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'

' •2 - The Daily.:"~ntine~ Mlddleport-Pcxneroy, 0 .. Wecm"esdav. Jan. 2. 1911

C~HC

spokesman says 648
-Board violates own rules
of the ''648" Board to discuss the
issues of the takeover. However, the

The Gailla ·Jackson ·Meigs C!m·
m~mlty Mental Health and Mental
Re~tion "648" Board a~ . in
vlolalion of its own niles in taliing
over direct operations rl. the Nelson·
ville Alternative Residential
Facllity last week, said a Com·
munlty Mental Health center
spokesperson today.
Due to the sudden and unexpected
takeover from the Commmlty Mental Health Centerr severe problems
rep~ staffing, licensure, insurance, quality of care and other
legalities have arisen, the
spokesperson continued.
Acconllng to a statement released
today by the Center's ad·
mln!Btration, the executive com·
mittee of the Community .Mental
Health Center's Board arranged to
meet with the Executive Conunittee

meeting was "postponed in·
definitely" by Annette Levine,
chairman of the ''648" Board.
The Gallia CoWlty C&lt;mmissioners
are asking a restraining order to
prevent further operatims of the
new facility (named until last week
the Chlldren's Resid!f1tial Treatment Center) Wltil 1juestions of
licensure aJJJ staffing are resolved.
Un'til the takeover by the "648"
Board, the Community Mental
Health Center ran the operation.
Plans were to open in mid.January,
after essential staff were hired to
provide care. "We are only talking
about a matter of a few weeks," said
the Center's spokesperson.
The "648" Board, in taking over
the facility claimed that it ws ready

tO open and must open immediately.
A child was admitted to ttie program .
on December 26. The spokesperson
questioned the ''648" Board's need to
"shove a child in there before services were in place. "
Since the ''648" Boards acroas the
state are not direct service
operations, but bodies to oversee •
and fund mental health services, ihe
takeover is unprecedented.
The six .employees of the
children's facllity were forced to
resign as Community Mental Health
Center employees and be placed on
the ''648" Board payroll. ''Hiring siJ:
employees and putting them oo the
payroll is certainly in violation of the
Community Plan and state
regulations," said the Center
spokespersm. State law requires a
local community plan which

·. 42 party ·goers die in fire
CHAPAIS, Quebec (AP) - A
young man was arrested after a fire
at a Lions Club New Yea: ·. ~-·eMf.
ty kllled at least 42 revelers. ;it is
definitely a criminal matter," police
said.
The 21-year-old was toying with a
cigarette lighter near Christmas
decorations that burst into flames
neat' the club's entrance, survivors

told Investigators.
Constable Rene Fortin of the
Chapais municipal police told repor·
ters he did not know when the
charges would be lodged. The
suspect was not immediately Identified.
Police said mliny of the· bodies
were stacked against a reer door of
the club, the ()pemiska, and that 50
other partygoers suffered serious
burns and smoke inhalation as the
fire roared through fir branch
decorations.
"
Police said there _ were ap·
proximately 350 persms in the club
when the fire broke out about I: 30
a.m. Tuesday. Thirty children lost
parents in the blaze, and one family
lost five relatives.
One of the survivors, Norman
Bedard, said when the fire broke out

Weather
Cloudy tonight with snow flurries
likely. Low. in the mid to low :n..
Cloudy Thursday. High in the upper
20s and low ~. The chance of
precipitation 60 percent tmight and
20 percent Thursday_

•
TRACI'OR CLUB MEETING
The Southeast Ohio .Garden Trac·
tor Club wW meet at 2 p.m. Sunday
at the Scout Building behind the
firehouse in CheSter. There will he
election cl new &lt;ificers. New mem·
herships wW be taken. All interested
persons are invited to attend.
BOARD ORGANIZING
The Southern Local School
District Board cl Education will
meet for Its organizational session a\
7 this evening in the high school
cafeteria.

SQUADCAJJ.'m

The Middleport Emergency Squad

was called to Front St., at 7:59p.m.
Tuesday for ,Harold DemOBkey who

was taken to Veterans MEmorial
Hospital where he was admitted.
MEETINGCANCEJ,I.ED
A meeting of the Ladies AIW!Iary
of the Middleport Volunteer Fire
Department schEJluled for this
evening has been postponed until
Jen.9.

HAPPY

many of the guests cootinued dan·
cing. Then there was panic, and
people fleeing through the blazing
front door ''Were like walking torches as their nylon clothing bUrned," he said. A
Another s~. Luc Marceau,
24, said he saw several m~ try to
put out the fire with a portable extinguisher and that when he realized
they weren't going to succeed, he
fied with his girlfriend.

SPECIAL MEETING
Tbe Meigs CouDty Commlsslonen
will meet Friday· at 10 a.m. to
dlseuu SEOEMS. Tbe contract whh
SEOEMS was termJaated Dec. 31.

becomes part of the state system.
Any changes in the plan must be submitted to the state for action.
Other· poesible violations concern
equal employment opportunity pra!ltlces. Any agency that uses state or
federal monies must cm1ply with
Equal Opportunity guidelines.
This lack of proper EEOpractlce$
on the part rJ. the "648" Board can
prevent a contract with the Mental
Health Center for support, back-up,
and o1her services. "A cootract with
them at this point might jeqNll'dlze
our federal grant," said the Center
spokesperson.
,
"Since all of the poHdes and
procedures depend entirely on the
Ctmmwilty Mental -Health Center, ,
cl which the children •a facility waa a
part, the bula for licensing was no
lmger valil," said the Center's
spokesperaon, "Everything in the
policies and procedures manual that
we developed for rWlning the facility
depends upon the Center."
The Center representl\tlve
quesUmed how the ''648" Board
managed to receive a state llcense
within two days when the CommWlily Mental Health Center had to
· follow all of the state rules and
regulations to obtain the license.
''They received a Ucense withOut.
having any rJ. their services in
place."
Other problems have reportedly
arisen because lhe Community Mental Health Center shared utilities, in·
surance, telephone sei'vlce, maintenance and safety operations with
the children's facility.

Mayor's

~ourt

'

Niehm claims takeover first step toward creation
•
•
.o f one agency for mental health care zn regzon
-

FLAG REMINDER - Flags such as these are being displayed In the
store windows cl the Middleport business sectlm to remind residents and
motorists of the hostages held in Iran. Besides these fiii8B which serve as
a reminder little has been done in Meigs County to demonstrate the resentment of residents towards the situation.
Weltha Dlllenger, Cyrus Donnley,
Jonathan Folden, Marvin Friend, .
U&gt;ris Hall, Faye Harrison, Mildred
U&gt;ng, Wllllam Nichols, Earle Palri· ·.
ter, Karl Paulson, Veri Reynolds, Cynthia Snyder, Michael Sllllnaker,
DBwn Spencer, Jason Stanley, ;
Willard Swain, Andrew Thcmp110n, •.
David White, . Betty Williams,'"
Richard Wlaeman.
BIRTIL'I DEC. •
,
Mr. and Mn. William Hubbard, :·
daugther, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs . •
Roger Moore, daughter, Jackson; ·
Mr. and Mn. Chester Elliott,
daughter; Pl. Pleasant.
'
DJSCIIARGESJANl
Mrs. Benjamin Barker and .
daughter, Delores Barlow, Amanda ..
DBvls, Carrie Evans, Mary Frye,..
Cynthia Harrison, Amanda Houck,
DBvid J!ianson, Loulae McCarty,
Mrs. Michael Payne and son, Teresa
Reynolds, Phyllis &amp;ssell, Mrs.
Timothy Stout and son, Bernice
Webb, Judith Wllli8111S.
BIRTIL'I JAN. I
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Sbulew,
daughter, Pt. Pleasant; Mi-. and
Mrs. Vlncen Stapletat, son, Crown
City; Mr. and Mn. James HudMxl,
am, Bidwell.
, .. •

:vETERANS MEMORIAL
Monday
Admlsalons--Bessle
Quillen, Middleport; Erlcka Hubbard, Syracuse; Jess Pickens,
Racine; Woodrow Hall, Racine;
Eugene Reeves, Pomeroy; Virgil
Yarbrough, Rutland.
Monday
Dlscharges-.J ohn
Blosser, Charlene SWartz, James
RouSh, Sherry Holtz, Brady Knapp,
Ruth Mulford, tbarles Werry.
Tuesd11y Admlssions~·Erlc
Phllllps, Galllpolis; Mary Stanley,
Shade; Dana Covert, Pcxneroy;
Harold Demoskey, Middleport;
Bessie StiU, Racine.
Thesday Dlscharges-Nme.

Four defendants were fined in the
court of Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens Monday night.
Hol&amp;er Medltla Center
Fined on speeding charges were
·Franklin W.Brinker, 37,
DlacbarKes, Dec. 30
Pt.Pleasant, fl3 and costs; James
Frances Burcham, Jerri Can·
F. Williams, :M, Rt. 1, Loog Bottom, · terbury, Judith &lt;:c., Ray Garlinger,
$13 and'coets; Earle E. Showalter, Gerald Gllm&lt;J'"e, Michelle Johnsm,
35, RD, Lonll BoUom, $15 and costs; Julia Kennedy, Jueslie Molden, Om
Helen F. Wilcoxen, 22, Radne, $13 Russell, Lllile Snyder, Brent Thorn·
Hovatter, Columbus; William · and costs.
psm, Andy Tredway, Amy Wood.
Hovatter, Lancaster; Clyde HovatDISCHARGES, DEC. 31
ter, Jr., Cuyahoga . Falls; Gary
Donna Barbar, Phlllip Bentley, John
Hovatter, Circleville; Richard
Blanksenshlp. Anne Bradbury,
Hovatter, Middleport, and James R.
Lucretia Brooks, Clyne Bnunfleld,
TWO SQUAD RUNS
Taylor, Ft. Stewart, Ga.; 41 grand·
Valerie Bumgart, J3ob!IJ Clark.
The
Pcmeroy
Emergency Squad
children, four great grandchildren;
went to Burlingham at 11:30 a.m.
her mother, Mrs. WUUam Ford, NutTuesday for Mrs. Mary Stanley who
ter Fort, W.Va.; two sisters, Mrs.
THE OFFICE OF
was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Janice Williams, Clarksburg, W.
Hospital where she was admitted. At
Va., and Mrs. Patricia Sleeth,
12:48 p.m. Tuesday the unit went to
Columbia, Md; ooe brother, William
Spring Ave. for James Wlaelllllh who
Ford, Nutter Ft.
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
FW!eral services will be held
ThurSday at 10 a.m. at the Shaw·
DB vis North Chapel, 4341 West High
TWINS BORN
St, Columbus. Friends may call at
Will Remain Open with Two Dispensing
Mr.
and
Mrs. Howard Ph!Wpa cl
the funeral home today fr1m 2 to 4
Rutlwxl received word cl the birth of
and 7 to 9. Graveside services will be
Opticians on Hand to Take Care
Your
twins-a
sm and a daughter-to Mr.
held at Middleport Cemetery Thurand Mra. Joe Phll1ips at Owensday at 2:30p.m.
sborough, Ky., on Dec. 26, the bir·
Repair Needs and Deliver Glasses
, thday anniversary of Mrs. Howard
Phillips.
on Order.
Grandparents other then Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Phillips include Mn.
Ellen
Hatfield, Route f, Pomeroy,
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs.
John Thcker, Pomeroy.
and
Khm1eini would receive him, there
was no indication from &lt;ificlals in
Tehran that this would happen.
Meanwhile, the students who
seized the U.S. Embassy on Nov. 4'
reiterated their WlChanging position
+ that the hostages would be freed
only if President Carter returned the
shah to Iran for trial. They said they
would not talk with Waldheim Wlle99
Khomeini told them to and that he
would ntt be allowed to see any of
the caplive Americans.
The government 1V service
coupled its pictures cl Waldhelm's
arrival m a split screen with an amputee and two !lead children it said
were victims of SAVAK, the shah's
secret police.
TWIN SIZE
"This is·a New Year's gift offered
Reg. S149.95 ea.
by the 1V staff on the occuim of
Mr. Waldheim 's arrival," the annow only
nouncer said.
The U.N. Security CoWlCll gave
95
Waldheim a new mandate Mmday
to try to win the release of the
~JlUn
hostages - put at 50 In nwnber by
FULLSIZE .
the State Department, 49 by their
~eg, $179.95 ea.
captors an4 ~ by three U.S.
now only ·
clergymen who vl.slted them over
Chri8tmaB.IM If he falls to get them
freed by Jan. 7, the councll wW meet
0
then to vote on a U.S. resolution now
being drafted to impose limited ssnENS
ctlons agalnstlran.
Reg. $449.95 set
The Sovjet government was one of
.
nowonly
four that abstained in Monday's
U.N. vtte. Tass, the official Sovlf.t
news agency; said m Tuesday that
', 'SETl
the U.S. "steps to lmpoae an
economic blockade m Iran give r1B1
..
.
to the profOWld indignlitim of the .
Iranian public." But thousands _of
Afghan residents of !tan demoo·
strated, outside the Soviet Embuay
in Tehran arid the Sovl« Conlulate
ONLY~
•.:·
in Mashad Tuesday;-ptotelting the
Soviet military ·Jntezyentlon In
Algha,nlstan: They hauled dOwn the
Soviet flag and . burned. It, btt
Iranian revolutloll8ty guards drove
them off when they tried to Invade
the embassy.

Area deaths
GARLAND G.BECHTEL
Garland G. Bechtel, 77,' Southside,
W. Va., died Tuesday morning at
University H011Pital in Columbus.
Mr. Bechtel was a retired farmer
and a member of the Concord Bap·
tist Church. He was preceded in
death by his wife, Sally Klnniard
Bechtel oo March 22, 1!178.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Leona Muine King, Lancaster; a
son, Gerald E., Henderson, W. Va.;
a sister, Mrs. Jewell Caudill,
Marion, Ohio; four brothers, Jack of
Middleport; Lawrence, Gilbert and
Charles, all of Hendersm, four gran. dchlldren and nine great·
grandchildren.
FWleral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Concord Baptist
Church with the Rev. Fred D. Mc·
Callister officiating. Friends msy
call at the Crow-Hussell Funeral
Home anytime after I p.m. Thursday.

MILDRED B. FOlDEN
MOdred Hovatter Folden, tr1 203
Fairway Drive, Columbus, fo.:mer
Middleport resident, died Monday at
her residence.
·
Mrs. Folden is survived by six
daughters, BeUy Hughes, Diana
Hovatter, and Gloria Hampton, all
of Columbus; Alice Spellman,
~oeton, Mass.; Gerry Fenton, Huntington,and Karen Unger, Rockbridge, Ohio; six sons, Ronald

-

HOLIDAYS
From The
People At:

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

Lighting
up
ANEW
YEAR
with joy
and hope
~· for all ·

[:.__-...;,...~

"'"h.r

CENTRAL lRUST COMPANY
'
Middleport, o.

Gold soars again
NEW YORK (AP) - .aid
soared to all-time highs at h~me
and abroad and the dollar sagged
Wednesday as investors coosldered tense Iranlan·U .S.
relations and the RussJim Ani\Y's
move into Afghanistan.
Gold ended trading in New
York at a record $574 an ounce, a
jump of ~ fr(JJI Mooday, according to Republic National

Waldheim

Bank.

Long delays
With the start of a new ccxn·
puterlzed registration system set
up this year by the Ohio Bureau
of Motor Vehicles, thousands of
people hoped to beat the long
lines usually associated with
license bureaus.
But many of them were out of
luck Wednesday as they found
long delays resulting from
problems with the new system.
Cuyahoga County Deputy
Registrar Robert Bennett said
that by llite In the&amp;y, only about
half the county's 12 license
bureaus were working at
capacity.

ELBERFELDS IN POM

"SPINE
SAVER"

'179 95

For .
Healthful·

. SupPort!

'224-,, .

SEJS

..

-ELBERFELDS lN -POME-ROY ·

for a license to operate.
During Wednel;day's testimony
before Judge James A. Bennett, Dr.
Niehm responded 'to a question con·
cerning the 'Eatiooale offered by the
648 Board for the December 17
takeover by stating he had been informed the takeover had been in·
spired by a desire by the 648 Board
to open the facility prior to the
holiday season. Acctrding to Niehm
the Center had planned a mid·
January opening.
When asked, by Prosecutor Cain,
if he believed that reason, Niehm

MASONIC OFFtCEJRS..;
Pomeroy Lodge 164,
Accepted Masons. Pictured are, frmt,l tor, Dmald Vaugluln, senior deacon ;
Eric Gryszka, senior warden; John Jenkins, war·
shlpful master; Michael Kelly, junior warden; Robert
_purbin, junior deacon; back row, I tor, Hugh Custer,

Pie~e

.

replied (following an objection
raised by 648 Board COWlcil Lynn
Boster and overruled by Judge Ben·
nett), " .. .its difficult to believe that
a matter of a few weeks would make
that much difference .. .I can only
surmise it was an attempt to emharass the Center Board... the
takeover appears to he a first step
toward an attempt at an eventual
merger of the Boards--or the
dissolution of the Center Board"
In further testimony, Dr. Niehm
said he found it hard to believe the
648 Board could have met the

BY BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs Local Board of

Education adopted - inclement
weather plans for this winter at
Wednesday night's organizational
session at Middleport.
According board action, classes
will be delayed one hour under Plan
A; two hours under Plan B, and
three hours under Plan C. Aregular
dismissal hour will be malnteined
and days when any of the plans are
put into effect.
During the organizational session,
the board reelected Carol Pierce as
president for another year and Dr.
Keith Riggs was elected vice
president. The next meeting was set
fot Jan. 15 and in February, March
and April the regular meetings will

~:t.

Deputies probing
hit-skip accident

acts against S0 VIets

a.

, r

Carnahan gave the oath of offiCe to
new board members, Charles Pyles
and Don Smith. The fifth board
member is Denny Evans. Dallas
Hill and David Nease, former board
members, were commended for
their services to the district

OSP launches
enforcement
effort today.
The Ohio State Highway Patrol
has Ia Wlched an enforcement effort

to help curtail a dangerous and
irritating conditim on highways following too Qjosely or tailgating.
Lt. E. W. Wiggles,orth said of·
ficers at the Gallipolis Post have
been alerted to observe these
violations and take appropris~.en·
forcement action.
According to Lt. Wigglesworth
the Highway Patrol recognizes t~
danger to mdorists who drive a
small fuel~fficient car which is
tailgated by a nothit vehicle.
"Ihis hazard is particularly obvious and even more dangerous
when a large truck is involved " he
said. '"Following too closely ~ the
fifth leading cause of accidents in
Ohio."
Lt. Wigglesworth urges all
motorists · to exercise courtesy in
their driving and realize that at 55
MPH it takes about 226 feet or 13 car
lengths to bring a vehicle to a stop.

allies.

· CUba 's natural inclination is to
support the Soviets, the officials
said, but a CUban endorsement could
alienate much of the •-member
noo..a]lgned movemept, which CUha
now chairs. Coba was~ of the first · .
COWltrles to back the Soviet Invasion
of Czechoslovakia 11 years ago.
Initially, the l!dministratlon
favored a U.N. General' Assembly _
debate but;IOi' reasons that are WI·
·clear, decided ipstesc) to take its ·
case to the security Council even
. thwgh the Soviets have ".eto poWer
•· OATH. OF OFFICE GIVEN - SyracUS!! Mayor
In that l~embe~forum.
.... Eher Pickens, left, ad!Dinistered the osth of office to ·
-~

Jaruce Lawson,. clerk, and Mute stnible councilinliii ·
M"onday night. Alllo sworn in was Ka~ Crow
elected councilwoman.
'

.re:

.,

l.

ll'

the children's facility project was
funneled through the 648 Board. The
Center is a noo-profit organization
which contracts with the 648 Board
to provide mental health services.
The following letters wete in·
troduced as evidenci' during
Boster's exainination of Dr. Niehm:
December 14, 1979
To : Bernard F. Niehm, Ph.D., In·
terim Center Director
From: Maxine S. Plummer, Ex·
ecutive Director
Subject: Children 's Residential
FacUlty
..
''Our Board and the community
has anxiously ~n awaiting the
opening of the Chlldren's Residential Facility which we anticipated
would be by mid-December. I would
like to request, on behalf of the
Board, any information on wfly the
facility has now been delayecNI&lt;om
its early December opening. As you
know, I served on the Legislation
Conunittee that reconunended the
closing of the Nelsonville Children's
Center and went on record with the
State Legislature that we could pro·
vide the service better and closer to
the children's home environment. I
also served on the committee that
this year, for the first time, has a
line items in the Governor's budget
for the direct ·operation of the
Children's facility.
"AS far as the plannint for these
faciUties, and the construction,
Athens-Vinton-Hocking CoWltles 648
Board and our Board progressed
(Continued on oage 7) ·

Mrs. Johnson elected
new hoard president

Two women members were elec·
ted to lead the Southern Local School
Bosrd for 1911 when the board met
for its organizational session Wed·
nesday night.
Mrs. Shirley Johnson was named
new board president and Mrs. Susie
Grueser was named vice president
mendatim is expected for the Jan. for the new year.
be held on the second Tuesday of
Mrs. Nancy Carnahan was named
15meetlng.
each montli starting at 7:30p.m.
Supt. David Gleason was named to treasurer for two years on the
Board members will receive $40 a
receive, expend and account for required two year probational basis.
month and will receive only that
Meetings were set for the second
federal
IWlds lor the year.
amount regardless of the nwnber of
Tuesday
of each month except in
It
was
voted
to
renew
membership
meetings which are held. The board
January
when
the meeting wlli he
in
the
Ohio
School
Boards
set an allowance of $1500 as a service
held
on
the
third
Thesday. Starting
Association
and
liability
insUrance
fWld for board members to attend
time
will
b&amp;
7:30.
was
purchased
f~r
board
members
meetings or special training
The group voted to join the Ohio
and bonds were purchaSed for the
sessions.
Sch
1 Boards Assoyiation and
In an executive session, the board treasurer, board president and
00
liiSurance -·was purchased
liability
;
set the salary rJ. the treasurer superintendent.
for
the
board along with per·
The board took no action on a
$17,000 including any income from
formance
bmds for the superin·
federal programs. Temporary ap- recommend&amp;tlon from Supt.
Gleason to accept all substitutes tendent, treasurer and board mem·
propriations were adopted.
from
the coWlty office for the year. · bers and temporary appropristions
The board discussed filling a Title
It
was
indicated that the board were adopted. Treasurer Nancy
I reading program vacancy on the
would
prefer
approval of all substaff.
1'bere was no recomstitutes
named
to serve in the local
mendation made but a recom·
district.
The board also took no action on
,
acceptance of textbooks recommended for the year from the county
0
Meigs CoWlty S!lerilf Deputies are
e
Gleason told the board that
investigating a hit-6kip accident that
_ he is in the process of pn!paring a
occurred on couty road 34 juilt north
e
handbook for teachers· and sub- of Pine Grove Church.
stitute teachers on "do's and
It is believed a southbound vehicle
dont's" and it will soon be ready for
went off the road on the right and
distribution~
stuck and damaged a section of
that this was nota likely prospect.
Treasurer Jane Wagner gave the
woven wore fence owned by Ed
Britain and Pakistan have been · oath of office to new board memFrecker, Rt I, Minersville.
tryingtoroWldupsupportforaU.N. bers, Robert Snowden and Richard
Deputies are also investigating the
debate on the issue, and diplomatic Vaughan, and to reelected mem·
theft of a battery from a car parked
sources said Wednesday niglt they hers, Larry Powell and Dr. Riggs.
at Riggs Used Cars at Chester.
~ ·
have enlisted the bacl~ing , of
Bangladesh, Portugal and Noriray.
Public debate could get under way
this weekend, the sources said.
Several officials said press commentary in the Third World, much of
it' government controlled, has been
generally critical rJ. the Soviets. But
• most govenunenta have refrained
from taking an &lt;i!idal stand.
Seve~ days after the Soviet in·
tervention, OJI!a, ftr eumple, had
· not endorsed the Soviet intervention.
American offldals regarded this as
significant, considering that Cuba is
one of the Kremlin's most trusted

carter to seek U- eN

WASHINGTON (AP) - Undeterred by the prospect of a Soviet
veto, President Carter wW seek
United N'aliona Security CoWlcil condemnation of the Soviet Union as
part of a series of moves.to COWlter
Soviet intervention in Afghanistan,
according to administration cJ.
HAMILTON, Olllo (AP) flclals.
Hamilton school teachers WedIt was not clear what other steps
Jlelday night voted to accept a 7.1
Carter would take although White
percent pay raise, averting
House officials said they _would gQ
earlier. lhreats rl. a strike In the
beyond "verba~ or symbolic
system li 10,500students.
gestures." Military intervention was
Teachers had demanded a 9.5
the ooly QPtion explicllty niled out.
percent ralae. They have been
White House press secretary Jody
working without a cootract since
Powell said Wednesday that Carter
July. Neg~tiatlons began last
has made up his mind and that "the
January.
president's decisions will he mad'e
public wl)en appropriate con·
sultatlons and notifications have
taken place."
WOODBINE, Ga. (AP) - A
A formal announcement was ex·
body !llllalnll since 1 a twin·
pected
today or Friday.
.
eniJned pllne crashed two d4ys
One official, who asked not to (lt
before auutmas, kUling a five·
ilentlfled, sakl"there was a "general
meniber Ohio family, IIIII! been
~ion" worldwide to the Soviet·
fllUnd mired in a southeast
sponsored
coup in Afghanistan last
G«tllia sWuql, olflclaluay: .
week and that tile admln!Btration
'l'be body of pilot Kenneth Mat·
hoped this Wl!uld be refleeted in a
tix, rr 1·WBB found W...,_,ay by
.
, a ~earch te'am consisting of his · U,N. debate.
I!ieally, ·another offictal sal~, the
, father Merle; his alsler and her
· Soviet&amp; would find theiiiBelves so
' ll IIJ.Iband.
- - '·' .
The family feanlaearCbed Oll)Y , Isolated
8 . ~ult ol ·~~~~ U.N.
'de !late that they would qulc;kly with·
half '.a day . l;lefore tindb\c the
dt'lw lhe estimated 30,000 to to,OOO
. llody, glired In rlwddy gra• and
tr~ ' they have deployed 1n
cov~ by bracil,llh lldal water.
Af~~lstan , He .added, however,
"! ·- •

requirements for licensing the
facWty in the four days alleged. According to Niehm, the procedure
followed by the Center_ ~;equired an
extensive review ·of the facility and
its programs, as well as a site
visitation by state mental health of.
ficials. The 648 Board reportedly
received a temporary license from
the state within four days of the
takeover.
Dr. Niehm, during his nearly three
hours of testimony, further stated he
did not believe the facillly ' was
properly staffed. Following the
December 17 takeover, Center employes who had been assigned to the
children's facility were told by 648
Bosrd administrators that if they
wished to retain their jobs at the
facility they would have to resign
from the Center and be hired by the
648Board.
According to Niehm, key positions
of Community Intervention
Specialists and Teacher-Councilor
had not been in place prior to the
takeover. He said he did not believe
those positions had been filled by the
648Board.
Dr. Nlehm described the service
li'fered at the facility · as, " ... a
delicate program." ''If you do
everything right, success is
questionable .. .you just can~ open
the door and expect success.
During questioning by 648 Board
council Boster, Dr. Niehm testified
that the contract between the Center
and the 648 Board had expired in
September I !179, and that funding f!K' ,

Meigs hoard adopts weather plans

Body located

'

chaplain; ,Kemeth Wiggins, educational officer; Tom
Edwards, secretary; Theod~re T. Reed, Jr.,
treasurer; Pat Wood, senior steward, and Millard Van ·
Meter, tyler. Phil Kelly, junior steward, was not
present for the p1cture.

'

reelected president

Accept contract

'149

PRICE:

,, · "The ~rlendly Sanlr"

NEW YORK (AP) - Scalded,
roastad and burned, a 1~ear-old
boy clq to life Wednesday as
hiB mother was charged with put·
tlng him in a htt oven in an apparent ritual ordeal to drive the
devil out of him.
The Infant, Leon Justin, burned
on • percent of 1m bcidy and
~EIItly malnourlabed u well,
-- aitder Intensive OU'e and In
very critical condition In the bum
center of New York Hospital·
Cornell Medical Center.

oJ

Great To

~

Child critical ·

DR. N. W. COMPTON ·

NOW!

Walk·Up Teller Window Open Fri. Eve. 5 to 7 P.M.

BY LARRY EWING '
rights of toe CoWlty Commissiooers,
Gallia.Jackson-Mell!ll C~m~~~untty
the 648 Board and the Center conMental Health Center Director Dr.
cerning the licensure and operation
Bernard Nlehm charged Wednesday
of the children's residential facility.
that the December 17 takeover of the
ControversY surrounding the
Nelsoovllie Alternative Residential
operatloo of the facility, which is
Facility by the G.J-M Mental Retar~ • owned by Gallia CoWlty, surfaced on
dation 648 Board is the first f!tep by December 17 when the 648 Bosrd
the 648 Board to create one agency
directed the takeover by 648 per·
for the delivery of mental health sonnel of the building and its
caretothetri~yarea.
operation.
That charge came during the first
According to Friday's complaint,
day of hearings in Gallipolis
the Mental Health Center developed
· • Municipal Court on a complaintfiled · the Nelsmville Alternative facility
Friday seeking an injunction and had been given verbal approval
restralnlng both the Center and the
648 Board from carrying on the
business of the children's resldeptial
facllity Wltil questions surrounding
the staffing and licBISing of that
facD!ty have been determined.
Friday's actioo was filed by
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph L.
Cain on behalf of the Gallla County
Board of Commissioners.
The ccxnplaint further seeks a
declaratory judgment as to the

.

'

�..
2- The Dail•· :...ntinel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., ThiD'sday, Jan. 3, 1911
-

• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _&lt;f_ _

l

"""'!' _ _ _ _

DRUGa IN TI-l~ §Cf..IOOL&amp;!
OVR KID§! I T[LL You,
I'M §0 VP&amp;ET I'LL
N(ED TvJO VAL.IUM§
To GET To §L£[

0

I
I
I
I
I

Sentinel
Editorial
'lt ______________________________ _
~

I

I

I

\

In .Washington'
Evolving
Senate ethics
.,
'

m&lt;l'lt visible Senate investigations in
recent years.
.
In cases involving Sens. Edward
W. Brooke, R-Mass., and Herman E.
Talmadge, D-Ga., the conunittee
acted only after embittered and
estranged wives forced the
discl&lt;l'lure 'of information that vir·
tually mandated probes of their
husbands ' alleged 1 illegal or
unethical act! vi ties .
The Wilson cases is distinguished
by the lack of any public pressure o~
the House committee, whose Initial
suspicions reportedly were aroused
by information its own investigators
developed
during the Korean inHili.
fluence peddling probe.
Both House and Senate establishWilson is charged with.acceptlng,
ed ethics committees more than a
"under circumstances which might
decade ago, but in the ensuing years
be construed by reasonable persons
those panels generally have
as influencing the performance of
restricted themselves to perfunctory
his government duties," $15,500 in
activities that wouldn t bruise overgift';
during the early 1!11~ from a
sized eg&lt;ie or tarnish cherished
man
who had "a direct interest in
political reputations.
legislation
before the Congress."
The significance of the Wilson
He
also
is
accused of converting
case lies in the fact that it represents
'
to
his
personal
iise" almost $29,000
the fil'!lt time either ethics commitworth
of
campaign
funds , then lying
tee has undertaken an investigation
about
the
matter
when
interrogated
of a legislator on its own initiative
under oath by the committee last
and has pursued the matter to the
year.
•
point d publicly accusing the target
Virtually all of the alleged violaof the pcobe of serious violatloos.
tions date back to the 1971-73 period,
Over' the years, the two ethics
pre&amp;enting a problem of timeliness
committees have received hundreds
that not long ago would he afforded
of complaints against members of
the
committee an· excuse to quietly
Congress. But the investigations into
drop
the matter after a cursory inthe charges -- usually distinguished
itial
probe.
only for their superficiality and ...
To its credit, however, the comsecrecy - too often have produced
mittee
appears to be seriously purresulbl legitimately criticized by
suing
the
case, which could prove to
critics as whitewashes.
be
a
landmark
in the troubled
Public displays of Congress' dirty
of
ethical
reform
on Capitol
history
laundry have been confined to cases
Hill.
where outside pressures made fullscale, open investigatioos an unDICKINSON EXHIBIT
ccmfortable but unavoidable alterNEW YORK (AP) -Some 70 painnative. Some exampLes :
tings and drawings by Preston
- Journalistic investigations: Tl\e
Dickinson, a member of the
first major probe cooducted by the
Precisionist group &lt;i American
Senate's ethics committee involved
painters, wlll continue on display at
charges against then.sen. Thomas
the Whitney Museum of Modern Arl
J. Dodd, D.Conn. But the reluctant
through Feb. 24.
panel opened its investigations ooiy
The lint retr!llpective of work by
after months of relentless pressure
Dickinson, the exhibition reviews his
and damaging discl051lres from col·
contribution to 20th-ce ntury
umnist Jack Anderson.
American arl. After its New York
The mere recent investigatioos
showing, the show will travel to New
conducted by both ethics commitMexico, Colorado and Georgia.
tees into allegations of influence
peddling by Korean . businessman
THE DAfi..Y SENTINEL
Tongsun Park were a grudgif!g
tUSPSJG-. . )
response toallegations in the
Washington Post and other
newspapers.
DEVOTI!D TO THE
- Justice Department action: To
INTERE'lT OF MEICJ&amp;.MASON AliEA
maintain the appenrance of proprieROBERT IIOEFIJCH
ty, the ethics committees in recent
CllyEdllor
Publbh&lt;d daOy ..copt8o-y by 'l1w Oh.j
:yean have opened their own inValley Publblllq Compuy· MIIIIDD":;I!:j
·vestigations after it became obvious
11l Cowt Sl, Pommtr, Oldo 45111.
otllce l'lltloe nz. IlK. Edllorlol Pboae
that federal prosecuton were pursu•t-tm.
~
ing criminal probes along identical
SeeoDd elaN pollllt paidal Pomeny, Olllo.
Nadoaaladver111la&amp; npre~e~~CaUve,l.adoa
lines.
A..OI!ltltes, SlOt Euc::lld A.-e., Cleveland, OhJit
Recent examples included the
tellS.
.
!
Sllllo&lt;riPIIOD ..... , Ddlv- lly corrlet
:cases of Democratic Reps. Joshua
Pert avaU.ble tO ceatl per wcet. By Motor
:Eilberg and Daniel J . Flood, both ci
Roate ...bere c.rrier .en1ce aotavaOab~. e&gt;a;
:Pennsylvania, and Charles D. Diggs
moalb,$S.M.
11le D.Oy S.alllle~ by mall Ia Oblo allll w..
Jr. of llfichigan.
.
Vlrllala, - year 111.11; Sh .,..,lbo 117.51
lbn!e mooU. fJG.SO. Ebewbere $31.00; 1
- Scorned women: This arcane
mootbttzO." ; tl&amp;reemoatbi$U.eo.
category is unlikely to attain any
1bt AAod11ed Preu II et:clullvely ead
to tbe •e for pubUc.Uea ol all DrW~ cU.~
significant permanent status, yet
eredi!H to die ....... per IIIII alH die '-I
"messy" divorces involving a pair
aews pubU.bed berelll.
d lawmakers led directly to the two

By Robert Walters
Wist of two related collliDD.8)
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Compared with the major congressional
'7 scandals of past years, the formal
accusation rl. misconduct filed
recently against a single West Coast
congressman clearly fails into the
"small Potatoes'' category.
But the decision of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to initiate a full investigation into cerlain financial transactions of
Rep. Charles H. Wilson, D-Otlif.,
represents a watershed in the evolution of ethical standards on Capitol

U
:,d
t

Berry's World

§)r8N'71
I&lt;QCKY MTN

NEW8J NfA

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidents rarely wait for anyone. DOzens of
underlings and bodyguards move on
his command, and devil take the hindmost.
President Carter left the White
House for the State Department on
such short notice a few weeks ago
that he left behind his personal
physician, Rear Adm. WiDiam
Lukash, who's usuaDy close enough
to serve as the chief executive's
shadow.
Lukash, whose office is but a few
paces from tile spot where the
rmtorcade formed, was mystified
because buzzers near his desk alert
him to presidential movements. Yet
he did not have time to take even
those few steps.
Also left behind were two vanloads
of reporters and photographers. The
vans and Lu)&lt;ash 's sedan drove
away empty.
Sequel: The empty vehicles returned a few minutes later to pick up
their passengers.
Carter agreed to an interview with
one reporter who, because of a
mixup in signals with press
secretary Jody Powell's office,
arrived 15 minutes late fofbis ap' I
pointment. ·
On that occasioo, Carter waited.
But his impatience seemed evident
,when the reporter found the chief
executive in the Rose Garden
tossing sticks to daughter Amy's dog
Grits.

