<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16100" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16100?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T00:17:34+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49225">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c082b27a81aa8b482c292188aeec0b0d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>44a4c5cc7555fba1ebb1769a2a6411d0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51519">
                  <text>10- The Dally Sentinel, Middl~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Dec . II, 1979

I

Christmas basket
project underway
'lbe Meigs County Jaycees are ac·
ceptln!! donatioos for the annual
Olrl!trnas food baskets and toys for
the toys for tots programs.
Needy persons will be considered.
'nlOIIe who feel they quaWy are
asked to complete the form below
and mail to the Meigs County

Jaycees, Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohlo
45769. Deadline for applications is

Dec. H.
Any application after the 14th
cannot be considered . Dave Jenkins
is chairman for the food donations
and Dave Fox and Terry Spencer
are c~hairmen for the toys for tots .

Meigs County Jaycees
Christmas Food Basket
Toys for Tots
Name .....
Address ......... .
Number in family .
Age of children ...

. boys- - - girls - - - -

Food baskets .

. ..... toys

both

Additional infonnation
Mail to Meigs County Jaycees, Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohlo 45769.

Investment explained
' 'We call it investment, " says Rita
White, the investment leader for the
P&lt;m&gt;eroy Seventh-day Adventist
church, "becaUBe that's what it
really is." The members decide on a
project they think can make money
for the church. They then invest
IKJ(Ile money of their own and add a
little manpower to make their
project grow," explains Mrs. White .
''Whether it's selling garden
produce, saving pennies or washing
cars, each project becomes a matter
of private prayer ." After having
done this, these projects more or
less become God's responsibility, so
to speak.
Each "investor" has been working
c;o hill project all year, and turned in
his fwlds on the Sabbath, Nov . 24 .
When January comes around, the
members will pick out new projects
for 19110.

"Investment," says Mrs . White,
to
support
the
" helps
denomination 's world mission
program in 190 countries . Investors
the world around turned in $3 .9
million through this method last
year ."

&amp;old soars at(ain
WNDON !API - Gold soared
today to a record high of $«6 an ounce in Zurich today as the dollar fluctuated wildly against the Japanese
yen.
In London , the m~tal was quoted
at $+13.75.
The previous high for gold, an investor's traditional haven in times of
monetary uncertainty, was $444, hit
in Zurich Oct. 2 amid a crisis of confidence in the dollar.

WIN DISTRICI' HONORS - Three members of the Meigs Chapter of
the Futun! Farmers of America , won honors at a district 17 FF A
speaking contest held recenUy in Jackson . Kathy Parker gave her sill
minute prepared speech on gasohol and its effect upon the economy . She
received a gold rating and a second place. Billy Holcomb received a
silver rating presenting the FF A Creed . Billy Dyers received a silver
rating for extemporaneous speaking . His topic was the relationship between FF A and vocational agriculture. Schools participating were
Gallipolis, HBIUlan Trace, Jackson, Vinton. Wellston and Meigs . The
three Meigs members winning awards will receive them at the district
FFA banquet in the spnng . Honored were Billy Dyer . Billy Holcomb and
Kathy Parker .

BMan K. Landrum, Jackson lugh
school senior star fullback and th~
SEOAL 's Most Valuable Back in
1979 was seriously injured m a one
car accident early Saturday morning on county road 76 (Beaver
Pike) just two tentha of a mile west
of Jackson .
Landrum, 17, son of Mr . and Mrs.
John Landrum of Jackson Route 3,
was listed today in "stable condition" at Holzer M~cal Center
where he was transported by the
Jackson Emergency M~cal Ser-

International

A
GIFT
FOR THE FAMILY

A NEW CAR
With a low cost auto loan
arranging the most

Walk-Up Teller Window Open Fri. Eve.

s to 7 P .M .

''The Friendly Sonic"

lHE CENTRAL TRUSf COMPANY

~Iii'
·.M !P ..,."~ ~Ot&lt;:

.\1itMiqwtt1 . 0 .

JESSE PLANTL
Private funeral services for Jesse
Allen Plantz, Jr ., 39, a resident of
Kanauga, will be held 1 p.m . Wednesday at Miller's Horne for
Funerals with Rev . Ira Wellman officiating .
Burial will be in Centenary
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7:30 this evening.
Mr. Plantz was born Feb. 19, 1940,
in West Virginla, son of Jesse Allen
Plantz, Sr., and Frances Bush Plan-

tz .

SEOAL's top hack
condition stable

!Continued from page I I
headquarters was filled WJth armed
men . Machine guns were mounted
on the roof and some balcorues, and
a party official said they were
prepared for an attack .
The Turks reported nine of the
their men killed and 60 wound~d in
the rebellion so far .
Meanwhil~. one of the embassy
hostages, Marine Cpl. Billy
Gallegos, 21, of Pueblo, Colo ., said m
an NBC-TV mterview that the
students holding them ''have really
been good to us . It's hard to believ e.
I know, but we haven\ been asked
any questions about what really our
job was ."
Asked if he was worried . he
replied : "I unagme we 11 he
OK ... Nobody 's been mistreated
Everybody 's OK. ·'
Gallegos said the hostages were
given "everything we need ," toeluding toothbrushes , and "the
cleanliness is great. "
He said he was kept in a room "1th
about 30 other Amertcans. He repor U!d each one of them had a mattress,
clean linen, a chair and a desk . He
said talking was forbidden , but he
coold """ the others
Gallegos satd their hands were
loosely tied and som~ of them were
sometimes taken somewhere and
later brought back . He also sa1d he
had no idea where the other 20
hostages were kept.
In additiOn to the embassy
hostages, the Iranians are holding L
Bruce Laingen, the U.S. c har~e d'af faires, and two other embassy officials at the Foreign Mintstry . All
are being threatened with spy trials
and possible death sentences unless
Carter hands over deposed Shah
Mohammad Reza Pah!av1 for trial
in Iran .
The shah underwent cancer and
gallbladder treatment in New York
last month and is now convalescing
at an Air Force base in TelUls .
The United States went to the In ternational Court of Justice in The
Hague Monday and charged that the
seizure of if.« embassy and the members of the embassy staff violated
four international treaties and
agreements signed by Iran and the
United States. U .S. Attorney General Benjamin R Civiletti asked
the court to order the hostages freed.
but Iran refused to recognize the
court's jurisdiction and boycotted
the hearin~

vice ambulance .
At Holzer , Brian underwent
surgery for a dislocated hip,
lacerated leg and broken teeth . The
accident occurred sometlme after
rrudnight Friday, but Landrum was
not found until several hours later .
The patrol reports he was
traveling west when he went off the
left side of the road, and new
through the air over a small creek
and struck a bank. Landrum was
finally noticed lying on the edge of
the roadway by a passer-by, who
notified Jaw enforcement officers
and emergency personneL

Big parade opens
yule activities
MASON - Christmas activities
for the Town of Mason on Saturday ,
Decemher 15. will hegin with a
parade at 10 a .m. The parade will
form a t the parking Jot on the levy ,
escortmg Santa up Pomeroy Street
to 2nd Street and down 2nd Street to
the Fire House where imm~ately
following the parade, Santa, with
Fire Department's help, will pass
out treats to the children.
In the afternoon, from 2 to 4 p.m .,
a party for aU children up to 12 years
of age will he held at VFW building
sponsored by the Ladles Auxllikary
Stewart-Johnson Vi'S Post 99'lli .
That evening from 8 to II p.m., a
C11risunas Dtsco will be he ld at the
f1re house s ponsored by the Gtrl
Seoul Mothers

He moved to Kanauga 10 years
ago. Mr. Plantz was a I~ graduate
of Kyger Creek High School, and
ranked second in his class
scholastically.
Following
graduation, he received a scholarship from General Motors, and attended Ohio University one year.
He joined the Navy and while in
service, glaucoma set in, forcing
him out of service with an honorable
medical discharge.
Surviving besides his parents are
three sisters : Linda Swanson,
Miamisburg, Ohio; Barbara Densenberry, Charleston, W. Va., and
Anna Mae Combs. Ravenswood, W.
Va . ; two brothers: Edward Plantz ,
Middleport, and Marion Robert
Plantz. Byersville, Ohio . One
brother preceded him in death.

\E\\-.,

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted -- Barbara Harris,
Cheshire ; Marie Dudding, Middleport ; Etta Cullurns, Pomeroy;
Helen George, Bidwell .
Discharged-T~rry Pooler . James
Scally, Roy Frecker, Fred Roush
and Marie Nelson .
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC. 10
Earl Bocook, Irene Brannon,
Harry Calloway, Mrs . Cavendar and
son, Mary Dobbins, Thelma Dowel.
Faith Etsnaug!e, Betty Foster,
J eremy Geider , Angela Johnson,
Linda Lambert, Mrs . Wendell Lusk
and son, Robert Persons , James
Reynolds, Ryan Russell , Ruth
Shafll , Bertha Thompson, Ke!Uleth
Well .
BlRntS DEC. 10
Mr . and
MR s .
Stephen
Yonker.daughter . Racine ; Mr . and
Mrs . Donald Britz, son , Jackson ;
Mr and Mrs . J erry Ireland, son ,
Jackson .

ton, was killed Saturday in a ~r
accident on U. S. 50 in Vintal County .
MLss Rl.shel wu choeen Junior
Miss of Vlntal County at the annual
Southea.ot Ohio Junior Ml8 held at
Southern High School oo Nav. 19.

Retiring •••
(Continued frnm page 1)
about a 50 percent increase ln
revenues next year as a result of the
recent doubling d auto license fees
by the Ohio Leglalature . Council aJ)proved the November report ol
Mayor Fred Hoffman showing
receipla of $1370 in fines and fees and
$44 in merchant police collecU0111
for a total of $1414.

SECOND READING GIVEN
A wage ordinance which will
provide salary lncreueJI for village
employes ranging from five through
13 percent in 19110 wu given a second
reading. CouncU p8&amp;'led legislation
providing for the Issuance cl $90,000
in notes for the purchase of a new
fire truck and the acce11110ry equiJ&gt;ment. Voters last year approved a
tax levy providing money for the
purchase.
Council diBcussed traffic problems
in the Walnut St., area and It W8S
agreed to place a no rlghi turn sign
at the traffic light at the intersection
of N. Second and Walnut and a no
right turn sign at the intersection of
North Third and Walrut Sts.
A special sessioo was set for Jan.
10 at 8:30p.m. to prepare the annual
approprtationa. Mayor Hoffman announced a public meeting for Dec. IS
to be held by the Meigs County
Regional Plarming CcmmiMion to
receive input on Middleport's
housing needs · as well as otiMr
aspects of the needs of the town.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treuurer
Grate, Jon Buck, the new appointee,
and council members Hortoo, Marvin Kelly, Charles Mullen, Carl
Horky and WUJlam Walters.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to Fourth St., at &amp;:32
p.m. Monday for Gene Thompson
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
At 7:27 p.m., the unit went to liO
Riverview for Michael Smith who
was taken to the office d Dr. James
Conde

GUNU16T
Doug Hemsley, Syracuae, has lost
a 20 guage automatic Browning
sho4Cun between the Robert Cunningham residence and the coon
hunters cabin on Snowball Hill.
Should anyone find It, they should
contact Hemsley .

(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVIII

NO. 169

~
~

FURNITURE DEPT. 3RD FLOOR

~

cosco KITCHEN

~
~

W

~

W
I

I

I

~

ACCESSORIES
r

J

·c

1 /-fj 9 \

~~
. 'I ·1 :

1

1'

·(it J(

:: J
ll.

-

~

I

I

W

.',

i

\i
I

I

W

~

'.~''

•

•

•

II!
ll.

!
!I

3 Shelves
Twin Electric Outlet

• Easy Rolling Casters

ll.

• White, Almond, Yellow
or Avocado

-~

ll.

'2399

II

UTILITY SlOOL

II

I

• Black Rubber Tread on Steps

. _::. :: , ·. ,

!. ·
:

1

SERVING CART
, ;,

, _,

'II
1

'3339

;/r -~~,
.\'1, 1 '\:~
L,
~~

~

I

• Swing Away Steps
• Rubber Treads
• Chrome Frame
eAvocadoorSaddleBrown
Upholtery

!,

,~ ~- ·r
'x \1: ''
f ~r~ j1

II!

~

DEWXE STEP STOOL

I-.~J . ·

W
W

I
li
I
I

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 8

~

i

~

ELBERFELD$

• Enamel Finsh -

Avocado

1

ell 1/ Blnch High

·

I

II

•1 0 95

~~ ~SANTA
•~==----~---~~----~~,
I~
WILL BE IN THE STORE TUES., I
lwEo.,THUR.,FRI.,SAT . 6:JOTIL7:Jo.

I

L~-~-~~---------~---·

I

I
I~ ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY I'II
I

"For Merry Christ mall Shopping"

~~-~-~~~----------~----~~-

~

at

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESOAY. OECLMBE.R 12. 1979

Action taken for employes'
pay day prior to Christmas
BY BOB HOEF'LICH
Meeting in emergency session
Tuesday night, the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
took action to provide to pay days for
teachers and non-&lt;'ertilied employes
before Christmas .
Payment of employes, who would
have normally been paid la.•t

Friday, has been a highly complicated and controversial issue in
the district following an almost 10
week teachers strike.
According to the resolution adoJ&gt;ted last night, the Meigs Local Board
of Education directs the clerk to pay
certified employes in 20 ~ual installments, · the first two installments being before Christmas,

one as soon as possible and the
second ooe on Dec. 21. The
resolution provides that non certified employes be paid sinlllarly
in two payments before Christmas ,
one pay for seven days and one for
five days or as close as possible to
that schedule as can be worked out.
The board also directed Supt.
David Gleason to obtain signatures

Carter administration
will appeal judge's ruling
CHICAGO (AP) - President Carter has moved ahead of Sen. Edward
KeMedy as the Democratic voters'
choice nationally for the I 9811
presidential nomination, the latest
Gallup Poll reports .
The survey, completed Dec. 9,
shows a dramatic jump in Carter's
popularity as he became the choice
of 411 percent of the Democrats, compared to Kennedy's 40percent.
In mid-October Kennedy led Carter by a z-1 ratio, and in the Nov. 1619 poll, KeMedY led by a margin of
5:&gt; percent to 38 percent .
The president's increasing
strength among the voters is due, at
least in part, to Americans' support
for his actions in the hostage crisis in

Iran, and a renewed faith in his
ability to lead the country, poll officials said. Seventy-five percent of
those surveyed approved of the
president's handling of the Iran
situation.
The poll, published in the today 's
editions of the Chicago Sun-Times,
also cites Kennedy's criticisms cl
the deposted Shah of Iran as a factor
helping Carter.
The president's standing also has
improved among independents, and
he now holds a 25ilercent lead over
KeMedy in that group. The previous
poll showed Kennedy with a 50-37
percent lead over Carter among ln·
dependents, but Carter now leads 56
percent to 31 percent.
The dramatic change rA Carter's

fortunes in the poll is the largest increase in a president's popularity in
the last 40 years, except those
following Pearl Harbor and the
signing of the Vietnamese peace
treaty, poll officials said.
Poll results are based on in-person
interviews with 1,303 persons ag~ IB
and older in selected localities
throughout the country during Dec.
7-9. The nomination results are
based on interviews with 530
Democrats and 423 independents .
A telphone poll rA &amp;25 adults taken
Dec . 5~ by Gallup reaffirmed Carter's renewed strength, with 61 percent of the respondents approving of
the way he is handling his responsi bill ties.

Commission reviews termination
Bob Bailey and Bob Fisher.
representatives of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services,
diBcussed the tennination of Meigs
County's contract with SEOEMS
Tuesday night with Meigs County
COO'IInil8ioners.
The commialioner&amp; earlier voted
· to officially tennlnate the contract
with SEOEMS effective Dec. 31,
1979.
Bailey was instructed to submit an
itemized list of equipment owned by
SEOEMS and located in Meigs County.
Bailey was informed that recent
communications frtm SEOEMS
have indicated that a meeting with
SEOEMS will be necessary to
resolve the question of placing an
anterma on the SEOEMS tower and

other questions pertaining to the
payment of the remainder rA the 1979
contract.
Wesley Buehl , county engineer,
reviewed the highway deparbnent
operatioll!l and the engineeriing on
the access road to the Multi-Purpose
Health Care Center.
The conuniasioners will meet with
Buehl at a later date to discuss the
19110 budget and will view the area of
the acceas road later tiWi week .
Naoma Brinker and Merle}ohnson of the county CET A office met
with the commi.ssion to discuss the
various CETA programs.
The board voted to appoint
Eleanor Thomas as a member of the
Regional Manpower Services Council (RMSCJ.
Chris Layh, administrator of the

Meigs Copunty Mental Retardation
program, discussed that program
for 1980. The board requested that
Layh meet with them again before
the end of the year to discuss the 1980
mental retardation budget.
It was reported that the old
bulldozer used at the county landfill
could not be repaired and it would
be necessary to reptace it at once .
A letter was read from Rick Crow ,
prosecuting attorney, informing the
board no statute provides fur
making a purchase this large under
emergency measures. Crow advised
that the board would have to advertise for bids.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, corrunillsioners, and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~-~-~~~~

1

MAN FINED
Gary E . Spencer. Rt. 3, Albany ,
was fined $15 and costs on charges of
speeding in Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens court Monday night .

MJCJIEII,E RISHEl.

MLss Michelle Rl.shel, 17, daughter
of Mr . and Mrs. James Rllhel, Vin-

RUSSELL SAUNDERS
Funeral Services for Russell SaWlders will be held 1 p.m. Thursday at
the WUlis Funeral Home, Galllpolis,
with Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
Burial will be in Old Mercerville
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Wednesday lorn 6 until 9
pm.

W

IIO~I'IT\1.

e

Area deaths

CLARA H. JOHNSON
Qara H. Johnson, n, 12 North
Sbarmon Ave., Athens, died Monday
morning at 0 'Bleness H08pital .
Mrs. Johnson was born in Meigs
County the daughter of the late
Samuel and Elisa Betz Holter. St..
was also preceded in death by four
brothers, Albert, Ernest, Roscoe
and Hallie Holter.
Mrs . Johnson attended Ohio
University and Rio Grande College.
She taught school for several years
in Meigs County. She has been a
resident of Athens the past :&gt;1 years.
She was a member of the Eastern
Stars, Athens.
Mrs. Johnson is survived by her
husband, Willis E. Johnson; one
daughter, Mrs. James (Marjorie)
Kollister, Menter, Ohio; three grandsons, Bruce Kollister, Chardln,
Ohio; Kenneth Kollister, Huston,
Texas; Jay Kollister, Menter; two
great grandsons.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I :30 p.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens, with the
Rev. Cecil Cox officiatln!!. Burial
will be 1n Shade Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home Wed·
nesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9. 1'hot!e
who wish may contribute to
Sheltering Amls Hospital lund.

•

Grate, man of many talents,
will retire December 31st
By Bob uoerucb
Middleport's man of many
talents, Gene Grate, will retire
from the Central Trust Co . -formerly Citizens National Bank on Dec. 31 after 38 years of service with the town's only banking
institution.
Grate, a son of the late Mr . and
Mrs. J . H. Grate of Middleport,
began his employment with the
local bank on June 15, 1941. He
was named assistant cashier alter a few years and on Jan. 10,
1957, was named assistant vice
president; a position which he
sbll holds.-Prior to entering the field of
banking, Grate had served as
secretary to the Middleport
superiintendent of schools from
1933 to 1937 when he left the
school system to help operate
dairy shops owned by his father .
He returned to his secretaMal
post at the schools in 1939 and
remained there until he accepted
employment with the Citizens
National Bank in 1941.
Actually, December is a month
of "retirements" for Grate who
has served over 30 years as
village clerk in Middleport . He
did not seek reelection this year.
Monday night marked his final
meeting .
However, he does expect to
lend some technical advice and
help to the village from time to
time since he has been in village
administration for so many years
and is well versed in the business
affairs of the community .
Speaking of his retirement,
Grate says the first thing he pla1111
to do is "collapse for a while."
After that, you can be s ure he'JJ

be followong some of his many
paths of endeavor for which he is
known throughout the community .
Gene, as he's known to
everyone in town, is a whiz at
clock repair . He's a clock collector and a self -taught repainnan .
He's been known to get clocks
ticking again that haven~ run for
years. His clock collection is
fabulous.
A jack of all trades and the
master of many, Grate con-

GENE GRATE, an lDdlvtdual
of maay tal calli, will retire from
!lie CeDinll Trust Co. ill Middleport on 0..,, 31, after 38 yean
..,rvt., e.

structed hill own attractive home
overlooking the beautifui Ohio .
The brick structure, known as
Gratevlew, was begun inside the
old Purity Ice Cream Co .
building. The older structure was
tom down as the new Grate home
progressed. He spent about five
years on the project and has a
home in which anyone couid feel
pride.
For years, until 1979, Grate 's
friends have been quite aware of
his ability in the cooking department. Each Christmas season he
has turned out uncountable fruit
cakes and hand dipped
chocolates for his friends and
famUy.
His culinary art goes beyond
the "goodie" department too.
Each year t.. entertains all m~m­
bers of hill family with an
elaborate Christmas dinner.
Members of Middleport Village
Councils, over the years, have
been guests at other dinners he
staged .
And then there's music. Gene
plays both piano and organ qwte
well and regularly does his thing
at the piano for weekly meetings
rA the Middleport-Rotary Club to
accompany group singing .
What will Grate do without his
duties at the bank and with the
village? Well - he'U miss them.
of course . However, followtng the
"collapse," he11 embark on
making five grandfather clocks.
Now, that sounds Uke an ambilious project!
Whawve r task Gene takes up in
his retirement, those who kno~&lt;
him are positiv~ that it will be
done in Gr-dt~ fashion -and that ·s
fiREAT!

from representatives of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association and the
local chapter of the Ohio Association
of Public School Employes on an
agreement to the effect that this
payment system is a one time, good
faith gesture on the part of the board
after which pay days will return to
normal. The resolution states also
that all no time can any employe be
overpaid due to school closings for
bad weather or other unforseen circumstances.
Linda Morris, president of the noncertified employes, signed the
agreement late last night and Mrs.
Bonnie Fisher, president of the local
teachers assoctation, has been
notified that the agreement is ready
for signature.
Mrs . Dorothy Oliver, an active
member of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association, said this morning that the arrangement to pay the
teachers was not a great gesture on
the part of Mr. Gleason or the board
of education.
Teachers had the money coming
last FMday and the action to make
payment came only alter a wildcat
strike by teachers was threated in
order to secure the pay, Mrs. Oliver
said.
Mrs . Jennifer Sheets, a member rA
the board of education, said the
board technically did not have to pay
the employes at this time but did so
because of the Christmas season.
She said the board had been working
for a week trying to work out a pay
plan and that she supported the action for the two payments hefore
Christmas not as a result of the
teachers actions regarding the matter but "in spite of them" . She said
she and Larry Powell insisted on last
night's emergency sesston .
Mrs. Sheets further commented
that Supt. Gleason had been blamed
because payment has not been made
to employes while, she said, the
board has direct control of the clerk
and the lack of payment has been the
board's responsibility.
Last night, board members were
given suggested makeup schedules
to be studied between now and the
next regular board meeting. There
will be some 30 days to be made up
by students of the district due to the
strike.
The board also directed Supt.
Gleason to mvestigate charges of
alleged unprdessional conduct and
inad~ual&lt;! classroom instruction by
some U!achers at the Meigs High
SchooL
All board members were present
for last night's session. The action
by the board to make the two
payments to employes before Christmas followed a conference earlier
Tuesday evening between a
teachers ' committee and Supt.
Gleason

•

FREE P ARKlNG - Middleport merchants are again offering free
parking to Christmas shoppers from now through Dec. 24. Meters were
covered by memhers of the Meigs Chapter, Order of DeMolay. Merchants
will make a contribution of $300 to Middleport Village in appreciation for
village officials freeing the meters. Pictured at one of the covered meters
is Cantly Ingels, Middleport business woman , who served as chairman of
the annual community Christmas parade and is president~lect of the
Middleport Chamber of Commerc e.

Patrol cites
three drivers
Three persons were c ite d
following two accidents investigated
Tuesday in Meigs County by the
Gallia -Meigs Post, Highway Patrol
Officers were called to the scene of
a two-vehicle mishap on SR 124, just
east of Langsville, at 1:10 p.m .
The patrol reports v ehi cles
operated by Rady Hayslett , 23 , Cincinnati, and John E . Frye , 32,
Elsmene, Ky ., had stopped at a
railroad crossing. The Frye vehicle
r~ersed into tht front of the
Hayslett auto.
Fry~ was cited on a charg~ uf
failure to exercise caution whiJe
backing . Hayslett was cited on a
charge of failure to display valid
registration.
There was moderate damage to
the Hayslett vehicle, slight damage
to the Frye auto.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident on SR 143, on~{enth
of a mile west of CR 10, at 4 p.m .
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Helena H.
V'Augustmo , 21 , Albany , turned left
and struck a west bow1d vehicl e
driven by Lorraine K. Sayre, 211.
Albany.
V'Augustino was cited on a charge
of no operator's license . Both
vehicles
incurred
mod e rate
damage .

Earlier findings
reversed by firm
PIKETON, Ohio I AP I - A
Chicago-based laboratory has reversed its earlier findings that radiation
levels in drinking water near the
Pik~ County uranium enrichment
plant exceed allowable levels .
Eberline Laboratories recently
conducted tests on water samples it
received from Local 3~ of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
Union, which has alleged that
drinking water around the Goodyear
Atomic Corp. plant contains harmful
levels of radiation. The union has
been on strike against Goodyear stnceMay 3.
The samples tested came from a
cistern where rainwater is collected.
In it original report, Eberline said
it discovered radiation levels in the
water to be 120 times greater !han
those allowed by the U.S. En \'ironmental Protection Agency.
However, in a letter the union
received Monday. Eberline said the
water sample was re-analyzed and
that the original results were found
to be in error.
"I think it means we got a
bedroom scene between the lab and
the Department of Energy," De!Ulis
Bloomfield, union local president ,
said Tuesday .
Bloomfield pointed out that
Eherline also conducts tests for the
U.S. Energy Department and the
Nuclear Reguiatory Commission .
The Department of Energy owns the
Goodyear plant.

The latest Jab results confirm
previous tests made last w~k by the
Ohio EPA on 10 samples of water
supply near the plant. The EPA said
testing of both publtc and private
water supplies in Piketon showed
they were within safe drinking water
standards .
In U!lephone converstations with
Bloomfield, Eberline manager E .S.
Chandrasekaran said , "It was just
one of those things . ··
·"This definitely places us in a very
bad position, " Bloomfield told the
Eberline manager .
Bloomfield said later he was skeptical of the new findings, and he said
the union wouid send more water
samples to another Jab, which he
wouid not identify.

..' ,,.
~

Licenses mailed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Ohio 's Bureau of Motor Vehicles
is having to mail out about :I'Al,OOO
new applications lor special
reserved and "vanity" license
plates for 19«1, Registrar Dean L.
Dollison says .
The reason, he said Tuesday, is
that the legislature voted an increase of $10 in the basir state fee
on Nov . 30, about 45 &lt;lays after
B.OOO applications had been sent
to holders of special reserved
plates and 18,000 having the persorwlized plates .
The increase to $20 in the basic
fee took special reserved plates
from $20 to $30 and the vanity
plates from $45 to $55.

Body recovered
TOKYO I API - North Korea
said today rt had recovered the
body of a U.S. soldier who
&gt;irayed into the communist side
of the demilitarized zone and
wouid return it to the U.N Command, the North Korean Central
News Agency reported .
The report did not name the
soldier. But Sgt. 1st Claas
Thomas !.. Anderso~. 36, was
reported missing Friday
following an explosion on the North Korean side of the DMZ.

Appeals finding
COVINGTON, Ky. (AP) - A
small air commuter service,
whose Oct. 8 fatal crash is under
investigation by the National
Transportation and Safety
Board, sa1d it will appeal a
$43.000 finding against it by the
Federal Aviation Administration .
The FAA, which had scheduled
an inspection of Comair, pushed
up if.« investigation following the
crash at Greater Cincinnati International Airport in which a
pilot and seven passengers died.
The llight was bound for Nashville , Teru1.
Officials of both agencies said
the investigations were not connected . The NTSB repori is not
complete .

Mission hit again
NEW YORK (API - An explosion rocked the Soviet Mission
to the United Nations on Tuesday
night, shatteriing windows on both
sides of the block and injuring
three police officers, authorities
said .
The blast occurred around 10
p.m . in a garage adjacent to the
rni"ion on Rast 67th Street in
\1 &lt;:~

11i 1&lt;-t ttm1

T ta! police officers, who were
assigned to guard the mission,
were taken to Lenox Hill
Hospital, police said .

'

.

'

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , Dec . 12, 1979

The awful

Today's commentary
By DooGraff
Inflation shows no signs of loosen Ing its hammerlock on the American
economy.
The energy pinch for the im mediate future promises to be
tighter than ever . There rna y be
some argument as to whether we 're
actually in the early stages of a
recession, but none whatsoever over
the fact that the economy is not
booming .
Unemployment is still at an un comfortably high level and desptte a
cheapened dollar foreign trade
deficits continue month after month .
But things could be worse .
And as a matter of fact. they are .
In the Soviet Union .
Moscow recently made publi c a
remarkably straightforward annual
reading of the ~tate of the economy .
Which is just this side of dismal.
Economic growth for 1979 i.s in the
mediocre region of 3.6 percent, the
lowest since World War fl and far
short of the 5. 7 percent target set a
year ago .
In almost every major industrial
category - steel. plasttcs, heavy
machinery -the Soviets have fa llen

.

A miserable
Pcononuc company

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
In our purswt of energ y alter natives we hear much about solar
development, abou t co nverting
shale to oil, about coal gastftcattonwe hear very little about a virtually
untapped resource that may prove
to be the most practical near term
solution to the wurld 's energy
problems
The littl e menttonec! resource ts
heavy oil , a product energy e~&lt;perts
contend is in ab undance world wtde .
And the addttional good news IS that
the Western Hemisphere a ppear5 to
contamthe highest concentratiOns of
the world's heavy oil deposits . These
deposits appear to stretch from
Alaska to the tip of South America
In Canada, the western Province of
Alberta , alone , is thought to hold as
much as 967 billton barrels of heavy
oil . This fi gure ts considerably
higher than the present estimated
total of light oil reserves for the
whole Persian Gulf area .
A belt a long the Orinoco River in
Venezuela. is estimated to contain
as much as I to 2 trilli on -yes I satd
trillion - barrels of heavy oil , a n
anount nearly equivalent to the total
quantity of petroleum conswned tn
the history of the planet earth .
In the U. S., the heaviest concentrations of heavy oil are in
California and Utah. However, tndtcations are that it is also ab undant
m those a reas of the country that
heretofore have yielded large
amounts of eonventional light otl.
Recent estima tes for total U. S.
rese rves of heavy oil range from a
low of 10 billion barrels to a high of
over 200 billion. the latter figure
being over stx limes greater than
our current kn own li ght oil reserves.
Former Deputy Ener~y Secretary
John O'Leary s uggests tha t heavy
oil could make the Unt ied States
totally independent of the Mi ddle
East in 20 yea rs .
Hea vy oil as its name suggests ts a
hi gh densily ml much thicker than
conventiona l light oil. So thick m
fact that in many cases it has to be
mined from the gr ound much like
strip mined coal. Heavy oil a lso con-

If the Soviets are holding a bad
economic hand , their East European
allies have been dealt one in spades.
Inflation is forcing official price
increases everywhere, which is a
cause of considerable official concern since memories are still fresh
of the riots touched off in Poland by
1976 increases .
Productivity' never adequate w
start with, is declining and
"underground" economies - i.e .,
private enterprise by fanners and
craftsmen - are thriving . Exports
are falling as products are less and
less up to the standards of world
markets.
And the worst news of all rnay be
coming from Moscow, which is mov mg to align prices of oil deliveries to
its almost totaUy dependent satellite
family with those of the OPEC
cartel.
It just goes to prove what every
family knows - that ltfe with Big
Brother can be rough.

tains more s ulphur and other impunities than conventional oil and as
a result ts more e~&lt;penstve to extract
and refine .
The latter problems unW recently
precluded its profitable production.
When light crude was selling for a
couple of dollars a barrel, only the
cheapest elCtraction processes could
be employed. Now however . with the
world price of light oil ever soaring ,
heavy oil is becoming an increasingly attractive e nergy alternalive . Studtes done for the Bureau
of Mines suggest that surface mined
heavy oil can be produced at a cost
ranging from $12 w $21 a barrel.
Heavy oil that would have to be extracted from underground mining
operations would run from $10 w $60
a barrel. When you put these figures
alongside the existing international
spot market prices , that run as high
as $40 a barrel for light oil, you can
sec why heavy oil is gaming in creasing attention a" a possible
energy alternative.
What is keeptng us from
developing these resources' The
problem according to Dr. Joseph
Barnea, an energy specialist and
forme r Director of :-latural Resources for the Untied Nattons, has been
two-fold F'irst . masstve ca pital expendttures are necessary to com ply
with the many environmental I a~
111 effect tn tlus country ; and second,
until recently federal price controls
made the production of heavy oil
resou rces economi ca ll y unat tractive when compared to light oil
With the President 's recent lifting ul
controls on heavy oil and his
proposed exemption of heavy oil
from the so..,alled wtndlall profit.&lt;;
bill presently bemg considered by
the Congress. the picture should get
much bnghter for the development
of these resources . Unlike many of
the other energy substitutes we hope
to develop, our heavy oil resources
arc tangible. they ar e m the ground
"1th tec hnology available to get
U1e m out. It's time our e ne rg y In·
dustry set to the task of doing JUSt
tha t.

