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0
r'

.
Invasion force eliminating any resistance
.

KARACIU, Pakistan (AP) - The
Soviet inviaion force In Afghanistan
was reported today to have launched
an all-out drive to eliminate
resl.ttarM:e as the United States
moblllzecl a diplomatic offensive in
relpCII8e to the Rlmslan Intervention
In the Ceiltral Allan country.
Karachi's
English-language
neWipllper Dawn quoted Informed
sources In Islamabad, Pak~ as
saying the Soviets are 111 the move to
clear pockell of guerrilla resistance,
block escape routes, and crush all
qlpOIWon to the puppet.reglme the
Ruulans installed in Kabul last
week.
The Soviet troops are engaged In a
JD118Sive anti1!UerriDa movement In
the piovlnces of Nurtstan and

·Kuhar, which b&lt;rder the Chltral
district of Pakistan and where the
Soviets suspect the Moslem
guerrillas are operating, the paper
said.
Up to last week's Soviet~ed coup
In Afghanistan, the two provinces
were Inaccessible to Alfllan govern·
ment forces. But nOIY the well·
equipped, modem ·Russian army
unlll are fighting to make major
headwsythere, the report said.
The Soviet occupati111 forces are
using ~p-climbing mechanized
columns to battle the anti·
govenunent forces, which are
operating frcm the mountalno~m
regions with small and wtdated arms, the newspaper added.
It also said the Kremlin regards

against the Moslem guerrillas, who
lately have pined both in nmnericai ·
strength and captured territory.
The few Western reporters in
Kabul, the Afghan capital, were not
being allowed to send any information out. But in the wake of the
Soviet-eupported coup last Thursday
which lnatalled Afghanistan's third
communist government in 31 months, Soviet troops have been reported under attack in the n&lt;rthem,
northeastern, western and soutHern
parts of the country.
No confirmed est'ffnates of
casualties were · available.
Diplcmats in New Delhi or Afghan
rebel soi,II'CeS in Pakistan repu-ted
250 Soviet troops killed &lt;r wounded

•

e
(USPS 145-960)

'
in Kabul during the coup; more
than
310 Soviet soldiers · and 63 Moslem
guerrtllas killed in ~htlng in the
Konar dlst.·ict, facing Pakistan's
historic Northwest Frontier; 35
Moslem guerrillas ·and a number of
civilians killed in Soviet air attacks
in the n&lt;rtheast, and too guerrillas,
a Soviet general and large numbers
of Soviet and Afghan troops killed in
fighting last Saturday in the northem province of Takhar, on the
Soviet border.
The Pakistani newspaper Jang
said the Moslem rebels claimed the
capture of a mllltary base at Chighai
Sera!, on the Paklstanml border
near the Khyber Pass, after a threeday battle In which an Afghan army
brigadier general and nine other of-

this winter as crucial in its offensive

at y
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 182

'

ficers deserted to the rebels.
The paper rworted fighting .between Soviet and Afghan army tr!IOP8
at Barikot, ~o near the Khyber
Pass, and said Soviet forces recaptUred a post in Badakshan province,
near the Soviet and Chinese borders
after 90 hwrs of fighting and heavy
casualties on both sides.
A Western diplomat In New Delhi
said he had reports of clashes between Soviet and Afghan troops in
Kandahar, In southern Afghanistan; ·
Jaialabad, between Kabul and the
Pakistani border, and Herat, ·in the
western part of the country, where
at least 60 Soviet troops were killed
in an uprising last March.
Estimates of the number of Soviet
~ in Afghanistan ranged from

35,000 to 45,000, with 26,000 more
wsiting oo the Soviet side of the northem border if needed.
· The Soviet government poured
forces into the country ~ then
replaced the communist government that had been in power only
Uiree moriths. President Haflzullah
Amin was executed, and Babrak
Karma!, another commun!Jt, was
called home from exile In
Czechoslovakia to replace him. ·
Amin, who was prime minister
before he ousted President Nur
Mohammad Taraki In September,
was rwlaced because he had been
unable to put down the rebellim by
Moslem fundamentalists that broke
out after the coummunlst overthrow
of Pt'esldent Mohammad Daoud In
Aprll1978 .

entine
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 2, 1980

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Grocery bills climb
10 percent in 1979
'

By LOUISE WoK
-~Jated Press Writer
·
19'19
with a surge in supers that boosted family
market '
grocery bills to a level almost 10 percent higher than at the start of the
year, an Associated Press marketbasket survey shows. The December
increase was the secmd largest of
the year, topped only by the January
rise.
The AP drew up a random list of
ccmmonly purchased food and omfood items early in 1973 and checked
the price at one supermarket In each
of 13 cities on March 1. The prices
have been rechecked on or about the
start of each succeeding month.
The latest survey showed that the
marketbasket bill increased during
~mber at the checklist store in 11
cities, ris!nf an !!_~ran. of 3.2 per.cent. 'lbe ~ill declfnecnn orily two
cities - Dallas and Philadelphia -

'

State and Federal funds ranging well over a million
dollars. The land,· and a large portion Gf the money
used to build the college, was donated by Isaac
Carletm,sr. In about 1865. The first graduating class
frcm the three-fear high school at the college was In
1887. The new school for the mentally handicapped is to
be named Carleton School. A Carleton College Board of
Trustees, with 21 members, continues in exlstl!nce
today.
'

Waldheim receives no
speedy release signs

•

Holiday death toll
exceeds prediction~ .
Traffic accidents during the fourday New Year's weekend took 4Tl
lives - a toll exceeding advance

No traffic deaths
PONTA DEI.GADA, Azores
(AP) - A strong earthquake hit
Portugal's Azores Islands In the
mid·AtlanUc '1\J.&amp;ay, crumbling
IJullclqa and killing at least 52
per10111, oftlciall reported. They
said men than 110 were Injured.
Tbe U.S. Air Force base at
IAjel on Terceira Iiland suffered .
miDcJl" ilamage .and no American
miUtary peraoll!l(!l &lt;r their
dependents were reported Injured, according to an Air Force
spokesman In Washington. He
said Air Force dlsastei' rellef
teams were sent from the base to
aid clvlllan l"eeiCCIe crews.

First homicitk
CLEVELAND (AP)
lanldde detectives
.are l.nveltigatq the dty 'I firlt
mmfdde of 1110, the smot~ng
death of Aaron L. Hallman, 14,
killed j ..t minutes after tbe start
Gf the 11811' year.
' ..
Pallce lllid the teenatl'r and
rQemben Gf hill family left their
hame to 110 to a nllghborhood
telilpM• booth to make a call to

Cleveland

tbeboy'l~otber.

WbiJe they were waaq to the
booth, tbe boy ... struck in the
throat by .22-callber bullet

LOcked in trunk
HOVBTON (AP) - A 81-year-

olil Qal......, man 1811 be• wu
lodDid lD tbe tnmk G( JU tui by
two ...... ,...... . , . without
food or waw; ..mq near-

....,.ataru
before
-~

fr • &lt;•

.

be

lllarl Blue Sr... . pul}ed fnlln
biB _, about 1 ~ Mlllda1 after ..moe. _.... owner Jolll
·Kartll beeMie curicRia about the
tal Jllkld on hiB lot lin~ Tlwr, . , akDoon, llltii«;!Uea said.

recorded in area

estimates by the National Safety
. Council.
The highest toll for a.New Year's
weekend of the .same length was 481
ln1969.
The safety council had estimated
311 to 440 persons might die on the
nation's streets and highways bet~ 6 p.m. Friday and midnight
'l'u!!sday.
During a rion..OOUday weekend of
the same length at this time of the
year, 4al deaths could be expected,
the council said.
Ayear ago, ~ p«q~le were killed
dllflng a three-day holiday period,
Tiie record New :Year's weekend
toll was 584 during a three-day
weekend in 1985.
..

dropping an average of 1 percent.
On an overall basis, the marketbasket bill at the checklist stores increased 2.6 percent during December. That was the worst ffilllthly
boost since January 1979 when the
marketbasket bill went up ·2. 7 percent.
f '
The AP check showed the marketbasket bill increased during nine oi
the 12 mmths of 1979; the ooly
decreases came in February, June
and October. Comparing today 's
totals with those at the start of the
year, the AP fpund the average
marketbasket bill at the checklist
store ro11e 9. 5percent.
The food items 111 the list rose
faster than the non.foods. When the
noo.foods were excluded from the
totals, the marketbasket bill at the
·checkliSt stofll,MlQW,eQ a 12 percent
illcrease dilr'ing 19'19.
.
Perk prices declined or remained

Unlike the rest of the Buckeye
State and nation, no traffic fatalities
were Investigated over the long New
Year's Holiday period in the GalllaMeiga County Area.
'three accidents were investigated
Monday and 1'ue!lday by the Gallla
Meigs Post, HighWay PatroL
An auto operated by 'l'!lcmas R.
Smith, 17, Bullard, Texas wss
demolished Monday during a one·vehicle acicldelt on MW Cftek 1\d., · Meanwhile, at least 23 pe~ns ,nlne.teitths · of a mile ncirth Gf seven of them pedestrians -died In
Gallipolis. ·
Ohio traffic accidents during the 100- ·
Oilledtothesceneat8:30p:m.,of- hour New Year's holiday weekend,
fleers repGit Smith's south bound . the Highway Patrol says.
vehicle struck a bridge railing, and
The toll, kept by tbe patrol from 6
ran iB tbe rigIt aide of the roadwsy p.m. Friday uJtil midnight Tuesday,
into a creek. No citation was issued.
also Included three double-fatality
Officers Investigated a two- mishaps, one of them Including two
vehicle mishap In Melga County on d the pedestrians;
·
The dead:
SR 6111, four-tenths of a mile east of
SR 7,at6:30p.m.~onday.
.
'IUESDAY
The patrol reports a west bwnd
CINCINNATI - Cathy Davis, 8,
vehicle operated by Robert Saun; when struck by a car 'near her
dei'S, 51, Reedavllle, litruck an auto 1n Qndnnati.
owned IIY Harold Smith, 31, Reed- .. CLEVELAND - John Smith, 50,
svllle, '!bleb was stalled on the road- of Cleveland, when struck by a car
way.
.
.
111 a Cleveland dt)t'atreet.
Sa111ders ~ dted on.a charge of
RAVENNA- nmothy L. Jeffery,
no operator'a lict~~~e. There was 13 months of Ravenna in a one-car
· MVere damage to tbe Saundera auto, • · crash on ~ tonhlp ~ in Portage
County. ·
·
lllght damage to the Smith vehicle.
Offlcen were callld to the acene of
MONDAy
atwo-vehlclu ........ aaTRII,twoCOLUMBUS- Michael A. Shaw,
taltbf.ofa mile .uh Gf ~Valley :11, Gf Westerville,ln a
cruh
· Rd., Tueadar,aU:411p.m. ·
onaColumb•street.
·, 'lbe patrol reports • lOUth bound
SPRINGFIELD~stephenCaaUe,
vehicle ddwn· by MIC:bMJ IAWIOII, -11, !)I Sprlnglleld, In a c:ar.uuck
II, Vinton, 11'81t left (I(· center and collislononaSpnngfieldatreet..
~truck a parked auto owned by Doria
CINCINNATI - Malilla Doyle,.
J. Bn11'8f, 34, Vlntcn The IAwaon 2( of Cincinnati, In' a t~r acalllo conlinued andstruck a tree.
,. ddent on a Cincinnati CitY, street.
IA'II'Ion was cited on a charge of ·
COLUMBUS- Aileen' Caqlente~.
left of ce.oter. '11here wu severe
Tl, Of Akr~. ·in.a two-car crash
--.e· liD the IAWIOII auto, Morse and Sunbury Road,ll In
moderate damatl' to the Brewel"' •Franklin Coldy.

TEHRAN, Iran . (AP) - U.N. others on his arrival '1\Jesday: "I
Secretary-General Kurt Waldhelm hope to find the meam and the wsys
talked with Foreign Minister Sadegh to solve the crisis." But 'he added:
Ghotbzadeh for nearly three hours
"You C8MOt expect from such a firtoday, but there was no sign Gf a
st visit to solve Immediately all
speedy release f&lt;r the American problems. You have got to be
· hostages, now In their 60th day of
realistic."
captivity.
He cited U.S.-Iranian relations,
"We had an exchange of views
''the grievances of the Iranian
over tbe hostage crisis," Waldhelm . people in relation to the previo~m
said afterward. Ghothzadeh told the
regime," and the seizure of the U.S.
secretu-y-general at the end of their
Embassy and its staff among ''the
session, "Your Ideas .have helped,"
very serious problems that will have
but did not elaborate.
to be discussed if the way can be
This a(temoon Waldheim was
paved for the solution of the crisis. "
scheduled· to vlait a museum of
Ghotbzadeh reiterated before
atrocities allegedly CU11mltted unWaidhelm 's arrival that he con. derthereglmeoftheo~shah.
sidered the secretary.general's visit
"I've come to see·what I can do " a fact~ mission only, to hear
'
r
the secretary-general told a reporter
lran'scase against the United States
as he arrived at -the Foreign and Shah Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi,
Ministry for his first meeting with
and not one of medlstion and
Ghotbzadeh.
negottati.on. Although Waidheim
Waidhelm told Ayatollah Ruhollah said he had information indicating
Khomelnl's f&lt;reign minister and
(Continued on page 12)

home

two:car

a'

velilcle.

· . ,

\.
·•

QUIET S'l'REETS - Pomeroy Vllllge slde-plb
New Year's Day f•
they j..t weren't being uied ·u residel'ts apparently

Dll7 jult bave been well rolled up

•

stable during much of the year, but
the demand finally caught up with
supply in December. The AP survey
showed that the price of pork cbops ·
increased last month at the checklist
store in nine cities. ~gs - another
~ular substitute for beef - also
cootinued to increase, rising in price
at the checklist store in 10 c!Uea
during December.
The AP survey list originally InCluded 151teriiS .~oneTiem, chocOlate
chip cookies, was dropped from the
list at the
of November 1977, ·
however, beCause the manufacturer
discontinued the package size used ·
in the survey.
No attempt wss made to weight
the AP survey results ace&lt;rding to
popllation density or in terms of
what percent of a family's actual
grocery outlay each Item represents. TheAPlllctnotUytocompare·actual prices from city to dty. The
only cunparisons were made In terms of percentages of increase &lt;r

end

decrease.
The items on the AP checklist
were : chopped cluck, center cut

pork chops, fnrten orange juice concentrate, coffee, paper towels, butter, Grade-A mediiUil white eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, milk, frankfurters and
granulated sugar. The clUes
checked were: Albuquerque, N.M.,
Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, ......,....,,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami,
York, Philadelphia, Providence,
R.I., Salt Lake City and Seattle. ·

Oath administered
The osth of office was given toflw
reelected officials and one new town
officer at Mlddlep&lt;rt Village Hall
Monday evening.
Admlnlstering the oath was Manning Kloes1 Middleport banker, to
.Mayor Fred Hoffmar), councilmen,
Carl Horky and William Wallierl;
board of public affairs membera,
Freddie Hwdashelt· and Tcm Anderson and to the new clerktreasurer Jon Bock.

•

�.,.-.
J·

3- The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Porreray ,0., Wednesday, Jan . 2, 191l
2,. The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday . Jan. 2. 19ilo

A crime to

In Washington

keepqu~et

;

By Roben Wallen

greater than in the field r1. ''whille

any federBJ department or agency

collar" or corporate crime, a has examined tbe esped•l)y WASHINGTON (NEA) • "For
shameful situation documented in a sitlve area of ccrporate criminality.
great wra~gdoing, " proclaimed lhe- .. landmark report recently published • The study of "Dlegal Corpm-ate
Greet historian ll~rodotus, ''there
by the Justice Depl!rtment's Law Behavicr," Involving a detailed
are · great punishments from the . Enforcement Assistance Ad- analysl.a of the legal record of the
country's 582largest publicly owned
gods." But now that' mere mortals
mlnlstraticn
__ are.Jn cbargp of tbe criDIIUal justice
The IEAA.'.I detailed study, . corporatima in the mid-19701, shows
system, no such equities t•llst.
directed by Unlwrsit' of W'ISCOilllin that during one brief two-resr
Nowhere has the disparity .betsociology prdeasor Marsball B. period more than 8l percent of the
ween crime and punishment been
Clinard, marks the fint time- that cocporatlcms were accused rl.
~olatlng a federal law.
The allegation&amp; included aerious
crimes such aa fraudulent securities
practice&amp;, income ta:r fraud, financial manipulations, advertlaing
misrepresentatlm, antlcompetltiw
practices, air and water polh1tim,
food and drug law violations and the
payment of illegal kickbacks,
rebate&amp; and bribes.
''Ccrporate crime COlts nm Into
the bi1110111 of dollars," the report
notes, although precise figures are
difficult to obtain. Estimates range
from a Senate subcommittee's $3Xl
billion to the Justice Department 'B
'
We often see' reference In the ground and converted to steam On- appromnatlcm of $10 bWion to $20
medis to so-called "e:rooc" sources ce converted to steam the geotherbillion.
of energy, sources that take mal energy ill used to drive turbines
Regardless of which figure ill uselaborate steps )II produce. Until • that generate power.
ed, however, tbe cmtraat betwem
At present tbere are various corporate crime and "street crime"
recently such~te ~made
geothermal
projects underway
!he production of moat such resourill both striking and dlsturJan«.
around
the
country,
projects that
ces ecnomically ~ractlcal. llut
The losses incurred by the vlctlma
now, with the spiraling cosm mcon~ some energy experts feel will of the more conventional classes rl.
ventional energy supplies being greatly accelerate lhe devel~ment
crime are relatively mundane
what they are, these skalled of this source of energy. Some ex- -approximately $450 In a typical
exoocs are receiving increasing at- perts are predicting that the poten- burglary, $250 in an armed robbery
tial exists to derive as much as five
tentlorL
·
and $150 In a larceny case -: but
One such "exotic," which to date to seven percent of our nation's
those cmvlcted of such crinnea 8re
has been given only passing referen- energy needs from geothermal sour- routinely sentenced to prison terms
ces In the yean ahead.
ce in the news, Is geothermal power.
of flw to 10 year11 or lcmger.
One of the larger projects un"
Moat think of geothermal power as
Yet wljte collar crlminala consteam power, but power generated derway ill located «&lt; miles north of victed of d!!fraudlng, stealing or
Albuquerque, New Meslco. In a joint looting milllaJB cl dollars seldom
by the release of steam from deep
beneath the earth's swface. "Old venture, private enterprlae and the
face such harsh penalties. ''Few
Faithful," that famed geyser in federal govenmient are drilling members of corporate management
Yellowstone National Park, ill -an wells into the Jemez Mountains In ever go to prison, even If cmvlcted,"
e:rample of this fonn' of geothermal ocder to tap a major hot water reaer- tbe lEAA report says.
vW'. The U. S. Department of
power. In northern California• a
Amcmg those Incarcerated, the
power plant genera~ by steam Energy is splitting the $125li'illlloo
longest prison tenns were six-month
derived from a geysel- field presen- cost of the project with Unim Oil of sentences imposed on two exCalifocnla and the Public Service
tly produces 6«1 megawatts r1.
ecutives. Three others were sentencCompany of New Mexico. The
power, enough to supply electricity
ed to 80, 45 and 30 days in prison. The
project is a:pected to generate 50
for more than 650,000 residences.
average sentence for the remaining
megawatts of power by 19112.
Unfoctunately there are UJ)y a very
11 e:recutives was e:raclly niiledays •.
UnW recently the cost of
few locations that lend themselves to
''Ordinary" criminals invariably
generating electricity from hot
!hill type of power productlm.
lose their jobs after being convicted,
water has been problbltive when
More coinmonly. geothermal
but the LEAA study found that 12 m
cOOJp&amp;red to alternate sources · of
development has' focused on the use
21 executives convicted of making Ilenergy. Much of the cost of
of .hot water reservoirs, pools of
legal campalgn cootributims redeveloping this re&amp;OIII'Ce is tied up In
water trapped beneath the earth's
mained In their original corporate
ezploratory drilling. Union Oil
surface that can be piped from the
JIOIIItioos a year later, while two
)'eiiOI1B lis New Mexico wells cost
others were retained as "conappro:rlmately f1 million each, and
sultants." Only seven retired,
they had to drill18 such wells for this
resigned or. were dlsmi"ed from
project. other noteworthy geother·
their jobs.
1'1111 projects underway include
The typical penalty against corwll'e(! 10 megawatt projects in the
poratioos In such cases ill a requireImperial Valley in Southern Califor.ment that its officers sign a consent
nla, all of which are scheduled to
agreement. a harmless legal docubecome ~alive S&lt;me time this
ment in wblch the company proyear.
mises not to commit the crime in
&lt;XJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Ul!e any energy SOIII'Ce, geother- questlm In the future -but is not reJamesA. Rhodes'penchantfoc,state mal energy raises some en- quired, to admit violating the law in
construction projects to generate · vlronmental coocerns and obthe past.
"jobs and progress" ill legend, but jections. Generally geothennal
For those who argue that such lerecently he turned his attentim to . projects require e:rttnslve tand
nient punishment is appropriate .
ways In which some e:t1st1ng public clearing, clearing which often mars
because white collar criminals do ·
buildings could be used more ef- the appearance of thole lands that
not threaten others with bodUy hann
ficiently.
have bee!) dlsrupl@d. In that such
oc injury, the LEAAstudynotes that
He created a special state task for- projects are normally located In
corporate crimes Involving unsafe
ce and gave It six mooths to study scenic mountain areas this has been
work places and uncontrolled
how Ohio •s more than 5,0111 schools an often voiced criticism.- .Also
releases of to:rlc oc carcinogenic
could be used for pllrj)OIIes other energy e:rperts are at111 not sure
agents can result in Illness, Injury
1hane~catloo.
what effect the pumping of huge
anddeath. ·
The nine member panel, quantities of water from the ground - What can be done to establish a
eatabllshe(l under an executive or- will have on nearby water supplies. , more equitable and unlfOIUl system
der last m&lt;Jnth, has until July 1)o. Nordotheyknowwhatthelongtenn
of crlmiDaljuatlce? The report sugreview possible alternative uses ·for '" ••':eflililJ'!III,ile:~,wl itseU -"!,ill it _ gfilta..a .IIJI!Ilber of remedies, In·
vacant school butldings or for the ex- cause slgliflcant land suDsldence?
eluding the use of consiuner
panded use of facilities still in
Admittedly, these are valid conpressure and publicity as sanctions.
operation.
cerns, concerns which we need to · But the government's recent actiOns
It is also to e:ramine Ohio · law
take into account In devel~ing new
do not bode well for the future .
relalq to the use rJ schools to
geothermal projects. At the same
'None of the publicity that often acdetermine whether new measures
time we must realize that we can
companies the public dlstrlbuUm of
must be adopted or e:rlstlng atatutes leave no stone unturned In our pur·
LEAA reports - press releases,
changed to pel'Q)It uae r1. the
suit of energy alternatives. We must
newsletter articles and other fonns
c1assr0001 space by senl&lt;l' citizen or pursue to the fullest extent possible
~ promot1111 ··was affordelf to the
other community groups.
the devel~ment cl geotherinal
study of a subject that remains a
1\{any su$ organizations need
!lOWer. To do anythlng leas wDI;IId be
de~cate Issue to many prosecutors.
locations for meetings, recreatloo, shortslghted.
hot lunches and other activities.
· Declines In public school
enroUmeniB which have occurred in
moat school districls have p:oduced
less demand for school facilltieB,
Rhode&amp; pointed out.
Many school dlatrlcta have been
f&lt;l'ced to cl011e some buildings
because of lower enrollment&amp; II'
reduced educational programs, be
said. The action left ''valuable and
otberwlse useful buildings vacant"
(
or precluded from use by
organlzatioos unrelated · to the
educational system.
''There is tremendous waste in
today's system cl part&amp;e use~ ''

Washington
.t;Jy Clarence
Report Miller

-Today's
commentary
By Don Graff
Dollars by the billioos ill what
Social Security ill accustomed to
· dealing with, not mere pennies.
But one aapect of the system very
much resembles a particular type of
penny - a bad one. And that ill the
flnanclng problem, which has turned
up repeatedly In recent years and ill
alxut to do so again.
Thill January, millions' of U. S.
wag~rs will detect the flret
sign. The bite taken out rl. their
paychecks for Social Security
paymenta will lncreaae f!4.575 a
mooth.
. On an &amp;Mual basis, that 's an increue of only $174.90 and, all thlngs
considered, minimal. Primarily to
be considered by most of us, of ·
course, are the much moce dramatic
lnllationary leaps of food, houaing
and the other easentlala of living.
The 1980 Social Security boost may
scarcely be noticed.
But the following year's certainly
will be. That Ia scheduied lobe$32.311
per mooth, ralaing the muimwn
annual payment foc wage-amers in
19111 to fl,975.05, compared with
$1,587.67 for all of 1980 and $1,403.77
for the year just ended.
· That ill neither jlennies nor
; peanuts, and is going to make a dif: terence in miUicms rJ budgets.
: The increases are mandated by
. legllllatlon enacted in 11177 and in: tended to meet the system's then
; pinch - outgo in benefits increasing
· at a faster rate than income from
: erq&gt;loyee and employer payroll
· taxes.
There was an outcry at the time
but, since the sharpest bites were
.still a few years off, ~po'ltion simmered down. It is certain to flare up
·again, and almost certainly with
greater intensity.
. : It would be one thing if the increases, painful as they promise to
be, had resolved the financing pro,blem. They have not. Expenditures
.again threaten to outpace revenues.
: The reasons are several. Basic ill
'the decl.in)ng birthrate, as a conse.quence of which the retired popu IB-

:Medicare premiUJll
:gomg' Up m' July
.

.
wASIUNGTON (AP) _ The mon:!h!Y premiwn that most Medicare
. beneficiaries pay will rille from $8.70
;iq ...60 next July 1, the government
•&amp;nnciuncecl today.
: The 90-cent lncreaae applies to the
:»eaDed Part B of Medicare, which
.eoven doctors' biDa and certain outIJI!Uent medical e1Pf118eB. There is
no premium for Part A, which
covers hospital stays.
. The Department of Health,
EducaUon and Welfare said nearly
·21 million perli:IM will be enrolled In
-' Medl
in
· Part B "'
care the f~ year
itartlnl0d.1,1ncbidlng 21.1 mllllon
per10111 1111 or alder and 2.8 mllllon
!liNbled per10• under 1111.
·
. Part B II opUINI, but moat perlOIII eUglble for Medleare pay for lt.

. The premium lncreal,e Ia required
~Y law and Ia pegged to Increases in
lheCOit ~lhe program.
,
: The premiwna went up 50 cents
Jaat July.
' 1be~IIUmltecltolheume
•.tpercetiboolttbllt8oc;ial~
tectpenta received In tbllr benet!II

Jut Jal7. Wltllout tllit

'ltd; the

premium Wllllld have been rliaed to
~uo 1 rnanth to cover
. ....... HEW

tal,!_

.._,

Social security's
•
•
msecunty

lion is growing at a taster rate than

chworlt likely to emerge during an
electioo year. But an overhaul must
come eventually.
Otherwise, in a few years tile
system is likely to be lett wiill
nothing In the way of aaaets e:rcept
comparative pennies to meet Its
billion-dollar obligation to the working public.

!he work focce. There are ever fewer
wage-earners to make the payroll
contributions that support each
retiree, and imhalance compounded
by lengthened life expectancy. At
present, each benefit-receiver is
supported by an average 3.3 wageearners. By the year OOll, a ratio of
one to two ill projected.
Indexing benefits to compensate
f&lt;l' Inflation ms also caused benefit
payments to balloon, as have virThe End Is Not So Near
tually out-&lt;Jf-control costs II the
A
recent
report fnm the science
system's medicare and medicaid
front
suggests
that things may be
programs.
~
wone
and
better
than previoliSThere's not much that can be dcme
ly
!brought.
about the i:irth rate and aging
Anew theory of peysi~s has it that
populatioo, but something can about
the other problem areas. There is far from beil\g indestructible,. all
the possibUity of cutting !he medical matter is destined to decay.
programs out rl. the system entirely, Ultimately its components - the
to be financed out of general ta:r t{lrotons and neutrons and .aJJ the
oiiM particles !hat focm atoms revenues. They would stlll be costly
but cooceivable easier to cootroi will simply vanish, leaving an empty
when subject to regular budget universe.
E-Day Is, however, still a Jcmg,
scrutiny. And a major burden would
long
way ofi - on the order of 10,000
be removed from the payroll levy.
billioo
billion billion years, which is
Thill is a key reconunendation rJ
much
more
remote 1han pmtulated
the Advisory Council on Social
in
other
theories
of the life and death
SecuMty, a panel of non-government
of
the
universe.
experts cOOU'(lissioned by Congress
A Jot of thlngs can happen in that
to study the problem, and can be expected to figure pr&lt;minently in hear- time. Iran might conceivably even
ings on Social Security reform get its revolutionary act together
and come up with IKIIlethlng
scheduled to begin during 1911.
These are not likely to result in resllffibllng a government the rest r1. '
new legislation immediately, wliich 1he world could deal with.
is just as well considering the}lat-

Index in.dicates
economy on skids
WASHINGTON (AP)- Agovernment index intended to foretell
future ecommic activity plunged in
November for the second consecutive month, suggesting strongly
!hat the ecooomy will start 1980 oo
the skid.s, the Cunm!rce Department reported today.
Thed~ofL3petcentlntheCom­
posite Index of Leading Indicators in
November followed a 1.4 percent
decline In October. It was the fourth
mmth In five that the index has
declined.
"It certainly makes a receaalon
look more certain," said a Commerce Department .analyst, who
asked not to be Identified. ''The in:!n.~. much weaker than It !lid

lrieAllllig slniultaneiiiis Mllgnation of
economic activity and infiation of
prices.
Seven of 10 components of the Indicator ccmtributed to the November
decline, with building permits
Calling by the biggest margin.
Others were average worlt week,
laydf rate, stock prices, money supply, new orders and the percentage
rJ companies reporting slower
deliveries.
Three of 10 Ina-eased: liquid
aB'Iets, sensitive prices and contracts and orders.
Supporting the belief that the
econOO)y will show some growth In
the fourth quarter was the Coo!IJO'Iite Index rJ Coincident Indicators, which ·attempts to parallel
the natlcm's outpul
The coincident Index rose 0.2 percent in November, making up for the
0.1 percent drop in October, the
report showed.

Many economists had believed the
economy had begun falling Into a
recession In the second quarter this
year, when the nation's output fell at
an SM!II'I rate of 2.3 percent.
But real gross national product +
the value of the nation's goods and
services adjusted for inllatlm +
reboqnded In the third quarter to
grow at an amual3.1 percent.
. Preliminary figures frllll the, , - - - - - - - - - - - - ;1111! DAIL1!8Em'JNEL
Canmeroe Department Indicate ,
1118PSI4HIII
tha
t fQurth.quarter growth could be
around 1.5 percent.
·
All a result, many economists now
be
.neve the downturn will begin in
earnest In the first quarter of 19110.
The department analyst aatd the
Nowmber lndell confirm&amp; that .
IAISplcion.
__
.
In November the index stood at
138.8, wblch_means It was 38.6 percent of Ita 11111 bue of 100. That wai
the lowelt levellb!ce July 1977 and
-the weUe&amp;t since the Index peaked

· at143.61n October 1818.

''ln!Jtead of falling off a cliff, we
: .... deficit 11. llliCie ~ from '-d • period of atagtlatlo 1n 1979 ..
~eneral revenues. 1be tolal COlt Of · the analyst Ald. •That ~Nit o:.e
art B of Medkare II apectacl to of the odd eat jl'eludes to a receslion,
jamp from ...7 bllllm In lllc:all* which It loob llll:e we'l'e hea4ed for ·
to .11.4 billion In fllellllll, HEW !hat we've ever hlld.''
'
~d.
,
StagflaUon II I
word

colfd

Ohio
Perspective

Berry's World

OSU gamble Costly,
Trojans
win,
17-16
..
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Ohio
State gambled and lost - a touchdown, ·a Ro8e Bowl and a probable
'national college football title.
With first and goal at the Southern
Califomill2-yard line late in the first
quarter, Ohio State Coach Earle
Bruce shot the works. The Trojans
helda~lead at the time.
Bruce chose to ram !he Trojans'
powerful defensive line on four
straight downs. Four limes, the
Buckeyes fell shoct rJ !he goal line
on their way to a 17-161oss Tuesday
to Southern Cal.
Gone were the dreams of a 12.0
season and a Rose Bowl victory f&lt;l'
Ohio 'State, ranked No. I going into
the game. Now, No. 2 Alabama and
No. 3 Southern Cal step forward as
the candidates for !he national
crown. The wimer will be announced Thursday ~
''That was probably !he difference
. in the game,'' a terse Bruce said of
the Trojans' goal-line stand. ' 'H I
had to do it over again, I'd sure go
for !hatfield goal."
AU-American gua~ Ken Fritz, the
heart of ~e Buckeyes ' blocking,
kept mumbling, "I can't believe it. I

Rainbow trout
'

.stocking s~t

''It's a big letdown. We had a shot
still can' believe it. I wanted to go
at
the national championship and we
for the seven points. It would have
didn't get it," he said.
been a slap in the face of the ofSouthern Cal Coach John Robinfensive Une If we hadn't gone for the
•
son
was overwhelmed by the victouchdown.''
lacy.
Ohio State quarterback Art
'That was ooe of the greatest
Schlichter, halted m a fourth-down
you 'II see by 180 or 185 young
games
option run by USC linebacker Dennis
men,"
he Mid. "l doo 't know what
Johnson, said, "We tried to jam it up
they
charged,
buht was worth it.
the middle. We just didn't blow them
offense
wore them down. But
''Our
off the Une. They got psyched up af.·
they
were
a
great,
valiant defense;"
ter the first couple rJ downs."
·'
The
Trojans
plied
up 519 total yarFullback Paul Campbell, also
ds
to
412
yards
for
Ohio
State.
stopped for no gain m a third-down
Robinson thinks his i'rojans, 11-0plunge In the key series, said, ''!'hey
1, should be considered for the
just had a greater defensive Une
national title along with Alabama,
surge. They were penetrating us."
which Is 12~ after a 24-S Sugar
For Southern California, the key
Bowl declsloo over Arkansas
offensive series did hot come until
Tuesday.
the closing minutes of the fourth
Bruce was more emphatic.
quarter. The Trojans drove 83 yards
''I haven't ·seen Alabama," he
with Reisman Tropey winner
said.
"But I saw a lot of Southern Cal
Charles White bolting 32 and 28 yar!hill
afternoon.
I thought the winner
ds on the first two plays, White later
rJ
this
game
should
win the national
scored from the 1-yard line.
champiooship. ''
"Mac (quarterback. Paul McIt wa8" another bitter loos for the
Donald) audibilized on the first two
Big Ten, developing a loser's
plays. It wa~ a check with me. On
imagein
po'lt-lleason play.
both plays, he picked the right one.
Since
the
conference voted to send
Marcus (Allen) blocked the
mOre
than
me
team to bowls in 1975,
linebacker alfd I was off to the
the
Big
Ten
has
won only four of 14
races," said White, whose 247 yards
post-11eason
contest&amp;.
Two of them
rushing closed a brilliant college
came
this
season
with
Indiana wincareer.
ning
the
Holiday
Bowl
and Purdue
''It was just a matter of selecting
winning
the
Bluebonne~
Bowl.
the play that went away from their
Michigan
also
I
oat
In
the
Gator
Bowl.
strength," explained , McDonald,
In
the
Rose
Bowl,
the
Big
Ten
now
who threw for 2M yards and one
has
lost
sl:r
straight
times
and
10
of
touchdown.
the last 11. Their advantage over
Schlichter was just as brilliant in
West
Coast teams has dwindled to an
defeat with 297 passing yards and
i8-16
margin
in the New Year's Day
one touchdown. But it failed to erase
Classic.
the sting of the loss.

Brood stock rainbow trout will be
stocked'!lf the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources,
WUdllfe Resources Division, during
the first week of January in Cornstalk and Krodel Lakes near Point
Pleasant, Ona Lake near Barboursville, Ridenour Lake near
Nitro, and Hurricane Lake at
Hurricane, West Virginia. The rainbow trout stocked will be brood stock
averaging between ' one and two
pounds each. These fish were saved
especially for this program.
These January I !riO stockings will
initiate \he second ·year of this
tremendously popular winter •
stocking program. Hundrecm of ice '
fishermen successfully fished for the
prized rainbow trout and West
VIrginia's own Golden Centemial
Rainbow Trout for 1he first time in
this western haH of West v'irglnill
last year. In 198&gt; an even greater
turnout is expected for thiB special '
first time stocking of giant brood
stock according to district fisheries
biologist, Michael Hoefl.
One third of the rainbow trout will
be three year old brood stock over
17" long while the rest will be two
year old brood stock between 11 and·
13 inches loog. A few r!. these large
trout (the most sought after game
fish in the U. S.) will be over three
pounds qualifying the lucky fisherman who catches !hem to receive ~
full color Trophy Fish Qtation.
Fishing enthusiasts may practice
fly fishing, which enhances the sporting effect or try ice fishing with
cheese, salmon eggs, corn, wonns,
or more exotic bait such as combinations rl. lilarshmal.lows and
salmoo eggs. Make sure the ice is
safe to walk on before attempting to
crack a hole with an axe, ice spud or

Grofessional

.tl

.

f

.,..

famiU• have children IIi school. If
such a broad~ program of us1111
sehool facHitles Is acc~Usbed, 1
have no doubt that me reSUitwlli be
better ta1payer support
school
finances .I I

«

~

I
RD WHITEWALLSI
Our Reg. 29.76 - A78x13

· ·· ·

t
t

Featuring

Mister Wrestling No. 2 vs. Conar Donegan
Chief Joy Silver Cloud vs. Buddy Donovan
·
Kansas City Sweetheart Kitty Kl"!! vs. Debbie Valentine
Plus other Matches - Advance Tickets $3.00 each
.,
Available lhru Howard Beasley, 773-5-471 and Mason dispatcher ·
·
(upstairs Mason City Building I

f

6 '

•Ticket~· Available At Door •4• Each .
,

~- ,

•Re.freshments Available

Service Includes :
1. Oil Change
(Choi ce ol 5-qt.
Any Weight
K mar1 · Oil
In st all 1 K mar1 ·
Brand OU Filter'
Chassis
Lubricat ion
(~lttlngs Ex tra)
Brake Flui d (II
Needed)
Gear Lube (If
Needed)

Sole

. Price

'B

Labor 15 1nctuded . Ad dtt1onal paris
or services el&lt;tra. Save at K mart.

