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(

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P!IIleroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan . B. 1900

ffiG WINNER - Bob Schmoll, Middleport,l~ft. was the big winner~~
the Christmas promotiooal program of the Pomeroy Flower Shop. Schmoll IS pictured recelVlng a $50 gift certificate from Melvin Van Meter of
the st.Jp 's sl;lff.
)

U.S. ready to supply station
PEKING (AP) - The · United
States is ready to provide China with
a ground station capable of picking
up information from a U.S. space
sateUlte, and the station could have ·
military application, a U.S.
spokesman said today.
The spokesman said Defense
Secretary Harold Brown made the
ctfer to China's chief military planner, Vice Premier Geng Biao,
during discussions Monday on the
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan.
The earth resources satellite, Landsat D, provides information useful

to agriculture, exploration for oil
gas and minerals, but the ground
station involves very advanced
· technology in tape recorders and
computers, which the spokesman
said could have military applicatioo .
The United States and China have
been discussing the deal since last
January, when relations between
the two countries were normalized.
Conclusion ci the agreement now,
comes at a time when China and the
United States are discussing
strategy to count..-act Soviet interventionin Afghanistan.
Brown met today with Senior Vice
Premier Deng Ziaoping to discuss
the Soviet moves and Brown was
quoted by the Chinese news agency
JUVENILE COURT
Five juveniles were fined when Xinhua as saying America and
they appeared before Judge Robert · China should coordinate their
policies.
.
E. Buck oo traffic Offenses.
who
also
is
armed
forces
Deng,
Fined were John Tuttle, 16, Rt. I,
chief of staff, said, '"Oiina and the
Minersville, $50 and costs,
operator's license suspended 30 United States should do something in
days, DWI ; Andy Pattel'llon, 16, a down-to. way to defend world
peace against Soviet hegemonism."
Syracl!'le, $15 and costs, no
"All countries in the world should
registration; Robert M. Bowles, 17,
enter into an alliance to deel
Pcmeroy, $15 and cmts, speed;
seriously" with Soviet global exMarl&lt; Simpson, 16, Racine, $15 and
pansion, Deng said.
ce~~ls, speeding; $20 and costa and
"The great value of mrmalization
operator's license suspended 30
(of relations) is ... the strategic addays, reckless operation ; Tammy
vantage to both our countries in
Blake, 16, Middlepcrt, costs only,
being able to engage in conleft of c~nter, accident involved.
versations like I've been having,"
Brown told Deng as they posed for
photographers in the Great Hall of
the People.
SQUAD RUNS
The Syracuse ER Squad made
three runs New Year's Day.
At 7:116 a.m. they were called for
ASK TOWED
Kenneth Buckley and at 5:20 pm.
A marriage license was issued to
for the daughter of Mike Swisher.
Willards G. Dul'llt, Jr., 32, MidBoth were taken to Holzer Medi.cal
dleport, and Nancy M. Hawkins, 22,
Center.
Middleport.
1..
At 9:?11 p.m. Bessie Stilts, Racine,
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
MEETS FRIDAY
On Jan. 4 at 10 a.m. they tranMary Shrine 37 will meet Friday
SPQ,rted John B&lt;rham to Veterans at 6 p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Memorial Hospital, and at noon they Temple. There will be potluck
were called to a wreck on U.S. 33.
refreshments .

HERE'S THE

KEY!
TO Fl NANCI NG
YOUR 'NEW CAR

J..\ to'lv cos~r
J..\u~ro t.OJ..\~1
TEST DRIVE A .

1980
AT YOUR

LOCAL
DEALER
We'll Arrange the Most Convenient Terms .
For Your Budget

OPEN

M-W, 9 till, Thurs . &amp; Sat. 9 til12, Friday 9 till &amp; Hll7

"The Friendly Banlc"

nJE CE~L TRUST

----

- .r .!r ·
•·

Middleport,
(

o.

•

'·

.1979 news highlights
JUNE
June I -- Light voter turnoot was
predicted by the Meigs Board of
Elections for the primaries to be
held oo June 5.
June 2 -Census takers from the U.
S. Census Bureau were working
through the county obtaining names
and addresses of residents for the
191rJ census.
June 4 -Pomeroy Village Cooncil
approved the placing of a city in·
come tax on the November general
election ballot.
June 5 - Emergency operating
levies oo the ballot in the Eastern
and Southern Local School Districts
went 'down to defeat almost 2 to I in
both locations. In the Pomeroy
mayor's race pr!mary, Hollie Green
defeated Robert Am1S to get the
Republican spot on the November
ballot. In that race, only 166 v~tes
were cast.
June 6 - Julie Houdashelt,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Houdasheld,Syracuse, wsa the State
of Ohio Grand Prize winner in the
Mental Health Association and
Read-A-Thon.
June 7 --Syracuse Village Council
made pians for the repair ci streets,
and worl&lt; was scheduled to get underway on June 11.
June 6 - Five Ohio Valley
Publishing Company employees
received promotions. Robert
HoeDich, Daily Sentinel city editor,

Additional
•.•
(Cootinued from page
I)

last July, said Herbert D. Brwn,
director of the division of finance in
the Department of Education.
But actual enrollment figures as of
October, on which state school subsidy payments are based starting
each January, were lower than an ticipated in some districts and
higher in others.
Word of the extra funds came !Ill
controllers approved the revised formula under which state school foun ds lion subsidies will be distributed
monthly.
Use of the surplus for education or
other purposes will be up to the
General Assembly .
But Shoemaker, the House iinance
chairman, cautioned against quick
action. He suggested lawmakers
wait until more is known about the
state's "gloomy" economy and
''what our needs may or may not
be."
The revised enrollments, based on
"Average Daily Membership," also
mean some districts will receive less
state aid than &lt;riginallx appropriated this year.
Ohio's largest school system,
Cleveland, sustained the largest
drop, $1,632,188, due to reduced
enrollment.
Colwnbus, the second largest
district, will receive an additional
$991,903, however. Most of this increase represents a reimbUI'llement
for the cost ci desegregation transportation, Brum said.
The board also depleted its
emergency fund foc this year and
borrowed $500,000 from next year to
meet a request from state prison cificials.
Controllers released $1,034,000 for
the Department of Rehabilitation
and C&lt;rrection.
Part of the money will be used to
hire an additional15 correctional ciflcers for the Columbus Correctimal
Facility, fonnerly the Ohio Penitentiary, said department head George
Dentoo.
The extra enployees are needed
to comply with a U.S. District Court
order requiring improved conditions
in the old prisQn prior to its
scheduled closing by 1984.
The funds will also allow for the
transfer of 52 employees fr!IIl the
Ohio Youth Commission to the
corrections department to staff the
new Southeast Training Center at
Ulncaster.
The facility, formerly the Fairfield Scoool !of Boys, is being
renovated for liSe as an adult
facility.
In other action, the board :
--Approved the release of $220,000
to the Ohio El&lt; positions Commission
f&lt;r radio, television, and newspaper
advertising for tbe 1980 Ohio State
Fair. The commissidll awarded the
contract to TRI Advertising Inc. of
Colwnbus, but several lawmakers
suggested such mattel'll should he
subject to competitive bidding in the
lutu~e .
·
- Agreed to prQvide $357,068 as the
state's share of funding Buckeye
Community Services Inc., a mental
~etardation facility in Athens County .
- Released $911,900 in con sll'uction funds for a computer center at the University of Akron . •. . .
--Approved $202,000 for construction and additional architect
fees for varloliS projecls ot the
Hocking Technical College.
.
- Deferred until Its next meeting
coosiderati.on of a 1400,000 contract
with Ohio State University lor
management !I the Transporta lion
Research Center.
- Released $8,6.56,857 to the
Department ci Mental Health and
Mental Retardation for construction
of a 112.1Jed developmental center in
Clerm\lllt County.

was 'promoted to general :nanager ci
that Pllblication. Other OVPC employes receiving promotions were
Uirry L. Boyer. Gallipolis Daily
Tribune; Glenn Smith, OVPC
treasurer; Hobart Wilson, Jr .,
Tribune and Sunday-Times Sentinel; and Steve Halstead, Pt.
Pleasant Register.
June 10 - It was announced that
two parades woold take place as
part of the Regatta festivities. A
smaller kick-off parade was
scheduled for Thul'!lday, June 21,
and a larger "Grand Parade" would
be held on Saturday, June 23.
' June II -Middleport Village 's ap- .
plicatioo for a HUD grant under the '
Community Block Grant Small
Cities Program was accepted f&lt;r
review by the Department of
Housing and Urban Development
June 13 - Pomeroy village
workers began the process ci patching maoy large potholes in the
surface of the P&lt;meroy pariling lot.
Meanwhile, patching and paving d
Syracuse streets got underway .
June 14 - Middleport officials
were apparently focing a voter
referendwn action as the result of a
recent passage ci a $5 permissive
auto license tax in the community.
June 15- With Regatta Weekend
drawing near, frogs began to hop up
everywhere. "Frog cre~~sing" road
signs were being posted, and a 12:&gt;pound frog cake was being
distributed among area residenlll
and visitors .
June 17- Ralph H. Werry, chairman d the Regatta TalentShow,an-.
nounced that Jonis Carnaham would
be serving as mistress of
ceremonies for the show.
June 18 -The Meigs Local School
Board was split in its efforts to name
a new superintendent. In the meantime, Pomeroy Village Council
passed a resolution to benefit em·
ployees with longevity of working
fer the village.
June 20 - Wesley Buehl, County
Engineer, met with the Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners to discuss the
operatioo of the- highway department and county road problems.
June 21 - Despite rain, the 15th
Annual Big Bend Regatta was begun
with a small parade through Middleport and Pomeroy.
June Zl - Miss Denise Qualls,
Pomeroy, was crowned 1!119 Regatta
~een. Other activities included the
Frog Jwnp and the Frog Derby. ·
June 24 - Heritage Sunday, an observance of the histc)ry of Meigs
County at the Meigs Pioneer and
Historical Society MIISewn, and
power boat races were the main
events of the Big Bend Regatta.
June 'll -A public hearing on the
proposed Pomeroy village income
tax was held. The tax, which would
be for 1 percent, was decided to he
placed on the ballot fer the November general electim.
June 2B -The Meigs Local Board
d Education, at. a 3-2 vote, named
David L. GlflliSOn, Circleville, as
new superintendent of the district.
MEETSTIWRSDAY
There will be a meeting of the
ext!C\ltive board of the Meigs County
Unit of the American Cancer Society
at 8 p.m. Thursday in the east-west
dining room.
LADIES MEETING
The Ladies Auxiliary of the Middleport Volunteer Fire Department
will meet at 7:30pm. Wednesday at
the fire station.

e
&lt;USPS 145-960)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, '1980

Gleason releases salaries
FIRST RESIDENT -Mrs. May Bird became the first resident of the
'new Pomeroy Health Care Center Mooday morning. She is pictured being
presented a bouquet of rose; by Ronald E. Zidian, administrator of tbe
center, on the right. Others pictured from the left are Leo L. Vaughan, a
nephew of Mrs. Bird; Mrs. Helene Zidian, director of social services;
Mrs. Nancy Van Meter, director of IUII'lling; Kay Spencer, niece d Mrs .
Bird, and Louis B. Vaughan,alsoa neJi!ew d Mrs. Bird.

-Nursing care center
greets first patient
The new 100-bed Pomeroy Health
Care Center, Rock Springs Road,
welcomed ils first resident Monday
morning.
The first resident is Ml'll. May
Bird, a native of Meigs County.
Mrs. Bird, formerly May
Vaughan, was born in Pomeroy. She
was married to the late Frank Bird
and they operated .the Cedarville
Variety Stere in Cedarville lor man)'
years .
Upon Mr. Bird's death, Mrs. Bird
returned to Pomeroy about four
years ago and made her home with a
sister, the iate Anna Vaughan.
Mrs. Bird for the past 15 months
has been a resident of the Mercer
Convalescent Center in West

Virginia and was transferred from
there Monday morning.
Mrs. Bird indicated she was proud
.to be the first resident d Meigs
County's only health care facility .
She was presented a bouquet of
roses by Ronald · Zldian, ad·
ministrator d the center, and was
welcomed by the staff.
Mrs. Bird said she was pleased to
find her bedroon done in her
favorite color, blue.
Accompanying Mrs. Bird for her
admission to the center were her
nephews, Louis and Leo Vaughan,
and a niece, Mrs. Kay Spencer, all
local.
.
Visiting hours at the center are
11:30 am. to 6:30p.m. daily.

CERTIFICATE PRESENTED - William B.
Do'illlie, left, Pomeroy, vice president of the Meigs
Fair Board, received on behalf of the Meigs County
Agricultural Society, a ''certificate of appreciation"
from JOOJI M. Stackhouse, riRht. director of the Ohio

The Meigs County Agricultural
Society, which annually stages the
Meigs County Fair, was presented a
''certificate o( achievement" by
Jolm M. Stackhouse, director of the

Nurses-aide/orderly .
course offered ~:~t BHCC
RIO GRANDE - The Adult
Education Department of Buckeye
Hills Career Center in Rio Grande
will ctfer an 00-bour program in Nurses-Aide Orderly, beginning Jan. 17.
Classes will be held every Tuesday
and TWI'llday evenings from 6:30 to
9:30 p.m. until March 16. Also, included in this course is one Saturday
clinical experience at Holzer
Medical Center.
The course content includes in·
struction to prepare individuals for
performing simple tasks involved in
the pel'llonal care of people. receiving
nursing services in hospitals or nur·
sing homes, under the supervision of

a nurse.
Lifting and moving patienls, personal care ci patients, food service,

special treatments of fluids and
wastes, vital signs, patient admissions, patient transfer and
discharge, physical examinations,
preoperative nursing ·care, and
postoperative nursing care are
are8ll included In this coUrse.
Mrs. D..-othy Frank, R.N., will be
the instructor. Fee lor the course is
$75.
.

SORORITY MEETING
Preceptor Beta Beta Otapter of .
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
7:45pm. Thursday at the Meigs Inn
mine room. Hostesses will be Velma
Rue and June Freed.
B008TERS TO MEET

PLEASANTV ALLEY HOSPITAL
DISCHARGES JAN. 7
David McDaniel, John Morrow
Ginger Grimes, Cindy Matheny:
Freda Hall, Lydia · McKirmey,
Melanie Gillespie, Crystal Spencer,
Fred Smith, Lucille Morland Josie
~inter, Frank Henson, 'Debra
Fisher, Johnny Wamsley, Melissa
Holstein, Jesse Christian.

The Eastern Band Boosters will
meet at 7:30p.m. this evening in the
band room of Eastern High School.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-Nooe.
Discharges-Lillie
Johnson,
Waite~ King, David Jenkins, Helen
Slack, Bessie Rudisill, Gene Eskew,
Michael Reitmire.

ELBE RfE LIDS
JANUARY
CLEARANCE
BOYS. SH IRTS
'

•

Riyadh, Saud a Arabia (AP) The saucl,i government today

executed 83 milltanls who seized
the Grand MOSJ ue in ·Mecca,
Islam's holiest shrine. Officials
did not give the method of
executioo, but the traditional
Saudi way is by public beheading
after Friday prayers.
The Interior Ministry said the
C&lt;m111811der of the m05Jue attack, Identified as Jusehnan Bin
Mohammed Bin Sail, headed the
list of those executed, and that
those put to death included · 41
SalJ!lls, 10 Egyptians, six South
Yemeuis, three Kuwaitis and one
each from North Yemen, Sudan
and Iraq.

Prices slipping
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP ) - Volume
was up sharply Tuesday at the
Ohio burley tobacco market, but
average prices were off slightly
due to green and rougholferings.
Sales totaled 489,422 pounds for
$731,310.38 for a hundred pound
average of $149.42. Most offerings
brought $150.

Film increases
NEW YORK (AP) - ShOoting
pictures is getting a lot more expensive, and rising silver prices
Is the reason.
·
Eastman Kodak Co., the
world's largest film producer,
says It will raise film prices by as
much as 75 percent later this
month to compensate lor the
sharp increase in silver prices.
As a result of the iiJcreases, the
retail prlce of a l~llpollure roll
d Kodacolor II color prlilt film,
size 110, will rille from the current
$1.86 to $2.15.
.
A 3!imm roll of Kodachrome
slide.IBm, with 20 expa~ures, wW
. rise from tt:95 to $6.20.

charged

•
Boys' sizes 8 through 2o long sleeve styles, westerns 1
po1yester-&lt;:ott9n blend sporT
shirts, flannels, knit shirts.
Campus. Mr. Leggs, Ely
brands.
BOYS$5.95 SHIRTS . . , .••.••••...••. , ... SALE $4.20
·: ovs $6.95 SHIRTS . ,., •••••••••...•_•.••• SALE S4,90
OYS~7.95 ~HIRTS . ..•••••..•.•• . ••.• •. SALE $5.60
BOYS. $8.95 SHIRtS . . • •• • .... • •• • •• 1 •••••• SALE $6;JO
BOYS $9.95 SHIRTS •·.................... SALE $6.90
'BOYS $10-95 SHIRT~ ...•.• •••• ....•••••. SALE $7.60
.

ELBERFELDS IN
'J

63 executed

-Prejudice ·

.

•:.

.

POM~ROY
'

Department ci Agriculture, at ihe recent Ohio Fair
Managers Conventioo in Columbus. Center is Ralph
Welker, Pomeroy ,legislative ctficw of the Ohio Department of Agriculture .

'Meigs fairboard recogpized

•

WASIDNGTON (AP)
With for?1lto30yem.
rates,ifnecessary,tokeepupwith
home mortgage interest rates
The new rate proposed by the
market conditions.
already at record high levels and . board would ease pressure on lenThe proposal would make finanmore increases likely, efforts are ders as well liS homebuyers, glv.ing 'cia! instltutio111 more. wWing to
under way to protect h!IIlebuyel'll•-.. th1111latitude to il)crease·mortgage
makemortgageloans,Jauissald.
from bemg locked into high interest riiiMi;i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiijjiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i;;i;;iii;;;;;.;~~;..

ra~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 187

en tine

Meigs Local pupils will not be penalized

Efforts underway to
protect homebuyers
elfective Interest rate on mor·
!gages for new houses averaged
11.66 percent in early December, up
from November's 11.37 percent, the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
said Monday.
A hint of more increases could be
seen in the commitment mte, the interest that financlill institutions
promise on yet-t&lt;Hle-closed mor·
tgages, which ro5e. fa:om 12.65 percent in November to 12.93 percent
.last month. The December ·com·
mitment rate averaged 2.54 percent
hlgherthanitdidayearearlier, the
bank txard said.
'The Federal Reserve Board's
Oct. 6 anti-Inflation monetary action
continues to push -mortgage com•
mitment rates higher," said Jay
J~s ; bank board ch&amp;irman,,adding
!hilt the housin'g indUBtry must a· ·
pe~t "several more niontm of tough·
gomg."
. ·
·
Janis said be has received ''highly
favorable" reaction · to the bank
board 's proposed •r enegotiated nite
mortgage," intended · parUy to
protect homebuyers from being .
bound to current High interest rates

at .Y

c~CINNATI (AP) -lllstler
magazine publisher U.rry FlYnt
says ·.revocation of illS $27,000
· bmd and ·Issuance of a warrant
for Ills arrest back lis clllims of.
Judicial ''prejudice."
Flynt is charged with
ilissemiilatirc material hannful
to Juven114. in conriectloo with
· the dl$rlbutlon of a 1fl7 ~·
phlet on w• and a 1978 palq)hlet
m ·dllld abull8. .,\n addiUonal
chl!fge of pandering .ol:!scenity la
also pending from 1!11&amp; sales of
tiliStler in Ham! lion County.

.,

Ohio Department of Agriculture,
during the annual meeting between
the director and delegates attending
the Ohio Fair Managers· convention
in Columbus.
Accepting the award for the Meigs
County Society was Wnliam B.
Downie, vice president of the local

Students of the Meiga LOcal School
District not attending classes from
September 24 through October 15
when schools were officially open
but were virtually closed due to a
teachers ' strike, will not be
penalized Superintendent David L.
Gleason said today.
According to Glea9on, some confusion has developed over the
situation. A memorandwn was
distributed to all odministrat&lt;rs on
. December 7 explaining the at·
tendance procedure to be used to
reportalllences during the strike.
.Two sct.Jols have reported absences on report cards for the September 24 through October 15 period
while seven have not, the superintendent reports.
Absences during that period will
not count against the student for normal perfect attendance awards , in
calculating grades, or in determining retention or promotion, the
superintendent said.
The procedure outlined by
Gleason for the period involved is as
follows: The total absences on the
grade cards should equal the days a
student was absent, not counting the

16 strike days between September 24
and October 15. However, according
to the procedure, the school records
specifically blue books are to show
whether a student attended classes
on the days, September 24 through
October 15, or not and the absences
will also show on all records and
figures needed for sta te
calculations.
A student who attended scbool on
every day except the strike days
(when schools were officially open)
will receive a perfect attendance
certificate lor the year.
Notations will be made in the
cumulative folder and in the blue
books that a teacher strike did occur
during the period of Sep;ember 24
through October 15.
SUpt. Gleason also reports that as
a result of board action taken over
the past six months , all employes of
the Meigs Local Schools have
received pay ina-eases.
The district employe salaries were
based oo comparisons of other
diatricts of equal size: At the Jan. 2
board of education meeting , a pay
increase was granted the treasurer
and this coocluded the increases for

Commission discusses
s·a lary issue again

fair board. Others attending the convention from Meigs County were Mr.
and Mrs. Wallace Bradford and Ml'll.
Lucille U!ifhei t.
The annual director of agriculture
The salaries of the ctfice perb,-eakfast was held Jan. 4 as an insonnel
at the county highway garage
tegral part of the convention which
were
again
diacussed when Meigs
involved over 1,000 people from
County
commissioners
met in
throughout Ohio and parts of
regular
session
Tuesday
night.
Eastern and the Midwester United
Meeting with the cmnmission was
States.
Wesley
Buehl, county engineer.
Stackt.Juse addressed the conBuehl
infonned
the board that he
vention delegates and commended
felt
it
was
infringing
on his autt.Jrity
them for their progressive and out·
by
setting
his
employes
salaries.
stan~ leadership in presenting
Buehl
saidthat
he
still
believes
Ohio's 95 independent and county
that. the e.mpl9yes 81'11 entitled to a
· agricultural ~irs during_ 1979.
Stackhoqse stated : "We are ex· S624 raise for !!l80;but lhat be still intremely fortunate to have in excess tends to cooperate with theboord
of 1,86o capable fair board directors because lt Is tile only way that the
Pomeroy Council approved ap·
thronghout Ohio. You, as com- people of Meigs County can benefit.
propriations for 1900 totaling
Commissioner Henry Wells said
munity leaders, along with many
he
appreciated Buehl stating his
.
t556,008. 75.
other local leaders, businessmen
feelings.
Richard Jones commented
Here is a break down of the
and govenunent officials enable
that
his
only disagreement with
budget : Mayor, personal services,
Ohio to have the greatest foir
Buehl
is
that
the personnel should he
$2,400; clerk-treasurer, pel'llooal
program in the natjpn.
on
an
annual
salary at 26 pays per
services, $3,600; solicitor, personal
Of the multitude of activities at
year
instead
of
a per-pay basis.
services, $3,000; elections, $1,000;
your fairs, those in which young
council, personal services, $1,440;
Jones
further
stated that there
people compete or exhibit are the
general, personal services, S&amp;,OOO,
ones to which Ohioans can point with would certsinly he a controversy if
Buehl gave the raises anyway, in
supplies and materials, $1,300, other
juStifiable pride.
$18,000, otal $25,300. Total for all
Ohio's fairs are known thrQughout that -the account would run out of
general governmental services,
the country for having excellent money.
Jones reminded Buehl that the
$36,740.
junior fair programs.
Police department, personal ser·
county
auditor is without authority
"Another important aspect of your
vices, $65,000, . supplies and. fail'll is that they serve as the to pay more than 50 percent of the
materials, $29,200, ineters, $7,000,
showcase for Ohio's number one in- total appropriation within a six mon t&lt;Ul $101,200.
dustry - agrirulture. Throngh your th period.
Buehl remarked that even though
Parking meter fund, other,
efforts and coordination, the general
$10,000 ; total for security of persons
he
ran out ci money he would not
public is educated on the importance
and property, $111,200.
shut down the department.
of agriculture.''
Buehl said he had not bem able to
Street paving, personal services,
prepare a statement to the board for
$33,000, supplies and materials,
·::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::-:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:::::·:-::;:;:;
one-third of the elq)ertses of
$15,000, capital.outlay, $1,500, other
operating the engineer's office, but
$12,000; total, $61,500; state highway
EXTENDED FORECAST
that he would present it at the next
department, personal services,
Friday throngb Sunday: A
meeting.
$2,000, other, $3,000, total, ti),OOO.
chance of rain Friday. RaiD or
.Buehl also reported that the slip on
Cemetery operation and
snow. poulble early Saturday.
McCwnber
Hill has been repaired.
maintenance, personal services ,
Partly cloudy Sunday. Highs
He
also
stated
that a bridge on coun$13,000, supplies and materials ,
from the mld 40s to the mid 50s
ty
road
one
is
ln
need of repair.
$2,000, total, $15,000.
Friday and from the mld 30s 1o
Buehl
presented
an estimate of
Distribution of electricity, $23,000.
the mld fOs by Sunday. Lows
$17,000 to repair the bridge by force
Water distribution, persooal sermoslly from the 30s Friday and
vices, $38,000, - ~upplies and
account. Buehl recommended that
Saturday to the 20s Sllllday.
,materials, $15,000, capital outiay,
the Ohio Bridge Co., do the
$7,000, other, $22,l[OO, total $102,500. ::::::::::::::::·:·:::::::::·:::::::::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Administratioo-water, personal services, $700, debt service, $36,000,
$48,531.25; total, $85,231.25. Total lor
·water distribution and administration, $187,731.25.
Sewer maintenance, personal serRichard W. Turner has been a junior at · Otterbein College in
Westerville.
vlces, $12,500, supplies and named executive vice president d
The new executive vice president
materials, $20,000, total, $32,500; ad· the PomeroyNationa!Bank.
ministration sewage, personal ser·
· A native ci Jackson, Turner is a member of the United Methodist
vice;, $700, debt service, $23,055, graduated from Jackson High Church, all Masonic bodies; Scottish
$5,000, total, $28,751i. Total for School and served in the U. S. Navy Rite, Alac!din Shrine, a past
sewag~ maintenance and a'd·
from 194648. He attended the president and member-of the dlamminlstration, $61,256.
University of Virginia from 19411- ber d commeree, a member of the
. General bond retirement, pay - . 1952.
Elks Lodge, a past district governor
Mr. Turner began his work in the and member of Liona International.
ment of principal, $7,000, payment of
interest, f,l,362.50, total, $9,362.50.
financial field when he aceepted em- He i.s a past president and member
Federal revenue sharing, .$15,o00 ployment with The City Loan and ...
-' the B.A.I., Ohio Bankers .....
• ••n.,
street truck, $14,000 note, $500 Saving$ Co. at Jackson in 1952. He state member . of the usury com·
reereation ; total, ~9,500.
transferred to lAncaster in 1956 and . O:Utfee, O_hio Bankers Association
_Fire deparlplent, personal ser• to Pomeroyinl912.
group county chainpai),OBA state
VICeS, S4,000,suppllesand materials,
He went with the First National •membllr of the inatalhnent com·
$7,500, other, $3,720; .tota.l, $14,720. Bank il~ Jackson in 1963 as manager mittee, ·a member of the Fifth
TotalaHappr1)1lriatlolll,$565,0&lt;11.75.tl\)- of the wtallment loan_ depa~nt • tederal ReserVe advisory com·
.
and was advanced to vace president mittee, and an·a!IIIOclate member of
and director. He became executive the National ' Association Invice p~sident of the Commercial ~pendent Fee Appraiael'll.
·NORMALSCHEDVLES
and savings Bank in 1912.
All Meigs iehool.s were functi6ning
In !978, he joined the -Citizens
· on a normal syhedule Wectnllllday.
National Bank of Point Pleasant, W.
. Temperatures . r!ISO on Tpesday Va.;' a~ vice president in c~e r1.
MOBtly clear tqnlght. lAws iii the
melting away r:nuch of a heavy •now the real estate department.
teens. ·increl!lling cloudiness and.
which . fell Friday and Satlirday.
Turner and bis wife, Lucille, have warmer Thursday. Higbl in the upToday the teJ11perature was rising . two . c)Jildren, Richard, 23, band per 30s. The chance of precipitation
and wanxpectecfto hit 40.\oday and
din!cttr at r.reenvlew High School , Is near !eto tonight and :II 'percert
. 45.tomoiTC)w.· :
at Jamestown. O.!al.o, and Colleen, 20, Thursday.
·;'

Pomeroy
budget
outlined

necessary repail'll.
Henry Wells made a motion to approve the request of Buehl and for
the work to begin as soon as the Ohio
Bridge Co., presents a detailed
breakdown of the costs which would
total the $17,000 estimate. Chester
Wells seconded the motion.
Chester Wells reported there was
something wrong with the engine in
the truck which Buehl hadoffered to
be used at the landfill. Buehl said he
would have it checked before the
landfill truck driver takes it.
Concerning the re&lt;p~est for ooethird rl the expenses of the
engineer's dfice Jones added that
no purchase orders or vouchers for
office supplies would be signed until
the board receives official
notification of the amount of the
request for one-third payment of of·
fice expenses.
Mike Swisher, welfare director,
met with board and reported that
there is _presently no contract with
the Conununity Action Agency for
tmnsportatioo srvices for people
needing to go to doctol'll and hospital
f&lt;r treatment in that there are no
Title XX monies presently available
to matdl the local share to operate
the program.
Jones said the county will operate
the program soley from the local
match in order to provide the ser·
vice and until such time as the
.Wellate Department receive; the
matching Title XX moneyCharles Blakeslee discmsed the
housing and land use survey, for
Meigs COWlty. Blakeslee repOrted
the grant is in the process of ooing
corq&gt;leted.
Blakeslee also repcrted that an
FHA comprehensive planning preapplicatioo has been submitted for
$16,000 with $12,000 in federal funds
and S4.000 in loealln kind.
(Continued on page 14)

1979-00 and since all raises granted
are now in effect, it pennlts the
release of the following finandal
data for each group, Gleason pointed
wt.
Salary incr-s for teachers
produce a $10,COO beginning base.
The number of teachers receiving
the $10,000 base to the top $23,3ll
salary follows :
TEACHER SALARIES

Nwnber of Teachers and Salary:
three, $10,000; one, $10,400 ; one,
$10,768; five, $10,000; five, $11,200 ;
two, $11,300; three, $11,500; three,
$11,600; three, $12,000; one, $12,250;
one, $12,400; three, $12,700; three ,
$12,000; one, $12,954; one, $13,000;
three, $13,200; five, $13,516; two,
$13,000 ; seven, $14,000 ; four, $14,567;
22, $14,800 ; one, · $14,950; two,
$15,1ioo; one, $15,200; four, $1~, 500 ;
14, $15,850 ; two, $16,000; one,
$16,075 ; four, $16,595; three, $16,645;
two, $16,950 ; ooe, $17,000; one,
$17,016; QDe, $17,205; nine, $l7,500;
one, $17,!117; two, $18,175; two,
$18,454; one, $18,931; three, $19,332;
one, $21 ,717, and one, $23,333.
Gleason also repo)ted that the
board of education granted administrative raises which had been
earlier released. The board granted
increases administrators with. the
understanding !bat their salaries
had been frozen for several years.
Administrative salaries are:
Superintendent, $35,000 ; Administrative Assistant, $25,375; and
Currirulum and Instruction, $26,375.
High , School Principal, $24,500;
Assistant High School Principal,
$21,875; Junior lngh Principal,
$21,625; Full ·Time Elementary
Principals, $21 ,875.
One . Elementary Principal,
$20,125; one Elementary Principal,
$19,560; two Elementary Principals,
$18,!115; one Elementary Principal,
$14,950, and a Part-Time High
School Assistant Principal, $18,500.
The Superintendent announced
the non-certified old and new hourly
rates foc each pasition. The recent
hourly rate contains 'the increases
granted January I, 1911l of an ad·
ditional 10 cents an hour increase .
The job classiflcations with the old
and new rates follow:
NON.CER'"'I"''IF"'I~EO~

SALARIES

Directer of Transportation, (old
rate and new rate listed, with the old
rate given first), $5, $5.53;
Mechanic , f4.24, $4.54; Maintenance, f4.19, f4.49; Bus Driver, ·
'$5.08, $5.38; Aide, $3.39, $3.69; Cook,
$3.54, $3.84; Custodian, $3. '19, $4.09;
Night Custodian, $4.04, f4.34; Head
Custodian, $4.29, f4.59; Executive
Secretary, $4 .50, $5.03; Administrative Secretary, $3.70, f4.23;
Assistant to the Treasurer, ft, $4.53,
and School Secretary, $3.64, f4.14.

MAND.O.A.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the James Sisson
residence at 7:29a.m. Wednesday
for Charles Coben who was dead
upon the unit's arrival.
At 12:ZI am. Wednesday the
squad went to Route 143 for Clarence
~urrier who had a back problem.
He was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
.
At 1:37 p.m. Tuesday, · the unit
went to 124 Ebenezer St. lor Bill
White. He was not hospitallzed.

Turner joins Po.,eroy National Bank

, Weather

JO~S POMEROY NATIONAL -'-' Rilchard
vice president rl. the Pomeroy National Bank.

�3- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan . 9, 1980
• · 2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1980

:-:·~

"

~-

;

'

Large voter turnout urged .

¥

WASHINGl'ON (AJ:') -The Car·
ter administratioo 's $2.~ billion
program to buy up American grairt
once destined for the Soviet Union
will be closely scrutinized by
. Congress, perhaps before the
prq!ram gets off the ~rund.
Some industry experts say the
program i9 the best available ~lion
at this point, but express concern
about the 1011(!-term ilr11act vasUy
increased government re~~erves will
have on the grain market.
The House Agriculture Ctmmittee
will open hearings on the program
Jan. 29, said Rep. Thcmas S. Foley,
D-Wash ., the committee cbainnan.
He said his panel will conduct a
"full, detailed review" of the
program, annOlDlced Monday by
Vice President Walts- F. Moodale to
help protect fanners from the
severe declines in market prices
that could come with having so
mucb grain go unsold.
Even -with the purchase program
and other steps, "my guess Is that
there will still be a loss of $300
mDlioo ... to persons engaged in the
bu5ness aU the way !rem the export
fad~ties bad&lt; to the (farm) country," Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland silk! Tuesday '
President Carter announced
Friday that he was suspending the
sale of about 14 million metric tons
of grain the Soviet Union had con·
tracted to buy. ~ move is part of
the administration's retaliation
against the Russians for their
military intervention in
Afghanistan.
Bergland, interviewed on NBCTV's "I'oday" show , ad&lt;nowledged
that Carter's action could hann the
president's renomination chances in
Iowa, a major grain-producing

DES MOINES, Iowa (API -A
Republican presidential candidate is
urging Iowa voters to turn out in
such massive numbers that they will
convert their nelghbor"mod political
meetings Jan. 21 into the equivalent
of a primary election.
Martha Angle and
They woot.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of
Ro~ert Walters
California has asked Democrats wbo
don't support him for president w
&lt;leclare themselves unconunitted at
thoseprecinct caucuses.
The record indicates that a good
many
Democrats might choose that
federal
nannies
about
emiBsion
conBy Robert Walters
course,
although not necessarily
trols,
fuel
econcmy,
air
bags,
safety
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
.
because
Br9""
wants them to.
bumpers
and
assorted
other
governscene is a familiar one in millions rl
Those
are
two
of the quirks in a
ment
marxlates
was
-according
to
households: teen-aiers beseeching
state.
presidential
contest
that is not quite
coq&gt;any
officials
-a
major
cause
of
their parents for more spending
'1t makes mattern more coman
election.
•
Chrysler's
financial
plight.
lllOIIey while simultaneously · de plicated," he said. "But we're going
Iowa's
competition
will,
by
the
Olrysler
now
has
its
$3.5
billion
nouncing them for a variety of allegto appeal to the basic decency of the
aid package, including $1.5 billion in most ~timistic estimates, Involve
ed sins.
Iowa
voter, and I think they're going
no
more
than
one
out
of
15r~istered
federal loan guarantees - and it's
A variation of that family drama
to
see
that what the president has
time to set the record straight about voters.
recently was played on a grander
done
is
in the national interest."
Butitisflrst.
how the company goi into its
scale in this capital. In the expanded
Mondale
said the government's
A week from Mooday, come blizprecarious financial condition.
version, the federal government was
massive
purchase
program was orFor decades, Otrysler has been zard or January thaw, Iowans will
cast in the role of the parents while
dered by the president to help
cortent to be the "me-too" company ·stage the opening contest rl the 191)
the Chrysler Ccrp. was the freeprotect farmers from price drq&gt;s if
presidential
campaign
at
d.
the
auto
industry,
de-emphasizing
spending, ill-mannered teen-ager.
the grains were suddenly dumped on
Democratic
and
Republican
innovation
in
favor
of
copying
the
While imploring.the White House
meetings
in
2,531
precincts.
Some
of
the
market.
successful
technical
improvements
md Congress to 'authorize unMondale told a news conference
those
caucuses
will
draw
scores
of
and
design
changes
made
by
its
bigprecedented financial assistance to
ger competitors, the General Motors people; some will draw only a hand~ the Agriculture Department will buy
bail out their corp~ration, Olrys1er
about 10 million metric tons of corn
ful.
Corp. and the Ford Motor Co.
e:recutives griped CIIIStantly about
and 3.7 million metric tons of wheat
But
all
rJ.
them
will
count
+
at
"Chrysler is a traditional leader in
the real and imagined coats of
plus lesser amounts d. other grains
least
on
the
Democratic
side
+
and
fuel economy," Lee A. Iacocca,
· federal regulation.
!rem
Z! exporting companies infor
the
first
time
it
will
be
possible
to
the.company's recently installed
The incessant nattering frcm
volved
in sales to the Soviets.
score
·
officially
the
competiti!ll
board chairman, boosted to a Senate
That
represents the difference betamOil(!
President
Carter,
Sen.
Edcommittee. ''Chrysler builds more
ween
the
rooghly 21.6 million metric
wardM.KeonedyandBrown.
small cars as a percentage of its
t(I)S the Soviet Unloo has contracted
The Republican caucuses, which
total production than either General
to buy and 8 millioo metric tons ofwill test Ronald Reagan and the
Motors or Ford."
in fact, the company entered the half-doren candidates trying to cat- ficials say will be allowed to go to
Russia under a long -term
&amp;naU car market so late that it has ch him . in the race f~r the GOP
agreement. A metric ton equais
pitifully little capacity to produce nomination, are not binding. The
about 2,:1A15 pollllds.
economical autos. The highly touted results wiD be mly a straw poll of
Tlie purchase Pl'OI!r&amp;m, Mondale
Republican sentiment.
Omnis and Horizons aU have engines
said,
"is oot without cost to ourWere
they
held
in
March,
after
the
built by Germany's Volkswagen,
primary
election
season
has
begun,
selves.
while the Champ and Colt are built
: A new time of aay rate for Ohio
"Amlrlcan farmers are just as
in tbeir entirety by Japan's Mit· the Iowa caucwes would be no m~re
; Power Co. residential customers
wilting as Iiller Americans to carry
than a sideshow.
subishi .
;using electric - thennal - storage
Iowa had plenty rJ. clout in 1976, as
their :twre d. the burllen + but they
By confining Its claims to
-(E'IS) equipment has been apmust not be forced to carry an extra
passenger cars, Otrysler defUy the state where Jimmy Carter's
:!X'oved by the Public Utilities Comshare
just because they are farcampaign
took
off
and
came
to
avoids
mentioning
Its
IU-edvlsed
mission rl Ohio.
corporate plunge Into the production national ootice. Carter didn't really ·mers."
The new rate will be available in
win in Iowa in 1976; he ran second to
He added, however, that the
&lt;i vans, motor hcmes and assorted
. conjunction with the company's ETS
the
uncommitted
vote
of
Democrats
program
is not intended "to guaranother
oversized,
inefficient
vehicles.
;program which u tiJizes a speCial furwho
weren't
ready
to
pledge
them·
During
1977
and
1978,
Chrysler's
tee
!X'ofits."
·nace and hot water heater. This
The grain will be stored under the
share of rnmestic auto saies was in selves to any candidate. But he did
:system is designed to store heat and
beat
aU
the
other
candidates
in
what
government's
regular reserve
the 10 to 12 percent range -but the
:hot water at night for use .\he
program, although the mecb anics of
was then a crowded Democratic
C(lllpany accounted f~r abnost 57
;following day.
the actual stockpiling are still Grain
percent of aU moror homes sold,
field .
• Offering ofthe systemaod the new
Republican candidates paid little
from the stockpile will eventually be
Chrysler led the industry
:rate follows thre&lt;l years of testing by
released onto the market slowly .throughout the 197!11 in producing attentioo to the Iowa conte:t last
:ohio Power and sister C(lllpanies of
Agriwlture Secretary Bob Bergland
vans designed to be cusloolized with ' time, but they are paying plenty
:the, American Electric Power
said, so as not to adversely affect
glow.m.the-dark exterior paint jobs,· now. Indeed, neither party ever has
·System. The load-management and
ceiling-to-floor carpeting, seen the kind off campaigning, ad· prices.
:Conservation progrma was designed
:ro both reduce residential electric quadraphonic sound and swiveling, vertising and canvassing the can- Bergland said the purchase plan
didates are staging in the race for
reclining captain's chairs.
would have "no impact whatsoever"
bills and to lessen the need for new
1900
caucus
votes.
The
only
thing
the
valls
tacked
was
on
consumer prices.
power-generating facilities.
''It
is
Important
and
Indeed
it
is
rupectable
gllS
mileage
and
The
government's Conunodities
•::. While the new rate now is in effect,
vital
that
the
outpolring
d.
parChrysler's
most
recent
financtal
Futures Trading Commission on
i;; it coold be several months before the
ticipants In the Iowa caucuses on
problems stem, in part, frcm the
~ new equipment is . ready for
Jan. 21 be so large t!Jat it becomm
..: marlteting. TPI Cocporation of John- fact that the bottom dropped out of
the functional equivalen\ of a
the van market when gasoline prices
:; son City, Tenn. is. the developer of
· primary," said &amp;m. Howard H. ,
began to soar.
:- the American version of the E:I'S
Baker Jr., one of the Republican
Chrysler boasts of an enlightened
~ units commonly used in Europe. It
contestants.
new management team, led by
~: will be s0111e time .before sufficient
No one thinks that will happen, but
lacocca. But when General Motors
~ units are manufactured and ready
rlficlals
of both periles believe the cbeglln
aggressively
marketing
small
::- for the homebuilding and
intense
campaigning
will lead totur: -·
cars
several
years
ago,
Fordthen
·: remodeling market.
nouts
substanliaUy
larger
than last
under
Iacoca
's
leadership
,·WASHINGTON (AP)- The Car:: The ETS furnace is a combination
time.
countered
with
a
more-lor-yourter admlnlstraUon Is putting final
;. electric furnace and beat&gt;Storage
money advertising campaign protoldles on a g~~sohol program !P.: unit. At night, heating elements in
moting its oversized auiDB.
tended to both stretch U.S. oil sup,
' the st~rage furnace raise its interior
When lacocca appeared before the
plies and use some rJ. the American
~ temperature up to 1,400 degrees F.
Senate Banking Ccmmlttee' his
- - - - - - - - - , · grain being withheld from the Soviet
;. This heat is stores in refractory -type
testimony was larded with
r:IE DAILY IIENTINEL
Union, an Energy Department
: bricks until it is needed. A blower
(UIPII-)
references
to
the
"massive
cll6t
spokesman
111ys.
·: pulls in cool air, which is directed
burden"
imposed
by
federal
agenDetails
~
the plan, including
:; through the layer of heated bricks
t,~~
·~-·cies,
''the
heavy
impact
of
governpi'IIWction
targets
and policies for
; during day-time hours. This air, now
achieving
them,
are
to be unveiled
ment
regulation"
and
"burdensome
~ heated, then Is re-circulated back
within
the
ned
f~
days, depart. product regulations."
: through a home'sductsystem.
1
But authoritative analyses show
ment spoke11111n Les Daly said Moo·
. The water heater is more heavily
that approximately one .!Jalf to twoday.
• insulated and larger than nonnal
The plan apparently has been in
thirds of those Cll61B involve com1
: · water heliers. The heaters used in a
the
works since President Carter anpliance
with
the
fuel
ecmomy
stan-yll&amp;r field testing period by
nounced
Friday !lis decision to
dards
that
have
forced
Chrysler
to
:: o~ Power were developed and
finally
accept
small,
economical
wlthhbld
some
14 mlllion tona of
· manofactured by the A. 0. Smith
grain
ordered
by
the Soviet Uillon.
cars.
: Compeny d. Kankanee, Ill.
The
partial
embargo
was bnposed in
Are those standard bureaucratic
: . The off-peak hours rate, when the
an
effort
·to
underscore
American
"nonsense,"
as
Chrysler
claims,
1r
; :E:I'S equipment ia storing heat, will
concern
about
Soviet
nillitary
in'
· ;lnclllie energy consumed .betlleert are they responsive to conswner
tervention
in
Afghanistan
.
.
·
d411118nd.1? The final word on that
;.u p.m. and 7a.rn.
·
Gasohol is a mixture ·of 10 peroent
.IUbjec:t c - hun no ' 1es1 an
; : Ol&amp;'ing tile field tetltlnC rJ. the
oct8ne.oooeu~ alcohol, made from
·;equlpmert, ~ lltlliJI~ the • ~~ty U.S Gineral Mofol's
grain, and 90 percent gasoline. It
:;ETSequlpment l!llfiri91Jiocom· Prelldent l!!ll1a&amp; M. btel: ;-n.,
already Ia · tiel~ marketed on a
:Omunltles ' rated tbe · eq!Jipment Cllltomln an JWdJ. Tiley want
relatively small scale.
•'highly .
-l.lllll etOIDDJ - · ~

IN WASHINGTON

UnconVincing cop-out

PUCO

;approves

:new day rate

Gasohol
readied

....

