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W.I NTHROP
KNOW WHAT MY FA\.ORITE.'
AFTER--6C:Hc:::IOL SNACK 15 ~
PEANUT~ OJ A MATT'ER.

Dlc:k Cavalli .
I 5AIDMY F"A\IOR.I"Tl: AF l t:;R-

WAIT A MINUTE .. : WHAT
DID 'YOU uuer 5A¥~
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5CHOOL- 6NACK 15
PSANUT eur f a&lt;CN A MA I I E:R.

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Seven die in latest winter blast
11'11011 AI' WIIU!:II
Tbe avalanche danger forced the Colorado Civil Air
Back~ lra\Wn _ . . . to beWire at PMrvJ to •lll*ld Ita March of tile CoUeBiate Peaks
avalanchea In tile wlnd-wbippecl Raelly M.m.ins near Buena Vllta, where IIIey were trying to locate
tockly, while IICirmll cut pciWII' to lbaaundl of bomoe -.ency alnnft beacanl believed CCllllinC from the
near Seattle and JliiiU of MJch!1•" _.. burled under ana.No....-wererepo!'tedmllllng,however.
.
lflncbea ofancnr. Seven people were klllld.
Seareh teams planned to resume their effort at dawn
. A 34-ye&amp;I'Oid man, hla fllnee lllld hla llnJiher were today. be aald.
.
ldlled ·when IIIey bied to laDd tbelr 1111111 pipe In
Tbe C*ller lll,ld heavy anowfaU 'and winds up IG ·80
Hayden, Colo. dwinl heavy Suadly. ........ ... _.., C81lli"'l a danproul ualaDcbe lituatton
allckened roads were cited u the ca1111 of - fat.! · aiCliiJ with !lie poulblllty of avalanches hitting higbtraffic accident In Colorado, two In Nebrub and one
WBYI a1anc IIIOIIIIIaln pailel,
In Wuhlngton:
Tbe IIIAirm, BCCGinpaaied by punJal1lns wlndl, swept
Snow In Mlch•s•" feH 1n a band from IAnllnB to juat Into Colondo Salurllay. Some mountain areas gol21
weal of Alpena, with central Mlcldgan's Grattat County
incbea of snow overnight Saturday and Swtday, with
hit hardelt.

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NOTHING-... W~

Nick DeLuca said the cruh occurred as the pilot was

making a ~ attempt to land in a

swlrlinB

snowstorm.
In Washington, about 4,000 peciple In auburbo north
and northeast of Seattle lost power after snow-laden
tree limb! feU en power Unes. The storm a1ao snarled
traffic, keeping many skiers from the slopes.

Ski operators in the Cucade Mounlainl laid
businesa wss ,_than they '*I apectedSatwday.
Police lllid icy roadi in Colorado led to the dlleth of
Steven Ruper, 311, of Copper lltountaln, Colo., who was:.
killed in a lrlffic accident on Intenlate '10.
•
A il·)'eii'Old woman, Vesta Wilkena, died about 12·'
hours after the car In which abe wss riclinc aDd on ice
before collidinB with aiiolher car on U.S. 2just north of
Farwell, Wash., the patrol asid.
In Omaha, Neb., where 3 to 5 incheS of lllOW feU Sunday, tile icy roads were cited In the death at Earl
McKay, 73, who was killed on Nebruka 82 wbea his
vehicle spun out of control. Rodney Sobc:lyk, 21, was
killed after the vehicle he was ridlng in collided headon with another on a Omaha city street, poUce saM!.

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enttne
1 Section. 10 Pages · 15 Ctntt

Voi.30,No.17f

MA I I t::f'O&lt;. WliH 'YOU~

near Hayden, authorities lllid. Routt COunty Sheriff

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fl.bour accwnullltions of more than 2 feet. Snow was
ltll1 falllac today'
Kevin Sutcliffe, 25, Robert Sutcwre, :M, aDd Carolyn
Dufort, 23, aD of Tampa, Fla., were kDled Saturday
night when tlleir ~BaroHirplane crubed In
a wbeltfleld one mile eut oflbe Yampa VaDey Airport

A Multimedia Inc. NewspapH

Pomeroy-Middleport•.Ohio, Monday, December 28,1981

Copyrlehted1981

Guards end .uprising
MIAMI ( AP) - Hundreds of
Haitians who had massed for a
weekly demonstration outside a
detention camp charged and scrambled up fences before club-swlnslng
guards beat them back.
Officials said the attack may have
been an effort to free Haittan
refugees held in the camp.
Alter the protesters were driven
from the Krome Avenue federal imrniBraUon camp amid tear sas Sunday, several Haitians set fires in the
nearby EverBlades Underbrush and
12 acres burned, said Metro Dade
Sgt. Joe Wiehe.
"The plan seemed to be to help
break out the interned entrants,"
immigration spokeswoman Beverly
McFarland said. "They stormed
past the security li1e •nd were cliJn.
bing the fences to ••• m.. ,
About 30 Haitian dclail:ee•
escaped over a back fence in the confusion, but 20 returned voluntarily or
were recaptured.. Ms. McFarland
said. The others disappeared into
the crowd, where about 300 HalUan
immi!IJ'IIIIts were shouUns their support to the more than 200 who chanted "Uberte, Uberte" as they bied to
scale the fences.
Metro Dade pollee and immigration &amp;eCIII'\Ilr •Jlllllr:do! •. u.,t
club! and Mace to·drive baok what
one officer de8cribed as a "mobtype" rush. The protesters were
dispersed by about ~v.m., officials
said.
Ms. McFarland said no Injuries
were reported, but a lawyer for a
Haittan refugee center claimed
police )ISed ·UMeressary force in
subduing the crowd.

I

Priscilla's Po
NO YOU wON'T.' .

I'LL GET THE
SUNDAY

by Ed Sullivan

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'YOU
6EEN
CLIPPING- ITEMS .
OF THE' PAPER

I'LL GET IT.'

PAPER, FOP.'

WINS A PRIZE.'

BEFORE ANYOJI..IE
CAN READ IT/

.I'VE GaTTA

BE FAST, POP/

SAKE? PRJ SCI~
ISN'T IN ~R CLASS..'

~ENAY

BEAT #C 10 IT'

· 11-iE' PApER BeFORE
\tOJ CUP?

~RE":

L GUESS '·rOl.fRE
RIGHT.' COULD I
PL.EA$E. HAVE THE .
COMICS SECTIO'I ?
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WHO, FOR HEAVENS

WELL, CAN'T 'rO..I
AT LEASTWAr:r
UNTIL I'VE REAt7

THE. ONE WHO . .
CLI P5 THE f'.lof:Y.iT'

11ERf=.'

IClJFII'UNG .... A f-.,.1 pard alllle U. S. IJD. llahln re~a~- at x-l!nb llu ....·tlle eamps,

Wtlnllea ud ~ 11erv1ee Krome A\'llllle

rew

plea Suday.IDjartea ......
111 aplte ~the fact tbat
1P1J1 Kllfflel with a .... llalllao jWeleelar alter 8 'tile de-Irati,.. turDed fllto ,a dlalurbance. (AP
budfal of llaltlams proteatlag the IDiermneul of fellow Luerpbotol.

About 625 of the 701 Haitian
refugees held Inside the Krome
Avenue camp 20 miles southwest of
Miami had been boycotting meals
since Chrisimas Eve to protest their
internment. But they apparently
were not Involved In Sunday's
disturbance.
Demoostrators'have gathered outside the camp for the past four months, and the day Legan like any other
recent Swtday.

About 500 demonstrators appeared at the head of a half·mile:long road leading to the gates. Aline
of helmeted immigration security
guards stretched across the road,
blocking the marchers.
After about 15 minutes of chantipg
and singing HaiUan anthems, 200
demonstrators charged and ovemm
the guards, They rushed to the gates
of the camp and began clinlblnB
over them, Ms. McFarland said.

HAITIAN PIWI'EST- A groap of Halllu demoaalrators IWII'II! the
plea at the eatraDCe 1o Miami's Krome Avenue refugee ..mp Suaday
shortly before a ba.tful of them broke throuBb lbe gates ami ocuflled
wllb federal pnlo itt the camp. There were no serious llljuries at the
dlaturbllace. (AP Laserphoto).

Poland's martial law regime
cuts meat, butter rations
.

Wants change in method used
WASHINGTON- The American Telephone &amp;Telesraph Co. says it
expects to fUe a request Wedneaday with the Federal Communications
Commlslllon to change the' cUrrent method of computing charges for
long-dlatance callB.
Under the ciarrent •ystem, an interstate long-distance can is blUed
solely on the buls of when it began. AT&amp;T has three long-dlstan~ rate
periods: standard rate for weekday calls placed between 8 a.m. and 5
p.m.; 35 percent less between &amp;p.m. and 11 p.m.; and 80 percent off
the standard rat.; on weekends and on weekdays between 11 p.m. and 8
a.m.

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Marble marker, cross stolen

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WASHINGTON- A marble marker and wooden cross at Robert F.
Kennedy's gravesite at ArUngton National Cemetery have been

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.. -.IIIC..TMfooo.U.S.NITMOII. ·
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stolen.

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U.S. Park PoUce lllid thai the thieves apparently scaled a stone waU

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and a sill-foot fenCe to set to the gravesite, where they dug out the
IJllBU Vermont marble tonlbetone and pulled up the two-foot wl)ite

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woodencross. .
The theft was ~ Sunday morning alter cemetery
discovered the loss. PoUce asid they had no IIIIJ)eCts.

"THE TEA LEAVES TELL ME YOU AR£ FOND OF
CLASSICAL MUSIC, YOU LOVE CHILDREN AND YOU
DIDN'T STIA' THE SUGAR ENOUGH!"
I
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'~HIS FATHEA OFFEReD HIM $10 ~0 GiVe IT lP, BUT

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HE'S HOLDING ou:r FOR ABICYCLE!"

w~rkers

Dozier faces interrogation

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MILAN, lt.ly- Tbe Red Bripdel released a anapehot of kidnapped
u.s. Anny Bris. Gen. JIIIIIS L. Dozier on Sunday and said he would be
interrogated ata "proletarian trial" about the NATO forces under his

command.

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The urban guerrillu !Woke eight daya of sUence with a call to an
Italian newa agency ssy1na tbey had left the pboto, a communique and
a long dOCI!IIIIIIt 111 atrale&amp;Y In a downtown lruh bullet.
Tbe 1181111 wen laund In a brawn gitt-w•-we«~ package, tied with
,yellow ribbon, police llld. ,
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Weather for.ecast

''BETTER SEm.E WITH HER, SIR! AFTSI ALL, IT'S JUST
YOUR WOAD AGAINST ATHOUSANO.OF.H£ASI"

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LOS ANGELES (AP)- President
Reagan hu ne~rly completed work
on tile nat federal budget, and tile
State of the Union speech - his next
-Jcr project - is ne11rly a month
away. So today was a day fll'
checking up on hla ranch.
Tbe praldentleft a fogay, chiUed
capital Sunday for the California
IWIIblne and a week of viBltlns with
.· family and frllllda bere and at the
~ 8prinp lllltlte of publisher
Walter AnMabq.
...... brouahl with him 311 bUla
· pe•eed at tbe end of the
ecqnMi-'1 ... aodshortly af.
ear lie errtVIII '' 1111 hotel 111e White

minimwn benefit and aid to miners

Speakes said tile president wiU
with black hinl disease.
"probably do some budsel review,
The praddent, on his Sixth visit to although most of it is already done."
his home llate this year, plaMed
And Reapn himself told reporters
tockly to fly by Marine Corps heUcop. aboard Air Force One: "We're pretter to his ranch-. Santa Barbara, ty mucb solid on that."
about 101 mll11 north of here, while
The flacal 1983 budget, which ~oes
his wife, Nancy, remains behind for ·into effect Oct. 1, will be unveiled In
the day.
late January or early February. By
Deputy White House press some eaUmates, it .will produce· a
secretary Larry Speakel said thai deficit that could exceed $100 billion,
while in Californll tile president despite the president's effort at
would, "spend time Cll1 the State of trimming spendlng increases.
the Union mossa(le" after . Reapn, apeaklng lo reporters
"receivlnB a nlllllba- of Ideas tram briefly on the airplane,
ataff and ~net" 111111111era. "( acm-ledged thai he had received
would Judie be'U wrltt most of the a 1111111• to a letter he sent Soviet
State of the Union bimeelf," said Pniidde11t Leonid Brezhnev about
Spoakee.
lbecrimlln Poland.
Tbe speech to a Joint ..ton of
He l'lfuled to diacu.sa detalls of
Cllngiws probably will be deUverecl Jlniiilmfi'a reaponae but said of the
on Jan. II.
Soviet Union: "With them, it's

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arrested In southern Poland because
o( their ,disagreement with the
policies of the ruling miUtary council.
Those reports also spoke of
soldiers fraternizing with strikers at
the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk and officers having to watch their men
constantly to make sure martial law
provisions were applied strictly.
Normal communications have
been cut in Poland and Western
reporters must file dispatches
through govenunent censors, Both
official and unofficial reports are
difficult to verify.
Uncensored dispatches reaching
the United States quoted pri~on
visitors as saying there appeared to
be no substance to reports that two
of Poland's best·known politicSJ

dissidents- Jacek Koron and Adam
Michnik - have been treated
brutally in prison.
In other developments Sunday,
President Reagan said he received a
11

negative" response from Soviet

leader Leonid Brezhnev to . his
missive warning the Soviets of
reprisals if repression continues in
Poland. Reagan refused to ·
elaborate.
An administr~tion official, asked
later how negative Bre2hnev'sletter
was, replied: "He did not cOIJI.
pletely close the door O!l further
discussions on this matter."
The official, who asked not to he
identified, said Reagan had not
heard from Jaruzelski, whom he had
written. Reagan is vacationing in
California.

·President completes work on budget, speech

Hc!IJiepnaCIIflct~behad

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By,The Associated.Pnas
currency to buy antibiotics, because
Citing a "serious shor1faU," the disposable syringes and needles
martial law regime is r~ucing have to be used as many as 100 times
January meat arid butter raUons fir and bec~use there is not enough
aD Poles except manual laborers, detergent to wash bed linen.
Meanwhile, Solidarity leader Lech
Warsaw Radio said Sunday. The
rations wiU be suspended altosether . Walesa, under house arrest in Warfor farmers with more than \.2 acres saw, was named Time Magazine's
Man of the Year for 1981 for standing
ofland.
out
"not only as the heart and soul of
Warsaw Radio said invesUptors
Poland's
battlewith a corrupt Comsent out to check food distribution
munist
regime,
but as an in·
today discovered milk and bread
temational
symbol
of the strug~le
deUveries were delayed. II gave no
for
freedom
and
dignity."
·
reason for the delays, but said
In
London,
the
Daily
Telegraph
"authorities wUI draw the apand the British Broatlcasting Corp.
propriate conclusions from this."
A London Times report from War- quoted independent reports
saw published Sunday said recent reaching the West from Poland as
visits to Waraaw hospitals revealed sayifll! thai at least one soldier was
a tragic shortage of medical sup. executed for refusing to obey orders
plies. It said people. were dying and that 10 staff office~s were
because the govenunent lacks hard

lipid three at
Amontllhoee
IIIII Ill be l!pd, prabably en
.....,, . . tile deflnle lppraprilltla bill, fonlp .auiltlnce
......... tbe Socla1 ,Security
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always negative."
But one administration official
asking that he not he identified said
Brezhnev "did not completely 'close
the door on further discussions on
this matter."

Before Reagan left the White
House, his aides released 11
statement marking the secoiJd anniversary of the Soviet miUtary
move into Afghanistan .
"Despite the presence of 90 000 ·
Soviet combat troopo, a recent' increase of some 5,000, tile COUra(leoua
people fll AfJ!hanlstan have fought
back," Reapn said. "Toda,y they ef.
fectively deny Soviet fon:u CGIItrol
of most of Afghanistan. Efbta by
the Soviets to establish 1 IIUIIPit
government In tile So¥tet 1111118
which could govern 1 conqc•ad
land have faDed."

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Commentary

·Pomeroy-Mitldlepert, Ollio

Cummings gets 37 points, 19 rebounds
in DePaul's 75-68 win over Cardinals....

Paa-2-The Dilly .........
Pomeroy-M141111"ort, Olllo
Monday, DKIIIIber:ll,ltll

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·c ardinal Cooke's demurr"'a,L_1_____..:_____Wi_mra_·m_F._._Buc_k_ley_Jr._.
mar-

Lasl week was the traditionaf teaching, and reiterated it; "The from fraternal wrallfll.ing. It is a . cream~"~ Stein was a
season {sbortly before Christmas) Church has traditionally taught and form of sacerdotal dialectic. From it vel of lUCidity, up agalnat some of
when the cardinal archbisbop of continues to leach that a govern- emerges ilol truth, necessarily; but our modem churclunen.
Cardinal Cooke, in the letter adNew York, who for many years has ment has both the right and the duty guidance.
dreaaed
to him by the dlssentera, has
It
all
comes
down
to
this.
served aa military vicar to the ar- to protect its people against wijusl
been
askeol
to surrender the in.
There
are
churdunen,
Catholic
. ined forces of the United States, sen- aggression." And specifically, no
and
non-Catholic,
who
believe
that
ds out his yearly message. Terence doubt with an eye or two turned on
Canlinal Cooke, successor to Car- hla Episcopal brothers, Cardinal the mere presence of atomic bombS
dinal Spelbnan - who lor many Cooke added, "The Church does not on earth is a profanation. On the day
years spend his Chrisbnas with require, nor have the popes of the Cardinal Cooke spoke such sense,
'American troops all over the world nuclear age or the Second Vatican the moderator of the United
-is a man of great civility, pruden- Council recommended, unilateral Presbyterian Church came out for a
freeze on nuclear weapons, and the
ce and benignity. Although he is not disannarnent."
As one might expect, there has leaders of the American Baptist
inclined to maneuver rhetorically in
.'
order to seize polemical advantages, !Jeen all hell to pay. It is difficult to Churches joined the Gulag parade.
he does know when it is time to think of any position Cardinal Cooke "The presence of nuclear weapons,"
speak out, and last week he did so. might have taken that would have the Baptist leader said, "and the
'He came out in favor of our nuclear aroused so much wrath from the willillflness to use them, is a dired
militant unilateralists, all of them affront to our Christian beliefs and
·deterrent.
· Now as vicar general to the armed fond of quoting this or that pronoun- conunitment."
''The presence of nuclear weapons
services, tt isn't easy to know where L-ement of the bishops or Vatican II,
to draw the moral line between a suggesting that inherent in such ... " is an affront to Christianity?
bow and arrow and a hydrogen pronouncements is nothing less tlian That proposition is not easy to
bomb. {What about the blockbusters the straightforward theological penetrate, inasmuch as most
·we used with such abandon during disavowal of the nuclear bomb even thinking people would agree with
World War II? Goodness knows they as a deterrent instrument. It may Cardinal Cooke that the presence of
·killed innocent people.) And so he strike some as curious, in all this, such weapons has made life livable
·does not draw that line. In his that there is in Rome 1 a pope for the majority for a good many
special references to the thoroughly alive and frighteningly years.
But the abuse of language goes on.
hideousness of atomic bombs he articulate who is perfectly capable,
What
do you make of this, in the letcomes on]y this close. He says that should he choose to say so, to declare
ter
signed
by so many cler!lY, nuns
to maintain them as a deterrent is a that he believes the maintenance of
and
laymen
against Cardinal Cooke:
poslure "not . satisfactory, but nuclear deterrent forces to be sinful.
tolerable." II is hard to know exacUy He hasn't said so, which leaves those
"Justice for the poor is the only
who wish he had said so, or who true context for peace." As a trained
how to use the word ' 4satisfactory"
. to describe any weapon designed to proceed as though he had said so, advocate, I'd just as soon fight for
using words and piling them up as the slogan, "Toasted Suzy is mr ice·
kill someone. And perhaps it.is safe
tendentiously as possible in order to
to say that the more people that can
try to con~ey that impression. But
be killed by a single weapon, the less
"satisfactory" that weapon is. But the popes are used to this kind of
thing, and their tradition is to benefit
the cardinal went back to traditional

dependence of his mind; Why?
Because those who skirt closer than
they realize with the proposition that
life- without love, without God- is
worth living, cannot underatand hJa
fundamental point. It Is, simply, that

Terry cwnmings claims be jllll
W8JIIs to be part of the act at · to Oregon !lUte last Sunday In
Tokyo.
DePaul.
In other games involving the
But Saturday, be waa the whole

however abhoneut the pa1en11a1
uses of UJat 1lhieh pr'OI!UIW the ·
defense of the lpiril, bettet the! the
spirit ohould be free than IIIII the
abhorrent lnslrwnent be retired.

