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                  <text>8- The Dally SenUnel, Middleport.Pcmeroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 10, 1977
Foot comfort
It's a gOod idea to keep an
old, comfortable pair of shoes
on harid at the office to
change to when · you' re
breaking in a new pair.

Columbia

Killer

HOSPITAL NEWS

(Contlnued !rem page 1)
VelenuMemoriiiHospii!IJ Marcum, daughter, Point
(Continued from page I)
genh
plasth,
developed
by
Satruday 'Admissions - Pleasanl, W. Va.; Mr. and
that 1sn 't up to specification.
·
Sebasta
ahd
his
associates
is
Leona
Hubbard, Syracuse: Mrs. · Randy
Pedigo,
It was centered In that line
and did' some equipment expected to result in wheal Lawrence Fields, Pomeroy; daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
damage in the processing hybrids that render the Barry Theiss, Ra cine : Mrs. Steven Johnson ,
daughter, Ja ckson ; Mr. and
area and blew out some greenbug almost harmless, Grover Klein, Pomeroy.
even
though
the
insect
Saturday
Discharges
.
Mrs. Robert Clark, daughter,
windows in the ad·
cootinued
to
feed
fill
the
Laura
Anderson
,
Sharon,
Thurman;
Mr . and Mrs.
ministration building.
wheat
plants.
Crouch,
Everett
Roush,
Clot1s
Hart,
son.
Leon, W.Va .
One mao was cut above the
Agreenbug..-esistant strain Daniel Rundell , Grover
._'-'.ght eye and taken to a
Fremont Hospital . for is the only way to save wheat Klein.
and other grains from the
Sunday Admissions - .
tr~atment. The spokesman
said there was no estimate on tiny aphid, says Sebasta, Robert Ward, Rutland ; ELVIS TURNS 1%
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP!) how long it will be out of because the Insect has Marie Milliron, Middleport:
become
lnunune
to
many
Arley
Markins,
Albany
:
Elvis
Presley's 41nd birthday
service.
insecticides.
.
Lawton Templeton, Jr., was celebrated by fans who.
Sebasta and colleagues ·. Pomeroy ; Ethel Carson, once wore ducktails an&lt;)
PTA WON'T MEET
from
_the
Oklahoma Tuppers Plains ; Clarence bobby socks and by others
The Pomeroy Elementary
I
Agricultural
Experiment
Norris, Racine: 'ca rolyn who are younger than the
PTA has been cancelled until
Station
and
the
U.S.
McCoy,
Ch~shire; Edward copyright on "Jailhouse
February.
Department of Agrl'cuilure Capehart, Shade: Patricia Rock" and "Hound Dog," two
began trying to develop a Thomas, Long Bottom.
of the singer's hits. ·
greenbug ... eslstant strain_o[_ Sunday Discharges Hundreds of Elvis fans
wheat in 1966 when USDA Stanley Bennett, Jr., Nellie shivered Saturday in 20entomologlst E.A: Wood re- Lemley:
degree temperature outside
celved a greenbug..-esistant
the Presley mansion hoping
strain
of rye from
for a glimpse of the
PLEASANT VALLEY
rock'n•roll sta r.
Argentina.
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
Sa'd
'
Since that time the
I one mlddle-ag ed ,an,
researchers have managed to Robert Miller, son, Pomeroy; "He may be getting older' but
transfer the single dominant Sarah Rainey, Gallipolis . he's better today than he was
rye gene for greenbug Fer:ry; Elvis Varian, Mason ; 20 years agp."
resistance to winter wbel!t Morgan Sayre, Leon; .
without including WIY of the . Gregory Sullivan, Gallipolis;
u n d e 8 i r a b 1 e r y e Mrs. Francis Young, Clifton;
characteristics.
Mrs . . Opal Neal, Point
Sebasta sai~ he used an X· Pleasant; Cora Smith, Leon: ROYAL RA!llE
ray technique to rearrange Fred Nibert, Point Pleasant;
TOKYO (UP! ) - Like
· the chromosomes of a wheat· Howard Scott Kayser , millions of fellow Japanese
rye double hybrid which had Racine : William Stegall, whose work contract expires,
(9bra 19
been back-crossed with other Mason : Joseph Lively, Emperor Hirohito is going to
Keeps you safely
wheat varieties.
Letart; Lawrence Wolfe, get a pay raise next April I.
in touch.
The resulting product Letart, and Cecil Phillips,
The government's Imperial
Now only ...
consisted ahnost entirely of Gallipolis.
Family Finance Council, with
genetic material from the
Holzer Medical Center
Premier Takeo Fukuda as
different wheat varieties
(Birt~, Jan. 8)
chairman, has voted to
used, plus the portion of the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jones, increase
the
livin g
allowances for the 18
rye chromosome which son, Shade.
·
contains the green bug(Births; Jan. 9)
members of Japan's royal
resistant gene. ·
Mr. and Mts. Larry family.
The council budgeted
$655,172 as a yearly
allowance for the 75-year-&lt;Jid
(Contlnued from page I)
emperor, Empress Nagako,
COBR A 21
reaching blizzard intensity, raged from the Midwest to. the Crown Prince Akihito, his
• Oynamrkc and Rf Gatn Control
Northeast early today, snarling travel and closing schools and wife, imd their three ch~en,
• Squelch • Notse L.tmrter
$
businesses
in wide areas.
a 13.8 per ctlnt raise, the first
• PA Ca pabril ty • Only3 1 21bs
Seven
inches
of snow clogged Chicago by early today and pay boost in two years.
·
• Installs anywhere
forecasts called for up to three additional inches. The snow
snarled traffic throughout the metropolitan area and hundreds
COBRA 29
• For Base or Mabrle opera tron
of plows and salt trucks were sent to work. Cars skidded Into
• Delta Tune • Au toma lrc Squelch
ditches
and even a snow plow ran off the road. There were no
• AU ~ 3 Chanrlels rn ctudrng
::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.
serious
injuries.
Emergeo;c~· Channel 9
• For car . huck boat I}Ome or
.
.
.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
busrness
PALM SPRINGS, CAIJF. - FRANK SINATRA'S92-yearWednesday through
old mother and three others were killed instantly and their Friday, cbance ol snow
COBR A 89
bodies torn apart in the crash of their private jet into rugged flurries and cold Wed·
• N01se blankmg &amp; rrmr trng
~ Sep;.ua te me ters for RF power
San Gorgonio Mountain during a snowstorm. Ahelicopter pilot nesday.
Fair
with
and srgnill streng tn
sighted the scattered wreckage of the white plane Sunday, moderating temperatures
• Channel Selec tor
· P.,rtially buried in six-to-eight-foot snow drifts at tbe peak's Thursday and Frida y.
• A 12 11J DELUXE powerhou~
9,00Moot level, less than 500 feet from a ridge summit.
Highs In the teens WedSinatra, who earlier had been reported ''hoping against nesday, warming to the ZOs
hope" that his mother had somehow survived the·crash, was and low 30s by Friday.
notified of her death at the family compoond in Palm Springs, Lows near ze ro early
22 miles southwest of the crash site.
Wednesday, rising to the
The other victims were Mrs. Anthony Craboni, the widow
leeus by Friday.
of a prominent doclor and a close friend of Mrs. Sinatra : and
·pilot Donald Weier, 36, and copilot Jerold Roley, 43, both of Las
:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Vegas, Nev.
·

MEIGS THEATttE

ClOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH .FOR
OPENING DATE

News •• in Briefs

9995

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$15995

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$1

SENIOR CITIZENS

Fendel'5 ·hanged up, but good!
A.,wave of fender benders
took place in Middleport over
the weekend due lo the ice
and snow.

Are Preferred People

At Farmers Bank

At 12:39 p.m. Saturday on
North Sec9nd Ave., a car
operated by Marie H.
Pickens, Cheshire, In the sci
of parking struck the parked
car of Sammie Plants,
Middleport . At I :32 p.m.
Saturday a car driv~n by
AID RUNS MADE
The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
a call to the Kermi4 Gilkey
residence on Route 681 at 7:13
p.m. Saturday. However, a
patient there refused
treatment. At 2:51 p.m.
Sunday, the squad went to
Powell St. where there had
been an accident. No one was

injured. At 2:54 a.m. today
the squad went to Bryant
Place for Mrs . Dorothy
Harley who l!id suffered a
possible broken hip in a· fall.
.She wsa taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Jolin W. Triplett, Middleport,
skidded into the ba ck of a car
driven by Carolyn Sue Ward.
Sharon, W. Va., at the traffic
light on Locust St.
Sunday afternon, Melanie
K. Simmons, Route I , Mid·
dleport, escaped injury when
the car she was driving north
on Powell St., hit ice and
snow and skidded off the
road. At 4:30 p.m. on Race
St., a car driven by Kenneth
L. Byer, Middleport, slid into
a tree as it attempted to turn
onto Race St.

died

sun:day

Mrs. Lenna
Frame
Koehler, 78, died Sunday
rooming at the home of a
daughter, Mrs . Kenneth
(Nonna) Amsbary, Route 3,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Koehler was bom
Feb. 11, t898 at McCluney,
Ohio, a daughter of the late ·
George W and Lettie Ebert
Frame . 'she . was also
preceded In death by her
husband , Lewis E. Koehler,
in 1953; a daughter, Pearl;
two s.isters an d tw o broth. ets.
Surviving are three
·
B
daughters, Mtss
· etty
Koehler, Ga llipolis; Mrs.
Nonna Amsbary, with whom

I

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an invitational pace,
Saturday night at Northfield
Park, going tlie fastest mile
of the winter meet.
The eight-year-old pacer
led all the way to record a
length and one half victory
over Osborne Creed in 2:05 35 over the mile. Combat Joe
was· third.
The 3,802 fans wagered
$368,063.

'

Continued ·from page 5

need sun. Display In a brightly lighted place away from drafts.
.Making a poinsettia bloom another year is tricky, but go
shead and try if you enjoy a challenge. The usual advice is to
cut a plant back and put It away for a few months, watering
just enough to keep it alive.
Ught control is crucial, if you want bloom. Beginning in
the fall, ynu should provide plants with atra hours af
darkness. Even with all this effort, the show of bracts can be
puny if you haven't led your plant once a month from
midspring to early fall.

•

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POMEROY, OHIO

OUR JANUARY

LEARA CE SALE
CONTINUES

WOMEN'S COOR.DINATED
SPORTSWEAR
S·AVE

.,

25%
INCLUDES OUR
ENTIRE STOCK OF

SlACKS. JACKETS,

'.

REGULAR &amp; LARGE

SIZES.

992-3629

540,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each. DeDOSJtor

Member Federal Deposit. Insurance Corporation

c~ats,

I

· Pomeroy, o:

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

.

sweateo. shirts and

Winter robes, sleepwear, maternity
wear, biOU$eS end evening wear.
I

• .., , . , _ _ . . _ .
, ......
~Wwft_W
.ft_W
. . "......
ft_ft, _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _" "

SHOP WEEKDAYS Tll5:00. FRIDAYS TILL 8:00

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY
..,

KANSAS CITY, KAN. - ONE THEME has emerged early
in National Parent-Teacher ~IJition hearings on television
violence: teachers and parents want their children to have a
choice of watching something besides gory killings and
random mayhem.
A tO-member cmunission of PrA officinls today held their
aecond of eight scheduled regional hearings on television
violence. Paul Vance; a member af the commission from Des
Moines, Iowa, said the broadcast industry has told the
commission It simply is depleting America the way it is.
"The other testlmooy we've·had so far would cause us to
question whether they're showing reality," Vance said. "They
seem to bave a set theme - you've got to have a murder at the
start of a show and another toward the end, and a chase, and
then th~ white hat cernes In and solves It all." Grace Baislnger,
National PTA first vice president, said, "I wonder If people
.were given more choice, whether violent programs would be
rated so high."
·
~LUMBUS

VESlS, SKIRTS,
BLOUSES AND TUNICS

. __ _ _ _ _ _ . . _ . . _

THE MEIGS INN

BOSTON - THEIR VESSEL SMASHED apart by :!a-foot
waves, the seven crewmen clung to the sinking wreckage of
the tanker Olester A. Poling, expecting to die. But the Coast
Guard raced through a raging storm to reach the wreck, and
six crewmen were rescued. The seventh drowned as be
panicked, grabbed wildly for a lifeline, and fell into the icy
Atlantic waters.
•
The 281-foot U. ·s ...-egistered vessel, which was not carrying any oU, Monday became the third tanker to be lost off the
New England coast in less than a month. Battered by the fierce
winter storm, it split amidships about four miles off Cape Alm,
Mass., shortly after 10:36a.m. Est', when the captain issued a
. Mayday signal.

ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

WOMEN'S:

Hot Rolls
Ccffee. Tea or· Milk

By United Press International
OOLUMBUS - '!\!ARlO DIAZ JR. AN AUDITOR with the
Ohio Department of Welfare who testified before a federal
grand jury investigating .the state's Medicaid program, said
Monday he ;mq two others .took the Fifth. Amendment Ill
!I'Otect thelllselves against false charges.
Diaz, assistant chief auditor in the Medical Provider
Medicaid Audit Section, .said charges of kickback schemes
involving nursing home records were made by "an ex-roworker who made some allegations broadly based on personal
resentments." Diaz also said he would not resign despite a
statement by Gov. James A. Rhodes asking for the
"Immediate resignation" of any department employe who
refused to testify before the grand jury.
·
"We bave nothing to hide," said Diaz. "We had been aware
thla pertlcular person has been making comments, but we .,
dldn'tknowhe would make an issueoutofit."

dry and then water thoroughly agaili. Plants in bloom do not

Winter
lel~ure su1ts.

Veget~Sble

f.LleWS • • •in Brief~

mem~rs .

Sportswear. sleepwear and coats.

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Dressing
Home Fries

that the design of the house
numbering project is completed and work can begin.
He explained that roads will
receive numbers as fast as
they can be assigned and
residents can use them immediately.
Busines-ses, ·utiliti es,
emergency services and
others will have access, to the
work as it progresses. Page
stated t~t the new addresses
are revle&gt;yed by the postal
servi~ ~1or to release. The .
commiSSioners .passed a
resolution mstructmg Pag~ to
proceed With the numbenng.
Commissioners Jones,
James Roush and Henry

VOL XXVII NO. 188

Wells asked Page to provide
more details of the housing
rehabilitation assessment.
Jones reported that the
commissioners did not want
any funds spent for studies
unless justified.
Page
explained his
"plarmer" was meeting with
Joe Barsotti, executive
director of CAA, who will be
directing the rehabilitatimi
and will report back to the
commissioners. Page also
explained that 'the assessment for the community
facility was progressing and
would be submitted soon.
Common Pleas Judge John
C. Bacon t old the com-

missioners building space in
the courthouse is adequate,
that there· is no restroom
facilities for the jury room,
no office lor the prosecuting
attorney, or engineer, and the
health department needs new
facilities.
· The· judge asked about the
new mental health building to
be built near Veterans
Memorial Hospital , that will
also house the senior citizens,
as to • who would own the
fa cility and he was informed
that it will be county
property.
Judge Bacon suggested
that the commissioners
(Continued on page 2)

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.4

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DEVIL SNOWMAN was created by C. T. Chapman in the front yard. of his home in
Syracuse. Assisting C. T. was Eddie Smith.

TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

hr-~'''''~~:~::::;:;:::;:::::~::::::::,8::;w:~,,~,~-.:c:::~::..-

I! CHILDREN'S:
l! M.EN'S &amp; ·BOYS'••

SErvice char~e .. All those 65 years and over are
welcome to oPe'n an account any lime. Stoo in end
see us now.

the engineering firm of
Fleming, Page and Stolle,
Marysville, . Ohio. He ex·
plained that the assessment
for the aecess road had been
Informally approved by
HUD. The commissioners,
representatives of the
auditor's office and county
engineer Wesley Buehl
received infonmition from
engineer Page ill regard to
services the firm is providing
for several community
development block grants
programs presently underway.
' Page presented the environmental assessment for li
proposed access road through
coUJ!Iy property near the
hospital to serve community
facilities, He also explained
that the assessment indicated
nothing to prevent the road
from being completed. The
document is on file in the
commissioners office for
public viewing. The assessment ~as a program
requirement prior to building
a road.
Page .also infonned the
commissioners and Buehl

I

r:::r:::~~n-a:d~~::~:ant~e-;
t~;
;;,:::. ·. Jan~~~·l
! Clearance Sale prices throughout our store including:

'
We invite you to use this preferred
servlcfl with no

'

Munich killings -Suspect·will go free

Night Special

Free Checking Account For You

· The Meigs County Com·
mlsalmen Monday voted to
appropriate $14,1134.95 to pay
for bills due on senior citizens
building, an · enVironmental
BSBelllllenl for an .access .
road and rural house nwn·
bering .
Housing
rehabilitation, however, ran
into a snag.
Bills payable were senior
cltizens environmental
assessment, $H4, house
numbering, $10,177.21 and
access road, $4,113. 74.
The total grant from HUD
for all projects is $310,325, of
which $80,000 has been
received. Commissioner
Richard Jones stated that he
would 1\jlt , appropriate any
funds
for
housing
rehabilitation until he knew
what
" housing
rehabilitation"
really
meant, 'that is, whether it is
buying
houses
and
remodeling and re-selling
them, or just insulation of
older bomes. There was no
apparent answer to this
question.
Meeting with tbe com·
missioners was Jim Pa~e. of

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Thumb
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• Notes
NORTHFIELD
•
•
•
NO RTHFIELD , Ohio •
A weekly feature of Meigs
•
(UP!) - Thorpe Frost won • County Garden Club
•
the featured $3,500 ninth race, •

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
county sheriff's office
Saturday at 7:01 p.m. lor
Lawrence Fields who was
taken lo Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 9:23 p.m .
Saturday the squad went to
Laurel Cliff for Grover Klein
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted. He was
diseharged Sunday evening.

Because We Furnish A

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Partial'payments approved
by board of commissiohers

i9i3

she hadre~idedforthepast17

BON VOYAGE
PLAINS, Ga . (UP! ) -Both
Rosalynn Carter and her
Secret Service agent received
a goingaway gift from Mrs.
Carter's Bible class,
. Members of the class gave
the next first lady a silver
bookmark "to .remember
us/ ' and gave ..agent Steve
Harrison, whom they called
''Rosalynn'ssh8dow,!' a book
entitled "The Guideposts
Treasury of Inspirational
Classics."
Harrison is the only nlale
permitted to sit in on the
women's Bible class every
Sunday since the election.

'

-pared for CODJ[deratlon at
Pr::n~~UJ:'~ ii,; convention, prqeoaed
a•·ndonlng the group's
Fann Bureau Federillon ,...,sltim
..
10 atenBlOII of the
called on Congress today to.
farm· law which esptres
resist appeals for high crop this year _ but with strong
supports, and urged f~~
nditlons keyed to the
to rally againat or..,.~ · ~~ganlsallon'a traditional
labor's efforts to win new
"free
powers.
preference 1or a
Allan Grant warned in a msrkel" agriculture.
U
A proposed resolution
speech prepared for de very wouldallowtheFannBureaU
to the grolip's 58th aMUal
of the law,
convention thai some · to beck 8~--•on
~ ......
which provides crop aupport
politicians "use a lack of
public understanding to call loanratesandsetaup ''target
for federally controUed grain prices" with !l'ovislons for
reserves and for excessively directpaymentslc!farmersif
high (crop supports )."
markets fall below the
"These Interfere with targets. A companion
market prices and blunt proposalwouldendorMuseof
consumer pricing signals," . other payments to induce
·_.
- to hold a-••e
he said. ''They encourage · !
...
~-- out
government-owned
of productioo If necessary to
surpluses, which may be curb surpluses.
manipulated ill treate an
But Fann Bureau !elders
illusion !bat food is cheaper stressed they would endorse
by transferring pert of the these moves only If supporta
costs to taxpayers."
areto.bekeptatlevel.s, which
Grant said lllrmers "should would not.intertere_with free·
study the labor union agenda market ·operatlons_elc.epl
for the new a~tation during periods of "severe
and the 95th Congress, and downswings."
stand ready to protect
Granl also called on
farmers' rights in those areas Ianners· to resist "arbitrary
including agriculture."
and unwise decisions" by
· The agenda includes government regulatory
several items which could groupo in areas Including
hurt farmers including pesticide and pollution
''more federal intervention in controls. He added that
job creation and compulsory · fanners are concerned about
unionism
for
public the consumer movement be·
employes," the farm leader • cause "most professional
said.
' conswner advocates reflect
Other Farm Bureau the aims of organized labor."
leaders, in · resolutions

,yea rs , and Mrs. Lou is
(Wanda ) Haines, Groveport;
two sons, Lewis, of Bryan,
Ohio, and. Richard of
Columbus; a sister, Miss
Mary Frame of Crooksville,
16 grandchildren and four
great-gra ndchildren.
Funeral services· will be 1
p.m. Tuesday at the
Raw I ings-Coats Fun era I
Home with the Rev . Harold
Deeth officiating. Burial has
tentatively been set for
Teusday afternoon at the Iliff
Cemetery at Crooksville.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time.

THE INN PLACE
T~day

Farmers urged to
op
' pose bia
.ae labor
.

. Mrs. Koehler

·

By RAFAELA SEPPALA

PAI\IS (UP!) - A French
court today rejected West
Gennan and Israeli requests
lor extradition of Palestinian
leader Abu Daoud and
ordered him released
immediately.
Daoud,a high official of the
Pal~stine
Liberation
Organization, is su.spected of
masterminding the kidnaping

One for Ripley:
one who liked
to pay his taxes
Meigs Couuty road and
highway workers - slate,
county and villages - were
today hlgbly commended
by Hefbert Gllkey, Route 1,
Sbade, forine~ Middleport
Cblef
of
Pollee.
Gilkey said II was a
pleasure to pay biB real
estate tnes In apprectaUon lor the won·
derful job workers bave
done In balidllng the roads
during the penlsl!lnlsnows
of.the last couple of weeks.
.

of Israeli athletes at the
Munich Olympic games in
1972 which led to the
massacre of 17 persons,
including 11 Israe.lis.
Folllowing the court
decision Daoud, 39, was taken
in a police van under heavy
guard back to La Sante prison
where he was expected to be
turned loose lnunediately.

release .on grounds that he is
not a killer named Abu Daoud
since the simple arrest IAit an official named Youssef
warrant
was
not Raji Hanna.
He told the court, "The only
accompanied by a formal
diplomatic request, and motive for my arrest was
therefore could not be polilicai. I demand my
release . I demand the
honored.
Daoud himself, speaking protection of French justice ."
A husky man more 'than 6
through an interpreter at the
feet
tall with streaks of gray
court hearing, demanded his
judges ruled that the German
request was incomplete,

Middleport Village Council
adopted a $420,644 appropriations resolution and
reelected Marvin KeUy
presiden.t for 1977 in its first
session of the year Monday
night. The 1976 budget for the
village was $365,008.61.
The approximate increase
of $55,000 for the most part
derives from the additional
$36,000 income from the three
mill tax levy approved by
voters last year (lor street
repair and street lighting) ;
$7,000 in federal funding for
the tennis court; about $2,000
anticipated
In
"anti·
recession'' money (based on
unemployment ); an expected

small increase in revenue miscellaneous, $3,000; radio,
sharing, and balances in most $750; ·cruiser, $1,500. Total :
or all funds at the end of 1976. $44,750. (The safety lund total
Breakdown of the is also listed in the general
proposed expenditures ·of the fund listing ).
village during 1977 shows:
Cemetery Fund - em·
General Fund - council, ployes, ~ ,700 ; c.lerk, $1,080;
$576; mayor, $7,500; clerkJ retirement, $1,000; materials
$4,500; solicitor, $1,000; and supplies, $500; main·
b u i I dings , $10 , 4 0 0 :· tenance of equipment, $300:
miscellaneous, $18,000; office expense, $100; tools ·
contingency, $.1,275; trans- and equipment, $600 ;
fers, $35,1102: street lights, miscellaneous, $040: C. F.
$12,000: hydrants, $2,.160; Rathburn trustees , $780 .
safety, $44 ,750 . Total : . Total: $11,720.
$137.963.
Fire Equipment Fund Safety Fund - chief of salaries, $690 ; equipment,
police, $9,500; other police, buildings, $1,000: retirement,
$22,000; retirement, $4,500; $36; schooling and con·
g a so I in e,
$ 3 , 5.0 0 ; vention, $150 each; equip-

Fire losses near $!4 million
Fire losses on alarms
answered by the Middleport
Fire Department in 1976
amounted to over one~uarter
of a million dollars according
to the annual report of Chief
c. Robert Fisher.
,
During 1976 the department
answered 86 fire calls, 35 in
town and 51 out of town, and
497 calls for emergency
medical and ambulance
assistance.

in his thick black hair and
mustache, Daoud noted that
he was in Paris as a
representative of
the
Palestinian Liberation
Organization when he was
arrested Friday.
"I therefore have the right
to think that I was protected
by a kind.. of dip.lomalic
immunity ," he said.

