behind t wo evenongoalsbyJacquesLegoals by Swedish rookie Roll malre and rookie Rod LangEdberg.
wav, the •• ...er scoring on a
'
,."
" I think it's Just the 60-loot slapshot.
accumulation," said Belisle, . Langway's goal made up
when asked why his team was for a misplay in the first ,
able to heat the leaders of the period when Rick Smith
N i
atonal Hockey League's picked ofl a clearmg pass by
Patrick Division . "The guys Langway for the first goal ol
have a lot of pride and the game.
everything was stsrting to go
Bruins Coach Don Cherry
• · ."
negati ve agam
was dlsappo'inted by the tie
In other NHL games, the but pleased with the
Montreal Canadiens tied the perfonflance of his goalie.
1
Boston Bruins 3-3, the
• -:: : he e v e r s
was
Colorado Rockies outscored sensational," he said. "It
.
the st. Lows Blues 9-5, the · looks like the old Cheese is
AUanta Flames beat the back. If we can keep him
Pittsburgh Penguins 7-2, the going like that , he 'D be aU
1
Philadelphia Flyers defeated ri'""t. "
6''
the New York Rangers 7..1,
Rockies 9, Blues 5
the Toronto Maple Leafs
Ron Delorme scored three
topped the Buffalo Braves 6- goals and Merlln Malinowski
3, the Detroit Red Wings had a goal and three assists
trimmed the MI. nneso ta as Colorado posted its highest
North stars 3-1 and the goal· total 'of the season and
Vancouver Canucks and scored its first victory at
Chicago Black Hawks fought home in 15 games.
to a Z.2 tie.
· Had the Rockies failed to
Montreal now leads the win, they would have tied an
NHL with 111 points, while NHL record for I;Oilii&lt;!Cutive
the Islanders have 1118.
winless games at horne The
The capitals took a 3-0 lead record is shared by Chicago
on goals py Dennis Maruk, and Montr eal and has
Yvan Labre · and Robert remained uhmatched since
Picard ,•nd made ,it ~on the Canadlens' 14-game'
Edberg s score early m. the winleas streak in 1939-40.
second period.
Flyen 7, Raagero 3
Losing J!oalle Glenn Resch
Rick Lapointe started a
said his team was dazed by th
oa1 first
·00 th t
th t
ba
"If
let
ree..g
pe(l
a
1
a ear Y rrage.
we
helped the ,Flyers defeat the ,
teams push us around like. Rangers solidifying their
thai , we're going to be in hold on ~ond place In the
ttoubie," Resch said.
Patrick Division
New y ork' s M'k
'
I e Bossy
The Flyers 111-1·1
in theu-'
score? his. S~ goal to break last 12 lll!~es, lead the
Reggie Leach s record of ~I Rangers · by five p omts .
goals for a right winger , set m Philadelphia has three games
th e 1975-78 season . But to play, the Rangers four.
Edberg and Guy Charron New York Ia c"'e point in front
came back with goals to give of fourth-place AUanta alsO
Wash in~ a .comfortable 6-1 with four games to play.
lead gomg mto the third
Maple Leah a, Sabres 3
period.
Lanny McDonald scored
Clark . Gillies,
Mike threegoalsandoneass!Btand
Kaszyck1 and Bossy scored in Toronto score'd on three of its
th e third period lor the first five shots in beating Buf-

falo and ending an U..game
· personal unbeaten streak lor
Ssbres goalie Don Edwards.
Red Willgo 3, North Stan I
· Errol Thompson and
Vaclav Nedomansky each
scored one goal and assisted
on another ' to lead Detroit
over Minnesota. The . Red
Wings got aU three of their
goals in the first 14 minutes of
play to hand the North Stars
their !lith ~traight defeat.

FranciSco at Phoenl~~t, Ar iz .•
Flames 7, Pengula1 2
(n J
Darcy Rota scored three
1 "Jiuesday•s Games
goals as Atlanta assured
New York (A) at Unlver·
itself of the home ice lor lbe slty of North Carolina
H ou~ton , vs. Montreal at
first round of the NHL'
Daytona Beach, Fla.
playoffs.
Alla ~ ta vs . Chicago (A) at
canucb 2, Black Hawb % Sar~sota. Fla .
St. Louis vs . Cincinnati at
Defenseman Mike
O'Coonell scored his third Tampa , Fla .
sburgh vs. New York
goal of lbe season at 3:13 of INPitt
) at St. Petersburg , Fla .
the final period to give
Philadelphia vs Minnesota
Chicago its tie with Van- at Orlando, Fla .
Texas

couver.

Meigs 4-H Club New,s .
The ,Pleasure Riders 4-H
Club met Mar.ch 19' at the
Tammy 'Ervin t~idence with
three advisors and 22
members in attendance .
Itenis 'of business discussed
included the C.C.A. program
at WMPO apd the Area Horse
Bowl which !VIii be held April ·
12 at Jackson, Ohio.
Officers elected were:
president, Brett Jones ; vice
president , · Penny Mlller ; ·
secretary, Valerie Jeffers;
treasurer, Debbie Woodyard ;
News rep6rter, Tammy
Ward; health, Erin An·
derson; safety , Darin Hayes.
· Refreshments were served
by Nancy Ervin ..The next
meeting will he held April 16
at the Penny Mlller
residence. - Tammy Ward,
reporter.
...-,
The Meigs County Junior
Leadership 4-H Club met
March 2lat the Meigs County
Extension' Office with one
advisor and 27 members in
attendance. Dues·were set at
$1.50 to be paid by first
meeting III Jun41. Officers
elected were: president,
Cindy Pitzer , vice president,
Patty Dyer; secretary,
Tammy Miiler ; treasurer,
Penny Mlller ; news reporter,
Tammie starcher. Refreshments were served by Diana

'•

vs

Syracuse 'Vs. · Toronto at

·lor

Starcher, reporter.

Ask Ole about
Life Insurance

The Irish Leprechauns 4-H
Club met March 16 at the
Go hie residence with 20
members and two advisors iii
attendancc. Items ofbusiness
l offer a total program to help
discussed included a com· .
protfi!Cl your family's way of Jlvlng
munity project and ways to end buJid Ananclal security for you r
save money. Recreation was retirement ye~ys Call me for details
enjoyed by the club. Refresh-.
ments were served by Judy
Goble. Special plans [or the
next meetmg are to collect
149 S. Third
bottle caps and members are
Midlt1eport, o.
to be thinking about the
992·7155
elderly people in the com' State Farm l1le and
munlty the club can help with
Acc tdent Assuran ce
odd jobs. The next meeting
Company
w1ii be Apr il 6 at the Lester
11l:lme Ollott
Bloorm1191Gn llhM• S
residence. - Melinda Goble,
reporter.

·: for'lbdays
FamUies ·

"'IKE SWIGER

---..

· On Cable Channel 4

PREVENTION

IS lHE
BEST POLICY
'
As an
Independent
Insur ance agency , our
primary fu.nctlon Is to
provide policies which
afford financial protection
In case ot loss .
But, we also have a vital

Interest in loss pre~entlon,
as 'should our clients . We
el'lcourage care, caution
and safety ... preventiVe
measures which cGn keep
that car accident from

happening, !hat building
fire from

starting, that

home burglary from be ing
committed.
Prevention saves life,

limb and property ... and
helps control Insurance
costs and, premiums.
When losses do oc.cur,
our policyholders can count
on protecting and serving

In lime anq need. But we
still say - prevention II the
best policy.

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992-2143
102 W. Moln
Pomtro~

Today's birthdays: Actor
Alec Gulness Is 65. Televiaioo
actor and Jli'Oducer Jack
Webb Is 59. Actor Buddy
Ebsen Is 71.
Thought lor today : Never
trLUt a\lllan who speaks weii
of everybody - John Churton
Collins, E ngh sh literary
critic, 1843-1906.

BUILDI ·SUPPLI
HOME IMPROVEM
POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO• .

Dr.

-watch for it!

et

Ounedl~ ;

... "u

Free HBO is coming April 7 &amp; 8

at

Baltimore

Miami , Fla.
Detroi t vs . Boston
Winter tjaven, Fla.

Fla .
CIH eiall(f vs . Oakland at
Eberts. Special plans
the ' Scottsdale_.
Ariz.
next
meeting
ln'c lude
Los Angeles vs . Chicago
Recreation Program w!lh the 1NJ' ·.nJ~.isa , A&lt;lz.
San Diego State at San
Ohio University 4-H Club and
refreshments will he served' Diego, (n)
by April Parker. - Tammie · _ .;__ _ _ _ _ _ __

- - - - - - - - - - .. -~:;_~~P.-=-:

·'

wtlh four seconds remaimng. W do - run the clock down
George Gervin led the Spurs and go over me," said Ford .
with 34 points and Silas • ''That's just what he did."
ca vallers 114, Rockets 105
scored 25.
campy Russell sc(i'ed 21 of
" I was surprtsed," said
Silas. "He gave me the shot I his 25 points in the second half
wanted ·r was looking l or the as Cleveland beat Houston
medium-range jumper and and dropped the Rockets Ilk
gam~ behind first-place San
that's wha t I got "
Anto nio In the Centra l
" I knew what he was going
DivisiOn. Moses Malone led
Houston with 24 points and 20
rebounds.
E11hibitlon Baseball '
Kullo:ts 105, Nuggets 119
AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
Elvin Haye s scored 30
.. aturday's Games
pomts as Bullets Coach Dick
Montrea l 9, Houston 6
1
Atl ant a 4, Balt1more " B" 3 Motta became the third coach
St . Louis 3, Pitt sburgh 2
10 NBA histOry to win 500
Toronto 6. Phlladelph• a 2 games, joining Red Auerbach
Te)(as 8, Kansas Ci t y 6
and Red Holzman in that
Bos1on 9, Min nesot a 4
select
circle. Motta's teams
Chicago (A ) 4, Detroit 0
Ch icago tN J 4, Qakland 3 in Chicago and Washington
San Franc1sco 8, Clevel and have lost 397 games in 11
5
years .
Milwaukee 12, Seattl e 5
The loss put Denver oneCl ncmnati 5, New Yor k t N )
half game behind first-place
Balttmore 2, New York A) 0 Kansas City in the Midwest
California 7, Los Ang eles 6, Division.
13 innmg s
Clippers 1%8, Knicks 118
Sunday's Games
Uoyd Free scored 28 points
Mont real 3. Houston 2, 10
inni ngs
and Nick Weatherspoon
Atlanta 3 , Minn esota '2
added 24 as the Ssn Diego
·Boston 9, St. Louis 6
New Yor k I N) 5, Phil· snapped a four-game losing
streak to stay within reach of
adelphia 1
P11tsburgh 7, Cmclnnatl :, PorUand in the playoff chase.
Chi cago (A I 10, Toronto 7 The Clippers outscored the
•Te ~ as 6. Kansas City 1
New York ( A) 4, Detro it J , Knlcks 2U in the last 5:42 of
the third period to take
10 innings
Los Angeles at Callforn le control .
Cleveland 7, Seattle 3
Suns 116, Pll!lons 105
Oakland 9, Chi cago (N) 8
Phoenix
won Its sixth in a
San Fr anci sco s, M il .
row behind 23 points and ,12
waukee 3
San Diego 5. Selbu Lions 1 rebounds by center Alvan
Monday's Games
Adams. Th~ Suns' 48-30
Kansas City vs. Atlanta at
record is the !hird best in the
West Palm Beach, Fla.
Montr eal vs. St. Loui s at St . NBA, but they still trail
Petersburg 1 Fl~
SeatU~c .bY ,two game~ in the
New .Yor k INJ vs: Toronto Pacific DiVIsion .
at Dunedin. Fla.
Sonlco 102, Warrioro f7
Philadelphia vs Boston at
Seattle, the NBA's top
Winter Haven , Fi ll
PittSburgh vs . .M innesot a defensive team, held Golden
" A" at Orlando Fla;
State without a hasketfor five
Minnesota " B'' vs. Houston
minutes of the final period.
at Cocoa , Fl a.
Baltimore vs . New York Guards Dennis Johnson and
lA) at •Fl . Lauderdale, Fta . Gus Williams led the Sonlcs
Chicago (A) vs. Texas at wit h 24 and 21 points ,
Pompano Beach, Fla
Milwauk ee vs. Chicago { N) respectivel:tJ.
Hawks 109, Nets 118
at Mesa , Ar iz.
Oakland vs . Cleveland at
Dan Roundfleld had eight
Tucson , Ari z.
ol his 31 points in a 20-4
Cinci nnati vs. Detroi t att
Atlanta spurt in the lourlb
Lakeland , Fla . In)
quarter
that sealed the
California at San Diego, (n)
Los Angelt;!S vs . San victory over the Nets.

The Department Store ·
Of Building
Since 1915

Dr R~f' 11"'Dr A. .J. Stathll, Dr . G J Stombtu111• Dr. C W, Hil l
Dr W D ktmblll• Dr, J C Murph1 • Dr w.L St ~ht
Dr 0 W Ad1m 1 • Of 0 1A. M polt

N9 (;, U.IAptOII A.M.

C.W...t.l , Olllo

'

,,

I

'

j'

•

•

'

�•

---- __.

•

.

4- The Daily Sentinel. MjddlepOit-Pomt•roy. 0 .. Mond•y. Apr. 2. 1979

Pro Standings

.Pirates
slip past

At A Glance

lh' The

Press

Assoc iate~

• ·Wa sh .

52 25
34
41
31 49
28 49

Phlla .
' 45
New Jersey 36

BIIADENTON, Fla . (API
- Dave Parker and Phil
Garner each ·hit two-rdn
homers to lead the Pittsburgh
Pirates to a 7-5 victory over
the Cipcinnati Reds in
exhibition baseball Sunday.
Pittsburgh is now ·11-10 in
exhibition play. 'Cincinnati
fell to 1().12 despite tw&lt;&gt;-run
homers by pinchhitter Ken
Henderson · and Arturo
OeFreites. .
Parker's homer in the first
inning, his seventh of the
spring season, followed a
single by Frank Taveras and
came off losing pitcher Torn
Hume.
In the secood inning, Garner's hamer followed a single
by .Ed Ott.
A double by- Parker in the
third drove home Ornar
Moreno who had doubled.
Moreno walked
the fifth,
Stole second and scored on a
two-&lt;&gt;ut single by Lee Lacy.
· In the seventh..._j_niling,
Parker singled home another
run , his fourth RBI of the day.
Cincinnati scored its first
two runs in the fifth off
winning
pitcher Bert
Blyleven on a pinch homer by
Henderson, which scored
Cesar Geronimo.
In the seventh, Dan
Driessen doubled, went to
third on a · hit by Junior
Kennedy and scored on a
single hit by Geronimo.
.Another two-run homer for.
the Reds in the ninth by ne:
Freites drove George Foster
horne.
·

Rio third in

New York

Boston

.675 '
.570 8
.458 16
.388 22 1, 2
.364 24

Central Division
45 JJ .577

San Ant.

Hoyston
Atlanta

43
43
Cleve.
30
Detroit
19
New Orleans 25

34
36
48
49
54

.558
.544
.385
.372
.J·16

11, 2
21, '2
15 ·
16 ·
20 1 1

Western Conference
Midwest Division
Kan . City
Denver

Mllw.

45
44
37
36
29

34
34
42
43
so

.570
1, 2
.564
.468 8
.456 9
.367 16

Indiana
Chicago
racific Division
Seattle
28 .641
Phoeni x
48 30 ~ 615
Los Ang .
44 JJ .57 1
Portland
44 34 .564
42 37 .532
San Diego
Golden St .
35 44 .443
x - cl inched divisiOn

so

·2
s•, ,
6
8 1' 2
15 1, 2

Saturday's Games
New Orleans 109, Atlanta
107

Milwaukee 108, Chicago 99
Kansas City 126, Indiana

10 1

..

Seattle

123, Detroit 102
Sunday's Games
San Antonio 112, Boston 110
Philadelphia 11 2,
Los
Angeles 111
Washington 105, Denver tiY
Cleveland 114. Hous ton 105
Por tland 109, Milwaukee
107
Phoenix 116, Detroit 105
iSan Diego 126, New York 116
Seattle 102, Golden State. 97
Atlanta 109, New Jersey 98
Monday's Games
No games scheduled ·

Tuesday's Games

Denver at New JerseY
San Antonio at Cleveland
Wl'llshinoton at Milwaukee
Houston at New York

Los Angeles at Chicago

Boston at New Orleans

Detroit at Golden State

Seattle at Portland

By The Associated ·~,ress

'

National Hockey League
Campbell Conferen.ce
·
Patrick Division
w 1 t pts gf ga
X· N . Y. ISiallaers
47 15 14 108 '338 207
•
Phila . 39 23 15 93 274 234

Saturday event

Rio Gtandl College placed
third in the Frail Memorial N. Y. Rangers
39 27 10 88 304 271
llelays Saturday with 87
points. Marietta captured top Atlanta 40 29 7 87 311 268
Smythe Division
honors .with 111 points. West X·Chicago
·
Virginia Wesleyan was
27 34 15 69 2jO 266
second with 96. .
Vancouver
,
24 42 12 60 213 288
Glenville was next with 89,
Louis 17 48 12 46 241 341
Fairmont 51; Wilmington 41; St.
Colorado
West Virginia State 18 and
15 52 10 40 200 320
West Liberty II. '
. ~~ les Co~feren~e
Adams Division
, .Redrnen thinclads posted .
x·Boston
42 22 13 97 304 255
wins in the following : Buffalo 35
27 15 85 265 249
Distance Medley . Relay - , Toronto 33 32 12 78 255 2.41
27 38 11 65 249 270
Mark Roush, Andre Barclay; Minn .
Norris Division
·
•. Jeff Elick and Ben Junk; four
mile relay - Jeff Elick, Rm • ·Montreal
50 16 11 Ill 323 199
Dunfee, Mark Fox and Ben Pitts. 34 30 1~ • 81 272 269
Junk ; two mile relay - Mike' Los Ang. JJ 32 tl 77 -27 5 2·70
Detroit 22 J9 16 60 247 287
Ska~. Torn Wellnitz, 'Mark
. 22 40 15 59' 259" 324 '
Wheeler and Mark Roush. ·,.:.·.VVash
·x - cl

~

scoreless innings· and Barry Montefusco, in his best pet
Andy Messersmith .
H~· l'hl~ ,\ ssoc.i~tt·t~ l'rt·ss · wlw1\ he bumped plate
·' I had the locker two away Evans and Kurt Bevacqua formance o(the sprlnl!, ga"
They say you can 'I replace umpire .Jim Scott in the fifth
Hod Carew, but Willi~ Ma ys irmln~ while protesting he fr om Carew at ·Palm homered as the Padres beat up only two hits, struck ou
Aikens didn't do a bad job hadn 't swung on a third 'Springs." Grich pointed out .. the Se,ibu Lions of Japan 5-i in . four and walked' none as b
"I did a lot of talking to a 71&gt;-inning game.
led the Giants wa 5-3 victor:
~unday .
slrike.
San Francisco hurler John over the Milwaukee Brewers
_ Aikens subbed foc Carew
In the next inning, Dan Rodney and changed my
·after the seven-lime batting Ford singled and Aikens hit stance. ''
Elsewhere, 1978 National
champion ~Y•s ejected, and his second homer of the
League Rookie of the Year
hit a two-run homer to help spring· for the Angels.
,'
Tuesdav ' s Games
the California Angels heat the
Bobby Grich, claiming . Bob Horner play~ in his first
Los Ange les at Wa shington
l.os Angeles Dodgers 7-4 in some assistaqce from Carew, game of the spring for the •
At lanta a t New Yor k
exhibit
ion · baseba ll at also was . a hero for · the Atlanta Braves, a 3-2 decision
Islanders
Anaheim
.
. . winners with two RBI singles, over the Minnesota Twins.
Chicago at Minn esota
Horner, involved in a con- .
Carew was thumbed out of Including a rally-eapping hit
Pitt sburgh .at S1 . Loui s
Colorado at . Van co uver
the "Freeway Series" game in a two-r·u,,n third against tract dispute with the Braves,
went hitless in four· appear'
ances in hi s role· as
designated hitter. Barry
.
Bonnell hit a two-run homer
to
lead the Braves.
·
ATHENS, Ohio . lAP ) - run in rainy 5().degree Haviland, did not defend his
George
Scott's
two-run
Dan. Sekerak , a 35-year-&lt;&gt;ld weather, 204 finished.
crown because he was in a
single keyed a five-run fifth
Granv ille resident, wQn the
Last year 's winner, BiU race in Washington .
,
inning and Mike Torrez ttmed
12th annual Athens marathon
up
for a regular-oeason start
Sunday, running the 2&amp;-mile,
later
this Week as the Boston
~yard course in 2 hours, 30
Red
Sox defeated the St.
minutes, 29.4 seconds.
Louis Cardinals 9-0. Although
He was part.,of a three-man
group of Licking County rimBy The Associated Press
hefore her wedding, $cored a he allowed eight hits . and
GOLF
3-6, 6-3, 6-1 victory over three earned runs in six
ners known as the Legend
HILTON HEAD ISLAND, Dianne Fromholtz in the innings, Torrez was satisfied.
Harriers . Other members
finished fourth and sixth to S. t. - Torn VVatson. needed championship match of a He strtlck out four and didn't
ea~ily capture team honors. only a final round of 'par 71 to $200,000 women's tennis walk a batter.
In other action, Chris
Finishing more than a win the Heritage Golf Classic event.
•
BOWLING
Chambliss .singled home the
minute behind Sekerak in by five strokes ani!, in tlie
GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
winning run , in the lOth
second place was Julio process, set a tournament
Abanto, 32, of Warren, N.J . scoring record of 270 for the Earl ' Anthony rolled nine inning, giving the New York
His time was 2:31.38.
Harbour Town Golf Links.
strikes in the championship Yankees a 4-3 victory over
Watson's score was 14 shots match to defeat · Cliff .Me- the Detroit Tigers . Joe
Other memijers of the
Legend Harriers were Steve under par anJIIone better than Nealy 257-201 for the Long Wallis' live hits helped the
Wilkin of Heath, whose time the old marl&lt; Jack Nicklaus Island Open bowling title, his Oakland A's beat the Chicago
was 2:33.33, and Roger · set in 1975. Ed Sneed shot a 5- first victory since he suffered Cubs 9-8. Rookie Eric Wilkens
Toothman of Granville, "!ho under-par66totake second at a heart attack nine months earn~d his first Cactus
275.
ago.
League vtdctof_ry, allowing two
logged a 2:36.42 mark.
The first woman to finish
COSTA MESA, Calif. AUTO RACING
runs an lve hits in six
was. Iris Black of Spring Joanne Carner sank a· 2-foot
BRISTOL, Tenn . - Dale innings, as the Cleveland
Valley, who placed 30th in par putt on the second hole of Earnhardt took the lead with Indians beat the Seattle
3:00.36.
.sudden death to d~ feat two pivotal pit stops with 15 Mariners 7-3.
Out of 225 runners who Japan's Chako Higu~hi after miles to go, then roared away
Johnny Grubb's two-run
started the race; which was a five-way playoff in the from the pack to take the first horner led the Texas Rangers ·
$150,000 Ladies Prolessional victoi-y of
career, beatmg to a 6-1 victory · over the
Golf AsSociation tourn4lllent. Bobby Allison by 2.7 seconds Kansas City Royals. Greg
&lt;;:amer. who fired a 71 in in the $110,000 Southeastern !'ryor's solo horner triggered
Local Bowling
Colonia,I styled roll·top desk with pidgeon hole c~m ­
the final round, ouUasted 500 Grand Nation;d stock car a four-run eighth inning that
partmei'I1S and bOOkshelf for easy organizing, large
Higuchi, whose 6-foot par putt race
carried the Chicago White
drawer has 3 drawer effect. Full finished back and
Friday Night LadieS
March 23. 1979
" Modesty " panel lets you uSe this beautiful desk
slid past the final playoff 1 Allison overtook Darrell Sox past the Toronto Blue
Standings
anywhere in any room. Your Ehoice in Knotty Pine·
hole.'
Waltrip
for
s
econd
just
three
JaDys
IMC
.
h
h
.
Team
Pts. •
or Nutmet Maple s:r;::ulated 'wood grained' finish
Nancy Lopez, bogeyed four ,laps from the finish. Richard
ave as 's lOt 'Inning
Kenny 's Angels
50
with writing surface of genuine " Formica" high
of the last eight holes to finish Petty finished fourth ahead of single drove in 'the winning
Mine No. 3
46
pressure
plastic, laminated to particle board .
Bill's Qua l ity Body Shop
35
· ·
c·
H
· B
p
run as the Montreal Expos
32"&gt;&lt; 20")(41 " high . ...
enny arsons .
.. edged the Hous
. ton Astros 3-2.
Parker's A. I. Ser vice
35 . m a tlf ,with amer, Iguchi
COLLEGE
Honak..- C: B.
33 - who shot a 73 - ,Jan
Stepehenson and . Donna
BASKETBALL
Dave Parker and Phil Gamer
Rangers ·3·
·
To.ron to 6, Bvffa lo 3
" t\Aontreal 3, Boston J, tie
Detroit 3. Minn esota 1
Washihgt on 6, New York
Islander s 4
Vancouver 2, Chicago 2, tie
Colorado 9, St. Louis 5
Monday 's Game
Los Ange les at New York
Rangers
•

Sekerak marathon champion
·.
.

