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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Fob. 5, IU79

Squads busy
over weekend

IIAK E SALE SI.ATF.V
Tho Ladies Auxiliary of the
Middleport Fire Department
willm&lt;&gt;ct \Vodncsday, Feb. 7,
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire hall.
'llll' Pomeroy emergeJtcy
A white elephant and bake . squad was called to Route "I
sale will be held. Hostesses nea r Shenang Springs at I : 50
will be Hetty Ohlinger and a.m. Sunday for Dean Hawk
Patty Stein.
who' was injured in an auto
accident. Hawk was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The squad went to the
Chester Road at 7:09 a.m.
' Sunday for James Garnes
who .was taken to Veterans
Memorial llospital.
At 3:13 p.m . Sunday the
· squad went to Minersville lor
Pauline Cunningham who
was also taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Saturday aft ernoon the
squad took Mrs. Norma
Goodwin from Brick St.. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Southeastern Ohio

Garden Tractor Club will
meet at8 p.m. Wednesday at
the Dale Kautz residence,
. ~ute 3, Pomeroy: Persons
interested in joining the club
are welcome.

Baker Furniture Has
A Budget Shop-

All NEW FURNITURE
AT BUDGET PRICES!
9'X12' RUGS

$58

3 IPC. LIVING ROOM

GROUPS
'398 . '498 - '598
PLATFORM ROCI&lt;ERS $68
'

.

SPEED
QUEEN LAUNDRY
I
HEAVY
DUTY - LARGE SIZE
f

$588

WASHER &amp;
DRYER
.

CHEST OF DRAWERS $39

HOOVER CANISTER
10 QT. DISPOSABLE _BAG, 1.7 PEAK HP,
~ FLOATS ON AIR,

NO WHEELS NECESSARY!

'4495

HOOVER SWEEPER

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLETPORT, 0.

$68 88

The Middleport emergency
squad was called to 573 North
Second Ave., at 7:13 a.m.
Monday lor Dorothy Scarberry who was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 7:36 p.m. Saturday, the
· squad went to Route 124 for
Charles Burt and at 7:57
Saturday night to Middleport
Hill for Mabel Pierman.
· Both Burt and Mrs. Pierman were also taken to
Holzer Medical Center.

Committee plans
Tuesday meeting

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

1
I
I
I

Area Deaths

AIJA V. OHLINGER
Mrs. Ada Virginia Zahl
Ohlinger. 80. Houle 1, Mid·

dleport, died Sunday morning
at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Ohlinger was born
Oct. 25, 1898 at Minersville, a
daughter of the late August
and Christina Yeager Zahl.
She was also preceded in
death by her husband ,
Frederick William Ohlinger
in 1972: a "sister, Mary
Elizabeth Zahl, and two
brothers, William and Edward Zahl.
twin
Surviving . are
their
daughters
and
husbands, Mary and ·Albert
Schleicher, Parma, and
Martha and James Vennari,
Pomeroy ; another daughter
and her husband, Mildred
and Joe ·Bailey, Route I ,
Middleport, with whom Mrs.
Ohlinger had made her home
for the past three years; a
brother, Aaron (Zeke ) Zahl,
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Ohlinger was a
member o( the Minersville
United Methodist Church and
she had been a Meigs County
school teacher for 36 years.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p-.m. Tuesday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
· Home in Middleport with the
Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call
. at the funeral home any time
until the hour of services. .

The committee for the
establishment o[ a nursery
and day care center will meet
JAMESON R. FRIEND
at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
Graveside
rites . for
Meigs County Mental Health
Jameson Ray Friend, stillCenter.
Meeting with the com- , born san of Jeffrey and
mittee will be Gary Little of Kimberly Ward Friend, Portthe Buckeye HUls-Hocking land, at St. Joseph Hospital,
Valley Regional Planning Parkersburg, Saturday, were
Commission
and
3' held this afternoon at the
representative of the county Gilmore Cemetery.
Surviving besides the
commissioners. All interested persons are urged to parents are maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
attend the meeting.
Gene Ward , Portland ;
paternal grandmother, Betty
Friend , Long Bottom ;
, ASK TO WED
greatA ' marriage license was maternal
grandmother,
Icy
Dailey,
issued to Robert Lee Jones,
greatRacine;
paternal
. 34, Rt. I, Albany and Nancy
grandmother,
Amy
Friend,
Louise White, 26, Rt. ),
Akron : maternal great
Albany.

•

YOUR SAVINGS HERE I
Saving money in a passbook savings account or time certificate
-account is necessary in today's economy. A savings account
earns interest compounded daily, giving you money to meet
emergencies or for buying luxuries . A savings account will also
help to send your kids ·to college!

Fat litters
POMEROY, OHIO
......_

....__

......

VUKU

-

'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Eac~ Depositor
· Member. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
. I

&lt;.

•

BY KATIE CROW
·
Conditions of US 33, SR 7 and the City Hall Building were
major topics discussed at Monday's regular session of
Pomeroy Vlllage Council.
Larry Wehrung, councilman, told fellow members he had
readthelettersMayorCiarenceAndrewsreceived last spring
in which Gov. James Rhodes had placed U.S. 33andSR 7on the
top priority list for paving.
Wehrung noted that this did not happen. Later when
council agreed to have the state pave Nye Ave. to Sycamore
Street the weather was such that hoi mix could not be placed.
Wehrung asked council for pennission to write to Gov. .
Rhodes and ·Glenn Smith, Marietta, Ohio Deparbnent of
Transportation to request that paving in Pomeroy be done in
early spring· rather than in September. Wehr.ung also
suggested tbat paving be completed from Butternut to the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. Council approved his suggestion.
Hall Deplorable
Wehrung also commented that the present city hall was in
deplorable condition and suggested that the building be
remodeled.
•
He added that "villages all around have nice city buildings
while OW'S is a rat hole." He also addert that he relt the vilJa~e

t:HIUSTINE JOHNS
Chri&amp;ine Johns, 58, 107
Kerr Street, Pomeroy, died
Saturday in a nursing home
at Piketon, Ohio. She was
preceded in death by her .
· mother.

Survivors

include

one ·

sister, Ellie Mae Venable,
.'Cleveland, one . nephew,
William Venable · and two
great nieces, four aunts,
Cornelia Bunch and Gertrude
Johns, both of Pomeroy,
Vlolena Melton, Cleveland, .
and Rosie Minnis, Bidwell,
and several cousins.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 10 a.m. at
Ewing Chapel with Ute Rev.
Eddie Buffington officiating.
Burial will be in ·Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at any
time.

WINT~R HIKE SUCCEss .:... Thirty-two overniRht eampers loaded for a cold winter
evening and 10 day hikers traveled the Grandma Gatewood trail last Saturday at the Second
Annual Winter Hike and Campotit sponsored by Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande. Doubling
the numbers who participated last year, this weekend's venture was blessed With fair
weather and moderate temperatures. Hikes included a 4-H Club from Friendship, Ohio;
faculty and students from Shawnee State College; Jackson area businessmen and many
local adults and children . The day hikers explored fresh animal tracks in the snow while the
''backpackers managed to jump two buck deer and a doe. Fox, raccoon, turkey, and grouse
prints were pointed out by the experienced trackers. After the days' hike and discoveries
along the trail, the campfire was ignited and fellowship was Shared by all. Seasoned winter
campers assisted the novice by sharing thei~ tips and insights.

GLADYS L. BOSWORTH
Mrs. Gladys L.- Bosworth,
80 , Dexter, died Monday
morning
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mrs .
Hospital News
Bosworth was born in Salem
Township, a daughter of the Veterans Memorial Hospital
late Alfred and Flora O'Dell
Saturday admi ssions Pond Holliday . She was a 66- Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy;
yea• member of Star Grange Ray Tryall, Pomeroy.
778.
Saturday di scharges Surviving are her husband , Ronald Miller, Charles Wise,
E. L. Bosworth ; a si&amp;er,
Larry Curtis, Henry CunAllee Houtday, Delrter, and ningham , John Edwards,
several nieces, nephews and . Mary Laudermilt, Thomas
cousins.
Walker, Marion Francis,
Funeral services will. be . Dora Smith.
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday by
Sunday admissions - Dean
the Old Delrter Church with Hawk, West Columbia, W.Va. ;
the Rev .' Ralph Smith of- James. Garnes, Pomero Y,;
ficiating. Burial will be in the Sarah Lunsford, Tuppers
Nelson Cemetery.
Plains ; William Arnott, CoolFriends may call at the vj))e ; Charles Frye, Rutland ;
Bigony-Jordan Funeral Paulin e Cunningham,
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Minersv ille; Ethel Dilcher,
p.m. Tuesday. The body will · Rutland.
.be taken to the church one
Sunday disc harge .
hour prior to services .
Timothy Dillon. •

Buckey~. • • Ferry
union contracted crews
employed during the strike
would pay the additional
\yages being sought by 2359
for six years. ·
"The cumomers are being
fleeced in an attempt to bust
the

union,' '

Pancake

.

Highways, building conditions agen.da .topics

great - grandmothers, t•:o;thcr
DaileY, Portland, and Sarah
J. Congo, Racine, and several
aunt s. undes and cousins.
Officiating was the Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp.

(Continued from page I )

•••

.

I
I
I
I

contract

is terminated
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP)
- This city has terminated
its contract with one of three
ferries operating on the Ohio
River since the closing of a
bridge to South Shore, Ky.
"It won 't be a great Joss,"
City Manager Barry Feldman said this morning. A 400person passenger ferry and a
motor vehicle ferry continue
to operate.
Portsmouth City Council
decided to cancel the contract
with the Keystone - Rich·
mond Co. at midnight Sunday
following a weekend meeting
because of con.tinued public
criticism of the company's
operation, Feldman said.
The ferry, which carried
motor vehicles, had frequent
technical problems, the city
manager said. The company
was paid $3,800 a day for its
service. It was to have
remained in effect until
repairs were compiet~d on
the U. S. Grant Bridge,
scheduled to re-open neKI
December.
·
Feldman said a suitable
replacement for the ferry
would be sought this week.

Men expected to
return to Ohio
'

HAMILTON , Ohio (AP) Two Hamilton men being
held in Nashville, Tenn., in
connection
with
the
disappearance of a Florida
couple are expected to waive
extradition and be returned
Monday, authorities said
Sunday.
Gary Morningstar, 33, and
Allen Scott, 27, have been
charged with felonious
assault , but police said
additional charges could be
filed.
Two charred bodies found
· in .a burned-out, abandoned
car Saturday in rural Butler
County have been tentatively
identified as those of Carmen
Buetti, 36, and Terri Bel)!lett,
20, both. of Miami.
. But Butler County Coroner
Garret Boone said the bodies
were "burned beyond
recognition and ~rozen ," and
that clinical identification
may take a week.
The Florida couple disappeared after ~!tending a
rock concert in Cincinnati
last Saturday night. They
were reported missing the
next day by another Florida
couple who accompanied
them to Ohio.
A search of the house where
Morningstar and Scott
allegedly took the F'lorida
couple folloWing the concert
uncovered what appeared to
be
bloodstains,
bone
fragments and bullet holes,
police said.

charged.
James said he had in·
formation indicating that the
cooperative had accepted a
high bid from the non-lJ11ion
firm, Floyd Pike Construction, North Carolina, for
a recent project.
"The information indicates
Pike was the highest bidder,
but they got the work, "
James said.
"I don't under&amp;and why,
but the low bid was [rom a
union contractor, who would
not work during a &amp;rike," the
state representative con·
tinued.
Many of those . attending
said outages which occurred
last month following an ice
storm, would have been much
shorter if the company had
fired the non-union firm and
settled with the union local.
State representative James
received praise during the
afternoon session from the
committee members, union
workers and cooperative
u.s. WILL TRY
customers.
OTIIER PLANS
"Politicians have swarmed
WA.SHI~GTON (A P )
around these meetingJi li~ ~ The United St~tes plans to try
bees around 11 honey pot, lin to sell some of the billions of
but one has buzzed off though dollars worth of arms orders
- that's Ron James," canceled by the &amp;rife-torn
steerin~ co~ittee member government of Iran to other
Bob Letth satd.
countries, sources said.
Also present Sunday was
During recent negotiations,
State Senator Oakley Collins, Iran and the United States
a representative , from , Sen. agreed to cancel arms orders
Howard Metzenbaum's office of as much as $7 billion,
and a representative from sources said Sunday.
Congressman Clarence
Miller's office.
James emphasize,d at the cooperative's
code
of
outset of the meeting that his regulations, told the memconcern with Buckeye Rural bers that it would. · be
operations should not be necessary to draw · up· ·
!=Onsidered pro-union or anti- . petitions si~ed by 10 percent
management · but rather · in of the coop's customer support of the consumer.'
-owners calling lor a special
Those present were told by board meeting in order to
a steering committee to hold elections · lor new
reform the Cooperative that directors.
Anne Zimmer then asked
'Buckeye was formed to
provide low cost electrical for volunteers from each of
service to people who the cooperatlve's.five service
otherwise would not have that · areas to help in circulating
service, but over the years , the petitions, which have yet
the membership had, through to be written.
inaction, relinquished control
"We "expect the current
of the comJ)any to the board board of directors to do
of directors.
something or be replaced,"
A local union leader Lorry one committee member said
Smith di.rected himself to that Ill! coop members stepped
point when he said, "It's not forward to volunteer to
us working
for
the c\rcujate the petitions.
cooperative ."or Clyd~ Ram"It would be more hone&amp; if
say, but the cooperative and they took a gun and held
Clyde Ramsay working for people up," the committee
us. "
member continued, "at lea&amp;
The meeting ended after then you'd knOw what they' re
.l• me•. reading from the doin'g ."
·

..

.,

Morningstar and Allen
w'ere apprehended Friday at
a Nashville motel where
police confiscated two pistols,
a grenade, a small amount of
drugs and about $12,000 in
caSh.
Each was charged with
felonious
assault
and
Morningstar was charged
with possession of illegal
ordnance after officers found
explosives and automatic
weapons in his apartment .
Butler County Prosecutor
John Holcomb said SUnday
the matter may be submitted
to a grand jury being
empaneled Monday .
. However, that would not be
made public until the grand
jury reports Friday.
TO END MARRIAGES
Three dissolutions of
marriage have been filed in
Meigs County common pleas
court.
Filing were Andrew Edward Lyles, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, and Cindy Morgan
Lyles, Rt. I, Long Bottom;
Lawrence Eldo Rose, Rt. 2,
Racine and Edith Lee Rose,
Racine: ·Mary H. Cleek,
Racine and Corbett 0 . Cleek,
Racine .

Why doesn't the FCC assign
a special channel for the exclusive broadcast of TV interference?

ELBERFELD$
Wrangler' cowboy cut jeans
are made with that

good old western traditi on. They're rugged
yet extremely &lt;am·
fortable, feature

swing pockets and
pa nt legs that will
fit easi ly into your
boots. Best of all
they're ' so easy ' to care
for because Wrangl er

could not .&lt;iord' to renovate the senior high building or regarding such a tax. ·
maintain it. He felt the present location is a better one than the
Brown ·also reported the HUD grant for sewage,
senior high building.
demohtion of houses, winterization of homes and
I.ou Osborne, councilman, felt council would be wasting rehabilitation has been submitted . Brown said he had been
money on a building that is in as poor condition as the present contacted by a representative, of the Bureau of Outdoor
city hall. "We would be throwing good money· after bad," Recreat ion regarding the village ·gra nt for its mini-park .
Osborne noted.
·
Brown reported the village would not hear from the
Belt~ Baronick, councilwoman, suggested the present federal level for five to eight weeks , at which time he will be
structure be torn down and new building erected.
sent information on how to proceed with the project. Council
Council a11thorized the mayor to get cost estimates on also was to have a survey done to see what land is available.
repairing the present structure and costs for erecting a new
Discuss-Salaries
building.
Council also discussed a salary increase for the mayor and
It was also pointed out that Osborne Street was in terrible clerk. Council felt it was fortunate to have a mayor that spends
condition . It is impossible to patch holes there.
as much tim e as Andrews does on village business.
.
$50,000Spent
It was also noted that lhe clerk begin ni~g next year, will
Harold Brown, councilman, said council spent $50,000 on take over the treasurer's duties. No action was taken on salary
paving last year . He commented that if the village had a one or increases. Couricil, with reluctance, accepted the resignation
one"and a haUmilllevy for streets it would be possible to set up of Larry Powell. Powell's term expires at the end of th e year.
a program il·council knew what revenue was coming in.
Council discussed possible replacement member following
It was suggested that an additional tax on liquor might the council meeting.
help the village get more revenue lor street·paving.
. Council, in other business, approved the second reading of
·
Brown is to contact Villa~e Soliritor: Fr.O rrow . an ordinance granting a seven percent increase in wages to all
village employes and gave the first rf'arlinrr to u Fair H111to:.::inu

·e.
. (USPS 145 -96~

VOL NO. XX.IX NO. '206

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY, OHIO

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Promising not to raise taxes,
Gov . James A. Rhodes
outlined plans for improved
fundin g of education in his
Stiite of the State address
today.
He called for increased
state funding of schools under-

a new distribution formula·
and tightening of sch~ol
management to assure
effective spendin g . for
education.
He labeled education "the
first priority of our budget."
"I propose an additional
S636 'million in state support

for Ohio's schools," Rhodes
told the joint session o[ the
Legislature .
"This is a 24 percent
increase from the current
biennium. at a time when
enrollments will decline by 6
percent."
The plan will result in a

.--··cAA accepting applicants
for exten.d ed EEA proWam
CHESHIRE - The Gallia Meigs Community Action
Agency will be accepting
apJIIIcations
for
the
Emergency
Energy
Assistance Program (Extended), beginning Wednesday. ·
This program will assibt '
low·lncome households and
the elderly who experienced
financial hardship between
January I and June 30, 1978 ;
and those who have received
a "shut-off" notice this year.
The program Is intended to
assist elig ible low-incom e
individuals and families who
endured financial hardship
during the period January I,
1978, through June 30, 1978.
Individuals and households
who are pr esen tly experiencing a winter-related
crisis- such as a "shut-off"
notice from a utllity company
- are encouraged to apply
for assistance under this
· year's program, especially
the elderly living ·on fix ed
incomes.

In order to be eligible for
assistance, , an individual or
household mu&amp; meet income
guidelines and demonstrate
that winter conditions [in
1978) created - or are
presently creating
an
emergency nee,\1 which the
. person or household does not

have the financial resources
to meet .
Eligible applicants can
receive assistance with fuel
- utility bills ~nd-or such
iterns as blankets, clothing,
temporary space heaters,
emetgency furna ce repairs,
coa), .fuel oil delivery, temporary shelter, nutrition,
health and supportive ser·
vices, and temporary and
emergency·repairs to housing
unfit for habitation.
Those
)Nho received
assistance through th e
Emergency
Energy
Assistance Pro gram last.
year are not eligible to
participate in the "eK!ended"
program ; but may apply for
assi&amp;ance under this year's
program if they can provide
proof that an energy·related
crisis is occurring. Copies of .
utility-fuel expenses incurred
between January 1, 1978, and
June 30, 1978, ar~ required, as
well as proof of the ·
emergency need. Th e same
requirements exist for this
yea r's program.
Applications will · be
available in the following
locations: th e Community
Action Agency in CheShire
(992-7000, 367-7341); Com·
munity Action offices in the
Gallia (446-4612) and Meigs
(992-5605 ) county court-

hou ses; Senior Citizens
Centers in Pomeroy (9927884) and Gallipolis (4467000); and the Satellite
Nutrition Sites at the Vinton
Baptist Church (388-7877) and
the Reorganized Church of
Jesus Qtrist of Latter Day
Saints in Racine (843-3364).
Application deadline for
last year's program is March
15; · deadline for assistance
under this year's program is
May 31.
Additional . information
may be obtained by contadng
one of the above-mentioned
locations.

Church making
special appeal
An appeal is being made by
the Dexter Church of Christ
for donations of material or
money to build a small home
·for Caryl Tyler,.Dexter.
Tyler 's home burned to the
ground two weeks ago.
Neighbors in Dexter have
offered assistance and •I&gt;'
peals have been made to
several Churches of Christ.
Those wiShing to make a
donation may do so by sen-'
ding it to Waid Nickolson,
31345 Bowles Road, Dexter,
Ohio 45726.

boost ln basic atd per pupil
fr om $960 to $1,250 in the first
year and $1 ,300 in the second
year of the new biennium , the
governor said.
Hi s budget provides tor a 22
percent increase to education .
for handicapped children and
an increase o£ 104 classroom
units
for
vocational
education.
Rhodes said his education
budget would :
-Improv e . training for
teachers and administrators.
- Provide lull fundin g for
the basic skills program he
proposed last fall .
-Provide increased aid to
big city districts.
- Provide incentives .[or
parents and teachers to work
together.
~Provide funds -for--poor
school. districts to pay debt
charges.
"I will soon appoint a
special task force to analyze
and recommend solutions to
school di sc ipline problems,"
he said.
In addition to his big plans
for schools, Rhodes promised
$155 million, in property tax
reli ef.
"This relief includes a 2.5
per ce nt increase in the
rollback and increase in the
homestead e xem ptio n
program, " he said.
For higher education , the
governor proposed a 21
percent increase in fundi ng
and an increase in student
loans.
.
Rhodes ca lled for a 21 percent increase in fu nds for
mental health programs and
we lfa re incr eases " to
families that are in
legitimate need."
He hit upon a favorite topic
- jobs - by referring to
them as " the only thing that
will save the inner cities ."
" I will again propose
legislation that would exempt
employers who create or
(Continued on page 8 )

pucker and wri nk le free,

.relief.

l:

