<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16111" 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/16111?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-16T01:39:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49236">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e6db2a2b4799ba14cf7a78308873c344.pdf</src>
      <authentication>266a2a4f1e36577620757bd2b769d16a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51552">
                  <text>· ·Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , U., Wednesday , L&gt;ec. 2o.

1~7~

IOib

I

"

Chilean Navy
rescues 100

Great Savings on
Popular Electronic
Gifts Santa May
Have Missed!

•,

'
-

Nova'· -40
by Realistic

•

Powerful AM/FM Stereo Receiver
STA-20000 by Realistic'
75 wa tts Ill ill I ~M ~l per
channe l r:t t 8 11 tm1 s ?0

Save s140

CJ U9 ''

dubbrn~ o~llow s

95

359

1595

f(Jict l ~ l ctr
rnon1c d1 ~ t o rt ron Dual tape

?0 000 Hz

co pyrng

lrom orw l ;=tpe a ec k to an ·

Reg .
499.95

01sco ve r the pleo s u· c o f l)rr ·

utller Dol by ' norse reduc tr on s·ys tcm lowers no1sc

Reg . 24 .95

vale ste reo lrs tenrrg' Re ·
sponse 30-18 .0 00 Hz 33 -993

and RJde·l dS d~· na rTHC range
31 -2084

.._..__. . . ..________.._____.....____'-'--------------t....,
HALF PRICE
Batteries Shack

Component System with Power &amp; Precision!

--

~ ~
~ 23s67

D
23- 466

· Realistic STA-20000 Stereo Receiver

Each
Reg . 34c

·Realistic LAB -400 Direct -Drive
Automati c Turntable with Cover and
$39 .95 -Value Magnetic Cartridge

Long

\I

\\

'\

Save
10°/o

TOY CLEARANCE!

Save 27o/o to 50o/o
Now you can enjoy big
savings at Radio Shack 's
after Christmas toy
clearance. Save on radio-controlled cars and
trucks, "PettablePortable" radios
and more! Hurry
for best selection .
Not all toys are
available at all
stores.

Each
Reg 27c

\

\;,
\.,

\

' d &lt;; llfl (l 1

on Our
Entire Stock of
Color TV Antennas!

Be Ready for
the Bowl Games!
M,a &lt;, t

not

gas 5847

to

M &lt;H1r: rn Rad i( J S ti.J (. I. .., I JWrr US Af
,Jc,flnrJ ('Ualr ty' Gi• l I
d ( tu rr,.:&lt;, to
- 1
flO

YO w
"' loi

6~

97

rrr',t

f-'rp

I 11 1

', ,

. t&lt;-.). m
'd lor r·.t ~.v rn
-..~U mt • \ t·f• Jl l' &lt;-. r• ir ·cJ r(Hl l il•· ••
1 1 ,I
c (II ' '
ncec...,~ 1S · 164D· 16 ·l S ~ ~ · 16 S0 · 16S4

rlrU n

e
(USPS 145-960)

VOL XXVIII NO. 179

.. : .

' I. ~ ' I

'

.- '

•

• .f • -

.. '

•

...,. ...· ':)·_. ,,~ . . .
. ~ . ~
~ . :~.
I \ • '
... ~&lt;.){'!':~·
·- - "·.r'. •....'!j.. .~

'
.'

'

~ .

\

I

y

'. -- .
.l,r,-,i(
..
·.··:..

~~ ....;

·r . .

.r_. ·, .-}

--- "j
~'"""
WORK COMPLETED- Laurel Street residents in
Pomeroy received a nice &lt;llMstmas present in the
completion of a project to repair a wall which had
fallen, blocking all traffic at one point . Piling was

. ...
- ..
.

'

CB-The Ideal Traveling Companion

..

/ w~
·~:-

11 you drrve thrs Wlnt er
be prepared' Use CB to
lrnd ou t road condrt 10ns
avclld L1angerous s11ua
Ir ons !nsta n t rtc u :~s to

.. . !

.

.

'

~·c

.-

' COLOR FILM
PROCESSING

lor emerqency

help &amp; ,nfo 21 · 1S31
I ICJ llh

t 10 llh

10 t

M.,.,, ,,.,, ...
'"'a,rabl~

,, 1.,,

.:tr

H.:tdiO 5hrtr. 11

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
!!lA UIVI SION OF TANDY CORPORA T IO t'

_.

..

'

Oe&amp; l l: ' '&gt;
\IQn •" &gt;oJUI
n o•

.:;' •

•fllUU11

1 ~~ '',:_..;. MAY V AH Y:.. '

)(V&lt;' J '&gt;tt~ l "

''

.' I I \I 'I )'-.tHJI •,

r._____..,,.

ftad.e
lhaek

Offer E ~pi r es Jan . 18

D EALE R

. ._ _ _ _ _ _. .

Nn

1

· '

'' L s roRE c,

j

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THUR SDAY. DECE MBER 27. 1979

SAN DIEGO (API - Two air
traffic control supervisors were
to blame for the near-collisioo of
two airliners over San Diego Nov .
18, an Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration review board has
concluded.
1be five-member FAA review
board said the incident was the
result ol Improper coordination
and judgment by the two men .
The fact-finding group deter mined that jetliners from Pacific
Southwest Airlines and American
Airlines were headed for a head on collision at 350 miles per hour
when evasive action was taken .

Vacations off
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP ) Vacations for all city employees
were canceled and police manned
a third of Kansas City's fire
stations as unioo firefighters
escalated their seven~Y work
slowdown by calling in sick .
. About 114 f1 the city 's 1100
firefighters reported sick during
the day WednesdaY and another
75 called In sick for the II pm.
shift change, officials said.
Police, who had staffed six of
the city's 33 fire stations since
Monday, were told to take over
seven more stations to help
provide adequate fire protection .

TEHRAN, Iran lAP ) - Three
AmeMcan clergymen today urged
compromise in the the U.S.-Iranian
crisis, and a French archbishop said
he expected "clemency " for the
Ameri can hostages even as
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini raised
the possibility of war. The mystery
over the number of captives also
deepened.
1be Revs . William Sloane Coffin ,
Thomas Gwnblelon and William
Howard flew home today at the end
of a three-day Christmas mission
with messages from a number of the
captives to their families and a plea
for conciliation by both sides in the
:&gt;4-day -old standoff.
'1f one side gets a little more
tough it tends to make the other side
a little more tough," Coffin told
reporters before leaving Tehran . "U
one side decides to be a little more
gracious, the other. s1de has the
freedom loj, be a tittle more
gracious . "
The cler~en, who conducted
emotional Christmas Day services
for the captives at the occupied U.S.
Embassy in Tehran, left on Iran Air
night 775 via Paris and L&lt;&gt;ndon and
were scheduled to arrive in New
York at about 9p.m . EST.
During the Paris stopover, the ar chbishop of Algiers , who assisted at
the Christmas services in Tehran
with the Americans, said he found
Iranian authoMtieo and public
opiruon ·1avorable to an act of
clemency."
Though he said he had not

J

driven and apparenUy the street is "now there to
stay". F'undlng was provided by a federal grant of
$432,000 to the Village, a part of whi ch is to be used for
the extension of the sewage system.

Stolen car located,
man hurt in mishap

~

RADIO SHACK HAS OVER 7000 STORES ANr .: £ ALI:: RS IN THE US,.. A N D C ANADA !

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Clergymen urge compromise
in U. S.-Iranian situation

Blame controllers

1~· ~~ .~ ~

.-

(h 9(1'-J

enttne

When he reee1ves his M.D. degree
fr om WV U m May. he will enter a
three year res idency program in
Fam1ly Practice. Upon completion
of the residen cy, he plans to return
to West V ~r gin1a to practice.
Willie at Pleasant Valley H"'pitBI,
he 1s examming patients, taking
histories and physica ls, doing wellbaby check-{l ps, and genera l health
problem evaluatJOns All of these are
don e under the supervu;oon of Dr.
McNc1ll

i

Save
5
50

•

at

tom . on grou nds of gross ll€glect of
duty a nd rxtrrme cruelty .

October 1979 sa les of SenesE and
H United Savmgs Bonds were $29 .4
rrullion. The state attamed 75 percent of ils 1979 Sales Goal October
31 , "i th sales totaling $367 .2 rrullion
for the )'ear .
Theodore T . Reed, Jr . Meigs
Count y Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chai nnan, reported Ol·tober sa les of
Savmgs Bond in the county were
$19,596 . The county achi eved 71.2
percent of rts annual sales goal Oc tobe r 31.

mer joutstanding athlete at Wahama High School, was
kiUed Wednesday Lewis, a quadriplegic frmt a
previous accident, drowned in the rain swollen Thirteen Mile C.'reek.

VAN RECOVERED - Members of the Leon
Volunteer Fire Department used cables to recover the
submerged van in which Michae l Nolan Lewis , a for -

•

Common Pleas Court for divorce
from Jack L. Provence, Long Bot-

CHRISTMAS

: ' ,, ,

TRC-422 by Reallstr c

Home in Monroe County and was to
begin work there Jan . 16.
Born Jan . 8, 1956 in Point
Pleasant, Lewis was a son of John N.
Lewis, Mason, and the late Belva W.
Roush Lewis .
He was a graduate ol Wahama
High School's Class or 1974 and was
an All-State baseball player while in
high school. He attended West
Virginia State and after one year
with the baseball team there was
named ·'Hitter of the Year" by the
West Virginia Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference .
Surviving, in addition to his
father , are his stepmother, Shirley
A. LeWIS; a brother, Dale W. Lewis ,
Ft. Bragg , N.C. ; one sister, Karen
Y. Lewis, at home; maternal grand mother, Mrs . Gamet Roush, Letart
Rt. 2; paternal grandmother, Mrs .
Lola Lewis, West Colwnbia ; stepgrandfather, Romie White, Mason;
and several aunts and uncles.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at I : 30 pm. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason
with the Rev . James Lewis and the
Rev. John Wildman officiating.
BuMal will follow in the ]{jrkland
Memorial Gardens .
Friends may call at the funeral
home Friday from 5to 9p.m .

SEEKS DIVORCE
Delores Ann Provence, Reedsville, has fli ed m the Me1gs County

CltE:RISit ME:MORI€5 OF

• .
"

William Thomas Soulsby. Jr ., 26,
Rocksprings Rd . Pomeroy, and
Belinda Victona F'nend, 22, also of
Rocksprings Rd. Pomeroy.

ELBERFELDS

lll',L H •

·' t l .,.tr "' !1 1(! lvl ll tr
elf 'Pt, ll(frnq cJl 1 dIl l! 'lln&lt;J ( H flrl
' I~ I J

I ill' r fJI(H

AIOCi rZ{] d10 f 18~1 rnl li t ,._,
'l i d !! 1 ·
r 111 1~ 1 rqf1h

IO( ]Udf'(l

Reg . t0 .95

to

I I(Hll

'

-

said the accident occurred around
12 :34 p .m. After leaving the roadway, the van reportedly traveled ap proximately 300 feet over a small
embankment, stMklng two trees ,
before going into the creek.
Members of the Leon Volunteer
Fire Department assisted in attaching cables to the submerged
vehicle, which was pulled from the
creek by a Rollins wrecker.
The victim was transported by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad to
Pleasant Valley Hospital where Dr.
John Grubb , Mason County coroner,
ruled that drowning was the cause fl
death. All per state law, the body will
be sent to the State Medical
Examiner's office in O!arleston for
further examinatioo .
According to reports, Lewis was
enroute to visit a fMend , who also is
paralyzed , when the accident occurred.
He had graduated last week
from West Virginia State with
a BS degree in recreation service and also received an associate
degree in recreation service . Durmg
graduation ceremonies, Lewis
received special recognition from
Gov.John D. Rockefeller .
Lewis bad accepted a position with
the Andrew S. Rowan Memorial

ASK TOWED

POfNT PLEASANT - Stephen
Hanna , son of Rev and Mrs. Tally
Hanna of Point Pleasant, and a four th year student at West Virginia
University School of Medicine, is
currently working with Dr. Sam McNeill in Family Practice at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Dr. McNeill, in cooperation with
Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
WVU School of Medicine will be
teaching fourth year medical
students in Family Practi ce during
a four -week rotation a t Pleasa nt
Valley.
Hanna . who will graduate in May
of 1980, is the first student to t•ome to
Pleasant Valley Hos pital under the
program whi ch the Joint Council of
Tea ching Hospitals approved earlier
this year .
Following hi s four week s at
Pleasant Valley , Hanna will return
to Morgantown to complete his M.D.
degree at the university .
He lS a graduate of Oak Hill Hi gh
School, and Duke Uru ve rsi tv in
Durham, N. C., where he majo~ed m
pre-med as well as receiving a B.A
in Religion.

~\

\\

\\,I
\

recordwg level con tr o l ~ Pau~ i ! c un tr DI
buill-in drgr l al trmcr 14· 946

Each
Reg . 34c

1 1 80

TR-883byR~e:a;li;st;lc~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~rlll

mete"

'AA '
23- 468

(1et (" lCHJq h lor ,'I ll
th (J$0 C hr r'::,lllr, l ~ t o ~· '.:. ttldl cout d n 1
bP plrtyN1 ,.., ,tt1 t ; ,~ c du "l t~ c;orncone
forgol ltl f' bdllr•rll.:'-1 1
Sale Ends

8-Track Tape Deck with "Pro" Features

Makes reco rd rng easy' D ua , VU

~

17¢ 17¢ 13¢

· Two Optimus T-100 Floor -Standing
Spea kers . 8 Woofer. 3 Tweeter

A spokesman ror Lindblad Travel
Co., which operates the vessel, said
in New York that actor Chuck Connors was the only American aboard.
But in Los Angeles, Rudy Alotobelli
- agentfor Olivia Hussey, who also
is in the movie - said she and Connors retum&lt;&gt;d to U1e Uruted States on
Monda y.
The Lmdbla d also ran aground in
the An!Brcti c m 1972 off St. George
Isla nd in the South Shetland Islands.

A former Wahama High School
basebaU star drowned Wednesday
afternoon after his van plunged into
Thirteen Mile Creek oo old Route 35
at Leon and sank.
The victim, Michael Nolan Lewis
Zl, ol Mason, a quadriplegic si~
suffering a crippling spinal injury in
a 19'15 automobile crllllh, apparenUy
wall strapped into the driver's seat
ol the specially-equipped van and
Wllll unable to free himself.
Mrs. Shennan Graham, through
wh011e yard the van traveled before
going into the creek, said
that she was in her kitchen when she
'tleard a noise that sounded like
someone unloading lwnber' '.
Mrs. Graham said she ran out to
the creek, which Wllll about IS feet
deep at that point, and could see the
van floating around. ' 'He was
hollering for help", she said, "but
there was nothing we could do."
A neighbor, Keith Deweese, made
several desperate attempts to reach
the van but ''the water was jWit too
cold and deep ", Mrs . Graham
stated.
She said that Lewis' cMes for help
became weaker )Wit before the van
sank beneath the surface .
Mason County deputy sheriffs
J .M. Withers Jr. and P .E. Watterson

Medical student
working at PVH

..

.

It em s 1059.80

not move unde r illi own power .

some shuddering and then we knew

- ~

Reg . Separate

we had hit something," he said.
The operator said no one was in jured and the passengers decided to
rema in on board for a ChristmaS
Eve diMer before abandoning it
Tuesday 1n lireboats . The transfer
took nearly three hours.
He said repair work had begun.
Water was being pumped from the
ship and its starboard list had been
corrected from five to tw o degrees.
The twin-llulled LUJdblad Explorer was built 10 years ago to
travel the icei]ad&lt;ed polar caps and
the grounding poked holes in her
outer skin but did not damage the inner hull .
Lars Cederqvtst, a spokesman for
the Swedish Brostreom Line that
owns the s hip , said in Stockholm
there wa s no water leaking into the
engi ne room, but the propeller shaft
was noocted and the Explorer could

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Chilean Navy rescued more
than 100 persons from the Swedish
cruise ship Lindblad Explorer,
whi ch ran aground m Antarctica
while filming a science fi ction movie
a bout the end of the world, and a
skeleton crew remained aboard
today waiting for salvage tugs to
pull the vessel off a reef.
There continued to be conructing
reports on the exact nwnber, of
people aboard the Explorer when it
ran aground about noon Monday,
and how many were evacuated.
The ship 's radio operator said 70
passengers and 35 crew memhers
were transferred Ul lifeboats to the
Chilean naval vessel Pilato Pardo.
They were expected to reach Punta
Arenas, Chile, a bout 700 miles from
the reef, late today .
But Chilean 11. Cnndr. Rodrigues
Solar said in Punta Arenas that 108
passengers and 34 crew members
had been evacuated .
The radio operator of the Lindblad
Explorer told an Australian
newspaper by radi o telephone
Tuesday that the ship still was firmly wedged on the uncharted reef
but was in no immediate danger of
sinking.
" We are a ll safe and are keeping
our fingers crO'!Sed that two salvage
lugs will arrive to help us get off the
rocks," he said .
Chilean shipa were standing by the
24!l-foot Explorer, located 10 mil es
north of Paradise Bay in the Palmer
Peninsula - about 150 miles north of
America's Palmer Coast Guard
Station in Grahamland, Anti ca rti ca.
A Norwegian and a Russian tug boat
were en route.
The operator sa id the crew had no
warning before the ship ran
aground.
' 'We heard these awful cracks and

Former Wahama athlete dies in van wreck

Meigs County Sheriff James J . Proffitt and deputy Robert Beegle Wed nesday afternoon recovered a 1980
Ford Pinto apparenUy stolen in
Michigan.
The abandoned vehicle was found
ooe mile from a logging road in
Salisbury Twp.
Grand RBplds Michigan police are
trying to detennine who had leased
the vehicle there. 1be car was repor ted to be in excellent condition.
In other action, the department in vestigated two accidents Wed nesday .
The first occurred at 5:30a.m. oo
State Route 7 at Massar Hill, near

Merchandise
said stolen
The theft of merchandise valued in
excess of f3,500 from Betz Honda
Sales, 551 Upper River Rd ., is under
investigation by the Gallla County
Sheriff's Department .
According to a report filed with
that department, entry to the main tenance area was forcibly gained
through a side door oo the east end of
the building . A cutting torch was
then reportedly used to cut the lock
from the door leading to the
showroom ol the Upper River Road
dealership .
Removed from the facility were
eight Honda generators and two tool
boxes.

Weather
Cloudy early tonight, becomi~
partiy cloudy towards rroming . l.nw
in the upper aJs . PllrUy s mny
Friday . High in the low 40s . Th r
chanct of predpitatim 10 percmt
tm iglt and near z~ Friday .

Eastern High School. According to
the report, Frederick Ride r. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, was traveling north on
State Route 7, dMving a !9n In ternational semi . A:J he downshifted
his Mg, another northbound vehicle
driven by Albert E. Parker, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy, who was unable to stop,
struck the semi in the rear .
Parker was transpor t ed to
Veterans MemoMal Hospital by
private vehicle for treaUnent of
lacerations to the head . He was
cited to Meigs County Court ror
failin8 to maintain assured clear
distance .
The second accident occurred at
II :40 pm. on State Route 124 at
Minersville Wednesday evening .
Larry C. Powell, Lincoln Hlll ,
Pomeroy, told deputies he was
traveling towards Pomeroy, when
his vehicle struck and killed a deer
that jwnped into the ~JBth of his 1m
Chrysler . The dMver was not in-

received any

"exa.ct promises, •·

Cardinal Etienne Duval told repor ters at Orly Airport he had reason to
hope for the ·1astest and broadest
po."'ible measure of clemency" for
the hostages.
Duval arrived wtth the three
Ameri can clergymen. wh o
remained aboard the night and did
not talk to reporters.

The State Department had no Immediate comment on Khomeini 's
latest prediction of war between the
United States and Iran.
In a speec h Wednesday to an
Islamic anti-drug addiction group,
the Iraruan strongman said : ''Now
we are at war, a political and
economic war . It is likely that the
military war will also come along .

Record traffic
deaths recorded
By Tbe Allsoclaled Press
Heavy raUJS , snow and fog across the country contributed heavily to
a record 713 traffic deaths reported during the four-day Christmas
weekend, the National Safety Council says.
The previous record for a four-day Christmas holida y was 706 deaths
in 1956. The record for any Chrlstmas holiday lS no, set dwing the
three-day weekend of 1965.
'The heavy rains , the ice, the fog that prevailed had an adverse ef fect on the count, ·· Barbara Carrara, the council's supervisor of motor
ve hicle statistics . said Wednesday. 'There are no indications that
travel was any greater than we had anticipated. Unfortunately, we 'II
never fUld out just how many miles were traveled" during the peMod.
Before this year 's Christmas holiday peMod. the council had
estimated 450 to f&gt;OO persons might be killed on streets and highways
between 6 p.m. Friday and midnight Tuesday.
Council statisticians say that during a non-holiday, four~y period
at this time of year, 510 traffi c deaths could be expected.
During the three-da y Chnstmas weekend last year , ~ traffic
deaths were counted .

jured .

Amusement machine
licenses expiring
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today reminded village merchants
having coin operated amusement
machines that all amusement
machine licenses expire on Dec . 31.
1979.

license fees are $SO for each juke
box, $50 each for amusement
machill€s up to a total of three, and
$25 for each ma chine after the first
three .
Ucenses are available at the
mayor's office Monday through

triday from 8 a .m . to 4p.m.
Village ordinances provi de for
dally penalties for ha ving coin
operated am usement machines
without proper licenses .

r

CARTER GETTING OOPY - President Jimmy Carter will be given the fi rst copy ol volume one of the new
Meigs County History which is now being di.tributr·rl .
Meigs County. Mrs. Agnes Hill , left , well known
histoMan from Tuppers Plains, purchased the first
copy and 1t is being presented to her by Mrs . Margaret
Parker, secretary of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society and coordinator of the Meigs
Museum , and C. E. Blakeslee, president of the society .
Mrs . Hill will atempt to make arr~ements lhrou~ h

Cong . Clarence Miller to personally present the volwne
ro Pre,·•rlrnt Jimmy Carter on behalf of Meigs residen. ' .. •r: •atiuu or his effors to free the hostages bt
lrun. Meantime , Meigs residents are being asked to
sign a letter of appreciation to President carter and
these signatures will accompany the~Meigs residents have until Jan. II to sign the letter at
all Meigs County banks, financial institutions and other
locations.

�r-'l]!e"!"~:~~M.!-~~~-!'.:U~Y..:.~.!~~...~-:_27· !!7! __1 ~:::::::::::::====~---------=========::::-:-

Sentinel
l
Editorial

.!I
I
I

l
I

.1.

