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                  <text>U-.'1- The Swulay Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Dec. ll, 1979

View from Statehouse

I Hoofs and Paws
c. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - This is the time of
the month during which I alwa)'l tell
you w!Mit went oo during the month
concerning animals.
Before getting to the detailed number of events there is ooe story that I
think should be told because perhapa
we can prevent the same thing from
happening again.
A dog was hit by a car in Racine.
Three days later, it was found by
accident where it Jay in the weeds
along side the road . The Hwnane
Society was notified and one of our
men went irrunediately lo the area
and J»cked up the poor animal.
It was Sunday and vets are hard to
find on that day - but there is one
clinic that is open each Sunday up
near Athens and that is where our
representative toe* the animal. He
left the dog and returned home to
find a descrlptioo in the paper of the
exact dog he had just administered
to - in the lost column
When he called the owners , they
were ll111Ch relieved at hear that
someone had found their animal and
not only went to identify their pet but paid the bill- and the animal is
now at heme with its owners.
Now then. again I ask that those of
you who love your animals - get
them Ucensed and get that license on
your pet. Yoo are not only allowing
your animals to become frightened
to death by being confiscated by
organizations not familiar with your
pet and in one case it being eventually destroyed (if picked up by tl•e
Dog Warden and put in the pound I or
being placed with another family (If
picked up by the Humane Society 1.
Next, if you hit a dog or cat.
Donl just glance back or around
and if you don't see the injured
an1Ill8! Just drive oo and forget it.
Stop your car and check and see
what the status of the animal is and
where it is. There's nothing you can
do 1f the animal is dead rthat
problem can then rest on the
shoulder of the owner who did not
restrain his animal &lt;r provide a fenced m area ). BUT. if the animal is
injured and suffering it should be
provided with comfort .. if not by
known owner, then by you, or if you
need help, call the Humane Society.
One night last week Joyce Miller
and I were so pleased to have the
President of til! Meigs Cwnty
Humane Society, Dorthea Fisher.
bringtwopeople to our home to meet
us and give us encouragement in our
/lumllne etforfll. And I w1Bh you aU
cruld have met them '
John Hoyt, President of the
Hwnane Society rl. the United
States, Washington. D. C. and P au!
Irwin, Vice President and
Treasurer . It is certainly apparent
why these men have the positions
they do with the national
&lt;rganization. Tthey were both
pleased with the accomplishments
o{ your local Humane Society.
The acti vi lies that took place
during the month of December were
as follows :
Calls to the Humane Society for
assistance, 285 ; Calls from the
Hwnane Society, 122 : Emergency
runs, 9 (unusually low ); Dogs and
puppies placed, 19; Cats and kittens
placed, 2; Dogs euthanized , 1 1injured); Investigatioo rl. neglect and&lt;r cruelty, 5.
At present, animals available f.r
adoption are : three German
Shepherd puppies, about eight
weeks old, female and really nice
pups. A Poodle, silver, female and
beautiful but would be even more
beautiful, if groomed. We also have
an Irish Setter, female , young, and
there is probably nothing m.re gentle and loving than this red-headed
breed We also have an English Setter type and eight puppies. Anyone
who would give this really nice lady
a permanent home, we will help you
place the puppies when they are old
By Marton

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BY STATE REPRESENTATIVE
RON JAMES
ID-PROCI'ORVILLE,
!I!ND HOUSE DISTRICT I
Last week we looked at this year 's
activities of the General Assembly
with regard to education, taz.
energy, transportation, and Justice.
This week, I will continue with my
year end review rl. legislative activity during 1m.
EQUAL RIGHTS: This year, the
General Assembly enacted Hou91!
Bill 19 which prohibits employmert
discrimination on til! basis of
pregnancy . Also, House Bill 23J
established a law prohibiting age
discrimination in employment
LABOR : The !13th General
Assembly enacted Hoose Bill 138
which establishes a more effective
rehabilltaitm system to return
workers to gainful employment.
Beyond this, the General Assembly
enacted Senate Bill 2, which
eliminated the waiting week beftre
unemployment
compensation
benefits. However, Senate Bill2 was
vetoed by til! Governor .
House Bill Ill, which permits employees the righl to obtain coJ»es rl.
their medical records from employers, became law. Pending in the
House is Senste Bill 21 which
provides tax incentives for
bus in e&amp;.~es to develop ln areas of
chrooic unemploymmt.
Debate will cootlnue oo a pubtic
sector collective bargaining bW next
year. House Bill 475 would enact
bargaining proce dures while
wtlawing strikes for pubtic sechr
employees.
ECONOMIC AND OOMMUNITY
DEVELOPMENT: , The ijennial
budget bill featured several
initla lives for eCIJII(mlc development. Among other items, continued
stroog funding was provided f&lt;r
development of a rapid rail transit
network linking OJ!jo's major urban
areas . Hruoe Bill 168 created the
Ohio Rail Transit Authority, ORT A.
Aho passed into law, House Bill
275 removed the state-mandated interest ceiling on ll111nicipal boods.
ENVIRONMENT
AND
NATURAL RESOURCES : The ooly
question voted on statewide this past
November was the bottle deposit
statute spoosored by the Ohio Alliance for Returnables Issue I, which
called for a refundable 10 cenll!
dep(J!jil oo beer and soft drink lxttles

enough. We also have a Bocder
\.ollie. one year old, male and as you
know , this breed is alwa)'l nice.
Last, but certainly not least, is one
cat - a beautiful Calico. Anyone
wanting to give any ol these animals
a good home, please call992~260.
In closing, I would tike to say
some thing to Meigs County
hwnanitarians. When you see an
a nimBI in trouble, please do the ril!ht
thing, not the easiest thing. Pick up
the animal and if injured, take it to
the nearest vet, if not hurt then take
it home. Call us in either event (9926260 ) and we will take over. This
idea of seeing something you know
needs to be remedied and then just
driving off and going home and
calling us then or later just doesn l
make you the humnanitarian you
could have been. So many do just
this -and sometimes by the time we
get to the area, the dog or cat is
dead, there is no animal in sigh~ the
animal has suffered longer than
necessary, etc.

In other words. tf you are real
hwnanitarian, think like we do ,
think of the welfa re of the animal
over and above any inconvenience
you may have logo through in order
to help it. You 'il feel a lot better over
the situation, we will most certainly
appreciate it, and the animal will not
hurt so long . Thanks in advance
from us and the creatures.

Elderly may get
discount st&gt;rvices
ATHENS - The Medical and Dental CUni"" operated by Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation will
provide services at a discoonted rate
to eligible low mcome patienll! who
do n!t have coverage by third party
gurantors such as Medicaid,
Medicare or other health in&amp;~ ranee.
The amount d. the discount will
depend on til! size of the family and
their total incom e.
Patients wishing lo apply foc this
discounted rate should iiV:)uire at the
Clinic in person.
No detenninatioo rl. eligibillty can
be made by phone and no group
discrunts will be made. Each
patient's sitUlltion will be considered
Individually, and the discount rate
will be based m verified infonnallon
provided by the individual appbcanl .
lnfonnat10n ca n be oblailrd at the
Vinton CoWlty Health Clinic, 7Jl3
South Market Stree~ McArthur; the
Meigs Cou nty Medical Clinic,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, and
the Racine Dental Cbni c. Racine.

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Residents can VOICe
opinions on ·spending
COLUMBUS - Ohioans are
voicing their opinioos on how their
tax money is being spent in the county, state and nation. This rare opportunity is being made pos..ible by
the Resources Conservation Act ol
1977 (RCA), headed by the USDA
Soil Conservation Service (SCSi .
RCA is giving all citi2e1Vl a chance
to get involved with long-range planning decisions that will guide the
future of the USDA conservation
programs, and affect the future of
the nation's soil and water resources.
Draft Appraisal Part I, containing
all current infonnation on the status
of the resources m the state and
nation, iB now availsble for public

Alleged bomber
nabbed in Cincy
DUBLIN , Ga. l AP) - A
wheelchair-bound man was arrested
fnday in Cin ci nnati on charges of
sending an exploding O!ristmas
present in the mail to his wife and
the paraplegic man she was visiting.
authorities sa1d.
Sheriff W.R. " Rock" Bussell said
WilllBm H. Cole, 32, of HarrlSoo,
Ohio, was arrested by postal
auth&lt;rities acting oo an aggravated
assault warnint sworn wt in
Laurens Cou nty , Ga .
He said a hearing oo the warrant
was scheduled Saturday morning in
Cincinna b !D determine wb!thtr
Cole would resiSt ext raditioo to
Geoll!ia to face th e charge.
Larry Swe.gart, 21, and Rtta Cole ,
Jl, were injured Moodsy evening
when a gift-wrapped package exploded as s,.,igart opened it in his
ilving room in Dublin.
The small package had been
mailed in nearby Wrightsville , with

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a Ia bel saying it was from, "Guess
Who?"
Mrs . Cole, WiDiam Cole's wife,
who was C\Jt in the chest by the expi&lt;1!ion , was relea91!d from a
hospital Thursday , the sheriff said
Sweigart was in stable cooditiCII ala
Macon hoopital where he was
treated for injuries to his upper
body. face and head.
Officia ls said Sweigart and Cole,
both confined to wheelchairs since
looing the use of their legs in
separate aut&lt;mobile accidents, apparenU y met in a hoopi Ia I during
tb!ir rehabilitation.
It was also at the hospital that
Swei8art met Mrs. Cole, who later
Joined him in Dublin.
BuS!Iell said he did not know the
I; name or location of the hospital
wb!re these events occurred, or
when the two men were injll'ed.

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Today
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W1ll1r. T. Leadingham
Realtor

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INVESTOR'S VIEW OF REAL ESTATE
The New York Stock E)lcha nge recently conducted a study of t he
small investor 's view of inves tment income potent ial. IT must ha.., e

ba ckfired, because stocks ca me oot a far d istant second to real estate .

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The study concer ned itse lf with the sma l l investor , defined as
anyone wno falls in one or m or e of the tollowino cate'Qories : 1) annual
household income betwee n $7 ,500 and $20,000; 2) has a securi ties port
folio valued at less than SlO.OOO ; 3l or annual secu r i ties transactions
valued at less than $5 ,000
They were asked what rate of return they thought could be attain·
ed on a regular basis from the five major investment areas . Real
estate Investments were ra ted highes t, exceedi ng the yield fro m
stocks, (the second ranking ca tegory J by more than one third, follow ·
ed by mutua l funds , sav ings banks a nd insurance in th at order . Phone
us now, we work hard for both sma ll and large investors .

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If there is anything we can do to hc 1,· -.; U u: th e l1el d ul rev! es t
please phOne or drop in at Li!ADINGHAM REAL ESTATE . Sll Secon&lt;
Ave., G~lllpolis . Phone 446-7699. We're he re to help .

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and cans, faDed overwhelmingly.
Previously this year, the Hoose
Energy and Envirooment Committee failed to recommend House
BiD 139, the "bottle bill" for
passage.
Nevertheleas, two alternatives to
Issue I wiD be considered next year.
A lis- tax proposal, HouseBDI361,
pas~~td Ire House aoo is wtder coosideratioo by the Senate. House BW
ll6 would cloee certain tax loopholes
and raise money to attack the state's
li Iter problem.
In other matters, the General
Assembly edopted legislatioo to ensure the proper disposal and
management of hazardous and
nuclear wastes in Ohio. The
Legislature adopted H.J .R. '1:/ which
establililed a J!Xnt Hazardous Waste
Study Committee 1D study hazardous
and nuclear waste disposal in Ohio.
Additionally, the Senate passed
Senate BiD 11, which is designed to
protect the environment and pubic
health and safety from disposal of
radioactive wastes.
HEAL1HANDINSURANCE: The
biennium buadget extended
medicaid eligibility to persons on a
hillher inccme level and remvoed
the value rl. a home 88 a criterion for
medicaid etigibility. Furthermore,
the General Assembly enacted
House Bill 176, which establishes a
new formula for medicaid reimoorsement of nursing homes and
pro hi bIll discrimina lioo against
medicaid patients by nursing
homes.
In the insurance fiekl, the Geneml
Assembly passed into law H.B. C.
This new law is designed to prohibit
unfair or deceptive insurance
rosiness practices.
House BiU fi07 and House Bill 398
are designed to prevent insurance
redUning. Both bils will be C&lt;llsidered by the House Insurance
Committee when the Leg isla lure
retum.sfrom recess.
UPCOMING:
Beyond the
previously mentioned pending
leg islalim, til! 111081 pressing issue
yet to be resolved is the Capital Improvements bill, House Bill 834.
H(J!jue and Senate cmferees will
meet early next year to resolve their
differences.
Thus, fr&lt;rn this overview of the
past year and what lies ahead, we
can easily see that next year will be
b~h interesting and productive .

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LOCATION JEOPARIZED

NEWOOMERSTOWN, Ohio lAP)
- The Ohio Baseball Hall rl. Fame
and the Cy Young Musewn mighl
have to cl08e up and move from
Newcomerstown by the end of
January unless a hassle over the
locatioois resolved.
To be resolved are co1m1ttments
from Thomas Eakin rl. Shaker
Heighll!, founder and president of
the Ohio Baseball Hail of Fame, on
new, lal'l!er, quarters to display the
hall's artifacts, moot cl. which he
owns, aoo on a hall of fame induction
next sununer.
Gary King, pre side nt of
Newc&lt;merstown Sports Corp., the
managing body rl. the musewn. has
said that Eakin has imposed conditions that "make it impoasible for
ll.'llodeal with him •r.:; further."

review at all SCA offices in the state.
They are also available at
Agricultural Stabilization Conservation Service (ASCS I offices not
located with the SCS.
"The public is asked and en couraged to all RCA review
documents in the Appraisa ~"
Robert R. Shaw , state conservationist for the SCS said. "Any
organization or individual in Ohio
concerned about specific or general
conservation problems in the state
or nation, can go to any SCS office,
review the information in the Appraisal and submit a written response to the RCA Response Analysis
Center, USDA Soil Conservation SerVlce, Box 888, Athens, Georgia,
30603. ,,
A response is a comment, opinion.
or suggestion abrut a resource
problem, Shaw said ' We are
seeking b!lpful responses on the
data we have compiled; suggestions
about new data sources; suggestions
about conservation problems we
may have overlcrl&lt;ed; &lt;r just any
response a citi2en might feel iB important," Shaw explained.
The Analysis Center will summarize the nationwide public comments which will aid the National
Coordinating Committee in
developlll! the final Soil and Water
Conservation Program for the
natioo. Draft Appraisal Part n, soon
to be out for public review, will
present the projected demands oo
the na lion 's resoum!s up to the year
2030.

ENTER TANKER

BRIXHAM, England (API
Royal Navy firemen prepared to
board a blazing tanker Saturday to
put out the fire and keep 740 tons r1.
bquid propane gas aboard from exploding.
English Channel shipping was
warned to stay away from the
"floating bomb" olf the south
English coast 88 the lour-man team
rl. naval firefighters tried to approach the naming, 1,152-ton
Spanish ship Butaseis.
The fire broke out in a cabin on
Friday while the ship was sheltering
in Torbay from wrricane-lorce winds. The crew oll8 was rescued.

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VOL XXVIII NO. 181

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POMEROY MIDDLEPO RT. OHIO

MON DAY . DECEMBER 31. 1919

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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What are your hopes for America during 1980,?

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Burial at sea
NEW OWNERSHIP - The Sewing Center in Middleport is lllW under
new ownership. Pictured oo the left is Mrs. Libby Stumbo, the fonner
owner of the Sewing Center shown here handing over the keys to Mrs.
Marianna (Thomopson) Mitchell, the new owner. The establlslment wUI
keep its original name . Mrs. Stumbo operated the Wsiness for3l years.

Pollitt gets refugees
to start 1950 decade
BY JAMES SANDS
GALUPOUS - When Gallians
faced the new decade 00 years ago ln
1960, lt seemed as though they were
stepping imo a new age. Headlines
In January, 1960, carried the prediction rl. hist&lt;rlan Arnold Toynbee that
the world could look ahead at 50
years rl. a cold war.
The Gallipolis Trioone remarked
In an editorial: '1t meam that we
will have to keep a bigger army than
we'd like to have, for a lmger thne
than we ever imagined would be

necessary."
Later the Tribune predicted that
the United States will now be called
upon more than ever to boost up the
economies of certain eowttries so 88
to keep them from turning ccrnmwtist.
Tllre eveotl al J.......-y ...,.
lnloreed upon Galliano that the
United States wu elllerlq a new
decade. GaDia'o flnt dllplaced per·
11001 from tbe communist takeover
o{ Eulern Europe arrived at Swan
Creek, where IIIey would take up
reoldeuee oo the farm al Proland Mrl.. Dould PolliU. Petro and
Zlna Nlel&lt;nua:ewlcz, their five
cblldml IMarla, Olga. Eugenia,
Zotla, and Mlkolay), and ZIDa'o
modler, Eva llal'allcmk, were met
In New Yon and lranlported by car
and puel lnlek by PoJUII, 1111 10n
Don, Jr., and two Manhall College
IIUldeaa.
Petro had worked for eight years
under the Nazis and two years under
the Soviell! and knew about 2,IMXI
words in English 88 well 88 Polish,
Russian, Ukranian, and German.
The family had beeh a middle dass
family in Pilson, Poland, living in a
six-room house. Their house on
Swan Creek was five-room but other
ro«ns were to be added later. Two
teachers at Swan Creek, Mrs. Pollitt
and Mrs. TrtmbleJmes, became the
children's tutors.
The family came through Church
World Service and their first week
were invited to speak before an
audience at the Gallipolis
Preabyterlan O!urch where the subject rl. displaced persoos was to be
discu811ed It wa.s reported that two
Latvian families had Just settled
aboutlO mlles up the Kanawha and
that L. C. Spriegel of Northup had
applled for a DP family.
11Im 88 now the subject of DPs
caused a backla.O of criticism
inasmuch 88 many Americans were
a !ready out rl. w&lt;rlL The Gallipolis
Tribune remarked that persoos who
say that the settling of DPs causes
unemployment are in etTOr. Harry

Hum wrote: "We are all children o{
the melting pol"
Two : Train
The second event was the last trip
of a regular pasaenger train through
GalUa County. The C and 0 diacontinued passenger service to
Gallipolis and Pomeroy with the
running rl. old "137" on December
31, 1949. Over 7JlO rode the rail Ill
PomeroY on the last trip. Hundreds
more waved farewell. Gallialll were
not u 91!ntlmental as Cllly six persons made the last trip to Gallipolis
and back to Pomeroy, and only a
handful o{ Gallians gathered on the
tistory-making day. The "Pumpkin
Vine" division of the C and 0 was no
more. At Addlscn Mrs. 0. C. Johnson
waved a sad goodbye. She had abo
seen the flm passe1'4!er lnlin in
Gallia way back in 1880.
A1 Vinton the only puoenger who
g~ m board was Cline Gerlacb, who
returned to his home by b..,. it II
ironic that the disaRiflllrance rl. the
paS!!enger train from Gallla 's
history received 1111cb little mourning. Harry Hum wrote: "Ill! (the
railroad) coming heard Joyous
shouts and welcomed in an era rl.
progress. The whistle sounded a
looely requiem. No tears were !hed
and neither were there flowers."
'l'bfte:

belkot*r

The third event oa:urred in the
unlikely place cl Mudaoc. The lint
forced helicopter landing in Gallia 's
history occurred there. Floyd
CarillOn, a test pilot with Bell Aircraft in Buffalo, wu forced by
cooling system trouble to land In the
field of Elmer Drummond. Wortmen were flown into the area and
taken to Mudooc, where, within 24
hours, Carlson was on his way.
When asked about the practicAl
use cl. the helicopter, Carlson said,
'1t will patrol power Unes, do
geological work, dust \:I'OIJii and help
persons wbo are snowbound. '•
It had not occurred to Carlson that
the helicopter would also be used in
two wars that historians were to call
extensions of the cold war that wall
usb!red in so fom!fully with the
c!IOlng rl. a new decade 00 years
ago.
Some Gallia~ woold cmtest that
there was a fourth event U.tshowed
GalUs had entered the modem age.
II was reported that Bert ChaMy
was the only Galllan who still made
hand-rolled cigars, a lnlde that had
at one thne made Gallia famous
tlrooghout Ohio.
(James Sands ' address is B01 214,
Rainsboro, Ohio 4SI65 I.

ELBERFELD$

Hu1t!tff~d5 fiH..e fo'5thle/
PI..AYTEX

18HOUR.SALE
OFF~~
Ol.t not~ CW1 'I l4our ~ 1.,.,._~ "'2•UO 24 2 A 1A221

Sale ends JanuOfll 5. 1980

Ohioans can brighten the winter
laooscape with the color, sound and
natural beauty rl. brds with a
homemade birdfeeder and a few
seeds, says the Ohio Department rl.
Natural Resouret's (ODNR ).

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We Will Be Closed All Day Monday, Dec . Jlst and Tues day, Jan . !st.

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LD--.S.-IN-.....P..:.O:.:.:.:ME::.::.;RO~Y....J

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KETCHIKAN, Alaska (API - The
freighter Lee Wang Zln, which capsized Christmas Day in the cold seas
off Alaska, was b!aded today for an
unceremmiws burial in Canadian
waters that may sink forever any
clues lothewhereabwts ofits crew.
But eariy today, 16 rounds fired
from five-inch cannons on the Coast
Guard cutter Munro missed the
vessel, probably because of
darkness , a spoltesnan said. A COOl·
mercia! diver was called in to plant
chal'l!es l111ide the ballast tanks ,
reducing the danger of a hit to the
fuel tanks.

Arson suspected
COLLINSVILLE, Ill. I API - Arson is suspected in a fire at a
privately owned born that claimed
the lives of at least Zl thoroughbred
horses, authorities say.
Sh&lt;rtly before the fire broke out
Swtday ntght, a man was seen 11Ul·
n~ from the structure, Fire Chief
William EIUs of the nearby State
Park Place volunteer department
said
No damage estimate was immediately availsble on the barn
which adjoins the Fairmoont Park
Racetmck .

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C. E. BLAKESLEE, President
el the MelgJ County Pioneer and
HIAtorical Society - "I bope that
our young people will lace up to
the cballeogea of tbe '1101 and not
pattern after tbe example we
older people bave oel I bope that
they will realize that moeny does
not grow on treea, and that
production iB tbe basts for
economic developmenl I am
bopeful tbal we wW learn that
peace will come In our country
aDd In the world by undentalldtog and worttag lowanb
the many needa ol an people.

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DAVID L. GLEASON, Superintendent of the Meigs Local School
Dilltrlct - "As I see It, tbe next
decade will be extremely lmportalll to America and world
peace .
The
political
ramlflcatioDB of the Middle East
situation and the oil producing
countries'
ever-Increasing
demands will remain critical to
workable solutioDO tbat could be
developed. I bope America will
be able to slalld strong aDd lead
tbe world towanb a peaceful
e:lllltence where we all wort for
tbe hettennenl ol mantlod.
However, I doo't see this as an

JANE MILLER, Elberfeld
Department Store employee "My bopeo are to Itt everyone
lmow tbat In an tbelr times of
need, there Ia 110meone there.
Jes1111 cans, aDd He II concerned
with WI alL And no matter what
troubles arlae, He'll be rlgbt
be&amp;lde Will only we )Wit ask."

CARSON CROW, Pomeroy
Attorney - "I hope thai tbe
people of America will have good
health, co1111tant happlneM, aDd
continued success. My further
hope ill lbal each day we lake
time to give tbanb for our good
fortune.''

Clerlt-Treamrer el Melp Coonty
PllbHc Ubrarles - ''I bope thai
America wW wott coward peace
and undentaudlng for an people,
reganlless of age, beUm, baDdlcapo, and 10 oa. I bope that
America will find fllluelal
&amp;tabntty and leaden with IIlii·
Dclent vision to help tile rat of 1111
aee beyond the "1-wanlll" or
today 10 that we can lUI tbe needs
of tomorrow."

By Jayne Hoeflich
"What are your hopes for America during the new decade of the 'OOs?"
This question was asked of several Meigs County residents. Their answers
are below their respective photos.

easy venture; so I beUeve our

national defeDBe mecbanlllm&amp;
have to be tbe be&amp;lin the world.

Nation to celebrate end of '70s tonight
By'l'tleA• ehtedrn.
Mylllic, Conn., is llleppiJw bllck 100
yean to celelnte the end cl the 70s
aa America!II by the m!Woos sit
bacl&lt; fer an overdoee rl. televised
football and New Year's
merrymaking.
In New York, poUce are hopinf! to
keep TIIIIIIlll Square peaceful, but in
B&lt;lllm, Baltimore and Hmolulu,
there may be m peace all fireworks
hail the 19805.
Meanwhile, mother&amp;-(o-be will sip
chaJ:f1lagne and celelnte with
noiBemaken, balloons and party
hats tooil!ht as they await that first
child ofthe 191lls in the Lying~n Unit
o{ B&lt;lllm H08pital fer Women.
The Seamen's lone in Mystic,
Com., is recreating a New England
New Year's Eve celebratioo from
Dec. 31, 1879, with a 20opiece string
ensemble and dinner served by
~waiters .

