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---

PIPER

25BOWS

'

. •3 .,........ Iloilo
•hdlloll .... '. 160"
•TOIIII 100 Sq. Ft.

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NILION'SIIG.

•35 Sq. Ft.

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•Foil
•11 Sq. Ft .

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26'' Log
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49'

NILso/,.•s REG. 7t• .

FilL

LH IILLS

liFT BOIES

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3 Per Pbck

Assorted Folding Boxes

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2&amp;4~oirl'ock ,
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ELECTRIFIED SCENIC
STAR

NIUON'' 110. n.H

10 ROLL FLATliiBBON

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NIL!SbN'S lEG. ll.H
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Lorge stoble tree stond
with ' four, channel
·design legs Is extremely
sturdy ond vlrtuallr. tip
No. IM
proof. Finished in 9 ony
, ,~_no'!ltl In tradltianol
6 ,.., ,CI)ristn\as cal~rs ... red
ond green. four od.
, ·,,juatii;/g' screws control
tree cilignment. Large
NIII.ION'I no.
water
copocity.
m.tJ
· Assembles · without
too.ls.

$ 99
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Ntuowl-.

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$

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11"

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ASSORTED
MINIATURES

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NESTLE
COOKIE MIX
oOotmoalllalolh
200. . •
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18.6 0..
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Collectau.' O.Canter
With 24 !R. of dei!Cioul
Dry ltoa1ted P.an"'"

•

FIFTEEN CENTS

··Ohio officials pessimistic about future
COLUMBJJS, Ohlo (AP) - Some
top Ohio officials are pessimistic
about the future of· various state
, government agencies if more spending cuts are ordered to balance the
budget.
And Gov. James A. Rhodes, who's
been meeting with legislative
leaders to discuss ways for
eliminating a projected $353.,7
million deficit, is offering little
elaboration about the prospect of
more Cjlts _or a,,tax hike ,to generate

cut, a tax increase or some ·comnew state revenue.
Receipts from Ohio's existing bination of both to erase the red ink.
· Most state agencies already have
sales, , personal income and other
taxes have been sharply below lrirruned their budgets by 6 ·percent
estimates used to prepare the in an attempt to offset the shortfall.
current state budget, which expires And department heads now are
June 30, 1981. The Rhodes ad- · spelling out the Impact that an administration blalnes the problem on ditional cut of 10 percent would have
on their services. It is believed that
the national recession .
an
across-the-board reduction of
The Ohio Constitution requires the
that
amount would be needed to deal
budget to be balanced by the end of
with
the problem in lieu of new tax
the fiscal year. As a result, officials
revenue.
facf.the options of a major spending

.

..

~OIIL I

R.etar~Hnt

32"xC'

enttne
Franklin B. W,alter, state superintendent of public instruction, and
Timothy B. Moritz, director of the .
Ohio Department of Mental Health,
have both schedulCd sessions with
reporters to discuss the fiscal crunch.
Their sessions follow one by Kenneth B. Creasy, state welfare director, who predicts another 10 percent
cut would mean that OhiO's Aid to
Dependent Childret) program will go
broke in March 1981. ·

The cut also wowd force the
Medicaid program to close up shop
by February and lead to coUapse of
the general relief program, he said.
Even without the extra cutback,
Medicaid funds are expected to run
out in March, Creasy said. The ADC
funds should be exhausted in April.
According to Creasy, the agency
needs at least $110 million and
perhaps as much as $126 million to
continue its programs through the
current fiscal year.

Meanwhile, Rhodes held a news
conference about an unrelated sutr
ject Monday and dodged reporters '
questions about the state's money .
woes. He offered nothing new when
asked about the possibility that
Ohioans could face their first
general tax increase in nine years. . •
'Rhodes reminded reporters of a
top level meeting Dec. 9 with
legislative leaders to review the
problem. But when asked '
(Continued on page 8)

Parade welcomes Christmas season

'·Flame

orowl1d . It It 22~ .hlgtt, ,9\o', "
wid• an&lt;f 13"" 104\g. IIH'II•tic' h~
lookt ol'ld made cf cobiul .
durable poly.

treats to youngsters on hand. Santa is pictured with his
first visitor of the evening, Ryan Rowe, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Rowe of Middleport.

If more cuts come

.

'29' '

., ·,

.I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO TUESDAY DECEMBER 2. 1980

HOT -CIIOI

•Silver Foil ·
•Red &amp; Green Foil

,

VOL XXI NO. 162 .

.

U.M

CAMPfiRE MINI
MARSHMALLOWS
.
.

1!10.

PLAY SHGPPIII CART
•

Rugged, stoble stand hos fo11r
channel ,d'esign legL. moking it
sturdy Ond virtuolly tlp•.proof.
Finished in sqft ,vmlte ·engmel
with gold occent, frl~. Four od. justing scews ~ontrq! ,tree olignment. Lorge W~Jtered capoclty.
Assembles without tools.

'229
no.

•6Ya Oz.

•• ()%.

.

TREE STAND

19'

•Silver
. •Gold .
•9 Ply
3'.'x12 Ft.

...

·"*~·

. SANTA....Santa was again a most popular fellow in
Middleport Monday night when the town welcomed in
the Christmas season. Santa distributed hundreds of

e
1 Oz.
White

TREE STAND

XIISH
WJIEATHS

.•4••

RELIGIOUS FLoAT-This excellent float by the Middleport's annual Christmas parade.' The float
Middleport First Baptist Church was a highlight of featured revolving scenes of the Nativity, the
crucifixion and the resurrection.

•Plated Filllgroe Star
· •lllumhloted Sc.W~Ic C•nter
loll

•150 Ft.
' .•Asst. Colors

'

•••••

.

~

WIOWI . . . t1M

I IFFlEi
. . UWIIAI$

Earthquake victims will get help
WASIDNGTON - Congress, heeding a Carter adnninistration plea
to help a friend in need, is moving swiftly to send $50 million to earthquake victims in southern Italy. One U.S. official said even that
much money may not be enough.
,
·
The disaster relief bill was rushed thrqugh the ijouse with no o~r
position Monday as Democrats and Republicans put aside partisan
differences in their lame-duck session to beat Friday's scheduled adjournment.
The legislation was sponsored in the Senate by Ma~chusetts
Democrat Edward M. Kennedy and strongly supported by President
Carter, who called the quake "the worst natural disaster to strike
Western Europe in half a century."

BLime deaths o:d carbon monoxide
CLEVELAND - The deaths of an East Side family of three appear
to 'have been caused by carbon monoxide poisoning from an Improperly ventilated gas space heater, police said.
Wavie't T. Whitlock, 21; his wife, Pamela, 20; and their 3-year-old
son, Wavie't Jr., were found dead Monday night by Whitlock's mother
and two coilsins.
Mrs. Louise Whitlock Boyd had gone to her son's apartment after
the victims had not been seen or tieard from since a family gathering
Saturday.

O.urch must speak out for mercy
VATICAN CITY- Deploring that justice Is still meted out on the
basis of an "eye fQr an eye and a'tooth for a tooth," Pope John Paul II
said in an encyclical' today that the Roman Catholic Church must
speak out for mercy in the name of all mankind.
The pontiff's 83-page letter said threats to the world from atomic
weapons, materialistic society, the abuse of power, the systematic use
of torture, increasing inequality and distortions of the idea of justice
are greater than they have ever "een.

Streets in the Middleport business
section were jammed with people
Monday night as the community officially welcomed in ihe Christmas
season.
A parade, highlighted by the a~r
pearance of Santa Claus, was staged
at 6 p.m. under the direction of Candy Ingels, president of the Middleport Chamber of Corrunerce. The
parade was marked by nwnerous
marching unitS including several
bands .
Led by the Middleport Police

'

Department and Fire Department,
the parade included the Meigs High
School Band, the Rangerettes of
Mrs. Judy Riggs, Meigs High School
j!JIIior varsity cheerleaders, Big
B~nd Regatta Queen Kath~ Quivey,
Reino Lind with a snowmobile in
which were riding the Benny Ewing
children, Meigs County Junior Miss
Sonja Hill and first runnerup, Bonnie Boso; Ruffles and Flourishes, a
marching unit; Meigs varsity
cheerleaders ; Middleport Brownies

12M; the Syracuse Raiders sixth
grade; Syracuse Brownies 1204 ;
Bradbury Brownies 1052; Harrisonville Cadets ll16 and Juniors 1155 ;
Middleport Junior Troop 1039; the
Wahama High School Band; Chester
Girls Troop 1049; Rutland Girl Troop
1292; Chester Girls Troop 1049 ;
Rutland Girls Troop 1293; Pomeroy
Brownies 1271; Syracuse Girls
Troop 1120, Stylettes of Mason County; Studio 211, a black and white clad
marching unit; Pomeroy Boy Scouts

249, a Middleport First Baptist Church float lvhich featured a revolving
wheel featuring scenes of the
Nativity, the crucifixion,_ and the
resurrection, and the Kyger Creek
band which led the way for Santa
who arrived on the traditional float.
Following the parade, Santa met
with youngsters in the drive through
of the Central Trust Co. distributing
hundreds of bags of treats. Merchants of the town were open until 8
p.m. featuring special sales.

Main lock to reopen at Gallipolis. dam
Miles of traffic backed up on the
Ohio River on each ~ide of the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam were to
begin to clear out today with the
reopening of the facility's main lock.
The main GOO-foot lock, which was
closed several weeks ago for repair
of a gate, was to be completed between midnight and noon today, said
Gene Henry, shift foreman at the
locks.
As of Monday evening, about 32
towboats were strung out on the Ohio
River, Henry said. Many had been
there as long ago as Nov. 27.
Aboqt 48 hours will be needed to

clear out the entire line of river traffic once the main lock opens, he said.
Cargoes being held up included coal,
petrolewn, chemical, steel, sand
and gravel.
Because of the disabled main lock,
towboats were forced to use a :Jro.
foot auxiliary lock. That involved
breaking each string of barges into
five or six parts, Henry said.
"It's taking time for breaking (the
barges) down," he said. "Each
lockage takes an hour.''
The southern Ohio facility, located
15 miles south of Galli~lis, a~r
parenlly is the only lock left on the

Ohio River with a 6()()..foot-long
locking chamber. Oth_ers have 1,200foot main locks, little help to most
river tows, built for accommodation
by larger locks.
The · U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, which has said a new
system is needed to ease the river
traffic problem, plans to hold a
public meeting in Huntington ,
W.Va., on Dec. 18 to discuss a $2
million study for five proposals for
remodeling the Gallipolis locks.
A corps spokesman in Huntington
has blamed the traffic problem on
the locks' small size and a bend in

the Ohio River there.
Allan Elberfeld, district chief of
the corps' navigation and economics
branch, said its district engineer
believes a $2S8 million plan for a
1,200-foot lock and ®foot backup
lock in a bypass canal would best
meet the river 's needs .
Other proposals include a new
1,200-foot lock and rehabilitation ·of
the present lock; a new 1,200-foot
lock with a smaller lock to be added
later; a new lock and dam three
miles downstream from the cui-rent
lock; and rehabilitation of preSent
facilities.

Tax attorney new,Cincy mayor
CINCINNATI - Newly named Mayor David Mann says his G'h
years on City Council, during whicll he dealt With variOus citizens'
groups, has preparecj him to head Ohio's third largest city. ·
The. 41-year-old tax attorney was sworn in Monday as the newest
may~Jr of Cincinnati, a largely ceremonial post. He vowed his one-year
term "will be the year of the citizen."
Mann's elevation to the office, replacing Mayor J. Kenneth Blackwell, was in keeping with the tradition of a unique political coalition
formed in the late 1960s. · ·
.

'

'

Ohio lottery winner

CLEVELAND - The winning number selected Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was: S-2-2.

Weather
Partly cloUdy tonight. Lows in the mid to upper 20s. Partly clou!l)'
the mid to upper 308. Chance of precipitation :io
percent tonight and 10 pereent Wednesday. Westerly to northwesterly
winds diminishing slowly tonight. ·
Ellfeaded Oblo Forecast - Thursdai' through Saturday: Fair Thurllday. Achance of showers Friday and Saturday. Highs from the upper
301 and low 40s north to the low 50s south. Lows from the mid-20s to
mld-3011 Thlll'lldlly morning and rnosUy in the 30s Friday and Saturday.
Wedti~y. Highs In

......

NELSON'S

~

NANCARROW'S

TRAFFIC MOVES AGAIN - A tu~boat and several coal barges edge
toward the main lock al the Gallip"lis lncks and dam during the rive.r
traffic jam-up there last week. The U . S~ Arm)' Corps of En~inctt's reports
I

repal r work on the lock IS done and a new gate has been inatalled,
a'i\hough it will take another two or three days before over 30 vessels and
their cargo waiting to go through the locks are finaUy past the locks.

�2-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1980

•

3--The Daily Sentinel, r.'

I

::.. OAKLAND (AP) - Quarterback .goal in the first period from fonner
:..'lim Plunkett rolled out around a Raider Fred Steinfort. But from that
::deceived Denver defense for an 8- point Ol), the Oakland defense over•• ' ard touchdown run, sending wheimed the Craig Morton-directed
:,.oakland ahead in the third quarter, Denver offense.
~ and the Raiders continued their
· The Broncos got only two fir~\
• Monday night magic with a 9-3 downs in the second half and lost the
~ National' Football Leag•e victory
ball twice on fwnbles and once o~ an
Lover the Broncos.
interception.
The Raiders drove 77
·~••
Oakland made its aU-time Monday yards for their touchdown , and Chris
• night record 16-1-1 with the victory, Bahr salvaged something from an
- :which improved the Raiders' season otherwise miserable ·night by
' record to 9-4 and returned them to a kicking a 44-yard field goal in the
.first-place . tie with the San Diego fourth quarter.
~Chargers in the AFC West. Denver,
Bahr missed lour field goal at7~. fell virtually out of contention , tempts, including a 26-yarder, and
for a playoff berth.
,
also blew the extra point try after
• .. The Broncos scored on their Plunkett's bootleg touchdown run .
~~second possession in the nationally
The Raiders won before their first
' televised game, moving the ball 60 sellout crowd at home this year. The
·:: yards and getting a 41-yard field fans were enthusiastically sup-

THE DAILY SENTINEL

!USPS 11$-!IIGI •
DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEREST OF
AREA
Letten of oplnlol are welcomed. Tbey should be less thalli. 300 words loag (or subj«t \o f'Mutdoa by the fllJtor ) and must bt slptd with the slp ee's address. Names may bt wllbbekl apoa
publiuUoa. However, oa ffl!Ueat, a~mes wiU bt dlsclOS«!. Letters should bt La &amp;ood tai tc:, addrnslJtC bsues. aot peruulitiea.
Publbbtd dally except Salunllly by Tht' Ohio VMI!ey Publilihlna:; Cempamy- Multimedia, lDt.,
111-;:ou.rt St., Pomeroy , Ob.lo457&amp;'9. BudneSI Offl('t Pbooe ttz.. 2154. Editorial Pbooetl%-2:157 .
secoad t illS po1ta1e paid at PODlt'toy, 0bi41.
National advertlsi.lg represeatatlve, l.aadoa Associates, 3101 Eutiid Ave., ClevelaDd, Oblo
till$.
'
The As!ioclated Preis bi exduslvely e11titled to the use for publicatiou of all news dlspatcbel
('redlted to the 11e~spaper a .ad also the local news publis h~ he~in .
Robert WiqtU
Publisher
Robert Hoerucla
General Mer. &amp; City Editor
Dale R~thg~. Jr
New• Edlw•
~Jb

•

-

Bm~ rT"'--''-"""T""'~d·~

~v

Fortune 500: a game
of hoard business
Gavin Brackenridge is talking a lot about games this
Christmas, but he isn't playing games. He is promoting
them.
He earns 60 cents for every "Fortune 50(f' games. He is
promoting them.
He ear~ 60 cent~J!Jr every " Fortune 500" game sold at
retail, and more on sales to schools and companies. And
for having their names on his game board, 20 blue chip
companies have paid him $30,000 each.·
That probably isn't half the story, for this isn't so much
.tb!! tale of a game about business as it is a story of entrepreneurship.
.
It begins at least four years ago with disribution in Fr4nce of "Business," a board and dice game devised by
Richard Fenwick, like Brackenridge, a 1969 graduate of
the Wharton School of Finance.
"Business" was aptly named, since it attempted to
create many of the situations faced by the chiefs of major
corporations: Prime rate increases, strikes, inflation,
acquisition opportunities et al.
"You forge empires and face all the challenges and
dilemmas along the way - unfriendly takeover bids,
collapse of credit sources, a squeeze from the cartel that
controls your natural resources.
" There are strikes to contend with, natural disasters,
changes in goverrunent regulations, stock offerings, ad
campaigns. It's everything business really is."
"Business" sold 250,000 copies in France alorie before
Fenwick and Brackenridge, a real estate adviser to major
crporations decided to take it to the U.S. market under the
auspices of Editions Fenwick Inc.
As in the game, problems arose. The two young
businessmen sought to call the American edition "Fortune,'' but found the name already copyrighted by another
game company. They selected " Fortune 500."
For what Brackenridge describes as " a very small
royalty, " Time Inc. agreed to the use of the name, one
reason being, Brackenridge suggests, that young players
might someday subscribe to Fortune Magazine.
In the spirit of nothing is impossible, Brackenridge then
suggested to some of the biggest U.S. companies that they
pay $30,000 each to have their names and logotypes ensconced on the game's 4-inch panels.
Some, he relates, didn't even bother to answer, and he
imagines their chuckles about his audacious suggestion.
Others, however, seized the opportunity, seeing it as a
unique new advertising medium.
Alcoa, Chase Bank, Southern Pacific, Mobil, Pan
American, Aetna ,Life '- Casualty and others signed and
put up their $30,000. "We took in $600,000 before we ever
sold a game in the United States, " he says.
In the same spirit, some of the companies decided to ex·
plait their new and monopolistic (one ad agency, one in·
surer etc.) position on what Brackenridge says is bound to
be the greatest business game ever. ·
H.J. Heinz Co. mentioned " Fortune 500" in its magazine
and sold 675 games. W.R.Grace '. Co. enclosed a flyer with
its Dec. 14 dividend check to 50,000 shareholders offering
the game at half the $20 price.
.
Some 45,000 games have been sold in the United States so
far, but they represent but a fraction of the six and sevendigit nwnbers to which Brackenridge aspires.

