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Newspaper Archive of
The Hinton News
Hinton, West Virginia
November 20, 1979     The Hinton News
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November 20, 1979
 
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t ! t I t L 9--Hinton News Tues. Nov. 20, 1979 Livestock darket Bluegrass Market Inc. Sat- Over the years we&apos;ve become .... familiar with truth in lending urday November 10, 1979. 894 head ci liwstock sold to 150 bu' z amo,mting tO $201,931. ..!. .e'fers: ;tandard, 60.50- 62. 50; ,idlit), 53.5- 50.75. St,..ker & Feeder : Steers : Ch<.',+e, "(.50- 77.00; Good, 66. ,,,- 70.50; : dium, 53. 50- 64.00. ;qeer Calves: Choice, 95.00- 100. 4: Good, 83.00- 92.00; Med- ium, c ,.O' 80.00; c,.ws, 39.00- 63.00. Heifer calve: L.ok:e, 63.00- 66.00; Good, 59.00- 62.0o; Med- ium, 47.50- 61.00. Ve Calves: Good, 75.00- 81.00; Medium, 68.00- 74.00; Common, 50.00- 67.50. Bulls: Commercial & Good, 53.00- 54.50; Cutters,.49.50- 51. 00. Light Bulls: 39.00- 53.50. Bull Calves: cwt, 55.00- 91.00. Baby Calves: 25.00- 102.00. Cows: Commercial, 60.00- 64. 00; Utility, 52.00- 58.00; Can- ner & Cutter, 8.50- 51.00. Cows & Calves BH, 560.00- 645. 00; Cows, BH, 405.00. Hogs: No. 1, 41.00- 45.50; No. 2, 37.00- 45.00; No. 3, 29.00- 46.00; Sows, 31.00- 41.00; Boars, 21.00- 35.00; Pigs & Shoats, 8.00- 33.00; Ponies, CWT, 8.00- 18.50; Hor- ses, cwt, 27.50. Sheep & Lambs: Blue, 57.00- 60.00; Red, 54.00- 55.00; Med- ium, 53.00- 58.00; Common, 20. 00- 45.00; Ewes, CWT, 17.00- 22.50; Bucks CWT, 22.50. Ponies : B.H., 17.50-22.50. Goats, BH. 25.00- 35.00. Elected To Board of Directors • J. Walter Brown, former mayor of Oak ttill, and Bill Wilbur of the Beckley- Raleigh County Chamber of Commerce, were elected to the Board of Directors of the New River Travel Council at a board meet- ing a{ the Oak Supper Club at Pipestem Sunday, Nov. 11. Both men begin serving on the board immediately. The two seats on the NRTC Board of Directors became open due to increased memb- ership in the travel council from both counties. Board membership representation of the counties is determined ab- ove a minimum by the general membership from each county. Guests who addressed the directors included Joseph Fow- ler, director of the Travel De- velopment Division of the Gov- ernor's Office in Charleston, and Steven Nicely, executive director of the Country Roads Travel Council headquarters i'n Parkersburg. President James Bolinger of Pipestcm , in his report to the board, urged that the state develop a new and much st- ronger law aimed at the con- trol of litter and trash. He pointed out that the Pipestem Creek valley was a most be- autiful area when he first came to West Virginia from Illinois to manage Pipestem Resort. Since then, he declared, the valley in Summers County has become littered with junked automob- iles and other eyesores which detract from the natural beau- ty greatly. Managing Director E.J. Hod- el reported that membership dues had climbed to an all- time high, exceeding the $12,000- goal set for the year, and that 1980 memberships had already be- gun coming into the NRTC offices. In another report, Hodel re- vealed that beth volunteers at the Canyon Rim State Park overlooking the New River Gor- ge Bridge and the travel cou- ncil's employe, who took over in September, had greeted nearly 10,000 guests at the visitors' information center in the new park in 96 days of manning the center during the period from June through October. Due to a lack of volunteers at times and bad weather during this fall # no heat or power had yet been supplied for the in- ]'rmation center) manning for the center was limited to little more than three months out of the five-mnnth period. It is also estimated that less than one in ten visitors to the park actually seek information at the center while there. Thus, there" were undoubtedly more than 100,000 visitors to the park on the 96 days uf manning the center. The monthly figures: June, open 26 days, 2,849 visitors; .Ju}y, open 2fi days, 2,812 vis- itors; August, open 9 days, 1,034 visitors; ,pternber , 22 days, 1,4} visitors; October, 13 days, I.fi93 visitors to the information t.