In Milford, Coon., merrymakers
can skate in1D the 'llll! at a disco
roller rink. And In Hamden, Conn.,
Dante! Keamll p1aM to fill his club
with 10,000 heUum balloons, while
stuff from three snowflake
machines, confetti and machinemadefog .
"It's going to be like Dilmeyiand in
Ham! en ," he said.
New Yorkers will gather at the
Waldcrf-Astoria hotel, where BiD
Lombardo, who took over Guy Lombardo's Royal CanadieiVJ after his
uncle's death two years ago, will
cooduct a disco version d "Auld
LangSyne."
sun others will attend attend a
party given by :omedian.filmmaker
Woody Allen. Several huoored per oms were ased to come - and
those who weren't reportedly were
eagerly hunting an invitatioo.
But the biggest party will be in
Times Square, where ~o.ooo revelers
are expected to hoot in the new year

EXTENDED OU'I1.00K
w..-..tay tbrougb Friday, a
ebance ol oaow flurrlet WedDoaday and a pin aboiit Friday.
HIP In tbe mid 3GB IG low 40s
Wedotldly faiUntl IG the upper
teeu to mid zto Thursday and
Friday. Lowa Ill tbe 2111 early
Wednetday and iD lbe leeDS and
low zto earl)' Friday.

Weather
Moatly cloudy tonight and
Tuellday. Low tonight in the 14&gt;per
208. High Tue!lday in the upper 30s.
Olance d ;JrecipltatiCII is 10 percent
tonight and 3l percent Tuesd ay

Ma

Whfir

ball ol Uglll dropo from I

Times Square at the stroke of mid ·

nighl
Some 900 pollee will be on hand to
see that the merrymakmg doesn\
get out of hand . Last year, there wM
a stabbing, several dozen robberies
and 40 picked pock ell! repcrted .

uft WS'S'' ft' Plorl"or ~. •• aefd dfficer T!lll Quigley, whose regular
beat includes Times Square.
Another crowd is expected in
Atlarta 's Margaret Mitchell Square
to COWlt down the end of 1979 oo a
clock under a huge, blinking red and
white Coca-Cola sign . It's the last

1!""1' for illle olf!b,

""*"

wtll be

removed to make way foc an office
bwlding and park.
Today college teams meet in the
Peach Bowl and the Bluebonnet
Bowl. On New Year's Day,lhereare
foor bowls - &amp;!gar, Cotton, Rose
and Orange - likely to decide the

...u.-...

m~

dnrtcMp.

Fans of the Tournament of Roses
Parade in Pasadena, Calil., began
lining the !Hnile rollle nearly three
days before the Jan. I evenl Til!
91st annual parade - with the theme
"Music of America" - will feature
:i9 floral floats, 23 marching bands

~ sp '* '
is grand marshal.
In Hawaii, noise and snake brings
in 1980 as reside nil! liow up milli&lt;llS
of dollars' worth of firecrackers aoo
fireworks in the lmdition adopted
generatiCIIs ago from the Chinese
inunigrants.

- •· a ·n'.

New Year's holiday death toll continues climb
By The Asloclated Prea
The New Year's Day holiday
weekend tmffic death toll cmtinued
to climb as generally pleasart
weather lured many m&lt;torists onto
the nation's highwa)'l .
By~ a.m. EST, a t&lt;tal of 203 per80111 had died in traffic accidents.
The National Safety Council
estimated that 3111 to 440 persons
cruld be killed in traffic accidents
during the four-day weekend, the
final weekend ol the 1970..
'
Council statisticians said that
WJ-ing a noo-boliday weekend of the
same length at this time rl. the year.
dl deaths could be expected .
Last year. during a three-{!ay observance, 356 persons died .
The hil!hest New Year's weekend
dEBth lui was recorded in 1965 when
there were 564 traffic deaths during
a thre~ay holiday period . The worst toll fora four-{!ay New Year's Doy
observance was 481 in 1!1!9.
The period during which the nwnber of traffic deaths is counted by
The Associated Press began at 6

Gunshot
causes death
James Reed, 56 , Powell Tenn ..
died at I : 4~ a.m . Sunday at St.
Joseph Hoopilal in Parkersburg as
the result of self-inflicted gunsh&lt;t
wounds.
Middlepcrt Pol ice said that Reed
was found shot in the hood at 10 :08
p.m. Saturday in his camper which
was parked in front of Jack 's Dairy
Bar. He was taken lo Veterar&lt;~
Memorial Hoopital by the Mid dleport Emell!ency Squad and sho·
Uy later was transferred to . t'-'
Parkersburg Hospital. Police had
gooe to the camper because they had
been informed that Reed had earti er
hinted in a local bar that he was
going to his camper to get a gun.
Police said that gun was a .38 caliber
carbin e.
The bo&lt;ly was tak en to the Le.a\'ill
Funeral Home in Parkersburg from
whe"' 1tw a' fl own to Tennesee
Mr. R.oed was employed at Uw
Ill! plant and was livin g at the
LaSalle Hote l in Mu:t.lleport

p.m. Friday and ends at midnight
Tuesday.
Meanwhile, at least IS persons are
reported dead in accidents on Ohio 's
m•dways during the New Year 's
holiday weekend, accocding to the
state Highway Patrol.
The patrol is cowrting holiday
weekend traffic fatalities from 6
p.m. Friday urtil midnight Tuesda y.
The dead :
SUNDAY
CANTON - Gary Weooell , no ag e
listed. of Canton, i1 a one-car accident on Ohio 687 in Stark Cowrty.
DEF lANCE - Eliseo Gonzales,
28, of Defiance, a pedestrian struck
by a car on a Defiance city street .
CIRCLEVILLE
Jame s
Nungster, :IIi, of Colwnbus, in a onecar accident on Ohio r.6 in Plckaway

County.
XENIA - Daniel L. Rector, 17 , of
Xenia, in a m~ar crash on a
Greene Cowrty road.
SATURDAY
CARROLLTON - Tim Mullins,
21, of Minerva, in a one-car accident
on a Carroll Cwnty road.
WARREN - Terry M&lt;rris, 3&gt;, of
Pulaski, Pa., in a one-car accident
Cll Ohio 616 in Trumwil County .
FINDLAY - Wilbur DoonaU Jr.,
35, of Lima, a passenger in the car.
andDavid C. Lucas, 21, cl. Olford, a
pedestrian struck by one of the
vehicles in a car-truck accident at
the intersection of U.S . 30 and Ollio
23:; in Hancock County.
CLEVELAND - Arlese Portis, 9,
and Doris P&lt;rlis, 52, both rl.
aeveland, both pedestrians struck

by a vehicle on a Cleveland city
street.
LIMA - Keith Kahne , 23, of
Columoos Grove, in a car-tmin accident on an Allen CoWlty rood.
ZANESVIllE - Tammy Kuhn,
29, of Zanesville, in a two-ear ac cident on U.S . 40 in Muskingwn
County.

FRIDAY NIGHT
WEST CARROLLTON - Matthew
Sortman, 17, of Centerville, in a onecar accident oo a West Carrollton
city street.
MOUNT GILEAD - DaMy Sampley, 39, and Elaine Sampley, 33,
both of GaUon, in a Clle-ear accident
on Ohio :186 in Morrow County.

Deputies check minor mishap
Meigs County sheriff deputies are
investigating an accident which occurred Saturday afternoon at StiversviDe.
According to the report, Jill
Lawrence was stopped at the c&lt;rner
rJ the Curtis' Store wilding when
her vehicle was struck by a vehicle
backing out from adjacent gas pumps .

Deputies said the name rl. the
driver ol the second car is being
wltli&gt;eld, and charges are pending
until the investigation is ccmpleted.
Sreriff James J. Proffitt offers
this advice i&gt; Meigs Cwnty residents for the New Year's holiday .
"If you attend a New Year's party,
make the last drink coffee. l.kt 's not
start the new year with a fatality ."

R ut!Rnd E.M.S. still operating
With lhe termination of the Meigs
County contrac t to the Southeast
Ohio Medtcal Service on December
31, the Mei gs County Commission
wi 0 incorporate the exi&gt;ting station,
vehicles , and pers.JMel at RuUaoo
into the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service System, comprised
of the other squad departments in
Meigs Cwnty.
The station and personnel will cun tinue operations under the new
authority rl. the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
System into 191ll and service from

service. Starting January I, 19&amp;1 the
number will be 992-3S67 . This number ~ll be used f&lt;r all residents in
the area currenUy served by the
Rutland E. M.S. Squad.
If any questioos about the change
should arise please contact til!
Meigs Cowtty Emell!ency Medical
Service Office at 992-&amp;ii7 Monday
ttuough Fridav.

th e past.
With the r hange in management
the deparbnent will have • uew

FREE PICKUP
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
announced today that a free pickup
of Christmas trees will be held on
Wednosday in Middleport. Residents
are asked to place their trees at the
curb and they will be picked up free
of charge b)' the village street depar-

phone nlDTl ber to call for rr.lt'f' ~ ci •I"Y

t.rr~nt.

th at stati on will remain as it ha.lli in

•

WINDOW VANDAUZED - A large plate glass window at the Lrcar
Monument Co., West Main St., Pomeroy, was ''patched" together Saltlrday morning so that operations cwld continue at tbe alablilJiunenL 'l1;le
window was damaged in a wave cl vandalism which took place In tbe
West Main St., section. A similsr window was damaged at Lou's Alilllnd
Station and wind!ilields were brc*en out rl.two auloi in tbe WeatMalnSt.
section.

�L-

The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport -Pumeruy. 0 . Monct..y , Da· 31 , 197~

f TTA

&lt;'&lt;&gt;1!r "'011n\ 9rAI1-1LLE-c;llAM.

N

.(.~

Washington today

19

HUL-Mf

ACTUALl'(

...THEN WE FINISH UP OUR TOUR
Will'~ A VI'51T 10 THE CURR\::NTLY
'' IN" t;poT IN WAS\--\INGTO N, WHE12.E

IT'~

GREAT.' WE
6ET TO SEE
THE ZOO/

I'N\ SURE YOU 'LL ENJOY THE
1\NTICS OF T\--\E IN\--\AEITANTS ...

THE

'5UPREME
COURT ...

)

c

Bond's opinions:

Take facts
to the polls

By Julian Bond
I donl think you're really ready
for the l!m electJons.
You may be registered to ""te
You may consi der yourself well ihfonned. But you can 't tell th€
players or the rules next year
without a program. The rmst complete program is found in two books "The Almanac of American
Pohtics 1900" and the "Nationa l
Jounwl's Election '8() Handbook ."
The Almanac's beauty is that 11
lets yru know how each member of
the House o1 Representati ves am
the Senate has voted - am spent
your mone y- since the last tune you
were asked t o cast your vote .

In thum bna il sketc hes. the
Almanac also describes the ethnic
and econorruc proftle of each
Congressiooa l district and - moot
importantly for you - how 11 dtf ferent orgaruzations rate the vobn g
performance of each representative
in Washingtoo.
For eiample, Rep. Jack Edwards.
R-Aia .. rated a low 3J in 1978 from
the Li be ra l Ame rica ns for
Democratic Action, but the Conservative Americans for Con -

onc-t/urd ove r the next three year.; .
The votes are ch~en, in the
ed1tor's words, "to spotlight memlx&gt;rs · views on major issues. par·
IIcularly those wtuch are ncr readily
apparent fro m their party affiliation
or their group ratings ...
These votes -- not campa1gn
rheton c - are the sum of yowlegislator's philos ~hy. Yet the
F.lection Han dbo&lt;i&lt; (Jlotes two
po!Jtical sc ~entists who predict
reelection for most incuunbents
rega rdl ess of their vo ting records.
as long as they "avoid sca ndals .
send out fraq uent newsletters informing the voters of thei r
achievements, answer their mall
and consCientiously assist consti lll ents with the1 r problems. "
Toda} 's successful member of
C&lt;mgress IS less a policy mak er or
legis lator than he IS an ombudsman
who~

But these men and women need to
be judged on the issues they've SU!}ported or opposed - not on their
television c harm or the birthday
ca rds they send (at taxpayers' expense 1 to high school !leniors every
yea r.
Your paragon oo the Potomac
may know the words to yrur favorite
hymns, but these two election guides
will tell you whether he can read the
figures on your paycheck, and
whether his visioo cl government
coincides with yours.
"The National Jrumal 's Election
'110 Handbook" is $7.95 from National
Journal , 1730 M Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20006. "The
Almanac of Amencan Politics 1900 "
is $11.50 from The Fund for ConstitutiCfUII Govenunent, Sujite 43)0,
~15 Madison Avenue, New York.
New York 10022.
Carry some facts to the voting
booth nut year - you 'll be glad you
did .

sta ff ser ves to msure that

Sotlal Setunty checks are delivered
on tune and day care centers receive
the appropriate federal grants.

·: c1ten than in .

-' -Party labels mean less now than
:; they used to .
•. - "Interest group politJcs" ha s
~ fragmented a once-reasonably un:; cluttered political landscape.
The Almanac's own vote listings
., are derived from 15 key Hoose and
: Senate votes, rangmg frcrn a state 's
:: right to rescind ratification of the
' ERA to Kem!}-Roth, a failed
:: propoSal to reduce Income taxes by

.
.....

•.: .

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
: IN TH'Ii MATTER OF THE
. FORECLOSURE OF
· lIEN 5
F0 R
• DELINQUEN LAND
~ TAXES .
.,
CASES Nos . 78 -DL T IS
.,
78 -DL T·18
79-DL T·21
79 -DL T·22
79 -DL T·23
•&gt;
79-DL T·24
;
79 -DL T-2S
•
79 -DL T-26
:NOTICE OF SALE UN ·
•DER JUDGMENT OF
' F 0 R E C L0 SURE 0 F
' LIENS
FOR
-:PELINQUENT
LAND
·il AXES .
· ~ Whereas judgmE"nt has
l been rendered against cer
.ltain parcels of real est ate
.ltor taxes , assess ments ,
~costs

and

charges

as

:follow• ·
: CASE NO . 78 -DLT 15,
:.-ARCEL NO . C B T 04,
:tilled In the name of T. G.
iClay and Bertha Clay .
~

SJtuated in the Vi IIage of
·.oyesvllle , County of M eigs
'arid State of Ohio (Town
'ship of Columbia 1 Being a
:1o1 measuring 1oo by 20 feet

,at the N.W. corner of l.&lt;&gt;t

,No . 6. Surveyed and plotted
•by
James Hanlin and
recorded in Plat Book No. 1

Ohio Perspective

records of plats ol Meigs
County , Ohio.
· Deed Reference : Vol .
179, page 4151 Meigs County
Deed R:ecoras.
Judgement S113.07 plus
accrued ta)Ces, assessmen
ts and penalties and cost s
of action .
CASE NO . 78 DL T 18.

OOLUMBUS . Ohio lAP I - The
Ohio Histllrical Society - whi ch
keeps the sta te in touch with its past
at 61 museums, centers and
memorials - wlll welcome a new
decade by opening "a major new
site" in northeast Ohio.
The soc1ety plans to open the Ohio
Ccranu cs Museum in East Liverpool
' ~ hortl y alter the first of the year ,"
"ctmg director Wii!Jam Keener said .
The museum was funded m part
by the William H . Vodrey fami ly and
the National Endowment for the
Humamties A $200.000 ceramics
exh1b1 t program wtll be housed in an
old post offi ce acquired and
renova ted by the sta te.
In addi tton , a coll ection of the East
l.1v crpool histon ca l society bas been
loanftl to the musewn for an ex·

tended period, Keener said.
An ea rly spnng operung is an ticipated for a restored general store
at the society's lustorical site in the
eastern Ohio v1llage of Zoar.
"It IS the on gmal Zoar store that
was acqw red by the state some
ye&lt;~ rs ago," Keener said . The
T u~c arawas Cowlty Gennan com -

muni ty was establiShed in 181 7.
A new le.ti le exhibit will open in
late March at the Ohio Histori cal
Center 111 Col umbus. the society 's
RV 07 , f1t! Pd

1n me name o f Clara
( h arle t on .
addres s
unknown
Si tuated in th e Village at
Rutland ._ Me igs County .
Ohio Be•ng lo t No 'l 1n
F al l on ' s
Addlf1 o n
to
Rutl and Save and excep t
20 feet oft east s1de and
tr iang le off west side con
veyed to H P Pr1 ce
Deed Refere nce

Judgm e nt S36 82 ptus a c

cr ue d taxes . assess ments
and penalt iPs and cost s at
action

CASE NO 19 DL T 21 ,
PARCEL NO OVT OJ.

Se rial No 79 D L T 21, titled
in t he name of SMa h A
Po w ell , addr ess unknow n
S1 lu a ted in Ol 1ve Town
snip ,_ Me1gs County, Ohio .
Sec t1 on 35 , Tow n 3, Range
II. O.C. P., N E of N W 1 .. .
con t aining 30 acres
Ref eren ce Deed Volume
82, page 366, Meigs County

Deed Re cords
Judgment

Sl9J 86

plus

accrued fa xes . tt ssessmen

ts. penc:t lt ies and cost s of
action .

CASE NO 79 DL T 22.
PARCEL NO 04034054.

Serial N o 79 DL T '12 . titl ed
in the name o f Milia A .
Wat son, aka M i ll ie A . Waf
son , add r ess unk nown .
Si tuat ed in the Township

of

L eba non ,

County of M eigs, Ohio , Sec
fion 19, N _W_ pa rt of 53 33
A . of S.W . 1 •. co nt a1 ning

ten acres .
Reference Deed \/ol . 59.
page 345, M ei 9s County
Deed Records
J udgment S63 14 o tus ac
cru ed taxed , assessmen ts,
p_era tties and co:; '~ of ac
t iOil.

Rams finally win big game, defeat Cowboys
BY ASSOClA TED PRESS
The last time the Los Angeles
Rams visited Tampa, they got their
heads handed to them - but, then
again, the last time they visited
Dallas. ..
()1 Sunday, the Rams taught
Roger Staubach am the C&lt;&gt;wboys a
lesson in miracle comebacks and
earned another trip to Florida's Gulf
Coast - where the Tampa Bay Buccaneers are planning on another
miracle r1 their own .
It was a weekend cl upsets. In
three of the frur National Football
League playoff games, the underdogs won, putting a few new
faces in the Jan. 6 conference championship games.
In the National Cmference, the
Bucs kepi their Cinderella season
alive Sabtrday by beating the
Philadelphia Eagles 24-17. And on
Sunday, the Rams, 30-&lt;i regularseason lmers in Dallas last Oct. 14,
shocked the Ccwbov' 21-19.
In the Arr1eri ca.' C&lt;lnference, the
battered Houstoo Oilers rode an ex-

Business mirror
NEW YORK IAPl - There was a
time when Americans oo electim
eve or New Year's eve were
sa tisfied with the promise of change
to come. They didn't complain very
loudly either when the promises
were forgotten
But now the times seem to demand
the real thing, at least in regard to
personal economics . For many
families the squeeze is on : Their
credit is used up, and their
paychecks don't match up to the expenses.
After listening w a panel of labor
authorities from co rpora lions.
unions and academe, The Con·
terence Board, a private sector
research and educational
organization, predicted today that
American wage gains in 19!1J will be
erased by continuing high inflatim.
The panel estimates tbat while ftrst-year wage and benefit hikes in
major cootracts will average 9.5
percent in 1900, inflation will jump 10
percent to 12 percent, producing a
dec line in real wages.
"People simply won 't stam lor
this," said Frank P. Doyle, General
Electric vice president. Promises,
that is, won 't do. Americans dislike
reducing their living requirements ;

it isn'tan acceplableoptim.
Rather than do so, they will
examine alternatives, including
cost-of-living cootracts. The Cooference Board's panel expects plenty r1 COLA pressure, even on
smaller companies that have so far
avoided them.
But small co~anies am large
one~ tno are complaining that they
also need relief, am you know how
they intend to get it: thro"'h price
in&lt;l'eases. lots of them, big ones and
small.
When prices go up it adds to inflation ; inflation takes back trose
new pay raises; COLA remstates the
raises; that forces more pay increases. In other w&lt;rds, the same
old treadmill of pnmi!llls.
During the decade cl the 19'105,
famil ies faced up to the !lituation &lt;r avoided i~ if it suits your perspective - by using a number cl
devices :
- They borrowed - on their
houses, on their good name.
- They went out to wori&lt; in record
numbers. Wives who hadn't held a
job for years went back into the
labor force .

Sports World
By Will Grimsley A P Correspondent
SAN DIEGO (AP J - He is an
ow lilt! man in his 51m, with crewcut
bair aoo jowly cheeks. He can't see
the 50-yard line with thick~ens spectacles. His jaw is usually crammed
with chewing tobacco. He wears
brigl'tlY c&lt;i&lt;red wwboy boots aoo a
wide-brimmed Texas hat with an
ostrich feather around the brim .
But no country bumpkin is O.A.
" Bum" Phillips, head coach r1 the
Houston Oilers football team. He's
got a football mind like a steel trap.
Phillips. rancher, horse trader,
defensive genius, bas emerged as
the most captivating personality in
the National Football League pia yells, counting down to the Jan. 20
Super Bowl.
If the victories r1 Tampa Bay and
Los Angeles were surprises,
Houston's 17-14 upset r1 the highly
touted San Diego Chargers was
nothing slllrt of a miracle.
lbe Oilers entered the pme with
their veteran quarterlJack , Dan
Pastorini, and star ball-earner,
Earl CampbeU, rendered hii'S de
combat. Ken BuiTOIIIlh was aching
so mich he could only be ll8ed 118 a

