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aty .ehtine

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: VOL~Jl ttQ,_,.::..·:....
lJ..._.~·--·-==------'--___;--"-'-~=~o=M=E=Ro.....v.;:;_M_Io_oL_EP_o___,RT_,.o.. .H. _Io-.T__;,w_ED_N_Es~oA_v_.o- '. :=CJ.Q=~E,.:~-;,;=1==,1~_9&amp;_o--=-·----------"---FIFT_E_E~NCEN'Tt

u.e

in gold mining accident ·

JOIIANNE8Btma, South Africa - An elevator C8ITying 1{mlners
·plQI!II'd \0 tbe boUom of a gold mine in Johannesburg'' eastern subur.. earl7
8114 all 't~were believed killed, the South African PresS

.

AIIOC--~· ·
It IBid
bodies had been recovered by micknomlng from the
a::;~ gold mine, Which 112,300 feet deep. Rescue teams were attl
to reedl the other inliiers.
.
It · tbe leCOIId accident thji year Involving the failure of an
elft~ln a South African gold mine.
-tbree miners were kllled in March when an el~tor_ fell
more tban a lillie to the bottom of the 'VII!Il Reefs mine in'~m

1'ralliMal PI'9VlnL'e.

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Union leaders·procee(lwith strike·
· WARsAW, Poland- Independent union leaders say they are going
··~ with a one-hour llllJiomride strike for higher wages Friday ··
,,. . . the government's claim that their demands exceed lncteases
~...~in the Gdansk
. t.. .
..
.
.,....._
.
agreemen
l)eputy Premier Kazmierz Barclkowskl accused the labor leaders
Tuelidly 91 breaking the Aug. 31 agreement that ended the massive
wave of ltrtkel for political reforms u well as higher pay.,

Alexander gets educational grant
. OOLUMBUS, Oblo- Tbe Ohio Department of Education has awar-

crants totaling $110,027 for improvement of basic lnltructelllG lllcllool districts:
t ~ '
· Tbe maoey will be llll8d for prOgrams designed to empllasize skills In
JWdinl, matbematica, writing and oral COIIllliunlcation.

ded , . .

~· l'aD!IinB

trcm' $4,000 to $11,000 will go to the Toledo, Field,

Geneva, Weatbersfield, Farmington, Cosbocton, Alexander, Deerfield
County,~ County, and Darke County school
' diltrletL (
.'
.

Unloa, Knp

. ConfereetJ block .loan guarant~
WA8BINGTON - OIIJiresslonal conferees have .blocked ~.
, WIJllam;Pliwultl'a effort to prevent New York City from u.slng $300
' mOuc..infederallOill ~
tack~ a ban on uae of the guarantees onto a govenunent
IDIIIUI"e. He uld the city should be prevented from
Jatirthla week becauae federal guarantees~ Intended.• ·
W•
tile eity could not obtain ci'edlt without them, a
. . . . .llelilcl._.'talltnow. Promlire, I).Wis., accUIIed the con,... ol "'*tl••tinl Ida ainendment tor "transient political pur.
.
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• ·wileD
=
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Seriate~~ hostage bill . ·

·.

· ~t:,. &amp;.eaate bas appl-cwed' and ll8llt to Pnillclent

we:•
a. ~-~al IJet.efttl to the u.s. hostages
Ill I rtlll*lllrddiJID-111Dd1Gliianlallp!Wtailts.
. .
'l'llt IIIII;...... i I

*#

I~ by volee

viti 1\ii&amp;day, 1f0'4)d place the

' 'PI_. lllatlilllr ~oCer.w.rtng aYlnp actOUIIta and 'would
till ' -· &amp;o be withdrawn to meet •N•ptleted needli of the
I I P' W their famOiei, U would authlirlle ..,meat,of~ ex-

. . . . olllll cl9illall ballqes and tbelr fami)IM and would make the
poi:iWIIat ielpiNwlh!e fw educatkN18IpelllelincurTed by wives
anddlildNil of the bo~Ups.
~

~nt fee&amp;

refund }iossible

' ~. Olao -'- .A COIIIIUitant fCJi! the Oblo OffiCe of the Con....... Oounl!tluJi clllb••""'' of Columbus and Southern Ohio Electrte Co.lboald ,et·a fU mll1lon refwld. Tbe conilultant IBid the conr
piiiJIIIlld Ulllf~ coal from Ita own mine.
· AfJ llllll* given the Public Utilities Commillaion of Ohio by the
.P v 'J!Id eGIIIII1tinl flrll1 of ToUche RollS and Co. said the price paid
r. coal from CUOB'a Slmco-Peibody mine was not economically

rrect . ·

J

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· · ·

Tbe npart uld COfl::-a could have been reduced signlflcanUy by
. ...,.... ,.. from!!ldlpendentcoatractors.
.

.Proeeauw ogice. ordered open

.

OOLUIIB1iJ, OidO- Qov. ~A. Rhodes bas ordered atlte ~
plo)iasi1Dt dalml ..oo: l . "'I oftlces to stay open on Oct. 13, which II
'IIIIP
~. fofoOieratlte employees.
.
lit IBid be onllnd 1111 aflkes &amp;o stay open b6cauae of the 9.1 percent
IIWit' l)uilmt rate repaded ID the atlte for August.
ClliDianlu of Ernp!O)uiimtllervlces Admlnlltrator Albert G. Giles
18kla8lall
u... nrp1ar dalml oftlces that normally ar:e open
I

.....

oa.

'e~~~llr4QiwiD-.cleled•tlleboltdav.

.. ·, .

. ·westher forecast'

, .

- ' lflltlt clllud1 ...._ and 'l'llndl1. LowJ toidpt 4i40. Hight .
'l'lllilt .....'li. f»nce Gl ~II jlllceat ~and 'lburaday. WID~WI I rbwwlbwutalt.,ound~O~tcJni&amp;bt.

=

::~~~!;:=:
FrldaytbraucbSundaJ:Cbance
of
8llarday 8lld
S.uvlaJ. Hlgba in the upper 50s
Sltll'da1 8lld In tile ... 8uDcla,y. Lows in the

. . andlowCISa--., andSuOOay. .

LAST DAY OF EMPLOYMENT - Tuesday was the last day for
CETA employes that worked on the.plat map project. They were honored
by Eleanor Robson, county recorder with a cake designed In the shape of
Meigs (::oWlty;.Roger Michilehlnd Dll!l Nease will continue with.the county with tax maps and house .nwnbers. Pictured are, front row, l~r, Debbie
Grueser, deputy recorder, Eleanor Robson, county recorder, Bambi

Fisher, Jackie HWlch and Janet Korn, CETA employes; .back, CarsQn
Crow, complaint officer for. the CETA program, Gloria Manuel, CETA
employe, Roger Michael, Dan Nease, Frederick Crow, director of the
program, and Henry WeUs, county conunissioner. Other CETA workers
who were absent were Patsy Thoma, Judy Rowe, Debra Maiden, Mary
Key Deeter an&lt;;! Gail Thoma.

Senate ·blocks action
on emergency funding
....

·'

WASHINGTON (AP) - The · required a case of rape or Incest to • mother's life is ' in danger. The authority.
The House abortion position would ·
Senate, voting to soften a proposed be reported within 48 hours for a " Senilte side demanded that paymenrestriction on federally funded abor- federal abortion payment to be
ts also be provided for rape and in· . tighten current restrictions on
federal payments which are now:
tions, blocked final action earll: .made. .
·
.
·
cest victlins ..
permitted In cases of rape and inWednesday morning on an emerged=
Under
current
law,
abortions
are
Failure to . meet a midnight
cy-fundlng bill needed to keep the Tuesday deadline on the emergencypaid for under Medicaid if a case of cest.
government running.
rape or incest is '1promptly" repor- .,_sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska, said
spending bill meant that nearly the
· By ~olce vote, the Senate adopted entire federal government 'was
ted to authorities, a time period in- the Senate already had agreed to a
House proposal allowing states to set
an amendment revising a House technically left without spending
terpreted to mean GO days.
proposal that would sharply restrict authority. But it was not imMeanwhile Tuesday, federal agerr tougher restrictions on abQrtion
the nwnber of times that Medicaid mediately clear what effect that
cies made unprecedented emergen- money than the federal government
paynwnts could be made for poOr would have on the actual operation
cy preparations for shutting down and woul~make - np further con· ",
WOJI¥!li'S abortions i,n cases of rape
activities; other than thllse,1!eeded to cession.
of the government.
.
"We've
·
it~ated to you on th\tt
protect "il.fe and property.'' ·
andlnce8t.
• On a ·6--6 vote, Senate negotiators
for
the
Ia:
time," Stevens said'
Because the House had,adjourned had accepted the House proposal
. But the Office · of Personnel .
angrily.
,
wben the Senate made the change, although Stevens argued that cases
Manage!llent instl'\lcted federal
Several negotiators also warned
the blll was effective!); delayed Ulltil of Incest are·rarely ~ported before
worlters to report to work Wed·
that
failure to enact the emergency- ,
'' nesday despite the congressional im·
later Wednesday when the two a pregnancy is conflnred. .
spending bill might be Interpreted
passe.
bodies were scheduled to return,
After the ·v.ote, SteveiiB vowed to
by the . voters and U$ . allies as a
The
emergency-spending
bill
was
Tbe ~ent, proposed QY Sen.
filibuster the bill when it reaches the
sign
of irresponsibility
Senate
floor.
'
to
finance
the
government
between
Te4 SteveiiBi R-Alaska, would
weakness.
requlre·a woman to report a rap'e
"I di\lri't c0111e to the Sell8te to be · the midnight deadline' - the end. of
"It makes us look like a bunch of
fiscal year 1980- and Dec. 15.
within 72 hours in ofder to later · bossed by the House," he told reporidiots,"
said Sen. Patrick Leahy, 0Although nearly every year some
qualify for a federally fun,ded abor- ters.
Vt.,
adding
that the llipse of federal
federal agencies are threatened with
Earlier, House· negQtiators in. tion. It would require no reporting to
spending
authority
could raise
authotities of a case of incest. ·
a shutdown because of funding difsisted that the emergency-funding
.
questions
about
the
status
of the U.S.
ficulties, it is unprecedented for virEarlier, the House approved the
bill ban federal payments for poor
fleet
in
the
Persian
,Gulf.
tually the entire government to face
stopgap-funding bill, 200-100, with an . · women's abortions Ullless the
the prospect of losing ~its funding
amendment that would have

ranians will ·keep Horrriuz Strait open
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iran
declared today It intends to keep the
Strait of Hormuz opeil to shipping.
Meanw))lle, black smoke kept
curling from a burning natin'al gas
line hit by Iranian warplanes that
bombed a Baghdad power plant, aDd
three foreign .reporters were .expelled for their coverage of the at-.
tack . .
Tbe Strait of Hormuz, the narrow
~ forming the entrance to the
Persian Gulf, II the bottleneck
tbrc!ugh which much of the West's oil
• ·auWJy .was funnc!led. Iranian of·
flcial8 have threatened to expand
the war if Qther Arab'state$ aid Iraq, .
and . the Pentagon has sent four
lpllClal radaHquipped planes to
Saudi ·Arabia to proVide an early
wamiDg ~in cue of attack.
Noting thla, Iran's official Pars
news agency uid that "in the p8st .
few days, ileveral governments un- .

der the pretext of expressing their
concern over the possible clos)lfe of
the Strait of Hormuz, are considering intetferlng In the region of

the Persian Gulf."
The statement added: "The government of the Islamic Republic of
Iran, in full cognizance of its in-

Marijuana
raid nets arrests
.
'
. Joe Welker, 24, Hemlock Grove and Michliel Woolard, '22, Pomeroy,
. have been arrested in connection with a marijuana raid conducted by
the sheriffs department late Tuesday aternoon on .the Joe Welker
•·property' '
.
..
Two female juve~es were also taken into custody and released to
the custody of their parents jlending further action,
·
Deputies siezed approximately three quarters of a ton of marijuana
grqwtlig on the'Welker property.
· Using a search warrant obtained from Judge Robert Buck,,deputies
upon entering Welker's cabin foWld a large JllllOWit of prepared
marijuana ready for sale; Value of the prepared marijuana has not
been determined. . .
'
Charges will be filed today in 'Meigs County Court. Assitlng the
sheriff anll deputies were officers trom ·Pomeroy and Middleport
Pollee De~~_nts.

temationiil oliligatioiiS; Wishes to
assure the international community
that Iran shall not hesitate in any effort to keep this waterway in full
operation. ·
"Despite our current relationship
with the. hostile government or
govei:nments of the area, the govl)r·
. · nment of the Islamic Republic of
Iran guarantees to do its share ·to ·
maintain this waterway open."
The Iraqi news agency said today
that the smoke fUIIIIeling over the
city ~as from the Dora Hilla natural
gas line jWlcture that fed the power
plant a~cked Tuesday by Iranian
Phantomsf It also said for
describing damage to a nuclear
research center they didn't see
themselves reporters .for Agence:
France Presse, Madrid's Diario 16;
and Amsterdam's De •Telegraaf
were expelled.
· Iraqi groWld forces were·reported ·
(Continued pn page 16)

·In·Meigs County

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:

Commissioner~ discuss landfill expans_
ion
.-

Regional Plarinlng Cornmlaslon to
enter into a contract for llllista.nce
provided by the Ohio Departmewnt

The boafd, upon the recommendation. of the director of the
Board of Elections, agreed to 1118tall

of Economic and Commilnlty

:e=a~i~": ... Contract
·ratified
.

tbeMlllbeiTyAye.,)II'Opt!rty.
. "
It Wa8 8IIIIOIIIICed that the dog
winlen, Charles lfJeell, will be on
vacation fnm Oct. 6, througb Nov. 3.
. Tbe board named Richards
Blesllln&amp; as tbe actin&amp; dOIJ Wll'den
wblle HyaeU II oo vacation. Bleulng
maybereachedbycaWnaiiUBIB.
Don. WMtman, uiel ~
tatlft Gl Cequllr E1ecUGn Bervlce,
~ tbatlbe BT:IIO ballot coUnter tblt bad liMn ordeNd eannat ae
de1i\wed in time for the November

NEW HAVEN
.

Members•. &lt;i

Unlted Steelworken Loca1 "5171 at
Foote Mineral Company, near ·New
Haven, ratified a new thtee yeer
contract Tuesday avertiJIC a strike
that would have bepri at 12:01 a.m.
today.
'
·
.A company spokesman aalc! the
contrict was ratified by a "lllbstant1a1 margin."
· ·The ¥aeon Colmty PlaAt,
.. producer I'll ferro-allcl)l, bas a taU~ ·
of 111 per10111 who _.. 'members of
eledt...
'·
'
Locai~171.
Whitman .............. tbat \the
The plant I)IOkeama'n ... !Ltd
board accept till BNIII DllCbine, dell&amp;bt that a 8trlb waa ava1ed.
which they hive on band, for 111 ad- WllUam Beard 11 plant menager ind
.dltioilal$1,000andCI!lS.wouldlns\all ' Gary Freeman serves, u union
lthe BT-200 atfer the election. . ·
,president.

.,

"'

the BT-300 with the $1,000 to be paid
after Jan. 1, 1981, at no interest.
t
'
Tbe board to accept tlie bid. of ·
Shelly and Sands, Inc. for purchases_ ·
of bituin4Jous material during the
1I1011th of Oct.
.
'l1)e board transfered $1,900 from
the IY·D, IE-2 salaries aecount • .
the prosecutors salaries account.
Tbe commissiD~teni also made other
money t('ansfers.
•·
· · A&amp;lilnding were Richard ·Jones, ,
pr'elident, Henry Wells and Chester
Weill, conunlssioners, Mary HO!Jr..
atetter, · clerk and Martha ~
bera.

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san.D..lego
. e n d S R ed s ' h opes .

"- 3-TheDallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WedneSday, Oct. 1,1980
'....7

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the· team's. chances. " If• we can

finish second,;_that's what we'll try to
do." ·
.
Gene Tenace clouted his 17th- .
homer, a solo shot, with two out in .
the sixth for a 3.-2lead th&amp;tstoocl up.
Cincinnati mounted three ·scoring
opport~ties in the late innings off
John Curtis, but failed t~ score, .
Dave Collins doubled to start the bottom of the fifth, but died on third.
Ron Oester 's double-play ball wipeq
out atwO-on, one-out rallyinthesixth.

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·.Opinions .&amp;
Comments

·

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·
·
·
CINCINNATI (AP)- For the San The 3-2loss ~peel the Reds to.m
·. Diego Padres, it was just another
behind Houston and 212 behind Los
game: For the Cincinnati ·Reds, it . Angeles with just fol,ll' games to ·
wastheseason.
play. ·
The Padres, D:urect in the National
"There's no great satisfaction in
· · • .' Lea~ Western Division basement, elimlnatlhg the team, if we did,"
heat the Reds Tuesday for only the
Padres manager Jerry Coleman
third t1me In 17 ganies this season
said. "My satisfaction is in us ·
• ending Cincinnati's pennant hopes:
playing a winning game."

The clinching mistake followed in

.

·
Officially, ·the ~eds weren't
eliminated until 'later in the night
wiJen the DOdgers defeated San
Francisco.. But Reds manager John
McNamara knew it \vas coming
eventually. ·
"We still have a chance .fo catch
the Dodgers, depending on what
they do," McNamara summed up

the ~venth, w~n Dav&amp;~oncepcion
led off with a double and was summarily picked off by CtJrtis, 1~9 .
"That was the . key play m the
game," Coleman said. "Curtis
helped himself. · That's what it
takes."
. ..
,..
AformerSanFranciScoGtantwho .
moved to San Diego last' year as a
free agent; Curtis savored his sixth
straight victory because it killed-the
Reds' title chances.
" T.he fteds made my life

miserable for a couple of seasons
when I broke In with the Giants," the :
!eft-bander said. "They have CJluaed. !
me too many sleepless nittftts.
· l
"I get .great satisfaction ·out of •
beating tllem. This win jB th11,best. It :
is aboutas good as I can throw."
.:
San Oiego pushed across two runs : .
with two out in the third .off Charlie l
~ibrandt, 1~9. Curtis led off with
an infield single . that· McNamara
argued until he was ejected by wn- l
pire Andy Olsen.
· ~

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4

Rallut; Wtaa~eti
Robert Hoetltdl

Dale a.dt&amp;e~ Jr.

CarfGbeeD

.

Next legislative•
sesszon toughest

~OT

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Eac::h of m... ldvertiled items is requirec:t to be