1

With Exchange

Calcium lead construc ted ~ea l ed so It
never needs water. For most U.S. cars.

Service Includes :
1. Re place Front Brake Pads
2. Resurface Rotors
3. Inspec t Calipers
4. Bleed Hydraul ic System an d
Refill
5. Repack Inner and Outer Bearings
6. Inspect Rear Li n in g For Wear
7. Inspect Master Cy llnd~r ..
·
8. Replace Front Grease Sea ts

FRONT END ONLY I . HEAVY·OUTY
DISC BRAKE JOB :ARRESTOR · MUFFLER

K mart · OIL, LUBE,
FILTER SPECIAL
I
'I
I
1

Sale

Price

.,1

$A6

Addit1onat parts and sefvtces
m ay be needed a t extra cost.

I
I
I1

Carr~-Out
9688
Pr~ce
fi
Doubie w oapped . S 1 ze~ lor
many U S cars and light trucks

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

:

;:'--:=;:

I.MAINTENANCE•fREE

MOUNTING INCLUDED, 1
NO TRADE-IN
REOUIRED1
Al l T~res Pius FE T Ea

t

MASON FIR'E' STATION, MASON, W. VA.

•

....~

...

chainsaw.

Top twenty
-The AP Top Twenty

By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty . teams in The
_ Associated Press college basketball
poll, with first-place voles In paren. theses, records and total points.
Polntsbasedon20 · 19 · 18 - 17 · 16 - 15

THE APPALACHIAN COIN CO.

1~.

0regon State

15. Loulsilllle
· 16. UCLA
17. St. John's, N.Y.
18. Georgetown, D.C.

19. Brigham Young
illinois

20 . ,

(11 -1)
(8 -2)
(7 -2)
..(8 -.1 )
(8 -21
(9 -3)

(10 · 2)

is paying 1000% for U.S. silver coins; dimes, quarters, and halves dated 1964 or older.

You bring in 15.00 worth and you will get SSO.OO in cash; you bring in 110.00 worth, you get 1100.00; and so on. Also paying 11.15 each for

- 14 - 13 · 12 · 11 · 10 · 9 · 8 - 7 · 6 - 5 · 4 · 3
. 2 - 1:
(.U) (10.0) 1,125
1. Duke
(10) (11 -1) 1,083
2. Kentucky
(3) (8.0)
960
3. DePaul
(8-0)
921
~ - Louisiana 51 .
(5-1)
824
5. Ohio State
(5-1)
824
6. N. Corolloa
(7 -1)
742
7. Notre Dame
(7-1)
694
8. Purdue
(8.0)
671
9. Svracuse
(9 -0)
614
10. Iowa
(7 -2)
515
ll . lndlana
(10.0)
-181
12. Missouri
(9 -1)
442
13. VIrginia

Kennedy halves, dated 1965, 1966, 19o7, 1968, or 196-9. 1.50 each for U.S. made silver war nickels dated 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945. (Min.
of 110.00 for each silver dollar dated 1935 Or older.)
.
•

NOTICE:

36&lt;1

Bring anything marked "sterling" spoons, forks, knives, dishes, cups, etc ... s10.00 or more for each piece.

SPECIAL:

Minimum of 1125.00 for each and eve!)' U.S. gold coin. Buying real old pennies, old gold watches (no wrist watches),. old gold .
.
.
jewelry, diamond rings, and gold iings at market prices.

356

349
346
130
95
46

Yes, get 1000 percent on your money. Gold and silver both have

.,.

llhod• cmtended.
...onl):- 34! · percent &lt;I . today'•

4~ PL Y POL VESTER

W~estling Schedule~

Thursday, January 3rd
7:30 P.M.

achoo( bulldin-," Rhodes ""id.

The assessment, lrdcally, waa
not unlike that offered by Seriate
Democrata In llillshing the · adn'inlstratlon 'B big $776 mllllm·dollar .
capital Improvements ~1.
They argued many of the prqiOfled
projects were rot needed ind
queationed the ablllty rl. the state to
'psy for all of the ne;tr COilltnlctlon.
~~~~ UJe rl~ would not
only benefit the CCIMiunlty but
would help gtllll'ate ~JIIIl1 foc
ielic»I dJitrleta amoog taxpayers,

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30; SUNDAY 1-6

HOCKEY
.
Finlaoo (:u&gt;l , The
Soviet
Union
de-feated
Czechoslovakia 11-2 for their second
tournament victocy ~he World
Junloc Ice Hockey Tournament•
In the comolatim round, Canada
defeatei! the United ~tes 4-2•

hit top prices and have started to decline. NOW is the time to sell
those old coins- WE PAY CASH ... "If you can't come to us, call,
and we'll come to you !r! ! Bring in your old coin.~..of every descripti'on
and we'll look them over for you. This is the highest price allowed
under our silver contacts and we urge ou to sell now before prices go
down.

HE~I .

. :a&gt;__;.._..:.:._ _ __

.

c'"''•.•EA.I~·

AUl'O~ClNG

EVANSTON. Ill; (AP) - Richard
Petty, winner of seven NASCAR
Grand National championships, was .
named 19'19 Driver of the Year )ly
1he editors ·of Auto Racing. Digest
Magazine.

••

•

Mr. and M~s. Jerry of the Appalachian Coin Co. will be
buv.ing coins in the Pomeroy-Middleport area at the
Meigs Inn· Room 105, ofHhe 2nd street entrance, Friday,
Janu;iry 4th from 12:00 to 5.:00 p.m. and on Saturday,
January 5th from 9:0oa.m. t()3:00p.m. only!!!

I •

d

' '

.

.

'

.

.

I

ALSO BUYING SILVER BARS AT s12.00 EACH
------1

...

'

'

•

�.,.-.
J·

3- The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Porreray ,0., Wednesday, Jan . 2, 191l
2,. The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday . Jan. 2. 19ilo

A crime to

In Washington

keepqu~et

;

By Roben Wallen

greater than in the field r1. ''whille

any federBJ department or agency

collar" or corporate crime, a has examined tbe esped•l)y WASHINGTON (NEA) • "For
shameful situation documented in a sitlve area of ccrporate criminality.
great wra~gdoing, " proclaimed lhe- .. landmark report recently published • The study of "Dlegal Corpm-ate
Greet historian ll~rodotus, ''there
by the Justice Depl!rtment's Law Behavicr," Involving a detailed
are · great punishments from the . Enforcement Assistance Ad- analysl.a of the legal record of the
country's 582largest publicly owned
gods." But now that' mere mortals
mlnlstraticn
__ are.Jn cbargp of tbe criDIIUal justice
The IEAA.'.I detailed study, . corporatima in the mid-19701, shows
system, no such equities t•llst.
directed by Unlwrsit' of W'ISCOilllin that during one brief two-resr
Nowhere has the disparity .betsociology prdeasor Marsball B. period more than 8l percent of the
ween crime and punishment been
Clinard, marks the fint time- that cocporatlcms were accused rl.
~olatlng a federal law.
The allegation&amp; included aerious
crimes such aa fraudulent securities
practice&amp;, income ta:r fraud, financial manipulations, advertlaing
misrepresentatlm, antlcompetltiw
practices, air and water polh1tim,
food and drug law violations and the
payment of illegal kickbacks,
rebate&amp; and bribes.
''Ccrporate crime COlts nm Into
the bi1110111 of dollars," the report
notes, although precise figures are
difficult to obtain. Estimates range
from a Senate subcommittee's $3Xl
billion to the Justice Department 'B
'
We often see' reference In the ground and converted to steam On- appromnatlcm of $10 bWion to $20
medis to so-called "e:rooc" sources ce converted to steam the geotherbillion.
of energy, sources that take mal energy ill used to drive turbines
Regardless of which figure ill uselaborate steps )II produce. Until • that generate power.
ed, however, tbe cmtraat betwem
At present tbere are various corporate crime and "street crime"
recently such~te ~made
geothermal
projects underway
!he production of moat such resourill both striking and dlsturJan«.
around
the
country,
projects that
ces ecnomically ~ractlcal. llut
The losses incurred by the vlctlma
now, with the spiraling cosm mcon~ some energy experts feel will of the more conventional classes rl.
ventional energy supplies being greatly accelerate lhe devel~ment
crime are relatively mundane
what they are, these skalled of this source of energy. Some ex- -approximately $450 In a typical
exoocs are receiving increasing at- perts are predicting that the poten- burglary, $250 in an armed robbery
tial exists to derive as much as five
tentlorL
·
and $150 In a larceny case -: but
One such "exotic," which to date to seven percent of our nation's
those cmvlcted of such crinnea 8re
has been given only passing referen- energy needs from geothermal sour- routinely sentenced to prison terms
ces In the yean ahead.
ce in the news, Is geothermal power.
of flw to 10 year11 or lcmger.
One of the larger projects un"
Moat think of geothermal power as
Yet wljte collar crlminala consteam power, but power generated derway ill located «&lt; miles north of victed of d!!fraudlng, stealing or
Albuquerque, New Meslco. In a joint looting milllaJB cl dollars seldom
by the release of steam from deep
beneath the earth's swface. "Old venture, private enterprlae and the
face such harsh penalties. ''Few
Faithful," that famed geyser in federal govenmient are drilling members of corporate management
Yellowstone National Park, ill -an wells into the Jemez Mountains In ever go to prison, even If cmvlcted,"
e:rample of this fonn' of geothermal ocder to tap a major hot water reaer- tbe lEAA report says.
vW'. The U. S. Department of
power. In northern California• a
Amcmg those Incarcerated, the
power plant genera~ by steam Energy is splitting the $125li'illlloo
longest prison tenns were six-month
derived from a geysel- field presen- cost of the project with Unim Oil of sentences imposed on two exCalifocnla and the Public Service
tly produces 6«1 megawatts r1.
ecutives. Three others were sentencCompany of New Mexico. The
power, enough to supply electricity
ed to 80, 45 and 30 days in prison. The
project is a:pected to generate 50
for more than 650,000 residences.
average sentence for the remaining
megawatts of power by 19112.
Unfoctunately there are UJ)y a very
11 e:recutives was e:raclly niiledays •.
UnW recently the cost of
few locations that lend themselves to
''Ordinary" criminals invariably
generating electricity from hot
!hill type of power productlm.
lose their jobs after being convicted,
water has been problbltive when
More coinmonly. geothermal
but the LEAA study found that 12 m
cOOJp&amp;red to alternate sources · of
development has' focused on the use
21 executives convicted of making Ilenergy. Much of the cost of
of .hot water reservoirs, pools of
legal campalgn cootributims redeveloping this re&amp;OIII'Ce is tied up In
water trapped beneath the earth's
mained In their original corporate
ezploratory drilling. Union Oil
surface that can be piped from the
JIOIIItioos a year later, while two
)'eiiOI1B lis New Mexico wells cost
others were retained as "conappro:rlmately f1 million each, and
sultants." Only seven retired,
they had to drill18 such wells for this
resigned or. were dlsmi"ed from
project. other noteworthy geother·
their jobs.
1'1111 projects underway include
The typical penalty against corwll'e(! 10 megawatt projects in the
poratioos In such cases ill a requireImperial Valley in Southern Califor.ment that its officers sign a consent
nla, all of which are scheduled to
agreement. a harmless legal docubecome ~alive S&lt;me time this
ment in wblch the company proyear.
mises not to commit the crime in
&lt;XJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Ul!e any energy SOIII'Ce, geother- questlm In the future -but is not reJamesA. Rhodes'penchantfoc,state mal energy raises some en- quired, to admit violating the law in
construction projects to generate · vlronmental coocerns and obthe past.
"jobs and progress" ill legend, but jections. Generally geothennal
For those who argue that such lerecently he turned his attentim to . projects require e:rttnslve tand
nient punishment is appropriate .
ways In which some e:t1st1ng public clearing, clearing which often mars
because white collar criminals do ·
buildings could be used more ef- the appearance of thole lands that
not threaten others with bodUy hann
ficiently.
have bee!) dlsrupl@d. In that such
oc injury, the LEAAstudynotes that
He created a special state task for- projects are normally located In
corporate crimes Involving unsafe
ce and gave It six mooths to study scenic mountain areas this has been
work places and uncontrolled
how Ohio •s more than 5,0111 schools an often voiced criticism.- .Also
releases of to:rlc oc carcinogenic
could be used for pllrj)OIIes other energy e:rperts are at111 not sure
agents can result in Illness, Injury
1hane~catloo.
what effect the pumping of huge
anddeath. ·
The nine member panel, quantities of water from the ground - What can be done to establish a
eatabllshe(l under an executive or- will have on nearby water supplies. , more equitable and unlfOIUl system
der last m&lt;Jnth, has until July 1)o. Nordotheyknowwhatthelongtenn
of crlmiDaljuatlce? The report sugreview possible alternative uses ·for '" ••':eflililJ'!III,ile:~,wl itseU -"!,ill it _ gfilta..a .IIJI!Ilber of remedies, In·
vacant school butldings or for the ex- cause slgliflcant land suDsldence?
eluding the use of consiuner
panded use of facilities still in
Admittedly, these are valid conpressure and publicity as sanctions.
operation.
cerns, concerns which we need to · But the government's recent actiOns
It is also to e:ramine Ohio · law
take into account In devel~ing new
do not bode well for the future .
relalq to the use rJ schools to
geothermal projects. At the same
'None of the publicity that often acdetermine whether new measures
time we must realize that we can
companies the public dlstrlbuUm of
must be adopted or e:rlstlng atatutes leave no stone unturned In our pur·
LEAA reports - press releases,
changed to pel'Q)It uae r1. the
suit of energy alternatives. We must
newsletter articles and other fonns
c1assr0001 space by senl&lt;l' citizen or pursue to the fullest extent possible
~ promot1111 ··was affordelf to the
other community groups.
the devel~ment cl geotherinal
study of a subject that remains a
1\{any su$ organizations need
!lOWer. To do anythlng leas wDI;IId be
de~cate Issue to many prosecutors.
locations for meetings, recreatloo, shortslghted.
hot lunches and other activities.
· Declines In public school
enroUmeniB which have occurred in
moat school districls have p:oduced
less demand for school facilltieB,
Rhode&amp; pointed out.
Many school dlatrlcta have been
f&lt;l'ced to cl011e some buildings
because of lower enrollment&amp; II'
reduced educational programs, be
said. The action left ''valuable and
otberwlse useful buildings vacant"
(
or precluded from use by
organlzatioos unrelated · to the
educational system.
''There is tremendous waste in
today's system cl part&amp;e use~ ''

Washington
.t;Jy Clarence
Report Miller

-Today's
commentary
By Don Graff
Dollars by the billioos ill what
Social Security ill accustomed to
· dealing with, not mere pennies.
But one aapect of the system very
much resembles a particular type of
penny - a bad one. And that ill the
flnanclng problem, which has turned
up repeatedly In recent years and ill
alxut to do so again.
Thill January, millions' of U. S.
wag~rs will detect the flret
sign. The bite taken out rl. their
paychecks for Social Security
paymenta will lncreaae f!4.575 a
mooth.
. On an &amp;Mual basis, that 's an increue of only $174.90 and, all thlngs
considered, minimal. Primarily to
be considered by most of us, of ·
course, are the much moce dramatic
lnllationary leaps of food, houaing
and the other easentlala of living.
The 1980 Social Security boost may
scarcely be noticed.
But the following year's certainly
will be. That Ia scheduied lobe$32.311
per mooth, ralaing the muimwn
annual payment foc wage-amers in
19111 to fl,975.05, compared with
$1,587.67 for all of 1980 and $1,403.77
for the year just ended.
· That ill neither jlennies nor
; peanuts, and is going to make a dif: terence in miUicms rJ budgets.
: The increases are mandated by
. legllllatlon enacted in 11177 and in: tended to meet the system's then
; pinch - outgo in benefits increasing
· at a faster rate than income from
: erq&gt;loyee and employer payroll
· taxes.
There was an outcry at the time
but, since the sharpest bites were
.still a few years off, ~po'ltion simmered down. It is certain to flare up
·again, and almost certainly with
greater intensity.
. : It would be one thing if the increases, painful as they promise to
be, had resolved the financing pro,blem. They have not. Expenditures
.again threaten to outpace revenues.
: The reasons are several. Basic ill
'the decl.in)ng birthrate, as a conse.quence of which the retired popu IB-

:Medicare premiUJll
:gomg' Up m' July
.

.
wASIUNGTON (AP) _ The mon:!h!Y premiwn that most Medicare
. beneficiaries pay will rille from $8.70
;iq ...60 next July 1, the government
•&amp;nnciuncecl today.
: The 90-cent lncreaae applies to the
:»eaDed Part B of Medicare, which
.eoven doctors' biDa and certain outIJI!Uent medical e1Pf118eB. There is
no premium for Part A, which
covers hospital stays.
. The Department of Health,
EducaUon and Welfare said nearly
·21 million perli:IM will be enrolled In
-' Medl
in
· Part B "'
care the f~ year
itartlnl0d.1,1ncbidlng 21.1 mllllon
per10111 1111 or alder and 2.8 mllllon
!liNbled per10• under 1111.
·
. Part B II opUINI, but moat perlOIII eUglble for Medleare pay for lt.

. The premium lncreal,e Ia required
~Y law and Ia pegged to Increases in
lheCOit ~lhe program.
,
: The premiwna went up 50 cents
Jaat July.
' 1be~IIUmltecltolheume
•.tpercetiboolttbllt8oc;ial~
tectpenta received In tbllr benet!II

Jut Jal7. Wltllout tllit

'ltd; the

premium Wllllld have been rliaed to
~uo 1 rnanth to cover
. ....... HEW

tal,!_

.._,

Social security's
•
•
msecunty

lion is growing at a taster rate than

chworlt likely to emerge during an
electioo year. But an overhaul must
come eventually.
Otherwise, in a few years tile
system is likely to be lett wiill
nothing In the way of aaaets e:rcept
comparative pennies to meet Its
billion-dollar obligation to the working public.

!he work focce. There are ever fewer
wage-earners to make the payroll
contributions that support each
retiree, and imhalance compounded
by lengthened life expectancy. At
present, each benefit-receiver is
supported by an average 3.3 wageearners. By the year OOll, a ratio of
one to two ill projected.
Indexing benefits to compensate
f&lt;l' Inflation ms also caused benefit
payments to balloon, as have virThe End Is Not So Near
tually out-&lt;Jf-control costs II the
A
recent
report fnm the science
system's medicare and medicaid
front
suggests
that things may be
programs.
~
wone
and
better
than previoliSThere's not much that can be dcme
ly
!brought.
about the i:irth rate and aging
Anew theory of peysi~s has it that
populatioo, but something can about
the other problem areas. There is far from beil\g indestructible,. all
the possibUity of cutting !he medical matter is destined to decay.
programs out rl. the system entirely, Ultimately its components - the
to be financed out of general ta:r t{lrotons and neutrons and .aJJ the
oiiM particles !hat focm atoms revenues. They would stlll be costly
but cooceivable easier to cootroi will simply vanish, leaving an empty
when subject to regular budget universe.
E-Day Is, however, still a Jcmg,
scrutiny. And a major burden would
long
way ofi - on the order of 10,000
be removed from the payroll levy.
billioo
billion billion years, which is
Thill is a key reconunendation rJ
much
more
remote 1han pmtulated
the Advisory Council on Social
in
other
theories
of the life and death
SecuMty, a panel of non-government
of
the
universe.
experts cOOU'(lissioned by Congress
A Jot of thlngs can happen in that
to study the problem, and can be expected to figure pr&lt;minently in hear- time. Iran might conceivably even
ings on Social Security reform get its revolutionary act together
and come up with IKIIlethlng
scheduled to begin during 1911.
These are not likely to result in resllffibllng a government the rest r1. '
new legislation immediately, wliich 1he world could deal with.
is just as well considering the}lat-

Index in.dicates
economy on skids
WASHINGTON (AP)- Agovernment index intended to foretell
future ecommic activity plunged in
November for the second consecutive month, suggesting strongly
!hat the ecooomy will start 1980 oo
the skid.s, the Cunm!rce Department reported today.
Thed~ofL3petcentlntheCom­
posite Index of Leading Indicators in
November followed a 1.4 percent
decline In October. It was the fourth
mmth In five that the index has
declined.
"It certainly makes a receaalon
look more certain," said a Commerce Department .analyst, who
asked not to be Identified. ''The in:!n.~. much weaker than It !lid

lrieAllllig slniultaneiiiis Mllgnation of
economic activity and infiation of
prices.
Seven of 10 components of the Indicator ccmtributed to the November
decline, with building permits
Calling by the biggest margin.
Others were average worlt week,
laydf rate, stock prices, money supply, new orders and the percentage
rJ companies reporting slower
deliveries.
Three of 10 Ina-eased: liquid
aB'Iets, sensitive prices and contracts and orders.
Supporting the belief that the
econOO)y will show some growth In
the fourth quarter was the Coo!IJO'Iite Index rJ Coincident Indicators, which ·attempts to parallel
the natlcm's outpul
The coincident Index rose 0.2 percent in November, making up for the
0.1 percent drop in October, the
report showed.

Many economists had believed the
economy had begun falling Into a
recession In the second quarter this
year, when the nation's output fell at
an SM!II'I rate of 2.3 percent.
But real gross national product +
the value of the nation's goods and
services adjusted for inllatlm +
reboqnded In the third quarter to
grow at an amual3.1 percent.
. Preliminary figures frllll the, , - - - - - - - - - - - - ;1111! DAIL1!8Em'JNEL
Canmeroe Department Indicate ,
1118PSI4HIII
tha
t fQurth.quarter growth could be
around 1.5 percent.
·
All a result, many economists now
be
.neve the downturn will begin in
earnest In the first quarter of 19110.
The department analyst aatd the
Nowmber lndell confirm&amp; that .
IAISplcion.
__
.
In November the index stood at
138.8, wblch_means It was 38.6 percent of Ita 11111 bue of 100. That wai
the lowelt levellb!ce July 1977 and
-the weUe&amp;t since the Index peaked

· at143.61n October 1818.

''ln!Jtead of falling off a cliff, we
: .... deficit 11. llliCie ~ from '-d • period of atagtlatlo 1n 1979 ..
~eneral revenues. 1be tolal COlt Of · the analyst Ald. •That ~Nit o:.e
art B of Medkare II apectacl to of the odd eat jl'eludes to a receslion,
jamp from ...7 bllllm In lllc:all* which It loob llll:e we'l'e hea4ed for ·
to .11.4 billion In fllellllll, HEW !hat we've ever hlld.''
'
~d.
,
StagflaUon II I
word

colfd

Ohio
Perspective

Berry's World

OSU gamble Costly,
Trojans
win,
17-16
..
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Ohio
State gambled and lost - a touchdown, ·a Ro8e Bowl and a probable
'national college football title.
With first and goal at the Southern
Califomill2-yard line late in the first
quarter, Ohio State Coach Earle
Bruce shot the works. The Trojans
helda~lead at the time.
Bruce chose to ram !he Trojans'
powerful defensive line on four
straight downs. Four limes, the
Buckeyes fell shoct rJ !he goal line
on their way to a 17-161oss Tuesday
to Southern Cal.
Gone were the dreams of a 12.0
season and a Rose Bowl victory f&lt;l'
Ohio 'State, ranked No. I going into
the game. Now, No. 2 Alabama and
No. 3 Southern Cal step forward as
the candidates for !he national
crown. The wimer will be announced Thursday ~
''That was probably !he difference
. in the game,'' a terse Bruce said of
the Trojans' goal-line stand. ' 'H I
had to do it over again, I'd sure go
for !hatfield goal."
AU-American gua~ Ken Fritz, the
heart of ~e Buckeyes ' blocking,
kept mumbling, "I can't believe it. I

Rainbow trout
'

.stocking s~t

''It's a big letdown. We had a shot
still can' believe it. I wanted to go
at
the national championship and we
for the seven points. It would have
didn't get it," he said.
been a slap in the face of the ofSouthern Cal Coach John Robinfensive Une If we hadn't gone for the
•
son
was overwhelmed by the victouchdown.''
lacy.
Ohio State quarterback Art
'That was ooe of the greatest
Schlichter, halted m a fourth-down
you 'II see by 180 or 185 young
games
option run by USC linebacker Dennis
men,"
he Mid. "l doo 't know what
Johnson, said, "We tried to jam it up
they
charged,
buht was worth it.
the middle. We just didn't blow them
offense
wore them down. But
''Our
off the Une. They got psyched up af.·
they
were
a
great,
valiant defense;"
ter the first couple rJ downs."
·'
The
Trojans
plied
up 519 total yarFullback Paul Campbell, also
ds
to
412
yards
for
Ohio
State.
stopped for no gain m a third-down
Robinson thinks his i'rojans, 11-0plunge In the key series, said, ''!'hey
1, should be considered for the
just had a greater defensive Une
national title along with Alabama,
surge. They were penetrating us."
which Is 12~ after a 24-S Sugar
For Southern California, the key
Bowl declsloo over Arkansas
offensive series did hot come until
Tuesday.
the closing minutes of the fourth
Bruce was more emphatic.
quarter. The Trojans drove 83 yards
''I haven't ·seen Alabama," he
with Reisman Tropey winner
said.
"But I saw a lot of Southern Cal
Charles White bolting 32 and 28 yar!hill
afternoon.
I thought the winner
ds on the first two plays, White later
rJ
this
game
should
win the national
scored from the 1-yard line.
champiooship. ''
"Mac (quarterback. Paul McIt wa8" another bitter loos for the
Donald) audibilized on the first two
Big Ten, developing a loser's
plays. It wa~ a check with me. On
imagein
po'lt-lleason play.
both plays, he picked the right one.
Since
the
conference voted to send
Marcus (Allen) blocked the
mOre
than
me
team to bowls in 1975,
linebacker alfd I was off to the
the
Big
Ten
has
won only four of 14
races," said White, whose 247 yards
post-11eason
contest&amp;.
Two of them
rushing closed a brilliant college
came
this
season
with
Indiana wincareer.
ning
the
Holiday
Bowl
and Purdue
''It was just a matter of selecting
winning
the
Bluebonne~
Bowl.
the play that went away from their
Michigan
also
I
oat
In
the
Gator
Bowl.
strength," explained , McDonald,
In
the
Rose
Bowl,
the
Big
Ten
now
who threw for 2M yards and one
has
lost
sl:r
straight
times
and
10
of
touchdown.
the last 11. Their advantage over
Schlichter was just as brilliant in
West
Coast teams has dwindled to an
defeat with 297 passing yards and
i8-16
margin
in the New Year's Day
one touchdown. But it failed to erase
Classic.
the sting of the loss.

Brood stock rainbow trout will be
stocked'!lf the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources,
WUdllfe Resources Division, during
the first week of January in Cornstalk and Krodel Lakes near Point
Pleasant, Ona Lake near Barboursville, Ridenour Lake near
Nitro, and Hurricane Lake at
Hurricane, West Virginia. The rainbow trout stocked will be brood stock
averaging between ' one and two
pounds each. These fish were saved
especially for this program.
These January I !riO stockings will
initiate \he second ·year of this
tremendously popular winter •
stocking program. Hundrecm of ice '
fishermen successfully fished for the
prized rainbow trout and West
VIrginia's own Golden Centemial
Rainbow Trout for 1he first time in
this western haH of West v'irglnill
last year. In 198&gt; an even greater
turnout is expected for thiB special '
first time stocking of giant brood
stock according to district fisheries
biologist, Michael Hoefl.
One third of the rainbow trout will
be three year old brood stock over
17" long while the rest will be two
year old brood stock between 11 and·
13 inches loog. A few r!. these large
trout (the most sought after game
fish in the U. S.) will be over three
pounds qualifying the lucky fisherman who catches !hem to receive ~
full color Trophy Fish Qtation.
Fishing enthusiasts may practice
fly fishing, which enhances the sporting effect or try ice fishing with
cheese, salmon eggs, corn, wonns,
or more exotic bait such as combinations rl. lilarshmal.lows and
salmoo eggs. Make sure the ice is
safe to walk on before attempting to
crack a hole with an axe, ice spud or

Grofessional

.tl

.

f

.,..

famiU• have children IIi school. If
such a broad~ program of us1111
sehool facHitles Is acc~Usbed, 1
have no doubt that me reSUitwlli be
better ta1payer support
school
finances .I I

«

~

I
RD WHITEWALLSI
Our Reg. 29.76 - A78x13

· ·· ·

t
t

Featuring

Mister Wrestling No. 2 vs. Conar Donegan
Chief Joy Silver Cloud vs. Buddy Donovan
·
Kansas City Sweetheart Kitty Kl"!! vs. Debbie Valentine
Plus other Matches - Advance Tickets $3.00 each
.,
Available lhru Howard Beasley, 773-5-471 and Mason dispatcher ·
·
(upstairs Mason City Building I

f

6 '

•Ticket~· Available At Door •4• Each .
,

~- ,

•Re.freshments Available

Service Includes :
1. Oil Change
(Choi ce ol 5-qt.
Any Weight
K mar1 · Oil
In st all 1 K mar1 ·
Brand OU Filter'
Chassis
Lubricat ion
(~lttlngs Ex tra)
Brake Flui d (II
Needed)
Gear Lube (If
Needed)

Sole

. Price

'B

Labor 15 1nctuded . Ad dtt1onal paris
or services el&lt;tra. Save at K mart.

1

With Exchange

Calcium lead construc ted ~ea l ed so It
never needs water. For most U.S. cars.

Service Includes :
1. Re place Front Brake Pads
2. Resurface Rotors
3. Inspec t Calipers
4. Bleed Hydraul ic System an d
Refill
5. Repack Inner and Outer Bearings
6. Inspect Rear Li n in g For Wear
7. Inspect Master Cy llnd~r ..
·
8. Replace Front Grease Sea ts

FRONT END ONLY I . HEAVY·OUTY
DISC BRAKE JOB :ARRESTOR · MUFFLER

K mart · OIL, LUBE,
FILTER SPECIAL
I
'I
I
1

Sale

Price

.,1

$A6

Addit1onat parts and sefvtces
m ay be needed a t extra cost.

I
I
I1

Carr~-Out
9688
Pr~ce
fi
Doubie w oapped . S 1 ze~ lor
many U S cars and light trucks

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

:

;:'--:=;:

I.MAINTENANCE•fREE

MOUNTING INCLUDED, 1
NO TRADE-IN
REOUIRED1
Al l T~res Pius FE T Ea

t

MASON FIR'E' STATION, MASON, W. VA.

•

....~

...

chainsaw.

Top twenty
-The AP Top Twenty

By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty . teams in The
_ Associated Press college basketball
poll, with first-place voles In paren. theses, records and total points.
Polntsbasedon20 · 19 · 18 - 17 · 16 - 15

THE APPALACHIAN COIN CO.

1~.

0regon State

15. Loulsilllle
· 16. UCLA
17. St. John's, N.Y.
18. Georgetown, D.C.

19. Brigham Young
illinois

20 . ,

(11 -1)
(8 -2)
(7 -2)
..(8 -.1 )
(8 -21
(9 -3)

(10 · 2)

is paying 1000% for U.S. silver coins; dimes, quarters, and halves dated 1964 or older.

You bring in 15.00 worth and you will get SSO.OO in cash; you bring in 110.00 worth, you get 1100.00; and so on. Also paying 11.15 each for

- 14 - 13 · 12 · 11 · 10 · 9 · 8 - 7 · 6 - 5 · 4 · 3
. 2 - 1:
(.U) (10.0) 1,125
1. Duke
(10) (11 -1) 1,083
2. Kentucky
(3) (8.0)
960
3. DePaul
(8-0)
921
~ - Louisiana 51 .
(5-1)
824
5. Ohio State
(5-1)
824
6. N. Corolloa
(7 -1)
742
7. Notre Dame
(7-1)
694
8. Purdue
(8.0)
671
9. Svracuse
(9 -0)
614
10. Iowa
(7 -2)
515
ll . lndlana
(10.0)
-181
12. Missouri
(9 -1)
442
13. VIrginia

Kennedy halves, dated 1965, 1966, 19o7, 1968, or 196-9. 1.50 each for U.S. made silver war nickels dated 1942, 1943, 1944 and 1945. (Min.
of 110.00 for each silver dollar dated 1935 Or older.)
.
•

NOTICE:

36&lt;1

Bring anything marked "sterling" spoons, forks, knives, dishes, cups, etc ... s10.00 or more for each piece.

SPECIAL:

Minimum of 1125.00 for each and eve!)' U.S. gold coin. Buying real old pennies, old gold watches (no wrist watches),. old gold .
.
.
jewelry, diamond rings, and gold iings at market prices.

356

349
346
130
95
46

Yes, get 1000 percent on your money. Gold and silver both have

.,.

llhod• cmtended.
...onl):- 34! · percent &lt;I . today'•

4~ PL Y POL VESTER

W~estling Schedule~

Thursday, January 3rd
7:30 P.M.

achoo( bulldin-," Rhodes ""id.

The assessment, lrdcally, waa
not unlike that offered by Seriate
Democrata In llillshing the · adn'inlstratlon 'B big $776 mllllm·dollar .
capital Improvements ~1.
They argued many of the prqiOfled
projects were rot needed ind
queationed the ablllty rl. the state to
'psy for all of the ne;tr COilltnlctlon.
~~~~ UJe rl~ would not
only benefit the CCIMiunlty but
would help gtllll'ate ~JIIIl1 foc
ielic»I dJitrleta amoog taxpayers,

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30; SUNDAY 1-6

HOCKEY
.
Finlaoo (:u&gt;l , The
Soviet
Union
de-feated
Czechoslovakia 11-2 for their second
tournament victocy ~he World
Junloc Ice Hockey Tournament•
In the comolatim round, Canada
defeatei! the United ~tes 4-2•

hit top prices and have started to decline. NOW is the time to sell
those old coins- WE PAY CASH ... "If you can't come to us, call,
and we'll come to you !r! ! Bring in your old coin.~..of every descripti'on
and we'll look them over for you. This is the highest price allowed
under our silver contacts and we urge ou to sell now before prices go
down.

HE~I .

. :a&gt;__;.._..:.:._ _ __

.

c'"''•.•EA.I~·

AUl'O~ClNG

EVANSTON. Ill; (AP) - Richard
Petty, winner of seven NASCAR
Grand National championships, was .
named 19'19 Driver of the Year )ly
1he editors ·of Auto Racing. Digest
Magazine.

••

•

Mr. and M~s. Jerry of the Appalachian Coin Co. will be
buv.ing coins in the Pomeroy-Middleport area at the
Meigs Inn· Room 105, ofHhe 2nd street entrance, Friday,
Janu;iry 4th from 12:00 to 5.:00 p.m. and on Saturday,
January 5th from 9:0oa.m. t()3:00p.m. only!!!

I •

d

' '

.

.

'

.

.

I

ALSO BUYING SILVER BARS AT s12.00 EACH
------1

...