Berry's World
-------~

THE DAIU' SENTINEl.
I USPS l&amp;&amp;-. . 1

I

~~~~~d1U THJ.o:
INTEREST OF

O~VOTED

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFUCH
CltyEdl ....
Publided daD )I eseept Saturdly by The otllo

Ill Coart SL , Pamer9y, Ohio U7D. Butae..
Offltt Pboo&lt; 1ft- !IJI. Edllorial P"fi%..21Sl .
.ser-1 claa pa~&amp;q:r paklal POIIIIH"O)', OtlM .
N........... 0 , . . , . _ .. lfw .........

NO

CASE

Auocbrte.. Jill Eaclkl Ave., Orvdaad. ObJo

maJor musewn . The center also
houses the organization's archival
and library coUection, as well as
research facilities.
The quasi-governmental group is
beginning the new year with sub stantially more money to spend.
The society's budget for the 1900
fiscal year totals $7.3 million, With $6
millioo in state subsidy, said
business manager Luke Martin.
The state provided $4 .1 nullion in
fisca l year 1979, with the rest of the
organization's $5.4 million budget
coming from such areas as members hips, admissions and investments .
Tours and demonstrations were
conducted for about 89,000 persons
last year at the center and the neighboring Ohio Village , a neconstructiOn of a 19th century Ohio comThe society is most visible through
1ts museums, restorations , natural
and archaeological areas . But some
of its other key work involves the
ma intenance of collectJons and
properties
Mi crofilming of fragile documents
and newspapers continued last year.
with 640,809 newspaper pages
proc·essed, the society's annual
report shows.

79 DL 1 13.

Walters, address un~nown
Situa ted
in Lebanon
( Eastern )
Townsh1p ,
Me1gs Coun t y , Oh• o Se c t •on
1

1 of S . E

' ~ .c o n

1a1ni ng 10 acres

Referen ce Deed Vol 67 .
page 514. Me igs Coun t y
Deed Records
Judgement

Sl14 13 plus

acc rued taxes , as ses smen
Is . pena l ttes and c ost s of
ac t ion
CASE NO 79 DLT 14.

PARCEL

NO

Reate wbereaniertef"Vi« aetavaO.ble, Oat

mc.dl.a.• .

'Mie Dt.Oy SeadDd, by maJilD Ollio aod Wl'll
VlrJI.a.la, _,. yur PJ.M ; 8b. mtelbl .11.51 ;
dlrM IDOillllt $lUI. E!Mwbert Pl.• ; •ll
mot~tlu tzt.•; Uaret IDOIItba SIUI.
Tbe Auoelalcct Pral II n.c:=Uivrly uUUed
1.o tbt •e lor publkatioa of all Dn'l diap.&amp;cbf:t
cmll\ed &amp;. tbr llrWI. . prr aard 1lacl 1M local
DP1rl publlebed twftta.

mwiity .

PA RCEL N O
04 0/ 'il 01 7.
Se r•al No 7'il DL T 1J . litl ed
1n The name of Jacob

34, N .

641115.
S.blt!T1pU. nkl : DeUvl!f't'd by ean1er
wt.en ava.U.~ • tH.tl per weft. By MoiOr

The maintenance of physical
facilities has become 'increasingly
burdensome as structures continue
to age and dollars are diluted by in flation, "the report said
The cost of restoration and major
maintenan ce projects totaled
$198,463 last year, Martin said .
About $200,000 is budgeted for
simi!Br work during fiscall!m .

OR

T 02 .
Ser•al N o 79 OL T 14, f•fl ed

in the name of Qu1 nce Cole .

address unknown

S• tua ted in Or'ange Town
ship, Meigs Coun tv . Oh io.
Sec ti on 18, Town .A . Range
12 , 0 C P . c onta•ning 32 50

acres

Reference Deed
Vol
1'15, page 478. Meigs Coun t y
Deed Records
Judgment \ 195 Jl pl us

accrued ta xes , assess men

ts , penalties and costs of

action

CASE NO 79 DL T 2S.
PARCE L NO 04 021011 .

Serial No 79 DL T 25 , tift eo
1n th e name ot Rebe cc a
Wal ten, address unknown
Situa t ed
in Lebanon
Tow nsh ip , M eigs County ,
Ohio , Sect ion 32. Town J .
Range 11. 0 C P , con
t a ining 40 acres
Deed Ref erence Vol 87.
page .426, Meigs Cou nty
D eed Records
Judgment S269 87 plus
accru ed fa)(e S. assessmen
ts , penalties and cos t s of
ac t ion .

CASE NO 19 DL T 76.
PARCEL NO ORT OJ .

Serr a I No 79 OL T 26, titled
rn the name of W W

Btagg

Sdua t ed in Orange Town
ship , Meigs County . Ohio.
Sf&lt;c t ion 6. T own 4, Range
12, Village of Tuppers
Pla 1ns, co ntaining
l 1
acres
Re ference
Deed : Vo l
158 , page 153. Meigs County
Deed Records
Judgment S249.60 plus
ac c rued taxes. assessmen
ts , pena lt1es and cost s of
act ron
Wh ere ~ts . such i udgmen
ts order sa1d real prope rty
to be sold by tne un
dersrgned to satrsf y th e
total
amount of su c h
tudgmen t
Now th erefore , puo li c
not1ce 1S hereby ~iven that
I , James J Proff1tt, Sher iff
o f M eigs County , Ohio, will
se ll suc h rea l properf')' at
public auct ion , ' or cash to
the h igt1est bidder of an
amoun t su ff 1cient to sat i sfy
the iudgment against each
par c el beginn ing at 10 ·00
a .m , at the front door of
the Me igs Cou nty Court
House . in Pomeroy , Ohio .
on the 5th day of Januar y ,
1980
and
c ontinuing
thereafter from day to day ,
1f any par cel does not
rec e ive a sufficient bid . It
sha ll be offered for sale ,
under the Sll me terms and
condit ions of the f i rsr Sc31e
and ar the sa me time of day
at the same place on the
19th day of January , 1980
for an amount suff1c ie-nf to
sa t is fy th e iudgmeot aqdi n
slt he parcel .
James J . P roff i tt
Sher iff of Meigs
County . Ohio

1111 17, 24. JI , Jtc

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
- PROBATE DIVISION ELIZABETH ANN LUCAS
Administratr ilc With the
Will Annexed of the Estate
of Ralph
R . Carman.
Deceased ,
Plaintiff ,
-vs -

MABE L C. CAR MAN

Whose last known address
Wheeling, W. va . Other ·
wise unknown ,
IS

THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES. LEGATEES,
OISTJIIBUTEES .
AD
MINISTJIATORS. EXEC ·
UTORS AND ASSIGNS , IF
ANY , OF EACH OF THE
FOLLOWING :
ARTHUR
CARMAN,
Deceased,
ALBERT
CARMAN ,
Dece.a sed,
RALPH R. CARMAN,

a. k.a . Ra Iph R . Carmen ,

Oe&lt;:H~d .

decoy.
"If we

ted Phillips before the game, noting
that the game was so much in the
beg for the Chargers tbat Las Veg8S
refused to estabtisha line on it.
lbe Oilers didn't nm out cl
players. Instead. it must bave

MARGARET CARMAN
lo t
Being th e same property
MARGARET
DAVIS
c onvered
to
t he said
SMITH , Deceased,
HENRY
CARMAN . Rober 0 Schmoll from th e
tr us t ees of the St Paul's
Deceased ,
ELMER
COFFMAN, Eva nge l ical and Ref ormed
Church of
M iner svi l le,
Deceased ,
MARY CARMAN COFF Ohio , by deed dated
Febr uary 16th 1948 . ano
MAN, Deceased ,
HELEN
COFFMAN re co r ded rn D ee d Boo k No
16 1, Page 185, Meigs Coun
BAIER . Of!&lt; ce ased .
ELMER
CARMAN , ty Deed Reco,..ds

PA RCEL '1
Being the
fo llowing described re.11
oerendan h .
NO . 2231! esta t e , Situate in 100 acre
lot No 301 '" Town 2 and
- SERVICE BY
Range 13 1n th e sa1d County
PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS of Me ig~ . near the school
ABOVE
NAMED : hou~e on SiHd 100 Acre lot
301 . &lt;resc r rbeet as
Y ou are hereby no1if i ed No
th a t you have been name&lt;! f o ll ows . fhat 1S t o say .
Beg rnnmg at th e Sou th eas t
Defendants .n a ler;;~a l ac
" Elizabeth corner of a lot belong 1ng t o
I ron ent1tled
Schrt?ine r .
Ann Lucas , Adminis lrafr l,. Fred erick
Wilh m e W ill A nnexed of decedst&gt;d . thence along the
East line of said lot I SO f ee t
the Esta te of Ralph Car
t o th e Northeast corner of
man ,
D ece ased ,
Vs
the Sc hreiner lot , thence
E I 1Iabeth Ann
Lucas
efal " i n the Common P leas N o rth abou t 80 Oeg East 80
Cou,.. t o f M e1gs Coun ty , feet , the nce Sou th parallel
Ohio
Probate D ivision, with the Wes t line of Phrl lip
Case N o 12319 , the de mand Bedf ·~ lot to th e stret&gt;t run
ning towards the Oh10
being _for the sale of the en
t ire 1nterest rn the redl R 1ver . then ce along sa1d
estate
tlPre i nat t er srreet 80 t eet t o the pfa ce of
described 1n order to pay beg1nn •ng
ExceFtin g .=.nd re ser v1ng
the oeb t s of me dec edent.
Ralph R C Jr man 1 and ._ the thf' coa and o t her m1nera!s
t n~re1n w 1th t ht' r rght to
costs c., f adminJst,..at1on
The r ea l estatP is descr itx&gt;d m 1ne the -:.a rn e WIThout rn
cu mt.Jrar- ce t o the sur fa cr
as follow s

and al l ways and r i9ht of
way along any m•ne r al
seam ar e he r eby rese rved
And being the same land
deeded Marctl 12th 1868 to
Jacob Ma s~ar by V B H or
ton a nd C. A Horton and
reco rded rn Record of
Deeds of Me igs Coun t y,
Oh io. Vol 33. ~ ages 376 and
] 7)

The 30 feet by 40 feet of
above
described
land
heretotore deeded to the
Ge rm an Protestan t Chu r ch
of Minersville, Ohio , is
hereby reserved and ex
cep ted in th is tr ans, er .
T he afore sa •d r ea l estat e
bei ng the sa m e real e~ 1at e
co nveyed to Fl or ence Car
men, who wa s also known
as Florence Kerman, by
Jacob Massar and wi fe by
deed recorded in Deed
Book 93 al Page 296 of the
Meigs County D eed Recor

ds

PARCEL
J
The
following
Real
Esta t e
s1tuate in the VIl l age of
Minersville, M eigs County.
Ohio . and
more
par
t icu la r l y
desc rib ed as
fo l lows . Being sixty {60)
feet off th e wes t erly s ide of
Lot No . 53 i n M inPrsv ill e .
M eigs Coun ty , Onm . known
and designated as sub
" B " OO Being sixty 160) tee t
i ranting on Cliff Street and
,..unning 10 a northerly
direc tio n at right angle
with said C liff Str eet tw o
hundred ( 200) teet
Deed Reference
Vol.
225, Page 579 , Meig s Coun
ty Deed Records

c

pa r ce l of land conveyed to
Joh n Baum , Sr . by Minnie
Kau tz and husband by deed
da ted June 2, 1916 . and
recorded in Vol 113. page
486 of the Deed Records of
Meigs County , Oh io .
Being a portion of the
real es tate c onveyed by
Ir ene McDowel l and Jack
McDowell t o K ar l Grueser
by deed dated June 1, 19•5,
a nd r ecorded in Vol . 158,

Page

257

of the

Craig Luther's 22 p&lt;iru paced the

Walsh Cavaliern to an 82--71 har·
dwood victor)' over Cooch Art
Lanham's Rio Grande College Redmen in the consolabon game cl the
1!179 Marietta Holiday Tournamert
Saburd.ay night.
In the championship contest, Glenville State, behim Dm Bullett's 20
marllers, defeated host Marietta, 5251, forthisyear'scrown .
Rio Grande, now 4-7 on the year,

Deed

Records, Meigs County.
Of1io .
Reference Deeds : Vol .

263. Page

389 ;

VOL 263 ,

Pa9 e 225 Deed Records ,
M ergs County , Ohio
and 1t1e demand of the
Complaint is to se l l Defen
dants ' interest in the
above _
You are reQuired to an
swer the Complaint w i thin
twenty ·eig ht days after the
last pubfication of t his
no t ice. namely , by not later
t h an the 11th day
of
February ,
1980 , or
iudgment by default w il l be
re nde red aoainst you .
El izabeth Ann Lucas
Administrator w i th
the Wllt Annexed
Ralph R. Carman,
Dt&gt;ce ased
Crow . Crow and Porter
Attorneys f or Plaintiff
14, 7t

3,

10, 17, 24, 31 Il l 7.

LAFF- A · DAY

"e ~~;!,E~:;i:iiJr7~

P A R E described
L
,
Trea l
following
esta t e situate in the sr ateot
Ohio. County of M eigs and
Township of Sutton and
Village of M i nersville a nd
bOunded and described as
follo ws Be9inning at the
south corner o f a two acre
lot deeded by V . 8 H o rt on
to Daniel DeWolfe in 100
acre Lo t No 301 Town '1,
Ra r.ge 13 of the Ohio Com
pany 's Purchase ; thence
N o rth 66 Oeg _ East · ' 1 feer
to a s take , th ence N urth
Deg Weo;l 51 4 10 tee t to a
stake , thence soutn 66 11
Oeg Wes t liS 8 10 fee t to a
stake ; thence along the
road t o the pla ce of beg 1n
n i ng
Be1ng the Sdme lo t or

;-

•s

'

" When

we get to the party .

you ' re not going in looking like
tha t. are you ~"

paced three men in double figures.
led by Grari Greenwood's 16
marllers. Brett McCormick added 12
am Dave Slricklam 11.
The Redmen trailed 40-33 during
the halftime intennilBim.
Rio connected on 32 of 73 field goal
atte"l'ts for 44 percent Rio attempted only 12 free throws. The
Redmen sank !Ieven for [&gt;II percent
Rio had 29 rebounds, eight by McCormick, seven assists, three by

Forma-Miller's
•
zn championship

of the Est at• of

ill)

lod&lt;ed to Dan Fouts, San Diego's
4,082-yard passing genius, as if
Oilers were coming out of the ground
by the do:zens - especially Vernon
Pen)', the rookie refugee from the
Canadian League who intercepted
four of Foots· passes, blocked a field
gael attempt and ran tile bell back 57
yards.
It was a daytbat the sheer grit and
guts of the battered defensive unit
spoiled the dreams of a team many
expectedtogoalltheway.
Arx:l behind it all was the deft hand
of the rugged yet fatherly figure
they call ''Bum," whose trademark
in close to :II years of coaching has
been defense.
Phillips was asked afterward how
many pairs of boots he kept in his
dose!.
"Lots," he replied
"Are IIleY all blue' " someone
queried. calling at II! nti '"' to his
uure, hls..__Jod. pclinllod-4oe t-.
wear.
"Naw, I got all colors," he replied,
suggesting --perhaps jll!ltifiably that he saw no reason to !bat line of
questioning.
' 'Dont forget, you've bec&lt;me a
1V personality," someone said.
"Dont know why," he said, still
atte~ling to shift attention from
hilmelf.
Referring to his familiar 10-gallon
bat, Phillips said, "When you're on
the eastern side ol the field, you need
something to keep the SWJ oul of
your eyes."

Coach Ray Malava&amp; was still
savoring the dra rna tic triwnph
when someone asked him when he 'd
begin thinking a bout the Bucs.
"Soon," he replied. "In a bout two
hours . We1J enjoy lhe win here, but
when the plane touches down in I.os
Angeles we11 start plaming for
Tampa Bay.
"We've played them before this
year and didn't do too well, "
Malavasi understated, "but 111 tell
yru this + if we play our nell! two

games like we did today, we'll win 11
all. "
Ferragamo 's day started
inauspicioosly with a safety when he
slipped and fell in his end zone trying
to escape Dallas' rush. But he
responded with his TD pass to Tyler
and, after Rafael Septien made il7./;
with a 33-yard field goal for Dallas,
Ferragamo found Smith on the end
of his "Hail , Mary " bomb into the
end zooe three secoms before halftime .

Forma ScieJtific of Marietta will
battle Millers at 8:3() p.m. Wednell:!ay night in the championship
game ri the Eastern Athletic
Boosters' Independent Holiday
Basketball Tournament at Eastern
High School.
The consolatim game al 7 p.m.
finds Homer 's Old TillErs play~ng
the Methodist Crusaders.
Forma advanced by defeating
Wellston F.O.E . 8&amp;-60 and Homer's
Old Timers, 811-47 in the semi finals.
Miller 's Homes dumped Bawn's
Lumber cl Chester, 119-46 am the
Methodiat Crusaders, 76-.13.
In Fonna 's first game, Dennis
Ward aoo Jerry Mitchem led the
way with 17 and 16 points respectively.
John Royster paced Wellston with
17points
Bob Miller's 15 points paced
Miller's Home to its 81-46 win over
Baum's Lumber. John Sheets led
Sawn's with 10 points.
In other games, Methodist

Cruaders down Racine Hydro Electric, 6HL Carl JOOnston led the
Methodist with 22 points. Mitch
Meadowa bad 3J f&lt;r Racine Hydro
Electric.
In the cllllest game cl the tourney.
Homer's Old Timers edged Goebel's
6().59.
Bill Jewett, Jack Rood and KeMy
Caldwell had 12 points each for the
winners while Tim Simpson led
Goebel's with 23 points.
Jack Rood hll ~h ends cl a one
plus situation giving H~~ner's the

PASADENA, Calif. (API - Art
Schlichter and Paul McDonald, two
contrasting quarterbacks, likely will
be the key peri&lt;rmers Tuesday
when t~-ranked Ohio Stale takes on
No. 3 Southern Califorrua in the Rose
Bowl.
Both sides already are contending
the winner will claim the national
college football championship. Ohio
State matches its ]].().() rec&lt;rd
against USC's 10-&lt;l-1 mark in the
nationally televised showdown
(NBC-TV, 5 p.m. EST).
The two schools bave been consistent bdwl perf&lt;rmers in the last
decade. Each bas appeared eight
limes in post-11easm play, the
Trojans performing in six Rose
Bowls, the Liberty Bowl am the
Blue Bonnet Bowland the Buckeyes
in five Rose Bowls, the Orange ,
Sugar am Gator bowls.
Schlichter, 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds,
is a raw-boned sophom&lt;re who rWIS
as well as he passes. He 's developed
into a big play man.
The strong right-hander bas
cracked lhe school's single-t~eason
total offense record in both ol his
seasons. Wilh two years to go, he
already ranks as the Buckeyes' all time passing champion.
"It always amazes me how well
Schlichter does in the clutch. There
are not many quarterbacks that can
run and pass like him . And what I
like about him is, he's only a
sq&gt;homore," said Earle Bruce, Olio
State's coach.
''We lire a bfg plily team,'" ""'d
Schlichter, who aocounted roc l,!tl5
yards and 22 truchdowns this
season. "We can be very explosive
at times. But llhink we can drive the
ball down the field if it's needed. ''
The left-banded McDonald, &amp;-2 and
100 pounds, is a smart senior, a gilted passer, but not a good runner. He
ranks as the secom-best passer in
.major college history .
McDonald is ccmpleting passes at
a school-record 64 percent clip this
season. He bas thrown for 3,904 yards and 36 truchdowns in his fouryearcareer.

"He's more caught up in the confines of our system," said USC coach
John Robinson. "His career interception rate is the lowest in
college football.
McDonald 's
reputation is less than it should be
because cl ( Hei.sman Trophy winner) Charles White and rur whole
teant ''
The Trojans, who some say bav e
the greatest array of talent in
history, averaged 466 yards and 33
points per game this seasoo. Ohio
State produced at rates of 408 yards
am 34points .
McDonald predicts il will be a
high-ao6ring game, saying, "I dm't
thiait anybody is going to sit on the
iJ&amp;ll. It 's supposed to be the best
game in the country this year. Let' s
make it that. "
Southern California ranks as a 7tpoint favorite to hand the Big Ten its
sixth successive defeat am lOth in
the last II Ro!le Bowls.
"I don 't pay much attention to
that, " said Robinson. "We were sixpoint underdogs against Michigan in
the 1970Ro!le BowL We won.
'1 think it will be a close, dramatic
game. The teams will find a way to
hang in there lor three quarters and
then the team that gets hot in the
fourth quarter with its passing game

they got the ball First Sidney Thorntm capped a drive with the opening
kickoff by piling in from one yard
out. Then Terry Bi-adshaw hit
scoring passes of 17 yards to John
Stallworth and :II yards to Lynn
Swann.
The Dolphins, totally outgunned in
virlllaDy every department, got a
TD on Bob Griese's !lllven-yard JNIII8
to Durie! Harris after an official
gave Miami the ball - app&amp;renUy
mistakenly - because he believed a
member cl the Steelers had touched
it after a Dolphin punt
But that only cloeed the margin to
20-7 and the Steelers quickly put to
rest any thoughts cl yet another upset when Rockv Bleier and Franco
Harris ran I or short-yardage touchdowns.
Now come the Oilers, who fOWld
the_pt'!elves so badly outplayed in the
snow' sleet and freezing rain in Pittsburgh a year ago.
" The two best teams are In It,"
Bradshaw said cl the AFC Utle
rematch. "It doesnt snow In
Houston (where the Oilers beat Pit·
tsburgh a&gt;-17 on the regular-11eaam'a
nexl-to..last Mmday night). U It
snows here, that 's an edge we 'II
take ."
·'Next week will be the game ol the
decade, " added Swann, "and the
Steelers bave always been able to
meet that cballe!lle."
()1 Saturday, the Oilers, with NFL
Ml'lling champion Earl CamJi&gt;ell
and quarterback Dan Pastorini blllched with injuries, bEet the
Chargers, thanks to five interceptims, a playoff rec&lt;rd four of
them by safety Vernon Perry. He
also blocked a pWII and returned tile
ball 57 yards to !let up a field goal
while cornerback J.C . Wilson's in·
terception preceded Gifford
Nielsen's game-winning touchdOII'n
pass to Mike Renfro on a play
covering 47 yards.
The Bucs, who shed their label as
laughable losers by putting together
the league 's best defense thll
!Ieason, got sane unaccustomed help
from their offense with Ricky Bell
carrying the ball a playoff-record 38
times for 142 yards and two touchdowns and Doug Williams passing
nine yards to tight end Jimmie Giles
for another score against the
Eagles.
'1t's like a fairy tale, but this team
~Ella !t.ig llll.le," aaJd Bell, "1

w1JI win ."
National Playoff league
Playoffs Af A Glance
B~ The Associated Press
First Round
Oec . 23

,...,..,.., c ...

....

Ohio College Basketball

..,..,.,.. _,.

•...
., ._..

By The Anociated Press

~,.N,..,

f'hflactetphfe 21. Crtrcego l7

Dayton 10, i!lotcrw,n-WeUece,

American Conference
Houston 13, Denver 7
Second Round
Saturday 's Games
National Conference

Tampa Bay 24, Ph iladelphia 11

American Conference
Houston 17, San Diego 14
Sunday's Games
American Conference
Pittsburgh ).f , Miam i 1.4
National Conference
L os Angeles21. Dallas 19
Sunday , Jan . 6
American Conference
Championship
Houston at P ittsburgh
National Conference
Championship
Los Ange les at Tampa Bav
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl xrv
At Pasadena , Calif .
AFCcnam pionvs NF Cc hampi on

EAST

McClelland 0 U-Q. TOTALS 29·24 -

82.
RIO GRANDE (71 I ·· GreenwOOd
8-Q 16 ; M cCor mick 6.0 -12 , Dorsey 2
2 6. Strickland 51 II, PtH~ Ips 3_2 8 .
Burgess 4 0 9 . Hudson 1-0 2. Qu1sen
berry 0 -0 () , West J 2 8 TOTALS 31 · 1·
71 .
.
Halftime score ·· Wa lst1 •o R ro 33

SOUTH
Fairleiqh Di ck i nson, 63, Ma ine 61
Florida 93, Ill. W ~ l eyan 7•
Georg ia 102. Le noir · Rhyne 7•
Gramb l in g 77, M orr is Brown 71
Kentucky 86. Notre Dame 80
Lovisiana St. 9?., D elawar e 6-4
Navy 70, Millersvi l le Sf 5A
N . Caro l ins St. 73 , Georgia Tech 62
S Carol ina St 91 . Geor qe M ason

15

S FLorida 82, Cent Connecticut 69
Union 63, SE Louisiana 59
van derbilt88, S Methodist 77
WakeForest90 , N .C. Asheville6•
w Baptist 9J , Linfield 86
Wi IIi am and Mary 69 , Roanoke 67

I

u

ill( fJI

4

W¥. . . . . . . . •

Cinderella team "

Oh io St 71. N W Louisiana 46
Bluefield Tournament
Consolation
Cedarvi lle 92 , Wilfred Laur ier 59
Connecticut Tournament
consolation
Ful lerton St 71 , Ohio U ~
Dut&lt;e Tournament
Championship
Duk e 87, Cincinnati 75, 01
Franklin Tournament
c na mpionsh1 p
Frankl in 88 , Oberlin 7 1
Hi llsdale Tournament
Consolation
Tiffi n 65, Lake Super ior Sf _61
Marietta Tournament
Consolation
Walsh82 , R ioG rande71
Championship
Glenvil le St . 52. Marietta 51
Maryland Tournttment
Consolation
M1ami , Oh io 86 . Harvard 79
Ohio Wesleyan Tournament
Consolatu&gt;n
Ohio Wesleyan 43 , Wi s. ·Oshkosh 62
Championship
Denrson 69 , Case Western 61
Toledo Tournament
consolation
Bow li ng Green 79, No r thwe stern

Creigh t on 104, Canis ius 95
Providence 6.3 . St . Leo 's 37

Potopsk y 4·7 15 ; Dun~en 8· 1 17.
Feester 4-• · 12 ; Sabu!sk• 1·02 ; Sed
mock 0 • ·4; Hes s 1-2-4; Wh1te se 1 2 2
6.

U the Trojans have a defensive
weakness, it might be their secondary . Southern California has
yielded 199 yards passing per game,
but Bruce con tends that is
misleading.
"I don 1 think anyone bas passed
effectively against them early in the
ga:ne . It's come-from-behind
passing yardage. They 're so strong
physical ly against the run, you have
to pass," he said.
Both sides will be in top physical
conditioo with me exception. Gary
Dulin wUI replace Luther Henson at
defensive tackle for Ohio State. 4Jenson has been sidelined with a stress
fracture of the leg .

Saturday's Coll ege
Basketball Scores
By The Associated Press

Vince Phelps am 21 turnovers.
Besides Luther's 22 points, Ray
Dungen bad 17, Dave Potopsky Ia
and Joe Feesler 12 for the Cavaliers.
Walsh won it at the foul line, carr
ning 24 cl 3() rree throw attempts I Ill
percent). The winners were 29 of 63
from the field f&lt;r 46 percent. Walsh
had 45 rebounds, led by Luther's 18.
The Cavs had 15 assists and 27 turnovers .
Saburday 's win was Walsh 's
secom in 10 starts.
Rio Grame will C&lt;mplete preleague play with a noo--conference
game at home Wednesday against
Ohio Conference foe Bald win Wallace. Game time is 7: :II p.m.
Saturd.ay, the Redmen open play
in the Mid-Ohio Conference at
Malone .
Saturday's box score :
WALSH (821 -· Luther 9 &lt; 22

BEST POLICY
As an independent insurance
agen c y , our pr i mary fun ction Is
to prov 1de pol ic ies which afford
financi al protection in case of
loss
But , we also nave a vital In
t erest in loss prevention , as
should our clients . We encourage
care, caution and safety
preventive mea sures whi c h can
keep that ca r accident from hap ·
pen ing, tna r building fire from
start ing, tt1at home burglary
from being comm itted .
Prevention sa ves l ife , limb t'lnd
propert y
and helps control in ·
surance c osrs and premiums .
When losses do occur . our
pol icy holders ca n count on pro
tecting and servi ng in timp and
need . But we st ill say ~ preven ·
lion 1S the bes t poli cy

6B
Championship
WaShH'lgton 71 , T&lt;:MedO 70 , Of
Urbana Tournament
consolarion
Centre 81. W il m ington 55
cham pionstHp
Urbana 78, BluHton 66
West Virginia Tournamenf
Consolation
xav1er 74. Col um bia 59
Wooster Tournamen t
Consolation
J ohn Carro ll69, Wesl eyan 67
Charm pionship
Wooster 74. Ohio Nor1hern 73

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
'192 -2143
102 W. Main
Pomeroy

MIDWEST

61

Day ton 70, Baldw in · Wal lace 59
DeP~tu l68 , Bradley 61
Florida St . 67, W . Kentucky 65
I llinois St . BJ. Ct1arleston, W Va
l ndit'lna St.71. Bu tle r 55
Iowa 77 . OrakeM
Ohro St. 71, NW Lou isiana .t6
Purdue 82. Tul sa 58
Wls M il waukee67 ,Arkansa sS t 66

SOUTHWEST

Baylor 76, D avidson 67
New Mexico St
T exas 61
Pan Amer1 c an 90, SW Lou 1S1 ana 79
Tex~ts Chr is tian 89, N E Mi5sourr

n.

11

FAR WEST
Arrzona 61, Lamar 51
Ar izona St . 73 . Kansas65 . ot
E I l l inois 77 . Boise Sta ten
FresnoSt 7.f, Portland66
N Arizona 89 . St Xavier. 111 70
Puget Sound 80, Por tia nd State 72
San Francisco St. 81, N Y Teen 67
~outherr- Cal 8-4, Cal i fornia 74

BASTION OF
FREEDOM OF CHOICE
Ht&gt;re; a! The Insurance Store,
we're free to sell)ou who I you really net'd!
~ume in "u rancL' agt:nl\ offer the pol ic1e ~ of a smgle in surance
.:om ran~ . Aud that \ o ka~ ·. f:q;·ry good 1n suran ce company
u ller \ ro li cll''&gt; that rroo,1 J e nrc lh:nl be n efit ~ to many people .

Hut

h('rc at I he Jmu ra TlL' C Sto re- we offer more.

W l· are mdept:nrfrnl

agent\ . Then

meam

we

are

free

to review

and recommend 1he p o lt c i e~. (Ove r age~\ and services

nl ""''"' leadmg co mpan 1c1... lik e The Continental Insuran ce
Companie1 , for example. So you have a betl er
your

Kansas St . 66. Arkansots 51
Nicho lls9.4, lndillna Tech 70

2nd Street

TOURNAMENTS

Rainbow Clanic
Fifth Place
W isconsi n 78 , Army S.f
Seventh Place
Nevada Reno68 , Princeton S8
Sacred Clusic

Middleport

992-6167

Will be Open
Monday, Dec . 31
Tuesday, Jan. 1

Cn.m,P:iOnl~ip

.. c 65 Clari&lt; 64

Mlpl8 Third Place
New Hampsh i re Col 93. Sf
~elm ' s 73

requ irement s.

OONNElli'S PIZZA

MIDWEST

Qui

~pecia l

An

Let us help you bring in the New
·rear .
Thank you tor leHing us serve
you in 1979.

·•

PREVENTION
IS THE

~.. han~,.·c to get the m~ ura n cc protecti on that exactly fi ls
sunday ' s College
Basketball Scores
By The ASSOC i ated Pr ess

victory.
In the semi final round, Craig Per-

sall had 18 points to lead Forma to
an 11H7 roul rt Hcmer's.
Jim Caldwell had 20 points in a
losing CaliSe.
Bob Miracle led Miller's lo its 7633 romp over the Methodist
Crusaders with a 13 point perfomlllllCe .
Trophies will be awarded
following Wednesday's games .

Roger Staubach, who brought the
Cowboys back from the brink r1
defeat in the final two minutes of
three games in 1979, guided Dallas
into posrtim for Ron Springs ' !-yard
TD run in the third period and beat a
Rams' blitz by passing two yards to
tight end Jay Saldi to put the
Cowboys On top 19-14 with 12 :47 to
play.
lbe Steelers were awesome in
their triumph over Miami, scoring
tclllchdowns the first three times

•
Quarterbacks will be key m
1980 Rose Bowl contest

Walsh downs Rio 82-71
in Marietta tournament

--see
1t's a ·coffee table book l book co ffee
table' ..

DAVIS , De&lt; eased ,

Deceased,

run oot of players, we will

just punt and play defense," lamen-

PARCEL
1
The
to 1 1ow1n~
Real
Eslatc
sr tuated m th e Coun t y of
Meit;JS . in the Sta t e of Ohio .
and rn the Villaqe of Mi ne r
sv i lle . to w i t : Bei ng a part
o f 100 acre lot N o 30 1 in
Town No 2. Range N o . 13 ,