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House tioti on tax increases for highway
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe; )).New building . and maintenance o_r
Boston, says the nexi session of the general expenses is likely until next
Ohio Legislature will probably be year, Riffe said. Lawmakers are to
one of the most important and reconvene after the election to comtoughest in which he's been J. .plete work for 1980 in a·session ex.valved:
pected to last two or three weeks:
The 114th GeneralAssembly, most ' Several other important issues
of whose members will be Chosen by could face the Legislature next year....
voters at the Nov. 4 election, conRiffe said legislation reinstating
venes in January. All 99 House capital punislunent will be on the ·
districts are at stake along with 16 of agenda unless a pending bill is
33 Senate districts. However, Riffe revived in the Senate. A Househas no opposition this fall.
passed death penalty bill was
Foremost · on next year's defeated in the Senate last month. It
legislative agenda, whether could be brought up again if Senate
Democrats retain control or Republicans and Democrats can
Republicans unseat them, will be compromise.
By Julian Bond
steps to deal with the state's current
A product liability bill, in which a
E(l Clark should have been invited
money crunch and development of a consumer's right to sue the
to take Jimmy Carter's place at the
new ·two-year state budget for a manufacturer or seller of a faulty
recent Ronald Reagan:John Anperiod beginning July 1, 1981.
product would be restri'cted in cerderson debate. After all, Clark is
"We are iii serious trouble finan- lain cases, will also reappear, Riffe 'running for president, too.
.
~ally, " Riffe told - the Ohio
predicted. A Senate-passed version·.
He is the candidate of the UberMunicipal League last week, of •this was pulled from the' House
tarian • Party, an eight-year~ld
Revenues are currently about $300 calendar for lack of support.
collection of disaffected voters who
million below earlier projections.
Also expected on the agenda is a . have met at a point he~een - or ·
Gov. James A. Rhodes has or- bill fonnally, granting , ollective · beyl!nd - the standard definitions of
dered a 3 percent spending cut bargaining· rights to public emconservative and liberal.
which, coupled with legislative p]oyees. "I believe that we ·need a
The Ubertarlans ran their first
steps, should offset a projected $266 collective bargaining bill, but I'm . serious presidential candidate just
million deficit.
not ready to say the type," Riffe
four years ago. He was Roger Mtr
But Riffe said there is a possibility said.
Bride, whose name appeared on the
of more cuts next year. "We all hope.
The method of financing O)Uo's
ballots of 32 states and who received
not. We all hope the economy will get education system is also a priority
171,818 votes. That may not have
better. I don't know what's going .to item. The state's current budget in- . · been a massive total, but It was
happen In the next two or three mon- eludes about $6 billion for education
large enough for lllin to finish foUrth .
tha," he said.
and the General Assembly- has-- behind Democrat Carter,
'Finding new funds for the Ohio passed a law prohibiting districts , Republican Gerald Ford and l.rlDepartment of Transportation is from closing because of lack of fun.
dependent Eugene McCarthy.
anothe~: major problem. The agency
dol. "We must and will take another
In 9178, some 200 Ubertarians ran
has curtailed highway building as a look at the financial probleins of
for various offices aCI'OIIS the United
result of slumping revenue. No ac- education in this state," Riffe said.
States. They racked up 1.3 nilluon
votes, challenging the truism that
lesser parties draw fewer votes in
non-presidential elections. 'J.be
Uhertarian vote in 1978 was greater
.
.
than that received by all other third
I
parties combined.
This year Is likely to he the best

r8ldily

NEW YORK (AP) - Ba,ck in 1960 pensation, but ,eflect also the atthe high-ranking, ·white-collar tritlon in buying power resulting
manager in the ex~tive suite ear- from inflation and taxation. ·
ned about seven tlmea the buying
Nevertheless, the study shows that
power of the blue coDar production over the past two decades blue coDar
. worker out-.,in the factory.
workers have obtained base salary
By Robert J. Wagman
Since then the factory worker baa increases about 10 percent higher
WASJUNGTON (NEA)-- : Recent
Improved his relative position. By than those won by members of
have given the Reagan
successes
this year the ratio had fallen to about major management
·:
campaign
confidence that was
5.6, accompanied by concerned
That wasn't the.factor that eroded
sorely
lacking during the first gaffdiscussion among executives of the the relative value of 11l8118gement
filled week of its fall season. But
"compression factor." ·
buying power, however. In fact,
professionals from both parties and
Tliat suffocating feeling is also management made it lip in bon~~~~e~
neutral observers st1ll believe that
being felt among factory foremen.
during good years. The damage ·was
the
Reagan effort baa far to go
Twenty years ago they earned 2.03 done by inflation and taxes, with the
before
It can be considered an ef.
1:1mes the buying power of those who latter theoretically eroding a
fective
national
political operation,
.worked under them in the factory. greater percentage of the largest
Inside
the
campalgn,
a. bitter
1bls year t,be ratio i.i down to 1.61.
paycbeckll.
~
power
struggle
iB
being
foughl
on
· The figures, based on a survey by
In projecting the figures, C. Ian
two
fronts
operational
and
Hay Associates, a consulting firm, Sym-Smlth and J . Alan Riordan, the
phiiiiiiOphical. On one side are the
and publlahed by the Wharton authors, feel that if inflation lan't
conservativl!ll,
most of whom have
Magazine, are used by many C()IJl- kept to 7.5 percent or less there could
been
with
Ronald
Reagan since at
panles to establlah their own pay be a further loss of buying power for
least 1976. On the other side are the
practices.
.
' job! at alllevela by 1985.
·
moderates, many of whom camFor the foremen, the erosion baa
Overall, they offer little hope that
paigned for President Ford four
been steady, falling to 1.891n 1966, to top executives as a group can subyears ago and joined the former
1.821n 1970, to 1.751n 1975, and finally lltantlally raise their
power.
Callfornla governor only around the
to 1.6lln this year.
Spealdng of top executives, they
t1me of the Republican Convention.
While the ratio decline for top sa~ :
..
The COIIIJervatives - campaign
aei:utivea comes to about the same
' Given inflation and taxation,
director
Wllllam Casey In particular
· pe11:entage over the 20-year . span, nobody has achieved a aignlficantly ._
are
being
for Reagan's
thef seem to have made some effort better standard of living from bla or faltering startblamed
In
the
race qa1n1t
todecornpress tofighttheeJOBiooof . her·joblnthetrros.
President
Carter.
So,
more and
their relative~
"Because they earned «ood •
mote
control
over
day-til-day
From the 7.21 \of 1980, the ratio fell - bonuaea as a reault of. good ~t J.
operations Is Rowing . to the
toS.481n 1966,1'011e to6.561n 1970, fell ·, creases in the~ two years, senior
newcomera,
IIUCh as Ford veterans
steiply to 5.34 In 197$, the final )'ear executiv:;s have done better ·than
Wllllam
Tlmmona,
Stuart Spencer
of ll)lllllexpectedly.llevel'e receaston
others...
andtbeni'OIIeagilinthlayearto6.61.'
Why? "Largely becaiJI:e they are .
rile changl!ll 1n the buying power ' already at the mulmwn tu rate,
figurl!ll aren't neceaaariUy the
and cash 1ncreaaea do not pu.sh them
of different aWtudl!ll· toward
.into • higher tu bracket"
'.•..

E~hif)g "ffU

power.

resuit

com-·

Today .in 'history•. ~ •

Today is Wednesday, Oct. 1, the was proClaimed the head .. 01 an J. ,
275th day-of 1980. There are 91 daya ugent Spanish state.
.
left In the year.
ln 1161, the Vatican called on all
Today's highlight in history:
Chrlatlans to belln dialoguea with
On Oct. 1, 1H9, Mao Tae-tung . athellts, Including cilmmunillta.
PIVclaimed the People's Republic ol
Ten yean qo, Vice President Aii-.
Cbloa.
.
'
.
war Sadat S1ICteeded Gamal Abdel
On thla date:
.
Nuser as ~dent of EII1Jil.
IIi 1800, SpaiD cedect lAlui8lana to' ·. One year ago, Panama's flag l'lwlcein I secret treaty:
railed over the Clnll Zone, tllldlnf
·JJI 1IGI, "-J Ford intrOduced b1a .21 years of American jurildlction In
lamoaa ''Modei-T.''
. the area.
'
'
In 1936,.General""? 'JC ,Franco ·

Bi g I

buy at. ,:rOger

IS

MA CARON I &amp; CH USE

tied, Kroget' will rePace .,our item wtth the Mme brend or a
-- - ..:l

-

CO'Y~IGHT

1910- THE _K IOGEi CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
COO[tSUNDAY SEPT . 21 THIU SATUIOA't OCT . 4 . 1,10 IN

IIA

POMEROY AND GALLIPOLIS STOR ES.,

WI IISIIIIYE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES, NONI lCLD
TO DIALUS.

"boondoggles" where cuts could be
disengage from other cominitmade: "the Energy seiiurtty nust
ments." For example, 'he proposes
Fund; which provides $3.7 billion a
eliminatllig the 60 percent · of the
year in su!Wdies to energy comPentagon budget that he asserts Ia
panles; the Export-Import Bank,
spent cterending "not the United
8!JO Ubertarians - including II few which lends abnost f76 billion an- States but other countrieS from
blacks and Hispanics - are rwming
nually to subsidize American ex- Wl!lltem Europe to the Middle East
for seats In Congress and state
porting firms , .the Foreign · tll South Korea to Japan." He ablegislatures.
solutely opposes the draft.
Agriculture Service, which spegds
In a recent Los Angeles Times
I!IOre than $60 million eveyr year for
Clark Wants to repeal subsidies
poll, three percent of those most
su!Wdized tesearch. and marketing . ·iJJd regulallOilB for all fonns of
likely to cast ballots In November ·· for agricultural buainessea; the energy, And )le favors an annual tax
said they plan to vote Ubertariim.
Commodity Credit Corporallon, credits of $1,200 per child for Use
That could add up to 2.5 , million
which spends more than $3 billion toward elementary, secondary . or
voters.
•
annually to subsidiZe faimers. and college education in public or
Clark, a Callfomla lawYer, swns
keep food prices high; the Marlthne private schooL
up the Ubertarian creed in a few
Administration, whicli'spends more
words: "freedom- ffeedom to live
than $500 million a year to protect
To conquer urban blight, CJait ·
)'Our life a8 you choose as long as you
the shipping and shlpbuUdlng J. . proJ)08eS repealing rent-eontrol
are n()! violating the rights of others, dustries, and dozens of other laws, zoning regulations and . 1Jb. '
freedom to- be responsible for the
prOgrams to su!Wdlze business at solete building codes. He calla for i
consequences of your own a 'o , taxpayers' expense," He also wanta ~ repeal of laws against victim1eaa '
freedom, to solve p1:,0blems, •g t
to aboliSh the Energy and E, .:ation crime and of laws that he bellevl!ll ·
and small; In voluntarY action
Departments and to freeze' federal · · stand in the way of Integrating the
others."
. pay and hiring.
· poor Into the American rnainatreBm. ·
Clark bas spelled out his pla rm
Just when it seems that Clark is . . The Ubertartan proposals aren't
In mucb greater d"etall than bla · trying to out-Reagan Reagan, he of. everyone's idea of what government
Democrallc and Republican rivals.
fers his position on national detenae:
should be dOing- or, as ClaB would
He p!'OpQI!es to balanCe the budget,
''I believe that our foreign policy put It, of what government shouldn't
slash govet:nment spending and "cut and de(ense ·spending should be be doing . .But Clark iB at least ofthe a~e American) taxes in . limited to protecting the United fering .American voters areal choice
half." ·L ~
States from· foreign invasion , and on the issues. He deservl!ll to be ·
He even proposes this list of
that to d9 thla properly we must heard.

-

.

,..

~YUTDA~WI'I~KIOGU

TOIIIatO

~

have been with Regan from'thesiart . which Reagan would have reasaerBut the campaign Is still troubled
against the more moderate econom- ted hl8 support for Kemp-Roth - but
by the absence of an avEh clc advisers, many of wholli served
over a five-year period. 1bls change
manager who enjoys Reagan's trust
under Ford, who have signed on In Is . bitterly opP\IIIed by the ~~~~Nand who can act quickly, Without
recent weeka.
•
:llnera, Including Rep. Jack Ke!pp
such an Individual, major decisions·
Take tu cuts, for aample. 1hlmself Though Reagan has tbu&amp;are belnileft for long "diaculsiOilB" Reagan came out early for . the ,far reallted the revision, the jlebate
among Reagan and various camKemp-Roth prGpOial, wblcb calla for illlllill raging.
.
pa1gn Olftclals that often end in
a radical slash In taxl!ll rates of 10
MOlt obllervers believe that a
stalemate after sbarp debate betpercent a year for three years. The slngl' strong band will have to take
ween the old guard and the new conservatives believe that thla Is charp of the ~ if Reagan 1s
arrivals.
. just the medicine the economy needs
to counter effectively the continued
and that the federal govamnentwill
gains of Carter's higbly' Ol'linlzed
._.To coi,npound these problems,
make up any lost revenue from adteam. 'l1ley note . that the lack of
many of the profeaalonaliJ who have ditionel tul!ll collected when the
cohelliveni!IIS Is . shoWing up In
recently joined the CJlmpalgn have
economyspurtsahead.
Reagan's unfoi:used media camll(l!ittle regard for Reagan's abilltll!ll .· The former Ford economldsia see · paign;
~ .
·
th8t they do not tnlat him out on his the need for a tax eut, a r t .
' .
.
!nm; lhq believe he DWBt be closely prder tblt It be designed to
, Jlno ·Biker, who ill . aald to be.
manapd and kept away from the
buolnesalnveatment and Jobs ra
· 'plnlnc Reigan'a truat, may well be
pre&amp; JJIIIm, Regan Is showing that
tban to simply jMOYJdlt , .
tbe .IIIII to tate charge. On paper,
;Jie doellllll have much faith .In his relief. 'lbey believe It wiD ab tbe .llllrlr, Who ran Ford's campelgn 1n
starr,
be 111 aald to blame for ecoaomymnchlongwtogrowtptbe
1S'18 81111 G-se Biilb'a campelr
.many oflU early problema.
.
point where all iGit Income 18
thla year,lutlll Cuey'a deputy, But
· Meamrbile, the fierce debate con- J'eCOVa'l!!l from the l_. rates. In
inllden ay he 18 l!llt!nc more and
llnnea unong Reagan's a~ addition, they tear that CII&amp;UDc 110
man Ill the majCJr CII*'BUanal
uver «.'GGiC••dn, which· aD agree much 110 qulckly wW fuel mn.tlon
IIDIIt be aile the key lsaue of the
through illcrmed danaiwl; lliey
· ""-•• Bater mtpt •'ID"ie
campalp TbiB debate haa resnlted want to -the cut plllled in over It
CGIItrQl, It WOUld be !lillie too 10011 for
In pother con.rvallve-inoderate 1eut . five years and po-tNy as· Republican prof•lmalo, wbo li-e
. ~on; , ln this casa, It 18 the
many as aeven.
. verY worried about the campall'l'a ·
.hanH!ne economic: advlaera who . Twice they drafted lltalemeiota In 'lack Of dlrecUon and c;entrol.
.•

'"'

Avonlfale ........
Com ...... . ~a "
1

•OO-SHUTS Pll lOLL

Mixed
Fryer Parts ... .. .......lb.sgc

!

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.O.A. GRADE A
(ANY SIZE PKG .. ) FRYING

Paper
Ctll.

FISCHER'S HOt OR MILO

t

Chicken Drumstacks ... .lb.

,

INSPECTED

C

Grade A
Large Eggs

I·IA·LB. AVG. FROZEN U.S.D.A.

Young Turkeys .. ... ... ... .lb.

LOWFATMILK
KIOGEI
GAL • .PlASTIC CTN •.. $1 ••9

Pork Sa.usage .:......
·

ISSUe ...... •ko .

'
'

KIOGU

... $179 :~:::.
·lb .

S... NCWI C:H 01 WIENEI

79

3· $1·

Sun Gold 1 ·(1 .
Buns ........ •••·
Wheat

'

...

39e
53c '•....
gge
'

'

·"'

KIOGU
16·oa .

Loaf

')

'
.:..

KIOGU Sllf ·IISING

Com
5
.,.
Meal ...... •·i

Vita Gold
Orange Juice

. .,

4

Pinto
Beans ....

Bread ......

Esprit
·
6-oz.
Yogurt ... ... ... .... ... Ctnrs .
COUNTRY CLUB
'/,-Gol. $129
Ice Cream ..... :.. .. .. . ctn.
Fried Chicken.........
KROGER FROZEN EASY DINNER •
Macaroni &amp; Cheese

Fleece
Bath• .••u
•

$109

0

~

.·"
.r
•

GOLD CllST IEGULAII
0 .1 MINI A TUil

Marsh-

-~ $239

,.,•.

tllllllo'!l . . . ...

Bt-lb. $129

lfGVALUI

SaMwlch. 2•·c•:
Cool&amp;lea ..... "'•·
COLD CltlST

Box

Lemon

10·01 .

Dropl . " " ' ...
cc)UHTIY OVIN

AVAILAILI ONlY IN
STOlES WITH
DILIDEm,
HOT FOODS
AVAILAII.IliTIL 7pl11

PINT IETUINAilE

Sprite, Tab
or·Coca Cola·

Anael Foa4 ,.....

c.kt """. "'•:

.as 9

••oNOAll

P.lnto
" ·5.••
Beans ... ... &lt;•" ·

I

Mit~OUND

Potatoes ..

Northem
8 _ _;,

20
·
.
$289
.....
.

Bag

,

C

Broccoli .......... .aunch

CAI,II'OIINIA WONDII

·.. .

-

AMERICAN Ott MUSTAltO

::o. . . . . .. . 69.c
•

111. ·

For

VIIIGINIA

.

.

hell·

JUM10 •1111 HONI~

M'lo.ns .. ........ :..Eath.

· CALifOINIA

lit.

$119

.

·..

Red Gr1pe1 ........ :. 11..

a·

a·

V"

~'1

·~

C·.:~·.·
" ,i&lt;o

.

25c
...... 22c
9c
......,. ·-·~­ ·6ggc

PIISH u.iiD

.

·•

24•01

.$129

Dutch Apple Pae .·.. PI•
.
I'IISH_IIAICID Brtad .:.. 2t::.··
.89 c
.

Perk &amp;
......
1tan1 ... ..... Coo
KROGII

Tamato

Put• ....... c..
liiOGII COIN OIL

Mapll•

'.

~·

COUNTIY OVIN •

ClllpMIItll,..,,
Cllklll ." ' ....
'

......

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

.....

Gtlllllll .. . ..,:
liOOII

......,

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

•

. $139',-.

1ot•(t,

I

..., .

•

r

....

·.7 ~

· 79c·
'

·o.M

Drts. ..... ""

'

9
2

.

33c :- ~

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

1r, ---'" ~

c' ~

ICitOGII

KAHN'S

~ II_!IIID 01 GOlDIN

IU·••·
. ........ Coo

(fwEUNI Lt• PIIC9

69
5
Sl
$249
Smoked Sausage ... .:
Green Peppers .... ·
S359
17
C
Apples.
Baked .Ham.............

FlESH •

29

AVOHDALI
_

"'*"

··

.

WHOLE UINfl 01
CllAMSTYlE

'.

and, espedally, JlnoBaker. ,_

20

e

....... $3
' 99

FROZENKROGER

~

,••,•.••.

Soup ........ &lt;•"

'

."eee..._

44 c ·:;

Pll IOU

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

yet for the Ubertarians, The party

.

SHU T~

neece
lowes
ooll
I .. .. ""•I•

expects that the names of Clark and
nmning mate David KOch will appear on the ballota of all 50 states
and the !&gt;(strict of cylumbia. Nearly

-

23~ ...

Avondale 7 '/• · 0I .
Di nner .... . ... .

c:omp~ratMa brand Of refund vour purct..M P!'ice.

,..

19c

, .••.

Be verages c. ,

guaranteed tor vour 10(JI
Ntitftetion regardlel&amp; of manufactur81' . It yot.1 are no1 uhs-

·The Reagan effo:rt· still has far .t~ go
.

e&amp;m!"«

t01 sale m uch Kroger. Store,' exctP~ as

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Afte.r · all, Clark is running too

Factory worker
improves place

.l\lellable

.,...;fatt rctect ;, thll ad, If we do nKt out of an ICMrtited
item. we wWI offet" yau yOur chotce of a c;ompereble item ,
~ ~- rBflld:ing the same s.JVk!gl or a raincheck
~h will tntitle yoo to purchase the Jd\lt(tiMCI item 1t the
ad\;ertiled price wYithln lJ &amp;IV'$ . ·

.

.. •

·n

�•
.

·~

•

- 4'-The Daily 5ehtll'lel, ~ddlejlort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1980

_SVAC wrap-up

•

of fi.:.... 4 '
Games
_
. __'::'-.C~- . '

.

'fwo league tilts highlighi Friday's

a~tiOn

.·

.

By.Malor AlDOl B. HOQple
eluding the higb-powered Otten8es of .takes on Marylam(ln a llattle of State Buckeyes, who are most
pus~over. In
close cfintest, the
closer than that. saturday's clash
Wilal'd of Odds
bot!! clubs - we believe the homepowerftil Eastern forces.
· awesome at hopte, will topple a good
Hoople System predicts a Pitt vicwill be almost as close with the SC
Egad, friends, the.;e' are so many field ed!le· will give NebraSka a . !h"n there's Penn _state vs. inv~ding UCLA elev~, 36-21. Texas,
tory, 21,14- ~f-kaff! .. :.· · ·
Gameeocks trapping the WolfJiaCk,
sterUng attractions on this week's three-point victory, 31-28. l.!m- Missour_i m . an . offen;nve show, eyemg the SWC title no~ t~t
Another donnybrook ISm l!.tQre for
2t.22.
card your Peerless' Prophet hardly kwnph!
South~rn Califorrua facmg Arizona
H?usgon appears to be faltermg, Will .th~ ~5,000 lucky 1~ who will jam
Here is how the' Hoople System
knows where to start.
And get a Joad Of the other top
State m a rugged Pac IO ~lash, and WID 1ts second conference game of
Missilun's Faurot Fteld to see the . calls the other key games:
South_ Carollila battling North the year. The Longhorns figure to
Tigers take on Penn State. Here
Houston will finally get its offense
A good place to begin iS with clubs" in action this weekend and the
Nebraska hosting Florida State. ..
caliber of their opponents.
.
Carolins State._
.
blast Rice, 34-10.
'-· . ·
again is a pair of teams with equal straightened out and win .a close conAll season long, the Nabraska Cor:
Alabamil meets Kentucky in the
In 28 meetings. wtth ~entucky, · The Colorado Buff~loes, trymg un- . potential. In a down-tD-the-wlre test from Baylor, 19-14. AlSo in the
nhuskera and the Floiida State SEC. Ohio State faces SUIJlrising . Alabama has an .unpress1ve 26+1 der coach Chuc~ Fairbanks to come
firiish, we look lor Missouri to SWC, Arkansas will take TCU, 22-12,
' Semlnol4111 have been side by side in . UCLA. Texas tangles witWRice in.· record. Alas, it will be mor~ '!_( the back to former glory, just don't have
prevall, 21&gt;-22.
and Texas Tech will dump Texas
the.college football ratings _ which the SWC. Oklahoma meets Colorado
same for Kentucky this SatUrday as enough to stop the onslaught of
Arizona State is one of the few
A&amp;M, 24-20. ·
makes this game one of the toughest in a Big 8 grudge battle, Notre Dame
Bear Bryant's boys keep on rolling, Oklahoma. The Sooners atta_ck
teams to hold.an edge over Southern
In a Big l~Pac 10 matt;b-up, the
to call.
·
· battles Michigan State in the 46th
31·21. Har-rwnph!
.
•
throughthe.airoronthegroundWlth
California in football. In the only Michigan Wolverines will devour ...,« -l~~!..;all~~~_;:-:Jin-~~re~n~
. e~wa~l~ln~this~c~lassi~·c:_. .!_And~!Pi~-tt~--~E~Ise=w~he~r::e,~th::e~a~w~es~om~e~O~hi~·o_
· ~eq~ua~l~str~e~ngth~.~So~,~the~H~oo~pl~e~nOd~·~pr~evi~o~us~m~ee~ting~,~the~S~un~Devi~-ls~ heb-heh - California's Golden
'"'
Bears, 37-10. At home, the Stanford
Cardinals will edg~ San Jose State
18-14.
The Washington Huskies will have
•
an easy _time with Oklahoma State,
42-14, on the Cowboys' ])orne turf. In
their 78th repeat -performance, watch for the Utah State Aggies to win,
211-17, over old nemesis Utah.
Now go on with my forecast:

SAVINGS UP TO 70%1 DO-N 'T MISS .ITI

STARTING TH-URS.DAY JO A.M·._;_N POINT PLEASANT OR

HELD BACK • FALL

STORM
WINDOW

MENS THERMAL
·DRAWERS
OR TOPS

Sizes S·M·L·XL

4"";:~

Ria'.