Today in

history~ • •

Today is Tuesday, Dec. 2, the 337th
day of 1980. There are 29 days left in
the year.
Today' s.highlight in history :
On Dec. 2, 1942, a nuclear chain
reaction was demonstrated for the
first time by Sfientists working on a
secret project in Chicago.
On this date:
In 1804, Napoleon Bonaparte
crowned himself Emperor of France.
In 1823, President James Monroe

outlined the Monroe Doctrine.
In 1956, Fidel Castro and his
followers landed in Cuba to overthrow the Batista government. ·
In 1965, the U.S. carrier Enterprise launched air strikes over
Vietnam, becoming the first
nuclear-powered ship to enter combat.
Ten years ago: The North Atlantic
Treaty Organization adopted a plan
to-bolster military forces during the
1970s,

"'The most important pro/;Jiem 1 think we should
consider today Is the Tom Sr.wiier-Rona Barrett
s1tuaflon. "

- . - - ------1

.

Plunkett's TD beats Denver

Opinio.n s &amp;
Comments
MEI~MASON

.Jeport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2,1980

portive, but many of them also tilok
part in a "Save Our Raiders"
demonstration at the tw(}-minute
warnings of both halves. They stood
on their feet, waving signs to show
their concern over the proposed
transfer of the franchise to Los
Angeles.
The Raiders received the secondhalf kickoff ;md drove to the game's
only touchdown, with a pass interference call against Denver corn~rback Aaron Kyle accounting for
a 36-yard gain. ~yle went over the
back of receiver Cliff Branch on the
play.
Kenny King, who left the game
later with an ankle injury, picked up
20 yards on four carries in the drive.
Mter Mark van Eeghen plunged 2
yards for a first down at the Denver

8: Plunkett fak ed a hand off to the left
and rolled right on the touchdown
run . He strolled into the end zone·
near the right sideline.
Plunkett completed a screen pass
to van Eeghen which gained 21 yards, setting up Bahr's field goal.
Bahr's field goal misses were on attempts of 31, 26, 47 and 43 yards, and
his extra point try hit the left
upright.
Denver's final possession of the
game ended with I :06 remaining
when Oakland safety Mike Davis intercepted a pass at midfield, and
Oakland ran out the clock.
On the last play of the first half ,
cornerback Lester Hayes broke an
Oakland record with his lith interception of the season, picking off
a long desperation pass by Morton.

fNo.
1..DePaul has convincing victory
..
w

-

By Associated Press
surged to the top of The Associated
"' Beating Gonzaga might not be Press poll today, were plenty conmuch to brag about, but when you're . vincing in .their 74-56 demolition of
No. I, you're · expected to beat the Bulldogs Monday night.
everybody.
Forward Mark Aguirre, last
So the DePaul Blue Demons, who
•r

(

'

J

College's top, 20:

For those. fea-·up: 'Lawyers on Trial'
By Robert Walters
WASffiNGTON . (NEA) - Philip
M. Stern and Paul T. Hasse l]jlve
some important questions for ' this
country's citizens in general and its
lawyers in particular.
Why do Americans pay three
times more in attorneys' fees to
probate the wills of deceased
relatives than they pay funeral
directors to bury the dead?
Why do the nation's lawyers annually clo..Jrge clients billions of
dollars to conduct routine transactions - including buying a house;
probating an estate and securing a
divorce - that could be done by
laymen at little or no cost?
Why does the United States have
three times as many la.,eyers per
capita as Great Britain, five times
as many as Germany, 10 times as
many as France and a phenomenal
21 times as many as Japan ?
What other profession administers
its own entrance exams, .establishes
its own standards, regulates its own
members and passes judgment on
its own misconduct(
Stern, a New York writer, poses
those questions in the recently

published "Lawyers on Trial,"
described as "a book for people who
are fed up with lawyers - and for
"lawyers who are , troubled about
. their own profession."
Hasse propounds virtually iden·
tical queries in his role as chairman
of Help Abolish Legal Tyranny, or
HALT, a Washington-based publicinterest group that claims approximately 30,000 members
throughout the country.
They're certainly not the first to
note that too many aspects of the
conduct of the legal profession have
become a national scimdal. In recent
years, for example, both President
Carter and Chief Justice Warren E.
Burger have advanced widely
publicized, scathing critiques of the
profession.
IM Stern and Hasse, in efforts
conducted Independently of each
other, have advanced the state of the
art by codifying the argwnents
against the f\linous costs, excessive
power and insensitivity to justice
spawned and promoted by a
profession purportedly committed in
public service.

"Lawyers with obscure language
and · overcomplicated procedures
have woven legal webs around
nearly every aspect of private,
business and public life," says
HALT. "The law has become
remote, mysterious and intimidating to American citizens,
even in its most routine civil applications."
Stern takes the argwnent one step
further, notiog that "there is a
seemingly endless supply of attorneysavailable (and eager) to serve corporations and the well-to-do
but a dearth of lawyers both equipped and willing to help poor and middle-class clients.''
Not only do 90 percent of the coun·
try's lawyers serve only 10 percent
of its people, but "the legal
profession has done its best to keep,it
that way," adds Stern. "The
organized bar has deliberately kept
the price of legal help· up and has
kept competition down."
The longo()verdue overhaul of the
inequitable system '· requires the
drastic revision of many federal,
state and local laws - but HALT
notes that's no easy task because

lawyers dominate most,of the ~on­
try's legislative bodies.
Hasse's organization has proposed
a series ci relatively modest
measures to bring"about refonn, including substitution of understandable language for legal
jargon in all contracts and establishment of ' a system under which
laymen and paralegal advisers
could handle routioe contra~ .q~
transactions.
HALT is publishing a series of 20
legal manuals to be distributed free
to its dues-paying members. The first in the series includes a model contract requmng lawyers to
specifically identify their services
and prices.
Stern proposed a more radical
solution - establishment of a
National Legal Service "placing
legal help on a par with all other parts of the justice system and making ·
it equally available, free of charge,
to all citizens."
Regardless of which approaches
are pursued, action is urgently
required to correct an Increasingly
intolerable situation.

Court could complicate housecleaning
By Robert J. Wagman
volved. " The justices found that the
WASffiNGTON (NEA) - Sup- loyalities of the public defenders
porters of Ronald Reagan can har-. were to their clients rather than to
dly wait for him to get out his broom the county supervisor, so they couid
and sweep all these liberal ap- not be replaced unless proved impointees from the federal competent.
bureaucracy. But a recent Supreme
The decision was little noted by
Court decision may make it difficult the public, but it has been closely
for Reagan to appoint his own people scrutinized by federal personnel ofto thousands of government ficials. Some believe that it will
positions that have traditionally cause chaos when Reagan tries to
been filled by the prisident and that remove incwnbents from many
are not protected by civil service positions that have always ~n emstatus.
ptied and filled by the president. The
In March, the court ruled 6-3 ih the incwnbents, they fear, may go to
case of Brenti vs. Finkel that a new court in an effort to hold onto their
Rockland County, N.Y., supervisor jobs.
·
could not replace two assistant
public defenders appointed by the
Most government personnel ex·
previous administraiton simply perts agree that Reagan will have no
because they were of a different trouble replacing the Cabinet and
political party than he.
the White Hoilse staff. In those
The court held that newly elected cases, loyalty to the new president
officials can use party membership and his party is clearly a valid job
as a job qualification only if theY qualification.
"can demonstrate that party af·
But what about tlJe approximately
filiation is an appropriate 2,200 positions .below the 11ssistant·
requirement for the effective per- secretary level that are filled by the
formance &lt;J.f the public offi~ in- president? While these appointees

may not set P'llicy, they are
critieally important in carrying out
the prej!ident's programs. Some experts interpret the Branti decision to
mean that these appointees will
have to be proved incompetent
before they can be replaced.

pointing his own_people to government positions.
The Branti decision may even
enable third parties to participate in
lawsuits challenging ther emoval of
incwnbent office-holders without
proof of their incompetence. For
example, a Ralph Nader-style conswner group might join in a suit to
prevent the replacement of the head
of the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration or a middlelevel executive of the Envirorunental Protection Agency with
somebody friendlier to the auto industry.

Margery Waxman, general counsel for the Office of Personnel
Management, is among those who
believe that the decision will have
less impact on Washington than on
state and local governments. She
argues that the ruling "will have little effect on the federal personnel
system" or on the new president's
appointment authority because it
Most of those · knowledgeable
merely limits "the use of partisan about this issue believe that some
political criteria for the retention of lawsuits will be instituted by in.what are essentially non-political cwnbents and groups seeking to
jobs."
keep them in office. It is not clear
But others are not so sure. lri his what 'will happen in the interin\ as
Branti dissent, Justice Lewis Powell ' the suits move through the courts. .
wrote that the ruling "decreases the
Thus, an incoqling president's noraccountability and denigrates the mally routine job of replacing old ofrole ·of our national political par· ' ficlals with new may become much
ties." To Powell, the decision clearly more complex than usual this
hinders a new president in ap- January.

•

The Top · Twenty teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with f ir~t­
phtt~
votes
in parentheses,
season's
records and tota l points. Po ints based on

8. Alabama
9. Nebra ska •
10, Penn State

20--19-18-17 -16-l 5-14·13·12·11·1 0-9-8-7 ~-5+ 3 -2·

12. North Carotin &lt;~

I'

1. Georgia (52)

r•· •

2. Notre Dame (4)
J. Florida State ( 4)

J ~~

4. Pittsburgh
5. Oklahuma
6. Michigan
7. Baylor

- 1 11

-u

vanct&gt;d .!:!1e:t1~ :1f dt'GJy. Mmh'hl'."'

!H).! '
9-1.{1
J().l~

9-2.{1

!l-2.{1
11).1.{1

ll. Bri~ham Young
H. UCLA
IS. Washington
16, MissiSsippi State
17. So. Ca\Uornia

1, 187
l ,llS

1,092
1,1107
926
865

18. South Carolina
19. So. Mettmdist
20. Miami, Fla.

843

7&gt;JI
682
627

I

5511

49!

191
159
137
359

9-2.{1
9-2.{1

265
135

7-2-1
(l.:J.()
(1.3-()

' 124
1J'

""""

:·.; .S outhern scores
•

•

•

·:_:zmpresszve .wzns
The Southern Tornado girls' high
school basketball team has opened
the season on a high note with two
, ,. very impressive victories. In both
h
appearances, the l&lt;icals have netted
",, more than points en route to lop. .. ~ ided victories.
,
~ . In its initial outing, Southern born.. barded Wahama White Falcons 72-

led all scorers with 21 markers,
while teanunates Usa Peters and
Marriam Sisson added two.
Kim Grueser's reserves put on a
sparkling performance at Trimble
as Southern chalked up a ~ 14 win
over the young Tomcats.
Debbie Michael ripped the nets for
14 markers, Laren Wolfe six, Jenny
Bently five.
Also credited with playing a good
game were Michelle Johnson, Bonnie Boso, Teresa Holstein, Kathy
Baker.
.
In the varsity contest Southern
roared to a 62-35 win over Trimble.
Mel Weese sank 20 points, Tonja
Salser 12, Della Johnson 13, Renee
Smith six, Tammy Smith five, Debbie Michael four, and Cindy Evans
two.
Southern plays North Gallia
Friday evening at home.

so

r

• t

25.

.

•. • Every Tornado saw action and II
._ . ~I the scoring coll!Jilll.
. , Mel Weese had an · outs'ianding
game with !8 points tli lead the winners. Tonja Salser netted 10, Tammy
Smith and Della Johnson eight, Cindy Evans and freshman Laren Wolfe
six each.
Debbie Michael, Michell e Johnson, and Jenny Bentley sank four
apiece, while Teresa Holstein .and
··
_, Renne Smith added two.
Tammy Allensworth of Wahama

..

.;·Southwestern, Hannan Trace
'

:.:·o pen cage campaigns tonight
tl.•

Two Gallia County schools, South•. ; western and Hannan Trace· open tlie
· ' 1980-81 cage season tonight.
· · Southwestern with five returning
n . lettennen is at home
against
-.. Chesapeake while Hannan Trace
visits Symmes Valley.
Highlander returning lettermen
" " are Scott Russell, !HI senior; Jay
"" 'Burleson, !HI senior; Tot;ld Baker, 6-1
-· " senior center; Dale Newberry, 6-2
"; senfor forward and Wayne
::, Sizremoe, 6-&lt;l senior-guard.
"'' Baker and Newberry are the
team's best rebounders while
-'" Burleson, Russell and Sizemore
-"' have good outside shots and provide
1 • ·lots ofleadership.
~"
Also expected to see plenty of ac- .
tion are Mike Sterrelt, 6-1 senior;
Steve Forgey, 6-1 junior; Scott
Lewis, ~10 junior; Tim Miller, a &gt;9

junior, and Charles Stewart, &gt;9
junior. Southwestern posted a 9-12
record last ye~r.
Hannan Trace led by three retur·
ning lettennen, Richard Jones, 6-1
senior; Rodney Pack, 6-2 senior and
Greg Webb, &gt;II junior, will open
against a much improved Symmes
Valley squad.
The Wildcats hoping to improve
last year's 2-19 record will play a
strong pressure defense.
Both teams will be oprating under
new head coaches. Uoyd L. Myers, a
veteran on the basketball coach, is
returning after a 10 year absence at ·
Southwestern While Mike Jenkins, a
long-time reserve . coach at
Southeastern of Ross County,. is on
his first year as a head mentor at
Hannan Trace.

11

Rogers captures
Heislm an Trophy

Meigs junior high teams
ready for 1980-81 season

Jan . 12 at Logan

Jan. 14, Wellston
Jan . 22 at Southern

Jan. 26 at Shade
Jan . 28, Albany
Feb. 2 at Athens
Feb. 9, Gallipolis
Feb. 16. Logan

Eighth Grade Schedule

Dec. 6, Shade
Dec . 15, Southern

Ni ck Bush, Mi ke Cl ine, Oarr in
Cremeans, Steve Crow, Bobby
Foster , Scott Gheen, Randy J ewe ll ,
Bret Kor n, Joey Poulin , Rod Roush,
James Snyder, Bobby Staats, Alan
Terry, Danny Thomas and Jackie

Welker.

Girls' Rost er-

Kristin Ba iley, CathY DeL ong,
Kim Eblin, Ruth Fry , Ke ll y Ginth er,
R·h o nd a
Ha d d ox:,
Jol e ne

Dec. 17 al Athens'

Moodispaugh,

Jan. 5 at G·allipolis

Russel l, Julia Sisson. Cindy Soulsby,

Jan . 7, Wellston
Jan . 12, Logan

Pierce,

R~onda

Trina

Neece, Jul ie

Reeves,

Snerry

Denise Stega ll and Diana Whi te.