B£TCHA

Today in hi."ttory
Today is Wednesday, Dec . 12, the
346th day of 1979. There are 19 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history •
In 1792, Ludwig van Beethoven
paid 19 cents for a music lesson,
from Franz Joseph Hayden .
On this date •
In 1924, guests at the Hotel Savoy
in London were treated to a
technological miracle • thev danced
11IE DAU..V SEN'11NEL
IUSPS lt$--1

DEVD!'Im'to THE
IPf'rEilFSr OF

o..-

mo.Lb, a .• .

n.:

DaUy Seadarl , by maD t. OIUoalid WNt
VlrJinla , oet ' " ' s;a.•: Sb moat!ll II Hi i
tilrw moatb 111.51. E!MwWr at-• : ab

D:MIIIt.bi$!Ut : LilrM IDODdas Jll .• .

1"hr ANoclat.r-d Preu U nclallvel)' eadUe.l

w \k _.for publkadoa ~ allllrW• dbpalt"hN
~ ·rftiJ&amp;rd W tbr DrWI~pPr
IW"WI pubUatw-d b.r~ta.

aDd alao tM loul

ONE STAMP PL-US ONE'

f'Cl$fA61:. 51AM PS

CHA•N L•GH! CORD WOM
THE W.RD'NAR£ STOR.!O

~

I

~£'~'-.'V

WASHINGTON (APJ - The first
vote has yet to be cast, but there
already has been a boom -&lt;tnd .Oust
cycle in the campaign of Sen . Edward M. Kennedy for the
Democratic
presid e ntial
nomination.
President Carter, virtually written off by some politicians and
analysts even before he declared his
candidacy, turns out to be politically
alive and well .
He appears more formidabl e than
before, .md Kennedy less so .
But comebacks and slumps don 1
mean much until they start
producing nominating delegates , a
process that won't begin for five
more weeks .
Kennedy has not conquered simply by running. In fairness, he never
suggested he would, but said weeks
ago that he expected a closely fought
contest, with Carter a candtdate for
the duration.
There was at the time a wave of
speculation that Carter would not
make it through the early primary
season. He was down, and some said
he would be out early . Now the
fashion has changed, and the focus is
on Kennedy's campaign problems .
The only surprising thing abo"'
this is that anyooe should be surpri!ed. And the only certainty is that
there will be more peaks and more
valle)'ll for Carter, for Kennedy, and
probably for California Gov. Edmund G.!lrownJr. as well .
Carter's perfonnance rating has
soared during the Iranian hostage
crisis, and the most recent polls
show the president and the
challenger from Massachuaetta in a
virtual dead heat heading into the
primary election season . That , too,
;ssubiect to change .
to music being played by a band in
New York City . The music was
broadcast over a complex radio link .
In 1937, the Japanese sank an
American gunboat on the Yangtze
River in China, causing an in ternational mcident.
In 1966, the Supreme Court upheld
the conviction of Teamster leader
J inuny Hoffa on jury-tampering
charges.
In 1968, a Pan American Airwa ys
airliner exploded near the airport in
Caracas, Venezuela , and plunged into the Caribbean. Ftfty-one people
cited.

On the Republican side, thenPresident Gerald R. Ford looked
shaky + at best +in 1976 against the
challenge of fanner Californla Gov .
Ronald Reagan . Ford proceeded to
defeat Reagan in tbe early
primaries, at which point the
c hallenger seemed all but
eliminated. As soon as that had been
said, Reagan started defeating
Ford , who held on narrowly to win
the nomination .
Olanges like that are part of tbe
now of any campaign . They can
grow out of an incident , a slip of the
tongue or, as is the case now, an in ternational crisis.
The embassy imprisonment of !iO
American hostages in Tehran has
put Carter in the position that is

most advantageous for any
president. There ill no better campaign pulpit than the White House,
and there is no better way to campatgn for the job than by doing it.
Any candidate challenging an incwnbent president finds that fact
frustrating . Carter did in 1976, wben
he complained that Ford wu campaignlng from the IW6e Garden instead of going to the COWltry .
In declaring his candidacy for a
second term on Dec . 4, Carter said
he had curtail~!~) political activities
because of the Iranian cri8is .
Now there are complainta fran
the Kennedy camp that Carter has
been campaigning by telephone, and
by calling in potential supporters for
meetings at the White House .

"'0:

o-f

~

0
.....,

" ....
i o.
a;-

,...,

~
;!:
.

MN

-...

,....&gt;-

..
!::o

:::!&lt;2:

cz:o

"' oz
z:::&gt;
~

=~
....
at ,

~

0.

Ohio perspective
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - Along
with its other work, the Ohio Department of Education adrruni.sters 41
federally funded programs which
this year used a to tal of $295.6
million .
They range from providing the
equivalent of a high school education
for adults to distributing s urplus
federal property to sehools and
providing educational aid to
veterans .
The most costly program involves
basic instruction for disadvantaged
children and is administered under
the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act. It ts alloted $71.8
million in federal funds . No level of
matching funds is required The
department also administers six
other ESEA programs which collectively cost an additional $27 .2 million
in federal funds .
Costs of other items ranged down
to $61,010 this year for a program for
leadership activities in community
education services.
OveraU costs of the programs
grow annually, but tills year 's Increase of $70.5 nullion wa.• a g iant
stride over the progression rate of
recent years .
In 1978, the programs cost $225.1
milUon, up $14 .4 million over the
$210.6 million cost fur 1977.
Federa l funding in 1975 totaled
$186.3 million, and in 1976 went up by
$7 million w $193.3 million .
The list includes eight different
food service praj!rams which collec-

t:

e

""'(/)

a..
0

""

tively are spending an estimated
$110 million in federal funds this
year. This ranges from $37 million to
provide special food a.ssistance to
needy children in conjunction with
the school lunch program to $953,7117
for equipment assistance.
Costs of all the food programs are
estimates only because of variances
in costs and needs .
The programs have become so
complex that the Division of Federal
Assistance WJthin the Ohio Depart ment of Education has prepared a
handbook whi ch gives concise
profiles of each program and given
it to interested agenctes.
The handbook includes the legal
authority of each program, its purposes, the names of partic ipating
agencies, application procedures,
the amount of fed era I funding
currently available, matching fund
requirements and state and local
responsibilities.
Cost totals include S4.5 million for
federal surplus property this year.
All s uch property is donated by the
government and no federal -t~ te
cash transactions are mvol ved.
Eligible agencies pay service and
handling charges only on property
selected for their use.
Such charges support the
operntions of the state agency for
property utilization . This year , Ohio
agencies paid $402,5211 for personal
property which was valued at $4.'
million.

TO

-=~:-:'::·--&lt;v•:-:·

• ; .,:. ··:c:-.

·-

__ _.--.:-

-

- -

. -. -.-.

..

~

w
JOY TO GIV[ ... " jOl" TO "[U:IVL..

~

~

COMPLETE LINE OF GIFTS FOR KIDDIES

~

~~

BICYCLES- TRICYCLES- WAGONS

~~

~

TRACTORS

~

~~

PICKENS HARDWARE

~a

~

~RiORY.

W~N T

,.,,,:··· .·,::::~· :..,, .,.,~.='=~=.~:.~' .,,.,. ,·:~i'-:··&lt;'''~-~''''''-:'::·:-"·,;:;,·~,-,::·:,_;-::(:,~i:Y::"'=;.,-

-.. "

7

YOU C AI&gt;l S«£L LAC
IT IF YOiJ

.~~~~-~~-~--------~----------N-~~~---·
a
.
• · · - .. f
.
i
~i

\JP.1'10~

t'\(;;Y TAG AND O NIO BAl-Le

MID DRY

~

cc

gt
t
d
Boom and bust
.
Was h In on o ay
.
camprugn •••

CtlyEdll«

I

IS GOING

TO WA'(..t \.W A~9
1'1\R '' •N.tRCJ..,.

SU'6JECT...

HOBERT HOEJil.JCH

Offl« Ptloet 1ft.. 2151. F.Atilorial Plloee
ft%...%157
~ dau po.&amp;aa~ paid at Pomeroy, OtUo.
Nadoaaladverd.ID&amp; repr-eteDladn, ._.....
.u.odak:l, Jill EucUd AVt: ., Clrnllllld, Ollie
Hll!'i.
SU'-cr!pd01 r'111.8 : Oellvend by tarner
-'er• avaU.ble W ceatl per wee&amp;. B)' Me&amp;or
Rouk •be~ aurltr .ervice 110t a\'IJI.ahlt,

0\AN(JING

THE

MEI~.4REA

Publilbed dad:r aceiM S.l:lar'd.y by 1be Oblo
Valk-y Pv.bUdfaC Compa.,... MaltlmedU. , t.r .,
Ill Court Sl, Plllllft'"oy , Ob1o 457• . Bua...

ANti.

-·

£-ACH 'LOCKET" T"'J&lt;ES

NEVER, TKXJGHT
YOU COULD USE

To M Ar&lt;f
&lt;'&gt;RE AT FR{\fN
Tf'- AR
Tf-'E 5'rAMPS
OFf' OF OLD
l.EH£RS. SOAK
I N WAT£R TO
/...0056/oJ GLU£1

per year durmg the '00., with most
of the increase coming not from Russians but less-skilled Asian
minorities.
There is no suggestion in this that
the Soviet system is threatened with
t'Ollapse . But it does demonstrate
that a soctalist economy is not immune to -may actually suffer more
severely from - the ailments that
plague other models. In fact, what
some economists find particularly
intrtguing is the evidence that
stagflation, the combination of sluggish economic growth and inflation
with which the West has been struggling, is not limited to market
economies
The poor performan ce has
brought critical fire from political
leaders down on key economic planners and managers reminiscent of
Nikita Khrushchev's era . But one
line is being omitted from the
familiar Khrushchev scnpt - and
wisely under the circumstances.
No one any longer is promising an
imnninent economic overtaking of
the West.

GOIJERNMENT
INTERFERENCE .1

..

~.NON?E~ Wloi~N

W~SI-IINGTON

NEEDS IS LESS BIG

Soviet truth

short. They have their own energy
problems with slackerung oil production - long the world 's largest and a downturn in coal. There are
admitted shortages in consumer
goods from toothpaste to needles
and thread . And a poor agricultural
year means tight meat and grain
supplies, despite large imports of
the latter from the United States.
Western experts, surprised by the
frankness of the report to the
Supreme Soviet, also point out that it
actually understates the seriousness
of the situation since it ignores the
effects of inflation, which is not s up posed to exist in a socialist economy
but very definitely doe:l .
Prospects are that the Sovtets can
look for no signifi cant inoprovement
in the inunediate future. Western
analysts have long been predicting
that Soviet oil production is heading
inw a decline and that the country
,.ill become an energy importer.
The continwng problem of low productivity will be compounded by
something close to zero growth in
the labor force . Because of falling
btrth rates. it is expected to increase
by only a few hundreds of thousands

I

WHAT TI-llS COUNTRY

MASON, W.VA.

-

~

-...

RED OAK

~

,;

4'x8' 1/8" THICK

95

1~
..t..,

A Sheet

i:.:

5

·~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~=~~~~ ~~ ~-

'

~I
I

..

-

--

�7 - The Dail Y Se ntmel, MJddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, l&gt;ec . 12. 1979

Georgetown scares number one Indiana

Today's

"

Sports

World
It's voting time again for one of
baseball's most hallowed institutions - the Hall of Fame - and
we are immediately renunded of
comments from a couple of worthy
guys who have never made it.
''The Hall of Fame is charity."
Roger Mariis said bitterly not so
many sununers ago, "It 's something
they give you. not something you
necessarily earn. ''
' 'The Hall of Fame has become a

home nm derby," said Enos (CoWltry ) Slaughter, the Ty Cobb and Pete
Rose of his era. "There is more to
baseball than hitting home runs. I
loved the game and I played it
hard."
Greater truth has never been
spoken.
There are 62 names on the list of
possibilities mailed baseball writers
by Jack Lang, the bowtcy secretarytreasurer of the Writers' Association
(BW AA ) and keeper of the ballet
boxes. Misaing is that of Slaughter,
the old firebrand of the Cardinals
whose career was sandwiched
around Worid War U. Hidden
eomewhere in the table is Maris, the
man who broke Babe Ruth's season
home nm record.
Slaughter's 15 years of eligibility
expired without his getting a call.
Now if he makes the shrine, he must
do It through a side door -probably
by the Old-Timers' Conunittee after
another five-year wait.
"It just isn \the same, " Slaughter
said disconsolately from his Roxboro, N.C., tobacco !ann. "I may be
deld when I am picked."
There is no excuse for pasaing
over Maris. He's still there. with his
81 reoented home runs in 1961, his

Phoeni)( 123, Wa~hingt on 99
Sea Mie 103, M i lwaukee~

Chicago 104, Portland 93
Denver 127 , San Anton io 121

Weclnesd.ay 's Games

W . L. Pct . GB

New Jer!Jey at Boston

21 7 .750
21 7 .750

iloston

New York at Allanttt

New York
lA 15 .483 7 111
Washington
11 \" .440 8 111
Nr w Jersey
11 17
393 10
Central Division

Atlanfa

18 13

581

Houston

5a 11 ....,nf.

14 13
15 14

.519
517

Indiana
Cleveland
Detroit

U 16
u 17
8 20

10 20
7 21

Pacific
seat11e

Los Ano
Phoeni x
Portland
San Diego
Golden St

"-

W

1

3

.286

8 1' '

Midwest Division
Mllwau l&lt;e&lt;&gt;
19 12 .613
Kan _ Ci ty
16 1-4 .533
Den.er
11 20 355
Chicago
UTah

2
2

. 467
.452

Western Conference

.~CII

recognized fielding and throwing
skills, his two Most Valuable Player
Awards when he played side by side
with the great Mickey Mantle .
How can Maris be 1 nored' How
could Cowttry Slaughter have been
ignored by men in the press box who
saw him play his innards out for 19
years. batting .300. knocking in 1.304
runs , running, throwing , playing
with the wild a bandon of the old Gas
House Gang'
The questions are rheton cal
because the answers are sell ·
evident. The Hall of Fame vollng,
the exclusive province of baseball
writers, is, as Maris once charged .
often a popularity contest with less
emphasis on statistics and the CobbRose intangibles of grit and gristle ,
which both Maris and Slaughter had
in abwtdance.
Secretary Lang, who serves as our
conduit, makes note of the fact that
favorites for selection this year are
Duke Snider, the outfield mainstay
of the Dodgers' Boys of SWlUIJer,
and durable AI Kaline of the Detroit
Tigers. on the quaWied list for the
first time .
To be named, a player must
receive 75 percent of the vote.
Snider, a flawless fielder and power
hitter with 407 home runs and a .295
average [or his 16 years, missed by
only 16 votes last year when Willie
Mays won virtually by acclamation.
There is no intention here to
downgrade the qualities of either
Snider or Kaline, both holding strong
credenllals. Instead this is an annual
appeal that we don't lose objectivity
and let personal spite deprive any
man of his just desserts .

Ind iana 124, New York 122 , a t

By The Associated Press
En tern Conference
AtlAntic Division

fhila

· rJ&gt; -

'

TueSCiay ·s Games

Nition•l
Basketball Ass.ociati on
At A Gl,ance

- · 0•
'-' N

'

"'

Pro standings

•

•

•

\:

By Will Grimsley

l

1::.
"\

1

A

Houston at San Diego
Thursday 's Game
washington at Cl eveland
San Anton 1o at Utah
H o uston at Phoenix
Nafional Hockey League
At A Glanc e

By The Associat ed Press
Campbell Conferenc e

8

Patrick Di vis •on

333 8 1 2
250 10 ' 1

W . L . T . PIS . GF GA

Ph d a
NY Rangers

690
6/J ]

I

1

.58 1 J
16 15 .516 s
14 17 452 7
11 19 . 367 9 1 1

I B 13

Detroit at Golden St a te

2 1 '1

Di~ision

20 9
20 10

Milwaukee at Ph iladelphia
sea tt le at Indi ana
Portland at Kansas C1 l y

18

1 7

13 13

4

4.3 11 1 83
30 115

105

Allan ta

11 11 J 17 93 90

NY Islanders

10 13

4

24

Wash1ngton
5 19 5 I 5
Smythe 01vision
V.mcouver
D 11 7 31
Cnicago
8 9 10 /6

99

97

78 116

rn

95

71

79

dy The A.. oclated Press
It W" ' r inser than the 76~9 SCOre
looked,
and
upset- monded
Georgetown nught have knocked off
top-rank ed·Indiana if shootmg from
the floor was all that counted .
But Indiana hit 18 of 20 from the
free throw line Tuesday mght while
16th-ranked Georgetown was 5 for
10, and that more than offset
Georgetown 's 62.7 pen.-ent shoollng
from the field .
Other B1g Ten teams had easier
times of it in non-conference games
Tuesday . Nonth-ranked Purdue
defeated Nebraska 78-56 : 17th -

St

9
9
8
6

LOUIS

W1nnipeg
Colo r ado
Edmonton
Wale ~

ranked Iowa beat Wichita State 8! a nd lllmo1s trounced MissounSt. Louis 91-&lt;15.
lndJana Coach Bobby Knight saod
6~:

tus Hoos iers , now 4..{), were out-

played .
" I don't think we 've ever had
anyone shoot like that against us ."
he said. "I think they played better

16 5 2J 84 lOB
16 4 22 80 II 3
15 J 19 85 97
14 6 18 86 II S

Con f erence
Adams Oivtsion
19 6 J 41 110

Butfa lo
Boston
M 1nntosota
To r onTo
Quebec
Montreal
LOS Ang
Pitts .
Hartford
Oct r oi t

16

7

11

6

7

12 11

J

4

10 14 4
Nor ri S DIViSIOn

68
36 99 78
31 109 86
17 93 88
7 4 B4 100

11 11

8 11

9 12 5 13 87 85

NY Rangers 2, Del roil 1
NY Is landers 4, Monlrea l 1
Pitt sburgh 3. Sf Louis 3, t ic
Vancouve r 5, Hartfo rd 3
WeCn es da y's Gam e~
NY Is land ers at P itt sburgh

Minnesota at Was n.ngt on
Winn1peg a t Quebec
Colorado at To r on to
N Y Rangers at Ch icago
Al!an Ta at Edmonton
Hartford at La~ Angeles
Thursday ' s Games

Detr oif at Boston
Quebec a t Philad e l phia
Ch •c ago at Buffalo

Hawkeyes improved to IHJ.
Wichita State, 3-2, was led by
freshmen Antoine Carr and Cliff
Livingston with 13 each.
JWlior forward Eddie Johnaon
scored 21l pointll to lead llllnoiB,
while Missouri-st. Louis was paced
by Rick Kirby with 18.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phone f9l· Z178
.l4 E . Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon. thru Wed. 9-S,

Thur. 9-12, Fri . 9-S, Sot. 9-2.
Satisfactioo Guaran1eed
or Your Money Back

SPECIAL

5 29 118 11 3
7 19 96 97
8 2 4 89 94

Tuesday ·~ Game ~

minutes."
Co-capta in Mike Woodson scored
23 points and freshman lsiah
Thomas hada season-high 19, including 10 1n the fina l five minutes,
to lead lndJana.
For Georgetown. now. 3-1. Craig
Shelton scored 23 poinlll , and Eric
Floyd c hipped in with 21. The Hoy as
lut 32 of 51 fnm the floor.
Purdue, 5-&lt;l, exploded in the
:econd half to beat Nebraska, 4-1 .
Ke1th Edmonson, a 6-foot-5
sophomore guard who had been
averaging 6 points a game , led Purdue with 27. Joe Barry Carroll, the 7foot -1 center. finished with 16. Tim
West scored 22 for Nebraska, most
of the pomts after the game was
decided.
Iowa 's senior guard Ronnie Lester
pumped in 23 poinlll and sophomore
forward Kevin Boyle added 2Jl as the

We
Be Closin2
the Season on Dec. 16th.

15 9 6 36 111 90
11 8

and more consistently over the 40

LEBANON RESULTS
LE BANON, Ohio IAP I - Rnzor
Blade led wire-to-wire and hung on
to win the $900 featured pace mile at
Lebanon by half a length Tuesday
night in 2:011.
The winner paid S6 .6V. $3.20 and
$2.6V. Prince l..aetare placed. paying
S3 20 and S3 20 and Scott'• Little
Lady was third to pay $5.60.
Just Common and Playboy Talen~
1-2, paid $69.60 in the double. The
mutuel pool totaled $117,276. At·
tendance was 1,145.

PIZZA BURGER. •••.•• 79~
WITH FRIES •••••••• $1.09
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAUIY
992 -2SS6
)tu W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday , Dec . 12, 1979

Hassett's three point goal defeats Knicks

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 12. 1979

Belpre overpowers Meigs, 72-45 Tuesday
By Greg Bailey
The host Belpre Golden Eagles

last night controlled the rebounding
game as they gathered 50 errant
shota on their way to a Jopeided 72-45
win over the Meigs Marauders.
Belpre's Crawford hauled in 14
rebounds and tossed in 12 points to
pace the winners who placed four
men in double figures.
More than half of those rebounds
came off the offensive boards as
shown by the shooting charts where
Belpre shot 64 times, making '1:1 of
the shot. for a 42 percent night.
Meigs meanwhile managed a cold 34
percent from the floor, cashing in on
just 15 of t4 shots.
Belrpe used 8 well-balanced attack to go along with their quickness
and rebounding strength to jump out
to 8 quick lead. But as has been the
case all year , Meigs played well to
open the game and midway through
the first period the Marauders led
12-11.
But then Belrpe ran off eight
straight points as they led at the first
buzzer, 19-12.
Meigs then stayed within striking
distance during the next two quarters, trailing by 12 at the half, 36-24,
and also by 12 at the end of the third
period, 49-37. But early in the fourth
period, the Eagles poured things on
to put the game on ice as substitutes
saw a lot of playin~ time.

Belpre hauled ill those 50 rebounds
compared to just 24 for Meigs. The
two teams had 44 fouLs called on
them, but only one player, Sexton
from Belpre, was whistled out.
Al5o hitting double figures for the

winners were Sexton who had 14,
Epling with II, and Parsons with 10.
Meigs was paced by Kevin Smith
who took the night's scoring honors
with hill 17 points. Steve Ohlinger
also hit double figures for Meigs

SEOAL match.

with 13 points.
Meigs is still looking for its first
win after th.-ee g8JIIe9 while Belpre
raised its record to 3-1. Meigs will
travel to Galllpolis Friday for a contest with the rival Blue Devils in a

Charley McKnight dumped in '11
points Tuesday night to lead the Coal
Grove Hornets to a 93-73 nonconference victory over the SV AC
Southwestern Highlanders.
McKnight had 17 baskets and
three foul shots. Other Hornets
collecting double figures were Bare
with 12pointsand Wise with 10.
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's Highlanders were led by junior Dale
Newberry's 24 points and 11 reboonds.
Todd Baker, another junior, had 23
points and 13 rebounds while Wayne
Sizemore and Scott Russell had
eight points each.
Southwestern trailed 25-16 at the
end of the first period, and were
behind by just five at the half, 41-36.
Midway through the third period,
the Highlanders tied the score at~
4S but foul trouble problems placed
Newberry and Russell on the bench.

From that point on, Coach Gary
Salyers' Hornets pulled away. The
visltors used a fullcourt man-to-man
press and sometimes switched to a
zone press.
Statistic-wise, Southwestern hit 2:J
of 51 Door attempts for 43 percent
and 7 r:1. 26 at the foul circles.
Coal Grove sank '1:1 ol '11 from the
foUl stripes and 39 of !Ill floor attempbi for 40 percent.
Coach Bergdoll's described the
Hornets as very quick and good
shooters. Coal Grove took the reserve con test, S4-'1:1.

Southwestern, 1-2, travels
Southern Friday.

to

Coal Grove 1931 -- Kegley 3 3 9;
Bare 44 ·12; Turley 0·0·0; Willis 3-() .
6 ; McKnight 17 ·3·37 ; Johnson 1 H ;
Lawless 2·2-6; Mark ins :2.0 ·4 ; WiseS ·
11-10; 1&lt; . Mcl&lt;nightl -0·2. Totals 39-17-

93.

Soulhweslorn (7J) .. Newberry 9·6·

U; Sizemore 32 ·8; Boker 5· 13 ·23 ;
Rus"'ll 2-H; Burleson 2·2·6 ; Forgey
1-Q 2; K . Sizemore 1·0 2. Totals 23 ·27·
73 .
By Quarters :
Coal Grove
25 16 25 27 -- 93
SOuthwestern
16 20 22 16-- 73

Chesapeake drops
Wildcats, 7 4-50

Meigs didn ~ score in the third
period at all , and Jeff Wayland was
the only Marauder to find the basket
m the fourth period, scoring six poin ts.
Belpre edged out to a 13-l! lead at
the end of one quarter, and at the
half the hosts were only up nine, 2314. But then the ice storm hit Meigs
and as the third period ended, the
hosts had iced the calte, $-14.
Wayland paced Meiga with his ten
points while Murray added six. The
team hit 9 of41 shobi for only Z2 percent and cashed in on the only two
free throws they attempted.
Both teams were called for just a
total of thirteen fouls, sl.x by the
hosts and seven by Meigs . Belpre hit
on just one of their sl.x foul attempts
while catuling a hot 211 of 41 shots

Totals

IS-44

JS -lO

24

21

Tuesday"s high
Ohio High School
Basketball

Akron Coventry 80, Aurora 50
Akron Hoban 71, Green 55
Akron Kenmore 66, Norton 62
Arkon Spring . 69, Nordonia 51
Anthony Wayne 46 , Bowling Green

Meigs

TEAM
Chillicothe

w

P

4 0 227

Ironton
Waverly

3 0 188
1 273
3 1 2.1
2 l 21•
2 2 221
2 3 329
l 2 185
l 2 163
l 5 285
0 3 lSI&gt;
0 • 189
0 0 0
4

Logan
Wellston
Gallipolis
Athens
Portsmouth
Wh~l@rsburo

OP
186
1&lt;19
215
214
173

220
29'1
175
143
316

Court House
Meigs
2).j
Jackson
280
Pt . Pleasant
0
Tuesct.y's results :
GrovePOrl66 Athens 65
ironton 6o4 Russell 55
Belpre 73 Meigs •5
Circleville 60 Court House 49
Frtd•Y '' t•mes :
Jackson at Athens
Looan at Ironton
Meigs at Gallipolis
Waverly at Wellston
Teays Valley at Court House
Portsmouth West at Wheelersburg
Chillicothe at Westerville SOuth
Marion Franklin at Portsmouth

S.turd•y's games:
Wheelersburg at Waverly
Gallipolis at Chillicothe
Northland at Portsmouth

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

~

~

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.
SUPER SAVINGS

Ash . St. John 45, Kirtland 40
Austintown Fit ch 68 , Young .

Chaney 40
Avon 58, Keystone 51
Baker 101, Northridge 98 ,2 ot
Barberton 103, Young . East 57
Batavia 52, New Richmond 51
Bay Village 80 , Westlake S4
Beechwood 37 , Newbury 30

Belpre 73, Meigs 45
Bergholz Spring 71, Stanton .dl
Berkshire 80, Cardinal i.7
Brecksv ille 70, M idpark 47

''No-Hands''
Oven Cleaning ·

Brooklyn 77,

72

WHILE TliEY LAST - QUANTITIES UMITID

MODEl CE30C6WF

1

Along IIYtlh :he work·sav•ng cont mu ous
cle antng oven on thts model y ou II lind
a removable oven door wtth wtndow
ei PC1fiC c l oc K automat tc O'llen rnn tr ol
1 h u ur -n tnu te
l trnerandtn l!l"llte

WORK
BENCH

$2}26

SPECIAL

,•

STAPLE
GUN

hea l con i&lt; Ois

IW

:

TABLE SPECIAL
TENNIS SET

JtGIJsonR.
~
~
TH~~E~~~!~

"Two In One Store"

•

~

•

! INGEL'S FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY
1 106 N. 2ND AVl

Reg . $69.95

$5295

BACKBOARD
AND GOAL SPECIAL

I

I

""''""""9

II '-

II I

IJ I ' . \ l l\
\I 't

l'l't

-1

~

JEFFERSON
STARSHIP
.......

,, ,,.,,..

8-TRACKS
OR CASSETTES
Smo ~o.e v

~ o o rn\on

T ,JmtJ

597

DONNA SUMMER
Greatest Hits

On The Radio
II

ALBUMS

1047
C..f • •1 ~

Stevie Wonder's

Independence 62 , Med ina Buckeye

fi
fi

fi
fi
fi

-11:1! ~~~~~--I* 1!111101-I

IYI CA r.re u:, rdl

ALBUMS

" 60
•

Jamestown , Pa _95 . B loomf ield 67
Kansas Lakota 82 , Old F ort 60
Kens ton 66 , Madison 57
La Brae 72 , Howland 613
Lakeland 69. Guernsey Cath 3
Lake Ridge A ca d 79 , E l yria
· Chri s f. 26
Heritage Christ . 67 , Bratenant 58
Kent Roosevelt 76, Ravenna 74
.. Leetonia 66 , Columbiana Crest
"' View S6
' Lemon ·Monroe 7.4 , Day . Belmont

396
8 -TRACKS
OR CASSETTES

O nnn a Sur n rner

B-T RACKS
OR CASSETTE

1097

447

Mot o w r1

ALBUMS

8-TRACKS
OR CASSETTES

667

697

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

·~
; Lime svi lle , Pa . 74, Py Valley 69 , 2

--

Lockland 47 , Kings -46
Lorain King 75. Amherst 57
Lutheran west 52, s. Am her sf 39
Madison Pill ins 76. Wilmington 65
Maplew00C177 , Grand Valley 4 7

Maysvil le 79 . Philo S6

....•
M

~

.McDonald .u, Lordstown 40
Medina 49, Rocky River 25
~ntor Lake Cat h . 73, Gene v a 49
Miami Trace 67 , M cC lain 5J
MooadOre 76, Woodr idge u
Mount Healthy 56 . Colerain -48
Nelsonvil le ·York 59 . Feder .·

1

I

r"1r l n

CHART BUSTERS

• Acad . 35

$6 795 ~

I•

567

Fort Frye 75. Ca l dwell 48

I

L •"

_·

ALBUMS

Frontier 62, Meadowbrook 5.A
Garfield 79, Franklin 63
Gilmour Acad . 89. Wickliffe 75
Glenn 47 , River View -46
Goshen 71 . Bethel Tate 47
Groveport 6th , Athens 65
Harrl!.on 48 , Read i ng 43
Harvey 66, Fairport Harding 59
Hiland 70, Conotton V~l 54
Hillsboro 75, Teays Valley S8
Holland Spring 53, Maumee 44
Houston 77 , Ansonia 47
Howland Christ 40, Grand River

w

I " Wo•

"

Fairview 75, N Olmsted 68
Finneytown 54 , WyhOming 46
Fire!ands 80, Columbia 63
Forest Park 68, Cin . Northw est 48

I

"''

~/
:.~~"
.·,,,.,,, .