TRASH .
BAGS .

'

4 COLORS
11-L·XL

SAVE $5"!
MENS ORLON
IPOVER SWEA

RtiUIIr 49' Fell Stock

orllfl~lll -~· g~
.

..1·-

_ . , 1M_., bultll' or

Now For

WANT A BAIIiAIIII

EIITIRE STOCK REDUCED

WOMENS FOLDING
UMBRELLAS

WOMENS
SUMMER
HANDBAGS

SOFA
PILLOWS

SOLIDS OR
PIIIITS _
•R•I· 13.99

,.$ 244

2

Pt PI..S.nt
Only -

1

111. To 4.99 · $ 'JOO

$100#

'

ClEAII UP!
SMALL LOT
13.00 Values

Wbn;

IMPORTANT COG mGSI defeose~ are coocenlr!IIIDg
on stopplug teammate Todd
Sibley, Tim Murphy hall provided
a big Uft to the Hannan Trace
WDdcat oHenie. Marpby had
several key first downs In tast
Friday's ~ SVAC win over
. Kyger Creek.

RAY.O·YAC
. BAnERIES .
FOR

44~

$

~ HO~\T
r.luTO
UTILin MATS
R111llr 71'

Fib
Full or Twin Bed

EIITIRE STOCK
011 SALEI1

•

Pol-

-

MENS FLANNiL
SHIRTS

IWhile They ustf·

Rlglltoutolowotoclll

VALUE~

Entire New Fall Stock Goes! ·
CARDIGANS,.A:APES
. PUUOVERS

complolo

selocllon.

30
.

. -hr

...llr

lot quollty &amp; trr'o. SliM 5-M-L-XL.

700

111 t!Ut.

AIIQ-

$

Y-

goo

$

(._

_ _/"

-·

%PRICES
::t

'7.5,000 REDUCTION

OFNIWFALL

,_

T'""".

-....-•

NEW FALL STOCK
ORLON K-NEE-HI
SOCKS
REDUCED!
Z Siz• 6 To 8\i
Aid 9 To 11
'1.69 Rq. To •z.u

/..._.....,_
'-.__.....

Ynu lwltt&gt;r lwlii'H' it!

•

•

- ~ns

SALTID PIANUTS
IN SHILj.
..
Ill 24 oz. lq

.._1111!1~~

. SAVE 30'

,~

129

iUiE_I iiiAI
2 StiiJltl .

.

IS
01.
tun_..,
..

•

D-U.r
~lie:.

'

~RG[

WHILE THEY LASTI

l- Ill· quollty
Fill 9 tOn1
15.
Wllllt withn
llrlpo
topo.

-

lEIS 110111

. JlltSEY
GLOYIS

;1

Pl•itle

UTIFiCIAi.,
IOSION
PIRN

Nle,

. 19$

HIIH11Pitf
lll1 STACIIII

TUMiL1 tins

2-·'110.

· The tnullet, a vegetarian without ·
teeth, Is one of the "few fl.lh with a
gizzard. It ll!llllebes on m01111 and
· algae and the gizzard sift.J out sand
takenin.
· ..

.•..•

PR

2~· :$100 .

97~

$1

37

FALL PANTS

Pomrruy BowiJDg LaDH

n.etday TrtpUcate League
Sept. 11, lnt·
StaadJngs

,...,.

I'll.

-~
•
•

~
M

~al Crown Cola

a

Melsl;s iM

10

No.!
No.3

8
6

Hish individual game - Loci Faulk 191; Debi

Hawley 190 ; Marlene Wilsori 185.

84!bserles - Debl Hensley 516 ; Betty WhiUat-.

diM; MarleneWUson495.
Team high game - No. lSI!
Team high,.riea - .No. 11§1.

Pomei"O)' Bowling Laneo

TNm •
No. 2
No.5
No.3
No.6
Two'• C&lt;lllpany

MomJntl Glories
Sept. 16, lUIO

Totala
12

10 "

• '
8

6
t
llilh Ind. game - Betty Whitlatch 110; Peg
llolofahelt 179.
llilh incl. 3-g....,. - Betty Whitlatch 488; P.og

- -- -

ltoud.ullolll5!.
High team game - No, 6 &amp;28.
lllghteom 3-games - No. 622!1l .

PEPSODENT
TOOTHPASTE

QERY PAIIT IS 011 SALE!
u
- o1 S.VIftlll, at "'" stort 111 lht pont-. No
ley-o,..Y.. Come- on.,_ loll pont ,..,~~o ....

Don't Miss Thai

1

AValue!
2.45

'SAVE 30_% ON ·T OPS..

994

POMEROY BOWLING lANE
RESIJLTS
EARLVWEDNE'IDA Y
MJUDLEAGUE
• Stanci!Jp

......

Pili.

21 '

No.8
· Tany"o Carcyout
No. I
No.4
Zlde'o Si&gt;ort Shop

I)

II
14

12

_

ID

NeloonDrUII '

TNmoerleo: No.4111!11.
TNmsame: No.l811; .
IIIJih oerl•: Roy Roach !611; Pal Cinon 512.
hlt!l&gt;· oeriel: Jr. Pl1olpo ~; Betty

.........

llllh g11110: Ray ll&lt;locll:IIB, Pal Clnoon ZlD;

lr. Phelpo IM, Mulne Dugan 1118.
See.ISerteiSbr'bp

lll,

· Zi
zo

10% Off

31

II
12

-

.AIIIILS

AID
AttPUIES

..........

so·•~~---

. ·. . .

GOALTENDING
.
When goaltendlnc Ia called IIi tbe
MBA and two points are narcllld,
the player wbo made tile lbot
thereupon gets an utra
tla-ft.

rr.

,,

\.•

'

.

II

• •

c.•c.l'enmotl

SUPER 8.3 OZ. SIZE

VEUIIRS. aDILLE, POLYESTER,.BLENDS .
AlfLOIIG SLEEVE AND.SHORT SLEEVE
-NlW-FML lOPS ON SALE!.

Minnesota 20 Northwestern 7
Mississippi Z1 S. Mlssissippl17
Missouri Z5 Penn St. Z2
Nebraska 31 Florldl! St. zs ·
N. carolina 4Z Georgia Tech 24
Notre Dame 38 Mlcblgan St. 14
N. Dllnols 28 S. IDinols 20
Oblo State 36 UCLA 21
Oklaboma 35 Colorado 18
Pitt 21 Maryland 14
Purdue35Mlaml (Ohio) 8
. Rutgers 27 Cllrnell21
S. carolina 24 N. Carolina St. Z2
Southern Cal 33 Arizona St. ·18
Stanford 18 San Jose St.l4
Syracuse 28 Kansas 20
Texas 34 Rice 10 ·
Temp!e 14 Booton U 7
Texas Tech U Texas A&amp;M 20
Tulanel8SMU10
Utah St. ZS Utah 17
VMI 14 Cltadel7
Wake Forest 24 Wm. &amp;Mary 14
Wasblngto!l4Z Oklaboma St. 14
Washington St. U PacUic 17 W. Michigan 18 Bowling Green 13
W. Teus St. 33 New MeJiicoSt.17
West VIrginia 27 VIrginia Zl
Wisconsin 17 San Diego Sl.ll
Wyoming 3Z N,tw Mellioo Z5
Yale 14 Alr Force 10 '

Local
bowling.

Wo-6ur .

rut

Pcity-lwllls. Knit col ... •1011·- .

~ :1

AND

llllcllon lor ~ . . '"" ..
llllllowpra.-ar muHod .....
In 51• S.M-l-Xl.

MENS UN-LINED
JACKETS

.

_WOMENS
LOVABLE
BRAS

WOMENS AND TEENS

,. .
501 Cottln · SK P~1dtr
L111 Tall • 2 Pldlb . ·

WESTERN BELT .UCKLES$166

' ..
FJ8H WI1U GIZZARD

. :·~~11

Reguhtr 39c

·sweaw-n

PRICE .

WO_IIEIS COMIII!~TIOII
UMBRELLA &amp;
·1011 BAG.
VIII• Te 11Ut

SAVE· '3" .· .

liAS Iii. •Ut

TUBE SOCKS

HARD RUNNING PIRATE Kellll (~ Payne hall . . _ ··
oae Ill Nortll Gallll'• top ~fq:
b.ck IIIII f.U. 'l'be Miller railed
for lJI yardl Jut week .,u.t
Waterford willie coiJediJis foar •
polnll oa eoovenlon 1'11111_.

lh

194

Witll Comfort Top

Yes• .wry sweater from oUr new
.CDIIocllon II on solo. A Vt&lt;y

40% OFF

OVER THE CALF LENGTH
t

SAJ:R! .
WOMEN'S
KNEE-HI
NYLONS

BRiAD IASKDS

MENt

.

$866

.

.

..

OIL LAMPS·

EIILJ

...

Small lot. Full bed size.
Perfect quollty. Be eorlyl

Point Ple1unt Only

HOUSE SLIPPERS

THERMAL
SOCKS

'

$

CHENILLE

pillows. Values to $3.99. Take
them at uvlngs.

ffashiog

soo.

WOMENS

$"1~0

5o~.

..$

112-~;:;,:io

liENS
- TUBE TYPE
--

WATCH BANDS 1J2rRitE

10_0

1
WERE
--- - 16.99

110 LAY-AWAYS

SUPER

l h' PRICE

fillU#;f1~1 ij :Y

PrlnJ•• thermals or iollds. Slight
Irregulars from • famous Southern mill.

s111
.

EASY CARE POLYESTER
OVER THE CALF
. Fib Size 9 T.o. 11

llli»!!OR-GUTDOOR $199
RUNNER
·
lq. 1UI
CARPO UTILI1'Y
MATS
Size 24127

·

HANDKIRCHIIPS

ALL LEATHER

2Ft. X 5 FT.

•

I

BOYS TUBE

2PAIR

REDUCED RUGS

,.·
· ·

BLANKETS

SALE STARTS THURSDAY 10· A.M •.

·•

SIZE ·t OR SiZE D
Re11llr &amp;r

-:
·:
\

1M VIRGIN .ACRYLIC

REG. 1,1• - STOCK UP .

HANDBAGS

27~

30% .off

liUIIIIETAL, LIGHT BLUE, lED, liREEJI,· IIAVT
ltlllar 19.99. Sizes M• L• XL

MENS LEATHER BELTS

WOMENS FAU

Bolsten, loun;ers, accent

$ro

-

SAVE
'3.77

..~~:9 .s100 13 66' I

ENTIRE STOCK

Alabama 31 Kentucky Zl
Appatlicblan St. 24 Marshall 10
Arkansas tz TCU 12
Army ZS Harvard :IZ·
Auburn 33 Richmond 16
Boston College 30 Navy 20
· Brown 36 Princeton 14
Central Michigan 24 Toledo 0
Clem&amp;on 28 VIrginia Tech 14
Colgate 17 Connecticut 14
Coinmbla 14 Penn 7
Dartmouth Zl Holy Cross 20
Delaware 16 Lehigh 7
Florida Zlll.SU 18
Houston 19 Baylor 14
Dllnols 34 Mississippi St. U
Inciiann 33 Duke 14
Indiana St. 38 Wichita St. 17
Iowa U Arizona 7
Iowa St. 36 Colorado St. 18
Mlc~an37CaUfonda10

$377

FOR

CHAIIS
1~
AND CHAISES

100 Count Box

49'
elue

Umbrellas ~

MElls WHITE

STAINLESS SCOTTIES
TABLEWARE TISSUE

ALL Ill OIIE • 110 SEAM

99~

F - 11.-.cl. Slza 5-M-l.
pr-lng Willi.

I

WHITE

Dessert or salad forka. tllble

-SWEAT PANTS

II ESH BACK
MENS CAPS

ALL THAT'S LEFT
LAWN
FURNITURE

SAVE '1.00 - PR.

r.

$·700
.

-~

u •.

'·

Sizes S·II·L-XL .
RIIUiar '12.99
AM ERICA II MADEl .
Pal11t Pluu1t 01lyl

/

·POL VESTER SILK
FLOWERS

99'-

SAVE '2
SWEAT
SHIRTS

•

-.nfuiMiocllon of
- - lllk , ___ w.
CMh, not llowlrt- so you
a lontatlc ,...,_ buy.
·

ocr.4

. TO GET READY FOR THIS SALE.

SACRIFic;:EQI

-

i·---·-

..

WE ,WILL CLOSE
WEDNESDAY AT 5 P~M

$75,. 000- STOCK RE' UCTIO
00

NO PHONE CALLS, PLEASE!

,

·Th~y'll _hus~ ·(kaff-kaff) the · s~minQles£:~~:~rfJ!~\::
if~~E.~t~;~5s
a

.·

Two league conteSt!~ highlight this "past two weeks, ~ed for 65 yards
Friday night by Charlie Lookado game but 1t wasn't enough. Danny . Tile defending SVAC ctJampe are Chapman enjoyed another great
week's.action in the Southern Valley - on 17 ca!Ties against Belp_re. Durst' and Keith Payne.
•
Talbott score the lone TD on a 'six
tied with North GaUia for first plilce · outing.
J
, Sou''--'Athletic Conference. Friday night, · collected 54 yards in 11 carries while
Lookado had tw_o.touchdowns and yard nm.
in the SVAC ~ with HI
Coach Jack ames
"''""'.ern
~e~ iced the game on the en-· records.LutFr;idaynight,theWUd- HlgblanderawlllaliloC:tterqpttoget
· North G~ takes its unbeaten . ~regW!gal,,asenior,had34yardsin 80yardsrushingwhilePayneadded
e1ghttries.
f~urpomtsw.hilecollectlng126yards
~ltickoffona79yardnmbyBob
cats capitalized some Kyger ereet· back~ the ~lldcaumn against
recerdtoMe1gsCountyforaheadon
clash with Southern while Kyger
Durst, a mainstay on defense, h!!d rushing.
·
Dunkle.
. .
•
fuml!les to score a lll-6 vi~. ~ . Hallllafu winless
Ia. .
Creek visits Eastern. ·
15 tackles in thal gaine while Wigal
Greg Dee!-, junior end, also lidded
Defensively, senior Dale Teaford,
. Todd Sibley, senior- tallback,Durin!! the put two weeks, SouthNon-league encounters feature un- and Leonard added nine each.
a TD on. a 21 yard -reception froin led .Southern with 20 tackles while
scored two touchdowns and I'UI!hed
western baa dnJpped a 21HI league
beaten Hannan Trace going to Irori-. .
Coach John .Blake's North Gallia
Don Shupe.'
· ·
· Terry Patterson had 15.
for 88 yards In passing the Wildcat
contat to North GaUia and aU nOll. ton St. Joe for a 7:30 p.m. game Pirates, off to one of their better
Coaches Mick Winebrenner and '
Hannan ll'race goes after Its sixth
offensive unit. In ~ddltlon, Kyger
leagueaffalrtow':::beld· .1_
Saturday night and Hannan, W.Va., starts in severill years, seek their . HOWie Caldwell's Tornadoes lost to WID this season and 18th co~tiye
Crei!k's ·def~nae which held Hannan
Lui week,
un two
atSouthw~rn.
·
sixth straight victory against
Miller, 2'1·7.
over a three year span against lrl!no
Trace incheck the first quarter was , goal fine stands In~ Its touchBoth Kyger Creek and E;~Sterrl Southern.
Southern collected an earlylllird tonst.JoeSalurdayeveningatltono
burned .by HT's. Tim Mw-phy and down victory. Soutbwestern had 92 ,
will be out to snap losing streaks in
North Gallla wu ~~ last
quarter
to
back into its
·
Rflll
Defellliftb', Cnll .. tiiWprdl.
. Friday's important SVAC contest.
Kyger Creek 2-3 was beaten~ last
week at Hannan Trace and prior .to
· that, 2U by Piketon.
Eastern 3-2 loss a 34-14 battle at .
Belpre last Friday nig!Jt.
Kyger Creek and Eastern
dominated the SVAC during the 70's.
The Bobcats five straight championships from 1973-1977. E!IStem
won the league title in 1970, 1971, and
1978. The Eagles did not suffer a
losing season during the last decade.
Besides the usual rivalry·
BOSS .
associated with the series, this
year's game takes on a new. dimenSATSsion.
WE HAVE MADE A PAINFUL BUSINESS DECISIONTOO
Deryl Well, Kyger Creek's head
TO MAKE DRASTIC MARKDOWNS. DUE TO CURRENT
, , IILLS
BUSiNESS CONDITIONS WE FIND WE MUST TURN
football coach, is a graduate of
SOME
INVENTORY
INTO
CASH.
A
STOREWIDE
SALE.
::::Eastern High School, a member of
' A"D TOCt
QUALITY FALL MERCHANOISE THAT WE OFFER AT
~:
the Eastern Board of Education and
PRICES UN -THINI&lt;ABL.E ONLY WEEKS ALSO. COME
IIUCH
a resident of Tuppers Plains.
SHOP, SAVE BIG FOR FALL AND CHRISTMA,S.
IDSt
The Bobcats have had pr\)blems
SET OF FOUR
getting their offense untracted
ALL ITEIIS IIOT AVAILABLE I~ MASON.
VIIIYL PLASTIC
HEAVY DUTY
following a 61 point romp over·
Federal Hocking to open the 1980
_ campaign.
Another major probletn con.SAVE 1 131 On Elth Piece ·Warm ·
Each
IIZI
36.72_fronting the Bobcat coaching staff ill
Campltft with strips
. loll 0110
too many fumbles. In their last two
defeats, Kyger Creek has fumbled 12
times and lost 10 of those miscues.
SO : WE1U &amp;lVIII&amp;
Offensively, KC is quarterback by
TOU 116 BUYS!
junior Rob :.Vaugh. His running
backs are Bill Ross, a senior; Ed
!0 porC8Dt poii'OIIr. 58
Moore, a junior, Kevin Parsons, a
pe!"Cont cotton. Amerle41n
mecli. Long sl•ve shirtS.
seni~and Scott Burnett, a junior.
22
Ankle length drawers.
E
m has been led offensively
by De · Durst and John Reibel.
AT. REDUCED PRICES
' liENS
~~"~s~~ilor
Reibel who has come on strong the·
Grey or NIYY' Co(J)ra.

To '1U9

goes to Oklahoma, 35-18.
sw-P~ the Trojans. Now the
Noire .Dame, gaining strength
Trojans·will even the record with a
every week, will cl,own the vlalant . 33-18 triumph.

5-'11!e Daily SeDtinel, Wddleport-Pomeroy;o., Wednesday, Oct. 1,1980

I

•

"

...• '

-

..

�Sentinel,

-

0., Wednesday, Oct.1, 1980

.·

..._ ·w~uld. wiD OSU-Trojan battle!

Southern's _~arsity players~

..

Greg Duvall

...

I~
•• •• •• ••

Dennis Teaford ·
11-3, 2661bs.
Freshman Tackle

H, 1461bs.

Freshman Guard

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

and struck out eight to give him a
career total of 3,100 strikeouts, fourth best in the major leagues. Ryan
left in the sixth after yielding fo!U'
hits and three runs.
·

EAST

W L I'd.

New Yortc

911

58

Baltimore
Bolton ·

'{/

Sl

112

73

112
. 75
61
. WEST

73
78
93

93
Ill

64
T1

Detroit

Cleveland

Toronto

•-Kollsas CiJy
Oakland
Miruiesota
Texas
Chl~go

CaUfomla

~effie

13
811
91
811

~

.521
.522
.500

16
11
20%

2%
16

.4118

z

.5112

-

.474

12'ril
JJ %

.4118 ' Jlj \1,
.426 :Ill

.417

%1%

.316

31

Detroit 5, Toronto 3

•

Cleveland 12,· New York 9
Oakland 5, Chicago I
Kansas ctty 7, Seattle 5, 14 innings
Milwaukee 4, Calliomia 2
Wt4aadly'aGama
llaldand (l.angfonl 19-11) at Chicago
(Bawngarten ~II)
•
• Minneoota (Williams !1-2 and zalm 1318) at Tens (Matlacli:; 10-i and Jenkins
1:1-11), 2, (t-n )

Baltimore IMcC"'l!or IN) at Bolton
(Eckersley, 12-13). (n )
Detrol (Fid')'&lt;P 1-3) at Torunb&gt; (SUeb
12.14), ( n)
New Yorlt (Jolu! ZU) at Cleveland
(Barker 10.10), (n)
Sealtle (Dre..Ier +!I) at Kansas City

(Gale 1:1-.11, 1• 1

. Mllnukee (LaPointe 1.0) at cautornia

lllottln8 0.1),

(n)
Tb~y'aGama

Oakland at Chicago
Toronto at Boaton,. (n)

. BY ASIIOCIAl'EDPRESS
Jid hear moans - the guys woUldn't
.The New York Yankees ani sliplet i:ne concentrate.
ping; the Baltimore Orioles are . . "Bilt that's half the fun of a pensurging. The American League East ·nant race. The other half is win-.
bas a pennant race once again, and
ning."
O!ioles Manage~ Earl Weaver is ·
In other games; the Oakland A's
hsving trouble coilcentrating.
beat the Chicago White Sox l&gt;-1 , the
."Wbat was-t)le score of our
Kansas CitY Royals edged the Seat·
tie Mariners 7-5 in 14 irinings, the
game?" Weaver ~ed ~r the
Oriole" whipped the Boston Red Sox
Detroit Tigers topped the Toronto
11.0 Tuesday night while the first.
Blue Jays ~ ·and the Milwaukee
place . Yankees were dropPing a
Brewers defeated the California
seesaw 12-9 decisionto CI~eland.
Angels 4,2. Minnesota at Texas was
··
Those results cui tbe Yankees' · rainedout. ·
IeadlntheALEaatto2~ games. It's
Baltimore ~ed Mike Flanagan·
still a sizeable margin, since New _to 10 runs, in the first five innings,
York has only five games to play and
Baltimore four. But for the Orioles
the ouUook Is muCh brighter than it
~ 88 recently 88 Saturday, when
they trailed by 5'&gt;!. games.
~·we .were listening to It in the
dugout," Weaver said_ of the Yankee
game. "Rick Dempsey had the radio
on loud I couldn't think. I'd hear a
cheer·at the end of the dUgout, then

L ' I'd

81
87
Ill

711

.506

St. lool.s

72

IS
!12

.456

Ill

.U8

94

. 40~

22
24%

.$73

-

WEST

Howoton
Los Angeles

10
10

110 111

&amp;I

ClncinnaU

16

89
72

Atlanta

10

78

San Francisco
Diego

san

.567
.561

GB

Montr.al
Philadelphia
Pitt.burgh
Chicago

Plante, rloht wlnl!.
.
WINNJpt,G JETs-sent Pierri! Hamel
soaltender;

-

TOOAY'SMAJORi.EAGUELEADERS
AMI!IIICAN 1.&amp;\GVE

BATTING (430 at bala)' G.Brett. Kansas City, .387; Cooper, Milwaukee, .357 ;

Cleveland. .MO; Riven,
.m; Carew, Calllomia, .m. ·

Dilone.