. . .----------------------,

Texas eyes on Oiler training room, Staubach 's future

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

LET M~
MAK E: n H&amp;
PERi="[CTLY
CLEAR:

Natiooal security is a subject most
would just 8l! soon not focus (II, particularly during the Holiday Season.
But this month an action took place
which considerably enhances the
defensive capabWties of our country 's European allies, and in the
process, the security of the United
States.
This month a critical decision affecting the long temr peace of the
free world was made in Brussels,
Belgiwn. The decision went almost
WIDoticed in this country due to our
natioo 's current concern with the
situation in Iran. But its significance
should not be underplayed.
On December 12, the foreign and
defense ministers of the member
nations of the North AUantic Treaty
Organization (NATO ) met in
Brussels to approve the deployment

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

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sporu Writer
The eyes of Teus are upon the
Houston Oi lers training room and
~Ulger Staubach 's future.
Three regular pa trons with the
Oi lers' doctors make up most of the
team '!! offense : AU-Pro running
back Earl Campbell, quarterback
Dan Pastorlni and wide receiver
Ken BlllT'Ough . They aUare listed as
doubtful with groin injuries for
Houston 's American Football Coo ference playoff game at San Diego
Saturday . They were hurt in
Houstoo 's 13-7 playoff triumph over
Denver last Sunday .

is brought Into balance.
The Russians, anticipating NATO
approval of the deployment
the
new nuclear weapons system, mcunted a massive propaganda cam·
paign against deployment, much
like the one they successfully mounted in
againSt the deployment
the neutron bootb. During the Lut
few months they attempted to rally
Internal opposftim witbln the NATO
countries to these weapooa. But this
time it appeared the Ruaaiana suf•
fered from a C8lle of ovensell. They
pressed the issue to the point that

IX

1978

moat west

IX

European8

became

C(lll-

opposed to the system, It mu.st be In
their best Interests to be for ll
The proposal the NATO nations
approved will deploy 572 new intermedla te nuclear weapona
~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!:~IX
a new generation of nuclear · throughout Europe 's member
•
missiles in Western Europe, ln- nations . Of these, 108 would be Pertennediate range missiles which for shing n Moblle missiles. The Perthe first time were capable of shing, with a range
about 1,000
striking Soviet soil. The action waa
miles, has the capability d hitting
taken to counter the growing Soviet
targets In the western part of the
milltary superiority In the European Soviet Union, but not M(IICOW. The
By Robert J . Wagman
however. Khomeini 's grip on Iran is
shaky at best. Some outside event is
theater.
WA S HI NGTON I NEA )
balance of the new weapons are
Starting in 1977, the Soviets began ground launched TmWl8wk crui.le
needed to finn up his hold and to
AyatoDah Rllt&lt;&gt;fiah Kh omel rt wants
bringing on JJne a mobile, triple missiles. These extraordinarily acenable him to launch his ' ~thad "
the United States w take Ollll'E form
warhead nuclear weapon caUed the
of militar y a ctiO n aga msl li s coun - (holy war ).
curate missiles have a striking
ss-20, a deadly accurate weapon
Military action by the ''the Zionist,
try. At least , that is the c onclusio n of
range d appn:mlmalely 1,500 miles,
which has no counterpart. The ss-20,
imperialist " United States against
a top secret psychological pro file ri
giving them the capablllty d
whi ch is termed a long-range reaching the Soviet capital of
Khcmei ni put together by U.S. in - Khomeini 's Islamic revolution
theater
nuclear weapons, could Moocow .
this
purpose,
the
in
would
best
serve
te lligen ce services.
/
wreak havoc on any w1'31 European
The profile 's cminous C(Jld usio n telligence profile maintains.
NATO 's decision to go forward
city. At present about 120
these
Thus, the ayatollsh bas done all he
is bei ~ taken sen ously by th e adwith the deployment rJ. these new
systems are targeted oo Western weapon systema Is an indlcatim that
mnistratioo , a rrl it fonn s t tE ba sis can to force the United States into atEurope. Along with the Soviet Back- its member nations are awakening
tacking Iran . This also explains
ri Presiden t Carter's strategy in
fire bomber, a superior in- to the threat
wh y, whenever a Khomeinideal ing with the cr is is in Iran .
the lncreaaing
tennediate range bomber capable of military buildup by the Sovleta. It Ia
TtE profile is based (II newly appointed official begins to take a
delivering nuclear warheads, the SS- an indlcatim that they are wi11lnl! to
moderate line , he is quickly removtranslated writing; by the ayaiDllAh,
ed from office .
20 gives the Soviets what most view shoulder a greater burden d the free
inte,;o ie"" ?.i Ur person s who ha ve
to be a decisive edge In nuclear world's defense, a burden that until
The nellt best event from Khoknow n him fo r years and informadelivery capablllty. It Is an edge now, has fallen almost exclusively
meini 's viewpoint, according to tbe
b(ll gathered fr &lt;ITI cove rt sour ces. It
many feel the Soviets will exploit In on the United Nations.
psychological profile , would be
claims that Kht111eini plans a
their
dealings with the West unless it
severe
economic
sanctions,
such
as
wc:rldwi de Mosl m1 po liti cal revolu a blockade, which Khomeini could
t ion , us111g Iran as his base. This
exploit to whip up Islamic fervor .
revo lub (ll , Khvrnein i reported ly
greeting, 65 cents for a Monda le
!xiieves, wil l lead to a worldwiJe Sources close to adminislratioo
card .
planning say this belief -that Khoreviva l of I slam. with him . as the
+++
meini needs some kind of radical
Among Wash ington reporters,
:;piritual leader ri th e reborn
By Doll Graff
tenninate the U.s. defense treaty
Moslpm world .
response from the United States to
news photographers and broadcast
While Iran continues to give new
with Taiwan, a controversial Slep
Kh omeml apparen tl y tak es uteral- solidify his powerbaae within Iran
technicians , ooe of the muchmeaning to the deflilition of mob
taken
In conjWICiion with the openanticipated invitations of the y""r is
ly the Koran t declaration tha t and to spread his revolution to other
rule, two countries at a great
ing
of
diplomatic
relations with Pek to the president 's annual Christm""
·'there aw aits ... a rri gh ty chasti se- Moslem countries -has tempered the
remove in more than the
ing.
reception for the press.
ment" for the un be lievinJ,( non - U.S. response so far . And, these
geographical sense are providing
The court's reasoning Ia confused
sources add, the administration
Moslem world .
Although aides to the president
some lntresting demonstrations ol
- typically so
this court, hopes to continue this play-it-cool
and Mrs . Carter try to limit in"Prescribed for you is fighting
another type of rule at work -that of might say -but it doee preclude furapproach even after the hootage
vitations to those who cover the Ca r- ... , " the Kora n tells its fa ithfuL "0
law.
ther complication through a coobelievers, take your preca utions , situation is ended .
ters at least occasionally, nwnerous
In Canada, tbe Supreme Court In
stltutional
confrontation of an
As one very knowledgeable source
then move forward in companies, or
journalists who ctherwise never step
Ottawa has upheld the rlgh ... d lin- already complicated U.S . relation said , "It wouldn \do us any good to
inside the White House aren't bash- move forward all together ... When
qulstic minorities against the ship with the two &lt;lllneae regimee.
outlast Khomeini only to end up doful about announcing they should be you meet the unbelievers, smite
govenunents and, more Important ,
In the high court the adminiltn.
Ing the very thing that he so badly
their necks and , when you have
on the guest list.
popular prejudices In two key pro- lion is the winner. But In a lower
wants us to do. Our most effective
One of this year 's uninvited called made wide slaughter a mong thew ,
vinces.
court It iB not. In the only me the
means of dealing with him over the
press secretary Jody Powell 's offi ce tie fast thei r boods .. . Those who are
In one ruling, Involving a S5 traffic
decisions relating directly to Iran, a
long run would be simply to ignore
to argue that Carter might say
kiUed in the path of Allah , He does
ticket iBsued to a French-Bpeaking
U.S . district judge has ruled that the
him and his country as if they were
something about Iran during the af- not let their good deeds go frr
resident, the court held unconstitu - U.S. govenunent has erred In Ita
so uniJaportant as not to be worthy
nothing ."
fair - he dido 't - and that the
tional the lll11ear-old legal status d
visa investigation of Iranian
of our bother . But, of course, this is
The first step in the ayatollah 's
reporter would be hurt com English as the sole language of students by singling out for special
impossible as long as he has our peopetitively if he were barred. The grand plan was accomplished with
Manitoba 's courts and legislature.
scrntiny this ooe group from aU
ple and eventually it may be
ploy worked.
the overthr ow of Shah MOhammed
While French was the winner In
others. Permitting such c!Uparate
politi cally difficult when the
More bizarre was the case of a
Rela Pahl.avi and Khomeini 's return
that instance, it was the loser in the
treabnent, the judge obl!erved,
hostagesre released.
reporter who, unbeknownst to the
from se lf -imposed exile . The secml:l
court's similar invalidation of a 1977
"would not only reject the mOIII
White House. is in the throes of a
step has proved more difficult.
Quebec law establishing French as
cherished
constitutional precep!B
divorce. When the invitation arrived
that province's only offi cial
applicable
to
all of 111, citizen and
at his home, it was opened by his
language.
alike,
but
would create a precealien
estranged wife, who called the
Ironically, the situation lines up
dent
of
aJann1ng
elaaticity fr001
R.S.V.P . number to accept on her
French -11upremacist Quebecers and
which
future
extreme
usert1001
own behalf - and to ask if she could
francophobe Manitobans on the
e1ecutive
power
could
readily spr bring her new boyfriend.
NE W YORK !AP I ~ Inflation tainl y not, says General Motors. We
same and looing side. And it does not
ingboard."
are an effect. We are merely trying
isn 'I so bad when you 're on the
resolve the basic language conflict
So here we are. Where one body of
receiving end, which is to say when to rna intain our profit margins.
that preoccupies Canada to the point
lrantan
students defies the law In
Could it be fanners ' No way , they
you can take in dollars faster than
of dissolution .
Tehran,
another iB protected by the
say . We bad record production in
they lose thei r value.
But iI does demonstrate that
law in the United States . It iB a
When that happens you can enjoy
1979 but our profits were eroded by
iBsues can be dealt with other than
lesson
certain to be lost m the8e
it. and a good ma ny Americans en- rising costs.
through explosions of popular emo- studenta, however, since the book
joyed infla tion for several years .
The middleman ' He's always
tion, that in a society of laws the
they go by makes no prvvlaion for
singled out but seldom specifically,
Pay raises exceeded the dilution of
power of decision involves more
such
concepta u govenunent by
buying power , home eq uity soared,
If that isn ~a cootradiction. "He" is
than mustering the largest forces in
laws
rather
than men . Meanwhile,
borrowers paid back in cheaper
a collective. No matter who he is,
the streets or in legislatures.
back
In
Tehran
the rmdJah In charce
you can be sure he complains of getdollars.
Meanwhile , another Supreme
-if
that's
the
word
for it -of revolu ting squeezed.
It might come to an end in the
Court has passed judgment in
tionary
justice
warns
that anyone
1900s. In a limi ted way it already
Nobody admits to being a cause ,
Washington oo an iBsue between and
occupying
offictal
buiJdJnga
withol&amp;
has.
ooly an effect. They take their cue
dustry in Ohio. His biggest prize was
legislative branches of government
authorization
will
be
summarily
ex·
Spendable earnings in November
a new, $411.6 million, Miller Brewing
from Uncle Sam.
The brethren have rejected a
ecuted.
·Who, me? " asks Sam In
were 5.1 percent lower than a year
Co. facility forButier Crunty.
challenge by a congressional coaJiEmbassies obviously excepted .
The governor did a lot of other
earlier, and that has a dual impact :
disbelief. Sam, who 11 be spending
tion to President Carter 's right to
It makes people less willing and it
more than he earns, borrowing more
tlings in 1971l, feeding speculation
makes them less able to buy. People
than he should, will disclaim rl!llponthat he intends to run for the U.S.
siblity and pose as the chief inflation
Senate in 1982, when he won't be
are losing out to inflation .
fighter.
eligible for another term as goverSo long as double-digit Inflation
But don \ expect him to get along
reigned, inflation a! the same rate
nor.
with less money, because the old
He denies planni~ that far ahead,
had litlle impact on borrowers. Now
fellow just can't lower his lifestyle.
that the Federal Reserve has pushed
but his actions indicate otherwise.
Uncle Sam. you see, is on the
In recent weeks, Rhodes has come
borrowing coots beyond the rate of
receiving end, and that's the end rJ.
inflation it 's getting costly.
up with his own plan to make the
This dose of reality, say the
inflati on that 's easy to take.
nation self-Bufficient in oil. It would
economisl!J , is the best medicine we
take federal action to pull it off ,
because m~y it involves requiring
can apply to the malady . The fact
that the medicine tastes awful , they
major utilities in the northeast to
THE DAILY SENTINEL
say,
is the greatest assurance we
switch from oil to coal.
t USPS ltH11 1
have of overcommg inflation .
He says another plan to solve
WeU. maybe . Maybe in th e long
potential natural gas problems is in
~ ~~- ~ ....
run. What went up swiftly , it seems,
theworko .
must come down slowl y if we are to
In addition, Rhodes has bomavoid a bump that might ja r the senbarded President Carter and the
ses as well as knock the acqwsitive
federal establishment with more
instincts out of the economy
"messages to Waahingtm" than forThe short-i'Wl forecast . whi ch in
mer segregationist Gov . George C.
this instance is about a yea r, Ill less
WaJiace of Alabama did about the
encouraging .
racial mixing of schools.
' 1 think there ·s a good deal of con The Ohioan, however, rails againsensus we can 't look for any ITIHrked
st the federal EPA and other
improvement in inflation next
regulatory agencies that he claims
have crippled the coal and steel inyear ," says Courtenay Slater , Commerce
Depa rtment chief economist.
dustries.
Workers aren~ the only ones
Rhodes brushes off questions
seeking, as they rati onalize it. to
about his future , with comments
And so little Ollie learned that athletes,
sur.h as " I'm not rurming for
keep pace.
parents. judges. politicians and celebrities are
General Motors· 1900 editions wiU
anything" and "we've got to do
human - and everybody li ved happily ever
average about $500 higher than a
something about energy .''
after. "
year ago. Could this be a cause ? Cer-

UPPER DECK
Still Taking
New Years
Reservations
Come and See

IX

RONNIE LOVE &amp;
THE DRIFTERS

Jimmy's Whitehouse

IX

IX

IX

+++
As reported earlier , the
Democratic National Committee
paid S86,000 to print and mail the
1110,000 ChriBimas cards sent out by
President and Mrs. Carter.
Well, the committee paid an ad ·
dltional $4,000 to take care of the
Mondales' 6,000 cards .
It figures out to $1 .54 per Carter

Today's Commentary

1&amp;75-5807. 675-5808
OR 675-5049

Business mirror

IX hla 70th birtb!ay.

Prllllounced In excellent health by

hla doctors, Rhodes flew &lt;:If to
Florida for the Christmas hliidays
with golf and famlly relaxation oo
hllmlnd.
His trip capped a busy year.
1be 11811(11 's oldest and longest
tenured governor - he's now one
year Into his fourth, four-year tenn
- Rbodes, In 19'19:
-Pulled strings In the
Legislature, controlled by
Oemocrata, to get hla general verdon of Important state budget and
ehoolfwdng jnpOIIB)s.
· -Lectured &amp;llow governors and
lildeed tbe nation about energy shortiliU and federal "overregulatioo,"
wblcb be blames for job losses In the
Ideilandcoallndustry.
-Headed an Ohio trade rni..alon to
Bed Chila, a gruelifW trip of more
tlllalw'ow.bln the sweller of July
111111, In a nati(ll almost devoid of
~m coowniencel!, such aa air
Condit!~ .

: -R«umed from the Far East in
time to hold forth, as usual, In the
.\uguJt heal at his beloved Ohio

State Fair -

cutting ribbons and
)!ilndln8 out trophies and prizes.
: -Hopped acrou state Jines, to
p1aces such as Detroit uno.l
Milwaukee, to try to lure ~~ew In-

bot h loaded , loc al 1 owner s, low mlies

1978 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO
good color

1977 FORD GRANADA
6 cyl., auto ., air

'4695.

low miles, 1 owner , sharp

'3395.

'3995.
1975 FORD MUSTANG

1976 DODGE ASPEN

4 cyl. , auto.. air , radials.
I owner

'2895.

1977 TOYOTA

1977 FORD COURIER

long bed , 5 speed, air

4 cy l. . 4 speed

Your Choice

'3795.

Upper River Rd.

446-9800

"But I thmk he should play
a nothe r yea r. He L~ having one of lu.-,

best yea rs and he reall y put us Into
the division rh.amp tonshlp _' '

The Cowboys manha ndled the
Hams :JJ-&lt;i Oct. 14 at Texas Stadiwn .
where Sunda y ·s ga me "ill be
played. Staubach hart one of hi s best
gam es ever tn lhe 197;) NF'C cha m·
pionship aga m:;t thP H..rnn'\, com-

perimenting with Butch WooUolk
and Stanley Edwards in the same
backfield and the Michigan coach
said Wednesday he liked the results .
"Practices have been very good ,"
Schembechler sa id. "Stanley has
looked bette r at full ba ck than I
thought he would . And he 's so quick
getti ng to the hole. He kind of remin ds me of Rob Lytl e."
Edwards, a 64oot -l, 205iJOund

juru or from Ddrmt. started the
se;;son at tailback for Michigan and
gai ned 618 yards b&lt;&gt;fore inJ uring a n
ankle agamsl Minnesota 111 the sixth
game. WooU olk . a 6-1, 207'j&gt;Ound
sophomore from Westfield, N.J .,
stepped m and finished the season
wrth 927 yards
··r think it will add another dunen s1on with Woolfolk and Edwa rds in
the same backfield. " Crum smd. · ·J

Gallipolis, Ohio

locations are listed in the 1979 Deer
Hunti ng Law Digest.
A dee r hunting permi t is required
In addi tion to a reg ular hunting
li cense. Hunters are also reql!i red to
hav e the landowner ·s permission
before hunting on private prope rty.
Ohio has numerous public areas
that provide good deer hunting,
especia lly state forests and wildlife
a reas in southeast Ohio The
primitive hunting area at Salt Fork
State Park will be open during this
primitive weapons season. Also. any
state park area that was open for

Toda y in history
Today is Thursday. Dec. 27, the
361st day of 1979. There are four
days left in the year.
Today·s hig hlight in history :
On Dec . 27, l\122 , French sc rentist
Louis Pasteur , known as the father
of preventa tive medi cine , wa' born .
On this date :
In 1571, German astronomer
Johannes Kepler was born .
In 1900. prohi bitionist Dlrne
Nation staged her first ra id on a
saloon . smashing botlles at a bar in
Wichita , Kan.
In 1927 , Joseph Stalin 's faction
won at the All-Union Congr ess in
Rll'iSia, and Leon Trotsky was ex·
pelled from the Ccmmwlist Party.
In 1945 , foreig n nunisters of
Britain , the United Sta tes a nd Soviet
Uni on, meeting in Moscow, ca lled
for a provis ional democratic govern ment in Korea.
fn 1966, a raU y of 10 ,000 Red Guar ds in Peking de nounced Chinese
President Liu Shao-chi .
Ten years ago: Libya, the Sudan
and the United Arab Republic announced a political, economi c and
nuhta ry agreement in Tripo!J .
Five years ago : a coal mine e•plosion and fire in the northern
French town of Le ivir kllled 41 men.
One yea r ago : Algen an P reSident
Houari Boumedienne died at ag e 53.
Today 's Birthdays : Act ress
Marlene Dietrich is 75.
Thought For Toda y • You mus t be
poo r to know the luxury of giVl!lg Georg e Eliot 1 181 9- 1 81'~ 1

deer hutrung during U1e shotgun
season w1U beopen to hunters using
muzzl e-loading shotgWlS , longbo ws
and c rossbows.

Hunting wr th mur.zle.Joadmg nfles
IS not perrnitted on state parks ex cept at Sa lt Fork.
Besides U1e tasty venison hunters
are hoping to take home, many of
the successf ul hunt..rs "i ll make
buckskin clothi ng from deer hi des
The hides can be tanned a t home or
sent to a commercial tanne r. Deer
hides may also be sold to an y li cen·
sed fur buyer.

BASKETBALL
NE W YORK 1 AP 1 - NatiOnal
Basket ball Assoc1at ron Com missi oner Larry O'Bn en reduced to
SIX days a 10-day suspensron he had
Imposed on Denver ~ u ggets forward
George McGmnts for runn in g mto

referee Jess Kersey.
O'Brien saHI McG uuus had wrth drawn his request for a hearing on
the matter and "acknowledged hiS
fail ure to e xercise s ufficient care to

avOid the coll isi on...
NEW YORK l AP 1 - San Drego
C.l ippers center Swen Nater. who
had 35 points and 22 rebounds against Utah last Sunday, was named the
Na ti onal Baketball Associati on's
Player of the Week.
Duri ng the four-game span endmg
Sunday. Nater avera ged 20 .3 pomts
and 13R reboun&lt;i,, whi le shooting
.750 from th e f1eld .

and four touchdowns in a 37-7 vic-

tory .
Dallas may have to carry the
hopes of the Lone Star stat. for a
Super Bowl contender If Campbell ,
Pas lonm a nd Burrough are una ble

tu play against the Chargers , who along with Pittsburgh - had a 12-4
record,tops in the NFL .
Oilers Coach Bum Phillips is n \
giving up on his star trio, although
he has faith 10 their substitut"' or

really don l know what to expect , but
l 'm sure it will alte r their sequence.
That could throw us off. "
Schembechler indicated he would
use both B.J . Dickey and John
Wangler at quarterback, but refused
to say whi ch one would start .
" I think it just makes North
Carolina ·s job of defensing us a little
tougher when they don t know who
Will start ." Schembechler said.
Dickey, who gamed 242 yards
ru,, hiJJg, is coruudered the better
runner . while Wangler , who com pleted 72 of 122 pass attempts , is
easil y the better passer .
Seni or Matt Kupec , a 6-1, 193pounder from Syosset. N.Y., wW
handl e the quarterbacking for the
Tar Heels . Kupec now holds vir tually every North Car olina passing
record , but is generall y conside red a
poor numer.
On the w ound , North Carolina
re lies mai nly upon Amos La wren ce,

a 5-10, l~'jlOWJde r from Nori olk ,
Va , who is known as ' famous
Amos " around Chape l Hill .
·we ·re not really a power team ,"
Crum said. ' 1 think we're more of a
finessse team . That 's dictated by
ou r tailback, Amos
' 'He 's a glider. He depends on fl uid
moves I thmk stopping Amos will be
a big part of their game plan . But
Doug Pasc hal has had some good
games for us at full ba ck, and we
mi ght tum to hlffi If they slop
Amos ."
Crum said the Tar HeeL• also
would atta ck Michi ~a n ·s best defen ders - end CUrtis Gree r and All America linebcker Roo Sunpki ns rather than try to run away from the

Kentucky losing
Dwight Anderson
LEXJNGTON, Ky . (AP) - Starting guard Dwight Anderson has quit
the second-rank ed University &lt;i
Kentucky basketball team, and the
future of two other players is in
doubt.
Head basketball Coach Joe B. HaU
sa1d Wednesday that Anderson, a 6-3
sophomore and the team 's third
leading scorer , had decided to leave
the universit y for "personal
reasons. "
But he refused to coofilnn or deny
reports by Lexington radio station
WVLK that freshmen Sam Bowie
and Dirk Minniefield will be suspended for one game .
According to the broadcast, the 7foot -1 Bowie and Mirmiefield, 6-3,
Will be suspended for the Notre
Dame game Saturday in Lou1svllle
but will be reinstilted afterwards.
Asked about the suspensions
during an impr omptu pos\1lractice111terview, Hall said, '1 don, know
anything about that."
In a copyrighted story 111 today 's
edi tons of the Louisville Courier Journal , Hall is quoted as saying, '1
have not suspended them ."
But he said he dido t know if the
two players would play a gainst
Notre Dame .

'1 think may be you have a little
better chance rurming at them
because they pursue so well ." the
Ta r Heel coach said . "We're going to
run our complete offense . "
The Wolverines. who finished the
regula r season 6-3, and the Tar
Heels , 7-3-l. were schedul ed to prac tice on the grass turi of the Gator
Bowl for the first time tonight.
Klckoff for the game, to be
televiSed nationally on ABC. IS set
fur 9p .m .

team 's strongest man and ca n bench

pressure accompanymg

press 430 pounds . "We ca n hit the big
pass and be right back 10 the game
We proved that against UCLA and
Minnesota ..
Soph omore quar terb ack Art
Schichter drove his team \lO yard s In
eight ptays m t he warung moments
to pull out a 17-14 deciS ion at UCLA .
Sc hiichter also hrt on big second-half
pla ys at Minnesota to rally Otu o
State from a 17-7 deficit In he set·ond
game of the season .
Glen Mas on, an Oh10 Sta te
ass~&gt;'tant coach. said F'r itz ha s t ar ned tus acc laim because ·'he has the
experi ence He ·s a tough kid who
love' lortball And he possesses
tremendous physical strength.··
Fntz said he has no rdea where he
&gt;'lands rega rdmg the NatiOna l Fool ·
ba ll l.eagu e draft . srnce Bruce has
forLidden disc ussrons witlr NFL
teams unti l after the Rose Bowl
'I'd lrke to go 111 the first round
and I hope 1t 's to the Oeveland
Browns . They hav e been my team
smce grade schoo l. " F'ntz sa id
The Buckeyes wtnd up their pre game sighl&lt;;eemg todsy with a tour
of Umversal Studios .

Ohi o State 's rankin~ as the top team
111 college football go111g mto the
RDse &amp;wl a~ams t Southern Dl li forma. says the Bu ckeyes · All ·
Am encan guard , Ken Fritz .

'1t ·s something you've got to
keep . It's an extra burd en, " f'ntz
said Wednesday while lw a nd his
t eamm a tes

s tr o ll ed

ar'J und

Disneyland .
Str\1, the 6-i w t .J, 242-pound seruor
fr om Ironton. Ohw. relishes bemg
ranked No 1 m Th e Associated
Press poll .
"I almost went to M1 chJ ga n. The
reason l chose Oh ro State was
because t hey had been to the Rnse
&amp;wl three of the tast four yea rs
rec ruiting

me

being

weak

befor e

the

season.

Howe1-er . he and his buddJ es fooled
the experts and helped the Buc keye.
to avera ges of &lt;W6.4 total ya rds a nd
So wha t happened to the team .

wtuch was picked to fini sh fourth in
tl~

own confer ence?

· 'fhe attitude of the players was so
pos it i ve , .. a ns we r ed Fntz .
"Everybody worked a little harder .
We had a Jot more unity than last
yea r. This is the closest team l 've
Oeen on ··
Gone Is the conservatism of
Woody Hayes. Earle Bruce, Hayes·
successor as head coach, !Jelieves in
a more versatile attack .
'We 're more explosive," said
Fritz. who is recogruzed as the

K C cage player
injured in wreck
KANSAS CITY MO. tAP I~ Bill
Robinzme , starting forward for the
Kansas Ci ty Klngs , was injured in a
traffi c a ccident and missed the
learn's 116-ll l victory over the Los
Angeles Lakers Wednesday night .
Robinzine was on his way to a
King ·s workout Wednesday morning
when the accident occurred . Team
offi clllls said Robinzine was taken to
a Kansas City hospital and held for
observation. He suffered no broken
bones . but was bruised and did
aggravate a ri b injury incurred last
week in a game against the.
Milwaukee Bucko.
Rob1nz111e 's status with the Kings,
who leave this evening for a game
Fnday 111 Phoneix, is on a day-byday basis .
Rookie Reggie King replaced
Ro binzine in the starting lineup.

S\' AC standings
SVAC ST ANDINGS
ALL G AMES
TEAM
WL
~ou th e r n
4 1
N o rf h Ga lt 1a
4
Frt~ t er n
J 4
Kyger Creek
2 4
South w est er n
2
Ha nnan Tr ace
0 6
SVACO NL Y
Sou ther n
J 0
North Galli a
2 I
E a st er n
2 I
Sout hwest ern
2 1
Ky ger Cr ee k
0 3
H an nan Tra ce
0 J
SV AC R ES ERVE S
S.Ou thern
3 0
No rtn Gal l ia
J 0
E rt s. t ern
2 1
Kyge r Creek
1 2
Ha nnan T r ac e
0 3
S-ou t hwest ern
0 3

'

•

~peciall
'f,.

34 pOlnl's a ga m l' in thet r unbeaten
11-vtctory season .

I

backup QB Gifford Nielsen, Phlllips
said :
'He 's showed me every time he 's
been in a game that he's capable of
starting in this league. "
Rob Carpenter would replace
Campbell and Rich Caster and
Guido Merkens probably would take
overfor Burrough.
The other Saturday game pits
wi ld-card Philadelphia, which beat
Chicago 27-17lasl Sunday, at Tampa
Bay. On Sunday , defending Super
&amp;wl champion Pittsburgh entertains Miami .
The Steelers will be hurt by AllPro linebacker Jack Ham 's absence
with an ankle injury but that doesn \
change Dolphins Coach Don Shula 's
ouUook.
"You go down the roster both
ways and they're deep, " said Shula.
"They've got experienced players
backing up eve!'\' position. "

pcur .

