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The News Journal from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 28
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The News Journal from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 28

Publication:
The News Journali
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

LEGALS LEGALS 28 Evening Journal, Wilmington, Tuesday, April 10, 1979 500 Legal Notices 500 Legal Notices CROSSWORDS ACROSS Answer Previous Puzzle NOTICE Ii hereby given that an order dated 3 April 1979 has been Issued by the undersigned author-liing the name of the oil screw ccrni A r4rm Mnmhar U4334. 66 Sheep DOWN ver to LI to Cl Yj Si owned by Rltter Leasing Incorpo A Tale of 3 Cities, All Eager to Hang The Washingtons rated of which Wilmington, ueia-ware Is the home port, to be changed to CIRCUS MAXIMUS II. J. C. BURNS, CW02, USGC, Documentation Officer, U.S.

Coast Guard, Wilmington, Delaware. apr 5-6-9-10 07378) PUBLIC NOTICE HEARING OF PLAN FOR HANDICAPPED CHILDREN A Public Hearing on the use ol Federal Funds for the Education of Handicapped Students will be held on May 15, 1979, at 7:00 P.m. In the Cabinet Room, second floor of the Townsend Building, Dover, Dela-ware. To review the Plan, contact Dr. Carl Haltom, State Director of Exceptional Children Special Programs Division, Department of Public Instruction, Dover, Delaware, Telephone 678-5471.

Comments may be made In person at the hearing or In writing from April 15, 1979 to May 15, 1979 to Dr Haltom. Written comments should specify me section number of the Plan and then Indicate the concern or recommended change. aorlO 127423) 503 Bids! Proposals I ICJ IQ liTTT PT TTkOd' Mi i f'tsjTs wT Rj I A fltjA dTa' HIT do A DQc I otsTHfir ots HjJOl J5 Oi a i tTePai HaTpTT I E7 Vi gio'TTd i 1 on For Quick Action Try This Easy-to-Use WANT AD ORDER BLANK Write Your Ad Here: ONE WORD ON EACH LINE Words with 5 units or more are counted as 2 words. Note Minimum 3 lines in Real Estate Sale Employment Classifications. No SiluaHom Wonted Advwftiemertfi mutf be pnpoti rhont fow SO) Bids 4 Proposals 1 Bang 4 Rabbit 8 Witches 12 Christmas decoration 13 Always 14 Iniquity 15 Table tennis 1 7 Character part 18 Novelist Ferber 19 Mao tung 21 Ill-bred person 22 Caps 25 Pod vegetable 27 Longing lor friends 30 Tided 33 I possess (contr 34 Agapanthus 36 Irish Free State 37 Sharp 39 Fourpenny 41 Fuel 42 Terminating 44 Shade of 1 Skirl 2 Latin poet 3 Comedian Ed 4 In the know 5 Macao com 6 Hires 7 Energy unit (pl) 8 Pronoun 9 Hobby 10 Colorado tributary 1 1 Alaskan transportation 16 Actress Storm 20 Environment agency (abbr 23 Not well 24 Moribund 26 Noun suffix 27 Enjoy 28 Heater 29 Poverty 30 Mendacity 31 Actor Blore PuSLiC NOTICE Is hereby given that the Department of Finance, Division of Procurement and Records of the City of Wilmington, Delaware will receive, Publicly open and read aloud in the Fifth Floor Conference Room, City-County Building, 8th French Streets, Wilmington, Delaware on Thursday, April 19, 1979 at 2 00 M.

sealed proposals, in triplicate, from qualified bidders to furnish and deliver, per specifications various work and Items for the City of Wilmington to be known as Contracts) CD79II4 THREE 0 FORK LIFT TRUCKS, PW79026 TRAFFIC SIGNAL PEDESTALS. WD79023 ARCADE AND WINDOW SCREENS FOR ROCKFORD TOWER. Information, specifications and other contract documents are on file and may be obtained at the Office of the Division of Procurement and Records, 5th Floor, City-County Building, 8th and French Streets, Wilmington, Delaware 19801. PAUL F. MAHONEY, Manager, Division of Procurement and Records Apr3-10 5 7345: '1 I III 32 Strike out (abbr) 35 Singing syllable 38 Writing implement 40 Carry 43 Negation 45 Bewildered 47 Study 48 According to fact 49 Yours and mine 51 Christmas 53 Stimulate 54 Evening in Italy 55 First man 57 Automotive society (abbr 59 Sawbuck 60 Genetic material (abbr) The Board of Education of the Cape Henloptn School District it soliciting sealed bids on athletic supplies and equipment to be re.