:

ot

POWER
w
HAMER SPECIAL
i
----------------~w
I
Electric
Reg. 544.95
I
I
TURBO
HEATER

lhe Departmen~ Store of Building Since 1915
,. f.•lllll:~ll"ll!l!llllllil!lw llllll . .:fiiiiRI~::I I!OIII!RIIiiii'BIII:fl;lfl:l IIIIIIIJIOII·l----.,;.,..

I '

Mich . 51

I

·-~-~--------------~---------~

·~

f XCiri Nt. .

'lTOklf 'l ~-l

'

• Hocking 51
New Le)(ington 56 . Morgan 53
Niles M cKinley 71 , Canf 1eld 46
N . College Hi II 60. Greenh i lis 58
Northview 61 , Bedford , M ich 57
Norwood 73 , Cin Anderson 69
Olentanov 62 , wortningron Chrisf

------------------~·
Reg. Sl4 .95
w

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

I

E . Palestine 55. Lowellville 53
Elyria Cath . 78, Bedford Chane I 51
Emanuel Bapt. 66. Summerfield ,

M100l£PORT, 0. I

w

i
ti

Pomeroy, 0.

ROD STEWART
GREAH~ST HITS

E . canton 63 Rootstown Sl
E clinton 76. Llnchburo Cla y 4&lt;
E . Liverpoo161 , Carrollton 55

~----------------~1
Reg. 516.49

TWO'S COMPANY DRESS SHOP
E. Main

Col. South 87 , Col . Briggs 50
Col. West 56, Co l Lancaster 50
Covington SJ , Newton S2
Crestwood 76. Stree tsboro 69
Day . Carroll 73, Fairmont w . 57
Doylestown 73 , Smithvi lie 67

------------------~~
Reg. $79. 95
w

TABLE SPECIAL
TENNIS TABLE

FREE GIFT WRAPPING!
Open Every Night Til8
thru Christmas

"""''e S•• le• ~

RidgeS6
Col. Linden Me Kin ley 77 . Col
Marion -Franklin "'9
• Col. Mifflin 72 , Col . Whetstone 49
~
Col. Northland 51 , Col East .t8
Col. St . Charles 87 , Col. Hami!fon

L-----------------~1
Reg . 521 .29

BUY A PAIR OF JEANS
AND GET A DOUBLE
WRAP BELT FREE J

head games

iK JtlU6ie

Circleville 60 , Washington C H .49
Cleve . Baptist 99, Ledgemonl 63
Col. Brookhaven 67 , Col. Beech
crof165
Col . Cen tra l8.4. Col . Eastmoor 60
•
Col. Independence 74 , Co l Walnut

be w•ped up wtth a damp c lOt h So get a
G •bso n and Look M o m - N o Hands '

~~--------~----~.
6 Pc .
Reg. S31.9S
i

CHISEL
SET

HOLIDAY SPECIAL

SUNDAY 12-7

YIUIIt 'Be&amp;t 'Bugft

ot

a clean ov en Only large sptll s need to

'39995

Syracuse. Oh.
992-5776
Open Daily 9 til s
Open Sunday 1 til 5
Poinsettias, Christmas
Cactus, Hanging Baskets,
Foliage Plants.
Featuring:
Monument
Sprays &amp; Candle Arrangments.

FOREIGNER

Cln . Taff 63, C l n . Walnut Hills 59
Cin West . Hi lls 45. Cin Hughes 43
Cin . Woodward 103, Day . Roth 100.

1 he con ttn uous ctean•ng oven tn th•s

'•

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30

C uyaho~a

"

G•bson range eat~ up spa rters and
sotllos as they happen so yOu alwa~ have

~----------------~i
Reg. 46.95

WED. THRU SAT. SALE

Seattle beat Milwaukee. The Bucb
were without all~tar forward
Marques Johnson, who has shoulder
and back injuries.

loss.

Twp . 63

SPECIA~6 ~
69

$10.95

..

i

w

I
!
1

COLLEGE
NORTHERN ILLINOIS -- Fir~d
Pat Culpepper, head football coach .
R ICH MDND Nom~d V ictor
Shea I y head football coach .

Young . Ursuline 105 , Girard 57
Young .
W ilson
66 ,
Poland
Semin ary 61 , of

Cin . St . Rita 71. Ohio Deal 54

Every Time
Ydu Use It!

------------------~~
8" and 10" Adjustable
fi

WRENCH
SET Reg.

.

Young . Raven 62 , Sharpsville Pa .

Carl isle 5.4. Lebanon 52, ot
Celina 56, PiQua SJ
Cin A i ken 5..t, Cin . Withrow 48
Cin . Christian 73 , Fayetteville 44
Cin . McNicholas 63 , Madeira 49
Cin . Moel ler ll. , Boone County , Ky .

Cleaning Oven
Cleans ltseH

It

Named Bobby Goldwater director of
public relations .

Sooica 103, llacb 91
Guarrts Gus Williams and Dennil
Johnson combined for 58 pointa u

• 48

Electric Range
with Continuous

'I!

Basketball Logue
NEW JERSEY GEMS - Waived
Sue Marlin and Sheilah Collins .
SAN FRANCISCO PIONEERS S1 gned Lynn Smith. Placed Joslyn
Grant on the Inactive list .
GENERAL
MADISON SQUARE GARDEN -

Windham 51, Garretsvi! !e50
Xenia Wilson 40, Miami Valley 28
Young . L•berty 42 , Jackson ·Milton

Cin . Oak Hills J.t, Cin Turpin 26
Cin St . Bernllrd 65 . North Bend
Taylor 34

w
w
w
w
6

GIFTS FOR THE HOME

~

Women ' s Professional
Waterloo 7S, Ravenna SE 77
West Branc h 52 , Minerva 45
Western Brown 74, Amelia 67
Westfall 58 . Logan Elm 48
Williamsburg 60, Cin Seven Hills

62

I
I
I
I
I
I

National

apiece by Dav•d Thompson and
George Johnson J1 the last 10 secon ds clinched it for Denver.
S111111 123, Bullets 99
Paul Westphal scored 18 of his 27
points in the first half as Phoenix
shot 59 percent from the field in
building a 65--45 lead. The Suns led by
as many as '1:1 points in dealing the
Bullets their fifth loso; in the last
seven home games.
Westphal shot 134or-21, handed
out seven assists, made three steals
and blocked three shots in 30
minutes.
Bulls 104, Blazers 93
Reggie Theus scored 23 points and
Mark Landsberger added 20 as
Chicago won its third in a row and
dealt the Blazers their ninth straight

Buckeye Trail 78, Beal ls ville 55
Campbell -Memorial 51. Struthers

Chesl!peake .. 8

Tuesday'S COIII9e
Bosketball Stores
By The Associated Press
EAST
Boston Coil . 82, Seton H oil 61
Boston U . 83, Upsala6S
Colgate 70, Cornel lOB, ol
Connecticut 66, Fairland 57
Duke 70, Penn !i1
Duquesne 77, Canlsius 6'2
Fairleigh Dickinson 70, Montcleir
St. S7
Lasalle 102, Rider 59
Navy 6.t, Delaware 62
Rutgers 114, Massachu..,tts 68
St . Peter's •9, Army 41
St . JOhn'S, N.Y . 91, Columbia 75
Temple 81, Lehigh 6o4
Trinity, Conn.oo, M . I.T . 57
vermont89, Dartmouth 68
SOUTH
Bowie St. 78 , Virginia St. 77
Murray St . 68, Arkansas St . 46
Oglethorpe 75, N . Georgia 60
Transylvania 81, Georgetown, Ky .
79
MIDWEST
Huron 59, SW Minnesota A6
Illinois 91, MO .·St. Louis 65
indiana 76, Georgetown , D . C. 69
IOWa 81, Wichita St. 62
NWMissouri 80, Emporia St 62
Notre Dame 77, UCLA 74
Oberlin 67. Heidelberg S7
Oklahoma City n, Oklahoma St .

35

outr ight

st Houston with three bombs in overtime.
"The three-pointer has certamly
been good b me," Hassett said. "I
used to shoot from there in college
and we only got two points for it.
Now that we get three, it's nice . My
future ill brighter now."
In other National Basketball
Association games Tuesday night,
the Denver Nuggets defeated the
San Antonio Spurs 127-121, the
Phoenix Suns beat the Washington
Bullets 123-99, the Chicago Bulli;
edged the Portland Trail Blazers
104-93 and the Seattle SuperSonics
trimmed the Milwaukee Bucks 103·
99.
Mickey Johnson led Indiana with
28 points, English finished with 25
and James Edwards had 20. Toby
Knight led the Knlcks with 26 points
and Bill Cartwright had 24 points
and a season-high 18 rebounds.
Nuggets !Zl, Spun 121
George McGinnis scored 11 of his
35 points in the fourth quarter as
Denver held off a San Antonio raUy
that cut a 34-point deficit to two in
the closing minutes .
George Gervin, the two-time NBA
scoring champion and the leader
again this year, scored 41 points and
teamed with Larry Kenon in the last
period to bring the Spurs hack . San
Antonio had trailed 82-48 earlier and
'11-74 entering the fourth quarter .
But the Spurs made 17 of their first
19 shots in the final period and closed
to 123-121 before two free throws

Hts 60
Brunswick 86. N . Royalton 4.3

~

ON

....

his

Basketball Association
DETROIT PISTONS Named
Jack N!t:.Cioskey oeneral manaver .

Warren Harding 105. Akron East

Tuesd•v Night

pitcher ,

BASKETBALL

83

By The Associated Press

Hanni!tn Trace 33 .

ALL GAMES
L

Apodaca ,
release .

school results

Ash . Edgewood 68 , Jefferson 42

BY QUARTERS
H . Trace
8 15 15 12-- 50
Chesapeake
252017 12 ·74
Hannan Trate (SOl .. Beaver 1·6·8;
Campbeii&lt;-Q-8; Jones 2·2·6; Webb • ·
6·U ; Chapman 2·2-6; Waugh 1-0·2;
Pack 3·0-6. Totaisl7·{16-III·SO.
CheHpeake {74 1 .. Jordan 2·0·4;
Gillen 1·3·5; Rice 6-0· 12; Kemp 42
10; Delker 6·0· 12 ; Williams 3·2·8;
Johnson 4·0·8; D'Antoni 6·1· 13; Pem
berton l-0·2. Totals 33·{8·101 ·74.

BASEBALL
NEW YORK METS -- Gave Bob

12 12 13 8~5
19 17 13 23--72
.Cl,

Tuesday ' s Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
National league

Score by Quarters:

Re$er'w'e Score - Belpre
20 .

vocates. "We ran a decoy play and a
pick to get him free and he had the
shot we wanted. But with that little
time, you've got to have a lot of luck,
too."
Having Hassett around to shoot
three-pointers he~ as well . The
tllird-year pro from Providence was
signed by the Pacers with that purpose in mind after being cut by Seattle, and he has connected on 17 longrange baskets. Eartier this season
he tied a game against Utah with a
three-pointer and won a game again-

Transactions

45

Belpre {721
Player
FG·A FT· A R B PF TP
Crawford 5· 11
2·2 14
I
12
Epting
412
H
5
I
18
B . Joseph 4-7
0·0
2
I
8
Parsons
4· 10 2·5
6
2 10
Sexlon
7·11
0·1
8
5 lA
Baker
0·2 4·4
6
3
4
Bishop
1·1
0·0
0
0
2
A. Joseph 0·0
2·2
I
I
2
Logue
1·2
22
0
2
4
Moore
0·3
11-0
4
2
0
Peters
1·2
22
4
2
4
Vannoy
03
1·3
0
3
l
Totals
27·1&gt;4 18-25 so
23
72
Meigs
Belpre

.. . een, took an mbounds pass from
Ptul Cheruer and lofted a threepointer from the left side that went
through at the buzzer, send.Jng the
game into overtime.
The Pacers squandered a sevenpoint lead in the five-minute extra
period but came back to win 124-122
on Alex English's 13-foot jumper
with 46 seconds left.
"It 's no secret Hassett is the guy
we go to in that situation," said
Pacers Coach Bobby Leonard, one of
the three-i&gt;Oint goal 's chief ad-

43

nan T:-ace, now 1-3 on the season.
Chesapeake is 2~ and entertain Coal
Grove Friday. Hannan Trace goes to
North Gallia.

Reserve score:

MEIGS 145)
.
Player FG ·A FT ·A JRB PF TP
Ohlinger
3·9
7 12 8
3
13
Ashley
1 10
l 3
7
2
13
Smith
912
12
3
0 l7
C. Kennedy l l
0·0
2
3
2
Dodson
28
090
I
4
4
Judge
o-o
23
I
l
2
Scott
0l
00
2
0
0
D . KennedyO·O
l 2
0
3
l
Swann
0l
3·5
0
2
3
Faulk
O·l
0· 1
0
0
0
Snowden
O·l
0·2
0
3
0
O'Brien
9·0
0·0
0
0
0

tory .

Box Score

CHESAPEAKE- Mark D'Antoni,
Mike Rice and Craig Delker sparked
Olesapeake High School to a 7~
victory over Haman Trace last
night.
D'Antoni, youngest brother ol former Marshall and NBA star Mike
D'Antoni, led the Panthers with 13
points while Rice and Delker added
12 each. David Deiber added another
12 points to the balanced
&lt;llesapeake attack .

from the field for 48 percent. Dever
paced the winners with l2 points
while West added ten.
Meigs travels to Galllpollll Friday.

RESERVE GAME
The Meigs Reserve team couldn l
find the hoop in the second half last
night at Belpre, scoring just six points the enUre half, and the host Baby
Eagles rolled to an easy 41-211 vic-

Hornets dump Highlanders

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Joey Hassett has become basket·
ball's latest specialist - he's the In·
diana Pacers ' designated three point goal shooter .
Hassett, nicknamed " Sonar "
because of hill long-range shootmg
talent, struck again Tuesday night.
After sitting on the bench the entire
second half, he entered the game
with the New York Knicks lead.Jng
113-110 and two seconds showing on
the clock.
Hassett raced free behind a

' 60
() r iQirl.l '

lendf'r

n.-1 •() I •

1

i t nrl l l' l y

blend o l 11 hl' d \'

&lt;()nl KP fi ! IJ f ~ y

F• .. ·rl

ArH_l rl \ 1 r&lt; rlor •(l
H l d "'P'' , •. ,

K en tuc lo. y Fr!! '(J C h1c k. e n

~-.

(' r

' lo Pfl

OPIIC ••• , , ...

• r r ' ' , , r:o to r r• l '•

'· P• ·r

·.tl

n •rq "· ' P r •t qt P I tl• ( l..r ·n lrpr•
•.,•,;~!h th • 0• 1,.. R1 hh o n

It's nice to feel so good about a meal.

Fried
Qhicken
.
.
'

O l msted Falls 96, Avon Lake 74
Paines . Riverside 53, Conneaut 51
Perrysburg 79, Syl . Sou th view 6A
Rossford 43, M il bury La~c 38
Sandy Valley 53, Tus ca rawas V at

I ' , .,,

5.~!a

39
1 Sebring 71 , Lisbon "'9
,. Sh~dyside 67 , Barnesville 5!
Shenandoah 57 . Waterf ord 53
Sheridan 50, W . Muski ngum 4 7

'" Sky vue 77 , WOOdsfield 53
"

Southern 50 , United 49, ot
Southington 68, Farm i ngton 60

Stow 58. Tallmadge 51
,. Strasburg 59. Gar away 51
Stronos¥ille 66, Cloverl ea f J6
Tol. Central61, Tot Libbey 59
Tol. Dev i lb iss 78 , Spen cer Shar
·p ies 41
Tol. Start 70, Tol . WOOdward 39
Trinity SH, Ri chmond Ht!!. 41
Tri VaHey 75 . Crooksv•lle 4.5
Wadswo rth 6... Bere~ 51

2.!?mCI

LP Record, 8-Tr., or Cassette Carry· case

Adventures for Children on Records!

Conven1en1 c arry1ng cas e hold s 24 oi your reco rds I ap e'
or cassettes' Hand some padded v1nyl. w11h plasti c handle
for easy carry on ~ Greal savings now a\ Km a11

Keep your ch1l dt en amused l or hour s' Choose I 1om excit·
1ng tales Irom Star Trek . Popeye. Peter Rabbit. orAlphabet &amp; Countmg Songs for youngsters .

_~ ...~. --,a5 UPPER
.... . .

RIVER . ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
.

•
~J

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesda y . Dec. 12, 1 !17 ~

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomero.r, 0 ., Wednesday , Dec . 12, 1979

Christmas tree can bring joy, danger t

Prime time schedule changes are underway
NEW YORK lAP ) - The net work.s' pr1me-time ratings r ace
lightened just a bit during the week
ending Dec. 9, as CBS won the
weekly competition for the third
time in a mooth.
CBS now is less than a point
bebind ABC for the season to date,
thank.! in large measure to several
popular series .

r---Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT
AMAT EU R
GARDENERS, 8 p.m . Christmas
porty Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Ferman Moore with Mrs .
Harry Moore and Miss Kathryn
Hysell as assisting hos tesses. Ther e
wtll be a gift exchange and the j udging of wrappings will take place .
ROSE Garden Qub, Tuppers
Plains, Wednesday 6 p .m. at home of
Mn. Harley Rice. Gift exchange.
Bring covered dish.
POMPOMEROY CHAPTER 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30 p.m .
followed by reuglar meeting at
Bcsworth Council 46, Royal and
Select masters. All companions urg ·
ed to attend.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Qub Wednesday at Meigs Inn .
Ouistmas gift exchange. All m em ·
ben urged to attend.
THIRD
WEDNESDA Y
lkmemaken Qub, Syracuse , will
meet Wednesday at 6 p.m . in the annex of the Presbyterian OlUrch .
THURSDAY
OHIO VALlEY Grange 2612,
Letart Falls, at the hall Thursday
7:30p.m. Dues to be paid. Potluck
refreshments and $1 gift exchange .
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA Thursday 7:46 p.m. at Athens County
Savings and Loan . Guest speakers
wt11 be Betty Fultz and her daughter,
Becky, who wt11 speak on Japan. The
&lt;llristmas party wt11 be held on Dec.
22 at the home of Mrs . LilliBn Moore .
MARY SHRINE 37 Friday 8 p.m.
8ring a guest. Oui.stmas party to
loUow business meeting . Gift exchange and potiuck refreshments .
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE ,
Thursday night at 6:30 potiuck dinner. Meat to be furnished by the
grange. White elephant gift ex change .

FRIDAY
GALLIA COUNTY SALON 612,
Eight and Forty, Friday night at the
Rlverboart Room, Athens County
Savings and Loan Co., Pomeroy offlee, 6:30p.m. Friday.

RETIJRN JONA111AN MEIGS
Olapter, Daughters of the American
Revolutim, 2 p.m. Friday, home of
Mrs. Emenon Jones. The program
wtll include a review of 'The Legend
of the Black Madonna" by Mrs. Nan
Moore.
BAKE SALE Friday at Kroger's
beginning at 9 am. Spmsored by
Pmleroy Boy Scout Troop 249.
ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE
Friday a to 11 p.m. at Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Center . Dance open
to public. Admission $1 for adults .
. Qlildren Wider 2 with parents admitted free.

SATURDAY
BAKE SALE Saturday at Gaul's
Grocery, Chester, from 9 a.m. unttl
nooo. Sponsored by Chester Cub

Pack%15.

•

PARTY PLANNED

The annual New Year'sEve party
ot.Raclne American Legion Post lll2
wW be held with music by Larry
Hubbard and the Country Ramblers
Band. Advance tickets may be pur~ at the Cross Store, Paul's
Barber Shop. and Simpaon 's Hardware Store. Tickets are $10 a
couple and $7 a single . The event wtll
be fmn 9 p.m . to 2 a .m .

CBS' "Alice " finished No. I in the
A.C. Nielsen Co. 's m ost recent sampling of prime--time progr ams,
followed by "60 Minutes," a nother
CBS reg ular . CBS listed rive other
shows in the Top 10.
CBS' rating for the week was 19.8
to 19.3 for AB C and 16.5 for NBC. The
networks say that m eans in an
average pr ime-time minute during

the week, 19.8 percent of Ule hom es
in the country with television were
tuned to CBS.
NBC now ha• been last in the
r atings seven of the past' eight
weeks .
CBS · rating lor the season so far is
18.9 to 19.7 for ABC.
The rating for "Allee " was 30.
Nie lsen says that means of all the

Person to person
By Jolm A. Malacoo, Pb.D.
Dlreetor of Rio Grallde
Community Educallooal
CouDAellng Center
The Christmas season is here and
many people are excited over the
idea of exchanging presents, havifl8
vacation, sharing family time
together, and celebrati08 the birth
of Chris!. It's a fun time for me too
because it gives m e a c hance tn 'ape~

Holiday
dinner held
A holiday dinner and awards
presentation was held recently by
Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 at Camp
Kiashuta.
The cubs and their families enjoyed a covered dish dinner which
was preceded by a skit about the
first Thanksgiving presented by Den
3andDen 1.
After the dinner awards earned
during October were presented .
Receiving bobcat badges were Brian
Bailey, Chris LcDeaux, Floyd
Ridenour, 0. A. Harris , Frank
Parker, Thomas Morrissey, Timmy
Frederick , Greg Carpenter, and
David King .
Wolf)Jadges and arrows and beada
were presented to Allen CUrtis, Timmy Lawson, Roger Carpenter, Mony
Wood, Matthew Darling, Willie Hill,
Terry Newsome , Leonard Hill , Or·
ville Hill, Dale Laudermilt, Eri c
Sim, and Randy Kesterson.
Earning awards on the webelo
level were Brian Beeler, Gary Curtis, Matt Harris, Michael King, Orville Hill, and Terry Newsome.
Next pack meeting will be held
Jan. 17 at the scout hall in Chester.
All cubs and their families are invited to attend .

Local man to
work at Olympics
NELSONVILLE
Michael
Robert.., son of Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Robert.. of Racine, is among 16
Hoclung Technical College students
who will be working at the 1980 Winter Olympic Games at Lake Placid,
N. Y.,Jan. 23toFeb . 29.
A second year student in the hotelrestaurant management, Robert..
was hired by ARA Inc. of
Philadelphia, the company which
has the contract for food production
operations lor the Olympics.
Sharon Ingram, ARA personnel
director who interviewed the students last week, said AHA's 7110 employes will be providing 30,IXXI meals
a da y lor the athletes and support
personnel at seven locations , includifl8 Olympic Village .
The studenls will be ;nvolved m
actual food preparation. In addition,
they wt11 receive college uedit lor
their work experience.
Hocking Technical College in
Nelsonville is the only two-year
college in Obi o which owns i Is own
motel and restaurant as a traini08
facilit y
for
hote l-res taurant
management and cullnary arts
students .

up more of m y feelings toward
others, and to feel thankful for all
the good things that have happened
in my llle.
However, I always reach a point
this time of year which makes it difficult for me to enjoy fully the spirit
of the Christmas season. As I feel
and share of myself with others, my
increased awareness also makes me
reflect on those people who rna y not
be as lucky as I. I think about the
hostages in Iran and about the
elderly people who are lonely .and
away from their families . I wonder
what it must be like to be so poor not
to be able to give gifts, or to be so
sick that each day becomes a
struggle for survival. The Christmas
season is also a time of sadness lor
those people who are depressed or
angry and have difficulty being hapPY a bout anything .
It would be easy to allow the
problems c:l the world to get me
down so much that I cannot enjoy
my llle, but I have chosen not to let
that happen. To do so would only
cause more misery for everyone .
What I can do, though, is use my inner strength and faith tn give a little
of myself to other people . I urge all
of you to do the same. Call a I riend
you haven't heard from in a while.
Visit a person who is alooe or confliled . Send a toy to a child . Reach
out and do something !
Have a Merry Christmas' '

CANTATA PRESENTED
The choir of the Racine First Baptist Church will present a Christmas
cantata , " Love TraR'ICending" at
7: ll p.m . Sunday at the church.
Members of the choir are Robert
Beegle, John lhle, Dennis Manuel,
Otis Bailey , Ray Smith, Wayne
Roush, Ronald Salser, Robert
Smith, Nick lhle, Qaudia Roush,
Theresa VanMeter, PhyllJs Bailey,
Florence Adams, Kathryn IDll,
Janice Salser , Marie Walker,
Marilyn Powell, Stella Smith, Lura
Swiger, Dorothy Badgley, Garnet
Smith, Mary Cleek, Margie Grinun,
Vickie Cwrunins, Dortha Brown,
Sharon lhle, Patricia Smith.
Direction of the cantata is by Barbara Gheen and accompanists are
Delores Wolfe, organist, and Lillian
Hayman, pianist. The public is invited .

in stsrk contrast to ABC 's "20-:11) "
newsmagazine, which was No. 36 for
the week, NBC's " Prime Time Sun·
day,'' which ranked 63rd .
All three networks ha ve a nnounced schedule changes for the
second half of the season , involving
four of the week 's five lowest-rated
shows.
()( the week 's five lowest-rated
shows, only NBC's "Best of Saturday Night Live," No. 64 , appears
secure.
"Prime Time Sunday," No . 63 ,
will become " Prime Time Satur·
day ," while CBS' "Paris, " 65th for
the week, already has switched
tirneslots . No . 66 "Shirley," from
NBC, apparently wtll be dropped,
while "California Fever, " from
CBS, No. 67, has been canceled .
Here are the week 's 10 highest rated programs :
"Allee, " with a rating of ll
representing 22.9 millJon homes, and
"60 Minutes," 29 .5 or 22.5 millJon,
botn CBS; " Three's Company, " 28.8
or 22 millJon, ABC; "One Day at a
Time, "28.6 or 21.8mil1Jon, and ' 'The
Jelfersons," 28 or 21.4 millJon , both
CBS; 'Taxi," 25.9 or 19.8 million,

homes with television in the country ,
30 percent were tuned to at least part
of the Sunday night program .
ABC's best for the week , ' Three's
Company ," was third, while NBC's
top-rated program was a special +
" Little Rascals Christmas " + No. 16
in the ratings . .
CBS ' "60 Minutes " continued its
ra ther remarkable run near the top,

Sorority to
conduct March
of Dimes
Members of Xi Gamma Mu
Olapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorort ty
voted to conduct the March of Dimes
in January again this year during a
meeting held at the Columbia Gas
Co. office Tuesday night.
Holiday plans were discussed with
Ruth Riffle noti".;i a change of plans
for the Saturday r.&lt;~t couple 's par·
ty. Instead of being hei.! ;:~ tile Royal
Oak Park it wtll be held at the
American Legion ha!l in Pomeroy, 7
p.m ., with the dinner to be catered
by the Meigs Inn. Zerpha Blue wt11
provide music for dancing .
The gift exchange party wtll be
held .t the home c:l Mrs. Doris Ewing on Dec. 18 at 7:30p.m. Members
are to wrap their gifts in white paper
and use red ribbon. The chapter
voted to have a group photograph
taken that evening.
FoUowing the meeting a sale of
holiday homemade cookies was
held .

BUILDING DOWN
PULLMAN, Wash. !API - When
Was hington Stale University wanted
to expand its 28,0&lt;XHieat stadium , it
could not add on to tops of existing
stands, because of the proximity of
existing buildings.
So to make room for 11,0110 more
gridiron fans, the university lowered
the fie ld by 181eet and built the extra
seating downward instead of upwa rd .

By me mbers of the
Oblo State
Medical AaiiOCiatlon
People cele brate Christmas in dif.
lerent ways all over the world, notes
the Ohio State Medica l Association .
Some people a wait Father Christmas instead of Santa Oaus, som e
put shoes out to be filled instead of
stockings - but one tra dition which
is the center of aimost every coun try 's festivities is the Christmas
tree. For many people, its selection
and decoration mark the beginning

AP
" AuntMa ry," 24.9orl9
rru
; "Morl&lt; and Mindy,"
24..
nillion , ABC, and " Archie
's Place," 24.2 or 18.5
millJon, and "M-A-S-H," 23.8 or 18.2
million, CB.'i .
The ne.d 10 · • .ws :
'Trapper • JJ , M.D.," CBS, and
"Happy Days," ABC, tie; " John
Denver and the Muppets Christmas
Show ,' ' ABC; " WKRP in Cincinnati," CBS ; "Soap," ABC ; ..Littie Rascals Christmas, " NBC ; " My
Old Man," CBS, and "Angie," ABC,
tie, and " CHiPs," NBC, and "Barney Miller, " ABC, tie.

American Cancer Society

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N . Second Sf.
Middleporr, 0 .

N i ft y ,

new

tash i on

c omfo r t

cush ioned and styled ro

plea se . A tun and ·fan cv
free g ift tor the lady i n
your lif e!

Sale Confinues on Women's Dress Shoes

CHAPMAN SHOES

Next toE lberfelds in Pomeroy , 0 .

)

PAULSMI'11J
SURGICAL PA T1ENT
Paul Smith, Racine, Is a surgical
patient at the St. Joseph H08pltal in
Parkersburg, W. Va . Theroomnumber is 235. Smith is a driver of the
senior citizens van in Meigs County .
Announcing the Revised
Office Schedule of

A regular feature , prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to ke&lt;T
you informed about cancer .
QueiUoD: "Ill there a safe number
of 'Cigarettes one can smoke' ''
ANSWERJine : Individuals who
smoke more than five cigarettes a
day show a higher death rate than
nonsrnokers . The death rate increases with the number of cigarettes smoked .
Queslloo : ''where in the body do
most cancers begin ' ' '
ANSNERIIne : Most cancers
originate on the surface of an organ,
such as the skin , the surface of the
uterine cervix (the opening of the
!Urus ), the lining of the mouth,
stomach, intestines, bladder or
bronchial tube in the lung or the
lining of a duct in the breast or
prostate gland. These kinds of cancer gypically remain on the surface
of1 the organa mentioned unttl the
cancero~ cells begin to penetrate
beyond the surface and invade underlying tissues . tntirnately , if left
untreated, the cancer cella are
carried by the blood stream or lymph system elsewhere in the body.
QueiiiOII: "What are the major
risk factors lor breast cancer'''
ANSWERIIDe: Riak factors include : the pre8ellce of a lump In the
breast or a cmdition such as nipple
discharge ; a family hiBtory of close
relatives - mother, sisters , or aunts
- who have had breast cancer .
Women over :J:i, and eapecially those
over 50, are at increaaed rtsk of
developing breast cancer. Also , a
woman wbo hu never bad a child, or
hal had a child after the age of 30 Is
at higher risk . A woman who hal had
breast cancer in one beast may
develop cancer in her other breast.
Please note that we are cllac1188ing
"risk" lactora only; we are not
apeaking of certainties . A woman in
any of these "risk" categories must
not aasume that she wtll actually
develop breast cancer. Rather, her
understanding of the possibility of
being slightiy more at risk than
ather women should prompt her to
do monthly breast self -examination
and to see a physician if she notices
anything unusual about her breasts .
To a physician, tbese risk factors
1Jignal the fact that as part of good
medical care, a woman should be
watched carefully lor possible
breast cancer and may require
special tests such as breMl x-rays.
Even the most obvious risk factor the presence of a lump or swelling in
the breast - does not necessarily in-

dicate that breast cancer is present.
indeed most breast Jumps are
benign , which means that they are
hannless. However , it is nece89111'}'
to have a diagnosis because of the
possibiliy of cancer.
The concept of risk factors enables
both women and physicians to know
who out of the general population
should be especially alert to possible
cancer . Since breast cancer detected in an early stage is most responsive to effective treatment the con cept of risk factors can help sa~
lives.
Meigs County Cancer Unlt, Sraron
Michael, public information chairman, Pomeroy, Ohio , 45769.

cerr''
ANSWERline : The list includes
former First Lady, Mrs. Betty F ord;
Mrs . Happy Rockefeller ; TV personalities , VirginiB Graham , Betty
Rollin, Arthur Godfrey , Amanda
Blake . In sports , there 's pro foot . ball 's Jack Pardee and golf superstar Gene Litter. One of the grea ts of
the American musical theatre, com poser Richard Rodgers also has had
cancer.
Meigs County Cancer Unit lnlonnation Chairman is Sharon
Michael, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992-

Question: "What causes 'smoker's

cough'?"