ANAHEIM . Ca ~ f 1AP 1 - The re is
t tnmen.·u~

Pla ymg rn the Rose Bowl was my big
dream , .. sa id the two-tune All.fl 1g
Ten Conference selec tion.
·1 would like nothin g better than
to go out as Rose Bowl wumers a nd
national champ rons, " sai d Fritz.
lroruca lly, rt is his fi rst appearance 10 the Pasadena . CaW .
New Year 's Day classr c, because
Mi chigan represented the lea gue 111
his first three seasons .
Fritz settled for tn ps to the
Orange . Sugar and Gat or bowls .
~· ntz se rves as the p1Uar of an
OhJ o State une that was suspected of

-

16 of 26 passes for 220 yards

Ohio sportlight

when they were

Berry's World

• I

'579

Your Choice

IX

•

- 1979 FORD MUSTANG
(TURBO)

1979 CAPRI (TURBO)

IX

•

CX&gt;LUMBUS ~ Hunters will have
a chance to go back to the day s of the
frontiers men durin g Ohio's fi rst
statewide primitive weaspons deer
season Jan . 2-4.
Many hunters will be using muz tle~oading fireanns very similar to
the rifles used by pioneers like
Daniel Boollf' .
Legal hur._mg implements for the
special seasoo are : single shot muzde~ oading rifles of at least .38
caliber. muzzle~oading shotguns
using a single ball, longbows a rxl
crossbows.
Hunters will be allowed to take
either a buck or doe from 7 a.m . to 5
p.m., Jan . 2-4 Hunters are reminded
there is a !unit of one deer for the
license year (Sept. !-Aug. Jll ) rega rdless of the method of taking . All
deer taken during the primitive
weapoos season must be permanently tagged at an official deer
checking station within 24 hours a!ter the dee• is killed .
The official checking station

V.W. - AMC - JEEP

continues rapid pace
mlleltone

pens all at unn~

pletin~

Starting quarterback no major worry

RIVERSIDE

IX

Rhodes not slowing,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - OJio's
persmlal Republican governor,
James A. Rhodes, showed no signs
of liowlng down in 1979 desJite the

"H we are fortunate to go to the
Super Bowl, " said Cowboys Coa ch

has reached the age where all the
skills can disappear . ··and It hap-

Primitive deer hunting season set

President Jimmy Carter

IX

season.

Tom Landry , whose Nati onal Confere nce Eas t c hamp ions ar e
prepanng for a Sunday conte;t
agamsl NFC West titlist I.os
Angeles, ' 'he nught quit this year.
Roger has pride and he 11 never let
himseU get over the hill . He ll pla y
a• long as he feels he can do the
job."
Staubach did such a good job thi s
seasoo that he led the NFL ·s passing
efficiency ratings . But Landry
acknowledg es that hrs quarterba ck

IX

IX

WASHINGTON (API - The folks
who protect Vice President Walter
F. Mondale were startled when the
scores of phone calls began : "Yes ,
we 11 be corning to the party. "
' 'Sorry, we can't make it."
For ooe thing, the men and women
the Secret Service play no role in
arranging
Mondale's
social
acbedule.
But, more Important, the barrage
calls bad nothing to do with any
party Involving the vice president.
It seems the ACTION agency in·
vited 1,000 people to a pre.ctuisbnas
celebration
the 15th armiversary
liB VISTA program.
But the telephone nwnber listed oo
the Invitations for RS .V. P purposes
waaln error by a single digit.
Result : a flood of calls to the
guard poat at the entrance to Moo·
dale's Secret Service-guarded
residence at the Naval Observatory .

If all three are sidelined , the AFC
West champion Chargers will be
heavy favorites over the wild ..:ard
Oilers .
The Cowboys might need to bo•
concerned with something far more
pennanent + Staubach 's retirement
akthough the ace signal-caller has
said he won \ decide untU next
spring whether to return for the 1980

JACKSONV II J.E , Fla . lAP ) North Carolina Coach Dick Crum
isn, concerned that Michigan Coa ch
&amp; Schembechler won\ leU him who
the Wolverines wiU start at qua rterback in Friday night's Gator
&amp;wl game. But Crum is plenty
worried that the Wolverines are
starting two big, fast tailbacks in the
same ba ckfield.
Schembechl er has been ex -

vlnced that if the Russians were so

Khomeini wants war

/

3- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Thursday, Dec. 'n , \979

..

i(

~
I';'
1--

I
I
I

:;

-

..

2"

I c=,,vo 3•

194
209
191
149
162
186
145
109
128
109
116

u1 ·
196
152
198 '
249

200
125
I 01

97
135
152
173

Film

-,-9-9- ~

E»tposure

'o

227

Color

KODicoUiR
0&lt; Comool•ble fiLM
'2
DEVELOPING
~ tP

PDP
362 261 .
553 59Q.
44Jl 412
]54 4 10
369 4 19
301 38 1

I ,. 541
f liP

C OU PON MUST ACCOMP AN Y ORDER
LIMil ONE ROLL WITH COUPON
EXC LUDING PORTFOLIO 35

I
1

IJ
I

L ~A_!:ID_D~-,36_!~':_0.:.C:..3!:.1_!7!. ...!

Village Pharmacy
frt,

�- The Daily Sentinel , M1ddleport.Porne roy , 0 ., Thursday , Dec. 27, 1979

-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday. Dec. 21. 1979

Bowl games

Today's

Winners? 'Barna and Trojans

Sports .\Vorld
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
NEW YORK (AP I - They pried
Arthur Ashe's ribs apart as il they
were giant springs and unclogged
four arteries from his heart as a
plwnber might fix the pipes of a
balky lcltchen sink.
'1t was a matter of nwnbers. " the
36-year-old tennis champion said
calmly os he relaxed in his 18th floor
East Side New York apartment
Wednesday, two weeks after undergoing delicate quadruple bypass
surgery.
"You can say I've had a plwnbing
job. I've got a brand new pwnping
system now . My heart is stronger
than it's been m three or four
years ."
It's comforting, particularly in
this holiday season, to talk to a man
of Ashe's unflagging fighting spirit
and tremendous reoolve WJder cir ..
cwnstances that would crush most
of us nonnal htunan beings.
Few could disruss the ordeal with
such blithe openness .
Ashe suffered a heart attack in
Jacksonville , Ffa , on July 31. He
was well along on his rehabilitation
program, even swinging the racket
again, when he was stncken with
new chest pains earlier this month.
'1 woke up at 1 a.m. with these
heavy palpatations, " he explained
"It was scary as hell. realizing I had
these narrow arteries and not
knowing whether this might be the
end."

Most of us would have panicked
but Arthur waited lllltll morning and
checked with his doctor. He faced a
choice : Go on a stnct regimen of
diet and exercise to clear the arteries or submit to open heart
surgery. a frightening thooght .

By Major Am08 B. Hooplt

'1 went with the percentages, " he
said. "TI~e odds were against me
that I could whip the problem with
diet and exercise. I knew that the
operation wos being done successfully in Houston, Cleveland and
New York . I found that there was
only a 1 percent chance of not surviving and an 8 percent chance of
having another attack on the
operating table .
"So I contacted Dr . John E . Hutchinson and told him, 'Okay, let 's go
at it." '
It was a microcoom of Arthur
Ashe's whole life. He faced the specter with the cold nerve that marked
his U.S. Open and Wimbledon cham pionships and an 11-1 record in a
decade of Davis Cup competition.
He never wilted from the
challenRe . Always playing against
formidable odds, he disdained the
short cut. On the court and off it, he
met the battle head on.
Even without tennis, Arthur Ashe
does not find himself bereft of in· terests and challenges. He has a new
racket being readied by the company he has represented for years .
He endorses a clothing line in Fran ce. He is tennis director at Dora!
Country Club in Miami .
He 1s consultant for a life insurance finn . He is involved with
black kids and racial inequalities.
He is up to his ear lobes in the Ted
Kennedy presidential campaign.
And he helps encourage the
professional photography career of
his wife, Jeanne.
"It's quite obvious I can' concentra te on tennis as I once did, " he
says. "But who knows' Maybe see
you at Wimbledon."
~

Pro standings
National Basketball Association
At A Glance
By Th~ Associated Press
U estern Conference
Atrantic Oi'.'iSion
W . l. Pet .
Boston
27
8
771

Philadelph ia

26

10

727

GB
J 11
1

New York
11 10
459 11
Washington
\ 4 18 .438 11 1 .,
NewJersey
14 2J .378 14
Central Division
Atlanta
2J IS .605
SanAntoni o
18 18 500 c
Indiana
17 18 .47'2 5
Clev£&gt; 1and
17 20
459 51 1
Houst on
16 19 45 7 5 1 ~
Detro it
9 28 243 lJ 1 1

We-ster n Conference
Midwest Divt &lt;;ton

n

Milwaukee
Kansas City

'12

1S .595
16 .579

Denver

14

24

368

Chicago
Utah

12
10

24
26

333 9 1 "]
.278 11 ' .,

1

8

11 :;&gt;

Pacific Oi'o'iS1on
SeaMie
Los Anoele s
Phoenix

25

11

694

15

Portland

?0

13
13
19

.6511
.658
513

25

O II J

San OieQo

J

Golden State

;

19 10
48 7 ] I
11 25 324 1] 1
Wednesday ' s Games
New Jersey 11 6, w ashi ngton 104
Indiana 98 . Detro1t 97
Kansas City 118, Los Angeles 111
Milwa ukee 110. Chic ago 101
Houston 143, San Anton10 110
Phoen ix 119, Portland 99
Denver 99 . G-o lden Stat e 94
SeaMie 1'24, San Diego 104
Thursdav's Games
Houston at Atlanta
Milwaukee at Washington
New York at Cleve land
Philadelphia at San Anton1o
Los Angeles at Uta h
Boston at Sa n D1 ego

Fridav ·s Games
Denver at Detroi t
Indiana at New Jersey
New York at Chi ca go
Kansas City at Phoen ix
Boston at Los Angeles
Portland at Seatt le

Transactions
Wednesday ·s Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press

Nat1ona1 Hocker League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pts GF GA
Philadelphia
22 1 10 54
N Y Rangers
16 5 37
Atlanta
14 15 4 31
N Y ls.landers
12 14 6 30
wash1ngton
B 12 5 21
Smythe Division
Chicago
11 12 12 34
Vancouve-r
13 15 7 33
W1nnipeg
17 19 4 28
Sl Lou•S
1\ 18 6 18
COIOrci tiO
10 20 J 2J
E d mon ton
8 18 7 23
Wales Conference
Adams Division
23 9 3 49
Bulla to
20 9
4.5
Boston
1] 7 7 41
M1nneso ta
11 15 • 34
Toront o
14 15 5 33
Quebec
Norris Division
Montre al
17 lJ 6 40

s

LosAngeles

15 12

PitTSburgh

I)

145 99
137 133
113 118
110 114
102 135

96 100
113 113
96 133

101 175
110 179

114 ISO
131

88

132

96

135

97

119 116
110 11 5
13 3 117

6 36 145 132
10 11 35 11 3 Ill

Detr011
10 15 7 27 106 11.4
H ar tf ord
9 15 9 27 Ill 123
Wednesday 's Games
Ph 1laOelph1a 4, Hartford 4, 11e
P 1 t1 ~1Jur qt"l 6, Detro 11 4
So c:.t of s t.n ;,nta 3
Vv•1 \t"" q q ! ron

B. T o ronto 2

M1n n••\•Jirl o, Wtnn 1peg 0
( hi ( d\l' , St Lou 1s J l •e
Earnon")" .1 Co l ora d o J
Van cou\lt.• r 6. Moscow Dynamo 2, e:.

Thursday's Games
St LOUI'::i at Detroi t

New York Islander s at Montreal
"Toronto a T Buffalo

M) nneso t a a' Co lorado
Q u(&gt;Det r~r Los An geles
Friday's Games
cn~c ag o at Washington
Pittsburgh at Atlanta
Phil adel phia at Winnipeg
Edmon ton at Vancouver

Wednesday ' s College
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

TOURNAMENTS
AII ·College Tournev
First Round

Louisiana Tech 79, Okla . Citv 7'1
N . Texas Sf . 72 . San Jose St . 61

ECAC Holiday Festival
First Round
St. John 'S, N.Y. 68, Lafayette 511
80$ton Coli . 75. Georgetown 74, OT
Far West Classic
First Round
Brlngham Young 58, Penn 51 . 50

Oregon St . 100, Idaho 91

Gator Bowl Tourney
Jacksonville 58, William &amp; Mary 4J
Florida 63 . Iowa St. 59

Olllo 111gb School Bultetball
ByTbe AA&amp;odated Preu
Wedoeoday's Rellllto
Dayton Dunbar 56, On. Taft 55
Kenton Ridge 48, Triad 47
Lake Catholic 60, Akron Buchtel 53
Marietta 65, Parkersburg, W. Va .

57
Mechanicsburg 56, W. LibertySalem49
Walsh Jesuit 63, Young. Chane)• 45
Wickliffe Sl, W. Geauga 77

kumph '
The first eight teams in the Top 10
ratings will be in action. And three of
them - Ohio State, Alabama and
Florida State - have perfect 11-0
slates .
A fourth , Southern California,
firushed undefeated but suffered one
tie . for a 1~-1 mark . The other four
.Oklahoma , Arkansas, Nebraska
and Houston - racked up impressive
IG-1 records .
The partlci pants in the final four
games on New Year's Day compiled
an astronomical8H-l (. 949 percent)
tally. Amazing , indeed !
Here is how the Hoople System kaff -kaff - calls these outstanding
games :
Friday. Dec. Zl!
GATOR
Jarksonvllle, F1a . (N i
MlCHJGAN29
NORTH CAROLINA 21
The Wolverines (lh'l I boast a
strong defense, which has limited
opponents to 99.3 yards per game
and an average of just 12.2 points.
On offense the Wolves can coWJt on
the hardrunning cJ Butch Woolfolk
and the spectacular antics of ex citing wide receiver Anthony Carter.
Countering that defense-offense
combination, the North Carolina Tar
Heels 17,1-11 have free-wheeling,

100-yard s-per-game
Am os
Lawrence.
But, alas, twon' be enough,os Bo
Schembechler 's forces end a
disastrous six-game losing streak in
bowl games .
Saturday, Dec. Z9
HAIL OF FAME
Blnnlogham, Ala. (N I
SOI.Jlll CAROLINA 24
MJSSOURI 22
A bam~urner all the way, with
the Gamecocks (8-3) wiMing.
Leading the South Carolina attack is
All-America rumer George Rogers,
wm has accoorted for an average
152 yards per contest .
The Missouri Tigers (6 -6 ~
mystery team of tiE powerful Big 8,
will give tiE Gemecocks a lot of
rougll momerts before finally suffering a narrow two-point la~s. Hak kaff!
Moodlly,Dec.31
PEACH
Atlanta, Ga.
BAYLOR28
CLEMSON24
This one will be as close as the
hark on a tree -beh-beh! -as No. 19
Baylor battles to climb over the
Clemson Tigers, who occupy the No.
18 spot in the national rankings.
Baylor 17-4 I suffered those IOS'les
to highly rated Alabama, Houston,
Arkansas and Texas. So watch the
Bears go all-out against Clemson
(lh'l I to prove they belong way up in
the ratings .
Monday, Dee. 31
BLUEBONNET

Housloll
PURDUE35
TENNESSEE 28
A high-IICOring affair as quarterhacks Mark Hemnann of Purdue
(9-2) and Jlnuny Streater of Ten nessee (7--4) stage spectacular
SOOWll .

The Boilermaker's have been
more consistent than Tennessee
over the long haul this season and
their coolness under stress rates the
Hoople nod .
But, dear readers, your correspondent wouldn' be surprised if Jolumy
Majors • Vols pulled an upset . Harrumph'
Tueoday, JIU1.1

SUGAR
New OrlfSIII

ALABAMA:IO
ARKANSAS21
Bear Bryant and his Alabama
Q-irnson Tide (11-0) will make their
21st wmecutlve bowl engag811enta
winning one, os they turn back an
exreDent (10-1) Razocback team.
Steadman Shealy, Major Ogilvie
and Co. wiD go all ot1 to towle loo
Holtz 'Arkansas club.
By winning , ' Barna can
legitimately claim tiE national
crown -- if Southern California
defeats Olio State later in tiE day .
Tuesday, Jan. 1
CO'ITON
Dallu
HOUSTON31
NEBRASKA22
A typical SWC-Big 8slam-bang af-

CHICAnO I API - Indiana junior
quarterback Tim Clifford has been
named the Big Ten 's most valuable
football player m 1979, earning him
the Chicago Tribune Silver Football.
Twenty.four electors, including
the 10 conference coaches, selected
Clifford from among the most
valuable players of each school as
chosen by teammates.
The Silver Football has been
presented since 192-1.
Clifford, who set four school records last season, scored a slim victory
over senior tailback Dennis Mosley
of Iowa .
, The other eight nominees were :
Dlinois senior quarterback Lawrence McCuilough, Michigan senior
linebacker Ron Simpkins, Michigan
State senior linebacker Dan Bass,
Minnesota senior quarterback Mark
Carlson, Northwestern junior
linebacker Chuck Kern, Ohio State
senior linebacker Jim Laughlin,
Purdue junior tight end Dave Young
and Wisconsin senior flanker Tom
Stauss.
Simpkins finished third, Laughlin
wos fourth and Carlson fifth.
Clifford set school season records
for most pass attempts (259), most
completions (149 ), most passing yardage (1,907 l, and total offense (1,978
yards\ .
H&lt; led Indiana to a 7-4 record and

fair. The Houston Cougars (1().1 ),
rated No. a, w1ll pull a mUd surprise
as they outscore the No. 7 Nebraska
Comhuskers (1().1 ).
Both cluba have been to the Bowl
Wars many times and w1ll play
outstanding rootball.
Watch for Houston's Terald Clark
to win the Individual rushing duel
from Nebraska's Jarvis Redwine .

BY ASSOClA TED PRESS
The owner of the Houston Rockets
wants to see his team 4'ke off soon. It nught already have done so
1f it had kept Mike Newlin .
The Rockets, 16-19 and tied for
fourth in the National Basketball
Association 's Ce ntral Division,
broke a six -game losing streak by
pelting cross-6tate rival San Antoruo
143-110 Wednesday night. The victory came on the hee Is of team
owner George Maloof's mdictment
of hu; club for its ''negative approach. "
Had the Rockets management
seen fit to hold onto Newlin rather
than deallum to New Jersey early in
the season , the y might be
chailenl(mg AUanta for the top s ~
10 the division. ~ewlin has been on
an tmreAl sconng streak t.hat saw
him net 52 points 10 days ago in tWI
last home game , and hJt for 37 Wednesday as the Nets took Washington
116-104 .
Ca lvm Murphy, who along with
Tom Henderson made Newlin expendable from the Rockets backcourt - or so the club's !font office
believed - led Houston wtlh 29 points . MOSt's Malone added 27 and Rick
Barry hiid 21 as the Rockets reacted
to Maloof's bllist Wlth a nurry of

on the road . We gotta get off that
kick . "
Elsewhere , Kansas City was better than Los Angeles by 118-lll; Indiana edged Detroit 98-97 ;
Milwaukee beat Chicago 110-101 ;
Denver stopped Golden State 99-114;
Phoenix bonnbed PorUand 119.00,
and Seattle coasted past San Diego
124-104.
Neill ll&amp;, Bullelll 104
Newlin's perfonnance equaled
Elvin Hayes' 37-point output for tbe
Bullet. . Winford Baynes scored all
14 of his points down the stretch to
help the Nets break a three-game
losing streak .
Jim Cleamons, one of four Bullets
who tried to guard Newlin, was im pressed by the Nets'sharpshooter.

Kings us, Lakers lU
Sam Lacey dominated the boards
with 21 rebounds and scored 18 points as he outplayed Kareem AbdulJabbar. The Kings rallied from a 15point deficit in the third quarter.
OW Birdsong had 25 points for the
Kings while Jamaal Wilkes and Earvin "Magic" Johnson each had 24 for
Los Angeles.
Pacers 98, PtatoDB 97
Detroit lost its eigllth consecutive
!Jlme as Mickey Johnson hit a pair
of free throws for tiE decisive poilr
po tnL~ .
ts. Detroit's Jom Long missed a shot
"] !'an1 say that Mr . Maloof's
at the buzzer that could have woo the
statements had any effect on the
game .
way we played, " said Houston
Alex English led the Pacers with
Coach Del Harris. "I can' ask my
21 points while BobLanierhad 24for
players to play any harder . They are
the Pistons.
doing all they can and I'm coaching
BD&lt;klllO, Bullsl01
the best way I know how. We don~
Junior
Bridgeman scored 12 of his
go out and try to lose games."
Z3
pomts
in the final quarter and
Maloof had accused the Rockets of
Marques
Johnson
also had Z3 for the
feeling "it's predetermined that you
Bucks .
can only win a few selected games
·Bridgeman is a very smart
player and he uses their offense to
get himself open," Bulls' Coach
Jerry Sloan said. "He's like another
guard out there . They run him
around a let and he works hard to get
open. When he gets the ball he can
either pull up or go to the hoop."
Reggie Theus had 21 pomts for
Chicago.
fourth place in the Big Ten . The
Nuggelll !19, Warriors 94
season was capped by a 38-37 victory
Dan
Issei more than made up for
over Brigham Young in the Holiday
the absence of suspended Ge!J' ge
Bowl.
McGinnis and injured David llJJm·Tim is a clutch perfonner who
paon from the Denver line~ by
came through time and time again, "
pouring in 39 points. Issei hal 'J/
said Indiana Coach Lee Corso. "He
was as va luable to this team as any , points Tuesday night.
McGinnis began a six-day, threeplayer in the Big Ten . He was a
leader on the field as well as a great game suspe!!Sion for knocking down
referee Jess Kersey in a game at
athlete "
The 24 voters were the coaches, 10 Seattle Dec. 16.
Sull8 ll9, Trail Blazers 9!1
veteran officials, Big Ten ComPhoenix
won its 12th straight
missioner Wayne Duke, Tribune
game,
riding
balanced scoring that
sports editor George Langford , and
Len
Robinson
hit for 21 points,
saw
Tribune sports writers Bill Ja . .
Paul Westphal for ~. Walter Davis
and Roy Darner.
The results were announced Ill for 19 and Mike Bratz for 14.
"There arr a lot of factors when
Tuesday's editions of the Tribune.

you la!e one lilte this and none are
good," noticed Jack Ramsay, coach
of the Blazers . "We've got some sick
people but that doesn \ excuse the
entire squad. "
SuperSoaJ« 121, Clippers 104
A 14 -point spree by Demis Jomson in the third quarter paced Seattie. The Sanies outscored San Diego
Jill in a 7'1-minute ~an d. th~
period.
San Diego's Brian Taylor had 28
pomts, including four three-point
field goals.

Tueoday, JIUl. 1

ORANGE
MJamJ, fla . (N I
OKLAHOMA24
FLORIDA STATE 21
ProbablY the hardest giiDIO! of the
day (and --heh-heh- nlg!t)tocall.
TIE Florida Stall! Seminoles of
Coach Bobby Bowden have come
fr (JJl be li nd seve ra It llllB'I to rack up
an 11-0rerord -their all~ best!
Bt1, am l 'sa big Bl.Jl', Oklahoma
(1 0-1), the second -best rushing and
SC(J'iog team In tiE collegiate ranks,
Ills game -wrecking Billy Sima
ready and raring to go.
Sans, the 1978 Ha1rnan winner
and the I !i9rumer-up, was going in
high gear during the second half of
t~s season. And he figures to be the
big difference as the veteran
Sooners win a cl&lt;Jie one. Har-

TENNIS
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Seeded Australian players John
Alexander and Ross Case and
Austnan Peter Feigl were upset in
the opening round of the $362,000
Australian Open.
American Rick Fisher defeated
AleXander 7~, 7-&lt;;, 6-4; Australian
Mark Edmondson upset Case 6-7, 63, 6-1 and Aussie Paul Kronk
outlasted FelgiS-3, 6-4, 2-&lt;;, 6-3.
In other matches, Guillenno Vilas
of Argentina advanced with a hardfought 7-6, 6-3, 6-4 win over
Australia 's Chris Lewis, while
Aussie Phil Dent posted a 6-3, ~. &amp;-2
win over countryman John Marks .

0

0

• o" •
0 •

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Happy holidays are made up of
more than goodies and gilts .
Traditions and togetherness have
their place and the local scene was
filled with fun as families gathered
to share, to exchange, to reminisce .
Home for the holidays 1vith his
family was Steven Walburn of Eden
N: C... and his fiancee, Stephani~
Kitzmiller of Erwin, Tenn . Steven 's
parents , Mr . and Mrs . Dale
Walburn, and Jill entertained SWJday with a dinner for Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Clark of Gallipolis Ferry.
Other holida y dinner guests were
Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Walburn
and Mr . and Mrs . Houze Cretsinger.
Mr . and Mrs. William Forbes of
Sissonville, W. Va . visited the
Walburn family on Saturday, and
following church services, the Dale
Walburn family were guests of Mr .
and Mrs. William Uilnbert of Middleport for a holiday supper.
Jill Walbum will accompany her
brother and his fiancee to North
Carolina where she will make a holi day visit with Rick Taylor and his
parents .
Mr . and Mr s . Ke nneth
McLaughlin entertained Sunday
11
Jl.
f-.•

.

.