.Sports briefs.

• •

Dan 's Uphol stering

17
Ind ividual game - [orie
Moore 167 ; Dottie Will 163161'; Frances Thomas 161.
Ind ivid ual series - Dottie
Neison, 459 ;. DOttle Will .448 ;

Caponi..Yo!lllg .at 2-over:par
SPRINGFIEW, Mass.
286.
After an overwhebning 13_1
Stepehenson, Lopez and . rejection of a 30-second·
·
Young dropped out on the shooting . clock for coUege
Ettamay Norton 409 .
first o,vertiJlle hole :With basketball, the NC.AA Rules
Team ,game Kenny's bogeys. '
Committee has approved
Angels, 515;.... Parker 's A. L 1
TE~IS
thr ee changes related to
Servjce 494; Bill' s· -Quality
.
S T U T TGART,
Body Shop •87 .
West fouls..
Germany _.: Poland's Wojtek
The panel also ordered
Fibak upset top-seeded 'tighter officiating of foul
Guillenno Vilas of Argentina rules now on the boOks, ac,
6-2, 6-,2, 3-6, 6-2 to win the cording to
committee
'Ohio Girls High
$75;000Stuttgart Grand Prix spokesman Edward Steilz,
School Basketbatl
tennis tournament.
Springfield CoUege athletic
By The Associated Press
State Championships ·
MI,LAN , Italy - John director.
:'
· Saturday
M
c
E
n
r
o
e
d
e
f
e
a
t
e
d
Steitz
said
that
a•survey .of
At Ohio State' s
-;Austrafia's
john
Alexander
6'
c
ollege
coaches'"$o*ed
a
Sf . John Ar.eana ·
4,
th'l
to-win
a
World
·Chammargin
of
2-1
against
tl)e
.
C~ASS
AAA
'
~.' - .
Akrop St. Vh\cent-St. Mary pionshlp Tennis tournament; shooting clock similar to the
2
35, Barb\!•lon 27
DA!YTON, - Ohio - . Dutch' 24-second clock to use in the
. • · ' · tLASSAA
'
'', . ' o'olphos St. John 57 , Walts won t~e l')ayton Pro National · Basketball
Another nice thing aboUt
New
2,
Coltlmbus Hartley 53
Tennis Classic with a 6-3, 6-4 · AssOciation.
your newspaper : you can't Buffalo
'~
..
l'
CLASS A
., ,
over ~arty Riessen.
He also said that officials
sluff the telly under the door
Montrea l 5, Prt~JPdrgh ,'3 . ·Old VVash ingto~ Buckeye win·
Ci\RUlBAD,.CAIIf.
Chris
were
told to crack down on
when a blizzard hils town.
Toronto 6, Minnesota 2
Trail 51 , Holgate 32
Evert, in . her final match Improper bencp dee,orum,
. Vancouver 2, Cotor~do 0
hand checking on 'defense,
grasping the rim~ and
charging fouls by jump
shooters.
The committee voted to
impose
two-shot fo.ul for
CINCINNATI (AP) :_•
was
to
he doesn't do is break ·.a
two ' taking ana excessive
tiJlleaut.
Cincinnati Beiigals wide broui!ht him no more than , the huddle.
more than t~e l!r~~ious
receive~ Billy Brooks no $65,000 in his fifth season. He
"1 am rejuvenated," said . year's 14 conteats. '
longer feels, that "there Is a ' said that salary hardly was Brooks, 25, conceding his
"A football team has-got to
cancer on this team that has an in\lication ofthe. prestige change in attitude from last be a family," Brooks said.
to be cut out.''
. that goes with being No. I.
year. Only three months ago, "You have to be close to your
If the buck stopS here . how
The. "cancer" referred to
But now , Brooks said, . he had complained &lt;lf a "cap-· teal!""ates and clo~ to man- come we
ha '
past player-management following the meeting with cer" on the team.
agement ... and management • money• never
ve any
"When you're . running bas whe close to, you."
·
squabbles. which he said re- Brown at which his contract
suited in Cincinnati's 4-12 Na- was renegotiated, there is a happy, it changes your entire
tiona! Football League record marked change in attitude by . concept," said Brooks, who
last season.
the front office toward the once estlmated that 85
The resentment and anger players.
. , percent of the team's players
have disappeared for the 6-3,
"They really are trying to wanted to leave the Bengals,
2 0 2- pound
Brooks. make an effort with the play- resulting in a losing attitude.
Cincinnati's top draft pick ers," 5aid Brooks after a . "If the players aren't
out of Oklahoma in 1976, recent two-day · \cforkout at happy ... it shows up in
beca.use of a meeting with Spinney Field. "I think .they quarterback sacks, dropped
Mike Brown, Bengals ·as- realize now tha~ If you di&gt;n't . balls," he said. .
slstant general manager.
have happy players, you have • When he is happy, there are
Brooks had 'been unhappy a problem."
.
, few wide receivers who can .
with his five-year contract.
Brooks had lashed out at match Brooks. In 1977 he
Brown for refusing to renego- •. caught 39 passes; tops on the
tlate his contract,: f!e had.felt team, and averaged 19.8
that Brown didn't understand · yards a catch, ranking
'the players and bad ·no corn- among the \eague leaders.
.
· passion for them.
.
Last · year , though, he
That feeling has changed, · slipped to just 30 receptions lri
Brooks said, adding that he
·
believes Brown has matured - - - - ' - - - ' - - - - -

.

"\I.'

'·

BengaJs' Brooke happy again ·
'~hich

'

'

"'Reds

estim~~ hav~ ~~

~.;;n,:tllat~liialuded

cut.

111-DRI
PAPEI
-TOWELS

five more

·as an executive, gaining an ·

understanding
of . the
peychology of a team.
Today In HistOry
"I think Mike realizes the
By
The
Associated Press
ci~NNATI (AP) _ The. .players · need him as more
Today
is
Monday, April 2,
Cincinnati Reds · have an- tha~ just a management
the
92nd
day
of 1979. There.
nounced five more sql!ad ftgure but as a friend," he
273
d~ys left in the year.
are
cuts, . lowering their total said. "He realizes he's as
ToCiay'&amp; highlight ·in
number of players to.• 26 , one much a ·part of, the team as
·
history:
'
above the opening day limit. the players are. Why, the on~y
On this date in 1917, PresiSent to · th~ Red&lt; minor ·
dent Woodrow Wilson asked
league complex SUnday were
Congress to declare war on
pitcher&amp; Mar.io · Solo and
Germany, saying the world
LAFF-A·
DAY
Manny Sarmiento, catcher
must be made safe for de·
Don Werner, and infielders .• •
mocracy .
Harry Spilman ·and Ron
On this date:
Oester.
.
In · 1792,
Congres,.
The Reds also llllllOWICed
established the U.S. Mint. '
that
outfielder
Gene
In 1865, during the Civil
Locklear, In camp m a nm- ,
War, Confederate Preslctent
rost'er basis, was qfler~ • a ;:
Jeffer110n Dayis and most of
contract with the club 's
his Cabinet ·fled from
• Indianapolis minor Jeaglie
· Rjchmorad, Va.
team, hilt turned it doWil and
r&lt;---&lt;-~ · In 1882, outlaw Jesse James
left camp:· ·
·'
' .._
ot·l
.w~s shot and killed by . a
:rlJe Reds open their season .
, dear, run ·outside and member of his · gang_in St . .
I\ t;ap,sday agalnat the San
Joseph , Mo.
\9' 1o pl~y . " •
.Fraliliisco -Gianf'!.

players:

'

"
·'

'
''

''

~

president of the Ohio Eta Phi
· fChapter of Beta Siglllll .Phi
:Sororit-y at a meeting held

. Big, jumbo size for
- better • absorption!
103, 2-ply sheets ·',.,
per roll,

,.I$#,

.!us.t t
.•

Tuesday· night at tht" Mt~i~H

.

{lt ~nt : C:nnn it• J&gt;mlsnn . n '&lt;'tH'· · Clwryl Cruw , par linwn- that tlw Pmtleroy F.lmm·n - Mt·mln•rs wh~ ht•]pt.'(l with the

Inn.
ding S&lt;'&lt;T&lt;;tary :. C:arnl C:rnw.
Other nffi!'ers ele!'!ed wt•r.• · tmtsnrpr · Paltv PickPns
Kathy Cumrflings, vice p1·rsi-

Dieting di$aster? ??

('fll'l:t•spo;tdi ng •!-i('{'re1 a~·};:'

tarinn : ami N:uw1· Hill. dtv
•·nmu·il n•pn•st•nt:iti\'t'. · '
Sonya Ohlin t.:t'l' CJ JHHllln('l'd

(;trv ~d1111 tl i:-; not ctv&lt;-~ ilahlt• F.etsh•r Sl'Ctl tdethon wert'
for . c1 diSt·u d&lt;mt'l' , Mt•mhcn: ~tiwn tt volt• of thanks.
Asucrct selt•dinn ortht•l-{irl
W(Tl' n•mindt•d nf tht• EH stl•r
l'J..!I-! and hakt• seth• on April 14 lJf till' year was mmlt' and will
wi th Pa&lt;'h nnt• to IJ;;Ikt• Ht lt•Hsl Jw. rmn oun cetl &lt;:Jt tht!
lwo items. The rillml i•f Founder's Oay clinncr tu bt.•
j ~' \\'t•ls b •:1 will he hn!-ill•d 1by held April 26 at the Meigs Inn .

!'""'H;t;;,H;iP"' I

K;tthy noitlg&lt;• at tht• home of

By ANDY lJPPMAN
concept . .
As-lsll!d ''tJreis Writer · For live years, their Clinic

US • . •By Helen Bottel:!

Ji ll Li1.on had thl' cultural

ht•r mothl'r, · Mrs. Lillimt repnr1 on the F.astcr theme .
Mnur:C on April. 22, 2 JUn . Sherri Abbott and Kathy

. CINCII'iNA'l'l ( AP)
; 'Warnlnil! ' Dlet111g can be
' hilzardoba to ypur' health.
~t'l the label three paychologlata have. put on what
they feel Is one of America's
most dangerous myths,
'~DleUng often does as
much lood, as holding your
!rea~," &amp;aid Wayne Wooley.
"It's contrary to what t.he
body Is geared to do."
"Whole lives can be coratrolled by . feelings of
fatness," added Wooley's
88110Ciate, Suaan Dyrenforth.
"It's a rny_th we all
participate ln. What we ask Is
that people qui! living In a
myth of aelf-ltatred and start
llvbtg in the real world.''
What
Wooley,
Ms.
Dyrenltr!h and Wooley's wife
· • Susan offer - Is a unique

. . Emma ·Clatworthy .
hOS· ts S'r.Jrtnettes

1
1
1 Calendar 1

___ --

.... .

~....,;-'

. :'llomerov:

.......

'

o. ·

r.Ji and Esthe r Vance Wl're married on March 26 at
Rm·ine, and J. B. Self, l.u~ her horne in Racine hy !he
Angeles, Calif. , son of Mr .. Rev. Edward Buffington.
The couple wa s attended hy
her daugh(ers, Bunni and
·Plans furthered for Tracy, Doug W•rden, Jean
andTre~ea Grueser.
Mr. and Mrs. Self will he
alumni banque~
alterna tin ~ their time bet-

'
Plan• for the Middleport
Alwnni Association banquet
and dance on May 26 were
furthered at a meeting of the
officers Sunday.
nonations are now heing
taken on a side of heef and
should he made to the presi·dent. Mick Childs, 992-8188.
Also for sale by the group are
Middleport· Yellow Jacket
souvenir T-shirls at $5· each.
These are a11ailable fr~m
Mrs. Cherole Burdette ,

·Clinic scheduled here

,. . . , . .

..

Wedding plans complete

I

t)

Reeves

VICToR LEIFHEIT
Victor Leifheit of Pomeroy
who has been irt the intensive
care unit at the Holzer
Medical Center a week, was
moved Friday into Room 435.

•
•

CHESTER_;Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Reeves, Sr. of
, Chester, are announcing the
birth of a son, Roher! Lee' ·
·Jr., March 21 at the HQlzer
Medica l. Center, Gallipolis.
The baby weighed eight
pounds and 11 ounces.
The infant is the first
gra ndson of Mr. and Mrs.
John Lee Roy Gillilan of ·
Chester. Paternal grand- .
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
,James C. Reeves of Wolfe
·Pen. Mrs. Ethel Johnson of
Portland and Mr. and Mrs. ·
Fred Tuckennan of Wolfe
Pen are great-grandparents.
Robbie has a brother; Bryan,
10, and a sister, Brandl, ten
months.

BULK
·sEEDS
NOW AT

CROSS HARIMARE .
..

\

Plus All
Gardening Tools :
eShovels
eHoes
-•Garden H'o se
eSprayers

u.n

·Rose Gardin Club met ·

ween here and California.

Announce birth

~

71

INGELS FURNIT.URE
&amp; ·JEWELRY
.

and Mrs. Cyrus H. Self;
Cumherland Furnace, Tenn.,

-,
_Social

., .

· · CROSS
HARDWARE
Middleport
9 : 00

to

S: OO

..

FRESH
STORE MADE

.
SLICED

will

SAUSAG~

LB~~39

$159·

GROUND.EF

BACON

_fl29LB.

CHUCK. ROAST

ARM$~~~T

Hel~ us write

$}49_1JI.

jootjl'llllll'lllli1'111111'111111'11111_...,..,..,..,..,..,._.,..,..,..,.1'11111U BEEF STEW

the book again.

-~~EHERE~

EGGS

$.}59 .

52e

12

W::f

QUALIT.Y

also

HOME

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE
.
.,.

•

,,

'·

•

r'

oz.,

ZESTA

72e

CRACKER·S

59e

BOX
FRENCH CITY

WIENERS
12 oz.

79e

REG. or DIET

SALE TIME

.

200 East,Miin

ffA Cl N F. -- Ms .
J ud y
Me(; raw, Raci ne, daughter of

.