RUNS' . !\'Ilion,
Yount, Milwaukee,

Kansas

Tens,

City,

171;

119; · Bumbry, Baltimore, 114L . HODde~, Oakland, 101;
Trammell. ueuol~ 104.
·
RBI, Cooper, Mllwoultee, 120; Oslivie.
Milwaukee. 115; G. Brott, Kansu CIJy,
US; Oliver, Texas, 113; Mwny, BalUmore, 112. , ,
.
. lilTS' Wllaon, Kansaa City, 223; · Coop.
er, Milwaukee, 21.'7; Rivera, Teua, 8:
Oliver, Teus, 203; Bumbry, Baltimore,
200.
Youn~

Mll,.aultee,

II;

OU.

.$111

2

l$64

4¥.:

-~13

9%
16% .
Ill%

.148
.441

73 83
' 71 87

TtleaclaJ01 GaJms

%
8

HOME · RUNS, Oglivie,

lllomaa. • Mllwauiet!,

MllnUkee,

:II; Re. Jocklon,
New York, 31; Annas, Oakland, 35; Murray, Baltimore, 31.
·
STOLEN BASES, Hendenon, Ookland,
!rl;
Wilson, Kansu City, '11; DOone,
aeveland, 61 ; Bwnll&lt;y. Baltlrnon!, 44;
J .Cruz. Seaffie, 4.1.

"·ORDERS WELCOME!

FOR

..

SVAC -standings

,....,..Sporta1'1
.

IIIASliETIW.l.

Hannan Trace .

North Galli a

"'

.

FOOTIWL

SVACONLY

OOLIJMBUS, -Oillo (AP) -

1, CincinDaU
~.

·.
PHI\-ADELPHIA
EtGLES-Signed
Rodney Parter; wtcle receiver. Raced
Scott Fitlkee, -wide receiver, on the inlured ........e list.
'

.

..
"

.

v....,...;..n Mooney (2! ;

2111

5-CHJ,

(1) ,

Clnclaootl PrincdDn (1),

~ l.onJn -

~.

5,&amp;-1,

(II, ~. 134.

1811.

6, (1), ....... lot.
7, Cenborville (1), 4-HI, IS.
' Won. Jfanllng (1), 44-1,
• (tit), LIUwood Sl and Upper ArllDI!IOO (1), 4-1.0,
other ~ 10

_ , n·

tile),

w-.me

:11, ancw.u Elder IS. ll,
II. M (Ue), lloytoo llortl&gt;

Lancutn 10.
ClAIIIIAA
Cloveii'MI lletledJdlne (3),

_ . IIIII

.
. '

' "·

·1/8'·' x4'xl'

r;~~~~~~~~;;;~~~~iiiiii~iii~~~~~~

...

•3''· ASHEET

.
. '

.

I)

·,

.

.

HAlf

FROZEN DINNERS

LIBBY'S

•CHICKEN

·VIENNA
·sAUSAGE

•SALISBURY STEAK
•MEAT LOAF •TURKEY

3·~ $109

'

.

. ~.

1811

AUon St. VlnoenWit. Moey (31, U.,

10W30

1 GAllON

WINTER
WINDSHIELD
WASH

INSULATED
--·
COVERAU.S

-

~·

99C

s2491

I

VALVOLINE
ALL .CLIMA

MOTOR
OIL

69~

'

4PACK

. Ai)JUSTAIU

•

HEAT __

:jiPU~RS

99~
,,

'119

MOIITON

or _..
North
ond

~ewort 31. IS (tlo), Willouoblw IIIII
llonr :N. 11, llorldllllcy IS. . 18, Lake Calbolle :a. 17 YllllllpiOwn 21JI, Clortii'MI St.
II. II, Gllioll

l\llllllri 14.
'!lfllomtllo

Tucker, Komar
Players of Week

GAlioN

72.
(I I, 4-1...
10.

Jc.iPii

SPECIAL
.
RE_, -OAK

All FLAVORS

:m

18, II, 11nnw1c:t 17. 11, Aa111ntown Fltdl
IIMI, Canton McKHey II. II, ColuJnbull .

PANEliNG

PAPER

CREAM

G·ROUND.
BEEF

·2% MI.LK

'149

ICE

MuiiUclll (1), H;O, _133 .

$,

N•tmal Peetball tape

Moeller

~FRESH

ROYAL CREST

68
70
121

llere's how

.CIAIIIIW

. points.
~

.

~

br&lt;Jodaolerl raau Ohio high school football teomo IIIIo woel for Tbe Alloclated
Prao, with II ~ lor lint to I . P\)lnt
for lllh (teuno ployoff dlvillons In Jlll'
e11thesel):
·

HOLLAND

56

• . llatowlde panol of !lpOrtl . writers and

''t ''

!U..

98
85
80
99

High school ratings

. "

Astros 7, Braves 3
Jose Cruz hit a three-run . double
and Nolan Ryan shut out Atlanta for
51-3 innings before needing relief
help as the Astros defeatf'rl th~
Braves. ·
· Ryan, 11·9, scattered eight Juts·

GUNSAFETYSTRESsED .:.. NatlonaiHuntlncandFIIbiq.Daya
· observed l8st weekend at Royal Oak P!f)!. Game protector Andy' Lyle~ ·
COi.tJMBUS, Ohio (AP)
and members of the Ken Amsbury Chapter streued gunaety to the 106
Tailback Darryl Tucker of Central · · youn~rs attending. Other outdoor activities Included fly fishing, .
Michigan· and linebacker Frank
· canoeing, arehery and how to fillet a fish.
·
Komar of Ohio Univer8ity are. the

2
2
2 3
2 3
J
J

Hannan Trace
1 0 20 6
Nor:;, .:&gt;allla
1 o 20 16
Eastern
0 0 0 o
southern
.o o o 0
Southwestern
0 1 16 -20
Kyger Creek
0 1 ~ 20
Friday's games: Kyger Creek at
Eastern; North Gall ia at Southern
and .Hannan, W. Va. at South·
western.
.
Saturday night - Hannan Trace
at 1 ronton St. Joe 17 :30 p.m.)

•'

' N

\

,..,op
0 135 «
P

5
5 0 128-

southwestern
Eastern
Kyger Creel\
Southern

Wemea'a BubbD Lape
·
MILWAUKEE
EXPRESS- SUspended
operoUOIIS.

ALLGAMES
W L

TEAM

• &lt;

LOo Anj[eltl (Hooton 1:1-1) at San Francla&lt;o (Whi'""' 11-1!1, {nl
......... ,.•• Gtuaet
Ol!cago at Phllade\1&gt;1'1&amp;. (n)
AtlantA! at Houtoo, (n)
LOo Antt•les at San Franctoco, (nl
Orlly gii!IIU ocheduled

79~

fl""l'llJ

Chicago (Lamp 11&gt;111 at
(C.rlton ZUJ, (n )
,
San Dlet!O f"hhrley IJ.ll) at ClndnnoU-

'

JAR

Coaaty Jaycee.. Judge, a seolor,
II 5-U lllld tipl tbe IIQ)e at 118

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By:
David M. Polk.
Secretary.

Houston

LB• .·

PLAYER OF 'lBE WEEK Cbrts Judie, ceater for the Meigs
Marauden, ba1 beea 118111ed
pia~ el die week by tbe Mason

(Palmer 1_.1, (n)

at ·

ROAST&lt;

INSTANT
COFFEE

Pltlaburgll (Bibby IJS.II at New Vork
(Bunls 7-11)
St. IAuls (Rincoo · •U) at Monbul

15-l&amp;)

29

CHUCK

FOLGER'S

Wedleldly' s Gulel

Atlanta' (Niekrtl
(Ruhle 11-4), (nl

WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT 10

LIMIT .
QUANTITIES
FOOD STAMP

nlngs

(Seaver · IHI , lnl

SUNDAY, OCT. 7

..

New Vrni&lt; 3, Pittsburgh I
Montreal 7, St. LoulJ 2
PhlladelpiiJa 14, Chicago 2
San Diego 3, ClncinnaU 2
Houaton. 7, AUanta 3
La! Angele1 8, San Fnmcllco 3, 10 Jn. .•

'

to 115, a club record.
A's5, White Soli)
Tigers 5, Blue Jays 3 · · .
Rickey Henderson broke Ty
·Alan Trilmlilell, who. had five hits
Cobb's 6:&gt;-year-{)ld ·AL record by 'on Monday, continued- to feast on
steallng his !J7th base for .t)le A's. Toronto pitchllig with a pair of home
Only two players have stolen more
runs Tuesday night. "I've never. hit
bases in ol)e season - Lou Brock of
two home l'UIIS in .a game before, not
St. Louis stole Uil in 1974 and Maury
even Little League," said the 22year-{)!d shortstop. ·
Wills stole 104 in 1962.
Royals 7, Mariners 5
Brewers ' • Angels 2
George Brett slammed a three-run
Ben Oglivie took over the AL home
home run off Mike Parrott in the· run lead with his 39th of the season
14th in,ning to snap Kansas City 's · for Milwaukee; a twe&gt;-run shot in tl)e
first inning.
·eight-game losing streak. He went 3for-6 to raise his batting average to·
Bob McClure didn't allow a hit for
.367 and he also boosted his RBitotal.· 52-3 innings and posted his fourth
victory in fiye de~isions as a starter.

19 oz. $399

All interested persons will
be given an opportunity to
be heard . Further infor·
mation may be obtained
by contacting the Commis·
sion.

39;

dians.

PRICES GOOD JODA Y THIIIU

so

, · •.

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set for.
p~bl ic hearing Case No.
8~239- EL-FAC . to review
the fuel procurement prac· ·
tices and pol icies of the
Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company,
the operation of its ,Fuel
Cost Adjustment Clause,
and related matters. This
hearing is schedul.ed at
9:30 a.m. on Monday ,
October 6, 1980, at the
offices of the Public Utili·
ties Commission of Ohio.

and

defenoeman,

I.Yie Moffat. Pal Daley and Larry HoplUna, wtnp, to TUlsa ot tbe central Hockey League.

1().5.

Mid-America,!!
G9nference footba1J
Players
of the Week.
Tucker, a 5-foot-9, 185-pound
senior from Detroit, carried 25 times
for 147 yards and two touchdowns in
the Chippewas' 21.0 conference victory over Kent State. He !lUis 26
career touchdowns.
·Komar, a 6-1, 2flO.pound junior
from Lorain, Ohio, was in -on 25
tackles, four of which ·wete from
behind the Jine.of scrinunage; in the
Bobcats' 22-21 loss to Northern
IUinois. Komar leads the conference
. ...with eight tackles (or lasses.

R""' Cory,

.

Rookie Joe Charboneau's RBl
single ~ed the score and starte&lt;l a
four-run · eighth-inning rally that
gave the Indians the victory.
Baltimore got 15 hits in beating
Boston, including home rwis by Ken

LEGAL NOTICE

Pierre

NORD1QUES-Cut

through."

.·

Singleton, Eddie Murray and Dan
Graham. But Belanger was looking
ahead
Indians U, YaniJ:eea 9
"They can't come much tougher
than that. We're not used to losing
these kind of games,"·said Manager
Dick Howser, whose Yankees
allowed eight runs in the second inning, fought back to lead ~ only to
lose as ace reliever Rich Gossage
surrendered four runs in the eighth.
After Charboneau siilgled home
the tying run, Mike Hargrove
delivered a twe&gt;-run single and Ron
Hassey an RBI sipgle for the In-

r-;---=:-::----.--,=--

Yount, MUnukee, 10.

EAST

66
63

Kevin McCIOikt)l, def~n~emen, and Dave
.,Herbel, John Meredith, Mlke Slecle. Barry
Aller, Poul Po&lt;i!lc, Tony Tllcmu, Plene
Lapce, Marcel Fortier and lloo lJe.
labblo, forwanlll, In Baltimore of the
Eamm Hockey Leogae.

TRIPLES , Griffin, Tllnllllo, 1$; Wllaon,
Kansu City, 15; w~ Kona.u
aty, 11 ;
I.An&lt;lreawr, Minnesota, 11:

NATIONAL LEAGUE

New York

NOIITH
STARS-~nt
Dave Tardlch. &amp;.lb Jwabuchi and Jay
O'Connor, g.._ltender~; Wes Coullm, Jay
Lanon, Gerry Ciarcta, •Roser Wolfe and
MINNESOTA

~.

.

breezed by Boston and turned its attentioh to the radio for reports on the
Yankee game.
"We tuned in for the three-run ·
homer that ma\ie.lt 9-8," said Orioles
shortstop Mark Belanger, referrU!g
to Dennis Werth's seventh-inning
liomer tliat gave the Yankees a brief
.lead. "Then Super Joe came .

LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Br~tter
Beste was declared the winner of the
$1,000 featured pace rilile after a
.three-horse photo finish Tuesday
night at Lebanon and paid. $7.Sl,
, $5.Mand$3.?D.
·
The winner caught the .lesders at
the wire posting a winning time of
2 : ~.4-li. James Riley placed, $4.40
and $4.40 and Clpverleaf Jlmbo,
third, $4.40.
.
Tbe 4-3 double of Pop Nixon and
Surgartown. Leader paid $19.60 and
the crowd of 1,063 bet$120,823 •

. ver, teas, 42; · Mln1son. Olicqo, to;
McRae, Kaillu City;' 37; MUITIIY, Baltimore. :16.
•

Minnesota at reus, (n)
Only games schedl.lled ·

W

quarterback , . retired. Signed
Tom 1\q&amp;an~ quarterbeclt.
RocmY
NotloaoiH.....,.l.oope
.
CIUCAGO BLACK liAWKS-sent Jodi
O'Callalwl, def..-nan, In Moncton ol
the Amerkan IIOd&lt;ey lagae.

DOUBLES'

Detroit at New York, (n )
~attle at Kansas City, (n.)

Lem-

mennan ,

QUEBEC

TUHday'• Gamet

three

'

82

73
116
65

-

MinneSota at Texas, · ppd., wet groundl
Baltimore 11, Boston 6
'

"We're loose and we know the
championship .is within our grasp,"
Andre Dawson said after the frontBy Greg Bailey
running Expos defeated the St. Louis
Approximately 200 people attended National Hunting and Fishing Day at
Cardinals 7-2 Tuesday night and
Royal Oak Park Saturday. One hundred six youngsters, ages 5 to 17, were
hung tough in the National League
registered by the Izaak Walton League, Ken Amsbury Chapter, which
East.
spearheaded the event. '
.
"We have to go out and apply our-..
The day's activities were initiated by Game Protector Andy Lyles who
self and use the talent we have," adgave a demonstration on gun safety. Then the youngsters were split iQto
ded Dawson, who had two of
rptating groups in order to participate in fly fishing, canoeing, and archery.
Montrea l triples against the CarAfter a free lunch served by Izaak Walton members Rex Bailey and
dinals. " It's fun but it's also hard
Denver Well, those attending saw a fine demonstration of bird dogs in aCtion
: .. work. And we can't, afford to make
as Roger Birch again was grac[oud enough to put on this exhibit.
- .mistakes."
The youngsters were shown how to fillet a fish and set a trap. They also
The Expos thus maintained their
were introduced' to the fast rising sport of ice fishing . They then got to try
half-game advantage over the
their hands at shooting a mwleloader and shOOting trap. The day's acPhiladelphia Phillies, 14-2 winners
tivities were topped off with a drawing of prizes. There were'25 major priZes,
pver the Chicago Cubs.
and each youngster present was given a prize to take home. ·
The Astros, mea.nwhile, beat the
Although the lzaAk Walton League organized and worked at the
Atla'nta Braves 7-3 and maintained a
celebration, many lilcal clubs and businesses cqntributed. Special thanks go
twe&gt;-game advantage in the West
to the following organizations and businesses lor their contri~tions 'of food,
over the Los AngeleS" Dodgers; who
prizes, or money: Meigs County Fish and Game Associatio Racine Gun
beat the San Francisco Gia nts 6-3 in
Club, Gold Ridge Gun Club, and Shade River Coonhunters. A1s thanks go to
10 innings.
Cline's Orchard, Beacon Service Station, Seamin's Market of Athens, Dan
Elsewhere in the NL, San Diego
Dee Potato Chips, Mr. B Potato ChiJ)s, J and J Carry Out, R C Bottling Comedged Cincinnati 3-2 and New York·
pany, Village 1'rading Post of Oak Hill, and QUality Print Shop (adbeat Pittsburgh 3-2.
vertising).
Triples by Rodney Scott and
A real special thanks goes to Horace Karr and Royal Oak Park for the
Dawson ignited a five-run, sixthfacilities and to~
·!
e members and nonmembers who helped in any way
inning rally for the Expos.
. to make tire day
ej success.
•
·
.
&lt;
With the Expos trailing 2·1 and
,.. ...... ..,..
.
.
Cardinal starter Iiob Forsch, 11-10,
rolling along with a four-hitter, Scott
blooped a hit into left field with one
out in .the sixth and wound up on
third when the ball caromed from
charging Leon Dur~ . .. Rowland
Office brought Scott hoine with the
tying run on an infield out.
Dawson then stroked his second
triple of the game and Gary Carter
followed .with a run-scoring double,
putting the Expos ahead 3-2. Warren
Cromartie was intentionally walked
and Larry Parrish followed with a
three-run homer, his 15th of the
year.
Both Cardinal runs were unearned
off Montreal starter Bill Gullickson,
'

1t

GB

.631
.614
.5211

.sn

• ..Clinched divl.!lon title

Cruz's blow came in the fifth after
Doyle Alexander, 14-10, had loaded
the bases on walks to Joe Morgan
and Puhi and a single by li:nos
Cabell.

I

M 73

Milwaukee

Den Talk .

race.

HAMIL~N...~'G~=~ce

AMERICAN LEAGUE

LoOse Expos, Astros
continue flag chase
with easy victories
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
For more seasons than they can
remember, the Montreal Expos and
Houston Astros have been· playing
the roles of spoilers.
This season, though, they're learning how the other half lives - and
loving every minute of it, despite the
mounting pressure of a pennant

LEBANON RF3ULTS

·Ies hope

Slipping Yanks gi-ve surging

.--•••••-1 r--••••••

.

!-:-Th!IDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Ptimeroy, 0., Wedilesday, Oct 1; 1980

that fired up ior u.s," said Salem. "I (Tom Ramlley). And in Ken Easle~
CHICAGO .(AP) Because
Southern Cal is ineligible for post think there are two reasons for that. they have the finest defensive .back
season competition, there is no chan- ·One is they beat us so badly last year in the country.
·
"I know they're the only team in
ce of another Rose Bowl meeting · and the other is they had seen how
against Ohio State, a 17-16 vlctin\ of
badly Ohi
. "o S~te had beate,.n us."
the country !hat bas two Heisnlin
·d Bruce. "They're a ·
the Trojans last New Year's Day.
Ohio State, undefeated and ranked candida•-·,"sal
"""
No. 2, takes on UCLA, undefeated team that has a lot of confidence.
But if the two met; what would
likely happen?
' and ranked No. 11, in a nationally You can tell It ~rom wat(hlng their '
· Minnesota already has played · televised game this week and Coach fihns. The way they react early and :
Jll&gt;th Ohio State and Southern Cal Earle ·Bruce knows the Buckeyes again after they've won a game."
Bruce feels his Buckeyes are
and . ,Gop)ler Coach JQe. Salem· have their work cut out for them.
"They're not eligible to go to a progresaing satisfactorily.
· ·
· Tuesday told the Chieago Football
"I think we've improved;' ~ said
Writers in a telephone interview that bowlsothisisabiggameforthem,"
"The ~ that made the right play Bruce said fn his telephone in- Bruce. "We have made progress
at the right time would probably win terview. We beat them last year 17· ·each week In each area and that'll :
13 and we were very fortunate to what we're shooting for. But we'll
again 17-16 or 11..1.4.
.:,
.,.
win.
The Victory made us a goOd know more about ourselves after ·
"Both teams have great talent 11nd .
. .
are evenly matched," said S8Iem, .team and the loss started their thisgame.''
Art Schllchter, Ohio State's out- .•
.whose Gophers last Saturday were itemise.
"This .is a different UCLA team . standing quarterback, bad a super
down only 11}.7 to Southern Cal with
five minutes to play before Marcus from last year," said B.ruce. -'·-effort last Saturday in a 38-21 victory ·
"They' re~andhaveafinenlixture
over Arlzof18 State and Bruce atAllen broke a pair of touclldown runs
fW" a 24-7 outcome. Ohio State swam- of running from (Freemall) McNeil tributed it to the fact he had a chan'
and passing from their quafterback ce to perform.
JIM Minnesota 47~.
"I'm not·sure Southern Cal was all
·
"In the Minnesota game he "" on ·
the bench after the first hall and :· ,
against Syraciuse we didn't have the
ball much in the first half but the "· ·
second half was exciting.;,
'

~OUTHERI
'"'

.