'•

Tlleoday,Ju.1
ROSE
P ... dena, CallJ.
SOlJI'HERN CAL 28
0Hl0STATE22
The Granddaddy of all the bowls.
This will be the top game of the
day with Ohio State (11~) striving to
contain Southern Cal ( 10~1) - led
by Heisman Trophy winner Charles
White and the accurate passing of
All-America quarterback Paul
McDonald.
The Buckeyes, under the direction
of "Coach d. the Year" Earle Bruce,
can put lots of points on the board
-with soph QB Art Schlichter throwing to sure-handed Doug Donley.
And with Schlichter, Calvin MUTTBy
and Rick Volley flUJiling the ball.
However, the Trojans Jli'(Hized
line and overall team speed will
prevail in a very, very good game.
Har-rumph 1

Rockets snap losing streak

f

x-f
'

HONORED ON FIRST YEAR
- Mr. and Mrs. Jim McLain eokrtalned receotly witb a party
hooorlng their daughter, Heather
Lorena, oo her lint birtbday. Her
cake wu made by ber motber. A
pat-t~-ea&amp;e , bakermao tbeme WBB
carried out. The cake was served
wltb Ice cream, Kooi-Ald a.OO coffee. At\endlog were Mr. aod Mrs.
tbarleo McLaiD, Rev McLalo,
Richard Moo...,, Mr. and Mn .
VIolet HyaeU, Judy Humphrey•,
Jay and Tara; Saody Henderson
and daughters, Deanna, Leeanoa, Sunanna , Mr. and Mra. Norman Humpbreys and Jack, Gina
and AutiiDll! Grtffltb.

with a Christmas buffet for their
family. Attendmg were Mr . and
Mrs. William Howells and sons, Rittman , Mr . and Mrs . Alan
McLaughlin , Kevin McLaughlin,
home from Camp LeJune, N. C.,
Terri Yeauger, Pomeroy. The family received telephone calls from
Debbie and Gary Cooke, Jackson ville, Fla ., and Debbie and Duane
McLaughlin, Idaho Falli,ldaho.
Joining Mr. and Mrs . Roscoe
Wise, Susanne and Jennifer, for
Christmas dinner were M.rs.
Kathleen Scott, Minersville, Steve
Harrison, Gallipolis, and Mr . and
Mrs. Cyril Arnold , Stewart.
Harry Henry, Athens spent
Ou-istmas with his brother-UJ4aw
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick
Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs . James Dishong, The
Plains, and Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Van Mest, McConnelsville, were
Ou-istmas dinner guests of Mr . and
Mrs . Bob Hoeflich and Jayne .
Christmas Eve dinner guests were
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Shuster, and
visiting earlier were Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hammer, Stevie Martin, Mrs .
Lou Ann Jones, Amy and Christi,
Columbus.
All of the family of Mr . and Mrs .
Raymond Cunningham of Syracuse
were home for the holidays . Besides
their son, Eric, still at home, there
were Mr . and Mrs . Jon Cunningham
and Jason, South Point; Mr. and
Mrs . Daniel Neff , Angela and Dac,
Stewart; Mr. and Mrs . Alan Cunningham, Olevia and Zachary, Cottageville, W. Va.; Paul Cunningham, Marietta; Ron Cunningham, Winthrop, Iowa, Marilyn
Noble, Strawberry Point, Iowa;
Mis:; Mae Roush, Parkersburg;
Mrs . Beulah Roush, Middleport; and
Mr . and Mrs. Jack Johnson, Mason,
W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs. Dayton Phillips of
Pomeroy were the Christmas guests
of their daughter and son-&lt;n~aw, Mr.
and Mrs . Bob Grimm. and their
family , Amy , a junior at Bowling
Green Uruversity; Mr . and Mrs .
Steven Grimm and Michael, Cam bridge ; and Christy, a seruor at Ohio
State .
Mr . and Mrs. Bert Grirrun of
Letart Falls also made a Chnstm.as
visit with the Bob Grimm family,
after spending the holiday with their
other son, Russell Grimm, his wife,
and their family , Mr. and Mrs . Matthew Norman and Geoffrey of
Bridgeport, and David, at the
Grimm home, St . Clairsville.
Chris tmas Eve guests of Mr . and
Mrs William Radford were Mary
and Roger Gilmore, Athens, Mr . and
Mrs . BW Radford and daughter.
Brooke, Marietta , Becky and Larry
RDmine, Homer Radford, Doug and
Connie Little, Judy Radford, and
Barry Marshall. On Christmas Day.
tiE Radfords were JO!Oed for dinner
by Mr. and Mrs Fred Goeglein,

~h'

.,
,.,,.,,.~,

Indiana's Oifford
Big IO's top player

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA - Reduced the suspension of
Georoe McGinnis , forward , Denver
Nuggets , from 10 days to si x days f or
running into referee Jess Kersey

Falber of tbe Bowls
Egad. friends, the matchup~~ in the
eight major 1979-!ll college football
bowls over the long holiday weekend
are as interesting as any your correopondent has seen in years . Um-

Happy holidays--more than just gi ts

oQ

• 0
0 o•

.

•

~~A/LGvnQ~

o o

00

Fond

regard~ It l

and \llllr
.
f:tm ih in t hi:-, time
&gt;f togetherness and
.\'OU

x.i
/Y'"'-

for

• FLOOR SAMPLES
• DEMONSTRATORS

c heer~

\OUr

Thanks
faith in u~!

AT
For

Meigs County

DRASTICALLY
REDUCED PRICES!

Horner Radford Mrs . Grace Glaze,
Virgil Glaze, and Mary and Roger
Gilmore .
Mr. and Mrs . Albert Roush and
Mr. and Mrs . Lanny Tyree and son
are spending the holidays in North
Carolina with Mr . and Mrs. Bill Hutchinson, the former Joan Roush, and
their family . Christmas was observed at the Roush home earlier with
visits from Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush
and family,St. Albans, Mr. and Mrs.
RDger Roush and children, Grove City , Mr. and Mrs . Larry Flowers,
Pickerington, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Roush and son, Mr . and Mrs , Lanny
Tyree and son.
Mrs . Rose Reynolds is in Morgantown, W. Va . spending the holidays
with her son, Val Reynolds, and
family .
Chnstmas dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Finlaw, Heather and

By Cecily Brownstone
Associated Press Food Editor
PARTY FARE
Cheese and Crackers
Beverage
PeanutCreams
PEANUT CREAMS
It's a no-cook candy; only the
shaping takes time.
If, cup butter, at room temperature
l.Jrd cup smooth or chunky peanut
butter
I pound confectioners ' sugar
l-3rd cup heavy cream
I&gt; teaspoon vanllla
Roasted unsalted peanuts
Cocoa
Beat together butter and peanut
bolter WJtil blended. With a spoon ,
gradually beat in coofectioners ·
sugar, cream and vanilla unW blended . Cover and chill just until firm
enough to shape. Work with half the
mixture at a time . Scoop out level
teaspoonfuls; press a peanut in the
center of each and roll into a ball
between your palms. Sprinkle some
cocoa m wax paper. With a spoon.
coat balli with cocoa, then roll between palms lllltil cocoa becomes
darker. Layer balls between saran
1n a shallow freezer container ; store
in the freezer . Delicious served
straight from the freezer. Makes
about 9 dmen .
By CecU Brownstone
Aasoclated Preu Food Editor
DINNER FARE
Roaot Port
Spiced Peaches
Broccoli
Potatoes
Cookles
Beverage
SPICED PEACHES
A simple recipe a reader asks us to
repeat because it'sa "just right" accompaniment for meat.
~-ounce can cling peach halves in
heavy syrup.
If, cup firmly packed light browr
sugar
1, teaspoon nu tmet
I&gt; teaspoon cinnamon
Drain peaches, reserving one-half
cup syrup, and arrange in a 10 by 6
by 1 and three-fourths-inch baking
dish . In a smaU saucepan stir
together sugar, nutmeg, cinnamon
and reserved peach syrup; heat.
stirring to dissolve sugar; pour over
peaches. Bake in a pre-ileated 350degree oven lllltll very hot- 10 to 15
minutes .
ByCecUyBroWIIItone
Aloocalled Press Food Editor
BRUNCH FARE
P08cbed Eggs oo bam
Cheese Blscul\8
Freob Fruit
CHEESE BISCUITS
Our latest version of a delicious
and nutritious hot bread.
1cup all-purpose bread
One and on~ighth teaspoons
baking powder
"• teaspoons baking soda
One-eighth teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons sugar
2tablespoons butter
I&gt; cup small-curd, tangy cottage
cheese
I large egg
3tablespoons mllk
In a medlwn bowl stir together
nour, baking powder. baking soda,
salt and sugar ; cut in butter until
particles are fine . In a small bowl
with electric beater at high speed,
beat cheese WJtll it is as smooth as

RACINE
.HOME NAnONAL

BANK'
Racine,

oeto

CHRISTMAS PARTY HEW - The Me1gs County Jaycee and
Jayceetea put in a busy holiday season in helping others. The two groups
combined their efforts to stage a party for residents of the Meigs County
Infinnary and Santa arrived presenting each resident with an individual
gift from the Jayceettes and a major gift to the men and to the women of
the lnfinnary from the Jaycees . There were games, carol singing and
refreshments to round out the party .
ricotta -at least 2 minutes; add egg
and milk ; beat until blended; add to
nour mixture and stir with a fork Wltil nour mixture is moistened and
rather sticky . Turn dough, by level
tablespoons, into buttered I'% by :y,.
inch muffin1'8n cups. Bake in a
P"'heated 450-&lt;legree oven until a
cake tester inserted in center comes
out clean - 15 minutes. Serve hot.
Makes 2 dozen .
By Ceclly Bro'WOBtone
Aasoclaled Press Food Edlwr
EVENING REFRESHER
SpongeCake
Wttb Mocha FrosUng
Cfiftee
JOSPINNELU'S
MOCHA FROSTING
The shortening adds fluffiness and
lightens the color.
"• pound (I stick I butter , at room
temperature.
'-&gt; of a 3-&lt;&gt;unce package cream
cheese, at room temperature
I tablespoon instant coffee
1 teaspooon hot tap water
1'-&gt;cups confectioners' sugar
Milk
1'-&gt; tablespoons shortening
I&gt; teaspoon vanilla
Beat together butter and cream
cheese WJW blended. Make a paste
of coffee, cocoa and water ; beat into
butter mlxture until blended.
Gradually beat in confectioners'
sugar, keeping smooth, Beat in
enough mllk, I&gt; teaspoon at a time,
to give a good spreading consistency
lwe used 11&gt; teaspoons). Beat in
shortening and vanilla. Makes
enough frosting to cover a sponge
cake baked in a 10-inch pan .

Russ1a had the largest nwnber of
movie houses in the world in 1975 1'15,600 - according to the latest
data in the United Nations·
Statistical Yearbook . In the same
year , Italy had 12,471, the United
States 11 ,250, France 5,543 and the
United Kingdom 1.525

SEEKS DIVORCE
On grounds li extr1n1e cruelty,
George G!X'don Warner, Pomeroy.
was grarted a div(J'ce fr&lt;IIl Cyrttua
Gay Warner, Oleshire , in the Meigs
County Conunm Pleas Court .

NEW YEAR'S PARTY
Racine American Legion Post 602
wiU hold a New Year's party Mon day everring at the hall . Pri ce is $10
a couple and refreslunents and meat
will be provided. Members are to
take a tovered dish. The affair 1s an
adult party for members and guests.

TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
~

Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday li1112 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Her man Grate
773 -5592

Holiday visitors of Mr . and Mrs .
Harry Davis included Mr . and Mrs.
R&lt;&gt;bert Lehew and Robin, Columbus,
Mrs. Harold Johnson , Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Leifheit and son, Curt, Sprlllgfield , and Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Jeffers, Tim and John, on Sunday ;
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Lehew, Ted, John,
Bill and Clleryl, Sadie Theuner, and
Jim Jeffers on Monday ; and Tracie
Jeffers and Mr. and Mrs. Bob Davis,
Tina and Tammy, on Christmas
Day .
The Rev. and Mrs . Donald Walker
of Racine hosted a family gathering
Saturday evemng. It was the first
time in four years that the entire
famlly was together . Attending were
Mr. and Mrs . Don Walker , Jr .,
Michelle and Tommy, Dixie, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs . Larry (Maurita
(Maurita l GaWI.hrop, Melissa and
Johnnie, Richwood, W.va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Delbert Walker , Summersville,
W. Va . ; Mr . and Mrs . Jeff (Rexanna I Knighting , Ricky Walker, at
home, and the Rev . and Mrs. Mark
McClung 1Mary Ann I, Middleport.
Monday evening following the
candlelight services at the Middleport Baptist Church, the Rev . and
Mrs . Mark McClllllg left for Mt .
Lookout , W. Va . where they spent
Christmas with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin McClung, and other
relatives. They returned home
Wednesda y.

Sermonette
With Christmas Day behind us,
what lies ahead' The prophets and

HOLZER MEDICAl , CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC. 24
Richard Carter, Juliun Delcato,
Mrs . Patrick Bailey and son, Elsie
Farley, Mar cella Ferrell , Walter
Fraley , Rovert Fulton, Wealtha
Greene, Louella Hearon , George
Henry , Mrs . Richard Hill and
daughter, Sarah Jerrell, Rosalee
Jones , Thomas Jones , Gary l..amm
Jr ., Ramona Leach, Bertie
l..ivmgston, Helen McClees, Cathy
Mlchael, MRs. Micahe I RDush and
son, Laura Simpson, Mar~aret
Smith, Annamae Tracewell, John
Tucker, Jody Wasburn .
DISCHARGES DEC. 25
Rayal Beattie, Cheryl DeWitt,
Ruth Goody, Leota Henry , Mildred
Lemle y, Monica McK.imey , Mrs .
Samuel Meadows and son, Maurice
NeutzJing, Mrs . Steve Seyder and
daughter .
DISCAHRGES DEC. 26
Ray Barker, Angela Burdeil ,
J erry Caldweil, Freda Eliason,
Alica Finley, Mrs . Jeffrey Folmer
and son, Michael Isaac, Omar
Ressegger. Emma Richards , Mrs .
Leonard Williams and son .
BIRDISDEC. 26
Mr. and Mrs . Dav1d Jones .
daughter. Jackson

BirthdaJ' celebrated
Mr . and Mrs . James Brewer
entertained ret·enUy WJth a party 10
celebration of the lOth birthday of
their daughter. Marybeth.
The group enJoyed an old fashioned wi ener roast Attending
were Steve Cassell . Penny Clark .
Churckie and Susie Pul len, Eddie
Baer , Tracy and Stom1y Walker ,
Mike Southern, Rhonda Rathburn ,
Nicki Whitlatch, Mary Beth Cre means. Ryan and Sam Cowan, Jerry
Kirkham, Kelly Douglas.
Games were pla yed "ith pnzes
going to Eddie Baer. Tracy Walker .
and Susie PUllen .
Sending gifts were Mr . and Mrs. L.
M. Brewer, GaWpoUs: Retty l.&lt;&gt;u
Gilmore, and Mr . and Mrs . Ted
Riley , Jr ., Middl eport

TO MEET JAN. 8

A regular meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, has been set for
7:3() p.m on Jan . Bat the Middleport
temple .

pundits are hard at work in their attempts to discern some sign that
would indicate precisely the shape of
things to come . Surely as the 1970s
draw to a close, all of us should find
occasion to thank the Gracious Lord
for His mercy and good providence.
Factories , businesses, and other
institutions traditionally pause for a
short time to take inventory each
year to determine their status,
financially and otherwise. If this
were not undertaken, management
would have no accurate idea how
things really are . Every Chnstian
needs to pause to take inventory too.
With an old year behind us and a
New Year ahead of us, what better
time to pause to take spiritual inventory . What areas in my life need
special attentioo' What are my
weaknesses '
What are my
strengths ? What are some of the
special joys I have to be thankful
for' What are some of my spec1al
needs for which I should seek the
Lord 's help '
Paul tells us 10 his letter to the
Philipp ian Church: ''This one thing I
do, forgetting those things which are
behind, and reaching forth unto
those things which are before, I
press towa rd the mark for the prize
of the high calling of God in Qu-ist
Jesus." r Phil. 3: 13-13 1.
Perhaps it 's best tbat we do not
know all that will happen to us in the
future . We learn trusting faith by
depending upon God and leaving the
future m His hands . We look backward in gratitude, realizmg that the
past is but prolo~ue for the present
and the futur e. W1th Pa ul, may we
resolve to pres.' toward the mark of
God's high ca lling m the new year of
t960 .
Blessing and honor and glory and
might be unto the God forever and
ever . Amen .

!Submitted by Richard W.
Thomas, minister, Northwest
Cluster United Methodist Churches!.
\Your 7.ifxTra-,:~-~
Florist Since 1951

1
I
I
I
I

!

~

JA-IMC~

J'LORIST
PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

' --

-FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE

WHILE THEY
LAST!

week 's hohd&lt;l y VlsJt with their
parents , Mr . and Mrs. C. E .
Blakeslee, Pomeroy, and Mrs . Mary
Circle , Racin e. They wer e
Christmas dinner guests at both
homes . Others with the Blakeslee for
a Christmas night dinner were Mr .
and Mrs . Jim Butcher, Julie and
Jeff, and Mrs . Eva Smith who is
enroute from her home in Indiana to
her home in Florida .

...

MASON FURNITURE

The Oual1ly-Feature Line -at FA NTA ST IC SAVINGS

HURRY

~,.

SHOP

Your "CHANCE OF A LIFETIME " TO GET AN AMANA .

People

Matt of near Chester, were Mr. and

Mrs. Williaw King, Kevin King , student at Ohio University, Mr . and
Mrs . Hank Johnson, Bradbury
Road , Mr. and Mrs . Richard
Meckstroth , Huntington , W. Va ., Mr.
and Mrs . Richard Finlaw , and
Alfred Grueser .
Mr . and Mrs . Melvin Circle and
children, Marianne and Mark, of
Wichita , Kansas are here for a

Mason, W.Va.

1
I
I
I
I.
)

Yo~!:.!!?.!,!~i~--j

�•

Generation Rap
By H .. l,· n and~ .. ,. BoUt·I

Doeso 't MIDd Hl.s DatfDJl:
But Not With HJs Ex· Wife!
By Heleu and Sue Hottel
OEARHELEN AND SUE :
I'm in love with a divorced man.
He wants to date other girls and I
said that was okay, 88 he sees me
very often anyway , and we 're not
engaged .
But I caught him with his no good
ex-wife! And he W881l 1 just visiting
the kids . He says he's sorry and it
won\ happen again, but can I ever
trust him? He's been divorced a UtIle less than a year. - OEEPLY IN
LOVE
DEAR OIL :
Look, you're just one of several
people this man is dating. So why
aim your ire at the ex-wife, when a
new woman might he more of a
threat? - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : In other
words, you haven 1 yet established
territorial rights. Cool it!

)

I

Calb)'

M anic )•

Engagement announced here
Mr . and Mrs . Ray Manley, Mid-

1976 graduate of Wahama High
School, and is employed by the lrby
Construction Company of Maysville,
Kentucky.
The wedding will be held on Dec.
29 at 4 p.m. at the Middleport Free
Will Baptist Church, with the Rev .
Noel Hemnann officiating .

dleport, are aMouncing the upcoming marriage of their daughter
Cathy to Clayton Oldaker, Hartford,
W. Va., son of Otho Oldaker and
Alice Fields, alBoof Hartford .
Miss Manley is a 1977 graduate of
Meigs High School . Mr. Oldaker is a

Great Smokeout 'great' success
The American Cancer Society's
Great American Smokeout was successful in convincing about
18,200,000 smokers across the country and 1,500,000 smokers in Ohio to
give up cigarettes on November 15,
81Ulounced Pat Ingels , Meigs
Smokeout chainnan.
"That means more than one-third
of the adult smokers acroos the
rountry and Ohio took our challenge
seriously to give up smoking for at
least one day, ''she added .
A random telephone survey con ducted in 48 states and the District of
Colwnbia on the morning of the
&amp;nokeout showed that 64.5 percent
of those interviewed were aware of
the Great American Smokeout.
The third 81Ulual Great American
Smokeout was sponsored by the
American Cancer Society as a
challenge to smokers to try their will

power and quit smoking cigaretwl
foroneday.
Mrs . Ingels commented that she
has received reports that several
local smokers kicked the smoking
habit as a result ot the Great
American Smokeout.

VISITING HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Urcle and
children, Marianne and Mark, of
Wichita, Kansas, are spending the
holidays with their parents, Mrs .
Mary Circle, Racine, and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Pomeroy.
The family, which arrived Saturday,
enjoyed Chlrstrnas dliUiers at both
homes .

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
ZIPPER WON'T ZIP
By Polly Cramer
POU. Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I washed my
son 't winter coat and now the zipper
will not stay up . Do you or anyone
el.!e know how to make it stay zipped? -DEBBIE
DEAR DEBBIE - There comes a
time when we have to give up . It
may he that your zipper has had its
best days and you need a new one. It
is not too hard to put in a new one if
you carefully observe the way the
original ooe wu installed . - POLLY
DEAR POlLY - I have found an
eBBy way to stuff a turkey that I
would like to share with the other
readers. I keep three graduated
si2es of lin cans (with top, bottom
and labels removed) in my storage
drawer. A soup can is great to use
when stuffing a small chicken, a one
pound can foc a larger chicken &lt;r
small turkey and a large fruit can
foc a bigger turkey.
The propper size can be inserted
lnto the cavity as far as It will go and
the dressing is spooned lnto the can,
railling It as the cavity fills . The
smooth rim of the can makes it
poeslble to fill the bird with little
spillage or mess. (Polly's NOte Our reader did not say but I feel sure
sbe removes the can after the cavity
Ia filled. The sluffing could be pushed from one end out the ot•,er.) MRS.R.S.
DEAR POlLY -My Pointer concerns Icy windshields. Windshield
wuher foe winter hill! anti .freeze in
It 10 I squirt some on the windshield
and then turn on the wipers. The Ice
then melts much faster than it does
when waiting for the defroster to do
the job alone. -FRED
DEAR POlLY - When making
candles you do not have to buy expensive candle scents. You can use
any pine scent. First mix it with alit-

Ue alcohol so it will mix well with the
hot wax . For beautiful colors use
wax crayons .
The screens to sliding glass doors
are so light they do not always glide
easily . To cut down oo the pushing
and breaking spray the bottan track
with silicone or rub soap on it. MRS.C. W. M.
DEAR MRS. C.W.M. - Your
Pointer saved the day for me and I
found using slivers of leftover soap
bars worked very well . I will keep
them just for that purpose .
- POLLY
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newapaper-{X)upon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column.
Write
POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
In these days of everybody with
some kind of weight and nutrition
problem, why is it that restaurants
don\ cater to '1ean Americans"?
Fast food chains to the fanciest
places serve mainly high-ealorie
food : everything from Grease City
to heavy sauces, sour cream
potatoes and fancy desserts.
Oh sure, a few rest'urants have
tasteless lo-eal platters , but who
wants them • Salads, hold the dressing•
Why doesn't some bright business
persoo start a restaurant chain
featuring healthlul, tasty, tempting,
low-ealorie food? I doo 1 mean
"health foods" which many people
can 1 get into, but menus sans
sauces and greasy frying, and
featuring really light desserts ' RESTAURANT RADICAL
DEARR.R.:
It's being done, but perhaps not as
much as it should be . One problem :
when people go out for diMer , they
want to break loose, as in, "I dieted
all week, I deserve !his 1" A lo-eal
meal, no matter how ta.!!ly , would he
less than a celebration. - HELEN
AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My best friend is always putting
herself down. She really has a rough
time at kome, and she'd go crazy if it
weren 1 for her friends who help her
through. But I'm afraid she1llose
them if she keeps on saying how
stupid, awful~ooking. and hopeless
she is. I get so tired telling her she's
wrong when all she does is dwell on
the bad things about her (which really aren 1 that bad). How can she
break this habid before we all leave
her' - BEING DRIVEN UP THE
WALL
DEARBDU1W:
Someone should tell your friend
that her habit is a cop-out: it's so
much easier to say '1 'm hopeless"
than work at improvement. Besides,
her down11utting brings gympathy
and attention: she hasn 1 much in centive for change.
Our IU : the truth t Make her
aware that she has a very bad habit
and you 11 help her break it by refusing to hear of her "bad side", but instead praising ber whenever she
sees something good about herself .
Then make a habit of catching her
up each time she slips into old ways .
And don 1 he reticent about mentioning that total pessimists end up
alone. Good luck 1 - HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE : Your friend
could do with pr&lt;iessional help . Why
not talk to a school counselor about
her problem • She needs lessons in
self-esteem that might better be provided by an expert.

!GOT A PROBLEM • Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination mother daughter answer - in care of this
newspaper . I
The Battle of the Nile in 1798
marooned Napoleon in Egypt .

_WARM COMFORT __
'

ANGEL TREAD

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Scuff and Ballertna Styles in Wh1te.
P1nk or Blue Terry.

SALE
REG. '5.00
We ask that all Christmas Exchanges be made by
Jan.
1980. Thank You .

s,

•

There may really be a
'man in the moon 'I
WASHINGTON tAP) - Europa, a
moon of the planet Jupiter, may he
the moot likely place in the solar
system to search for some fonn of
life , says a scientist who has studied
data from the Voyager 2spacecraft.
Richard C Hoagland, a coosultant
to the Na tiona! Aeronautics and
Space Administration, says the
Voyager data indicates that beneath
the surface of Europa is an ocean of
water, ''the prime prerequisite for
life as we know it."
Hoagland, writing in the January
issue of "Star x Sky" magazine,
bases his theories on information
gathered by Voyager during its July
fly-bys of Jupiter and its four moons .
"Only three other objects in the
solar system have ever been
seriously suggested 88 abodes of life
+ Mars , Jupiter and Saturn's moon
Titan , " he said. ''Spacecraft investigations of all three of these
bodies in recent years have cast
doubt on life existing on any of
them . 11
''The Voyager 2 findings leave little doubt that Europa is covered
with a crust of ice perhaps five miles
thick that envelops a global ocean
possibly 60 miles deep," he wrote .
He also suggests thwt at one time,
conditions on the Jovian moon were
such that the ocean was free of ice .
''Jupiter was once a miniature sun
according to our current coocepts ol
solar system fonnation," he said.
'11 only lasted a short time + a
few million years at most + but for
that brief period Europa probably

~---Social

Calendar

I

THURSDAY
RACINE GRANGE free ham dinner, 7:30p.m . Thursday at grange
hall ; take covered dish and own
table service; everyone invited.
FRIDAY
PARENTS WITHOUT Partners
dance, 8:30p.m. Friday at K.E.R.A.
near Ravenswood. Open to public,
casual dress.
MONDAY
NEW YEAR'S Eve party, Mmday
for Racine American Le!Poo P\lst
Sa! at hall. $10 per couple with meat
and
refreSiments
provided;
members to take covered dish . An
adult party for post members and
their guests .
'FIRST ANNUAL New Year's Eve
gospel sing featuring Harvest Trio,
Reedsville, and Singing Messengers,
Parkersburg, will he held at Eastern
High School on Monday at 7:30. Admission free but offering will be
taken. Ref reslunents will be sold by
Eastern High Band B0011ters .
POMEROY VOLUNTEER Fire
Department aMual New Year's Ball
at P\lmeroy Elementary Monday, 10
p.m. to 2 a.m. Music by "Holher
Hollow Review ''. Advance ticketa on
sale at G and J Auto Parts, New
York Clothing and Legar Monument; evenings at fire statioo . $12 a
couple.
NEW YEAR'S EVE service at the
Ao&lt;h Street Freewill Baptist Church
in Middleport at 7 30 on Monday
evening . There will be special
singing and special preaching.
Everyone welcome.
NEW YEAR 'S Eve party at the
Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy.
The party will take place from 8
p.m . to 12:30 a.m . on Monday evening . Admission charge will be $1 foc
adults and children under 12 will he
admitted free with their parents.
Everyone attending is asked to bring
sandwiches or cookies for the coffee
break and party during the evening.
There will be dancing and music by
the Stringdusters. Tile public is invited .

