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D-8- TheSunday

Timt·s-~entllwLSIIIII:I~ ·~··:; ·~:~• • " "

Five cases continued

- ~al ~ -in Gallipolis Court

C[;'stat·A:
-:-L~
\.A

T 0 daj. :e

t;ALI.IPULIS -:

~·i.ve eases

were contin ued m Ualhpohs

Municipal Court Friday .
Harold Green, Ga llipolis,
By .
• entered a plea of not guilty to
Willis T. Leadongham
• cha rges of threatenin g
· • physical harm . Bond was set
Realtor
• at $500 . Case conti11ucd . .
• . Entering a plea of not
• guilty to the c~arge ofleaving
Another influence, no t • the scene of an accident , the
I
Str o ng
lo rce s
arc
tobe ign ored . is r eti r ement . • case again;t Keith Voreh ,
· t keepmg the single home
In many ca ses. home
I market very much al ive
t despi te the tncreasing . ownership ulfcrs th e unly • Gallipoli s, was continued.
hope to en ter retirement in • Bond was set at $500.
t price trend over the pas t
a condii1 0n o the r than :
Garv L. Perkins, 39,
• several years . A probe_ of
p ove rty . Since .Social
· the m o tivalt ons behtnd
Virginia Beach, Va .. pleaded·
Security "vas desig ned as a •
• current sales has found
supplement i'lnd na t suf - ·• guilty to charges of operatin g
I that bu yers are con vinced
t thi'll home ownershi p is ficient to I ive on . a free and e a motor vehicle without a
e wor t h the finan cia l clear home, or the in • licen se. Bond was set at
e s~crificefo r environmenta l . ves tment potent tal of home • $500 . Case continued for
• ~easons A better place lor equ ity , prov ides a sol id • sentencing .
base l or r etirement .
• their chil dren to ltve and
Franklin
Nobile , 39 ,
the farther fr om the ci ty
Ga llipoli s, and Howard
• the bet ter .
·
II !her r. 1S .ony th inq we
I
A second power ful in · ca n ri o t o ilf' lp yo u 111 tlw
Pauling. 20. Patriot, each
e flu ence is in fla t ion . Buyers li ('tc1 (I f .i{',l l f'S I,l l r p! P,'l 5r
1
entered pleas of not guilty to
•
ar e convi nced that th e ph n nP or &lt;lrop 111 111
charges of ex cessive speed .
R F /H
41 houstng inventor y is too LEADINGHAM
Ten ot her cases were
f short to see an y signifi can t ESTATE , ~ 11 S~•c on 'rl AvP .,
over supply or r eduction in Go11t ipoli s. Phonf' _._.6 lo'I Y .
terminated in Judge James
• va lue in thei r lifetime .
W P' n.• h c r l' to h ctr
A. Bennett 's court Friday.
Delbert W. Clonch, 47 ,
Gallipolis, pleaded guilty to

••

MOTIVATIONS FOR BUYING

••
•••
•••
•

••

"'."~

•

~··························

·

BHHVRDD
•
meetmg
0

set Jan. 30
POMEROY
Th e
executiye committee o! the
Buckeye Hills · Hocking
Valley Regional Development District will meet at 7
p.m . on Jan. 30 at the BHHVRDD conference room in
Marietta.
George Collins, Meigs
County Treasurer, who is
chainnan o! the audit. ..budget committee, has
scheduled a meeting of his
committee at 6 p.m. on the
same evening in the office of
the executive director in
Marietta .
Among the topics to be
considered by the executive
committee will be approval of
the final report of the Athens Meigs Industrial Site Study
as prep?red by James M.
Jennings Associates Co.,
Columbus.

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow's Family
Restaurant
Po M e roy, Oilio

A 64 oz.. Bottle of RC wltJ, the

purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu pak.
·
GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

OPERATION
BROKEN-UP
CLEVELAND (AP )
Police said an officer with
binoculars posted atop an
East Side building helped
break up a stop-and·rob
operation that has victimized
a score of women driving on
Chester Avenue.
Two youths, ages 16 and 1a,
were arrested Friday · after
policemen on the ground
were alerted by the spotter,
who was watching from the
roof of the 22-&lt;ltory . Wilson
'Tower Apartments at East
55th Street.

fi ni sh w1l h · mat ching
c loth in ter ior . Equipped with power
steeri ng, power bra k es, ai r condi
t ion1ng. r ear elec tr ic defroster , i'lnd
AM radio . GM f ~cto r y officia l 's
nu tomobile .

'4695

'

Fin1 shcd in Mayr~ n red with white
huckel sen t s. Thi s Trans Am has it
rt ll fl.ir cond itioning , c ruise control,
11 tt whee l, AM. FM 8 tra ck . Rolly e II
w h crts and raised wh i t e- letter t ires .
T his new Bonneville tracif' is o to c ~ l ­
ly oWnNI nutomobil(' . Only 4,1971ow,

Only

low mi les.

'5995

1978 BUICK RIVIERA

1978 CAMARO
This 5port s model is sure to catch
your attention . Carm i ne ext erior
a net bl ,lck bu c k et scu ts w i t h ai r con
di t ion ing, t'lu tomMic trn nsmission ,
AM FM radio and c;port sty l ed
w heels. Pri ced to sell.

'5995

1978 CHEV. IMPALA
This fi'lmily sized .t1 door s~ dan hn s
only ?.. 42A miles . Finished in :nedi.u m
blue with mat c hin ~1 c loth 1ntC'nor .
Purchr~ scd new Augu St 30, 1978 .
Batn nc c of factory warriln l y . Mu st
be seen to apprect atc .

.. .

Pt o t in um ex tenor wi t h beau tif Ul
car m ine c loth interior . L o rt ded with
option s l ike flir cond i ti or,ing , p o~cr
Wi ndows, power floo r locks, cr u1sP
controL ti lt w hee l, AM FM B tr.1 ck
st ereo . Rall ye whee l s. This stun ni ng
coupe is. supcr s hM P inside an d out.

m;r es .

LD\il l cxec utivf''S crt r . F ini shecl in
lirc t hOr n red wit h rt wh i tc 1.1nc1au
top Optio ns inc lude AM · F M in clii_S h
CB r ndio, powe r scil ts, powpr w m
claw!&gt; , cr uise con t rol. ilutomnt ic r1i r
condi t ioning , c hrome w hl'els, C~nd
mu c h
mor e .
Th1 s
st un n in0
automobil e is on eli spi ny tada•t .

.
'7995
1977 V.W. SCIROCCO

This stunnin g interm e&lt;1inte hos i t
rt ll . Beouf if ul Si!H ron ex ter ior wi th a
hu r kski n landau top rmd mfltching
'"' 60 dO sea ting . EquippC'd W1fh r~i r con
dition1ng, power windows, power
door loc ks, tilt wheel , cruise contro l,
A M FM c~1 ssr ll c ster eo syst em , rmd
c hrome styl f'ri wh ee ls .

'

•6295 .
1977 G.M.C. PICKUP

'4995 '

. '4695

'3795

1977 CHEV. EL CAMINO CLASSIC

1977 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

'4595

ptrttinum wi t h b i Mk 60 JO v in yl in

h..• r ior .1 nd a mat cll in9 pi'l clclf'd l&lt;m
dau top . Air conclit io nr&lt;t. tilt wheel.
radio, nnd Ratlyr It wh cf• l 'i Sec i t
now .

1976 BUICK CENTURY
Cu stom J door , dMk blu e ex terior ,
("hromr styl('rt whc_r·l s, air . One lo ct~ l
ow ner , vinyl IPf"l
N ew Lc Si'l brc
trnd t'

"

'3995

'5495

BUICK
P-ONTIAC
19 1 1 Eastern Ave.

Phone 446-2282

lnn·stigaturlli suid lht'
drin•r apparently lril'd
to bt•at the locomotive lu a
crossing.
hu ~

'
·;t':'::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::~~~.~~,~~~ :::~~~ ~:~:~:~; ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;i

Tht• locomoti,•c, on its

way tu link up with a
freight train, ripped the La
Presa-Los Remedios bus
oprn and fllppcd II on its
side, spilling victims along
lht• tracks.
~
A survivor said the bus
was O\'Crloaded with about

::

Suo:;:::~~hie t~;:::~y. ~~:::~=~~

:,_::: :,.

snow flurries in the northe~st

75 persons aboard, some

" hanging from the open
doorway."

::::
::::

Tuesday and Wednesday. Highs
!rom the 20s to the low 30s Mond~y

··
::::
:;:;

:

~:d~~:-:::;.y r~~~~o~~ly l~e th~e;~:

:::

(
)·

Monday and Wednesday and be· tween 5 and , 10 above Tuesday. ·

;:;:

f

"::":::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;

Investigation
still_underway

ELBERFELD$

POMEIWY
Meigs
County sheriff 's deputies
Saturday continued in vestigation into the theft of
two wooden barricades with
flasher lights taken from an
excavation project on SR 124
nea~ the Pennzoil Service
Station.
Deputi es recovered the
barricades along SR 33a near
Antiquity .
Deputies Friday
investigated a one-car accident
on Union Ave.
According to the report.
Michael R. Stewart, 21, Rt. 2,
Cheshire , said he was
traveling along when the gas
pedal stuck on his car. He
attempted to get it loose but
his vehicle slid off the street
striking a mailbox owned by
the Johnson Company.
Mel'gs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports the
report of the accident involving Roy T. Grueser and
Scott Bearhs on Wednesday
should have read "Scott
Bearhs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy ,
traveling north on CR 20 (old
Rt. 33) slid left of center on
the ice and struck a southbound vehicle driven by Roy
Grueser, Rt. 3, Pomeroy."
Thursday 's report was in
error. Mr. Grueser .did not go
left of center. This error was
made by Sheriff's Department.

SAVE s39

• Top· Filling disposable dust bag avoids
clogging . needs lewer changes .
• Oaylighl Headlight finds dirt in darkest corners
• Exclusive 6-way Oial·A·Nap • lowes!
nap to deepest shag or any other carpets .

REG.
$119.90
w/tools

.

~~e:~-~1

.

..~
Model 1458

" - . plJ~\.

l(\.EEt'lEt\ '
EDGE
.

.

.

$19.95 cleaning tools included

•

See all the other models Eureka Upright- Canister and
Power Team Sweepers.
HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT. 1ST FLOOR

Weather
Rain changing to snow
flurries and turning colder
Sunday, with steady or falling
temperatures. The chance of
precipitation is 90 percent
today.

95
-

The 'bright idea' in a
6-way adjustable cleaner

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
ACCL4IMED FROM COAST TO COAST!

lJb':u.ous ."Ink Spots"
9:00 PM TIL 2:30 AM JANUARY 22 THRU f.EBRUARY 3

$531.6 ·billion budget given congress today
WASHINGTON tAP) lion and includes a deficit of a slower pace than last year, of the 1980 presidenti a l
- President Carter today sent $29 billion . It sets aside $2:5 he said .
election year and he may be
Congress a "lean and billion to be paid to American
"We must reduce the held accountable by his party
austere" budget lor 1980 that workers
as
inflation growt h of total federal and voters on whether it does
he said will increase outlays insurance in 1980, if Congress spending while protecting the what he promises it will .
for. defense and the poor while approves.
security of our nation and the
Battle lines already- were
helping to throttle the
Spending would be eqilal ,to well-being o! the American being drawn between those
government's
voracious $2,416.85for every American . people," Carter said in a -...who feel the budget will not .
appetite for spending.
The current 1979 budget message to Congress. '
slow•federal spending enough
But there are controversial provides for spending of
But the president did not and those who think it goes
cuts in jobs programs and a . $493.4 billon and a deficit of repeat his past promises to too far .
·
freezing of other programs $37.4 billion.
balance the budget by 19a!,
Sen. William Roth , R-Del.,
for states and cities that are
Carter said his 1980 budget, saying only that h e will · said "To describe Carter's
certain to cause problems lor Jor the fiscal year beginning " achieve a balanced budget budget as lean is like looking
Carter within his own next Oct. 1, emphasizes as soon . as economic at the package o! bacon in the
Democratic Party . The spending restraint and conditions permit. " The 1980 supermarket -you don't see
administration also decUned fighting inflation and makes ·deficit will be the 19th in the the fat until you open the
to make a commitment to "the federal dollar work last 2tl years.
package." ·
continue revenuesharing harder and better." It also
The budget is important
But Sen. Edward M .
beyond 1980,
ensure
continued politically for Carter since it Kennedy , D-Mass., a possible
will
The bldget totals $531.6 bll- economic growth, although at will be in effect during most challenger to Carter for the

Committee
will hear
PUCOchief
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The chairman of the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
is scheduled to brief the ·
House Utilities Committee
'l'llesday night on utility rate
regulation.
Rep. Ronald H. James, !).
Proctorville, said the committee will listen tD PUCO
Chairman
C.
Luther
Heckman as members try to ,
prepare themselves to bandle
utility legislation.
Utilites should receive a
fair rate of return on their investment, but consumers
should pay no more than they
absolutely have to pay,
James said.
"It has to be a delicate balance/' he added.
Heckman is only one of several experts who will appear
during coming weeks before
the new panel, which was
established in the ll3th
General Assembly by tbe
House leadership,
the
chairman said.
The
committee
will
primarily listen tD problems
at first, rather than consider
major legislation, James
said .
"For the next three or lour
weeks, we are going to have
different groups in -the consumer's coWJSel, the utilities
themselves - and we want to
get
someone
from
Washington to explain what
effect (he new National
Energy Policy Act is going tD
have," James said.
One measure that will
eventually come before tbe
committee is a bill sponsored
by James to eliminate tbe
embattled fuel ·adjustment
clause. Under that clause, tbe
cost of the utilities' fuel
automatically is passed along
to consumers.
Four years ago, James

sponsored a measW'e that put
the adjustment clause into
statutory law lor the first
time, although utilities had
been using it in practice for
many years.
"Actually, my bill was an
attempt to put regulations on
the fuel adjustment clause,"
James said.
The utilities, however, have
not been restricted as a result
of the bill, he said.
When the companies began
charging customers higher
priCes for power purchased
from other companies, "that
was the straw that broke the
camel's back," the Lawrence
COunty lawmaker said.
Utilities have· complained
bitterly about possible
elimination of the' fuel
adjustment clause, claiming
such a move would devalue
their bonds and thus damage
their ability to meet
demands, James said.
But West Virginia repealed
its fuel adjustment clause
about a year ago and tbe
utilities have not been burt,
·
be said.
In the long run, there is no
doubt customers will have to
pay for the fuel used by tbe
utilities, he said.
But instead of passing such
costs along automatically, he
said the companies would
have to come before the
utilities commission for
approval at regular rate
increase hearings.
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
established the new Utilities
Committee this yeaf because
of the growing number of
utility measures being
introduced in the Hou5e.
Most of the bills point to unrest among the lawmakers
over rate-making policies of
,Ohio's utilities.

.---Nationwise____,
Seven perish in arson fire

1978 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

This 1 2 ton tru r k is eQui pped with an
crono mi c ilt 6 en gine, stilndi'lrc1
tr onsmission , tong wide bed, r ear
st ep 11umper, .=~ nd rro(ir s liding glass .
On ly 7-t 0-0 miles

T he G .M . surccss c.1r . Fin i'ihcct in

pulit'l' rcportt·d .

During
the meeting,
presided over by Rod Karr,
commander, plan s were
made for presenting classroom flags to representatives
of the Eastern and Meigs
Local School Districts on
Feb. 6.
Following a report by Don
HWUlel on the Pomeroy youth
summer baseball program,
the post agreed to purchase
_
one uniform.
A project was pla1111ed for
the "gifts for t)Je Yanks who
gave" program and membership was reported at 320.
Reported ill w.ere Joe
Zwilling and Leonard Jewell.
The financial report as
given by Charles Swatzel was
approved and refreshments
were served.

•7495

NOW

Thi s ') Dr model is chnmpi'lgnC' out
sic1c with co ntrn st iny vi nyl buc k e t
S('n fs Equipped wi 1h .J spccct. i1i r
contft.. anc! AM FM r ~dio .. Priced il l

Th is tru ck ve r sion is ex tra cl eAn tn
si df' rl nd ou t . EQuipped with
automa ti c t ra nsmission , power
steering, powN brilkes, an d R flllyc
wheels with r adia l t ires .
Pr i ced to Sell .

dustrial suburb Friday.
killing 17 and injuring :15,

commanders and trustees
arc being asked to attend as
well as other post members
who might be interested in
the plaMed improvements.
All persons planning to
attend the dinner are asked to
contact Paul Casci so that the
proper amount of food can be
prepared .
·

• 1978 TRANS AM

1978 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO

12, 080

. I'UMEHU Y - A dinner
n~ccting to •discuss proposed
improvem ents to the po~t
home wsa set for Jan . 30
when Drew Webster Post 39,
Amerlcan Legion , met in
reg ular sc~sion.
According to plans made
for the di~ner session. past

PONTIAC

Smith Bu·ick - Pontiac
SiPrra gold

A I~K·umuth t·slammcd intu
a bus filled with fllnl·
muh·rs en ruutc to Uwlr
fadur) jobs in an in--

APPEARING .NIGH.TL Y
MONDAY THRU .SATURDAY

Your Quality Used Car
Dealership ....
1978 CHEV. MAliBU 2 D~.

Improvements on Jan. 30th legion agenda

M E XICO ( 'IT\ 1•\1' 1 -

."!
DWI ,
opc ratmg a motor vuha:lc
without a license. Cloneh was
Jined $400, plus a one year
sentence, all l&gt;ut 10 days
suspended.
Waiving $22 on charges of
.failure to drsplay a valid
registration. was Donn~e D.
Evans, 2\J, Sandyv.llle ,. \1 . Va.
Vernon L. Fa~rch1ld, 19,
Thurman, was lined $15 on
charges of left of center. '
Waiving $27 on charges of
operating an unsafe motor
vehi cle wa s Thomas A.
Buttrick, 53, ~allipolis:
Gerald M. Gee, 19, Bidwell,
was lined $15 on charges. of
fa1lure to display license
plates.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of excessive speed
were Barry P . Rothlem, 30,
Kettering, $23; Wesley
Dobbs, 33, Jasper, Mo., $26 ;
Billy N. Mullins, 2a,
Ewington , $23; and Donald
W. Saxon, 26, Gallipolis, $23.

charge ;

-

N.O RESERVATIONS- PLEASE .

---COMING ATTRACtiONS·---.

.

.

,

. I

(FEBRUARY 5 THRU FEBRUARY 17·) _.

Nationally Known- "THE DRIFTERS"
(FEBRUARY 19 thru MARCH 3)

JOHN RODGERS _
FORMER LEAD SINGER WITH '1HE PlAITERS"

UPP.ER DECK
AT THE PT. PLEASANT INN

The Entertainment and Dining
Spot of The Area

Galli oils
•''

JERSEY CITY, N. J. ( AP) - Seven persons,
includng a mother and her five children, were killed
early today in a tenement fire ·that wsa deliberately
set, a uthoritles said. ·
·
Victims were seen rapping on a window shortly
before firefighters arrived, but apparently we~e .
overcome when they tried to reach a fire escape, said
Deputy Chief Dominick Cardillo. It was the second
fatal apartment ~ilding fire in New Jersey in three
days. At least 19 persons were killed early Saturday in
a fire at Hoboken, which authorities also suspect was
caused by arson.

Homicide charges dropped
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) - TWo charges of
vehicular homicide against a Columbus man have been
dismissed, apparently because of a mix.up in a request
lor a continuance of the case.
In dismissing the charges against Glen Frame, 45,
Butler County Common Pleas Judge Henry Bruewer
noted that Frame had not been brought to trial within
90 days as required by law. Records did not indincate
Frame asked for a continuan&lt;;e that was granted last
November.

Oumge could hurt GSA probe
WASHINGTON
( AP)
The
Carter
administration's apparent decision to replace the head
of the General Services Administration could seriously
harm the examination of corruption at the scandalplagued agency, a top investigator says.
Irwin Borowski~ the agency's general counsel, said
&amp;inday that ousting GSA Administrator Jay Solomon
would undermine confidence in the corruption
investigation that Solomon helped launch.

Wants

co~ssional probe

CLEVELAND (AP)- Mayor Dermis J. Kucinich
heads for Washington today, reportedly trying to get a
congressional investigation into the r-ole ph!yed by at
least ooe bank in Cleveland's fiscal crisis. Kuclnleh
would not cooflrm the published report that he planned
to meet with members of congressional . banking
oversight committees during his Wuhin~on ylsit. ·

r/

n e mo crati c presidential
nomination; says the budget
is "seri ously defective ,"
alleging that those who can
lea st afford it are bearing the
brunt of the spendi ng ·
restraint .
Carter said his budget
slows \he growth in federal
spending to 7.7 percent in
1980, down from an avera~e
annual increase of 12.1
percent during the period
from ' 1973 through 1978. The
19ao increase is only 0.7
percent after discounting for
a 7 percent inflation rate.
Spending would be $12.6 billion lower than if federal pro·
grams had continued to grow
at the same levels as before,

•

e
(USPS 145·960) ·

the administration said .
The budget includes a llfe·
viously allocated $6.9 billion
for the · revenue-sharing
program for state and local
governments, but it said no
decision has been made about
continuing the program after
J9aO . Any attempt to
dismantle revenue sharing
· would be certain to invite new
c'Onflict with mayors and
local government~executives
already unhappy with Carter .
Treasury Secret0ry W, Michael Blumenthal said tbe
administration " has not yet
made a decision on whether
and in what way it will be
carried forward ," although
he added that revenue

•

enttne

at y

· VOL NO. XXIX NO. 195

sharing probably will be than 3 pyrcent even after
continued " in some way. "
discounting the effects of
The budget holds out the . inflation.
possibility of a pew round of
Among t he sharpest cuts
tax reductions in 1981 are 160,000 public service jobs
possibly including a rollback for a savings of $535 million.
in Social Security taxes . Some trimming of .Social
programs
is
Blumenthal told reporters it Security
would be " very risky '' to proposed to reduce outlays by
enact a new tax cut any $600 million initially and
sooner because that could Congress might not approve.
worsen inflation .
Congress, which has its
1980 , own
budget-m a king
Re venue s
for
including tax receipts, are procedures , could make
estimated at $502.6 billion, up substantia l changes in the
Carter budget. However , the
from $456 billion in 1979.
As expected, the biggest in- new Congress is expected to
crease in the 1980 budget is be · more conservat ive than
for . defense, with outlays the last, and it seems more
rising $10.8 billion to $122.7 likely it would cut spending
1Continued on page 10 1
billion, an increase of more

15 CENTS

MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1979

Hearing underway for
C&amp;SOE's rate increase

· POLITICAL FIGURE DEAD - George A. Meinhart,
77, Middleport, a well-known Meigs County politic~! figure
for a number of years died Saturday in Grove C1ty. Mr.
Meinhart served as Meigs County Recorder for 16 years
and was Meigs County's Representative to the General
Assembly lor 14 years. He also served as a Middleport
Village Councilman in Ia ter years. Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m . Tuesday at the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home .

Fire run was
near disaster
.

A fire run into the Dexter
area by the Pomeroy Fire
Department Saturday night
was near disaster.
The department was called
to the home of Caryl Tyler,
Route I, Dexter. Tyler had
been hospitalized and was
staying with a relative. Heat
and IJ&lt;IWer to the home had
been turned off for that

reason.
Enroute to the scene,
Pomeroy truck 1 skidded on
icy roads and spun around in
the road. It took some time to
get the truck turned around
and headed in the right
direction Again due to .t he ice,
the narrow road and a ditch.
Meantime, the department's
second truck could not get
past to go on to the fire.
Adding to the woes, Fire
Chief Charles Legar driving
to the scene ins his car
skidded on the ice and came
to rest with the front of his
car hanging over an embankment lacing a stream of
water.
Unable to move because
the weight change might
cause the car to go over the
· drop, Chief Legar sUmmoned
help via radio. A wrecker
finallY. pulled him and the

.

·•

Columbus &amp; Southern "to tell . question ed the reasons
us whether the company is du ring a news conference
making prudent decisions Saturday . ·
" Why does a company that
and usjng its funds wisely ."
Columbus &amp; Southern filed has received four rate ina request last November for a creases in the last five years
$63.6 million emergency rille need a 25 percent emergency
increase as part pf a $126 increase .and a 50 percent
million rate hike the com- hike in its permanent rates ?"
pan y will seek in early Spratley asked. '
Spratley said the amount of
March.
the
emergency request
Commission hearing s On
the emergency request will should be reduced by as much
as $43 million. The company
begin Monday.
Spratley said his office has needs no more than $26.9
million m increased revenue
determined Columbus Southern ha s a financial to meet the emergency , he
em er genc y,
but
he added.
Spr atley's position was
outlined in testimony by J . K.
Madan, a financial analyst ·
and engineer with Touche
Ross &amp; Co., was fil ed with the

Northeast struggles,
17 die in accidents
"

By The Associated Pr.ess
Gov. Ella Grasso declared
The Northeast struggled to- a state of emergency in Conday to deal with flooding n~cticut, where more than 4
spawned by heavy weekend inches of rain fell in some
vehicle from the precarious rains . Families in three
sections in a 12-hour period .
position after a one-half states were forced to flee
The business districts in
hour's wait.
tl1eir homes, and air, auto Stanford and Millar&lt;! were
The two-story Tyler home and rail traffic were tangled under waisthigh water .
was destroyed by the lire in the storm .
Scores of drivers were
with fosses set at $10,000.
At least 17 persons were trapped in their autos.
Investigation as to the cause killed in weather-related
One woman drowned in
is being continued. There was accidents, and the rain Stanford when the car she
no insurance.
transformed some highways·· was riding in skidded into a
into rivers in the populous flooded railroad viaduct.
The mobile home of Mr . Northeast corridor from Three others died in an auto
and Mrs. George Markin and Virginia
through
Mas- crash .
all of the family's personal sachusetts.
About 30 families were
belonging s were destroyed in
The region had braced for a forced tD leave their homes in
a fire at 5:58a.m. monday at taste of the heavy snow which .Stanford due tD rising flood
the residence on Route 554 battered the Midwest last waters. Similiar evacuations
. near Kyger.
week, but warm ocean air were ordered in several other
Middleport firemen were turned the snow into sleet and coastal communities near the
on the scene until well after 9 rain as temperatures climbed New York metropolitan area .
a.m. Monday. A smoke Sunday into the 40s and 50s.
In Lodi, N.J., the Saddle
detector was credited with . New York City reported a River crested at 9 feet - 4
saving t,/Je Jives of Mr. and high of 54 degrees before the feet above flood stage Mrs. Markin and their small temperature started to drop forcing 200 people from their
son. Monetary loss and cause later in the day.
homes.
were not established this
Two hundred persons fled
Heavy log enveloped New
morning .
their homes in the Boston York's LaGuardia Airport,
Persons wishing to con- suburb of Chelsea Sunday closing it lor ~vera! hours.
tribute clothing to the family alter more than 2\2 inches of There were delays at Newark
are asked to take it to Mid· steady rain . Subways shut and KeMedy airports.
dleport Village Hall. The down between Cambridge; '
Two supersonic Concorde
sizes are : infant, 4 shirt, size Mass., and Boston as water airliners from London were
3 pants and size a shoes; seeped into tunrels.
diverted to Philadel phia
ladies: 38-42 blouse; 15-16
cut International Airport
The
downpour
slacks ; 8-8'~ shoes; 'man's electrical service, and Boston because of the log· in New
clothing : large or extra large Edison reported po;wer York. Another Concorde
shirt, 40-32 trousers and size a outages io the South End and landed at Windsor Locks,
shoes.
Roxbury sections of the city. Conn.
Two youths drowned in
More than 3\2 inches of rain
Ware, Mass., when they went drenched New York City in
snowmobiling in the freezing Jess than 24 hours, baiting
slush and their vehicle broke subway lines in Manhallan
and Brooklyn and closing
was cornered on East Second through ice on a poild.
some of the city's major
St. , and surrendered. By this
expressways.
time, Mrs . Russell had
MEETS TUESDAY
At least live persons died
arrived and her pocketbook
The Meigs Area Holiness
on
Virginia's ice-slicked
was returned.
wiJJ
meet
Association
Mrs . Russell had been Tueday·, Jan. 23, at the highways. Two others were
when
a
taken · to in front of the Middleport Church of the electrocuted
Elberfeld Department Store Nazarene. 'l)le Rev. Dale transformer short-circuited,
by her daughter, Mrs. Ron Bass, pastor of the Syracuse electrifying · their mobile
Reynolds, Who said she IJ.ad Church of the Nazarene, wiU home .
Winds of up to 38 mph felled
been afraid lor her mother to bring the message. The
go out Saturday afternoon service is at 7:30 p.. m The power Unes in South Carolina.
Snow and sjeet lingered in
because of the ice not public is invited.
realizing that she would
;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::::::
encounter the purse problem .
WEDNESDAY SESSION
twO DISTRICTS OUT
Mrs. Reynolds was parking
The Eastern Board of
Due
to a 3·ineh snowfall
the car ·when her mother Education wiU meet Wedovernight
, schools of the
encountered the purse thief. nesday at 7:;!0 instead of
Meigs
Local
and South~rn
Riffle, who is jailed on Tuesday as was scheduled. ·
Local
School
Districts
were
charges of .petty theft, was
In
the
closed
again
Monday
.
looking in the window when
SERVICES SET
the
high
Eastern
District,
Mrs. Russell arrived.
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F. and
school and junior high school,
AUCTION TONIGHT
A.M., will conduct services
located in the ·same building,
Meigs County Isaac Walton lor George A. Meinhart at
were closed, but elementary
League will hold its aMual 7:30 this evening at the
schools were operating.
Funeral ·
auction this evening preceded Rawlings-Coats
·:::;:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:·
by potluck supper at 7 p.m. Home.