'

'

•

�(
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1 ~

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2,1980

l Ma~

Whi.ch .team is now number-&lt;1

BY ASSOCIATEDPR&amp;'IS
Who's No. I in college football ?
Let the argwnents begiri.
Regardless of who finishes at the
top ci. The Associated Press' final
poll, which is scheduled 'to be announced !might, there will be plenty
ci. debate about which is the best ·
team. In fact, it appears to be a
classic case ci. "deja vu. "
Just as in last season's final poll,
Alabama al1lL_.~tbern California
have the inside track to the top. The
defending champion Tide, ranked
No. 2, eased past Arkansas 24~ in
the Sugar Bowl, while the thirdranked Trojans took a tougher route
to victory on New Year's Day,
edging No.1 Ohio State 17-16'in the
Rose Bowl.
In the other major bowl games

Pro standings
National Hockey League

At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Campbell Confereqce
Patrick Division

W. L. T . Pis GF
Phila.
24 1 10 58 153
NY Rangers
17 IS S 39 142
Atlanta
14 17 4 32 117
NY Islanders 13 15 6 32 119
Washington
9 23 5 23 110
Smythe Division
Chicago
12 13 12 36 103
Vancouver
14 16 7 35 122
St . LOUiS
13 18 6 32 107
Winnipeg
t2 22 4 28 102
Colorado
12 21 3 27 121
Edmonton
9 19 7 25 120
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
25 10 ' 3 53 145
Boston
20 10 5 4S 135
Minnesota
118 9 7 43 145
Toronto
16 16 4 36 128
Quebec
15 17 5 35 114
Norris Division
Montreal
18 14 6 42 142
LosAng.
17 12 6 40 152
Pittsburgh
14 11 11 39 122
Detroit
11 17 7 29 115
Hartford"
9 16 9 27 111
Tuesdav's Games
No games scheduled

GA
104
135
125
121
142
109
120
127
150
138
155
99
103
107
134
125
125
135
119
124
126

Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Pittsburgh

Los Angeles at Detroit
N.Y. Rangers at Quebec
N. Y. lslandersatToronto

Boston at Minnesota

Colorado at Chicago
Moscaw Dynamo at Winnipeg,
exhibition
Hartford at Edmonton
Thursday 's Games
Pittsburgh at New York Islanders
Central Red Army at Buffalo,
exhibition
Vancouver at St. Louis

National
Basketball Association
At AGlance
By The Assoclatt s Press
Eastem Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L Pet.
Boston
29 9 .763
Phila .
27 11 . 711
New York
20 21 . 488
Wa'l/lington
15 20 .429
NeW' Jersey
15 23 .395
Central Division
Atlanta
25 15 .625
Cleveland
19 20 .487
San Antonio
19 20 .487
·Houston
· 17 20 .4S9
Indiana
17 21 .447
Detroit
10 29 .256
Western Conferenc·e
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
22 18 .550
Kan . City
22 18 .550
Denver
14 26 .350
Chicago
12,.-25 .324
Utah
12 27 .308
Pacific Division
Seattle
27 11 .711
Los Ang .
28 13 .683
Phoenix
26 14 .650
Portland
21 21 .500
San Diego
20 21 .488
Golden St .
12 26 .316

Tuesday's Games

GB ..
2
10'12
12'12
14
5'12
5'12
6112

7
14'12

8
8'12
9'12
'!,

2
8
8'12
15

New York 128, Sah Antonio 120
p,rtland 109, Washington 99

~.
'
''Little did I realize that tile best
Southwest Confe~nce , w~ch football team in the country would ·
finished 10-2, to win its third slr]jight play an almost perfect game," he ·.
Sugar Bowl and 21st consecutive said. '1 don't .think Alabama can .'
game. Major Ogilvie scored on runs play any better than they did today. ·
,of l and 22 yards and set up a field ... I don't think there is anybody in .
the country wbo can beat Alabama." ,
goal witlJ a 50-yard punt return_
· The Tide clinched the contest with
"l feel we're deserving of the
a
98-yard, nine-play m drive in the
honor of being No. 1," said Tide
finalquarter for Bryant's 3l5th win
Coach Belir Bryant after Alabama .
C(lllpleted a perfect seasoo for the at Alabama - he has 296 overall - '
tying him with Woody Hayes for
first time since 1966.
One of Bryant's players, All- mall victories at one major college. :
Eighth-ranked Houston avoided ;·
America tackle Jim Bunch, was
another last-eerond disappointment .
even more definite. '"lbere 's a
possibility we could play the Pit- in the Cotton Bowl when Terry ,
Elston hit Eric Herring on a 6-ylird,
tsburgh Steelers and they'd come
fourth.OOwn TD pass with t2 seconds '
out !Iii top. Other than that, there's
to play. The Cougars lost~ at the
no doubt in my mind that we're-.the
final
gun to Noire Dame In the Cot- ;
best team In college football."
ton
Bowl
1aat year after leading 34- ·
cent."
Arkansas Coach l.Alu Holtz con12.
.
Nebraska, ranked seventh, had :
taken a 14-10 margin with a 31-yard
drive after recovering a John ·
NewhOU!Ie fumble. The march '
cJalmlnated in quarterback Jeff
Quinn hitting backup tight end Jeff
Finn with a 6-:}'ard scoring toss.
,
"We've been doing It all year," ·.
said Herring of his Cougar teammates, who tied with Arkansas f&lt;r
the
SWC title and finished 11-l. "We
and Ray Williams, played two
Richardson had 21 points, 17 were confident oo our passing plaYB
superb quarters Tuesday night, aJXl
assists and four steals while and knew if we had to do it, we could,
it was enough to beat the defenselass
Williams tied rookie center Bill Car"Sttnebody upstairs was looking
San Antonio Spurs 128-120. It wBll the
twright for team scoring honors with over me, especially, and the UH
Knicks' fifth victory In the last six
'1:1 points. Forward Toby Knight
games and brought tbem within ooe chipped in 21 points to offset San An- team" added Herring, whose touchdown catch came on a pass tipped by
step of the break-even point at 20-21
tonio's high«oring backcourt of Nebraska cornerback Ric lAinas they reached the midpoint of their Jamas Silas and George Gervin, who
dquist. "The ball sailed under one rl
National BBllketball . Association had 34 and 33 points, respectively.
their arms .•. hit my hand, bobbled '
schedule,
In the only other MIA game up.I caughtit coming down." " '
Tuesday night, the Pll1land Trail
Oklahoma quar.terback J.C, Watts
Blazers defeated th~ Washington rambled 61 yards for .a touchdown ·
Bullets 109-89.
and Bud Hebert stole three passes as ,
For years the Spurs have been tbe Big Eight champs, ranked fifth, ,
criticized for playing ineffectual
snapped the No,4 Seminoles' 15defense, and now Coach Doug Moe game winning streak.
says the critics are right, at least
"J.C. had a good game," said Allwhen the Spurs are on tbe road. The America rwming back Billy Sims, '
Spurs, who lead the league in who rushed f&lt;r 164 yards. ''Every
scoring but aLso allow the most poinplace I went they had three guys on
ts, have lost six c/.. their last seven me
and that took the pressure off
road starts. For the season the everybody else."
.
Landon Turner and Steve Bouchie
defending Central Division chamIn
bowl
games
played
Monday,
started at forward, with Ray Tolbert
pions are 7-15 away from home and
Baylor beat Clemson 24-16 in the
at center and Isiah Thomas and BUtjust 19-® overall,
Peach and Purdue defeated Tench Carter in the backcourt.
"Every road game we get blitnessee
27 ~In the Bluebmnet.
Thomas, who scored 20 points in
zed," said Moe. "It's a lack of inthe Tennessee game Friday night,
tensity and effort on defense, and it's \
was named Most Valuable Player in
happl!lling every g&amp;JDe now. We feU
Announcing the Revised
the CabriUo, but Hoosier Coach Bob- behind by 34 to Denver !lnd by 30 to
Office Schedule of
by Knight was far from pleased with ·
, Dr.MateoP. Dayo,~r.
Utah. We were behind LA 1_ll,IO before .
306 N. 2nd Ave.,
his play, and neit!Jer was Thomas.
we started playing. We f!'ght back
Middleport, Ohio
'1 don't tbirik I played well at all,"
and get into it, but you just can't fall
Effective January 1980
said Thomas, a freslunan. ''I C(lllMonday
behind like !hilt, especially on the
mitted 17.turnovers in two nigbts. I
10:00· 1:00
road."
2:110-5:00 P .M.
don't know why they gave me the
Blazers 109, Ballet199
Tuesday, No Office
MVP ... I just have to learn not to
Wednesday
The Bullets blew a 15-point third
throw the ball away."
9:00·11:30
quarter lead and were outscored by
2 :00-7:30 P.M.
Added Knight, "When we asked
PortlaJid 40-17 in the final period as
Thursday
him (Th(lll88) to join our program, ·
9:00·11:30
the Blazen snapped a three-game
we expected him. to be a starting
2:00-7:30 P. M.
losing streak.
Friday
player. We expected him to control
Forwards Maurice Lucas and Ab10:00·
1: 00
and proteq the ball."
2:00-S:OO
dul Jeelani led the Portland surge.
Miller indicated he iB satisfied
Saturday
Ulcas scored 16 of his game-high l1
9:00-5:00
with the progress so far of the
pcints in the fourth quarter and
E"'ept the last SaturBuckeyas, who are 7-1 and have
day ofthe mortth.
Jeelani came off the bench to score
aUowelj an average ci. only 56 points
12 of his 14 points in the final period.
agame,
,

11-1 record in his first season at
OSU.."Alabama has a great football
team ... but I haven't seen Alabama
and I saw a lot of Southern California this afternoon.
"Oilr team was only two points
away from the national championship."
.
Those points might have cune had
Bruce opted for a field goal on a
f ourth-end-1 play at the Southern Cal
I beginning the second quarter, Instead, he called for Schlichter to run
an option and the quarterback was
stoppedshlll'l ci. the goal line.
"If I had to do it over again," said
Bruce, ''I'd sure go f&lt;r that field
goal. Sometimes you go for too many
field goals and not enough touchdowns. You always make decisions
you regret; hindsight iB 100 per-

Janakievski and a 67-yard scoring
pass play frttn quarterback Art
Schlichter to Gary Williams to build
a 16-10 lead. Southern Cal had gotten
its points on a 41-yard field goal by
Eric Hipp and a 53-yard pass play
from Paul McDonald to Kevin
W'tlliams. 1
"I can' J.rote, but USC played a
great game and deservas to be
No.I," said Schlichter, a sophomore
who connected on 11 of 21 passes for
2'1/ yards. '1 t 's a big letdown. We
had a shot at the national championship and we dido 't get it."
Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce also
thought about what might have been
while throwing his support in
Southern Cal's comer.
'1thought the winner o!ijlis game
should be national champion," said
r--~--------------------, · Bruce, who led the Buckeyes to an

•

easily handled

zn 128-120 win' over Spurs

National Football League
Playoffs AI A Glance .
By The Associated Press
First Round
Dec. 23
National Conference
Ph iladelphia 27, Chicago 11
American Conference
Houston 13, Denver 1
Second Round
Dec. 29 Games
National Conference
Tampa Bay 24, Philadelphia 17
American Conference
Houston 17, San Diego 14
Dec. 30 Games
American Conference
Pittsburgh 34 , Miami 14
National Conference
Los Angeles 21, Dallas 19
Sunday, Jan. 6 •.
American
Conference Championship
Houston at Pittsburgh
National
Conference Championship
Los e.ngeles at Tampa Bay
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl X 1v
At Pasadena, Calif.
AFC champion vs. NFC champion

SKIING
GARMISCH-PARTENKIR- CHEN
West Germany (AP) - AustriW:
Hubert Neuper won the second event
of the international four-hill ski jumping tournament with jUillpll of 96
and 99 meters f&lt;r a total of 232.2
poiniB.
Finland's Jari Puikkonen was
second with jumps of 96.5 and 99
meters and :!:!0.4points.
SEEFELD, Austria (AP) Takao Ito of Japan won an international ski jumping meet with
jumps of 86 and '16.5 for 248.5 points
beating runnerup Willi Puerstl ri
Autrsia, who collected 2:is.T
OSTERSUND, Sweden (AP) J azef Luszczek of Poland won a 20kilomerer cross-country ski race in a
.time of 57 minutes, 21 seconds.
Thomas Wassberg of Sweden was
second in 57:38.

NEW YORK (AP) - "It's nice to
be the league leader in assists and
steals," says New York Knicks
guard Michael Ray Richardsoo,
''but I'm not worried about individual statistics. I just want to
help us win. There's no way we
should be under .500."
The Knicks, led by their
·blassoming backcourt of Richardson
...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State guard Kelvin Ransey thinks
Indiana is going to see a Buckeye
team much improved from lastt!IIIBr
when the two Big Ten basketball
powers open conference play Thursday night.
''Last year we had four- losses
before we came into the confereitce," Ransey said. ''ThiB team
is moce emotionally ready this year
to play in the Big Ten."
That's good, Ransey added,
because "it's going to be very Important to win the first two gamas at
home." The fifth..-anked Buckeyas
meet Purdue on Saturday night.
However, all of Buckeye Coach
Eldon MiDer 's thoughts were on
llth-f'anked Indiana. And the fact
that the HOil!liers have lost forward
Mike Woodson for the season hadn't
eased any ci. his concerns.
"Even though they're losing ~
poir)ts a game in scoring, Indiana
has an emphasis on the team con- .
cept," Miller said. "They'll find
someone to replace Woodson."
Indiana juggled its lineup and won
the CabriUo Classic in San Diego last
weekend with victories over Tenne:mee and Brown.

'

He was particularly high on freshman forward Clark Kellogg,
"Clark's Improvement game by
game haS been very evident;'' Milltil'
said. ''Clark has really been making

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
. SALE

' -

eAII Natural
Wear eChildren•s
Jea(ls • Toddlers Outfits

• Boys Winter Shirts
eGirls Dresses

WATERMELLON PATCH
Open 10:30 to 5 M, T, W, F, Sat.
Closed Thurs &amp; Sun.

ECKRICH

5th St.
New Haven

182-3410

BACON
.

ENDS
&amp;
PIECES

BOLOGNA
SLICED

Racine, 0.

DUTCH·
LOAF

FRANKS

CUBE
LB~

'2"

CHUNK

LB.

69C

•

GRADE A'

Whole fryers........L!·.4
Chicken Breasts...L!·.
Chicken Thighs. ... ~.7
.

.

$}59

GROUND CHUCK..~•..
BALLARD'S

\

SAUSAGE.:.............~~ 9
114

PORK
..

CABBAGE ............. !8;}5~
•

•

BANQUET FROZEN

~Property

2I$}

BANQUET

Transfers

¢

:;

Joeeph M. Magnotta, Affidavit,
•Middlewrt.
: Joaepii M. Magnotta, ~rol \WI
:Magnotta to Joseph M. Magnotta,
I Ann Magnotta, Lilt,- Mideport.
'
· s.rkiey · Faulliner, Esther D.
~er to Roger Adams, Rlglt of
ew~·- Orange.
- • Robert S. WHite, Dove White to
:Roger Adams, Right of Way,

.~

0

TV DI-NNER... }~. :.

Meigs

••'
••

POT PIES....... !~.. 4./

$·

~

'

39t.,AHEAD .

BRAUNSCHWEIG Eft .

POMEROY, 0.
·PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATIJRDAY, JAN. 5TH, 1980

:thursday night 111 the Middleport
)fasonicTemple. Resolutloo night to
)e observed. New members to C(IJle
;!II 7 p.m. Memberll to take sunshine
~for the OES Home .
r
···
~
FRIDAY .
fOMONA GRANGE, Friday, 8 p.m.
,t the Rock S]llings Grange Hall
Jfarrisonville Grange to be host for
P'e meeting .

·LEITUCE
29

3 LB. BOX $

PHEBI''S STORE

~-

., ..

298 SECOND ST.

CHAPTEI\ 172,
:order ci. the Eastern star, 7: ill p.m.

pQfATQES
10 LB.

Sun.day 10 am-10 pm

~ EVANGELINE

Is now offering· complete Speech - Language
and Hearing services for adults.
. Those adults
. with problems such as:
stroke, laryngectomy, neurological related
problems, head traumas, deafness, hearing
impairment, studdering, reading and writing
problems, articulation problem and language
problems·,
If you have any questions about the
evaluation and/or treatment of such communication problems please call 446·5500 in
Gallipolis, 992-2192 in Meigs, 286·1626 in
Jackson.

ECKRICH

·'

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

THURSDAY

lHE GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTli CENTER

IDAtM&gt;

Social Calendar .. ,

Store Hours:

. WEDNDDAY
: POMEROY LODGE No. 164 F.
fnd A.M. will hold its regular
meeting Wednesday at 7:30p.m. All
master masons are invited.

SPEECH AND HEARING DEPARTMENT

lh-PRICh

OFF .

r---

r;=.:~=~=:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------------=--------,

I

.

'

progress."

M~NII•II

Mr. and Mrs. Ted Downie and Mr.
and Mn. Edison Baker joined Mr.
and. Mrs. Alan Downie, Debbie and
Elizabeth, for Christmas. .
New Year's guestsci. Mr. and Mrs.
Osby Martin and son, Adam, Included Robert Martin and children,
Stephanie and Steven, and Debbie
RainwaU, Alliance; Pat Martin, Columbus, and Mrs. Leona Martin,
Pomeroy. The family received a
telephone call from Frank Martin of
Texas. On Chrlstmassmas weekend
visitiors were Mr. and Mn. Robert
Jones and son sons, Randy and
Kathy, Gallipoljs, and her fiance,
Ronnie Newmah, North carolina;
Pat Martin, Cohunbus, Letcher
Wines, Cleveland, Ruth Gosney,
Middleport, and · Mr. and Mrs.
Everett See, Columbus.
HoBday guests ci. Mr, and Mrs.
karl Kloes, Syracuse, were Mr. aJXl
)frs. Sidney Kloes, Darcy and Todd,
Pahama1 Mr. and ·Mrs. Raymond
JCloes, Ken, Kelly and Krls, Ricken)lacher Air Force Base, Mrs. Betty ,
13mith~ Middleport; Mr. and Mis,
Jon Kloes, Kenda, Wendl, and
~. P~roy, and Mrs. Ruth
~ Sellers, Krista and Gregory,
J'ortland.

Indiana will see
much better team

1/3

We Glady Accept Fed , Food st~mps
Monday thru Friday
..
9:00t117:00
Saturday 9:00-, : 00
CLOSED

12~,

Arkansas, the co-champion of the

IRichardson leads Knicks

Wednesday 's Games
San Diego at New Jersey
Boston at Houston
Los Angeles at Indiana
Phoenix at San Anton io
Kansas City at Utah
Detroit at Denver
Portland at Golden S t ate
Washington at Seattle
Thursday's Games
San Diego at New York
New Jersey at Atlanta
Philadelphia at Cleveland
Indiana at Milwaukee

START! NG JANU~RY 2, 1989

5th &amp; Pearl

Alabama,

By Alma

CHILDREN ARRIVE
HOME FOR HOLIDAY
MASON ~ The joy Of Cluistmaa
was extended to five days for Mrs.
Charlotte (Roush) Jenks, when ber
two sons and daughter 11f&lt;1 their
families arrived to spend the
holidaYB. They were all there except
two granddaughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roush and
daughter, Amy, ci. Maryland arrived
on Friday and observed an early
Chri.sllnas.
On Tuesday, Mrs. Jenks went to
Gallipolis to spend Christmas day
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Roush
and three children. And on Thursday, her daughter and husband,
Mr._and Mrs. Howard Huck and son,
Chris, of Rocky Mt., Va., arrived at
the Jenks' home for another Christmas observance.
. On Friday, Mrs. Jenks' granddaughter, Miss Laura Huck and her
fiance, Gregg McGough of RDcky
Mt., Va., spent some time with her
grandmother. On Saturday, Mr. and
Mrs. James Richmond (Linda
Huck) of Moundsville, W. Va. ended
Mrs. Jenks' many Christmases this
year and was enjoyed by aU.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Roush also
visited with the family oo Thursdiy,
Friday and Saturday, at his
mother's home.

•

Tuesday, Houston rallied to beat
Nebras,ka 17-14 in the Cotton Bowl •
and Oklahoma stopped Florida State
24-7in the Orange Bowl.
"We daserve consideration to be
No. 1 in the nation," noted Southern
Cal Coach John Robinson, whose
team drove 83 yards to the winning
touchdown, which Heisman Trophy
winner Charlas White scored by
diving into the end zone from the 1
with I :54 left. White set two Rose
Bowl records with 247 yards rushing
and 39 carries.
"!hope we're No. I, " added White,
who did his bast to get the 11-4-1
Trojans there. "I'll just have to walt
arxt see."
The Buckeyes got a Rose Bowl
record three field goals from Vlade

County

I

Debates will follow number One selection

News Note;- l

'

1

~ange.

L

• Harry WiiUord, Elizabeth Willford

ic; Dllill\ R Pulnpa, 1.062 acres, sut~·

·TOMATOES·.,.

:_Dotmar

MAXWEilL. HOUSE

'
· .·
Bawil; Kathryn Baum to

!iiJ111llthy Alan

Ballin,

.·

: Dali'nar Balllll, KAthryn Baum to
' ~~ G. Smith, Nancy Kay Smith,

,·

·
.
.
1\Qee to Patr.lck T.

t.·
Shannon L. Rlctmonll, 3.2374

.·•t:Patrlct

• res, Colwnbla.
· · .
~ J, Blackwell, Cindy M,
il to Harold W~ ~ach, EdN!
Leach, [54 acres, Salisbliry
.• ,
.
II ·

·r

..

2 ~8.
CAN
050x5 .

~599

COUPDI'&gt;I_

;r,
,

I
.
Limit 1.Per customer " '
Good Only;.t/ Poweli's j
Expires Jan . s; 1980

3 LB .

CAN

l-

•

cRisco

·- ~···SHORTEN
lNG
..

I

COFFEE

M8rteena

~ Bawn, 8.4 acres, Chester.

::f,hcres, Chelter.

L,

COUPO N

$1~9

· Limit 1 Per Customer'
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E
Jan. S, 1980

COL'PON

j

DUNCAN .HINES
I .

·CAKE .MIXES
18~5_()1. j$

3 200

Limit 1 P,e~ Customdr ·
Good Qnlyat Powell's.
Offer Expires Jan: s, 1980

1

,

GE~BER

STRAINED

BABY' FOOD
Ol

6/$1

.

'

Limit ·1 Per Custofll~r
Good Only at Powell's ·
Jan. s.

�(
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1 ~

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2,1980

l Ma~

Whi.ch .team is now number-&lt;1

BY ASSOCIATEDPR&amp;'IS
Who's No. I in college football ?
Let the argwnents begiri.
Regardless of who finishes at the
top ci. The Associated Press' final
poll, which is scheduled 'to be announced !might, there will be plenty
ci. debate about which is the best ·
team. In fact, it appears to be a
classic case ci. "deja vu. "
Just as in last season's final poll,
Alabama al1lL_.~tbern California
have the inside track to the top. The
defending champion Tide, ranked
No. 2, eased past Arkansas 24~ in
the Sugar Bowl, while the thirdranked Trojans took a tougher route
to victory on New Year's Day,
edging No.1 Ohio State 17-16'in the
Rose Bowl.
In the other major bowl games

Pro standings
National Hockey League

At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Campbell Confereqce
Patrick Division

W. L. T . Pis GF
Phila.
24 1 10 58 153
NY Rangers
17 IS S 39 142
Atlanta
14 17 4 32 117
NY Islanders 13 15 6 32 119
Washington
9 23 5 23 110
Smythe Division
Chicago
12 13 12 36 103
Vancouver
14 16 7 35 122
St . LOUiS
13 18 6 32 107
Winnipeg
t2 22 4 28 102
Colorado
12 21 3 27 121
Edmonton
9 19 7 25 120
Wales Conference
Adams Division
Buffalo
25 10 ' 3 53 145
Boston
20 10 5 4S 135
Minnesota
118 9 7 43 145
Toronto
16 16 4 36 128
Quebec
15 17 5 35 114
Norris Division
Montreal
18 14 6 42 142
LosAng.
17 12 6 40 152
Pittsburgh
14 11 11 39 122
Detroit
11 17 7 29 115
Hartford"
9 16 9 27 111
Tuesdav's Games
No games scheduled

GA
104
135
125
121
142
109
120
127
150
138
155
99
103
107
134
125
125
135
119
124
126

Wednesday's Games
Montreal at Pittsburgh

Los Angeles at Detroit
N.Y. Rangers at Quebec
N. Y. lslandersatToronto

Boston at Minnesota

Colorado at Chicago
Moscaw Dynamo at Winnipeg,
exhibition
Hartford at Edmonton
Thursday 's Games
Pittsburgh at New York Islanders
Central Red Army at Buffalo,
exhibition
Vancouver at St. Louis

National
Basketball Association
At AGlance
By The Assoclatt s Press
Eastem Conference
Atlantic Division
W. L Pet.
Boston
29 9 .763
Phila .
27 11 . 711
New York
20 21 . 488
Wa'l/lington
15 20 .429
NeW' Jersey
15 23 .395
Central Division
Atlanta
25 15 .625
Cleveland
19 20 .487
San Antonio
19 20 .487
·Houston
· 17 20 .4S9
Indiana
17 21 .447
Detroit
10 29 .256
Western Conferenc·e
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
22 18 .550
Kan . City
22 18 .550
Denver
14 26 .350
Chicago
12,.-25 .324
Utah
12 27 .308
Pacific Division
Seattle
27 11 .711
Los Ang .
28 13 .683
Phoenix
26 14 .650
Portland
21 21 .500
San Diego
20 21 .488
Golden St .
12 26 .316

Tuesday's Games

GB ..
2
10'12
12'12
14
5'12
5'12
6112

7
14'12

8
8'12
9'12
'!,

2
8
8'12
15

New York 128, Sah Antonio 120
p,rtland 109, Washington 99

~.
'
''Little did I realize that tile best
Southwest Confe~nce , w~ch football team in the country would ·
finished 10-2, to win its third slr]jight play an almost perfect game," he ·.
Sugar Bowl and 21st consecutive said. '1 don't .think Alabama can .'
game. Major Ogilvie scored on runs play any better than they did today. ·
,of l and 22 yards and set up a field ... I don't think there is anybody in .
the country wbo can beat Alabama." ,
goal witlJ a 50-yard punt return_
· The Tide clinched the contest with
"l feel we're deserving of the
a
98-yard, nine-play m drive in the
honor of being No. 1," said Tide
finalquarter for Bryant's 3l5th win
Coach Belir Bryant after Alabama .
C(lllpleted a perfect seasoo for the at Alabama - he has 296 overall - '
tying him with Woody Hayes for
first time since 1966.
One of Bryant's players, All- mall victories at one major college. :
Eighth-ranked Houston avoided ;·
America tackle Jim Bunch, was
another last-eerond disappointment .
even more definite. '"lbere 's a
possibility we could play the Pit- in the Cotton Bowl when Terry ,
Elston hit Eric Herring on a 6-ylird,
tsburgh Steelers and they'd come
fourth.OOwn TD pass with t2 seconds '
out !Iii top. Other than that, there's
to play. The Cougars lost~ at the
no doubt in my mind that we're-.the
final
gun to Noire Dame In the Cot- ;
best team In college football."
ton
Bowl
1aat year after leading 34- ·
cent."
Arkansas Coach l.Alu Holtz con12.
.
Nebraska, ranked seventh, had :
taken a 14-10 margin with a 31-yard
drive after recovering a John ·
NewhOU!Ie fumble. The march '
cJalmlnated in quarterback Jeff
Quinn hitting backup tight end Jeff
Finn with a 6-:}'ard scoring toss.
,
"We've been doing It all year," ·.
said Herring of his Cougar teammates, who tied with Arkansas f&lt;r
the
SWC title and finished 11-l. "We
and Ray Williams, played two
Richardson had 21 points, 17 were confident oo our passing plaYB
superb quarters Tuesday night, aJXl
assists and four steals while and knew if we had to do it, we could,
it was enough to beat the defenselass
Williams tied rookie center Bill Car"Sttnebody upstairs was looking
San Antonio Spurs 128-120. It wBll the
twright for team scoring honors with over me, especially, and the UH
Knicks' fifth victory In the last six
'1:1 points. Forward Toby Knight
games and brought tbem within ooe chipped in 21 points to offset San An- team" added Herring, whose touchdown catch came on a pass tipped by
step of the break-even point at 20-21
tonio's high«oring backcourt of Nebraska cornerback Ric lAinas they reached the midpoint of their Jamas Silas and George Gervin, who
dquist. "The ball sailed under one rl
National BBllketball . Association had 34 and 33 points, respectively.
their arms .•. hit my hand, bobbled '
schedule,
In the only other MIA game up.I caughtit coming down." " '
Tuesday night, the Pll1land Trail
Oklahoma quar.terback J.C, Watts
Blazers defeated th~ Washington rambled 61 yards for .a touchdown ·
Bullets 109-89.
and Bud Hebert stole three passes as ,
For years the Spurs have been tbe Big Eight champs, ranked fifth, ,
criticized for playing ineffectual
snapped the No,4 Seminoles' 15defense, and now Coach Doug Moe game winning streak.
says the critics are right, at least
"J.C. had a good game," said Allwhen the Spurs are on tbe road. The America rwming back Billy Sims, '
Spurs, who lead the league in who rushed f&lt;r 164 yards. ''Every
scoring but aLso allow the most poinplace I went they had three guys on
ts, have lost six c/.. their last seven me
and that took the pressure off
road starts. For the season the everybody else."
.
Landon Turner and Steve Bouchie
defending Central Division chamIn
bowl
games
played
Monday,
started at forward, with Ray Tolbert
pions are 7-15 away from home and
Baylor beat Clemson 24-16 in the
at center and Isiah Thomas and BUtjust 19-® overall,
Peach and Purdue defeated Tench Carter in the backcourt.
"Every road game we get blitnessee
27 ~In the Bluebmnet.
Thomas, who scored 20 points in
zed," said Moe. "It's a lack of inthe Tennessee game Friday night,
tensity and effort on defense, and it's \
was named Most Valuable Player in
happl!lling every g&amp;JDe now. We feU
Announcing the Revised
the CabriUo, but Hoosier Coach Bob- behind by 34 to Denver !lnd by 30 to
Office Schedule of
by Knight was far from pleased with ·
, Dr.MateoP. Dayo,~r.
Utah. We were behind LA 1_ll,IO before .
306 N. 2nd Ave.,
his play, and neit!Jer was Thomas.
we started playing. We f!'ght back
Middleport, Ohio
'1 don't tbirik I played well at all,"
and get into it, but you just can't fall
Effective January 1980
said Thomas, a freslunan. ''I C(lllMonday
behind like !hilt, especially on the
mitted 17.turnovers in two nigbts. I
10:00· 1:00
road."
2:110-5:00 P .M.
don't know why they gave me the
Blazers 109, Ballet199
Tuesday, No Office
MVP ... I just have to learn not to
Wednesday
The Bullets blew a 15-point third
throw the ball away."
9:00·11:30
quarter lead and were outscored by
2 :00-7:30 P.M.
Added Knight, "When we asked
PortlaJid 40-17 in the final period as
Thursday
him (Th(lll88) to join our program, ·
9:00·11:30
the Blazen snapped a three-game
we expected him. to be a starting
2:00-7:30 P. M.
losing streak.
Friday
player. We expected him to control
Forwards Maurice Lucas and Ab10:00·
1: 00
and proteq the ball."
2:00-S:OO
dul Jeelani led the Portland surge.
Miller indicated he iB satisfied
Saturday
Ulcas scored 16 of his game-high l1
9:00-5:00
with the progress so far of the
pcints in the fourth quarter and
E"'ept the last SaturBuckeyas, who are 7-1 and have
day ofthe mortth.
Jeelani came off the bench to score
aUowelj an average ci. only 56 points
12 of his 14 points in the final period.
agame,
,

11-1 record in his first season at
OSU.."Alabama has a great football
team ... but I haven't seen Alabama
and I saw a lot of Southern California this afternoon.
"Oilr team was only two points
away from the national championship."
.
Those points might have cune had
Bruce opted for a field goal on a
f ourth-end-1 play at the Southern Cal
I beginning the second quarter, Instead, he called for Schlichter to run
an option and the quarterback was
stoppedshlll'l ci. the goal line.
"If I had to do it over again," said
Bruce, ''I'd sure go f&lt;r that field
goal. Sometimes you go for too many
field goals and not enough touchdowns. You always make decisions
you regret; hindsight iB 100 per-

Janakievski and a 67-yard scoring
pass play frttn quarterback Art
Schlichter to Gary Williams to build
a 16-10 lead. Southern Cal had gotten
its points on a 41-yard field goal by
Eric Hipp and a 53-yard pass play
from Paul McDonald to Kevin
W'tlliams. 1
"I can' J.rote, but USC played a
great game and deservas to be
No.I," said Schlichter, a sophomore
who connected on 11 of 21 passes for
2'1/ yards. '1 t 's a big letdown. We
had a shot at the national championship and we dido 't get it."
Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce also
thought about what might have been
while throwing his support in
Southern Cal's comer.
'1thought the winner o!ijlis game
should be national champion," said
r--~--------------------, · Bruce, who led the Buckeyes to an

•

easily handled

zn 128-120 win' over Spurs

National Football League
Playoffs AI A Glance .
By The Associated Press
First Round
Dec. 23
National Conference
Ph iladelphia 27, Chicago 11
American Conference
Houston 13, Denver 1
Second Round
Dec. 29 Games
National Conference
Tampa Bay 24, Philadelphia 17
American Conference
Houston 17, San Diego 14
Dec. 30 Games
American Conference
Pittsburgh 34 , Miami 14
National Conference
Los Angeles 21, Dallas 19
Sunday, Jan. 6 •.
American
Conference Championship
Houston at Pittsburgh
National
Conference Championship
Los e.ngeles at Tampa Bay
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl X 1v
At Pasadena, Calif.
AFC champion vs. NFC champion

SKIING
GARMISCH-PARTENKIR- CHEN
West Germany (AP) - AustriW:
Hubert Neuper won the second event
of the international four-hill ski jumping tournament with jUillpll of 96
and 99 meters f&lt;r a total of 232.2
poiniB.
Finland's Jari Puikkonen was
second with jumps of 96.5 and 99
meters and :!:!0.4points.
SEEFELD, Austria (AP) Takao Ito of Japan won an international ski jumping meet with
jumps of 86 and '16.5 for 248.5 points
beating runnerup Willi Puerstl ri
Autrsia, who collected 2:is.T
OSTERSUND, Sweden (AP) J azef Luszczek of Poland won a 20kilomerer cross-country ski race in a
.time of 57 minutes, 21 seconds.
Thomas Wassberg of Sweden was
second in 57:38.

NEW YORK (AP) - "It's nice to
be the league leader in assists and
steals," says New York Knicks
guard Michael Ray Richardsoo,
''but I'm not worried about individual statistics. I just want to
help us win. There's no way we
should be under .500."
The Knicks, led by their
·blassoming backcourt of Richardson
...

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State guard Kelvin Ransey thinks
Indiana is going to see a Buckeye
team much improved from lastt!IIIBr
when the two Big Ten basketball
powers open conference play Thursday night.
''Last year we had four- losses
before we came into the confereitce," Ransey said. ''ThiB team
is moce emotionally ready this year
to play in the Big Ten."
That's good, Ransey added,
because "it's going to be very Important to win the first two gamas at
home." The fifth..-anked Buckeyas
meet Purdue on Saturday night.
However, all of Buckeye Coach
Eldon MiDer 's thoughts were on
llth-f'anked Indiana. And the fact
that the HOil!liers have lost forward
Mike Woodson for the season hadn't
eased any ci. his concerns.
"Even though they're losing ~
poir)ts a game in scoring, Indiana
has an emphasis on the team con- .
cept," Miller said. "They'll find
someone to replace Woodson."
Indiana juggled its lineup and won
the CabriUo Classic in San Diego last
weekend with victories over Tenne:mee and Brown.

'

He was particularly high on freshman forward Clark Kellogg,
"Clark's Improvement game by
game haS been very evident;'' Milltil'
said. ''Clark has really been making

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
. SALE

' -

eAII Natural
Wear eChildren•s
Jea(ls • Toddlers Outfits

• Boys Winter Shirts
eGirls Dresses

WATERMELLON PATCH
Open 10:30 to 5 M, T, W, F, Sat.
Closed Thurs &amp; Sun.

ECKRICH

5th St.
New Haven

182-3410

BACON
.

ENDS
&amp;
PIECES

BOLOGNA
SLICED

Racine, 0.

DUTCH·
LOAF

FRANKS

CUBE
LB~

'2"

CHUNK

LB.

69C

•

GRADE A'

Whole fryers........L!·.4
Chicken Breasts...L!·.
Chicken Thighs. ... ~.7
.

.

$}59

GROUND CHUCK..~•..
BALLARD'S

\

SAUSAGE.:.............~~ 9
114

PORK
..

CABBAGE ............. !8;}5~
•

•

BANQUET FROZEN

~Property

2I$}

BANQUET

Transfers

¢

:;

Joeeph M. Magnotta, Affidavit,
•Middlewrt.
: Joaepii M. Magnotta, ~rol \WI
:Magnotta to Joseph M. Magnotta,
I Ann Magnotta, Lilt,- Mideport.
'
· s.rkiey · Faulliner, Esther D.
~er to Roger Adams, Rlglt of
ew~·- Orange.
- • Robert S. WHite, Dove White to
:Roger Adams, Right of Way,

.~

0

TV DI-NNER... }~. :.

Meigs

••'
••

POT PIES....... !~.. 4./

$·

~

'

39t.,AHEAD .

BRAUNSCHWEIG Eft .

POMEROY, 0.
·PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATIJRDAY, JAN. 5TH, 1980

:thursday night 111 the Middleport
)fasonicTemple. Resolutloo night to
)e observed. New members to C(IJle
;!II 7 p.m. Memberll to take sunshine
~for the OES Home .
r
···
~
FRIDAY .
fOMONA GRANGE, Friday, 8 p.m.
,t the Rock S]llings Grange Hall
Jfarrisonville Grange to be host for
P'e meeting .

·LEITUCE
29

3 LB. BOX $

PHEBI''S STORE

~-

., ..

298 SECOND ST.

CHAPTEI\ 172,
:order ci. the Eastern star, 7: ill p.m.

pQfATQES
10 LB.

Sun.day 10 am-10 pm

~ EVANGELINE

Is now offering· complete Speech - Language
and Hearing services for adults.
. Those adults
. with problems such as:
stroke, laryngectomy, neurological related
problems, head traumas, deafness, hearing
impairment, studdering, reading and writing
problems, articulation problem and language
problems·,
If you have any questions about the
evaluation and/or treatment of such communication problems please call 446·5500 in
Gallipolis, 992-2192 in Meigs, 286·1626 in
Jackson.

ECKRICH

·'

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

THURSDAY

lHE GALLIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTli CENTER

IDAtM&gt;

Social Calendar .. ,

Store Hours:

. WEDNDDAY
: POMEROY LODGE No. 164 F.
fnd A.M. will hold its regular
meeting Wednesday at 7:30p.m. All
master masons are invited.

SPEECH AND HEARING DEPARTMENT

lh-PRICh

OFF .

r---

r;=.:~=~=:!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------------=--------,

I

.

'

progress."