STORM
WINDOW
KIT

4PAI71*

1 GAllON

PRESTONE
WINTER
ANTI-FREEZE

$449
" .
lADIES' &amp;
GIRlS'-

DORM
-MATES

�•

•

..

'

-.L~cal /f!milies

gather to

shar~

Spaghetti c/inner planned ,

m:emories_·

· Plans-for a apaghetti dinner to be
held Friday night at Southern Jflgh
School were made when the Racine
·EII!DI\!Illary PrO met recently *t·the
school. · • .
Nancy Yoacham pr '1M at the
meeting. Servlngwllllie-frunUOto
S:30p.m.wjththechsrgetobe$2for
those over 13, and$lfor those under

·Sinclair reunion -:---,---__,.....----:-------"'-:-------- -- - ----.-and Patsy and Patrick Aelker,
children of Mt. and Mrs. Pat Aeiker,
PO!ofroy. Traveling the farthest ,.
were Elwood and Barbara .Kegley
and family of Wallingford, Ky. ,
Games were played following the
picnic dinner.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Noel
Sinclair, Athens; Gayle Miller,
Chris and DeWayne, Athens; Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Bretz, Athens,
Sammy Davis, Jackson; Ora Sin- ·
clair, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hawk and
Robbie, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
George Bing, Judy and • G~rgina,

'..., .

Health Review

.

chairman, noted that Gill ere ~ •
cen&amp;llllld the driVe will~
In October. RoOm count walt to tbl:~
IJeCOIId gr'lde. Plana wwe-iuade toil
haVU booQra&amp; the fall ftltlval.
::
Jobn Ccw!!.o!I!O, Title 1 teaeller, :

concludecl':