Purse _snatcher caught
Purse
snatching
in
. Pomeroy is unheard of - it
was until Saturday afternoon,
that is.
However, the first incident
was brought to a screaming
halt at once by the quick
action of the victim, the
Pomeroy Police Department
and helpful people.
Freda
Russell,
Mrs.
Pomeroy, had just .started to
enter the front door of
Elberfelds when her purse
was grabbed from her ann .
Mrs. Russell is ao years old
and was discharged from a
hospital only a week ago .
However, these were not
·.
discharging !actors.
Mrs. Russell ran up East
Main St., after the man 1'/hO
had ripped off her pocket·
book. Upon sbouting for help
as she ran, several persons
joined the chase. The man,
Robert Riffle, 21 , Pomeroy,

By The Associated Press
avoid the threat of default.
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) Consu mer
groups,
Hearings began to(lay before however,, have accused
the Public Utilities Com· Columbus &amp; Southern ofmission on a $6~ million ficials o! mismanagement,
emergency r3te lnc~ease contending the company has
request by Columbus &amp; built more power plants than
Southern Ohio Electric Co. .it needs.
lf approved, the 25 percent
Meanwhile , the state 's
increase would take effect in consumer counsel wants tc;.
March fo r Columbus &amp; know if Columbus &amp; Southern
Southern's 441 ,000 customers. Ohio Electric Co. is efThe request for the ficiently managed.
emergency rate boost is part
Co nsumers ' Counsel
of an overall $126 million rate WilliamS. Spratley has asked
increase · p3ckage the com· the Public Utilities Company is seeking .
mission of Ohio to require a
audit
of
Company officials said the management
additional money is needed to

Maine, New Hampshire and
Vermont today , hampering
driving
already
made
hazardous by Sunday 's
freezing rain . More than a
foot o! snow was expected
today in Maine.
Meanwhile,
in
the
Southwest, as many as 700
families at tbe Navajo Indian
reservation in northeast
Arizona were trapped in hipdeep mud and water following four days of rain and
the collapse o! two earthen
dams. Authorities said tbe
National Guard was bringing
supplies to the stricken tribe
by helicopter.

Suspect taken
~uring routine

traffic check
A routine patrol investigation ended Saturday
with a Rt. I, Reedsville man
being taken into custody.
Sheriff James J . Prollitt
reports deputies on routine
patrol Saturday came upon a
vehicle in a ditch on SR 24a,
approximately one mile west
of Sand Hill Cemetery Road.
Wh en deputies ran the
driver's name through the
computer they learned that
Carl L. Smith, · ~ . Rt. I,
Reedsville, was wanted by
Athens County sheriff's
department for contempt of
court.
Smith was taken into
custody and was transported
to the Athens-Meigs County
line where he was turned over
to Athens County sheriff to
lace court action in Athens.
Saturday at a:50 a .m .
Dallas A. McGuire, Vance
Road, Rt .' 1, Langsville,
pulled into the parking lot at
Small's Grocery, lost control
on the ice and struck the store
building .
The building Is owned by
Michael Smnll, Rt. I, Dexter.
No citation was issued.

commission Friday .

Madan disagreed will) the
electric company's revenue
·and expe11se projections for
this year. He pointed out
so me of the
revenue
projections are too low and
some expense projections are
too high .
Consequently, the company
is requesting more than it
actually needs, Madan said.
Columbu s &amp; Southern's
emerg e n cy

r eq uest

also

exceeds the inflationary
guidelines established by the
President 's Council on Wage
&amp; Price Stability, Spratley
said.
The co uncil recommended
that price increases do not
exceed 9.5 percent.
Spratley said he has yet to
receive a reply to several
letters he has written COlU)Cil
chairman Alfred Kahn asking .
lor a clarification of the
guidelines. Spratley, · in t~e
letters, also asked Kahn to
inform the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio of the •
need for utility companies to
comply with the standards.

Five die
on Ohio
highways

By Tbe Associated Press
Five persons were killed in
live separate accidents on
Ohio's roadways ·Over the
weekend, according to the
state Highway Patrol. No
deaths
were
r eported
Sunday , despite hazardous
road conditions in many parts
of the state.
The patrol counts traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday
until.midnight Sunday.
The dead :
SATURDAY
MEDINA - Thomas Blum,
27, of West Salem, in a onecar accident on Ohio 18 in
Medina County .
ASHTABULA Russell
Parker, 21, of Ashtablta; on
Ohio 49 in Ashtabula County .
ATTICA - Charles Bell
Jr. , 23, of Adair, Okla., in a
trucktrain collision oo U.S.
224 in Seneca County.
DELAWARE - EdwardA.
Marston , 21, of De!aware, in a
Partly cloudy tonighi With two-car a~cident on U.S. 42 in
a lOw near 20. Snow changing · Delaware County.
to rain Tuesday with a high in
FRIDAY NIGHT
the low to mid 40s. The TROTWOOD' - Elmer Mor·
chance of precipitation is 20 gan, 34, of Daytori, in a onepercent tonight and 60 per- car accident on a Trotwood
city street.
cent Tuesday .

Weather

'

~

�~- I he 1&gt;ally :.emmet

2- The DatlySentmel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Jan 22 1979

ETTA

~woom. ~ la£6~

HI/4.\'1\E

E A 'TV

N

Donald F Graff

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Freedom for whom?
By Doa Graff

No time for participation
WASHINGTON (NEA l
When he was rwmmg for
prestllent Jtmmy Carter was especially outspoken about
the fa ct that the American people have been excluded
from the process of evolvmg and conswrunatmg our
foretgn pohcy
But now that he s ensconced m the Whtte House Carter
has enthustastlcally embraced the unnecessary secrecy
he once so VIgorously deplored m his rece'!_t predecessors
conduct of mternatlonal affairs
The most recent - and undoubtedly most blatant example of Carters abandonment of hts pos1t10n was his
unilateral dectston to extend dtplomallc recogmtwn to the
People s Repubhc of Chma and the concurrent Withdrawal
That mlttallve was revealed only after 11 had become fa1t
accomph wtlhout any pnor notification to etther the
electorate or Congress and wtth vtrtuaUy no opportumty
for any form of pubhc or political debate m the two weeks
between the December 15 diSclosure and the January I
effective date of the agreement
As the Whtte House repeatedly notes m Its defense
restoratiOn of dtplomattc relatwns beween Washmgton and
Pekmg probably has been mevttable ever smce President
Richard M N1xon VISited m February 1972 and s1gned the
Shanghai Conunumque
Moreover normahzatton of relations between the two
nations IS a long-overdue development that holds the
promtse of pohtlcal economtc and dtplomattc benef1ta for
both countnes The 1ssue however IS not what Carter d1d
but rather how he dtd 1t
It certamly 1s not entirely by colnctdence that the
prestdent s announcement came at a tune when the 95th
Congress had adJourned and the 96th Congress was not
scheduled to convene for another month
That tumng coupled wtth the exceptionally hasty
schedule for tmplementalton effectively precluded any
debate on the 1ssue wtthm the legislatiVe branch of

government
In terms of Carters personal and poliltcalrrwntles the
tlffietable was a stroke of gen1us He stll bears some
wounds from the full scale Senate debate on the Panama
Canal trealtes and th1s year must endure an even more
brutstng Senate struggle over rattftcabon of the SALT II
treaty w1th the Sov1et Umon
Confronted by countless other domestic and mterna
twnaltssues that are both d1ff1eult to resolve and threaten
to erode an already weak base of support the pres1dent
understandably sought to mmtmtze the controversy over
Chma
But m allowmg those tactical constderatwns to dommate
the dectston makmi process Carter grossly abused- and
probably destroyed - h1s stated principles on public
noltftcatwn and parttclpatmg m the shapmg of mterna
!tonal poltcy
The most eloquent expostbon of those prmc1ples IS
contamed m a March~976 speech before the Chicago
Council on Foretgn Relattons when Carter was especially
crtltcai of then-secretary of State Henry M Kissinger
Our foreign policy 1s bemg evolved In secret, and In 1ta
full details and nuances 1t probably IS known to one man
only candidate Carter sa1d on that occasion
That man IS sk11led at negottalton w1th leaders of other
countnes but far less concerned wtth consultmg the
Amer~can people or thetr representatives In Congress he
added
Carters standard was a high one Our policies should
be shaped w1th the part•c•pa~10n of Congress from the
outset on a bi-partiSan basiS And they should emerge
from broad and well mformed public debate and partlcipa
bon
That approach may Indeed be hopeleBBly naive, but
Carter promoted 1t when he was seekmg the support of the
electorate and has never subsequently disavowed It
Hts recent performance on the other hand merits only
the Ntxon Ktsstnger Memor~al Award for Devious Manipu
Ia IIon

•

The Great Wall
ORDINANCE NO 500
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE

A RESOLUTION to make

appropr at ons

tor

Curren t

Expenses and other Ex
pend tures of th e V llage of
Pomeroo;
State ot Oh o
dur ng the f seal year end ng
December 31 979

Section
1
BE
IT
RESOLVED by the Count
for the V age of Pomeroy
State or Oh o That to pro v de

for the current expenses and
other expend tures of the sad
V llage of Pomeroy dur ng
the f seal
year
end ng
December 31
197 9
the
to ow ng sums be and they
are hereb y set as de and
appropriated as fc ows v z
Sect on 2 That th ere be
appropria ed
from
t he
GENERAL FUND
GENERAL

GOVERNMENTAL
SERVICE
MAYOR

Persona I Serv ces
Tot a For Mayor

S 2 400 00
2 400 00

CLERK CLERK
TREASURER

Personal Serv ces
3 000 00
Tota For Clerk
Clerk Treasurer
3 000 00
TREASURER
Persona I Serv ces
360 oo
Tot a For Treasurer
360 00

SOLICITOR
LEGAL ADVISOR

Personal Serv ces
Total For So l c tor
L ega I Adv sor

3 000 00

Other
Total For Elec t ons

1 000 00
1 000 00

3 000 00

ELECTIONS
COUNCIL

Persona Serv ces
Total

1

••o oo

1 .uo 00

GENERAL
ADMINISTRATION

Persona l Serv ces
Supp es and
Mater a s
Cap tal Outlay
0 he r
Tota l For Genera
Admlnlstrat on
Total For Genera
Government a
Serv ces

6 610 00

1300000
2 000 00
18 000 00
3961000
SO 810 00

SECURITY OF
PROPERTY
POLICE DEPARTMENT
PERSONS AND

Names '•••
in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Liza Mmnelli ts a leg up on the com
petition - m fact two legs up accordmg to Fonun magazme
The magazme says m a story on the The 10 Most Sensous
Patrs of Legs that MISS Mmnelli s rank No 1 They are legs
that epttomtze the beauty of human lunbs the magazme
says
Standmg m Formn s lme after MISS Mmnelli are m order
actresses Angte Dickmson Shirley MacLaine and Jane
Fonda Iemus star Chris Evert ftrst lady Rosalynn Carter
)etsetter BIBnca Jagger golfer Nancy Lopez actress Cheryl
Ladd and former MISs Amertca Bess Myerson
NEW YORK {AP) - Opera supei'Siar Joan Sutherland
hasn t been fired but she won t be singing arias With the Met
ropolttan Opera next season a Met offiCial says
Dav1d Rubm a company spokesman satd a report Sunday m
the New York Dally News that MISS Sutherland hss been
relieved of all pla!Uled forthconung engagements was
very rrusleadmg
That s not true at all he satd We do not have longterm
contracts wtth performers our contracts run season to

season
Rubm satd the Australian soprano w1U not perform at the
Met next year because of a scheduling conflict
We are m negotiations wtth MISS Sutherland for future
years Rubm sa1d There s been no rift we are talkmg
MISs Sutherland appears tomght at Avery Fisher Hall in
concert w1th anqther opera superstar LuCiano Pavarotti
NEW YORK (AP) - Chinese V1ce Prerruer Teng Hsiao-pmg
may get a part m a teleVISion spectal durmg hiS VISit to tbe
Uruted States
Teng and Prestdent Carter are expected to attend a speciBI
program on contemporary Amertcan culture at the Kemedy
Center on Jan 29
'
An Amertcan Entertainment will be broadcast live by the
Public Broadcastmg Service and will mclude scenes from the
Jaffrey Ballet s production of Rodeo and the Broadway
mustcal Euble
The program will be beamed by satellite to China where as
many as 200milllon people may see 11 PBS says
GRAND RAPIDS Mlch (AP) -Former President Gerald
Ford has come to the defense of the Warren Collllllis4ion
In an mtervlew published m Sunday s Grand Rapids Press
Ford sa1d 11 IS 'pure speculation to say Prestdent John F
Kennedy was the target of a consptracy and added that the
ev1dence compiled by tile Warren Commission proves Lee
Harvey Oswald was the assassm
As a congressman Ford was a member of tile comrrusslon
which conclllded that three shots were f1red aU by Oswald
The House assassmallons committee conclllded recenUy on
the basts of acoustical evtdence that a fourth shot came from a
second source
It sutter speculation said Ford We have aU the physical
evidence Thetrs IS pure gpeculahon

BYG~RYCLARK

Ttm Roush 6 I jumor
rPnt.Pr ~corerl tR nomts Rnri
hauled in 12 rebounds to lead
the Wahama Whtte Falcons to
a 62-51 triwnph over the
'lstting Kyger Creek Bobcats
The vtctorv was the second
stratght st home for White
Falcons and left them wtth a 35 record
The bend area team also
avenged an earlier season 61
55 loss to the Bobcats back on
Jan 5 With the win In that
contest the locals converted
one of 10 foul shots whtch was
the major factor In the defeat
However on Saturday mght

whose acerbic w1t drew a companson m tenus of vmtage

of recogmtton from Natlonahst Chma

Personal SeriJ ces
Supp ies and
Materials
Cap tal Out av
Other
Total For Pol ce
Department

65 000 00

30 700 00
7 000 00
3 000 00
105 700 00

PARK METER FUND
(GE N l

Other
3 900 00
Tota tor Park
Meter Fd Gen )
3 900 00
To a For Secur tv
of Persons and
Property
160 410 00
PLANNING

COMMISSION

Other
2 500 00
To a For Plann ng
Comm ss on
2 500 00
Sect on 4 That there be
appropr a ed
from
the

STREET CONSTRUCTION
MAINTENANCE
AND
REPA R FUND !AUTO
LICENSE AND GASOL NE
TAX)
TRANSPORTATION

FACILITIES
STREET DEPT

Persona Se v ces
Supp l es and
Mater als
cap tal Outlay
Other
Tota l For Stree t
Pavin g

30 000 00

15 500 00
1 500 00
10 000 00
57 000 00

STATE HIGHWAY
DEPARTMENT

Persona Serv ces
Other
Total For State
H ghway

2 000 00
J 000 00

5 000 00

PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICES
CEMETERY
OPERATION AND
MAINTENANCE

Personal Serv ces
Supp es and
Mater a s
Total For Cemetery
Operat on and
Maintenance
Total For Cemetery
Fund

13 000 00
3 000 00

15 000 00
1500000

DISTRIBUTION
OF ELECTRICITY
UTILITY

Other
23 000 00
Total For E te ctr c
(L ,ght l (Re'w'enuel

Fund

23 00000

Sect on 9 That there be
appropr ated
from
the

WATER
FUND

(REVENUE)

W~TER

DlSTRIBUTION

Personal SeriJ ces
36 000 00
Suppl es and
Mater 11 s
30 000 00
7 000 00
Cap tat Outlay
Other
21 000 00
Total For water
System Operation 9.4 000 00

ADMINISTRATION
-WATER

Personal Sent ces
700 OD
Deb service
84 532 22
Total For Adm n strat on

- w81er

85

532 22

Total For Waler
(Revenue ) Fund 119 532 22
Sect on 10 That there be
appropr a ted
from
the

SEWER(REVENUE)FUND
SEWER
MAINTENANCE
Personal Serv ces
Supp es and
Mater a s
Total For Sewer
Ma ntenilnce

11 500 00

20 000 00
31 50000

•

ADMINISTRATION

FtNANCIAL REPORT

Cap tal Ou tla y
3.4 BOO 00
Tota l F or Adm n strat on
s ewage
34 800 oo
Tota l F or Sewer
(Revenue) Fund
66 300 00
Sec on 13 That he e be
appropr ated
fro m
the
GENERAL
BOND

Orange Townsh•P
Me gs County
Rt 2 Cool\' tile Oh o
Januarv 16 1979
cer fy the fc lo w ng
eport to be co recr
N na Rob nson
•
Townsh p C erk
Te No 6149753869

- SEWAGE

RE T REMENT F UND

Payment o Pr nc pa 7 000 00
Payment of n erest 2 625 00
Tota Fo Genera
Bond Ret rement
F und
9 625 00
Sect on 15 Tha there be
appropriated
from
th e

FEDERAL

REVENUE

SHAR lNG FUND
lap tal Outlay
19 200 00
Other
3 900 00
To at For Feder a
Revenue Shar ng
Fund
23 00 00
Sect on 6 That there be
appropr a ed from the F t R E

DEPARTMENT FUND
FIRE DEPT

Personal Serv ces
4 000 00
Supp es and
Mater a s
7 500 00
Other
3 720 00
Total F or F re
Dept
5 220 00
TOTAL ALL
APPROPR l ATIONS
556 687 n
Sect on 17 And the V llage
C erk Is hereby author zed to
dra\IV hts warran s on th e
V age
Tr easure
for
payments from any of the
forego ng
appropr a t ons
upon rece v ng proper cer
t f cates
and
vouchers
therefo
approved by the
board or off cers au hor zed
by aw to app r ove the same
or an ordnance or resol ution
of counc I to make the ex
pend lures prov ded th at no
warrants shall be drawn or
pa d for sa tar. es or wages
except to persons emp oycd
bY author tv of and n ac
cordance w th law or or
d n ance Prov ded furtt)er
tha t the appropr a ons tor
con t ngenc es can onl y be
ex pended upon appea l ot two
h rds vote of Council for
ems of expense cons u ng
a !ega I obi ga on aga nst the
v t age
and for purposes
other than hose cover ed by
the
other
spec t c ap
propr a ons here n made
Sect on 18 Th s esolu t on
shall take effect a
the
earl es per od a owed by

law

Pa ssed
At est

Jan 15

OF TOWNSHIPS

SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES RECEIPTS
AND E~PENDITURES

Ba ance Jan I 1978
Genera l Fund
344656
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
499282
~ &lt;~87 34
Gasol neT ax Fund
F re Protect on
Fund
79 ~4
Fede ra Revenue
Sha r ng Fund
2 220 82
To a s
1522698
Total Rece tpts
Genera Fund
tt 9 516 18
Motor Veh cle L cense
Tax Fund
7 357 73
Gasol ne Tax F und
13 376 00
Road and Br dge
Fund
2 22 .43
F r e Pro ect on
Fund
2 068 02
Fede at Revenu e
Sharng Fu nd
353800
Totals
38 077 36
Tor a 1 R ecetp1S &amp;
Balances
Genera Fund
2 962 74
Mo or Veh c e L cense
Tax Fund
2 350 55
Gasol ne Ta x Fund
17 863 34
Road and Br tlge
Fund
2 22 1 43
F re Protec on
Fund
2 147 46
Federa Revenue
Shar ng Fund
5 758 82
Tola s
55 304 34
Expend tures
Genera l Fu nd
9 169 93
Motor Veh cl e L censt:
Tax Fund
7 20 9 72
Gasol ne Tax Fund
1.4 07 62
Road and Bridge
Fund
93 80
F re Pro eel on
Fund
205875
Federa l Revenue Shar ng
Fun d
5 702 32
To a ls
39 44 14
ea a nee De c 31 1978
Gene ral Fund
3 792 81
Motor Veh c e L cense
Tax F und
5 40 83
Gasol ne Tax Fund
3 79 1 72
Road and Br dge
Fund
1 289 63
F re Prolec on
F und
8B 71
Federal Revenue
Shar ng Fu nd
56 50
Tota ls
14 60 20

CASH BALANCE
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND

979

Jane Walton
C er k of Counc
H D Brown Jr
Pres dent of
Counc I
CERTIFICATE
Sec on 5705 39 R c
No
appropr a on measure sha ll
become effect ve unt there
sf l edw th the app op at ng
author ly by the county
aud tor a cert f cate that the
total appropriat ons from
each fund taken together
w h a
other outs and ng
appropr at ons do no exceed
su c h off cal es t mate or
amended off cal est mate
When the approprlat on does
not exceed such off ca l
est mate the coun v aud tor
sha ll g ve suc h cer t f cate
forthw h upon rece 1t1 ng
from
t he
appropr at ng
author y a cert fed copy of
lhe appropr a on measu e

The Sta te of Oh o Me gs
county ss
1 Jane wa ton c erk of he
V llage of Pom eroy n sad
County and n whose custody
th e F l es
Journa l s and
Records are requ red by the
Laws or the State of Oh o to be
kep
do he r eby certify that
the forego ng Annua
Ap
propr at on Reso uton
s
taken and copes from the
or gnat Reso tut on now on
f lew th sa d v Jlage that the
foregoing Resolut on has
been compared by me w th
the sa d or g nat and that the
same s a true and co rr ect
copy thereof
W tness my s gnature this
5th day of January 1979
Jane Wa ton
Clerk of the
V llage of
Pomeroy
Me gs Cou n y Oh o
1 22 29 21c

\

HARASSMENT TACTIC
GRAFTON Ohio (AP) Midvlew School Superln
tendent John Beatty says a
sex dlscrbnination complaint
filed by teachers over
coaches salaries Is nothing
more than a harassment
tactic '
Beatty said Friday the pay
schedules were part of a twoyear contract recently accepted by the Midv1ew
Education Association
The biggest variation In
Midvlew s salary schedules Is
In basketbaU where the head
coach for boys receives S1 274
a year In addition to his
teachers pay and the girls
coach gets $882 extra

General Fund
Balance Jan 1 1978 3 446 56
Rec:etpts
Gen era Property T ax
Rea Es a e and
Tra ler (Gross J
3 125 48
Tang ble Personal Proper y
Tax (Gross)
48 02
Esta e Tax
Gross)
27 5~
Local Government an d
3 233 07
State ncome Tax
L quor Perm Fees
99 38
C gare e L cense Fees
and F nes Gr oss
93 74
ntang b es
2 898 95
Total Rece pts
9 516 18
Total Beg nn ng Balance
P us Rece pts
12 962 74
EM pend lures
Total Expend tur es
- Ad m n s ratlve 7 746 13
- Town Ha Is Memor a t
Bu d ngs &amp;nd
125 00
Grounds
606 90
- Ceme er es
691 90
- L ght ng
G and Total Exp
Genera Fund
9 169 93
3 792 81
Ba
Dec 31 1978
Tota Exp Plus Sal
12 962 74
Oec 31 1978
Motor Veh cle L cense
Ta x Fund
Ba ance Jan 1 1978 4 992 82
Rece pts
Mo tor Vehl c e L cense
Tax
733849
19 24
Oth er
Tot a Rece pts
7 357 73
Tot a Beg nn ng Balance
Plus Rece pts
12 350 SS
Expenditures
Tot a Expend lures
- M scett aneous
7 2()9 72
Grand Total Exp
- Motor Veh cle L cense
Tax Fund
7 209 72
Ba 1 Dec :n 1978
-s 1.40 83
Tot a Exp Pus Bat

Dec 31 1978

12 350 55

Gasoline Tax Fund
jan 1 19]8
4~873.4
ReC:e1pts
Gaso l neT ax
3 200 00
Other
176 00
Total Rece pts
13 376 00
To at Beg nnlng Balance
Plus Rece pts
l1 863 34
Expenditures
Total Expend fures
- M scellaneous
6 715 57
- Ma ntenar}ce
7 356 05
Grand To a Exp Gasol neT ax ~ und
4 OH 62
Bat

Sal Dec 31 1978

3 791 72

Total Exp P us Ba
17 863 34
Dec 31 1978
Road and Bridge Fund
Total Rece pts
2 221 43
Expenditures
Total Expend lures
M scellaneous
931 80
Grand Tb a Exp Road and Br doe
Fund
931 80
Bal Dec 31 1978
1 289 63
To at Exp P us Ba
2 221 43
Dec 31 1978
F re Protection Fund
Balance jan 1 1978
79 44
Receipts
Gene a t Property Tax
R eal Estate and
Tra er ! Gross&gt;
2 068 02

.