SNOW BITER " goes thru
ice, mud and snow!
'F•~estone

ll&gt;

~t{~ ~~
PQ!yester cord

Jan. 14 at_shade

Alarming dismTay in Atlantic alliance
By Don Graff
Received wil!dom these days is
that the Atlantic alliance is in a state
of aIanning disarray.
,
What, then, is a wise man to make
of Madrid?
The West has been putting on an
impressive display of togetherness
there at the ~onference . on Security
and Cooperation in Europe. And not
only the NATO members. A few of
the dedicated neutrals have lent
welcome s~pport to tile first team in
castigating the Soviet perfonnance
on hwnan rights, both abroad in
Afghanistan ar.d at home .in the
denial of justice to its own peoples.
The Madrid gathering is a followup, the second such, to the 1975
Helsinki conference of 32 European
states plus the Soviet Union, United
States and Canada 'that was supposed ln be tht• capstone &lt;lf P.a,IWest detente.
Rut tlelelllt the~e days is In~" :od-

11-11-il

ll. Ohio State

9-2-&lt;l
9-2.{1
9-2.{1
9-2.{1
1()..1-0
11-l-0
9-2&lt;1

year's AP Player of ·the Year as more than this last year, said
DePaul was ranked No. I for most of Detroit Coach Willie McCarter. "!
the season, scored 26 points and quit watching after 10 minutes."
Kansas Coach Ted Owens wa s a
picked up nine assists to pace Ray
Meyer's crew to its 43rd consecutive winner for the 300th time as the
Jayhawks rode the play of substitute
homecourt victory.
"It's nice to be No. I," said Meyer, Booty Nea l to a 8Hi7 triumph over
who didn't ~eii\IY mean it. " But Pepperdille. Neal scored 14 of his 16
when I really think about it, it really points in the second half.
Mike Davi,hit for 24 points to lead
i:fisturbs me. I like f.O be fifth or sixth. In a nutshell, it gives us nothing Alabama to a 90-75 victory over
WINS HEISMAN TROPHY - George Rogers, of the University of
to shoot at and I believe that a suc- Wisconsin. Ken Johnson scored 21
South Carolina, holds the Heisman Trophy which was awarded to him at
cessful basketball team has to be points and Eddie Phillips added 20
the Downtown Athletic Club in New York Monday. Rogers, of Duluth,
able to climb over other teams and for the Crimson Tide.
Georgia, leads the nation in rushing t)lis season. (AP Laserphoto ).
improve to the point where they feel
Jim Stack scored 24 points, his
they are accomplishing something." ,ca,reer high, as Northwestern topped .
Only two other ranked teams were Colorado State 78-75. Eddie Hughes
in action Monday, with No.5 Indiana poured in 33 points for CSU. ·
Eric Williams' 19 points boosted
beating Murray State 59-41 and 12thHouston
over Southern California 71ranked Iowa shelling Detroit 98-55.
54;
Vanderbilt
took Iowa State 97-87
Isiah Thomas, who missed Indiana's season-opener with a groin thanks to 27 points from Mike
injury, was sufficiently recovered to Rhodes and 22 by Charles Davis;
score 21 points agai nst Murray freshman center Russell Cross dropState. But it was the Hoosiers' defen- ped in 21 points in Purdue's 104-75
NEW YORK (AP) - As a high all. Eventually, an aunt, Mrs. Oletta
se that won the game, holding the bl owout of Loyola, Calif. , while school sophomore, George Rogers Rogers of Duluth, Ga., offered him
Racers to two points in the final 18 Marquette broke to a 13-11 lead and remembers he was "scared of con- "a chance to come up there and go to
cruised to a 106-.'ill verdict over the tact:"
minutes.
school. It was the best thing I ever
' Vince Brookins played only 16 University of Charleston, W.Va.
"One time, I was chickening did.''
Guard Jerome Akins hit his only through the hole, not going full
minutes yet hit a career-high 'l:l
points, including 17 in the first eight free throw of the night in the final speed, and my coach reached down
The rest is history. Rogers singleminute of play as New Me&gt;&lt;ico State and picked me up from the bottom of
min~tes, to pace Iowa. Brookins had
handedly
lifted South Carolina from
edged
Baylor
61-60.
Akins,
1-of-9
17 of the first23 points by Iowa.
the pile. l wasn't but 180 pounds and
the
ranks
of football ne'er-do,wells
from
the
free-throw
line,
sank
lhe
" He jus• had one of those nights,"
he was 6-foot-5 .and 220. He started
into
the
bigtime.
He rushed for 4,958
said Iowa Coach Lute Olson of the 6- winning point after the Aggies had shaking me and sa id, 'You're gonna
yards
excluding
133 against
squandered most of a IQ-point lead in run the ba!l or I'm gonna kick your
foot~ senior. "Our players weren't
Missouri
in
last
year's
Hall
of Fame
rear end.' I was, like, crying, but
really surprised. They see him all the final six minutes.
good
for
fourth
place
on the
Bowl
Nav~ routed Haverford 91-43,
the time in practice. They all know
that hel ped motivate me. "
all-time
list.
He
has
gone
over
100
that if you give Vince the shots, he'll Columbia walloped Brooklyn II&lt;Hl7
Rogers has qeen running the ball
yards
in
his
last
21
games
and
he
is
and it was Bryan 67, Trevecca ever since and Monday the Univerput them in."
.
South
Carolina
's
career
total
offense
"I think they beat us by 10 points Nazarene 64. ·
sity of South Carolina tailback ran
himself right into the Heisman leade r without ever having thrown a
Trophy, awarded annually to the pass.
nation's ou tstanding coll ege football
player.
Along the wa y, Rogers built him'' The bad times," said Rogers, the self up from a 190-pound freshman.
fourth leadin g rusher in major "The training table played a big part
college football history, "happened in that,'' he explained. "I was eating
aJong time ago."
three times a day. I was just lucky.
Roge
rs
is
now
a
6-foot-2,
22!l-pound
I' ve got some friends who are still
Jan
.
19,"
Jack
so
n
r!
The Meigs Local School District's
Jan . 22 at Sou th er n
senior
who
may
be
the
first
player
back there in that Atlanta neighbasketball program is now going at
Feb. 1, AIhens
in
next
spring's
National
chosen
borhood."
full force on all levels. The boys varF eb . 4atWellston
Footbali
League
draft.
That
would
F eb. 9, Ga ll i pol,is
sity and reserve squads opened this
culminate a real life poverty-toF eb . 18 at Logan
.past weekend, while the high school
Seven1h Grade Schedul e
riches drama that has seen Rogers .- - - - - -- - - - - - girls have seen action the past two
Oec . Sat Shade
escape
an Atlanta slwn to win
Dec . 15, Southern
weeks.
college
football's
most prestigious
Dec. 17 al Alhens
It was recently announced that
Jan . 7, Wellston
individual award.
Meigs will sponsor seventh and
Jan. 11, Logan
"! lived in a real bad neigheighth grade boys baskethall and a
Jan. l 4a t Shade
borhood,"
he recalled. "But being in
Jan
.
19,
Jack
so~
junior high girls team.
Jan. 22 at Sou th ern
the
situation
I was in, l didn 't have
Ron Drexler will coach the eighth
Jan. 16, Gallipolis
any
choice
but
to stay around.''
grade squad, Bruce Wilson . the
Feb. 2, AlherjS
Rogers'
parents
were sepa rated
Feb.
4atWell
51dn
seventli graders, and Gloria AlexanF eb . 9atGallipol is
his
father
recently
was released
and
der the junior high girls.
Feb. 18 at Logan
from
jail
after
serving
a~nost eight
Rosters and schedules follow :
Seventh Grade Boys
fatally
shooting
a girl
years
for
Shaw n Baker , Brian Buffington,
Mik
e
Chancey,
Paul
D
uff,
Rod
friend.
Meanwhile,
Rogers,
hi s
Girts Sc~edul e
Harri son, Brian Houdashelt, James
Dec . 1 at Albany
mother, two brothers and two teenKeesee, Chr is K ennedy , Parker
Dec . 4, Southern
age sisters - each with a baby -:Long , Eric M itchel l, L ee Powell,
Dec . 8 at Wel lston
moved from town to town, eight in
Brad Robinson, Chri s Shank , Dav i d
Dec. tO. Shade
Warth
and
Rick
Wise.
Dec. 17, Athens
Jan. 5 at Gallipolis
E ighfh Grad e Boys
r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

Sports briefs.

prospects, dim to start with, almost and others have also been speaking proval of Soviet actions. At Madrid,
flickered out entirely during a six· out sharply. Even the .French - and precisely that purpose is being
week preliminary session that was you know how the French can be achieved by American parunable to agree on agenda.
have stuck with the team,
ticipation.
.
The. reason was clear: Stalling on
American ·ledership has been
The Carter admlnsitration's stanthe part of the Soviets to a point just ftiund wantiog by the allies during
ce
on human rights bas been sul;lshort of deliberately scuttling the recent years on grounds of general
jected to considerable criticism and
conference. They sought to limit uncoordination and a disinclination
was, in fact, an issue of sorts In the
discussion on hwnan rights and to to comult with them in advance of
campaign. But lt was a signal sucshift the focus to political questions fonnulating policies affectinj! all.
cess of pre-Carter American
and anns. What they achieved was The complaint won't wash at
diplomacy to have coupled the printheir. own isolation, publicly from Madrid, where · Ame.tlcan·
ciple
that respect of rights Is 1 matthe Europe:m neutrals and privately engineered caususlng has been conter ol leiltlmate international con- ·
from some ol their own em- tinuous. It shows in the united front.
cern to the princple of national
barrassed allies.
, ,.
Ronald Reagan, at a late stage of security.
And they have aided the American the campaign, questioned · the
American consistency and firm.
delegation in achieving exactly what wisdom of participating in the conness
on the rights issue has made the
the Carter administration sought in ference. Having boycotted the
·
United
States the good lillY II
deciding to go to Madrid'desplte the Moscow Olympics, why go to
Madrid with overwhelming support
decay of detente: Play a critical Madrid?
,
among the c(!nferees, alliea and
spotlight on the hypocritical perThe president-elect missed the neutrala alike.
·
r.., ""'"'"e of the Soviets since · point. Whatever one may think of the · That Is 1 poUtical achievement ol
Helsinki.
effectiveness of the Carter ad- no small liplflcance, one that the
American spokesman have taken ministration's response m , the
q,,. lead IIi lhe critiques, hut they Olympics, the plll')lOie was to ex· iJ\coming admlniltration In 1111
wisdom should not loae sight of In 1111
11(1\ •. ;u't Ut..'t'll atunt: H i i!.sll. Dutd1
prt'ss Ill! publicly as possibl_e dlsap- zeal to talk tougher to the Soviets.

an

'),

BASEBALL
YORK ·{API - Left-bander
steve Howe, who became the long· sought stopper in the Los Angele~
:: ~Dodgers' bullpen ·last season, was
C
., !'ilamed National League Rookie of
• " " the Year by the Baseball Writers
"'"moclationofAnierica.
-'"'' Howe received 12 first place
'' ~ ballots from the 24-man BBWAA
-~,; panel and totaled 80 points. 'lt was
~N the first time since the award began
;•• in 1947 that the panel bas voted on a
~.:; 5-3-1 basis.
I l
Montreal pitcher Bill Gullickson
-~ hOI.shed second with '53 points in~·.' 'eluding five first place ballots and
. ·'" ·outfielder Lonnie Smith of the
~ "'"Philadelphia Phillies was third with
u•' 49 points.
Howe had a 7·9 record with 17
,,
•· •saven,nd a 2.65 earne.d 'run average.
::~ ~
TENNIS
•• r JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
••• (AP) - Fritz Buelming downed
thiro:seeded Bob Lutz 6-4, 6-4, and
~:·:~ NEW
4

•

,.

•

••

seventh-seeded Kim Warwick ci
Australia outlasted South African
Kevin Curren U, 7~. 6-3 in .the
semifinals of an international international tennis.
·
.
,. ·
. HOCKEY
NEW YORK (AP) _Right wing Anders Kallur of the New York !sian·
ders was selected the National
Hockey Lkague player of the week.

NOTICE TO CUSTOMERS

CHRISTMAs BAZAAR

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN IN MIDDLEPOR'
l'
.
IS NOW OPEN UNTIL.8:00 P.M. DAILY
EXCEPT• SUNDAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS"
EVE WHEN WE WIU CLOSE AT
5:00 P.M.

DEQMBER 5 &amp; 6

·IT PAYS TO SHOP EARLY

r------------.:.-1

lHRIFT SHOPPE,
MI~PORT

I

Handmadl! items, crafts,.
t,aked goods &amp; candy.
Sponsored By Meigs
Humane Society

~o.

'

Black F.E.T.
A78-13 532.95 $1.63
878-13 . 34.95 1.89
C78-13 35.95 2.12
D78-14 38.95 2.11
E78-14 40.95 2.33
• F78·14 42.95 2.46
G78-14 43.95 2.61
Slze

' Size

-

Black F.E.T.

5.60·15 $34-95 $1.80
6.00-15L 36.95 1.93
P78-15
43.95 2.52
45.95 2.68
G78-15
HJS-15 ,· 47.95 2.91
50.95 3.14
L78·15

;

We have tM bi~gest selection of mer' chandise i,n our 31 years in Middleport.

I,IALL15 BEN FRANKLIN

All prices plus tax. No trade· in needed! Other size.s
comparably priced. White-walls extra.
Also: Batteries For Cars, Trucks &amp; Tractors

POMEF.1Y HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E . Main
Ph. 992-2094
Pomeroy, OH.
Front End Alignment-$11 .50 Most Passenger Cars

�•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1980

' $-The D_ally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 1980
, IJJJ,;I\ U\AC'i
t
.

l

- - - -,-Thanksgiving in Meigs 'Y!Jeans family-· ~-...;,__----.

Thanksgiving means not only a
lime for turkey with all the trimm ings, but togetherness for
families.
The Bend social scene was
rmrked with family gatherings.
Some traveled afar to join their
r~latives, while others journeyed to
Meigs County for the holiday
weekend .
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Smith and
daughter, Paige, went to MidtUetown to join her brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John
Chasteen and their children, Sean,
Sherrie and Ryan. Others there were
Mrs. Ethel Chasteen of La!!d 0'
Lakes, Fla., and Mr. and Mrn. Ray
Chasteen and children, Lear and J .
R. of Gaithersburg, Md. Mrs. Ethel
Chasteen returned to Pomeroy to
visit her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Smith, for the next
month. Missing from the family
group was Todd Smith whose employment on the river continued
over the holiday.
Mr . and Mrs. George Hackett, Jr.

hosted a holiday dinner at their Middleport hoine. They were joined by
J ohn and Linda Goodwin who moved
over the weekend to the F ort
Lauderdale, Fla. area; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Robert F ranko of Pittsburgh, Pa.;
Mr. a nd Mrs. Kent KIOfs of Belpre,
and Mr. a nd Mrs. Manning Kloes
and daughters, Lori, home for the
holiday from Judson College, and
Lynn, Dennis Hackett, Bill Hackett,
B. J . and Ben , and Herman Kloes,
Middleport. Linda Goodwin who has
been in the public defender 's office
in Columbus recently passed her
Florida Bar and will be practicing
la w there.
Mr. and Mrs: James Lochary and
family of Glen Ridge, N. J . wer e the
holiday weekend guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
Spending the holiday weekend
here with their mother, Mrs. Marie
Steiner, Middleport, wer e Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Steiner, Cleveland. Steiner
has been associa ted with the
O evela nd Illumina ting Co. for the
past 25 yea rs.

•

EVENING

6 :00 m O C!J O C!J®li!21 19 NEWS '
CD BACKYARD
ffi CAROL BURNETT AND.
FRlENOS
@ ABC NEWS
CIJ 3-2· 1 CONTACT

,

@ OVER EASY Gues t s: Singer

,-·

Social Calendar
¢ "'.::

hangers, pillows, stuffed trees, stockings, afghans,
wall hangings, and wood items, along with homemade
candy a nd baked goods. A sample of the many items to
be sold are shown here with Mrs . Ge orgia wa;son,
right, and Mrs. Garnet E rvi ne.

CHRISTMAS BAZAAR - The annual bazaar of the
Citizens Center will be held Thursday and
f riday from 9 a .m . to 3:3() p.m. Numerous homema de
tlems will be for sale including colorful aprons,
r·pramic trees, Christmas ornaments, bell door
~rnior

·
SUTTON TUESDAY
TOWNSHIP
trustee
meeting 8 p.m . Tuesday at Syracuse
Municipal building.
OHIO ETA Pill CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7: :ro p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.