Sc:clrln8 a career-high 37 points

IIIII p-abblng ,19 rebounds, eummlnp led the nation's 1311&gt;-ranked
team to a 75-a upset of No. 8

BraVO .

Pomeroy, Olllo
flf-lltZ.UM
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DEVOTEDT01lfE rNTERFSI' OF THE HEIG&amp;MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publlsber

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PATWBITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
Geaeral Mlaa1er

AulltiDI Publllbtr/CoatroUer

Loullvjlle.
.
Cummings' performance eclipsed
Iii pnvlous acoring peak of 31 poin.Is, achieved agalnat Loyola of

BATftJNG POR CONTROL-

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
~News~b'

· \

A· MEMBER ol '!be AIIDdatcd Pretl, r:w..d O.Uy Prell AnociiU.. a.:! the
A.meriCiiDNew~~per Publlllllen AnocJidoa.
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LE1TERS OF OPINI9N art welr:Gilled, Tbey 1baUI be Ina dl.aa 3lllwardlll.,.&amp;. All
Jetaen are •"jut bl edfdll£aDd must be slptd wUb ume, addreuaM telepbooe aumber. No -lped letters wm.be publilftd. Let&amp;en aboalll bt Ia good bilk, addreu ..g
IlliteS, IMII ptrNDaUUel. .
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Berry's World

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The big clearance

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Having passed through the phase of the retan zodiac known as the
Chrtstmaa selling season, we enter now the periOd of the blg clearance
-of linens, toys, cars and old Christmas cards.
As surely as we anticipate the seasons, we know that post-Christmas
sales are coming. It has always been so, and unW merchants team
more about how to keep lean Inventories 11 probably always w111 be so.
But there Is a difference this year. We are In a recession, as we were
In 1973 and 1974. People are pressed for cash, and they are holding down
their purchases. It's a buyer's market.
Moreover, as Wllllam Burke of the San FrancisCo Federal Reserve
Bank, puts It, "saving:- not spending -Is the 'In' lhlng for the ll!9ls."
'nlat ineans double trouble for seUers; An lnabWty oi some customers
to spend, and an unwlllillg1less to spend by some who might have
abWty.
[t's a deadly package for retallers, especlalty !bose who concentrate
their sates. Laat December, for example, 15.8 percent of all sates by
depariJilellt store and other general mercbancuse outlets occurred 1n
Decl!mber. A bad season, therefore, can break a store, and lead to a
desperate attempt to reduce 1nventot1es througb price cuts In January.
At the belght of this year's season, unemployment was at leut 8.4
percent, meanJDg9 mllUon American wete wttllout jobl. And, delpltea
tax cut, real COIIIUIIlel' Income hadn't moved appreciably higher 1n
yeara.
In fact, Burke observes, the nel worth of ~wners ,...akened In the
put year alter rtabqr for nearly a decade. In part, that liae waa a
· c&lt;i1111!qW!!1Ce of -no, home values, but now much of that equity 11
aooe. Burke believes that homeowners cashed In perhapll25 blllkJIIln
eacb of the put aeveral yean, to buy can, campen1, educatlolll, VIICBtlanl an olher COIIIWtlel" lteml. Now they have Utile tnlll'e to 8IJI!Ild.
Credit carda allo helped them to spend, but IIIIIIIY Amel1caDI
fear their Utile plastic dllcs. They- them u PIIIIP' u ts to bulcnlplcy,
and relatively few people ever want to tate tbat Jll!p. They lmow that
me way to avoid bankruptcy 11 to keep their handy Uttlecredltcard Ina
place that lan't handy, 111cb aa·tn the saiHepoalt vault rather IliaD tn
the waJJet. In other words, to retire It ratber tbaD u.e 11.
AD lhfa the retailers kDow 1n their own lpiiCial way, wblcll 11 by
reeding the cash reglsler recet~M. Jt thole recelpta are dawn tbelr
concern Is _up. And ~t In turn leada to an abutldance of J~ 18lei.

.

Ill dkm't threalen after . . .

uniformly excellent. TWA's
ticketing syslem Is a -model for the
ind~ry. Eastern improves; ·you
will f1nd this hard to belleve, but
Eastern actually served two decent
meals on successive · days. Northwesl haa added Jack Daniel's to Its
booze locker, for which significant .
step forward, Jinileful thanks. Delta
disappointed. By any other name
Allegheny remains, forever,
Allegheqy. ·
Atlanla's new airport Is 'working
splendidly. Tampa's airport is 8
delight. Washington National Is a
mess. The nation's worst airport 1s
at New Orleans, where the relum of
a rental car requires divine Inspiration - the inadequate signs will
never get you there. The · Loa
Angeles airport is pretty mlserallle
too.
So It goes. Atraveling man doesn't
ask much courtesy at the desk a
clean room, good 1ampa a 'IIWking
TY, Plenty of hot wakn- p!'Oiqlt
checkouts amiling - amenltiea' are lltlle ~ to look
for. You WOiider why they
10
hard to find.

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This chart shows _how your IRA can grow.
AGE
When You Open

AMOUNT
You Will Accumulate

Your IRA

At. 65*

IMDIVIP.UAL
.RETIREMENT .
ACCOUNT
'Thle. -..nes lhll

~

each year.
You can ella a1 1 one of two ways to •m
yowltile....at .. BANK ONE.
You can choose an inlet est rate which is set for 18 months. Any .
new funds depoeitecl will earn the 18-monlh rale in effect at the time

[t

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Member FDIC

..

$ 298,667

30

$ 966,926
$3,042,435

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theY a're deposited. (Ouring December the 18-monlh rate is
12.25%.) Or you can choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect tor December is 12.08%.)

actvantaie.

.

.

Act quickly to get the beSt tax
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan or the variable rate plan,

you will be assured your money is earning inllation-proof interest for
your retirement. To maximize the tax~ interest you earn,
you should make your contributions as soon as possible after the
first of the year. You will receive monthly statements on the slatus
of the Acx:ount and your funds are insured by an agency of the
federal government.

. '.
Stop by •ny BANK ONE ofllce for delaiiL
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PRJLAIIICLPIIIA d!AOLII-Acttvoted
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$

20

BANK ONE's IRA (Individual Retirement Account) provides all
wage 98ll'l9l'$ with an ideal way to shelter a~ of their income.
The Acc:oln also offers an ideal way to satt away additional funds
for retirement.
Each year you can contribute Up to $2,000 of your iricome to
· ycu IRA. If you have a non-working spouse, you can contribute up
to $2,250. Of course, Hyou and your spouse both work, you can
boltl open an IRA and contribute up to a IOial of $4,000 to your
plana. And any conlributions you make to an IRA can be
sul:*iOKI from )'OUr II lOOt1l9 before your taxes are figUred

1'tltlly

83,506

50

ITIIICe a $2.000 tllniJtluliDn at lhl beginning of eac:l'1 yew at a 12% inteMt 1ata, and that you leave lunds il yr;A~IAA lt'llougtl yr;AJt6511'1 .,...

There- !a all.lbltrial intn;st penally tor

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BANKONE,M BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEAOV.RUTLANOoTUPPERS PLAINS

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Atlanta and the San Francist.-o airport, but poor at the Denver airport.
In Jacksonville they can 'I get the
bed 1nade up by 3 o'clock in the afternoon.
The Hyatts, generally speaking,
represent a triwnph of the taste of a
decorator over the convenience of a
guest. I hit three sorry Hyatts in a
row, at Boston, Palo Alto, Calif., and
Phoenil&lt;. The Boston Hyatt provided
lamps that no human could read by;
·the Palo Alto Hyatt had a telephone
so ineptly placed that II could be
·used only by sitting on the floor. In
Phoenix the bed lamps were
unreachable. Wouldn't you suppose
that s good hotel manager woUld
have discovered by this time where
to locate a switch on a bedside
lamp?
The Rolaid Award for the worst
hotel meal of 1981 goes to Stouffer's
in Cincinnati. I caMot recall the eonventlon but the luncheon remains .
fixed forever in the bid pylorus fillet of presaed wallboard with broccoli; sauce of library paate.
~ring ~ year I traveled on 10
lnaJOr airlines and eight smaller
ones, American and United were

CINCINNATI {AP) - anctnnati
Coach Hank
Bullough dlscounla criUcisrn that hJa
defense nearly loat nine of 12 vlctoriel this In the final three
mlnulea of the games.
"What you're trying to do in a
preVent clef.- is you're trying to
make them use the clock," said
Bullough, brushing aside the ·
quesUoo that the defensive seconda..y might oot be able to preserve a
· lCIIHCOl'lntl game In the National
Football League playoffs.
.
The Bengals play here on Saturday against the Buffalo Bllls, winners of Sunday's American Con- ·
lerence wllckard playoff game.
Bullough said defenses have a
choice in !bose situations - play
man-to-man and run a greater riak
of being beaten by a bomb, or play
zone and give up short paaaes.
·"You can't play both," he said.
He said the strategy Is to use the
clock, make the other teams throw
· over the .middle and possibly force
· theni Into a mistake.
BullOIJ8)i added that his team calls
it a fourllH!uarter defense, not a
prevent defense.
Bullough dlscoUnted oppments'
ability lo move down the field in late
1110J11eDts of the finaj quarter.
''The def811se rests," he said, since
the Bengal&amp; won them all.
During last minutes of the g~es,
all won by Cincinnati:
-The New York Jets drove 72 yards in two minutes to score, but Cin.ctnnati fielded the ensuing onslde
kick to hang on.
. ·
-The Buffalo Bills drove 70 yards
with 1:49 remalnlng to set up a
game-tyillfl field goal, but Cincinnati
won in overtime.
-The Plltllburgh Steelers, in the
first game between the two Central
Division rivals·, marched 72 yards in
4:30 for a score, but It was
meaningless because the Bengals
were well ahead.
·· -The San Diego Chargers drove
114 yards in 1:19 to score, but Cincinn&amp;ti was too far ahead;
-The Loo Angeles Hams went 71
yards In one minute to acore with
1:56 left, but the Bellflals won.
-The Denver BI'OIICCJI drove 57
yards m' four plays for a touchdown
with 2:32 remainillfl.
-In the second game with
Cleveland, the Browns moved 70
yards to score with 2:21 remaining.
-In the second Pltlsburgl\ game,
reserve quarte,rback Mark Malone
rqovad the Sleelera 711 yards for a
~ and, with 1:18 left,
nftrroJwlY mlsaed receiver Jinn Smith
IJP'dl Ill the end zone, letllng CinCinnail win. '
-Last week, the Atianla Falcons
drove , 97 · yards with 2:40 left and
mlasad a field goal aa time ran out.
CiDclrulati had lla final vlctorj.

•'

M'-"1 earned •JIIIol In ......,••
championlhlp
pme ~ tbe ,........
rebounds la8&amp; - · but hu been
on
the lldellnes a1nce X-rays Tire loumey agalnlt Sollllla:ft Cal,
revealed a halrllne fracture In his · whicll beet Mlclllgan 7'1.G Ia .....
left leg last July.
day's other llnk'ouDcl pme.
Eric Booker sank two free throws
'l1le 8eeldiJI Tea
with no time on the clod&lt; aa San
ct.rlle SIUon and DPny E..Frandaco rallied to defeat Bradley.
led Oreson Slate on a Sf nJIIPIII8
Booker's first free tlwow broke an throu8h the final 11 mlmllw ~ tbe
a:&amp;2 tie and gave the Doni their lOth first llllf ·••lnst Pitt. ~ Bea¥11'1
COIII8Cidllve victory of the year. Af- virtuaUy put the pme 811181 wltb a
ter Booker'• second free throw, Eric 411-11 lead over the Pantben et lnSlaymaker converted three of four termi88ion. Sitton scofed 12 ~ Ida Z1
technical foul free throws aressed 'potnts and Evans had 11 of Ids ltla
.
against Bradley Coach Dick Versar.e theburst.
at the flnal buzzer.
The game was one of four cpnldllfBradley, behind Michael An- rounders in the Far Weal Clulle
derson's 2'/ . polnta, had built a 1~ over the weekend. In other acUol),
point lead, 81-71, with 3:20 to play, Idaho breezed pasl Iowa State . .
but Anderson's free .throw with 1:35 as Vandals guard Ken Owelllllllt. a .,
left waa the only ~r point the tournament record with 15 d#1; .
Braves could muster.
Oregon beat Wisconsin N aAd
Jon Sundvold scored 22 points as Portland turned back Tennessee liMissouri erupted In the flnal8:30 to 82.
beat Alabama-Birmingham.
Uaraaked Tea1111
Millsouri had a tough time with UAB
Kevin Whiling's !Moot juroplr
for moot of the game. But with B'At capped a 16-polnt comeback dllld
minutes to play, Missouri scored gave Rhode Island a ~78 victoey
eight straight points, four by SuncJ. over Bethany Nazarene in the flnll
void, to take a 12-point lead. and the round of the All-College IOUrnatnl!lll
'

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Notes of a traveling.man.____J_ames_J._.K_ilpld_--_aic_k
"That looks Hke a vety good Idea, Mr. Prt1flldent. I think I'll go back to my office and have a
. little nap, too. "

It) ...

lldcagoln'UI'19.
The Blue Demons, who committed
12 turnovers In the first half,
regrouped after tnterinlsslon' with
Skip Dillard, Curnmlllfll and reserve
Tyrone C~rbln leading . the
comeback in the nationally televised
game at the Rooemont Horizon In
Chicago.
After Louisville's Lancaster Gordon tied the score at 31 with 14:09
remaining, the Blue Demons went
on a 1~2 spurt over the next 4:40,
with Bernard Randolph scoring two
baskets. With 4:06 remaining,
DePaul held a 85-04 advantage.
Derek Smith scored 20 points for

81

Discounts
• • •
cnticism

WASHINGTON - Furious as ad- crilicisJ11 from Israel to the United Israeli prinne minister continues his limbs in the service of their country
minislratlon officials are at Israeli States. Begin u8ed the late Anwar stubborn policies, it could e.ventually might be expected to get especlally
conscientious treabnent from the
Prime Minister Menachem Begin's Sadat in similar fashion last June, lead to a serious alienation.
In fact, none of the ad- · govenunent. But hearings by Rep.
high-handed annel!lltion of the Golan . when Israel !lambed the Iraqi
Heights - and his shrill denun- nuclear reactor a few days after the miQistration's public statemenbl on James Dunn, R-Mich., have turned
ciation of the U. S. response - they swnmit meeting between the.Israeli the annexation has reflected the up evidence that many veterans are
have learned that it could have been prime minister and the Egyptian .degree of anger directed at Begin in not being properly fitted with arworse. The United Stales was nearly president.
private. Weinberger's description of tiflclalllmbs by suppliers under co.
sandbagged into appearing to have
As it happened, of course, Haig the annexation as "provocative" tract to the Veterans Adcondoned the provocative Israeli an- never made it to Tel Aviv. The and "'destabilizing" Is tame com- ministration.
nexation. ·
Five years ago, a study by the
Polish crisis intervened, and be pared to what's being said off the
·
· National Academy of Sciences found
Here's how it was supposed to rushed back to Waslilngton. The in- record in the White House.
have happened, in what State Depar- ternational furor over Poland served
One-reason for Weinberger's ire is that the VA's whole prosthetic
tinent officials have dubbed the as an excellent.altemaUve ••cover" the shattering effect the Golan program was an adrrlinio¢rative •
''ambushat Tel Aviv"~
Heighb annelllllion has had on jumble. My sources '""Y little h8s ·
for Begin's annexation move Secretary of State Alexander Halg which was changed to.Dec. 14 after . Spo!!:ial envoy_Phllp Habib's efforts changed since then. , ,
. ,'
to negotiate a permanent setUement . In fact, the problems at the VA's
was scheduled to be ln Tel Aviv on the Haig visit was cimceled.
Rehabilitation Engineering 'eenter
Dec.l3- the day, State Department · Administration officials are un· of the Lebanese mess.
Begin's surprise aMexation, and · (VAREC) inNewYorkhavebecome
sources believe, that Begin planned derstandably incensed that Beginto ramrod the annexation decree who indignantly charged that the especially his plot to sucker the so serious that its director, Anthony
through the Israeli parliament. That United States was treal.ing Israeli United States into sharing the Staros, has been forced to quit. He
would have been damaging enough like a "vassal" and a "banana blame, have led Reagan ad- had been in charge since 11168.
One aslonlsbing problem turned
to U.S. claims that it had not been republic" - was quite willing to ministration officials to despair' of
advised of the Israeli move in ad- trick his country's staunchest ally patching up ~lations with the up by Dunn's investigators Is that
vance.
and make a fool of Haig in the IsraeliS' as long as Begin reamins In more than a million dollara' worth of
power. The plan ·now is to walt it out artificiallinnbs- 10 percent of the
But U.S. Ambassador Samuel process.
Lewis has told Haig that either
Haig and Ambassador Lewis have and hope for cooler heads to prevail center's Inventory - is missing. In
Begin or Foreign Minister Yitzak reason to be particularly outraged at in Israel.
addition, many of the proethetic
Shamir was going to .announce the Begin's recent actions. They have
Footnote: A spokeswoman for tbe devices need continual, expensive
annexation with the U.S. secretary been far more sympathetic to his Israeli Embassy said that the an- repairs, with all the pain ·and lnof state standing at .his side and the goverrunent than have Secretary of nexation of the Golan Heights was- L'OIIveniencethatthlsentalls.
televlsl9n cameras rolling. The pur- Defense Caspar Weinberger and the "pur~ly an internal matter" and
In fact, disabled veterans told
pose was to_create the illusion that State Department's career Middle was not related in any way to Haig's Dunn that they have developed their
the United States had not only been East experts.
planned visltto Israel.
own lnfol'llllll network of Inconsulted about the annexation, but
The Reagan administration is
formation on which artificial limbs
had approved il
staunchly pro-Israel; but there is
are beal Tbey II)' their trial-andVETS SHORTCHANGED: Of all error method II mare effective than
The result would have been to growing White Hotise allfler and ·
deflect much of the international dissatisfaction with Begin. If the · American veterans, those who lost theVA's.

SCRABBLE, Va. - The business cellent.
·of innkeeping goes back at least to
Among the resort hoU!Is, the
Bethlehem, apd probably back to the Greenbrier in White Sulphur
day~ of Hammurabl. Through the
Springs, W. Va., remains Inages it has been a great calling. But comparably in a claiiS by Itself, but
here in the United States In 1981, the the Breakers in Palm Beach and the
business of innkeepiag is sadly on Williamsburg, Va., IM also are firthe decline. Ask any man who st-rate. My year's end ootes accord
travels.
high marks to the Sandpiper Bay .
That is a discouraging Resort in Florida. I hit three
assessment, but it seems to me a fair Marriotts, six Holiday 11111.1 and a
one. I spent 181 days on the road in ·couple of Rlimadas - no great
!981, traveled 94,000 miles, and cheers but no complaints.
stayed in more hotel rooms than I
After that it was downhill all the
like to think about. For one reason or way. Some of the great old hostelries
another, most of them fell short of slalld In sore 'need of attention. The
what a good innkeeper should grande dame of the ln~ustry is the
provide.
Waldorf-Asloria In New York, but
There were delightful exceptions the grande dame haa the rlieumatiz:
to that general criticism. In antiquated bathrooms; a shower
Washington, where I spent more ·that wouldn't hold Its temperatiare, a
than baH of those days, stouffer's In desk with no pulls oo the dr8wer. At
Arlington became a kind of home $122 a night, one elq)ects plllls on a_
away from home - attentive ser~ drawer.
vice, immaculate 1'001118, a perThe Fainll""l In New Orleans has
vasive desire to please. The capital lost Its elegant touch. So, 109, the St.
has other fine hotels. The Jefferson Francis in San Francisco. The
is a little gem in the best European. Grand Hotel oo Mackinac Island,
tradition. The Madison's fOUJ'ottar Mich., hu Jp!endld 8mblence- and
reputation is holding up well. The lwnpy beda. The HOlan hotela are an
remodeled Mayflower also Is ex- uneven lot - OK In Del MoO.,

Orecae'l DI.W ~

.rer-WIIliull (41) fllblfor ...trelaftllel .. d Whlldlfllc:PTTWIGery
Zlaqnf Ittl Cell bit ID llle llead ID llle elollal• e
of tbelr hr West
Clulle pme ID Porllaad Sllllday alilbL 0nsa def....... Wllcoalln, 85IZ. lAP Luerpboto ).