Union .leaders ·out on bonds
dation officials said th at
Two leaders of the Ohio Rt. 1, Cheshire, and staff union must have a certain there has been no harassment
Public Work ers Union re pr esentat ive Robert percentage of individual s . and, to their knowledge, there
(OPWU ) entered not guilty Gogerty. Massi llon, were wanting to join before its have been few if any cases of
pl eas Monday in Gallipolis arrested Monday morning by representatives could receive irritation.
Municipal Court to charges of GSI security poli ce when they pe rmi ss ion to ent er th e
Reg ulations under which
trespassing on Ga llipolis allegedly r efused to leave grounds and recruit.
the
GSI operates empl oyee
Charging that the arre,ts
campus grounds.
State Instit ute grounds.
organizations
mum meet the
A spokesman for the were Unwarrant ed, Mik e 10 perce nt membership
Dennis VanSickle. asthe
union's
si&amp;ant director of OPWU , Department of Mental Health Clifford ,
exec
uti
ve
di
rec
tor
, said requirement a nd mu!)t give
Reynoldsburg, fornterly of and Retardation said that a
Monday that the new union seven days' written notice.
The superintendent may
currently has between 50 and
grant
the right to enter the
60 members at GSI.
for pu rposes of
grounds
Clifford said he had sent a
rec
r
uitmen
t · when those
letter to GSI Superintendent
requirements
are met.
John Beattie stating that the
In
this
case,
the departOPWU would be on the inment
said,
Clifford
did send a
stitute grounds to discuss
letter
requesting
pennissio
0
problems with members and
to com e on the grounds feb . 5
Th e
Pomeroy
Fire gas standby: seven autos: non·members.
Department during 1978 one apartment building; one
"In recent weeks," Cli fford and 6 for the purpose o[
electrical;
one
fa
lso
alarm
;
answered 71 calls, 30 in to1m
wrote , "several employees recruitment; however, since
and 41 out of town , according one jail and three residence. have been harassed about his employee organization
Out of town calls included OPWU, and it is our intention did not meet the 10 percent
to Charles Legar, fir e chief.
four
autos ; l wo tractor and
criterion. the superintendent
Legar submitted a report to
hay;
eight residences: one to help soothe irritations the informed them that their
Pomeroy Council Monday
workers arc feeling and help
night for the period from July brUsh , One false ala.rm , one them understand their requem had to be denied.
barn and one dumpster.
· The jncursion of the
1 to Dec. 31, 1978.
rights."
Truck
two
was
rebuilt
at
a
During t~at perio d the
Department of Mental grounds Monday morning by
total
co't
of
$22,000.
All
department answered 15 in
Health and Menta l fl.etar- · VanSickle and Gogerty was
equipment
was
reported
in
en tirely unaut horiz ed and
town resulting in $35,010 in
good
condition
with
the
exinappropriate, the statement
lo sses, 355 man hours; 16 and
;.·-::::-:::·.;: :: ;.::::-:.··:&lt;:·.:::;.;.;.,.... ;.;;:·:·::;. read.
one-hall miles each vehicle ception of hose damage
· Mu nicipa l Court .Judge
one way, average ca ll per during recent flooding. There
EXTENDED FORECAST
were 184 man hours spent
James A. Bennett set bonds
man 15.
Thursdav through
at $500 each. The cases were
~aturday: c'old Thursday
Out of town calls tota l~d 18; flushing the. streets following
continued until March 5.
$53,63Uin loss; 199 miles each the flood .
and warmer Friday and
Saturday. Possible snow
vehicle one way; 292 man
hours; average man per ca ll ,
F rida)' and snow or rain
Saturday. High around 20
12.
Storm warning
Winter · st orm watch
In Pomeroy, there were one
Thursday and rising into
tonig ht. Snow possibly
the 30s by Saturday .
beginning by evening and
Overnight lows zero to 10
posted tonight
possibly mixed later tonigl1t
abo\'C Thursday and rising
with fr eezing rain or sleet.
into the 20s by Saturday .
By The Associated Press
!.ow tonight in mid to upper
The
Nationa l Weather
20s. Chance of precipitation :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;&lt;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: Service. has issued a winter
· · ·RACINE , Ohio (AP)
storm watch for extreme
Arrowheads found at the site 90 percent tonight, 70 percent
southern Ohio tonight. A
of a proposed trealment plant Wednesday .
winter storm watch means
have put a $4 .million sewer
that Conditions are right for
project on ice lor at least
BILL INTRODUCED
the
development·
of
three months.
WASHINGTON iAP) - A
hazardm.Lc; winter weather in
Bidding on the plllnt for
A porch at the James the area.
Meigs Co unty communities of constitutional amendment to
The watch was brought on
Racine and Syracuse was allow voters to enact their Hayes home on Nye Ave.,
scheduled to take place about own ·federal laws was in- Pomeroy, was eKtensively by a low press ure area
Nov. I, said Frank Porter, trodu ced again in Congress damaged and a pickup truck moving toward Ohio from
attorney for the two-village Monday and promptly ran hea vily damaged as the along the Gulf Coast today.
formidable opposition . result o£ an accident at 1 a .m. This system is expected • to
sewer di&amp;rict. But it now is into
1
'l'm
against it,'' said Rep . Tuesday.
spread snow across the s tate
stalled by a &amp;ate order for
Pomeroy police sa id the tonight. The snv~ may be
Don
Edwards
, D-Calil.,
archeologi cal
exploration.
Porter said the delay is cha irman of the Hou se truck driven by Eldon Blake, mlxect ·with freezing rain or
costing about $5,000 a day and consti tutional rights sub· 49, Reed sville, was traveling sleet in southern counties.
Temperatures in Ohio
put the total eK!ra cost at committee. which will con- l)Orth on Nye Ave .. it ran over
the sidewalk strikine the tonight should be mu clt
sider the proposal.
$250,000 to $~00,000.
Edwards said he will hold porch . The vehicle continued milder than the past two
An initi al archeological
&amp;udy turned up the arrow- heafings on the amendment if on and flipped over when it · nights, In the 20s.
The high temperatures on
heads. Additional exploration the majority of' the sub- ran into an embankment.
Blake is charged with Wednesday will range from
of the site will begin in April t'Ommittee ' wants to. The
and tak e 11 weeks, Por\er subcommittee declin ed to driving while intoxicated and the mid 21ls to around 30, with
said, li e pU\ the co&amp; of the hold hearings on a similar leavin g the scene. He was not snow tap ering off into
injured in the accident.
new c•ploration at $13,000. meas urt' la'st yr-r~r .
flurries.

71 fire calls
answered in '78

Driver faces
two charges

available
Wrangler

fuller cut blue
fuller in

the legs and seat
Sires 32 to.so walsi
lengths 30 to 36.
Be sure to see our
new spring styles

sl~ve

workers. Though the work ;s probably only a tempora• y
solution until repairs can be completed, it is a welconle

Anowheads
ice project

Straight Leg or
Boot Flare

men's

PATCHING HOLES - The Pomeroy parking lots
along the Ohio Power were getting the many potholes
patched Monday afternoon by the Pomeroy \OIIage

Weather

never shr inks out of size.
Navy in sizes 29-42 ..

of

15 CENTS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1979

Rhodes ·unveils school
financing plans today

of the dryer ready to wear

jeans -

ent1ne

a1 y

Fault" 100",(, co tton 14 ox .
deni m with Sanfor-Set'" .
Washes cleaner and comes out

Also

•

•

makes 'em of "N o-

men's

ordinance. Without the Fair Housing ordinance, the village
cannot qualify lor a federal grant.
Meeting with coun cil were Jeff Russell and Bob Schmoll,
representing the Jaycees. They asked if the Jaycees could
have an antique car show during Regatta. Mayor Andrews
informed the men to conta ct the Pomeroy Chamber of
1
Commerce.
Jane Walton , clerk, read a request to transfer a liquor
license from Mildred Johnson, Shamrock, to Morris and
Johnson, Rainbow Inn and a request transferring a liquor
license from Jellrey Morris to Morris and JoiUJson, Rainbow
Inn.
Council did not take any action. Council .members would like
to receive opinions· fr om residents in the respective district.
Council will take action one way or the other at the next
meeting.
Chief .Jed Webster 's report showed the deparbnent
invest igated 26 acciden ts, drove 4,611 miles, made 49 arrests
and collected $3,052 from the parking meters.
Tlie meeting wsa opened loy prayer by Lou Osborne.
Attending were Mayor Andrews, Wehrung, Osborne, Brown
and Baronick , council members, and Chief Webster.

long

western ·

shirts ready for
your selection .

SUBMIT HISTORY -Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Amsbury,
left, are Shown submitting -their family hls;ory to Meigs
County History Book Committee workers Mrs. Ted Reed,
center and Mrs. Patrick I.Dchary, right, at the Meigs
County Museum on Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. Mrs.
Reed and Mrs. I.Dchary were working at the Museum

Elbeffelds In Pomeroy .

.

I

&gt;

I

Monday. from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. receiving the. written
historical accounts. Mrs. Margaret Parker, coordmator of
the Meigs County' Historical Society, reports more_than
500 accounts of family histories have ·lfeen turned m fa~
publication in the new county history book.

.,

'•

..

.

�3- The Daily Sentmel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 , ruesda1

IN WASHINGTON
;:;
1

Looking at national needs

ISm ?

What about the New Prospenty

Hts one question for hJs congressman ts What have you

caseworkers to track down constituent Soctal Securtty

LEGAL NOTICE

The Oh o Department of
A dm 1n st r a ve
Serv ces
Off ce of Manpo wer Develop
ment h as s gned a L etter of
Agreemen t wth the U S
Oe partm enl of Labor
o
r ece ve $25 000 tor pr e
plann n g I act v t es
to

es ta b sh th e Pr vate Sector
In tat e Program (PSIP tor
F scat Year 1979 under T lie
VII of th e Comprehens ve
Employment and Tra n ng
Ac t ICETAl of 1978
The purpose of PSI P s to
sec tor
nc reas e private
employ me n t and tra n ng
opportun t1es
n Oh o s
Balan ce of State Pr me
SponsorShiP wh ch c urrent y
cons sts of 57 r ur a co unt es
PSIP w
operat~ ~r~ nd e r the
d r ectlon
of
and
be
monitored by the Office of
Manpower Dev elop ment
A co py ot the Lette r of
Agreement IS ay aJtabl e for
nspectlon dall y at the Off ce
of Manpower Development
(OMDl at 30 E Broad Str eet
27th F oor Colum bu s Oh o

43215
(2

6

He

Aromas they ll never b&lt;
able to duplicate the pot
pourn of metal 011 warmth
twine and a hundred other
scents that greeted you when
you walked mlo a genume
hardware store
Tuesday

largesse for the~r dlSiflcls But they do not slop there
Cappella was a shrme
The best members of Congress acknowledge their 10 which St Ma rtm s cloak
responsibility to look beyond the borders of the1r own was kept The word f1rst
diStriCts the1r own states to the problems and needs of the meant a place for keeping
nation as a whole
sacred lhmgs then 11 de
scrlbed any holy rlace and
fmally a place o worsh1p
The old French Chapele
from the Latm Cappella
was taken mto English as
Chapel

HEALTH
lawrence E lamb, M D
Second Cousin Question
By Lawrence Lamb, M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I have
been datmg my second cousm
and we were thinking of not
seemg each other anymore If
we gel senous we would get
marned and we are concern
ed about whether our
children would be nonnal
My mother sa1d she has
heard of other cases like this
and the children were fme
Was this JUSt luck • Please tell
me the chances of our
children bemg retarded or
havmg other defects My
grandfather and his mother
are brother and s1ster This
"" t a we1rd relationship
e1ther
DEAR READER - I don t
know whether you re a stu
dent of history or not but m
anc1ent Egypt brothers and
Sisters m a royal farruly mar
ned each other Cons1dermg
what happened to the Egyp
tian ruling dynasty that may
not be a reconunendal10n for
such a practice
In the anunal kmgdom the
way pure breeds are produc
ed literally IS by m
breedmg
Children are
always the co.nbmatlon of
genes from both parents
These
Inherited
charactenstlcs determine
whether a child IS born with
any 1nher1led defects or not
The pos1t1ve s1de of that IS
tl)at these same mher1ted
characteriStics determme
how super the offspnng may
be too It follows that if both
parents have excepllonany
good genes and don't have
any defective genes the
children should turn out
remarkably well
The problem Ill that no one
can guarantee you that all of
your genes will mduce
perfect characteristics Both
parents may have some
recessive genes that don t af
feet their own mdlvldual
characterlsiJcs
These
recessive , or secondary
genes may by chance be mat
ched m producing an offspr
mg AI that time the
undesirable tra1t rna} . ur

•

face
The answer to your ques
lion really rests m genetic
counseling Dav1d Hendm
and Joan Marks have a book
called The Genetic Connec
lion How To Protect Your
FaiDlly Agamst Hereditary
Disease wh1ch can g1ve you
some useful mformat10n
(William Morrow and Co
Inc 105 Mad1son Avenue
New York NY 10016 $8 95 )
Thill book also contams a hst
of the genebc counseling
centers m the vanous states
If you and your cousm have
have genel1c counseling one
of the thmgs the center wtll
want to know IS what diseases
your fanulles have had 1n the
past
Finally 1f you !DBrry a
relabve and have children
you could of course have
tests done dunng your
pregnancy to determme
whether or not the baby was
healthy or had a defect
If you fmd out durmg the
pregnancy that the developmg baby has a genetic defect
then you re faced with a se
cond decision whether or not
you WISh to contmue the
The GenetiC
pregnancy
Connection wtll glve you ad
dil1onal lnfonnallon on how
these laboratory tests are
done and the techniques
available to help you reduce
the risk of genetic disease 10
your children
There are other things
besides genes that affect the
baby The mother-lo-be who
uses alcohol may damage her
baby whether she drmks too
much each day or goes on a
couple of bmges durmg
pregnancy Alcohol has other
had effects on your health
THOSE WHO want to know
what alcohol does to the body
can send 50 cents with a long
stamped, self addressed
envelope for The Health Let
ter nwnber 1.4 Address vour
request to Dr lAmb m care
of lhls newspaper, P 0 Box
1551, Radio C1ty StatiOn New
York NY 10019

not to mention New 1
Here s an easy one - the New Frontier
It CaD t have escaped the attentiOn of manr of US WhO
have lived through any s1gmficant portion o the period
that catchy slogans - or would be catchy slogans - have
become almost as predictable a feature of the 2oth-century
preSidency as the maugural ceremony Itself
Not an exceptiO~&gt; only a bit slow In the delivery
President Carter has now come up with hiS own cootrlbu
lion to the genre Hts New Foundation tossed at us 10
the State of the Union message marking the midway po10t
of bJS term JOinS a lengthy bst of political catchwords
destmed for the most part not to go down as historic
bywords
Of contemporary chief executives only Dwight Elsen
bower and Gerald Ford did not adopt some slogan for their
admlmstratJons (unless a point Is stretched considerably
to qualify the latter s Whip Inflation Now )
But only Franklin D Roosevelt's New Deal and Just
posSibly John F Kennedy s New Fronller g1ve ind ca
lions of hav10~ much staymg power the fonner for lis
assoclallons w1th a true watershed m ,Alner1can history
and a vast body of enduring social legislation and the latter
for Its evocatwn of a presidency thai made up In color and
drama for what 11 lacked m lastmg accomplishments
At least one IS probably best forgotten altogether the
reahty of Lyndon Johnson s ambitious Great Society
fallen far short of the goal and 1\s most notable
• havmg
mementoes being a disastrous war and an apparently
nonstop mfla!lon
The most prolific slogan comer was Richard Nbron who
tned out the f1rst three of those mentiOned In the quick QUIZ
above all three sarvivmg m the public consciousness
scarcely longer than the speeches m which they were
delivered
Jmuny Carter m an atypical display of prestdenllal
modesty
and honesty foresees somethmg s1m1lar for hiS
The agency held a third
hearmg Jan 30 m Columbus own conlr1bullon There was no mtent10n of establishing a
permanent slogan, he told a ~ost address news conference
to receive testimony on the - I doubt 1f 11 w1ll survive
proposed detenrunallon" 1n
ThiS 1s one case where he unquestionably has history on
general and Ideas on how to h1s side
def1ne the key word
reg10nal m particular
Rhodesian exodus
•
Earlier m the month the
A good place to be from these days lS Rhodesia, taking
federal agency held out an
ohve branch to the utilities m the statiStics of that white-ruled African territory s own
government
the form of a comprorruse
B;y official count some 18 000 whiles left the country
The EPA appomled a team durmg 1978 a record errugratlon for one year They
to negotiate w1lh the ullhtles represented about 8 percent of the estimated white
as to how to clean up their population of 230 000 To put that m perspective conSider
erruss10ns and mdicated 11 that an eqwvalent outflow from the United States would
probably would accept some mean more than 17 mllhon people And the Rhodesian
combmatwn of Ohlo and non- figures covered only declared emigrants not mcludlng
Ohio coal burrung along With IndiVIduals who left the country ostensibly on vacatton but
the 1nstallahon of some com- chose not to return
exodus Is the consequence of the mounting intensity
bmahon of scrubbers and of The
the war betweeJl the Salisbury government and black
other less costly anll- guerrilla forces and 11 makes a mockery of the military
pollullon deviCes
successes the better equipped and organized government
Some of the utilJIIes have forces have been able to ach1eve m the field- so far With
been contacted by the team, the contmumg hemorrha¥mg of the white population time
but no hard negotiations have and numbers are mcreasmgly on the side of Rhodesia s 6 5
been held EPA off1clals said m1llion blacks
It 1s 10 thiS situation that Prerruer Jan Smith who more
recently
than a decade ago led Rhodesl8 s wh1tes and blacks Into
In the meant1me, m the wilderness of unilateral mdependence m the cause of
terested parties still may f1le contmumg whlle rule, now hopes to create a Viable
wntlen teslunony With the coalition of the races
EPA until Feb 26 The dec1
But black opposition may be less of a problem for Smith
Slons from Washmgton Will m the plans unplementation than the penchant of white
be released some tune after Rhodesians fat foreign travel At the present rate of
outflow he may shortly have difficulty scraping up enough
that date
compatrwts to f1ll tbe allotted while seats
Dtrecttons

done for me lately ?
Unfortunately for the nation as a whole enllrely too
many members of Congress - especially m the House now spend the bulk of their lime trymg to answer that
quesllon to the sallsfactlOn of enough constituents to msure
a return llcket to Washington at the next elecllon
They use most If not an their offiCial allowa nce to hire

asstduous m performmg casework and pursutng federal

By Greg Balley
Whoa 11 Webster defines this word stop halt go no
further, cease It IS tune that some of the hostility 111 sports
contests come In a whoa - stop halt go no further
cease
When should ll come In a half' When fans coaches and
players alike have forgotten what the objectives (beSides
WIIIDmg ) m a sports program are - like domg your best
setting goals overcommg problems havmg pride learning
how to WID and also how to lose and others
Me~gs County's Southern Eastern sports rivalry IS a
case In pomt Over the years, sportmg contests between
these schools buUt mto a healthy rJvalry
But I say whoa - 11 has developed min a hate hUed
all out war whenever these two clubs meet not as much be
tween the athletes as the adults - (IS that an accurate
word?) The contests are no longer healthy or even safe
And this Is happernog all over the country
!Wberi Corrao an 85i'Octate hocker coach at Ohio State
and a Ph D can~l~ate recently published m the Coaching
Review an arllcle on the coach s role m curbmg Violence A
part of Corrao s article recently appeared m the Colwnbus
Dispatch Here are some of his professwnal v1ews both as a
coach and professor of phySical education Sounds hke he s
qualified right?
Most researche~s feel that aggressiOn Ill actually
learned or Ill a response In frustratwn In other words
aggression and hostility are taught Now have we - fans
parents, coaches - been teaching our youngsters what we
should?
Wmnmg and losmg have been found In play a large
part m the level of aggresswn exhibited by partlctpants (and
fans)
Wmnmg coaches may be able to reduce levels of
aggression m loSing competitors by pr81Smg thelf efforts
and mamtammg a posttiVe note On the other hand 1t IS
unportant for any lostng coach to develop a post-game
atmosphere which will decrease or elunmate aggressive
feelings
The way a player VIews an opponent IS unportant too
Frequently the coach Ill able to control this perceptwn
ExhortatiOn of players With references In the dir!y tactics
and unfllll' pract1ces of an opponent will help develop a
negative perception and mVIles an erupl!on of VIolence
Coaches who subscnbe to these methods must be
prepared In bear the responsibility for vwlences wh1ch
meVItably will result
Coaches who Wish to control
vwlence 111 sports should provide negal!ve remforcement for
vtolence - whether m practices or games
Who srespons1ble for the unruly 1gnorant behavior that
occurred durmg and after the Southern Eastern contest 1 No
me from eJiher s1de can say Not me
If we did nothlnk to hall such behaVIor and hate then we
are guilty If we actively conlrtbuted to such vtolence and
hate tben we are guilty also If over the years we sat back
and allowed the healthy rivalry to develop mto what tl IS now
- hate - then we are guilty too
Let us ask ourselves these thmgs Parents m your
actions and teachmgs what dld you teach your child' Mr
and Mrs Spectator what exactly d1d you do or say In show
our young people the rlght path In follow' Coaches what
have you taught your players?
Not all fans or parents need In shoulder the blame
Durmg and after tbe post-game melee Tuesday mght I
talked to some lovely people from both schools But sadly
those lovely people were disgraced by the action of some of
their fnends compamons and yes, even some of their own
children
The admlnistratnrs and others m charge did admirably
m coo trolling the tnuchy Situations that arose but they can
only do so much Must somethmg draslle and even more
trai!IC be done before a halt to the hate comes? Will someone
be shot stsbbed or even trampled? Will some mnocent
child be caught In the middle of a brawl 1 Only we can stop 11
And we must
My frustration and depressiOn can best be expressed m
thiS anecdote Durmg the post-game confusion and scuffimg
and shouting an mnocent five year old asked me what are
they domg' I could fmd no answer Could you • Let us save
our hve year olds

Qutck now - and no reference checking Which
presidential admm•strat10n brought us the New Federal

WASHINGTON ( NEA)
Members of Congress hke
retail sales personnel are expected to pretend that the
const1tuent--custon1er IS always nght But 1t am t necessar
dy so
All too often John Q Pubhc IS likely to be passiOnate m
hiS opm10ns but paroch1al m hJS outlook H1s mterests and
hts perspecbVe are shaped by h1s own experience He may
acknowledge th e posSibility that people elsewhere In the
country - not to mentiOn the world - have problems
d1fferent from his own but he doesn t much care

checks or staff a1des to b1rddog sewer grants water
proJects and other pork for the folks back home
Every lime a controverSJallssue looms they wh1p off a
questlonnatre sohc1tlng constttuent op tmons on hO.)V they
should vote They scour the mall race home every
•
weekend and vote the dlStrtct
They become m other words
Mr F1x 1\s for the
people m theJr own d1slncts not natwnal legiSlators
balancmg the mte rests of all Amencans as the Foundmg
Fathers orJgmally mtended
I m afra1d we re gettmg too many people m Congress
whose sole alm IS to get re-elected conceded Rep Paul
S1mon D Ill one of the most effecttve and consctenllous
mem bers of the House
Stmon now servmg his thtrd term from the 24th DJStnct
m southern Ilhnms has felt the pressures so many of h1.
colleagues succumb to But he has QUietly resiSted them
Last fall for Instance one newspaper 10 hiS dJStnct
endorsed S1mon for re-t!lecllOn but grumped about hiS
straymg towards world poh!Jcs suggestmg hiS average
conslltuent believes there are more than enough problems m Southern Illlnms to keep a legislator busy
Instead of apologJzmg for h1s service as a U S delegate
to the Umted Nallons or for hJS work on problems of world
hunger S1mon carefully and pallently wrote a column for
all the newspapers m hiS district explaining why the rest of
the world matters to Southern Ilhnms
He remmded hiS constituents many of whom live In
rural a reas that one out of two acres under cultlVatwn m
IlhnoJs produces food for export to other countries that m
the southern thlrd of the state SOme 15 600 JObS are dtrectly
related to manufacturmg export goods that mflat1on lS
affected by the oofavorable U S balance of trade wtth
other countrtes that world hunger contributes to mterna
Ilona! tens10ns
II wasn I the ftrst such column that S1mon a former
newspaper publisher has written for h1s constituents And
1t won t be the last He 1s one congressman who takes h1s
leadership responsibilities seriOusly and that includes the
responstblhty to educate h1s conslltuents
Nor 1s Stmon alone There are other members of the
House and Senate equally disturbed by the hde of
parochialism smgle 10terest pohl1cs and me-flrst rhe
tone now washmg over Capitol Hill
They are by no means mdifferent to the needs and wishes
of lheJr own conslltuents On the contrary most are