\

Several members of the Ainerican
Legion Auxiliary of Racine Post 6()2,
will attend the. Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital party Dec. 18.
Meeting recently at the hall, the
unit made arrangements to meet at
the -hall on Dec. 18 at 11 a .m. to
travel together to Chillicothe. -···
They will take (flrlt, ditty ba gs and
towel bibs along wit h other
miscellaneous items. A donation
was also sent.
other holiday donations were
made to the Xenia home for orphans
and also to the ·Racine Firemen's
Auxiliary to help pay for the Santa
treat for children of the community.

The annual Christmas party for
the members was set for Dec. 17 a t
7p.m. at the Steamboat Inn in
Racine, Each members to take a
reading for the program and also an
exchange gift, preferably something
they made. Dues were sent to the
Past Presidents Parley .
Mrs. Louise Stewart presided at
the meeting prayer, the pledge and
the preamble . Therewas a moment
of silent prayer for the honored dead
and the war veterans. Officers'
reports were given and it was noted
that the unit reached goal on Nov. 8.
Ubby Willford received the redbird
pin for collectin-g the most rnem-

bership dues.
Martha Lou Beegle gave readings
about Thanksgiving and also on the
theme of the membership, "Flight in
Succession." A communication was
read from the state president
thanking the unit for a gift sent to
her recept,ion.
The traveling prize was donated
by L&lt;:ora Young and won by Mrs.
Beegle. Mrs. Wilford, Mrs. Young
and Mrs. Beegle are accepting the
reservations for the Christmas part y,
Refreshments w~re served by
Mrs. Shirley Ables and Mrs. Julia
Norris.

Michelle Hines
honoree of
layette fare

ted by Mrs. Judy Broome at the
recent meeting the Society of the
Middleport Nazarene Church .
Mrs. Broome used a skit entitled
"Johnny Come Lately" emphasizing
the recent growth of the men's work
in the missionarydrcles. Mrs. Marjorie Taylor, missionary presiden~
read scripture from Jeremiah 7, ver-

ses 1 to 24. There was group singing
of " Showers of Blessings", " Burdens are Ufted at Calvary", and
blessed Assurance. "
Phyllis Luster sang " Please Search the Book Again" with the clpsing
number being " How Great ·Thou
Art. " There was a poem " God
Knows Best" by Mrs. Taylor.

Festival selects ·
fall royalty
Royalty was selected at the recent
fall feslival of the Salem Center
Elementary School.
Kings and queens named were
Bily Ogdin and Angel mcDaniel, and
Terry McGuire and Krystal Brown.
·Ribbons in the baked goods ju~ging
went to Gloria Oiler, Barbara Lambert, Barl!llra Hayes,. Ben Bell, Sue
. Shenefield, and Kathy Rhodes. An
auction was held with Keith Oiler as
auCtioneer.
Games and other activities were
carried out during the carnival sponsored by the Salem Center
f.ducational Organizational.
\

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday Saturday
&amp;

·

8 : 30tos : OO,~hursdaytill12noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONlY
773-5592

Mason.• W.Va .

HERMAN GRATE

~~;i;i;i;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii
I

570 ~.MAIN

•.

('

POMEROY, OH.
I

&amp;LOCK!:"~

OUT THE SIT·
llATION AT
SILVER CRfEK

6:58
7:00

BORN LOSER

BUT I'AA OClT S~ 'bi.J ~L.It€
1\1AIIIJI-I,A.,T '{OIJ H~ iS f.lOT

I l&lt;l-nl '/OJ

'bJ

BeL.I~Vt;
llf.lCie~/&gt;-,IJD WHAT

'bJ 1J.Ii1Jt( t 9JD" •

I

I'M eott-)6 TO FIFe HIM I Bl&gt;T RI&lt;?T
I'M 00\1.}0 TO Kll..L- HIM- '1'---~1

WHATI~T.

.

8:00

100

MINUTESOF
THRILLS--LA-UGHS

100

STARS DIRECT FROM

SAVE
•

•

ANNIE .

STAGE AND_CIBCUS

TRAFFIC'LL BE
6ETIIH' HE!IJIER
THOUGH -IT'S

•

ADVANCE TIC.KETS
AT REDUCED PRICES

AUIOST OAWH!

*GROTON*

WEDS.,
DEC.

ER ~ WHY ARE WE
TURHIH' OFF OHW
THIG OIRT ROOt', _
GH.IP?

DUHHO~BUT

I HOPE HE
MEIJER. FINOS
,---------1..---:g•- HER!

_...,~~--./

3Ro

MEIGS JR. HIGH AUD.
Sponsored by Midd. Fire Dept.
Show Time 7:00P.M.

Lor~"

ENTERTAINMENT
· WED., lHURS., FRI., &amp;SAT.
NIGHTS

Troy Donahue .

GASOLINE AILEY .

a:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
9:00 CD 700 CLUB

How
about

Your
mother '-."'--- '
wants

us to

•

half

cash
ard

She'll
q·1ve us
'close-lt.in"

half to
appl4
onmu
loan?

·rates!

BARNEY

'

I GOT TO
WATCH TATER

1

ALLTH'TIME···

,I CAN'T TAKE.
MV EVES OFF HIM
FOR A SECONT

NIGHT LIFE

ui74

BEVERAGES SOlD
'

THE MEIGS. .INN

Phont&gt; 992·3629 ·

(I) G2) 19 THREE'S COMPANY
Jack takes ajobasa mo\l&amp;blemsn·
neqUin in a store window display,
but it's hard to tell who' s really the
dummy when Janet set s the stage
tor Jack t o fall for Larry' s luscious
new love . {Closed-Captioned;
U.S.A.)
®MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)''"
.. Gunga Din" 1939
®
BODY IN QUESTION
' Balancing Act' Dr. Jonathan Miller .
analyz es the body's remarkable
repertoire and shows how the
human body is a complex ayatemol
control mechanisms designed t o
restore all things to their most
, favorable
state .
(Closed· ·
Caplioned;U .S.A.) (60 mine .)
,
9:30 @WID TOO CLOSE FOR COMFORT The revealing uniform Sara
wears on her new job as waitress is
asensati oh for the male clientele at
the restaurant , but spark s fatherly
shock in Henry.
10:00 (I)IJC!J GENESHALITTALKSTO
THE STARS Gene ShaUl of NBC's
'Today · will be shown in selections
from the hundreds otlnterviewa he
has done on the program over the
last e ight years . Among Shallt's
celebrity inte rviews to be shown
are those with Richard Burton, Bun
Reyn olds, St eve Martin, Meryl
Streep, Anne Bancroft ; George
Burns, end Mickey Roonev. (60
mina.)
(I) G2l 19
THE · BARBARA
WALTERS SPECIAL Barbara
Walters interviews Burt Reynolds,
Paul Newman and Clint EastwOod. t
(60mins.)
®NEWS
10:15 CIJ TBSEYENING NEWS
10:2a (I) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 I]) FAITH 20
ffi GREATEST SPORTS RIYAL·
RIES ·usc ve Notre Dame' Since
the Irish beat the Trojane 13·121n
1928, there hasn' t been a breather
in this aeriee.
® EXTENSIONS
10!58 I]) NEWSUPOATE
11:oo
CIJ
CIJ ®l (}21 •
NEWS
I]) .TODAY IN I!IIIL! PROPHECY
(!) SNEAK PREVIEW
® DICKCAYETTSHOW
11:15 (I) NIGHT GALLERY
11 :2a I]) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 CIJ • C!J THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host: David letterman.
Guests: Jack Lemmon, Hoyt AKton,
Will Shriner. (80 mine.)
., l1i ROSS BAGI.f:V' SHOW
(I) MOVIE ·tSUSP!NSE) " '
"Man With The Golden Gun"

m•

4 PIECE.&amp; VOCAL
FIIDM PARKERSBURG,
·DEC. 3, 4, .5, 6

You must be 21 l)r accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

1979

@C!%JQ) LAVERNEAND SHIRLEY
It's lights , c ameras and act ion
when Laverne and Shirley become
stuntwomen in Hollywood in order
to meet tt,eir hearllhrob, film star

_..'

'

lCHUTOY t
· J I I J

Pomeroy,O..

D ·

0

I'VE READ ALOT ABOUT
ABRAHAM UNCOLN WHEN
WAS AN ATTORNEV•..

NOT ONCE, ON THE DAV
ATRIAL,~ HE UNASLE
FIND TilE COUIOJ.IOUSE

LIFE WAS
51MPLeg THEN!

m•

·

·

(I) (B) •
ABC NEW!.
NIGHTLINE
• (I) CIIS LATE MOYIE 'LOU

Answer here:[

ey

T HE CAI"'TAIN
SECA,A,IIc.

Now arrange the circled letters 1
form the surpnse answer, as sut
gested by the above cartoon ,
·

X X X )"[ XX X X,
{An,swers tomo n1

fes terday·s

I

Jumbles: VALVE MERGE BEHIND NIMBLE
Answer: One arrives tw o hours after t h1s-ElfV F.

Jumble Book No. 14, conta in ing 11() puzzles, Is available forS1 .iS poslp ald
from Jumble, clothls newspaper, Bo x 3-4, Norwood, N.J.&lt;l7S.8.1nclude your
name, addrets, zip code anct make checli:l pay abl e t o Newspaperbootts

j

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Unlikely contract scored
NORTH
+KJ 8 7
• tO 3
• Q92
+AK6 5

12-2-80

WEST

EAST

+A5
.Q8 5
tA8 5 1
+JJ0 8 !

+643 2
' A02
tJ 10 7
+9 72

SOUTH

+Q3

Vulnerable: North-Sou th
Dealer: West
. West
Pass
1

Pass
Pass
Pass

With 11 high-card points a n~
rather good five-card heR ,
suit, one notrump , two h r ~r
and two spades are all inact
quate while a forcing jump
, two notrump is a trifle (
strong.
The hand is no probl em
all to the expert as he pl "'
the second-round JUmp to t
notrump as highly invitati
al, but not absolutely forci
he jumps to two notrump.
North has a trifle ovet

minimum and goes to game

• Q 10 9
'KJ9 7 4
t K6 3

I.

North

I+

East
Pass

Soulb

t+

3 NT

Pass
Pass

2NT
P ass

Opening lead:+4

:By Oswald Jacoby
aud Alan Sontag

South sees plenty of troul•
at his game contra ct. His ki•
of dia.monds takes East's I 0 ,
trick one and he decides to 1
after spades immedia tely.
West takes his ace of spad
and leads a low · dia mo1·
South must make the r j,·
decision here and rise
dummy' queen.
Now he has enough r,'
tricks for two notrump. IJ;
cashes the good spad.- an·
fi nally comes down to a hnar
play. He leads the 10 h or
aummy. East ducks , but Sout
has no guess at this point
West dealt and passed and ha&lt;

shown two aces. He will nol

South has a tough problem
in find ing his correet rebid
after North's one-spade call.

hold the heart ace as well 1 so
South hops up with his king
and makes his optim isti c
game contract .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)

~'M't.'t~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 GrQUp of wolves
5 Twittered
11 Feel grippy
1% Not in the mood
13 Daze
14 Card combination
15 Place for
an aerie
li Sanctum
17 Vegetable
18 Bewitch
ZO Dutch city
!1 Challenge
Tom Seaver
!2 Engendered
Z3 Hartebeest
Z4 To a degree
%5 Warden's
nightmare

DOWN
1 Stickum
2 Exert
influence
3 Certain
parties
4 Football' s
Stabler
5 Eucharist
plate
6 Occurrence
7 Poet's
time of day
8 Devotions
9 Fugitive
10 Thought
about
16 April 1st, e.g.
19 School subj .

Yesterday's
22 "Yesterday"
23 Charter
facility
24 Courtship
Z5 Did a commaildo's·
job
Z8 Choose

Answe
29 Office
1118chine
fo r sho1t
30 For the
31 Coat
mnteri I
36 Philippines tre,
37 Mauna -

Z6YorkBhire
river

!1 Curve
Z8 Distingulshed
3Z _Russian

b-+-+-

river
.33 In a blaze

. u Haul

. 3i Royal crown
.37 Queue
31 nelbe
orlords
. 39 Fonnerly
ttl Hernando
of history
.U Graybearded
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to wol'k it :
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

In

One letter aimply •tands for onother.
this sample A is
. uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinal• letters.
apostrophes, the lenllh ond formation of the words are ~II
hints. Eoeb doy the code letters ore different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

GRANT: Scandal' Ro~elauap•cts

that the new, attractive woman
reporter on the Trlbune'a staff Ia
getting Information from a powerful
pol~tician because of her personal
relatlonah IP wit hthe man. (Repeat)
'BILLY : Portrait 01 A Straol Kid'
t977 Stare: Llf!Var Burton, Tine
Andrews.
Cil MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS

WHAI THE C FI: UISE
PAS5EN&lt;SER5 MAFI:FtiE t.

tJ

'\YCISJL

Cushing . (3 hrs.)

WEEKEND

.

ina swimming relay, a running relay ,
multiple choice testa, and char·
adea . Participants will inc lud e
Scott Baio., Gil Gerard, Di c k \/an
Pallen, Leit Garrell, and more . (2
hre.)
CD ORAL ROBERTS
® BASKETBALL Atlanta Hewks
vs Philadelphia 76era
(I) (}21 8 HAPPY DAYS Marion' a
handsomenephewRooermovesto
Mil waukee to coach basketball
and teach English at Jefferson
High, but his first day in t own
becomes a shambles when hetan~s with the Fonz .
0@ @I HALLMARK HALL OF
FAME 'A TaleofTwoCitiea'Based
on Charles Dickens' story, this tale
is set during the French Revolution.
The story focuses on the lives of
Oarnay, a descendant of French
aristocracy, end Carton, theoatensibly aimless barrister who
physically reserpblee the Frenchman. Stars: Chris Sarandof).• Peter

®®NOVA 'Moving Still' Thlolilm
shows the extraordinary work of
still and cine photography in the
1800'5, tracingthes'tory ofhowthe
ab II ity to freeze lime on film has enabled scientists to draw remarkable
new insights into the ir work.
(Ciosed·Captioned;U.S.A.)
(60
mins.)
8:30 CD GOOD NEWS
ffiMOVIE-(COMEDY)" " HaroAt

992·6687-992~5129

(No Specials During Holiday Season)

Ag ing. Hosts: Hu gh Downs and 1
Frank
Blair
(Ciosed·Captioned :U.S.A.)
m iJ C!J NBC NEWS
CD
20TH
CENTURY
GUIOELINES
ffi BOB NEWHART SHOW
(I) FACE THE.MUSIC
O &lt;Il®l CBS NEWS
CIJ WILO WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
l1ll FEELINGS
G2)Q) ABC NEWS
CD NEWS UPDATE
m 0 PM MAGAZINE
@
GERALD
DERSTINE
PRESENTS .
ffi ALL IN THE FAMILY
@(j2) Q) FAMILY FEUD
C!J TV HONOR SOCIETY
O &lt;Il TIC TAC DOUGH
CIJ ®
MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®l NEWS
(}J IJ BULLSEYE
CD FAr)'lt THAT LIVES
C!l RICHLITTLE'S'ACHRISTMAS
CAROL' '
@ SANFORD AND SON
(I) 0 CIJ JOKER'S WILD
C!J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
00® DICKCAVETTSHOW
®l MATCH GAME
G2)Q) FACE THE MUSIC
ffi NEWS UPDATE
(}) IJ C!J BATTLE OF BEVERLY ,
HILLS Athletic and mental abil ities
w ill be tested when eight fivemember teams of celebrities and
their families vie lor big cash prizes

214 Main
Pomeroy

AT
MEIGS
INN

7:30

7:58

. REUTER-BROGAN
'
INSURANCE SERVICE

All LEGAL

992-2556

PER~UADED

POLI CE CllfCK

CHECK IT WITii THE
INSURANCE EXPERTS.

Gloria Oiler was crowned weekly
queen for the RuUand TOPS OH 1466
meeting held last week. She was
presented a dollar and members
sang in her honor. Barbara Alkire
was runner-up at the meeting.
Phyllis Oay, cD-Ieader, presided
at the meeting. There was a short

8 :30

!&gt;TATE TROOPER OUT
5ETTII&gt;I'UP ROAO- ,

'II {/

On Sunday, Dec. 14th

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

GOT EVE!I:Y AVAILAB LE

••• checked
~ la. _your
~ 1nsurance
lately?