'

IJlCourtRtreet

nation's ranked teama Saturday, No.
1 North Carolina drubbed No. 2 Kentuclly 112-* in the New Jersey
Meadowlands and No.18 Oregon
State bl!llt Pitisburgh 118-68 In the
Far Wesl Classic In Portland. On
Sunday, No. 7 San Francisco beat
BJ'adley l'l..a2 in a first-round gaine
o(. the Rainbow Claasic in Hanii
and No. 9 MiBoouri beat No. 19
Alabama-Blnnlllflham 98-80 In the
Winlllon Tire-Holiday Classic in Loa
Angeles.
The Top TeD
James Worthy and Sam Perkins
combined to help North Carolina
beat Kentucky In their nationally
televised game at East Rutherford,
N.J. Worthy scored 26 poinb and
Perkins 21, 17 in the second half
when the Tar Heeb put the Wildcats
away. Mel Turpin, playing center in
place of Sam Bowie, wound up •with
10 points and jusl four rebounds for
Kentucky after averaging 8.8.
Perkins had 11 rebounds and Worthy

Jlllow.

Begin nearly set up Haig for .
approval of Golan move,___:____Ja_ck_A_nde_rso_n

The . Daily Sentinel .

Loullvllle, which lost ila second . 8.
pme ID a '!f'M. The Cardinals lost
Bowie averaged 17 points and nine

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�December

Bill~

outla.s t Jets;
face Bengals SundaY
NEW YORK (AP) - The Buffalo
Billa, perilaFI1G secoods away from
iolnc oowbeie but home, are 1t111
travellnc a road that could lead to
Pontiac, Mich., and the Sl1verdome.
Ralph Wllaon, the BiUa' owner, -

GIANTS' TOP GAINER- New York Giants' Rnb
Carpenter picks up eight yards before being stopped by
Eagles' Randy Logan, left, Sunday In wild card playoff
game in PhUadelphia. Carpenter was Giants' top

ce wanted a National Football
League team in Detroit, end though
having the BiUa In suburban Pontiac
for the Super Bowl was not what he
'had in mind at the time, he is
deUghtedat the posaibllity.
After watching 11 the BIDs held on
by their flngemaUs for a 31·27 wildcard playoff victory over the New
York Jets Swlday, Wllaon crowed,
" After all of lheae yean, It would be
the greatest thrill of my life to go to
Detroit for the Super Bowl."
Wilson, In the 111608, tried In vain to
buy a piece of the Detroill.Jons but
eventually settled for ownership of ·
the American Football League's
BIDs.
The Bills are now a couple of victories from getting to Pontiac, about
a 30-mlnute drive from the Motor
City.
Next Sunday, they'll be in Cln· .
cinnali to play the Bengals. If they
win there, they'll play in Miami or
San Diego, depending on whether
the Dolphins or Chargers win next ·
Saturday. And, then ...

ground gainer with 1&amp;1 yarti!J. He also caught four
passes good for 32 yards. Giants won the game, 27-21. ·
(AP Laserpboto).

Giants beat Eagles at
•
own ga~e, running
0

PIDLADELPHIA (AP) - It was
simply a case of the New York Giants beating the Philadelphia Eagles
at their own game - running the
football and unrelenting defense .
The Giants, with the help of a pair
of first-period turnovers - two fwn·
bled kick returns - beat the Eagles
27-21 in a National Football League
wild card playoff game Sunday.
New York running back Leon
Bright caught a 9-yard touchdown
pass moments after Eagle return
specialist Wally Henry fumbled a
punt at his 25. Later in the first quar·
ter, Henry bobbled a kickoff that
roiled into the end zone where Mark
Haynes fell on it f!!r a touchdown and
a 20-0 Giant lead that quieted a
crowd of 71,611 at Veterans Stadium.
The Giants sandwiched those two
touchdowns ·around a scoring drive ·
capped by a IO.yard pass from quarterback Scott Brunner to wide
receiver John Mistler.
The Giants now head for Califor·
nia to meet the San Francisco 49ers,
the National Conference Western
Dvision champions, in a second-

round playoff game next Sunday.
The Eagles reduced the deficit lo
ID-7 in the second quarter· on a 15yard pass from quarterback Ron
Jaworski to wide receiver Harold
Cannichael. II ended a 26-yard drive
following a pass interception.
The Giants, however, took the en·
suing kickoff and drove 62 yards in
five plays for a touchdown that gave
them a 27-7 halftime edge. Rob Car·
penter gained40 yards on the ground
and Brunner completed the drive
with a 22-yard scoring strike to tigit
end Tom Mullady.
The Eagles scored once in the
third period on a 6-yard run by
Wilbert Montgomery, and again in
the fourth on Montgomery's 1-yard
dive. But that was all they managed
against the fierce Giant defense.
Carpenter, the running back
acquired from Houston in a trade af·
ter the season started, led the New
.York running game with 161 yards in
33 caries. He said be had "great oneon-one blocking up front."
What made the effort by the GianIs' offensive line even more out·
standing was that it came against

-

jury his next time out.
"If I had stayed healthy, 1 think I
could hllve gotten just as many yar·
lis as they did," says Bryant, who is
close to 100 percent again for 11 tilranked North carolina's Gator Bowl
clash tonight with Arkansas.
" I'm just trying to keep a11 that in
the back of my mind and finish the
year the best I can. Maybe I'll say to
myself what might hsve been, but
not to anybody else."
Judge for yourself what might
have been. Bryant opened up with
211 yards and six touchdowns against East Carolina, and followed that
with 136 yards and five TDs against
Miami of Ohio and 173 yards ~
four touchdowns against Boston
College.
He was the national scoring leader
and third-leading rusher in the
nation, and seemed about to go
\ , higher when he went down with tom
cartilage and a sprained knee
ligament after gaining 46 yards on

The llail y Sentinel
IUSPSI...,.I
A Dtvilhllltl MuJtimedia, lllc.

PUblished every afternoon, Monda)' through
Frlday,lll Court Street, by the Ohio VaUey
Publilhlng Company - Mulllme&lt;llo, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45768, t92-ll56. Seton&lt;~ clau
~ge pald at Pomtroy, OtUo.

Member• TheAIIO&lt;Lited Preu,1nland Dol-

ly Prell Aalociation and the American

Newapeper Publishers Auociltlon, National
Advertlalnc Repreaentatlve, Branham
Newapaper Sak!l, '133 Thlrd Avenue, New
York, New Vorl 10017,

ByCanitr«MolorReak

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the NFL's top-ranked defense.
The Giants were led· by Brunner,
the second-year man who took over
six weeks ago when PhD Slnuns suf·
fered a separated shoulder:
•'The Eagles have a good club, but
the breaks went our way today and
we capita~zed on them," said Brun·
ner. He completed nine of 14 passes
for 96 yarti!J, but three of them went
for touchdowns.
Brunner looked ahead to Sunday's
game with the 49ers, tbe111ify team
to beat the Giants since ·he became
quarterback. The .49ers beat New
YorkinSanFrancisco,i7-10.
• The Eagles drove 80 yards in the
final period to pull within 27·21. They
were helped by three penalties
before Montgomery scored from the
one.
But 1he Giants ran out the final
2:51 on the clock as Carpenter msde
two first downs.
Jaworski completed 13 of 24 for 154
yards, and Montgomery ran for 65
yards on 15 carries.
The Giants, the worst offensive
team In the NFL, gained 275 yards to
. the Eagles' 226.

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Simmons named consultant
COLUMBUS - Pamela Simmons,
The .PJalna, has been appointed field
consultant ff'l' the southeastern
counties of the Central Ohio Heart
Chapter. Simmons will serve as
Uaison between the heart chapter
and the heart branches of Athens,
' Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Lawren-

,.

ce, Meigs, and Vinton counties. Sbe
will also be responsible for ~lping
coordinate Heart fund-raising events und assisting in community ser·
vice projects for Hearl.
Simmons holds a muter's degree
in health and physical education
from Ohio University. Prior to ac-

Winners in the home decorating
contest sponsored by the Winding
Trall Garden Club were announced
They are as follows:
Overall decoration: James
Soulsby, 117 Union Ave., first; John
W. Blaettnar, Wright st., second;
Albert Roseberry, 471 West Main St.,
third; and Ronnie Caato, 410 Spring
Ave., fourth.

81.,.,...

GAME SAVER- Buffalo BOIJ' free Afety BID
eur1e1 the
buD after hia game saving illlerteptlon of a New Yorll Jete' JiliN by
Rlcllard Todd with two aeconti!J left to play llll\lelf wllckanlpll)'llf
game SUaday at New York's Sbea Stadium. 1be BIDs wea 31-2'1. (AP

•

Lllerpboto).

,

•

from

going to Betty Wehrung and Shirley
Baity. During the bu.slneas meeting
conducted by Nettie Boyer, the
group VGied to give $25 to the Meigs
County Jaycees for their annual
project of helping the needy.
Mrs. )lullen presented each member with a needlepoint ornament.
Refreshments of dessert and punch

The exc.itement of a game.

1HIID-UE

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10

CALL 446·52171N ADYANCI

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Scarberry

By the Edlton
of CODIUIDer Reporlll
How much of your holiday shop-

0

'

ping was dorie on credit cards, bank
or Installment loans? Before you
continue to charge up a storm, you
should know that a bill In Congress
could eUminate interest rate ceilings
for an consumer credit in all states.
'!be interest rates today msy not
be the ones you'll pay tomorrow, no
matter when you msde the loan or
charge- the lnteest might double or
triple.
·Senate blll1720 would aboliah all
state limite on credit charges, even
in states that already allow Interest
rates as high as 45 percent on per·
sonal bank loans and retail In·
stallment purchases, 11 they do in
New Mexico and Utah.
The credit cost hikes under S.1720
would take effect immediately.
Whatever balances you have on
clepartmeltt atore or bank credit cards, car loans and other commercial
loans could accumulate interest
.rates and finance charges you never
heard of - and certainly never ex·
peeled to pay
This In IIPite of the fact that more
0

than half -the states have already
liberalized or abolished usury
statutes within the put few years.
Delaware and Nevada wiped out
all interest-rate restrictions for all
classes of lenders. Alaska, New
York and !jouth Carolina will be
looking al raising or eliminating
their ceilings over the coming year.
Ten states now permit banks that
issue credit cards to charge any in·
teres! rate they like. Whether or not
your state thinks the sky is the lbnit,
you'll pay the rates applicable in the
~tate where the bank card
originates. Thirteen states no longer
set any upper Umit on the lnlerest
rate that banks can charge on consumer loans. Such limits fonnerly
defined usury, but no more.
Uaury cellinga do more than limit
what a lender can charge for loan.
Where usury ceilings have been
removed, otber abuses have appeared.
'
Arizona removed Ill ceUings for
most kinds of loans In April ofl980.
According to the Arizona Banking
Department, Arizona eonsumers are
unknowingly sJvlng secOnd trust
deeds with effective Interest rales

a

I
,,

Seyler

Wahama Senior High School,
Muon.

Pvt. l)o!Jiias A. Seyler Jr., aon d
Marp'etLSmllhafMaPI, W.Va.,
1u COILI!Ilnw 1 mulllchemwl c:omnudciiiiCIIII equlpmB Clpll'llllr

Allen

" .. u. a.

-

Anny stpal

Bel alll,.ronQGI'don, Ga.
fltadonl,t leal'lltd to Install,
apnte end repair field radio nlay
ud .-ctatad tCJUipmlnt.

Seyler II a 1111 graduate of

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Hawaii.

During the six-month deployment,
, he will participate in training exer·
clses with other U.S. Anned Forceo
and lhoae -of a!Ued nalione. In adMariJie Lance t.:pl. '1'hol1las E. dition, hla aquadrcln will lllllite port
Allea, 1111 of Doai and Pam Allen of
vlslts In Japan, the Republic of the
444'18 Wbippllt Road, ~. bu.. l"'ilbttllnea and Korea.
deployed 1111111 Weetem Pacific. He
Ia a member of llarlne Fighter AtA
of Southern High
Sehool,
Racine,
ADen joined tbe
tack Sqaadroll m,.bued at Marine
Marine
Corpa
In
June
19'19.
Corpa Air Station, l&lt;aneohe Bay,

"iraduate

the honored guest opened the gifts.
Sending gifts were Todd Russell, Flo . .
Neeley, and Zonie Burnside.

Clifford Scott Thomas Ill
celebrated his fourth birthday
recently at the home of his parents,
Pqt and Cliff Thomas.

Scarberry

Reiber
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Reiber,
Racine, Route 1, are announcing the
birth of their third child, Russell
Duane, born Nov. 18 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy. He
weighed eight pounds, 11 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley stearns, and the
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reiber. Maternal great·
grandmother is Bertha Spencer. Mr.
and Mrs. Reiber have two , ott.er
children, Rachel,~3 and Robert, six.

A Dukes of Hazzard theme was
carried out. Attending were Cliff,
Margrel, Mark and Liz Thomas,
Joyce, Jennifer, Heather and Tray
Shannon, Ed, Scott, Mike, Linda,
Shawn and Matt Donley.
A buffet lunch was serv~ before

Reibels
celebrate

Tuesday
HACINE - Racine Lodge 4t1
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday, Dec.
29, at 7 p.m. There will be work in
the EA degree.

OHio Valley Conunandery 24
K. T. will meet Wednesday, Dec.
30, at 7:30p.m. Order of the temple will be conferred.

anniversaries
The wedding anniversaries of Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Reibel and Mr. and
Mrs. Donley Reibel were observed
on Christmas Day. Henry and Edna
Reibel celebrated
68thson
wedding
anniversary,
andtheir
their
and

DALE HIU
D TRACTORS
215 W•.,.ain
Pomeroy

' 992-2668
RE·OPENINGOF

MYRTIS KAY'S

BEAUTY SALON
Tllanksgivin!l guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne SiSson were Mr. and
Mrs. Richard SJ~Sjlft and Annette,
Mr. and Mrs. BobSilaon and famUy,
Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
PlcSertngton, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Bradbury and chUdren,
Collllllbus.

FITNESS
STUDIOS
1021;, E . Main St.
Pomeroy, OH .

PH. 992·6720

Social
Calendar

Thomas
Top ollhe Stairs

daughter-in-law, Donley and Betty
Reibel celebrated their 35th wedding
anniversary.

Wednesday

Service notes

fir..1 birthday recently. A Merry-GoRound cake baked by his mother,
potato chips, ice cream and pop
were served.

Thomas

Birth

that exceed an annual percentage
ratge of 100 percent. Payments are
for the interest only, and a balloon
payment for the entire losn comes
due in as little as seven months. At
that ·time, if the borrower can't
make the balloon payment (the en·
tire amount owed), the loan is "flipped"- refinanced all over again, in·
eluding an origination fee that
usually amounts to another 15 to 20
percent of the losn.
You can get a loan In Texas from
some small loan companies- if you
don't mind paying back three dollars
for every one that you borrow. In
Oklahoma, creditors can charge
more than 170 percent on one kind of
smsllloan.
Credit advice from Consumer
Reports In a future colwnn.
(Protect yourself at home, too . .
For a special reprint of Consumer
Union's ·evaluation of burglar alar·
ms send $1 for each copy to CON·
SUMERS, P.O. Box 461, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019. Be
sure to ask for the reprint on burl!lar
alanns.)
!c) 1981, Conswners Union

Registration is being handled
by Rhojean McClure, workshop
coordinator, 36384 Skinner Rosd,
Pomeroy. Further information
may be obtained by calling Mrs.
McClure at 992-3436. In the event
the Jan. 15-16 workshop class is
filled, residents are asked to in·
dicate if tbey would be Interested
in a Jan. 8-9 worksh_op.

Presenting gifts to the young•1er
were his grandmother, mrs. Mildred
Scarberry, Mrs. Bobby Foster,
Missy and Ryan, Mrs. Dick Folmer,
Michele and Danny, and Cortney's
sister, Gina Scarberry.

Cortney Justin Scarberry, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Scarberry,
Route 2, Pomeroy, celebrated his

Beware of costly credit

Rosd in Pomeroy. Leo Hill,
professor at Rio Grande College,
will · be the instructor for the
workshop which has a
registration fee of $20 payable $10
at the lime of registration and the
balance at the first class. The
pre-registration fee is refundable
only if the class is full.

Area birthday celebrations

meeting.

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The mind of a computer.

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The Bend 0' the River Artists
Council will meet on Jan. 7at 7:30
p.m. at McClure's bam studio.
, The program will feature a slide
presentation on sculpture.
Residents are reminded that a
photo workshop will be held Jan.
15 and 16 at the Hershel McClure
Fann on Skinner and Flatwoods

were served. Others attending were
Mrs. Flo Strickland, Mrs. Lenora
McKnight, Mrs. Betty Wehrung,
Mrs. Evelyn (}Umore, Mrs. Lucy
White, Mrs. Pandora Colllna, Mrs.
Mildred Welts, Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel, Mrs. Ann Brqwning. Mrs.
McDaniel will host · the January

Consumer Reports

teat run by Canon Camera Co. 1be picture was
featured Ia the monthly salon conteatspollflored by the
firm. (APWirepboto).

Artists council will meet

Sew-Rite Sewing Club meets

FREE Game~ FREE Game ~ne, , t
Game Club Chatter Membership when !PI l?.uY ;
three ()cJyssey2 Ciame Cartridges by .1anua1y 10th.
Buy any three Odyssey! game
cartndges (there are more than 44
games to choose from) between
December 26, 1981, and January 10
1982, and we ·usend you your choice
of one of three exciting Odyssey•
game cartridges~ Keyboard Creations. Pachinko. Or Volleyilall. Each
one 1.s a $22.95 suggested retail
value.
.
Plus "':e'll give you a free 1982 .
subscription to Odyssey' Adventure ·
M~~gaz!ne. A full~olor Quarterly
maqaz1ne that brings you everything
you ve ever wanted to know aboul
'Odysaey' video games.
And we 'II give you a charter
membership in the new Odyssey•
Adventure Club.
FnNt Adventure Club membel'lhlp
tor buying one a.rtrldae, too.
Buy just one Odysaeyl' game car.
tridge between December 26 1981 ,
and January 10, 1982, and we 111 send
you a year's subscription to Odysseyt
Adventure Magazine and enroll you
as a charter.member of the OdYssey•
Adventure Club.
·
But remember: This oiler eqJires
January 10th. So hurry down to your
Od~sey• dealer. He has complete
details and the order torm you 'II
need to send for this free offer.

Entry: Scott Shank, 105 Union donated by Hubbard's Greenhouse,
Ave., first; Franklin Rizer, East · Pomeroy Flower Shop, Powell's,
Main, second; Annie Chapman, 105 and Three iii One, Fanners Bank,
High St., third; and James Neut- Fulton-Thompaon, Dabble Shop,
Elberfelds, Kroger's, and Francis
zling, Lincoln H,ight.s, fourth.
Religious: Eula O!legard, Florist.
Judging took place Tuesday
Naylor's Run Road, first; George
Korn, Ann St., second; Homer evening and following a tour of the
Bricklea, 173 Mulberry, third; and town, the judges were entertained at
Fred Miller, Ann st., fourth.
the home of Mrs. Addalou Lewis.
Prizes for the winners were

THE EYES HAVE IT - Japa-e 1111111teur
photographer Ichiel Isblgaml pltotograpbed thia
strildng sl\ldy lncoatraal a.nd entered ltlaa Tokyo con-

0

The annual Christmas dinner of
the Sew·Rite Sewing Club was held
at the Meigs Inn followed by a party'
at tbe home of Mrs. Barbara Mullin.
The home was extensively
decoratad and gifts for an exchaage
were placed beneath a Christmas
tree. Games were played with prizes

just five carries against · Georgia
Tech.
"The start was kind of hard for me
to believe at first," says Bryant, who
.averaged 94.5 yarti!J on just 16
carries a game a year ago while
splitting lime with Amos Lawrence.
The knee injury kept Bryant out
fQr four games. He diu not have to go
under the knife bul was j.:'ll a
shadow of his old self when he lr!eJ
to come back against Clemson~ "I
didn't have all my flexlblllty back"
- and managed just 31 yards on 13
rushes.
But the rest of the season resembled the atsrt - J71 yards and a
touchdown against Virginia, 247 fill'
ds and two scores against Duke.
Only Allen (23), Walker (20) and
Eric Dickerson of Southern
Methodist (19) topped Bryant's 18
touchdowns, and in the five games
for which he was relatively healthy,
be averaged 187.8 yards, a pace
which would have left him behind
only AU~n at the end of the season.

&lt;oepting her current position, she was
a girls' athletics and lntramurals
teacher and coach at Trimble Local
HighSehool, Athens County, for nine
years ..
Simmons and her hWiband James,
an associate of Bartle, Wharton and
Pell, in Athens, bave two children,
Todd, 4, and Gary, 1.

Contest winners announced

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today.