ceived in the office of the Superintendent of Schools, Nassau, DE 19969 until 2:00 p.m. April 18, 1979 at which time and place they will be publicly opened and read. Instructions and specifications are available al the above named office. F. Robert Mercer, Supt.

Cape Henlopen School District Nassau, DE 19969 Apr 4-10 037211 THE UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE will receive Sealed Bids at the Office of the Director of Purchasing, General Services Building, 222 S. Chapel Newark, Delaware for: BID NO. 2070-KITCHEN EQUIPMENT. Until 2 PM, April 24th, 1979. Specifications may be obtained at the above address.

apr 10-17 '25152 THE UNIVERSITY OF DELA-WARE will receive sealed bids at the office of the Director of Purchasing, General Services Bids 222 S. Chapel Newark, THE University of Delaware will receive sealed bids at the Office of the Director ol Purchasing, General Services Building, 222 S. Chapel Newark, DE for: BID NO. 2069, LASER until 10 a.m., April 24, 1979. Specifications may be obtained at the above address.

apr.10-17 127250 YOUR FINGER 0N 10 WORDS 12 Ixnl 3 DATS $5.58 I WEEK $11.76 I MONTH $48 60 difference 46 Cameroon tribe 47 Breakfast food 48 Quantity of coal 50 Powerful explosive (abbr) 52 Weather bureau (abbr 56 Feels sorry about 58 Made obsolete 61 Bear (Lat) 62 Biblical garden 63 George Gersh win's brother 64 Abstract being 65 Songstress Home i 7" 6" I la 9 10 I 1 19 20 23 24 2b 26 TTTIT" 30 TT" TT" 33 34 3b 36 37 38 "1 39 40 741 42 43 1 44 45 46 4 7 ilTTg 505I 1 52 i6 57 bi 59 60 fit 62 "63 64 65 66 I I I I I I 1 I I 1 io iNf ASCPfH (fff Bi'B At ASSN SOME extra CASH WD ft BOSTON (AP) "Free George and Martha" the Washington Post appealed. "Keep the Washingtons in Boston," pleaded the Boston Globe. Compromise, opined The New York Times, declaring that the couple should hang in New York. Invoking American history, the human-rights issue and regional chauvinism, the three newspapers have joined an intercity battle for Gilbert Stuart's unfinished portraits of George and Martha Washington. The city of Boston, charging that Washington bureaucrats are "plundering the landscape," went to court yesterday to prevent the Boston Athenaeum, a private library, from selling the famous portraits to the National Portrait Gallery.

The New York Times entered the fray today when it suggested what it called a compromise. The newspaper said in an editorial that the portraits, which presently hang in the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, should be between Washington and Boston specifically, in New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. As a precedent for its proposal, The Tiiiies cited the compromise northern and southern politicians reached in 1790 to place the nation's capital on the banks of the Potomac River. Yesterday, the Washington Post, in an editorial appearing under a headline saying "Free George and Martha," called the dispute a human-rights issue. this portrait sale is a human-rights issue a human-replica rights issue, at any rate and the Washingtons must be set free," it said.

"They do in fact belong here; Martha certainly, but George even more so. For one thing the portraits are unfinished; and what could be more appropriate for this town than the symbol of eternally unfinished "Come home, George." The Boston Globe said in an editorial Friday that "claims that the portraits will be better off in Washington D.C., where more tourists ill get a look at them, are dubious. Tourists flock to New England and having national treasures distributed throughout the country seems a more thoughtful scheme." The Globe also editorialized about the controversy today, saying that the Post's "rather tongue-in-cheek editorial dismisses attempts to keep the portraits here as a kind of misguided provincial effort. If they want to argue on those grounds, we'll respond by noting that last year's attendance at the National Portrait Gallery was a mere 481,000, compared with the MFA's million." The city of Boston asked the Massachusetts Supreme Court yesterday to issue a temporary restraining order to block the sale of the portraits. Also named in the suit was state Attorney General Francis X.