M~NII•II

Mr. and Mrs. Ted Downie and Mr.
and Mn. Edison Baker joined Mr.
and. Mrs. Alan Downie, Debbie and
Elizabeth, for Christmas. .
New Year's guestsci. Mr. and Mrs.
Osby Martin and son, Adam, Included Robert Martin and children,
Stephanie and Steven, and Debbie
RainwaU, Alliance; Pat Martin, Columbus, and Mrs. Leona Martin,
Pomeroy. The family received a
telephone call from Frank Martin of
Texas. On Chrlstmassmas weekend
visitiors were Mr. and Mn. Robert
Jones and son sons, Randy and
Kathy, Gallipoljs, and her fiance,
Ronnie Newmah, North carolina;
Pat Martin, Cohunbus, Letcher
Wines, Cleveland, Ruth Gosney,
Middleport, and · Mr. and Mrs.
Everett See, Columbus.
HoBday guests ci. Mr, and Mrs.
karl Kloes, Syracuse, were Mr. aJXl
)frs. Sidney Kloes, Darcy and Todd,
Pahama1 Mr. and ·Mrs. Raymond
JCloes, Ken, Kelly and Krls, Ricken)lacher Air Force Base, Mrs. Betty ,
13mith~ Middleport; Mr. and Mis,
Jon Kloes, Kenda, Wendl, and
~. P~roy, and Mrs. Ruth
~ Sellers, Krista and Gregory,
J'ortland.

Indiana will see
much better team

1/3

We Glady Accept Fed , Food st~mps
Monday thru Friday
..
9:00t117:00
Saturday 9:00-, : 00
CLOSED

12~,

Arkansas, the co-champion of the

IRichardson leads Knicks

Wednesday 's Games
San Diego at New Jersey
Boston at Houston
Los Angeles at Indiana
Phoenix at San Anton io
Kansas City at Utah
Detroit at Denver
Portland at Golden S t ate
Washington at Seattle
Thursday's Games
San Diego at New York
New Jersey at Atlanta
Philadelphia at Cleveland
Indiana at Milwaukee

START! NG JANU~RY 2, 1989

5th &amp; Pearl

Alabama,

By Alma

CHILDREN ARRIVE
HOME FOR HOLIDAY
MASON ~ The joy Of Cluistmaa
was extended to five days for Mrs.
Charlotte (Roush) Jenks, when ber
two sons and daughter 11f&lt;1 their
families arrived to spend the
holidaYB. They were all there except
two granddaughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roush and
daughter, Amy, ci. Maryland arrived
on Friday and observed an early
Chri.sllnas.
On Tuesday, Mrs. Jenks went to
Gallipolis to spend Christmas day
with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Roush
and three children. And on Thursday, her daughter and husband,
Mr._and Mrs. Howard Huck and son,
Chris, of Rocky Mt., Va., arrived at
the Jenks' home for another Christmas observance.
. On Friday, Mrs. Jenks' granddaughter, Miss Laura Huck and her
fiance, Gregg McGough of RDcky
Mt., Va., spent some time with her
grandmother. On Saturday, Mr. and
Mrs. James Richmond (Linda
Huck) of Moundsville, W. Va. ended
Mrs. Jenks' many Christmases this
year and was enjoyed by aU.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Roush also
visited with the family oo Thursdiy,
Friday and Saturday, at his
mother's home.

•

Tuesday, Houston rallied to beat
Nebras,ka 17-14 in the Cotton Bowl •
and Oklahoma stopped Florida State
24-7in the Orange Bowl.
"We daserve consideration to be
No. 1 in the nation," noted Southern
Cal Coach John Robinson, whose
team drove 83 yards to the winning
touchdown, which Heisman Trophy
winner Charlas White scored by
diving into the end zone from the 1
with I :54 left. White set two Rose
Bowl records with 247 yards rushing
and 39 carries.
"!hope we're No. I, " added White,
who did his bast to get the 11-4-1
Trojans there. "I'll just have to walt
arxt see."
The Buckeyes got a Rose Bowl
record three field goals from Vlade

County

I

Debates will follow number One selection

News Note;- l

'

1

~ange.

L

• Harry WiiUord, Elizabeth Willford

ic; Dllill\ R Pulnpa, 1.062 acres, sut~·

·TOMATOES·.,.

:_Dotmar

MAXWEilL. HOUSE

'
· .·
Bawil; Kathryn Baum to

!iiJ111llthy Alan

Ballin,

.·

: Dali'nar Balllll, KAthryn Baum to
' ~~ G. Smith, Nancy Kay Smith,

,·

·
.
.
1\Qee to Patr.lck T.

t.·
Shannon L. Rlctmonll, 3.2374

.·•t:Patrlct

• res, Colwnbla.
· · .
~ J, Blackwell, Cindy M,
il to Harold W~ ~ach, EdN!
Leach, [54 acres, Salisbliry
.• ,
.
II ·

·r

..

2 ~8.
CAN
050x5 .

~599

COUPDI'&gt;I_

;r,
,

I
.
Limit 1.Per customer " '
Good Only;.t/ Poweli's j
Expires Jan . s; 1980

3 LB .

CAN

l-

•

cRisco

·- ~···SHORTEN
lNG
..

I

COFFEE

M8rteena

~ Bawn, 8.4 acres, Chester.

::f,hcres, Chelter.

L,

COUPO N

$1~9

· Limit 1 Per Customer'
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E
Jan. S, 1980

COL'PON

j

DUNCAN .HINES
I .

·CAKE .MIXES
18~5_()1. j$

3 200

Limit 1 P,e~ Customdr ·
Good Qnlyat Powell's.
Offer Expires Jan: s, 1980

1

,

GE~BER

STRAINED

BABY' FOOD
Ol

6/$1

.

'

Limit ·1 Per Custofll~r
Good Only at Powell's ·
Jan. s.

�..
'..

7 -TbeDally_SenUnel, Mld~.,Pomeroy, 0., WedDesday, Jan. 2,1980

8- The Dally ~entine~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1980

Helen Help

'T

US, , , Ry llo·l•·n Butt•• I
MUO~GESURVEY

By Helea Bottel
· READERS AIL:
1
As part rJ mY last Sllllllller 's Mini·
Marriage Survey, I listed 10 ingredients ln a good marriage (not
necesarlly the only 10 ), and asked
you to number them in order of their
importance ~ou. Not surprisingly,
"Consideration, Dependablllly and
Understanding" rated far-out lclps
among all respondents -married,
single or divorced.

AWARDED CERTIFICATE -larry Bunce was awarded a~ gift
certificate given by the Middleport Department Store as a part of itol
holiday season promotion. Makil)g the presentation is Mary Boggs.

Meigs Inn Employees
have holiday party
Penny Compton, Don Taylor, John
Compton, Eleanor Werry, Calista
Searls, Nancy Carnahan, Sandy
Miller, Tom Bentz, Sandy Miller,
Shirley Roush, Esther Bacon, Jack
Bacon, Diana Taylor, Noel Miller,
Terri Carsey, Glen Roush, Ron
Quillen Dave Cal'lley, Belinda
Roush, Virginia Dunn, David Herdman, Diana Herdman, DorothY
Clark, Yancy Roush, Joyce Quillen,
Dave Dunn; Karen Werry, Bob
Werry, Shirley Cogar, Bill Cogar,
Greg Taylor, Lonnie Dooahue, and
Ralph Werry.
A 'buffet was enjoyed by the
employes and Board. "Donahue",
provided music for the dance.

Employees of the Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy, recently hosted a
Chrisbnas party for the board of
dire.ctors and t}le employes at the
Inn.
.
Door prizes were won by Tom
Bentz, Don and Diana Taylor, Terri
Carsey, Belinda end Yancy Roush,
Glen Roush, Nancy Carnahan
Shirley and Bill Cogar, Kare~
Werry, and Eleanor Werry.
Employes and board members attending were Kennit and Jane
Walton, Richard and Sara Owen
John and Dottie Musser, Bernard
and Betty Fultz, Dr. and Mrs. Ray
Pickens, Dee Bentz, Danny Norman,
Frances Carleton, Kent Hershy,

SOMe e»-Y WeLl.. LOOt&lt;

BACK A'T 11·HS AND !..AUG H.

"Total Togetherness" came In
dead last, with SIDle 80 percent
voting It ninth or tenth on the scale.
"It's okay for a brief honeymoon, "
wrote a 30-year-old wife, "But soon
afterwards you discover you're still
two people with different Interests which, of course, keep you interesting to your mate." A retired
man ol:llerved, ''We discovered total
togetherness was total misery, so we
branched out into varied hobbles
and other 'apartnesses.' We now
separate enough to give each other
space"'
Only a few singles and divorced
persons put togetherness first. Even
very young marrieds were insistent
that too much "us" weakened the
union.
Also on the least-important side
were "Equal Rights," which clocked
in at a consistent ''nine.'' Either
couples had worked out their
priorities here or they synply
weren't Interested ln, as one woman
said, "fighting a lost cause that I've
grown accustomed to. " But a few
described marriages or livetogether situations where partners
split home and child care right down
the middle, had separate bank accounts, shared expenses, and
generally considered themselves
"liberated Into equality."

PlANTERS
PEANUTS
[),
'loo~oO

,101

~

As with the rest of the SID'vey,
males seemed slightly more
idealistic than females in their
listing d. Ingredients for a good marriage. They were more apt to want
"romantic love," although they
agreed . with women iJ.\ placing
''Good Sex" seventh in Ifuportance.
A startler: men stated they were for
equal rights more often than did
women. Whether or not they follow
through ln real life Ia another question.

IIIIQ llll l l 19

$.99

The following Is how readers listed
"Essentials to Happy Marrisge" In
order of their Importance:
I. Consideration, Dependability

_HI DRY

PAPER
TOWELS
Wor1
~Ill

Ml9 h&lt;t ,

Jae\1»
· ·Me•rs

HI DRY"

BATH llSSUE .

-

Elizabeth Ellis

.
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Eilts,
Route 1, Rutland, entertained
recently with a party in celebration
of the first birthday rl their
daughter, Elizabeth.
Attending were her grandparents
Mrs. Clara Ellis and Mn. Alta Fish:
aunts, Miss Connie Fish, Miss Dawn
Fish, and Miss April Ellis, and
cousins, Shannon Walker, Billy Ellis
and Richard Ellis. Sending gifts
were Mrs. Joyce Peterson. Cake and
ice cream were served.

I Ii

$.67 ~

, 271 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VILLAGE PHARMACY

'
MAXINE LIND·
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Reina · (Maxine) Lind
Pomeroy, remains a patient
Holzer Medical Center. She has beeJ1
moved
to
room
416 ..

at

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

By Will Grimsley
..

..

..

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) O!arlea White threw up at the bench
Just before the game. Afterward, 11e
appeared In the Rose Bowl's un·
dergrowld Interview room, looking
llke Joe Frazier after the BaWe of
Manila.
A bandage covered an open wound
on the bridge of his nose. His boYish
face ~!bowed ugly bruises. He
·wheezed and coughed as if he
:couldn't get his breath.
He was the battered b~ not the
beaten hero of the ooth ROse Bowl
football game, his last1Jasp
dramatics giving the Southern
canfomla Trojans a 17-16 victory
over No; 1of'llllked, undefeated and
untied Ohio State.
Professional scouts by the dozens
came .to the historic oval to look at
the Moot, Uliopowtd Los Angeles
native who had run for an
astronomical S,998 yards ln his fouryear career and had swept the
Helsman Trophy from the 1978 win·
ner, BWy Sims of Oklahoma.
They were filled with skepticism.
'Too small for the pros," moat of
them said.
"He'll go ln the first round of the
draft but about midway down, 14th
or 1stb," said Gil Brandt, astute per·
sonnel director d. the Dallas
Cowboys.
''He's a fine player,''
acknowledged O.J. Shnpson, one d.
the greatest of the Impressive
parade of llnHplinterlng tailbacks
to c&lt;me off the Southern Cal assem·
bly line. "But be needa to get with a ··
team that won't have to use blm on
the first-down situation. He'd be
greatfortheSteelets."
They came to . critique the
Heisman wirmer but they stayed to
drool over a tsll, leather~ugh Ohio
state quarterback, Art Schlichter,
whom they csn 't touch for two
years.
·For 00 minutes, the gangling
sopb&lt;more Houdini electrified the
105,000 crowd and countless TV
vtewets with his ball.faklng magic
8lld.mighty arm, hitting on 11 d. 21
tu'oWB for 'lHI yards alii putting the
~ckeyes ahead 111-10 with the clock
winding down. .
r Then, wilh 5:21 remaining and

By Tile Alloclllted l'ral
that tougher battle - though they
have been In five such championship
Fourteen Sundays ago, the Tamp~~
Bay BllllCaneen recorded a 21-t vic- games in the last seven years ... and
l.ollt every one ol tbem.
tory over the Los Angeles Ra1111. It
AP Correspondent
was just anothet game on the ·
"Everybooy's aware we'te never
gotten paat the secmd (playoff)
National Football League IICbedule,
Southern Cal backed up Its 21, they .. ·raising the Buell' record to +0 and · game," laid center Rich Saul, a
member of all seven La8 Angele8
banded the ball to White and said, . dropping the Rami to 2..Z; but foOt.
ball playen,llke 111011 atbletea, have
NFC West champions. ''You can't
''OK, Charlie, you've done It In the
worry
about the paat, tbougb." ·
remarkably
111111
memories.
past. You gottadoltagain."
Los Angeles cornerback Pat
But Sebnon can look to the future.
Whoosh! Uke a lightning flash,
'lbomaa,
for
eumple.
He
looted
"We can't relax against them for
over right guard for 32 yards. Whish,
two
reaso111, " be said. "One, we
ahead
to
Swtday's
National
Football
bam, bop, 28 more arowtd end, red
played
them before. And two, we
Conference
title
game
against
the
Buckeye jerseys strewn ln his wake.
and
laid,
"I
'In
glad
to
beattbem."
Buccaneers
Teanunates pick up short yardage.
be going back to play thoae guys afA tblrd reason would be that the
Then back to White.
ter
what
they
did
to
us."
winner
rJ the NFC clash will adThree over right guard. Then five.
vance
to
the annual gala called the
l
That
'II
Just.
what
bothers
TalqJa
Then two. The red shirtS know be's
Super
Bowiagainst
the
of the
Bay
linebacker
Dewey
Selmon.
conllng, but there's nothing they can .
American
Conference
title
game
''You
have
to
take
that
team
vecy
do. By now the ball is on the one. One
seriously the nat time aroiUid," between the Pittsburgh Steelen and
more shot. White dives over for the
Selmon
said Tllesday. '"lbey will be the HOUBion Oilers.
touchdown.
''Ibis time, they're bungi-y," said
fired up. They will want revenge
Score: Southern Cal17, Ohio State
against you. And you tend to gear Selmon, referring to the Rams.
· 16. Final victory. The· guy who Is too
'They want it. So do we. We're both
yourself for a harder battle."
small for the pros had don~ lt_~!n·
The Rams, who upended Dallas to shooting for the same thing.
"Los An1Jele8 Ia an experienced
reach the NFC title match, pnmlse
team. They have a lot more to gain ·

-not only a shot at the Super Bowl,
but revenge against us. "
The Oilers didn't have to walt as
long for revenge against .the
Steelers. Houston answered its 311-7
loss at Pittsburgh with a 20-17 home
triumph on Dec. 10, and Steelen
Coach Chuck Noil basn 't forgotten
that, either.
''We have a great deal of respect
for Houston," said NCJII, who wat·
cbed the Oilers beat San Diego last
Saturday ln the AFC semifinal. "We
bad it before they beat San Diego, af.
ter and still."
Along with respect, the Steelen .

winner

Local howling
POMEROY LANES
Early Wednesday League
December 12, 1979

Pis.
Headquarters
81
Zlde 's Sport Shop
78
Longshots
73
Smlth·Nelson Motors
6!5
Tony's Carry Out
o111
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
37
High Ind. Series, Men - A. L.
Phelps, Jr., 573; Larry Dugan.
High Ind. Series, women - ~?at
Carson 522; .Deb I Hawley 516.
High Ind. Game, Men - A. L.
Phelps, Jr., 216; Larry Dugan 196.
High Ind. Game, women- Betty
Smith 198; Pat Carson 18ol.
High Team Series - Headquarters2013.
High Team Game - Headquarters 737.
POMEROY LANES
December 16, 1979
(Winners of First Hall I

Pts.
78

Jack 'sDairyBar
31n0ne
7~
Sarah Gibbs, Dep. Reg.
72
Waldnlg Trucking
68
RoyaiCrown
58
Picken's Hardware
58 ·
High Ind. Series. Men - Darrell
Dugan 3n; Larry Dugan 518.
High Ind. Game -Larry .Dugan
224 Darrell Duoan 222.
High Ind. Game, Women - BeHy
Smith 192; Stephanie Rought 189.
High Ind. Series - Betty Smith
527, Stephanie Rough 51J7
High Team Series - 3 In One,
1tn.

Team Ind. Game -31n0ne73~.

have six consecutive ,AFC Central
crowns, a 35-7 victOI')' In the AFC
Utle match against Houston Jaat
year, and tbree' Super BOwl tWes In
the last five ye81'8. But Non still ian 't
making any forecaata about Suri·
day's contest.
•
''I am not ln the predlcltion
buslnesa," be said. ''I am ln the com·
petition business...
Neither Is Bum Pbllllpll, coach rJ
the Injury-plagued Oilers, who was
expected to flnd out today if Houston
will play without quarterback Dan
Pastorlni,I'UMing back Earl Campbell and receiver Ken Burrough.

THE SALE YOU HAVE BEEN \lAITING FOR
~

FALL &amp;WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE STARTS

THURS~

GROUP MEN'S

JAN 3, 1980 AT 9 A.M.
GROI.)PWOMEN'S

DRESS &amp; CASUALS DRESS SHOES

Early Wedntlday Mixed
December 19, 1979
!End of First Hall)

Values To $35.00

Pis. ·
Headquarters
82
Zlde's Sport Shop
8ol
,LongshOI$.
75
Smlth·Nelson Motors
67
Tony •s Carry Out
~
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
39
High Ind. Series, Men - Charlie
VanMeter 562; John Tyree 558.
High 1nd . Series, Women Isabelle Couch 503; Pat Carson and
carolyn Bachner, -496.
High Ind. Game, Men - John
Tyr.,S58; Charlie VanMeter 197.
High Ind. Game, Women- BellY
Smith 182; Pat carson 186.

POII!.rOy Bowling Lane&amp;
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Doc. 23, 1979

Team
Pts.
Pickens Hardware
8
Royal Crown
6
Sarah Gibbs, Dep. Reg.
~
J InOne
~
Jack's Dairy Bar
2
Waldnlg Trucking
o
High series .. Jeff Wilson 566r
Ellen Rought 515; John Tyree 524,
Margaret WyaH ~74.
High game .. Jeff Wilson 21~.
Margaret WyaH 191; Bill Willford
201, Ellen Rought 188.
Team series .. Royal Crown 1111 .
Team game .. Sarah Gl_bbs, oep.
Reg. 659.

Early Wednesday
Mixed League
Dec. 26, 1979
Team
Pts:
Smlth·Nelson Motors
6
Zlde 's Sport Shop
6
Long Shogs
6
Headquarters
2
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
2
Tony's Carry·Out
2
High ""rles .. Richard Russell 596,
Helen Phelps ~6; Ray Roach 561
lsabelleCouch~83.
'
High game .. Ray Roach 245,
Helen Phelps 196; Richard Russell
209, Pat carson 191.
Team series .. Smlth·Nelson
Motors 2010.
Team game .. Zlde's Sport Shop
720.

SALE
PRICE

SALE
PRICE

GROUP WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOE:
Values To $25.00
SALE
PRICE

Values To $25.00

$500
.

GROUP
CHILDREN'S KIDPOWER

TENNIS SHOES
Values To$19.95
SALE
PRICE

ALL WOMEN'S FASHION

GENERAL
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) Tony Thomas, 31, died fr1111 a blot
clot on the brain and bead Injuries
received ln a bout last week against
Sammy Home.
Thomas remained in a coma In
Spartsnbug General Hospital since
the Dec. 22 bout. He had undergone ·
emergency surgery after be collapsed in the dressing room about an
hour after be lost the fight on a
tecbtlcal knockout.

BOOTS 30%Off
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. Main St.

Pomero , Ohio

•

.

Phone 742-2100

OPEN

Prices Effective Thru Sat . , Jan. 5th
Homemade

jacey Waggoner
alii Understanding. (Namt!d ''most
important" by far.)
.
2. Faithfulness (i.e., no extramarital action).
3. Friendship Between Mates.
4. &lt;lllldren (Including problems or ,
lack of them, i.e., no major
disagreements oo child-raising,
etc.).
S. Similar Interests.
6. Financial Security.
7. Good Sex.
8. Romantic Love.
9. Equal Rights (male.female
llberstlon).
10. Total Togetherness. (Rated
least Important. ) . .

HAM SALAD •••••• , ••••• , •••••••••••••L.~.• sl.19
'Eckrich .

~

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••• !-.&amp;.·. '1.59
French City

HONEY LOAF &amp; PORK 'N BEEF••••••• ~~~ •.s1.99

$1
sg
·
POTATOES....... •
1
Idaho Baking

.
CHEESE.. ......... .1. 49
.
-

1,2 oz. Krall Pimiento or P
Individual Sliced $

3 lb. Yellow

SAVE
ON

FRIDAY

EVERY

NIGHT

ITEM
IN

TILL
8 P.M.

STOCK

.

ONIONS ....•.. ~~.~: 39~

I.

Start the New Decade OH with A New Look from Empire Furniture.

FROZEN

'

.

.

12 OZ. DONALD DUCK FROZEN ORANGE JUICE.. .• 2fl1.59
Authorized CATALOG
SAL!=S MERCHANT

·~
Phone 992·il7s2J4 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-S,
Thur. 9-12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9-2.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
1-'--......:.or:...Your Money Back

Everything l_n Stock Reduced for this Big Sale Event.
..

5 to 7 LB. AVG. SUE BEE ROASTING HENS ........ 69' lb.
16 oz. Teen Queen

•APPLIANCES
•SWEEPERS
•lAMPS
•MIRRORS ·

TOMATOES ••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• 2/79~
16 oz.·

COFFEEMATE.................. !:~.. $1.49
24 oz. Armour

·

BEEF STEW•••••••••••••••••••••• ,•• $1.29

•GUN
CABINETS

· 10l/,.oz. Campbells.Oid Fashioned

VEG.ETABLE
--- -

Unlock the Doors to Communication

••••oc,.•••..o

MRS. DORO'niY RITCHIE
CONFINED BY ILLNE'IS
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie, confined to
Mt. Carmel Medical Center, Colum·
bus, since Oct. 14, returned home
Saturday. Mrs. Ritchie underwent
open heart surgery on Oct. 1S. Her
hospital confinement was extended
due to an infeetion. She will continUe
to make weekly trips to Columbus
for treatment. Mr. and Mn. Ritchie
and their son, Bob, Jr. of Houston,
Texas, spent Christmas togeiher at
the
hospital.

'

The Gifts of Speech . &amp; Hearing

l"f5l • Ool tv&lt;&gt;Gti0\0•D """(:U
crto.o. '"""
• ·~•

at the h1111e of Teiannft Well next
Tuesday. Mrs. Ruth Riffle thanked
the members for helping decorate
the legion hall for the Christmas par·
ty.
Following a holiday dinner, the
members exchanged gifts.
Hostesses for the meeting were Mrs.
Doris Ewing, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw,
Mrs. Susan Baer, Mrs. Ruth Riffle,
and Mrs. Sue Zirkle.

Jacey Gayle Waggoner celebrated
her second birthday on Dec. 24. She
is the daughter of Jim and Jeanne
Asl) Waggoner o!Sandyvill, W. Va.
Grandparents are Pearl G. Ash,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bomie Conde
Ripley, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs:
Eddie Waggoner, Sandyville, W.Va.
Great.grandmothel'll are Mrs. Ada
Clark, Marietta, and Mrs. Alina
Freeman, Sandyville, W. Va.

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALJH CENTER, INC.

&lt;Roll P&gt;
!~I

march for january 20 locally

8

.~

... 9

~ Sorority plans Marc_h of Dimes

~

21'1.00

Sports ·World

The juniors of the local unit wrap·
ped gifts contrl.buted by ,residepts
for the 13 men and six women from
Meigs County at the Athens Mental
Health Center, 'and these were
dellveted by Mn. Mary Martin,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and Mn. Veda
Davis.
At the ANurslng Home, the
Awdliary took fruitcakes to 1S
veterans, diabetic food plates to.four
veterans and wblle there visited
Meigs County residents giving each
a candy cane. The juniors rJ the unit
sent $1 to eacb veteran and a gift to
Bill Rovnak, . their "adopted"
veteran.

Plans f~ the annual March of
Dimes' Mothet's March were announced at a recent meeting of the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the home
of Mrs. Doris Ewing.
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning, service
chairman, reported that she will
have packetol to the members at the
next meeting. The march will be
carried out on Jan. 3&gt;.
During the meeting it was voted to
give lhe Jaycees $50 toward their annual food basket project. A cOmmunication was read from Jack and
Bill Ross, relatives of the late
fowtder of Beta Sigma Phi exten·
ding best wishes to the chapter for a
successful year. Members were
reminded of a taco party to be held

Tampa Bay-Rams battle for NFC titl~

TodBy's

-·

Numerous holiday activities were
carried out by the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39
Pomeroy.
•,
It Is reported that several Aux·
iliary members went to Athem to
assist in wrspping Chrislmas gifts at
the Athens Mental Health Center for
1:11 P.~~lients there. Gifts were also
prepared for the six women and
three men at the Meigs County Infirmary, and fruit baskets and fruit
cakes were taken to several local
veterans who are shutlns, shutin
auxiliary membel'll and some legionnaires.

· "Romantic Love" placed eighth
on the list, and ''Good Sex" seventh.
starry -eyed dreamers my surveyees
weren't! They largely agreed with a
16-year-old bride's· views: ''We love
each other a lot but being best
friends Ia the greatest... I guess
'Good Sex' is only important to those
who don 1 have it, or haven 1 got
much else, and that's not our pro·
blem.''
''Faithfulness" and "Friendship
Between Mates" ranked second and
third, although votes were scattered
all the way from one to ten. A
number of divorced· persons put
faithfulness first, probably for good
reason.
''Qiildren," Including the problems rJ. child-raising, appeared
such an lndividuallasue it was hard
to assess. While almost no one gave
offspring top priority, votes were
well di8tributed between three and
eight, with four getting a slight rna·
jortty.
Numbers five and six were
"Similar Interests" and "Financial
Security." An Indiana husband
wrote, "I like football; she likes concerts. We enjoy these with friends;
occasionallY, when the mood strikes
us, together. I like steak alii
potatoes, she likes fancy casseroles.
We compromise. I'm Republican,
she's Democnt. Often we cancel one
another's votes. So what? Vlve Ia
dlffere!ICI! ! "
Money? "The amowtt isn't as important as agreement over how
you 'U spend it," a New Jerseyan
observed.

Holiday activities
carried out by. club

Birthdays
celebrated

The Speech Hearing Department has these
services available for the hearing impaired individual.
.
Hearing Evaluation
· Hearing Aid Check for damaged hearing
aids
Hearing Aid Selection to find best aid for
the client's hearing
Hearing Aid FiHing
,,..
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing Aid Ol'ientation an" Lip Reading
ComJ)Iete F~w:!Jp Services
·
For more inforn\ation, call 446·5500 in Gallia,
2116-1626 in.Jackso , in M i s 992-2192.

SOUP.~ ••••• ~ ••••• ,~: 2759e

e

LOOK .FOR THE
SALE TAGS
FROM

PEANUT BUMR........................
·ereain.vorchunky . sg•
--

·REMNANTS

·

WATER MAID .RICE
.
.

2 pack Soft. Weve

.

..

.

·:

EVERYTHING
IN STOCK

43'·
:
..

. 1

P~Hie, snickers ·

...

·

~·~

1

10 r;~z: Nestafe ·

'~:~

I

·

' I

' ' . •:.,..

~

,

~

i

Of

1,

.1.~ · ·· '·· ·.; · · · "-. :.'...;

~INSTANT .~.FFEE:. ~.'.....~~~·; •••.•)4Jg
.,

·~

,t

STOCK

.

•.

\

~SAVE •2'24~95-

~

, l ~·

~500

TO

BEDROOM. SUITES

r

i '

CAN·D·y·.·BARS
.· ..' . · ·; . ·;..., .........
"P.ack· ·7,;,·.
·.w·,:·
.. .......
.

$100

ON ALL

rT:OILET
TI·SSUE
' . . .2 Roll Pkg. 51'·og;
I' .
,
. ··~-··•••• ••••••.•••••• • .
· ~hree MusReteers, Milky Way, York

EVERY
THING
IN

SAVE

'

·box ..
········ · ····~···

cHESTS

•RUG

12 oz. Jif

16 oz·:

-

•MICRO WAVES
•MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS
•MIRRORS
•RECLINERS
•CE"DAR

0.

, .Bai.ett .Qu.en Size.
MAnRESS &amp;
.;BOX SPRINGS ··224,95 Set1
·'

•
I,

�..
'..

7 -TbeDally_SenUnel, Mld~.,Pomeroy, 0., WedDesday, Jan. 2,1980

8- The Dally ~entine~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1980

Helen Help

'T

US, , , Ry llo·l•·n Butt•• I
MUO~GESURVEY

By Helea Bottel
· READERS AIL:
1
As part rJ mY last Sllllllller 's Mini·
Marriage Survey, I listed 10 ingredients ln a good marriage (not
necesarlly the only 10 ), and asked
you to number them in order of their
importance ~ou. Not surprisingly,
"Consideration, Dependablllly and
Understanding" rated far-out lclps
among all respondents -married,
single or divorced.

AWARDED CERTIFICATE -larry Bunce was awarded a~ gift
certificate given by the Middleport Department Store as a part of itol
holiday season promotion. Makil)g the presentation is Mary Boggs.

Meigs Inn Employees
have holiday party
Penny Compton, Don Taylor, John
Compton, Eleanor Werry, Calista
Searls, Nancy Carnahan, Sandy
Miller, Tom Bentz, Sandy Miller,
Shirley Roush, Esther Bacon, Jack
Bacon, Diana Taylor, Noel Miller,
Terri Carsey, Glen Roush, Ron
Quillen Dave Cal'lley, Belinda
Roush, Virginia Dunn, David Herdman, Diana Herdman, DorothY
Clark, Yancy Roush, Joyce Quillen,
Dave Dunn; Karen Werry, Bob
Werry, Shirley Cogar, Bill Cogar,
Greg Taylor, Lonnie Dooahue, and
Ralph Werry.
A 'buffet was enjoyed by the
employes and Board. "Donahue",
provided music for the dance.

Employees of the Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy, recently hosted a
Chrisbnas party for the board of
dire.ctors and t}le employes at the
Inn.
.
Door prizes were won by Tom
Bentz, Don and Diana Taylor, Terri
Carsey, Belinda end Yancy Roush,
Glen Roush, Nancy Carnahan
Shirley and Bill Cogar, Kare~
Werry, and Eleanor Werry.
Employes and board members attending were Kennit and Jane
Walton, Richard and Sara Owen
John and Dottie Musser, Bernard
and Betty Fultz, Dr. and Mrs. Ray
Pickens, Dee Bentz, Danny Norman,
Frances Carleton, Kent Hershy,

SOMe e»-Y WeLl.. LOOt&lt;

BACK A'T 11·HS AND !..AUG H.

"Total Togetherness" came In
dead last, with SIDle 80 percent
voting It ninth or tenth on the scale.
"It's okay for a brief honeymoon, "
wrote a 30-year-old wife, "But soon
afterwards you discover you're still
two people with different Interests which, of course, keep you interesting to your mate." A retired
man ol:llerved, ''We discovered total
togetherness was total misery, so we
branched out into varied hobbles
and other 'apartnesses.' We now
separate enough to give each other
space"'
Only a few singles and divorced
persons put togetherness first. Even
very young marrieds were insistent
that too much "us" weakened the
union.
Also on the least-important side
were "Equal Rights," which clocked
in at a consistent ''nine.'' Either
couples had worked out their
priorities here or they synply
weren't Interested ln, as one woman
said, "fighting a lost cause that I've
grown accustomed to. " But a few
described marriages or livetogether situations where partners
split home and child care right down
the middle, had separate bank accounts, shared expenses, and
generally considered themselves
"liberated Into equality."

PlANTERS
PEANUTS
[),
'loo~oO

,101

~

As with the rest of the SID'vey,
males seemed slightly more
idealistic than females in their
listing d. Ingredients for a good marriage. They were more apt to want
"romantic love," although they
agreed . with women iJ.\ placing
''Good Sex" seventh in Ifuportance.
A startler: men stated they were for
equal rights more often than did
women. Whether or not they follow
through ln real life Ia another question.

IIIIQ llll l l 19

$.99

The following Is how readers listed
"Essentials to Happy Marrisge" In
order of their Importance:
I. Consideration, Dependability

_HI DRY

PAPER
TOWELS
Wor1
~Ill

Ml9 h&lt;t ,

Jae\1»
· ·Me•rs

HI DRY"

BATH llSSUE .

-

Elizabeth Ellis

.
Mr. and Mrs. David E. Eilts,
Route 1, Rutland, entertained
recently with a party in celebration
of the first birthday rl their
daughter, Elizabeth.
Attending were her grandparents
Mrs. Clara Ellis and Mn. Alta Fish:
aunts, Miss Connie Fish, Miss Dawn
Fish, and Miss April Ellis, and
cousins, Shannon Walker, Billy Ellis
and Richard Ellis. Sending gifts
were Mrs. Joyce Peterson. Cake and
ice cream were served.

I Ii

$.67 ~

, 271 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VILLAGE PHARMACY

'
MAXINE LIND·
HOSPITALIZED
Mrs. Reina · (Maxine) Lind
Pomeroy, remains a patient
Holzer Medical Center. She has beeJ1
moved
to
room
416 ..

at

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

By Will Grimsley
..

..

..

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) O!arlea White threw up at the bench
Just before the game. Afterward, 11e
appeared In the Rose Bowl's un·
dergrowld Interview room, looking
llke Joe Frazier after the BaWe of
Manila.
A bandage covered an open wound
on the bridge of his nose. His boYish
face ~!bowed ugly bruises. He
·wheezed and coughed as if he
:couldn't get his breath.
He was the battered b~ not the
beaten hero of the ooth ROse Bowl
football game, his last1Jasp
dramatics giving the Southern
canfomla Trojans a 17-16 victory
over No; 1of'llllked, undefeated and
untied Ohio State.
Professional scouts by the dozens
came .to the historic oval to look at
the Moot, Uliopowtd Los Angeles
native who had run for an
astronomical S,998 yards ln his fouryear career and had swept the
Helsman Trophy from the 1978 win·
ner, BWy Sims of Oklahoma.
They were filled with skepticism.
'Too small for the pros," moat of
them said.
"He'll go ln the first round of the
draft but about midway down, 14th
or 1stb," said Gil Brandt, astute per·
sonnel director d. the Dallas
Cowboys.
''He's a fine player,''
acknowledged O.J. Shnpson, one d.
the greatest of the Impressive
parade of llnHplinterlng tailbacks
to c&lt;me off the Southern Cal assem·
bly line. "But be needa to get with a ··
team that won't have to use blm on
the first-down situation. He'd be
greatfortheSteelets."
They came to . critique the
Heisman wirmer but they stayed to
drool over a tsll, leather~ugh Ohio
state quarterback, Art Schlichter,
whom they csn 't touch for two
years.
·For 00 minutes, the gangling
sopb&lt;more Houdini electrified the
105,000 crowd and countless TV
vtewets with his ball.faklng magic
8lld.mighty arm, hitting on 11 d. 21
tu'oWB for 'lHI yards alii putting the
~ckeyes ahead 111-10 with the clock
winding down. .
r Then, wilh 5:21 remaining and

By Tile Alloclllted l'ral
that tougher battle - though they
have been In five such championship
Fourteen Sundays ago, the Tamp~~
Bay BllllCaneen recorded a 21-t vic- games in the last seven years ... and
l.ollt every one ol tbem.
tory over the Los Angeles Ra1111. It
AP Correspondent
was just anothet game on the ·
"Everybooy's aware we'te never
gotten paat the secmd (playoff)
National Football League IICbedule,
Southern Cal backed up Its 21, they .. ·raising the Buell' record to +0 and · game," laid center Rich Saul, a
member of all seven La8 Angele8
banded the ball to White and said, . dropping the Rami to 2..Z; but foOt.
ball playen,llke 111011 atbletea, have
NFC West champions. ''You can't
''OK, Charlie, you've done It In the
worry
about the paat, tbougb." ·
remarkably
111111
memories.
past. You gottadoltagain."
Los Angeles cornerback Pat
But Sebnon can look to the future.
Whoosh! Uke a lightning flash,
'lbomaa,
for
eumple.
He
looted
"We can't relax against them for
over right guard for 32 yards. Whish,
two
reaso111, " be said. "One, we
ahead
to
Swtday's
National
Football
bam, bop, 28 more arowtd end, red
played
them before. And two, we
Conference
title
game
against
the
Buckeye jerseys strewn ln his wake.
and
laid,
"I
'In
glad
to
beattbem."
Buccaneers
Teanunates pick up short yardage.
be going back to play thoae guys afA tblrd reason would be that the
Then back to White.
ter
what
they
did
to
us."
winner
rJ the NFC clash will adThree over right guard. Then five.
vance
to
the annual gala called the
l
That
'II
Just.
what
bothers
TalqJa
Then two. The red shirtS know be's
Super
Bowiagainst
the
of the
Bay
linebacker
Dewey
Selmon.
conllng, but there's nothing they can .
American
Conference
title
game
''You
have
to
take
that
team
vecy
do. By now the ball is on the one. One
seriously the nat time aroiUid," between the Pittsburgh Steelen and
more shot. White dives over for the
Selmon
said Tllesday. '"lbey will be the HOUBion Oilers.
touchdown.
''Ibis time, they're bungi-y," said
fired up. They will want revenge
Score: Southern Cal17, Ohio State
against you. And you tend to gear Selmon, referring to the Rams.
· 16. Final victory. The· guy who Is too
'They want it. So do we. We're both
yourself for a harder battle."
small for the pros had don~ lt_~!n·
The Rams, who upended Dallas to shooting for the same thing.
"Los An1Jele8 Ia an experienced
reach the NFC title match, pnmlse
team. They have a lot more to gain ·

-not only a shot at the Super Bowl,
but revenge against us. "
The Oilers didn't have to walt as
long for revenge against .the
Steelers. Houston answered its 311-7
loss at Pittsburgh with a 20-17 home
triumph on Dec. 10, and Steelen
Coach Chuck Noil basn 't forgotten
that, either.
''We have a great deal of respect
for Houston," said NCJII, who wat·
cbed the Oilers beat San Diego last
Saturday ln the AFC semifinal. "We
bad it before they beat San Diego, af.
ter and still."
Along with respect, the Steelen .

winner

Local howling
POMEROY LANES
Early Wednesday League
December 12, 1979

Pis.
Headquarters
81
Zlde 's Sport Shop
78
Longshots
73
Smlth·Nelson Motors
6!5
Tony's Carry Out
o111
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
37
High Ind. Series, Men - A. L.
Phelps, Jr., 573; Larry Dugan.
High Ind. Series, women - ~?at
Carson 522; .Deb I Hawley 516.
High Ind. Game, Men - A. L.
Phelps, Jr., 216; Larry Dugan 196.
High Ind. Game, women- Betty
Smith 198; Pat Carson 18ol.
High Team Series - Headquarters2013.
High Team Game - Headquarters 737.
POMEROY LANES
December 16, 1979
(Winners of First Hall I

Pts.
78

Jack 'sDairyBar
31n0ne
7~
Sarah Gibbs, Dep. Reg.
72
Waldnlg Trucking
68
RoyaiCrown
58
Picken's Hardware
58 ·
High Ind. Series. Men - Darrell
Dugan 3n; Larry Dugan 518.
High Ind. Game -Larry .Dugan
224 Darrell Duoan 222.
High Ind. Game, Women - BeHy
Smith 192; Stephanie Rought 189.
High Ind. Series - Betty Smith
527, Stephanie Rough 51J7
High Team Series - 3 In One,
1tn.