::uw_

•.

~

Point Pleasant dumps EasternEagles,71-60

Congress will scrutinize
Presid~nt's grain program

~~rm

(

Swjday had ordered trading in com,
wheat, soybeans and soybean oil
suspended on the nation's futures
markets· Monday and talay while
the administratim finalized its
plans.

BY JACK ~OGERS
Well, the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks fuel somewhat better about
the basketball situation today.

''There's no reaaon for markets to
cqe mucb from last Friday's
cloee," Bergland uld. Yet, he ad·
ded, ''they may, there are pe~le in
the grain business that panic
easily."

Today's

Sports

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'I

.!I
I

Sentinel
i
Editorial ~

World

J

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By Will Grimsley
Debbie Meyer, once the queen of
the world's swimmers, has seen the
best and the worst of the Olympic
Games, yet feels that the great international sports spectacle should
be kept free from goverrunent interference.
"U"nless you have given the better
part of your life to the Olympic
movement, as I have, and unless you
have actually lived in the Olympic
Village, you shouldn't be too quick
make a decision on the boycott
idea," says tbe dimpled heroine of
the 1968 Games.
''Once you're inside the gates,
there is a whole new attitude. There
are smiles and handshakes and
camaraderie. No matter what
language you speak, there is communication+ it's eye contact.
"You forget politics. AU '!he international boundaries are down.
Ideological rivalries are forgotten .
If it were left to the youth of the
world, there would be no wars."
Debbie, 27, rJ. Hayward, Calif.,
won three gold medals in Mexico
City, where days before army troops
were !booting down students in the
streets. The Soviet Union had justinvaded Czechoslovakia.
Four years later at Munich, as a
part-time journalist, she saw the
West Germans strive to erase the
memory of Adolf Hitler and for 16 of
the 19 days stage the most pleasant
and relaxed Olympics of aU time.
They festooned their streeis with
p8Stel colors instead of nationalistic
Oags, while security police moved
through the Village ' like Miami
Beach vacationers in their white
flannels and blue blazers - not a
gun or stick in sight.
Then the Arab terrorists moved in

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Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
the creation of hazardoll'l waste for
the balance. SUcb ,a fee structure
could necessitate going In as many
as 290,000 different sources, an overwhelmliig blireaucratic task in and
of itself.
It is the po!lition rJ. the chemicalindustry that the Administration's
estimates as to the total scope of the
problem are gresUy e~aggerated. It
is the position of the Olemical
Marufacturers Association that if a
fund is needed at aU it is only to pay
for the cleanup of orpum sites, those
sites no longer in use for which there
is no clear detenninati111 of responsibility, accountability for the site
cannot be established. It is
estimated that there are fmn 1,200
to 3,(0) such orphan dump sites
ammg the 30,000 total sites men·
tioned earlier. It is the Associatioo 's
position that a determination by the
courts as to ultimate respomlbility
is the appropriate course to take.
~Y feel that any asse!l'ment of
fees and liability by anyone other
than the courts is arbitrary and un·
constitutional.
One may ask, why can't we let the
courts handle these matters without
the federal government bem~
Involved; why the need for a "super
fund," as the billion dollar fund has
been labeled? The front money concept is premised on the fact that to
litigllte the question of responsibility
for the many hazardous waste
problelllll that exist would take coun·
tless years, years which we can't af·
ford to let pass in tackling these
problelllll. ··
I share this concern. Such
problems as Love Canal can't be
ignored. They can't be postponed.
They won\ go away on their own accord. At the same time, I am reluc·
'tant to see the federal government
set itself up as judge and jury, to set
up yet another bureaucracy witch
could arbitrarily impose large finan·
cial burdens on elements of the
private sector.
Hopefully the hazardous waste
legislation that is expected to be
brought before the Congress later
this year will balance both these con·
cerns. I for ooe, will do aU that I can
to oee that this measure provides for
a prompt attad&lt; on this pressing
problenl with a mlnirnwn of federal
involvement.

,,_ \

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To the IIJl}mowing Love Canal
sounds like II r(lllantic getaway. To
officials concerned with the well·
being d. America's lands and water·
ways it is a problem of significant
proportion , a symbol of the
troublesome condltioos besetting
our nation's countrysides and
streams. ·
Love Canal is one d. the estimated
:.l,OOO industrial dumping sites in
our country that through abuse and
neglect are polluting the land and
streams around them. RecenUy the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), and the U.S. Department rl
Justice filed a $134 million lawsuit
against the Hooker Chemical Company ·for its failure to maintain
adequate safegua"rds and controls in
dumping more than 94,000 tons of
chemical waste at Love Cana I and
other nearby sites in and around
Niagara Falls, New York, EPA has
indicated its intentions to file at least
another 50 suits during 1980 in con·
nection with other abanooned waste
sites located throughout the country.
The problem of hazardous wastes
is extensive. It deals not onlY with
waste dump sites but with oil spills,
and spills of uselul chemicals such
as chlorine as well. It is a problem so
large in scope !hat It will take
billions d. dollars to correct.
Congress and the Administratioo
are presently trying to ccme up with
legislative solutions for this problem
that would be acceptable to all parties concerned, but the road ahead
appears fraught with debate. The
main subject of controversy is the
questiol\ d. who will pay the
multibillion dollar bill for the
massive cleanup that will be
required. Where should the bunlen
of responsibility eliDe down, on the
polluters, on the users, or on the
units of government within wlx!Be
boundaries the particular hazardous
waste problem exists?
The Administration's proposal
would set up a $1.6 billion fund over
four yearn that would go toward
clCf!lling up the 400 to 500 worst sites
arouricfthe country. To get the frort
money necmsary to initiate a broad
scale cleanup, the bills presently
being considered call for a federal
contribution of about 20 percent and
for a collection d. fees fr0111 those in·
dustries primarily responsible
for .
.

They finally got to play in 1900.
And in doing so, they· got dougle
figure scoring from David Raike,
Ron Cremeans, and Greg Thomas to

·-· '

on the Israelis in an ugly adventure
that left 16 people dead and almost
resulted in cancellation of the
Games.
'1'm glad they didn \ cancel
them," Debbie said. "I'he Israelis,
m~t of aU, would have insisted that
they go on. You can \let the Games
become hostage to violence. That
way, you l~e everything."
Debbie can speak with authority.
~ Olympics have taken up most of
the years of her young life - first as
a competitor, winner of 19 national
championships and setter of 20
~Wrld records in freestyle swimming, then as a part~ime coach,
commentator, advisor to the U.S.
Olympic Cornml ttee and now good
will ambassador for one of the corporations sponsoring thf U.S . Olympic effort.
The company is Life Savers, Inc.
Soon with figure skater Dorothy
Hamill she will launch a
multimillion dollar campaign for
U.S. Olympicfunds.
"We're going to dump 91,600
packages of gum drops and .candy on
Lake Placid for the Winter Olympic
athletes," she said. The sweet tooth
has no inte~national boundaries.
Debbie was asked if she felt that
nationalism in the Games should be
downplayed by using only the Olympic anthem and symbols.
"I don't know," she replied. "I got
goose-pim}ies when I stood on the
victory siand and saw the American
flag raised. I felt a part of the youth
of America.
"But there was individual
satisfaction also. It was me on those
blocks and it was me controlling my
body in those races."

,
·
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·
·
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tum back the visJllng Eastern, Ohio ,
Eagl~s from Mei~ County, 71-60. A
less than sellout crowd looked on.
Raike, the sure .!Janded 5-10
senior, led all scorers with ten
buckets and 2-of,1 free throws for 22
tallies, netting 14 of them in the se.cond half when the Eagles started a
late surge.
Ron Cremeans pumped in 18 and
led both teams in rebounds with 12
before drawing his fifth foul with
3:00 still on the clock.
And 6-1 senior Greg Thomas, hauling down II rebounds, went back up
successfully with several of them to
roll in 15 markers. It was his best effort of the young season.
For Coach John Boston's Class -A

Eastern outfit, Brian Biss~ll, a !i-ll
senior, canned 19 points to pace his
mates . Junior Gene Cole powed in
14, getting Hl from the free-throw
line . He also pulled down 9 caroms .
Tim Dill, a 6-3 junior, cleared the
glass 10times and added 8points .
Jay Minton turned in a fine floor
game for Co_ach Lennie Barnette's
locals and would have had a passel
of assists had the receivers been successful in their underneath shots.
Anyhow, Jay added a pair of buckets
for 4, and Jeff Chambers came
through with 5.
David Nott, fast becoming an important reserve on the bench, swished 7in spot appearances.
Actually, the Big Blacks won the

game in the secOitd penoLI when they

outscored the Ea~les 24-10 to go into
the locker room leading by fifteen,
34-19.

The first eight minutes were as
close as twins in a crib, with the lead
seesawing and PPHS finally breaking on top I 0-9.
A pair of Eastern free throws by
Brian Bissell put his mates on top
·11-10 to open the second stanza and that was the last times ·-the
Eagles led. Fourteen unansweroo
points by the Big Blacks, with
Thomas, Cremeans, Raike,and Not!
all hitting , and it was 24-11 before
Eastern broke the drought.
Oddly enough, the Eastern boys,
with only two seniors on their squad,

Stall fails, Wahama
drops Bobcats, 37-28
BY GARY CLARK
Despite some cold shooting percentages on the part of both teams,
the Waharna White Falcon defense
was superb in taking a 37-28 decision
over the Kyger Creek Bobcats
Tuesday evening.
The victory was the third of the
season for the White Falcons and the
second of the year over the Bobcats.
Wahama defeated Kyger Creek in
their season opener by a 46-45
margin, They have dropped two contests.
•
Gary Richards led the White
Falcon attack with 12 points on the
night, aU in the second half. Rid&lt;
and Scott Damitz contributed eight
markers apiece.
Tim Price was the top Bobcat
scorer with ten points while David
Sands chippoo in with 8.
Due to the low scoring in the
game, one might think that there
was not much action. But this was
not the case as there was no stalling
involved. The locals overcame a 10-7
first quarter deficit to take 13-12
halftime lead. During ·the second
half the bend area cagers outscored
the host Bobcats, 24·16, to claim the
victory.
Kyger Creek opened up a 1().7lead
in the opening period behind David
Sands who scored four points in the
quarter . Tim Roush had five of the
White Falcons seven points in the
eight minute span.
Wahama 's defense litnited the
Bobcats to a mere two points in the
second canto in outscoring the Gallia
Countians §-2 to take the lead at intermissions. Scott Barnitz scored all
six points for the locals in the quar-

ts each in the period. The locals out scored Kyger Creek, 16-11, to capture their third win of the season by
a 37-28 margin.
Shooting percentages show
Wahama with a 34 percent mark
from the floor and a poor 44 percent
showing at the charity stripe. Kyger
Creek hit just 32 percent from the
floor and 46 percent from the foul
line.
Wahama 'held the rebounding
edge, 28-18, with Tim Roush owning
12 individual rebounds. Wahama
corrunitted 18 turnovers while Kyger

Potter paces
SWHS victory
Sherman Potter enjoyed his
biggest night ever on the hardwood
Tuesday night as the :;.7 senior
guard dumped in 23 points to lead
the Southwestern Highlanders to a
lopsided 80-53 non-conference vic tory over Hannan,W.Va.
The win pushed the Highlanders'
season record to 3-4.
Also hitting double figures for
Coach Wayne Bergdoll 's Highlanders.wer.e Todd Baker with 15 points
and 13 rebounds; Dale Newberry
had 14 points and Scott Russell
scored 13 points.
Luther Young led Ed Coon's Wildcats with 22 points on nine baskets
and four free throws. Wayne Dalton
finished with II points while Rainey
had nine.
Southwestern jumped in w a 2().12
lead at the end of the first period and
held a 42-24lead at the half.
Going into the third period, the
hosts were ahead 60-40.
Southwestern also won the reserve
tilt, 36-26. Scott Lewis and Steve
Forgey had eight points each for
Southwestern.
According to the charts in the varsity game, Hannan connected on 21
of 48 floor attempts for 44 percent
while the Highlanders canned 35 of
75shots for47 percent.
Hannan committed 25 turnovers to
SWHS's 12.
Southwestern will host Eastern of
Meigs Friday night in an important
SVAC contest. Eastern has loot two
straight games to Southern and
Point Pleasant.

a

ter.
The White Falcons continued their
fine defensive effort on into the third
stanza and "increased their advantage (Q 21-17 at the third quarter's end. Gary Richards put in six
points in the period for Waharna.
Both teams opened up in the final
eight minutes with Wahama increasing their lead behind the offensive efforts of Rid&lt; Barnitz and
Gary Richards, who scored six pain-

By Quarters:
Hannan , W .Va .
Southwester n
Hannan (Sl)
Rainey 4-1·9;

12 12 16 13··53
20 22 20 18 --80
-- Datton 4-3-11;
Roclevitch 2·0-4;
Young 9·4·22; Tollive r 1-2-4; Brum f i eld 0-1-l and Ray 1-0-2. Totals 21 ll.Sl .
Southwestern (80) -- Burleson 3.{)6; Newberry 6-2 -14; Baker 6-3-15 ;
Ru sse ll 6· 1-1 3;
Potter 10 ·3·23;
Forgfy 3-1-7; Sizemore 1-0·2. Totals
35 ·10·8() .

.

Creek had 17 miscues .
Wahama also captured the
preliminary contest by a 32-'lB score
for their third triumph rJ. the season
against two defeats.
The local junior varsity used a
well-balanced scoring attack in
taking the victory with York Ingels
notching eight points while Travis
Gray and Todd Kitchen added six
each.
Kyger Creek got ten markers each
from Moore and Waugh in a losing
catLSe.

The White Falcons take the court
two more times this week with Spencer visit8.g Mason on Friday night
and the loca ls joourneying to Meigs
on Saturday night. Game time for
Friday will be 6 p.m. for the junior
varsity tilt with the varsity game to
follow .
WAHAMA (37) ·· Richards 5·2·12;

R. Barnifz 4-0-8; S. Barnitz 3·2·8; T .
ROush 1·3-5: Gibbs 2 0-4; weaver 00·0; A r no ld 000; J Roush 0{1 ·0.
Totals 11-6 -28
KYGER CREEK (281 ·· Pri ce 5·0·
10; Sa nd s 3 -.. , ·B; Westfalll 2-4; Smi th
2-0-4; Springer0 -2 -2 Totals 11 -6-28.

held the scoring edge in the last two
&gt;tanzas, pumping in 41 markers w
'fl.

Still, the ga me was not as close as
the final score would seem to indicate . Twice in the third quarter the
Big Blacks led by twenty-8ix, f&gt;4-28
and 56..ll.
In that third period, when PPHS
was out-pointing Eastern 2&gt;-~.
Raike went on a tear with 1-1 and
Cremeans notched 7. Brian Bissell
was keeping pace for his mates with
9.

Be that as it may, the Big Blacks
broke the ice with their first victory
and are now 1-and-2.
The Eastern Eagles saw their
record sink to 3-end&lt;l.
Coach Larry Markham's Little
Blacks (2&lt;! 1got 15 points from Alan
Machir to defet the Little Eagles,
46-32 in the pre).;m. The losers dropped to Hi. Greg Cole was their·
leader with 9.
ether Little Blacks scorers: John
David 8, Barry Barnette 7, Mark
Burris 4, Mike Porter and Jim
Bowser each 3, Pat Harrunack 3, Jon
Veazey 2, John McDermitt a free
throw .
Next outing for the Big Blacks will
be Friday at Ravenswood (4-2). The
Red Devils dropped a 49-:i9 decision
at Parkersburg C.tholic last night.
EASTERN (60) - Brian Bissell
8-3-19, Gene Cole 2-10-14, 1Im Dill
3-2-3, Greg Wigal 2-2-6, Joe Bowers
O-{), Brent Matthews 1-&amp;2, Rick
Long 3&lt;!-6, Mike Bissell 1-1-3,
Charlie Ritchie O&lt;l&lt;l, Paul Sprague
1-&amp;2; Totals 21·J.8.60.
BIG BLACKS (71) - Jay Minton
2&lt;1-4, David Raike 10-2-22, Greg
Thomas 6-3-15, Jeff Chambers 2-1-5,
Ron Cremeans 7-4-18, David Noll
2-3-7, John David 0-&amp;0, Barry
Barnette 0-&amp;0, Mark ~orris O&lt;J&lt;l,
John McDermitt O&lt;l&lt;l, Jim Stewart
O&lt;l&lt;l; Totals 29-13-71.
Score by qiUil"lers :
9 10 20 21-60
Eastern
Big Blacks
10 24 25 12-71
Reserve Scores: Little Eagles 46;
Little Blacks 32.

Score by Quarters:
Wahama

7 6

8 16--37

K.Creek
10 2 5 II -28
Total Fouls -- Wahama 10 Kyger
Cr eek 14.
RESERVE GAME
WAHAMA (32) •· 1npe1s 3·2·8;
Gray 2·2·6; K itchen 2.0 ·6, Laven der
2·0·4; Pau~h 2·0·4; J. ROush 1·0 ·2; K.
Weaver 1·0-2. Totals 14-4 ·32 .
KYGER CREEK (28) ·· Moore 4·2·
10; Waugh 4·2-10 ; Shroud 3·0·6;
Clar k 0·2·2; Helms 0 -0·0. Total s 11 -6·

28.
score by Quarters :
Wahama
K. Creek

a

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Those adults with problems such as:
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COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

The view from Afghanistan
It's almost like old times In the
Hindu Kush .
'l'he Russians once more, as they
have repeatedly for more than a century, are pushing south into
AfghaniStan.
Almost that is, but not quite.
There Is this time no British Raj at
the Kbyber Pass, ready and able
with 1111 Bengal lancers to repel the
. attempt to take over the strategic
heartland rJ. Central Asia.
Instead, there is only a power
vawwn south of the Khyber. Op·
·position to the Russian advance this
time comes from much farther away
and in much less convincing faslton.
It comes from Washington, wblcb
Is loudly protesting Soviet armed in·
trusion in~ Afghan affairs. Also, in
somewhat rmre muted
from
Peking and assorted Qther capltall, '
even such an unlikely one as
·
Bucharest.
Ahd It may very soon be el!Pressed
in tlie United Nations, as if 'that
organization Is not already ·aUffl·
cH;Iltly·overwbelmed by the effort to·
prove that It can perfotm some func.
lion In the IraJ11an mess. .
'
· All j Ustlfled "a condemnation by
world oplnlon, olflclal ·and pulillc,

ton•.

.

~

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may be and as well-orchestrated as
it may becoole, It is no sWstltute for
Lanceni. NegaUve q&gt;inion will n~
dissuade Moscow from pursuit of
what it regards as Its vltallntereBts.
It nevs- has -n~ in EastGemiany,
In Hungllry or in Czechoslovakia.
There Ia, however, a difference
between these three previOUB reel·
pients of Soviet military attenUon.
and Afghanistan. Mountains, plus a
functioning and eJp8ndlng oppasl·
lion moven~ent.
Even with Soviet troops appBt:eJ~t-.
ly in finn control of Kabul and ar·
mored forces continuing to roll into
the coontry 111 roads CIIIVeniently
b1n under earlier aid programs,
thl,!re Ia growing speculation !hat
Afghanistan could become
Moscow's Vietnam.
That may well be tbe c1111e. But the
West would· be pmrjllluii! to
we~ the praspect ._ gOod nen,
since It would mean addq turmoU
In what!&amp; already a daligenJUsly tur·
bulent rt~~ion.
Frun wbate:ver angle It II viewed,
Algbanlltan -weal'l ID be Pl'eBell· .
tJnl tbe W!rlil with txiiCtiJ What it
doeii!Qt need at lhil Ume -an&lt;tber

crllla.

-RED OAK

~·
If you 're loo k•ng for a real meal and ·a great value . Kent ucky
Fried Chicken 's the answer. The Colonel's "fi nger tickm ' good"
chicken and all the fildn·s . A rea l meal the whol e family wi ll
enjoy ... and ,what a value Come in and see for yoursell

4'x8' 1/8" THICK

If's nice to feel so good aboUt a meal.

'4·~

Fried Chicken.

A
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HOGG &amp;.ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
,~77-3--55~54_..__._.. . . . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . .~M:AW:N~,~W.~Vl~
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�3- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan . 9, 1980
• · 2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 9, 1980

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Large voter turnout urged .

¥

WASHINGl'ON (AJ:') -The Car·
ter administratioo 's $2.~ billion
program to buy up American grairt
once destined for the Soviet Union
will be closely scrutinized by
. Congress, perhaps before the
prq!ram gets off the ~rund.
Some industry experts say the
program i9 the best available ~lion
at this point, but express concern
about the 1011(!-term ilr11act vasUy
increased government re~~erves will
have on the grain market.
The House Agriculture Ctmmittee
will open hearings on the program
Jan. 29, said Rep. Thcmas S. Foley,
D-Wash ., the committee cbainnan.
He said his panel will conduct a
"full, detailed review" of the
program, annOlDlced Monday by
Vice President Walts- F. Moodale to
help protect fanners from the
severe declines in market prices
that could come with having so
mucb grain go unsold.
Even -with the purchase program
and other steps, "my guess Is that
there will still be a loss of $300
mDlioo ... to persons engaged in the
bu5ness aU the way !rem the export
fad~ties bad&lt; to the (farm) country," Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland silk! Tuesday '
President Carter announced
Friday that he was suspending the
sale of about 14 million metric tons
of grain the Soviet Union had con·
tracted to buy. ~ move is part of
the administration's retaliation
against the Russians for their
military intervention in
Afghanistan.
Bergland, interviewed on NBCTV's "I'oday" show , ad&lt;nowledged
that Carter's action could hann the
president's renomination chances in
Iowa, a major grain-producing

DES MOINES, Iowa (API -A
Republican presidential candidate is
urging Iowa voters to turn out in
such massive numbers that they will
convert their nelghbor"mod political
meetings Jan. 21 into the equivalent
of a primary election.
Martha Angle and
They woot.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. of
Ro~ert Walters
California has asked Democrats wbo
don't support him for president w
&lt;leclare themselves unconunitted at
thoseprecinct caucuses.
The record indicates that a good
many
Democrats might choose that
federal
nannies
about
emiBsion
conBy Robert Walters
course,
although not necessarily
trols,
fuel
econcmy,
air
bags,
safety
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
.
because
Br9""
wants them to.
bumpers
and
assorted
other
governscene is a familiar one in millions rl
Those
are
two
of the quirks in a
ment
marxlates
was
-according
to
households: teen-aiers beseeching
state.
presidential
contest
that is not quite
coq&gt;any
officials
-a
major
cause
of
their parents for more spending
'1t makes mattern more coman
election.
•
Chrysler's
financial
plight.
lllOIIey while simultaneously · de plicated," he said. "But we're going
Iowa's
competition
will,
by
the
Olrysler
now
has
its
$3.5
billion
nouncing them for a variety of allegto appeal to the basic decency of the
aid package, including $1.5 billion in most ~timistic estimates, Involve
ed sins.
Iowa
voter, and I think they're going
no
more
than
one
out
of
15r~istered
federal loan guarantees - and it's
A variation of that family drama
to
see
that what the president has
time to set the record straight about voters.
recently was played on a grander
done
is
in the national interest."
Butitisflrst.
how the company goi into its
scale in this capital. In the expanded
Mondale
said the government's
A week from Mooday, come blizprecarious financial condition.
version, the federal government was
massive
purchase
program was orFor decades, Otrysler has been zard or January thaw, Iowans will
cast in the role of the parents while
dered by the president to help
cortent to be the "me-too" company ·stage the opening contest rl the 191)
the Chrysler Ccrp. was the freeprotect farmers from price drq&gt;s if
presidential
campaign
at
d.
the
auto
industry,
de-emphasizing
spending, ill-mannered teen-ager.
the grains were suddenly dumped on
Democratic
and
Republican
innovation
in
favor
of
copying
the
While imploring.the White House
meetings
in
2,531
precincts.
Some
of
the
market.
successful
technical
improvements
md Congress to 'authorize unMondale told a news conference
those
caucuses
will
draw
scores
of
and
design
changes
made
by
its
bigprecedented financial assistance to
ger competitors, the General Motors people; some will draw only a hand~ the Agriculture Department will buy
bail out their corp~ration, Olrys1er
about 10 million metric tons of corn
ful.
Corp. and the Ford Motor Co.
e:recutives griped CIIIStantly about
and 3.7 million metric tons of wheat
But
all
rJ.
them
will
count
+
at
"Chrysler is a traditional leader in
the real and imagined coats of
plus lesser amounts d. other grains
least
on
the
Democratic
side
+
and
fuel economy," Lee A. Iacocca,
· federal regulation.
!rem
Z! exporting companies infor
the
first
time
it
will
be
possible
to
the.company's recently installed
The incessant nattering frcm
volved
in sales to the Soviets.
score
·
officially
the
competiti!ll
board chairman, boosted to a Senate
That
represents the difference betamOil(!
President
Carter,
Sen.
Edcommittee. ''Chrysler builds more
ween
the
rooghly 21.6 million metric
wardM.KeonedyandBrown.
small cars as a percentage of its
t(I)S the Soviet Unloo has contracted
The Republican caucuses, which
total production than either General
to buy and 8 millioo metric tons ofwill test Ronald Reagan and the
Motors or Ford."
in fact, the company entered the half-doren candidates trying to cat- ficials say will be allowed to go to
Russia under a long -term
&amp;naU car market so late that it has ch him . in the race f~r the GOP
agreement. A metric ton equais
pitifully little capacity to produce nomination, are not binding. The
about 2,:1A15 pollllds.
economical autos. The highly touted results wiD be mly a straw poll of
Tlie purchase Pl'OI!r&amp;m, Mondale
Republican sentiment.
Omnis and Horizons aU have engines
said,
"is oot without cost to ourWere
they
held
in
March,
after
the
built by Germany's Volkswagen,
primary
election
season
has
begun,
selves.
while the Champ and Colt are built
: A new time of aay rate for Ohio
"Amlrlcan farmers are just as
in tbeir entirety by Japan's Mit· the Iowa caucwes would be no m~re
; Power Co. residential customers
wilting as Iiller Americans to carry
than a sideshow.
subishi .
;using electric - thennal - storage
Iowa had plenty rJ. clout in 1976, as
their :twre d. the burllen + but they
By confining Its claims to
-(E'IS) equipment has been apmust not be forced to carry an extra
passenger cars, Otrysler defUy the state where Jimmy Carter's
:!X'oved by the Public Utilities Comshare
just because they are farcampaign
took
off
and
came
to
avoids
mentioning
Its
IU-edvlsed
mission rl Ohio.
corporate plunge Into the production national ootice. Carter didn't really ·mers."
The new rate will be available in
win in Iowa in 1976; he ran second to
He added, however, that the
&lt;i vans, motor hcmes and assorted
. conjunction with the company's ETS
the
uncommitted
vote
of
Democrats
program
is not intended "to guaranother
oversized,
inefficient
vehicles.
;program which u tiJizes a speCial furwho
weren't
ready
to
pledge
them·
During
1977
and
1978,
Chrysler's
tee
!X'ofits."
·nace and hot water heater. This
The grain will be stored under the
share of rnmestic auto saies was in selves to any candidate. But he did
:system is designed to store heat and
beat
aU
the
other
candidates
in
what
government's
regular reserve
the 10 to 12 percent range -but the
:hot water at night for use .\he
program, although the mecb anics of
was then a crowded Democratic
C(lllpany accounted f~r abnost 57
;following day.
the actual stockpiling are still Grain
percent of aU moror homes sold,
field .
• Offering ofthe systemaod the new
Republican candidates paid little
from the stockpile will eventually be
Chrysler led the industry
:rate follows thre&lt;l years of testing by
released onto the market slowly .throughout the 197!11 in producing attentioo to the Iowa conte:t last
:ohio Power and sister C(lllpanies of
Agriwlture Secretary Bob Bergland
vans designed to be cusloolized with ' time, but they are paying plenty
:the, American Electric Power
said, so as not to adversely affect
glow.m.the-dark exterior paint jobs,· now. Indeed, neither party ever has
·System. The load-management and
ceiling-to-floor carpeting, seen the kind off campaigning, ad· prices.
:Conservation progrma was designed
:ro both reduce residential electric quadraphonic sound and swiveling, vertising and canvassing the can- Bergland said the purchase plan
didates are staging in the race for
reclining captain's chairs.
would have "no impact whatsoever"
bills and to lessen the need for new
1900
caucus
votes.
The
only
thing
the
valls
tacked
was
on
consumer prices.
power-generating facilities.
''It
is
Important
and
Indeed
it
is
rupectable
gllS
mileage
and
The
government's Conunodities
•::. While the new rate now is in effect,
vital
that
the
outpolring
d.
parChrysler's
most
recent
financtal
Futures Trading Commission on
i;; it coold be several months before the
ticipants In the Iowa caucuses on
problems stem, in part, frcm the
~ new equipment is . ready for
Jan. 21 be so large t!Jat it becomm
..: marlteting. TPI Cocporation of John- fact that the bottom dropped out of
the functional equivalen\ of a
the van market when gasoline prices
:; son City, Tenn. is. the developer of
· primary," said &amp;m. Howard H. ,
began to soar.
:- the American version of the E:I'S
Baker Jr., one of the Republican
Chrysler boasts of an enlightened
~ units commonly used in Europe. It
contestants.
new management team, led by
~: will be s0111e time .before sufficient
No one thinks that will happen, but
lacocca. But when General Motors
~ units are manufactured and ready
rlficlals
of both periles believe the cbeglln
aggressively
marketing
small
::- for the homebuilding and
intense
campaigning
will lead totur: -·
cars
several
years
ago,
Fordthen
·: remodeling market.
nouts
substanliaUy
larger
than last
under
Iacoca
's
leadership
,·WASHINGTON (AP)- The Car:: The ETS furnace is a combination
time.
countered
with
a
more-lor-yourter admlnlstraUon Is putting final
;. electric furnace and beat&gt;Storage
money advertising campaign protoldles on a g~~sohol program !P.: unit. At night, heating elements in
moting its oversized auiDB.
tended to both stretch U.S. oil sup,
' the st~rage furnace raise its interior
When lacocca appeared before the
plies and use some rJ. the American
~ temperature up to 1,400 degrees F.
Senate Banking Ccmmlttee' his
- - - - - - - - - , · grain being withheld from the Soviet
;. This heat is stores in refractory -type
testimony was larded with
r:IE DAILY IIENTINEL
Union, an Energy Department
: bricks until it is needed. A blower
(UIPII-)
references
to
the
"massive
cll6t
spokesman
111ys.
·: pulls in cool air, which is directed
burden"
imposed
by
federal
agenDetails
~
the plan, including
:; through the layer of heated bricks
t,~~
·~-·cies,
''the
heavy
impact
of
governpi'IIWction
targets
and policies for
; during day-time hours. This air, now
achieving
them,
are
to be unveiled
ment
regulation"
and
"burdensome
~ heated, then Is re-circulated back
within
the
ned
f~
days, depart. product regulations."
: through a home'sductsystem.
1
But authoritative analyses show
ment spoke11111n Les Daly said Moo·
. The water heater is more heavily
that approximately one .!Jalf to twoday.
• insulated and larger than nonnal
The plan apparently has been in
thirds of those Cll61B involve com1
: · water heliers. The heaters used in a
the
works since President Carter anpliance
with
the
fuel
ecmomy
stan-yll&amp;r field testing period by
nounced
Friday !lis decision to
dards
that
have
forced
Chrysler
to
:: o~ Power were developed and
finally
accept
small,
economical
wlthhbld
some
14 mlllion tona of
· manofactured by the A. 0. Smith
grain
ordered
by
the Soviet Uillon.
cars.
: Compeny d. Kankanee, Ill.
The
partial
embargo
was bnposed in
Are those standard bureaucratic
: . The off-peak hours rate, when the
an
effort
·to
underscore
American
"nonsense,"
as
Chrysler
claims,
1r
; :E:I'S equipment ia storing heat, will
concern
about
Soviet
nillitary
in'
· ;lnclllie energy consumed .betlleert are they responsive to conswner
tervention
in
Afghanistan
.
.
·
d411118nd.1? The final word on that
;.u p.m. and 7a.rn.
·
Gasohol is a mixture ·of 10 peroent
.IUbjec:t c - hun no ' 1es1 an
; : Ol&amp;'ing tile field tetltlnC rJ. the
oct8ne.oooeu~ alcohol, made from
·;equlpmert, ~ lltlliJI~ the • ~~ty U.S Gineral Mofol's
grain, and 90 percent gasoline. It
:;ETSequlpment l!llfiri91Jiocom· Prelldent l!!ll1a&amp; M. btel: ;-n.,
already Ia · tiel~ marketed on a
:Omunltles ' rated tbe · eq!Jipment Cllltomln an JWdJ. Tiley want
relatively small scale.
•'highly .
-l.lllll etOIDDJ - · ~

IN WASHINGTON

UnconVincing cop-out

PUCO

;approves

:new day rate

Gasohol
readied

....

::uw_

•.

~

Point Pleasant dumps EasternEagles,71-60

Congress will scrutinize
Presid~nt's grain program

~~rm

(

Swjday had ordered trading in com,
wheat, soybeans and soybean oil
suspended on the nation's futures
markets· Monday and talay while
the administratim finalized its
plans.

BY JACK ~OGERS
Well, the Point Pleasant Big
Blacks fuel somewhat better about
the basketball situation today.

''There's no reaaon for markets to
cqe mucb from last Friday's
cloee," Bergland uld. Yet, he ad·
ded, ''they may, there are pe~le in
the grain business that panic
easily."

Today's

Sports

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

.!I
I

Sentinel
i
Editorial ~

World

J

I

By Will Grimsley
Debbie Meyer, once the queen of
the world's swimmers, has seen the
best and the worst of the Olympic
Games, yet feels that the great international sports spectacle should
be kept free from goverrunent interference.
"U"nless you have given the better
part of your life to the Olympic
movement, as I have, and unless you
have actually lived in the Olympic
Village, you shouldn't be too quick
make a decision on the boycott
idea," says tbe dimpled heroine of
the 1968 Games.
''Once you're inside the gates,
there is a whole new attitude. There
are smiles and handshakes and
camaraderie. No matter what
language you speak, there is communication+ it's eye contact.
"You forget politics. AU '!he international boundaries are down.
Ideological rivalries are forgotten .
If it were left to the youth of the
world, there would be no wars."
Debbie, 27, rJ. Hayward, Calif.,
won three gold medals in Mexico
City, where days before army troops
were !booting down students in the
streets. The Soviet Union had justinvaded Czechoslovakia.
Four years later at Munich, as a
part-time journalist, she saw the
West Germans strive to erase the
memory of Adolf Hitler and for 16 of
the 19 days stage the most pleasant
and relaxed Olympics of aU time.
They festooned their streeis with
p8Stel colors instead of nationalistic
Oags, while security police moved
through the Village ' like Miami
Beach vacationers in their white
flannels and blue blazers - not a
gun or stick in sight.
Then the Arab terrorists moved in

L
J
--------------------~--~~~------

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
the creation of hazardoll'l waste for
the balance. SUcb ,a fee structure
could necessitate going In as many
as 290,000 different sources, an overwhelmliig blireaucratic task in and
of itself.
It is the po!lition rJ. the chemicalindustry that the Administration's
estimates as to the total scope of the
problem are gresUy e~aggerated. It
is the position of the Olemical
Marufacturers Association that if a
fund is needed at aU it is only to pay
for the cleanup of orpum sites, those
sites no longer in use for which there
is no clear detenninati111 of responsibility, accountability for the site
cannot be established. It is
estimated that there are fmn 1,200
to 3,(0) such orphan dump sites
ammg the 30,000 total sites men·
tioned earlier. It is the Associatioo 's
position that a determination by the
courts as to ultimate respomlbility
is the appropriate course to take.
~Y feel that any asse!l'ment of
fees and liability by anyone other
than the courts is arbitrary and un·
constitutional.
One may ask, why can't we let the
courts handle these matters without
the federal government bem~
Involved; why the need for a "super
fund," as the billion dollar fund has
been labeled? The front money concept is premised on the fact that to
litigllte the question of responsibility
for the many hazardous waste
problelllll that exist would take coun·
tless years, years which we can't af·
ford to let pass in tackling these
problelllll. ··
I share this concern. Such
problems as Love Canal can't be
ignored. They can't be postponed.
They won\ go away on their own accord. At the same time, I am reluc·
'tant to see the federal government
set itself up as judge and jury, to set
up yet another bureaucracy witch
could arbitrarily impose large finan·
cial burdens on elements of the
private sector.
Hopefully the hazardous waste
legislation that is expected to be
brought before the Congress later
this year will balance both these con·
cerns. I for ooe, will do aU that I can
to oee that this measure provides for
a prompt attad&lt; on this pressing
problenl with a mlnirnwn of federal
involvement.

,,_ \

:/)
)' . ·

.

.