Bellotti. who, Mayor Kevin White said, should move to prevent the loss of "public property." "We view selling 200-year-old paintings of the nation's first president and first lady with the 15 WORDS 13 Imtl Day $3.72 3 DAYS $8.37 I WEEK $17.64 I MONTH $72.90 ALMANAC CORNER AHHIrrphuto llton Mayor Kevin liite says the paintings are part of his city's heritage. same reluctance that the ancient Athenians would have shown in auctioning off the Acropolis," White said. The paintings, White said, "are part of Boston's heritage Washington thinks it has a right to buy anything of historic value plundering the landscape." The paintings have been on loan to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts for 103 years. Citing financial need, the Athenaeum, a venerable private library on Beacon Hill, is selling the portraits for a reported $5 million.

Under tentative terms of the sale, the portraits would return to Boston once very five years for exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts. The city argues that the 51,500 used to buy the pictures from Stuart's widow in the early 19th Century was raised by public subscription. And it says this created a public charitable trust requiring that the pictures be available to Boston residents. Meanwhile, The Washington Post reported today that the National Gallery of Art in Washington has acquired a rare matched set of Stuart portraits of the country's first five presidents. two of the portraits of Washington and John Adams were gifts to the National Gallery.

The museum bought the other three. All five paintings come from Thomas Jefferson Coolidge IV of Boston, whose family has owned them since 1853. No price was disclosed, but the Post quoted sources as saying the National Gallery paid $1 million for them. And the newspaper said that is half the appraised value of the set. Coolidge said he decided to part with the paintings "for reasons of security.

They were hanging in my mother's house, in Manchester, by the sea. They're painted on wood. We were worried about the effect the cold winters and hot summers there would have on their condition." Now the National Gallery has 39 Stuart portraits, and the National Portrait Gallery none. Until Wednesday 30 Dial a News-Jour Del for: BID NO. 2065-THEATER CURTAINS, until 2 pm, April 17, 1979.

BIO NO. 2066-TWO TRACK MASTER RECORDING SYSTEMS until 2:30 April 17, 1979 Specifications may be obtained at the above address. April 3 8, 10, 1979 I39 PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that the Division of Procurement and Records of the Department of Finance, will receive, publicly open and read aloud sealed bids for the purchase of the property known as the Presidential Apartments, situated al 2420-2428 Market Street in the City of Wilmington, County of New Castle, State of Delaware on Friday, April 27, 1979 at 2:00 P.M. In the Fifth Floor Conference Room, City County Building, 800 French Street, Wilmington, Delaware. The Property will be sold subiect to the following conditions and restrictions: la) The purchaser shall be required to use the property in a manner conforming to the applicable roning restrictions contained in the Wilmington City Code to! The minimum acceptable bid shall be 141,795.82.

Property shall be brought up to City Code standards within 18 months and buyer may not sell property until it is up to code to any entity except the City. ktl Proposals dependent upon City, State or Federal subsidies are to be given a lower rating than those reiving on private funding. All Conditions of sale and such further information as is available may be obtained from the Division of Procurement and Records, ol the Department of Finance, City-County Building, Fifth Floor, 800 French Street, Wilmington, Delaware 19801 PAUL MAHONEY. Manager, Division of Procurement and Records Apr3-10-17 127341 "CRAWLER AC KHOE, LOADER" Sealed proposals will be receiv ed by the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control for the furnishing and delivering of one '1 Crawler Tractor with Backhoe and Loader for Contract No. 79-07-10 entitled "Crawler Backhoe Loader." Proposals may be obtained from the below address at Legislative Ave.

and Wm. Penn St. or by calling O021 678-4183. Proposals will be addressed to the Department of Natural Re sources and Environmental Con trol. Office of Administration, O.