Cummings were .hos le~scs .
for Eating Disorders . has
1:
been trymg to get people used
to the reality of their weight.
They offer no magic diets,
NOT ALLSTA'ff$ REQUffiE TESTS
no promise of weight loss.. In
OR
WAIT FOR MARRIAGE LICENSE
fact, after 15 weeks of going
BY
HElEN
BOTTEL
DEAR HElEN:
to weekly clinics, inost people
Please
settle
an
argument'.
My husband Insists that all states ·
1- •
show an average weight loss
require
blood
tests
to
get
married.
H~len,
we
were
married
in
·.
of four pounds.
The cost of treatment at the Marylal\d in 1952 and I know we did not have blood tests. He
clintc; which ill part of the de- swears we did.
If I'm right, please tell me what other states don't require
partrnent of jllychiatry at the
Emma K. Cla tworthy Gertrude Mitchell. .
such
tests. - "RIGHT"
University of Cincinnati
Next meeting will he on 992-7143.
hosted
a meeting of the Twin
College of Medicine, Is $45 per DEAR RIGHT:
Your signature says it: Maryland (as of my 1978 almanac) City Shrlnette recently with Apri125 at.the Meigs Office of
week for either a lw&lt;Htour
Mrs. Cora · Beegle presiding the Athens County Savings
group sessim or a · one-hour still does not require blood tests for marriage. Nor does Min- at the meeting. ·
and Loan Co. Reported ill
nesota,
Nevada
or
South
Carolina,
unless
recent
laws
have
individUal session.
were Mrs. Jean Moore, Mrs .
.
The
Lord
's
Prayer
opened
What the clinic doeS offer is changed things.
Mary
Grueser, and Mrs. Iri s
the
business
session
during
Incidentally, more than 20 states do not insist on a waiting
peace. of mind. The clinic's
Kelton
. Refreshments of
which
time
remembrances
message is simple: If It feels period between application and issuance of the marriage for sick members were cake, hot- fudge dessert and
good to eat that hamburger, license. ~ H.
di s~ ussed .
The sprin g coffee were served. The
·maybe it would be better to
ceremonial was announced Easter theme was carried out
go ahead and eat it instead of DEAR HElEN.
in the table decomtions.
trying to atarve.
'
By accident I discovered my husband and sister were sex- for May 5 at.Columbus.
Twila
Childs and Florence
·
Gifts
were
given
to
those
In fact, the triq has foWld ually attracted to each other years ago. I suspected then, but
..
Wells
wereguests. Attendl ng
who
made
and
wore
an
that dieting seldom does' any thought they'd be honest enough to tell me.
besides
those
named were
Easter
bonnet
to
the
meeting
~-~-~--.
good in the Joog run for many
We went out together a lot and they confined their flirtation
Mrs.
Clara
Adams,
Mrs. BarMrs.
Mary
Hughes,
Mrs.
of their clients.
to parties. He's sorry but says they didn 't think they were dobara
Dugan,
Mrs.
Lora
Beegle,
.Miss
Shirley
Beegle,
"Being hungry seta off an · ing anything wrong, as they never went all the way. •
Byers,
Mrs.
Mary
Bowen.
Mrs.
Beulah
J=:wing,
and
Mrs.
evolutionary alarm, a panic
It's long over, butl can'tforget. I'm sure my friends are still
I;; • •
reaction far stronger, laughing at me. Help.- DEPRESSED CRY BABY ·
?. )(r1j'
t• ..
.
because it is
more DEARCRYBABY:
fundamental than any
Can you truthfully say that over the years you have never
" ' ,._.-.
motivation to become thin," fell attracted to another man? So why blame your husband and
~ONDAY
Ma. Byrenforth aald. "'I'm sister for a mild flirtation that never went anywhere, and is
A blood pressure clinic to oldest member. Mrs. Y~.~~l:ta&lt;;.}WuZ, ~~~~ . going to starve!' the alann long gone? If you haven 't also been tempted, you're not be held on April 19 was an - Mc-Grath announced a rumRobert
nounced when the Harrison- mage and balre sale to he held
, Mrs. Julia Hysell, 7:30 Mon- S8yll. The body fightS back. It human. Forget it -as yourfriends already have! -H.
on
May
4
and
·S.
Next
club
.
viii~ Senior Citizens held a
'd
nl hl with M E'l
~ls to live."
•
: ay g
rs . . 1 een
All of the 200 patients the DEAR HELEN:
meeting Tuesday eve~ing at meeting will he on April 24.
Ice creMm and ca~e were
' Searles, hosles!ltrio bas seen in the past five
When I was 19, I experimented with um.The last time I took the town hall.
·' B .' ·H. SAN110RN Mis- years have something_ in thisdrugoranydrug,lfoundoutlwaspregnantafterwards.
Mrs. Minnie McGrath, vice served to Mr. and Mrs. Norsionary Society, 7:30 Monday common. All have spent a
I was terrified throughout my pregnancy that something president, had charge of the man Will, Mr. and Mrs.
evening, Middleport First lifetime trying to lose weight. would be WJ'I)Ilg witfi the baby, but he was born very healthy meeting during which time Henry Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
Baptist Church, annual
And they have all run the ahd remiiins so.
'
Frances Young and Mrs. Clair Waggoner, Mr. and
fellowship tea. ~- Betty dietary gaunUet while trying
Even thougl) thi~ happened years ago, I'm ashamed and em· Frances Alkire were welcom- Mrs. Ernest Carr, the Rev .
Fultz to be the guest speaker to achieve the ideal of the barrassed to ask my doctor about eventual effe&lt;;ts my ·son ed as new members. Arinual and Mrs. Otis Chapman,
on her trip · to China and slim American. In faCt, no coul&lt;l have. •
dues were collected by Mrs. Eliza Powell, Dorothy Boggs,
Japan last year.
one can enroll .in the clinic
Please tell me if he could have troubles 'with chromosome Grace Turner, treasurer. Ora Carsey, Frances Young,
· R-AciNE ~R 134, until they have tried a darnagewhenhemarri.Sandhaschildrenofhisown.-C.B. Quarterly . birthdays were Frances Alkire , Bessie
observed with ' Henry Turner Graham, Hazel Stanley, Min·
.. Order ·of Eastern Star, reputable diet program.
DEAR C.:·
each hit two-run homers to
receiving a gift for heing the nie McGrath, and Mrs.
_,
regular
session,
Monday,
7:30
"UIJ!ng
thebreath
.lrnage
If
your
son
is
perfectly
healthy
now,
don't
sweat
chances·
of
lead the Pittsburgh Pirates
. Reiser. ·
o.m.
1\fUOnlc
Temple.
Jnitla.
again,
we
try
to
get
to
later
trouble
via
the
one
tab
of
I.SD
you
took
when
you
con¢eivpast the Cincinnati Reds 14.
Steve HendersOn ·and Lee
tion practlee and offiCers to bl:eathe a little leaa each time ed.
MazziiU hit homers as the .
: I wear chapter dresses. CCA ' uDtil It becomes a habit,"
But do confide in your ·doctor. His professional opinion will
New York·Mets defeated the
: potnls w be, taken to the said Ms. Dyrenforth. "They . be much more reassuring than the words of ah advice colll!"TUPPERS PLAINS-A pro- to mak~ arr~ngements for
: meeting. Dues are payable.
learn to conirol thell: ·tntake nisi. -fl.
·
"
Phil,delphia Phillies :;.1.
Lee May hit two [!omers
and boost their self-esteem. n
gram on ''Growing Your Own the sports banquet at Eastern
d 8 d bl
., S A L E M C E N T E R
When a typical clinic group
11
Perennials from Seeds" by High School. Mrs. Leota
•·
an
ou e to pace the
•
TWtJ In One Store
Education
Qrganlzatl~n- of a half-dozen pel'801ls Mrs. Doris Koenig was a Massar won the door prize
Baltimore Orioles to a 5-3
106 N. 2nd Ave.
. Middleport, .O. ·
meeting 7:30p.m. Monday at · mostly women_ gathers at
feature
of the March meeting · and Mrs. Floyd Stout, the
Yictory over the University of
Community Club Sponsor
the school wltb Thri81!t Goins weekly meetings, · they
Miami. San Diego's Eric
of
the
Rose
Garden Clup.held traVeling prize. ~ · ~
Plans have been comjlleted • Third Av,e., Middleport.
Rasmussen tossed · six
Dan Morrls.of the Central diacuaa the detailed records
The hostess served a
at
the
home
of Mrs. Fred
•I ; - and
The Rev. Steve Wilson will
Office; Meigs Local Olstrict, th • k t during the
k for the open church wedding
.
dessert
course to · the · 10
Goebel.
as speakers. Refreshment's
ey ve ep
wee ·
The recol'ds show when a of Miss Bunni McGraw and officiate. A. reception will
members
The
club
received
a
· wUl be served l public Invited. food was eaten and where It Doug Warden. The -wedding follow in the social room of
·ALL 1969 graduates of ; was eaten. The patient also wilt be an event of Friday, the church. T~e gracious
Meigs High School Invited to rates, on a f!Cllle of one to five, April6, 7:30p.m. at the Heath : custom of open church wlll be
attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m. how pleasurable it was to eat United Methodist Church, observed .
Monday at the Melg Inn each food item .
Meigs honor roll
rneetlni! room.
"We want to get ·the"
ALL 1969 gra&lt;lu es of pleasure rating up as high as
Principal John Mora has Making a grade of "B" or
MeigsllighSchool
vlted possible," said Wayne announced the Meigs Junior ahove In aU their subjects to
to a meeting at the elgs Inn Wooley.
High School fourth six weeks be listed on the roll were :
at\..7:30 p.in .. Mon. to plan
" One of the problems of grading period honor roll.
SEVENTH - Sherry Arwe resetve the right
lor'tl!
nlversai'y overweight people Is thetr
nold, -Bryan Betzing, ChriS
. diimer and dance In JIUle.
ideal Is not eaUng ·- the do care - no one can spend Burnette, Megan Cale, Robin
to limit quantities
SOUTHERN Local Athl.!ic feeling that when yod,'re their whole life being · Campbell, Monte Chapman,
eating, you're bad.n
_ ..~.. I p.m.
Carl Davies, Jim Farley, Tim
Boosters M.,.....;,.
someone else's ideal."
TUESDAY ·
· Overweight people often
Although it . offers no Frazier, Scott HyseU, Mary
-MIDDLEPORT GARDEN make things worse by calling miracle cures, the clinic's Jacobs, Paul Janey, Rho~da
!ollowers have beeh faithful. Jeffers, Mike Kennedy, Keith
CIub , Tuesda y, 7:30 p.m. at attention to themselves.
,
the Mlddleport fireholllle.
"They feel good when Among the 200 persons who Kinzel, Jack Kitchen, Vikkl
·FRESH
.
Mrs. Fred Kessinger and they're dieting beCAUie they have attended the clinic since Lamp, Mike Mourning,
Mrs. Rita Hamm
be • believe they'll undergo less It opent!!J, the dropout rate is Angela Myers , Tamm~,
H~M
Parsons, Kim Pauley, Jon
hostesses. Program by Mrs.
bll
·t·
.. w001
oraly four percent ..
ey
One person has been Perrin, John Powell, Angie
David BoWell. Display of · ·:d c cri IC 1sm'
Pratt,1 ' Christl Quivey,
,Audubon ~ird piints by Mrs. .
B~lng overweight and coming fOI" five years.
Riggs, Nick Riggs,
Christine
. trying to .Jive up to an often
The clinic's three' payJohn Davia. ,
Len Sayre, Vaughan Spencer,
CHESTER COUNCIL 323, , all-butlmpoaslble Ideal of ~~oglstg
~b~a~':':c~eyon · Paula Swindell, Kenny Sue
LB.
Daughters of America, Tues- . heing slim drives many of the '
Thomas,
Clinton
Turner,
day e p.m. Practice for dieters lnto nti of rage and JU! not out to'l!lilke a profit.
·•-· ti 1 nd stale
' When the clinic was Laura ·. ~nMeter, Zand~a
recelv • ., na 0118 a
sometimes Into anU-«&gt;clal featured on television Vaughlih, Bryan Zirkle.
· officer!! .. Good of ~er ~- behavior_
.
EIGHTH ·
Rowena
mittee to have .Uent aucllon.
"With many of tbeae people recently, Ita w&lt;rkers were
Initiation will be held. It's either 1oee we'""t or the . kept bUlly for a week -with Averlon , Jeff Baughman·,
hite
'5''
ealls from people asking for Karla Srown, !tobin BufMernber,sto·-rw ·
·hell with tt, and 1hey corattn;. information. AI one time, so fington , Cindy Crooks, Karla
XI
GAMMA
MU ually swing ~een these .many people wanted to join .DeMoss, Angela Farley,
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma . Phi two extremes, Wooley said. · Ita programs that It bad a.six- Brent Flnlaw. Becky HandSororlty, 7:30 Tuesday night
U losing weight Ia a much- month waltlri'g list ..
ley, Scott Harrison, Paula
at the Gu.Co. office' Cultural aoUIIht desire, maintaining ·· It has been dljficult to get Horton, Tom ' Kennedy,
program, "Keeping Score"' weight lli a.major concept at qualified people to teach at Natalie Lambert, Suzan
by Mrs: Carolyn Gruaer and the clinic. It's. not 80 bad to the clinic. The problem, those · Lightfoot, Scott Pickens,
Mr$. Iris Payne. Marilyn . eat Ice cream If It gives you in charge say, Is that too John Smith, Kris Snowden,
Grueaer · Andenon, Roberta ~e, the II'Ychologlsts many persona have deep- Paula Swisher, Joan Tanner,
Maidens, and Janet Peevley, say .- But maybe,:andy coulonld seated prejudices against fat Greg Taylor, Mike Tromm,
hostesses.
be cut out 11 It .. eaten Y .. le
a.
. Renee Willis.
Smaii- Gr••&lt;l~
' SUTTON- TOWNSHIP after an argument.
peop '
M~AT
Trustees Tuesday a pm. at
"Some of these people
Syracuae Municipal Building. beHeve there lli aornetlling
horribly wronc with them,"
.
(8,
, Dozen
SIGN·UP of '!iYraciase - ~- Dyrenforlh aald. "They
M 1n era vIlle . Baseball ate surprised to see.how little·
Association Tuesday, from 5 they are eating.''
•
'p.. to B p.m. at Syracuse
The trio argues that'many
· Your new telephone directory is going t~.pr~ss very soo.n.
Munlclpa,l building. people eat food .like ·yoeurt .
RegistraUon fee f5.
only becaliae they ihlllk It's
· So now's the time to make any changes you'd like in the · · .
good for them. It might be
FINE ASSORTMENT
way you're Iisted.
·
WEDNESDAY
better, they IU'gl!e, to eat a
SOUTHEASTER~ Ohio food they like and cutdown m
Is your narne shown the vvay you want it to be?
OF STORE 'SLICED
Garden
Tractor Club will another sweet that Will! eaten
Woold·you like a listing for another member cit your house·
meet at.Bp.m. WednesdaY at In
·
hold_ (your SP-&lt;JliS~ or kids or relatives or io-l.aws)?
·
the Scout BuUdlni behind tl!e
the cltnlc
offers
LUNCH MEATS
flrebouae ln .:..Ches!er. All Is the alternative of tllaylng
. If you'd l.ike to make any changes or add a dual name
interested persons are in· fat and liking It, a radical
:.
listi~g, now's the time ,to do it.
·
vltf"'
concept for any clinic ,of Its
Just call .our business office and find out what the
POMEROY LODGE 164, F. kind.
charges ar.e, if any.
'
and
A. M., regular meeting, · Susan Wooley Is ·uvin,g
•
'
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. All ·testimoray to the concepts
master masons invited to at' success . The 35-year-&lt;lld .
,,
tend
woman has been through II
·'•
·
·
allliying to Ioee welght;but
TinlRSDAY ·
nothing worked. She has
LAUREL CUFF BETTER . ·jiCCepted her weight and Is at_
. ' HEALTH' CLUB, 7:30 Thurs-. .eaae with .herSelf.
dliy, at the home of Mrs. Pal·
"If the people you cld'e
.I Iy Eichinger. Mrs. Marjorie about don't care, what's there
.
Goettlo be co-hostels.
to Worry about? And If .they

.

..

•

Tonya Davis was elected

;:.========~~~~~--~--~~--~~~==~=

Ben Franklin :
Desk Collection i

Marriage announced

..Sorority ·elects president Tuesday

''

his

Pro Hock!y · ~

At AGlance

·Angels slap -7-4 loss on Dodgers

Philadelphia 7. New York

Atlantic DiVision
W. L. Pet. GS

m

''I

Atl clnt~ 7, Pi tt sburgh 2

Eastern Conference

Reds, ·7-6

•

S41.nday•s Games

National Basketball
Association

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Apr. 2,1!179

7-UP
1-16 oz,
"''tfles

gge

PIUS ta.c
&amp; deposit

•
•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mon~Apr. 2, 1!179 ·
FINANCIAL REPORT
To taiTrans'fers
1.600,00
OFTOWNSHIPS
To ta l ReV enu e ·
For Fisul Yeu Ending
Rec e ipts &amp; .
Oec . ll , 1971
Trans fer s
99,259.95
Chester Township
· Tol.al Be o innino Ba lttn cc
Melg' Count&gt;t
Pl us R ece ipt s
108 ,149 .88
Chtster.. Ohio
Elpendltures
~
March~·· 1979
Salar ies ana wa~ e s .- s , 1~9.f l
1
ce rl il v the follo w ing
Boa 116 ,Food &amp; r. ood Ha n dl ing
r epo rt to t:l e corr ec t .
Aeclne, Otdo,.S771
Suppl ies
5S.269 .5S.
Fr ederic k M Tulfl c
MarcPI 21. lt79
Ot he r E" xp .
• 689 .77
Townsh ip Cle rk
t certify the follow ing Jot a I E x p.
101 , 100...." '3
Tel . No . 98.S".dl 68
report to be correct .
Transfer S To
SUMMARY OF CASH
· Linda J . Spencer Ge ne ra l
1,600.00
B.ALANCES, A ECEtPTS
614 ·9•9·'1700 Tot al Transfers
1.600 .00
AND EXPENDITURES
Cash Reconclll•tlort
Bal., Dec . 31, 1978
5.4&lt;4 1. 25
Balance Jan . 1, 1978
Total Fund Balance$
Total E x p. &amp;
General Fund
S856.52
Dec . 31 . 1978
$152,d8 .00
Transfers Pl us Bal..
Motor Ve hi cle License
Depository BaiJince!l
Dec . 31, 1978
108,149 .88
Ta x Fund
159.88
Racine Home National
Building Funds
Gasoline Ta x Fund
1,063.11
Bank
135 .21 2.77 Bal .. Jan . I , 1978
' .46,061 ,68
Cemeterv Fund
2,365. 1&lt;4
SUb · Tot•l Depository
~·euiph
Cemeterv B_equest
Balances
13.5 ,21 2.77 Interest ~- Ina c t ive
Fund
· 512 .92
Investments :
Fund!!
1,312 .00
Fire Pro t ection Fd .
29 .63
Certlf lcatu of
Total Receipts
1.31 2. 00
Federal Re1.1enue
Deposit
19 ,211 .65 Total Beginning Balance
Sharing Fund .
10 .00
Sub ·Total
Plus ReceiPts
.-7,373 .68
M is c ellaneous F,..nds
82 .47
lnvestmehts
19 ,211.65
Expenditures
Total Receipts
Cash On Hand :
Build ing s
1,765 .56 , General Fund
17 , 157 . 9~
Total
15&lt;4,&lt;12&lt;4 .•2 New Eq1,.1ipm ent
13,980.84 ·
Motor Vehi c le License
Outst11nding Warrants
Other
)2,Jo4Q.54
·T a x Fund
11.•71 .89
Dec . 31. 1978
Total Exp .
28.086.94
Gasoline Tax Fund u .•oo.oo
tOeducl)
1,976 . .42 Bal. , Dec . 31.1978
lf.286.7&lt;1
~oad and Bridoe
' Reconciled Balance
Total Exp . Plus
Fund
..
S.218.62
Oec . 31 , 1978
152 ,-ue.oo
Ba l. Dec . 31. 1978 47.373 .68
Cemetery Fund
3.352.56
SUMMARY OF CASH
E .S.E .A. Title I
Cemeter¥ RPn ll _,t
BALA~CES , RECEIPTS
Bat., Jan . 1, 1978
.-2,960 .05
Fund
2 1 1~Ht
AND EXPENDfTURES
Receipts
Fire Protect ion Fd . 2,377.56
Gener•l Fund
Federal SubsidV
77 ,065 .00
Federal Revenue
Balance Jan . 1, 1978 16.88• .91 Total Receipts
77,()65 .00
Sharing Fund
6,353. 00
Total Receipts
1,138,7i9.06 Total Beginning Ba!11nce
Miscellaneous Funds •93 .00
Total Rece ipts &amp;
Plus Rece ipts
120,025 .05
Total Rece.lpts ·&amp; B1111ncu
Balances
1,155,693.07
.
Expenditures
General Fund
18,01&lt;4.50
E•r.endltures,
1. 135,681.82 General Admin istra11on
Motor Vehi c le Lic~ns'e
Ba .,Oec . 31 , 1978
19,922 . 15 Selar !esandWage!l 1,0.57 .0()
Tax Fund
. 11 ,031.77
Dls•dv•nt•ged Pupils
Other Exp .
87 .85
Gaso.line Tax Fund 15,.63.71
Progr1m
ln!ltroction
, Road and BridQe
Balance Jan , 1. 1978 2, 627 .3,9 Salar ies and wages 56,675. 36
Fund
5,211.02
Toto I Rectipts ·
18 ,399 .00 Other Exp.· · ·
2.927.48
Cemetery Fund
5,111 .50
Total Rec:eipts ._
Capital Outlay
Cemeterv... Bequest
Balances
21.026.39 Nil!'w E;quipment
113.82
Fund
2,738.78
Expenditures
5,437 . 19 Total EMp,
. 60,861.51
Fire Protection Fd . 2,407'. 1.9
Bal., Dec: . 31, 1978
1.5,589.20
Tumsfers To
.'
Federal Revenue
lond R•tlrement.
General
9,872.67
Sharing Fund
6.363 ,00
Bal. , Jan . 1. 1918
36.40• .57 Total Transfers
9.872.67
M iscellaneous Funds 575 ... 7
Total Rece ipts ·
82,096.35 Total Exp. &amp;
Expenditure•
Total Receipts &amp;
Transfers
70,73 ... 18
General Fund
, 15,902 .71
Balanc:es
119, 100.92 Bal .• Dec . 31. 1978
49,'290.87
Motor Vehicle License
E•pendlture!l
76,183. 13 Total Exp . &amp;
•
Tax Fund
12,102.92
Bal., Dec . Jl, 1978
.e2,917 .79
Transf.er, Plus Bal ..
Gasoline Tax Fund 12,016.-41
LYnch Room Fund
Dec . 31.1978
120,0?5.05
Road and Bridge
Bal., Jan . 1,1978
8,889.93
E.S.E.A. Title IVB
Fund
•• 186.06
Total R:eceipts
99 ,259 .95
Receipts
Cemeter~ Fund
•• 769 .97
Total Receipts &amp;
Olher Federa1 .S ubsides
Cemeterv Bequest
Balances
108 , 1.49.88
2,896.00
Fund
2,218 .72
EMpenditures
102,708 .03 Total Receit:~ls
2.896.00
Fire Protection Fd .
2,,.07. 1fJ
Bat. , Oec . 31. 1978
5.••1.25
Transfers From
.Misc:; ellane·o us Funds 571.66
Buildint Fund
Genera 1
370 .69
&amp;•lance Dec. 31,1f78
Bal., J.n . 1, 1978
..6,061.68 Total Transfers
370.69
G.eneral Fund
2,111 .79
Total Receipts
1,312.00 Total Rece ipt!! and
Motor Vehlc.le License
,
Total Rece•pts &amp;
Transfers
3,266.69
Tax Fund
- 411 .15
Balances
•7.373 .08 Total Beginning Balance
Gasoline TaM Fund
3.... 7.30
E•r.endltures
28,086.9•
Plus Receipts &amp;
R.oad and Bridge
sa .• Dec . 31. 1978
19.286 .7•
Transfers
3,266.69
Fund
1.031 .96
IE SEA Title I
Elpenditurts
·
Cemetery Fund
947 .73
Bal.. Jan . I, 1978
42,960.05 l.nstruction
Cemetery Beauest
1$20.66
Tot•l Receipts
77,065.00 Other Ext:~ .
3,266.69
Fund
Total Receipts &amp;
Total E~~:p .
3.266.69
Federal Revenue
Balances
120,025.05 Total Exp . Pl~s Bal. .
Sh•ring Fund
3,662.81
EMpenditures
70,734 . 18 · Oec . 31 . 1978
3,266.69
Miscellaneous Funds
3.81
Bal ., Dec. 31,1978
•9,290 .87
BETWEEN FUND
tot• I
11,25•.31
FtNA~CIA.LREPOAT

OF "TH£ BOARD·OF
EDUCATION
For Fist•l Year End ing
Dectmber n . 1978
Southern Loca1
Schooi .District
Melgi County,

.

ESEA Tll!oiVb-IVC

Total Receipts
3,266 .&lt;49
Total Receipts &amp;
Balances
3,266.09
Expenditures
3,266 .09
Total - Balance
Jan . 1, 1978
1$3,788.53
Total - Total
Receipts
1,420,758 .05
TOtal &amp; Total Recetpt!l
&amp; Balance5
' 1,5U,546.58
trotal - Expenditures
1,422, 098.58
Total - Balance
Dec. 31, 1978
152,.ua. oo

CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS AND

Property Tax (Grossi
General-Real Estate

2•2.S9S.02

Tangible Personal ,1,0111 .37
Basic Allowance
783,302 .02
Vocational Education .C90.11

.Other RtYtnue
Total Rtctnut

51.'31 .07
117.96

RKIIPfS
• 1.113,715.32
RKtl,tt-Mtn•Rt¥tRu•

ACIIulfm.nts
· Refundl

a.

12.101.11

Total Non -Revenue
Rtctlpts .
12.101.11

DPPF
Tillo 1

Tnnsttn FrtM

762.19
9.112.67

Lunchroom
Tot• I Transfers
'fot•t Re-ceipts ·

1,600.00
12.23&lt;•.16
.

..,..., ..

tR•Ytnut,

a. Tranlfff'l)

Non -Revenue

1, U1,759.06
Total &amp;-olnnlne ' Belance
Plus Receipts 1.15S,603.97

...,

Total Admln\stratlon
Expei\CIIturts
37, 177. 23
Total tnsttucUOft
Expendlturts
60.5,319. 7\
Totef · Co ~Ordlnatt Activities
Expend}turts
5,571.23
Totll Llbr•rv
Expendlturll
12.•3•.59
Total Pupil transp.
Expendlturet: · t2.16S.67
Totar School Pl ,~tnt
Operation !Exp .
"5,661 .•2
Total SChOOl Pltnt

Molnl. EKp.

12.996.11

Total Otf\er Auxmarv
Expenlt
112. 598 .••
Total Gtntrat Fund
Debt. Serv .
37, 009.06
Tole! ExPtncutures

1.133.111.13

Transfers To
Lunchroom
'
1,600.00

TllloiV·B

.

370.69

Total Transfers
· 1,970.69
Total G~er,al Fund
Exp. and Transfers

1.135.681.82

Genenl Fund Bat. ,
Dec. 31, 1978
19,922 .15
TotJI Exp. and
Transfers Plus Bal.,

Dec. 31, 1971

1,155.603.97

Dltadvantaged Pupils ·
p ·rogram F11nd
Bal., Jan. 1, 1978
'2,627 .39
Revenue Receipts
State SUbsidy
18,399 .00
Total Revenue
Receipts
18,399.00
total Beginning Balante
Plus Receipts
21,026 .39
Expenclltvres
General Administration
salaries and wages
350.00
Instruction
Other Exp .
657 .59
Health
Salaries and Wates
2,582.91
Other Exp.
I,OU .50
· Total Exp .
...675.00
Transfers To
. General
762 . 19
Total Transfers
762.19
'Total Exp . &amp;
Transfers
$,~37.19
Bat..• Dec~31. 1978
15,589.20
Total EJ&lt;p . &amp;
Transfers Plus Bal.,

Dec. 31, 1971
· 21,026.39
Bond Retirement Fund
Bal.. Jan . 1. 1971
36.40'-57

Receipts
Propertv Tax (Gros9'1
Generaf-Re&amp;l Estate

·

58.87S.I6

T anglble Personal
6;066. 97
Other Non -Revenue 11,15A 22
Total Receipts
82,696.35
· "Total BeelnninQ Balance
Plus Receipts
11.9,100.92
EXpenditures
Fetl &amp; Cherges
Withheld - TaJ&lt;
,
Settlement
1,518. 13
lnterett On Bonds
31.U5.00
Bond Rfdemption
36,000.00 .

Tolal Exp.
Bat., D~.ll, 1978
Total Exp. Plus

76.183.13
76,183. 13
·

aal., Dec. 31,1f7.8 119,100.92
Lunclu•Mm FYnd
oat .• Jan. 1, 1f71 '
. 8,889 .93

discuss several
activities
at recent .rf!,eeting
.
.