Appropriations approved, Kelly reelected

.

THE FOURTH AND FINAL OHIO . Among calls to 26 structure
Enviranmental Protection Agency hearing on,sulfUr dioxide fires, 16 were in town and 10
emission regulations was scheduled to conve11~ here today. wereoutoftown, the building
Earlier bearings, beld in Onclnn8ti, Cleveland and losses totaling $142,950 and
Steubenville, have llhown that proposed federal regulations cootent I088e8 $45,825.
are oppoaed by the United Mine Workers union and by large
There were five business.
coal cmsumer8.
itres, four in town and une out
Ohio coal contains much sulfur and the UMW contends of town, with ballding losses
ttuit if the regulations are enforced thousands of coal miners totaling $20,350 and content
wlllloae their jobs. Ulillties say installation of anli'JlOllution losses of $30,350. There were
cmtrola to enable them to burn Ohio coal within regulation 11 vehicle fires, five in town
guldetlnes would cost millims of dollars.
and six out of town, with
losses totaling $15.335. Total
I OOLUMBUS, OHIO - DR. EVERETI' 11. JUNG of building loss amounted to
Hamilton Ia the 12th president of the Stele BOard of Education. $178,835, content losses
He was elected Mnda)'4and Martha W. Wise of Elyria was $78,175.
selected u vice president.
Middleport firemen an·
A team physician lor Miami University and tin orthopedic
surpon, Jung Aid, "selecting the SUCt'.e&amp;IOI' to Superintendent
· of Public: Instruction Martin W. Easel is the most important
task facing the Board at this llme." Essex last week
A meeting
of the
announced that he 11'81 reaigning effective March 15. Mrs. Wise
Southeastern Olilo Black
has been amember of the board since 1973.
Lung Aasoclatlon scheduled
WASHINGTON- APPALACJUA COAL MINE operators to lie held in Pomeroy Friday
Monday oppolled paaage of lederallllrip lllinlng reclamation has been cancelled until
lan u the 81lth Congress Initiated biormal hearings on further notice.
!I'IIIJ08ed leglalatlon. Coli operators from Kentucky, Virginia
A meeting of Past Counand Alabama appured before lft!llllbera of the House Interior
Cllliinlttee In the flnt ol two days of the House Interior . cllors, Theodorus Council,
~fee In the flnl of lwl! days of heerlnga, The next Daughters of America,
scheduled · for Thursday
'hearing will be Wecbtuday.
.
Rep. Morril K. Udall, 0-Arlz., the man ezpected to be evening haa ' been cancelled.
IUied to cbalt the interillr panel when the conunltfee
fcnuaDy reorpnlze, ... Introduced a MW bW, ne~rly
The Jan. 12 clinic of the
ldentlc:alto thoae twice vetoed by Pttaldtjtt Ford. President· Meigs County Unit of the
elect Jimmy Carter, Jiowever, has said he bacb auch American Cucer Society has
leplallan.
been cancelled. All area
women having an appomt·
WASHINGTQN -TOP AFLOO LEADERS ilre atrungly ment for tbe Jan. 12 clinic
reJedlnl PrnlilenHlect Jlnuny Carier'a econarn1c package, Which wu tq have been held
lalerpntlns It 81 I "retreat" from h1a CIJIIIIIlcn pronlile to at Veterans Memorla I
~
. . (Clllltlnued on PIP I)
•i
H08pltal ll1't uked lQ phone

swered 16 trash and brush men answering the calls.
fires, three in town and 13 out Total mileage of all vehicles
of town; six false alanns, one was 17,36:i.5.
in town and live out of town; ' During December, the
nine mutual aid calls; 13 department answered 60 calls
miscellaneous calls, six in including· six lire calls, 5ll
town and seven out of town. emergency and ambulance
The in·town lire calls runs and four miscellaneous
totaling 36 involved losses of calls. On the emergency runs,
$9,840 on residences and 41 were in town and nine out
vehicles, and $50,200 on of town with three involving
businesses while the 51 out of motor vehicles.
town calls involved losses of
Firemen spent 230.3
$194,270 on residences and manhours on the emergency
vehicles and $500 on runs and drove 1244.5 miles in
businesses. The Middleport making the runs . Total
Department called other
departments for mutual aid :::::::::::::::·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:::;:;.;:;:;.;::::
five times.
·
SCHOO!.'I CLOSED
Of the total 497 emergency
Scbooll
of all three Mll_igs_
runs there were 358 in town,
County Local Scbool
139.out of town, and 22 of the
Dlltriet were closed loday
358 involved motor vehicles.
Total manhours
on · for the fifth couecutlve
day .due to weather coaemergency and . ambulance
runs amounted to ·2233.3 and
dltions.
total mileage .for these runs
Although Ullle additional
was 12,921.3. Total man· snow fell, blgbwaya remain '
hours for fires amounted Icy and slippery. Ovemlcbt
to 1036.6 with an averaAe of 11 temperatures dipped to
zero. All school dlstriciA
are now over tbe five day
calamity day period
allowed by the atate
992.3:182 and make an ap- · without bavlag to be made
· polntment for the nell clinic up.
which will be held on Jan. 26.
The Jan. 26 clinic.will be held
from 9:30 alm. to 3:30 p.m.
COUNCIL TO MEET
The next
regularly
The family night potluck of scheduled meeting of the
the MiddlepOrt FirSt United Regional Advisory Council on
Presbyterian Ch·urch Aging is scheduled for 10:30
acheduh\d for 8:30 p.m. a.m. on Jan. 18. The meeting
Wednesday has been poit; will be held in the Geriatric
poned untU next WedneSday. Conference Room at the
The annual congregaUonal Athens Menl!ll Health Center.
meeting will be held following The Athena Mental Health
the potluck.
Center Is on the hill on the
southwest comer of the Jn.
Ademonstration on steps to teraectlon of Richland
take In choking incidents Avenue (U.S. Route r,o and
ocheduled to be held Wed· 33) and State Route 882. It is
neSday at the Meigs County south of the O.U. Convocation
Senior. Citizens Centers •In Center on the south side of the
Pomeroy has been cancelled..
Hocking River.
~

Meetings cancelled

.

•

The four-man panel ruled
that the West German
request was incomplete and
that the Israeli request was
legally deficient.
The court thus made it
possible for the French
goverrurient to drop a case
lhat had been getting more
embarrassing by the day.
The .four -man panel of

manhours for fires amounted
to 105.7 with an average of 11
men answering each call.
Total mileage for all vehicles
driven
in
December
amounted to 1593.5.

Weather
~loudy,

cOntinued cold
tonight and Wednesday. Lows
tonight about five above zero,
highs Wednesday from 15 to
20.
Probability
of
precipitation 10 per cent
today and 20 per cent tonight
and Wednesday.

ment maintenance, $1,000;
utilities, $2,500. Total : $5,526.
Planning Commission
Fund - Miscellaneous, 500;
labor, $500; Total: $1,000.
S)VInuning Pool Fund ffilploy.S, $4,500; incidentals;
$1 ,600; chemicals; $1 ,000 ;
electricity, $1,000; pool
maintenance, $2,000; in·
surance, $500; park equipming pool , $500; other,
$9,330.18. Total: $19,870.
Bond Retirement Fund Bonds , $8,000 : interest,
$1,905; miscellaneous, $500:
total: $10,405.
Sanitary Sewer Fund clerk , $6,448; employes,
$13,000: retirement, $2,500;
miscellaneous, $3,000: plant
maintenance and equipment,
$5,000: sewer improvement,
$5,372; office e1pense, $1,400;
interest payments, $24,360.
Total: $61,0811.
Federal Revenue Sharing

Fund- general government,
$3,394 ; swimmin g pool,
$2 ,000 ; tra nsportati on,
$1,000 .03 ;
cemetery ,
$1,486.07 : safety, $371.75: fire
departmen! . ~l.'la!l; _ ~wim­
ment, u,Gii; tennis courts,
$14,100. Total: $26.300.
Water 'Fund - office
salaries, ~.000; employes,
$17,300 : retirement, $3,000:
office expense, $1 ,200 ;
maintenance supplies and
improvements, $15 ,650:
miscellaneous, $6,1100; - water
purchase, $6,600; equipment,
$1,160 : interest payments ,
$36,590. Total, $93,5oo:---Water M.ortgage Revenue
Bonds - interest payments,
$36,570.
.
Sewer Mortgage
Revenue Bonds - interest
payments, $24,360.
Street Maintenance · Fund
(Continued on paRe 8)

Another contest
lost by Mr. Ford
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ford's effort to
boost his 1976 campaign
manager into the Republican
National Committee
chairmanship has run
aground. The contest for the
GOP leadership now focuses
on a former senator .and a
handful of party Insiders.
James Baker, the Homtoo
lawyer who took over Ford's
Qampalgn from Howard ·
"Bo" Callaway and brought
it within a few points of
victory, Monday withdrew ·
his name from consideration
for GOP chairman. The
committee ·meets
in
Washington Friday and
Saturday .to select a
'· replacement for retiring
Mary Louise Smith.
Baker,.endorsedfor the job

by' Ford and Vice President

Nelson RockefeUer last week,
issued a statement in Hotiston
saying he had decided not to
he a candidate.
The burst Baker boomlet
left one well known GOP
politician, former Sen.
William Brock of Tennessee,
in the field of announced
"'
::::::::::::::::::;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;,:::::;:,:,:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::·
candidates. Brock Monday
got the public backing of
EXTENDED OU'TLOOK
Senate
Republican Leader
Thursday through
Howard Baker, • another
Saturday, fair Tbanday, a
Tennessean, and of Senaie
chance of saow Friday and
GOP
Whip Ted Steveris of
clearing Saturday. Cold
Alaska.
wltb blghs from 15 to Z$ and
And ·House Republican
lows from zero to 10 above.
Leader John Rhodes of
Arizona said the James
:::::::::::::::::::;:,:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Baker withdrawal puts Brock
PAYMENTS MADE
"in the catbird seat" and he
Meigs County Auditor
could easily support him.
Howard E. Frarik announced
Less known, but very much
today he has received $1,:1»8
in the battle were several
for the third quarter of the :;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.;::::::::::::::::~::::::,:::;:; current members of the 182Public Works Employment
member national committee.
Ad of 1978 and the second of Grunes postponed
Richard Richards,
two
revenue · · sharing
chairman of the Utah
payments ·for Entitlement .
The followlag aree llilb Republlcan Party, was the
PeriOd Seven (EP7), both for
school bllikelbaU Pillet first entry and has the
a total of $23,821 .
achedaled loalcht have backing of most western GOP
Ilea peelpolled: GllllpolJa:. chalnnen. Heading to
Ja~; Waverly·II'OIIton, · Washington today, Richards
retet Ju. 11; Me liP• claimed enough support from
BASICS LEARNED
- Wen.t., l'eHI Jaa. IS;
the . RNC to mate him a
Marine Private First Class A~aa, l'eHI Jaa. leading contender for chair.
Pa~lJ. Jones, son of Mr. and
lt; ltJCer C..S·Eulera, ' He alao claims the backing
Mrs. Charlet W. Jones of 25 met Ju. 11; Norlll GalJia. of former Califor1J11 Gov.,
Point Lane, Pornetoy, has Symmet Valley; Staib. Rooald Reagan, but Reagan
completed recruit training at Pelei.Cbe1apeake; Pt. did not endorse Richards
the Marl!le Corps Recruit Ple._a...NIIn, Wlllluna·
after a White Hollie meetinc
Depot, Parris Island, s. c. He Speaeer, ud Soutbera· - last week wbere Ford. and
· joined the Marine Corpe in ~~~~-• Tnee.
&amp;ckeleller declared their
Februa~; 1976.
· '' ' ' ' ' ' ' ''' ' ' ' ' '''':r'''''''''''''''''''''' ' ' ' ' :':· bllcking10for Baker.

I

�•

•

•

,.• 2- Tbe o.lly S!ntlnel , Mlddleport~oy, 0., Tutllday,Jan. ll,l977

••

••

••
••

Carter boning up on defense
,p

foreign policy and national
defense to prepare lor
assuming the presidency nert
week.
Plannong Ill remain m the
nation's capital
until
Thursday afternoon, Carter

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wilt~ HOIIR Reporltr
PLAIN'S, Ga. t UP!) :_
Jimmy Carter flies to
Washmgton lat.e IDday for a
fonal sertes of llriefmgs m
(

scheduled foreign pohcy
meetmgs most of Wednesday
With Democratic and
Republica~ congressional
leaders at the red brick
"Castle," the Smitbsonian
Institution's oldest building.
Newly designated Cabmet·
level adviSers m the military
and diplomatic fields were
expected for the briefmgs.
While in Washmgton,
Carter also planned personal
telephone calls to leaders m
Western Europe and Japan to
discuss the forthcommg
economic sununit meeting he
will attend this sprmg. The
date and the place hBve not
yet been set.
Carter will stay at Blair
House, the presidential guest
house, during his Washington
stay, but was not expected to
meet with President Ford.
Carter and Ford, in fact,
had no piam to meet agam
until they ride down
Pennsylvania Avenue
together on Inauguration

Gen. Bradley
receives medal
contributions to govenunent.
He, too, received a standing
ovation.
Others acceptmg were
historiam Will And Artel
Durant; Steelworkers Union
PreSident I.W. Abel; authors
James Michener ·and Bruce
Catton; retired Adm. Arletgh
Burke; Nobel prize..)Vinning
scientists Norman Boriaug
and James Watson; US.
Appeals Court Judge Heury
J. Friendly, and art patron
Katherine Shouse.
P~t Archibald MacLelsh,
artist Norman Rockwell and
physicist John Bardeen were
represented by relatives
So was baseball great Joe
DiMaggio. Brother Dom- the
" Lil Professor" who played
so many years in the MaJOr
Leagues shadowed by the
famed "Yankee Cllpper"accepted in his behalf.
Composer Irving Berlin,
artist Georg1a O'Keefe, and
the wtdow of sculptor
Alexander Calder could not
attend and will get their
awards later. Bad weather
accomphshments ''have prevented broadcaster
Lowell Thomas
from
made our lives better."
reachmg
file
White
House
in
Ford kissed Mrs. Johnson,
time
for
the
ceremony.
c1ted
for
beauhlymg
The awards, begun m 1945
America, and she rece1ved a
for
CIVIlian contributions in
standing ovation from her
wartune,
were expanded in
daughters, Luci and Lynda,
to
recognize
and others in the 12().memher 1963
accompijshments
in
a wide
audience
Ford gave an especially range of other fields. The
warm handshake to V1ce recipients, said the president,
President
Nelson Hset shrring examples for
Rockefeller, honored for his others to follow."

BY PAMELA REEVES

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Omar Bradley, the nation's
only five-star general, sat
upright in his wheelchair,
JUSt down the row from Lady
Bird Johnson and conducter
Arthur Fiedler,
When his turn came to he
on center stage in the East
Room of the White House,
Bradley was wheeled up a
little ramp. President Ford
stepped forward, bent down
and draped on the ~year-old
man's neck a beribboned
Meda ~
of
Freedom
representmg the nation's
highest civilian honor.
Although he is atling,
Bradley listened attentively
while his accomplishments
were enumerated-"military
hero, courageous in battle
and gentle m spirit, friend of
tlle common soldier ..,"
It was one of 18 medals the
President bestowed Monday
in an emotional ceremony
featuring artists, writers,
scientists, military men and
others
whose

'1

'

Day, Jan 20.
Af!J!r file swearmg m, Ford
will head for Fort McNair
where he will board a
hehcopter for the tnp to
Andrews Air Force Base
At Andrews, Ford and
members of his family will
fly on Air Force II, the
presidential backup plane, to
Monterey, Calif , where they
will vacation.
In other developments,
Carter's key aides were
preparmg to take over the
White House and under, the
orders of the president..,lect
Will strip it of some of 1ls
unperial trappings
Portal-to-portal chauffeur
service for White House
offiCials w1ll be eiim10ated,
after years when the
prestdenllai fleet would carry
staffers to work and back
daily
Sources s81d smaller cars
are hemg ordered for the
White House. Stressmg the
popuhst unage, Carter may

r-eplace the armored long
black presidential iunousine
with ~ smaller - but stili
armored - car.
He also plans to cut down
the number of welcoming
ceremon ies at the Wh1te
House , and to reduce the
fanfare.
One trapping - security he cannot cut. The Secret
Serv1ce ts preparing to
protect every member of the
Carter family, mciuding Jack
Carter, 29, a lawyer who will
remam in Calhoun, Ga. , with
his wile and young son.
Protection will he extended
to two sons, Olip, 26, and
Jeffrey, 24, who will hve m
the White House w1th their
wtves. Nine-year-old Amy
already has a Secret Service
guard.
Carter sitU bas to announce
the names of hill staff, but 1t
was learned that h1s second
cousm, Hugh Carter Jr., has
been tapped to he in charge of
White House administrallon.

Episcopal ordination of
Ellen Barrett consumated
By MOU.Y CARRUTH
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Rt Rev. Paul Moore Jr.
asked the congregation
gathered in the Church of the
Holy Apostles Monday mght
if there were any obJectiOns
to the ordination of Ellen
Marie Barrett, an avowed
lesbian
The Rev. James C Watley
stood up and sa1d there were
He sa1d homosexuals leud "a
life of sm" and that Ms
Barrett's ordmation "would
be a travesty and a scandal"
unless she publicly diS3vows ·
lesbiamsm.
But Moore, the Eptscopal
btshop of New York,
dism1ssed the objectwn and
proceeded to ordam Ms

~rrett

The congregation replied in
wuson 1 '1t is."

and Annette Ruark,
another Episcopal deacon.
Reading from a statement ,
Moore declared Ms. Barrett
" highly quailfted
intellectually, morally and
spiritually to he a priest."
The women were the
second and third to be
ordamed Episcopal prtests m
New York. Church delegates,
representing 3 mtlhon
Amertcan Episcopalians,
voted last September to allow
women to become pnests
beginmng lh1s year.
In Monday rught's ceremo·
nies, Moore asked the 250
persons gathered in the
church "Is 11 your will that
Ellen Marte be ordamed a
pnest?"

construction' workers will be
employed at the site.
While ERDA officials say
some of these workers
undoubtedly can be obta10ed
from surrounding counties
many w1ll be temporary
personnel brought in from
outside.
Stacey said one area of
!lUll or unpact will be schools.
Addttionai pupils will
mcrease education costs, but
also brmg m added revenues.
"We want to identify both,
so the local school distncts
can plan for the future," said
Stacey.
The study will look at
projected needs, costs and
rev~nues · for
houstng,
transportation, water and
sewer serviCe; pollee and ftre
protection; refuse collectiOn;
health care and recreation,

Stacey added.
"We want to be very
specific about the number of
workers who will he coming
in during various phases and
very specific on where they
w1ll reside," Stacey sa1d.
The study w11l consider the
HIT MAN HIT
LOS ANGELES (UP!)

Max Kurscbner, who wrote
three books about hiS explOits
as an underworld "hit man,"
pleaded guilty in Federal
Court Monday to evading
$92,000 in income taxes.
Also known as "Joey
Black," Kurschner, 44, was
mdicted last Septermber on
charges of failing to report
$71,150 m taxable mcome lor
1973 and another $20,732 for
1974

DR. LAMB

Vitamin B-12 helps
• •
•
pernrcwus
anemra

'•

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -!1111188
and have had perniCious
anerrua lor 10 years. I take
one mi. of vitamm B-12 by
hypo each week. Is B-12 the
only medication for per·
nicious anemia?
DEAR READER - Yes.
You can get B-12 in your foods
but a person With pernicious
anemia usually doesn't absorb enough of 11. To avoid the
problem of losing the B-12
because it isn't absorbed,
doctors giVe it by injection.
That way it IS p1cked up
_Jlirectiy by the blondatream
and used by your body. There
IS nothing else you can take to
replace the B-12.
To give you more informa·
lion I am sending you The
Health Letter number 4-5,
Vitamin B-12, Folic Acid,
Pernicious Anemia. Others
who want this information
can send 50 cents for it with a
·long , stamped, self·
addressed . envelope. Just
send your letter to me m care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio C1ty Stat10n, New
York, N.¥. 10019.
rw \R DR. LAMB- I am 28
rs old and I have
!ulcerative colitis for four
drs. Even though I have the
.•ease under control with
corti~e and aqt.ibiotics I

still expenence almost constant heartburn. My doctor
tells me to take antacids, but
· they offer very little rebel.
Recently I read a book by a
nutrttlorust. She claims that
too bttle hydrochloric ac1d
causes the same symptoms
as too much; bloating, gas,
heartburn She says that tak·
ing hydrochloric acid tabiels
will eliminate these problems, and that antacids are
the "worst" and people have
been bramwashed mto poppmg antacids.
Have you any comment on
the use of hydrochloric acid
in pia~ of antactds?
DEAR READER - Yes, I
do, An important principle m
medicme if you want to help a
patient is to treat the 'rtght
thing. A leg splint won't do
much lor a broken ann.
II a person really had
abaence of hJ.drochlonc acid
m the st0018eh 11 rrught be Important. It is usually a result
of another dtsease problem
such as perntcious anemia '
or cancer- of the stomach.
Absence of hydrochloric acid
as the basic cause of illne'l'l Ill
rare if it occurs at all. This
was once a popular diagnosiS
and people did take
hydrochloric ac1d but 1t is
now constdet ed a nu e pr"'

•

biem and treatment w1th
hydrochiortc ac1d 1s seldom
mdicated.
In your case your problem
is undoubtedly too much
hydrochloric ac1d. Taking
more would only make your
symptoms worse. It would he
like runmng With a broken leg
against your doctor's adv1ce.
The cortisone that you are
taking stimulates the
stomach to form mcreased
amounts of hydrochloric acid
and can cause peptic ulcers 1n
patients needing to take it lor
any of a number of reasons
And you may be interested to
know that one way to cause
heartburn in the laboratory Is
to place a httle hydrochlortc
ac1d m the lower esophagus
through a tube. Yourdoctons
trying to help you but you will
need to gJve him your full
cooperation.
Your doctor may want to
give you one of the atropine
group of medicmes - an·
tlspasmodics -' llwt tend to
block the nerve &gt;1tmulatlon of
the stornBch to produce
hydnlchloric acid ThiS in addillon to your antacids may
give you more rehef. I cannot
advise you too strongly to .
gtve up that ideh of tak1ng
ac1d pills for your conditiOn I
ur~c you to follow your doc·
tor s adVICe.
'

effects on the communities of
P1kelon, Portsm outh ,
Chtlhcothe, Lucasvtlie, .
Wheelersburg,
Mmford,
Waverly, Beaver and
Jackson and the counties of
Scioto, Pike, Ross, Jackson
and possibly Vmton

Hundreds

of schools stay closed

By United Press !n~I'IUIIional
Hundreds of Ohio schools remained
closed today as a winter storm moved out
of the state · but sub-zero temperatures
remained.
·
The National Weather Service said
travelers' advisories were stili m effect m
northern counties today because of
blowjng and drifting snow, but all other
warnings, watches, advisones and storm·
related weather statements have been
discootinued.
,
Although snow flurries are probable m
Northeastern Ohio, blUe accumulation is
likely.
Very cold a1r covered the state early
today and sub-zero readings were common
in western and southern Ohio overnight.
Cincinnati, with a 9 below zero reading,
was the coldest spot m the state while
Youngstown, with a reading of 5 above,
was the warmest.
Toledo had a reading of 3below zero with
wind gusts up to 20 miles an hour which

•
•

.•

'
"
.'

gave that area a wind chill factor of M
degrees below zero.
The strong low pressure cen~ of tllat
storm was over ~fiebec early today and
continued to move to the northeast. High
p-essure over the Mlasissippi Valley will
move to the south of Ohio today and
tonight.
Another low pressure disturbance - a .
much weaker one this Ume - will push
southeastward from the Northern PlaiNI
states across the Great Lakea tonight,
brmgbtg the likelihood of more snow
flurries to Northern Ohio.
Cold weather will be slow to leave Ohio,
although some warming may be expected
by late in tile week
The Ohio extended outlook for Thursday
through Saturday calla for fair weather
Thursday, a chance of snow Frtday and
clearing weather on SatUrday. It will be
cold during the period with highs from 15
to 25 and lows from zero to 10 above.