+++
On two occasions, President Lyndon B. Johnson did wait for the
press, but these were exceptions
proving the rule.
On a trip to Olicago in 1968, the entire White House press corps flew
aboard Air Force One, moving to
and from the city by bus while LBJ
went by he1ltopter.
Returning io the airport, one press
bus crashed into an auto. Johnson
had little choice but to walt for the

Today's Commentary

Spo~s

·Canada tries again
r:J. the resotirce-rlch western proBy DonG~
vinces -British Columbia, SaskatFighting words tilough they may
chewan and Mahltoba in addition to
be to much of the English&lt;~peaking Alberla .:_ that has been underway
majority, French would appear to
for some time. The shift has further
provide the best description at this fragmented a political confederation
point for Canada's upcoming elecunable to rel!Olve the histeric
tion -deja vu.
· Again Pierre Elliott Trudeau will French-English split that has
thwarted development r:l. a national
be leading a Liberal old guard
identity since Its establishment.
against Joe Clark, the youngish
But while Alberta and its
knight out of the far West at the head neighbors have the resources, Oncl a coalition with little in common tario and Quebec still have the votes.
other than dislike r:J. Trudeau - his Trudeau's Liberals go into the elecparty, his policies and often tion with a fitm control of of the latvehemently his personality.
ter province's parliamentary '
Again differences of conventional
delegation but preciotm little outpolitical program and ideology are
side. Clark made it last time thanks
compounded by contradictory
to a swing away from the Ubera!B in
ecommic interests of West, East
Oniarlo, largely provoked by
and the near-orphan Maritime Pro- Trudeau's determination to overvinces. And by the English-French
come all oppo6itioo to a bilingual
language confrontation that confumes to distort virtuaDy every at- society.
The clash of energy intere&amp;ta
tempt at normal political com- might be enough to effect a swing
munication in Canada.
back, or off in another direction enThere are some changes from the
tirely, yielding a parliament r:J. such
situation of last May's election,
discordant minorities that no basis
however. Trudeau, who . put off
for an effective coalltioo would exretirement as Liberal leader when
defeat of Clark's budget compelled·a istAnd there is something else to connew election, has declared himself
sider. This is the first time In almost
in only for the interim. Should the
a century that voters are being callLiberals be returned to power, he
ed upon to turn out li1 a frigid Canahas promised to tum over the
dian February. Weather could be the
government to a new prime minister
wild card thatde.termine&amp; the entire
''well before the next electioo."
game.
Trudeau's intentions may or may
While pre-election Canada poses
not make his party more attractive
numerous questions, It also answer
to th!lle voters- and they are legion,
one - whY pollilcal analysis is often
particularly in the western prO- so much safer than predictiorL
vinces - who are most turned off by
him personally. But It leave&amp; as a
question mark who would be replacing him, and thus who the electorate
would be opting for in the ioog run.
The one thing the last election
seemed to have made clear last elec- .
Today is Thursday, Jan. 3; the
tion was that a majority r:J. Canathird day of 1981: There are 363 days
dians did not want more cl Trudeau.
left in the year.
And they certainly did not get It in
Today 's highlight in history:
Clark, Canada's very own Joe Who?
On Jan. 3, 1959, Alaska became the
•
49thstate.
when he squeaked into the prime
minister's r:J.fice. They have gotten
On this date:
In 1777, General George
to know him better In the seven months since and while there are unWashington's army routed British
doubtedly words foc his official perregulars in the Battle of Princeton,
formance, dynamic ' isnt one of · N.J.
them.
In 1961, the United States severed
Th~ fall from precarious grace of
relations with Cube.
Clark's minority government came
In 1967, Jack Ruby, the convicted
in parliament's rejection of a budget , killer of Lee Harvey Oswald, died d
focusing on restructuring national
cancer.
In 1974, Kuwait reached
energy polif!Y· (Sound familiar out
there, America? ) Clark sought a
agreement .with Gulf Oll&amp;lld British
Petroleum for a 60 percent takeover
gradual equalization of Canada's internal price cl gas and oil with rates
of their operatl~ the Persian
prevailing on world markets,
Gulf state.
thereby encouraging both conservaIn 19'n, the biggest loan in the 30tion and new development to make
year histOry of the International
Canada selfoflufficlent.
Monelary Fund - almost $4 billion
The prospect is enormously ap-was made to Britain.
Ten yearS ago, a Brazilian plane
pealing to Clark 's native Alberta,
hijacked
by
Brazilian
with less than 10 percent of Canada's
population but 86 percent of oil and
revolutlooarles arrived in Cuba afgas reserves. But not to the popl!lous
ter stops in Peru and Panama. ·
East, particularly Ontario which is
Five ye&amp;l'll ago, the recession
home to a third r:J. Canadians and a
deepened as the govenunent repocted the highest American jobless
half of all industry. The enormous
transfer of wealth contemplated
rate since 1962.
,
One year ago, Iran's new Prime,
would roughly repeat internally
what has been OCCUlTing oo the
MiniBter, Shapour Bakhtiar,
promised a gradual dlamantllng rl.
world scene between the industrial
economies and the oil-exporting
ma'rtlal law, and hinted that the
countries.
shah would soon leave Iran.
The situation points up the InToday 's Birthdays : Actor Ray
creasing weight In Canadian affairs
Mllland ill 73.

shsken, if uninjured survivors.
A year earlier, a four-rnan ''pool"
of repcrters was chosen to accompany LBJ from the Philadelphis
airport to Los Angeles following the
first of two sununit meetings Johnson held at Glassboro, N.J., with
Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin .
Naturally, JohnSon's helicopter
preceded a Marln!l-lllanned press
chopper from Glassboro to
Philadelphia. But once Johnson was
on the ground, the pilot of the press
helicopter announced that he could
not land Wltil Air Force One had
departed.
No one could convince the pilot
that Johnson and his big jet would
not take off until the four reporters
were aboard Air Force One.
About five minuteslaieJ:,lwB"ever,
a radio message from the ground did
the trick.
The fint reporter up the ramp of
Air Force One was greeted personaDy by an irate pre&amp;ident, who
shouted, "Where the hell have you

been? "

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

Eastern Conference

Atlanta Division
W. W. Pel.
30 9 .769
Boston
Philadelphia
27 11 .711
New York
20 21 .o488
Washington
16 20 .ol44
15 24 .385
New Jersey
central Division
Atlanta
25 15 .626
San Antonio
20 20 .500
Cleveland
15 20 .487
Houston
17 21 .447
Indiana
17 22 .436
Detroit
10 30 .250

GB
21/2
11
12'h
15

5
5'h
7
7 1h
15

a 19-point lead, 60-U, early in thesecond half before Rio Grande came
stonning back to cu tthe deficit to
eight pointa on a steal by Vince
PhelpS, 62-64, with seven minutes
left in the game.
However, two loog 'bombs ' by
Baldwin-Wallare's Ron Myers, 6-2

Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande
College Redmen suffered a 78-'7
non-conference basketball loss to
Ohio Conference power BaldwinWallace at Lyne·Center Wednesday
evening.
Rio Grande, now ·4-3 on the year,
siayed cl08e In the first half, trailing
- 36-26 diD'ing the intermission.
The Yellow Jackets zoomed out to

GAME CHANGED
Eastern's varsity lind junior varsi. ty basketball game with Pl. Pleasant has been changed from Jan. 26
to Jan. 8.

Kansas City .
23 18 .561
Milwaukee
22 18 .550
'h
Denver
15 26 . 366 8
Chicago
12 25 .324 9
Utah
12 28 .300 10 1h
Pacific Division
1h
seaMie
27 12 .692
Los Angeles
29 13 .690
Phoenix
26 15 .634 2112
San Diego
21 21 .500 8
Portland
21 22 .488 8'12
Golden State
13 26 .333 14'h
Wednesday's Games
san Diego 103, New Jersey 97'
Boston 111, Houston 103
Los Angeles 127. Indiana 120
· San Antonio 118, Phoenix 109
Kansas City 128, Utah 121, OT
Denver 135, Detroit 116
Golden State 111, Portland 92
Washington 139, Seattle 134, 2 OT
Thursday's Games
San Diego at New York, n.
New Jersey at Atlanta, n.
Philadelphia at Cleveland, n.

Oldrivalries
slated Friday
Basketball returns to the SVAC in
a big way this weekend, following"
the long holiday break.
Friday 's action finds to old
rlvalies being renewed with the
defending champion Southern Tornadoes traveling to Eastern and
Kyger Creek visiting NcrthGallia.
Southwestern plays at Hannan
Trace in another league cootest.
Southern cootlnues to lead the
SVAC with a perfect 3~. Coach Carl
Wolfe's Tornadoes are 5-1 overall.
Eastern goes into the coo~est with
a 3-4 mar1t in all games and 2-1 slate
against league foes .
At North Gallia, Coach Ted
Lehew's Pirates 4-4 overaD and 2-1 in
the league host Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats. KCHS has a 25 record in seven games and (),'!
mark In the SVAC.
Southwestern goes fer Its third victory this season against the winless
Hannan Trace Wildcata. ·

lndiene at MiiWai.Jkee, n.
Friday's Games
Houston at New Jersey, n.
San Diego at Chicago, n.
San Antonio at Kansas City, n .
washington at Golden State , n.
Utah at Portland, n.
Detroit at Seattle, n.

~

TURBO

People have jobs, but the polls
suggest
that peq~le don't enjoy the
waDet.
seciD'ity cl having jobll. People apThe Carter people won't be
parertly have had mooey with which
·without ammunitii'ln, being able to
to
buy thlngs, but they've been inpoint to a high level of j~reatioo,
clined
also to emphasize the high
low unemployment and prosperity,
price
~
goods and the depleted conThe troub~ for Carter is that
ditioo r:J. their wallet!.
many people havlm1 perceived his
At a Ume of incredible economic
years as good times. While people
enremes, there 'a no lack of
bouglt in record 11100unts, for example, they repeatedly Indicated they ' debatable issues.
lacked financial security end con- · The debate ID date, it seems, Ill
whether there will be a debate.
fidence.

issues, many of which involve the

NEW YORK (AP) - With still pected to hammer away at the
another red ink, potentially in- rationale of the so-called windfall
fiB tionary budget expected by Jan. prciits tax, seeking to convince
28, political critics of the president voters that what it is called a tax on
wiD be asking what ingredients oil c001panies wil~ be paid for by
them.
make up his anti-inflation program.
The OPEC defense, blaming the
Existing progrwns have failed to
Organization
of Petroleum Exmake much of an impression,
porting
Companies
for domestic injudging by an inflation rate that is
flation,
is
cballenged
by ecooomists
epected to exceed 13 percent for l!r79
and to remain in double digits everyday. In debate, it isn't likely to
retain much credibility. ,
through most of 1980.
.There are plenty of economic
Interest rates too are widely
forecast to remain at roughly the
rate of inflation, and probably to rise
even higher before any SU!Itained
correction locks itself into place. ·
Savings have withered under the
"WASHINGTON (AP)- Preaidlmt
came Jlllt as·Sen. Edward M. Kents, the Jranlans might seek to create
heat r:J. inflation, and the official U.S.
Carter
has
done
more
than
drop
out
nedy
began
his
active
challenge
for
a
crisis to coincide with his Jllk'
savings rate is now only 5 percent or
of
one
campaign
debate.
He
Ills
put
the
·
Ileqlocratic
n(IJllnation,
Carpearance.
. . .
so, the lowest for any of the major
his
penonal
campaigning
.
on,
hold
ter's
popularity
and
'job
"
r
atings
in
There
are
j~I~~t
en~li qaallf;ylng
trading nations. People are burfor
the
duration
rl.
the
hostage
crisis
the
public
~inlcin
poll8
have
soared.
words
in
that
m·qe
to leave open
dened with credit paymenta.
in
Iran.
"I
cannot
lreak
awey
fmn
my
the
llkelihood
that
Clrter
wUl keep
A recession is scheduled, too. And
And
then
is
no
way
of
deterdutle&amp;
here
which
are
extraordinary
dcmg
wbat
he
bll
l1een
doq
for the
while some economic traditionalists
mining
how
long
that
will
be.
now llilll ooes which onlt I can · put two montha: telepl!D!IInl .key
say the pain must be endured before
The president said his decision
fuUifl," Carter wrote to advlsel'!l · Democrats to uk for !bell' support,'
the patient can again eiljoy health,
agsinSt
debating
his
Democratic
·
who said they had lirged him to keep
and lneeting at the Wblte lfclutte with
woi'kers aren't accep~ it. Their.
chaDengers in Des Moines nest Moothe debate date In Iowa. ''We wlll
group1 clpolielilahupporterl.
take-home pay has been shrlnkfng.
just have to take the · adverse
The IC*onedy people bad CQIDo
The administration's Pay Ad- day was based on the demands &lt;A his
job,
not
on
politics.
The
president
political
conaequences
and
make
the
p1alned
befoi'e that while catter wu
visory Committee has so far faillld to
also
declined
a
proposal
that
the
beat
cllt."
!81d
to
be:.all~m-II'III,
be .
agree on a level r:J. pay Increase acdebate
be
·
held
Jan.
17
lri
He
told
the
Del!l
Moines
Rellater
found
time
to
do
tbet
ldrid
of":. ,
ceptable for 19M.
walli!rlgt.on.
and"
Tribune,
which
wu
sponsmng
polltlcldni.
It
sOunded
liD
lOIII'
U no decision is reached the im_He said he has to stay at the Whfte
the Jan. ·1 debate In Iowa; tJ\at he
I!J'IPj!llfromtbeCIIIIprl.~caiw!l!(ete
pact might reverberate. It could, for
House
to
deal
with
the
sltuall.oo
ilr
hai;l
to
~lay
jn
Wuhlngt.on
to
deal
wl)o
~u !OiiJW .,and, ad D• ,
example, add to the feeling that inIran
and
the
Soviet·
incurllm
Into
withlraliandothetvllalmiltteri.
Houle
..,W. •jla ntGrtltd tllat the
flation and other econon'lic matters
1
Afghanistan.
In
a
well•dvertllled,
•'
the time be!rw. c111 best
prl!lldeJt .,.. •
pnlperiJ cfaln&amp;
. are beyond the adminlstratioo 's
handwritten iiote, Carter told hl8 . cootlnue these efforts If I forgo perwhat time (AIIIlleltt«&lt; 111m ~ do tw
ability to c~e with. ·
participation · lUre ell=t'Miftwt.
Dollar-watchers wiD continue to political aidea that he'lljlllt have \0 sooa1 ,appearlll(.'es
accept any adv~ polltlcal cooin eVflllla which are scluaively pert'"But
offer their opinion li. the currency by
, '
r:J. a Jl!lrtlsan political ciUDpalgn," ' Uie
advising people to get out of paper sequences.
Cartereald.
.
· So far; tile conHquenc• · cl hil
and into gold, silver, diamonds +
stay-et-horne
camp~lgn strategy
He IIIIo salll"that were· he to (Ill!'·
commoditi~ of limi~ supPly and
!Jave
been
exactly
the
,opposite.
ll.clpate
iJi publicized polltlcal IVII!I·
seemingly unlimited dellillnd.
Dllring
two
months
ci
crisis,
.
which'
Republican opponents _can be es'
'

' National Hockey League
· AIAGiance
By The Associated Press
Patrick Division

W L T Pis

GF

Philadelphia
24 1 10 58 153
NY Rangers
17 15 6 40 145
NY Islanders
14 15 6 34 122
Atlanta
14 17 32 117
Washington
9 23 5 23 110
Smythe Division
Chicago
13 13 12 38 108
Vancouver
14 16 7 35 122
St. Louis
13 18 6 32 107
·winnipeg
12 22 4 28 102
Colorado
12 22 3 27 123
Edmonton
9 19 8 26 123
Wales Conference
Adams Division
25 10 3 53 145
Bullalo
20 11 5 45 136
Boston
Minnesota
19 9 7 45 147
16 17 4 36 129
Toronto
15 17 6 36 117
Quebec
Norris Division
Los Angeles
18 12 6 42 156
AAon)real
18 12 5 42 145
Pittsburgh
15 11 11 41 127
Detroit
11 18 7 29 117
Hartford
9 16 10 28 114
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 3
Los Angeles 4, Detroit 2
N.Y. Rangers3, Quebec3, tie
N.Y.Islanders3, Toronto!
Minnesota 2, Boston 1
Chicago 5, Colorado2

GA
104
138
122
125
142
111
120
127
150
143
158

99
105
108
137
128

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
POP
Southern
5 1 456 336
North Gallla
4 4 553 590
Eastern ·
3 4 448 412 .
Kyger Creek
2 5 396 475
Southwestern
2 4 369 419
Hannan Trace
0 7 341 468
SVAC ONLY
Southern
3 b 227 141
North Gall Ia
2 1 194 196
Eastern
2 1 209 152
Southwestern
2 1 191 198
Kyger Creek
0 3 149 249
Hannan Trace
o 3 162 200
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
. 3 0 186 125
North Galli a
3 0 145 101
.eastern
2 1 109 97
Kyger Creek
1 2 128 135
Hannan J'race
0 3 109 152
Southwestern
o 3 116 173

137
132
122
128
129

hlbltlon
Hartford 3, Edmonton 3, tie
Thursday's Games
Philadelphia at N.Y . Rangers, n.
Washington vs. Hartford at Spr ·
ingfleld, Mass., n. ·
Detroit at Atlanta , n.
Boston at Winnipeg, n.
Vancouver at Colorado, n.

I

.'v

1979 CHEVY

SPECIAL ,
(1) 1979 FORD

TURBO

305

V-8

engine,

A.C:..

junior guard, put the Jackets back
on top 68-54. The visitors remained
ahead by 10 to 1~ pointa the remainder of the game.
The victory left Baldwin-Wallace
with a 5-11 season record.
Rio Grande placed four men in
double figures, led by Grant Greenwood and Bret McCormick's 18
polnta. Tom Dorsey added 13 and
Vince Pheps 12.
Rio Grande connected on 'll of 56
field goal attempts for 48.2 percent.
The Redmen were 13-19 at the foul
line for 68.4 percent. Rio had 18 rebounds, five by McConnick, 21 turnovenand 17 assists, five by McCormick.
'
The Yellow Jackets· placed ~~,tree
men in double figiD'es. Ron M:Yers
tossed in 25, Shelly Waters 19 and
Don Haines 10.
"
The winners hit 32 of 56 field goal
attempta for 58.8 percent. B-W picked off 19 rebounds, five by Waters,
had 12 turnovers and was eredited
with seven assists, three by Myers.
Saturday, the Redmen open
defense of their Mid.Ohio Conference title with a big gs~ at
Malone. The YeDow Jackets will
open defense at their Ohio Conference crown at Marietta Saturday.
Wednesay 's box score :.
BALDWIN ·WALLACE (78)
Wilson, 3·2·8 ; Myers, 10·5·25;
Waters, 9·1-19; Haines, 5.0·10 ; Whit ·
ney, 2·4-8 ; Korom, Hl·2; Elliott, 0·22; Winn, 1·0·2; Lesko, 2-ll-4..10TALS
32-14-78.
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE (67) !&gt;helps, 6.0 ·12; Greenw?od, 6-6·18 ;
Dorsey , 5·3·13; McCormi ck , 7u·4·18;
Boster, 0·0·0; Burgess, 1.0·2; Hud·
son, 1-0·2; west, 0-Q.O ; Quisenberry ,
0·0·0; Strick land, 1·0·2; Smalley, 0.00 TOTALS 27 ·1H7.
· Halftime scores - BW 36, R io26.

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Kyger Creek at North Galli a
southwestern at Hannan Trace
Southern at Eastern

(1) 1979 MERCURY CAPRI

1976 FORD
MUSTANG II

MODULAR
HOMES

WIIITrERIIE

low miles. ·

TURBO RS

TICKES ON SALE
Tlcketa for Friday niglt 's game
between Eastern and Southern can
be purchased at both of the high
schools today from 8:00a.m. - 3:00
p.m. Tickets will be S2 for adults and
'1 for studenta.

KINGSBURY
HOME
SALES
1100·1:. Mam

35:i E. Main, 1-'omeroy .
Your

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'

ultimate goals are than anything
they've done in the previOUB 'time
that I've been in office. "
The Olympics and politics are no
strangen. African athletes boycotted the 1976 Mootreal Games alter a
New Zealand rugby team toured
South Africa, and threatened a fiD'ther boycott of this year's Games if
the British Uons rugby lour to South
Africa goes ahead as scheduled.
But Western sports officials
stressed that Western governments
have few if any legal powen to stop
athletes from taking part.
A Belgian Olympic Coounltee
member said: "We (the BOC) are a
sovereign organization. We can participate in the Olympics outside cl
. the government."
Sir Denis Follows, chairman of the
British Olympic ABIIoclation, said:
"The ooly way the British government can prevent us taking part is
by taking away the passports of all
our competiton, and there is no way
that that is going to happen." He added : "It is not for governments to··
meddle in matters cl this kind. Sport
should be abqve politics, otherwise
the whole concept of sport just goes
out the window."
Maurice Herzog, ooe of two French members r:l. the IOC, said: '1n
spite of the reactioos of some, the
business at Kabul has nothing to do
with the Olympic Games."
A member of the Italian Olympic
Coounlttee said: "We are against
any political involvement in sport."
Danish Olympic Committee member Kurt Moeller said: "We. don't
want to Involve Olympic prospects
with NATOmatten."

Thlsweek 'sgames: _

CAMARO

USTANG

possible Olympic boycott that reportedly was suggested by a West German representative.
The Sov let intervention in
Afghanistan has profoundly, alarmed Western politicians.
.
President Carter Wednesday
"1Clllled U.S. Ambassador Th00\88
Watson · from Moscow ·after
declaring that the Soviet move "has
made a more dramatic change in
nny opinion r:J. what the Soviets'

Yellow Jackets ·top
Rio Redmen, 78-67

western Conference
Midwest Division ·

,,

Carter's anti-inflation budget fa.ils

or

_j

National Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

pic Committee, in a dtatement Wed- .
nesday.
Sports officials from the United
States, selgium, Britain, Denmark,
France, Italy, Norway and West
Germany lined up with him In op~sing the boycott call.
Killanin 's plea , in. a statement
isaued 1rom IOC hea~uarters in
LausaMe, Switzerland, came less
than 24 hours after NATO nations
meeting in Brussels discu&amp;&lt;!ed a

WNDON (AP) - Olympic officials have lined up against Western
politicians who are demanding a
boycott of the Summer Olympic
Games in Moscow to protest Soviet
military interve ntion in
Afghanislan.
"Athletes come first , and in no
way should be prevented from c«npeting in international competition
by political, racial or religious
discrimination," said Lord Killanin,
president of the InternAtional Olym-

Moscow Dynamo 7; Winnipeg o, ex ·

For

"PSSTI Hey, buddy, wanna be tlabberghasled
-

tiseptic. There is no way such a
playoff could capture the color and
the carnival holiday spirit that has
been built. up by the tradition of the
bowls.
Because of the massiveness of the
project, chances are no truer champion oould be determined than the
one that comes unofficiaDy out of the
New Year's Day mailness.
One only has to witness one Rose
Bowl pageant to realize that ita
demise - like that ofthe other bowls
- would be a great tragedy.

..... '·' ·''•' .• r~••

President's campaign put on hold

by a revolting locker room joke? "

.W orld

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Stop
the presses. Call off the dogs. Forget
all the sennonlzing, pontificating
and experting of the past about the
necessity rL establishing a championship playoff system In college
football.
U you '11 ucuse the reversal, we'd
like to take the other lack.
Leave the bowl games alone.
They provide a sparkling climax
to the long drudgery cl the regular
season with thelr'iestive air, their
pomp and pageantry and the intersectional controversies
generated overwbois No.1.
Who is No.1, anyhow?
Regardless of the choice of
Alabama as No.1 in the post-bowl
poll Wednesday - and the polls, incidenially, should remain an institution not to be tampered with you're not going to convince
everybody, ·or even a fraction of
everybody, that one team is better
than all the others.
In the Deep South, how could
anybody even suggest that
Alabama's unbeaten Crimson Tide
doesn't deserve to repeat, although
it beat one of the secondary teams of
the Southwest Conference? You
can1dothe Bear that way.
But out here on the Pacific Coast,
sentiment is just as strong that the
real No.1 is massive, talented
Southern Cal, which knocked off
previously No.1 Ohio State in a battle of unbeaten conference champions. And nobody can tell Southwesterners that mighty Oklahoma,
with the hard-nmnlng Billy Sims,
couldn't beat the lOt cl them -lined
up, one by one.
.
Let the people argue until they're
blue in the face. It's atlmuilltlng. It's
healthy. And it hurts nobody.
Meanwhile, try to imagine what
would bappen if . the National
'Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) attempted, as many of us
have argued for years, to install a
playoff plan.
. First of all, it would be unwieldy.
It would add tremendous strain to a
program that already has stretched
to 11 games and'cannot bend further
without infringing on' the playen'
academic reaponsibilltes.
·
Mote than that, it would be an-

)

.

Politicans d·e mand boycott,

Today's

Today in history

'
(•resident
jimmy Carter

.

3.: The.Ilai!Y Sentinel, \liddleport.Pomeroy, 0., Thursllay, Jan. 3, 1911

•

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2- The Dail•· :...ntinel. Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., ThiD'sday, Jan. 3, 1911
-

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0

I
I
I
I
I

Sentinel
Editorial
'lt ______________________________ _
~

I

I

I

\

In .Washington'
Evolving
Senate ethics
.,
'

m&lt;l'lt visible Senate investigations in
recent years.
.
In cases involving Sens. Edward
W. Brooke, R-Mass., and Herman E.
Talmadge, D-Ga., the conunittee
acted only after embittered and
estranged wives forced the
discl&lt;l'lure 'of information that vir·
tually mandated probes of their
husbands ' alleged 1 illegal or
unethical act! vi ties .
The Wilson cases is distinguished
by the lack of any public pressure o~
the House committee, whose Initial
suspicions reportedly were aroused
by information its own investigators
developed
during the Korean inHili.
fluence peddling probe.
Both House and Senate establishWilson is charged with.acceptlng,
ed ethics committees more than a
"under circumstances which might
decade ago, but in the ensuing years
be construed by reasonable persons
those panels generally have
as influencing the performance of
restricted themselves to perfunctory
his government duties," $15,500 in
activities that wouldn t bruise overgift';
during the early 1!11~ from a
sized eg&lt;ie or tarnish cherished
man
who had "a direct interest in
political reputations.
legislation
before the Congress."
The significance of the Wilson
He
also
is
accused of converting
case lies in the fact that it represents
'
to
his
personal
iise" almost $29,000
the fil'!lt time either ethics commitworth
of
campaign
funds , then lying
tee has undertaken an investigation
about
the
matter
when
interrogated
of a legislator on its own initiative
under oath by the committee last
and has pursued the matter to the
year.
•
point d publicly accusing the target
Virtually all of the alleged violaof the pcobe of serious violatloos.
tions date back to the 1971-73 period,
Over' the years, the two ethics
pre&amp;enting a problem of timeliness
committees have received hundreds
that not long ago would he afforded
of complaints against members of
the
committee an· excuse to quietly
Congress. But the investigations into
drop
the matter after a cursory inthe charges -- usually distinguished
itial
probe.
only for their superficiality and ...
To its credit, however, the comsecrecy - too often have produced
mittee
appears to be seriously purresulbl legitimately criticized by
suing
the
case, which could prove to
critics as whitewashes.
be
a
landmark
in the troubled
Public displays of Congress' dirty
of
ethical
reform
on Capitol
history
laundry have been confined to cases
Hill.
where outside pressures made fullscale, open investigatioos an unDICKINSON EXHIBIT
ccmfortable but unavoidable alterNEW YORK (AP) -Some 70 painnative. Some exampLes :
tings and drawings by Preston
- Journalistic investigations: Tl\e
Dickinson, a member of the
first major probe cooducted by the
Precisionist group &lt;i American
Senate's ethics committee involved
painters, wlll continue on display at
charges against then.sen. Thomas
the Whitney Museum of Modern Arl
J. Dodd, D.Conn. But the reluctant
through Feb. 24.
panel opened its investigations ooiy
The lint retr!llpective of work by
after months of relentless pressure
Dickinson, the exhibition reviews his
and damaging discl051lres from col·
contribution to 20th-ce ntury
umnist Jack Anderson.
American arl. After its New York
The mere recent investigatioos
showing, the show will travel to New
conducted by both ethics commitMexico, Colorado and Georgia.
tees into allegations of influence
peddling by Korean . businessman
THE DAfi..Y SENTINEL
Tongsun Park were a grudgif!g
tUSPSJG-. . )
response toallegations in the
Washington Post and other
newspapers.
DEVOTI!D TO THE
- Justice Department action: To
INTERE'lT OF MEICJ&amp;.MASON AliEA
maintain the appenrance of proprieROBERT IIOEFIJCH
ty, the ethics committees in recent
CllyEdllor
Publbh&lt;d daOy ..copt8o-y by 'l1w Oh.j
:yean have opened their own inValley Publblllq Compuy· MIIIIDD":;I!:j
·vestigations after it became obvious
11l Cowt Sl, Pommtr, Oldo 45111.
otllce l'lltloe nz. IlK. Edllorlol Pboae
that federal prosecuton were pursu•t-tm.
~
ing criminal probes along identical
SeeoDd elaN pollllt paidal Pomeny, Olllo.
Nadoaaladver111la&amp; npre~e~~CaUve,l.adoa
lines.
A..OI!ltltes, SlOt Euc::lld A.-e., Cleveland, OhJit
Recent examples included the
tellS.
.
!
Sllllo&lt;riPIIOD ..... , Ddlv- lly corrlet
:cases of Democratic Reps. Joshua
Pert avaU.ble tO ceatl per wcet. By Motor
:Eilberg and Daniel J . Flood, both ci
Roate ...bere c.rrier .en1ce aotavaOab~. e&gt;a;
:Pennsylvania, and Charles D. Diggs
moalb,$S.M.
11le D.Oy S.alllle~ by mall Ia Oblo allll w..
Jr. of llfichigan.
.
Vlrllala, - year 111.11; Sh .,..,lbo 117.51
lbn!e mooU. fJG.SO. Ebewbere $31.00; 1
- Scorned women: This arcane
mootbttzO." ; tl&amp;reemoatbi$U.eo.
category is unlikely to attain any
1bt AAod11ed Preu II et:clullvely ead
to tbe •e for pubUc.Uea ol all DrW~ cU.~
significant permanent status, yet
eredi!H to die ....... per IIIII alH die '-I
"messy" divorces involving a pair
aews pubU.bed berelll.
d lawmakers led directly to the two

By Robert Walters
Wist of two related collliDD.8)
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Compared with the major congressional
'7 scandals of past years, the formal
accusation rl. misconduct filed
recently against a single West Coast
congressman clearly fails into the
"small Potatoes'' category.
But the decision of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct to initiate a full investigation into cerlain financial transactions of
Rep. Charles H. Wilson, D-Otlif.,
represents a watershed in the evolution of ethical standards on Capitol

U
:,d
t

Berry's World

§)r8N'71
I&lt;QCKY MTN

NEW8J NfA

WASHINGTON (AP) - Presidents rarely wait for anyone. DOzens of
underlings and bodyguards move on
his command, and devil take the hindmost.
President Carter left the White
House for the State Department on
such short notice a few weeks ago
that he left behind his personal
physician, Rear Adm. WiDiam
Lukash, who's usuaDy close enough
to serve as the chief executive's
shadow.
Lukash, whose office is but a few
paces from tile spot where the
rmtorcade formed, was mystified
because buzzers near his desk alert
him to presidential movements. Yet
he did not have time to take even
those few steps.
Also left behind were two vanloads
of reporters and photographers. The
vans and Lu)&lt;ash 's sedan drove
away empty.
Sequel: The empty vehicles returned a few minutes later to pick up
their passengers.
Carter agreed to an interview with
one reporter who, because of a
mixup in signals with press
secretary Jody Powell's office,
arrived 15 minutes late fofbis ap' I
pointment. ·
On that occasioo, Carter waited.
But his impatience seemed evident
,when the reporter found the chief
executive in the Rose Garden
tossing sticks to daughter Amy's dog
Grits.

+++
On two occasions, President Lyndon B. Johnson did wait for the
press, but these were exceptions
proving the rule.
On a trip to Olicago in 1968, the entire White House press corps flew
aboard Air Force One, moving to
and from the city by bus while LBJ
went by he1ltopter.
Returning io the airport, one press
bus crashed into an auto. Johnson
had little choice but to walt for the

Today's Commentary

Spo~s

·Canada tries again
r:J. the resotirce-rlch western proBy DonG~
vinces -British Columbia, SaskatFighting words tilough they may
chewan and Mahltoba in addition to
be to much of the English&lt;~peaking Alberla .:_ that has been underway
majority, French would appear to
for some time. The shift has further
provide the best description at this fragmented a political confederation
point for Canada's upcoming elecunable to rel!Olve the histeric
tion -deja vu.
· Again Pierre Elliott Trudeau will French-English split that has
thwarted development r:l. a national
be leading a Liberal old guard
identity since Its establishment.
against Joe Clark, the youngish
But while Alberta and its
knight out of the far West at the head neighbors have the resources, Oncl a coalition with little in common tario and Quebec still have the votes.
other than dislike r:J. Trudeau - his Trudeau's Liberals go into the elecparty, his policies and often tion with a fitm control of of the latvehemently his personality.
ter province's parliamentary '
Again differences of conventional
delegation but preciotm little outpolitical program and ideology are
side. Clark made it last time thanks
compounded by contradictory
to a swing away from the Ubera!B in
ecommic interests of West, East
Oniarlo, largely provoked by
and the near-orphan Maritime Pro- Trudeau's determination to overvinces. And by the English-French
come all oppo6itioo to a bilingual
language confrontation that confumes to distort virtuaDy every at- society.
The clash of energy intere&amp;ta
tempt at normal political com- might be enough to effect a swing
munication in Canada.
back, or off in another direction enThere are some changes from the
tirely, yielding a parliament r:J. such
situation of last May's election,
discordant minorities that no basis
however. Trudeau, who . put off
for an effective coalltioo would exretirement as Liberal leader when
defeat of Clark's budget compelled·a istAnd there is something else to connew election, has declared himself
sider. This is the first time In almost
in only for the interim. Should the
a century that voters are being callLiberals be returned to power, he
ed upon to turn out li1 a frigid Canahas promised to tum over the
dian February. Weather could be the
government to a new prime minister
wild card thatde.termine&amp; the entire
''well before the next electioo."
game.
Trudeau's intentions may or may
While pre-election Canada poses
not make his party more attractive
numerous questions, It also answer
to th!lle voters- and they are legion,
one - whY pollilcal analysis is often
particularly in the western prO- so much safer than predictiorL
vinces - who are most turned off by
him personally. But It leave&amp; as a
question mark who would be replacing him, and thus who the electorate
would be opting for in the ioog run.
The one thing the last election
seemed to have made clear last elec- .
Today is Thursday, Jan. 3; the
tion was that a majority r:J. Canathird day of 1981: There are 363 days
dians did not want more cl Trudeau.
left in the year.
And they certainly did not get It in
Today 's highlight in history:
Clark, Canada's very own Joe Who?
On Jan. 3, 1959, Alaska became the
•
49thstate.
when he squeaked into the prime
minister's r:J.fice. They have gotten
On this date:
In 1777, General George
to know him better In the seven months since and while there are unWashington's army routed British
doubtedly words foc his official perregulars in the Battle of Princeton,
formance, dynamic ' isnt one of · N.J.
them.
In 1961, the United States severed
Th~ fall from precarious grace of
relations with Cube.
Clark's minority government came
In 1967, Jack Ruby, the convicted
in parliament's rejection of a budget , killer of Lee Harvey Oswald, died d
focusing on restructuring national
cancer.
In 1974, Kuwait reached
energy polif!Y· (Sound familiar out
there, America? ) Clark sought a
agreement .with Gulf Oll&amp;lld British
Petroleum for a 60 percent takeover
gradual equalization of Canada's internal price cl gas and oil with rates
of their operatl~ the Persian
prevailing on world markets,
Gulf state.
thereby encouraging both conservaIn 19'n, the biggest loan in the 30tion and new development to make
year histOry of the International
Canada selfoflufficlent.
Monelary Fund - almost $4 billion
The prospect is enormously ap-was made to Britain.
Ten yearS ago, a Brazilian plane
pealing to Clark 's native Alberta,
hijacked
by
Brazilian
with less than 10 percent of Canada's
population but 86 percent of oil and
revolutlooarles arrived in Cuba afgas reserves. But not to the popl!lous
ter stops in Peru and Panama. ·
East, particularly Ontario which is
Five ye&amp;l'll ago, the recession
home to a third r:J. Canadians and a
deepened as the govenunent repocted the highest American jobless
half of all industry. The enormous
transfer of wealth contemplated
rate since 1962.
,
One year ago, Iran's new Prime,
would roughly repeat internally
what has been OCCUlTing oo the
MiniBter, Shapour Bakhtiar,
promised a gradual dlamantllng rl.
world scene between the industrial
economies and the oil-exporting
ma'rtlal law, and hinted that the
countries.
shah would soon leave Iran.
The situation points up the InToday 's Birthdays : Actor Ray
creasing weight In Canadian affairs
Mllland ill 73.

shsken, if uninjured survivors.
A year earlier, a four-rnan ''pool"
of repcrters was chosen to accompany LBJ from the Philadelphis
airport to Los Angeles following the
first of two sununit meetings Johnson held at Glassboro, N.J., with
Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosygin .
Naturally, JohnSon's helicopter
preceded a Marln!l-lllanned press
chopper from Glassboro to
Philadelphia. But once Johnson was
on the ground, the pilot of the press
helicopter announced that he could
not land Wltil Air Force One had
departed.
No one could convince the pilot
that Johnson and his big jet would
not take off until the four reporters
were aboard Air Force One.
About five minuteslaieJ:,lwB"ever,
a radio message from the ground did
the trick.
The fint reporter up the ramp of
Air Force One was greeted personaDy by an irate pre&amp;ident, who
shouted, "Where the hell have you

been? "

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

Eastern Conference

Atlanta Division
W. W. Pel.
30 9 .769
Boston
Philadelphia
27 11 .711
New York
20 21 .o488
Washington
16 20 .ol44
15 24 .385
New Jersey
central Division
Atlanta
25 15 .626
San Antonio
20 20 .500
Cleveland
15 20 .487
Houston
17 21 .447
Indiana
17 22 .436
Detroit
10 30 .250

GB
21/2
11
12'h
15

5
5'h
7
7 1h
15

a 19-point lead, 60-U, early in thesecond half before Rio Grande came
stonning back to cu tthe deficit to
eight pointa on a steal by Vince
PhelpS, 62-64, with seven minutes
left in the game.
However, two loog 'bombs ' by
Baldwin-Wallare's Ron Myers, 6-2

Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande
College Redmen suffered a 78-'7
non-conference basketball loss to
Ohio Conference power BaldwinWallace at Lyne·Center Wednesday
evening.
Rio Grande, now ·4-3 on the year,
siayed cl08e In the first half, trailing
- 36-26 diD'ing the intermission.
The Yellow Jackets zoomed out to

GAME CHANGED
Eastern's varsity lind junior varsi. ty basketball game with Pl. Pleasant has been changed from Jan. 26
to Jan. 8.