: ; Jl.,

1

To the IIJl}mowing Love Canal
sounds like II r(lllantic getaway. To
officials concerned with the well·
being d. America's lands and water·
ways it is a problem of significant
proportion , a symbol of the
troublesome condltioos besetting
our nation's countrysides and
streams. ·
Love Canal is one d. the estimated
:.l,OOO industrial dumping sites in
our country that through abuse and
neglect are polluting the land and
streams around them. RecenUy the
Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), and the U.S. Department rl
Justice filed a $134 million lawsuit
against the Hooker Chemical Company ·for its failure to maintain
adequate safegua"rds and controls in
dumping more than 94,000 tons of
chemical waste at Love Cana I and
other nearby sites in and around
Niagara Falls, New York, EPA has
indicated its intentions to file at least
another 50 suits during 1980 in con·
nection with other abanooned waste
sites located throughout the country.
The problem of hazardous wastes
is extensive. It deals not onlY with
waste dump sites but with oil spills,
and spills of uselul chemicals such
as chlorine as well. It is a problem so
large in scope !hat It will take
billions d. dollars to correct.
Congress and the Administratioo
are presently trying to ccme up with
legislative solutions for this problem
that would be acceptable to all parties concerned, but the road ahead
appears fraught with debate. The
main subject of controversy is the
questiol\ d. who will pay the
multibillion dollar bill for the
massive cleanup that will be
required. Where should the bunlen
of responsibility eliDe down, on the
polluters, on the users, or on the
units of government within wlx!Be
boundaries the particular hazardous
waste problem exists?
The Administration's proposal
would set up a $1.6 billion fund over
four yearn that would go toward
clCf!lling up the 400 to 500 worst sites
arouricfthe country. To get the frort
money necmsary to initiate a broad
scale cleanup, the bills presently
being considered call for a federal
contribution of about 20 percent and
for a collection d. fees fr0111 those in·
dustries primarily responsible
for .
.

They finally got to play in 1900.
And in doing so, they· got dougle
figure scoring from David Raike,
Ron Cremeans, and Greg Thomas to

·-· '

on the Israelis in an ugly adventure
that left 16 people dead and almost
resulted in cancellation of the
Games.
'1'm glad they didn \ cancel
them," Debbie said. "I'he Israelis,
m~t of aU, would have insisted that
they go on. You can \let the Games
become hostage to violence. That
way, you l~e everything."
Debbie can speak with authority.
~ Olympics have taken up most of
the years of her young life - first as
a competitor, winner of 19 national
championships and setter of 20
~Wrld records in freestyle swimming, then as a part~ime coach,
commentator, advisor to the U.S.
Olympic Cornml ttee and now good
will ambassador for one of the corporations sponsoring thf U.S . Olympic effort.
The company is Life Savers, Inc.
Soon with figure skater Dorothy
Hamill she will launch a
multimillion dollar campaign for
U.S. Olympicfunds.
"We're going to dump 91,600
packages of gum drops and .candy on
Lake Placid for the Winter Olympic
athletes," she said. The sweet tooth
has no inte~national boundaries.
Debbie was asked if she felt that
nationalism in the Games should be
downplayed by using only the Olympic anthem and symbols.
"I don't know," she replied. "I got
goose-pim}ies when I stood on the
victory siand and saw the American
flag raised. I felt a part of the youth
of America.
"But there was individual
satisfaction also. It was me on those
blocks and it was me controlling my
body in those races."

,
·
·
·
·
.

tum back the visJllng Eastern, Ohio ,
Eagl~s from Mei~ County, 71-60. A
less than sellout crowd looked on.
Raike, the sure .!Janded 5-10
senior, led all scorers with ten
buckets and 2-of,1 free throws for 22
tallies, netting 14 of them in the se.cond half when the Eagles started a
late surge.
Ron Cremeans pumped in 18 and
led both teams in rebounds with 12
before drawing his fifth foul with
3:00 still on the clock.
And 6-1 senior Greg Thomas, hauling down II rebounds, went back up
successfully with several of them to
roll in 15 markers. It was his best effort of the young season.
For Coach John Boston's Class -A

Eastern outfit, Brian Biss~ll, a !i-ll
senior, canned 19 points to pace his
mates . Junior Gene Cole powed in
14, getting Hl from the free-throw
line . He also pulled down 9 caroms .
Tim Dill, a 6-3 junior, cleared the
glass 10times and added 8points .
Jay Minton turned in a fine floor
game for Co_ach Lennie Barnette's
locals and would have had a passel
of assists had the receivers been successful in their underneath shots.
Anyhow, Jay added a pair of buckets
for 4, and Jeff Chambers came
through with 5.
David Nott, fast becoming an important reserve on the bench, swished 7in spot appearances.
Actually, the Big Blacks won the

game in the secOitd penoLI when they

outscored the Ea~les 24-10 to go into
the locker room leading by fifteen,
34-19.

The first eight minutes were as
close as twins in a crib, with the lead
seesawing and PPHS finally breaking on top I 0-9.
A pair of Eastern free throws by
Brian Bissell put his mates on top
·11-10 to open the second stanza and that was the last times ·-the
Eagles led. Fourteen unansweroo
points by the Big Blacks, with
Thomas, Cremeans, Raike,and Not!
all hitting , and it was 24-11 before
Eastern broke the drought.
Oddly enough, the Eastern boys,
with only two seniors on their squad,

Stall fails, Wahama
drops Bobcats, 37-28
BY GARY CLARK
Despite some cold shooting percentages on the part of both teams,
the Waharna White Falcon defense
was superb in taking a 37-28 decision
over the Kyger Creek Bobcats
Tuesday evening.
The victory was the third of the
season for the White Falcons and the
second of the year over the Bobcats.
Wahama defeated Kyger Creek in
their season opener by a 46-45
margin, They have dropped two contests.
•
Gary Richards led the White
Falcon attack with 12 points on the
night, aU in the second half. Rid&lt;
and Scott Damitz contributed eight
markers apiece.
Tim Price was the top Bobcat
scorer with ten points while David
Sands chippoo in with 8.
Due to the low scoring in the
game, one might think that there
was not much action. But this was
not the case as there was no stalling
involved. The locals overcame a 10-7
first quarter deficit to take 13-12
halftime lead. During ·the second
half the bend area cagers outscored
the host Bobcats, 24·16, to claim the
victory.
Kyger Creek opened up a 1().7lead
in the opening period behind David
Sands who scored four points in the
quarter . Tim Roush had five of the
White Falcons seven points in the
eight minute span.
Wahama 's defense litnited the
Bobcats to a mere two points in the
second canto in outscoring the Gallia
Countians §-2 to take the lead at intermissions. Scott Barnitz scored all
six points for the locals in the quar-

ts each in the period. The locals out scored Kyger Creek, 16-11, to capture their third win of the season by
a 37-28 margin.
Shooting percentages show
Wahama with a 34 percent mark
from the floor and a poor 44 percent
showing at the charity stripe. Kyger
Creek hit just 32 percent from the
floor and 46 percent from the foul
line.
Wahama 'held the rebounding
edge, 28-18, with Tim Roush owning
12 individual rebounds. Wahama
corrunitted 18 turnovers while Kyger

Potter paces
SWHS victory
Sherman Potter enjoyed his
biggest night ever on the hardwood
Tuesday night as the :;.7 senior
guard dumped in 23 points to lead
the Southwestern Highlanders to a
lopsided 80-53 non-conference vic tory over Hannan,W.Va.
The win pushed the Highlanders'
season record to 3-4.
Also hitting double figures for
Coach Wayne Bergdoll 's Highlanders.wer.e Todd Baker with 15 points
and 13 rebounds; Dale Newberry
had 14 points and Scott Russell
scored 13 points.
Luther Young led Ed Coon's Wildcats with 22 points on nine baskets
and four free throws. Wayne Dalton
finished with II points while Rainey
had nine.
Southwestern jumped in w a 2().12
lead at the end of the first period and
held a 42-24lead at the half.
Going into the third period, the
hosts were ahead 60-40.
Southwestern also won the reserve
tilt, 36-26. Scott Lewis and Steve
Forgey had eight points each for
Southwestern.
According to the charts in the varsity game, Hannan connected on 21
of 48 floor attempts for 44 percent
while the Highlanders canned 35 of
75shots for47 percent.
Hannan committed 25 turnovers to
SWHS's 12.
Southwestern will host Eastern of
Meigs Friday night in an important
SVAC contest. Eastern has loot two
straight games to Southern and
Point Pleasant.

a

ter.
The White Falcons continued their
fine defensive effort on into the third
stanza and "increased their advantage (Q 21-17 at the third quarter's end. Gary Richards put in six
points in the period for Waharna.
Both teams opened up in the final
eight minutes with Wahama increasing their lead behind the offensive efforts of Rid&lt; Barnitz and
Gary Richards, who scored six pain-

By Quarters:
Hannan , W .Va .
Southwester n
Hannan (Sl)
Rainey 4-1·9;

12 12 16 13··53
20 22 20 18 --80
-- Datton 4-3-11;
Roclevitch 2·0-4;
Young 9·4·22; Tollive r 1-2-4; Brum f i eld 0-1-l and Ray 1-0-2. Totals 21 ll.Sl .
Southwestern (80) -- Burleson 3.{)6; Newberry 6-2 -14; Baker 6-3-15 ;
Ru sse ll 6· 1-1 3;
Potter 10 ·3·23;
Forgfy 3-1-7; Sizemore 1-0·2. Totals
35 ·10·8() .

.

Creek had 17 miscues .
Wahama also captured the
preliminary contest by a 32-'lB score
for their third triumph rJ. the season
against two defeats.
The local junior varsity used a
well-balanced scoring attack in
taking the victory with York Ingels
notching eight points while Travis
Gray and Todd Kitchen added six
each.
Kyger Creek got ten markers each
from Moore and Waugh in a losing
catLSe.

The White Falcons take the court
two more times this week with Spencer visit8.g Mason on Friday night
and the loca ls joourneying to Meigs
on Saturday night. Game time for
Friday will be 6 p.m. for the junior
varsity tilt with the varsity game to
follow .
WAHAMA (37) ·· Richards 5·2·12;

R. Barnifz 4-0-8; S. Barnitz 3·2·8; T .
ROush 1·3-5: Gibbs 2 0-4; weaver 00·0; A r no ld 000; J Roush 0{1 ·0.
Totals 11-6 -28
KYGER CREEK (281 ·· Pri ce 5·0·
10; Sa nd s 3 -.. , ·B; Westfalll 2-4; Smi th
2-0-4; Springer0 -2 -2 Totals 11 -6-28.

held the scoring edge in the last two
&gt;tanzas, pumping in 41 markers w
'fl.

Still, the ga me was not as close as
the final score would seem to indicate . Twice in the third quarter the
Big Blacks led by twenty-8ix, f&gt;4-28
and 56..ll.
In that third period, when PPHS
was out-pointing Eastern 2&gt;-~.
Raike went on a tear with 1-1 and
Cremeans notched 7. Brian Bissell
was keeping pace for his mates with
9.

Be that as it may, the Big Blacks
broke the ice with their first victory
and are now 1-and-2.
The Eastern Eagles saw their
record sink to 3-end&lt;l.
Coach Larry Markham's Little
Blacks (2&lt;! 1got 15 points from Alan
Machir to defet the Little Eagles,
46-32 in the pre).;m. The losers dropped to Hi. Greg Cole was their·
leader with 9.
ether Little Blacks scorers: John
David 8, Barry Barnette 7, Mark
Burris 4, Mike Porter and Jim
Bowser each 3, Pat Harrunack 3, Jon
Veazey 2, John McDermitt a free
throw .
Next outing for the Big Blacks will
be Friday at Ravenswood (4-2). The
Red Devils dropped a 49-:i9 decision
at Parkersburg C.tholic last night.
EASTERN (60) - Brian Bissell
8-3-19, Gene Cole 2-10-14, 1Im Dill
3-2-3, Greg Wigal 2-2-6, Joe Bowers
O-{), Brent Matthews 1-&amp;2, Rick
Long 3&lt;!-6, Mike Bissell 1-1-3,
Charlie Ritchie O&lt;l&lt;l, Paul Sprague
1-&amp;2; Totals 21·J.8.60.
BIG BLACKS (71) - Jay Minton
2&lt;1-4, David Raike 10-2-22, Greg
Thomas 6-3-15, Jeff Chambers 2-1-5,
Ron Cremeans 7-4-18, David Noll
2-3-7, John David 0-&amp;0, Barry
Barnette 0-&amp;0, Mark ~orris O&lt;J&lt;l,
John McDermitt O&lt;l&lt;l, Jim Stewart
O&lt;l&lt;l; Totals 29-13-71.
Score by qiUil"lers :
9 10 20 21-60
Eastern
Big Blacks
10 24 25 12-71
Reserve Scores: Little Eagles 46;
Little Blacks 32.

Score by Quarters:
Wahama

7 6

8 16--37

K.Creek
10 2 5 II -28
Total Fouls -- Wahama 10 Kyger
Cr eek 14.
RESERVE GAME
WAHAMA (32) •· 1npe1s 3·2·8;
Gray 2·2·6; K itchen 2.0 ·6, Laven der
2·0·4; Pau~h 2·0·4; J. ROush 1·0 ·2; K.
Weaver 1·0-2. Totals 14-4 ·32 .
KYGER CREEK (28) ·· Moore 4·2·
10; Waugh 4·2-10 ; Shroud 3·0·6;
Clar k 0·2·2; Helms 0 -0·0. Total s 11 -6·

28.
score by Quarters :
Wahama
K. Creek

a

VISIT OUR
CONVENIENT
DRIVE THRU

City limits
DRIVE THRU

9 8

3 11

7··32
86 ·28

748 N. Second St.

Middleport, 0.

THE GAUIA-JACKSON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
SPEECH AND HEARING DEPARTMENT'
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, stuttering, reading and writin~
problems, articulation problem and language
problems.
If you have ; my questions about the
evaluation and/or treatment of such communication problems please call 446·5500 in
Ga IIi pol is, 992-2192 in Meigs, 286-1626 in
Jackson.

COMMENTARY
Donald F. Graff

The view from Afghanistan
It's almost like old times In the
Hindu Kush .
'l'he Russians once more, as they
have repeatedly for more than a century, are pushing south into
AfghaniStan.
Almost that is, but not quite.
There Is this time no British Raj at
the Kbyber Pass, ready and able
with 1111 Bengal lancers to repel the
. attempt to take over the strategic
heartland rJ. Central Asia.
Instead, there is only a power
vawwn south of the Khyber. Op·
·position to the Russian advance this
time comes from much farther away
and in much less convincing faslton.
It comes from Washington, wblcb
Is loudly protesting Soviet armed in·
trusion in~ Afghan affairs. Also, in
somewhat rmre muted
from
Peking and assorted Qther capltall, '
even such an unlikely one as
·
Bucharest.
Ahd It may very soon be el!Pressed
in tlie United Nations, as if 'that
organization Is not already ·aUffl·
cH;Iltly·overwbelmed by the effort to·
prove that It can perfotm some func.
lion In the IraJ11an mess. .
'
· All j Ustlfled "a condemnation by
world oplnlon, olflclal ·and pulillc,

ton•.

.

~

. .

may be and as well-orchestrated as
it may becoole, It is no sWstltute for
Lanceni. NegaUve q&gt;inion will n~
dissuade Moscow from pursuit of
what it regards as Its vltallntereBts.
It nevs- has -n~ in EastGemiany,
In Hungllry or in Czechoslovakia.
There Ia, however, a difference
between these three previOUB reel·
pients of Soviet military attenUon.
and Afghanistan. Mountains, plus a
functioning and eJp8ndlng oppasl·
lion moven~ent.
Even with Soviet troops appBt:eJ~t-.
ly in finn control of Kabul and ar·
mored forces continuing to roll into
the coontry 111 roads CIIIVeniently
b1n under earlier aid programs,
thl,!re Ia growing speculation !hat
Afghanistan could become
Moscow's Vietnam.
That may well be tbe c1111e. But the
West would· be pmrjllluii! to
we~ the praspect ._ gOod nen,
since It would mean addq turmoU
In what!&amp; already a daligenJUsly tur·
bulent rt~~ion.
Frun wbate:ver angle It II viewed,
Algbanlltan -weal'l ID be Pl'eBell· .
tJnl tbe W!rlil with txiiCtiJ What it
doeii!Qt need at lhil Ume -an&lt;tber

crllla.

-RED OAK

~·
If you 're loo k•ng for a real meal and ·a great value . Kent ucky
Fried Chicken 's the answer. The Colonel's "fi nger tickm ' good"
chicken and all the fildn·s . A rea l meal the whol e family wi ll
enjoy ... and ,what a value Come in and see for yoursell

4'x8' 1/8" THICK

If's nice to feel so good aboUt a meal.

'4·~

Fried Chicken.

A
.

HOGG &amp;.ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
,~77-3--55~54_..__._.. . . . . .- .. . . . . . . . . . . .~M:AW:N~,~W.~Vl~
I

. .•

'

~·

~-

.
.'

�,

s;;"};;:;;;~i;;;;;·~P"'set~
Jl4fj
I

•

1

n k ed N 0 tre D

·SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) _ Notre
·
.
Dame was beating the San FranCISCO Dons under the backboards,
treating BUl Cartwright 's former
·
·
. .
understudy wtth a mtmmum of
respect.
"!'he coach told me at halftime .
••
h
that I 1· ·
that w~
my ouse,
1ve 10
there arxl shouldo 1let anybody else
in "the Dons' Uoat Wallace Bryant
'.dl te dis
· h h h
S&amp;J a r:
cussmg ow e elped
lumed thtngs around in the second
l)alf Tuesday night as USF roared to
a 67.09 vict~ry over the seventhranked Fighting Insh.
Bryant scored two points in the first half, when Notre. Dame
outre bounded the taller Dons 25-16.
The Irish settled for a 30-30 halftime
standoff, however, making just t:J of
33field goaI atie mpt s.
· Notre Dame dido' get off as many
~nces to score in the second half,
partly because Bryant blocked so
'niany soots. The Irish finished the
night with an embarrassing total of
1;l,tumovers and a 39 percent field
,gD81 shooting mark in the loss which
~e theirrecond 7-2.
·
,i,.It was Notre Dame's first game
. ~ on 1
K t k
cethelr..,_, ossto enuc yoo

seventh
T~~~~~r.:s h~~oo.~~~~'~! ~~~~!~..,,...
am
· e

Dec ~
· ·
Only three other members of The
Associated Press Top Twenty were
in action and· all came away winners,although two had close calls,
Louisville, the No.11 team, routed
St Louis 94-05 in a Metro ~nference
· ..~il N
St J hn'" N y
game wu e o.14 . o o, . . ,
edged Princeton 44-42 and No.20
Georgetown D c withstood a late
' · ·• ,
rally ~y St. Josephs , Pa., and
prevailed 62..)3 .
Bryant, the sophomore•who stepped into the starting center job when
AU-American Cartwright went from
college bi!Sketball to the pr&lt;1!,
scared II of his 13 points in the
second half. He totaled 13 rebounds
and
blocked shots in the victory
which improved unranked USF 's
record to 11 •2·
The Don!l held a 31-21 rebounding
edge in the second half.
"Our front line isn t as big as in
the past few seasons, but we've done
well against big teams. We've
played the Russians and UCLA this
season," said 6-5 forward Tracy
Jackson of Notre Dam~ .
''In the second· half, when we had

six

Tuesday N•ght
Akron Buchtel .56, Massillon 49

61 59
•

'

32

that bad spell USF took advantage
.
•
·
We dido 1 make any shots from the
field and we cou ldn' make our free
throws, either."
Notre Dame led 50-46 with eight
minutes remaining, but USF then
outscored the Irish 11.0, going ahead
to stay at 51.00 on a jump shbt by
Mike Rice with 6t minutes
remaining.
'Th had
d
b
' ey
us own, ut once we
got over the top, we got a lot of confidence and kept it going," said
Coach Dan Belluomini, woo has ooly
oneseni(J' on Iilli.USF squad.
"I thought we were a year away .
Maybe not, " he added.
·
f
Sul:f;btute orward John Hegwood
woo, like Bryant is from Gary, Ind.,
not far from Notre Dame, led the
· ts B
t
d
Dons WI·th 14 potn
· ryan an
guards Quintin Dailey and Billy
Reid had 13 each.
The game's top scorer was Notre
Dame guand Rich Branni~, with 15
points. He was the only Irish player
to shoot better than ~percent (7 of
13) fran the field, but he made one
of four free throws and the team was
a poornine of 19.

'GARS
•
l t • t {l
,
survzves as -mznu e uror
lo hand Waverly 59-54 loon
r loss
'

.

~

JfVikings take

)..~'. 3-44 victory
,

, • Using a balanced scoring attack,
: mmes Valley rolled to a 63-44
I lUilph ove{ Hannan Trace last
ht.

••' The Vikings, now 2-7, got 13 points
;l(rom Brent Miller and 12 apiece
m Jeff Saunders and Allen Bur-

m.
' Greg Webb scared 17 and Carlos
'•
pbell 12to leal Hannan Trace.
:.~ Hannan Trace fell behind&amp;5-12 at
;~e erxl of the first period arxl 34-25
~t the half.
;i« Synunes Valley put the game aut
reach in the third quarter.
The lMs left the Wildcats with an
:~-7 record. Hannan Trace had 29
: tal rebounds with Campbell coUec•'• g11.
.
; Symmes Valley took the reserve
:rAame, 4!&gt;-31 with Shepard leading
:~ way with 22 points. Sheets had
•lj!ight for the Wilckittens.
: [ Hannan Trace travels to Kyger
!:t:reek Friday .

..••;
'I

Avon 57 , Independence 56 .
Avon Lake 11, North R1dgev111e 60
Badger 61, Vienna Mathews 55
Beachwood 55, Twinsburg 45
Bedford Chane! 71. Cleve. Rhodes
58
Bergholz Spring . 107, Leetonia 73
Berl in W : Reserve 71. Lowellville
53
Berne Union 61, Worthington
Christ. 58
Bristol61, Grand Valley 59
Brooklyn 92, Lutheran West 48
BuckeyeS.76,JeffersonUnion59
Buckeye Trail 64, Newcomer·
stown 62
campbe ii ·Memorial89, Brookfield
68 &lt;;:ana l Fulton NW 56, Claymont 38
Cin . Christ. 74, Cln. Hills 33
Cin . Greenhills 74, Taylor 43

44

tempts for 43 percent. The 'llgers
were 10 of 17 at the foul line for 58
percent. Waverly had 211 rebounds,
eight each by Steger (who fouled out
with 1:05lefttoplay) and Nathan.
Waverly had 16tumovers.
In the second haH, GABS pressed
in back court then switched to a
zone •. thus bo!tiizig up Steger ana
crew the final two periods.
GAHS trailed 24-ISat halftime, but
outscored the home team 44-30
during the final two periods of play.

.
·
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams in The
Associoted Press college basketball
poll, with first ·place votes in paren·
theses, records and total points.
Points based on 20 · 19 · 18 · 17 · 16 · 15
. 14 . 13 . 12. 11 ~ 10 9 8 7 ~ 6 . 5 . 4 . 3
·2 · 1:
~ : g~~~ul
1481 (12·01 1,073
1 (!r~? 1 '~~~
J. Ohio st.
1
4. Kentucky
(12·2) 814
5. Syracuse
(11 ·01 ~~
~: ~~~~~i~~a,;:·
~ iiJ
e. Virginia
(12·11 710
9. Oregon St.
(13·1I 606
10. Purdue
18·2) 541
11 . Louisvi lle
(1021 481
12. 1awa
110:11 438

Robinson

Skidmore
TOTALS

1~: ~is;~~~!s.NY

3

Elle~ti~~na;:;ry 1960
. 10:00-l :OO
2:00·5:OO P.M.
Tuesday, No Oil ICe

"'::':o~~~~:oy

2:00·7:30 P.M.
Thursday
001 o
9: :30
· 1:3
2:00·7
P.M.

(;~n ~~~

1~: ~e:t':{oli ~a

:~~l

1t~~~~,Yoo

m

~~~~:.;:~
9

:1~~l
~~
11·41 136

20. Georgetown, DC

19 3)

Except i~~-s~~~~

dayotthemonth.

111

satur-

STUBBORN FLOOR TILES
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POlLY -Doyouhaveany
suggestions for loosening stick -on
floor tiles? I have raised some with a
putty knife but find it is a very lwnd
job.-ALICE
DEAR AL!t:E - I presume these
come off just as any other resilient
floor tiles. Put a pleae of an old sheet
or other such cloth over two or three
tiles and then iroo over them until
the become wann. This will soften
the glue enough s'o your putty knife
will work much faster . Only iron two
or thr,ee at a time because they will
restick if they have time to cool. POlLY
DEAR POLLY - I have a safe and
easy way to keep the chRdren 's mittens from being lost. Sew that sticky
type fabric fastener on the inside
sleeves of the child's coat and the
mittens will stick to it. No more lost
mittens. - HELEN
DEAR POLLY - When painting
with messy QU base paint most of us
g~tit on our hands, anns, faces, etc.
Instead of using a harsh remover
llke turpentine I simply rub in a
teaspoon rl shortening and then
wash with wann water and soap. MRS.A. J.V.
DEAR POlLY - My bathroom
mirror used to fog up after each
soower and then when it ws dried off
with a towel the mirror would
streak. Now I set my electric blow
dryer on hot and blow it into the mir •

/z PRICE
on

1

ALL WOOL
BLENDS

60" Poly Knits
Print &amp; Plain

60" CHINO
45" PERM PRESSWOVENS
SINGER MACHINE

SALE
PRICED

MODEL 533

$189.95

R . 1229.95

11SW-~~~~·c sH~~y,Oh.

Score by quarters:

992·2284

Paul Kimble.

..
:···

Mrs. Rose Reynolds has returned
home from a month's visit with her
son, Val, and his family at Morgantown, W.Va. H(llle for the holidays
with the family were Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Taylor (Lynn Reynolds) who
left Morgantown oo Dec. 30 for
Charleston, S. C. where they are stationed at the Naval Hospital. Mrs.
Taylor ill an·~ating room technician and her husband is a hospital
technician.
Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Rupe spent the
hoDdays in Warren with their Slln-inlaw 111d daughter, Dr. and Mrs.
Joseph McKay, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Roush and
daughter, Jennifer, and Mrs.
Leverett Roush, have returned
home after visiting over the holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. William Roush
and family In El Paso, Tens. While
there they visited the Carlsbad
Caverans, White Sands NaDonal
Monwnent in New Mexico, and
Juarez In Mexico.

lf3 OFF

e
~

MONEY SA VI.NG SALE I
A BIG

50%

OFF

DEAR POlLY -I have been clip·
ping and saving "cents rlf" coupms
foc years but too often the Ume limit
expired before I remembered to l18e
them, My two teenagers came up
with the following solution. They are
in charge of clipping them and giving me the ones I should use on my
weekly shopping day .. They receive
any cash rebates as part of their
aUowances. They love doing it and I
am happy to l18e the ocupons. ELIZABETH
DEAR POLLY - Never throw
away an old felt hat. Use it to make
protectors for the bottoms of lamps
arxl vases and bookends. Trace size
of the bottom of object, cut out and
glue in place on the bottom. Saves
many a scratch. -GOLDIE
Polly will send you one rl her signed thank7&lt;ou newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In lier
column.
Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

'

NO EXCHANGES -

"'

Valley (631 --i.'l'ilier 5·3·

SALE IS RIGHT NOW

6-Q·12 ; Harell 41 ·9; T.
Totals

a.

'Sears\

ATTENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Heat aleman and you'll get twice
the amount of juice. Pop the fruit into a 200 degree F. oven for a few

Pomeroy
'•;':\ during
:~-~ld ~~gr::~::7,; =~~reskl"":~=~~
furlough .
squeeze more productive.
t Personal Notes ~\ir--------------1
his

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine
spent several days during the
holidays with their son-in-blw and.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David
Eskew, Kandi, Beth and Amy,
Newark. They were joined for
Christmas dinner by Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eskew and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Fields and som, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Errol! Cmroy,
Cllester, spent the holidays In Akron
visiting their sons, George and
Hugh, arid their families.

Housiguests
in Texas
Mrs. Aile!) Hampton hlis returned
from Corpus Christi, Texas where
she spent the holidays as the
hooseguest of Mr. and Mrs.
Sylvester LyUe.
Joining the family for the hoDday
were Mrs. Hampton's stepson,
Ethan Allen Hampton, Jr., Raymood, Washington. Otheli.· visitors·
were Mrs. Mary Scott and Miss LDis
Hampton, Los Angeles; , Vernon
Hampton, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Hampton,
HoUBton, Texas; Mr: and Mrs. Mit.cheli Hampton aoo family, Skidmore, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Ha~q~ton, Beeville, Te:ms; Leonard
LyUe aDd famiJ.y, and Mrs. Wilford
Sinithandfamily, Tulsa,Okja.

'

DISCOUNT
OFF
TO
ON MEN'S, WOMEN, 'S &amp;
CHILDREN'S SHOES

50%

CALL 992-2156

CHAPMAN SHOES

BElWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CARBURETOR AND
GAS LINE
ICING

992·5292
(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich 1
109 High St.
Pomeroy

'Ji'!)) '\- - - - - - - -....

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

-

·"

Mr. and Mrs. AgUBtin Montanez
and children, Agustin, Jr . Carolee,
Todd and Shawn fl. Arecibo, Puerto
Rico, spent the holidays here with
her paren!B, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Ables, Vale St., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Montanez is the former
CarolYn Allman P(llleroy . Also
here visiting with the family were
Mr; and Mrs. Olarles Smith and
daughter, Tamara, Charleston, W.
Va .; Mrs. Aubrey Asbury of
Elkview, W. Va. and Mrs. Clarence
Michaelson, CharlestCil, W.Va.
The Montanez family returned to
Puerto Rico on New Year's Day.

THE PHOTO PLACE

• • MEN'S WEAR_., ..

5·2·12; Crawford 4-1-9;

KEVIN ANGEL

Spend holidays here.

12lh

Protects

n.

to

-25
deg.

GIFTS
For The

FRENCH CITY 20 COUNT

WIENERS

•1•'
BACON
Racine, 0.

LB.

PHEBE 'S STORE
We Glady Accept Fed . Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:001il7 :00
Saturday 9:00·9:00
CLOSED

STEAK

~f,zf:Iavors 2/89' CRACKERS

$}29

LB.

40 oz.

1 lb. Box

LB.

$}19

POLISH
SIUJSAGE

$ 99

69'

23 oz.
Tender Leaf

TEA BAG

09

, · SILVEFfPLATE
CU
FROM

15~ LB.

'1 29

RO.AST

'1

FROM YOUR JEWELER

CABBAGE

LB.

PORK SHOULDER

21bs.

JELLO

5LB.

.

100 Count

LB.

99:e

.EMERGENCY

TOW ROPE
6.500 Lbs. with.siiP. Hooks

ONIONS'
.

3 LB. BAG

.

'

39~

. FROM
'·

Vlllley

\i/a Gallon '

~~

99~
i

-II

s4.

c-.

.......
-··
6
SPRAY
CLEANEII

· ,1flndshitld ~'
:- W~e.r _ r
·~leaner . · .

I

~·

.LOCK

D"ICER

aa~
RETAIL VALUE ..... I.69
Unfreezes frozen locks.
Automatic
"push ·
in(ection."

cu •..,
c..... u

· CARBURETOR
SPRAY CLEANER

'128

REMIU

~ Anti-Fr~ ~
· ~,_.

..

WINDSHIELD WASHER
ANTI-FREEZE

99~

GAL

G&amp;J AUTO P

'

INI'ANTS' F!IOINO lET
.
.
.'1'

BUrrER MILK

YM-'1'1•

Regular $9.75

$}'~ ·

$}89

BLUE PENGUIN.

BABY

GRAPEFRUIT'
T-BONE
STEAK

troop ··. ~

Kyger PTA.
Stiltner, patrol leader, aDd Sbery
The Juniors meet on Tuesdays at
Cooper, assistant patrol leader.Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary School
other members are Ni118 Hager,
to learn new games, songs, crafts
Sheena Harrison, Becky Price and
and IIIIJCh more.
Stacy Yankuns.
They recenUy participated in the
Members of Patrol B are Becky.
!llrlstmas parade which was held in
Thomas, patrol leader and Amy•
Gallipolis.
Brown, assistant patrol -leader.· ·
The girls held their Investiture • other members are Stephanie Pen- ·
Rededication Ceremony on
nington, Missy Snyder, Carol Stover
Tuesday, Nov. 20, at Cheshlreand Amy WalTIBiey.
Kyger. Mothers and leaders pinned
the new Jwdors. The Jwdors held . - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
their ceremony with Brownie Girl
Scout Troop 1515.
Authori1ed CATALOG
Cheshire Jwdor Troop 1099 memSALES MERCHANT
bers are Amy Brown, Sherry
Cooper, Nina Hager, Sheena
Harrison, Stephanie Pennington,
Becky Price, Missy Snyder, Janet
l'llone P92-2i 11
Stiltner, Carol Stover, Becky
23 4 E. Main St.
Thomas, AmY Wamsley, and Stacy
Pomeroy,O.
Yanlruns.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; .iudy Williams
Leader for Jwdor Troop is MrS.
tpen: Mon . thruWed. 9-5,
Betty Edwards, and co-leader is
hur . 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2 .
Mrs. Janet Thomas.
Satisfact ion Guaranteed
or Your Money B•ck
Members of Patrol A are Janet

:i~

\

Wearhaus

NO CHARGES-NO LAYAWAYS

Dealer

A party in celebration of the 70th
birthday of Mrs. Iva Stewart was
held &amp;I turday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James Stewart,
Rutland.
Following a dbmer, a decorated
· cake inscribed ''Happy Birthday,
Mom", coffee and pwteh were served. Pictures were taken during the
· evening of Mrs. Stewart, her
children arxl grandchildren.
Attending the celebration were
Mr. and Mrs. JameliStewart, Beverly and Jim B;J, . Mr. and Mrs .•
WUliam Brown, Teresa, Kelly and
Karla, Mr. and Mrs. Herb EDlott,
Angie, Amy aoo Becky. Mr. aDd
Mrs. Robert Si:!aon, Rob, John aDd
Melissa, all of RuUand; and
Clarence Stewart of CollUilbll!l who
spent the l'ftlekend here .
Mrs. Stewart, since her recent
oospitalization, is residing with her
childrm.

Chellhlre has a new Jwdor Girl
Scout troop this year with 12 girls experiencing scouting.
For Halloween and Chrisbnas, the
girls made glfts for the boys and
girls at the Children's Home. For
Thanksgiving, they made tray
favors for the children in pediatrics
at Holzer Medical Center. 1'l1ey also
made turkeys for a bake sale, which .
was sponsored by the Cheshire•

.

"

JUST GIVE US A CALL.

ePRE·WASHED JEANS By Wranglers, Mr. Legs, D.C. &amp; STATLER
eWESTERN FLANNEL SHIRTS- S·M·L·XL- DISCO SHIRTS· Fancy Prints
eSWEATERS, CARDIGANS &amp; PULLOVERS eSUPER SUDED SHIRTS. Were
$16.95, Now $7.48 eVlNYL·DENIM·CORDUROY DOWN FILLED JACKETS
eVELOUR SHIRTS • Solids &amp; Fancies eWRINKLE FREE QUINAS DRESS .
SHIRTS e ENTIRE STOCK OF QUILTED VESTS eSPORT COATS . Sizes 361o
46 •

nothing does the iob better
t han a sty lish watchband from
Sped idel . Spe idel - originator
of f amous Twist -0 -Fie)(oo wat c: hband constru ction . Just the
t hing to give new l ife to an old
wa t ch.

70th birthdgy G,heshire area gains new scout
reported

VISITS HOME
.
Kevin Angel, stationed with the U.
S. Army at Fort Lee, Va., spent the
. oolidays in Athens with his mother,
Mrs. Ann Angel. Kevin earlier completed his basic training at Fort
Jackson,S. C. He was met at the Col';'i':':'•'•'•'•'•':'•':'•'•':'•'.:•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:•:•:•:•;•'• '•'•';'" umbus Airport by his grandmother,

We are still .taking senior portrait appointments .
Your preview set will include portraits before tradi·
tiona! oil backdrops as well as outdoor type scenics :
You'll like the personal attention and reasonable
prices we offer.

A watch that run s like new

5p.e.t,dR.t

DENISE

YES I

ON THE FOLLOWING GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

should look the part. And

Authorized

ror. It is unfogged in less than half a
minute and witlt...nll.. streaka. -

NOT 10%- NOT 20% • NOT 30% - BUT

AND LOOK
LIKE NEW

4·4·12 ; Jones 0-Q·O; Webb
Chapman I -2-4; Waugh 0·2·2;
1·2-4; Petri e 2-Q-4. Totals 14 ·16·

---

-·

Polly Cramer

.•'.·..• i

1

-~·

POLLY"$ POINTIRS

r;::~~~:"fl

Gallipolis
5 10 23 21 .. 59
Waverly
10 14 12 19 .. 54
OFFICIALS - Ralph Davis and

Our ex perts specialize in the repair of
all ma kes and models of watches.

Hannan Trace (44) ··Beaver 0-1-1;

1·63.

4

-Announcinv the
Office Schedule of
Dr . Mateo P. Dayo, Jr.
·
304 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio

:i·;

0·0 0·0 0 0 0
19-44 21 ·29 19 31 59
WAVERLY (54)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Steger
5·14 3·4 5 8 13
Johnson
8·10 1·3 2 5 17
Arnett
3·9 4·5 4 3 10
Moore
H
0·0 1 1 2
·Nathan
49 0·2 3 8 8
1·2 0-Q 3 1 2
Teeters
Smith .
0·3 2·2 3 2 2
0·0 0·0 0 0 0 .
Pendleton
0-Q 0-1 0 0 0
Banta
TOTALS
22-51 10·17 21 28 54

WE'll MAKE YOUR WATCH
RUN LIKE NEW

12 25 3~ 44
15 34 48 63

1·4·6; Wiseman 1-0 -2.

1~2

0·4

Greenevlew 49, Spring Cath. 47
Grove City 70, Whltehall67
Harrison 56, St. Bernard 36
Hawken 68, Baptist Chrlst. 63
Howland 57, Niles McKinley 42
Indian Valley N. 61, Conott_on
Valley 60
......,ewett·Sclo 58, lakeland 54
Kalida 80, Pandora-Gilboa 58
Keystone lO, south Amherst 33
La Brae 49, Champion &gt;Ill
Lakeview 4, Liberty 36
Lakewood 58, Parma Normandy
35
Lima Cat h. 7~. Bat~ 66
.
Little Miaml63, Clinton MasSie 46
Lorai n67 ,Loral n5outhv iew~3
Lorain King 64, Findlay 49
Lords town 61 , Farmington 52
Lutheran E. 72. W. Reserve ~cad .
68Madison Plains 86, Greenfield 57'
Maplewood 68, southington 66
Marion Harding 70, Wapokoneta
59Mason , Lemon -Monroe 71
78
Mayfield 66, west Geauga 65 •
[r;;;:::=.~-~~::=:;;;;;;;;

f,'

e wm was a W s e!g
1D 19
meetings with Waverly since 1970. It
was the Blue Devils' third victory in
the palace former WHS Coach C. D.
Hawhee built, and first there in four
years.
WeliBton Next
Friday, GAHS will host high .flying
Wellston (7~) while the Waverly
Tigers travel to Ironton for a key
contest.
Box score:
GALLIPOLIS (59)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Nibert
0·0 0·0 3 4 0
Wea ver
1·4 2·2 1 I 4
Cameron
3·6 2·2 3 14 8
Armstrong
1·16 11-14 3 I 25
Harr ington
3·4 4-7 3 0 10
Price
5·10 1·2 2 8 11
Boggess
o-o o-o · o o o

a.

·~ ••mo•be ll
.,.,.,,c~

Ton
twenty
I:'

~:e~=~s~f;~r;:g"::with
119~:- ~,nredi~~·ahsnaoa~voung
Th ·
G u· • · hth .

Quarter ss:

Valley

Doylestown 78, Northwestern 62
East Canton 51. Tuslaw 33
Elmwood58,BowlingGreen57
Elyria west 78, Midview 59
Emanuel Baptist Ill, Fayette 49

plays . They (I'im Skidmore and

tentionally with 10 seconds left. The
GAHS lefty hit one of two attempts
take a 38-36lead going into the fina l
to give GAHSa 57-54 advantage.
stanza.
Waverly missed a desperation
After Todd Nathan's goal (6:47)
shot with big Kent Price coming
gave the host Tigers their final lead
down with the most important
of the game (41-40) Gallipolis,
rebound in his career. Amlstrong
behind Greg Harrington, Bill AI·
was fouled purposely with three
mstrong, Kent Price, Jeff cameron
seconds left. The GAHS senior guard
and Mark Weaver, stormed out to a
sank both shots to make it 59-54.
54-45lead with 1 :05left to play.
Waverly lost the ball again.
Appeared " In Bag"
GAHS' Mark Weaver fired a pass to
It appeared GAHS had the game
Harrington down court as time ran
"in the bag,'' IJJt it wasn t over, yet.
out.
Nathan hit a long jumper (0:47 ) to
The victory, Gallia 's first on the
reduce Git::a 's lead to 54-47.
road this season, left GAHS with a:;.
Bill Amlstrong wa; fouled on the
4 overall mark. The Blue Devils
following inbounds play. He missed
climbed into a fifth place tie with
at the free throw lin e. With 33 secon·
Waverly with a :hl league record.
ds left, Cllarles Smith canned two
Waverly dropped to 5-lionthe year.
free throws. Waverly trailed54-49.
Armstrong Leads Scorers
Again Amlstrong was fouled, thi s ''
Armstrong led all scorers with 25
time intentionally with 32 seconds
paints. Price came off the bench to
left. Aimstrong made both shots. It
score 11 points and pick off eight
was :ili-5 1.
rebounds for GAHS, Hattington
Bo Ainett stole. an inbounos pass
tossed in 10 markers and Jeff
with 26 seconds left and scored on a
cameron had eight. The latter was
layup to make it 56.01. Waverly got a
credited with 14GAHS rebounds .
break nn an official's call. Ainett
GAHS hit 19 of 44 field goal atwas fouled . He sank one of two free
tempts for 43 percent. At the foul
throw attempts with 21 secoods left,
line, the Devils were 21 29 (15 of 20
making it 56-02.
in the final period). GAHS had 31
Lead Cut To Two
rebounds and 13 turnovers.
Waverly got the ball again. Randy
Randy Johnson paced the Tigers
Johnson's long jlUilper cut Gallia 's
with 17 points. Onno Steger had 13,
leal to two, 56-04, with 12 seconds
one in the second half, and Bo Arnett
left.
10. Todd Nathan finished with eight.
Harrington was foul ed in·
· Waverly hit 22 of 51 field goal at-

:r.

49

:~~hepfila.!~~n~:::~~~~

GAHS, down 21-11 with 3:53 left in
the first half, came storming back to

,t:,

Col. Northland 66, Westerville s.
Col . Ready 62, Hamilton "(wp. 60
Col . St. Charles 68, Westerville N.
65
Cal. Whetstone 59, worthington 58
Crestwood 83, southeast 63
.Cuyahoga Hts . 72. Columbia 55
Dalton 64, Hillsdale 54
Day . Belmont 85, Day . Stebbins 67
Day. Cham ·Jul . 61, Day . Kiser 57
Day . Christ . 75, Miami Valley 44
Day . Meadowdale 56, Miamisburg

Ashtabu l-a Edgewood 64, Jefferson

One oddity in the game saw two

.

.:
:Earlier this week, ABC-TV
~esented a movie tiUed, "!'he
ngest Yard," starring Burt
ynolds.
uesday night, at Waverly, Coach
Jfm Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils
~d Coach Gabby Smith's Waverly
'llgers presented a real life version
&lt;t "!'he Longest Minute."
J Fortunately, for GAHS fan s, the
~e Devils held Cl1 to defeat
?taverly, 59-04, in a Southeastern
~o Athletic hand wood thriller.
:n had to be the longest final 60
st:onds in the 55 year history of
SC:OAL basketball, S((llewhere in
"'"neighborhood of 18 minutes.
:IThere were eight timeouts (four
4!fch by the two teams; coaching
npne!Ners you wouldn 1 believe
llaless you were there ; a foul up m
life clock, requiring time to reset it
at.a crucial point when GAHS was
shooting a one;md-one and a contjfiuous parade to the foul line by
yers cl both team;.
.
This kept screaming fans on their
t unW the final hom sounded.

49

Akron North 57, Akron·Hoban 56

- - - - -- - - · --

Frontier 55, Waterfor~ 48
Georgetown 7.1, Batav111 61

Columbiana Crestview 90, Stanton

'

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 9, 1900

$13.50

,•

~

•

J •.

. . _.'~rot.rJtiUr&amp;g : ~-'Cour't St. ·

992-2920

Pomeroy, OH.
.

' .

..

."THE
.. PRO,ESSIONAL PEOPLE"
.

.

West Second Sl

Phone 992·2139
,,

�,

s;;"};;:;;;~i;;;;;·~P"'set~
Jl4fj
I

•

1

n k ed N 0 tre D

·SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) _ Notre
·
.
Dame was beating the San FranCISCO Dons under the backboards,
treating BUl Cartwright 's former
·
·
. .
understudy wtth a mtmmum of
respect.
"!'he coach told me at halftime .
••
h
that I 1· ·
that w~
my ouse,
1ve 10
there arxl shouldo 1let anybody else
in "the Dons' Uoat Wallace Bryant
'.dl te dis
· h h h
S&amp;J a r:
cussmg ow e elped
lumed thtngs around in the second
l)alf Tuesday night as USF roared to
a 67.09 vict~ry over the seventhranked Fighting Insh.
Bryant scored two points in the first half, when Notre. Dame
outre bounded the taller Dons 25-16.
The Irish settled for a 30-30 halftime
standoff, however, making just t:J of
33field goaI atie mpt s.
· Notre Dame dido' get off as many
~nces to score in the second half,
partly because Bryant blocked so
'niany soots. The Irish finished the
night with an embarrassing total of
1;l,tumovers and a 39 percent field
,gD81 shooting mark in the loss which
~e theirrecond 7-2.
·
,i,.It was Notre Dame's first game
. ~ on 1
K t k
cethelr..,_, ossto enuc yoo

seventh
T~~~~~r.:s h~~oo.~~~~'~! ~~~~!~..,,...
am
· e

Dec ~
· ·
Only three other members of The
Associated Press Top Twenty were
in action and· all came away winners,although two had close calls,
Louisville, the No.11 team, routed
St Louis 94-05 in a Metro ~nference
· ..~il N
St J hn'" N y
game wu e o.14 . o o, . . ,
edged Princeton 44-42 and No.20
Georgetown D c withstood a late
' · ·• ,
rally ~y St. Josephs , Pa., and
prevailed 62..)3 .
Bryant, the sophomore•who stepped into the starting center job when
AU-American Cartwright went from
college bi!Sketball to the pr&lt;1!,
scared II of his 13 points in the
second half. He totaled 13 rebounds
and
blocked shots in the victory
which improved unranked USF 's
record to 11 •2·
The Don!l held a 31-21 rebounding
edge in the second half.
"Our front line isn t as big as in
the past few seasons, but we've done
well against big teams. We've
played the Russians and UCLA this
season," said 6-5 forward Tracy
Jackson of Notre Dam~ .
''In the second· half, when we had

six

Tuesday N•ght
Akron Buchtel .56, Massillon 49

61 59
•

'

32

that bad spell USF took advantage
.
•
·
We dido 1 make any shots from the
field and we cou ldn' make our free
throws, either."
Notre Dame led 50-46 with eight
minutes remaining, but USF then
outscored the Irish 11.0, going ahead
to stay at 51.00 on a jump shbt by
Mike Rice with 6t minutes
remaining.
'Th had
d
b
' ey
us own, ut once we
got over the top, we got a lot of confidence and kept it going," said
Coach Dan Belluomini, woo has ooly
oneseni(J' on Iilli.USF squad.
"I thought we were a year away .
Maybe not, " he added.
·
f
Sul:f;btute orward John Hegwood
woo, like Bryant is from Gary, Ind.,
not far from Notre Dame, led the
· ts B
t
d
Dons WI·th 14 potn
· ryan an
guards Quintin Dailey and Billy
Reid had 13 each.
The game's top scorer was Notre
Dame guand Rich Branni~, with 15
points. He was the only Irish player
to shoot better than ~percent (7 of
13) fran the field, but he made one
of four free throws and the team was
a poornine of 19.

'GARS
•
l t • t {l
,
survzves as -mznu e uror
lo hand Waverly 59-54 loon
r loss
'

.

~

JfVikings take

)..~'. 3-44 victory
,

, • Using a balanced scoring attack,
: mmes Valley rolled to a 63-44
I lUilph ove{ Hannan Trace last
ht.

••' The Vikings, now 2-7, got 13 points
;l(rom Brent Miller and 12 apiece
m Jeff Saunders and Allen Bur-

m.
' Greg Webb scared 17 and Carlos
'•
pbell 12to leal Hannan Trace.
:.~ Hannan Trace fell behind&amp;5-12 at
;~e erxl of the first period arxl 34-25
~t the half.
;i« Synunes Valley put the game aut
reach in the third quarter.
The lMs left the Wildcats with an
:~-7 record. Hannan Trace had 29
: tal rebounds with Campbell coUec•'• g11.
.
; Symmes Valley took the reserve
:rAame, 4!&gt;-31 with Shepard leading
:~ way with 22 points. Sheets had
•lj!ight for the Wilckittens.
: [ Hannan Trace travels to Kyger
!:t:reek Friday .

..••;
'I

Avon 57 , Independence 56 .
Avon Lake 11, North R1dgev111e 60
Badger 61, Vienna Mathews 55
Beachwood 55, Twinsburg 45
Bedford Chane! 71. Cleve. Rhodes
58
Bergholz Spring . 107, Leetonia 73
Berl in W : Reserve 71. Lowellville
53
Berne Union 61, Worthington
Christ. 58
Bristol61, Grand Valley 59
Brooklyn 92, Lutheran West 48
BuckeyeS.76,JeffersonUnion59
Buckeye Trail 64, Newcomer·
stown 62
campbe ii ·Memorial89, Brookfield
68 &lt;;:ana l Fulton NW 56, Claymont 38
Cin . Christ. 74, Cln. Hills 33
Cin . Greenhills 74, Taylor 43

44

tempts for 43 percent. The 'llgers
were 10 of 17 at the foul line for 58
percent. Waverly had 211 rebounds,
eight each by Steger (who fouled out
with 1:05lefttoplay) and Nathan.
Waverly had 16tumovers.
In the second haH, GABS pressed
in back court then switched to a
zone •. thus bo!tiizig up Steger ana
crew the final two periods.
GAHS trailed 24-ISat halftime, but
outscored the home team 44-30
during the final two periods of play.

.
·
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams in The
Associoted Press college basketball
poll, with first ·place votes in paren·
theses, records and total points.
Points based on 20 · 19 · 18 · 17 · 16 · 15
. 14 . 13 . 12. 11 ~ 10 9 8 7 ~ 6 . 5 . 4 . 3
·2 · 1:
~ : g~~~ul
1481 (12·01 1,073
1 (!r~? 1 '~~~
J. Ohio st.
1
4. Kentucky
(12·2) 814
5. Syracuse
(11 ·01 ~~
~: ~~~~~i~~a,;:·
~ iiJ
e. Virginia
(12·11 710
9. Oregon St.
(13·1I 606
10. Purdue
18·2) 541
11 . Louisvi lle
(1021 481
12. 1awa
110:11 438

Robinson

Skidmore
TOTALS

1~: ~is;~~~!s.NY

3

Elle~ti~~na;:;ry 1960
. 10:00-l :OO
2:00·5:OO P.M.
Tuesday, No Oil ICe

"'::':o~~~~:oy

2:00·7:30 P.M.
Thursday
001 o
9: :30
· 1:3
2:00·7
P.M.

(;~n ~~~

1~: ~e:t':{oli ~a

:~~l

1t~~~~,Yoo

m