We Hold These Truths ...
A Chronicle of America
'An American':
M1chel GUillaume Jean De Crevecoeur, an 18th centuiY
French traveler m America . "He is an American, who,
leavmg behmtl h1m all his ancient prejudices and man·
ners, rece1ves new ones from the new modeollilehehas
embraced, 1~e new govern·
menl he obeys, and the new
rank he holds He becomes
an Amertcan by being'
recetved 1n the broad lap of
our great alma mater Here

'
,,''

n

Criminal costs
paid by state
COLUMBUS - State
Auditor
Thomas
E.
Ferguson's office aMounced '
Monday criminal cost subSidy payments amounting to
$1119,322.99 were distributed
to 75 county clerks of court "
during December
Tliese payments, which do
not reflect any expenses
incurred under the Obio
Public Defenders Program,
ranged in amount from $31.60
to the Brown county clerk of
court to $29,848.95 to the
Hamilton county clerk of
court.
The Criminal Cost Suboidy
,rrogram allows for state
reimbursement to counties
for the costs involved in
successful prosecution and
imprisonment of indigent ..
felons in state penal in·
stltutlons Paid to the Meigs
County Clerk was $731; to the

Ravenswood
to host firemen

Partial
(Continued from page 1)
allocate space to each
department m the new multi·
purpose building., Bacon
asked 1f a contract has been
s1gned in regard to the money
and the bullding of the new
facility and Wells told h1m no,
that they were only mlormed
that the grant had been approved m the amount of
$160,000
Bacon asked who w1ll be
responstbie lor the water and
sewage. Wells could not say
who and Jones and Roush
were not on the board when
the proJect was i~unched .
Wells sa1d no contract had
been signed, butthe architect
has been hired. Jones asked
Bacon if the budget he submitted was a firm budget, or
could 1t he negotiated Jones
asked Bacon to meet with the
commissioners in regard to
the budget, and Bacon
agreed.
Also meeting with the
commissioners and county
engmeer Buehl was Mike
Qifford, representative of the
Ohio Ctvii Service Com·
mission, in regard to a
contract lleing negotiated between the Civil Service
Commission and the em·
ployes of the county highway
department
It was brought out that
Buehl has the authority to
reach an agreement with the
employes and Clifford, and It
is not necessary for the
commissioners to be involved ,
Clifford told the com·
missioners that collectiVe
borgaining is a certainty in
Oh1o and needs only 30 per·
cent of total employes in a
bargainmg unit to enter into a
contract All but three em·
ployes at the county garage
are interested m entering into
a contract, he said.
John Rice, agricultural
agent, also met with the
commissioners in regard to
his budget. He stressed that
he would very much to have a
' 4-H agent.
Jones explained that the
commissioners plan an ex·
tensive review or the budget

Chief Earl Wolfe, Ravens·
wood , w. Va., Volunteer Fire
Department and Emergency
Squad, and his department
will host a regular meeting of
the Area Volunteer Ftre and
Emergency Assn., at 7·30
p m. Tues~ay, Jan. 18.
The Ravenswood hre
station where the meetmg
w1ll he held is located on
Vtrgima St , near the shopping center At present the
association plans to set up a
program involving industnal
emergencies. The association
now has over 500 members in
ltve counties w1th 22 lire
departments and emergency
squads represented.
Bob E. Byer, president of
the assoctation, is asking
each unit to send at least two
representatives to the Jan. 18
sesSion.
before any appropriations
are awroved.
The commissioners
decided early in the meeting
tO change the meetings to
Monday ' at 6·30 p.m.
However, they later changed
1t to Tuesday at 6:30p.m., to
avoid conflicts with other
regularly scheduled
meetmgs
They appointed the
following:
Elizabeth Hobstetter, clerk
of county court, and Arizona
Stewart, deputy clerk of
county court; on the com·
munity improvem~nt cor·
poration, Henry Wells,
commissioner, chairman,

Bernard Fultz, Middleport;
Howard Frank, Racine ;
Eleanor Robaon, M10ersville;
Elbert Robinson, Pomeroy,
and Vernon Weber, RuUand.
Also meeting with the
comJIIISSioner to discuss the
budget was engineer Buehl.
Jones told Buehl there were
two things involved, money,
and a 'road program for 1977,
in regard to surfacing,
building and resurfacing of
highways.
Buell! e:xpiained" that he
would have to know the appropriation before he could
outline such a plan. Buehl
said he could not negotiate in
good faith without 10111e Idea
of finances. Jones e•plained
that nothing could tie in more
closely. Tbey agreed oo go
!Ner the propoled bucl!!et. . .
Jones ezplained that if they
had a live year program
plamed' they would have a
better idea how to plan for the
future ~,,.,hi explained he

found less severe in Ohio

By J.R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Ohio's natural gas shortagl'
may not he as severe as ftrst
mdtcated, accordmg tel
rep.orts Monday of new
supplies for the Columbia
Gas Co. of Ohio and an initial
assessment
of
the
curtailments by state energy
chtef Robert Ryan.
Aspokesman for Columbia
Gas sa1d Monday tllatabout 2
billion cubtc filet of nat)ll'al
gas would be made available
to its customers from the
East Ohio Gas Co.
The energy supplies
became available because
mdustrial customers of that
utility voluntarily switched to
alternate energy sources.
"We don't know 1f this will
have any unpact on the
curtailments," sa1d the ·Co·
lumbia spokesman
Ryan, in a report to the
board of the Ohto Energy
Resource and Development
Agency (ERDA), said he has
discovered that the worst·
ever curtailments ordered by
Columbia Gas "are not as
severe as we origmaliy
ind1ca ted."
Gov James A. Rhodes last
week asked Ryan , and C.
Luther Heckman, chainnan
of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, to
evaluate the curtailments
and to recommend whether
he should order an "energy
crisis ."
Heckman ts not expected to
finalize his recommendations
until
Wednesday
or
Thursday . Ryan 11 1ll be
unable to reach his decision
until at least Thursday.

Ryan sa1d he wanted to
draft his response to Rhodes'
request Monday, but because
of his dual role as director of
the state's energy agency and
as a member of the tenmember ERDA board, he will
wait until the hill board
reviews
his
recom·
mendallons before transmitting them to the governor.
After Ryan's presentation,
the board argued for two
hours on whether Ryan could
act unilaterally in his
response
Another board meeting was
set lor 1 p.m. Thursday to go
over what Ryan will say to
Rhodes.
" It is too early to say if (the
curtailments) will result in a
crisis situation. Th~re is
going to be some impact
(because
of
the
curtailments)," said Ryan,
noting that some "schools
will be cold" and some
unemployment will result
because of decreased
industrial production
The curta1hnents are not
similar to flood damage or a
11

Go-

hurricane where you can
pump in money ancj material
and people. The problem is
still natural gas. Will the •
declaratiOn of an (energy) ·
emergency provide any ·.
addttional natural gas?
·•
"It does not," concluded
Ryan
Ryan said he thought one
reason lor the gas shortage
was tile paasage last year of a
btll prohibiting residential '
gas customers from bearing
any portion of emergency •
industrial gas purchases.
"I think it is a bad bill and •
should be repealed," said '
Ryan.
That statement prompted
Sen. Robert O'Shaughnessy,
O.COiumbus, to say he
tllought "mismanagement"
of the Columbia Gas Co. of
Oh1o was partly to blame for
the current lacl! of natural
gas.
"For (COlumbia Gas Board :
Chairman) Marvin White to ,
say there's no gas becaiiSe ol "
legislative. interference ill the ~
most asmme statement I've
ever heard anyone make,"

said O'Shaughnessy.

"

Record defended -•
by Kissinger
•

WASHINGTON (UP!)- In
the finale of an eight year
lovehate relationship with the
Washington press corps,
outgoing Secrelary of State
Henry Kissinger defended his
record and lannented the
impact the Watergate
"trawna" had on it.
Kissinger spoke Monday to
would need to know how
a
standing room only crowd
much money will be avaUable
at
the National Press Club,
as to what programs can he
and
told the reporters in
accomplished.
farewell: "I'll think of you
r-"-----~--. with affection, tinged with
exasperation."
THEDALYSENTJNEL
DEVOI'm TO THE
He was to speak in New
IN'I'EIIESrOF
York
today to a lunchem
MEIGHIABON A11EA
,
OIEBTER L. TANNEHILL
11p01180red by the COnference
Eoe&lt;.Ed.
of Presidents of Major
ROIIERTHOEFIJCH
CllyBdllor
American
Jewish
Pllbl~hed dall)' . , , . s.tur&lt;~ar
organlzati0111,
and
to
a dinner
by The Ohio v allty PubiJ.ahinl C&lt;rnsponaored
by
the
Foreign
any, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
46780 Ol1l&lt;e ~ m.
Policy
Aasoclatim.
Thotll!
are
2111.Edii&lt;Jrioll'hooe!IUI$7
his
last
scheduled
public
Second cl.ua poltate paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
appearances before leaving
NaUonal adverUatnc letW'W§Goffice next week.
Litlye Ward· Grlfftth Cumpany, ln. ' t BoUineW ond
Alked what · was his
Dl!:•
7$7 Third Ave, l'orll, NV.
greatest
diaappointment,
111017.
Ki11in1er
spoke of "the
S.bocriotloo ,...., Dellvond bY
carrier "here avaU.We 75 eeldl per
ln1D118 of Watergate" llld i\4
week By Mo&amp;.or R~ wbert ctnier
ellectaon U.S. foreign policy.
"""" not ovalloble, Ooe lllllnlh,
He said the weakened
""'
Dr mou 1n Olio ond w v~.,
One Veor, 121.00. 5I&amp; monllw.
power
of Richard Nixon
Ill 50, Three monlha, 17 00;
prevented
the United St.ataa
Ellowbere ta.OO yen: 5I&amp; millllhl
'u 50, Tlyee months, fl 50 1 from ezploillnl the llltuatioo
~ll,&gt;e UJclude:ii Sundi)'
tllat exlsled in the early 1971111.
·~t created a dangeroua

Sport Parade

By
United
Preu
For the sease'n, the Flyers
JnternaUonal
have 18 home games
The Dayton Flyers are scheduled compared to only
preparing to take their 1~ _eight contests on the road.
re,cord m the road.
-, In their lOth home contest
By MILTON RICHMAN
The
Flyers,
who
have
Monday night, file Flyers
UP! Sporta Edllor
played 10 of their 11 games at made it look easy as they led
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Whl!h Joiumf\l!ench heard hiS home this season in the all the way in the dowrung
buddy, Tmy Perez, had been traded to Montr~al, he cried.
friendly confines of U.D. previously undefeated
He still likes the deal lor Cincinnati, though.
Arena,
tangle
with Youngstown State ~9
"One thing has nothing to do with the other," BenCh says, undefeated a_l)d second·
Jun Pauon's 24 po10ts
thinking like a ballplayer again.
ranked
Ctn c innatl pacedtheFiyersandthefour
The Red! never had much choice. They had to come up with Wednesday night ld the other starters also scored in
some pitching after Don Gullett played out his option witll Queen City.
.
double figures as they woo
tllem, said goocjbye and good luck and signed on with the
The road trip will be short· their fifth consecutive game
Yankees for $2 million.
lived though as t~ Flyers since being handed their only
That was the big reason the Reds went for veteran left· return home for fiVe more loss of the season by Virginia
hander Woody Fryman and right-handed reliever Dale Mur- games llefore traveling to Tech m the UniverSity of
ray in their deal last month with the Expos, who got Perez and Memphis, Tenn ., Jan. 29oodo Dayton Invitational last
relief pitcher Will McEnaney in e~change .
battle with Memphis State.
"! can understand why we made the trade," says Bench.
"We needed pitching after we lost Gullett. You don't replace a
pitcher like him, you just fill in for him. You make do the best

you can."

Natural gas shortages now

Slfl

Bearcats host Flyers Wednesday

•

Comment10g on the controversy, Moore said Ms
mdiYiduals of all nations are
Barrett's "personal life has
melded mto a new race of
never been under criticiSID.
men, whose labors and
Many
persons
with
prospertty w11i one day cause
homosexual tendencies are
great changes m the world
presently m the ordained
The Amencan &amp;sa new man ,
mmistry
who ac ls upon new prln·
"Ellen Barrett's candor m
c&amp;ples , he must threrefore
th1s regard 1s not consulered
entert amnew 1deasand fQrm
a barrter to ordmation," he
new opimons '
srud
Ms Barrett told a news
conference
after
the
- Bv Ro.s~ Mackr nl le &amp; Jeff Ma cNrllv/el!m lln ued 1rr a11.1 re Svnd1cn1e
Gallia Clerk, $467.70.
ceremony
that ~~~~~~------~--~
homosexuality IS not "the
mam pomt of this particular
ceremony. ''
She said the church's
attitude has forced many
gays m the mimstry "to he
about fllemselves m the house
of trufll .. . To me that's a

Grant assures- Piketon plant study
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
U.S. Energy Research and
Development Adm"llstration
has
granted
Battelle
Memonai Institute $170,000 to
study soc1ai and economic
unpacts of the $4 billion
expanston of the Piketon,
Ohto, nuclear enrichment
plant, 11 was announced
Monday.
Dr Gary S Stacey, of the
Battelle econorrucs and management systetns sect1on who
will head the study1.eam, sa1d
the five month study would
provide 10format1on to com·
muntties and institutions m
the area surrounding the
plant on the expected needs of
new workers.
ERDA estimated that at
tile peak of construction on
the
new
facihttes,
approXImately.- 6,000

..••.•
.,

.

Bench, who personally put the crusher oo the Yankees with
his two home rtmS in the fourth and final game of the World
Series, happened to he in the Cincinnati offiCe of his lawyer,
Ruben Katz, the day Perez was traded after the btg first
boseman had spent his whole career in the Red!' organization.
Perez uses the same lawyer as Bench, and he was in the
office, too, with his wife, Patuka.
Bench had just walked in when Katz said to hun, "Did you
hear the news ? Tony was traded."
Perez' wife looked at Bench and smiled. It wasn't a haPIIY
smUe, rather a sad wistful one.
"Adios, Johnny," she said, with her husband close by her
side.
Bench and Perez have been friends, close friends, for the
better part of 10 years. They're more like brothers than
friends. And the Perezes consider Bench practically part of the
lamlly.
"!looked at Tony and suddenly the idea he wouldn't be there
anymore hit me," sayg the Reds' catcher "I JUS! couldn't hoip
it. I bust out crying."
.
A moment or so later, Johnny Bench eased some of the
emotion with ~ question he put to Perez.
"Can I borrow some money from you?" he joked.
Tmy Perez laughed, getting the message immediately.
He'd be in line for a mce lucrative new contract now go10g to
a ball club like the Expos, who had offered Reggie Jackson
almost half of Canada before he dectded the only place be
wanted to play was m New York
Bench's contract, whichrtmS around $235,000 a year, expires
at the end of this COJDing season after which he could elect to
play out his option in 1978.
"I don't think I will," he says, still not 100 per cent sure
"What for? I've got most of the secUrtty I need, I know a Iotta
other guys are getting bi~ money by playing out their options. I
used tQ he in the top five money-wise. Now maybe I'm
somewhere in the top 40," Bench iaugbs.
"My dad reads the papers and says to me, 'Did you~ what
so.and..., got? You ought to get more than you do.' My·mother
always thought I should, but that's just Papa and Mama
talking. It's only natural for them to feel that way about their
son.
"I'll tell you this much about our ball club this year We're
going to miss Tony. We're going oo miss hiS emotwn in the
clubhouse That means a lot. Who knows, tllat may change my
ideas when my contract is up. He was such a vital part of our
boll club. I'm not talking about only on the field, either."
Johnny Bench turned 29 only a lew days ago and has done
about everything you could possibly aak of a ballplayer. He has
wm key games for the Reds, been MVP, played in Al!Star
games and with a World Series' winner. Ttl• only thing left IS
the Hall of Fame, and he'll undoubltedly make that atso as Ted
WUllams predicted he would nearly 10 years ago.
In Bench'sopinion, the two best ballplayers he has seen have
been Roberto Clemente and Joe Morgan.
"Joe has so much talent that he changes the ball game
around," Bench says of Morgan. "He hits for average, hits the
boll out of the park and steals bases. He puts so much pressure
oo the other clubo' he lntimtdates them. U he has a weakness,
it's turning the double play because of his arm. But I'll still
take him over any secmd baseman I've ever seen."

Oakland fans celebrate
in cool, damp weather
By CLARK McKINLEY
OAKLAND, Calif. (UP!)The Oakland Raiders heard
the last hurrah of the NFL
football season In the
Collaeum where they began
tllelr victory march oo Super
Bowl XI.
More than 15,000 fans and
lec!Higers, taking advantage
of free pa5!M'S, huddled in a
Mmday night chill for the
community's offtcial celebra-

lion.
The scoreboard read,
"Raiders 32 Minnesota 14,''
and an electronic sign flashed
the brief te:xt of a
congratulatory telegram
from President F~rd.
Onlookers, sometimes
chanting "We're No. 1,"
waited more than an hour in
damp 46-degree weather
before the column of Raiders,
behind the trophy they woo

~

•

"If we make

~

•
••

environment and needless
disputes about the authority
of the executive branch and
the legislative branch," he
said. "It consumed too much
of our energy on peripheral

:
-;:
..
••
:
:

issues."

:

When asked a queStion "'
about the SALT negotiatlona, :
worded in such a way as to .=
suggest that he had :
bargained away U.S. :
Kini~ger ••
supremacy,
8ho•10me 111111er and Ald, ~
"It's time we conducted a :
rational debate on nuclear ,
strategy."
...
"Supremacy has no mea- :
ning'' when "each of two ::
superpowers have the ablUty ;:;
to wipe out mankind, and ..
C881111tlea in any nuclear 1181'-;,:
would be meuured by the ::
tensofmlWona,"ile llkl,
declared "I dm't believe the ;:
Sovl,eli ~trying to acbleve •
supetlorlty."
:
&lt;Aikecllil gr.l.ell ulilfac· ':
llcln, KIIIIIIC« did nat anner !
dlredly but alluded to the •
fact thet
lorelp polley ':
now CGDforml to lbc ~llltlc •
altulllun In the world. He S3hl ..
the new ldmtnlalratlon
nqutre a umle!l COIIIItry, anct:
he made 1 pllla for the
reparten to &amp;lvt the IIIW
prellldent their IUPporl. l

an error
on
.
your taxes,
pay the penalty.
And the interest!'

we

Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.
H&amp;R Block doesn't make many misfakes.
Our people are trained not to. But 1f we
should make an error that costs you
additional tax, you pay only the additional
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work.

and:

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAIN

u.s.

Open 9 A.M -6 'P,M. Wetkdoys,9-5 Sol.
Phonem-3195
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

wDI:

.,

II

•

,,

month .
Creighton hit 58 per cent ol
Youngstown State center 1ts shots dur10g the first half
Jeff Covington kept the to roll to a 34-23 advantage at
VISiting Penguins in the game the intermission.
m the first baU, when he . Cleveland State came back
scored 22 of his 26 game-high m the secood stanza to hit 15
points, but the Flyers sUII had of 25 for..OO per cent and make
a 41-30 lead by intermission. the game close, but with 1: 55
The Flyers outshot the remaining the Viking.! blew
Penguins 48 to 38 per cent three consecutive chances to
from field and Dayton had score and the Blue Jayocame
only 14 turnovers compared away victorious
to 31 lor Youngstown State.
The win gave Creighton a g.
Elsewhere, Rick Apke, the 2 record while Qeveland
!HI son of head coach Tom State dropped to ~.
Apke, poured in 25 points to
In other games involving
power Creighton to a GUO Ohio teams Monday night,
wm over Cleveland Slate
Central State edged Chicago
Dave Kyle was high scorer State 89-a7 and Indiana (Pa. )
for the losers with 18 points.

I

N BA Standtngs
AtlanftC DIVISIOn

W L Pet

Hawks, 93-92
MacLeod.

,

We didn't let
down Atlanta's aggreSSlve
play took us out of our
11

offensive patterns and they
started gettmg' a number of

Ph ilad elphia
NY Kn1c:ks
Boston
Buft alo
N Y Nets

scored."

The VICtory broke a fiVe•
game losing streak for the
Suns and was their first road
win in 10 tries. For. the
· fifth
HaWkS, it was thell'
straight loss and their lOth
defeat in 11 games.

teams

swapped

15

19 18
18 18
l S 2~
12 26

GB

5B J 51-&lt;1 21 -.
500 J
385 7 1 ~J
316 10

W L Pet GB
23 15 605 20 15 511 J\'1
20 19 513 31 ~

Cl eveland
Ho ust on

San Antomo

wash •ng ton
18 18 500 ~
N ew Orl ea ns 19 20 487 4 1?
Atla n ta
13 28 317 l l 1 1
Western Conference
MidWeSt DIVIS 10M
W l Pet
GB
Denver
26 12 684 D etro•t
11 16 579 .t
lnd1ana
20 20 500 7
Ka nsas C1ty
lB 20 47 4 8
Ch 1cago
13 22 371 l l' '1
M1lwaukee
12 28 300 15
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
W L Pet
GB
Portland
27 l3 61 5 Los Angejes
24 14 632 2
Gol den Slate 20 16 556 5
. sea tt le
22 19 537 51 7
Phoentx
15 21 41 7 10
Monday's Results
PhOen llc 93 Atlant a 92
[Only gam e scheduled )
Tues day's Games
Houston vs Bos ton
at Harlford
L os Angeles a t Cl ev eland
Phoen1 x at Chi cago
Philadelph ia a tK an C1ty
WaSh ing ton at M il waukee
Detro!! a t Golden St
NY Kmcks at Por t land
tOnly ga m es sc hedul ed )
Wednesday's Games
Ind ia na at BOSIOn
Atlanta a t Buffa lo
Houst on at Phtlad elphla
M ilw aukee at San An ton• o
Chtc ago a t Washmg ton
· New Orlean s at Den ve r
Oetr o1 t al Seattle
COn l y gam es schedul ed)

NHL Stand'""'
Bv Un1ted ftress

lnternafiOnal
Campbe ll Conference
Patnck DIVISIOn
w L T Pts GF GA

Phda
25 9 9 59 16611 7
NY lsla ndr s 25 9 6 56 1d8 102

Atlanla
19 16 7 45 137 134
NY Rangers" 16 12 " 162 112
Smythe
D•vosoon
W L T Pts GF GA
St Lou•s
11 20 5 39 118 149
Ch1cago
Mmnesora

14 22 6 34 132 153
10 21 9 29 117 160

Colorado

10 23 7 27

Vancouve' 12 29 4 28
Wales

Conference
NorriS DIVISIOn

The SWlS jumped to a 23-17

lead m the first quarter and
« •n halflim
d
held a ~
e a van·
tage. The leaded widened to
. the second
20 pOlO ts ear1y 10
half before Ailanta rallied 00
take the lead, BU7, wiith 1:07
left . The Suns wenI eight
minutes without a field goal
during the Atlanta splurge.