But the Jets rallied to pull within
11 points. And after Joe Cribbs raced
45 yards with a pitchoul early in the
fourth quarter for a seemingly
secure31·13lead, NewYorkstormed
back for two touchdowns and were
lust 11 yards and 10 seconti!J away

HOLZER CLINIC.L'JD,
MONDAY • FRIDAY 5.Pll • 9 PM

No lllblc:riptioos by maD permitted In towna

whlrthOmec.arrier.ervicellava~.

o o o o o o o o o o o o - · o o - o o o o . . . oo

::.lie,

· FertiJISOil campleted 17 of 34
...... for •
yards and .... ln- qains1 Qllrlend Ill I
scored more qulddr lila
•
ten:epted lour times.
Then FefllUIOII Mill Ill wart with
"For a moment there," Knox llllid
l18J'C8811ca0y, "It looked as though hla TO peas of 110 end • 1ll'ds to
they were trying to keep bolh New Lewis around Nick!&amp;: Uayer'a a.
Yorl&lt; teams In the playoffs, lllllite It yard field goal.
Todd's SCI-yard --m&amp;. ,_ to
an all-New York day (the GlantsJn
fact, beat Philadelphia 2M1 ai)OIIt Mickey Shuler lltlrtild 1111 Jete'
three hours later). But they forget comebaCk, then Pat lMbr kicked
field goals of 211 and lt 11rda, the
·Buffalo is in new York, too."
Romes got the BIDs on the second one l'll8IDI 1 fno eyebliows
scoreboard.in just 16 seconds. Ervin ' since it came on a ~at
Parker •\ripped the.baD.!rorn Bruce the 2-yardline in the third quarter.

'

AT

Sublcr:lbert not doirin8 to PlY the ctrrl.er
may nmlt In adYaiiCO to The Dolly
SePI:bWI on a 3, 6 or 12 month buJa: Credit.
wiD be atven carrier uch month.

1SlxiDOIIIh
IY-

had

NIGHT CLINIC

16C..U

00

1111••

betn
1lllw what
11811F ened. OniJ llllall'e Nat ·
Moore, who IIIII rua a ..,.aing
ldckaff back • rardf Ill II IIICIIIdl

end zone

no evidence to tntppOI't the idea that
trawna or injury leadl to cancer,
pain ill a common symptom of bone
cancer. Another important sign of
bone CB~~Cer is swelling calllld by
the el)lllndlng tumor. In some caas,
fever may be present, but thla ill
WluaUy seen only in advanced
dlseaae and not .. an early sign. A
diagn4llil of bone cancer usually
requires a team effort by the
patient's physician, a radiologist, an
orthopedic SIIJ'geon, and a specialist
in the laboratory examination of
body tissue and fluids. A physician
should be consulted without delay.
QUESTION: I have heard that
when one has an operation for cancer, the air can cause it to spread. Is
this true?
ANSWERline: This Is an old
wive's tale. Cancer cells grow In the
tissue that surrounds them. They
may invade lymph channels and
_!Jiood vessels a.nd be carried to other
parts of the body and grow there.
This spread Is called metsstasls. But
they do not travel through the air.
For further questions call 992-7531.

0

PRICES '

0 . - 0 0 00

•..a ..

ANNOUNCIMINT

8UIIRCRIPI'ION RATES

00

Harper, ~ Pll:lrild I 1P Clll C111e ,
bounce at the Jfb'
Ill the

American Football Conference wildcard matchup with the Jets.
They had built a 24-0 lead In the
second quarter with the belp of a
Charles Homes fumble return for a
touchdown on the opening kickoff
and a pair of Joe Ferguson-to-Frank
Lewis .reoring passes.

SenUnel, lll COurt St., Pomeray, Ohlo~789.

00 00

line.

A regular feature prepared by the for canceno to occur with
American Cancer Society, to help greater frequency In IIOille fmallies
save your life from cancer.
than in the population at large.
QUESTION: I've lried to slop FamWal tendenciell have been found
smoking aeverallimes, but I think I in leukemia and cancers of the
need help. Where can I getwistan- breast, colon, stomach, and lung.
ce or advice?
When any of tbese types of cancer
ANSWERllne: Get in touch with occur in ooe member of a family,
your local American Cancer Society. more frequent checkups are recomlt llj)OII80I'8 programs designed to mended for other members of the I
help people who find It difficult to family. The "family" referred to
stop. In aome communities tbere are here includes not only parents and
Quit Smoking Cllnlca in which d:· children, but also uncles, aunte,
couslna and grandchildren.
smokers lead the way.
QUESTION: I've been told that
QUESTION: U I notice a signal or
tea made from miBtletoe is good for symptom of cancer how long should
stomach cancer. Is this true?
I wail before aeeing a doctor?
ANSWERllne: Although claims
ANSWERilne: It isn't wise to wait.
have been made for a preparation The sooner you- get to your doctor,
msde from various · kinds of the belter. Chances are you'll find
mistletoe, there is no reason to that you don't have cancer, and the
believe mistletoe is an effective doctor will put your fears to rest. But
trealmenlforcancer.
if you do happen to have cancer,
QUESTION: Seveal members of yotJ'll be glad that treatment can be
my mother's family have died of • startedearly.
QUESTION: I have an old knee in·
caticer. Is it hereditary?
ANSWERllne: A few rare types of jury from the days I played football.
cancer are inlieritable. Moot can- It has become very painful. Is there
cers are not. However, there is what any danger of cancer?
is known 11 a "familial tendency"
ANSWERline: Although there . is

out their options Sunday in the

IUTMASTER• Send addreu to The Dolly

()no Montll..

free aafety ,BiD SimpiOII stepped In
front of I Richard Todd p8ll and intetcepted It two yards frun the goal

Cancer Answerline

The Bills were close to closing all

•

Arkansas-North Carolina
meet in Gator Bowl game
.JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) - As
September gave way to October,
three runnings backs were the talk
of college football - Marcus Allen d
Southern California, Herschel
Walker , of Georgia and Kelvin
Bryant of North carolina.
Allen went on to set a national
single-season rushing record,
sophomore Walker eclipsed his
brilliant freshman statistics and
Bryant, who scored an amazing 15
touchdowns in his first three games,
went to the sidelines with a knee in·

irom an Incredible comeback when

1911

101 w. 2nd !Ground Floor)
Pomtrov ( lormerly LaMar' s)

OPEN TUES. thru SAT.
I :GO toS:GG
For Appointments Call:
992-7tGO
Owner : Myrtis Kay Parker

· WE WILL CLOSE
AT 4:00P.M.
ON NEW YEAR'S EVE
Regular Hours:
Mon.-Fri .
9:00 A.M.·9:00 P. M.

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

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Chester Women hold
holiday dinner party
'
"A Humble Manger" was the
theme for the program at the annual
Christmas holiday dinner party of
the Chesler United Methodist
Women held recently at the church.
A potluck dinner was held in the
fellowship rO&lt;JIT• with tables
decorated in kcepil'g with ihe·
season. AI each place setting was ·a
crocheted tree trimming made by
Mrs. Mildred Gaul. After dinner the
group gathered In the sanc:tuary for
the program.
Mrs. Kathryn Baum played an
organ selection, "The Holy City" as
a prelude followed by group singing
of "'111ere's a Song in the Air" a~
companied by Mrs. Clarice Ault,
pianist

Scripture was by Mrs. B~rnice
Bailey taken from St. Luke. Prayer
was given by the Rev. Richard
Thomas and Mrs. Allen played and

sang "Star of the East." Mrs. Bailey
read "A Christmas Perspective.,
assisted by Mrs. Ethel Orr and Mrs.
Helen WoH. She noted that at Christmas, the Christ Child must be the
center of celebrations.
The Rev. Mr. Th&lt;lrnas sang and
played "0 Holy Night," there was a
cavalcade of carols oo the origin of
carols with Mrs. Kathryn Bawn
giving carols of promise, Mrs.
Daylene Bahr, carols of place, Mrs.
Betty Roush, carols about people,
Mrs. Allen, car.ols which tell of the
world and nature, and Mrs. Bertha
Smith, carols which give response to
then and now.
.
"The Spirit of Christmas" was
told by Mrs. Gaul who noted that the
true spirit of Christmas is the
celebration of God's greatest
message to the world, the coming of
Jesus Christ was and is made visible

for the world. Asal!!ting Mrs. Gaul
were Mrs. Frost, Mrs. Marilyn Spencer, Mrs. Kathryn Windon, Mrs.
Clara Conroy, Mrs. Betty Lue
Moore, anQ Marie Probert. The
program closed with "Silent Night"
and a prayer poem, "Dwell With Us,
Spirit of Christmas...
There was a gift exchange. Others
attending were Mrs. Eva Hollon,
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Mrs. · Ada
MorriB, Mrs. Ruth Karr, and Mrs.
Altona Karr. Guesb were the Rev.
Mr. Thomas, the Rev. and Mrs. Carl
Hicks, Betty Lou Dean, May Holter,
Ada Van Meter, Opal Kloes, Mary Jo
Barringer, Pauline Ridenour, Martha Lee, Debbie Frost, DeniBe Mara,
Ruth Erwin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Machir, Jake Gaul, Erroll Conroy,
Fred Smith, Roscoe Hollon, George
WoH, Arthur Orr, and Jonathan
Ray bum.

Ask Dr. Blaker

By Karen
Blaker, Ph.D.

New family tradition
DEAR DR. BLAKER - From
reading your column for the last five
years, I know you are always interested in family traditions around
the hoildays.
Our family changed our way of
doing things this year. We decided to
send New Year's cards instead of
the usual Christmas cards. It's fun
to do something different and we
have enjoyed having the luxury of
the time during the Christmas
vacation to write long notes in all the
cards.
Maybe our new traditions is
strange but we like it. ,
DEAR READER - Actually, the
practice of sending New Year's cards was prevalent during the Victorian period. People with strong
puritanical traditions found it difficult to associate any kind of
merriment with a reilgious festival.
The general idea of exchanging
iUustraled greetings and presents,
however, is ancient. The Egyptians

gave symbolic gifts such as inscribed scarabs to celebrate the
New Year while the Romans exchanged laurels, sometimes made of
olive branches.
In Japan to this day, the
celebrating of New Year's is the
major holiday around that time of
year and New Year's cards are
popular.

I am always interested in ·family
tradition and how they begin and
then change over the years. Thank
you for sharing yours with me and
my readers.
DEAR DR. BLAKER- As a man,
I have always been coofuse&lt;l when it
came to asking for help. I knew
when I needed it but something
seemed to hold me back.
Is it something in me or are aU
men like this?
DEAR READER - Masculinity in
our society is defined~ being able
to take as much pain as possible; not
being able to ask for help; not

Consumerwatch:

Monday, oecember21,1~8\

Middleport, Ohio

needing to express feelings; being
able to hold a lot of ilquor; ' being
able to eat anything and as mueb as
possible; being able to recuperate
from serious illness quickly; and
never needing to cry.
All men are influenced by these
guidelines and, to some deg~ee. try
to modei !heir behavior after them.
They are, however, self-destructive
wllen it comes to physical and
emotional health.
Getting better amounts to men
getting more in touch with the
feminine part df themselves, the
part that is caring and expre..ive.
Shy? Write for Dr. Blaker's newsletter "Shyness." Send 50 cents and
a stamped, self-addressed envelope
to Dr. Blaker in care of this newspaper, P. 0. Box 475, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
Write to Dr. Blaker at the above
address. The volume of mail
prohibits personal replies, but .
questions of general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

Family·Medicine
the dru8 of alcohol (and II iB a
drug) 81 an acwoe for more UJI8Clo
cepUble beblvlor. Remember thai
not every penaa wbo Is cnnt II an ·

By Anthooy Tenoglla, D.O.
Aasociale Prof I • of
Family Medicine
Ohio University COII!ep
of Osteopathic
Medicine
(Editor's note:
Dr. Ed Schreck
has asked Dr. Anthony Tenoglla to
answer
thla
week's question

1111e

CINCINNATI (AP) - Today's cat
burglar is young, agile, often high on
drugs - and dangerous if cornered,
police say . .
Hamilton County sheriff's detectives Phil Endres and Ron Reekers,
burglary experts, were asked if they
could describe the "average" cal
burglar.
"I'd say 18 to· 25 years old,"
Reekers said. "Ordinarily of small
build, very agile."
Endres said, "He could go through
windows easily, has a Jot of dexterity, and most of the lime he's high

burglar, tallJed about hla past in an
interview witil The Cincinnati
Enquirer al the Lebanon Correctional Institution, where he iB serving 15 to 75 years after being convicted of 11 burglaries.
"It was a challenge, yeah," he
said of hla past career. "Most of the
lime I was more or less high, mostly
drink and smoke (marijuana or
hashish), doing that stuff. II was
more or less a fantasy." ·
Taylor aaid he would watch for
people who had property worthy of
risk by looking at the type of car
they drove and the style of clothes
they wore. Then he would watch
their habits.
"I walcb for people who come
home tired," Taylor said. "They
need sleep. They work hard at a job
all clay. 'J'!!ey go to sleep tired and

. on drugs."
Reekers added that the cat
burglar is "probably involved in the
gratification, the excitement in it."
Tony Taylor, 19, an admitted cat

Astrograph
DecemberZII,1981
Busine.S contacts you've developed over the years will prove very
~lpful in the months ahead. One in particular could put you on to
something quite good.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jaa. 19) Fortunately, you'll be able to
recognize small opportunities today which may not be that obvious to
others. You'll know how to make them into something larger.
AQUARIUS (JIIJL :!0-Feb.lJ) Because of your experience you may
be able to guide another over the rough spots today, so that he or she
won't make the rni.stakes which caused you a problem.
PISCES (Feb. ::tO-March Zll) Keep in mind the old adage today that
everything comes to he who wails. Be patient. Your possibilities for
happy end-results lOQk extremely good.
ARIES (March ZI-Aprll19) Someone to whom you've proved your
loyalty is prepared to back you up allhiB time, should you need his or
her support.
TAURUS (AprU :!0-May 20) The progress you make Is apt to be
slow, but steady. Even if you're not moving as fast as you'd like to,
small gains at thiB tltne are very important.
GEMINI (May ZI-..1 - 10) In order to infuse new life into a venture you're involved in, it may be necessary to take a calculated risk
today. You'llhandleilwisely. •
CANCER (Juue 21-Jaly 21) Changes or ahifting conditi0111 tend to
work for your ultimate benefit today, even though you may question
them at the time they occur. Be flexible. Ride with the tide.
LEO (July Z1-Au1. 21) One who has enonnous respect for you may
come to you today for advice or counsel. ThiB peraon knows you wUl
level with him or ..r.
VIRGO fAq. !I Sept. 21) To get what iB coming to you today,
don't be timid about voicing your rights. The squeaking wheel gets the
oil. U ynu don't speak up you may be overlooked.
LIBRA (Sept ZI-OcL 13) Activities wlulch offer a bit of friendly
competition should prove ltitnulatlng today. Play to win, but cJon't
take yourself or the game too llel'iously.
SCORPIO (Oet h-Nov. ZZ) Others may dodge their responsiblliUIII today, but not you. lnatead of looking upon them 81 being
c:umblrane, you'D bub pride In meeting them well.
SAGnTARIUI (NI¥. D-Dee. tl) Thlall•gooddaytotakecareof
any ~ calla or CCII ii&amp;pondallce that you have neglecled. You'll
feel better once they are off your mind.

company that sold. you the
timeshare in the first place. And
even if a unit does increase in value,
your share of the profit Is limited by
the length of your timeshare.
-Look at the total cost of the
timeshare, including finance
charges, annual fees and travel expenses. Find out whether there are
limits on annual increases in maiJ&gt;.
tenance fees, and compare the cost
of your timeahare on a weekly-basis
with the going rates for similar accommodations in the same area.
-Don't let yourseH be p.-ured
by a seDer who tells you that you'D
miss an opportunity of a IHetlme If
you don't sign right away. Review
all documents yourself or have a
lawyer do It for you.
-Make sure that oral promises
are included in the written contract.
If the seDer !ella you aomethlng that
contrsdlcta the contract, be careful;
the contract is what count..
-If you're buying H tlmeahare on
a property which Is still under
development, get a written commitment from the aeller that the
facilities will be CCIIIIPleted as
promised, You might want to ask
that some of your money be held in
escrow until the work Is done.

I

Capt. Steve Vollmar of the suburbu Fore&amp;! Park Police Department
compiled data on burglary in purIIUIDI• caae that led to an arrest and
the cleulng of • burglaries off the
department's books.
"The cal bursiar has a combination of high intelligence, an ego
trip and also a desperate need - a

Today's cat burglar is dangerous,

too.
''If he's cornered," Vollmar said,
"he can be very, very dangerous. It
goes back to his ego. If caught, it's

the end of his ego trip, and his ego is
rapidly deflated. He can become
violent.''
PsychotogiBI Walter Lipper Jr.
said cat burglars ani "very, very
fine thieves who know hoW to do, it
(steal)." Upper, who has worked
with police and has adviBed the Cindnnati Special Weapons and Tactics
team, said cat burglars have 1 "low
level of anxiety" and are generaDy
"cold" individuals.

BatesviDe, Ind. An unidentified man
ala reataurant in Penntown, Ind.; about a mile !ram the house- drove
them to the hospllal. .
Meanwhlle, Julie Roberts, a nuH-se
who lives in Beech Grove, luld.,
heard the father telling about the )lccident at the reataurant. When She
learned the sevenid ann was stiq at
the fann, she drove there, packad it
in ice, and took it to the hospilai,
Mrs. Welch aaid.
' '
Fawn wu tranaferred , to
Chlldren's Hosptlal, where she ~
derwent surgery on Tuesday. Doclora inserted a vein from her leg into
the arm, accordlnc to her sis\er.
Tammy Hoffman.
Betty Stephens, Fawn's mother,
said the ann wu alive. She said
more surgery was planned i)le~y.

"''fl

.'

' •

Dl'IS

IIA'IS

-•
a

....
,,.,,

'·

.

IIA'IS

t::t-

no'1.71ect ~.
hl[rorn
James Searll to'w. F. ut·

,,,_.and A. T. &amp;11110ft,
datod FellrUII"{ 14, 11934,
and rKordod In Volume 27.
P - 511, of the Meigs
county LeoN RecordS.
which loaae caven mo
ac:reo. more or Ieos, In
Ruftand Town'll:$1./ilgs
Countv, Ollto,~ndl of on
the N6r1h by
ane
C-r on the ul by lands
of Walter HyMIIj on the
South by Iandi vr William
Haltv; and on the Wnt by
lands of Public Road; and
whiCh,YOU are the Lessees,
Is lorfitlted.
The basis of the lor·
telturo balno thai the loaae
calls for a term of one year
and 10 !OliO thereafter as oil
or vas Is produced from the
Iandi" lloMd. and royalty
and rentals paid by the

'3

'4

?

'4 '?

10

1

'11 '16

UP II

HO

'1

'9

'19

'16

'

:
I
I

'
I

"
'·

SIIT!Sf:J· YOt/R NEE.D.&gt;

•·

'• ·"

a ANNOUNCEMENTS

t-Il.......... " .

....._.
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4 lltl I tf

•

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'

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I~ICMIIIIMtndea

16-R.-TY.

.

'·'

&amp;CII-

\1 . . . . . TeDI

.......

oPINANCIAL

II

....

F'•~tttL•II

..... 8 ....

.,_,......

eRIAL 111/ITI

a nsrr_._
D ...,........

,,

::,.
•'

•'•'

!i,,
..
. ,,
•'

. ·'•'
'

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.,•
••
'•
"..

ee about him."
"He II I vert pow a fiA lpeaker and Bible te oher and VWJ
llllborllallve 111 tile pulpit," the evus Jilt uld .t~out William
Frallldlu Gral!MI U. wbo II to be ordained Jan. 10 lit tiJe -

••

dencimluiiONl Once Comnudty Otarc:b.

................ Wtnttd

.
_ ,_

Wllllt-A. u.tt.....

Olltllllltl

.
..:.:~."':Vir.
........ I•• ~.M.
....... I lPttll 1 I

bedrooms, iorge living
room~

fUll

wtapartment. extra big
lot on unton Ave.
526.500.00.
RACINE Lovely
remodeled two story
home. Beautiful - ·
work throughout, 5
bedrooms, 1am 11 Y room
w/corner fireplace and
beam celllno. tormal
dining room, large kit·
chen and breaklalt
room, near schODII and
iiTIIY LIVING Beautiful · •4 bedroom
home, 2 baths, llvlno
room, family foom
wtwoodbUr-• . bullt·ln
kltchtll, double a••-·
heet pump, central

.......
.._............

vacuum, on 11.1:1 acres.
VIlma Nlclnsky, Anoc.
P"- 74:1-:1092
ClltrYI Lemley, Assoc.
Phono 742-1171

lntentiOf' or I'M u"· ,

Nam•-----------------

44-AWihNilili for RIE..

41-PurM~M~t 1-.ms

.,

•

T

. . . ..

.,_...........
eMEICHANDISE
,._
................
. _••• ,, :WAifw . . .

N--CI. TY, 1111" I.IP'Mft~

M-MIK./AfldltiiiCIIM
11-l•lllltllt ...

.._............. ,,u..
P

bedroom

_..