To a t R ece pis
2 068 02
Total Beg nn ng Balance
Pus Rece pis
2 147 46
Expend tures
contrac s
2 0 s 00
0 her E )( pen ses
43 75
Tota!Exp
205875
Ba
Dec 3
978
88 71
Total Exp Plus Bat
2 147 46
Dec 31 978
Federal ReHnue
Sharmg Fund
Bi'l
Jan
978
2 220 82
Rece1pts
Grants F eder a
3 538 00
Tot a ReGe pts
3 538 00
Tot a Beg nn ng Balance
PIU S Rece pts
5 758 82
Expend tures
Mamt and Opera! on
Supp l es
5 702 32
Tot a Exp
5 702 32
Ba
Dec 31 978
56 50
Tola Exp Plus Ba
5 758 82
Dec 31 1978
( ) 22

1c

The Dally Sentmel
SP~

t

145-960

e ..
~

-r-

...,._m-

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
DAVID BUSKIRK

and durabthty between the last-c1ted structure and herself
durtng a recent appearance on the estlma ble televiSion
program 60 Mmutes
It was a lively 1nterv1ew ranging over a long career and
related subjects m the course of wh1ch the actress
delivered herself of a one word review of current mov1es
filth She also had a suggestiOn for dealmg wtth the
s•tuabon whtch constdenng the way decisions have been
gomg of late made her sound hke promtsmg malertal for
the Supreme Court
They say Oh no censorship No no - freedom of the
press
she observed The hell w1th that' They ve got to
do somethmg
Well
Everyone ts entitled to an opmton of course and there ••
undoubtedly a large body of 1! out there 1n vtewerland
whtch would agree emphatically w1th thts one Am1d all the
sex and vtolence m ftbns these days 11 s not easy to detect
the occaswnal redeemmg soetal value
How to deal wtth the sttuahon IS another matter
however and one on whtch there may be a considerable
difference of opm10n Who for example are they who
must do something Congress' The courts' Federal or
local law-enforcement authorities' A spectal agency'
The mov1e mdustry ~s not unfamlltar wtth the subject
The Hays Offtce was a power m Hollywood durmg the 30s
Whtle durmg that penod the studtos produced many
classics they were

also

restrained from ptcturmg much

that was true about American life It might be noted m
passmg that under the then preva1hng code two pictures
for whtch Katharme Hepburn was to rece1ve Academy
Awards in the 60s m1ght not have been produced- The
Lton m Wmter for Its frequently spicy language and
Look Who s Com1ng to Dmner for 1ts taboo subJect
matter (whlsj)er the name) m1scegenabon
Freedom particularly of expressiOn IS fragtle and
relative In the arts 1! often IS a matter of taste and value
judgments One person s ftlth can be another s priStme
truth a pomt that was made not long ago by one of the
persistent dtssenters on the present Supreme Court
Justice Wtlham Brennan
I fmd he commented m a case mvolvmg the radto
broadcastmg of obJectionable language
a depressmg
mablltty to appreciate that 1n our land of cultural
pluralism there are many who thmk act and talk
differently from (the members of the court ma]onty) and
who do not share their fragtle senstbthltes It IS only an
acute ethnocentrtc myopta that enables
censorship of
commwucatlons solely because of the words they
contam
It is certamly an mdiVIdual s right not to v1ew- and an
actress s not to appear m - films whtch are judged
objectwnable That ts a matter of value JUdgments and
freedom of personal chmce But a very sensitive lme 1s
crossed tn a plurahshc soctety when one md1v1dual s or one
group s values are made the public standard and applied to
ot!~~~;.;~~~~:e:. they share such values or not
censorship ts And pardon us Kate but to to

HEALTH

f

Tuesday Jan 23

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Be de Osol

January 23 1979
Fr ends and assoc 1ates WI be
nst umental th s com ng year
n helpmg yo u ach eve your
hopes and des r es They w II
be lucky for yo U You n turn
w I be lucky lor them

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Any group you ve niJO ved wtth
oday w II benef 1 greally by
your p~sence You know how
10 get thmgs o gamzed and
aren t afra d to do 1t F1nd out
mo re of what I es ahead for you

n 1979 by send mg for your
copy

of

the

all new

Astra

Graph Letler Ma I $1 lor each
and a ong se f addressed
s amped enve ope to Astra

Graph P 0 Box 489 Radro Crly
Slat on N Y 10019 Be sure lo
spec tfy b11th s gn
PJSCES (Feb 2D-March 20)
Dame Fortune w be do ng a
great dea to ass1st you today
so s t I ght don t make any
unnecessa Ywaves and JuSt let

lh ngs happen
ARIES (March 21 April 19) Go

whece the actton Is or where
your fr ends are gathered
You re at your best today when
you can be mvo ved w th many

people
TAURUS (April 20 May 201 Con
centra l e on matters of major
mportance and exert the nee
essary effor to accompl sh
your a ms today A large v ctory
ca n be yours

GEMINI (May 21 Juno 20) Your
th
tng IS pos t ve and we I
d ected today mak ng 11 poss
e to you to be qu te lucky
en deal ing w th o thers

C NCER (Ju
lng ands
task

1.July 22) Wrl
help you w th a

wh1ch otherw se you

m ght have had to h11e outside
ass1stance Your saiJ ng w1U be
substant al

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Yqu have
a dynam1e personal ty today
draw ng others to you ke a

mag}1el

Wherever you

go

you II be we ll rece ved and wei
come

DEAR DR LAMB- Please
help me I am a 55 year-&lt;&gt;ld
woman and JUSt passed the
menopause whtch I got
through very eastly My pro
blem ts I have lost complete
mterest m sex Thts has been
happenmg for the last two to
three years but now 11 has
gotten worse
My husband IS a year
younger than I and he IS st1ll
very active- maybe more so
My obstetnc1an shrugs his
shoulders and says this hap
pens when women get this
age My mterm;1 IS more m
terested and prescnbed an
estrogen omtment which dtd
help the discomfort that I was
expenencmg but 1t didn t
help IITlprove my sex dnve
My husband IS becorrung
more and more discouraged
as am I He IS not unfatthful
to me but I wouldn t blame
htm tf he was I am sure he
feels like he s makmg love to
a broom slick I can t believe
that at age 55 my sex dnve
should be completely gone
We ve always enJoyed a good
sex life and I want 11 to be that
wayagam
I have talked to a couple of
frtends of rrune my age and
they don t seem to be havmg
thts problem Is there any
honnone I could take that
would help ' At one lime dur
mg my menopause I took
estrogen tablets but gave
them up because of the
cancer scare My husband
says he IS hegmnmg to thmk
11 s all in my mind but I can t
buy th1s I rruss the feelmg as
much as he does
Please gtve me some ad
LIBRA {Sept 23 Oct 23) Some
th ng pleasant cou d occur to
day to put you n a good frame

of mmd all e"emng 11 mtghl
even be cause for celebrat ng

SCORPIO (Oct
lady Luck

24 Nov

22)

s m your corner

loday and might favor ynu With

a smal wmdfall If there s
somet hing you ve been want
ng go alter t now

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec
21) Your opl mrstlc att tude to
day can av..aken In others an
mterest n your deas Contact

persons who m ght 111 Into
plans you re contemplat ng

CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jan 19)
Alth~ugh you m1gh1 nol th nk
VIRGO {Aug 23 Sepl 2Z) This you
need ass stance othe s

could be an especial y produc
t ve qay because you are capa
be of harmomous y be nding
yo ur tnner drive with your phys

cal ab llty

I

lawrence E Lamb, M 0
In St'X

are go ng to pay an Important
role n he lp ng you get what
you want today Accept gra
CIOUSiy
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPR SE ASSN

the Wahama charges canned
10 of 24 chartty tosses whtch
made the dtfference
Roush has been the startmg
center for Falcon cage coach
Homer Preece and had up
until now scored m double
figures m only one contest
that was a 15-pomt effort m the
locals 6U7 wm at Eastern
The 6 I juntor made 7 of 11
field
goal attempts and
added 2 of 4 free throws to
lead three Wahama players
who scored m lwm dtgtts
Gary Rtchards and Rt ck
Barnltz dropped m 14 and 13
pomts respecttvely to atd
considerably m the Whtte
Falcon v1ctory

Ironton rally
tops Gallians

Advertblng Manager
Pub shed da ly extepl Sa urday

b) The Ohio Va Icy Pub ISh ng
Compuny Multimedia In
Ill
Court St Pomeroy Ohto 45769
Bus ness Off ce Pho e 992 2156
Ediluru:t l Phone 992 2157
Se ond la ss postage pa d a
Pu ncruy Ohio
NattoTUII adver s ng represen
lat ve J.andu
Assoc 11tes 3101
Eud dAve Clt!veland Oh of4115
Sub3&lt;.'t'lptlon rHtes Delivered by
urr er where ava !able 75 ~nts per
week By Mulo Route whl'f'e arr er
serv e n I a\a able One month
$..1 25 By rna I n OhiO and W Va
One Year $27 50 S x months
$14 SO Thr e months S8 50
Eh;ewhe e $32 00 year S x months
$17 00
Th ee months $9 00
Substr pt on pn -e n tudes Sunday
Tlmes.&amp;ntmcl

Jan 1:1. JU ~

1

There are landmarks and then there are landmarks
We Americans for example take justifiable pnde 1n
such tmpresstve features of the national scene as the
Washington Monument the Golden Gate Brtdge New
York Ctty s Flattron Bmldtng and Katharme Hepbu•n

By Martha Angle and Robert_Walters

Mund~y

Wahama beats Bobcats
avenges earlier loss

COMMENTARY

IN

J\ilto&lt;itr"'rt t'umeruy \)

v1ce I don t want to take
anything that would gtve me
cancer but at thts pomt I am
desperate enough to try "
anythmg that Will help
DEAR READER - I m sure
you are distressed and there
are a number of women m
your age group who have
stmilar problems When sex
goes out the Window that
doesn I mean people stop lov ~
mg each other There 1s more
to love than that Certamly
after a long mamage as you
apparently have had there
are a lot of thmgs the mar
r~age has been bUilt on
besides JUSt sex I Will have to
tell you that the loss of m
terest m sex m lllld life IS a
symptom The next ,step IS
fmdmg out why The rruddle
years IS a tune when many
people have a depressiOn If
you are depressed you may
not realize 1t yourself
A lot of people have a
nusconcepllon about depres
s10n and thihk 11 means you
have to s1t there m a chair
abnost unmobtle or With
tears streammg down your
cheeks Depressions can
masquerade m many fonns I
am sending you The Health ~
Letter number 10-10 Depres ~
SIOD The Ups And Downs Of :
Life It Will g~ve you a better •
1dea about this Loss of m ;..;
teres\ msex m both men and
women 1s frequently a syrup- :;
•
tom of a depression
•
•
Other readers who want n
this ISSUe can send 50 cents ;:
WJth a long, stamped self ,.
addressed envelope for 11 Send your request to me m ~
•
care of this newspaper P 0 "'
Box 1551 Radto City StatiOn ;:
New York NY 10019
:.
I don t know whether you ~
have a depressiOn or not It IS •
certain ly one of the :
posstbthltes that shouldn t be ':
left out If you do 11 doesn t ,
mean that you can controltl
•
e1ther It more likely would
mean that you could tLSe some ,..
professmnal help to get you
through this phase of life and ~
regam your former VIm and •
vigor
••
I also don t know whether ';
you are low on hormones ot ~
not You need tests to lind
•
out If you are honnone •
replacement with a proper
cycle of Wlthdrawmg the hor
mones for one week out of
four IDight be very useful
•
The fact that estrogen oint
ments helped suggesta that •·
you might be low on hor •
mones

=:

..

Ironton trailed VISttmg
GallipoliS the ftrst 23 mmutes
and 51 seconds of play
Saturday mght once by 13
pomts early m the th1rd
penod but came on ltke
gangbusters m the final
stanza to post a 55 44
Southeastern Ohio League
basketball vtctory over the
Blue Devils
Coach Buddy Bell s Ttgers
overcame a horrtble ftrst half
shootmg performance from
the field (SIX of 35 for 17
percent) to post th~tr etghth
VIctory m 11 starts
The wm left Ironton m a
three way he for first place
With Waverly and Athens m
the SEOAL race wtth a 7 I
record
The
loss
snapped
Galllpolls four game wm
rung streak and left Coach
JIITl Osborne s lads w1th a 6-5
season mark Instde the
SEOAL Galha Academy
dropped to 4-4
Harris Armslrong Hot
The Blue Devils behmd
guards Jim Hams and BtU
(Big John) Armstrong
Jumped off to an Boll lead m
the ftrst period Ironton s lone
bucket In this stanza came as
a result of a steal by Ketth
Harvey wllh 20 seconds
shoWing on the clock Ironton
hit only one of 16 fteld goal
attempts m the ftrst pertod
and trailed 10 2 at the first
whistle break
GAHS mamtamed a 10 to 12
point spread throughout the
second quarter behmd the bot
hands of Hams and Ann
strong The Blue Devils who
failed to get any scormg help
from thetr big men ms1de led
25-14 at halftiiTle
In the first half the
Gallians hit 10 of 22 fteld goal
attempts for 45 percent
BtU Armstrong s short
Jumper following the third
pertod tip (7 50) gave
GaU1polls tts b1ggest lead of
the game 27 14
At this pomt the Tigers
came alive scormg I 0
unanswered pomts over the
next three mmutes of action
to reduce Gallia s lead to
three 27 24
J IIIUllY Hams popped m a
long jumper (4 01) to break
the Ironton spell Dtckte
James liiTllled to four pomts

m the ftrst half hit a long
JUmper (3 40) and Hams
countered I 2 541 to make 11
31 26
James dtrvmg layup
{I 57 ) and a tap-m by Joe
Fletcher 10 58) cut Gallm s
lead to one 31 30
Ironton Gains Lead
Fletcher s layup off a fast
break (0 09 ) gave Ironton 1ts
first lead of the mght 32 31
Robm Fttzpatnck s free
throw (7 43) opened fourth
penod scormg
Hams knotted the count at
33 all (7 081 From that pomt
on 11 was all Ironton
Wtth James Tom Gorden
and Fletcher leading the
assault Ironton mcreased tis
lead to 10 pomts 45 35 wtlh
3 44 left to play
Ironton outscored GAHS 1().
9 durmg the fmal three
mmutes of action
Ironton flntshed the game
wtth a 31 percent effort from
the fteld connectmg on 22 of
69 attempts The Ttgers were
11 of 16 at the foullme for 68
percent Ironton controlled
the boards 41 32 F1tzpatrtck
ptcked off 12 rebounds D1ck1e
James nme

Kyger Creek gol almost all
of 1ts scoring from Jon Th
ompson and Von Taylor who
combmed for 37 of the Bobcats
51 pomls Thompson 6 6
semor cener led all scorers
w1th 23 markers on 10 of 16
held goals and 3 of 12 chartty
losses He also led both teams
m r,ebounds wtth 17 Taylor
added 14 pomts and 11
rebounds for the Galha
Counttans of coach Ketth
Carter
The Bobcats jumped outlo a
qutck 4-ll lead but Wahama
scored SIX stratght pomts to
take over the scoring ad
vantage at 6-4 Todd Rawlings
free throw w1th no lime
remammg m the mthall."'nod
gave Wahama a shm II 10
lead after etght mmutes
Kyger Creek enjoyed the
upper hand only once more at
14 13 bul the lead was short
lived as Gary Rtchards foul
shol at the 6 33 mark knotted
the score for the last ttme The
remamder of the game was all
ahama although the VISitors
stayed close and tra1led by
seven at the half 30-23
The thtrd quarter saw
Barmtz and Roush take over
mcrease the Whtte Falcon
lead to 46 33 Boll&gt; players
scored SIX pomts m the stanza
as Wahama outscored the
Bobcats m the quarter by a 1610 margm whtch made the
fmal canto a mere formality
SubstitutiOns played the
most part of the fmal mmutes
for the bend area team wtth
Wahama gaming thetr btggest
lead of the mght at 55-35 Wtth
5 39 remammg the Bobcats
outscored the host Falcons 16
9 the rest of the way but 1t was
not enough as Wahama held a
64-51 advantage at the buzzer
Shootmg percentages show
Wahama wtth a 36 percent
mark from the floor on 27 of 75
attempts At the free throw
stnpe the locals htt on 41
percent As a team they
commttted 16 turnovers and
collected 39 rebounds
Kyger Creek shot 37 percent
(20 of 54 ) from the fteld and 42
percent (11 of 26) at the hne
As a team the Bocats com
m1tted 25 turnovers and had 40
rebounds
In the reserve contest the
Ltttle Falcons butlt a 36 14
halfttme lead and coasted to
an easy 63 26 wm over the
Bobkittens
Larry Gtbha and Peanut
HarriS paced the wmners wtth
24 and 17 pomts respectively
as the L1ttlle Falcons upped
tts season slate to 6 2 on the
year G1bbs was also the
games top rebounder wtth 12
whtle York Ingels had 11
Kyger Creek was led by
Waugh wtlh 10 of the
Bobktttens 26 pomts
Wahama wtll return to the
hardcourt next Fndsy and
Saturday mghts when they
entertam -North Galha and
Metgs m succession It wtll be
the first meetmg wtth the
Ptrates while Metgs handed
the Falcons a 75-li2 setback
back on January 6

Fowler
Stodola
TOTALS

SPORTS
The Daily Sentinel

Athens beats
Meigs, 70-55

02 3 0
0.0 0 0
27 75 39 64

KYGER CREEK (51 )
Thompson
10 16 17 23
Taylor
7 20 II 14
Smtih
1-5 0 8
Sprmger
I2 5 3
Mtsner
1-5 2 2
Gtlmore
D-3 2 I
Vans1ckle
02 2 0
Westfall
D-1 0 0
0-ll I 0
Flint
TOT All;
20-54 40 51

BY GREG BAILEY
Dave Matthews pumped m
20 points Saturday mght to
pace the Athens Bulldogs to a
70-55 SEOAL vtctory over the
vtsttmg Metgs Marauders
Once again a lack of
reboundmg strehgtll added to
a Marauder loss Athens
controlled the boards wtth 43
rebounds to only 29 by the
Metgs club
Athens jumped mto a qu1ck
lead and led 14-&lt;; at the end of
the first stanza By 1n
termtsston the Bulldogs
mcreased thetr lead to 34 15
Many tunes durmg the
mght Athens seemed to be
makmg a rout of the contest
but the Marauders would not
gtve up Metgs kept conung
back to keep the game wtthm

Score by Quarters
I 2 3 4 Tol
Kyger Creek
10 13 10 17-51
Wahama
11 19 16 16-94
Total Fouls Kyger Creek 24
Wahama 25
Offlctals J Avcremanne and
S Veltn
Reserve Game
Score by Quarters
I 2 3 4 Tot
Kyger Creek
6 8 5 726
Wahama
14 22 14 13-li3

WAHAMA (63)
Gtbbs 7 10 24 HarriS 8 117
Ingels 3-3 9 Buzzard 1 2-4
Roush 2 0 4 S1sk 0 3 3
Barmtz 1-ll-2 Kttchen ~
ToiJ!ls 22 19-&lt;;3

Cage
standings

KYGER CREEK 126)
Waugh 2-&lt;; 10 Sands I 3-5
Pnce I 3 5 Porter 0 2 2
Moore 1.0 2 Barr 1-ll-2 Kmg
0-ll-ll Gtlmore 0-ll-ll Lane 0-ll0 Swtsher ~ Totals 6 14
26
Total Fouls Kyger Creek 28
Wahama 21
Offlctals Alfred Chapman
and Edward Cromley

TEAM

Portsmouth

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.

11

Athens
Waverly

OVERPOWERING - Gary Rtchards (12) of Wahama
Jumps high to g1ve a gtant hke look over V ctor VanSickle
(25) of ~yger Creek Richards scored 14 pomts for the
Falcons

0 768 593

9 2 737 623
9 3 730 542
6 2 474 .so.s

Pt P ea sant
ronton

8

Wash CH
Galt po s
Logan

8 4 620 575
6 5 629 583
• 6 603 581

Rav en swQOd
Jackson

2 5 415 443
2 9 673 852
2 9 652 844

Wellston

4

Me gs

3

7

722

668

548

823

SEOAL VARSlTY
TEAM
W L P OP
ronton
Waver y

7 1 553
7 I 513

Athens

Ga I

po s

Wellston
Jack son

Me gs
TOTALS

384
359

7 1 542 432

3

Ma hews 9 2 20

SEDAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP

Wellston shocks Logan

2

406

3 0

6 2 326 304

Gall pols
Wave ly
Logan

5 3 294 267
5 l 373 322
5 3 351 JOO

Jackson
Wei stan

3 5 368
2 6 290

Me gs
TOTALS

40
Hawley 7 3
7 115
C K

8 Dodson 0 I l

Totals 23 9 55
Athens (701 - Sm th 2 2 6
Chonk o 50 10 Hart 50 0

Saturdays results
ronton 55 Gall pol s 44
Wa v erly 72 Jackson 39
Athen s 70 Me gs 55
Wet ston 62 Logan 60

6

score

Andrews 2 0 4 C L Ken nedy
102
Yeauger
102
Blaeltnar
00 0

0 8 440 641
32 32 4000 4000

Athens
Ir on ton

BoJC

Metgs 1551 - Ohlinger

17 Becker
Kennedy 1 0 2 Ashley 0 4 4

4 .4 471 429
5 505 482
3 5 492 616
1 7 484 657

Logan

The Ttgers had 11 turn
overs and committed 15
personal fouls
James Nets 19
James an all state can
dictate lm!Shed the game
Wltll 19 pomts Tim Hodges
added 10
Ga lltpolls connected on 18
of 50 held goal attempts lor 36
percent In the second hall
GAHS was etght of 28 for a
cool 28 percent
The Blue Devils were etght
of 12 at the foul lme for 66
percent GAHS had 10 assiSts
four by Hams and three by
Armstrong GAHS had 32
rebounds etght each by
Armstrong and Jeff Lanham
Galltpohs had 15 personals
and 10 turnovers
REACHING OUT - Three players mcludm g Tom Spnn ger 311 of Kyger Creek Tlffi
Ironton dtd a tremendous
Roush (22) of Wahama and an umdentthed Kyger Creek pi aver re tc h out lo prevent the ball
job on Gallta s btg men un
from gomg out of bounds
derneatll perm1ttmg only one
held goal out of 20 attempts m
the 32 mmute battle
Waverly Next
Tuesday GAHS wtll host
co league leader Waverly WAHAMA (64)
(7 30 p m ) m a makeup
In one or the season s
Logan s only lead came at re bounds
FGM ATT REB TP
game Ironton plays at Roush
btggest
upsets
the
Wellston
2
early m the contest and
Clark snared etght bounds
4
71112 16
Jackson Tuesday m a Richards
Golden
Rockets
stunned
the
later
the
Chtefs
managed
a
for
Logan whtl e Swonger and
5 18 5 14
makeup contest
Ch
teftams
62
60
Logan
h
e
on
Da\e
Lehman
s
goal
Norman
each grabbed seven
5 14 6 13
Barmtz
Saturday
mght
m
an
SEOAL
w1th
7
4B
left
m
the
thu
I
of
Well
ston
s 27
4 12 3 8
Weaver
contest
played
at
Logan
quart
er
that
made
tl
29
29
The
box:
score
Sayre
4 12 3 8
Coach Rtck Perdue s
Wellston then ttcked off s1x
WELL STON
162)
I I 0 2
Arnold
Rockets had bmlt a 62-58 lead stratght po nts lor a 35 29lead M ont go n ery 6 2 4 Se es 0
I2 I 2
Russell
wtth JUst under one mmute and held on to send Logan s 0 0 Loc l.;ha 3d 10 M asse
Rawlings
0-3 6 I left when Logan s Charlie
.1210
S v onge
43 1
record to 4-f. overall and 3 5 n Nor man 8 1 7 TOTALS 25
Keynes hit a goal wtth 45 le tgue pl a1
12- 62
LOGAN 160) - Moore 0
seconds remammg closmg 1t
Robbt e Norman s 17 pomts
CotiK c g 20 '
F sk 5 0 0
to 62-60
led Wellston "lule Jeff Mont Lehman
Basketba II Scores
9 2 10 Walton I 0 2
By The Associated Press
At the 32 second mark Ken gomery added 14 and Dan Key nes 2 0 4 Clark 6 1 13
Saturdays Results
Kretg ptcked up hts fifth Lockhart and Mtke Masste Lov ese y 2 2 6 TOTALS 27 6Eas1
personal foul
sendmg chtpped m 10 each wtth Mark 60
Army 98 Manhattan 84
Scor e by qua ters
Boston Coil 89 Hoi y Cross Wellston s Dan Lockhart to Swonger gettu g II
We l ston
15 I ll 12 2 1 ~2
87 2 at
the chanty str1pe
Dave Lehman dnlled m 20 Logan
10
17 12 21--60
Boston U 76 New Hamp
He miSsed the first of a one
pomts for the Chtels "1\h
Reserve Score Log a n 55
sh re 72
Bucknell 93 Rochester 78 and-&lt;Jne with Logan grabbmg Pete Clark gettmg 13 and We ston 49 (OT )
Colgate 89 Albany St 82 the rebound but qmckly lost Bob Ftsk 10
Columba 82 Corne I 62
11 on a turnover wtth 22
The C'lueftams connected
Drexel 81 Northeastern 73
seconds
left
on
27 of 65 attempts for 42
S m peopl e u e loggcdl)
Duquesne 90 La Salle 89
While
trymg
to
run
off
the
percent
converted stx of letellmned
lhers llL JUSt
Georgetown 78
Pennsyl
clock Wellston cormmtted a se1en t the I ne and had 31 pi 1 n stuI bm n
van a 16
Hofstra 90 Delaware 72
turnover giVIng Logan s
N Adams St 70 Boston St Steve Walton a last second
67
shot at the bucket but It
Prov dence 64 Connecttcut
rebounded off the run and
63
Rhode Island 71 St John s
Wellston snared the rebound
NY 70
to preserve the upset
Ru lg ers 48 Penn St 46
In uppmg t he1r season
S
Bonaventure
83
mark
to 4 7 and league record
Fa rfed 82 ot
St Joseph s Pa 65 to 3 5 the Rockets btl 52
Laf ayelle 44
percent of thetr shots (25 of
S tena 81 RJder 77
481
and placed ftve players m
Seton Ha 65 Ntagara 62
double ftgures
Syracuse 103 Canlsws 92
Va
Commonwealth 47
The Rockets also parlayed
Navy 42 ol
the free throw Into a deadly
Ve rm ont 87 Mane 86
weapons htltmg on 12 of 17
V llanova
89
George
mcludmg 11 of 13 1n the tense
Wash1nglon
77
The Department Store
West Chesler St 56
fourth quarter
Of Bu1ldtng
Ba more 54 ot
The Rockets led 15 10 after
Ya e 76 Williams 62
Smc:e 1915
one quartet 29 27 at halftime
South
and 41 39 after three stanzas
A abama 83 tubu rn 76

BUILDING SUPPLIES
HOME IMPROVEME •..,...