Closing For the Seaspn
-THANKS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE-

THE HARDKOCK
~HERIFF TO
HAVE STATe

lUC K~ THERE 'S (IEEN
JAIL &amp;RE~I&lt; SO THE Y' VE

,

9 til,

WE WILL BE

!;!AVE ARRJVED
IN !SILliER

~b~us~i~n~ess~m~e~e~tin~g~.iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======~l

q.,~,.,.--~~OJ?&gt;~""""""

Women of the Calvary Bible Church recently hosted a layette shower
honoring Michelle Hines at the home
of Betty Barker.
Garnes were played with prizes
going to Jean Peavley, Marta Blackwood, Michelle Hines and Brenda
LaDeaux. Others attending or s~­
ding gifts were Helen Jane Brown,
Jessie Martin, Debhie Boatright,
Sheryl Little, Iva Sisson, Vicky
Peavley, Kay Blackwood, and
Melissa and Trina Barker. Refreshments were sel'\'ed by Mrs. Barker
with the special cake being made by
Mrs. Peavley.

MEAP&gt;{WHILE,
CORY DEAN

r•M~rs;;.F;r;ed~a~H;e;nd;e~r;so;n;.~;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;w

TOPS NEWS REPORTED

Church society hears of missionaries recendy
A program on involvement of men
in missionary societies was presen-

LIVORNO ANO
TWO OF fll$
MOll !SOLDIERS

CREEK .. .

a

MEIGS LOCAL Band Boosters
7:3() this evening in band room at
high school.
REGULAR MEETING, Mid·
dleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM 7:30 this
evening; installation of officers.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY WDGE 164, F&amp;AM
meeting 7: 3() p.m. Wednesday; ' installation of officers.

Group plans party at VA hospital

Enzo Stuart i and Dr. Rob ert Butler,
Director of th e Net ionallnatit ute on

CAPTAIN EASY

had charge of the mee~ing with pins
and patches being awarded to Eula
Jeffers, 100 hour pin and a 50 hour
pateh, Mrs. Ina Mas5a.t, 4,000 hours,
Goldie Carson, 50 hour patch.
The program was presented by
Mrs. Ethel Grueser who used a
Thanksgiving theme. Mrs: Anthony
read scripture from Psaim 100; Mrs.
Clara Burris, "The Origin d
Thanksgiving," Mrs. Louise Bearhs,
"An Old Mother's Thanksgiving,"
Mrs .
Lucille
Leifheit,
" Thanksgiving Day"; and Jessie
Molden , "A Boy 's Thanksgiving."
Mrs. Ethel Grueser had a quiz on the
parts of turkey.
Mrs. Janice Daniels had the
closing prayer. A horn o( plenty
decorated the table and pumpkin
c~ke, coffee, mints and nuts were
served. Hostesses were Mildred
Fry, Mrs. Burris, Mrs. Jeffers, and

•

DEC. 2 , 1980

r-------------

Plans for the annual holiday
potluck were made when the
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital met recently at the
hospital.
The dinner will be served ·at 6: 3()
p.m. and those attending are to take
their own" table service. There will
be a gift exchange of items costing
between $2 and $3. Mrs. Katie Anthony was named flower c~airman,
and handling the decorating will be
Mrs. Louise Bearhs,, Mrs. Ethel
Grueser, Mrs. Shorty Wright, Mrs.
Janice Daniels, Mrs. Alma Newton,
Mrs. Midge Abbott, Mrs. Elonda
Haynes, and Mrs. Kathryn Metzger.
The tables will be set by the
executive committee.
Mrs. Carrie Kennedy, president,

NEW YORK (AP) - If water molecules could be strun
like beads, it would take more ·than 79 million of t!R!'m t ·
make a string one inch long.
In a single drop of water, there are enough molecules t•·
make a string more than three and a half times as long as th·
distance from Earth to the sun .

VI~wmg

and Mrs. John Searles, Richard
Searles, Jimmy Taylor, Jerry
Taylor, all of Fostoria; Mr. and Mrs.
Duane D. Duffield, Findlay; Mr. and
Mrs. David Farabaugh and Heather,
Findlay; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
R obinson and Nicholas, Findlay;
Miss Brenda Duffield, Dayton ; and
Frederick 0. Rambo, Findlay.

·Auxiliary makes plans
for holiday potluck

'

Television

~~:;;-;;;;-;::;;~

'

A .pre-Thanks giving famil y ni versary on Thanksgiving Day,
took place at the Albert
gathering
joined Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Darst
Roush
home
on Bailey Run Road. At .
and c hildrep for Thanksgiving dinthe
dinner
were
Mr. and Mrs. Bill
ner. Other guests were Mr. a nd Mrs.
Mrs.
Cindy Overs,
Hudson
and
Herbert Gilkey, Middleport.
Jacksonville,
N.
C.;
Mr. and Mrs.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
Parsons,
Lois
and
Kim, Kevin
Virgil
Carpente~· for Thanksgiving ; were
ani!
Chris
Smith,
Mr.
and
Mrs. LanMrs. John.Young, Phillip, Robin and
Usa, James Carpenter and son, Jay, ny Tyree and Charlie, Mr. and Mrs.
Reedsville, Mr. and Mrs . Harry Kenny Roush and Jason, all of
Young, Galion, Mrs. W. 0 . Barnitz, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush,
Sherry and David, St. Albans ; Mr.
and Mrs. Suzy Carpenter. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Young spent and Mrs. Larry Flowers, Columbus;
the weekend with Mrs. W. 0 . Ba r- Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush, Doug,
Susie and Roger II, Grove City; Mrs.
nitz.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McCullough Garnet Herdman, Leon, W. Va.; and
and children were joined for . Mrs. ~uth Johnson, Mawnee.
Thanksgiving dinner by 1\er parents,
A . Thanksgiving family reunion
Mr, and· Mrs. James Criswell, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Slack was held at the home of Mrs. Hazel
and sons, Akron, and Mrs. Margaret Taylor, RuUand. Local f_amily
guests were Mr. and Mr.;. J. 0.
Goett, Pomeroy .
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Roush and Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. Rolan!\
son, Jason, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Searles and son, Marty, Mrs.
Roush and grandson, Charlie Tyree, Isabelle Brandeberry, Mrs. Adah
spent the Thanksgiving holiday in Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Pickerington with Mr. and Mrs. Searles and family, and SteV£
Larry Flowers.
TayiQr. Out-of-town guestS were Mr.

Mr, and Mrs. Hnberl &lt;.;ruw, Pam ·
Crow a nd da ughter, Meredith,Pomeroy, a nd Lori and Bobby Crow,
Zanesville, were Thanksgiv ing
weekend guests of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Joseph Kelley a nd children, Joe,
Sha_ron a nd Sarah, Columbus. They
also visited Mrs. He len Wetzel and
Don Wetzel while in Columbus.
Thanksgiving guests of Mrs.
Gera ldine Young, Pomer oy, were
Milton Davis, J r., Ann Arbor, Mich.;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rogers,
Nelsonville, their daughter, Na ncy,
and her husband, Paul, a nd their two ·
childre n, Michael and J odi, Belpre,
a nd Lydia Davis, Pomeroy .
Joining Mr. a nd Mrs. Alfred
Yeauger tor Thanksgiving weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Gene Yeauger
a nd daughter Paige, a student at
Miami University, Enon ; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Yeauger, Bellville; Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Yeauger , Mansfield ,
and Pa mela Vagh and J im Zim·
merman, Columbus.
Mr. a nd Mrs. John Metzger who
were observing their 32nd an-

•
A SINGLE DROP

NAVQ

XKYMZQPHQ

XKYMLKH

· RYKFLFNF

NULKHF,

Z D P I

KYN

l. K

MY A P F .

0 Y K N D H V

Ye~terday'l Cryplljqaote: IT IS EASIER TO DENATl 'flE
PLUTONIUM TIIAN- TO DENATURE THE ·EVIL SPIR
MAN.-ALBERT EINSTEIN

.,,!

.,

•

�•

,.

.

32

; 6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Dec. 2, 19110·

.~ Grocery
•
r

,.,.
,.

~

•

.

prices continue
'

to rise during November

'\
:t

By.Associated Press
,,.
Groc~ry bills jumped by aimost
~ 2\2 percent last month - six times
:: faster than they did in October, an
:: Associated Press marketbasket sur•' vey shows.
Economists, meanwhile, are warni!lg that the worst IS yet to come, as
, the full impact of the summer
·• drought makes itself felt at the
~- ' sllpermarket.
· The AP survey covers 14 food and
non-food items, selected at mndom.
·· Prices for the items were checked at
one supennarket in each of 13 cities
on March I, 1973 and have been
rechecked on or about the start of
each succeeding month. A 15th item,
' chocolate chip cookies, was dropped
:. from the list after the manufacturer
·' discontinued the package size used
:: in the survey.
·· November brought higher prices
up and down the aisles. Eggs increased at the checklist store in 12
,:..: clties; milk went up in seven cities: .
•· sugar and pork chops each rose in
siir: cities. Coffee - which dropped.in
• price at the checklist store in seven
:· cities - p~ovided the only bright
spot.

The AP . found that the marketbasket bill went up at the checklist
store in 10 cities during November,
rising an average of 3.2 percent. The
bill decreased at the checklist store
in only one city - Atlanta, where it
dropped half a percent. "I:he total
was unchanged iR two cities. On an
overall basis, the average cost of the
items in the AP marketbasket was
2.4 percent higher at the checklist
stores at the start of December than
it was a month earlier.
During October, in contrast, the
marketbasket bill increased in six
cities and decreased in seven, for an
overall rise of only four-tenths of a
percent.
November's retail price fluetuations generally reflected changes
at the farm and the wholesale level.
Milk prices, for example, have been
boosted by an Oct. 1 increase in the
government price support level and
by Jligher marketing costs. Coffee
roasters have reduced wholesaie
prices several times in recent months.

Comparing prices today with
those at the start of the year, the AP
found that the market basket in-

creased at the checklist store in
every city surveyed, rising an •
average of 13.4 percent. During the
same period of 1979, the marketbasket total went up an average of 7
percent.
No attempt was made. to weight
the. AP survey results according to
population density or in tenns of
what percent of a family's actual
grocery outlay each item represents. The AP did not try to compare actual prices from city to city. The
only comparisons were m,ade in terms of percentages . of increase or
decrease.
The items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck, center cut
pork chops, frozen o'range juice concentrale, coffee, paper towels, butter, Grade-A medium white eggs,
creamy peanut butter, laundry
detergent, fabric softener, tomato
sauce, millt,· frankfurters and
granulated sugar. The cities
checked )Vere : Albuquerque, N.M.,
Atlanta, Boston, . Chicago, Dallas,
Detroit, Los Angeles, Miami, New
York , Philadelphia, Providence,
R.I., Salt Lake City and Seattle.

Pullins, Leah Danner, Mark Smith, Stephanie English,
Theresa Little; second row, Samanatha Roush, Julie
Hysell, Tammy Cremeans, Amy Roush, Kristi Richmond, David Acree, Donald Stein ; third row, Darla
Hawley, David Dodson, Penny Clark, Amy Radekin,
Pat Shrimplin, Eddie Baer, Scott Hanning; fourth row,
Stanley Broome, Cindy Riffle, Rhonda Rathburn, Judi
Mees, Dawn Keesee, and J. R. ·Kitchen. Absent was
·
David Smith.

PARTICIPATE IN IN READ-A-THON - Twentynine stu~ents at BradbllfY. Elementary participated in
the recent read-'1.-thon sponsored by the Mental Health
Association of Ohio. Students obtained sponsors at a
cost of 2!l cents per book read up to 10 books per sponsor. The students collected a total of $931l. They each
will receive a prize based on the number of sponsors.
Taking part were, first row, 1-r, Shannon Stewart,
Virginia Underwood, Nancy Blankenship, Chuck

NO
HUNTING
or
trespassing day or night on
the Charles Yost, Ivan Will
or John Houdashelt farms .
All violators wi II be

Entire family gone

:A~ditional imports may end pinch 1!!::!~!~~.":!'!:~~~.1!! .':!!e:.;~!!.~~~=.,
WASHINGTON (AP)
The
peanut production pinch in the
United States could be eased by
allowing 200 million more pounds in
- imports without threatening the
price support program for the crop,
. the Agriculture Department says.
The department is urging the U.S.
International Trade Commission to
support a relaxation, but not a
suspension, of the strict quota on
peanut imports.
· An additional200 million pounds of
peanuts would allow domestic
producers to churn out peanut butter
and candy products without Ufl·
dennining the economic stability of
peanut' growers, the department
said.
. Harold W. Hjort, the department's
chief economist, testified before the
trade commission that " the !980
shortfall in domestic peanut production is severe and the desirability of
relieving that shortfall through ad. ditional imports 1s clear.

' EASTERN STAR TO MEET
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet 7:31l p.m.
Thursday evening at the Middleport
· Masonic Temple. A Christmas party
will ~ held following the meeting.
·women are asked ot take $3 gifts for
women, and the men, $3 gifts for
men. Women are to wear long
dresses for the meeting and party.

HOLIDAY DINNER HELD
. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Reynolds entertained Thanksgiving Day with a
dinner party in celebration of the
birthday of John Houdashelt and the
holiday.
Others attending
were
- Houdashelt's sisters, Mrs. Stella
Grueser, Middleport, and Mrs. G. R.
· Russell, who with her husband make
. -their home with her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Millard, Kristin and Jennifer, Man. sfield; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lowe,
Traci
and
Stephen,
p;ckerington;and Mrs. Bradford
Maag, Minersville.

" The national interest will be served by prompt action to make this
possible," he said.
The corrunission, which resumed
hearings today on the import quota,
plans to make a recorrunendation to
President Carter by Jan. 13.
Carter has emergency powers to
lift the quota on his own, regardless
of what the commission recommends. But the situation has created
a potentially tricky problem for the
president because of his famlly's
peanut business.
Carter has not indicated what he
might do.
Peanut farmers are opposed to an
outr1ght suspension of the strict import quota but have said some
relaxation on· imports, such as that
urged by the Agriculture Department, might be advisable.
Hjort testified that permitting 200
million more pounds of peanuts into
the country would not threaten the
government's price support
program for domestic growers.
He said the cutoff date for the imports should be next June 30, one
month before the end of the peanut
markeling year.

allegedly killed his wife and
executed his four children after
promising them surprises was slain
by officers as he described the grisly
slayings over the telephone, police
said.
Thomas Ray Walker Jr. dled Monday night at Presbyterian Hospital,
about an hour after he stepped from
a phone booth screaming, "Shoot
me! Shoot Me! Shoot Me!" and was
gunned down by police.
Police had converged on the phone
booth shortly after the man's call to
KDFW-TV was traced, police
spokesman Bob Shaw said.
Kenny Boles, executive produce'
at KDFW-TV, said a male caller told
a switchboard operator that he "had
a good story."
"I've done something · terribly
wrong," Boles said 'the . man told
him. "Then he described in graphic
detail how he murdered his wife and
children. Basically he said he had
murdered his wife in the shower
while his children were outside.
" One by one, he brought the
children inside, telling them he had
a surprise for them," Boles said.
"As to why, he simply said he was

Since !953, the price support
program has limited imports to 1.7
mlllion pounds a year, a fraction'bl I
percent of the domestic production.
The·program is designed to proteci
farmers against falling prices in the
event of excess production.
But Hjort noted that this year's
drought has hit the peanut crop
hard. The projected 2.3 billion-pound
production for 1980 is 42 percent less
than last year.
TO BE CLOSED
The office of the Meigs County
Registrar of Moto·r Vehicles, located
ill the former Gibbs Grocery
building , will be closed Wednesday
and Thursday of this week due to a
meeting for staff members being
held in Columbus.
FRUIT BASKET SALE

Meigs High School band students
are conducting their annual sale of
fruit baskets.Prices are $6, one-half
peck, and $10 for the larger one peck
baskets.
Students will be taking
orders until Dec. 12. Residents
wishing to place orders may contact
any band student or call99H212.

C-'PRICORN (Dec. !Waa. lf) Circwnstances

may develop today to give you an opportunity to
prove to orle you Uke what a goOO friend you
re~lly are. Don't let this chance go by.
AQUARWS (JID. zt..Feb, 11) There's a
likelihOOd you'll coast (oday unleas you are raced
with a chal~ge . Dna the t~auntlet ls thrown
down, your ingenuity will be Ignited.
PISCES (Feb. ~March H) Through
· someUUng you obeerve, or posaibly due to the
casll.!'ll ~1T18rk d another, a profitable concept
will flil.sh Into your m1nd. Get it to the market·
place.
ARIES (March Zl·Aprtl 11) Bf on the alert
t~y . Something unusual /!QUid develop which'
rrught offer you vrotitable possibllltieti. A clever
friend will engineer it.
·
TAURUS jApri) zt.M•y !0) 1t behooves you to
associate today with persons who are '
progressive thinkers. An eXchange of Ideas could
result in something mutually beneficient.
GEMINI (M•1 f(.June %0) Your work ca n be
m.~de much e.rsler today if you serlowsly give
.sume thought to developirtK Ume-!laving
pro..:edures. What you'll Ct)me up with will
lil!hlen the load .

thm,.:s "'ltlrt.• l'apidly than Llsual
o~ratm~o~

al I"Jl

when 1Wt l pi'Ujt!t.1 ~ 111'l' lll\'11[\ t't!