~~~~:.;:~
9

:1~~l
~~
11·41 136

20. Georgetown, DC

19 3)

Except i~~-s~~~~

dayotthemonth.

111

satur-

STUBBORN FLOOR TILES
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POlLY -Doyouhaveany
suggestions for loosening stick -on
floor tiles? I have raised some with a
putty knife but find it is a very lwnd
job.-ALICE
DEAR AL!t:E - I presume these
come off just as any other resilient
floor tiles. Put a pleae of an old sheet
or other such cloth over two or three
tiles and then iroo over them until
the become wann. This will soften
the glue enough s'o your putty knife
will work much faster . Only iron two
or thr,ee at a time because they will
restick if they have time to cool. POlLY
DEAR POLLY - I have a safe and
easy way to keep the chRdren 's mittens from being lost. Sew that sticky
type fabric fastener on the inside
sleeves of the child's coat and the
mittens will stick to it. No more lost
mittens. - HELEN
DEAR POLLY - When painting
with messy QU base paint most of us
g~tit on our hands, anns, faces, etc.
Instead of using a harsh remover
llke turpentine I simply rub in a
teaspoon rl shortening and then
wash with wann water and soap. MRS.A. J.V.
DEAR POlLY - My bathroom
mirror used to fog up after each
soower and then when it ws dried off
with a towel the mirror would
streak. Now I set my electric blow
dryer on hot and blow it into the mir •

/z PRICE
on

1

ALL WOOL
BLENDS

60" Poly Knits
Print &amp; Plain

60" CHINO
45" PERM PRESSWOVENS
SINGER MACHINE

SALE
PRICED

MODEL 533

$189.95

R . 1229.95

11SW-~~~~·c sH~~y,Oh.

Score by quarters:

992·2284

Paul Kimble.

..
:···

Mrs. Rose Reynolds has returned
home from a month's visit with her
son, Val, and his family at Morgantown, W.Va. H(llle for the holidays
with the family were Mr. and Mrs.
Brady Taylor (Lynn Reynolds) who
left Morgantown oo Dec. 30 for
Charleston, S. C. where they are stationed at the Naval Hospital. Mrs.
Taylor ill an·~ating room technician and her husband is a hospital
technician.
Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Rupe spent the
hoDdays in Warren with their Slln-inlaw 111d daughter, Dr. and Mrs.
Joseph McKay, and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Roush and
daughter, Jennifer, and Mrs.
Leverett Roush, have returned
home after visiting over the holidays
with Mr. and Mrs. William Roush
and family In El Paso, Tens. While
there they visited the Carlsbad
Caverans, White Sands NaDonal
Monwnent in New Mexico, and
Juarez In Mexico.

lf3 OFF

e
~

MONEY SA VI.NG SALE I
A BIG

50%

OFF

DEAR POlLY -I have been clip·
ping and saving "cents rlf" coupms
foc years but too often the Ume limit
expired before I remembered to l18e
them, My two teenagers came up
with the following solution. They are
in charge of clipping them and giving me the ones I should use on my
weekly shopping day .. They receive
any cash rebates as part of their
aUowances. They love doing it and I
am happy to l18e the ocupons. ELIZABETH
DEAR POLLY - Never throw
away an old felt hat. Use it to make
protectors for the bottoms of lamps
arxl vases and bookends. Trace size
of the bottom of object, cut out and
glue in place on the bottom. Saves
many a scratch. -GOLDIE
Polly will send you one rl her signed thank7&lt;ou newspaper-coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In lier
column.
Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

'

NO EXCHANGES -

"'

Valley (631 --i.'l'ilier 5·3·

SALE IS RIGHT NOW

6-Q·12 ; Harell 41 ·9; T.
Totals

a.

'Sears\

ATTENTION:

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AND
MIDDLEPORT AREA
FOR THE
DAILY SENTINEL

Heat aleman and you'll get twice
the amount of juice. Pop the fruit into a 200 degree F. oven for a few

Pomeroy
'•;':\ during
:~-~ld ~~gr::~::7,; =~~reskl"":~=~~
furlough .
squeeze more productive.
t Personal Notes ~\ir--------------1
his

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine
spent several days during the
holidays with their son-in-blw and.
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. David
Eskew, Kandi, Beth and Amy,
Newark. They were joined for
Christmas dinner by Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eskew and Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Fields and som, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Errol! Cmroy,
Cllester, spent the holidays In Akron
visiting their sons, George and
Hugh, arid their families.

Housiguests
in Texas
Mrs. Aile!) Hampton hlis returned
from Corpus Christi, Texas where
she spent the holidays as the
hooseguest of Mr. and Mrs.
Sylvester LyUe.
Joining the family for the hoDday
were Mrs. Hampton's stepson,
Ethan Allen Hampton, Jr., Raymood, Washington. Otheli.· visitors·
were Mrs. Mary Scott and Miss LDis
Hampton, Los Angeles; , Vernon
Hampton, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Hampton,
HoUBton, Texas; Mr: and Mrs. Mit.cheli Hampton aoo family, Skidmore, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. Dewey
Ha~q~ton, Beeville, Te:ms; Leonard
LyUe aDd famiJ.y, and Mrs. Wilford
Sinithandfamily, Tulsa,Okja.

'

DISCOUNT
OFF
TO
ON MEN'S, WOMEN, 'S &amp;
CHILDREN'S SHOES

50%

CALL 992-2156

CHAPMAN SHOES

BElWEEN 8:30 AM &amp;5 PM

NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

CARBURETOR AND
GAS LINE
ICING

992·5292
(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich 1
109 High St.
Pomeroy

'Ji'!)) '\- - - - - - - -....

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

-

·"

Mr. and Mrs. AgUBtin Montanez
and children, Agustin, Jr . Carolee,
Todd and Shawn fl. Arecibo, Puerto
Rico, spent the holidays here with
her paren!B, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Ables, Vale St., Pomeroy.
Mrs. Montanez is the former
CarolYn Allman P(llleroy . Also
here visiting with the family were
Mr; and Mrs. Olarles Smith and
daughter, Tamara, Charleston, W.
Va .; Mrs. Aubrey Asbury of
Elkview, W. Va. and Mrs. Clarence
Michaelson, CharlestCil, W.Va.
The Montanez family returned to
Puerto Rico on New Year's Day.

THE PHOTO PLACE

• • MEN'S WEAR_., ..

5·2·12; Crawford 4-1-9;

KEVIN ANGEL

Spend holidays here.

12lh

Protects

n.

to

-25
deg.

GIFTS
For The

FRENCH CITY 20 COUNT

WIENERS

•1•'
BACON
Racine, 0.

LB.

PHEBE 'S STORE
We Glady Accept Fed . Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
9:001il7 :00
Saturday 9:00·9:00
CLOSED

STEAK

~f,zf:Iavors 2/89' CRACKERS

$}29

LB.

40 oz.

1 lb. Box

LB.

$}19

POLISH
SIUJSAGE

$ 99

69'

23 oz.
Tender Leaf

TEA BAG

09

, · SILVEFfPLATE
CU
FROM

15~ LB.

'1 29

RO.AST

'1

FROM YOUR JEWELER

CABBAGE

LB.

PORK SHOULDER

21bs.

JELLO

5LB.

.

100 Count

LB.

99:e

.EMERGENCY

TOW ROPE
6.500 Lbs. with.siiP. Hooks

ONIONS'
.

3 LB. BAG

.

'

39~

. FROM
'·

Vlllley

\i/a Gallon '

~~

99~
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SPRAY
CLEANEII

· ,1flndshitld ~'
:- W~e.r _ r
·~leaner . · .

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D"ICER

aa~
RETAIL VALUE ..... I.69
Unfreezes frozen locks.
Automatic
"push ·
in(ection."

cu •..,
c..... u

· CARBURETOR
SPRAY CLEANER

'128

REMIU

~ Anti-Fr~ ~
· ~,_.

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WINDSHIELD WASHER
ANTI-FREEZE

99~

GAL

G&amp;J AUTO P

'

INI'ANTS' F!IOINO lET
.
.
.'1'

BUrrER MILK

YM-'1'1•

Regular $9.75

$}'~ ·

$}89

BLUE PENGUIN.

BABY

GRAPEFRUIT'
T-BONE
STEAK

troop ··. ~

Kyger PTA.
Stiltner, patrol leader, aDd Sbery
The Juniors meet on Tuesdays at
Cooper, assistant patrol leader.Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary School
other members are Ni118 Hager,
to learn new games, songs, crafts
Sheena Harrison, Becky Price and
and IIIIJCh more.
Stacy Yankuns.
They recenUy participated in the
Members of Patrol B are Becky.
!llrlstmas parade which was held in
Thomas, patrol leader and Amy•
Gallipolis.
Brown, assistant patrol -leader.· ·
The girls held their Investiture • other members are Stephanie Pen- ·
Rededication Ceremony on
nington, Missy Snyder, Carol Stover
Tuesday, Nov. 20, at Cheshlreand Amy WalTIBiey.
Kyger. Mothers and leaders pinned
the new Jwdors. The Jwdors held . - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
their ceremony with Brownie Girl
Scout Troop 1515.
Authori1ed CATALOG
Cheshire Jwdor Troop 1099 memSALES MERCHANT
bers are Amy Brown, Sherry
Cooper, Nina Hager, Sheena
Harrison, Stephanie Pennington,
Becky Price, Missy Snyder, Janet
l'llone P92-2i 11
Stiltner, Carol Stover, Becky
23 4 E. Main St.
Thomas, AmY Wamsley, and Stacy
Pomeroy,O.
Yanlruns.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; .iudy Williams
Leader for Jwdor Troop is MrS.
tpen: Mon . thruWed. 9-5,
Betty Edwards, and co-leader is
hur . 9·12, Fri. 9·5, Sat. 9·2 .
Mrs. Janet Thomas.
Satisfact ion Guaranteed
or Your Money B•ck
Members of Patrol A are Janet

:i~

\

Wearhaus

NO CHARGES-NO LAYAWAYS

Dealer

A party in celebration of the 70th
birthday of Mrs. Iva Stewart was
held &amp;I turday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. James Stewart,
Rutland.
Following a dbmer, a decorated
· cake inscribed ''Happy Birthday,
Mom", coffee and pwteh were served. Pictures were taken during the
· evening of Mrs. Stewart, her
children arxl grandchildren.
Attending the celebration were
Mr. and Mrs. JameliStewart, Beverly and Jim B;J, . Mr. and Mrs .•
WUliam Brown, Teresa, Kelly and
Karla, Mr. and Mrs. Herb EDlott,
Angie, Amy aoo Becky. Mr. aDd
Mrs. Robert Si:!aon, Rob, John aDd
Melissa, all of RuUand; and
Clarence Stewart of CollUilbll!l who
spent the l'ftlekend here .
Mrs. Stewart, since her recent
oospitalization, is residing with her
childrm.

Chellhlre has a new Jwdor Girl
Scout troop this year with 12 girls experiencing scouting.
For Halloween and Chrisbnas, the
girls made glfts for the boys and
girls at the Children's Home. For
Thanksgiving, they made tray
favors for the children in pediatrics
at Holzer Medical Center. 1'l1ey also
made turkeys for a bake sale, which .
was sponsored by the Cheshire•

.

"

JUST GIVE US A CALL.

ePRE·WASHED JEANS By Wranglers, Mr. Legs, D.C. &amp; STATLER
eWESTERN FLANNEL SHIRTS- S·M·L·XL- DISCO SHIRTS· Fancy Prints
eSWEATERS, CARDIGANS &amp; PULLOVERS eSUPER SUDED SHIRTS. Were
$16.95, Now $7.48 eVlNYL·DENIM·CORDUROY DOWN FILLED JACKETS
eVELOUR SHIRTS • Solids &amp; Fancies eWRINKLE FREE QUINAS DRESS .
SHIRTS e ENTIRE STOCK OF QUILTED VESTS eSPORT COATS . Sizes 361o
46 •

nothing does the iob better
t han a sty lish watchband from
Sped idel . Spe idel - originator
of f amous Twist -0 -Fie)(oo wat c: hband constru ction . Just the
t hing to give new l ife to an old
wa t ch.

70th birthdgy G,heshire area gains new scout
reported

VISITS HOME
.
Kevin Angel, stationed with the U.
S. Army at Fort Lee, Va., spent the
. oolidays in Athens with his mother,
Mrs. Ann Angel. Kevin earlier completed his basic training at Fort
Jackson,S. C. He was met at the Col';'i':':'•'•'•'•'•':'•':'•'•':'•'.:•::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;:•:•:•:•;•'• '•'•';'" umbus Airport by his grandmother,

We are still .taking senior portrait appointments .
Your preview set will include portraits before tradi·
tiona! oil backdrops as well as outdoor type scenics :
You'll like the personal attention and reasonable
prices we offer.

A watch that run s like new

5p.e.t,dR.t

DENISE

YES I

ON THE FOLLOWING GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

should look the part. And

Authorized

ror. It is unfogged in less than half a
minute and witlt...nll.. streaka. -

NOT 10%- NOT 20% • NOT 30% - BUT

AND LOOK
LIKE NEW

4·4·12 ; Jones 0-Q·O; Webb
Chapman I -2-4; Waugh 0·2·2;
1·2-4; Petri e 2-Q-4. Totals 14 ·16·

---

-·

Polly Cramer

.•'.·..• i

1

-~·

POLLY"$ POINTIRS

r;::~~~:"fl

Gallipolis
5 10 23 21 .. 59
Waverly
10 14 12 19 .. 54
OFFICIALS - Ralph Davis and

Our ex perts specialize in the repair of
all ma kes and models of watches.

Hannan Trace (44) ··Beaver 0-1-1;

1·63.

4

-Announcinv the
Office Schedule of
Dr . Mateo P. Dayo, Jr.
·
304 N. 2nd Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio

:i·;

0·0 0·0 0 0 0
19-44 21 ·29 19 31 59
WAVERLY (54)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Steger
5·14 3·4 5 8 13
Johnson
8·10 1·3 2 5 17
Arnett
3·9 4·5 4 3 10
Moore
H
0·0 1 1 2
·Nathan
49 0·2 3 8 8
1·2 0-Q 3 1 2
Teeters
Smith .
0·3 2·2 3 2 2
0·0 0·0 0 0 0 .
Pendleton
0-Q 0-1 0 0 0
Banta
TOTALS
22-51 10·17 21 28 54

WE'll MAKE YOUR WATCH
RUN LIKE NEW

12 25 3~ 44
15 34 48 63

1·4·6; Wiseman 1-0 -2.

1~2

0·4

Greenevlew 49, Spring Cath. 47
Grove City 70, Whltehall67
Harrison 56, St. Bernard 36
Hawken 68, Baptist Chrlst. 63
Howland 57, Niles McKinley 42
Indian Valley N. 61, Conott_on
Valley 60
......,ewett·Sclo 58, lakeland 54
Kalida 80, Pandora-Gilboa 58
Keystone lO, south Amherst 33
La Brae 49, Champion &gt;Ill
Lakeview 4, Liberty 36
Lakewood 58, Parma Normandy
35
Lima Cat h. 7~. Bat~ 66
.
Little Miaml63, Clinton MasSie 46
Lorai n67 ,Loral n5outhv iew~3
Lorain King 64, Findlay 49
Lords town 61 , Farmington 52
Lutheran E. 72. W. Reserve ~cad .
68Madison Plains 86, Greenfield 57'
Maplewood 68, southington 66
Marion Harding 70, Wapokoneta
59Mason , Lemon -Monroe 71
78
Mayfield 66, west Geauga 65 •
[r;;;:::=.~-~~::=:;;;;;;;;

f,'

e wm was a W s e!g
1D 19
meetings with Waverly since 1970. It
was the Blue Devils' third victory in
the palace former WHS Coach C. D.
Hawhee built, and first there in four
years.
WeliBton Next
Friday, GAHS will host high .flying
Wellston (7~) while the Waverly
Tigers travel to Ironton for a key
contest.
Box score:
GALLIPOLIS (59)
Player
Fg Ft PI Rb Tp
Nibert
0·0 0·0 3 4 0
Wea ver
1·4 2·2 1 I 4
Cameron
3·6 2·2 3 14 8
Armstrong
1·16 11-14 3 I 25
Harr ington
3·4 4-7 3 0 10
Price
5·10 1·2 2 8 11
Boggess
o-o o-o · o o o

a.

·~ ••mo•be ll
.,.,.,,c~

Ton
twenty
I:'

~:e~=~s~f;~r;:g"::with
119~:- ~,nredi~~·ahsnaoa~voung
Th ·
G u· • · hth .

Quarter ss:

Valley

Doylestown 78, Northwestern 62
East Canton 51. Tuslaw 33
Elmwood58,BowlingGreen57
Elyria west 78, Midview 59
Emanuel Baptist Ill, Fayette 49

plays . They (I'im Skidmore and

tentionally with 10 seconds left. The
GAHS lefty hit one of two attempts
take a 38-36lead going into the fina l
to give GAHSa 57-54 advantage.
stanza.
Waverly missed a desperation
After Todd Nathan's goal (6:47)
shot with big Kent Price coming
gave the host Tigers their final lead
down with the most important
of the game (41-40) Gallipolis,
rebound in his career. Amlstrong
behind Greg Harrington, Bill AI·
was fouled purposely with three
mstrong, Kent Price, Jeff cameron
seconds left. The GAHS senior guard
and Mark Weaver, stormed out to a
sank both shots to make it 59-54.
54-45lead with 1 :05left to play.
Waverly lost the ball again.
Appeared " In Bag"
GAHS' Mark Weaver fired a pass to
It appeared GAHS had the game
Harrington down court as time ran
"in the bag,'' IJJt it wasn t over, yet.
out.
Nathan hit a long jumper (0:47 ) to
The victory, Gallia 's first on the
reduce Git::a 's lead to 54-47.
road this season, left GAHS with a:;.
Bill Amlstrong wa; fouled on the
4 overall mark. The Blue Devils
following inbounds play. He missed
climbed into a fifth place tie with
at the free throw lin e. With 33 secon·
Waverly with a :hl league record.
ds left, Cllarles Smith canned two
Waverly dropped to 5-lionthe year.
free throws. Waverly trailed54-49.
Armstrong Leads Scorers
Again Amlstrong was fouled, thi s ''
Armstrong led all scorers with 25
time intentionally with 32 seconds
paints. Price came off the bench to
left. Aimstrong made both shots. It
score 11 points and pick off eight
was :ili-5 1.
rebounds for GAHS, Hattington
Bo Ainett stole. an inbounos pass
tossed in 10 markers and Jeff
with 26 seconds left and scored on a
cameron had eight. The latter was
layup to make it 56.01. Waverly got a
credited with 14GAHS rebounds .
break nn an official's call. Ainett
GAHS hit 19 of 44 field goal atwas fouled . He sank one of two free
tempts for 43 percent. At the foul
throw attempts with 21 secoods left,
line, the Devils were 21 29 (15 of 20
making it 56-02.
in the final period). GAHS had 31
Lead Cut To Two
rebounds and 13 turnovers.
Waverly got the ball again. Randy
Randy Johnson paced the Tigers
Johnson's long jlUilper cut Gallia 's
with 17 points. Onno Steger had 13,
leal to two, 56-04, with 12 seconds
one in the second half, and Bo Arnett
left.
10. Todd Nathan finished with eight.
Harrington was foul ed in·
· Waverly hit 22 of 51 field goal at-

:r.

49

:~~hepfila.!~~n~:::~~~~

GAHS, down 21-11 with 3:53 left in
the first half, came storming back to

,t:,

Col. Northland 66, Westerville s.
Col . Ready 62, Hamilton "(wp. 60
Col . St. Charles 68, Westerville N.
65
Cal. Whetstone 59, worthington 58
Crestwood 83, southeast 63
.Cuyahoga Hts . 72. Columbia 55
Dalton 64, Hillsdale 54
Day . Belmont 85, Day . Stebbins 67
Day. Cham ·Jul . 61, Day . Kiser 57
Day . Christ . 75, Miami Valley 44
Day . Meadowdale 56, Miamisburg

Ashtabu l-a Edgewood 64, Jefferson

One oddity in the game saw two

.

.:
:Earlier this week, ABC-TV
~esented a movie tiUed, "!'he
ngest Yard," starring Burt
ynolds.
uesday night, at Waverly, Coach
Jfm Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils
~d Coach Gabby Smith's Waverly
'llgers presented a real life version
&lt;t "!'he Longest Minute."
J Fortunately, for GAHS fan s, the
~e Devils held Cl1 to defeat
?taverly, 59-04, in a Southeastern
~o Athletic hand wood thriller.
:n had to be the longest final 60
st:onds in the 55 year history of
SC:OAL basketball, S((llewhere in
"'"neighborhood of 18 minutes.
:IThere were eight timeouts (four
4!fch by the two teams; coaching
npne!Ners you wouldn 1 believe
llaless you were there ; a foul up m
life clock, requiring time to reset it
at.a crucial point when GAHS was
shooting a one;md-one and a contjfiuous parade to the foul line by
yers cl both team;.
.
This kept screaming fans on their
t unW the final hom sounded.

49

Akron North 57, Akron·Hoban 56

- - - - -- - - · --

Frontier 55, Waterfor~ 48
Georgetown 7.1, Batav111 61

Columbiana Crestview 90, Stanton

'

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 9, 1900

$13.50

,•

~

•

J •.

. . _.'~rot.rJtiUr&amp;g : ~-'Cour't St. ·

992-2920

Pomeroy, OH.
.

' .

..

."THE
.. PRO,ESSIONAL PEOPLE"
.

.

West Second Sl

Phone 992·2139
,,

�-

-

Our firm lnlenllon It to have every
adwrt!Hd Item In alock on our Jhel'let.
II an ad••lhl&amp;'d ltam 11 not avaUab~ tor
purchaM Clue to any unloreMtn
reaSOrt , K mart wilt l"ue 1 Rain Check
on request lor the merchandiM 1o be
purchaMd at the ..,. price wh.never
aval .. bll or will MN you a comp~rable
quality Item 11 a comptrab~ reduc:Uon
.&amp;n price . Our policy II
I
cualomar-s MNIII ..ctlon

'~!!
4mart·
till
With exchange

~~~~~~;~~~

54 88

••

.•'
•

K
4/48
Battery

6 ! !g. 8.96

Polyester
· Woven Pants

S1zes To F1t Most
U.S . Cars and
Light Trucks .

1--

KM200 2+2
Fiberglass
Belted
"-'V.-"'1' Whitewalls

Our Reg
1.07 Pr.
Pair
Jersey Gloves
For men and boys
wrist. Brown .

1!~3

94

Thermal Boot Socks
Our 2.02 to 4.44 Pair.
Warm blends . F1t 10-14.

596R~~r7 96
Metal folding Chair
Heavy duty steel
'l:hair folds for easy
stor

1

Tnm-flttmg pull-on
pants at budgetpleasing savmgs .
'-\--.--~
F ~m..:~d sty Ie s with
pockets and
other n1ce deta1ls.
Easy-care. Save

4'!!Reg.
20.67
Utility Carl
Handy 3 tier metal
cart rolls easily,

r":: [7
... "'\

Misses' Sizes

·888 L.C.D. Calculator

'];;

J[

b::''

t?

4~~9

'2

Our Reg 295
Handwarmer, Fluid
Pocket -s1ze warmer
plus 16-oz: fluid .

5.96

Basketball
Off1c1al size we1ght.
Rubber cover

28 !u~eg.
37.97
Bar Stool

seat

9~urReg.
9
14.97
Metal Storage Shelves
Sturdy 4 shelf unit.
60x36x12".

-87
83

$ 9, 0urReg.
10.9 7

s.tterlet not lntllldtd

Personal-s1ze portable w1th solid-state chass1s.
automatic color and frequency co ntrols.
Plus F.E.T.
1.74 Each

Our Reg .
12.97

Hand-held ca lculator features
Our Reg . easy-to-read, 8-d1g1t L C D
d1splay and 4-key memory.
9.97

-~t)7J~~~~ith$f~~e ~

WI_,

Color TV Set

Big-screen portable featu res color Mon1to,l! II
system, quartz preCISIOn electron ic tuning . :.

Deluxe Unit

Pre-washed
Denim Jeans

12-d1git 2-color printed
Our Reg-:- d1splliy and green light
93.97
readout. Memory. Save.

Me n 's
cotton
Jeans w1th elastic
wa1stband 1n the
back Save

.~'488- Desk-Top Type
10-digit printing calculator
Our Reg . w1th one-touch grand total
62.97 memory. Save at K mart

.

Men's Hooded
Sweat Shirt .,flp -front sweat
sh 1rt w1th muff
pockets. In lam" mated polyester.

v

CHARGI 111
WI HONOR

s·~622
Our Reg. 7. 96-8.57

.

Yarn-dyed Spring Tops
Add a breathe of spnng to your wardrobe with ...
our pretty yarn-dyed fash1on tops . Colorful
plaids with revere collar, roll-back cap sleeves
1n polyester/cotton . Misses' sizes. Save now .

2.58

,.,~.:. ~~ · Thermal Shirts

..-.. ,'·
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..'
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~\

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....-'
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..
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OR

64!~788
AMI FM \ndash
With 8-tracl&lt;
tape play er·

'•

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8 0 Pa'r
our 28 .88-37 88

24
ial Speakers
coax
6 9" or 4x10".
5,1, · round , x k
Handles 50- W pea

/4,88 19.sa ll9.77Pr.

Stere
S"

Pr'.our

o Speakers Del

speaker m aces llc-front cab,ne t

"·''

.

8

and

Our 149.77

uxe Speake

woofer 8 . d

two 2;;..
2

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rone
tweeters .

3! t

Anlde Length DraweJS

229!~9
ou
.h

1 Recorders

Stereo Wtt
a
AM IFM stereo receiver
players/recorders , recor

1

-track and cassette
~hanger speakers.
'
'

s 4?

Our Reg

.
nd comfort
warm sh!rt;o~t absorbent
fit pantsJ '"soyssizes4-7 .
carton. r .

25994

U&lt;£ !"frAil . .. ~ CAlli.'

~ --~

-

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3~.!,,

~-our Re9 -

-

master charge

6 97

P4IR
Our Reg , 8. 97

~rew Tube Socks

ens·s,zes 10-13
Boys'9·11,Pkg.3.47

d

Ranch Suede

~en's sizes

mg.

.

2 pr ·120
OurReg.87c
STREJ&amp;':NI PANTIES

NYLON
FASHION
GOWNS
Long or wcltz length gowns
Wtlh assorted tnms In
wanted styles. New season
colors , s1zes S-M-L

Choice of assorted pnnts in one-stze-fits-a\1
100% stretch polyester. For stzes 5-7 .

.-

24~?s·
1 0-Cup Mr. Coffee "
W1 th Coffee Sav er "
funnel. 25 f11ters.

..., .
..

4~~s

Heating Pad
Wetproo f pad wtth 3
heat settmgs

148!!~

168 84
Dual Recorders
8- tra ck I cas sell e
player i recorder.

67!!
79.88
Record Player
3-speed automatic
record player.

198

!Reg.
•
29.88
TV Pedestal Table
Holds up to 19" color
portables. Wood look .

9'lC ~:~:c;_S§ 2!r'!g. i?;!g.

$·1 0

Your

•
Our.
• Pack of Envelopes
5 Q,4J/4X11 " ;25, 6V2X
9 '12' or 15 , 10x13" .

~

1.96 '

3.28

Typing Paper
250 sheets eraseable 8V2x 11 " paper.

Legal Pads
Three 50-sheet pads.
Ledger Outfit ... 9.97

'7

2FOR

o ur' Reg .
4 97
20x26" Pillow
Polyester fiberfill m
polyester / cotton.

7!!~.10. 97

1297

36s~e

744~ays

Acrylic Blanket
Woven plaid ; nylon
binding. 72x90-in.

297

· 62x80 "
Our Reg . 17.97
Slumber Bag
Print reverses to
solid. 100 " zipper.

Bath Towel
Our Reg . 4.44
24x44' ' Bath Towel
She ared
polye ster

.,,•
1
'

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......_•...

Excednn si

-

..

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,•

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5!!

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12' Booster Cable
Deluxe, all-copper.
Tangle-proal Box

'. ~ ·

,.
''

.-.
-•-•
,.t.

51!~

Deluxe Cushion
Heavy-duty HercuIon • olefm Colors
18x35". · Htreul••fk.v. TM

7"

Our Reg .
11.88

Ginger Jar Lamp
tat
Classic . ginger
shape, with white vinyl·

Deluxe TV Stand
Wa Inu t -g r~ in vinyl
with laminated hard ·

J

19Our . Reg,
1.82
Pledge Spray

Regular or Lemon. 14

oz.

$3

OurReg .
3.88

Scope Mouthwash
40 oz . Economy size.
SAVE.

J29
;
SAVE
•

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Herbal Essence ~
)
15 oz. Shampoo
Net. ~ .!······ ·l

•

118

Your
Cho1ce
our Reg. 1.78
Account Books
Ledgers and record
journal. 8V2X5V. 1n

178

1!!~

Your
Choice
Our. Reg. ~.38
Pocket Files
Tax , warranty or
bu dget 11x8 112 1n.

100 Excedrin •
The extra-strength
pain reliever, Save .

14'!~

30 Sinutabs •
Relieves sinus con gest1on . headac he

36 Aspirin
St Joseph " asp1rin
for children Save

5·oz.' Crest ·
Regular or mint
Crest' toothpaste.

94~ays

Aqua-fresh •
6.4-oz.' refre.shmg
toothpaste. Save

..... "'·

~

2 Aesurtace/true rotors
3 lnspecl calipers
· 4 Bl&amp;ed Hydraulic System

,
''
~

''
' '
' '

Jli

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and refill
5. Repack Inner and outer
bearings

I
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6. Inspect rear linings tor

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Deluxe H.D . Shocks
1'/ " " piston . •; , ·
shalt. For many U.S.

i

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.,

ll~Reg.

Spray Enamel
Inte rior-ex terior
paint. 11·16 oz.'

1.14

7 ! r !g 12.84
Ironing Table
4 legs , adjustable ·
Pad· Cover . . . 1.47

97.u~Reg_
Soft

'

1.34

Scruii ,
Cleanser wl1h mild
abrasive. Netwt. ~6oz :

'

. 44

4

Our Reg . 6.66

'Big Stu' Pot
' Big 11' .5-qt. enamel
coakin~ pot. Lid.

1

I
I
I
I

97 .'

Our Reg. 2.64·

. 1-lb. ~k Ham
Ready ' to eat Ham. 4.27 .
2·Lb. Ha.!TI

..

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~oupon

4-Pack 1-ji &amp; Dri "
toilet !issue. '

'""''per roll
Umt1 :l,., Cuaromer •

·.oo. 4¥1• 4Y~ " .

1·PI't

Whi.. 12fl0 Pkv•. P•r s tor• UIJt

Of'-' Good Set.. J1n U . IMO

' 84
' 4·Days
6-0z.• Comtrex •
36 Comtrex ' Capsules .... ' . . ' 2.64

14~

Baby Cloths
150 pre -moisten ed
cloths with lanolin, ·

4~!

56 Dexatrim~
One -a' day
capsules and diet plan.

l!~ow

3-0z.' Ben-Gay'
Greaseless rub to
sooth sore muscles

�-

-

Our firm lnlenllon It to have every
adwrt!Hd Item In alock on our Jhel'let.
II an ad••lhl&amp;'d ltam 11 not avaUab~ tor
purchaM Clue to any unloreMtn
reaSOrt , K mart wilt l"ue 1 Rain Check
on request lor the merchandiM 1o be
purchaMd at the ..,. price wh.never
aval .. bll or will MN you a comp~rable
quality Item 11 a comptrab~ reduc:Uon
.&amp;n price . Our policy II
I
cualomar-s MNIII ..ctlon

'~!!
4mart·
till
With exchange

~~~~~~;~~~

54 88

••

.•'
•

K
4/48
Battery

6 ! !g. 8.96

Polyester
· Woven Pants

S1zes To F1t Most
U.S . Cars and
Light Trucks .

1--

KM200 2+2
Fiberglass
Belted
"-'V.-"'1' Whitewalls

Our Reg
1.07 Pr.
Pair
Jersey Gloves
For men and boys
wrist. Brown .

1!~3

94

Thermal Boot Socks
Our 2.02 to 4.44 Pair.
Warm blends . F1t 10-14.