Box 1401, Dover, Delaware 19901. and shall be received at that time and place no later than Wednev day, April 18. 1979, at 11:00 am and opened and read aloud. The Secretary of the Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control reserves the right to reject any and all bids. apr6-10 7403) ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of Education of the New Castle County School District will receive Sealed Bids for: I Bid No NC 78 95 AUDITORIUM SEATING until HAM Wednes day.

April 25, 1979. 2. Bid No NC 78-110 OIL BURN ER REPLACEMENT MARTIN LUTHER KING SCHOOL until HAM Thursday, April 26. 1979. 3.

BID NO NC 78-96-A CUS TODIAL SUPPLIES until HAM. Tuesday. April 24, 1979. 4 BID NO. NC 78-111 RENTAL OF AGRICULTURAL LANDS until 2PM Monday, April 16, 1979 in the Office ot the Director ol Purchasing and Property Control, New Castle School District.

1400 Washington Wilming ton, Delawre 19801. Instruction Specifications may be obtained in the Office of the Director of Purchasing and Property Control at the above ad dress weekdays between BAM 8 Apr. 3, 4, 5, 10, II, 12 117731) ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of Education of the New Castle County School District will receive sealed bids for: 20 WORDS 14 lin nal Ad-visor now! We'll help you write a low-cost, result-getling ad. tK 1 DAY 3 DAYS 1 WEEK 1 MONTH $4.96 $11.16 $23.52 $97.20 SO Sell the still useful ColH Ro.n E3 items around the Shows Stotionoiy Orrluded fjfU NATIONAL WfATHFR StRVICf house that you no longer need. Get in touch with cus tomers through News-Journal Want Ads! 25 WORDS (5 Into Intended Outlook DELAWARE: Thursday through Saturday Chance of rain Thursday, ending Friday, and partly cloudy Saturday.

Highs will average in the upper 50s to mid 60s with lows in the 40s to low 50s. Record, Tides Sunrise today, 5' 33 a tomorrow. 5:31 a.m. Sunset today, 6 35 p.m.; tomorrow, 6:36 p.m. Length ot day: 13 hours, 1 minutes.

Moon (gibbous waxing) sets tomorrow morning, 5:12. TEMPERATURE DATA High yesterday 47 Low yesterday 34 Average yesterday 4) Normal for date 50 Low this morning 34 Record temperatures tor today since 1894: High, S4, in 1922; low 26 in 1911, 1917. CALL The ealluT Map The forecast for today until Wednesday morning: Widespread showers and rain for the Southeast and most of the central section of the country, snow from the central to the northern Plains and a mixture of rain and snow for the Pacific Northwest. Most areas will have below seasonal temperatures. The Forecasts DELAWARE and EASTERN MARYLAND Mostly fair tonight, low in the mid to upper 30s.

Partly cloudy Wednesday, high in the mid to upper 50s. Chance of rain is near zero tonight and 10 percent Wednesday. SOUTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIA and SOUTHERN NEW JERSEY Fair and cold tonight, low in the low to mid 30s. Partly sunny and milder Wednesday, 1 DAY 3 DAYS 1 WEEK I MONTH $6 2C $13.95 $29.40 $121.50 655-4061 Nicaragua Rebels Pin Down Troops Daily8am-5 pm Saturdays 8 am-12 noon nign tne upper sos to low 60s. Chance of rain is near zero tonight DEGREE DAYS (Heating) Yesterday 24 Month to date 181 Season (from Oct.

1) to date 4,819 Normal tor season to date 4,578 Last season to date 5,238 (A degree day is symbolic unit calculated to measure heating fuel requirements. The daily degree day figure equals the number of degrees the average temperature has fallen below 65. For example, a day with an average temperature of 55 degrees would cause me total "season to date" figure to rise by 10 degree days. PRECIPITATION DATA Precipitation yesterday 92 in. Month to date 1.54 in.