Jf-PII'Iftiii"Tf'...
'

IPARMSUPPLIIS
ALIVIITOCK

.,_......
' u-w_..tt ..r

.

to shopping.
Nice lot. $19,750.00.

eTitANif'ORTATION

2.-----,--

n-TrcU ........
~YIM.4W.D.
.,

1

......

,.._.._ ........
• 1

...

.......c........

lfmtllt

3
._
--_-_4, _
_
s. _ _ _ __
6. - - - . , - - - 7. - - - - - ' - -

11. - - - , - - - - -

21.
--_
- '_
- _22. _-_
_
23. _ _ _ __
24. _ _ _ _ __

with electric and !los
available. $8,000,00.

SOUTHERN DISTRICT
Approx. 2'h acres

-

Cedar,

from

Wolnut

&amp;

Massey Plf'IUion In·

dustrlal Equipment.
We sell the belt and 1er·
vice tt1e rHt.
Dn Rt.33W.

Ripley, W. VI.
Ph. (304) 37Ht75
or (3041 372-5479

12·18·1 mo.

MILLER
SERVICE
For 111 of your wlr·
lng needs.
Lot G'orgo Mlllor
clleck your prHtnt IlK·
trlcalsyatem.
Resldlntlal
&amp; commercial
Call 742-3195

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
_.Addons and

romaclollng

_Roofing anct guH•r

work
_Concret wOf'lc

__Piumillrlll ond
olo&lt;1rlol Work
(Free Ettlmatft)

v. c. YOUNG Ill

I

I.

~ . Ohio

'

II

"'2-6215ortt2·7314

, . . .. I

land with 2 bedroom
mobile home. $11,000.011.
VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

OVER 6 acres of vacant

land with a drilled well
in the Meigs School
Distiiet. $11,000.00.

REALTORS
Henf'y E. Clel•nd, JR.,

G.R.I.

,2-6191

Dottle &amp; Roger Turner
992·5692
Jean Trussltll 949·2..0
Office
992·2259

PUWNS

.BISSELL

Sizes start from 30x24"

SIDING CO.

UtillJ Buildinp

"INU!IIul, Cullom
aunt Gare~tt"
ceu lor trM siding
Hllllllltl, t4t-U01 or
t4t-U60.
No Sunday Calls
3·11·ftc

'DIE

TAXIDERMY
SHOP

VIRGIL a·. SR •
216 E. 2nd St.

SMALL
4to 6 ond oil
24136.

EXCAVAnNG
eoozers

eBackhoes

eDumpTrucks
elo Boy
eTrencher

ewater eSewer

P&amp;S

Rt. ~, IDIC Sot
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591

6-15-llc

"Gel in Shape for the
Holidays."

12-11-1 mo.

e;'1t'r'~::e';1~oe _

3 bedroom frame home

Finest Quality
Excellent Service ·

exc•llent repair.
Baaement, kitchen has
range, refrigerator and

Flsh·GameHead··
life Size Mounts· Plus
Hide Tanning

In

birch cabinets. Large
tot with city water .and

ll~~~~~~;;~:l

'

I

I

Misc. MerchandiH

54

TP waler; large level
acre. Garage 42x36 on
Rt. 7. Onl~ 32,500.
340 ACRES - 10 room
horne, 2 lull balhs. !rea
gas,
furnace,
5
bedrooms, large family
room. and 2 large por·
cf1es. M~y sell i ust the
house, and one acre. or
trade.
3 ACRES - On IIOGd ·
country road. Will sell
oneorau.
HOT WATER HEATYou can't beat this one
tor price or condition.
AIIO hiS 2 Incomes, 3
bedrooms, insulated,
cedar closet, nice
carpeting, 2 full balhs,
tuil basement, formol
dlnlno and aar1111e. Ask·
tng S6t,900.011. Offer
welcomed. Can move
J

fhe........, •
"'"'"
hi/lh \A'Iu'll SEe tJoW
"''-' ,.... "
briiforting
it iS fO flaW!

J...=
1

eGas Lines
• Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH.,2·2071
12-20-1

mo. Pd .

"·----29. - - - ' : - - - ' - 30. _ _ _ _

I"'

iflNG L
CALl:

POMEROY
LANNIIADK
UIIIIU\
2 8
614-99 ·21 I
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas - Diesel He•tlng Oil •

PRICED·RIGHT.
CAll. 1001 I

- . Mercllandlco

Shop ,·

31.~----

•.

:13. _ _ _ __;
k _ _ _ _ __

....,.-----

Tappan
Furnace, Recuperatlv_e
Coleman Air
conditlolng, Arkla·Ser· ·
vel Gas Air COfldltion··
ino. Sheet Metal Work..

eBockhoe
IEXCIVatlng
1 Septic Svotema
ewoter, Sewer&amp;
GosLines
eoumpTruck

Lleensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201
5o2Hfc

SKATE-AWAY
Open Wed., Fri. &amp;,S•t.
7:30 Till10:00
Sunpay 2:011 to 4:30
New Year's Eve
7:30to1:00
Priv.tte Parties
Available

SUNRISE HEATING
1 COOLING
Rt. 2, Albany, Ohio
614-6tl-6791
11· )6-tln

PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

C. R. MASH

12· 16·1 mo.

And Home Malnten.tnce

•R-g of all types
•Siding

•Rtrwed..lng
•FreeHtlm•te•
•28 Yn. ••perience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. Mf.1160 or t4f.2412
7-5-tfc

CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens lnd ap-

pliances,
custom
battlrooms, remodeling,
plumbin. electric, and
heating.

FR'EE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992·7656

8·20·1fc

HARRISON
1V SERVICE
NCM
OPEN

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.

NEW PHDNE NO.

SliM CARP

-hlictlell

3 Rolli Ill
Pick F.-

RubiMrB•ck

112•·

STARTING AT

Sq.

yd. Instal ltd

~-

32. - - ' - - - - -

·ca:ou•l'
na
~

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Mlf&amp;lnlv N•n£1l1N
rH\1 ,..,.., 1\.10 'J\If

'

S4

SUNRISE
Hli:'A'iJING &amp;

PH.742-222Sl•t.

sewer.
LAND CONTRACT Nice 5 room home in
Tuppers Plains. Forced
air furance. carpeting,

"

Just In Time for
Christmas: Member·

hl .. toollor.

wide or trailer. Electric,
and L.eadlna•Crk. water
·a vail obi e.
Sl ,500.00
down. 1ol'!&amp; Interest, 60

'

E. MaIn St.
Ph. "2-6720

202'12

Rates
per
visit
available.
Came In &amp; IN what we

LAND CONTRACT - l
level lots tor house, dbl.

';

TOP OF THE STAIRS
FITNESS STUDIO

ship Gilt Cortlllcales.

· Phone
1-(6141-992-3325

. 27.
:16. -_
-____

13. -~----:::---14. - - - - - . , -

"·--~---

land

20, _ _ _ __

12.------

15.------,---

alloges

• RePAir: Cleaning,
rehnishlni. new grips
length clllnge,
weight ciNnge
• Fast service
• 6 Free lessons
drawing

18.-----19, - - - , - - - - -

··------ ·· ·- -----

9. . , . . - - - - - 10------

* Prop-Golf lessons for

SOUTHERN DISTRICT
- Approx. 13 ocres of

17. _ _ _ _ __

1, _ _ _ __

*Gilts lor Golfers
'*Discount Prices on
Shirts, Windbreakers,
Sweaters. Socks,
Pants, ShHs
•Shortglme practice

venient

I .: '

............ Plf'tlllltf'

Chester, Oh.
Order Now for
Christmas:

MIDDLEPORT 2
bedroom home. con·

wOOded

Mldt

Cyprus,
Cherry.

Scout Camp Rd.

garage. Large lot.
Beautiful condition.
$39,'1011. 00.

vacant

FOR CHRISTMAS
14 Avalllblo

From S34.9$
Til$79.95
PH. "2·3249
12-3·1 mo. Pd.

KWB

SYRACUSE - Ronch
type 7 room house with
basement• .3 bedrooms,
bath, dining room, 1 car

'

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

THE

In
lui~

basement. Perm a stone
exterior. 2 car garage.
$.19,900.00.

1

t)-Li'*ttdl

n-_..twlllt

home

Racine. 1'h baths,

U •'VIIMMIMIM

-Prvittl v•...•""

,.

STATELY - 2 story, J

$15,500.00.

Phon•----------------

I RENTALS

r---------11

t
I

QOCKS

~Dino. S25,000.bo.

,------------'::=z=====:::;

ttHt

HMDCRAFJED

. 12·16·11c

basement

Add~u--------------

41 - HIIUI.. tiN' !tent
q-Mif»&gt;lfHIMel

-_
---·.....-·....
-1$5

.. ,. ...., .........
'
••

Phillips denies affair

i

-··-·..........
•IMPLOYMINT
. dRYICII

stoi~'! .:g~, l!ll~~s ~·

Write your own ad lnd ordtr bY mell with thll
coupon. conctl vour ad by phone when you get
rnults. Monty not refundable.

CLAIIIfiiD AD INDEX
t-CI,.ef'fMMI

RNIIItlte~ - o l

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Cla•lflecls and
Savei
-- - II.
-'

Or Write Dally Sentinel Cll!sslflecl Dept.
111 court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

'.,-

~:~hN::r2h':n~el:\."'':l

W. F. Ulllnoer. dlted 5ep·
tember 1.5, l9G, and recor·
dod In Volume 41, Page~
of lhe Meigs County L....,
Records.~.. which leove
covers lw ac~ more or
less. In Ruftond Township,
Meigs County, Ohio, boo~n·
dod on the North by Iandi
of Ell Luckadoo Estote,
Don A~; on the East
by
Ianda Of Charley Series,
Ira Flemlno, Frank Hlsell;
on the 50U111 by Iandi ot
Frank Hlsell, Clarence
Price; and on the West by
lands of Clarence Price,
Opal Armstrong; ond
which you are !he lessee, Is
forfeited.
.
THo IIHII ot ' tho tor·
lelture Is thai the torm of
the IHH hos nplred since
thtlelle calls lOr a term of
live veers, and 10 long
therHffl'r as all or gas Is
DrOdocec:t from tne -lands
leased, end royalty and
rental paid by the lessee
thortfor, among other
provisions. whleh --=lflc
provision haJ been vloleted
lind not fulfilled, and It Is

'

111'11

••
·',.
·',.
.,.,'
,,

The )'GUIIItl' Gl'lllul ...ell ~tan's Purse, wlulcb donates
money tllllrvfllllll c:burc:bes, and World Medical Missiona. Both are
baaed In a-, N.C.

I'

'

II'

IDS

IWIIIIII

.,;;
••..

Says son 'has a presence'
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP)- Evaqelllt 8WyGrahanl says his~ ·
old 1011, whom he plana to ordain in Tempe next month, "has a pr 1 l-

llOIDS

I
DAY

PHONE 992-2156

I

PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Charles Richter, the 11-ye&amp;Mid
~elsmologlllwho gave his name to an earthqllllkHneuuing llcaie,
aays It wu "a relief to get home" from a hoapilal after a c:ar crash.
• Richter, released Sunday from Huntington Memol1a1 Hoaptlal, had
been hoouplt.llled for nearly two weeluu after his c:ar plunged Into a
canyon. He spenlllis hours wandering in a daze before beillfll'eiCUed.
The co-daveloper of the Richter IICIIle suffered brulaee and 8liJ)OIUI'e
and WU put in the hoapilal becaUII of fear .. might develop
pneun'ionia, hoepilaii(IOIJenoman Kaye Murphy said. '
.
.

'"·

l

"'

WANT AD INFORMAOON

'

'

co/ .332 ofllltt Ohlo Rev I=

REALTY

,

'

Authorized Sunflewer
Dealer. Sell or Rent
Thtst Signs.

Pursuant to tho
euvtflona of Section

NOTICE OF
FORFEITURE
~~ ...:=~~~:,~:Jr.
Olt LI!A$1!
TO: W. F. Utsln,er
Rutland, OH ' 45 75
REMOOI!LI!D- Three
Dear Sir:
bedroom home, , _
Pursuant
to
the carpet, full -ment.
proviSions
of Section
Ideal starter. home.
5301.332
ofllltt Ohio Revised
Code, you are hereby $15,000.00.
notified lhlt tho lease from OWNER FINANCING

.

.

C..·Colo Products by
the • AI Pack and also In
liter llottles.

Gent-:

tlon Is stated. Final actions

~

Fum Equllifnent
Parts &amp; SerY.~ce

Wt Sill Pepsi, R.C., I

a.T.aa'*'
Rutland, OH 45715

Public Notlco
COUNTYi MEiGs··•
PUBLIC NOTICE
Last WMk the tollowlno
documents were received
or l!l'lflared by The OhiO
Envlr011rnental Pr~tlon
Ageney (OEPA). T,,.. el·
teetive date of each final
action and the ISsuance
date of each pro~ ac·

I

Monday /People
Richer in accident

NOTICE

oild ' StreeT, P-roy.
;"
o, will be held at the lifo
flee of !d Bonk ln
~'":!!!'·
to, ~~~or dlflg
to
I•• u,la , !Ill the 111 1 ril
Wednesday or Ja.nuorY,
1982, ot 4:00 p.m. tw the
aurpandOM of etecttno dlonlrecof·
ton
the transocl
such other bualnetJ as m•v
~rly come before uld
rneetlno.
Paul!!. Kl-,
Secretary
(12128, m 11, 17, 19,4tc

j

Doare..

u.m.tellp. ...

l)poa'Frl. II 6 1.111.
flint Sullllay ot' p.m.
OPEN 24 HOURS
FRI.·SUN.

NoiJ: Is t.rebY ~"'
II::'
s~ocr.f4'
"11.;
F•men
o and
Pl!nY
211
.

Gir1 satisfactory
after accident
CINCINNATI ,(AP) - A !~year­
old Sunman, Ind., girl, whole ann
was reattached following a tractor
accident, Is scheduled for more
surgery Tuesday.
Fawn Stephens,· whose left arm
was severed in the farm accident
last Tuesday, was reported in
saUsfactory condition Sunday at
Cinclnuati aDidren's Hosptlal.
Mae Welch, the girl's grandmother, said Fawn had been with
her father on the tractor while
gathering fire wood Tuesday,
Fawn's snowsuit caught in the tractor's drive shaft, oeverlntl her left
arm and breaking the right arm at
the shoulder, Mrs. Welch said.
The girl's father, Frank Slapbens,
had a O.t tire while driving her to
Margaret Mary Hospital at

0pon 7 Days A Woelc
Opon Mtn.·Thun.

(12121, ltc

~' '

ss.n a ss.u

ca"""'s

Interest to
Lnsor

~GAL

U.S. Rt. 50 :iolf
GuYsville. fllllo
Autftorl•• J ... Dow.
Now Hallalld, a11111 Hlle
FarmEIIU'-t

fkt*l&lt;

Cltonftel

ACKHOUSE,
successor· I,.

lliGtis

SALES &amp; SERVICE

OUr Spacl•••

THICOMMON

need to support a drug habit,"
Vollmar said.
"The cat burglar 15 to :KI years ago
was a very skilled indlvidllal. They
dreslled the part - all black,
sometimes a suit and tie," he aaid.
Bui today's cat burglar isn't of the
1141JRe stripe. Vollmar said they
aren't as coy or as sophisticated,
and that their final goal is drugs instead of money. ,
.
"It takes guts to do it," he said,
"but it also takes a great desire to
show off."

r

CEITIFIEDUS

New breed of cat burglars

exJulllllled. '!

In both cases, the cost depends on
the length of time you want to spend
on the prilperty; the' longer your
holiday, the more you'll pay.
The FTC says would-be buyers
should follow some basic rules.
Among them:
-Weigh the value of "gifts" or
"prizes" used to promote timeshare
sales. "Common promotional
giveaways include gems with lillie
or no value as jewels, 'solid-gold'
ingots with mlntma,l gold content ...
or 'vacation awards' that do not
cover major costs such as travel and
food," the FTC says.
-Consider whether you actually
will be able to use a timeshare
facility regularly. Are your vacation
plans subject to last-minute
schedule changes? Are you willing
to go back tp the same place every
year? U you are looking at a
timeshare plan wi!h units in several
places, make sure the club has
enough units at the locations you
prefer so you can vacation there
when you want to.
-Evaluate invesiment claima
made by the seller. Try to make a
realistic assessment of the future
value of the timeshare. "Resale ...
may be difficult," the FTC says. You
may face competition from the aame

•

Public Notice

•

weD as the benefits before signing a
contract or check."
There are iwo \Jasic types of
timeshares: deeded and non-deeded.
With a deeded plan, you buy an
ownership interest in a !&gt;ieee of real
estate. You actually own part of the
house or apartment building.
·With a non-deeded plan, you buy a
lease, license or club membership
allowing you to use the properly for
a specllic amount of time every year
for a stated number of years.

aalisfies thil "appetite" must be
available. Second. .. or llhe must
1eam the substance brlnga reUef.
Suflerers from these dileaaes are
conaldered to have a deapei'ate need
for reUef !ram intensive feelings of
discomfort or pain. Thla need is
based on an altered body chernllltry
related to the person's genetic

alcclllolh!. True alcoballlm probably
...Wt. from a ccmbination of
lltllltiC: and anvil OIUIIIIIlal COIIiiJUona. Glvea the rilht condlll0111 he
or lbe will become an licobollc alm1 ply beca- of an Inherited genetic make-up.
A person apparently develops the
lrd. It II not IIOIIIellllng that 1 perdisease
when he "hangs around" the
... ~~ to become. The
.,aug
cnrird
(iB expoaed to the suba b o u t
Uc:GIIGIIe dOesn't want to be lazy. It
stance),
get.
the
subutance and learalcoholism.)
l'lliHC)"'!U
• jult the ..t ...U of his reacllon
ns
that
it
gives
relief
of thiB biologic
QUES'I10N: A friend toldmeu.t kltllluukvc and his llddlction to it.
pain
or
discomfort.
Therefore,
in analcohol iB a drug and u.t ~ c:.n
QUBB'I'ION: What makes a perbecome addicted to il I tlllilk .. II - beet~• 111 aJcobolic? Is it "in swer to your questions, both parts of
wrong and that people betauiW the IIMd'' or do peple set it by the your thought seem to be correct. It,
alcohoUcs 81 ~ excwoe,not to won. 11M illftwlfel of hancinll around perhaps, is "in the blood" and it does
need a "wrongcrowd"todevelop.
They want to be laxy. Who II right?
with the ..... crowd?
The major strategy for trestment
ANSWER: It Is very lmpor1ut for
ANSWER: Tbere Is mounting
iB
widely held to be re-integration of
us to understand that not every per- fl\llclwo:.\.o in clinical and laboratory
the
drinker into a non-drinking setson who drinks has the disease of mecllclne thai the polentill capacity
ling.
This goal can best be achieved
alcoholism. In fact, only about ten to develop the dlloaae of alc:ohollam
percent of those who conaume is an Inherited characleriatlc which among people with whom one can
alcoholic beverages actually Is ezceedlngly common In the . develop close interpersonal ties and
become alcohoilcs. While some dl h1Dt18D genetic pool. In the United 'in settings where there iB a Bell8e of
the other 90 percent experience Slates alooe, for example, there are "spirituality" and commonality.
For some unknown reasons, the
problema with · alcohol, the vast ' - by conservative estimates majority llle it.withoul difficulty.
more than ten million sufferers from development and continuation of
these close interpersonal Ues seem
Those persons who have the the dlsea ... of alcoholism.
uisease of alcoholism exhibit
A current theory slates that to be the best fonn of treatment for
behavior which may appear to be alcoholism stems from what can, long tenn recovery. Thla concept of
due to laziness, lack of dlacipline, broadly speaking, be called an splritualily is aeparste and dlatlnct
poor judgment, prychosis or altered "appetite." In fact, all from religion per se. Although for
neurosis. With proper treatment, ~mingly compulsive dileases, some people religion is an important
howeve,r the vast majority of such as alcoholism, drughlsm and aspect of their spirilllality, it is not
alcohoUcs can return to normal fun- foodism (obesity) are seen as having so for everyont!.
In self-help groups sueb as
ctioning and wiii no longer exhibit . a common biolOgical cause.
If thiB theory iB correcl a suscep- Alcoholics Anonymous, Alanon,
"cr8zy" or Hlaey" behavior.
On the other hand, alcohol can be . tible person needa two things to Alateen and Alatot thiB issue is left
misused by non-alcoholics. These develop one of these diseases. First, to each individUlll to decide on a perpeople are not true alcoholi\'!J, bui the primary substance which sonal basis.

Sharing a.vacation home
By LOUISE COOK
A880Clated Presa Writer
A growing number of Americans
are cutting vacation costs by signing
up for "timeshare" plans giving
them the use of a holiday home for a
limited, pre-selected period each
year.
,
The Federal Trade Collunission
says timeshare sales have doubled
every year since 1975, topping $1
billion in 1980. But the FTC warns
conswners to ••consider the risks as

blvesbnent, ·large retu.tn. Sentinel Want Ads
Business Service~

Kltdlen -

Calla '•' C.rry

a,_,ituo

..... • Yd.