+,nl<,r. come tax energy credit, or increasing the value of your home, to name a few. and truth in advertising. Now we're being introduced to truth ' However, the average home- in insulation, by way of a new owner, though willing to take Federal Trade Commission ( advantage of one or all of the FTC) rule scheduled to go into above reasons in buying insul- effect this coming November 30. arian, is hardly prepared to face There are a multitude of good the complexities of the growing reasons to adequately insulate a insulation industry. Many con- new home or add insulation to sumers may be under the im- an existing one--more efficient pression that the thickness or heating, lower fuel bills, an in- price of insulation determines its quality and effectiveness. Gadd's Consumer News While this would appear te be a reasonable assumption, the cor- rect way to measure the eff- iciency of a certain type of insulation is by its R-Value, or resistance to hea! flow. ']'he higher the R-Value. the greater its ability to msulate against heal trod cold. The new FTC home insul- ation rule requires insulation manufacturers to tesf their pro- ducts according n standard scientific mcthods. The result- ing R-Value ratings must be made available to consumers prior to purchase. Any package labeling should state how much the contents will cover at a given R-Value. If the consumer is unable to inspect a pack- age, retailers and installers must provide a fact sheet con- taining this same information. The first question relating to R-Value a homeowner may have is "How much R-Value do I need?" Since different clim- FAIRLEA, WV AND RT. 12, ALDERSON, WV FOODLINERS GWALTNEY SEMI-BONELESS FULLY COOKED HAMS lb. WHOLE OR HALF $1 e9 2-4 lbs. SLICED FREE lb. WILSON CORN KING RONELESS HAM Open Men. thru Sat. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Quantity Rights Reserved ates dictate the amount re- quired, West Virginia has been divided into two sections-- the eastern, mountainous region, and the lower river valleys of the western portion of the St- ate. Homeowners in the eastern section, containing the pan- handles and the higher elevat- ions, should have no less than R- 30 in attic floors, R-19 in ceil- ings over unheated crawl spaces or basements, and R- 11 to R-13 in walls. In the river" 'valleys east of a line drawn between Morgantown and Bec- kley, homeowners should prov- ide for R- 26 in attic floors, R- 13 in ceilings over unheated crawl spaces or basements, and R- 11 to R- 13 in walls. Ideally, you cannot have too much insulation. However, there is a cut-off point at which you're spending more for the insulation than you would ever expect to get back by lower fuel bills. The above figure recommended amounl you an idea how mu arian yoQ may need going overboard. The West Virignia Energy Office has a n I pamphlets on energy- eas, including a new J booklet "West Virig Energy Guide". You.[ rain this information that office toll-free| 9012. / IGA TABLERITE CAN HAMS CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY Plenty of free parking - with parcel pickup. Prices effective thru Saturday, November 24. 1979. IGA TABLERITE SELF BASTING HEN TURKEYS € 10-12 lbs. lb. IGA TABLERITE GROUND BEEF lb. HILLSHIRE SMOKED SAUSAGE $4" can 51b. can $7 99 SWIFT PREMIUM $1oe KAHN'S 990 WHITE AND DARK MEA$ GWALTNEY'S SLICED BONELESS HAMWICHES BACON ENDS BUTTER BASTED TURKEY SAVE 400 10 oz. pkg. & PIECES 3 lb. box ROAST lb. STOVE TOP-CORNBREAO-CHICKEN-PORK , 59c CRISCO VEGETABLE STUFFING 8oz. box, SHORTENING ................ 3+. 32 oz. KELLOGG'S CROUTETIES STUFFING ................... 7 o,. box, MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE ...................... 3lb. HORMR POTTED MEAT ............ 3o.n HORMR VIENNA SAUSAGE ......... 5o., 89¢ FLOUR ...................... s+.,g MARIIIA WHILE-,lie-PLAIN-SELF RISING 89¢ ++s +, +, 99C MEAL ....................... s+. ++ CHOCOLATE MORSELS ........ +o,. m. HU,rs BUTTERSCOTCH MORSELS ..... sol pkg.59C TOMATO JUICE .............. 4+o.+69C ++ $1+9 o+ 2/89¢ WESSON OIL .............. 38 oz. borne CRANBERRY SAUCE ....... le oz..n ,H,tC, O,.,H,,.,s+. 99c +,o,,, 89¢ BATHROOM TISSUE ........... 4+oil pk. CHEESE CAKE ................. ;1 o,. VAN CAMP i It'hl"ll'l ROYAL /OP,,II SHOWBOAT PORK & BaNS ........... ,+ OZ. can II,I/.0I I GELATIN ................. co,. box,l/)109 SWEET POTATOES ........... 3o oz..,, VAN CAMP eme[ WaRm. i ....... ,o=on2779¢ TENDERLEAF 41+4 O9 McCORMICK'S TEA BAGS .................... 4+ctl .BLACK PEPPER .............. ,.. 0nut 79¢ " '+I '" HEAVY DUTY 18" KOSHERDILL stRiPS ............. ++oz., TOWELS ............... jumomtL]) ALUMINUM FOIL ............. 25,. m,,,+ 2/$1 KEENEX "'" n ]euek ,GA SWEET SANDWICH CHIPS ......... 12 oz. jar DINNER NAPKINS ........... +o ct L/Bill, EVAPORATED MILK ....... ;3 o. ca, 1 DELICIOUS ' IGA OXYDOL .............. Giant Size 49 oz. box CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP ......... BI:IKERY SPEOflL$ QUICK'N" EASY MARGAmNE ................ =+.+.59* FARMBEST OR FLAV-O-RICH *OP eros m 59C COTTAGE CHEESE u o,. m. OOv COOL WHIP... ................. 8o,. . ........... MRS. sMmrs FARMBEST OR FLAV.O-RICH €133 IGA e¢)l+Oe ICE CREAM .................. VZpL.4,, BREAD. oo., ................. 260Z. FRESH RED OR YAMS PUMPKIN PiE FRESH RIPE AND JUICY FRESH CRISP FRESH TANGY OCEAN SPRAY GRPpIT CELERY CRANBERRIES Qlarge el lib. d_q¢ ++++990 Obunches I '' pkg..JL.W.J¢ 5 lb. for