Donald F. Graff

How infirm a foundation

By Martha Aogle and Robert Walters

It'

l

t*************************•*****************~~

'Ohio perspective'
By James W Hatton
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) The rruners are back m the
coal f1elds the lawyers m
the1r paneled offiCes and the
bureaucrats 10 their bureaus
I
I
s walling hme for dec1s1ons to
be reached ln Washington on
how best to clean up Ohio s
dirty a1r
Two dec•swns are ex
peeled probably m March
from either Douglas M
Coslle head of the U S En
Vlronmental
Protechon
Agenc)' or from Presdident
Carter
The first dec1s1on 1s xpec
ted to require Ohio s seven
maJor ublilles to cont10ue
buymg and burmng Ohio s
high sulfur content coal even
though thiS lS what is creat10g
the problem The second
hkely Will reqmre the utilities
to mstall costly scrubbers
and probably, other ant•
pollution deVIIJ!s to remove
the hannful sulfur dioxide
gas from the smoke
Hangmg m the balance are
thousands of Jobs higher

electric rates and rmllions of
dollars m lost wages
The current battle for clean
a1r m Ohlo dales back to 1976
when Congress passed the
Clean Air Act which sets
strmgeniluruts on how much
'..ollutwn may be puffed mlo
the atmosphere It turned m
to a war a year later when
Congress added an amend
ment to the act which gave
EPA aulhonty to reqwre
ut1ht1es to buy local coal 1f 11
would hurt the economy to
buy low sulfur coal
elsewhere
The federal agency held
hea rmgs last year m
Cleveland and St Clairsville
Then 10 December 1t released
a proposed delenrunalwn
to reqmre the ulllilles to con
tmue buymg Ohio coal and m
stall additional anll pollullon
dev~ees

A sw1tch to non-Ohlo coal
would cost the JObs of 5 000
mmers and 10 000 persons m
related work f{lean a loss of
about $200 rrullion m wages
and cost the state up to $41
m1lhon m unemployment
benefits the EPA sa1d

Proposal made to rename Oticago
By TOM RAUM
Assoctated Pres s Writer
WASHINGTON ( AP) Chtcago can take comfort m
the knowledge that only a tmy
fraction of btlls proposed m
Congress are ever enacted
One of the latest legJslallve
Wedneoday feb T

ASTRO•GRAPH

rfl::.l...
'Your
w
'Birthday
Foburary T 1979
This commg year w II be unu
sual n that proJ ects that you
lhought would be b g w nners
may l1 zz e wh1l e o th er s tua

efforts a proposal by Rep
Dan Quayle R lnd
to
rename Chicago after former
lndtana Sen Vance Hartke
Quayl e says he s afraid
Congress will rename the
lnd1ana Dunes NatiOnal
Lakeshore m memory of the
Rad o C ly Stal on N Y
100t9 Be sure to specify b rth
s gn
PISCES (Feb 10 March 20) Pre
489

tent1ous airs are ha rmfu l to
you r mage today Your fnends
1ke you for wt'tat"\yotJ are so

lust be yourself
ARIES (March 21 April 19) A low

fo r the fra11t es o f oth ers today
and you II be prepared to ha n

die any d sappom tm ents that
m ght occur Recall Everyone
has h1s or her weak nesses

TAURUS (Aprll20 May 20) II you
hea som e unflat1e r ng remarks
about ot hers d on 1 espond m
kmd Don t ever stoop to aneth

late Sen Paul Douglas of
Illinms
Douglas was mstrumental
m settmg up the scemc park
on the shores of Lake
Mwh1gan and there has been
a move underfoot m Congress
for some tune In name 11 after
hun
Last year the House even
passed such a bill at the
behest of Rep S1dney Yates
D Ill But 1t d1ed m the
Senate
Quayle says nammg an In
diana park after an IllmolS
senator doesn t make any
sense to h1m Therefore
Quayle sa1d 1f Yates bill
surfaces agam
I would
offer a resolutiOn under
which Chicago would become
Hartke lllmots In honor of
Senatnf Vance Hartke

er s low level
As other House members
k d to b hot
bed
I ons thai you Jhought lacked GEMINI (May 21 June 2Q) We all
need lo treal ourselves lo a few JOe eye
e P ograp
promise could produce enor
maus rewards

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)
Take personal p r de n yo ur
work today mstead of look mg
fo r apprec at1on Someti mes
people are too nvolved to
not1ce the extra s ano ther does

How lo get along w11h other
signs IS one of the sec t ons

you II enJOY n you r 1979 Aslro
Graph Letler Gel yours by
mailing $1 lor each and a long
se lf addressed stamped enve
lope lo Aslro Graoh P 0 Box

re

lu xu r es once n a wh
but
today s the wrong day for ¥Ou

w1th VlSllmg Chmese V~ee
Prem1erTeng HSiao-pmg at a
congressiOnal reception
Majortty Leader Jun Wnght
D Texas Inadvertently
stepped between Teng and
the army of photographers
followmg him
Hey down rn front came
a votce Wnght d1dn I
respond
Hey you rn the brown
sports coal get out of \be
way came another vo1ce
Wnght looking aroWid and
seemg no one else m hill
munedtale vtCIDlty wearmg a
brown sports coae obliged
and ducked
The House AdmiDlstratlon
Committee recently agreed
to supply Its members with
wntten cop1es of proposed
amendments When the
questiOn of cost came up
charrman 'Frank Thompson

Berry s wor Id

1
Ia do so lnslead of comfort
you II receiVe b1lls
CANCER (Juno 21 July 22) You - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - , _ . . ,

won t be able to have your cake
and eat 11 too today You
m1ght have to c hoose between
furthenng yo ur own nteres ts
and th ose of someone you care

about

1

s besl lo go off by yourself
gainst you Do your own thm g

The Da1ly Sentmel
IUSPS 11.1-!leO)

fr ends or assoc ates you know

DEVOTED TO 'mE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
DAVIDBUSKJRK
Advertl1i11 Ma0111er
Published d~:~l y exeept &amp;&amp;turday
by The Ohio V11Uey Pub L'jhing
Company Mulllmed a Jnc
111
Court St Pomeroy Ohlo 45769
Bu.!llness Offl e Phonto 992 Zl56
Edllorifll Phonell92 2157
Second class postage Ptild at
Pomeroy Ohio

Nallollltl lldvertb:lng repn:sen
l.tillve I.andon NJsoclete" 3101
EudltJ Ave Clevel1nd Ohio 44115
Subs( riptlon rates Delivered by
Cllmlf'r where avt~il~tble 75 cent.!i pt11
week By Motor Roote where carriu
Ber¥1ce nut available One month
$3 25 Sy mall in Ohio and W V1
One Yellf ' "
Sx n tt s
IH 50 Three months $8 SO
Elsewhtlre 132 00 year Six months
II 00
Thrt-r nonlh.'l tl'l on
St Ls r1pt10 1 t'
Ju les :S ~tl
T1!\t Ser&gt;t

well or you might lind yourself
to be a stranger

LIBRA (Sept 23 Ocl 23) Too
yo ur ambitions a n~ your

hopes can t get together You
m1ght want mce things toda y
but chances are you woo 1
expend the necessary effort

22)

Your vJewpotnts cou ld be so
one std ed today you ll overlook

e~~:peot

It s never worth hurting anoth

cons dera te

59H653

LEONARD WILKES. SERVICE MGR.

'

Everywhere I go 11 s more mobs mobs
mobs' Its not easy bemg a Khomemt tookalike '

franchise,;
The Natwnal Basketball
Association was here unlll
1973 when the Cmcmnall
Royals moved to Kansas
C1ty
Hood satd Monday that the
chamber JS exc1ted about the
poss1b1hty of the league s re
turn and was trymg to fmd
out what 11 needed to do to
promote the 1dea
Hood said the chamber was
so unaware of U!e NBA s
mterest that no one from
Cmcmnat1 was m contact
w1th the commttlee before
the
vote
although

•

"The simpl
return,
the less

we charge~'

If you qualify for the Short Form we charge
avery low pnce But even 1f you need the
Long Form the simpler the return the less
we charge That s anottrer reason why you
should let H&amp;R Block do your taxes

Galhpohs, Oh1o
An Equal Opportunity Employer

ranked powers

lhe Hebels 16-1 &lt;olleeted
270 pmnts to 250 for No 2
rated Mansfield St Peter s
lo 2 m th e ba llotmg by a
statewide panel of sports
wnters and broadcasters
The top three ranked teams
remamed the same Jn all
dtvtstons tht s

week

With

If!. lUI

\\IUif.' (

IOVcport

COUMBUS Oh o lA P)

w a~

mnth and M 1 JPttil down one

to No I I
ln !lass

wee k I 10 po nts for I r s to on e
po nt fo r l Oth )

v ;;~ntetl

1 C nc nnat W1t h r ow 1) 0
302 p o n ts
1 Ketter ng Alter 13 I Z78
3 Canton M c K nley 14 1

A\ Willard ad
une to rourth
•" app!ng places Wllh
Cleveland C:. thedral Latm
Dayton JeffeJ son JUmped one
rung to SJxth and M11leJ sburg
West Holmes \\ ent up two to
seven!I Wheelersbw g fell
fJ on Sixth to eighth and
( ulumbus M flhn wen I up one

Class AAA

?78
4 Cleveland St Joseph l d

In Class AAA Cleveland St
Joseph was up one spot lo
fourth ~ mdlay up one lo f1ftl1
and Cehna down l"o to Sixth
Toledo Scott was sevenU

76

1

5 F nd la y 14 1 144
6 Ce lm a 15 I 99

7

fl r

mo r e

Toledo Start 19 19 Barber ton
I I 20 i I e En on G eenon
Akr o n Ce ntral H o wer and
Spr n gt eld South 10

awas Ca tholic do\\ n one to
mnth and Qlnal Wmchester
de wn on e lo No 10

Class AA

Portsmouth
15 0
277
pomts
2 Young stown Ra yen 14 0
I

168

Cl eve land
Lai n 11 3 155
6

120

loss to r urman collecl!ng 729
S} ra e use was close
behmd m No 7 w1th 718
p01nts I ouJsJana Slate
moved up two places lo No 8
w1th 673 pomts followed by
Marquette 619 and M1ch1gan
State !98
1 he Second Ten was
headed by two Soutl1west

I 16 4

representativ es of ot her
cttles d1dget m touch With the
group
Larr) Wemberg preSident
of the NBA s expanswn com
m1ttee sa1d Cmcwnall came
mto the ptclure through a
study done by t he group
Dallas
M1am1
M !lln eapo ll sS t
Paul
Pittsburgh St Lows and
Toronto "ere also mentiOned
m the sludy
In our determmation lD
expand we based the study
on lhe areas most likely to
succeed on a market
eva luatiOn
and
other
fa c tors he sa1d
The departure of the
Royals should not be held
agamst the c1ty sa1d Hooc(
• The problem w1th the
Royals was one of fac1hty and
of bad management Hood
sa1d We think thai now w1th
the Riverfront Coliseum we
have-tan outstandmg fa cility
that can support pro
basketball
Hood sa1d the prospect of
pro basketball ~arn e at an
opportune time for the

(17 3)
I17 5

140

129
124
18

KC girls win
fifth contest
Led b) Sherry Hamson s
18 pomts Kyger Creek s g1rls
basketball squad captured lis
fifth VIctory of the season
Monday mght 43 24 over
Southwestern
Judy Darst also had double
figures w1th 10 pomts whde
Glorta Amos cann ed seven
D J effers and L Edwards
led Southwestern " 'th SIX
pomts apiece
KC 5 3 plays at So uth
western Fr1day mght
Cohseum
The Cmcmnall Stmgers of
the
World
Hockev
Assoc1atwn the facil ity s
prune tenant needed a last
dJtch effort to get enough
tickets to remam m busmess

Columbus Harll ey 11 12 It e l

M ar on R ve r Va lley an d
South Po nt 10
Class A
1 Gn ad en h u tt e n 1nd an
Va ll e y Sout h 16 1 270 po nt s
2 M anft el d St Peter s 15

Sports briefs.
Bv fh&lt; Assm 1ated Press

HGE BASKEfBAII
NI W YORK - Notre Dame
md lnd1ana State mamtamed
th e No I a nd No 2 posJI!on s
res pecllvel)
1n
I he
Assoc Jat ed Pres s coll ege
ba sketball
poll
wh1le
(()I

presea son

cho tce

Du ke

mched closer to the top
The lnsh who defea ted
Hrown XaVIer of Ohio and
Dayton last week to ratse
me1r record to 15 2 collected
25 Of 54 fir st-place ballots and
1 036 pomts m ballotmg by a
natwnw1de panel of sports
v. nters and broadcasters

or m or e po ., ts 11 C ncmnat1
Summ 1 Countr y Da y 36 12
Lee s Cr eek Eas t Cl n on 33
14 St
13 Woods ! eld 32
Henr y 30 IS R1chmond Oa le
Southeastern 28
16 New
Ma tamoras Front er 26 17
Adena Buckeye Wes t 17 18
Ada 15 9 Newbury 4 20
(t e)
Leeton a Mil ler C t y
Lora n C enrv ew and Toledo
Olht wa H li s 13 24 R p ley
l e ' s Uo o I 15 T pp C ty

------------,
I Pro
I
!Standings 1
I

I

Nat1ona I
Basketball Assoc at1on

Bethel 10

AI AGlance
By The AssoCiated Press
Easte r n Conference
Atlanti C 011/15100

W
Wa sh ngt on

Ph1la

36
29
23
24
19

L
15
19
25
30
31

Pet GB
706
604 5
479 1
444 13
380 16

New Jer se y
New Y or k
Bos ton
Centra l DIVISIOn
Sa n An on o 31 22 585
Houston
27 23 540

Allanla
Cl eveland
De lre I

'1
'l

2
2

New 0 Jeans 17 36 321 14
Wes t ern Conference
M1d wes t D v s10n

Kan C ly

31 20 608

28 26 519 4
2 30 412 10

M Iwa ukee
Ch cago

12 31 407 10
19 33 365 11 '

PacifiC DIV Slon
3t1 6 680
Los Ang
32 20 6 5 3
Ph oen x
32 20 6 5 3
Sa nD ego
17 27 500 9
Po !la nd
24 25 490 9

Seattle

1

Golden 51

15 29 463 11
Mondays Gam es

No g a n es schedu ed
Today s Games
Sea l e a New York
Boston a t Atlant a
New Jer sey at Cl evel and
lnd ana at Ch ca go
Detro t at Hou ston
San Ant on o at Los Ang e es
Ph oen1x at Por tl and
Wednesday s Games
Seat tle at Bos ton
Detro t at Ph dad elph a
Ne w Jer se y at lnd an a
Washmgton at M !waukee
New Yo rk at New Orl ea ns
Atlanta at Kan sa s C ty
Cl eveland at Den ve r
Sa n Anton o at San 0 ego
Los An ge l es a t Go d en

State

wmter con tmues another s1x.l

months

•
•
meetzng
zn

opening round

2

18 15 518 3
10 31 391 10
19 33 365 II

Den ve r
ln d ana

Meigs teams

Bv Greg Bailey
Two Mc1gs County teams
w1ll clash tn the annual
Albany Jumor Htgh basket
ball tournament slated to
begm Thursda) February 5
Eastern and Mmg:l""wlll
square off 111 that openmg
round action the1r contest
scheduled the second on the
C\ cmng s card First game
w1 ll begm at 5 p Ill and the
locals game wtll follow at 6
pm
!nat contest wtll be held at
th e Albany E lementary
BuJidlng but all other games
w1ll be m the Alexander Htgh
School G)mpasJUrn
Which ever tea m com es out
of that clash w11l have to play
four games to capture the
champiOnShip The wmner of
Thursday s first clash will
pla y Albany on February 10
at 3 30 p m
Other teams m the tour
na ment are Nelsonv ille
York Tnm ble Vmton
Shade
Southern
New
Marshfi eld and Fed eral
Hockmg Southern squares
off agamst Shade on
February 10 at 2 15 at the
h1gh school m second ro und
actwn
The consolatiOn game w11l
be pla)cd February 17 I
p m w1th the champwnshlp
to follow

• •

ranked as low as nmth by one
voter

Ouke runnerup m last
year s NCAA champ10nsh1p
rece iv ed seven Hrst pl a ce
voles and 9B4 pomts after
deleatmg Wake Forest and
M;~ry land last week
SKIJ;NG
JASN1\ Czechoslovakia
Phil Mahre of White Pass
Wash upset Ingemar Sten
mark of Sweden m a spen al
slalom to grab the first World
Cup VIctory of the season for
U1e U S men s team
Mahre clocked the fastest
first heat and was Uurd

edgmg the ;;vcamores b) 33 fa stest on th e second ru n
po nts
desp1te losmg hJS goggles on a
lnd1 ana State now 20~ bump HIS combmed t1me
was tabbed first on 20 ballots was 1 mmute 43 03 seconds
alter postmg a 91-39 O\ ertJme
Stenmark f mshe I third m
VICtor) over New Mexico I 44 65 behmd Mahre and
State and a 66-56 tnurnph runnerup Leonardo Dav1d of
OHf ful ~a Jast week
Italy I 43 81
Noll e Dame and Indiana
Mahre s vtctor y earn ed
State both "e' e named on all him 17 World Cup pomts and
U1e ballots The ln sh were boosted hun mto Ulll d place
tabbed no lower th an SJxth m th e standmgs beh md Peter
wh le tl e Sycam or es were I uescher of Switze rland and
Stenmark

Ohio college standings
(Others )

Oh1 o College Basketball
By The A ssoe~af e d Pres s
Through Feb l Games
"'B1g Ten Conference
Conference All Games
Schools
W L
W L
Iow a
8 2
IS 4
Dh o Sl
8 2
13 6
Pu r due
7 3 17 5
Mchg an St
6 4
13 5
Ill nOIS
5 5 17 5
M ch1g an
5 5 11 7
lndana
5 5 13 9
M nneso ta
3 7 8 1
W scans n
2 8 B 1
No th wes l ern
1 9 5 14
Oh o Conference
Conference All Games

GROUNDHOG DIDNT
MAKE HOlE
The
groundhog mav have seen h1s
shadow Fmla) but he pa1d
dear!) for 11 f om Hunter 2 150
3 Botk ns 7 0 105
f1ve l ear old son of Mr and
4 Zanesv le Rosecra ns 14
Mrs Henry Hunter 37613 0 169
Schools
W L W L
5 M og ad or e 14 0 147
1 exa s Road
Pom eroy
Baldw
n
Wal
ace
9 0 15 5
6 Old Wash nglon Buckeye
turned out hJs dog Shenn
W ttenberg
8 I 17 3
fr a t 2 1 11 6
Woost er
8 1 16 4
when he ret umed home JU S1
7 Sebr ng 12 I 95
Oberl
n
7 1 1 9
alter noon from kmdcl garten
8 sou th ngt o Chalke r 14
He d e ber g
6 3 13 B
66
classes at the fuppers Plams
Cap1tal
5 4 10 7
9
N ew
P h la de ph 1a
Elementary School to catch
Mu
sk
ngu
m
5
4 9 7
T usca aw a s
Cen tral
Otterbe n
4 5
9 10
a groundho g Sure enough Cal ho i c 13 1 50
Mar ett a
J 6 9 10
Sheen returned home with th e
0 Ca al W n ch es ter 13 I
Mt Un on
3 6 6 13
groundhog - and a big one al 43
Oh o Wes ley an
2 7 { 12
O
th
er
sch
ools
r
ece
v
ng
10
that
Keny on
2 7 6 13

We feel we must have a
maJor tenant m th e
A popular belief 1s that 1! a
Cohsewn Hood sa1d
groundhog sees Iu s shadow on
Feb 2 (Groundhog Day ) he
returns to hts buJt O\\ and

MASON FURNITURE

14 1

lD Bell a re 11
38
Othe schoo s re ce v ng 10
or m or e po nt s
11 (t e)
S eubenv li e Ca th a c Cen rat
anQ Bell v li e Clear For k 35
13 Sw an on 33 14 Or r v li e 20
15 ( I e
0 taw a
Gland or f
and K ngs M s K ngs 9 17
Nelsonville York 17
18
Bu cyru s Wy nl ord 15 19 ( I e)
Cad z and M nfor d 14 21

thts season

SHOP

Day on Jefl er son

61

Texas

17 Vanderb It
{ 15 4)
18 Georget own 0 C

171
Ca thedral

7
M tl er sburg
Wes t
Holm es 14 1 102
8 Wheelersburg 13 2 87
9 Col umbus M ffl n 13 3

pomts

19 Temple

Uhr chsv l e Claym ont

5

A&amp;M and Texas OhiO State
ranked No 7 last week fell\9
No 13 alter a loss to lnd1ana
Arkansas was No 14
followed by Iowa Alabama
George town
dectslOns over New Mextco Vanderbilt
State and Tulsa was g1ven 20 Temple and Illinms
Iowa !Jed for leadership ln
votes for the top pos1bon thiS
week b) a nattonwufe panel of the B1g Ten " as the only new
member of the fop Twenty
sports wnters and broad
thiS week Maryland No 17
casters
Duke made the race more last " eek dropped out aftc1
mterestmg mchmg up to the losses to V1rguua and Duke
The AP Top Twenty
leade rs With 904 pmpts The
By The AssoCiated Press
Blue Devlls were awarded
T he Top T w en ty team s n
seven votes for first after
Th e A ssoc ated Pres s co ll eg e
vtctortes over Wake Forest ba skelball poll w lh f rst
p ace votes 1n parent heses
and Maryland
se
r ec o rd s and t o ta l
Notre Dame and Indiana poanson
ts Po nt s based on 20 19
State were named on all the
18 7 16 15 14 13 12 II
voters ballots The l n sh re
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 I
1 Not e Dame
(25} { 15
cet ved nothm g below a No 6
ballot while the Sycamores 2) 1 036
2 lnd ana State
were named as low as No 9
(10) (20 0 ) I 003
on one ballot
3 Duke
(7) (163)
984
4 UClA
I 16 3)
918
UCLAmoved up one spot to
5 Lou sv li e (2) ( 19 3)
874
No 4 w1th 918 pomts followed
6 Nor th Caro na
( 6
closely by I omsv1lle 1n No 5 4) 719
Wlth 87!
7 Syracuse
I 18 2)
718
a Lou s an a Sta te
( 19
North Carolina dropped
three spots to No 6 after a Jl 673
619
9 Marquett e
{ 16 3)
10 M &gt;h gan St (14 5) 498
496
11 Te .. as A&amp;M
{20 4 )
376
12 Te .. as
( 16 5 )
375
13 OhiO State
I 13 6)
360
14 Arkan sas
( 15 4)
15 Iowa
(154) 269
16 Alabama
113 5) 150

11

and Mansfi eld Ma d so n 22 17
Spr ngt e d North 21
B

Notre Dame is
AP poll leader

20 I limo s

oo nt s

13 0 11 3
4 W lard IS 0

Conference nvals -

3 1 87

Chtlllcothe 39 12 All a nce 32
13 C nc nnafl Elde r 28 14
fi e) c l eveland West Tech
C nc nn a t M oun t Health y

3

NEW YORK ( AP ) - Notre
Dame and lnd1ana State
conbnuetoruna fast paced I
2 tn The Associated Press
college basketball poll w1lh
surgmg Duke commg on
strong m the No 3 spot
The lnsh held the lead
today b) a total of 33 pomts
n\ e 1 the Sycamores I 036 to
1 003 w1th the help of 25 ftrsl
place ballots aflllr postmg
vtc tones last 11 eek over
Brown XaVIer of Ohio and
Dayton for a 15 2 record
lnd1ana State at 20~ a fter