596R~~r7 96
Metal folding Chair
Heavy duty steel
'l:hair folds for easy
stor

1

Tnm-flttmg pull-on
pants at budgetpleasing savmgs .
'-\--.--~
F ~m..:~d sty Ie s with
pockets and
other n1ce deta1ls.
Easy-care. Save

4'!!Reg.
20.67
Utility Carl
Handy 3 tier metal
cart rolls easily,

r":: [7
... "'\

Misses' Sizes

·888 L.C.D. Calculator

'];;

J[

b::''

t?

4~~9

'2

Our Reg 295
Handwarmer, Fluid
Pocket -s1ze warmer
plus 16-oz: fluid .

5.96

Basketball
Off1c1al size we1ght.
Rubber cover

28 !u~eg.
37.97
Bar Stool

seat

9~urReg.
9
14.97
Metal Storage Shelves
Sturdy 4 shelf unit.
60x36x12".

-87
83

$ 9, 0urReg.
10.9 7

s.tterlet not lntllldtd

Personal-s1ze portable w1th solid-state chass1s.
automatic color and frequency co ntrols.
Plus F.E.T.
1.74 Each

Our Reg .
12.97

Hand-held ca lculator features
Our Reg . easy-to-read, 8-d1g1t L C D
d1splay and 4-key memory.
9.97

-~t)7J~~~~ith$f~~e ~

WI_,

Color TV Set

Big-screen portable featu res color Mon1to,l! II
system, quartz preCISIOn electron ic tuning . :.

Deluxe Unit

Pre-washed
Denim Jeans

12-d1git 2-color printed
Our Reg-:- d1splliy and green light
93.97
readout. Memory. Save.

Me n 's
cotton
Jeans w1th elastic
wa1stband 1n the
back Save

.~'488- Desk-Top Type
10-digit printing calculator
Our Reg . w1th one-touch grand total
62.97 memory. Save at K mart

.

Men's Hooded
Sweat Shirt .,flp -front sweat
sh 1rt w1th muff
pockets. In lam" mated polyester.

v

CHARGI 111
WI HONOR

s·~622
Our Reg. 7. 96-8.57

.

Yarn-dyed Spring Tops
Add a breathe of spnng to your wardrobe with ...
our pretty yarn-dyed fash1on tops . Colorful
plaids with revere collar, roll-back cap sleeves
1n polyester/cotton . Misses' sizes. Save now .

2.58

,.,~.:. ~~ · Thermal Shirts

..-.. ,'·
t•.
..'
..,•..
~\

'

....-'
._,.
..
...
.,' .

'

'

'

OR

64!~788
AMI FM \ndash
With 8-tracl&lt;
tape play er·

'•

•'

8 0 Pa'r
our 28 .88-37 88

24
ial Speakers
coax
6 9" or 4x10".
5,1, · round , x k
Handles 50- W pea

/4,88 19.sa ll9.77Pr.

Stere
S"

Pr'.our

o Speakers Del

speaker m aces llc-front cab,ne t

"·''

.

8

and

Our 149.77

uxe Speake

woofer 8 . d

two 2;;..
2

rs

rone
tweeters .

3! t

Anlde Length DraweJS

229!~9
ou
.h

1 Recorders

Stereo Wtt
a
AM IFM stereo receiver
players/recorders , recor

1

-track and cassette
~hanger speakers.
'
'

s 4?

Our Reg

.
nd comfort
warm sh!rt;o~t absorbent
fit pantsJ '"soyssizes4-7 .
carton. r .

25994

U&lt;£ !"frAil . .. ~ CAlli.'

~ --~

-

I

3~.!,,

~-our Re9 -

-

master charge

6 97

P4IR
Our Reg , 8. 97

~rew Tube Socks

ens·s,zes 10-13
Boys'9·11,Pkg.3.47

d

Ranch Suede

~en's sizes

mg.

.

2 pr ·120
OurReg.87c
STREJ&amp;':NI PANTIES

NYLON
FASHION
GOWNS
Long or wcltz length gowns
Wtlh assorted tnms In
wanted styles. New season
colors , s1zes S-M-L

Choice of assorted pnnts in one-stze-fits-a\1
100% stretch polyester. For stzes 5-7 .

.-

24~?s·
1 0-Cup Mr. Coffee "
W1 th Coffee Sav er "
funnel. 25 f11ters.

..., .
..

4~~s

Heating Pad
Wetproo f pad wtth 3
heat settmgs

148!!~

168 84
Dual Recorders
8- tra ck I cas sell e
player i recorder.

67!!
79.88
Record Player
3-speed automatic
record player.

198

!Reg.
•
29.88
TV Pedestal Table
Holds up to 19" color
portables. Wood look .

9'lC ~:~:c;_S§ 2!r'!g. i?;!g.

$·1 0

Your

•
Our.
• Pack of Envelopes
5 Q,4J/4X11 " ;25, 6V2X
9 '12' or 15 , 10x13" .

~

1.96 '

3.28

Typing Paper
250 sheets eraseable 8V2x 11 " paper.

Legal Pads
Three 50-sheet pads.
Ledger Outfit ... 9.97

'7

2FOR

o ur' Reg .
4 97
20x26" Pillow
Polyester fiberfill m
polyester / cotton.

7!!~.10. 97

1297

36s~e

744~ays

Acrylic Blanket
Woven plaid ; nylon
binding. 72x90-in.

297

· 62x80 "
Our Reg . 17.97
Slumber Bag
Print reverses to
solid. 100 " zipper.

Bath Towel
Our Reg . 4.44
24x44' ' Bath Towel
She ared
polye ster

.,,•
1
'

.
......_•...

Excednn si

-

..

.•
,•

.••

5!!

"

12' Booster Cable
Deluxe, all-copper.
Tangle-proal Box

'. ~ ·

,.
''

.-.
-•-•
,.t.

51!~

Deluxe Cushion
Heavy-duty HercuIon • olefm Colors
18x35". · Htreul••fk.v. TM

7"

Our Reg .
11.88

Ginger Jar Lamp
tat
Classic . ginger
shape, with white vinyl·

Deluxe TV Stand
Wa Inu t -g r~ in vinyl
with laminated hard ·

J

19Our . Reg,
1.82
Pledge Spray

Regular or Lemon. 14

oz.

$3

OurReg .
3.88

Scope Mouthwash
40 oz . Economy size.
SAVE.

J29
;
SAVE
•

J

Herbal Essence ~
)
15 oz. Shampoo
Net. ~ .!······ ·l

•

118

Your
Cho1ce
our Reg. 1.78
Account Books
Ledgers and record
journal. 8V2X5V. 1n

178

1!!~

Your
Choice
Our. Reg. ~.38
Pocket Files
Tax , warranty or
bu dget 11x8 112 1n.

100 Excedrin •
The extra-strength
pain reliever, Save .

14'!~

30 Sinutabs •
Relieves sinus con gest1on . headac he

36 Aspirin
St Joseph " asp1rin
for children Save

5·oz.' Crest ·
Regular or mint
Crest' toothpaste.

94~ays

Aqua-fresh •
6.4-oz.' refre.shmg
toothpaste. Save

..... "'·

~

2 Aesurtace/true rotors
3 lnspecl calipers
· 4 Bl&amp;ed Hydraulic System

,
''
~

''
' '
' '

Jli

I :

and refill
5. Repack Inner and outer
bearings

I
I

I

6. Inspect rear linings tor

I
I
I
I

, '' '

-..-

~

I

'

~

'
r'

•

c

.

'

l R l lsave 1
Deluxe H.D . Shocks
1'/ " " piston . •; , ·
shalt. For many U.S.

i

,,..•.

·.·

.,

ll~Reg.

Spray Enamel
Inte rior-ex terior
paint. 11·16 oz.'

1.14

7 ! r !g 12.84
Ironing Table
4 legs , adjustable ·
Pad· Cover . . . 1.47

97.u~Reg_
Soft

'

1.34

Scruii ,
Cleanser wl1h mild
abrasive. Netwt. ~6oz :

'

. 44

4

Our Reg . 6.66

'Big Stu' Pot
' Big 11' .5-qt. enamel
coakin~ pot. Lid.

1

I
I
I
I

97 .'

Our Reg. 2.64·

. 1-lb. ~k Ham
Ready ' to eat Ham. 4.27 .
2·Lb. Ha.!TI

..

I

..

.,

I

I

'

'

I

i•

I

5 S f:h

~oupon

4-Pack 1-ji &amp; Dri "
toilet !issue. '

'""''per roll
Umt1 :l,., Cuaromer •

·.oo. 4¥1• 4Y~ " .

1·PI't

Whi.. 12fl0 Pkv•. P•r s tor• UIJt

Of'-' Good Set.. J1n U . IMO

' 84
' 4·Days
6-0z.• Comtrex •
36 Comtrex ' Capsules .... ' . . ' 2.64

14~

Baby Cloths
150 pre -moisten ed
cloths with lanolin, ·

4~!

56 Dexatrim~
One -a' day
capsules and diet plan.

l!~ow

3-0z.' Ben-Gay'
Greaseless rub to
sooth sore muscles

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, o.,Wednesday, Jan 9, 19M

l

/

'

'

•,.,,g- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·P&lt;meroy, 0 ,;weclneaday, Jan. 9, 1980

.r

_$1 000 donated to church und locally

•

A donation r1 $1,000 to the church
building fand was made by the
U!iled Methodist Women r1 the
&lt;llester Church during a recent
meeting,
Mrs . Rlth Karr, newly elected
presldel)t, had charge r1 the meeting
dw-lng which time Mrs. Clarice
ADen and Mrs , Nancy Morrissey
were welcomed into membership. It
was noted that 26 sick and shutin

calls had been macte. ·
Officers' reports were given and
thank you notes were read frlm the
recipients of bollday fruit baslii!ts.
Twent;y -eix baskets were delivered
by the committee In charge. It was
annoanced till t a new 'shipment of
Jeny: 'Maid has been received and
can be ordered by caRing any
member of the Soclecy .
· Aservice of prayer and self-denial

was held with Mrs. Ethel Orr as the
thew- 4, verse 18, and Matthew 5,
leader. The. group sang "For the
verse 14.
Beauty r1 the Ear111" acoo~ed­
Members taking part in the
nled by Mrs. Clarice Allen at the
reading of the program were Mrs.
piano. Each. member was preaenled Bernice Bailey, Mrs. Ruth Kar'r,
a copy of the Qoiet Day service pro- Mrs. Daylene Bahr, Mrs. Eva
gram entitled ''l'he Life Devine." · Hollm, Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Mrs.
Responsive reading ''God's DiviDe
KaU.,O Wloloo, and Mrs . Betty
Purpqae"foRowedthebymn, "JLueMoore.
C&amp;lls Us O'er the Tumult. "
Divided into two parts, the pro· SCripture was taken frcm Mat· gram dealt wllb "l'he Way to the

Life Divine" , with emphasis on
hearing the
r1 Christ, responding to the can, and ccmmltling
ooe 's Ufe, .while the secood part,
"Living th.,e Life Divine" dealt with
walking In the light and knowledge
r1 the ever11resent Christ.
Mrs. Orr read the presentatloo of
r1fering objective for the service
preceding the taking of the gifts. The
program closed with prayer and a

can

Wlison reading of · "Go Now In
Peace."
Following the meeting the group
gathered In the feRowship room for
refreslunents of cookies and punch
In hopor cl the outgoing officers,
Mrs . Bernice Bailey and Mra. Jean
Roush. Next meetinl! will be held on
Feb 7 at ·1:30 p.m. at the Otester
Church .

'

•
KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
. nt 1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

/

COI'VIIGHT 1910 • THI KIOGII CO. ITIMS AND PltCU
GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 6THIUSATUitDAY, JAN. 12 , lftOIN
WI

IUi~Vl

THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUAHTITIU. NONI SOI.D

TODEALEIS.

=-

_,...,

..... •

-

ADVERTISED lTEM POLICY

to bo
IVIilable fof .... in eteh Kroget Stcn, •xcept M
~ noted in thlt .:j, " 'tW do I\A"' out of ., ICttartilld

Each ot
item.

we will Offer

you your

choice of

1

COITII*Ibllitem,

when available, rdKting the ....,. IIVingl or 1 rlinchldt
which will entitle you to purchall the .:lvertil8d iYm •• ttw
adYtrtiMd !)lice v.tthin 30 dl'!'l.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Everything you buy at Kroger Ia gu.ranteed for your 10c.l
11tilftetlon reg~rdlell of m~nufacturer . If you •• not utDfied, Kroger win replace your item with the umt twana: or 1
comperetH brand Of rtful'ld vour purc:hllie price.

I
U.S. GOV'T GIIADID CHOICI, RIP CHUCK AIM

Boneless Bostan

$199

Roll
Roast ........ lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOlQ lONE IN
IEEF

.

Tn,Splfte

$279

Loin Strip Steak ..... lb.
14·17-LI.AVG.FilSH
SJ19
Whole Pork Loin ... 111.
·

If' COCII

!$1~

70\

SUCID PIIU I~TO ONI CON\IINIINT TAICI-ItOMII'kO.

SERVE 'N' SAVI

•
W1eners
................12·01.
Pkg.
REGULAR OR CHU.,AK,
ANY SIZI PKG.

Chi~k;:RADEA FRYING

A low tar, slim cigarette
. all your own.
Regular or Menthol.

Drumsticks .. .. ....lb.

79c

HOllY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Coli

I

$ 49

Ground
Beef...... lb.
.
FIISH DIISSID
s
J49
Sea Trout ... lb. .
,.

SHEmPER

CottoneUe
Bath Tissue

45

Mixed Fryer Parts .. 1b.
GWALTNEY
l·lb. ggc
Great Dogs .......... Pkg.
HOTORMILDGWALTNEY
.
.
Pork Sausage ...... ~!~i

Ci

ggc

I

I
I
I
I

KIIOGIUO.QZ. IOUNO TOP

:~:d . . 3~:~· $1

.

19

Golden Ri
Bananas

69
C
Grade ALarge Eggs
ggc
K•aaer Bnad .. 2't:~;
KIIOGER '

Do•.

l'

.ICIMI'OiltRIAA

r.

, :............... 'o:.t'· SISt

3
·
9
i
c
Apples ................

WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY .. Sill

D~Ei~ious

Kroger 0.5%G•l·S139
Lowfat Milk .. ~c

2
sac
Lighter .. .. ... ... .. .. ~~~.
Y.W Yogurt ...... 3 t:!: Sl
71 0
-!IMII,.LOWI'ATMU
OM. ·A-0111'\AITICCTN •• . ll.H

CIIIC:KET

·

fiODN KIOOII WHIPPID

11-ol.

.

Topping ............. a...

CHEAPER BY TH
Save Even More

When You Buy 12·

lb .

Tangelos
For .. •.
Salad Tomatoes ...... lb.49c

Only9mgtar

3
'
$1
Cucumbers.............

In the new crush-proof
. purse pacl&lt;.

FRESH.

For ·

.

9 mg"tar;'O.Bmg nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC Method.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
•'

i '

..........
'

•

'
'

.

"

11'11

~

'Ia ....
....... .. .......IIc:-

I

-·•·

D Y*

'*bCopt CloiiOd Saturday Midnight.Til 9am Sun .
*Except Hinton, White Sulphur Springe, 7th
Avel'iue Charloaton &amp; Williamson

. $
.. .. .. .. .. .15 1

.~:~~~i:O 1111 TANGIIINES

...........

,

I

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, o.,Wednesday, Jan 9, 19M

l

/

'

'

•,.,,g- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·P&lt;meroy, 0 ,;weclneaday, Jan. 9, 1980

.r

_$1 000 donated to church und locally

•

A donation r1 $1,000 to the church
building fand was made by the
U!iled Methodist Women r1 the
&lt;llester Church during a recent
meeting,
Mrs . Rlth Karr, newly elected
presldel)t, had charge r1 the meeting
dw-lng which time Mrs. Clarice
ADen and Mrs , Nancy Morrissey
were welcomed into membership. It
was noted that 26 sick and shutin

calls had been macte. ·
Officers' reports were given and
thank you notes were read frlm the
recipients of bollday fruit baslii!ts.
Twent;y -eix baskets were delivered
by the committee In charge. It was
annoanced till t a new 'shipment of
Jeny: 'Maid has been received and
can be ordered by caRing any
member of the Soclecy .
· Aservice of prayer and self-denial

was held with Mrs. Ethel Orr as the
thew- 4, verse 18, and Matthew 5,
leader. The. group sang "For the
verse 14.
Beauty r1 the Ear111" acoo~ed­
Members taking part in the
nled by Mrs. Clarice Allen at the
reading of the program were Mrs.
piano. Each. member was preaenled Bernice Bailey, Mrs. Ruth Kar'r,
a copy of the Qoiet Day service pro- Mrs. Daylene Bahr, Mrs. Eva
gram entitled ''l'he Life Devine." · Hollm, Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Mrs.
Responsive reading ''God's DiviDe
KaU.,O Wloloo, and Mrs . Betty
Purpqae"foRowedthebymn, "JLueMoore.
C&amp;lls Us O'er the Tumult. "
Divided into two parts, the pro· SCripture was taken frcm Mat· gram dealt wllb "l'he Way to the

Life Divine" , with emphasis on
hearing the
r1 Christ, responding to the can, and ccmmltling
ooe 's Ufe, .while the secood part,
"Living th.,e Life Divine" dealt with
walking In the light and knowledge
r1 the ever11resent Christ.
Mrs. Orr read the presentatloo of
r1fering objective for the service
preceding the taking of the gifts. The
program closed with prayer and a

can

Wlison reading of · "Go Now In
Peace."
Following the meeting the group
gathered In the feRowship room for
refreslunents of cookies and punch
In hopor cl the outgoing officers,
Mrs . Bernice Bailey and Mra. Jean
Roush. Next meetinl! will be held on
Feb 7 at ·1:30 p.m. at the Otester
Church .

'

•
KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
. nt 1

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

/

COI'VIIGHT 1910 • THI KIOGII CO. ITIMS AND PltCU
GOOD SUNDAY, JAN. 6THIUSATUitDAY, JAN. 12 , lftOIN
WI

IUi~Vl

THI liGHT TO LIMIT QUAHTITIU. NONI SOI.D

TODEALEIS.

=-

_,...,

..... •

-

ADVERTISED lTEM POLICY

to bo
IVIilable fof .... in eteh Kroget Stcn, •xcept M
~ noted in thlt .:j, " 'tW do I\A"' out of ., ICttartilld

Each ot
item.

we will Offer

you your

choice of

1

COITII*Ibllitem,

when available, rdKting the ....,. IIVingl or 1 rlinchldt
which will entitle you to purchall the .:lvertil8d iYm •• ttw
adYtrtiMd !)lice v.tthin 30 dl'!'l.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
Everything you buy at Kroger Ia gu.ranteed for your 10c.l
11tilftetlon reg~rdlell of m~nufacturer . If you •• not utDfied, Kroger win replace your item with the umt twana: or 1
comperetH brand Of rtful'ld vour purc:hllie price.

I
U.S. GOV'T GIIADID CHOICI, RIP CHUCK AIM

Boneless Bostan

$199

Roll
Roast ........ lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOlQ lONE IN
IEEF

.

Tn,Splfte

$279

Loin Strip Steak ..... lb.
14·17-LI.AVG.FilSH
SJ19
Whole Pork Loin ... 111.
·

If' COCII

!$1~

70\

SUCID PIIU I~TO ONI CON\IINIINT TAICI-ItOMII'kO.

SERVE 'N' SAVI

•
W1eners
................12·01.
Pkg.
REGULAR OR CHU.,AK,
ANY SIZI PKG.

Chi~k;:RADEA FRYING

A low tar, slim cigarette
. all your own.
Regular or Menthol.

Drumsticks .. .. ....lb.

79c

HOllY FARMS, U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Coli

I

$ 49

Ground
Beef...... lb.
.
FIISH DIISSID
s
J49
Sea Trout ... lb. .
,.

SHEmPER

CottoneUe
Bath Tissue

45

Mixed Fryer Parts .. 1b.
GWALTNEY
l·lb. ggc
Great Dogs .......... Pkg.
HOTORMILDGWALTNEY
.
.
Pork Sausage ...... ~!~i

Ci

ggc

I

I
I
I
I

KIIOGIUO.QZ. IOUNO TOP

:~:d . . 3~:~· $1

.

19

Golden Ri
Bananas

69
C
Grade ALarge Eggs
ggc
K•aaer Bnad .. 2't:~;
KIIOGER '

Do•.

l'

.ICIMI'OiltRIAA

r.

, :............... 'o:.t'· SISt

3
·
9
i
c
Apples ................

WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY .. Sill

D~Ei~ious

Kroger 0.5%G•l·S139
Lowfat Milk .. ~c

2
sac
Lighter .. .. ... ... .. .. ~~~.
Y.W Yogurt ...... 3 t:!: Sl
71 0
-!IMII,.LOWI'ATMU
OM. ·A-0111'\AITICCTN •• . ll.H

CIIIC:KET

·

fiODN KIOOII WHIPPID

11-ol.

.

Topping ............. a...

CHEAPER BY TH
Save Even More

When You Buy 12·

lb .

Tangelos
For .. •.
Salad Tomatoes ...... lb.49c

Only9mgtar

3
'
$1
Cucumbers.............

In the new crush-proof
. purse pacl&lt;.

FRESH.

For ·

.

9 mg"tar;'O.Bmg nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC Method.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
•'

i '

..........
'

•

'
'

.

"

11'11

~

'Ia ....
....... .. .......IIc:-

I

-·•·

D Y*

'*bCopt CloiiOd Saturday Midnight.Til 9am Sun .
*Except Hinton, White Sulphur Springe, 7th
Avel'iue Charloaton &amp; Williamson

. $
.. .. .. .. .. .15 1

.~:~~~i:O 1111 TANGIIINES

...........

,

I

�:10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 9, H.SO

Double
:birthdays
observed

Helen Help

US o

S'now warnings offered by Heart Assn. · · ·.

Snow warnings are being issued ' frequent rest periods and quit as
ten.
vessels, while alcohol may give you
by the Meogs County Heart Bfanch soon as you feel tired,' ' says the doc ·
- Shovel before eating or aneoot a false lift and lead to overexertion.
of the .Central Ohio Heart Chapter . tor. ·
two hours afterward. Alwa,ys avoid
-Remember, wet snow is heavier
SPOILED DAUGHTER·IN·LAW
Shovelmg
snow
froo
walks
and
He
offers
the
following
tips
for
undue
exertion
after
meals.·
than
dry snow.
GRADUATES TO 'BIG CHIZZLER'
dnveways
ts
strenuousexercose,
so
safe
shoveling,
based
on
advice
from
-Don\
make
your
arms
do
all
the
Share
the chore; divide work
By Helen Hottel
take
.
specoal
precautions
before
the
Heart
Branch.
work.
Use
all
your
muscles,
in·
among
family
members oc friends.
DEAR HELEN :
tac~
the
task,
the
Heari
Branch
-Check
with
your
doctor
first
if
eluding
back
and
leg
muscles.
..,.
Snow
shoveling,
if done properly,
The girl was and is spoiled rotten.
you are out of shape, overweight or
- Wear warm but lightweight doesn \ have to be a dangerous un·
Twin brother got a new car as a gift adviSes.
"Midclle-aged men ~ frequent have a history of heart disease.
clothing. Underdressing may lead to dertaking. For more information on
from parents. So twin sister got
-Elderly people or those unused
chilling, while too much clothing the risk factors of heart attack, con· .
equivalent cash. Brother needed a targets of snow shoveling..-elated
tact your Meigs O&gt;unty Heart Bran·
bouse so parents buy it for him. heart attacks, rut extra care should to ~enuous activity should avoid . could lead to overheating .
.. Don' smoke or drink before ch at P. 0. Box 100, Pom&lt;!'oy , 0.
Daughter gets cash again. Later be take~ by an~.one woth a history of . snow shoveling if poosible. If you
heart disease, warns Dr. James must shovel , do it slowlv and rest of.
shoveling. Smoking constricts blood
45769.
parents buy son a pickup truck, and,
·
ri course, give daughter same Witherell , M.D., President of the
Heart Branch. ''These people
amount in money.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Daughter has been married all ' shouldn 1 lift a shovel until they bave
1
their
doctor's
approval.'"
The
trustees
of the Meigs County .
along to aman who puts aU his in·
"Proceed
with
caution
when
Pioneer
and
Historical
Society will
come into their Joint account; but
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Livingston of
WEDNESDAY
clearing
snow
even
if
you
have
no
meet·
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
at the
she keeps her money in her name on·
Northbrook, Ill, the former Seren
Rffi ULAR meeting , Pomeroy
symptoms
of
heart
disease.
Take
Meigs County Museum.
ly. Husband must pay income tax on
Lewis, annoWJ.ce the birth of a son,
Midclleport Lions Club, noon Wed·
A discussion will be held on the
the interest!
Daniel W'tlliam, Dec. 28. Mr. and
nesday at Meigs Inn. Ml members
publication
of the history book and·
Well, parents of husband loan ex- more people her age '' I tried junior asked to attend.
Mrs. Livingston have a son, Scott,
consideration
will be given to the
pensive furniture and $25,000 to the volunteer nurse's aides, but she
age !3.
MEETING of Ladies Auxiliary,
!llrchase
of
property.
couple so they can buy a house. They didn \like it. - MOM
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Middleport Fire Department, this
The last two scheduled days to
don\ consider her a thief, so make
and
Mrs. William Lewis, Mid·
DEAR MOM :
evening at the fire station.
purchase
the history books will be
up no formal papers. .
·
dleport. Paternal grandparents are
Social groups for h;mdicapped
TIJURSDAY
Wednesday
an&lt;! Friday from 1 to 3 ·
Mter five years, daughter pushes young people can be found by look·
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Livingston,
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapte,r
pm.
at
the
Museum.
husband out the door, and swears
Sanibel Island, Fla .
ing through your phone book or inPeople wanting additional books ·•
loan was a gift to her. Of course he quiring at a local social service and Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45p.m.
Thursday
in
mine
room
at
Meigs
may
order them by mailing a check-..
parents are insisting their child welfare organization.· Also, your
Inn.
Hostesses
are
Velma
Rue
and
historical
object
which
they
will
ex·
in
the
amount of $38 to Meigs History
''take it all." To see her sweet face daughter can find a foreign pen pal
June
Freed
.
plain
in
a
two
minute
period.
Mrs.
and
they
will be reserved in the or- ·:
and innocent smile, you'd never by sending a stamped, self·
EXECUTIVE
Board
of
Meigs
Thereon Johnson will show film on
der they are received as long as they ·
know she is a liar and a cheat.
addressed eQvelope (with request
genealogy.
last .
Down the drain goes some $30,000 1 for application blanks) to World Pen Unit, American Cancer Society,
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in east·
Husband 's mother needs surgery Pals, 1600 Como Ave., St. Paul,
west dining room, Veterans
and now she can' afford it.
Minn., 55108; or to Letter Exchange,
Memorial
Hospital.
Can you help? - MRS. R F.
People to People International, 2440
ELEANOR
CIRClE, Thursday,
DEAR MRS . F.:
Pershing Road, Suite G-30, Kansas
7:30
p.m.
at
the Heath United
Surely a good lawyer can help, but City,Mo., 64106. A small charge may
Methodist Church, with Donna Byer,
he won\ come cheap.
be asked for each referral. - SUE.
Helen Byer and Grace Johnson as
And here, readers, is another
hOstesses. There will be a white
graphic reminder that faith, hope
DEAR MOM:
elephant
sale.
and charity are fine family at·
More important, however, is
tributes, rut if you lean foolishly on working on your daughter's
MEIGS County Humane Society
faith and hope in business matters,
meeting,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at
defeatist attitude. She must learn
the "charity "will be on you! -H.
self-esteem, how to cope with her Riverboat Room, Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan
handicap and rise above it. So long
DEAR HELEN:
Pomeroy.
as you and she believe everyone is Co., W. Main St.,
MENS
-'
I have'' 16-year-old daughler who against her, she may gain nothing
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
PLASTIC
DISH
·
SWEAT
was born handicapped - she suffers but more self-pity from thes~
pm. Thurooay at the hall, weather
from a disease there is no cure for. organizatioos.
~ DRAPES ~. ~ CLOTHS ~
~ SHIRTS ~
pennitting.
She is not retarded, not beautiful,
Try group therapy, which is often
1i Reg. '1.29
8 Reg. 49' ii II Ru. '5.99 •
yet not ugly. In high school, she does available through social service
FRIDAY
average work.
agenctes. - HELEN
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Chap·
Lonely: there's no way to describe
ter, Daughters of American
.All'-....~
~
how lonely she is.
(GOT A PRBIEM? Or a subject
Revolution, 2 pm. Friday at River·
Cathy has no real friends; they all for discussion, two-generation style?
~
boat Room, I Meigs Branch ' Athens
take advantage of her, and she's so Direct your questions to either Sue
County Savings and Loan with Mrs.
WOMENS
I
depressed and miserable. Why must or Helen Bot tel - or both, if you
Robert Ashley as hostess. 'Grand·
•TOPS •SWEATERS
people judge on ''defects"'
want a combination mother· mother's 'Keepsakes" is program
I am remarried and her stepfather daughter answer - in care of this
topic with members .to take one
•BLOUSES
berates her. She never knew her real newspaper.)
father. He's living, but gives no sup· 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~;;!p;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
port.
I
merchandise . Come
Are they any pen pal or other
Shop. You ' ll Save.
organizations to help Cathy meet
o o By Ht·lt•n lluw·l

r---Social Calendar

. Cortney N.ousb

r Bitth announced

••
•
\...as~ J~3For$1J ~ $422 J
.... .... •

-

r1

Nyan Norris

a

•

;::,~g·,'~.i'o~,r~~~~~

33 o

-~ OFF

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE

Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush,
Route 2, Racine, held a birthday party Sunday in honor of their daughter,
Cortney, three years old on Jan. 2,
and their nephew, Ryan Hill Norris.
Ryan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norrts, Route 2, Racine and he
was me year old onJan.6.
Cortney was presented a Raggedy
Ann cake and Ryan, a Raggedy Andy cake. Each received gifts and
money. Ryan _
also received a gift

from hia grandmother, Mrs. Erlene
Norris Stobart of Racine, ' who did
mt attend the Ill rty.
Ice cream, cake, coffee and punch
wl!'e served. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill, gran~arents ; ·
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, greatgrandmother; Mr. and Mrs. Mar·
shall Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Norris, Joey Roush and Tracy Nor·
ris .

) Lb. Golden Isle Vacuum Packed
·

LB.

SLICED BACON •••• •••••••••••• ·····•· ••• 51.19
Homemade
LB. $}}9
•
HAM SAlAD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Say "hello" to
Kero-Sun heaters!
Say ''goodbye''
woodstoves!

Armour Star

DRY sALT PORK ••••••••••• o;••••••••• ~~~. $1.09
LAST ~EEKS SNOW LEFT GREAT BUYSI

MARGARINE

LB.
Quarters

79~

to

RUG SALE
TWO GROUPS

2FOR$300 .
And
2roR$soo

Head

LE11UCE

11 oz. Morton

VELOUR
BATH ·
TOWELS

Jr~~Y;;:;~~S~~·~rt~,&gt;~~~~~W~ed~n~e~s~
~ y,~J~an~.~9,~1M;o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. .~-,. . . . . . . .~::=-....~::::::::;i~::..~...............,
·highlights
July 2- Pomeroy 1Cotu1cil approv.
ed an emergency measure ca lling
for the paving of Main street from
Sycam.ore to Butternut Ave ., at a
cost &lt;J $8,230.
Kathryn Ernestine Brown, 65,
Minersville, died at her residence.
William F. (Bill) Warner, 55, well
known Pomeroy bwlinessman, died
unexpectedly.
Congressman Clarence. Miller in
Ptmeroy to view the multi -purpose
building being erected adjacent
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
fonner Children's Home.
July 4 - First place winner of the
theme division in the 4th of July
parade held in Racine went to
Olester Council 323, Daughter s&lt;J
America .
July 5 - Jeffrey Gore, 17, Rt. 1,
Shade, was killed as he jogged on
U.S. Route 33.
July 6 - Dr. Margie Lawson new
dentist in the village of Racine.
July 9 - Pomeroy Fire Department called to the trailer home of
Raymond Johnson, Rt. 1, Shade,
where lire and smoke damage was
estimated at $1,500.
July II -Southern Local Board of
Education adopted a budget totaling
$1,491,552.
July 12 -' Jack Williams was
sworn in as a new member of
Syracuse Village Council.
July 13 -The Meigs Local School
District Board &lt;J Education approved a general fund budget totaling
$3,11i0,500.
.July 16 - A proJect •o pave the
area where the railroad tracks are
was proposed at a meeting of
Pomeroy Council.
·Bedford Conunuility Recreation
Center Board of TrU'ltees decided to
set up a scholarship fund for Bedford
students who plan to attend college.
July 17 - Meigs Local Board of
Education awarded Hackett Rooli.J)g, Middleport, a contract to repair
the roof at Meigs High School.
July 18- The Meigs County Com·
missioners employed Donald Mora
as income maintenance supervisor
and SU'lle Hill as an income
ll)llinlenance worker.
Wilma A. Mansfield, M.D., began
her family practice at the Meigs
J'o!'edical Building, adjacent to
Veterans MEmorial H06pital.
. July I - Green I of Gallia County captured the annua( Syracuse Lit·
Ue League Tournament with a. 17-4
w;in over Pomeroy's Tigers making
tl)e Tigers the runners-up. Tuppers
Plains took third place and
Gallipolis Red Sox fourth.
July 23 -Middleport Council accepted a· budget in the amount of
$674,211.
.
July 24 - Florence Circle and
Valerie Johnson , elementary
lejlchers in Southern Local resigned.
A1tnouncement of steven L. Story,
~·1!eport, employed as attorney in
Bernard V. Fultz's law offices. Jim
Mees, Indianapolis, former
Pomeroy Council member and announcer for WMJ?O Radio, Middleport, died.
:July 25 - A request for county
funding cl. the Salem Township Fire
Department was turned down by
Meigs County Commi.ssioners.
Jul)r 28- One hundred and fortyeight area golfers ready to participate in the first annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament to
be..held at Riverside Golf Course,
Mason.
•
~uly :Jl - The Dave Diles CelebriIYG&gt;lf Tournament got underway at
I
at Riverside Golf Course;
MaSOII.
July 30 - Dave Diles Celebrity
GOlf Toumamen'l termed huge success.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·IO pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE ffiRU ~TURDAY, JAN. 12ffi, 1980

CENTER CUT RIB

$200

49

PORK CHOPS. ..... ~.~ }

59

PORK CHOPS.......L~-~.1
CENTER CUT LOIN

CRISPY SERVE

BACON...................~~.

USDA CHOICE

ROUND Tl PSTEAK ..~ 2

29

USDA CHOICE BBN ELESS

.

. $199

RUMP .ROASI .......L~·

••

CUBE STEAK ......... ~B~

.

3 LB. BAG

YELLOW ONIONS..

p.m.

::annon Irregulars
Prl.nts. Jacquards; .
Strrpes, Solids. 11.99

----·--·-

VALLEY BELL

r-------------------------,
w~k'(M~Vd_
I~OIIId
Utlfn Ill fllllaiM a rt

liP ltll

l'lllJ

:

..._ . . wl!nlt 1~11ur 11b~t to ~uctluo by thndltorl 1

•

TV DINNERS •• .-:~.~:~~~:'•••••••••~~~~.]ge

.

•

PLASTIC

$}69

2% MILK.........G.A~L~~....

NOd 1111111 br; •l(llr'd "'lth tht 11&amp;;~'• a&lt;HrH1 . f\j .uJn may 1
be wllllll,ld Upoll publl rallN. u....n,r. 011 ffq~fll , I
ll'lllllt 41scl01f.!. t..rte.-. Jbould bf. In good la.ltt. 1

_n
I
~ . ~. tlitlOt=.f!!l !

-:-~.:

.

0

9 oz. PR.INGLES •••••••••••••c.a.n•• }tl5
32 oz . VIa sic Kosher

"Ornni" models

"Radiant" models

Portable heat for contractors, greenhouses,
small bualnetlses, workshops, garages,
outdoor recreation.
New imported Kero-Sun kerosene heaters beat woodstoves every way! No
logs 'to cut , haul . split and stack. No Smo~e. soot . ashes. No wasted heat up
the flue - Kero-Sun heaters need no chimney. Fuel cost av~rages only
3·5¢ an hour Absolutely no installation cost or mess (compare that with
woodstoves!) . Burns with no kerosene odor: tested for pollutoon safety, Au·
tomatic igniter. automatic tip-over shutoff. Every Kero-Sun heater Puts
the warm where vou want it'"'
·

$

DILL PICKLES

~

Jar·
·······~···············

99'

46 oz. Golden Isle

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .............~~~
10'12 Campbell's

CHICKEN ·STAR SOUP.••••• ~::•• 2/59e
20 oz. Sweetbrier

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .••••:a.~ ..... 69~
30 oz. Joan of Arc

A
PORTABLE HEATERS

PICKE.NS' HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

RED KIDNEY BEANS ••••••••••••••
12 01.

75~

W/IOC Off

FURNITURE
I THROWS
• Chair $199
Size.

$499J699

BRAIDED
RUGS

Size
19X33

Denims. corduroy by

$100
79~ $8~8
.

Size
24X36

MENS
JEANS
Big Yank. Values to

Sld . 99 .

Perfect.

Quality and lrr.

NO-IRON MUSLIN

lETTER SHEETS
Twin size printed sh

stripes or ~ Ids. Some:ts . Full size available In
or flat size. Matching 'i/fhtly Irregular . Fitted
•
P ow c~ses $3.00 pafr.

Twin Size

Full Bed Size

$300 $400

ARMOUR TREET •••••••••:!~ ...... 1.29
5

12oz. Armour

•

ROAST BEEF ..

~

14 V2oz. Swanson

0 •••••••••••

. . . .. . . . .

s}.•59

BE£F BRQTH ···o······~w~.~ ...... 2155~ .

POINT
PLEASAN.T
Qlf' ~

MASON

I

••uuAA.O

' Editor'
near
1 would like to answer the age old
qUMtion, is there a Santa Claus? I
C4fl truthly say yes there is.
~le h~ might not be the jolly old
g$nUeman running aroiind In a red
stjlt, there surely is. someone who
cares.
:This person's name I do not know,
Uiey wanted It that way. But, oh boy
, did they make three little boys
~ppy DO Christmas day.
!fbree· .new bikes so shiny and
,bt&gt;lght sat waiting for their owners to
rille.
·
:Ibanks fi1 a good sweet person in
Middleport. You restored my faith in
11'\Y fellomnan. The person who you
~ve the money to buy the bikes ·
w~' ~~~ he's keeping your secret
~u. so I can' \hank you in person.
. ~ut I'm taking this way to say.
thiink you Santa whoever you are. '
You area very sweet person~rd we
aU give you our thanks. ~Y your
di!,Ys be blessed with joy and love
~ evet'ythin(good corileyour way.
Thanks. ,
' '.
J
. '
Mr.s. William ll'ink ·
'•·
.'
· 244 Syr.amore St.
•
Middleport, !)hio

.

.
.•'

PARKAY

Santa Oaus

MARGARINE.... ;~.2/

SMUCKERS

GRA-PE JELLY. .. !2.~Z~.
CAMPBELL'S .

CHICK EN NOODLE
. $
SOUP.~ .......;.......~~~-4/
.

BANQUET BUFFET

1 SUPPERS........ !~~--~ }

...,. ...

KRAn

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE .

29

7.25 9l:-- •
(LIM IT ~ PL~~SE) . .

¢

·Limit 1 Per. customer ·
· Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 12,1980

COUPON
-

- : . : -· .

•

•

•

'

..
NAVY. BEANS
. .
.
.•

2-LB.
BAG

t__CO':'PO N

0

FLAVORIJE
......

.
.

I

•I

j

ZESTA CRACKERS

l

I• •

.

Limit 1 Per customer
: ·I· ·
Good Only atPow'ell 's
. :1
Offer Expires Jari. 12, 1980 .

I

'.

}

LB. BOX

2/~1

39

COU PON

CORONET

TOILET TISSUE

.

2/$1

$

.

:£. _.-:.._~ ~

COUPO N

_

8 ROLL
PAK

$}39

.
': •f

•I ,

Offer

�:10 - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 9, H.SO

Double
:birthdays
observed

Helen Help

US o

S'now warnings offered by Heart Assn. · · ·.