ALL GAMES
WLPDP

reach
Meigs Tom Hawley paced
the Marauders With 17 pomts
on seven field goals and three
free zhrows CaptaUI and
guard Greg Becker tossed m
15 markers
Other Bulldogs in double
figures with Matthews were
Art Chonko and Gary Hart
w1th 10 pomts each
Athens had a good mght
from the field hitting 31 of 64
attetlfllts for 48 percent and
etght of 14 at the foul lines
Meigs was only lukewarm
from the field hlttmg 40
percent canning 23 of 58 at
tempts The Marauders also
canned nme of 17 at the
chanty stripes
Oddly
enough Becker was the top
Meigs rebounder with eight
Reserve lilt
Metgs reserve squad
to
tts
e1ghth
fell
loss tn 1o contests thts
season 68 33 to tile Athens
Bullpups
Rtggs paced
Athens wtlh 17 pomts while
Lavery and Casler added 12
and 10 respectively
Leading the Meigs reserves
were Tony Scott and Dave
Kennedy With 10 points each
Metgs next outmg IS
Fndsy agamst Jackson at
Larry R Morrison Gym
The annual Hall of Fame
festlvttles will be conducted
Frtday evening between the
reserve and varsity game

Bentley 3 0

6 Ross I 0 2 Black
Sabo 1 0 2 Brunrng
Myer 0 1) 0 Burson
Edward 1 2 4 Da ley
Totals 31 8 70
Sy Quarters
Me1gs
6

Athens

379
359

0 8 249 416
32 32 2657 26S7

Saturdays results
ronton 35 Ga pol s 33
At h e ns 6B Me gs 33
w aver y d7 Jackson 45

Logan 55 Wells on 49 lOT)

Tuesday s games
r on ton at Jackson (makeup)
Wav e rly
at
Gall pol s
( 11akeup)
Raven swood at Tyler County
Rus se ll at Porlsmouth
Rock H at We ston
V nton County a Pt Pleasant
Mad1son
Pta ns
at
Wash ngton C H (makeup)

l7

10 2

2 26

00 0
102
33 55

33 57 70

l7

Prevention is the
best policy•••
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

You can help cut down on
crlr'ne losses

losses that

directly affect
you
whether they happen to you

or

1\()t

Take the crime of arson
You re pay n9 an In

creaslngly heavy subsidy

Fnday s games
Ath ens at Ga pol s
Ironton at Logan
Jack son at Me gs
W e ll ston at Waver y
Por t smou th a Ru sse
Was h ngton CH at Teays
Va l ey
Saturdays games
Mar etta at Athens
N e ls York at Logan
G !mer County at Ravens
w ood

•

for deliberately set fires
thro ugh your Insurance
premiums
In surance
C'Osts
are
adversely affected by
bu rglaries robberies and
car thefts
pus the

countless CB radios and
bicycles

that

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missing
Ole thing you can do s to
support

programs

provldlng sllf1er penalties
for

Person to person
health insurance

wrongdoers

and

proposals lor strengthened
crime invesllgallon efforts
You can al!O make it
tougher for crooks Use

good sl ron g locks Mark

possessions with your
soctal sec:ur ty number

11 can halp pay
soaring hospllal
and surgical billa
Call me

Our
agency
provides
f nanc1al protection and
service when crime losses
occur
but many clJn be

M1ke

prevented That s why we
say -

prevention Is the

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149 S Thrrd 51
Middleport 0

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INS.
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Mid-Winter
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•

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ReJ! S13 9S NOW 'll.86
6 29
Re'! s
NOW 1535
•

SAYRE
HARDWARE
New Haven W Va

�,
~

...

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.. " .

Steelers conquer Cowboys, 35-31
By BRUCE; LOWITI'
AP Sports Writer .
MIAMI (AP ) - '!be noise Tom ·Henderson ultima tely hea rd
was not his own. It was the turbulence churned up by Terry
Bradshaw's passes.
Hollywood Henderson had played his big scene too early in
the dra ma . But Bradshaw saved•his best for last - for the final
curtain in a decade of Super Bowls. And, when the last cheers
faded, the Pitlllburgh Steelers were proclaimed unquestioned
champions,. Jl&gt;-31 , over the Dallas Cowboys.
No one had ever tlu'own more than two touchdown ~ in one of
these National Football League extravaganzas.
Brad,baw threw four oi them.
·
No one had ever thrown for more than 250 yards in one of
these games. ·
Bradshaw threw for 253 in the first haU alone and wound up
completing 17 of 30 passes f&lt;r 318 yards, more than he'd ever
thrown for in any pro game.
And no one --not legendary Vince LOmbardi's Green Bay
Packers, not Don Shula's once-perfect Miami Dolphins not
Tom Landry's defending champion Cowboys, not even chuck
Noll's Steelers -had won this Hope Diamond of pro football
more than twice.
Henderson, the loudmouth Cowboy linebacker, was distraught - but unbowed- by the defeat . " As you can see, I'm a
little sad," he said, letting tears flow freely . But he vowed that
his brashness would continue to flow just as freely ."
And Noll, when asked in the postgame bedlam about Henderson'spregame bragging literally !eared as he replied ,

" 'i'h(IJ)as who?"

In a Super Bowl XIII that turned out to be Super Bem,atch I,
Bradshaw and the Steelers re-enacted their drama of three
years ago, on ce again using the Cowboys as foils. Once again
they grabbed the seemingly insurmountable lead - and once
again they held their collective breaths before hanging on for
the narrow fouriloint victory.
And once again, Lynn Swann, the Nureyev o! wide receivers,
was on the receiving end of Bradshaw's game-winning
touchdown pass. Last time, it had been a 64-yard bomb and a
21-17victory. This time it was an !B-yard coffin nail for the fi.
nal points.
•
That made it 35-17 with less then seven minutes to play .
Roger Staubach, who also. completed i7 of 30 passes but
unlike Bradshaw did most of his throwing in the second half,
found Billy Joe DuPree on a 7-yard scoring pass with 2:23 to
play. Then he connected with Butch Johilson on a 4-yarder two
minutes later after Dallas had pulled off a successful onside
kick.
The only way the Cowboys could win, of course, was to get
the hall back once more on an on..ide kick and pray for a
miracle. It didn't happen.
Rocky Bleier's jumping catch of Bradshaw's third scoring
pass of the day, a 7-yard looper 26 seconds from halftime, had
put Pittsburgh in front for good. The task of keeping the
Steelers there also fell to Bleier, who paunced on Dallas kicker
Rafael Septlen'.s soft roller with 22 seconds to play. Bradshaw
then fell on the ball twice more to run out the clock.
,/

The first big play that was costly to Dallas came only moment' bt-lore Septien's 27-yard J ield goal, -the only points
scored in the third period, and shaved Pittsburgh's lead to 2117.
.Jackie· Smith had spent 1~ years in a St. Louis uniform,
waiting in vain for a trip to an NFL championship game, and
he finally made it with Dallas followin g a brief retirement. And
there he was, aH alone in the end zone , poised to make a game tying catch .
Staubach was shielded !rom Pittsburgh 's thundering line,
linebackers and defensive backs. They said they were expecting a run on the third-and-three situation. The quarterback
flipped the ball almost- but not quite- pet'fectly.
'
&gt;And Smith dropped it.
The next play in the series of Cowboy back-breakers came
with the score still 21-17 about four minutes into the final period. Swann, who caught seven passes for 124 yards, sprinted
down the right side, ahnost stride !or stride with cornerback
Benny Barnes. There was contact and they went down in a
tangle of legs and arms .
·
"There was a blitz and no pickup on it by our guys. And I
knew it, so I just put the Hail Mary on·it," Bradshaw said, alluding to the now-famous Hail Mary pass by Staubach that
went for a touchdown in a playoff game against Minnesota.
This one didn't go for a TD - but it went a long way toward
one .
" I saw it and I figured, our ball down there ." It wo • &lt;'i eJn

i---"P;~---1
lStandings
National
Basketball Association

AI A Glance

By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pel.

offensive play of Tom Dorsey Tom Dorsey 10.
Before the largest home early in the second half.
crowd of the season, Coach
c10 points) in the early second
Rio Grande hit 42 of 57 field
Regulars Return
· Art Lanham's Rio Grande
·
• goal atte~pts_.{or 62- percent.
The regulars sat out the half explosion.
College Redmen erupted with first 10 minutes or the second
The Rio mentor said The Redmen were nine of 10
at the foul line lor 90 percent.
53 points in the second half to half before returning, one-by- although Rio was getting bury visiting Urbana College, one.
and making - the good shots, Rio had 42 rebounds, 20 turn·
9~. in a Mid-Ohio Con·
The victory, siXth in a 'row "we just couldn't seem to put overs and 27 assists. Mark ·
lerence basketball game in for Rio Grande, left the the kill on them in the first Swain had five assists for the
Lyne Center Saturday night. Redmen with a 9-10 season baH. "
winners.
Urbana hit 31 of 61 field
Rio, up by only two at mark. The triumph also left
Lanham said Greg James,
halftime (40-38) began second Rio Grande unbeaten in MOC despite a bout with the flu, goal attempts lor 50 percent.
half play with five new faces play with a 5~ record.
stood out for Rio on the The Blue Knights were three
in the lineup ,- Phil
Coach Bob Cawley's Blue boards . James had 10 of.nine at the !oull~n1:'13.3
Washington, Dwayne Clark, Knights dropped to 6-3 on the rebounds.
percent. Urban
ad ' 22
Howard West, Tom Dorsey year and 2-3 inside the
rebounds, nine y Dave.,
Purcelt Top Scorer
and Brett McCormick. This league.
Rio placed three men in Gustin. The losers had 24
shakeup by Coach Lanham
Lanham praised Phil double figures in scoring. turnovers.
paid off as the Redmen in- Washington's defensive play Dan Purcelt's 21led the way.
Urbana placed three men
creased its lead to 12 points and nine rebounds, and the Steve Lon~ added 20 and in double figures in scoring.
(
Mark Ringer! led the way
· with 20. Gustin had )8 and
Willard Flunoy ·added 16.
Tiffin Next
Rio Grande's next outing is
Tuesday, at Tiffin.
Box score:
URBANA 165)- Anders 0·
1-1; Roberts 1·0-2; Ringert 10·
0-20; Gustin&lt;9·0·18; Flunoy 8·
0-16; FrautzO·l·l ; Huf!J .Q.2;

Washington
Phila .

GB
31 13 .70S
27 15 .643 3

New Jersey

21 20 .512

Boston

16 28 .364 15

New York

Wa~erly 72-39 SEO win

Jones 0-1-l ;

mark to 9-3 the Tigers were
led by Mark Frederick's 18
points. Joel Gordon had 16,
Bo Arnetlll, and Uno Steger
10. Frederick's long range
jump shots from 15·25 feet
triggered the Waverly surg~
in the second half. ·
Tom Evans, with 1·2 points,
was the only Jackson player
to reach double figures.
The Tigers connected on 31
of 64 fielders for 48 percent,
made 10 of 18 free throws, and
captured 44 rebounds, with
Gordon snaring 14.
Jackson, now 2-9 and 1·7 ,
showed a miserable shooting
night with 28 percent on just
12 of 42 attempts. They
converted 15 of 25 lree
throws, had 28 rebounds, with
Ed Martin getting six.
Tuesday night Jackson
entertains Ironton in a
makeup contest while
Waverly travels to Gallipolis
for a makeup game.
The box score : '
JACKSON (39) - Stevens
0·0-0; Sydow 2·3·7; T. Evans

4-4-12;

Martin

3-3-9 ; D. E11ans

1-5-7 ; Waugh 1-0-2 ; Barnett l -

0-2. TOT~~S 12 -15-39.
WAVERLY (72)- Arnett
3-5 l l t Frederick 8·2·18 ;
Steger 5·0·10; Gordon 7·2·16 ;
Holsinger 3·1-7; Noble 1:0-2;
Johnson 4-0·8. TOTALS 31-10·
72.
Score bv quarters :
Jackson

11 17

Waverly

5 6- 39

17 12 25 18- 72

Reserve Score : Waver ly 47 ,
Jackson 45.

Meigs eighth

tops Southem
The Meigs eighth grade had
its best offensive performance of the year last
Thursday and won a seesaw
contest
from
visiting
Southern 48-42. Rick Chancey
of Meigs led aU scorers with
20 points.
Southern led at the end of
the first period 14-9, but the
rest of the game was a real
seesaw battle. Meigs actually
won the game at the foul line
where they made 14 of 21
shots. Other scorers for
Meigs were Smith with 14 and
File with 8.
T. Brinegar led the loser§
.with 16 points while Z. Beegle
and Patterson each had 10.
The team made 4 of 11 Cree
throws. Next Meigs game is
tonight at Wahama .

Little

2-0- 4.

TOT ALS .ll-3-65.
RIO GRANDE (93)- Bise
3 2 8; James a .4; Purcell 10·
1·21 ; Lones 8·4·20; Phelps 2-0·
4; Swain 3-0-6; Washington 22-6; Clark 1-0-2; Dorsey 5·0·

10 ; McCormick 2-0-4; Niday
2-0-4; Davena 2-0-4; West o.o.
0; Royse 0·0·0. TOTALS 42-9·
93 .

Halftime score -

Rio 40

28 18 .609
26 19 .578

At lanta
Cleveland
Oetroit

26 22 .542 3
18 27 .400 9'1'
IS 31 .326 13

Ohio College
Basketball
By The Associated Press
Satu-rdaY's Results

Conference

Big Ten
Ohio St. 78, Michigan 69
Mid-American

Ball St. 67, Kent St ..62
Bowling Green 79, Ohio u.

%

77, ot

Midwest Division

Kans . City
Oenver

28 17 .622
26 21 .553 3

Milwaukee
Chi cago
Indiana
Pacific

22 28 .440 8'12
l7 29 .370 11 1. : &gt;
16 30 .348 12'' 1

Seattle
Los Ang .
Phoenix
Golden State
Portland
San Diego

Toledo 80, W. Michigan 72
Metro
Cincinnati 65. St . Louts 63 ,
ot
Ohio

.

Baldwin-Walla ce 76 , Ohio

Weekend Tran ::~ act'ians
By The Assodated Press

College
Colorado - Named Doug
Dickey, Doug Knotts, Ray
Braun. Ray Marciniak, Ron
Hubbard, Gene Hochevar.

I

GIRLS SIZES .UX
'
BOYS SIZES 4-7

._Bob Cortese, Lynn Stiles and

Gary Cabe, assistant football
coaches.

St. Louis -

lilBEN t=R~LIM
liJ ~ br·lng va¥Y to life!
POMEROY BEN FRANKUN
'

200 East Main
,\

Pomeroy, 0.

Announced the

resignation of f1erb · .Slate,
assistant basketball coach.
effective March 1.
Nation• I Football
League Playolfs
At A Gianct
By The Associated Press
r

Division

28 15
29 18
2,8 19
22 25
20 23
21 .26

.651
.617 1
.596 2
.468 8
.465 B
.447 9

Saturday's Games

Atlanta I 18, New Orleans 94
Detroit m. Kansas City 110
Boston 108. Philadelphia
&gt;02

Washington

109,

Indiana

104
Portland 118, San Antoni o
113
'

Seattle 107,

Ch!~ago

101

Denver .109, Golden State
106
!:,\ . .
?
PhQenix plC ·H ouston 97
Sunday's Games

Philadelphia 91, &amp;ston 87
Cleveland 94, Chicago 93
Milwaukee 138. New York
114
New Orleans 108, Atlanta 87

Los Angeles 113, Golden
State 107
Todav's Game
Detroit at Denver

Tuesday's Games
Ind iana at Atlanta
Denver at Cleveland
Seattle at Washington

Boslon at Chicago ·
Kansas City at New
Orleans
New York at Los

Last week . Eastern junior
high girls rotnped to a 25-7
win over Kyger Creek to raise
their record to 2-1. Becky
Ambrose tossed in 12 points
and collected 7 rebounds to
lead the winners.
Eastern· was ahead 7-2 at
the end of the first quarter,
but in the second period the
defense stiffened and limited
Kyger Creek to just one point.
other scorers for Eastern
were : Rhonda Riebel 5, Dee
Dailey 4, Kelll Headley 2, and
Beretta Deeter 2. Chris Beebe
scored three points for Kyger
Creek, and Amy Roush and
Cindy Swisher each had two.
In a . loss to Southern last
week, Ambrose scored six
points, Riebel had four,
Headley three, and Deeter
two. Ne:;t game for Eastern
is tonight at Hinnan Trace.
7 6 10 2-25
E
KC
2 I 2 2- 7

Angele~

World Hockey
. Association

wltpfs9111a
Quebec 23 14 4 50 158 130
New Eng . 20 13 6 46 162 136
Winnipeg 20 17 5 45 163 ISS
Edmonton

Cincinnati

Birm .
X· Ind .

21 17 0 42 153 129
19 22 . 4 41 161 161
16 23 3 35 148 170
5 18 2 12 78 130

x.suspended operations
• Saturday's Games
New ' England 3, Cincinnati

1

Quebec 10, Winnpieg 1.
Sunday's Games

Winnipeg 3, Quebec 1
·
Birmingham 4, Edmonton 3

·Today's Games
No games scheduled

Tuesday's Games ~:
Quebec at Blrminghan\
New England ·a t Edmonton

Coach John Boston 's
Eastern Eagles rolled to their
fifth league win without a loss
Saturday night, 8H2 over ·
North Gallia.
It was Eastern's biggest
pOint production this season.
The visitors jumped into a
21-18 lead at the end of the
first period and extended It to
47-29 at the half.
During the first period, Dan
Spencer,

senior

center ,

provided eight points and
combined with senior Brian
Bissell to pace the second
period scoring. Bissell
dumped in 12 points that
canto while Spencer added
eight.
It was one of Spencer's best
games this year. He collected
11 Eagle rebounds.
Bissell finished as the
game's top scorer with 22
points; Spencer had 18; Joe
Bowers, 12 and Greg Wigal
.10.
.
Pacing Coach Ted Lehew's
Pirates was Sam Smith with
20 points. Tim McComas and
Steve Utile had 13 each.
Eastern sank 31 of &amp;4 attempts·for 48 percent and 22
of 35 at the charity stripes.
North Gallia .hit 24 of 47

Conference
TEAM

!League only)

·R ovalttes
· • -l.or
J

S 0
3 2

Malone
Walsh
Urbana
Tiffin

3
3
2
1

2
3
3

Ohi o Dominican

l

3

Vernon

1

A

2

TOTALS

19 19

IAII Games)
TEAM
Cedarville

W L
9 6

Malone
Rio Grande
' Urbana

9 8

floor attempts for 48 percent
and just 14 of 30 at the foul
lines. The Pirates held a
slight 36-32 rebounding edge.
Super Bowl IV - Kansas
The
victory
pushed City CAFL J 13. Minnesota
Eastern's overall record to .6- . CNFU 7
Super Bowl V - Baltimore
5 and 5~ in the SVAC.
(·AFCI 16, Oallas (NF CJ 13
North Gallia fell to 2-5
Super Bowl VI - Dallas
overall and 2-2 in the SVAC. ( NFC) 24, Miami CAFC) 3 ·
Super Bowl VII - Miami
The Little Sues won the
reserve game but no score 7CAFCI14, Washington CNFCI
was available.
Super Bowl VIII - Miami
Tuesday ni_ght, Eastern CAFC) 24, Minnesota INFC) 7
Super Bowl IX - Pittshosts Hannan Trace while NG
burgh !AFC) 16, Minnesota
plays Kyger Creek.
CNFCI 6 •
.
Super Bowl X- Pittsburgh
Box Score
(AFCI 21, Dallas ·(NFC) 17 .
Eastern 184)- Spencer 8·2Super- &amp;wl XI - Oakland
18 ; Eynon l -2-4; Bower s 4·4· (AFCI 32, Minnesota CNFC)
. 12 ; Goebel 2· 1-5; Bissell 7-8- 14
22 ; Myers 1·0-2; Matthews I ·
Super Bowl )( It - Dallas
0~ 2 ; Wolfe 1·3-5; Wigai4-2-IO ;
CNFCI 27, Denver IAFC) 10
Cole 2·0-4; Totals 31-22-84.
Super Bowl XIll - PillSNorth Gailia (62) - Smith burgh IAFC) 35 , Dallas
9·2·20; Winston 2-0-4; Mc- CNFCI 31
Comas 0 -13; Peck 3-0-6;
Little 4-5·13; Giassbur ~ 2-0-4;
Barnes 0 · 2 ~ 2 . Totals 24·14·62.
Cardinal Richelieu died in
By Quarters:
.
21 26 19 18- 84 1&amp;41.
Eastern
N. Ga llia
18 11 14 19- 62

6 8

&lt;

0

3, 9.

Ohio Dom inican
MI. Vernon

s 14

Tiffin

4

16

Saturday's r:esults:

Malone $2 Walsh 78
Mt . Vernon 63 Till in 62

Ohio Dominican 81 Cedarville

80 (2 otsl .

Rio Grande 93 Urbana 65

argument tha t ce rtti inly
applies in t he case of
Hau'lChenberg, whose work
today freque ntly sells . for
$100,.000, and Indiana , who
recently sold one sculpture
lor $80,000.
Ms. Pendleton 's work sells
lor an average $500 to $2,000.
She and other a rtists have
been lobbying in Washington ,
fi ghting for a share of an unprecedented resale bonanza
in contemporary art.

N.

I
I

l1
J

I

I
___________________....
OPTOMETRIST

.

OFFICE HOURS: 9: 3tHo 12,2 to 5 (CL.OSE I
AT NOON ON THURS.) .;... EAST COURT . I
ST., POMEROY.
I

1
~-~-_,..

EXTENSION OF. TIME-HAS
BEEN GRANTED TO· PAY .
REAL ESTATE TAXES-

~]
~~ / ~
~

THE FINAL DAY TO PAY TAX
IS FEBRUARY 14, 1979

, .u_

" Bad news concerning our

budget - the children round
ou t other famili es eat three
time s a day .' '

GEORGE M. COLLINS
MEIGS CO. TREASURER

Philosopher Thomas
Hobbes died in 1679 ..

.

HAMS

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$}295
WHOLE

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LB $!19
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SLAB BACON.::~L!.o:.H~~.•..• ~-.89~
FARM FRESH PRODUCE

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ROME BEAUTY. APPLES .... :.......................... 4 LB. 69~
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WITH

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regular: price I

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NABISCO OREO COOKIES .................. •:;:·

KEEBLER FUDGE STICKS ..................... ~:;

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RESERVED

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CHIPPED CHOPPED HAM.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

GRAPE JAM

BRING IN
YOUR DIMENSIONS
AND OUR
.
EXPERTS WILL

law has already been the sul:&gt;ject of co urt fights.
As far as the national law is
concerned, Wade says "there
Is undoubtedly a lack of unity
in the art community , and
legislation cannot be enacted
on t he fed eral level unless all
constituents agree."

LAFF - A-DAY

.

KITCHEN CENTER, INC.

HELP YOU!

Hall of Fame pitcher Chief
. Bender was one·fourth
Chippewa Indian.

ht~ud ,

CRISPY SERVE BACON ....................................... : ••

DALE'S

CASH &amp; CARRY
SAVINGS WHEN
YOU DO IT
YOURSELF.

llut without unity in the art
community, their eff&lt;J:ts ma y
be futile.
The California law " was
enacted
without
the
participation
of
all
consti tuents, '' says Robert
Wade, of the National
Endowment for the Arts. The

Wax ma n, on the other
asserts tha t " today's
arti s ts
were
f;1med
yesterda y's unknowns" - an

more C~rti ~ts hl:tve j ulued
U1c group. and the lflember.s
plan another exhibit next
spring. Once more, Uley wlll
sell only to those who agree to
the contrad .
Hut if e&lt;·onom ic justi te is
the aim, a Visual Arts federal
law wouldn 't fully solve the
problem, says Ralph Colin,
president .or New York's Art
Oea iers Association . He
claims that only a third o! the
30,000 new artists emerging
every yea r in America are
successful enough to dictate
the price of their work.
18

FAMILY PAK FRYERS 49~
·
LB. $}59
ECKRICH ALL VARIETIES WIENERS··························
89~

9 10

Walsh

.•

!NFL) 35, Kansas City (AFL)
10
Su per Bosl II - Green Bay
INFU 33. Oakland CAFLJ 14
Super Bowl Ill- New York
CAFLI 16, Balt imore INFl) 7

' W L

Rio Grande
Cedarville

Mt .

84-62

WINTER MONTHS
NOTHING TO DO?

Mid-Ohlo

Northern 71, ot

Heidelberg 84. Marietta 75
Muskingunt 53, Den ison 37

Oberlin 66, Kenyon 59

Otterbein 69, MOunt
Union 55
Wittenberg 101, Ohio

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS WANTED

ASSORTED FLAVORS

FAYGO P

4"

5

.DIET FLAVORS

5.

16•01.
Bot lies

$

,,
1

~~··

JIFFFY CORI MUFFII Mil ........... 5~~;:• 1
WESSON COOKING OIL ..................:....!::.~ 99'

89'

~

«

z

~

Um il thrM wi th

one coupon " '

ill
,.z

5 00

/

Wesleyan 72,

Hoosier.But:keye

Sunday's Game

_ Super Bowl XIII
Pittsburgh 35, Dal las 31

SYRACUSE, 0•.&amp;
MIDDLEPORT, 0•.

Findlay 78, Earlham 71
Manchester 86, Bluffton 78
Presidents
Bethany 74, qlram 69

Carneg1e-Mellon 84, Case

Reserve 62
Wash . &amp;
Carroll 77

Jeff . 84, John

Mt . Vernon Nazarene 63,

Pomeroy.Mam Bridge)

Tiffin 62
Ohio

Dominican

BORDEN'S

2% MILK
GAL '"

(Between Hudson Street and

Mid-Ohio
Malone 82. Walsh 78

81,

Cedarville 80, 2 ot
Rio Grande 93, Urbana 65
Other Games
Ashland 92. Grace, Ind. 85
Chicago St. 81, Central St.
78
· Cleveland St. 93. Akron 84
Dayton 68. DePaul 64, ot
Marquete 67, Xavier 50
Salem 92, Steubenville 76
Wright St. 96, Elmhurst 77
'Actress Rosalind . Russell
was born in 1911.