in said County of M eigs.
parti cula r l y described as
f o ll ow s Beginnrng at th e
N orth east cor ner of a lot
deede d
by
F r ede r ick.
Schreiner
to
Gehart
Sc honeberger. thence Nor
th 80 Oeg East . 45 fee l :
t hence at ri~Jht angl es to
thi s l i ne and rna Sou ther ly
direc tion 35 t ee t . thence at
r ight angles to the lin e la st
mentioned
and
1n
a
Westerly direction 45 feet
to a poin t rn the East I ine of
said Sc h o n eberc,;~ e r ·s lol ,
th ence along sa1d Geharf
Sc honeberg er 's Eas t l ine to
th e p lace of beginning , ex
cepting the coa l and other
m 1neral s and the r ight to
m rne the same WIThout 1n
c umbranc e t o the surf ace ,
and The r1ght to fence '\a1d

tra&lt;rdinarily aroused defense to a
17-14 victory Saturday over the San
Diego Chargers. And on Sunday, in
the only "expected" ootc(llle, the
defending Super Bowl cha~ion Pittsburgh Steelers mauled the Miami
Dolplins 34-14.
So the Bucs, winless in 1976, their
first season, but the NFC Central
Division champions this year, take
on the NFC West champion Rams ,
whom they beat 21-6 last Sept. 23.
And the AFC Central cha~ion
Steelers, who flattened Houston 34-li
in last year 's AFC title game, take
on the Oilers, their division's wild card team, again.
Vince Ferragamo, who had
thrown touchdown passes of 32 yards
to Wendell Tyler and 43 yards to Ron
Smith in the first balf but bad seen
the Rams' 14-6 lead turn into a 19--14
deficit, teamed with Billy Waddy on
a 50-yard TD paS!! play with 2 :06
remaining for the victory tbat
avenged last year's 28.(1 NFC title~ame 106S to the Cowboys .

Today's

1

t"'ARCEL NO

(Southern)

He says Congre!5 shwld pass better
Ia ws in the first place, instead of
writing into legisla tion a procedw-e
to block results 11 decides it doesn1
like.
His opposition to the congressional
veto does not stop at tile door of the
Federal Trade Commission, even
though he disagrees with the consumer acb vist policies of its chairman, Michael Pertschuk.
Ford says that if Congress didn1
want the FTC intervening in the
mari&lt;etplace, the Senate shouldn'

Weekend of big upsets

Valley PobllaOlo&amp;~y- MIIIOm.... , ""·•

._ 111ttin A.ctJon .:cred him at • -

Edwards' Mobile district is 33 percent black, 41 percent white collar,
;. 42 percent blue coliar. 3 percent
": !ann. The median income is $7,3()5:
'" II percent ol his constituents earn
.,:: more than $15,000 a year; 18 percent
:,·earn less than $3,000
•• The necessary ccrnpamon to the
~ Almanac is the Election '80 Hand~ bod&lt;. Although it focuses heavil y on
;: the presidential ra ce. its a rticles.
~charts and graphs offer inf&lt;rmabm
'· like :
.: - The RepubUcans probab ly won 't
:; win control of Congress m 1980 but
-:might in 19112 and coukl by 1900 .
•·• - The 1981! state house elecllons
.: will decid e wh o re -draw s
,; Congressional lines after the I !m
.: Census count, aoo that Republicans
·· will probably be counted out more

WASHJNGTON !API - The new
year is not a promising one for the
people wh o write fede ral
regulations. In Congress and in the
presidential campaign, th€ unelected bureaucratiC rulemaker bas
become a handy target for political
rhetoric.
The House bas voted to sem the
regulat&lt;rs a message by curbing the
authority ci the activist Federal
Trade Commission, and the bill
awaits action in the Senate.
Under the Hou!le bill, either branch of Coogress could veto any
regulation the FTC proposes to apply on an industry-wide basis. The
vote for that mea~re was over·
whelming, and there is substantial
support in the Senate ((II' similar action.
IronicallY , some ardent advocates
cl deregulatioo say that would be a
mistake. One of them is former
President Gerald R. Ford who, like
every president since Franklin D.
Roosevelt, opposes the legislative
veto .
That procedure is now built into
more than :llO federal laws. It permits C&lt;&gt;ngress or, in many cases,
one house r1 C&lt;&gt;ngress, to block
specific executive actions. Presidents always have argued that is an irn·
proper invasion of their authority to
administer the laws.
Now, in the clamor against federal
regulators , the process could be expanded so as to apply across the
board to the actions r1 one agency or
another.
"Lately, the problem of unelected
bureaucr-ats acting counter to the
congressional interest has been
highlighted dramaticaUy at the
FTC," said Sen. Harrison Sclunitt.
"Merely by knowing that Congress
cruld veto a proposed rule, the FTC
or any other agencies would be
automatically deterred from
straying ru tside their mandate ....
"It is time to admit that, properly
confined, the legislative veto 's time
has c&lt;me," said Schmitt, R-N.M.
Republican F &lt;rd doesn't buy that.

3-The DaUy Sentinel, Mitldlepcrt.Pcmeroy, 0., Morday, Dec. 31, 1979

have approved Pertschuk's
nomination to head the agency.
The former presid111t said Pertschuk 's activism should have come
as no S:Irpri.se to anyme at the
Ot pitol, stnce he served as counsel
to the Senate Commerce Committee
before President Carter named him
to a seven-year term at the FTC.
Now the same Corrunerce Committee is shaping legidation to rein
in the agency . As an alternative to
the veto plan approved by the House,
its bill wauld require the FTC to
nottfy Congress cl any propooed rule
~days in advance .
That way, Cmgress coold pass a
law forbidding anything it didn't
want done.

1t4 E. MAIN ST.

POMIROY,C'

"2-sno or m-s139

"YOU DON'T IUY A POLICY,
YOU I! IRE

AN AGENT"

�~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomemv 0 .. Mondav. Dec . 31. I!179

Generation Rap
ti~

H••h•n and ~tw Rot tt-l

THE MOUNTAIN OR
FLATI.ANDGUY : WIDCHONE
SHOUW SHE MARRY ?
By Helea aod Sue Bo«el
DEAR HEI.EN AND SUE :
I live in mountain lake country
wtEre tiE skiing, flshmg , clim bing,
and water sports are great, the
scenery superb, and fli ends abun-

dant .

MRS . MAE SPENCER, seated, W&amp;'l surrounded by her six living
cluldrm on Christmas Day . Left to right, seated are Vance, Dayton and
Elson Spencer, and standing, Mary DeGroot, Waid Spencer and Avis
Bing.

~pencer family

gathers

to celebrate holiday
POMEROY --Members of the
Spencer family ga there d on
Christmas Day for a holiday observance a t th e home ol Mrs. Ma e
Spencer.
Attending were all six ol the living
children of Mrs. Spencer. Tiley are
Elson Spencer whale wife is
Dorothy, Waid Spencer with Ius
wife, Glaeys, Dayton Spencer with
hi£ wife, Sarah, Avis Bing with her
husband Lowell, Vance Spencer, and
Mary DeGroot with her husband,
Lawrence.
Grandcluldren attendmg were
David aoo Linda Spencer, Ike , and
Judy Spencer and son, John Henry,
&amp;.tiEr Ma}"l and sons, Jeff and
Dean, Harry and Avi., Spencer,
Keith and KeUy, Tom and Cathy '
Spencer, children, Jared and Janel
Ron and Marilyn Spencer, Trish~
and Donnie, Mary a oo Bo Dodrill.
Vaughn and Shawn. Joyce Bing .
Bernard LaValley, Mike and Diane
Bing and son, Rand y, Jun Bing, Cin -

dy Smith, Gail, Lema and Laura
DeGroot and tEr fiance , Jean Floyd,
Heruietta DeGroot.
A buffet din...,r was served.
The DeGroot family traveled from
Fountain, Colo. to spend the r
Christmas vacation. The three
oldest DeGroot girls are m break
from college. Gail attmded Pike~
Peak Crmmuntiy College, and
Leona and Laura attend Western
State College at Gunnison, Cok&gt; .
J~n Floyd, fiance of Laura, is a
jurior at tiE U. S. Air Force
Acac:Emy a t ColcroooSplings.
Only four of the grandchilW,n
were unable to attmd. Larry
Spencer is Ill . Jim Mayes, Nina
Wassell who lives in Indiana, and
Mr.~ . Layne Gray (Bunny) who
resides in Nurenberg, Gennany with
tEr husband am wughters , Lisa,
Debbie and Renee .
Also attending was Esther Wnght,
Athens. mother-in-law of Waid
Spe ncer.

Health Review
By Robert G. Slockmal,
D.O., Ph.D.
Aoolataot Prolesoor
of Family Medic ine
Oblo Uolverolty College
of O.teopathlc Medlcloe
TilE BODY'S DEFENSE
AGAINST CANCER
!Editor~ note : While Dr. Lamar
Miller is on vacation. Dr. Robert
Stoclunal will con tinue as guest
columrist. l
QUESTION : Does the body's immune system prote&lt;1 us from cancer?

ANSWER : Yes . The in1mune
S}"ltem prote cts the body from in vasion by oul, ide materia ls such as
bat1eria and VIruses, as well a.s in vasion from Within by cancer cells .
'This protective functwn, often called
"surveillance, " is constantly occurring with the elimination d any
mutant or malfunctioning c an ~er
cell . It i:l somewhat like the rejection
ofa tramplanted tiss ue
QUESTION: Then why do people
get cancer'
ANSWER : Infonnation currently
available suggests that cancer oc curs in people who have deficient
cellular ilrununity . This reduced efficiency ol 'the inunune system
seems to go along wlh advancing
age, e~~pamre to carcinogens (can-

- ·•
I offer ll total program to Mtp
protect your fllm\ly's way of hvtng
lind build flnandltl wcurtty for your

redrernepl ve.a.:~. CNl me fot details

MIKE SWIGER
.Miadleilor!,

"""

.....

A

l .. llolloUitl

u.

_!9?-66e$ ·

!)fate Farm life and
Acctclem Auurance
Company
Home Otllce
[)' A""' ''V'I)n

l l•no•S

cer producing age nts 1 and the
taking of drngs which affect the
operation of the immune system.
QUESllON: Can the inunune
system be bolstered to help the body
fight cancer '
ANSWER : The fact t hat certain
cant"er pa tients haw improved even
after medica l treatment has failed
1nd wa tes that the irrmune system
can rebound . This observation has
promJferl ctimcal research aimed a t
stimulating the fal ling 1mmune
system The rnatenals curren~ y
hem~ studJed for ths purpose in ·
elude · B.C. G .," a ba c tenal
preparatiOn : Thymosine, a thymus
hormon e: Levamisole, an an tihelmmtlu c drug currently used by
vetennarta!"ls;

and

vaccines

prepared from actual tumor cells .
As yet there have been no
dramatic cures, but we must
remember that fighting caocer wi tjJ
unmunotherapy is in its infancy .
When inununity is better understood
at the re llular and molecular leve l
the manipulation of the inun~
system will be mor e practicaL

H rcll '&lt;' l'l /1(/1 c g/1(!.\ IS
Many relatives and friends called
at the home of Mrs . Allen Brewer
and David during Christmas week .
Their guests included Mrs. Marilyn
Brew er and son, Mark, Columbus:
Mr. and Mrs . Harold BreW&lt;!r and
Sammie Rarden, Lmg Bottom ; Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer and
Teresa and Kenneth D, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs . Edgar Brewer and
Dmnis Dobbins, Portland ; Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Close and Roy , Waterford ; and Mrs . Rita Garrett, Colwnbus .
Sending gifts were Mrs. Brewer's
daugtier am her husband, mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Dmnon am family
Newburg, Ind .; Miss Ronda Beall,
Huntingtoo Beech , Calif., Mr. and
Mrs . Robbin Ressinger, Hallomon,
N. M.; Mr. and Mrs. James Bender
a_f!l famllv Findlay.

With a fair job and a 0 the things I
love around me, my Ide should be
perfect, ligti'
Wrong !
Roland, who loves the mountain a s
llUICh as I do, wants me to marry
him. He 11 never be rich, but he really enjoys life, and maybe we'd ski
and sail happily ever after.
But now I've met Normand who is
an assistant district attorney down
in the flatlands . Maybe he 11 be
governor s001eday. He 's dynamic,
successful, exciting, a pure city
man. He skiis weekends but admits
sports aren't Ius biggest passion.
He also wants to marry me .
I think I love them both, and if I
could just roll up aU the plus
qualities of each into a ooe-man bur die, I'd become
Mrs. RolandNormand in a minute .
Which should I choole' - MOUNTAIN GIRL
DEAR GIRL:
What 's wrong with staying single
unW you stop rating men by where
they live or what they do, or ''Will tE
make me happy'"
I doubt you love e ither of these
fellows as much a.s you love your
mountain . - HELEN
NarE FROM SUE : When you care
about someone so much you want to
share your life with him, no matter
where cr how, that's the time for
marriage. Or as someone once said,
''We wed when we knew we couldn't
stand being not marlied to each
m'ler another minute." You're
nowhere ...,c rt hat stage yet, I think.

RAP:
I am 14 and going with a guy of 17.
He 's been in trouble with the cops a
couple of time-'l and my mother
heard about it, so stE forbids me to
see him. He's straightening up now,
but Mom is too damn strict -she's
always bugging me. I sneak out to be
with him, as he only lives four
houses down the street.
Also, my girlfriend likes him and
wants to go with him. One night
when I got drunk, I told her she
could, but I dido~ mean it. Now
she 's telling him I don 't like lumany
more and trying to break 110 up.
My whole family wants me to quit
him, but 1 tlunk I love him. And I
sure don't want my girlfriend to
have him ! Please help me make a
decision . -S .O.F .
DEARS.:
Your mother may be strict, but
she isn't very observant : otherwise
she 'd be aware her 14-year-old gets
drunk and sneaks out.
Straighten up, smarten up and
listen to your farruly ! They could be
better judgef of character tha n you
thirit . - HElEN AND SUE

1GOT A PROBlEM' Or a subject
for d1sc ussion, two generation style'
Direct your questions to either Sue
or He len Bot tel -&lt;&gt;r both, if you want
a combination mother-daughter
answer -in care of thiS newspaper. )

Officers elected
by Eagles class
SYRACUSE - Officers were
elected at the Thursday night holi day dinner of the Eagles Class of the
Asbury United Methodlst Church
held in the church social room.
The dinner w 111 cale!'ed by Circle's
Restaurant of Gallipotis. Grace w"'
giw n by Mrs . Opol Kloes . Tables
were decorated in keepmg with the
holiday season.
Officers elected W&lt;!re Mrs. Helen
Teaford , president ; Mrs. Wanda
Rizer, assistart president ; Mrs .
Vera Van Meter, secretary treasurer; and Carroll Cundiff,
assistant sea-eta ry -treasurer.
A discussion was held on the newly
installed canopy over the step!&gt;. Mr.
and Mrs. Van Meter will halt the
January meeting.
Attendin~ were Mrs . Kloes, Mr .
Mrs . Brewer r eceived fruit
baskets from the church and
Citizens Band Radio Club .

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

::.

Mr. and Mrs. Norman &amp;Tilth and
daughter, Sharon, and grandsm,
crud&lt;, has "" holiday guests, Mr.
md Mrs. James R. Smith am sons,
Tuppers Plains, Mr. and Mrs. J om
Tubbs and lam ily, Waslungton
Courthwse, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Wolfe, Chester . They received
telephone calls from their sons, N..-man, Gibbstown, N.J., and Paul and
Albert, Charleston, S . C.
Mrs. Genevieve Meimart and
Miss Enpa Smith were in Huntington over the holiday weeked.
They were guests of Mrs . Albert
Smith, their slster-in-law . On Mon day they visited their brother..inlaw, Ernest Bartels at the Mark
Memcrial Nursing Home at Milton,
W. Va. and em Christmas Day were
guests d. Mr. and Mrs. Fcrest Akers ,
for a buffet luncheon before returning home.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Van lnwagen,
Powhattan, spent tiE holidays here
with Ius parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Vanlnwagen.
Mr. aoo Mrs. Larry Jacoba and
daughter, Teri, Houston, Texas,
have been here for the past week
visiting their pirents, Mrs . Lavena
Ebersbach and Mr. and Mrs. CliffordJacoba.
Mrs. Jane Jacobs and children,
Sean and Krist~ are on a ten-day
visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Ervin Acree at Clearwater, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore went
to Columbus on Chlistmas Day .
Their daughter, Mrs. Samy Durst,
and two daughters, retuned to
Pomeroy with the Gilrnores for a
holiday visit.
Gue~ts of Mrs. Tina Jacoba over
the holidays have been Mr. and Mrs .
Paul Jacobs, Southshore, Ky . and
Mrs . William Davis, Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Bing and
daughter, Indianapolis, Ind. have
been here visitill! Mrs. Cly!la Bing
and &lt;ther relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and
Jayne visited over the weekend in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs . Mike
Hammer and family . Joining the
family there for a holiday visit on
Sunday were Mrs. Kay Gilkensoo,
Mrs. Emily Wood and daughter,
reama Kay, East Uverpool .

New arrival
Mr. and Mrs . CedI Ray See, the
former Kathryn Teaford, Lincoin
Heights, P!IIleroy , are announcing
the birth d their second daughter,
Amy Melissa, born m Dec . 1. Their
other daughter is Darlene, age
sevm .
Amy weighed eight pounds, 10
ounce! am was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. am
Mrs .
Raymond
Teaford
Minersville, and the grandparent~
are Kennie See, Middleport , and
Laura
Garlinger,
Cheshire .
Christens Grimm, Syracuse, is the
infant's
maternal
greatgrandmother.
and Mrs . Richard Ash, Mr. and Mra.
Olarles Hoback, Eddie Hoback, Mr.
am Mrs . Bob Smith, Mr. and Mrs .
Herbert Parker, Thomas Edwards
Mr . and Mrs. Millard Van Meter'
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Teaford, Mr:
and Mrs. Kenneth Cumiff, Mr. am
Mrs . William Winebrermer, Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Cundiff, Jr., Elma
Louks, Elva Dailey, Mr. and Mrs .
Franklin Rizer, Jean Kloes, Eleanor
Robson and Emmogene Holstein.

A WATCH NlGHT SERVICE will
be held Monday frml7 :30 p.m . until
midnight at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains.
The public Is invited to attend.
THE POMEROY United Methodsit Church will hold a Watch Night
Service Monday, from 9 p.m. till
midnight. There will be singing ,
fellowship, recitation, food, and
prayer. Everyone is welcome to attend any part of tiE service, if not
the entire tlung.
A NEW YEAR'S EVE Watch
Night set:Vice will be held at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church
Monday, begiming at 7::.1 p.m.
Special singing will be perfonned by
The Hymntimers, and the putiic is
invited to attend.
'FIRST ANNUAL New Year's Eve
gospel sing featuring Harvest Trio,
Reedsville, and Singing Messenger.~,
Parltersburg, will be beld at Eastern
High School on Monday at 7:30. Ad mission free but offering will be
taken. Refreshments will be sold by
Eastern High Band Boosters .
POMEROY VOLUNTEER Fire
Department annual New Year's Ball
at Pomeroy Elementary Monday, 10
p.m . to 2 a .m . Music by "Holber
Hollow Review ". Advance tickets on
llaie at G and J Auto Parts, New
York Clotlung and Legar Mooument ; evenings at fire station. $12 a
couple .
NEW YEAR'S EVE semce at the
Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church
In Middleport at 7::.1 on Monday
evening. There will be special
singing and specia I preaching .
Everyone welcome .
NEW YEAR'S Eve party at the
Senior Citizens Center, P!IIleroy .
The party will take place from 8
p.m . to 12 ::.iam. on Monday evening. Admission charge will be Sl for
adults and chilW,n under 12 will be
admitted free with their parents .
Everyone attending is asked to bring
sandwiches or cookies for the coffee
break and party duling the evening .
There will be dancing and music by
the Stlingdusters. THe public is in -

'

NEW YEAR'S Eve party, Mmday
fer Racine American Legirn Post
611lat hall. $10 per couple with meat
and
refre !II men Is
provided ;
members to take covered dish . An
adult party for post members and
their gue-'lts .
THE RACINE Ameli can L.eg ion
No. 602 will be holding a New Year's
pirly, Monday evening at the Legion
hall. Larry Hubbard and the County
Ramblers will provide music, and
admission is $10 per couple. Refreshments will be furnished, but Legioo
members are asked to bring a
cowred dish.
TIIURSDAY
EV ANGEUNE CHAPTER 172,
Order ol the Eastern Star, 7: :ll p.m.
Thursday night at the Middleport

IJOlphins seem to be able to sleep
with one eye open and with half the
train still awake. according to
National Geograpluc. They need
ooly abuut as nwch sle~ as a cow perhaps 2 or 3 hours a day . Before
leaving the land to return to the see
some 50 million yean ago, dolphins
may have bem related to forerun ners of today's cows, goats and
sheep. Like those animals, dolphins
have several stormchs.

Masonic Temple. Resolution night to
be observed. New members to cane
at 7 p.m . Members to take sunshine
gifts for the OES Home.
Announcin9 the Revised
Office Schedule Df

Or . Mateo P . Oayo, Jr .
l!W N . 2nd Av e .,
Middleport , Ohi o
Effectivt&gt; January 1980
Monday
10 , 00 · 1.DO
l 00 ·5 DD P .M .

Tuesday, No Office
Wednesday
9 : 00 · 11:30
l D0 -7, 30 P . M .
Thursday
9 , 00 · 11: 3D

l ·00· 7 : JO P . M .

Friday

10 , 00- 1 ,oo
1 :00 ·5 00
Saturday
9 OO ·S· DO
E•cept the last Satur ·
d~y of the month.

r

0

0

()

0

(

0

WATERMELLON PATCH
Slh St.
New

H~ven

By Mn. Herbert Rouab
Calling m Mrs. Margie Hunt
CluistrnM Day were Mr. and Mrs .
Elza Birch It Racine, Miss Millie
Rlpley of Charleston, W. va ., Paul
Beegle, local.
ChriBtmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Dallas Hill were Mrs . Dolly
Wolfe , Mr. aoo Mrs . Marshall
Rwsh, Joey and Cortney, Mr . and
Mn. Durrell N&lt;rris, Tracy and
Ryan, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill, son
Dean Vance II, Art HiU, friend, Debbie Wallace of Racine, John Joe
Shain. Mr. and Mrs . Carl WoUe Jr
children, Wendy, Tricia and M~ga~
ol Racine, Mr. and Mrs . Cecil
Roseberry called on the Hills in the
evmi111 .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr.
spent Christmas Day with Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Johnson and family at
Racine.
Tueaday evening before Clulistmas the family of Mr . and Mrs.
Gerald Hayman met at their home
and held a gift exchange. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs . Robert Hart and
children, Blice and Beth d. Racine
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell ami
cblldren, Barbara am Bob, of
Letart, W. Va. , Mr. and Mrs . Allen
Cunningham and children, Olivia
and Zac ol Cottageville, W. Va . Mr .
and Mrs. Hayman served refreshments. 0! Sunday evening Mr. and
Mm . Robert Hart and cluldren
Brice and Beth, and Mrs. Geralct
Hayman visited Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Qullingharn and children at Cottageville and attended the Christmas program at the United in Christ
Church in CottageTIUe. Mrs. Linda
Jew.!ll and Bob also attended the
program.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart of
Columbus spent Christmas Eve and
Day with Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart at Ra~ine .
Other visitors of the Bells were Mr.
and Mrs. David Hen.sler and
children of Racine, Mrs. Linda
Turley am sm, Kirl&lt;, Mr. and Mrs.
John Chaney ol Five Points.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell visited Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Turley and son Kirk,
Mr. and Mn. John Hill Wednesday
evening. On Saturday Mr . and Mrs.
Bell, Mr. and Mrs . David Hemler
and daughter, Rachel, visited Santa
Claus at the Mall at Parltersburg
and dined at the Wes~m Sialin '
Steak House in Parkersburg .
Mr. and Mrs. Walter McDade of
Troy spent from Wednesday till
Saturday with ~':dna Roush and
family .
Christmas guests of Mr . and Mrs.
Vernon Donohue were Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Harden and children cl
Marion, Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Winebrenner and family of
Newbury , Mr. and Mrs . Lowell Bur1m and family d. Colwnbus .
Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Roush were Mr . and
Mrs. Don Riffle and cluldren of
Wheelersburg, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
C&lt;nnolly, &amp;ian and Shelly of
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith
of Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Cumiff, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Manuel, Angie aoo Amy, Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Roush and children, J om
and Mike Roush. Don Riffle returned to Wheelersburg Christmas
evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush
tod&lt; Mrs. Riffle and children home
Wednesday . Missy Riffle remained
for the week with Mr. am Mrs . Gary
Cundiff.
Christmas Day guests of Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt and Mr. and Mrs .
William Wickline, Scott and Kyle
were Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilson,
Robin, lloonie , Cheryl and !Mend,
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Burri of
Bolivar Dam .

auutmas

ORDINANCE
NO. so•
ORO! NANCE PROHIBI ·
TING
PARKING
OF
MOTOR VEHICLES OR
LOAOEO VEHICLES ON
PAVED PORTION OF C.
AND 0 . R IGHT.OF ·WA Y
THAT LAYS BETWEEN
SYCAMORE
STREET
AND
BUTTERNUT
AVENUE
ANO
BET ·
WEEN THE NORTHERN
PORTION OF THE TWO
PARKING LOTS
AND
SOUTHERN BOUNDARY
ON MAIN STREET IN
THE
V'LLAGE
OF
POMERCY , OHIO .
BE IT ORDAINED by
tne Counci l of me village of

~

ABIG 20~

Pomeroy ,

() 0
0

LIVING ROOM
SUITES

~iti~fr
~·
' ' If

0 Discount

I

]'.

!J.11 . ...

~

'

..lilf)

'

-''·· -- ,_

MARKED DOWN

ON BASSETT

AS MUCH AS 50% OFF

End Tables &amp; Coffee

WE HAVE EVERY SUITE REDUCED '100"
AND SOME AS MUCH AS '200" OFF
REGULAR PRICE.

Tables
Have Some Odd End

BIG BEDROOM
SUITE SALE

TABLES &amp; COFFEE
TABLES
BROKEN SETS IF YOU NEED TO ADO
SOME PIECES STOP IN

50%

lus?ffew!

~

GET A BOX SPRING AND
MATTRESS FREE
During January

~~ """

c,'l-

A Selected Group
OF CHAIRS

5 DRAWER
CHEST OF DRAWERS

$4995

AT A lOW
PRICE OF ONlY

THESE CARRY A LARGE DISCOUNT.
WE HAVE A BIG STOCK OF CHAIRS ON
SALE.

SAVE AS MUCH AS 50%

Ju st 12 To Se ll At This Reduced Price

EUREKA UPRIGHT

23" &amp; -2 5" Z:.ENITH

SWEEPERS

COLOR T.V.

$6995

o.,,

All REDUCED '100" EACH.

25" AS lO~ AS '599" DO N'l MI SS OUT
ON THIS ZENITH SALE, All 1980
MODELS.

YOU GET THE AITACHM ENTS FREE!

Big Sale On
BASSETT AND SINGER
DINNING ROOM SUITES

SAVE AS MUCH AS
oN A

$sooo

MA YT AG WASHER &amp;
DRYER PAIR

All REDUCED '100 00

JUST RECEIVED A LOAD ON
DECEMBER 26th

9 Piece Suite As low As

HIDE-A-BED

SLEEPERS
SAVE 150" ON EACH SOFA IT'S A
SOFA IN THE DAYTIME AND A
BED AT NIGHT.

~"

..

Sealy Miss Match
MATTRESS &amp; BOX
SPRINGS
FUll SIZE

Only

$6800

Each

Pomeroy , Ohio. al l mem

0

c

Wishing
0

Ot1io,

hereb.,.

prohlbit5 any motor vehi c le
or loc1ded &gt;Jehicle of any
type, weighing more than
6,000 pounds to park on that
paved ar~i!l of the C. and 0 .
right -of -way
laying bet ·

ween Sycamore Street and

Butternut Ave ., in the
Village of Pomeroy ~nd the
northern portion of the
park ing lots and the
southern rlght -of ·way line
of Main Street in the
VIllage of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Sec . 2. Thai any one
viol1!1ing this Ordmance
shall be f i ned not less than
$25.00 nor more than $50 .00
for each violation there-of .
Sec. 3. This Ord ini!Snce is
hereby dec Ia red to be an
emergency necessary for
the public safety and pub lic
welfare of the v i llage o4
Pomerov . and is to go Into
effect lmmed i atelv .
Passed : December 17 th ,

0

1919 .

HAPPY NEW .
HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

-

AppleGrove r-~~~~~==~~-----===~==~------~:=:=:=:=::----1
News Notes
Starts Wednesday
I Don't Miss Iff

One Only!

bers concurring thereto .
Sec . 1. Thai the Village Of

1980

• Girls Dresses

INil -3410

Night service Monday evening,
beginning at 8 p.m Entertainment
will be provided by TIE Kill!'S Harmony Quartet. A hymn sing will be
held later in the evening, aoo
refreshments will be served. The
public is cordiaUy invited to attend.
A CANDI.EUGH!' NEW YEAR'S
EVE service will be held at the
Racine First Baptist Church, beginning at 8 p.m . Monday. The Rev.
Don Walker cordially invites the
public to attend.

1n 0~

• Boys Winrer Shirrs

-

THE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

The Reedsville U.M.W. held their
Christmas party at the h(llle It Mrs.
Lorraine Wigal with Mrs. Mamie
Bucldey ro-hostess. The program
was led by Mrs. Saney Cowdery on
The Christmas Story as told by St.
Luke . Mro. Sue Douglas sang 'The
First Noel ". Group singing ol
Christmas carols by aU. Cl111ing
ll'ayer was by Mrs. Buckley,