Kansas City .
23 18 .561
Milwaukee
22 18 .550
'h
Denver
15 26 . 366 8
Chicago
12 25 .324 9
Utah
12 28 .300 10 1h
Pacific Division
1h
seaMie
27 12 .692
Los Angeles
29 13 .690
Phoenix
26 15 .634 2112
San Diego
21 21 .500 8
Portland
21 22 .488 8'12
Golden State
13 26 .333 14'h
Wednesday's Games
san Diego 103, New Jersey 97'
Boston 111, Houston 103
Los Angeles 127. Indiana 120
· San Antonio 118, Phoenix 109
Kansas City 128, Utah 121, OT
Denver 135, Detroit 116
Golden State 111, Portland 92
Washington 139, Seattle 134, 2 OT
Thursday's Games
San Diego at New York, n.
New Jersey at Atlanta, n.
Philadelphia at Cleveland, n.

Oldrivalries
slated Friday
Basketball returns to the SVAC in
a big way this weekend, following"
the long holiday break.
Friday 's action finds to old
rlvalies being renewed with the
defending champion Southern Tornadoes traveling to Eastern and
Kyger Creek visiting NcrthGallia.
Southwestern plays at Hannan
Trace in another league cootest.
Southern cootlnues to lead the
SVAC with a perfect 3~. Coach Carl
Wolfe's Tornadoes are 5-1 overall.
Eastern goes into the coo~est with
a 3-4 mar1t in all games and 2-1 slate
against league foes .
At North Gallia, Coach Ted
Lehew's Pirates 4-4 overaD and 2-1 in
the league host Coach Keith Carter's
Kyger Creek Bobcats. KCHS has a 25 record in seven games and (),'!
mark In the SVAC.
Southwestern goes fer Its third victory this season against the winless
Hannan Trace Wildcata. ·

lndiene at MiiWai.Jkee, n.
Friday's Games
Houston at New Jersey, n.
San Diego at Chicago, n.
San Antonio at Kansas City, n .
washington at Golden State , n.
Utah at Portland, n.
Detroit at Seattle, n.

~

TURBO

People have jobs, but the polls
suggest
that peq~le don't enjoy the
waDet.
seciD'ity cl having jobll. People apThe Carter people won't be
parertly have had mooey with which
·without ammunitii'ln, being able to
to
buy thlngs, but they've been inpoint to a high level of j~reatioo,
clined
also to emphasize the high
low unemployment and prosperity,
price
~
goods and the depleted conThe troub~ for Carter is that
ditioo r:J. their wallet!.
many people havlm1 perceived his
At a Ume of incredible economic
years as good times. While people
enremes, there 'a no lack of
bouglt in record 11100unts, for example, they repeatedly Indicated they ' debatable issues.
lacked financial security end con- · The debate ID date, it seems, Ill
whether there will be a debate.
fidence.

issues, many of which involve the

NEW YORK (AP) - With still pected to hammer away at the
another red ink, potentially in- rationale of the so-called windfall
fiB tionary budget expected by Jan. prciits tax, seeking to convince
28, political critics of the president voters that what it is called a tax on
wiD be asking what ingredients oil c001panies wil~ be paid for by
them.
make up his anti-inflation program.
The OPEC defense, blaming the
Existing progrwns have failed to
Organization
of Petroleum Exmake much of an impression,
porting
Companies
for domestic injudging by an inflation rate that is
flation,
is
cballenged
by ecooomists
epected to exceed 13 percent for l!r79
and to remain in double digits everyday. In debate, it isn't likely to
retain much credibility. ,
through most of 1980.
.There are plenty of economic
Interest rates too are widely
forecast to remain at roughly the
rate of inflation, and probably to rise
even higher before any SU!Itained
correction locks itself into place. ·
Savings have withered under the
"WASHINGTON (AP)- Preaidlmt
came Jlllt as·Sen. Edward M. Kents, the Jranlans might seek to create
heat r:J. inflation, and the official U.S.
Carter
has
done
more
than
drop
out
nedy
began
his
active
challenge
for
a
crisis to coincide with his Jllk'
savings rate is now only 5 percent or
of
one
campaign
debate.
He
Ills
put
the
·
Ileqlocratic
n(IJllnation,
Carpearance.
. . .
so, the lowest for any of the major
his
penonal
campaigning
.
on,
hold
ter's
popularity
and
'job
"
r
atings
in
There
are
j~I~~t
en~li qaallf;ylng
trading nations. People are burfor
the
duration
rl.
the
hostage
crisis
the
public
~inlcin
poll8
have
soared.
words
in
that
m·qe
to leave open
dened with credit paymenta.
in
Iran.
"I
cannot
lreak
awey
fmn
my
the
llkelihood
that
Clrter
wUl keep
A recession is scheduled, too. And
And
then
is
no
way
of
deterdutle&amp;
here
which
are
extraordinary
dcmg
wbat
he
bll
l1een
doq
for the
while some economic traditionalists
mining
how
long
that
will
be.
now llilll ooes which onlt I can · put two montha: telepl!D!IInl .key
say the pain must be endured before
The president said his decision
fuUifl," Carter wrote to advlsel'!l · Democrats to uk for !bell' support,'
the patient can again eiljoy health,
agsinSt
debating
his
Democratic
·
who said they had lirged him to keep
and lneeting at the Wblte lfclutte with
woi'kers aren't accep~ it. Their.
chaDengers in Des Moines nest Moothe debate date In Iowa. ''We wlll
group1 clpolielilahupporterl.
take-home pay has been shrlnkfng.
just have to take the · adverse
The IC*onedy people bad CQIDo
The administration's Pay Ad- day was based on the demands &lt;A his
job,
not
on
politics.
The
president
political
conaequences
and
make
the
p1alned
befoi'e that while catter wu
visory Committee has so far faillld to
also
declined
a
proposal
that
the
beat
cllt."
!81d
to
be:.all~m-II'III,
be .
agree on a level r:J. pay Increase acdebate
be
·
held
Jan.
17
lri
He
told
the
Del!l
Moines
Rellater
found
time
to
do
tbet
ldrid
of":. ,
ceptable for 19M.
walli!rlgt.on.
and"
Tribune,
which
wu
sponsmng
polltlcldni.
It
sOunded
liD
lOIII'
U no decision is reached the im_He said he has to stay at the Whfte
the Jan. ·1 debate In Iowa; tJ\at he
I!J'IPj!llfromtbeCIIIIprl.~caiw!l!(ete
pact might reverberate. It could, for
House
to
deal
with
the
sltuall.oo
ilr
hai;l
to
~lay
jn
Wuhlngt.on
to
deal
wl)o
~u !OiiJW .,and, ad D• ,
example, add to the feeling that inIran
and
the
Soviet·
incurllm
Into
withlraliandothetvllalmiltteri.
Houle
..,W. •jla ntGrtltd tllat the
flation and other econon'lic matters
1
Afghanistan.
In
a
well•dvertllled,
•'
the time be!rw. c111 best
prl!lldeJt .,.. •
pnlperiJ cfaln&amp;
. are beyond the adminlstratioo 's
handwritten iiote, Carter told hl8 . cootlnue these efforts If I forgo perwhat time (AIIIlleltt«&lt; 111m ~ do tw
ability to c~e with. ·
participation · lUre ell=t'Miftwt.
Dollar-watchers wiD continue to political aidea that he'lljlllt have \0 sooa1 ,appearlll(.'es
accept any adv~ polltlcal cooin eVflllla which are scluaively pert'"But
offer their opinion li. the currency by
, '
r:J. a Jl!lrtlsan political ciUDpalgn," ' Uie
advising people to get out of paper sequences.
Cartereald.
.
· So far; tile conHquenc• · cl hil
and into gold, silver, diamonds +
stay-et-horne
camp~lgn strategy
He IIIIo salll"that were· he to (Ill!'·
commoditi~ of limi~ supPly and
!Jave
been
exactly
the
,opposite.
ll.clpate
iJi publicized polltlcal IVII!I·
seemingly unlimited dellillnd.
Dllring
two
months
ci
crisis,
.
which'
Republican opponents _can be es'
'

' National Hockey League
· AIAGiance
By The Associated Press
Patrick Division

W L T Pis

GF

Philadelphia
24 1 10 58 153
NY Rangers
17 15 6 40 145
NY Islanders
14 15 6 34 122
Atlanta
14 17 32 117
Washington
9 23 5 23 110
Smythe Division
Chicago
13 13 12 38 108
Vancouver
14 16 7 35 122
St. Louis
13 18 6 32 107
·winnipeg
12 22 4 28 102
Colorado
12 22 3 27 123
Edmonton
9 19 8 26 123
Wales Conference
Adams Division
25 10 3 53 145
Bullalo
20 11 5 45 136
Boston
Minnesota
19 9 7 45 147
16 17 4 36 129
Toronto
15 17 6 36 117
Quebec
Norris Division
Los Angeles
18 12 6 42 156
AAon)real
18 12 5 42 145
Pittsburgh
15 11 11 41 127
Detroit
11 18 7 29 117
Hartford
9 16 10 28 114
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh 5, Montreal 3
Los Angeles 4, Detroit 2
N.Y. Rangers3, Quebec3, tie
N.Y.Islanders3, Toronto!
Minnesota 2, Boston 1
Chicago 5, Colorado2

GA
104
138
122
125
142
111
120
127
150
143
158

99
105
108
137
128

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
POP
Southern
5 1 456 336
North Gallla
4 4 553 590
Eastern ·
3 4 448 412 .
Kyger Creek
2 5 396 475
Southwestern
2 4 369 419
Hannan Trace
0 7 341 468
SVAC ONLY
Southern
3 b 227 141
North Gall Ia
2 1 194 196
Eastern
2 1 209 152
Southwestern
2 1 191 198
Kyger Creek
0 3 149 249
Hannan Trace
o 3 162 200
SVAC RESERVES
Southern
. 3 0 186 125
North Galli a
3 0 145 101
.eastern
2 1 109 97
Kyger Creek
1 2 128 135
Hannan J'race
0 3 109 152
Southwestern
o 3 116 173

137
132
122
128
129

hlbltlon
Hartford 3, Edmonton 3, tie
Thursday's Games
Philadelphia at N.Y . Rangers, n.
Washington vs. Hartford at Spr ·
ingfleld, Mass., n. ·
Detroit at Atlanta , n.
Boston at Winnipeg, n.
Vancouver at Colorado, n.

I

.'v

1979 CHEVY

SPECIAL ,
(1) 1979 FORD

TURBO

305

V-8

engine,

A.C:..

junior guard, put the Jackets back
on top 68-54. The visitors remained
ahead by 10 to 1~ pointa the remainder of the game.
The victory left Baldwin-Wallace
with a 5-11 season record.
Rio Grande placed four men in
double figures, led by Grant Greenwood and Bret McCormick's 18
polnta. Tom Dorsey added 13 and
Vince Pheps 12.
Rio Grande connected on 'll of 56
field goal attempts for 48.2 percent.
The Redmen were 13-19 at the foul
line for 68.4 percent. Rio had 18 rebounds, five by McConnick, 21 turnovenand 17 assists, five by McCormick.
'
The Yellow Jackets· placed ~~,tree
men in double figiD'es. Ron M:Yers
tossed in 25, Shelly Waters 19 and
Don Haines 10.
"
The winners hit 32 of 56 field goal
attempta for 58.8 percent. B-W picked off 19 rebounds, five by Waters,
had 12 turnovers and was eredited
with seven assists, three by Myers.
Saturday, the Redmen open
defense of their Mid.Ohio Conference title with a big gs~ at
Malone. The YeDow Jackets will
open defense at their Ohio Conference crown at Marietta Saturday.
Wednesay 's box score :.
BALDWIN ·WALLACE (78)
Wilson, 3·2·8 ; Myers, 10·5·25;
Waters, 9·1-19; Haines, 5.0·10 ; Whit ·
ney, 2·4-8 ; Korom, Hl·2; Elliott, 0·22; Winn, 1·0·2; Lesko, 2-ll-4..10TALS
32-14-78.
RIO GRANDE COLLEGE (67) !&gt;helps, 6.0 ·12; Greenw?od, 6-6·18 ;
Dorsey , 5·3·13; McCormi ck , 7u·4·18;
Boster, 0·0·0; Burgess, 1.0·2; Hud·
son, 1-0·2; west, 0-Q.O ; Quisenberry ,
0·0·0; Strick land, 1·0·2; Smalley, 0.00 TOTALS 27 ·1H7.
· Halftime scores - BW 36, R io26.

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Meets

Kyger Creek at North Galli a
southwestern at Hannan Trace
Southern at Eastern

(1) 1979 MERCURY CAPRI

1976 FORD
MUSTANG II

MODULAR
HOMES

WIIITrERIIE

low miles. ·

TURBO RS

TICKES ON SALE
Tlcketa for Friday niglt 's game
between Eastern and Southern can
be purchased at both of the high
schools today from 8:00a.m. - 3:00
p.m. Tickets will be S2 for adults and
'1 for studenta.

KINGSBURY
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'

ultimate goals are than anything
they've done in the previOUB 'time
that I've been in office. "
The Olympics and politics are no
strangen. African athletes boycotted the 1976 Mootreal Games alter a
New Zealand rugby team toured
South Africa, and threatened a fiD'ther boycott of this year's Games if
the British Uons rugby lour to South
Africa goes ahead as scheduled.
But Western sports officials
stressed that Western governments
have few if any legal powen to stop
athletes from taking part.
A Belgian Olympic Coounltee
member said: "We (the BOC) are a
sovereign organization. We can participate in the Olympics outside cl
. the government."
Sir Denis Follows, chairman of the
British Olympic ABIIoclation, said:
"The ooly way the British government can prevent us taking part is
by taking away the passports of all
our competiton, and there is no way
that that is going to happen." He added : "It is not for governments to··
meddle in matters cl this kind. Sport
should be abqve politics, otherwise
the whole concept of sport just goes
out the window."
Maurice Herzog, ooe of two French members r:l. the IOC, said: '1n
spite of the reactioos of some, the
business at Kabul has nothing to do
with the Olympic Games."
A member of the Italian Olympic
Coounlttee said: "We are against
any political involvement in sport."
Danish Olympic Committee member Kurt Moeller said: "We. don't
want to Involve Olympic prospects
with NATOmatten."

Thlsweek 'sgames: _

CAMARO

USTANG

possible Olympic boycott that reportedly was suggested by a West German representative.
The Sov let intervention in
Afghanistan has profoundly, alarmed Western politicians.
.
President Carter Wednesday
"1Clllled U.S. Ambassador Th00\88
Watson · from Moscow ·after
declaring that the Soviet move "has
made a more dramatic change in
nny opinion r:J. what the Soviets'

Yellow Jackets ·top
Rio Redmen, 78-67

western Conference
Midwest Division ·

,,

Carter's anti-inflation budget fa.ils

or

_j

National Basketball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

pic Committee, in a dtatement Wed- .
nesday.
Sports officials from the United
States, selgium, Britain, Denmark,
France, Italy, Norway and West
Germany lined up with him In op~sing the boycott call.
Killanin 's plea , in. a statement
isaued 1rom IOC hea~uarters in
LausaMe, Switzerland, came less
than 24 hours after NATO nations
meeting in Brussels discu&amp;&lt;!ed a

WNDON (AP) - Olympic officials have lined up against Western
politicians who are demanding a
boycott of the Summer Olympic
Games in Moscow to protest Soviet
military interve ntion in
Afghanislan.
"Athletes come first , and in no
way should be prevented from c«npeting in international competition
by political, racial or religious
discrimination," said Lord Killanin,
president of the InternAtional Olym-

Moscow Dynamo 7; Winnipeg o, ex ·

For

"PSSTI Hey, buddy, wanna be tlabberghasled
-

tiseptic. There is no way such a
playoff could capture the color and
the carnival holiday spirit that has
been built. up by the tradition of the
bowls.
Because of the massiveness of the
project, chances are no truer champion oould be determined than the
one that comes unofficiaDy out of the
New Year's Day mailness.
One only has to witness one Rose
Bowl pageant to realize that ita
demise - like that ofthe other bowls
- would be a great tragedy.

..... '·' ·''•' .• r~••

President's campaign put on hold

by a revolting locker room joke? "

.W orld

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Stop
the presses. Call off the dogs. Forget
all the sennonlzing, pontificating
and experting of the past about the
necessity rL establishing a championship playoff system In college
football.
U you '11 ucuse the reversal, we'd
like to take the other lack.
Leave the bowl games alone.
They provide a sparkling climax
to the long drudgery cl the regular
season with thelr'iestive air, their
pomp and pageantry and the intersectional controversies
generated overwbois No.1.
Who is No.1, anyhow?
Regardless of the choice of
Alabama as No.1 in the post-bowl
poll Wednesday - and the polls, incidenially, should remain an institution not to be tampered with you're not going to convince
everybody, ·or even a fraction of
everybody, that one team is better
than all the others.
In the Deep South, how could
anybody even suggest that
Alabama's unbeaten Crimson Tide
doesn't deserve to repeat, although
it beat one of the secondary teams of
the Southwest Conference? You
can1dothe Bear that way.
But out here on the Pacific Coast,
sentiment is just as strong that the
real No.1 is massive, talented
Southern Cal, which knocked off
previously No.1 Ohio State in a battle of unbeaten conference champions. And nobody can tell Southwesterners that mighty Oklahoma,
with the hard-nmnlng Billy Sims,
couldn't beat the lOt cl them -lined
up, one by one.
.
Let the people argue until they're
blue in the face. It's atlmuilltlng. It's
healthy. And it hurts nobody.
Meanwhile, try to imagine what
would bappen if . the National
'Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) attempted, as many of us
have argued for years, to install a
playoff plan.
. First of all, it would be unwieldy.
It would add tremendous strain to a
program that already has stretched
to 11 games and'cannot bend further
without infringing on' the playen'
academic reaponsibilltes.
·
Mote than that, it would be an-

)

.

Politicans d·e mand boycott,

Today's

Today in history

'
(•resident
jimmy Carter

.

3.: The.Ilai!Y Sentinel, \liddleport.Pomeroy, 0., Thursllay, Jan. 3, 1911

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'SUPPLY .
CO.R PORATION
.,
•, :
- Middleport, 0 ..
992-2709 Of 992-6611 .
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru t;rl.
103: 00 SetllniiV
'

923 S.. ~r.d Ave.

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�4- The Dally Sen1inel, Middi"J!))rt.Pomeroy, 0 ., Thlll'llday, Jan. 3, 1980

Alab8ma has second straight championship
college to finish with a perfect 12~
record, convincingly beat a pesky
Arkansas team, 21-9, mthe Sugar
Bowl.
Then in the Rose Bowl, Southern
Cal, which had a tie with stanford as
the only blemish on--i&amp;ri, record,

By 'Ibe Alloclaled Press
Time marches. on, but the
Alllbama Crimson Tide rolls along in
the sM.ne place - No.I in The
Assoclited Press final college footballpq'jj forthesecood year ina row.
Alabtpa wov the national championsbip follow!~ the bowl games
laBt year, beatblg Southern California In a hotly disputed vote. This
year's balloting, also seriously
challenged on the West Coast,
flnlshed with Alabama No.I and
Southern Cal again In hot pursuit.
Coach Bear Bryant's Crimson
Tide received 45 outright first-place
votes to 3l for Southern Cal frtm a
nationwide panel•of 67 sports writers
and broiiilcasters Wednesday. Two
voters split their ballot betweeh
Alabama and Southern Cal, giving
the Crimson Tide 46 firsti)lace votes
to 21 for the Trojans.
Oklahoma finished third for the
secOnd straight year, followed by
OhiostateandHouston.
Alabama began New Year's Day
in second place, II&gt; points behind
top-nmked Ohio State and 8 ~ points
ahead of No.3 Southern Cal. But the
Crimson 'J'ide, the only maj&lt;r

~ueakedbyOhioStatel7-16.

In total points, Alaharna received
1,317 out rl. a p~ible 1,340, while
Southern Gal had 1,289. In contrast
to the final regular season pol~ when
eight voters kei&gt;t Alabama out of the
top three, only two board members
had the Tide as low as third this
time. It was Alabama's fifth
national championship - all under
Bryant - since The AP poll began in
1936.
The Tide received all21 firsti)lace
ballots from voters in !be South, 21&gt;
of the 12 ballots in the West, seven rl.
eight in the Southwest, nine of 16 in
the Midwest and 611 ri 10 in the East.,.
The 667'ear-old Bryant, college
football's winningest active coach
with 296 victories, said he was
"highly pleased, but not surprised"
at the final rankings "because 1
thought aU along we had a good
chance of finishing first. I decided

not to worry about it Ol}t' way or the

happy if someone voted us No.I, but
I can 1 be angry if someone voted
Alabama No.I."
Oklahoma, 11-1~. moved from fifth to third after routing preViously
unbeaten Florida State 24-7 in the
0rl)llge Bowl Tuesday, totalling
1,163 points. "Alabama definitely

other."
Robinson, who said after the Rose
Bowl that be considered his Trojans
No.I, said Wednesday : "Certainly,
as you look over this year and last,
the two best teams in the country are
Alabama and USC. We'd have been

. .,.,

-.'

"

'

.

;'

who suffered a hairline fracture of
his left leg Sunday.
Los Angeles Coach Ray Malavasi
said Wednesday he expected
Youngblood to play, but a final
decision won\ be made until later in
the week. H YOungblood can't start
or play fulltlme, the Rams plan to
use second-year pro Reggie Doss.
The Oilers are still badly bandaged. They managed to upset the
San Diego Olargers 17·14last Saturday withoot Earl Caniiibell, the
NFL 's leading rusher, quarterback
Don astorini and receiver Kenny
Burrough.
Recognizing that the offense was
in a lower gear, the Houston defense
played inspiratiooal football. Who
knows whether the defense would
have played as well if the offense
WBSD,WOWlded?
But Houston Coach Bum Phillips
knows that undermanned teams
don't generally beat the defending
Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh
Steelers, who blasted the Oilers 34..'i

% OFF

LADIES' COATS

/a OFF

COATS &amp;JACKETS

, 'j Fl RST SALE

80's

OF THE

.. DOOR BUSTER SALE I

th.
Florida State and Pittsburgh, both
11-1~. were sixth and seventh,
respectively, followed by Arkansas,
Nebraska and Tennessee.
The SecOI'Xi Ten had Washington,
Texas. Brigham Young, Baylor,
North Carolina, Auburn, Temple,
Mi~higan, Indiana and Penn State.

..c

Others

--

:s

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w

....

receiving

vots

Louisiana
State,
Marvland,
Missouri, Nev-Las Vegas, North

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Carolina State, Notre Dame, San
Diego State, S. Carolina, Syracuse.
Tennessee, Texas A&amp;M, Tulane,
Wake Forest.

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alphabetical
order :
Centra 1
Michigan, Clemson. Indiana State,

National Football League
Playoffs At A Glance
By The Associated Press
First Round
Dec. 23
National Conference
Philadelphia 27. Chicago 11
American Conference

by

_,

_,

Hush Puppj,!(

Second Round
Dec. 29 Games·

=
...
.-

~

·m

Houston 13, Denver 7

The Bucs, led by running back Ricky
championship
TBIJIP8 Sunday.
Bell, are more in
run-oriented
and do
not operate out of the shotgun.
The Rams, bowever, may have to
do a different kind of realigrunent
because of the questionable status of
star defensive end Jack Younghlood,

.a

The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams In the final
Associated Press college football
'POll, with first·place votes In paren ·
lheses, records and total points .
Point s
based
on
20·19-18·17 ·16·15·14· 13·12·11 ·10·9·8-7 -6 ·
5·4·3·2·1:
1. Alabama 46 OHHIJ
1,317
2. So. California 21 OH1·1J . 1,289
3. Oklahoma.(ll ·HJJ
1,163
4. Ohio State (ll ·Hll
1,160
5. Houston (ll ·Hl)
1,08-4
6. Florida State (1 H-ill
7. Pittsburgh C11 · 1·0l
8. Arkansas (10·2·01
857
9. Nebraska (10·2·0)
852
10. Purdue (10·2·01
739
11. • ·Washington (10 ·2·)
690
12. Texas (9·3·01
48-4
13. Brlngham Young (11 · 1-0)
474
14. Baylor (8·4·01
3"'
15. North Carol ina (8·3·11
311
16. Auburn (8·3·0)
263
17. Temple OQ·Hl
213
18. Michigan (8 ·4-i!)
207
19. Indiana (8 ·4-ill
206
20. Penn State (8 ·4-i!)
168
• - Includes forfeit by Arizona
State.

in the American Football uConferfl!ce championship last year.
"When I die I want you to put this
on my tombstone," Phillips joked
Wednesday. ''He would have lived a
lot longer if he badn 't played the Pittl!burgh' Steelers six times in two
years."
Campbell, who injured his groin
against Denver 13 da}'ll ago, returned to workouts Wednesdsy and said
he was ready to l'WI . His condition
was listed as questiooable, as was
Burrough's. Pastorini, who al8o in·
jured his gfoin in the Denver game,
was listed as doubtful, although he
said he expected to work out later in
the week before the team leaves for
Sunday's AFC championship game
in Pittsburgh.

TENNIS
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Argentina's Guillermo Vilas overwllelmed John Sadri 7-6, 6-3, 6-2 to
vun his second str~ht Australian
Open Tennis Championship.
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - Chris
Evert Lloyd crushed Australian
Dianne Fromholtz, 6-1, 6-4 while
Tracy Aus1in defeated Wendy Turnbull&amp;-!, 6~ in the first ...ound of the
$250,000 women's tennis series
championships.
HOBART, Tasmania (AP) Hank Pfister struggled to a l&gt;-7, fk!,
6-4 victory over Australia's John Fitzgerald in the Australian Hardcourt
Championships.

---.....

Top twenty

Injuries haven't hurt
Ram-oil statistics

By Anociated Press
As it turned out, injuries were just
what the doctor ordered for the !As
Angeles Rams and the Houston
Oilers. But neither team wants to go
that route again in ill! cmference
playoff games 00 Sunday.
Los Angeles beat the Dallas
Cowboys 21-l9 last Sunday, in part
~
because the uncertain status of
- - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - ; several players in the Rams' secon.dary forced them to carry nine
defensive backs on the rClSter. But
Pat Thomas, Rod Perry and Dave
Elmendorf did play and the extra
backs were then deployed in a sevenman aligrunent that plugged up
Dallas' shotgWl offense.
Without the injuries, the Rams
would not have had the flexibility to
insert the extra back in the defensive secondary that ~red quar1
terback Roger Staubach and forced
him into four incomplete passes in
GIRLS
Dallas 'last series.
"Football is a strange game," said
Ram defensive coach Bud Garson.
''I guess that was the ~ne thing that
. Men&amp; Boys
came out of all those injuries.
JACKETS REDUCED
''It was a unique situstion because
we had so many peq~le hurt in the
Ladies &amp; Junior
secoodary.
We kept the ones we
WINTER WEAR
acquired
because
they did a real
SPORTSWEAR
BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
good
job
on
the
special
teams and we
REDUCED
THE STORE
weren' sure about the status of
Perry, Elmendorf and Thomas."
The Rams don 1 expect to utilize
their special antii)8Ss formation
against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
in the National Football Conference

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

should be the national champion and
Southern Cal No.2, ' ' said Oklahoma
Coach Barry Switzer.
Ohio State, 11-1.0, finished fourth
with 1,160 points, while Houstoo, Il l~. a 17-14 Cotton Bowl winner over
Nebraska, jumped from eight~! to fif -

Ill

.

National Conference
Tampa Bay 24, Philade1Phia17

Ill

American Conference
Houston 17, San Diego U

...•• •
....

~

Dec. 30 Gilmes
American Conference
PiNsburgh 34, Mlam I u

.::::»

:z:

National Conference

Los Angeles 21, Dallas 19
Sunday, Jan . 6
American Conference Championship
Houston at Pittsburgh
National Conference Championship
Los Angeles aiTampa Bay
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl XIV
At Pasadena, Calif.
AFC champion vs. NFC champion

-~ ·

·JN'i1 Gi.L.LOO NO
010:1. ONY 1n0 11nd
JNI1
011100 NO. 010:1 ONY 1n0 11nd
'
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.
---·--'--.----~----.--------------------------~-----------------------------------------------------.PULl. OUT· AND · FOLD ON, DOTT.ED LINE
PULL OUT ~tiD FOLD ON DOTTED LINE
'

.

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McGinnis ejected

.LI,I

1••-•
= ·:-5
en
~

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DISCOUNTS I

Y2 OFF
ON SELECTED GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

SOME GREAT VALUES
1 GROUP

WINTER PURSES

40% OFF
ENTIRE STOCK WOMEN'S
FALL &amp; WINTER DRESS

BOOTS and SHOES

33 1/3% OFF
1 GROUP - VALUES TO 130.00

MEN'S ·SHOES

$15 00
MEN'S RAND DRESS &amp; CASUAL

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

BY ASSOCIATED PRE118
George McGinnis' return to the
Denver Nuggets' ijveup wasn't an
auspicious one but the Washington
Bullets' first visit to Seattle this year
certainly was.
McGinnis returned from his three- ·
game suspension 'by National
Basketball Association Commissi mer Lawrence 0 'Brien for
crashing into referee Jess Kersey in
a game at.8eaUle last month with a
short performance. The 6.foot-8 forward was thrown out of the Nuggets'
13~116 victory over .Detroit Wed·
nesday tt 3:44 of the second period
by picking up two technical fools. He
disagreed with referee Hue Hollins'
call of a rebounding foul on him. At
the time, McGiM.is had seven paints, seven rebounds, five assists and
three blocked shots.
While Big George was having a
quick night in Denver, the Bullets
and SuperSonics worked ovEttime
before Washington won 139-134 in
two elllra sessions. The laBt time the
Bullets were in the Klngdcme, they
were m the process of 1Cl8ing the
NBA tiUe totheSonics.
In other NBA games, it was !As
Angeles 127, Indiana l3l as Kareem
Abdul.Jabbar became the No.5
scorer in league history; San Ailtonlo 118, Phoenix 109; Kansas City ·
128, Utah 121 in overtime; Boston
Ill, Houston 103; San Diego 103, New
Jersey 97, and Golden State 111, Por· ·

Oan~~ets ut, llqpe!S!IDical.3f

couldn 1 help in the final!: 00 of the
second OT, when the Bullets scored
eight points.
·
Lakers 127, Pacers ue
Abdul.Jabbarpassed Elgin Baylor
and now has :13,170 career points. He
tallied 32 points against the Pacers
for his 184tli consecutive game
scoring in double figures.
The Pacers got 32 points frtm
Jolumy Davis and 31 from James
Edwards.
Spun 118, Swu 108
George Gervin poured in 42 points
and COII)bined with James Silas (3l)
and Mike Evans (16) to score 24 of
the Spurs •32 fourth-quarter pointl!.
KlDgs 1211, JllD 1%1, ar
Scott Wedman coonected for a
career.fiigh 45 points as the Kings
moved one.j)aJf game ahead «.
Milwaukee in tbe Midwest Division.
He 11lt a threei)Oint field goal with
five seconds remaining in regulation
to force the extra session, then
scored nineofthefirstllKingll paints in OT.
Ce!Ucslll, Rockell103 ·
After Rick Barry ignited the
Rockets with three threei)Olnt shots
and 12 straight points, Boston's
Cedric Maxwell took charge, hitting
for 12 point!l in the lAst 5:22 to give
hlm29altogether.
Cllppers103,Nets97
Uoyd Free put in 31 points + 21.1n
the first half ~ as San Diego evened
Its record at 21-21. Mike Newlin had
27

The Bullets ~ Elvin Hayes' 34
points, including nine in. the 'liecond
overtlme,.pastSeatUe.
·....._
The Sonics got ·a game '"'gh
.. ••

·

''

--... .! .

- .
·OF SHOES
.,..

. .

MIODLEPORT, Oli~· ·
FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

I-

•.

•

•-.

... _

Mon., tues., weii.; Friday &amp; Sat.
.
-:'
iiillltci
5:00 Th~.trsd•y till12 Noon ·
..
1
''
"', · - ·- ' " •
•··----. ·..
'
,.
.
··'
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENt Ot.U Yi
......
·.
·.
Herman Grate
,
••
.. ,
.
Mason, w: vll:'
.
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'·-

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About Your Health

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When you 1need any kind of
medication, we make sure
.that yo,u have it promptly.
Vitamins and toiletries.

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&gt;

.....

THE
SHOE BOX

Kasem

WMPO
SATURDAYS ·
8 til Noon

~-r,._,.

-.·-- TRI .STATE·AREA ..

.