Snow warnings are being issued ' frequent rest periods and quit as
ten.
vessels, while alcohol may give you
by the Meogs County Heart Bfanch soon as you feel tired,' ' says the doc ·
- Shovel before eating or aneoot a false lift and lead to overexertion.
of the .Central Ohio Heart Chapter . tor. ·
two hours afterward. Alwa,ys avoid
-Remember, wet snow is heavier
SPOILED DAUGHTER·IN·LAW
Shovelmg
snow
froo
walks
and
He
offers
the
following
tips
for
undue
exertion
after
meals.·
than
dry snow.
GRADUATES TO 'BIG CHIZZLER'
dnveways
ts
strenuousexercose,
so
safe
shoveling,
based
on
advice
from
-Don\
make
your
arms
do
all
the
Share
the chore; divide work
By Helen Hottel
take
.
specoal
precautions
before
the
Heart
Branch.
work.
Use
all
your
muscles,
in·
among
family
members oc friends.
DEAR HELEN :
tac~
the
task,
the
Heari
Branch
-Check
with
your
doctor
first
if
eluding
back
and
leg
muscles.
..,.
Snow
shoveling,
if done properly,
The girl was and is spoiled rotten.
you are out of shape, overweight or
- Wear warm but lightweight doesn \ have to be a dangerous un·
Twin brother got a new car as a gift adviSes.
"Midclle-aged men ~ frequent have a history of heart disease.
clothing. Underdressing may lead to dertaking. For more information on
from parents. So twin sister got
-Elderly people or those unused
chilling, while too much clothing the risk factors of heart attack, con· .
equivalent cash. Brother needed a targets of snow shoveling..-elated
tact your Meigs O&gt;unty Heart Bran·
bouse so parents buy it for him. heart attacks, rut extra care should to ~enuous activity should avoid . could lead to overheating .
.. Don' smoke or drink before ch at P. 0. Box 100, Pom&lt;!'oy , 0.
Daughter gets cash again. Later be take~ by an~.one woth a history of . snow shoveling if poosible. If you
heart disease, warns Dr. James must shovel , do it slowlv and rest of.
shoveling. Smoking constricts blood
45769.
parents buy son a pickup truck, and,
·
ri course, give daughter same Witherell , M.D., President of the
Heart Branch. ''These people
amount in money.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
Daughter has been married all ' shouldn 1 lift a shovel until they bave
1
their
doctor's
approval.'"
The
trustees
of the Meigs County .
along to aman who puts aU his in·
"Proceed
with
caution
when
Pioneer
and
Historical
Society will
come into their Joint account; but
Mr. and Mrs. Troy Livingston of
WEDNESDAY
clearing
snow
even
if
you
have
no
meet·
Thursday
at
7
p.m.
at the
she keeps her money in her name on·
Northbrook, Ill, the former Seren
Rffi ULAR meeting , Pomeroy
symptoms
of
heart
disease.
Take
Meigs County Museum.
ly. Husband must pay income tax on
Lewis, annoWJ.ce the birth of a son,
Midclleport Lions Club, noon Wed·
A discussion will be held on the
the interest!
Daniel W'tlliam, Dec. 28. Mr. and
nesday at Meigs Inn. Ml members
publication
of the history book and·
Well, parents of husband loan ex- more people her age '' I tried junior asked to attend.
Mrs. Livingston have a son, Scott,
consideration
will be given to the
pensive furniture and $25,000 to the volunteer nurse's aides, but she
age !3.
MEETING of Ladies Auxiliary,
!llrchase
of
property.
couple so they can buy a house. They didn \like it. - MOM
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Middleport Fire Department, this
The last two scheduled days to
don\ consider her a thief, so make
and
Mrs. William Lewis, Mid·
DEAR MOM :
evening at the fire station.
purchase
the history books will be
up no formal papers. .
·
dleport. Paternal grandparents are
Social groups for h;mdicapped
TIJURSDAY
Wednesday
an&lt;! Friday from 1 to 3 ·
Mter five years, daughter pushes young people can be found by look·
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Livingston,
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapte,r
pm.
at
the
Museum.
husband out the door, and swears
Sanibel Island, Fla .
ing through your phone book or inPeople wanting additional books ·•
loan was a gift to her. Of course he quiring at a local social service and Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45p.m.
Thursday
in
mine
room
at
Meigs
may
order them by mailing a check-..
parents are insisting their child welfare organization.· Also, your
Inn.
Hostesses
are
Velma
Rue
and
historical
object
which
they
will
ex·
in
the
amount of $38 to Meigs History
''take it all." To see her sweet face daughter can find a foreign pen pal
June
Freed
.
plain
in
a
two
minute
period.
Mrs.
and
they
will be reserved in the or- ·:
and innocent smile, you'd never by sending a stamped, self·
EXECUTIVE
Board
of
Meigs
Thereon Johnson will show film on
der they are received as long as they ·
know she is a liar and a cheat.
addressed eQvelope (with request
genealogy.
last .
Down the drain goes some $30,000 1 for application blanks) to World Pen Unit, American Cancer Society,
meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in east·
Husband 's mother needs surgery Pals, 1600 Como Ave., St. Paul,
west dining room, Veterans
and now she can' afford it.
Minn., 55108; or to Letter Exchange,
Memorial
Hospital.
Can you help? - MRS. R F.
People to People International, 2440
ELEANOR
CIRClE, Thursday,
DEAR MRS . F.:
Pershing Road, Suite G-30, Kansas
7:30
p.m.
at
the Heath United
Surely a good lawyer can help, but City,Mo., 64106. A small charge may
Methodist Church, with Donna Byer,
he won\ come cheap.
be asked for each referral. - SUE.
Helen Byer and Grace Johnson as
And here, readers, is another
hOstesses. There will be a white
graphic reminder that faith, hope
DEAR MOM:
elephant
sale.
and charity are fine family at·
More important, however, is
tributes, rut if you lean foolishly on working on your daughter's
MEIGS County Humane Society
faith and hope in business matters,
meeting,
7:30 p.m. Thursday at
defeatist attitude. She must learn
the "charity "will be on you! -H.
self-esteem, how to cope with her Riverboat Room, Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan
handicap and rise above it. So long
DEAR HELEN:
Pomeroy.
as you and she believe everyone is Co., W. Main St.,
MENS
-'
I have'' 16-year-old daughler who against her, she may gain nothing
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 7:30
PLASTIC
DISH
·
SWEAT
was born handicapped - she suffers but more self-pity from thes~
pm. Thurooay at the hall, weather
from a disease there is no cure for. organizatioos.
~ DRAPES ~. ~ CLOTHS ~
~ SHIRTS ~
pennitting.
She is not retarded, not beautiful,
Try group therapy, which is often
1i Reg. '1.29
8 Reg. 49' ii II Ru. '5.99 •
yet not ugly. In high school, she does available through social service
FRIDAY
average work.
agenctes. - HELEN
RETURN Jonathan Meigs Chap·
Lonely: there's no way to describe
ter, Daughters of American
.All'-....~
~
how lonely she is.
(GOT A PRBIEM? Or a subject
Revolution, 2 pm. Friday at River·
Cathy has no real friends; they all for discussion, two-generation style?
~
boat Room, I Meigs Branch ' Athens
take advantage of her, and she's so Direct your questions to either Sue
County Savings and Loan with Mrs.
WOMENS
I
depressed and miserable. Why must or Helen Bot tel - or both, if you
Robert Ashley as hostess. 'Grand·
•TOPS •SWEATERS
people judge on ''defects"'
want a combination mother· mother's 'Keepsakes" is program
I am remarried and her stepfather daughter answer - in care of this
topic with members .to take one
•BLOUSES
berates her. She never knew her real newspaper.)
father. He's living, but gives no sup· 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~;;!p;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
port.
I
merchandise . Come
Are they any pen pal or other
Shop. You ' ll Save.
organizations to help Cathy meet
o o By Ht·lt•n lluw·l

r---Social Calendar

. Cortney N.ousb

r Bitth announced

••
•
\...as~ J~3For$1J ~ $422 J
.... .... •

-

r1

Nyan Norris

a

•

;::,~g·,'~.i'o~,r~~~~~

33 o

-~ OFF

ALL WINTER MERCHANDISE

Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush,
Route 2, Racine, held a birthday party Sunday in honor of their daughter,
Cortney, three years old on Jan. 2,
and their nephew, Ryan Hill Norris.
Ryan is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Norrts, Route 2, Racine and he
was me year old onJan.6.
Cortney was presented a Raggedy
Ann cake and Ryan, a Raggedy Andy cake. Each received gifts and
money. Ryan _
also received a gift

from hia grandmother, Mrs. Erlene
Norris Stobart of Racine, ' who did
mt attend the Ill rty.
Ice cream, cake, coffee and punch
wl!'e served. Attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill, gran~arents ; ·
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, greatgrandmother; Mr. and Mrs. Mar·
shall Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Norris, Joey Roush and Tracy Nor·
ris .

) Lb. Golden Isle Vacuum Packed
·

LB.

SLICED BACON •••• •••••••••••• ·····•· ••• 51.19
Homemade
LB. $}}9
•
HAM SAlAD •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Say "hello" to
Kero-Sun heaters!
Say ''goodbye''
woodstoves!

Armour Star

DRY sALT PORK ••••••••••• o;••••••••• ~~~. $1.09
LAST ~EEKS SNOW LEFT GREAT BUYSI

MARGARINE

LB.
Quarters

79~

to

RUG SALE
TWO GROUPS

2FOR$300 .
And
2roR$soo

Head

LE11UCE

11 oz. Morton

VELOUR
BATH ·
TOWELS

Jr~~Y;;:;~~S~~·~rt~,&gt;~~~~~W~ed~n~e~s~
~ y,~J~an~.~9,~1M;o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. .~-,. . . . . . . .~::=-....~::::::::;i~::..~...............,
·highlights
July 2- Pomeroy 1Cotu1cil approv.
ed an emergency measure ca lling
for the paving of Main street from
Sycam.ore to Butternut Ave ., at a
cost &lt;J $8,230.
Kathryn Ernestine Brown, 65,
Minersville, died at her residence.
William F. (Bill) Warner, 55, well
known Pomeroy bwlinessman, died
unexpectedly.
Congressman Clarence. Miller in
Ptmeroy to view the multi -purpose
building being erected adjacent
Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
fonner Children's Home.
July 4 - First place winner of the
theme division in the 4th of July
parade held in Racine went to
Olester Council 323, Daughter s&lt;J
America .
July 5 - Jeffrey Gore, 17, Rt. 1,
Shade, was killed as he jogged on
U.S. Route 33.
July 6 - Dr. Margie Lawson new
dentist in the village of Racine.
July 9 - Pomeroy Fire Department called to the trailer home of
Raymond Johnson, Rt. 1, Shade,
where lire and smoke damage was
estimated at $1,500.
July II -Southern Local Board of
Education adopted a budget totaling
$1,491,552.
July 12 -' Jack Williams was
sworn in as a new member of
Syracuse Village Council.
July 13 -The Meigs Local School
District Board &lt;J Education approved a general fund budget totaling
$3,11i0,500.
.July 16 - A proJect •o pave the
area where the railroad tracks are
was proposed at a meeting of
Pomeroy Council.
·Bedford Conunuility Recreation
Center Board of TrU'ltees decided to
set up a scholarship fund for Bedford
students who plan to attend college.
July 17 - Meigs Local Board of
Education awarded Hackett Rooli.J)g, Middleport, a contract to repair
the roof at Meigs High School.
July 18- The Meigs County Com·
missioners employed Donald Mora
as income maintenance supervisor
and SU'lle Hill as an income
ll)llinlenance worker.
Wilma A. Mansfield, M.D., began
her family practice at the Meigs
J'o!'edical Building, adjacent to
Veterans MEmorial H06pital.
. July I - Green I of Gallia County captured the annua( Syracuse Lit·
Ue League Tournament with a. 17-4
w;in over Pomeroy's Tigers making
tl)e Tigers the runners-up. Tuppers
Plains took third place and
Gallipolis Red Sox fourth.
July 23 -Middleport Council accepted a· budget in the amount of
$674,211.
.
July 24 - Florence Circle and
Valerie Johnson , elementary
lejlchers in Southern Local resigned.
A1tnouncement of steven L. Story,
~·1!eport, employed as attorney in
Bernard V. Fultz's law offices. Jim
Mees, Indianapolis, former
Pomeroy Council member and announcer for WMJ?O Radio, Middleport, died.
:July 25 - A request for county
funding cl. the Salem Township Fire
Department was turned down by
Meigs County Commi.ssioners.
Jul)r 28- One hundred and fortyeight area golfers ready to participate in the first annual Dave
Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament to
be..held at Riverside Golf Course,
Mason.
•
~uly :Jl - The Dave Diles CelebriIYG&gt;lf Tournament got underway at
I
at Riverside Golf Course;
MaSOII.
July 30 - Dave Diles Celebrity
GOlf Toumamen'l termed huge success.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8 am·IO pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE ffiRU ~TURDAY, JAN. 12ffi, 1980

CENTER CUT RIB

$200

49

PORK CHOPS. ..... ~.~ }

59

PORK CHOPS.......L~-~.1
CENTER CUT LOIN

CRISPY SERVE

BACON...................~~.

USDA CHOICE

ROUND Tl PSTEAK ..~ 2

29

USDA CHOICE BBN ELESS

.

. $199

RUMP .ROASI .......L~·

••

CUBE STEAK ......... ~B~

.

3 LB. BAG

YELLOW ONIONS..

p.m.

::annon Irregulars
Prl.nts. Jacquards; .
Strrpes, Solids. 11.99

----·--·-

VALLEY BELL

r-------------------------,
w~k'(M~Vd_
I~OIIId
Utlfn Ill fllllaiM a rt

liP ltll

l'lllJ

:

..._ . . wl!nlt 1~11ur 11b~t to ~uctluo by thndltorl 1

•

TV DINNERS •• .-:~.~:~~~:'•••••••••~~~~.]ge

.

•

PLASTIC

$}69

2% MILK.........G.A~L~~....

NOd 1111111 br; •l(llr'd "'lth tht 11&amp;;~'• a&lt;HrH1 . f\j .uJn may 1
be wllllll,ld Upoll publl rallN. u....n,r. 011 ffq~fll , I
ll'lllllt 41scl01f.!. t..rte.-. Jbould bf. In good la.ltt. 1

_n
I
~ . ~. tlitlOt=.f!!l !

-:-~.:

.

0

9 oz. PR.INGLES •••••••••••••c.a.n•• }tl5
32 oz . VIa sic Kosher

"Ornni" models

"Radiant" models

Portable heat for contractors, greenhouses,
small bualnetlses, workshops, garages,
outdoor recreation.
New imported Kero-Sun kerosene heaters beat woodstoves every way! No
logs 'to cut , haul . split and stack. No Smo~e. soot . ashes. No wasted heat up
the flue - Kero-Sun heaters need no chimney. Fuel cost av~rages only
3·5¢ an hour Absolutely no installation cost or mess (compare that with
woodstoves!) . Burns with no kerosene odor: tested for pollutoon safety, Au·
tomatic igniter. automatic tip-over shutoff. Every Kero-Sun heater Puts
the warm where vou want it'"'
·

$

DILL PICKLES

~

Jar·
·······~···············

99'

46 oz. Golden Isle

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .............~~~
10'12 Campbell's

CHICKEN ·STAR SOUP.••••• ~::•• 2/59e
20 oz. Sweetbrier

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .••••:a.~ ..... 69~
30 oz. Joan of Arc

A
PORTABLE HEATERS

PICKE.NS' HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

RED KIDNEY BEANS ••••••••••••••
12 01.

75~

W/IOC Off

FURNITURE
I THROWS
• Chair $199
Size.

$499J699

BRAIDED
RUGS

Size
19X33

Denims. corduroy by

$100
79~ $8~8
.

Size
24X36

MENS
JEANS
Big Yank. Values to

Sld . 99 .

Perfect.

Quality and lrr.

NO-IRON MUSLIN

lETTER SHEETS
Twin size printed sh

stripes or ~ Ids. Some:ts . Full size available In
or flat size. Matching 'i/fhtly Irregular . Fitted
•
P ow c~ses $3.00 pafr.

Twin Size

Full Bed Size

$300 $400

ARMOUR TREET •••••••••:!~ ...... 1.29
5

12oz. Armour

•

ROAST BEEF ..

~

14 V2oz. Swanson

0 •••••••••••

. . . .. . . . .

s}.•59

BE£F BRQTH ···o······~w~.~ ...... 2155~ .

POINT
PLEASAN.T
Qlf' ~

MASON

I

••uuAA.O

' Editor'
near
1 would like to answer the age old
qUMtion, is there a Santa Claus? I
C4fl truthly say yes there is.
~le h~ might not be the jolly old
g$nUeman running aroiind In a red
stjlt, there surely is. someone who
cares.
:This person's name I do not know,
Uiey wanted It that way. But, oh boy
, did they make three little boys
~ppy DO Christmas day.
!fbree· .new bikes so shiny and
,bt&gt;lght sat waiting for their owners to
rille.
·
:Ibanks fi1 a good sweet person in
Middleport. You restored my faith in
11'\Y fellomnan. The person who you
~ve the money to buy the bikes ·
w~' ~~~ he's keeping your secret
~u. so I can' \hank you in person.
. ~ut I'm taking this way to say.
thiink you Santa whoever you are. '
You area very sweet person~rd we
aU give you our thanks. ~Y your
di!,Ys be blessed with joy and love
~ evet'ythin(good corileyour way.
Thanks. ,
' '.
J
. '
Mr.s. William ll'ink ·
'•·
.'
· 244 Syr.amore St.
•
Middleport, !)hio

.

.
.•'

PARKAY

Santa Oaus

MARGARINE.... ;~.2/

SMUCKERS

GRA-PE JELLY. .. !2.~Z~.
CAMPBELL'S .

CHICK EN NOODLE
. $
SOUP.~ .......;.......~~~-4/
.

BANQUET BUFFET

1 SUPPERS........ !~~--~ }

...,. ...

KRAn

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE .

29

7.25 9l:-- •
(LIM IT ~ PL~~SE) . .

¢

·Limit 1 Per. customer ·
· Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 12,1980

COUPON
-

- : . : -· .

•

•

•

'

..
NAVY. BEANS
. .
.
.•

2-LB.
BAG

t__CO':'PO N

0

FLAVORIJE
......

.
.

I

•I

j

ZESTA CRACKERS

l

I• •

.

Limit 1 Per customer
: ·I· ·
Good Only atPow'ell 's
. :1
Offer Expires Jari. 12, 1980 .

I

'.

}

LB. BOX

2/~1

39

COU PON

CORONET

TOILET TISSUE

.

2/$1

$

.

:£. _.-:.._~ ~

COUPO N

_

8 ROLL
PAK

$}39

.
': •f

•I ,

Offer

�12- T he Daily Sentinel, M iddle poct-P om e roy. 0 .. Wednesday, Jan . 9, 191Kl

Your .· Hest Buys _Are -Found in th.e Sentinel Classifieds

13- The D~ il v Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy,O ., Wednesday , Jan. 9, 1!110
.DICK TRACY

In Memor y

WANT AD

CHARGES

IN LOVI NG memory of
Charles H . Wagner , who
passed awa y on Jan ua ry 7,

16 Wonla tr Under
I

Olor&amp;•

Cub

do¥

l.ID

I.Z

Jda)'l
3 dayl

1.10

6dan

U1

· 1 20

3.00

1.75

1.10•

Each word over the minimum
,15 words Ia 4 centa per word per

day . Maflllllllnaolhe~tbancoo ­

secutivt din wil1 be charged at
the I day 111ie.

memory. Coni " Thanllo
and Obituary : I cenla per won!,
1n

$3.00 mlnimwn. Cull in ad·
V.,.,.,

Mobile Hm1e salea and Yard
. salt3 are OC&lt;Op(e&lt;l only with
ca.!!h with order. 2$ cent charge
for ad.!! carrytn,g Bo1 Nwnber In

can. ol lbe Senllnd.

~ Publisher 1'1!8en'e!l

the

ri&amp;ht to edit or reject any ada
deemed objectional. The
Publisher will )lOI be ._.sible
for more thai!. one incorrect in•

1978. Although he has left
us and is sadl y m issed , he
w i II a lway s be gr ell fl y
lOVed·by h is w ife, Alice and
two chi ldren , Jac k ie and
Robin.

Card of Thanks
WE WI SH to 1hank the
many fr ien ds lind nei gh bOrs, the Chester Counci l
Daughters of Ame r ica, t he
emergency units doctors
a nd nursing staff at Holzer
Center . Al s o
M ed ical
Ewing Fune.ral Home who

coonhound .

If

seen,c all

Pa u l Ph ill ips at 742·2209.
IN COME TAX service,
Federa l a nd State . Wal lace
Russe ll , Bra dbu ry, 992·
n28.
in

Pomeroy · area .

Doroth y Lawson .
H usband and Famil y.

PART Tl ME 11 p.m . to
a.m ., RN or LPN . Call t
Pomeroy Heal th Care cen

during the i llness and death
0 tou r wife and sister , Mrs.

sertion.

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

In v estiga ti ve

Agent .

SHOOT EVERY
s UNDAY I PM . FACTORY
cHOKE ONLY . RACINE
G UN CLUB .
G UN

1977 CHE VROLE T Bl a ze r ,
P .S., P.B., A.C.. 2·wheel
·drive. 13,000 actual m iles.

992-6192.
1975 AMC Pacer . Good con ·
d iti on . No rust . $1700. 742·
2957 .

4P.M.
tllf' day before publication

Sunday
4P.M .

G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Fac1ory cnoke only .

ANTIQUES,
NITURE , glass,

Gun Club,

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

Osol

( IM ·
A TTENTION :
p ORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pav cash or certified check
I or antiques and callec ·
t ibles or entire estates.
N othing 100 large . Also,
g uns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614·
767·3167or 557·3411 .

u .s. SILVER
DATED 1964 OR
(ANY
E ARLIER
AMOUNT) . DON 'T LOSE
M ONEY, SIMPLY PICK
u p THE PHONE AND
614 · 992 · 511 3,
D IAL
B ROWN 'S.
B UYING

cOINS

Janu-ary 10, 1t80
Your ambllions will be honed to
a fine edge this coming year and
there is lillie doubt that you will
acc omplish what you set out to
d o. It's important , hOwever, that
you also set aside ample time to
enjoy yourself and others.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. Ill
Things you hope to accomplish
tod ay ca n be done, pro'tlided you
don't put roadblocks in your own
pa th look for easy routes , not
d ll ficiJII ones. Find O\lt more of

wha t lies ahead for you in the

year !allowing your birthday by
svnd mg for your copy of AstraGraph l etter . Mall $1 for ea&lt;:h to

Astra-Graph, Bo11 489. Radio
Clty Station . NX 10019 Be sure
to specify birth date.

AQUARIUS IJon. 20-Fob. 18l

The more time you spend dwelling on that whk:h should be
done, the more reasons you ' ll
come up with why It can't. Be a

doer, not a procrastinator.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20l

Before 'tiOiunt eering to manage
something for another today, be
certllin you can do a better job
than he can. Don't O'tlerestimate

your talents.
ARIES (M•ch 21·April 11) In

projects calling for a team effort
today, bend over backward to be
Cooperative. Nothing will be
accomplished If each pulls In an
opposing direction.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20l It's

best to focus your eflorts today
on only one projeCt instead of
h&amp;Vif1g several Irons in the fire .
Tasks will remain unfinished If
you attempt too much
GEMINI (Ma)l 21-JUM 20) Don't
l &amp;ke gambles on things today
about which you know litlle or
nothing. losses are likely il you
get out or your area of expertise.

CANCER (Juno 21-July ZZl

I NCOME TAX SERVICE .

Qu arterlo;, Federal and all

state Income tax reports

Rd ., Pomeroy .

PAY highest prices
po ssible for gold and silver
I

colns, rings, jewelry , etc .

contact Ed Burkett Barber
shop, Midd lepor1 .

PROBATE COURl.
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
E STATE OF BEATRICE
M . ROBSON, DECEASEO
c ase No. 22927
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDUCIARY
On January 3, 1980, In the
M elgs County Probate

ar,

w
Street, Middlepor1
0 h 0 45760.
'
Rober! E. Buck
Probate Judge ·
Clerk

II I 9, 16, 23, Jtc

shoes.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. ZZl You

Pnay find It a trllte dlnicult today
to stay within your budget, owing
to your extravagant whims _Shop
only for essentials.
-

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) Being

too insistent upon having things
your own way today Will not win
support at persons whose help
you need. Oon't alienate neces-

sary aiHes

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Jiov. ZZl An

Inability to forgive and forgei
could cause you unnecessary

beds ,

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given
1h at the annua I meetln~ of
the stockhold ers 'of
he
F armers Bank and Savings
ompany of 211 West
econd Street, PomerQy,
0 hio, will be held at the of·

you should. You 'lllon't like It
wl'len the bllll come due.
IN IE W IPAPI~

ENTIAPAIII!! AtiiN.)

Paul E . Klees,

Secretary
D ec . 30, Jan. 3, 9, 15

LEGAL .NOtiCE
The Department of Ad·

dUI'ing the period.

linement, Shaklee organic

MARTIN'S

LAFF- A- DAY

Is aslollows: Title 11 B, c,
$20 184,147 ; Title II D,
$1 6, 229,880 ;
YCCIP ,
$ 1,080,267 ;
YETP ,
$4 ,887,055 ;
Title
VI,
$1 4,544,072 ; Tille VII.
$J{0&gt;1,546; SYEP, $12~086 ;
H RE II, $737,249 ; an Ad ·
Cost

Pool,

S1 p29.916 .
he Comprehensive Em ·
PIoyment and Training
Ma ster and Annual Plans
are available for review
be tween 8:00A .M . and.S :oo
P.M. in the OMD Library,
27th Floor, 30 East Broad
Streel, Columbus, Ollie ·
43 215! Phone 614·466·8326.
wr tten commenfll may
be submitted to Mr .
Leo
· nard F . Blanton at the
sa me address by January
30, 1980.
(I l ·1, ltc

black , brown, white, year
old. Fox t errier, fema le ,
housebroken . 2 German
poli ce and Norwegian

Elkhound .
Humane
Society , 992·6260.
HUMANE ·society
beagles, shepherds. husky,
English Setter type pup ·
pies . 2 English Setter dogs ,
shols, wormed. 992·6260.
male,

2

female .

Mobile Homes · Sale
1'112 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970New Moon 12x603 bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304·67 5·4424.

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
available . Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R1 . 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

DIAMOND

iron banks, tools. antiqu e

clothing,

razors ,

992 ·3337 or 992·2121 .

992-332:5

DRY
HARDWOOD
firewood, $30 1ruckload. 12
ga . double shotgun in good
condition , $90. Phone 742-

2359.

pocket

knives and other old items .
ZENITH CONSOLE stereo .
5 years old. V.ery good con -

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, otber gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture .

Will

buy

ooe

piece or household . Call
992·6370.
'

dition . Alter 5, 992-5085 .
WARD'S

energy

electric dryer.

saver,

Excellent

condition . $150. 667·3958.
.--=-::~:-::-:::-::-::o--.1' '

SILVER DOLLARS AND
51 LVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES.
ALSO , GOLD COINS ,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC . ITEMS AT HONEST
UP · TO·DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT ,
BARBER SHOP, MID ·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992 ·3476.

HOTPOINT
and

bedrooms, 2 baths, tore ·
ed air heat, •stove,
refrigerator, and other
furniture. 7/8 of an acre
near Harrisonville.
4 ACRES - Near Mid ·

dlepOrt ·on hard road .
Two trailer hookups, a
one bedroom trailer and

large u1i lily bldg .
$925.00 DOWN - Bal .
about like rent, 3

'i?..,. _Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.

·.... ~... ~ ..Phone 99:Z-:Z181

·•

TWO BEDROOM furnish ed
apt .. $165 mo . plus utilities
1 child, no pets. 949 ·23n, o r
after 5p .m . 949 ·2875 .
TWO

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl is h
and Western . Saddles an d
harness .
Horses
an d
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614
698 ·3290. Barding an d
Riding Lessons and Hor se
Care products . Wester n
bOO IS . Children 's $15.50
RISING STAR Kennel
Board ing. Call367·0292.

Headquarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN .
WANTED - Nice home with 4or 5 bedrooms, fami·
ly room &amp; garage . Six to 1en yrs. old . Five to 10
minutes from Pomeroy . We have a buyer for the

right house. $75,000.00 price range .
JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedrm. house wllh kitchen,
dining &amp; bath . City water and septic. Nice vinYl
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp. Priced at $14,900.
· PRICE DRASTICALLY REOUCED - On this nice
3 bedroom house with large living room &amp; kitchen,
balh, plenty of c 1ose1s, bullt ·ln cabinets, etc . Stove &amp;
refrlg . Large storage building with concrete floor.
Large lot with plenty of shrubbery. Located In Mid ·
dleport. Reduced for quick sale to $28,000.
BEAUTY SALON - Fully equipped, ready 1o go. In ·
eludes two working stations and five rooms, bath .

Cold drink machine, etc. A money·maker In good
location, in Racine. Priced at $25,000. ·
S11,000 - Trailer &amp; Lot In Racine. 3 BR, all
carpeted, front porch with awning, wood underplnn ·
ing, also includes poo l far the children. Anxious to
sell.
SYRACUSE - Nice 3 BR home, exira large LR,
equipped kit .. washer, dryer, lull basement, central
air, breezeway leading to garage. Well cared for
house has many extras, several fruit trees ol dif·
ferent varieties and nice garden. See

indoor ·outdoor

facilities
regi ster e d
Dobermans . 61.4 ·446 ·7795.

Also

AKC

GIVE A CUTE liveable pu p
a fu1ure . Adopt an orpha n

Human e
Society . Shots, wormed
Donations appreciated
from

your

992-6260 .
REGISTERED

Pekin..e

puppies, 1 male, 1 femal e.

Ready to go. 7 weeks old.
949·2646..
HUMANE SOciety pets tor
adoption, 992·6260. Heal1hy
shots, and wormed. Borde r'
collie types, Irish Setter
English Setter with pup
pies, shepherd type. Put a
cold nose in vour life . Kit
tens, kittens, kittens, all
shapes, all sizes.

From I to 75 acres, bordering ·

6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR, dining and utility room, f
kit. equl pped w·stove and ref rig. Moslly carpeted, :
forced air gas furnace, 1 yr. old "Garage, a complete
trailer hook·up wllh nat. gas tap_and septic can ac;ld
Income. over 2 acres. $29,900. can for appol_ntme~t.
Just off Rl. 7 below Middleport.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CAll .

Auto Sales

-

to appreciate.

Very nice location In lower Syracuse on st. Rl. 124.
Priced At $63,900 .
TRAILER - 2 bR on peaceful side street, all equip·
ped kitchen Including dlne11e set. Must sell. S10.SOO.
NEW - WON'T LAST - 4 yrs . old, 3 BR, ba1h &amp;
utilities, kitchen w ·dlshwasher, D. R. w ·slldlng glass
doors to patio, on nearly 'I• acre. Carpeted In
beadtlful taste. U1.9oo.
MINI FARM - Beautiful brick bHevel with. 3
b«&lt;rm ., large living room with fireplace . Total elec·
trlc and fully Insulated. All hardwood floors. Base·
mentcould be finished for extra living quarters. At·
tached garage. 3 large hot houses and many extras
on 5 acres. Loc. close to Racine. Asking $63,500.
CHESTER - 4 BR home, hardwood lloors, large
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
,garden space . ASking $48,900.
.FAMILY HOME - Lo1s 01 possibilities wl1h thfs:
nice 2 s10ry. Many features, central air, built· in ap· '
pllances, all carpeted, good lnvestmentwllh several ·
n!ce blldlng lots. On approx. acres In the center :
of Racine. Asking $54,000.
LOTS o ·F LOTS Pomeroy.
·

Plymouth Scamp,
custom Inter ior, 6 cyl ..
auto ., S1800 or trade. 742·
2451.
1974

walks

and

driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES l
Reduced Winter Rates
RACINE,O.
949·2748or
992·7314
, 2·28·pd .

~

Roger Hysell
Garage
J /4

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2388
O~J' NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
...,I
'4H6540r 949·2591 .

on 51. Rl. 124 toward
IW11and.
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30·tfc .

Hours 9·1 M ., W., F.

Oilier tfmes by appoint·
ment.

107 Sycamore (Rear

Answer:
Yeste•day's

King George II of Greece
was restored to the thnme

by plebiscite In 1946.
Real Estate for Sale

Jumbles· CREEl

FUSSY

Mary Hartman B;

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003.
NEW LISTING -

realtors .

Ex ·

ceptional buy . 2 homes

on Beech Grov~ Road .
Both In excellent shape.
Live In one and rent the
o1her. Situated on 10
good acres. Call for all
details. Good Income
producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - EX·
ecutive sty le 5 bedroom
home . 2 fu ll .baths,
modern kitchen, family

608 E.
. MAIN. _
.
POME I!O:Y, 0
992·2259
WOULD YOU
BE·
LIEVE - A beautiful
kl1chen with a bar and

room, living room and

lull basement. Many
nice features to this
home. Ca ll for an appt.
NEW · LISTING - 2.41

dining
area,
3
bedrooms, a family
room, a rec. room, a TV
room a nd a new swimm -

acres

across

from

Eastern High . Very
good building site . Ask ·
ing $7,000.00.
RUTLAND Total
electric, 3 b«&lt;rC&gt;Dm,
brick home on Main
Street. 1'1• baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and full basement.
Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING- Cozy
3 b«&lt;room home In
Syracuse on Cherry
S1reet. Living room, kit·
chen, ba1h and base ·
ment. Sma ll lot with
building. A real buy at
only $10,000.00. Better
check this one oulll
NEW LISTING- Quail ·
tv built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, .utility
and living room. Kit·
chen
has garage
disposal
and
dishwasher. Situated on
a little over an acre.
Must see to appreciate
workmanship. Sells for
$.45,600.00.
Our ljomes are selling.
We can help our
qualified buyers lind
flnanclne. Call us and
discuss
your Real
Estate problems, we'll
be glad to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2083
Velma Nlclnsky, Aisoc.
Phone 742·3092
-GeorgeS. Hobsto11er Jr.
Broker 992-5739

Ing pool for onlY
$39,500.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house pay ·
ment for you . Large
brick
duplex
In
Syracuse. Live In part
and ren1 pari. $28,000.00.
HAND -Y MAN'S
SPECIAL - 2 apart·
ment frame In Mid ·
dleport . Always has
renters. On a corner lot.

$10,900.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES AP·
prox. 25 acr ... some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
deve loped to property .
$27,500.00.
LOVELY 2 story
home overlooking the
river. Has 3 bedrooms,
rec. room, full base·
ment, and equipped kit·
chen. $35,900.00.
·
WE HAVE READY
BUYERS FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST
WITH US.
REALTOR
Henry E. CLeland, Jr.
99H191
ASSOCI ATl!S
Jean Trusseii949·2WO
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONIE
992-2259

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

.

., · r·

MIDDLEPOAT, OHIO

South

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I•
I NT
5•

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
2 ...
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag
Without an auction, if the
West hand were given to I 00
.players on lead against a fivediamond eontrae( all of them
would lead a high heart.
However, auctions are reveal·
ing. If West had drawn the
proper inference from the
diagrammed auction , he
would have had an excellent
idea of declarer's distribution.
Then he could have found the
killing lead.
South's bidding shows a
three-suited hand of either 4·
1-4·4 or 4-0·5· 4 distribution.

B~ADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Servic~ . Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crl.tt Bradford.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Supplicate
1 Type of thread 6 Standing
6 Legislate
tall
11 Wall bracket 7 Cribbage
12 Noted lover
term
8 Asian river
13 Grapevine

the farm!

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned. Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard. 992·
6309or 7-42·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742 ·Zl28.

~MifHd

He'll
have aqood
home at

toasters, Irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mower .
Next 10 State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
31125.

Md
'

PlANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
SChools and home since
1965.

WINNIE

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.
.

MY EARS WILL
II£VER BE TI1 E
t&gt;AME AFTER

MOST PEOPLE

ANI7

OUR A&amp;EW ILL
&amp;YMPATH IZE

LISTEN ING TO

WITH YOU.

111EY G-ET lHEIIZ
C/.01HE5 . .AT
A t&lt;:UMIM&amp;E
SALf: ?'

THAT LOU !/
MU51C AT

Services Offered

SAVE ON ;QRPET ·
DRIVE A tiTnE ~
..SAVE- A' LOt ''
.RUBBER BA~kjJ
CARPET
.1

'4!19 .
.. and up

Caah &amp; carry •.

W~f'JZE

DO

T'M e.IJR'E

&amp;OME

OF

lHEM DO... ANI7 11'5
QUITE FA5HIONA8LE1
I MI6HT Al717.

WENI7Y1.7.

WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992-63311.

BARNEY

PAW UPAN'BOUGHT
A SECONT-HAND
. WATER HEATER
'IESTIDDY

GLORY BE!!

WHAT DO IT
RUN ON-- GAS

1:oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1 :soNews 13,1 7.

THURSDAY,JANUARY 10,1980
5 :4s-Farm Re porl 13; 5:5(}-PTL
Club 13 .
6:oo-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 :0s-Warld a1 Large 17 ; 6:31&gt;-F or

4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Passwor d

Yesterday's Answer

Z8 Beat

35 In the

it!
30 Have the
appearanc e
32 Miscal·
culation
33 Irish
islands
34 Cougar

center of
37 Within :
comb. form
38 Word with
teen
39 Esau's home
40 Irish river
42 United

z

h-1---t--1--+I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEII

"GUOD REMNANT

. SEI,ECTION
6'~12' TO

12'X16'

$~000 .

'

.· -~ . anauD

,

\

' ;

\:811742-2211

RUii.AND

.

FURNituRE
.,:Rutland,

OLIR TEACHER SA'-15 ·
WE HAVE TO MEASURE
SOMETHIN6 WITH A RULER

I WONDER HOIIJ YOU

1-lOLD ,STILL ...I'LL

WRITE THAT'... I'LL PUT,
''LirlO LIP, lllfEE !NCIIf5"

TRI{ MEASURING !{OUR
MOUTH AGAIN.:.

.r CAN.'r

l
:~

STANP IT!

·''.

o:

.

- ~ ·..