.

f.'O~LY'S· POINTERS

S4 '\'t•ral

e1divitit•!'

wt•n·

Tlw F.:tsft•r bakt• sol It· wa s .Juanilu , French, secretary ,
Hl111t&gt;11tlt't'l for April1 4 ill tlw Re• ·ky Triplett, treasurer ;

.

ple. - VIOLET
DEAR POLLY - My son
lht• M('iJ{s ·rnunty .JHyt't't'- .Jnm•:-; Ruy!-i Cnm1 9 cm1. tn Slwlly Clark, ways · and
and my folks both use ~"'
••fl t•s held at lhe Mei~' Inn.
111wm . Mav 12 is tlw• Mother 's means; Cindy Smith, publici·
DEAR POLLY - Is it possi·
Mrs. J tossit• Mi~hl of tht• · Oay pla~it sale at the New ty, Mrs. Might. Penny · ble. to remove a S&lt;orch spot guest' room on alternate visits
llike&gt;it·lhon for thl' mentally York rJolhing linus.. from· 9 Mullt•n, J•nna Amott. Connie from polyester knit pants? ,.. but my son smokes and my
parents do not so the pillows
rt•tardc'l was prcl't'nt • to :un. to 12 noon. Plans were · A!triche, Barbliacketl, Carla B.P. .
smell like cigarell~ S~Doke.
clisruss tht• group'!-i pHrtiripa- ;t)so made for thl' Regatta Md''arland, C!trol Ault and
DEAR B.P.- Heavy scorch Now when I make up the bed I
Unn. They wert• asked ln paradt• and a disen dance to Shelia Rl"eVes.
marks cannot be removed. put a fab~ic softener .sheet
assist with deliver ing lw held on June~ from 9 p.m.
Next meeting will be on · ori those that do not seem to ·such
as goes in the dryer on ,
refreslunenls to the ' rest tn 1 n.m.
,.
April 10 at 7:30 in Middleport · be really burned you might each pillow and then pu)l the
spots. T!le bike&gt;it·thon will be
Attemling the meeting were ~~ the Jaycee . Hall. New try dampening a cloth wi.th bedspread over il After a few
held on May 12.
Nancy Burns, president ; . membersarewelco!lle.
peroxide. d..ay this oo the .· visits I use the softener sheets
scorched spot, cover with in t!le drye~ and put new ones
another pressing cloth and on the pillows.- EIJ;:ANOR
. Iron over it with iroo set at
Polly will send you one of
the hottest setting for your . her signed · tha'nk-you
particular type of fabric. newspaper coupon clipper.; lf .
seminars in the mornings and · Alumni University, 6268 ·ALWAYS test first .to.see ef· she . uses your favorite
By LOUISE COOK
Auoclated Press · Writer leave afternoons free for Thurston Ave., Ithaca, N.Y., feet of anything on · dye and Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
.
Thousands of American cultura) or ·o ther leisure 14850.
fibers ln material. -POLLY
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
activities.
The
University
of Oregoo ·
famllies ·are spending
DEAR POLLY- When you POINTERS ln care ·. of this
1
Here isJ!Iook at some typl- sponsors two programs.- the cannot open .a drawer
summer vacations studying
Family Vacation College, because something in it is newspaper.
everything from European cal vacation colleges:
The Cornell Alumni July 1~20 and the Grace sticking up, try using a panhistory to the human braln.
They skip traditional Universlly . expects 1,000 Grahain Vacation College, cake turner. lt'will reach in
holiday sites llke the seashore adults and .500 children to for adults and high.;scbool- and push tj1e offending 'item
and move Into college . enroll ln courses over a six- age children only, Aug. 1:1-19. down so the drawer will open.
The topic for adults ln the -HENRIETTA
dormitories
to · take week period beginning July 1.
advantage of programa that · Cornell is offering three family program will be: "In•
DEAR POLLY - I found
mix · education and enter- maj&lt;r courses and a series of timacy: Communlcatl9.ns that electric blankets are too
tainment for both adults and wrkshops . The major and
the
Relationship short to tucl&lt;'in if the blanket
children. ·
courses- each of which lasts Process. •• The chai'ge ·for is pulled up to cover one's · By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roy
Most vacation colleges are a week -are: "WillS, Trusts adults is $175; the fee for shoulders. So'I tore about half
of
Racine visited Mrs. Ett
sponaored by alumni 11880Ci· &amp; Strategy for Estate children 5 to IBis $70 and the oh worn-out top sheet that is.
Warner,
Sunday.
~tims, but are open to the Building;" "Without God, cost for yoWlgsters under • is tbe same width as the blanket
,
Mr
.
and
Mrs: Russell
general public as weD as to Why Should I be Good?: The $35. Prices Include dormitory and sewed this strip to the ·
&amp;ush.
were
dinner
guests of
graduates. Individual Greek Enlightepment;" and accomodations and cafeteria, foot of the electric blanket.
Mr. arid Mrs.t&gt;ana Lewis and
Beasts
and style meals.
progralllll v8ry, but most "People,
Now there is ·plenty to' tuck ·
feature
lectures
and llfachlnes: What Does It
The Grace Graham college ·under and the bed does ntt attended a (jasketball game
MeantoBeHwnan."Thereis. wlU oHer two. courses: "The · have to be completely re- at Wahama~ Hlgh School .
a special program for YOUR¥· Human Braln: Nature's De- made every day. This is where. thelr son, · David
On the lightSide
sters 3 to 12, as well as fense Agalnal Stress?" and especially good for tall pea- Roush, was one of the
courses for teenagers.
"Paradoxes of Social Life." _ _ _ _ _...;___ _ _ _ .players.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Hla H1g1a Tlmeo are Over
Tuition for adults is $230
The . baste fee, covering
{X)()PEJ\ CITY, Fla. (AP) per course; most workshops room, board, tuition and Mrs. Jack Codner at the Roush and Cindy and Ed
- From where he sat, Bill are free. The tuition Includes some entertainment Pentecostal Church on Route were dinner guests of Mr. and
M«ibee had a good view of accomodations in the activities is $MD for a private 124,
Racine . Saturday Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
Jeremy, Monday.
"
Ibis Fort r..uderdale suburb, dormiiDry (two to a room), room and $230 f&lt;r a shared evening.
TRANSFER
CASH .ALANCE,
Mr.
and
Mrs;
Sld
Manuel,
but after A hours ln an &amp;by.a. meals and materials. Rooms room.
Information
Is
Ralph AShley Is a patient
RECONCILIATION
RICIIPTS AND
foot lhed atop an electrical wlth private baths are available from Vacation Col; at Pinecrest Nursing Home Long Bottom, were ·Swiday
From Fund
EXPRNDITUAIS
DPPF
762.19
IY FUND
pole, he wu glad to have his available at an adilltional lege, SUmmer Sessloo Office, and Is not at•the home of 'his guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Title l
,
9.872.67
.
GtJitnl Fund
feet
back m terra firma.
charge. The fee for children · U~iverslty . of Oregon, daughter, Jean Ashley, Manuel and Tim.
Lunchroom
1.600.00
Bal . , JltL 1, Jf71
156.52
McGhee, 35, made the is $135 per '!"eek. For In- Eugene, Ore., 97~.
General
1,600.00
-leulttts
Ravenswood, as was recenUy
General
370.69
Gtntral Proper t y Tt-'1 - ·
marathm poiHit 111 Friday fOI'IJllltion, C!Kllact Cornell
reported.'
,
Total Exp. Transfers
Real Est••• 1od
u .20S.55
Tralttr CG'r oss»
7,401 .55 and S.turday to raise mGiley
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilson
To Funcl
Tangible Pl!f'sonel PrOf:llrty for the hlch ICbool band he
spent a few days ivtth ·their
General
762 . 19 .
Ta• tGrOUI
.. ,o9S.O
dlrecta. From hla perdl, he
son, Ronald WUson ai the
General
9,872.67
Local Government lnd
General
1.600.00
Stete lncomt Tax 4,t61 .50 not lilly pulled In ••1100 fQr
home of Mr: and M.a. Charles
Lunchroom
t 1,600.00
Liquor Permit ftees
" ·$0 the _,up•a trip to a Mexico
Rl. 1, Middleport, 0 .
ByMrs. HerbertRousb
broke her shoulder. Her Burri at Bolivar Dam.
Title· tv . a
370.69
Total Receipts
17,157.91
992·6173
aty IIIUIIe feltlftl later t.1111
Sunday visitors of Mr. and · sister, Mrs. Elsie Shuler, is
Total Rec . Transrers 14,205.55
Total Bevlnnlng Bllance
Weekend guests of Mrs.
Warnnfl
Plus Rec:elph
11,014.50 llllllth, but wu the lint ID Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr :· and staying wlth her.
Pear! WnllB and Mrs. Helen
Datt
Bxpendlturtl
'..,.,i • fire at a nearby Mrs. Eddie Hupp and Mr. and Mrs. Wallle Morris Slack were .Mrs. Betty Webb
9·15-78
Total Expenditures
As low as
and ·alerted Jeremy,Mr.andMrs.Ernest spent Sunday .with Mr. and ·and daughter, Melody of West
Voucher Warrant No.
- Adminlitrlti\le U ,41•.e.c carnival
Book Entrv
- Town Halls, Memorial
flre!lghtera. The Friday Bush, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mrs. Walter Morris at Jeff&lt;!rsonandsister, Patty, of .
$}511 Sq '~.Yd .
From Fund
Bulddlngs and
afternoon
blaze
wu
doused
Title I - 033T78
Roush,
·Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dorsa
Flatwoods.
Grounds
.. 7.11
Columbus, Mrs. Mary 'J ean
To Fund
Grand Total Exp.
a~ter damacing . a I ew Parsons,
New Colors
Mrs. Ronnie
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley R111sell, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Titll I - 115179
- General Fund
1$,902.71
·.
concelalon
stands
and
Amouht
Wagner,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rocky
and
children
of
Colwnbus
Kauffman also of Columbus.
Bal., Dec . 31.1978
2.111 :79
Afriwjng WeeldJ:
32,150.58
Total E~~:p . Plus Bal.,
carnival vehicles.
spent a weekend with his
Hupp and son •J. R.
Purpos.
Dec . 31 , 1978 . •
18,014 .50
McGhee
got
aloog
with
a
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Carry Over
MotOr Vehicle License
aleeplng bag, chemical toilet, Roush spent Saturday Russell Findley.
Total Tr:S~'iTS~" 032.lso .•sa
BaL . J&amp;n . r,a ~j und
_
1 8
159 88
coffee pot, radio and evening with 'Mr. and Mrs.
Cindy Allen, Antiquity and
LIAIILITIES
.
Rtctlpts
television . set. Food was Dana Lewis at Clifton.
DEC. 31, 1971
Motor Vehicle Llcel'lse
. Becky
Michael · spent
AJSeh:
T IX
U.471.89
hoilted to him In a wicker
. .
.
Mrs.
&amp;ger
Roush
and
Saturtlay
night
with Mr. and
DI'~OSitorv Balances
Tote I Receipts
llr•71 .89
buket.
daughter, Klniberly, Mrs. Mrs. Roger Roush and
1.33,236.35
Total Beginning Balance
.
lnvHtmenrs
19,211 .65
· Plus Receipts
11,031.77 . . But he Isn't eager ID repe~t Charles Michael and Tracy. Kimberly .
Lend
d ,OOO.OO
Expenditures .'
the ordeal.
Pickett were visitors at Polnt
Mrs. Irene Riffle of .
Bui!Ciingl
3,959,600.00
Total EJICpctndltures
·
''That's like · asking a Ple~sant on Monday . . Mrs. Ravenswood, Lester Rhodes
Equlpmtf'lt
210,000·.00
.... Miscellaneous
3,212.00
Total ASHIS t
.. ,437 ,648 . 00 ~ ~~Maintenance · l,i89.9:2 person who got sick eating too
&amp;ush consulted her doctor at · of Cottagevllle, Harley
JacksOn Ave.
Point Pleasant
U•bllltits :
Grand . Tofal Exp . IIIIich Ice creain lf he woUld Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Acc:ountsPIVIble 1,420,122 .16
Motor Vehicle Licenae
Hoschar · of Leon, Bart
Bond lnd~ttdness •62,000.00
Tax Fund
12,102 .92
Uke to . eat aome · more,"
Mr. and Mrs. Doli Bell Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Note Indebtedness 35,750.00
Bal. , Dec . 3l, 1978
- •71.15
McGhee laughed.
visited Mr. and Mrs. Jolm AndersQn · were Saiurday
Total Ll•bllities 1,917,872.16
Total Expenditures Plus B"t:,
Excess of Asstts 2,519,775.84
Dec . 31, 1978
11,631 .77
Chaney at Pine Grove Friday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Total
4,.437,648 .00
Gualine Tax Fund
Here au Olllk, Tliere u OIDk evening, ·
Owen Anderson.
IndebtednessBal. , Jan . 1, 1978
1,063 .71
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) Part 1 Bonds
ReuiptS
Paul Cross spent a weekend
Donette Talbott was con·
Purpose for Which Debt
Gasoline Tax
1-4,400.00
The state Houae chambers wlth his parents, Mr. and fined to Veterans Memorial
Waf Created
Total Rec:eipts
1•.•00.00
echoed with what aomded Mrs. Andrew Cross. Mr. and Hospital due to a bicycle
Canst. - New High
Total Beginning Balance
lllte Indian war whoops last Mrs. Cross spent Sunday wlth accident. Visiting her S~mday
School
Plus Receipts
1$,463 .71
Outstandlnv Jan .· 1,
' Expenditures
week when legislators passed their son, Mt. and Mrs. were Mrs. Denise Manuel and
1978
98,000.00
Total Expenditures
a resolution urging Congress Edward Cr&lt;&gt;ss at Chiliicothe. Mrs. Edith Manuel.
Redeemed During
~- Miscellaneous ·
7,322.61
Year 19'78
10,000.00
-- Maintenance
&lt;4,093.80
lo allow Chief Turkey Tayac . Mrs. Andrew Cross entered
Here to attend the wedding
Balance Outstanding
Grand Total E~p. \If
the 1'18cataway Indian Holzer Medical Center of Christopher. HlU a~d
Oec . 31, 1978
82,000.00
Gasoline Tax F.und
tribe to be buried on land he Monday as a medical patient. Brenda Lewis Saturday at the
Int. Rate
'~'
12.016.•4.1
Maturity Year
198J
Bal., Dec. 31, 1978
3,447 .30
donated
to th~ federal
Additions to High
. Total Exp. PI!JS Bal.,
Mrs. Stella Jarrell of .Great Bend Baptlat Church
·
· Racine
SchOOl
Oec , 31, 1978 '
15,463 . 11 . govenunent.
IUTriiNUT F.INISt.l
spent a few days with and visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Outstanding Jan . I,
. Road 1nd Bridge Fund
Seasoned
legislative
her son, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Gerald Hayman and K~th
1'178
400.ooo.oo
Receiph
observers said the aounda Jarrell and family. . ·
Redeemed During
General Property Tax :..
over the weekend were Mr.
Year 1978
20.000.00
Real Estete end
added a new note ID a variety
Mrs.
Gertie
Manuel
and
,
and Mrs. Don Haym\Ul and .
BalanCe Outstanding
Trailer (Gross}
5,105 .55
of sounds that ~ve enlivened son, Troy, Racine, viliited Mr. chll!iren of Laurel, Md., Ted
Dec . 31, 1978
380.000.00
Tangible Person' I Property
In I. Rate
4.5
Tax {Grossi
112 ..47
House debates ln recent and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr. Hayman and family of
Maturity Year
1996 Total Receipts
5,218 .02
years.
Total Bonded Oebt Total Beginning Balan~e
and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and Westerville, Mark Hayman of
Almost any bill dealing son
Outstanding Jan .
Plus Receipts
5,218.02
Jeremy
Monday Carnelgle Mllllon College,
1, 1978"
-498,000.00
. Elptnditures
with dogs Ia greeted with a ev..:.lng. Corr~ Bass of Pittsburgh, · Mrs. Robert .
Total Bonded Debt Total Fxpendltures
chcirus of·"woofs" and other Clifton, Jlnuny and Billy Hart, Beth ADn .and Brice of,
Redeemed During
- M isc:ellaneous
1,099.46
Year 1978
30,000.00 1- Maintenance
2,-416.60
barking
sounds, .and bUI.s liupp spent the weekend wlth : !\acme, Mrs•. Gene Jewell
Total Bonded Debt
Grand Total Exp . dealing
With
feline laaues ihelr grandparents, Mr. and andtwochlldrenofLetart, W. ·
- Balance Outstanding
Road ·and Bridge
usuaDy elicit a "meow" or Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Dec . 31,1978
.-62,000.00
Fund
•.186.06
· Va.
Indebtedness Bal., Dec . 31,1978
1,031.96
two · from delegates. · BUI.s
Partl Notes
Tot§d Exp. Plus Bal .,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Norris,
Mrs. Helen Slack, Harry·
dealing with wcka anc1 8.... son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Shaln are surgical patients at ·
Purpose For Which Debt
O'ec . 31,1978
5,218.0:2
Was Created
Cemtttry Funct
draw a variety of bird calli, Norris returned to thelr Veterans Memorlel Hospital. .
Emergency School Levy
Balance, Jan . 1, 1978 2,365. 14
while · an uolnk" here and
R eOpenlng School "for
Recti ph
home ~ear Mt. Vernon after
Mr. and Mrs. 04111~ HU1,
Instruction
General Property Tax there signals consideration of spending
the
.
winter
in
Mrs.
Dolly ·Wolfe attended
OutstencHng Jan . 1,
Real Estate and
some · speclal-litterest, pork- Sarasota, Fla.
1978
71.500.00
Trailer (GrossJ
2.J77.56
the
weddlnfl
of Lee Ord,
barrel bond bill.
Total Note Debt
71.500.00 Sale pf Lots
97$.00
Mrs.
Flossie
Badgley,
a
daughter
of
Mr.
and Mrs . .
Redeemed During Veer
Total Receipts
3.35:2.56 '
There is also.an occasional former local resident now of Bobby Ord, Syracuse,
1978
•
35,750 .00 Total Beginnliig Balance
and
chorus of hooting, but thOile ln Racine, feU at her'homea','d Ml.ke Codner, son of Mt. and
Total Note Debt
35,750.00
PhiS Rece ipts
5.711.70
Balance Outstanding
E lpendltures
the know say It has nothing ID
.. Dec . ·31, 1978
3S, 'A~ . oo s" laries
3.393.96
do
with owls or any other ,----'"--""'!"---......._-_._.......;..___
Total Note Oebt
35,750.00 New Buildings and
Mtmor•nd• D•t•
Add itions
birds. It is, Instead, the
447.73
Tax Valuation
Tools and
respons'e of some male
Assessed
13,797 ,026
·equipment
817.15 delegates to an annooocmer1t I
School Tax in mills
Other Expenses
51. 13
per s.1 ooo Valuation :
Total Exp.
4,769 .97
by .a woman delegate about
6
lnsrde 1 Mtll
Bal.. Dec . 31 , 1978
9.117 .73 . the
Order of Women
limitation
3.50 Total Exp . ~Ius Bal. ,
di)oi('Ussed

durin ~

a 1m·t't inJ.,! nf

CHUCK
LB · ·1
·; 19
STEAK ••••••••••• ~ ••• .

PORK
SHOULDER
:~:: ..........~.! 139 ROAST........~~·~..

GROUND
BE.EF

Polly Cramer

.

Knit got scorched

.

.

ANY .SIZE
PAK

•

39

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS

$}69

· ~ .
HAM. ~m
........ .........
WHOLE, HAlf,

Fairview
News Notes

··~ ~

~

·

Co.u ntry Style Meal"

~ ~.-P-h-oo-~-u-l.S_e_k_ct-~-.-.----~~~-ID-AH-0----------~

CELERY .......•...........~~~~~.. 39e "POTATOES.........~~· .L.s~.~~~ ... $129

SAVINGS IN TOWN! ·

.APPLES •.. ~ .........• ~.~~!.K.~·.. 99~ .
DON'T'

'

( 4) 2, lfC

FAIItVIEW
Total Recelpls
2,165.86
Total Beginning Balance
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel
Plus Receipts
2.738.78
. ·
_
Expenditures
entertained with a party in E~pendltures ··.
h'onor of thelr . daughter,
Nonre$trlc1ed
MOO.OQ
Robin's 5th birthday. At- , e'lf:s'l~ /~¥;~s 218.72
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Total E•p.
2.218.72
l::harles McNlckles. Robin ·f~/;; 1 o;~i&gt;3 1 r./~~8 Bal .. · S20.06
was preBellted .a birthday
Dec . 31, 1978
2.738 .78
cake and nlce gifts. Sending
Flro Prolocllon Fund
Ba l., Jen . 1. 1978
'29 .63
gifts were J ason, Terrl and
Rocolph
.
David Shain, Charles · and General Properly Tax Real Estate and
Lorraine·Pyles, Flossle Buah, . Tra
iler 1Grcss1
2.377.56
Don and Edna Kuhns.
Totat Receipts
2.377 .56
Total Beginning Balance

.... lpll
'
PliJs.Reccipts •.
2.•.-07 . 19
sale c;f LYnthei '
35.913 .78
·
. EJ~pitnditures
Slate Subsidy
· 61.746.17
C'on·t racts
, 2,J56.0'
In 1144, Soviet force's . Other Expensos
23.14
·
Yotal Rev,e nue
9
7•659 .95
Re~elpll
entered · Romania :durln.g Totol E•p. · · · 2.•,07 .19 .
Transfers· From
·
W~ld War D.
·
Total Exp , Plus Bal., · .
General
1.600.00 . .,..
Occ . J1 , 1978 ·
· 2.~07 . 19 ·

10.00

Contracts- Total EMp ,
BilL , Dec. 31 , 1978
Total Exp . .Plus Bal.,
.
Dec .. 31, 1978
• . 6,36:1q )O
Anfi· RUetSIOft
BaL. Jan .' l , 1978
82 .47
' Receipts
Other=
,
TOtal Receipts
.T otel Beginrilng Balance
Plus Rece ipts
. 575.•17
Expenditures
Salar ies.
571.66
Totlll Ex~
571.60
Bal ., D.cc .. 311 1978
3.81
Total. ' E:xp . Plus 8~ 1..
! Ope. 31, \97,
575.

with

.

Dow Corning Silicone
RubbefSealants
~=::::,

•

Long lasting
• ·Waterproof
• Weather tight bond
• Choice of paintable, white,
clear or Bathtub Caulk

'Ofter opplin to :artrtdgel olelflcono rub'l&lt;tr
, s..llnta and silicone rubber bllhtub caulk.
'·Cartridge. Now .55.49
Ratund
Your Net Prlce,.$4,74

L•••

-·.?s ·

. SAYRE .

'HARIMARE
New Haven, W. Va. ·

.

·SWEET POTATOES ••.• ."••.••~.~.&amp;ge

JOAN OF ·ARC

KIDIIEY
BEllS

'

'

15 \12-0Z.

MAXWELL HOUSE

.8 PAK 16 oz. B1lS.

CHEESE

Pkg .

I I

, REGUlAR, DRIP,
.PERK OR

L.B.

..

.· .

:J

TOWN HOUSE

CRACKERS

HALVES'
.

.

.

16 OZ. CAN·

..

49c

DAIRY VALUES

or lOX

TIMElL)) CHA~...

PILLSBURY Lim~ 2 With Coupon

·~~~~~5

.-~

IFREEZER VALUF:!..j

PIES

16 Ol

..

~

z

Cafl

8-oz.

Pkgs.

$]79 ~
~

~

• ....... !1111

0

....... c.6111 fl oy•l IIIII StofU

t;

()() .800\~

PKG.

1h GAL

BORDEN'S SKIM OR

COUNT~

liMIT ONE·

.

CREAM ~OR,. STARQI ................ 2 ~~:: 49&lt;

••

BANQUET

BORDEN'S AMERICAN

SINGLES

25' OFF LABEL

.,

75&lt;

$IOO

/,~~!~Hw.~~·~

~

DETERGENT
•

,~~~1~"

' . .DOMINO .

.

~L

·.

.P~T EVAPORATED MILK .·.. :.:..... 2 ·'c·~~:

.,,,

I FROM lalnsco. I.