Ca~y

Golden State broke a threei!ame
IQS!ng s.treak and extende,d Port1 d's' unha
sluiin to 12 str ight
, an
· pPY · '.
a · '" ~
"'" ""
1068es on U1li road as-Sonny Parker
n~po~in~ts~fro~m~De~nnis~~Jo~hn~son~b~u:_t~he=-~~~~~~ had 25~oin~ . ' '

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a= 114

PIGSKIN)
COLORS:
•DROMEDARY
•COPPERTONE
(SMOOTH LEATHER)
COLOR: •CAMEL

~.:==~~n 9Z

' FOR TI:IE BlifST-D&amp;AI..S IN THE

J't~trit~e- house

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�4- The Dally Sen1inel, Middi"J!))rt.Pomeroy, 0 ., Thlll'llday, Jan. 3, 1980

Alab8ma has second straight championship
college to finish with a perfect 12~
record, convincingly beat a pesky
Arkansas team, 21-9, mthe Sugar
Bowl.
Then in the Rose Bowl, Southern
Cal, which had a tie with stanford as
the only blemish on--i&amp;ri, record,

By 'Ibe Alloclaled Press
Time marches. on, but the
Alllbama Crimson Tide rolls along in
the sM.ne place - No.I in The
Assoclited Press final college footballpq'jj forthesecood year ina row.
Alabtpa wov the national championsbip follow!~ the bowl games
laBt year, beatblg Southern California In a hotly disputed vote. This
year's balloting, also seriously
challenged on the West Coast,
flnlshed with Alabama No.I and
Southern Cal again In hot pursuit.
Coach Bear Bryant's Crimson
Tide received 45 outright first-place
votes to 3l for Southern Cal frtm a
nationwide panel•of 67 sports writers
and broiiilcasters Wednesday. Two
voters split their ballot betweeh
Alabama and Southern Cal, giving
the Crimson Tide 46 firsti)lace votes
to 21 for the Trojans.
Oklahoma finished third for the
secOnd straight year, followed by
OhiostateandHouston.
Alabama began New Year's Day
in second place, II&gt; points behind
top-nmked Ohio State and 8 ~ points
ahead of No.3 Southern Cal. But the
Crimson 'J'ide, the only maj&lt;r

~ueakedbyOhioStatel7-16.

In total points, Alaharna received
1,317 out rl. a p~ible 1,340, while
Southern Gal had 1,289. In contrast
to the final regular season pol~ when
eight voters kei&gt;t Alabama out of the
top three, only two board members
had the Tide as low as third this
time. It was Alabama's fifth
national championship - all under
Bryant - since The AP poll began in
1936.
The Tide received all21 firsti)lace
ballots from voters in !be South, 21&gt;
of the 12 ballots in the West, seven rl.
eight in the Southwest, nine of 16 in
the Midwest and 611 ri 10 in the East.,.
The 667'ear-old Bryant, college
football's winningest active coach
with 296 victories, said he was
"highly pleased, but not surprised"
at the final rankings "because 1
thought aU along we had a good
chance of finishing first. I decided

not to worry about it Ol}t' way or the

happy if someone voted us No.I, but
I can 1 be angry if someone voted
Alabama No.I."
Oklahoma, 11-1~. moved from fifth to third after routing preViously
unbeaten Florida State 24-7 in the
0rl)llge Bowl Tuesday, totalling
1,163 points. "Alabama definitely

other."
Robinson, who said after the Rose
Bowl that be considered his Trojans
No.I, said Wednesday : "Certainly,
as you look over this year and last,
the two best teams in the country are
Alabama and USC. We'd have been

. .,.,

-.'

"

'

.

;'

who suffered a hairline fracture of
his left leg Sunday.
Los Angeles Coach Ray Malavasi
said Wednesday he expected
Youngblood to play, but a final
decision won\ be made until later in
the week. H YOungblood can't start
or play fulltlme, the Rams plan to
use second-year pro Reggie Doss.
The Oilers are still badly bandaged. They managed to upset the
San Diego Olargers 17·14last Saturday withoot Earl Caniiibell, the
NFL 's leading rusher, quarterback
Don astorini and receiver Kenny
Burrough.
Recognizing that the offense was
in a lower gear, the Houston defense
played inspiratiooal football. Who
knows whether the defense would
have played as well if the offense
WBSD,WOWlded?
But Houston Coach Bum Phillips
knows that undermanned teams
don't generally beat the defending
Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh
Steelers, who blasted the Oilers 34..'i

% OFF

LADIES' COATS

/a OFF

COATS &amp;JACKETS

, 'j Fl RST SALE

80's

OF THE

.. DOOR BUSTER SALE I

th.
Florida State and Pittsburgh, both
11-1~. were sixth and seventh,
respectively, followed by Arkansas,
Nebraska and Tennessee.
The SecOI'Xi Ten had Washington,
Texas. Brigham Young, Baylor,
North Carolina, Auburn, Temple,
Mi~higan, Indiana and Penn State.

..c

Others

--

:s

-::1
w

....

receiving

vots

Louisiana
State,
Marvland,
Missouri, Nev-Las Vegas, North

~

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~ ......
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Carolina State, Notre Dame, San
Diego State, S. Carolina, Syracuse.
Tennessee, Texas A&amp;M, Tulane,
Wake Forest.

Ill &lt; ·-

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The "Rogue"

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O,oo&lt;

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~

alphabetical
order :
Centra 1
Michigan, Clemson. Indiana State,

National Football League
Playoffs At A Glance
By The Associated Press
First Round
Dec. 23
National Conference
Philadelphia 27. Chicago 11
American Conference

by

_,

_,

Hush Puppj,!(

Second Round
Dec. 29 Games·

=
...
.-

~

·m

Houston 13, Denver 7

The Bucs, led by running back Ricky
championship
TBIJIP8 Sunday.
Bell, are more in
run-oriented
and do
not operate out of the shotgun.
The Rams, bowever, may have to
do a different kind of realigrunent
because of the questionable status of
star defensive end Jack Younghlood,

.a

The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams In the final
Associated Press college football
'POll, with first·place votes In paren ·
lheses, records and total points .
Point s
based
on
20·19-18·17 ·16·15·14· 13·12·11 ·10·9·8-7 -6 ·
5·4·3·2·1:
1. Alabama 46 OHHIJ
1,317
2. So. California 21 OH1·1J . 1,289
3. Oklahoma.(ll ·HJJ
1,163
4. Ohio State (ll ·Hll
1,160
5. Houston (ll ·Hl)
1,08-4
6. Florida State (1 H-ill
7. Pittsburgh C11 · 1·0l
8. Arkansas (10·2·01
857
9. Nebraska (10·2·0)
852
10. Purdue (10·2·01
739
11. • ·Washington (10 ·2·)
690
12. Texas (9·3·01
48-4
13. Brlngham Young (11 · 1-0)
474
14. Baylor (8·4·01
3"'
15. North Carol ina (8·3·11
311
16. Auburn (8·3·0)
263
17. Temple OQ·Hl
213
18. Michigan (8 ·4-i!)
207
19. Indiana (8 ·4-ill
206
20. Penn State (8 ·4-i!)
168
• - Includes forfeit by Arizona
State.

in the American Football uConferfl!ce championship last year.
"When I die I want you to put this
on my tombstone," Phillips joked
Wednesday. ''He would have lived a
lot longer if he badn 't played the Pittl!burgh' Steelers six times in two
years."
Campbell, who injured his groin
against Denver 13 da}'ll ago, returned to workouts Wednesdsy and said
he was ready to l'WI . His condition
was listed as questiooable, as was
Burrough's. Pastorini, who al8o in·
jured his gfoin in the Denver game,
was listed as doubtful, although he
said he expected to work out later in
the week before the team leaves for
Sunday's AFC championship game
in Pittsburgh.

TENNIS
MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Argentina's Guillermo Vilas overwllelmed John Sadri 7-6, 6-3, 6-2 to
vun his second str~ht Australian
Open Tennis Championship.
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - Chris
Evert Lloyd crushed Australian
Dianne Fromholtz, 6-1, 6-4 while
Tracy Aus1in defeated Wendy Turnbull&amp;-!, 6~ in the first ...ound of the
$250,000 women's tennis series
championships.
HOBART, Tasmania (AP) Hank Pfister struggled to a l&gt;-7, fk!,
6-4 victory over Australia's John Fitzgerald in the Australian Hardcourt
Championships.

---.....

Top twenty

Injuries haven't hurt
Ram-oil statistics

By Anociated Press
As it turned out, injuries were just
what the doctor ordered for the !As
Angeles Rams and the Houston
Oilers. But neither team wants to go
that route again in ill! cmference
playoff games 00 Sunday.
Los Angeles beat the Dallas
Cowboys 21-l9 last Sunday, in part
~
because the uncertain status of
- - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - ; several players in the Rams' secon.dary forced them to carry nine
defensive backs on the rClSter. But
Pat Thomas, Rod Perry and Dave
Elmendorf did play and the extra
backs were then deployed in a sevenman aligrunent that plugged up
Dallas' shotgWl offense.
Without the injuries, the Rams
would not have had the flexibility to
insert the extra back in the defensive secondary that ~red quar1
terback Roger Staubach and forced
him into four incomplete passes in
GIRLS
Dallas 'last series.
"Football is a strange game," said
Ram defensive coach Bud Garson.
''I guess that was the ~ne thing that
. Men&amp; Boys
came out of all those injuries.
JACKETS REDUCED
''It was a unique situstion because
we had so many peq~le hurt in the
Ladies &amp; Junior
secoodary.
We kept the ones we
WINTER WEAR
acquired
because
they did a real
SPORTSWEAR
BARGAINS THROUGHOUT
good
job
on
the
special
teams and we
REDUCED
THE STORE
weren' sure about the status of
Perry, Elmendorf and Thomas."
The Rams don 1 expect to utilize
their special antii)8Ss formation
against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
in the National Football Conference

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

should be the national champion and
Southern Cal No.2, ' ' said Oklahoma
Coach Barry Switzer.
Ohio State, 11-1.0, finished fourth
with 1,160 points, while Houstoo, Il l~. a 17-14 Cotton Bowl winner over
Nebraska, jumped from eight~! to fif -

Ill

.

National Conference
Tampa Bay 24, Philade1Phia17

Ill

American Conference
Houston 17, San Diego U

...•• •
....

~

Dec. 30 Gilmes
American Conference
PiNsburgh 34, Mlam I u

.::::»

:z:

National Conference

Los Angeles 21, Dallas 19
Sunday, Jan . 6
American Conference Championship
Houston at Pittsburgh
National Conference Championship
Los Angeles aiTampa Bay
Sunday, Jan. 20
Super Bowl XIV
At Pasadena, Calif.
AFC champion vs. NFC champion

-~ ·

·JN'i1 Gi.L.LOO NO
010:1. ONY 1n0 11nd
JNI1
011100 NO. 010:1 ONY 1n0 11nd
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'

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McGinnis ejected

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= ·:-5
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DISCOUNTS I

Y2 OFF
ON SELECTED GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

SOME GREAT VALUES
1 GROUP

WINTER PURSES

40% OFF
ENTIRE STOCK WOMEN'S
FALL &amp; WINTER DRESS

BOOTS and SHOES

33 1/3% OFF
1 GROUP - VALUES TO 130.00

MEN'S ·SHOES

$15 00
MEN'S RAND DRESS &amp; CASUAL

SHOES &amp; BOOTS

BY ASSOCIATED PRE118
George McGinnis' return to the
Denver Nuggets' ijveup wasn't an
auspicious one but the Washington
Bullets' first visit to Seattle this year
certainly was.
McGinnis returned from his three- ·
game suspension 'by National
Basketball Association Commissi mer Lawrence 0 'Brien for
crashing into referee Jess Kersey in
a game at.8eaUle last month with a
short performance. The 6.foot-8 forward was thrown out of the Nuggets'
13~116 victory over .Detroit Wed·
nesday tt 3:44 of the second period
by picking up two technical fools. He
disagreed with referee Hue Hollins'
call of a rebounding foul on him. At
the time, McGiM.is had seven paints, seven rebounds, five assists and
three blocked shots.
While Big George was having a
quick night in Denver, the Bullets
and SuperSonics worked ovEttime
before Washington won 139-134 in
two elllra sessions. The laBt time the
Bullets were in the Klngdcme, they
were m the process of 1Cl8ing the
NBA tiUe totheSonics.
In other NBA games, it was !As
Angeles 127, Indiana l3l as Kareem
Abdul.Jabbar became the No.5
scorer in league history; San Ailtonlo 118, Phoenix 109; Kansas City ·
128, Utah 121 in overtime; Boston
Ill, Houston 103; San Diego 103, New
Jersey 97, and Golden State 111, Por· ·

Oan~~ets ut, llqpe!S!IDical.3f

couldn 1 help in the final!: 00 of the
second OT, when the Bullets scored
eight points.
·
Lakers 127, Pacers ue
Abdul.Jabbarpassed Elgin Baylor
and now has :13,170 career points. He
tallied 32 points against the Pacers
for his 184tli consecutive game
scoring in double figures.
The Pacers got 32 points frtm
Jolumy Davis and 31 from James
Edwards.
Spun 118, Swu 108
George Gervin poured in 42 points
and COII)bined with James Silas (3l)
and Mike Evans (16) to score 24 of
the Spurs •32 fourth-quarter pointl!.
KlDgs 1211, JllD 1%1, ar
Scott Wedman coonected for a
career.fiigh 45 points as the Kings
moved one.j)aJf game ahead «.
Milwaukee in tbe Midwest Division.
He 11lt a threei)Oint field goal with
five seconds remaining in regulation
to force the extra session, then
scored nineofthefirstllKingll paints in OT.
Ce!Ucslll, Rockell103 ·
After Rick Barry ignited the
Rockets with three threei)Olnt shots
and 12 straight points, Boston's
Cedric Maxwell took charge, hitting
for 12 point!l in the lAst 5:22 to give
hlm29altogether.
Cllppers103,Nets97
Uoyd Free put in 31 points + 21.1n
the first half ~ as San Diego evened
Its record at 21-21. Mike Newlin had
27

The Bullets ~ Elvin Hayes' 34
points, including nine in. the 'liecond
overtlme,.pastSeatUe.
·....._
The Sonics got ·a game '"'gh
.. ••

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·OF SHOES
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MIODLEPORT, Oli~· ·
FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

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Mon., tues., weii.; Friday &amp; Sat.
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5:00 Th~.trsd•y till12 Noon ·
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OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENt Ot.U Yi
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About Your Health

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When you 1need any kind of
medication, we make sure
.that yo,u have it promptly.
Vitamins and toiletries.

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THE
SHOE BOX

Kasem

WMPO
SATURDAYS ·
8 til Noon

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-.·-- TRI .STATE·AREA ..

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Ca~y

Golden State broke a threei!ame
IQS!ng s.treak and extende,d Port1 d's' unha
sluiin to 12 str ight
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PIGSKIN)
COLORS:
•DROMEDARY
•COPPERTONE
(SMOOTH LEATHER)
COLOR: •CAMEL

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' FOR TI:IE BlifST-D&amp;AI..S IN THE

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Mrs. Maxine A. Und, 57, 2M Con·
ckl- st, Pomeroy, a lifelong resident
ol the community, died late Wed·
nel!day_lilftemoon at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mrs. Und had been in .falling
health for several years and bad
been confined to the medical center
for the past few weeks.
She was born in Pomeroy, Aug. 16,
1922, a daughter of the late Edward .
and Glenna Lewis Hoeflich.
Besides her parenta, she was also
preceded in death by her only child,
Ullted States Marine PFC Thomas
R. Lind who was killed in Vietnam
llll Aug. 26, 1968.
Mrs. Und is survived by her
husband, Reino Und, a lricklayer
who baa been employed in major
construction projects in this area for
over the past 30 yeare. A nwnber of
cousins also survive.
Funeral services will be hdd at 1
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
.Home where friends may call at
anytime after 7 this evening. Burial
will be in Beech GroVe Cemetery.

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Niehm claims ..•
(Continued froin page I)
equally Wltil wedeiegated the opera·

FOURGENERATIONSare pictured at a dinner held at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Graves in Pomeray this week. 1be group includes
Bradley Allen Mil' ria seated on the lap ol lJls mother, Mell.m Kay
Thomas Morris, Mrs. Carolyn Graves Thomas, and Mrs. Nell Gnrws.
1be Morrises are residing in Arizona.

I

.

. . 1,

Gift wrapptnl!ll were judged and
prizes awarded when the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts met for
a Christmas party at the hmte of

also won the door prize.

Mrs. Erwin and Mrs. Jackie Frost
gave a short demonstration on selection and shaping rJ.llne material.
Members enjoyed a buffet style
dinner and then had a game for
distribution of the gifts. Melanie
Stetbem and Betty Dean were
hostesses for the meeting.

Mrs. Jennie Machlr.
Packages were wrapped In
predominately wliite suggestive of
snow using plant material. Mrs.
Shelia Taylor judged the glfta with
first going to Carol Erwin, second to
Betty Dean, and third to Mrs.
Machlr. Each me received a pin and
a dried ammgement. Mrs. Dean

\'

~J

r---

Social Calendar

Combines
VIBRATING BRUSH
AGITATION and
·'
powerful
STEAM EXTRACTION
CLEANING

j
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to loosen. dissolve

and 9)Ctract
deep-seated di rt and

residues.
Gets carpets
cleaner. Fastert And
it's easy Ia operate
100.
NO liniNG •
CLEA NIN G WAND
EQ UIPPED WITH
WHEELS
HANDLES LIKE
A VACUUM
SWEEPER ___.,~~

STAR SUPPLY
Racine, 0 .

ATTENTION:

EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172,

TO MEET TONIGHT
1be Catholic Women's Club !i
Sacred Heart Church will meet this ·
evening. Mass will be at 7:30 p.m.
followed by the meeting in the chur·
ch basement at8.

PAPER CARRIER
NEEDED IN THE
POMEROY AREA

Order rJ. the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.

Thlrsday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Resohitim night to
be observed. New members to cane
at 7 p.m. Members to take sunshine
glftsfortheOES Home.

NO TRASH PICKUP
Racine VIllage will not have truck
trash pickup on Jan. 7 due to
necessary truck repairs. A new
pickup date will be aMounced.

....

Daryl and D&lt;rls Ann Well with all
the chil~ from the kindergarten ·
class to the teenagers parUciJI!Iting.
A nativity seen~, was placed in' front
o1 the church for the hoUdays by Mr.
and Mrs. 11m Bauni.

Since tomatoes didn't arrive in
Italy Willi the 16th century, Italian
cooks once toppe4 their pasta with
hooey or a cmnblnatlon ol honey,
butler, cream cheese and cimamon.

111URSDAY

everything completed before. open·
ing the doore. As I review the
tions and the opening of the clinic to reasons for not being able to1 open
the Center Board.
prior to this point In time, the mediate transfer from the Center's
"Atthlstime,Iamcmcemedthat primary problems were (1) getting . payroll to the county's payroll; as
Ahhens County opened their falclity
the buUdlng comleted and fumlahed such, they will become ''648" Board
in June, and we are still not open. I and (2) getting a cmnpetent coor· staff members. Nonofltaff expen·
know there must be reasms why the dlnator for the program. Bill McGee dltures will be reviewed for relmdelay in the opening o1 the facility hill done a magnificent job ol put- bursement to the Center.
and need tiDe reasons In Cl'der to tlng the program in place since join·
''It Is expected that since the
supportwbywearenotopen,noton- ingtheCenter.
Residential Program will have a
ly at the stete level, but with roy
"In swnmary, I believe the 648 lateral relatiooshlp to the Center
Board for Mcnday night's meeting. Board can be informed that the services, that cooperaticn between
Any infonnation you can get to me facility will be open very early in
the two ~gencies to assure contlnul~
by Mondy will be appreciated.
January·"
of core and quality treatment will
''I would !tope that the opening Is
December 18, lt'll
occur. •
'
not based 'on the policy manual
To: BemardNielun, Ph.D.
- By late ~'week, reportedly, all
developed by the steff of the
Interim Center Director
Center emplo es 81!Bigned to the
Chlldrens Residential Facillty as I
From: Mulne S. Plummer, EJ:. children'sfac tyhadresigned.
have been told by the Licensing
ecutlveDirector
During questioning by Center at·
Commlttee from the District Office
"One ol the agenda items of the tomey D. Dean Evans, Dr. Nlehm
that It is the most comprehensive,
December 17, 1979 "M8" Board answered In the afflnnatlve when
Inclusive, professlcnal manual,
meeting was an update m the stallli asked If the Center had participated
responsive to ellenfa' needs, that
r4 the Children's Residential Pro· in the develq&gt;ment of a Community
they ahve seen developed to date gram. I shared with the Board Plan for the operation ol the Nelacn·
anywhere in the District:"
members mY concerns about delays ville Alternative Center.
December 17, 1978
in opening the program as were ,
Evans: "Was the M8 Board
To: Maxine s. Plwnmer, Ex·
stated in my December 14, 1979 takeoverapal1ofthatplan?"
ecutlve Director, 6t8 BoBrd
memorandwn to you. I also shared
Nlehm: "No."
From: Bernard F. Nlehm, Ph. D.,
your response to lilY memo. In parEvans: "Was the plan amended to
lnterimCenterDirectorB.F.N.
ticular that the opening baa been aUowforthe648Boardtekeover?"
Re,: Children's Residential Treat· delayed until sometime In January,
Nlehm: "No."
ment Facility
lBro.
When asked about the fulfillment
. "A specific date for the opening of
'The "648" Board voted rJ. Equal Employment Opportunity
the Children's Residential Treat· unanimously to exercise ita powere requirements by the Center, Dr.
ment Facility baa not been set,
as granted them In Olapter 340.03 of Nlehm stated the Nelsonville Alterhowever, we are hopeful it can be ac- the Ohio Revised Code and wlll, native facility employes had
compUshed in early January.
therefore, aaswne the operation ol originally been hired with full comPerhaps the most critical factor in
the Children's Residential Program. pllance with those stipulations.
This action was deemed necessary
"If we don't meet EEO
detenninatlon of the opening date is
completion o1 the staffing. Whle
for the following reasons: first, the req1,1lremenl8, we could lose ·gran.
most staff are in place, two of the
programhaslladcelltlnualdelays in ts,"Niehmsald.
most crucis! staff positioos are still
Ita opening. The facility" baa been
Evans: "To your knowledge, did ·
vacant. The vacancies are a
ready and licensed for operiltlon the 6f8 Board meet EEO
teecher-counaelor Jlllllltlon and two since November, 1979; the majority requirements... (in placing the for·
communlty lnvervention specialists.
of staff on the T.O. have been mer Center employes on the 648
The two conununlty intervenslon
employed; and referrals from the lloBrdpayroll)?"
specialists have the major respm- communlty have been CIIIDing in
. Nlehm: ''No, we couldn't dolt."
slbillty fc.- Phase I d. the 'three phse stressing the Immediate lleed fll'
Wednesday's second witness, Cen·
residential treatment program. Blll this service.
ter Director of Operations ¥alcolm
McGee, the Program Coordinator,
'The ' '648" Board has not been in· Orebaugh, deacribed the 6t8 Board
hopes to be inf.trvlewing applicants
formed d. any qulllt;y of care Issues as a " ... planning, funding,
for theae positions 1n the next few
that could jeopardize opening this monitoring agency...the Center Is a
days.
program Immediately, and baa thus service provider."
·
"The policy manual . for· the cmcluded that the delay Is an ad'The 1148 Board can Initiate ser·
children's facillty 1s 1n place due tb mlnlstratlve one. Admlnlitrative vice ...as they did at the ootaet of the
the dedication effort r1. BDI ·McGee
reaSons should not take precedence development of the center in Gallla
and his steff. A few detalla are iltlll over the need fCI' the services when County.:.ilntll another agency exlsti
being detennlned 1n tenns ol the such servl~s are currently toprovldeservlce,"Orebaughsald.
children's program meshing with avallableforprovlslcn.
Under cr0111 il:l:aminatlon,
Other program CCIIIlponenlll of the
''Serond, as stated In my Orebaughaclmowll!dgedthatthe618
mental healthcel1ter&amp;DdcOilllDUnl· Ilacember 14th memo, 'tbe ''648" Boardbadautborit;ytocontractwlth
ty referral groups and agencies. To · Board and I, aa l!lzeC.ttlve Dli=ector; " agenCies other than the Center fll''
date, we.have had meetings with tile· hlive spent conalderable time and ef. the ilqllementation ol mental health
pedlatrlclanulld are In the process fort fobbylng wUh tbe state aervlcea.
,
·
·
q1 wOddng rut details o1 medical
leglllature for the Children's ProWednesday 'a four hour hearlnll
" coverage; In addition, Dr. Sajth and eramapproprlaticn that Ia CIIITI!IItly adjourned at 8:30 p.m., and wu ,
Dr. Landers are ready to serve the In HB 204. This IIJIPI'OIIrlation Is a scheduled to reconvene at !O:OOa.m.
Center's pbysctetrlc . needs of specific line Item for Alternatlwi'to today.
.,
children under !)r. Cassidy~ cltrec:- Nelsonvllle Children's Program,
The suit being heard was filed last
lien.
and a cmtlnuallon d. thia llniritem Is Friday f~ a three hdilr
f'Tbe fadllUes are complete' and
aubaequent biemtuma Is CCIIIUngent meetiJ!IIn executive lellllm by \l!e
are ready wl~ball furniture tn pL!jce.
upon adequate evaluation vi Ita first Count;)' Ommlillonen attended b&gt;:
"AlthoUgh It wu the hope of our' two Y~ pefonnance. Tbe .''148" • Dr; NIGhm, 'Orebaugh and
steff aJ!(I Board to open the facility . Board expects tlae aendcee to be l'ro8eclltCI' Cain: ~ from
in Nov~mber II' Pecemb«, ~ did . provided to fuiJll ,the needs that ~t ~lng . wu a motion elvi!lli,
mt WI!Jit to open unleu an program •were ezpreaed to the Lellllatora and ' ...the Pra!iecutlng Attorney At·
components were In ·. place ,10aecutefuturefuncltnc. . · ·
tomey permilalcn to take whatev~
Qperltlng a f"&lt;:l.'!881ful rChlldren ·~ ' "The "648 n Board will make a,.. . lfCal actl..-. . - r y fill' ~
Relldentlal Treatment Program Is range11111111B with the IIIJPioyeee of . · operation ·and management of. the
11101t difficult eveq ~mder Ideal em- the Center lllllgllld to tll{-adldnn
Altematlve to Nel.lonvllle &lt;lllldren 's
ljltl~, thua oor rationale for getting ResJdentlal ~ for ~r lm• ~~nllal Facility."

v

HOST DINNER

Mr. and Mre. Elmer Bailey, Dar·
win, hosted a family dinner at their
home Chilltmas Day. Attendi~
were Dwight and Kay Logan,
Pomeroy; Wayne and Helen
Milhoan, Darwin; Guy, Sandi,
Jonatban and Krista Sargent,
Pomeroy; Bernice King, Hemlock
Grove; &amp;bert Reed and Golda,
Pomeroy.

Gift wrappings judged
by floral arts council

'

FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, Friday, 8 p.m.
at the Rock Springs Grange HaiL
Harrlsmvllle Grange to be h011t for
the meeting.

FOR THE

SUNDAY

SOUTHEAST omo Garden Trac-·
tor will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at the .
sCI'Ut building, behipd the firehoose
in Ch&amp;ter. All interested persons
are invited to attend.

DAILY. SENTINEL

roESDAY

CALL 992-2156

MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS, 7:30
Tuesday In , the band room. All
parents of band members urged to
attend.

BElWEEN 8:30
AM &amp; 5 PM
'

r------------L-------------------'-----

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPICIAL $ nL 10
MENU
Salad Bar
6 oz. Prime Rih
Baked Potato
Vegetable
Roll,_
Tea,

Coffee or Milk

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY I SATURDAY
NIGHI'

GOLD
A3-PC. GROUP
/

ALL lEGAL
IIEYWSES SOlD

'

FROM zANESVIUI, 0.

You must lit 21 or eccomjMnltd ~,.fllltl ar IIIIIIMrdlln:

• !

•

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-.1629

'*

.\

Annual Christmas dinner ol · the
Tuppers Plains Church d. Christ was
held 'at the church social room m
Dec. 18.
.
Attendinl were Mr. and Mrs.
Daryl Well and Amy, Mr. and Mrs.
Timothy Gumpf and David, Mr. and
Mrs. Beryl Wlbon, Todd, Aaron and
Jamie, Mr. and Mrs. C. 0. Newland,
Mrs. Helen Newland, Mike and Pat,
Mrs. Rabal Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard caJdwell, Mr. and Mrs. Her·
man Black, Mr- and Mrs. Clyde
Kuhn, Tim and Joe, Mrs. Betty ·
Millhme, Mrs. Janie Headley, Mrs.
Shirley Hawk, Lisa and Julie, Mrs.
Annie Calaway, Mrs. Blnice Tuttle,
Mra. Allee Osburne, Dale McCain.
Following the dinner, several went
carollrw in Tuppers Plains. On Sun·
day evening before Christmas a program was held under the direction of

Cemetery. FrieOds may call at
Ewing Funeral Hmne after 7 p.m.
this evening. Friends may call at the
church on Satunlay frmn nocin until
time ol services. In lieu of flowers
the family request that donations be
made to the St. Paul Lutheran
Memory Fund.

BE.'!SIE MAE QtJILI.EN
Mrs. Bessie Mae ~en. rn,
Sycamore St., Middleport, died Wed·
nel!day at Veterans Memorial
Hoepital.
Mrs. Quillen was born Oct. 6, 1892
at Mason, W. Va., a daugllter of the
late George and Euphemia Platt
Batey. She was abo preceded In
death by her hll8band, Charles, in
1955, three sons and two daug!Urs,
and a brother, James Batey.
Surviving are four daughters,
Mrs. Raymond (Evdyn) Speoolr,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Franklin (Lue!Ja)
King, Pomeroy ; Mrs. Harold I.An·
na) Persinger, Waverly, and Mrs.
Edward (Betty) RUSllell, Reynold·
sburg; ~ sons, George, Mid·
dleport ; Raymond Eugene,
Mmroevllle, and Robert WWlam,
Mason, W. Va.; a brother, Ben R.
WILLIAM J. MAYER
Batey, Middleport, and two sisters,
William J. Mayer, 51, Pomeroy, a Mrs. Clyde (Viola ) Bayles and Mrs.
prominent Pcmeroy businessman, . Jack (Cecelia) Hite, both d. Mid·
died this mocning at Holzer Medical dleport. Also surviving are 38 gran.
Center.
dchildren, 39 great-grandchildren
Mr. Mayer wils born May 24, 1928 and two great1!re&amp;t1!randcbildren.
the son ol the late William and Em·
Mrs. Qulllen was a member of the
rna Durst Mayer.
Middleport ChQrch of Christ in
Mr. Mayer was co-owner of the Ouistian Union and funeral services
Pomeroy Pastry Shcp, a member of will be held at that church at 1 p.m.
St. Paul Lutheran Church, Pomeroy Saturday with the Rev. O'DeB
.:_ ,..Phamber ol Cmnmerce, Drew Web- Manley officiating. Burial will be in
_, ster Post 39, American Legion, and Rook Springs Cemtery .
Ohio Art and Crafts Assoclatiori.
Friends may call at the RawlingsHe is survived by his wife, Martha Coats Funeral Home from 10 a.m. to
•Mayer, me son, Rick ,Mayer, 9 p.m. Friday and until 11:00 a.m.
Pomeroy, one brother, Roy, Saturday when the body wlll be
Pomeroy and several nieces and taken to the church where It will lie
nephews.
Instate.
Funeral services will he held
Saturday at 3 p.m. at the St. Paul
MEETSJAN. S
Lutheran Church with the Rev.
The Meigs Association for Retard·
William Middleswarth officiating. ed Citizens will met Jan. 8 at.7 p.m.
Burial will lie In Beech Grove
at the Meigs Inn.

en

-

Christmas dinner held

•
Area deaths ,

.

Pomeroy,

..

o.
\

�,
. 8 -- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tlnu-sday, Jan. 3, 1980

.

] ob 's Daughters name Ms. Wise honored ijuee;
Susanna Wise, daughter ,of Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Middleport,
was installed honored queen ol
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job 's Daughters, _in ceremonies held
Saturday night at the Middleport
Masooic Temple.
Other officers instaUt&gt;d were Bren-.
da Chappelear, senior princess;
Theresa Starr, junior princess ; Zan·
dra Vaughan, guide; and AmY
Sisson; marshall .
Appointed officers insta lled were
Jeannie Welsh, chaplain; Unda
Riggs, recorder; Debbie Wyatt,
tre asurer ; Ruth Blake , first
messenger, Jeanna Pauley, third
messenger, Lisa Riggs, librarian,
Kim Pauley, senior custodian ;
Megan Cale, junior custodian; Beth
Blaine, inner guard, Julie Byer,
outer guard.
The installing officers were Julie
Byer, retiring honored queen, · !n·
niter Wise, guide ; Twila Childs,
marshall ; Angie Sisson, chaplain;
Kathy Johnson. senior custodlan;
Debbie Finlaw, junior custodlan ;
Sandy Luckeydoo, recorder; Sharon

Hawley, music1an, and JeCUIIfer Butcher, flag bearer,
Each of the installing ' &lt;ificers
wore a red rose bud corsage, the
flower of the honored queen. The
honored queen 's gave! was
presented to her by her fatlier. Miss
WISe presetned Miss Byer with a gift
from her and one from the officers.
Miss Byer then presented gifts to
Mrs. Mary Wise, guardlan, and
Kenneth Wiggins, associate guardian.

Helen Help

US. . . By H.. l.. n Ruth· I
IS IT SEX HARASSMENT OR

FEMALE APPRECIATION?
HELEN AND SUE:
We've got a pretty relaxed bunch
at our 0ffice, The women work as
hard as the men, and we appreciate
one another. But there was mild horsing around. We told jokes, made
what some would sa~1 are "sexual
remarks," kidded each other and
had a few laughs.
Into this nice fwnily group comes
a militant female! Trouble is, we
didn ~ know how touchy she was.
She's complained to the big guy
about sex harassment oo the job
when aU she got was the routine kidding and one pat on the fanny - by
me, because she has a nice fanny
and she was bending over a desk as I
passed by. Seemed only natural.
After aU, I've been fanny-patted by
&lt;ifice females and I take it as a compliment.
Since her beef to management,
we've all been so constrained
and 'edgy that working here is no fun

Capt. and Mrs. Gene Crooks and
children, John and Mark, Annapolis,
Md. spent the holidays here visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks and in
Columbus with Mrs. Gme Crooks'
parents, Afamily'!li.nner was held at
the Crooks home and attending
besides Gene and his family were
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, Danny
and Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Eddle
Crook~. Cindy, Pam and Eddie.

~
1 Group

CORDUROY

LenQX Square

30%0FF

SEPARATES
GROUP WINTER
TOPS &amp; BLOUSES

20%

HATS
GLOVES

OF

F

30%0FF

SKIRTS

20%0FF

Miss Charm &amp;

member of Bethtl 62, and a member
of the Knights of the York Cross of
Honor.
·Council members introduced in·

eluded Sue Starr, guardian
secretary; Ruby Vaughan, guardian
treasurer; Carol Sisson, promoter of
sociability ; Donna Byer, dlJ;ector of

•

------- ---- ---· ---

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

·- ---- ---- ---- -- -

Middleport
Personal Notes

JEANS

Guests were registered by Mrs.
Bessie King. Introduced were Mandy Sisson, past honored queen ; Paul
Darnell, l)llst associate· grand guardian, .past associate gyardian of
Bethel 62, homrary member of
Bethel 62, member ci. the Knights of
the York CJ:oas of Honor; Mrs. Wise,
Bethel·guardian; Kenneth Wiggins,
associate Bethel guardlan; Emma
Clatwnrthy, past guardian of .Bethel
62 ; Tom Edwards, past associate
guardian of Bethel 62; honorary

I

11 Group

:SWEATERS
\ ALL

..

0/00FF

20 /(
L-------.J

COATS

30%

20% OFFI

Ladies &amp; Juniors
DRESSES
25% OFF

TWO'S COMPANY DRESS SHOP
Main St.