7531.

ANSWER!ine : Certain cells of the
lung have tiny hairs, called cilia,
which help cleanse the lungs by
sweeping mucus towards the throat.
Constant irritation of the lung cella
by cigarette smoke causes the cilia
to disappear. Without cilia to sweep
it away, mucus becomes trapped in
the lung until it Is forced out by what
is known as 'smoker's cough.' This
cough signals a change in the lung
which may develop into cancer.
Request: " Can you list the rna jor
fonns of cancer and explain which
ones are treatable."
ANSWERIJne : The major fonns of
cancer in the U. S. include cancers of
the lung, breast, colon-rectum, skin,
uleM18, oral cavity , and the blood
and lymph systems. For most of
these forms of cancer effective
treatment does exist. When the cancer Is diagnOsed in an early stage,
the possibility of long~ healthy
survival or cure is excellent. For two
of the major fonns of cancer, lung
cancer and the most common fonns
of skin cancer, it is possible to
prevent disease. Approximately MJ
percent of lung cancer could be
avoided through elimination of the
cigarette habit . Most skin cancer
could be prevented if people avoid
overexposure to the sun.
Question : "Why do people try unproven cancer treatments ' What i.•
the motivation ?"
ANSWERIJne: There are many
answers to your question. However,
a basic fact is that cancer often
frightens people more than other
diseases, and there is a false asswnption that cancer is automatically
fatal . Proponenls of unproven treatments prey on these fears by offering false hope. People also turn to

Question : " When are men at risk
of developing prostate cancer ?"
ANSWERiine:
The typical
prostate cancer patient is aged f&gt;S or
older. The incidence rate for this
form of cancer increases with aging .
In terms of signs and symptoms, a
man in the later years of life may be
at risk of prostate cancer if he is experiencing such difficulties as
inability to urinate; painful or burning urination ; blood in the urine ;
pain in lower back, pelvis or upper
thighs. It must be emphasized that
these symptoms are more likely to
indicate prOstate conditions other
than cancer . However , the
possibility of cancer ex ists.
Therefore, older men should have
regular physical checkups including
examinations of the prostate. Afld ,
they should seek medical attention
for any urinary problem.
Question : "Ill the American public
well infonned about cancer?"
ANSWERline: In a 1978 study
prepared for the American Cancer
Society it was shown that the public
has 8 relatively high awareness of
cancer's warning signals and, more
people than ever before are having
checkups that include cancer tests.
Nonetheless , there are iMportant
gaps in knowledge. For example,
most people underestimate how

to decorat• it. When you bring it in side, cut the butt end of the tree
diagonally one or two mches above
the original cut . Place the tree a safe
distance from aU heat sourees,
especialiy fireplaces .
Plastic or artific ial trees also can
present a fire hazard . Make certain
your tree is made of a fire--res istant
material and is ke pt away from heat
sources . Metal trees sharpl y reduce
the possi bili ty of fi re, but faul ty electr ica l w1n ng can turn a m etal tree
mto a " live" one. The only sale way
to ilhuninate a m eta l tree is with

·'/

'(

y

\-'
. \!

.r

·~·
·\
·
.

e

f

!I
'1

'

prevalent cancer is in the U. S. If
current r ates continue, one~ut~ f ­
lour Americans will develop some
form of cancer . The study also
showed that the public believes, incorrectly , that the chance of sur viving cancer is extremely lo w.
There are over three millJon
Americans alive toda y who have a
cancer history and some two million
of them can be considered cured.
Question : "How is leukerrua
diagnosed ?"
ANSWERline : Leukemia IS
diagno sed
by
m ic r oscop ic
examination of the blood and bone
marrow cella. Blood samples are
taken in the usual way by drawing a
small amount of blood from a vein in
the ann or linger . A bone marrow
sample is taken by using anesthesia
to permit a needle to enter the bone
at the top of the hip or breast-bone.
The sample is removed by suction.
These blood and bone marrow sam ples are examined for excessive
numbers of abnonnal white blood
cells which are characteristic of
specific types of leukemia . The
blood samples reveal the quantity of
various blood cells and components
and whether leukemic cells have en tered the circulatory system .
Throughout treatment of le ukemia ,
blood and bone marrow tests are
also done to measure the body 's
response to treatment and to deter -.
mine whether the disease is under '
control or if recurrence is taking
place.
Request : "How can I gct the latest
cance r statistics for a high school

term paper ~' '
ANSWERiine: The Americ an Can cer Society Unit in your community
will be pleased to give you a free
copy of the latest edition of ils " Facts and Figures . " It will contain
current infonnation about cancer in'
cidence, 3urvival and death rates m
the U. S. and abroad and offer facts
about specific forms of cancer.
Meigs County Cancer Unit lnlonnation Chairman is Sharon
Michael, Pomeroy , Ohio , 45769, 993-

7531.

i

By CecUy BrOWDB!olle
'
Aasoclaled Press Food Editor
WEEKEND BRUNCH
Freob Fruit Cup
.-uu Scramble
Tomato Fry •"
~
Cottage Biscuits
Coffee
'
COTIAGEBISCUITS
These ma y be as new to you 8 s
they were to us .
1\2 cups unbleached or a1J-p11rp011e
flour
2 teaspoons baking powde r
\2 teaspoon baking soda
Y, teaspoon salt
I teaspoon sugar
2 tablespoons butter
2 tables poons vegetable shorte ning
I large egg
'"• cup small &lt; urd (regular or
tangy ) cottage cheese
Melted butter
In a medium bowl stir together
fl our, baking powder, baking soda,
salt and sugar ; with a pastry blender cut in the 2 tablespoons butter .
and the shortening until particles
ar e small. With a fork beat egg
slightiy; add cheese and mix well ;
add to flour , mixture. With the fork
toss together ; knead a couple ri
times to form a ball . Tum out onto a
pastry cloth ; with a stocltinetcovered rolling pin , roll out dough so
it is a scant 12-inc h thick; cut out
biscui ts with a floured 1'1'•-lnch
round cutter ; place an inch apart on
buttered cookie sheets . Br1111h with
melted butter. Bake in a preheated
425-degree oven until golden - 12
rrunutes. Serve hot . Makes about 21'.
dozen. Adapted from "The Garden
Wa y Bread Book " by Ellen Foscue
J ohnson. !Garden Way).

..

.......

By Ceelly BroWDBtone
AaiiOCtaled Press Food Editor
LUNCHEON FARE
Pbyll 's Chicken
Salad Bowl
MIDce Tarlrl
Tea
PHYLL'S CHICKEN
My sister sometimes serves this to
guests .
2 tablespoons butter or rendered
chicken fat
3 tablespoons flour
I c up lat~ree chicken broth
1-Jrd cup heavy cream
I ~ cups di ced ( '-i! to '"•-inch 1
cooked chicken
' • cup diced I '•-inch I roasted
sweet red peppers
Yc cup (10 large) sliced pitted ri pe
olives
Salt and pepper to taste
Canned crisp Chinese noodles
In a medium saucepan over low
heat melt butter ; stir in flour ; off
heat gradually stir in broth, keeping
smooth. Cook over moderately low
heat , stirring constantly, until
thickened and boiling. Off heat stir
in cream ; add chicken, peppers,
olives and salt and pepper. Reheat
genUy . (Sauce will be thin . I Serv e
over the Chinese noodles . Makes 4
servings.
By Ceclly BroWDBtone
AaiiOCialed Press Food Editor
DINR FARE
Fried Chicken
Hominy
Spinach and Bacoo Salad
Fruit
Beverage
BUTl'ERED HOMINY
Devised by an Ohio high-fiChool
girl.
llk&gt;unce can whole hominy (white
or yellow )
2 tablespoons butter
Paprika , salt and pepper to taste
Makes 4 servings .

'... .

. .1.

.,-, ~ \1, )!
To minimize the smell of cooking fish , broccoli , brusseJ Sprouls and •'
cauliflower, let a pan of vinegar simmer slowly on the stove.

JIM DINE
CINCINN ATI , Ohio (AP ) - " Jim
Di.ne ·s Etching, " a retrospective
e xhibition of more than 100 prints bY
the Cincinnati-hom artist, is on view
at the a ncinnati Art Museum
through J:j.,c. 30
The museum says the exhibit
spa ns a 17-year period from 19tH to
1978 and exarrun es the history of
Dine 's work in drypoint, e ngraving
and etching.

.

"~·~·':,;..
~{'

x'.:,

.71,-A.·."·

'

BIRTHSTONE RINGS
l~:"P

~~~:~

FAMOUS NAME
JuJ~.QP.J~~.~

Monday

Sealy

10 ,00-1:00

box

:mattresses .

2,oo-s,oo P.M.

( Factory

Tuesday , No OHic e

Wednesdav
9' 00 · 11 · JO

sp,.ing s

7S

r:·· ~· -~~

of

·-~

and

pieces .

Six genuin e stone s s urround a 3 pt . diamond .
Choose the ston e for your month .
S100.00 e ach
(April S195 .00 - Ail Diamonds)

M i s -match

1'~~~
~·,o~~~;s•QUEEN, lWIN

P.M.

II

Thur sday

Price Sl"tould R ead

9 · 00 ~ I L JO

lleg . II29 .9S

PM.

Friday

For

10,00· 1,oo

SJ9~

2,oo.s,oo
Saturday
, ,oo s ,oo

E ~~:c ept

attra ctive addition to any tree but
they too can present dangers. Avoid
plac ing sharp or breakable ornamenL• with detachable parts on
branc hes where small children or
pets can reach them . 'This is
especial ly true of bubbling lightB,
many of whic h resemble food . Many
an unsuspecting child or animal has
been injured trying to eat ornaments
whic h look like ca ndy. Christmas
tree trimmings should be made of
non&lt;ombustible or flame resistant
materials . Christmas tinsel or artificial icicles should be made of a
non-lea ded material.

GENUrNE STONE

306 N . 2nd Ave .,
Middleport , Ohio
Effective January 1980

2' 00· 7, 30

Ooodlights . Make ce rtain, howeve r.
that the Ooodlight.s a re kept out of
the rea ch of chi ldren srnce they can
become very hot.
Ch r istmas tr ee deco ration s
present additiona l safet y hazards .
Al l lighting sets should be approved
by the Underwnters · Labora tory
fUL ). Before they are plugged in
each year , they should be checked
lor signs of wear . Look lor fra yed
wires . loose connections, broken or
cracked sockets and expo,ed wire.
Damaged sets should be thrown
a way or repa ired.
Christmas tree ornaments are an

CORRECTION-SUNDAY'S AD

Or . Mateo P . Dayo, Jr.

2,oo 7, 30

outside , in wate r , until you are ready

,.
unproven treaiments beca use they
worry a bout the expense uf
reputable medical care. Sometimes
patients turn a way from their
medical team because they feel that
health professionals have given up .
1his may not be the case at all and it
is one reason why frank and open
discussions between physicians and
patients should take place on a
regular basis.
Question : " Can you name some
famous people who have had can-

Answer line

From The
People Af :

Dormie
to ot we l! r ,

ts the single most important safety
factor to look for in natural trees
The highe r the moisture con tent of
the tree, the less likely it is to dry out
a nd become a hre hazard. To test
freshness, check the needles . They
should bend between the fingers , not
break. Tap the tree lightly on the
ground . if there is a showe r of
needles, the t r ee is not fresh. Don't
be fooled by a tree's ruce green
color. Some trees are sprayed green
to improve their appea rance .
Once you get the tree home, there
are severa l steps you can take to
make certa in it stays fresh . Keep it

CANCER

HAPPY
HOLIDAYS

.

n

of the long awai ted holiday seasnn .
But Christmas decorations which
cause so much joy each year a lso
bring danger. The U. S. Consumer
Prod uc t
Sa fe t y Co mmi ssion
estimates that each year thousands
of American famili es suffer needless
dea th, injury and destruction of
property as a result of accidents involving holiday decorations . Many
of these accidents could be avoided
by taking proper precautions.
Selecting the right Christmas tree,
for example, is essential. Freshness

and up

the la s t Satur ·

day of I he month

PORK SHOULDER

STEAK

79~

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

~~-

i
iI
I

·
SAVE"
2st
~
~~
P...
WHEN YOU BUY
one any size

LIM i t
Jrl ll&gt;f (( .... ~\J '-'1 ~
,., ' "IVIVItf~

l ' l'&lt;l&gt;lj lx•
oH''''
' •• I
I",

o~•r L()IJ('()N f"Efl PUA01A SE

• t• •·~• •

f

'-O I

.,_'

,,.

I
I

I

~

' , , .., ....,~,
01

r """' ,., " " ' -

• •. ...,, •·

&lt;&gt;"' 'r
,,~· · • • ''"'~•·~, ~ ..., ... , .,,, ,,." r ·~..,....,..~,...,..,
1
'"' · '' 0

· ,,,,,......_, ., ,

•

• · '

'O• I, ,.

I'•·

'""- r 0oJH,..'&gt; ~" "''' ~~ .,..,,..,

' &lt;1'-" ,.. ,
o·

,.,, ..,..,,...., ., .,,... ,,.. ,., ., .••. '' '"''·•&lt;r•· , ...,.,... ,. ,.:~· •.
,,...,.~ l&lt;l 106 'I·' '"'"" ' o .,.,.. • b •1 • '' 0 '"" .,_, , , "'', 0 .,,,

,_,.,.,,...,,,,ow, , .

I

,1, ,

,.,..,. .. ,

1

,.,...,.,

l&gt;or

6&lt;. " ' " " 1 ,

•. ·~:~ ;)

., 1 • r·t•o •. t

"' IOfiOC ttl a ll.t.-1 •'"' '• ''"'"~ ~ • '"''''

L J.. ooo---=:J

$

We Glad y Accept Fed . Food Stomr&gt;S
MondiiV thru Friday

, ,ooru7 ,oo

BAC.ON

S•turday 9 :00·9 : 00

CLOSEO
SUNOAYS

"'':' " ' •• '

,.~

'"

•'' .

'

•

.

·, ...

·-.. · ··· ·' ·' "·

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

1 lb. Sliced

129

BROWNIE MIX

Jib. Pkg .

I
1

Hi

BATHROOM TISSUE
l

4 Roll Pkg .

ROAST
LB.

79e

Tender Leaf

TEA
..

LONGHORN

lB~ }89

CHEESE

DOG FOOD

23 01 .

100 Count

S}89

99¢

BUSH'S BEANS

Midland

Duncan Hines

h

o. t• P •.,, ' ' ' I ' • • -. . .

PROC TER &amp; GAMBLE

PHEBE 'S STOR&amp;

1 .

:~
· · . ... . . ·:. :.·:. :.):~::·- . . . ·. :· .· .·.· ·: .· .· . ::-. ~~~i&gt;{: :~::~::;: ;:;:~.\ :~·: :;: ;~:·;:~.~::::;:~:-C:Tt:_::) ~
2~~- '" "'~"'"' "'"~''•·•'
~·
•~•"

SHOULDER

$139 LB.

k!f • f·
·•

PICKLE LOAF

Racine, 0.

o&amp;UVSc.

o i''\ '" •'"·,'~O • •J '"~ •·], . , , , , ·--~"'''·'' O']OO '

'.

LB.

PICNIC
HAMS

CUT AL ONG DOTTED LINE

Be sure and register for
Chrisrmas
Grocery
Giveaway, $50 , S2S &amp; SIS
baskets of '9roceries will
b e given away
for
Chr istmas.
Drawing
Sat .. Dec . 22 at 4 o 'clock.

ISOz .

6/$11)()

zest a

CRACKERS

, lb .

69e

Navy , Grear Norrhern,
Chili Hot, Pork-n -Beans,
and Pinto Beans .
1s oz. Mix or Match

VAll£Y BEll

COTTAGE CHEESE

24

3/89'
OL

.•

•

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Dec. 12, 1979

Christmas program featured Monday
Traditious of Cluistrnss related by
members was a feature of the program at the Monday night meeting
of the United Methodist Women of
the Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Mrs. Jeanne Bradbury was program leader and used as her worship cenler, a nativity scene. She
had the members leU of family
traditions and customs with several
displaying old
ornaments.
There was a playlet, "1brough
Other's Eyes" by Betty Fultz, Donna Byer, Esther Simpson, Billy Jo

POLLY·s POINTERS,
Polly Cramer

Dog keeps chewing

chews, but the three bottles I have

used have not bothered her a bit.

-HAZEL
DEAR POLLY - I do hope I will
get some advice from readers who
also have dogs that chew up
everything in sight. My dog is 8months old and has chewed all my
dinette chairs as weU as shoes,
stockings and so on. The vet said I
should put a muzzle on her but I do
not want to . A friend told me I should
put oil of cloves on the things she

Helt&gt;n Ht&gt;lp

US • • •lh llo ·lo ·n ll"tto •l
TIUS EX-HUSBAND WANTS
WIFE-VISITING PRIVILEGES
DEAR HElEN :
Bo, my husband , and I split up,
mostiy over difficulties with my
children from a former marriage.
The two teen-agers had got in with
the wrong crowd and after many big
problems, I decided they'd have a
better chance of rehabilitation with
their father (who wanted them) .
While I was sway making the arrangements and getting them
organized, Bo took up with another
woman and started living with her.
Now he comes over here and stays
the night while she's working night
shifts. He's also with us on Sundays,
and does more household repairs
than he did when we were together.
He says he loves me, but he
doesn~ want to rush things. You see,
we've been remarried three times.
Evidently he loves the other woman
too.
Helen, I'm caring for his three
children. He comes to visit them, but
stays to be with me . How much more
time should I give him before he
makes up his mind which woman he
wants?- ONLY EXISTING
DEARO .E .:
How about 10 minutes, starting
from when you two wake up tomorrow morning?
Don' worry. You're a shO&lt;Hn.
When a man remarries a woman
three times she becomes a habit
hard too break. -H .

DEAR HAZEL -I am sure we will
be hearing from readers who have
had the same trouble that you have.
It sounds to me as if you should take
)'Our pet to obedience school. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When ready to
make my cucumber relish I save a
messy cleano&lt;Jp job by putting my
food grinder on the outdoor picnic
table. I can grind away and aU !.he
juice just !sUs on the grass .
A quick, neat and easy way to bundle up old newspapers is to use
masking tape. -MRS. R.F.H.
DEAR POLLY - Every winter I
seal my storm windows with rope
caulking because there are liSuaUy
some spaces that cold air gets
through. I then dose the regular
windows and seal the entire window.
No tools are needed and anyone can
do this job by just pressing firmly in
place . In the spring I take it down
and carefuUy roll and put in plastic
bags so it can be reused . I know this
keeps out wind and cold air. A furnace man told me my fuel bills are
lower than for other homes he has
checked.
There are several brands of this
product and they can he bought at
hardware and similar stores. In
older homes where windows are
loose and owners put folded
newspaper tn the cracks they can do
that and then apply the rope caulking. I usually buy one new box a year
because it does get dirty but that only costs about $2 dollars and I really
save on my heating bills .
I hope this helps older people who
cannot go outside to do storm windows, for this is aU done from the inside. -MARIE
Polly will send you one of her signed thank -you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn .
Write
POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of thi s
newspaper

tree

Brr,. th announced
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Clatworthy
of Merritt Island, Fill . are announcing the birth of a son, Matthew
Aaron, born at Cape Canaveral
Hospital on Nov. 8. The baby weigh·
ed seven pounds, 15 ounces and was
19 inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Clatworthy, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Brown, New
Haven, and the great-t!J'andparents
are Cecil Brown, New Haven;
Margaret Clatworthy, Middleport ;
and Virginia King, Pomeroy.

SPEAKER THURSDAY- Tbe
Pomeroy Cbapler of the Womm '•
Aglow FeUoW!blp will feature for
1111 December m~Uag apeater
Joey Vlnceat of CoolvWe. Mn.
Vlnceat, a receat gradallle of
iUitm Bible Sebool, will speak
about ber We. Tbe meetlni will
be beld at the Meigs iDD In
Pomeroy oa December 13. '!be
doon will opea at I p.m. aad dlaner will be served at 7. '!be
featured guest, Joey VIncent, will
speak at 8 p.m. 'lbe dbmer fee II
t3-50 per penoa. Relle!'VIItl.,..
sbould be made on or before
Tueoday, December 11. Make
reservatloas by caiUDg 99W71J,
992-61159, 175-3%'73, Nll-23%5 or 4"'7«41n the evealng1.

During a five-year period, more
than two out of every five American

families change their homes, The
Conference Board notes. Although
many only move down the street or
around the block, one out of five
moves to a different state.

Christmas luncheon waa &amp;IUIOuncect
for ThurBdaY at I p.m. Eleanor Cir cle will have a party Thunday night
at the home ~ Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy . Also announced waa the
QlristmaS cantata to be held at the
church on Dec. 23.
Mrs. Emily Sprague was dev&lt;&gt;tiooal leader. Chrt!trnas readings
and scriptures were given along
with a ChtistmBs prayer. The
meeting closed with singing op
"Silent Night." Chrt!trnas cookies ,
sandwiches and punch were served
from a decorated ta b1•

Krawsczyn, and Pauline Horton .
Mrs. Byer gave a program on
dolls, displllying about 50 from
various countries around the world .
The meeting opened with a piano
prelude by Mrs. Beulah Jon"' . Mrs .
Fultz, president, welcomed the
members and the Rev . Robert
Robertson.
A report was given on the bazaar
by Mrs. Nan Moore and Mrs . Byer.
The minister annoWtced the installa tion of officers to take place Sunday
at the morning worship service .
Pecans are still for sale . The

..

Announce birt

NEWYEAR
DANCEPLANNEO
The Orange Township VolWtteer
Fire Department wiU sponsor a dance New Year's Eve at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School from 10
p.m. to 2 a.m .
Music will he provided by The
High Times Band. They wiU present
a variety of music. Admission i.s $1~
a couple. Advance tickets are now on
sale and may he purchased by contacting a member of the fire department or call Bob Tripp at 667-3941.
Tickets are limited .

Leslie and Patricia Hayman, Rt.
~. Pcmeroy, aMOunce the birth of
their lint child, Jennlfer Marie, on
Dec . 3 at Ple118811t Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed eight J)OWlds and
three and one-fourth ounces and
measured 20 and one-half inches in
length.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs
James Autherson and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert
Hayman.
Great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Hayman, Mrs. Loshia Mitchell and Carl Autherson .

WARNERS TO SING
Jack and Rachael Warner of
Jackson will be at the Rutland
United Methodist Church Sunday for
the 10:30 a.m. service. Mr . Warner
will be singing during the service
Mr. and Mrs. Warner are former
residents of Rutland. She IS the
former Rachael Reese. The pubUc i.s
invited to attend.

SERVICES ANNOUNCED
The sermon at the Middleport
Heath United Methodist Church wiU
be "He Will Come" and Will be
delivered on Sunday at 10:30 a.m.
There will also be installation of officers of the United Methodist
Women.
At 7:30p.m. a Christmas program
will he presented by the Sunday
School. A visit from Santa wiU be
made.
The Christmas cantata by the
adult choir will be held on Dec. 23 at
!0:30a.m.

HOLIDAY DINNER
PARTY PLANNED
The annual holiday dinner party of
the Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club will be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at
the Rock Springs Grange haU. The
meat and beverage will be furnt..hed
by the club, and members are to
take a covered dish. There will be a
$5 gift exchange.

Save up to

DEAR HElEN :
Seems that everywhere you go you
meet gay men, read about gay
organizations, hear of gay husbands,

r

etc.

Are more males turning hom~x­
ual these days because liberated
women are taking sway their
manhood?
I wonder If we 11 sometime
become a nation of Amazons who
force males to have sex with us so
we can make babies, then turn them
back to their gay lovers? - WORRIED
DEAR WORRIED :
Counter-question : Are there more
hanosexual males these days, or
are they just more visible? I'd guess
the gay population has remained
fairly constant at around 10 percent
or less, and a Amazon nation ISn ~
exactly imminent . - H .

3 lb. AGAR CANNED HAMS ................ ~~~.. '4.79

ECKRICH 1 LB. ROU SAUSAGE ........... ~~~~. s1.39
HOMEMADE HAM SAlAD .......... .......... ~~: ... '1.i9

Both!
A safer treatment : take two
aspirin and (seductively) go to bedwith your own husband. If he 's
capable, there's a good chance he
can be persuaded . - H

12 oz. FRENCH CITY WIENERS ............ ~~~ ... 99'
DAIRY

PRODUCE

Teen Queen
S lb. Bags White or Pink
auAaRrGteArsRINE 2/99~ GRAPEFRUIT..
...... sl.09
M
113 Count California
21
ORANGES........... 6/59'
Cheb1.,s0 e1tg. ht
6x7 Size ripe
CHEESE ... ~~~. •
TOMATOES ....... ~~: .. 59'

$2 49

~~

The annual Ouistmas party of the
Central Trust Company of Middleport was held Saturday night at
the Meigs Inn.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Hubbard, Mr. and Mrs. Manning
Kloes, Mr. and Mrs. Jay Hall, Jr.,
Mrs. Rose Reynolds and son, Val,
Mrs. Margaret Dutton and sister,
Betty McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McElhinny, Gene Grate, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Durst, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl McKinley, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Anthony, Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. John
Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wilcox, Mary Hindy, Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Abbott, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Tbomas, Mr. and Mrs. Jack

Paugh.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
I
_c;'? I
I
~I
I
1Buy One Get One 1Buy One Get One I
I Free
I Free
I
I
1
II
I
1
~

Wilh Thrs Coupon

BIG SHEF®

FISH· FILET

save $1 .14

I

I
I

save

One coupon per customer, per vistl. Nol
valid where other discounts apply.
Good only at participating Burger .Chef
restaurants . Void where prohibited .
Good through December 18. 1979.

1
I
I

-

as¢

One coupon per c ust omer per "sil. Not valid
where other dts counts apply
Good only at parlt c o p al~ng Burger Chel
restaurants Vood where prohrbtted
Good December 19, 1979 through ·
December 26. 1979.

I

,.................,.................•
1
I

12 oz. Birdseye Frozen Strawberries ....... ~~~.... 9H- I Wrth Thts Coupon
~ I With Thrs Coupon
I
2 lb. Banquet Fried Chicken Dinner .... _...... _'2.97 I TOP SHEF®~i~hB~~~e~acon ~ I TOP SHEF® MEAL' DEAL
1
64 oz. Tropicana
1 Buy One
_c:7 1
• Save 54¢ . - 11
ORANGE JUICE ..•.••••••••••••.• ..Sl.39 I Get One Free Save $1.59 :I
29

oz.

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ••••••••••••••••..59e
(Chicken.

or Pork)

STOVE TOP STUFFING ••••••••••••• 69'
5

oz. Castleberry

BEEF STEW.•••.•.•••••••••:~~c.:~... 2/69e
s oz. Armour

.I
1
1
I
I

STOKELY KETCHUP. •••••••.•••.• 2/99'

I

W rt h Thts Coupon

I
1
I
I
I

TopShel . regular froes , medrum soft drtnk

One coupon per c ustomer, per visil. Not
valid where other discounts apply .
Good only at partr cipating Burger Chef
restaurants Void where prohibited .
Good through January 5, 1980.

1

BIG SHEF®

With This Coupon

MEAL DEAL

I
I
1

Big Shel , regular fries . medium soft drtnk
One coupon per customer . per visit . Not valid
where other d tscounls ~pply .
Good only at parltc tpaltng B~rger Chef
restaurants . Votd where prohtbrted .
Good through January 5. t980 .

I

I

i

FISH FILET MEAL DEAL

I

Frsh Sandwich, regular fries, medium soft drink

i

I
I
1
I

One coupon per customer. per visit . Not valid
where other dis counts apply .
Good only at parti cipating Burger Chef
restaurants. Void where prohibited .
Good through January s, 1980.

I

I
1

3 LOCATIONS

GRAPE JELLY•••.••.•••••••••••.••. $1.19
Sweetbriar

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE••••••••••••• 69'

Gifts were provided for each of
, • those attending the holiday party .

·'

I1

•................. ~................•

21b. Kraft

20 oz.

I
I
1
I

~ $1.59 Save 49~ ~ $1.39 Save 40~ ~

I

14 01.

One coupon per cus tomer, per visit . Not valid
where other disc~unts apply .
Good only at parttctpatlng Burger Chef
restaurants . Void where prohibtted .
Good December 27, 1979 through
January 5, 1980.

I••••••••••••••···~···••••••••••••••
I
I

I
I

I

VIENNA SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••. 2/89'

I

$1 99

I

6oz.

Annual party held

Clip and use these valuable coupons'

Wtth Thts Coupon

1 lb.

DEAR HElEN :
I have arthritis . I read recently
that sex activity stimulates the
adrenal glands to produce larger
amounts of cortisone which can
relieve arthritic pain for up to eight
hours. That's what Dr. Jessie Potter
of the National Institute for Human
Relationships says
My husband has given up sex ,
though he's still capable. Would it be
rehabilitation or infidelity if 1 found
another man while my hliSband i.s
out playing poker with the fellows?
-ACHING WITH AND ACHING FOR
DEARAWANDAF :

13 - The Dally ~ntlile l , Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. l2. 19'19
ORDINANCE ·
shall m at ure 1 n 10 annu al
su c h prepayment.

POMEROY, OHIO
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

698 W. MAIN ST.

1503 EASTERN AVE.

POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

2325 JACKSON AVE.

•

f

..
' '

NO. 109a·79
PROVIDING FO~ THE
ISSUANCE OF uo 000
FIRE TRUCK NOTEs' IN
ANTICIPATION OF THE
ISSUANCE OF
BONOS
FOR THE PUR POSE OF
ACQUIRING
A FIRE
TRUCK
AN o
THE
N E CESS A R y
Ap _
PURTENANCES
AND
EQUIPMENT THERETO
AND DECLARING
AN
EMERGENCY
WHERE AS, the Cler k
Treasurer . as lisc al off icer
has certif ied to th is counc i i
that the es t 1 m ated life of
th ~ pro_iec t desc r ibed in
thi S or d1n ance is at least 5
ye ar s, that t he m axi mum
maturity of rhe bond s.
referred to h erein 1s 10
y ears , an d
tha t
th e
ma&gt;Cimum matur i ty of th e
notes rei erred to herein to
b e i $Sued i n a nt ic ipatio ~ of
the bonds. is 8 years i.f sold
public ly or 1 y ear It sold
pnvately

ins ta l lmen ls
sec t ion 3. 11 is necessar y
to 1ssue and th is counc 11
oetermin es that notes i n
th e aggregate pr inc ipal
a mount of S90,000 (th e
Notesl sh d ll be issued in
ant ici pa tion of the Bonds.
The Notes shall be dated
Februar y 1. : 980 , shall bear
1nter es t a t7perc entperan
nu m , p aya b le semi
annually on June 1 and
Decem ber
1,
bet~inning
J une 1. 1980, an d shall be
i ssued in th e denom i naTion
of ss,ooo eac h, and snail be
n umber ed from 1 18 . If the
Notes are sol d at a rate of
inter est other than the rate
stated above , the Notes
shall bear such rate of In ·
terest as specif ied in the
re s.ol uti on awarding the
Notes. Th e principal of and
i nter est on the Notes shall
be pay~b l e in lawful money
of the Unit ed States of
Ameri ca a t the offi ce of
Tne Ce ntra l Tru st Com

BE IT OR D A INED b th .
Council of the Vil l aJ e a~
Middleport Me ·g s cou t
Ohio , tha r . .
I
n y,
Section 1. It 15 dec lared
n ecessa r y to issue bond 0f
th e V 1'll age o1 M t d d lepo~ts 1n
the aggregate pnnct pal
e~mounfof $90,000 (the Bon
ds) .ft?r the purpose of
acqu1rtng a f 1re tru ck and
the
ne ce s s ar y
ap
purtenances and equ 1p
ment the r eto .
Sect ion 2 The Bonds
s hall
be
o at eo
ap
prox i mately Janua r y 1
1985, st1all b ear i nteres t ai
the estimated ra te of 7 per
cent per annum , payable
semi -annually , unfit rhe
princ ipal sum is P&lt;"+•d , .=1nd

Div is ion , M i ddleport , Ohio
The Not es shall mature on
December 1. 198 4, but shall
be prefayable in whole or
i n par without penalt y or
~rem i um at tne opti on of
h v ·11
· t
e 1 age on any 1n erest
payment date as prO\Iided
1n
this
ordinan c e
Prepayme n t
pr i or
to
maturity shall be made by
deposit with the pay ing
agent referred to 1n this
section of the principa l
amount of the Notes to be
prepared together w i th ac
cr.ued interest thereon to
the
dat e
of
su c h
prepayment . Such right of
prepayment shall be e)(er
c ised bv maitinq a noti ce of

NOW · THER E FORE

pany ,

N.A ,

Parker .

Se&lt;:tton S. Subject to the

Oond Retirement Fund for
investment in that fund, the
Notes shell be sold at
public sale by the Clerk ·
Treasurer at not less than
par value and accrued in
terest .
The
Clerk ·
Treasurer
Is
hereby
authorized and directed to
deliver the Notes, when
eKecuted , to the purchaser
upon payment of the pur chase price. The proceeds
trom !he sale of the Nole&gt;,
except any premium and
accrued interest, shall be
paid into the proper fund
and used for fhe purpose
for which the Notes are
bein~

Section~ . The notes shall

be executed by the Mayor
and .the Clerk ·Treasurer ,
P.'0\11ded that one ot such
s~gn_atur~s may be a lac S1m11e S 1 ~naturer !'ear the
seal C?f t e muniCIPal. C&lt;?r ·
poratton or a facs1mtle
thereof and express upon
th 1· 1 '
the
f
e r aces
purpose or

ternal Revenue COde and
the regulations prescribed

under that

collected . The tax shall be

placed before and in
p:reference to all ather
ttems and tor the full
amount thereof . The funds
derived from tne tax shall
be placed in a separate
fund, which , together with
tlflcole on behalf of the all interest collected on the
Village, for Inclusion in the same, shall be irrevocable
transcript of proceedings, pledged for the payment oi
setting forth the facts, the principal of and In
estimates
and
cir - teresl on the Notes or Bon
cumstances
and ds when anCI as the sa me
reasonable expectations fall due.

the

regarding !he amount ond
use of the proceeds of !he
Se&lt;:tton

years while

t~

paym~l

Notes ·run

of the same . The

there &gt;half be levied on all
the loxoble property in the

par V8fue To be re-ceived

nually not tess than that
which would hove been

of the Noles shall , to the ex ·

from lhe sale of the Bonds

Village, In addition to all
other taxes , a direct taK an ·

property and the persons
wllhln
the VIllage;
wherefore, lhll ordinance
sholllle in full farce end effect from ond lmmedlolely
after lis po&gt;sage.

1083, adopted June 25, 1979,

Secllon B. The Notes shall

7. During lhe

Section 10. Ordinance No .

is hereby repealed . Such
ordinance authorized the
issuance of a Note in the
amount of $90 000 to
mature on or before one
year from date for the pur ·
pose sta ted herein, but
such Note was not issued .
Section 11. The Clerk of
Council is directed to for ·
ward a certified copy of
this ordinance to the
Auditor of Meigs County .
Section 12. It Is deter · ·
m i ned that all formal ac ·
tions of this Council con ·
cern ing and relating to the

be
the
full
general
obligations of the Village
and the full faith, credit
and revenue of the Village
are Pledged tor the prompt

Notes pursuant to Section
103 (c) and regulations
thereunder .

passage of thl&amp; ordinance
were adopled In an . . ,

and any excess funds
resulting from the issuance
tent necessary , be used for

::;,~:;,~

.w.J,~I:erit~~~

thi&gt; Council and Of any Of
Its commllltts that
re&gt;ulted In such farmalac ·
lion were In moetlngs Ol)en
to the public In comDIIence
with 111 legal requrremon·
ts, Including Stclron 121.22,
Onlo Revised Code.
Section 13. Thll or ·
din once Is declared lo lie an
emergency
measure
necessary for !he lm·

mediate preservation Of
the public peace, lleallh
ond safely of thiS Vtll194t,
and for !he furlher
that !he Immediate Issuance ond sale of !he Notes I&gt;

re11011

necessary

to

protect

Pa&gt;sed : De&lt;:ember 10,

nn

Altest : Gene Grate
Clerk-Treasurer
Fred Hoffman
Mayor
f~roved : December 10,
Bernard v. Fulll
SOlicitor
(12) 12. 19. 26. Jlc

WhY Not You?

~

FOLLOW THE CROWDS THAT ARE SHoPPING &amp; SAVINt':
!··----------~
~
REGULAR VALUtS ..
tO----~
'1.99
1 DOZENS F••-••••••••••••••-•••,
~ GAG GIFTS
•
OF
~i
UNBREAKABLE I
-.1

~

Le~gue

Dec. l, 1979
Standings
Team
3 in One
Jac~·s Dairy Bar

Sarah Gibbs, Dep. Reg .

Pts.
68
68
64
60
56

Waldnig Trucking
Pickens Hardware
Roval Crown
.U
H ign series
Bill Willford 572,
Stepnanie Rought 573 ; Jerry Rought
557, Becky Kloes521.
High game ·· John Tyree 220,

Slephanie Rought 211; Bill Willford
218. Stephanie Rought 188.
Team series ·· Jack's Dairy Bar

1941

iI

.

Q

-:-.'l~
I! II I!..........

Early Wednetday Mixed
League
Dec . s, 1979
Standings
Team
Pts.
HeadQuart ers,
73
L ongshots
73
Z1de's Sport Shop
72
Smith Nelson Motors
Sl
Tony ' s Carry Out
4
Sw is her Lohse Drugs
35
H1gh ser ies Ri chard Russell 573,
Debi Haw leY' S.S..C , B il l Porter 567.
Ma)l. ine Dugan 484
Hign game · Joe Van Meter 229 ,
Debi Hawley 198; R ichard Russell
12 7, Oebi Hawley and Mary Porter

I
I

!
I
I
I
I
I
I

T~m

I

!

!
I
I

f.)p

81
65
62
47

\

'

i

AH.UGE

But hurry, they are sell ong fosl .

$1 50

$259

TO

~
lll
I
I

GinS

!

~:i."c~~:n":u~he~~t ~~~:·

AHU&amp;I Array

~
~

SELECTION!