Toledo Scott

8 Grovepor t l 14 1 70
9
Wa rr e n
We s te rn
Reser ve 4 2 69
10 Manetta 12 2 64
Oth er school s r ece v ng 0

l.'tH

dlVl SlOO

The Daily Sentinel

How a pane l ol s ports v r te.-s
and b ro adcasters ra t(ls Oh o
h gh school bask etball teams
forT.., ., Associa ted Press t h ts

down one to e1ghth \\ tl rr en
\\ l'Si t l n tcservu up one to

Canton MeKmle) 14-1 No 3
m Class AAA UhrJchsv1lle
Clavmont 13-0 lh1rd m Class
M and llotkms 17-0 third m t 1 nmth
In ( lass A Zanes vill e
Class A
HellaJre 12 I was the only Hos~t' nms m oved up one
newcomer 10 the Top Ten of poSJlJon to fourth and
any class. taking over the No Mogadore one to hfth wh1le
10 spol 10 Class AA Steuben Old Washmglon Bu ckeye
vill e Catholi c Centra l 1 ra1! went down two to s1xth
suffermg three stra ight Se b mg was seventl agam
losses tumbled from e1ghth wh le Southmgton Chalker
to a he for lith m lhe same was up two to eJghth fu s

TRI-STATE AREA
'

61BE MAINST
POMEROY 0
Open I AM 1o
6 P M Weekdoys
9 5 Saturday
Phone 992 3795

i'hJiadelplna
42 40
m
overtm1e m a battle of sla te

Oh o Northern

I 8

Schools
Da y t on

2nd &amp; BROWN ST
MASON W Va
OPENTUES
THURS &amp; SAT
9AM 5PM
PHONE 7739128

Appointment Available flul Not Necessory

lo 5
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15 5
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A sh l and
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w ght 51
Xave r

9

11

Cl eveland St
Akron
Young stown St
C n c nnat
H r am
Cas e Weste n
Joh n Ca rroll
Steu benv e

8 12

Wal sh

4 5

8 1

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OPEN
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Thursday Tll12 Noon
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19
13

You fi nd a crew of
spec a sts at The Ins urance St ore
ead~ to he p shou d you e~er need to t le a c a m We wo k
w th seve al l ne nsu ers llkfi~ The Coni nenta l Insurance
Compan es and we Know how o help ~ou obta n a fast
equ tab e c a m settlement
We don t JUSI sell you and fo get you We e he e to se ve you

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE
SERVICE ~ ·
214 E MAIN ST
POMEROY 0
992 Sl30or992 sm
YOU DON T BUY A POLICY
YOU HIR E AN AGENT

•

8
9

10
7 10
7 II
6 I
J I
' 12
3"
9

Den1 son
0 9 0 16
Hoos1er Buckeye Confere nce
Conference Ov era ll
School s
W L W L
Hanove
9 2 17 4
Def 1ance
9 3 14 4
Fmd a y
7 3 14 5
Ander son
8 4 14 8
W lm ngton
7 4 2 10
Taylor
A 6 10 10
Manches er
3 8 9 12
Ea lh am
9 4 18
B ufflon
1 10 2 16
M d Oh1o Con fe rence
Conference Overall
WL WL
School s
R o Gr ande
8 1 11 I
Ce darv e
6 3 11 7
6 3 11 9
Malone
4 6 8 11
Urbana
Mt Ve rn on Na z
Tflm
Oh o Damn can

L

5 5

INEWSPAPEFI ENTEFIPR SE ASSN I

I

w

IN THE

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

416 Second Avenue

lly (,fORGE SfRUOE
&lt;\I' SJM&gt;r~' Wnh r
COl UMBUS OhiO I AP)
Cmcmnall Withrow Ports
mouth and Gnadenhutten In
dJan Valley South swept pasl
thetr oppo•tlton last weekend
In retam the1r leads m The
Associated Press Oh1o high
school boys basketball
ratmgs
W1throw the Class MA
h on !runner defeated Cmcm
natl Hu~hes 51-45 for lis 15UJ
vtctOJ y man unbeaten season
and earned 302 pomts to 278
lor runner up Kettermg
Alter 13-1
Portsmouth the defending
Class AA state tournament
champwn whtpped Ashland
Ky 56-lOio match Withrow s
record The TroJans own a
pre carwus 277 268 lead over
second~a nked
Youngstown
Rayen 11-0
lnd1an Valley South a state
tournament sem1fm ahs t a
year ago kept 1ts Class A
lead by nrppmg Tuscara"as
Central Ca tholic of New

SPORTS

FOR THE BEST DEALS

H&amp;R BLOCit

Capital s.inp &amp;Loan Company

ride
CAPRICORN (Doc 22-Jan 1i)

you lean over backward to be

ATHENS, 0.

We have openmgs for Mlnager tr1inees
now Phone Mr Clatworthy at 446 2765 to
arrange • lor a conhdenllal, personal
mterv1ew

to receiYe a free

er s feelings m order lo gel
your way You II be happ e1 II

mcluston of Cmcmnall among
potential SJtes for a new
Nat1onal Ba ske tball
Assoc1allon fran chiSe has
caught
Cha mber
of
Commerce offi cial s by
surpnse
We
wer e
caught
comp letely off guard
admitted Bob Hood manager
of commumty relations for
the chamber
The NBA s Board of Gover
nors Saturday mcluded
Cmcmnat• among seven
cJIIes m a vole on posSible
s1tes
for
expansiOn

BOB ~Wk atRYSI.ER PLYMOUTM

1

lhe very facts lhal can help
you Try nol lo lock In on any
s ngular attllude
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Doc
11l.J.Tt at optlmJSIIc outlook of
~~ts could work agalnsl you
Ioday You II be dlsappolnled 11
you

' CINCINNATI (AP) -The

MECHANIC MUST BE EXPERIENCED.
HAVE OWN TOOLS. APPLY:

28 E. STATE STREET

Portsmouth retains AA lead

Cincinnati may get
NBA cage franchise

HfU'WANTID

W1th Capital, bemg a Branch Man1ger IS
almost like bemg m busmess for yourself
You furmsh the ability and the Initiative
Cap1talsupphes you w1th the off1ce framing,
the know how, the off1ce location and
equ1pment and all the money needed to
build a successful branch
•

bad

21 Nov

~

Attorney General Griffm B

"'

unco mfortably
1n a c rowd

SCORPIO (Ocl

Sen Edward M KeMedy,
DMass
Introduced
Prestdent Carter s inflation
adviSer Alfred Kahn as
AI at a news conference
It Willi a rrunor blunder He
doesn t like to be called Al
Actually Kahn says most of
his friends call hun Fred
Kahn told reporters that he
was glad to join h1s good
fr•end Kennedy, even if he
did call me Al

Bell waited pahently to
testify at the first meeting of
the year of the Senate
Jud1c1ary Committee as
senator after senator droned
on wlth opening speeches
It finally came freshman
Sen Howell Hefiin s turn to
speak But the Alabama
Democrat drew on h1s
expeflence as chief just1ce of
his state's Supreme Court
and Said
I m delighted In be on the
conlffilttee I concur m part
and dissent ln part With
everytlung el.te that's been
said I y1eld tbe rest of my
time to Mr Bell

Become a Managar of a
Consumer Finante Office

today 1f you feel co workers are

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 221
Choo se to spend your day w1th

DNJ
suggested that
distnbution be limited In
one for each member who
can read

FORGE AHEAD

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Rather

tha n say ng anythmg unkmd

alone

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

1

:********•*****************************•·····,

! Editorial opinions

6 1979

Sports Desk

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Waltert

~eb

�:.

.

•.

•• t

'

·-

------

••
'.

r-----..-,

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesd;iy, Feb . 6, 1979

Birthdays

Shauna Crawford
Shauna Renee Crawford,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Crawford, Rout.~ , 3,
Pomeroy cele!&gt;rated her first
birthday on Jan. 24.
A party was held at ihe
home of · her grandparents
with a Holly Hobbie theme
being carried out. Cake, ice
-cream, potato chips, coffee
and pop were served.
Attending and presenting
gifts were her parents and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Riehard Ash, her grei!_tgrandmother, Mrs. Thelma
Hawley, Mr. and Mrs.
Mi chael Ash, Mr. and Mrs.
. Riek Ash, Sonia and Tonia
Ash, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
· Miller and Holly and Mike ,'
Mrs. Sharon Bailey and
Kristin .
Sending · gi ft s were Pat
Vaughan, Mrs. Dorothy Wa it,
Mrs. Kathryn Byers, and Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Young and
Amy .
Saturday another was par·
ty was held at the home of her
parents with a Raggedy Ann
ttwmc being carried. Attending were her grandfather ,
Roy Cra wford , Mr. and Mrs.
F ra ncis Quee"n and Bt•n, Mr .

and Mrs. Richard Ash and
Mick Ash. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Layton,
Tinuny and Tyson.

'Time to Remember~
supports heart research .

SoClw.
··-1 -- I
1 Calendar 1
II

With Valentine's Day Month campaign each year
appro aching in Pomeroy, from local residents, thes~·
special greeting cards now funds support research which
fill the racks in Meigs County · has led to such developments
stores , along with · those as pacemakers, heart·lung
designed for birthdays, an- machines, bypass surgery.
niversaries, weddings, bar and medications to control
mitzvahs , get well and high blood pressure and heart
sympathy sentiments &amp;nd rhythm abnormalities.
" 1 hope others will _feel as r
other special purposes. , .(
do,"
Soulsby said , "and take
Meigs County residents
advantage
of the opportunity
now have another choiCe
to
give·
a
lasting
gift, which
· available when looking for a
needs
no
exchanging,'
nor is it
truly " heartwarmin.g"
sentiment. James Soulsby thrown away after the ocsaid. Soulsby, who is cam· casion ...
Memorials, get-well and
~iiP,l chairperson for the
Meigs County Heart Branch, special occasion gifts in
Meigs County should e
repor~ed . that the Heart
A'ssociation now has . a directed to : Meigs County
pro_gram called "Time to Heart Branch, Box 29,
Remember " which en- Pomeroy, Ohio. Infonnation
CI)Urages gilts in honor of accompanying the gifts
Jiving, as well as deceased, should include the name and
address of the honoree (or the
loved ones and friends ..
" The new 'Time to deceased, if a memorial) as
R~member' program has a well as the contributor's
tea 't efully designed, name and address. It should
traditional memorial be noted with the gift whether
ackoowledgement," Soulsby a memorial, a get-well
said. "But there are also sentiment· or a special oc·
cards designed to com· casion gift is intended. If a
memorate happy or special memorial, please include the
occasions, such as birthdays , · name and address of the
weddings, anniversaries or family of the ·deceased, so
religious holidays," he in- they may be sent an
acknowl edg ement of your
dicated.
" Wh en a donation to gift. Amounts are not
support heart research is disclosed. Volunteers at the
given in honor of a friend or Heart Branch will send the
loved one, he or she receives appropriate memorial card
a card with the sentiment 'In or greeting and ·a record of
cel ebration of your hap- the gift to the contributor.
piness, a warm sentiment
wishing you love and happiness ... '."
"A truly meaningful getwell gift can be made through
this program, too," Souls by
continued. The get-well wish
donation card can be made
from one or a group of in·
dividuals. with a sentiment
readin g, " Wishing you a
speedy return to good health,
the following have made a
special get-well gift in your
name."
Memorial and special ·
occasion donations are used
for heart research, public
health and professional
education and community
service programs such as
cardiopulmonary
resuscitation classes ('CPR),
he indicated. Along with
contribution s collected
during the February Heart

TliF.'&gt;DAY
XL
GAMMA
MIJ
CHAPTER, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7: ~0 p.m. at tht• C:nlwnbia C. as C:n. in Middleport.
Cultura I program, " Tht•
ShrinkinJ}.- World" by Mrs.
· Kay Atkins. Host&lt;•sses,
Chiwltnte Hanning and Donna
Nease.
GALIJA ~GGUNTY Sslon
6!2, Eight and Forty, 7: 30
. p.m. Tuesday at the Pomeroy
home of Miss Erma Smith.
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star,
7:45 p.m. Tuesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Dues are payable.
WEDNESDAY
!TED MF:THOD!ST
W ~N , Letart Fall s
Meth . ist Church, home of
Mrs. ez Hill, Rat;ine , 7:30
p.m. ednesdav.
LADIES AUXILIARY of
Middleport Fire Department
Wednesday 7:3Q p.m. at fire
hall. White elephant and bake
sale.
Hostesses
Betty
Ohlinger and Patty Stein.
Wednesday, 8 p.m. The
Southeastern Ohio Garden
Tractor Club meet at Dale
Kautz residence, Route 3
Pomeroy. New members
welcome.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. The
Meigs CountY History Book
Committee meet at the Meigs
Museum . Anyone
who
worked on the book is urged

TUEISday, ~·eb . 6, 1979

to otlt:ntl.
,
Wedn t sdllj' .. i : :w p.m .
Poml'rov"J.odgL· No. 164 F . &amp;
~ .M. H~gul&lt;or mcc•tinH . All
Mw;l l'f Masons arc. invited.

Today's Topic:

THIJRSDAY
F.I.F.!INOR fiRfLF.. i : ~O
Thursday a't th&lt;• Ht•alh lJnilt•d

DOlT

Mt•lhudist fh1irc·h . Naiii 'Y
r;;th". Cht•ruh• Hunh•th·, wul
Kilty r.assl'l l, hush·!'i ~t· ~.

FRIDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS
CLASS, I :30 p.m. Friday at
the Trinity Churd1.
MONDAY
RF.THF.L 62, IIIt&lt;•rnatiumil
Order of Job's Daughters.
will meet at 7:.10 Mnmlay at
till' Middlqiort Masonic Templt•'

l! y .J.H'K

.\ssudah'tl

Drive in to ~Bob Evans and , take
home some finger lickin' good chicken from the Colonel. Pick up dinner
· after work. You'll see us on Eastern
Avenue. Don't drive by. Drive in.

VALENTINE DANCE
A valen"tine dance will be
held at the Senior Citizens
Center, Pomeroy, from 8 to II
p.m. F'riday. There will be
round and square dancing,
and cakewalks will be held.
Music will be by the String. dusters. Admission will be $1
for adults with children under
12 admitted free with
pa_rents. The public is invited.

VISIT FLORIDA '
Mrs . Harold Whittekind
and son, Shawn Lee of
Pomeroy are spending a few
weeks in Orlando, Fla.
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Paul
VanCooney and family . T)ley
will return home this week.

RECEIVES CERTIFICATE - Shirley Sparks,
Mason W.Va. is shown receiving a certificate from West
Virginla Secreiary of State A. James Manclun. It reads, in
part: "1, A. James Manchin, secretary of state, do m
pursuance of authority vested in me hereby appomt
Shirley Sparks West Virginia Ambassador of good will
among all people to hold said office and executive the
duties, thereof, with dedication, devotion and diligence. " .

DRIVE IN .
WE DO IT RIGHT.
· OR WE DON'T DO.IT:;'

Mrs. •Jessie Houchins, Mid·

a

grea t-

William Milliron
Wflli a m
Milli ro n
celebrated his seventh birthday Sunday at the home of hio
mother and stepfather, Mr .
and Mrs. Ephriam Herdman .
Guests were his brother,
Roger ~artlow, his sister ,
April Herdman, gra nd mother, Mrs. Alice Wagner

in separate lists.

" tt i~ the only swnmary of
·death matter on a weekly
l)a sis available in the United
States " said Dr. Michael
Gregg', deputy director of the
epidemiolo gy bureau and
editor of the MMWR . "What
it tells you is the number of
death certificates prO&lt;-'tlssed
by 121 cities. It doesn 't tell
you when they died. It represents 70 million people an urban U1ird of the United
States."
.
Co ffin manufa c tur er s
apparently watch Table No. 4
ciosely . "Once in 1968 we
transposed the deaths from
one region of the country Ul
anot her ," s8id Gregg , " and

we got a call from a casket
maker in Toledo, Ohio."
The first flu reports are
analyze d
by
aspi rin
manufacturers, who consitler
MMWR statistics an aid in
d et ermining

produ c t ion

levels, Gregg said.
The MMWR is free and
an yone can

ge~

on th e m ailing

list, simply by asking. It is
not copynghted and can be
quoted fl•eely, reprinted in
other publication s and used in
textbooks.
" It carries a certain degree

of established fact, " said
Gregg. " It has achieved a
sort of qua si-le gal a nd
archi val standing. At the

'·"Steam Stretches Knits
By Polly Cmmer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
analyze the statistics to give
physicia ns and public health
DEAR POLLY - For about
«ff icials useful data.
a year 1 faithfully followed
the . directions (gentle wash
" 1\'e can fill the breach and
give the public, state and and delicate dry ) for my
local
hea lt h
offi cials favonte knit wash and wear
inf orma tion, '' C~r egg said. suit. Then I once acddentally
"We. can put ·down on paper put it in the dryer set on
something that becomes a "regular." Fortunately , it is
kind of authority that can Qe still wearable but it is un, comfortably snug . Ha s
extremely useful. "
'anyone a~y suggestions that
The address to ~et on the would help me reverse this
one hasty moment ' -RUTH
maga zi ne'::~rn ail ing list is U.S
DEAR RUTH - Acrylic
Depart ment of Healt h.
Educ·ati on and Welfare . knits are prone to stretch if
Public Health Service, Center moistened by steam. - PO!r
for Disease Control, Atlanta , LY
Ga .. :10:n:1.
DEAR POLLY - When I
knit bedroom slippers I turn
them upside down and spray_
the soles with clear acrylic
paint t&gt;£.-&gt;fore the ~· ~re worn. T

·Daughter
born

Mr. and Mrs. Danny (Nick I
Lee of Point Pleasant, W. Va.
ctr·c alliHHillL'ing the birth of

their fi rst child, a tlaughter.
.hill .

25

at

Un ivers ity

Hospita-l, Columbus. The
h;;Jby wcigltL•d four pound!'i, 10
ouncl's an d wa s 18 inches
long. She has beeil named
Nieolc Oa wn Mrs. Lee is the
forme r Gt•rTi J acbwn.
M&lt;Ji ernal grandpare nts arc
Mr. cmd Mrs. Oelarw J~u~k son
of Point Plcus.:mt , W. Va .
Pctl erncd g!•amlpHr cnts· are
Mr. cmd Mrs . .James H. Lee,

Cltftun . Mr. wul Mrs. Harry
Re~ss of Point Pleasant are
m a t e rnal
gr e at ~
grandpC:Ircnts, and Mrs. Mary
Davis of Rutland is the pater·
nal great -grandmot}Jer.

she

uses

your

favorite

Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

any more powdered sugar 1 I

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Dwight Wallace ha s
returned from a week's visit
at McConnelsville due to the
Mr. and Mrs. Ketih Brad- illness of her mother, Mrs. G.
ford , the for mer Debi Knight ; C. Knox. Mrs. Knox was
Portlctnd, arc annuum:ing the t rHns ferr ed fr om Goo(l
birth of their first child , a sun. Sam a rita n Hos pital in
Matthew Joseph, J;m. 2 at St. 7.a nesvillc to the Morgan
.Joseph Hospital, Parker- County Care Center at Mcsubrg. The baby weighed Connelsville.
eight pounds, three ounces.

Son born

Don't be a
heart
breaker

Gn,m gparenL'-1 a re Mrs.
Bradford , Pumer(Jy,

.JL'i-Hl

Mr. and Mrs. I.Hil RI·wJford .
Portland , Mr s. Ven edi "
Knight and the late Otis
Knight, Portland . Mrs. Lottie
Bradford , Racine b i:t grea t
grand mot!Wr and other
gre(jt-grandpctrcnts arc Mr.
and Mrs. F:hner Proffitt ,
Portland.

MEATS

SUPERIORS

MARY SHRINE

TO MEET
. Mary Shrine :17, Order of
White Shrine of Jerusalem
ceremonial Friday 8 p.m. at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Potluck refreshments will be

HaveyouJ
blood pressure
checked.

served.

VALLEY BELL

- .

BY THE PIECE

9. 9

BOLOG NA..............~~·.

FRANKIE$
- ·

~

.,

A LEADER IN THE COMMUNITYII

$}59 ·

M~lk ......~~~~ ..

¢

EGGS ..................:..........!'?!;. 79

69 DEL MONTE ·CATSUP. •••••••••••••~~~~.~~L:..69~

,

1

·

-

.BACON................... -~~· 8 CJ.e

Congratulations

.

ASSORTED CUT

MARKET SLICED

Our Rotarians' lives are filled with love, families, leadership,
high ideals and -ideas for our community.