.l

' J
'I

~ ~---

~~~:::5=t=J - ~~~-~~----~~

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LO· NGFEL'LOW

to

work

It:

One letter simply standi lor another. In this sample A ll
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letlen.
apoitrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code !etten are dilletent.
I;RYPTOQUOTES
HSBWCQ

-SB

CRXXSQYB

GYV&gt;\YA .
~

HFYG

HY

BXCCN

XFVG .

HFYG

HY

BCVA . .., HSJJSVQ
HCAWBHCAXF
Yealerday'1 Cryptoquote: KNOWING IS NOT ENOUGH; WE
MUST APPLY.WIWNG IS NOT ENOU~H; WE MUST 00.-

GOETHE ·

"'1n

12 ·0Q--Movie " The Posse;;sed" 8;
10 :4(}-Baretta 6, 13.

DOWN

OR ELECTRIC?

M ovi e

The modern tendency whe n
holding three four-card sui ts
as opening bidder is to bid the
You .. Biac k Wom an 10; News 17 .
suit be low the singleton in
• 6:4s-Mornlng Report 3; 6:51&gt;-Good
order to save room in the
Morning , Wes t Virg ini a 13;
auction. North realized after
6:55-New s 13.
South had bid three suits that
7:oo-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
his I 0 hig)l-card points we re
America 6, 13; Thursday Morall golden and decided to
ning 8: Batman 10 ; Thr ee
jump to the diamond game, an
Slooges-Little Rascals 17.·
action that was certainly
7: 15- A.M. Weather 33 ; 7:30justified.
Family Affa ir 10; Big Blue
West woodenly led his ace
Marble
33.
of hearts and the hand could
7:55- Chuck White Report s 10;
no longer be defeated . He
8 :00- Capt. Ka ngaroo 8,10 ;
switchd to a trumf. at the sec· ·
Family Affair 17; Sesame Sl. 33.
ond trick, but dec arer was in
8:3(}-Ramper Room 17.
control. South cased his four
9:oo-Bob Braun 3; Big Val ley 6;
black suit winners and scored
Porky Pig 8 ; One Day At A Ti me
six more diamond tricks by a
10; Phi l Dollahue 13, 15; Lucy
cross-ruff.
Show 17.
If West had led a trump at
9:3(}-Bob Ne whar t 8; Lave of Life
trick one, which he should
10; Green A cres 17 .
have realized was the right
10 :oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
lead from the bidding, declarNight 6: Be at the Cloc k 8, 10;
er would go down. South could
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
still ruff two of his losers in
" The Streets of San Franci sco"
dummy . But before he could
17 .
ruff his third black suit loser ,
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3,15 ;
he would have to lead a heart
$20 ,000 Pyram id 13; Andy
as there was no quick entry to
Grlffl lh 6; Whew 8, 10.
his hand . This would give the
10 :5s-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
defense the chance to lead a
11 :01}-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
devastating second round of
Shir!ey 6, 13 ; Price is Righi 8, 10.
trumps . South would be
11 : 30- Whe el of Fortune 3, 15 ;
stranded with the two blac k
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
suit losers as well as the heart
20,33 : 11 : 5s-News 17.
loser.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
The original heart lead
6,8,10,1 3: Mindreaders 15; Love
effectively established comAmerican Style 17.
munication between declarer
12 :3(}-Ryan' s Hope 6,13 ; Search for
and dummy for the cross-ruff.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Movie " The Geisha Boy" 17;
Elec. Co. 20,33.
(For a copy of JACOB Y
1 :oo-Days ol Our Lives 3,15; Al l My
MODERN, send $1 to: '"Win at
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Bridge, " care of this newspaRestle$S 8.10 .
per, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
1: 30-As The World Turn s 8, 10;
Station. New York , N . Y.
2:()()-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to
tot! 19.)
Live 6, 13 ; 2 :2s-News 17 .
2: 31&gt;-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Lighl8,10; Gigg lesnorl Hotel17 .
3 :oo-General Hospila l 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Masterpiece Theat re
20.
3: 3()-{)ne Day At A Time 8; Joker' s
Wild 10; Flintstones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.

9 Whale
items
10
Lug aroWld
15 Ironic
14 Scourge
16 Caddoan
of serge
Indian
18 Exude
17 Being: Sp.
• 19 White grape 19 Wire measure
00 - Merkel
23 Disfigure
21 Sun . talk
27 Sluggish
!2 Stuff
Z8 Rita Hay·
2f Hgt .
worth role
25 Fish
29 Julie
Christie role :16 Busch or
Marsh
30 Parlor piece
31 Get
together
33 Brazilian
tree
38 Press
statement
u Gossiper
t3 Food acids
44 Ms. Toklas'
friend
45 Consumer
advocate'
46 N.Y. Mets
manager
I Damsel
Peruvian
royalty
3 Rabbit's tall
4 French
author

.SUE ON ALL

.,

'.

Ease

Opening lead:• A

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·lt·yourself or
let us Install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

~~;.;.;,..._;__,_

..

North

all

AUTOMOB IL E
IN ·
SURANCE been cah celled?
Last
your
operator's license? Phone
992· 2143 .

RUTLAND - 2homes on Salem Street. Take yo.ur
chOice or buy both and rentthem. Sl2,000tach.

.

I.

Wett

MACHINE
service ,

Scissors .

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom brltk only 1 block
from 10wn, low utilities. A bargain at S12,SOO.

Rqclney •Downlng, Broker, Home 992·:1731 ,

.QJI09 7
.53
+9 3

K QJ 10
+A8 7 6

makes . 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen

POMEROY - A beautiful little starter home · or
retirement couple. Two bedroom · and· bath. Large
living room · nice kl1chen . Fult basement• .
S17,500.00.
.

ani&lt;thiicis"; Br•nch Mit11ittr, Home 992-2449

EAST
• Q6 5 3

+A842.

LIKE NEW - Qulef country living In this tree
bedroom, 2 bath ranch. Over an acre of ground with
a spill roll fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00.

CALL 992-2342

WEST

• J 10 9
.AK

.5+

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742 ·2455.

HOMES FOR SALE
WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOw
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY

• A982
+K5

SOUTH

Business Services

.

1·9

.860 2

..BUT NO! INSTEAD THEY RI ~CULE
ME FOR ~y POVERT '(! LOOK AT
TH OSE TENTS! RAGS HELD
TOGETHER WITH PATCHgs ... AND
PATCHES Q!:l THE PATCHES! ...

11 : 15- L ove

Cold Blood" 10; Movie " Two
Rode Toge1he r ·· 17.

NORTH

• 764
• Q J 10 4 2

20 ;

Ameri can Style 17.
11 :3(}-Tonlght 3, 15; Love Boal 6,13;

Answer: What th e soprano 'sa 1d to We tenor when he
pr oposed marri age - LETS " DU-ET" .

+K7

10·19'1 mo.

Repairs,

Cavett

DEBATE

Discovering killing lead

0

3, 15;
M ov i e

10: 3()-{)ver Easy 20.
11:00- News 3,6, 8,1 0, 13. 15 ; Dick

(Answers tomorrow)

CEMENT

6;

10 : 15- Up stair s, Dow nstai r s 17 ;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

JAMES_ KEESEE
PH. 99l·'l./72

SEWING

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot . Can be par·
lially linanced . Call Guido
Girolami. 992·&gt;186, 10·6. No

I

I

I I I I ]

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

.Aluminum Siding
elnsulatlon
• Storm Doors
I e Storm Windows
·
• Replacement Win ·..'
dows
Free Estimate
·;'

CALL992-7544

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store . Phone
992·7559.

.•. -

r r x JTHAT r x I

St rokes

A ngels

" Seizure : The Slory ol Kathy
Morr is" 8, 10; Sta te of the Slate
Address 33.
9:3(}-Live lrom Studio 8H 3,1 5;
Charlie's Angels 13.
10 :oo-Vega s 6,13; News 20 ; Movie
" The Lathe a t Hea ven" 33 .

Now arrange the cirded loners to
form the surprise a'nswer, as suggested~ the abOve cartoon.

J&amp;L BLOWN.
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Pomerey,O.

- -i"

Charl ie ' s

Guaranteed work
Free Estimates
Aller 5 P.M. 992·5547
'12·13·2 mo. pd.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

.

9 : 00- Dilf ' r e nt

'.

mile off Rt: 7 by·pass ,

Real Estate for Sale
F INANCIN G·VA ·FHA LO ·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
0R
R.E F I N A N C E .
0 IRELAND
MORTGAGE .
77 E . STATE, ATHENS.
614·592-3051.

Gr ea-t Performances 20, 33;
M ovie ' ' Sands of lwo Jl m a" 17.

tMUGLEEt

Wednesday, Jan. 9 ·

RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 9'12-2852
or '192 -7235
12·13-pd .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"'lOOdburn ·

992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap
ts . Phone 992 -543-1 .

Let Us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

down

bedrooms, natUral gas
furnace , basement and
nice lot.

Housing

All types roof work, new
or repair gullers and .
downspouts,
guttar
cleaning and painting.
All work euaranleed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1H4·mo.
. .

WEDN ES DA Y,JANUARY 9.1980
7:3(}-Counfry Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6; J oker 's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33 ; The Judge 10; Wild
Ki ngdom 15; All In The Family
17; Mac Ne il-Lehrer Report 20 .
8 :oo-Rea l Peopl e 3. 15; E ight Is
Enough 6; Young Maver ick 8,1 0:

I I ( J

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S I N. L CONSTRUCTION
Qua llty cons1rucllon at _
PWMBING REPAIR
rHson1ble rates.
·

ing fireplace, large win·

POMEeOY
LANDMAik

Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Cal I

3

dews. view of the river,
full basement and front
porch . $1,()00.00 DOWN .
BUS. BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
with bath, and nat. gas
for only $11,000.00. Six
Hundred down.
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992·3325 OR 992 ·31176

Headquarters
Appllance_s .
'Sifes &amp; !;ervice

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e •

MOBILE HOME -

RANCH -

-

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

·~

For Rent

216 E. 5e~!"'d Street

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates . All work
guaranleed. 20 years ex·
perlence. Call Athens,
c~llect, Gerald Clark
797,.157 or Tom Hoskins
797·2745.

spouts, some concrete

Real Estate far Sale
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond tor swimming

H. L WHITESEL ·
ROOANG

- ~------~-----J

REMODELING
Gutter · work,

OHJt) VAllEY
ROOFING

12-1-1 mo.

ADD ONS &amp;
work,

tires on Olds wheels . S40.

and · se ll ing. Will appraise

new, used or antique fur
niture . One piece or com
plete household . Gold
silver and other old coins
china, glass, old toys, dolls

*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·HPd.l

Part

dachshund, part Man ·
c hest~r . Before 3, 992 ·7617 .
After 1, 992 ·3367.

TWO J ·7BX15 studded snow

years experience in buy in g

C.. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

EIGHT WK. old pups, 4

Stop, think , are you abau t

to lose money? Over 25

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding, all breeds . Clea n

- mlnistrative

'm thankful we're in IH!re . .. a
rson is n 'I safe in tile streets
,ymore ..

BLACK

APPRAISAL

to the Depar1ment of Labor
31, 1979.
Major chanjleS in the
M aster Plan Included in·
fo rmation concerning the
Independent Monitoring
unit, the Intake system,
p rograms
for
arget
roups, labor market In ·
?o rmatlon, the OMD·OBES

tr ackln~
sfstem and
T argete Job ax Credit.
The final allocation of
lu nds for the Annual Plan

Giveaway
BORDER COLLI E , male,

carpeted. 3 10 17 acres

products,
Rawlelgh
products . 9'12 ·7825.

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor . 614 ·367·7220.

Non-Financial Agreement,

7.42·

silver . Call J. A. Wamsley
742·2331. Treasure Ches
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592
6462.

m inistrati ve Services, Of ·
fice of Manpower Develop·

· ment submined Annual
a nd Master Plan Revisions

firewood,

priced .

UTILITY TOOL ches1 for
pickup, $75. Inquire at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, OH.

ches, c lass rings, weddin g
bands, diamonds. Gold o r

Adulls $29 .00 .

0 n December

Ccmblne harvester sales
climbed 13.9 percent
nationwide for January
lhroogh June. A total of
8,243 combines were sold

reasonably

OLD COINS, pocket wat

January,

properly come before sa id
m eetlng .

SR

2544.

ter.

to select actlvltln which could
cause you to spend more than

CURED

2nd , Middleport, OH . 9'12
3161.

fl ce of said Bank in
p omeroyl Ohio, accordln~
to Its by· aws, on 1he thl r
of

Orchard ,

NICE PIGS for sale . Wor ·
med, ~as1rated . 949 ·2857.

china
anything . See or call Rut h'
Gosney , ant iques, 26 N

992·5858 .

frustration today. let bygones
be bygones. Open a new chap -

SAOITTARIUI ( -. 23-Doc. 21)
EnJoy yourHit today, but try not

F itzpa tr ick

FUR

12x60
BEDROOM
mobile home . Ra cine area

1980, at 4:00 P .M. lor 1he
urpose of electing dlrecfo rs and the transaction of
su ch other business as may

669 ·

689 .

~

wed~sday

Wilkesville ,

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at Uper bu . Bestfor
apple butter . Call 669·3785,

call9'12 ·7760.

TWO BEDROOM trailer
Adults on ly 992 ·3324.

bringing up domestic
i ssu~s today where you and your
spouse are at opposite poles.
Neither Is likely to make compromiSes or conceulooa.
be careful today not to demand
of other&amp; things you would not
do yourself If the roles were
reversed. Put yourself In their

Phone

3785.

c

ourt, Case No. 22927, Mar ·
t ha L. Cunninqham, 414 5
M cDonel , L•ma , Ohio
45801, . was
appointed
E xecurnx of the estate of
Beatrtce
M.
Robson,
d eceased, late of 625 Broad ·

Avoid

LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. 22) You must

brass

·will be prepared by ap· Cal1992-6370.
po intment. 992· 2212 or see
wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatric k Or ·
chard, · State Route 689 .

FURNITURE ,

Miller . Rt . .4, Pomeroy or

Hallow

3891.

_

AND 2 Y EARS
PROBATION?

Delivery can be arranged .

E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992 ·

ic e
lron
beds. desks, etc., complete
households . Write M.D

otD

At their buildingin Bashan .
F actor-; choke guns on ly .

Rutland . Proceeds donated
t o Boy Scout Troop 249.

food, and all types of salt .
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc .,

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max
diameter 10" on larges t
end . $12 p -er ton . Bundl ed
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2
Pomeroy 992 ·2689 .
boxes,

corn

Friday afternoon

For Sale
LIMESTONE ,

sand , gravel. calcium
chloride , fertilizer, dog

SHOOT . Rae i ne
G UN
vo lunteer Fire Dept .

E very Sa1urday . 6 :30 p.m .

Tueaday
thru Friday

843 ·2795 .

COAL,

COUNTY
H UMANE SOCIETY . 992 ·
6 260 . Pets available tor
adopti on and information

s erv ice.

$5,000. Ca n be seen on a
Sa t urday, Twp . Rd . 27 ,

1976 1h ton p ickup tru ck in
good condition . 992 -- 5786
from 9-Sp.m .

.. M E IGS

NOTICE

HAY FOR SALE . S1 per
bale, 80c b y tr uckload .

I

l£RACT
L ..,_.,,_r1
c......_ ,_ .. , -....... ....tJ

IN ART 08..J ECT5 .
AND GOT Af200 ANE

·Business Services

bicyc le.

change rear end, m otor
b uilt to m ax imurri, a ll new
parts. New and ex tra t i r es .
E xtra parts and rims.

ter , 992 -6606 - ask for Mr
Zidian .

Notices

26 " 10 -s peed
Stereo. 9'12·5621.

De xter , at Slater 's resi den ·

Black cover . 992 ··76'11 .

were so k ind and helpful

HALF A MILLION

For Sale ·

ce .

LOST: Scofield reference

Bible

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
th e
Middleport
an d
Pomeroy areas . Call th e
Daily Sentinel betwee-n 8:30
and 5 :OOp .m ., 992·2156.

.

Au fa Sales
STOCK
CA R . Ho we
c hass is, 350 4 boll mai n
Chev y, Frankl in q uick

Lost and Found
LOS T : Snowvi lle a rea .
F ema le
b lu e
ti c k

Television
Viewing

Unscrambkt these four Jumbles.

one letter to' each square. to form
four ordiriary words.

L. IKE THE G UY IN
D ETROIT WH O STOl-E

.
*&gt; 1-.:1 IICing Pellum

.

S1ndlc1Je, Inc .

.

Plus 15; Merv Gril(in 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame Sf. 20,33;
Real McCoys 13; Spectreman 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Petllcoat
Junclion 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
Gilligan' s Is. 17 .
S:oo-Caro l Burnett 3; Sanlord &amp;
Son 8: Mister Rogers' Neigh ·
barhoad 20 ,33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17 .
5:3(}-Mash 3; Ne ws 6; Gomer Pyle
8; E lee. Co . 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Zoom 20,33; Carol Burnett 17.
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13 ;
Caro l Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20 ;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:oo-Cross-Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Ba xle rs 6; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33; News 10; Newlywed
Game 13; Love American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son ' 17; Dick
Cavett 20 .
Squares
3;
7: 30- Hollywood
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; $100,000 Name That Tun e 10;
Nashville On The Road 13;
Country Roads 15; All In The
Fami ly 17 ; MacN e il -Lehrer
Report 20 .
8:oo-Buck Rogers In the 251h
Century 3, 15; Mark &amp; Mindy
6, 13;; Waltons 8, 10; Milwaukee
Symphony Orc hestra in Concert
20 ; Civilisation 17; Camera
Three 33.
8: 30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Close Up_
33 .
9:oo-Qulncy 3,15; Ba rne y · Miller
6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 10; Energy :
8; Sneak Previews 20,33; College
Baskelball 17.
9:30-SMp 6,13; Camera Three 20;
DAncing Disco 33.
10:oo-Rockford Files 3, 15; 20-20 13;
' Energy : 6; Knots Land ing 8, 10;
• News 20; Soundstage 33. ..
"'
"'
10 :'30-Cver Easy 20.
· '
11 :QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of.:
the Wild 17; Di ck Cavett 20; Fall •
&amp;. Rise of Reginald Pe rrin 33.
:.
11 ::!(}-Tonight 3, 15; Po llee Wo ma n ' ,.
6,13; ABC News 33; Movie " Mr .
Skeffington " 10; Mov ie " No
Time for Comedy " 17 .
12 :4o-Tomorrow 3; News 15; I : 3~ .'
News I).
•
1: ~Movie "Thief of Damascus" ,·

17: 1 :-is-Black Sheep Squadron ·.-

8.

•

.,

1: 50-News' 13; 3: 11&gt;-Movle " Tokyo
Joe " 17: 5 :oo-Untavchoblea 17.

�12- T he Daily Sentinel, M iddle poct-P om e roy. 0 .. Wednesday, Jan . 9, 191Kl

Your .· Hest Buys _Are -Found in th.e Sentinel Classifieds

13- The D~ il v Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy,O ., Wednesday , Jan. 9, 1!110
.DICK TRACY

In Memor y

WANT AD

CHARGES

IN LOVI NG memory of
Charles H . Wagner , who
passed awa y on Jan ua ry 7,

16 Wonla tr Under
I

Olor&amp;•

Cub

do¥

l.ID

I.Z

Jda)'l
3 dayl

1.10

6dan

U1

· 1 20

3.00

1.75

1.10•

Each word over the minimum
,15 words Ia 4 centa per word per

day . Maflllllllnaolhe~tbancoo ­

secutivt din wil1 be charged at
the I day 111ie.

memory. Coni " Thanllo
and Obituary : I cenla per won!,
1n

$3.00 mlnimwn. Cull in ad·
V.,.,.,

Mobile Hm1e salea and Yard
. salt3 are OC&lt;Op(e&lt;l only with
ca.!!h with order. 2$ cent charge
for ad.!! carrytn,g Bo1 Nwnber In

can. ol lbe Senllnd.

~ Publisher 1'1!8en'e!l

the

ri&amp;ht to edit or reject any ada
deemed objectional. The
Publisher will )lOI be ._.sible
for more thai!. one incorrect in•

1978. Although he has left
us and is sadl y m issed , he
w i II a lway s be gr ell fl y
lOVed·by h is w ife, Alice and
two chi ldren , Jac k ie and
Robin.

Card of Thanks
WE WI SH to 1hank the
many fr ien ds lind nei gh bOrs, the Chester Counci l
Daughters of Ame r ica, t he
emergency units doctors
a nd nursing staff at Holzer
Center . Al s o
M ed ical
Ewing Fune.ral Home who

coonhound .

If

seen,c all

Pa u l Ph ill ips at 742·2209.
IN COME TAX service,
Federa l a nd State . Wal lace
Russe ll , Bra dbu ry, 992·
n28.
in

Pomeroy · area .

Doroth y Lawson .
H usband and Famil y.

PART Tl ME 11 p.m . to
a.m ., RN or LPN . Call t
Pomeroy Heal th Care cen

during the i llness and death
0 tou r wife and sister , Mrs.

sertion.

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

In v estiga ti ve

Agent .

SHOOT EVERY
s UNDAY I PM . FACTORY
cHOKE ONLY . RACINE
G UN CLUB .
G UN

1977 CHE VROLE T Bl a ze r ,
P .S., P.B., A.C.. 2·wheel
·drive. 13,000 actual m iles.

992-6192.
1975 AMC Pacer . Good con ·
d iti on . No rust . $1700. 742·
2957 .

4P.M.
tllf' day before publication

Sunday
4P.M .

G UN SHOOT every Sunday
12:00. Fac1ory cnoke only .

ANTIQUES,
NITURE , glass,

Gun Club,

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede

Osol

( IM ·
A TTENTION :
p ORTANT TO YOU ) Will
pav cash or certified check
I or antiques and callec ·
t ibles or entire estates.
N othing 100 large . Also,
g uns, pocket watches and
coin collections . Call 614·
767·3167or 557·3411 .

u .s. SILVER
DATED 1964 OR
(ANY
E ARLIER
AMOUNT) . DON 'T LOSE
M ONEY, SIMPLY PICK
u p THE PHONE AND
614 · 992 · 511 3,
D IAL
B ROWN 'S.
B UYING

cOINS

Janu-ary 10, 1t80
Your ambllions will be honed to
a fine edge this coming year and
there is lillie doubt that you will
acc omplish what you set out to
d o. It's important , hOwever, that
you also set aside ample time to
enjoy yourself and others.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22·Jon. Ill
Things you hope to accomplish
tod ay ca n be done, pro'tlided you
don't put roadblocks in your own
pa th look for easy routes , not
d ll ficiJII ones. Find O\lt more of

wha t lies ahead for you in the

year !allowing your birthday by
svnd mg for your copy of AstraGraph l etter . Mall $1 for ea&lt;:h to

Astra-Graph, Bo11 489. Radio
Clty Station . NX 10019 Be sure
to specify birth date.

AQUARIUS IJon. 20-Fob. 18l

The more time you spend dwelling on that whk:h should be
done, the more reasons you ' ll
come up with why It can't. Be a

doer, not a procrastinator.

PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 20l

Before 'tiOiunt eering to manage
something for another today, be
certllin you can do a better job
than he can. Don't O'tlerestimate

your talents.
ARIES (M•ch 21·April 11) In

projects calling for a team effort
today, bend over backward to be
Cooperative. Nothing will be
accomplished If each pulls In an
opposing direction.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20l It's

best to focus your eflorts today
on only one projeCt instead of
h&amp;Vif1g several Irons in the fire .
Tasks will remain unfinished If
you attempt too much
GEMINI (Ma)l 21-JUM 20) Don't
l &amp;ke gambles on things today
about which you know litlle or
nothing. losses are likely il you
get out or your area of expertise.

CANCER (Juno 21-July ZZl

I NCOME TAX SERVICE .

Qu arterlo;, Federal and all

state Income tax reports

Rd ., Pomeroy .

PAY highest prices
po ssible for gold and silver
I

colns, rings, jewelry , etc .

contact Ed Burkett Barber
shop, Midd lepor1 .

PROBATE COURl.
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
E STATE OF BEATRICE
M . ROBSON, DECEASEO
c ase No. 22927
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FlDUCIARY
On January 3, 1980, In the
M elgs County Probate

ar,

w
Street, Middlepor1
0 h 0 45760.
'
Rober! E. Buck
Probate Judge ·
Clerk

II I 9, 16, 23, Jtc

shoes.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. ZZl You

Pnay find It a trllte dlnicult today
to stay within your budget, owing
to your extravagant whims _Shop
only for essentials.
-

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) Being

too insistent upon having things
your own way today Will not win
support at persons whose help
you need. Oon't alienate neces-

sary aiHes

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Jiov. ZZl An

Inability to forgive and forgei
could cause you unnecessary

beds ,

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given
1h at the annua I meetln~ of
the stockhold ers 'of
he
F armers Bank and Savings
ompany of 211 West
econd Street, PomerQy,
0 hio, will be held at the of·

you should. You 'lllon't like It
wl'len the bllll come due.
IN IE W IPAPI~

ENTIAPAIII!! AtiiN.)

Paul E . Klees,

Secretary
D ec . 30, Jan. 3, 9, 15

LEGAL .NOtiCE
The Department of Ad·

dUI'ing the period.

linement, Shaklee organic

MARTIN'S

LAFF- A- DAY

Is aslollows: Title 11 B, c,
$20 184,147 ; Title II D,
$1 6, 229,880 ;
YCCIP ,
$ 1,080,267 ;
YETP ,
$4 ,887,055 ;
Title
VI,
$1 4,544,072 ; Tille VII.
$J{0&gt;1,546; SYEP, $12~086 ;
H RE II, $737,249 ; an Ad ·
Cost

Pool,

S1 p29.916 .
he Comprehensive Em ·
PIoyment and Training
Ma ster and Annual Plans
are available for review
be tween 8:00A .M . and.S :oo
P.M. in the OMD Library,
27th Floor, 30 East Broad
Streel, Columbus, Ollie ·
43 215! Phone 614·466·8326.
wr tten commenfll may
be submitted to Mr .
Leo
· nard F . Blanton at the
sa me address by January
30, 1980.
(I l ·1, ltc

black , brown, white, year
old. Fox t errier, fema le ,
housebroken . 2 German
poli ce and Norwegian

Elkhound .
Humane
Society , 992·6260.
HUMANE ·society
beagles, shepherds. husky,
English Setter type pup ·
pies . 2 English Setter dogs ,
shols, wormed. 992·6260.
male,

2

female .

Mobile Homes · Sale
1'112 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vlndale 12x63 with ex ·
pando, 2 bedr.
1970New Moon 12x603 bdr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv. 304·67 5·4424.

or fishing, 9 rooms, bath,
available . Located approx.
7 miles from Pomeroy off
R1 . 7 or 33. 446·2359 after 6.

DIAMOND

iron banks, tools. antiqu e

clothing,

razors ,

992 ·3337 or 992·2121 .

992-332:5

DRY
HARDWOOD
firewood, $30 1ruckload. 12
ga . double shotgun in good
condition , $90. Phone 742-

2359.

pocket

knives and other old items .
ZENITH CONSOLE stereo .
5 years old. V.ery good con -

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver coins,
silverware, otber gold and
silver items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antique
furniture .

Will

buy

ooe

piece or household . Call
992·6370.
'

dition . Alter 5, 992-5085 .
WARD'S

energy

electric dryer.

saver,

Excellent

condition . $150. 667·3958.
.--=-::~:-::-:::-::-::o--.1' '

SILVER DOLLARS AND
51 LVER
CHANGE
BEFORE
1964
AT
RECORD HIGH PRICES.
ALSO , GOLD COINS ,
RINGS, JEWELRY AND
MISC . ITEMS AT HONEST
UP · TO·DATE PRICES .
CONTACT ED BURKETT ,
BARBER SHOP, MID ·
DLEPORT, OH . OR CALL
992 ·3476.

HOTPOINT
and

bedrooms, 2 baths, tore ·
ed air heat, •stove,
refrigerator, and other
furniture. 7/8 of an acre
near Harrisonville.
4 ACRES - Near Mid ·

dlepOrt ·on hard road .
Two trailer hookups, a
one bedroom trailer and

large u1i lily bldg .
$925.00 DOWN - Bal .
about like rent, 3

'i?..,. _Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.

·.... ~... ~ ..Phone 99:Z-:Z181

·•

TWO BEDROOM furnish ed
apt .. $165 mo . plus utilities
1 child, no pets. 949 ·23n, o r
after 5p .m . 949 ·2875 .
TWO

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl is h
and Western . Saddles an d
harness .
Horses
an d
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 614
698 ·3290. Barding an d
Riding Lessons and Hor se
Care products . Wester n
bOO IS . Children 's $15.50
RISING STAR Kennel
Board ing. Call367·0292.

Headquarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN .
WANTED - Nice home with 4or 5 bedrooms, fami·
ly room &amp; garage . Six to 1en yrs. old . Five to 10
minutes from Pomeroy . We have a buyer for the

right house. $75,000.00 price range .
JUST LISTED - Good 3 bedrm. house wllh kitchen,
dining &amp; bath . City water and septic. Nice vinYl
siding. Located In Pomeroy Corp. Priced at $14,900.
· PRICE DRASTICALLY REOUCED - On this nice
3 bedroom house with large living room &amp; kitchen,
balh, plenty of c 1ose1s, bullt ·ln cabinets, etc . Stove &amp;
refrlg . Large storage building with concrete floor.
Large lot with plenty of shrubbery. Located In Mid ·
dleport. Reduced for quick sale to $28,000.
BEAUTY SALON - Fully equipped, ready 1o go. In ·
eludes two working stations and five rooms, bath .

Cold drink machine, etc. A money·maker In good
location, in Racine. Priced at $25,000. ·
S11,000 - Trailer &amp; Lot In Racine. 3 BR, all
carpeted, front porch with awning, wood underplnn ·
ing, also includes poo l far the children. Anxious to
sell.
SYRACUSE - Nice 3 BR home, exira large LR,
equipped kit .. washer, dryer, lull basement, central
air, breezeway leading to garage. Well cared for
house has many extras, several fruit trees ol dif·
ferent varieties and nice garden. See

indoor ·outdoor

facilities
regi ster e d
Dobermans . 61.4 ·446 ·7795.

Also

AKC

GIVE A CUTE liveable pu p
a fu1ure . Adopt an orpha n

Human e
Society . Shots, wormed
Donations appreciated
from

your

992-6260 .
REGISTERED

Pekin..e

puppies, 1 male, 1 femal e.

Ready to go. 7 weeks old.
949·2646..
HUMANE SOciety pets tor
adoption, 992·6260. Heal1hy
shots, and wormed. Borde r'
collie types, Irish Setter
English Setter with pup
pies, shepherd type. Put a
cold nose in vour life . Kit
tens, kittens, kittens, all
shapes, all sizes.

From I to 75 acres, bordering ·

6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR, dining and utility room, f
kit. equl pped w·stove and ref rig. Moslly carpeted, :
forced air gas furnace, 1 yr. old "Garage, a complete
trailer hook·up wllh nat. gas tap_and septic can ac;ld
Income. over 2 acres. $29,900. can for appol_ntme~t.
Just off Rl. 7 below Middleport.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CAll .

Auto Sales

-

to appreciate.

Very nice location In lower Syracuse on st. Rl. 124.
Priced At $63,900 .
TRAILER - 2 bR on peaceful side street, all equip·
ped kitchen Including dlne11e set. Must sell. S10.SOO.
NEW - WON'T LAST - 4 yrs . old, 3 BR, ba1h &amp;
utilities, kitchen w ·dlshwasher, D. R. w ·slldlng glass
doors to patio, on nearly 'I• acre. Carpeted In
beadtlful taste. U1.9oo.
MINI FARM - Beautiful brick bHevel with. 3
b«&lt;rm ., large living room with fireplace . Total elec·
trlc and fully Insulated. All hardwood floors. Base·
mentcould be finished for extra living quarters. At·
tached garage. 3 large hot houses and many extras
on 5 acres. Loc. close to Racine. Asking $63,500.
CHESTER - 4 BR home, hardwood lloors, large
LR, family rm., garage, outbuilding, fruit trees and
,garden space . ASking $48,900.
.FAMILY HOME - Lo1s 01 possibilities wl1h thfs:
nice 2 s10ry. Many features, central air, built· in ap· '
pllances, all carpeted, good lnvestmentwllh several ·
n!ce blldlng lots. On approx. acres In the center :
of Racine. Asking $54,000.
LOTS o ·F LOTS Pomeroy.
·

Plymouth Scamp,
custom Inter ior, 6 cyl ..
auto ., S1800 or trade. 742·
2451.
1974

walks

and

driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES l
Reduced Winter Rates
RACINE,O.
949·2748or
992·7314
, 2·28·pd .

~

Roger Hysell
Garage
J /4

CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2388
O~J' NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
...,I
'4H6540r 949·2591 .

on 51. Rl. 124 toward
IW11and.
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4·30·tfc .

Hours 9·1 M ., W., F.

Oilier tfmes by appoint·
ment.

107 Sycamore (Rear

Answer:
Yeste•day's

King George II of Greece
was restored to the thnme

by plebiscite In 1946.
Real Estate for Sale

Jumbles· CREEl

FUSSY

Mary Hartman B;

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003.
NEW LISTING -

realtors .

Ex ·

ceptional buy . 2 homes

on Beech Grov~ Road .
Both In excellent shape.
Live In one and rent the
o1her. Situated on 10
good acres. Call for all
details. Good Income
producing property.
MIDDLEPORT - EX·
ecutive sty le 5 bedroom
home . 2 fu ll .baths,
modern kitchen, family

608 E.
. MAIN. _
.
POME I!O:Y, 0
992·2259
WOULD YOU
BE·
LIEVE - A beautiful
kl1chen with a bar and

room, living room and

lull basement. Many
nice features to this
home. Ca ll for an appt.
NEW · LISTING - 2.41

dining
area,
3
bedrooms, a family
room, a rec. room, a TV
room a nd a new swimm -

acres

across

from

Eastern High . Very
good building site . Ask ·
ing $7,000.00.
RUTLAND Total
electric, 3 b«&lt;rC&gt;Dm,
brick home on Main
Street. 1'1• baths,
modern kitchen, dining
room and full basement.
Asking $43,500.00.
NEW LISTING- Cozy
3 b«&lt;room home In
Syracuse on Cherry
S1reet. Living room, kit·
chen, ba1h and base ·
ment. Sma ll lot with
building. A real buy at
only $10,000.00. Better
check this one oulll
NEW LISTING- Quail ·
tv built new home. 3
bedrooms, bath, .utility
and living room. Kit·
chen
has garage
disposal
and
dishwasher. Situated on
a little over an acre.
Must see to appreciate
workmanship. Sells for
$.45,600.00.
Our ljomes are selling.
We can help our
qualified buyers lind
flnanclne. Call us and
discuss
your Real
Estate problems, we'll
be glad to help.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2083
Velma Nlclnsky, Aisoc.
Phone 742·3092
-GeorgeS. Hobsto11er Jr.
Broker 992-5739

Ing pool for onlY
$39,500.00.
STOP PAYING RENT
let someone else
make your house pay ·
ment for you . Large
brick
duplex
In
Syracuse. Live In part
and ren1 pari. $28,000.00.
HAND -Y MAN'S
SPECIAL - 2 apart·
ment frame In Mid ·
dleport . Always has
renters. On a corner lot.

$10,900.00.
WOODLAND
HOMESITES AP·
prox. 25 acr ... some lots
surveyed, water and
electric available, road
deve loped to property .
$27,500.00.
LOVELY 2 story
home overlooking the
river. Has 3 bedrooms,
rec. room, full base·
ment, and equipped kit·
chen. $35,900.00.
·
WE HAVE READY
BUYERS FOR YOUR
PROPERTY. LIST
WITH US.
REALTOR
Henry E. CLeland, Jr.
99H191
ASSOCI ATl!S
Jean Trusseii949·2WO
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner
742-2474
OFFICE PHONIE
992-2259

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

.

., · r·

MIDDLEPOAT, OHIO

South

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

I•
I NT
5•

Pass
Pass
Pass

1•
2 ...
Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sonlag
Without an auction, if the
West hand were given to I 00
.players on lead against a fivediamond eontrae( all of them
would lead a high heart.
However, auctions are reveal·
ing. If West had drawn the
proper inference from the
diagrammed auction , he
would have had an excellent
idea of declarer's distribution.
Then he could have found the
killing lead.
South's bidding shows a
three-suited hand of either 4·
1-4·4 or 4-0·5· 4 distribution.

B~ADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Servic~ . Phone
949·2487 or 949·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crl.tt Bradford.

ELWOOD
REPAIR -

BOWERS
Sweepers,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Supplicate
1 Type of thread 6 Standing
6 Legislate
tall
11 Wall bracket 7 Cribbage
12 Noted lover
term
8 Asian river
13 Grapevine

the farm!

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned. Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard. 992·
6309or 7-42·2348.
WALL PAPERING
painting. 742 ·Zl28.

~MifHd

He'll
have aqood
home at

toasters, Irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mower .
Next 10 State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
31125.

Md
'

PlANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber, 742·2951. Service to
SChools and home since
1965.

WINNIE

REYNOLDS ELECTRIC,
651 Beech St. Rewind and
repair electric motors. 992·
2356. Will make service
calls.
.

MY EARS WILL
II£VER BE TI1 E
t&gt;AME AFTER

MOST PEOPLE

ANI7

OUR A&amp;EW ILL
&amp;YMPATH IZE

LISTEN ING TO

WITH YOU.

111EY G-ET lHEIIZ
C/.01HE5 . .AT
A t&lt;:UMIM&amp;E
SALf: ?'

THAT LOU !/
MU51C AT

Services Offered

SAVE ON ;QRPET ·
DRIVE A tiTnE ~
..SAVE- A' LOt ''
.RUBBER BA~kjJ
CARPET
.1

'4!19 .
.. and up

Caah &amp; carry •.

W~f'JZE

DO

T'M e.IJR'E

&amp;OME

OF

lHEM DO... ANI7 11'5
QUITE FA5HIONA8LE1
I MI6HT Al717.

WENI7Y1.7.

WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Fred Miller, 992-63311.

BARNEY

PAW UPAN'BOUGHT
A SECONT-HAND
. WATER HEATER
'IESTIDDY

GLORY BE!!

WHAT DO IT
RUN ON-- GAS

1:oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1 :soNews 13,1 7.

THURSDAY,JANUARY 10,1980
5 :4s-Farm Re porl 13; 5:5(}-PTL
Club 13 .
6:oo-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Health Field 10.
6 :0s-Warld a1 Large 17 ; 6:31&gt;-F or

4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; Passwor d

Yesterday's Answer

Z8 Beat

35 In the

it!
30 Have the
appearanc e
32 Miscal·
culation
33 Irish
islands
34 Cougar

center of
37 Within :
comb. form
38 Word with
teen
39 Esau's home
40 Irish river
42 United

z

h-1---t--1--+I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEII

"GUOD REMNANT

. SEI,ECTION
6'~12' TO

12'X16'

$~000 .

'

.· -~ . anauD

,

\

' ;

\:811742-2211

RUii.AND

.

FURNituRE
.,:Rutland,

OLIR TEACHER SA'-15 ·
WE HAVE TO MEASURE
SOMETHIN6 WITH A RULER

I WONDER HOIIJ YOU

1-lOLD ,STILL ...I'LL

WRITE THAT'... I'LL PUT,
''LirlO LIP, lllfEE !NCIIf5"

TRI{ MEASURING !{OUR
MOUTH AGAIN.:.

.r CAN.'r

l
:~

STANP IT!

·''.

o:

.

- ~ ·..

.l

' J
'I

~ ~---

~~~:::5=t=J - ~~~-~~----~~

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LO· NGFEL'LOW

to

work

It:

One letter simply standi lor another. In this sample A ll
used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Single letlen.
apoitrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code !etten are dilletent.
I;RYPTOQUOTES
HSBWCQ

-SB

CRXXSQYB

GYV&gt;\YA .
~

HFYG

HY

BXCCN

XFVG .

HFYG

HY

BCVA . .., HSJJSVQ
HCAWBHCAXF
Yealerday'1 Cryptoquote: KNOWING IS NOT ENOUGH; WE
MUST APPLY.WIWNG IS NOT ENOU~H; WE MUST 00.-

GOETHE ·

"'1n

12 ·0Q--Movie " The Posse;;sed" 8;
10 :4(}-Baretta 6, 13.

DOWN

OR ELECTRIC?

M ovi e

The modern tendency whe n
holding three four-card sui ts
as opening bidder is to bid the
You .. Biac k Wom an 10; News 17 .
suit be low the singleton in
• 6:4s-Mornlng Report 3; 6:51&gt;-Good
order to save room in the
Morning , Wes t Virg ini a 13;
auction. North realized after
6:55-New s 13.
South had bid three suits that
7:oo-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
his I 0 hig)l-card points we re
America 6, 13; Thursday Morall golden and decided to
ning 8: Batman 10 ; Thr ee
jump to the diamond game, an
Slooges-Little Rascals 17.·
action that was certainly
7: 15- A.M. Weather 33 ; 7:30justified.
Family Affa ir 10; Big Blue
West woodenly led his ace
Marble
33.
of hearts and the hand could
7:55- Chuck White Report s 10;
no longer be defeated . He
8 :00- Capt. Ka ngaroo 8,10 ;
switchd to a trumf. at the sec· ·
Family Affair 17; Sesame Sl. 33.
ond trick, but dec arer was in
8:3(}-Ramper Room 17.
control. South cased his four
9:oo-Bob Braun 3; Big Val ley 6;
black suit winners and scored
Porky Pig 8 ; One Day At A Ti me
six more diamond tricks by a
10; Phi l Dollahue 13, 15; Lucy
cross-ruff.
Show 17.
If West had led a trump at
9:3(}-Bob Ne whar t 8; Lave of Life
trick one, which he should
10; Green A cres 17 .
have realized was the right
10 :oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
lead from the bidding, declarNight 6: Be at the Cloc k 8, 10;
er would go down. South could
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
still ruff two of his losers in
" The Streets of San Franci sco"
dummy . But before he could
17 .
ruff his third black suit loser ,
10 : 30- Hollywood Squares 3,15 ;
he would have to lead a heart
$20 ,000 Pyram id 13; Andy
as there was no quick entry to
Grlffl lh 6; Whew 8, 10.
his hand . This would give the
10 :5s-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
defense the chance to lead a
11 :01}-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
devastating second round of
Shir!ey 6, 13 ; Price is Righi 8, 10.
trumps . South would be
11 : 30- Whe el of Fortune 3, 15 ;
stranded with the two blac k
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
suit losers as well as the heart
20,33 : 11 : 5s-News 17.
loser.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
The original heart lead
6,8,10,1 3: Mindreaders 15; Love
effectively established comAmerican Style 17.
munication between declarer
12 :3(}-Ryan' s Hope 6,13 ; Search for
and dummy for the cross-ruff.
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
Movie " The Geisha Boy" 17;
Elec. Co. 20,33.
(For a copy of JACOB Y
1 :oo-Days ol Our Lives 3,15; Al l My
MODERN, send $1 to: '"Win at
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Bridge, " care of this newspaRestle$S 8.10 .
per, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
1: 30-As The World Turn s 8, 10;
Station. New York , N . Y.
2:()()-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to
tot! 19.)
Live 6, 13 ; 2 :2s-News 17 .
2: 31&gt;-Another World 3, 15; Guiding
Lighl8,10; Gigg lesnorl Hotel17 .
3 :oo-General Hospila l 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17 ; Masterpiece Theat re
20.
3: 3()-{)ne Day At A Time 8; Joker' s
Wild 10; Flintstones 17 ; Over
Easy 33.

9 Whale
items
10
Lug aroWld
15 Ironic
14 Scourge
16 Caddoan
of serge
Indian
18 Exude
17 Being: Sp.
• 19 White grape 19 Wire measure
00 - Merkel
23 Disfigure
21 Sun . talk
27 Sluggish
!2 Stuff
Z8 Rita Hay·
2f Hgt .
worth role
25 Fish
29 Julie
Christie role :16 Busch or
Marsh
30 Parlor piece
31 Get
together
33 Brazilian
tree
38 Press
statement
u Gossiper
t3 Food acids
44 Ms. Toklas'
friend
45 Consumer
advocate'
46 N.Y. Mets
manager
I Damsel
Peruvian
royalty
3 Rabbit's tall
4 French
author

.SUE ON ALL

.,

'.

Ease

Opening lead:• A

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits. Do·lt·yourself or
let us Install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992·5724.

~~;.;.;,..._;__,_

..

North

all

AUTOMOB IL E
IN ·
SURANCE been cah celled?
Last
your
operator's license? Phone
992· 2143 .

RUTLAND - 2homes on Salem Street. Take yo.ur
chOice or buy both and rentthem. Sl2,000tach.

.

I.

Wett

MACHINE
service ,

Scissors .

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom brltk only 1 block
from 10wn, low utilities. A bargain at S12,SOO.

Rqclney •Downlng, Broker, Home 992·:1731 ,

.QJI09 7
.53
+9 3

K QJ 10
+A8 7 6

makes . 992 ·2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen

POMEROY - A beautiful little starter home · or
retirement couple. Two bedroom · and· bath. Large
living room · nice kl1chen . Fult basement• .
S17,500.00.
.

ani&lt;thiicis"; Br•nch Mit11ittr, Home 992-2449

EAST
• Q6 5 3

+A842.

LIKE NEW - Qulef country living In this tree
bedroom, 2 bath ranch. Over an acre of ground with
a spill roll fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air cond. $44,900.00.

CALL 992-2342

WEST

• J 10 9
.AK

.5+

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742 ·2455.

HOMES FOR SALE
WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOw
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY

• A982
+K5

SOUTH

Business Services

.

1·9

.860 2

..BUT NO! INSTEAD THEY RI ~CULE
ME FOR ~y POVERT '(! LOOK AT
TH OSE TENTS! RAGS HELD
TOGETHER WITH PATCHgs ... AND
PATCHES Q!:l THE PATCHES! ...

11 : 15- L ove

Cold Blood" 10; Movie " Two
Rode Toge1he r ·· 17.

NORTH

• 764
• Q J 10 4 2

20 ;

Ameri can Style 17.
11 :3(}-Tonlght 3, 15; Love Boal 6,13;

Answer: What th e soprano 'sa 1d to We tenor when he
pr oposed marri age - LETS " DU-ET" .

+K7

10·19'1 mo.

Repairs,

Cavett

DEBATE

Discovering killing lead

0

3, 15;
M ov i e

10: 3()-{)ver Easy 20.
11:00- News 3,6, 8,1 0, 13. 15 ; Dick

(Answers tomorrow)

CEMENT

6;

10 : 15- Up stair s, Dow nstai r s 17 ;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

JAMES_ KEESEE
PH. 99l·'l./72

SEWING

THREE BEDROOM home
on a big lot . Can be par·
lially linanced . Call Guido
Girolami. 992·&gt;186, 10·6. No

I

I

I I I I ]

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

.Aluminum Siding
elnsulatlon
• Storm Doors
I e Storm Windows
·
• Replacement Win ·..'
dows
Free Estimate
·;'

CALL992-7544

FARM ON SR 143 above
Wolfe Pen Store . Phone
992·7559.