~~~~~· x xx

tricot or bru&gt;hed tricot .
Size&gt; S·M·L ond Extra
Wonderful

The Gift She Expects
.,t Won't Buy Herself

..

:499 To $7 99

..... ...,

,__.,~--------_;_.-r;
".....,._,.J:jl_.,.._.
,.
J 1000 STRANDS 1
DO YOU NEED GRAP BAG

~ FIREPROOF ~
ICICLES

J11

We~!.'~~!~~~~~:~~~~.~ and.

Jll

under . Novelty gifts. procflcel gifts, probably rlghl for your needs. Coma
. Browse .

Ill

;ll

$}4! i 29~ ~

TABLEMATE GIFT

~MtiBJOSili!SIMI:SM~j 1/. Sail and

lMMM~l!SJOSil"'llMIIIBJOiill"'llM:IIIill'Sill':SJ MMIIIIMM. .MM:IIIill

!
~

GAMES

ALL STORES
ARE OVER

I

We List Just A
Few From Our Selection

~

Pepper , butter

J dish. napkin holder . All
J matching Some

r:!!,
ill

g Y, reduced I rom S3 99

FLOWING WITH

I~

$}99

sl)HIIlfll!SJOSIMMI:SMIIII!M
GIFT IDEAS! ! ..-_ll:l!l~lllltiiiMillflillllil,.,.,llOiiii

..
· JIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIilJ•lli

S6 GAME CHEST

High tnd. g~me
Clara Mcintyre
209 ; Dottie Will , Louise Eads 169 .
H igh ind . J ·games · Clara Mcln·
tyre 504 , Dottie w i 11 443.
H igh team game G and J . Auto

I

n toj'/11:

$1499 ·

TO

Regular
Values
To '1.99

30
17

$144

56 Different Gomes.
F •;, , for all ages .

•

BIG JOKES AND RIDDLE BOOK
5l6 Pages. soft. cover . Loads of jokes.
rtddles . l tmencks. cri'tzy crosses. tall
ta les and more
Regu lar $7 99

AMILY ft:UD

Parts 802 .

2ND EDITION

$628

Que511on
Game
based on T ·V Show .
All new edition Ages

Alfred
Social Notes
The Alfred church is having a
paper drive . Anyone who wants to
get rid of their old newspapers,
please contact Mrs . Uoyd Brooks.
The Alfred U.M.W. will meet Nov .
20 at 7 : 4~ p.m . at church with Anna
Thompson having the Thanksgiving
program .
Mr . and Mrs . Art Atherton and
Clarence and Jean Atherton went to
Columb\18 to attend the funeral of
Art's brother .

1
I

ruB~JOSI-JOSII:SM,

CHRISTMAS
CARDS

women, Debb ie Dobb ins 467 ; Debbie
Sayre 456 ; Shirley Smith 427 .
Frye's Penn ·
Team hig h game
101 1821.
Team high series
Frye 's Penn ·
zoi 12289

Vaughan's Cardinal
G . and J. Auto Parts
Karr and van Zandt

I

l--~-----~-~----------1
THE LARGEST COLLECTION YOU'LL SEE
I '~*- •
l
.
.
I · ·~ 1 $peual ~ift Selectim
Sh~rts
~
.
,
l
bingerie for
Ameriun lladt By Blocl
COMPARE!
Quality And Price! 1woMENs • GIRLs l E!hristmas!
I
BOXED ~ LONG GOWNS •
I JEWELRY l SHORT GOWNS Box

CAND Y CANES

571. Ron Sm ith 532 ; Bill Smith 475 ;

No. I

I

111

Smith 185 . Women , Debbie Dobbins
164, Debbie Sayre 161 : Linda Smith,
Debbie Dobbins 156.
Men, Russ Carson
H igh series

Pfs.

ll different types. They'll bring giggles at office
par1ies , plants, gift exchanges . This Is the
assortment of gag items t.llat you have asked for .

I

! Of Styles 11
--J:jl··~;;c~JOSI-JilJIISlM5lllii9JOSI~ ~ 1oo To $3oo I

Smith 113 , Russ Carson 206 ; Bill

Team

1

I

Roa ch 's Gun Shop
« 28
Frye' s Pennzoil
..2 30
French 's Sunoco
36 36
No . 3
22 50
High individual game -- Men, Ron

Morning Glories
Dec . 4, 1979

00

and de$ns

!

our
collection
Cottons, acrylics,
blends, velours . Sizes
small to X -Large .
Come, See .

L.

~

The

1
1

Slyled Rlghtl No
need to poy $20.00 for
his gift shirt Shop

181
Attonday Mixed league
Dec. J, t979
Standings

and 6 pack .

favorite 2'' size . Several colors

I

toilet tissue . Crazy gifts for golfers,
naughty fun items for men or women . Over 100

~

ARE
R
DIFFERENT
~
STOP
I
AND
SEE

.~--~-------------J

I

I

3 i n One677 .

4 pack

A
~

THEY'RE FUN!

W
~ Comic

TREE
W GIFTS
THAT
ORNAMENTS I

High team 3 games · No . 1 2224

Attendance Dec. 2 at the Free
Methodist Church was 76. Choir
members present was 10. There was
a special song by Larry Clark .
The Christmas program will be
held Dec . 23 at 7:30p .m .
The local church wiU be open from
6 p.m . until 12 midnight Christmas
Eve for anyone wishing to take communion .
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Jackson,
Bellvi ew, vis ited recently with Mr .
and Mrs. Norman Schaeffer .
Mr . Herman Kayser, Dayton, formerly of Pomeroy, has been
seriously ill in a hospital in Dayton.
Mr . Kayser was in hospital for I 7
days . His wife is the former Gayle
Parker, daughter of Mrs. Bertha
Parker.

&gt;ection . The

fiscal off icer or any other
officer , including the Clerk
of Council having respon ·
sibility with respect to the
issuance of the Notes is
author ized and directed to
give an appropriate cer ·

~

Early Sunday Mixed

l

under

cter Se&lt;:llon 103(c) of the In ·

th e retirement of the Notes
maturity , together with
interest thereon, and are
pl edged for such purpose .
Section 9. 11 is deter ·
m ined that all acts, con ·
d if.ions and things required
to be done or to exist
precedent to and In the
1ssuing of the Notes , in or ·
der to make them legal,
valid
and
bindfng
obligations of the Village
have happened , been dOne
and perfOrmed in reouler
and due form as required
by law , and that no
limitation of indebtedness
or
taxation ,
either
st afutory of constitutlonat,
will have been exceeded In
the issuance of the Notes .

at

r-----------------·----------------~~~-------

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

No. 5
The Fabl"f

Issued

the Notes will not con
stitute arbitrBge bonds un ·

prov1sions of this or ·
dinance . Any premium and
accrued interest received
from the sale shall be tran ·
sferred to
the
Bond
Retirement Fund to be ap plied to the payment of !he
principal of and internt on
the Notes in the manner
provided by law
Section 6. The VIIIOV!i!
covenants that if will
restrict the use Of the

Local
!I
howling II
~~

Team gam e

pectollons ol the ttme the
debt evidenced by me
Notes 15 Incurred, &gt;0 that

the officer In charge of the

wtth the . ~ylng a9ent on
lhe spec1fied prepayment
datefollowlngthegivingof
such. notice (Unless ~he
reQutrement of such not1ce
!5 wa tved as stated a.bo~e),
tnterest on t~e pnnctpal
amount prepaid shall cea!.e
to accrue , and _upon the
req~st of the VIllage the
Ofl~1nal pvrchaser of the
No .esshallarrangeforthe
dellve_ry of the Not~s to be
pr~pa1d at the de5Jgnated
off tee of the paylnV agent
for prepaymen
and
surr~nder
and
can ·
celtatJon.

levied if the Bonds nad
been issued w ithout t he
prior issuance of the N ote ~ .
The ta,._ shall be and is or
dered computed , certified ,
and e)(tended upon tne taK
duplicate and collected by
the same offi c ers , in the
same manner , and at the
same time that faxe~ for
general purposes for each
of said years are certified ,
levied ,
extended
and

proc eeds of the Notes in
suc h manner and to such
eKtent . if any , as may be
necessary , after taking into
account reasonable ex ·

reiec11on of 1he Notes by

p~epeymentareondepos1t

soulhern

Laurel Cliff
News Notes
The attendance at the Free
Methodist Church on Nov . 4 was 85 .
Choir members present numbered
1~. A duet was sung by Pastor Shook
and Franklin Martin.
Ernest Powell has been returned
home from VMH and is very much
improved.
Joe Guess, who is 88 years old,
rode his bicycle over 5,000 miles the
past several years.
The four children of Mr. and Mrs .
Lenny Lyons, Rocksprings spent
Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs .
RoyHoweU.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
01urch Nov . 18 was 113. Choir mem bers present 10.
Dedication and baptism of Carissa
Lyn Ash, daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
Richard A.•h. was held at the local
church .
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Frazier.
Columbus , Mr. and Mrs . Edwin
Leifheit, Grove City, attended morning services at the local church .
Mr . and Mrs . William Jacobs.
Columbus , spent Friday night with
Mrs . Jacobs' mother, Mrs . Tina
Jacobs.
Mr . Ernest Powell remains on the
sick list .
Mr . and Mrs . Bill Perry spent
Thanksgiving with Mr . and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer and Mr . and Mrs
Vern Story and son, John.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
01urch Nov . 25 was 83. Choir
members numbered 15.
Mr. and Mrs . Faye Countryman of
Greenfield was a Thanksgiving Day
dinner guest of Mrs. Emma Fox .
Mr . and Mrs . Roy Howard spent
an evening recently with Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Walker, Shade .
Mrs. Tina Jacobs spent the
weekend with relatives in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. William Perry ,
Athens, visited Thanksgiving Day
with Mr . and Mrs . Norman Schaefer
and Mr . and Mrs. Vern Story and
son, John.
Mrs. Jeraldine Ferguson and son,
James, Mr and Mrs. Gene Alkire
and son Keven, and friend, Miss Lori
Pomeroy, and Miss Cleo Parker ,
Columbus, were Thanksgiving Day
dinner guest.• of Mrs . Bertha

wn ic h they are ISSued and
that they are issued pur
suant to this ordinance .
The Notes shall not have
coupons attached .

in
c lu(jing the date thereot
and tne name and address
of such payin~ aoent, bY.
certified or reo1stered mail
to the original purchaser of
the Notes not fess than ten
days prior to the date of
such deposit, unless such
notice is waived by the
ori~inal purchaser of the
Noes . If moneys for suc.h

:B

I:SMM tolilliiiiMMtolil J::Sli:IIBM ,__..
.:sJ

$311
~----

SUPER T.V. DOLL SALE!
Money Saving Buys . All dolls may not bo!

10 and uo .

available in both stores . Come Buy-Now! They
won't last long al these low, low pr!ces.

S}288

WET AND CA__
RE_ _ _
BY KENNER
"'Dt:RATION
Vou play dOCtor In
thiS Wacky Skill

$728

Game Aoes 6 to U

~ ~~~~~~ 1•PARKER MAD

ei

·

MAGAZINE GAME
It' 11 drl ve you mad ·

F lrst

to

lose

all

$}322

LUV·A-BUBB_LE_ _ _ _

BY MATTEL

S}322

BABY THIS N' _TH_A_T_ _

7

$ 38

money wins . Age5 8

BY MATTEL

$}322

BABY MAGIC_ _ _

BY MATTEL

up.

Attendance Sunday , Nov . II at the
Free Methodist Church was 91.
01oir members prese nt were 15.
There were specia l songs by th e
Eblin family .
Mr . and Mrs . Joseph Higgenbotham and Erin spent a weekend
with Pastor and Mrs . Floyd Shook .
Mr . Ernest Powell is on the sick .
Mrs. Ethel Evans has been retur nedtoV.M .H.
Mr . Wyatt Shaefer, Mt. Vernon,
visited his parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Norman Shaefer and Mr . and Mrs.
Vern Story .
Mr . and Mrs . Wi ll iam Per r) .
Athens, visited recently wtth the
Shaefers and Storys.
Mr. and Mrs . Pearl Gilkey vistted
a Sunday Pvenlng with Mrs . ['ella
Stahl .
~·

Reedsville Penooalo
Recent visitors at the Hetzer-Bise
hom e were Sara Foster of Belpre
and Mr. and Mrs . Arthur Hetzer of
Belle , W. Va .
Gene Wilson is a surgical patient
at Camden.Qark Hospital, Parkersburg, W. Va .
Weekend guests with Mr . and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead were Mr . and
Mrs . Ed Hensch of CUyahoga FallB
and Juli Whitehead from Ohio

Hou~~~~:v:~!~N $3.29
family . Original Game

Many, More family
Games!

6 Each
Store

University , Athens .

A gallon of nectar can provide
enough energy for a bee to cruise
four million miles at seven mph.
.~

•

�14- Tilt! L)atl)

~clllllll'l ,

Hit

1$- The Daily Sentinel,

I '111! H' i •·

Mllhl ll' pur1

man says
"'

CLEVELAND 1AP 1
gunman satd he would have ., .
cepted an offer to attempt to kill fur .
mer Mayor Dennts J . Kucimch if the

Business
•
mirror

o\ t"rt' ]II~IJt ' ! I U l ig / t . ,I 1\'[t '\ l 'i ' '•·

st;dJ urt rt• po rt:-.
I n &lt;t l't1 1:·. ;·;"'L! ; q Jol t .\t ,• rtdt~ :. L\
Wt\Y( ' T\ t ht• I' UII\' Idt'd hit lll d/ 1
:-Mild lw " " ·" :tpprurwlwd ,dJnut tilt ·
rt:-.s~ :-.:mw tl eot l
ph tt lJ\ nrga n lt.•·d
t'f' Uil l' f i J.!ll l' t '~ Ill ()t ·( ,J!)t'l' 1~ 1 ;;, Wt't•b

bd tll't' f\. Ut ' ltlldl

Wil~

t'l t• t' ln l

rwop Jt• bt'tll lhl tht· f1 Jit•gt•d pl• tf

Th t•
\~ I' ll '

td l'll l lfWd
Tilt' rn&lt;H l . whoSt' td t•n tll \ wa .~ r1ol
l'l' \ 't'&lt;L kcl. 1:-. I.H.'Irth twld undtT a
ft•dt ·r·n l p ni lt·c'll \ t' c·u. . . tcul.\ pr c J~ :r&lt;WI
for Wlllli ' ..... . ., t•...,, ;h' t'onlmg t u tlw
l't'f&gt;ol't. Th t• F BI l't'ftL'-t' d c'O!!l/llC 'Ill \Ill
110{

NEW YORK 1AP I - To the sur prise of econorrusts who had bt•en
forecasting a recession. retail ""'''-'
apparently turned strong agatn
Novembt&gt;r

~.1 _\

U'as aJJpro;u~hetl to

he

111

1111 year long, they ·ve beentalkmg
about the coming rl'L'CS.SIOn. and now

tlw stor~
llunng f\u c llll c h \ tw u

~c·M .... lll o f-

ll1 t ' till' ., •'l'lt · Ill • J t •p ulb ••I
lt ' lll JI\ " t•· , .c rT\ &lt;&gt;I ll . . udt
r_ tl\1/t lllt

0\d "

dt !t·d( c• d

.'!1\ , 1 ~

pi•II

.t

I ll

.1

I•' ·

t •l t ·i' l tl tJ I IHd l: t.... t 1l 11111! h

I

iljl p i'tt.l l' llt'cl ,cl )I IU{ ' l ilt' jl lh
.t.'&gt;kl'd I 1Vt• 111:1 ~ lt : l\' t'\ 11 g!' t
r\11\ ' l l llt ' h ~Hi t of ti lt' V.il Y. '.' t 11l ld \ ull
t.~ k • · ltll' j11h. ·a nd I ~ ct l d 1f tht' ll lnlll'~
.,, a , n~h t . I 'd Ltkt· tt." till' htt llldll
sa1d
1 ~Li t """ !Itt' t tlll~ n ·a.'iu /1 I dtdll't
\&gt;,,1..,

d ll d I\ d ..,

gt• l l ht ·
Up

Jt l b \-\it ..... t~ • t '(IU St '

l f l ll' iHlO\ht•r

I ~t lt Plt'kt ·d

"aid
tn kill

lTIIIIL'I ... h1•

AskL• d If lw

w;t s Wlllillg
thl' !llall satd . "Sure .
l'n·r .\ - IJIId~ hul lit fll&lt;tkt· &lt;-t llvmg
If I
was to de l 11 . I H:t tuld wcm1 at h·et st BO
l\u t 'lllll'h .

hill forrner t'levelanll mayor
}~li lLIOI I

:: r .tltd
J'l d lc
I\

.:!

-&gt;! '&gt;. Hid

\\h, tt

I tic

P''·"''lll l

I

1-. 1!"1\

l1

h'l t

,1

1!

..,,1\lfl•l"

\•ill ~ u ! !.c
1

~ ll\ II 111 ~

\\ h&lt;tt

ru -.llk ..,.,,, .,,],
\ . . . kt •d 1\h; H 1+',1.'&gt;11 11 1\; c-. 1..!1\t'll f l o/
lll• ' pJ,,t , Itt· ~ .11d
Wt• l'dll.1 t1U\
· 1\. tJt ' lf lW i l lil a ! 1:-. "' h&lt;lt I .,.. il.'l tuld Wt·
1 .tii 'I IJU.\ 1-\ tr• Ill It It !It- w&lt;1 :-. c· ut fr wn
.. dtfft '/1 '11 1 tiH lh Th t'~ di d /1'1 kilt• ....

''"L" c·c cl lll ll ~

,I

fr on t.
tltc' \
/J &lt;~ d l11 wr1 rk 111 drff t·n· nt " &lt;! J" ........
t\ 1rc IIIH"h c·a rn pai gnc·d a g atiL'- t

\\li en · ht •

CO /T IIj)ll i Hl lll ~ I J\'t ' l' r!lllt'lll ii lld

had

po111' Ci.\'l'd )HI!I.'i t' Jf ~1...., tilt' l' il&lt;ttllpiOil
of lilt' po1 11' Wid \\'Ill' kill C. Ill &lt;Ill
f ·~ dWirl ~il i-: IJ I' .... kl . ( 'h'\'t•J ;-tnd \ rll' tlll g pol H"l' d ud . .'Wclld trtforr11atJun

1 , ., t' ll 1·d l1)

l/) t '

dt• j)t-trtllll ' ll( I l l

l&lt;t kl n ~

1/IUI\l'li lalt • ~ t t'p!-J

to l'II SUf l'

th,c l c't JU!d nut hii ppt •n ··
Til ~· rqJI Hi -.tlld thdt t hroug h &lt;t
. . po kl•.•.rnan. Kuctl ll t'h til'l'ilm·d ,·wu rrwn l 11/l tht• plot . althoug h the
"i'' 'lu·:-. ru;m ('\Ji tfl nlll'( l th l' lllil_'.O r
IJ;-ul I&gt;' 'l' 11 utfom tt·d uf ftw d 1-111 t..: lT
K ul' lllldl W&lt;i S prulL'l'lt•d by. stnrt
~'l' ttr· t t~·

arr&lt;HJ~ellJL' Ilt.s.

1n&lt;:ludrng

tlw pu.'i ttng uf po h t'l' mttrksmen at
( 'it'\'t'iand Murul'lpdl Stadt Hill when

he tosst•d 11Ul the f1 r st Odll to open the
1918 Ua.o.;t'iwll Sl'a snn for the

( 'h•vel ttnd lmlt tm s .

;11,. ma yor hdd a meld! detector
tnsw llt'll at the entrance to his office
'lfter Son Fronosen Mayor George
Mosr une wct.'i s hot to death on Nov .
Zi, 1978. A form er San Francisco
supervi sor , Dan Wh.Jte , was con·
vH"tt'(J of voluntary manslaughter in
thL' Muscone slay mg .

Nagorski said police suggested to
the mayor that he would be less
vulnerable to attat·k if he avoided
crowded places, but added · "I don't
bdteve he really did cancel anything
llts feeling was that he was a
pu lit1cal an11nal
and being in
JTowds was part of the job.··

Universities seeking federal aid to help market coal
TOlEDO, Ohio (AP) - A conliOrtium of 12 state universities is
making a bid for up to $9.4 million in
federal aid as part of a ~ million
research effort aimed at increasing
the marketability of Ohio coal.
ln addition, the universities are to
be joined by both industrial research
and independent groups in the
mtWive proposal which ultimately
could involve dozens of researchers .
'The universities involved are Ohio
'state, Case
Western Reserve' Cin.

cinnati, Ohio, Toledo, Bowling promise plan.
" Ohio is late getting its
Green, Miami, Wright State,
Cleveland Slate, Dayton, Kent Slate unlverisilies going in coal research," eaid Lawrence J. O'Brien , a
and Youngstown State.
The major drawback to Ohio's spokesman for the Ohio Board of
Regents . But he adds the consortium
coal is its high sulfur content, and
"is an exciting concept , very
slate and federal pollution agencies
timely ."
remain divided over whether the
.O'Brien 1s director of energy
slate's proposal to control sulfur ·
programs
and special projects coordioxide will meet national air
dinator for the board. He also "'
quality standards.
treasurer of the consortium, ofBoth state and federal control
ficially known as the Ohio Coal
plans are on the books and an effort
Research Laboratories Association.
is being made to al(ree on • com·
He also represents the chancellor ri
the board of regents on the ISmember association's board of
trustees.
Two years ago the Legislature
directed the board of regents to
Lawrence E. Lamb , M.D.
designate a university, or some

HEALTH

it appears that it won't appt·ar . that
it won't come up m 19;9
Next year, they assure us . but
dtdn 't they say that a year ago '
Yes . and nine months ago. stx

months ago and as ret·ently as last
week . Viewing weak second-quarter
figures . even the Wlute House had
aU but conceded last summer th&lt;Jt
the recessiOn had arrived .
That isn't to say that 1t d1dn 't h&lt;J ve
an impact. Fear ol1t mfluenced con·
sumers. business, labor , the Federal
Reserve. Congress, the Whtt e
House. People borrowed, bought and
spent. but with a gutlty feelmg .
Consumers' polls show, m fact.
that many people believe a recesswn
dtd occur in 1979. no matter that th•:
official statistics , some of whtch are
tion . satd no .
To them. and to all others who
worried co ns tantl y about 1 t.
recession was a prt&gt;sence m every

commercial transacti on. even if it
was the presence of a ghost Coun ·
!less words were devoted to tl. 11 was
perhaps the most anttdpated
economic non -event of the decade .
A popular forecast , perhaps even
a consensus , developed as the year
wore on : The longer the recesswn
was delayed the worse inflation
would get and the deeper and longer
would be the ensuing recessiOn .
Could frustration and anger have
been a factor m that forecast'' One IS
inclined to believe that objective .
scientific, academically proud
economists wouldn't be guilty of
such behavior. But they are human .
Now, near the end of the year.
nothing much has changed . The
forecasts remain as solidly defended
as they were a year ago . There will
be a recession m 1980 ; that ts the

l~liM C I ,AJ(f iH'.

consensus view.

ln fact , a Conference Board
forum , made up of private sector
economists from think tank s,

academia, manufa ctu ring and
banking, concl uded this week that
10

One might even read mto their
report a suggestion of ennw. "It IS
entirely clear." the forum chairman
said, "that the group treats inflation
as the overwhelrrung issue of 1980.
outweighing the cycltcal potential
for recession that lies ahead."
That isn't to say there won 1 be
one. Everyone knows you can't live
a whole year with a ghost and not
believe in it. The specter is there :
recession in 1980. The forum concurs.