Team Ind. Game -31n0ne73~.

have six consecutive ,AFC Central
crowns, a 35-7 victOI')' In the AFC
Utle match against Houston Jaat
year, and tbree' Super BOwl tWes In
the last five ye81'8. But Non still ian 't
making any forecaata about Suri·
day's contest.
•
''I am not ln the predlcltion
buslnesa," be said. ''I am ln the com·
petition business...
Neither Is Bum Pbllllpll, coach rJ
the Injury-plagued Oilers, who was
expected to flnd out today if Houston
will play without quarterback Dan
Pastorlni,I'UMing back Earl Campbell and receiver Ken Burrough.

THE SALE YOU HAVE BEEN \lAITING FOR
~

FALL &amp;WINTER CLEARANCE
SALE STARTS

THURS~

GROUP MEN'S

JAN 3, 1980 AT 9 A.M.
GROI.)PWOMEN'S

DRESS &amp; CASUALS DRESS SHOES

Early Wedntlday Mixed
December 19, 1979
!End of First Hall)

Values To $35.00

Pis. ·
Headquarters
82
Zlde's Sport Shop
8ol
,LongshOI$.
75
Smlth·Nelson Motors
67
Tony •s Carry Out
~
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
39
High Ind. Series, Men - Charlie
VanMeter 562; John Tyree 558.
High 1nd . Series, Women Isabelle Couch 503; Pat Carson and
carolyn Bachner, -496.
High Ind. Game, Men - John
Tyr.,S58; Charlie VanMeter 197.
High Ind. Game, Women- BellY
Smith 182; Pat carson 186.

POII!.rOy Bowling Lane&amp;
Early Sunday
Mixed League
Doc. 23, 1979

Team
Pts.
Pickens Hardware
8
Royal Crown
6
Sarah Gibbs, Dep. Reg.
~
J InOne
~
Jack's Dairy Bar
2
Waldnlg Trucking
o
High series .. Jeff Wilson 566r
Ellen Rought 515; John Tyree 524,
Margaret WyaH ~74.
High game .. Jeff Wilson 21~.
Margaret WyaH 191; Bill Willford
201, Ellen Rought 188.
Team series .. Royal Crown 1111 .
Team game .. Sarah Gl_bbs, oep.
Reg. 659.

Early Wednesday
Mixed League
Dec. 26, 1979
Team
Pts:
Smlth·Nelson Motors
6
Zlde 's Sport Shop
6
Long Shogs
6
Headquarters
2
Swlsher·Lohse Drugs
2
Tony's Carry·Out
2
High ""rles .. Richard Russell 596,
Helen Phelps ~6; Ray Roach 561
lsabelleCouch~83.
'
High game .. Ray Roach 245,
Helen Phelps 196; Richard Russell
209, Pat carson 191.
Team series .. Smlth·Nelson
Motors 2010.
Team game .. Zlde's Sport Shop
720.

SALE
PRICE

SALE
PRICE

GROUP WOMEN'S

DRESS SHOE:
Values To $25.00
SALE
PRICE

Values To $25.00

$500
.

GROUP
CHILDREN'S KIDPOWER

TENNIS SHOES
Values To$19.95
SALE
PRICE

ALL WOMEN'S FASHION

GENERAL
SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) Tony Thomas, 31, died fr1111 a blot
clot on the brain and bead Injuries
received ln a bout last week against
Sammy Home.
Thomas remained in a coma In
Spartsnbug General Hospital since
the Dec. 22 bout. He had undergone ·
emergency surgery after be collapsed in the dressing room about an
hour after be lost the fight on a
tecbtlcal knockout.

BOOTS 30%Off
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. Main St.

Pomero , Ohio

•

.

Phone 742-2100

OPEN

Prices Effective Thru Sat . , Jan. 5th
Homemade

jacey Waggoner
alii Understanding. (Namt!d ''most
important" by far.)
.
2. Faithfulness (i.e., no extramarital action).
3. Friendship Between Mates.
4. &lt;lllldren (Including problems or ,
lack of them, i.e., no major
disagreements oo child-raising,
etc.).
S. Similar Interests.
6. Financial Security.
7. Good Sex.
8. Romantic Love.
9. Equal Rights (male.female
llberstlon).
10. Total Togetherness. (Rated
least Important. ) . .

HAM SALAD •••••• , ••••• , •••••••••••••L.~.• sl.19
'Eckrich .

~

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••• !-.&amp;.·. '1.59
French City

HONEY LOAF &amp; PORK 'N BEEF••••••• ~~~ •.s1.99

$1
sg
·
POTATOES....... •
1
Idaho Baking

.
CHEESE.. ......... .1. 49
.
-

1,2 oz. Krall Pimiento or P
Individual Sliced $

3 lb. Yellow

SAVE
ON

FRIDAY

EVERY

NIGHT

ITEM
IN

TILL
8 P.M.

STOCK

.

ONIONS ....•.. ~~.~: 39~

I.

Start the New Decade OH with A New Look from Empire Furniture.

FROZEN

'

.

.

12 OZ. DONALD DUCK FROZEN ORANGE JUICE.. .• 2fl1.59
Authorized CATALOG
SAL!=S MERCHANT

·~
Phone 992·il7s2J4 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, 0.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-S,
Thur. 9-12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9-2.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
1-'--......:.or:...Your Money Back

Everything l_n Stock Reduced for this Big Sale Event.
..

5 to 7 LB. AVG. SUE BEE ROASTING HENS ........ 69' lb.
16 oz. Teen Queen

•APPLIANCES
•SWEEPERS
•lAMPS
•MIRRORS ·

TOMATOES ••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••• 2/79~
16 oz.·

COFFEEMATE.................. !:~.. $1.49
24 oz. Armour

·

BEEF STEW•••••••••••••••••••••• ,•• $1.29

•GUN
CABINETS

· 10l/,.oz. Campbells.Oid Fashioned

VEG.ETABLE
--- -

Unlock the Doors to Communication

••••oc,.•••..o

MRS. DORO'niY RITCHIE
CONFINED BY ILLNE'IS
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie, confined to
Mt. Carmel Medical Center, Colum·
bus, since Oct. 14, returned home
Saturday. Mrs. Ritchie underwent
open heart surgery on Oct. 1S. Her
hospital confinement was extended
due to an infeetion. She will continUe
to make weekly trips to Columbus
for treatment. Mr. and Mn. Ritchie
and their son, Bob, Jr. of Houston,
Texas, spent Christmas togeiher at
the
hospital.

'

The Gifts of Speech . &amp; Hearing

l"f5l • Ool tv&lt;&gt;Gti0\0•D """(:U
crto.o. '"""
• ·~•

at the h1111e of Teiannft Well next
Tuesday. Mrs. Ruth Riffle thanked
the members for helping decorate
the legion hall for the Christmas par·
ty.
Following a holiday dinner, the
members exchanged gifts.
Hostesses for the meeting were Mrs.
Doris Ewing, Mrs. Debbie Finlaw,
Mrs. Susan Baer, Mrs. Ruth Riffle,
and Mrs. Sue Zirkle.

Jacey Gayle Waggoner celebrated
her second birthday on Dec. 24. She
is the daughter of Jim and Jeanne
Asl) Waggoner o!Sandyvill, W. Va.
Grandparents are Pearl G. Ash,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bomie Conde
Ripley, W. Va., and Mr. and Mrs:
Eddie Waggoner, Sandyville, W.Va.
Great.grandmothel'll are Mrs. Ada
Clark, Marietta, and Mrs. Alina
Freeman, Sandyville, W. Va.

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALJH CENTER, INC.

&lt;Roll P&gt;
!~I

march for january 20 locally

8

.~

... 9

~ Sorority plans Marc_h of Dimes

~

21'1.00

Sports ·World

The juniors of the local unit wrap·
ped gifts contrl.buted by ,residepts
for the 13 men and six women from
Meigs County at the Athens Mental
Health Center, 'and these were
dellveted by Mn. Mary Martin,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, and Mn. Veda
Davis.
At the ANurslng Home, the
Awdliary took fruitcakes to 1S
veterans, diabetic food plates to.four
veterans and wblle there visited
Meigs County residents giving each
a candy cane. The juniors rJ the unit
sent $1 to eacb veteran and a gift to
Bill Rovnak, . their "adopted"
veteran.

Plans f~ the annual March of
Dimes' Mothet's March were announced at a recent meeting of the
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the home
of Mrs. Doris Ewing.
Mrs. Charlotte Hanning, service
chairman, reported that she will
have packetol to the members at the
next meeting. The march will be
carried out on Jan. 3&gt;.
During the meeting it was voted to
give lhe Jaycees $50 toward their annual food basket project. A cOmmunication was read from Jack and
Bill Ross, relatives of the late
fowtder of Beta Sigma Phi exten·
ding best wishes to the chapter for a
successful year. Members were
reminded of a taco party to be held

Tampa Bay-Rams battle for NFC titl~

TodBy's

-·

Numerous holiday activities were
carried out by the American Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Post 39
Pomeroy.
•,
It Is reported that several Aux·
iliary members went to Athem to
assist in wrspping Chrislmas gifts at
the Athens Mental Health Center for
1:11 P.~~lients there. Gifts were also
prepared for the six women and
three men at the Meigs County Infirmary, and fruit baskets and fruit
cakes were taken to several local
veterans who are shutlns, shutin
auxiliary membel'll and some legionnaires.

· "Romantic Love" placed eighth
on the list, and ''Good Sex" seventh.
starry -eyed dreamers my surveyees
weren't! They largely agreed with a
16-year-old bride's· views: ''We love
each other a lot but being best
friends Ia the greatest... I guess
'Good Sex' is only important to those
who don 1 have it, or haven 1 got
much else, and that's not our pro·
blem.''
''Faithfulness" and "Friendship
Between Mates" ranked second and
third, although votes were scattered
all the way from one to ten. A
number of divorced· persons put
faithfulness first, probably for good
reason.
''Qiildren," Including the problems rJ. child-raising, appeared
such an lndividuallasue it was hard
to assess. While almost no one gave
offspring top priority, votes were
well di8tributed between three and
eight, with four getting a slight rna·
jortty.
Numbers five and six were
"Similar Interests" and "Financial
Security." An Indiana husband
wrote, "I like football; she likes concerts. We enjoy these with friends;
occasionallY, when the mood strikes
us, together. I like steak alii
potatoes, she likes fancy casseroles.
We compromise. I'm Republican,
she's Democnt. Often we cancel one
another's votes. So what? Vlve Ia
dlffere!ICI! ! "
Money? "The amowtt isn't as important as agreement over how
you 'U spend it," a New Jerseyan
observed.

Holiday activities
carried out by. club

Birthdays
celebrated

The Speech Hearing Department has these
services available for the hearing impaired individual.
.
Hearing Evaluation
· Hearing Aid Check for damaged hearing
aids
Hearing Aid Selection to find best aid for
the client's hearing
Hearing Aid FiHing
,,..
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing Aid Ol'ientation an" Lip Reading
ComJ)Iete F~w:!Jp Services
·
For more inforn\ation, call 446·5500 in Gallia,
2116-1626 in.Jackso , in M i s 992-2192.

SOUP.~ ••••• ~ ••••• ,~: 2759e

e

LOOK .FOR THE
SALE TAGS
FROM

PEANUT BUMR........................
·ereain.vorchunky . sg•
--

·REMNANTS

·

WATER MAID .RICE
.
.

2 pack Soft. Weve

.

..

.

·:

EVERYTHING
IN STOCK

43'·
:
..

. 1

P~Hie, snickers ·

...

·

~·~

1

10 r;~z: Nestafe ·

'~:~

I

·

' I

' ' . •:.,..

~

,

~

i

Of

1,

.1.~ · ·· '·· ·.; · · · "-. :.'...;

~INSTANT .~.FFEE:. ~.'.....~~~·; •••.•)4Jg
.,

·~

,t

STOCK

.

•.

\

~SAVE •2'24~95-

~

, l ~·

~500

TO

BEDROOM. SUITES

r

i '

CAN·D·y·.·BARS
.· ..' . · ·; . ·;..., .........
"P.ack· ·7,;,·.
·.w·,:·
.. .......
.

$100

ON ALL

rT:OILET
TI·SSUE
' . . .2 Roll Pkg. 51'·og;
I' .
,
. ··~-··•••• ••••••.•••••• • .
· ~hree MusReteers, Milky Way, York

EVERY
THING
IN

SAVE

'

·box ..
········ · ····~···

cHESTS

•RUG

12 oz. Jif

16 oz·:

-

•MICRO WAVES
•MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS
•MIRRORS
•RECLINERS
•CE"DAR

0.

, .Bai.ett .Qu.en Size.
MAnRESS &amp;
.;BOX SPRINGS ··224,95 Set1
·'

•
I,

�8- The Daily ~-cntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 191&gt;

_ 9 -The Daily Sentinel, Middle~Ji!rt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 191&gt;

hmored at the 12th Masonic District
banquet.
Feb. 12- Middleport Village Council agreed to look into an energy con·
charges following a rafd at the Cen- servation program for village
FEBRUARY
in area roads.
benefits, and council passed a
•. Feb. 3- Damage was estimated at
Feb. 6 - · A budget totalinp tury Bar in Pomeroy.
hiking pay of village ftmresolution
·.~,000 aa the result of a fire which
Feb. 9 -The Middleport.Pomeroy
$134,161.34 ·was approved by the
ployes.
~~estroyed a Chester home.
Rotary Club celebrated its 50th anSyracuse Village Council.
Feb. ,13 - Randall Mace, director
-;: Feb. 4 - Striking union members ·
Feb. 7 - Judge Robert ·E. Buck . niversary with a banquetof
SEOEMS, discussed the
~t Buckeye Rural Electric was sworn in as Judge of Probate
obsenfance at the Heath United
organization's
contract with Meigs
Cooperative began a petition drive Court, Juvenile Division, by Judge
Methodlst Church in Middleport.
County
at
the
meeting
of the County
:&amp;o oust the board rl. directors ·of the Manning Webster.
Feb. 10 - Lori Wood, P~meroy~ ·
..
Commissioners.
:ut!Uty.
a.nd Greg Blllh, Middleport, were
Feb. 8 -Six persons were arrested
Feb. 14- Plans for the annual Can~: Feb. 5 - Pomeroy Village Council
selected as the outstanding young
for drug-related charges and a
cer
· Crusade were discussed when
tbegan action on
potholeB seventh person was booked on other
people In Masunic astiviUes, and

~'ervice

~979 · Meigs

notes...
MARXSMml

GRADUATES
RANTOUL, Ill. - Ainnan Mark S.
SMith, son rl. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
L. Smith d. New Haven, W. Va., baa
graduated from the U. S. Air Force
technical training course for
fabrication and parachute
specialists at Chanute Air Force
Base, here.
4
Graduates of the course earn
credits toward an &amp;BSOdate degree
in applied science thfough the Community C~ege d. the Air Force. •
Ainnan Smith is being assigned _to
Seymour Jronson Air Force Base,
N. C., for duty with a unit rJ. the Tactical Air Command.
The airman is a 1979 graduate of
Wshama High School, Mason, W.
Va.
NEW PASTOR OF TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH - V'mcent C.
Waters UI will be taking over the position of minister for the Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ starting the first Sunday in January. Vincent is
currently a stud•~t - ~Kentucky Christian College in Grayson, Ky., and
will graduate in May with an AB in Olristian Ministries and will receive
: also the BTh degree. Vincent has a double major, Bible and Christian
. Ministries, as well as nwnerous hours in Greek, History, PSychology.
Waters is a native of Lexington, Ky., where he attended Henry Clay High
School. After graduating from high school Vincent clltered the U. S. ,
Marine Corps and served four years in which part of that time was spent
in Vietnam and Europe. Once discharged from the MarineB, Vincent went
to work for General ~ •. ., .."'" ' n Lexfngtm and was employed there for
two years until he entered KCC. He is married to the fonner June Lemley
- ·ri. Wayhesburg, Pa., and they have two children, Stephen Pau~ age three,
.. and Carrie Denise, eight months.

---------------------.

'.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

MARISA.QUEEN
ASSIGNED
SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Ainnan
Marisa L. Queen, granddaughter d.
Norma Queen ofMasm, w. Va., baa
been 8Siligned to Lowry Air Force
Base, Colo., after completing Air
Force basic training.
During the siJ: weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base; here, the ainnan
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training in hwnan
relations.
In addition'; ainnen who complete
basic training earn credits towards
an associate degree in applied science through the Community College
of the Air Force.
The ainnan will now receive
specialized instruction in the
avionics systems field.
Her uncle, Otis Queen, also resides
in Mason.

come out still lightly perfWIIed so I
FLOOR.TILE GOT BURNED
take them , one at a time, and wrap
By Polly Cramer
around the wood. Seal at the ends
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Sl'EVEN CONLEY
DEAR POLLY - There . is a with white glue. Just slightly
PROMOTED
cigarette burn on the new overlap the pads and they will stay
Marine Pfc. Steven C. Cooley, son
in place.
pennanent-Bhine tile floor in my
of Thurman Conley of 12400
Then double crochet a strip wide Chillicothe Road, Chester, has been
bathroom. I hope someone can tell
enough to make a case aromd the meritoriously promoted to his
me what to do.- MRS. M.C.
wood and as long as the hanger bar. present rank while serving at the
DEAR MRS. M.C. - U the burn is
Sew
it on in place with yarn so the Marine Corps (Helicopter) Air
not deep try putting bleach on the
wooden
part is co'lnpietely covered. Station, Tustin, Calif.
stain. U that does not work try rubb·
Wrap
yarn
around the metal hanger
ing with a car buffing compound. If
He received the accelerated
the floor is laid in squares it might · rop and fasten with glue to the foam promotion in recognition of outbe easier to remove that tile and in- sheet. Make a yam pompom to standing performance, duty
cover the part where wood and proficiency and demonstrated
stall a new one. - POLLY
metal join.
DEAR POLLY - When I take
· professional abilities.
We sell these lovely hangers in our
baby out I carry several plastic
He joined the Marine Corps in
hospital gift shop for $2.25 each and I Febi'UIIf)', 1979.
bread bags with me. In tt;em I put
have seen them sell at church
lloiled disposable diap• 1. facial
bazaars for $3.00. Just use your im·
tissue, etc., and tie a knot 1n the top.
agination
and you will have a ll'iclul,
These bags are easily disposed of in
• JAMESJONFS
lovely
moneymaker
for your baza{lr.
a streettrash can.
- MRS. E.M.
To keep my kitchen garbage can
REPORTS FOR DUTY
Polly will send you one of her signclean and odor.free I put messy
. Marine Pfc. James H. Jones, soo
ed thank-you newspaper-coupon of Aywood c. and pansy M. Jones d.
scraps, egg shells and wet garbage
clippers if she uses your favorite Route I, Box 11, Racine, bas reporIn ·a rinsed-()Ut empty milk carton.
Pointer, Peeve or ?Foblem in bet . ted for duty with 3rd Force Service
Thls saves haVing· to 'brow out a
column.
Write POLLY'S Support Group oo Okinawa.
hall-empty garbagP. bag - I simply
POINTERS in care of this
put the carton in the outdoor can
He joined the Marine Corps in
newspaper.
April, 1979.
when it is full or odorous. - BON-

AQUAFRESH

35
TOOTIII'ASTI

1n.
55•
IIG.

li!:'

-

•

Out-oftotimers
attend funeral
Relatives out~f·town here for the·
funeral services for Martin Cunningham at the Ewing Funeral
Home Monday and visiting Mr. and
.Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr., Apple
:Grove, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Johnson and family at Ra~ine were
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mangus, Mrs.
Mary Rouda and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Bennett, all of Saxonburg,Pa.
Others attending were Martin
Derouin of Clanton, Pa., Mr. and
· Mrs. Thomas Cloes and childrel) of
Valencia, Pa., Joseph Derouin of
Millvale, Pa., Mrs. James (Carol)
Freeman of Irwin, Pa.
Mr. Cunningham made his home
with his dallfltter, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert ~ith, Sr. at Apple Grove.
He died at Veterans Memorial
!iospital; burial was in Letart Falls
Cemetery.

HISTORY BOOKS
AVAILABLE
.
.Copies of the Meigs County
History Book may be picked up from
I to 3 p.m. Friday and Sunday at the
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Some 458 of the books have been
packaged and delivered to the post
office for delivery and are expected

....sl"

...... -;t. ..·

we w•ll oHer you .,au' cho·ce ola comparable •ltm, wMn
ava•table . reftect•no the wm J Nv•ngs or 1 re•nc.-..ck whiC:,;
w•ll ent•t le -,.ou to purchne the advftr1•Md 1tem II the
' " " " " ' ' "' p11C~ WlttHn )() dlys

Aoy Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

:

TUMBLERS

~ ~i!J)J

0

..

:'

..

992-2920

Pomeroy, OH.

SLICED INTO C~OPS, FRESH QUARTER

Pork Lo1n. ................. lb.
$159

VELLOW

·lb

.

$299

Bag .

NEWVORK

BUY .E 6-0Z. CTN.

89
$139

Country Clu
Ice Cream

Esprit Yogurt A'f THE REGULAR PRICE
lET ONE 6·0Z. CTN.
Esprit Yogurt

FREEl

lOC

c

•

..

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

""
•

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

4

-·"·'
-.•..
. w

:,_

ROUND TOP KROGER

•

20·oz
LVI.

....'
•·

• bupt Closool Sotv.., MWftltl&gt;t T1l ,..,
• llu;t HlotH, Wlllh S.lpltor, WIIIMson I
7111 A""" Ciletlo.olon • ..,., Storti

~

•

''!!!

. ·., •

. 11-oa.

'0~3flt

*149'

9 oz.

. lb.

Fried Chlcbn

. c-.

.. s21~

-.....S449

. ..............c..

".{

........... C•n•

Family Pak

IHa.

,.....

'

,' ~

;;;;; · s2e1 a;l.d io s·1· t9
.

tae11f·hr·I·Q•~. .

· · Donuts ... •••

.

·

r;;;;;;omNCsl:89 .i.i.~~;SAGIOI . $249

..CLUDilMIAT.IYIOITAIUI.IIOU&amp;

.Special ..........
v

46-oa.

Longhorn
Cheeae

.

-C~opped Ham

.

COLlY

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl bEPTS .
HOT FOODS
AVAILAILE I
7pm DAILY
.

Dell Style .

~

~;:!·

19

.'

.Q

LESS
THAN
QOIEN ·

Seven:· Up

~

'

EN

PINT IITUIHAill
IOnLll

.

..
.......•
-.....
....

Save Even More
When You Buy ~2

Sweet Peas . . .. ...

~

·'

.

$799

CHEAPER BY TH

3· s11.9

:-'.• ·Wh'if e Bread... ..

'

''

99C

~

q

;

'/,·Gal •

.OPEN
24 HOURS
ADAY s......,,

ft

UTE CHOC;

PEANUT

•

75c

·
3
Bean Coffee .... ~~9

WDEN'S

SOPH_E MAE

GradeA
Large Eggs ... ..... Doz.
SPOTLIGHT

3gm

.

·

Orange Ju1ce ........ctn.

0

3.16 ....

KROGER

KROGER FRESH

ADHESW~
lEG. ID.$1.91

• UG.
10.

'ntoltr JtwlrB &amp;tDtt ·

Sliced Bacon.......... ~~~:

(10·L8. 8AG ... 99&lt;)

.

.

GWALTNEY OLDE TOWNE

::.. White Cab~age ......... lb.

G.E. son
FRENCH'S
MUSTARD ~~~· WHITE BULBS
·4..$~~'an 59
·0

9:30-5:00 M, Tu., W, F, Sat.
CLOSED ALL DAY Th. &amp; Sun.

1
B

. • ............ ..25
··' On1ons

WTMAN

$1.49 peck

AS USUAL OUR WINTER HOURS Wllf BE:

0

;;

::3 ~I

EVEREADY
BAnERY

an.

..

•

:.: Potatoes .......... 20 !9

MAGIC
TAPE

"C" &amp; "D"

'

U.S. NO .IROUNOWHITE

Pkg.

(SUCED ... Ib , 19CI

49

$

roll•

WILL BE OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ..... .lb.

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

Yz x 450-INJfcOTOI

TWIN~STACK f)~~-·

_

lsAvil 1-1~.
l!!.J 8

5·7·11. AVG.

15cc
~.c:;:-..,,,.

I
I

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

$ 14
_

I

I
I
I

KROGER COST CUTTER .COUPON

EYEREG.DROPS
REJ. $1.90

_ COMn

c:

~

1
Pkg.
I LIMIT 1 PIIG. WITH COII'OIIliiD $7.50 ADDITIOIIAL
I
PUICHUl (llCLUDJIIG THIS ITEM I
I
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
1 ·~
- IIIIICT- TIIMICIIU
.III.IIC. lt Tin lll.lii.I. IIII
IIIR llltll Till&lt;

VISINE

55

I'
I
I
I
I
I

i lsAVEI12-oz.8

.. .s1•

14.'5

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE

INDtVIDUALL Y WIA,ED SLICES

Kroger
Cheese Food

RIOPAN
SUSP.
REG. RQ. $2.45

RONNIE LOVE &amp;

Court St.

Etch of tht$t advenised •tems ·,, reau•rtbto be rudily

3•

~·

S.

lEG.

J•g

ava•labhl! 101 sale •n uch Ktogflr store. e•cept a'l ~rta•v
noted ,, "''I aa 11 ...,.4! dO run out of an ldlltrh..O ,,.,,

Q-TIPS
SWABS
REG. REJ. $1.64

RAVE SOn
PERM
KIT
lEG.' RD. $5.89

AT THE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPOJ PU FAMILY

s-1

11-oz.

With Record Sales Over 20 Million

Gal.4

(HB. PKG .... $1.71)

SJ29

TAll

SPEND CHRISTMAS

IN COLUMBUS
PT. PLEASANT - Mr. and Mrs.
Otho L. FitzRandolph o{ Ohio River
Rd. spent the Christmas holidays in
Columbus with their daughter and
son-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. R. Lane
Andrist and daughters, Karen and
Lynd!l of Virginia, at the Andrist
h1me in Columbus. Rev. Andrist Is
Aalloclate Pastor ·of the Blvd.
Presbyterian Church in Columbus.
Also present were the FitzRandolph 's other daughter a nd
husband, Mr. and Mro. Winfred Holt
and Mr. FitzRandolph's sister, Mrs.
Pearl Trevey, all of Charleston.
While in Columbus, Mrs. Holt 's birthday waa observed.

SAVE
3&amp;·

ORNEX
24's
REG. ROAIL $2.09

"'"""'

PEPTOBISMOL
REG. Rn. $2.00'

THE SOUND OF THE DRIFTERS

I

Clorox Bleach :

0
CIECU-cBI''JINWGelc:

The Nationally Known

111 I

5' OFF LABEL

KLEENEX
TISSUES

NOVAHISTINE
ORNEX
DMX
·~
~

APPEARING JANUARY 2nd • JANUARY 5th

UPPER DECK

KROGERCOSTCUTTERCOUPON

FACIAL

RIG. REJ. $3.09

$

Chamber of Commerce awards
banquet was held. Honored were Bill
Quickel, Eleanor Thunaa, A. R.
Knight, Edison Hobatetter, Jbdge
Manning Webster, Freda Ueving,
and Beuhill Utterback.
Feb. 18 " The largest snowfall of
the season, more than !Oinches, feU,
making roads hazardous and cancelling many, many events.
Feb. 19 - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews named Rod Karr to fill
the vacancy oo Pomeroy Village
Council left by the reslgnatloo of
Larry Powell.

LIMIT 1 JIG WITH COUPON AND $1.50 ADDITIOIIlL
.
PURCHASE (EICLUDJI!jl THIS ITEM)

7

to be delivered by the end d. this

week.
There are a few extra copies of the
history book available to the public.
Calt rl. the book is now $35 if picked
up and ~7 if mailed. The remaining
.copies will be sold on a first come
first served basis and may be pur:
chased during the Friday and Sunday hours at tbe museum.

. .

Et...SJ29

•

®I® BATHROOM
TISSUE
!Jt•

;"'.........

the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society met at Veterans
Memorial HOI!pital.
Feb. 15 -- Daughters of the
American Revolution good citizenship award winners in MeiM County
were announced . They were Jana
Kay Burson, Rt. I , Shade; Karen
Probert, Reedsville; and James
Brent Patterson, Racine.
Feb. 16 - Plans for the 1979 Big
Bend Regatta were outlinerl at the
Pomeroy Chamber of Cwunerce
meeting.
Feb. 17 - The annual Pomeroy

OILORASEPTIC
WITH SPRAYER

HI-DR I

''"'·-·
- ·
._
-~
...." ·'"'·-'&lt;,..-

news highlights

REGULAR 01 CHERRY

NIE

DEAR POLLY - I would like to
share the way I cover single wood
bar coat hangers. Those blue
softener sheets us~ the dryer

,

·

•

'

&lt;

ll...ala ..•~.

,

..,

0.
'
· II'J\4&amp;.
I:1111 ...............
c..
a.AT 110111

'
~

.·

.
.(

'
r

�8- The Daily ~-cntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 191&gt;

_ 9 -The Daily Sentinel, Middle~Ji!rt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 191&gt;

hmored at the 12th Masonic District
banquet.
Feb. 12- Middleport Village Council agreed to look into an energy con·
charges following a rafd at the Cen- servation program for village
FEBRUARY
in area roads.
benefits, and council passed a
•. Feb. 3- Damage was estimated at
Feb. 6 - · A budget totalinp tury Bar in Pomeroy.
hiking pay of village ftmresolution
·.~,000 aa the result of a fire which
Feb. 9 -The Middleport.Pomeroy
$134,161.34 ·was approved by the
ployes.
~~estroyed a Chester home.
Rotary Club celebrated its 50th anSyracuse Village Council.
Feb. ,13 - Randall Mace, director
-;: Feb. 4 - Striking union members ·
Feb. 7 - Judge Robert ·E. Buck . niversary with a banquetof
SEOEMS, discussed the
~t Buckeye Rural Electric was sworn in as Judge of Probate
obsenfance at the Heath United
organization's
contract with Meigs
Cooperative began a petition drive Court, Juvenile Division, by Judge
Methodlst Church in Middleport.
County
at
the
meeting
of the County
:&amp;o oust the board rl. directors ·of the Manning Webster.
Feb. 10 - Lori Wood, P~meroy~ ·
..
Commissioners.
:ut!Uty.
a.nd Greg Blllh, Middleport, were
Feb. 8 -Six persons were arrested
Feb. 14- Plans for the annual Can~: Feb. 5 - Pomeroy Village Council
selected as the outstanding young
for drug-related charges and a
cer
· Crusade were discussed when
tbegan action on
potholeB seventh person was booked on other
people In Masunic astiviUes, and

~'ervice

~979 · Meigs

notes...
MARXSMml

GRADUATES
RANTOUL, Ill. - Ainnan Mark S.
SMith, son rl. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
L. Smith d. New Haven, W. Va., baa
graduated from the U. S. Air Force
technical training course for
fabrication and parachute
specialists at Chanute Air Force
Base, here.
4
Graduates of the course earn
credits toward an &amp;BSOdate degree
in applied science thfough the Community C~ege d. the Air Force. •
Ainnan Smith is being assigned _to
Seymour Jronson Air Force Base,
N. C., for duty with a unit rJ. the Tactical Air Command.
The airman is a 1979 graduate of
Wshama High School, Mason, W.
Va.
NEW PASTOR OF TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH - V'mcent C.
Waters UI will be taking over the position of minister for the Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ starting the first Sunday in January. Vincent is
currently a stud•~t - ~Kentucky Christian College in Grayson, Ky., and
will graduate in May with an AB in Olristian Ministries and will receive
: also the BTh degree. Vincent has a double major, Bible and Christian
. Ministries, as well as nwnerous hours in Greek, History, PSychology.
Waters is a native of Lexington, Ky., where he attended Henry Clay High
School. After graduating from high school Vincent clltered the U. S. ,
Marine Corps and served four years in which part of that time was spent
in Vietnam and Europe. Once discharged from the MarineB, Vincent went
to work for General ~ •. ., .."'" ' n Lexfngtm and was employed there for
two years until he entered KCC. He is married to the fonner June Lemley
- ·ri. Wayhesburg, Pa., and they have two children, Stephen Pau~ age three,
.. and Carrie Denise, eight months.

---------------------.

'.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

MARISA.QUEEN
ASSIGNED
SAN ANTONIO, Texas - Ainnan
Marisa L. Queen, granddaughter d.
Norma Queen ofMasm, w. Va., baa
been 8Siligned to Lowry Air Force
Base, Colo., after completing Air
Force basic training.
During the siJ: weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base; here, the ainnan
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training in hwnan
relations.
In addition'; ainnen who complete
basic training earn credits towards
an associate degree in applied science through the Community College
of the Air Force.
The ainnan will now receive
specialized instruction in the
avionics systems field.
Her uncle, Otis Queen, also resides
in Mason.

come out still lightly perfWIIed so I
FLOOR.TILE GOT BURNED
take them , one at a time, and wrap
By Polly Cramer
around the wood. Seal at the ends
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Sl'EVEN CONLEY
DEAR POLLY - There . is a with white glue. Just slightly
PROMOTED
cigarette burn on the new overlap the pads and they will stay
Marine Pfc. Steven C. Cooley, son
in place.
pennanent-Bhine tile floor in my
of Thurman Conley of 12400
Then double crochet a strip wide Chillicothe Road, Chester, has been
bathroom. I hope someone can tell
enough to make a case aromd the meritoriously promoted to his
me what to do.- MRS. M.C.
wood and as long as the hanger bar. present rank while serving at the
DEAR MRS. M.C. - U the burn is
Sew
it on in place with yarn so the Marine Corps (Helicopter) Air
not deep try putting bleach on the
wooden
part is co'lnpietely covered. Station, Tustin, Calif.
stain. U that does not work try rubb·
Wrap
yarn
around the metal hanger
ing with a car buffing compound. If
He received the accelerated
the floor is laid in squares it might · rop and fasten with glue to the foam promotion in recognition of outbe easier to remove that tile and in- sheet. Make a yam pompom to standing performance, duty
cover the part where wood and proficiency and demonstrated
stall a new one. - POLLY
metal join.
DEAR POLLY - When I take
· professional abilities.
We sell these lovely hangers in our
baby out I carry several plastic
He joined the Marine Corps in
hospital gift shop for $2.25 each and I Febi'UIIf)', 1979.
bread bags with me. In tt;em I put
have seen them sell at church
lloiled disposable diap• 1. facial
bazaars for $3.00. Just use your im·
tissue, etc., and tie a knot 1n the top.
agination
and you will have a ll'iclul,
These bags are easily disposed of in
• JAMESJONFS
lovely
moneymaker
for your baza{lr.
a streettrash can.
- MRS. E.M.
To keep my kitchen garbage can
REPORTS FOR DUTY
Polly will send you one of her signclean and odor.free I put messy
. Marine Pfc. James H. Jones, soo
ed thank-you newspaper-coupon of Aywood c. and pansy M. Jones d.
scraps, egg shells and wet garbage
clippers if she uses your favorite Route I, Box 11, Racine, bas reporIn ·a rinsed-()Ut empty milk carton.
Pointer, Peeve or ?Foblem in bet . ted for duty with 3rd Force Service
Thls saves haVing· to 'brow out a
column.
Write POLLY'S Support Group oo Okinawa.
hall-empty garbagP. bag - I simply
POINTERS in care of this
put the carton in the outdoor can
He joined the Marine Corps in
newspaper.
April, 1979.
when it is full or odorous. - BON-

AQUAFRESH

35
TOOTIII'ASTI

1n.
55•
IIG.

li!:'

-

•

Out-oftotimers
attend funeral
Relatives out~f·town here for the·
funeral services for Martin Cunningham at the Ewing Funeral
Home Monday and visiting Mr. and
.Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr., Apple
:Grove, and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Johnson and family at Ra~ine were
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mangus, Mrs.
Mary Rouda and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. William Bennett, all of Saxonburg,Pa.
Others attending were Martin
Derouin of Clanton, Pa., Mr. and
· Mrs. Thomas Cloes and childrel) of
Valencia, Pa., Joseph Derouin of
Millvale, Pa., Mrs. James (Carol)
Freeman of Irwin, Pa.
Mr. Cunningham made his home
with his dallfltter, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert ~ith, Sr. at Apple Grove.
He died at Veterans Memorial
!iospital; burial was in Letart Falls
Cemetery.