•

PORK CHOPS. .....~~·......l

~~~~~~E........:.....!~:~.l 09

..

BROUGHTON

89

SUPERIORS

12 OZ. PAK

BUTTERM ILK ............ ~h-~.A.L;. 89 ·
U.S. GRADE B LARGE

PORK CHOPS......L~; •••••

SUPERIOR

¢

•

2%. Low Fat

$

FRESH LEAN CENTER CUT

•

apply three or four light ap'
plications, letting them dry
between each coat, and this
saves wear on'the yarn. They
also do not soil so quickly. VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - Rose can
apply a few coats of ordinary
hair spray on the pastel drawing of her dog and achieve,the
same result as she would get
using the fix -it 'spray. This
also preserves and prevents
smudges on small pencil
drawings. - WILMA
DEAR POLLY- Hang up a
non-stretching sweater to dry
without clothespin marks by
putting a towel through the
armholes and fastening the
towel ends to the clothesline.
. When I get too much liquid
in frosting' and do not have

L~?~LESS!

.,

Diamond Pendaots
Hearl .Lockets
Pierced Earrings"
Pierced Earrings with Diamond
Jade Br,acelels
Nothing Necklac~s
Charm Brace·lets
Monogram Pendants
Bulova Watches
Speidel Bra&lt;Je1ets

Pneumoni a and influ enza-

related deaths also are cited

Polly Cramer

publication.
These expe rts write brief\; •
t ~r hn lc al
st ori es a bo1J:\r-.
unusual di sease out breaks or

&amp;HEAT

,.

-~-·

GIFTS THAT SAY
"I LOV.E YOU"

Ake ~ section is Table No. l ,
which appea rs every week on
pa ~e 8. The table lists the
number uf deaths from all
ca uses in 121 U.S. cities, as
reported by ~nd loca l
h e a It h l u t h.crl-i ties.

POLLY·s POINTERS

a rc
r egula r
I"O II1 ributurs
to
th e

Sf'n in ·

II

add graham cracker crumbs
to the frosting and stir until it
is the right con.sistency. The
erJimbs not only absorb the
extra moisture but give the
frosting a nut-like navor.
Candles last longer and
burn without dripping or
smoking if they are all (except the wiCks ) coated with
soapsuds. Let them dry in the
cand le holders be fore
lighting.
.
To thread a needle with
yarn i take a piece of sewing
thread , put it around the yarn
and pass bo.th ends of ll)e
thread through the needle
pulling the yarn through with
the thread. This is much
eil.sier than doubling the yarn
and trying to work the doubled end through the eye. ~
DOROTHY
Polly will send you one of
her signed tha nk -yo u
newspaper coupon clippers if

ll PENNIES .

~

.

Writt•r

cholera, smallpox or yellow
fever - diseases which the
CDC's mWical technicians
identify ~nd study in sealed
laboratories. Travel agents
watch for these stories as an
early warning on where not to
send customers.
The
staple
MMWR
features, however, · are the
gray columns of statistics
that chart the activities of

-~

.l

Pn•ss

ATLANTA ( AP l - A:;mall
publi cation printed each
week in a basement room at
the national Center for
Disease Control provides the
only official and up-to-theminute report on the state of
the nation's health.
Physicians, journalists and
a broad spectrum of
businessmen such as coffin
manufacturer s , a spirin
makers, . pharmaceutical
salesmen. and travel agents
read it avidly.
It is the 26-year-old MMWR
the Morbidity and
Mortality Weekly Report ,
published by the CDC 's
Rureau of Epidemiology and
mailed ~very Friday to 85,000
subscribers.
The . 12-page MMWR
provides technical but
fa scinating accounts of
obscure medi cal
phenomenon. A recent item told
of three Colorado women who
\\•ere poisoned by a common
herb used as a' folk method
for inducing abortion .
Another ei&lt;plained how 13
Alaska natives were stricken
with trichinosis after eating
Alaskan black bear meat
prepared in a wok.
Other items touch on outbreaks in other nations· of

va ri ous d iseases , fro n ~
meas les tu tube rculos is ,
typh oid feve r aml influenza .

SERVE

MiddleportPomeroy
Rotary Ouh
A LEADER At HOME. • •

. ,•.. : .... ....
·- ' .· ...
JAMIE EVANS •
J ami e Evan s will
celebrated his first birthday
Wednesday. Afamily party is
being planned by his sister ,
Becky, and brother, Michael.
The cake will carry out the
Tweety Bird theme Mr. and
Mrs. Dehn¥ Evans are his
parents. His grandparents
are Bobby Joe Adams, Sr.,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Salser, Minersville.

Maternal grandpai'ents are
Mr. a nd Mrs . George
Hobstetter, Pomeroy, and the
paternal grandparents are
M1· . a nd M1·s. Joh n
KroWsl'zyn, Sr., Middleport.
dleport , is
grandmother.

'STILLMAN

dangerous diseases such as

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. .John
Krawsczyn, Jr., Minersville,
are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Erin Leslie, born
Jan . 26 at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital. The baby
weighed seven pounds, 13
oun ces. Mr. and Mr s.
Krawsczyn have a son, Adam
Michael, two . ~.

and her daughter Robin , Mrs.
Marjorie Caton and her son,
Howie .Jeffers, Kelly and
David Herdman .
Refreshments of cake, icc
CJ'eam, and chips were served. The cake was decorated
in a cowboy and Indian motif.
Gifts were presented to the '
honored guest.

1\iwut ;,u physidi:J IIi&gt;, vcttt rillar i;nJ:-; a ud l'pidcrniulogi"sts
whu et rt• ml'mht:rs . of the
(' I J( "~ l·' pi!ll'llli(" I nte lli g~h ce

Death Magazine

'

.,

111 111 '. li lt · riU IIJhe r s Hlld fi.l l'ts
;1 r1 ' the IH"st avu il~hlt; _ ..

1 LB. BAG

$}.59

-GAL
•••••••••••••

VITAMIN D HOMO M

KRISPY CRACKERS ••••••••••••••••••••~;-~~~•• 49'
STEW
lOih oz. CAN .59'
HILTON,S.OYSTER
_
.
.
•
....................
-.
TRAIL BLAZER CHUNK STYLE
.
.
·
· 2HB BAG $3 69
OOG FOOD•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.-..... ·
•

HEREFORD ROAST BEEF.~ •••••••••••1!.??-.~~~. 89'
HOLSUM

LOAF 39~

.

KING SIZE· BREAD•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.

'

CARROTS ·········~····
'
. •••••••••···••··•··•••••••

29~
'

FRIDAY

On Your

ONLY

5~h ~iversary

1929 -1979

.....,•• ,. .

•

·~· .,

GOESSLER JEWELRY STOR~
Cour t St. , Pome roy , O.

•

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at y
I,'

D•• PEPPER

RC or DIET RITE

..

PAK 16 0~
Plus Deposit

8

'

•

'•
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i

enttne

EVERYDAY PRICE 8 pak 11.19

!
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.

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'

8

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BTLS.
Plus Deposit

79t

REG. PRICE •••• • •• • • • •

•

ggc

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

Federal Food Stamps - We Reserve The Right To Limit

•

~

99¢

PAK 16

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&gt;

7 -The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesda' Feh 6 1117'1

6 - The Dally Sentmel, MidrUeport-Pameray, 0 , Tuesdav, ~ eb 6, 1979
FINANCIAL REPORT
OF THE BO'AR D OF
EDUCATION
For FisCII Year Endmg
December 31 , 1978
Meigs Local
School Dtstrict
Meigs County
Mtddleport, Ohio 45760
January 26 1979
1 ce rt tt y t ne tot to w .n g
r epor t to be co r rect
J an e Wagner
Tr eo!ll s urer of t h e
Boa rd of Edu catiO n
61 4 99 2 5650
Cash Reconcthafton
Total Fund Ba la!'lces
Oec 3 1 1978
' 522 44 7 72
Depos1to r y Bala nc e s
Far m ers Bank &amp;
Sa v mgs
361 55 9 62
Po m e ro y Na tt cnal
J 67 6 OJ
Ba nk
C1t1zens Nationa l
Ba nk
6 615 42
S ub To t al Depo s1tor y
Ba lances
371 851 07
Inve stment s
Cer t •f• cates of
De pOSit
150 000 00
Othe r tn 11estm ent s
4 177 73
Su b Total Inves tm ents
154 177 73
Ca sh on Hand
Total
526 028 80
Outs tandtn g Warran h
Dec 31 1978
{Ded uc t )
3 581 OB
Re conc iled Balanc e
Dec 31 1978
522 447 72
Sum mary ol Cash
Balances Recetpts
And Expendttures
Gener.al Fund
Ba t J an I 1978
207 818 59
Total Rec e 1pts
3 297 934 25
Total Rece 1pts &amp;
Balan ces
3 505 75 2 84
Ex pe nd.tures
3 395 894 99
Ba t Dec 31 1978 109 857 85
D1sad\' anlages
Pupils Progr.am
Bal Jan 1 1978
13 640 76
Total Rece •pls
43 478 66
Total Recet pts &amp;
Ba lances
57 119.42
E xpend 1 tur ~
44 171 52
Ba t D ec 31 1978
12 947 90
Bond Retirement
Ba t Jan 1 19 78
255 329 04
Tot al Rece 1pts
140 45 5 89
Total Rece •pt s &amp;
Bala nces
395 784 93
158 525 92
Ex pend ttur es
Bal an ce Dec 31
197 8
237 259 01
05 Mlll Lny Refire
State Loan
To tal Re c e pts
152 270 33
To tal Re ce 1pt s &amp;
Ba la nces
152 270 33
Ex pe nditur es
152 270 33
Lunch Room FunCI
Bal J an 1 1978
43 766 07
To tal Rece ipts
30.t 568 53
Total Rece tpt s &amp;
Ba la nces
348 334 60
E xpend itures
296 190 74
Ba t 'D e c 31 1978
52 143 86
Un1form Supplies
Bal Jan 1 1978
s 616 77
Tot at Rece• pts
33 754 09
Tot a l Rece• pts 8.
Ba lances
39 370 86
Ex pe nd•ture s
24 128 41
Ba t Oec 31 1978
15 242 45
Permanentlmpro\'ements
Ba t J an I 1978
26 342 00
Total Recei pts
6 468 15
Tot a l Rec e1pt s &amp;
Bal a nces
34 810 75
E)(pe n d •tures
268 85
Bal Dec 31 19 78
34 541 90
Trust Fund
Bal Jan 1 1978
"' 090 86
2 715 14
Total Re ce•pts
Total Rec e1p ts &amp;
Balan ces
7 806 00
Bat Dec 31 1978
7 806 00
Scholarshtp Fund
Bal Jltn 1 1978
260 58
Total Rece tpt s
JO 00
Tot a l R ec e 1pts &amp;
Bal a nces
290 58
Ba l Dec 31 1978
290 58
N DEA Title Ill
Bat J a n 1 1978
13 078 25
Tota l Rece 1pts
187 00
Tot a l Rec etpt s &amp;
Balanc es
13 266 25
E xpe nd iture s
13 266 25
CETA PL 93 203
Total Rece 1pts
9 029 60
Total Rec e 1pt s &amp;
9 029 60
Balanc e s
10 863 75
E x penditure s
Balance De c 31
(18 3415 )
197 6
ESEA Title I
Bat Ja n 1 1978
46 531 82
Total Rece 1pts
134 575 00
Total Rece tpt s &amp;
Balan ces
18 1 10 6 82
E Mpe nd ltur es
148 618 44
Ba l Dec 31 1978
32 488 38
ESEA Tttle II
{ 18 68 )
bat J an l 1978
488 95
Total R ece~ pts
Total Rec e 1pt s &amp;
Ba lan ces
470 27
Ex pe nd itur es
470 27
MOTA - ARA Fund
Ba t Ja n 1, 1978
16 425 65
Total Rec ei pts
8 1936 84
Total Rec e1pt s 8.
Balances
25 362 49
E)Cpendttures
23 489 38
Bat Dec 31 1978
1 873 11
Adult Educ Title Ill
Bat J a n 1 1978
1 047 84
Total Rece1pts 8.
1 047 84
Balanc es
1 047 84
E Mpend •tur es
ESEA Tttle
IVB - IVC
2 93 2 52
Bal Ja n 1 197 8
24 155 99
Tot a l Re cetpts
To tal Rec etpt s &amp;
'1708851
Balan ces
15 502 68
E Mpe nd1 tur es
11 585 83
eat Dec 31 1978
Ttfle VI B
Flow Thru Fund
Total Rece tpts
8 245 00
Tot a l Rece1 pt s &amp;
8 245 00
Bala nces
8 245 00
Bal Dec 31 1978
Total - Bara nce
63 7 863 07
J a n 1 19 78
Tot a l - Tot a l
Rece •pl s
4 169 294 02
Total - To t al Re ce tpts
&amp; Balances
4 807 157 09
Tot a t - E x p e nditur e~
4 284 709 37
Tot a l - Ba t Dec
31 1978
22 447 72
Chash Balances
R ecetph, And
Expenditures •
By Fund
General Fund
Ba t Ja n 1 1978
207 818 59
Re c etpts - Re\'enue
Prope r ty Ta x !Gra s sl
Genera l- Real Es tat e
1021 416 74
Tang•ble P er son a l 241 227 87
Slat e Sub s d.e s Sc hool
Fau ndatton (Gross )
Ba s• c Allowan ce 1 839 251 Od
Bu s P urc ha se
All o wan c e
7 757 00
v oc at1on a1 Ed uc a t• on 2 164 63
Othe r Stat e
50 132 32
Su bS idt eS
T u 1t on - Par ent s a.
10 61&lt;1 33
Patron s
Tult on - Otn er
26 815 38
D1 s t rlc t s
Rent a l Schoo l
Pro pe r ty
670 00
Int er es t - ln a ct •ve
4 125 06
F und s
8 950 7 9
Other Re ve nu e
Total ReV' e~nu e
Rece ipts
3 213 125 16
Receipts- Non Re \' enue
Adtustm en ts &amp;
Re f und s
1 6 ~3 21
Othe r Non Revenue 3 045 07
Tot a l No n Revenue
Rece 1pts
4 698 28
Tot a l Rec e 1pts
3 217 823 44
Transrers From
GET A
22.529 38
Ti tl e I
31 494 2 1
Tttt e II
470 27
Title II t
13 266 25
DPPF
10 238 00
B a~1c Adu lt
Educ at 1on
1,047 84
T1tl e i V B&amp;I V C
1064 86
Total Transfer s
80 110 81
To tal Rec et pfs (Reve n ue
Non Re 11 en ue &amp;
Tra nsfe r s )
3,297 ,93;4 26

DICK TRACY

For Best Results Use Sentinel Classifieds

Tota l Beg •nn 1ng Bala nce
Plus RCC C!pt S 3 ~OS H2 84
Expendttures
To t a l AdnH 0, 1 ~t ra i 10 n
E xpe ndit Ur E'S
133 781 00
To tal In st ru ct iOn
Exoe nd1tu r es
1 984 929 64
Tot al L tbrary
In Memory
Expend• tures
3.t 581 35
'
'
To t al P u pil 1rans po r ta fl on
IN l OVINC. mf' tnnry of our
Ex pe nd it ur es
242 176 63
,
dn ghtC't J((ty lynn McC o r t ~,'
1
Tot al Schoo l Pla n t
nt~ who wr n l lo hr w tlh Jnsu&lt;; I
Ope r a t1 on Ex p
3 14 958 22
IS words ur Und~r
Chltrg.i i;::-' 'f OOl~ ogo 19 / b
Tot al Sch oo l Plant
C.sh
1 26
Yn ..
rle nr
yo u t£! !&gt;om co 11 n
Ma• nt ena nce EMP 50 384 59
Ida)
100
1 90
spPnol who wtll h P tho ll ght o f
To t a l Oth e r Au)( tl 1a rv
2 days
100
Ex pe n se
626 989 84
2~
(' nr h dn y th ro ugl out tlw yeor
ldays
100
Total Cap 1ta 1
Rdays
300
3 7~
o nrl wnh ea ch though t of you
1 019 83
Outt a v
deo• o n e wC! ~ herl a fnw mo•e
!Transfer To
Eat:h word over the minlmwn 1~
IC OI &lt;.
Bond R e t tre m en t
6 399 78
wurtl.s I! 4 t:e nts per word per tbly
Sarli -,. m1sserl by p&lt;u r liS Joe on d
T, fi e 1
668 00
Ads runmng other than coruteCuliVt'
Ma t y Mclorty ond gro nd
Ttll e IV B
6 11
days w11l be dwrged 1:11 the I day
porFm ls Mr5 Ruth Smtfh ond
Total T r ans fer s
7 073 89
rHI\!
Mrs C''ll go Mr(a rl y Al .-.o sur
Tot a l Ge ne r al Fund
Ex p and Tran s fer s
In m~mory Card of Thank.'! .and
v v u q ,... n h1n lh f' 1 Ke th All en
J 395 894 99
Obttuary 6 L-ents per word 13 00
M( (Ot ly
Gene r al F vn d Bat
1rummwn Cash In advance
109 857 85
GO Nf BlJln ol for goltl':' n
Dec 31 19 78
To ta l E xp And
Mobile Home sales and YBrd sales
In ho 11 01 on d m e mot y of o ur deo1
are at:cepted only With L'ltSh wtlh
Tr an sfe r s P l us Ba l
h u~ hon rl and fath er Charles
Dec 31 19 78
J 50S 752 84
onier 25 L-ent c tu~&lt;rKt! for 11ds carry·
Ro hc rt Wtn(! hr enne r
who
mg Boll Number In Cart&gt; ol The Ser}·
Otsad\:antaged Pup1ls
rl
e
po
rtcd
thts
l1
fe
Mmdov
Program Fund
lmel
Jan uar y 14 1971
Ba t J a n 1 1978
13 640 76
OeOf Bob
The Publisher reserves the nsllt
Re\enue Rectlph
St ate Subs tdy
.:13 478 66
lo edit or reject 11ny ads deemed 00.
You ore no t dead
}et1tonal The Publi:sher wtU nol be
Total Re v enue
You ore fU SI a wa y there aw01 t1 ng
re;pons1ble for more Uum one lncorRece• pts
43 478 66
us o il a no the r day
r~ l msertion
Total Beg nn 1n g Balan ce
In l1fe we Javed you de orl y os we
Phone 992 2l56
Plus Rece 1pt s
57 119 42 ..
now do
Expendttures
Your wvwry doy wa lk m l1f e left
ln s tru cl •on
u.-. w1th memones to be proud
Satar .e s and Wages 24 044 48
f o y ou were honorable hone st
Hea lth
Sa tar e s o!l n ~ Wages 8 sal 97
o1d true
Oth er Ex p
462 9 2
Thot !'. why we all loved yo u
Refu nd - Fund1 ng
An d os the sun se ts every n1gh1 11
Ag e n cy
5.40 15
on se s th e ncx l fl1 0rntng
TolaiE )(p
3393352
The
day wtll come whe n we wdl
Transfers To
oil meel ogot n whNe there lli
Gen e ra l Fu nd
1023800
I·
no sorrow or pom
Tot a l Tra ns fer s
10 238 00
Total E x p &amp;
Sadl y n 1ssed an d dearly loved by
Tr an s fe r s
44 171 52
wt fe Mabe l Daught ers In s
Mondlly
Ba t Dec 31 1978
12 947 90
Noon on S.aturdlly
Aid ne o nrl Do no and grond
Total E )( p &amp;
chtldren
Tr ansf e r s Plus Ba t
Tuesday
Dec 31 1978
57 119 42
thru Fnday
Bond Ret.rement Fund
4PM
Card of Thanks
Bal Jan 1 1978
255 329 04
the day before publ k abon
-Recetpts
WI: WISH to thonk al l the fn ends
Prope rt y Ta x (Gr oss)
Sunday
ne rg hbo rs and orgomzot1ons
Gener a t- Reat Es tate
4PM
sen dmg food cords fl owers
128 J.4 7 35
Friday afternoon
Spect ol tha nks to th e Re" Ma rk
Ta ngtbl e P er son al
5 908 76
McC lung a nd the Mtd d leport
Total Rec e pts
134 05 6 11
Agency
10 .l O
Transfer From
Ft rs l Bo pt st Church the M d
117 12.: 1 23
Genera l F und
6399 78 Total Exp
dle por t and Po rn eo ry Emerge n
Transfers To
Total Tr a nsf er s
6 399 78
ry Squads Vete ren s Me mo r al
Genera ) Fiund
31,494 21
Total Rec e tpt s
end Ho lz e r Hosp11ols Dr Abel s
31 -49 4 21
Plus Transfers
140 455 89 Total Transfers
ond Dr J J Oa'JIS o t t he ttrn e
Total E x p &amp;
•
Total Beg nnmg Balan ce
Transfers
148 616 44
of th e de ath of our Mo the r
Pl us Rec e1pts &amp;
32 -488 38
Th e Chddrpn of Elo1se 8 Wdson
Transf e rs
395 784 93 Bat Dec 31 1978
Total E x p &amp; Transfers
Expend1tures
Plus Bal Dec 31
Fees &amp; Charges W1tht1 e ld
1978
18110682
- Ta x Settlement 24 J59 67
Noloces
E S E A Tttle II
Int er est On Bonds
34 165 25
Library
'
Bond Redemptto n 100 000 00
GUN SHOOT Ro r1ne Gun Cl ub
(18 68 )
TotatE xp
158 52592 Bat Jan 1 1978
fv e ry Sunday l pm Factory
Recetpfs
Total E x p
158 525 92
chokf" gun s only
488 95
Bat Dec 31 1978 237 259 01 Federal SubstdV
Total Recetpt s
488 95
Total E x p Plus
GUN
SHOOT RaCi ne Vol unleer
Bal Dec 31 1978 395 784 93 Total Begmnmg Balan ce
Ft re De pt Eve ry Sat urday 6 30
Plus
Recetpts
470
27
SMtiiLe\'\1
pm at th e tr bu1fd1ng 1n Bashon
Transfers To
Retirement State Rece1pts
fa ctory choke gu ns o nly
470 27
General Fund
Pro pe rty Ta )( (Gross)
470 27
Total Trans fers
Ge neral - Real Es tate
IN COME TA X Sep, 1ce f e de ral
Bal Dec 31 1978
00
10993351
and State Wa lla ce Ru5se ll
MDTA - ARA
Tan g bl e Property 42 JJ6 82
Bra db ury ( o ll992 7228
16 425 65
Total Rece 1pts
152 270 33 Ba I Jan I 1978
Recetpts
Total Begmn ng Balance
FRH CANDY malong do ss of Ot s
7 976 Btl
Plus Rece1pts
152 270 3J Federal Substdy
Ca ndy an d Coke Suppl1es Spr
Total Rece1pts
1 976 84
E ~~:pendltures
1 1g Voll ey Plaza 446 2134 fo r
Transfers From
Fe es - Charg es 960 00
reg •strot1 on lt s fun and easy
J 389 97 CETA Fund
Co untv
960 00
Yo u II be omazed at what you
Ret1re State Loan
148 880 36 Total Transf er s
Tot al E x p
152,270 33 Total Recetpts an d
ra n do
Transfers
8,936 84
Tot al Exp Plu s
Total
Begmntng
Balan
ce
Bat Dec 31 1978 152 270 33
Pl us Re ce1pts and
los! and Found
Luncnroom Fund
Tri'lnsfers
25 362 4 9
Bal Jan 1 1978
43 766 07
Transfers
To
LOST OR s to len Bunk e r s H1ll
Recetph
Fund
22 529 38
Block and ton opprox 4 years
Sal e of Lun ches
11 3 46076 General
TA Fund
960 00
Federal Subs dV
168771 27 CE
o
ld coo n hounds chtld s pet 1
Transf e rs
23 489 38
State Subs 1dy
22 336 50 Total
blo ck plot! appr o)( 4 yea rs old
Sa
\
Dec
31
1976
1
87
3
11
Total Re11enue &amp;
RPwo rd
fo r tnformol1on
Total Transfers Plu~
Non Revenue
Sal Dec 31 1978 '25 362 49
qrn 7!!"7
Recetpts
30&lt;4 568 33
Adult Educatlorf
Total Beginning Balance
Ill
P lus Recetpts
348 334 60 Bat Jan 1Tttle
1978
1 047 84
Help Wan led
Expendttures
I 047 84
e
Salarte5 and Wag es 100 375 59 Total Balanc
Transfers To
FARM HELP wanted 949 2582
Food &amp; Food Handl ing
Gen e ra l Fund
1 047 8-4
Suppl1es
16300506 Total Transfers
WANTED
PART time LPN fo r doc
1 047 84
Other Ex pendttures 32 810 09 Tota l Transf ers Plu s
to r's office ( oil ~2 663 3 bet
Total E x pend•ture s 296 190 74
Bat Dec 31 1978 1 OH 84
wee n 11 and d
Bat De c 31 1978
52 143 66
E S E A Tttle IVB
Total Exp Plu s
2 932 52
Bat Jan 1 1978
Bat Dec 31 1978 348 334 60
Rece1pts
Yard Sale
Untform Supplies Fund
Other Federal Subs dtes
Bat Jan 1 1978
5 616 77
24 149 88
IF YOU ha11e o se rv te e to alte r
Rece1pts
To t a l Rece 1p ts
24 149 88
wo nt to buy o r sell so me lhmg
Sale of Workbook s &amp;
Transfers F rom
or
oe loo k 1ng fo r work
Suppli es
33 754 09 General Fund
611
what eve r
you II get res ult s
Total Rece 1pts
33 754 09 Tota l Transfer s
611
fo ste r wtth o Se nlt ne l Wont Ad
Total Beg 1nnmg Balan ce
Tota l Rec e ipts and
P lu s Re cetpts
39 370 86
Ca ll 992 2156
Trans f ers
24 155 99
EMpend1tures
Total Beg tn n1ng Balanc e
P u rc ha se of Workbooks &amp;
Plus Rece1pts &amp;
SupplieS
2-4 128 41
Pels for Sate
Tran s fer s
27 088 51
Total Expend1l ur es 2.t 128 41
Expendtfures
Total E x p PIU S
RISING STAR Ken nels Boordmg
General Admmtstrat.on
Ba l Dec 31 1978 39 370 86 Sa ta nes and Wag es 1 563 66
and g room mg ;;:'boll breeds
Per-manenllmpro\'ement
otner Exp
49 85
Ches h re 3b7':'00'j'2
Fund
tn s truclt on
Bal Jan 1 1978
26 342 00 Sa lanes a nd Wages
Ft
VI:
MA l t: AKC regtste re d Beagle
2 635 22
Rece1pts
pu ps 992 7179 or 992 3169
Other EMp
9 836 30
Interest - lnactJve
Refund - F udnmg
otte r 9p m
F unds
846875
Agency
165 79
Total R e ce pts
8 468 75 Total E x p
14 250 82
Total Beg nnln g Balan ce
Tran s fers To
P lu s Recei pt s
34 810 75 T•tlelll
Redee med Ourmg Ye ar
187 00
Expend1tures
1978
1700000
General Fu n d
1 064 86
o tne r
268 85 Total Transfer s
Balan ce Out s tandm g
1 251 86
Total E x p
268 as Total Exp &amp;
Dec 31 1978
34 000 00
Bal Dec 31 1978
34 541 90
tnt Rat e
.t'h
Tra lls fer s
15 502 68
Total E x p Plus Bat
Matuntv Year
1980
Bat De c 31 1978
1158583
De c 3 1 1978
34 810 75 Tolal E Mp &amp;
Po m eroy Elem School
Trust Funds
Construc t1on
Transfer s Plus Balan ce
Bat Jan 1 1978
5 090 86
Outstanding Jan 1
Dec 31 19 78
21 088 s1
Recetpts
1978
132 000 00
Tttle VI B Flow Thru
Inter e st On lnacft'V e
Redeemed Dunng Year
Rece•ph
Fu nds
2 71 5 14 Ot he r Federal
1978
22 000 00
Total Rece ipts
2 715 14
Balance Outstandmg Dec
SUbSidieS
8 245 00
Total Beg 1nnmg Balan ce
J 1 1978
11000000
Rece tpt s
8 245 00
P lus Recetpts
7 806 00 Total
lnt Rate
4'12
Bat Dec 31 1978
B 245 00
Bat Dec 31 1978
7 B06 oo
Ma tu r.ty Year
1983
BETWEEN FUND
Total Exp PIUS Bat ,
Nortnwest Improvement
TRANSFER
De c 31 1976
7 806 00
Outstandtng Jan 1
RECONCILIATION
Scholarship Funds
1978
7 000 00
From Fund
eat Jan 1 1976
260 58 CETA
Redeemed During Year
22 529 38
Rece1ph
1978
7 000 00
3149421
Ttt te I
Interest On lna ctt11 e
tnt Rate
3rh
Ttt
le
II
470
27
Funds
30 00 Ttl le II t
Matunty Year
1978
13 266 25
Total Rece 1pts
30 00
Northw es t lmpro11ement
DPPF
10 238 00
Total Beg mnm g Balan ce
Outstanding Jan 1
Baste Adult ..
Plus Rece1pt s "
290 58
1978
9 000 00
1 047 84
Bat Dee( 31 1978
290 58 T1tEducat1on
Redee m ed Dur~ng Year
le IV 9 IV C
1 06&lt;1 86
Total E x p Plu s Bat ,
1978
9 000 00
General
6 399 78
De c 31 1978
290 58 T1 tl e IV 6
tn t Rate
3
187 00
N D E A T1tle Ill
1978
668 00 Matur.ty Year
General
Bat Jan I 1978
13 079 25 CETA
960 00 Me•gs H1gh Scnool
Transfers From
Sch ool Co nstruct.o n
6 11
General
T1t let V B
18700 Total E x p Trans fers
Ou ts tandtng Ja n 1
Total Tr a nsfer s
18 7 00 ~
1978
585,000 00
88 331 70
Total Beg lnnm g Balan c e
Redeem ed Our ng Yea r
To Fund
P lus Transfers
13 266 ~ 5 1 Bond Ret1rement
1978
45 000 00
6 399 78
Transfers To
T 1tl e I
668 00 Ba lance Outstand mg
Ge ne ratFund
13266 25 Ti t le IV B
Dec 31 , 1978
540,000 00
6 11
Total Tr a nsf ers
13 266 2.5 General
tnt Rat e
4 375
10 238 00
B~ance Dec 31 1978
00 Ge neral
1990
13 266 25 Matur.ty Year
1
C E T A P L 93 203
General
31 ,49 4 21 Total Bonded Debt ~
Receipts
Ou ts tandmg Jan 1,
General
.470 27
Fed er- al S ubs1 d y
9 029 60 General
1978
784 000 00
22 529 38
Total Rece1pts
9 029 60 CETA
96000 Total Bo nded Debt Re deemed Ourmg Year
EMpend1tures
General
1 047 8-4
General Ad m ln 1strat •on
1978
100,000 00
T1fle Ill
187 00
Other EMpend lfu r e s
1A6 sa
General
1 064 86 Total Bonded Debt Balance OutstMdmg
lns t r. u c tton
Total Rec Transfers 88 331 70
otner E xpend iture s 10 717 17
De c 31 1978
684,000 oo
ASSETS AND
Memoranda Data
Tot al E xpendttur e s 10 863 75
LIABILITIES
Tav Valuat 1on
Balan c e Dec 31 1978
DEC 31 1978
(I 834 15 )
As sessed
68 622,523
ASSETS
School Ta x m m il ls per
To t ;, l E Mp Plus
Depos1torv Balances
S1 000 Valuat1on
Ba l Oe c 31. 1978 9 029 60 _
368 269 99
E 5 E A Tille I
Inv estm ents .,
154 177 73 lns•d e 10 mtll
ltmttation
3 80
Sa l J a n 1 1978
.46 53 1 82
Inv e ntory
165 000 00
Rece1pts
Land
500,000 00 Outs1de 10 m ill
ltmltat•on
16 20
Federal Sub s td Y
133,907 00
Bu Ji dmgs
9 306 79 A 00 BondeCt Debt Millage
4 00
Tot a t Rec e1pts
133,907 oo
Equ ipment
1 878 296 00
Ae.counts Payable
Transfers From
Total Assets
12 372 537 72
Statemf!nt
Gene ral Fu nd
668 00
LIABILITIES
Tot a l Transfers
668 00
Accounts F'ayab te
11 000 00 ~ertv services Tota l Rece1pts and
Bond Indebtedness 6B.t 000 00 ~Relrs and ma~ntenan c e
Transfer s
134 575 00
Total Lll!lb d 1t les
695 000 00 \" !to~rvtees property
Insurance rentals 1 069 oo
To tal Beg1nnlng Balance
E xc ess (or Def•c •ency)
Plu s Rec e tpts &amp;
of Assets
11 677 ,531: 72 Textbooks - Ltbrarv
books
3 325 00
Transf er s
181 106 82
Total
12 372 537 72
Suppl• es and mater •ats Expenditures
1ndebtedness Mamte11anc e and repair
Ge ne ral Admm1 s tratJO n
Part I Bonds
of bulldmgs eQutpment
Sa lanes and Wages 6 803 &lt;16
Purpose For Which Debt
a nd ve h•cl es
4 565 00
Otner Exp
124 64
Wn Created
C a pit at outla y and
Instructio n
Middleport E Ie m
r r pla ccm cnt c ap •tal
Salar.es and Wo1t ges 105 464 25
H s Addttton
:&gt; tJ tla y
1,3 75 00
Ot he r E x p
4 721 62
Outs tand ing Jan
Fud n 1ng
Ref und
51 000 00
1978
Fc':l 6

WANT AD
CHARGES

~n ~

-

----- ---

- - - -- - - - - -

F01 oo;1 Prn
for s toncitng
99'1 S%5 or

-Room Addihons-

GARAGE

-C1,1slom Remodeling-

'I• mile oH Rt 7 IIY INISS on
Sf Rl 124 loWllrd Rufloncl,

ceramic Ttle
Formica
Counter Tops
Ceilings
(Suspended, Texture) · Tole
Floors Pa.,.ling &amp; Trim

0

OLD COIN S poc ke t watches
t! lms rm gs wP.rld ng bond s
rl a rn o 1ds Gold o r sdve Coi l
Ro ge rWom sley 142 23:1 1

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
.(lso Transmission
'Repaor
Phone 991:-5682

WANT TO buy o ld 45 onrl 71:1
pho nog op h reco rds
Co li
991 63 i'O or Conta ct Ma rl1 n Fur
n1h re

REYNOLD'S
ELECTRIC MOTOR
SHOP

Auto Sales
std

As k•ng $400

I

1-4-1 mo (Pd .)