It says that unemployment. now at

&gt;.8 percent, wiU rise to 7.2 percent,
and that industrial production.
which rose 3.9 percent 1n 1979. wtll
fall to just 1.8 percent in 1980 That
represents a sharp downturn

Capital
briefs
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP 1 - A state
representative has gtven $.1,000 of a
recent $5,000-a-year legislative
salary boost to one of Columbus ·
best known Christmas chanties .
Rep. Lawrence E. Hughes K·
Columbus, presented in his offtce
Tuesday a chec k for $3.000 to
Charity Newsies. Inc.. a group that
raises money to help children of
needy families at Christmas time .
Hughes, a telephone company official and member of the House stn ce 1969, said he accepted only ; per ·
cent of the boost in late 1978, wlu ch
increased the pay of lawmak ers
from $17,500 to $22.&gt;00 a yea r
He called the increase innationary
and voted against it.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I read your
column about the woman who had
ringing in her ears and I would like
your advice . I used to have this problem and I went to my doctor and he
took wu out of my right ear and the
ringing went away. The last time
this happened and I was having a
buzzing noise, just laking wax out ol
my ear didn 1 help.
I am 72 years old and have a constant buzzing in my ear. He sent me
to an ear, nose and throat specialist
who said the nerve in the ear was
degenerating and that because of
that and my age there wasn't
anything he could do to help me . I
also have ainus trouble and am a
very nervous person. Now that I've
learned that there are some methods
of treating this problem, I'm
wondering if I really couldn't get
liOme help for it.
DEAR READER - At least you
could try . The methods of helping
people who have buzzing and ringing
in the ear, called tinnitus, are fairly
new . Nevertheless, they are very
weU established . They won't help
everybody but unless you try , you 11
never know .
You say in the rest of your Jetter
that you have excellent hearing. If
you have nerve degeneration with
some hearing !OM, you might not
know it because it might involve
sound frequencies that aren't in the
range of normal conversation.
Sometlmu because of nerve
damage, hearing aids are of .limited
use. However, even if one is of partial benefit, it may eliminate the
buzzing sounct.. that people complain
about.
If your hearing is perfect, then at
least a tinnitus masker can be tned .
1llese devices present a constant
liOund to the ear and literally fiUillk
the annoying buzzing or ringing
liOunds that a person may have .
1'm sending you 'The Health Letter
number 12-10, Help For Tinnitus :
Noise Or Ringing ln The Ear. You
can take a copy of this with you when
you go to see the ear, nose and throat
specialist just in case he may have
missed the information available in
the medical literature about it.
Other readers who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stamped, self~ddressed envelope
for it. Send your request to me, in
care of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1~1, Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019.
One of the problems that's still
present in trying a tinnitus masker
is that not everyone is authorized to
fit them. Uke any device that puts
noise into the ear, it must be properly adjusted for the individual . If not,
excessive noise put into the ear
could even cause a problem. At this
date, because it's a recent development, not every hearing specialist
has yet qualified to provide this service to patients.
You might try a home tinnitus
masker method. Use your FM radio
and tune It between stations . 'Then
turn up the volwne and sit clooe by .
If the sound masks your buzzing
noise, that is a clue that a properly
adjusted tinnitus masker might help
you . Some people who have trouble
sleeping because of ear noises get
benefit
from
this
me
benefit from this method.

hove

gone

DARK COLORS
INDIANAPOUS,lnd . (API - The
U.S . divers in the 1980 Olympics wiU
be wearing black or dark o(O()Jored
bathing suits, says Dr. Aaron Wein stein, president of the U.S. competitive diving committee.
" A few years back, divers were
wearing colorful suits but when
someone realized the judges were
distracted by the bright colors, there
wBB a shift to dark, austere looking
suits. Black or dark~lored suits
tend to emphasize the body more so
that the judges can clearly see the
motions in a dive," Weinstein said .

in -

struction for )4 days. with no
resol ution of the strike in sight .
Bonanno noted that the governor
has taken a leadership role in lh•·
economic development of Ohto. and
recently has p1·oposed rndlion' "'
dollars in s~le assi.st&lt;HH't' t" t ht·
floundering Chf\ sk1 1 " 11
•j
,.J I '
"Undoubtedl ; . ,., 'I·'
I

\\' :· .,,

&lt; h t•t j_,
di S I' OIJi" 1 ,.. ~-'

il'l't~pn r ~ u :~

htL' ' ' ' '
d .~ n·c:l::'·

,1:1,

:,

na t!Ona l un&lt;•l:!• ' .. :- ·' g•M"I

Ji , t

'

• ••

Ron~n nu ~ : ~ · · 1

. ,.. ,

1 H.. ..

;

!a _-,. • ·

L.A. f'ORSHORT
El Pueblo de Nuestra Senora Ia
Reina de Los Angeles de Porciuncula was the origmal name of Los
Angeles . The site of the future
California metropolis was first
visited by Portuguese navigator
Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo in 1&gt;42. The
first settlement was the Mission San
Gabriel, 1771, and the ctty was for·
rnally foonded Sepl4, 1781 .

the board to designate an applicant
and in turr the regents decided on
the co"-'lOrtium approach.
The association was formed last
June . In October it turned the ~
million package mto the energy
department, which seeks a total of
$9.4 million in federal aid for five
years beginning with fiscal1980.
O'Brien said it is expected that
Ohio utilities and coal producers
each will nominate a represenlallve,
as wiU tile Columbus laboratories of
Battelle Memorial Institute and
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio).
The Department of Energy
proposal contains 31 initial projects,
culled fr&lt;m among 110 research
proposals, 0 'Brien said. They would
be funded by a combination of
federal, state, industrial and univer-

sity money.
0 'Brien said that as an interim
measure the Legislature is earmarking money in the higher
education budget for coal research.
llowever long-term funding could
come from the state 's proposed coaluse lax, which would be paid by coal
producers and a portion of which
would be earmarked by law for the
UCL.
'The energy department is expected to announce its decisions on
the 13 UCl..s 1t mtends to lund by Jan.
15.

Cincinnati processed so many
hogs in the early 1800s that it was
called " Porkopolis."

.'

.,

11lt'

'II '

., .

' '

The 18,410,030 shares traded at the
New York Stock Exchange on Black
TuesdaY, Oct. 29, 1929, set a volliiTlf
~ that luted until April I, 1968.

FROZEN

I
I
I

ll&lt; .,..'-""
I

COPVItGHT

It"

liOGII CO . lfiMI ANO

I
I
I

I

I
I

I
I

I'IKII GOOO SUNDAY
OK. t 'fWIIJ IAfUIOAY
OIC II . lutlN POMIEROV
A,. 0 GAl Lt POLl~ !i TORE~

I
I

c:

I
I
I
I

lHt

I

Birds
Cool

I~'('V.

WI IUIIVI THIIH)HT TO
liMU' ®ANTITIII . tofONI

'0LO TO DIALIII .

f.,.rytrl,~

.,ou llt,o~ at llr091" '' gvat'IM_, lew \'O'Jf t
""'"ultc lur., 11 ~0... • •• nv•

FROZIN

llt111Kt •oro ' 110''~ ol

Semi -Boneless
Smoked Hams

ADVERTISED ITEM PO LICY
.,.....,_, ,,.,...... &lt;1 ' t&gt;CI" " tod 10 tit
· Mdol~ , ... . . - . 1oo ..~ '" Moe~ O::•ogr Stoo• ••c-ot "
Ex ~

ot

t'-

~"&lt;&lt;Ottd.-.e...el

~-00 rv&gt; OV1~.,., ~

$ 19

11 .......... Of! .. .a., 'lt)o.J t CI\Ooe.l (ll I C ~I IC)It •tr
.,..,.. hlilaOII Jrfl«_tong 1fooe w,.... .. ~'"!iil (" t
"""'" " ""'' r l •n. to.. to purt . . _
.cl&gt;rl"'......:l .,.,... f l t....

.cl~I"' ·..O "' " ' ... ~ .......

)I),..,.,

·• "&lt;"«•

t..,.

I

Kroger Orange :
Juice
:

' ........ ""'th lhl . ......

1...:1

1 (

I

s::,E) :.-~~~zz
am.

$189 ~

I Ultl H-ll. •1-1z•z.em. •tTl Ctiii'IJIII!IIJ .If
I
Ultl1IUl. PIKIISI illtlltliC Till In II

)•uiiil~liui7

I u
1 "

lUIIIIIT ONI COUPOioll PU •• Mil

y

- - - - - ,_. ...~,• "1111
~ liAI'f'UCIIU nal1a~aat 'uu

1
I
1

I

I

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
HOllY

F"~MS .

INSPfCTlD

;,;~!~r.!·~~~~
75
u• •EGULA. WlSHIONI

¢

Young Turkey... ... .... lb .

COUNTRY ClUB

~:=e-~ 3~~~$ 5SJ39
~~

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

14-· lT ·ll . AVG _WHOU

Fresh Hams ........

SEIVE ' N' SAllE

Fresh Turkeys . .

Wieners ..

gge

I

(5-ll. UN$0 .,. )

KIOGU U.S.D.A. GIADI A . 10-- I.C· L!II . AVG .

tb.

I
I
I
I
I

lb

........ ~~:: ggc
(2· LI. PI(G . Sf .fl )

VAC P"K

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

~~·,:~ . 3~:~ 899
KROGU

Cranbeny Sauce .
Dll MONTI

Pineapple .

15 '/. -o • .
. Can

: co''
I o\J~

1O-lb1. And Up

3 $109

16-oz.
Cans

:~li

SWIFT'S ROY ... LIIOCK
F~OUN U.S.O ..... IN5'lCTID

Young Turkeys

sge

:
:

I
1
I

"'""

II

Fresh
Cauliflower

\L~··"

~J,E

:

Head

:

!lilT IIlli Ctlii'IJURD lliUDDITlOtlll
"ltllSI tEICliOll' TKIS ITEI I
liMIT ONE COUP'ON P'U F"MilY

-

_... • •,.~.,
tl

~ ~ ~ •"
II..,.... fi&amp;TI I tiiUI TUU

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

e,rc)TIM6'-..S

OPEN
24 HOURS
ADAY

AMERICAN

~

~OVI I'ItlfMOI.'

ICIQGtl UO•l iotA' A
JUU VAitfff 0' Wlli. .AU IUIIIY\
AVAI.A-.1

PftlOINSTANT PRINT t Hl UPOSUIU )

$579

FlO lEN MIS . SMHH'S

$139

PumDkin
Pies.
IO~NET
Margarine ..

Kodak Film .... ... Roll
KROGER

Gal .

0. 5 %Lowfat Milk"'c",::'c

l lU IE

.

26-o•$129
Pie

QU.Ulllf\

l-Ib.
.. Pkg.

59C

•IOGI• 111 NU I 'I\ lOWtAT Mill
GAl , ....... 04tJ'\.AifiC CTH
, , It

FRUIT B"SKH5 OR

'hc.-pt Cleo. . ktu r &lt;le~ t.Aiolllltl'll Ill hi'O\ ''"'"'
"l or,..t HllohHI Willi• ,.,lpllur 71~ ll~111u•
C ....•I•IIOII &amp; W lltlsm oon

ROUND TOP KIIOGU

Fruit 5295 Sl295 White3 20-o•$109
Bowls
To
Bread
,...
•o11 GJn.w._.;~~·o c"•'"""s

Poinsettias ........

FLOIIOA TANGilOS 01

'~::~

$399 "c•unff• M k
$399
o ee a er . lac~
99
For$1 Piu~h Toys ..... Ea}4

16

I

·~*:*-:**'**'*
IIGGEI

Larp 72 Slu
NeVIl .,.....

Slll

BIGGEST

liMN U Silt

liiiYII Orefteet
Do•

S]88
AVAILAill ONlY IN stOlES WITH DIUDEI'TS .
HOT fOODS AVAILAIU 11om TIL 7pm OAILV

UIVIi 20·30 PIOPU

Connolueur' 1
Choice
,AITT TIAT

Roast Beef,
Peppered Beef or
Comedleef

$2995 S399

ll!KII
SlZI

II'LA(l VOUI II'AifY flAY OIDII 24 HOURS IN ADVANCE at

Fresh
Broccoli ..... .. ..

th• Party 'ood Centar In ovr Kro. .r 0.11. Pick "'P your order
the day of your parfr . lu•t anoueh In o4¥onc• of tarvlng to It
¥OJill 1M fra1h ai\CI ctellclol.fl. lamemMr . you'll lind many oth•r
fOOd thlnt• .. HI and drln6c for your party-·olt buclget·prlced
at Kropr . Wa do tha wolit- ·you h•v• th• fyn I

ClfOWID MAM 01

Cooked Salami .

I

I
I
I

89ci

·-------·-··········

Dos .

without

ch.
1n the me&lt;ontime, the U.S. Department of Energy decided to belp fund
13 reg1onal Univers ity Coal
Laboratory. or UCL. projects in the
United Slates. The Legislature told

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

++ +

COLUMBUS, Ohto 1API " Kep
Benny Bonanno, D-Cleveland. ha'
called on Gov . James A. Rhodes to
take quick action to bring an rncl t&lt;&gt;
the Cleveland teachers · stnke .
He told the Republica n ~overnu1
in a letter Tuesday that 92.000
students of tt.e slate's largest sehoul
district

universities, t o pursue cool resear ·

Constant buzzing
in ear

still s ubject to revbiort and corn:'l'-

even now the economy was
recession .

lht•

t.dl cd t~ni 1 ~ \dt l' alt: d th&lt;Jt lht' /'l'
1\cnild IJt.• ,1 prof.-...., . . Htlliil atll' lllpt on
l ht· lllil\ cw\ ltft•
d lld Wt ' sl~Hil'd

Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 .• Wednesday. Oec . 12. Hl79

lb.

I
I

I
I

�16- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1979

~~1i~()()()port-PomJer~oy~,O=·=·==~~=·Dec
:::-1;2·:197::9~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .

funding
approved
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR )
Division of Civilian Conservation
has been notified it will receive
$962,000 !rom the federal govern ment to operate the 19110 Ohio Youth
Conservation Corps (YC C)
program .
'This allocation means Ohto will
remain one of the largest single
operators of a state Youth Con servation Corps program in the
COWitry," said OONR Director
!Wbert W. Teater.
The YCC Program is ad ministered nationally by the Forest
Service of !be U. S. Department of
Agriculture, and the U. S. Depart ment of !be Interior .
· Ws progcam will provide summer joba lor more !ban 1,300

Store Hours:

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am -10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 15TH, 1979

yO\tlgsters next swruner," said
David D. Franklyn, Chief of the
Division of Civilian Conservation .
About 7,000 youths have worked with
vee operations in Ohio since 1971.
To be eligible lor !be 1980
program, applicants must be·age 1~
by JWie I, 19110, and be no older than
age 18 through August 31, 19110.
Recrultinent materials and a pplication !onns lor the 19110 program
are being distributed to all Ohio
secondary schools, Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services orlices, county agricultural extension agencies
and local community action
organizations.
vee participants are selected
through a random computer
program operated by !be federal
govenunent at Falls Church, Va . Individuals who have previously attended a vee program are not
eligible to return except when
chosen as a youth leader by the
camp stall.
The vee Program operates two
lour-week sessions during JWle,
July and August . Workers may live
at residential camps where they will
stay the entire !our-week period, or
may commute from home to work
sites. Those attending residential
camps will receive about $302 plus
room and board, and non-resident
campers about $372 lor !be lour week period . Typical projects perfanned by vee work cTews include
trail construction, land reclamation,
timber stand improvement, erosion
control , wildlife habitat improvement and development and
maintenance of
recreatioiJ\&amp;1
facilities .
Campers also participate in conservation education programs WJder
!be guidance of experts in the environmental
and
resour ce
management field.
Deadline for applying for the l!!lll
program rs Saturday, MBrch 15,
1~. Applications should be com pleted according to !be instructions
on !be form provided and mailed to
vee Selection Office, P.o. Box MO,
Falls Church, Va . 22046 .
Applicants will be notified in early
April whether they have or have not
been selected. Instructions are
provided concerning camp assign·
ments, reporting dates and other

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

C

SUPERIORS

SLAB BACON ............~ . &amp;9

$} 99

TYSON FROZEN .

FRIED

CHICKEN.~~~:-....

$} 49

USDA CIIOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST........:~-.....
CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS ..........~!,.~.1
$

CENTER CUT LOIN

PORK CHOPS........... ~;. ..l

29

39

SLICED

SAVORY BACON ......~,.59

¢

detalls .

Mayor's

FLORIDA

TOMATOES...............~:.39

~ourt

apparent crackdown on
speeding is Wlderwa y in Pomeroy
according to a record C1f hearings in
!be court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
There were nine defendants involved, all charged with speeding .
Eight of them forfeited bonds and
!be ninth appeared on the charge.
Forfeiting bonds were Randy Ran·
dolph, Pomeroy, $30; Jeffrey E .
Dllniels, Middleport, $2S ; Perry K .
Hill, Racine, $30; WllliamE . Eskew,
Dexter, $19; Don Harper, West
Columbia , $30; Kenneth E.
Longstreth, Langsville, $37; James
A. Thomas, Pomeroy , $30; David
Huston, Syracuse, $40. Fined $30
and costs on speeding charges was
Yancy E . !Wush, Dexter .
.Motorists Inclined to have a
"heavy loot" had best lighten the
load a bit as they drive through Middleport according 'to reflections
from the records C1f the Tuesday
court d Middleport Mayor Fred Hoi·
!man.
Twelve motorists were cited to
coort Tue8day night, all on speeding
charges and aU 12 forfeited bonds.
The defendants include Wimlliam S.
Duncan, Point Pleasant. $34 ; Ronald
L. Humble, Greens borough, N. C.,
$28; Dennis Lane, Route I ,
, GallipoliB, $30; Mark C. Gard, Route
1, Middleport, $34; !Wger A. Carson,
Middleport, $27; John J . David .
Route l, Albany, $27 ; Roger G .
Tabor, Proctorville, $29 ; Robert C.
Brown, Route I, Galli polls, $27 ;
Clarence A. Patterson, Route 2,
Gallipolis, pI ; John M. Fultz . Middleport, $35; Michael EUioll, Route
3, Gallipolis , $35 ; Dorothy A.
Badgley, Route I, Racine, $28. The
ooly other court action was lining
Bob l&gt;ugan, RuUand, $50 and c JSts ,
on a disorderly manner charge .
An

LDW TAR • MENTHOL
LOW TAR . FILTER

Only 9 mg tar
In the new crush-proof
purse pack.
9 mg"rar: '0 8 mg nico11ne av per crg arette by FTCMet hod

Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smokmg Is Dang erous to Your Healt h.

,

e

VALLEY BELL

2% MIL K...........~;.;. .~.}69
NU-MAID

LIBBY'S

FLAVORITE

170Z.l/S}
ggc
GARDEN PEAS.....
ICE CREAM ........~~.:.A.~.
C OUPON

COUPON

DUNCAN HINES

HUNT'S

CAKE MIXES

oz. 3/$200 ...
: .f

.

18.5

'

~

... Ir

CATSUP
JLB.
CAN

GIANT 44 OZ.
. .I~

BOTTLE

99¢

1

C O UNl N

·'

TIDE DETERGENT
39
49 OL

$}

�19 ~ The Datly Sentinel. Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 ., Wedn esda y , Dee . 12 . 1979
18- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednesday, Dec. 12, 1979

'i f f\lf.\.ft lfi)'\l ~ TH~T SCA~MBLED WORD GAME
'-S /~ (.!lr;.!J . by Henr1Arno d a no Boo Lee

DICKTJ:tACY

.

~ ~

.Your Best Buys Are }"ou11d in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
I dlly

1.00

1. 25

Zdlys
3 c:Liya
lday•

I.!ICI
1.10
3.00

1.110
1.25
3.7S

X RAY TECHNOLOGIS T
- Immediate open ing for a
full tmie reg i stere&lt;J x ·ra y
tec hnologist
Generalous
salary , excellent fringe
benefits . Apply to D i r ec tor
of
Personnel , Plea sa nt
Valley Hospital, Valley
Dr1ve , Point fJteasant, wv
255.50 . An Affirmative A ction -EQual
Opportunity
Employer

PRO U DLY
AN
NOUNCING tusr in time
for Christmas. On a per

manent basis we are now
selling
a ll
A ladd i n

EM't:J wont over the mJnimum
1~

wordl iJ 4 cents Jll!r word per
dl!y. Adl runnil'li other than con-

Kerosene tamps, heaters

Je('Uti\le days .ru be charged at
U..l day rate

and replacement parts at
10 pet . l ist . Stop and see the

many

In memury , Cord cl Tb&amp;nlu

beaut i ful

Mountain

and Obituary · Br-ents per 11r0rd,
$.1.00 minimwn. Cash in ad·

styles .

Leather

and

General Store , 104 106 W.
Union St ., Athen s Open Ill
8: 30 beginning Dec. 10 .

.vance.
Mobile 1-kme sales and Yard
&amp;Illes llf"t 8L'Cel)ted onJy with
~~r~lh

WANTED MIOATCUTTER
Manager , ~pply C&amp;E I GA
Grocer)! , Richland Ave .,
Athens.

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 ·00. Factorv choke only .
Corn HOIICMI Gun C lub,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Soy Scout Troop 249 .

IS WtRI ar Undtr
Cuh
Ow'ge

cash

Help wanted

Notices

Wanted to Buy

PA GEV I LLE FREEWILL
Bapti st Reviv a l begi nn ing
M onday , Dec. 10. 7.30 p .m .
Re v
M er li n
T eets ,
Evangelist.

order 25 cent charge

for ads carrytrlf! Bo1 Number ln

Care of The Sentinel.

The Pu.bliahcr ruenes the
right to edit or reject any ads

CH 1P WOOO. Poles ma•
diameter 10" on larges t
end . $12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Del ivered
to Ohio Pallel Co .• Rt . 2,
F'omeroy 992 ·2689.

__ ______
,

d~emed

object ional.
The
Publl.sher wt1.1 not be responsible
for more than ~ incorrect in-

GET TOOAY ' S MARKET
VALUE FOR YOUR GOLD
OR SILVER . CONTACT
ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP , MIDDLEPORT .
OH .

.tertion.
l'tolne !192-1156

NOTICE

OLD FURNITURE, ice
ooxes. brass beds , iron
beds, desks. etc .. complete
hOuseholds . Write M D.
Miller . Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll m 7760.

MUSIC LES SO N S Begin
n•ng guitar and trumpet
Qpen1 ngs on Monday 4 00
7 30, starting 1st of year
Ca II 997 5693

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

WANTED : SAW
logs
Payment upon delivery to
ou r yard , 7· 30 t o 3 :30 w eek
days. Blane" HardwOOd s,
SR 339, Barlow, OH 678 ·

P AY 111ghest pri c es
poss1bl e for gold lind si lver
co•n !). r•ng s, jewel ry , etc .
Contac t Ed Burket t Barber
Shop , M •dd leporr
1

Moo day
Noon m S..tunl.ay
Tuesday

~80 .

A NTIQUE S ,
FUR
NITURE , glass , ch i na .
any th ing . See or ca ll Rut/1
Gosney . antiques, 26 N .
2nd , Middleport , OH . 992
3161

Wu Fnday

•r

M

ATTENTION ·
(I M
POR TANT TO YOU ) Wdl
pa y c ash or ct&gt;rl lli ed c heck
fo r ant iques and c oltec
t •ble s or en t i re estate s
Noth •ng too la rge . AlSo,
guns , pockt.&gt;t watches and
co•n collect•ons . Call 61-4
767 3167 or 551 3411

tlw day l)efore publ•catwn
SUnday
4P M

Fnday aftPmoon

Notices
MEI GS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY 'I'll
6260 . Pet s available tor
adopt ion and i nformation
serv .c e
ln vestigat •ve
Agent

OLD COl N S, pocket wa r
ches . class rings , wedd i ng
bands, d1amonds. Gold or
silver . Ca ll J . A . Wamsle y .
742 233 1. Treasure Ches'
Coin Shop , Athens , OH 591
6462

Lost and Found
LOS T
LADIES wedd i ng
r ing and gloves a t Syracuse
Mef hod•st Churc h, parking
lot
or L eta rt Fall 5
Ce metery . Phone i992 ·S279,
Russ Morr is

NO
HUNTIN G,
no
trespa!&gt;sing w ith no ex
cept ions on my property

Judy M cG raw Self .
·-

BUYING US SILVER coins
dated 1964 or before .
Paying top price . Call
Brown 's, 99'2 ·5113 .

BUYING
U .S
SILV ER
COINS DATED 1964 OR
EARL IER
IA N Y
AMOU N T) DON ' T LOSE
MNEY . SIMP LY PICK UP
T H E P HONE AND DIAL
614 992 5113 . BROWN ' S.

GUN
SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ON LY RAC I NE
G UN CLUB

----

ANT I QUE POCKET wal
ches . W il l ing to pay '&lt;&gt;P
dollar . Call
1-592 2973
evenings

--

G UN
SHOOT
Ra c i ne
volunteer
Fire
D e pt
Eve-ry Saturday . 6.30 p m .
A t their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke guns onl y .

COMMOOE and tank . 991
2201.
WANTED TO BUY . used
golf clubs . Golf balls
regu lar S19 doz ., special
$14 .95 . 985 3961 .

FOUND : fema le terrier
dog , white with black spots.
head , ears . Almost 9 or 10
years otd . M eigs Jr . Hi g h
School. Midd leport
992
3760 .

BAILEY ' S SHOE S will be
c losed
from
Dec . 25
Through Jan . 1.
- ·- -WANTED . PIANOS for
Pomer oy Health Care Cen
ter . P lease c all 997 ·6606
between 9 a.m . and s p .m .,
ask for Mr . or Mrs. Zidian .

LOST 20 gauge automa t ic
Browning shotgun between
Robe r t
C unningham ' s
res•dence and coon hun
ter' s on Snowba ll Hil l. lf
tound , con 1ac f Doug Hen
sl ey , Syracuse

Mobile Homes -Sale
1972 L YNN HAVEN 14x65 3
Jed room
1970 Vindale 12&gt;63 wilh e•
panda, 2 bedr .
1970NewMoon 12K603bdr .
1973 Skyline
12&gt;55 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2bedr .
B &amp; S MO B I LE HOM E
SALES, PT PLEA SANT ,
wv . 304 675 4424.

LAFF - A - DA
....:....:Y~_

'l'ii ·
__.

1,

._ _

_r

:~
1 i · ' ill i
1 \.L •. ... -1· 1\..l, J

--

'\11 .,
•ltl 'L ;·1 ... I

R; ,

1

11' , ~
· • n,L · r,

C( •
,. ")!Jl~ ·

~.~

,r

L

•

'·"'~

, [

P \.

?' · ~

·-cJ - .:_

J' y

I

- 112&gt;60 HOLLYPARK with 8
/ tt . exp.ando . Lot . Com
)pletelyfenced and other ex ·
tras . :ll4 n3 ·5544 .

-- '" .':J ==:::::==:::;==Services Offered

t h. uh · It l•)nks likt• mom

For Mobile Home

n ·al h mitd a l u&lt;; !ha s tnnt'.

lmurance.

You"ve ~P(' Jlt . 1 h 11 ( ii1111H '
and nwnt•y plt"klllg t1 U!

yo u r spt.·( ifk nn. . ds . ~oy,
get the~ in ~ uran( · r to
matt·h .
C OV t'f l le"W

t

1r

H AVE
VACANCY
in
)rivafe home for elderly
)n ty . Boa rd , r oom and
aund ry . 992 6022 .
No
dri nkmg atlowl"d .

Help want,.::.
ed
, ___

IUIJbiJ C h ( Jlllt' lh,U III C:t' t ..,

We 'II

IS

CARR IER N EEDED in the
Po m eroy area . CALL THE
OAILY SENT IN EL . 9'12
21S6 belween 8 :30 and 5. 00
pm

L15t""d

m o bilt· h tllllf".., . Y41H &lt;an
evt"n ~t · t 't ' &lt;l~i 111.tl n ·n tal
or L'Otnmt·n ·l.tl 11\ ... u r: nHT

WILL DO housec lean ing
one day a week . 9,.9 2655

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW , English
dnd Western . Sadd l es and
harness.
H orses
a nd
ponies . Ruth Reeves . 614
698 3290 . Bo rdin g and
R1d ing Lesson s and Hor ~e
Car e prOducts
Western
boots . Ch ild r en 's S15.50.
ActultSSJq 00

PO SI TION A V AILABLE
M LT
(A S C P
or
£&gt;Qu•volentl to r part time
employmen1 at fhe J ac kson
Count y Branch of Ho lz er
Med •c at C lin ic L1d
at
We llston . OH . Sa lary c om
mensurar e
with
ex
penence E xc ellen1 fringe
be nefits. Apply in person at
the Per sonnel Office of
Holzer Clini c Ltd ., US
Roule 35 at SR
160,
Ga ll ipo l is, OH .

C OVt"~t·~ .

we-·n '" ht ·n · wht ·t• \'t•tl IWt 'f\
us f11 r .nuhik lu inw 111
surauc c. Conw tu tlw p n1
fessumal s h 1r 1ht• spef'ial
polky to lit your spt· ~· ific
n eeds.
DOWNING -CHI LOS
Phone 992· 2342

0.

RISING STAR
Kennel
Boarding Calll67-029'1

POODLE
G ROOMIN G
Judy Taylor 614 367 7'120 .
HILLCRE ST
KENNELS .
Board ing , at I breeds . Clean
indoor outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registere d
Dobermans . 614 446 7795 .

PUBLIC AUCTION SALE

Saturday, December 15tn

Auto Sales

1:00 p.m.

1976
C H EV R O LET
MALIBU . 6 cyl. . P .S .. P B
Only 51600. 949 2660 .

Duncan F de d i ning room ta bl e. cha1n and c h 1na
. closet. large v1c toria n fing er car ve d couch . woode n
tea server ,
Victorian fi nge r cor ved wa l nut gen
tlemen ' s chair , Eastlake uphol ster ed chair, ?
Vlc1orian rose back carved parlor chair s. octagon
walnut table, Italian -black marbl e st a nd . Ch ip
pe ndale mahagony secretary b•rds ~ y e c lawfoot, 12
inc h world globe , ser v ant pu ll llo we r ed l ~p es t ry . old
child 's desk and cha1 r , bul let . lh r ee c 1ece bed room
set . extra nice har p back c hai r , book case w ith g las s
rront and adjustab le shel ve- s. blanke t c hes t toot eo .
Chippendale dinmg room c hair . double magazine
rack , old, all wood steam er trunk , f lat trunk .
Noritake chi na , many pieces . BavdrJan cups an d
aucer s, green granite coffee pot , brass f loor lamp
with paper s,.,&amp;de . "- ep tor centerpi rce . r oyal
!copenhagen cu p rt nd ·. ~u&lt; ...-.,. :.. r'yS i itl ~ t c m g lasses.
!alh·er hllir brush set. many ot her ite m s too numerous
o list .

1979 JEEP CJ5 . Low
mileage, 6 cyl . 367.0102 bet
ween 9 a.m . and,. p .m
SHARP 197 3 Nova Hat
chback, whit e witt1 black
inter ior , $900 . 7A1 7460

For Rent
COUNT RY M OB IL E Home
Park , Route JJ , north of
Pomerov . Large 1ot s.Ca tl
992 ·7479
3 ANO 4 RM furnished ap·
Is . PhOne 992 · 54~ .

T HRE E
BEDROOM
nome
ne a r
mobile
Pomeroy and Middleport
992 ·5858.

Wilbur C. Dickson , Admim strd tor Spantial E!.tate
Sale wil t be he ld at 507 ( ho n filp r D• iv~
. Upper end o t Point P1Pa s ~r 1
WAT C~-' ~c~tJ
Au ction ~&gt; t:&gt;r

Ho w .-t • d

\!G "~

'

TWO BEDROOM apt , 1
bedroom a9 t . 1 k.1d ac
cepted . No pets , no d:-unks
Furnished, uti li tie s pai d.
J lf2 mites south , Mid
dleport. Rt. 7, John Sheets .

l·h~u\ley

Term s : l.&lt;:lsh or ci.~· ck w.tt-- pos1tiv e I ~'
Clip &amp; Sa•e· thiS Ad!

;
'

.............,

. . + - - - -- - ·

.

.·

...

WALK E R T YPE hound for
gentleman o wn er Ma le Sl
Bernard , bro wn, wh i te,
bla c k , home 1n c ountr y,
ma le Bo xer type, 1t tan
w i th black muzzte , femal e
2 mothers ; 1 terri er type
with 4 pups . 1 English set
ter with 8. LOOk ing for
owners for dogs . H umane
Soc1ety wilt pla ce puppies.
Shoh, w ormE'd . 992 6260.

·- - -- - -- --=-==

TWO ORGAN tiger kittens
looking tor a home Grey
and whit e striped Humane
Soc iety , 992 ·6260

For Lease

BUSINESS BUILDING l or
least . Former
Warner
Beauty Shop. Appro• 1100
SQ . ft Call 992 ·2117 or 992
1518 after 5 p m

A
TOY
Man c n e ster
chi huahua and 5 pupp1es, 1
female , ,. males . Hum ane
Society wilt place after
weaning . Da schound type
fema le
with6 puppies
wait ing tor a home . Shots
and wormed . Human e
Society, 992-6260 .

· For Sale
COAL .
LIMESTO NE .
sand , gravel , ca lc i um
chtori&lt;:re , fertilizer , dog
food , a nd all types of salt .
E.celsior Salt Works , Inc .,
E . Main St . , Pomer oy , 992 ·
3891.

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .•
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford, WV, 4
miles above
Pome roy ·
Mason Bridge .

EMERGENCY
POWER
alternators own the best
buy W I NPOWER . Call 513
788 2589 .

HOUSE FOR SALE behind
Jones Boys . l5500. Call 304
273 · 50~ . Sharon St ark .