SADDLES
&amp;
SADDLE
BAGS
BELTS
&amp;
BELT
BUCKLES
WESTERN
CLOCKS

baaked in energy as rich as any
streaming toward Earth ¥~daY from

the sun. II
t
That was long enough, Hoagland
said, '1or molecules that are suspected life11rocess precursors to he
created as they t.ve been in
thousands of earthly laboratory
simulatlona .... The life precursor
molecules produced during
Europa's first few 11lilllon years
could have continued to evolve under a canopy of ice, sustained by internal heat sources."
Europa looks like a giant cracked
eggshell ln pictures relayed back to
Earth
from
Voyager
2.
CriMcroosing its yellow surface are
hundreds of dark cracks, some of
which seem to he as wide as 30 miles
and as long as2,000 miles.
The next chance scientisl! will

have to get a further look at Europa
is in the mid-1116(B when NASA launches Its Gallleo satellite into orbit
around Jupiter. The satellite Ia to
pasa repeatedly within a few hundred miles ot Europa.
''The real exdtement will arrive
with the first human e%pedition to
Europa," Hoagland said. 'Qnly by
landing there will we discover 11
Europa is another Earth which
somehow died before it had a chan-

ce."

Announce birth

VIRGIL PARSONS
HOSPITAI.IZED
Mrs . Vlrgll Parsons is confined to
the cardiac care unit at the Holzer
Medical Center. She was admitted
Monday .

Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Folmer, RoCk
Springs, are 81Ulouncing the birth of
a son, Cllad Allen, Sunday at the
Holzer Medical Center. The baby
weighed eight pounds, I I ounces.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson JOhnson, Portland, and
Mr. and Mrs. William Folmer, Rock
Springs. Scott Folmer, Rock Springs, is a great-grandfather. Mr. and
Mrs . Folmer have another son,
Jared, age two.
TRUSTEES TO MEET

Chesler Township Trustees will
JOB'S DAUGHTERS
JNSTALLA110NSA11JRDAY
Susanna WISe will he installed as
honored queen of Bethel62, International Order of Job's Daughters,
Saturday at 7:30 pm. at the Middleport Masonic Temple.

meet at 7 this evening at the Chester
Town Hall.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
The Sutton Township Trustees will
meet oo Monday, Dec. 31, at 8p.m.,
at the Syrscuse Municipal Bulldlng.

i lnD «lllllltAII WI
STOREWIDE DISCOUNT

10% OFF
WOMEN'S FASHION BOOTS

30% OFF

MARGUERITE SHOES
102 E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

Due to the death of

Dr. Compton,

Goessler's Jewelry
Will be closed Wed.,
Thurs. &amp; Fri., Dec. 26, 27 &amp; 28.
We will be open Dt•f'. 29 for rt'~ular
business hours and tht~ n will dost·
until Wed., Jan. 2.

20% OFF

EVERYTHING
LISTED

PET SUPPLIES
EXCEPT: AQUARIUM SPECIALS,
LIVE ANIMALS &amp; DOG &amp; CAT FOOD

MODERN SUPPLY

"The Store with All Kinds of Stuff ." For Pets,
Stables, Large &amp; Small Animals, Lawns &amp;
Gardens.
992-2164
399
main

w_

BILLFOLDS
BOOTS
&amp;
MOCASSINS

r-------------------------1

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 27. 1979

India no longer dumping
ground for American grain
WASHINGTON lAP ) - For the
capita production since 1976-77 , aclast 20 years, India periodically has
cording to the figures .
been a major dumping ground for
More significantly, it showed Insurplus American food grain . But
dian per capita grain production this
times have changed, says the
year was less than consumption for
Agriculture Department.
for the first time since 1976-77.
One r1. the world's most heavily
The agency said the Indian food
populated countries,lndia has made
situation is complicated further by a
remarkable gains in agricultural
shortage of diesel fuel for railroads,
production in the last decade . But its
although food movements have been
given top priority .
birth rate once again appears to be
exceeding food output, U.S. officials
Procurement of food in India is
said Wednesday.
carried out by the Food Corporation
''Ibis decade has witnessed the
of India, state governments and farbeginnings of an agricultural tran mer cooperatives , with most of the
sformation in India, a crudal coungrain controlled by the FCI, the
report said.
try in the delicate world food supply
balance," the department said .
Thus , the Indian government,
"From the position of one of the
through FCI, ' 'must successfully
world's major food importers during
distribute grain from iis stocks to
19'13-76, when 81Ulual grain imports
the areas severely affected by the
averaged over 3.5 million (metric ) drought in order to avoid serious
tons, India has become a net ex - localized food shortages in the
porter of grain in recent years."
coming months, " it said .
The analysis was issued by
The outcome of next spring's har USDA's Foreign Agricultural Servest ''will be the key detenninate in
vice as an ''update" of India's grain
any decision the Indian government
situation.
would make regarding possible
It said India's "striking grain imports , "the report said .
agricultural gains .. in the last four
Citing "other sources," the report
years resulted from good weather
said India may need to import two
and improved technology .
' million to four million metric tons of
But drought in 1979 "dramatically
grain in the coming months .
illustrates'' the extent to which India
''Finally, with an election to be
still depends oo ' the vagaries &lt;i
held in the first week of January, the
nature" despite its improved far - government in power will probably
ming methods.
determine a minimum act.-eptable
Total Indian grain and pulses
stocks (of grain ) level, below which
!beans, for example 1 in 1979-M are
further drawdowns will be met by
estimated at abol4 113 million
imports, "it said.
metric Ions against 128 million last
+++
year' officials said '
WASHINGTON (AP) - The holiday
The 12 percent drop in grain out - doldrums struck heavily a I the
put came despite a record wheat
Agriculture Department this week .
crop last year, the report said. But
After a federal holiday on Monday
this fall's Indian grain harvest was and Christmas on Tuesday, few of hit severely by drought.
ficials were around to answer
"India's grain production year is
telephones on Wednesday .
broadly divided into two harvest
Secretary Bob Bergland, his office
seasons, the rabi (spring 1. which a c- announced last week, is scheduled to
counts for approximately 115 percent
vt.it home folks in Roseau , Minn ..
of total 81Ulual production, and
until Jan . 2.
kharll (fall), which comprises the
Asked about who 's minding the
remaining 35 percent. " II said.
store, acting press chief Russell For India's population of about 6!iO
te said Wednesday that Un ·
million is growing by an estimated
dersecretary Dale Hathaway "is ac ·
2.2 percent 81Ulually , the report saJd . ling" for Bergland but "has nothing
"With total grain and pulse conscheduled." All of Bergland's other
sumptioo of approDil8tely 10 million
top aides were out except Assistant
tons per month, India faces a net Secretary Carol Tucker Foreman,
productioo shortfall of about 6. ~
who "alBo has nothing scheduled,"
million tons during 19'111-M," the
Forte said.
report said .
+++
"However, overall production
WASHINGTON !API - The
must increase by more than 2.:;
Agriculture Department has named
million tons per year in order to
Alexander Bernitz to he counselor
for agricultural affairs in Ottawa,
maintain these minimal consumption levels ."
Canada.
Bernitz, a career employee of the
Tables included in the report
department's Foreign Agricultural
showed that India 's grain and pulse
Service, most recently has been
output in 1979-M iB estimated at 175
kilograms per persoo, CWlp&amp;red to deputy 888istant administrator for
agricultural attaches. He is exa reord ot 201 kilograms per capita
pected to arrive in Ottawa in early
in 197S-79. That was the lowest per

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
PROBATE OIVISION
EDNA N . WOOD as Ad ~
ministratriK of the E.state
of
Ida
M.
Chr1slie .

the

Southeas t q uarter a t

Section No . Seven, Town
No Th ree and Range No .

Thirteen oi the Oh io Com
panr ·s Purc hase ; then ce

Nor h tar enough so rnat by
ru nning due West to th e
ce nter of the State Road ,
thence along the cen ter of
O.ceased
said road to the sect ion
Plainfitt
l ine , then ce ~ast to th_e
place of beg1nnmg so that tt
vs .
EDNA N . WOOD,
shall contain thirty acres ,
but subject to a l l legal h1gh
2010 Greeonwich Road
Wildsworth, Ohio 44281
ways .
The
aforesa 1d
described real estafe being
E"t al.,
the same real estate con
Defendants .
veyed by William Smith ,
No . 22704
Jr . to Lu cetta Smith by
NOTICE
deed beMing date of the
TO THE DEFENDANT ,
15th . day of Septembec
THOMAS
F . TAYLOR,
1876 and recorded tn Vol
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
~.Pages 607 and 608ot the
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
records ot deeds •n the
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
Recorder ' s Office of Meigs
WAS BOX 4J, SIBBERT ,
County, Ohio
WEST VIRGINIA ; THE
And being the same
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
property conveyed by Guy
DEVISEES, LEGATEES,
A Smith , Executor of the
DlSTRIBUTEES ,
AD ·
Estote of Lucetta Sm&lt;th,
MINISTRATORS
EXEC ·
Deceased, to Samuel J .
UTORS AND ASSIGN~ IF
Chri_stie
and
Ida
M
ANY OF EACH OF I HE _,.- CHr1stie by deed dated
FOLLOWING:
IDA M .
June I, 1\&gt;25, and recorded
CHRISTIE. DECEASED ;
in Book 127, at Page 448_of
o o u G LAs
Y 0 UN G,
the Deed Records of Me~gs
DECEASED · RANA KING . County Ohio
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE ·
EXCEPTING one ·tourth
o· GLADYS GOEGLEIN, of an acre more or le~s~on OECEASED· DELLA RIF ·
veyed by Ida M . Chmtoeto
FL E
DECEASED;
Cecil C. Heilman and A l len
FLORENCE
HENRY,
C. He i lman by deed recor ·
DECEASED ;
DAVID
ded in Vol . 247, Page 483
KING, DECEASED ; BER ·
Deed Records . Metgs Coun
NARD
KING,
ty,Ohio.
DECEASED · HAROLD
In SECOND COUNT Ida
kiNG
DECEASED ;
M . Christ ie was seiZed of
lEN A,
o 0 E R FE R , the undivided one ·fou_rth
DECEASED A . K .A . LANA
part of the followtng
DORFER
DECEASED :
described realest ate :
OTHO
'
YOUNG ,
The following described
DECEASED ·
LAURA
real eslate situated in the
1(-NAPP,
DECEASED ;
Slate of Ohio, in I he County
ftENRY
DOER FER
of Meigs and tn Saltsbury
DECEASED ·
OLEN
Township : II being near
DOERFER , DECEASED;
the middle of the Sovlh hall
OA YTON
YOUNG,
of the North halt ot Sect&lt;on
DECEASED ;
ADA
No . 18 ,TownNo . 2i~Range
YOUNG
DANIELS,
13 Ohto Companys Pur ·
DECEASED · GEORGE
chast" and on the South I me
YOUNG
DECEASED ;
of said South haU ol the
E0 '
KING ,
North half and beg1nnmg at
~~CEASED· SAMUEL J . the Northwest corner of
CitRISTIE ' oECEASED ;
James A . Vovng 's 36 acre
AoND
T'HOMAS
F.
lot ; lhencenorlh2'h D~ .
TAYLOR DECEASED .
East 7 chains and 75 links
Plaintiff nas brought this
ro the County road ; the~ ce
action naminO you as
South 4l Deg . East 5 chat ':IS
Ottendants In the abOve
and .40 l inks along sa td
named court by f i ling her
road ; then~e South 68 Deo .
m laint on November
East 1 c hatn and U lin~s fo
f~., p 1979. The Complaint F innan Smith's West ltne ;
r~ ifes tha t each of you is
then c e South 2 1/ :J _D eg Wt&gt;~t
POSSibly an hetr -at l aw and
3 c hain~ and .fO links to h1S
t of kin of Ida M .
Southwest corner. then_ce
~istie, De-ceased; that at West to the _p_lace of begm
e flme of her death Ida nino. conlatntng two acres
M Christie was se i zed of
more or less
.
tt\ nti re Interest of the
Also 1 the fol!~wrng r~al
re:l :state descr i bed in the
estate sr tuated m Sec11on
FIRST COUNT ollhe Com
No 18, Town 2 and Ran~e
plaint
which said real
13 of th e Ohto Com_pany s
estate' is des.cribed
as
Purchase and descrtt?ed. as
f 0 llows ·
follows, to wit : Begtnntng
Situate in the county of
at the Southw~st co~ner ~
Meigs, in the State of Ohio
Geo~ge . Young s lot tn sa1d
and In the Township of Bed
Se-ct ton, thence ~uth 8
f d and bounded and
rods and 7 te-et ; thence
d~s(r l bPd as follows : E-!ts1 19 rods ; the~ce North
8 · ·
t the Southeast
8 rods end 7 feel . then c ~
c~g~~~~p t~e west halt of West 19 r ods to the pla ce of

~

•

February, officials said Wednesday .
Bernitz will succeed Clarence V.
Jean , who is being reassigned . An
agency spokeswoman, Mary F .
Chugg, said Jean is being reassigned
but that she did not know where he
will he assigned.

Capital Finance

with Beneficial
The Capital Financial Services office at 300 West Second Street in
Pomeroy iB now an office of a consumer finance subsidiary of
Beneficial Corporation , BIUIOunced
the manager, James Snodgrass.
This change took effect on
December 19.
When asked a bout the new affilialion with the Beneficial Finance
System
affiliated comanies,
Snodgrass conunented : '1 'm proud
to be joining Beneficial. It's a
dynamic organization. It offers one
of the broadest ranges of financial
services 10 the industry .
' We're going to be telling people:
'You're good for more at Beneficial',
and I'm looking forward to offering
customers full Beneficial services.
There's the AII.fu.Qne Loan to clean
up bills and the Inter-Office Identification Crd to allow customers to
apply for loan services at any
Beneficial office in the world. ''
Beneficial Finance System affiliated companies currently serve
over three million customers around
the world and maintain ove 2,300 &lt;ifices throughout the U.S., Canada,
Australia, Japan, New Zealand, the
United Kingdom, and West Germany . They are subsidiaries of
Beneficial Corporation, a $5.6
billlon , Delaware-based, NYSEIisted diversified financial services
holding company .

CLOSING JAN . !
The Holz..- Clinic Ud . in Gallip&lt;i is
and its Jacksoo County Branch in
Wellston will be closed Tuesay, Jan .
I, !911l, in observance of the New
YearHoliiay .
In case of an emergency duri!ll
the holiday period, physicians rl. the
Holzer Oinic Ltd. staff will he oo duty in the Emergency Room
(446-62011 of the Holzer Medical
Center Hospital to handle ernergency cases only.
Holzer Clinic Ltd, will resume normal operationa at both locations on
Wednesday morning, Jan . 2.

'

and ordered lo sell the en ·
tire in terest in the real
estate
described
in
SECOND
COUNT
ac ·
cording to ttle statutes in
such
case made
and
provided, and for such
other relief as to wh rch she
may be entitled to.
You are required to an
swer the Comp laint with 1n
twenty -eight days after the
last pub li cation of this
noti ce
which will be
pub I ished once each week.
for six successive w eeks
and the last publi ca tion will
be made on the 71h . day of
February , 1980 .
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as perm itted bY.
the Ohio Rules of Civil
Procedure within the time
stated ,
\"udgment
by
de-fault wi ! be rendered
against you for the rei ief
demanded in the com
plaint
Larry E . srencer

Clerk o Cou,rt

of Common Pleas
Me igs County, Ohio
112 127, Ill 3, 10 , 17, 24, 31 .
121 7. 71c

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VICTOR H .
LEIFHEIT, DECEASED
case No . 22891
NOTICE OF
APPOINT ME NT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Dec ember l.f , 1979, in
the Meigs county PrObate
Court. Case No . 22891, Ed
win P . Leifheit, l007 B:ar ·
beE' Avenue , Grove Ctfy ,
Ohio -4.3123 , was appointed
Executor of the estate of
V i ctor
H.
Leifheit.
decea sed . lale of R . D . 2.
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge
Cler~

112120. 271113.31c

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY.t. OHIO
ESTATE
OF
DESSIE
WAUGH
ATHEY ,
DECE(jSE 0
Case No. 22894
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMEPoiT
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 10 . 1979, In
me Meigs County Probate
Cour t . Case No. 22894.
Pa ul ine R ife. Rt 1, Box
112, Bidwell , Ohio -4561~
was appointed Executri&gt;~: of
the estate of Bessie Waugh
A they , oeceased , la te of S09
SOuth second Avenu e, M id
dleport, Ohio 45760

( I/ )

BOB BRADFORD

Bradford
promoted

now associated

beginning , c onta 1ni ng one
acre .
Also. the foll owing real
esta te si tua ted in Se&lt;:l ion
No . 18 , Town 2 and Range
No. 12 of t he Ohio Com
pany 's Purchase and boun
ded
and described as
fo ll ow s. to w it · Beginning
at
George
Young ' s
South east corner in said
sec tion ; thence East 21
rods to the r oad ; then ce in
a West£&gt;rl y direction along
sai d ro ad 15 rods and 10
f ee t ; the nce West 20 rOds ;
thence 15 rods and 10 f ee t to
the p lace oi beginning , con
taining 2 acres.
Also ,
the
follow i ng
described real estate in
Salisbury Township , Meigs
County, Ohio . Begtnning at
a stone co rner East 70.5-f5
ro ds of the Northwest cor
nerof W S_ Wills69 112 acre
tot near a w i llow tree about
30 i nches in diameter ;
thence South 8 .85 rods to a
stake East of a double ·
chestnut about 3 feet 1n
diameter : thence South
101.1~ degrees west 6.94 rOds
to a stake 1 foot South of
white oak.
4 feet
in
diameter ; thence South
591/41 Deg . West 8.33 1/J rod s
to a stake 3 feet East of a
chestnut tree ; thence South
49 1h Deo . west 6 .212 rods to
a stake 2 1 /~ feel South of an
ash 6 ln . in diameter ; then
ce South A9 1 41 Deg West
8172 rods to a stake 3 feet
wesr of white oak tree 3
feet in diameter ; t hence
So ulh 69 Deg . Wes t 14.515
rods to ce nter of road ;
thence in an easterly direc tion fo l lowing said road to a
stone co rner on South side
of road 31 leet East of
Sugar tree 61n . in diameter
about 51 _97 rods , thence
North to place of beginning
62 .483 rOds co ntaining 7
acres 25square rOds .
Also, beginning at a stone
at the Southeast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar t ree _6
ln . in diameter ; then ce tn
an
Easterly
direction
following said road about
2~ S4 rods to Ida Young 's 2
acre tot , then ce West 20 8-41
rods ; then ce North to
afores.aid sugar tr~ or to
pla ce of beginni ng , con
tain ing 1 1h acre .
Reference Deed : Vo l
135, Page 2.41 Deed Recor
dstMe ios Count{. Oh io.
he Object o the Com
plaint is to sell the intere5t
of Ida M Christie in e.,ch
parcel of real estate in or
der to pay the debts of the
es tat e and costs o f ad
ministering the est a te
Plaintiff demands the
real estate desc r i bed in the
FIRST COU NT be sold .
that th e entire interes t in
the real es ta te described in
SECO ND COUNT be sold .
that the rights , int erests
and l iens o f all parties may
be fully determ i ned , ad
·usled and rr otec ted , i"nd
hat Plain tit be auth ortZPd

I
1
utters or opinion are welcomed . They should be less
I than 300 words long (or subject to redu~tion by the editor I
I and must be signed with the sigm·e 's address. Names may
I be withheld upon publi('atioll. However, on request,
I names will be disclost&gt;d . Letters should be in good taste,
I addressing issues, not p~r&gt;nna hties .
I
I
I
I
I
I

Rober-t E Buck
Probate Judge Clerk
1J , 20 . 27. 31C

Bob Bradford, a native of Meigs
County, has been named assistant
manager for the Cardinal Bullders
in the Newark Division office at
Newark.
Bradford is a graduate of Racine
High School and has a number of
relatives and friends in this area .
A Newark newspaper had lhls to
say on his promotion : "Bob has been
a resident of Licking County for over
16 years and has been involved in
sales and office management in the
county for fourteen ot those years .
He was sales manager for a Columbus company for two years .
' 'His work has permitted him to
become very familiar with the communlty and his courteous and
straightforward manner of doing
business has won for him many
friends in Licking and surrounding
counties. He has been a realtor foc
the past several years and was a
member cl. the local realtor board as
well as the state and national realty
boards.
"He is a graduate of the Realtors
Institute of Ohio and holds the high
prized G.R.I. Certificate. He has a
wide background of experiences in
office organization and management and the benefit ol special training in this line of wock, as well as
many hours of training in telephone
use and ethics .
"He Uves in nearby Hebron with
his wife, Bernice, on their three acre
mini-fann. ''

Alfred
Social Notes
S"nday School attendance Dec. 16
was 53. Preaching followed with
Rev. Ri chard Thomas using Matthew 2: 1·12 as scripture.
Wilber Parker learned recently of
the death of his uncle, Charles
Staneart, at Toledo, Ohio . Mr .
Staneart w88 the brother of Wilber's
mother.
The Allred UMW had its annual
Christmas party Dec . 18 at the church. lnstallstioo of ctf1cers for 19&amp;1
was performed by Rev . Thomas.
they are as Jollows : Mrs . Nellie
Parker, president; Florence Ann
Spencer, vice president : Jam~
Moore, secretary ; Nina Robinson,
treasurer, and Thelma Henderson,
missions . Everyone enjoyed smging
and gift exchange.
The Alfred U. M. church had its
Christmas program Dec. 20 with
Dan Moore in charge. The Christmas story was acted out wtth
several songs. The young adult class
sang a special song and Bonnie
Thomas sang a special. Rev.
Richard Thomas was pianist. The
younger children and teens sat
around the Christmas tree and
recited recitations and sang soogs.
When they sang Jingle Bells, Santa
arrived and passed out gifts. There
were around 70 people present.
Word has been received that Helen
Woode has had a light stroke.

FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson~ otfice reported a 10011 of
$25,869,608.93 in public assistance
was made in November to Ohio's 88
counties . Meigs County 's portion
was $34,730.25.

Likes history hook
I am taking this method to state
"A GREAT TiiANKS for a job well
done''. 'Ibis is my way of expressing
my appreciation for the Wonderful,
High Quality and Beautiful History
Book of Meigs County .
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society is certainly to he
congratulated for accepting a
challenge as great as lhls, in a new
field, of having printed, this first
volume of a ' History of Meigs County".
I as one , conunend each and every
one that has had a part in making
this book available to the citizens of
Meigs C.:.unty .
I am certainly thankful to have
had an oWortunlty of having this
book come into my life . I awaited
these books with anticipation, and
was more than glad for their arrival
for our Cllristmas Holiday .
I pi ck I'd up my five copies on Sunday the .::led, one for me and each of
my four children and families,

A Santa response
Editor '• Note - Roo Zldlan,
admlnlstrator of the Pomeroy
Heallb Care Center, 18 responding to ....,eDt letters from Santa
wltb a letter of blo own, wblcb

reads 811 follows:
Dear Santa,
I am responding to your letter to
Helene and me, while you were making your way through Meigs County .
1 am glad that you found a place to
rest. I promise that next year at this
time we will definitely bave a place
for y~u to rest if you so choose.
You know, Santa, we at the
Pomeroy Helth Care Center have
done our homework We have passed
our tests, hut we are now waiting for
our certification.
Until then, we are not allowed to
accept anyone to rest at our place ,
including you.
The people here in Me1gs County
have been very patient with us , and
also the State, who must certify us .
I would Uke to ask you to send
them every good wish for a
healthful, happy , and peaceful New
Year. They all deserve it.
Please tell them that we will st.out
the news from the housetop as soon
as we have the word . We hope it w111
be by the New Year 1
Sincerely,
Your fnendand helper,
Ron Zidian
P.S.: You ha&lt;&gt; a good year
yourself, and don\ work too hard !

Holiday economics
What do Martin Luther King Jr.
and Christmas Eve have to do with
each other' A.baolutely nothing take it from Washingtoo.
In the matter of the late dvil
rights leader, a move to make his
blnhday, January IS, a national
holiday recently lltalled in Congress.
The primary argument of opponents
was that adding yet another day off
with pay to the public holiday list
would he too costly, hitting the
federal payroll for an estimated $194
milllon and private business for
possibly billions .
In the matter of Christmas Eve,
President Carter has declared Monday, DecemN othing new in this
since every president since Dwight
Eisenhower has given the
multimillion bureaucracy a bonus
day when Christmas falls just before
or after a weekend.
No further conunent.

Carpet Clean1ng
Ettect1veness
YOU CAN REALLY SEE 1
RENT NEW,
PROFESSIONAL

-g~c

~

Combtnes

VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATI ON And
powerlul

STEAM EXTRACTION
CL EANING
deep · &lt;;P&lt;dPrJ U1rt ana

res rdue s

•.

I

"I' .

I L ~ "- ' • " ,
l ~ · 11·1 t

. ... ,!

• • 1\~, :', I

, •.• ·' '.

....
•I

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0.

By
Meets
• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today .

Kick

up your

heels and let's
hear it for the
dazzUng New

Year that's
upon us.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
1100 E . Matn
Pomeroy , Ohio
0'1? - 703~

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Christmas gifts to each of them.
They haven\ hardly been able to let
go of them. Our friends coming in
show the same interest.
This history book had bad to have
many, many volunteer hours by
precious people to have become
available to Meigs County. Those
dtizens not taking advantage of an
olfer to have their family history to
be a part ol this history and to own
one of them are at a great loss and
don \know what they have missed .
So once again, thanks to All and I
mean All of those participants and
The Taylor Publishing Company for
providing this great asset to the
citizens of Meigs County. Our county
has received a 1979 Christmas gift to
be long remembered.
Vic Brown
&gt;129110 SR 124 lloi 26
Minersville , Ohio 46763

MODULAR
HOMES
ALL AMERICAN

I
I
I
I

Wishing you
every successrTHE

KIDDIE SHOPPE
, Ohio

..