Pomeroy, OH.

anymore. A few fights have started.
BRICKS lOOK A SMOKING
We never fought before.
By Polly Cramer
I'd be the first one to condemn real
POLLY'S·
PROBLEM
sex discrlmlnatlon on the job, but
DEAR
POLLY
- When we bullt
this is ridiculous. Could you please ·
the
first
fire
o.f
the
season in our
tell these overzealous women that
fireplace
the
damper
was
not opened
one pat does not a rapist make ?
properly
so
the
ligtt
beige
bricks in
-APPRECIA'IDR, NOT HARASSER
front
were
badly
smoked.
What
can
DEAR A., NOT H.:
we
use
to
clean
themOEDITH
You've told 'em. Thanks! DEAR EDITH -Use your favorite
HELEN
scouring powder and steel wool.
Then rinse well. -POLLY
A. NOTH. :
DEAR POLLY- The brown sink
Why don't you make this militant
in
my kitchen matches the stove,
female your project? Smely you and
refrigerator,
dishwasher, etc., and it
the office staff, by sheer force ci.
developed
a
white
film that regular
numbers, can defuse (humanize)
would not
household
cleaner
her before she causes a major exploremove.
I
tried
the
same
cleaner
sion. Start educating! -SUE
that I use for copper pans and it dld a
beautiful job. Do hope this helps so·
DEAR RAP :
meoneelse,
-JUNE
I'm mad! Just read a wire service
DEAR
POLLY
- At this time d
article about a student survey in
year
when
my
windows
fog up and
Grosse Pointe, Mich., that said the
moisture
runs
down
them
I pour li·
average high schooler there spends
quid
soap
on
a
paper
.
towel
or rag
more than ~ per month on drugs
(including alcohol) and $37.60 per and wipe over the windows. That
month on cigarettes. The illustration ends the trouble.
DEAR POLLY - I find that left·
showed spaced -out kids smoking and
over
coffee used for the liquid makes
boozing, and handlng out money to
delicious
mocha-flavored chocolate
pushers.
cakes
and
icing. It also adds flavor
Only lllO students were interviewand
color
to
most gravies and it can
ed in a school of over 2,000. 111 bet
be
added
to
a fresh cup ci. coffee to
they weren't very "average."
cool
it
a
bit.
(Polly's
Note • I always
Maybe researchers picked heavy
add
coffee
to
chocolate
icing and
users?
think
it
tastes
much
better.)
I come from an affluent
Grapefruit spoons are great to use
neighborhood, too, but I sure don't
for
eating canteloupe and for scrap·
spend six times as much on drugs
and cigarettes as I do on lunches ing seeds out of squash and other
(which is what the survey reported). . vegetables.
I make my own high energy snack
Neither do any of my friends: More
·by
combining raw sunflower seeds,
than half of them doo 't smoke, and
diced dates, figs, cut-up
raisins,
Jhey couldn't put out near a hundred
nutmeats,
coconut, sesame seed or
bucks per month for liquor and pot.
any
combination
of them. The kids
Big dcpers do, but a lot ci. us don 't
love
it
and
it
is
cheaper
to make It at
even buy. We'd bring down the
h&lt;me
rather
than
buy
it already
average.
made.
-IRENE
Why don't you ask your teen-ilge
DEAR POLLY P And Sad Sheller
readers what they spend for tobacI put inhabited shells in a bucket
co, booze and recreational drugs?
I 11 bet the answers would be a lot and co'Ver them with boiling water.
Leave overnight and the next day a
different than Grosse Pointe. screwdriver will reach in the end
UPSET DEAR UPSET:
and the innards can be pulled oul
You'reon!
Okay, readers: Please estimate
for us, if you will, how much you
spend per month on:
Liquor~gs ( theiUegalkind)-­

Cigarettes -Lunches and snacks -CarClothes-, Recreation-Thanks. -HELEN AND SUE

leaving the shell clean. Wash with
detergent ~ater, then clear water
and drain SJid then the sbell can be
taken indoors with no odor. -- MRS ..
M.G.
Polly will send you me ci. her signed thank-you newspaper~oupon
clippers if she uses your favocite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write Polly's Pointers in
care of this newspaper.

fu:ance; Patty Hoffman, promotor
of h011pitality. Also Introduced were
Harry Roush, worshipful master of
Middleport Lodge 363, and chapter
advisior ol Meigs DeMoJay; Besilie
King, deputy grand matron of
District· 25, Order of the Eastern
Star; James Buchannon, melllber of
the Knights ci. the York Cross of
Honor; and Greg Bush, master
counselor of Meigs Cbapter, Oi'der
ofDeMolay.
Following the
installation
ceremony members and guest&amp; were
invited to the dining room which was
decorated In the red, green ani
white colors of the new honored
queen. Christmas cookies fl!ld punch
were served. A heart-tihaped cake
was the refreshment table centerpiece and was Inscribed
''Congratulations,Susama.
The hooored queen 's emblem is
the heart, her theme friendship, and
hermotto: "Halfofthefunofhavinll
a friend is being one yourself."

Gd~boMd"';;k~Ys $5;680,403 budget
Gallla County 's Local Board of has not been determined by the State
Education Wednesday night during Department of Education.
,
ltS armual organizational meeting . Other figures approved for the ·
approved a temporary ap- 1900 school year were lunchroom,
pr.opriation measure totaling .371,109.53; Bond Retirement Fund,
t:j,6t!0,403 In the General Fund.
$29,035; DPPF Fund, $12,000; Title I,
J;lpwever, that figure is expected to ' $45,000; Title VI B Fund, ~.ooo and
~jVell since no state foundation funds
Activity Fund, $10,000.
were included in that amount.
The budget was planned last JUly
::Since voters in the Gallia County and approved by the Gallia County
·Scbool District approved a two mill
Budget Ccmmission based upon the
operational levy last November, the
district's millage.
During • tbe organizational
district now qualifies , for parrreeting, Dr. David R~nnan, en.ticipation in the state foundation
pJ:ogram, based upon pupil
tering his third year as a"lllember ri
t~rollment and other factors, the
the board ci. education, was elected
~trict will be getting more than one
president succeeding James V.
million dollars in state funds. At this
Blevips. Blevins who served four
point, however, the exact amount
years as a board member did not

.,

.

618 E. MAIN ST.

UJearhaus

..

NOT

10% -

50%

Men's All Weather
REDUCED

20%

-50%

CHAPMAN SHOES

30%

DEADUNE JAN.lO
Deadline for entrles in the 1980
Dally Sentinel's Baby Derby sponsored by 32 area merchants is 5 p.m.
oo Thursday, Jan.lO.
A statement from the attending
pi\Ysician giving the time and
location of the baby must be at The
Sentinel office, 111 Court St., by the
deadline. The winner ci. the first
haby of the new year contest will
n:ceive gifts from the 32 merchants .
FUNDS RECEIVED
Auditor Thomas E.
F~rguson 's office announced the
January, 1980, distribution of
$40,039,~ in Aid to Dependent
Children to 470,243 recipients in
Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs County
received •111,021 for 1,353 recipients.

State

Skirts, Blouses, etc.

1

SPORTSWEAR h PRICE

REDUCED

~~bWT &amp; 20%-30%

COATS

~A~rSess &amp; Casual
REDUC
Men's Colored l;)ress

SHIRTS R
NOW

PANT SUITS

REDUCED 30%

1 Lot Ladies .

%
20

SKIRTS, JACKETS,
BLOUSES

20%
REDUCED

1 Lot Ladies

20%

BLAZERS

30%
REDUCED

Ladies

SLACKS

Men's Spurt

SHIRTS RE

RE

D

1 Rack

Men's Dress &amp; C:asual

HATS

.

.:»;,...._,~ Ladies

REDUCED

REDUCED
Ladies

·JSWEAtERS

-. ,

20%
20%

NO CHARGES -- NO LAYAWAYS-· NO EXCHANG.ES
RE,DUCED

SALE IS ON RIGHT NOW!

ALL MERCHANDISE.
FROM OUR .REGULAR STOCK

20%-30%
REDUCED

Ladies, Missy &amp; Half Size

"

Group of Men's Dress Shirts Reduced .... ... ......... 50%
Group Men 's Flannel Shirts Reduced
-- 20~. -50%

COAlS

20%

•VINYL- DENIM · CORDU~OY DOWN FILLED JACKETS .
•VELOUR SHIRTS - Solids &amp; Fancies··
•WRINKLE FREE QUIANAS DRESS SHIRTS·
.
•ENTIRE STOCK OF QullltD VESTS
•SPORT COATS
. - Sizes 36 to 46 .

SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS

.

.• ,.J

30%

.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-RebeCca Ackerman,
Pomeroy; Mary Longenette, Reedsville; Elmer Melford, Ewington;
Mary Smith, Middleport; John
Powell, Portland; Herbert Rose,
Racine; Charles Harris, Reedsville;
Bessie Rudisill, Pomeroy,
Discharges--Clay Burns.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGF3JAN. Z.
Juanita Arthur, Charesel Broob,
J~ Browning, Erin Caldwell,
Gayle Drummood, Diana Fleming,
Mrs. Michael Harvey and daughter,
Sharoo Hlll,,~. Terry Jenkins and
. daughter, Michelle Randolph, Redford Riffe, Natasha Sommer, Grant
stanley, Marguerite Sterling, Mrs.
Donald Thacker and daughter, Wendy Wolfe, Diana WOodruff, Mildred ·
Zlnunerman.
BIRTHSJAN.2
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Morris, son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Donny
Gilbert, dlluilfl~,Bidwell; Mt. and
Mrs. Harry Patton, SCIII, Buffalo, W.
Va.
,

20%-

LICm!S'

1

"fhe E'rly Bird Gets rhe Best Choice"

UJeathauS·

'

!,

'

'.

'

.

'

I

,

• • .MENS WEAR.,... , .,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

t

I

M

20%-30%

OFF

SUPER' SUEDE .SHIRTS . WERE '16.95

1 Casual Slacks - Polyester 9r Corduroy Reduced 25%
Samson1te Luggage Reduced .... .. ..................... 20%
All Men's Jogging SUits Reduced .................. .. .. 33%
All Florsheim Shoes Reduced .............. ............ 20% -

h - P-RICE

-......

NOT 30% - BUT

•WESTERN FLANNEL SHIRTS - S.M-l·Xt
•DISCO SHtRTS - Fancy Prints
•SWEATERS,.CARDIGANS &amp; PUU.OVERS

SUPER VALUES

1

20% -

Ladies Car &amp; Dress

JACKETS &amp;
CAR COATS

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

·DISCOUNTS

•

Men's Winter

Nineteen defendants were fined
and 13 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
wre Paul Steinmitz, Jr., Rutland,
two charges taking deer during ~las­
ed season, 60 days confinement on
each charge, one charge
spotlighting with possession of gun,
60 days confinement, •1 ,000 and
costs, 170 d·a ys confinement
OFF
suspended providing fine and costs
paid within 00 days, au hunting
rights suspended for three years and
one year probation; Stephen A. Norris, Portland, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Cheryl R. Roseberry, Rt. 3,
Racine, Nonna Jean Fisher, Pt.
Pleasant, Loreli Meaige, Pt. Pleasant, Carl L. Tennant, New Haven,
•15 and costs each, speeding; Conley
D. Dudley, Mason, $10 and costa,
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
failure to yield; David Arlix, Harrisonville, •25 and costs, disorderly
conduct; Leo C. Stumbo, Bidwell, 1-------------.....;_-------~
•175 and costs, overload; Daniel
Peyton, Rt. 3, Albany, •1 '15 and
costs, overload; John M. Eberts,
Hamden, $127 and costs, overload;
Bennie R. Stumbo, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
~ and costa, overload; Steve R
Lambert, Rt. 1, Rutland, $25 and
casts, disturbing traps without permimlion; Thomas Davis, Proctorville, Edwin Florence, Pomeroy,
and John Warner, Pomeroy, •15 and
costs each speeding; ElJuna Milam,
Rutland, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; David J. Craig, . Rt. 1,
Rutland, $10 and costs, failure to
display tags; Thomas I. Arnott, Rt.
2, Racine, $10 and costs, speed.
Forfeiting ·bonds were Guy W.
Lee, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $35.50 failure to
yield; Charles Fred Zeigler, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, $36.50, illegal passing;
AND
Jack Lee Johnson, Letart, W. Va.,
•
Mary A. Hoskins, Cbauncey, Perry
M. Poppe!, Gallipolis, and Timothy
A. Kime, Cuyahoga, $35.50 each,
speeding; KermethG. Slnclalr, Rt.1,
Shade, $36.50, no cycle endorsement; Jolm E. Partlow, Rt. 3,
•
Pomeroy, and Monty Hart, Rt. 1,
Hours:
9:30 to s,oo
Racine, ~ -50 each, DWI; Vltus
Mon . !hru Sal ,
Hartley, Pt. Pleasant, $35.50, illegal
9:30 to 8:00
passing; Marvin Buttrick, Logan,
Ftidar,
~5 ,50, unsafe vehicle;
Randy
Hayslett, Cincinnati; ~5.50, failure
2nd St.
to dislay registrtlon; Helena H.
ROY.O.
D'Augustino, Rt. 3, Albany, ~. 50,
no opera tors license.

WITH FURTHER

aranc

Appoin1ment Available But Not Necessary

'

(

:

,.

\

Com-

SALE CONTINUES

WI·NTER

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W.VA. ,,.,. .
OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp;SAT.
9A.M.·5 P.M.
PHONE 773-9128

POMEROY,O.
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M. Weekdays,
.9-SSaturday
PHONE 9'12·3795

•PRE-WASHED JEANS BY WRANGLERS, MR. LEGGS, D.C. · &amp; STAnER

Dress Shirts Reduced .............................. 25%
Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ......... 25%
Dress Slacks Reduced .. ..........~ ..... 20% • 25%
· Outerwear Reduced..(~~~:~:'d~~~~ .. ,...25% - 50%
Sweaters Reduced .... ....... .. ................... 25%
Dress Hats &amp; Neckwear Reduced ................ 20%
Sport Shirts..RedtJced ................... 2Q% -50%

**

THE iNCOME TAX PEOPLE

.CORDUROY SLACKS

Fine Furnishings &amp; Sports Wear Entire Stock

or MEN'S

.

ON ~FOU.OWING GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

'105 SU I'D) .. ... ..• ..... .• •..•...... .•. .•.....•.. '84.00
'135 SUITS ...... ...... ,....................... '101.00
'175 SUITS ............................ ......... •131.00
'195 SUITS ............. .. ..................... '146.00
'210 SUITS .. ... .. ............................ :•157.00
'285 SUITS ......... .. ........................ · '214.00

GROUP

•.

,,

driver ; Fred Fellure, janitor, and
Robert Ashley as a reserve basketball coach.
The board \lpproved tile payment
for liability insurance and performance bonds for board president
carman and treasurer Saunders in
the amount of $20,{0) each ll'orn '
Republic Franklin Insurance
pany.
.
During the county board meeting, .
a temporary appropriation totaling
$23,470 was approved.
·
The board went into executive
session to discuss personnel and
negotiations.

1--'---------------------

•SOOT DESTROYER
AND CHIMNEY
CLEANER

.•STOVE PIPES
SLEDGE HAMMERS
SPLITTING MALLS
SAWS
AXES

H&amp;R BLOCit

Entire Stocks

HART -SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX· JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEAC!-J ·SEWELL SUITS

j_....

•FIRE SHOVELS •DAMPERS
•COAL BUCKETS •ELBOWS

We 're only human and once in a while we make
a mistake . but if we should make an error that
costs you additional tax, you pay only the tax .
Block pays any penalty and interest. We stand
behind our work .

A BIG

a few of the fantastic savings awaiting you.

CoWlty.Court

iWARM MORNING
&amp;
KING_
srovE
SUPPLIES~
.
*

pay any
mterest
and penalty
if we make
an error.

.

· Debbie Ratliff will&gt; has been employed in the Central Office for the
past two three years was hired as

********************************* ************************\-

"MONEY SAVING SA I.E"
A sale of quality men 's apparel that you cannot afford to miss .
Come in early while our selection is at its best. Listed here, are just

July.

.It-

Block ·

assistant treasurer at a salary of
'
$10,000 per year.
Jerri Davis was employed as a
secretary in ihe Central Office for
the remainder ol the school term.
Other personnel employed were
Cathy Heinke as librarian at North
GaUla lllgh School ; Gil Price,
assistant basketbaU coach at Southwestern High School; Dci.ard Fetty
as janitor at Bidwell-Porter --iind
Henry Swick as janitor at Bidwell·
Porter and Vinton Elementary
Schools.
Resignations accepted included
those of Rhonda Rogers, a bus

interim treasurer since the
resignation of Mrs. Naomi Beman in

''"

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

NOT

seek reelection last fall . He was
presented a plaque by Carman.
J .E. (Dick) Cremeens, the
veteran of the board, was named
vice-president.
The oath of ci.flce was administered to newly elected members, Fred Dee! and BWyHaUey.
Board compensation was setat$40
per regular meeting and board
meetings were set for the fourth
Mooday of each month following the
Gallia County Board d Education
meetings.
ln other action, the board employed Mrs. Jewell Saunders as
treasurer -on a twoi'ear contract.
Her salary was set ·Ill •15,000 per
year. Mrs. Saunders has served as

•FLOOR BOARDS .•GRATES

.. MEN'S WEAR_... ..

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

-

'

30%

'

.

.

TOENi&gt;~E ,: ·

In t,~eilla. COuitt~ PJias·•

court

I

F. • PI!Wt, Rt. •2,
, Racine, · incl Hiirrt R. ,, Pettit,
Pomeroy, flied for pMI,on rJ.
UJntta

marriage. .

. :
;

DRESSES
SPORTSWEAR -

40% OFF

SLEEPWEAR

OFF
-

1/3

..

CURRENT
SAVING
RA 5

PASSBOOK

5 lf4%

Compounded Daily

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .......~~~:~~~ .5•1 :~~~~-.. 51h%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~.~~::-:~~ ~.~:~·~.. _.... 6%

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~~~:~.~:':~~:~~~-~.... .71A%

&amp;·YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~:~~':'.~':'.~~·.~.·:~ ..... JlJ2%
ERTilFCAJE ............................
. Minimum $1,000.00 ]o/1.%
8YEARC
4
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

..

$10,000 minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate or 112 day treasury
!&gt;Ill rate. As determined at weekly au ell on.

Current rate 11.88% effective January 3·9, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.

. '·
A Home Bank ·
For

Meigs County
..

People

'

'' ·
SEEit
A marriage llcenae lilu l.slued to
Wyatt EnrJn Robinlon, 19, Rt. . 4.
Pometoy, and Donna Marie.AdldJ;is,

2f1Rt. 4, Pomeroy •.

·coATS
SNOWSUITS
JACKETS

.
•.

'

~
~

'

RACINE
HOME
. NATIONAL
'

BANK
-.'

Radne,Ohlj

�,
. 8 -- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tlnu-sday, Jan. 3, 1980

.

] ob 's Daughters name Ms. Wise honored ijuee;
Susanna Wise, daughter ,of Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe Wise, Middleport,
was installed honored queen ol
Bethel 62, International Order of
Job 's Daughters, _in ceremonies held
Saturday night at the Middleport
Masooic Temple.
Other officers instaUt&gt;d were Bren-.
da Chappelear, senior princess;
Theresa Starr, junior princess ; Zan·
dra Vaughan, guide; and AmY
Sisson; marshall .
Appointed officers insta lled were
Jeannie Welsh, chaplain; Unda
Riggs, recorder; Debbie Wyatt,
tre asurer ; Ruth Blake , first
messenger, Jeanna Pauley, third
messenger, Lisa Riggs, librarian,
Kim Pauley, senior custodian ;
Megan Cale, junior custodian; Beth
Blaine, inner guard, Julie Byer,
outer guard.
The installing officers were Julie
Byer, retiring honored queen, · !n·
niter Wise, guide ; Twila Childs,
marshall ; Angie Sisson, chaplain;
Kathy Johnson. senior custodlan;
Debbie Finlaw, junior custodlan ;
Sandy Luckeydoo, recorder; Sharon

Hawley, music1an, and JeCUIIfer Butcher, flag bearer,
Each of the installing ' &lt;ificers
wore a red rose bud corsage, the
flower of the honored queen. The
honored queen 's gave! was
presented to her by her fatlier. Miss
WISe presetned Miss Byer with a gift
from her and one from the officers.
Miss Byer then presented gifts to
Mrs. Mary Wise, guardlan, and
Kenneth Wiggins, associate guardian.

Helen Help

US. . . By H.. l.. n Ruth· I
IS IT SEX HARASSMENT OR

FEMALE APPRECIATION?
HELEN AND SUE:
We've got a pretty relaxed bunch
at our 0ffice, The women work as
hard as the men, and we appreciate
one another. But there was mild horsing around. We told jokes, made
what some would sa~1 are "sexual
remarks," kidded each other and
had a few laughs.
Into this nice fwnily group comes
a militant female! Trouble is, we
didn ~ know how touchy she was.
She's complained to the big guy
about sex harassment oo the job
when aU she got was the routine kidding and one pat on the fanny - by
me, because she has a nice fanny
and she was bending over a desk as I
passed by. Seemed only natural.
After aU, I've been fanny-patted by
&lt;ifice females and I take it as a compliment.
Since her beef to management,
we've all been so constrained
and 'edgy that working here is no fun

Capt. and Mrs. Gene Crooks and
children, John and Mark, Annapolis,
Md. spent the holidays here visiting
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks and in
Columbus with Mrs. Gme Crooks'
parents, Afamily'!li.nner was held at
the Crooks home and attending
besides Gene and his family were
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Thomas, Danny
and Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Eddle
Crook~. Cindy, Pam and Eddie.

~
1 Group

CORDUROY

LenQX Square

30%0FF

SEPARATES
GROUP WINTER
TOPS &amp; BLOUSES

20%

HATS
GLOVES

OF

F

30%0FF

SKIRTS

20%0FF

Miss Charm &amp;

member of Bethtl 62, and a member
of the Knights of the York Cross of
Honor.
·Council members introduced in·

eluded Sue Starr, guardian
secretary; Ruby Vaughan, guardian
treasurer; Carol Sisson, promoter of
sociability ; Donna Byer, dlJ;ector of

•

------- ---- ---· ---

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

·- ---- ---- ---- -- -

Middleport
Personal Notes

JEANS

Guests were registered by Mrs.
Bessie King. Introduced were Mandy Sisson, past honored queen ; Paul
Darnell, l)llst associate· grand guardian, .past associate gyardian of
Bethel 62, homrary member of
Bethel 62, member ci. the Knights of
the York CJ:oas of Honor; Mrs. Wise,
Bethel·guardian; Kenneth Wiggins,
associate Bethel guardlan; Emma
Clatwnrthy, past guardian of .Bethel
62 ; Tom Edwards, past associate
guardian of Bethel 62; honorary

I

11 Group

:SWEATERS
\ ALL

..

0/00FF

20 /(
L-------.J

COATS

30%

20% OFFI

Ladies &amp; Juniors
DRESSES
25% OFF

TWO'S COMPANY DRESS SHOP
Main St.

Pomeroy, OH.

anymore. A few fights have started.
BRICKS lOOK A SMOKING
We never fought before.
By Polly Cramer
I'd be the first one to condemn real
POLLY'S·
PROBLEM
sex discrlmlnatlon on the job, but
DEAR
POLLY
- When we bullt
this is ridiculous. Could you please ·
the
first
fire
o.f
the
season in our
tell these overzealous women that
fireplace
the
damper
was
not opened
one pat does not a rapist make ?
properly
so
the
ligtt
beige
bricks in
-APPRECIA'IDR, NOT HARASSER
front
were
badly
smoked.
What
can
DEAR A., NOT H.:
we
use
to
clean
themOEDITH
You've told 'em. Thanks! DEAR EDITH -Use your favorite
HELEN
scouring powder and steel wool.
Then rinse well. -POLLY
A. NOTH. :
DEAR POLLY- The brown sink
Why don't you make this militant
in
my kitchen matches the stove,
female your project? Smely you and
refrigerator,
dishwasher, etc., and it
the office staff, by sheer force ci.
developed
a
white
film that regular
numbers, can defuse (humanize)
would not
household
cleaner
her before she causes a major exploremove.
I
tried
the
same
cleaner
sion. Start educating! -SUE
that I use for copper pans and it dld a
beautiful job. Do hope this helps so·
DEAR RAP :
meoneelse,
-JUNE
I'm mad! Just read a wire service
DEAR
POLLY
- At this time d
article about a student survey in
year
when
my
windows
fog up and
Grosse Pointe, Mich., that said the
moisture
runs
down
them
I pour li·
average high schooler there spends
quid
soap
on
a
paper
.
towel
or rag
more than ~ per month on drugs
(including alcohol) and $37.60 per and wipe over the windows. That
month on cigarettes. The illustration ends the trouble.
DEAR POLLY - I find that left·
showed spaced -out kids smoking and
over
coffee used for the liquid makes
boozing, and handlng out money to
delicious
mocha-flavored chocolate
pushers.
cakes
and
icing. It also adds flavor
Only lllO students were interviewand
color
to
most gravies and it can
ed in a school of over 2,000. 111 bet
be
added
to
a fresh cup ci. coffee to
they weren't very "average."
cool
it
a
bit.
(Polly's
Note • I always
Maybe researchers picked heavy
add
coffee
to
chocolate
icing and
users?
think
it
tastes
much
better.)
I come from an affluent
Grapefruit spoons are great to use
neighborhood, too, but I sure don't
for
eating canteloupe and for scrap·
spend six times as much on drugs
and cigarettes as I do on lunches ing seeds out of squash and other
(which is what the survey reported). . vegetables.
I make my own high energy snack
Neither do any of my friends: More
·by
combining raw sunflower seeds,
than half of them doo 't smoke, and
diced dates, figs, cut-up
raisins,
Jhey couldn't put out near a hundred
nutmeats,
coconut, sesame seed or
bucks per month for liquor and pot.
any
combination
of them. The kids
Big dcpers do, but a lot ci. us don 't
love
it
and
it
is
cheaper
to make It at
even buy. We'd bring down the
h&lt;me
rather
than
buy
it already
average.
made.
-IRENE
Why don't you ask your teen-ilge
DEAR POLLY P And Sad Sheller
readers what they spend for tobacI put inhabited shells in a bucket
co, booze and recreational drugs?
I 11 bet the answers would be a lot and co'Ver them with boiling water.
Leave overnight and the next day a
different than Grosse Pointe. screwdriver will reach in the end
UPSET DEAR UPSET:
and the innards can be pulled oul
You'reon!
Okay, readers: Please estimate
for us, if you will, how much you
spend per month on:
Liquor~gs ( theiUegalkind)-­

Cigarettes -Lunches and snacks -CarClothes-, Recreation-Thanks. -HELEN AND SUE

leaving the shell clean. Wash with
detergent ~ater, then clear water
and drain SJid then the sbell can be
taken indoors with no odor. -- MRS ..
M.G.
Polly will send you me ci. her signed thank-you newspaper~oupon
clippers if she uses your favocite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write Polly's Pointers in
care of this newspaper.

fu:ance; Patty Hoffman, promotor
of h011pitality. Also Introduced were
Harry Roush, worshipful master of
Middleport Lodge 363, and chapter
advisior ol Meigs DeMoJay; Besilie
King, deputy grand matron of
District· 25, Order of the Eastern
Star; James Buchannon, melllber of
the Knights ci. the York Cross of
Honor; and Greg Bush, master
counselor of Meigs Cbapter, Oi'der
ofDeMolay.
Following the
installation
ceremony members and guest&amp; were
invited to the dining room which was
decorated In the red, green ani
white colors of the new honored
queen. Christmas cookies fl!ld punch
were served. A heart-tihaped cake
was the refreshment table centerpiece and was Inscribed
''Congratulations,Susama.
The hooored queen 's emblem is
the heart, her theme friendship, and
hermotto: "Halfofthefunofhavinll
a friend is being one yourself."

Gd~boMd"';;k~Ys $5;680,403 budget
Gallla County 's Local Board of has not been determined by the State
Education Wednesday night during Department of Education.
,
ltS armual organizational meeting . Other figures approved for the ·
approved a temporary ap- 1900 school year were lunchroom,
pr.opriation measure totaling .371,109.53; Bond Retirement Fund,
t:j,6t!0,403 In the General Fund.
$29,035; DPPF Fund, $12,000; Title I,
J;lpwever, that figure is expected to ' $45,000; Title VI B Fund, ~.ooo and
~jVell since no state foundation funds
Activity Fund, $10,000.
were included in that amount.
The budget was planned last JUly
::Since voters in the Gallia County and approved by the Gallia County
·Scbool District approved a two mill
Budget Ccmmission based upon the
operational levy last November, the
district's millage.
During • tbe organizational
district now qualifies , for parrreeting, Dr. David R~nnan, en.ticipation in the state foundation
pJ:ogram, based upon pupil
tering his third year as a"lllember ri
t~rollment and other factors, the
the board ci. education, was elected
~trict will be getting more than one
president succeeding James V.
million dollars in state funds. At this
Blevips. Blevins who served four
point, however, the exact amount
years as a board member did not

.,

.

618 E. MAIN ST.

UJearhaus

..

NOT

10% -

50%

Men's All Weather
REDUCED

20%

-50%

CHAPMAN SHOES

30%

DEADUNE JAN.lO
Deadline for entrles in the 1980
Dally Sentinel's Baby Derby sponsored by 32 area merchants is 5 p.m.
oo Thursday, Jan.lO.
A statement from the attending
pi\Ysician giving the time and
location of the baby must be at The
Sentinel office, 111 Court St., by the
deadline. The winner ci. the first
haby of the new year contest will
n:ceive gifts from the 32 merchants .
FUNDS RECEIVED
Auditor Thomas E.
F~rguson 's office announced the
January, 1980, distribution of
$40,039,~ in Aid to Dependent
Children to 470,243 recipients in
Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs County
received •111,021 for 1,353 recipients.

State

Skirts, Blouses, etc.

1

SPORTSWEAR h PRICE

REDUCED

~~bWT &amp; 20%-30%

COATS

~A~rSess &amp; Casual
REDUC
Men's Colored l;)ress

SHIRTS R
NOW

PANT SUITS

REDUCED 30%

1 Lot Ladies .

%
20

SKIRTS, JACKETS,
BLOUSES

20%
REDUCED

1 Lot Ladies

20%

BLAZERS

30%
REDUCED

Ladies

SLACKS

Men's Spurt

SHIRTS RE

RE

D

1 Rack

Men's Dress &amp; C:asual

HATS

.

.:»;,...._,~ Ladies

REDUCED

REDUCED
Ladies

·JSWEAtERS

-. ,

20%
20%

NO CHARGES -- NO LAYAWAYS-· NO EXCHANG.ES
RE,DUCED

SALE IS ON RIGHT NOW!

ALL MERCHANDISE.
FROM OUR .REGULAR STOCK

20%-30%
REDUCED

Ladies, Missy &amp; Half Size

"

Group of Men's Dress Shirts Reduced .... ... ......... 50%
Group Men 's Flannel Shirts Reduced
-- 20~. -50%

COAlS

20%

•VINYL- DENIM · CORDU~OY DOWN FILLED JACKETS .
•VELOUR SHIRTS - Solids &amp; Fancies··
•WRINKLE FREE QUIANAS DRESS SHIRTS·
.
•ENTIRE STOCK OF QullltD VESTS
•SPORT COATS
. - Sizes 36 to 46 .

SUITS &amp; SPORT COATS

.

.• ,.J

30%

.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions-RebeCca Ackerman,
Pomeroy; Mary Longenette, Reedsville; Elmer Melford, Ewington;
Mary Smith, Middleport; John
Powell, Portland; Herbert Rose,
Racine; Charles Harris, Reedsville;
Bessie Rudisill, Pomeroy,
Discharges--Clay Burns.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGF3JAN. Z.
Juanita Arthur, Charesel Broob,
J~ Browning, Erin Caldwell,
Gayle Drummood, Diana Fleming,
Mrs. Michael Harvey and daughter,
Sharoo Hlll,,~. Terry Jenkins and
. daughter, Michelle Randolph, Redford Riffe, Natasha Sommer, Grant
stanley, Marguerite Sterling, Mrs.
Donald Thacker and daughter, Wendy Wolfe, Diana WOodruff, Mildred ·
Zlnunerman.
BIRTHSJAN.2
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Morris, son,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Donny
Gilbert, dlluilfl~,Bidwell; Mt. and
Mrs. Harry Patton, SCIII, Buffalo, W.
Va.
,

20%-

LICm!S'

1

"fhe E'rly Bird Gets rhe Best Choice"

UJeathauS·

'

!,

'

'.

'

.

'

I

,

• • .MENS WEAR.,... , .,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

t

I

M

20%-30%

OFF

SUPER' SUEDE .SHIRTS . WERE '16.95

1 Casual Slacks - Polyester 9r Corduroy Reduced 25%
Samson1te Luggage Reduced .... .. ..................... 20%
All Men's Jogging SUits Reduced .................. .. .. 33%
All Florsheim Shoes Reduced .............. ............ 20% -

h - P-RICE

-......

NOT 30% - BUT

•WESTERN FLANNEL SHIRTS - S.M-l·Xt
•DISCO SHtRTS - Fancy Prints
•SWEATERS,.CARDIGANS &amp; PUU.OVERS

SUPER VALUES

1

20% -

Ladies Car &amp; Dress

JACKETS &amp;
CAR COATS

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

·DISCOUNTS

•

Men's Winter

Nineteen defendants were fined
and 13 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
wre Paul Steinmitz, Jr., Rutland,
two charges taking deer during ~las­
ed season, 60 days confinement on
each charge, one charge
spotlighting with possession of gun,
60 days confinement, •1 ,000 and
costs, 170 d·a ys confinement
OFF
suspended providing fine and costs
paid within 00 days, au hunting
rights suspended for three years and
one year probation; Stephen A. Norris, Portland, $5 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Cheryl R. Roseberry, Rt. 3,
Racine, Nonna Jean Fisher, Pt.
Pleasant, Loreli Meaige, Pt. Pleasant, Carl L. Tennant, New Haven,
•15 and costs each, speeding; Conley
D. Dudley, Mason, $10 and costa,
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
failure to yield; David Arlix, Harrisonville, •25 and costs, disorderly
conduct; Leo C. Stumbo, Bidwell, 1-------------.....;_-------~
•175 and costs, overload; Daniel
Peyton, Rt. 3, Albany, •1 '15 and
costs, overload; John M. Eberts,
Hamden, $127 and costs, overload;
Bennie R. Stumbo, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
~ and costa, overload; Steve R
Lambert, Rt. 1, Rutland, $25 and
casts, disturbing traps without permimlion; Thomas Davis, Proctorville, Edwin Florence, Pomeroy,
and John Warner, Pomeroy, •15 and
costs each speeding; ElJuna Milam,
Rutland, $10 and costs, failure to
yield; David J. Craig, . Rt. 1,
Rutland, $10 and costs, failure to
display tags; Thomas I. Arnott, Rt.
2, Racine, $10 and costs, speed.
Forfeiting ·bonds were Guy W.
Lee, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, $35.50 failure to
yield; Charles Fred Zeigler, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, $36.50, illegal passing;
AND
Jack Lee Johnson, Letart, W. Va.,
•
Mary A. Hoskins, Cbauncey, Perry
M. Poppe!, Gallipolis, and Timothy
A. Kime, Cuyahoga, $35.50 each,
speeding; KermethG. Slnclalr, Rt.1,
Shade, $36.50, no cycle endorsement; Jolm E. Partlow, Rt. 3,
•
Pomeroy, and Monty Hart, Rt. 1,
Hours:
9:30 to s,oo
Racine, ~ -50 each, DWI; Vltus
Mon . !hru Sal ,
Hartley, Pt. Pleasant, $35.50, illegal
9:30 to 8:00
passing; Marvin Buttrick, Logan,
Ftidar,
~5 ,50, unsafe vehicle;
Randy
Hayslett, Cincinnati; ~5.50, failure
2nd St.
to dislay registrtlon; Helena H.
ROY.O.
D'Augustino, Rt. 3, Albany, ~. 50,
no opera tors license.

WITH FURTHER

aranc

Appoin1ment Available But Not Necessary

'

(

:

,.

\

Com-

SALE CONTINUES

WI·NTER

2nd &amp; BROWN ST .
MASON, W.VA. ,,.,. .
OPEN TUES .
THURS. &amp;SAT.
9A.M.·5 P.M.
PHONE 773-9128

POMEROY,O.
Open 9 A.M. to
6 P.M. Weekdays,
.9-SSaturday
PHONE 9'12·3795

•PRE-WASHED JEANS BY WRANGLERS, MR. LEGGS, D.C. · &amp; STAnER

Dress Shirts Reduced .............................. 25%
Topcoats - All Weather Coats Reduced ......... 25%
Dress Slacks Reduced .. ..........~ ..... 20% • 25%
· Outerwear Reduced..(~~~:~:'d~~~~ .. ,...25% - 50%
Sweaters Reduced .... ....... .. ................... 25%
Dress Hats &amp; Neckwear Reduced ................ 20%
Sport Shirts..RedtJced ................... 2Q% -50%

**

THE iNCOME TAX PEOPLE

.CORDUROY SLACKS

Fine Furnishings &amp; Sports Wear Entire Stock

or MEN'S

.

ON ~FOU.OWING GROUP OF MERCHANDISE

'105 SU I'D) .. ... ..• ..... .• •..•...... .•. .•.....•.. '84.00
'135 SUITS ...... ...... ,....................... '101.00
'175 SUITS ............................ ......... •131.00
'195 SUITS ............. .. ..................... '146.00
'210 SUITS .. ... .. ............................ :•157.00
'285 SUITS ......... .. ........................ · '214.00

GROUP

•.