HISTORY BOOKS
AVAILABLE
.
.Copies of the Meigs County
History Book may be picked up from
I to 3 p.m. Friday and Sunday at the
Meigs Museum, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy.
Some 458 of the books have been
packaged and delivered to the post
office for delivery and are expected

....sl"

...... -;t. ..·

we w•ll oHer you .,au' cho·ce ola comparable •ltm, wMn
ava•table . reftect•no the wm J Nv•ngs or 1 re•nc.-..ck whiC:,;
w•ll ent•t le -,.ou to purchne the advftr1•Md 1tem II the
' " " " " ' ' "' p11C~ WlttHn )() dlys

Aoy Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

:

TUMBLERS

~ ~i!J)J

0

..

:'

..

992-2920

Pomeroy, OH.

SLICED INTO C~OPS, FRESH QUARTER

Pork Lo1n. ................. lb.
$159

VELLOW

·lb

.

$299

Bag .

NEWVORK

BUY .E 6-0Z. CTN.

89
$139

Country Clu
Ice Cream

Esprit Yogurt A'f THE REGULAR PRICE
lET ONE 6·0Z. CTN.
Esprit Yogurt

FREEl

lOC

c

•

..

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

""
•

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

4

-·"·'
-.•..
. w

:,_

ROUND TOP KROGER

•

20·oz
LVI.

....'
•·

• bupt Closool Sotv.., MWftltl&gt;t T1l ,..,
• llu;t HlotH, Wlllh S.lpltor, WIIIMson I
7111 A""" Ciletlo.olon • ..,., Storti

~

•

''!!!

. ·., •

. 11-oa.

'0~3flt

*149'

9 oz.

. lb.

Fried Chlcbn

. c-.

.. s21~

-.....S449

. ..............c..

".{

........... C•n•

Family Pak

IHa.

,.....

'

,' ~

;;;;; · s2e1 a;l.d io s·1· t9
.

tae11f·hr·I·Q•~. .

· · Donuts ... •••

.

·

r;;;;;;omNCsl:89 .i.i.~~;SAGIOI . $249

..CLUDilMIAT.IYIOITAIUI.IIOU&amp;

.Special ..........
v

46-oa.

Longhorn
Cheeae

.

-C~opped Ham

.

COLlY

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DELl bEPTS .
HOT FOODS
AVAILAILE I
7pm DAILY
.

Dell Style .

~

~;:!·

19

.'

.Q

LESS
THAN
QOIEN ·

Seven:· Up

~

'

EN

PINT IITUIHAill
IOnLll

.

..
.......•
-.....
....

Save Even More
When You Buy ~2

Sweet Peas . . .. ...

~

·'

.

$799

CHEAPER BY TH

3· s11.9

:-'.• ·Wh'if e Bread... ..

'

''

99C

~

q

;

'/,·Gal •

.OPEN
24 HOURS
ADAY s......,,

ft

UTE CHOC;

PEANUT

•

75c

·
3
Bean Coffee .... ~~9

WDEN'S

SOPH_E MAE

GradeA
Large Eggs ... ..... Doz.
SPOTLIGHT

3gm

.

·

Orange Ju1ce ........ctn.

0

3.16 ....

KROGER

KROGER FRESH

ADHESW~
lEG. ID.$1.91

• UG.
10.

'ntoltr JtwlrB &amp;tDtt ·

Sliced Bacon.......... ~~~:

(10·L8. 8AG ... 99&lt;)

.

.

GWALTNEY OLDE TOWNE

::.. White Cab~age ......... lb.

G.E. son
FRENCH'S
MUSTARD ~~~· WHITE BULBS
·4..$~~'an 59
·0

9:30-5:00 M, Tu., W, F, Sat.
CLOSED ALL DAY Th. &amp; Sun.

1
B

. • ............ ..25
··' On1ons

WTMAN

$1.49 peck

AS USUAL OUR WINTER HOURS Wllf BE:

0

;;

::3 ~I

EVEREADY
BAnERY

an.

..

•

:.: Potatoes .......... 20 !9

MAGIC
TAPE

"C" &amp; "D"

'

U.S. NO .IROUNOWHITE

Pkg.

(SUCED ... Ib , 19CI

49

$

roll•

WILL BE OPEN FOR BUSINESS

Fresh Picnic
Pork Roast ..... .lb.

REGULAR OR CHUB PAK

Yz x 450-INJfcOTOI

TWIN~STACK f)~~-·

_

lsAvil 1-1~.
l!!.J 8

5·7·11. AVG.

15cc
~.c:;:-..,,,.

I
I

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

$ 14
_

I

I
I
I

KROGER COST CUTTER .COUPON

EYEREG.DROPS
REJ. $1.90

_ COMn

c:

~

1
Pkg.
I LIMIT 1 PIIG. WITH COII'OIIliiD $7.50 ADDITIOIIAL
I
PUICHUl (llCLUDJIIG THIS ITEM I
I
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
1 ·~
- IIIIICT- TIIMICIIU
.III.IIC. lt Tin lll.lii.I. IIII
IIIR llltll Till&lt;

VISINE

55

I'
I
I
I
I
I

i lsAVEI12-oz.8

.. .s1•

14.'5

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE

INDtVIDUALL Y WIA,ED SLICES

Kroger
Cheese Food

RIOPAN
SUSP.
REG. RQ. $2.45

RONNIE LOVE &amp;

Court St.

Etch of tht$t advenised •tems ·,, reau•rtbto be rudily

3•

~·

S.

lEG.

J•g

ava•labhl! 101 sale •n uch Ktogflr store. e•cept a'l ~rta•v
noted ,, "''I aa 11 ...,.4! dO run out of an ldlltrh..O ,,.,,

Q-TIPS
SWABS
REG. REJ. $1.64

RAVE SOn
PERM
KIT
lEG.' RD. $5.89

AT THE

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPOJ PU FAMILY

s-1

11-oz.

With Record Sales Over 20 Million

Gal.4

(HB. PKG .... $1.71)

SJ29

TAll

SPEND CHRISTMAS

IN COLUMBUS
PT. PLEASANT - Mr. and Mrs.
Otho L. FitzRandolph o{ Ohio River
Rd. spent the Christmas holidays in
Columbus with their daughter and
son-in-law, Rev. and Mrs. R. Lane
Andrist and daughters, Karen and
Lynd!l of Virginia, at the Andrist
h1me in Columbus. Rev. Andrist Is
Aalloclate Pastor ·of the Blvd.
Presbyterian Church in Columbus.
Also present were the FitzRandolph 's other daughter a nd
husband, Mr. and Mro. Winfred Holt
and Mr. FitzRandolph's sister, Mrs.
Pearl Trevey, all of Charleston.
While in Columbus, Mrs. Holt 's birthday waa observed.

SAVE
3&amp;·

ORNEX
24's
REG. ROAIL $2.09

"'"""'

PEPTOBISMOL
REG. Rn. $2.00'

THE SOUND OF THE DRIFTERS

I

Clorox Bleach :

0
CIECU-cBI''JINWGelc:

The Nationally Known

111 I

5' OFF LABEL

KLEENEX
TISSUES

NOVAHISTINE
ORNEX
DMX
·~
~

APPEARING JANUARY 2nd • JANUARY 5th

UPPER DECK

KROGERCOSTCUTTERCOUPON

FACIAL

RIG. REJ. $3.09

$

Chamber of Commerce awards
banquet was held. Honored were Bill
Quickel, Eleanor Thunaa, A. R.
Knight, Edison Hobatetter, Jbdge
Manning Webster, Freda Ueving,
and Beuhill Utterback.
Feb. 18 " The largest snowfall of
the season, more than !Oinches, feU,
making roads hazardous and cancelling many, many events.
Feb. 19 - Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews named Rod Karr to fill
the vacancy oo Pomeroy Village
Council left by the reslgnatloo of
Larry Powell.

LIMIT 1 JIG WITH COUPON AND $1.50 ADDITIOIIlL
.
PURCHASE (EICLUDJI!jl THIS ITEM)

7

to be delivered by the end d. this

week.
There are a few extra copies of the
history book available to the public.
Calt rl. the book is now $35 if picked
up and ~7 if mailed. The remaining
.copies will be sold on a first come
first served basis and may be pur:
chased during the Friday and Sunday hours at tbe museum.

. .

Et...SJ29

•

®I® BATHROOM
TISSUE
!Jt•

;"'.........

the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society met at Veterans
Memorial HOI!pital.
Feb. 15 -- Daughters of the
American Revolution good citizenship award winners in MeiM County
were announced . They were Jana
Kay Burson, Rt. I , Shade; Karen
Probert, Reedsville; and James
Brent Patterson, Racine.
Feb. 16 - Plans for the 1979 Big
Bend Regatta were outlinerl at the
Pomeroy Chamber of Cwunerce
meeting.
Feb. 17 - The annual Pomeroy

OILORASEPTIC
WITH SPRAYER

HI-DR I

''"'·-·
- ·
._
-~
...." ·'"'·-'&lt;,..-

news highlights

REGULAR 01 CHERRY

NIE

DEAR POLLY - I would like to
share the way I cover single wood
bar coat hangers. Those blue
softener sheets us~ the dryer

,

·

•

'

&lt;

ll...ala ..•~.

,

..,

0.
'
· II'J\4&amp;.
I:1111 ...............
c..
a.AT 110111

'
~

.·

.
.(

'
r

�; u- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1!180

•

•

your Best Buys Are },OUitd In the Sentinel ·Classifieds

ftj'}I)N} fj}ft ~ lliAT IICRAIIIIWlWORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ $ -----l&gt;y.HeDr.i Arnold and Bob LH
unscr•mble these lour Jumbhta.
one tetter to each aquue , to form
lour ordinary worda.

-'l'lleDaUySentlnel. Middleport-Pomerov. 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2,19110
DICK TRACY
11

WENDY.
I 11-l.. ANSWeR
AS MANY
QUESTIONS A S
HI

WANT AD

CHARGES
Cuh

1.50

uo

ldays
&amp;days

~ - 00

MEIG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 992 ·
Pets available for
adoption and Information
servi c e . . Investigative

Olarge

1.00

wanted to Buy
CHiP WOOD. Poles ma• .

6260.

15 Words or Under

I day
2dayl

Notices

Agent.

l.Zi
I.IIJ'
125

GUN SI-&gt;OOT EVERY
SUNDAY I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

3.75

Each word over the minimum
IS words b 4 cents per word per
da)' . Ad! rwminl: Clthe:~:thau.con­
secutive days will t.! ctuu-gi!d at

GUN

the 1day rate.

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Rac i ne

Fire

Dept.

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
Altherr buildingln Bashan.

In .memory, Card of Thanks
and Obit.~ : 6 cenb pe:- word,
13.00 nurumwn. Cull in ad-

Factory choke guns only .

vance.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Seoul Troop 249.

Mobile Heme sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with

cash with order. ~ cent charge
for ad! caJTYinM: Box Nwnber In
Care oftbeSeriiinel.

The Publiaber reserves theright tel edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publlaher will not be reoponslble
for more than ~ incorrect ln-

_,Clll.

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
co,ins, rings, , jewelry, etc .

Contact Ed BurkeN Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Pbone 992-21!16

ATTENTION :
(1M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certif ied check

NOTICE

for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates .

WANT-AD

Nothing loo large. P,lso,
guns, pocket watches and

AR~Mll~k~G

coin collections. Call 614-

767·3167 or 557&lt;!411 .
BUYING U.S. SlLVE R
COINS DATED 196A OR
(; ,. RLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE ANO
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN ' S.

Monday
Noon on Saturday

Tuesday
thruFrlday
4P.M .
the dey before publication

SWiday
&lt;P.M.

Friday afternoon

MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular mon·

thly meeting, Sat. , Jan. 5th
at Shade Valley Club
House. Bring a friend.

Thurld•r. Jan. 3

end . $12 p·e( ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW. English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614 -

698 · 3290.

Bording

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
care products. Western

boots . Children's
Adults $29.00.

S15.!il .

indoor-outdoor

ONE
REDTICK
coon
hound, 2 trained beagles. 3
white English bulldog puppies. 3 rabbits, 2 does, I
buck. 742 2520.

.

HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 002 · ·6260 .
Healthy, shots, and wor·
med . Border collie types,

Irish Setter, English Seller
with

puppies,

shepherd

type. Put a cold nose in
your life. Kittens, kittens,

kiNens,
sizes.

all . shapes,
•

ONE red tick coon hound, 2
tra.lned beagles, 3 whlte

English· bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck. 742·
2521.

WOULD THE PERSON
who found the Iaroe sum of

area.

3

years old, black and white .
2 year old black and tan.
Please call949·2155 .
J•nuery 3, 1910

LOST: Female blue lick
coon dog 'and male ~alker
Cherry

Ridge

area .

Phone 992 ·5556 .

OLD

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)

Coworkers will expect you to
shoulder your share ol the burdens today. Pitch In wherever
you see you are needed.

FURNITURE,

ice

can be strengttlt.ned
todsy with someone close to
your heart . This person wlll 'see
you as placing his or her Interests above your own.
Bonds

situations reallstlcally today, but
don't take things so seriou!ly
that you lose your sei\Se of
humor. A lillie ol each Is needed
lor success.

household.

pat you 're fond ol can profit from
your experience. Normally It's
not wise to offer unsolicited
advice. but today could be an
exception.

gold and 'silver coins.
silverwar.e, other gold and

razors,

pocket

SCORPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22) A

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique

furniture. Will buy one
piece or household . Call
992-6370.
SILVER DOLLARS, $13
AND
UP,
SILVER
CHANGE ,
$12
PER
DOLLAR, GOLD COINS
AND ITEMS AT DAlLY
MARKET PRICES. CON ·
TACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992 ·3476.

Brazil was proclaimed a
, republic In 1889 when the
_
anny revolted against Emperor Pedro IT, head of the
·---·--. ___ ,. family
of
Cobclltrg" ('m a 1rop1cal bird 1 can 'l Braganza whi&lt;:" nded Parlive in a room where il's only 65 tugaland Brazil. HJs father
degrees •"
had declared Brazil's IIi·
dependence In 1822, when
The Suez Canal officially the Portuguese governwas opened in llle9, 15 ment tried to reasll!rt Its
power over ·the colony It
years after Ferdinand de
Le~seps had been had lost during Napoleai's
authorized to build It The occupation of the

homeland.

and

than once.
Ifl · 1869,
however, Queen Victoria
received de I..e.uePs IIi Lm·
don, and Britain l8ter
bought shares in the canal.

.

Scamp,

interior,

cyl.,

6

1~

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming

Mgr.

.....:..;. .. Phone992·2181 _

Nuu;:,C .\..U~L, · lump or"
stoker, will deliver. 7-42-

2183 .
APPLES -

ROME beauty

apples at S4 per bu . Best tor

apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard,

SR

689.
GLASS FIREPLACE doors
with black finish plus
tubular grate with blower,
like new. Asking S100 . Call
992·7866.
NICE PIGS for sale. Wor ·
med, castrated. 949·2857.

or fishing. 9 rooms, bath,

in Rutland, OH, on corner

of Bryant Rd . ~nd Main St..
out of water. No reasonable
offer refused. Phone 742·
2063 .
VERY NICE 3 bedroom
trailer . 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land . 742·2.542 or
742 ·2324 for complete
details.

FIVE ROOMSandbath,all
electric home, 1 acre of
land. 992 ·2711.

Street

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. Large tots.Call

992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·.54~ .
TWO BEDROOM !railer.
Adults only 992 ·3324.

tra

storage,

$135

plus

utilities and lawn care.
Deposit
required .
Available after Jan . l. 985 39#1.

POMEROY -

tofat brick home in
Rutland. l lf2 baths, liv ing room , dining room ,
modern kitchen and
garage. Full basement.
Situated on small lot .
Call for more info .

51,000.00 DOWN - large
II room home, ideal for
a family. I '12 baths, nice
carpeting, paneled kit.,

home

car

TUPPERS PLAINS -

2

Nice starter hoffie. 2

with

bedrooms,

bath, T.P . water, all
electric, nn R t. 7 in Tup·
pers

Plains.

tu 11
basement .
$23,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - '-OVe ·
ly 5 bedroom home wilh

2.90

acres near Rutland on

2 baths, living room,
family room , dining
room, utility, modern

hard road. Water tap,
septic tank, electric and'

Duple• un·

furnished .apartment, $150

per mo. plus utilities. $150
security. Call99H511 after
5p.m.

kitchen and full base -

SALEM CENTER ;One acre on Rt. 124.
Three bedrooms, 1'h
baths, F.A. heal, rural
water tap and Ohio
Power. $2,000.00 DOWN,
G. I. NOTHING.
S750.DO DOWN 8

ment. Has been almost

totally

Located on South 2nd
Avenue .

MIDDLEPORT
Large 9 room home on

Locust Street. Sell price
$25,000.00.
TV PPERS PLAl NS Lot with septic system
and water tap.

1 acre.
$10,500.
BARGAIN .
2'1&gt; ACRES Nice

POMEROY - You must
see this extra well kept
home . 3 bedrooms,

woods and native stone,

4 room home, bath, city

modern ki1chen, bath
and utility. Well worth
$25,500.00.
RUTLAND - Lo-ely 4

water, and gas furnace.
~down .

POMEROY
furnished,

two

H. L WRITESEL
'

ROOFING
All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,

gutter

Reasonable Prices

Ex ·

'

bedroom home on Main
St . Nice kitchen, dining
room accented with
butler's pantry . Let us

formal dining room,
baement. furnace, 5
bedrooms and 2 car

sho~ you

this tine home

and you can make a
reasonable offer.

garage.
WANTED:
LITTLE
FARMS ON THE EDGE
OF
TOWN.
CALL
9'12·3325 OR 992·3876.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.
Remodeling

Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Free Estimates
Alter S P.M. 9'12-SS-47

12· 13·2 mo. pd.

Real Estate for Sale ·

bedroom

MlODLEORT

one

bedroom apt., stove and

refrigerator,
newly
remodeled, wil furnish, If
necessary. S200 per month
plus utilities, $200 security.
Call992·7511 alter 5 p.m .
FOUR ROOMS and ·bath.
Gas forced air furnace. 949 ·

2734.
Auctions
BIG AUCTION every
.,
7 pm. Hartford Co
unity
Center, Hartfo , WV, 4
m lies abo
Pomeroy ·
Mason Brid e.

For Sale
WOOD BURNING stoves
- fireplace Inserts at the
Rlversl'de Fireplace, 514 E.
Pomeroy.

Open

Tues. -Fri., Sat. 9·1. l ·6.
ONg PLATE glass Window
5'x8' to highest ofer. 992·
5786.
REMINGTON 1100 12 ga .
with 2 bbls., deerslayer,
lull choke. Remington 870
20 go. sholgun with 2 bbls.,
deerslayer, · full choke.
Single shot410 shotgun full
choke. 22 Magnum Marlin
clip rille. 22 IOI)g and short
• rltle ..40 lb. pull bow wlth at·
tachable quiver. Gun rack,
holds 5 guns, h~$ drawer.
992-5295.
.

Pomeroy, 0.

Free Estimate

CALL 992·7544

3 plus flat acres and

Ohio River frontage.
Thls house ls well buIll
·. and nicely kept. $.12,600.
HOUSE WITH business
building In Reedsville .
Garden spot plus 2 car
garage. House has 2
bdrms . Asking $25,000. ·
LOOKING FOR a house
you like ln your price
'range. Why not build to
suit yourself on one of
the 2.50 acre lots on Rt. 7
near Eastern H lgh
School? Each lot $6,000.
34 ACRES Sliver
Rl dge Rd. across from
Eastern High. Many
building sites. Sell part
or all.
$16,000 - 3 bedrm . 1'12
balh trailer, Expando
living rm., underpinned,
_.well water, Ohio River
frontage on Rt. 124 at
Long Bottom.
$2,000 One acre
building site or Install
trailer. City wa1er
avallable. Just off 681
near Reedsville, 0.
Phone
985·4197

WANTrO SE.LL? - GIVE 1is A CALL

. CALL iiMMY DSEM, ASSDCI~TE 949•23si
OR NANCY JASPE~.s~ ~~SOCIA&lt;I'E
~• or ••t·.of1
' ,.

... .

7

.

!IVE:N TALK TO
OLAUPIA T:w\l&lt;e
:HER OD&amp;Y'

HER TO SO OVER
TO THAT TR!&amp;-

ROYAL.'T't' IN
A CARD GAME:,

I

ICALBEM

1 WANT

Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
Now arrange the circled let1er$ to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon .·

Prlntanswerhere:

Roger HJsell
Garage

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
guHars,

•nd

downspouts.
Free
Estimates. All work
guaranteed. 20 years ex perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797-2745.

Jumbles: ACRI()

rn [ l

I )

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
'·
Phone 992·5682
'
00-tfc .

Hammond Oraan•

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gift
Both New &amp; Used

Gutter . work,

_PETE SIMPSOl

Sales Rep, For
Sundlns
Ham monel Organs
Tyree Blvd. Racine, o. ·
(i . h
i
0
•• Phone 949·2118 evelngs
after 5 p.m. Weekends
after 12 noon.

WILL HAUL llm.Stone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris

" Dunkirk "

, BORNLOSER

'ffiOR~...
IF He /&gt;.~&lt;;

~

tJl

leads a diamond. D11mmy's
jack wins and our British

down

NORTH

t632
32
.AJ
tQ8H3
WEST
EAST
t84
tAK9H
.78 4
• K 1011712
tKJ2
+to 9 7 s

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.9

SEEJo\5 ODD, I
SOMEHOW ITS TR@lTION
FOR ANY HAcFWIIY DECENT
HAREM TO SE ENHANCED
BY ONE OF l!r IICAUTIFUL
..n-T"\ YOUNG
&lt;&gt;IIKLt&gt; ...

delivery : various sizes of

tQJ 10
.AKQJIO!

•Qss

tA

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

B~DFORD,

3t

w...

Auctioneer,
c plete Service. Phone
9 ·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

Pass

POME~O:V,O, .

992·2251
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, 2
apartments, walk to
town, always rented,
call for details.
RUTLAND - 2 story
frame a. brick, up to 4
Bdrms.,
2 baths,
fireplace, 11h acres.
$26,881.00.
SY·RACUSE - 3 year
old ranch, 3 Bdrms.,
equipped kit.. base·
mrnl, garage, other
features. $.44,000.00.
CHESTER Small
farm, 25 acres, fencing
barn, remodeled

and service. We sharpen
Scissors.

S 8. G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free

EXCAVATING,
dozer,
loader and backhoe work:
dump trucks and lo·boys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
top soil, limestone and
gravel . Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089.,
night phone 992·3.525 or 992 ·
5232 ..

992 ·

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

and

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can celled?
Lost
your

..

992 ·2143.

Board,

----

'4!!uD.

Services Offered

only.

room

and

992 ·6022.

No

Tomorrow we

conscience

Phqllis!

Timely revolutionary new
heating product now belng
Introduced. Ground· floor
opportunity to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment
of Sl,OOO secured by In·

ventory. Send name, ad·

dress and home no. to Myco
Thermal Art Sales, c-o Box
729·M. The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy,OH 45769.

aReady a way
t Roget

WIJI'd:

•

18 Style

•

· $_38~anaup

of
furniture
Ill Be sorry
Zl Egg giver
Z! ~nnan
clllb
liS Deer
U Vegetable
Z1 Mort ol the

Call 742·2211

monolosue
NTraltor

•WINNIE
13E.Sll/E9, SHE WON'T"

, lnstalledwltb Pad Frtt

. . .•

BE

_;

KEEPTAB5 ON

HER..

6'x12' to 12'x.16' ·

AeU::&gt;ES THE

PRIVILE191; ...

FATHER. GIVETH HE
CAN AL$0 TAKETH
AWAY. RIGHT?

dlctable

Hlescrlption11 Looked

unfriendly

fitting

az Swiss city

silk fabric
S5 Puzo's
U Engendered
"Fools - "
Z1 Bogart fllm

M Final

Zlllllappy

comeback
31 Wlae about

Rutland, 0.
~..,;,o;;.;,;,;:~--

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS. 5.% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TCr PAY

WELL,~. IF SHE

I KNOW! WHAT 111E

of blue
Z! Pulsate
a Imltatjon

chamber

8 Be pre-

for doctor

· :fURNITURE

HOMES FOR SALE

liS Poems
Z9 Makeup
Item
38 MortiiJe

n Suffm

... RURAND
•

e.o fAR AWAY

THAT WE CAN'T"

GOOD REMNANT
SELI:.I:TION

: .!

Yeetenlay'• Auwer

abbr.

need
5 Fiery crime II NaU on
the wall
17 Sub's weapon: I Boundary
It Shade
abbr.
7 Seraglio

·9~'du~

,I

setting

1t Footing·
11 Vallo1t Fanner's

•

IN STQ.CK

servation, full or part time,

z "Sj)artaCIIB"

ISGas

.SALE ON ALL

CASH IN ON every con·

home

1% Slenderize

•

cash &amp;Carry

1 My lord's

11 Host

... ·1
' ..&amp;RNEY

1Z InvltaUon
33Enemy
It Garland

NPart
ol speech
17 Quit Ill!!

rat race
II 'l'beri!fore
II u_; of

LIKE NEW - Quiet country : living ' ln this ·tree
bedroom, 2 bath ranch . Over an acre of ground with
a split rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00. ·
·
POMEROY - A beautiful little starter home · or
retirement couple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
living room · nlce kitchen. Full basement.
$17,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bed~oom brlck only 1 block
from town, low utilities. A Qargaln at '12.500.

All!erica":

I

Bo.'ton

·· ---~-----__.;,_;,_

L ' ONGFELLOW

' One letter aifi\Ply ston&lt;\1 tor another. . In this sample · A II
used for the three L'1, X for tbe two O'a, etc. ·single letters,
apottrophes, the lenath and formation of the word• are oil
hints. Eaeb doy the code !etten are different

caYPTOQUOTBB

RUTLAND- .2 homes on S~lem Street. Take your
. choice or buy both and ren!!hem. $12,000Hch • .
•'

,

DAILY CRYJ;&gt;TOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
· AXYDLBAAXI
II

'

G

BGT . LGW

VB
,,. E. X K P V R ,
: .

JK

'

G
.J K
.

C A Z LJ
MV •

JK

MV

J CN W J V R ,

.Mv - jlt:KDVR,' , JK MV CVDVCVI\.
'"I

)

•

'7

OGXRK VBVCWKT
Yestentay'• Cryptoqllott: FROM US TO YOU! MAY · to~
·AND PEACE BE YOURS ~UGH 'I1IE YEARS ro OOME.
-

CGXEL

Movi e

1:oo- Tomorrow

17 ;
5 : 25- Love,
Stvle 17 .

THURSDAY,JANUARY 3,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13 ; 5: 55-World at Large 17 .
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6:3()-For You ... Biack Woman 10;
News 17 ; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; 6:5()-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Thursday Mor·
nlng 8; Batman ·10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17: 7:15A.M . Weather 33.
7: 31}-,fFamlly Affair 10; Blg Blue
Marble 33 ; 7:55-Chuck White
Reports 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10 ; Family
Affalr 17; Sesame 51. 33 .
8:3()-Romper Room 17.
·
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day at a Time
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Lucy
Show 17; Children's Key Concert
33.
9:3()-Love of Lite 10; Bob Newhart
8; Green Acres 17.
IO:GO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
N lghl 6; Magazine 8, 10; Morning
Magazine
13; ·
Movie
"Manhandled" 17; Festival In
Vienna 33 .
' 10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6.
10 :55-House Call 10; CBS News a.
11:00-High Rollers 3,15 ; Laverne 1!.
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Johnny Mathis 33. :
11 : 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St .
20 : 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 0()-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10, 13; Mlndreaders 15; Love•
American Style 17; Big Band
Bash 33.
12: 30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field l5;
Movie "Casanova's Big Night"
17; E lee. Co. 20.
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,
Young 1!. the
Restless 8, 1,0.
·
' ·1()-As The World Turns 8,10;
~ : GO-Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6, 13; News 17.
2:3()-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Gigglesnort Hotel 1'7.
3:00-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Masterpiece Theatre
20: Such Good Companions 33.
3: 3if-{)ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
W lid 10; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6; At:
ternoon Playhouse 8,1 0; Sesame
ST. 20,33; Real McCoys 13;
Speclremen 17.
•
4 :3()-Lone Ranger 3; Tom 1!. Jerry
13;. Gilligan ' s ls. 17.
5 :00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford 8.
Son 8; Mlsfer Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Mary Tyl.jr
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17.'
5 :30-Mash 3;: News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec. Co. 20: Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-News 3,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News
6 ; Zoom 20,33; Carol Burnett 17 .
6:3()-NBC News 3,15; ABC News
6 , 13; CBS News 8, 10 ; Bob
Newhart 17; Vila Alegre 20; Wild
Wlld World of Animals 33.
7 :00-Cross-Wlts J; Baxters 6 ; Tic
Tac Dough B: News lO;
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
So'l 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: 30-Hollywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; s1oo,ooo Name That Tune 10:
Nashville On The Road 13;
Country Roads IS; All In The
· Famlly 17 .
·
8:00-Buck Rogers 3,1f, Mork &amp;
Mindy
6,13;
Waltons
8;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
In Concert 20; College Basketball
10; Movie "The Joker Is Wild"
17: Camera Three 33.
8:30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Closeup
• 33.
9:00-Frank Sinatra 3, 15; Barney
Miller 6,13: Barnaby Jones 8;
. Sneak Prevl~s 20,33.
9.:30-Soa.2_6, 13; Camera Three 20;
Danci"'t l&gt;lsc:o 33. :
.
JU :D0-20-20 6, 13; Knots Landing
a. 10; News 20; SOundstage 33 .
10: 3()-0ver Easy 10; 10:45Civlllllltlon 17.
"·
11 : Oo-News 3,6,8,10,13, 15: Dick
Cavett 20: Fall &amp; · Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33. ·
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; Pollee Woman
6: 13; Colu"'bo 8; A!IC News 33;
Movie "The Comic" 10.
11 :~vie "Stella" 17: 12 : ~ •
Bar•tta ·6,J3.
·
.
\ :110-Tomot.row 3; News 151 1:30MIKilgan a.
"
1 : 40-~ews 17; 1:45-Movle "Sky
Coml)1e~" 17; 1: 50-Newt ·13.
3: Is-Untouchables 17; • : 15-()pen
,,··U.P 17.

;

n:

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
• Federal
1 Accumulation agents
5 Bereft of
DOWN

take him out
to the farm!

warm
milk,

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

operator's license? Phone

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 fo: "Win st
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
10019.)

·tlew•ww:l'

SAVE ON C4RI'ET
DRIVE AUT1U
SAVE.A LOT

septic

systems, dozer, backhoe.
Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614) 698·
7331 or 742·2593.

HAVE VACANCY In
private home for elderly

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

We have added the EastWest cards to complete a
P.roblem from the English
'Pop11lar Bridge."
The defense starts . with
three rounds of spades. West
trumps tbe third spade and

Reasonable

rates. Scotchguard.
6309or 742 · 2~8.

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,

By Oswald Jacoby

· and Alan Sontag

•

estimate .

home,

new kit., new bath,all
carpeted, etc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel ·
. jng, $16,200.00.
PoM'E RQY- Beautiful
home all features, e•·
cellent condition, must
be seen to be appreciated. $40,000.00.
BUILDING SITES - In
neW subdivision, start at
$2,500.00.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES
AT ll'h% Interest, 30
yrs. to pay, "'down on
1st ·. 525,00t.DO, s" on
'ballnct, VA. No o-n
P1y. _
. '
REALTOR
Henry E. Clelo'ld, Jr:
."2't191
' ASSOCIATES
Rove•&amp; Dollie Turner
.
742-2474
.
Jnn Trusaell 949·2660
OFFICE PHONE
992·:1:159

Eaol
Pass
Pass

Opening leaa:t 8

BOWERS
Sweepers,

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
~

Business Opp'ty

II!,.....

Norlb
Pass
Pus

toasters, i'rons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

~

.

•e

pool kits. Do ·it·yourself or
let us install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992-5724.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes.
992-2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales

WANT TO start new gar·
bage pickup ln RutianMH
area. Call evenings 614·367·
'7:167.
608 e.
MAIN

The answer lo the problem
is that 11nless West holds the
king of clubs you aren't going
to make your contract. So, we
have completed the hand with
West holding the club kiqg.
It stlll may not look to yo11
as if you can bring In the rest
of the tricks, but they are
there by means of an unusual
play known as a criss·cross
squeeze.
You simply cash all yo11r
trumps to come down to
queen of diamonds and ace of
clubs in dummy. West will
have to unguard one of his
kings and you simply cash the
ace of that suit, lead to the
other ace and make the last
trick with the appropriate
queen.
Note that If West discards
all his little diamonds, you
will have no jrohlem. If he
holds one an unguards the
club king, you should be able
to work that out also.

SOtJTII

drinking allowed .

·

friends ask : 1 'What now?''

1·2

•s

l N STOCK for immediate

Americ~o~n

Criss-cross sque~ze play

HIM!

.RACINE, D.
949·2748 or
992·7314
12·28-pd.

caneers "

•

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

I'l..t. 06HI~

6,13;

8;

3; News 15.
1:05-News 17:" 1:1 0-Movle "The
Lasl Hurrah" 17; I 5()-News 13
3 :4()-Movle " Last of lhe Buc.

BRIDGE

HERe a::w£.5

driveways.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

News 33.

12 40- Ba re lla

.

basements, ponds, brush,

timber, land clearing .
Charles Butcher. 742·2940

9:00- 0 i ff ' rent
Slrokes
3,15 ;
Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
" Ohms" 8. 10; College Basketball
/
17.
'
9:3()-Joe' s World 3, 15; 10:00-Best
of Saturday Nlghl Live 3, 15;
Vegas 6, 13.
11 :00-News 3,6,8 ,10,13, 15,20; Last
of the Wild 17 : Wodehouse
Playhouse 33.
11 :3()-Tonlgh13, 15; Love Boat 6.13;
Black Sheep Squadron 8; Movie
" Br other Or chid" 10; Movie
"Castl e on I he Hudson" 17; AB C

name, addr..t, zip code and mekt chtcke peyablt to Ntwapaperbookt.

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and

11·19·1 mo.

OUTFIT NOODLE

Jumble Book No. 12,contllning 110 puultl,,tev•llablelori1.1Spostpaid
from Jumble, clo thll newapeper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J.07MI.Include your

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

&amp; Famous Name Brit'ld

GOUGE

What the hypochondria c said every time she
discovered a new symptOm-

"GOOO GRIEF '"

on 51. Rl. 124 toward '
. Rutland.

12-1-1 mo.

I Answer:

Yesterday's

mile off Rt 7 by -pass •

l /4

Roofing,

laundry.

Broker 992-5739

JUST LISTED - Beauty Salon - Fully equipped,
ready to go. Includes two working lations and 5
rooms, bath. Cold drink machine, · tc. A money·
maker In good loc. in Ralcne. Prlcea •• $25,000.
NEW LISTING - Trailer 8. lot In Racine, 3 DR, ail
crpeted, front porch with awning, wood underplnn·
lng, also Includes pool for the children . Anxlous to
sell . $11 ,{)()().
TRAILER- 2 BR on peaceful slde street, all equip·
ped kitchen Including dinette set. Musl,..ll. $10,500.
NEW- WON'T LAST - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, bath 8.
utilities, kitchen w·dlshwasher, D.R. w·slldlng glass
doors to pall!&gt;, on nearly 'I• acre. Carpeted In
beautiful taste . $44,900.
MINI FARM - Beautiful brick bf.level with 3
,bedrm., large living room with fireplace. Total elec·
trlc and fully insulated . All hardwOOd floors. Basement could be finished tor edra living quarters. AI·
tached garage. 3 large hot houses and many extras
on 5 acres. Loc. close to Racine. Asklng$63,500.
NEW LISTING- Nice 3 BR home, e•tra large LR,
equipped kit., washer, dryer, full basement, central
air, breezeway l~adlng to garge. Well cared tor
house has .many extras, several fruit trees of dlf·
ferenl varieties 1!. · nice garden. See to appreciate.
very nice location In lower Syracuse on St. Rt. 124.
Priced at $63,900.
CHESTER - 4 BR 'home, hardwood floors, large
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
garden space. ASklng~.900.
'FAMlL Y HOME - Lots of possibilities with this
nice 2 story . Many fealures, ce~tral air, built-In ap·
pllances, all carpeted, good lnveslme~twllh several
nlce bllding lots. On appro•. acres In the center
of Raclne. Asklng$.54,000.
·
i..OTS o ·F LOTS ...:. From 1 to 75 acres, bordering ·
Pomeroy.
6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR, dining and ullllty room, ·
kit. equipped w ·stove and refrlg . M\)SIIy carpeted, ·
forced air gas fur'nace, 1 yr. Clld Garage, a complete
trailer hook-up with nat. gas tap and septic can add
Income. over 2 acres. $29,¥00, Call tor appointment.
''"'"'' Rt. 7 below Middleport.