!IQIIS

I arua, Rust
J&lt;=r.-.lled

)

........
IIII'Vftl

992-G259

276 Sycamon St.
Mlddloport, 01110
9·21-t!c

~~~.Yd.

Reupholstery
SPECIAL
Bar stools
525.00
Truck Seals
5101.00
La- &amp; Matorlal
Effective Dac. 1Stl1
T~ru Jan. Utll ·

llllf&amp;llod

,Buy Now &amp; save $2•$6 Per Y•rci
25 Rolls

In stock to

· c.rpet

selection Roll

from.

tree
PARft AND SEIIVICI
ALL MAKES

SNODGIAII .
UPif~JtaY
Ract::; 011.
i. '''"'
Shop
PM.
ftt1
12-15-1 mo.

I

�..

...

'

Pap-1-The Daily

Time

II

HOUie'Mt-OOk Addillon. 3 llodroonts. family
room with fireplace, cantrtl elr, ~semen!. 304-675-

SWEEPER-- ·and sewing
moclllne repair, ports, and
suppjiH.
Pick up and
. delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, ono half mile up
Georges Crttk Rd. Call

OISOiine. heating oil and
diesel fuel. call L.andmark,

992·2181 , Pomeroy: Oh.

Flea Market .
New
' Opening. 1 days a week .

The Heart of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992·6370.

CASH FtAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bulck·Ponllac, GAllipolis,
We still hove plenty of ap- Ohio . Call 446·2282.
ples at Fitzpatrick Or~hard, SR689. Phone 61&lt;·
BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
'669· 3785.
t
paying cash for anything
stamped IOK , UK, 18K and
Bailey's Shoes, Middleport, dental gold. Class rings,
,will be open Thurs., Dec. 24 wedding rings, silver coins
&amp; Sot., Dec. 26. Closed for or
anything stamped
vacation Dec . 27 to Jan. 3, sterling. Clarks Jewelry
1982.
Store. Golllpolis 446·2691 cir
992·20541n Pomeroy!
Rock In vour New Year
with Tranzit. New Year's Buying . Gold, Silver,
Eve. Frldoy &amp; Saturday at Platinum, old coins, scrap
the
Green
Gables, rings &amp; silverware. Dally
Gallipolis, 0/llo.
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for

Gtveawar

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not Offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this
.column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

2 Border Collie puppies,
Phone 992·5106.
PUP PI ~s. to gOOd home
30-4-675·2254.
1 have a lot of COde SymOOis from cans &amp; packages,
if anyone is collecting them

for charity or club. Calf 304·
576·2169.
Lost and Found

6

LOST Red Irish Setter. I
1&amp;2 year old, In vlnclnlty of
Owl Hollow Rd. and san·
dhill Rd. Reward offered,
familY pet, Pearl Cote, 6755397.

l,~,r;,~~~~-~~~s

I!

wanted to buy motor for
1976 Honda Civic. Call 256·
6652.
We pay c'ash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, Old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wOOd Ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Complete
households .
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or992-7760.

female,
white with black spots,
may have collar &amp; chain
with "Blankenship" on It,
vicinity of Lakin &amp; West
Columbia. SSO reward. 304·

m -5066.

Yard Sale
7
GARAGE sale. furniture &amp;
washer, dryer. Tuesday &amp;
Wednesday, 9 a.m .·4 p.m.
504 Kattlnor Lane. Pt.
Pleasant.
wanted to Buy

'

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry , rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

BUYING ' DEER AND
BEEF HIDES. Gene Hines
Rt. 1, Amesville, Oh oUII·
6747 , Buying raw fur .after
Dec. 12. Dally 6 PM to 9
P.M, closed Sundays. Also
closed Dec. 24 &amp; 25.

'1972 Skyline I bedroom fur·
nlshed,
gOOd
condition
Park lot can
be rented.
992·.
7479. ·
.

DEPENDABLE baby sitter to live in while mother
works, some evdnlngs, free
room &amp; board, 30HZ3·5186.

1971 oarlan 12 x 65, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Crown
65 with 8 x1973
10
Haven, 143xbedrooms.
expondo,

1!_!2_ _:S~If~ua~t,ion=s:'w"'o"'n,fed,_-: Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
Tree trimming &amp; removal. 1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
9
29
bedrooms. 1972 Noshau, 14
Free estimates. 49·21 • .xs60, 2 bedrooms. 8 If• s
99_2·_60_40
_ ._ _ _ _ __
Sales, 1nc. 2nd and Viand
Sis . Pt. Pleasant, wv.
Have vacancies In bpar- Phone675-4424.
dlng home for elderly, one
private room and one 1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, undouble room. 614·992·6022 .
derpinned . 615-4064.
Have vacancy in my home
tor elderly. Man or woman.
Tuppers Plains, Ohio 614667·3402. .

Priced to sell. Three used
mobile homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at D and w·
Estates. formerly K and K.
Rt. 62 north, Pt. Pleasant.

·~~~~~~~~~-·
11
Insurance

wv.

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage In Gaflia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home· and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in·
dlvidual needs. Contact
Kall Burleson agent. Phone
446·2921 .

1974 CAMERON 12x60,
S.SOOO., 304-675·2560.
1972 mobile home,
nished, 2 bdr., like
675-3741.

fur·

new,

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
2. 1 acre house lots, on 5.54,
low downpeyment, land
contract, rural water,
Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256·6413, 12
p.m. to9 p.m.

Pomeroy. 992-2689.

Oh.

.............
................... "'

WILL CARE for elderly
man or woman in our
home. $900. per month.
Call.i46·8163.

Help Wanted

TV service calls. Call 992·
2034. Also used color TV for
sale.

II

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us r-ight away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.
RN's immediate opening
shift part-time I.V.
nurse team, experience not
necessary. Call · \leteran
Memorial Pharmacy. 992·
6297 . E .O.E .

day

Wanted cable . tool driller,
4000 ft cable rio. spudder ,.
Expierencenecessary. Call
J.D . Drilling Co. at61H49·
2512 day or 614-949·2&gt;106
evening.
Olan Mills needs people to
do light delivery work.
Must provide economical
transportation. Apply to
Jackie Carsey. 380 E. 2nd
St.• Pomeroy, Oh on Mon·
day Dec. 28, 9am · llam and
6pm·8pm. ,E.O.E . M·F.

----

41

2 bedroom well Insulated
house near Rio Grande
College. 1225 per month
pius utilities and $100
refundoble deposit .
References required. Call
2-45-9325 or 245·5364.

- ......... .
......

22

L

'

•

0 ~ 0

Money to Loan

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finan·
clng Loan Rep. 'Cookie
Krau"e' CJCU)6)5·3473.

-===;;=.;::::;=::e3==

23

Professional
services

Plano Tuning· Let your
plano sound pretty for the
holidays, only $30.00. Call
Bill Ward, 446-43?2.

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dlviduals.
Carol Neal44&lt;1·3862
$5 discount for pianos tuned

before Christmas. Call Bob
Grubb, 446·45251
M &amp; M Electric. All electric
work guaranteed &amp; bonded.

Houses for Rent

Smoll 2 bdr., 104 4th Ave,
Gallipolis. Suitable ·for
couple only. Call «6·2957.
1

House 5 rms . . and bath,.
newly remodeled inside,
nice garden space, loc:ated
110 4th Ave., GalliPOliS.
Call 446·3810.

LOCATED In Oak Hill . 5
rm. house, vedry nice. Call
682·6010.
Mobile homes for rent In
Gallipolis and pt. Pleasant
areas. Call 446·0682 and 675·
3000. K &amp; K Mobile Homes.
2 bedroom all electric ran·
ch style home. 1 mile from
Racln~.
References and
deposit required. Available
Nov. 15. Caii61H49·2849.

Unfurnlshed very nice 2
bedroom house. St. Rt. 248.'
985-4244.

6592.

Need dependable babysit·
ter to live In while mother
works some evenings. Free
room and board. 1·304-773·
5186.

(:/HIItcified }HI/(1'8 l'f&gt;Vf!l' fhe
follm.flinl( teleph11nt&gt; exehHillft'll .. ,

111112

.

u~~~~ts.

''

ond
apt,

·

Mobile Hom••
4t
Sp!ctfor Rent
for Ron!
COUNTRY MOBILE Home ·
2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile Park, Route 33, Nortn of
hOmes. Call ~175.
Pomeroy. ·Large toll. t;:ell
992·7479.
House trailer adulll only,
no pels, 322 3rd. Ave. Col 1
446·37.41or256· 1903.
42

----~:-:---:3

Lookl14x70 mobile hOme,
bedroom, Rodney aree. ·
Call cottecfl -304·736·1471.
2 bdr. unfurnished on Rt.
35. Ref. &amp; dep. required.
Cell of.46·4229 ..
Attractive and modern 2
bdr. S~yline, furnished,
nice location on Rt. 7 above
bypass. Call245-5818.
Centenary : 2 bdr., private
tot, adults, ref. &amp; dep.
Eureka: Rlver'lront lot, I
bdr., adults, ref. &amp; deposit.
Calll-614-643·2644.
2 bedroom trailer. Brown's
Trailer Pork, Syracuse.
992·3324.
Construction
workers'
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773-5651. Mason.
2 bedroom. furnished, all

electric. $125 plus utilities
and deposit. 675-ol088,
APirtmeml
lor Rtnt
Furnished
room
utilities pd., single
ranoe. refrig. share
«6·4416 after 7PM.
Mobile home in city central
air and heat, adults only,
dep. 446·0338 .
2 BEDROOM , apartment,
kitchen furniShed, HUD
progrom, utlllll., pold, 11
qualified. 304-675-5104 or
304-675-7364.

Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

2-2 bdr. unlllrnlallect, fpll.
In VInton. Hookup I«
WOOdburner or ··tuel ott,
31
2 bedroom house with stove refrlg, &amp; SIOYe llll'lf.!lllect.
Hames for Sale
and refrigerator. One and a . Coll245·5818.
,
BY OWNER: 4 bdr .. split· half mlleo from Pt.
level, living room &amp; dining Pleasant on Rt. 2. 675-3914.
room combination, eaHn
Apartm"'ll for rent. 614·
992-5908.
kitchen, lg. !emily rm., 2
112 baths, tocatect In Tara VERY nice two bedroot'l)
Estates.- Club houst and house with furnace heat, 3 bedroom apt. In Mid·
pool prlvlteoes, $75,000 range and refrigerator fur· dleport. S150. month. 992·
.
firm . Kyger Creek SchOOl nlollect. Locetect 2 miles 5692.
District. Shown by oppt. !rem downtown Gallipolis.
$275. month. Deposit end
only catlo1.16-9403.
tn ·Middleport, 2 room of·
reference requlred.3DH75·
l655. '
ficlency apt. Call 304-882·
Or rent·3 ~droom fur·
2566.
n/shed home on Bud Chat· 1
FURNISHED,
4
room
cotlin Rood on big level lot.
tage, adulls, no pet5, 304·
576-2711 .
675·U53.

Meigs Co. Area Code

grocery store equipment.
call 156·6413.- 12 p.m. to '
IJ.m.

For Nle'lf19 , _ CJ•7,
1. excotlont Q111dltlctl1. A
extreL Cotlo1.16-J.MS.

For Sate Klfcllln table ond
2 chelrs, $25. set 11 769
Brownell Ave.• Midcll-'·

-l·drlve, 29.000 mllel, 8
cyt. call after 3 p.m. JO&lt;t-

Reotaurant equipment
recondflloned by RADCO.
Call 304-523-1378. Hatn.
WVA.
Mver used, $35' Can con·
vert
to furnanc'".
Callprice,
256New
wood
stOve, hall
1216, Gelllpol,s.

Rubber SlamiJ Shqp,
usuaally one or two days
service. Dismuke's, o1D5
2nd. Ave., Gallipolis, ....
0414 ·

200 Mercedes dl-1 e11111ne,
18 HP Evenrude OlllbOard .
I steel chalnsaw. Cell «6·
9638.
te

TUBULAR fireplace gra
fan blower. Call 446·

Comr,tete front axle for vw
Beele, $35. Long royal blue
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
vetvetevenlng dressworn2
Sofa. cllllr, . rocker, o)· limes, $15. Call 304-458·
loman, 3 dteb tes, $SOOt· Sota , ' 1997.
chair an 1ovesea , 5275·
Sofas and cllllrs prlc..
from $285. to $795. Tablesf PI "II Pong table wllh net &amp;
$38 arid up 10 $109. Hide-a'
paddles..sso. Call olol6-0562.
$380
beds,$340., queens 1ze,
·
Recliners, $175. to S!m.;
Lampo from $18. to $65. 5\ 55
Building Suppllts
pc. dlletles trorn $79., to
$385. 7 pc., $119. and up. l Building materials block,
Wood table wltl1 4 chairs, brick, pipes, wl.,.
$219 up to U/5, Desk SilO. - . ll~leta, etc. Claude
Hutches, $3110, and $375., Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
maple or pine finish. Coii24HI21.
Bedroom suites · Bauett
Oak, $675 .. Bassett Cherry, Sheet metal. Flat 20 to 24
$795. Bunk- bed complete ·gauge . . Parcell an enamel
with mattresses, $250. Jnd •coated. Sizes 4 It by 8 fl.
Up to $350. Capteln's bodS,· 1thru • fl by 12 11. 'Many
$275. complete. BollY beds, building use&amp;. Prices $5.60
$99. Mattresses or box
to 18.00. Tuf'P"rS Plains,
springs, lull or twin, $58., Ohio. 61N67·Jq85.
firm, $68. ond $78. Queen
sots, $195. 5 dr. chesll, 149.
•
Pets for Sole
4 dr. chests. $42. Bed
frames, $20.and 525., 10 gun IIOOoLE GROOMING.
· Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet·
Judy Ta~tor at 367·
te chairs $20. ond $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
'
thopedlc .super firm, $95,
D~AGONWYND
CAT·
~by malresses, $25 &amp; $35,
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
bed frames S2G•S25, &amp; $30.
Electric fireplace, gun Cl]ow puppies, CFA
cabinet, LIVIng room suite, Hli'nlllyan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call oloi6wOOd table I. 4 chairs.
all« 4 p.m.
used.
Ranges,
rtfrllieratora. and TV's,
3 miles 0111 Butavllle Rd.
Hlt..LCREST KENNEL ·
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon. Boarding all breeds, clean
thru Fri., 9am toSpm, Set.
tndoor·out- facilities.
.w6-o322
At5CI AKC Reg. Dober·
mana. Callolol6-7795.
GOOD
USED ' AP ·
PLIANCES · washen, IIRI~RPATCH KENNELS
dryers.
refrigerator~.
Boerdl~tt end groom11111.
ranges.
s~aggs
Ap· AKC \ Cordon sollers,
pllances. 1918 !'astern l;ngiiSh CQCker SpanielS.
Ave .. 446· 7398.
Call388-f790.

614

Jiol\l

USED Tappan Gallery
range, 30 ln. y.'lth warming
tray. Coli 446·1171.

EHictency rooms IIY tht

Twin slnllft, 111'111 I'OOI'M
and vent Pl. Pttaunt.
Depoell and rtltrtnca. I·
61&lt;t-263·1322 or t-41&lt;t-263·

MISon Co .. , W.Va.

Area code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon
576-Appte Grove
773-MIIon
112-Ntw H•ven
195-Lttart
?37-Buflola

'

Tubuter flrtPIIct grote
with blower ettechment.
Used onty 3 mont"'. SOiling
btCause of move, sso.oo.
call 446·0562.

AKC

registered, shots, wormed,

vitamin, fed, ready .t o go,
l'loht weeks old. · Proc·
torvllte, ~IH86-BS40,

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies .\
Everytnlno
tmaglna~lo In horae equip·
menl. Al_ip belli. booll. 698·
3290. ~ulli Ree-.
.
F ilh Tanlc and Pet ShOll
W3 Jacr.- Ave.. Pl.
Pteastnt. t675·2063. Mon ..
Thurs .• 1 FrL 11 to 6. Tues ..
Wed., I Sal. II to 4. Check
our Fish Special .
AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian and Poodle
pupa, JO&lt;t-895-39~.

·
r
FirewOOd $35 truck load.155 a cord. 843-2933 or liG- Purebred New teoland
en.
whlterabbl". 675-l'US.
·
FIREWOOD·split oak, $40
a rlck1 170. a cord, .call 3Q,f.
675-JI37 anytllne .

. .

----,......----:- ..
11110 CHEVY Scotlldate,

~~

ton, •wlllel·drlve, 4 lpHd, ,

PS. AM·FM, mlln. ''
reg. gaa, good sllape, coli ::
:IIW·m ·5150.
•.

- -------:-- - I

77 FORD Bronco. DOiMt con; ;:

S3900.,,

dillon, 64,0011 mlln.
30H7H323or67H112.

USED counter top with
sink, 304-675-6773.

'~
,
••

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto ports, auto r011111r.
wrecker service, buy ,.
outomablltl, radiators and;'
b~a:tte~rleS5.~446~·~n~t7~.k:~: ,...
Auto Rte!r

Ellwood Kieser of Paulist
Productions, traveled to
Mauritania, Kenya and DjibOuti
on behalf of the Catholic Relief
Service.
"It was such an emotional ex·
.'p erience In that we aaw a lot of
. suffering," aaid Bwion. "I had
never seen poverty like that on
any level. I felt, why should
people have to Uve Uke this? I
kept hoping to see the AfriCII of
my visions or the w•y I had suppCIIBed Africa ~hould be.
"Mauritania, where we started, was desert and not what I ex·
peeled. Djibouti was on the coast
and not what I expected. Not until
we got to Kenya did I see any
signs of tribal IHe," the actor
ll8id. "SO the big lesson I learned
is that Africa is a big place. There
are a lot of different languages, a
Jot of different cultures."
It was the first visit to Africa
for Burtoil, who starred in .the
record·setting ABC minlsertes,
based on Alex Haley's book,
nearly four year.! ago. He played
the young warrior taken captive
and brought to America as a
slave. The African scenes were
• iilmed near Savannah, Ga.
The group was accompanied by
Jack Perkins and an NBC

BORNLOIIER

"

. .,
OualltY Au-y &amp; Paint;·
work. Insurance work ·'
welcorrie. Sunroofs In•
slelled from S:Z00.$210, Auto.
Trim tenter, 446·1968.

-:-;=:-:---"-'
'' ~
Homo
'·
tmprovtmonll
· STANLEY STEEMER ,,
Carpet Claonlng
olol6-ol20fl

.--;-11

ANNIE
-ltiAYBE YEM? THM1!i ALL RIGHT,
Y' 6CI/RE THEN{ THAT'S UKE IT

l1flt!

6HOiJLP BE!

21152.

LIQIIttct torllt atlvertlllng
algn with llldllllltettera on
lfilnd. $400, Pl1ont 576-:ND2.

camera crew, and the visit was
French City Painting
Reslctenttal, commerc~J.o.
interior, extwlor, pe.,..."
hanging, and texur. ..
ceilings. Pll. :W7-77alor
7160.

recounted in a sef!J'IIent on "NBC
Ma~azine. n

Aryother camera

crew took ·lilm lor the travelers to
use on TV talk shows.

:wn:::

Purebred sh011 Hornect
bUll Cllf, -Wiilte.l!xtra
good btocid
Born In
July. 378-6152.

Une.

=· '

4 horN atalia for rent. Call
61 ..7&lt;12·21151).
\

Handsome Indian!

.. .. ~
.

.

F &amp; K Tree TrlmmlrW~ ;
stump removal. 675·1331 . ', 1
-----'---:::-

I

H ..........

Christmas?

--------';" .,

:KW·895-~.

CARPENTRY
&amp;J
remodeling, electrical end 1
plumblll!l. 304·576·2989 or
. 576-2587.
'
.
·
' l
LOCKSMITH
Ser'vl~•" r
Residential, eutomotlte, :
Emergency service. cau t ,
8112·2079.
! •'

Si.IPPEP MY MINI7.'

12

Plumbing
• Htltlftl

I

'1'·~ I·
I~"··

I

t,~13..,.~.

l, .•

Start or add 10 a doll collection
with !hiS prood doll.
. '
NEW' This American lnd11n
doll aboull6-inches lall, is hom
our' fabulous "Dolls ol lhe N•
tions" series. Pattern 1I 95:
Directions, details, tissue tllttern
pieces for doll, l:o~ume 10cl. : _
$2.00 for each pattern. Ad&lt;!
501 each pattern for P&lt;&gt;sl•ae
and handlini. ~••• to:

12
EXCOVItf!l---... · rr
Gallipolis Dlvw.lftJ(I Con· r
·at. Co. CUllom dolor~
backiiGI work. Spocl
farm ratea. Cell us for
Hlimates. olol6-44111.
14

lltcll'lclt
&amp; RelriHrall!l!!
,.
SEWING MIICIIIIII r-1..;
•rvlce. AutlloriiJCI Slflllef
SaiH &amp; StrYice1 lllarpon
Scissors. Flbrlc SIIOPI
- o v. 992·2274.
,

BARNEY

ITS TIME TO

AWfW

\fOUR PLAY TOVS AN'
TAt&lt;E 't'OOR BATH

TH' LITTLE

TATER
1imAII'I!E~R

VARMINT!!

Nttdllcrlft ~

The Daily Sentinel·

HE HUNG UP.

I

"

I '

The beat woman player
· Alu: "Bow 1bclat

••

.AIQIIU

uticlel liD WOIIIIII bridle
ptayen1 I am 100 :JOWl&amp; lo
haye kmwD Be!ID SObel
Smilh, but ,.,. mUll blve
pla)'*l

IJS

+K4

•u