HOU SE COAL. lump or
stok er , will oel iver . H2 ·
2183
APPLES - ROME beauly
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for
apple butler . Call 669 3785,
F itzpatri c k. Orchard , SR

689.
'

HOTPOINT

NEW THREE bedroom all
electric home , over 1 acre,
nice kitchen,
garage ,
disposal and dishwasher ,
washer and dryer hook -up,
ca rpeted except k itchen
and bath . Near Langsville
a nd
min es .
5~3.000 .
Raymond Ha tfiel d, 7-42·
28 19.

ilnd

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

HeldQUilrters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK

PHONE 742-2003

w. Carsey
Mgr.
Phone 992-2111

~Jack

GLASS FIREP LAC E doors
with black
f inish
plu s
tubular grate wifh blower ,
l ike new . Asking SlOO. Call
992 7866 .
CHRISTMAS
TR EES .
St , Rutland 9 a .m . t o
5p m
M~in

F IREWOOD for sa le . 985 ·
3567 .
LUMP COAL, S39 per ton .
Del•ver ed . Call a ny tim e .
992 7 126
MAYTAG DI SHWA SHER .
avocado green , t op loader .
Excellent condition , S60 .
'l'f2 7126.
WHIRLPOOL GAS dryer .
Good working condi t ion .
992 3920
REDUCE SAFE and fast
with GoB ese Tablets and
E vap
" water
pills" .
Nelson Drug .
TONY LAMA. ACME and
Di ngo boots, M 1ler w es tern
wear, H Bar C and D ·C
shirts, Resistol hats . Buy
t het cowboy or cowoi r! i n
yo ur 1if e the latest in
western boots, hah and
shirts
for
Christmas .
Mountain Leather and
Gener a l Store , 104 106 W .
u nion St . At hens . Open til
8 30 Monda y Sa tu rd ay .
CHRI STMA S TREES Sc ot ch p1nes , spr uce and
whit e pine, 5 ff and up .
Po inse ft •as large 4 bloom s
or more, t.J 39 each Grown
lr esh
1n
o ur
own
greenhouses Fancy fruit
baskets in .t convenient
sizes . F resh bulk Christ mas ca nd y tn 17 varieties .
Fancy citrus fruit in ·
e luding
Florida navet
orl!l nges ,
fllngernie
and
ta ngeloes . A lso, orc tl ard
fresh apples Nuts. manv
ot11er fruit s and veg etables
We sell rete i t or wholesal e
to
non - profit
a na
organizations . Qu a n t i ty
discounts available . Call
for pric es . Bob ' s M a rket.
Ma son 713 ·5121 . Open daily
8
t0
8.
BOY S' Ne w hoode-d sweat
shirts, SA 88 . New blank et
remnants , S5.99 . Bailey 's
Shoes, M iddl eport
CHEST TYPE freezer l 1
years otd 15 cu ft EK
ce llent c ond it ion . 99 2 5181
orm 78.41 .
1

PORT A B LE POWER plant
on 110 votts , radial saw ,
acetylene
tor ch
w i th
gauges, 12 gallon churn .
742 ·2223.

MOUNTAIN LEATHER
and General Store invlte-5
you to stop and see our
many oift items . Long
lasting gifs with special
meaning t or tne wtlole
fami ly Chi ldr en 's books . to
otd t• m e shav•ng suppti t&gt;s,
1ewelr-y , pottery , lef! tt1er
goods a nd western ooots ,
hats and western wear . 104
106 w. Union , Alhens . O~n
!i ll8 : 30 Mon . Sat.

I

Roger Hysell
I Gnie

H. L WRITESEL

ROOFING

1 1 mile

off Rt. 7 b y pa ss
on St. Rt 114 toward
Rutland ,

All types roof work. new
or repair gutters and
downspouts .
gutter
cle•nint and pamting .
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimate-s
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 -286 2
11 ·1,. mo .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
A I so Transmission
Repair
Phone 99 2-5682
A

NEW LISTING 2
bedroom frame home in
Tuppers Plains . Kit cnen. dining room , bath
and
full
basement .
$23,000 .00
RACINE - 6 112 acr es
w i th n ice 3 bedroom
hOme . Uving room ki f ·
chen , bat/1, L ·shaped
family r oom . laundr'f
and storage . Sell price
SJ'I ,600 00
ACREAGE - 3 65 acres
on St. Route 143. sells
lor 510,600 00
HYSELL RUN - A lit
tie over 7 llcres with 2
bedroom home . Lots of
possibilities w ith thi s
one . Call for more i nfo .
Asking 52 3,500 00
MIDDLEPORT
Laroe 9 room home on
Locust St . Sell i ng Price
$25,000 .00.
POMEROY - LOvely 3
bedroom home on East
Maln . Only 525,500.00.
ST . ROUTE 143 - 1969
New Moon trailer witll
5112 acres . Sells for
515,000.00
We need listings . If you
are thinking of buying
or selling, give us a catt
tor friendly, courteou'
service.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742· 2003
Velm• Nicin,ky, Anoc .
Phone 742 ·3092
George 5. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker 992· 5739

10 ff &lt;

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

Federal Housing &amp;
veterans Admin. Lo.ns .

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.
HotJrS9 ·1 M ., W., F.
Other times by appoint ·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Win ·

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

r 1 u . .,.J_
. ,.
"

. ' ... .........
~

.

.•-

'"

I I I:"'""""
I .....,.....,
I j

PIANOS

l?REArfl

Great Christm•s Gift
Both New &amp; Used

PETE SIMPSON

~A C

K UP
A N D RUN
THAT BY
U~ A6AI'-Ii

Sale' Rep . For
sundins
Hammond Org.iins
Tyree 81-.d . Racine, 0.
.
h
i
0
~hone 949-2118 eveings
aft er s p.m. weekenos
after 12 noon.
11 ·19 · 1 mo .

WHY T HE E!\RI:::&gt;E
A ND GROOM D ID N' :

I_D TI+-(T?"'&lt;j:"1

CAPTAIN EASY
~T H E FOLLETT Cl4.\ ,6RA \.. E

TH4T 5- \.\H \. HE
D I 5 .~PPE AR. EC':

t;OMPMN) I~ R•rr~ :-,:- WITH
"- E 6 T- A N D~~ 0~5' ~ 1.-""'~D

B:.JT T HE &gt;"I Q ,, , ...::

J WEf' Hl5 "5HIRT

~OOkS ARE S~...-""'

TtJEl~S:

V\ E ~5E[l

u;:; AR" ,t.,!~,

MCrO L "- ' E~E R
GOT Wi ~ E ~

VHE MAR~IE D

SO

\\R?, FOLLETr

WHE~

THE

o\ND 5- TAI&lt;TEP
MO E\
~''~EY INTO THE
P OU R1~6

C ATCH I H E i f&lt;:
'TRAIN,

B'R~l _L~

MOB CcUED IN·
Y.OOO C WA5 1'-1
1!&gt;113 TROU~LEi

COMPA /...Y

"Jo w a u ar1ge rne orcled le tte- s 10
lo rm t ne surpr•se ans we • as sug
geslec Jy the aoo,.·e, anoon

Answer THE CI.IC0 G0 T o.:::I.:lliJ

Real Estate for Sale
THE FARM ot the late Her
bert H . Lowther in A thens
Co., OH . is being off ered
for sale by his esta te . It is
situated in Sec t•o n 14 , LOdi
Town ship , with subs tant ial
frontage on two pub11 c
maintained roa ds. and con ·
sisting of approx. 128 acres.
There Is an old farm home,
i n need of repair , a large
barn in oood condition and
several outbu i ld i ngs . Ther e
Is some timber on the
property and a substantial
part of the ta nd is t i llable .
All mineral rights ate
being so ld W1lh the proper
tv . I nquiries to L Alan
Goldsber-ry , E &gt;Cec u tor . Box
661. OH 457 01 Te lep hone
614 593 3347

WIL L HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also . l i me hau !i nQ
and sp read ing Leo Morr is
Tru cking . Phone 742 2455

·= = = ' ---c - ~­
Real Estate---for Sal- e
FINANCING V A FH A LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PUR CHA SE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE .
71 E . STATE . ATHEN S
6145923051.
T HREE YEARS old, 3
bedroom, all electri c hom e.
nice eat -In kitchen , ov er 1
acre. car pet and v in y l
floors , garage an d stora gE'
bu i ld•ng , wash er and dr yer
hook up . Near Langwillc
m ines S41.000 Ray mond
Hatfield . 742 28 19.

l'&lt;&gt;&lt;.te•~a,..,

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
Roofing , gutters, •net
downspouh .
Free
Estimates. All work
guaranteed. 20 years e• perience . Call Athens,
collecl, Gerold Clork
797--4857 or Tom Hoskins
7?7 -2745 .

~ _

l'"-' ""~'':"'~"'''"-~c, ,'

12 71mo .

- - .~·.,) -

PAINT I N G AND s~ n d ·
blast ing . Free estimates .
Ca ll 949 2686 .
DOZER . END
L oader .
b rust1
hog
Wilt do
base ments , ponds , br ust1 ,
l• mber , tdnd clea rin g .
Char les Butc her 742 29.40
SEW IN G
MACHINE
Repa •rs ,
sent•ce ,
all
make s.
992 228-4 .
The
Fabri c Shop, Pomero")l .
Authorized Singer Sal es
and Service We sharpen
Sci ssors

~Oswald Jacoby and Al an Sontag

Clever low-level bidding

~ ~

TWO HOUSES In
Middleport . Live in one,
rent the eth er . Both
nouses remode led in
side. One ha s 3 bdr m s ,
the oth er ha s 1 oedr m .
Located on Powe ll St at
lower end of town
MODERN HOUSE wilh
3 p lus flat ac r es dnd
Oh io R iver frontag e.
Th is house i s welt built
and nicely kept . S--42,600
HOUSE WITH busi npss.
building in Reedsville
Garden spot plu s 2 cdr
garage . House has 2
bdrm s. Asking S25,000 .
LOOK 1N G FOR a house
'fOU l ike in your price
range . Why not build to
suit yourself on one of
the 2 50 acre lot s on Rt . 7
near
Ea5tern
H igh
School? Each lot $6,000 .
34 ACRES
Silver
Ridge Rd . across from
Eastern H igh
Many
building si tes . Se ll p ar t
or at I .
$16,000 - 3 bedrm . Jl ·.,
bath tra iler . Expando
living rm ., underp1nned ,
well water . Ohi o River
frontage on Rt 124 at
Long B ottom
52,000
One acre
building site or i nstall
trail er .
Ci ty
water
available Just off 681
near Reedsville, 0 .
Phone
Virginia Hayman
985-4197

216 E. Second Slrett

.,

• .·\ K ~ ~

• fi 4 .11

+ K l..J
WEST

"

'

• l iJ R ~

• i.J J 7
• 92

00 0

ANNIE

II 4

+ .J HI 7 ~

•K J"n
0

t

EA., T

+ 9 B fi .1

t &gt;H

+ .J H ~ ~
SIJl Til

11: S
···ARE ALL lHfSf
OIL Wf US 'rOJR'S

wow·'

I WFCE'NTLY

1 MUS T ,, ClOT 11 J=OR A SONG
HAVE COST A
O,CT !_.!Al l Y. Tl-1E S E WE lLS
1

B()uGHT THIS Fif-LD.
ANNIE .

'OR Tll'!f' , -' ARE ALL DfAD

~ ()ADD'!':;--

OR SO

LOW . PRr:5CXJCING IT'S
NOT W~ T H I.I.IORK IN G

-----~ ·--

21 •1 ACRES - fv'odern 3
bedroom home , e lec
baseboar d hedt , d r i lled
well on hard road near
Rutland . 5% down
MOBILE HOME
3
bedrooms . '1 full bath s,
equipped k1 t an d fur
niture . 718 of an acre
near Harrison ville
4 ACRES - On Rl 114
Trailer
l2x60 , smalt
building and .2nd serup
Go -c:art spot , garden or
playground
S% DOWN - 3 bedr oom
home on L inco ln Hts
Bath , gas t urn ace , ba se
menton high lot . Birch
kitchen .
$1,000.00 DOWN 3
rooms, l 1h ba t hs , 4
bedrms. and over 4
acres ot land 1n good
repair and possession on
deed. Ohi o Powr and
T .P.
Water .
Dishwasher , 5 c losets,
and out of hig /1 water
Barga in lor 520.000 00
INVEST
IN
REAL
ESTATE FOR YOUR
CHILDREN 'S
FUTURE.
IT
HAS
PAID OFF BIG . CAlL
992-3325 or 992 ·J~76.

Housing
Headquarters

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING POR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS 5%
DOWN .
608 E.

JUST LISTED - Beauty Salon - Fully equipped ,
ready to go. Includes two working stat1ons and 5
rooms, bath . Cold drink machine, etc . A money
maker In good loc . in R~ ic ne. Priced ats25.000 .
NEW LISTING - Trailer &amp; lot In Racine, 3 BR , all
crpeted, front porch wllh awning, wooer underpinn Ing, also Includes pool lor the chlldren. Anxious to
sell . 111.000.
TRAtLI!R - 2 BR on peaceful sldeslreet, all equip ·
ped kilchen inc tudlnOdinelfe sel . Must sell. 510 ,500.
NEW - WON ' T LAST - A yrs . old . 3 BR . bath &amp;
utili t ie-s , k l tc henw d ishwasher , D . R w slld in gglass
doors to patio, on nearly 3 r... acre . Ca r pe ted in
beautiful tas te . S-44 ,900.
MINI FARM - Beautifu l brick bi-level with 3
bed rm ., targe li vi ng r-oom with fireplace . Total elec ·
tric and fully Insulated . All hardwood floors . Base ·
ment covld be finished tor extra liVIng quarters . At ·
tached garage. 3 large hot houses and many extras
on s acres . Loc . close to Ra~lne . Alkl~g $63 ,500.
N!W LISTING - Nice 3 BR home, extra l~rge LR,
equi pped kl!., washer, dryer, full l)fsement, centro I
air, br.ezewey leading to oarge. Well cered for
house has many e•rras, several fruit rrees of dl l
ferent varieties &amp; nice garden. See to appreciate .
Very nice locati on in lower Syracuse on St. Rf . 124.
Pri ced at S63.900.
CHEST~R - -4 BR home , hardwOOd floors , large
L R, family rm • oarage , outbuildi ng, fru it trees i'lnd
garden spa ce. ASking$.48,900 .
FAMILY HOM E - Lots of possibilit ies wi t h this
ni ce 2 $tory Many features , cen tra l air , buitt·in a p
pllances, all carpeted, OOOd i n-.estment with several
nice blldl ng lots. On approx . acres in the cen te r
of Racine . Ask1"9154,000.
Sl2,000.00 - GOOd 3 BR. all arpeted home c lose to
Pom~oy&amp; Middleport. Loc•tfd on l'q acres .
LOT$ OF LOTS - From I to 75 a~rts, bordering

MAIN
POME"OY, 0.
NEW LISTING
1
story frame , S room
house, 2 bedrooms, lots
of
remodeling .

no,ooo.oo,

N!W LISTING 6
rooms, 3 bedrooms, b~y
window, full basement ,
garage ,
hardwood
f l oors ,
larg e
lot ,
$26,700.00
NEW LISTING - Ren
tat proper-t.,. , 3 apart
ments, always rented ,
large lot, real mane,
maker , does need some
re pair . $8,000.00.
NEW AODITION
Now home about l'h
y~afs, 1111 acre, bu11t ·in
kitchen. dining room, 3
bedrooms . 2 bMhs. ,
garage, ell carpeted,
many other fea tures
$4A ,800

PomeroY.

·

6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR, dlnlngand utility room,
kll. equipped w ·stove ~no retrlg. MOI!Iy carpeted,
torced air oas furnace, 1 yr . old Gar•oe. e complete
trailer hOOk up with nat. gas tap and septic can add
Income . Over 1 ac r es $79,900 Ca ll f or apoo. ntment
Just off Rt . 7 be low M irkt iPnn;..t

WANT TO SHL? - lill/1:. UJ ;.
~ AlL

W\L&amp;.

JI MMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 9" ·2JII
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE

i

•••·26s.t or ut-~591

....

~

.....

;.,

AUTOMOB I LE
IN
SURA N CE
been
c an ·
c etl e d?
Lost
you r
operat or 's t•cense ? Phone
997 7143

r.Ji &lt;HllOIHf S

+Q
HiJH? YOO BOUGH"T I HA · HA' DO YOO
A DEAD OIL FlflD, \ REMEM9E'R THE S f ORl'

·~- 7 WHY?.'

"T HEM .'

OF

9 AQ91i 4
t A K 10 &gt;
+ A6 3

ANNif ?

Vulnera bl f' Both
Dealer Sou th

'

)

We!i l

:-ouuth
19

+

Pass
Pas..s

:l

P&lt;t ss

3t

l 'a""

Pass
Pas!.

~ •

l'd :--:0.

ti

l' dS"

2

2.

l'a-.-.

+

••
••
;, :-.T

.

I' d-.~

+

"

AU.EY OOP _ __
DID YOU ~ "'--L) l d N LY n -1 Al , THE
SAY O UR
HAT(t-.4 L it-JI ,S A ~ t
EGG S ARE:.
MO.TUR ING AT AN
~TCHING? AlARM ING RI\TI: '

1

~

GREA..T bCl N lUS

1

~lOW COUL D T ~ f\1

BREAKD()Y.JN IN THE S U S ·

IJ\I'PEN W ITH TH E

PEND'ED ANIMA\ ION

SA.FEGUI\RDS.

·'

SYST EM WE SUSTIIJNED
DURING THE LA.ST
MET EOR 51-lOWER .'

Bv Osv..ald Jaeoh\
arid Alan Son tag ·

ARE '&lt;OU All

l S USPECT IT WAS THA.T

SOLUTELY SURE
ABOUT THE EGGS,
S ENC&gt;I'-K :'

h1s

son
h

1 1J U ~I ra t f'S 'f'\"N &lt;t )

theon

h P rf'

!h d f

O n f'

(Do }OU have d ques r1on t or
the e•perfs? Wnte ·A s k rne
E - oer rs ·· care of t h1s ne wspa .
per lndJvrdua l aueStlons ....- dl
tlt:? ans werea ' ' accomponter1
D}
s rampeo
self-Jaarflsseo

Pnvatopes

Th~

most mte rest ·

:ng qoes rrofls w 1/l be used 1n
rh1S column and ..,.,.i/J recerve
cop1es of .tAC08Y MOUERN !

[want
to qo

! don't want

to be a

Where 1s l,lOur
home, dear?

heme 1

Shopp 1nq

by THOMAS JOSIPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Maine city
I M!.trtna

Walt. I thinlo\
40u'd better
f 1nd the
manaqer'

s1ghts

S Apostolic a I

10 Oli ve genus

Fa1r4 an4-

II l.asl nde

more t

2 IslamiCdt•lly
3 Pr&lt;t y
4 F ood

ve lu cle
IZ C&lt;mfederat e
13 Printing

gaff es

for Fil cka

5 Anto l nrttt'
,\word

Yestrrday·s Ans"'·e r
14 Forme r chess 6 SwiS S r1v er
IMPartner
champion
~ Hallelujah
25 Frenc h
nvrr
15 F. Krlud e
H On horse ru. ck
nf wear
9 Was fault y,
2i I X&gt;vou Lm:s s
16 VeK
l l .lt' opardl7.e
a s d fou t·e t
liiJkean
22 lli etn c h
28 Kmgl v
29 Fl&lt;-~vu rlr s.s
II V &lt;i l ~nt 1 m'
Apnl d~ :
23 Aro rna ltc
1

WINN IE

MY WEOOING 60WNi
:

'

. /

./'

20 Pol itical

PLEASE ... FOR OLO
TIMES'SAKE/

.
\,)
.

t.

\~

.../ ;

Sp i&lt;T

24 Ca lu 1 d own

cartoonist

s i a n~

H lln
:15 SEA." an
peopl e

21 Foxx
of comed y

, . . . -,. t' e·

.

s vrn t&gt;t •I
15 l '&lt;t tf iS h

l9 Y ou . G(• r

T R Y •T ON i::&gt;ARLING .

22 Imbroglio
23 B1t

.

~4

Partner

of carry
25 Pulveme
ZAi F.ye

Ba y

eleven
30 VIva,

Mano lete •
31 Wrath

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

BARNEY

32 Hire

M'{ MAN SNUFFY
A IMS TO KEEP
TOASTY WARM

33 Hea vy

HE'S GOT HIS
THER MY - S TAT

35 Ner onian

SE T fl.T

gar b

140 PROOF

THIS WINTER

36 Wnte
37 U.S.S R

~nd UP

SALE ON ALL

the

~.'H4

Zl Gree n

Cash &amp; Carry

1n

spade kee ps· th e b1ddmg lo w
Act••ally . tw o c! ubs l .'i far

BS.E
CO N STRU CT I ON .
Remodeling old homes and
new roofi ng , spouting , root
re pa ir Dr-ywall , hang and
l int sh, leKture Concre te
work of al l kinds , block,
br ick , ti le, etc Plumbing
repair
and
new in ·
st al1 ation , plast ic , copper
galvanized Call 742 2445.
Bob Patterson , Ed Sick

'4"

bac k

Jun

Os·.o.;ald . s1t t 1ng :\orth
re!:iponded tw o rl ub!:i 1n ~ t e.:uJ
of on e spad e Then• ts a fa lJ J .
L' IOU S

EHI'H I \ ~ . ~&lt;..,-..,"\

a h&lt;Jnd b1d rt·al\\

IS

fine po 1nts of b1 d d1ng

S &amp; G Carpet Cteanang .
Steam
c l eaned .
Free
es timate
Reasonable
r a tes
Scot chguard . ~1
6309or 7472348

SAVE ·oN~1~1PET'
DRIVE A ..lm.E
SAVE A' LOt

thl' dtam nnds hreak :~ - 2 Then
he '-'pr ra rl hr s ha nd As lPng as
hr d 1d not lead d th i rd t r um p
th l• r ~nl v lrl ~ k hl' (" ou ld !r1:-. 1'
\l.uulJ ~;e W e~t"s h1 gh tru111p

well by Oswald Jarobv and

A&amp; H Uphotstenng , across
from the Te:..aco Slat•on in
Syra cu se 992 37AJ or 991
3752

PIANO
TUNING , Lanf
Daniels New phone num
ber . 7A2 1951
Ser vi ce to
schools and home s•nce
1961

Wht·n OS'.I. &lt;l ld w~nt tu f 1ve
di am onds. J rm kn f" w that hf'
was ~ h u wr n g four ca rd d1a·
mo nd support and a lso wa:-.
1111 \1.
llldrked w 1th not mo re
lht:~n f lnt' hf·ttrt \1a vh.· t ht!re
w-; a grand s la m .i11n\ f 1n'
011\rum p w J~ th t•1r l41rn1 of
_!:(ra nd sla m fon ·p to ask how
gn 1~d lu:-. f&lt;H ht' r s d i&lt;Hnfm ds
'.l.t'rt' St x rlu hs saa rl thn wt.&gt;rc·
ba d
·
.11m won th P c luh lea U dnd
r a s h l:' d h 1s ace-k 1n g n f
di il.!!JCHu..J s He lll:'ed~d \ 0 hJV(·

\t""\A.)I '·H· t-:H t-.-...1

Here
S IX II E'S

ELWOOD
BOWERS
R E PA l R
Sweepers .
toas ter s, 1rons , al l small
appl i ances . Lawn mower
Ne•t to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3815 .

__j

Opentng lead • 9

I N STOCK for i mmed1ate
de livery var ious s•zes of
pool k 1t s Do 11 you r self or
let us insta ll f or you D .
Bumgardner Sales , tnc
992 5724 .

BRADFORD . Auc t1oneer .
Complet e Serv1 ce Phone
949 14.8 7 or 949 1000 racine .
Oh10. Cr i rt Brddford .

ll\i lrf' ltkt·ly t o k(· •·p thl· b1d ·
t.l1ng ltJv. T hu~ o .... v. &lt;tl cl ..., &lt;., p r ·
ond h1d o f I lA"II -.. p:.Hh'" lc•fl th~·
ht d rl1n ~ ;,t lh(· t 'w\.1 1 1(•\p] v.lth
ol! fou r SU I!:-. shuw n .J H1 1 cou ld
nu w
ht d t hrrf' cluh:-. ,wd
I I ~ W .:t]d !hrN• dJ a n HHl d S
.!11 11 '- four -dtdm11nd h1d Wd S
it fn r i"P R;. tht o., t1 1n e t ht p&lt;
HI
rwr :-. h1 p W i.lS on 1b W d \ " 111
~ ;.J m L· 11r hr glwr llsv.ald r;u uld
f1nd 11o h•' tt f' r hr d than fl vt•

~UHTH

EXCAVA T ING .
dozer ,
loader a nd bac )(hoe work ·
d ump truc ks and 10 boys
fo r htre . w i tt haul f i l l dirt .
to p ~oil, l1 m estone and
gr avel Cd ll Bob or Roger
Jett er ':&gt; , d ay pnone 9'-/1 70M ,
n1yht p hone 997 351 5 or m
5132 ..
H OWERY AND MART IN
Ex c avating ,
sept 1c
system s, dozer , backnoe .
Rt 143 Phone 1 (6141 698
1331 or 742 2593

l·~j

Dt·c·. I 2

BRIDGE

llUllAPP~E&gt;. ~~m~e:. 'l\aMPPL5
11-\E.f&lt;S 00 SI\TISF'(I~ 'bu -z

A i 2 RAIS"- IfJ
1g74 , 11- l If..\ '7b
Af..\C- AW0n1BI&lt;
of, 2. U6 T '{fAR I

Zl::.r~ I IH

V•Jt rl l I' "· •nl'o1 ', l u· h ·n l .\.frJ I ~.; r 1 •~•· • :
I 'I l l • '•''' ' · • · ··!~
, • ., l+ •!PI J t l 11 1", •· 1'

BORN LOSER

LhPS .JJST REVIEv-: M1 ( i..llv~b )

I HHt.IH

t , HA/r

Ans we •

l'iJ 'iS

ERA MERCER
REAlTY

r , h/lt,

1umo ~r ow

.luPlOie&lt;,

"" ( 1/1 1(

Wt· dnrsda~ .

lake

38 Imtable

I

39 Unemployed L-l-.1.......1.-1....--

[)AJLY C' RYPTO(! l!OTE -

Here's how to work

It :

II

·9~~u&gt;

GOOD REMNANT
St.LtCTION
6'xl2'to

12 ' ~16'

$3800

and up

Call 742 ·2211 ·

RUTlAND
FURNITURE
R Ulland, 0.

~

PEANlJI'S

L{OU THINK IT
WORKE~

I. 0 N G F [ I, I, 0 W

One l etter Simpl y ~ la nd s ror another In this sampl e A is
ust-d f or t he thre e I."&lt;&gt;. X f or thr two o ·s. r ic Sin gl e l etters.
apos t rophe s. t ht" len ~th :1nd forma t io n nf 1he wo rds are all
hmts E ac h tb} t h e co rl e l etlf&gt;r s are d iffer ent

lnstalledwtth P•d Free

HUH. SI R~

THAT'S GREAT. IF ~
BOWIN '{OUR !-lAIR
6 0T 'f'OU A · c f'LU5 '
I'M .\LL FOR IT

U!f.JAT AK'E '1'0!!
GOING TO WEAR
7
TOMORROW. 51R_
___,,...

;','&gt;\

I'RYPTOQUOTES

A!71711'w

ANOT~ER

BOW !

T Z

QY W

IRJ\ ' VW
f E 0 W

I.WQQWV

FRTKF

QR

JVRJWVDI,

XKH B

WSW VI

JDEI

IR N

U

VNDW.

J.E:Vl.EVE
HRVUEK
Yesterday's Cr yploquote : I HAVE FORGO'ITEN WHAT IT
W,\5 TilAT I WAS TI•Y!NG TO REMEMBER .- MURIEL
HUKF.Y~&lt;.R

~ ·sA Crowd 3; Tic Tac Dough
!'! . Mdtch (Jd me PM 6 : News TO ;

Newlywed Game 13 ; Love
Amer i ca n Style 15; Sanfo rd &amp;
Son 17 , Di ck Cavett 20,33 .
30 - Cou ntr y Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6. Joker ' s Wild 8 ; The
Judge 10 : Family Feud 13 ; Wild
K.n gdo m 15; At1 In The Family
17 Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20,33.
B 00- Real People 3. 15. Eight Is
Enoug h 6, 13; Young Maverick
a. 10. Gr'ea t Performances 20,33;
Upst a1 r s, Downstairs 17.
9 00 D lff ' r en t
Strokes
3, 15 ;
Char lie's Angels 13, National
F 1nat s
Rodeo
6;
Cou ntry
Chr1 s1mas 8, 10. Rat Patrol 17.
9 lD-John Cu rr y
Dance on Ice
10,33
9 30 H e ll o, larry 3 , IS ; LeK O:
Ate)( a n d er Toradze , Pian ist
10,33 : NH L Hockey 17.
10 DO- Best of Sdt urday Nigh t Live
3, 15. Vegas 13 . Crystal Gayle
8. 10 . New s 20: S1mple G1fts : Six
Episo des for Christmas 33 ;
10 30-- Bes.t of Groucho 20
1' 00- Ne w s 3. 6.8.1 0, 13 , 15 ; Dick
Cave tt 20 ; Wode house P layhouse
33
II 3D- Tonight 3.1 S, t..ove Boat6,13;
You r Turn Letters to CBS 8;
A BC News 33 ; M ovie "Pen·
dutum '· 10
17 00- Bia ck SheeP squadron 8;
M ovi e " Th e Woman in White"
II
12 40~ Ba relt a 3: News 15 .
1 10--·Hdwai• F 1ve 0 8: I : 50- News
13 ; 2 2o-- New s 17
7 2s- M ov 1e " The Fuller Brush
G •r l" ' 17 . 4 70 - Movie " Gun
Fur y '" 17

THURSDAY . DECEMBER 1), 1979
5 4) F arm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL
Club 13
6 00-700 Club 6.8. PTL Club 15;
Hea lth F 1e ld 10 : 6 10-World at
L arge 17
6 30- F or You Bla c k Woman 10;
New s 17, 6 45- Morning Report
3. 6 50 Good Morning Wesl
V• rg i n1a 13; 6· 55--News 13.
00-- Tod a y 3. 15 . Good Morn ing
Ame r 1c a 6. 13 . Thursday M.arni n g 8. Batman 10 ; Three
Stooge s. L• tHe Rasca ls 17 ; 7 . IsA M Wedt her 33 .
)0- F nmdy A ffai r 10. Big Blue
Ma r ble 33 . 1 55-Chuck Whi le
Reports 10
8 00 Ca pt Kanga r oo 8, 10; Family
Alfa 1r 17 Sesame St 33
8 3G- Rom per Room l7 : 9: 00--Bob
Br aun 3. Ph1l Donahue 13,15; Big
Va ll ey 6 . Porky Pig 8 ; One Day
A• A T• IT1 e 10 , Lucy Show 17.
~ j Q Bob Ne ...... ha r t 8, L ove of Life
lO. Gr ee n Acre s 17
10 oo--ca rd Shar ks J, 15 , Edge ot
N •gh· 6 Bea t the Clock 8,10;
Morn.ng Milgarine 13, Movie
Tr •ple Deception ·· 17
10 JO Hollywo od Squares 3, 15 ;
An dy Gril fith 6 ; Whewl 8, 10.
10 55- ( AS Nt:'ws 8, House Call 10.
t 1 ()(} H 1gh Roller-s J, 15 ; Lave rne &amp;
Sh1 r tey 6 13 Pr 1ce 1S Right 8, 10.
11 JO Wheel at F o rtune 3. 15;
F.:unily Feu d 6, 13. Sesame St .
70 Nov a JJ
17 00 N e w sc e n ter
3.
New s
6 8 10. 1) M •ndreaders 15 ; Love
Arner•Lan Style 17
li Jl}- R y,:, n s Hope 6. 13; Search for
Tom orr ow 8. 10 . Mov!e " One
Des•re · 1l E lec Co. 20,33 .
I 00 Days Of Ou r Uves 3, 15, All
My Chil dren 6. 13 . Young &amp; ~he
Res l less 6, 10
JO A :. The World Turn s 8 , 10;
] 00- Doc lO r' SJ : One Li te to Live
6 1) 7 ?5 New s 17
JO Another' World 3. 15 . Guiding
l1 q hl 8 10 G•gg lesnort Hotel 17 .
J 00 Gene-rat Hospllal 6, 13 ; l Love
Lucy 11 Mas terpiece Theatre
10
30 One OC~y A t A T i me 8 ; Joker's
'.~\~lid 10
l-l1 nt stones 17 : Over
E ~sy 33
J 00 M •ster Cartoon 3: Password
P lus 15 M f'r ·.; Gr iffin 6, Beverly
Hillbill•es 8 Sesa m e St . 20.33;
Milt •on Do llar Man 10; Real
M cCo yr;, 13 Spe ctrema n 17.
.1 JO
Bewitched
3.
Petticoat
Juncl1on 8. Tom &amp; Jerry 13;
Mf'rv Grd l .n 15. Gilligan ' s Is . 17.
) 00 I C'eam ol Je annie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son a M 1s ter Rogers ' Ne ightJorhoo d 20 33 . Mary T yler
Moore 10 . M y Th r ee Sons 17 .
30 Carat Burnett 3 ; News 6;
Gome r Pyle 8. E lee Co. 20 20;
H.=tpp y 0 d "(S Again 13 ; 1 Dream
of Je dnnie 17. Doc tor Who 33 .
6 00 N ews 3. 8, 10. 13, 15 ; Ca rol
Bu rne ll 17 , Zoom 20: The Long
Se a rc h 33
6 30- N BC New s 3.15:A BC News 13;
Ca-o l Bur ne116 . CB S News 8. 10;
Bob Newha rt 17 , Over Easy 20;
T1c Tac Dough 8; Ba xters 6;
News 10. Newlywed Game IJ;
Love A mer ican Style 15; Sanford
&amp; Son 17. D ick Cave tt 2(),33.
30 - H ol t ywood
Squares
J ;;
New l ywe d Ga me 6: Joker' s Wild
8 $100 .000 N ame That Tune 10;
Nashvill e on the Road 13;
Counlr y Roads 15; A ll In The
Fam• ly 17; MacNei l Lehrer
Repo r ; 20.33
8 DO- Ja ck Frost 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Sh .rley 6,1 3: Wa llons 8,10 ;
E ·ven•ng al Sym phony 20; Movie
·· r a m m y Tell M e True'' 17;
State We' re I n 33
8 30-- Benson 6.13, Spo rts Close-Up

s...