~~~::::·
sw.. ps Gallet
lnsuncl

Don't let 1 chimney fire put
~~~ ompor on your IJfo

1

lHE REP
lfth cent•ry StrVICI wltll
2oth Centery

Know How

Speclettzlneln

TWO AEOROOM mobtf e home
ne a r Oe~e t e r ne or No 1 M1ne
1191 51:1 51:l

For Sale

COAL LIMESTONE so nd gro vel
colc 1um chlond e ferttlt zer dog
MOBILE HOME lo r re nt Adult s
food and oil !ypes of sa lt Ex
o nly 992 2591:1
ee ls or Soh Wo rk s In c E Ma1n
St Po me roy 991 3891

SMALl LONG hatr e d Chow type

pu ppy All black w1th wh1 te
fee t Me gs Huma ne Socte ly
992 2592

For Sale
- ------SPLI T FIHEWOOD $30 o rou nde d
p1ckup lood 12 to 14m unl e ss
o rdered Call bl4 691:15601 col
lee!
AMERI CAN MADE Men ~ work
boots ond s hoe s leather up
pe rs Pmed ne ar whol esale
now 10 per Ce nt off Batle y s
Fe b 1 ond Feb 10
G OOD MIX ED hoy cut w1th co nd1
!toners S BO pe r bale Roy
mend CoHen II Rt 4 Po me t o y
742 2087

APPlES FITZPATRICK Orchard
Sto le Rt 689 Phone W lk esvd le
oo9 37B5

For all
Needs

your

JACKW
CARSEY
Mgr
Phone''2 ·2181

1979 FORO CUSTOM F ISO truc k
302 engme 1 , ton auto P S
P B A C 7•2 2826
RUTLAND HARDWARE 2 de o rs
fr o m Rutland Post Off1ce
Phone 742 7255 We are og01n
offe nng the LARGE KING coo l
a nd wood he ater wtl h blower
a nd slo11e board for $339 95
One only mogo z1ne s tyle Kt ng
cool heater free sto11e board
fo r $199 95 One only free stan
d1 ng wood heater 550 2
Sunbeam
ele cln c
sn o w
blo we rs
$45
One only
kerosene he ot~r U9 95 Ar111n
Eli_?ctr c heate rs 10 per cent off

? 16 E Second Street

AOVANTAGES ~ 5 ren
tals, 4 occupied Excellent
mcome Live m one let the
rent pay for It 523 000
NEW
LISTING
3
bedrooms, bath, new cen
tral a•r and gas furnace
Full bas~ment , enclosed
bac k por' h and carport
Only $12,500
3 APTS - AIJ rented With
goOd 1nc ome
Property
looks good near school
NEW LISTING - Bus1ness
bnck bulldmg 2 stortes
W1fh oer 4400 sq 11 with ad
d1t lonal spac e In basement
$21,500
ACREAGE - In the wold
We will sell you what you
want Jost call to see
WANT TO SAVE YOI,IR
MONEY WITH LARGE
INTEREST? INVEST IN
PROPERTY,
THEN
WRITE lTOFF
G Bruce Teaford
Helen L Teaford
Sue P Murphy
Associoles

HotJsing
He;1dquarters

FROSTY S CB llod•o Equtpment
!:ve ryth tng tn two woy rod10
antenna ond occes 50rtes
Phone Portland 843 2181 Open
e venmg!..unttl Sunday 2 tdl6

a

FOUR PIECE bedroom s uite Com
plete 992 Sb 1&lt;1
AMERICAN MADE Men :) work
hoots onrl sh oe~ leat her u11
p rop;;
PrtcPd nenr whole solo
now 10 PC• ~ 11 off Bmlr-y
M•dcllepo tl Fe t- I to reb 10

Your Headquarters For

.

Armstrong Carpeting
Washongton Sf Albany, 0
Phone 698.6173
Davtd Coleman
Agenllor
MOTIRISTS INSURANCE
COMPANIES and SANOY
&amp; BEAVER INSURANCE
COMPANY, Losbon, Ohoo
AUTO,
HOMEOWNERS,
FARM,
LIFE
&amp;
BUSINESS
mo

EWOTT
APPUANCE II
220 E. Main Slreel,
Pomeroy,D.
Call992-7113
For Free Estimates
11 -9 1 mo

TRUIPY

rxJ

WHA'T Me.MeERS OF
A TEAM US.UALLY
WEAR, FIC:.UR:A'TIVE!..'Y

5PEAKIN5.

I·

Now arrange the c rcl&amp;d etters to
form the surpnse answer as s ug
gas ted by the above cart oon

Busoness Servoces

Business Services

EXCAVATING dozer bockho e
a nd d1tcher Charle s R Ha t
lt e fd
Bock Hoe Se ri.II Ce
Rutland Oh1o Rhone f42 2008

BRADFORD Aucllonee r Com
plete Servtee Phone 949 2487
or 9&lt;19 2000 Rocine Oh1o Cntt
Bradfo rd

Jumble Book No f3 containing 110 puu:ln laavallablelorS1 75 poa!pa td
homJumblt,clothltnewep':/'er Box34 Norwood N J 078•8 Include your
name, addreas ztp code an make chec:ke payable to Ntwtpeperbook a

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers toaster s .ro n ~ oil
s moll oppltances lawn mowe r
newt to Stole H1ghway Goroge
on Route 7

~

Real Estate for Sale

- - - -- - -

by

608E . . . . . .
MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

SIM8Li.

21 ACRES CLOSE lN has many bu1fdmg sttes,
utll1t1eS available Small
pond, woods $23 000 00
f l/4 ACRE
Vacant
ground, ong 1nally had 2
houses lots of frontage,
located
tn
Pomeroy
$3 000 00
.tiBOUT 6 YERS OLD Lovely to see J bedrooms,
utolltv equipped kotchen,
afr cond storage bldg,
carport 528 500 00
MIOOLEPDRT N1ce 3
bedroom home
uti11ty,
N G
forced atr heat,
enclosed porch, garage
A)so has 2 mobile homes
(a 11 are rented 1 529, 500 oo
NEAR MINES - BeaUtifUl
late mOdel mobile home
Located on level acre, sur
rounded by a new wood
fence, large concrete park
1ng area $16,500 00
SELLING YOUR HOUSE
- LET AN EXPERT DO
THATI Won't cost a cent
UNTIL and UNLESS we
gel
you
lhe desired
RESULTS!
REALTORS
HENRY E CLELAND SR
HENRY E . CLELANDJR
ASSOCIATES
KATHY CLELAND
LEONA CLELAND
992 2259
992 61,1

AW~

~~

•

II5 Salad
Newman
g re film
en

; ~~

~g,@!~

'l

BATHROOMS AND Kttchens
remod e led ceramiC hi e plum
btng carp entry and gene ral
mo1ntenonce 13 ye a rs ex
P':! •.!~e 99~~~ _ _ _ _
PU LLINS EXCAVATING Co mpl e te
Serv1ce PhonP 992 2A78

GASOUNE AI J RV

\,.,J

Ol4a4 1 Pull
'er up c;low
an' eas4!

QUit

shakon
Gran pa•
You're
reckon

the

E C ELECTRICAL Contractor serv
tng Oh1o Volley regmn S1x
days a ¥J&amp;ek 24 hours sen11ce
Emergency calls Coli 882 7952
or862 2305

~~~

.

BEAT THE ht gh pr ce of home 1m
pro11ements corpe ntry plumb
mg and heatmg roofmg and
electncol Call 0 &amp; F Controc
tors Go lltpohs 614 446:1407
coli collect Free esttmotes

WATER WELL dulling Wilham T
Gra nt 742 2879
TREE TRIMMING and
742 3167 or 742 2573

THINJC 1"1" GALL.-.f ATT!:N'r'IOI'II A.V«f

removal

•
•
'

•
••

flower
23 Early name
lor Nova
Scatoa
24 Argentone c1ty

vetl

BRIDGE

31 Allude

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

33 Old dan ce
36 Bord 's nes t
37 M G M great

PIANO TUNING for home and
schoof Lone Oomels asscc1ote
ot Elberfeld s and Bruntcord1
Musi c
Company
Phon e
992 2~81 or '1'12 2082

•

Playing in haste a waste

member

WEST

EAST
• 9543

• Q 10 3

• K 7 52

-+-+--il • Q 10 8 7

+ A 32

• 84

• QJ 8 5
• 10 6
SOUTH

F;;tf_1J: 3334 LWrath
A athlete b+--f--t---

+

J

hve diamonds and two clubs

1f 35 LaWJdry
• worker

.AK743 !

for a total of 10 easy s ure
tro c ks

37 frond

Vulnerable North-south
Dealer South

Aslc lbC EXDCPIS

f~IVJ

( ;;') 1'(10

A

•
•

+K 8

ethe r e al
39 Heraldic
wreath

W,. :

Is

w..t

North

'
Pass
Pass

South

Yo u So utlf11o ld

1+

Pass

3 NT

Pass

Pass

• A2
+A4
83 2

Opemng le ad
to work

1.

Easl

WINNIE

"

FOR GDSH .SAKES,
WENDY; WHAT'S

HE

/S???Ifl

•

-'

HAPPENING ?

-

+7

'""

W1th

oppon e nts

pass m g

your pa rt ner opens one club
and ratses your one-spade

it:

response to tw o s pades You

btd four notrump a nd your

L 0 N G FELL 0 W

~~
C) ll IJ.'b .,~
One te ll e r s1mply stands lor another In lhas sample A 11 By Oswald Jacoby
fi~UJ
used ror th e three L's X fo r th e two O s e tc Stngle letters and Alan Sontag
~ .,- ~ {
: ~':V t '-' '
aposlrophes the le ngth a nd lormaloon o l lhe words are all
1
South won the s pade le ad
U
-.
htnts Each da y th e code letter s are dtffere nt
woth hos Jac k Then h e led hos
CRYPTOQUOTES
kmg of doamonds Eas t wa s
unkond enough to le t the kmg
TNZOZSYZ hold.
PROW
VREQO
UILZ
AI this stag e of the pro·
'
IT 1S M OM I THE MAN SHE
c eedmgs South s topped to
WNRJAEZ
GO
RV
PGSF
FOUND DOWN TI-IERE
think It was t o o late for
HA B DEFIN ITELY
!honking to help He had one
WURJHUW
BEEN IDENTI F IED
IAOZSYZ
RV
doamond tr1ck m and that
was all the d1amond !rocks
he could get H e we nt after
U
SZCW •RS
Yellerday's Cryploquote "FREEDOM OF SPEECH" DOES the clubs and of they had
NOT GIVE ONE THE RIGHT TO SHOUT "FIRE" WHEN broken 3·3, h e would still
have made h1s contract But
f'i?:'~/"":2. 1'"""'- THERE IS NONE IN A CROWDED THEATER -OLIVER W
clubs were 4·2 a nd S o uth
HOLMES
Q:l 1979 King Fealu..., Syndical&lt; Inc

wuz

A &amp;~~~~~

Mobole Homes for Sale "''
'
1 11 ACRE 12 ~e 60 mob1le
home _..
near Dexter 992 5858
1967 TOTAL ElEC.TRIC' - m-o b-,1; ~:
home
furntshed
3 bedr
washer ond dryer Air c.ond1
ttoned 1 lot 210 ft frontage
$12 000 Phone 7•2 2826
=
'
1955 Protrte S~hoOner 28 11 8
,
bdr
"'"'
1965Genarol 60M 12 2bdr
1968 Elcono 52M 12 '2 bdr
1969Buddy 60 • 12 • bdr
1970 Sylva 60 M12 2 bdr
'I
1Cfl0Costle b0x12'"?bdr
1973 Arlington 60 x 12 2 bdr
1973 Rtdgewood 70 x 14 3 bdr
"
1973Kirkwood 50x12 2bdr
·~ ·
B &amp; 5 MOBilE HOME SALES
I "'
PT PLEASANT WV
67S ••2•

2-6 8

+ KQJ 9 1 6

+

~==~~~~··~~~~~--~~-

•

\\otth h1s a ce of s pa des T h ts
wo uld have w a s t e d the fre e
fone sse g oven hom by the
1 ope mng le ad B ut the kmg of
spades wo uld ha v e bee n a
s ure entry t o dummy and
South c ould h ave been s ure
of two s p a d es one he art,

• AJ 9

.