The business se&amp;'lion was coodueled by Mrs . VIvian Hwnphrey.
The pledge to missions was voted to
be paid. Cards were signed for
several members in the hospital.
Thirty-nine shut..in calls were
reported. The home was beautifully
decorated for the Christmas seasoo
and giftB were exchanged. Secret
pals names were revealed and new
mmes drawn for the cunlng year.
Buffet style refreshments were
served to ihe following guests and
members: Mrs. Virginia Walton,
Mrs . Erika Boring, Mrs . Leona
Ruth, mrs. Marlene Putman, Liaa
Rucker and Beverly Wlga~ Mrs . Vivian Hwnphrey, Mrs. Connie
Rud&lt;er, Mrs. Dorotha Riebel, Mrs.
Verna Rose, Mrs. Dolly Reed, Mrs.
Pat Martin, Mrs. May Hwnphrey,
Mrs. Vickie Keller, Mrs. Sue
Douglas, Mrs. Mamie Buckley, Mrs.
Saney Cowdery, Mrs. Violet Satterfield, and Mrs . Lilllan Pickens. Door
plizes were given to Mrs. Riebel and
Mrs . Rucker. Next meeting will be
Jan . 10 at tiE church basement with
Mrs . Putman and Mrs. Satterfield
h&lt;l'!tesses .
REEDSVILLE PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs . Edward CtEvalier ol
Reedwille, Garrel CtEvalier of
Mansfield, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer of Tupers Plains, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Spencer, Angle and
Chlis of Tupper.! Plains, were holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Coe, Debbie, Mi&lt;!kie and Jimmy at
Columbus.
Sunday afternoon callers at the
home ol Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Olevalier were Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer of Tuppers Plains, Mr . and
Mrs . Dale Wind land &lt;I Gu}"lville Rd .
and Lowell Chevalier, local .
Garrel Chevalier returned to IRs
home in Mansfield after vl.!iting
with Ius perents, Mr. and Mr!!. Ed ·
ward Chevalier.

•

1h PRICE

eAII Natural
Wear • Children 's
Jeans • Toddlers Outfits

REEDSVILLE UNITED
METHODIST WOMEN

d Middleport will hold a Watch

you
well

~

STARTING JANUARY 2, 1989

lfl OFF

held Mmday evening at the Middleport lndependert Holiness Church. Guest speakers will be Rev. Troy
Fields, Rev. William King, and Rev.
Benjamin Sullivan. Services begin
at7 :30 p.m , and the public is invited
to attend.
THE ST . PAUL'S United
Methodist Church, Tuppers Plains,
will hold a Watch Night Observance
on Monday , begiming at 7: :ll p.m.
The public is cordially invited to attend.

Tiled.

11m v See

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE

Op•n 10 : 30 to 5 M, T. W, F. Sat.
Closed Thurs &amp; Sun .

·,
',
,·

r--------------- Reedsville
1
Social Calendar
MONDAY
News Notes
A WATCH NIGH!' sservtce will be

MATERIALS COMPANY
W. VA.

Clarence Andrews
Mayor
H 0 . Brown. Jr
President

ATTEST :

Jane Wal ton

Clerk

(Ill 31 I I l 7, lie

WE HAVE A PULASKI PAUL

ELECTROPHONIC STEREO
CONSOLE

AM-FM RADIO WITH RECORD PlAYER,
8 TRACK TAPE PLAYER, CASSETTE
PLAYER AND RE~u"~~R .
Reg. '379"
Save •8Cl

Now Only
00

$2995:5

Be sure and oe he re on Wednesday , January 2nd when the doors open fo r va lues as never
he fore . I!n9 ha s been our best yea r since we started in bus iness in 1950 . To show we appreciale
your busine" . In 1980 we're go ing a ll out to make you one of our satisfied f'ustomcrs. Wt

BUNYON POSTER
BEDROOM SUITE

IS IS FROM THE KEEPSAH GROUPIN
THIS IS SOMETHING OUT OF THE
ORDINARY, YOU MUST SEE IT.
Retail Value
You Buy It $}4gr.:oo
1
OF 1950'' Now For Only
J
always a ppreciat e our many customers coming by to say he llo . Even if you don't need
anything. th1s is to w1sh a ll of our Friends a Happy and Very Prosperous New Year in 1980.
HF. RMA 'I I.BATF.

�a-The OaiJy Sentlnel, Mldaleport-Paneroy, 0 ., Monday , Dec. 31, 1979

1979 Meigs news highlights
JANUARY

Jan. I - Two Middlep&lt;rt men were
being held in local jails, while
awaiting extradition to West
Virginia for charges d the breaking
and entering d a Mason, W. Va .
heme.
Jan. 2 - Dr. Harold Brown was
reelected pre&amp;dent d the P&lt;meroy
Village Cotmcil, and conunittees
were IIUiled d~ the first meeting
lithe year.
Jan. 3- Tbe Ohio River, which had
flooded many area businesses in
December, crested 3.5 feet below
flood stage .
Jan. t- The Meigs Local Board of
Education adopted a budget f&lt;r the
1979 calendar year. Hennan London
w~ elected president of SyraCWie
Village Council
Jan. 5 - The area w~ blanketed
by ito first snowfall ol the winter d
79.
Jan . 6 - More snow fell, and road
cooditiollll were made hazardous by
a layer of ice. Sixteen accident!
were investigated by the GalliaMeig~~ Highway Patrol
Jan. 8- No quorwn was presmt at
the regular meeting rt the Middleport Village CoWICil, so the
meeting was cancelled
Jan. 9 -An e:rtEII!ive lnvestigatioo
of the Meig~~ County Welfare Department was completed by the Mell!s
County Grand JW)', and finding~
were reviewed by the board of County Commissioners.
Jan. 10 - A committee headed by
E . A. Wingett began the proce98 of
armexing some 200 to 300 acres of
land to Racine Village.
Jan. 11 - The Meigs CoWtty
Budget C&lt;mlllission certified a
budget for the county department rt
health.
Jan. 13- Middleport Village Council toe* initial steps to raise village
employes' pay.
Jan. 15- Pomeroy VRiage Council
approved the annual appropruiatiollll measure, an increase
r1 ts,OOO over 1978.
Jan. 16- Larry Powell, Pomeroy
businessman, was named to the
Mei8s Local School District Board of
Education, fi~ a vacancy created
by the resignatioo d Wendell
Hoover.
Jan. 17 --Middleport Village Council gave its final approval Ill its appropriatiOIIIl rl!liOiution f&lt;r 1979.
Jan. 18 - One man was kJJied,
an&lt;ther injured, as the result rt a
gas expl011ion on Succesa Rd., In
Olive Township.
Jan. 19 - Dr. Raymond Boice,
prominent Pomeroy physician, died
at Veterans Mem&lt;rial Hospital,

,___

Jan . 24 - Blizzan:l-like conditions
existed across the county, as officers
of Meigs County , along w11ll those of
Vinton , pursued a s uspect !or tile armed robbery of the Wilkesville
Carry out . After a 56-mile chas&lt;&gt;, the
liUSpect was finally apprehended
near Tuppers Plains.
Jan. ~ - Two special service
awan:ls were presented, and 13
young athletes were tnducted into
the Meigs High School Hall of Fame
in ceremon1es held at Morrison
GymnaSium.
Jan. 26 - Heavy damages resulted
when a car rammed lllroogh a
Syracuse home . Damage amounted
to about $4,000.

Jan . 't7 - A fire caused e&gt;rtensJVe
d!lmage to W1Uunson Sales and S•·rVlCC Store. Middleport.
Jan. 28 - Rex Shenefield was
reelected president of the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation Dlstncl
Jan. 29 - The Meigs Jaycees
celebrated their ftrst annual Charter
Night w1th a banquet held a t the
Meigs Inn.
Jan . :ll - The Me1gs County Com·
missioners approved a budget of
$2,2~. 7fil for 1979. a new record
amount
Jan. 31 - The Meigs Counly Commissioners announced they were
seeking applicants for the job of
Meig~~ Coonty Welfare Director.

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Dec. 31, 1979

[ Siinderella class meets
Combt ned meetmg of the
Slin~rella 01et Classes was held
Thursday night at Mason "'th
recognition for weight loos going to
DebiJe Murvhy and Peggy Lewis,
the two having lost the most weight
Debb•e Clonch was also recognized
for having a substantial weight loss .
The combined meeting was held
because rt otiler holiday activities.
At the classes the week earlier,
Sharon Ashley a nrl Zelia Riley were
tl1e biggest we;ght losers in the morning class at Mason; IA!rlene
Gagnon and Virginia Johll'lon in the
!'Vcrung class at Masoo; and
Marilyn Stodola and Peggy Lewis in

the Middleport class.
Irlonnation on the clas.'les may be
obtained from JoAnn Newsome, in s tructor. !112-3382.

Sta tistio ln a study published by
the
International
Labor
Organization indicates that today
there are at least 52 milllon worlters
under the age of 15. Of these, more
than 50 mil lim are in the developing
countries, especially In Asia.

..

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BLADE CUT

29

OONNELli'S PillA
1nd S1reet

Some l,IXMJ years ago, Cahokia
was the largest city in what is now
the United States. The Indian settlement - called Cahokia by archeologists - bad a population cl
about 30,1XMJ and was located in what
is now southern Illinois, according to
National Geographic.

Lb .
US 0 A CHOICE ARM OR

99'Hl67

ENGLISH CUT ROAST ......... '" s 169

Will be Open
Monday , Dec. 31
Tuesday, Jan . 1

BEEF SHORT RIBS ................

SLICED PAN READY

BEEF LIVER .............................. ,. s1

Le1 us help you bring in 1he New
Year .
Thank you tor leHing us ser'Ve

BONELESS CHUCK ROAST

F IS

you in 1979 .

SEMI BONELESS PORTIONS

·~·:· 79~

HAMS..............................l!l•.. 99 e

ORO

I

3 - LBS . OR MORE

;I

CARDINAL EXTRA FANCY

S

BACO

BOLOGNA ••••••••L~;.
HOMEMADE BULK

lb

s 1"

SLICED

:~~AGE ••••••••• ~~-.~ 1°

9

USDA CHOICE

BEEF

:~:AK.............. ~~~~2

49

$

79

CENTER CUT

=L~C~S..............L~~ .~ 1

99

Lb.

VAUGHAN'S

LESSER AMOUNTS .. Lb

5

159

Middleport , Ohio

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN

KRAFT

BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

lp

Sale Dates
January

"-5. 1980

TOMATO SAUCE .......................~.~ - ~~.3/$1 00

PEACHES ..................................... ~. . ~.~· 59c
PET
EVAPORATED MILK .............:~.t.~.~-~~ 2119'
FRESHLI KE VACUM PACKED

IFROZEN FOODS I

EOETABLES

BANQUET

director.
Jan. 23 - Tbe Citizens National
Bank, Middleport, was acquired by

TUAKEV .SAliSBURY SHAK
BEEf &amp; NOODLES BEEF STEW .
CHICKEN &amp; NOODLES OR
C HICKEN &amp; DU MP LINGS

the Central Trust Co~ny, N.A.,
Cincinnati, the Anchor Bank of Central Bancorporation.

Middleport
Personal Notes

ER...

ROMAN

.. .

MONARCH

GREEN LIMA BEANS ............. ~~..~~- 2/89c

e14-oz. CRINKLE SLICED CARROTS
e16-oz. VEG-ALL

;~;-~~· ;;~~~~=~~;:nB::~s _$~

~

_.,#

• 14 ~'2 -oz. Sweet Peas

"f

GLAD
Reg . $2.59 30
$189
GARBAGE BAGS ••••••••••••••••••••••
GLAD
Reg . S2 .59 20 Cl. $189
TRASH BAGS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Ct.

VIVA

FOLGER$

COFFEE............·......... ~~:.~~..! 2
I ROYAL CROWN

PUFFS FACIAL

TISSUE
BIRDS-EYE

Cans

~

• 14 v• . oz. C,...m 8..,._ Com

• 12-o~. Whole K-.... Corn

BLEACH. ....................... !::~~~- 59e

Lb .
Pkg.

Jo McKinney , home from Rio
Grande College, is spending the
holidays with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Burdell McKimey. Also joining
the family for the Christmas hoi ida y
was Ernest McKinney r1 Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Klapl&lt;owsld
and children, Klistin and Curt, of
Claysville, Pa., were Friday guests
r1 Mrs. Bernice Grueser. Mrs.
Klapkowski is Mrs . Grueser's
gran!tlaughter.

32 -oz .

MONARCH

MO,NARCH
9

T

SALAD
DRESSING
LIMIT 1

Jar

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

Jan. %1 - The Melg~~ Jayeff! announced the celebratic_l of their 27th
anniversary as a clvic organization.
Jan. 22 -The Meigs County Planning C&lt;mmission elected Thereon
Johnaoo president, and C. E .
Blake!lee was renamed executive

8 OZ. PKG.

COOL WHIP

1

176 CT . PAINTS
200 CT . WHITE OR ASSORTED

49~

TISSUE
[FRESH FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES

The family of Mrs. Opal Harris

met Christmas Day at her h&lt;me for

ORANGE

JUICE

$1 09

PLUS DEPOSIT

COLORS

FFRESH

POTATOES

APPLES
PECK BAG $}19

Io~~sg~

12 LBS. AVG .

ct.
Pkg.

PRINTS OR

U. S. NO. 1 OHIO

RED DELICIOUS
GARVIN'S

COLA

16-oz.

Bottles

79

KLEENEX BOUTIQUE

Family m eets jor dinner

100 CT. RED DELICIOUS

ORANGES or
GRAPEFRUIT

APPLES

s LB. sg~

&amp;·oRsg~

KEEBLER

ZEST ASALTINES
'~:

64 oz.
CARlON

l,,.,,,

&lt;&gt;" • ''"'" toupr&gt;n
.,,. rn ui&gt;O~ ~' IIMff'

BALLARD SWEET OR BUTTERMILK
~..

BISCUITS ........6 :~~:. 5 1 °0

:.,.::t.&lt;M·

,&lt;fJ',P1

16 -oz.

BLUE BONNET

Early American colonists had an
easy way ol making change. If they
needed a quarter, they simply brc*e
two bits olf a dollar coin, which will
made of soft sUver. For 50 cent!,
four blta were brc*en rtf.

Lb

s 189

LEAN FRESH
I

99¢

s 119

BITE SIZE

BONELESS BEEF STEW ......

SUPERIOR REDSKIN

lb

USDA C HOICE

19

SUPERIORS All MEAT

___

a Olristmas dinner.
Atlending v. ere Mr. and Mrs.
Harton Webb and CArrie Webb,
Mamfleld; Mr. and Mrs. SoMy Harrill' Thnmy and Cindy. Mike Harris,
Lori Young, Mr. and Mrs. Herman
Grossnickle and Patty, Mar~
Grossnickle and Kaleen Milhooe,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grossnickle
and Chrissy, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Harris and so01, Larry Jr. and
Keith, local
Others calling at the Harris h&lt;me
during the holidays were Mr. and
Mrs. Jobn Hamiltoo, Johnnie and
Nita, Ma01fiekl; Charles Hamil too
and David Hamilton, M8119field;
Charles Barr, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs .
Jallli!S Caster, Springfield; Bonnie
Barringer and Amanda, Da
Osborne, Marlene Putman, and Mr .
and Mrs. Dale Barr.

jMEAT DEPT. VALUESJ

Middleport

MARGARINE ........ '.~:.~~~... 59'

Warnr ng The S•11geon Ge neral Ha s De1errnmed
That Crgare11e Srnoktng Is Dangerous to Your Health

GRADE A LARGE
10 mg."!ar". 0.9 mg. mcotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.

EGGS.........~z:. 69e

Can

~,

..

MONARCH

SHORTE~!NCA~ $}79

NESTLES

QUIK

2

Lb .

Can

TENDERLEAF BAGS

TEA

99
100 CT. $}

Eo., .... , !&gt; to
Good u C1rdon11
Aofll lll ul Slt)fl'

57(

�H- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monrtay, Dec 31 , 1979

9- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport .Pomeroy , 0 .. Mooday . flee 31 1979

-.•

• .

...•

,

~\\0 ~\\.\. \1
st \M \9S0

WHo WILL IT
BE IN 1980

RULES:
•Winning baby must be born to parents who aiJ! legal residents
of Meigs County.
•All such babies are eligible.
•&amp;act time of birth must be specified in written statement by
attending physician.

----

listed on this page and facing page are gifts offered by local merchants that

·A~plication must be filed in this office by Jan.

of a tie, award will be distributed at discretion of contest

go to the first baby

committee.
•Prizes must be claimed by Jan. 31, 1980.

born of Meigs County parents. Parents of children born after Midnight Dec. 31, 1979 are asked to
send their name, address and doctor's report to The

THE NEW YEAR'S
FIRST NEW BABY

As1ooo
GIFT
CERTIFICATE
FOR
1980's
FIRST ARRIVAl

WITH A

'10.00
SAVINGS
ACCOUNT
FROM THE

CENTRAl TRUST CO.

OF THE
FIRST BABY
JHf

ONE

CHAMPAGNE

A

YOUR

We Will Be
Closed On

ss.oo
GIFT
CERTIFICATE
From ...
THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

LOU'S
ASHLAND SERVICE
279 W. MAIN

POll PARROT BABY SHOES

SECOND ST.

EROY OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

WIU PRESENT
THE FIRST
"MISS" OR "MR."
OF 1980 WITH A

HARTLEY
SHOES
TO THE
MOTHER OF
/~'\
1980'S ,
~~
FIRST BABY \

GIFT CERTIFICATE
GOOD FOR
BABY
ITEMS
IN OUR

FUZZIE BEAR

MOORE'S

POMEROY

$5.00

,r:· £'-~--~

~\\~

·&lt;'f-~

s3.00
GIFT
CERTIFICATE

THE
SEWING
CENTER

STORE

KROGER$

OUR GIFT TO THE
FIRST
1980
BABY
Will BE A

FROM:

POMEROY 0.

CASE OF KROGER
CANNED MILK

POMEROY OHIO

Fisher-Price ~.

Open on Wed.

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST ARRIVAL OF
1980

STORE

\

THE MEIGS INN

VILlAGE PHARMACY
EPORT, OHIO

MIDDLE

POMEROY, OHIO

OUR GIFT TO
OF THE FIRST
BABY

~

OUR GIFT TO THE
FIRST BABY

MARGUERITE SHOES
BEnY OHLINGER

102 E. MAirt

POMEROY OHIO

TO THE PARENTS
OF 1980'S Fl RST BABY

A
'10.00
SAVINGS
ACCOUNT
A GIFT OF THE-

RACINE HOME
NATIONAL BANK

FOR FABRIC FROM

THE FABRIC SHOP

Our Gift To
Meigs County's

OF 1980

1980 Arrival

Craw's Family Restaurant

3 CASES
OF
BEECH NUT
BABY FOOD

A 3-Piece
FEEDER SET

OUR GIFT TO THE
FIRST BABY

OUR GIFT TO THE
FIRST BABY OF

1~0

•S.OO

~

~
'

.~
.~

-.~
~

~

ers

WAID CROSS &amp; SONS

GIFT
FICATE

BABY
PLANTER

heritage house

Aai~,_, ~LO"IST

352 E. MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO 45769

OF SHOES

· L~~_:~~~-~~~~~~~~~n~~:m:•ro~v1r-~M'imrm~H~Io--tu~~Ph~on~e~61m;F;~r1
RACINE. OHIO

~

:

•

~

OUR GIFT ro THE FAMILY

•
:

OF 1980'S
FIRST BABY

:

2 ROYAL CROWN

~

•

;:
;
:

TOBOGGANS
AND
FREE CASES OF

2

.~

ROYAL CROWN

-~

ROYAL CRCMN BOIIUNG

·-

OUR GIFT

TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
0'S
8
THE

VAUGHAN'S CAROl NAL
~- L-~M:Io:o;;LE:Po:.:RT~.O~HI;.O~~-+~~~M~IDO~lEP=OR:T.:-OHiiii.IO-~
~
FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
MEI~S COUNTY'S
"
~
FIRST
FIRST BABY
~
LlnLE
OF 1980
11
::
MR."

A BABY
PLANTER

eroy Flower Shop

3 BOXES OF NEWBORN
PAMPERS

FOR lliE FIRST

Will RECEIVE
A
PACIOOE OF

CURITY
DIAPERS
STim.ER'S STORES INC.
POMEROY, OHIO

WE'RE LOOKING AHEAD
1980'S
FOR
FIRST BABY
Willi OUR GIFT

1980
BABY

TWO EVEN FLO
NURSER SETS FROM

()(),

or
11
M ISS"

LADIES'
SLIPPERS

A FREE MEAL

GIFT
CERTIFICATE

~

1 PAIR

THE FUTURE
1980
FIRST BA~Y

our gift will be

~ 1--.!M~IDO~lE!:!!PO!!;RT,!OH:IQ---1--~.;;~ER~OY~,o~HI~O--+-=P~OM~E~RO~Y-~OH~IO~--t-=~~~;-;

~

THE FIRST BABY OF THE
NEW YEAR WILL RECEIVE
A PAIR OF

OUR GIFT OF

~

A:;;l

POMEROY, OHIO

1980'S FIRST BABY
WILL RECEIVE

OUR GIFT TO THE
FAMILY OF
1980'S FIRST
BABY
10
GALLONS
OF GASOLINE

~.. CASE .OF
~ GERBER FOODS
~- FOR BABY
~ MARK V SUPER MKT.

:

OUR GIFT TO THE
PARENTS
OF 1980'S
{~~
FOR THE 1980
FIRST
fiRST ARRIVAL
.
ARRIVAL
~ "-'/ . :. FROM THE FOLKS
-- ~ I
- ~A FREE MEAL
AT
FOR THE
POWELL'S LUCKY COUPLE AT.
@; SUPER VALU

POMEROY, 0.

UUIDMARK ..

~~
- ------~~~~~
~ TO HELP THE FIRST BABY
THE MOTHER
:
OF
~ GROW BIG
,s
1980
~ AND STRONG
FIRST BABY
~ OUR GIfT
WITH RECEIVE A
:
IS A
:
•3.00

A '1000
GIFT CERTIFICATE

992-2181

POMEROY, O.

WESTERN AUTO
MtoDLEPORT

OHIO

540 E. MAIN

POMEROY WINE STORE

FROM

RACINE FOOD MARKET

BABY BUNTING

OF

CRIB TOY

From •••

A

aonu

A

PAMPERS

1980

R'M

OUR GIFT TO THE FIRST
BABY OF
1980
(I

OUR GIFT TO THE
FIRST ARRIVAL
OF

TO THE LUCKY
COUPLE
OF

3 BOXES OF
NEWBORN

ElBERFElDS IN POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Sentinel not later than Jan. 11, 1980.

FOR THE FIRST
BABY OF 1980

OUR GIFT:

Will BE GIFTED

Dai~

11, 1980. In case

A

'10 00
SAVINGS ACCOUNT

Kenneth MtCullovgh, R. Ph .
Chorl.. Riffle. R. Ph
Ronald Hannmg , R Ph .

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY RUTLAND TUPPERS PLAINS

THE MOTHER
OF THE 1980'S
FIRST BABY

OUR GIFT TO .,liE
FIRST 1980
ARRIVAl

WILL RECEIVE

e\

1 CASE OF
HEINZ STRAINED
BABY FOOD

lWIN CITIES
GATEWAY SUPERMARKET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
... -...

~

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

_

. . .. . .. ...

-...

,

......

-- ··-- -- -

'
'

�· -The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.P&lt;meroy, 0 ., Monday, Dec. 31 1979

•

Your Best Buys Are }'ou11d

11 - TheDailySertinel. Middlepori.P&lt;rneroy , 0, Mmday . O.t·. 31 1979
DICKTRACY
'

the Sentinel Classifieds

Ill

'

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sea led
bids will
be
received by the Boa rd of
Cou nt y Commissi.on er s of
M eigs Coun ty at 1fs o ffi ce
in
the
Cou rthou se
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 , until
12 o'c lock noon , on Jan 3.
1980 and at that t ime
opened as provided b( taw .
for the purchase o fur
niturt&gt; and l"Quipment to be
installed in the Meigs Coun

WANT AD
CHARGES
I~

I day

2days
3 days
6day.

ty Mult i Health F ac il i ty in

accord ance w1th the equip
ment I1st and specifications
dated November . 1979, no w
on file in the of 11ce of the
Board oi County Com
misSIOners , Meigs County ,
and at th e off ice of Wr i ght
Kri tschgau and Associates .
In c,

WOI"tia ...- Under
Cull
Cl&gt;arge
1.00

1.2S

1.~

J.liiO

UJ(I

1.2:5
3.7$

3.00

Each W'Ofd over lhf minimum
U wonil 1.1 4 cent.s per word per
da)' . Ads runJUng othe~theQ. COO·
5eeutlve days wW bt charied at
Lhe I day rate

J600 Trabue Road, Colum
bus , Onio 43204 . Cop ies ot
sa1d speci fi ca tion s may be
obt ained from the offi ce of
the Architect, the Galli a
Jack.son M e i gs Community
Menta I H e a I th Cen ter , In c ,
412 Vin ton Pike, Ga ll ipo l is ,
OhiO .t56J 1, or 1he Me igs
Coun t y CommiSSiOner-s Of
fi ce
The Owner reo:.erves the
r igh f to relec t any or all
b1ds 1n who e or 1n parT , to
wa1ve any 1nformalifies 1n
the b1ds rece i ved . or ac cepf
any b1d w h~eh it deems
f avora ble All b1do:. must be
made on Form ol Proposal
1ncluded
w1th
specifica ti ons
B1d advf'rhsemPnts will
be run on lt•e da t e~ of De c
10, 17 , )4 ana : 1, 1979, oy or
dN ot the Board ot Coun t y
Comm i SSIOners, M e1QS.
51&lt;'lle ol0hto
Mary Hob&lt;&gt;tetter ,
Clerk
ApprovE&gt;d as ro !=arm
F reder1c k w Crow Ill
Prose cut1ng Attorney

vance.
and Yard

We! art &amp;l~t'd ooly w1th
cash 1111\h orde r. 25 cent Char'Sf'

lor ads carryi~ Box. Number In
Care ol The Senttnel
Till! PubiW.r f"f!M!n'N the
nght t.o il!d.lt or ~Ject any Mia
deemed objectiona l.
The
Publiaher ..W not bt ruponalbie
for mort than one Ln&lt;""orrect in~ rti on

Phone91n-21!16

( 11) 14 , 31 , 71c

NOTICE

ASTRO-GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

F=onow your highest lde~tla thta
coming year and you 'll be
rewarded witt1 dividends . Don"t
be misled in!o tf"lmktng people In
high places have all the answera
CAPRICORN {OK. 22·Jan. 11)
You 'll be Judged today by the
company you lo:eep, so tl you
care aoout your image be
e~~: t r emely selecttve ol you• pals
Ftnd out fTIOfe of what 11es aneael
lor you m !he year l o11ow1ng your
blrtt1day by senellng tor your
copy ol Astro-Greph letter Mall
$1 for each to A.!tro-Graotl . Bol
•ae. Aaato Cny Station. N v
100 19 Be su re to specify b•rth
date
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab.

11)

Your effectiveness will sutter II
you try to ca tch up m one day on
a tot ol work you 've left undone
Pace yourSBII You "II accomplish
more
PISCES

(Feb.

20-March

20)

Trying to spare someone 's leellngs because you lhtnk tt cou ld
hurt them caul(] oackl1re They
m1ght accuse you ot holdmg
back the facts . so tell1t 11ke 1t 1s
ARIES (March 21 -April ti) lt"s

unlike you 10 bEl 1nlluenced by
the doubts or Oplh10ns ol other:; ,
so don't b~ 1 n today You must
do things your wa y rl you !Ire to
succeed
TAURUS (April :N-Mar 20) You
cou ld still be 1n a festive mood.
and find It dilficult I : accompliSh

your chores today At least try to
get the Important things done
QEIIINI (Mar 21 -J urte 20) Btl
sensible about how you spend
this W88k 's budg9t . or there's a
gOOd chance you ·ll have to contend with some dellclts when the
bills are due
CANCER

(June

21 ~ Jul~

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x66 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x6.3 with ell:
pandO, 2be&lt;t'
1910 New froon l2 x«l Jbdr .
197 3 Skyline
11x55 1

For Sale

bedroom

BIG AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm . Hartfo rd Community
Cenh!r , Hartlord, WI/ , 4
mfles above Pome roy ·
AAason Bridge .

FIREWOOD
FOR
Now tak ing orders
deliver , 742 ·2056 .

Giveaway
PUPS. 3 mmths old . 992
555 7 a fter 2: 30p .m .

B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SALES , P T. PLEASANT .
wv . 304·615 44 24 .

PART co ll ie pups. 742 ·1714 .
FOX Terrier type, around
lbs.,
brown ish
tan,
female , Humane S.oc iety,
992 ·6260.

lh.- day before puDhClll!on

Sunday
• p &gt;I
t'n dlly ~moon

Card of Thanks
WE wish to thank everyone
who has been so nice to us
sin ce Karl became ill . We
wish to thank those who
took Opal ou t to eat, the
ones who made lhe tr ips
bac k and for t h, to and from
the hosp i ta l. to Rev . and
Mrs. Harvey Koch who
stOOd by us through it al l, to
those who sent flowers ,
cards, f or the visits and
telephone c alls but most of
all for the many prayers
t hat went up for us . We al so
wish to thank our neighbors
"'nd Christian friends who
brought food , flowers and
gifts d uring the Christmas
season . We w iH never
forge t all these kidnesses .
May God bless each one of
you Ka rl and Opal t&lt;loes .

Notices
MEI GS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . 99? ·
6260. Pets available for
act&gt;ption and i nformation

Hrvle• .

A~nf .

CAS H IN ON every con
servalion, full or part tim e .
Ti melv revoluficrtary new
hea ting product nCM' beirg
i ntroduced . Grwnd floor
op~rtunify
to devel~
sales for S300 retail unit .
Pcrneroy and surrounding
area available. lnwostment
&lt;i noro seccr-ed by n
ventory. Send name. ad
dr-ess and home ro . toM~ o
Thermal Art Sales. co B&lt;&gt;&lt;
729· M , T ~ Daily Sentinel,
Pomeroy, OH 4Sllll.

wanted to Buy

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
i ncloor ·outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dctlermans . 61H46· 7795

CHIP WOOD. Poles m•• di amete r 10'' crt I argest
end . $12 p -er t&lt;r1 . Bundled
stab . SlOper ton. Delivered
to Oh io Pallet Co ., Rt. l
Pomeroy m 1689 .

ONE
REDTICK
coon
hound , 2 trained beagles , l
white English bulldOQ pup pies . 3 rabbits, 2 does, 1
buck . 742 2520.

OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds. iron
beds, desks , etc ., cofll)lete
hooseholds . Wrlle M . D
Millet" R t . 4 , Pomeroy or
ca II 9'12 7760 .
WANTED : SAW logs
Payment upon delivery to
our vard, 7: 30 to 3 : l3 week
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow , OH . 678
:19110 .
ANTIQUES .
FUR
NITURE , glass,
&lt;tllna .
anything . See or ca ll R utll
Gosney, anti""'e5. 26 N .

lnv.stfgetlve

2ncr, Mleldl•port, OH . 992 ·

HUMANE Society pel5 tor
adopTion, 9'12 6260 . Healthy .
sho~. and wormed . Border
co ll ie types, Irish setter,
English 5.e-tter with pup ·
pies, shepherd type . Put a
cold nose in vour life . Kit ·
tens, k:iftens, kitt ens , all
shapes, all sizes.

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route JJ , nortn of
Pomeroy . Large lots .Call
991 ·7479 .
3 AND. RM furnished ap ·
ts. Phone P92 ·SCJ.c.

ANTIQUE POCKET w•t
ches . Will ing to pay rop
dOllar . Call 1 ·592 ·1973
evenings .

GUN
SHOOT
Ra ci ne
Volunteer
Fire
Dept .
Every St~turday . 6 ·10 p .m .
At lheir buildingin Bashan .
Fact cry d"loke guns only .

OLD COINS, pocket wal ·
ches, class rings , wedd i ng
bands, d iamonds . Gold or
silver. Call J . A . Wamsley ,
7.t2 ZJ31. Treasure Che5 t
Coin Shop, Athens , OH 592 ·

641l
MARTIN ' S APPRAISAL
Stop, think , are you abOuT
to lose money? Over 25
years experierce in buy ing
and selling Will appraise
new, used or ant ique f u r
nitvre . One p iece or com ·
p l ete household . Gold ,
silver and other ~d coins.
c hint'l , g lass, old loys, dOl lS,
iron banks, tools , antiQue
c lothing , razo~ .
pocket
knives and other old i tems.
Ca ll 992-6370 .

PA Y hiohest pr i ces
PCJ.Ssib le for gold and sil ver
coirtS , ri ngs , jewelry , etc
Ccrlf act Ed Bu rkett Barber
Shop , M id d leporl
1

A TT ENTION ·
( IM
PORT ANT TO YOU) Wi II
pay cash or ce rtifi e d check
fo r an tiques a nd co llec
tibles or enfire estates.
Nothing too Iaroe Also ,
guns, pocket wa1 c h€'S and
coin col lectio ns. Ca l l 61•
167 J 16 7o r 557 J• ll

WILL PAY TOP dol l ar tor
gold and
silver coins.
silverware . other gol d and
si tver ite m s, jewel r; , old
gl ass frames and antiq ue
furniture . Will bu y one
p iece or house ho ld Call
992 6J70.

BUYIN G
US
SILVE R
COI N S DA TED 191&gt;&lt; OR
EARLI E R
( ANY
AMOUNT ) DON "T LOSE
MONE Y, S IMP LY PICK
UP THE P HO N E AND
DIAL
6149925 1 13 ,
BROWN 'S

SILVER DOLLARS . Sl3
AND
UP .
S IL VER
C HAN GE.
$11
PER
DOLLAR , GOLD CO INS
A ND ITEM S AT DAILY
MARKET PRI CES CO N
TACT
ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP . MID ·
DLEPORT, OH. OR CALL
992 3476

---------- ·-Lost and Found
WDULD THE P ERSON
who found the large sum of
m oney in Rutland Dec . 15,
pleasecal17 47 7116.

Auto Sales

L O ST 2 female beagles,
Rac ine Vi llage area
3
yea~ o ld . black and white .
2 year Old b lac k and tan
Please cal l 9•9 7155

1978 OLDS 98 Regency 2
door hardt op, full power
and options .
JJ 81 or 992
7435.

m