Normal for entire month 3 20 in. Year to date 18.78 in. Normal (as of end of month) 12.54 in. 30 WORDS 16 linn) ana iu percent Wednesday. 1 DAY 3 DAYS 1 WEEK 1 MONTH $7.44 $16.74 $35.28 $145.80 i or 810.

ou Can Support a Guerrilla' ians died and that the guerrilla left the hospital because of fears troops would find him and kill him. Ismael Reyes, president of the Nicaraguan Red Cross, declared "state of emergency" and sent three units to Esteli and three ambulances to Matagalpa, 18 miles southwest of Esteli. An informed source said two government World War II aircraft were forced out of combat in Esteli because of guerrilla ground fire but a military spokesman said they landed due to technical difficulties. The guerrillas also ambushed a jeep west of Managua late yesterday, injuring two soldiers, and, battled with troops just outside the 1. Bid No.

NC-78-97 A. MUSIC SUPPLIES until 2:30 p.m. Wednesday. May 3, 1979. 2.

Bid No. NC 78-98-A. LIBRARY SUPPLIES until 1 .30 pm, Wednesday, May 2, 1979 3. Bid No NC-7fr99-A PHOTOGRAPHY SUPPLIES until 2 pm, Tuesday, May 1,1979. 4.

Bid No. NC 78-100-A. HOME ECONOMICS SUPPLIES until 1 30 pm, Thursday, May 3, 1979. 5 Bid No. NC-78-101-A.

HEALTH SUPPLIES until 11:00 Friday, May 4, 1979. 6. Bid No. NC-7B-105-A PHYSICAL EDUCATION SUPPLIES until 2:30 pm, Thursday, May 3, 1979. 7.

Bid NO. NC-78112-A. LAWN MOWERS, 21" until II am, Tuesday, Mev 8, 1979, in the office of the Director of Purchasing 8, Property Control, New Castle, County School District, 1400 Washington DE 19801. Instructions specifications may be obtained in the off ice of the Director Of Purchasing Property Control at the above address weekdays, between 8 pm. April 10,11,12,17,18,19 Q5143) Order More Insertions Pay Less Per Day Name of Classification: TIDES AT MARINE TERMINAL Huh Low Tomorrow A.

11:27 6 07 Tomorrow P. 11:48 6:24 HIGH TIDES TOMORROW A.M. Indian River Inlet (bridge) 7:32 7-54 Rehoboth Beach 6:51 7:13 CapeHenlopen 7:43 7:59 Breakwater Harbor 8:21 8 04 Mispillion River 8:21 8 37 Bowers Beach 8:44 9 00 Woodland Beach 9:21 9-42 Beginning (Dote) Reedy Point 10:36 10:57 I EUClOSf or BILL TO newLasne 11:27 Baltimore 6:07 6:30 Kent Island 4:23 4:46 Chesapeake City 9:42 Townsends Inlet, N.J. 6:58 7:26 MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -Guerrillas manned barricades in northern Nicaragua after two days of fighting in which 41 were reported killed, but vacationing President Anastasio Somoza said "the country is under control." The guerrillas erected barricades six feet high in the streets of Esteli, 90 miles north of Nicaragua, to block military vehicles, and pinned down troops in the barracks on one side of the main plaza, refugees fleeing the city of 30,000 said. They reported the fighting renewed late yesterday after an unexplained mid-day cease-fire.

They said about 300 guerrillas were pitted against 100 troops in the barracks and that the soldiers were holding out for ammunition, reinforcements and air support. The refugees, many with only the clothes on their backs, streamed out of Esteli holding white clothing tied to sticks as a sign of neutrality. They said the guerrillas were using Belgian-made machine guns and grenades and that the soldiers had armored cars. Col. Aquiles Aranada Escobar, I the military spokesman, said in addition to Esteli the guerrillas were battling troops in El Sauce, Ducuali, Condega and Achuapas, "but the army is starting to win control of the situation." He reported 28 guerillas and seven soldiers killed in clashes Sunday and yesterday in Esteli and several nearby villages.

Dr. Alejandro Davila Bolanos of Estcli's San Juan de Dios Hospital said 20 injured civilians and one guerrilla were treated Sunday and yesterday. He said six of the civil- Weather Elsewhere Addttii City PHILADELPHIA (AP) A group of black Philadelphia lawyers and judges has been urged to make financial contributions to guerrilla movements in southern Africa. The suggestion was made at the Barristers Association's Workshop on African Affairs by Irv Davis, a representative of the New York-based Pan-African Skills Bank, which supports guerrilla movements in Rhodesia and South Africa. "For $40, you can support a guerrilla fighter for one year," Davis said Saturday in urging contributions to an organization called Support for Freedom Fighters.