WEST

IIIIDJ-··

97U
IQJOU
+JJOU

Onlld: :'Helen wu aot
oaly tbe boll woman brld&amp;e
Dlayer " Ill-time, llbe ...
the equa! o1 Ill but maybe
~yen.

•

Strltllllf - " · I lllways
fouDtl myeen playing

ualnlt bet until 1181' lul
tOitmlmeot, lbe utlottal
miDd leam of IHII. Helen
wu termJnaDii:D at lhe
.lima, but pia 1 wllh my
Bracti·
100 Jim Iiiii

BAIT
IJ7U

•u
Uss

.I

+QUi
SOUTll
.AJIOH
IAKI7
+AU

V~able: North.SOUlh
Dealer: North

-..

=

:19

111811 of DaUu we wOD coing

INT

Wllh Ill rel1leCI to
lad Jim, He£011 carried tbe llan!e of ua."
A1aD: "Wblt aJI(em did
ouplayT"

'

Poa

I
r
I

OpeDinl lead: +J

y Onald: "Stnlgbt Hel011.
SlroDI DOtrumps (points
WJiptCified), llinlt raises

(foiciD&amp; l'lllel 10 lte worked
oat 11 iiaecled) and jut aood
canll!laJ. 011 ootr """Y lim
bllld 1 sal South and had a
problem
. at my tblrd bid. My
live IIOtrump wu tbe r,rand
a1am force, lout we lta4 not
anythiDI

II-IN

.KQ8

wtlh lad ap1n1t her

two or 1hne lillie

NOilTII

110111e

five ootrump. She rai&gt;Oiided·
seven hearts
dowa her
remarked, 'I
looking for

and 11 libe put
hand , DeleD
hope l!~ were
!be
and

r·

' "
Alu: "Tba II what yoa ;
tteeded. I also DOte lhat leV·
eo notrump d.- DOt make."
~trum
queeD..

10

comJIIcleated. Still lhe came
,... bolrd..·matcll aitd I
kneW Helen would not pus

DOWN

1 Give a lift to
2 God of Islam
t Provender

5 Most
(

cunning
I Shelter

7 Sum total ·
(abbr.)
8 Watch it!
9 Covenant
1% Soaked ·
16 Gennan song
19 Bergen's
Mortimer

Yesterday's Allawer

3Z Sofkindodisegsase
telepboning
:u Was of use 33 Engender
Z5 Slavish
35 - the
Z6 Debark
bullet
28 "Roscoe"
38 Hipster

Z3 One

31 '111;:ink;~~39;;;.Co.;,vrz.•;..r

20 sow

. dynasty
ztFal
38Inter

34 Actress

ullmann
35 Wicked
31 Average

:n Show
3tRow

·toTeD
41 11 Pi.cnicn
playwright
4Z Frllblen
from
OFeat
IHS

,..._ . NY 10113. Pdlll · -

\

"'-112·2019.

-1912 Nttdltulft Callill: l
free patterns inside. 170 llest

em

.

,

/

f
·DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE _Here's how to work It:

jadel~ dolls, quills, more!
'Knit croch~rider. $1.50

.suo

MI.
tldl
Ill 11ta111 1111 CON llld 50$
tldl ..................
Ut-1111111 Clillle Ott l'nllt

. . . . . IIIMI!nt

I
'

Md-, Zip, Pllltm llttabll

~~.::r~.:.~~~~ ·

. IU.QIIIIIItkiUI
110 hultrl'iilk IIDI31-M
12Utlllllpt
'R' Dalilll
O'nao!lll
12J.Stllidt 'n'
12Z·Stafl 'n' Puff
IZUioclltl Yaur

11

·u..,_, ,.,II'PlldiE
~

CNclltl

81
lltet!t.
1.:u.eltlcl)
1051 1 1CIIrllol

IOU 11 a Qttllto
; 101-QIIII ... CGIIaclloc I
.,

..

AJIYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
'" t

dt for another. In this aample A II
for thO two O's, etc. Sin11e !etten,
uoed or
th""le 0 _.'h ond formation of the words are all.
••
d ' ll
t
apo1troph111, e
hln1a. Each day the code !ellen are t oren .
.

On~ le'::r0 :~mp,.L~s 1~

.,

·tifm '*'-' -

IIHiaJ Art •w';W.CrD&amp;t

I' ,

-

I

. . lil, Old QIIMo Ill.. ...

ON· ME!! '

JACKS REFRtGifRATiO.
N. air r:ondiiiOn MrYice, ·
cornrMrclll, Industrial.

'·,jf

:!4 7

llftt......

116-IIIIJ FIIIJ fl:l~. ,

II'Udl. .... . , _ 3UQf.
:1117.

.

Z8 Chinese

, I

'llt-Eay Art ..

(all321111 •

.I

!3BoUd
28Become
late
21 Avouch

••• lOU HAP SO MAllY
011t!ER THIN6S 601NG
OM. IT JU6T••• eR ...

1

'I

.675-1333

'

lorm
"'" ....,... - · .. ouggtltad~tlle--.

11 Learned
essay
ztLUy21 CrisscroSS
Z! Stringed
instrument

'.J

&lt;:eillwwtlfllllltMHiot;·

'

.I

__ ... __ .

IINBELB]

13 Palm leaf
14 Completely
15 Rested
11 To be rented
17 Sheep tick

Water
wells. Commercia' I "
and Domestic. Test holes.""
1'11111111 Sat111and 5arvtc 0. '.,

·a; lime.._ tor 111'1-•n.

two DICk¥ll

. ...

IKLACEY~
() (

jar ·
11 Bad buys

RINGLES'SSERVICE .,... ~
·perlenced mason. roofer~ ~ .
carpenter, electrlcla'!~ -~ 1
general repairs and ,..J.
remodeling. Phono 30Hi5,~-,
2088 or 675·ol560.
, ;

NOW HAULING hauM COil

74 Cloii!VV 'A

I

5 Tasteless
ll Earthenware 3 Shade of gray

Well! Recovered

JONI!S BOYS WATI!R
SERVICE . C1t1 :WH471 or •'

1175-~.

.'

()

rXl

ACROSS
1 WUd party

~NEAUEY

,.,..,~,

r.- _.._ •

•

.., THOMAS JOSIPM

..

WALKING, logging, IICir·
claer, Bears, new, .S75.
pi*M 30&lt;t-576-21N.

VtelkiY
111111 up In ClrciM Molt!.

J

tow-..y .....

~

I'

For rant 3 room tum. apt,.
ldUIII only, no pets. Call

In Masoa County

..... ....._.

7195

rldlllll

:IMP.

992-2156

•

l'

__ ..... _. 10-

dlaeuaaed

Call 446-2801 tor
roach, bird, rodent,
ond flees control.
estlmates,sBIII TllomaL

'

1

J

if!»~
IE · - - - C!J
'-!~'
•
•THATIC"'
~ -111111!111 ...........

u....,... -

'

.

famine relief agency.

=-,===;;:::::;::::::;;::~=~ ·

LUMP coal dell-ed by
pickup.
Reasonable.
M11on, Hertford. t!IW
Ha- area. clll 3114-112·
AMANA
radorange
microwave oven. SIWmlll,
exc~llent
condition, 3
block. Rotttnkateo. brend
new. Call 3114-576-29«1.

.

. Burton, with Dick Van Patten,
Palty Duke Astin and the Rev.

Auto Parts
.;:
7_~-~.!'&amp;!.!A~C:!:C:!!tuOr!!!!!C!'"":":-:-:-

77

By JERRY BUCK

AP TeievllloD Writer
LOS ANGELE$ (AP)- LeVar
Burton, wbo played the young
warrior Kunta Klnte In ABC's
"Roots,.. n!ade hi8 first trip .to
AfriCII recently on behalf of ~

CARTER'S PLUMBING '., l
ANDHEATING
,, ,
Cor. F011rtlllnd Pint · "
Phone 446-3188 !If' o1.16-4177 ~

In Meigs County

446-2342

:

M~~.

\

AIREDALES,

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Galliil county

79

AKC Reg. Boxer puppies, B
wks ot~, $125. Cell446-3870.

~,-...m.

=":.,. :'v.:::.~,.strtet,

-DODGE
-- -·
power w - . &lt;t-

ffdJ.

SEASONED oak firewood,
Clll JO&lt;I-675-2757 after 4
p.m.
ONI! good

9P2-Middloport
Pomeroy
·
915-Chtster
3!3-Porttand
2!7-Lttart Falls
'49-Racine
7!2-Rutland
667-Coolville

11orve -oom

1 --':-,
5::1:--H;-;o::oa=oh;::o:;:tdo,G~IMIII=;;-

One year Old froslfree
retrlgeretor end stove, In
Small furnished house, gOOd condition. SCIOO. tor·
adults only. Call 446·0338:
both or $350. for ref. &amp; $250.
tor stove. Call 446·0562.
3 rooms' with private bath,
'
845. sOcond Ave. Phone 446· 52
CB, TV, Rodlo
2215.
Equipment
RCA TV, console model,
Furnished Apt. lat floor, BIW, excellent condition.
utilities furnlsllect. Ref. Call of.46·7013.
required. No pell. Adults
preferred. Call 11 631 4th
Ave.
51
Houltllotd-•
2nd. floor furnished ef·
!Ieney apt. 729 2nd. Ave.,
GalliPOlis. Call 446·0957.
Adults only, no pell.

'Roots' star
on initial
visit to
Africa

•lit., doUble end ·
cheat, 2 enllqUe clockl, I
maal lllctr end misc.

tt~~~~~~~~TI~~~~~~~~0
I,

1

'.

bar·

3- 1 ft. shOWC- wntl

1

Modern 2 bdr. furnlshed,
t2x70 trailer. Convenient
location, sec. dep. &amp; ret .
required, utilities paid ex·
cept electric. Call «6·8558
alter 5.

'

""'st.. 32111.

fllrewaad·INIOMd

I

2 ~draom house. Spring
Ave.. Pomeroy. Carpeted,
remodeled. Call Iller 6.
$195. month not Including
utilities. 992·2288.

.
.
VIewmg

. as *"..., IOed
dell-". ceo 34\76.

I

4! . '

304-675·2236.

consignments. 614·698·

Gallla Ca. Area Cade
614
&lt;1&lt;16-GaiiiPOIII
367-Chnhlre
31t-VII\IOII
245-RioGrande
256-Guyon Dlst.
643-Arabll Dis!.

IIU.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10,. on largest
end . $12.50per ton. Bundledll
" ' - --'w,.a,n_,ted,_,to,Do=-slab . 110.50 per ton . Butcher' s Shoppe Custom
Del iverd to Ohio Pallet Co., butchering &amp; processing.
~ock Springs Rd . , Call 446·2851, Gallipolis,

and appliances or anything
otl1er than clothing. Will

Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals.
batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Harper-Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·.5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily . Open Monday Friday Hpm .

RESPONSIBLE woman to
live In wit~ elderly lady, In
RavenswOOd. Call 30.1-273·
,.216after6p.m. orweeken·
ds.

12X60 CAMERON, 3
bedroom, partially fur·
nlshed, extras, 304-675-1424.

·used household ' furniture
tak~

mobile home. Set up with 2
or
.. lots,
gas heat, Buddy
rural
12x60
2 bedroom
water, close to t!)Wn, finan·
clng available. Phone «6·

AUTOMOB .ILE
IN·
SU RANCE been can·
celled? . Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992·2143

LOST Femare Beagle dog
back of Clifton. Name tag
on collar. 773·5684.
LOST -Foxhound,

•\

1965 General mobile home
12x6S, completely ready for
setup, Includes cement
blocks &amp; skirting. 54.800.
For more Information call
446·0511 .

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Ever)' Sun. starting
at 1 A-m. Factory choke
gunsoltly.

4

,, ' l

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE of.46·3868.

of

\.
I

~7572.

Television

" " dllcllutll on WOld I.
taat.
IIOCk
·c:o,·,
· o.Hipllll
· While
IUIIIIIY

l

r

Molll1t Homtl
!«S.It
TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Year
end · sale, price reduced.
used mobile hOmes. CALL

Plete line ¢ trapplllll sup·
Pilei. Traps, dye, wax, and
lures.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co.. Sprl1111 Valley
.P laza, ~-11025.
,
delivery

..

H

· TRAPPER We have a com·

For · bulk

II

1542.

.

~4. :

The

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ,.

HOIIItllwS.It

.

CRYPTOQUOTES
IHMG ' P
ZHNNIG

MZJK

YGZXUYP
DXUD

SHRHOS

DXG

EG

JOJQ

P XZ HOA

WY . - E . P. S HIFG Z D

-.
---~ WE KNOW WE'VE WISHED YOU
rs·•,.•l"'t'"'..Ja~b=NGS BEFORE BU'l' ONCE AGAIN WE
WEJOUMORE.-\'OURPUZZLEMAiCERS

!'

�.

'
Oltlo

Patrol.checks .Dili.iOi
two .,.
ldda7
AI,..., 8W..,
!1118..,.,
tl
wa
al the

'lbe lui

01 ........

ac-

Ill . . . ...... ... -

ddllllllld I . . . . llllllar
:b
in die - . oteOI 3 llo the GalllaMelll Post al the . . . ldclnray

, • I. . .

$$]

..

•
:-n:.=tll'llll

...- 7 I ,.llid I
011111111
lit - - · Rt. I, .,..,..., . .
Golla~ 1\d. I at I LID. 8unda)r

.......__
.. ..... .............

patrol.
'lbe patrol Mid Tema L. Bryant, '
211, Rt. 2, Patriot, aUgNiy In-

Alfwo

at y

e

wllldl_._.,...

in 11181-&amp;, promotes international

Wlllianu Ill charged with the deatbl of lwo Yt11J1C
Atlaata blacki and biB trial beglu today with Jury
se_lect1011. (AP Laserpholo).

WJLLIAMS TO TRIAL - Wayne WWlaDU, right,
war1Jit1 gltlles, Is under heavy security as be was
laken from Fulton Co. jail Moaday morning In Atlanta.

I.

Area deaths

Tommy H. McGrath
· Tommy Howard McGrath, Sr., 58,
died Sunday at his Route I, Long
Bottom residence.
·
Mr. McGrath was a veteran of
World War II and was employed at
Veterans Memorial Hospital. He attended the Flatwoods United
Methodist Church and was baptized
00 July 24, 1981.
Preceding him in death were his
father, Emory C. McGrath; a son,
Roger, and a grandson.
Surviving are his wife, Irene Hartung McGrath: his mother, Florence
Patterson McGrath, Route 5,
Athens; three sons, Tonuny H.
McGrath, Jr., Chester; Harold Lee
McGrath, at home; Ronnie Dale
McGrath, Reedsville; two
daughters, Mrs. Jerry (Barbara
Lee) Hart, GuysviUe, and Mrs. Ed
(Patty) Schaekel, Chester; seven
grandchildren; three brothers, Eddie E. McGrath, Athens: Robert
McGrath, Albany, and Samuel K.
McGrath, Canal Fulton, and two
. sisters, Mrs. Walt (Betty) Pyle,
Athena, and Mrs. Casler (Mary
VIrginia) Giffin, Albany, Several
nieces, nephews, uncles and aunts
-also survive.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Jim Corbett and
the Rev. Richard Rothemich officiating. Burial wiD be In Meigs

I Accelerator

MemorY Garden. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after 7
this evening.

Mary S. Plattenburg
Friends bere have received word
of the death of Mary Ann Smith Plat-

lenburg, wife of the late Rev.
Stanley Platten burg, rector of Grace
Episcopal Church from 1969 to 1972.
Mrs. Plattenburg died at a nursing
home in Cincinnati whe're she and
her late husband resided following
his retirement from the ministry.
She Is survived by· a son, three
daughters, 14 grandchildren, and
two great-grandchildren, ailing with
a sister in Cape Cod, Mass.
Funeral services were held from
Christ Church Chapel at 10 a.m. on
Dec. 23.

Survivor omitted
Unintentionally omitted from the
death notice of Hubert Price, fonner
teacher and school administrator,
was a daughter, Beverly Price &lt;1
Cincinnati.

Amusement license's

will expire Dec. 31
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today reminded area businesses that
their amusement maehint licenses
expire on Dec. 31. These licenses are
· .available at the mayor's office Monday through Friday from 6 a.m. to 4
p.m.
.
.
Amusement machine Ucenses are
$50 for a juke box, $50 for each coinoperated amusement machine on
the first three machines and $25 for
each machine after the first tju-ee.
These fees are deposited in the
recreation lund of the village and
are used to provide park equipment
at the municipal park.

causes wreck

RepubllcofGertnany.

Emergency runs

A stuck accelerator led to three
cars being damaged in an accident
The Meiga County Emeraency
Medical Service reports five calls
at Tuppers Plains Sunday afternoon
were milde over the weekend by
the Meigs County sheriff's depart·
area emer~~ency aquads.
m~t ~- t0 d tl Clayton
.
At 10:113 a.m. Saturday, the Mldcc
g
epu es, .
... dleport unit transported Diana
Gree?, 82, Tuppers ~ 1118 was _ Roberta from her Page Street home
backing his car out of his garage
to Pleaaant Valley Hospital.
when .the acceleratQr stuck and his
The RutlalJd squad was called to
yehicle back~ across State Route 7 Meigs Mine No. 1 to transport Dick
mto the dnveway at , the ~om
Fetty to Holzer Medical Center
Burrough home. Greens vehicle Saturday at 12:07 p.m. ·The Midstruck two cars parked in the dleport unit made another call that
day, at 4:32 p.m., lreatlng Hobert
Burroughs driveway. They were
moved about ZO f~t by the Impact. Spirea at his Miller St. residenc:e
Ught damages were incurred to the andat6:51i p.m., theTuppen~
Green vehicle. However, one of the. aquad took Jordan CaldweU from his
Burrough vehicles was demoU.hed Route. 7 home to St. Joseph's
and there were damages to, the rear Hospital.
of _the second vehicle. There were no
Sunday, one call waa answered·by
, inJunes ~nd 90 citations.
the Pomeroy aquad, which IranDeputies also report John sported · Harold Davia lnlm his
Pridemore, 'll, Rutland, hu been MlnersvlllehometoPleuantValley·
nesday
a charge
of dumping
cited
to on
appear
in county
court trash
Wedaloog a road in Rutland Township. .
II was also reported that a vebicle
apparently backed into a rail lence
at the Richard Clark, near Racine,
over the weekend breakJ.ng off two
posts.
Meanwhlle, Pomeroy pollee said a
car driven by Sabra Morrison,
Pomeroy, received medium damage
Friday night when it was crowded
into a wan on Lincoln Hill Road.
Mrs. Morrison was coming down the
hill .when a second vehicle going
• uphill crowded ber into the wall,
pollee said.

1816, the Rotlry FaUI!IIa.ti
tioooo hu

lfllllled over 1100 ~-Ez.
aw;arda

worth ap·
prox1ma1e1y fl~ miDIIIII and ID•
volvlnf_.-elbill'9608plt-fi'GIIl

manllllll18ea tiM.

For further lntormallllll or for ap.
pllcatian f~. c:andldalel may
wrltur call J111111 C. Taylor ID
of the NCJI. Carp., f .O. Box 'Ill,
Cambriclle. Ohio, f"'&amp;JJQQ, plione
439-8611, or Cbulel T. CulluiiiDO.
care al The RIVII' Gu Co., • lClllrth St., 111r1etta, Oblo 4117R, .....,.
373-«i46. AppliGIIIGaiGIUIIIIie campieted_ and rebn•4jljf' .toto the Mid-

'*'

lvarv
fue1rffltl
Nl1111ll
.fAt Crow'• ·
-· ,
~ ,_
•

ALL THE KENTUCKY fRIED .
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.
· · · · · .. • •

·.

·· ·

.

WILLIAMS TO SECOND DAY OF TRIAL Wayse wtDlams earrles a legal pad Tllelda;r momlug
u be II escorted !rom the Fldto. Ceunty Jall earoute to
the .......t day ol biB !rial on cbarges of ~ two

'

UTICtft DIIIIER OIILY
DIIIIIG ROOM ONLY
Sorry, No Subslllutel oxcopt
..,•••, .. which ha.,. . . . .
dit•l price.

· ~row's
228W. Main

Served . w.ltll Whl pped
PotI toll, Clllclcen ONVV.
Cole Slaw, ...,-.on, Butter.
ondCof.fel•

.

.......

PlllltfOY,OH.

r~H~ospl~tal~a~t~3:~40~p.~m.~----_j~===~=====~;;;;::;;:;;;::~;

Oct.1.

Begin offers assurances
TEL AVIV, Israel - Prime Minister Menachem Begin sent Egypt
assurances Mooday that Israel's evacuatioo of the Sinai Desert will be
completed on schedule, al!'cordlng to Israeli Radio.
The assurances, made to Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak In a
seven-page, handwritten letter delivered !JY the Israeli ambassador in
Cairo, came amid a new outbreak of violence by settlers who want to
remain in the northern Sinal town of Yamlt.
llraeU Radio said the letter delivered by Ambassador Moshe Sasson
also explained Israel's Dec. 14 annexation of the Golan Heights, captured from Syria in the 1987 Mideast war.

Two marriage licenses have been
Issued by the Meigs County Probate
Court. They were Luued to Eric Lee
Foster, 19, Racine, and Bultoal Ann
Richardson, 16, Coolville; and
Richard Eugene Collins, 35,
Pomeroy, and Carolyn Jean Sat-terfield, 36, Pomeroy.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SALE! 'HALLMARK
CHRISTMAS CARDS - GIFT WRAP·

Atmcks,annexationsurprises
Contrary 10 popullr billet. you
dont need big bucks to build a
retrremeni nest egg. At least nor
any more.
Becauae the new lax-deferred
lndrvrdual Rebremenl AccouniS at

,_.,. lo"" ,.,,

you build a srzeble retttemenr fund

!rom modllll annual illVISiment&amp;.
As an examl)ll.diPOIII II .000
at the stanot each Ylll' lor 30vears
rd your grand 10111. \\1lh lltned
1nrarar. could bla wlloPtlino

S210.2t2 (e..! on 1~infilrasl.
oomllOUI'diCI annUIIIy).
Thll'l WOflll..-"9: S1 .000
a Ylll' tor SO ,.._ 6IUI inleflll.
could equal over a Qulrtlr of a
milliOn doilal'1.

SELECTION INCLUDED- ht FLOOI.

'VJ IJRICE

The rotating cylinder, proposed for the aovernment's nuclear
energy nHrvaUoo at nearby Oak Ridge, WDUid burn contaminated
olll and sollda hauled to the site by truck, DOE spokesmen said Monday.
.
oak Ridge, Secretly built during World War n as the construction
site of the first atomic bomb, now encompasses three plants that