21

Ce ntral DIIIISIOM

secood shots on the board and

The

Games postponed
As of 9:30 this morning, the
following a rea basketball
games had been postponed,
due to bad weather : Waverly·
Ironton, to be played Jan. 18;
Kyger Creek-Eastern ; Pt.
Pleasant-Nitro and South
Pomt-chesapeake.

f

't •.
.

123 180

115 U6

w L T Pts GF GA
Jl 5 6 68 20 8 9A

Montreal

Pottsburgh 11 16 8 42 131 137
Los Angel es 14 19 10 38 136 143
Detro•I
13 23 5 31 11 7 150
Washmgtn 12 24 6 30 110 164
Adams Dom.on
W L T Ph GF GA
BuHalo
26 11 4 5i&gt; 153 108
Bos ton
25 13 3 53 156 126
To,onto
19 11 6 " 151 '"
Cleveland 12 2&lt; 7 31 128 t58

twice nahona1 champions
during the Oscar Robert..on
years m the early 1960s,
moved up from fourth to
second while improving their
woo~ost mark to 1~ this
past week.
There was a mild shakeup
among the to)H'ated powers
m tile wake of Cincinnati's
leap oo the No. 2 spot.
Kentucky, ranked second
last week, dropped a notch to
third following hard-earned
victories over Georglll and
Vanderbilt . Alabama,
another Southeastern
N ~ W YOR K I UP II The Conference power, remained
U n 1 I e d Pr ess International unbeaten with a trio of
Board of
Coaches' college victories, and impressed the
basketball r a t tngs w 1lh w on lost
of coaches who voted them
r ecord s through g~mes
S ~turda y Jan 8, and nu m ber fourth
th1s week, an
of f 1r st pla ce votes 1n pa r en
improvement
of one notch.
the!es sixth week
Team
Pomts
North Carolina, looking
1 San F ran c1sco ( 311 (17 0) 357 more and more like one of
2 c .n cmnall ( 1) (100)
315
Smith's
most
3 Ken tucky ( 1) { ~ 1t
2d6 Dean
231 formidable Atlan tic Coast
4 Alabama {1) (120) •
5 Nor tli Car ollna- (ll (8 1) 222
powers yet,
6 M• ch1g an (9 1J
'2 14 Conference
1 Nev ada La s Vegs (1 )( 10 1 ) 157 improved from seventh to
B Wake For est Cll 1l
65
9 Marquett e (9 21
63 fifth alter one&lt;lided wms over
10 Amana 111 11
62 Clemson and Virginia. Howe·
11 M inn esota ( l l ( 10 0)
58 ver , Michigan, third last
12 UCL A (11 2)
lB
13 Purdue (8 JJ
25 week after being first for the
14 LOUI S\I dle (9 2)
24 previous
two weeks,
15 Oregon ( I 1 11
?0
16 Arkan sas (10 1)
15 plummeted to sixth after
17 Tenn es see {8 2 l
9 strugghng
past South
18 Pro v 1den ce { 11 2)
8
Carolina
and
Wiscons10.
19 (h el Ho l y Cross (\ 01 1
7
19 0 1e l St J ohn '~ ( NY l (9 2) 7
Nevada-Las Vegas also im·
proved a couple of places,
jumping to No 7 alter
VICtories over Colorado, New
Mexico and Cal-Northridge
ST. LOUIS (UP! )- Flam· gave the Rebels a 1:1-1 mark.
Wake Forest, which proved
boyantSt. Louis center Derek
1t
must he taken seriously in
Sanderson, unwanted by any
file
ACC this year by beating
of file 17 ·other National
Maryland
at College Park,
Hockey League clubs,
made
the
biggest
advance of
Monday was sent by the
file
week,
going
into
the oop 10
Blues to their Kansas City
oo
8th
place,
and
Marquette,
farm club in the Central
m the rebound after a pair of
Hockey League.
losses two weeks ago, moved
The Blue~~~ asked
hack mto the top 10 at No. 9.
waivers on~ ..~~ NHL Arizona completed the top 10.
rookie of the year, but no
other team bid for
Sanderson's services, even
Thu; Week's SoeClal
though St Lows Coach Emlle
Francis offered oo part with
Sanderaon
for
free .
Sanderson will have a chance
to rejoin the parent club, "If
he works," Francis said.

NEW YORK (UP! )- After
more than a decade among
college basketball's alsorans, San Francisco and
Cincinnati are back at the
top.
The unbeaten Dons, now 170, have been ranked No. 1 for
two weeks and they increased
their lead this week, pulling
down 31 firsti!lace votes
from the 37 coaches
participating in the balloting
for a total of 357 points.
Cmcinnati , meanwhile,

USED CARS

Monday 's Results

NY Island er s

e Phd a

3

baskets in the final secoods Wash mg ton 2 Detro i t 0
Wnly gl! m es scheduled \
before Westphal sewed up the
Tuesday's Games
contest with his free throws. Boston at wash tngron
Toronto at Pttt•bu,gh
Westphal led the Suns With Montrea
l at Colo7ado
20 points While John Drew
I Only ga me• scheduled !
scored 29 and Lou Hudson 24
Wednesday's Games
NY Ranger s at Atla nt a
for AUanta.
NY Islanders at Ch•cago

SANTO DOMINGO,
Dominican RepubUc (UP!)Rick Bosetti, a 24-year-oid
outfielder in the Philadelpua
Pbil)ies' farm system with
excellent major league
prospects, said Monday he
will quit the Dominican
winter league because he has
received threat.l on his life.
The manager of his
Dominican winter league
team, Franciso Acevedo, said
the Lions will withdraw from
the championship race if
Bosetti sticks to his decision
oo return to the United States.
The manager said he was
trying to get police protection
for his star player.

!:

I

By Um1ed Press lnternahonil
Ea stern Conference

·S uns slip by

Sunday in Pasadena, walked
ooto the grass infield
While they waited, fans
were enterta10ed by sporadic
College Basketball Results
list fights in the aisles,
By United Press International
Raider band music and eight
•
East
dancing Raiderettes. At one Ar m y 72 Scranton 67, o t
C W Pos t 92 Clarkson 87
point a broadcaster pleaded Dlc kn sn 72 E Stroudsbg 53
with the crowd, "Be cool, Duqu esne 86 P en n St 7J
Geo Wash 87 Calh U 7-t
don't.spoil this party "
Hofstra 1J Ntagara 70
Coach John Madden intro- lndtana Pa 59 Steubnv l 58
lona 68 St John 's N Y 66
duced the players, beginning Junta
ta 51 Grove C1ty 48
with safety George Atkinson, Leh1 Qh 96 F DU Ma dt son 31
a nine-year veteran slapped M orav tan 79 Ur s1nus 66
Pha Tex 85 Ku!Ztown 64
with a "dirty player" lag 51
Fran NY 94 Adelphi 83
South
after a controversial play
~ 101 MISS 88
against Pittsburgh in the Alabam
Ark St 76 NW L a 75
early season. Atkinson, Auburn 95 Georg1 a 71
ubrn Mntgmrv 73 Mnl ev llo dS
Madden said, "got a lot of ABapti
St 68 Citadel 54
criticism he didn't deserve.'' Cstal Car 61 L1 mes tone 59
Then running back Pete Dav ls&amp;E ik1ns 9) Waynesbg 70
93 Lafay ette 77
Banaszak took his turn at the Duke
E Tenn 67 w Kentuc ky 61
mike, one of only four players F lor 1da Tech 98 .Aqu tna s 81
Fori Valley 91 A lbny Ga 89
left from the Oakland team Ga
Tech 7d Georg 1a St Sd
tllat Green Bay humiliated, Jacksonvl 68 So F la 59
Grnge 54 Ga S'w strn 49
33-14, in Super Bowl II nine La
Lin coln Mem 97 Cu m br ln d ~68
years ago.
L•vngstn 91 B•rmnghm So 71
"We put up quite a fight Memphis St 78 Tu lane 6d
Tenn 73 Tenn Tech 68
getting it (file Super Bowl M1d
Mor e h e ~d 64 A ust 1n Pea y 60
trophy)," Banaszak told the M Harvey 12 Shepherd 59
11 Ea stern lt y 70
crowd, "and we're going to Murray
Newberry 78 Cl1arleslon 69
fight like hell making sure we New Orl eens B8 La Tech 67
Norlh Ga 7l Shorter 57
keep it.''
broke BJ Catawba 76
Members of the Raider Pem
Pfe1fter 112 NC Grnsbro 98
organization received awards Roanoke 79 Maryville 76
R Morr•s 65 Centenry 6'1
and compliments · from Slhrn
U 81 f... lt ~r n Sl 79
Madden, and in 45 minutes Spr ing Hll 100 x av ier La 98
92 Florida 82
the ceremonies were over. Tennessee
Stetson 97 Hardn Sl mmn s 74
Dozens of helmeted police Tenn St 92 M Brown 80
were left to contend with Troy St 80 Delta St 70
VMI 74 Appalachian 54
fighting, bottlethrowing teen· W Car lOS N C A&amp; T 60
Wm &amp;Mar')l 71 Vlrg1n1a 65
agers.
Midwest
There were several arrests Ctn t St 89 Ch1cago
Sl 87
but no serious injuries, police Creighton 63 Cleve Sl 60
Dayton 83 Yngstwn St 59
said.
Drury 76 l&lt;y Wes leyan 61
Lest anyone had forgotten, 11 1 St 74 No Iowa 61
the Raider band's first song, Ill Wslyn 10'1 No Cent 80
St T H 90 Butler 67
11
Who's Sorry , Now," was Mlndo 84
San D1eg0 51 69
dedicated to the Steelers who Neb Omaha 89 W Ill 71
cy 88 SIU Edwrdsvl 68
lost ID Oakland, 24-7, in thla Quin
Wis GrnBay 73No Il l 58
sea!OII's pl&amp;yofll.
Southwut
60 Teus Tech 53
"I waallappy to aee them Ark.
Baylor 90 TCU 74
win it in Paudena, " said E Tel&lt; Bap t lOS LeTrneau 73
Robert IAong, an !~year-old E Tex Sl 62 'T exas A&amp; I 51
15 E New Me J&lt;Ico 61
usher from nearby Fremont. McMurry
Okla Chr is 7.t SE Ok la 63
"But I waa nwre thrilled 0 Robrts 86 Swstrn Tex 60
Vw 124 Tex Coli 108
seeinll them heat Pjttaburgh Pra1rle
Sam HouSion 85 Ab Chr is 76
than Minnesota."
SMU 72 Rice 61
A. Walter, 30, of Oakland, SW Tex 67 Tarltn St 64
$ F A ustn 74 H Pa yne 66
said he expecle!l "just what I TeX liS 81 Tl'l KftS A&amp;M 1J
saw" when Oakland cruahed Ws trn N M , 76 Wslrn ~ ~ 59
WIChi ta St 12 Ok C1l')l 66
Minnesota.
West
"I gave •em 34-14 and came Dl;'nvcr R4 F Montana 68
Wash 84 Alska An cr ge 5:l
up two polnta short, I would EPuQr
l ~ ound 51 U C lrvin fl dO
have bet, but there wat no so Colo 6d Adem s St ~~
So, Utah Ii i RO P t•g1 s 69
sucker on the end of the tine.' '

The Ohio Dominican-Rio
Grande contest scheduled for
Mmday night was postponed
because of the weather.
Tonight's seven-game
schedule features four Ohio
Athletic Conference games.
Kenyon hosts Heidelberg ;
Muskingum plays Capital at
Columbus; M.tlrietta will be
at llemson ; and Ashland
entertains Otterbein. ,

!St:~ndings I

rota! of 31 po10ts and pulled-- teams in action won easily.
down 11 rebounds and Brown Arkansas, led by Sidney
a center, added 21 points' Moncrief with 23 points and 12
Freshmen guards Robert rebounds, won a 60-53
Scott and Kent Looney had 18 Southwest Conference
and 13 points respectively VIctory over Texas Tech, and
The Ole Mbs attack was Tennessee, with a tight
paced by John Billips' 24 Southeastern Conference
points and Walter Actwood's game broken open at the start
21. Also scoring in double of the second half by Errue
ligures lor the Rebels were Grunfeid's two three-point
Eugene Harris with 18 pomts plays, defeated Florida, 92.and John Stroud with 10
82.
·
The win ran Alabama's
In other games, Duke
SEC record to w and 1~ defeated Lafayette, 93-77,
overall, while Ole Miss Auburn routed Georgia, 95-71,
dropped to 0-3 in the Memphis State dumped
conference and &amp;-5 overall. Tulane, 78-64, Missoun
"I didn't dream we would downed San Diego State, 84he undefeated at this point," 69, Texas beat T: •as A&amp;M,
Newton said.
87·73, and SMU whipped Rice,
The only other two top 7~1 ·

ATLANTA (UP! ) - A
farce almost became a
tragedy for the PhOenix Suns
at tlleir lavorite road stop
Monday night
The Suns, who usually have
great success in Atlanta, built
a 20-pomt lead over the
Atlanta Hawks in the
National Basketball
AssOciation's only game, then
couldn't find the basket and
fell behind and finally had to
depend on four free throws by
Paul Westphal in the last
seven seconds to escape wifll
a 93-92 victory.
•
"A 20-point lead means
nothing in this league," said
Phoemx
Coach
John

58.

Dons retain
r-----------., top ranking
: Pro :

Tide now 4-0
•
zn loop play

United Press International
Unbeaten Alabama rolled
to 1ts fourth straight
Southeastern Conference
VIctory Monday night, 10 a
come-from-behind style that
Coach C.M. Newton says is
all too consistent.
The weary fourth-ranked
Crimson Tide, playing thetr
1ourth game in eight days,
battled from behind twice as
forward Reggie King and
center Rickey
Brown
combined for 52 points in a
101.U victory over Ole Miss.
"We're doing a magnificent
job of keeping an edge and
being consistent,'' Newton
said. (jBut we've been
consistent in getting behind.
"We went out there in a
zone press on Ole Miss from
the beginnmg and we got
ourselves in a hole."
Midway in the opening half,
Ole Miss spurted to a sevenpomt lead before Alabama
rallied and reeled off 18
pomts to only lour fo the
Rebels during a 61'.!-rninute
stretch.
The Tide went ahead, 32-31,
on Brown's 111-foot jumper
and led, 44-41, at the ball, but
the Rebels battled back in the
second half and took the lead,
at 72-71, on a jumper by
freshman Tom Warda w1th
10:,113 remainmg.
King, a !Hi, 22b-pound lorward, sent Alabama back
into the lead seconds later
with a tip-in and the Tide
slowly hegnn to pull away.
King sank 14 oL 21 shots
from the floor, three of lour
from the free throw line for a

squeeked by St.eQhenvllle 59-

Montrea l at St LOU IS
Oetr o1t at Cleveland
l.. os Angeles at Toronto
Minnesota at V ancouver
(Only ga m es sc heduled )

lnternat1onal
Hockey League
Un1ted Press International

North
WLTPtsGFGA
21 14 3 d5 11.11 136
20 16 4 d~ 176 149
18 16 8 44 169 ISS
16 18 7 39 159 166
17 21 4 38 14.11 166
South
W L T Pts GF GA
Cayton
20 18 1 41 162 162
Col u mbus 17 18 7 41 16d 163
Tol edo
18 19 5 41 168 118
F t Wa')lne 14 2 1 7 35 14S 1S9
Monday ' s Results
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
N.o games scheduled
Kala m a
F lint
Sag 1naw
M us k
PI Huron

Wednesday's Games
Dayton at Fort Wayne

S ag~naw

at Port Huron
F l1nl at Co l umb vs
( Only games scheduled J

BUENOS AIRES,
Argentina
(UP!)
Argentina's Automobile Club
president Cesar Carman said
Monday the Argentine Grand
Prix had not lost mmey but
he declined to give any exact
ligures.
Sunday's Formula One
race at the Buenos Aires
Autodrome played to a
capacity crowd of an
estimated 50,000 persons,
paying a minimum of $13 oo
enter. But the cost of the
Grand Prix was expected to
pass $900,000 dotiars. ·

'76 GRANADA ,
2 DR.
V8, automatiC, power
steering, 3,000 miles.

•4695
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll Like Our Quality
Way of

Doing Business

, GMAC FINANCING
992·5341
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'Ill 6:00
Tlll5 P m. S.OI.

-- -

If your Insurance agent can't give you
"worry free" service, fire him and hire
Mick.

"Let Mick Do It!"
•

with us!
..,

PLANNING APIZZA PMTY
,HONE
THE IALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHM:K
-Enjoy three sires of your favorite
pi111S.

-Try our delicious subs while you
)iiP your favorite suds,
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

You may r:eever have to worry about
insurance ilgain.

OOV.NING CHiLDS ~
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Middleport, o.

\

•

•

~
I

,
0.:
,,,

'.'

l

�• .. r
. '.

'•

'

•

4- The DaUv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tues&lt;Uiy, Jan. 11,1977

.

p 0 lly' s Pointers r*'~~Ge=;:;wiiml~~-n~R~J.\IIIW~!iillll~~-~E~"II MKjdleport
•
~
By Helen and Sue Bottel
~ ~ Personal Notes
~
*
Clyda Allensworth has
returned from Marysville
•••.•

57·

Mr~.

How to _repair
bean bag chair

PubUc Spender, Private Miser

....

I

'

I Calendar

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
NO DEALERS'PLEASEI

OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
'

that

doesn't

SMOKED
PICNICS
CHICKEN

BACKS &amp;
NECK·S

A new twist for the wrist.
Beautiful new watchbands
from Speidel. As flexible
and durable as any ·
Twist·O·Fiex" watch
bracelet. and now adorned
with the classtc look of the
buckle In yellow and stain·
less steel.

Helen Farley, Alfred
Farley to Helen Farley,
Alfred Farley, Lot 4 Webb &amp;
J!;arnshaw Subdiv., ·Mid·
dleport.
Glenda Warren, Helen
Marr, Gerald L. Marr,
Freddie Cline, Lynda Cline to
R. L. Barnette, Lorraine H.
Barnette, Lot, Middleport.
Donald E. .Yoho, Erma K.
Yoho to John A. Dean,
Virginia Dean, John W. Dean,
Anita Dean, Ease., Bedford.
John A. Dean, Virginia
Dean to John W. Dean, Anilil
Dean, Parcel, Bedford.
Th~odore T. Reed Jr.,
Nancy B. Reed to Raymond
A. Kloes, Patricia R Kloes,
Lot, Middleport.

LB.

29°

992-2920

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY

LB.

GOLDEN ISLE

GOLDEN ISLE

ON
QUALITY MERCHANDISE!
3-Piece
· ·

LIVING ONLy
ROOM SUITE

FRENCH FRIES

$399

ns.~ 69~

-BAKER
Middleport,

~~ey-m.m~-w~~~ ~~~~i~l~

.

'

~acine,

•' •

0.

PHEBE 'S STORE

Rl~

Jan. 11 • Jan. 15

Reserved to LimltQuarit,tle! .

We Gladly Acctpt Fod&gt;-Foad Stamps
Mondoyt~ru Friday
9: 00107: 00
91o9

..

'• '

TOMATOES
••

1-I.B

.

SLICED CHEESE ................................... :.•1.39

.'' .
.

. .

YELLOW

ONIONS
LB.

154

DUNCAN 1UNES (EXCEPT ANGEL FOOD)
· BOX .
CAKE MIX .•............................................ 59c:
AMERICAN BEAUTY
PORK 'N BEAN$ ............... 2 2'h SIZE CANS 99•
PRINGLES TWIN_P_Aic ............................. 89•
KERR QUART JARS ............... REG. OOZEN•1.99

·

RC ..

'

CHUCK
ROAST·

ARM ROAST

DIET RITE
8 PAK 16 OZ. BOTI'U

LB• • •

~

TASTEE

BOLOGNA

$ 19

2-LB. TRAY
SLICED
,.

' '

ENGLISH
ROAS-T

LB.

OR

PWS.TAX
&amp; DEPOSIT

'

.,39

'

LB.

•

BOILING .BEEF
LB..

39°

FRENCH CITY

BOILED HAM
LB•• ,

.

••

·,

:•
._••

CAN

'

49 ~..GAiN~""j i

·
9
9
o.r.tr.~-~. . . . . . .6
6 (1! .

cans

.i ,:. .
•

Jl
Twin City Gateway •
: Coupon Exp. Jan. 15, 1977:
.............. . • . .

•

W-C &amp; $10.00

j FABRIC
•
· ~.· sonENER
No. 255
64 ot. Bottle

•

:

$}39 .

$

•
Purchase
•
4.
-•
: .cou~n E.xp . Jan. IS, 1"17;
._ Twm C1ty Gateway J

.........._! • ...................' , . ....................,..
KEEBLER : I CHARM IN : i . GOLDEN ISLE -~

rcoupon ~Xp,
City

,Jilfl, 13, IY,,

·~Maa•••,u••••

FUDGE : :

•••• ••• .............

GOLDEN ISLE

"•

39e

f fiNAL TUUCH

~

No. 105

ggt i 79e

121/lliZ· Pkg

36 oz. Box

'

f.~

i FLOUR ·;

'·
•

Twin City r.ateway

·1· i PUPPY i •
CHEESE
. 89 . ~-~!~E !
SINGLES•............. ~~..~.~.
~
i
'

,CEREAL

~

41 Coupon EKp. Jan. 15,

DOZEN PACK

'

i

INSTANT
COFFEE
10 oz . Jar

·ELECTRA. ·s o.L ~\oz. box
GOLDEN ISLE

i WHEATIES rRoo;t,Q)ol

FOLGER'S

DONUTS

NO. 2lh CAN

79e

5 LB. BAG

.. . . . . u ............

30 oz.
.

a·9e

10 LB. BAG

GLAZED

AND ·

~ GRAPEFRUIT

POTATOES

BETSY ROSS

PORK
BEANS

WHITE
OR
PINK

WHITE

c

.

24 OZ. BTL

JOAN OF ARC

o.

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

FLOUR.••..•....•• :..•..•..•..... :·•...•......... 2:. LB. '3.99

,

U. S. NO. 1

•

FURNITU.RE

CLOSED

PURE
VEGETABLE OIL
'

CLEARANCE PRICES

Reutei-Biopn lnsurn:e

69e

POMEROY, _0.

~l...~

OFFICE HOURS

DOG FOOD ............. •......... ;......... 25 LB. •3.39

POLISH
SAUSAGE

NAVIGATE OVER TO
BAKER'S JANUARY

• •

MI-CHOICE

SUPERIORS

o.aMiMth

Secon_d_St.

PINTO BEANS ............................. 5 LB. •1.00

ARE

The
Buckle

Property
Transfers

-~\

BORDEN'S AMERICAN . .. .

j

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT.. JAN. 15, 1977

society."

J Social

MARTHA WHITE REG. OR SELF RISING

.

•

a

..

SELIM J. BLAZEWICZ M.D.