••

•

Tuesday, Feb 6

· -- - - -- - -- --, " " a und up o ne tn c k s hort and
one rubbc1 la te
NORTH
2-6 A
II S ou t h h ad s t o pped t o
+K62
t honk a nd to Co unt ho s
• 864
winner s at tr1c k one he
+QJI09 15
wo uld have gon e rogh t up
• 9

;

' ,

17

ou lllf-&lt;,ara ~narks3 ,4, 15 Edge of Nlaht 6 Al l in The
Family 8, tO , Dati ng Game 13 Movie " See How
They Run 17
10 3o-AII Star Secrets 3,4 15 520 000 Pyramid 13
Andy Grllfllh 6, Price Is Right 8 10
11 00-Hogh Rollers 3,4,15 Happy Days 6, 13 Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20
11 30- Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Family Fe ud 6 13, New s
4 Love of Life 8, 10 , Sesame St 20 33 11 5~B5
News B House Call10 News 17
12 01&gt;'-Newscenter 3 News 6,10 Jeopardy 15, Yo,ung
the Restless 8
Midday Magaz ine 13
Love
Amer ican Style 17
12 3o-Ryan s Hope 6, t3 Passw o rd 15 Se arch fo r
Tomorro w 8 10 Elec Co 33 , Movie " the ipcress
Fi le" 17
oo-Hotlywood Squares 3 All Mv C hildren 6 13
News 8 You ng B. the Rest less 10 Not fo r Women
Only 1S
1 3()..-Daysof Our Lives 3,1 5 As The Wor ld T urns 8 10
2 DO-O ne Life fo Live 6, 13, 2 25-N ew s 17
2 3o-Doctors3,1S , Guiding Light 8,1 0, I Lo ve Lucy 17
3 DO-Another World 3 1S General Hospital 6 13 Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20, Speed Racer 17
3 3o-Mash 8 Joker 's Wild 10
Fl lntstones 17 Over
• E_asv 20
Million DofiBr Man 13 Brady Bunch 15 , I Dream of
Jeannie 17
5 Jo-Carol Burnett 3, News6 Sanford a. Son B Elec
Co 20, Mary Tyler Moore 10 Odd Couple 15 ,
Beverly Hillbillies 17 Doctor Who 33
5 oo-News3,B, 10, 13, 15 ABC News6, Andy Grflflth 17,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
, 6 3o-NBC News 3 15 ABC News 13 Carol Burnett B.
Friends 6 CBS News 10, My Three Sons 17, Over
Easy 20
7 DO-Cross Wits 3, Newlywed Game 6 13 Porter
Wagoner B News 10 Love Amer ican Style 15
Carol Burnett 17, Footsteps 20
Big Green
Magazine 33
7 3o-Dolly 3, Match Game PM 6, Muppef Show B The
Judge 10 That's Hollywood 13 Wild Kl ngdom 1S
Sanford B. Son 17 Ma c Neil Lehrer Report 20 33
B Oo-Supertraln 3,15, Col lege Baskelba ll 8 Charlie s
Anaels 6,13 Great Performances 33, Inc redible
Hulk 10, Edward the King 17
9 oo-&lt;:lne Day AI A Time 10 , NBA Basketball 17
Country Matters 20
9 3o-Langston' 33 Jelfersons 10
10 Oo-Qulncy 3 15 Vegas 6 13 Kaz ~ 10 News 20
Roots, Rock Reggae 33
10 3o-Turnabout 20 11 oo-News 3 6 B 10 13 15 Di c k
Cavett 20 Lilias Yoga B. Yo u 33
11 1~College B~sketball 17 , 11 3o-Joh nn y Carson
3 15 , Pollee Woman 6 13 Rockfo rd Fi les 8, ABC
News 33 Movie "Fode In ' 10
12 4o-Mannlx 6 13 , 1 oo-Tomorrow 3 4, 1 ISBasketba ll 17
1 50-News 13 3 3D-News 17, 3 so-12 0 c lock Hogh
4 so-Dr agnet 17, 5 20-World at Large 17

M

',

•'

WATER AND m1s c houlmg Co li
'1'12 5858

ROOM BOARD laundry elderly
onl~ Pnvote room Price slarts
ol $175 992 5422

25 Look toke
27 As tra l
30 Papal

say-so
20 Dmsyhke

tltf THIC::.f( 1\NICLI:$ '!
/
c:j. P.9 JJ. •"'~0 , l 40 In a queer
~ e;:f',;o ·~o
~ way
.&amp;0.,' u ,-:, . ~,. 'i:&gt; ~
fJ,fiiJ·~ ;r {_;~ DAILY CRYPTOAQ~~T: ;:- :~e:s ~oRw