SHOOTING

MATCH.

Rutland American Legion

every Sunday, 1:00. Big
prites and games. F actOf'y

chokes only.

PICKING up piano In your
area. Responsible party
may take over low balance.

May b seen locally. Call
collect credi I mgr . 773
5128.
CHRISTMAS Bazaar,
December 5 &amp; 6, Thrift
Shoppe, Middleport. Hand·
made items, crafts, baked
gOOds &amp; candy. Sponsored
by Meigs Co~ Humane
Society.
ABSOLUiEL Y no hunting
day or night on the Charles
S. Beller &amp; Alma Peterson
farms. Violators will be
pro5eculed.
Hunters.

heads

mounted.

Perry Kennedy. 742-2927.

MEIGS HISTORY Books
for sale for Christmas at
Meigs

Museum

every

ternoon during December
or at Pomeroy Library . •

ltM.la y.

ynu'rt:"

t•ifh:lt'IIC}"

even

rr MUST BE:~ 10 LtVE:
CO&lt;INT~

bands, diamonds. Gold or

742·2331. Treasure Chest
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
6462.
USED FURNif·URE . Gold

&amp; silver, class rings, pocket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on . Copper brass and
batteries, antique items,
also do appraisals, com plete auctioneer service.
Over 3 years e)(perience in
business. Will buy com·

.

WITH A S~

PLJIY ,. .....

consignments .
Auction
every Friday night, 7 p.m .
Ossie' s Auction House,

WANTED To Buy. Baby
items, whatnots, toys,
dolls, or what have you.
Phone 992· 7494 .

-

-~
.

!
!
l

WELL, 71{£:'(

Homu
tor Rent
~~-Apartment Qln; Rent

~2-Mob1te

ad by phone when

you

41- Ef!ulpm~ntfor

Addreu

·'

SOIIE.WHEI'E

~

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-Wanted To Do

'1-Filrm Equipment
'1- Wanted lo Buy
72-Trucu tor Sale

eFINANCIAL
ausinen
Opportunity
22- Monev to Loan
13-Protenional

21-

'3- Livestoc.k
U - Hay &amp; Grain

'·-----~
P~u~b~
li~c~N~o~li~c~e_____

'

6~ SHCI I. F'rlllh.ft'
•

Services

LEGAL NOTICE

I

eTRANSPORTATION

rl- AUIOs tor Sale
7l-VIIns&amp;4W.D.
74-Mot .. cyclts
75Autof'ans
&amp; Accessor its
17-Auto R tl)llr

eREAL ESTATE
31 - HomtslorSIIt~

32-Mobllt&lt;Homes
torS11te\
ll- Farms lor ale
34-luslneu Buildings
Js-Lotl &amp; Acreage
~Real Est11te wanted
31- R.. Itors

Public Notice

'

.ten statemen1s. To ensure

The Corps of Engineers an a ~c urate record of the '

will hold a public meeting • meettng,

all facts

and

on 18 December 1980 in statements, including those

Huntington, wv at the Hun· · presented orally, should be ·
tington Civic Center, Suite subm i tted in writing either

A, al 7 p.m:, to discuss a to the chairman at the time

tentatively selected plan of ·!he public meeting, or
for
Improving
Nle matled to ·the Huntington

Gallipolis Locks and Dam District Office no later than
in Gallia County, Ohio, and ' 30 ~ays following . the

e SERVICES

Want·Ad Advertising

Deadlines

11 - Homelmpravemenll
12-Ptumbin!ll &amp; E•cav11t1ng

Mason
County,
West 1 meet1ng .
Virginia . Draft versions or : ·
, ·

IJ~ E,uvatlnt

14-Eiectrical
&amp;

- 2:IO""P .M. OaH)r
n Noon Slturd't

the ¥aln Report and the (12) 1, 2, 3, 31c

Relrig~~ratlon

Environmental

u-Gtneral H11ut1ng
16--,...,H.

to'r Mondn

...

17- Upholsterv

Rates and Other Information
15 Words or Undtr

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

c...

1 day

2 Gays

ldlyS
•days

Engineers,
Huntington .
D'istrict
Library,
the

'·"
2.15
3.75

In memory, Card ot Tl\llllll' and 6bift.lary : 'un11

~ttr wwd. SUI

anct Y&lt;t,..aalesar• accepted only wllft

=·~~~~ Cfflt cflar" for adl Cllrryrnt

~stl

BOX Number In C..- ol The

"

P, 0. Box 2127,
Huntington, West V irginia ] '

;.:~~~·i~~e:~~~:l ~::~r~ !; ''My h._band a;.i;t·~r~t~
1

the publ iC meeting Will btt '

•

~-eot.IJd Yo:'J direct

o~n fo• ~ot&gt;-.. oraland.wrlt, n "'"

shifts? Feel the need to
develop your ideas in
resident care with a highl~
motivated staff? Pomeroy

Health Care Center has the

answer for you . Due to
achieving near max imum
census, we now have

6 rooms, 2 bath~. 1112
acresi 6 rooms b-asement,
bath, 2 mobile homes;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'12

me

to ·~

...,I

Rt. 124, Minersville, OH .

Phone 992-5587

available. Come visit us or

R. N ., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen-

ter, 614·992·6606.

Be paid
to learn
a valuable skill.

TWO

992·7284.

BEDROOM

992·2288.
42

Mobile Homes

1

Military Police, . Ad·
ministration, Food Service, Mechanics. Good
benefits. Advancement

living room, eat·t n kitchen,
garage, large utility room .

on 2 acres. Tuppers Plains ·
area . $29.000. 667·6455.

44 .

ROOM HOME. 2'h acres,
fireplace, woodburner ,
total electric, carpeted, 2
car garage, basement,
10x27 sundeck. First house

daY da

'

s

daYS

May take a pickup or small
trailer trade·in. call mar·
nings or evenings. 247-3561
or 843·4562.

1 WILL clean house in area

Headquarters

T~~~~-~:.t J)t
_

16 E. Second Street
I

NEW HOME - Has 2
bedrooms. bath, kif·
chen, dining, living, and
loft for storage. A nice
hOme with river fron ·

tage.
.
MIDDLEPORT

Reasonable home with

family room with wood·
burning fireplace. 2

1
8_
._
--_
-19. _
_-_
_

bedrooms plus nursery,

equipped kitchen, and

20. _ _ _ _ __

1. _ _ _ __

21. _ _ _ _...,...._

2. _ _ _.....;..._
3. _ _ _ _ __

"·------

utility room. Nice cor·

ner lot. Only S16,500.
NEW LISTING - Nice
home with 5 bedrooms,
new bath, paneling,
carpeting,

Mall This coupon with ~emitt!uice
The Dally Sentinel

L~---:~:~~~h~~~:

large

kit-

chen, breakfast nook.

enclosed front porch,
basement, new roof, and

large

yard .

A~ki

ng

$.45,000.

INVESTMENT - .Good

corner location that has
several rentals with ex ~
eel lent hicome.

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - 3 nice

bedrooms, 2 full site

baths with showers, din·
lng area with glass
sliding door to the large
yard,

baseboard

electric

heat and

garage. A real nice

I

l1

______l,,
I

-AI,Ito and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From l0x30"

SMALL

Utility BuiiGings

9 A.M.-5:30P.M.
992-5682
10·7-tfc

Roofs,
&amp; Siding

Vinyl &amp;
Alumin"'m Siding
elnsulatlon
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement ·'
Windows
Free Estimate .
James Keesee
Ph. 992· 2772

perier,..#'O

Ph. 446-4741
11 ·5·1mo. pd.
Space for Rent

Pets tor Sale

56

Pomeroy Large lots. Call

imaginable in horse eQuipment . Blankets, belts,

Registered pood le
pups. 2 small min iature
and 1 toy . 1 female, apricot.
1 light chocOlate brown
male, 1 dark chocolate
brown ma le. After S p m .

992·2967.

Anttques

53

&amp;

Noth ing too large. Also,

guns, pocket watches and
coi n collections. Call 614-

767·3167 or 557·3411 .

Pomeroy .

992·7511 or992-6130.

JUSt 2 Mal·n Parts!

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

place fof lust $43,500.
SF.LL NOW WHILE
YOU CAN. MONEY IS
SCARCE AND HIGH.
CALL US AT "2-3325 or

tn-3176.

1-loii·,,HI

.'-lt'.Hiqu,u tl'rs

Firewood . 742·2508.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .

62

diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p-er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet co., Rt. 2,
·Pomeroy 992·2689 .

cross boars. 8.43·2933.

TFansparlatlae
71

Autos for Sale

inserts. Prices reduced
SlOO. or 20% whichever is
greater, from now thru

home that is
furnished . Real
nice with new carpet

Dec. 15. Outdoor Equip·
men! Sales, Jet. Rls .. 7 &amp; 35,
Gallipolis, Ph. 446·3670.

ONLY

$16,500.00.
THAT HOME IN THE
COUNTRY - With 4·5
bedrooms, new built· in

6ft. green artif icial Christ-

mas tree in good
$15. 9'12·3726.

kitchen, spacious living
room, 2 patios, fully
carpeted, with approx.

FOR
GROWING
CHILI)REN - ThiS 10

room modern home has

4 bedrooms, l'h baths,
full basement, fully

Hotpalnt MicrowtveO•en.

this 2 bedroom home on

R... .. ,

__.---..,.- 4729
SIZES 8-20

6.,-/h,_ -/1.1-.-j
fa·a--5-t fashion! Just two main
patter·n parts-no waist seam, no
zipper. no frills. Pure ltne plus
pure comfort.
Printed Pattem 4719: M1sses
S11es 8, 10, 12, 14. 16, 18. 20.
S11e 12 (bust 34) dress lakes 2~
yards 45-ln&lt;h: bell II yard 45inch fabnc

Home lite SUper 2 Chain Saw
C21-!ottl
Ret. lts.ts ·
Now t16US
CPrice ln(it.ldtt FrH carrying .
USt)
Comfort Glow l(erostne
HHtti'"S,

Eonam.,

(~),

NO.. S17t.U
St.ake-- l!ted Coaster Wagon
(22-2652), Rq.M&amp;.U Nowt4US
1 Gor ·
: Oryer
ITS

POMEROY
LANDMARK
E. Main St.

~omeroy

$1.75 fir liCit prtllm. AH 504 • 54,.___P'-'et=•t,o'-'rs,a,_,te' - flr ......... .. first.da - ·
SIX AKC registered poodle
linull .... IIMdJittC. s.tt II:
puppies, 3 black males &amp; 3•
chocolate females. Born ;
ANI A11111s
Oct. 10. 992·7102.

hlln.,..

Dally Seatlael

ASSOCIATES

949·2UO
OFFICE 992·2259

,My Pul up with hilfl prices- dollars. aet better quality!
Send fur our ~EW FALL-WINTER
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 pitterns:

.A lB

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1·22-lfc

.

Trucks for Sale
1970 c·IO 'h ton Chevy
truck, 8ft. bed, with racks,

f~ P11te•' Coupon (worth
Sl.7S). :01a1Gc. $1.00.

IW....,.._CIIIIIIIdl.n
li-5UI.n

t•s.-.ra.Tlllllfln .SJ.75
2t-QIIQ/flsy

127-MINns '"' Dlllitl ... $1.7$

THE MEIGS County
Humane Society ~IS of the
week are: Several adult

cats, 5 black &amp; tan puppies,'
~lack labrador, black Irish
setter, collie type,
shepherd type, black &amp;
tan; house broke medium

size dog ready to be loved,
lovable mixed breed. m·
6260.
Cocker

Spaniel

puppies.

Black, blonde. Will hold for
Christmas. 9'9· 232~ .
~--·--·---

-

gOOd cond . $895. 667·3085.
74

I

Motorcycles

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorC'yc le.

Call949·2649.

76

color

blue.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CRAGER aluminum slot
wheels fbr Ford pickup
F 100 or 150 series also for a
jeep 4-wheel drive or 2

1971 DODGE DEMON .
$150. can be fixed up or

992·5704.

1976 LUV Pickup. AM·Fm 8
track, a.c., topper, good
tires, runs gOOd. $2,600. 992 -

camping
Equipment

BUS CAMPER, sleeps 6.1·
stove, refrigerator. Sink
and water tank, gas lights,
2 large cabinets, must be

towed . $500. 992·5260.
Set wiEe$

81

Home
Improvements

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu ·look back in
your carpet, high ly recom·
mended , reasonable rates, ·
Scotchguard .
Free .
estimates. Gene Smith, call

now 992·6309 or 142·2211 . ·
Excavating

SJ

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
\/ICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Excavati ng work &amp; transit

layout. 992·7201.

84

Electrica·l
&amp; Refrigeration

SEW I NG
Repairs,

makes1

MACHINE
service,

992·2284.

all

The

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Si nger Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

ELWOOD
REPA I R

BOWERS
Sweepers.

toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

Next fa Slate Highway

Garage on Route 7, 985-

3825.

APPLIANCE SERVICE :
all makes washer, .dryers,
ranges, dishwashers ,
disposal!. water tanks. Call

Ken Young at 985·3561

before 9 a.m. or after 6

p.m.

6323.
U6t

Aft. lllf.t!J

243 lfGI 17 ~~Tilt, IT
10011. !'rill
MI!IIESS.
ZIP, SIZE, _,
.._._

lloger &amp; Dollie Turner
992-5492
Jean Trussell

mileage, a.c., t ilt wheel ,
black with orange stripe,
factory mags. Exc. cond .
Phone 985·3828 even ings.

used for parts . 949· 2374.

Now At
Pomeroy
landmark

and best of a II, an above
ground paoli $.11,500.00.
YOUNG MARRIED Start your future wilh

992-6191

sha~ .

1979 FORD LTO II With low

air &amp; power. NICE! SS,200.
new. First S5,200. Firm.

carpeted,
garage·
carport, on approx. 2
acres of land for play,

building in ex-

350,

Pioneer stereo,

gallon fuel oil tank,
very good cond. $75 . 949· 7._,2'---__T
,_r,_,u,_.c:!k"-s-"fo:ere.:S:ea,_,l;.e___
2225.
1980 DODGE 150 Ad·
venturer, double black.
GRAVE Blankets. 949·2493 Small V·8 overdrive
or 992·7320.
automatic. 17 Ia 19 mpg.,

55tl,ooo.oo.

~r

CUTLASS

275

35 acres wOOded land.

cellent condition with 2
working 5taflon5. Also
frailer hookup lot.
$24,900.00.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

1971

WOOD &amp; COAL stoves, fur· runs gOOd. Body needs
nace adapters &amp; firpiace some work. $900. 992-5911 .

mo~tlv

vestment.
JUST
$15,000.00.
OWN' YOUR OWN
BEAUTY SALON! A

1974 TOYOTA. Good cond.
742·2421.
Cragers,

NEW LISTI.NG - A'N
ACRE IN TOWN - Plus
a 12x65 Holly Park

air
heat,
enclosed
porch. A good rental in·

Free Estimates
Rea son able Prices

wheel drive, 8.5x15. Call

Firewood for sate, Mixed
of 'wood . $35.00 per 6,3c_____,_L.,iv_..e._sl,_.o.,.c"'k_____
·up load. Delivered, 2 DU ROC and Hampshire
will stack for Senior

cond. 9'12·3728.

bedroom home on ap·
prox . 1 acre lot. Forced

All work guilranteed.

78

room table, 6 chairs, buffet
and china closet. Exc.

a bargain at $25,500.00.
SALEM CENTER - 4

and downspouts,. gutter

cleaning and painting.

pay cash or certified check
for antiQues and collec tibles or entire estates.

dwood, split and delivered .

maintained with a rec .
, room in basement, and

All types of roof wort&lt;,
new or repa;l- gutters

72

HOOF HOLLOW: . Horses
COUNTRY MOBILE Home and
ponies and riding
Park, Route 33, Norlh of lesso ns
.
Everything

843·-4831 .

$26,900.00.
A REAL VALUE IN
TOWN! A 3 bedroom
home with a beautiful
kitchen and bath. Well .