· Nof R'e spon si ble tor T ypogra ph ica l Errors

Acne causes·explained

. Lancaster; Wllllanr and Carolyn
Sha~; Lyle IUid Sheila Sinclair,
Bj Rellert G. Stoekma!, ·
- produce gland plugs plays an imVan Meter, Ricky, Misty, Tauilda
Kyle, ShellY. Tuppers· Plains; Paul
D.O.,PII.D.
portant role. Femwes also produce
and Shaunda, CUfton; Mr. and Mrs. and Carol)lll Sinclair, Brenda and
wutheapeekerlllldtalked•bout~:;
Ae:f:t::m----•ar
anctrog
' ens. which usually are SU"'·
Charles Rife, Debra, Teresa,,
Craig, Shade; Elwood and Barbara
Jli'OIII'lllDinremediahrork.
· ·~
prm~ by the female honnon~
· Chucky, Larry and Sharon,
Kegley, Cathie, Tracy, and Sandy,
. ·~~
&lt;*eUIIiwnl&amp;y&lt;;tllege
(~ens) , However, menstrual or
Wellston; Patty Capehart, TII!WOY,
Wallingford, Ky.; Boll and Wanda
13.
.
.
;;
etOat lpadlicMedlc:ble
hormonally
induced flare-ups of acMichele,. and Timmy, Clarence .and
Da~, Billie, Kerrie Ann, Nancy .
Qonna lhle led the group In prayer
·
.,..
Quel&amp;lm: Wba,tls acne?
ne are common in some womeJL
Maxine Jordan, Pat and Cindy
Marie, Marysville; Jim and Viola
8nd the pledge to the flag .. Officers'
YOuNG CITED FOR SERVICE ..~
Alinnr: Acne Is a skin problem stress, lack of sleep 81l.d Improper
Aelk.e r, . Patsy and Patrick, ·Aldrich, Cri8ty Bod Cherie, Jackson; · i-eports were given and members
Victor C. Young, Jr., Pilmenly,':
,more prevaleril In the adolescent sklilcareareotherprecipitatingfacPomeroy ; Denise Johnston and Harry and Virginia Freeman and
were reminded that I!IIYOIIe wishing.. has been cited by Time lnluruce&gt; ·
'group. Jt often involve~ the face,
tors.
Jeremy, Poriland.
Todd Cooper, Jackson; Robert and a conference should call the IChool
Company, Milwaukee, ·for Ita 10:~
· ahouJchrs. back and chest. The ~ost
Qllf'..STION : What can he done
Charles and ·Margaret Sinclair Kathy Sinclair 8l1d CryStal, Atl)ens;
for an appointment.
· ·
yean of aHUiatlon with ,the firm ~ri
'CCIIIIIJltll leaiOIIII are ,the whitehead
about acne?
' ·
and Chad, POnieroy; . 'Pal\1 and Jeff Gray, Jackson; Valerie Pierce,
Cindy Winebrenner, memben!llp
an Independent agency. . ·
;.:
· ind the blackhead 'lbese may
ANSWER: The choice' of treatMildred Ha~ber and Scott, Long Bot- Wetlaton; Melody Roberts, Lorlg
jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ:--t:.:._-":. ~jl'Oil~=-: to pustules (pimples) that "!!'n(depends uwn how severe the
tOni; Alba and Helen Sinclair,· Bottom. ·
ultimately heal with tile poasibillty , acne is. Severe casea should be
of 110p1e ICaiT!ng. The parts 0t the . treated by a physician:·Diet has not
bOd1 affected are those ri1:h in oil · been shown to play a major role in
.
(18b!im) lleCI'eting glands called
the control of pimples, but "junk
The eighth annual reuniJ&gt;ri of the
..
~
~lands.
The
pores
of
these
food"
Is definitely nQt part of a
host. Hayman and Bill Robison Swarz, T. Riffle, Bill Robison,
Cirl Stewart, Charles Collins, Rusty
families of H. A. Fred and Garnet F.
·Blanda
become
blocked
from
within
nutritious,
balanced diet.
Charley Matheny, Usa Hayjnan,
worked at the grills for the dinner
RObison, Timmy Robison, RusseU
Polk Hayman was held recently at
by
a
c&lt;Wb!naUon
of
dead
cella
arid
Cleanllneaa
ill
helpful
and may make
and the supper. There was country . June Hayman, Charles SteWart,
Robison, Jr. and Russell Robison, s,
.
'
~ '
the home of their elder son, C. E.
uc
11ebufD. The 'accumulation the pores less prone to clogging.
music and singing in the afternoon Kellhie Stewart, Valerie Hayman,
Van Meter, Dog/Davids"!', Charles
Hayman, Sr., AntiquitY.
"
I
.
,
Ot
thil
material produces' a [)c)n't use cle8nsing creB~~~J, greases •·
along with a ball garne !Or the Vera Stewart, Joe Spencer, Reda
Ha!llday, Do!4!· M. .Hi)!, Craig .
C..E. Hayman, Sr. was re-elected
·
wbltabead
which progreSses to a · or otla which may clog the pores.
children. Several friends stopped by
and Paul Holman, Bill Holman, · DougaJi, Kathleen Dougan; Bryan
~T
president with Kathleen Dougan
:blackheacl when the tip of the pllig Is [)c)n't use abrasive cleanaers which
during the day.
Judy Holman, Barba Roush, Dallas
Taylor, Ed Taylor, Joe Anderson,
being named,secretary-treasurer. A
apoeed to alt. Nonnal skin surface · may ai:t!lally worsen the condition.
Attending were C. E. Hayman, Campl;lell, Ri&lt;;hard Stewart, James · Carl Henderson, and William
.Manufacturer's suggested
fried -chicken and .steak dinner was
-~
a1ao becomes trapped In the U11e a mild or hypoallergenic soap
Sr., Virginia Hayman, Charles Stewart, Clarence E. Hayman, Jr.,
Brown.
·retail price, transportation,
0
served ·at noon with grace by the
·
plug
conte11ta.
They inu!Uply and
and do.not scrub. Awid friction from
·options, and !Niles tax extra.
.
convert
certain
of
the
sebum.
conrough clothing, musical In- ·
'·
'
tats Into fatty acida. These acids
strumen.t;s, masks or athletic
: ere Irritating and produce mild In- equlqment which could aggrevate
Bookman and Dorothy Bookman
flammation. A further complication
acne. Don't pick, rub or squeeze
Use EPA Est. MPG for
Descendants of the late James C. Call, Buchtel ; -Mr .. and · Mrs. Roy
The annual Carl reuruon"was held Stephanie and David, GaitherSburg;
I!CCUI'I when the continued producyour pimples since this will only
comparison.
Your
mileage
and E\llelinda S.tone Moore held a Wolfe, Carroll; Mrs. Dana Fell,
recentlyatthescoutcabinonKings- Md.; Mr. and Mrs. William Cool, ,
may
vary
with
Spftd,
Uon
of
liebuln
ca1181l11
the
wi118
of
the
·
make them worse.
·
Epa. Est. Est. HwJ.
reunion Sept. 14 at the Shriners washingt on c. H'.; Mr • and Mrs . . bury Road.
weatt\er, trip length. Actu11 .
Homer Mathe!JY of Piketon; Mrs.
·
~~~~&amp;ed
gland
to
burst.
This
allows
Non-prescription
remedies
InPark,
Mpg
.
highway
mileage . will
. Racine. Thirty-two relatives Fred Smith, p omeroy ;.Mr . and )lfrs .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Faye Pratt, Phil and Paulette
the
contents
of
the
gland
to
spread
elude
"exfollants"
.which
cause
the
and. friends attended.
Arthur 0 rr, Chester; Mr. and Mrs .
prObalily be leu.
Charles Riffle and Ann, Middleport;
Harrison, Rodney and Trevor, ·
. Into the surrounding tissue,
skin to dry and peal, hastening the
A basket dinner was held at noon Robert Lee, BopandBeeky, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Harrison, Scott Poineroy; Rhonda Gibson, Jodi,
triggering
a
more
violent
Innatural heallng. These preparations
with the Rev. Mark Flynn giving Mrs. Joe Blazer, Rio Grande; Mr.
Sean and Dale Gibson, Athens; ·
and Jodi, Ottie Scholl, Pomeroy;
flammatlon.
This
·
process
is
'contain either sulfur, ~esorclnol or.
table grace. A baking contest was and Mrs. Douglas Circle, Mrs. Larry
11
Hazel and Bud Wilson, Charles and Steve and Sue Brickles, Jeffery and
repeated In different glanda and per- sallcyllc acid. Anti-bacterial agents
judged by Fred Smith and the win- Circle, Shane and Grant, Mrs. Unda
Bernice Riffle, Pomeroy; carla and Michael, Gaithersburg, Md. ; Ron
petuatel the condition.
are also helpful in preVention and
ners were Patty Circle, best cake; Patterson, Mr. · and Mrs. Harold
Bill Lohrer; Shari and Mike, Ket·
Unda Riffle, 'flna and Matt,
QUESTION:
What
causes
acne?
treatment. Beonzoyl pei'Oilde Is
All the 1981 AMC veh[cl•'lnclude ZIEBAR,. FACTORY
Elsie . Circle, best pie. The bean Hager, Kim FoUrod, Matt Weaver,
tering; Virgil and Judy Carl, Brett,
. omeroy; Rodney and Mona
ANSWER:
Acne
typically
hegins
•
especlally
good.~ sure to follow the
RUST
PROTECTION,
the .exclusive AMC Buyer
guessmg contest was won by Fred Garrett Circle, Florence Circle, · Randy, Danny ani! Melodl Carl, Olen
reeker and Jason, Middleport; ,
· Protection Plan• ' and full five- year No-Ruti·Thni ·
at
~
when
an
upsurge
In
cirpackage
instruclllB
and don't over·
Smith, and·Arthur Ort won the door · ' Paul· Moore and Mr. and Mrs.
. Warranty™. Zlebart0 11 a reglitered trlldemerk of
and '-101!ise Harrison, Ray and Mabel
Ralph and Sadie ~rl and Ivan Carl,
culaUon inale . hormones (an- do the treatment Be patient because
prize.
· Clarence Grueser, Racine, the Rev.
Zlebart International COrporation.
.....
Brickles, Iona, Denise and Bruce
lloyd and Eya Kmg, Bnan, Brill
~)'J:JUIIes ari Increase' In size
imProvement may take several
Attending were the Rev. Roy Mary Flynn and Melanie Wert.
Brickles, Pomeroy; Carolyn Banks, - ' and Phil, Pomeroy.
·
'lllld activity of the ~ebaceous glands. wee)m.
Hereditary predisposition to

1981

.AMC SPiRIT

LOOK

Moore reunion -:::--7-~::--7."--=-:----- Carl reunion-~----'----:--

-'5033°

'23/33

No Rust-Thru WarrantyT"'"

.COM PARE OUR NUMBERS TO

Moras entertain with lawn fare

'"'

YOUR NUMBERS TODAY ·
.

Mr:

Stewart, Mrs. Altona Karr,
and
MrS. Patrick Morrisey, 'fom and
Carrie. . Brenda Rucker, Rodney
Keller , Tim Bearhs , Dennis
Eichinger, Jon Cline, Carson crow,
Bill Quickel, Alan Holter, Greg
Eblin, Tom Hoschar, Janet Mora,
Judy Mora, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Frost, Mike, and Debbie, Mr. and
Mrs.·Richard ora and Jennifer.
Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora entertained Thursday evening with a
l¥1rtY· honoring their daughter,
Janet, on her 19th birthday.
·
Ice cream, punch, red velvet cake,
sloppy joe sandwiches, potato chips
and pop we.-e served to the honored
guest and Gregory Eblin, her sister,
Judy,andTomHoschar,herbrother
and sister-In-law, George and Paula
Mora, Denise and Jennifer Mora,
Debbie Frost, Pat and Carla
Soulsby, Rex Roy and Gayle Hunter,
DavidSmithandSherryStarcher. ·

446-9800.
Upper River Road

Gallipolis, Ohio

.

FISH TAIL :............. 99'
! ... .. ..

$1.39

-.ADOLPti:S •
Alit_
V_ALLEY
,.,.~-ust

570 "'(.MilD

Young man
·turns three
Shawn ErVin Dalley, son of Steve
and Rhonda Dalley, Racine, was
honored recently with two parties on
his third birthday.
:Shawn and his guests enjoyed a ·
balloon-t!lemed party with a Winnle'
the-Pooh cake and ice cream
novelties being serv~ to Tracy and
C. J·. Stone, Jeff ' Tracy, Kendra
· Norris, Sara and B. J. Ervin, Tracy
Beegle, Nathan Harris, Jamle Hubbard, Sharon Hubbard, Sue Beegle,
Oonna Norris, June Harris, Sue
Stone, Tammy Ervin, Teresa Ervin,
and his grandparents, Howard and
Nancy Ervin.
A family paey was also held with
cake and ice cream being served to
his paternal grandparents, Floyd
and Marie Dailey, paternal greatgrandparents, Winnle and Orner .
Dailey, maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Nancy Ervin, Beverly and
Roger Willford, Herbie ilnd T..C..Ervin,. Teresa Ervin, Lori Powell,
rrank. Ludwig, and Jack Ludwig.
Gifts irere presented to Shawn at
both parties. • . (

AIR CONDITIONED

FASv CHEK

TAVERN

CHOICE MEATS

HAMS

TAVERN
HAM

t'. •

..

Sliced Lb.

$1 99

Boneless

'SHOULDER .·
ROAST
BUCKET

f

$159

whol e

LB.
ess

CHUCK
ROAST
TOP BLADE

STEAK

, ,

BEEF
STEW

STEAK

Pork

PORK
ROAST

.CU_BE

SLAB
BACON

POLISH
.SAUSAGE

STEAKS

Sliced

. $119

LB .

.

BEEF ·
LIVER

FRANKIES

FASv CHEK PRODUCE

""

TOWELS

·2

Pk.

CABBAGE

99~

LB.

21

¢

IDAHO

POTATOES ·
10 LBS.

.;;,

were elected at the
'
meetiJJa of the Adalt
ttllonblp of tlie SyraCUI!e Cllurcb
'tl. the N....-.ne held .lli the ehurcb.
hllOnblp room.
l!:leded were Tbelma MU!er,
jlnlllldel¢; Mary Pickens; vice
prealdeljt; and. ~lcki n . ~Uzer,

'lbunday of each month. Mary
Janice Lavender,: Sis .Cundiff and
MARTINS ENTERTAIN
T1lelma MUler served refreshments•.
Mr, and Mrs. Osby Martin enAltendln&amp; besJdee thole named
tertained
Tuesday afternoon with,an
were Debbie Triplett, Rev. and Mrs.
.
open
house
party honoring John
Klttlti, Artie Grindley, Nonnan and
\Velah,
Republican
candidate for
Gladys Pi'esley, Mrs. Hayes; Mary
·
Meigs
County
Sheriff,
on his 58th birPickena, Junior Martin, Marie
thday.
Refreshments
were
served.
.:reWy-treuurer. l.AOII8fa Bus Rizer, Fanny Aleshire, and ·Ora
opened the meeting with prayer and · Bus.
ella meetlnga were set for the tli1rd

(nc.at.

Eckrich

..

SMOKED. SAUSAGE~ •••••.••••••~~-. $1.97 .
CHESTER CUB ScOut 'Pack 235 received first place prize at the.International Sportsmen Week observance Of the lzaak Walton Leligue held
Saturday at Royal dak Park. The pack hail the largest attendance at the
event. Here Frank NeW!IO!Jie of the Pack receives a check from Russ Well
of the Izaak Walton League. PaUl Curtis; webelo leade, is pictured left,
and Larry Lee on the right. Pack members participating were Del
Laudermj!t, David Casto, Sherri Lightfoot, Rod NewsOme, Donna Curtis,
Todd Lee,_ScoU Starcher, Gary Curtis, Tony Lee, Alban Curtis, Terry
Newsome ilnd Willie Hill.
TO MEET FRIDAY
The Happy Harvesters Claas of
Trinity Church will meet at 1 p.m.
Friday at the church.

YOllTH EXTRADITED
A Pennsylvania youth arrested by
the Gallla-Melgs Post Highway
Patrol for the alleged thefts of a 1978
motor vehicle has been extradited to
Meadvllle, Pa. The youth appeared
Melton, Mrs. Helen Reynolds, ~­
Dorothy Roach, Mrs. Beulah Roush, . Tueaday before Juvenile Court
Judge Robert Bud:.
and Regina Swift.

!. •

.WffK'S
SPECIAl.

...

Open Mf 7 til 7; Sat. 9 _til 9
5TH .&amp; PEARL, RACINE, OH.

-: New oJBcela

Table purchase approved
· Purchase of tables for the school
Vincent Peale. Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,
for the mentally retarded persons
Kenneth McElhinney, and Martha
was approved at the Thursday night · Searles were reported ill.
meeting ~ the Phllathea Women of • Miss Frances Roush, vice
the Middleport Churcltof Christ.
president, intrOduced Larry Baker
Mrs. Nora Rice presided at the
who demonstrated how to help a
meeting and welcomed those at- choking victim and also answered
tending. Mrs. Mitzi Saltsman was questions on first ald treatment.
welcomed as a riew member: Grace
Reft'eshments were served by
Hawley was.commended for her out- Mrs. Clyda Allensworth, Mrs. Ger- .
standing work as flower chairman, !rude Miller, .Mrs. Evelyn Murray,
and plans were made for serving the Mrs. Bea Stewart, Mrs. Grace Pratt,
Homebuilders banquet In October.
and Mrs. Martin. -Attendlng beSides
Mrs. Clyda Allensworth led in those named were Mrs. Reva Beach,
singing tpe Phllathea song followed Mrs. Martha Childs, Mrs. Farie
by the Lord's Prayer. For devotions, Cole, Mrs. cathy Erwin, Mrs. sftndy
Mrs. Mary Martin read "You Can Gibbs, Miss Mildred Hawley, Mrs.
Cope with Anything" by Norman Betty McKlriley, , Mrs. Debbie
'
"

Urrtlt QucMfltl•i

llves aa ·Christians. .A cwltest is undenray to see who can bring the ·.
ROBERT CODER .
most new " visitors to the group .
during September and ~obet with , ·,
COMPlETES TRAINING l
wlth~Robinionattheplano. . the winner to receive an engraved
Marine Pte; Robert L. Coder, son
·1, At the regular meeung of the
Bible. Plansarebelllgcompletedfor of Harold L. and Rose 1'\'1. Porter of
·youth felloirllhip 11. youth Jlll1'"
a family night potluck. A fUm will ~­ Route 1, Gallipolis, has COIIIpleted
recruit training at the Marine __ _,.. _,....,
tldpa&amp;ed In a Iesaon itudy about . shown at the chUrch on Sept. 28,6:30
Recruit
Depot, San Diego.
.
:~ tlle ·JIIrectlon of their • p.m., tiUed"BigHenry.'·'
·A 1980 graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, Cheshire, he joined the
.Maiin_e Co~_in November, l!rl9.

·.. ~Acl¥1~-~el!o.Yi~~P":c~s m~~

.

The Annual Meeting of the Board
Daniels of Meigs County, who has
of Tnmees of Planned Parenthood
worked with the clinic program sinof Southeast Ohio was held on Monce its beglruiing and .assisted with
day, September 22 at a dinner at Sl
support of the agency In the comPeter's Episcopal Church in
munity.
Gallipolis. The slate of nominees for
Planned Parenthood of Southeast
. membership and offices was acOhio Is a private, non-profit agency
CI!Pted, the work of the staff in
dedicated to provision of
delivery of services was described
educational, social and medical serby Ms. Kathie Stevenson, R.N. and
vices for family planning and materMs. Kathleen Evans, R.N.
nal care in seven counties: Vinton,
Fred Moog, Logan, was elected to Meigs, Lawrence, Jackson ,
a second term as president; Nora
H~~~. Ga~ . and Athens. The
Price, Gallipolis, vice president;
governing Board of Trustees InPatricia Griffiths, Oak Hill,
cludes representatives from the
secretsry, arid Sally . Oremus, · seven counties.. Representatives
Nelsonville, treasurer.
from Gallta County are Nora Price,
Special recognition and a plaque
Laraine Sloane, Polly Wetherholt,
were presented to Dr. Roger P.
and Jean Clark.

We Rese(Ye

~ activities rl. the Alfred
'Youth have Included slng1ng at the
Alfiecl Cbarch ~- T1le
·' croup IIIII "JI!IUSis Coming Soon"
•

M.

.

Alfred Youth have ·hymn sing

.

RIVERSIDE AMC·JEEP

Planned Parenthood meets

WITH FRIES

've

OUR IMPRESSIVE .NUM,ERS •

5 year

·1:1

-- ---- -

,;;::;:llya,-:;;.,

r

Hayman reunion
. . ,._.- -""----:,.-..;-...,..--,---------:-------

Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Mora
recently entertained at the Mora
farm 'with a lawn party and buffet
dinnel: honoring their son, George, ...
and his wife, Paula, in celebration of
their recent marriage.
Attending the reception were Mt.
and Mrs. Harry K. Mills, Mr. and
Mrs. Gregory Mills and son,
' . and Mrs.
Charles, Galllpo,,.
.... ; Mr
William Knight, Point Pleasant; W.
Va.; David McCunn and Kim Kozak,
McArthur; Mrs. Mae Ftost,
Parkersburg, W. Va. ; David Koblentz, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter, Mrs.
Ada Holter, Mrs. · Opal Eichinger
and Laura, Nancy Clark and
daughter, Jerica, Jane Wise, Mr.
and Mrs. David Buskirk, .Tom
Bowers, Janet Brooks, Marilyn
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. )loger Karr
1111d JesSica, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Karr ·
and David, Mr. and· Mrs. Donald
Myers, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence

'

8;-'l'he o.1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0 ., Wednelday, Oct.l; 19110

··'I'~

'

&lt;•

'fhe second Sinclair re\lnlon was
held recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Sln~JaJr, Athens, with 8o .
persllnsattending.
Mrs. Uoyd (Ora Mae) Sinclair of
Sumner Road, Pomeroy, was
-recognized for being the oldest at·
tending, while the twin daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Bob' Dick OaviB of .
Marysville, Kerrie Ann and Nancy
Marie, nine mon~ old, were the
youngest. Other twins attending
were Taund;l and Shaunda Van ·
, Meter, children of Mr. and Mrs.
William Van Meter, Clifton, W. V&amp;.,

.

.

S&lt;L-The Dally Sentinel, 1\fiddleport-Pom~:roy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 1. 19110

-'

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

.

.

Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••• ~ ••••••••••• :~... $1.19 ·
Agar

BOILED HAMS •••• ! ............ ;-!·..'2!7_
9·
Ohio Colby

lb. Local WHite

$2.
1
9
CHEESE .... ~.~:.. •

POTAToEs •.• ~~~.ii.59

LOJGHORN.

31b. Golden Delicious .

1 lb. Kraft Parkay

APPLES ..........~.~~. 91'

(;lu_a_rters •

30 Count Michigan

I

•
~IItlE ...... : 79
· . :LB

Cfl ERY........ ~~!!~~- 3f

14 oz.

-

BY OCTOBER 6TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED·: Visit "tlie
Board's Office In person- OR - Phone the· Board of
Elections~ OR -'-Mall the Board 1 Card.
· .
.· . ALSO, if you MOVE you must notify the county of· ·
f.ice. Or If you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered, phone the Boanl- 992-2.,7.
I
~
·--....:..
.
.
'

MEIGS .COUNTY
BOARD
.
.OF ELECTIONS
'

~ASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P.(). Box 411, Pomeroy, Ohlo.45769
Phona 992-2697
Regular HO!Ir•- 1: 3H:30 MOndays through F.rldlys
ADDITIONAL HOURS
FOR REGISTRATION: '
. Friday EVtnlnts-Sept. 19, 26, Oct. 3
tot p.m. '
·
.
Siturdllys-SIIIf. 20, 27, Oct. 4
t •.m. to 12 noon

• p.m.

.M ondliy-Oct, .. t a.m.-t ,.m.

•

59~

BANANAS

3/$100

;jazz festival in Athens

Libby

'

A111ENS - A- revival of jazz Auditorium.
Gllllie IUid t.p dancing Is coming to
This year the Artist Series will
()blo Unlvenlty'a main camp!lll on
host a variety of entertalmnent. The·
'l'linlday, Oct.. 9 at I p.m. 1bree nine scheduled performances will in- ·
·jaa DMwlclll'll and three ~ danelude two current Broadway plays, a ·
ieer. Will be appearing u the Jazz
choral group, a cOncert . pianist, a
,-ap Ea.nble which wll1 operi the modem dance company, a brass
unlftnlty'aArtiatSerles.
quintet, Big Band ·musicians, and
Following appearances on the
the oldest orchestra in Gennany.
Eillt aDd West Coasb, the ensemble
Series tickets are avalla!lle
wiD brillga combination ofllve Jazz
through · OcL9, at the MemOrial ·
ud .vlr&amp;ufllo t.p dancing to the Auditorium bOx office mm 12 nooil-4 '
tflmorlal Audttorilm s~age: ·nanp.m. Monday through Friday Mtcen IUid lllllliclana play' off each 6107: Tickets for Individual shows
·plber cnatlllll new paUerns with tap lrill ~on sale beginning Oct.IO.
I!OIIIIdllllld jazz rbythma.
· The Artiat Series 111 made poasible
... Tne ll!llel!lb!e Ia .featured In the in part by the Oblo Arts CouncU. The
new mOrie, "Tapclancin~' by New Jazz Tap Enaembie will be aJ&gt;Yorll ft1mmeker Qll'iltlln Bilek· peartng malpst8ge for an evehlng of
'IIOiid..'11111 award wlnlllng film will, tap In lioth the old and new
be lbOwn free ol charge on Wedtraditions.
.a.day, Oct. 8 at 8 p.m. in Memorial

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

FAS ,"' CHEK FROZEN
· Donald
- · - -Duck
·

ORANGE
JUICE

16 oz.

39e

soz.

FAS,,_ CHEK DAIRY
Valiey &amp;ell

· BUTIERMILK

'h Gai.

sge

Valley Bell

2% MILK

PEACHES

FASV' CHEK DAIRY

16oz.

Fas"' Chek

BREAD

NOVEMBER 4.TH GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED

3.LB.

IONS

COMEr
.CLEANSER

'

.'

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

YELLOW

Lb. LOaf

4/$1 OO

49~

.

1,S_oz, SweepstaKe'

_

. ·.

·

EVAPodTED MILK .....2~:~s ·sgc

.

JACK
MACKERAL~ ••• ~ ••••.•••••••••• ,.. · .
15 oz. An;nour Corned ·
BEEF
ttAStl.•••••••• ~ ••••.••••.·•••••.••:99' .
oi. Campbell's ·
BEEF.
NOODLE- SOUP..·
•••••••••••·
14112 oi. Hunt. · -...
.
WHOLE
tOMATOES
...............
,
30 oz: Join of Arc Mea - -- ·
KIDNEY BEANS...................
~ •...79'
.29 oz. - - - ----;.

Libby

POTTED MEAT.. .........~.~~: . 4J11• .
Libby's ·

1~

'

'

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN ••• ~ .........~t~.69'
2GI Count btfs

'

FACISL
nSSUE
....
~········
2
a;:._a_
:111 oz:
Jlf crumy

·

,

.

PEANUT.BUnER •••••• ~.~ •••• ~J·~-~
GallO!'

•••••••••••••••••••

·

PEAS &amp; CARRO~ ..... ~~~~~: 2/Sgt

The ldell gilt for him

With. P.CJC)IIt k!dfe
handel Stmllng lllwr
argald lllledllanlh,
......... ateel blade.
Dohawh~l

DILL
PICKLES......... ~-~?:~·... $1,49
,

fJ
7
atOCOLATE SYRUP ............ ·. .
CORN ................ ~ ...•..1.~.~~: 31'1• Hudson
Cream Self Rising · ·
l..ibbv' s Whole kernel
· .
-fiouR ...................~~ !~·....$4.59
-- .
.
' 17 oz. 3J1111
~N ..... ·,·~· ~-· ......... '"''.... . .

· Libby Cream Style

The Executive
Letter Opener

Heinz Genuine •

.

Hershey

16 oz.

D-Con -

PEAS .......... ~?.?~: .•218f READY MIX ...............~~:... $1.79
CotiPON ,
I&lt; RAFT

RINSO

Stedlna I!Mr

GalcHiled .

.

84

oz. $169

GRAPE JELLY .

.

With coupon &amp;s1o.oo .,urchase
GCIIIICI at Spencer's Fas ... Cl'lek
Racine, Ohio tllru Oct. 4th

·.· . . 3 LBS. 99~

.·

With Coupon &amp; $10.00 Purchase
Gocld at Spencer's Fas ... Chek
Racine, 9hio thru Oct. 4th

�y

11-TheDaiJySentinel.,~iil~eport-Pcii~~~W~edn;e~sda!·~y,!!!

:)B-.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,

&lt;kt. 1, 19110

Gymdnfa successful

: Former Middleport girl )08th annuq./ Welsh
ne
:.pegins training at .·.
The 1oeth annU'id Welsh Gymanfa ·