AREA
·

PH. 992-2156
.
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
IITWIIN

st~

TIDE DEGERGENT

3• off l•bel

Limit One With $10.00 Purchase

GLAD TRASH BAGS ......................... ·~;~· SJ"

FOR

Wooster 76, Capllal 67
Anderson 65, Wilmington 38

Miami 73, N. Illinois 69.

OFF

Pzr~tes,

Bv The Association Press
Res ults of ttie 13 Super
Bowl .games:
Super Bowl I - Green Bay

.·

T- ..l-y's To • , ·

-0.

Vo STORES

$1 00 ~
~

Rov-1 lluo Sl1or..

"0

~

00·~1 ·0;#

.

.

"GARANIMALS"

l V2

New Orleans 16 34 .320 1-4
Western Conference

.

::::::; :;:; ~;* ::.:::;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:; :;:;:;:; :;:; :;:;:;:;:; :; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :::::::::;:: : ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::: ..

ENTIRE STOCK

22 25 .468 10'1,

San Ant onio
Houston

Urbana 38.

Eastern gals
beat KC gals

81f2

Central Division . .

Second half rush gives

Waverly's high powered
Tigers broke open a tight
game at Jackson Saturday
night by outscoring the
lronmen 43-11 in the second
half to post a 72-39 SEOAL
victory.
the triumph snapped a
two-game losing streak for
the Tigers as they remain
deadlocked with Athens and
Ironton for first place in the
league with identical 7-1
records.
Coach AI Berger's much
smaller lronmen used the
free throw successfullY in the
first half, converting 14 of 20,
to battle the Tigers to a near·
standoff.
Waverly led 17-11 after the
first quarter and held a slim
29·28 edge at halftime with
hall of Jackson's points
coming from the foul line.
The W-Tigers then blew it
open in the third quarter,
outscoring the hosts 25-5 to
take a commanding 54-33 lead
into the final period.
In upping their season

Eagles·.defeat

Previous
champions

I •

Rio's second half explosion
crushes Urbana five, 93-65

judge Fred Swearingen flagged Barnes for. pass interference
- 33yards and a first down at the Dallas 23.
A few plays later, Franco Harris roared through the line for
22 yards a nd the touchdown that made it 28-17.
Nineteen seconds after Harris' TD, came Swann. Randy
White of the Cowboys, who shared last year's Supe.r BowlMVP
award , was one of this year's goats when he fumbled a ktckoff
after the Harris score.
.
.
· Bradshaw opened the sc oring with a TD pass, covering 28
yards to the guy known primarily as Pittsburgh 's "other"
recei~er, John Stallworth. He made a leaping catch in the left
corner of the end zone , just 5:13 into the game.
· On the final play ol the quarter, Staubach tied it with a swing
pass to Tony Hill, who took ihe ball on the.Steelers 26 and raced
· the resto!the 39yards down the left side lor the score.
Hende rson who had two of Dallas' four sacks of Bradshaw,
clutched the Steelers quarterback and fellow linebacker Mike
Hegman swiped the ball and sprinted 37 yards for a TD that
gave Dallas a 14-7lead less than three minutes into the second
period. Less than two minutes later, Bradshaw and Stallworth
struck again .
Bradshaw faded back from the 25 aixl dumped off a pass to
· Stallworth at the 35, Cornerback Aaron Kyle, burned by
Stallworth once , was charred again . He dived at the receiver's •
feet, missed, then could only watch as the play went for 75
yards and a tying touchdown.

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middlenort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 22. 1979
U&gt;e largest lobbying group, burden ol a ·rea l' !inancial
. ut.Ut
piC •
.
the 700-member Arllsts transaction."' he said.
(; iUJert t::delson , " lawyer
Hights Today, said royalties
for· the . Al't Dea lers
a~...,..~ts
~
would
ke
ep
intact
"the
1
.J '
-.1 "~
•
umbilica i c-ord ·between the Associa tion, a rgues that
artists are different from
artist and his work ."
By MARIA PALLAIS
and others who would be
Waxman, who plans to writers and composers, who
Associated Press Writer . paying royalties on visual present to Congress in F~ bru­ "get royalties . when they
, NEW YORK (AP )- When art ,"
is needed
for ary a third revised dra!t of license their work, not when
Robert Rauschenberg was a congressional approval.
his bill, says, "It's only just they resell it."
And many art dealers, that visual artists share the
struggling painter in the late
The California iaw, which
195Cls, a collector of "pop" art collectors and museums have benefits of profitable da tes to 1976, entitles an
bought one of his works for been critical. Art dealers, in resales."
artist to collect 5 percent of
$960- and resold it later for · particular, argue it would
But most major dealers the price of "a registered
$85,000. freeze the market for disagree. Spokes.men lor work which wa s profita bly
The collector made a profit conte.mporary art.
Sotheby Parke Bernet; a New resold at over $1 ,000."
of 8,754 percent in the resale.
Those active in the move- York art auction gallery with
The artists' arl1"111ent is
''I've worked my ass off for ment seeking the new law in- a salesroom in Los Angeles, that their work is a
you to make aU this profit," clude such well-known names say a similar bill already in commodity and should be
!he painter heatedly, and as Jasper Johns, James . effect in California had ''an · treated as such. They want to
publicly, told him right after Ro se nquist , and Robert adverse eff ect on the sell art works as they would
the auction .
Indiana , who painted business oLauction houses novels if they were writers · That has long 'been a ' 1LOVE " with the now- and galleries."
with a contract.
Jroblem foc artists, but now familiar block letters in
If tile concept is written
Even without a law , Judy
hundreds . of them are which the "0 " teeters off bal- into federal law, "it would Pendleton , an artist who
supporting a proposal to ance. Indiana made 25 copies dissuade mo st American heads a New York City-based
change their finances by in sculpture and prints, but coll ec tors !rom buying group called the Artist
guaranteeing them royalties he never copyrighted the contemporary art," asserted Right s' Association, ha s
much like those which works, and thus missed out · David Nash , a director at begun selling her paintings
Sotheby Parke Bernet.
Writers and composers get. on .most of the pro!its.
with a contract entitling her
artists,
both
These
Waxman's bill would help
One dealer who asked to re- to a share of resale profits.
struggling and· successful, artists by setting up a main anonymous said that if She claims that " it hasn 't
say it is only right that they National Commission on the the government decides to proven to be a hindrance in
get a share of the profits from Visual Arts to "require protect artists in the face of selling my work " - and that
the resale of their work.
payments by certain sellers increasing speculation, the she has received 500 requests
. California Rep. Henry A. of works of visual arts," and number of collectors who buy for a copy of the so-called
Waxman Is proposing that register art transactions just their work will diminish agreement. Congress pass a law to do just as the Ubrary of Congress substantially.
A couple of years ago, her
·, 'When most businessmen !4.fllember group held two
ll)at, but there is a major registers books printed.
Rubin . Gorewitz, a ' New buy art, they like the idea of shows in which buyers had to
problem. He says the "full
support of dealers, collectors Yock City lawyer who heads buying beauty without the sign the contract. Since then,

$159

BANQUET

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.\!i' ' ' ' ' ii;};;;'' i i;I'' ' ' '&gt;'!l New members we~comed, ·
1.1
.

1.-The Daily Sentinel, Middle;.Jrt-Pomcroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 22, 1979

Us. .. . By Helen J.:,e1lribbons awarded in weight loss
·

.

·:::

New

members

".

were

Roney and Carolyn Beaver for having lost the most
bed. RUIUlers-up were Daisy weight during the week.
IS BINGE EATER ANOREXIC?
wetght loss were a'!'arded at Patterson and Alma Jeffers . , Eight new members were
'AID' SOCIETY OFFERS.HELP
Ia!;! week's ~eetings of the
At the Middleport morning welcomed.
DEAR HELEN :
Charlene Hinkle and
Shnderella Dtet Classes.
class. eight new members
Our daughter was the classic " good little girl" who comAlma Jeffers received .a SO were taken in. Edwina Scott Connie Evans were the ones
peted with herself to be perfect.
pound ribbon, and :Maxine lost the ·most weight for the losing the most weight at the
A friend teased her about getting fat, and we were quite hap- Jordan, a 35 pound rtbbon at . w~ek, wtth Regma Erlewlne . Point Pleasant morning
py when She began to slim down. Since she w,a sn't eating any the Mason class me~mg, bemg the runner-up . At the class, with Linda Wamsley
less, we thought she was just losing baby fat - until we Twenty-one . new members even.ing class, Sarah Johnson and 'Donna Elliott being the
discovered she was vomiting up her meals. (Those regular were taken tn and the most recetved her 20 pound ribbon, best losers at the evening
trips to the bathroom as soon a s she left the table made us weekly weight lost, Clara while Rhonda Roush and class. Several members were
suspicious.)
·
Dixie Sayre were recognized taken into the two classes.
Now it seems that some days she tries to avoid food, and on
others she overeats. We've found hidden candy wrappers in
her bedroom, and food disappears from the kitc~en and
refrigerator, sometimes in startling amounts. I've asked ques·
tions, but she avoids straight answers, or else she screams tha t
)'m spying on her. (She never lost her temper before.)
·She's thin and'nervous lately . Not emaciated, or excessively
active, as we've re~ d are the symptoms of anorexia nervosa
. (the starvation disease), but still not her same sweet self.
The Busy Bees Class of the Riley and also to Mrs. Ada program, members worked
Could this be the beginning stages? I don't want to play the
Middleport First Baptist Root who observed her IOOth on the yearbooks.
worried mother if it's just a phase. I well remember when I
was a teen-ager and trying to reduce, I'd overeat and then put Church meeting Thursday birthday Monday at the
rny finger down mr throat, this when I couldn't resist tempta, night at the church voted to Pinecrest Nursing Home in
lion a minute longer. But I soon outgrew throwing-up and send a contribution to the Gallipolis. Mrs. Eva Hartley
A surprise birthday party
Lung Association .
was among those visiting
learned to control my appetite.
honoring
Warren Van Meter
Mrs.
Mary
Brewer, Mrs. Root .
Shohld we go on the assumption that she will too' -MRS.
was
held
recently
at the borne
president, had charge of the
A jello salad, decorated
T.W., REDWOOD CITY, CALIF.
·
of
his
daughter
and son-Inmeeting which opened with cake, coffee and tea were
DEARMRS. W.: ·
GALUA-MEIGS Community Mental Health Center inpatient unit stBff are shown
law , Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
prayer and devotions.by Mrs. served by Mrs. l!rewer, Mrs.
Never "assume" when child's health is at stake!
seated, left w right, Pam Massie, Jan Doolittle and Marc Levine; second row, F.ssie
Burke and daughters, Lisa
There's need to worry if your daughter's personality has Nelle Werner. She used Werner, and Mrs . Thelma ' and Tricia.
Branuner ; third row, 1.,., Jim Fultineer, Dow Saunders and Bill Bennett.
scripture from Psalm 32, and Hayes to those named and
changed and she continues losing weight.
Attending were Mr. and
the
article "Korean Kite Mrs. Lillian Demo'skey, Mrs.
Consult a doctor, have her examined for physical ailments,
Mrs
. Otto Marcinko and
and then , if anorexia nervosa is suspected (the binge-vomit Philosophy." The flower fund Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs.
Stephanie,
Charlotte Van
syndrome is a major symptom), try psychiatric counseling. report was given by Mrs. Eva Isabelle Winebrenner, Mrs.
Meter,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Richard
When !he disorder is caught in its beginning stages, there's Hartley, while Mrs. Freda Leora Sigman, and a guest, · Spencer, Robert Bailey,
Edwards
gave
the Mary Beth Brewer.
much hope for early recovery.
James Bailey, Oscar Pentreasurer's
report.
The
birthThe table was ce11tered
You'll receive great encouragement - and your daughter
nington,
and Mr. and Mrs.
might be convinced she needs treatment- if you'll both attend day boxes and the barrel with a red- poinsettia in a
Carr.
Charles
copper bowl with white
meetings of the Anorexic Aid Society, San Francisco area funds were reported on.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Members
sang
"Happy
tapers
In copper candlesticks
branch, at 1010 Doyle Street, Menlo Park, Calif. Write to DirecMrs. Charles Sargent and Mr.
The staff of the inpatient portunity to tour the unit, cerns regarding the unit. The tor Sue Morton, Box 583, Los Altos, Calif. 94022, for further in- Birthday" to Mrs.' Clara Bell on either side. In lieu of a
and Mrs. Marvin Walker.
unit of the Gallla - Jackson - Open House will be held on inpatient unit Is a part of the fotmation. -H.
·
· Refreshments of cake, ice
Meigs Community Mental Sunday, Jan. 28, from II a.m. Gallia Mental Health Center
cream, punch and coffee
Health Center wishes to until 8 p.m. Staff members which is located at the juncNOTE TO OTHERS who· are threatened by anorexia nerwere served .
announce the opening of the will be present to tour and tion of State Routes 160 and 35 vosa: Chapters of the National Anorexic Aid Society (self-help
inpatient urdt on ~an. 29. This answer questions and con- in Gallipolis.
groups for victims and their families) are now active in Colfadllty will be a ten-bed unit
REEDSVILLE The made. Twenty-one 'shut-in
umbus, Cleveland and Cincinnti, Ohio; Sacramento, San FranCounty
Health
offering short-term intensive r·--~---··-, Meigs
cisco Bay Area, nnd Los Angeles, Calif.; Annapolis, Md.; Oak Reedsville U.M.W. met atthe calls were made. Nominating
Department, Mechanic St.,
Charles and
Brenda
psychiatric treatment to the
Ridge, Tenn.; Valparaiso, Ind. ; Long Island, N.Y.; and church basement with Mrs. -committee for 1979 is Mrs.
Pomeroy.
residents of the three
Douglas
hostess . Lillian Picket)s, Mrs. Verna LaDeaux of Chester are
related organizations are operating in the Chicago area and Sue
'BEND '0 THE RIVER
counties of Gallia, Jackson
New Jersey. Groups in Phoenix, Ariz. and Rochester, Minn. Devotions were led by Mrs. Rose and Mrs . Connie announcing the birth of a son,
Wesley Allen, Nov. '!1. His
and Meigs.
Garden Club, home of Mrs. are getting underway.
Sandy Cowdery entitled "Are · Rucker.
·
Grella Simpson, Monday ,
To provide the residents of
A Bible game was played birth weight was eight
Specific questiol!l! will be answer~ if you send a stamped, We What We Pray."
7:30p.m. with Mrs. Bernice
the communities an opself-addressed envelope to Patricia Howe, director, National Readings were Jliven bv Mrs with Mrs. Cowdery winning pounds, two ounces. Mr. and
MONDAY
Carpenter til halie a program
Mrs.
Vivian the prize: Mrs. Pat Martiit Mrs. LaDeaux have another
Anorexic Aid Society, P .O. BoJ!: 29461, Columqus, Ohio, 43229. Douglas,
JANUARY MEETING, on birds.
Humphrey
and
Mrs . will have the · February son, Christopher Lee, seven.
Membership dues of $5 per year entitle you to regular newsletMiddleport Elementary
Cowdery.
Mrs.
Douglas
gave meeting. Sandwiches, chips Grandparents are Mr. and
BETHEL 62, International
ters, information on clinics and doctors specializing in treatSchool PTA scheduled for Order of Job's Daughters,
the
closing
prayer.
·
and dip with relishes, Mrs. Roger Toney, Route 3,
ment ·of the disorder, news of latest developments In care and
Monday evening has been 7:30 Monday night at the Mid- cure; and updates on how the various branches are progressBusiness meeting was cookies, punch and coffee Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ludy
cancelled.
. ,
Toney, great-grandmother,
dleport Masonic Temple.
conducted , by President Mrs. were served to the following:
ing .
. 169 N . 2nd Street
SOUTHEitN
Band
·
Beckley, w. Va.
Humphrey.
Dues
were
"Brenda
and
Lisa
Rucker,
N.A.A.S.
works
closely
with
pr:ofessionals.
It
is
not
WEDNESDAY
Middleport, Ohio
Boosters Monday 7 p.m. at
collected
and
treasurer's
Beverly
Wigal,
Abigal
substitute
lor
psychiatric
help,
but
an
adjunct
to
it.
-H.
POMEROY
MID992-2725
high school for special
report was read. The church Cautborne, guests, and these
DLEPORT Lions Club,
meeting. All members urged
awning will be Installed in the members, Vivian Humphrey,
CANCELLATION
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Keno , 3 to 3: 30 p.m . ;
BOOKMOBILE
to attend.
spring.
The
group
voted
to
Dolly
Reed,
Connie
'Rucker,
A
meeting
of the Women's
Inn. Lions urged to attend.
Reedsville - Reed's Store, 4
SCHEDULE ,
CHE~TER PTO Monday
Sandy
Cowdery,
buy
a
manger
scene
for
the
Verna
Rose,
1
of
the Veterans
Auxiliary
1
The Bookmobile schedule to 5; Tuppers Plains - Arfor
THURSDAY
7:30 p.m. at school.
church.
Mrs.
Cowdery
and
Mamie
Buckley,
Lorraine
Memorial
Hospital
scheduled
for Tuesday has been an- b.!iugh Housing, 5:30 to 6:30;
REGATTA COMMITTEE
SPECIAL MEETING of the
·Mrs.
Dolly
Reed
are
to
Wigal,
Violet
Satterfield,
and
for
Tuesday
has
been
cannounced by Jeanne Robbana, Chester - Metbodist Church,
J, n. 22 lhru Feb. 10
purchase
one.
Plans
to
visit
a
Ullian
Pickens.
·
District Advisory Council Thursday at noon at Meigs
celled.
6:45to ·7:45; Riggs Addition, 8
librarian.
7:30 p.m . Monday at the Inn .
nursing home .in April were
It is as follows:
to 8:30.

~

WITH PRIDE· WITH .JOY

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we~comM and rtbbons for

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NATIONAL JAYCEE WEEK· JANUARY 21·27

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•

Busy Bee Class contributes to Lung
Assn, obseroes member's birthday

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Hold surprise party

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Gallia-Meigs Mental .Health
Center opens inpatient unit

DOWNING CHILDS

THE DAILY SENTINEL

INSURANCE-REAL ESTATE

POMEROY, 0.

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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HALL'S BEN FRANKLIN

PERSONAL GROWTH AND SUCCESS ••• WHILE

MIDDLEPORT, 0 ,

Reedsville UMW met

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Social 1
tCal d t
1 . en .art

POMEROY,O.

·TWIN CITIES
GATEWAY

KArs

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

BEAUTY SALON

·KINGSBURY HOME
SALES &amp; SERVICE

a

"PERM SPECIAL"
20.00
17.50

POMEROY,O.

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
.MOTOR SALES
POMEROY,O.

Jaycees Are
People For Progress

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

...

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.sank

POMEROY, OIDO
1
40;000 MaximUm lnsuratiCe For Eacl:l Depositor

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· lnsuraoce Corporltim.

-s~~~ijfjJA Home Ban~

~

For

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
POMEROY,O.

ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG CO.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

pomeroy
,nationa
bank

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL

the bank of
the century
established 1872

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

DALE C. ·WARNER
INSURANCE

FDIC

Meigs County

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POMEROY,O.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, 0.

People

.TEAFORD REALTY

RACINE

JAYCEE FACTS
MEMBERSHIP

PURPOSE

Nearly 8,500 local chapters with
375,000 members in 50 states and the
District of Columbia.

Personal development through com munity service for young men 18-35.

HEADQUARTERS

HISTORY

MIDDLEPORT , 0 .

FRANCIS FLORIST

Jaycee movement began in 1915 in
St. Louis.

A full time staff of 90 in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, provides wide range of
service.

COMMU~UTY

RAWLINGS.COATS
FUNERAL HOME

ACTION PROJECTS

• Christmas Food Basket Program
• Infirmary Christmas Party
• Outstanding Young Farmer
• Powell's Super Valu Halloween
Party
• Frog Jump
• Muscular Distrophy
• Eat-A-Thon
• Halloween Patrol

•
-•
•
•
•

Toys For Tots
Pomeroy Park Projt;!ct
Haunted House
Punt Pass 'N Kick
Dilly Dunker
(Available for Public Use)
• Send A Kid to Camp
• Safety Patrol for
Mental Retardation Bike-AThon

POMEROY,O .

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
POMERQY,O .

MOORE'S

BANK
Deposits Insured To $40,000

.,
&amp;:::"&lt;·

,;

POMEROY, 0.

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FABRIC SHOP

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POM.E ROY , O .

OFFICERS

Pres., Dave Jenkins
Past. Pres., Mike Mullen
V"ICe Pres., wm·. Young

DIRECTORS

Dave Fox

Ken Searls

Sec.-Treas., Robert Schmoll

Glen Enslen
Mike Kel~

MARK V
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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MEIGS AUTO PARTS

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POMEROY,O.

CREED
We Believe: That faith in God gives meaning and purpose
to human life;
· That the brotherhood of man transcends ·the sovereignty
of nations; ·

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ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE

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MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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heritage house

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MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

That economic justice can best be won by free men
through free enterprise;
That government should be of laws rather than ·of men;
That earth's great treasure lies in human personality;

.,

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
Pomeroy, 0.

ACE HARDWARE

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And that service to humanity is the best work .of life.

G &amp; J AUTO PARTS

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

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POMEROY, 0 .

POMEROY,O.

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NATIONAL JAYCEE WEEK

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HOME NATIONAL

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"THE FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

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DAN THOMPSON FORD

POMEROY,O.

Throughout Our Community Jaycee Members are Sharing in the
Challenges and Responsibilities of Bullding for the Present and
the Future. We Salute Their Accomplishments Toward the

Far•nters

COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT•. Jaycees

MEIGS INN-PIZZA SHACK

1

pomeroy
rutl~nd
&gt;tuppers pla•ns

POMEROY, 0 .

· WORKING TO AID OTHERS THROUGH

Announce birth

Bettennent of All In This Community.

SMITH NELSON
MOTOR

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

JANUARY.21 TO 27
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MIODLEPQRT, 0.

.VETERANS
MEMORIAL' HOSPITAL
.

- POMEROY,O.

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY
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8- The Daily Sentmel, MlddlellOrt·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 22, 1979
ORDINANCE NO . 1071 -79

ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION

ORDINANCE
RE SOLUTION to

A

appropr tatt ons

tor

make

Cvrrent

E x pen se s and other Ex
penditures of th e Village of
M iddleport , Sta t e of Ohto ,
dunng the t.sca t vear end tng

December 31. 1979
SECTION
1.
BE

IT

RESOLVED by the Co un c il
fQr the Village of Middleport,
State of Oh 10, That , to pr ovide'
for the current expenses and

otner e~ pendl'tures of the sa1d
Vtllage of Middleport during
t he

fi sc a l

year

end i ng

December 3 1, 1979, the
fotlow• n g su m s be and they

are hereby set as1de and
appropn ated a s follows , 11 1Z

Sect •on 2 That th ere be
app r opnat ed
from
the
GENERAL FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL

law

SERVICES

Passed January 17, 1979

MAYOR

Pe r sonal Se rvtce

2,500 00
6,200 00
8.600 00

$

Other

Tot a l Fo r Mayor

CLERK·

CLE R K ·TR EASUR E R
Perso nal Ser v •ces
2.500 .00
Other
2,000 00
Tot al For Clerk
Clerk T reasurer
4,500 00

SOLICITOR

LEGAL ADVISOR
Person--al Services
3,000 .00
Tota l For SOIIC ifOr ·
3,000 00
Legal Adviso r

COUNCIL

Per sonal Serv1ces
1,008
Tota l For Cou nci l
1.00$
BUILDINGS AND
M IS C.
Other
60, 135
Tota l For Buildings
and M •sc
60 ,1 35
Tot a l For Gene ral
Go'J ern menta l
Sen11 CCS
77 ,243
SECURITY OF

00
00
00
00
00

PEfiSONS AND

PROPERTY
POLIC E DEPARTMENT
Persona l Serv~ees
36,200 00
Other
21,865 00
Tot al For Pol~ee
Department
58, 065 .00
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Personal Serv1c es
1,190 00
Other
8,835 00
Total For F•re
Deoartm ent
10 ,025 00
Tota l for Sec ur 1ty of
Per sons and
Proper I y
68,090.00

LEISURE TIME

ACTIVITIES
PARKS AND
PLAYGROUNDS
Persona l Serv•ces
5.500 oo
Other
12,500 00
Total For Parks and
Playgrounds
18,000 00
Tota l For Le•sure
T1me Actlvttu~s
18 ,000 00
PLANNING

COMMISSION
Other
,
500 00
Total For P l ann tng
Commtssion
sao oo
Tota l For Com mun it y
En'Jtronment
500 oo

STREET LIGHTING

Other
Tot al For Street
Ltghtmg
Tota l For
Tran sportat•on
Fac ll •t•es
Grand Total

12,000.00

12,000 00
12,000 00

GENERAL FUND
Appropr iat•on
175,833 00
Sec t 1on 4 That there be
appropr~ated
from the

STREET

CO NSTRUCT ION .