,,

driver ; Fred Fellure, janitor, and
Robert Ashley as a reserve basketball coach.
The board \lpproved tile payment
for liability insurance and performance bonds for board president
carman and treasurer Saunders in
the amount of $20,{0) each ll'orn '
Republic Franklin Insurance
pany.
.
During the county board meeting, .
a temporary appropriation totaling
$23,470 was approved.
·
The board went into executive
session to discuss personnel and
negotiations.

1--'---------------------

•SOOT DESTROYER
AND CHIMNEY
CLEANER

.•STOVE PIPES
SLEDGE HAMMERS
SPLITTING MALLS
SAWS
AXES

H&amp;R BLOCit

Entire Stocks

HART -SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX· JOHNNY CARSON
PALM BEAC!-J ·SEWELL SUITS

j_....

•FIRE SHOVELS •DAMPERS
•COAL BUCKETS •ELBOWS

We 're only human and once in a while we make
a mistake . but if we should make an error that
costs you additional tax, you pay only the tax .
Block pays any penalty and interest. We stand
behind our work .

A BIG

a few of the fantastic savings awaiting you.

CoWlty.Court

iWARM MORNING
&amp;
KING_
srovE
SUPPLIES~
.
*

pay any
mterest
and penalty
if we make
an error.

.

· Debbie Ratliff will&gt; has been employed in the Central Office for the
past two three years was hired as

********************************* ************************\-

"MONEY SAVING SA I.E"
A sale of quality men 's apparel that you cannot afford to miss .
Come in early while our selection is at its best. Listed here, are just

July.

.It-

Block ·

assistant treasurer at a salary of
'
$10,000 per year.
Jerri Davis was employed as a
secretary in ihe Central Office for
the remainder ol the school term.
Other personnel employed were
Cathy Heinke as librarian at North
GaUla lllgh School ; Gil Price,
assistant basketbaU coach at Southwestern High School; Dci.ard Fetty
as janitor at Bidwell-Porter --iind
Henry Swick as janitor at Bidwell·
Porter and Vinton Elementary
Schools.
Resignations accepted included
those of Rhonda Rogers, a bus

interim treasurer since the
resignation of Mrs. Naomi Beman in

''"

SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

NOT

seek reelection last fall . He was
presented a plaque by Carman.
J .E. (Dick) Cremeens, the
veteran of the board, was named
vice-president.
The oath of ci.flce was administered to newly elected members, Fred Dee! and BWyHaUey.
Board compensation was setat$40
per regular meeting and board
meetings were set for the fourth
Mooday of each month following the
Gallia County Board d Education
meetings.
ln other action, the board employed Mrs. Jewell Saunders as
treasurer -on a twoi'ear contract.
Her salary was set ·Ill •15,000 per
year. Mrs. Saunders has served as

•FLOOR BOARDS .•GRATES

.. MEN'S WEAR_... ..

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

-

'

30%

'

.

.

TOENi&gt;~E ,: ·

In t,~eilla. COuitt~ PJias·•

court

I

F. • PI!Wt, Rt. •2,
, Racine, · incl Hiirrt R. ,, Pettit,
Pomeroy, flied for pMI,on rJ.
UJntta

marriage. .

. :
;

DRESSES
SPORTSWEAR -

40% OFF

SLEEPWEAR

OFF
-

1/3

..

CURRENT
SAVING
RA 5

PASSBOOK

5 lf4%

Compounded Daily

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .......~~~:~~~ .5•1 :~~~~-.. 51h%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~.~~::-:~~ ~.~:~·~.. _.... 6%

4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .......~~~:~.~:':~~:~~~-~.... .71A%

&amp;·YEAR CERTIFICATE ...... ~:~~':'.~':'.~~·.~.·:~ ..... JlJ2%
ERTilFCAJE ............................
. Minimum $1,000.00 ]o/1.%
8YEARC
4
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE

..

$10,000 minimum. Interest rate equal to the rate or 112 day treasury
!&gt;Ill rate. As determined at weekly au ell on.

Current rate 11.88% effective January 3·9, 1980.
Substantial penalty required for early withdrawal.

. '·
A Home Bank ·
For

Meigs County
..

People

'

'' ·
SEEit
A marriage llcenae lilu l.slued to
Wyatt EnrJn Robinlon, 19, Rt. . 4.
Pometoy, and Donna Marie.AdldJ;is,

2f1Rt. 4, Pomeroy •.

·coATS
SNOWSUITS
JACKETS

.
•.

'

~
~

'

RACINE
HOME
. NATIONAL
'

BANK
-.'

Radne,Ohlj

�/

DICKTRACY ·

Your Best·Buys Are }.;ound in the Sentinel Classifieds.
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad · •

1$ Worde or Under

mlnlstr1trix of the Estate

of
Ida
M.
Deceased
Plainllff

Chris 1ie,

ld.oy

a.rae
1.25

UO

UIS

uo

!d.oyo

Y.S.

6days

EDNA N. WOOD,
2010 Greenwich Road
• Wadsworth, Ohio 44281

uo

3.00

3.71

Each word over tbe mln1mum
,n worda b i cents per word per
day. Ads runnlrui otheothancoo·
secutl~ e day.11 wiU 1Jf! chaf1e'a at

Etal.,
Defendants .

•

Cull
1.00

2dlya

No . 22704
NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYI:OR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43, Sl BBERT,
WEST VIRGINIA; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEE$ ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC ·
UTORS AND ASSIGN~ IF
ANY OF EACH OF 1HE
FOLlOWING ; IDA M .
CHRIS'TIE, DECEASED;
DOUGLAS
YOUNG ,
' DECEASED ; RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE ·
D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DECEASED ; DELLA RIF·
FLE ,
DECEASED ;
FLORENCE
HENRY,
DECEASED;
DAVID
KING, DE&lt;;EASED; BER ·
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROLD
KING , DECEASED;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A. K .A. LANA
DORFER, DECEASED;
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED ;
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED;
OLEN
DOERFER, DECEASED;
DAYTON
YOUNG ,
DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING ,
DECEASED; SAMUEL •J .
CHRISTIE, DECEASED;
A'ND
THOMAS
F.
TAYLOR DECEASED .
Plaintiff has brought this
action naming you as
defendants in the above ·
named court by filing her
complaint on November
13th. 1979. The Complaint
recites that each of you is
possibly an heir -at -law and
next of kin of Ida M .
Christie, Deceased ; that at
the time of her death Ida
M . Christie was seized of
the entire interest of the
real estate described in the
FIRST COUNT ofthe Com ·
plaint, which said . real
estate is described as
follows;
Situate in the County of
MeiQs. in the State of Ohio
and tn the Township of Bed ·
ford, and bounded and
described as follows :
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
the Soytheast qyarter of
Section No. Seven, Town
No. Three and Range No .
Thirteen of the Ohio Com ·
pany •s Purchase; thence
North far enough so that by
running due West to tli'e
center of the State Road;
thence along the eenter of
said road to the section
line; 1hence East to the
place of beginning so that II
shall contain thirty acres,
bYt SYbiectto all legal high ·
ways.
The
aforesaid
described reol e•tote being
the same real estate c ln·
veyed by William Smith ,
Jr. to LYcetta Smith by
deed bearing date of the
15th. day ot September
187~ and recorded In Vol.
.c5. .-ages IIJ7 and 408 of the
records of deeds in the
Recorder's Office of Meigs
County, Ohio.
And being the sa me
property conveyed bY Gyy
A. Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith ,
Deceased, to samuel J.
Christie and Ida M .
CHristie . by deed dated
June 1, 192.5, and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
the Deed Records of Meigs
Coynty Ohio.
EXCEPTING one·sixth
of an acre more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M. Christie to
Cecil c. Hellman and Allen
C. Hellman by deed recur ·
ded in Vol. 2~7, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs CoYn ·
ty, OhiO.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Christie was seited of ·
the undivided one-fourth
part of the following
described rear estate :
The following described
real estate situated in the
State of Ohio, In the County
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : II being near
the middle of the Soyth half
of the North half of Section
No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range
13 Ohio Company's Pur ·
chase and on the South line
of said South half of the
North half and beginn ing at
the Northwest corner of
James A . Young's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 21!7 Deg .
East 7 chains and 75 links
to the county road ; thence
SOYth -40 Deg . East s chains
and 40 links along said
road; thence SOuth 68 Deg .
East 1 chain and 141inks to
Finnan Smith's West line ;
thence South 2'12 Deg. West
3 chains and AO links to his
Southwest corner; thence
West to the pia&lt;• of begin ·
ning, containln~ two acres
more or less .
Also the following real ·
estate situated in Section
No. 18 Town 2 and Range
13 of lhe Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as
follows&lt;_to-wlt : Bqginning
at the &gt;&lt;&gt;Uthwest corner ot
George Young •s lot In said
Section ; thence SOuth 8
rods and 7 feet; thence
East 19 rOds; thence North
8 rOds and 7 teet; thence
West 19 rOds to t~tace of
beglnhlng, con fam 1nQOne

acre .

the 1day rate .

in

IN LOVING memory of my
dear husband, Rolph Spen·
cer, who passed away
January 3, 1972.
Just a toughl of sweet
remembrance
Just a memory fond and
true
•
JYst a token of affection
And a heartache still for
YOY .
Sadly missed by wife,
Harriet.

m&lt;mory. Card of T!lanb

an&lt;i ObltuAry o 6 cont. per ...-.1,
$300 mlnimwn

vance.

Cuh In ad·

MobUe Home salea and Yonl
SBles are accepted ooly wt~
cash with order. Z$ cent cbarSt
for ada caJTying Box

Number~

Care of The Sentinel.
The Publiaher reserve.
right to edit or reject any

uJ

ICI8

deemed obJectional. Th~
Publlaher will nol be rapotll!blo

for more than one incorrect In"

sertlon.

Phone 992·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday

Noon on Saturday

Tuesday
lhruFrtday
4P.M.

tM day before publlcaUon
&amp;utday
&lt;P.M.
Friday aftemoon

chestnut aboYt 3 feet In
diameter; thence South
70'12 degrees West 6.94 rods
to a stake 1 foot SoYth of
white oak 4 feet In
diameter; thence South
591J• DeQ . West 8.331/J rod~
to a stake 3 feet East of a
chestnyt tree; thence South
49 112 Deg. West 6.212 rods to
a stake 2'12 feet South of on
ash 61n . ln diameter; then·
ce South 49'1• Deg . west
8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet
West of white ook tree 3
feet in diameter; thence
South 69 Deg. West 14.515
rOds to center of road;
thence in an easterly dlrec ·
tlon fo llowing said road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar tree 61n. In diameter
about 51.97 rods; thence ,
North to place of beginning ·
62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25sqYare rOds .
Also&lt;beginning ata stone
at the ::,oufheast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln. In diameter; lhence in
an Easterly direction
following said road about
24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence west 20.84
rods; thence North to
aforesaid sugar tree or.to
place &lt;&gt;f beginning, con ·
talnlng 1112 acre.
Reference Deed: Vol.
135, Page 241 Deed Recor·
ds'rMeigs Count{• Ohio.
he object o the Com ·
plaint Is to sell the Interest
of Ida M . Christie In eoch
parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and costs of ad·
ministering the estate .
Plaintiff demonds the
real estate described In the
F I RST COUNT be sold;
that the entire Interest in
the real estate described in
SECOND COUNT be sold;
that the rights, Interests
and liens of all parties may
be fylly determined, ad·
usted ·and protected, and
hat Plaintiff be authorized
·and ordered to sell rhe en ·
tire interest In the real
estate
described
In
SECOND
COUNT ~ ·
cording to the statutes In
such case made and
pro11ided
and for such
other relfet as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to an ·
swer the Complaint within
twenty..,ight days after the
last publication of this
notice which will be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the last pYblicatlon wil l
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as permitted by
the Ohio RYles of Civil
Procedure within the frme
stated ,
\. udgmenl
by
default wi I be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the com·
plaint.
Robert E. Buck
Judge and Ex ·OIIiclo Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division
( 12) 27f (1 J 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,
(217, 7c

l

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VICTOR H.
LEIFHEIT, DECEASED
Case No. 22891
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 14, 1979, In
the Meigs CoYnty Probate
Court, Case No. 2-2891, Edwin P. Leifheit, 3007 Bor bee Avenue, Grove City
Ohio -&lt;1123, was appointed
Executor of the estate of
V i ctor
H.
Leifheit,
·deceased , late of R. D. 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Also. the following real
Robert E. Buck
estate situated in Section
Probate JydgeNo. 18, Town 2 and Range
Cierk
No. 12 of the Ohio Com · (12J 20. 27 (1 J 3, Jtc
pany •s Purchase and boun ·
ded and described as
follows, to-wit ; Beginning
LEG-AL NOTICE
at George Yoyng •s · Notice Is hereby given
SOYtheast corner in said that the onrwal meeting of
section; thence East 21
the stockholders of The
rods, to the road ; thence In
Farmers Bank and Savings
a westerly direction along Company of 211 Wnt
said road 1S ~Ods '!!nd 10 Second Street, Pomeroy,
feet ; thence We•t 20 rods;
Ohio, will be held at the ofthence 15 rods and 10feetto fice of said Bonk · In
the place of beginning, con- Pomeroy! Ohio, according
talnlng 2acres.
to Its by- aws. on the third
Al•o.
the
following Wednesday 01 January.
desc'rlbed real estate In 1980, at 4:00 P.M. for llie
Salisbury Township, Meigs P\frpose 01 electing direc·
coonty, 01110. Beginning at tors and the fransacllon of
a stone corMr East 70 ..5A5 such other bYsiness as may
rods of the Northwest cor· properly come before said
ner of W. S. Wills 69'12 acre meeting.
·
lot near a willow tree about
Pay I E . Ktoes,
30 Inches in diameter;
secretary
thence SOuth 8.85 rods to a De&lt;;. 30, Jan. 3, 9, IS
stake East of a doYble

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our
thanks to relatives. friends
an~l)elghbors for the sym·
pamy and kindness shown
dYrlng the Illness and death ·
of our father Earl Nelson.
We also w ish to thank Rev.
Cecil · Cox, the B igony ·
Jordon Fyneral Home and
all who assisted us in any
wav.
The Nelson Family.
I WISH to thank everyone
who helped me in any way
last Wednesday when fny
car caught on II re ot
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital. YoYr help was
very mYch appreciated.
Ellen Rought, Pomeroy .
WE
WISH to
thonk
everyone who has been so
nice to us since Karl
became ill. We wish to
thank those who had Opal
in their homes and those
who took her OUt to eat, the
ones who made the trips
back and forth to and from
the hospital. to Rev. and
Mrs. Harvey Koch who
stood by us through it oil, to
those whO sent flowrs, car·
ds, for the visits ahd
telephone calls, bYt most of
all for the many prayers
that went up for YS. We also
wish to thank our neighbors
and Christian friends who
brought food, flowers and
gills dYring the Christmas
season. We wUI never
forget all these kindnesses.
May God Bless eoch one of
you .
Karl and Opal Kloes . .

Notices
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY. 99j.
6260. Pets available for
adOption and Information
service .
Investigative
Agent.

GUN SHOOT every Synday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gyn CIYb,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy ScoutTroop 2~9.
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and Silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
psy cash or certified checK
tor antiques and collec ·
tibles"' or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
gyns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Coli 614·
767 -3167 or 557-3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 196.1 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.
MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular monthly meeting, Sat., Jan. Sth
at Shade Valley Club
House. Bring a friend.

TWO BEDROOM fyrnlshed
trailer in country setting
off Rt. 7, 6 miles from
Pomeroy . Fr.eezer and ex·
Ira storage, S13S plu5
Ylilltles and lawn core.
Deposit
required . .
Available after Jan . 1. 985·
3949.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china ,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
ches. Willing to pay top
dollar . Call 1·592 ·2973

.,.

OLD COl NS, pocket wa1
ches, closs rings, Ifill
bonds, diamonds. Gold o•·
silver. Call J . A . Wamslt&gt;
742 ·2331. Treasure Cw
Coin Shop, AthenS, OH .
6.162.

:J\, EORT
one
...m apt.. stove and
Jerator ,
newly
•-'led. wll furnish, If
•, • ry . S:IOO per month
.,,wun, $200 security.
1511 after 5 p.m.

~

Hourst·l M., W., F .
Olher limn by •ppolntment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

FIREWOOD FOR sale.
Now taking orders. Will
deliver, 742·:10515.
..

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver corns,
silverware, other gold and
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antlqye
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992 ·6370.

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

SILVER DOLLARS, $13
AND
UP,
SILVER
CHANGE,
$12
PER
DOLLAR, GOLD CO INS
AND ITEMS AT DAILY
MARKET PRICES. CON ·
TACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, M ID·
DLEPORT, OH. OR CALL
992·3476.

HOUSE COAL, lump or
stoker, will deliver. 7~2 ·
2183.
APPLES - ROME beayty
apples at Sol per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchord, SR
689.

Pomeroy, o.

JAMES KEESEE

,

PH. 992-2772 ·

CALL 992-7544

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. RYth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care prodYCI$. Western
boots. Children •s $15.50 .
AdYits $29.0Q.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor ·outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 61~ -.u6·779S.
ONE
REDTICK
coon
hound, 2 trained beagles, 3
white English bylldog pup·
pies. 3 rabbits, 2 does, 1
buck . 742 ·2520.
·
HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 002 .. 6260 .
He~lthy, shots, and wor·
med. Border collie types,
Irish Setter, English Setter
with puppies, shepherd
type. PYt a cold nose in
your life. Kittens, kiHens,
kittens, all · shapes, all
sizes.
ONE redlick coon hoYnd, 2
trained beagles, 3 white
English bulldog pyppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck. 742·
2521.

r---:':':1~""'~:::-:;;i':· -..,:;"

HOTPOI.fo,IJ
and

GENERAL
.ELECTRIC
HHdQuartera
Appliances

mes ., 1ervfci

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

II' '

R$ Hysell

f

Garage

'

HIGH SCHOOL gradyote
with grocery store experience. Apply at Twin
City Gateway, no phone
calls.
·
WAITRESS WANTED,
over 21. Night shift. Frien·
dly Tavern, 992·9975 .
TEACHERS, community
workers ; sell World Book.
Extra Income . . • Send
resume to Box 46, Racine,
OH.

Wanted to Buy
-PAYING S1Ul AND (Jp
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
$13.20 FOR SILVER
CHANGE, GOLD COINS
AND MIS&lt;:. ITEMS AT
HONEST UP·TO · DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARGER
SHOP. • MIDDLEPORT,
OH. OR CALL 992· ·3~76 AF ·
TER S;OO P.M .

Plymouth Scotnp,
custom Interior, 6 cyl.,
outo., $1800 or trade. 7.U ·
2-151 .

1~

1

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gill
Both New &amp; Used

$undins
.
Hammond Organs

;...... ee tiiVO. Racine, o.··,

,.

h
I
C!
Phone 949·2118 evehigs
alter s p.m '. weeKeMs
after 11noon.
11·19-1 mo.

-

1978 OI..DS 98 Regency 2·
door . hardtop, fu II power
and options. 992·3381 or 992·
7.()5.

$370 per thousand for en·
veiopes yoo mall. Postage
paid. Free. MAP. Box ~7.
Buchtel, OH -15716.

1916 112 ton pi~kYP truck In
good condition. 992 ..5786
from 9-S.p.m.

NORTH

ANNIE
... uHLE55 HE
RECOG~IZED

.'

THE UTTLE

12·13·pd. :

A6DUCTOR 1

I

and

PAINTING AND sond·
blasting, · Free estimates.
Call9~9 ·2686 .
:

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New Phone nym ·
ber, 742 -2951 . Service to
schools and home since
1965.

DOZER, END Loodotr1
brush hog . Will do
basements, ponds, brusw,
II mber, land clearing.
Charles Butcher. 742·:2940 .
SEWING
MA:CHINE
Repairs, service,
all
makes.
992 ·22U.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomero).
AYihorlzed Singer Salts
ond Service.. We sharpj$'1
Scissors.
EXCAVATING,
dozer,
loader and backhoe wor~:
dump trucks and lo·boys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
top soil, limestone ond
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089,
ntvht phone 992·3525 or 9~ ·
5232..
.
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,
septic
systems, dozer, backhoe.
Rl. 1.(). Phone 1 C6UJ 698·
7331 or 7~2·2593.
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
·celled?
Lost
your
operotor's license? Phone
992-21.().
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery; various sizes of
pool kits. Do ·lt-voYr5ell or
let us Install for yoo. o .
Bymgardner Soles, Inc.
992-5724.

WINNIE

.+fOiliNG DAY!
DON'T YOU

REMEMBER?

OHbYEAHJ
PI?. MISE11

"TOifEi.P
YOU, DIDN'T

I?

WELL LET'S 0 ET IT OVER
WITH : .. ,9!ST! MAYBE

111EN I CAN GET _ __,

OOME SLEEP
AROUND HERE .

:

~,..

.

. ., .

in whl!:h neither side knew
whose · !land it was, South
became declarer in five clubs .
. West's lead of the heart king
· won the lint tritk. If he had
switched to a spadl'at the second trtck, declarer would
have hall no play for his con·
tract alld there would be no
·. story. : .
Howrwer, W~st passively
returned a hoart, lorc ing
declarer to ruf.l - in dummy.
South now led a small · dta . mond from duriuny that Eas!
won with his king. Declarer
made the key play at this
trick. When East won his dia mond king, South unblocked

.,.

~:~

a

--"1+

,

~

I'M PLUMB ASHAMED
TO-SHOW M'l FACE
OVERTHAR

- ... •,

....

LIKE NEW - Qlrlet country llvlnb In this tree ·
bedroorn, .2 bath ranch. over an acre of gi"OIJnd with
a split rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air CC&gt;nd . 1-44,900.00.

&lt;·~·

·20,33.

-

POMEROY-- A beaYIIfYI little starter home • or
retirement coYple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
living room - nice kltcheo. Full basement.
$17,500.00.
.

WI-ll{ SHOU.LDN'T.I SE
INVITED TO A PARW?

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom brick only 1 block
from town,low utilities . A bargain at $12,500.
RUTLAND -2 homes on Salem StrHt. Take your ·
choice or buY both and rentthem. 112,000 each.

CALL 992~2342.

GO AHEAD. AND TELL
! COME ON, TELL ME!

1- j

o·B
..

E~:.~FQ

·

:i,:\

·

· j: .

··'

..

TO BliP .

..

Hmtstny
He;ufquartcn

'

·II

'

9:3o-Movie "Stunts Unlimited"
One letter slmpl:t -·~!'''~ for.~nother. In this sample A is
6,13 .
used for the
(he two O's, etc. Single !etten,
10 :oo-Dallas 8,10; Perspedlve on
apostrophes,
formation .of the words are all
Gieatness 17 ; News 20; David
hints. Eacll,day ·
are dllferent.
' .
·
SYssklnd 33 .
,,,, I• 1 j ...
11 :!»-News 3,6,8,10, U,1S; Last of
..
.
tile Wild 17; Monty Python's
I' lying Circus 33. ,
Q · . tf A P :f1; D
P 'N.Q
·
. ·~· 11 :31&gt;-.-Tonight 3,15; Charlie's
p ·J 0 • :~
:4tl!lels 6; Movie "The Death
.....,
liiiucy" 8; ABC News 331 Movie
' ~
'
.:!l,);.li! · ?:Oaughter of Dr. Jekyll" 10;
. M Z ti..--~
-...,le " Firstto Fight" 13; Movie
Q~.~.~
~acula Ha$ Risen from the
A R D Q .f.;~; .. : lve" 17.
.•
, . ' ' i2 :'
.FBI 6;
1 :00- Midnlghl
I K M Z .•,
. Special 3.15; Movie "Twisted
BE EM- , ,
&amp;rain " 10; News 13.
l i l0.:.News
.17; . 1:35-Movla
.~ ~ :·
·~•cle Beach Party" . 17. •
.._\&lt;. ·~:~ ews 3; 3: 35---Movle "~.:on•
1
~7c
ons of • Nazi Spy" 17.
~

',

~.

I

'

&amp;
i,

REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-11191
ASSOCIATES
Roger&amp; DoHieTumer
' 742-2474
.J Hn Trussell 949·2UO
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

MiDDLEPORt, OHIO .

R'tGtH, PUNJA5!

HOW ABOU'f I

~ISSY'S

l'ay.

Bill Childs, Branch Meneger, ~1111 "2-244,
ll~ey Downing, BrOiler, Hohlt "2-3731 .

SY GOLL'I, YOU'RE

.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 7~2·2328 .

·w

m 1l

Let Us ·

BECALM

FRIOAY,JANUARY 4,1980
5:45---Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13; 6 o00-700 Club 6.8; PTL
+A863
Club 15 ; Health Field 10.
+Q!4
6: 15---World at Large 17 ; 6 ;3()Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6 :45Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good
Morning West Virginia 13 ; 6 :55·A~2
• K ti ' "
Nvws 13 .
7:00',-,Today 3,15; Good Morning
+92 ·~:.
SOl/Til
•. .
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
•
·-.,_,
Batman 10; Three Stooges. Little
• Av
·~:.
Rascals 17 ; 7: 15-A.M . Weather
• 83
·' ;.'.
+QH
·--::
33 .
7 :30-Famlly Affair 10; Studio See
+AKJ 1076
33 ; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
Vulnerable: Both
10.
Dealer: North
his nine.
8·00-Capt . Kangaroo 8. 10; Family
East returned
spade, but
Affair 17; Sesame St. 33 .
Weol
Nortb Eaol .~ S..tb
·
declarer
was
in
controL
He
8:30--Romper Room 17.
Pass 2 •
. won the ·ace an4.drew trumps
9:00C,.Sob Brayn 3; Big Valley 6;
s•' . . Pill$ ·.;
. :.J&gt;au
~
.., in twCf. round:l,,:-.lt was now .
Oil&amp; Day At A Time 10; Porky
...
. ;:..•. ~
:: :
- open crtds for aeclarer.
Pig 8; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
·South kDew that East had
Show 17; Chot with Country
Opening lead:9 K ' ·
5larted with 4·5·2·2 distribuMusic Artist. Doc Williams 33.
tion because of his original
9 . 3Q-Bob Newhart 8; Hogan's
opening bid. When South
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17;
cashed his diamoad queen an~
Country Moods 33.
East dropped tha. IO, it was a
By Oswald Juoby
10:011-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
simple matter for declarer to
aad Alan Soolal!
N lght 6; Beat the Clock B. tO;
• ··. .
fiuesse West's marked jack of
Morning Magazine 13 ; Movie
Tournament playeri. are diamonds and throw his spade
·"Arrivederci. Baby!" 17 ; Gospel
very fond of _c ooventllibs. At loser &lt;ln dummy's good
f;tesurrectlon 33.
limes these bids can lie belp· diamolld .
•
10 : 311--Holtywood Squares 3, 15;
lui at arrivint at the proper •
None- of this would have ·
$20,000 Pyram i d 13 ; Andy
contract
_
·. been possible if declarer
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10
However, 'someti!MII too .hadn' t unblocked the nme of
10: 55---CBS News 8; House Coli 10 .
much information is &amp;Jven to dial,"onds.
11 :00-High Rol lers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
the Opponents.
[NEWSPAPER ENTERPRl~E ASSN )
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8,10;
East's two-diamond openElec . Co . 20 ; In Performance at
ing bid is a popular tourna(Do you have a question lor
Wolf Trap 33.
ment convention called Flan- Jhe experts? Write " Ask the
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
nery, named • artfr. · the ··Experts," care of !his newspaFamily Feud 6,13: Sesame Sj. 20.
inventor Bill Flan~ of /)6r. Individual questions will
12 : 00-Newscenter
3;
News
Pitllburgh, Pa. It cl9ileribed be answered if accompanl~ .,
6,1,10,13; Mindreaders 15.
an ~ning bid of 1·\-Uo 16
by stamped, Hlf-addrass9d
12 : 15-Movle "Five
Brande;edr~
high-card polrits c:~nlDg . envelopf18. The most lnferesrWomen" 17; 12 :3()-Ryan's Hope
four spades, fin! 11aart1 and ·~· lng que$1/ons will be used In
6,13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; .
any minor suit distribution.
. this column and will receive
Health F leld 15.
After a competjtive'.u«:lion
copies ()f JACOBY MODERN.)
1:Oil-Days of Our Lives.3, 15; All My
.'
Children 6,13 ; Young &amp; the
,..
Restless 8, 10; Where the Twisted
Layrei ·Grows 33 .
1: ~As The World Turns 8,10;
Cross CoY ntry 33; 2: Oil-Doctors
3,15; One Life to Live 6,13.
2: 25'--News.17; 2,: 3()-Anolher World
3,15; Guiding Light 8,10;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:ro-General Hospital 6. 13; I_Love
~ucy 17; Upstairs. Downstairs
10; Sugar in the Gourd 33.
3:3o-&lt;lne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over
wear
~asy 33.
13HerriBon
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
fiiiQ.role
Plvs 15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Y•tenlay's Aaawer
15 Nailtlcal
Hillbillies
8; Sesame St. 20,33;
16 In Zl Wild
Gomer
Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13;
~
ve~
· outburst
Spettreman 17 .
II Once a GJ. ·
It "TeA and
Z'l Scribble
4;3o:...t.one Ranger 3; Petticoat
Junction 8: Brady Bunch 10;
Synipiuby" 0 Tabasco
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
star':
' ;. laborer
Gillglan's Is. 17.
21 Rojll abode 33 Czech river · 5: Oil-Carol Burnell 3;; •Sanford &amp;
Z% Generally
34 Had on
Sj)n 8; Mister Rogers Neigh.
23 Theatrical 31 Give it a go
l&gt;O'rhood 20,33 ; Mary Tyler
J'i\pore 10; My Three Sons 17.
luminary
.37 Drunk
s::J02-;.Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; ' Eiec . Co. 20; Happy Doys
Again 13; Mash 10; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33 .
6 o ~News 3.8. 10,13; Zoom 20,33;
.Carol Burnett 17 .'
6:30&gt;--NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
C~trol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17, Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
UIO--Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
3's. A Crowd 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Style IS; Sanford &amp;
SOli 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: ~Price Is Right 3; Newlywed
Game 6 ; ·Family Feud 10;
Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavett 33;
Pop Goes The Country 13,15; All
In The Family 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:011-Shlrley 3,15; BAD Cats 6,13;
l~redibte
Hulk
8,10 ;
W'liohlngton Week In Review
:10,33 ; Movie "The Conqueror
Wgrm" 17 .
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33.
·- · 9 :· 0~Sensatlonal. Wonderful,
:·:
·\Vi:cky '705 3,15; DYkes ot
-: ~~.aJzard 8,10; Lord·Moyntbatten

.7

,,

1975 4-dor Ford Landau,
I&gt;.S., P.B., all power .. Ex ce.llel'\t condition. S2495.
call 992'530~. or 992·2238.

9~9 -2181.

LA NKY MADMAN

..:;s, .

•JU13 ·

TOTAl- !?e(AL.l)

WILL ~AUL limestone and
gravel. Also. lime hauling
ond spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-155 .~

608 E.
.. MAIN. .
POMEf!O:V,
992·2259
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, · 2
apartments, walk to
town, alwavs rented,
ca llfor details.
RUTLAND - 2 story
frame &amp; brick, up to 4
Bdrms..
2 boths,
fireplace,
1112 acres.
$26,881.00.
SYRACUSE - 3 year
ord ronch, 3 Bdrms.,
equipped kit., base·
ment, gar age, other
tearures. $4.4,000.00.
CHESTER Small
farm, 25 acres, fencing
barn, remodeled home,
new kit.. . new bath,oll
carpeted, eTc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel·
lng. $16,200.00.
POMEROY- Beautiful
home all featyres. ex·
cellent condition, myst
be seen to be ap·
preclated. $.11),000.00.
BUILDING SITES -In
new subdivision, start at
$2,SOO.OO.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES
AT 11 V:t% Interest, 3G
yn. ta p.oy, 3% down on
J st 125,000.00, 5% on
balance. VA. No Down

~··

.·....'Iii

. "'l,, ·.

~.'1'65.~1..~,1 /t.M

S &amp; G Corpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Rea5onable
rates. Scotchgyord. 992·
6309 or H2·234t.

-::R:-e-a""'lE=s--:t-a.,-te--:f:-o-r-=sa--:1:-e \

~ ~

(Answers tomorrow)

"tlele ats royalt y m a ca rd game - AN ACE

,: - . _,'7; ·
BORN LOSER

Wrl!P Your :
Pipes for .
Cold Weather •

.

Jumt:&gt;tes StGUN

. Answer

.

JIM &amp;WAYNE'S
PWMBING REPAIR :•

-

r}'I r r xr n r x x)

Convtritioltbld
telle. alt..
.:..

j: ._______

.RACINE,O.
949-274tor
992-7314
12-28-pd,

HANDS F'~OM
. G&amp;T"'t1N6 ~OU6H.

;; ·

'• ·

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call992-2852
or 992-7235

MANiC:URI€-T

KEPT HE~ C::l.IENI'$

~~w arra. the circled letters to

GuarantHd Work
FrH Estimates
A Her l P.M. 992-5547 ,
12·13-2 mo . pd
1•
_w

V. C. YOUNG Ill

0

FIVE ROOMS and bath, all
electric home, 1 acre of
land. ?92·2711.

I

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

~ates

VERY NICE 3 bedroom
trailer. 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land. 7~2·2542 or,
7~2-2324
for complete
details.

I

Gu1ter work, down
SPOUts, some concrete,

PETE SIMPSO"
Rep, For

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepero,
toasters, irons, ail small
appl iances. Lawn mower.
· Next to State• Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
'3825.

I

··tJ

1

• Answer: sHE

RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concreto Finlshl_ng

~

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

&amp; Famous Name Brand .

BRADFORD, Ayctioneer,
Complete Service. P~one
9~9 ·2487 or 949 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

J

HOW THE

Jcarm the !Urprise anewer , a s sug ·

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS lOw
As:5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY-

CASH IN ON every con·
5erllatron, full or part time.
Timely' revolutionary new
healing prOdYct now being
Introduced. Ground floor
opportynlfy to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment .
of Sl.OOO 5eCYred by in·
ventory. Send name, ad·
dress ond home no. to Myco
Ther,mal Art Saln, c-o Box
729·M ; The Oally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, OH 457111.

cam.rw ·m • ·sP!led.
Hurst rear spoiler, block on
block. Cragars, other ex·
tras. Excellent 5hape. Call

T~URSDAY, JANUARY 3,1,10
8:00-B uck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
· Mindy
6. 13 ;
Waltons
8;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
ill Concer t 20; College Basketball
10; M ov ie " The Joker Is Wi ld"
17; CarToera Three 3~.
8:30-Benson 6, 13; ·sports : Closeup
33.
9:00-Frank Sinotra 3,15; Bar ney
Miller 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8;
Sneak Previews 20,33.
9 : ~Soap 6,1 3; Camera Three 20 ;
Dancing Disco 33 .
tO o00-20·20 6,13 : Knots Londlng
8,10; News 20; Soundstage 33 .
10 o30- 0v er Easy 10 ; 1'0 : 45-,C:iVit lsallon 11 .
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10 , 13,15; Dick
Cavett 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 :3()-Tonight 3, 15;, Pollee Womon
6, 13 o Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " The Com ic" 10.
11 :45--Movle " Stella" 17 ; 12 :4()Baretta 6, 13.
1:00- Tomorrow J ; News lS ; 1 :30-Madlgan 8.
1 : 4~ews 17; L45-Movle "Sky
Commando" 17 ; 1: so-News 13.
3: 15-'-Untouchables 17; 4: 1~n
Up 17 .

gosted by the above cartoon

HOMES FOR SALE

Business Opp'ty

.,

P0660IIIe IT. CHRI!I~ HOW IMNY
Tl/,11:9 00 YOU HAFTA 1!110 TOLD
T'~TAY OUTA CLAUDIA'~ PI'N i

' JUMPIIJ' I!ILUI: &amp;LAZEi7l
NOW .rve SI:E:III
!VeJtYTHIIJ8 l

Quality construction at
roasonable rates.

..

197~

..

.I

4:30·!1&lt;_

condllicin~. 992-2371 or

1974 JEEP Cherokee, posl·
track, all new radial winter
II res .
&lt;;om-p letely
overhaYied and checked
out for winter. A -1 condition. 614-985 ·~209.

....., \

. .

a

CAPI'AINEASY

992·6114.