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Dec. 'l/, 19'/'J

Your Best Buys Are
NOTICE OF
SALE OF BONDS

Sealed bid s tor the pur
chase of S90,()Q(l F ire Truck
Notes (the " Notes ") of the
Villaoe of Middleport (the
"Issuer") 1n the County of

Me igs -and State of Ohio ,
will be received by the un
dersi gned officer at the
Village Hall , 287 Race
Sfreel, M iddleport. Oh io
457 60 until 4:00 o 'c l ock

p .m ., Eastern Standard
Time , on Januarv 14, 1980,
at which t ime the bids w i ll
be
opened
and
read
publlcry . Bids for the Bon
ds,
authorized
by

1eg1s)a t ion ena c t ed on
December 10, 1979 shal l be
sealed and endorsed " B1d
fur S90,000 Fire
Truck

Notes, " and each bid sh all
be made only tor al l or none
o f the No tes
The Notes are ISSued for
the purpose of acquiring a
f t re
tr uck
and
the
necessary appur tenances
and equtpment there to
The Notes wi l l be dated
February I, 1980, will be of
the denominatton of 15,000
each , and will bear intere5t
payable semt annually on
June 1 and December 1 of
eac h year , be~tnntng June
1, 1980, at the rate of 7 per
cent per ann um
The Notes ma tu re on
December 1, 1984 , but shall
be pr epay a bl e wtthout
pena lty or premium in
whole or in part on any tn
h;-rest payment by matting
a
noftce
of
such
prepayment , tn cludtng the
date tttcn~· ot . the amount to
beJ'repaid , and the name
an address of the pay1ng
agent , by
cert ified
or
re;is tered mai 1 to me
or1gina1 pu rc haser of thr
Nofes not less than ten day s
prt or to the date of such
prepayment
The pr •nc tpal ot an a 1n
t eres ! on th e Notes ar e
payable w 1thout deductton
for the servtces o f the
Issuer 's pay 1ng agen t at
The Centr dl Trust Corn
oanv
N A
Southern
D•v• s •on .
Mtddl eport ,
OhtO The bonds •n ant,
c• p alto n of wh tc h
th e
Notes etre •ssued . unless
patd from other sour ces
and
su t)fec l
to
the
p rovts•ons
of
fe d eral
bankrupt cy la w and other
laws atf ecttng cred1tor 's
rights , art&gt; to oe pa1d from
the p roceeds of the levy ot
ad votarem ta )(eS on all
property Wtlhin the boun
dartes of the Issuer sub teet
to ad valorem ta;-e·s leV1ed
by the Issuer , w tfh1n th e
ten milll tmltal ton tmposed
by taw
Bidders destr tn~ to do so
may pre sen t a btd for the
Notes based upon the1r
beari ng a dtfterent stngle
r ate of tntere st from th at
speci fied here•n but not •n
excess of 10 1 2 per cent per
annum If a frac tt onat tn
teres! rate tS btd , such tra c
!ton shall be one etghth of
one perc ent or a mult1plt&gt;
thereat Spl it rate btds w ttl
no t be cons tdered
1t 1S con templated that
the Counc il of the Issuer
will meet at 7 30 o 'cloc k .
PM .. on January 14. 1980,
ro conside r tne Oids and
award the Notes
Legal matters tnC1dent to
the issuance of t he Notes
rmd w ith regard to the tax
exempt status of the tn
teres I mer eon are sub te&lt;: t
to ttle approv 1ng le-Jal
opinion of Squire, Sauna.c rs
and Dempsey , Bond Coun
sel , whtch wi I be fur nish ed
w•thout cos t to the sue
cess tul btdder at the t1m e
the Notes are del •vered to
•t Bond Counsel has not
been engaged to conf irm or
veri fy , assumes no respon
Slbtl tt y for , and expresse s
and w ill express no optni on
as t o the acc uracy com
pleteness or fa irness of any
statement-:. i n any report s,
f inanc ial 1nformafion . of
tertng
or
d•sc t os ur e
dOcuments or other i n
fo rmation rel at ing to the
1ssuer o r the Notes that
may be prepared or made
available by the Issuer or
others t o th e bidders tor or
hol der s of tne N otes or others.
Th e I ssuer will provid e
the Notes In typed form
without interest co upons A
c omplete
tr anscrtp T ol
proceedings wdl be t ur
nished by
th e Issuer
together w ith a ce rftft ca te
that to the knowledge of the
signers no litiga t ton or ad
m1nistrative actton
or
proceeding IS pendmg or
threatened at the time of
delivery to r es tra 1n o r en
join or seekin~ 1o rest ra m
or enjoin the ISSuance and
delivery of the Notes , or the
levy and collec t ion of taxes
fo..- their payment, or to
contest or question the
proceedings and authority
under wniCh the Notes have
been author1zed . issued ,
sold . executed or delt vered
o r the validity of the Notpc;
The bids wil l promptly be
constder ea, and, unless all
bids are r e jected , the Notes
will be awarded to the
highest bidder offering the
lowest interest r at e deter mined by ca luclatt ng the
tot al interest to stated
maturit y at the rate bid
and deducting there from
any premium bi d
( the
" best bid " ), at not less
than par and accrued tn
terest . 1f each of two or
more bids is the best b id .
th e Notes wi I I be awarded
o n such best bid as is
chosen by lot All bids must
be accompanted by cas h ,
bank cas hter 's or official 's
check or ce rtified c hec k
payable to the Issuer , or
any combinat t ·n thereof ,
aggregating o
percent of
the par aml...~nt of the
Notes. upon the co ndit1on
that , If th e bid is acce pted ,
the successful bidder will
receive and pay for the
Notes in acc ordance with
the term s and provi sions of
th i s noti ce. No bank bid ·
d ing for the Notes sha11 file
its own cashier 's o r of ·
flclal's c heck , or a c heck
c ertified
by it . Such
sec urity shall be held by
the Issuer unused pending
delivery of the Notes and
forfeited as full liquidated
damages !n the event of

default by the successful

bidder . No interest wi~t be

paid on the security sub ·
milled by any bidder
In the event that , prior to
their delivery . the 1nterest
on
Notes shou ld by act
of Congress or otherwise
become sub iec t to federal
Income taxes, or any ac t of

me

congress should provide
that the Interest income on
the Notes shall be taxable
at a future date for federa l
income
whether

ta x
purposes ,
directly or in ·

direc tly , The su cc essful btd
der may retuse to accept
delivery and in such e11ent
its b1d sec unty shall be
returned with out i nterest
Before making tent.Jer of
t he Note s at the pla ce of
delivery , the Issuer snail
give wr i tt en nott ce to the
suc cess ful bidder , not later
than the fif th business day
before the proposed tender .
of the fact that the Notes ,
trans c rtpt , no li t iga t 1on
certtftcate a nd approvtng
opmion will be availa ble
tor del•very and givtng the
dale an d hour for the ten
de r at the place of deltvery ,
provided , nowe1.1N , tn at
nothing herem co ntained
sha ll prevent th e making of
a mu t ual ly agreeab le writ
len or verbal ar rangement
tor the delivery of th e
Notes et ther at a place
other tha n the place f1xed
for del i1.1ery o r at a date
and hour oth er than the
da te and hour fixed tor
de l ivery
If such not1 ce has nor
been gi11en by the Issuer or
waived by the suc cessful
btdder and the Nat es . fra n
scrip t , no lt t igation cer
tit ica t e a n d
approving
op1n1on are not available
for deltv ery to th e sue
cessful bidder sha l l nat be
i n defa ult of any of tiS
ob liga ti ons. it snail have
the rig ht therea f1er , and so
long as no suc h tender by
the 1ssuer shall ye t have
been made . to cancel the
conl rac! of purchase Any
such rtghT snail be e)(er
ctsed by del1ver•ng wnffen
not•ce of such ca ncellation
to the undersigned or to the
ofl tce of the undersigned
du rtng business hou rs
Such
btddel'"
shall
thereupon be ent 1tl ed to the
return of the deposi t wht ch
accompan ted its bid and
such depostt shall be re tur
ned to tl tmrnediale ly
The r 1ght •s reserved to
re1ect b tdS
Village o f Mtddlepor t .
OhtO
By Gene Grate. Clerk
Treasurer
Telephone No
614 tN1

Zdays

ldays
&amp;days

Owa•

1.25

·~
I IJ

l.:a

lOll

l .n

S3 00 muumwn

Cuh In •d ·

vance

Mobile

H~me

a&amp;les •nd Yard

sale8 ~ IK't"epted only wtth
ca&amp;h With order 25 cent chaf1e

for ad! carryinK Box Num~ In
CArP of 1'ht Sentinel

The Publisher reserve~ tlk
right to edit or ~ Jtct any ada
deemed objectional. The
Pub!Wti will not be n!llpml.lble
for ~ thaJ1 one iocorTect In·
.terti on
Phone 992-!110

Thunday, O.C. 21

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Deeembelt 27 ' ~·11
will have a chanc" to work lor
you thts coming year If you don 't
~~ ou ts•de pleasures tntertere.
your tnnovll ttons could h1111e
tong ~ term benefits

C APAICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 1tl II
you are laced with an unpl88sanl
!Utuatlon tnvo lvmg the actions ot
another . discuss It wtlh thiS pe1 .
son 1n confidence He or she will
respond ft not embarrassed
Find out morf'l ol what lift ahead
lor you tn the year t ollow1~ yO'.Jr
blr1hday by send tng lor your
copy of Astra-Graph letter Mall
S 1 IOf each to A!!.tr o-Graph, Box
~89 , Radto C ity St ation. N Y
100 t9 Be sure to speclty birth
date

AQUARIUII (J•n. 20--F.b. 11) A
forceful person today may try to
get y-ou to believe your tdeas are
wrong We~gh things with others
and you 'll be able to get a r~Mt ­
abte ptcture
PISCES (Fob. ~h 20l The
~r mtght need to be cleared
tOOay in montty mattttr!l Involving
o t~ s trs probable all the facts
are not known to both skies
A,_IE8 (March 21-Aprll 11)
Promptly rBC!Ity any mtsundtw·
standing. no

ma tter

1\CW !Uigflt .

might arise today between
you and a close associate 01h erwiM 11 could cau!lf!l 1m unnec-

TAURUS

(April

~Moy

201

Tacllte that d tstastalul c hore that
h&amp;.! you squee18d Int o a corner
loday With a lillie •noenulty.
you' ll complete It Quicker tl'1an
you th ougnt poa&amp;lbte
QfMINI (M•J 21-Juna 20)
Another s unplear.ant behavior
can De turned about If you speak
up and tell this person the disturbing effect he or 8he 11 havtng
on you Tact and dlplo mact help

CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 221 Cen·
ter your attention today on the
'"I values you hope to gain from
your present goals tnst .. d of let llnQ the emotional llde tUues
rule
LEO (Juty 2S-Aug. 22) vou·u
have to be ct~t refut not to color

the truth In dealing with others
today bec.ause you'!l be as«.ea to
pro~~e your SIIUemen ts
VIRGO (-.ug. :z3..&amp;.9t. 22) A little
e"pla lnlng about the mat erial
!acts ol life m tght be called for
today when !lomeone who shares
your bank account gets a btl too
extravagant
ueRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) Thtngs
may not go l'lrltlrttly your way
today. Thera Is no one batter
abte than you , however lo make
compromiMI and concepons
to get whit you want
ICOtii'IO (Oct. ,.__ _221 You

can brNthe 1 sigh of relief
Som.one Is going to help you
today with a r.ponaibillty that
h• fallen entirety on your Shout cllro.
IACIITT AIIIUI (lloY. 2Hieo. l1)
Before dcMng anythlllQ today that
h• an ~t of cttanoe. better
talk It o-..r wnn u many ~
.. poMJbte I'll bet yOU'll cl'tl~
'f04Jr mind

o.c.mber 21, 1179
rnlnge you personally manage
this coming year should turn ou t
to be very I'Ucky lor you . Don't be
afraid to lake on projects th8t
ares bit larger than those you 've
handled In the past
CAPRICORN IDoc. 22-.lon. 1tl
Social lnvof11ements can mAke
this day a very pleasant one fOf
you . So If you don't already have
plans. be the Initiator and get
some pats logt~thet" Oiscov81'
what

""

ahead

lor

you

In

romance this coming year by
sending for your new Aetro·
Graph letter . Mall S 1 for each to
Astra-Graph , 80)1 489 Aaeflo
City Slatton. N Y 100 19 Be sure
to spectty btrth de l e

AQUARIUS (Jon.

So m e th m~

~Fob . 111
been t~optng

you ve
to change may be brought about
today through the eftorls ol oth ers working on your bfthalf
Thlnga should ahape up greatly
to your ttklrlQ .
PIICEI (Fob. 10-Morch 20) Be
horof!ltul and positive today Big
dreams could become a re9ht y

SA W

logs

Payment upon delivery to
our yard. 7 30 to 3 :30week ·
days . Blane y Hardwoods .

SR 339. Ba r low . OH
1980.
ANTIQUES .
NITURE . gla ss.

678 ·

FUR
ch ina .

WANT-AD

ANTIQUE POCKET wat

ADVERTISIN&amp;
DEADUNES
Monday

ches

dollar

Ca l l

1 591 2973

evenings .

ches, class rings , wedding
bands , diarr.onds Gold or
silver . Call J . A wamstey ,
741 -133 1 Treasu..-e Chest
Coin Shop , Athens . OH . 592
6462

l"ueodoy
lhru f"riday
tP .M
the d.iy before- publlcelion
SunW.y
•p "
l'nday afternoon

HOOF HO L LOW, Engl i sh
and Western . Saddles and
harness .

adoptton and information
serv tc e
Investigative
Agent .

GU N SHOO T EVERY
SU NDAY 1 PM FACTORY
CHO KE ONLY RACINE
G UN CLUB

GU N SHOOT every Sunday
12 .00 . Factory choke only
Corn Hollow Gun Club .
Rutland Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 249
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silvE!r
co ins , ring! , jewelry , et c
Con ta c t Ed Burkett Barber

Shop . Middleport .

Horses

and

ponies . Ruth Reeves . 614·
69B ·3290 . Bordlng and
Riding L essons and Horse
Ca..-e products . Western

bOOts . Children 's
Adults $29.00

$15 .50

BUYING US . SI LVE R
COINS DATED 196A OR
EARLIER
( ANY
AMOUNT ! DO N 'T LOSE
MONEY , SIMPL Y PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 9915113 ,
BROWN ' S
SK ATE -A -WAY announces
Holiday parties . Chnstmas
party Saturday , Dec 22,
7 30 10 .00 New Year's Eve
party , Mon , Dec · 31, 7 30
12 . 30
Hats ,
horn s,
noisemakers Open Wed ,
Fri . ,
Sat
eventngs
Avdilable for parties Mon ,
Tues , Thurs . nights, Sa t
dnd Su n afternoon s 985

3919 or 9B5 ·91'96

Lost and Found
LOST in Letart Falls area ·
Pekinese Chi ld 's pet 247
3663

LOST : CR

19 mixed
beagle and snepnerd , black
and brown 992 086

stoker,

COAL , lump or
w tll

del iver . 742

APPLES -

You have the ability and t he

a111es lo make this possible.
ARIES (abrch 21 -April 11, Dare
to thtnk tn biQ terms today and
go shw What you want The
0000 lhtngs 1, lite can be yours
bul you 'll have to make the initial
etton

20)

Don "I be turpnled It you 're the
lite of the par1y today You 'll bc!t

In a tun mood Your attl!ude will
attract others and 1t1mutate

All types root work. new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting ,
Atl work vuaranteoed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
9A9·286l
11 14·mo

ROME beauty

REDTICK

N. L CONSTRUCTION

G LA SS F IREPLACE doors

Quality construction at
reasonable rates .

with black
finish plus
tubu lar grate with blower ,
tike new Asktng SlOO . Call

C.utet:ll (Juno 21-.luly 22) You
choose to ln&gt;~olve youraetl ln. yet
the nlcasf part Is fha l!tn)oyment
rt brings you

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) You're In
an excellent achlevemenl cycle.
so don 't waste your time and
enetgy on unimportant goals
Anything you go aft8f today can
bc!t yours
VllltOO (Aug. 23-&amp;ept. 22) This
could ~ one or your lucf( y days
to gat the attention you '..-e been
Metiii"'Q because you ·re at the

right spot at th8 rtght time
LIBRA (Sept , ~ D) Advantaoes could come to you today
through sources that aren 't n«esaarlly ri!ICognlzabla. ywt the
resutt11 will bil ttrongty ten.
ICOIIPIO (Oc1. . -. 22)
MaMing con tacts and auociatlno
wtth many people could prove
extrltfTII!Iy luCI(y lor you today 11
yOll can 1 gal out to mingle, Find
other means to communicate.
IAGmMIUI ( -. . 11)
A break might be for1heomlng
today In an aru whert you·w
been applying 1 lot of hard work .
Continue to put O'JI your Y«Y

Block Work
Concrete Finishing

IA35 .

FM stereo 8 tr~ c k r~dio
KOdak Carousel pro1ector .
Yashtca
FR ·2
35mm
camera with F 1. 9 tens, 200
mm telescope, ~uto. win
del'" and case . Yamaha CR
1000
stereo
system
Pana so n ic
Ranger 505
black and white outdoor
TV , 12 volt DC and 10 volt

HOTPOINT

coo n

while English bulld09 pup ·
pies . J rat:lbits , 2 does , 1
buck 742 ·2520

11 13 1 mopd

. .,.... . Phone "2 -21 81 .

Auto Sales
19/B OLDS 9B Regency 2
7A35
1975 4-door Ford Landau .
P .S. , P. B ., all elec power
$2495 . Call 992 ·5304 or 99'/
22JB .
PONTIAC

Flreblrd

New tires and e.chaust
system
E&gt;e ce llent con

dillon

61A · 698 · 6448

evenings or 696 ·1169.

197B FORD '(} ton pickup ,
F 150 Super Cab. Metall iC
brown . 7 ff ~d with top .
Auto trans ., good cond ition

S-4500 . 949 2042 .
196A C H EVY pi c kup

111

ton

741 ·2431

CHR IS TMAS

SALE

co mponent systems in mat
c hed sets of mix and mat
ch Speakers for home en
ce nters ,
t e rtalnment
radtos , automoblfes and
patios Combination AM
FM stereos and tape deck,

cassette or B·track, CB
base station s and mobile
units . Portable AM FM
radios with tape player and
recorder Oig 1tat AM FM
cloc k l'"adi os and compact
AM FM pocket radios .
Portable
recorder
Televisions - portable and
console models . Regency
scanners
Antennas and
masting Manv optional ac
ces sories and general elec
troni c supplies . France TV
and Elec troni cs,
39260
Brad bury Rd , Middleport,

OH 45760
1972 CHEVY Nova 6 cy l ..
auto , wil l sell c ar for S100
or W1tl sell parts

Phone

9A9 ·2046
1969 FORD MUSTAN G 351
w , auto , very gOOd co n

1969 FORD MUSTANG . 351
W, automatic . very gOOd
condit ion , mags an d tots of
extras Call
2833 after A

m

Camping Equipment
DISC OU NT

all

stock

a1

614114 3 lOll

For Rent

HAY FOR SA LE . Sl a bale
BAJ 1795.

BI G AUCTION ever y Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford communtty
Center , Hartfo rd , WV , 4
mtles above
Pomeroy
Mason Bridge

Services Offered
HAVE

VACANCY

tn

private home for elderly
only . Board , room and
laundry
991 ·601 2
No
drinking allowed .

Park , Route 33 , north of
Pomeroy Large tots Call

991 7479
3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap
ts Pho ne 992 5434

pri ced

742

1544
ONE PLATE glass w indow
5'x8' to highest afer . 992

5786 .
ONE POLAND Chtna and
one Yorksh i re Gilf sows to
f a rr ow Mar c h 1st 'M . ea
260 Pri ce S90 each Phone
985 l565 atrer 5 p ·m
ONE 100,00() BTU 01 1 fur
nace One 275 gallon fuel oil
tank . One natural gas con ·
1.1ersion burner for oi l fur ·
nace , SO 190,000 BTU 985·

3B15
DRY

T HRE E

FIREWOOD .

- - · - -- -

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home

BEDROOM

mob1le
h ome
near
Pomero y and Middlepor t

H ARD W OO D

f irewood , $35 t r uc kl oad . 12
ga double gun, OOOd con
di tion . j$100 ?.42 1JS9.

991 SB58
ROOM and board tor
working men . Br the week
or month
Reoasonable
Si ngle room or a duble 997

o022

For Sale
26 in . 10 speed bicycle 997
l181 or 991 7A35
GRAVELY

TRAC TO R

Sa les Yea..- end Spec1a ts
Gravely Tractors ,. ·5160 8
hp ele&lt; start with JO "
mower, List S2016.7S, sale

$1613 ..00 1-5460· 10 hp elec
slart with 40 " mower , list
$1447 75 , sale Sl958 .20
Kubota Tractors (Diesei J
1·L185 Tre~d 2 wd , l •s t
$.0415.00, sale $3908.00. 1
816100 Farm Tread,. wd ,

ltst 5«15 .00, sale $3532 .00
1·B5100 Turf Tread 4 wd .
list $.1165.00, sale $Jl12 .00

GniV!Iy Tractor Sal~s an d
Serv ice, 20.4 Condor Sf ,

Pomeroy , OH 992 ·2'175
---- -~.

--

SALES , PT . PLEASANT .

wv 304 ·675 4A14
19 73
Freedom
mob il e
nome . 12XSO S3700 9491049
after 5 30

HAY and stra w . Alba Yost ,
M.nersville , OH 9~9 2634 .

REM IN GTON 1100 11 ga .
w tth '1 bb ls
deerstayer ,
full c hok e Remtngton 870
.,0 ga shotgun with 1 bbls .,
deers tayer , ful l c hoke .
Single shoT .. 10 shotgun f ull
choke 21 Magnu m Marl in
cl tp r if le 111ono and short
rifle ,.Oib pull bOw w ith at
tdchable quive..- Gun rack. ,
holds .S gu ns. has drawer

991 5195

BORDER

co llie

type .

male , bla c k and brown and
wh• te , 1 year old German
She-pnerd types , black and
t an
Da c hshund ,
housebroke . English setter
with puppies , Humane
Society will place puppies.
t rish se11er , rouno female ,
I aroe poodle , femat@ ,
silver
Sho ts , wormed .
Humane Society , 992 6260

12 7 I mo

F I NANCING VA FHA LO ·
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORT GAGE.
77 E STATE , ATHENS
61091 3051
NEW 3 bedroom all ele&lt;f r tc
home, oyer 1 acre, nice klt
chen , garage , disposal and
dishwd sher , washer and
dryer hook up , ca rpeted
e.:cept kttchen and bath
Near
Langsville
and
mines t-43 ,000 ~aymo nd
Hatf1eld , 742 28 19

Old .

)

bedroom, all electric home ,
ni ce eat 1n kitc hen , over 1
acre . carpet and vinyl
floors , garage and storage
bui lding , washer and dryer
hook -up Near Langsville
mines . ~1,800 Raymond
Hatfield , 742 2819.

of ground . Drilled well
Storm windows . Cllrpeted .
full
basement ,
16xJ1
building . $30 .000 741 307•

r

• Starin Doors
• 5 torm WIndows
•Replacement
dows

JAMES KEESEE

Fine defense plav scores

PH. 992-2772

10 19· 1 mo.