.... .

'

'

pastor

"The. ,.,....~s•.'' a Welsh n.~:. ..... that
. 1 d~ed. "~
"""''""
me u . Roy Moses, Lym and
Roger Rees and Roger Williams:
They sang "The Sweetest
HallelUjah'' and ~~ ~." a~
·ed b
u ""''"
~· tbe
congregation in a songtelil that ineluded the following hyu)ns, "Deemster "Blodwen " "CaJon Lon" sung .
in ~or of~ people trom 'Wales '

.1'1 Nebo ·OhW'ch. Before

. of the .Central .Southeast Ohio
beganhisthoughta bereadaportlon
. Ass?ciBtion of The United Church of • of the -Welah ~tion of Nebo
Christ was ~d at Nebo Church In . Churcb frGm the eatl,y yeJrS
· GailiaCoun
_ tyonSe~ber""- • •
....._.-..._ o - WUJiams
.
ac-

'

'

"''

·fametl
Mayo
clinic
.
.

28

The business meeting_Willi held at

'-'~Nil....:-. ·

"-.§~

. compellied by_ Margaret Tbomas at
3
With all guest - the plallo led the congregation the
ministers, association officers and slnginc Ill Sanctus. .
.
As Clfterinl! was taken, Ben R.
delegates present. .
The Gymanf~ services began on Ev8111 made Introductions, gave inSaturday everung Wllh services at fCll'lll8llan concerning the floral
7: 30 p.m. as moderator Ben .R:" · ~ts that had been placed
Ev~ welcomed all to N~bo. The
in the churcb and other anoperung song was directed by
nOUIICIIIIIII!IIts. ... ,.. ·
DaY_id Jenkins, in charge of the
· chorister Roger . WilliamB and ac,
comparued by.Margare.~ Thomas, all
~ tributes eact{ year at the
the congregation sang . Cwm fUion.; Gyroanfa for 22 years, gave a bibute
dda" followed by "Bryn Cailaria."
to tholle of the Gymailfa circle no
• The devotions . for the evening · longer here. This was f~pwed by a
w~re by Rev. John R. Owen of
solo by Roger Wil.liamll, ''When I've
Lisbon, Oh. who spoke briefly.
Done My Best." He was acRev. William G . Barndt of Colum- companied on the organ by
biiS was introduced by Ben R.
~t TbOmali. ·
Ev~.
_ . .,
The aecond sennon of the morning
w&amp;S by Rev. John R. Owen, who
Roger W1lhams . led the
congregation in singing "Aberyst- spdke 'briefly concerning the beauty
wyth. "
ofthelandofWaies. ·
.
The second sennon of the evening . The morning ses.11on closed With
was glen by Rev. G. John Richards
the singing of "Sychu Dagrao" and
of Bloomington, lnd. His theme of
"Cwm Rbonnda."
FollOiring the dinner noon time
.thought for his sennon centered on
the words, "Three of the greatest ' was spent visiting with old friends
gif~ that are never Withdrawn from
and malting the acquaintance of new
118.
ones.
Tbe meeting began at 10 a.m. SWI-Aftemoqn services began at l:JIO
day with Ben R. -Evans again in p.m. with Rev. Jenkins as assistant
charge. Tbe opening · song was . .mOijerator. There were two opening
"Dm
' dem."
-songs, 11 Rachie" and urn
Rev. I'· John Richards talked
Memtrlam."
briefly concerning good news for
_Rev; G._John Richards began his
. mOdem man and concluded his
sel'ffi911 with Paul's letter to
devotionswithprayer.
Timothy asking him to "Do Your
The first sermon of the morrung
Beat to Come Before Winter."
was given by Rev. Gomer JeJ1)dns,
SPf!!~a! music was enjoyed by

P-~· at~ ch~

-

"Presynapic MOdulation of Sympathetic • Activity by 5·
Hydroxytryptamine Serotonin in the
Canine Hindlimb VasCulature."
A graduate of Oak Ridge- High
· · School · in 1968, Miss · Terrell
. graduated fi'OIJI Vanderbilt University, magna cwn laude, with a B.A.
degree in biology and a chemistry
minor in 1972. She Wall elected to Phi
Beta Kappa honor SQCiety.
Following graduation, she
enrolled in graduate school in the
field ;.f pharmacology at the University of North Carolins at Chapel Hill
and transferred in 1973. to the
·· - Ch_ristine Te"elf
University of Minnesota when her
advisor Willi IIPP'Ointejf"CIWnnan of
. The d!iughter of former Mid- pharmacology at Minnesota. For the
. dleport residents has begun residen- next seven yearli, she enrolled In a
training in internal medicine at combined MO.-Ph.D program which
~ Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Mirin.
consisted of graduate research plus
• She is Christine Terre11, daughter
medical schOOl training.
M John F. (Jac.k) and . Nancy
During her ~nd year at the
Jerrell, 106 W. Price Lane, .Oak University of Minnesota Medical
Ridge, Tenn. Mrs. Terrell is the for- School, she wsa named "Most Outmer Nan Fisher, daughter of c . 0. · standing Student in Pharmacology"
J"isher and the late Mrs. Fisher of . and in the third year Wall elected to
!&gt;fiddleport, and Christine is the
Al!&gt;l!a Omega Alpha honor society,
granddaughter of Fisher, a fonner
the Phi Beta Kappa of medical
school.
.
long-time mayor of Middleport.
Miss Terrell is currentiy comAt graduation with an M.D.
pleting writing her Ph.D. thesis in
degree, she was 1)81Iled recipient of
the cardiovascular-autonomic field
the Janet M. Glasgow award given
Of pharmacology_ The title is
to outstanding women in the
graduating ~lass-

.:cy

ho
. .
.
.
w wef!presel'\t,Eben~r(Ton-r· ·
Botel) Penpark, Orygybar and .
Diadem.
-.
Rev. John R. Owen delivered the
lastsenn011 ofthel.-Gymanf
·
"""
a. ·
S:g
"How Great Tbou Art" and
everyone join~ in the stncing of tile ~-Welsh National Anthem in Welsh
follo.wedby"GodBeWithYou." '

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ATTENTIONI

WE ARE· NOW
ACCEPTING
..
...

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AP-PLICATIONS FOR

MOTO~ ,

ROUTE ·'DRIVERS BEtwEEN
CLIFTON &amp;NEW HAVEN. W. VA.
If INTERESTED, CALL
..

·992-21-56 BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

(. ,

: Sentinel Social Calenruir
'

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY WDGE 164 F&amp;AM
' Wed-'
:regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
:nesday; all master masons invited.
. : SOUTHERN LOCAL OAPSE ·
!Deeting, 7 p.m.. Wednesday at
Southern High School.
MIDDLEPORT FIRE Deparfment Ladies AWIUiary meeting, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at fire · hall·
hostesses, Bessie Darst and Sue
J&gt;oden. Mary Powell will be speaker
on money-making projects.
UNITED METHODIST WOMEN
of the Letart .ralls ChlU'ch..will met
Wednesday at the horne of Mrs. Bert

Grilnn] witli Mrs. Andrew Cross all
co-hostess. The meeting will begip at

298
Second St

FREE
. •..

~

~u'

"

\

7:30 p.m. and the topic will be
••Togetherness.''
THURSDAY
MOVIE "Burning Hell" will be '
shown at the Midway ~unity .
Church, county road 10, Langsville, ·
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Public is invited to attend.
FRIDAY
. SOUP SUPPER Frida\' be_fore
homecornJng game in the annex of·
the Episcopal Church. Serving from
4 p.m. to 8 p.m. Eat in or take out.
M118t bring own containers for take
out orders.

rm:

_POMEROY,
.....
OHIO

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Homecoming Friday
after football ganie
. The senior class and cheerleaders
of Eastern High School will sponsor
a public homecoming dinner at the
school before the Eastem-Kyger
Greek games Friday, 4:30 to 6:30
p.m.
The menu will include baked
chicken, roast beef, baked ham and
vegetables. Pnee is $3.50 for adults
and p.50 for children under 6.
There will alao be a sock hop after
the game. Adrnlsalon is $3.50 per
couple. All students, alumni and
their guests are welcome.
Tea will be served at a receJ!tiOD·in
. the cafeterta following the game for
. all~Bll!"Uli of Olive-Orange, Chester

udEastem.

'.

.

.!• . $J-~39'

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.

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Prices Effective Through Saturday, Oct. 4, 1980- ·
~·

Ground Chuck:...~.~.

·

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Chock
-,. ·$ 1

-

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•

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CENTER· CUT

Loin .Pork Chops~~.
-fRENCH CITY .
•
.
oz.
W1.eners ... ~ .. ~ .......~K:~

• been In Cbllllc:othe for the past
; aeyeralyeara, will be at the Grace
; Epilcopll Pariah House Sunday at
; 11:30oaJD. to VIsit with friends,
' 'lboee in the area acqulunted with
: Mrs. Roedel are Invited to visit with

SALES MERCHANT

'

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Mil:k... ~ ......~A!¥~c·-.

ROYAL CREST

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Eggs.~ .. ~~ ...

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GRADE A

Small

.

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~QUET.FROZEN . .. . .

1TV D1nners

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Crackers ....•-..-.. ~ ... ~~-.:

VISITS HERE

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12

ZESTA

, ·Mrs. J. 0. (BIWeJ Roedel, whohaa

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.

Rib Pork Chops ..~.

'

. paternal grandmother Is Mrs .
: Goldie Van Maire, West Columbia.
: Mrs. Gaye Hilton of Oakwood, Va.ls
. ~t-grancbpother. ·
•

".

.

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: Ken Clark, Middleport, and the

: hei'U..;

CORONET

PAPER TOWELS

/~109,

KRAFT
-MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

·CRISCO
3 LB.

CAN
Limit 1 Ptr Customer

Gaod OftlY At Plrftii'S
Offtr &amp;xplra OCt. 4, 1910'

171

I,

oz.
.

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Limit! Per Customer'
Good Only At l"owetrs
Offer ll!Pires Oct. 4,

~%~Z.

3/89'

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At P-Ill'S

Offer Explrn Oct. 4, 1910 ..

•O.rltiiWcl

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$ 39
8~
Cube .· Steak ........
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. $
89
BUCKET

Maternal grandmoiher Ia Mrs.

·;

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I.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

Middleport, are announcing the bir1
. th of a son, Clark Andrew, Sept. 28 at
· : the Holzer Medical Center. The baby
: weighed nine pound!, one ounce and
• was 22 Inches long. Mr. and Mrs ·
' Van Maire have another son Ken·

.

INGEL'S FURNITURE &amp;!EWELRY

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

· Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van Maire,

, ""hiiOA

.IIOND

' M011.-Sat .8 am-10 pm .

Lettuce .... .-.........~~ .

...... ...Ill•

'75

"

:Baby arrives '

...

•

Store Hours: .

.

.

12 LB.AVG.

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: HAM

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10 L.B.AVG.

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77$·LB.

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POLISH
SAUSAGE

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'12.99

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"'"\Oe"".f.•"
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·~ $4.80
$3.00.
$3.30'
$3.00

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MEATS .

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BUY DIRECT. FROM THE TRUCK &amp;

Sept. 10 through Oct. 15, 1990

•SO.IOfiD

.t

speaker at the Thursday night
meeting of the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
held In the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County.Savings and Loan Co.
George WAShington's marker at
LOng ' Bottom, the courthouse at
Chester. and Blennerhassett ·Island ,
were discussed by Mrs. Mora in her
talk to the group. ·She noted that
Wa!lhington· while travelog through
the area surveying land made seven
campsites along the Ohio River.
Rellim Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
.the Daughters of the Americari
Revolqtion marked the one at Long
Bottom with a monwnent and during
thll bicentennial year revisited the
" lociltijlll for a ceremony.
Mrs. Mora alao talked about the
cow:thouae at Chester which cost
. t5;000 to build in 1841. She said that it
had--been voted one of the sill most
outstanding tn the state. The other
location which Mrs. Mora discuSsed
Willi Blennerhassett Island, the lil8llslon which was destroyed, and the
recent restoration activity. Sunday
members· of .the chapter toured the
island.
.
· Mrs. Jean Werry announcels that
• international hall issued a golden invitation for all members at large to
reunite with their sorority sisters to
celebrate the 50 years of growth .
,Girls interested in being reinstated
· are asked to contact Ann Rupe or
any other member of the chapter.
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas and Mrs.
Nellie Brown served refreshments.
- Mrs. Leona .Hensley presided at ·
: the meeting. She real!&gt; the 12th chap• ter of St. Lbke with the Lord's
, Prayer and the )!ledge being given In
. unison. It was noted that get-wen
~ cards bave been sent to several In
· the commwiity by Mrs. Mae McPeek. Time of the meeting was
changed from 8 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
; Hostesses for the next meeting
: will be Nellie Andrew, Dorothy
. Thurston, Phyllis Larkins, and
: Teresa ·collins. Attending were Mr.
: and . Mrs. Tom Hayman and
daughter, Mae McPeek, Pat and
: Anita Neutzling, Teresa Collins,
: Paul and Mildred Hauber, Francis
: and Nellie Andrew, Dorothy and Bill
Thurston, Ada and Joe Bissell, Elber
Riebel, ken. and Betty YOung,
Phyllis and Dorsal Larkins, Pearl
Powell, Ruby Brewer, Janie Fitch,
Leona Hensley, Ernestine HaYman,
Virginia Newlun and Melody Rober·

purCh8se

SYSTIII\ I 1V

or Maoual Tuolog

ocr.

THURS.,
2nd 10-6
.: FRI., OCT. 3fcl 10-8
SAT.. OCT. 4th 10-6

· ' Mrs. Maye Mora was guest

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_Sorority·
hears ·
Mrs._, Mora

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12-The.DailfSentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct.l,l981i

la-1neOatlySenMel, Middleport-POJDProy .o w-~- ..... -y Oct 1' 1.DICK !)JA!"Y
.
.
· ' ., ow,....aa ' • ' ....,

•

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•

. .Fields, Vance .marry . "Summer .vows;·
· bags.' Mrs . Sar ah Gibbs, New
The blue and white three-tie~
Sbe carried a C9ionial bouquet of nee
white sweetheart · roses, · white cal' Haven, Mrs: Delores Taylor,Mason,
wedding cake was aceented with a ·
'nations, blue daisies and.$teph8notis
served as wedding consultants. .
fountain underneath of l)lue water .
highlighted 'with baby's breath and
The groom wore a black full dress · with the traditional bride and groom
tuxedo trimmed in black satin with a
on top of the cake. Six round cakes, ·
iVy greenery with blue and white
streamers tied in lover's knots.
white stand-up wing collareii shirt. · entwined with leather leaf greenery,
Mrs. Marsha Carpenter. Grcoen- His boutonniere was a silk white
surrounded the tiered cake. It was
sboro, North Carolina, cousin of the
rose with baby'abreath.
baked by Mrs. Bunnie Kuhl of
bride, served as matron of honor.
&amp;am Brafford, HJllltington, served Pomeroy, Ohio.
She wore a .. floral-printed· chiffon as best man, and ushers were Dick
· HQStesses. for the reception were ·
gown over blue crePe-back !Min Fairchild and ·Philip Jolillson, both
Ms. Lisa Yates, cousin of the groom,
styled similar to the bride's gown, of Huntington. They wore black
Ms. Cindy KuDdrat, Mrs. Judy Banand carried a nasegay bouquet of tuxedos with boutonnieres of white fi, all of Huntington, West Virginia . .
white silk roses trimmed in blue silkrosesdippedj"bluewithbaby's , Ms. Pam H90~er, also of Hunwith baby's breath and greenery and ' breath.
· · tington, registered the guests. ·
blue and white streamers tiel! in
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. .
For ber goingoBW!!LeDSemble, the
lover's knots.
Fields wore a full..length pink satinbride se.lected a blue.and ~en
The bridesmaids included Mrs. crepe gown with pink re· dress With a red sweetheart rosebud .
Marilyn Riffle, a friend of tb_e bride,
embroidered Alencon lace cape, Her corsage. She also wore whita ac"Cheri:;h," ".0 Perf~t Lo~~'"
and Miss Usa Davis, cousin of the
corsage was a pink silk orchid.
cessories. .
1
. •
''FasCination," ''Colour My World," bride, both of New Haven.
The mother of the groom, Mrs.
· After · a honeymoon trip through
"I Love You Truly." The soloist,
The attendants wore identical full·
Vance, WOI'I!' a full-length blue the : s~th and the ~· the
Mrs. Becky Reed, sang "Never in length gowns of blue ctepe-back
colored silk polyester gown. She also couple IS now at home m Huntington, •
Love/ ' " Portrait of My Love," and satin with floral-printed chiffon ruf.
wore a white silk orchid corsage.
W. Va.
' " The Lord's Prayer."
fled collars styled similar to .the
After the bride and groom ex·
Tbe rehearsal dlnrier was held on
The altar was decorated with · bride's gown. They .carried a
changed vows, they knelt for prayer Friday eve~ at the Meigs Inn,
floral arrangements of white nosegay bouquet of white silk roses
and Mrs. Becky Reed sang "The P.omero:y, Ohio.
•
gladioli, blue and white daisies, and trinuned in blue with baby's bresth
Lord's Prayer."
Pre-nuptial showers were given ~Y
highligllted with two li&gt;·tier spiral and greenery and blue and white
Tbe mothers were presented with the WCG of the New Haven First
brass candelabras. The front of the streamers. AU attendants wore
long...temmed white silk roses, Church of God and one b:y Mrs.
altar was decorated with a brass ar· · headpieces of ministure silk flowers
taken from a white Bible carried by William C. Gibbs, Mrs. Brian Riffle' ·
ch entwined with .white daisies and and baby's breath.
·.
the bride's mother •t her wedding, and .Ms. Usa Davjs. TwQ ahowers
greenery and accented with love bir·
Miss Wendy Davis, also a cousin of
expressing their love and a~ ,were also giVen by friends ·in Hunds and white bows. The pews were , the bride, served as flower girl. her
preciation. · Tbe !ride's grand· tington.
adorned with white lace bows and gown was styled to match the at·
mother, Mrs. Lufema Weaver of
Mrs. Vance is a 1!170 graduate of •
greenery.
tendants and she carried a white
New lfllven, was pi:esenle!l a whit~\ Wahama High .~ool and a 1974
The bride, given in marriage by wicker basket of red rose petals and
silk rose corsage.
Marshall Unlvers1ty_graduate. She
her parents, wore a formal gown of tied with a blue yelvet. bow which
Following the wedding, a rece~ will receive her M. ~· degree this
polyester organza fashioned with matched her waistband. She also · lion was held at the .Point Pleasant fall from Marshall Uruverslty. She is
· silk Venise lace and floral appli1tue. wore a headpiece of·silk flowers and
Inn. The serving tables were a teacher in the Wayne County
The Venise lac .. trinuned the ruffled baby's breath.
·
covered, with linen tablecloths with Schools.
scooped neckline; bodice aod skirt.
Roger Weaver and Bart Davis,
lace overlays and held crystal canMr, Vance is a 1971 graduate of
The A-line skirt, trimmed with cousins of the bride, served as
delabras decorated with blue and Huntington High School and a
Venise lace, swept into a chapel acolytes.
. . ,
white silk flowers. Tbe guest tables graduate of Marshall University.
length ruffle train. Her matching
Melissa Fields and Diedra Fields,
were covered with white linen
Out-of-town guests were from
veil was walking Jength, trimmed in cousins of the bride, served as junior
cloths, centered with white candles Allen ·Park, Michigan; Point
wide Venise lace and was attached attendants and wore ·floral-printed
decorated with leather leaf Pleasant, Mason, Hartford, Wllliamto a Juliet cap with seed pearl and chiffon gowns of blue, and carried
greenery, sptigs of lU:y.of-the-valley stown, St. Albans, Charleston, Hunirridescent.
wrist corsages of white roses and
and wedding bells. The decorations tingotn, and Barboursville, . West ·
Her only jewelry was a string of blue silk flowers. They distributed
and tables were done by Mrs. Heleri Virginia; Syracuse, Pomeroy, Ironpearls which her mother wore at her the wedding bulletins, scrolls, and
Saner, Middleport, Ohio.
ton, South Point, and Brookville,
weddirig· .
Ohio; Greensboro, North Carol\ns.
/
Miss Aiigela .Jtim• Fields and Carl
Eugene Vance were united in .
marriage ill a candlelight ceremony .
at till! New Haven First Church of
God, July 26, at 2:30 p rn.
The bride is the daughter of the
Rev. and Mrs. David' Fields, Jr.,
New Haven, and the groom is the son ''
·of Mrs. Edith Elizabeth Vance and
the late Carl A. V;rnce, Jr., Hun·
tington.
· "l
Officiating the double ring
ceremooy were the bride's father, .
!Jle Rev. Davld Fields, Jr. and the
Rev. Orville Hayes, Charleston. .
Wedding music was provided by
Mrs. Jennifer Cundiff at the organ
and consisted · of " Brian's Song,
" The Young and the Restless," ·

Mr. and Mrs., Carl Vance

Sacniment of Confirmation
to be conferred ·Thursday
The Sacrament of Confirmation · Ambrose, Belpre, Rev. Paul Welton
will be ·conferred by the Most Rev:· of Sacred Heart, Pomeroy; also
Albert Otten weller, Bishop of Sister Julitta of Athens.
SteubenviUe; this Thursday, at Our
To the dinner at 6 p.m. were inLady of Loretto Church in Tuppers vited the clergy and special guests,
Plains.
the ministers from the Tuppers
Seventeen people, six from that Plains area, namely, Rev . John
parish, 10 from St. Jude Church, Douglas of Reedsville and Rev. VinChauncey, and one from Christ the ce Waters of Tuppers Plains, both
~ King parish in Athens, will receive
pastors of Church of Christ
the Sacrament of the Holy Spirit.
· congregations.·
The preparation to receiving the
Assisting the Blshop and the
Sacrament, besides baptism and pastor is the latter's brother, Rev.
First Holy Conununlon, consisted in
William Patala,
missionary in
at least one hundred hours of South America, who is recuperating
Christian doctrine, which was given
this month at his brother's church in
by th~ pastor, Rev. Frank J. Patala,
Chauncey.
9ver the past four years.
·
Confinnation will be at 7:30p.m.,
Area clergy in attendance wiU be
followed by a social hour prepared
Msgr. Jan B. Kish, pastor of St.
and served by the Catholic Women's
Paul's Church, Athens, Msgr.
Club of Our Lady of Loretto Church.
Donald Horak, pastor of Christ the
Parish Council members will act as
King Church, Athegs, Rev. Michael
ushers during the Confirmation
Hellmer of Holy Cross Church,
MasS, which will be provided music
Glouster, Rev. Norbert Connelly,
by a guitar group of four, from the
formerly pastor of St. Andrew,
parish and · from St. Margaret
Nelsonvllle, now transferred to St.
Mary's in l"arkersburg.

a

•

Meigs settler's descendent
accepted into 'First Families

Awards were presented at the
recent Syracuse Cub Scout Park 242
meeting held at the Syracuse..
Elementary School.
The pledge of allegiance and the
Lord's Prayer led by Chad Taylor
lllid Kevin Grueser opened the
.meeting. BobcaL awards were
presented to Jerod Moore; John Van
Meter, and Gaty i!'reeman with
J{evin Grueser receiving. the wolf
award.
Receiving awards for participating iii the :t..ugust bike rodeo
were Marty Cleland, Scott McPhail

Gary is,living in Marysville with
his wife, Joan, and children, Vicki
and Guy, and is still much involved
insearchingforhls"roots.''Hehjls
found many of them in the MeigsGallia area. He is anxious to share
what information he has collected on
the Stevens clan, which dates back
to the year 1695 at present, and to
gather any additional information
from present~y descendants. He
invites residents to write him. Gary
is employed as a packaging supervisor for Anheuser-Busch at the
Shrock Road Brewery in Columbus.

men and their role in our American
heritage. They were Franklin, Mar·
tin Luther King, Jr., Sequoyah,
PlidreJunlperoSerra.
·
Todd Merrifield was welcomed as
a new member and his father, the
Rev. Stanley M~eld wa8 introduced. Themeetingclosedwitha
living circle. Refreshments ,were

servedbyBonnieF~andMar·

tha McPhail. Attending were Mrs.