.

NO, SIFU LIKET··

WeL~d!MY

17ciFcPI~

10·19·1 mo.

DOZER, END Loader,
brush hog. Will do

Phone 742·2003

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR.
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN.

WHOA I etW THAT
.ai6A IN I VA DON'T
AAFTA POINT OR .

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992~2772

'
'

TWO HOUSES ln
Middleport. Live In one,
rent the other. Both
houses remodeled In·
side. One ·has 3 bdrms.,
1he other has l bedrm.
· Located on Powell St . at
lower end of town.
MODERN HOUSE wlth

Virginia Hayman

·CENTRAL REALTY CO.

.

dows

George S. Hobstetter Jr.

HeacJ. uarters

-----

Other times by appoint·
. men!.
107 Sycamore (Rear

PAINTING AND sand ·
blasting. Free estimates.
Call949·l686.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

Phone 742 -3092

• Storm WIndows
• Replacement Win·

ERA MERCER
REALTY

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc. i

ousing

.

[J I

CAPTAIN EASY

F&lt;lRA~,

un ·

house. $100 per month. plus
utilities. $100 security . Call
992·7511 alter Sp .m.
·

Main,

remodeled

within the past 2 years.

rooms, meta I storm
windows, bath, nat. gas
F.A heat, basement and

$1,000.00

kit ·

chen, dining room and

$1,000.00

DOWN .
NEW LISTING -

balh,

elns~tion
eSior DoOrs

Di ck CavPtt 20

7:30...:Newlywed Game 6; Joker' s
Wild 8; Dick Cavett 33: The
Ju(!ge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Fam ily
17; MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Real People IS; E ight i s
Enough 6, 13; Young Maverick
8. 10; Great Performances 20,33;

IAMMANDI

Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9·1 M., w.. F.

Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

NEW LISTING
Beautiful 3 bedroom

ftl-33'25

I

11 ;

(Answers tomorrow)

Guaranteed Work

.PHONE 742-2003

bedroom

C.,heap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992·2852
or 992·7235
12 13·pd .

SIX ROOM house and bath

REALTY ·

baement and 2
garage. $17,500.
LOT 77X264

~

Call Howard
949·2862
11 ·14·mo.

HOBSTETTER

5e~ond
'

u

STATEMENT
TO THe FBI.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

· REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterons Admin. Loans.

Let us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
cold weather

cleaning and painting,
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates

Rea 1 Estate for Sale

216 E.

,JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PWMBING REPAIR

l

WEDNF~na Y .JA"'UARY 2,1980
7:00-College ~asketball 3: Tic Tac
Dough 8; News 10; Ma l ch Game PM
6; Newlywed Gam e 13 ; Love
Amer ican Styl e 15; Sanford 8. Son

.. OFFICIAL.

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7or33. 446·23511 alter7.

gobd garden land.

In 1492, Chriltopher
.Col11mbus made lht first 'I)/HIT E WHIRLPOOL
rer.orded referenee tO- d'ryer, gOOd running con dillon. $125. Call985·4276.
tol.lacco IIi his JOW'IIIl.
.

POMEROY
LANOMARK
·. '1'V.., _Jack w. Carse•

Gold,

Cal l 992 ·6370.

opposed by the Brttlsh
the· work · stopped more

lales &amp; Servic•.

$1,750.00 DOWN - A
real 9 room home. 2
baths, equipped kitchen,

kniveS and other old items.

Frl!llch canal was at firm

Headquarters
Appliances .

trailer in country setting
off Rt. 7, 6 miles from
Pomeroy. Freezer and ex -

clothing,

I NEWSPAPER ENTEAPfiiSE ASSN .)

l'l.NA!«:l NG·VA·FHA LO ·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REF I NANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
614-592 ·3051 .

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

have the ability today to overcome challenging situations .
Don't be Intimidated by events
where the odds appear to be
stacked against you.

Do not postpone changing
something Important tOday that
has an effect upon your reputation or finances. Muster your·
courage and get il done.

ELECTRIC

cellent buy.

silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks. tools. antique

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)

Real Estate for Sale

TWO BEOROOM furnished

plele

LIBRA (hpl. 23-0CI. :a) You

~ENERAL

OLD COINS, pocket wat -

Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur niture. One piece or com ·

firmly behind a friend who may
require your support today. Let
him or her know that you can be
relied upon when needed.

and

evenings .

MARTIN 'S APPRAISAL .

VIRGO (Aug. U-a.pt. 22) Stand

HOTPOINT

ONE BEDROOM furnished
house. Adults only. 992·
2598.

LEO (July 23-Aug. Zl) Try nollo

attached.

Plymouth

auto., $1800 or trade . 742 ·
2451.

silver . Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6412.

make thoae you help today feel
obligated to you In some
manner. a. charitable. Handle
matters so there are no strings

out fOr winter. A -1 Dcon -

ca ll992·7760.

ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
killing . Pennies have a way or · ches. Willing to pay top
adding up to dollars.
dollar. Call 1·592 ·2973

CANCER (Juno 21-JulJ Zl) View

1975 Monte Carlo, e"'ellent
condition, $3250. 992 ·2377 or '
992·6114.

custom

satisfied with small gains today,
ralher than trying to make a big

GEMINI (M•J :Z1-June :ZO) Don't
be a retuclant leader today.
Once you make a commitment,
go all out. Don't wall lor others
to get things rolling .

669-

3785 .

Dexter, at Slater 's residen ce.·

Miller. Rt . ,., Pomeroy or

2nd, Middleport, OH. 9923161 .

TAURUS (April 20-M., 211) Be

Wilkesville,

rJ -

I

HAVEN'T A5
YET MADe MY

tan ,

Mobile Homes· Sale

Rd . 27,

1974

M.D.

Gosney, antiques, 26 N.

aren't that tough.

Twp.

households.

A!ITIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or ca ll Ruth

AAIES (M•rch 21-April 18) Just
because a task Isn't to your likIng Is not a good enough reason
to put II off today. Meet your
duties head on. You'll find they

Saturday,

boxes, brass beds, ii"on
beds, desks, etc., complete

WANTED : SAW logs.
Payment upon delivery to
our yard, 7:30 to 3:30 week ·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow, OH. 678·
2980.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)

Phone

brownish

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale l2x63 with ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12&gt;&lt;60 3 bd r .
1973 Skyline 12•55 2
bedroom .
1972 Bonanza 12&gt;&lt;52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PlEASANT,
.wv. 304·675·4424.

parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
$5,000. Can be seen on a

dilion. 614-985-4209.

Write

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or chard, State Route 689.

lb .,

992·6211! .

change rear end, motor

1974 JEEP Cherokee, posi track, all new radial winter
tires.
Completely
overhauled and checked

Wanted to Buy

It's painful. Find out more about
yourself by sending for your
Astra.Graph Letter. Mall $1 tor
each to Astra-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019.
Be aure to apedty birth date.

F IREWOOD FOR sale .
Now taking or ders. Will
deliver, 742 2056.

40

Business Services

j ~UNEB+n

LEGALLY

IS
· PRUDENT-

female . Humane Society,

built to ma•imum, all new

LOST : 2 female beagles ,

in

E. Main St ., Pomeroy, 992 ·
3891 .

all

Bernice Bede Osol

Partnership arrangements into
which you enter this coming year
..Wil have beneficial results. You'll
t . .ve the knack for teaming up
_wllh just the right associates. _
CAPRICORN (D... ZI-Jon. 19)
Dodging difficult decisions is not
the way to go today. Problems
which require solutions should
be attended to promptly, even if

Excelsior Salt Works. Inc.,

facilities .

Also· AKC
reg i stered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

STOCK
CAR.
Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
Chevy. Franklin quick

Village

food, and all types of salt .

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

Auto Sales

Racine

FOX terri er type, around

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067-7220.

Lost and Found

please call 742·2116.

sand, gravel, t at clum
chloride, fertilizer, dog

COAL ,

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding. Call367-0292 .

ASTRO·GRAPH

money in Rutland Dec . 15,

,, ..

diameter 10" on largest

For Sale
LIMESTONE ,

Giveaway
PART collie pups. 7A2 ·2714 .

Television
Viewine

j

.

..

�; u- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2, 1!180

•

•

your Best Buys Are },OUitd In the Sentinel ·Classifieds

ftj'}I)N} fj}ft ~ lliAT IICRAIIIIWlWORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ $ -----l&gt;y.HeDr.i Arnold and Bob LH
unscr•mble these lour Jumbhta.
one tetter to each aquue , to form
lour ordinary worda.

-'l'lleDaUySentlnel. Middleport-Pomerov. 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 2,19110
DICK TRACY
11

WENDY.
I 11-l.. ANSWeR
AS MANY
QUESTIONS A S
HI

WANT AD

CHARGES
Cuh

1.50

uo

ldays
&amp;days

~ - 00

MEIG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 992 ·
Pets available for
adoption and Information
servi c e . . Investigative

Olarge

1.00

wanted to Buy
CHiP WOOD. Poles ma• .

6260.

15 Words or Under

I day
2dayl

Notices

Agent.

l.Zi
I.IIJ'
125

GUN SI-&gt;OOT EVERY
SUNDAY I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY . RAC INE
GUN CLUB .

3.75

Each word over the minimum
IS words b 4 cents per word per
da)' . Ad! rwminl: Clthe:~:thau.con­
secutive days will t.! ctuu-gi!d at

GUN

the 1day rate.

SHOOT .

Volunteer

Rac i ne

Fire

Dept.

Every Saturday . 6:30p.m .
Altherr buildingln Bashan.

In .memory, Card of Thanks
and Obit.~ : 6 cenb pe:- word,
13.00 nurumwn. Cull in ad-

Factory choke guns only .

vance.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy Seoul Troop 249.

Mobile Heme sales and Yard
sales are accepted only with

cash with order. ~ cent charge
for ad! caJTYinM: Box Nwnber In
Care oftbeSeriiinel.

The Publiaber reserves theright tel edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
Publlaher will not be reoponslble
for more than ~ incorrect ln-

_,Clll.

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
co,ins, rings, , jewelry, etc .

Contact Ed BurkeN Barber
Shop, Middleport.

Pbone 992-21!16

ATTENTION :
(1M ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certif ied check

NOTICE

for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates .

WANT-AD

Nothing loo large. P,lso,
guns, pocket watches and

AR~Mll~k~G

coin collections. Call 614-

767·3167 or 557&lt;!411 .
BUYING U.S. SlLVE R
COINS DATED 196A OR
(; ,. RLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT) . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE ANO
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113 ,
BROWN ' S.

Monday
Noon on Saturday

Tuesday
thruFrlday
4P.M .
the dey before publication

SWiday
&lt;P.M.

Friday afternoon

MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular mon·

thly meeting, Sat. , Jan. 5th
at Shade Valley Club
House. Bring a friend.

Thurld•r. Jan. 3

end . $12 p·e( ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW. English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614 -

698 · 3290.

Bording

and

Riding Lessons and Horse
care products. Western

boots . Children's
Adults $29.00.

S15.!il .

indoor-outdoor

ONE
REDTICK
coon
hound, 2 trained beagles. 3
white English bulldog puppies. 3 rabbits, 2 does, I
buck. 742 2520.

.

HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 002 · ·6260 .
Healthy, shots, and wor·
med . Border collie types,

Irish Setter, English Seller
with

puppies,

shepherd

type. Put a cold nose in
your life. Kittens, kittens,

kiNens,
sizes.

all . shapes,
•

ONE red tick coon hound, 2
tra.lned beagles, 3 whlte

English· bulldog puppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck. 742·
2521.

WOULD THE PERSON
who found the Iaroe sum of

area.

3

years old, black and white .
2 year old black and tan.
Please call949·2155 .
J•nuery 3, 1910

LOST: Female blue lick
coon dog 'and male ~alker
Cherry

Ridge

area .

Phone 992 ·5556 .

OLD

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)

Coworkers will expect you to
shoulder your share ol the burdens today. Pitch In wherever
you see you are needed.

FURNITURE,

ice

can be strengttlt.ned
todsy with someone close to
your heart . This person wlll 'see
you as placing his or her Interests above your own.
Bonds

situations reallstlcally today, but
don't take things so seriou!ly
that you lose your sei\Se of
humor. A lillie ol each Is needed
lor success.

household.

pat you 're fond ol can profit from
your experience. Normally It's
not wise to offer unsolicited
advice. but today could be an
exception.

gold and 'silver coins.
silverwar.e, other gold and

razors,

pocket

SCORPIO (OCI. 24-Nov. 22) A

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique

furniture. Will buy one
piece or household . Call
992-6370.
SILVER DOLLARS, $13
AND
UP,
SILVER
CHANGE ,
$12
PER
DOLLAR, GOLD COINS
AND ITEMS AT DAlLY
MARKET PRICES. CON ·
TACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, MID·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992 ·3476.

Brazil was proclaimed a
, republic In 1889 when the
_
anny revolted against Emperor Pedro IT, head of the
·---·--. ___ ,. family
of
Cobclltrg" ('m a 1rop1cal bird 1 can 'l Braganza whi&lt;:" nded Parlive in a room where il's only 65 tugaland Brazil. HJs father
degrees •"
had declared Brazil's IIi·
dependence In 1822, when
The Suez Canal officially the Portuguese governwas opened in llle9, 15 ment tried to reasll!rt Its
power over ·the colony It
years after Ferdinand de
Le~seps had been had lost during Napoleai's
authorized to build It The occupation of the

homeland.

and

than once.
Ifl · 1869,
however, Queen Victoria
received de I..e.uePs IIi Lm·
don, and Britain l8ter
bought shares in the canal.

.

Scamp,

interior,

cyl.,

6

1~

COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swimming

Mgr.

.....:..;. .. Phone992·2181 _

Nuu;:,C .\..U~L, · lump or"
stoker, will deliver. 7-42-

2183 .
APPLES -

ROME beauty

apples at S4 per bu . Best tor

apple butter. Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard,

SR

689.
GLASS FIREPLACE doors
with black finish plus
tubular grate with blower,
like new. Asking S100 . Call
992·7866.
NICE PIGS for sale. Wor ·
med, castrated. 949·2857.

or fishing. 9 rooms, bath,

in Rutland, OH, on corner

of Bryant Rd . ~nd Main St..
out of water. No reasonable
offer refused. Phone 742·
2063 .
VERY NICE 3 bedroom
trailer . 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land . 742·2.542 or
742 ·2324 for complete
details.

FIVE ROOMSandbath,all
electric home, 1 acre of
land. 992 ·2711.

Street

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. Large tots.Call

992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992 ·.54~ .
TWO BEDROOM !railer.
Adults only 992 ·3324.

tra

storage,

$135

plus

utilities and lawn care.
Deposit
required .
Available after Jan . l. 985 39#1.

POMEROY -

tofat brick home in
Rutland. l lf2 baths, liv ing room , dining room ,
modern kitchen and
garage. Full basement.
Situated on small lot .
Call for more info .

51,000.00 DOWN - large
II room home, ideal for
a family. I '12 baths, nice
carpeting, paneled kit.,

home

car

TUPPERS PLAINS -

2

Nice starter hoffie. 2

with

bedrooms,

bath, T.P . water, all
electric, nn R t. 7 in Tup·
pers

Plains.

tu 11
basement .
$23,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - '-OVe ·
ly 5 bedroom home wilh

2.90

acres near Rutland on

2 baths, living room,
family room , dining
room, utility, modern

hard road. Water tap,
septic tank, electric and'

Duple• un·

furnished .apartment, $150

per mo. plus utilities. $150
security. Call99H511 after
5p.m.

kitchen and full base -

SALEM CENTER ;One acre on Rt. 124.
Three bedrooms, 1'h
baths, F.A. heal, rural
water tap and Ohio
Power. $2,000.00 DOWN,
G. I. NOTHING.
S750.DO DOWN 8

ment. Has been almost

totally

Located on South 2nd
Avenue .

MIDDLEPORT
Large 9 room home on

Locust Street. Sell price
$25,000.00.
TV PPERS PLAl NS Lot with septic system
and water tap.

1 acre.
$10,500.
BARGAIN .
2'1&gt; ACRES Nice

POMEROY - You must
see this extra well kept
home . 3 bedrooms,

woods and native stone,

4 room home, bath, city

modern ki1chen, bath
and utility. Well worth
$25,500.00.
RUTLAND - Lo-ely 4

water, and gas furnace.
~down .

POMEROY
furnished,

two

H. L WRITESEL
'

ROOFING
All types root work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,

gutter

Reasonable Prices

Ex ·

'

bedroom home on Main
St . Nice kitchen, dining
room accented with
butler's pantry . Let us

formal dining room,
baement. furnace, 5
bedrooms and 2 car

sho~ you

this tine home

and you can make a
reasonable offer.

garage.
WANTED:
LITTLE
FARMS ON THE EDGE
OF
TOWN.
CALL
9'12·3325 OR 992·3876.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!

N. L CONSTRUCTION
Quality construction at
reasonable rates.
Remodeling

Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Free Estimates
Alter S P.M. 9'12-SS-47

12· 13·2 mo. pd.

Real Estate for Sale ·

bedroom

MlODLEORT

one

bedroom apt., stove and

refrigerator,
newly
remodeled, wil furnish, If
necessary. S200 per month
plus utilities, $200 security.
Call992·7511 alter 5 p.m .
FOUR ROOMS and ·bath.
Gas forced air furnace. 949 ·

2734.
Auctions
BIG AUCTION every
.,
7 pm. Hartford Co
unity
Center, Hartfo , WV, 4
m lies abo
Pomeroy ·
Mason Brid e.

For Sale
WOOD BURNING stoves
- fireplace Inserts at the
Rlversl'de Fireplace, 514 E.
Pomeroy.

Open

Tues. -Fri., Sat. 9·1. l ·6.
ONg PLATE glass Window
5'x8' to highest ofer. 992·
5786.
REMINGTON 1100 12 ga .
with 2 bbls., deerslayer,
lull choke. Remington 870
20 go. sholgun with 2 bbls.,
deerslayer, · full choke.
Single shot410 shotgun full
choke. 22 Magnum Marlin
clip rille. 22 IOI)g and short
• rltle ..40 lb. pull bow wlth at·
tachable quiver. Gun rack,
holds 5 guns, h~$ drawer.
992-5295.
.

Pomeroy, 0.

Free Estimate

CALL 992·7544

3 plus flat acres and

Ohio River frontage.
Thls house ls well buIll
·. and nicely kept. $.12,600.
HOUSE WITH business
building In Reedsville .
Garden spot plus 2 car
garage. House has 2
bdrms . Asking $25,000. ·
LOOKING FOR a house
you like ln your price
'range. Why not build to
suit yourself on one of
the 2.50 acre lots on Rt. 7
near Eastern H lgh
School? Each lot $6,000.
34 ACRES Sliver
Rl dge Rd. across from
Eastern High. Many
building sites. Sell part
or all.
$16,000 - 3 bedrm . 1'12
balh trailer, Expando
living rm., underpinned,
_.well water, Ohio River
frontage on Rt. 124 at
Long Bottom.
$2,000 One acre
building site or Install
trailer. City wa1er
avallable. Just off 681
near Reedsville, 0.
Phone
985·4197

WANTrO SE.LL? - GIVE 1is A CALL

. CALL iiMMY DSEM, ASSDCI~TE 949•23si
OR NANCY JASPE~.s~ ~~SOCIA&lt;I'E
~• or ••t·.of1
' ,.

... .

7

.

!IVE:N TALK TO
OLAUPIA T:w\l&lt;e
:HER OD&amp;Y'

HER TO SO OVER
TO THAT TR!&amp;-

ROYAL.'T't' IN
A CARD GAME:,

I

ICALBEM

1 WANT

Upstairs, Downstairs 17.
Now arrange the circled let1er$ to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon .·

Prlntanswerhere:

Roger HJsell
Garage

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
guHars,

•nd

downspouts.
Free
Estimates. All work
guaranteed. 20 years ex perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797-2745.

Jumbles: ACRI()

rn [ l

I )

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
'·
Phone 992·5682
'
00-tfc .

Hammond Oraan•

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gift
Both New &amp; Used

Gutter . work,

_PETE SIMPSOl

Sales Rep, For
Sundlns
Ham monel Organs
Tyree Blvd. Racine, o. ·
(i . h
i
0
•• Phone 949·2118 evelngs
after 5 p.m. Weekends
after 12 noon.

WILL HAUL llm.Stone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris

" Dunkirk "

, BORNLOSER

'ffiOR~...
IF He /&gt;.~&lt;;

~

tJl

leads a diamond. D11mmy's
jack wins and our British

down

NORTH

t632
32
.AJ
tQ8H3
WEST
EAST
t84
tAK9H
.78 4
• K 1011712
tKJ2
+to 9 7 s

(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.9

SEEJo\5 ODD, I
SOMEHOW ITS TR@lTION
FOR ANY HAcFWIIY DECENT
HAREM TO SE ENHANCED
BY ONE OF l!r IICAUTIFUL
..n-T"\ YOUNG
&lt;&gt;IIKLt&gt; ...

delivery : various sizes of

tQJ 10
.AKQJIO!

•Qss

tA

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West

B~DFORD,

3t

w...

Auctioneer,
c plete Service. Phone
9 ·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crill Bradford.

Pass

POME~O:V,O, .

992·2251
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, 2
apartments, walk to
town, always rented,
call for details.
RUTLAND - 2 story
frame a. brick, up to 4
Bdrms.,
2 baths,
fireplace, 11h acres.
$26,881.00.
SY·RACUSE - 3 year
old ranch, 3 Bdrms.,
equipped kit.. base·
mrnl, garage, other
features. $.44,000.00.
CHESTER Small
farm, 25 acres, fencing
barn, remodeled

and service. We sharpen
Scissors.

S 8. G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam
cleaned .
Free

EXCAVATING,
dozer,
loader and backhoe work:
dump trucks and lo·boys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
top soil, limestone and
gravel . Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992·7089.,
night phone 992·3.525 or 992 ·
5232 ..

992 ·

WALL PAPERING
painting. 742·2328 .

and

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can celled?
Lost
your

..

992 ·2143.

Board,

----

'4!!uD.

Services Offered

only.

room

and

992 ·6022.

No

Tomorrow we

conscience

Phqllis!

Timely revolutionary new
heating product now belng
Introduced. Ground· floor
opportunity to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment
of Sl,OOO secured by In·

ventory. Send name, ad·

dress and home no. to Myco
Thermal Art Sales, c-o Box
729·M. The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy,OH 45769.

aReady a way
t Roget

WIJI'd:

•

18 Style

•

· $_38~anaup

of
furniture
Ill Be sorry
Zl Egg giver
Z! ~nnan
clllb
liS Deer
U Vegetable
Z1 Mort ol the

Call 742·2211

monolosue
NTraltor

•WINNIE
13E.Sll/E9, SHE WON'T"

, lnstalledwltb Pad Frtt

. . .•

BE

_;

KEEPTAB5 ON

HER..

6'x12' to 12'x.16' ·

AeU::&gt;ES THE

PRIVILE191; ...

FATHER. GIVETH HE
CAN AL$0 TAKETH
AWAY. RIGHT?

dlctable

Hlescrlption11 Looked

unfriendly

fitting

az Swiss city

silk fabric
S5 Puzo's
U Engendered
"Fools - "
Z1 Bogart fllm

M Final

Zlllllappy

comeback
31 Wlae about

Rutland, 0.
~..,;,o;;.;,;,;:~--

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS. 5.% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TCr PAY

WELL,~. IF SHE

I KNOW! WHAT 111E

of blue
Z! Pulsate
a Imltatjon

chamber

8 Be pre-

for doctor

· :fURNITURE

HOMES FOR SALE

liS Poems
Z9 Makeup
Item
38 MortiiJe

n Suffm

... RURAND
•

e.o fAR AWAY

THAT WE CAN'T"

GOOD REMNANT
SELI:.I:TION

: .!

Yeetenlay'• Auwer

abbr.

need
5 Fiery crime II NaU on
the wall
17 Sub's weapon: I Boundary
It Shade
abbr.
7 Seraglio

·9~'du~

,I

setting

1t Footing·
11 Vallo1t Fanner's

•

IN STQ.CK

servation, full or part time,

z "Sj)artaCIIB"

ISGas

.SALE ON ALL

CASH IN ON every con·

home

1% Slenderize

•

cash &amp;Carry

1 My lord's

11 Host

... ·1
' ..&amp;RNEY

1Z InvltaUon
33Enemy
It Garland

NPart
ol speech
17 Quit Ill!!

rat race
II 'l'beri!fore
II u_; of

LIKE NEW - Quiet country : living ' ln this ·tree
bedroom, 2 bath ranch . Over an acre of ground with
a split rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00. ·
·
POMEROY - A beautiful little starter home · or
retirement couple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
living room · nlce kitchen. Full basement.
$17,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bed~oom brlck only 1 block
from town, low utilities. A Qargaln at '12.500.

All!erica":

I

Bo.'ton

·· ---~-----__.;,_;,_

L ' ONGFELLOW

' One letter aifi\Ply ston&lt;\1 tor another. . In this sample · A II
used for the three L'1, X for tbe two O'a, etc. ·single letters,
apottrophes, the lenath and formation of the word• are oil
hints. Eaeb doy the code !etten are different

caYPTOQUOTBB

RUTLAND- .2 homes on S~lem Street. Take your
. choice or buy both and ren!!hem. $12,000Hch • .
•'

,

DAILY CRYJ;&gt;TOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
· AXYDLBAAXI
II

'

G

BGT . LGW

VB
,,. E. X K P V R ,
: .

JK

'

G
.J K
.

C A Z LJ
MV •

JK

MV

J CN W J V R ,

.Mv - jlt:KDVR,' , JK MV CVDVCVI\.
'"I

)

•

'7

OGXRK VBVCWKT
Yestentay'• Cryptoqllott: FROM US TO YOU! MAY · to~
·AND PEACE BE YOURS ~UGH 'I1IE YEARS ro OOME.
-

CGXEL

Movi e

1:oo- Tomorrow

17 ;
5 : 25- Love,
Stvle 17 .

THURSDAY,JANUARY 3,1980
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13 ; 5: 55-World at Large 17 .
6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6:3()-For You ... Biack Woman 10;
News 17 ; 6:45-Mornlng Report
3; 6:5()-Good Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6:55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Thursday Mor·
nlng 8; Batman ·10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17: 7:15A.M . Weather 33.
7: 31}-,fFamlly Affair 10; Blg Blue
Marble 33 ; 7:55-Chuck White
Reports 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10 ; Family
Affalr 17; Sesame 51. 33 .
8:3()-Romper Room 17.
·
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Porky Pig 8; One Day at a Time
10; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Lucy
Show 17; Children's Key Concert
33.
9:3()-Love of Lite 10; Bob Newhart
8; Green Acres 17.
IO:GO-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
N lghl 6; Magazine 8, 10; Morning
Magazine
13; ·
Movie
"Manhandled" 17; Festival In
Vienna 33 .
' 10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6.
10 :55-House Call 10; CBS News a.
11:00-High Rollers 3,15 ; Laverne 1!.
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10;
Johnny Mathis 33. :
11 : 3()-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St .
20 : 11 :55-News 17.
12 : 0()-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10, 13; Mlndreaders 15; Love•
American Style 17; Big Band
Bash 33.
12: 30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field l5;
Movie "Casanova's Big Night"
17; E lee. Co. 20.
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,
Young 1!. the
Restless 8, 1,0.
·
' ·1()-As The World Turns 8,10;
~ : GO-Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6, 13; News 17.
2:3()-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Gigglesnort Hotel 1'7.
3:00-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17; Masterpiece Theatre
20: Such Good Companions 33.
3: 3if-{)ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
W lid 10; Over Easy 33.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Griffin 6; At:
ternoon Playhouse 8,1 0; Sesame
ST. 20,33; Real McCoys 13;
Speclremen 17.
•
4 :3()-Lone Ranger 3; Tom 1!. Jerry
13;. Gilligan ' s ls. 17.
5 :00-Carol Burnett 3; Sanford 8.
Son 8; Mlsfer Rogers' Neigh borhood 20,33; Mary Tyl.jr
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17.'
5 :30-Mash 3;: News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; Elec. Co. 20: Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-News 3,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News
6 ; Zoom 20,33; Carol Burnett 17 .
6:3()-NBC News 3,15; ABC News
6 , 13; CBS News 8, 10 ; Bob
Newhart 17; Vila Alegre 20; Wild
Wlld World of Animals 33.
7 :00-Cross-Wlts J; Baxters 6 ; Tic
Tac Dough B: News lO;
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
So'l 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: 30-Hollywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; s1oo,ooo Name That Tune 10:
Nashville On The Road 13;
Country Roads IS; All In The
· Famlly 17 .
·
8:00-Buck Rogers 3,1f, Mork &amp;
Mindy
6,13;
Waltons
8;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
In Concert 20; College Basketball
10; Movie "The Joker Is Wild"
17: Camera Three 33.
8:30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Closeup
• 33.
9:00-Frank Sinatra 3, 15; Barney
Miller 6,13: Barnaby Jones 8;
. Sneak Prevl~s 20,33.
9.:30-Soa.2_6, 13; Camera Three 20;
Danci"'t l&gt;lsc:o 33. :
.
JU :D0-20-20 6, 13; Knots Landing
a. 10; News 20; SOundstage 33 .
10: 3()-0ver Easy 10; 10:45Civlllllltlon 17.
"·
11 : Oo-News 3,6,8,10,13, 15: Dick
Cavett 20: Fall &amp; · Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33. ·
11 :30-Tonight 3,15; Pollee Woman
6: 13; Colu"'bo 8; A!IC News 33;
Movie "The Comic" 10.
11 :~vie "Stella" 17: 12 : ~ •
Bar•tta ·6,J3.
·
.
\ :110-Tomot.row 3; News 151 1:30MIKilgan a.
"
1 : 40-~ews 17; 1:45-Movle "Sky
Coml)1e~" 17; 1: 50-Newt ·13.
3: Is-Untouchables 17; • : 15-()pen
,,··U.P 17.

;

n:

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
• Federal
1 Accumulation agents
5 Bereft of
DOWN

take him out
to the farm!

warm
milk,

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

operator's license? Phone

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 fo: "Win st
Bridge, " care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
10019.)

·tlew•ww:l'

SAVE ON C4RI'ET
DRIVE AUT1U
SAVE.A LOT

septic

systems, dozer, backhoe.
Rt . 143. Phone 1 (614) 698·
7331 or 742·2593.

HAVE VACANCY In
private home for elderly

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

We have added the EastWest cards to complete a
P.roblem from the English
'Pop11lar Bridge."
The defense starts . with
three rounds of spades. West
trumps tbe third spade and

Reasonable

rates. Scotchguard.
6309or 742 · 2~8.

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,

By Oswald Jacoby

· and Alan Sontag

•

estimate .

home,

new kit., new bath,all
carpeted, etc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel ·
. jng, $16,200.00.
PoM'E RQY- Beautiful
home all features, e•·
cellent condition, must
be seen to be appreciated. $40,000.00.
BUILDING SITES - In
neW subdivision, start at
$2,500.00.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES
AT ll'h% Interest, 30
yrs. to pay, "'down on
1st ·. 525,00t.DO, s" on
'ballnct, VA. No o-n
P1y. _
. '
REALTOR
Henry E. Clelo'ld, Jr:
."2't191
' ASSOCIATES
Rove•&amp; Dollie Turner
.
742-2474
.
Jnn Trusaell 949·2660
OFFICE PHONE
992·:1:159

Eaol
Pass
Pass

Opening leaa:t 8

BOWERS
Sweepers,

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.
~

Business Opp'ty

II!,.....

Norlb
Pass
Pus

toasters, i'rons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

~

.

•e

pool kits. Do ·it·yourself or
let us install for you. D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992-5724.

SEWING
MACHINE
Repairs,
service,
all
makes.
992-2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales

WANT TO start new gar·
bage pickup ln RutianMH
area. Call evenings 614·367·
'7:167.
608 e.
MAIN

The answer lo the problem
is that 11nless West holds the
king of clubs you aren't going
to make your contract. So, we
have completed the hand with
West holding the club kiqg.
It stlll may not look to yo11
as if you can bring In the rest
of the tricks, but they are
there by means of an unusual
play known as a criss·cross
squeeze.
You simply cash all yo11r
trumps to come down to
queen of diamonds and ace of
clubs in dummy. West will
have to unguard one of his
kings and you simply cash the
ace of that suit, lead to the
other ace and make the last
trick with the appropriate
queen.
Note that If West discards
all his little diamonds, you
will have no jrohlem. If he
holds one an unguards the
club king, you should be able
to work that out also.

SOtJTII

drinking allowed .

·

friends ask : 1 'What now?''

1·2

•s

l N STOCK for immediate

Americ~o~n

Criss-cross sque~ze play

HIM!

.RACINE, D.
949·2748 or
992·7314
12·28-pd.

caneers "

•

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

I'l..t. 06HI~

6,13;

8;

3; News 15.
1:05-News 17:" 1:1 0-Movle "The
Lasl Hurrah" 17; I 5()-News 13
3 :4()-Movle " Last of lhe Buc.

BRIDGE

HERe a::w£.5

driveways.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

News 33.

12 40- Ba re lla

.

basements, ponds, brush,

timber, land clearing .
Charles Butcher. 742·2940

9:00- 0 i ff ' rent
Slrokes
3,15 ;
Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie
" Ohms" 8. 10; College Basketball
/
17.
'
9:3()-Joe' s World 3, 15; 10:00-Best
of Saturday Nlghl Live 3, 15;
Vegas 6, 13.
11 :00-News 3,6,8 ,10,13, 15,20; Last
of the Wild 17 : Wodehouse
Playhouse 33.
11 :3()-Tonlgh13, 15; Love Boat 6.13;
Black Sheep Squadron 8; Movie
" Br other Or chid" 10; Movie
"Castl e on I he Hudson" 17; AB C

name, addr..t, zip code and mekt chtcke peyablt to Ntwapaperbookt.

spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and

11·19·1 mo.

OUTFIT NOODLE

Jumble Book No. 12,contllning 110 puultl,,tev•llablelori1.1Spostpaid
from Jumble, clo thll newapeper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J.07MI.Include your

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

&amp; Famous Name Brit'ld

GOUGE

What the hypochondria c said every time she
discovered a new symptOm-

"GOOO GRIEF '"

on 51. Rl. 124 toward '
. Rutland.

12-1-1 mo.

I Answer:

Yesterday's

mile off Rt 7 by -pass •

l /4

Roofing,

laundry.

Broker 992-5739

JUST LISTED - Beauty Salon - Fully equipped,
ready to go. Includes two working lations and 5
rooms, bath. Cold drink machine, · tc. A money·
maker In good loc. in Ralcne. Prlcea •• $25,000.
NEW LISTING - Trailer 8. lot In Racine, 3 DR, ail
crpeted, front porch with awning, wood underplnn·
lng, also Includes pool for the children . Anxlous to
sell . $11 ,{)()().
TRAILER- 2 BR on peaceful slde street, all equip·
ped kitchen Including dinette set. Musl,..ll. $10,500.
NEW- WON'T LAST - 4 yrs. old, 3 BR, bath 8.
utilities, kitchen w·dlshwasher, D.R. w·slldlng glass
doors to pall!&gt;, on nearly 'I• acre. Carpeted In
beautiful taste . $44,900.
MINI FARM - Beautiful brick bf.level with 3
,bedrm., large living room with fireplace. Total elec·
trlc and fully insulated . All hardwOOd floors. Basement could be finished tor edra living quarters. AI·
tached garage. 3 large hot houses and many extras
on 5 acres. Loc. close to Racine. Asklng$63,500.
NEW LISTING- Nice 3 BR home, e•tra large LR,
equipped kit., washer, dryer, full basement, central
air, breezeway l~adlng to garge. Well cared tor
house has .many extras, several fruit trees of dlf·
ferenl varieties 1!. · nice garden. See to appreciate.
very nice location In lower Syracuse on St. Rt. 124.
Priced at $63,900.
CHESTER - 4 BR 'home, hardwood floors, large
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
garden space. ASklng~.900.
'FAMlL Y HOME - Lots of possibilities with this
nice 2 story . Many fealures, ce~tral air, built-In ap·
pllances, all carpeted, good lnveslme~twllh several
nlce bllding lots. On appro•. acres In the center
of Raclne. Asklng$.54,000.
·
i..OTS o ·F LOTS ...:. From 1 to 75 acres, bordering ·
Pomeroy.
6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR, dining and ullllty room, ·
kit. equipped w ·stove and refrlg . M\)SIIy carpeted, ·
forced air gas fur'nace, 1 yr. Clld Garage, a complete
trailer hook-up with nat. gas tap and septic can add
Income. over 2 acres. $29,¥00, Call tor appointment.
''"'"'' Rt. 7 below Middleport.

.

NO, SIFU LIKET··

WeL~d!MY

17ciFcPI~

10·19·1 mo.

DOZER, END Loader,
brush hog. Will do

Phone 742·2003

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR.
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN.