Help Wanted

Television
Viewing

. by Henr1 ~ r~ old and Bob Lee

••

one lttt~r to e!ch aquare,~~form
!our ord1nary words.
!~~
. ~.;. .

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Phon@ 992-5682

12-7·1 mo.

THREE BEDROOM home,
approx. 1 acre. Good
location . SR 689. Call 992·
3389.

1975 Monte Carlo, excellent

-t ..

Unscramble these four J~ .

Yesterday s

Roofing, gutters, and
on St . Rt. 124 !award ·
downspouts.
Free
: Rutland.
Estimates. AU work , 1
guaranteed. 20 years ex.
Auto&amp;Truck
perlence. Call Athens, : I
Repair
cottect, Gerald Clark
797-4157 or Tom Hoskins
Also Transmission
797-2745.
Repair

FARM ON SR ,1.(! above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992-7$59.

1

so YOU STRUCK
WITH YOUR FIST'?
PREFERRED POL-ICE

~

11

'

11 - 1~ · mo .

10·19·1 mo.

GLASS Fl REPLACE doors
Services Offered
with black finish plus
HAVE
VACANCY
In
tYbular grate with blower.
private home for elderly
like new. Asking $100. Call
. only , Board, room and
992·7866.
laYndry . 992·6022.
No
drinking allowed.
NICE PIGS lor sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 9~9·2857.
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
WOOD BURNING stoves
tile. Fred Miller, 992-6338.
- firep loce Inserts ot the
Riverside Fireplace, 514 E.
Main, Pomeroy . Open
Auctions
Tues. ·Frl., Sat. 9-1, H.
BIG AUCTION every Wi!d.,,
7 pm, Hartford CommunitY
REMINGTON 1100 12 ga,
Center, Hartford, WV, ~
with 2 bbls., deerslayer,
miles
obove Pomeroy·
full choke. Remington 870
Mason Bridge.
20 ga. shotgyn with 2 bbls..
deersloyer, fyll choke.
Single shot 410 shotgun Ml
Real Estate for Sale
choke~ 22 Magnum Morfin
clip rifle. 22 long and short
FINANCINGVA·FHA LO·
rifle. -40 lb. pull bow with ot·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
tachable qylver. GYn rack,
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
holds 5 guns, has drawer. · OR
REFINANCE .
992-5295.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
61~·592 •3051.
WHITE WHIRLPOOL
dryer, good running condition. S12S. Call985 · ~276.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swr mm 1ng
or fishing. 9 rooms, bath,
UPRIGHT plono. Priced to
carpeted. 3 Ia 17 acres
sell. Good condition. 742·
available. Located approx . .
2303.
7 m lies from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . .u6·2359 after 7.
17 cubic foot refrigerator,
$100. 2 Firestone snow
SIX ROOM hOYSe and bath·
tires. Call 992-2759.
In Rutland, OH, on corner
of Bryant Rd. and Main St.,
CURED
firewood,
out of water. No reosonable
reasonably priced. 742- otter refused. Phone 7.Q·
2544.
2063.

Pets for Sale

•

Ail types roof work, now
or repair gytfers •ncl
downspouts,
gutter
cti•nlog and p.olntlng.
All work guaran-.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Coli H-ard
949-2862

dows
Free Estimate

Hammond Oraans

COAL .
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, terti llzer, dog
food, arid all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .•
E. Main St .• Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

~ ~

-

ICALPeA , .~·

el nsulation
• Starin Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement Win -

7734.

For Sale

,

•

Vinyl &amp;
.Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

,\Ill ROOMS and bath.
Gas forced air furnace. 9-19·

MARTIN'S APPRA ISAL
stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in tMJytng
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
nlt\)re. One piece or com·
plete hou5ehold. Gold,
silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors. pocket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992-6370.

STOCK
CAR.
Howe
chassis, 350 ~ bolt main
Chevy, Franklin qylck
change rear end, motor
built to maxlmym, all new
parts. New and e)(tra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
$5,000. Can be seen on a
Saturday, Twp. Rd. 27,
Dexter, at Slater's residen·
ce .

Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

lf• mile off At: 7 by·pass

evenings .

LOST: Female blue tick
coon dog and male walker
In Cherry Ridge area.
Phone 992 ·5556.

FINANCIN~

POMEROY - Duplex un·
furnished apartment, $150
per mo. ply• ytilltles. $150
security . Coli 992 ·7511 after
Sp.m

•

·

J&amp;L B1DWN
INSULATION

REAL ESTATE

ONE BEDROOM fyrnlshed
house. Adults only . 992·
2S98.

~980.

Lost and Found

LOST: Snowville area .
Female
blue
tick
coonhound . If oeen,c all
Pay I Phillips at 742 -2209.

TWO BEDROOM trailer.
AdYits only 992 ·332 •.

WANTED o SAW logs .
Payment upon delivery to
our yord, 7:30 to 3;30 week ·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow, OH . 678 ·

Auto Safes

LOST : Reward for walker
hound,
Long Hollow
vicinity . 304-675·1799.

3 AND 4 RM tyrnished apts. Phone 992·5&lt;13.4.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes. brass beds, Iron
!;&gt;l!ds. desks, etc., complete
households. Write M,D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call992 ·n60.

,

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Royle 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
992-7479.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton . Bundled
slob. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Oh io Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN
SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m .
At their byi ldlngln Ba5han.
Factory chokegyns only.

For Rent

wanted to Buy_

In Memory

WANT AD
CHARGES

. \ nl\l~~ TliAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

11-Tbe DallY ~linel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., 'lbutsday, Jan. 3, 19(10

:J- The Daily Sentinel, Ml&lt;kllep&lt;rt-Pcmeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 3,1980

. .....l

•

~

..,.....

·1

�/

DICKTRACY ·

Your Best·Buys Are }.;ound in the Sentinel Classifieds.
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
EDNA N. WOOD as Ad · •

1$ Worde or Under

mlnlstr1trix of the Estate

of
Ida
M.
Deceased
Plainllff

Chris 1ie,

ld.oy

a.rae
1.25

UO

UIS

uo

!d.oyo

Y.S.

6days

EDNA N. WOOD,
2010 Greenwich Road
• Wadsworth, Ohio 44281

uo

3.00

3.71

Each word over tbe mln1mum
,n worda b i cents per word per
day. Ads runnlrui otheothancoo·
secutl~ e day.11 wiU 1Jf! chaf1e'a at

Etal.,
Defendants .

•

Cull
1.00

2dlya

No . 22704
NOTICE
TO THE DEFENDANT,
THOMAS F. TAYI:OR ,
WHOSE RESIDENCE IS
UNKNOWN BUT WHOSE
LAST KNOWN ADDRESS
WAS BOX 43, Sl BBERT,
WEST VIRGINIA; THE
UNKNOWN
HEIRS,
DEVISEES, LEGATEES ,
DISTRIBUTEE$ ,
AD ·
MINISTRATORS, EXEC ·
UTORS AND ASSIGN~ IF
ANY OF EACH OF 1HE
FOLlOWING ; IDA M .
CHRIS'TIE, DECEASED;
DOUGLAS
YOUNG ,
' DECEASED ; RANA KING
LIGHTFOOT, DECEASE ·
D; GLADYS GOEGLEIN,
DECEASED ; DELLA RIF·
FLE ,
DECEASED ;
FLORENCE
HENRY,
DECEASED;
DAVID
KING, DE&lt;;EASED; BER ·
NARD
KING ,
DECEASED; HAROLD
KING , DECEASED;
LENA
DOERFER,
DECEASED A. K .A. LANA
DORFER, DECEASED;
OTHO
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
LAURA
KNAPP,
DECEASED ;
HENRY DOERFER ,
DECEASED;
OLEN
DOERFER, DECEASED;
DAYTON
YOUNG ,
DECEASED;
ADA
YOUNG
DANIELS,
DECEASED; GEORGE
YOUNG,
DECEASED;
FRED
KING ,
DECEASED; SAMUEL •J .
CHRISTIE, DECEASED;
A'ND
THOMAS
F.
TAYLOR DECEASED .
Plaintiff has brought this
action naming you as
defendants in the above ·
named court by filing her
complaint on November
13th. 1979. The Complaint
recites that each of you is
possibly an heir -at -law and
next of kin of Ida M .
Christie, Deceased ; that at
the time of her death Ida
M . Christie was seized of
the entire interest of the
real estate described in the
FIRST COUNT ofthe Com ·
plaint, which said . real
estate is described as
follows;
Situate in the County of
MeiQs. in the State of Ohio
and tn the Township of Bed ·
ford, and bounded and
described as follows :
Beginning at the Southeast
corner of the West half of
the Soytheast qyarter of
Section No. Seven, Town
No. Three and Range No .
Thirteen of the Ohio Com ·
pany •s Purchase; thence
North far enough so that by
running due West to tli'e
center of the State Road;
thence along the eenter of
said road to the section
line; 1hence East to the
place of beginning so that II
shall contain thirty acres,
bYt SYbiectto all legal high ·
ways.
The
aforesaid
described reol e•tote being
the same real estate c ln·
veyed by William Smith ,
Jr. to LYcetta Smith by
deed bearing date of the
15th. day ot September
187~ and recorded In Vol.
.c5. .-ages IIJ7 and 408 of the
records of deeds in the
Recorder's Office of Meigs
County, Ohio.
And being the sa me
property conveyed bY Gyy
A. Smith, Executor of the
Estate of Lucetta Smith ,
Deceased, to samuel J.
Christie and Ida M .
CHristie . by deed dated
June 1, 192.5, and recorded
in Book 127, at Page 448 of
the Deed Records of Meigs
Coynty Ohio.
EXCEPTING one·sixth
of an acre more or less con ·
veyed by Ida M. Christie to
Cecil c. Hellman and Allen
C. Hellman by deed recur ·
ded in Vol. 2~7, Page 483
Deed Records, Meigs CoYn ·
ty, OhiO.
In SECOND COUNT Ida
M . Christie was seited of ·
the undivided one-fourth
part of the following
described rear estate :
The following described
real estate situated in the
State of Ohio, In the County
of Meigs and in Salisbury
Township : II being near
the middle of the Soyth half
of the North half of Section
No. 18, Town No. 2 in Range
13 Ohio Company's Pur ·
chase and on the South line
of said South half of the
North half and beginn ing at
the Northwest corner of
James A . Young's 36 acre
lot ; thence north 21!7 Deg .
East 7 chains and 75 links
to the county road ; thence
SOYth -40 Deg . East s chains
and 40 links along said
road; thence SOuth 68 Deg .
East 1 chain and 141inks to
Finnan Smith's West line ;
thence South 2'12 Deg. West
3 chains and AO links to his
Southwest corner; thence
West to the pia&lt;• of begin ·
ning, containln~ two acres
more or less .
Also the following real ·
estate situated in Section
No. 18 Town 2 and Range
13 of lhe Ohio Company's
Purchase and described as
follows&lt;_to-wlt : Bqginning
at the &gt;&lt;&gt;Uthwest corner ot
George Young •s lot In said
Section ; thence SOuth 8
rods and 7 feet; thence
East 19 rOds; thence North
8 rOds and 7 teet; thence
West 19 rOds to t~tace of
beglnhlng, con fam 1nQOne

acre .

the 1day rate .

in

IN LOVING memory of my
dear husband, Rolph Spen·
cer, who passed away
January 3, 1972.
Just a toughl of sweet
remembrance
Just a memory fond and
true
•
JYst a token of affection
And a heartache still for
YOY .
Sadly missed by wife,
Harriet.

m&lt;mory. Card of T!lanb

an&lt;i ObltuAry o 6 cont. per ...-.1,
$300 mlnimwn

vance.

Cuh In ad·

MobUe Home salea and Yonl
SBles are accepted ooly wt~
cash with order. Z$ cent cbarSt
for ada caJTying Box

Number~

Care of The Sentinel.
The Publiaher reserve.
right to edit or reject any

uJ

ICI8

deemed obJectional. Th~
Publlaher will nol be rapotll!blo

for more than one incorrect In"

sertlon.

Phone 992·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday

Noon on Saturday

Tuesday
lhruFrtday
4P.M.

tM day before publlcaUon
&amp;utday
&lt;P.M.
Friday aftemoon

chestnut aboYt 3 feet In
diameter; thence South
70'12 degrees West 6.94 rods
to a stake 1 foot SoYth of
white oak 4 feet In
diameter; thence South
591J• DeQ . West 8.331/J rod~
to a stake 3 feet East of a
chestnyt tree; thence South
49 112 Deg. West 6.212 rods to
a stake 2'12 feet South of on
ash 61n . ln diameter; then·
ce South 49'1• Deg . west
8.272 rods to a stake 3 feet
West of white ook tree 3
feet in diameter; thence
South 69 Deg. West 14.515
rOds to center of road;
thence in an easterly dlrec ·
tlon fo llowing said road to a
stone corner on South side
of road 31 feet East of
Sugar tree 61n. In diameter
about 51.97 rods; thence ,
North to place of beginning ·
62.483 rods containing 7
acres 25sqYare rOds .
Also&lt;beginning ata stone
at the ::,oufheast corner of 7
acres above mentioned 31
feet from said sugar tree 6
ln. In diameter; lhence in
an Easterly direction
following said road about
24.84 rods to Ida Young's 2
acre lot; thence west 20.84
rods; thence North to
aforesaid sugar tree or.to
place &lt;&gt;f beginning, con ·
talnlng 1112 acre.
Reference Deed: Vol.
135, Page 241 Deed Recor·
ds'rMeigs Count{• Ohio.
he object o the Com ·
plaint Is to sell the Interest
of Ida M . Christie In eoch
parcel of real estate In or·
der to pay the debts of the
estate and costs of ad·
ministering the estate .
Plaintiff demonds the
real estate described In the
F I RST COUNT be sold;
that the entire Interest in
the real estate described in
SECOND COUNT be sold;
that the rights, Interests
and liens of all parties may
be fylly determined, ad·
usted ·and protected, and
hat Plaintiff be authorized
·and ordered to sell rhe en ·
tire interest In the real
estate
described
In
SECOND
COUNT ~ ·
cording to the statutes In
such case made and
pro11ided
and for such
other relfet as to which she
may be entitled to.
You are required to an ·
swer the Complaint within
twenty..,ight days after the
last publication of this
notice which will be
published once each week
for six successive weeks
and the last pYblicatlon wil l
be made on the 7th . day of
February, 1980.
In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as permitted by
the Ohio RYles of Civil
Procedure within the frme
stated ,
\. udgmenl
by
default wi I be rendered
against you for the relief
demanded in the com·
plaint.
Robert E. Buck
Judge and Ex ·OIIiclo Clerk
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio
Probate Division
( 12) 27f (1 J 3, 10, 17, 24, 31,
(217, 7c

l

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF VICTOR H.
LEIFHEIT, DECEASED
Case No. 22891
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On December 14, 1979, In
the Meigs CoYnty Probate
Court, Case No. 2-2891, Edwin P. Leifheit, 3007 Bor bee Avenue, Grove City
Ohio -&lt;1123, was appointed
Executor of the estate of
V i ctor
H.
Leifheit,
·deceased , late of R. D. 2,
Pomeroy, Ohio.

Also. the following real
Robert E. Buck
estate situated in Section
Probate JydgeNo. 18, Town 2 and Range
Cierk
No. 12 of the Ohio Com · (12J 20. 27 (1 J 3, Jtc
pany •s Purchase and boun ·
ded and described as
follows, to-wit ; Beginning
LEG-AL NOTICE
at George Yoyng •s · Notice Is hereby given
SOYtheast corner in said that the onrwal meeting of
section; thence East 21
the stockholders of The
rods, to the road ; thence In
Farmers Bank and Savings
a westerly direction along Company of 211 Wnt
said road 1S ~Ods '!!nd 10 Second Street, Pomeroy,
feet ; thence We•t 20 rods;
Ohio, will be held at the ofthence 15 rods and 10feetto fice of said Bonk · In
the place of beginning, con- Pomeroy! Ohio, according
talnlng 2acres.
to Its by- aws. on the third
Al•o.
the
following Wednesday 01 January.
desc'rlbed real estate In 1980, at 4:00 P.M. for llie
Salisbury Township, Meigs P\frpose 01 electing direc·
coonty, 01110. Beginning at tors and the fransacllon of
a stone corMr East 70 ..5A5 such other bYsiness as may
rods of the Northwest cor· properly come before said
ner of W. S. Wills 69'12 acre meeting.
·
lot near a willow tree about
Pay I E . Ktoes,
30 Inches in diameter;
secretary
thence SOuth 8.85 rods to a De&lt;;. 30, Jan. 3, 9, IS
stake East of a doYble

Card of Thanks
WE WISH to express our
thanks to relatives. friends
an~l)elghbors for the sym·
pamy and kindness shown
dYrlng the Illness and death ·
of our father Earl Nelson.
We also w ish to thank Rev.
Cecil · Cox, the B igony ·
Jordon Fyneral Home and
all who assisted us in any
wav.
The Nelson Family.
I WISH to thank everyone
who helped me in any way
last Wednesday when fny
car caught on II re ot
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital. YoYr help was
very mYch appreciated.
Ellen Rought, Pomeroy .
WE
WISH to
thonk
everyone who has been so
nice to us since Karl
became ill. We wish to
thank those who had Opal
in their homes and those
who took her OUt to eat, the
ones who made the trips
back and forth to and from
the hospital. to Rev. and
Mrs. Harvey Koch who
stood by us through it oil, to
those whO sent flowrs, car·
ds, for the visits ahd
telephone calls, bYt most of
all for the many prayers
that went up for YS. We also
wish to thank our neighbors
and Christian friends who
brought food, flowers and
gills dYring the Christmas
season. We wUI never
forget all these kindnesses.
May God Bless eoch one of
you .
Karl and Opal Kloes . .

Notices
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY. 99j.
6260. Pets available for
adOption and Information
service .
Investigative
Agent.

GUN SHOOT every Synday
12:00. Factory choke only .
Corn Hollow Gyn CIYb,
Rutland . Proceeds donated
to Boy ScoutTroop 2~9.
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and Silver
coins, rings, jewelry, etc .
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOUJ Will
psy cash or certified checK
tor antiques and collec ·
tibles"' or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
gyns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Coli 614·
767 -3167 or 557-3411.
BUYING U.S. SILVER
COl NS DATED 196.1 OR
EARLIER
(ANY
AMOUNT! . DON'T LOSE
MONEY, SIMPLY PICK
UP THE PHONE AND
DIAL
614 · 992 · 5113,
BROWN'S.
MEIGS County Fish and
Game Club regular monthly meeting, Sat., Jan. Sth
at Shade Valley Club
House. Bring a friend.

TWO BEDROOM fyrnlshed
trailer in country setting
off Rt. 7, 6 miles from
Pomeroy . Fr.eezer and ex·
Ira storage, S13S plu5
Ylilltles and lawn core.
Deposit
required . .
Available after Jan . 1. 985·
3949.

ANTIQUES,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china ,
anything. See or call Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992·
3161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wat·
ches. Willing to pay top
dollar . Call 1·592 ·2973

.,.

OLD COl NS, pocket wa1
ches, closs rings, Ifill
bonds, diamonds. Gold o•·
silver. Call J . A . Wamslt&gt;
742 ·2331. Treasure Cw
Coin Shop, AthenS, OH .
6.162.

:J\, EORT
one
...m apt.. stove and
Jerator ,
newly
•-'led. wll furnish, If
•, • ry . S:IOO per month
.,,wun, $200 security.
1511 after 5 p.m.

~

Hourst·l M., W., F .
Olher limn by •ppolntment.
107 Sycamore (Rear

FIREWOOD FOR sale.
Now taking orders. Will
deliver, 742·:10515.
..

WILL PAY TOP dollar for
gold and silver corns,
silverware, other gold and
silver Items, jewelry, old
glass frames and antlqye
furniture. Will buy one
piece or household. Call
992 ·6370.

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, State Route 689.
Phone Wilkesville, 669·
3785.

SILVER DOLLARS, $13
AND
UP,
SILVER
CHANGE,
$12
PER
DOLLAR, GOLD CO INS
AND ITEMS AT DAILY
MARKET PRICES. CON ·
TACT ED BURKETT
BARBER SHOP, M ID·
DLEPORT, OH. OR CALL
992·3476.

HOUSE COAL, lump or
stoker, will deliver. 7~2 ·
2183.
APPLES - ROME beayty
apples at Sol per bu . Best for
apple butter . Call 669·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchord, SR
689.

Pomeroy, o.

JAMES KEESEE

,

PH. 992-2772 ·

CALL 992-7544

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western. Saddles and
harness.
Horses
and
ponies. RYth Reeves. 614·
698 ·3290. Bordlng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care prodYCI$. Western
boots. Children •s $15.50 .
AdYits $29.0Q.
RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING.
Judy Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS.
Boarding, all breeds. Clean
indoor ·outdoor facilities.
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans. 61~ -.u6·779S.
ONE
REDTICK
coon
hound, 2 trained beagles, 3
white English bylldog pup·
pies. 3 rabbits, 2 does, 1
buck . 742 ·2520.
·
HUMANE Society pets for
adoption, 002 .. 6260 .
He~lthy, shots, and wor·
med. Border collie types,
Irish Setter, English Setter
with puppies, shepherd
type. PYt a cold nose in
your life. Kittens, kiHens,
kittens, all · shapes, all
sizes.
ONE redlick coon hoYnd, 2
trained beagles, 3 white
English bulldog pyppies, 3
rabbits, 2 does, 1 buck. 742·
2521.

r---:':':1~""'~:::-:;;i':· -..,:;"

HOTPOI.fo,IJ
and

GENERAL
.ELECTRIC
HHdQuartera
Appliances

mes ., 1ervfci

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

II' '

R$ Hysell

f

Garage

'

HIGH SCHOOL gradyote
with grocery store experience. Apply at Twin
City Gateway, no phone
calls.
·
WAITRESS WANTED,
over 21. Night shift. Frien·
dly Tavern, 992·9975 .
TEACHERS, community
workers ; sell World Book.
Extra Income . . • Send
resume to Box 46, Racine,
OH.

Wanted to Buy
-PAYING S1Ul AND (Jp
FOR SILVER DOLLARS,
$13.20 FOR SILVER
CHANGE, GOLD COINS
AND MIS&lt;:. ITEMS AT
HONEST UP·TO · DATE
PRICES. CONTACT ED
BURKETT
BARGER
SHOP. • MIDDLEPORT,
OH. OR CALL 992· ·3~76 AF ·
TER S;OO P.M .

Plymouth Scotnp,
custom Interior, 6 cyl.,
outo., $1800 or trade. 7.U ·
2-151 .

1~

1

PIANOS
Great Christmas Gill
Both New &amp; Used

$undins
.
Hammond Organs

;...... ee tiiVO. Racine, o.··,

,.

h
I
C!
Phone 949·2118 evehigs
alter s p.m '. weeKeMs
after 11noon.
11·19-1 mo.

-

1978 OI..DS 98 Regency 2·
door . hardtop, fu II power
and options. 992·3381 or 992·
7.()5.

$370 per thousand for en·
veiopes yoo mall. Postage
paid. Free. MAP. Box ~7.
Buchtel, OH -15716.

1916 112 ton pi~kYP truck In
good condition. 992 ..5786
from 9-S.p.m.

NORTH

ANNIE
... uHLE55 HE
RECOG~IZED

.'

THE UTTLE

12·13·pd. :

A6DUCTOR 1

I

and

PAINTING AND sond·
blasting, · Free estimates.
Call9~9 ·2686 .
:

PIANO TUNING. Lane
Daniels. New Phone nym ·
ber, 742 -2951 . Service to
schools and home since
1965.

DOZER, END Loodotr1
brush hog . Will do
basements, ponds, brusw,
II mber, land clearing.
Charles Butcher. 742·:2940 .
SEWING
MA:CHINE
Repairs, service,
all
makes.
992 ·22U.
The
Fabric Shop, Pomero).
AYihorlzed Singer Salts
ond Service.. We sharpj$'1
Scissors.
EXCAVATING,
dozer,
loader and backhoe wor~:
dump trucks and lo·boys
for hire, will haul fill dirt,
top soil, limestone ond
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992-7089,
ntvht phone 992·3525 or 9~ ·
5232..
.
HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,
septic
systems, dozer, backhoe.
Rl. 1.(). Phone 1 C6UJ 698·
7331 or 7~2·2593.
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
·celled?
Lost
your
operotor's license? Phone
992-21.().
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery; various sizes of
pool kits. Do ·lt-voYr5ell or
let us Install for yoo. o .
Bymgardner Soles, Inc.
992-5724.

WINNIE

.+fOiliNG DAY!
DON'T YOU

REMEMBER?

OHbYEAHJ
PI?. MISE11

"TOifEi.P
YOU, DIDN'T

I?

WELL LET'S 0 ET IT OVER
WITH : .. ,9!ST! MAYBE

111EN I CAN GET _ __,

OOME SLEEP
AROUND HERE .

:

~,..

.

. ., .

in whl!:h neither side knew
whose · !land it was, South
became declarer in five clubs .
. West's lead of the heart king
· won the lint tritk. If he had
switched to a spadl'at the second trtck, declarer would
have hall no play for his con·
tract alld there would be no
·. story. : .
Howrwer, W~st passively
returned a hoart, lorc ing
declarer to ruf.l - in dummy.
South now led a small · dta . mond from duriuny that Eas!
won with his king. Declarer
made the key play at this
trick. When East won his dia mond king, South unblocked

.,.

~:~

a

--"1+

,

~

I'M PLUMB ASHAMED
TO-SHOW M'l FACE
OVERTHAR

- ... •,

....

LIKE NEW - Qlrlet country llvlnb In this tree ·
bedroorn, .2 bath ranch. over an acre of gi"OIJnd with
a split rail fence, garage and workshop. Fireplace,
central heat and air CC&gt;nd . 1-44,900.00.

&lt;·~·

·20,33.

-

POMEROY-- A beaYIIfYI little starter home • or
retirement coYple . Two bedroom and bath. Large
living room - nice kltcheo. Full basement.
$17,500.00.
.

WI-ll{ SHOU.LDN'T.I SE
INVITED TO A PARW?

MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom brick only 1 block
from town,low utilities . A bargain at $12,500.
RUTLAND -2 homes on Salem StrHt. Take your ·
choice or buY both and rentthem. 112,000 each.

CALL 992~2342.

GO AHEAD. AND TELL
! COME ON, TELL ME!

1- j

o·B
..

E~:.~FQ

·

:i,:\

·

· j: .

··'

..

TO BliP .

..

Hmtstny
He;ufquartcn

'

·II

'

9:3o-Movie "Stunts Unlimited"
One letter slmpl:t -·~!'''~ for.~nother. In this sample A is
6,13 .
used for the
(he two O's, etc. Single !etten,
10 :oo-Dallas 8,10; Perspedlve on
apostrophes,
formation .of the words are all
Gieatness 17 ; News 20; David
hints. Eacll,day ·
are dllferent.
' .
·
SYssklnd 33 .
,,,, I• 1 j ...
11 :!»-News 3,6,8,10, U,1S; Last of
..
.
tile Wild 17; Monty Python's
I' lying Circus 33. ,
Q · . tf A P :f1; D
P 'N.Q
·
. ·~· 11 :31&gt;-.-Tonight 3,15; Charlie's
p ·J 0 • :~
:4tl!lels 6; Movie "The Death
.....,
liiiucy" 8; ABC News 331 Movie
' ~
'
.:!l,);.li! · ?:Oaughter of Dr. Jekyll" 10;
. M Z ti..--~
-...,le " Firstto Fight" 13; Movie
Q~.~.~
~acula Ha$ Risen from the
A R D Q .f.;~; .. : lve" 17.
.•
, . ' ' i2 :'
.FBI 6;
1 :00- Midnlghl
I K M Z .•,
. Special 3.15; Movie "Twisted
BE EM- , ,
&amp;rain " 10; News 13.
l i l0.:.News
.17; . 1:35-Movla
.~ ~ :·
·~•cle Beach Party" . 17. •
.._\&lt;. ·~:~ ews 3; 3: 35---Movle "~.:on•
1
~7c
ons of • Nazi Spy" 17.
~

',

~.

I

'

&amp;
i,

REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-11191
ASSOCIATES
Roger&amp; DoHieTumer
' 742-2474
.J Hn Trussell 949·2UO
OFFICE PHONE
992·2259

MiDDLEPORt, OHIO .

R'tGtH, PUNJA5!

HOW ABOU'f I

~ISSY'S

l'ay.

Bill Childs, Branch Meneger, ~1111 "2-244,
ll~ey Downing, BrOiler, Hohlt "2-3731 .

SY GOLL'I, YOU'RE

.

WALL PAPERING
painting. 7~2·2328 .

·w

m 1l

Let Us ·

BECALM

FRIOAY,JANUARY 4,1980
5:45---Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club 13; 6 o00-700 Club 6.8; PTL
+A863
Club 15 ; Health Field 10.
+Q!4
6: 15---World at Large 17 ; 6 ;3()Kidsworld 10; News 17 ; 6 :45Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good
Morning West Virginia 13 ; 6 :55·A~2
• K ti ' "
Nvws 13 .
7:00',-,Today 3,15; Good Morning
+92 ·~:.
SOl/Til
•. .
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
•
·-.,_,
Batman 10; Three Stooges. Little
• Av
·~:.
Rascals 17 ; 7: 15-A.M . Weather
• 83
·' ;.'.
+QH
·--::
33 .
7 :30-Famlly Affair 10; Studio See
+AKJ 1076
33 ; 7:55-Chuck While Reports
Vulnerable: Both
10.
Dealer: North
his nine.
8·00-Capt . Kangaroo 8. 10; Family
East returned
spade, but
Affair 17; Sesame St. 33 .
Weol
Nortb Eaol .~ S..tb
·
declarer
was
in
controL
He
8:30--Romper Room 17.
Pass 2 •
. won the ·ace an4.drew trumps
9:00C,.Sob Brayn 3; Big Valley 6;
s•' . . Pill$ ·.;
. :.J&gt;au
~
.., in twCf. round:l,,:-.lt was now .
Oil&amp; Day At A Time 10; Porky
...
. ;:..•. ~
:: :
- open crtds for aeclarer.
Pig 8; Phil Donahue 13,15; Lucy
·South kDew that East had
Show 17; Chot with Country
Opening lead:9 K ' ·
5larted with 4·5·2·2 distribuMusic Artist. Doc Williams 33.
tion because of his original
9 . 3Q-Bob Newhart 8; Hogan's
opening bid. When South
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17;
cashed his diamoad queen an~
Country Moods 33.
East dropped tha. IO, it was a
By Oswald Juoby
10:011-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
simple matter for declarer to
aad Alan Soolal!
N lght 6; Beat the Clock B. tO;
• ··. .
fiuesse West's marked jack of
Morning Magazine 13 ; Movie
Tournament playeri. are diamonds and throw his spade
·"Arrivederci. Baby!" 17 ; Gospel
very fond of _c ooventllibs. At loser &lt;ln dummy's good
f;tesurrectlon 33.
limes these bids can lie belp· diamolld .
•
10 : 311--Holtywood Squares 3, 15;
lui at arrivint at the proper •
None- of this would have ·
$20,000 Pyram i d 13 ; Andy
contract
_
·. been possible if declarer
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10
However, 'someti!MII too .hadn' t unblocked the nme of
10: 55---CBS News 8; House Coli 10 .
much information is &amp;Jven to dial,"onds.
11 :00-High Rol lers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
the Opponents.
[NEWSPAPER ENTERPRl~E ASSN )
Shirley 6,13; Price is Right 8,10;
East's two-diamond openElec . Co . 20 ; In Performance at
ing bid is a popular tourna(Do you have a question lor
Wolf Trap 33.
ment convention called Flan- Jhe experts? Write " Ask the
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
nery, named • artfr. · the ··Experts," care of !his newspaFamily Feud 6,13: Sesame Sj. 20.
inventor Bill Flan~ of /)6r. Individual questions will
12 : 00-Newscenter
3;
News
Pitllburgh, Pa. It cl9ileribed be answered if accompanl~ .,
6,1,10,13; Mindreaders 15.
an ~ning bid of 1·\-Uo 16
by stamped, Hlf-addrass9d
12 : 15-Movle "Five
Brande;edr~
high-card polrits c:~nlDg . envelopf18. The most lnferesrWomen" 17; 12 :3()-Ryan's Hope
four spades, fin! 11aart1 and ·~· lng que$1/ons will be used In
6,13 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; .
any minor suit distribution.
. this column and will receive
Health F leld 15.
After a competjtive'.u«:lion
copies ()f JACOBY MODERN.)
1:Oil-Days of Our Lives.3, 15; All My
.'
Children 6,13 ; Young &amp; the
,..
Restless 8, 10; Where the Twisted
Layrei ·Grows 33 .
1: ~As The World Turns 8,10;
Cross CoY ntry 33; 2: Oil-Doctors
3,15; One Life to Live 6,13.
2: 25'--News.17; 2,: 3()-Anolher World
3,15; Guiding Light 8,10;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:ro-General Hospital 6. 13; I_Love
~ucy 17; Upstairs. Downstairs
10; Sugar in the Gourd 33.
3:3o-&lt;lne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over
wear
~asy 33.
13HerriBon
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
fiiiQ.role
Plvs 15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Y•tenlay's Aaawer
15 Nailtlcal
Hillbillies
8; Sesame St. 20,33;
16 In Zl Wild
Gomer
Pyle
10; Real McCoys 13;
~
ve~
· outburst
Spettreman 17 .
II Once a GJ. ·
It "TeA and
Z'l Scribble
4;3o:...t.one Ranger 3; Petticoat
Junction 8: Brady Bunch 10;
Synipiuby" 0 Tabasco
Tom &amp; Jerry 13; Merv Griffin 15;
star':
' ;. laborer
Gillglan's Is. 17.
21 Rojll abode 33 Czech river · 5: Oil-Carol Burnell 3;; •Sanford &amp;
Z% Generally
34 Had on
Sj)n 8; Mister Rogers Neigh.
23 Theatrical 31 Give it a go
l&gt;O'rhood 20,33 ; Mary Tyler
J'i\pore 10; My Three Sons 17.
luminary
.37 Drunk
s::J02-;.Mash 3; News 6; Gomer Pyle
8; ' Eiec . Co. 20; Happy Doys
Again 13; Mash 10; I Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33 .
6 o ~News 3.8. 10,13; Zoom 20,33;
.Carol Burnett 17 .'
6:30&gt;--NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
C~trol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17, Villa Alegre 20;
Wild Wild World of Animals 33.
UIO--Cross-Wits 3; Tic Tac Dough
3's. A Crowd 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Style IS; Sanford &amp;
SOli 17; Dick Cavett 20.
7: ~Price Is Right 3; Newlywed
Game 6 ; ·Family Feud 10;
Joker's Wild 8; Dick Cavett 33;
Pop Goes The Country 13,15; All
In The Family 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20.
8:011-Shlrley 3,15; BAD Cats 6,13;
l~redibte
Hulk
8,10 ;
W'liohlngton Week In Review
:10,33 ; Movie "The Conqueror
Wgrm" 17 .
8:30-Wall Street Week 20,33.
·- · 9 :· 0~Sensatlonal. Wonderful,
:·:
·\Vi:cky '705 3,15; DYkes ot
-: ~~.aJzard 8,10; Lord·Moyntbatten

.7

,,

1975 4-dor Ford Landau,
I&gt;.S., P.B., all power .. Ex ce.llel'\t condition. S2495.
call 992'530~. or 992·2238.

9~9 -2181.

LA NKY MADMAN

..:;s, .

•JU13 ·

TOTAl- !?e(AL.l)

WILL ~AUL limestone and
gravel. Also. lime hauling
ond spreading. Leo Morris
Trucking. Phone 742·2-155 .~

608 E.
.. MAIN. .
POMEf!O:V,
992·2259
NEW LISTING - In·
come producing, · 2
apartments, walk to
town, alwavs rented,
ca llfor details.
RUTLAND - 2 story
frame &amp; brick, up to 4
Bdrms..
2 boths,
fireplace,
1112 acres.
$26,881.00.
SYRACUSE - 3 year
ord ronch, 3 Bdrms.,
equipped kit., base·
ment, gar age, other
tearures. $4.4,000.00.
CHESTER Small
farm, 25 acres, fencing
barn, remodeled home,
new kit.. . new bath,oll
carpeted, eTc. $38,950.00.
MIDDLEPORT 1
floor plan home, 2
Bdrms., large lot, some
carpeting and remodel·
lng. $16,200.00.
POMEROY- Beautiful
home all featyres. ex·
cellent condition, myst
be seen to be ap·
preclated. $.11),000.00.
BUILDING SITES -In
new subdivision, start at
$2,SOO.OO.
WE HAVE FINANCING
AVAILABLE
FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES
AT 11 V:t% Interest, 3G
yn. ta p.oy, 3% down on
J st 125,000.00, 5% on
balance. VA. No Down

~··

.·....'Iii

. "'l,, ·.