IL

have lried two no trump over

~~~

NORTH

'"-"'!';;...a "'1:() M4J«£D

'll

Let us
Wrap Your
J.-Pipes for .
~--" Cold Weather :

• J 987
t K Hl

+Q J B 4

t;:

WEST

ANNIE

Cheap Rates
Quality Service

SAHIB -..ci&lt;S~ I FOUND
SAMD'I UI'4COMSCIOOS 6Y
THE GATE 1 HE ~SA

call992 -2852
or 992 -7235

+so

.96
tAQ10i8
+AK976

.J8754! 2
tz
+102

SOUTH
+AKQ I OB
• A K 10

CXIVER 11.1'\RB&lt;.JCKS ..
'IES- AMMIE D4D C.O
m SCHOO&lt;: TO!JIIy...
SHE HASH'T

t764

ARR~

Business Services

12 x50

. Wett
~,

J

ni ce bed rooms , 1 full
baths , 2 ca r attached
garage, p~ti o and "lots
on The OhtO R tver

RETIREMENT - Good

•aQIIII.I..I

60B E
MAIN
POMEROY , O.

PHONE W2· 2lS9
1980 CAN - be yO&lt;Jr best
rear yet in this new
ultra
modern home,
quality construction , 3
Bdrms . .
2 baths ,
garage, wood burning
fireplace ,
1 1 1:~
~cres

$« .800.00
START - The new year
rig ht on your ow n mini
farm , 6 acres, nice 1 1 /::~
story home , c lose in .

ONLY $2'1.500.00.
WELCOME IN - a new
year with i!!l move to the
top . Large 10 room br ic k
on Mulb-:orry Ave . 5
Bdrms., many features .
fit for SANTA himself .

Should be SlOO,OOO.OO is
lS8 .900 00 .
NEXT YEAR - you can
watch lhe ROSE BOWL
BY THE FIREPLACE
tn this J bdrm . country
ho me , 1 1;, acres, fruit
trees. equipped kitc hen ,
many other features

SJO.OOO 00.
OEER TERRITORY 72 111 ~ c r es , vacant land ,
near Rutland , building

si tes also . S25 .375.00
BUY XMAS GIFTS with th!' e)(tra i ncome
from this rental un i t .

WANT l6.500 00
CHRISTMAS LIGHTS

S23.500 00.
WANTEO
S ACRES
ON RT . 7 BYPASS .
CALL TODAY .
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .

REALTOR
991-6191
ASSOCIATES
Je.. n Trusell949 ·1•60
R09er &amp; Dottle Turner

742 ·247•
OFFICE PHONE
99l ·l2S9

3 bedroom fr a me home
on
2
level
acres
cove red
p ic nic
area
with concrete slab on
State Rt near Pomeroy
La rge shade t r ees
LOT tor tra i lers.
cam pin g , houses and
r iver front

HOWERY AND MARTIN ~:

HOUSE SITES -

Ideal

cou ntry l ocation w tth
water tine near , elec ·
tri c and nt ce trees for
wood or shade .

WANTED .
NICE
LOOKING PROPERTY
IN THE lS TO 2STHOU ·
SAND CLASS. THAT
WILL PASS A 9S%
LOAN .
CALL

992-3325 or 992-3876

Rousing
I Headquarters

----- -~-

---

ALLEYOOP
~E

f'w\EGAWA.RT HAS LE:FT
THE RELEASE CHI&gt;.MBE-R
AN D IS FUNCTlONING UNDER
ITS OWN GUIDANCE S'ISTIOM!

VERY GOOD.

When you write a book on
play, you don 't spend any time
or space on discussing what
tnight have been. But some
bandA in "Bridge: Case for the
Defense'" might well discuss
it.
Tbua, North might well

LONTOO! KEEP
ME INFORMED

OF ITS
PROGRESS!

I see 40u had a nice
Christmas. Mister Walt '
Lots o'turkel.! bones t

I Joker

5 Great
I Part of

10

Kmertcan
president

13 NegaUve

Victorian
11 Opera

s

THER!:
ENOUGH LOVING
WAR',\7'-&lt; tN "TtliS POOV.

ARE WE IN
TI-IE ''WRIGHT 11
~&lt;if«,c--1,
PLACE ?

'lOW '0 SOLVE "fl,E
COJ "'~'&lt;Y 5 ENE "&lt;GY
CRIS •S.'

REPAIR
sweepers ,
toasters, iron$ , all small
appliances Lawn mower
Next to State Highway
rs~~~ge on Route 7, 9~·;

'10U SURE ARE ..
A~TriOU6H

I

5US:JECT IT WIL~
13E CALLED "THE
WINKlE HOU&amp;E

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

s &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Ste am
c leaned .
Free
estimate
R easo n~bt e
rates
Sco tchguard
9'92 ·
6309 or 741 2J.IB

review
Hibernia
7 Susan
Heyward him
8 Blahop's

arm 1

BARNEY

01.: BULLET!!

HOMES FOR SALE

HOW DAST YE CHEW
UP PAW'S SHOE! '

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

!S Twilight

creature

u Speck
i3 Mad
- hatter
44 Hesitate

•• L(OU DON'T !-lAVE

'&lt;OU CAN'T PLA'&lt;

AN'! SHIN PADS?

HOCKE'r' WITHOUT
SHIN PADS ...

I WONDER IF A
COUPLE OF MAGAZINES
WOULD WORK ...

NO, I
GUESS NOT-1

X

Shirley 6,13 : P rice Is Right 8, 10;
Elec Co 10

11 30- Wh eel

of

Fortune

3. 15 ;

20. B09arf 33; 11 ·55-News 17.
12 00 - Newsc enter
J.
News
6,8, 10, 13. M~ndreader s 15; Love
Amer~ca n Style 17
12 3Q- Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 , Sea r ch for
Tomorrow 8,10 , Health Field J.S ;
Mo vie "The Perils of Pllul l ne"
17; Afternoon of Harold lloyd 33.

Easy 33
4 .00--M ister Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15 M erv Griffi n 6 : Beverly

Hil lbillies 8. Sesame St . 20,33;
Gomer Pyle 10 , Real M cCoys 13;
Spectreman 17
4 3o-Bewitc hed 3: Brady Bunch 10 ;
Tom &amp; Jerry 13 , Mer v Griffin 15;
Gi lligan ' s I s. 17.
5 oo-1 Dream of Jeannie J, Sa nford
&amp; Son 8 . M ary Ty ler Moore 10 ;
M y Three Sons 17
5 30--Car ol Burnett 3, News 6 ;

ol Jeannie 17.

Doctor

ABC News 6 , Caro l Burnett 17.

6·31l- NBC News3.15. ABC News 13 :
Carol Burnett 6, CBS News 8,10;

Bob Newh art 17 ; Over Easy 20;
W ild Wild World of Animals 33 .
7·CIO-Cross Wtts J; J 'S A Crowd 6 ;
T tc T ac Dough 8 , News 10 ,
New l ywed Game 13 . Lo1.1e
Amer1ca 1· Style 15 . San fo r d &amp;
Son 17
Jo- Price is R1ght 3. Newlywed
Game 6 , Family Feud 10 ,

Joker ' s W ild B; Pop Goes The
Cou ntry 13. 15; All In The Family
11 . Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 00- Sh ir ley 3. 15; ABC News
Closeup 6. 13 . Incredible Hulk
8. 10 ; Wash i ngton Week In
Review
20,33 ;
- Movie
' Frankenstein's Daughter"

LX Z W X

NBZQSU

ABVVJ

EXGQ

11 oo-H1 gh Rollers 3, 15 , Laverne &amp;

Dream

caYPTOCIUOT1!8
~

8· 30-Romper Room 17
9 00-Bob Brauri 3; Phil Donahue
13, 15 ; Btg Va lley 6 ; Porky Pig B;
O ne Day At A Time 10; Lucy
Show 17 . Gentle Ki lle..- s 33
9 30.....Bob Newhart B; Love of Life
10 ; G r ee n Acres 17
10 00--Ca rd Sharks 3, 15 , Beat the
Clock 8,10 ; Ma..-ning Magazine
13 : M ov ie "A laka zam the Great"
17 ; Great Performance 33 .
10 30 - Ho llywood Squares 3, 15;
$10 .000 Pyramid 13 ; Andy
Griffith 6 , Whew 8,10

Who 33
6 OQ-News 3,8, 10, 13. 15; Zoom 20 .33;

apostrophes, the lenlth and formation of the words are all
hlnu. Each doy the code letters are di fferent .

LXZWX

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:19 Forest

111 ed for the three L "s, X for lhe two O's. etc . Slncle lettera.

ZB

New s 13 .

7 OQ- Today 3. 15 ; Good Morning
Ame..-i ca 0, 13; Friday Morning B;
Batman 10; Three Stooges 17 ;
7 15-A M Weather 33
7: 30.....Family Affatr 10 ; Studio See
33.
B:OQ-Capf. Kangaroo 8. 10 ; Family
Affair 17 ; Sesame St . 33 .

Gomer Pyle B; E lee . Co. 20;
Mash 10. Happy Days Aga in 13, I

$17 .500 00.

Bill Childs, Branch M1n1ger , Home tU - 244~
Rodney Downing, 8rok1r , Home "1·J7J1

handle

One letter simply aitands f o r another . In this sample A ia

POMEROY
A beautif ul ltMie starter home or
reltrement coup le Two bedroom and bath Large
h1.11ng room
nice kl1 chen
Full basement .

CALL 992-2342

S7 - cheap
33 Vase

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'8 how to work it :
AIYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

Lii&lt;E NEW
Quiet country l ivi n111 in th is tree
bedroom , 2 batn ra nch . Over an acre of .;,round with
a sp l i t ra i l fen ce. oarage and work!l.hop Ftreplace.
central heat and air co nd \«,900 00

RUTLAND
1 hOmes on Slt lem Stree' Take your
choice or buy bO th and rent them '12 ,000ea ch

Z9 " - Cents
a Dance"
31 Upstick
shade
32 Maneuver
33 Algerian
city
3t Cuddly
Tibetan
being

1% Drearisome
II Like Falstaff

4f Function
47 RllSe
derivative
t1 Actress,
Rita DOWN
I Sallow
!Time
gone by
3 Surmount

Paint i ng 7.. 71328

FRIDAY ,UH.EMBER 28,1979
5 45-Farm Report 13; 5:5(}- PTL
Club 13 . 6:0Q-700 Club 6,B ; PTL
Club 15; Heal fh F ield 10; World
at La rge 17.
6·31l- Kidsworld 10 ; News 17 . 6 · 45Morning Report 3; 6:5(}-Good
Morning West Virginia 13; 6 : 55---

Jo-Qne Day At A Time 8, Joker ' s
Wild 10 ; Flmtstones 17 : Over

Yeolerday' s Aluwer

u Stand by

"TDCOME

Previews 20, 33.
9 )()-Soap 6 , 13 ; Camera T hree 20,·
Dancing Disco 33
10 QO- Newsmagazi ne 6, 13. Knots
Landtng 8,10 , Civi lisa tion 17;
N ews 20; ~ou ndstage 33.
10 . 30- Hocking Valley Blvegrass 20 .
ll .OQ- News 3.6,8.10.1 3.1 5. Last of
lhe Wild 17; Dick Cave!! 10; Fal '
&amp; Rise of Reginald Perr in 33
11 30-Tonigh t 3,15: Police Woman
6.13; Col umbo B. ABC News 33;
Movi e ''Term of Trial" 10. Movie
" De~.~otlon " 17
T240- 8aretta
6, 13 ;
1 : 00 Tomorrow 3: News 15
I 15- Banacek 8; 1: 5(}-News 13. 17;
1.5&gt;--Mov ie "Safari" 17.
3 SS--Movie "S iren of Bagdad " 17 ;
S 3Q-Love Amel'"ican St vl e 17 .

Light B. lO; Gigglesnort Hotel 17
3 oo-General Hospital 6,1 3; I Lo ve
Lucy 17 : Upstairs , Downstairs 20

and
nonsense!

&lt;=oR MANY YEARS

8 {)(}-Buck Rogers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shi rley 6.13; Wa llons B.lO ;
Hansel &amp; Grete l 20; Sneak

Chil dren 6.1 3; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10 , 1 30- As The
World Turns 8, 10
2 00---Doctors 3, 15; One Ltfe to L tve
6,1 3; 2 : 2s-News 17
2 30---Anothe..- World 3, 15 , Guid ing

zt Breakfast

:1% Swab
35 Elysium
38 Hour , in
Turin
S7 Warbucks
title
til Mystery
author
tZ Stuff

MacNeil Lehrer

.OQ-Day•ofOur Li ves3, 15; All My

t7 Tennis caU
staple
38 Chisel
t7 Beetle

WINNIE

BOWER S

MIDDLEPORT - 1 bedroom brick only 1 block
fr om town , low uttl iti es A bMgllln 11t \11 ,SOO

copies ol JACOBY MODERN.)

lJ Monkly title
ze Ugh! beam It - pig's eye
U Former
ZZ Anger
%5 Spoil
%3 Garrison

ze Tease

17;

Report 20 ,33 .

Family Feud 6, JJ ; Sesame St.

singer

delivery various sizes of ;
pool klh Do ·i t yourself or
let us i nstall for you . D .
Bumgardner Sales . Inc
992 572A .

Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6 ; Joker's Wild
B. $100,000 Name That Tune 10;
Nashville On The Road 13;
Coun t ry Roads 15; All In The

by srsmf)IK!, SB/f-Midenvelopes. The mosr Interest ing questions will be u58d in
this column tJtJd will rtJC8ivtJ

It Pilot
IS Many times symbol
17 Gaalight or II - Bayes

•

Son 17 ; Dick Cave!! 20,33 .
· 30 - Hol iywood

10 .55-CBS News B. House Call 10 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
t Tete-.-tete
t Best pert
t Ailtiqaate

13;
Love
Sanford &amp;

(Do you hsve s question lor
rhe experts? Wrlfe ""Ask the
Experts, ' · care of ttl is newspaper. Individual questions will
btl answered if accompanied

~a•1tHJft'

IN STOC K for immediate ·

WALL - P-;:;PER;NG

fNEWSPAPER ENTERPRlSE ASSN )

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Sontag

IN ·•

BRADFORD , Auctioneer ,
Comple te Service PhonE'
949 2487 or 9..9 ·2000. ra c 1ne , ·
Oh io , Crltt Bradford

hts partner 's two spades
ins tead of Just sp lashing nght
into four spades .
North would have had no
trouble maktng an overtnck
at that contract.
Here is the expert defense
agamst four spades.
East plays the 10 of clubs at
Irick one. West assumes that
this was the start of an echo,
but he sees that there is no
point In trying to gi ve East a
club rufl
So West shifts to the ace of
diamonds East plays the
deuce. but this does not deter
West I rom C&lt;Jnti nuing the suit
West goes back to the bidding and notes that East did
pass two clubs doubled with
JUSt two clubs in his hand
Why didn 't he go back to two
diamonds ' Because he held
just one diamond.
East rufls that second
diamond . leads a club back to
hiS partner and ruffs another

dtamond for down two.

992 214.1

---

Pa..

Opening lead :+ K

SU R A N CE
been
carl(~
ce lled ?
Los t
your •
operator's l1cense? Phor'\,t ·

ELWOOD

2+

Pa..

Pus

Repa •rs ,
service ,
&amp;tl
makes
991 21 84
T.,.
Fabnc Shop ,
Pomerov .
Authorized Si nger Sd iH
and Service We sharper1
Sc •s s.ors

BRICK

·-

Obi

p...

Pa.u

MA C HINe

Rl 7or33 441&gt;2359a ft erl

RANCH

Soulb

Loader ,

brus h h og
W ill
dd
baseme nts . ponds, brush ,
t 1mbe r , land c lear ing 1
Cha rles Butcher 742 2940 •

AUTO MOBILE

gOOd butld1ng s ana goOd
old 10 roo m house N ice
I, ytng farm land for
fut ure home sites

Eoo1
Pass

z+

PAINTING
AND sand ·
blasttng Free es timates .
Call 949 2686 .

80 ACRES

Lots of

.

WILL HAUL lt m es tone and

SEWING

• 53

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: West

gravel Als.o, t i me hauling
and spreading Leo Morr is
Trucking Phone 7411 ..55

E NO

EAST

+2

HELLO· - ~E S. Tl\IS IS

~~·

11 13 pd

DOZER .

12·21

.Q

10~ .

gravel Ca ll Bob or RogeC:
Jeffers , day phone 992 7099 ,.
n igh! phone 991 3515 or
5231
.

116 E . Stcorld StrM'

-

AOJUSI

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

'{r:;A.H, MIT W\!I...D
&lt;ST\U.. TAL.K'

Free Estimate

stocked pond tor sw i mming
or fishing 9 rooms, bath ,
carpeted . 3 to 17 acres
a"allable Located approx
7 &lt; les from Pomeroy off

wtlh

DOM INO

BRIDGE

Win -

E.ccava t t ng,
sep t ic :
svstems, dozer . ba ckhoe.
~t
143 . Phone 1 (61A I 69B ·
7331 or 7A1 2593

HOME

SNOWY

Tomor~ow )

Thursday, Dee. Z7

mobil e home and ft sh
pond
1 1/3 ~res, 2
b ed r ooms,
Leadtng
Creek water on black top
road .

COUNTRY

:t :t I I ) CD!"

'So me ! • me~ even Dellet n1dn a gt rl wl!t1 '"'
m1nd O NE THAT DOE SN T MIN D

A.nswer

m•

PRIVACY

Now arrange the ctrcled leners to
form the surpnse answer as sug .
gested by lhe above cartoon

''[IJ, I

Jumbles INLET

Yest etd ay s

N ewlywe d Game
Amer-Ican Sty le 15;

Fam1ly

(IJ l .

EXCAVATING ,
dozer t
loader ~nd N c khOe work ~
dump truc k s and Ia bo'f'
far hire , w il l haul till dirt •.
top soil, limestone a,.,

•2 - Jn~

MODERN 5 year old , 3 or A
bedroom home on 2 '11 ac r es

is all this vacant
home needs GOOd con
dit ion, all br •ck., 111::1
stories .
ONLY

Giveaway

Roofing, gutters. and
downspouts
Free
Estimates . All work
guaranteed . 20 years ex perience . Call Athens ,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hosktns
797 -274S .

Real Estate lor Sale
years

" '5 MEMORY.

LCUPHIC +-1--,..--

-~~-

bedroom
1970 Vindale 11-..::63 w ith ex
panda , 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 1'1x60 3 bdr
1973
Skyltne
11x55 2
bedroom
1971 Bonanza 12x 52, 2 oedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME

THREE

HE WAS L051NG

(Answers

JIM &amp;WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

Real Estate for Sale
~

COMP LAINE.D T HAI

elnstt~ation

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING

WILL CA RE tor the elderly
in our home . Trained and
exper ienced
Phone 992

WOOD BURNING stoves

C URED

KID! YOU 7HOULDN 'T
EVEN BE IN HERE' !
TIGER5 AR.EPIINO&amp;ROU5 ~!
UNDERSTAND 1'

LOOK AT THOSE- FAN0S
AND CLAWS! SURE. SHE
MAY BE ACTING KITTEN15H
NOw .. BUT WHAT IF SHEGOT MIIP OR EXCITEO?

~1

WHA"T "THE
P5YCH1Ai ~I 5T 5A ID
WH E:N THE PAi iENT

r)

I

IT OUT. IT

- firepla ce inserts at the
Riverside Fireplllce, 514 E
Main, Pomeroy
Open
Tues . F r i .. Sa t 9 l, 1 6.

reasonably

SIMPSO~

Auctions

1971 LYNN HAVEN l•x653

Mgr .

OH, YEAH\ Lt7Tf'N,

Aluminum Siding

o·

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

~

NOT \'1 1TH
CLAUDIA!
!&gt;HE"S MY
FRIEND!

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

&amp; Famous N•me Brand

Tyree Btva . Hac.ne, 0 .
h
;
•
Phone 949 -21111 eveings
after s p .m . weeken"s
atte..- 12 noon .
11 19 1 mo

Mobile Homes · Sale

'1'7A- Jack w_Carse~

Hammond Oroan&lt;

Sales Rep. Fo..$undins
Hammond Orqans

and

POMEROY
LANDMARK

['(J

OO·ffc

PIANOS

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
After S P .M . 992 -SS-47

--~

Headqu1rter!'
Appll•nces

HOLD IT--FO~ THE- LUWA MIKE!
YOU GO PETTIN6 Ti6EilS lii&lt;EO
TAAI. YOU COULD L05'1? AN ARM \

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

Houi'"S 9· 1 M., W., F .
Other times by appoint ment.
101 Sycamore (Rear
Pome..-oy, o _

PETE

NICE PIG S for sale . Wor

m

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

t:t.

[DAWTO R-'-1?~...,...---,

mile off Rt . 7 by -pass .
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .
34

Great Ch..-istmas Gift
Both New &amp; Used

Remodeling
Additions
Siding
8..-ick work

med . cas trated 949 ·2857 .
BRUSH and weed cu tter ,
gasoline powered C~loric
cera mic top range and
mt c rowave
oven
com
b i nation Sea rs L ady Ken
more washer , electronic
con trols
Frig idaire gas
c lothes dryer . K itchen Aid
d i shwasher 997. 381 or

I I C(1]

Television
Viewing
6 .31l- NBC News3.1 5; ABC Newsl3;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Over Easy 20; Bob Newhart 17;
W i ld Wild World of Anima ls 33 .
:oo-Cross -Wit s 3. Baxters 6 ; Tic
Tac
Dough 8;
News
10;

I GOBT~

Answer here

991 ·7866

hound , 2 tra i ned beagles , 3

1974

[1

Garage

CALL 992 ·7544

apples at S..C per bu . Best for
apple butter Call 669 3785,
Fi tzpatri ck Orchard , SR
689

Soles &amp; Servlt.

I hOm .

(Moy 11_.,_ 20) For tunate lnfluenc.a will be prevahtttnt today In matters havtng an
eff.ct on your hOme and tamlly,
bri~ng happln"' and tranquillity to you and yourt

Housing I
Veterans Admin . Loans .
Federal

ROOFING

1183.

indoor ·o utdoo..- fa ell if tes
Also
AKC
registered
Dober mans . 614 446 779 5

Codn er 's Campers, Rain ·

••

HOUSE

H. L WRITESEL

CIDER

JIB5

HILLCREST
KENNELS
Board1ng , all breeds Clean

bOw Rt dge , Long Bot1 om

!NEWSPA~eq I:NTfAPAIS( ~&gt; !! '"~

APPLES

HONEY
Fitzpatrick Or
chard, St a t e Route 689
Phone Wilkesv i lle
669

POOD LE ,GROOMING .
Judy Taylor ~ lA 361 ·7220

ONE

~A FIE

Rotter Hysell

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

7314

dition , mags and lots of ex
tra s ca11992 2833 atter A

belt ttforts

Now taking orders . Will
deliver . 742 2056.

RISING STAR Kennel .
Board ing Call :167 02'11 .

m

pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec ·
tibles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns , pocket wat c hes and
co1 n collections Call 61.4
767 3167or 557 J.&lt;ll

~Moy

sale .

AC . 99'/ 3381 or 991-7 4.15.

door hardtop, full power
and opt tons
JJ8t or 992

ATTENTION ·
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU! Wi l l

(April

FOR

GENERAL MO TORS AM

Pets for Sale

Notices

TAUIIUS

FIREWOOD

byHemiArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these four Jumbles .
one letter to e:~cn square, to torm
lour ord1nary words

Business Services

LIMESTONE .

Wi II ing to pay top

OLD COINS. pocket wal ·

Noon on S.turday

make a real contrtbutlon today
to any group endeavOf you

CNIWSfiiAJifiiii!NTIIIIPNU ASIN I

ice

m

WANTED

COAL.

sand , oravel, c alcium
ch loride , h _rt i llzer , dog
toad , and all t ypes of salt .
E•celstor Salt Works, Inc .,
E . Main St , Pomeroy , 99'2

3161.

lhlt

essarynM

FURNITURE.

OOxes. brass beds , Iron
beds, desks, etc. , com plete
hou se ho ld s
Write M . D.
M i ller . Rt . .c. Pomeroy or
ca ll
7760

NOTICE

G UN
SHOO T
Racine
volunteer
Ftre
Dept
Every Saturday 6 JO p m
At thetr Outldtngtn Bashan
Factory choke guns only

Your tmagrnallon and cra11tlv11y

dit!lmeter 10" on largest
end $12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab . $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 2689

anything . See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques , 26 N
2nd , Middleport , OH . 992 ·

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY 9'1'2
6260. Pet5 avai I able for

12 ) 13. 10 . 27 . 3t c

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma• .

OLD

~ ~ ~~~ ~J.~

3891

wanted to Buy

1.10

In memory, Card of ThonU
and Obituary Gcent. per word .

3145
r

ply in person Craw's Steak
House , Pomeroy , OH .

Worda or Under

Cub
100

.-·

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

'ilJt\11.\,ft fe}1}

-

For Sale_ _

WAITRESS WANTED, ap

CHARGES
ldoy

in the Sentinel CJassifieds

Help wanted

WANT AD
I~

~.,OUitd

11-TM Daily Sentinel, Middleport:f'omeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Dec. 'tl, 1979

DICK TRAt.; •

TBU

BVQ

xvv

KSW L

HVXPL

TSVVBN :

WMS

xvv

WBJL

WMS

GL

QXQ
XZQ

HUSQGW .

- PZYZBNZ
LBPUHS
YntmlaJ'• Cl")'ptoquote: IT IS THE DAY AFTER THE
HOLIDAY WHEN A HOUDAY IS MOSf NEEDED.ANONYMOUS

17.

8·31l-Wall Street Week 20,33.
9: oo-Gator Bowl 6, 13; Dukes of
Hazzard B. IO; Lord Mountbatten
20.33 .
10 · 00- CBS News Special 8 . 10 ;
Win ston Churc hill 17; News 20 ;

David Sus&gt;klnd 33 .
10:30-Night Gal lery 17; Lock Stock
&amp; Barrel 20.

l i .OQ-News 3,8,10, 15 ; Lost of the
Wild 17 ; Di ck Lovett 20 ; Monty
Python' s Flying Circus 33.
11: 30-Tonlghf 3.15; Movie " Only a
, Sueam Away " 8; ABC News 33;

Mov ie " The Devll's Hand" 10;
Movie "'The Fa ce of Fu Manchu"

17 .
11 OQ-News 6, 13; 12 .30-Charlle's
Angels 6; Movie " From Here to
Eternity" 13 .
OQ-Midnlght Special 3,15; Mov1e
" Biuebeards Ten Honeymoons"

10
·30.....News 17 ; 1:35-Movle "It's a
Bik ini World " 17; 2: 15-News 13,.
2 30- News 3; 3:31l-Movle "Black
Fury " 17 . 5: 30-Love American

Sty le 17. •

�•

Ul- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport .Pomeroy, 0., Thursday. Dec . '!1. 1979

Gold soars to record peak
$48S.50 at the clCJ'!e Monday.
Zurich, Europe 's biggest bullion
mart, also saw the price start at
f507 .50 and move to $511 by mid -day,
up from $475 last Friday, the last
trading session In the Swiss financial
center before a long Christmas
hollday.
In Paris, where prices are inflated
by a four percent government tax,
bullion hit a record $523.96 an ounce
at the morning fixing .
As gold rose, the dollar declined in
thin trading, with many businesses
remaining shut or thiMed down
during Christmas week.
Although gold markets in Zurich
and London were closed Wednesday ,

LONDON (Al') - Gold soated
above SOlO an ounce to new peaks In
Europe today amid concern over a
reponed Soviet military buildup in
Afghanistan, the continuing U.S.
Embaosy siege in Tehran, and
higher oll prices.
The dollar was lower almost
everywhere.
Gold wa.s up as much as f36 from
pre-boUday prices In Europe,
following the metal 's surge through
the $500 banier in New York on
Wednesday.
In London, gold opened at a record
SII07.50, moved to an aU-time high
fWng of f5011.75 and by noon was
tradinj( at f511. This compared to

in New York', gold for December
delivery rose to $510 an ounce on the
Conunodlty Exchange Inc. before
closing at ~. 30.
The ci06e waa up $19.30 from
Friday, the last trading day before
the hoUday break. At Republic
National Bank ol New York, gold
closed at $502. On Monday, bullion
dealers In New York sold gold for
$4811.

The price of gold is more than
double its $226 .375-41-troy~unce
close in London at the end of 1978,
and nearly $400 above its the '13l50
an ounce close at the end of 1976. The
old record for gold was $496, set
during the European trading day

Ohio traffic deaths may hit 2,400
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - &lt;lllo'll
highway death toll for 1979 may
reach 2,400, the state Department of
Highway Safely eslimates.
That would be about 300 more than
last year's total of 2,048, according

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted--Ruth Mulford ,
Pomeroy; Lena Heilman, Pomeroy ;
Harold Leach, Ptmeroy ; Nancy
Bartimas, Coolville; Terry Shain,
Racine ; Charles Werry, Pomeroy.
Discharged -Marc French.

to Kevin Winters , manager of the
department's division of statistics.
The jump in deaths can be atbi buted in part to the comparatively
mild winter during the first quarter
of 1979, he said. More motorists ventured out than in the blizzard·
beleaguered first quarter of 1978.
Since May, the traffic toll hall
remained about the same as In the
similar months ofl978, he said .
The number of motorcycle riders
!tilled In traffic accidenll has risen,
Wintel'!l said. But details of the
fatalities are stiU being studied, so
t 's too early to say if the increase in

FINAL SALE
Of 'ffil

YEAR

'S

7

-END CLEARANCE

FRIDAY, SATURDAY AND MONDAY

20%

TO

DISCOUNTS
WOMEN'S CLEARANCE OF OUR

ENTIRE INVENTORY
OF FOOTWEAR!
Choose from any Women's Shoe or Boot in
our store.
First Pair at our Regular Price and the second Pair

112off*
*Buy the

First Pair at Regular Price and
get a Second Pair at Equal or Lesser Value
at 112 Price.

deaths is related to the July 1970
repeal of the state's mandatory
helmet law for cycle rtdel'!l.
As of Dec. 21, the highway safety
department had received reports of
2,093 traffic deaths this year. Wintel'!l said his estimate of a total of
about 2,400 for the year reflects
delaY" in getting final reports of
deaths and ·'delayed deaths'' - per·
sons who will die early in the new
year as a result of accidents which
occurred in 1979.

Mayor~s

SOME GREAT VALUES/
Women's and Children's

RUBBER FOOTWEAR

20% OFF REG. PRICE
1 GROUP

WINTER PURSES

40% OFF
LEATHER PURSES .......................... 20% OFF

Brien Johnson, Middleport, was
fined f5 and costs on a charge of
parking on a sidewalk when he appeared before Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Wednesday night.
Forfeiting a $27 bond posted on
speeding charges was Arthur Hess ,
!IDute I, Middleport.
Twelve defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews.
Forfeiting were Eli Ebersbach III,
Middleport, $200 posted oo a
reckless operatioo charge; f50,
operating a motor vehicle while un der suspension; $:nl, fleeing a police
officer; Pamela Stobart, Pomeroy,
$:!&gt;,speeding; Larry E. Woods, Ray,
pennitting an unlicensed driver to
operate his motor vehicle; Patricia
Van Meter, West Columbia, f33,
speeding; Leah J. Swatzel ,
Pomeroy, f,l7, speeding ; Gary
Jones, Pomeroy, $2B, speeding ; Carl
Donegan, Elkhart, Ind., $31,
speeding; Janet Cremeans,
Rutland, $28, speeding ; Ricky Stone,
Middleport, f29, speeding; Angela
Ginther, RuUand, ~. speeding ;
Tommy Walters, Middleport, f50.
pennitting an unlicensed driver to
operate his motor vehicle; Ivan
Walker, Jr., Chester, $30,speeding.
Fined in the cow1 were William T.
Williams, Jr ., Pomeroy, $200 and
costs, theft; DaUas Hill, Racine, f26 '
and costs, speeding; Paul MilbW11,
Pomeroy, $200 and costs, theft, and '
Elaine Uttle, RuUand, flO and costs,
failure to yield the nght of way, and
$50 and costs, no operator's license.

Jeffers selected

Men's - Women's · Children's

SLIPPERS .......... 20% OFF
WOMEN'S

~~~HION BOOTS
DRESS BOOTS

3

IN MIDDLEPORT

. . -:.-:.:-:.:-:-:-:.;. .·.· :-:-:-:-·.:.:.:.:-:-!