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

~=========~~===:;==~§~~~~;::=~::;~-~-~~~~-~~-~

FIREWOOD $35 a truck
load, $60 a cord. All har·

rear
porch,
new
aluminum
siding,

Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614·843-2S91
6·15·1fc

INSULATION

Installed
&amp;
Repaired
12
years
ex -

Citizens. 843-4951 or 843·

approx . 1 acre. Equip·
~d kitchen, screened

Rl. 3, Box S4

Bl.(MN

2815.

burner .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

2566.

UNFURNISHED 'apts. in

r

Sizes from .-x6 to 12x40

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·6263
Anytime
11-16·1 mo.

Hrs.: Mon.· Fri.

1974 AMC Matador, 6 CYI.. 3
speed, 61 ,500 miles. $1.200
DUNCAN PHYFE dining or best offer, 773·5236.

1-(614)-992-3325

Include diSCount

GARAGE

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

ALL STEEL

any t ime 667-6636.

ing- Hl-7113 or 594-43238
collect.

Phone

These cash rate'S

KAUFPS

ATTENTION:
liM ·
PORTANT TO YOUI Will

992·3129 or 992·5914.

lease.

992-6215 or 992-7314
p omeroy, Oh.

Furnished apartments, 992·

graduate or high school
senio"r. Army Recruit~

Housing

10 1
days I

ROGER HYSEU'S

Apartment
for Rent

3129. 992·5914, or 1·304-882·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

.Y.C. YOUNG II

AKC

3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

ween a-5.

work

~~========~~~~~---:;;:::::::::::::::::~~~~~;;~~~;~;;;:;

children .

opportunities. Must be
18-34,. high school

I

1

3

-concrete work
-Plumbing and
electrical work
I Free Estimates I

Mobile Home on 1 acre. I.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~ S4•_ __!CM~i~s~c:..'.M~e~rc,_.h~a~n'!:is~e,__

l
I
I
I
I
I

• Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11·20-3 mo · pd ·

personalized

•f

992·7479.
for Ren"-t' ----English and
3 BEDROOM trailer in TRAILER spaces for rent. boots, etc.
. Ruth Reeves
Southem Valley Mobile· Southern Valley Mob ile Western
(614 ) 698·3290 .
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh ~ Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992·3954. Will accept 99q954.

992 2571 .

trade or

remodeling

Chnstmas gills. And
Christmas stockings,
shirts, hats, and
jackets.
·
Ph. 614·949·2358
Evenings &amp; weekends
10·9·tt c

tion

furnished
house, also
two /
bedroom furnished
&amp; one
bedroom furnished apart· 46
men!S. Call after 6 p.m.

Beautiful three bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Gas heat, central air con ditioning . Call 985-3814 or

-Addons and

- Rooting and gutter

"YOur Needs
Are My Bus1ness"

un ·

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

e Dozers

Houses for Rent

41

with river frontage. After 6

SALE,

EXCAVATING

,AAA Aluminum

HOUSE, 7 rooms, on bath,
full basement, large lol

32

Prr'nt ,_.
Shop_ ,

.

' FREE ESTIMATE;)

992·2571.

disability policy at no cost flousE for sale. Rutland.
to the employee, and 742·3154 ask for Mike, bet·
hospitalization insurance

Real Estate- General

17.
' _ _ _ _ __

Box72t

1

Parts &amp; Accessories

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Modular home lot on Route
7, three bedroom farm house located on Route 7.

and set up for wOOd

11.===== 32.=====

I

Kingsbury Home ·

PUWNS

We offer a wide setec·

$99.50

openings for full and part BY OWNER , 2 bedroom,
time positions on day shift
but will consider other shif·
ts. Competitive salary, excellent working conditions,
life
insurance
and

·

Installation within lS
miles ot Pomeroy In·
elUdes all labor and
material.
1
Special Winter Price

ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1•

I

25.-----1.--.....,...-- 28----...--29,- -----

!

ATTN: 1 :l!c
2

wanted
For Sale
Anhouncement
For Rent

Homes for Sale

mobile

23.- - - - - I 4. _ _ _ _ __
2
-t------.,I 5. _ _ _ _ __
I
26.-----I 6.;...
· ----I 8. _ _ _ _ __ 2 7 . - - - - - I 9. _ _ _..:,__ _
I
JO. _ _ _ _ __
I 10. _ _ _ _ __ 31. _ _ _ _ __
I
I 12.
33. _ _ _ _ __
I
34.
I 1 3 . - - - - - - 35. _ _ _ _ __
I 14.-----1
I 16.------

I
I

· ORH PO-N,

C '-------------.:_....,._~----'!"1

I

Corps of Engineers, Hun· !

District,

I
I
&lt;
&lt; I
&lt; I
&lt;

I
I

'I

contacting: U. S. Army ·

1
wlft1

I
I
I
__. I
I

1he Corps of Engineers In
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, 8nd
Louisvill~ . Copies of this ~
report may be obtained by

tington

Middleport, Oh.992·6370.

31

Custom

.

Exceecls Stat~, Federal,
and Insurance Stan·
dards.

plete estates. Also take

consignments . Auction
every Friday night, 7 p .m .
Ossie' s Auct ion House,

M . H. Rep.!!!___ ..

"YOU CAN STILL
BUY PEACE OF
MIND"
Anchor-Sur
Tie-Down
System For Your
Mobile Home

IN ·
&amp; Silver, class rings, pocket · AUTOMOBILE
been can ·
watches, chains, diamonds SURANCE
celled?
Lost your
&amp; so on. Copper brass and
batteries, ;;~ntique items, operator's license? Phone
also do appraisals, com - 992·2143 .
plete auctioneer service.
Over 30 years experience in
business. Will buy com-

Middleport·Pomeroy.
I of
'1&lt;12·3562 before noon or af·

15.------

Gallipolis Locks and Dam
Office, and the Offices of

Cflargt
1.25

Eac" word ovtr'tne minimum IS words is. 4 c•nts per wan:l per Ill\' .
Ads runnlnt other tfl~n ,,. .. , ·cutlve dtys will be charged •• tile 1 aav
rllte.
'
·

mlnlm.,m. Cashifladvar~ce.

Impact

Statement. are scheduled ,1__________
for pub Iic release on 3 I'
December 1980. The report'
will be avall~ble for pu~ · · ·
LAFF- A. DAY
inspection at the Corps at

Rt~ir

9
Wanted to Buy
USED FURNITURE . Gold

I

illal or group Of figures
I counts
as a word. count
I name and address or
I phone number If used.
1 You'll get be"er results Words
1 if you describe fully,
·
give price; The Sentinel
I reserves the right to
I claulfy, edit or reject
I any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
I· clasificatlon if you'll
I check the pro~r box
I below

\

Radio, TV

Mobi.. Home ul*l

f:LSI:!!

86

I ter 5.

1 space ,below. Each In·

W6.~P,I'I ·J•

s' - Hautetlold Goods
52-Cfe TV , Radio Equ1pment
Jl-Antfques
'\4-Mtsc. Merctlilndtse
5.5--Bu!lding Supplies
S6-Pels tor Sa te

&amp; C&amp;Repa lr

,

TOI'OP-'
....,._,

!
!
1

I
I Print one word In each

KEVIN s.I~K,
41 ~KINL$( Av&amp;.,

Renl

· eMERCHAN,OISE

,,_Help wa ntrd
12- Situattcl ranted

1 'TO!..ro'A

iOSTAVOFF
iHE. 6RASS!
GO P!.AV

wide
Kanauga
Mobile
Home. Sates.
Kanuaga,
Oh.

get I

1 Phane

MAKE IT TO
SUBI/Rl!IA ...
NOW
LISTEN

.

o-FRoam1
46--Space tor Rent
"'4 1-Wenttcl to Rtnt

e EMPLOYM~:NT
SERVICES

16--

eRENTALS

Mobile
&amp; u fl .

446·9662.

VACANCY in our
Classlfleds and l HAVE
home for elderly people,
I
I
11 Write your ownSavelll
l
ad and order by mail with this I formation at 992·7314.

1 NaiJie '

41 - HOUltl tor Rent

PRE OWNDED
Homes. 8, 10, 12

Middleport

I

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

nished. $8,500. 992·3224.

Golf Equipment, used sets.

~~

your

Mobile

5 ROOM unfurn ished apt.

l, Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for

coupon: Cancel

·Bayview

Home, 2 bedrooms, fur ·

WOMAN or girl to live in. past Memory Gardens S.R.
2 or 3 Block Sawmill. 992· 992·2686.
7. 992·7741.
6035.
~===========-r

II ·results. Money not refundable.
I

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1-CarCI or Thanks
l - In Memoriam
l - An!1Wn&lt;ements
t-Givuway
S-HIPPY Ad I
6--Lostand Found
7- Yard S.te
a-Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction

1979

plefe estates. Also take call: Nancy Van Meter,

:.-------------------.

«24.

WAN.TED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB· the ejigibility list at 9'12·
SOLUTE
MARKET 2156 or 992·2157.
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER RNs and LPNs, looking for
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT, challenging
and rewarding
OH 10 992·3476.
work? Tired of rotating

Broken shafts, etc. 614·985·
Friday and Sunday af· 3961 .

I

Pleasant, WV Phone 675·

Middleport, Oh.992·6370.

ATTENTION
Deer

2nd x Viand Street, Point

as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us .right away and get on

silver. Call J. A. Wamsley,

~-

12 x 60. two bedrooms, new
carpet. B X S Sales, Inc.,

miles south of Middleport,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992· 11___..,H
.o:e,_,I,_P.:.W
:..:a::cne:led
,__
Rt . 1.
7760.
GET VALUABLE training

OLD COINS, pocket wat-

li~=~!::::::~;:::::::::~:~~==~~~=:::=~

~d;~';'_s. b1a;~ 0&amp; '' ;; ;,e;_

etc. complete households.

ches, class rings, wedding

Business Services

bedrooms, all ele&lt;:tric. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 6) , two

tWrite M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,

I

·

UBRA (Sept. 23-0t:t. Zl) Be prepared ttl move
,quickly tuday if ynu gelt~.n UllUliUI:l l 11ff~r IIUI. uf
tl~ blue whkh could a..Jd tn yuur rt!f"llrt'ei 11r
contribute to your !loi!Curity. !t mi~ht bt&gt; 1:1 winner .
SCORPIO I Od. 24-NO\'. ~I ~ILhuuf.lh )'IIU rnay
sttll capallh• uf

HAVE YOUR deer trophy
mounted. Birchfield's.
li:ast on 124 at Rolland. 742·
2178. .

old' furntture, desks, gold
rings,
iewe l ry, silver
dollars, sterling , etc., wood
ice boxes,i ars antiques,

bedrooms,
new carpel
1972 Champion,
12 x 60,. 1976
two
Cameron, 12 ~ • 60, two

woman, women, men or
elderly couple. If in terested call for more in·

or Write Daily Sentinel &lt;;lassified Dept.
111 Court St., Pome_ro-,., 0 ., 45769

, 14-Buslness Tra ining
15-SCfiOOlllnslructlon

Radio C1ty Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to specify

They'll Do It Every Timf1

PHONE 992-2156

ll--ln111rance

birth dote.

.

WANT AD INFORMATION

'

n your Alltro-Graph which begms with your Dir- ,
thday. ~.faU $1 for each to A:kro-Graph, Bolt 489,

du

BAKE SALE SATURDAY
The &amp;nnual Christmas bazaar and
bake sale of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will be
held beginning at 9 a.m. on Saturday
at Trinity Church, Pomeroy.

~

9- Wanted to Buy _..J

Dec!ember 31 lt80
The coming year could hold some very unusual
but pleasant surprises (or you owing to the ac-.
tions of friem:b operatlnB on yoUr behalf. Keep on
good tenns with pals yDU deem lucky.
SAGI1TAR11.18 !Nov. ~Dec . 21) Your hunches could be qultl! helpful today regarding
things whJch affect your income or career. Treat .
them with the respect they deserve. Romance,
travel, luck, resources, possible pitfalls and
career for the coming month!! are all discussedl

MISS HOPE - Pamela Robinson, Middleport, is the Meigs's Nurse of
: Hope of the local unit of the American Cancer Society this year. Miss
: ' Robinson intends to g,ive hope to cancer patients in the county and to help
prevent cancer by helping with educational programs. Any club or
. organization wanting a special on cancer and its prevention should call
the local cancer office on Tuesdays or Tlmrsd~ys. 1 to 4 p.m., 992-75~1.
Miss Robinson is the f~aughter Qf Mr. and Mrs. R•,•: Robinsont Coolville.

store.
.
"When they got there, Duncan got
closest to the man and held out his
badge and said, 'I'm a police officer'
and held his pistol in the other
ha nd, " Shaw said. " He (the ~an)
earlier had talked about having a
pistol stuck in his pants.
"So, when Duncan confronted ·
him, Duncan said he (the man ) went
crazy and ... reached for his back
pocket. "
Duncan said the man pulled a
pistol.
Duncan fired twice and two other
officers fired five times, Shaw said.
"Three, perhaps four bullets hit
the man in the chest area," he said.
Steyer was recording his conversation with the man when police
arrived,Jloles said.
" He (the man) said 'Shoot me!
Shoot me!' when police arrived,"
Boles said. "The conversation ended
whenhewasshotbypoliceat8:41."

Small investment, large
returns,
Sentinel
Want
.Ads
-

acceptance. "There are, 11 he continued, "some fundamental wrongs
that stem from 6ur value base." Mr.
Hindman proposes-that we adopt the
attitude that all people should live in
our complete heterogenous society.
If we can accept this notion, we can
break the self-defeating cycle that
perpetuates the non acceptance of
handicappec\ people. Hindman advised advocates of disabled persons
to "get out of the straight jacket of
considering people handicapped, we
have to start challenging blt by bit
the decisions that society and ~~ial
service agencies are making in .
regards to disabled persons." Mrs.
Sharon Fohner of Meigs County
stated that until handicapped people
are put on the same level, society is
putting them down. Mrs. Fohner
also noted, " Being nonnal is simply
being what you are ....

ASTRO
GRAPH

..
....-..

family could live through his
suicide."
Mter Walker, 36, was shot, offleers located his address and kicked
in the front door of his southeast
Dallas home, police said.
Inside the bloOdied home they
discovered the body of Linda Jo
Walker, 35, sprawled in the
bathroom, and Traci, 14, Tammi, 11,
Tommy, 9, and Nicholas, 7, dead on
the floor, Shaw said:
Mrs. Walker had been shot twice
in the face while she was in the
shower. All were shot in the face, except for Nicholas, who was shot
behind the right ear, he said.
"At least three of the children
were shot on the pretext of 'I've got a
surprise for you,"' Shaw said.
Lt. Roger Duncan and Sgt. Bill
Parker went to the television station
Monday evening after receiving a
call from reporter Tom Steyer, who
talked to the man on several oc- ·
casions through.the afternoon, Shaw
said.
The man called again shortly after
the officefll arrived at the station,
Shaw said, and they were able to
trace his location to a phone both

prosecuted.

DEER TROPHIES Moun·
ted. 985·3833.

Personal Advocacy hears
several keynote speakers
Hugh Hindman, state coordinator
of Ohio Protection and Advocacy
Agency, was the keynote speaker for
the Gallia, Jackson, Meigs Personal
Advocacy Conference on Friday,
Nov. 21. The conference, which was
coordinated by Mary Skinner, Personal Advocacy Coordinator for the
Community Mental Health Center,
included presentationS by Jessie
Might of Meigs County, Laraine
Sloane of Gallia County, Pastor
William Middleswarth of Meigs
County and Hindman.
Hindman briefly discussed the
nature of handicapism. He noted
that we are all handicapped in some
form or fashion. The distinguishing
factor between people who have a
handicap and handicapped people is

1973 Crown Haven. 14 x 65
three bedjooms, new cer:
pel. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet .

fiCJWJers &amp; other Items to me.

during my stay in Holzer DEER Cut &amp; wrap~d at
Hospital. Mrs. Homer Car· Maple Wood ~ ake between
man .
Syracuse &amp; Racine, Qh.
$25 . per head. $5 additional
1-: Announcements --- for skinning.
1 ·PAY highest prices.
po$$lble for gold and silver RIFLE SHOOT. Racine
colnst rings, iewelry, etc. Volunteer Fire Dept. will
.Contact Ed Burl&lt;ell Barber h~ve a 22 rifle match thiS
Sal. night along with
Shop, Middleport.
regular shot gun match
O~n sights only.
,
·
SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow in Ruttand.
Every Sunday starting at NOW Open fbr Christmas
·noon.
Proceeds being . season. Laroe selection of
donate&lt;! to the Boy Scout Poinsettias. From $1 .00 to
Troop 2-1'1. 12 gauge factory $10.00. Christmas cactus
hanging baskets &amp; foliage
clloke ~un only 1
plants. Open daily 9·5, Sun.
1· 5.
Hubbard 's
RACINE GUN SHOOT, Greenhouse, Syracuse. 992Racine Gun Club, every 5776.
Friday night starling at
7:30 p.m. Factory choke
HELEN will be back al
guns only.
Helen's Beauty Shop in
Pomeroy starting Oec. 2.
GUN SHOOT: Saturday
evening starfJng at 6:30
Giveaway
p.m. Sponsored by the 4
Racine Volunteer Fire GERBALS. Will hold for
Department, at bUilding in - Christmas. 304·773·5163.
Bashan. Factory choke
gonsonty.
AKC Registered Irish Set·
ter. Female. Been spade. 8
APPLES - Sweet Cider: years old. To a very gOOd
We still have plenly of ap· home. 742·2236.
pies. S...OO per bushel and '
up. · Fitzpatrick Orchard,
Wanted to Buy
Stale Route 689. Phone 669· 9
3785.
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,

Mobile Hom es

tor Sate

DEER
PROCESSING .•
1
Card ~~!!_k_! __ _ Jones
Meat Packing off 555
t would like to than~ on Washington Co. 248, Lit·
everyone who Mnt cards, fie Hocking. 614-667·6133.