TIDE

~~~:z~

$119

limit two with coUpon

•

Pkg .

ARGO
SWEET
PEAS~ .•........ 3~~~ 89~
. JOAN- OF ARC PINTO OR
·GREAT
NORTHERN
BEANS4t~N°i$1 00
I'IE(:ES &amp;- STEMS· 3-DIAMOND
- - .
ROOMS
... ~ •••...1.~~.~~s
•

.T

ASSORTED VARIETIES

. · ·12 Ol BOX
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

FIG NEWTONS {18-oz.)

z ·:

;CAKE
.· MIXES

.
liSCO
WAFFLE CREMES ............................... ,to •• "•· 99 ,
'
· ""·79&lt;
NILLA WAFE.·as .......................1·························

. FOR

' J

•T

PILLSBURY PLUS

PEARS

s 00
4

7-oz.

Jumbo
Roll

II) oz. JAR

MONARCH BARnETT ..

CHOIQ PIZZAS 22 OL40$ OFF

aca·

1

;

Cans

KRAFT DINNER

WHITE &amp; ASST. or DEC.

19
$3
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••
$
A~••• 2 CAN 379
FOLGER'S

LIGHT or DARK REO

tiST ·

··

BUTTERMILK .•.. ~!~;.79~

ClASSE
·~
,,

GRADE A

MEDIUM
. EGGS:••••••~~. 59~

RIVIERA

· CHI.FFON

IR&amp;I.RIIE

Here's COUNTRY CLASSIC, nevteat member ol
Riviera's lamlly olllne cabinets. And what a beauty
n.ls. The grace·of arched cathedral doors, the subtle glow ol hand-rubbed hardwood "and the care!u!Jy coordinated hardware combine to make
COUNTRY CLASSIC live.up to its name. Coulltry.' atyle gone elegant, It Ia perfect with Amerlcl!n ·
trlldltlonallurnlture yet adaptable enough to be at
home wlt.h other styles. Riviera craftsmen even developed a 11Pt9ial stain to highlight the unusually.
hanilaome.ift'a(!\ .~ the k.!l&lt;!.tty alder hardwood.

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ..

CARDINAL

IC!C

1-Lb.

,

"

• L~;~DINAL FOOO SfO ES

\1~-Gal.
$109
Crtn.

CERUL·
,.,
.,

,. .
D

~~~

ou . . . . . . . . . . . .

•
•

I)'

TAYLOR

OFF .

I

I

~

' .

oo·it right .
.

j

··~'"'UST &amp; PEA.RL STREET-S
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'SALE

and save 75¢*

ALL PRICED LOW
ESPECIALLY FOR YOU

RGET U'S TIME FOR PLANTING '

'

TR.Aii.ER LOAD

owe.

WASHINGTON STATE EXTRA FANCY

90 SIZE

'

675-2318

Legislator~ -

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS- 2 to 2'h LBS. AVERAGE

SEED POTAtOES· GARDEN.·SEEDS ~ ONION ·SETS

211 9

Dec . 31 , 1978
$,717.70 ..
Cemetery Bequest Fund
6.00 Bal., Jan . 1, 1978 .
572 ,9'2
Receipts
Bequests
2,000.00
. , Interest
165 .86

"A Hearty Baking and Boilinl( Vegetable"

CARROTs ............. 41-LB. PKGs.$1

•

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

Outside 10 Milt
limitation
• 2•.09
B,pnded Debt Millage

Cr~am

"Boil In Butter or Dice 'n'

VAUGHAN'S

DALE'S

1

PORK BUTT ·RQAST•••••••.•••~~·••$1 39

"Try Our Fresh Prodli.Ce For That Down-Home

QUARTER PORK LOIN ....... :~; .. ~l 19

ODDS &amp;ENDS
. SHOP

50%

PORK STEAK.............Y!·•• $1 49

oz.

FRANKS.

New concept: vacation at colkge

Apple Grove NtMs .Notes

12

CARPET

EXP EyNfJ~~!IES
8
General Fun~ .
Bal .• Jan . 1, 1'78
16,844 .91
Receipts- R.... enue

Other Statt SubSICiitS

]aycee~ettes

'

$1 69

••

li mn on• wltft .......,.
D"ll CfiU~OII

0

D

~

'vo STORES

.• .

pe' . . . 1\'

Jet•I I) #It.): I

�..
.,. _?-The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Pmneroy, 9,. Monday, Apr.'£ !97J
IS-The U.tly Sentinel, Middleport-Pom eroy, O,, Mon&lt;Jay, Apr. l,
FINAICIAL REPORf
OF TOWNSHIP$.
For Fiscal Yt.r Ending
December 31 , 1971
Slllsbur~

Township
Meigs-County
Middleport, Ohio "
Februuy2l' , 1t19
1 certifY the follow in g
repo r t to be correct
R lc hard Bai le y
Township Clerk
Tel . NO . 614992 3861

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
ANO EXPENDITURES
&amp;I lance Jln. 1. 1f71

General F und '
'15,297 12
Motor Veh ic le License
Tax Fund
1,064 .24
Gaso li ne Ta x Fund
3.733.24
Rol!ld and Bridge
639 .36
Fund
-40 1 .7 5
Cemeterv F und
·Fede ra l Reve n ue
Shar.ng Fund
2, 548 60
M tscella neous F und s 1,581 09
Tota ls
2.5 ,265 40
Totlllil!ec:eipts ·
Genera l Fund
18 ,91 3. 86
Motor Vehicle License
Ta x F u nd
5,49 3 47
Ga soline Ta x Fund 15,97 1 68
Road and Sr 1dg e
S,548 30
Fund
380 00
Cemetery Fund
Federal Revenu e
Shar ing Fu nd
'22,258 .27
Miscellaneous Fu nd s 1,433 .00
Tota ls
69 ,996.58
Total Rece-ipts &amp; Bllances
General Fund
3,.,2 10.98

Townsh ip Debt- Notes.
P urpose for Which Note
Debt Was Created
Chev r olet Tru ck

Date of Fi na l Mat

19,704.92

Road end Bridge
F und
6,185 .66 '
&lt;;. emetery Fund
781.75
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
24 ,806.87
M isc ell a neou s Funds 3,014.09
Totals
95, 261.98
Expenditures
General Fund
23,772.28
Motor Veh 1cle License
Tax -Fund
5,522 .73
Gasql lne Ta x Fund 17,202 .75
Road and Bridge
F und
2,998 .04
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
19,872. 83
M iscellaneous Funds 3.012 . 13
Total
72,380.76
Balance Oec. ll , 1971
General Fu nd
10,,.38.70
Motor Veh icle Lice nse
Tax Fund
l ,OH .98
Gasol ine Ta x Fund
2,502 . 17
Road and Bridge
3,1 87 .62
Fund
781.7S
Cemetery Fund
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
,.,934.0"
Miscellaneous Funds
1,,6
Total
22,881 .22

CASH BALANCE,
~ECEIPTS ANO
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

· Generat Fund
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1978
15,297 12

Receipts

•
.

'

'·•

General Pror,erty Tax Reel Esta e and
Trailer (Gross)
8,150.-41
Tangible Personal P\opertv
Tax(GrOSS)
... 77 . U
Estate Tax
(Gross )
1,251.92
Local Government and
~,
State Income Tu: 4,681.76
Liquor Perm It Fees 3, 183.88
Cigarette License Fees
end Fines (Gros s)
168.75
Total Receipts
18 ,913.86
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
3-4 ,210.98
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Administrative 19,472 88
- Town Halls, Memorial
Bu ildin g s and
grounds
6Sl .06
- Fire Protection 1,UO.OO
- Cemeteries
1.808 .34
Grand Tota1 E xp . General Fund
23.772.88
Bal. , oec. Jl, 1978
10,438.70
Total Exp . Plus
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1978 3.tl,210.98
Motor Vehlc:le License
Tax Fund
Balance , Jan . 1. 1978 l.06.tl .24
Renlpts
Motor Vehicle License
Tax
5,-493.1117
Total Receipts
5,493 .47
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
6,557.71
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Miscellaneous
2,913 .33
- Maintenance
2,609 .40
Grand Total Exp Motor Vehi cle License
Tax Fund
5,552 .73
Bel., Dec . 31 , 1978
1,03i1 .98
· total Exp. PIUS Bal .,
Dec . 31 , 1978
6,557 .71
Gasoline TIX Fund
Sal , Jan . 1, 1978
' 3,733 24
Receipts
Gasoline Ta x
13,200 00
Other
2,771 .68
Tot11 Rece ipts
15,971.68
"" Total Beginning Balance
'·
Plus Receipts
19,70.tl 92
Expenditures
· Total Expenditures
- Ml!.CI!!IIanf OUS
6,761 1-4
- MaintenanCe
10,441 61
1, ' Grand Total Exp . 1
Gasol ine Tax Fund
~) Bal ., Dec . 31, 1978

17,202.75
2,502.17

Total Exp . Plus
Bal. , oec. 31, 1978 19,704.92
Ro•d and Bridge Fund
,~ Bal., Jan . 1, 1978
639 .36
Rec:elpts
General Property Tex , Rea l Estate and
Trailer {Gross)
3,978.68
Tangible Personal Property
Tax (GrOSS )
1'38.57
Other
,
829 .05
Total Receipts
5,5.,.6.30
Total Beginning Ba lan ce
Plus Receipts
6,185.66
E xpendltures
Total Expenditures
- Miscellaneous
1,983.63
-Maintenance
1.014 ... 1
Grand Total Exp. Road end Br idge
•I
Fund
2,998.0,.
'· Bal.. Dec . 31 1 1978
3,187 .62
Total Exp Plut Bel. ,

4-30 -81

Total - OU ts ta nding Jan .
1, 1978
8, 302 .66
Total - New Issues
During Year 1978 13,870.00
Total Rede emed Dur ing
Year 1978
4,151 .33
Total - Balli nee Outstand in g
Dec . 21 , 1978
18 ,021 .33

In memory, Card of Thanks ~
Obituary: 6 cenl8 per word, $3.00
minlmwn. Cash ln adva~.
I

·Mobile Home sa lei and Yard ults
11re accepli!d only with cash with
order. 25 cent 'charge for lids carry• I
tnt! Box Number In Care of The Sen-

The Publlaher ,...rves the right 1
to ,edit or reJect any ads deellltd 00.1
}ectional. 'I'M PubUsher will noc be
respon!!ible for O'lOI'e than one lncor·l
rect Insertion.
Pllooe 99'2·2156

'

Bernice Bede Osol

"":,

v,.

I

llnel

ASTRO• GRAPH
IV--·r
.,1\1\1
CO:rthd
-OJ
8)'

I

NOTICE

April 3, 1979
Th1s coming y-ear several lucky
breaks w111 g1ve you the opportunity to complete projects
you 've had on the drawing
board tor a lo ng time . Once
com pl eted , you ' ll be able to do
many new things .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) II
may come as a s urprise to you
today wh en someon e who usu·
ally doesn' t pay you too mu c h
auention is extra- nic e . Find ou t li
more of what lies ahead for you ,.
from n ow until your next birth·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISIN&amp;
DEADUNES I

Astro-Graph Letter . Mail $1 for

each \o Astro-Graph , P.O. Box.
489. Radio City Sta11on, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
stgn .

TAURUS (April

211-May

20)

SOmeone older or more ex peri·
enced may po1nt out a directton
tar you today , and bring you
new hope toward getting some·
thing you ' d like to have

GEfllllNI !May 21-Juno 20) Con·
tinue to give your respo ns ib1li·
ties top pri o rity today . You w ill
receive more satisfactton in
achievement than through trlv·
olous outlets .

CANCER IJune 21-Jply 22) You
have a good c hante to sell
those ideas or plans you 've
been trying to promote. Your
approach today Is creative and
practical

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A friend
Is going to jump into the picture
today and show y o u how to get
something you've been want..

ing badly . Lis len \O him, though
the way may not be easy .

VIRGO IAUII- 23-Sept. 22) You
ohave a chance today to make a

big hit with one who doesn 't
know you very well , through
your willingness to be cooperative and helpful.

LIBRA IS.pt. 23-0ct. 23) That
little eJCtra push you've needed
to put you out In .front of the
pack will be forthcoming today .
't'ou ' ll cross the finish line first
·aher all.

SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov. 22) If
you allow experience to guide

you today, everything should
come out just the way you' want
It to in the romance departmen\.

Slt.GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
tt~ lnvolvemen~s where you
share a material Interest
should be given full attention

lodoy Worthwhile gains will
come of It

CAPRICORN IDoc. 22-J..,. 19)
The timing Is good today to
make a request of someone
who doesn't grant favors easily. This person will be in the
right frame of mind and will
come through for you .

AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 11)
1\'s a good day to clean out
those closets or to tackle the
attic . You may even discover a
lew valuable misplaced or for·
gotten items!

Moodof
Noon on Saturday
Tuesday
thruFrtday
I P.M.
the day before publicaUon

TREE TRIMMIN G and remova l.
7A2 3167 o r 7-422573 .

~~ ·

reach. U,te this opportunl\y
advantageously.

OJ.ester
News Notes

PAINTING AND repo1ring roofs .
house paint1ng haulmg Free
es t imat es Coli 992 63~ o r
74'1 207. 4 .a ft er. 5pm
. . .
~

Notices
- -"-

NEW BATON clas ses . Beg1nnen,
1ntermediate and advanced
Taught by Cmdy Potrer son at
the Syracuse Grode School
Gym For more inlormallon
coll992-2088

wanted to Buy
CASH FOR 1unk ca rs 2-4 hour
wrecker
se rvice
Frye's,
Rutland , OH 7.tl2-2081 .
.

-

.

CHIP WOOD. Po les mo x
d1omete r 10" on lorgest end .
GUN SHOOT, Rocme Volunteer
S'2 per ton . Bundled ~ lob . $1 0
F1ro Dept. Every Soturdoy 6:30
per ton Dei~V e re d to Oh1o
pm at their building in Bos hom
Pollet Co .. Rl 2, Pom e roy .
· !o.ct?r~ 0?_k-:_ g~m.s c:'n~y . . .
992 2689 .
.

GUN SHOOT. EVERV FRIDAY 6.30 OLU FURNITURE , 1ce boxes, bross
PM RACINE GUN CLUB . FAC.
beds ." 1ron beds , desks, e tc ,
TORV CHOK~ GUNS ONL V
complele households Writ e

· · · · · - · - ·· ·

REWARD FOR information of
d isappearance of a standard
s ize bloc k poodle, long toil ,
needs dippi ng Abou l 3 weeks
ego 1n Carmel area 949 -2360
Evelyn Holter
- . . .

M l;) Mtll e r . Rt 4, Pome roy o r
ca ll qq2. 7760 .

.

··-·······

~

·

OLD COINS, pockel watches,
cl a ss nngs, wedding bands ,
diamo nd s Gold or 5ilve r . Coli
_R ~e r_ ~a~s! ey .
~J~I _ . •
WANT TO buy old "5 and 18
phonograph record s . Call
Give Awa:t..._ _
992 6370 or Contact Martin Fur·
A GOOD watch dog and wonde r niture
ful pet very t~me 2 years old
WANT
TO buy · old jewelrv . Coli
female . To a good home .
997 5262 or write Kay Cecil 87
992 -3.. 57
S. _2~d , M_1d~l ~por! £?H_ .
_
COlliE TYPE . block wi th bro wn
WANT
TO
buy
·
yo
ung
fry
e
r
rob
and white , fema le. 8 to 12 mon b1ts 4 ' ', to6 1bs Co l1992· 3b17
ths o ld . Beagl e, male , young .
Humane Soc1ety. qq2 7 ~ .

...

!4?

"

. . .

.

"

. .- . .

"

.

Yard Sale
Mobile Homes for Sale
1971 All ELECTR IC tro1ler 12 x 60
Central air , underpinning On
lo 11n Mason 30,.·773-S.tiJB
1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobil e
home , "furnished
3 be dr
washer and dryer. Air condi ·
. tioned . 1 lo t, 210 tt frontag e
S12 000 Phone 742 282b .
1955 ' P~~irie .. s~hoone r 2B x8
bdc
J9b5Genero l. 60 xl2 , 2 bdr ·
1968 Elcono , S2x12 , 2 bdr .
1969 Buddy , 60x 12, 4 bdr.
1970 Sylvo , 60x 12, 2 bdr
Pnocost le 60xl2 2bdr
1973 Arlington, b0xl2 2 bdr
1973 R1dgewood, 70x 1111 , 3 bdr
1973 K1rkwood . S0x 12 2 bdr .

88 5 MOBILE HOME SALES
PT PLESANT, WV .
675-442.4
1973 FREEDOM MOBILE home
Appl ia nces
und erpi n n ing ,
lrre place 992 5413 or 992·6118.

55200
1970 REBEL RAIDER 12 x 48 Very
good condition 53500 7"7·3875
or 9-49 -2b43 after 4 .

NO

TELEVISION
VIEWING

CASE IS

PORCH SALE Monday Tuesday
Wednesday . April '] 3 .tl
Bes1de th~ Waff le Shop tn Mid
dleport .
THR EE-FAMI LY- vOrd Sa.le · A~ril '
4th and 5th. 9 am to 5 pm. 2
m1le s off CR 36 at Chester,
Oh1o.
.

Camping Equipment
tru e ~

camper. Sleeps 6 , both , s ink ,
s to ve ,
ele ctric
or
go s
refrigerator and furnace S1 5
Coll7,.2-2843

1975 11 FOOT truck cofnpe r , sell contained, oir cond ition ex·
ee .llent
condition
992-2121 .
.
. . . . . . . .
TRAVEl MATE , 11 foot truck
camper Slee RS six both sink.
refrigerator on d furna ce.
$1500 Call7.tl2·28-43
. . ~

Help wanted

BY CLARICE ALLEN
RN FOR -special programs . Subm1t
Mrs. Slterry Tysinger and
resumes to· Me1 gs County
Dec 3\ , 1978
6.185 .66
Health Dept. PO Box 631 ,
daughters, Johnson City ,
,
Cemetery Fund
Pom~ r?Y: ~h ~o by Apr~! s, ..
~=. 8&amp;1., Jan . 1, 1978
-401.75 Tenn., spent a few days with
.
Receipts
NEED
SOMEONE to do housework
her
aunt,
Mrs.
Erma
Cleland.
Sale of Lots
380.00
2 day s a week and ca n d rive
Total Receipts
380.00
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
cor . 992-7936
·
Total Beginning Balance
Hartung and daughters,
PIUS Receipts
781 .7S
Louisville, Ky., spent a
Balance, Dec . 31, 1978 781 .75
, Ftdtnl Revenue
recent weekend with Mr. and
•·
, Shtrlng Fund
Mrs. Tom Nice and other
'1 Bal., Jan . 1, 1978
2,5,.8. 60
relatives.
Mrs. Thelma Eddy, CanRece'r"
. Grants- Federa
17.28"' .00
Dr.
and
Mrs.
jlilly
Robert
ton,
and Mrs. Esta White,
· Other Receipts
4,97 ... . 27
Allen, Westerville, were Keno, spent Wednesday
Total Receipts
22,258 .27
· Total Beg inning Balance
weekend ·guests of Mr. and afternoon with Mrs. Erma
Plus Receipts
2111,806.87
Mrs. 'Clayton Allen.
Cleland.
Expenditures .
Malnt. 1nd Operltlon
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bruce
Myers
Mr. and Mrs. VirgU Wood,
hlerfes- !m plovees 6,286. 90
Thursday
for
a
few
days
Springfield,
were recent
left
· Supplies
5,569.83
Contracts- Repair
1,807 . 70
visit with Mr. and Mrs. Tony overnight guesta of Mr. and
Contracts- services 2,353.-42
Westjohn, Oceanside, Callf., Mrs. Roy Christy.
Advertising end
A.20 the Westjohn baby has been
Spending Monday evening
Printing
, ..
Public Employees
quite ill.
with Mrs. Erma Cleland were
Retirement System 850.78
Fritz Poll, Co)umbus, spent Mr. and Mrs. Gary Michael,
,, Other Expense.s. Notes
J, 100.00
tbe weekend with DeMis Matthew, Ktmberly and Tod,
Total Exp.
19 ,872 83
·
Minersville, and Mrs. DoMa
Eichinger.
Bal., Dec . 31, 1978
,.,93,..,0_.
Total Exp . Plus Bal .•
• Mrs. Pauline RldenolU' and Ihle, Paul and David, Racine.
Dec . 3\, 1978
2A,806.87 Mrs. Opal Wickham visited
Mrs. John Wlckbam and
Anti· Rtceuton
with Mrs. Dorothy Lawson, Mrs. Clayton Allen called on
FISC II Assist1nce
Bol ., Jon. \, 1978 .
1,581.09 Wedneaclay afternoon.
Mrs. Ronnie Clay, ThuTsday
Receipts
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
·
·
morning.
Other
1,433 .00
Total Receipts
1,433 .00 Eichinger and Suzannah,
· Mrs. Opal Eichinger was a
Total Beginn ing Balance
Colwnbus,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
recent
overnight guest of Mr.
PIUS Rrtcelpts
, 3,014.09
Don Eichinger, Rio Grande, and Mrs. Charles Eichinger,
.l!'•oendlturts
Salaries
1,951 .54 ~t the weekend 'with Mrs. · Columbus.
'
qmployer ' s Retlr~ment ~
Opal Eichinger.
·
' Miss F alth Ann McCain and
,
Contribution
33o~~ . 89
: Supp)les
658 .20
Mr . and Mrs. Clifford ·Miss
Janet • Lockhart,
,. Repa rs
67 .50
Hayes,
Long
Bottom,
Marietta,
spent Thursday
;- Totol Exp .
3,012.13
. · Bol. , Dec . 31&gt; 1978
1,96
recently
called
on
Mr.
and
afternoon
with
Mrs. Erma ,
1
~ Total Exp . Pius BaL.
Mrs.
John
Wickham.
Cleland.
De~ . 31, 1978_
,J,OU.O'
\

sti)P
'

-·

3-7· 1mo. (Pd. I

Auto Sales
DECEMBER~ALE

1977 CHEVROLET 4d short wheel
base Maney Ferg uson corn
plante r.
co rn
culti votar ,

1970 DODGE DART. Fa1r conditi on $300 992-Slo47
19bb G .T.O. Exc ellent condit ion .
High
performance.
742·2249.
.
.
. . .
. . . .
"

19""/5 MALIBU STATION wagon .

A 1 shape. $2595 949 2753 .
· ··------ ...

·

'i1'\li}Nf fii}'ft

,1

~ THATSCRAMBLEO.WOROGAME

~ ~ ~~ .,

byHenriArnoldandBobloe

Unscramble lhese tour Jumbles.
one letter 10 each square, 10 form
lour o rdinary words.

'Re!NIIr

CARE '\O~OF ~F TO~

~'T

PotJ~~JVl'-L- ~ FOR~-~~~~
----'---~"'7~aAe ~~em£~

1.$1-all~...

SURVI

rn

IDIOT'$'?

Ohio ValeJ Roofing
•d
Home Maintllllnce

.

-

WE NEED LISTINGS!
Cheryl Lenlley, Associate
Pnone 142-2003
Hilton Wolle, Assoclale
Phone 9-19·2589
GeorgeS. HobsteHer, Jr.

·

Broker 992-5739

SEVEN ROOM , h ouse lo r sale. 3
bedrooms a nd bath . modern
kitchen w1th range o nd ·
di shWasher . corpet1ng up ond
down , hot water boseboord
heat up and down , oil drapes
and sheers, polio, 2 cor garage
and garde n Seen by appoint·
!"~n! o.nly, ~.4?· ~"'~1 ~ . __ .
males

SPRING SAL£
100 PRIZES FIRST
PRIZE 4-WHEEL DRIVE

JEEP ·

Jt.. APRIL 4-7

-·

IS THE PLACEt

JACK

W.