~

OUR PRt(ES

dleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M.; as a member and past
patron of of Evangeline No.
172, O.E.S.; Scottish Rite,
Valley of Colwnbus, and
Aladdin Temple, Colwnbus.
His unlaiiing work has
significantly benefited his
fellow Masons, and his
leadership and service to this
highly respected organization
and to his community and
state, have distinguished
James Clatworthy as a con·
cerned and responsible
Citizen. His commitment and
record of accomplishments
are
halbnark worthy of
emulalion by all those who
wish to work for a better

Miss Snyder
is married

r-------------...;,;;;____

. . . ..

during the drive will first be
applied to the $100 due now
for the brace and shoe and the
remainder will be applied to
the boapltal bill Mrs. Sanford
Thomas, 315 Broadway St., ,
Middleport, will head the
fund drive. She will establish
an account for the money and
will pay the money directly
· on the bUls involved. Funds
. raised are to be used only f9r .
the hospital expenses. and the
$100 due on the brace and
shoe. Contributions may be
sent to Mrs. Thomas at her
home address. ·

was thought that amputation
might
be
necessary .
However, It has been decided
that with the use of a special
shoe and leg brace she· may
be able to walk again.
The Colwnbus Orthopedia
Service. Columbus, ·is
preparing the shoe and brace
and the cost will be f295. Mrs.
Bailey wlll go to Holzer
Medic~! Center, probably· in
February, for the final fit·
ling. However, about $100
must be paid on the equipment now with one of the aid
programs to pay the balilnce.
All of the money raised

A public fund for Mrs.
Flora Bailey, Locust St.,
Middleport, has begun. ·
Mrs. Bailey, living on small
veteran and social security
checks, has a doctor · and
hospital bill totaling several
thousands of dollars and is
currently in need of $100 with
which to secure equipment so
that she can walk.
On Dec. 26, · 1975, Mrs.
Bailey received a severe
ankle and leg injury in a fall.
She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and has been
confined there several times
over the past year. Earlier. it

Clatworthy congratulated
on Masonic appointment

..

•

•

Drive ·begun for Mrs. Bailey

· and Colwnbus where she
/
Rap-h, our friends, my Dad is very rich , He makes a big.show ~pent the holidays visiting
I
of
how well his business is doing. When ·Dad and Mom relatives. Before Christmas
By Polly CraJU~r
entertain,
it's first-&lt;!lass all the way.
she accompanied Richard
being painted with nail polish.
DEAR POLLY - Is there
But
in
private,
he'sa
real
miser.
"e's
always
t~lling
us
to
Rawlings.and sons to Colum·
by. her child. Your answer
an easy way to repair a vinyl
"cut
down
."
Mom's
a
strict
budget,
and
we
eat
mostly
bus
to visit Mrs. Sns&lt;!n Rawl00
was that your experiments
bean ,bag chair? Once, I
cheap
hamburger
when
we're
alone
with
the
family·.
I
have
ings.
Later Mrs. Allensworth
removed the contents and showed nail polish remover
Ill
earn
the
money
for
my
clothes
and
extras,
but
I'm
not
.
and
Mrs.
Rawlings went to
restitched the seams but that took away the polish but left supposed wmention it around.
,
MarysviJle
where they spent
did not last. Is there any tape, oyour plastic dl!illooking. Did
Iwouldo't
mind
this
so
much
I
know
Dad
is
putting
up
a
·
.Christmas
with
Mr. and Mrs.
glue or whatever that will • you then try using clear nail front - but he ·never has time for us. He's always·involved in JamesJohnsohand family.
polish on the face of the cluck
work?
.M r. and Mrs. Robert Jay,
after
the polish was remov· some big dealthat's supposed to make us rich, but doesn't.
My Pointer is for those who
You
have
to
take
a
nunlber
w
even
talk
with
him,
it
seems.
Colwnbus,
and Mr. and Mrs.
hate to take eggs from the ed I This worked well for me Taking me places? Forget it'
·
Don
Grueser
were among the
carton to fill the egg tray in on the very scratched face on
Mom
says,
"Wait.
Pretty
soon
he'll
make
that
killing
and
.
holiday
visitors
of Mr. and
the refrigerator. I simply a wrist watch. The polish then we'll be a real family." I'm 16, IIJid can't remember ever Mrs. WilliamGrueser.
tear of!the top lid and set the must be new so it flows on hearingmuchmorefromhimthan, "I'mbusy,don'tbotherme
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
bottom of the carton with the freely and easily. The polish now." Does this kind of marl change? If so, how do we manage Allensworth of Groveport
eggs in it right into the egg will also help glue in a loose it?- FATHERLESS
spent -the weekend at their
tray. -MRS. L.R.
• ,. crystal or face of a watch or
home in MiddlepOrt.
DEAR MRS. L.R. - I know cluck. This should be first Dear F.:
Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown,
of no way to mend a bean bag tested on a small area, as
Chris and Stacey, Colwnblls,
Change
isn't
likely
for
a
man
whose
whole
life
seems
built
chairexcept by resewing the some plastic reacts different· around the long shot, the money-hunt, and (probably) the Mr. and Mrs. Ron Thompson
1
seams: If you put a bit less ly from others.- B.R.O.
and Sam, New Haven, W.
The Senate of the lllth
DEAR .POLLY - I save super con. Even though he ''made that kiJling,'' he'd no doubt · Va., and Mrs. Ida Bachner,
.sluffing hack in after slit·
be
off
after
another
coup
before
the
family
could
savor
its
luck.
General
Assembly of Ohio
large
foil
pie
pans.
They
are
. _ ching' the seams further in
You can manage, if you knock off resenbnent ·and get on Middleport, were Christmas has. issued a· resolution con·great
to
use
imder
paper
picfrom the e&lt;lges, it might last
guests of .Mr. and Mrs. gratulating James Clat·
with the positive parts of your world. -HELEN
longer. How about this nic plates, making handling
Everett Bachner. On New wortHy of ll'!iddleport on his
+++
readers - have any of you easier and safer.- MRS. S.S.
A WORD FROM SUE: Try to understand, your father is Year's weekend, Mr. and appointment as district depu·
DEAR POLLY - After driven by .a get..-ich dream: And the.only way you 'll win his Mrs. Bachner went to the
discovered a good way to
ty for the 12th Masonic
repair such chairs.- POLLY. washing my glass fiber cur· attention is by talking his language.
Brown home in Columbus. ! . District.
tains,
I
.
pleat
them,
when
DEAR POLLY - My Pet'
Mr. and Mrs . · Paul
Perhaps he feels as left out as y0u do. Honest now, have
The resolutio~ cites ClatPeeve is with the makers of they are still damp, into the you ever really LISTENED ID him. I doubt he'd be "too busy" Winebrenner, Colwnbus; Mr.
worthy
' s " long and
proper
folds
and
fasten
in
100 percent polyester men's
if you showed some interest in those big deals that obsess him. and Mrs. Jack Bowman and distinguished service with
place
with
clip
clothespins,
shirts. They put pins in the
(Who knows, he might even reciprocate with similar interest daughter, Susan, Pataskala,
this outstanding fraternal
shirts when they are being until the curtains are dry, .in YOUR problems.)
,
a~d her fiance, Don Clinger,
organization"
as the basis for
They
always
look
trim
and
folded and they leave holes or
+++
of Forest, 0. were holiday the commendation. Senator
neaL
even snags.- VELOIE.
Dear Helen and Sue:
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Oakley Collins introduced the
Always cut away the good
DEAR POLLY - I read
About an 11 p.m. (orinsomeplaces !Op.m.) curfew:
-Owens.
·
resolution.
I am an ex-&lt;!urfew violawr my5elf and have learnea this
L.D.'s problem with the sides of discarded mattress
T. Sgt. and Mrs. Timothy . The resoMion reads, in
pads.
They
are
great
to
go
in·
lesson: If you're out after 11 "just hanging around," you're a Priddy and children, Brian
plastic front on a clock radio
part, as follows: uJames
side pot holders you may be suspect!or the crimes that happen during the late hours.
and Vicky, Grissom Air Clatwor thy . has mad e
making.
Just being there will get you picked up for questioning, and Force Base, Peru, Ind. spent
SOMETIMES
After using the oranges out you could possibly be jailed for quite a while. Why chance it? two weeks here with her countless contributions to the
Order as past master of Mid·
of a nylon net bag, fill it with - LEARNED THE HARD WAY
parents, Mr. und Mrs. Dale
WORDS SIMPLY
bath toys for your
Jacobs. Also home for
youngsters, hang over the tub Dear Rap:
Christmas
with her parents
AREN'T ENOUGH.
and they will drip dry and all . Why should curfew laws be just for kids? If they're to was Carol J acobs of .Bookmobile route
be neatly in . one place. prevent crime, they should include adults, who also do crimes.
BUT FLOWERS
-STELLA.
.
Let's don't discriminate: Clear the streets of everjrbody Brooklyn, N. Y.
M~igs County Bookmobile
schedule for Meigs County
DEAR POLLY - I want to after 11 p.m. and ask the cops Ill go after older violators fllo. SAY IT ALL
this week :
·
tell Mrs. J.S. that I remove TEEN FOR EQUAUTY
Thul"'day. Jan. 13
those small adhesive snares
Pomeroy r, tementary ,
.with a little elbow grease and Dear Helen and Sue :
As a former police commissioner and school board
· 9:30-11 and 12 noon-2:30p.m.
a dull edged knife. It takes a
Co unty
Road
3,
while but they come off easi- member, I say the complaint of the young person concerning
Harrisonville, 3:15-3:30.
ly. I find they are easier to an II p.m. curfew is justified. No counu:Y representing Itself as
remove from a wood surface the bastion of liberty should have such laws.
Mrs. William Arthur , County Road 3, Forest
But what are we to do? Curlews were established because Snyder ol Middleport is an· "Acres, 3:45-4.
than others. - P.H.·
County Road 3, New Lima
Polly will send you one of condition in the cities became 10 grave. The majority of the nouncing the marriage of her
her "peachy thank-you cards, kids are penalized due to the wrongdoing of a few, (And they're daughter, Dixie Rose Snyder, Road, 4:15-4:45.
Rutland , Braley's, ~-5 : 1~ .
ideal for framing or placing protected also - it isn't safe Ill be out late these days.) '
Until our streets are safe again~ what would those against to Daniel Earl.Kootts, son of
Rutland, Depot St., 5:45·
in your fiimily scrapbook, if
James B. Knotts' Grafton, W.
6.
she uses your favorite ~rfews suggest? - EX-TEENAGER IN MISSOURI
Va.
Rutland, Brick St., 6:15·
Pointer. Peeve or Problem in
Mr. and Mrs. Knotts were
They are universally
...........................
•:.0:0 LLX:....:
·~·~·-.:.~~·'·"
........."''-~~~·
her colwnn. Write Polly's ~~·6:30.
married at Pearisburg', Va.
46, Roy and Select Masters, on Jan. 3 at the Pearisburg
Cook-Gap Hill. 6:45-7.
Pointers in care of this
understood and
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Baptist Church by Ihe Rev.
Hysell, Run, 7: lf&gt;.7:30.
newspaper.
Jet.
124-7, 8:15-8:30.
WHITE ROSE LODGE, Charles E. O'Roark, Jr., at I
always appreciated.
I ~30 Wednesday at the p.m. They were accompanied
CHICAGO (UPI) - The
American Legion hall in .there by Gene McDaniels of
I
Chicago Cuoo Monday more
Middleport.
Middleport.
than
doubled
the
size
of
their
The memory
FAMILY NIGHT potluck,
Mr. Knotts is employed as a
SEEKING RELATIVE
scouting staff, adding nine to
Middleport
First
United
patrolman
by
the
Middleport
Mrs.
Alma B. Heller, 53! W.
bring
the
tntal
staff
Ill
17.
TUESDAY ,
of flowers ·
Presbyterian
Church,
6:30
Police
Department.
The
cou•
13th
St.,
Temple, Arizona
. Among the new scouts
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
85281, is seeking cont;lct with
named Mooday were Jack 7:30 p.m. Third grade p.m. with meat, beverage ple resides in Middleport.
lasts and lasts.
a descendant of one of the
Bloomfield, a coach on the mothers wUl serve refresh· and dessert.fumished. Those
attending to take a covered
county's early families,
Cubs last season who also will ments.
NO MEETING
Wesley Baker, who had at
dish.
Annual
congregational
manage a Class A team next
RALLY, Tuesday, 7:30
The
meeting
of
the
Mid·
,
least
four sons, Daniel M.,
season, Eddie Lyoos, a scout p.m. at the Morgan Center meeting to be held at 7:30
dleport
Amateur
Gardeners
Jacob
L., Charles L. and
for the St. Louis Cardinals lor Gospel Mission located on the p.m.
~heduled
for
Wednesday
George
W.
Baker. Any reader
20 years, and Robert Vinton-Keno Road . Rev .
TIJESDAY
night
at
the
Meigs
Inn
has
having
information
is asked
Kennecty, Jr., son of !hi! Thereon Durham, pastor.
59 N.
RACINE
LODGE
461,
F.
been
cancelled.
to
contact
Mrs.
Heller.
recently
named
vice
WINDiNG TRAIL Garden
Phnn11 992-5560
president of . baseball Club, 7:30 Tuesday at the and A.M., stated. meeting,
. 7:_30 Tuesday at the Temple.
operations for the Cuoo.
home of Mrs, Cora Beegle. All master masons welcome.
Houseplant cutting ·lor roll
"The Insurance Store"
call, ecology message by
THURSDAY
Complete ·
Margaret Parker. Alice
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta
Thompson and Jackie Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Insurance Service
Brickles to have program on Thursday, 7:45 p.m. at the
224 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
.macrame hangers. Nancy home of Velma Rue.
Phone 992-3049
·
Collins will demonstrate a
FRIDAY
construction.
RETURN
JONATHAN
WEDNESDAY
Meigs
Chapter,
Daughters of
HEIMIJCH MANEUVER
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
the
American
Revolution,
demonstr,atlon , Senior
Middleport
firemen's
lounge,
Citizens Center, 10:30 a.m.
.9:00 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.
I:
30
Friday.
Mrs.
Emerson
and I p.m. Department of.
Health representative · to. Jones to review "Courage
FRIDAY EVENING
· 214 E. Main
POMEROY
•
demonstrate at both sessions. and Candlelight."
Open to the public.
··
6:00 P.M. TO 8:00 P.M.
MEETING SET
POMEROY • MIDDLE"QUALITY and
A county-wide prayer
PORT Lions Club, noon
SERVICE"
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn, meeting has been set for 2
P9MEROY CHAPTER 80, p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy
Royal Arch Masons, stated Wesleyan Holiness Church
._________________...J convocation, 7:30 p.m. with Glen Bissell to serve as
followed by Bosworth Council class leader.
'

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Itt ! ·coupon
Exp . Jan. 18,197::
Twin. City Gateway •

., •

~.

:
.L

Twin City G&lt;lteway

: •

PURE

•

-

''TISSUE
~ SHORTENINGj I· .
4
.i
Roll
! I 3 lb. g~
:!• :: Pkg.
i
:
ean
: :
:
W-C 510.00 . : :
W-C &amp; $ov.~O
:
~
Purcno·~
• $_
Purchase
;

5ge

:

.................A.

:
9

&amp;

• Coupon EKp. Jan. 15·, 1977:

'

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HOUSE
VAC PAC

Twfn City Gateway

'

No. 205
I lb. Can

~

1..oup01: Exp. Jan. 1S, 1977J

,

COFFEE

~

,11.( . . . . . . . . . . . . ." " '

• Coupon Exp. Jan. 15j 1977"•

:

Twin CitY Gateway

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..

:

c...

• Coupon Exp. Jan. 15,
Twin CitY Glitewoy

�1-Tbtlllllrllenllftp' ~,O.,TIIIIday,Jan.ll,l~

A,..,..ro- ·

~l

IN-:::;r.:f~~N
DUOLINU

.s P.M. D•r
Publication .

·

Before

Concollotlono,
corrtc !Ions ICCtptld first dly Of
pubtlctUon . ·
.
RI"~ULATIONS

For Wldl 11 d1J, .lan. Ut 1177

The Publisher reserves
ttle right to ectlt or reject

ARIES ( - 21·Aprtl II) It'* - an v Ids deemed ob unlike you to depend too tleavlfy
jectional. The publisher
will not bt rtsponslble for
on others. However, today you
more lh1n one Incorrect
may do just1hat and be aeverety
insertion .
disappointed. Be realistic •• to
RATES
whom vou can rely upon.
For went Ad Servtce

5 cents per word one

TAURUS 1Apt11 20·Mor 20) If
you don't think your moves
through carefully today vou 're
go ing to make things harder tor
yourself . · Careful planning
lightens the burden.
'

I

innrtion .
Min Imum Ch1rot $1 .00.
1.- cents per word thrn

consecutiYt lnstrtfons.
26 cents r,•r WD'I"d tlx
consecutive nsertlons.
25 Per Cent Discount on

peld ads end ads paid
within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
- $2 .00 fo r
SO \ word 1
fY".Inlmu m
-~•.c .. lou "onao word 3
cents .
ILINO ADS
Additional 25c Charge
per Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
1:30 a .m. to 5:00 p.m.
Dally , 8:30 a.m. to 12:00
Noon Saturday .
PhOne today 992 ·2156.

GEMINI (MOJ 21·Juno 20)
Watch out tor salesman types todav who promise you the moon.
You could end up with the slule
and not the steak .
CANCER (Juno 21.Julr 22) A
matter you 're anxious to conclude may not be as easy to
finalize as YO!J an1icipate. A
strong second effort will be requ ired _
LEO (July 23- AIIII 22) Time may
be taken from your routiil8 today
to help another. Although you
won 't welcome the intrusion ,
you'll still do jt out of the
goo'dness of your heart.

NOTICES
.
ATTN. : !!
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
Porc,_h and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, e'fC . '
must bt paid in advance.
Get yr;~urs In ea r ly by
s topp ing by o ur office at
The D11lly Sentinel, 111
Court St . or writing BoK
729, Pome roy, Oh io .t5769
with your rtmittance .

' VIRGO (Aug 2~·8opt 22)
Pleasurable whims carry a high
price tag today. Going on ,a
spendit'tg ~pree will cause you
buyer's remorse later.
LIBRA (&amp;opt 23·0ct 23) Don'l
a ir family problems in public to day. Ou tsiders will be of small or
no help - and you cou ld cause
them embarrassment If they teel
forced to take sides.
SCORPIO (Oct 24·Nov 22)
Us ually you're a rather private
person. Today , vou have a
.ten dency to te ll tales o ut of
sChool. You co uld regret ta lkin g
too. imp ulsively.

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~.:

NOW accepting piano student s,
beginners, intermediates , od·
vanced students . Coli
9922270.

PERSON's BODV Shop , 26 Railroad
St .. Middleport would like to
remind customers that Dec. 31
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23·Doc 21)
is th e lost day to .toke ad·
Casual acqu a'i ntances wUI fare
vantage of the paint jobs - all
better from your generos ity toover in 1 color, $100. 2 tone
day than will persons to whom
$125 without body work . Stop
you're really indebted. Get yo ur
in or phone 985-4174 for op·
priorities in order. ,.
~intme:::n::.
I · ---:-:-­
CAPRICORN (Doc 22.Jon tl) NOTI CE . Pratt's Meat Mk t.
(Pleasanton Meat Processing,
When you find othe rs in opposiInc.) Custom slaughtering. and
tion to your ideas today, back
processing. Retail , whol esale.
off. Once they ha11e their say you ·
No oppoinment ne&lt;:ess ary. Call
can turn them to your way of
(614 ) S9H6S5. hours. 9:00 till
thinking.
6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens .
AQUARIUS (Jon 20- Fob Ill
Oh .
-· --·-~
Hunches are far less reliable
SPECIALS
ot D &amp; J House of
tn an your log ic today . Base
F'obrics , Iorg e blanket pieces .
decisions upon visible evidence
reg , $1.50 lb . npw $1.00 lb:
- not on insig hts ,
Cru shed ve l11et pieces, reg .
$2.50 lb. now $:2 .00 lb . I table
PISCES (Fob 20·Morch 20)
of 'po ly kn it reg . $2 .49 yard.
Before linking up with anyontfttf'
now $1.3111 yard . 1 mile below
a joint \lenture today, be sure
-~iddlepo~!l_S . R,:~-- __ -~
their aims are equallY idealistic.
A selfish associate could ceuse GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
prob lems.
Club eVery Sunday , 1 pm
Auorted meats .

-

8tJMmw
· Jon. 12, 1177

Thts com ing year you mal{ be the
recipient of some confide ntial ln.
formation that could prove very
profitable . Keep what you're told
to yourself ,

-----

-c---':::-

RACINE FIRE Dept. wi ll hove a
Gun Shoot e11ery Sa turday night
6 p.m. at the ir building in
Boshon, Ohio.

be a

--~---

.

.

.vor Fast Results.Use The Sentinel Classifieds
''

n.;.;ut

, u:-_-,:0
LUM UBI :1';

_,:_

OLD turnitur•. ice boxes . brass
beds, walt telephones and
Parts, or complee households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . .C ,
CASH pold for oil makes and
models of mobile ho!l'l•s .
Phone oreo code 61-4·-423·9531 .

1176 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
Green finish, good tires,
steering, radio, factory air.

v.a,

TIMBER, Pomeroy Fqrest Products . Top price for 1tonding
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby ,
1-.446·8570 .

PO~~~?~E~?!~~. CQ. (ijt\
~

CASH! ! ! lor junk con . Frye's
Truck and Auto . 2-4 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE! Phone
742-208L ,

-

POMEROY, OHIO

______ __ _

WANTED : CHIPWOOO , poles
moxiumum diameter , 10 inches
on largest end, $8.00 per !on.
Bundled slobs, $6.00 per ton
delivered to Ohio Pollet Cornpony , Rt . 2, Pome roy. Phone
992-2669.

1969 Novo, exfrQ sharp, new
point bucket seats , oir shock~ .
mags . Phone 949·2480 .
-

NEW 3 bedroom house , bu ilt-in
kitchen, both and IJ, . Phone
J.t2·230C. or con tact MilO 8 . Hutchison , Rutlo.n~. Ohio.

1%8 JEEP --;ruck 4 wheel drive ,

4 ACRES UNDEVELOPED land near

-

$2150 1969 Rambler , 6 cyl.
'standard, good co nd ition . $850.
Phone 9B5.4227 .

·-~--~~

WANTED OLD upr,ght pianos in
ony condition. Will pay $10
eac h. First floo r only . Write giv·
ing directions to Wi tten Piano
Co. , Box 188, Sardis, Ohio
&lt;39&lt;6.

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1974 INTERNAT IONA l tru ck
·automatic , V-8 p .s., Richard
Felly, Rutl 6nd or 742 :28 18 .
. .

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1964 . Che'&lt;'y
condition ,

dt399&lt;
Fm-Sale

IF YOU ho11e o se rvice to offer .
won t to bu y or se ll something.
oe looking for work , , . or
what ever ... you 'll get results
foster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coll992-2156.

lte¥~~~~~"~tf~,:
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ONE YEAR ol d white ma le
Ch ihuahua , 3 yea r o ld mole
German Sheperd . Phone
742-3162.

For

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3 AND 4 RM . furnished and un·
furnished. opts. Phone ~2·
5.t34 .

1/ 1

ton pickup, good
new tires , coli

c

m1nes ,
redu ced.
742·2867.

HOU SE AND lot , 128 laure l St.,
Pomeroy, Ohi o. Contact Doc
Eblen.
HOU SE FOR SALE , 5 room s and
bath , · acre of land . Phone
7.t2·2769.
GOOD HOME for so le near shop·
pinQ oreo. Compl ete financing
to responSible party Phone
992-S7a6.

.

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lEA FORD

Vtrgll ~ . Sr ,, Reeuo.216 E. Second Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone 992-3325
RUTLANIJ bedroom t')ome with
gas heat, city water, 2 car
garage and garden. $12 ,800.

HARD WATER.
PROBLEMS?

let

POmeroy

Landmark

soften &amp; condition your
water with a cO-a p water
softener, Model
Now Only

UC -XVI.

•279.95

Pomeroy Landmark

- ~~, Jack W. ~ri.ey, Mgr.

INVESTMENT - Large 2
story
brick
wf1h
3
apartments. All utlllll"'
and 3 car garage . Only
$20,1100.

Phone 992-2181

POTATOES and pumpkins. C. W.
Proffitt , Po rtland , Ohio . Phone
8&lt;3 22S4 .