8S

General Hauling

1970 FORD Pickup truck . .
Spreading,
240 engine, 6 cylinder, •;, AGRI·LIME
limestone and fill dirt
ton with equipped bed. 985 · hauling. Leo Morris, 7~2·
3560 .

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Dec. 2. 1980

......

Would be peacemaker has· many
"

police officer Greg Keefer ..
Serenity House is planning a
volunteer transportation service to
remove victims of family violence
from the scene· and provide counseling, in response to a high rate of
spouse and child abuse in Gallia,
Meigs and JackSon rounties.

By KEVIN KELLY
A per!on trying to settle a family
ronfiict nms many riskS, and must
also know exactly.what he or she is
doing.
This was the message given
aroWid 40 prospective "crisis intervention" volunteers at a
workshop on family violence sponsored Monday by Serenity House,
Inc., the non-profit counseling center for family violence victims in the
tri-county area.
.
The role of the volunteer in a crisis
situation was discussed by Nancy
Ochsenbein of JackSon County
Childrens Services and Jarkson
'

" One definition of crisis intervention is incidents which are a
critical turning point for a family-it
can give a unique opportunity to the
family to change," Ochsenbein said.
The role of tne volunteer in
volatile. situations is an important
one ' she continued, and he or . she

Christopher arrives
for talk resumation
ALGIERS, . Algeria ( AP ) Deputy Secretary of State Warren
Christopher arrived in Algiers today
carrying the latest American
response to Iran's terms for freeing
the 52 American hostages.
Christopher was accompanied by
Redha Malek, Algeria's ami)assador
to· Washington, and a delegation of
other American officials.
The deputy secretary is scheduled
to meet with Algerian Foreign
Minister Mohamed Benyahia to
relay the U.S. reply. Algeria has
. been acting as intermediary in the
negotiations between the United
States and Iran.
There was no · immediate indication of a breakthrough on
gaining the release of the hostages
after nearly llmontlis of captivity.
Christopher and other U.S. officials will be prepared to answer
any questions the Algerians might
have regarding the U.S. position,
State Department spokesman David
Nail said Monday night.
Christopher conferred over the
weekend with President Carter at
Camp David, Md. , about the U.S.
response to Iran's request for
clarification, brought here lasi week
by Algerian emissaries.
The contents of the U.S. message
were not disclosed, but it is known
that the administration has tried to
persuade authorities in Tehran that
there are major legal and technica l
complications to the terms.
The • Washington Post quoted
unidentified sources today as saying
the message represents no change in
the basic American position carried

to Algeria by Christopher thre.e
weekS ago. The latest response, the
paper said, is merely a more
detailed reiteration of a stance that
has not changed "in broad outline"
since an unsuccessful round of
negotiations with Iran last spring.
Iran's demands, set by' its
parliament Nov. 2, call for an
American promise not to interfere in
the country's internal affairs, cancellation of all American claims
againsrlran, release of more than $8
billion in impounded Iranian assets
and return of the wealth of the late
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
State Department spokesman
John Trattner dismissed on Monday
any suggestion that the United
. States is engaged in hnmilitating
negotiations with ··violators of international law.
·
"Obviously, when you have a
hostage situation you have to work
to resolve it,." he said. " That's what
we've been doing. We'll worry later
about whether there is hnmilitation
involved. I don 't think there is."
President-elect Ronald Reagan,
meanwhile, said it would be "pretty
foolish " if Iran waited until after his
Jan. 20 inaugural to try to get better
tenus. His comment was in response
to a rep,ort from Tehran that an
Iranian official had suggested such a
delay.
Earlier Monday, a ranking White
House official said the outcome of
the hostage situation remains unpredictable and the domestic
political .situation in Iran is the
crucial factor.

Council discusses
hydrant maintenance

I.

Hydrant maintenance was
discussed and the police chief's
report given during a brief session of
Pomeroy Council Monday night. ·
Councilman Bill Young asked that
hydrants in the village be maintained and a list of hydrants that
have been inspected be prepared.
· Young also suggested that the
street department report immediately, any hydrants that are in
need in repair.
Young also reported that a
drainage problem on West Main
Street, near Logan Monwnent, had
been corrected.
It was also reported that new tires
had been placed on the police
cruiser.
The police report showed that
1,o:ili parking tickets had been issued

for the month of November, 35
arrests made, 276 calls received,
collected $2,173.50 from the parking
meters and drove the cruiser 4,148
miles.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Mayor Clarence Andrews.
Attending were Mayor Andrews,
Jane Walton, clerk, Young, Betty
Baronick, Rod Karr and John Anderson, council members, and Donnie Ward.

CLINICS CANCELLED
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
Ohio's Gallia County office announces some clinics will be cancelled in late December and ·early
January due to the holidays. Call the
office at 446-j)l66 as soon as possible
if one needs to arrange an appointment. If necessary, call collect.

MEETS THURSDAY
Village Council will
meet Thursday, Dec. 4, at 7 p.m.
rather than at 7:30p.m.

CLOSED TIIREE DAYS
Farmers Home Administration
county office in Pomeroy will be
closed December 3, 4 and s, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday due to
an out of town meeting.

Syrac~

NEW NUMBER
. Racine residents are advised that
for the next 30 days the new police
number is 949-2353.

must wear several different hatsCOW1selor, paramedic, attorney,
referral sefvice, transportation,
l)abysitter. mediator, and be "a
good, listener.
"People have to hav~ someone as
a sounding board," Ochsenbein
noted.
In some cases, a chain of events
( unemployme~t. alcoholism, ~tc:)
has led to a family crisis, and· by
. examining · these problems, the
volunteer may be able to. make a
referral.
"You need to help people sort out
their feelings," Ochsenbein said. " I
don 't think it's right to impose your .
lifestyle on lhem, it's for them to
decide what's best. "
In these cases, the volunteer must
also decide if transportation to a
shelter for abused women and
children is the best short-term
solution. Depending on how the
situation has been handled, home or
a relative may be the place to stay,
she added.
·
Family violence is not peculiar to
any one - segm~nt of American
society, Ochsenbein explained.
"I found there1s no real typical
family profile-it goes across races

r

Area Death~

at the Arcadia Nursing Home.
Mr.Duerr was a son of the late
Stacie Lavon Carter, 6, Hartford,
Phillip F. and Mary Priode Duerr.
died Monday at the Children's He was also preceded in death by his
fiospital in Columbus, Ohio.
wife , Ruth Wood Duerr; a daughter,
Bom March 29, 1974 in Point Plea- Shirley Custer; sons, Thomas and
sant, she was the daughter of Ken- Phillip and four sisters, Lillian
neth E. and Macy Lou Killingsworth Smith, ~da Arnold, Eva "F\.niaw and
Carter of Hartford. She was a Mary Windon, and a brother, Ermember of the Hartford Church of
nest.
Christ in Christian Union and a stuSurviving are a grandson, Michael
dent at Hartford Elementary.
Custer, Pomeroy; a son-inRlaw,
In addition to her parents, she is Hugh Custer, Pomeroy; a sister and
survived by two sisters, Mrs. Lore C. brother-in-law, Emma and Albert
Whitmore, Milton, W.Va., and Mrs. Hoffner and several nieces and
Connie L. Turley, Hartford; mater- nephews.
nal grandmother, Mrs. Florence ·
Mr.Duerr was president of the
Killingsworth, Point Pleasant; stepPomeroy Cement Block Co. for a
grandfather, John Milton, Bidwel~ nwnber of years. He was a member
Ohio. She was preceded in death by of LaFayette Lodge 79, F&amp;.AM,
a brother, Rockland E. Carter.
South Zanesville, and the F.O.E.
Services will be held l p.m. Lodge at Zanesville.
Wednesday at the Hartford Church
Funeral services will be held at I
of Christ in Christian Union with the
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Reverend Earl Oiler· officiating and Home with the Rev . W. H. Perrin ofburial will be in the Graham ficiating. Burial will be in Beech
Cemetery. Friends may call at the Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
Foglesong Funeral Home in Mason at the funeral home anytime alter 1
from 4 to 9 p.m. this evening.
p.m. Wednesday.

Stacie Carter

C ,.. l)y NI!A , II'IC

Emergency
squad runs

I'\

'

a..

lion of SR 160 and Gallia County Rd. causing moderate damage to_ her
was investigated Moriday af- car.
ternoon.
,------------William G. McCoy, 21, Point
Pleasant, was northbound on SR 160
NOW OPEN FOR
at 2:20 p.m. when he stopped to
CHRISTMAS SEASON
make a · turn onto CR 1 and was
Large Selection of
struck by another northbound car
POINSffiiAS
driven by Donald Miller, 47, Lesage,
FROM 11.00 TO '10.00
W.Va .
• Christmas
cactus
Minor damage was reported to
•
Hanging
Baskets
both cars and Miller was cited by the
• House Plants
patrol for failure to yield .rt a stop .
sign.
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
A deer was struck and killed Iiy a
Syracuse, Oh . · 992-5776
car driven by Sheriann S. Wood, 36,
Open Mon.-Sat. 9 to 5
Jackson, on U.S. 35 in Gallia Coijnty
sun. I tos
at 10 a.m. Monday, the pa"trol said,
I

. (Continued from page l l
specifically whether there. will be a
tax llike, he said "we'll decide that
next·Tuesday."
The governor declined to say· what
kind of a tax hike he'd personally
favor - a boost in the sales or state ·
in~ome tax. He also ducked a
question as to whetMr a boost
should be temporery or permanent.
Some members oft-hi&gt; Legislature
ha "e favored a temporary hike in
the 4-cents-on&gt;the-dollar sales tax,
but only for as long as needed . to
raise """ugh money to cover t11e exJ'&gt;f'''' t1 d d 1, r; · ·~ L

.

..

PRICES IN EFFECT DEC. lND 'DfRU DEC. 14'Df

your bvst
(hrhlrftas buys

·~

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fF~~~------------~----'!IOI!l""!ljj

~

ELBERFELD-$

w
w
w
w
w

SEE OUR SEI.EO'ION

NORELCO RAZORS

W Norelco

Rechargeable
Rotary Razor .

~

U 36

self -sharpeni ng
wi t h Micro-

W bladeS
~
~

groove floating heads

combined wlfh an im l:f p~o&gt;;red shaving ang le
U grve you cl oser, more
comf or tabl e shaves tl up to 3 weeks on a
rJ; single charge! Has 9
Wcloseness/ comfo r t setting s; pop -out trim ~ mer, char ge indicator
tf! l i ght , on/ off switch.
110/ 220 vo lt use
~ world -wide, with or
~ without the cord in
U del uxe travel Wanet.

I

«

w
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OTHER MOllELS NORELCO RAZORS
FOR SALE ON 1ST FLOOR

~ . ·ELBERFELDS .IN POMEROY

~.

~--------------------~-1----'---------._:_.,.!f----------:.._----

WILL HOLD SERVICES
Eastern Star services will be held
for Maude Grueser at 7 p.m.
Tuesday nht at the Ewing Funeral
------~:-71 Horne by Pomeroy Chapter 186,
NO EL-EVATOR.'
-" O.E.S. A meeting will beheld at 7:45
'1¥ p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic Tern~--L...t...""._,._,..,. •
pie. Dues are payable.

OOD

17

;!

VETERANS MEMORIAL
_Admitted-Ethel Stitt, Racine;
Daniel Arix, Pomeroy; Judy McNickle, Racine; William Riclunond,
Middleport ; Susan Windon, Reedsville; Stanley Wells, Long Bottom;
Dora Roush, Pomeroy; Bewah
Knotts, Vintori.
Discharged-Linda Crites.

Tiempo . ALL SEASONS
STEEL BELlED RADIAL

39

.

95 .

1 Chln&amp;tMr Spnnatnd Fall
Billn&amp;
tor frKticm 111

,.;

·ohio officials

Four emergency calls were answered by local units on Monday, according to the report of the Meigs
Emergency Service Headquarters.
They include Pomeroy Unit, 1:44
p.m., Pomeroy, Stanley Wells from
home in Pomeroy to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains,
1:44 p.m. Susan Windon, .Locust
Grove Road, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland, 5:14p.m., Gladys
Knotts,. Salem Center, to Veterano •
Memorial, and Rutland. 2:30 a.m.,
Ran~y Faulk, from Meigs Mine 2 to ·
Ho~er Medical Center.

.

J

John Raymond Duerr, 85, . for
many years a Pomeroy
businessman, died Monday evenin~

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

-

.

JAPANESE PLANT FOR OillO - Tatsurni Dohi, executive vice
president of Stanley Electric Co., Ltd., of Tokyo, Japan, announces his ?Cmpany has selected Ohio as a location for a plant to produce automotive
electrical parts as Governor James A. Rhodes listens In the background
Monday in Columbus. (AP Laserphoto).

John Raymond Duerr

. .,

.

A Portland woman was cited by
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Pa\rol in a tw&lt;&gt;-car crash in
M~igs County Monday.
The patrol said Agnes V. Sellers,
30, was northbound on Sellers Ridge,
north of SR 124, at 9:25 ·a.m. when
her ca r collided on a curve with a
southbound vehicle driven by. Van
Lee Barber, 18, Portland. ·
Minor damage was reported to
both ca rs and Sellers was cited for
failure to yield half or the roadway.
The patrol also investigated a tw&lt;&gt;car accident in Rio Grande Monday
morning.
According to the report, cars
driven by James E. Albright, 37,
Northup, · and A.G . Knotler, 37,
Gallipolis, both pulled out onto U.S.
35fromE. College Ave. at 9:20a.m.
Albright went into lhe left lane and
Knotter into the right lane, troopers
said. Albright struck Knotter's car
when ho attempted to pull into the
Sohlo service station, the report continued.
Minor damage was done to
Albright's car and moderate to the
Knotter auto. Albright was cited for
moving right without caution.
A minor tw&lt;K!•r crash at the june-

NEW BANK OF AMERICA
·HEAD - 'Samuel H. W11tacost
was named Monday to replace A.
W. Clausen as president of the
Bank of America, the nation's
largest commercial bank. Armacost, 41, is currently executive
vice president and cashier at the
bank. Clausen has resigned to
become cresident of the World
Bank in -washington, D. C. (AP
Laserphoto I:

TR~E/

.

and income and educational levels,"
she said. "There is very little' difference . between a low-income
family and a more Well-t&lt;Hlo family,
except low-income people may
report it. But it doesn't mean there's
any more or less violent incidents in
higher-income families."
Keeler explained the role · of the
law in these situations is to help, and
urged Serenity House volunteers
have police with them when walking
into family incidents.
"Tell the police if one is coming
up, " Keefer said. "It's a lot easier to
go in and clear things up prior to a ,
crisis ... by you calling and making us
aware, you' re giving us an ·Olt
polllunity to stop something from
happening in the future ."
Volunteers should also be familiar
with jurisdiction (city police,
sheriff 's · department, highway
patrol ) and with officers who have
handled domestic cases before.
"Too often, you' ll call and get people
who just don't care," he continued.
If there is no other alternative,
Keefer said battered wives''should
consider criminal prosecution so
evidence of physical violence can be
placed on court record.

Portland woman hurt in accident ·

MONTAGUE'SCHRISTMASbyla!lkrY:__ _ _- - ' - - - -- ,

WOW! THE:Rt: GHOVL-P
I!&gt;E A COZY GPOT FOR
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