~.'1'65.~1..~,1 /t.M

S &amp; G Corpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned .
Free
estimate.
Rea5onable
rates. Scotchgyord. 992·
6309 or H2·234t.

-::R:-e-a""'lE=s--:t-a.,-te--:f:-o-r-=sa--:1:-e \

~ ~

(Answers tomorrow)

"tlele ats royalt y m a ca rd game - AN ACE

,: - . _,'7; ·
BORN LOSER

Wrl!P Your :
Pipes for .
Cold Weather •

.

Jumt:&gt;tes StGUN

. Answer

.

JIM &amp;WAYNE'S
PWMBING REPAIR :•

-

r}'I r r xr n r x x)

Convtritioltbld
telle. alt..
.:..

j: ._______

.RACINE,O.
949-274tor
992-7314
12-28-pd,

HANDS F'~OM
. G&amp;T"'t1N6 ~OU6H.

;; ·

'• ·

Cheap Rates
Quality Service
Call992-2852
or 992-7235

MANiC:URI€-T

KEPT HE~ C::l.IENI'$

~~w arra. the circled letters to

GuarantHd Work
FrH Estimates
A Her l P.M. 992-5547 ,
12·13-2 mo . pd
1•
_w

V. C. YOUNG Ill

0

FIVE ROOMS and bath, all
electric home, 1 acre of
land. ?92·2711.

I

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

~ates

VERY NICE 3 bedroom
trailer. 2 complete baths, 5
acres of land. 7~2·2542 or,
7~2-2324
for complete
details.

I

Gu1ter work, down
SPOUts, some concrete,

PETE SIMPSO"
Rep, For

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepero,
toasters, irons, ail small
appl iances. Lawn mower.
· Next to State• Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985 ·
'3825.

I

··tJ

1

• Answer: sHE

RemOdeling
Additions
Siding
Brick Work
Block Work
Concreto Finlshl_ng

~

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

&amp; Famous Name Brand .

BRADFORD, Ayctioneer,
Complete Service. P~one
9~9 ·2487 or 949 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Crltt Bradford.

J

HOW THE

Jcarm the !Urprise anewer , a s sug ·

WE ARRANGE FINANCING FOR AS lOw
As:5% DOWN AND 30 YRS. TO' PAY-

CASH IN ON every con·
5erllatron, full or part time.
Timely' revolutionary new
healing prOdYct now being
Introduced. Ground floor
opportynlfy to develop
sales for $300 retail unit.
Pomeroy and surrounding
area available. Investment .
of Sl.OOO 5eCYred by in·
ventory. Send name, ad·
dress ond home no. to Myco
Ther,mal Art Saln, c-o Box
729·M ; The Oally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, OH 457111.

cam.rw ·m • ·sP!led.
Hurst rear spoiler, block on
block. Cragars, other ex·
tras. Excellent 5hape. Call

T~URSDAY, JANUARY 3,1,10
8:00-B uck Rogers 3,15; Mork &amp;
· Mindy
6. 13 ;
Waltons
8;
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra
ill Concer t 20; College Basketball
10; M ov ie " The Joker Is Wi ld"
17; CarToera Three 3~.
8:30-Benson 6, 13; ·sports : Closeup
33.
9:00-Frank Sinotra 3,15; Bar ney
Miller 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8;
Sneak Previews 20,33.
9 : ~Soap 6,1 3; Camera Three 20 ;
Dancing Disco 33 .
tO o00-20·20 6,13 : Knots Londlng
8,10; News 20; Soundstage 33 .
10 o30- 0v er Easy 10 ; 1'0 : 45-,C:iVit lsallon 11 .
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10 , 13,15; Dick
Cavett 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 :3()-Tonight 3, 15;, Pollee Womon
6, 13 o Columbo 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " The Com ic" 10.
11 :45--Movle " Stella" 17 ; 12 :4()Baretta 6, 13.
1:00- Tomorrow J ; News lS ; 1 :30-Madlgan 8.
1 : 4~ews 17; L45-Movle "Sky
Commando" 17 ; 1: so-News 13.
3: 15-'-Untouchables 17; 4: 1~n
Up 17 .

gosted by the above cartoon

HOMES FOR SALE

Business Opp'ty

.,

P0660IIIe IT. CHRI!I~ HOW IMNY
Tl/,11:9 00 YOU HAFTA 1!110 TOLD
T'~TAY OUTA CLAUDIA'~ PI'N i

' JUMPIIJ' I!ILUI: &amp;LAZEi7l
NOW .rve SI:E:III
!VeJtYTHIIJ8 l

Quality construction at
roasonable rates.

..

197~

..

.I

4:30·!1&lt;_

condllicin~. 992-2371 or

1974 JEEP Cherokee, posl·
track, all new radial winter
II res .
&lt;;om-p letely
overhaYied and checked
out for winter. A -1 condition. 614-985 ·~209.

....., \

. .

a

CAPI'AINEASY

992·6114.

Help Wanted

Television
Viewing

. by Henr1 ~ r~ old and Bob Lee

••

one lttt~r to e!ch aquare,~~form
!our ord1nary words.
!~~
. ~.;. .

N. L CONSTRUCTION

Phon@ 992-5682

12-7·1 mo.

THREE BEDROOM home,
approx. 1 acre. Good
location . SR 689. Call 992·
3389.

1975 Monte Carlo, excellent

-t ..

Unscramble these four J~ .

Yesterday s

Roofing, gutters, and
on St . Rt. 124 !award ·
downspouts.
Free
: Rutland.
Estimates. AU work , 1
guaranteed. 20 years ex.
Auto&amp;Truck
perlence. Call Athens, : I
Repair
cottect, Gerald Clark
797-4157 or Tom Hoskins
Also Transmission
797-2745.
Repair

FARM ON SR ,1.(! above
Wolfe Pen Store. Phone
992-7$59.

1

so YOU STRUCK
WITH YOUR FIST'?
PREFERRED POL-ICE

~

11

'

11 - 1~ · mo .

10·19·1 mo.

GLASS Fl REPLACE doors
Services Offered
with black finish plus
HAVE
VACANCY
In
tYbular grate with blower.
private home for elderly
like new. Asking $100. Call
. only , Board, room and
992·7866.
laYndry . 992·6022.
No
drinking allowed.
NICE PIGS lor sale. Wor·
med, castrated. 9~9·2857.
WILL DO odds and ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
WOOD BURNING stoves
tile. Fred Miller, 992-6338.
- firep loce Inserts ot the
Riverside Fireplace, 514 E.
Main, Pomeroy . Open
Auctions
Tues. ·Frl., Sat. 9-1, H.
BIG AUCTION every Wi!d.,,
7 pm, Hartford CommunitY
REMINGTON 1100 12 ga,
Center, Hartford, WV, ~
with 2 bbls., deerslayer,
miles
obove Pomeroy·
full choke. Remington 870
Mason Bridge.
20 ga. shotgyn with 2 bbls..
deersloyer, fyll choke.
Single shot 410 shotgun Ml
Real Estate for Sale
choke~ 22 Magnum Morfin
clip rifle. 22 long and short
FINANCINGVA·FHA LO·
rifle. -40 lb. pull bow with ot·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
tachable qylver. GYn rack,
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
holds 5 guns, has drawer. · OR
REFINANCE .
992-5295.
IRELAND MORTGAGE,
n E. STATE, ATHENS.
61~·592 •3051.
WHITE WHIRLPOOL
dryer, good running condition. S12S. Call985 · ~276.
COUNTRY HOME with
stocked pond for swr mm 1ng
or fishing. 9 rooms, bath,
UPRIGHT plono. Priced to
carpeted. 3 Ia 17 acres
sell. Good condition. 742·
available. Located approx . .
2303.
7 m lies from Pomeroy off
Rt. 7 or 33 . .u6·2359 after 7.
17 cubic foot refrigerator,
$100. 2 Firestone snow
SIX ROOM hOYSe and bath·
tires. Call 992-2759.
In Rutland, OH, on corner
of Bryant Rd. and Main St.,
CURED
firewood,
out of water. No reosonable
reasonably priced. 742- otter refused. Phone 7.Q·
2544.
2063.

Pets for Sale

•

Ail types roof work, now
or repair gytfers •ncl
downspouts,
gutter
cti•nlog and p.olntlng.
All work guaran-.
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Coli H-ard
949-2862

dows
Free Estimate

Hammond Oraans

COAL .
LIMESTONE,
sand, gravel, calcium
chloride, terti llzer, dog
food, arid all types of salt.
Excelsior Salt Works, Inc .•
E. Main St .• Pomeroy, 992·
3891 .

~ ~

-

ICALPeA , .~·

el nsulation
• Starin Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement Win -

7734.

For Sale

,

•

Vinyl &amp;
.Aluminum Siding

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

,\Ill ROOMS and bath.
Gas forced air furnace. 9-19·

MARTIN'S APPRA ISAL
stop, think, are you about
to lose money? Over 25
years experience in tMJytng
and selling. Will appraise
new, used or antique fur ·
nlt\)re. One piece or com·
plete hou5ehold. Gold,
silver and other old coins,
china, glass, old toys, dolls,
Iron banks, tools, antique
clothing, razors. pocket
knives and other old Items.
Call 992-6370.

STOCK
CAR.
Howe
chassis, 350 ~ bolt main
Chevy, Franklin qylck
change rear end, motor
built to maxlmym, all new
parts. New and e)(tra tires.
Extra parts and rims.
$5,000. Can be seen on a
Saturday, Twp. Rd. 27,
Dexter, at Slater's residen·
ce .

Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Loans.

lf• mile off At: 7 by·pass

evenings .

LOST: Female blue tick
coon dog and male walker
In Cherry Ridge area.
Phone 992 ·5556.

FINANCIN~

POMEROY - Duplex un·
furnished apartment, $150
per mo. ply• ytilltles. $150
security . Coli 992 ·7511 after
Sp.m

•

·

J&amp;L B1DWN
INSULATION

REAL ESTATE

ONE BEDROOM fyrnlshed
house. Adults only . 992·
2S98.

~980.

Lost and Found

LOST: Snowville area .
Female
blue
tick
coonhound . If oeen,c all
Pay I Phillips at 742 -2209.

TWO BEDROOM trailer.
AdYits only 992 ·332 •.

WANTED o SAW logs .
Payment upon delivery to
our yord, 7:30 to 3;30 week ·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow, OH . 678 ·

Auto Safes

LOST : Reward for walker
hound,
Long Hollow
vicinity . 304-675·1799.

3 AND 4 RM tyrnished apts. Phone 992·5&lt;13.4.

OLD FURNITURE, Ice
boxes. brass beds, Iron
!;&gt;l!ds. desks, etc., complete
households. Write M,D.
Miller. Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
call992 ·n60.

,

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Royle 33, north of
Pomeroy . Large lots.Call
992-7479.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p·er ton . Bundled
slob. $10 per ton. Delivered
to Oh io Pallet Co .• Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

GUN SHOOT EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM. FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY. RACINE
GUN CLUB .
GUN
SHOOT . Racine
Volunteer Fire
Dept .
Every Saturday. 6:30p.m .
At their byi ldlngln Ba5han.
Factory chokegyns only.

For Rent

wanted to Buy_

In Memory

WANT AD
CHARGES

. \ nl\l~~ TliAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

11-Tbe DallY ~linel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., 'lbutsday, Jan. 3, 19(10

:J- The Daily Sentinel, Ml&lt;kllep&lt;rt-Pcmeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 3,1980

. .....l

•

~

..,.....

·1

�,
JANUARY CLEARANCE

M·EN'S SUITS

0

3 piece vested Sl•its in sizes 36 to 46 . 100%
polyester, corduroys and denims .

.
MEN'S 89.95 SUITS ........ ............... 162.00
.

1

'

.

MEN'S 192.90 SUITS ...................... 165.00 '
. MEN'S 199.95 SUITS ............. ........ .' I69.90
MEN'S 1116.85 SUITS .................... 181.70
JANUARY CLEARANCE

~

r'

0. ,'lbursday, Jan. 3, 1911&gt;

12-Tbe

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

PomeroyJtealth care center opens Monday

MEN'S·&amp; BOYS'

.$1.39 TUBE SOCKS

New .facility serves elderly

Springfoot quality. Boys sizes 7 to .
11, men's sizes 9 to 15.

The 1004led Pomeroy Health Care
Center will open its doors to residents Monday according to an announcement today by Rooald E.
Zidlan, facility administrator.
An open house giving the public an
opportunity to tour Meigs CoWJty 's
only such facility, was held last Nov.

·99¢

BEGINS FRIDAY, JANUARY 4 AT 9:30 AM
SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE PRICES ON ALL THREE
FLOORS - All SALES FINAL - NO EXCHANGES
OR REFUNDS

PAIR

11.

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
'
. ' . ~

Ptmeroy Health Care Center-built
and to be operated by the Americare
Corp.-will provide the highest
quality nursing care for its patlerits In
a clean, comfortable, modem setting.
Services will be provided at the
skilled and lntennedial levels as appropriate for the needs ci the patient
In conjWJction with the medical orders of the patient's private
physician.
Each patient's needS will be
evaluated upon admission and
rwtlnely thereafter.
An individual pian ci care will be
developed for each patient to provide
the required nursing , dietary,
physical therapy and social services.
The center's goal will be to

'

CHILDREN'S
WINTER SLEEPWEAR
- Sizes infants to 7· 14.
- Robes - Gowns - Pajamas

OPEN FRIDA V TIL 8 PM
JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

LlnLE BOYS'

PRE-TEEN
SPORTSWEAR

SUITS.

MEN'S SWEATERS
Sizes small (3 ·36), medium · (38·40),
lanie (42·44), extr
e (46-48).
Vests · Slipovers · ardigans

MEN'S 115.95 SWEATERS.............. 19.5]
MEN'S 117.95 SWEATERS............... '10.77
MEN'S 122.95 SWEATERS ............... ~l3.77
MEN'S 124.95 SWEATERS...............114.97

REG. 14.00 ................ ... ......... SALE 12.79
REG. 16.00... .. ............ .......... SALE 14.19
REG. 19.00 .................. ....... ... SALE 16.29
REG. 115.00 .. .. ............... ...... SALE 't0.49

Two and three piece suits in assorted
sizes for little bovs.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

CHILDREN'S
WINTER COATS

MEN'S FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS

WALL UNITS

' WINTER JACKETS
Boys sizes 8 to 20 - entire stock included
for clearance.

WHILE THEY
LAST

BOYS '24.95 JACKETS ......... .. .. .. .... ... '16.21
BOYS' 127.95 JACKETS .... ........ :....... 118.16
BOYS' 129.95 JACKETS ............. .... ... .119.46
BOYS' 139.95 JACKETS ..................... 125.96
BOYS' 154.95 JACKET~ ................ ..... '35.71
JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Sizes 36 to 48. Denims · corduroys, down
jackets · P. V.C's · colton polyester
blends. Good style and size selection .
Line vests included.

Men's $39.95 Jackets
Men's $44.95 Jackets
Men's $52.95 Jackets
Men's $79.95 Jackets

.....• $25.96
. ....• $29.21
...••. $34.41
...... $51.96

JANUARY CLEARANCE

EXTRA SIZE

WOMEN'S SPO
Nice group of jackets, skirts, slacks and
vests in extra sizes 38· 44 .·

-,

REG. 116.00................... ....... SALE 19.59
.
REG. 117.00 .. ....................... SALE 110.19
REG. 118.00 .... ...... ........ ....... SALE 110.79
REG. 127.00 ......................... SALE 116.19
JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS
Entire stock including westerns · velours
· knit shirts · flannels . Sizes S, M, L and
XXL.

MEN'S 19.95 SHIRTS ....................... '6.90
MEN'S 111.95 SHIRTS.... ........ .... ..... 18.40
MEN'S 115.95 SHIRTS .. .................. 111.20
.MEN'S 118.95 SHIRTS .. .. ............... '13.20

REG. 113.00 ...................•....... SALE '9.75
REG ..:'l9.00 ......................... SALE 114.25

•

REG. 126.00.......................... SALE 119.50

I

•••••••• '

DRESS GLOVES
Regular prices $2.95 to $12 .95.
Good styles and colors. While they
last.

1f2 PRICE
GUN CABINETS

All of our boys long sleeve shirts sale
priced. Flannels · knits · velours .
westerns. Sizes B to 20.

our entire stock sale. priced. Lined
coverals · bib overalls · jackets · hoods ·
good selection of sizes.

BOYS' 15.95 SHIRTS ..................... 14.20
BOYS' 17.95 SHIRTS .... , ................ 15.60

SAVE 15%

BOYS' 18.95 SHIRTS .. ..... .............. '6.30
BOYS' 110.95 SHIRTS ...... ..............17.60

For example- Reg. $52.99 Brown Duck
Insulated Coverall $44.99. Every other
item similarly reduced.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

REG. '319 MAPLE,
6 GUN, EARLY AMER. STYLE ••.••• SALE 1249
REG. 1309 PINE,
. 6 GUN, EARLY AMER. STYLE ....... SALE 1239
~EG.

Neck sizes · 14112 to 17 Sleeve
lengths 32 to 35 inches. Solid colors
and white.

Van Heusen and E I y men's flannels in
sizes S, M, land XL. Solid colros and pat·
ferns.

-Assort~d

fabrics
-28" W. X 19" h. X 16" d .

'11.95 PAJAMAS ................... SJ.76
s14.50 PAJAMAS .................. '9.42
s15.00 PAJAMAS ................. s9.75
JANUARY CLEARANCE

.BOYS' SWEATERS
Bovs sizes 8 to 20. Excellent styles and
colors. Savings are great.

.

SWEATER .................. 17.11
SWEATERS........... ..... 17.76
SWEATERS. .. ~ ...... ; .••• 18.41
SWEATERS ................'9.71

ONLY

JANUARY CLEARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

WOMEN'S COATS
JUNIOR · MISSY · HALF SIZES
Save 33% on our entire stock off women's
winter coats.
'

REG. 180.00..... ..... .............. SALE '53.60
REG. 195.00: ..................... SALE 163.65 ·
REG. 1126.00 ..... .... ......... ~ . SALE 184.42
REG. 1158.00 ... ........ ......... SALE 1105.86

Knit hats, gloves, scarfs and sets at
clearance prices! .

REG. 13.50 ....................·..... SALE '2.60
. REG. '6.50... .... •.. .. .. . . .. . .. .. .. SALE 14.85
REG. 19.QO ............... .. ....... .. SALE 16.75
REG. 120.00 ....................... SALE '15.00

TIL

·I·N P

No wiring used
I

WINTER CAPS

OOVING1UN, Ky. (AP)- An
expert witnesS has attacked the
defense position . that. no
allmiiDm wiring W&amp;'l used in the
nCllih wall of the Zelra Rocm of
the Beverly Hills Supper Cub
wblch burned ' M• 28, 1977,
killing l~people and Injuring 50.
Jesse
Aronstein,
a
metallurgist, testified Thursday
that alumlJiwn . wiring In a
ilfl~ fixture taken fnm the
wall of the room Indicated to him
"tbat there was alwnlnum wire
in that wan, the north wan o( the
Zebra ivom, including the alcove
and til! wbbyhole. '!

s,

M, L and .X L sizes. Good selection.
Regulary $2.95 lo$8.95.

Included - all of our toboggans and face
masks .

JANUARY CLEARA
WOMEN'S

KNIT ACCESSORIES

'5_?.95

All purpose ch~st has many uses in the
living room, bedroom or family room.

MEN'S s14.00 DRESS SHIRTS ...'9.80
MEN'S $16.00 DRESS SHIRTS ..s11.20

FROM
ONLY

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) - A
courty Judge has ordered doctors
to dillcOIUlect llfe-eupport equipment from a comatose infant for
three minutes to detennlne if the
alleged . child-abuse victim is
"brain dead. •
Judge Ron Rogg of Sedgwick
Cowsty District Court on Thursday crdered a series of tests for
the Infant after a hearing on a
suit by bis stepfather, who is
seeking . to keep him m the
respirator.
Thomas Saad, 25, has been
charged with aggravated battery
and could be charged with murder If 3-month-oid Michael Saad
dies. -

UPHOLSTERED
CHEST

DRESS SHIRTS

Clearance prices on V·necks, car· .
digans, crew necks, sleeveless
vests and many other styles.

Order issued

JANUARY CLEARANCE

VAN HEUSEN

SWEATERS &amp;VESTS

REG. 110.95
REG. 111.95
REG. '12.95
REG. 114.95

REG. 1379 PINE,
7 GUN COLONIAL STYLE.. ........ SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S

By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS
Alloclated Prees Writer
TEHRAN, Iran (AP) - Iranian
militants oolding the U.S. Embassy
today demanded that America's top
diplomat in Iran, L. Bruce Laingen,
be turned over to them for
questiooing, the state radio reported.
Lalngen, the U.S. charge d'af·
faires In Telran, is one ci three U.S.
diplomats woo have been held at the
Foreign Mlnistsy since the Moslem
militants overran the embassy Nov.
4.
Earlier today, U.N. SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldhelm ended a
three-day peace mission to Iran and
left for New Yll'k after Iranian
. leader Ayatollah Ruhollah

MEN'S

BOYS' SHIRTS

JANUARY CLEARANCE

J.UN·I08.·IOP·S ·:~. --

Plan&amp; undecided

wrangle, tops in luniorsizes S·M·L.
-

..

_,.....

REG. '5.00. •.•••

-·

/ f ..

1

I • • • • • I • • I I • • I • • •. • • • •

''

....

SAL.£ '3.78

aNCINNATI (AP) -Plans are
still up in t.beJiir for the first rock
cmcert in Rlverfroot Collsemn
since ·Iaiit Dec. 3, when 11 peq~le
cled 1n·a ~ede before a con·
eert by -the Brl~h group ''The

,

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 184

•

at y

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1980

REG. sa.oo.............. ....... .. ... SALE '5.98
REG. 'l5.\)0. .................. ;... SALE 111.28
·REG. 120.00 .............. ;....... SALE 114.98 .

..
~

In another development, reports there today and were dispersed by
from Klunelni 's headquarters city · pro-Kh&lt;melni militiamen. Several
of Qtm, 100 miles south of here, said injlB'ies were reported.
supporters of Ayatollah Mohammad
Violence in Qom last month betKazem Shariat-Madari attacked an ween Khomelni and Shariat-Madari·
unidentified grwp of worshippers factims led to a major uprising in
nlrthwest Iran's Azerbaijan region.
Shariat-Madari, an Azerbaijan
native oppased to Kh&lt;meini 's almost
total power, has bectme a symhol
for the ethnic Azerbaijmis' quest for
.~
greater autonomy.
The state radio broadcast said the
militants demanded Laingen be
brought to the occupied embassy
"for necessary explanation ci
WASHINGTON (AP) - President cane by the weekend.
A boycott ci the Olympics would espionage documents." The report
carter is getting set to announce a
be a heavy blow to Soviet !l'estige. did not elaborate, but apparently
package of get-tough measures
refl'l'red to documents the militants
toward the Soviet Union, but some of The Moscow games in August will be
the ·key ltema ate being held back the center d; w~rld attention and the claim they foundatthecmbaally.
There was no immediate response
Russiana.lntem to make them a giituntil U.S. :illies give their support.
from
the Foreign Ministry, whidl
terlng.showcase.
Specifically, sources here said, the
has
rebuffed
previous demands
admiilistration is continuing to cclnfrom
the
militants
that it surrender
slder trying to o'rganize a boycott of
~
57
-year-old
Lain gen. The
the Olympic Games this smmner in
mlnistsy
has
said
he
and the two
Moscow and to slow down shipments
other
Americans
political
officer
of grain and teclmology.
'
Victor
Tomseh
·
and
security
chief
After Carter had breakfast thi5
Michael
H.
Holland
-are
being
held
morning with foreign policy ad·
at
the
mnistry
for
their
own
protecvlsers, White House press secretary
tion. They were not at the embassy
Jody PoweU said no decision had
when it was seized.
been made on when or how to make
The militants' statement was
public the course the president
CLEVELAND
(AP)
The
broadcast
only hours after
would follow.
IJIIDlbers
picked
Tbunday
night
Secretary-General
Kurt Waldhelm
Powell also said that no decision
iD lbe Oblo Lottery's dally
left
Tehran
for
New
York after
had been made on whether to em·
rauitber
drawiDg
8lld
tile
weekly
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
Khoineini,
the
bargo U.S. grain shipments to the
gameaare:
Iranian
revolutionary
JeadE!'
woo
Soviet Union. He said Carter also
The NIUilber- 887
holds the key to freed&lt;m for the
had yet to speak with u.s. AmPyramld-13;
705;
8192
American hostages, refused to see
ba&lt;!sador Thomas Watson, who was
Booanza88;
083;
3191;
''1810;
him..
recalled from Moscow.
·
374191
Waldheim departed almost a full
But to "be effective, these
Tbe lottery reported eal'lliogs
day ahead of schedule. Acmeasures must be coordinated with
r1. $346,014.50 on sales Thursday
canpanied b,Y lranial'\ Foreign
other weliern rom tries.
iD ill dally number game.
Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, he
The sources, who asked not to be
Tbe lottery's computer tabulaslipped out of his Tehran hotel at
ilentifled, said the United States
tioDB revealed sales for the day
7:25 a.m. and refused to answer
also Is urging its fri111ds to take a
came to ~,3%1. Holden of wllmquestions from a television crew
flinty view rl credits for Soviet purlug tickets are entitled to
that happened to be waiting in the
chases from the West.
$33,306.50.
lobby.
On the other ham, scme ci·the options aimed at punlsltng the Soviet
Unim f1r taking military action in '
Mghanistan have been considered
within the administratim and rejec·
ted. These, officials said, included a
break In relations with
Afghanistan 's pro..SOviet government and supplying U.S. weapons
directly to insurgents fighting to
overtlrow it.
Still not ruled out, however, is funneling American lll'lm through other
qJWJtries, such WI Pakistan. Several
key congreslimalleaders have said
'!'"- ....
..,'
they will support legislation
authorizing renewed lll'lm sales to
Pakistan if the prmldent requests it.
There were indicatims offi cial
word on actions to be taken could
Khomelni, who holds the key to
freedom for the American hostages,
refused to see him.
"The 50 American hostages at the
enmassy today began their third
month in captivity.

Carter to announce
'get-tough' rules

-~,.

BRAVE THE FffiST SNOW-JWJe and Ralph Stone, Rutland, braved
the nasty weather Friday to come to Pomeroy. Roads were hazardous
and accwnulaticn was expected up tnthree inches.

Crow reelected
council leader

Lavender who asked to purchase a
Kathryn Crow was reelected
president of village COWlcil and 15 foot alley that riDIS frtm Water
Aarm Sayre was appointed to a seat Street to the river. No actlm was
on the Board Of PubUc Mfairs when taken, huwever.
Attending were Mayor Pl.ckens,
Syracuse Village Council met in
•
Janice
Lawson, clerk, George
regular session Thursday night.
Holman,
treasurE!', Chief Varian,
Sayre was sworn in by May&lt;r
Zwilling,
Mike Struble, Jack
Eber Pickens.
Troy Zwilling, councilman, an- WilliBIIIB, Guinther and Crow, coucil
nounced that Jeff Hubbard and members, W'mebrenner, Sayre and
Ralph Lavender have beet~ ap- Doug Hemsley.
pointed by the fire department to the
FiremensDependency Board.
Gordon Winebrermer, a member
rl the Board of Public Mfalrs met
with council to discuss the annual
appropiation for the water departroLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A Rio
ment.
Grande
couple is suing a West
Winebrenner stated money for
Virginia
man for $1 million for In,
valves, to shut cif the water at a
break so that the entire town would juries suffered in a 1978srnall plane
not be without water, was needed ss collision and crash in Gallipolis.
In a case filed In US. District
is a chlorinator. ·
Since a cost figure was not court Wednesday, Danny R. and
available Wlnebreener is to meet Kristi L. Maynard claim extenalve
with Sayre and aiTive at a figure and injiD'iffi from the mid-eir collision
report back to coWJCil at Its next with a plane being Oown by Danny
Rlffee ci Given, W.Va. The Oct. 'll,
regular meeting.
1978, crash killed one persm,
Willie Guinther, councilman,
William C. Mlller of Gallipolis.
suggested that pedestrian sgns be
Rlffee and hi5 wife filed a $500,000
placed on Third street at the insuit against Mlller 's estate In the
tersectlon of College Road and
Bridgeman Street. Guinther · same court last November. They
were severly Injured in the crash.
stressed the lmportanc~ rl safety for
children cn&amp;ing the highway In the
Rlffee was piloting a 1947 Ercoupe
airplane while Miller was piloting a .
vicinity oll.ondon Pool.
1975Cessna 172craft The two planes
The annual report of Pollee Chief
Milton Varian was read and ac- ran Into each other arxl crashed as
cepted. The chief answered 151 com- , both were preparing for a landing at ·
plaints, made 81 arrests, in- the GJIIia-Melgs County Re~onal
Airport:
' vestigated lOaccidents, received 2311
The Maynard&amp; were passengers In'
--r-'7-- phone calls, issued 143 warnings,
the Cessna at the time rl. the crash.
had 32 motorists assits, cOllected
They claim in their suit Riffee was
$5,504
In
fines
and
costs
and
drove
i
allegedly piloting his plane
6,254.4mlles.
Council commended Varian for a · recklessly.
The · Maynard! claimed Rlflee
job well done.
Meeting . with ' COWlcU was Larry
overtook the Cessna from~bo¥
behind and ran Into it. They
r
said Riff~~!! did' not radio . airport
to either alert It of bis landing or
SCIIOOL8 DISMISS EARLY
learn of any air traffic.
·
Due to weather conditions schools
In
their
suit,
the
Riffefll
claimed
BUSINE~MAN DIES - William J. (Bill) Mayer, 51, Pomeroy ar'.ci the Eastern Local Sc!xloJ District
tlBt Miller, who had rented the
tist, photographer and businessman, died unexpectedly ThiU'Sday mor·
were closed Friday as the Winter's
Cessna, was allegedly negligent in .
ning following a heart attack. Mr. Mayer worked Iii several mediwns.
first snow of 8ny significance 'feU.
pUoting the plane, am had not taken ~
1\'uneral ser-Vice for.
Mllyer will be held Sapm!ay at 3p.m. at the st.
Southern and Meigs local Schools
Jll'(ll)er care In surveying air traffic.
Paul Lutheran Churplt. J'riends may call at Ewing F'wleral Home at any
were in sesslm. However, schooia ci
.
'l'lie M~ynanla seek a tr:ia1 by Jury.
time. The body will Be In state at the church fr_om noon on Saturday WJW
the Meigs LDCal DJStrk;t were beilig
No
date bas been setfor
hearings.
·
time &lt;i services.
dismissed two hours early.
I
.
i&gt;

Rio Grande cluple

files damage suit

~.,

Two. persons
hurt in wreck

A school bus...:.wlt}l no students
aboard-was struck by a car at 8: IIi
a.m. Friday m Brick St., Ptmeroy. ·
Pomeroy Police said a car driven
by George Johnson, Racine, skiUed
Who."
'
into the left front fJ. the bus driven bY
Two acheduled ~r .cooIda Mai'tln rl Pomeroy.
cart~ were cancelled, and a Jan.
Johnson and a Pl!saenger, Ullian
211 appeaf'!lnce by the group "ZZ
Jt1mson,
were taken t.o Veterans
TOp" ltilllsn 't guaranteed.
.
Memorial
Hospl~l by the Pomeroy
'"lbe group hasn't cOiiflnned
:
Emergency
Squad for examination
tha dati! yet," prunote~ Cal Levy .
·
,
tor
possible
Injuries. The bus, ·
llid n.t~. Levy Ia the local
owned
by
till
Meigs lDCal School
agent fOr .Electric Factory ConDjatrlct
811d
one
of the newer ones of
:cer,ts of · Philadelphia, the '
the
dlatrict,
had
to be towed to the
promoter for ''The Who" coocert.
bus garage !n RuUand.

.

.•

VOL XXVIII

open Monday, January 7, to serve
the needa of the Meigs CoWlty older
citlzem.
· ~t has been a long time In
coming, but to the dlsappoinlment of
any skeptics, It Ia happening .
" We pian on taking evesyone rl.
.Meigs ·county who Juo.s applied for
admission as loog 811 we are capable
to provide the services they need.
''We appreciate your patience and
yoor accepting the waiting as we
have. Our staff will certainly Dlllke
it uptoyoo.
"They, too, have been troopers in
pr,aciicing the virtue ci patience.
"I know that Meigs CoiD!tians are
proud to have this Center, but y&lt;a~
are going to be just as proud of our
employees who will be serving you.
''I am happy to present them to yolt
for service. They are skilled and
competent.! say it, but now they will
have the opportwtity to soow it.
' 'May I take this CIPilOrtunlty to
thank the Senior Citizens AlleDCY un(Continued oit page 10)

Militants )want to .questio·n · diplomat

SALE

CARHARn BROWN DUCK

WORK CLOTHES

(USPS 145-960)

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S TOPS
REG. $9..oo" , ... ..... . SALE $6.211
REG. $11.00 ......... SALE $7.69
REG. $12.00 ..... .... SALE $8.39
REG. $15.00 ........ SALE $10.49

•.•..•.•.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

SPORT COATS

REG. 111.00....... ........ ........... SALE 18.25

REG. 1109.00..... ..... .. . .. •.. . .. SALE '88.00
REG. '116.00 ..................... SALE 192.00
REG. 1.158.00... .-; ................ SALE 1126.00

REG.

•

e

REG. '99.00 ............. ..... ..... SALE 79.00

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Turtle Necks· Cow Necks · Jewel Necks
Sizes S·M · L ·XL

residents on Monday, Jan. 7. There are some 70 ap, 'plicatiom on file with the center, the mly facility of Its
type in Meigs County.

1

JANUARY CLEARANCE

FLANNEL PAJAMAS

One rack of plaids, prints and flannels.

$15.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ........ $11.10

OPENS MONDAY - The Ptmeroy Health Care
Center -a capacity ci 100 beds -will open its doors to

- various styles and shelf arrangements.
-Walnut, pecan or maple finish

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

JUNIOR BLOUSES

514.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS .. •.. . :. $10.40

Men's $11.95 Slacks ....... $8.95
Men's$14.95Siacks •..•.•• $11.25
Men's$17.95Siacks ....... $13.45
Men's$24.95 Slacks •...••• $18.75

MEN'S

JA~UARYCLEARANCE

$12.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ...... . . . $9.00
$13.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS ......... $9.70

Sizes 29 to 42 and extra sizes 44 fo 50 .
Solids and patterns . Most all are 100%
polyester double knits.

JANUARY CLEARANCE

lf2 PRICE

Clearance prices on remaining stock of
Alaskan flannels · country flannels . Sizes
s, M, Land XL plus super sizes 18, 19, and
20. Some tails in he selection.

MEN'S
.
DRESS SLACKS .

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Sizes 36 "to 46. Patterns and solid
colors. Hurry in for best selection.
Regularly $59.95 to $79.95.

Y2 PRICE

Y2 PRICE

Glearance prices on all winter
coats, snowsuits and snowmobile
suits.
REG. $11.00 ... ...... SALE $7.69
REG. $21.00 ........ SALE $14.69
REG. $32.00 ........ SALE $22.39
REG. $47.00 ....•... SALE $32.89
REG. $66.00 ........ SAL
19

MEN'S
WINTER JACKETS

Jackets, Slacks, Blouses, Vests
and Skirts.

rehabilitate each patient to his or her
highest level of functioning and to
help each patient maintain thi5 level
of independence.
The center is a 100 bed skilled and
lntennediate care facility with
physical therapy and rehabilitative
services, 24 hour nursing care with
private an~ semi-private rooms. It is
a member of the Ohio Health Care
Association and Is Medicaid·
Medicare approved.
Various services which will be
available at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center to provide for patients ' needs
will include medical arxi nursing
care; dietary consultation for general
and special diets; physical therapy;
pharmaceutical consultation;
medical laboratory consultation; dental consultation; speech therapy ; activities and occupational therapy and
social services.
In annoWJcing the opening, Zid ian
in his open letter to the public
stated :
·~ am happy to aMOunce that
Pmu:roy Health Ca~ Center will be

J.

~

\

Mr:

.;

1.&lt;

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