MA I NTENANCE
AN D
REPAIR
FUND
(AUTO
LIC E N SE ANO GASOLI NE
TAX J
STREET MAINTENANCE
FUND
Personal Ser v 1ces
12,300 00
Other
58,560 00
Tota l For Stree t
Matn l ena nce and
Constru c t ton
70.850 00
Total For Street
Construc t ton,
Ma•nlenance and
Repa1r F und
70,850 00
Sectton 6 That th er e be
ap pr oprtated
fr om
the
CEMETERY F UND Tr an sac tion

PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICES

CEMETERY
OPERATION AND

MAINTENANCE
Persona l Servrces
Other
Tot al For Cem etery
Operat•on and
Ma.nt enance
T M~I For Ceme t ery
F und

7,300 00
5,580 00

A tt est

Gen e G rate
Clerk of Councll

CERTIFICATE

Sec t •on 5705 39, R C. - " No
appropriation measure shall
become effective until there
IS filed with the appropriating
authoritY b y the county
aud itor a certifi ca te that the
tota l appropriations fro m
each fun d , taken toget her
W1fh all other outstanding
approP.rtations, do not exceed
such orttetal estimate or
amended OfftC !&amp;I est1mate
W hen the appropriations does
not eJHee d such offiCial
estimate, the county auditor
Shall g1ve such certificate
forthWith upon rece •ving
from
the
appropriating
authority a cerltfted copy of
the approp riat•on measure ."
The Slate of Ohio Meigs
county, ss .
I. Gene Grate, Grate, Clerk
of the Vlllige of Middleport In
said County , and in whose
custody the Files, Journals
and Records are required by
the Laws of the State of Ohio
to be kept. do hereby certify
that the forego1n1 Annual
Appropriation Resolution is
taken and cor,ied from the
original R eso utlon now on
f1le with said VIllage. th•t the
torego1ng Resolution hu
been compared by me with
the said origlnil and tt~at the
same is a true and correct
copy thereof.
Wiln&amp;n my siQnilture, this
17th day of Janulry, 1979
Gene Grate
Clerk of tne VIllage
of Middleport, Ohio
Meigs County, Ohio
Jan 22 , ltr

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF AC ·

COUNTS,

PROBATE

CDURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

Accounts and vou c hers of
the
fo llowing
named
f 1du c1a ries have been filed in
the Probate Court , Meigs
County , OhtO, for approval
and set tlement
CASE NO 16,148 Twenty
fourth Annual Account of
Bessie Ol •ver , guardian of the
person and estate of Grover
c Oll ... er
CASE NO 19404 EtOhth
Current Acco unt of Joyce A .
Dav)s , Guard11!1n of the
person and estate of Mary E
Russell .
CASE NO
19404
Ninth
Current Account of Joyce A
Dav1s , Guardian ot the
person and es t ate of Mary E ,
Russ ell.
CA SE NO 22178 F tnal and
O!Strtbut1ve Account of
F rank
w Porter . Jr ..
Executor of the Estate of
Marjorie
M
Wyatt,
Deceased
CASE NO . 20532 F 1nal and
D•stribultve Account of
Em ma C
Radford, Ad ·
m tn1stratrt x ot the Estate of
Char l es
w
Radford,
Deceased
CASE NO 13111 F1nal and
o,str,but , .,.e Acco u n t of
Edtson
Hobstetter,
Ad ·
m m 1strator of the Estate of
James M BIShop , Deceased

Third
Annua l Acc ount of Louis 8

12,880 00

Vaugha n , Guard ian of the
Estate of Will1am Reeves, an
tncompetent person
Unless ekcept!ons are flied
thereto, satd accou nts w111 b e
tor hea nng before said Court
on the 20th day of February ,
1979 at whteh l1me satd ac
co unts will be considered and
continued from day to day
u nt il ftnally dtsposed ot
A ny person 1nterested may
tile wr •tten except 1ons to satd
accounts or to matters
pertam tng to the exec ution of
the trust , not less than five
d ays prtor to the date set for
hea r1 ng
Mannmo 0 Webster

(REVENUE ) FUN D
ADMINISTRATION

- WATER

Persona l Serv1ces
25,200 00
Debt Ser v•ce
36.570 00
other
37 ,230 00
Total For
Adm •n•stra t •on
- W ater
99 ,000.00
Total For Water
(R eve n ue ) Fund
99 ,000 00
Sec t ton 10 That the r e be
apprapr.a t ed
from
the

SEW E RI R EVEN U E1 F UND
SEWER CONSTRUCTION

Capttal Outlay
125.000 00
Total For Se wage
125,000 00
ADMINISTRATION
- SEWAGE
Persona l Servtces
21.200 00
Debt Servtce
24,3 60 00
14,900 00
Oth er
Tot&lt;" l For
~
A dmm i stra t ton Sewa ge
60,460 00
Tot a l For Sewer
( Reve nue ) F una 185,460 00
Sec l •on 12 T ha t there be
from
t he
a pp ro pr . a t ed
POLI CEM AN ' S
RELIEF
A ND P E N SION F UND
Oth er
2,035 00
Tot al For Poli ceman ' s
Reli ef an d Pens 1on
F und
2.03500
Se c t. on 13 That th ere be
appropr tat ed
f ro m
th e

B0 N0

RETIREMENT FUN D
Paym ent of
PrinCip a I
5,000 00
Payment of
In teres t
1,35 0 00
Other
500 00
Total For General
Bond Ret~r e ment
Fund
6,850 00

CAS E

NO

19105

JUDGE

Com mon Pleas Court,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio

I ll 22. lie

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COIJNTY, OHIO
ESTATE
OF
HANNAH
GREENLEE, DECEASED

ANTI -RECESSION
ASSISTANCE
FUND
Oth er
1."'13 17
Total For Ant1 -Recesslon
Asstst ance Fu nd
1,.,. 13 17
Tota l for F ederal
Revenue Shartng and
An t t Recess. on
Assis t ance F und
20,972 08
rolat All
Apppropria tions 576, 38 0 08
Section 17 And the V1!1age
Clerk 1S hereby authorized to
araw h •s 41Warrants on the
VI ll age
Treasurer
for
paymeCl iS from an y of the

I day
ZdaY'
3da1'
6day.s

1211
1911
Z.21
3.75

992 7300
Hammond

~word

per day.
AdaJ'Ul'!!!U\g other than eoftleCUtlve
days lriH be charged ol the I day

1973 CHEVROLET fl iCK UP . auto ,
atr P S • P 8 9t:l5 3910

....

---i973 OLDSMOBilE DELTA 88 lull

MobUe Home sal• and Yard sales
.,.. ac&lt;opted cnly Jrilll cub wllll

The Publl.sher roRfVOI lhe r1ght
to edll on'el.ct any Ids doomed 00.
jectlonal Tile PubiWier wlll not be
respott~lble

for more than one ineor-

recllnsertion.
Phone M-21511

POST FIJ,I.ED
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) The new post of Deputy
Chancellor of the Ohio Board
of R~ents was filled Friday
by William B. Coulter.
In the past 15 years, Coulter
had served the board as vice
1 chancellor for admlnlslraUon .
1 and acting cjlancellor.
The new !M&gt;Sltlon was
created on the recom·
mendatlon of Edward Q.
Moulton, who will step into
the chancellorship this
month.
Coulter will coordinate aD
phaae.s of the boards day-today operations.

For all
Needs.

power good ltres runs good
$600 Coli Spen~e r 949 1150

In momory, Card of l'llonD and
Obitual')' · S cents per word, ..,.00
ITUnlmwn Caahir. illvuce.

--- - ----

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

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installed a new
heitlng &amp; air cond. unit in
Having

&lt;P.M.

Frldayoltonwoo -

Notices
Roctne Gun Club
Every Sunday l pm Factory
_: hokejl~~~~r. _____ _

GUN SHOOT

GUN SHOOT Roc1ne Volunteer
Ftre Dept E11ery Saturday 6 30
pm ot thei r butldtng In Ba shon
!~c~ r! 0oke ~u~ ~n!y_ _ _
INCOME TAX Servtce . Federal
on c{ ~tp te Toxes 992 2272 for
oppts or see Wando Ebhn
41000 laurel Cliff Rd
INCOME TA X Sen11ce Federal
and State Wolioce Rus sell
Brodbury Coll992 7218
· - -- - - - - - - - - - - CATHIE WOOD ts now employed
by Aline Weo ver s Oress and
Beauty Shop . Vtne St Roctne
Perm Spee~o I $20 now S15
Blow cuts , $6 All old and new
customers welcome
Phon e
949 2666 Monday thru Sotur

cond. (both In good work -

tng condttlon) . For more
information phone Carter
Plumbing &amp; Heating at
949-2441 .

MI XED CONDITIONED hay Ve ry
goo d qu o ltty
D elive ry
ovo do bl e Phone 991 7201 or

992 ·3309

Real Estate for Sate
FARM FOR sol e Hou se 2 ba rn s
tro1l er Lorge pon d 10 acres or
82 ocres 7.1 2-2566
REAL ESTATE LOANS VA
No
money
d ow n
( e! •g• ble
Veterens) FHA · As low as 31""
down (all non Veterens ond
general publ1c ) To purcho se
reo! esto tP. or r el1nonce 30

Minneapolis, Minn.

YEARS TERMS IR ELAND MOR
TGAGE CO , 77 E Stot e St
Athens Phone6 14 592 3051

old

_'"!1'_

For Rent

TWO BEDROOM k•tchen furn 1sh
ed opt Colt before 8 om

216

-----------REDUCE SAFE end fa st with
Go8ese Tablets and E Vop
_ \.~oter p1lls' Nel ~n Dru_g __ _

The subject of these Public
Hearings Is the revtew of the
Annual Plan tor Programs on
Ag ing .
Testimony can be spoken or
wn fte n or can be pres~ted
In formally The Area Plan Is
availl!lble at your local
County Com missioners Office
for review
T he publ i c Is cordially
urged to &amp;ttend and give
tes timony
For farther Information
plea se contact . Buckeye Hills
· Hock tng ValleY~ Regional
Developmen t District f614 l

37&lt;9&lt;36.
111

n

29, 21e

-~

I
I

SNOW
TIRE SALE

o:. Second Street

LARGE

ROOMS

3

bedrooms, all have closets,
llh baths, new nat. gas fur ·

nace with all city util ities
Only S2S,ooo . ,
•
MODERN - 7 yrs old. LOI
100x125, 3 nice bedrooms,
family room, in town sub
division with

city' water

and godd repair. S29,500
RENEWED - 3 bedrooms ..

new oil furnace, L .C
water, modern kit
and
large lot near town. $23,000.

BARGAIN - 8 roorri older
home w1th bath. nat. gas
and lot lor only $12,000.
1 YR . OLD Nice 3
bedroom ranch home. Kll.

and dining area with view
of nature Garage and one
acre S35,500.
INVESTMENT - 5 renlals

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

OUCE SAFE ond fo st w1 th GoBese
Tablets and E Vop 'water
_p~ls " N_!ls~n_D~u~ ___ _
ALFALFA HAY large round bales
New •deo uniptcker-sheller
84::1 -328 I after 6pm

1

In production. Four 2
bedrooms
and
one
business
All for. only

$68,000
IF YOU CAN AFFORD
SI,OOO .OO DOWN, WE CAN
SELL YOU A PLACE .
CALL 9V2-3325.
G. Bruce Teaford
Helen I,. Teaford
Sue'i". Murphy

AssociatH

-

H01isi;1g - .- .
Headquarters

SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

HOU SE IN
Miner sville
i
bedroom living room k itchen
bath end utility room N tee lull
stz e bosemeRf . 992 -5823

-SECLUDED

~---

Pomeroy Landmark
· Jock W. Carsey, Mgr.

PM

Phono m -2111
1

'1

NUBIAN

MilK

goat,

·-- -- ·---------

o.

.

20. Marla Callas in Concert 33
10 31}-Crockett ' s Victory
Garden 20;

..
,..
"

"

·-

Masonarv works

ROUSH

I
l

IF THAT Rt=PORT FROM P05E IDOI\l'5
Wt= MAY 5001\l FiND THAT
GOLD-SELLIED MON5T5R
TOOK MV ARM !

99H583
10 Years Experience

Unscramble

these

IN TOWN livi ng All
electr.c, 3 bedroom I 1/ 2 baths,
carpe ted family room wtth
Fronkl ln sto.,..e , garage 1 I
acre lend Near M e•g s H1 gh
School To see coll992·6287

- --

~

- - c -- - - - ,. --

imately

10%

...'

THE SWEEP

month ly payment IP&amp;I ).
10 LOTS - With •barn and
fencmg, in Long Bottom,
good 1 floor plan home,
fru it trees, garden spa ce,
nice kitchen , view of the
beaut1fUI Ohio, basement,
many other features. ON ·

L Y $17,700 .00.
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD In

Century Know. How.
Specl•llaing In
WDadstovt, Oil Furnaee
&amp; Fireplace Flues
Phone: 742-3110
K lm White, Proprietor

Middleport, 2 story home
that looks nice and can look
nicer. Close to schools,

shopp1ng, etc
ASK lfjG
$20,000.00 _
SECLUDED RANCH

Close to town , :~;,. acre, 3
bedrooms, nice puilt In kit
chen,
familY
room,
carpeting, woodbutning

fireplace A GOOD BUY
ATS2MOO 00.
$6,000.00 will buy this nice 2

,

'IOU
•

•

_
... .....
_
.....

AVIJ~RTI%

24 -H&lt;X112.
SBR&lt;JIC(; l

CHOCI' ...-n1AT".&gt; Tl1f!Ef;
&amp;-IJDUR~D~
:...::~~..-or;¥1

•

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer , as sug·
ge sted by the abo"'e cartoon

Pnntans wer here.
Jumbles OLDER

Saturdays

I Answer

R&lt;?t!_Ni? ~__LE_!l~~r .~ ·~~52&lt; __ _
RUTLAND HARDWARE '1 doors
down from Rutland Post Offtce
1 Iorge King cool ond wood
heater , regular pr1ce $399 95
wtth
blower
SALE PRI CE
$379 9S wtth lree 36 111 54 heovv
stove bciord ') Rad1ont coo l
heaters . regular price 5254 95
SALE PRICE $19Ci' 95 wtth I rAe 36
J( 36 11o ovv slo"• t-.o ard

HEH ~ H E I1 1 I M
ALL RIG HT i'LOW

REYNOLD'S

SHOP

Y'SEE? WE
MADE IT!

ISRANNY, IF 'IOU'l.L

'Tell. US WHE~

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
concel led? Lost your operators
l1cense" Phone 992·2143.

NOW WHY' N'CHA COME
SIT A SPELL !

"\.~1/JiJ..r""i
;·,

1

Y 1.1Ve!

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv ·
mg Oh1 o Volley reg1on , She
day s a week 24 hours seN•ce .
Emergency calls . Call 882-2952
or 882·2305

,_,.;bS,...~~~

ug •st' s Wire

~~i»";~ 13 Ready

Williams

for

5 Tropical
Amer. tree
6 Muse of lync
poetry
1 Twmge
8 Chuckle
9 Courageous
one
12 Tenant

pluckmg
u C1ty m.
Pak1stan
15 Dutch c1ty
' 16 Afterwards
17 Completely
19 Wee bird
:':::&gt;-""--~~~- 20 Moslem

SA'VE ON .

DRIVE AUTilE

WILL CARE for elderly pers on in
prtvote home m Pomeroy
Everythtng furnished ,
but
med1c'b tton $250 per month

I can't deCide
whether to nsk
it.

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

Coli '192-!022

GU1TAR-ANO:'--:-b-o-n~io--,-le-s-so-ns­

Talt.e

Too late now

t' beat th' rush
hour t ra ffic

an4hOW 1

All a~rptf lnst•lled wltn
poddln, ot no chtrg•. •
Ex,..-1 nstoltott..
·

ova1loble Phone 614 367 7729
. _a!!er 2pm . - ....--- - - - -

Allow AI

1' 11 ACRE 12 x 60 mobile home
neor Dext er. 992 5858

"'

1967 TOTAL ELECTRIC mobile
home , furni shed, 3 bedr ,
washer and dryer A •r cond 1
honed I lot, 210 ft frontage I
$12,000 Phone7472826
1

.,,~..

•

i

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

1

lvr wller• , .. c1111 ciint In
onil- toUt you• ... t.nllll

~

R

f

~.

'

''" •

0

.., .

river
22 Fragrant
Jl'!Cket
23 Used one 's
lungs
24 Unproducti ve
25 Spamsh
ja il keeper

BRIDGE

latiOn
35 Towermg
37 Pec k

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

~M

- FullY

slllcbil:,;;;.·

MISS

ON THf. L.1NE:.,
F'f:NSTf:~,

DAILY

YOIJ t:.AN'"r .s"QuE-E'J.E

w....ten·w~Mrt~car ...

NORTH
l-22·A
+ AK932

¥A 7 5

t K92
• 53
WEST
EAST
+Ql086 5
• 7
.. 9 4
.. Q J 10 3
t J B5
• Q 10 7 6
• J 92
• Q 10 8 4
SOUTH
• J 4
¥ K 862
t A 43
+A K 7 6

or 0... Smltll

IT IN fr"( TYPING.

-RUnAND.

fi\S"rf.R.

'FURNrru•

«;! t~l~ lriH•

"742-2211

• \VI-m HIS HAIR. AND NAILS
TRIMMEO; ~F:'5 B~NNIN0
TO LOOK MORE AND MORE
LIKE 81LL.

SHOP AT....

ROllAND RJRNIIURE

NOT YET, MR5.WR16HT.
WHY DON'T YOU ()O TO
YOUR HOTEL AND GET
SOME REST

furniture.

3. A Iorge building full of
bo•uHful carpet.

.. ''
IF l{OU DON1T HELP ME,
I'LL BIJMP l(OU~ ELSOW 50
I{OU CAN'T WI1.1TE STRAIGHT

I'LL BUMP l{OU~ NOSE !

TfJ.E 5E ARE EASI{
PROBLEMS

SCXBT

'

•

1- 2.Z

I

1+

Pass
Pass

PABCUYZ

MC

MLA

SHOX ·· IF
I JEST HAD
ONE MORE
PATCH

I COU LD
FII\!ISH THIS
THING UP

.GOOBLE
GOOBLE
GOO

Alan·

'' Now comes the

sure thm g play South leads

hls four or spades and
fmesses the mne If east
produces the ten, South will

JUst score three spade tncks
- but that1s the number he
n eeds . Th 1s p l a y ha s
g uard e d agamst th e ac t ua l
spad e holdmg."
Oswald. "South can try to

work out some sort of
squeeze ror a n extra tnck,
but h1s c ontr a c t lS now
sure ' 1

Yo u hold .
1-22 B

Opening lead : ¥ 9

By

Jacoby

and Alan Sontag

Oswald :

run some

~· Let' s

articles on play lor a while .
a

s pecifi c

number of tr1cks in a s u1t."

Alan: " Here's one. South
has
e1ght tricks in aces and
SOZA
S L C
0 Z
GVU
kings. West's heart opemng
looks like a short s Ult lead so
GOUT
LOZ
FLVUYA
M C
South can only ex pect two
heart tricks . The place for
CQ
MLA
QVFMZ . RXAZAUFA
MLA
his ninth tri ck must be 1n
s pades and 1t is up to South
XCN
B .
ZGOML
to find the safest way to
Yesterday's Crypl01p10le: THE LEAST ERROR SHOULD collect three s pade tricks "
Oswald· " H e wins the first
IRJMBl.E, BUT WE SHOUlD NEVER PERMIT EVEN THE
heart
in dummy and leads a
GREATEST TO DISCOURAGE US - WILIJAM POTIER
spade toward h1s jack. If
E a s t holds the qu een the
BARNEY

ou

ts there

Pass

How about some examples

AUCDYL

TODAY

446·3643 .

3 NT

of playmg for

WE DFFER YOU ...
I . Two full floora of •II now
furniture.
2. Nice setecHons of used

See the Grate . Family at ·

Pass
Pass

trtck

right away, but W est wins
w1th the queen over the jack
West leads a sec ond h eart
So uth wins "

South
1+
I NT

L 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

CRYPTOQUOTES

WINNIE
BUT WE WN'T I&lt;NON
FOR SURE UNTIL Hl5
FINGERPRINTS
ARE CHECKED.

North East

to work it:

One letter st mply stands for ano th er In tht s sample " ts

MLOZ

the house must be moved.
15 acres also available,

West

Pass

used for the three L 's, X f or t he two O's, etc Sm gl e l ett er s,
apostrophes, th e length and formatton of the w ords are all
h1nt s Each day t he code l etters are dtfferenl

~ ~ !~II&lt;~ V5 "" 0 11

T

But

Vulnerable · Neither
Dealer: South

CRYPTOQUOTE - He1e's how
A XYDLHAA XR
is

Promoting a needed trick
th1rd s pade

29 Seafarer
32 K1ssmge r' s
.,
alma mater
34 Blazmg
1=+-11-+36 Pagmg Mr.
Wallach
31 Opera
singer
38 T attl e
Grandparental
40 Am. Rev .
diplomat c•
41 Angelus

'

Monday, Jan . 22

o1l source
31 Emulate
33 Constel-

6+-+-

''

:tF THf:ltE: ISN'T

-----1
-qaJm'

- I I j NIKIIo

27 or the sea
29 Recephon
r oom
30 Edible

21 U.S.S R

r---------------39

Fllllir CMrinr In Stock

1955 Protr1e Schooner 28 x B

18 Sov1et

Yesterday's Answer

comra d e

Rubber .Back \;filii
Mobile Homes for Sale

16 Slugg ish

news agency
22 Actress
Spacek
25 Nimrod's
\- 1te m
26 H11i bmlders ~;c;-+-1f-+-,27 Lambkm's
c ry
28 F idel's late

GASOUNE ALLEY

C:ARPETIN~

home W11! toke
sem~-tnvohd 992 5422, Elderly
lady

expense

bone

Barrel 20; Student Affairs Inq uiry 33.

8. Son 17 , MacNeil -Lehrer Rport 20,33
B0
Boo-MoYie " M1dway" 3,4,1 S, Happy Day s 6. 13 , CBS
News Special 8, 10 ; Let 's Go To The Race s 17,
Soundtstage 20; City Notebook 33
B 3()-Love rne 8. Shirley 6, 13 , Last of lhe W1 ld 17,
When The Boat Comes In 33
9 00-State of the Uni on Address 13. 15.3.8.10. Mov ie
dThe Magnifi cent Seven " 17, Rizzo 20 9 30keyboard Sonata 33
10 ~Three ' s Company 6,11, Flying High B,10
I0 ·3o-Taxl6, 13 , Like It Is 20, -Area S howeas~ 33
11 !»-News 3,4,6,B,10,13,1 5, Dick Cavett 20 . Solt1
Conducts 33

resort

II Bowman

6,13, Please Stand By 8 . News 10, Love, Amer ican
Style15. Carol Burnell &amp; Friends 17, Lock, Stock 8.
7 3D--Hollywood Squares 3, Let ' s Go To The r aces 8;
Dating Game 4, Candid Camera 6, Prl'=e ts Riaht
10. Donna Fargo 13 ; E sca pe to Nowhere 15, Sanford

4 Billy -

.-;--,£~~~~;;:,~ 21 Forearm
potentate

pr~ vot e

Bunch 15, I Dream of Jeannie 11

5 30-Carol Burnett &amp; Frtends 3, Sanford &amp; Son 4 ,
News 6; Sanford 8. Son B; E lee . Co 20, Mar y Tyler
Moore 10, Odd Couple 15 , Beverly Hillbillies 17,
Doctor Who 33
6 !»-News 3,4,8, 10, 13. 15 ; ABC News 6, And y Gnfflt h
17 ; Hodgepodge Lodge 20.
6 .30-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Car ol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News B, 10; Over Easy 20, My Three
Sons 17

DOWN
!Irritating
2 Temple !1\m
3 Colorado

regiOn
10 Bacterwi·

ALLEY OOP

~WEiru'I.L;:-;:H;;;Eu:!.:pP:-:'i;.'~Kl;;M~:;;E~,~~~~s~~~i~~~\"EAS'vr~;sf:rl r-~-e-RE-.b_I&lt;_A_N-NY--;-!...-Y-V___,!_TH_A_N_K_S_'T--,''YO_U___SOYS_--:i""W"?"'

Services Offered

I

" It's a c razy morn tn g lor yo u - dear l ady' ' -

by THOMAS JOSEPH

o.

EXCAVATING dozer , bo ckhoe
and dttcher Charles R. Hot
f1 e ld
Bock
Hoe Sennce,
Rutland Ohto Phone742-2008

OWNER MUST SELL -The owner of thi s
charming 2 story stone home in Middleport
must sell now so she is offering this fine
.home for a low, low price of S20,000l There
are 2 bedrooms (1 is extra large), spacious
living rool'l! w-fireplace, formal dining, eat·
in kitchen. liafh tY-shoWer, garage &amp; a king
sired yard. Good location on Mill St . Call the
Wi~eman Rea) Estate Agency, . Gallipolis,

KIS MET UNCLAD

~

II Yoors Expwlenc•
WIIIMikt
Servlc• C. lis

1·4·1 mo. (Pd . )

T hree Sons 4, Beverly Hill bi llies 8 , Mister Roger s'

Jumblt Book No 1:Z,conlalnlng 110 puzzles, Ia avaiiabie lor$1 75 poatpa ld
homJumbte, c/othla newapaplf, 80)(34, Norwood N J.07648 Inc lude your
name, addre u , zip code and make checks p1y1ble 10 Newapaperbooka.

... WHU P '

651 Beech Street
Middleport,
992-2356

'

7 00-Cross VVits 3; PM Magazine 4, Newlywe d Ga me

ElfCiRIC M010R

EXC AVATING, dozer , loader and
bo ck hoe wo rk , dump truck s
and Ia boys for htre. wtll houl
fill d1rt to !O il, ltmestone and
grovel Call Bob o r Roger Jef·
fer s day phone 992 7089, ntght
_p~ ne '1!2~ar '192 5_..:2;::
32:;.:__

1968 TRAILER 12 x 60 as is $3500
Good cond1tio n Coll742-2806

FLA ME

MAD·A M '

.-- -- =-=--

675-4424

KII](IIJ
(Answers tomdrrow)

IJITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

11 -9-1 mo.

Space Giants 17

3Q-GIIII gan' s Is B. Brady Bunch 10. Gil ligan ' s Is
17.
5 Oo-1 Dream of Jean n1e 3, B•on1c Wornan 13 , My

4

Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10. Brady

r

II

E. Moln Street,

"Fcir FrH Esthtu1t11

PT PLEASANT. WV

Festival 33
3 30-Mas h 8, Joker's Wild 10, Flintstones 17, D•ck
Cavett 20
4 00-Speclol Treat 3,4, 15, Merv Griffin 6. Porky Pig 8.
Fnends 8; Sesame St 20.33 , Bat man 10 , D1nah 13,

HOW TO PL!'T
" PRE55URE" ON
S.OMEONE: YOU L.OVE,

I

_pomero~, 0.
Call "Z-7113

S30

'192-7106

3 Do-Another W orld 3,4, 15,- General Hospital 6,1 3 ;
L1llas Yoga &amp; You 20; Speed Racer 17, Beethoven

J rJ

APPUANCE li
220

Aii

6,10, 2 00--&lt;Jne Life to Live 6,13 , News 17
2 30-Doctor s 34.15, Gu 1dlng L1ghl B, 10, I LoVe Luc y
17.

•. u .

EWOU

-...

WE HAVE BUYERS &amp;•
FINANCING FOR ALL
TYPES OF PROPERTY
AND NEED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY.
REALTORS
HENRY E . CLELAND SR . I
HENRY E. CLELAND JR .
ASSOCIATES
LEONA CLELAND
KATHY CLELAND
992·2259
992-6191

1 : 30-0ay s of Our L1ves 3.4,15, As The World T u rn s

r

L:i

Annslrong .Carpeting

bedroom home in the coun·
!try near Langsville. VERY

GOOD CONDITION -

!»-Hollywood Squares 3. All My Children 6, 13,
News 8 , Young 8. the Res ll ess 10 , Not For Wome n
Only 15

•O'Oo,c~
.. '....,~ ~ , '"' " '"'""''"
~

Service

•

Elec Co 20,33; MoYle " Jim Thorpe Al l American "
17

Your Head"'rfets For

bdr

Love, American Style 17 ,
12. 31)-Ryan's Hope 6, 13. Search tor T omorrow 8, 10,

by HennArnoldandBoblee

b

I. ..I..... ... I

2oth

1965 General , 60 x 12, 2 bdr ,
1968 Elcono, 52;oc 12 2 bdr
1969 Buddy , 60 x 12 4 bdr
1970Sylva , 60x 12,2bdr.
1970Costle, 60x t2 , 2bdr
1973 Arlmgton 60;oc 12 2bdr .
1973 R1dgewood , 70 x 14, 3 bdr
19731&lt;trkwood , 50 x 12, 2 bdr
B &amp; S MOBilE HOME SALES

sum er Surviva l Kit 20

11 3()-Wh eel ot Fortune 3, 15 , Family Feud 6, 13, News
4; LoveofLi fe8 ,10, 11 55-CB S NewsB House Call
10, News 17
12 00-Newscenter J , Bob Braun 4, Jeopardy 15, Neus
6,10, Young &amp; the Restless B. M1dday MagaZine 13 ,

lour Jumbles.