~~~~---~

1978 FORD 1! 1 ton pi ckup.
F 150 Super Cab . Metallic
brO'Nn . 7 ft . bed w i th too .
Auto trans ., 9QOdcondit i CJ'I
$.1500 . 949 20.2

LAFF - A- DAY

22)

Grsnt8CI that your Ideas ere
good , you must still be willing to

yield a bll when It comes to
1 1969 FORD MUS TANG . 351
doing th ings. or you re gomg to
' W, automati c. very gOOd
run Into sllff opposition
LEO (Julr 23-Aug . 22) Your
condition, magsand lotsof
determination could get out of
extras . Caii99? ·18J3 affer 4
hand today, causing you 10 see
only the negative aspects BalST OCK
CAR
H o we
ance th1ngs out by lrying to see
the bright slda.
chassis , 350 • bO It ma i n
VIRGO (AU~~ . 23-llept. 22) When
Chevy , Franklin qui c k
dealing with friends today, take
c hange rear end, motor
care not to appear too selfish or
bu U to ma)( imum , all ne-w
sell-serving. Resentment could
·-... parts . New and e)( tra t i r es.
develop You 'd be denied coop- " Margaret . I feel daring this Extra part!. and r i ms
eration.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You' ll morning . A lthough it 's Tuesday . $5,000. Can be seen on a
.
d
Saturday . Twp Rd . 27 .
lose all control over the siluatlon I . m gomg
1o wear my Thurs ay Del&lt; fer , at Slater ' s residen
If you are set upon doing things
ce .
solo today. You 'll undertake too necktie .·'
many changes. Listen to others.
SCOIIPIO (Oct. 24-NOY. 22) Stay
1975 Monte Carl o. excellen t
calm ~ ~ 1 defend yourself lnteutconditicn , 5.3250 991 2377 Of'
gently h (OU • •ar or something
The University of
9'f/ 6114.
un!fue ·101 '•1.11 has said about
rou. Overreacllng could make Michigan food stores han·
things worse.
die s&lt;me 144,000 loaves ci
1974 J EEP Cherokee. poS/
BAGIT'UAIUI (No•. 23-Doc, 21)
tra ck , a ll new radi a I winter
bread,
3«,000
pounds
ci
ln\18atlgate any entangling situaComple t e l y
ground beef and 60,000 tire s .
tion that looks a lltue questtonoverhauled and c hecked
abte. Then, It need be, find the
pounds of ccifee in a single
out for winter A 1 ccrt
way to unwlnct your181f.
yea r.
dition . 614 ·98S· ..c109
I~PAPf~ EHTE APAISE AS!,...)

I

ROOM and
bo•n:l
tor
wo..-king men . By the week
or month . Rell!lsonable .
Single room or a duble . 992 ·
6022 .
FOUR ROOMS ond bath .
Depj C6 i t r-pqu ired . 992 &lt;))90 .
-~- -~-

--

-

- -

HOTPOINT
GENERAL
:ELECTRIC

TWO BEDROOM t\J r nished
lrailer i n country setting
off Rt . 7, 6 miles from
Pome roy . Freezer and ex ·
tra
storage, SllS
plus
uti lities and lawn care .
Deposi t
requ i r ed .
Available after J an . 1. 985·
39 49
--~-

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

POMEROY - unfur nish ·
e-el . two bedroom house,
$100 per
month , p l us
uti l ities.. $100 security Ca l l
992 7511 after 5 p. m .

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

MIDDLEPORT
o ne
b€-droom apt ., sto'Ve and
refrigerator ,
newly
remOdele-d , will furnish , if
necessar y . $100 per mon t h
plus utiliti€'5 , S200 security .
Call 992 ·7511 after 4 p . m .

ONE

For Sale

PLATE g lass w i ndow
5"•8" 1o tighest oter . 9'12

1786.
REMINGTON 1100 12 g•.
with 2 bbls .• oeers layer,
ful l choke. Reminvtoo 870
20 ga . f1 otg unw ith 2 bbts . ,
deerslay er , full choke-.
Si ng le shot •10 Shotgun full
c hoke . 22 Magnum Ma rli n
c l ip r ill e . 22 long and !llort
rifle . 40 lb . pull bON with at
ta chablequlvt"r . G1..11 r~k .
h o lds 5 guns, has d raw er
992 519 5.
EIG HT 10 w eek old pig s,
sn . ~85-3565. John Bailey ,
Fldt'Nlods Rd ., I mile fr om
Five Poi1 1s

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
Sales Year e nd S~cia b .
Gravely Tra cto~ : ~ - .!MO 8
hp . elec s tar-t 'Mth 30 "
mower . list $2016. 75. sa4e
$161J .«l . 1-5"&lt;10 10 hp elec .
start wi1h 4) " fllO!Ntlr , list
5 2«7 75, S&lt;~le $1958 .2 0.
Kubota Tractcrs ( Dies el) .
1· Lt85 T rea d 7 wd, list
$&lt;4)5.00. s•le $3906.00 1·
Bl6100 Farm Tread 4 wd ..
list 5«1500. s•le $3532 .00.
1 B5100 Turf Tread 4 wd,
list $4165.00. s•le SJ332 00 .
Gravely Tract:lr Sa l es and
Service , 20• Coodor St ,
Pomeroy . OH W2 2975

. . ..

l1!f.Bl.owN

I --"'~~lft~ON
el nsuJation
• Stortn Doors
• Storm Wll'ldows
• Replacement
dows

Win -

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

POMEROY
LANDMARK
,.