CARSEY,
MGR.
PH.-?92-2i81

-·······

1q75 CA DILLAC Eldorado . 25 ,000 1977 ARROWGLAS!i bass boat
miles , lully equ1pped Excellent
with 85 h p E11inrude motor .
.condi tion. 991 2121 .
qq2.1714 o r 992-5478

· · - - · · ···-··

1q77 BLAZI::R 4x-4. Cheyenne 1978 FO RD PI CKU P super cob V-B
with campe r lop Good cond ipackage 29 ,000 actual miles
Tilt steer , AM-FM rodio , A.C . . tlon Good gos mileage. S5400 .
low package . cruise .. w hit e
949·7042 .
!i.pok~ wheel s E~~:cellent cond i·
REDUCE SAFE and lost with
tion . Afte r 5. call99 2 ']C/67 .
Go8ese Tablets a nd E Vop
'" wolrr p ill!l ·. Nel son ~rug .
197.4 .4 -whee l d r1ve 3 ~ ton ,
Range r 3?.500 mile"' V-B . ....
~ poe d 1q73 Ford ' '• ton 6 cyl ,
good gos mdeage .4"- speed
Real Estate for·Sale
1970 Ford 1 • lon tl L outornohc
fa cto ry 5tokc bCirly. Hnrold
Brewe r , Long Bottom O ht o, f" OUR BEDR OOM ru ra l home thot
P.lione Q85.:l!i511
I"'" mt'"l:!l Fr..., HA s tondard s
141 :Kl"l4 .
1Cf!:J G RAND I:;' RI X . sun rC'of , top,. ,
ppwf'! l Gond hrf'!&gt; l'l&lt;'W f'/( TWO STORY 3 be droom frame
hau &lt;. l &lt;.y•.li111"\ . QO? ~j0JiJ .
ha u ~(' , ln M:ddl e port Q~ 'l - :14 "7

•

eleclrlc and 2 concrele
pads.
BUSINESS BUILDING In Middleport on the T.

.

---

IGEREL8j
I I

frontage,

NEW LISTING - 12'x60',
1972 mobile home, central
air,
wood
burning
freestanding fireplace ,
range,
refrigerator,
freezer and Other furnitUre-,

all

underpinning

and

blocks . In excelelnt coh·

dlton. $8,900.00.
RANCH
Excellent
condlllon. 3 bedroom home,
equipped kitchen, dining
area , carpeted , carport

and 2 storage bulldln_gs.
Immediate possession.
$28,500.00.
1'1" STORY FRAME Nalural • gas
heal,
Mlddlepo,rl · schools, 4
bedrooms. 2 beths, part
basement. needs some
repair . ·513,000.00.
MIDOLEPORT - Aillegal
building

REAL ESTATE loons . Purchase and
re linance. 30 year terms , VA
No money down (ellgiblf!
veterans) . FHA · As low os J
per cent d own {nan-veterons}.
Ireland Mortgage Co ., 77 E.
Stafe, Alhens. 6U-592-3051

24 Roll• of Carpatln Stoclc
100's ·of S.mples to
Choose From.

&amp;

BUY~9WUAVE

eaii 742-22H-----c - , "'--~&amp;-•­
TALKTO
Wendell or Herb Gr1te

· · · ·-·-r::--

THREE BEDROOM 2 story home,
Iorge kitChen and dining area
w1th ne w cabinets_, fully
carpeted throughout Corport 'IO
and chain link feJ;~ce o~ound
yard Beauty shop attached to
house Con be seen by appoint-

. _ _

. or Gent S..,..ith

'RUTLA
.
ND
..... URNI'nJRE
f ...

7_4;;;2-;;;:12..._1l,...._ _ _.;R.;.U1~1a;;.nd;;;-~·

Income. C.ll Today.
MIDDLEPORT - ~ lots,
mobile
home
10'x4S',
apartment, new .kitchen,

V'IE OFFI:R YOU ,,
1. Two full I loon of all new
fumlture.

corporatJon

limits,

•

2. Nice selections of usacl
3. A large building 1ull of
lrputllul carpet. ..
,.

3 • • nrr e~\ 111 11n mer.oy SEcluded
woocl ed area on top of hill
· O ....erlooks r iver Wate r e lectr i_c Ollod?bte. 9!2 ·31:18,6 . '

~

river

Hawaii's

Mr. Tipps, the pup's
riqhtful ownerr

..

7 Man at
the top
8 Slop
9 Miss Evans
and others
10 Auto

16 Li '1 Abner's
son
17 Mental
strain

Mee~

DOWN
1 Knight of
the plwne,
2 Lislen
3 1\ledicinal
plant
t Flock
5 Boozer ·
6 "The Naked

8:3G-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Sneak Previews 33. ·
9:00-Jesus of Nazarelh 3,15; Three's Company 6 13·
Movie "The Darker Side of Terror" 18,10; Sca~Iti
Leiter 20,33.
9:3G-Taxl 6.1~.
10:00-Ropers 6,13; Black Man's Land 33; World et
War 17; News 20.
10:3G-13 Queens Blvd . 6,13; Acodemy Loaders 20.
11 :oo,.-News 3,8,10,13, 15; Hogan's Heroes 17: Book
Seal 33.
.
11 :JG-Johnny Canon 3,.15; Movie · "Delta County
USA" 13; Movie "The. Oscar" 6; Barneby Jonn
ABC News 33; Movie "Escapade In JapM" 10·
Movie 'Asssasslnellon In Rome" 11.
'
12 :4-Medlgan I; 1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
I :30-Movle "The Golden Hawk" 17; 1:&lt;10--News 3;
3:15-News 11.
3:35-Movle "lslond Affair" 17

a;

17 "On the
28 Boosting
Beach"
the price
novelist
29 Lead ore
18 Half a score :10 Abrasive
19 Irish
,. substance
hill fort
31 Vulgar
21 Black
24 Toupee: sl.
25 For voices
28 lAyer

Moaday, Apiil 2

BRIDGE

'

bird
"Deep in the

Art of refusing finesses

- or TeX:88 01

23 Shock ;

'cruX

NORTH

25 Exlra-base
hit
27 Of great -

l:r-+--1~

dimensipns

1::::--+--+-

• J 978
• K2
t A882

+ A17
WEST
• It 53
• AQJIII
• 743

31 Melamorphosis
32 Actress
Grier
FRANK &amp; ERNIE

.,

33 Kind of

r--:-::::"":'~~.,...----~.,...--------------.;...---------- 34 Kind
type: abbr.
ottJit'(,O~I'ff

.%.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weld Nortll Ean

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - ,Here's how ·to work
AXVDLBAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW

It:

One letter Simply '! ltands for another ln ~hi1 aample A i1
u sed for the three L' s, X for th e two O's, clc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length a nd formation · of the word a are all

hints. Each day the code letters are dift'erent.

CRVPTOQl!OTES

K

.

+K884

soum

• QJ 10
+QJ1052

·.
&lt;