PLUIT

19th Cintury Strvlct with

downpay

ment, mortgage amount
$49,500, 9'12% 1nterest , 30
year term. Approx. $416 23

17
.
10 !»-Card Sharks 3,4, 15 . Edge of N1ght 6, Ail In T he
Fami ly 8, 10, Dating Game 13 , Movie " The.Da mned
Don 't Cry " 17
10 . 31l-AII Star Secrets 3.4 ,15. Andy Griffith 6 , Pn ce IS
Right B. 10, $20,000 P yramid 13.
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4,15. Happy Days 6,13 , Con

lour ordinary words

' '

------------HAVE ROOM board and laundry

beautifUl
new
r a nch
features a hearth centered
fami l y room, basement,
garage ,
111:1: baths. 3
bedrooms, 1 acre Approx

Show 17
9 30-Brady Bunch 8; Hogan 's Heroe s 10 Green A c res

one fetter to each square, to form

Don't let a chimney flrJt put
a damper on your Ufe
Call ..

I

4,1 3,1 5, Hogan ' sHeroes8 , Emergency0ne6 , Lucy

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

Clllmnty
)weeps ~ulld
Insured

TREE TRIMMING and rema.,.al
742 3167 or 742 2573

This

11 00- News

1 .30-Tomorrow 3; 1. 40-- News 13,

'iJJtl}rul]e}'\l

Momborof

WATER WELL drtlli ng Wtlham T
· Grant 742·2879 ,

This

News 8 , Schoolles 10, Three Stooges-Ltt1 1e Rascals

17 , 7 15--VVeather 33
7 3o-Family Affair 10, 8 . 00-C apt Kangaroo B. 10;
Leave It To Beaver 17 , Sesame Sf 33
8 30-Hazel ,17, 9. oo-Merv Griffin 3; Ph1l Donahue

2 21l-Maverlck 17 , 3 2o-Qpen Up 17 ; 5 2Q-Wo r ld at
Large 17
Ch . 4 HBO
6 PM - Casey's Shadow lPG). e ·oo-Lel's Do It
Agam I PG) ; 10 00 P .M Zany Awa rds ; 11 00 - The
Last Wallz IPGH)

TELL ME
GOSH, I'D SAY 'IOU'VE
HALF· P INT.
GOT EVERVTH/1/G , MIZ.
WHAT D059' MAKO! ME SSE YOU JUST
IT TAKE TO
DON'T SHO WCASE IT
CHAI&lt;:M YOUR
~NOUGH!
HOO K· IIIOSED
SLJ DDY~ -

1n

13, 6·ss-Chuck Wh ite Reporls' IO. News
13
7 00- Toda y 3, 4, 15, Good Morn1ng Am er ica 6, 13.; C BS

2 00-N ews 17

1&lt;1 6~ T-·

CONSTRUCJION

oo- Tomorrow 4,

I

CAPTAIN EASY

H9·1_mo.

'~

V~rginla

3, 4,6.8, 10, 13, 15 . D1ck Covell 20, Greal Per
for mances 33
II 3o-College Basketball l, Pollee Slory 6, 13. Johnny
Carson 4, 15, Rock ford F1les 8, Movie "A ~~on 1s In
lhe Slreets" 10
12 DO-M ovie "The Westerner " 17 ; 12 4G-Movle
" Grifftn &amp; Phoenix · A Love Story" 8, lrons1 de 13

~·

Home Remodeling
General Repairs

Auto&amp; TrucK
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Mash 8. 10,

9.31l-Movle " lnstltule tor Revenge" 3.4. 15, WKRP
In Cm ci nnati 8,10, Chi ldren Handle wlfh Care 33
10 0()- Lo u Grant 8,10. College Basketba ll 17, News

MOBILE HOME repo1rs Furnaces ,
eleclncol work , ptp es sowed,
WILL CARE for the elderly '" our
home Phone 992 73 14
_p":'m
_ b_in!1_._!)2·5B::_
5B:.:__ __

FHA APPROVED -

m edt cme ~

--

'I• mila off Rt. 7 l!r;·PAH _,
St. Rt. 124 tow•ril Ruttond,

Concerns &amp; lhe Comments 10
6·Jo--Focus on Columbus 4, Romper Room 17, 6 45Morning Report J, 6 :50-Good M orn mQ, West

Grow1nq Years 20

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
For Competitive Prices

do rooftng constru ctton,
Com·
plumbmg and healing No JOb BRADFORD Au ctioneer
too Iorge or too small Phone • p! ete Sennce Phone 949 2487
or 949 2000 Roctne, Ohio Cntt
742 2328
Bradf ord
HOWERY AND
MARTIN
Ex·
-:c:::-:-::ElWOOO BOWERS REPAIR ca .... at•ng
sepl •c sys t e ms,
Sweepers toasters Irons oil
dozer ba ckhoe , dump truck
small opphonces Lawn mower
l•mes tone
grovel
block top
ne;oct to Stole H1ghwo y Garage
pavmg Rt 143 Phone 1 { 61~ )
on Rou te 7.
698-7331
. ---- --- ~- ----- SEWING MACHINE Repotrs ser·
BATHROOMS
AND K•tchens
v1ce al l makes 992 2284 The
r em odeled ceram•c hie plum
Fobr1c
Shop
Pom eroy
bmg carpentry, end general
Authorized Singer Soles and
matntenance
13 years ex
_s~~ce . 'f'!!. sharpen Sctss~
pene nce 99'2 3685

PRICE REDUCED -

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

-or--

GARME

Sunr~se Semester 10

6 oo-PTL Club 15; 700 C!lub 6,8; 6 IQ-News 17. 6 . 25--

9 1»-How The West Was Won 6. 13 ,

Contact

Sno30 pet. to 50 pet.
on hNtlng cost
Exparl•nce ond
fully lmurod
Free Ed.
Cai19Y2-2772
11-3 I rmiJ

handyman ' s special can be
yours for the low price of
$8,000 - In Pomeroy on 4
lots, 2 stories, bath, k1t
chen, 3 or 4 bedrooms This
won't last long

GRAVEL V TRACTOR and mower
_H~_!o~s~ le 949 ~6B_ _ _ _

- --

JIM KEESEE

WELL ESTABLISHED grocery w1th 7
r oom upstotr s apt on Solem St
m Rutland Oh1o 742 2424 or
742-3 141

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

Public Hurin~ on the
Annual Plan for Programs on
Aging will be conducted
dur ing the first week of
February , 1979 Hear 1ngs Will
be held
•
Monday , February 5,
1979 at the meetin g room of
t h e Athens
City -County
Health Building , We'St Union
Street , Athens , Ohio,
Tuesday, February 6,
1979, at the Communltv
Building ,
Noble
County
Falrgrounda, Caldwell, Ohio ,
- Weclnesday, February 7,
1979 at the Perry County
Sen io r Ci tizens Center , 5'26
Rear Mill Street,
New
Lexington , Onlo .
All Public Hear ings will be
held from 11 00 AM. to 3 00

Blown Insulation

wooded oreo on lop of h1ll
Overlooks r~ver Water, elec
tnc avo tlobl e 9&lt;11 3886

TIMBER POMEROY Forest Pro
ducts Top pnce for stondmg
992-2288
sow limber Call 992·5965 or
TWO
BEDROOM mob1le home
_K:n!_~nbr_ ~~~~7~ ___ _
near Oexter neor No I Mme
OLD FURNITURE tee boxes bros'!i
992 5.:65
.::.:8_:___
beds , 1ron beds desks etc ,
THREE
ROOMS
AND BATH NI CELY
com ple te households
Write
FURNISHED
APT ...
M D Mtller Rt 4 Pomeroy or
REASONABLE CNA BE SEEN BY
coli Cl92 7760
APPOINTMENT AT 516 S &lt;lh
OLD COIN S pocket watches
MIDDLEPORT, 0 992 -2053
doss rings , wedding bonds
d 1amonds Gold or silver, Coli
_R~g!r ~~~sl.!~ ~42_ 2~3~ -- _ for Sale
WANT TO buy old 45 and 78
HA~ LARGE ROUND boles $20
ph onogr aph records
Coli
Square boles , $1 M M Corn
C!f/'l b370 or Contact Motltn Fur
shel ler 985·-4131 985 3537
n1lure
J C PENNEY wood burn mg stove
WANTED TO ' buy old 1ewelry
$150 742-2131
Coli 992 S262 or wnte Kay
Cectl 87 S 2nd , M•ddlepart
STEREO , JVC rece1ver 81( turn
table Two ::101 Bot se speakers
OH
~2 51 01 or ~n . 3597
WANT TO buy small metal lathe
992 7165
VERMEER 605 Super C Boler 1500
lb Metgs County s Autoriz:ed
WANTED USED trrlgat1on pu mp
Vermeer Oeoler , Gory Asp.n
al so some o lumtnump tpe Ber
Dexter
Phone 7A2 ·2877,
nord Wagner Rt 1 lowell , 0

PUBLIC NOTICE

J&amp;L

3 111 acre s .n Pomeroy Se cl uded

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
CHIP WOOD
Pol es
max
d1ameter 10' on largest end
l o_rg_e ~ t~ ~~~99,? ~4:_9__ _
$12 per ton Bundled slab $10 3 AND 4 RM fu rnishe d ond un
per ton D ~f11,ered to Ohio
fur n1s hed
opts
Phone
Pollet Co , Rt 2 Pomeroy
992 -SAJ.C ,

Coll 992 2156

-1·12-1 mo.

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

LASSIE TYPE pupp1e s 7 to 8
weeks old Adorabl e Mole and
LOST BLACK btl lfo ld m Pomeroy
females shots and wormed
Of
f o und
coli
Or l an
_H~
~o ~e _5o! !! '~· !9~- :_680
Houdoshelt ~2 3612
FUll SIZE mattress and bo)( spr
FOUND LARGE wh1te angora cot
~o~d _cond 1t ~o~ ~"'~ · ~2~4 _
w1th gray spots ond groy to1 l
w1th blue coll ar 991 2682

LUGGAG E . TWO
cob tne t s. 992 202 1.

PK&gt;NE 742-2328

HOU St: FOR sole
Locolton
M ason WV Fou r bed roo m spli t
~
level , bu d! in lotchen w 1th PU LLI NS EXCAVATING Complete
Se rv1ce Phon e 992·2478
oven , range garbage d1 sposol
- - --.
and bor Family roo m d tn tng room who le house ca rpettngl
Real Estate for Sale
Full s•ze basement Central 01r HOME SITES for sol e 1 acre and
and forced Otr 9°5 he at Al l
up M •ddle po rl , neor Rutland
drapes plus washer and dr yer
Coli 992 748 ,
Backyard 10 It h1gh cedot'
_ - - - - ___ - - - - fence ond ce dor decks for THREE BEDROOM fro me home •n
pnvocy Heated goroge Close
Middleport Call992 3A57.
to school store pork ond tenn1s
- - - --- - - - - - - - - - co urt Contract Gory L Gtbbs
Coll614 949·2246

Lost and Found

45744 Phone 896 2271

'

WILL

55426

992 2689 .

Paneling &amp; Trim.

Cellplosic (WOod fiber)
Thermal insuljltion _.. .

PIGS FOR so le 94 9 2857 offer 5

Road

wanted to Buy

. Floors.

992-6212 or E. A. W1ngen at

3938 MeadowbiOOk

- - - - - -- - - BAKERS BUSY Bee Cerom1cs on·
nounces new hours Opemng
Tuesday January 23rd Tues
day 10 to 3 and 7 to 10 Thurs
doy 10 to 3 and 7 to 10
Everyone welcome reserve
GiveAway
lions no t needed
Poulme Bok e r
BASSETT DOG 9 mo
985 3920

CeramiC Tile • Formica
Covnfer Tops - Ceilings
&lt;SUspended, Tuture) - Tile

weareofferingforsate (1)
gas heatrng unit and (1)
almost new electric air

Eagle Industries

_d~y--

- Room Additions-Custom Remodeling-

the State Liquor Store on
Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy

wanted to own and
operate candy &amp; Con·
fectlon vending route.
Pomeroy and sur·
rounding area. Plea·
sant business. High
profit items. Can
start part time. Age
or experience not im·
portant. Requires car
and S 1495 to $4995
cash investment. For
details write and in·
elude your phone
number:

Sundly

AL TROMM OONST.

Quality Wo}k You can
Depend On ....

FOR SALE

PERSON

4PM
the day before pubUcaUon

Tyree Blvd .~ Racine, Ohio,
Phone 949 -2111. E vtnlng
etter 5 P.M .~ Weekends
after 12 noon .

Pt:A HAULERS CB Soles Equ•p
m e n! now on sale oil 1n stock
Rod1o!o and occesson es th roug h
Chri stmas Open every day ex
cept Sunday ond Monday
EVen1 n g~
b~
opp otntment
Portland
O h•o
Phone
843-2064

RESPONSIBLE

Tueldey
tllru Friday

SALES REP. FOR
SUN DINS
HAMMOND ORGANS

ROGER HYSELL

TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 197f
5 45- Farm Reporl 13 ; 5 50- PTL Club 13, 5•55--

TELEVISilJN
VIEWING

-

Thinking Of Hoving
A New Home BUill?

----- -12-31-1 mo.

WANTED THUCK mecha ntc for
l1ght o nd medu1 m duty trucks
Must hove own tools Apply at
Two_R•; e!s _Fa! d. S~ r ~ •c:_e ~ept_

Monday
Noon on Saturrlay

PETE SIMPSON

APPLES FITZPATRICK Orchard
Sto le Rl b89 Pho ne Wtlke~ltle
b69·3785

He Ip Wa::.n::.t:o-e_d
, __ _

NOTICE

Appltance

JACK W.
CARSEY
Mgr.
Phone 992-liSI

EVERY SUNDAY at 1pm o nd o new
auctton e .... ery Wednesday ot
7pm Lots of new •tems , !iome
used
Hartford Commun1ty
I· · Center , Hartf ord WV 4 mile!!.
up fo rm the Pomeroy Mason
bndge Everyone •s welcome to
come

.

your

SALE PRICES

Auction

IF YOU ha ve o service to offer
wont to buy or sell somethtng
oe look mg for work
or
wh ot&amp;ver
You 'll get res ults
faster wtth o Sentmel Wont Ad

11 1 22,2912 1 5, 31c

HEADQUARTERS

-~---·

On January 18 , 1979, 10 the
Meigs County Probate Court,
C ase No 22576, George E .
Gree nlee , 7551 Lee Rd,
Westerv•lle , Oh 10 43081 wa s
appointed Admin istr ator of
the
estate
of
Hannah
Greenlee, decease d, late of
357 Williams 51 , Middleport ,
Oh10
Manning D . Webster
Pr oba te Judge .
Clerk

&amp;
Lower
Orttans. Story &amp; Clark
Pianos. Sales &amp; Service.
(New &amp; UstcU. Service on
current
Sates .

Auto Sales___ _

E.ch word owr the minimum t5

won:l!lls 4 cents

OICKTRACY

Business Services

sand ~ ' e v e I
ralci um rh londe , ferttlu• er , dog
food , ond oil ty pe s o1 solt h
cels1or Salt Work!!. lnr t: Mom
Sl Pomeroy 992 3891

COAL LIMFSTONt:

COlllt: PUPPIES Broutd ul 1 1
weeks old Sobl.-. ond white ,
full blooded &lt;oll w puppun $20

Cbora•

Yard Sale

FUND

Oth er
2.500.00
Tota l for Met er
2,500 00
Oepo s•t F un d
Tota l For Meter
Deposit F und
2,500.00
Sec t 1on 16 That there be
appro prtat ed
from
the
~: eoERAL
REVENUE
SHARING FUND
19,558 91
Other
Tota l for Federa l
Rev enue Shar tng
Fund
19,558.91

11 wordlor Undn'
CUb
100
1.lG
IJO
3.00

22. 197n

For Sate

RISING STAR Kennels Baorcl•ng
nnd groom mg all brPeds
Ch o!ih!rP 367 079L

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Sec t ton 15 Tha t there be
approprtated
from
the

DEPOSIT

Pets tor Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

Case No . 22S76
NOTICE OF

AODITIONAL
FUNDS
METER

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

order 25 ctnt chaf'le foc adl carry·
lng Bo1 Nwnber In Cart of 1be Sentinel

12,880 00

Sec t •on tJ
1na t Th ere be
approprtated
fr om
th e
ELE C TRIC
!LIGHT)

G E NE R AL

forego1ng
apr;~ropriations
upon recelvtng proper cer
tlficates
and
vouchers
th~fefor , approved
by the
board or off jcefi author ized
by l aw to approve the same,
or an ordinance or resolut 1on
Of COUMC!I tO make the ~X
pend itureii pro'ttded that no
warrants shall be drawn or
pa•d fo r salaries or wagu
except to persons em played
by authOrity, of and in ac.
cor.csance with law or or d i nanu . Provided furtner
that the a ppropnatlons for
contmgen cles ca n only be
expended upon appeal of two.
th trds vote of Council for
1tems ot expense co nst1tut.ng
a legal obllgatton against the
village , and fo r purposes
other than those covered by
the
other
speciftc
ap
propr•attons
he re in
made
Sect 1on
18
Thi s
resolut 1on shalt take effect at
th e earliest period allowed by

9-The Daily Sentm~l . Mi&lt;ldlcpnrl-P omcroy , 0 .. Monday, J an

•

J 4

" K862
t A 43
+A K 7 6
Th1s is the South hand
s hown in toda y' s article. A

Vermont reader asked u s If
we open it one c lub or on e
notrump .
In standard Amertcan

a

15-pomt hand IS jus t below
the one·nolrump range So
the s tandard opemng 1s

one

club. If you p la y a 15-17
notrump you s hould still

open one club as we dtd in
tod~ y·s artiC le.

INb:WS!'APJ::ft

F~ NTB IU~ HJ SJ;:

A._o.;.')N

I

(For a copy of J ACO B Y MODERN, send St to
Wm at
Bndge · care of thiS newspa
per, P 0 Box 489, Rad1o C1f}
StatiOn . New York. N Y. tOOt 9 )

THANK Y,

TATER

·,

�.
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .;-Monday , J an. 22, 1970

Ohio to
get more
snow

Resistance ·continues
BANGKOK, Thailand (AP )
·- Fighting was reported
today in the vicinity· of the
Cambodian capital of Phnom
Penh as resistance to the
Vietnamese invaders and
their Cambodian rebel alhes
continued 16 days after they
claimed control of the entire
country.
Reliable
sources
In
Bangkok also reported
fig hting around Cambodia 's
largest • ctty,
second
Battambang,
in
the
northwest; Ratanakiri, in the
northeast; the central city of
Komporlg Chhnang; Takeo,
in the southeast, and the
southwestern coastal area
near Kompong Soin, the
nation's only major seaport.
Thw military sources said
the troops of ex-Premier Pol
Pot were apparently trying to
put pressure on Kompong
Chhnang, which the new government install ed by the
Vietname se · declared
ll liberated" ,}ast week,
because it was being used as
a key supply point for the
100,000-man Vietnamese
force now spread across the
country.
Kompong Chhnang , a
western provincial capital 06
miles northwest of Phnom
Penh, also has a recently
improved military airfield,
they said.
The police chief of
Thailand's Sisaket Province,
on the Cambodian frontier,
said in·a telephone interview
that fighting also was
continuing near the ninecentury-&lt;Jid Buddhist temple
of Preah Vihear, held by Pol
Pot's troops. The Vietnamese
reportedly brought in longrange artillery to try to blast
the loyalists from the cliff-top
st ronghold on t~ e Thai
border.
Thai sources also reported
sizable Vietnamese naval and
ground reinforcements in and
around the port city of Kompong Som, which wi's retaken
briefly by the loyalists.
This was verified in part by

two newsmen who late last
week took a Thai fishing boat
to w1thm several hundred
yards of the Cambodian coast '
and saw a large flotilla of
Vtetnamese ships flying the
flag of the new Phnom Penh
goverrunent.
• Photographs taken by the
two showed hundreds of
empty ammunition cases
with Soviet markings flo ating
in the Gulf of Thailand.
.'!'he Bangkok Post reported
that
a
hig h-rank.ing
Cambodian officer who !led
to .Thailand reported exPresident Khieu Samphan ,
aided by Chinese advisers,
was commanding a force of
8,000 guerrillas tn the

northeastern province of
Stung Treng
The newspaper sa1d the
offi cer told it Pol Pol.""was
leading the resistance in the
jungles of southern and
central Ca mbodia .
The news agency of the new
Phnom Penh gove rnment
said reporters from six
Comm unist nations were
VIsiting the capital. It said the
group,
which
arrived
Saturday ._included reporters
from the Soviet Union, Cuba,
East Germa ny, Hungary ,
Czechoslovakia and Vietnam.
Several Western
correspondents have applied
to visit Phn&lt;In Penh but have
not received entry visas.

By The Ass()jllated Press
More snow is predicted for
Ohio by late Monday.
A higli pressure area over
the lower MjSsissippi Valley
will drift east through the
Ohio
Valley
Monday
afternoon and evening.
Alow pressure system over
the western DakQtas is also
forecast to move to the mid
Mississippi
Valley by
Tuesday morning.
.
Snow will spread into
western Ohio just ahead of
the low pressure system. 1
Tuesday's snow will change
to rain in the central and
southern counties as the low
draws warm air northward
from the Gulf of Mexico.

Emergency units busy
The Middleport emergency
squad was busy answering
calls over the weekend.
At 3:31 p.m. Saturday , the
squad went to the Waffle
Shop where Ron Hanson had
fallen . He was treated at the
scene.
At 9:12 a.m. Sunday, the
squad went to 294 S. Third
Ave., for Bob McElhinney
who was ill. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center after
first being taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 3:40 p.m. Sunday, the
squad went to 216 Ash St ., for
Bertha Brickles who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The squad went to
39 Rutland St. at 7:&gt;1 p.m.
Sunday for Leverett L. Roush
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy's emergency unit
was called to West Main St. at
12 :31 p.m. Saturday for
Ernest Imboden, Syracuse,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospit al for
treatm ent
of
injuri es
received in an auto accident.
Pomeroy police said a car
driven by Dreama Hovatter,
Middleport, struck the rear of
Imboden' s ca r . He had

stopped in the lane of traffic.
Miss Hovatter was cited for
failing to have her vehicle
under control.
The squad went to the
county jail at 11 ~29 p.m.
Saturday for .John Blanken·
ship who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.
At 7:21 p.m. Sunday the
unit went to Route 2 Albany
for Lyman Stanley who was
til. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was treated and released.
Ohio High School
Basketball
By The Associated Press
Saturday's Results

Ada 50, Ra wson
Rawson 48, at

Cory ·

Akron North 61. Massillon
Per r y 56

Al l iance 57 ,
All iance
Marlington so
Anna 73, Zanesf ield Ben tam fn Logan 40

·

Boardman 52. Cam pbe ll
Memorial 46, of

Brat en ahl
Christian 61

84 ,

El yria

Brook l yn 70, Rocky Ri ver
Lutheran West 63
Br yan 69, Paufdlng 47

Can ton McK inley 84, Akron
Ea st 53
Can ton South 72 . Navarre
Fairless 58

Cant on

Timk e n

68,

Louisv ille 57

Car dington

64 ,

Mount

Gi lead 58
Carroll Bloom ·Carroll

53,

Lancaster Fairfield nion 51
Chi llicot he Huntmgton 84,
Chillico t he Unioto 75

Cincinnali Country Day 63 ,
Fayettev ille 62
Cinc innati Elder 55, Cin cmna ti Bacon 54
Cinc i nnati LaSalle 84,
Cinc 1nna ti Colerain 69
Cinci nnati St Xav1er 56,
Cincinna ti McNi cholas 48
Circlevi ll e Logan Elm 62,
Am anda Amanda -Ciearcreek

NOW IS THE TIME TO SAVE

56
Clevel a nd Bened ictine 67,
Elyna Catt)olic 55
Columbus
Hamilton
Towns h ip 70,
Columbus
Frankl in Heig hts 55
Columbus
Nor th · 62,
Bellefontaine 49
Co lumb us
Ready
60,
Colum bu s Wehrle 56
Continental 93, Ha m ler
Patri ck Henry 66

ON FINE HOME FURNISHINGS
DURING OUR

JANUARY SALE

Cuyahoga Fall s Cuya hoga

Valley Chnstian 76, Canton
8runner dale JS
Dayton Cham inad e 61.
Day ton Fai rv iew '53
Dayton Edgewood 43,
Ea ton 42
Dayt on
Jef fer son 86 ,
Dayton Roth 7d

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow's Fanlily
Restaurant
Po meroy ; Ohio .

A 64 oz•. Bottle of RC with the
purchase of any bucket, barrel
or family valu pak.
GREAT SERVICE! GREAT OIICKEfi!

---- -

.
PUPS SI::EK HOME - These puppie.s held by
Veterinarian Doctors Notter and Boster of Gallipolis have
just been given il medical O.K. and their. shots. They are
Collies like Mother with their "other half" thought to be
also Collie. Aren 't they cute though ? These three males
and two females are available for adoption thr.ough the
Meigs County Humane Society after having been bor~ in a
field up north of Portland about 7 or 8 weeks ago. If
interested in giving one of these puppies a good. home,
please call 992-7680.

SUIT FILED ,
In Meigs County common
pleas court a suit in the
amount of $673.90 has been
filed by The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co., against
Joseph McConahy, Mid·
dleport. Deva Ann Cornwell,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, filed for
divorce against Paul E. Cornwell, CircleviUe.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wednesday through
Friday: A chance of snow
flurries Wednesday. Fair
Thursday and a chance of
snow Friday. Hlgbs In the
upper 20s and 30s. Lows
mostly In the teens .