JJ
9 00

AXYDI.BAAXR

IN SlOCK

Television
Viewing
ooi

lJR.AAL 1

Hammond Oraan~
&amp; Famous Name Brand

CALL 992-7544

10 19·1 mo .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

NEEDS
LOTS OF
ROOM ?
tn town ,
large k it chen , formal
dini ng room , li brary ,
screened
por c /1 ,
fireplaces , paneling ,
car peting ,
o ne
of
Pomeroy ·~ most elegant
old.-r homes priced tar
below market \lalue .
l58,900.00 .
MANY OTHER PROPERTIES TO CH6oSE
FROM ... WE HAVE •
WHAT YOU WANT OR
CAN GET IT .
REALTOR
Henry e . Cleland Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dort te TurnN
742 2474
Jean Trusell f49 -2UO
Office m -ns• IV'

[I NCCQ

HER

•Answe1 '&gt;

Real Estate for Sale

APPLES
Cl DER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or ·
c hard, Sta te Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesville , 669·
3785

lour ord,naf)o word s

Business Services

Aluminum Siding

FIREWOOD FOR sale .
Now tak•ng orders . Will
deliver, 742 2056 .

Yard Sale
YARD SALE
no w
in
progress thru Saturday .
Corner College and Th i rd .
N ear pool . Christmas
items 992 5655

MA~E

Giv! away __

O_l)p'!Y_

WANTED TO OWN and
operat e
vending route ,
Pomeroy and surrounding
area . Pledsant business .
High profit items Can start
part t 1Me
Age or ex
perience not important
Requ i res c ar and Sl495 to
~995 c a~h i nvestment . For
details wr ite and include
your phone number : Eagle
Industr ies. 7515 Wayzata
Blvd ., Minnesapolis , M inn .
55426 .

~ ·

- - - - - - - --

/

~us i ne_ss

Ur'1Setaf"Tlble th ese lour JumbleS
nre •ene1 to eac.., square to !Qrf"Tl

P POS E SHE IS A P EL A T IVE
OF YOUR LON G~Q EA D
ADV ERS ARY SHAKY:~ SA YS T f5S
T I I..;T DOESN'T AlJT•DNIA'n c:AI_l Y

Bob Hope 3, 15; Barney Miller
6, lJ . M ov ie " The Last Hard
Men " 8, 10, Sneak P revi ews 33 .
9 3o-So ap 6.13: Camera Three 20;
Danc ing Disco 33 .
10 00 - D ean Marlin 3, 15; 20·20 6, 13;
Civ ilisation 17;
News 20;
Soundstage 33.
10 : 30- Hocking Va lley Bluegrass 20.
11 00- News 3,8, 10, 13, 15 ; Last of the
Wild 17 , Dick Cavett 20; Fall &amp;
R •se of Reginald Perrin 33.
11 30-- Tonighl 3. 15: Pollee Woman
6. 13 Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
M ov 1c " E sc ape Me Never" ll.
12 &lt;0--Baretla 6, 13; News 13; 1: 15Banacek 8.
: 40--News 17 : 1.45-Movle "Prince
of P ira tes " 17 ; 1: -..News 13.
3 2o-M~v le " Serpent of the NIll"
17: 5:1 5---Untouchables 17 .

�20- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday . Dec . 12, 1979

•

$72 million rate zncrease may be appealed

Defense begins presentation
•
m Columbus bomb trial
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP) - Two
d. plotting to bomb a
ICboolattend«&lt; by the daughter ol a
fecknl judge were expected to
leltlfy In their Ilia! after the defense
began Ita presentation today.
Meanwhile, the !I"OSecution planned to wind up its case in U.S.
Dillrict Cow1 with the remainder rl.
IDI!II accuaed

lestlmooy by Terry

Dilloo. the

n.

NOTICE
CENTRAL TRUST CO.,
MIDDLEPORT, OH.,
WOULD LIKE TO INTRODUCE TO

I
i

i:

THE PUBLIC OUR NEW BANKING
HOURS.
EFFECTIVE DEC. 13th, 1979
MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY9AM TO 3 PM

:•

THURSDAY &amp; SATURDAYS
9AM TO 12 NOON
FRIDAYS- 9 AM TO 3 PM

•

f
:

~

••
•:
•••
:••
•••

i•

•••
••
•••
••
••
•••
•:

BURLEY RESULTS
IUPlEY, Ohio IAPJ - Tobacco
brought an all-time high average
price Tuesday of $149.81 per hWldred
poWJds at Ohio ·s burley market .
Sales totaled 101,822 poWlds for
$152,538.16.
Monday's average was $148.56 .

WINNING NUMER
CLEVELAND ( AP) - The winning nwnber picked Tuesday in the
Ohio Lottery's daily number game
was 727.
The lottery reported earnings of
$188,315 in daily game Tuesday.
Computer tabulations showed sales
of $296,829. Holders of winning
tickets get $110,514.

Weather
Periods of rain tonight and Thursday. Lows tonight 35 to 40. High
Thursday 40 to 45. The chance of rain
near 100 percent tonight and Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST
By The Auoclated Press
A chance of flurries ID tbe north
daUy Friday through Sunday.
Partly
cloudy
eloewbere.
Seasooable temperatures with
blghB ID tbe low to mid 3GB north
to mid tOs south. Lows ID the 2Qs
Friday lllld Saturday and In the
teeus to low 20s Suuday.
&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;.· . ·.·.·.·.·.· .... '' :-:.·.&lt;:::::

:

i

All Departments Will Be Open

!
..................................
For Friday Evening Hours.

w

w

~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

ift deas for the

_

.......[lllllloo~-

SPECIAL
SALE
PRICES I
Furniture-lrd

Furniture
·3rd Floor

WOOD

A SHOP THAT HAS EVERYTHING- The SandE
Gift Shop located in Syracuse, entrance is off Dusky
Street. has everything. H you are In doubt what to buy
that special someone - you can find it at the S and E
Shop. They have jewelry. watches, figurines, stuffed
animals, jewelry boxes, velvet pictures, knives, radio

County Court
Twenty-nine defendants were fined and 10 ~rs forfeited bonds in
Meigll COWity Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Walter Bradshaw, Gallipolis,
$10 and costs, improper left turn;
DelbPrt Manfold, Kent, $25 and
costs, hunting on lands of another
without pennission slip; Louis
Thompson, Springfield, $25 and
costs, failure to tag dead deer;
James E. Price, Jackson, Deborah
J. Collins, Gallipolis, Michael Bell,
Gallipolis, Vemon Otto, Reedsville,
and Terry Dunham, Parkersburg,
$IS and coots each, speeding ;
Timothy Adams, Pomeroy, $150 and
Cll'its, 11robation, DWI; Robert
Haverty, Mineral Wells. $15 and
costs, speed; Joseph C. Bonghner. I.
Wooster, $100 and =ts, engaged in
hWJting after using temporary tag,
$2S and costs. tagging the deer of
another taken illegally; Joe C.
Bonghner, D. Orville, $100and costs,
taking an anterless deer without
anterless pennit, $25 and costs, failed to tag deer; Bennie Stumbo,
Bidwell, $170 and costs, overweight;
Bobby Clark, Dayton, $25 and costs,
hunting deer after legal hWlting
hours ; John Tyree, Jr.. Middleport.
SS and costs, driving WJsafe vehicle;
Clarence Robson, Murray City. $100
and =ts, failed to tag dead deer,
$2S and costs, failed to take deer to
tagging station; Glen R. Bissell,
Long Bottom, $25 and costs. shooting
from road. $25 and costs, hunting
deer with vehicle.
Clifford Hall, Syracuse, $15 and

ROCKERS
Bent Wood Rocker

Rocker

- Framed
Beveled edges ,

- Assorted si : es

Deluxe

in Rocker .

SAVE 20%

SQUAD CAllED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Pine Grove at 7:57
p.m . Tuesday for Mrs. Kenneth
l.awson who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

costs, failure to yield; Warren D.
Hart, RuUand, $35 and costs. failure
attach temporary tag; Timothy T .
Thomas, Pomeroy. $10 and costs, no
headlights; Robert Tyree, Rt. I,
Middleport, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; Jack Stivers, Pomeroy, $150
and costs, three days confinement,
license suspended 30 days, DWI:
Michael L. Triplett, Rt. 2, Pomeroy,
$50 and costs, faiure to stop after accident; l.aren Dale Cox, Northup,
$19 and =ts, WIS8fe vehicle; Daniel
E . Turner, Roosburg, $25 and costs,
hunting without permission; Daniel
J . Hoffner, S. Charleston, $100 and
costs, harveting doe deer without
anterless permit; Michael R.
Florence, Belpre, $50 and costs.
reckless operation; Paul Reeves,
Albany, $75 and COflts, 30 days confinement, two years probation.
Forfeiting bonds were John A.
Dutko, Belpre, Earl F. Grandin.
Portamouth, Darold Armstrong.
Chester, L. Johnson. Franklin Furnace, Herbert P . Schottlance, South
Point, William P. Wheeler. Procwrville, and Bruce Blackston,
Pomeroy, $35.50 speeding; Gregory
L. Haning, Rl 2, Albany, $3:i.50, unsafe vehicle; Wilbert J. McClain, Rt.
3, Racine, $35.50, no operators
license, $360.50, DWI; Kathie Filsinger, Columbus, $37.r.:i, speeding.

w

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC. 11
Mrs. Rodney Bot!8ll and son, Jeffrey Chevalier, Marie Clonch, Randale Dailey. Amy Elkins, Janis
Hampton, Francis Higgens, James
Hood. Brenda Johnson, Bertha
Kingery. Seraphine Kokines, Susan
Leonard, Eric McKinney, William
Miller, Scott Morgan, Parrish Pendley. Mrs. Charles Pratt and son,
linda Pugh, Hazel Richards, Ruby
Roberts, Homer Roos, Ann Saunders, Christy Wledeback, Nadean
Wolfenbarger.
BIR'111S DEC. 11
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Nolan,
daughter. Patriot.

SEEKUCENSE
A marriage license was issued to
Randy Lee Riffle. 23, Pomeroy. and
Robin Annette Dugan,l7, Pomeroy ..

your

BRING THE CHILDREN
TO SEE SANTA ClAUS

WED. THRU SAT.
6:30 To 7:30 P.M.

S~wt o, IAITIIH tor (.hr''''"'' · N'
Otl Of! our lfl!llr@ 110&lt;11: o111mp~
(.IMIO~t trOITI floor IIITIP1 . IAblt
••mp~ . dt11&lt; l.l""P' · P••no 1AmP1 •nd

finishes.

$119.00
$169.00
$189.00
Reg. S249.00
Reg . $319.00
Reg. SS50.00

Sale
Sale $151.00
Sale $199.00
Sale $256.00
Sale $440.00

HOLIDAY SAL£

BRINGTit[K"iDs--1
TO SEE

SANTA
6:30-7:30 P.M.

WED. THRU SAT.

J

20% OFF

I

-

-' '\

!

'I

~----~~~~----

\'

I

ALL-IN-ONE
Oller not ovoltoble on 18 Hour Ughts" (styles •2•20. 2•2•. 2•221

SPECIAL CHIRSTMAS HOURS MON .-SAT. 9:30A.M. TIL 8:00P.M .

ELBERFELD$ ·IN POMEROY

Sale ends January 5, 1980

L--~~·~·F..r~Ch~ri..tma~·s::;:h,,.p~inl(·~·--~r.____ E~~~ERFELDS IN POMEROY
J

ON STRIKE - Members of l.ocal 1587. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, at Imperial
Electric, Middleport, have been on strike for three
weeks. The local seeks higher wages, contract
language changes. and insurance benefits. The old con-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY . DECt.MBER 13. 1979

tract e1qured Nov . '1:7. Tom Dorst, president of Local
1567, said the company has failed to meet woth the
meet
union . He also noted that the union is ready
anytime . A federal mediator has been in but no settlement has been rna de. Pictured , 1-r, Mary Roush. Blanche Bland and Tom Dorst.

w

Interested citizens
invited to meetings
1979 record year
LOUISVILLE, Ky . lAP)- The
Krof!er Co., a supennarket chain
in 211 atates, is feeling effects of a
slowdown in the economy but still
expects 1979 to be a record year.
Lyle Everingham, chairman of
Kroger. told the Louisville
Society of Financial Analysts
Wednesday that customers tend
to patrmize retaU outlets which
offer a wide variety of goods woth
one stop.

Third suit filed
CINCINNATI (AP) - A third
suit has been filed in connection
with the crowd crush outside
Riverfront Coliseum for The Wbo
concert Dec. 3 in which 11 persons died and 12 were injured.
ShaWII8 l.ynn Abbott. 20. Cincinnati, seeks $150,000 in a suit
filed WednesdaY in Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court. She
said she was hospitalized for
chest and leg injuries.

MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) - A
Waverly, W.Va ., man died when
hia car collided with a tractortrailer rig on Interstate 77 in
Marietta this morning.
The victim was identlf ed as
Melvin Starcher. 29 .
The Ohio Highway Patrol said
Starcher was exiting the intentate onto Ohio 7 when he apparently ran a stop sign and
collided with the truck

Save 20% on recliners. wall aways, swivel rockers, rock a-loungers and heater /vibrator chairs.

•

Rt. I, Northup, who was employed
as a boilermaker with Union Boiler
Company.
State Police Trooper U oyd Akers .
Huntington Detachment . reported
the accident is still being in vestigated .
Rainey was ap-

Deputies probing B&amp;E

Motorist killed

CHAIR SALE

Sale ~Yl&gt;.UU

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

A 1!1-year old Gallia County man
was killed Wednesday evening when
he fell approximately 110 feet from a
boiler scaffoldin g at the Mountioneer Power Plant Project above
New Haven. W.Va .
Fatally injured was Steve Rainey .

LONDON (AP) - Gold soared
to new highs this moming in London and Zurich as the foreign exchange markets buzzed with
news rJ oil price increases. The
dollar rose in Japan but declined
against most European currencies.
Gold was quoted at $4S7.50 an
ounce in London, an all-time
high, and f457 in Zurich.

Furniture -Jrd Floor

Holiday Sale Prices
on desks for home
and office. Studen1
' desks, secretaries ,
roii·IOP desks and
knee hole desks
L.arge selection in
oak, pine, maple,
walnut and cherry

w

19-year-old Gallia County
man dies in plant accident

Gold up again

SALE 20% OFF

He said the counsel objects to inclusion in the rate hike of anticipated
higher operating costs which may reduce profits. '"This is totally against the
concept of ratemaking under Ohio's Jaws . To be sure, costs increase fr&lt;m
year to year . but so do sales and orders," he said.
Cotleur says the Conswners' Counsel doesn't object higher rates for the
utility. just the size of the rate request. The electric company. which serves
about 445,000 customers m Columbus and surrounding central and southern
Ohio counties. asked for a total increase of $126 million.
Company spokesman Bob Jones says the utility has "mixed feelings"
about Wednesday's commission actoon . He said the amOWit approved sbould
suffice unW the company reviews its revenues and expenses in 1960.
ln related action, the commission saod ot rnay order the utility to refund
some S4.5 million to its customers 1t may have collected in excess of what
was authorized Wider the emergency rate increttse .

enttne

MEETING CHANGED

Furniture
lrd Floor

DESK
SALE

VOL. XXVIII NO 170

The Izaak Walwn L.eague will hold
its regular monthly meeting next
Monday, December 17. instead of
December 24 which is Christmas
Eve. Members who wish to are
asked to bring a $3 gift for a gift exchange .

ELBERFELD$
tfvttttt1 ~115 w to'3tWe!
OPEN EVERY
NIGHT TIL 8

(USPS 145-960)

at

VEI'ER.ANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Maryly
Harris,
Pomeroy; Mary Nichols, RuUand;
Dennis McKinney. RuUand; Paula
Deren berger, Pomeroy ; Thomas
Sayre, Portland .
Discharged-Charles Wayland,
Jack Neff. Hattie Annes, Linda Harper .

LAMP
SALE

MIRRORS

Nostalgia Rocker
Paul Bunyan Rocker
Grand
Catk i n

cars, radios, record players, replicas of Clydesdale
horses, brass items, planters. and many other items
·too nwnerous to mention all reasonably priced . The
shop is open 9 a.m. to 5 p .m . every day except Sunday.
On Friday they are open WJtil 8 p.m. Pictured are, 1..-,
Emmeline Hendricks and Sylvia Zwillirll!, owners and
operators.

Furniture3rd Floor

SALE

"In several recent cases we have been granted re hearings and the result
has been a decrease in rates,·· Cotleur sa1d . For eJ&lt;ample . he said as a result
of a rehearing, commissioners Wednes day also or'ered a $4 .9 million rate
decrease for Ohio Power Co .
Cotleur said the Consumers ' Counsel objects to the mdusion in the rate
hike of half of cost of the utility 's share of the Zinuner nuclear power plant on
the Ohio River east of Cincinnati .
""The corrunission has never done that before. They "ve eother allowed the
entire amount or denied 1t totally ,· · he said .
Cotleur said the Ohio Supreme Court may have to interpret a state law he
says prohil!its rates set by city ordinance to be raised Within two years of the
passage of the ordinance . Cotleur said in that case, rates for Colwnbus
cust(IJlers of the utililty couldn't be raised unW this spring because of a city
ordinance setting the current base rates .

e

SALE
CEDAR CHESTS
Make someone happy with
Christmas gift of a Lane Chest

Th.:- L. 1..n sumers' Coun5el has 30 days to appeal the commtss1on 's dec1sion

•

~

:

&amp;
5 PM TO 7 PM

:

Gerhardts probably would testily in
the trial, presided over by Judge
Joseph P . Klnneary .
Dillon, who also works on the
Colwnbus Fire Department bomb
squad, told the court about hill first
few meetingll with the Gerhardt
brothers , who founded the American
White Nationalist Party .

second police Wldercover agent to
work on the alleged bombing plot.
On Tuesday. Dillon told about his
involvement with defeOO..nts John
23, and Edward P .
W. Gerhardt
Gerhardt. :Ill, in the bomb conspiracy .
Victor D. Morullo, Gerhardt attorney. said he expected to start the
defense this afternoon . He said both

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

COLUMBUS. Ohio (API - The Office of Coosumers' CoWJSel may appeal
to the state Supreme Court the $72 million rate hike granted Columbus &amp;
Southern Obio Electric Co. Wednesday by the Public Utilities Commission .
"We believe the increase was excessive and we're coosidering various
methoda of appeal, including appealing the case to the (Ohio 1 Supreme
Court," said Michael Colleur, the agency's legal director.
Cooswners' Counsel Director William A. Sprately met with his advisers
Wednesday night to map out appeal strategy. Cotleur said a decision oo
whether to appeal the case the state's high couri or ask for a rehearing by
the utilities commission would be made wit tin two weeks .
As a result of the hike, customers of Columbus &amp; Southern face a 9 pet.
rate Increase. The increase adds up a $72 million annual rate hike . That
total Includes a $32 million emergency rate increase previously approved.
The higher rates could go into effect as early as next Wednesday.

WINNING NUMBER
CLEVELAND (AP) - The number selected Wednesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily number game
waa509.
The
lottery's computer
tabulatima revealed eamingll Wednesday of $t48,251. Sales in the daily
game were $300,392. Holders of winning ticketll get $157,141.

The Meigs County Regional Planning Commission (MCRPC) invites
Interested citizens to identify their
major community needs for
economic development, housing,
water suply. and waste disposal.
Several sessions have been
scheduled at convenient locations
aroWJd the county to obtain this

GIVEN llO DAYS
Paul Steinmetz, Sr .. Rutland, was
sentenced to 120 days on the Meigs
County Jail by Judge Charles Knight
on two deer related charges.
Steinmetz was charged with
assisting m taking a deer and
spotlighting deer
His hunting
license was suspended for two years.

citizen participation.
The public is invited to attend the
meeting that is most convenient.
The schedule is: Dec. 17 - Rutland
Fireman's Hall at 3 p .m . Tuppers
Pl81DS Fire House at 7 p.m.
Dec. 18 - Pomeroy Village Hall at
I p.m. Racine Town Hall at 3:30p.m .
Middleport Village Hall at 7:30p.m.
Each meeting will last one hour.
For questions or further in formation. contact MCRP C
Executive Director C. E. Blakeslee ,
1635 Uncoln Heights, Pomeroy 45769
or Tel. 992-2304 .

Weather
Clearing tonight. l.ow in the mod to
upper 20s. Mostly SWlny Friday .
High around 40 . The chance ri.
precipitation near 10 percent tonight
and near zero Friday .

The Meigs County Sheriff's Depar tment is investigating a breaking
and entering of the office trailer
owned by Geupel Construction Company. Col wn bus. contractor on the
Ohio approach to the Ravenswood
Bridge that occurred Monday night
or early Tuesday morning .
Entry was gained by prying open
the trailer door .
Items listed as taken include.
typewriter. calculator. water cooler.
new water pump, two walkie talkies.
camera, battery and a first aid kit.
Items were valued at $810.
l.ewis Miller , Tuppers Plains.
reported Tuesday that a battery was
taken from his tractor at his farm on
Sr . 681 . The theft occurred sometime
Monday evening or early Tuesday
morning.
Sheriff James Proffitt remind&amp;
area motorists that the Ohio State
law requires drivers to stop their
vehicles at least 10 feet from the
front or rear of a school bus that is
stopped w pickup or discharge
passengers.
Penalty for failing to stop for a
stopped school bus is a fine of up w

$500.

Sheriff Proffitt said Ius department has received a complaint from
a bus driver in the Eastern District
An arrest is expected .
Sheriff Porffitt requests that
motorists to pleao;e use ca ution and
be prepared to stop when approaching a school bus .

Buchanan given
honorary degree
James Sauer Buchanan. 851 Ash
Street, Middleport, has been awarded the designation of Knight of the
York Cross of Honour . it was
reported today.
The honorary degree, highest in
the York Rite of Freemasonry, is
conferred only on those who have
held the highest office in each of the
four bodoes of the nte.
Buchanan becomes one of the
comparative handful of a boot 400 of
the over four and a quarter milliOn
Freemasons in North America. the
Philippines and Australia to qualify
this year . Membership os by in vita-

tim wly.

EXTENDED FORECASI'
Fair Saturday and Monday. A
cbaoce of rain or soow Swaday.
Turning colder Sunday aod Monday. Highs In tbe 40s Saturday,
fall.log loto tbe 30s by Monday.
Lows In tbe ZOs to low 3GB Saturday and Sunday and In the tee1111
early Monday.

Buchanan served as Master of
Middlep«rt Lodge of Masons in 1972:
High Priest of Pomeroy Chapter.
Royal Arch Masons in 1967; Master
of Rosworth Council, Royal and
Select Masters on 1966; Commander
ol Ohio Valley C&lt;lnunandery. Knight
Templar, in 1978. He was elected to
membership in Ohio Priory and his
election confinned by Convent
General of the Order on December 7.
A certificate of membership has
been mailed to him .

parenUy working on a boiler around
8:25p.m . when he plWJged to the
ground .
Also investigating the accident are
company officials and the U.S. Occupation Health and Safety Administration.
Ra~ney was the third person killed
at the power plant since construction
began in 1977.

Offer given
50-50 chance
PlKETON. Ohio (AP I - The
president of uruon workers at the
Goodyear Atomic Corp . uranium
enrichment plant says there is a 5050 chance members will accept a
propooed contract to end a lengthy
strike.
But Dennis Bloomfield, saying no
progress has been made on
economic issues since the walkout
began last May. added , "I have
some doubts whether it will fly ."
Company spokesmen said they
would accept the pact, based on
recommendations of an atomic
ener gy
commission
labormanagement relations panel. The
energy commission panel made its
recommendations this week after
two days of hearings last week in
Columbus.
Goodyear spokesman Tim Matchett said although there are paru
of the recommendations that the
company doesn 1like. all WJresolved
issues are covered.
Bloomfied, president of Oil ,
Cherrucal and Atomic Workers
Union Local 3-089. called the recommendations ··good and bad ."
'"The i.ssues we feel pretty
satisfied woth. The economics now
may become a factor . The recom mendations encompassed abaolutely
no improvements economically
from what we had the day we started
on strike .·· Bloomfield said.

Four remaining counties will support SEOEMS
Commissioners of four COWJties
served by the Southeast Ohio
Emergency Medical Services, Inc.
(SEOEMSl yesterday gave their intention of continuing support after
receiving a financial report described as a "turnabout" . The report was
delivered by staff members of the
Ohio Valley Health Servoces FoWldation, inc. (OVHSF ), contract
managers ol SEOEMS since last
mid-March.
OVHSF called the gathenng of
commissioners within a month from
a notice by Hocking County conunissioners that they were withdrawing
from the SEOEMS system and a
week after the Meigs commissioners
had given similar notice.
According to Einon H. Plwnmer,
OVHSF Executive Director. '"it was
immediately asswned by persons
not familiar with the current financial pooltion of SEOEMS that the
loss of these two counties would
cause the demise of the system . This
is simply not true . SEOEMS is in the
strongest financial position since the
end of l!rl~. when it received the last
of its federal funding . We have every
reason to believe it can successfuly
conllnue on a state certified,
regional paramedic service for
years to come as long as responsible
management tools are applied .··
The SEOEMS Board of Trustees
contracted for OVHSF service this
year when mdependent audits
disclose&lt;! the system was approximately $234,000 in debt and a cashflow wa• non-exostent. Many
creditors had been WJpaid for obligations mcurred during 1977 and 1978
and were threatening collection a ~-

lion . The system was within weeks
of being closed down .
The current report presented commissioners giving a summary of
SEOEMS financial position as of
Dec . 5,1979, disclosed that all known
1977 and 1978 bills had been paid and
the obligations for 1979, approximately $80,000, were slowly being
reduced to current status . The current cash-on-lland, or deposit, was
cited at almost $82,000.
Billings for users of the service
during 1979 totaled $390,000. This
figure does not indicate the full use
of the system as several counties
have passed levies of the magnitude
to fully subsidize the service, and in
those CoWlties there is no user
charge except on emeColumbus . Todate, collectoons total 1172.000 and
adjll.'!tments $25,000. leaving a
balance of $193,000 for collection . It
is anticipated that about 75% of the
latter amoWlt will be collected . A
major portion of the amount will be
paid by private insurance of users.
and Medicare and WeUare . Payment by these agencies is notoriously slow, sometimes as late as six
months after claims are submitted .
An additional $118,000 is currently
owned by the six coWJties which contracted for SEOEMS services tho s
year . Commissioners of the two

r..:o unties

withdrawin g

rrom

SEOEMS, Hocking and Meigs.
which currently owe a combined
total of $42.114.32. have indicated
they intend to honor their obliga tions .
Carol Easley. SEOEMS financial
officer and a certified publie act'ounl3nt. noted that the finaacia l rever-

sal occurred more quickly than anticipated by OVHSF in March . She
gave credit to an active collections
policy. monthly payments by COWlties on a more timely basis. the
reduction of finance charges on
overdue bills. and the correction of
many poor mangement practices
which had beset the system since
1976.
Dan Uoyd. assigned to SEOEMS
by OVHSF as the managing director . told the commissioners that in
v1ew of the positive financial report
and assurances the system could
operate on a four-&lt;:oWJty basis that
firm commitments from the remaining four counties would be needed to
gain additional revenue from outside sources. thus helping to reduce
system cost to those four .
··we have had and will continue to
have requests from private
business. non-profit organizations,
and units of goverrunent who desire
to purchase either contract services
from SEOEMS or who desire to
lease the corporation ·s facilities or
eqwpment. ·· he sa1d . ""The most recent. received last week , was from a
regional service in West Virginia . It
is supported by state and federal
fWlds and os just now attempting to
build a communicatons system
similar to that of SEOEMS. which
served as the rural prototype for the
nation . This service is part of a West
Virginia state-wide microwave network currently under installation in
Morgantown, Beckley, Charleston
and Parkersburg. It services six
counties bordering Ohio and Kentucky . and is headquartered in HWItint:tun . So as lo not duplicat e costly

communocaton onstallatoons along
its side of the Ohio River . it os requesting to lease occupancy on at
least four SEOEMS microwave
tower sites and. as yet. an undertermined number of channels .
·•west Vorginia is dedicated to
upgrading its emergency medical
services to the highest type poosible
today . This type is based upon
mocrowave/UHF
radio
com municatons with tel emetry
capabilities. A great number of com munities and regions throughout the
nation are striving to reach thlS

OIL C.O lNG UP
BRUSSELS, Belgium IAPI - 011
MiDJster Sheik Ahmed Zakl Yamanl
!lllld today Saudi Arabia will raise oil
prices even befort oext week's
OPEC prtclng meeting. Another
Arab oll chief said tbe Saudlo and
some other producers plan $&amp;-&lt;!barrel hikes, but be said they would
not take effect untO Jan. I.
U appUed across tbe board by aU
13 oallollll of tbe Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries, Increases In that raoge could add ~ to
10 cents to the price of a gallon of
gasoline or beating oil In tbe Unlted
Stateo .
. . .. " . "

··· ·:.:-:-;·.·

MINOR FIRE
The Syracuse Fire Department
was called Tuesday at I p .m . to the
former state park where a shed on
the pump house was on fire . Cause of
the fire 1s undetennined.

level , a level SEOEMS obtained dur ong 1973. We believe, as does West
Virgorua, that an arrangement bet ween West Virginia and SEOEMS
woll bring financial benefits
both
systems.
""To be able to negotiate these
financially rewarding contracts, the
outside constrctors want reasonable
assurance that SEOEMS will contmue to operate. Income from con tracts such as this will make up for
the dollar support lost to SEOEMS
by withdrawal of Hocking and Meigll
Counties." he concluded.
Attending the meeting were
Athens commissioners Clyde Bron son, Karen Harvey and Max Adkins;
Jackson commissioners Rex Little john, Robert l.ewis and Edward
Michael; Lawrence commissioners
William Kaiser and Mark Malone;
and Vinton commissioners Willie
Hale, John Simmons and Ralph

w

Wortm~n

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="823">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11496">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51521">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51520">
              <text>December 12, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