Md. Bridge Hammed CAMBRIDGE, Md. (AP) The Choptank River Bridge was reopened after state highway crews checked for any structural damage done by a barge which ran into the base of the bridge, state police said. The bridge was closed for about four hours yesterday after the barge, which apparently broke loose from its anchor, floated downstream and lodged itself against the bridge, state police said. Sum Albany AibuQuerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheviiie Atlanta Atlantic City Baltimore Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo city limits on the highway to Ma-saya, but there were no casualties in that clash, witnesses said.

Military sources said fighting also broke out in southern Nicaragua near the border with Costa Rica, but Costa Rica's deputy security minister, Enrique Mon-tealegre, denied the report and said "all is caiiii" along the frontier. Somoza, on a week's vacation to visit relatives in the United States, told reporters in Topeka, yesterday, that Nicaragua "is under control I am coming over here to see my son, and that's it." Somoza's son, Julio, is a senior at Washburn University in Topeka. Somoza, accompanied by a daughter, was to fly lo 'iami today for a six-day visit wi'l: relatives. He said he woulri w': to Managua Monday. ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS The Board of Education of the New Castle County School District will receive Sealed Bids for 1.

Bid No. NC-78-106 INSURANCE-INCOME PROTECTION-GROUP LONG TERM DISABILITY until 3:30 PM Monday, May 14, 1979. 2. Bid No. NC-78-107 INSURANCE -GROUP TERM LIFE AND ACCIDENTAL DEATH AND DISMEMBERMENT until 2 PM Monday, May 14, 1979.

3. Bid NC-78-108 INSURANCE-GROUP DENTAL PLAN until II AM Monday, May 14, 1979. 4. Bid No. NC-78-109 INSURANCE-GROUP PRESCRIPTION PLAN until 1 PM, Monday, May 14, 1979 In the office of the Director of Purchasing and Property Control, New Castle County School District, 1400 Washington Wilmington, Delaware, 19801.

Instructions Specifications mar be obtained in the Office of the Director ot Purchasing and Property Control, at the above address, weekdays between BAM 8, 4:30 PM beginning at 8AM on Wednesday April 4, 1979. Instructions specifications not picked up by 3:30 PM Wednesday, April 4, 1979 will be mailed to those prospective bidders who have requested to be placed on the Bid list. Apr. 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12 (17733) By The Associated Press Hi Lo Hi Le 34 30 LasVeges 77 55 65 46 Little Rock 62 43 62 36 Los Angeles 65 55 45 37 Louisville 56 38 62 47 Memphis 53 48 65 52 Miami 80 69 55 45 Milwaukee 39 27 47 38 Minneapolis 44 26 58 52 Nashville 45 43 35 19 New Orleans 76 70 49 38 NewYork 41 38 38 34 Norfolk 72 60 83 72 Oklahoma City 65 39 32 29 Omaha 49 30 75 61 Orlando 87 64 f.Va. 54 36 Philadelphia 46 39 37 30 Phoenix 83 S6 37 34 Pittsburgh 53 31 33 30 Portland, Me 35 32 36 32 Portland, Ore.

52 41 72 48 Rapid City 70 32 69 36 Reno 52 38 45 33 Richmond 68 53 41 29 St. Louis 41 36 30 8 Tampa 81 68 34 23 Salt Lake 56 42 37 34 San Diego 61 59 52 35 San Francisco 60 50 84 68 Seattle 52 41 74 66 Spokane 51 37 IN CLASSIFIED Wilmington 655-40 1 Newark 738-6000 Dover 734-7577 Georgetown 8567371 MAIL TO: WANT AO DEPT. NEWS-JOURNAL PAPERS Please Note: Situations Wanted Advertising Must Be Prepaid. Thank You. 831 ORANGE STREET WILMINGTON, DEL.

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