$531.6 billion

(Continued from pag e I) '
further, rather than increase
it .
Carter is returning to Congress
with a proposal it
.;::·::;:;:;::·::::;::·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;::::·::;:::;:;.
spurned last year. He will ask
Congress to approve hospital
Gacy's presence
cost containment legislation .
The savings, Carter said,
being checked
would total some $2.1 billion .
The budget ends for one
CHICAGO (AP ) - The year the unabated growth in
Secret Service says it is federal aid to state and local
investigating the presence of governments that has lasted
mass murder suspect John two decades.
Wayne Gacy Jr. at a
Such federal grants, for
rece ption last year for first programs rapging from
lady Rosalynn carter.
public works and highway
Gacy had a criminal record construction to school lunch
for so(lomy at the time of the programs and revenue
reception, and since has been sharing,
have
been
charged with murder in the increasing at annual rates of
deaths of seven young men. about 14 .6 percent . But
He reportedly has confessed Carter's budget proposes
to killing 32 young men and virtually no increase .
boys.
Howe v er,
Carter
A copyright photograph in maintamed his budget does
the Chicago Sun-Times on not ignore the needs of the
Sunday showed Mrs. Carter poor, and in fact increases
and Gacy smiling and help for the truly poor and
shaking hands .
•
disadvantaged by $4.&gt; billion
The photograph, which the to a total of $68.5 billion.
newspaper said was taken
Nonetheless, 'there is little
May 6, 1978, is signed, "To increase after discounting for
John Gacy, Best Wishes inflation . And the $4.&gt; billion
Rosalyrin Carter."
does not count the cuts in
The newspaper said the in- public jobs at all.
cident occurred when Mrs.
Among programs for the
Carter was in the city for a p·oor · that are being
Polish Constitution Day increased, the administration
observance and to improve cited the following : food
the carter administration's stamps, up $700 million to $6.3
relations . with
local billion; Medicaid, up $700
Democrats.
million to $12.5 b1lllon, and
Gacy, who had been con- supplemental security invicted of sodomy in 1968 in come, up $700 million to $6.3
Iowa, apparently attended billion . Some of the increases
the reception in his capacity were required by existing
as a precinct-level party · law, officials said.
worker.
And some increases that
Mary Finch Hoyt, Mrs.
Carter's press secretary, saitl Carter cited in this regard did
Sunday that Mrs. Carier did not tell the ·whole story of his
not know Gacy and that it is budget. For instance , urban
not unusual for the first lady grants are going up but are
to have pictures taken with sharply below what .he
organizers of events she proposed just last March.
Existing housing subsidies
attends.
are up, but new subsidies
decrease.
Carter proposed increasing
Dayton Miami Valley 57,
Xenia Wilson 46
Medicaid eligibility for an
Dresden Tri -Vall ey 49, New additional 2 million poor
Concord John Glenn 41
children and expectant
Fort Loramie 67 , Fort
mothers at a cost of $451
Recovery 6.4
Grove City 69, Worthington
million.
58
However,
Carter
HamiltonRoss 75, Spring acknowledged there is an
boro 58
across-the-board slowdown in
Haviland Wayne Trace 70,
Wauseon 58 ·
many programs. He said
Hem lock Mi Her 58, Stewart spending
. restraint
is
Feder a I Hocking SO
imperative
because
"if
we
Huron
83,
Castalia
are to overcome the threat of
Margoretta 74
Indiana Deaf 50, Ohi o Deaf
accelerating inflation ... the
27
government will sirriply not
Johnstown Northridge 73,
be able to do as much as it has
Pataskala Watkins Memorial
in the past."
70
Kenton 76, Lima Allen East
Budget Director James T.
66
Mcintyre
told reporters the
Lima C~ntral Catholic 64,
budget "has kept the DemoDayton Col. While 62
.
Louisville Aquinas 66,
cratic Party's commitment
Atwater Waterloo 62
to meet human needs ....
Marion Elgin 61, Marfon
we've done that."
Pleasant 56
The administration
Middletow n 97, Dayton
contends many of the cuts
Dunbar 89
Midvale ' Indian Vall ey
will affect people who are no
North 71, Danville 51
Miller City 75, Delphos longer in need of federal help,
. if they ever were. It cites as
Jefferson 66
.Newa rk Catholic 64 , one example a proposed
Granville 59
decrease in the ' subsldl~ed
school lunch program ~f five
ASK TO WED
cents per .~eal
~htldren
Marriage licenses were from famil1es w1th mcomes
issued to Lsmar Lee lyons, above $13,845.
19, Tuppers Plains, and
It . conte.nds the 160,000
Shirley Marie Bennett, 18, Rt. Pl!blic ~rv1ce jobs slated for
I, Reedsville; Gregory Lee elimmat1on are no longer
Vining, 21, Pomeroy, and needed because. of the strong
Vicky Ann Hysell, 19, employment gams of the past
Pomeroy;
Gary Scott two years. Pubhc jobs under
Chappel. 22, Salem, Ohio and the Com pre hen 51 :V e
Cnrol Ann DeLong, 17,. Rt. 2 Employment and Trammg
Pomeroy; Donald W. Bolen, Act I CET A) would be
56, Pomeroy, and Patricia reduced to 467,000 JObs.
About 250 000 summer
Ann Ray, 20, l-angsville.
'

!or

youth jobs also would he cut
from the CETA program.
Carter defended the budget
against critics who say it will
slow the economy to the point
that a recession will be inevitable. It " will permit
continued economic grow1h,"
Carter said, although he
didn't flatly rule out a
recession.
The budget projects overall
growth of the economy at 2.2
percent in 1979 and 3.2
percent in 1980, below the
level needed to keep pace
with the nation's growing
labor force. The . economy
grew by ~ ·percent last year.
As a result of the slower
economic growth, which the
administration contends is
necessary to help control
inflation, unemployment· is
expected to increase from &gt;.9
perce nt currently to 6.2
percent by the end of 1979 and
remain there through 1980.
A large number of private
economists are predicting
that the economy will slow
even more sharply, however,
and that unemployment will
increase to 7 percent, or even
higher this year. If this happens, Congress might insist
on maintaining federal jobs
programs at existing levels.
Inflation is projected in the
budget at 7.4 percent this
year, compared to 9.2 percent
in 1978and 6.4 percent in 1~811 .
Those numbers also are
considered optimistic by
many private economists.
~-: :;:;::::::!;:::::::·:::::::::::·:::::::·:·:::;.;::::::::::::::::::::::::::

WORKING HARD
The Golden Gloves
boxing season Is fast approaching, and Meigs
County has a group of men
preparing for II. A local
boxer that Is lo tralolog Is
Larry Babbitt.
Other Meigs Countians
who are working wltb
Babbitt are Bernard
LaValley as trainer and
manager,
and
John
Costanzo as sparring partner and corner man.
Babbitt's sponsors are
Roger Adams and JD
Drilling.

LJ&gt;VERETT L. ROUSH
Leverett L. Roush, 69, 89
Rutland St., Middleport, died
Sunday · at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Roush was born June
30, 1909 son of the late
Ephriam E. and Jessie Darst
Rousll. He was also preceded
in death by five brothers,
Rev . Lester L. Roush, Uoyd
W. Roush, Harold H. Roush,
James Joy Roush and John
W. Roush.
Mr. Roush was a member
of the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. He was
formerly employed as
district manager for the
Farm Bureau Insurance Co.
and Marietta Manufacturing
Co., Central Coal Co., and did
construction work as a
member of IBEW Local 981.
He. is survived by his wife,
Pauline Hamm Roush, two
sons, Paul R. Roush, Tuppers
Plains, and William . L.
ROush, El Paso, Texas, two
daughters-in-Jaw, Nancy and
Veronica Roush, three
granddaughters, Jennifer P.
Roush and Luellen V. Roush,
a twin sister, Lsura Roush
Morris , Gallipolis, one
brother, Ross R. Roush,
Gallipolis, 21 nieces and
nephews.
·
Funeral services will be
1held Wednesday at I p.m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Robert McGee officiating.
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
after 1 p.m. Tuesday.
JOSEPH L. JOHNSON
Joseph L. Johnson, 40, 195
Sherwood Ave., Satellite
Beach, Fla., died Thursday at
the Holmes Regional Medical
Center at Orlando, Fla.
Mr. Johnson wasa building
contractor. He was a member
of the Church of Christ,
Melbourne Lodge ·1744, The
Brotherhood of Elks and was
a director of the Home
Builders Assn. of Brevard
County.
· Surviving are his wife,
Virginia S. ' Johnson; a son,
Gregory; three · daughters,
Christina, Cassandra and
Jolynn Johnson, all at home;
his mother, Mrs. Helen D.
Johnson , Pomeroy; , four
brothers, E. Ray, Dublin;
James, Larry G., and Ken·
neth A. Johnson, all of
Pomeroy, and a sister. Mrs.
Beverly Roush of Pomeroy.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p.m. today at the
B•ownlle Funeral Chapel
'with Jon E. Hall officiating.
Burial . was In Florida
Merriorlal Gardens. The
Brownlie Funeral Home Is In
Melbourne.
JASON LEE CARTER
Jason Lee Carter, three ·
month - old son of Blaine and
Martha Brewer Carter,
Route 2, Albany, died
Saturday at Children's
Hospital, Columbus,
following open heart surgery.
Jason was born Sept. 30,
1978 at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Besides his parents he Is

HOSPITAL~

.•

NEWS

a

LEGAL NOTICE

. The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has scheduled
for hearing Caae No. 78-676EL-AIR, being.In the Matter .
of the Application of the Ohio
Power Company to Increase
Certain of its filed Schedules :
Fixing Rate:~ and Charges for
Electric Sevice. On Thurs· ·
day, February I, 1979, a
public hearing will be held at
10:00 A.M., at the City Coun- .
cil Office, 218 Cleveland
.Avenue S.W., Canton, Ohio,
At this tlme Interested parties will be afforded an opportunity to present public ·
testimony.

BWE DENIM
'

JEANS
The handsome straight leg
jean. Very comfortable and
completely c;refree too.
In "No-Fault" 100% cotton
14 oz. denim with ·
Sanfor-Sct• that washes
clea ner and dries ready
to wear pucker and
wrinkle free, never ·
shrinks out of' size.
Wide belt loops, front
scoop and rear patch
pockets, Navy,

R ay.Blanton

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) A second federal grand jury
investigating the dealings of
former Gov. Ray Blanton's
administration Is looking Into
the awarding of state liquor
licenses.
•
The panel oolled several
past and present state
Alcoholic Beverage Commission officials to testify
today and Tuesday.
Tom
Guthrie,
ABC
director, conflnned during
the weekend that he· and
several aides were subpoenaed by the grand jury in
_ Memphis and told to bring
ABC records of all Memphis
retail liquor stores and
liquor - by - the - drink
establishments.'
Also called were William
Frogge agent in charge of
the ABC's west Tennessee
office; former ABC Commissioner Frank E. Phillips,
·a close friend of Blanton;
ABC agents Edward 0 .
Gammon of Memphis and
Th ·
·
. omas Wr!Rht of SomerVIlle :

Sizes 29 to 42

$14.95
Also •vailable in

Boot Fl•re Style.

wrangelr Pre-shrunk
BlUe

Denim.

Western Shirts

1

15.95

I'

•.

WAYNE IMPROVES
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Actor John Wayne continues'
to improve following surgery
to remove an abdominal
cancer, ·a spokesman for
UCLA Medical Center,
reports.
"He continued to Improve
and his vital signs are
stable," the spokesman said
Sunday.
The 71-year-old actor was :
initially hospitalized for
routine gallbladder
operation. But during
surgery jan. 12, doctors found
cancer and·removed Wayne's
stomach.

MEN'S

Federal 1·-nrrv
', ;
check
·
,
f'.
IRg tn~V.

...

'

Veterans Memorial Hospital "'
Saturday admissions - .,
Leslie Price, Pomeroy; ·
Bessie
Stitt,
Racine; '
Clarence Peters, Cheshire; , :
Roberta Young, Clifton; ·,
Maggie Gilmore, Racine.
Saturday discharges - .'
Marie Marcinko, Tammie '
Starcher, Neva McElroy, .•
William Morris, Dennis:'
Tolley.
·:
Sunday admissions-John 1
'Biapkenshlp, A!Dany; 1;0ra ,
Loftis, Rutland; Frederick
Stobart, Racine; Kathryn •
Miller, Minersville.
Sunday discharges
Goldie Lswson, Jerry Owens.

ELBERFELD$

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

Two supervisors
received oaths

survived by two brothers.-•
Joseph and Adam and a .
sister, Theresa, all at home; ',
a maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Margaret Brewer, •
Springfield; a paternal great-· •
grandmother, Mrs. Lona·
Frye, W1lllamstown, W. Va.,
and several.aunts, uncles an4.
cousins.
• Funeral services will be · ·
held at I p.m. Wednesday af
the Walker Funeral Home In .
Rutland with Mr. Denny
Coburn officiating. Burial'.·
will be In Meigs Memory
Gardens. Frlends'may call at
the (uneral home any lime ·
after 2 p.m. Tuesday and·.
until tlme of services. The ·
family will receive friends at ·
the funeral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

SWORN IN -Frank D. Celebrezze, Chief Justice of the Ohio Supreme Court, recently
. administered the oath of office to Thomas Theiss, Rt. I, Racine, newly elected supervisor to
tlie Meigs Soil and Water Conservation Service. Theiss will serve a three-year term. ·

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL NO. XXIX NO. 196
:-:::::;:::::::·:::::::::::::::::::·:::::;:;:::.:;:;:;:::_:;:::::·:;:;:;:;.;:

Bid O-Ptening
slated·Friday
Governor James A. Rhodes
announced today the state is
accepting bids for the $2.25
million fine arts and class·
room building to be constructed at Rio Grande
Community College.
Bids will be opened 2 p.m.
Jali. 26 (Friday) In the
Columbus office of the
Dlvlalon of Publlc Works, a
part of the Ohio Department
of Administrative Services.
"The building would
provide fa¢1lti~s for student
activities In art, music and
theater and a theater auditorium for use by the
college and the community,"
the Governor said.

Administrative Services
Director Richard D. Jackson
said the fine arts - classroom
building will bouse art rooms
for painting, ceramics and
crafts and will have space for
music education and music
activities.
The theater - auditorium
will be available as a large
lecture room, assembly room
and f0r cultural events for the
community.
Office space wiJJ be
provided for seven faculty
members In art, music and
apeech and administrative
offices for counseling and
placement service:.. ,

SS funds sought
· WASHINGTON (AP) Robert E. Shuck, acting diThe Carter administration , rector of the Selective
with an eye toward being able Service, said the extra money
to draft enough men if war is needed to improve the
ever broke out In Europe, is agency's ability to meet
seeking an additional $5 manpower requirements set
million for the Selective fort1r· in a Pentagon
Service System.
contingency plan for a war in .
· The president's budget, Europe.
proposed Monday, provides
That plan calls for the
$11.5 million for the now Selective Service to be able to
dormant Selective Service supply the first draftees in 30
$9.8million for the (iscl!l year days, 100,000 in two months
starting Oct. I and $1.7 and 650,000 in six months.
mlllion for the rest of this
Shuck said test runs last ,
fiscal year . The current fall found the agency needs
budget is $6.6 million.
four times its current
computer capacity to be able
to process that many draftees
in six months.

WANTS ANSWER
Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews today
Issued a statement to
taxpayers regarding the
deplorable conditions of US
33 through that viJiage.
Andrews said Pomeroy
Village Is not responsible
for the highway. Mayor
Andrews questioned wby
other counties In Ohio can
get super highways built,
but the VIJiage of Pomeroy
cannot get three miles ol
road paved through the
village on US 33 from Nyc
Ave. to tbe PomeroyMason Bridge.
'::::;:::::::::::::'f.;:;::::::::::::·::::::;:;:::;.;::::::·::::::::;.··:-::-:-

Ohio market to

close on Feb •.6--·
RIPLEY , Ohio ( AP) Ohio's burley tobacco market
will close on Tuesday, Feb. 6,
_the
four
warehouses
announced Monday.
Hundred-pound averages
dropped to their lowest point
of the season Monday. They
were $126 .06, down from
$128.95 J~st week.
Sales totaled &gt;04,312 pounds
for $635,742.04. An estimated
27 percent of offerings were
not sold and went into the
federal support price pool.

Weather
Rain tonight, low in mid
30s. Rain changing to snow
Wednesday. Windy, colder
with high in the upper 30s.
Chance of precipitation 60
percent tonight, 90 percent
Wednesday.

HOLDS CERTIFICATE - Rex Shenefield, Rt. I, Langsville, holds his certificate of
election after being given the oath of office as a supervisor for the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, Frank D. Celebrezze, left, administered the oath.

•

at y

en tine
TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1979

MIDDLEPORT·POMEROY, OHIO

Thereon Johnson was the steel haulers strike, Mrs.
elected president and C. E. Thomas said.
ENGINEER REPORT
~laReslee was renamed
County Engineer Wesley
executive director at Monday's meeting of the Meigs Buehl reported work is unCounty Plannmg Com- derway on the detailed plat
maps. nothing has been done
mission.
Other officers elected were basically to update the maps
Orion Rou sh, first vice since 1928. The work is slow,
president; Henry Wells , according to Buehl.
The group discussed the
second vice president;
Edison Baker, secretary and · possibility of an engineering
che ck being '!lade oil
George Collins, treasurer.
During the meetin g, property transfers with a
presided over by Johnson, charge being involved for the
expenditures for 1978 were purchaser of property so .that
reported totaling $2,612.84. It future 'deeds will be correct.
Buehl also reviewed a high·
was reported the 1979 budget
way
map which will be
is $3,716.
available
in the near future .
The group discussed the
recent industrial site report The map was done by Ohio
compiled bY Jennings and University through a federal
Associates, Columbus, and grant. Printing is now being
decided to contact Cash Bahr, done by an Athens firm. Th e
Middleport Chamber of county engineer said im·
Commerce President, and provements to Page St. in
arc
still
Paul Simon, president of the Middleport
Pomeroy
Chamber of
Commerce , recording the
establishment of a committee
for follow through of the
report which outlines 14 industrial sites in the county.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas
. reported on the multi•purpose
building project saying that
BY BOB HOEFLICH
work is being done as
Middleport residents will
weather permits. Work was hav e full service cable
held up several weeks due to television service at once.
·"'~.;...;.:
~.
·:".
~

.~die· Bridge
discussion set
CHARLESTON The
Shadle Bridge will be the
·subject of an lnfonnal public
lileellnc ICbeduled for Thursday, Jan. 26 at 7 p.m. by the
· Weal Virginia Department of
Highways. The meeting,
whlc:b will take place at the
Muon CoUDiy Courthouse In
Point · Pleasant, will offer
lllternted citizens from West
Virginia and Ohio an opportunity to uk questions
and dilctllll the Department
of Hilhways' plans to
reDOVIIIe the structure.
DOH per101111el will anawer
questions and ell(llaln the
rencmtlon project.

scheduled and that necessary
data on the project are being
secured by Jennings and
Associates.
' SOIL AND WA'rER
Bqyd Ruth of the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
Service
outlined
the
reclamation of some 60 acres
of strip mine lan d in the
Pageville area.
He a lso discussed a new

program, the Rural Abandoned Mine Program 1 which

provi des fund s for Improvements in ·cases where
mines have caused damage.
John son announced Blll
Zuspan had informed him
that a water loading coal
facility is planned at the
former Wh ite Rock Salt
loca tion m Minersville.
Zuspan told Jo hn son the
fa cility has approval of the
environmental protection
agency, the Ohio Department

of H1ghways and the U. S.
Corps of Engineers.
Johnson said Zuspan had
requested a Jetter of approval
from the regional planning
commission. The conunission
took no ~ction on the matter
because it felt that more
information was needed.
Johnson emphasized that the
safety factor of coal trucks
mov ing to the facility was to
be considered along with the
fat1 that 1,01)0 tons at least
are to be loaded in a day
which would necessitate
heavy coal truck traffic.
The commission agreed to
recom mend the appoint·
ments of L. W. McComas and
Bill Childs , both of Middleport, to the commission by
the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners. Th e ne xt
quarterly meeting was set for
3:10 p.m. on the fourth
Monday in April.

Middleport's council
approves .T V increase

......

......

.

,.._
-

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday: Snow flurries
Tbursday. F:alr Fdday. A
chance of ralo or snow
Saturday. Highs In the
upper 20s and 30s. Lows In
the teens and low 20s.

Youth fined

for incident
Nineteen - year
old
Raymond A. Barber, Cool·
ville, arrested by Meigs
sherHf's deputies for giving
· false Information to an officer
was fined $25 and costs
Monday in Meigs County
Court.
The arrest stemmed from
an incident at Ludwick's
Market, Tuppers Plains,
when a car owned by Robert
Qualls was taken by a
juvenile.
Barber, upon questioning
by an officer, denied knowing
the juvenile when In fact
Barber had picked up the
youth earlier In the day and
had driven him around
several hours. It was also
revealed that Barber had
known the juvenile for
several years.
The case against the
juvenile was transferred to
Athens County Juvenile
Court.

15 CENTS

Meigs' planning group
elects officers Monday

Full seroice
here Thurschly - :_:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::::;:;::
Middleport subscribers of
the
PolnTVIew
Cable
Television Co. will have
service on the two new
channels which have been
blocked out since the first of
the year by Thursday Paul
Gerard,
company
representaUve, said today.
Gerard
Issued
the
lltlltemllftt after Middleport
council Monday night passed
under
emergency
procedures, an ordinance
providing for a rate increase.
Any011e wanting to beat the
rate lncreue before they
receiVe their new payment
bonks may do so by paying
six monlhs In advance,
Gerard advlBed.

Rex E. Shene!teld, Rt. I 'Langsville, and Thomas M.
Theiss, Rt . l, Racine, recently elect&lt;l(j ~ul"!.rvisors of the ]\1eigs
So1l and Water Cohservation District, were sworn into office by
Ohio's Chief Justice of the ;&gt;upreme Court, Frank D.
Celebrezze at the 36th Annual Meeting of the Ohio Federation
of Soil and Water Conservation Districts in Columbus .
Shenefield and Theiss, elected to three-year terms, join
Thereon Johnson, Roy Miller and David Gloeckner in
administering the Meigs District's conservation programs.
Shenefield, president of the Meigs Boa"d of Supervisors,
stated the challenge of providing guidance in proper land
management and solving our energy problems without
destroying our natural resources so vita l to future generations,
ISstaggermg and will requtre the use of our best conservation
practices.
He considers the District's futur e role in reducmg pollution
from agrtculture and urban development sites as a major
District challenge.
"With the help of the people in the District we will
coordinate the work of the district staff with that provided by
the Soil Conservation Service and other loca l state and
federal agencies to bring the people of the Meig~ District an
efflctent and effective program. We are aU elected by the
people in the district and serve without pay. We are dedicated
to helping our community," said Shenefield.

J
•

This was the outcome of a
meeting of Mtddleport village
council Monday night after
council reversed an earlier
decision turning do1111 a rate
increa se requested by
PoinTView Cable Television
which serves the town.
Over the last couple of
months council had discussed
the rate increase then voted
against the increase raising
the cable service from $6 to $7
a month for most subscribers
and from $4 .50 to $&gt; .2&gt;
monthly for senior citizens
and disabled persons.
As a result of council's
failure to pass the increase,
two cttannels on television
sets of Middleport su b·
scribers were blocked out.
. Rece ntly, council upon
receiving some requests that
it reconsider the rate in·
crease asked subscriberS to
notify them whether or not
they wanted to pay the in·
cr~ase and receive service on
the two channels which were
blanked out about the first of
this year.
At last night's meeting,
council members reported it
had received a number of
calls with an overwhelming
majority favoring the in. crease and full service.
While approving the increase · at last night's
meeting, ·council, upon the
motion of Carl Horky, who
said that the company had
violated its fran chise in
removing a Columbus
channel from the service,
passed an action stating that
another cable company could
he franchised at a later time
to serve the cnmmttnity.
Council \m-;t n1ght ·tppro·ved

GOOD SLEIGH CONDITIONS - Monday's snow and the not too cold weather provided
a good sleigh riding situation for county youngsters who were dismissed from school for the
day . Tired of'sleigh riding but perhaps a bit hungry, Heather Woods, Pomeroy, has a feast of
snow.
~

the rate tncrca se as an
emergency measure giving
the ordinance all three
required readings rath.er
than to let \qe problem ·draw

out for a six weeks period as
would he required if only one
reading was given at each
meeting .
Mayor Fred Hoffman in·
dica!ed PoinTView Ca bl e
Television Co. had stated tt
will begin service •m·
mediately.
'!'. A. Riley appeared before
council last night before the
cable television problem
came up for discussion and
expressed his belief that
council should put the rate
iricrease into effect so that
subscribers who wished the
full service could receive it.
SEEKS BIDS
Council voted to advertise
for a one ton, flatbed truck
upon the request of the Board
of Public Affairs. A letter was
read from HUD on a grant
which has been approved for
Middleport. The letter stated
a discussion period from
Middleport will be held on
Feb. 9 on the $128,000 grant
which deals with \he nursing
home and ~0 units of housing.
Council approved the at·
tendance of Mayor Hoffman
to the meeting in Washington,
D. C.
Three ordinances were
given second readings
Monday night. They include
- a Pi'Y raise ordinance
providing for a seven percent
incre~se generally for village
employees; a snow removal
ordinance, outlining steps In
case of an emergency snow
' removal situation, and a Fair
Housing ordinance, designed
to
Insure
against
discrimination.
II letter from the Ohio•
De part ment of Liquo r
Conti'OI was presented an·
nouncing a hearing Jan . 30 at
9 a.m. at the courthouse in
Pomeroy. regarding a carry
out application filed by the
(Continued on p;~ge 8)
•.

REAPPOINTED - C. E.
Blakeslee, Pomeroy, bas
been reappointed to sen-e
as Exec utive Director of

the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission. The
acllon was taken at the
annual
meeting
Pomero_}-' Monday.

in

Rio board
reelects
officer~
Reg ular meeting date for
the Rio Grande Community
.College Board of Trustees has
been changed to the third
Wednesday of each month.
This was announced today
by the board's secretary treasurer, Dr. Herman Koby.
Starting time and meeting
place will remam the same, 7
p.m. in the Rio Grande
Coll ege and Community
College board room.
It was also announced John
Beckly, McArthur, and
Patricia Mills, Middleport,
were re-elected chairperson
and vice·chairp e r so n
respectively. Others on the
nine member board are:
. Orion Roush, Langsville ;
Elnon Plummer, Wellston ;
William Slavens and Dwight
Shumate, Jackson; Malcolm
Or eba ugh and Manning
Wetherholt, Gallipolis, and
Gerry Frye, McArthur.
Koby announced that bid
openings for the Rio Grande
Colle ge and Communit y
College Fine and Performing
Arts Center will be held Jan .
26 at 2 p.m. in the state architects office. Because the
buO'ding is slate fund ed, the
State of Ohio CO.-{)rdinates and
controls the bidding process.
The college's new technical
career cent er is moving
toward completion. It a!"
pears partial opening will be
in March with completion and
total move-in sometime in
May.

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport emergency
unit was called to 338 S. Fifth
. Ave., at 12:20 am .. Tuesday
for Mrs. Eloise Wtlson who
was tak en to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and later
to Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Wilson, a sbtcr to Dr. R.
E. Boice, Pomeroy' whose
funeral service:; were held
Monday afternoon, later died.
t

.

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