.•. -

r r x JTHAT r x I

St rokes

A ngels

" Seizure : The Slory ol Kathy
Morr is" 8, 10; Sta te of the Slate
Address 33.
9:3(}-Live lrom Studio 8H 3,1 5;
Charlie's Angels 13.
10 :oo-Vega s 6,13; News 20 ; Movie
" The Lathe a t Hea ven" 33 .

Now arrange the cirded loners to
form the surprise a'nswer, as suggested~ the abOve cartoon.

J&amp;L BLOWN.
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Pomerey,O.

- -i"

Charl ie ' s

Guaranteed work
Free Estimates
Aller 5 P.M. 992·5547
'12·13·2 mo. pd.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

.

9 : 00- Dilf ' r e nt

'.

mile off Rt: 7 by·pass ,

Real Estate for Sale
F INANCIN G·VA ·FHA LO ·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
0R
R.E F I N A N C E .
0 IRELAND
MORTGAGE .
77 E . STATE, ATHENS.
614·592-3051.

Gr ea-t Performances 20, 33;
M ovie ' ' Sands of lwo Jl m a" 17.

tMUGLEEt

Wednesday, Jan. 9 ·

RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call 9'12-2852
or '192 -7235
12·13-pd .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"'lOOdburn ·

992 ·7479.
3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap
ts . Phone 992 -543-1 .

Let Us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold weather

down

bedrooms, natUral gas
furnace , basement and
nice lot.

Housing

All types roof work, new
or repair gullers and .
downspouts,
guttar
cleaning and painting.
All work euaranleed.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2162
1H4·mo.
. .

WEDN ES DA Y,JANUARY 9.1980
7:3(}-Counfry Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6; J oker 's Wild 8; Dick
Cavell 33 ; The Judge 10; Wild
Ki ngdom 15; All In The Family
17; Mac Ne il-Lehrer Report 20 .
8 :oo-Rea l Peopl e 3. 15; E ight Is
Enough 6; Young Maver ick 8,1 0:

I I ( J

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S I N. L CONSTRUCTION
Qua llty cons1rucllon at _
PWMBING REPAIR
rHson1ble rates.
·

ing fireplace, large win·

POMEeOY
LANDMAik

Park, Route 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Cal I

3

dews. view of the river,
full basement and front
porch . $1,()00.00 DOWN .
BUS. BLDG. - Or a
cheap, 2 bedroom home
with bath, and nat. gas
for only $11,000.00. Six
Hundred down.
WHERE CAN YOU
GET MORE FOR
YOUR MONEY THAN
AN INVESTMENT IN
PROPERTY.
992·3325 OR 992 ·31176

Headquarters
Appllance_s .
'Sifes &amp; !;ervice

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e •

MOBILE HOME -

RANCH -

-

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

·~

For Rent

216 E. 5e~!"'d Street

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates . All work
guaranleed. 20 years ex·
perlence. Call Athens,
c~llect, Gerald Clark
797,.157 or Tom Hoskins
797·2745.

spouts, some concrete

Real Estate far Sale
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond tor swimming

H. L WHITESEL ·
ROOANG

- ~------~-----J

REMODELING
Gutter · work,

OHJt) VAllEY
ROOFING

12-1-1 mo.

ADD ONS &amp;
work,

tires on Olds wheels . S40.

and · se ll ing. Will appraise

new, used or antique fur
niture . One piece or com
plete household . Gold
silver and other old coins
china, glass, old toys, dolls

*New Kitchens
•Bathrooms
•New Home
•Add Ons
•Remoldings
*Free Estimates
1·HPd.l

Part

dachshund, part Man ·
c hest~r . Before 3, 992 ·7617 .
After 1, 992 ·3367.

TWO J ·7BX15 studded snow

years experience in buy in g

C.. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

EIGHT WK. old pups, 4

Stop, think , are you abau t

to lose money? Over 25

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding, all breeds . Clea n

- mlnistrative

'm thankful we're in IH!re . .. a
rson is n 'I safe in tile streets
,ymore ..

BLACK

APPRAISAL

to the Depar1ment of Labor
31, 1979.
Major chanjleS in the
M aster Plan Included in·
fo rmation concerning the
Independent Monitoring
unit, the Intake system,
p rograms
for
arget
roups, labor market In ·
?o rmatlon, the OMD·OBES

tr ackln~
sfstem and
T argete Job ax Credit.
The final allocation of
lu nds for the Annual Plan

Giveaway
BORDER COLLI E , male,

carpeted. 3 10 17 acres

products,
Rawlelgh
products . 9'12 ·7825.

POODLE GROOMING
Judy Taylor . 614 ·367·7220.

Non-Financial Agreement,

7.42·

silver . Call J. A. Wamsley
742·2331. Treasure Ches
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . 592
6462.

m inistrati ve Services, Of ·
fice of Manpower Develop·

· ment submined Annual
a nd Master Plan Revisions

firewood,

priced .

UTILITY TOOL ches1 for
pickup, $75. Inquire at 400
Lasley St., Pomeroy, OH.

ches, c lass rings, weddin g
bands, diamonds. Gold o r

Adulls $29 .00 .

0 n December

Ccmblne harvester sales
climbed 13.9 percent
nationwide for January
lhroogh June. A total of
8,243 combines were sold

reasonably

OLD COINS, pocket wat

January,

properly come before sa id
m eetlng .

SR

2544.

ter.

to select actlvltln which could
cause you to spend more than

CURED

2nd , Middleport, OH . 9'12
3161.

fl ce of said Bank in
p omeroyl Ohio, accordln~
to Its by· aws, on 1he thl r
of

Orchard ,

NICE PIGS for sale . Wor ·
med, ~as1rated . 949 ·2857.

china
anything . See or call Rut h'
Gosney , ant iques, 26 N

992·5858 .

frustration today. let bygones
be bygones. Open a new chap -

SAOITTARIUI ( -. 23-Doc. 21)
EnJoy yourHit today, but try not

F itzpa tr ick

FUR

12x60
BEDROOM
mobile home . Ra cine area

1980, at 4:00 P .M. lor 1he
urpose of electing dlrecfo rs and the transaction of
su ch other business as may

669 ·

689 .

~

wed~sday

Wilkesville ,

APPLES - ROME beauty
apples at Uper bu . Bestfor
apple butter . Call 669·3785,

call9'12 ·7760.

TWO BEDROOM trailer
Adults on ly 992 ·3324.

bringing up domestic
i ssu~s today where you and your
spouse are at opposite poles.
Neither Is likely to make compromiSes or conceulooa.
be careful today not to demand
of other&amp; things you would not
do yourself If the roles were
reversed. Put yourself In their

Phone

3785.

c

ourt, Case No. 22927, Mar ·
t ha L. Cunninqham, 414 5
M cDonel , L•ma , Ohio
45801, . was
appointed
E xecurnx of the estate of
Beatrtce
M.
Robson,
d eceased, late of 625 Broad ·

Avoid

LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. 22) You must

brass

·will be prepared by ap· Cal1992-6370.
po intment. 992· 2212 or see
wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatric k Or ·
chard, · State Route 689 .

FURNITURE ,

Miller . Rt . .4, Pomeroy or

Hallow

3891.

_

AND 2 Y EARS
PROBATION?

Delivery can be arranged .

E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992 ·

ic e
lron
beds. desks, etc., complete
households . Write M.D

otD

At their buildingin Bashan .
F actor-; choke guns on ly .

Rutland . Proceeds donated
t o Boy Scout Troop 249.

food, and all types of salt .
Excelsior Sail Works, Inc .,

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max
diameter 10" on larges t
end . $12 p -er ton . Bundl ed
slab. $10 per ton. Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co., Rt . 2
Pomeroy 992 ·2689 .
boxes,

corn

Friday afternoon

For Sale
LIMESTONE ,

sand , gravel. calcium
chloride , fertilizer, dog

SHOOT . Rae i ne
G UN
vo lunteer Fire Dept .

E very Sa1urday . 6 :30 p.m .

Tueaday
thru Friday

843 ·2795 .

COAL,

COUNTY
H UMANE SOCIETY . 992 ·
6 260 . Pets available tor
adopti on and information

s erv ice.

$5,000. Ca n be seen on a
Sa t urday, Twp . Rd . 27 ,

1976 1h ton p ickup tru ck in
good condition . 992 -- 5786
from 9-Sp.m .

.. M E IGS

NOTICE

HAY FOR SALE . S1 per
bale, 80c b y tr uckload .

I

l£RACT
L ..,_.,,_r1
c......_ ,_ .. , -....... ....tJ

IN ART 08..J ECT5 .
AND GOT Af200 ANE

·Business Services

bicyc le.

change rear end, m otor
b uilt to m ax imurri, a ll new
parts. New and ex tra t i r es .
E xtra parts and rims.

ter , 992 -6606 - ask for Mr
Zidian .

Notices

26 " 10 -s peed
Stereo. 9'12·5621.

De xter , at Slater 's resi den ·

Black cover . 992 ··76'11 .

were so k ind and helpful

HALF A MILLION

For Sale ·

ce .

LOST: Scofield reference

Bible

Help Wanted
CARRIERS NEEDED in
th e
Middleport
an d
Pomeroy areas . Call th e
Daily Sentinel betwee-n 8:30
and 5 :OOp .m ., 992·2156.

.

Au fa Sales
STOCK
CA R . Ho we
c hass is, 350 4 boll mai n
Chev y, Frankl in q uick

Lost and Found
LOS T : Snowvi lle a rea .
F ema le
b lu e
ti c k

Television
Viewing

Unscrambkt these four Jumbles.

one letter to' each square. to form
four ordiriary words.

L. IKE THE G UY IN
D ETROIT WH O STOl-E

.
*&gt; 1-.:1 IICing Pellum

.

S1ndlc1Je, Inc .

.

Plus 15; Merv Gril(in 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame Sf. 20,33;
Real McCoys 13; Spectreman 17.
4:30-Lone Ranger 3; Petllcoat
Junclion 8; Brady Bunch 10;
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
Gilligan' s Is. 17 .
S:oo-Caro l Burnett 3; Sanlord &amp;
Son 8: Mister Rogers' Neigh ·
barhoad 20 ,33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17 .
5:3(}-Mash 3; Ne ws 6; Gomer Pyle
8; E lee. Co . 20; Mash 10; Happy
Days Again 13; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Zoom 20,33; Carol Burnett 17.
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13 ;
Caro l Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Villa Alegre 20 ;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
7:oo-Cross-Wils 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Ba xle rs 6; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 33; News 10; Newlywed
Game 13; Love American Style
15; Sanford &amp; Son ' 17; Dick
Cavett 20 .
Squares
3;
7: 30- Hollywood
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; $100,000 Name That Tun e 10;
Nashville On The Road 13;
Country Roads 15; All In The
Fami ly 17 ; MacN e il -Lehrer
Report 20 .
8:oo-Buck Rogers In the 251h
Century 3, 15; Mark &amp; Mindy
6, 13;; Waltons 8, 10; Milwaukee
Symphony Orc hestra in Concert
20 ; Civilisation 17; Camera
Three 33.
8: 30-Benson 6,13; Sports : Close Up_
33 .
9:oo-Qulncy 3,15; Ba rne y · Miller
6, 13 ; Barnaby Jones 10; Energy :
8; Sneak Previews 20,33; College
Baskelball 17.
9:30-SMp 6,13; Camera Three 20;
DAncing Disco 33.
10:oo-Rockford Files 3, 15; 20-20 13;
' Energy : 6; Knots Land ing 8, 10;
• News 20; Soundstage 33. ..
"'
"'
10 :'30-Cver Easy 20.
· '
11 :QO-News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Last of.:
the Wild 17; Di ck Cavett 20; Fall •
&amp;. Rise of Reginald Pe rrin 33.
:.
11 ::!(}-Tonight 3, 15; Po llee Wo ma n ' ,.
6,13; ABC News 33; Movie " Mr .
Skeffington " 10; Mov ie " No
Time for Comedy " 17 .
12 :4o-Tomorrow 3; News 15; I : 3~ .'
News I).
•
1: ~Movie "Thief of Damascus" ,·

17: 1 :-is-Black Sheep Squadron ·.-

8.

•

.,

1: 50-News' 13; 3: 11&gt;-Movle " Tokyo
Joe " 17: 5 :oo-Untavchoblea 17.

�14- The IJBily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,
Jan. 9, 191ll
,

Food, goods rose 12.5 percent .during 1979

.C arter puts retaliation measures in force
WASHINGTON (AP) - President . Union " suffer ," but he
Carter is formally setting in motion
acknowledged they probably will not
a series cl. measures against the
force the Kremlin to withdraw its
Soviet Union in retaliation for what
forces from Afghanistan.
he calls "the greatest threat to
Speaking to about 100 members of
peace since the Second World War."
the House and Senate invited to·the
Carter ·said Tuesday night that
White House for a report on the
these measures will make the Soviet situation in Southwest A,'!ia, Carter

said there was nothing the United
States could have done militarily to
block the Sov iet action.
Carter admitted that the
retaliatory measures were aimed
rrincipally at influencing future and not present - Soviet behavior
but said that Moocow's intervention

nonetheless pooed a threat to
American security interests.
H the Soviets suffered no adverse
consequences, they would have been
tempted 'to move again and again
until they reached the warm-water
ports" or gained control of world oil
supplies, Carter said.

WIC program
offered to Meigs
residents
.
.
The Ohio WIC Program which
stresses that good nutrition is im- ·
portent to health at all ages,
especially during pregnancy and
early cbddhood, is being adlllinilltered in Meigs County by the
Meigs County Department of
Health.
· WIC Is a nutrition education
Pl"lllram that provides nutritious
foods to women, infants and children
under five years of age to improve
and maintain good health.
WIC benefits are available in
Meigs County through Meigs County
Health Department.
The program provides milk, eggs,

InterViews
scheduled

,.

I
I

The Tri-state Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, announces that
interviews for camp staff for the,
19«1 Camp Arrowhead season wiD he
held as follows:
January 10 -7-llpm., Pt. Pleasant
National Guard Armory .
January 17 -7-llp.m., Ohio Valley
Wholesale, Ashland.
January 24 - 7~ p.m., Scout Service Center, 733 Seventh Ave., Hun tington.
Positions available include the
following areas: cooks, main tenance, swinuning instructors, riDe
range, archery range, boating, kitchen staff, trading post staff, etc.
If interested, please contact Camp
Director Archie Hayes at (304) 5233408 for an application. Applications
will be available on the interview
nigh18.

cheese, juice, and iron-fortified
cereals for women and children and
iron-fortified formula, cereal ~nd
juice for infants.
Women who are pregn"!'t, postpartum (up to six months after
delivery ) or breastfeeding (up to one
year after delivery) and children
who are less than five years old may
be eligible for the program.
Participants must be a resident of
Meigs County and-or be receiving
health care through a WI C clinic,

Commission
(Continued from page I )
Jones congratnlated Blakeslee
and Margaret Parker as well as the
entire Historical Society for the fine
job that was done on the Meigs County History Book. Jones said, '1t is
one cl. ' the finest things ever
published for Meigs County."
Blakeslee thanked the commissioners for the 1980 appropriations for the County Planning
Corrunission as well as for the
Historical Society.
A letter was read from the sheriff
concerning the minimum standards
for jails in Ohio asking that the
board review them.
Henry Wells moved and Chester
Wells seconded to set the starting
salary of county employees at $5,700
with a 00 day probationary period
and with no raise in pay until after
six months of service.
The corrunissioners will meet at 6
p.m. on Monday, Jan. 14 for the annual organizational meeting.
Attending were Jones , Henry
Wells and Chester Wells, commissioners and Mary Hobstetter,
clerk.

CONTINUES
CLEARANCE
AT

HARTLEY SHOES

FOR lHE LADIES

FOR lHE MEN

Brand names such as:
Joyce, Hush Puppies,
Easy St., Meyers and
Lover Girl.

Brand names such as:
Jarman, Hush Puppies,
Florsheim .

Values to $32.00

Values to $65.00

-

Now
Sale_
10 To'l5
Prrced

Reduced
To

SHOES DISPLAYED FOR
EASY SELECTION
ALL SALES FINAL

MAYOR'SCOURT
Four defendants forfeited bonds
and a fifth was fined in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were David
Venov, Huntington, W. Va., $66,
posted on charges of speeding and
pasSing in a no passing.zone; Ernest
Triplett, Racine, $25, improper starting and hacking ; Floyd Kingery,
Bidwell, failure to maintain control
of vehiclE, $25; Mark Tanner,
Nelsonville, $25, foUowing to closely.
Fined $100 and costs on an assault
charge was Alfred Evans, Middleport.
Four defendants forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night. They
are Edward Ramsburg, Long Bottom, $25, po.sted on a speeding
charge; Sherry Bliskirk, Syracuse,
$31, assured clear distance; Dennis
Butcher, P&lt;meroy, $25, speeding,
and Michael Pierce, Rutland, $25, no
operator's license, and $50, failure to
appear in court.
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to North Second
Ave., at 7:48 a.m. Wednesday for
Mrs. Helen Boyd who had fallen.
She was taken to Holzer Medical
Center

HARTLEY SHOES, JNC.
Open M-Sat.
9:30 TiiS
Fri. Til 8

must be determined to be in
nutritional need by a WIC health
professional and must meet income
guidelines.
For l!lffi, a family of four may
have an annual income cl. up to approximately $12,500 and still be
economically eligible. The focus of
the program is improved nutritional
status and thus nutritional need
must be present in order to receive
benefits.
Interested individuals must apply
for the program at the WIC clinic,
located at the Meigs County Health
Dept. at 2.16 W. 2nd St. , Pomeroy.
Height, weight and a blood test will
be performed as well as infonnation
about food eaten in the past 24 hours.
If eligible , participants will
receive monthly_food coupons that
can be redeemed for specified foods
at participating grocers throughout
Meigs County.
Each individual certif;,d for the
program receives a food package
designed for his-her special needs.
Each participant's food package wiU
vary in amount and type of food
prescribed.
The WIC Program gives participants opportunities through
nutrition education to learn more
abrut feeding their families wisely
111 limited food budgets. Nutrition
education is provided by WIC health
professionals to participants and includes infonnatioo about each individual's nutritional risk reason
and ways to improve their hoolth
stain.&lt; hv using WIC and other

SHOP EARLY &amp; SAVEt .
Middle of Upper

Block , Pomeroy

ANGEL TREADS
WASHABLE
SLIPPERS
Reg. '5.00
SALE

-Devon -Aileen
- Redeye -Wrangler

299

20%

TO

50%

OFF

SALE

ENTIRE STOCK

WINTER
ROBES

SIMPLICITY
PATTERNS
lf2 PRICE

!hOFF
Ladies &amp; Children's
FLANNEL·&amp;
BRUSH NYLON

GOWNS AND
PAJAMAS .
· Rejlucel;llor Clea_g/lce

TO END MARRIAGES
Filing for dissolution of rna rriage
were James Alley, Rt. 2, Racine,
and Pamela Jo Alley, Rt. I, Racine;
Harry Yarbrough, Rt. I, Langsville,
and Kathy Yarbrough, Rt. I, Middleport.

~---Area-r&gt;;;;.-ih~-1

I

UP TO

I

.MRS. SHERMAN BUTLER

Mrs. Sherman Butler, formerly of
Rutland, died at the home of a son,
Tuesday in Findlay, Ohio. The body
wiD be brought to Rutland Friday.
Funeral services will be announced
later.

The Speech Hearing oepa rtment has !hese
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 Fitting ·
Hearing Aid Sales starting at $215.00
Hearing .Aid Orientation and Lip Reading
Complete Follow-up Services
For more information, call 446·5500 in Gallia,
286-1626 in Jackson, in Meigs 992-2192.

r-

AMERICA'S FIRST

CLASSIFIED BY UNDERWR-IT-E-RSLABORATORIES INC. ·

WoodBurni~

-A cld-A -furnqce ®
byMQNARCHG
eSaves on monthly fuel
bill and energy.
· eEasy to operate.
eAdapts easily to heating

systems In most homes.

• Smoke and Odor free

heated air Is circulated to
rooms you wish heated.
• Can be moved to basement or relocated easily
because of compact size.
e -Only warm air is clr ·
· c.ulated because of ther mostatically controlled
blower.
eOnef ire lasts for hours.
eCan be used without Installing to neat ducts, (i.e.,
garages, hunting lodges,
cabins I .
eHeat loss to chimney is
only fraction lost by
fireplaces and most supplemental
heating
systems. No flues to close
to avoid heat loss.

Reg. $9.95

ePractically

599

malntenan ~e

{)I&lt;J

...

.. I ,.

=-:&gt;

TO
PRIM AR't'
f

required .

ll" a 16" RE CT
DUCT OR 10" DiA
PIP E WIT H OPT IONAL ADAPTOR

RETURN

URN ACE

g

PLENUM

••

A·

v

v

E

E

UPFl.DW

MODEL
&amp;1324&amp;

~Apro~NSEM~~;~,

, \
-Pot Holder -Dish Cloth
-Mitt
-Blender cover

OFF

RET URN T O PR IMAR Y
UPFL.OW FURNACE

. ~

ELBERFELDS . W~REHOUSE.;
'

,

I

•

MECHANIC STREET IN POMEROY
'

'

I

''

.

'

conununity and institutional mental
health programs;
Improve the quality of community
and institutional mental health
programs;

Provide for the protection.• by the
state, of all employee rights , advantages, priorities, and preferences in the facility;
An agreement by the Commnnily
Mental Health and Retardatioo
Board to utilize the management information system and mental health
service classifications and Ito abide
by the procedures and requirements
developed under Section .237 of this
act;
Provide for general administration services to the Athens
Mental Health and Development
Center by the Department;
- An agreement by the Com·
munity Mental Health and Retar- .
datioo Board, or other management
agency, to assume civil liability that
may arise out of the internal
management or adlllinilltration of
Athens Mental Health and Develop·
mental Center;
institutional
-Improve
management;
-Expand conununity - based
alternatives to institutional mental
health care; and
-Probide for the availabillty of
mental health services in the least
restridive and environment consistent with individual needs.
Mrs . Plununer said these funds
were approved in the state budget
under the purview of Amended Sub·
stitute House Bill204.

Weather

Pomeroy native Carter appointee

I

no

•

George_D. Massar, Colwnbus, a
native of Pomeroy, has been ap_pointed by President Carter as the
Colwnbua metro chalnnan of the
· National Alliance of Business for
1980.
~
'
Massar, who will &amp;Illume the
chalnnanshlp at a Jan. :II luncheon
of Franklin County buslnesa 8JXI
commUJII!y leaders in the Neil
House, succeed~ John F. Wolfe,
publiBher of the Columbus Dispatch
who served as 19'19chalrman,
The N&amp;t!ooal Alliafice of Buslne!8
is an Independent, non-profit cor. poratlon · working in partnership
with business, labor', ~ovenunent
and education to ·reduce unemployment ·of the disadvantaged,
Vietnam veterans and exGI!enders;
as well as securing jobs foc needy
youths .'
·
·
Tbe organization was established
.in 1988
the niquest of the late .
PreSideqt JOOI)silr\ IIJid . nb:w · has
more than t20offlces lnmajcr dtll!ll
throughout the coumry.
•· TheOolunmuiorganlzal!onlsstaffed prlmarl)y by people oo loan frcm
}larticlpetlhg members. Robert
Hadderi. , Ill the Columbus' metro
. ·director.. .
.
·
· ~ attorney, M-.r ls.prestdeht

't

BLOWER CONN_ ECT~
WITH COL D AIR •

'.

50%

P~IMARY

FORCED AIR
,FURNAC!!

·lh OFF

A.

featuring sound from the "Annex" from lOp. m. to 12:1l a . m. Admission
is $2 foc singles and $3.50a couple. The queen will be crowned during halftime ceremonies. Normally, a homecoming queen would have been
chosen auring the football season. However, due to the long teachers'
Strike, the event will be held now .

Winter hike set

WHY OWN AN ADD·A-FURNAC E' BY MONARCH?

REDUCED

s

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JANUARY I0, 1980

'648' board receives project funding

COATS

s

enttne

at

POMEROY -MIODLEPORT, OH 10

NO. 188

•

•

country skiers stranded for two days
By The Associated Press
in a cabin were rescued by helicopPacilic storms have whipped up
wind and rain in Hawali and ter late Wednesday.
In the PorUand area, the storm
Southern California and stu!Uied the
knoCked out electrical service to at
Northwest with enough snow and
least 85,000 homes. At Ventura in
freezing rain to sink more than 100
Southern California, at least 2,000
boats.
customers were without power due
At least 12 persons were killed and
· to the heavy rains.
two others missing in weatherIn Southern California, more than
related accidenta over two days.
3 inches of rain were blamed for
Tens of thousands were without
rnudslidt!B and creek flooding that
power as Ice am snow dawned Unes .
closed several roads and highways
Some 125 boats sank and
and caused some drowning deatha.
IUIJlerous nxis collapsed un(jer the
Hurricane force winds and nearly
weight of the snow In Oregon and
6 irx:IEs of rain lashed the Hawaiian
Washington smte, where many
Islands on Tuesday am Wednesday
schools, businesses and highways
In what one resident described as the
were clo.sed Wednesday.
worst storm since World War II.
Slranded motorists jammed hotells
Trees were uprooted, electrical
and motels throughout the Norand telephone service was inthwest. In Boardman, Ore., the
terrupted and damage from winds of
HOMEOOMING CANDIDATES - Four girls are vying for
Dodge City Inn was full but cl.fered
up to -75 mph was expected to reach
homecoming honors at Meigs High School. Candidates are, left to right,
adults sleeping~ _lodging .for the
into
the
millions
of
dollars.
Terri
Yeaguer, Tonia Ash, Cherie Lightfoot, and Sonia Ash. Not shown is
nightf&lt;r $Ia head.
Portland Mayor CO!Inie McCready
Dee
Simms.
A dance wiU be held after Saturay 's game with Wahama
Deputies in a four-wheel-drive
declared a limited state r:l. emergenvehicle said it took them 4t hours to
cy as schools were closed and 9 intravel from Portland to Multnomah
ches
of snow forced the closing of
·Falls,about 2&amp;mlles away.
most of Portland lnternatlooill Air- ·
Up to a foot of snow also· fell in
port,leaving mly one runway open.
western Montana, where two crossMore than 4 feet of snow was
reported at Hood River, Ore., 60
'!'he Gallia- Jackson -Meigs Com- mittee will receive $50,000 for the
miles east of Portland, with acperiod of March I, 1980 through
cumulations of up to 2feetat nearby munity Mental Health and Mental
Fej&gt;ruary 28, 1981."
Retardstion "648" Board has been
towns .
The participating agencies
Along the Oregon-Washington bor- notified that a proposal for the plan(Federation
), institutions and
der, blizzard con~tions with drifts ning of a regional unified mental
steering corrunittee members are :
health system for conversion of
up to 14 feet brought travel to a halt
(A)Gallia -Jackson -Meigs "648"
facilities
and
management
of
the
in the Columbia River Gorge . Three
Board; (B) Athens Mental Health
Athens
Mental
Health
and
Developpersons stranded in snowbourxl
Development Center (state Convehicles in the gorge were rescued ment Center (AthenS) to the com- trol); (C) Muskingum Joint County
mitlees
had
been
approved
by
the
by an Amtrak train crew. Another 15
Board; (D) Washington County
Ohio Department of Mental Health
were rescued by deputies.
''648" Board and (E) Tri-Olunty
Drifts cJ. up to 4 feet were reported and Mental Retardation.
"648"
Board
According to Maxine Plummer,
at Stevenson, Waah., where officials
d. the plan is to :
Purpose
Executive Director of the Gallia said it was the worst storm since 34
any duplication of
-Eliminate.
Jackson -Meigs Community Mental
LAURELVIlLE, Ohio (AP)inches fell in 1969.
costs
and
effort
between community
Health and Mental Rltardation
The 15th annual winter hike at
In Seattle, 7 inches of snow
and institutlooal mental health
"648" Board, 'The planning comHocking Hills State Park is
covered downtown streets and few
programs;
scheduled for Jan. 19, the Ohio
businesses were open.
Improve coordinatloo between
Department of Natural Resources said Wednesday.
Hikers will follow six mlles of
EXTENDED WEATHER
an old Indian path through the
Saturday through Monday,
valleys and gorges of Hocking
..J' A chance of flurries In the norNEED A JOB?
Hills.
theast Saturday. A chance of rain
Rain llkely later tonight. Lows in
Dwight Goins, administrative
As many as 5,000 persons may
Sunday and Monday. Hlg1u from the assistant of the Meigs illcal School
the low 308, then steady or slowly
take part in this year's hike, the
mid 3011 to the mid 40s Saturday, District, announclll that a full-time
rising temperatures the remainder
departmEnt said.
rising to the 4GB by Monday. Lows custodian position as well as subcJ. tonight. Windy and wanner with
In the event of heavy snow or
from the mid ZOs to the mid 3011 stitute bus driver jobs are open in
rain Friday. Higbl in the mid to up· hazardous driving condltlOM, the ·
Saturday, rising to the :1111 by Mon- the district.
per 40s. The chance cJ. precipitatioo
hike will be held Jan. 26.
day.
is 60 percent tonight and 90 percent
Residents interested in applying
Friday.
should stop by the Meigs Junioc High
School in Middleport where they can
secure applications and undergo in terviewing.

COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, lNG.
The Gifts of Speech &amp; Hearing
Unlock the Doors to Communication

Ladies &amp; Children's

99¢skein

VOL XXVIII

Although gasoline prices rose 3.4
percent in December, the same as
November, prices for home ·heating
oil were virtually unchanged for the
second consecutive month, the
report said.
Capital equipment prices rose 0.9
percent in December, can pared
with 0.5 percent in the previous month, and ended the year 8.7 percent
ahead of the December 1978level.
TIE Producer Pri~ Index stood at
:127.8 in December. This means that
goods that coot $100 in the 1967 base
period co.st $227.80 last month.
The index meao;ures price changes
at three levels. Fi~Jished goods are
those one step short of retail outlets.
Intermediate materials have hal

•

He added, however, that there was
some evidence in December that
non~nergy crude prices were
moderating, a situation that often
occurs when the economy is heading
into a recession.
The Producer Price Index is watched clOBely because price increases
at the wholesale level often show up
in a month or two in higher prices at
groceries, drug stores and other
retail outlets.
Consumer prices have been rising .
slighUy faster than wholesale prices
aud could show a 1979 increase in excess of 13 percent, or the worst inflation rate since World War II price
controls were lifted in 1946.
(C(Jitinued 111 page 10)

some processing . Crude ·goods have
had no processi11g.
The 12.5 percent incroose in
finished goods prices from Decemher !918 to December 1979 was outpaced by a 15.9 percent rise at the intermediate level and 17.5 percent increase in crude prices at whplesale.
Intennedlste prices in December
mse 1.2 percent, compared with 0.9
percent in the previous month;
crude goods were up 1.1 percent,
against 2percent in November.
"!'here have been very high rates
of increase in the intermediate and
crude indexes· in recent months,"
Early said, suggesting that these
would put pressure on prices in
cornir!g months.

Pacific storm
sinks 100 boats

Pomeroy, 0 .

Main St.

Met~s

lh OFF_

WINTUK
YARN

(USPS 145·960)

9.2 per~ent in 1918.
Food prices fell 0.1 percent at
wholesale last month following' a
sharp 2.6 percent rise in November
and ended 7.5 percent higl!er than in
December 19'18.
·
The chief inflation culprits in
December were metals, including
gold, and energy, the !!!bor Department report.said.
·
Non.food prices at wholesale went
up 1.2 percent in ~mber, 'compared with an increase cl. 0.8 percent
in November. Sharply higher prices
were noted for such items as jewelry
and household implements in the
wake of rapid advances in the price
of precious and non-precious metals
in world markets.

•

e

.•

Jaellson

THERMALS

Coats &amp; Clarks

30%

lWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Eric Ci'ump, Racine;
Roy Jones, Pomeroy; Tracy
Whaley, Pomeroy; Ancil Prunty, ·
Bidwell ; HazeiRoy,Racine.
Discharged-Mickey Goode, Dana
Covert.

~ALE

percenl
·· "There's no doubt that energy
12.5 percent in 1979, the highest inmade an important cootributioo in
flation at the wholesale level in five
both cases," said Labor Department
years, the Labor Department reporeconomist John Early.
tedtoclay.
He noted that energy prices rose
There- was some moderatioo in
62.7 per'tent In 19'19 as 'a result of
food and fuel price increases at
higtler prices charged by the
year's end, with the government's
Organization rf. Petroleum ExProducer Price Index rising 0.8 perporting Countries and added that
cent In December, its most
OPEC's indecision about a new ,
moderafl! rise since June. Prices in
joint base price made the future
November had gone up 1.3 percent.
hard to predict.
Still, the Increase from December
"We would be pleased and sur1978 to December 1979 was the worst
prised " if the index goes up only 0.8
at the wholt!Bale ievel since 1974, . percent each month in the corning
when increases in crude oil prices
year, to produce a 10 percent incaused ~ the Middle East on emcrease for 1980, Early said.
bargo helped push the index up 18.3
Prices at the wholesale level rose

Gallia ·

~OL D

'12 ...........
Ladies ' Warm

FORECLOSURE ACTION
A foreclosure on a land contract
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Albert and Marie
VanCooney, Pomeroy, against
Charles Whittington, Middleport,
Deb!ll J. Snyder, Rt. I, Middleport,
Farmers Bank and Savings and
George Collins, treasurer.

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

Ladies &amp; Children's

-Zippers
~-eig Yarn
-Thread
-crochet Cotton
-Sewing Books
- Tatting Cotton
- Buttons
- Double Knit
- Cotton Fabric
-Sport Fabrics
- Decorator Materials

REG. 17.95

Six defendants were fined and 13
others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Jerry Wade, Gallipolis,"$15and
co.sts, speed ; Edward Sigler, Rt. I,
Rutland , and Lester R. Richards,
Long Bottom, $150 and costs each,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI; Laury W.
McGrath, Coolville, $150 and coots,
five days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI; Hazilee
Riebel, Rt. I, Long Bottom, $15 aud
costs, excessive speed; Robert E.
Sanders, Rt. I, Reedsville, $15 and
costs, expired operators license ;
Paul Spencer,Racine,costs,IOdays
confinement, six months probation,
assault.
Forfeiting bonds ivere John E.
Fry, Elsmere, . Ky ., $35.00, illegal
backing; Russell R. Burns, Long
Bottom, $35.50, stop sign violation ;
Jeffrey K. Stone, Vienna, W. Va.,
Don M. Ra;e, Rt. 3, Racine, John W.
Rinck, Hurricane, W. Va., and
William J. Darby, Syracuse, $35.00
each, speeding; Jerry D. Edwards,
Lorain, $35.50, no operators license;
John W. Joseph, Letart, $60.50, no
operators license; Lerry R. Harman ,,Shade, $60.50, hit skip; Roger
E. Brauer, Jr., Racine, $62.55,
reckless opera ton ; Raymond
McHooe, Proctorville, $362.55, DWI;
Richard McPherson, Coolville,
$37.55, illegal backing; Jeffrey Ohlinger, P\1ffieroy, $37.55, speeding.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Wholesale

pri&lt;* for food and other goods rose

JANUARY
SALES
CONTINUES
SAVINGS

JEANS

SALE

FABRIC &amp; SEWING NOTION SAlE

BOYS' SWEATERS

County Court

.z

SPORTSWEAR

$
.

nutritious loads.
All participants are encouraged to
obtain regular and comprehensive
medical care. Those participants
who do not have regular physicians
or clinic care will be referred to one,
although the WJC Program does not
pay medical fees.
For more information on the WIC
Program, cmtact Mary Cleek, WIC
Oerk at the Meigs County Health
Department at 992-6626.

The day after the Dec. 'll Soviet- · his rutbacks in Soviet-American
sponsored coup in Afghanistan, Car- cummercial and diplomatic ties this
way :
ter had compared the Soviet action
· "We hope that wehavelaiddowna
to the Kremlin 's use of armed force
marker
1111d let them (the Soviets)
to put down uprisings ii1 Hungary in .
know
that
they wiD indeed suffer oii.
l!litl and in Clechoslovakia in 1968.
now
and
in
the
future."
!tit Tuesday, he said the inTuesday's
measures
irx:ludlll:
·
tervention in Afghanistan was cause
-Formal notification to the ""
for greater coo cern because the
target was a non-aligned state Soviets that they will not be allowed ~
to open a planned consulate in New
rather than nations ,that had long
been in the Soviet sphere of in-· York and a directive that the 17 officials assigned to staff the consulate .,.
fluence.
are to be sent home expeditiously . ~
Olrter explained the rationale fo~
The Soviets also were infonned that .~
the United States wiD not open a con. "'
;·:::::::·:::::::::::::::•:::::::::::;:::::·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::·:::::·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:-·
sulate in Kiev and that the seven
"
ORGANIZATIONAL SESSION
ficials
assigned
there
will
be
with-.
A meeting wUI be held at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the Bradbury Elemen- · Jrawn_
. tary School to form a boosters club ..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..,.
for the Meigs Local School District
elementary basketball program.
Parents of fourth, !Uth and sixth
graders of the district are urged to
attend.

J.J

surance Group. He serves as a direcMutual Insurance Co., Southern · tor of Columbus. Mutual Life InDRIVER INJURED
!lome Insurance Co., and Columbus surance Co,, another State Auto afThe Middleport Emergency Squad
Security Life Insurance Co., all !Diate.
was called to Route 1 at 6:57 p.m.
He is also prt!Bident and trustee of
members of the state Auto InWednesday for Betty Reed who was
"1
Grant Hospital, a trustee of the
Injured In an auto accident, She was
Columbus Automobile Club,
taken to Veterans Memorial
treasurer of the Ohio Automobile
Hospital wbere abe wiP admitted.
Club and director of the American
AI 1:16 p.m. Wednesday the unit
Automobile Association. He served
went to Route 1, Rutland, for Ida
as vice president of the Columbus
Wblte, who was also taken to
Automobile Club in 1968, was its
V~terans Memorial Hospital 8Dd
president from 1972-74 and chairman
was also admitted.
·
of the board, 1974-1976.
A graduate cJ. the Ohio State
University College of Commerce
and College cJ. Law, Massar is a
Bridlt'e rep&amp;ir started
. member of t!Je Columrus Bar
Association, Ohio Bar Association,
A bridge located on county road
one (between Salem Center and SR
Columbus Area Chamber of Com•
merce, Columbus Club, Athletic
143) ir\ Columbia Township, over
Ogden Run is being repaired Wesley
Club cJ. Columbtis, and the Scioto
Country Club. He is a director of the . Biehl, counly engineer-, announced
today .
Retail Merchant's Industries and a
This is the fi~t bridge on county .
trustee of the Insurance Federation
rood ooe, aJ?Proxima tely 1,0~ feet
for Ohio and Griffith Foundation for
north of county road six (mine numInsurance Education.
ber two road).
Massar was honored in 1979 as
Blll!hi said traffic should 111e counMeigs County's Man of Distinction
ty
road .I-A (mine road) and county
at a dinner staged ~ \he Pomeroy
road
27 (Point Rock) as a detour
Chamber ;,f Commerce. -H~ is the
route.
·
·
, son ·Of Mrs. C.larence A. Massar of ·
The
bridge
reBuehl
reported.
Pomeroy and the late Ml·. M~ssar.
GEORGE D.,:... MASSAR'
and a director of State AutomobDe

'

HEADS OOUNTY BOARD Harold Roush of Racine bas been
re-elected pfestdent of the Meigs
Coonty Board of Education for
19*1.

Patrol cites two

&lt;lrl.vers Wednesd.ay
Two drivers were cited following
two accidents investigated Wed nesday by the Gallla-Meigs Post,
!Dghway Patrol.
Officers were called to the scene r:l.
a two-vehicle accident in Meigs
Counly on SR 7, at milepost 1.
According to an incomplete report
filed by the patrol, a south bound
vehicle qierated by Paul E. Reese,
38, Gallipolis, and a north bound
auto driven by Edward H. Ramsburg, 26, Rutland, collidlll.
Reese was cited oo a charge of
DWI. There was severe damage to
the Ramsburg auto, moderate
damage to the Reese vehicle.
One drlyer claimed Injury
following a two"'ehicle mishap on
U.S. 35, just west of SR 100, at 11:25
a.m.
. The patrol reports a -.est bwnd
' auto OJMtrated by Wlniam Tawney,
31, Galllpolls, hadsto~d In traffic.
• A vehicle itriven by Cecil Weston, 19,
· Marietta, failed to stop and struck
the Tawney auto in the rear.
Weston claimed injury, but was
not illlll1ectlately treated. Both
vehicles Incurred moderate
damage.

'

'l

' ,.J

Improvements
bill shelved

I

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Mem·
bers of the joint conference committee deadlocked over the &lt;Bpital
improvemeniB bill are taking a Illday breather.
Rep. Myrl H. Sbot:maker, DBourneville, baited the dell be rations
Wednesday after the panel - to the
distaste d. the Senate - continued
putting back mmey that the q&gt;per
chamber had taken rut of the bill.
Rmtorations over the past two
&amp;ys now have made up most of the
$191 million cut by the Senate In
what arrived there as n record high,
$775milllon spending pa&lt;hge.
Most of tile retnslated projecla
were proposed by Gov. Jwnes A.
Rhodes and Included in the original
House version of the bill.
. The p8nel haS been voting on the
Senate deletloM, offered u amendments to the original bill~ The three
House conferees, by voting ''no" to
these proposed wnendmenta, have
managed to defeat thern on 3-3 ties.
I

'

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