WOODS 29 a cres with
ci ty
li ke
wa t er and
e lect r icity . Sl6,000·.
SPECIAL.

COA L for sole, Open 6 do~s per
week and e'f'en ings . For fur ther
inf ormation coli (614) 367.7338.

MIDDLE PORT
2
bedroom home, bath. all
utilitie s , and leve l lot.
SI6,51XL
115 ACRES Orange
Township with all minerals
and free gas with In co me .
Nice la rge fishing stream .
530,1100 .

·-~ ---~~

MIDDLEPORT. -

Modern

4 Bedroom, nat. ga s F.A.
furnace . Eat-i n kit., birch
cabinets, disposal, and
level lot at 523.000.
RUTLAND- Good 9 room
house with 3 Brs .• 2 bat~s.
kit.
has
stove
ahd
refrigerator .
Full
basement, furnace and dbl .

garige .

Pomeroy Landmark

MIDDLEPORT - Nice old
3 rm . house with 2 baths,
utilities, garoge on corner
lot 40 K 100. Only S12,000.

,9
Ail.

BACK CAR_PETING
'6.95
Squoro Yord

BUY, FIX IT UP, AND
SELL AT A PROFIT.

CAPTAIN EASY .

l!!_!f.l!.l~

wE DON'T EYE~ KNOW WHAT TME
QU1Nf7. QUJ!iPER lli'!,. .WHY NOr;
HIIS~EYl YOU'RE OUR HOME

David P•rsons, OWnlt"

(6141 91S-41lS
Chesler , Ohio .
10-17-1 mo (Pd)

141·2114

iHOM( IM~ROVEMENt!

tllown

·P rolect your lnveslmont
plus add to the volue of
your · home. Trull those
,necessary 11~:- lt, roam
:audition and remoclollng
jobs lo your friendly,
neighborhood , quollflod
builder .

Insulation Semces
fiuncint: Avaitlblt
Blown into Walls Uttics
SlORM
WIIIIIOWS I IIOIIRS
REPLG.!IIT
WINDOWS
AWIIINUM
SIDiRI-SOIFIIT
CUTTtRS.IWRINGS

AL TROMM CONST.
11

LARRl,,~~~h~DER
4-11&gt;1 mj.

· APPLIANC!i &amp;ALES MANAG~R ~

11 -4-l mo.

'

FREE ESTIM TES

Ph. ltH!t3

RUB.l~_R_

-

F:orSBie·

'-_J

.

,_lito
...
Walltll .. _ .

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

Southeastern Ohio
Co.
' T~ . Rafter
.

•• 10 8 &amp;

t QJ 97
"'A 3

Wo
only
In .
monufocturod houalng.
ooublo wldes &amp; modtlllr •
homes by Skyllno &amp; Fuquo

WEST
A 10 &amp;4 3

•J

. K942
tl0 42
.s
"'K Q J 10 9
o~o --rn 2
SOUTH ID)

Homes Inc.
1100 E. Mlln St.
Pomel-oy, Ohio
m . 7o34
Hn.I:OOo. m.
To Ouak

•Q
• AQ75 3
. AK653

"'8 8

1-9-771 _mo.

Eas t-Wes t vulner.able.

Located in Langsville
Box 28·A
Rutland , Oh io4S775
Ptl . (614} 742·2409

We 8eliver

llool

SMITH NELSoN
MOTORS, INC.
LIT'f_L E ORPHAN ANNIE-SURVIVAL OF THE

---

e."r,

WHAT A BATILE. IT
MU ST HAVf. BEEt! -·~

SOMETIMES I

11&lt;\VE BEEH
REFeRREP 10

BRADFORD , Auct ioneer, Complete Service . Phone 949· 2,.87
or 9.49·2000. Ra cine, Ohio , Crill
Bradford.

AS "!HE

INDIAH SLAVES WITH
OHL1 STOHES AND
UUBS AGAIHST SPAHISH
STEEl AHD ARMoR ···

GRIM

~Pat!

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers, toas ters. irons , oil
smal l appliances. lawn mower ,
nex t to State Highwa~ Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985· .
3825.

led t he s ix of hearts and
fi n essed his queen . The
INEST"
finesse wo r ked , but West
p===""P"'":!:"~ dropped the jack . Now South
to'f!i DO HDf
HOO ARE
COUt"'T Ttt E
EVER
CiOii WE
TO COU ld n· l Ia:y d OW n h"lS ace a nd

0005 WHEN

lli EY 5TRIV E
FOR
F~EEOOM ··

GEl'' DOWN

HERE WITHOUT had to lead a low hearl to
8REAI&lt;IN'
OUR r&lt;ECI&lt;S ~ dummy" s 10 .
East took h1 s king and le&lt;l
out t he ace-k ing of s pades.
So uth ruffed the seco nd
s pade . entered dummy wi th
, the queen of diamond s; led

rm..

has

fireplace with ga s 4nlt, 2
large porches. E)(eellent
location. ASKING JUST
$14,1100.00.
POMEROY 2 story
frame with new alum .
s id ing , 3 larg~ bedrooms, .
11;, bolhs, d lnlng rm .• large
kitchen, large I foyer and
living rm. Ut ility rm. , full
basement .garage, storm
doors and window, new
F .A, gas furnace, lots of
carpeting. $18,500.00
MOBILE
HOME
Located on lh acre. 2
bedrooms , very large
llnving
rm .
Dine- in
kitchen.. Metal storage
bldg . 12x60 and In very .
good condition. 57,500.00.
POMEROY - Trailer s ite

-~·-'--'-

TUPPERS PLAINS- New
home ready to move into. 3
bedrooms. modern bath ,
lov el y dlne . ln kitchen ,
ullllty room , large garage
with work area. Approx. 1
acre. S2J.ooo.oo:
WANT TO SELL? (TIME
IS MONEY) LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY NOW.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

-

GASOUNEALLEV

.

d'parted

souls don't eat!

keep tell in' 'im
he'pin's!

LEGAL

Meigs County.
Real Estate Owners

clly sewer hookup, possible

The Tax Books are now open for the
December of First Half Collection of
the 1976 Real Estate Taxes. Also for
delinquent tax. Closing Date will be ·
Jan. 20, 1977. ·

.:_U:L~AB=N=E~R=(-i1i0Wt;Sii;J'A"'\i:iiSi:GMi~~:-'i}?(lrut:pi;:-(:;(ji-fE~~YE~fi~~r::::::l
._r_ ____, THEY WAS lt-.l A
5ULpr~~. currE A YES, DEAR.
~
PLACE: MADE 0 ' SfP'J. E ,BUr M-!AR r~1HAR WARN'r
ANY WINDONS CR

BIT. D'S.,.,..,
'= .-o.v ...,... TTF!&lt;.
t \..II"Cc::;
Af&lt;()LJND; HAINT
IN Fo'
v:-'--&lt;1 THAR '?SUPPE:R

GOT AN EYE FOR ABUY?

MASON fURNITURE .

(Fo r a copy or JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Br idge," c/o thi s
newspaper. P, 0 . Box 489,
Radio Cily Stalion. New York,
N. Y 10019)

21 Adolescent 25 Evil s pirits
( hyph. wd.)
22 Harrowing
experience
( 2 wds.)
23 Ointment
24 Be angry
(2 wds.)

27 One who
strives
28 Plowe d land
29 Frosty
30 Anthony
and Barbara
:U MGM's lion

1tfll}~ fii)1l ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME ...
~ ~ ~~ "
byHann
,
Lee ,
Unscramble ihese four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
four ordinary words.

term

1M
City In

2 s~~

JGROOFj
.__.___.~ I I
tJ
"DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
••m•~-·... •_ .......

r

O'Day

hints. Earh day the rode letters are p ift'ere nL

CI P ,

-TV&amp; APPLIANCE

I)

y zvc

CRY~:::T::

NOT "THAT EASY, STAN .I'VE !X&gt;NE

GAS SERVicE -

KAC

BD

UPKZRYRS

VIBQUH

V P ZF P

Chesfiir fl5:1107

I VENAK

QV

.

I

•

We will train you IIi become a branch
manager. Rapid advat\c~ment 1 outstanding
salary opportuniHts and employ" bentflta.
Must be at leaat high school graduate and
have a car. Relocation may bt ntcestary
now or In the future. Phont fW. Milia at
telephone no. 992-2111.

LISTEN TO THE

SWAP SHOP

7 PM- WMPO·· 92J FM
92 in the Country.
. ..
'

0

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVIa

V

J

I I

L---'~"-'-"'--'-·_.__~.

·1 KLUNIE

}

t- Il

1

YV

YR

rrJ

IK

CIP_

Q C Q Z P. - M P Z B 0 P
X Z QR P Z
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: A FRIEND GIVES US CON.·
FIDENCE FOR · UFE, A FRIEND MAKES US OUTDO
OURSELVES. - ANNA• LINDSAY

• •

I

I

BDKRN: r:r J I I
c c ICLARNE!

D

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

,

4 :3G---My. Three Sons 3; Afterschool Special 6,13;
Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones lS.
5:00-Big Va lley 3; Mer v Griffin 4; Bra~y Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Star Trek 15.
·
· 5:31)- News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Adam .
12 13.
6: 00-News 3,4,8,10, 13, lS; ABC News 6; ZOCim 20,33.
6 :30-N BC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vgetable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
7:01)-T ru th or Cons. 3; To Tolllhe Truth&lt;; Bowling for
Dollars6; P bp Goes the Country 8: News 10: To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival
Kit 20: Big Green Magazine 33.
7:31)-Dolly 3; $100,000 Name Thai Tune 4; Match
. Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeii - Lehr~
Report 20.33; All Things to All Men 10; _Break tile
Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
• ·
8:00-CPO Sharkey 3 .~.15; Bionic Woman 6, 13; Gunsmoke 8; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:3G---McLean Stevenson 3,4, 15; Jefferson• .JO ...
9:00-Sirota 's Co urt 3,4,1S; Baret ta 6,13; Movie Cage
Without a Key" 8. 10; Theater In America 33;
Soundstage 20.
8: 3D-Movie "The C Itv" 3,4,1 5.
10:00-Cha l lle' s Angels , 13; News 20.
I O:JG---Montage 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6,8 ,10, 13,15; MacNeii-Leht"ltr Report
33; Monty Pyt hon's Flying Circus 20.
II:JG---Johnny Carson 3,41,15; Rookies 6; Movie
" Sudden Terror" 8; Mory Hartman 10; College
Basketball 13; ABC ll!ews 33 .
.
12 :0G---Movle "The Angry Hills" 10; Jonakl 33.
lUG--- Myste ry of the Week 6.
,
l:QO--Tomorrow 3,4.
-·
1: 3D-News 13.
,··

Channel Five

One letter simply stands fo r another. In this sample A Is
used fo r th e three L's, X for t he two O's, e tc . Si ng le let ters,
apostrophes, the len gth and formation of the 11:ords are a ll
.•

11'7'7 lt1nl Futurts s,.nditltt, Inc.

11

~ITJ THE
'
Yo!leroay·s
.

-

WHERE ONE M16HT
FIND ONE~i-F

AFTER ROPI~A
MEA'T FftEE7ER'.

Now orrenge the clroled - . 10
fonn tho outprllt · 10 aug.
geotad by lhelbove·conoon.

ur xxx r xJ":

(An"""' IOmOtTOW)
"
J umbles: WIPED CLOTH FOSSIL DEFINE
Answer: Where ~u'reexPtCttd 10 1111-.a1n tho
-~
· right order-ATTHE POST OFFICE
.:

I

BARNEY

TATER H"'OU .

\.!E WANT TO
TARN OU"f TO ~E
LEFT- HANDS5 P

STOP THAT 1HI5
l

HAVE
KNOWN ...
tlliG~T

''' SMALL IS

VERY SECOl\IT !!

BEAUTIFUL !"

300 West SecOIICI St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
'

.,·

.

..

6 :3G---Testlmony Time
7: QO--F am ily F ltness
7: 3G---Speclal Edlllon
8 :3()-Movle "C r uci ble of Terror"
10 :00-700 Club

DOWN

YC

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

Macaroni 13.

Y esterdBy's Answer

AXYDLBAAXR
.. L 0 N G F E L L 0 w

773-5592

,.

re m ains as playe&lt;l .

39 Classifleds

work &amp; tlmt. Some unlb ore slightly acrolcl!od. All ore
priced to otll. S.t them lodov ol:

Roclno 941-2020

oth er oppon ent , his card

35 Pub drink

Gibson, Hardwick, Speed Queen and some
· Westinghouse.
Refrigerators, Ranges, Washers 1o Dryers,

RIDENOUR

t he ca rd played from dummy
if he so desires . As for the

_ 3i_ Granted
31 Clangor
38 Choir
members

GEORGE M. COWNS
Meigs County Treasurer

Brand new modtls, reirilerlters, fi.Hztrs, ·waahtn,
dryoro, ronges . All ore ltoluro-potfltd to 11ve you

lowest card and then change

office
4 Blackboards
10 Anecdotal
collection
11 Mexican

HOMESITE$ for sole , 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near Ru tl and. SEPTIC TANKS cleaned , Modern
Sani tation , 992 -395.4 . .
Coii99H&lt;a l .
-:--~-:----~--b8droo.m house , 2 baths, WILl do roofing , conwuctlon,
plumbing on d heat ing . No job
oil e le c .. 1 acre , Middleport,
too Iorge or too small. Phone
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
7-42 - 23~8 .
7.48 1.

natural gas hookup. $2,000.

may now demand that the
offender play he r highes t or

1 Held

SEPTIC Systems installed by
licensed installer , Shepard
Con tractors . Phone 7-42·2409.

has concrete patio, water,

have followed suit." Declarer

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Member

-~~

NiWJ

The answer is th at the
pla yer a nnounces, '" I could

by

----

______

a nd the ot he r defender have
fo llowe&lt;l to th e trick .

~

__

-

covers the error after dummy

of
the Golden
Horde
4 Drunk (sl.)
5 Drury and
others
dish
6 Friend, in
12 Glowing
Toulon
13 Name (sl.)
1 Presume ;
14 Colton fabri c
judge
I~ Universal
(2 wds.)
mother
8 EMoble
11 Leather9 Peaceful
necks
13 Infant
18 Strike out
15 Indian
19 Drowse
tower
20 Speck of
20 C1&gt;untry
dust
music,s
21 Kind of ski
Haggard
lift ( 2 wds.) ,_...,..._,.,._
23 Withered
21 Toast
25 Word with
flung
26 - BuntUne
27 Cultivation 1,-,..-J--t--i~
of land
31 Ending for
combat
32 Adored
33 Of an
apostle

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12,1977

6 :15-Farm Report 13.
6 :21)-Not For Women Only 13 .
6 :31)-AG-USA 4; News 6; Christopher Closeup 10.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3.
6 : 50-~ood Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Cood Morni ng, Trl State 13.
·
7:00-Today 3,4;1S; Good Morning , America 6 , 1~; CBS
News 8; Ch uck White Rports 10.
•·
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7·311-Schoolles 10.
&amp;:00-Lassle 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St 33.
8:3G---Big Valley 6.
9:0o-A.M. 3; Phll Donahue 4,13,15; Lucy Show B;
Mike Douglas 10. ·
.
9 :3G---Cross-Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Good Day 8.
lO: OG---Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, IS; Price Is Right 8,10; Mike
Douglas 13.
10: IS---General Hospital 6.
10:3G---Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15 .
11 :01)-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Woekday 4; Edgo of
Night 6; Double Dare 8,10 ; Morning wit~ D.J . 13;
Elec . Co. 20.
...·•
11: 31)-- Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Love of L ife 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,3).
11 :55---{;BS News 8; M s. Flxlt 10.
12 :0G---News 3,6,8,10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; Name
That Tune 15.
,
12 :3G---Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,131
Search for Tomorrow 8,10.
1 :OG---Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; Concent ration 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For
Women Only 15 .
1: 3D---Days of Our Lives 3.4.15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2:00-S20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3G---Ooctors 3,4,15 ; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
Light 8, 10 .
3:0G---Another World 3,4, IS; All In The Family 8,10; On
Aging 20.
3: IS---General Hospltlal 13.
3: 31)-Bewit ched 6; Match Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20.
·
.
4: 00-Mister Cartoon 3; Marcus Wel~y , M.O .: Gong
Show 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Mov ie "Glory" 10; Call It

:1!1"--=·!

c'----:c-:c::c-cc::--=:--:- - - -

REMODELING, Plumbing , hea ting
ondtoil types of general repair.
Woi' k guaranteed 20 years ex·
- --~HOW ERV AND MARTIN Experience. Phone 9?2·2~---COIIO ting , sept ic svstems,
SEWIN G MACHINE Repa irs , ser·
doze r, backhoe. dump truck.
11 ice . all moMes , 9'92·2284 . The
limes tone, grovel. block t9p_
Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
paving . At . 143 . Phone 1 (6~
Aut
horized Singer Solei ond
698-7331.
5er~e ..:.W.! sharpe~ Sclt~r.!.:._
EX CA VA
:-T
:ci:N-::
- G-. - -:8:-:A:":C:-K:-H::O::E:;:S.
DOZER. TRENCHER . LOWBOY . EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
bacKhoe work; dum p trucks
DUMP TRUCKS. Sill PULLINS .
ond lo · ~y~ for hire: will ho ul
PHONE 992-2478. DAY OR
fill d irt , to soil , limestone a nd
.NIGHT .
__ ...._
grovel . Coli Bob or Roger JefCHRISTMAS SPECIAl : Sew1ng
fer S, day phone 992-7089.
MachineS cleaned, oiled and
nigh t phone 992·3525 or 992adjusted.
$5 .98 .
Sewin g
5232.
- Center , M1ddleport,
....._ --- Ohio
-- .
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
Ott AND GAS furna ce service and
and ditcher. Charles A. Hotports. Trailer and homes, 24
field , Bock Ho• Service,
hour service . Phone 8.43·2165
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742·2008 .

fltiDAY UNliL 8 PM

1.

concede one trump trick . He

----

MIDDLE PORT Nice
level lot . 1112 story frame
home; 2 or J bedrooms,
bath, basement, dining

the eight of hearts and let it
ride after East playe&lt;l low .
Now he trie&lt;llo get back to his
hand with a diamond, but East
r uffe&lt;l for the third defens ive
trick. South s till had to lose a
cl ub and his contract.
Do you see where South
made his blunder'
II was at tric k two. He le&lt;l ·
the six of hea rts from dummy.
If he had le&lt;l tile e ight when it
came lime to· play tha t third
trump from dummy he would
have been leading the six .
Then he cou ld overtake with
hi s seven. pluck East's last
trump and cha lk up the game'.

A Mississippi reader asks
what happens when the first
defender fa ils to follow to the
s uit led by declarer . but dis·

with dummy's ace of clubs,
U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