+2
.107813
tK9D

----

J;:--t--1-

of syrup
36 Originate
j 39 Willow
, 10 Less batty
~~~ · • J 41 Cindy's
~
CO-&lt;Jtar

l

EAST

+ AQIOI4

owe vou .f1vE luc:.ec..s !
\

YV

CI Y R S

M' QVC
CB

I Q0 KR

RKCQZOYRHV

Openln1lead: •3

By Oswald Jacoby
uul ~lan Sonta1

Alan: "What ls the largelll
number .of flne8110S a de·
clarer might refuse to

take?"

Oswald: "Youcanprobaly
work
up a hand where deA Y ZA UP.
K
CB
KV K APRCPZ YV
clarer- will refuse four, but
three , II the largest really ·
BUYFPZ
JPRHPUU
IBUOPV logical number. Here Is an
,....J.~====~·Yuter*(l
THROW MUD. YOU MAY eumple."
Alan: "South realizes tl)at
.._
MISS YOUR MARK BUT YOU WILL HAVE DIR1Y HANDS.the
throe of clubs lead 't s
JOSEPH PARKER
probably a ~lngleton so he
RARNF.Y

CrfJitoqa.teoNEvER

IT'S YORE
PAW!!
See . me Grate Family aT 1

\

3t swdba
35 On the briny
37 Congeal
---;::---:-:-7=..;=:.::.:=:....::=,.:=-..,.---~38 Before
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

GLORY BE!!

111•

acres In all, originally had
two houses. $3,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Sr.
"·-Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
Y'rl -22$9
992-6191

..

42 Roofing
IJI81erial
43 Heroic
narrative

.
I J. .

'RUilAND RJRNRURE\

bedrooms
another

available. 515.000.00 .
221 ,FOOT FRONTAGE On Rl. 7 within Pomeroy

.....----=----!\ ~
' \1 /1tJl
____,..

KU

furniture .

and a bath,
apartment

ALLEYOOP

ACROSS
Ex-Iranian
VIP
5 Chef's
·specialty
10 Ascend
11 Horse, comic
or soap
12 Fallacy
While
or Bailey
14 Drained by'
ditching
15 Scotttsh

ABRAPYC

new heating syslertJ . 2.

33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Ali CARPEt

and

business
wltll
an
apartment over, extra lot
for parking, excellent

· ~~J-~tr'

A GOOD SELECTIQN OF
END&amp; ROLL BALANCES.

license, business for many

year~ .

I

SAVEll lDT

and up Instill-.! .

m~nl 9'1~·398_2.~

1

some

Housing
Headquarters

I Jumbles
CHI~F LOUSE DENTAL MANIAC
Answec· )ust lsn'Lsound! - SILENCE

from Jutnbl•, clothls n•wspaptt, Box34, Norwood, N.J.07MI.Includl yaur
name, ldclrttlt Zip C0de tnd mtkl ChKkl ptytblt t~ NIWSptplrbooks.

-

NCMON
WE
'
FRO;.,; $'711
.,--sq......

I JI I JI )

Ifumbllloolc No. 12, containing 110 puu:lel, l•••allstile IOJ $1 .71 poiiJMid

&amp;

c;Jeared, some waoded . '"

I
It

DRIVE Aunu

Just SJS,ooo.
LAND - Lots, acreage,

Now arrange the circled letters to
lonn lhe surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the abbve cartoon.

{Anawell tomorrow)

Saturday'~

CARPETING

sl«lng rooms. plus large
recreation
room
with
fireplace 3 car garage and
workshop and 1lh acres.

ATT~ACTIVE

10 OTHEF(S.

Prlntanswerhere: (

SAVE ON

FAMILY HOME - Large
country home with 4
bedroc&gt;ms, living and

river

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

cancelled? l ost you r operators
Jic_e~-'~ Phone 992-21.,.3.

26'x96' Several rooros up
with bath, rest room and
large bulsness room down.

MAKE5 saDIE~

II 0 0

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been

CROW
WITH
THE
COUNTRY, INVEST IN
REAL
ESTATE
AT
TEAFORD$. CA~L 9923325.
G~riion-B .
Helen L.
Sue P. Murphy
Reollor Associates

COMPLETE TWIN bed 17 x 8' -'1 ft
corp~t _ 7~2:2~2~ o!t~ r ~ . __
37 HEAD of sheep. Roms , ewes,
lombs. 992-71b5 or ~2 - 7880.

Mlark Your Calendar!
Come Register at

-- .

town and out.

2

Information at Longsv11lePos1
Off ice ,

______

+-•

ILYROOPI

-

197-4 OlOS CUTLASS Supre me
wagon $2200 See ot C1t izen s
No1 1onal.8ank
. , ~ - .or
. coli
. .992·
. . 7663.
- .
lb MM Be ll and Howe ll oulo load
197b FORD ELITE, s1 lve r wi th blue
sound m o..,.ie pro tector In good
..,. myl top Good co nd ition .
co nd111on . Ideal for club5,
?.2 ,000 m!l e_s ~0_4 n~- ~1.5 _ . " group or civic org~nitotion s . .
1973 INTERNATIONAl ~ SCOUT
$350_ P_h ~n ';'7,.:t2; 2~84 • .
21 ,000 m1les , fully equipped , ,CONDITIONED HAY for sole.
air, wench etc., exce llent conGood quality. Wdl deli .... er Coli
dillon 992 -2121
992·7201 or 992-3309
_

·-·- ·

CAPTAifoi'S
CA81N!

Aua&amp;Truck

220 E. Main SlrHI, .

NEW 2 PC LIVING ROOM SUITE
$149 .95, NJW 5 PC DINETTE 10 H.P. WHEElHORSE tractor witk
SETS . $49 9l NEW SEALY MAT·
36 1n . mower and 36 1n . snow
TRESS'S TWIN SIZE INTERSPR· · blade and lwo wheeled cart
lNG S4S NEW 3 PC END TABLE
Ph one '192-7477
SETS .. $39 95 U·HAUL . RICE'S 1973 HONDA 450, A l condit1on
NEW AND USED FURNITURE.
B54"2nd AVE .. PH -446 9523

AND HE' KNOWS IT... I ,..I
CAN'T Rl~l&lt; THE LIVES
OF MY PMSENJSEFt.S~

t "" mlll\off Rt. 7· p_,... ..
Sf. Rt. ~· ...-~ . . . . . .
0 ·
·
I

· · · - - - · - ----

6 cyl , std

Gl'tii&amp;E~

NO.. IT 'S NO U~E. !,., HE'S
HOWIN6 THE' TRUMP CA!l.D

IN5 1"1 THE.

ROGER.HYSEU.r.- '
I

IF I D!iTOI&gt;JATe
THAT LIFE VEST-VEil SHIP AND
PASSENrSERS'l-1BE MINCEMEAT!

OIIE SU!H'ECT!i
I'IHAT!!; HAP!'EN·

ror "'"

YARD SALE . Tues day and
Wedn es day. Apnl 3rd and 4th .
Glassware, clothes, tHe . Bake
sole Tuesday ot -iB,. Pearl St .,
Midd leport , Ohi o From 9. 5 both
days Sponsored by Soulheast
Ohio J r Miss Inc
SIAMESE robb1ts .t1
le moles . 985-3555 .

$900 9'12·7376

3- 16-ln~ ·

ALL SUi&gt;!
AND FU"' ON
TME CP:LJI~&amp;
L.INIH~ ... NO

1

5, b.

1971 GMC PICKUP

Phone 992-2581
o• 992-2082
J-11 ·1 ~

WE HAVE chocolat es. d 1obetic
Pomeroy,O.
Atso Tr•nsmlsslot
choco lat es and other ca ndy j
C.11992-7113
' Re!NIIr
su ppli es . Fre e Eas te r condy .,
EiHriiifei"
class . Coli Carouse l Conlee l
Phone 992-5612
l1one ry
in M1ddle port
11-9-1 mo.
99') b342 .
COAL LIMESTON E, sa nd , g rovel,
co lc1um ch londe, fertilizer, d og
E-C ELECTR ICAL Contractor s er""
Rea I.E state for Sale
food, a nd all types o f soh Ex
ing Ohio Vall ey reg ion . Six
cc ls1or Salt Work s In c .. E. Main
davs o week , 2-4 hour s se rvice
MODERN. THREE bedroom house ,
Emergency coils. Call 882-2952
_St Pom~ r~y _9n-?B9 1
or 882-3454 .
full basement , fireplace , fu llv
'EVERYTHING'S GOTT A GO".
,p" . - - - - - - - -· - ·
carpeted , central air , enclosed MOBILE
Ho0s e ahd lot , furniture,
HOME repo~r s . Furnaces ,
sun porch, loco ted on 6' 11 acres
clothes, ' oil my household
e lectn col work. pipes sowed ,
All types roofing, guners
o n CR 28 approx . 3 miles from
1tems Drop by 760 LaurelS! ,
plumbing. 992-585.8 .
; and downspouts. All ly.,..
Racine if interested contact
•
"
-- *
- --- - · - -'·
- '
_Middlep~rt
. . _ . .
home m•intenance - ntw
Lorry Wolf e 949-2836 weekends WALLPAPERING AND point1ng .
•nd rep•ir . Storm doors
DUTY
up h ols tery
HEAVY
Coii742·232B
and offer 5 e..,.e nings.
.
.
. "- --· -·-- -*-. ---. •nd windows. All -'&lt;
machine .
$250
Phone
STANDING TIMBER on Me •gs HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
. 8.43-2542
guaranteed .
20 years
covatmg, septic sy s tems ,
'. . .
Fairground Coii949·2B22
experie,nct.
Free
:.--···-···--16 FOOT BASS boat 50 h. p . Merda:r:er, backhoe. Rt . 1-43. Phone
estimate•, C1ll: Tom
cury engme, Mlnnkota trolling SIX ROOM house on I Ocre on
·7331.
"I (6141698
..
..,..
block top rood $1 5,000 Coli
Hoskins, '49-2160.
molar , ready lor fi shmg $2000
9A9-2231 or 985-4274
3-7-1 mo.
1.4 II l o ne star runabout with
Real !:state for Sale
trailer and canvertobie top,
SbOO. 24 tf Riviera Cruiser pon·
FARM FOR Sale . House , 2 born•
loon boat , all alummum, lots of
trai ler. Lorge pond . 10 ocres
RADFORD , Au ct ioneer , Cam·
ex tra s , 50 h . p '78 mo del Mer·
HOBSTETTER REALTY
plete . Service. Phone 949-2o487
8_2~c_r;.s_
, 7_
42~:,
25~66
~--cu ry e ngine. en gine , s till under
New Lima Road
nr 9"'9·2000. Racme, Ohio. Crltt
warrenty , $4500. Would conRutland 1 Ohio
B.-odlo:c'd:::·c__ __ __ _
sider car top f1shing b oot on
Phone 742·2003
ELWOOD
BOWERS REPAIR trade q4q.2013. Ro bert Hill.
NEW LISTING - On 3251n
Sweepers, toasters. irons, all
Danville. Home has 4
Racine
.
smoll appliances. Lown moer ,
bedrooms, living and faml·
ELECTRIC GUITAR with case, like next to State H1ghwav Gorage
IY rooms, kitchen and bafh.
new Steel guitar with cose ,
on Route 7
Situated on .75 of an' acre
_g~o~ co n~ i~1 o_n -~2- ?J. ~3.
.
with cellar. smoke house
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser NEW ROLl BAR for p1 cku p truck
and 2 other good buldini)s.
vice, all mokes, 992·228o4. The
·
The
house
needs
a
little
9'12·7001
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy,.
work, but it's well worth
Authari:zed Singer • Soles and
Kt:GISTEREO APPALOOSA Stallion
the effort at a price of only
216 IL S.cond 51rMt
ServiCe
Breed in9 for con·
·.Se!vl ce We shor~!.'?..~~~~$-18,000.00.
for mati o n , spos1flon , color
EXCAVATING. dozer , loader anc:t
R UTLAN 0 - E•tra nice 3
MAIN ST . - Business
614-797-2300
backhoe work; dump trucks
.
bedroom nome In Rutl&lt;!nd.
location with residence up .
ond to-boys for hire , will haul
GLASS DOOR cubbord , new 19"
Out of flood area. Only
All utilities and ideal
fill dirt, to p soil , limes tone ond
oalor TV Pearl Hawthorn e ,
$39,000.00 .
location for a new business.
grove l Coli Bob or Rog.,- Jef·
WEST RUTLAND
843· ?~5 ~ o~y_ti~e- __ .
COUNTY HOME - Nice 3
fers
, day pho ne 992-7089, night
Beautiful
country
setting.
bedroom modern . like
1%0 INTERNATIONAL d1ese l 660
phone 992·3525 or 992-5232.
This home hes 3 bedrooms
home
.
Large
eat-In
form tractor
$2500
New
and en extra large detach ·
kitchen , lull basement ,
EXCAVATING , dozer , bac:kho.
holland b8 Hoyliner boiler
ed
garage . There ' s a
front
porch
(enclosed),
and
ond dltcher , Chorles R. Hot4
1
~ . ~ _99_2-?6?2 _or_~'1 .5;J_.tl2_ .
blacktop drive and nice
hall acre lot. Good garden
,feld. Block Hoe ~en~ice_,
THREE REG ISTERED Bluet1ck
fencing , Call for more info.
spot. Only $23,500.
~ut land , Ohro. Pone7-i2·2008.
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
RECREATION SPOT coon_h~u':ld~ . ~~ - ~2~4 _ . . .
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete
home on Brick Street. E)( ·
01 the Qt)io River . 3 acres,
Service Phone 992-2478.
cellent buy at $20,000.00.
drilled well, septi c system.

-~·

1977 FORD PICKUP F-100 w1th top·
p•r 302 V-8 auto P.S .. P B.
Will se ll or trade lor boot and
moto r of equol vcilue. l975
Plymouth Ouster , s lant s iM
auto 11 m1les to the gollor or
bethu, on gos
Will se ll
reasonably
2561 ,
- ., - . Coll843
. .
. . . .

IT~

and Kimball Music Center, • 'I
1
of Athens

I

APPUANCE II

sale--·-·-·

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole Vernon
Bing residence , Rt . 143 , 2 m1les
out . Wed., Thurs ., Fri. April 4,

9'12·708•

ASSOCiate UT

EUJOTT

• - - - For

CAPTAIN EASY '.

EIIHtrlelds of Pomeroy

--992-6011o
-

I

.

lANE ·DANIB..S

'r-r.--..,,.-...,..-------.
Your Headqual'ten for
Armstrong "-tina
utllf'V

YARD SALE Tues ., Wed April 3
ond " · Smgle bed complete,
clothing, miSC . E1leen Swan,
Du sky St , Syracuse OH .
-------

*New Home
~Add-ons
1i Remoldings
1i Free Estimates

65 I Beech Street
Middleport. 0 .
992-2356

'

14 Yr. Experience
Aural Malhod

SIIXN~

18 Years E•perlence
Will Make
Service Calis

7:oo-&lt;:ross.WIIs 3; Newlywed Game 6.13: Pop Goes
T~e Counlry 8; News 10; Love, American Style 15·
Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 17; Dick Cavell 20: KnoV:.
Your Schools 33.
7:30-That Nashville Mus ic 3; Muppet Show 6; Price I!
Right 8; Wild Kingdom 10; Sl.98 Beauly Show 13,
Nashville On The Road 15; Sanford &amp; Son 17·
~
'
MacNeii· Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-LIIIIe House On The Prairie 3,15; Saivage-1 6:
Ll~, The Witch &amp; tho Wardrobe 8, 10; Bill Moyers'
Journal20,33; Jack Van lmpe Crusade 13; Let's Go
To The Races 17; 8:JO-Pragnet 17.
9:00-Jesus of Narareth 3,15 : How The Wast Was Won
6.1~ ; MA~ 8,10; Scarlet Letter 20,33; Movie "Lady
Caroline Lamb" 17.
9:30-WKRP In Clnclnatl8,10; 10:00-Lou Granl8,10
News 20; Nallonal Geographic 33.
10:30-Growlng Years 20 .
11 :00-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Rlp lng Yarns 33.
11 :30-Jo.hnny Carson 3, IS; Pollee Story6,13; Rockford
Files a; ABC News 33; Movie "Banyhon" 10; Movie
"Fahrenheit 451" 17
·
12 :&lt;10--McMIIIen &amp; Wile 8; Ironside 13.

PIANO .
nJNING

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.

ELECTRIC MOJOR

-- - - - - - - - · · . - -

·

REYNOlD'S

TUESDAY, APRIL 3,1979
Report 13: 5 &lt; ~PTL Club 13; World at
Large 17.
5:55-Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL
Cfub 15.
~ -6 : ID-tolws 17; 6:25-Concerns &amp; Cornmenls o.
6:30-Romper Room 17; 6 : ~5-Morn lng Reporl 3;
6:50-Good Morolng, West VIrgin ia 13; 6:5SChuck Wh ite Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today J, 15; Good Morning America 6,13;
Schoolles 10; Three S1ooges-LIItle Rascals 17;
? :l5-Wealher. 33.
7:30-Femlly Altair 10.
8:oo-&lt;:apt.Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It To Beaver 17;
Sesame St. 33.
8:30-11arel 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3: Phil Donahue 13,15; Emergency
One 6: Hogan's Heroes 8; Lucy Show 17.
9:30-Brady Bunch&amp;; Hogan:s Heroes 10; Green Acres
17.
10 :oo-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15; Edge of Night 6; All In The
Family 8, 10; Dating Game IJ.t Movie " II'S Love I'm
After" 11.
IO :JO-AII Star Secrets 3,15; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13;
Consumer Survival Kit 20.
11 :JG-Whoel of Forlune 3, 15; Family Fauci 6,13; Love
of ,Life 8,10 .
12 :00-Newscenter3; News6,10; Password 15; Midday
Magazine 13; Love American Style J7.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search lor Tolnorrow 8,10;
Elec. Co. 20,33; Movie "In A Lonely Piece" 17.
.
1·00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My Children 6,13;
Young &amp; the Restless 10.
1 :30-'-As The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to Live 6,13: 2:25-News
17.
2: 30-Anolher World 3, 15:-Guldlng LlghiB, 10; Banama
SpillS 17.
.
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Speed Racer 17.
'
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Fllnlstones 17; Dick
Cavell 20.
~:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Holllywood Squares 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Solman 0; Dinah 3; Space Giant. 17.
~ : JG-Bewllchecl3; Gilligan's Is. 8,17; Brady Bunch 10:
Petticoat Junction 15.
5:00-1 Dream of Jeonnle 3; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyla,
USMC 10; Bionic Woman 13; Brady Bunch 15; 1
• Dream of Jeannie 17.
· 5:30-Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 3; News 6; Sanford &amp;
Son 8; E lee. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Odd
Couple 15; Doctor Who 33.
6:cx;-News 3,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Andy Grtlllih 17;
• odgepodge Lodge 20.
6:3G-NBC News 3,15; Carol Burnet &amp; Friends 6; CBS
. Nows8, 10;. My Throe Sons17; OVer Easy20.
7:oo-&lt;:ross-Wits J; Newlywed Game 6, 13; News 10;
Love, American Slyle 15; Carol Burnell &amp; Friends
17; Dick Caval 20; Marshall u. Report 3il.
7:30-Hollywoocl Squares3: Let's Go To The R.- 8;
Candid Camera6; ; Price Is Right 10:. Donne Fargr
13; TV Honor Society 15; NHL Hockey 17: MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:oo-&lt;:llflhangers 3.15; Happy Days 6,13; CBS
Reports 8,10: Auslln City Limits 20; City Notebook
5 : ~5-Farm

M~NDAY,APRIL2,1979

Busin.e ss Services

------ --·-------·

SAVE UP T030~ STORE WIDE .

PISCES IFab. 211-March 20) A
social gathering could bring TRAVEl MATE , II foot
you together· with someone
who has been hard tor you to

IMMED IAT E
OtJl:N IN G
TWO BEDROOM mobile home.
.. Lo boro tory Tec hn 1C 10n , 3 11
Adults on ly. qrn 75'18
!\h ilt Expenenced MlT (ASCP}
O
Nf
B~DROOM apt!io designed
Or equ1..,.ol&amp;'n t E)(ce lte nt sal a ry
speof1 co lly fo r wheelchair PO "
and · fri n9e bEK\ef1 ts Sh•lt d•l
t1ents Ca ll between 9 and b
ferento1l Cont act Pe rso nnel
CN2 7772 .
Off 1ce",
P leo sanl
Volley
Hospi ta l Volley Dr1ve Po int NE W FOUR bedroom opts
Pleasant WV 25550 Phone
OVa iJObl e for fmo1 ly of 5 IO S.
304· b75 -43.tl0 An Equal O p
Call be tween 9 and 6 992-7771
portun!ty_Em ployer
FURNI SHED
THREE bedr oom
l roi ler with was her and d ryer
!i200 pe r month Deposi t re-Services
- - - - -Offered
-----ql.med 949 2'153 .
WILL CARE for two 1nvo lld or
elderly pers ons 1n my home TWO BEDROOM m~bile h~me in
M,ddl epoct cio•• to &gt;&lt;hoo l•
Tw e nty yea rs expe11ence
and shopp mg . Ut1ilti es po1d .
Reasonabl e rate s 992 6027 or
992 5421
$200 mont h plu• depo" '·
594 2472 .
WAHR AND misc . hou l1ng Coli
TWO
BEDROOM mob1l e ho me
9'12-SBSS
k1tchen furm shed Pref e r mid NOW HAULING limestone m
dl e oged coupl e or e lderly cou
M1ddlepdl' t PoemrOy are a . Co li
pi e 9~2 - 2749
lo r free. est1mo te 3b7 -7101
..
WILL CARE for two 1nvalid or
elderly per~o n s 1n my h om e
l we nty
yea rs ex penence
Heo so nable rat es 992 -6022 or
992 -5411
PAINTING AND ~ andb l r.~s ting
free es llmot es. Call 949-2680

Jt.,...;...PF'rl&lt;lay::.::;;:.--;;::==::...:;J...J

day by sending for your copy of

I

For Rent

-

.....

Tuesday , Aprll3

•

uo

300

' Each word over ttw minimum 15
won!! Ls 4 cents per word per day.
Ads MWiing other thun C005t!('Utive
day! will be char Med a\ the 1 day

(4 ) 2, lfc

.

BUT

THACTOH H~Ai l t: P dn vcr s teady C&lt;)UN TR Y M081LF Home Por~
Rou lf' 33 north o l P o meroy
f'tnploylllf'll l n il lht' houf ~ you
lorgr lots . Col! qq'} -7479
wont home ('very 11 1ght Mus I
~(' 7 1 yeo1 '1. olrl b67 313 1 Oh• o ' t A ND 4 BM h ul]l!.hl:'d a nd ,un
Volley MonulaciU!InQ Tu ppf'rs
1
u rni~hc-d apt~
Phon~: 11;,,....-~-..-.--------------"'"-----------.;;....;.._....:.l.'
Plains . Oh1o
·
I.J'I'l 5.. 34
50Mf0Nf TO d ean and cool.. '1 ~ ROLliNG ACRES ol good
I
rtoy . 7 to 3 days o week fo r
I'
po ~ h t re . Plenty ol wolt"l Could
Plderly c-ouple who J,...,f' in
onomodate SO plu!l ca ttl e I
Symcuse 304 b75 -67b9
bl4 t.tJ7 3398

15 Words or Under
•
C..h
1.00
1.50

lday
Zday!
3day!
5days

"

Hf!.ll) Wanted_

WANT AD
CHARGES

6
4-29- 79

New Issues Dur ing
Ye ar 1978
13,870 00
Ba lance Outsta nd ing Dec .
21 , 1978
13, 870 00
Rate of Int .
8

- - --

...

Chevrolet T r uck
Outslandi ng Jan 1,
19 78
... 151 33
Ba l ance Outstand ing
Dec . 21 , 1978
4,151.33

M~':: 1ue~~c le Licens~. 557 . 7 1 @~
Gasoli ne Ta• Fund

For Best ResUlts Use Sentinel Classifieds

Outs ta n d ing Jan 1.
1978
.
-1,151 33
Re deemed Ourino Year
1978
&lt;1 ,15 1 33

Rate of tnt
Date at Fina l Mat .
F ord Tru c k

I :00-Tomorrow J; N~ws 15; 1 : ~0-News 13.
2:00-News 17; 2:20-12 O'Clock High 17. .
3· 20-Dragnel 17; 3:SO-Opon Up. 17.

" '"

hops up with dummy's ace.
Then he leads the jack of
lrumpa from dummy and
rlaes with his ace. He can't
afford that !lnesse because
that openins club lead Just
might have been fourth best,
so South wants to pull
trumpa as, quickly as possible."
Dewald: "He leads a small
trump. Weal rloes with the
king And leads the three of
dlamondl, after East dls·
cards on that second trump .
South refuaea that finesse
aiM. Then he pulla West's
!all trump and goes about
the bualnesa of conceding
tricks to East's two klnp."
Alan: "South hu made
oure of hla game In •plte of
all llneaoea belng wrorig.
Incidentally, If all had been
'!l{ht he could have taken
them all and made a grand

alam."'

A New Jeroey reader
want.. to know who Invented
the weak Jwnp overcall.
The bid waa first used by
Oswald Jacoby in 1931. It
became a tool for a few
experts In the early '3111 and
loday Is In common expert
uae and alao t. employed by
many average playen.
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASliN ,)

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN, send 11 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care' of lhfs nt~wsPa·
per, P. 0 . Box 489, R.d/{1 City

Stalldn, N~w York , N.Y. 10019.) ·

�-

10-TI!e Daily Sentine,l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Apr. 2, 1979

Khomeini claims ~pp~oval

"'

I ~

..

TEIJRAt;, Iran tAP) A.YatoUah Ruhollah Khomeini
claimed unanimous approval
in the two-day referendum .on
his plan to make Iran an
Islamic republic, but his
revolutfonary regime
admitted one ethnic minority
was still fighting in the
northeast and trouble was
brewing with another in the
!lOUth.
Khomeini 's victory
statement p-oclaiming the
new Islamic republic was
~d by an aMouncer over
Radio Tehran .Sunday while
votes were stlll belrig counted·
from the balloting Friday and
Saturday.
The referendum amounted
to a vote of confidence in the
leadership of the 7$-year-old
Shiite Moslem patriarch who
engineered the revolt that
drove Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi irom Iran in
February.
..
The government radio-teleservice
said
vision
p-el:iminary results showed
18 mlllloo of the estimated
18.7 mllllon eligible voters
endorsed the Islamic republic.
But despite Khomeini's .
landallde at the polls, the
revolutioo he heads still faces
serious challenges from
ethnic minortties who make
up about a third of Iran's 36

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

·.

CALL

MutuiJIC\

,_.. .e,..ru. .

o/Omilhil~
Gregg Gibbs
992-3443

million people.
Radio Tehran said yet
another cease-fire had
shattered in the northeastern
town of Gonbad-e-Qabous.
Prime . Minister Mehdi
Bazargan warned rebellious
l'Urkoman 'tribesmen there to
halt their week-old revolt or .
he would send in the army on
Tuesday to que!! it.
The tribesmen have been
fighting pro-Khomeini
militiamen for control of
Gorgan Province, home of
550,000 Turkomans. At ~ast
SO persons have been killed
and more than 100 wounded in
the fighting. ·
'll(e Turkoinan rebellion
followed an uprising of Ktl1'ds
in the western province of
Kurdistan three weeks ago.
The Kurds, like other
mino.rity groups, saw a ·
chance for home rule in the
wake of the national uprising
that crippled the army, which
the shah had used for years to
put down the aspirations of
the minorities.
Besides their long-61anding
demands for greater political
autonomy, the Kurds, l'llrko-

mans, Baluchis and Arabs
are l)u!Uli Moslems and fear
the domination of Khomeini 's
Shiite sect, the religion of
most Iranians.
Khomeini curbed the
Kurdish revolt by promising
greater autonomy ·and
appointing Kurdistan's first
Kurdish ~overnor.
Negotiations are under way
on a simllar deal for the '
Turliomans.

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial HoopiiJII
Saturday Admissions Naomi Bentley, Middleport;
Mary Nichols, Rutland.
Saturday Discharges _Virginia Musser, Donald
Greene, ·Darrell Hanning,
Mary Reynolds, Salty
Savage, Maynard Ellis.
Sunday Admissions Wanda Sprague, T-~ppers
Plains ; Doris Haynes,
Pomeroy; Daniel Talbott,
l'ortland,
Sunday Discharges H~rry Shain, Herbert Ailing.
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were
Issued to Clarence Thomas
Wolfe, 32, Rt. 2, Rsclne, and
Rosalie Durst, 34, Spring·
field; Martin Allen Shuler,l9,
Langsvllle, and Jennifer
Lynn Ohlinger, 16, Pomeroy.
. '

P.rakes fail,
driver cited
Two cars received medium
damage and a driver-' "was
cited to court as the result ol
an accident on Lincoln Hill
Road at 2::1Jl a.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy Police said a car
driven by Rick Taylor, 20,
Pomeroy, hit a second car,
also traveling northeast,
from the rear. Brakes on the
Taylor car failed to work,
police said.
Driver of the second car
was Kim Jarrell, 20, Rsclne,
Taylor was cited to mayor's
court on an -unsafe vehicle
charge.

-

••••••••••••••••••••
McCLURE$
=
•
· 3 IN ONE
Pomer-oY, o.
•

·:

••

Middle~~Grt.

DAIRY ISl£

••

I'

i
·

EVERY TUESDAY IN APRIL IS"

o.

•=• ·

FREE SUNDAE DAy

•

BUY ONE SUNDAE

:

AND

•

·.· · Gn ONE FREE

:

••••••••••••••••••••

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

N~clear-at-a -glance

JAMFS K. HAGGERTY ·
James K. Haggerty, 73,
Middleport, died Sunday at
the Holter Medical Center.
Mr. Haggerty · was a
veteran of World War II. He
belonged to Feeney-BeMett
Post 128, American Legion,
the .- Disabled American
Veterans and the OH-KAN
Coin Club.
He was born Sept. 15, 1905
at Falnnont, W. Va., a son of
the late James S. and
Virginia Bartlett Haggerty.
He was also preceded in
death by a brother; Ed, and a
sister, LouiBe.
Surviving are hts wife;
Mary L. Nesbit HaRRerty:

By The Associated Press
.
THE BUBBLE - Atomic engineers were' encouraged with the apparent shrinking of a
hydrogen..-ich gas bubble in the reactor fuel core.
·
"It slops up and dol!l•tt', but the trend is de(initely downward/' said George 'l:roffer, ,
.
man$ger of generatioo quality for Metropolitan Edison Co.
Troffer said Sunday the potentially explosive bubble was about 400 cubic feet in size
doW!! from a maxbnurn ofl,BOO cubic feet since the accident occurred.
.
- '
EVACUATION - Pennsylvania authorities firmed up contingency plans for an
evacuation unprecedented in scope. All told, nearly a mllllon_pe~!ple in four counties would
be relocated in any mass evacuation. One local civil defense official said he expected Gov.
Dick Thornburgh to order a p-ecauti~ evacuation within the next day or so.
. •
Thornburgh and his ~ff may retreat to a radiation-proof-bunker Sil-leei 'beneaih the
state Capitol if an evacuation Is ordered.
The sealed ·command post in the basement of the state Transportation Building holds
en9ugh food to feed 240 people for aboutfour days, an air filtration system, communications
equljll~ent and Its own. w11ter well.
CARTE,R'S VISIT- President Carter and his wife, RosaiyM, paid a HI-minute visit to
the plant's control room after an on-site briefing from Nuclear Regulatory Commission
officials Sunday.
The president later spoke at a town ball in nearby Middletown, where he· said an
evacuation would be "strictly a precautionary measure."
"If it does become necessary, Governor Dick Thornburgh will asl&lt; you and others in this
area to take appropriate action to ensurl! your safety. If he does, I want to urge that these
·
instructions be carried out calmly and exactly," he Said. .
NATIONWIDE REACI'ION - Effects Of the radiation accident rippled through the
nalion as Gov. Jerry Brown of California sought a federal order to ahut down a power plant '
and anti-nuclear protestersl!ent a cry of "No Nukes" throughout the land.
"I think Harrisburg was a VefY bittersweet incident," said Mark Habn, a leader of
,MissouriBnB For Safe Energy. "We are all saddened by that people are being exposed to this
radiation, but I think It's wa~ up America."

LOCAL MOOD- Most of the women alid almost all of the children have left the town of'

Goldsboro, which lies in the ahadow of the crippled island powerhOuse.
·
Those who stayed behind were both curious and stubborn. They either prayed a lot' or
drank a bit.
'"111e day you come on this earth, your days are numbered," said tavern owner Bud
King. "lflt'sgoing to get you, it'sgoingtogetyou."

of the I&amp;;; persons ldlled and
50 injured patrons - will
want the jury to see and hear
frbrn some of those injured,
The owners of the supper
club, the 4-R Corp, and Its
principals, Ric~d Schilling
Sr. aildhls four sons, were released from further UabWity
in. the case after an out-of.
court seWement of S3 mllllon
was app-oved by Campbell

County Circuit_ Judge John
Diskin on March 23. Diskin Is
reviewing litigation Jointly
with Rubin.
As part of their settlement,
the Schllllngs agreed to be
available to testify for · the
plaintiffs in further Utigation
against other defendants.
The lrlsl is the first of several which will test the claims
of the victbns to about $2.9

•

:
billion in• damages. There are
more than 1,000 defendants,
including hundreds of
insurance !inns and p-oduct
manufacturers. The first 11-ial
will detennlne whether there
Is UabUity on the par! of
Union Ught. ·
Terminal boxes, conduits,
wires and other elements of
the electrical system torn out
of the ruins of the supper club
are expected to be introduced

.----.Nati.ODWI. se"---_, as~~~

the utUity com' pany were on the premises
fOllowing a 1970 fire at tb!l
supper club and during
various remodeling aild
expansion projects,
Judge · Rubin, designated
special judge to hear the Clll!e
by the Sixth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals, Ia expected
to bring his entire staff to the
Covington courtroom for the
duration of the trial.

(Coniinued from page 1)

Excursions may be revived.
PORTSMOUTII, Ohio (AP) -Despite all the bard·

ships created by the closing of the U. s. Grant Bridge
over the Ohio River, cOIIIillunlty leaders in Portsmouth
still set! ooe possible loog-range ben¢11.

James Secrest, a Portsmouth Area Chamber of
Conunerce executive, said river excursions may be
reV-Ived In the Portsmouth area becau.se interest' is
being aroused by the tripa residents and visitors are
taking on a ferry. Theferry_has been in operation since
the ltridge closed for repairs last July.

Ambas~ors

IJVESTOCK

CIN CINN ATl ( AP)
Cattle !SO. Auction early. As
of 10:30 a, m. near SO head
sliort of early esthnate; not
enough slaughter . steers or
heifers to test. Cows _ftrm to
$1 higher. · Twenty percent
steers; 10 percent heifers.