generate radioactive waste that would be Incinerated in _the cylinder.

WASHINGTON- October's flood of deposits in the nation's savings
and Joan associations dried up In November as Interest in the new taxelUllllpt ''all-savers" certificates waned, the latest government report
shows.
Savers withdrew $1.6 bUUon more than they deposited in the
beleaguered S&amp;L's In November, the Federal Home Loan Bank Board
said Mooday.
That made November the eighth month in the past nine with more
withdrawals , than deposits, with October's net deposit gain caused
only by the nuth to buy the new certificates when they were Introduced

licenses

'

mllllon to build an 11-foot-by-:.-foot garbage

Deposits dry up in November

'

INDIVIDUAL
CARDS
AND BOXED
CAIDI
- -PLUI
.
...
...
.
. .
CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP - PINS - NApwNI :TRAYS- TAILE DECORATIONs:...· ENTIII-IITMll

IOfOXVlU.£, T41111. - The Energy Dep8rimont, ~a way to WUfe tinged with radioactivity and cancet&gt;causing PCBs,

wanta ·to spend •

Family Restaurant
Ph.9H·MJI

DOE wants expensive disposer
get rid al

A Refunders .Club meeting will be
held Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Riverboat Room of Diamond
Savings, Pomeroy.

Marri~e

YOUDI Allanta bbtrb. 'lbe deatbl were 1wo In a string
of 28 alaylags over.a lwo y- peried Investigated by a
special task force. ( AP Laserpboto).

•

Williams' arrest.
"H you were charged with a
Crime, and a juror in your frame of
mind was trying you, would you feel

comfortable?" the defeiiSe lawyers

asked.

Some 'too prospective jurors have
been called lor the trial, but only 47
were questioned Monday. Of that

·.
•

•.

....
,

•

·.

or innocence.
Of the remaining 21, 11 were
qualified for the jury pool frum
which the 12 jurors ud altemaatM
for the trial will be selected, and the
other 17 faced individual questloninl :
today by defense lawye!'l and :
prosecutors.

The courtroom was packed Mon- :
group, 17 were excused because of
medical or famDy hardships, and day with reporters and spec:talll"Bo
two were diJmiased because they who were required along with the .
acknowledged they already had for- prospective jurors to paas through a
med opinl0118 about Williams' guilt . metal detector before entering._

Shoppers return fewer presentS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Shoppers may have been more careful
this year than last when buying
Christmas gifts, some merchants
speculate after seeing fewer gifts
being returned this year.
" People were more selective this
year, doing a Jot of comparison shopping and makinl sure of what they
bought, so returns are way down,"
said Craig Spidell, assistant
1118118ger of Kay-Bee Toys !nc. at
Northland Mall.
He said the fewer returns are not
because of reduced buying, as the 3-

year-old store sold considerably
more merchandise this year tha!1 in
1980.

•

Another merchant contacted by
The Columbus Dispatch during a
survey of post-Christrnas activity,:
salesman Daniel Mann of J .B.
Robinson Co. Jewelers, said the
mililber of returns this year Ia
amazingly low.n
Engagement rings are always 1
hot item at Christmas, but as of &amp;mo
day afternoon, only one tearful
suitor had come in to get his money
back, Mann said.
fl

Industrial sabotage charged

Meets Tuesday

FUNERAL TODAY- Fuueral
...-vices !Gij Herbert M. Price, 19,
of Ponllnad were beld today all
p.m. at ~ PortiMd United
Metbodllt Cltarcla. Mr. Price was
a former teacher llid prlaclpal of
the POI1land Elemetilary Sellool.'
He wu a member of the POI1land •
United Methodlol Cburdl.

ATLANTA (AP) - Lawyers for
Wayne B. Wllllams are fOCUIIng on
racial prejudice and the publicity
stirred up by a string of 28 klllllip
around Atlanta as they qlll!Siioo
prospective jurors for the YOUIII!
black man's doublL&gt;-murdertrlal.
District Attorney Lewis Slaton and .
his assistants asked few qlll!Siions of
the prospective jurors in the initial
day of jury seleclloo, but defense
lawyers Alvin Binder and Mary
Welcome interropted each one
carefuJiy, often at lenslh.
Williams, a 23-year-old free-lance
photographer, Is charged with murdering Nathaniel Cater, 'll, and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of 28 young
blacks whose deaths over a 22-mOnth
period have been investigated by a
special police task force. There have
been no arrests in the other 211
slayings.
"Have you had any experience or
relationship with a black person that
would make It difficult for you to sit
' in judgment in this case?" Binder
and Ms. Welcome asked Monday.
While none admitted to racial
biases that would affect judgment,
each told of reading newspaper
stories or seeing television reporta
about the series of slayings and

'lbe visit to Germany will provide

.\I
, ·~

IS C -.

AMulll,lllloloc. N_,... .

Jurors queried
about prejudice

Since the
In
r~Rota~ry~dlstrlct~§~~~the~trlp~.
;dl~eport-~~P~om~e~roro~yy8. ~..,.,.~~Ciub~~by

the team with • uadque penon-topersoo opportunity to JII'GIDflle bettor understanding and friendly
relatiooa between the people of the
United Statea and the Federal

I Section, 10 Po...

.

L.

Rotary Club .seeks applications

million
on the Group
Study
understanding
and good
wUI.program

enttne
I

demapud110lnjliay.
Moderate damqewu ngart8d to
a veblde driWiil by JICk M. Pt.-,
~. Daytoa, aftlr It~ i deer on
u.s.
• - - tbe JIM:ban County
Plneat9:11a.m. Saturday.

change

--.•..•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, Dectmblr 29,1981

~

'lbe Mlddleport-Pameroy Rotary
Wblle in Germany, the IJ'Oiip will
Club iiJieekln&amp; applicants for Group obserVe the w8y li life al their balta
,StudyEacbangeAwards.
. and study the llltloa'• ICOIIOIIIII:,
Rotary Dlatrlct B will send a 'aocial and cuJtura1 characii.IUcs
team of five Y0U111 bullneiS ud through travell!lld diBcuMIOIII with
profaslona1 penoos from thilarea theparUcipatlngRotarydillrlct.
to visit Gennany lot aiJ: wee~ in
The team wiD be accompanled by
May and June allJIIZ.
Michael F. LaPlante of ZlnelviUe, a
Gnq~ Study Euhallge Is an
Rotarian who ill serviJ1!I u repmea&gt;educatklnal activity al the Rotary, tative of District eee Govemor
Foulldation wblch provldel travel George F. Kramer.
granta for the excharwe al teams,
Each Group Study Exchange conwithin a two-year period, between siata of five outstanding nonpalred Rotary dlatrids In different Rotarians betwen the agea alii and
countries. The Foandatlon, which 35 who represent a crousection of
will spend approximately '$1.8 the businesses and profellllona In the

'

VOI.M,No.liO

Cop•tr111111111911

Thompttn, 111 ·
Ct ?o!te, ~ !lilt aDIIIrol ar .
~ ....,. 011 tbe ume 1'0111 at l t3G
. _ MDday, went le!lllld bl&amp; ID

Jured when ller veblde loet control
while northbauad an Rt, na at4 a.m.
Swlcla)' and ltrudla renee owned by
Arnold Pitchford, Rt-.1, 'l'buaman.
Bryant was not tnated at the
scene ud there was moderate
damqe reportocl to ber wblcle.
'lbe patrol Mid a :veblcle driven by
Jolin H. Coffman Sr., M, Pwtland,
sideswiped a westbound ftblde

•

•

·-···..&amp;"""''
r•

TEL AVIV, Israel - Sen. Charles Percy says the Reagan adminlltration hu been repeatedly surprised by the Jewish state's sudden miUtary attacks and aMexaUon of the Golan Heights.
The Olinolll Republican, who chain the Senate Foreign Relations
Conunlttee and frequently criliclzes Israel, planned to meet Prime
Minllter Menachem Begin and Defense Minialer Ariel Sharon later
today.llll'lleliB hope the talks will ease tensions between the allies.
, Percy met Foreign Ml•lller Yltzhak Shamlr for two hours Monday
after be arrived for the two-day talks but made no comment. Israeli officlala deacribed the tone as cordial.

· Or. nyou prelltr. dlllOiil tl'la
mllllOmum amount lor an indr-

vidull. $2.000 a ~r. Whicl1 could

make you a half ol a mtlhonarre rn
30years
And bacauae our IRA plans are
tax-deferred. you deduct the
annualrn..estlrlllllfromyouryearly
taxable income 59 yo~.~·n pay no
federll tP8S on your IRA until
you stan Will'ldrawing fundi
(mrnimum lilt 59\tl

Winning Ohio lottery number

Then. an you ~re. )10!1'11
PI'OblbiY blln •lowlr !IX brllclcet.
~no laSs lilies.

CLEVE~ - 'lbe winning number drawn Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" w8,16411.
The lottery reported earnlnp al $3811,044.60 from the wagering on Its
dally game. 'lbe eamlnga came 111 laluli f937 ,576, while holders Of
w!nnlnt! tickets are entitled to share tli67,531.60, lottery riflcials said.

' lliMttv 1er ••,,, Willlllnwll"
"luillllllllll

Weather forecast

•

Parlly cloudy tanllht llid WIKIPelday. 1-. tonight lri the low mo.
lflllaWodnlldayiDtbemld30L Tbeehance alpreclpltation 1810 percent toailht and near lfll'll Wrt tay.
B•l ' IOIIIoFwec:ut
'ftlu:lfl1 tlli p......,l.
Fadr1111itldar..... a.l)o ....._,, A ' ce al fltarrles Salarday.
..... , _ tile . . . . ~~ ..., . . 'Dita
tile . . Friday llid
I I *'·L!""'"-""Iwe• ....... t rlttlle .. Salllnlay.

..

'

ELBERFELD$ IN

I

'

••

t

,

..

By Tbe Auoclated Press
Defiant Polish workers are
producing automobile parts that
don't fit and enpglng in other acts
of industrial sabotage, according to
uncensored reports reaching the
West.
But Poland'a military 10Vernmenl
clalml work Ia re1ura1iJ11 to IIOI'IIllll
as the lui strlba agal.,. martial

Meanwhile, a weD-placed U.S. administration official said President
Reagan will blocll the sale to the
Sovleta of equipment for a pipeline
that would carry natural gas from
Siberia to Western Europe. After
revlewin&amp; recommendaUooa by a
hlgiHevel tuk force, Reagan also
decided to halt of aports al high
tec:llnollll)' to the Soviet Union, in--

la'Wan!~

dudinc

ClllllfJUien, and 8118pend

Man gets six month sentence
WUllam D. Lewis, 21, Mlck'lepnrt,
wu given a aiJ: moMh to five yeer
pr1so11 sentence when he appeared
before Meigs County Common Pleu
Court Judge John C. Bacon Monday
afternJlOII.
Lewis entered a voluntary plea ri
guilty to a chllrge of vandalism In
connection with an Incident on
Christmas Day at the Meigs County
Jail.
Lewis was charged in a bill of in-formation prepared by the office of
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow
Ill with setting a fire in the jail.
Lewis, at the time of the latest offense, was on probation for breaking
and entering at a Racine store in

clcted an tbe charge, a felooy of the
fGur&lt;J;.diiJw.
Judp lllacon Keepted her guilty
plea, but dele: aed aentenclng and or-

derod a ...--ntence Investigation
and report. Biker hu agreed to
repey all monies obtained from the

welfare department.
John Allen Park, Pomeroy, is
scheduled to go before Judge Bacon
today for sentencing oo his prior
plea of guilty to breaking and entering at Tom's Carry-Out in
Pomeroy. Park entered his plea in
July and was released on a personal
recognizance bond. He then disappeared from the area for several
months. He was arrested last week
and held for final sentencing. Park
1980.
In another case, Carol Y. Baker, had been using at least four different
Middleport, appeared before Judge aliases, officials report. He is also
Bacon on Mooday to enter a volun- wanted by Arizona authorities for
tary plea of guilty to a charge of . four different theft counts, one of
· theft by deception involving her which Involved the theft of a
allegedly receiving monies fradulen- fireann. Breaking and entering is a
Uy from the Meigs County Welfare fourth degree felooy carrying a
possible penalty of six months to five
Department.
years
in prison.
Baker had been previously in-

maritime rights under which Soviet
ships use U.S. ports and aviation
rights under which Soviet airliners
operate within U.S. boundaries.
Reagan, who blames the Soviets for
the impositioo of fllllrllal Jaw in
Poland, was expected to announce
the decisions this afternoon in
California.
Warsaw Radio quoted the
Ministry of Mining and Industry as
saying 939 miners at tbe Plast mine
in Sllesla would return to work today
after ending their 13-&lt;lay occupation
- the last large-scale protest of
martial law.
The radio said today that 12
"ringleaders of the protest action
have been arrested by the military
prosecutor's office." The arrests
came despite earlier government
broadcasts assuring there would be
no reprisals If the miners quit the
protest voluntarily.
Earlier official Polish media
reports said the 2,300 minel'S · who
abandoned their strike last week at
the nearby Ziemowlt coal mine
resumed digging Monday, and that
full production had resumed at the
Hula Katowice steelworks - where
security forces had routed
protesters.
The Brillsh Broadcasting Corp., in
a report from Warsaw, said, "The

military are said to have effectively
secured the country."
But British newspapers said today
that thousands of workers have been
fired for refusing to resign from tbe

Contract decision set today
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. - Members of Local 5668, United Steel
Workers of America are voting today to allow for renegotiation of their
contract with the Kaiser Aluminum Corp. plant in Jackson County,
W.Va.
The company has ask~ for the renegotiation in the wake of layoffs .·.
and a possible plant shutdown. According to union spokesmen, the ·
vote won't concern wage concessions.
The union said items open for renegotlstion are training of new employees, overtime lunches, seniority mles and provisions allowing for
flexibility in employee assignments.
..
Last week, Kaiser threatened to shutdown the plant if the contract .
wasn't renegotiated. The move would Idle almost 2,600 workers still oo
the job. Layoffs during the year have resulted in the loss of 1,400
people from the work force .
Kaiser management said the layoffs were necessitated by the
depressed steel market and low worker productivity, making the plant
uncompetitive in the field.
Another 400 workers could be laid off if the Oakland, Calif.-based
aluminum and chemical concern decides to close the plant's oreprocessing operation.
Voting Is scheduled to end at 7 p.m. today.

Woman hurt in wreck
A Pomeroy resident was
hospitalized In an accident with a
tractor trailer In Meigs County Monday morning.
Carole M. Arnold, 39, was reported
in good condition this morning in
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Arnold was stopped on Rt. 7,
waiting to make a left turn onto
· County Rd. 24 at 10:29 a.m. when the
truck, driven by Michael D. St.
Pierre, 24, Tecwnseh Ontario, was
unable to stop and strock the rear of
Arnold's vehicle, according to the
Gallia-Melgs Post Of the state highway patrol.
Severe damage was done to Arnold's vehicle, and she was taken to
Veterans by the Pomeroy ernerg'en1

cy squad. St. Pierre was cited for
assured clear distance.
The patrol said a driver was injured in a collisioo with a mo"blle
home In Gallll County Monday.
According to the report, Heber M.
Saunders, 80, Rt. 2, Bidwell, was
eastbound on County Rd. 4 (KerrHarrisburg Road),.Jiine-teaUIIU#.!.
mile west of Rt. 160, at 9:411 a.m.
when his vehicle went off the right
side of the road and struck the rear
porch of a mobile home owned by
Enunett Timmons, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Saunders' auto was demolished
and,he was treated at the scene for
his injuries by the Gallia EMS. He
was cited for no operator's license
and expired reglstratloo.

now-suspended Independent labor
nnion Solidarity.
Uncensored reports reaching the
United States from sources in war:
saw on Monday night painted a piC.
lure of defiance In Pvland, under
martial Jaw since Dec. 13.
·
Sources said workers at the FSO
automoble plant in Warsaw were
turning out parts that do not fit
iogether. Three alleged instigators
of an earlier strike at that plant went
on trial Monday in Warsaw and were
to be sentenced today.
A traveler returning to Warsaw
from the port of Szczecin said
facilities were open, but dock·
workers were merely " recycling"
cargo - loading and unioadlng the
same goods. About 200 fonner employees bave been fired as undesirables, the traveler said.
The Katowice steel mill waa
closed, according to the reports,
because workers sabotaged furnaces before StlC1ll'ity forces broke
up a strike a few days ago. In Warsaw, Western observers said they
saw only one smokestack working.at
the giant Hula Warszawa steel complex.
Warsaw Television quoted the
press spokesman for the general
prosecutor's office as saying seven
men have been charged with
"leading the sit-in strike at the
Katowice steel works, obstroCUns
normal work and seriously
damaging installations and production.11

'

Pomeroy addition among expansion projec~s
ATIIENS - General Telephone
Co. al Ohio hu budgeted more than
JU million for caplial expansion
projects In Its Athens district next
year, the companJ announced
today.
ExiBtlng caJI.tranamlttlng and
diltrlbutioo facilltla will be lncnued tbroulhout tbe 13 exchanges
al the dlltrlct, 1111 Jim L. Parker,
111'811 service manager.
l'!'~t call-switching ad-

~

dltlons are to be completed In

Albany, Amesville, Bremen, Lopn,
New Marshfield and Pomeroy. A
totalli 1,800 new customer lines wlll
be gained fronttbele projects.
General will spent almost $1.6
mlllioo to expand Its outside cable
dlatrlbuUon network. Conltructloo
crews will be working throughout
the district. There already are 70
specific projects oo the scheduleand

others are being engineered for completion in 1982.
"These projects, as well as the
central office expansions, wlll support our goal ri offering only onL&gt;party service by the end of the
decade," Parker said.
Another Important part of this

yeer's constructloo effort will be the
lnstallatloo of equipment to increaae
the nnmber of calling patha between
II

exchange offices. The qualliy of
""'nsmlsaloo also wiD be improved
'6y these projects, he added.
•
._In addition to Athens, exchansel
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