•

. ., ,

6 : ~Publlc Affairs 10.

~~~~~

the play of today 's hand . A
real bl under, but of the sort
that almost e veryone mak es.
South won t he firs t t rick

'"

PIL lt2·Zl74

mos .

~

living

4.I .

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

SMALl 1form to r sole , 1,0% down ,
CARP ENTER. floor ing, ceiling.
own~r financed . Monroe Coun·
pon ~ling . Phone992·2759.
ty , W. Vo . Pllone (304) 772·
...-----o----3102 (304) 772-3227.
MOBILE
Home ~e poir, Elec.,
..
plumbing and heating Phone
COUNTRY fa r mland with sedud·
992-S8SS .
ed woods, ·water and good oc·
-----~-·--cess in Monroe County , W. Vo. ELECTRONIC T.V. CLI NIC , New
$1 ,000 down , coil (304) 772T.V. s hop, Electroni c T.V. Clin ic
3102 or (304) 7'72-3227 ,
Service coli , $5 .95 . Color, B &amp; W
antenna systems stereos , etc.
572 Sou th Third , Middlep ort.
Phone Q92-6306. Corry in Qnd
so11e money.

rm.,

South

Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass Pass Pass
· Opening lead - K •

Real Estate-for Sale

oc

Nort h EaSt

West

"

12 - 22 - ~

EAST
• AKJ 2

There is a real blunder in

Mon.,Tues., Wed. 'I S:.t.---t:~tiiS:OO
· THU.RSDAY tiL 12 tJIOON

.

.~~~
NO =RT
=uc:---~--:-:
11

EXPERIENCED
~IID~~- · Radiator~~
Service

STORE HOURS

-

Small card makes big play

Sales I~
hand It
11M best

Free Est.
Work Guor.
Rullond 12 -9- 1~. 742-2328"

MASON FIIIRNITURi

-----

·

H16l.tW •s TRIED IOVI:RY
POSSIBLE sOURc~ OF INFO,
CHIEF -· 50 HAVE L~ EVEN
OUR TOP INDUSTRIAL SPIES
CAN' T GLEA&gt;I A CLUE!

KinpbuiJ lb1ll

We Clrtu

8 :3G---Laverno &amp; Sh ir ley 6,13. 9 :00-Pollce Woman 3,4,1S; Rich Man , Poor Man 6, 13;
MASH 8, 10
9:31)-()ne Day at a Time 8, 10; World War 133.
10:00-Pollce Story J.~. IS; Family 6,1 3; Kojek 8,10;
Nes 20; Decades of Decision 33.
10 :3G---Bia&lt;k Perspective on the News 20.
II :00- News 3,4,8,10, 13,1S; MacNeil · Lehrer Report 33 .
II : 3D-Johnny Carson J,4,1S ; Movie "Playmates" 6,13;
McCIDIJd 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12 :00-Movlo " The Tartar.s" 10; Janakl 33.
1:OD-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Channel Five
·
6 :31)-Testlmony Time
7:00-Famlly Fltnoss
7:3D-Adventure Theatre
8:31)-Daytlmne
9: 3D--Consu lt at ion
IO :OG---700 Ciuh

WlN AT BRIDGE

98 7 5

--

Local Bowling

'

ASSORTED

WAY OUT - 5 acres and 2
bedroom unfinished house.
Cistern , full basement .
Only 55.000.

,,...,

ltt us ftlt your wafpr

PUBLIC NOTICE
STOlEN FROM Shod~ . Ohio oreo
Sea led prop&lt;lsals wil l be
No11 . 1 , 197 6 . Walker COUNTRY Mobile HOme Pork . Rt .
received a t t he office :
33 , ten miles north of Pomeroy . APPlES . Fll ZPATRICK ORC HARD.
Coonhound , block and white ,
Me igs
County
Com .
STATE ROUTE 669 . PHONE
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
·brown eors, brow n spot bet ·
m issioners
WilKESVIL
LE. (bl&lt;) 6b9-378S.
sidewalks
,
run
ner
s
and
off
ween ears , age 3- ~ years , right
Meigs County Cou rthouse
street
parking.
Phone
~27.C79
.
eye
woters,
hod
su
rgery
below
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
FUlLE R Brus h Produ cts for so le .
tke eye. nome Joe. $300 FURNI SHE D two bedroom opt .,
Phone992.J410.
reword for return of dog with
unti l 12 Noon Eastern Stan adu lts only . No pe ts. Mid - CAMP ER , $600 . Also , horse
dard T ime - January 24, 1977,
information that will convict
dleport. Phone 9'tl·3874 .
troii P.r . $4 50 . Phone (6 1.4) 698.
ancl opened Immediately
persons who stole him . .Dog
therea fter for furnish ing th e
3290.
now believed to be in Pomerov- ONE BEDROOM Apl s. at VILLAGE
materie l and perfor ming the
MANOR in Middlepor t fo r $104 PEARCE SIMP SON C.B. bose sto·
West V~rgi nio oreo. Con tact
labor to r the execut ion a nd
monthly plus elec , .o r $130 in ·
Robert Webb, Rt . 1 Guys11 ille .
tion Phone U7 -268.t alter 5
cof1structlon of .
clud i'ng elec. LOWER RATES for
or pflone (61 4) 696·126.1.
COUNTY - WIDE
COM p.m
- . - --SENIOR CITIZENS. Co nve nient
MUNICATION
IM to shopp,i ng on Th ird and Mill
PRO VEM ENT
~ROJECT
FOR THE COUNTY OF
NOTI CE OF APPOINTMENT
Sis. in Middlepor t. Brand new
MEIGS , STATE OF OHIO
Case No . 22 ,001
high qual ity apartments. See
The information t or b idders . Es t~te ot
Mary
Eblin ,
themonogera tAp1.28or co il
One ,good us e d Remington
plans, s pecifications , and
· Chain Saw
SSO
ased .
992·7721. An Equal Housi ng
form of pr opo sal may be Dece
Not ice is nereby give n that
Opportunity .
,One good used McCullough
exam ined at the office :
Chain Saw
$75
Meigs
Covntv
Com · Frank J . Porter , Jr ., of R. 0 . 2 BEDROOM trailer, real nice.
3. Racine , Ohio has been duly
' One good used Ham elite
miss ione r s
Phone 992 · 332~ . adults only.
Chain Saw
SlSO
Meigs Co un ty Courtho use appointed Adm inistrator of
Ne-w Co- Op Water Sof .
the Es ta te of Mary E bli n, AVAilABLE AT Rivers ide Apts. I
Pomeroy . Ot1 io 457M
t@ners
bed rm. apartment, SHlO pe r
Copies
Clf
p l.ans . de cease d , tate Of Meigs
spec ifi cations and proposal Coun ty, Ohio .
model VC -XVI Only $279 .95
Cred
itors
are
reQu
ired
to
month
,
2
bedroom
opts.
$133
facts, togetner with anv
One
good use d Gibson Side ·
per month . Equal Opportunit y
furt her information des ired , fil e the ir cl aims with said
I by -Side Ref(ig e rator S2~0
may be Obtained by pr ime fiduc'ia rv within three mon ths. · Hovsmg. Phone 992·3273.
con lrac t ors at the a.bo\le
Dated this nnd day of HOUSE , 5 ROOM S and both in
Decembe r 1976 .
address.
.
Manning D. Webster
Rocine~reo . Phone992: 5B 5~ , _ Jack W. Clrsey , Mgr.
0
( 1J 1.1. 18, ?tc
Jutlg e VERY NICE 12 x 65 mobU e home
co urt of Co mmon Plea s.
f
d ·
Phone '92 ·2181
Probate Div ision
or rent 1ocate m Mason,
Meigs County , Ohio
W.Va . Adul h only. No pets.
( 11) 18 , ()) 4, 11 . 3tc
1 Conlact Sondra, 992.5693 Mon· lENCE POSTS . SLOO. Also .
firewood three·fo urth ton
day through Friday , 9 till3 p.m.
. ·---pickup loads delive red, $25
2 bedroom unfurnished aport·
withi n 25 miles . Phone
NOTI CE OF APPOINTMENT
men t in Middleport. Phone
985-4197 .
Case No . 22.000
.
992-3129 or 992-5.C3-4 .
Estate of Ste\len Ebl in ,
HEAVY
GAUGE
I
Be
am
s
and t
Oeuned .
Mondoy Nile Mixed
Beams for sole, 8 , 9, 10 inch
is
hereby
given
that
Not
ice
Jon. l,tt77
Phone992·7034 .
~
Frank w . Porter, J r . ot R . D .
W. L. 3.
. Racine. Onlo has been duly
Teamllo . S
8 0 appointed Adm inistrator of SINGE R GO lDEN Tou ch N' SEW NEW AM-FM Stereo· rad io , 8 trocl
tope combination . ,$129.95 o
Team No . 2
6 2 the Es tate of Steven E bli n .
does it all! Zig·zo gs, sews on
terms. Phq.ne 992-3965.
Team No . 3 (li~l
~ 2 decustd , late of Me igs
knits, automatic buttonholer ,
Tea.No. 4
2 6 County , Ohio .
makes clesigns, many other STEREo: AM~M- FM.stereo·radi~
Creditors are required to
Team No. 61flel
2 6
a tract.: tope combination .
features . PhMe 992·5! 46.
·-- '
Team ~o. l
0 8 fil e their claims wi th said
Balance due $10~ . 20 or terms .
fiduc
iary
w
ithin
three
months
.
FREIGHT DAMAGED , October 19,
Men's high series - NvJJIJ
Phone 992-3965.
Da
ted
thiS
72nd
day
of
1976. lig·lOg sewing mochin.es ,
Norma n 553 1 Bill Marcum
Oecember 1976.
SCHOOL
SEWING Mochmes .
buttonhole,
monogram,
etc
.
~IS ; Raym..,d Roath 4.1.5.
M1nning 0 . Webster
Singers
in
walnut conso lett e ,
·
Originally
$111'1
.95
will
sell
for
Men's high gjtmo - MiaM
Judg e
$46. Phone 992 ·51,.6 .
$59.95 ca sh· or term s . Phone
. Norman 191: Bill Marcum
· Cour t ol Cornmon Ple as,
992 - 5 1~6 .
Probate Division
117: MoM Norman 119. ·
Mei ,s
Coun t y ,
Oh io
Team high urles - TNm
FIREWOOD
. PHONE 742·213 1 or
No. l 21~7 : Tum No. S 2133 r- r: n 18 111 .. . 11 , Jtc
985-38 13 .
Sl!nices Offered
ham No. 2 2091 :
BIG OEAl DAYS SALE. make your
Toam high game - Toam
~st deal before January 28, Will do odd jobs , roof~ng , pain·
No, 3 710 ; Team No. 2 l#t ;
1977 on MoSley Ferguson troc·
ling, gutter work . Phor:ae 992Team tlo. · • 729.
torl , balers ana Implements.
7409.
Women's hlah series Betty Whlflatclt 555 : Bess
No. 1 Cosh Rebates, $100 to WilL 00 plumbi ng , heating, roofHendrlcko 444; Mary Ennis
$500. No . 2 Cosh Rebates , $-40
ing ,
re mode ling ,
fru
437.
to $250, with no finance charge
e~timot es .
Coil ·charles
. Holslngar and 1!'111 Marcum
Women's high game ~
till Moy 1 de~nding on pro· • Sinclair, 985-.C121.
: Horvey Whitlatch 173.
Bolly Whltllllch 221 ond 117 ; 1116
ducts". No. 3 No Finance charge WILL CARE fo~ elderly woman in
Team high series- Team
till July I on tractor implements
Boss Hendricks 168.
No, 5 2116; Team Nos. 6and 1
or Sept. 1 on balers. Come on in
my home. Phone 992- 73 1 ~ ..
2113: Toam No. 3 2107.
·
ond
make
your
beat
deal
now.
INCOME
TA)( Ser11lce Esther
I'Omtfoy ~ling Lints
TNm high game ~ Tern
Shinn't tractor Soles, leon. • Salser, Solem Street, Rutland ,
Mondoy Nl!t Mlxtd
No. 6 764' Tem No. 5 7rll ;
W.Va. Phone (3041 ~58· 1630 ~ Ohio or call 742-266:2 after 5:30
Dec. 27, 1976
TNm No. 3 742 . .
Team
W. L.
APPLES, FITZPATRICK Orcha&lt;d,
Womll)'t high sorleo 6
106 31
State Routt 689 , Wilkeaville.
Whltlllch 561 : Mary
~
.. 56 Em s 427: Best Hendricks
Phone (61~)669 · 378S .
5
76 61. 363.
USED .FOREST~Y Equipment .
3
70 74
TNm No. 6 Winners of first
Commercial propeny opprox . 17
Timberjack 2300 Skiddar: Case
1
6-4 80
hall.
acres. level fond . locot~d at
600
skld-t&lt;ing
Skldder;
Inferno·
2
28 116
High gom01 for Maaon Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route
tionol S7B Hough Skidder: John
Men's high series- Larry
Roymond Roach 22S ; Naomi
7. Phone (61&lt; ) 667-63()4 .
Deere
2010
Wheel
l
oader
.
Con·
Hendricks
521 ;
Jack
Floyd 209.
tact Don Graves , or lyons 3 bedrooms , M b·a ths , Iorge liv·
Halslngor
SlS ;
Harvoy
High sor101 . for ,...., in g room , d ining room and kit·
Equipment Co .. lnc . Circleville~
Whlllatcll 507.
Roymond Roach 622 ; Ben
OH
.
Phone
(614)
596-4769
or
chen.
fully carpeted. Phone
Men's high game - Larry
Henilrlcks .W6.
474-6028 .
992-3129. or992 S&lt;3&lt; .
Hoodrl~ka
.202 ;
Jack

RICIMI Ohio .

. KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Phone

COAL , limestone, a nd calcium 9 AC RE S OF unde11e loped lond,
chlo ride and calcium brine for
just off Un ion Ave. in Pomeroy.
dust contro l and special mb•ing
Con ta ct Doc Eblen.
salt lor formers . Main Street ,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992 · For sa le by owner, newer 5 room
house on 1 acre lot in country ,
389L
15 minutes from Athens , 10
1971 HONDA CL -450 . 12 .000
minutes f.rom Pome roy on Rt.
miles. sissy bar . crash bors.
33. $18-.500. Coll992-523 1.
pull back handle bars .. new, tire
, and seals . Scrambler si~e
pl~es . $650. Coll949-2480 .

PLEASURE HORSES and ponies ,
also will buy horses and
ponies . Phone {614 ) .MB-3290. 1
Ruth Reeves.
Risi N.G SrAR KENN-EL . boord-1ng
indoor and outdoor. Groom1ng
all breed5 , co mplete sonitarv
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (6.14 )
367-0292 .

59 acres . 6 ·room house. both 1
portly carp eted, two outbui ldi ngs , dug basement ,
one .fhir d tillable , mineral
rights located near Danville.
Reduce d for quick sole
$23,500 . Phone 7.t2-2766 .

1%9 CHEVROlET 8isquoine: 1966
BUICK Electro , 225 : 2 Rokon
triolbikes . Phone 949·2432.
.
1971 FORO BRONCO with 302 V·8
ouwi llory, gos tonk , full cob,
Wo rron elec . winch, Pnced
$2 100. Coll949·2449.

OlD TYPE pt~:ddle sewmg
machin e , type used in shoe

.5~ ·.£?~4?·~~~.

power

1975 FORD TORIN04 DR.
$2895
Local car, clean vinyl Interior, green finish . good llr ...
radlo. 351 V-8, automatic, power steerlng . ~nd brakes .

COINS. CURRENCY, tokens , old
pocket watches and choins,
silver and gold. We need I~
and older silver co ins. Buy, sell ,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
7&lt;H33L

NOW BUYING Scrap . Pomeroy
Auto Recycling , high prices
·paid , ~uto bodies , • motors ,
scrap, iron , metal5, batteries,
open· B till ~ ~30. Monday thru
So tur doy , Old 33, just obo11e
fairgrounds , Pomeroy . Ohio .
Will also pickup cor5 , Phone
99.2·6337.

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

$3895
automatic,

TUESDAY , JANUARY II , 1971
6 : 3G---NBC News 3,4,15 ; AB C News 13; Andy Griffith o;
CBS News 8.10; Lite &amp; the Struct ure of Hemoglobin
33; Vegelab le Sou p 20.
7:0()..!.Truth or Cons . J; Probe : Coriference with the •
Mayor 4; Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go To The
Races S; News 10; To Telllhe Trulh 13 : My Three
Sons ·15; Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20;
American Issues Forum 33 .
7 :30-l;lollywood Squares 3,4; Lei's Deal With 11 6;
Match Game PM S; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
In the Know 10: Wild Kingdom 13; TV Honor
Society 15 . .
8 :01)-Baa Baa Blaok Sheep 3.4.15 : 11appy Days 6,13;
Who's Who 8, 10; Kissinger In Retrospect 33 ;
Restless Earth 20.

THE COINS.

CMPET SHOP

PHOTOGRAPHY

$3795.
1176 AMC HORNET
Sportabout, 6 cylinder , automatic. power steering,
deluxe equ ipment, whitewall tires, luggage rock. dark
green flnlsh, less than 9,,000 miles, showroom clean.

Pomero~hlo . ~~11992·~!60 .

-·

NOT ROBBERY LOOI&lt; AT ALL

&amp;1\ 2s:s Pomeroy j Business
.\CI .QUAI.IlY MotorCo. L~-~~~~~~~~~~~
PROFESSIONAL
RACINE

LOST, RED Irish Setter, mole ,
vicini tv of Hemlock G rove orea .
9 months old. Coli m .2-433.

.....
,
·' ""'

Television log for easy viewing

-1

Auto Sal-

.

THERE Will
rev ival ot the
Middleport Independen t FIVE COLLIE puppies , to give
Hohneu Chu rch , Fourfh and
oway to good home. Con be
lincoln , Middlepoi-t , Starting
see n at 509'/t South third Ave .
Sunday , Jon . 9 thru Jan . l t,th . . Middleport. Or phone 992-5769 .
Evang el ist Rev . OQvid Light . _ .. ·_:__
· ·
Everyone welcome. Pastor, .
Rent
Re• . O"dell Mool ey .

·-·---

~Sentlnel,Middleport.Pomeroy,O., Tuesduy,Jan. 11,1977

I

An Equal Opportvrilty Employer

,,

,,

''

:'

•.

·:·

�•

•

' '

.

a_ 'ftle Dally SenUnel, Mlddleport-P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. II, 1977

~ Three

life·sentences
given kille~ of three

DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) murders occurred oo Nov. I
Margo Davies, 20, when she left her home in
Worthington, Ohio, today Worthington, a Columbus supleaded guilty In Delaware burb, and "drove north into
County CCIIllllOII Pleas court Delaware .County with my
to the deaths. of her three three children north of the
daughters and was sentenced Columbus Zoo.
"! parked next to the Scioto
to three · termo of life in
River,
tied up my youngest
prison.
.
child,
placed
her in a plastic
Prior to ·sentencing, she
bag
and
in
a
trash
can;• fte
described how she killed the
said. •
girls.
Mrs. Davies described how
Mrs . Davies had been
charged with aggravated she took Christine and "did
murder in the deaths of her the same thing" in anotherdaughters Laurie Jo, 18
months, Christine Lela, 2 and
Tanya Anne, 3.
The bodies of Laurie Jo and
Christine were
found
(Continued from page I)
wrapped in garllage bags and
employes,
$8,300;
found in trash barrels along retirement, $1,100 ; ma inthe Scioto River In Delaware tenance of equipment, $6,000;
County on Nov. 5.
miscellaneous, $3,000; street
, The body of Tonya Anne repairs by contract, $13,900;
was fo\md with her head equipment, $1,000: gasoline,
wrapped in a garbage bag in $8,500; materials, 15,000;
a Delaware County field on buildings, $1,500 ; traffic
. Nov. 9.
lights, $500. Total: $48,800.
Mrs. Davies said that the . Meter Deposit Fund from Middleport, $2,400;
Pomeroy, $100. Total: $2,500.
·Tbey11 get
Anti-recession Assistance
well laster
Fund - gasoline, $2,000. .
Council, after reelecting
with flowers.
Kelly Its president approved
the report of Mayor Fred
Hoffman showing receipts of
$1,524.70 in December.
It was agreed to amend the
payroll ordinance to include
the village haD custodian.
Bernard Fultz was reappointed viUage solicitor.
Mayor Hoffman said he
expects to appoint a successor to James Brewer, who
resigned from Council in
.
December, by the next
A.beautiful bouquet
meeting.
Mayor Hoffman reported
of flowers
that street department
workers. wh·o were commended by village officials,
help any patient
have so far used 90 tons of salt
in combatting the snow and
get well faster.
ice this winter. For the whol e

area .
"1 drove from there to an
area north of. Sunbury and
tied up my third child the
same way and placed her In a
eomfield," she said.
The sentence was Imposed
by
Delaware
County
Common Pleas Court Judge
Henry Shaw.
Mrs. Davies will be eligible
for parole in IS years.
She has been held in the
Marion County Jail at Marioo
under $1.!i(I,OOO bond.

Appropriation passed

can

let us speed your

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

.get well arrangement
on its way. ·

Stop in or phone
us today.

Diana Jarvis, Rt.l, Vinton,
filed suit for divorce against
Franklin Jarvis, same address, in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
A suit for parti~on of real
es(ate w.as filed by La•·•rn W.
Jordan and Mary Kath:N!r
Jorqan, Rt. 3, Alban·;
against F. Dorsey Jordan
Pansy Jordan, Rt. 3, Albany
and the Me igs County
Treasurer.
. '

•oo

59 N. Second Sl
Phone 992-5560

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;:;;;.·.··:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•,•:·:·:·:·;·:·.··

-

--

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'

We're quick-change art'ists

· AT CITIZENS NATIONAL
BANK

of last year only 60 tons were
used. The mayor said the
supply of salt Is running low
but a truckload Is expected
this week. He .al!o asked
council to think about purchasing a two way radio so
!hat !he street department
can be contacted easily when
members of the department
are on the job.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, and Councilmen
Kelly, Carl Horky, William
Walters, Allen Lee King and
George Meinhart ..

Hospital News
Veieraas Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Dorothy
Harley, Middleport ; Wilbur
Jean
Whaley, Shade;
Koehler, I;'omeroy; Clarence
Hayman, Racine; Brenda
Taylor, Fostoria; Bernard
George, Middleport; Anna
Ebersbach, Middleport;
Gertrude Woods, Middleport;
Daniel Humphrey, Mid·
dleport. ·
DISCHARGES - ·Mary
Derenberger, Ella Payne,
Augusta Potts , Winifred
Naas, Ruth Cairi.
Holler Medical Center
~Discharges, Jan. 10)
Mrs. George Allen and
daughter, Kimberly Angel ,
Patrick Brown, Emily
Cantrell, William Davidson,
George Dillon, Jr .. John
Evans, Donna G!'e!!r, Mrs.
Taylor Miller and son, Mrs, .
Harold Moyer and daughter,
John Sch ri chtkrull , Susan
=Impson, Betty Slnlnger.
Mlo.""V Sparks, Ruth Steele.
John Steinbeck. Oliver
Taylor, R..~ald Topping, Mrs.
George Wicke. :l!d daughter.
!tl.rs. Harvey WooiUI!I and
da.:ughter.
1Birlbs, Jaa.ll)
'.\ lr. and Mrs. David Smith,
db•1ghter, Wellston; Mr. •;;d
Mrs. iJ~yid Fetty, son.
Hende1"8011; Mr. afld · Mrs.
Michael · Ca!'n~~cll, son,
Bid.,ell.

¥

'
PRIMAL SUIT
. LOS ANGELES ·(UPI) Psy chotherapist Arthur
Janov has filed a $7.1 million
iibel suit against Psychology
Today becalise an article In
the magazine said Jtmov's
primal
therapy
was

"jabberwocky."

.

The suit, filed Monday m
Superior Court, asks for $6
million in general and
punitive damages for Janov
and another $1.1 million in
general and
punitive
damages for his Los Angelesbased Primal institute. -

'
ON IMAGE-MAKING
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
The news . media tends tn
build public figures up, only
tn tear them down again,
neWsman Edwin Newman
says, citing Henry Kissinger
and J ohn Kennedy as
examples.
" I hope that news orginizatiOns will be sem:ihlf' .:1 hnut

mental health and retardation, $20,099.04 ; real estate
assessment lund, $30,416.10;
motor vehicle and gasoline
tax lund, $900,026.97; soil and
water conservation special
fund,
$4 ,800.33;
bond
retirement funds, (hospital)
$24,742.74; sanitary revenue
funds (landfill) 121,153.61 ;
special levy fund, tuber·

mission, Rick W. Crow,
~Rcutlngattorney; George
l0.1.JCollins, treasurer, and
.
.
Howard Frank, auditor • m•
culosis, $59,093.85 ; mental · act, $8,931 ; federal revenue Friday morning to compile
the ligUres In the severo!
retardation , 158,281.35; .sharing funds, $106,842.73.
crippled children, 1641.68 ;
Members of the com· funds.
federal funds lnchgjing
Economic Development Act
for County Road I in Salem
Township, $193,301.35;
C.E .T. A., $46 ,332.60;
C,E ,T.A. VI, $65,715.92 ;
juvenile probation, $6,691.30;
anti recession public works

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from pa~e I)
cut joblessness. The labor federation issued a bitterly worded
statement Monday cbarglng that Carter's proposal for tax cuts
and jobs is "too small, takes too long and is too ill-advised to
give the economy the stimulus it needs."
Labor officials said Carter's program would not even
reduce unemployment to 7 per cen t~ "We consider !his a
retreat from the goals which we understood P~ident-elo:rt
Carter to have set during last year's campaign, they sa1d.
Issued belote Inauguration day, the statement was a
culmination of the growing antagonism between Carter and
the labor leaders who helped put him in office. Carter's
spokesman In Plains, Ga .. declined comment.

WALK-UP TEu.ER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OP.EN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.
"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

Visit Our Salad Bar
Stuffed Shrimp
·• " .
French Fries
Coffee. Tea or Milk

· WASHINGTON - A NATIONWIDE COAUTJON of
.consumer groups is urging Americans to cut their coffee
coosumption by 20 tn 30 per cent m order to reduce pnces by 50
cents to $1 per pound. The groups said they feared that pnces,
now hovering at $3 a pound, could go as h1gh as $4 if bu}'lng
habits do not change.
11
We believe conswner s can make this effort without a
boycott action," the groups said at a news conference which
featured tea instead of the usual pot of coffee. "Rather , a
modest change in the amount of coffee consumed daily , either
by drinking one or two fewer cups per person on the average,
or b)i" shifting to other beverages, such as tea, should he
sufficient to reduce consumption."

Jimmy Carter, " Newman
said Tuesday at an NBCsponsored l~ncheon . "I hope ·
that he will not be followed
minute-byminute, inch-byInch. I hope we will not find
Amy irresistible and that she
will be allowed tn be herself." · ·

Plus

Pomeroy,

VOL XXVII

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

CHESTS &amp;RECORD CABINETS
by Lane

RALPH W. HAWK
Ralph W. Hawk. 57. for -

merly of M~i gs County, died
a t the U. S. Naval Hospital in
Philadelphia , Pa., Tuesday

Regular $134.95 Maple Cl)est .
Regular $154.95 Oak Chest
Regular $154.95 Walnut Chest
Regular 5199.95 Maple Chest
Regular $209.95 Cherry Chest
Regular $289.95 Tulip Wood Chest
"Regular $299 .95 Pine Chest
' Regular $149.95 Maple Record Cabinet
Regular $149.95 Walnut Record Cabinet
Regular $159.95 Pine Record Cabinet
S219.9S Oak Record Cabinet

Sale $108.00
Sale $124 .00
Sale $124.00
Sale $160.00
Sale $168 .00
5r'le $232.00
Sale $240.00
Sahi $120.00
Sale $120.00
Sale SI28.00
Sale $176.00

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..••.:::.......•...•.•.. -··--·-··-·--·-- ··-··--· __.__- --------------.....

••

1

BAVE7¢
u •BNE COUPON PEA fUflctiA$E

••
•
••

CUT ALONG DOTIED
LINE FOR 7; SAVINGS
OR SOLID LINE FOR
15¢ SAVINGS

WHEN YOU
BUY ·

..••

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2•

MEIGS lHEATHE
CUlSFD FOR
VM'.ATION

MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
\

·Mtmller Federal Dlpolit lnsui'IIICI Ccrpoiatilr .
'-DIPOIITI INSUIID T9 ."40,000

·-

.

ra s.

a GAMBLa

BAVE15c
-

WATQf FOR
OPFNING ~TE
'

PROCTER

STORE COUPON

'. ,,

BOXES

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By LEE LEONARD
UP! State House Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes said today
he would submit a balanced
budget for the next biennium
which will · require np new
taxes and challenged
members of the Democratic
controlled Ohio General
Assembly tn put a JX"ice tag
on all spending bills th ey
introduce.
Rhodes, in a State-of~heState message tn a joint
session of the General
Assembly in which he called
for cooperation~ between the
executive and legislative
branches, said his budget
''will be balanced" and "it
wUI
require no new taxes."
'