•
our

19 Sultan s

~~~----------------------~-------------------------------------------38More

1:)0 You

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1979
5 50- P T L Cl ub 13 5 5~
Sunr ise Sem ester 10
6 00-700 C Jub 6,8 6 1o- Ne w s 17, 6 2~C hrl stopher
Close up 10 6 3o-Rom per Room 11
6 45-Mor nlng Repo rt 3 6 5o-Good Morning West
Vlrgonla 13, 6 5 ~C huck Wh ite Report s 10, News
13
Good Morni ng Ameri ca 613
7 DO-Today 315
Wednesday Mo r ning 8 Sc hoolles 10 Three Stooges
17
7 3o-Famlly Alfalr 10 B Oo-Capt Kangaroo B 10
Leave It To Beaver 17, Se sa m e Sf 33
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3, Phil Donahue 13 Hogan ' s
Heroes8 , Emergency0ne6 Maf ch Game 10 Lucy
Show 17
9 30--Brady Bunc h 8 Hogans Heroes 10. Green A1: res

5 4~ Farm Repor l t3

Yesterday 's Answer

name

pomllng

10

of Moses
3 f, xe cute
4 Dutc h town
5 Elegant

32 "See-saw"

plumbm~~~ 58~8

WILL CARE for the elderly
home Phone 992 7314

m eans ' bro g ht
DOWN
na m e
2I Her
Brother

27 Prophet
28 Hartebees t
29 Fnght

brodqe

MOBILE HOME repo1rs Fu rnoce s
electncol work ptpes sowed

Servoces Offered

Praose

rJVe r

bay's na m e
\ 15 Poppy coc k 1
16 Gentle
6 frog ge nus
- lamb
7 Work umt
17 Hgt
8 Ope ra
18 Conse crate
extras
20 Ve nezuela
9 Be tray
copper
the cause
cente r
12 Go round
21 Forest g1ant 16 Swiss author
22 R a bbol s
23 Buddhist
samt
25 Candotoon
26 Sororoty

HOWERY AND MARTIN EM 'i
covot•ng
septtc s y stems ~
dozer backhoe dump tru ck "
limestone gravel
blocktop "~' '
pav ng Rt 143 Phone I (bl4) !:
698 7331
I

pa rtn e r s hows t wa aces

A

Pennsylvama reader asks 1f
yo u bod seve n
No , we d o n ' t O ur pa rtner
only raosed to s pades and
unless h e h as f1ve clubs to

ace.-kmg-queen, seven

1s

not

hk el) to m a k e
( NE W~PAPE H ENTEHPH.ISE ASSN I
(Do you have a quest11:JT'I for
th e experts? Wn te Ask th e
Experts care of th iS newspa
per IndiVIdual quest1ons wfll
be an swered 1f sccompa med

by

sta mped

self addressed

en ve lopes The mos r mrerest
mg quesl1ons will be used 1n
th iS colum n and w1fl rece1ve
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN )

BARNEY

i"ATER JEST ET HALF
AN ORANGE, PAW--

,,

·
·

•

[~~~~=~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~ r~~~~~~~z~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IO

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

41 Be lgian

I Batman garb

ALLEY OOP

EXCAVATING dozer loader ond
bocl&lt;.hoe work dump trucks
ond lo boys for htre w1ll haul ..
ftll di rt to SOl i rlmes to ne and
gro11el Col i Bob or Roger Jef . 1
fers doy phone 992 7089 ntght ~
pho~~~ 3525 o r_~2-~~ _
1

WALLPAPERING AND
Ca ll742 2328

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser
vtce all moke5 992 2284 The
Fabrtc Shop
Pom e roy
Authonzed Smger Soles and
Serv•ce We sharpen SCissors

AUTOMOBI LE INSURANCE been
cancelled? Lost your ope rolors
ft ce nse? Phone992 2143

OWNER MUST S E l l - The owner 01 rnos
charmong 2 slory slone home on Mid_!lleporl
must sell now so she os offerong lhos fine
home for a low, tow pnce of $20,000. There
are 2 bedrooms (I os extril large), spacious
lovong room w fireplace, formal donong, eal
on kolchen, balh w -shower, garage &amp; a king
so zed Yifrd. Good localoon on Moll Sl. Call !he
Woseman Real Es'late Agency, Gallipolis,

446 ·3643,

r~

RNBY

$38,5(10

SNOW
TIRE SALE

ANTIQUE OAK dtmng room s u1te
Sq uar e table w1th clow fee t
chmo cpb1net w1th gloss doors
6 cho1rs Exc ell ent cond1flon
$BOO 992&lt;7500

INGEF
1

NEW LISTING - 24 acres
of beautifully secluded
land 2 year old bl level 3
bedrooms famdy room
garage home has many
other features
JUST

- - - - - - ---

Phone 992 2181

992-7Sll3
10 Years Expene~:~e
1· 191mo

SALE PRICES

STORE STOCK and equ1pment
Cosh 997 7179 ofter 9pm
992 3169

.....

Sales Rep. For
Sundtns
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd
Rac.ne, ohio
Phone 949 2118 evenmgs
after 5 p m Weekends
atter 12 noon
.
2-5 -1 mo

•ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these lou r Jumbles
one letter to eacn square to fo rm
four ordmary words

PETE SIMPSON

~om,Pettttve

Home Remodeling
General Repa1rs
Masonary Works

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

1::) ~ ~~ ~~ ®

PIANOS

Apphance

'

Carsey, Mgr

'if fi'\1~ fi5)'i}

..
~·

&amp; Famous Name Brand

HEADQUARTERS

NOW IS th e ttme' to buy 17 It
OMC Seaboard I 0 matc h ng
lrmler needs moto r work
$1250 1974 Bradley G T less
moto r $2500 W1th Po rsche
eng1ne $3500 9&lt;19 2789 e ve n
tng s

'. . . _'"Jack W

AN' TiiE NEXT IIJ~TAIJT
IT!&gt; PI5APPEA/lE()!

DIITCHMIIN

~ ORGANS

'J , one s tn Pomeroy Secluded
wo oded area o n lop of h II
Overlook s nver Water elec
tnc ovotloble 992 3886
•

STRAW
JOHN Bodey on Flat
woods Rd Pomeroy 1 m1 le
north of Ftve Patois

Pomero, Landmark

EA5Y IT ~ GONI'! ARE WE;
L051N OUR MARI!&gt;Li19 ; J
ONE SECOND IT 9 TH!:J&lt;:E:,

A!&gt; THE
I'L'IWfa

Hammond

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
For
Pr1ces

--

RALEIGH PRODUCTS Call even
•ngs 247 2813

SNOW TIRES
ON SAL EAT
POMEROY LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

DREAPIOD
!!!HOST !&gt;HIP
KNOWIJ TO

HOMESITES for sole I acre a nd
MIXI:D CONDITION I: O hoy VeQ
ry
up Mtddleporl neor Rutland
goo d quol ty
Oe l111er y
Coli 992 7 481
ov01lobl e Phone 992 7201 or
992 33oq
THREE BEDROOM fram e ho me 1n
Mtddl-:_p&lt;:'" ~ Co~ 9_?2_J~s_: . _
BROWNIN G-MA RK IV CB a nten na
tower 2 rotors watt me ter FARM FOR sole House 2 barns
D 10.t Twee he 8 rd rn •ke
trad e r larg e pond 10 acres or
l111e or Coli ltttfe Btl Baby sw
82 ocres 742 2566
~
•ng 25 b1ke 19 ~8 Cu t loss REAL ESTA1E
LOANS VA
No
Colo•s
e xcellent co nd1t1 on
mone y d own
(e ltgtbl e
9&lt;9 226S
Ve teren s) FHA As lo w os 3,,..
FARMERS NI:E D a few fo rme rs tn
do wn (all non Vete re ns a nd
th1 s a rea to !ry ACCO SEED
general publ•c ) To purchase
G reot sovmgs Wn tc or coli col
reot e state or re finance 30
lect St an Coa kl e y Rt
1
YEARS TERMS IRELAND MOR
K 1\b u r; k
OH
44637
TGAGE CO 77 E Stole St
216 276 .t 584
Ath e ns Phone 614 592 3051

VALENliNE SPECIAl I Ha mmo nd
mode l 99 12 a rgon wolnul
cobme t padded bench dual
ke yboard w1th rh yth m sect1on
many oth er e xtra s Reg ula r
$2695 speool $1895 Contact
Pete Stmp so n Su n dm s Hom
mon d Orga ns RaCine OH
949 21 18 after 5 even mgs and
alt e r 12 on week e nd s

~-

ColiN THI!&gt;,
liE noe

I WA_,T A
BeTTER LOOK
AT THAT
SPOOK 6HIP
WA6H' C MON
UP FO~WARD.

.

d

_

TH· TH· THAT
16, IF Y CAAJ
COWD~ WITH
A GHOST!

THE !&gt;I:Al .

On ••. •

Thmkmg Of Hav.ng
A New Home Built,
Contact

3 ""'NO 4 RM 1urn 1she ond un
Wooclstovt, 011 lfurrtact
f u rn 1s he d o p ts
Ph o ne
&amp;PinptiJCtFIUII
99 2 5434
Pliant : 742 J110
TWO BEDROpM kttche n furm sh
Kim White, Proprietor
e d o pt ~al l before B om ,__ _ _ _ _2o.;.&lt;S:,:1..:m=o,___ __.
992 228S
-

_ _ _(~ove A~ay __

I ME.AN

AIJOTHI!R
MVr?TeR'I OF

M~RINER6

992-2356

197'2 DATSUN 240 Z needs o ltttl e
bo dy wor k S t 750 992 31 b&lt;1

•

CAPTAIN EASY

1 12 1 mo

Beech Street
Middleport, 0.

MUST ~E ll 1977 Bu ck Elec tro
Sti ve r l oaded Astra rool Wtll
f 1nonce 1f quoltfy 304 736 :J908

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home Pork
Ro ut e :J3 nor th of Pomer oy
Lorge lots Cal l 992 7479

.....

PlllNE 742·2328

651

1962 FORD th ree quort er ton
ptckup $275 E ~e tr o moi or 540
1000 It of 2 p1 pe $200 Army
w 1nc h S750 142 3093
197'2 CHE VY IMPA LA P S P B
A C good co ndtl1 on '1 411514

~- F~ R!".! _ _ _

Depend

18 Years Experience
Wilt Make
Service C. Its

197 4 PONTI AC CA TALINA o 1r
cond b2 000 rrHj es Mak e offer
992 3S9U

............
--Service

j;luahly Work You Can

4

WA NT!=D TO buy o ld tewel y
Coil 991 5262 o r wnt C' Kay
CeCi l IH S 2nd Mt ddl oport /
OH

_

AI. 11lOMM OONST.

ROGER HYSEll.

85 7{1

rw

19/ 1 PINTO
992 6362

s 3D-C arol Burnett 3 News
Sanford &amp; Son 8 Elec
Co 20 Mary Tyler Mo're 10 Odd Couple 15
Beverly Hillbillies t7 Dqcf(lr Who 33
6 oo- News3 8,1 0 13 ,15 ABC News6 Andy Grflf lth 17
Hodgepodge Lodge 20
6 3o- NBC News 3 ts , ABC News 13 Carol Burnett 6,
CBS News 8 tO My Three Sons 17, Ove r Easy 20
7 oo-Cross Wits 3 New lywed Game 6 13 P lea se
Stand By 8, Love American Style 15, Carol Burnett
a. Friends 17 Lock Stock a. Barrel 20, Marshall U
Report 33
7 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 Lets Go to the Races 8,
Candid Camera 6, Pr ice Is Right 10 Donna Fargo
13 Gilligan s Js 15 Sanford B. Son 17 MacNeil
Leh r er Report 20,33
B oo-Movle "Two Minute Warning" 3,15 Happy Days
6 13 Horror Show 8 10 World at War 17 Austin
C lty Lim Its 20, C ltv Notebook 33
8 3o-Laverne 8, Shirley 6, 13, 9 DO-Three' s Company
6 13 College Ba•ketball 17 Academy Leaders 20,
Movie ' On The Town" 33
9 3o-Ta xi 6 13 10 Oo-Starsky a. Hutch 6 13 Paper

I

OLD ~ URNITURE •ce b n ltC '- hrov
hl rl !&gt; trnr bC'ds n ~s ~ ~ f' t('
corn r lr ll" ho •~r h n l rl ~
W 1
M () Mtlt m H1 4 Po 1r o y o
.: o tt

f

Business Services

99'/ 'lb!l9

POMH'OY
d ur ls 1np p11 cn
!&gt; Ow li mbe • Co li
Knn t Ho11 by I 446

'

TUESDAY, FEBfUARY 6,1979

WOO D
Pol(' "' mo ..
rl•o.nclt 1 10 on fo rge s I r nrl
5 17 p('• 1on Bund iC'rl ~d oh S10
p C't
101 O"IIYe red to O h ('I
Pn llrt l o
Rt 'l Pn llN oy

( !liP

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

TELET 1/SltJN
VIEWING

W,1111Cd to Buy

l iM BHf

Chose 8 10 News 20
11 00-New s 3 6,8 10 13 15 Hoga ns Hero•• ]7, Dic k
Ca vett 20 Book Beat 33
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3 15 Mo vie ' Love Bo~t t I I"
6 13 Mo vie " Dully" 10 , Mo vie Bunny O' Ha re
17 ABC News 33
12 ~o- Bana cek B 1 oo-Tomorrow 3 1 O ~ New s 13
1 3o-Mo vle ' The New Intern s ' 17 4 O~News 17,
• 25- 12 O' Cloc k H igh 17, s 2~Wor ld at Large 17

QUICKL'{ l-IE CONSULTS
lollS PHRASE BOOK ...
" I AM !-lAPP'{ TO
MEET I{OU " r-~-:J

',,"

.

"
'

-·AN' PART OF A PURPLE
AN' ALMOST A WHOLE
"AlLER

GOODY

FER HIM

ENCAANTE' DE FAIRE
VOTRE CONNA155ANCE

1968 TRAilER 12x 60 os IS $35(10
Good condttlon Call 7-42 2806
TWO BEDROOM mobile ho;;-;;
' , acre lot Garage workshop
•
Musf ' " too oppreclatel T p · "~'-­
oreo Phone614 667 3109

...

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u- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., TnesdHy, Feb. 6, 1979

Two firemen injured,
fire levels building

Iranian fighters, helicopters buzzed Tehran
t•ontin ue d with Hbout 400
By THOMAS JiliN I'
Pn$s Writer more Amer icans and 70
Ca nadians leavi ng
in
TEHRAN , Iran i AP) Iranian jet lighters and American militar y tnmsport
helicopters buzzed sections of · planes.
An Ameril.:an F.m bassy
Tehran today in a show of
spokeBman
said about 5,000
goverrunent force as tens of
Americans
remained
in lran
thousa nd s
of
defiant
marchers chanted support out of an estimated 50,000
for Ayatollah Ruholl ah when the turmoil starte&lt;' a
Khomeini;s nommee to head year ago .
In other developments:
a provisional · revolutionary
- Andrew Young, IJ.S. amregime,
The exodus of foreigners bassador to t he United
••••••••••••••••••••••
Assucia t~..&gt;d

AT BUDGET PRICES!
$58 ,

3 PC. LIVING ROOM
GROUPS

'398 • •498 • '598
PLATFORM ROCI&lt;ERS $68
SPEED QUEEN LAUIIIDRY
HEAVY DUTY - LARGE SIZE

$588

CHEST OF DRAWERS

$39

HOOVER CANISTER
10 QT. DISPOSABLE 8AG, 1.7 PEAK HP,
A.OATS ON AIR,
NO WHEELS NECESSARY!

'4495

HOOVER SWEEPER

Ry MIKE FEINSIIJ!ER movement protest were
Press Writer "generally representing what
we describe as loca l
WASHINGTON (AP ) Th ousa nds of militant problems . "
"There are others who
farmers were dealt stern
words
by
Agri culture have made ba d business
Sec-reta ry Bob Bergland judgments , paid too much
today while police stymied money for land ... others are
their tra ffic-snarling tactics seeking publicity and others
by encircling their tractors are driven by oldfashioned
with a wall of squad cars and greed ," Bergland said on
ABC-TV's " Good Morning ·
other vehicles.
Bergland
said
the . Amer'ica" program.
Meanwhile, the capital's
.demonstrators, who tied the
capital in knots Monday in a mornin g rush hour went
motorized display of force, smoothly as the farmers were
"can't get their act together denied their principal weapon
- so until they do, I'm not of protest by police who kept
going tp respond to their their tractors penned on the
individual complaints."
Mall behind hundreds o!
In the first of severa l public cruisers , buSes,, gar bage
appea ran~es in which he was
trucks, cranes and wreckers.
expected to reiterate a tough
Th e police encircled the
Carter administration line, farm vehicles as they were
Bergland said many of the parked during a rally at the
farmers who participated in Ca pitol Monday afternoon.
the America n Agricu lture The ·ta ct ic guaranteed a
smooth evening rush hour,
and there was no letup today
despite the farmers' intention
. MARKET TO CLOSE
to put the tractors back on the
RIPLEY, Ohio {A PI
Ohio 's burley tobacco market streets.
" We feel like we're in bondcloses after sales today.
age.
I don't trust anybody I
Green and damp tobacco
see
out
there," said Jerry
offer in gs Mon day fo rced
Hanning,
a farmer from near
prices to the lowest ·lev el of
Lansing,
Mich.
the season.
While the movement tried
Sales totaled 241,514 pounds
for $299,447 .30, or a 100-pound to get its machines in motion
average of $123 .90 . The again - claiming · a constitutional right to petition
previous low was 1124.53.
the government from the seat
of a tractor - the indications
were that this time the
MEET THURSDAY
farmers would find stiff
Past Officers of Racine resistance in the goverrunent.
Chapter will meet Thursday,
While Pr es ident Carter
Feb. 8, at 7 p.m. at the sy mpathiz eJi with the
Masonic Temple. There will £armers' cos~pr ice squeeze in
be a covered dish dinner.
a speech , his chief inflation
1\ssu r iah~d

ALL NEW FURN IlURE

WASHER &amp;
DRYER

'· I have nothing to do wi th
govt•rrunt:11ts (hat exist in the
Unagination of people and are
more of a joke,' ' Bakhtiar
sa id
of
Khomeini's
des ignation
of
Mehdi
Baz.:lrga n as interim prlrne
minister. "But if they start
taking action , I will respond
accordingly."
The state radio reported
that Par liament approved
diss olving the dreaded
SA VAK secret ooli&lt;"' and

$6888

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLETPORT, 0.

fighter , Alfred Kahn, told
reporters the protest did not
"bode well" for food prices.
In Congre~s, Speaker
Thomas P. O'Neill ~aid he
would listen to the farmer s'
pleas for government action·
to insure higher pri ces
although , "I thought we
passed a pretty good bill last
year ." Rep. Peter Peyser, ON.Y. , accused the farmers of
wasting 600,000 gallons of fuel
and Rep. Richard Kelly , RFla., said he would not be .
"intimidated by traffic jams
and bully tactics ."
Thousands of commuters~
including a few cabinet mem·
hers - were hours late
getting to work because of the
creeping •tractorcades ''
which, with lights glowing
and CB radios crackling,
stopped
traffic
more
effectively than any Vietnam
protest of a decade ago.
Police said the farmers
broke their agreements to let
traffic move , and when the
farmers parked Monday
afternoon on .the browned
lawn of the Mall to attend a
Capitol rally, the police
struck back. They encircled
the tractors with a wall of
vehicles.
Through. the night, no tractnrs were permitted out, a
tactic police hoped would
prevent the farmer s from
stopping traffic for a second
day.
The police- estimated 3,500
demonstrators and 1,350 vehicles - tractors, pickups,
campers, livestock trailers,
even combines - were on the

streets .
"The average guy feels
he's been very neatly
tricked," said Ted Schafer
when he learned the tractors
had been corraled. Schafer

Officials
attended
conference
SIRLOIN
STEAK

GROUND
BEEF

LB.

$}89

BONELESS

ROAST.

LB~l

FRENCH CITY

69

WIENERS

Small- Grade A

T-BONE

STEAK

L~229

EGGS ....... ?.~~~.~59~
BORDEN
12 oz. 16 Slice

LUNCH MEATS

$

CHEESE ............ l

FINE ASSORTMENT I C1IIRrhll'l16-n~
OF STORE SLICED

speeding up the corruption
tria ls of former officials.
The Oy&lt;Jver by nine F-14
jet fighters and about 100
Chinook and Huey helicopters
was th e second such show of
for ce in a week.
The planes and helicopters
passed over the marchers in
formations . The jets made
about six passes over the volatile university district, and
each time.lhe crowd shouted
" Allah Akbar" tGod is
great 1.

On Monday, Khomeini
named Razargan, a longtime
foe of Shah Mo~ammad Reza
Pahlavi, to fo.r'm a &lt;transition
government. He said it would
hold . elections for ·a
constituent assembly that
would ratify a
new
constitution abolishing the 2,500-year-old monarchy and
making Iran an Islamic
republic .
Bakhtiar told Radio ·
Tehran: " I will have no

objection
to
the
announcement
of
a
temporary government
provided this government
plays the role of a shadow
government or
future
government. But if it comes
tn action, it's a different
thing ."

· . Bazargaqcsaid his govern-

ment would be a "real" one,
not a shadow Cabinet.
The officer corps remains
.loyal to the shah and
Bl!khliar, .but some Western_
diploa ts
believe
the
commanders doubt their own
strength and are eager to find
·a way . to ,c6mpromise with
Khomeini. :
Bakhtiar's foreign
minister, Ahmed Mir Fendereski, said today Iran
will leave the 24-yearold
us."
All told, 19 farmers were CENTO alliance with Britain,
arrested and 19 vehicies were PaJtistan, Turkey and the Uni
hauled off the streets, where
they had been abandoned to
snarl traffic . One farmer was
hospitalized. Six policemen
were hurt .
·
But it was
day of
contra sts. In some parts of
town , farmers' wives in high
heels and Sunday best posed
for snapshots with the Capitol
in
the
backgroQnd .
Elsewhere police carrying
Return Jonathan Meigs
billyclubs and wearing Chapter, Daughters of
helinets and gas masks held American . Revolution, will
back farmers who screamed meet Friday, Feb. 9' at I :30
in their faces.
p.m. in the River Boat Room
One farmer held aloft ·a of the Meigs Branch of the
sign, "Give us a break, ' Athens County Savings and
Jimmy " while . another Loan.
covered over Carter's
Tracing ancestors will be
portrait at the Agriculture presented by Mrs. Thereon
Department with a banner , Johnson and Mrs. Robert
asking, "Would you buy a Ashley . The only money
used tractor from this man.?" making project of the
A farmer from HugotOn , association , a silent auction,
Kan ., summed up his case wUl he held.
with these figures : "Wheat:
Hostesses will he Mrs. Dale
1948 - $3.12 a busheL 1978 - Dutton, Mrs. Danlei .Thomas,
$3.05. Bread : 1948 - 15 cents. Mrs. Everett Hayes, Mrs.
1978 - 50 cents."
·
Charles Lewis, and Mrs.
Robert D. Craig.

Stern ·words greet farmers

Baker Furniture Has
A Budget Shop-

9'X12' RUGS

Nations, was quoted in the Prime M ani st er :")ha llvour
West German news magazine Bakhtiar .
Oer Spiegel as saying the
Khomcini 's backers said
Unite d Slates fai led "
'"'Huyser 's presence there was
forecast evenl~ in Iran be· another , example
of
cause "it didn 't wa nt to see America n intererence.
them."
Bakhtiar told the lower
- American sourc-es con- house of Parliament he would
firm ed that Gen. Robert C. remain in office "even if all
Huyser. deputy commander the parliamentary deputies
of American for ces in resign" and until he conducts
F:urope, had lert Iran after the next general election,
more than a month. Sources despite
demands . by
said he was in Iran urging the Khomeini that heresign imIranian military to support mediate!•

12 OZ. PKG.

19

.

PEPSI • MT. DEW
OR DIET PEPSI
8- 16 oz.

bottles

99e

Plus tax &amp; d(!posit

· Four officials of Drew
Webster Post 39, American
Legion , Pomeroy, were
among the some 1,500
Legionnaires and ladies of
the Legion Auxiliary attending the Ohio American
Legion''s annual mid-wint er
conference at Rhodes Center
in ColumbusSunday.
Local representatives
included Frank L. Vaughan,
eighth district Americanism
Chairman; Charles Ywatzel,
post finance officer; Leonard
Jewell, post service officer
and George Nesselroad, post
trustee.
During the
meeting
legionnaires .were briefed by
American Legion Nalional
Commander John M. Carey
of Grand Blanc, Mich., on
programs and policies of the
American Legion that have
national significance.
National Commander
Carey was in Ohio for his
official visit. · He is currently
on a leave of absence from his
position as department
superintendent at the Flint,
Mich., Fisher Body Plant,
General Motors Corporation.
. Other spea kers at the
Conference
were
Congressman Chalmers' P. '
Wylie, 15th Ohio District,
from Columbus and Jimmy
Crum , Sports Director,
WCMH-TV, Columbus.
During the program, the
Ohio Legion presented
special awards to Mrs. John
Young and Jeffrey Slovak,
both of , Columbus. Their
alertness and efforts led to
the apprehension and arrest
of the alleged kiUer of the .
Ohio Legion's Assistant
Adjutant, Joseph A. Annick,
in early December.
The conference was under
the direction of Elden 0 .
llohn of Columbus, state
commander of the 133,000mcmbcr Ohio American
Le g ion
vetera n s'
orguni:r:ation.

raises wheat, alfalfa, corn
and milo on 1,400 acres
outside Sterling, Kan.
The rally started with a
prayer and a pledge of
allegi~nce to the nag, but the
rhetoric turned rough.
The
" national
wagonmaster, ,, Gerald
McCathern of Hereford,
Texas·, urged 5,000 farmersstanding for an hour in . a
nasty wind - to use vehicles
to make their point. .
"lt is our constitutional
right to . drive our tractors/'
he shouted.
,
Catcalls and boos greeted .
congressmen who urged nonviolent tactics. One speaker,
outraged at skirmishes with
the police, said, "The people
here seem hellbent to destroy

Cotmty Court
One defendant was bound
over to the grand jury, five
were fined and four others
forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Bound over to the grand
jury by Judge Charles Knight
was Kenneth Mitchell,
Pomeroy, on a charge of
theft. Mitchell allegedly took
a battery from .a car last
week.
Fined were .James M.
Hinckley, Portland, $150 and
costs, three days confinement , license suspended
90 days, DWI; Paul M. Reed,
.Pomeroy , $15 and costs,
speed;
Raymond
C.
Schlethauf, Parkersburg, $15
and costs. -speed; Ronald
Coats, Pomeroy, $140 and
costs, license suspended for
30 days, credit for three days
confinement, DWI; Ronald
Eblin, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, wrong way on divided
highway .
Forfeiting bonds were
Dwight S. Haley 1 Middleport,
$50, no operator's license;
Eric W. Sinnett, Belpre,
Hilda Mae Roush, Letart, W.
Va., and Clarence F. Neutz·
' ling, Columbus, $35.50 each
,speeding.

OBSERVES BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Margaret (Ma)
Clatworthy,
long-time
Middleport resident, will
observe her 86th birthday
Thursday. Cards may be sent
to her at 764 S. Third Ave.,
Middleport.

SEEK LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to ,Christopher Allen
Veauger, 18, Cheshire, and
Brenda Kay Jett, 17, Minersville.
SEEK DISSOLUTION
Phillip W. Kelly and Sandra
Kelly, RD, Pomeroy, filed for
dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County common pleas
court.

Terry 'passes
written exam
Charles Terry, Chairman,
state Board of Sanitarian
Registration, announced
today thai Randall R.
Marshall, · Racine, successfully complet.ed the
written examination to
qualify for registration as a
sanitarian · · in · training.
When Marshall completes the
tequired period· of full time
employment, he can become
a Registered Sanitarian.
Marshall is currently
employed by the Meigs
County Health Department.
Registration of Registered
Sanitad11ns and sanitarians ·
in · training commenced in
Ohio on August 15, 1977,

Ancestor
•

a

tracmg

on agenda

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
GLoria
Decker, Reedsville; Emma
Cummings, Pomeroy; Sarah
Congo, Racine.
Discharged - Charles
Evans, Larry Patterson,
Beatrice Blake, Sarah Lunsford, James Grueser.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges, Feb. 5
Cathy Bellomy, Sharon
Burns, Helen Burt, Heidi
Caruthers, Helen George,
Edgar Griffiths, Mrs. Danny
Grueser and daughter,
Rebecea Hathcock, Clyde Ingels, Nora Landers, Dorothy
Lawson, Mrs. Luke McDaniel
and son, Dennis McGuire,
Mary Middleton, · Mrs. Jack
Nelson and daughter, Jeanie
Newe11 , Mrs. Charles
Orender and daughter, Daisy
Osbom, Nicholas Perry, An·
thony Petty, Joshua Queen,
Patty Rowe, Scott Scites,
Brucie Sergent, Dorothy,
Shaw, Catherine Shifflet,
MAtthew Slavens, Blanche
Sievers, Candy Swaney,
Mabel Tha xton , Linda
Wamsley.
Births, Feb. 5
Mr. and Mrs. Robert UnIon , two sons, Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. · Harold
Scarberry, son, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. Juhn Howell,
daughter, Oak Hill.

(USPS 145-960)

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Brothers Will be arraigned
GERMANTOWN, Ky. ( AP) - Two Northern
Kentucky brothers were scheduled for arraignment
today on charges of first-degree robbery in connection
with .the armed robbery of the Bank of Germantown
Tn.esday.
David Lee Wood, 25, and Donald Wayne Wood, 23,
of Silver Grove were held in the Bracken County Jail at
Brooksville, police said.

Gold hits record prices
LONDON (API - The price of gold hit a record
high of $250 an ounce in London and Zurich today amid
continued heavy buying, sparked in part by the
political uncertainty in Iran alid the continuing decline
of the U.S. dollar.
The dollar slipped some more on all money
markets in Europe and Japan, and dealers reported
buying by central banks to stem the slide .

Allies make appeals
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan ( AP) - Foreign allies
and others appealed to President Mohammad Zia ulHaq today to spare the life of former Prime Minister
Zulfikar Ali ·Bhutto, but so far there was no nationwide
rash of demonstrations in support of the political
leader facing the gallows.
.. •
·~ne U, S. goverrunent and leaders in Britain',
Turkey, Indonesia, India, Sweden, Australia and the
Uniied Na!ions appealed for clemency after the
Supreme Court, by a 4--3 vote on Tuesday, upheld the
death sentence given Bhutto for the ambush of a
political o,&gt;ponent in which the ·opponent's father was
killed

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FEB. 14tti

Elberfelds In Pome

ATHENS - Capital ex·
pa nsion proj ects totaling
·more than $4.1 million arc
planned for the Athens
district in 1979, General
Telephone Co. of Ohio announced today. Over the next
five years, $18 million is
budgeted for expansion of
telephone facilities in the
·
district.
Almost $2 million of th e
bud get is earma rk ed for
maintenance and upgrading
of the· cable distribution
facilities. There are 55 such
projects scheduled for
completion this year. said
Jim Park er. c u~omer service manager.
A reporting ce nter for
Loga n in s!a llation , repa ir
and construction crews will
be buill this year. It will he
bord ered by Elm Street on
the cast and Eulalia Avenue
on the west near Fourth
Street intersection. It also
will se rve as a vehicl e
parking and fueling facility
and accommod ate some
equipment storage.
Nearly $660 ,000 will be
spent for ca ll -processing
equipment. One of the largest
installations will be in Logan
where ~600 lines arc being
added lvith 300 terinals for
new phone numbers.
A major p' oj ect planned
for Albany and TI1e Plains -

Chauncey will provide single
and two-party line cus.tomcrs
with ·automatic processing of
long-distance calling information for billing purposes.
The exchange building at
Cuysv ille will be expanded
this year to hou se additional
ca ll-switching equipment for
use by eustomero in 1U80.
Loga n and Pomeroy will be
brought - on line with
General' s " traffic data
system ." This test equipment
will enable company employees to check the quality
or service, Parker sa id. He
expla ined that the chec king is
done long distance by a
com puter lo ca ted in the
finn's Marion hCadquarters.
Athens already is a part of
the system.
Installation of a second
type of remot e test equipment will be installed in the
district's other exchanges. It
will allow employees in
Athens to test lines when
isolating a reported case of
trouble
·
"The bi ggest challenge is
prov iding equipment for
remote 1 parts of our exchanges," Parker said. " We
serve expanding suburban
areas and customers who
build in rural locations expect
reliable telephone service.
And more customers are

Teng caught American cold

party items
from Hallmark help you
celebrate Valentine's
·Day, Wed., Feb. 14!

ToKYO . (AP) - 'Chinese Vlce Premier Teng
Hslao-pinli, suffering from a cold caught during ~is
visit to America, went to bed early "to conserve his
energle!l" for bilks with Japanese leaders Wednesday,
·
a Foreign' Minlslt.f spokesman said.
The 74·y~r.old Chinese leadef, who arrived
Tuesday from' Seattle vla Ancborage after his eightday U. S. tour, canceled a dinner engagement with
Foreign Minister Sunao Sonoda and immediately went
to bed, according to the spokesman.

Judge choices pleasing
WASHINGTON (Al') - Although Presiden\Carter
promised blacks they would he "well pleased" with his
chtiiCI!S for new federal circuit judgeships, thi! first 14
prospective judges recommended by his selection
.
panels are white.
A compilation of recommendati~ns by panels for
the :lrd, 7th and lOth U, S. Circuit Courts of Appeal was
relealled Tuesday by the Judlcian Selection Project, a
. IIJ'Oup of individuals from civil rlghts, public interest,
labor and women's organizations.

store , suffered smoke
" If it had not been for these
damage .
I
, ladder trucks we would have
Treated at the scene for lost a lot more .. .it was hard to
smoke inhalatiOn was Mason get inside,'' James said.
Firemen, including 26 from
Fireman Robert John son .
Taken to Pleasant Valley New Haven, battled the fire
Hospital was Pomeroy for over an hour and a half.
Fireman Cha rl es Ba rtles,
This morning, James
who was trea ted for a issued this statement.: "I'd ·
reported leg injury and later like to thank all assi•ting fire
released.
departments and commend .
The New Haven Depart- them on what a fabulous job
ment arrived on the scene at they did. As close as those
around 7:30 p.m. J ames building are this coulg have
described the scene then as been a major disaster."
According to Mildred
"heavy black smoke pouring
out of every opening."
Gibbs, an historian from
"The smoke was 'iO heavy Hartford who has writtne
that people in the surroun- hi stori es on Ma son and
ding area had to be Hartford, and is currently
evacuated ," James sa id. '· researching one on New
"Deputy Chief Pat Fields Haven, the building was
iinmediately surveyed the constructed approximately 30
area
and ca ll ed
fo r years ago by the late Herman
assistance. "
Layne and his brother Harry.
A.sbiance came from the "lt was used for that purpose
Mason. Pomeroy and Ripley (meaning a movie theater )
fire departmen\s. This in· until a few years back when
eluded ladder trucks from movies became unprofitable
Ripley and Pomeroy, which due. to television," she said .
According to Mrs. Gibbs,
according to James helped to
prevent a worse situation the
th eater
sa t apfrom occurring.
(Continued on page 14)

-- -----

•

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1979

15 CENTS

has
l
·
d
•
h
p an
· .n e ma1or c . anges

PLYMOUTH, Mass. (AP) -Despite a contemptof-court threat, the parents of Cbad Green were not
expected to show up in court today or tO -produce the ,
leukemia-stricken boy they took to Mexico for Laetrile
treatments two weeks ago.
Under Judge Guy Volterra's order, the Greens
would be in civil contempt of court for failure to
appear. Their attorney, George Donovan, said
Tuesday that the couple failed to show up for an
appointment Monday to have their son, Chad, tested
for cyanide poisoning in Chicago.

Celebrate
Valentine's
Da I . ·

© 1979 Hallmark Card$, Inc,

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY.
OHIO
.

Chad's parents u:on 't show

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'

·;.

enttne

at y

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)- An unemployed rock
band sound technician and a farmer remained in jail
without bQOd today as ,the prosecution prepared its
case for a grand jury In connection with the deaths of a
Miami, Fla., couple.
Butler County Prosecutor John Holcomb said he
would present the case to the grand jury, which is
expeCted to make its report Friday. Gary Morningstar ,
33, asked for a court-appointed attorney. Allen Scott,
27, said he was a self-employed farrher and that hiS
family would provide legal counsel. The two were
extratlited from Nashville, Tenn.

• ' fir
~....,.;-JL

Send Your

•

VOL. NO. XXIX NO. 207

Suspects remain jailed

ELBERFELD$
-ft«.U........-..t.

- - ---· - -

Nationwise~------.General . Telephone

{Continued from page I)
expand inner-city jobs from
taxes
which
are
counterproduct"ive to expansion/ ' he said.
An "all out effort" will be
pursued to see the physically
handicapped
rehabilitated
and hired, the governor .
promised. He referred to
pending legislation for
reh~bilitation of Injured
workers which he said would
provide them ••a new lease oo
life."
Extensive coal research
and development should he
pursued to develop "practical
alternative methods for
burning Ohio coal, while
protecting the health of
:Ohioans," Rhoiles said.
: He called for reform of the
·Ohio Lottery and said he soon
·would seek legislation to im. provement its management.
1 He explained ·plans to improve programs for senior
citizens, including a 76
percent increase in funds for
the Commission on the Aging .
· In closing, Rhodes said his
budget , which will be
presented Wednesday , will
include a proposed $188
million pay increase for state
employeeS' and will "unlock
the salary status of some
. 30,000" state workers, He
outlined benefits for slate
employees that will include
improved health insurance,
sick leave provisions,
personal leave days a year ,

~

RUSSELL MOORE , CHAIRMAN of a committee from Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, left, to provide American fla gs for classrooms of the Meigs and Eastern
Local School Districts, Tuesday night presented 83 fla gs to Dwight Goins, center ,
administrative assistant, and Charles Dowler, right, superintendent of the Meigs Local
District. Goins will distribute the fla gs tn classrooms of the Meigs Local District.

e

Rhodes •••

Hospital News

LC"l l 979

· Registered' sanitarians and·
sanitarians - in - training are
professionally trained Individuals tha! work to protect
the public from the factors in
our environment that cause
illness, injury or undue
emotional stress.

.
ROD KARR, RIGHT, commander of Drew Webster
Post 39, _American Legion, Tuesday night presented Clark
Lees, superintendent of the Eastern Local School District,
with 36 American flags to he used in the classrooms of the
district. The two by three foot flags were presented as a
_Part of the Post's Americanism program.

NEW HAVEN - The old
New Haven Theatre, a landmark building in th•t community and now se rving as a
wa rehouse, was destroyed by
fire Tuesda y evening.
Cause of the blaze, . which
also resulted in minor injuries to two fireman, had not
been determined as of this
morning.
According to William C.
James, fire chief of the New
Haven ' and · . Com·munity
Volunteer Fire Department,
an in vestigation into the
causes of the £ire is continuing . The building is
located on Main Street.
The building, which has not
shown movi es · now for
several years, was serving as
a warehouse for the New
Haven Furnitu re Co. , which
is owned Chad Humphries.
While no estimates of
damage were available this
morning. James said damage
was extensive and both the
contents and building were
destroyed. Besides this
building, the New ' Haven
Laundry Mat, located next

.

CENTER WILL BE USED - A $14,000 Multimedia
Driver Education Training Center wlli be put into use in
the three local .school ·districts of Meigs County. ·The
equipment was secured by the office of Meigs County
Superintendent of Schools Robert Bowen. It Is one of 43
such centers available in Ohio through funds provided by .
the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. The
equipment . integrates audio-visual programs with
microprocessor electronics for a complete, totally new
conce~t of teaching driver education. Pictured Tuesday at

'"

ask ing for priv:Jte lin es," he
added.
About 67 percent of Athens

.

distri ct's custom ers have
one- or two-party telephones
(Continued on page 14I

Council okays
.
.
approprzatzons ·
-

,
A budget in the amount of $134,161.34 was
a pprov ed when Syracuse Village Council met
Tuesday night.
On the first reading of the appropriation
ordinance, it passed by a 4-2 vote with John Arnott
and Mick Ash voting no.
Following a very lengthy discussion, council
gave the necessa ry two reeadings for passage
under emergency measure.
. Council , in other lmsiness, again discussed
increasing water rates.
1
It was indicated that rates possibly would be
raised $ 1 a month for residents and non-residents
and 25 cents a month for persons 65 or .over .
However , no official action was taken.
An ordinance calling for a water increase will
be drawn up for council action.
Attending were Mayor Eber Pickens , Troy
Zwilling, Herman London, John Arnott, Kathryn
Crow, Mick Ash, Jimmy Joe Hemsley , council
members ; J a ni ce Lawson , clerk ; George
Holman, treasurer, Doug Hemsley and Naomi
London . ·

HONORED - Probate Juqge Manning Webster was
honored on his retirement Tuesday by all Meigs County
Employes, county commissiOners, attorneys and theit
secretaries. Judge Webster was presented a cake
decorated with a replica of the courthouse and'! camera .
Webster began his duties as judge in August 1972. Prior to
that he was a practicing attorney in Pomeroy for 40 years.
Judge Webster stated "I have had great satisfaction in
working in the courthouse with all employes especially
Mrs. Janet Morris, Mrs. Carolyn Thomas, ·Mrs. Ann
Watson and Carl Hysell. Judge Webster's last day will be
Thursday. Mrs. Morris and Mrs. Thomas were in charge
of the occasion. Shown with Judge Webster is his wife,
M~y .

Eastern board
releases report

The larg est sing le ex·School offi cials in the
Eastern Local School District penditure in the area of the
have released some fina ncial school plant was the
data about general fu nd replacement of the roof at the
completed Chester building. That
expend it ures
during the calendar year proj ect cost the school
district $18,538.
1978.
Transportation costs
General fund expenditures
amounted
to $137,052 for
are report ed in five
salaries
and
other expenses
categories ; general control.
related
to
operation
and
t3'i' percent of tota) general
fund expenditures), in· . maintenance of school buses.
Fixed charges amounted to
struction (57 percent ),
•
operation of plant (10 per- $163,657 '
Expenses in this area in·
cent 1, maintenance of plant
(3% percent ), transportation elude deductions payable to
t 12 percent 1, and fixed the Employees Retirement
System, deductions payable
charges (14 percent ).
to
the co unty board of
In the area of general
education
, and deductions
control the board spent
by
the
County Auditor
made
$43,730 for expenses in the
for
school
election
costs,
area of administrative
Compensation,
Workmen's
peratlon, including salrles for
the superintendent, clerk- County Auditor 's and c.,
treasurer, secretaries and Treasurer's fees , and other
supplies. Instructional ex• insurance costs.
The school district paid ·
penses in the areas of salaries
$849,639
In salaries (for all
for teachers, principals,
employees
), hospitalization,
secretaries, textbooks, work·
··benefits
for
all .employees
books, supplies and library
retirement
· payments.
and
· materials. Over $18,000 was
76 percent
This
amounted
to
spent for textbooks, supplies,
of
the
total
expenditures
from
and equipment in the area of
the
general
fund
.
The
instruction. The board spent
beginning
teacher's
salary
in
$110,454 in the area of
operation of plant {schools ) the Eastern School District is
for salades of custodians, a state low of $8,900, and the
cost for beat, utilities, average salary is $1,158
telephone, supplies, and other below the state average.
The scho ol district's
outside services.
passage
of an emergency II).
Thirt y-t housand eight
a seminar held at Eastern High School were left to right,
mill
levy
last June has been
hundr ~d forty-six dollars was
James Ray Lawrence, Southern Drivers Ed instructor ;
providing
.the district with
spent for repairs .and
Mike Wilfong, Meigs local Drivers Ed instructor; Dennis
$270,000 (local
approximately
replacement of buildings,
Eichinger, Eastern Drivers Ed instructor; C. P . York of
money
plus
state bonus
mamtenance ·of equipment,
the State Department of Education; Larry Cathill, State
money
for
passage
of the
outside services related to
Department of Education, and George Hagerman,
in
badly
emergency
levy)
ma\ntenance and repair of
equipment demonstrator . Forty students can be taugtit at
needed
additional
funds
buildings, and the cost of one
once and there are some 20 lessons provided. There is no
cost involved locally except maintaining insurance on the
full-time employee in the during the period July, 1978
(Continued on page 14)
center.
lllll intenance department.

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