WHOA I etW THAT
.ai6A IN I VA DON'T
AAFTA POINT OR .

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992~2772

'
'

TWO HOUSES ln
Middleport. Live In one,
rent the other. Both
houses remodeled In·
side. One ·has 3 bdrms.,
1he other has l bedrm.
· Located on Powell St . at
lower end of town.
MODERN HOUSE wlth

Virginia Hayman

·CENTRAL REALTY CO.

.

dows

George S. Hobstetter Jr.

HeacJ. uarters

-----

Other times by appoint·
. men!.
107 Sycamore (Rear

PAINTING AND sand ·
blasting. Free estimates.
Call949·l686.

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

Phone 742 -3092

• Storm WIndows
• Replacement Win·

ERA MERCER
REALTY

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc. i

ousing

.

[J I

CAPTAIN EASY

F&lt;lRA~,

un ·

house. $100 per month. plus
utilities. $100 security . Call
992·7511 alter Sp .m.
·

Main,

remodeled

within the past 2 years.

rooms, meta I storm
windows, bath, nat. gas
F.A heat, basement and

$1,000.00

kit ·

chen, dining room and

$1,000.00

DOWN .
NEW LISTING -

balh,

elns~tion
eSior DoOrs

Di ck CavPtt 20

7:30...:Newlywed Game 6; Joker' s
Wild 8; Dick Cavett 33: The
Ju(!ge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Fam ily
17; MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20 .
8:00-Real People IS; E ight i s
Enough 6, 13; Young Maverick
8. 10; Great Performances 20,33;

IAMMANDI

Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours 9·1 M., w.. F.

Trucking. Phone 742·2455.

NEW LISTING
Beautiful 3 bedroom

ftl-33'25

I

11 ;

(Answers tomorrow)

Guaranteed Work

.PHONE 742-2003

bedroom

C.,heap Rates
Quality Service
Call 992·2852
or 992·7235
12 13·pd .

SIX ROOM house and bath

REALTY ·

baement and 2
garage. $17,500.
LOT 77X264

~

Call Howard
949·2862
11 ·14·mo.

HOBSTETTER

5e~ond
'

u

STATEMENT
TO THe FBI.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

· REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterons Admin. Loans.

Let us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
cold weather

cleaning and painting,
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates

Rea 1 Estate for Sale

216 E.

,JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PWMBING REPAIR

l

WEDNF~na Y .JA"'UARY 2,1980
7:00-College ~asketball 3: Tic Tac
Dough 8; News 10; Ma l ch Game PM
6; Newlywed Gam e 13 ; Love
Amer ican Styl e 15; Sanford 8. Son

.. OFFICIAL.

carpeted. 3 to 17 acres
available. Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7or33. 446·23511 alter7.

gobd garden land.

In 1492, Chriltopher
.Col11mbus made lht first 'I)/HIT E WHIRLPOOL
rer.orded referenee tO- d'ryer, gOOd running con dillon. $125. Call985·4276.
tol.lacco IIi his JOW'IIIl.
.

POMEROY
LANOMARK
·. '1'V.., _Jack w. Carse•

Gold,

Cal l 992 ·6370.

opposed by the Brttlsh
the· work · stopped more

lales &amp; Servic•.

$1,750.00 DOWN - A
real 9 room home. 2
baths, equipped kitchen,

kniveS and other old items.

Frl!llch canal was at firm

Headquarters
Appliances .

trailer in country setting
off Rt. 7, 6 miles from
Pomeroy. Freezer and ex -

clothing,

I NEWSPAPER ENTEAPfiiSE ASSN .)

l'l.NA!«:l NG·VA·FHA LO ·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT. PURCHASE
OR
REF I NANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
614-592 ·3051 .

ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or

have the ability today to overcome challenging situations .
Don't be Intimidated by events
where the odds appear to be
stacked against you.

Do not postpone changing
something Important tOday that
has an effect upon your reputation or finances. Muster your·
courage and get il done.

ELECTRIC

cellent buy.

silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks. tools. antique

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21)

Real Estate for Sale

TWO BEOROOM furnished

plele

LIBRA (hpl. 23-0CI. :a) You

~ENERAL

OLD COINS, pocket wat -

Stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience In buying
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur niture. One piece or com ·

firmly behind a friend who may
require your support today. Let
him or her know that you can be
relied upon when needed.

and

evenings .

MARTIN 'S APPRAISAL .

VIRGO (Aug. U-a.pt. 22) Stand

HOTPOINT

ONE BEDROOM furnished
house. Adults only. 992·
2598.

LEO (July 23-Aug. Zl) Try nollo

attached.

Plymouth

auto., $1800 or trade . 742 ·
2451.

silver . Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592·
6412.

make thoae you help today feel
obligated to you In some
manner. a. charitable. Handle
matters so there are no strings

out fOr winter. A -1 Dcon -

ca ll992·7760.

ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
killing . Pennies have a way or · ches. Willing to pay top
adding up to dollars.
dollar. Call 1·592 ·2973

CANCER (Juno 21-JulJ Zl) View

1975 Monte Carlo, e"'ellent
condition, $3250. 992 ·2377 or '
992·6114.

custom

satisfied with small gains today,
ralher than trying to make a big

GEMINI (M•J :Z1-June :ZO) Don't
be a retuclant leader today.
Once you make a commitment,
go all out. Don't wall lor others
to get things rolling .

669-

3785 .

Dexter, at Slater 's residen ce.·

Miller. Rt . ,., Pomeroy or

2nd, Middleport, OH. 9923161 .

TAURUS (April 20-M., 211) Be

Wilkesville,

rJ -

I

HAVEN'T A5
YET MADe MY

tan ,

Mobile Homes· Sale

Rd . 27,

1974

M.D.

Gosney, antiques, 26 N.

aren't that tough.

Twp.

households.

A!ITIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything. See or ca ll Ruth

AAIES (M•rch 21-April 18) Just
because a task Isn't to your likIng Is not a good enough reason
to put II off today. Meet your
duties head on. You'll find they

Saturday,

boxes, brass beds, ii"on
beds, desks, etc., complete

WANTED : SAW logs.
Payment upon delivery to
our yard, 7:30 to 3:30 week ·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow, OH. 678·
2980.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20)

Phone

brownish

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale l2x63 with ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12&gt;&lt;60 3 bd r .
1973 Skyline 12•55 2
bedroom .
1972 Bonanza 12&gt;&lt;52, 2 bedr.
B 8. S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PlEASANT,
.wv. 304·675·4424.

parts. New and extra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
$5,000. Can be seen on a

dilion. 614-985-4209.

Write

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or chard, State Route 689.

lb .,

992·6211! .

change rear end, motor

1974 JEEP Cherokee, posi track, all new radial winter
tires.
Completely
overhauled and checked

Wanted to Buy

It's painful. Find out more about
yourself by sending for your
Astra.Graph Letter. Mall $1 tor
each to Astra-Graph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019.
Be aure to apedty birth date.

F IREWOOD FOR sale .
Now taking or ders. Will
deliver, 742 2056.

40

Business Services

j ~UNEB+n

LEGALLY

IS
· PRUDENT-

female . Humane Society,

built to ma•imum, all new

LOST : 2 female beagles ,

in

E. Main St ., Pomeroy, 992 ·
3891 .

all

Bernice Bede Osol

Partnership arrangements into
which you enter this coming year
..Wil have beneficial results. You'll
t . .ve the knack for teaming up
_wllh just the right associates. _
CAPRICORN (D... ZI-Jon. 19)
Dodging difficult decisions is not
the way to go today. Problems
which require solutions should
be attended to promptly, even if

Excelsior Salt Works. Inc.,

facilities .

Also· AKC
reg i stered
Dobermans. 614·446·7795 .

STOCK
CAR.
Howe
chassis, 350 4 bolt main
Chevy. Franklin quick

Village

food, and all types of salt .

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds. Clean

Auto Sales

Racine

FOX terri er type, around

POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 61067-7220.

Lost and Found

please call 742·2116.

sand, gravel, t at clum
chloride, fertilizer, dog

COAL ,

RISING STAR Kennel .
Boarding. Call367-0292 .

ASTRO·GRAPH

money in Rutland Dec . 15,

,, ..

diameter 10" on largest

For Sale
LIMESTONE ,

Giveaway
PART collie pups. 7A2 ·2714 .

Television
Viewine

j

.

..

�.

'

' •2 - The Daily.:"~ntine~ Mlddleport-Pcxneroy, 0 .. Wecm"esdav. Jan. 2. 1911

C~HC

spokesman says 648
-Board violates own rules
of the ''648" Board to discuss the
issues of the takeover. However, the

The Gailla ·Jackson ·Meigs C!m·
m~mlty Mental Health and Mental
Re~tion "648" Board a~ . in
vlolalion of its own niles in taliing
over direct operations rl. the Nelson·
ville Alternative Residential
Facllity last week, said a Com·
munlty Mental Health center
spokesperson today.
Due to the sudden and unexpected
takeover from the Commmlty Mental Health Centerr severe problems
rep~ staffing, licensure, insurance, quality of care and other
legalities have arisen, the
spokesperson continued.
Acconllng to a statement released
today by the Center's ad·
mln!Btration, the executive com·
mittee of the Community .Mental
Health Center's Board arranged to
meet with the Executive Conunittee

meeting was "postponed in·
definitely" by Annette Levine,
chairman of the ''648" Board.
The Gallia CoWlty C&lt;mmissioners
are asking a restraining order to
prevent further operatims of the
new facility (named until last week
the Chlldren's Resid!f1tial Treatment Center) Wltil 1juestions of
licensure aJJJ staffing are resolved.
Un'til the takeover by the "648"
Board, the Community Mental
Health Center ran the operation.
Plans were to open in mid.January,
after essential staff were hired to
provide care. "We are only talking
about a matter of a few weeks," said
the Center's spokesperson.
The "648" Board, in taking over
the facility claimed that it ws ready

tO open and must open immediately.
A child was admitted to ttie program .
on December 26. The spokesperson
questioned the ''648" Board's need to
"shove a child in there before services were in place. "
Since the ''648" Boards acroas the
state are not direct service
operations, but bodies to oversee •
and fund mental health services, ihe
takeover is unprecedented.
The six .employees of the
children's facllity were forced to
resign as Community Mental Health
Center employees and be placed on
the ''648" Board payroll. ''Hiring siJ:
employees and putting them oo the
payroll is certainly in violation of the
Community Plan and state
regulations," said the Center
spokespersm. State law requires a
local community plan which

·. 42 party ·goers die in fire
CHAPAIS, Quebec (AP) - A
young man was arrested after a fire
at a Lions Club New Yea: ·. ~-·eMf.
ty kllled at least 42 revelers. ;it is
definitely a criminal matter," police
said.
The 21-year-old was toying with a
cigarette lighter near Christmas
decorations that burst into flames
neat' the club's entrance, survivors

told Investigators.
Constable Rene Fortin of the
Chapais municipal police told repor·
ters he did not know when the
charges would be lodged. The
suspect was not immediately Identified.
Police said mliny of the· bodies
were stacked against a reer door of
the club, the ()pemiska, and that 50
other partygoers suffered serious
burns and smoke inhalation as the
fire roared through fir branch
decorations.
"
Police said there _ were ap·
proximately 350 persms in the club
when the fire broke out about I: 30
a.m. Tuesday. Thirty children lost
parents in the blaze, and one family
lost five relatives.
One of the survivors, Norman
Bedard, said when the fire broke out

Weather
Cloudy tonight with snow flurries
likely. Low. in the mid to low :n..
Cloudy Thursday. High in the upper
20s and low ~. The chance of
precipitation 60 percent tmight and
20 percent Thursday_

•
TRACI'OR CLUB MEETING
The Southeast Ohio .Garden Trac·
tor Club wW meet at 2 p.m. Sunday
at the Scout Building behind the
firehouse in CheSter. There will he
election cl new &lt;ificers. New mem·
herships wW be taken. All interested
persons are invited to attend.
BOARD ORGANIZING
The Southern Local School
District Board cl Education will
meet for Its organizational session a\
7 this evening in the high school
cafeteria.

SQUADCAJJ.'m

The Middleport Emergency Squad

was called to Front St., at 7:59p.m.
Tuesday for ,Harold DemOBkey who

was taken to Veterans MEmorial
Hospital where he was admitted.
MEETINGCANCEJ,I.ED
A meeting of the Ladies AIW!Iary
of the Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department schEJluled for this
evening has been postponed until
Jen.9.

HAPPY

many of the guests cootinued dan·
cing. Then there was panic, and
people fleeing through the blazing
front door ''Were like walking torches as their nylon clothing bUrned," he said. A
Another s~. Luc Marceau,
24, said he saw several m~ try to
put out the fire with a portable extinguisher and that when he realized
they weren't going to succeed, he
fied with his girlfriend.

SPECIAL MEETING
Tbe Meigs CouDty Commlsslonen
will meet Friday· at 10 a.m. to
dlseuu SEOEMS. Tbe contract whh
SEOEMS was termJaated Dec. 31.

becomes part of the state system.
Any changes in the plan must be submitted to the state for action.
Other· poesible violations concern
equal employment opportunity pra!ltlces. Any agency that uses state or
federal monies must cm1ply with
Equal Opportunity guidelines.
This lack of proper EEOpractlce$
on the part rJ. the "648" Board can
prevent a contract with the Mental
Health Center for support, back-up,
and o1her services. "A cootract with
them at this point might jeqNll'dlze
our federal grant," said the Center
spokesperson.
,
"Since all of the poHdes and
procedures depend entirely on the
Ctmmwilty Mental -Health Center, ,
cl which the children •a facility waa a
part, the bula for licensing was no
lmger valil," said the Center's
spokesperaon, "Everything in the
policies and procedures manual that
we developed for rWlning the facility
depends upon the Center."
The Center representl\tlve
quesUmed how the ''648" Board
managed to receive a state llcense
within two days when the CommWlily Mental Health Center had to
· follow all of the state rules and
regulations to obtain the license.
''They received a Ucense withOut.
having any rJ. their services in
place."
Other problems have reportedly
arisen because lhe Community Mental Health Center shared utilities, in·
surance, telephone sei'vlce, maintenance and safety operations with
the children's facility.

Mayor's

~ourt

'

Niehm claims takeover first step toward creation
•
•
.o f one agency for mental health care zn regzon
-

FLAG REMINDER - Flags such as these are being displayed In the
store windows cl the Middleport business sectlm to remind residents and
motorists of the hostages held in Iran. Besides these fiii8B which serve as
a reminder little has been done in Meigs County to demonstrate the resentment of residents towards the situation.
Weltha Dlllenger, Cyrus Donnley,
Jonathan Folden, Marvin Friend, .
U&gt;ris Hall, Faye Harrison, Mildred
U&gt;ng, Wllllam Nichols, Earle Palri· ·.
ter, Karl Paulson, Veri Reynolds, Cynthia Snyder, Michael Sllllnaker,
DBwn Spencer, Jason Stanley, ;
Willard Swain, Andrew Thcmp110n, •.
David White, . Betty Williams,'"
Richard Wlaeman.
BIRTIL'I DEC. •
,
Mr. and Mn. William Hubbard, :·
daugther, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs . •
Roger Moore, daughter, Jackson; ·
Mr. and Mn. Chester Elliott,
daughter; Pl. Pleasant.
'
DJSCIIARGESJANl
Mrs. Benjamin Barker and .
daughter, Delores Barlow, Amanda ..
DBvls, Carrie Evans, Mary Frye,..
Cynthia Harrison, Amanda Houck,
DBvid J!ianson, Loulae McCarty,
Mrs. Michael Payne and son, Teresa
Reynolds, Phyllis &amp;ssell, Mrs.
Timothy Stout and son, Bernice
Webb, Judith Wllli8111S.
BIRTIL'I JAN. I
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Sbulew,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant; Mi-. and
Mrs. Vlncen Stapletat, son, Crown
City; Mr. and Mn. James HudMxl,
am, Bidwell.
, .. •

:vETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday
Admlsalons--Bessle
Quillen, Middleport; Erlcka Hubbard, Syracuse; Jess Pickens,
Racine; Woodrow Hall, Racine;
Eugene Reeves, Pomeroy; Virgil
Yarbrough, Rutland.
Monday
Dlscharges-.J ohn
Blosser, Charlene SWartz, James
RouSh, Sherry Holtz, Brady Knapp,
Ruth Mulford, tbarles Werry.
Tuesd11y Admlssions~·Erlc
Phllllps, Galllpolis; Mary Stanley,
Shade; Dana Covert, Pcxneroy;
Harold Demoskey, Middleport;
Bessie StiU, Racine.
Thesday Dlscharges-Nme.

Four defendants were fined in the
court of Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens Monday night.
Hol&amp;er Medltla Center
Fined on speeding charges were
·Franklin W.Brinker, 37,
DlacbarKes, Dec. 30
Pt.Pleasant, fl3 and costs; James
Frances Burcham, Jerri Can·
F. Williams, :M, Rt. 1, Loog Bottom, · terbury, Judith &lt;:c., Ray Garlinger,
$13 and'coets; Earle E. Showalter, Gerald Gllm&lt;J'"e, Michelle Johnsm,
35, RD, Lonll BoUom, $15 and costs; Julia Kennedy, Jueslie Molden, Om
Helen F. Wilcoxen, 22, Radne, $13 Russell, Lllile Snyder, Brent Thorn·
Hovatter, Columbus; William · and costs.
psm, Andy Tredway, Amy Wood.
Hovatter, Lancaster; Clyde HovatDISCHARGES, DEC. 31
ter, Jr., Cuyahoga . Falls; Gary
Donna Barbar, Phlllip Bentley, John
Hovatter, Circleville; Richard
Blanksenshlp. Anne Bradbury,
Hovatter, Middleport, and James R.
Lucretia Brooks, Clyne Bnunfleld,
TWO SQUAD RUNS
Taylor, Ft. Stewart, Ga.; 41 grand·
Valerie Bumgart, J3ob!IJ Clark.
The
Pcmeroy
Emergency Squad
children, four great grandchildren;
went to Burlingham at 11:30 a.m.
her mother, Mrs. WUUam Ford, NutTuesday for Mrs. Mary Stanley who
ter Fort, W.Va.; two sisters, Mrs.
THE OFFICE OF
was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Janice Williams, Clarksburg, W.
Hospital where she was admitted. At
Va., and Mrs. Patricia Sleeth,
12:48 p.m. Tuesday the unit went to
Columbia, Md; ooe brother, William
Spring Ave. for James Wlaelllllh who
Ford, Nutter Ft.
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
FW!eral services will be held
ThurSday at 10 a.m. at the Shaw·
DB vis North Chapel, 4341 West High
TWINS BORN
St, Columbus. Friends may call at
Will Remain Open with Two Dispensing
Mr.
and
Mrs. Howard Ph!Wpa cl
the funeral home today fr1m 2 to 4
Rutlwxl received word cl the birth of
and 7 to 9. Graveside services will be
Opticians on Hand to Take Care
Your
twins-a
sm and a daughter-to Mr.
held at Middleport Cemetery Thurand Mra. Joe Phll1ips at Owensday at 2:30p.m.
sborough, Ky., on Dec. 26, the bir·
Repair Needs and Deliver Glasses
, thday anniversary of Mrs. Howard
Phillips.
on Order.
Grandparents other then Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Phillips include Mn.
Ellen
Hatfield, Route f, Pomeroy,
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs.
John Thcker, Pomeroy.
and
Khm1eini would receive him, there
was no indication from &lt;ificlals in
Tehran that this would happen.
Meanwhile, the students who
seized the U.S. Embassy on Nov. 4'
reiterated their WlChanging position
+ that the hostages would be freed
only if President Carter returned the
shah to Iran for trial. They said they
would not talk with Waldheim Wlle99
Khomeini told them to and that he
would ntt be allowed to see any of
the caplive Americans.
The government 1V service
coupled its pictures cl Waldhelm's
arrival m a split screen with an amputee and two !lead children it said
were victims of SAVAK, the shah's
secret police.
TWIN SIZE
"This is·a New Year's gift offered
Reg. S149.95 ea.
by the 1V staff on the occuim of
Mr. Waldheim 's arrival," the annow only
nouncer said.
The U.N. Security CoWlCll gave
95
Waldheim a new mandate Mmday
to try to win the release of the
~JlUn
hostages - put at 50 In nwnber by
FULLSIZE .
the State Department, 49 by their
~eg, $179.95 ea.
captors an4 ~ by three U.S.
now only ·
clergymen who vl.slted them over
Chri8tmaB.IM If he falls to get them
freed by Jan. 7, the councll wW meet
0
then to vote on a U.S. resolution now
being drafted to impose limited ssnENS
ctlons agalnstlran.
Reg. $449.95 set
The Sovjet government was one of
.
nowonly
four that abstained in Monday's
U.N. vtte. Tass, the official Sovlf.t
news agency; said m Tuesday that
', 'SETl
the U.S. "steps to lmpoae an
economic blockade m Iran give r1B1
..
.
to the profOWld indignlitim of the .
Iranian public." But thousands _of
Afghan residents of !tan demoo·
strated, outside the Soviet Embuay
in Tehran arid the Sovl« Conlulate
ONLY~
•.:·
in Mashad Tuesday;-ptotelting the
Soviet military ·Jntezyentlon In
Algha,nlstan: They hauled dOwn the
Soviet flag and . burned. It, btt
Iranian revolutloll8ty guards drove
them off when they tried to Invade
the embassy.

Area deaths
GARLAND G.BECHTEL
Garland G. Bechtel, 77,' Southside,
W. Va., died Tuesday morning at
University H011Pital in Columbus.
Mr. Bechtel was a retired farmer
and a member of the Concord Bap·
tist Church. He was preceded in
death by his wife, Sally Klnniard
Bechtel oo March 22, 1!178.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Leona Muine King, Lancaster; a
son, Gerald E., Henderson, W. Va.;
a sister, Mrs. Jewell Caudill,
Marion, Ohio; four brothers, Jack of
Middleport; Lawrence, Gilbert and
Charles, all of Hendersm, four gran. dchlldren and nine great·
grandchildren.
FWleral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Concord Baptist
Church with the Rev. Fred D. Mc·
Callister officiating. Friends msy
call at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home anytime after I p.m. Thursday.

MILDRED B. FOlDEN
MOdred Hovatter Folden, tr1 203
Fairway Drive, Columbus, fo.:mer
Middleport resident, died Monday at
her residence.
·
Mrs. Folden is survived by six
daughters, BeUy Hughes, Diana
Hovatter, and Gloria Hampton, all
of Columbus; Alice Spellman,
~oeton, Mass.; Gerry Fenton, Huntington,and Karen Unger, Rockbridge, Ohio; six sons, Ronald

-

HOLIDAYS
From The
People At:

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

Lighting
up
ANEW
YEAR
with joy
and hope
~· for all ·

[:.__-...;,...~

"'"h.r

CENTRAL lRUST COMPANY
'
Middleport, o.

Gold soars again
NEW YORK (AP) - .aid
soared to all-time highs at h~me
and abroad and the dollar sagged
Wednesday as investors coosldered tense Iranlan·U .S.
relations and the RussJim Ani\Y's
move into Afghanistan.
Gold ended trading in New
York at a record $574 an ounce, a
jump of ~ fr(JJI Mooday, according to Republic National

Waldheim

Bank.

Long delays
With the start of a new ccxn·
puterlzed registration system set
up this year by the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, thousands of
people hoped to beat the long
lines usually associated with
license bureaus.
But many of them were out of
luck Wednesday as they found
long delays resulting from
problems with the new system.
Cuyahoga County Deputy
Registrar Robert Bennett said
that by llite In the&amp;y, only about
half the county's 12 license
bureaus were working at
capacity.

ELBERFELDS IN POM

"SPINE
SAVER"

'179 95

For .
Healthful·

. SupPort!

'224-,, .

SEJS

..

-ELBERFELDS lN -POME-ROY ·

for a license to operate.
During Wednel;day's testimony
before Judge James A. Bennett, Dr.
Niehm responded 'to a question con·
cerning the 'Eatiooale offered by the
648 Board for the December 17
takeover by stating he had been informed the takeover had been in·
spired by a desire by the 648 Board
to open the facility prior to the
holiday season. Acctrding to Niehm
the Center had planned a mid·
January opening.
When asked, by Prosecutor Cain,
if he believed that reason, Niehm

MASONIC OFFtCEJRS..;
Pomeroy Lodge 164,
Accepted Masons. Pictured are, frmt,l tor, Dmald Vaugluln, senior deacon ;
Eric Gryszka, senior warden; John Jenkins, war·
shlpful master; Michael Kelly, junior warden; Robert
_purbin, junior deacon; back row, I tor, Hugh Custer,

Pie~e

.

replied (following an objection
raised by 648 Board COWlcil Lynn
Boster and overruled by Judge Ben·
nett), " .. .its difficult to believe that
a matter of a few weeks would make
that much difference .. .I can only
surmise it was an attempt to emharass the Center Board... the
takeover appears to he a first step
toward an attempt at an eventual
merger of the Boards--or the
dissolution of the Center Board"
In further testimony, Dr. Niehm
said he found it hard to believe the
648 Board could have met the

BY BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs Local Board of

Education adopted - inclement
weather plans for this winter at
Wednesday night's organizational
session at Middleport.
According board action, classes
will be delayed one hour under Plan
A; two hours under Plan B, and
three hours under Plan C. Aregular
dismissal hour will be malnteined
and days when any of the plans are
put into effect.
During the organizational session,
the board reelected Carol Pierce as
president for another year and Dr.
Keith Riggs was elected vice
president. The next meeting was set
fot Jan. 15 and in February, March
and April the regular meetings will

~:t.

Deputies probing
hit-skip accident

acts against S0 VIets

a.

, r

Carnahan gave the oath of offiCe to
new board members, Charles Pyles
and Don Smith. The fifth board
member is Denny Evans. Dallas
Hill and David Nease, former board
members, were commended for
their services to the district

OSP launches
enforcement
effort today.
The Ohio State Highway Patrol
has Ia Wlched an enforcement effort

to help curtail a dangerous and
irritating conditim on highways following too Qjosely or tailgating.
Lt. E. W. Wiggles,orth said of·
ficers at the Gallipolis Post have
been alerted to observe these
violations and take appropris~.en·
forcement action.
According to Lt. Wigglesworth
the Highway Patrol recognizes t~
danger to mdorists who drive a
small fuel~fficient car which is
tailgated by a nothit vehicle.
"Ihis hazard is particularly obvious and even more dangerous
when a large truck is involved " he
said. '"Following too closely ~ the
fifth leading cause of accidents in
Ohio."
Lt. Wigglesworth urges all
motorists · to exercise courtesy in
their driving and realize that at 55
MPH it takes about 226 feet or 13 car
lengths to bring a vehicle to a stop.

allies.

· CUba 's natural inclination is to
support the Soviets, the officials
said, but a CUban endorsement could
alienate much of the •-member
noo..a]lgned movemept, which CUha
now chairs. Coba was~ of the first · .
COWltrles to back the Soviet Invasion
of Czechoslovakia 11 years ago.
Initially, the l!dministratlon
favored a U.N. General' Assembly _
debate but;IOi' reasons that are WI·
·clear, decided ipstesc) to take its ·
case to the security Council even
. thwgh the Soviets have ".eto poWer
•· OATH. OF OFFICE GIVEN - SyracUS!! Mayor
In that l~embe~forum.
.... Eher Pickens, left, ad!Dinistered the osth of office to ·
-~

Jaruce Lawson,. clerk, and Mute stnible councilinliii ·
M"onday night. Alllo sworn in was Ka~ Crow
elected councilwoman.
'

.re:

.,

l.

ll'

the children's facility project was
funneled through the 648 Board. The
Center is a noo-profit organization
which contracts with the 648 Board
to provide mental health services.
The following letters wete in·
troduced as evidenci' during
Boster's exainination of Dr. Niehm:
December 14, 1979
To : Bernard F. Niehm, Ph.D., In·
terim Center Director
From: Maxine S. Plummer, Ex·
ecutive Director
Subject: Children 's Residential
FacUlty
..
''Our Board and the community
has anxiously ~n awaiting the
opening of the Chlldren's Residential Facility which we anticipated
would be by mid-December. I would
like to request, on behalf of the
Board, any information on wfly the
facility has now been delayecNI&lt;om
its early December opening. As you
know, I served on the Legislation
Conunittee that reconunended the
closing of the Nelsonville Children's
Center and went on record with the
State Legislature that we could pro·
vide the service better and closer to
the children's home environment. I
also served on the committee that
this year, for the first time, has a
line items in the Governor's budget
for the direct ·operation of the
Children's facility.
"AS far as the plannint for these
faciUties, and the construction,
Athens-Vinton-Hocking CoWltles 648
Board and our Board progressed
(Continued on oage 7) ·

Mrs. Johnson elected
new hoard president

Two women members were elec·
ted to lead the Southern Local School
Bosrd for 1911 when the board met
for its organizational session Wed·
nesday night.
Mrs. Shirley Johnson was named
new board president and Mrs. Susie
Grueser was named vice president
mendatim is expected for the Jan. for the new year.
be held on the second Tuesday of
Mrs. Nancy Carnahan was named
15meetlng.
each montli starting at 7:30p.m.
Supt. David Gleason was named to treasurer for two years on the
Board members will receive $40 a
receive, expend and account for required two year probational basis.
month and will receive only that
Meetings were set for the second
federal
IWlds lor the year.
amount regardless of the nwnber of
Tuesday
of each month except in
It
was
voted
to
renew
membership
meetings which are held. The board
January
when
the meeting wlli he
in
the
Ohio
School
Boards
set an allowance of $1500 as a service
held
on
the
third
Thesday. Starting
Association
and
liability
insUrance
fWld for board members to attend
time
will
b&amp;
7:30.
was
purchased
f~r
board
members
meetings or special training
The group voted to join the Ohio
and bonds were purchaSed for the
sessions.
Sch
1 Boards Assoyiation and
In an executive session, the board treasurer, board president and
00
liiSurance -·was purchased
liability
;
set the salary rJ. the treasurer superintendent.
for
the
board along with per·
The board took no action on a
$17,000 including any income from
formance
bmds for the superin·
federal programs. Temporary ap- recommend&amp;tlon from Supt.
Gleason to accept all substitutes tendent, treasurer and board mem·
propriations were adopted.
from
the coWlty office for the year. · bers and temporary appropristions
The board discussed filling a Title
It
was
indicated that the board were adopted. Treasurer Nancy
I reading program vacancy on the
would
prefer
approval of all substaff.
1'bere was no recomstitutes
named
to serve in the local
mendation made but a recom·
district.
The board also took no action on
,
acceptance of textbooks recommended for the year from the county
0
Meigs CoWlty S!lerilf Deputies are
e
Gleason told the board that
investigating a hit-6kip accident that
_ he is in the process of pn!paring a
occurred on couty road 34 juilt north
e
handbook for teachers· and sub- of Pine Grove Church.
stitute teachers on "do's and
It is believed a southbound vehicle
dont's" and it will soon be ready for
went off the road on the right and
distribution~
stuck and damaged a section of
that this was nota likely prospect.
Treasurer Jane Wagner gave the
woven wore fence owned by Ed
Britain and Pakistan have been · oath of office to new board memFrecker, Rt I, Minersville.
tryingtoroWldupsupportforaU.N. bers, Robert Snowden and Richard
Deputies are also investigating the
debate on the issue, and diplomatic Vaughan, and to reelected mem·
theft of a battery from a car parked
sources said Wednesday niglt they hers, Larry Powell and Dr. Riggs.
at Riggs Used Cars at Chester.
~ ·
have enlisted the bacl~ing , of
Bangladesh, Portugal and Noriray.
Public debate could get under way
this weekend, the sources said.
Several officials said press commentary in the Third World, much of
it' government controlled, has been
generally critical rJ. the Soviets. But
• most govenunenta have refrained
from taking an &lt;i!idal stand.
Seve~ days after the Soviet in·
tervention, OJI!a, ftr eumple, had
· not endorsed the Soviet intervention.
American offldals regarded this as
significant, considering that Cuba is
one of the Kremlin's most trusted

carter to seek U- eN

WASHINGTON (AP) - Undeterred by the prospect of a Soviet
veto, President Carter wW seek
United N'aliona Security CoWlcil condemnation of the Soviet Union as
part of a series of moves.to COWlter
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan,
according to administration cJ.
HAMILTON, Olllo (AP) flclals.
Hamilton school teachers WedIt was not clear what other steps
Jlelday night voted to accept a 7.1
Carter would take although White
percent pay raise, averting
House officials said they _would gQ
earlier. lhreats rl. a strike In the
beyond "verba~ or symbolic
system li 10,500students.
gestures." Military intervention was
Teachers had demanded a 9.5
the ooly QPtion explicllty niled out.
percent ralae. They have been
White House press secretary Jody
working without a cootract since
Powell said Wednesday that Carter
July. Neg~tiatlons began last
has made up his mind and that "the
January.
president's decisions will he mad'e
public wl)en appropriate con·
sultatlons and notifications have
taken place."
WOODBINE, Ga. (AP) - A
A formal announcement was ex·
body !llllalnll since 1 a twin·
pected
today or Friday.
.
eniJned pllne crashed two d4ys
One official, who asked not to (lt
before auutmas, kUling a five·
ilentlfled, sakl"there was a "general
meniber Ohio family, IIIII! been
~ion" worldwide to the Soviet·
fllUnd mired in a southeast
sponsored
coup in Afghanistan last
G«tllia sWuql, olflclaluay: .
week and that tile admln!Btration
'l'be body of pilot Kenneth Mat·
hoped this Wl!uld be refleeted in a
tix, rr 1·WBB found W...,_,ay by
.
, a ~earch te'am consisting of his · U,N. debate.
I!ieally, ·another offictal sal~, the
, father Merle; his alsler and her
· Soviet&amp; would find theiiiBelves so
' ll IIJ.Iband.
- - '·' .
The family feanlaearCbed Oll)Y , Isolated
8 . ~ult ol ·~~~~ U.N.
'de !late that they would qulc;kly with·
half '.a day . l;lefore tindb\c the
dt'lw lhe estimated 30,000 to to,OOO
. llody, glired In rlwddy gra• and
tr~ ' they have deployed 1n
cov~ by bracil,llh lldal water.
Af~~lstan , He .added, however,
"! ·- •

requirements for licensing the
facWty in the four days alleged. According to Niehm, the procedure
followed by the Center_ ~;equired an
extensive review ·of the facility and
its programs, as well as a site
visitation by state mental health of.
ficials. The 648 Board reportedly
received a temporary license from
the state within four days of the
takeover.
Dr. Niehm, during his nearly three
hours of testimony, further stated he
did not believe the facillly ' was
properly staffed. Following the
December 17 takeover, Center employes who had been assigned to the
children's facility were told by 648
Bosrd administrators that if they
wished to retain their jobs at the
facility they would have to resign
from the Center and be hired by the
648Board.
According to Niehm, key positions
of Community Intervention
Specialists and Teacher-Councilor
had not been in place prior to the
takeover. He said he did not believe
those positions had been filled by the
648Board.
Dr. Nlehm described the service
li'fered at the facility · as, " ... a
delicate program." ''If you do
everything right, success is
questionable .. .you just can~ open
the door and expect success.
During questioning by 648 Board
council Boster, Dr. Niehm testified
that the contract between the Center
and the 648 Board had expired in
September I !179, and that funding f!K' ,

Meigs hoard adopts weather plans

Body located

'

chaplain; ,Kemeth Wiggins, educational officer; Tom
Edwards, secretary; Theod~re T. Reed, Jr.,
treasurer; Pat Wood, senior steward, and Millard Van ·
Meter, tyler. Phil Kelly, junior steward, was not
present for the p1cture.

'

reelected president

Accept contract

'149

PRICE:

,, · "The ~rlendly Sanlr"

NEW YORK (AP) - Scalded,
roastad and burned, a 1~ear-old
boy clq to life Wednesday as
hiB mother was charged with put·
tlng him in a htt oven in an apparent ritual ordeal to drive the
devil out of him.
The Infant, Leon Justin, burned
on • percent of 1m bcidy and
~EIItly malnourlabed u well,
-- aitder Intensive OU'e and In
very critical condition In the bum
center of New York Hospital·
Cornell Medical Center.

oJ

Great To

~

Child critical ·

DR. N. W. COMPTON ·

NOW!

Walk·Up Teller Window Open Fri. Eve. 5 to 7 P.M.

BY LARRY EWING '
rights of toe CoWlty Commissiooers,
Gallia.Jackson-Mell!ll C~m~~~untty
the 648 Board and the Center conMental Health Center Director Dr.
cerning the licensure and operation
Bernard Nlehm charged Wednesday
of the children's residential facility.
that the December 17 takeover of the
ControversY surrounding the
Nelsoovllie Alternative Residential
operatloo of the facility, which is
Facility by the G.J-M Mental Retar~ • owned by Gallia CoWlty, surfaced on
dation 648 Board is the first f!tep by December 17 when the 648 Bosrd
the 648 Board to create one agency
directed the takeover by 648 per·
for the delivery of mental health sonnel of the building and its
caretothetri~yarea.
operation.
That charge came during the first
According to Friday's complaint,
day of hearings in Gallipolis
the Mental Health Center developed
· • Municipal Court on a complaintfiled · the Nelsmville Alternative facility
Friday seeking an injunction and had been given verbal approval
restralnlng both the Center and the
648 Board from carrying on the
business of the children's resldeptial
facllity Wltil questions surrounding
the staffing and licBISing of that
facD!ty have been determined.
Friday's actioo was filed by
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L.
Cain on behalf of the Gallla County
Board of Commissioners.
The ccxnplaint further seeks a
declaratory judgment as to the

.

'

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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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</item>