EXTENDED FORECASI'
Vlll'lable cioudllless S.turday
and &amp;mday. A cbaoce ol &amp;bowers
or BDOW flurries Mooday. Lo'WS In
tbe upper 201 and low 30o . Hlgha
lu the upper 30o to mld tOI north
and mld tOI to low 5011 south.
·-·-:.:.:::;.:-:-·-·-: ............ .·.·.·.·. ··:.:.;- .·.·.·.·.·:.·.·.·.·.·.·.
'

%
OFF

heritage house
OF SHOES

Reed Jeffers of the Carpenter area
was recently elected to a three-year
term on the Meigs County
Agricultural Stabilization and Con.
servation Service (ASQ;) Com.
rruttee.
This is a three fanner conunittee
which is responsible for setting
policies for the ASCS office located
in Pomeroy.
The conunittee oversees the
overall operation of e office, makes
approvals on the Agricultural Con.
servation Programs, acts on struc ture loans and approves or delegates
authority to approve other program
docwnents .
Other members of the ASC County
Committee are Clarence Price,
Chairman and Virgil King , ViceChairman.
. . . . . . . .-.-.-.-.

Dec. 00.
"Nobody wants to sell, and there's
a general feeling gold's going
higher," aaid ooe Conunodlly EI·
change trader In New York.
"We're looking for gold In the
~ by the end of January, " said
Vincent Tese, a partner in the com·
modity hOUBe ol James Sinclair X
Co. The house last December predic •
ted gold would be In the $46C4500
range by the end ofl979.
With Iranian leader Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeinl saying the U.S.·
Iran conflict could erupt into a
''military war," the '1ran situation
is continuing to push up the price,"
said one trader.
"Any time you get a comment in
which somebody calls for military
action, it's going to be tied to
precious metals prices," said an
analyst.
Dealers said there also was concern over reports that 10,000 Soviet
troops had been stationed In
Afghanistan, and that moderate
Organization of Petroleum EJ:porting Countries membel'!l might
boost oil prices by f2-41 barrel after
BMouncing fS-41 -barrel price boosts
earlier this month.
Gold had risen to $444 an ounce in
early October, but then slid below
$400. The metal began rising again
in early November, after the seizure
of American hostages at the U.S.
embassy in Tehran.

Meigs Counly 's first baby of the new decade and Ill parenlll will get .·
a royal start, thanks to approximately 32 Big Bend merchanta who are
participating in The Dally Sentinel 'I annual Baby Derby.
A number of gifts will be presented by the buslnella firms to the baby
and the parents.
According to the rules ol the contest, parenll ol the first baby ol11180
must be legal resldenta ol Meigs Counly, although the father may be in
the anned forces and the family stationed at a dl!tant point.
The exact time and date of birth must be specified in a written
statement from the attending phyalctan, and the statement must be
received at The Dally Sentinel Office, 111 Cow1 St., Pomeroy, no later
than midnight on January 11, 1980.

dlildren. It looks like charily to
DILLES BO'ITOM, Ohio (AP) them, and they have to be starving
Coal miners are proud people, which
before they accept government aid
Is why many Ohio miners who have
or
before they even buy food stambeen thrown out of work recently
ps.''
refuse to go on welfare, according to
Mrs. Glass and her group's vice
Carol Glass, president of the
president,
Charlotte Walker,
women's auxiliary of United Mine
operate
the
auDllary 'I "Food
Workers District 6.
Cloaet,"
in
which
they pact bous of
"We don t want charity, we want
food
and
houlehold
staplea for
our jobli," said Mrs . Glass. ''Even
families
who
are
In
trouble
becauae
though welfare is government aid
rl.
shutdowns
rl.
eastern
Ohio
mines.
which miners' taxes have paid for in
Mrs.
Walker's
hlllband,
F1ayd,
the past, some just ca!Ulot get ov..was
laid
off
last
Chrlatmas
when
the feeling that any help is charity. ''
Consolidation
Cad
Co.
closed
liB
Belmont County Welfare Director
Egypt
valley
strip
mine.
Thomas Williams said caseworkers
"We drew unemployment until it .
tell him that "most miners and their
ran
out," she said. 'Then it took
wives are very embarrasaed over
weeks
for my hwlband to set signed
having to apply. They only come to
up
for
early retirement. OUr
us as a last resort. "
children
are
srown. They helped WI
However, Williams, a former
while
we
had
no
mooey coming in. "
UMW official, said the county
With
help
from
the Salvation Ar•
welfare caseioad hall Increased 20
my,
wh06e
Christmas
collections in
percent from a year ago. And he
the
area
surprisingly
Increased by
predicted a further Increase after
50
pen:ent
this
year,
the
auDllary
thousands of idled miners use up
distributed 100 .Chrtatmu dinner
their unemployment benefits.
boxes to needy famllles.
In nearby Bellaire , Salvation Ar·
Mrs. Glass said donations of canmy Lt. Bruce Wallis agreed that the
'
ned
food and other staples had come
big problem was ''getting these
from
working minera and merneedy mine famiUes to sign up for
chants
patrontted by the minen.
welfare and for aid to dependent

Divers dispatched
KETCHIKAN, Alaska (AP l Battling weather and time, U.S. and
Canadian reacuers were dispatching
divers today to determine whether
any of the 30 Taiwanese crewmen
aboard the ore freighter Lee Wang
Zln are trapped inside the vessel
Ooating upside down In the chiUy
Pacific.
The body of one crew member was
recovered Wednesday, but the
others were missing as the Canadian
tugboat Cindy Mozel kept watch
over tile vessel through the night.

SEEKUCENSE
Timothy Dean Brtnager, 18, Rt. 3,
Racine, and Carmen Kay Carpenter,
17, also of Rt. 3, Racine have applied
for a marriage license In Meigs
County Probate Cow1.
FORECLOSURE ACf!ON
A suit for foreclosure of a mortgage has been filed in the Meigs
County Conunon Pleas Cow1 by the
Security Bank, Athens, against Gary
0 . Hostetter, Rt. I, Reedsville .
Hostetter allegedly owes the bank
f26,874.21 plus Interest on a mor·
tgage note.

DIVORCE GRANTED
On grounds of gross neglect of
duty, a divorce hall been granted in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Jeanette L. Davis,
Syracuse, from Robert Eugene
Davis, also of Syracuse .
The
couple's child will be In the custody
of the plaintiff, and the other was.
placed in the custody of the defendent.

I

\

e
(USPS 145-960)

a1

CfNCINNATI AP - A convicted
bank robber, home oo a seven day
Christmas furlough frcm a federal
prison, and his brother, have been
charged in COMection with a Christ.
mas Eve bank robbery .
Johnny L. Smith, 'II, an inmate at
the Federal Correctional Institution,
Ashland, Ky., and his brother, Randall, 31, were chllrged with
aggravated robbery by Oncinnati
police.

Squad kept busy

Meigs County C(Jllmissioners
Thu11iday afternoon reviewed the
county budget c&lt;rnmisslon's cer·
tification ol estimated general fund
resources for 19lll with Meigs
Auditor Howard Frank.
Following the discussion, the
board reviewed the entire general
fund departmental budgets and
made plans lo have the ap pr~riations resolution prepared for
passage by Jan . 4.
The board also discussed the
possibilily of relocatmg the motor
vehicle title office to the third noor
of the courthouse with a final
decision to be 111Bde later.
Mr. and Mrs . Bob Hoeflich met
with the board to discuss the
operation of the AORTA bus between Pomeroy and Athens indicating that they would like to see
the service continued.
However, commissioners in ·
dicated that a schedule on the bus
stops and houl'!l that it runs should
he made available for publication so
that residents wishin~ to US&lt;' the

EXIT 70'S ENTER Ill'S - The James A. Gavin P!Bnt at Cheshire with
its two gigantic cooling towers and the adjacent Meigs mines have made
a major contribution to the econtmy of the Gallia-Meigs area during the
pest decade. In Sunday 's Times-Sentinel, the past decade ac·

complislunents will be reviewed .

.,.., .

'\

j
·"' '
.IP-•t'!ji-1,.

,l

.\

··'t.. ,...

made three runs Wectn.lay. At
I1:49 a .m., it was called to 8llli Oliver
St. for Jason Amos, who wu taken
to Veteranll Memorial Hoepltal.
Then , at3 : 1~ p.m. the aquad went to
848 Locust St., and transported Mary
Frye to Holzer Medical Center.
Finally, at 3:33, Mary McCardy,
50 Riverview Drive, wu taken to
Veterans Memorial Hoepttal by the
squad.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
END-OF-THE-YEAR
20% OFF CLEARANCE SALE
SAVIC 204}'. FRIDAY, DEC. 28TH AND
SATURDAY, DEC. 29TH ON THESE SELECTED
ITEMS

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8 P.M.
Men's Van Heusen Dress Shirts

Men's Corduroy Jeans

Men's Knit Shirts and Velours

Wrangler Insulated Coveralls

Men's Western Shirts
Men's Sport Shirts
Men's Winter Jackets
Boys' Winter Jackets

Women's Winter Pajamas
Women's Winter Gowns
Women's Winter Robes
Playtex 18-Hou r Sale

~-t

r

~• ·_'·"~tiC..-~:
. ,;

The Middlepcrt Emergency Squad

t , . -~
"'

-:.t:~

·.

'f,

-

~

1

.~-

- ., •

~- t. ·"'.

.i ·r

''

A-'

•

" "'
' ..
I . . .'Y:~
,.·•'I,,o•'
.

' ..f.M ·•·t_ . ._,,...
:

.' .

• '

~

'•

1,_

·•.

I .- J,.,•·
•• t
i(t!lf .. J:.."l
r~ "'~ ._,,1(~
·~

"1..1

· ~'

-~ ~

!....:z;i'.t f.

Dedication set
PORTSMOUTII, Ohio IAP J Fonnal cereroonies lo mark
reopening of the U.S . Grart
Bridge acroos the Ohio River are
seven days off, but police say
traffic oo the span is heavy and
rooving like clockwork.
The bridge was closed for
ne.arly18mCilths while more than
f6 million was spent replacing
cables and repairing its deck .
Police said that bridge traffic
1mv~
Jmre smoothly than
before, partially because ci the
addition ol a curb lane with a con tinuous right-tum feature for nor·
thbound vehicles.

10 die in fire
LANCASTER, S.C. iAPJ
While irunates yelled for help
behind locked doors , a fire ""nt
smoke billowing throogh a 156·
year.(l!d county jail, killing 10
prisoners two weeks before the
building was scheduled to be
closed.
Only three prisoner.; survived
the fire Thurs:lay night on the
second noor of the Lancaster
County Jail, a white, two-&lt;Jtory
masonry structure designed by
the architect who plamed the
Washin gton
Monument,
authorities said.
The county was scheduled to
move the jail and offices fi the
sheriff's department In two
weeks to a new building on the
outsltirts of Lancast..-, officials
added.

Way cleared
WASHINGTON IAPl - An ap·
peals court has cleared the way
for the deportation of some
Iranian students as part d

Junior Dresses

Van Heusen &amp; E~ Aannel Pajamas

America's retaliation for the
seizlD'e ol the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran.
But a lawyer for three students
who challenged President Car·
ter 's order singling out Iranians
for immigration checks says he
will carry the fight to the
Supreme Court unless he get.'! a
rehearing.

Missy Dresses

Posting prices

Men's Winter Caps

Half Size Dresses

Men's and Boys' Dress Gloves

Women's Sweaters

Men's 3-pc. Vested Suits

Christmas Albums &amp; Tapes

Men's Sweaters
Boys' Sweaters

Entire Stock Boys' Shirts
Van Heusen Velour Robes

Children's Winter Coats
Children's Winter Sleepwear
Women's Winter Coats

Men's Flannel Work Shirts

WE WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY, DEC. 31ST.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

FR IDAY. DECE MBER 28. 19 79

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Commission reviews budgets

"11

Brothers charged

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 180

Miners refuse
welfare offers

court

as committeeman
ON SELECTED GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

New arrival, parents
getting royal st~

•

Amid speculation that an 8.3
peroont price hike is in the offing,
Venezuela aMounced Thursday
it would post its 1980 oil pricffi on
Friday. A price like by
Venezuela, which supplies 3.5
percent ol U.S. oil needs, could
klck off similar increases by
other oil..,Irp&lt;rling oountrtes.
Energy Minister Humberto
Calderon Berti, speaking at a lun ch held in Caracas by the state oil
company Petroleos de
Venezuela, refused to say what
his country's new price would be .

•·

STEER WEIGH-IN
All l-H and FFA boys and glrlll
planniDg on carry!Dg a steer
project In 1980 are rem..IDded that
all steen mUJI be weighed In on
Saturday, Deco. %9, from 9 Lm. to
12 DOOD at Royal Oak Flinn.
II the roads prove to be UJ&gt;.
desirable, the weigh-ill wW be
moved from 9 a.m. to 12 noon to 1
to 4 p.m. the l8llle day at tile
•me pillee. II die weatber Is
questionable, ple&amp;lle list.., to
WMPO n.dlo Saturday mol'lllnc
or call Jobn Rice atlll'l-3%17.

Big oil hike
anticipated
By Tbe Auoclated Prao
A rise in the price rl. Venezuelan
oil by as much as 8.3 percent has
been predicted by some oil industry
observers.
Other oil exporting countries,
unable to agree on prices during
their year..,nd meeting last week in
Caracas, Vene&lt;uela, could follow
any Venezuelan moves and set off a
new round of price hikes.
Vene&lt;uelan Energy Minister
Humberto Calderon Berti declined
in Caracas Thursday to say what his
cwntry 's new price would be. But
Cal de roo Berti, had told reporters
last week the new price "may be
$26 " a barre I.
Vene&lt;uela is the supplier of 3.5
percent of U.S. oil needs. It had
joined with Saudi Arabia and two
other moderate Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
members before the cartel's
meeting m raising their base price
by $6 to $24 for a 42-gallon barrel.

Three killed in
car-truck mishap
BROOKVIlLE, Ohio (AP) Three persons were killed and a

truck driver and his pas.,nger were
hospitalized following a car-b'uck
collision on U.S. 4() just north of here
Thursday, police said .
Dead were the driver, Donald H.
Schei, 28, d Phillipeburg, and
passengel'!l, Robert D. Hane, 42 , and
Robert C. Hane, 21. bcth &lt;Jf East
Canton.
Truck driver Garry Dunn, 29, and
his passenger. Steven A. Dillman,
2ll, both rl. Sharpsville, Ind., were in
satisfactory condition at Good
Samaritan Hospital in Daytoo.
Police aaid the car was struck
broadside by the tractor trailer as it
pulled onto U.S . 4() and pushed
through a service station and a
residential lol The dead were pin ·
ned in the wreckage.
Police said Shei was sales
manager for Zlndale Corp., a
housing and recreational vehicle
marrufacturer. He had recenUy been
transferred here from corporate
helldquarters at Conk tin, N.Y.,
police said.
Po~ce .aid Shei was coming from
showing property to the Hanes .

.

facility will know the routes, times.
It was agreed that Com·
missioner Richard Jones will contact the AORTA Board in Athens and
see what the problems are and how
they can be worked out.
A resident met with the board to
discuss the general relief program
of the welfare department. She com·
plained that she is net physically
able to work oot her benefill! on
general relief because she CB!Ulct do
heavy worit . She stated that she does
not feel she is being treated fairly in
that she should get benefit.'! withoot
having to work fortl~em .
The conunissioners said this was a
decision fi the welfare department
and that the claimant should file an
appeal and request a hearing if she
feels that she '' not being treated
fairly.
The board authorized the payment
fi all outstanding bills relating to
unemployment
compensation
claims and au thortzed the county
auditor to make the necessary tran·
etc .

sf..-s in the appropriate accounts to
pay the claims.
A letter was read from the Ohio
Department of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation which stated
that is it agreed that a training oon·
ter and sheltered workshop com·
bination can be built fer Meig Coun ·
ty 's Mentally Retarded Program
providing that the adult workshop
area be designed as a temporary
ments for providing adult sesrvices
in the county.
The county audito r was authorized
to made the necessary trarnfers in

Rhodes
vetoes
•
extenszon

Hostage transfer
reports denied
TEHRAN, Iran fAP) - Moslem
militants occupying the U.S. Embassy denied reports today that
seven American hostages had been
transferred from the compound to a
maximum security jail. The rl.ficial
Pars news ageocy also denied
distMruting the report .
First word that Pars was carry;ng
the report came frtm the NBC·TV
correspondent :n Tehran, wh&lt;I said
Pars got its information from the
French news agency, Agerx:e Fran·
ce Presse.
The French news agency dispatch
came from Chartres, France, and
quoted a French legislator just
returned from Tehran as saying the
hostages had been transferred to
Tehran's Evin Prison, probably for
heahh reasom.
In an interview with the Freoch
newspaper L 'Echo Republica in. cir·
culated by Agence France Presse,
lawmaker Nicholas About gave no
indication of the source of his in·
formation. He was not immediately
available for elaboration.
He was one of three French
lawmakel'!l who recently returned
from a self-initiated fact-finding
tour to Iran. One fi the lawmakers
had earlier claimed that three of the
hostages would be released before
Christmas.

About reiterated that claim,
saying he understood the decision
was taken at a meeting of Iran ·s
Revolutionary Council on Dec . 20-21.
·When that decision was taken , it
was presented to w as a gesture of
good faith toward Fraoce," he said.
About "' a legislator frtm the
district of Yvelme, which includes
Neauphle-le-Chateau, the Par is
suburb where Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini organized his return to
Iran and the fall of the Shah Moham·
med Reza Pahlavi .
In other development.'!, Iran ·s
foreign miniSter angrily demarxled
spy trials for the U.S. h&lt;111ages if
America pushes for U.N . sanctions
against his country . At least 10 of the
captives were reported re~Uing
against their captors, and there was
no sign their jailers would free any
of them.
The United States has interpreted
every Iranian "good gesture as a
sign of weakness," Foreign Minister
Sadegh Ghotbzadeh told reporters
Thursday nighl He referred to
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's
decision last Friday to allow three
American clergymen to have Christmas vtsits with the hostages and
President Carter's armouncement
that America would seek U.N. sanc tiollS against I ran in a bid to
pressure the release of the captives.
Ghotbzadeh remained silent on the
Carter a mouncement until after the
three visiting clergymen left Iran
Thursday morning, but he was
clearly angry when he gave his

L01TERY
$1 Bonanza: 51; 198; 87%1;
&amp;1057; 773'710.
~nt P'fr&amp;mld : (9 ; 765; 03%8.

country 's official reaction to the
plan.
"All of a sudden we realize their
!America'S! whole propaganda is
absolutely ridiculous," Ghotbzadeh
said. "Now they are going to the
Security Council just because they
know in January the composition of
the council will be differen~ and this
is not acce[:Uble to us.
'1 f the United States continues lo
put pressure on us ... ! don' see any
!Continued on page 12 1

ABC renews
•
accusahons
MEMPHIS, Tenn. lAP ) - ABC
televison has renewed accusations
that Elvis Presley 's 1977 death was
drug-f'eiated and that there has been
an official coverup concerning the
death.
In an update of the network's in·
vestigation into Presley's death,
co rrespondent Geraldo Rivera
reported Thul11day night on the
ABC-News program "20-20" that
Presley's father was told two months after Elvis' dooth that his son
died of drug interaction.
According to Rivera , the infocmation came from Dr. Jerry
Francisco, Shelby County medical
examiner. But two days after his
purported conversation WIth Vernon
Presley, FranCIScO issued a news
release which denied drugs played
any role in Presley ·s death, Rivera
said.
Elvis Presley died Aug. 16, 1977, at
lis Graceland mansion and an
autopsy was performed the same
day at Baptist Hospital. The report
has never been made pubii",
although Francisco told reporters
the 42 year~ld singer died of hyper·
tensive heart disease.

all acc&lt;Alllts in order to close the accounts for the end of'"" year.
Coonty Engineer Wesley Buehl
was present for a lengthy discussion
with the board on highway depart&lt;IEnt appropriatiollS for 1980. The
matter was tabled for further
discussion on Jan. 2.
The meeting was receliSed until
Jan . 2 and ancther regular mee~
was scheduled for 10 a.m. on Jan. 4.
Attending the meeting were CcmmiSsioners Richard Jones, Chester
Wells and Henry Wells and Clerk
MaryHobstetter.

BEGINNING DUTIES -Jon
Buck has been named aew clerttreasurer of the Vlllage of Middleport aad will slart bls do lies In
January. Buck, a gradoate of
Ohio Unlversily ill Atheas, IB employed with the Gatlla-Melgs
Community Action Agency. He Is
the 8011 of Mr. and Mn. GaB Buck
ol Pomeroy aod be and bls wile,
the form..- Tam! HoHman, Uve In
Middleport. Buck replaces Gene
Grate. Grate did not IUe 1..reel~tlon to the pooL

Fire destroys c.Rr
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called to the former dump area
at Dark Hollow Thusday afternoon
where a 1974 Chevrolet was on fire .
The auto was demoliShed by the fire .

Pomeroy Fire Chief Olar les
said that ownership of the car
had not been detennined and the
matter has been turned over to the
department of Meigs Sherdf James
Proffitt. It is believed that the
ve hi cle could have been stolen and
abandoned at the secluded location.
L~ar

Weather
Clear tonight. Low tn the low to
rrud als. Increasing cloudiness
Saturday . Highinthelowtomid41E.
The chance of preripillltion nea r
zero tonight and Sa tllrday

EARLY DEADlfllo'E
The Daily Sentinel will be oi&gt;serving an early deadline Monday,
Dec. Jl. All ne"~ copy shwld be sub·
milled at the eerhest time p«&lt;Sibie.
No paper will be printed Ne w
Year 's Day .

TRI-CITIES BUS TERMINAL OPENS - A new
Greyhound bus terminal, serving Gallia. Meigs and
Masoo Counties, opened this week at 529 Jackson Pike,
Suite 001. Located in the Spring Valley Plaza, the ter·
minal offers a full line of Greyhound service including
tnul'!l, chartel11, in and out bound package express, and

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Gov.
James A. Rhooes today vetoed a bill
which would have provided an additior-..1 13 weeks of unEmploYment
compensation or free job training
benefits for persorn tlrown out rl.
work by plant closings.
"While this bill's costs are
unknown, rt has the potential for
bankrupting Ohio's unemployment
rompensation fund," Rhodes said In
his veto message to the General
Assembly.
He called the bill "flagrantly
discriminatory" in that it would apply only where there would be at
least 500 persons unemployed as a
result of total or partial swtdowns.
"What would be viewed as
favorable treatment by a worker in
a plant which employed 500, would
be viewed as discrimination by a
worker in a plant which employed
~99 ." he said
The governor said the llle&amp;llure
would wrden businesses d all slxes
with additional unEmllloymer&amp; compensation taxes and tlllt Ohio
workers could take advantage of
other state or federal joble!ll
benefits and training .
"The bi.U would hurt Ohio business
and industry, which has already
been crippled by governmental
over-regulation and environmental
eJ&lt;tremism," Rhode said, a theme
he has stressed repeatedly in public
remarks in 1979.
The bi U"holds rut what cruld he a
beneficial program d educational
job retraining but fails to fund it and
burdellS the Board of Regents with
unfunded mandates in ad·
mnistering it," Rhodes added.
'1 f this bill were to become law, it
would be the first fi its kind in the
United States and would put Ohio's
industry at a competitive disad·
vantage in securing new jobs for
OhioBllS and keeping those jobs we
have. " he said.
Rhodes criticized the bill for ad·
dressing ··only the results and not
the causes ·• of major plant closings.
Rep . Edward J. Or lett, 0-Dayton,
the bil l's chief sponsor, said Rhodes
was ··off base oo a nwnber of poin-

ts·· in vetoing the legislation.
He said it was "ridiculous" for the
governor to say the bill would
bankrupt the unemployment ctmpe nsati on fund

In and out bound baggage. The tenninal is open week·
days from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. and 5:30 until a p.m.
Saturday hours are fr(Jll 9 a .m. until 1:30 p.m. Piclured arc terminal owner and operator Stuart Cerone~
(left), and Steve Sitzler, District Supervisor
Greyhound Unes, Inc.

�</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="51554">
            <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="51553">
              <text>December 27, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