Roger Hysell
Garage

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.
. . Phone"2-2111

HOU SE COAL. lump or
stoker , will deltver. 7~
2183.
APPLES - ROME be•uty
•pples at $.1 per bu. Besttor
apple butter . c•l6t!9 ·3785.
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

689.
GLASS FIREPLACE doors
w ith
bla ck
finish
~us
kJbular orate with bl ower,
like ~w . Asking SIOO. C all
W27866 .
NICE PIGS lor s•le Wor
m ed , cas trated . 949·2857 .
BRU SH and ~edcutter,
gasol i ne POY.'ered . Caloric
cer-amic top range and
micrONave
oven com ·
bination . Sears Lady Ken ·
m&lt;Te wast-er , electronic
c mtrots
Frigida i re gas
cto tne s dryer . K ltc hen · ·A id
dishwasher. 992 ·381 a 99'1. ·
7435

GENERAL MOTORS AM·
F M stereo 8 ·trac k radio .
Kodak C8rOJSel projector .
Ya•hica

FR ·2

l5mm

with F 1.9 ler'fi , 200
mm telesrope, auto . w in ·
der and case . Yamaha CR
1000
stereo
system .
Panas.onic
Ranger S05
tjack. and white outdoor
TV, 12 volt DC ond 10 voll
AC. W2 ·3381 or 992 ·7435 .
16 in . 10 !4)eed bicyde. WJ. .

3:1!1 o rm 7435 .

WOOD BURN I NG stoves
- fireplace inserts at the
Rivers ide Fireplace, 51 A E.
Main , Pomeroy
Open
Tues. . Fr i., Sat 9· 1. 1·6

Real Estate for Sale

Y

608 E .
MAIN
POMEROY , O .

992 -22S9
NEW LISTING In
come
produ c ing ,
1
apartments,
walk
to
town, a twa '(S rented,
ca ll for detail s
RUTLAND 1 story
fram e &amp; brick. up to 4
Bdrm s . .
'1
ba th s .
firepla ce,
l 1/1
acres
$26,88 100
SYRACUSE - 3 year
old ran c h, J Bdrms .,
equipped kit ., base
men t,
garage, other
fea tures. S«. OOO .OO
CHESTER
Sm•ll
farm , 15 acres , fenci ng
barn, remodeled home,
new ki t .• new bl1th, all
c arpeted , etc. $38.950 00
MIDDLEPORT
I
floor plan h ome . 1
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remode l
lng $16.200 .00 .
POMEROY - B eau t iful
home all fe a ture s, ex
ce ll ent co nd i tion, must
be seen to be ap
prec l•ted $.10,000 .00
BUILDING SITES - in
new subdivision , start at
$2.500 .00
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES
AT 11'11 ~ Inter-est, JO
yrs. to pay, 3% down on
lsi $25.000.00, l% on
balance . VA . No Down
Pay .
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; DoUie Turner
742 ·2474
J ean Trussell '49 -2660
OFFICE PHONE
992 · 2159
COU N T RY HOME with
stocked IX)nd fer swimm i ng
or fi ~hing 9 r o CITl~ bath ,
c arpeted. 3 to 17 aaes
available Lo cated approx .
7 miles from Pomeroy oH
R t . 7 or 33. 44\· XJ 59 after 7.

- ---.

RACINE , D .
949-2741 or
99l -7l14
12 ·18 -pd .

10·19 ·1 mo .

- - -- ----

POMEROY - Duple • un ·
furnished apartment , $150
per mo. plus utilities . $1.50
securi ty Ca tl99'2 ·7511 after
Sp . m .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Heedquerfen
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

TWO BEDROOM tr• iler .
Adults only 99'1 3324.
ONE BEDROOM lurnished
house . Ad ulfs only
992 ·
2:598 .

Let Us
Wrap Your
Pipes for
Cold Weather

down

som~

cneap Rates
Quality Service
call99l -2852
or 992 -7235

--

mite ott Rl. 7 by ·pa ss
on St . Rf. 174 lowarCI
Rutland .
1,..

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
A I so Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 ·5682

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW
LISTING
Beautiful
J bedroom
total b ric k home 10
Ru11and . I'-. oaths , l iv
ing room . din ing r-oom .
modern
kitc hen
and
garage . Full basemen t
Situated on small l ot .
Call for more info .
TUPPERS PLAINS Nice star-ter home . ~
bedrooms , ba1h ,
kif
chen , dining r oom and
full
basement .
$23,000.00 .
MIDDLEPORT - Love
1y s bedroom home w i fh
2 baths , liv ing room.
fami ly room , d i ning
r-oom , utility , modern
kitch en and full base·
ment . Ha s bcen almost
totally
remodeled
within the pa st 2 years .
Located on Sou th 2nd
Avenue .
MIDDLEPORT
Larg e 9 room nom e on
Loc ust Str ee t Se ll price
$25.000.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS Lot with sept1c s ystem
and wate r tap
POMEROY - You mu st
see this extra we l l k ept
nome
3 bedr o oms ,
moder n kit che n, bath
and ut ility Welt worth
S15.500 00
RUTLAND
Lovely •
bedroom hom~ on Ma in
St N ice kt! C h~n . d1n 1ng
room accen ted
w 1th
buller ·s pantr~ Lf't us
show vov th•S hneo homt&gt;
ana .,.ov
mekf' a
rea\Ot'lablt- ott ..r

&lt;,,

HAPPY HOLIDAYS!!
Cheryllem l-'1 , Anoc:
Pttone ,
V elm• H•c•ftUt' , A.. oc . ./

....,J

Phon• I &lt;"I,.. ,

Geor,. S HoiHtetter Jr
Broker ftJ - SJ Jf

SIX RO&lt;:l~V! flwu end bath
in R uttll"'d , OH , on co m e r
of Brya ntRd and Ma i n St .,
out of water . No re asonable
o ffe r refv sed Phone 7.412063.
VE RY NI CE J bed room
tra i ler . 1 com pl ete baths, 5
acres of land . 741·1542 or
74'1.'1.32 •
for
co mplete
de tai Is.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Guaranteed Work
Free Estimates
Alter l P .M . ft2-SS41
12 · 13 ·2 mo . pd

S &amp; G Carpet Cle•n ing .
Steam
c leaned .
Free
es rim ate .
Rea son a bl e
rates . Smt chouar-d
992
6 m or 7 (I Zl48.

Real Estate for Sa 1e
Fl NANCING VA FHA LO
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
I RELAND MORTGAGE,
n E STA TE . ATHENS .
6145'113051 .

O~l'o'f',

WWI"

116 E . Second SlrHt

$1,000.00 DOWN - large
11 room home, ideal for
a family . 11h baths, ni ce
carpeting, panel ed kit.,
baement and 1 car
garage _$17 .500
LOT
77x264
2
bed room home wit h
bath, T . P . water, al l
e lectr ic, on R t. 7 in Tu p ·
pers Pla ins. $1.000.00
DOWN.
NEW LISTING - 1.90
acres nea r Rutland on
hard road . Wa ter tap,
septic lank , electric and
QOOd garden land.
SALEM CENTER
One acre on Rf 114
Three bedrooms, 1 'h
baths, F .A . heat, rural
water- tap ttnd Ohio
Pawer . S2.000.00 DOWN ,
G . l NOTHING
$750.00 DOWN
8
rooms, metal 5to rm
windOW's, bath, nat. gas
FA heat . basement and
I
acre .
$ 10 , 500 .
BARGAIN .
l''l ACRES
N ice
wOOds and nati ve stone,
• room home, bath, ci ry
water, and gas furna ce.
SI . OOO .OO down . E• ·
cellent buv .
$1.750.00 DOWN - A
real 9 room hom e. 1
baths, equipped k i tchen,
formal
d i niOQ room.
baement, furnace , 5
bedrooms and 2 ca r

Housing
Heaa uattets

HOMES FOR SALE
WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS LOW
AS 5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. T' . , I
LIKE NEW
Qu ief cou ntry living ir this tree
bedroom . '1 ba th ranch Over an ac re of ground with
a s.p l if rat! fen ce, garage and workshop F irepla ce,
cen t ral heat and ai r cond S.u,900 00

POMEROY
A bet'l utiful liMie sta r ter nome
or
r eTiremen t coupl e Two bedroom and bath . large
living room
nice kitchen . Full basement
Sl7,500 00
Ml OOLEPORT - 2 bedroom bri c k only 1 block
fr om town , low uti lities . A bargam at s 11 .SOO
RUTLAND
2 homes on Salf!m Sfreet . Take your
cho1ce or buy bOth and rent them lt2 ,000each

Bill Child,, Branch Manager , Home 991·1449
Rodney Oownino, Broker, Home t12 ·l7J1

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NE~ER Mt~D

RECKON VOU MUSTA

MV ltoi! T- PI CK I'-J ". _

IJE&amp;N RAI5fP f Y AN
ANIMAL lR:AifoJH TO
L!"ARN HOW TO TALK

vou·v~

PFt.OVEP
VOU R POI"'T!

TO .A Tt"'ER AND

,IGNAL WHAT

OH,

~O.~IR

..

CL FtUPIA WILL MIND
M~ . EVE-N IF l DO~T

PoiNT OR SAY
ANYTHING!

T'PO•• RI6Hf F

107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

CALL 992 -7544

OHIO VAU£Y
ROOFING
Rooting, gutters, ancl
downspouts.
Fr1e
Estimates . All
work
guaranteed. 20 ye1rs ex perience . Call Alllens,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-4157 or Tom Hoskins
797 ·274S .

127 -lmo.

~ · Hammond v.-aan•
&amp; Famou~ Name Brand

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gift
Bofh New &amp; Usecl

PETE SIMPSON
For

Sales Rep.
Sundins
Hammond Organs
Tyree Blvd . Racine, 0.
h
i
o
Phone 949 -1118 evelngs
after S p .m . Weekenc:fs
after 12 noon .
11 · 19-1 mo .

o·

WILL HAULIImesiiJnean d
gravel . Also. lime hau l llg
and spreading. Leo Mt:W'ris
Truckirg. PtJone7~2 · 2-t55 .

GASOLINE ALLEY
PAINT I NG AND sand
blasti no . Free esttmates
c all941:!686

Joel

You mean

Oh,bo4'

we own
iU

DOZER . END Loader,
brush
hog
Will
do
b•semen IS , pon&lt;!&gt; , brUSh.
timber ,
laro c tearing
Charles Butcher . 7•2 ·29-CJ

He's a bit
unsettled
riqht now'

I'll fix him a
place in the

Happ4 New

Year
to us!

qaraqe'

He had a fire

1n his stable!

SE WIN G
MACH IN E
Reptjirs ,
service ,
all
makes.
9'92 ·2284 .
T he
Fabric
Shop,
Pome-oy
Authorized Si nger- Sales
and Ser~ce . We sharpen
Scls !iOr s .
EXCAVA-T I NG.
dozer ,
loacEr .,d backhoe work :
du~ true~ ard lo-bovs
for hi~ . 'M II haul flll dlrt,
t(¥)
sot I, limestone arl:l
IT• ""I. Call BOb cr R O!ler
Jeffe "·day phone 9'1'1 ·7089,
night phOne 9'11 ·3525 or 992

WINNIE
iCU 6()T

NO -rnA~
JUS,. HIS

,'J~-&lt; AT

)O{J tiN'- TEe:'