Steers: few choice 2-4, 1025·
!ISO Ills., 71-73.40; good 2-J,
925·1075, 68.~70; standard 1·
2, 950-llSO, 61. 75-&amp;.25.
Heifers, good and choice 2
and 4, 875-1025, 65-70.
Cows generally 2-J, 850.1500, 56-$.SO; high dressing,

begin exodus ·

· . • CAIRO, Egypt (AP) - ' Arab ambassadors began
an exodus from cairo Sunday in protest oi Egypt's
treaty with Israel, but the govel,'lllllent of President.
Anwar Sadat saidJI would not be deterred from peace
by the Arab uproar;
Ari Arab summit conference in Baghdad, Iraq,
ended Saturday with the announcement that 18 nations
would punish Sadat by cutting all diplomatic and
economic ties with Egypt. By Sunday night the
ambassadors of Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Kuwait-;'lordan
and Bahrain had left Cairo, leaving their embassy
staffs behind.
.

•

U~ree step-children, Edward
Hughes, Wellston; John
Hughes, Tltuaville, Pa.;' and
Mrs. Charles (Carol) Moiwtv
CileMire; a brother, Ro~1 i
Middleport; . a slster-ilj·law,
Mrs._ Martha Haggerty, ,._
Middleport; five step·
grandchUdren and several
nlecea and nephews,
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
tlie Rswling..CO.ta F1111eral
Home with the Rev. Willtam
Uber officiating. Burial will
be ln Riverview Cemet~ry.
Friends may can at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday. ,

-

, ' The agency released ita annual tornado statistics
as the naUorrheads into another tornado season, Some
718 twisters were reported last year, well above the 28year mean of 867, but they took ooly 62llves compared
to a mean death toO of 111,

· CHI'CAGO
(AP)
caliceled ill flights at least
Contract talks are scheduled lhroll8h April 9. _
·
to resume Tuesday : in
Spokesman David Ostwald
Washington between United . said Sunday that United was
Airlines and a machlni8ts attempting to place Ita
union whose strike has ' passengers 111 other carriers,
grounded the nation's largest which reported ' heavy
air carrier.
'
bookings for flights that
United has said it Ia laying parallel United 'a. Eastern
off all pUots and flight attend- Airlines offlclala reported a
ants during the strllre, which 50 percent Increase · in
began at 12:01 a.m. EST reservations.
Saturday:
It wlllo be up to leaders of
•· The airline, which carries the San Frimclaco-based
an average of 130,000 International Alaociatioo of
passengers daUy on a system ·Machlnlsta .and Aerospace ·
connectln.l! 110 cities, bas Workers ''to define what they
wan_t" at the bargaining
l!e88ions, Ostwald said, "The
ball Is in their court right

Nmne••• ·

(Continued from page 1)
the Ohio Valley Improvement
Association, Cinclnuati.
The pubUc campaign Ia the
second phase of the
"Cilallenge for the Second
Century." Thus far, $2.3
mllllon hl!s been pledged in
the inltlsl intensive phase
which included support from
those who are closely
asaoclated and involved with
Rio Grande. Alumni, local
financial institutions, cor·
porate friends, faculty, ' ad,
ministration and students
have aU · made important
contributions thus far.
Other campus Cievelop'
ments continue in addition to
the campaign effort. ThroiJ8h
the college'• dual relation·
ship as a private and atate
assisted college, Rio Grande
will benefit With the con
- structlon of three new classroom facilities including a
technical careers building,
now under construction and
scheduled for a June I
completion, a ·fine and per-forming arts center and a
math and . science building.
Campus landscape changes,
including walkways and
better parking areas are also
scheduled•

now."
The union is seeking a
peMyan-ltour lnCreue when
the cOlt of Uvtng index rtsei
threetenlha of 1 percent, said
WIIUam Dengler, fJnanclal
secretary of .Chicago-area
Locall467.
"The-problem is there is no
p-ovlslon lor 1979," Dellgler
sAid. "The union feels It jlllll
can't llve without this
clause, ..
· He said United bad agreed
to an hourly wage lncreue of
17 cents in 1980 and 18 cents in
1981 to offset increases in the.
cost-of-living Index.
But union offlclals said they
expected the airline would be
reluctant to meet their cOlt·
oOiving d!!mand. A limllar .
ooe was rejected earUer -by
Trans World Alrlinee.
Airline spoktiiiMII refuaed
to ccmment about United's
position on the Issue or about
possible
problems
negotiators will face. Airline
officials have said the latest
rejected contract called for
wage increases totaling '32
percent over three year11,
MEETS TONIGHT ,
Eastern Athletic Boosters
will meet thts evening at 7:30'
p.m. at the high school.

. cfa~MIYRIST .

111y

0
0

a along tho way

Until this little slugger · makes the big
time, you may need some extra financial security. Our highest interest savings accounts can help! Find out!

0

0

Strong oppo_sition expected
cOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The sponaor Of a
modified no-fault automobUe insurance plan for Ohio
says be anticipates strong opposltioo to the let~islation,
which begins hearings in a House committee this week.
Rep. Vernon F. Cook, D-Qayahoga Falls, said
some .form of the no-fault plan has
before the
· ..Legislature without success four times in the past !ive
ye_ars.
.

Moot checkbook tlutcheo oew in their.checkbooko. But Rollo Ladies' Secretariat lets you remove the chttkboo!&lt; to make checkw.ritins eao!er. Ancl the
12-view windows are perfect for showins identification, All of ~ plus 7
credit card POcket~, protected by Rolfo exc!usivc Credit Guard, as well aa
pen and outs1de com Jlllrlt. So Y(herever you re headed, be oure to take alo111
tjle easy writer, Rolli Ladies' Secretariat,
'

come

.Bond hearing may be 'held

·Fai•nters·
sa-Dk_
If&amp;
POMEROY, OHIO .
'

$40,000 Maximum
Insurance For Each Depo,s. itor .
.
.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

.

000

,.

0

oooc~--~,0000

~~t;~tea~~ed~J~:,'

•

ROLFS.. , it ~how~ you care.

CLEVELAr1li (Ap) -

Abond hearlllg iOi'Anthooy
D, Liberatore, captured after being on the FBI's' ~·to
MO!l Wanted" Ust since May _28,1878, wlll be held today
in federal courl. Liberatore, 57, was arrested early
Sunday in a suburban Eastlake "safe house" by 15
federal agents and two local pollee officers.
Liberatore was in bed and offer~«! no resistance
when he '!as se!zed by a raiding party, said Stanley S.
Csamecki, FBI agent in charge fn &lt;:teveJana. No
weapons were found. But a neighbor, Donald A.
. Kernlskey,saldllethoughtaburglarywasoccurringat
where Ubecalore was

'

'

WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES-2ND FLOOR
Be sure to see our new -selection Women's
Rolls Wallets· Secretariat CigareHe Cases· .
Kev Rings:. etc. New stvles ·new colors.

POM
ER'
ELBERFELDS IN
0y
·

j

·

~--~------------------~
'(

were.
In Washington, Sen. Gary
Hart, chairman of the subcommitte e on nuclear
regulation, said "it might be
more ·expensive to clea_n u_p
the plant than it was to build
it. It might be a $1 bilUon
mausoleum! '
. Rep. Morris K. Udall,
chairman of the House
energy subcommittee, . said
the contamination inside the

·
containm ent building was
"unprecedented in thf
history of nuclear power'
and was "so bad -it will b&lt;
months before any possible .
. ·r . deed
cleanup can begm, 1 tn
a '
cleanup is possible.,.
" Nobody's seen those fuel
rods, that's the trouble,"
Udall 'said . "You can't open
up the top of the reactor and
look in , it's just tO&lt;) badly con·
laminated in there. "ua
Meanwhile, scientists on
the scene near Harrisburg'
were studying the potentially
explosive and lethally

· · ·
· ·
·
. . ·
radl?acllvt• gas bubhlt• and
But another NRC .offwlal,
momtormg_ the sensitive In· Richard Vollmer, said of the
struments mslde the reactor . bubble, "We hehe~e It IS
"We k~ow many of these prudent to Sit and walt a h(tie
systems may be at or beyond while to make sure It 's .nut
th . d ·g
rform· nc "
. ba k ..
~" esl n pe
a e,
eommg c · .
.
sa id Karl Abraham, a
Vollm~r said the tospokesman for the _Nuclear st~ents and v1tal safety
RegulatoryCpmmissiOn.
eqUipment· were designed to
Denton also said the reac- withstand severe accident
tor 's t.•n:~ra· t ure· had
· 1udi ng high.
. d rop· . cond't'
I !ons,
mc
ped SlgOiftcantly, wtth only rad1at1on, and that "we would,
two fuel cells, out of 177' over expect .that those would be
400 degrees, $everal,hu_ndred capableoftakinglt," .
degrees below the pomt at · If some devices fmled, he
which an explosion becomes said, it would still be possible
likely.
to control the reactor and

15 CENTS

. TUESDAY, APRIL 3, 1979

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

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

Council incurs debts
Hills-Hocking Vall~y.
are tickets that can be obCouncil, ·in other business, tained that will not be ruined .
approved a bid from when placed on a car when it
Pomeroy Motor Coh1pany 'tor is raining. CouncU also wants
· a cruiser in the amount of a meter report at each
meeting and the meterman in
$5,750 with trade.
· Council later rejected aU attenddnce.
Cillef Webster indicated he
bids. Bids will be readvertised and reopened will be retiring soon.
Aprill6. Thisisthethlrdthne . Council felt that a jobfor bids to be submitted. · description of the chief'.s
The issuing of parking position he obtained before
tickets was discussed at looking for a replacement.
Jane Walton, clerk, is to
length since tickets have not
b~en issued when . it is contact the M.unlcipalleague
.for a job definition.
raining .
Mayor Andrews reported
Councll felt this should be
changed. Council wants a that the .state, .weather
report submitted on how permitting, Is gojng to clean
many tickets are written on Main Street and patch it with
rainy days.
tar .
Co'uncibnan Harold Brown
O.ief Webster stated there
asked that if council has to
pave Main Street ftQm
Syracmore to Butternut Wliy
not put a weight )bnit on that
portion of !he street? It was
P'Jinted out that this was stm
~.r
partofu.s: 33. ·
·
I.JMA, Ohio (AP) - Fo..: Miami, Fla., private
The state does not pave this
investigators charged with conspiracy to kidnsp in
portion of . Main Street
connection with the dejlarture ofa Nicaraguan student
because of -.the re-venue
from the Lbna area were release&lt;! Irom custody
Pomeroy receives through
Monday,
('
parking meters. ·
"

BYKATlECROW
Due to the wiilter weatlier,
recent flooding and bad road
conditions, Pomeroy's street
department has incurred
debts totaling $13,000, but has
no funds to handle the deficit.
Monday ·night, Mayor
Ciarence Andrews suggested
that the street and finance
committees meet im·
mediately to determine how
the debts are going to be paid.
On the brighter sipe,
howeVer, Mayor Andrews has
been informed that $19,926
now has been approved ·for
the development of Sugar
Run Park (l,llnl-Park)..
_ ·Council must provide
matching funds. The flinding
was made through Buckeye

Nationwise ·

FolU' private o-ves releas
_ 00

-·· ot!Hn~l)' P.rolecllfDJ:,~~+-~.,.,., __ J.aru___~......l'~~;.....
'clfm~ft,''"i'e

.
.
,
'BAZAAR SALE - These articles in the window at the Dale C. Warner Insurance
Agency, on W, Main St., Pomeroy, are being sold by the Forest Run Methodist Cilurch on
April 6. The bake and baza_ar sale will offer such goods as comforters, Easter bunmes,
baskets and bak~ goods. The bazaar sale will be held at' the Warner Insurance Agency
office.
,..,
,

Appa •ent
. l0 -W . b l•dd
•

'

m
.· e- d'.
.

Mour.er rgrwres sons

'

If 111

.

fo~

.

.

e~s
.

,

.

Rio projl!ct

approved but not awarded,
for amounts not to exceed the
state architect's .estimate.·
The building's gla~ front will
be rebid.
The second bidding
procedure was necessary
because the first set of bids
all exceeded architect 's
estimates . Rio Grande
Community
College
Secretary - Treasurer Dr.
Herman Koby noted a big
plus in the rebid procedure.
"General bidders reassess
costs and methods ·allowing
for lower bids which move
pr jects forward." .
Groundbreaklng for the
fered as evidence an amen- fine ar:ts center should be in
dllcl complain! the Cincinnati . May.
board was barred from filing,
a Supreme Court prohibition
order and a transcript of the
Common Pleas Court trial
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
proceeding.
·
Tbarsday . tbrougb
"Judge Riley said the trial
Saturday: Mootly fair
court felt under compulsion
I'huroday. RaiD potlllble
to take no authority to · do
Friday and Saturday.
anything further at this
Hi&amp;h• from the upper 401 to
time "Uoyd said. "The issue
mid 50s Thursday and
here' is whether the Ohio
Friday and In ,the 40.
Supreme Court prohibits the
Jaturday. Lows In the low
U. s. District Court from
hearing an issue that Is· not
to mid 30s Th¥r•day and
chal\engable before any
Friday aod upper 20• to
mid 308 Saturday.
sta\e.''
general contract low bidder
was Sherman R. Smott
Construction. A. J. Stock·
meister was the low bidder
for both the plumbing and the
heating, ventuatlon and air
conditioning portions of the
building,
Electrical contracts were

Financing issue ·
on court.docket

s::

T""'

-...

'

vy

Officials said the accident
did not . affect the en·
vironment and they said the
plant, built by Westinghouse
Electric Corp., would resume
operations Thursday.
.:.. The NRC ordered a Illday safety check at seven
plants equipped by Babcock
- Wilcox Co.; the firm that
designed the Three Mile
. ha s .
Island reactor. The firm
denied .-responsibility for the .
accident.
,,
- As ·a precaution, White
House officials said I million
(Continued on page 12)

A new salary schedule containing the 1.30 index
was adopted, as of March 19, when the Southern Local
School District Board of Education met in special
ses~im Monday night.
. ·
Diitrlct teachers were on strike last.month over the
index which had be~ app-oved when it was submitted
to binding arbitration, but was not granted by .the
bod
. .
..
The board named Dr. Thomas Coyne as chief
negotiator for ita negotiations wiui classified
employes. Negotiations got underway Monday night.
Sandra Hill and Valerle Johnson, faculty
members, were named to produce the annual variety
show at the high school.
The next board session will beat 7:30p.m. Ap-U 17
·. in the high school cafeteria. Board members present
last night included David Nease, president; Shlfley
Johnson, vice p-esident; Sue Grueser, Betty Wagner
and Dallas Hill.

Gas reserves
will -be used

"
1J!e mnr --·~na·
· MacFarland, SO, the owner of a detective agency, and
received two calls fr~m
three of his employees - Richard Magee, 39, Sergio
resident! of Laurel Street
.
Garcia; 22, and WUda Garrett, 20.
statmg they had nothing but
RIO GRANDE- Apparent
. .O:r:.
•
.
'
• h.
praise for the street depart· low bidders for Rio Grande
WlS ' '.
rpent for a "job well done." CoUege and Community
.. '
Wehrung also reported College's fine and perfonning
MOBILE, Ala. (AP) -With time running 'out, the _
donations have been offered arts center were a!Ulounced
mother of John Louis Evans Ill has chosen to ignore
to help with the expense of today following a recent
her aon's wish to dle in the electric chair Friday and
cleaning the streets. He_also community college board
appealed to a federal judge to block the execution.
sugg~sted that addittonal meeting.
U. S. District Co uri Judge W. H. Hand was
cleamn~ be done on other
In this, the second bid
.scheduledtoreviewthepetitiontoday, Evans, who was
streets m the village.
opening for the building 'the
RFSIDENTS
'
sentenced to death for the slaying of pawn shop owner
E(bvard Nassar of MobUe in 1977, has said he has "'an
COMMENDED
ofiSession with freedom. If I can't have it, I'd rather be
- Council commended neighdead."
bors of Pleasant Ridge for
cleaning their street and
would 'like for residents of the
town to follow suit.
DAYTON Ohio (AP) - Investigations continued
It was indicated that if a
today into a jan fire at the Dayton Safety Building
little pride was shown the
which overcame 75 persons and hospitalized 28 others
town could be cleaned up with
after apparenUy starting in a padded cell inhabited by
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) residents' help. '
a prisoner wearing only his under-shorts.
The Ohio Supreme Court
TIRFS NEEDED
Police Director Grover W, O'Connor said Monday
scheduled arguments today
·Eight new tir~ are 11eeded on an appeal of a Hamilton
he wants to find out how the .matches used to start the
for the, two large trucks County Common Pleas Court
fire got in the jail, determine if a different kind of
belonging to the village . ruling that thestate·systemof,
padding should be bought for cells, and review the
Council voted to purchase financing public education is
evacuation procedure.
four tires and· tubes from unconstitutional.
Meigs Tire Center.
Meanwhile, U.S. District
Council lodged a complaint Court Judge Robert M. Dun·
FARMINGTON, Mo. ( AP) - Some of the 2l!
about
CETA
workers can has under advisement a
tesidenta killed in a boarding home tire could have
washing their cars when it is request to hear an injunction
been 8aved if there had been enough staff members to
raining when they cannot petition sought by the Cin(Continued on'page li)
work. Another complaint cinnati' Board of Education to
(Continued on page 12)
stop such expenditures under
present laws.
The CinciMati board filed
the original action , which .
resulted In Common Pleas
Judge Paul Riley 's ruling in
1977 that the present system
of slate educational aid is
unequal and therefore un·
constitutional.
Attorneys for the Ohio
Department of Educatio_n
told Duncan Monday that 1t
would be inappropriate for
him to consider the case now
because of ihe scheduled Ohio
Supreme &lt;;ourt hearing.
Attorney Thomas Hill,
representing the Ohio Depar·
trnent of Education, reviewed
the appeal route of the case
for Duncan and told of an un. successful attempt to amend
the . original complaint to in·
elude recently passed school
finance legislation.
''The plaintiffs are. asking
this court to entertain action
to void ~ statute that the Ohio
Supreme Court hal! said don't
void until that Supreme Court
has an opportunity to rule,"
Hill told Duncan. He said the
•ppeal sought to void all state
school financing slatutes on
i)oth state and federal con:
TEAM. AvAILABLE - The M-G-M OlaJter of the Thal~zya Lodge 457, Ord\'f of the
stitution•l ~rounds. ·
·
Arr0 w an Indian dance team is available to entertain for a~y scouting fl!nction in any phase
Attorney
John
Lloyd,
'
Tile dancers Ill'• all members of ~Y Scout Troop 249 In Pomer'oy. Thetr
representing the Cincinnati
of scouting. h·;,dmacie ·by the boys who have spent many hours of practice unde1· the
Boa"! of Education, pressed
cost ~me~ Fr'ank Casto. On March 26 the team danced at \he Blu,e and Gold Banquet at
~=!Ill the Cub and Webelo Scouts. Pictured are front, 1 tor, Cilarles Stone, Terry for a federal hearin~ on the
injund.ipn petitio?, and- uf·
~w:. ?~ck from the left, Brent Bolin, Dan Thorn"\ John Morris and Mike Edw•rds.

ch~tgel ~ had been ' ' ilro~ ~;:a)ritnit ' Patrict

power plants.
He said there was no real
way around nuclear power if
the nation wants to reduce its
he~
dependency on
Mideast oil "It's a question
.
of trading Iran off against
Three Mile Island," he told a
reporter,..
- In Seoul the South
Korean gover.{roent revealed
today that its .only nuclear
power plant hBs been out of
operation for a week because
of cooling system problem
that caused a leaking of
radioactive water
·

Adopts schedule

enttne

aty
'

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 246

complete its shutdown if
h h d .. .
enou•glt rt e~- ,CVICes con
II~&lt; to ~.~~-~ l_on.
. t' · 1
. ·t n on ~a~ -~ non£~en l ag
ms rwnflen . .or metasufntnhe
water ow m a par o
. t
ot ·
_ f· 'led
~.~ c ~r n d'~- u~~. ·/'theu~ . 0 ra :t::lJ':Iintnsl e
con mmen
h g.
h
Thei re were t ese ot er
deve
- I opments:
W· hE
S 11 , as '"~?n, ne'f
e~ r ~1 a r y .d ~m~ s that
~c es:ngerts;l on~~ (
Cespl c h ~d ~cr end
ong~ess s_ou fa P s';"e
up . censmg · or nuc ea r

•

•

e
(USPS 145·960)

could force plant's junking ·.

Lack Q/ staff blamed

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A.t')- GJUs industrY officials
say a vote by f&lt;nner workers at the Federal Glass Co
plant in Co!JIIIIbua haS enaured a perma~t ahutdowti ·
of the facillty. But union leaders and 'lrbrkers aren't
giving up hope. The plant's former employees·tumed
down a cootract offer from the company's prospective
buyer oo Sunday.
.
' Members from 'six locals of the American Flint
Glass Workers union voted 39~288 in a secret ballot to
back their bargaining committee in rejecting the \lifer
from the Lancaster Colony Corp, The locals rep-esent
about 1,200 of the plant's 1,500 former employees.

0

might fail because of intenseradiation - making it impossible to be sure what conditions inside the reactor

Investigation continuing

Vote assures shutdown

·STAR

·
By BOB DVORCHAK
Associated Press Writer
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP )
-Officials warned today that
the Three Mile Island nuclear
,
.reactor may be so con.laminated by radiation that
the entire facility will have to
be junked, becoming "a $1
billion mausoleum"
· assessment' came as
That
atomic engineers . continued
_to express optimism about
tbe shrinking gas bubble inside the crippled reactor. But
• they also worried that vital
'measuring
instruments

.resume Tuesday ·

ELBERFELD$

'

~ontamination

COntract talks ·

oFFfC'E' H l9:3hi 12, 2 to STCLOSE'
Cutter, 1-2, 800-1250, 46.50AT NOON ON
URS.) - EAST COURT;
56.50; high dressing, . 57c00-.
58.50.
jl_..f~~~~

WASHINGTON (AP) - '!Dere were more
tornadoes than normal in the United_States last year,
although they took f_.er lives than uaual, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminiatratloo reported
.

'

59.7lHI3 •

1978 ·year of tornadoes
Sunday.

·Area Deaths· I

1

.First.Beverly Hills trial begins
(X)VINGTON, Ky. (AP) A Bevedy Hills Supper Club
trial begins today in . U.S.
District Courl, with lawyers
for more than 250 plaintiffs
bringing suit against the
Union Light, Heat and Power
Co.
u.s. District Judge ·earl
Rubin will p-eside over the
11-lal, which Is apeeted to
take·one to two montha,
Union Light is the only de·
fendant. The utility was the
supplier of electricity to the
Southgate, Ky. supper club at
the tbne of the May 28, 1977,
fire which kllled 111;) pei'IIOns.
Experts who investigated
the supper club fire
attributed Ita cause to the
electrical system. Their
testimooy Is expected to take
up most of the trial.
But there will also be teatl·
mony • from survivors.
Lawyers for the plaintiffs' - ·
a group of about 250 relatives

)

..

"

'

'

The Orange Towns hip
Volunteer Fire Department
wns called Mpnday at 7:06
to search

for

Emergency service
,

'

• •
•
COmDllSSIOB tODIC

The future of emergency
medical service for Glillia
County was 'discussed Mon·
day night as the Board of
Commissioners met with
local buaine~ and medical •
representatives.
The discussion centered
around the operation of the
servlce system in Meigs
County, which operates as a
branch of county government.
,
Meigs County Emergency
Service Coordinator Bob
Bailey ,-who Is serving as' a
volunteer advisor to the
Gallia Conunission, detailed
the operation of the Meigs
Low tonight in the low to System.
·
mid 40s. High Wednesday in
According to Bailey, the
the upper SOs. The chance of Meigs service which Is finanrain is 60 percent tonight and ced by a '1 mill levy
80 percent Wednesday.

Weather

ChUdren safe
p.m.

Columbia Gas of Ohio, a area, including 31 new wells
unit of the Columbia Gas to be connected later this
System, announced today year.
that new reserves of natural
In addition to the new pipegas being developed 1f1 Gallia line, Columbia Transml~ion
and Meigs Counties will soon will Install two compressor
be br.ought to market.
engines 'to help move the gas
Columbia Gas Trans· to market in 1979_and two
mission Corp., another more engines prior to · 1982,
Columbia Gas System unit wlien . the program Is
and Columbia of Ohio's scheduled to be in full
primary pipeline supplier, operation.
wlll be~ln work soon on a $1.4
When fully operational, the
mllllon "pipeline construction · new field gas field and
project to serve the ·area.'
pipeline will ~eliver as much
- According to !;.olumbia . a6 4millioncublc feet•of 11&amp;1'8
Transmission, nearly 4.5 di!Y to wholesale customers
miles of Ill-inch pipeline and of Columbia Transmission,
more than 11 miles of 8-inch which supplies Columbia of
pipeline will be built, The line Ohio and 74 other gas com·
will accept gas under panles In eight states.
development by three in·
Work is expected to begin
dependent firms on roaghly on the pipeline within the next
17,000 acres lying primarily few days and is sch~duleli to
In South Central Meigs be completed by duly.
Counly and northern Gallia
Columbia Gas Trans·
County. · ·
mlsolon obtains about 10
Projected recoverable percent of the gas It delivers
reserves in the area are from Ohio. and elsewhere in
estimated to be in exc~ of ,Appalachia.
13.9 bllllon cubic feet, enough
Last year Columbia TranJgas to heat 93,500 homes for a mission spent more than $20
year.
million
finding
and
More than · 155 wells are developing new supplies of
scheduled to be.drllled in the . gas in the Appalachian Basin.

two

children losl in a wooded area
back of the Arbaugh Division
in Toppers Plains
The girls were fo,und S&gt;tfe
and sound at 7:15p.m.
Thirv-five firemen · and
helpers assi~ted and did . a
fine jnb, Chief Rob Tripp
r~port~'&lt;l .

SQUAD RUNS
The PO!neroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
residence of Mrs. Myrta
Schaefer, W. Main St. at 9:27
p.m. Monday.
· Mrs. Schaefer, who had
auffered a possible stroke,
was taken to' Vet~rans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.
At 10:19 p.m. Monday, the
squad was called to the
Flatwoods Road for Howard
Searles who had back and leg
difficulties. He too, was taken
to • v'etcrans M.cniorial
Hospital where he was ad·
niitted.

gener:tlng approximately
$100,000 per year, functions as
an all-volunteer, no charge
system.
.
Bailey further explained
that the Meigs service
openitea under the authority
of the County Commission, is
directed by_the_system coordmator, 1s advised by
medical advisory and con·
sumer groups, and receives
m~thly input from 1quad
representatives from the
units within the county,
. The Meigs County ,System
1s comprised of one SEOEMS
(Southeast Ohio Emergency
.Medical Services) squad arid
village volunteer units which
operate with their own
autonomy within the centralized sysll!m.

OSBA opposes federal board
I

Free clinics
are available

·The Ohio School Boards
Association (OSBA) Polley
and Legislative Committee
unanbnously vpted in opposltlon
to the creation of a
Meigs County industries
and businesses can take .separate Department of
advantage of a free hyper· E.ducatlon at the federal
tension (high blood pressure) level.
Dean R. Circle, school
. clinic for their workers
boa•d
member
Iron\
through the Meigs County
Gallipolis · City . School
Health Department.
The program, under the District, voted to oppose the
direction of Mrs. Nita formation of a separate
Wisniskl, R. N., has been department, after lengthy
active in Meigs County for. discussion at a meeting of the
OSBA committee this
two years.
During that period, a blood weekend at the association's
pressure screening program headquarters in Westervllle.
The following reasons were
was held_at the three mine
cited In the unanimous
site~ of the Southern Ohio
decision:
Coal Co. to two occasions.
(I) . Policy decisions arid ·
I!Qalnesses and Industries
. Interested are · asked to functions, now delegated to
eontact Mrs. Wlsniski at the state and local officials,
county health department should remain at the -local
level. With the. e¥bUshment
olflce.
&lt;¥
·

of a separate Department of
Education, more of these
decisions
relative
to :
education would he deter·
mined at the federal level.
(2) It is ·the belief of the
members of the Polley and
Legislative Committee thai
education remain under local
jurisdiction as. much •• ·
possible and und~r . the
sanctions of lOcal boards of
education. The formation of a
_separate department I~ in
direct opposition with this
concept.
The bill, S 210, was in· .
troduced , by
Sensto.r
Abraham Ribicoff (D-CoM.)
in January.
The delegate assemblr ,of ·
the National School Boards
Association will be debating
this Issue al Its - national
meeting in Miami, April ~
24.
110
'lj,

;.J

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="815">
    <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="11464">
                <text>04. April</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="50478">
            <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="50477">
              <text>April 2, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2387">
      <name>haggerty</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