. 'fiRST MEIGS BABY OF 1977 - Ryan Daniel Buckley, held here. by his mother, Mrs.
"We can provide a high
W1lllam (Twila Kart) L. Buckley is lhe winner of The Daily Se ntinel's first baby of the year
level of services for our
COil lest.
•cltluns without additional
taxes " uld Rhodes. "But
you a~ 1. mtdl be coounitted
meal to the par e~ts at to l.mp&lt;~~~lnl realis!lc
Co untry
Co ·usl ns spend +. 11.
"PPI11Ilc lldence dictates
Cookshoppe; $10 gift cer·
that lhe . COli ol every bill
tificate from Elberfeld's.
lnlrOdlired ln the General
Two · cases of baby
Assembly be revtaled to the
food from Waid Cross and taxpayers, " said Rhodes .
Sons; $5 gift certificate from
the Heritage House; a case of
ca nned milk from Krogers; a
Ryan Daniel Buckley, son prese nted Ryan and his package of diapers from
of Mr. and Mrs. W!Uiam L. parents include:
Stiffler's Stores, Inc. ; a
Buckley, Route 3, Pomeroy,
A baby pl anter from battery operated loUi·clock
has been named winner of Francis Florist ; a $10 savings and two cases of soft drinks,
The 'Dally Sentinel's · 1977 account at the Pomeroy Royal Crown Bottling Co.; a
Baby Derby.
National Bank; a case of one-piece snowsult from the to be sponsored. by th e
Chamber of
Ryan was born at 10:19 baby foods from Mark V Racine Department Store; a Pomeroy
Commerce,
will
be Jan: 20 at
a.m. on Jan. 3 at the Holzer Super Market; a brown bear baby bunting from Land6:30
p._
m
.
at
the
Meigs 1~ .
Medical Center and weighed from Moore's Store; a free mark; a $10 savings account
PreSident
Fred
Crow sa1d
six pounda, 10 ounces. As. meal to the parents at Crow's at the Racine ilome National
Monday's
regular
meeting
at
. winner of the first baby of the Steak House ; $5 off · on Bank ; a $3 gift certificate •
Wingett,
Charles
Robert
year contest, according to anything ordered from Sears' from Th~ Fabric Shop; three
registrations provided to The Catalog; · a $10 savings ac- boxes of pampers from the Legar and Pete Shields will
Daily Sentinel, Ryan and his count from the Citizens Racine Food Market ; a be honor~d guests. Richard
parents will receive a National Bank; a pair of planter from the Pomeroy Jones Will be master of
number of gilts.
. shoes from Hartley's Shoes; Flower Shop; a slip for ceremonies.
Tickets to the dinner will be
Maternal grandparents are three·boxes of pampers from mother from the L. and Z.
available
first to members of
Mr. and Mr.s. Horace K"arr, ViUage Pharmacy; 10 gallons Dress Shop; three boxes of
tbe
chamber,
then to the
Route 3, Pomeroy, and Mr. of gai!Oiine fr~m Welker's pampers from Swisher-Lohse
public.
Those
wi shing to
and Mrs. Joseph Turner, Service Station; a feeder Pharmacy; one case of baby
make reservations are to call
Jamest.own, Ky. Great- spoon with rattler from food from Twin Cities
grandparents are Mrs . Goessler's Jewelry Store; a Gateway Supermarket ; a cut on Barba ra Chapman,
Denver Holter, Minersville; free meal for the parents at flower arrangement from
Mrs . Purley -Karr, Long the Meigs Inn ; a $5 gift Dudley 'a and a three-piece
Bottom, and Ben Buckley, certificate from The Kiddie feeder set for K. a l!ll C.
Reedsville. Mr. and Mrs. Shoppe; a crib toy from Jewelers.
Buckley have another 8011 Western Auto, Middleport; a
Jeremy William, 19 months: flO gi,ft certificate from
Gifts provided by Big Bend • Powells Super Valu; a free
area merchants to be
Proffitt began

"Therefore l will propose
legislation tn require that aU
bills introduced in the
· General Assembly contain a
cost impa ct statement.
"The days of passing
Unfunded legislation with a
fa lse hope that it will
somehow be funded must
end," said Rhodes in his
prepared text.
Rhodes told the legislature,
which has enough Democrats
in both chambers to override
his vetoes, that General Fund
revenues are expected tn
increase by $1.5 blUion over
the next two years.
"With this increase in rovenues and better management
In government, we can do the
job tlle people elected us to
do," said Rhodes: ..
. Rhodes said his new budget
would Include proposa ls tn:
- Increase state aid tn
public schools by $250 million
which averages out tn a 23 per
cent increase per popil.
- An increase of 27 per cent
In state support for colleges
and universities which will
amount tn an increase of
more than $250 million than

the amount allocated for the
curren t biennium. Rhodes
said no tuition increases
should be necessary.

i_a:~~~~stu~~~t ~~~~e;~

- A 25 per cent increase in
the funding of mental health
and mental retardation pro·
warns which will amount tn
~
[.ncrease of about $210
nullion.
. -Modernize the Bureau of
Motor
Vehi cles
by
. computerizing its operation
and distributing license
plates in a manner more
convenient to Ohio's drivers.
- Provide a n expanded
progr~m for Ohio's senior
¢itjzens through ~lqiport for
local programs and increased
statewide service~ .
Rhodes also reiterated a
theme he haS espoused for the
past two years calling for tax
credits for business and
industry to
stimulate
expansion and relocation in
Ohio, with emphasis on inner
city areas.
"! want jobs for Ohioans(Conlinued on page 16 '

•
A Ho r. ney zn
a' uto mishap
&amp;, &amp;,I

· ·

GalliJIOlis attorney James
Bennett, 36, Rt. 2, Vinton, was
injured in 8 traffic accident
at5 :35 p.m. Tuesday on CR 3
one and eight tenths miles
north of SR 325.
The Gdllla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Bennett lost control of" his
vehicle on the ice covered
road. The station wagon slid
intn a .ditch and field. There
was minor damage.
Atty. Bennett's injuries
were reported of a minor

·" -,

,_. -•
nature.
(
Qma M. H ysr!r..,...~~...,,
Sy ra cuse, had minor ln]ur
as a ·result of a thrt•Hf'IUt i•
accident al 12 ~~ p m
Tuesday on Third Sl In
Syracuse . She was a
passenger in a car driven by
Lu~dy L. Deitz, 71, Syracuse,
The Deitz car turned left into
tbe path of a vehicle operated
by Clarence E. Hill, 28,
Syracuse. Following Impact,
the Hill car struck a parked
(Continued on page 18)

Smith reelected

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with no records

f.News. • •in Brief:,a or any supplies
By UDite4 Press!ateruatlnal
.
COLUMBUS, OHIO - REPUBLICAN STATE
CHAIRMAN Kent B. McGough was to announce today whetber
he will formally enter the contest for the RepubUcan national
:chalnnanship. The Ohio party cbairnian planned to Issue
'statements simultaneously In Columbus and Washington
according to hla office.
McGough contlooed Tuesday to test sentiment among
par\y pros to aee If he could capture the chalnnanahlp at
. Friday's meeting ol the 162-member RepubUcan National
Conunlttee. McOough acknowledged that activity ln his behalf
had stepped up ''consl~erably" since the weekend, when
James. Baker, President Ford's campaign m.."llllger, took
himself out ol the contest.
HONOLULU - 'tHE CITY MEDICAL examiner's office
today •awaited results of laboratory tests expeCted to
determine how Clark Gable's llepaon died. Anthony . B.
Splecbla !D, 'II, Beverly Hills, wu found dead In a friend 's
Sulllll Beach home on Oahu's north lhGre last Friday.
Investigaton said Tuesday ~ was no evidence of
violtllce In the death at the home ri Charles B. Sneath.
Sprecktla lui was ee,en aUve at about daim Friday after a
hotel party. SpredleLI wu the son ol actor O.rk Gable's
w!OOw and the lat. sugar heir Adolph B. Spncbl.lll.
.

....
THE SI'ATE'S 'I.'(JP water
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SACRAMENTO f:AIJF. .· (Continued on page 18)
,

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cbamlier, or Crow. Tickets
are $5 per person.
Crow also announced that a
dinner will be" held for old
tune ball players with Gordie
Coleman, former player for
the Cincinnati Reds, now in
the Reds' publications
department, wlll be guest
speaker. Coleman will also
show a film of a world series.
It was announced that the
Christmas promotion showed
a profit of $278.24. The Christ·
mas lighting fund has a .
balance of $1 ,557 .52 with
chamber members still

Thanks were extended to
Ed Kennedy and Jim Frecker
EAST MEIGS - Oris Smith
for assistance in the Christ- and Doug Bissell were
mas li ghting program.
reelected president and vice
Named to the lightin g president,
respectively,
committee were Frecker,
Tuesday night by the Eastern
Crow and John Anderson .
Local School District Board
Crow commended merol Education when it
chants for their generous orga nized.
dooations toward the lights.
The board set the second
Frecker asked if the chamber Tuesday of each month, 7:30
would consider having a new p.m,, for regular 'meetings
Ssnta Claus suit made. No . and voted to join the Ohio
decision was mad e. At- School Boards Assn. It was
tending were 'crow, Frecker,
also agreed to purchase
Scott Lucas, Anderson, N. W.
liability Insurance for board
Compton, Bill Grueser, Jack members.
Carsey , Derman Moore,
The board then moved into
Thereon ' Johnson, Richard
regular session and at the
Jones and Barbara ~;hap- request of several parents
man.
and teachers it was agreed to
have Supt. John Riebel check
with the Ohio Department of
Education on the possibility
of having a learn ing
disability class in the district
u.
.starting next fail. One
student, Rachel Hunter, was
• small way the thousands of
granted permission to attend
dedicated individuals whose
Eastern High Schon! on a
efforts make Ohio the
TUPPERS PLAINS - The hall-time basis with the
nationalleaderin Agriculture Orange Township Volunteer remainder of her time to be
Fairs participation. Ohio bas Department has named spent as a special student at
more agricultural fairs than administrative and line Ohio University.
anyotherStatein the Union," officers for the new year.
Supt. Riebel was named the
Stackhouse said. " Ohio's
Line officers include Larry authorized representative to
fairs offer not only good E. Millhone, fire chief; Bob receive federal program
wholesome family en- Tripp, assistant fire chief; funds. It was decided to start
tertalnment but also exhibits Keith Miller, captain; Tim the new breakfast program at
that help to provide a means Spencer, first lieutenant ; the Riverview Elementary
for understanding the im- J,amar Lyons , second School first with · others
possibly to be started at other
portant cobtributlon of lieutenant.
agriculture to today's
Administrative officers schools next fall. The
economy . The fairs em- elec1ed include James Riverview program will be
phasize community Involve- Watson, president; L. L. started as soon as the
ment that is excttlng and Lyons, · vice · president ; weather permits the forming
. rewarding ," Stackhouse Charles Weber, secretary; of the proper organization lor
stated. "We are optimistic Ron Loschar, ·assistant operating the breakfast
that the record attendance secretary , and George , program. Some students will
set In 1976 will be broken this Collins, treasurer and news receive free breakfasts, some
summer."
reporter.
will pay 10 cents and students
Durin g
1976;
the who can afford it wlll pay 2S
Attendin g the tliree-day
meeting from the Meigs Fair department answered nine cents. The cost for adults will
Board were Mrs. Leifheit and calls with 117 manhours be-40 cents.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace spent. Fire lossea . In !he
It was agreed to hire the
Bradford, president and township totaled $35,150. The assistant cook for an adsecretary, respectively, of department meets at 7:30 ditional hour each day and
the local boa rd.
.. p.m" onJhe second and fourth the elementary secretary at
Wednesdays of each month . ·. Riverview for an additional

Fair h'oard
recognized

Melli County Sheriff
Jame1 J. Proffitt preseated
a letter to tbe Meigs Couaty
Commiuloners al their
meetlq Monday and asked
It be made a part of lhe
official record.
Tbe 1eller
11ld:
"Pleau be advtaed •• of
Jaa. I, 1177 tbe date oa
wbleh I aSBumeil my duUes
11 -ly elected lhertfl of
Melc1
Couaty,
the
aforementloaed office wu
rendered me!fectlve due to
tbe ab,eaee of aD reconk,
crtmlaal, oeeldeat reperll,
et al, ao weD 11 aU olflee
IUpplleo lnd fwiiUI ~lad!
aU flllq cab!DeU Wert
empty.
"Althoup I cauot be
held ~spoaslble for the
abav.e; I lalelld .10 baadle
and be respoulble for such
willie ID olflee."

COLUMBUS - Director of
·Agriculture John M. Stackhouse presented · the . Meigs
County Agricultural Society
with a "Certificate of
Achievement" at the Ohio
Fair Managers Convention In
Columbus
durlrtg
the
Director of Agricultu•e
Breakfast and Meeting on
January 6.
The aMual Director of
Agriculture Breakfast was an
Integral part of the convention which Involved 1,500
people . Stackhouse addressed · the convention
delecates and commended
them for their progressive
anCI outstanding leadership In
preaenting 15 Independent
and county agricultural fairs
ln 1971.
Acttp!lng the awafd lor the
Meigs County Agrtcultul"f!l
Society was Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit, delegate to the
conventioo.
,
'
"We hope that in the
presentation of these certificate.,, we ca n recognize In

Firemen name

• ._ati've,
adminis

line officers

(

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~~!" =~~~-~!~~r..~et board president

Choose Puff~ and you'll
have the softest
.facial tissue money
can buy. Beautiful
decorator box, too.
Now choose your
savings. Cut arou8d
the dotted line and
save 7¢ ontwo-boxes of
Puffs, or cut around the SQU.d
line and save 15¢ on three boxes of Puffs.
.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 19.77

Buckley infant
first in 1977

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

STORE COUPON

,

WASillNGTON (UP!) - Unemployment fell to 7.9 per
cent at the end of 1976, still slightly higher than when the
year began, . the Labor Department reported today.
December's decline from the year's· highestlevel of 8.1
per ce'nt in November brought some relief for Jimmy
Carter as he prepares tn assume the presidency. But the
year-end rate was still only 1 per cent below the 1975
recession peak.
·
The report also heralded' a full year of virtual
stagnation on the American job ma.rket. The December
rate was 0.1 per cent higher than last January.
In a related developmen1 wholesale prices increased
0.9 per cent in December to quicken the pace of bu~ine ss
inflation in 1976, according tn tlle Labor Department. The
report said wholesale prices rose 4.7 per cent for the year
compared with 4.2 per cent in 1975.
All of the increase was in industrial corrunodi lies such
as metals, building material and energy. The Labor
Department said the industrial section of the wholesale
price Index increased 6.4 per cent from December, 1975.

Rhodes promises
balanced budget

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·POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

o:

Area Deaths

Tuesday morning .
·
Born in Gallia County, she nighl.
M r . Hawk was precedec:f. in
and her hu sba nd , the la te
Charles E. Watters , operated death by his parents, Mr . and
a grocery store in M iddleport Mrs. Pr ice Hawk ; a brolher ,
for several years . ·
Grover and a sister , Mr s. Ada
She was a . member of the Slivers.
Norton Church of Christ in ' Su rviving are his wife,
. El sie and two SOllS , Ra Iph ,
Col umbus .
Survivors Inc lude three Jr ., and Gregor y of Vinera nd,
daugh ters, Clara Boyd. N. J. ; a _granddaugh ter ,
Louisiana ; Kathryn Tuttle. M eredith ; a br other, Marion , .
Columb us , and
Nell ie Minersville ; foUr · si sters, •
Ballard, Largo, FIa .; "three M rs. Dorothy La wson,
sons .
Kenneth,
Belpre ; M inersville ; Mrs. Fr ances
Jan.es A.• Spokane , Wash .. Sm ith , Sandyville, W . Va .;
and Artt:ur, Thornv i lle, Ohio ; Mrs . Ka .t hryn Neutzli ng of
and
Mrs .
15 granc:khlldren, and seven Middleport
great.~,. .tndchildren.
Florence Wa rner of Syracuse
Fur~ral services wi ll be 1 and several nieces and
p.m . Thursday at thf! Evans nephews .
Funeral services were held
Fune.-,al Home, 4171 East
Llvlfll!Ston A.e., Columbus. c;~t the Pan coas t Funeral
Fr ier"ds may call 2 to .4 and 7 Home in Vineland , N. J., and
ttJ 9 Wednesday . Buria l will burial w~~ in New York City ,
be In Asbur y Cemetery , A11endi ng services from here
Columbus.
were Mrs . Neutzli ng and Mrs.
La wson .

NO. 189

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
C~pAR

kept as low as tlley can possibly be kep't.
He pointed out tbat there has been damage to some
buildings due to the low temperature, and the cold weather. He
particularly poinU!d out the Meigs High School where an
inspection has unturned 14 broken heat radiators.
Orie such radiator flooded the cafeteria and another has
caused an overhesd leak witll water entering the cafeteria.
Steps are underway to have the radiators repaire-d and a
representative of the heating firm which iiLStalled the system
at Meigs High School was due here tnday to inspect the
problems at the high school and make recommendations.
Morris pointed out, however , tbat some of tlle problems at
the high school was caused by improper maintenance of the
radiators.
LONG RANGE PLAN
During the ·three hour session, the board again discussed
the need for an overall !mig range program of improvements
within the district. It was decided that priorities shou ld be
assigned to the projects which would be carried out over the
(Continued on page 16 )

company had informed him that the allocations of natural gas
for all of the schools can be combined but if the district goes
over the allotted amount, the district l1 given a live day notice
and can appealto the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
II no relief is given. by PUCO, the gas service will he cut
off. Morris said he has been advised that ibe district wiD not
know how.it has done em the allocations until the end of the
current heating period which is the end of March and started in
November.
He said the district was all right through December. He
said should the diatrict have gas service cut off because ·of not
meeting the allocations then the schools ca nnot be reopened
until the overage is repaid.
Board Member Robert Snowden asked the administra1ors
to contact local gas compa ny personnel and ask tllem tn read
the meters frequently so that how the district is doing with the
allocations can he learned.
It was believed that some gains might bave been made
over the past six days because schools have been closed due to
snowandice.Morrissaidthatbuiidingtemperaturesarebeing

'"x

PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304 ·

1--------~-----------------I
I
I

KATHLEEN WALTERS
Kathleen M . Watters , 18, of
685 Westphal, Whitehal l, Oh io
died at MI. Carmel East

bave a 50 percent reduction in the amount of g~s used and an
additional 10 percent for the smaller buildings, which would
include the junior high structure. Tbe·letter recommended that
schools transfer tn other fu~ls, close in January or February,.
or reduce the school day to f1ve hours a day .
The State Department of Education will approve a five
hour day for high schools, the letter stated.
Dr. Essex urged that Meigs Local administrators assess
promptly their problems. It pointed out also that schools must
be completed by.the end of June with the 182 required days put
in and that teachers are entitled tn unemployment benefits
after the first week of being off due tn schools being closed.
Supt. Charles Dowler said that AS!t. Supt. Dan Morris and
junior high principal John Mora had figured the gas used In the
districlaad believed that the district cannot make it with the
curtailment.
Asst. Supt. Morris said ~ had been in touch with lhe gas
company and had learned that the curtai lment on !he six
elementary buildings in the district , which .counts the junior
high building, can ·he increased to 30 percent. He said the

s.z95'

THE MEIGS INN
992-362~

A &lt;emporary budget of $3,300,785 was adopted and gas
heating CUrtailments reviewed Tuesday night by the Meigs
LOcal School District Board of Education .
. Meeting In regnlar Session, the board adopted the
temporary budget until the new clerk, Mrs . Jane Wagner can
prepare the reports needed and amoun.ts to be received from
the state are shown. The full budget for the year must be
adopted by AprU 1.
1
Appropriations set up in the lmDOrarv bud~et include:
l!dmlnlstration sa!llries and wages, $82,900; instruction,
, $1,865,870; coordinate activities, $1.!i(l; auxiliary agencies,
' $164,000; operation of plant, $104,000; maintenance, $16,000 ;
special services, $20,100; suppiies; $229,300; materials for
maintenance , $57 ,600; equ ipment repl ac~ment, $98,500 ;
coo tract and open services, $4,000; fixed charges, $518,615;
cootingency, $20,000; capital outlay, $4,000. .
The board discussed at length the new cutbacks announced
by Columbia Gas Co.
A letter from Dr. Martin Essex, state superintendent of.
instruction, said a building ~uch as Meigs Hlldl School will

Unemployment falls to
7.9%: wholesale is up

'

TO PLAYBOY

CHICAGO (UP!) - Lee
Templeton, viCOi&gt;resident for
marketing of the Knight, Ridder newspaper chain, will
become
a
Playboy
Enterprises, Inc., senior vice
president
and
group
executive effective Feb. I.
Besides responsibility for
all International publimlng
and distribution operations,
licensing, franchising,
product merchandlllng and
~orporate
research ,
Templeton will carry overall
the
responslblllty for
company's new business
development, Derick J .
Daniels, Pllyboy president,
announced Monday.

:

~

THE INN PLACE
. Wednesday Night Special

'

PLEASANT VAI,.LEY
DISCHARGES - Rose
Goodwin, ·Point Pleasant ;
Michael Gleason, Point
Pleasant; James Anderson,
Radne; Mrs. Dennis Drlles,
New Haven ; Mrs. Matthew
Handshaw, Point Pleasant;
David Reynolds, Gallipolis
Ferry; Mrs. Bernard Lamp,
Point Pleasant ; Rachel Bush,
Lakin; and Myrtle Chorech,
Lakin.

· ... where drive-up banking lets you
complete deposits and withdrawals quickly
between 9:00a .m. and 3:00 p.m. J\1\onday
through Friday. Don't forget we're open 5 to
7:00 p.m. Friday evenings and from 9:00
a.m . until noon on Saturday. · Drive, up
banking was created for your convenience!

'\

m ill • ·
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Resources exceed $2¥2
The Meigs County Budget
Commiulon has estimated
resources totaling
$2,674,190.04 in the fiscal year
beginning Jan. I, 1977.
The commission has
prepared @ breakdown of the
resources which will be used
by the Meigs County Com!llissioners In preparing their
annuai appropriations
resolution for !he county this
year.
Making up the total are :
gemiral fund , $1114,389.99; dog
and kennel fund, $9,399.20;
district board of health,
$46,385 ; food
service,
$1,394.87; ,public assistance,
$2S6 ,701.'!r,"" com munity

•
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•

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one-half hour da ily because of ·
the additional work involved
with the breakfast program.
The board pa sse d a
resolution aothorizing the
clerk; Mrs. Eloise Boston, to
exclude listing the biiis in the
minute book and a second
r esolution

was

passed

authorizing Mrs. Boston to
ask for an advance draw
from the county auditor on
Jan, 19 in prepara tion for the
Jan. 20 payroll.
The board agreed to ask the
State Department to approve
Jan. 5, 6, and 7 as calamity
days. Those days make the
five calamity days permitted
by the state in a school year.
Make-up days .which will be
necessary were discussed but
no decision made on them. It
was agreed to check with the
Meigs Local Distri ct officials
on their make up days since
Eastern does have some
vocational students attending
in the Meigs District. It was
agreed !hat Monday, Martin
Lutheran King !'lay, will not
be a make up day .
It was agreed that the
policy wiD be to· ask all
persons or groups wishing to
appear before the board to
contact Supt. Riebel on the
Friday preceding a regular
meeting so that they can be
placed on the agenda.
However, it was painted out
that any happening taking
place Jrom the .Friday until
the Tuesday meeting can also
be discussed even though the
individuals Involved are not
on the agenda of board
meetings . Bills were approved for payment.
Attending were Supt.
Riebel, clerk, Mrs. Boston,
Chester Gooding, high school
principal, and boar~ members, Oris Smith, l)oug
Bissell, Dorothy Ca law•y,
Dan Smith and Dorsel
Larkins.

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