mt5 t5 501N6 ro

YOliROWN

8E'!HE~

AMRTMENT.I

Y64RE~l

HE

WHY
~~~N'T

WA'T' OF

LOOK FIT

5r-i0WI N6

TO NORK

H l5 N D IVID-

~TmE

UALI1&gt; I

DUMP.

HE 5\JRE: COULD
ue.E. A COMPLETE.
OVE!&lt;HAUL ON H IB

CXTERIOR 1

OULDN'T HE?

CITY

5Zll.
HOWERY AND MARTIN
E)(cavating,
se p t i c
systems. dozer , bac khoe.
Rt . 143 . Phone I 16 14) &lt;!98
7331 or 742 ·2593
A UTOMOBILE
IN
S URANCE
been
c •n
ce lled?
Los t
your
o~rator ' s license? Phone
992 2143.
.
IN STOCK tor im mediall!'
delivery · various sizes ot
POd kits. Oo·it·yourself or
le t us install for you . 0
Bumgardner Sales , In c
9'12 5724
--~--

-~-

BRADFORD. AucTioneer ,
Complete Service Ph on~
9~ · 2.S7 or- 9.A9 ·2000. raci ne,
Ohio, Cri tf Brad lord .
ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWER S
S weepers ,
toas~rs. ira~ , aU small
appliarce!. . LCWr'n IT1Jwer .
Next to State Highway
Garage on Rrule 7. lll5 ·
3825.
-·
~

-------~-

WALL PAPERING
painting. 7 42· 2128.

and

Television Viewing

~6UIII~ t f'
loy fHOMAS JOSEI'tt
ACROII8
II Cau!IOUI
!Junto
DOWN
t Energy 50urct I MlnneW
t Tomorrow,
film
for Pedro
2 Uving
II Sltelet.al
3 Invited

MONDAY ,OECEMBER )1,1'79
12 30--- Ryan ' s Hope 6, 1); Seorcll lor

I Olemistry
suffii
i New heights
Yesterday's
aid
trife
• Type
U SalamalWier
ot energy
1J Compact
II Throor off
7 Needing to
Z% Elastlcity
the track
,. CoMtel·
be turned on U Dlinols ci ty
B " llud"
%5 Clergyman's
lllion
Oscar winner
residenco
17 Tennla champ
t Malrully
2'7 Bundle
II Apportion
Ill Tepe color
Iitle
!I Buainesa
21 Camper's
II EMuJ
deal

ple&lt;e
11 DweUed
UJar
U Baronel's

ADiwer

It Old
weapon

n Habituate
33 Family
member

31 Florida
county
37 '' - more
Urne!"

101-up
21 Thelma

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A limE
SAVE A LOt
RUBBER BACK
CARPET
'4!!up
Cuh &amp; Carry

..- Mllte
II lfl8h opol
lllll"fe 1

-

!Jtllllian
dty
II! Word with
flat or bo•
U To the
- born
II Wynter

unscr amble theN IQIJr Jumbles.
one 1ene1 to each square to !Qfm
lour ord1nary words

or Al'Minws

• Border oo
Mille a

--t--r--1

[lDI~t---r-,

_l__D !]
'-c.::-.c'-::-.•-=-~.--:..:c..:::.~

alcl&lt;ly

SALE ON ALL
IN STOCI(_·

'9~~duu

I~SIIIIedwlth

.... .---

loogllt

• sa,..,

[ EGGOU ~

rJ

D Hold oot
tl "We - not
amused "

DAILY CRYI'TO(jUOTE - Uere's how to work II :
A X

Pad Fru

GOOD REMNANT
SEUCTION
6'x12' to 12'x 16 '

$3800

andup

·•

v D I. B

A A X R

I

-17-[~J__,

1ft

lD
£.UTTIO ~~~
J ~j

Ia LONGFEI.LO"
One letter 1 imply st&amp;nda for anot her In th11 sampl e A il L'-Ll.---'---~~~~~
used for the three L·,, X for the twn o ·,. l'tc- S m t~ le l ~ tte n .
opoalropheo. lhe length and l orm•IH&gt;n o l the words are oil LODO
~
NE.__l?""&lt;:J
hiolJ Each day thf' C"ode letters are dUt'tren1
.~
.1

I

YUDX

EM

VD

GDE

D

n

U

CRYPTOQUO'l' ES
XQG

ZDSH
Answerhero

CALL 992-2342

BUT

ment .

garage .
WANTED :
LITTLE
FARMS ON THE EDGE
OF
TOWN.
CALL
992 -3325 OR 992 -3876,

L.OOK6i 1.-IICf: VOU Wffl.l, P'OPNEJt ~
' COUR~i THAT~ ~OT QU IT e THE
SAME M CALMtH' HER OOWN H"
B+il&amp; IIIIEI1.. i3CT FEROCIOUS -

SHOW Me YOUR ~ICI&lt;. ~

--- -~ ~---

f't2 -ll15

I"/,\ TH~ O~E .,.-----,

WHO OU&amp;HT..- &amp;E SEE IN ' A
j... ltJNK ~ GO AHEAD AND

w.,

Qualify construction at
reasonable rates .
Remodeting
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concrete Finishing

~)

CAPTAIN EASY

Hours 9-1 M .•
F.
Other times by •ppolnt-

ROOFING

• 30 ttc

Real Estate for Sale

Federel Housing &amp;
Veter•ns Admin. LOins.

H. L WRITISEL
All types root work, new
or repair gutte-rs and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimafe!i
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949 ·l862
ll ·14·mo .

• e

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

11 -ll pd .

Aluminum Siding

c arnert~

3161.

work ,

JIM &amp; WAYNE'S
PLUMBING REPAIR

concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATES)
Reduced Winter Rates

Will

APPLES
C IDER
HONEY . F itzpa t rick Or ·
c hard, State Route 689 .
Phone
W ilkesville, 669 ·
3785

HOOF HOLLOW, English
•nd Western . .Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies. Ruth Reeves . 61•698 ·3290 . Bord i ng and
Rid ing Lessons and Horse
Care produ cts . Western
boots . Children's S15 .SO.
Adul15 S19 00 .

POODLE
GROOMING .
Jucl'( Taylor . 614 ·367 -nlO.

spouts,

sa le .

•nd

RISING STAR Kemel .
Boarding . Caii367-Q292 .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter

COAL,
LIMESTONE .
sand , oraYel , calciu m
c hloride,
fertilizer,
doo
food , and all types of salt.
E)(cetsior Sa lt Work s, Inc .•
E . Main St ., Pomeroy, 992·
3891

1972 Bonanza 11)(.5:2 , 2 bedr .

Business Opp'ty
Mond.1y
Noon on Satw-day

GUN S HOOT every Sund•y
12 :00 . Factory choke a11y .
Co m Hol low Gun Club .
Ru Hand . Pr oceeds dOnated
tl Bov Scout Tr-oop 2.. 9.
Januery 2, 1110

7167

Business Services

LONG RIFLE S HOP. 2A8
Rive-rview Dr , Pomeroy ,
OH . Locared on Lincoln
Hil l . Muzzte IOI!l ding guns
and su RJI Ies. Modern ouns
and 5U~¥tlles
Reloadl ~
supplie5
Open 5 p m ~
p .m . ex cept Surday, Satur
day 9 ·9. Phone Gardner
Wehrung, 992 ·3090 .

DISCOUNT all s lock •t
COO ner' s Campers, Rai n ·
bow R i dge , L ong Bottom
61A-84J· :IJII

G UN
S HOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY I PM . FACTORY
C HOKE ONLY . RACINE
GUN CLUB

W.tneedllr . ...n. 2

WAN T TO start nev-- gar
bage p ick ~.~&gt; in Rutland . OH
area . C all eveni ngs61~ · 367

Auctions

Camping Equipment

l"ue&gt;day
thru Fnday

Clerk

Business Services

40

• p &gt;I

~ty

X RAY TECHNICIAN . lm ·
mediate openng for a full
t i me regislered x · ray
technician .
Generous
sal~ry ,
exc ellent fringe
benefits . ARJIY to D i rector
of
Prsonne l.
Pleasant
Valley
Hospi t al . Valley
Dr ive , Pt . Pleasant, WV
255.50 . An Affirmat i ve Action -Equal Opportunity
Employer .

HAVE
VACANCY
In
pr-Ivate home for elderly
only . Board , room and
laundry .
992 ·6021
No
dr i nk.ing allowed

Mobile Homes - Sale

MuLil~ Htin~ tu~.lm

( 12 1 10, \7 . 24 , Jl 4f L

8Y CM"OI)I"n G . Thonle•

Services Offered

In rmmory. card of 1'h&amp;nks
lltld Obituary 6 centl per word ,
SJ .OO rrummum. Cash 1n ad -

Archi t ec t s Planner'S ,

NOTICE bN FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Th e Sta te of Ohio, Meigs
Coun ty , Court of Common
Plea !~.,
Probate Divi sion
To the Executor or Ad
m1n1s rr ator of the estate , to
such of the follow ing as are
residents of the Sta t e of
O h10 . viz
the surviving
spouse. the ne)(t of kin , the
benefi ciaries
under
the
will ; and to the attorney or
atto rneys representing any
of the aforementioned per
sons
Name o1 Decedent and
Res1dence are listed
Bessie Wa ugh Athey .
L 1ncol n and Second Sts .•
Middleport . O h 1o, Case No .
12894 .
You are Tl ereb y notified
t hat the Inventory and Ap
prai~ment of the es tate of
tne
aforementioned .
deceased late of said Coun
ty , were fi led in tllis Court .
Sai d Inventory and Ap
praisement will be for
he aring befor-e th is Court
on the lOth day of Ja nuar-y ,
1980, at 1 :JOo 'c lock P.M .
Any person des1r ing to
fil e except1ons th er-eto
must f ile th em at leas t five
da ys prior to the dat e set
fo r hearing .
Given under my hand
and seat ot said Court, this
701 h day of Dec emtH!r 197~
Robert E Buc k
Judge

Help Wanted

Call 742·2211

RUTlAND

FURNITURE
Rutland,O ,

QKA
VIH

FHQPH
GIIQUM

JH

GDEUM
VD

" [

VIUDE C I

PDXH .

Yetterdoty'o Cryploqoote: MACBETH AND LADY MACBETH
STAND OUT AS THE SUPREME TYPE Of ALL THAT A
H05T AND HOiii'ESS SHOULD NOT BE.-BEERBOHM

Saturdays

CHONO~ I AC. ~A l P

E.V ERY I 1M E. SHE
D I SCOVc~E;D A
NEW 5 YM P'T0'.-1 .
Now arrange !he CirCle&lt;! 1et1e's 10
form the aurpns.e answer 111 su~;~
gested by the abo\le c.1u1ooo

l I I)( l I l I Jl"

Jumbles PUIIV

I Af\lwer

WHA"T "THE HYF'O-

BLANK

1A.nswers Tomorrow I
OKYG EN B OD ILY

Tomorr ow 8. 10: Heal th Field 15
Movie "' Ar Alligator Named
Daisy "' 17
1 00 Day5 of Our Li ves 3 . 15 All My
Children tJ . l] . Younq &amp; the
Res tless 8, 10: Prl!daton JJ
1 30--As The Wor ld Turn s B. 10
'} oo--Ooc tors J, 13 . One Lde to L1ve
6, 13 . Song by Song JJ . 1 1S·
News !7
2 JO- Another Wor ld J. 15 Pe-ach
Bowl 8. 10 . G1gg1esnort Hotel 11
J OO ~ Gene r a l Hospi tal 6. 13 l Love
Lucy 17 PriVJner 10 . Citmt:'rrt
Three 33
) JO- Fiintstones 17. Ove r E&lt;t!.y 33
4 00- Mi ster Cartoon J , Passworel
Plus lS . Merv Gr iff in 6. Sesitme
Sl 20 ,3J ; Real M cCo ys 13
Spectreman 1 7
4 JO- Lone Rttnqer J Tom &amp; J_e:r!t_
13 Mer-v Gri ff in IS . Gilligan 's Is
II
S 00 Ca rol Bur nett J . M1ster
Rogers 20.33 . My Three Sons 17
~ 30- Mash J. News 6; Gomer Pyle
II . E lee Co XL Ma!l.h 10. Happy
Days Aga1n 13 ; I Dream ol
Jeann ie 17 . Doctor Who 33
6 00" News J,ll, 10, 1], 13, ABC New!.
6 . Zoom 70 .33 . Carol Bur nell 17
6 J() NBC Newn.l5. ABC New\ 13
(h 6 Goes 10 lhe Rose Bowl 6
CBS News 8. 10. Over E oHy 10
Bob Newhart 17
W1ld W tld
World of Anlmitl !. 33
1 00- Cross Wits 1 Muppel Show 6
Tt[ Tac Dou9h 8 . The ' 70 ~ 10
Newlywed G:~me IJ
LO&gt;'£&gt;
Americ an Stvlc 15 San lord &amp;.
Son II 01ck Cavel l 10 ,3]
! JO T'1i'11 Na ~h., t!le M liSic 1
N ~&gt; .....,lywed Gam~'&gt; 6 Jolo:er &lt;. W1ld
B E.ulc Bruc e Football 10
Fr~mily Ft&gt;ud 11 Nash111i le on •he
!-l oad 15 All If' T'le Fdmtl~ 17
Mnd-4etl Ll'IHf'r
Rf'por I 70 1]
11 00 to: 1ng
Or a nge
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PMade 1 13 Lnvernf' &amp; Sh1r ley
6 I]
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Man· 10 , Mov1e " Earlh quake"
1) , News 15
"} JO - Mov1e
" Th e An dromc dil
·south
Stra 1n "
M ov ie
Pa ctf1 c 17
J 30 N ew~ 13 , 4 43 Mov •e "' R1tual
o f E vt! "· 3
TUESDAY.JANUARY 1.1980
at Large !7 . 5 50---PTL
Club 13
b 00-700 Club 6.8 . PTL Ctub 15.
6 »-Banana Splits 17
6 45 - M orn tng Report 3 6 55 News 1]
7 00- Today ) , 1.'i , Good M orn i ng
Amer ica 6, 13, Tuesday Mor ning
8, Batman 10 Three S toog e~
L itfle Rasca ls 17 . l Is-A M
Weather 33
1 30- Fami ly Affair !0
M tster
Rogers 33 ; 7 3s- Chuck Wh ite
Reports 10
8 00--Capt Ka ngaroo 8.10 . Family
Alfa tr 17 ; Sesame 51 33
8 30- Romper Room 17
9 oo- Bob Braun J . B tg Valley 6 .
Voya ge to the Bottom of the Se a
10 . Phil Donahue 13.15 , Ses am e
St in Puerto R1c0 JJ
9 30--Bob N ~w hart 8. Green Acres
17. All Creatures Great&amp;. Small
33
10 oo--N BC Star Salute 3. 15, Edge
of Nigt116 . CoHon Bowl Festival
PMade 8.10. Morn 1ng Magaz ine
13 . M ov1e ·· send Me No
Flowers " 17
10 J(}- S?O .OOO Pyramid 13 Andy
Grt ltith 6 . Song by Song 33
11 DO-- Laverne &amp;. Shi r ley 6 , 13 .
11 30 Tournament of Roses
Pdrade 3. 13 ,8. 10, Fdmily Feud
e, , 13 Sesame 51 1(), Skating
Spe[ld cular ' 78 33
11 00 Ch 6 Goes to the Rose Bowl
6 . 11 15-Movie " F unny Face "
5

4~ W orl d

17

1? 3(} J:l yitn ' s Hope 6, 13, E tee Co
70 From Chi na To U s JJ

oo-

All Mv Ch1ldren 6. 13. 1 00Doc tors 3, 13. Su gar Bowl 6. 13 ,
Cotton Bow l8 , 10 . Mi les ToGolJ.
'} 1S- News 17
1 JO Another
World
3. l.'i .
G1 gg1esnort Hotel 11
3 00 1 Love Lucy 17 . Poldark II 20 ,
Wtll 1am Penn The Pa!iSionate
Quaker 33
J JO-- FI1nt ~to ne~ 17 . Over Easy lJ
4 OO- M1 ster Cartoon 3: Sesame St
'10.33 , Love American Sty le l.'i.
Spectreman 17
&lt;1 30
Rose Bowl Pregame Show
3.15. G•l tt gan 's Is 17
.j 45 - Ro o,~
Bowl l . 15,
5 00 Be ...nlch!!d 6. Fest 1val of Lively
Arts l or Young People 8.10;
M1ster Rugers 10.33; Tom &amp;
Jerry IJ, My Th ree Sons 17
1

5 30--- News 6; Elec Co 20 . Happy

Days Again 1) , I Dream of
Jeanni e 17 , Doc tor Who JJ
6 DO-- N ew ~ 8. 10.13 . ABC News 6.
loom 20. JJ . Carol Burnet t 17
6 30-ABC News l l ; Carol Burnett
b , CBS News 8. 10 , Bob Newhari
17. Villa Alegr e 20 : Wild Wild
Wor ld of Anim&lt;t ts 33
7 QO- In Sear ch Ot 6. Tic Tac Dough
8. MacNei l Lehrer Re por t 33:
News 10 . Newlywed Gam e 13;
S;mlord &amp; Son 17 . Dick Cavett 20 .
7 30-- . Newlywed Gam e 6. Joker 's
Wi ld e. D ick Ca-vett 33 :
Ho llywood Squares 10. Sha Na
Na !J . All In The Fam ily 17.
8 DO--Orange Bowl 3, 15. Happy
Days 6. 13. Wh ite Sha elo w 8, 1~ ;
Otto 100 Gorilla 20.33 Mo v1e
" Half a Sixpence" 17
8 30- Angie 6 . 13 . 9 00- 1 hree's
Company 6, 13; Hawaii Filli? -0
!1 , 10 ; World 10,33
9 JQ-- Taxi 6, 13.
10 oo--Ha r t to Hart 6, 13, Paris 8, 10 ;
News 20; Cliy Notebook 33
10 30---()ver Easy 20; Another Vo ice
JJ

11 00-News 3,6,8, 10.1 3. 15; Las t of
the Wi ld 17 : Dick Cavett 10:
Carry on Laugh ing 33.
11 JO- Ton ight
3, 15 ;
M ov ie
" Futureworld " 6.1l : Barnaby
Jones 8; Ca mera Three 33 : Earle
Bruce · Football 10; Movie " The
Great O'Ma lley " 17
11 oo-Movie " Land Ra ider!i" 10;
12 . .10 - M ovle ""The Te nde r
Trap" 8
OO- lomorrow 3. NewslS. 1 !&gt;News 17
1 20- Mov1 e " Fi ve"' 17 . 1 4 5--- N ew~
IJ
3

1(}--Mov ie "' The F lyi ng Missil e"
17 . 5 20-Lo\/e, American Style
17

WEONESOA Y.JAIIUARY l .t98o
4&gt;- Fa rm Report 1) , 5·50--PTL
Club t] , World etl Large 17
6 00 TOO Club 6,8. PTL Club 13 ;
Hea lth F1el d 10
6 )(}. - Christopher Closeup 10; News
17 ; 6 45--Morntng Repor t 3.
6 50 - Good
Mo rni ng
West
V1rgi nia 13 , 6 55-- News 13 .
J oo--- Today J. l.'i . Good Morning
A.meri ca 6. 13 ;
Wednesday
Morning B: Bettm~n 10 ; Th ree
Stooges Little Rasca l s 17 .
I S A M Weather 33 ;
7: 30Fa tnily Altair 10: Un icorn Tales
~

33
7 .55 -- Chuck Wh ite

Report s 10;
II 00 - Capt . Kangaroo 9. 10;
Family Aftalr 17 ; Sesame Sf . 33.
8 ] ().-Romper Room 17.
9 00 - Bob Braun ] , Big Valley 6;
Por k.y P ig 8 : Voyage to the
Bottom ol the Sea 10 ; Phil
Donahue 1], 15. l uc y Show 17 ;
M ovi~ '" Love Me or Leave Me"
1l

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome roy, 0., Monday, Dec. 31,1979

U. N. leader trying to ease situation
'IEHRAN, Iran (AP ) - U.N.
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim
is flying to Tehran to try to ease the
U.S.-Iranian crisis. But the students holding the American hCfitages
rejected his intervention, and Iran 's
foreign
minister
rej ec ted
negotiations with hitn.
The Security Council was
preparing to adopt a resolution
a.Wng Waldheim to "intensify his

Home

Insurance
let's talk value.
As a local insurance
agency, we can help you
find the best value for
your insurance dollars.
And, we'll show you how
to make sure your coverage stays current with
your home's rising value.

DAVI$-®ICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel

e!fort:; " to secure the release of the Foreign Ministry nor any governAmericans held hostage in the US . ment official," he said. 'When the
Embassy. Meanwhile, the United ~ecretary11eneral comes to this
States delayed a demand for the country, he wiU·certalnly meet some
council to vote limited e&lt;»nom.ic aftldals. Who, when and how has not
sanctions against Iran and gave been decided."
Waldheim 11 more days to try to get
The militant student&amp; who octhe captives freed.
~led the U.S. Embassy 58 days
Foreign Minister Sadeg h Ghotb- ago expressed only hostility toward
zadeh said Waldheim was coming to Waldheim and again lnsilted that
find out the Iranian government's
the hostages would not be freed
views , not to negotiate for the
unless Shah Mohanunad Reza
release ci the hostages.
Pahlavi was returned to Iran for
"'We will inform him of our views
trial.
oo America and the positim the
The resolution which the Security
U.S.A. had in Iran ," Ghotbzadeh
Courr il w• to vote on today called
told Pars, the official Iranian news
for the 1Hiatlon body to meet again
agency. 'Waldheim is cOOling to
Jan. 7. It said ll the llllltagea were
Iran in order to gather iliormation · not freed by then, the council would
and to learn ci the nature ci the
crisis. . .. The question of
negotiations with him 18 not ~

New arrival, parents
getting royal start

raised."
The secretary11eneral ns fiyi ng

to Paris with three aides to take a
chartered fliglt lhst would land him
in Tehran Tuesday. Diplomat&amp; at
U.N. headquarters said he believed
he would be able to talk with
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the
leader ci Iran's revolutionary
regime .. But Hassan Habibi, the
spokesman for the RevoluliorBry
Council, said he did not know if
Khomeini would receive the U.N.
chief.
"Waldheim has not been invited
by the Revolutionary Councilmr the

Meigs County's flnt baby of 1911
will get off to a good start lhanlts to
the Dally Sentinel's 8JUJial baby
derby spo1180red by Big Bend merchant&amp;.
Deadline for this yur 's ool&amp;eat
has been let for 5 p. DL on Thunday,
Jan. 10. Parents must be olflclally
reslde!U ol Melp Co1ny although
the father may be eervlng out rl the
county In the .-meet forces. Coo·

"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy "
992 -6677

'I
'
.,,'

tenders mlllt sullnlt a doctor's
statement lllOiring the time and date
ol birth to The Dally Sentinel office,
lll Court St., Pomeroy. by the Jan.

DONNEU.I'S PillA
Middleport

2nd Street

o

992 ·6167

FEDERAL
KEMPER
INSURANCE
COMPANY

Will be Open

Monday, Dec. 31
Tuesday, Jan. 1
Let us help you bring in the New
Year .
Thank you lor felting us serve
you in 1979.

':

..''' '
....
'

!'

•

••
••
••

,.flP
••

•• •••••

Wishing our friends and patrons
bubbly good times and high
spirits all through the year!
THANKS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE

RIGGS USED CARS
OHIO

adopt "effective measures" in accordance with Article u of the U.N.
Charter. That article provides for
cutclfs In diplomatic and economic
relatiom and communications.
The resolution is a sequel to a
resolution the cooncil adopted
unanimously Dec. 4 calling on Iran
to free the hostages.
Meanwhile, . a disp~te over the
number of America111 beill! herd
h011tage was still unresolved. The
State Department says there are 50,
the sludenta say there are 49, and
three U.S. clergymen who visited
them over &lt;llristmas said they saw
ooly 43. Ghotbzadeh m Swldlly
reltfl'ated a pledge he made to the
clergymen that he would try to
de~nnlne the llllllber.

10 deadline.
Buslneu lloua taking .. rt In the
18110 conlellt dthair &amp;lft to the new
baby or tbe parliiUindude: Cedral
Tl'lllt Co-, Mktdlepart. tlO saving~

account; Elberfeld'a, Ul gift oertiflctte; Rac:iJW Food Martet, three
boKea of N'•wborn Pampers;
Wellern Allto, a toy crib; Pcmeroy
Wine Swe, lllttle rl ct.q~Bgne ;
Landmark, aliaby bunting; Powell
True-Value, 110 gift certificate;
Meigs Inn, a dinner; Lou's Alhland,
10 1ailonl of p10lile; Tbe Kiddie
Sboppe, to giJ oerUfi:ate; Hartley
Shoes, a pail' tl Poll Parrot baby

aboea; Moore 'll, Fisher-Price Fuzzie
Bear; Kroger's, a case ol Kroger
camedmllL

Village PhartJIIcy, $5 gift certificate; 1be Sewing Center. t3 gift
certificate; Marperite'a Sboea, a
pair ollady'l aii»pen; Mart V, a
cue of Gerber baby foods; 1be
Fabric Slql, p ~ certificate;
Crow's Family Restaurant, a dinner; Radne Hcme-NatiCIIBI Bank,
$10 gift certificate. Wald Crola and
Sms, three cues ol Beech Nit baby
food; IU&amp;C Jewelers, a three piece
feeder set; Heritage Houle, $5 gift
certificate; Francia Florlat, a baby
planter; R. C. Bottliu&amp; Co., two RC.
tobogp• ud two cuea of Royal
Crown Cola; Vqban'a. Clrdlnal,
two E\renflo maner lila; Swllber
and I...Gble Pharmlcy, tine bcKeaof
Newborn Pampers; Pwueroy National Bank, tlO •vlnp accowlt;
Pomeroy Flower Shop, a baby
planter; Stiffler's, ..ctaae ol Curlty
diapers; Twin Qty Gateway, a cae
rl Helm strained baby food, and
Two 'a Ccmpany, a SIO gift Cfl'·
Uficate.

C.Omposer Rodgers, 77, dies Sunday·
NEW YORli (AP) - Richard
Rod&amp;el'l, the JI'WliC: t'O'q!M'~
wbale lllf«&lt;etlable melodiel for
such Broadway hill as
"Oklahoma I" "South Padfic'' and
'"lbe Kina and I" helped define the
. ·w !!-~.· -:..._....~onn,
Ia dead at the 11e rl Tl.
Rodger~ cHed late S111clay It Ilia
East !Ide home ,with his wife,
Doroliy,ati:Ualde.
;
1'ba c:aaae ol delth wu not lm·
medl•tely known, laid Allee Regenaburg, Rod&amp;en'lq-time publlclat
Roct&amp;en ..d been Dl for some time,
suffering a thrGat ailmed that made
It hard for him to speak, and only
five weeki ago received a
..cemaker to belp Iii heart.
Over the last II yean, many of
Rod&amp;en' 1,DOO-pm 110nga - m011t
written In coDaboration with lyridst
Lorenz Hart and later Oscar Hammerstein n -have becoole clasaics,
intrinsic parta rl Americana.

"All I really wam to do Ia to
provide a hanl.,.t..,...,.,it .the \
bioule bow'r witb aa
ilohx-

e

pt ·ng blmWf," Boc'l a once
said. "U be liba ILitww,• be can
whiatle It, and It will mab hla lie
"" r . '!
- .
. ..

Hia rare talent prodnoed 43 llta&amp;e

mlllical acorea, II ol them for
Bn.ctway, nlae film acana, four
televllion ICGrel and IIIOited oller

....

Sa""DJ Cabn, prealdeat ol the

Sane Writers HaD ol Fame, reuenbered

Rodgers

u

a

"true

pnieaslonal" whoee wodr could not

be matched.
"With all the sopblatlcated
methods we have rl COIIlPJterlzlng
performances, I don't Ui.. there'll
any way you can measure the In·
credible contribution rl Ri:Mrd
Rodgen, '' Cabn •ld In a telephCile
iraervlew from California. ·

Arsonist..sought

We were around
when &amp;lacksmiths
were
more important
than gas stations.

Saving the area's fJar, -.ing needs since 1904.

Far111ers

Bank
POMERG. 'lHIO

- ~

.·~ - ~

.........

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.·..

·.,..

....

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. . . . . ... -

Member FDIC

CHICAGO (AP) -In a cue Fire
Ccmmluloner RicMrd Albredtt
called "one rl the uglleat I bave ever
seen," Chicago pollee h1111ied for an
anonlst who touched rlf an apart·
ment bullding fire that apparently
blocked escape routes and killed six
people.
It was one rl two weekend fires In
apartment buildings In the city's
NorthSide.
Forty.four pel'liOIII were Injured
Saturday when IGIDieolle soaked the
hallway rl an apartmed building
with gascjlne, laid hcmicide lnvestlgatol'l. Two children were
among . the dead, and four
·:efigh ters were among the injured.

SEEK UCENSES
Two couples Mve been laaued filed
for marriage licenses In Melp County ProbatP. Court The flrat wu
George Clayton Oldaker, 21,
Mayesville, Ky., and Cathy Jo
Manley, 21, Middleport. The other
rouple was Charles D. Wllaon, Jr.,
Zl, Rt. 1, Reedsville, and Rose Mary
Barttmus, 18, Rt . 1, ReedsviDe.

MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, FlcAM, will
meet in regular selllim at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday at the te~le .
All
master mas om are invited .

MONDAY
GOOPEL MESSENGERS Quartet
will sing at watch night service at
Rutland Bible Methodist Clairch.
Speakers wiD be Rev. J. D. Young
and Rev. R. D. Brown. Amos Tillis.
pastor, invites the public to aervlcce
whirh begin at 8 p.m.

Area deaths
WRENA MAE RICE

Mrs. Lorena Mae Rice, 76, Maple
St., Middleport, dled Saturday afternoon at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Rice was born Aug. 19, 1900,
in Rutland, a daughter rl the late
Fred and Clara Stme Colllns. She
was aiBo preceded In death by her
rusband, Donald Rice, in 11186.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Bernice ROlle, Crown City, and Mrs.
Fklrenoe McDaniel, Gallipolia, and
seVfJ'al a unta, uncles, nieces and
nephews.
Mrs. Rice wu a member ol the
Middleport Clurch rl Clriat and rl
the Phllathea Society rl the cllll'ch.
She WM a member of the Royal
Neighbors o1 America, the Ladies
AuDliary ol Feeney-Bennett Post
121, American Legkll. Sbe was a
arau• o1 the Stephenson Holpltai
&amp;:IMIOI ol Nursing In Albland, Ky.,
and uo attended a business school
in Ashland.
Fun•alservloes wW be held at 11
a.m. Wednesday at the RawlingsCoati Funeral Home with Mr.
Robcl1 Melton offidating. Burial
will be in Mlddlepcl't HID Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fiUieral
home anytime after 2 p.m Tuesday.
MARYJl4KEft
Mrs. Mary Baker, 73, Route ~
Reedaville, a lifelong resident rl

Meip County, died Saturday
evemng at VeterarB Memorial
Hospital following a brief illness.
Ml'l. Baker was born at l..cJn&amp; Bottom, a dlluabter rl the late Henry
and Leath J011e11 St.on. She was a
member ol the Faith O.pel Ccmmllli\Y amcb a Little lfoctin8.
SII"Vivinl are three daughters,
Mn. Fred (Ethel) Clutter, Elyria;
Mn. Cllffonl (Hallie) Rockbold,
Reedlvtlle, and Mll8 Lucille Biker,
Colnrnhll; four ICIIS, Clarence rl
ReedlwWe; Carl rl Vlema, W. Va.;
O.rlea ol Waldo, and Robert,
Belpre; a stepdaug!Ur, Mn. Paul
(Elizabeth) Brooks, Tuppen
Ptalna; two brothen, Nelaon St..on,
Radnor, and Clarence Slaaon,
Marton; three aston, Serena
!111011, I..on&amp; Bottom; Mrs. Beale
ean,rove, Radnor, and Mn. Lerma
Hollinger, Indiana; a half-elater,
Mrs. Dorothy ClevaUer, Reedsville;
16 grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren, and Ul great~.. Beaidll.berparenta,
abe was pACe!led II! ct.th by ber
lp""'-':1, WWiam Franklin; a
• t ... B 'dee; a - . Emeat

Ra1albJ llldam bcotbeaa.

....... -*-Will be beld a&amp; 1

w-....,

at tile ReedaviDe
Unllild M:tbdlilt &lt;llurdl db tbe
a... Ralpb Sampaoa offldatln&amp;.
Burial wm•In Sand HID c-terr
at[Aq'BcUGm
P'rtendl may call at the WHte
Funeral Home In CociviUe eoytjme
after IIOCII Cll Tuelday. Tbe body wUi
Ue In ate at the dlureb one hour
prior to the service.
p.m.

ADA FRANCES CARSON
Ada P'raDcea Canon. •• Hartford,
died Saturday at Ple-nt Valley
Hoapltal. Sbe Wll bam May 5,ltll it
auton, daugbter ol the Artley E.
Blalle, aiftan, and the late Beaale
M_ Blair BlakeSbe was a coot at the Court Street
UriU In Pcmeroy.
SurviviJW are two diiU&amp;IUra, Mrs.
Jobmy (Oarime) JGbniOo, and
Mrs. John {Roberta) ac. both of
Muon; two lltep4ona, Donnie rl
Chicago and Nllly Canon. Granite
aty,m.
.
Two lilten, Mra. Lon!tta M.
Stewart of New Hawn and Mn.
Qarice F. Dunlap ol &lt;llftan, w_ Va.
and a brother, Georae A. Blake,
Sterlin&amp;, Alub and aiJ: grand·
children and five great grandchildren also survive.
Private fwleral services for the
immediate family wW be held at
10:30 a.m. Tueadlly In the Foglesong
Funeral Home at M110n with Rev.
Lester Van Meter officiating. Burial
will be In CUlton Hilla Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7.e p.m. tonight

ANGIELYNN BRUNTY
Angielynn May (Granny) McClure
Mcintyre Brunty, 81, Minenvllle,
died Sunday at Veterans Memorial
HCfipital.
·
Mrs. Bnmty was a daugtaer ol the
late James Franklin and Minnie Bell
Johnson McClure.
She wu also preceded in death by
two IIISbands, Henry Mcintyre and
Wilson Brunty; two 80118, Shennan
Thcmas Mcintyre and Charles
William Mcintyre; two sisten, Role
Snyder and Lelia Marks and two
brothen, Jim and Bill McClure.
Surviving are a sister, Laura
Mounts, and a brother, Joe McClure,
both rl Odeaaa, Fla.; a 1011, Herbert
A- Mcintyre, Mlnenville; two grandlons, four granddaughters, three
great1!fanddaughten and four
great1!fllldaona.
F111eral aervkea will be beld at 1
p.IIL Wedneaday at the Ew~!w
Funeral Home with burial to be In
Meigs Memory Gardena. Friends
may call at the funeral heme
anytime after 2 p.111- Tueaday.

·-'

Three persons hurt/
••

in Sunday accident .
.

Tlree peraona were Injured dluin&amp;
a one-vehicle aoclded lnvatlplied
Sunday In Meigs County by the :
Gallla-Melp POll, flllbway Patral. :
Called to the acene 011
four. :
tenths c1 a mile - t ol
7, at 4:41 ·
p.m., citlcen report a west bound
pickup truck driven by Dean Hawk, •

sa ••
sa

aut ol COil·:

16, ~ Plalna, went
tro~ ran elf the rill' acle

ol the :
roadway, atruck an embankmed ·•
and overturned.
•
Hawk claimed Injury and - :
transported too Clark Memorial :.
Hoapltal In ParkeriiJur&amp;. Two ·:
paa~en~en, GretCI'f Colinl, U, W. Colwnbia, W. Va.1 and Clrllli Hawk, :
11,
PlalJis, cllplayed nable:
slg• of Injury and were tralllpOI1Id :
to VetenrB Memorial Holpital for •

""pers

treatment.

~.

There was heavy damage to the
vehicle. No citation was t.ued

Squad kept busy
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was kept m tbe move with na over
the weekencL
At 12:11 p.m. Saturday the unit
went Ill . , Hudlon St. for a.rlel
KDapp no was tMen to Veteraoa
M " ial Holplt•t and at I :II p.m.
the ldt weat to Part Sl for Mrs.
A1wllda Werner wbo lpparentJy U·
fered a '-It 8UaC!k. Sbe wu taken
totbeBal8' Medical CenterThe unlt .._t to tbe acene ol a
lltootq 011 RaCe St. at 10:• p.m.
Moaday at ll :14 a.m tbe ~quad wed
to :as. 'lblrd Ave. for Ernest Wella,
w1to ._ treated m tbe ecene and
tla taken 1D the Holzer Medical
CalterbythePwnetoySquad.
At r.01 a.m., Monday the unit toot
Bealle Quillen, 191 Sycamore St., to
Veteram Memorial H011pltal.
VB'I'BIIANI~

Saturday Mniali--aay B..-.

ns, Middleport; 8twiJI!O!I Petrie,
Mlddleport; Cbar1el Knapp, Middleport; Sberry lloltl, Pameroy;
Annette Boyd.~.
Saturday . Dllclaarlel-'l'aii!IIIJ
Curry, Ranald llllllr, hnrlJ Hale,
Ethel Jack, Mary IJatef_
Sunday Admlui011a-WIUiam
Morris, Pomeroy; Albert Cadle,
Pomeroy; Michael Hubbard,
Syracuse.

Sunday
Dischargea-Terrle
Walker, Thelma Green, Clndlce
~Eunice Nutter, Sbln!DI
Petrie.
SQUAD RUNS
The P1111eroy Emergency Squad
made two runs since Sunday. 'l'be
flnt wu at 12:18p.m S111day, wt.t
the aquad was called to Gold Ric~&amp;~.
Road to tranaport Homer Benks Ill
Veterans Memorial HOipital The
second wu at 3:47 a.m. Monday,
when Emeat Wella, Middleport,
lranapot ted to Holzer Medical Cen-

w., .

ter.

ELBERFELD$
1980

GREETINGS
May 1980 be the stan of a banner decade
for all our wonderful friends. Many thanks
for your continued patronage. GoOd luck!

ELBERFELD$

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