John Van Meter, John and .(!iaia,
Mrs. Gary Freeman, Gary, Brian
and Deanna, Mrs. Johit Gnleser,

Assn. hears Collins

Kevin and Scott, Mr. and Mrs. John
Lisle, Todd, Scott and Travis, Jerod
Moore, Carl Weaver and Brian, Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Tllylot\ Chad and
Mark, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cleland,
Marty and Tracy, the Rev. Mr.
Merrifield and Todd, Mr. and Mrs.
HughMcPhall,ScottandHeather.
Attending the Izaak Walton
League day at Royal Oak Park
Saturday . were Mrs. Van Meter,
John and Alisia, John Grueser,
Kevin and Scott, ToddUsle,Mr. and •
. Mrs. Earl Cleland, ·Marty, Tracy
and Jimm;y, Mrs. Hugh McPhail, .
· ScottandHeather.

LADIES NITE

IIIBLEBOWL
110'11!-iADVENTURE)" " Ga-

TO MEET MONDAY
Meigs Ct!unty Sa1on 710, Eight and
Forty, will meet at 7:30 Monday
night at the home of Mrs. Rhoda
Hackett Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. '
Catherine Welsh will be hostesses.

I

tor"' 1878

~R()I; BURNETT .AND
FRI!NOS
AIICNEWS
IHl;t-2-1 CON'I'ACT
.
.
8 :30
ern NBC NEWS
30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING

Cil

I

Cj\PTAINEASY

1

.POOI'l OLD C00T'5Aeot.rr READY T'CA5oH IN HIS

11.\\0RE THAN A FRIEND-· ~E

CIJil!l)

CHfP5! COU1.0 THAT NO 1!/HY

SAVED MY LIFE OI!C~ WH!!N
I 60T ~TU&lt;:K OUT flol THE eAD·

CORY DEAN CALLED YA AT'
THE ,oiiRPOi"-1" f

I.ANDS-WITII A 'BU&amp;TEP ~f6,

CBS.NEWS
·
WILD WILD WORLD OF

,

ANIIIA.LS

.

liD

7:00

P.IL IIAOAZINE
SI!NO FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
AU:IH THE FAIIIILY .

~:

HI). FAIIILY FEUD'"'

Yesterday·s

IIACNEIL.UHRER REPORT

"-

NEWS
OVI!R EASY 'lnftotlon ' Gueot:
Special AaeloW&gt;t to tha Prelldanl ·
on Conaumer ftalra Eathef Peter·
eon. Holt a: Hugh OQwna and Frank
la!.I..(Ciooed·Copfloned)
7:30
w BULLSEYE
AT HOllE WITH THE BIBLE
IAH...!'ORD AND SON
.cil JOKER'.S WILD .
HOLLYWOOD SOOARI!S
DICK CAVI!TT SHOW G~eot :
Richard Burton. Port Ul.
.
8UJO,OOONAIIE THAT TUNE

.

._BOtlN LOSER

'
t\MM ... ~T'-7

01\,~U..'{

M/4. r.

CXID. I cn.l1f

RJR(O()'f

·· ~TO

H~ ·

1M

W{...-

~100

AID.

!
i

•
'
1

1

•

I

0

Answ.e r:

NOT REAlLY-6UE$S
IT'S 1110SE UGIITS

FLA6HIH'·..

l'tiW LIQKTS1 Tit ERE'S
HO TRAFFIC COMIN' AT

US!

HAIITLIY SHOES, IN~
P-.roy,Oh.

•
•

•

''MIIIIIIt ef U~~~~tr I lode 1ft '-enY'; .
· Store Hours t to I IKII Day
Open Prl. NlpttlllrGO P.M.

EIUBBLE

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.

Great pll!lyer shows skill

~

•

Identity In an effort to eocope the
mobater'a vengeance. (2 hra.)
8:30 CIJTHEYWMTETHeSONGS:YIP
HARBURG Thlo program loaturee
oongwrHer Yip Harburg alnglng l1lt
melo41ea from euch worka ae 'The
Wizard oiOz', and dlocuoolng ouc/1
divene atagi perlonalltlee aa
Ju~ Garland and the Marx

GASoLINE AILEY

.

~

~u·•~•ut'

1il,cit!'!:OF UVING

~VEGABDanTannaandLI.

10:00

Neloon'o SWAT oquod engage In a
deaperate effort to eave Sea , a
choreographer and four chorue
girte trom a trio of vk:loua ex-cone
who ara holding them hoetage.
(!!epeat; eo mlfto.)
(I) GOVERHIII!NT AS IT IS
'Executive ar.nc:h' In lhla flrtl epl·
lode In athrH-port oorleo, cotum·
nlol Jack Anderoon lakoa a pragmatic look at the pareonalhiea and
pollllcal crlooa which hove modo
the American Prealdency and the
executive branch of the federal
government what they are today. •
mlno.)
NEWS
10:28
NEWS UPDATE

... 11'5 lo.IICE AND
QUIET... NO ONE
IDDI~CT

ME ...

ttie

10:30

WELL SINCE: ~'I&lt;E 'THE. FI~T
m ARRIVE EVERY MORNING 1 ·
I 5-E:E: NO REASON FOR
NOT GIVING-YOU
YOUR OIVN KEY...

IIIAX MORRIS
FE lUNGS

1~:

n

'lt?~TECIJ ®I IJJ)•

NEWS

()) J!WISH VOICE '
(]) IIOVIE ·(COIIEDYJ •• "Hot

~~EVENINGNEWS

the
the
the

0

{I) MONTY PVTHON'S FLYIIG

~ltc

CAV!,TT SHOW Gueat:
~chard Burton. Port Ill.
11 :21
IWIIUPOATE
11:30
CD TH! TONIGHT SHOW
GuoltHoai:DovldBrenner.Gueotl:
·

CAMPAIGN

MILKIN' OC
I BETSHE'D
FAINT DEAD

see

ME

E TODAY,

-

race-'"

ac·

.

oljewe41h~o. (Repeat:2tn. ,15

12:00

lr~VI! ~ADV!NTUR!fn~

..

11:30

,.,

'(011'0 MAKE Afi«EAT
•cANAOA 6005E"

1:00
1:10

-~

1:18

4:00

4:40

33 Aquatic

figures

beast
3&amp; Pelion

26 Outcome
28 Don or

and 38 Sailor

path

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTE -Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXll
Ia

''Aclveltfwel Of lllrco . Polo''
.

L 0 N G F B L ' L 0 ·W

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ia
used for the three L's, X for tl)e two O's,etc. Single !etten,
apostrophes. the length and formatioh of the wordo are aD
hints. Earh day the'code !etten ore dUferent.
ca~UOTES

ZL ' C

• L D·G ,

R!'LGH.

'

LDNL

B C G T,

DNFFZQM

RFGHGT

BF

WNHM

·N

LR

DRBKC,

QGZC B KG

. 1:08
litO

:a:ao'

rope

Barbara 25 Church

Ul.Dse the

1:00

1:11

city
32 Vaquero's

gaffes
il'Glut

WOIIAN Love Boat .. 'Shlp Ot
Ghoule' Doc and Gopher ch•••
atterabeeutllulrnodelwholaolrold
to
attar a rwcent
clclent. Pollee Woman- 'lce' Papper and Crowley- ao lntarna·
tlona1Jewe4lenclltobreakageng

COW!! ·

match (Fr.)
24 Actress,

40 Printing

11:110 CIJS• LOVEBO"T-POLICE

SMART·,ALECKY

Y-esterday 's Answer
23 Shooting
30 Italian.

39LDuver

••~ "~q'nTIIe"1872

DADBURN

by THOMAS JOSEPH '·
ACROSS
43 Sandarac
I Appeal
tree
5 Tailoring
DOWN
measurement I Misrepresent
io HautbOy
2 pyerhead
11 Shout
3 Go broke'
13 Misplace
4 Sly look ·
14 Director
5 Fontina, e.g.
May
&amp; Pick - in
15 Superintend
(show flaws)
17 Sibilant
7 Old note
sound
8 Escape
18 Early auto
· 9 Nervous
19 Ninny
strain •
20 Spanish aunt 12 Delay
. 21 On cloud
I&amp; Novelist,
George 23 Son of Odin 22 Statipner's
product
Z4 l:lse up
%6 Devil
'incarnate
%7 Bit of work
Z8 Playwright
Connelly
Z9 Prior to tee
· 30 Destroy
by fire
31 "- y plata"
34 Biblical
verb ending
35 Tiny space,
. in biology
37Hang
around

IIOVIE -(COIII!DY.OIWIA)

. CHUIPAGNE VEL0U11 BUCKLE

CALL (614)-992-2104

WAIT ER

be- " YELL OW "

IHielneaamenandtNaneartycoeta
hlo .... (R-t; 2 ...... 20

. We Welc••• Ley-Aw..Y.

LOFTY

W hat you might expect a cowa rd to do- and

0

LOCK'l' TltERE'S NO
TRAFFIC.litiS TIME 0'
NIGH!.' WE C'N 61VE
'Eiol A6?017 601H' OYER.!

"""""""•ble

\

I

Jumbles · BLOAT

the four of diamonds while
We8t followed with 2, 5, 6 in
NORTH
li&gt;I· BO
order
to sbow an odd number.
+QB63
Three
in this case. Tbe four of
•u4
hearts
was led next. East rose
• Q87
with the king and noted that
+AKQ
South played the 10 and West
w-r;:,'t
EAST
the deuce.
t9742
tAJIO
At this point in time East
•sa
'AK5 3
was
able to count everrone's
+965
... +KJ 10 4"
distribution.
West obvtously
~"or. LOCAnON 'King &lt;lbeo To
t6'52
+83
held
4-3-3·3
which meant
•
SQUTH
~".:'.::.... GALLERY
declarer held 2·3-3-5.
tK5
~OOAUE'SANGELSThe
The average East would
Angeletravel to a famous aid reaort
.QJlO
proceed to cash his ace of
to help prevent tho kidnapping of •
+A32
hearts and lead a low heart.
handeoma, ethletlc prealdentlal
+Jl0974
The average East would also
aide who wino KoUy'o heart .
find himself caught' in a
Vulnerable: Both
&lt;!!"'!!!ot· 2 hra.)
.
squeeze
end play. South would
• ClJ (iij SPECIAL IIOVIE PRE·
Dealer: North
cash his last two clubs. East
SENTATION 'CorV.tte Summer ' ·
would have to chuck his 10 of
South
1978 Sloro: Mark Homiii,Annlo •· West North Eut
diamoilds anct his last heart.
t+
Obi . . 2 NT
Potta.
·
Then South would either
Pass ·3NT Pass
Pass
CIJ IHl NUC:LiEAR NIGHTMARES
lay ace and another diamond
'Ware That Muat Never Happen'
Pass
Hosted and narrated by Pate~
o force East to play spades
... Uatin"o v, thia documentary ueea ,
up to North's queen or be
Opening lead:+ 2
tourvtaually explicit acenaricaln an
would lead a spade and force
effort to portray the unthlnkoble ..
East to lead away from his
nuclearholocauat. (90 mine .)
king of diamonds.
8:30 ()) JOHN WESLEY WIIITE
East wasn't an average
(J) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves va
He was George Rapee.
player.
uaton Aatroe
.
,,
of New York, one of the great8:58
NEWS UPDATE
est players of all time. George
By Oswald Jacoby
8:00
eCZlWEDNESDAYNIQHTAT
simply cashed his ace of
TH!.IIOVIeS 'Eyea of laura Mara'
lll1d AlaD Sontag
spades before putting South in
1978Stare:FayeOunaway, Tommy
LHJonee.
South thought his two with a heart.
()) 700CLUB
South cashed his last two
notrump was non-forcing.
@IIOVIIE-(COMEDY)•••~ 11 10"
clubs, but George simply
misunderstood
and
·North
1878
raised to three with his bare- threw away t!&gt;.: jack of spades
• CIJ ()D) CBS WEDNESDAY
and I 0 of diamonds. Now be
boned ininiDnlm.
NIGHT IIOVIE 'Fug itive Fomlly '
scored tricks lour and five
West
opened
the
deuce
of
19110 Stars: Rlchord Crtnna. Diane
the king of diamonds and
Baker. ~ government wltneaa
spades and East's 10 fell to with
the
last
heart.
agalnat a crime ayndlcate boaale
declarer's king. Tbe top clubs (NEWSPAPER t:NTERPRISE ASSN .)
fOfced to go Into tlldlng with a new
were cashed. East discarded'

11788tara: JoeDon ..ker. Martlf!
. . , _, /Ill
delec·
live attempta to atatil tiMI ortmtnal
actlvltleo o l - powerful. e«nipt

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

or (304)-675-2144

I

•

~~C88LATEIIOVIE'Mttchall'

IXCIWNT
CHRIITMAI
.........
-·--Gin

rnrXI I)"

FACETHEIIUSIC
7:58
HEWSUPDATE
8:00
eCDRIEALPEOPLETonlghl'o
aegmenta feature monka ..who
voluntHI" a a fireman; a coupt. who
kHp alli;atora,akunka andwotvea
lnthelrhome; 1 healthfoodraataur·
ant with a gymnasium In the back
room. (80 mlno.)
()) SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF

i

You'lhave now when you
buy this Slnoer• sewing
machine. And you'll save ·
eveo more when you
starj sewing at --~~;;:;
home, because
home-sewn
clothes cost less

115 W. 2nd St.

"[I]

·IIACNER..UHRER REPORT

1

i

IF MAW COULD

.

. .

THEY

Now arrange th8 circled leners to
torm the su·rprise answer , as s ug·
. gested by the above cartPOn.

(An swers tomorrow ) .

·~WN
A11C CAPT10NED NEWS

~;~j:~t1es

6 /G C-1\Y,

WILD KINGDOM

Cil TIC TAC DOUGH

AWAV!!

ttian

HOW 5 00E PEOPL..E
HAVE FUN IN THE

II

•

r~

EAR,. NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

I

.

~ TWLEY~W NEWS

JOHN A. WADE~ M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

.I

OICK CAVETT SHOW Guaal:
Richard 8ur!on, Part Ill.
eAIICNEWS
8:58
NI!WSUPDATE

AND NO ·.;oop OR WATI!fll, l"

~-

Gold Brown Terry, Plain Vamp

I
KJ ·

INWET

·I T I I _ tJ

U~ Till! IIUSIC

Mike Connera, Jamea Bur~a. Pat
Boone. (110 mlfto.) .

wo-wajs to save
with SINGER

~---:-r'H

~BIG r

808 NEWHART SHOW

rtiAY~ TH&amp;

SCHOLL SHAPES
FOOTWEAR THAT'S BEnER
THAN BAREFOOT
Scholl designed tile Shape specially to follow
·
contours of the feet.
With a smooth hollow. for·
heel, a gentle raise under
arch and a little crest for
toes to cling to.

o ·

0

EVENING

CITY UMITS
DRIVE THRU

CANCER (J... ll.Joly IS) It's IIO&gt;ISible tllal
you could espeHence bolll ups and downs In your
financlal affairs today, owing to an ambivalent
attitude. Try to steer a steady course.
,
Lto {JIIly ZS.Aq. !;) Y&lt;&gt;u'rea good producer
IOdaY, bullhere's a cl!an&lt;:e y&lt;&gt;u could quit before
fUlJ.Shing aU you're 'capable of doing. Perfonn
with persistence and patience.
VIRGO CA•I· !S&amp;pt. !Z) Because you're~
cemed rorothen: todayyou'Umakeaacrlfieed on
lhelr behlll. There l)s aloo a poaiblUiy y&lt;&gt;u'll
speak of wblt you do 'and erilbart'llll'them,

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,.
one retter to each square, tO form
four ordinary words.

f.

.
/
.
,
, f
·
Mrs. Teresa Collins, R.N. was
that the association wiU assist advised ihembei's that he would
speaker at the recent meetmg of the
anyone who needs help, through the make a sizable donation to the
Long Bottom CoJ!Imunity
provision of . beds or bedding, Association ·if members waul~ cut
THqRSDAYS
~odation held in the community
dr~s, medicines, ami trans- · some brush on his property, The .
bwlding.
portation.
group agreed to do the work and will
9 P.M. to 12 Midnight
Mrs. Collins, director of nursing at
Plans were made for a costwne seta time later.
Veterans Memorial Hospital and acparty on Oct. 29 at 7:30p.m. in the
Get·well cards· were ~ for
ti.ve. with the American Cancer community building. Fred Newlun .PaulAndrewsandFredLarki!lkwho
Soctety, Metgs County unit, talked
recently suffered a heart attaCk. He
on the role of the Society in assisting
is recuperating at the home of his
a cancer .Pll.t!e.nt._§he noted that the_
daughter and . ber family, Mr. and
748 N. 2nd St.
office is now located in the former
WARSELECI'ED
Mrs. Norman Weber, Tuppers
Middlepori;Oh.
Children's Home building on
WASillNGTON (AP)- Peggy A. Plains.
Mulberry Heights, and eXJilained !,oar is the new director of the r•~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~===;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;iiiii;i;~
Smithsonian Institution Traveling
Exhibition Service.
'
A native of Cincinnati, Ohio, Ma.
today, but do sO in a manner that doesn't make
others feel obligated. Your good deed.! will be for
Loar ~ !leld positilins with the Innaught if you impose conditions.
dlanapollJ Museum of Art, the
GEMINIIM.o¥ Zl.June ZO) In 'Jl&lt;lrilni events ·
tcday pb\y our' best, but don' t make winning 10 • MetroPolitan Museum of . Art, and
·.
.
.
important that you'll spoU your day If you are not
the
Cincinnati
Art
Museum.
.
thevlctor.
~
-~

ID'il

8:00 ~-(t)-CIJ (II)lfm. NEWS

L._-....--- ASTROGRAP
. H .....

-

ltll~rul
~ TMAT SCRAIIBLEO WDRO GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHannAinol&lt;landBobLee

OC'r; 1; 1iNIO

•

•

and Brian Weaver, figure 8; Todd
I;ille, Scott McPhail, and Marty
&lt;lll'eiand, straight race; Todd Lisle;
Kevin Grueser and Marty Cleland,
quick stop; MartyC!el!llld,ScottMcPhail, and Todd Lisle, slalom; Todd
Usle, Brian Weaver, and Kevin
Grueser, slow race; Brian Weaver,
Mjirty Cleland, and Scott McPhail,
casting.
Receiving the swrunertime pack
awardsforJ)articipatinginthreeactivities were Scott McPhail, Todd
Usle, and Gary Freeman. Kevin
Grueser gave a talk on four ilifierent

YE~~~~t~ts~D~V:~iT~~-~~~T elevision
,Viewin~

(

•Awards presented at Syracuse· scout ceremony

.. Long .Bottom

of Ohio' club recently
The great-great-great-great •
grandson of one of the early settlers
of Meigs County has been accepted
Ill! member, 1607, of the Ohio
Genealogy · Association's " First
F&lt;UQilies of Ohio Club."
He is Gary E. Stevens of 646
Wagon Wheel Lane in Marysville,
Ohio.
To become a inember, the a~
plicant must prove ancestry to a
direct descendant who wsa living in
the Ohio area prior to the year 1820.
Gary's great-great-great-great •
grandfather, William Stevens, came
from Stevenstown, maine, and set·
tied in Meigs County in 1818. He first
lived in Rutland and then moved to a
farm near Langsville where he lived
until his death in 1843.
William's son, Amos Stevens, was
a prominent Baptist minister in the
Meig&amp;Gallia County area and is
credited with having "lllid out" the •
tOWJlii&gt;Of Pageville in Scipio Township. Amos's son, A. I. Witham
Stevens, was a soldier in the Civil
War. He was captured and imprisoned in the infamous Camp Ubby at Andersonville, Ga. A. I.'s son,
Amos Uncoln Stevens, owned and
operated a general store at Rio
Grande, until his death in 1940.
Amos Uncoln's son, · Asa E.
Stevens, was superintendent of
schools at little Hocking, and later
managed and owned a small chain of
five dry goods stores in Central
Ohio, living in the Columbus· area
until his death in 1977. Asa's son,
James 'fl. Stevens, was manager of
Stevens' Dry Goods Store in RichOhio, and is presenUy living in
Marysvllle area. He is Gary's

.

•

.

W.

DNSG
N

HGV

FGKCRH .
NT~WC

·~~~~~NO ONE WOULD 'EVER HAVE
IF HE OOULD HAVE GOTl'EN OFF
THE S1UP IN mE STORM.-ADAGE
,.

e~••llino

-

s..-. tno;.

�..
.

~

.

~

14--'-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

0., Wednesday, Oct.l.l980

Searles, and Mrs. Searles' brother,
Walter Gtddens--of Sprmg Valley,
Calif. In July Marme Sgt. Walter M.
Hams, New Orleans, Ld. and his
wtth Mr and Mrs. Searles before she · son, Walt Harris, II, Poplarville,
and Mrs. Searles sl&lt;uted the trip 1, MISs. visited here. After leaving
soutfi. They attended the Grand Ole '
here Sgt. HarriS departed for
Opera
Nashvtl!e, Tenn. and
Honolulu, Hawan w~re
will be
visited m Binningham before gomg
on assignmeqt for three years. Walt
on to Mobtle~ where Mrs. Searles
II stayed for another week after
spent a week.~fore startmg home.
which Mrs. Searles and her sister·lllSummer VISitors of Mr. and Mrs.
law, Mrs. Eileen Searles, took him to
Searles ,mcluded Mr. and Mrs.
Colwnbus where he boarded a plane
Garland T~asher of Bessemer,
' for Spnn~teld, Mass. for a visit wtth
Ala., long-time fnends of Mrs.
fnends before re.t urning Mississippi

GOSPEL SING SUNDAY

Returns from Alabama trip ,
Mrsr Elizabeth Earles recently

returned

from Alabama &gt;Yhere she
visited relatives and friends. In
·se:ssemer .she
the guest for a
week of her brother and sister-inlaw, Mr and Mrs. James Giddens .
Prior to that she and a fnend, Kttty
Lumpkin, spent ttme With mutual
friends itiBihnihgham, Ala.
- Mrs. Lwnpkin who restdes 10
Mobile; Ala. spenr two weeks here

\vas

m

'

~

_

A gospel group will be on hand to
sing at the Muldleport Church of
Cluist ln Christian tlnion at 7:30
p .m . Sunday. The featured singers
Will be The Ministers of Love. The
pas!or inVItes the pubUc. The church
IS!ocatedonPearl§t.
· '

tie

The Salem Township. Firebelles

, TRUSTEES TO MEET
A regular mee~the Salisbury
Towiiship Trilstees iill be held at 7
p_,m. Fnday at the home of the clerk,

.wanda Eblin, Laurel CJ.i!f.

will have a kitchen utensils shower
at a p.m. on Oct. 9 at ~ firehouse.
The auxiliary can use anything new
or not. The public is Invited to at·
tend

Belpre to be featured.

!UTRETIME ...
Do yoU ever feel thst life has
routed you north on a southbound

street?

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

.,
_,, ,,, .., ,"'"'""' ' '' ""' '' ,..

Public Not•ce

NOTICE
BtdS Will be rece •ved at
the ott&gt;ce of Bernard V
Fultz.,~ A1torney, in Bank
One of Pomeroy bulldmg,
until Monda y, October 13,
1980, alll 00 O' Clock AM ,
tor the sa le of the F Iorence
McLaughlin real es tate,
Sit uated at 773 0!1ver
Street, Middleport, OhiO

The real estate was ap

Ga,N~~~~!'~·z~~r~~~~
Vill'e,

prova l of the Me1gs County

Court

and

Nat.onal
U/ TA R

the

Guard1an reserves the
nght to re1ect any and al l

v•lle, Tenn.

Average No. Cop1es Each
Issue Durmg Precedmg 12
Months ·
10 Extent and Nature of
C•rculat1on:
A Total No Copies
Pnnted 5,950
B Paid C1rculat1on
1 Sales Through Qealers
and earne rs. Str.eet -Ven
dors and Counter Sales
d,797
2 Matl Subscnpt,ons
1,1!03
C Total
Pa1 d C•r
cu lat1on 5,800
0 Free 01stn but10n By
Ma11 1 Carrier or Other
Means, Samples, Com ·
pltmentary, a,nd other free
COpieS 28
E Total 01stnbut1on
5,818
F
COpieS
Not
01str1buted
1 Off1ce Use, Left Over,
Unaccounted, SpOiled After
pn ntmg 97
2 Returns From News
Agents 25
G To tal 5,950
Actua I No. cop1es of
S~ngle
Issue Published
Nearest to Fihng Date :
10 E)l(fent and Nature of

b idS

Marvm Kelly,
Guard1 an of
Florence McLaughlin
( 10) I , 2, 3, 5, 6, 7. 8, 9, 10,
9tc
Public Not1ce
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEI~S COUNTY,
OHIO
V IRGINIA
GROGAN
TAYLOR ,
Plamt1ff"
- VS·

JAMES TAYLOR ,
1
Defendant.
No. 17,619 '
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO: James Taylor, whose
la st known address was
Detro1t, M1Ch1gan ·
You are hereby not1f1ed
that you have been named
Defendant 1n a legal act1 on
ent1tled V1rgtn1a Groga(l
Tay lor , Pla1nt1ff, vs
James Taylor , Defendant
Th1s act 1on nas been
ass 1 ~ned Case No 17,619
and 1s pend1ng m the Com
m an Pleas Court of M&amp;1gs
County, Pomeroy, OhiO,

c~rc ulat1on

A Total No Cop&gt;es
Pn nted 5,850
B Pa1d C1rculat1on
1 Sa les Through Dealers
and earners, street Ven
dors and Counter Sales
4.7d0
2 Mall Sub~cnpt1ons

45769

The ob1ect of the com
pi a ~nt ts to annu l • a
marnage entered tnto on
August 11, 1960, at M1d
dleport, Oh1o
You are requ tred to an
sw~r the compla1nt w1th1n
twenty e1ghl days after the
last publtcatton of th 1s
not1c e, wh 1ch w 111 be
publ 1shed once eac h wee!&lt;
for s1x success1ve weeks
The last publi cat ion wil I be
made on November 5, 1980,
and the twenty e1ght days
for answer Will commence
on that date
l n case of your failure to
answer or
otherw1se
respond as requ 1red by the
Ohto Rules
of CIVi l

967

•

c

Total
Pa &gt;d C&gt;r
cu lal1on 5.707
0 Free D1stribut1on By
Mall, Carrier Or Other
Means, Samples, Com·
Pl &gt;mentary, and Other
Free Coptes 28
E
Total D•sfnbutJon
5,735
F
Coptes
Not
D&gt;slnbuled
I Off&gt;ce Use, l.,efl Over,
Unaccounted, Spo1led After
pnnttng 89
2 Returns From News
Agents 16
G Total 5,850
I
certify
that the
statements made by me
above are correct and com plete.
Robert WingeH,
Publisher

~~facs,~u'.!f tl ~~~ 'ree~er~~
9

aga1nst you for the relief
demanded tn the ~ com
plamt

11011, ltc

•
G1veaway

4

MALE red pomenan, four
months Old . 9d9 2185.

Announcements

3

1 PAY highest pmes
poss1ble for gold and sliver
coins, rmgs, 1ewelry . etc
contact Ed Burkett Ba rber
Shop, M 1ddleporl

JONES Meat Pack1ng
slaughtertng, cus tom
process mg. ret a II meat
Washington Co. Rd 248,
L1ttle Hock 1ng, OH
~7
6133
APPLES &amp; sweet Cider
All ul&gt;lily grade Grimes
golden &amp; golden dellCIOU.S
on sale at Sd 00 per buschel
From September 25
September 30 Fitzpatrick
Orchard , St Rt. 689 669
3785
GUN SHOOT
Saturday
even1ng startmg at 6.30
p m Sponsored by the
Ractne Volunteer F1re
Department, at building in
Bashan . Factory choke
guns only
30 percent off for the month
of
October
Drehel's
Ceramtcs, 59 N Second
Avenue, Middleport . 992
2751

PHONE 992-2156
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
II I Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
1 - C•rdotThant~a

Prtnt one word ,n each
space below . Each 1n·
1llal or group of f1gures
counts as a word. Count
name and address or words
number
used
--~~~!n~~~~q
phone
You'll get
better1fresults
11 you descnbe fully,
give price The Sentmel
reserves the n ght to
class1fy, ed it or re ject
any ad . Your ad w&gt;ll be
put 1n the proper
claslfic&lt;lf&gt;on 11 you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
1nclude d1scount

2-tn Memoriam
J- Announcements

44-Apartmlnl for Rent

S-HIPPVAGI

U - FRooms

._Lostand Found
7- YardSale

4.,_s,.ce for R~nr
41-W•ntN to Renl
• 41--Equipment for A1nt

t-Publlc Sale
&amp; Auclloo

t-WantedtoBuy

tMERCHANDISE

tEMPLOYMENT
SERIIICES

SI - He»Usahald Goods
U- CI, TV, Radio EQulpm.nl

1'-"-''P w1 nted
12- sitf11ted w•ntecl

U- Anliqu•s

M-Miac Merchandls•

15-luiiCIInt S\1..,_111
~P•'- t.r Selt

ll-ln1.urence

14-;::,.Ullnlll Training

•tFARM SUPPLIES

1J.-'.-Schoolalnstructlon

1._

Radio, T'\1
&amp;CIR._.Ir

&amp; LIVESTOCK
61- Parm Equipment
n- wanted to luy
12- Truclls tor S1111

11--Wante To Do
I FINANCIAL
21-

Wanted
ForSale
Announcement
For Rent

IUIIf'HI

u-uvastacll

Oppot1vnlf'(
0

17 _ _~----

M-HI~

22- Mont"t to Lo.n
2J-Profeulonll

I TRANSPORTATION

tREAL ESTATE

Jl-Autos tor Salt
7l-Vana&amp;4W D
74-Mottrcycles

31-Homts for S11e1
l2-Mt~ltHomes

1._

torSI II

pAU .. -flll'h

IACCeiiOf'itl
17-Auto ltep.elr

tor sate

J4-BUII ..IU lulldintl
U-L.ota&amp;Acru. .
M-RHI Elflt. Wantl'd

:17- R..Iton

&amp; Grain

U-- Sttd &amp; P:1rtUiztr

StrVICII

Jl--~arms

eRENTALS
41-Mobll• Home•
tor Rent

4- 0 ive•w•y

~

.

Want·Ad Advertising
Deadlines

6

Lost and Found

CANON A·1 camera at
Route 33 rest stop. Reward
offered dill collect 1·304·
747 6166 or 1 304 776 5093.
7

Yard Sale

RUMMAGE SALE, Grace
Ep1scopal Church, October
3·4 from 10·4 at 316 East
Main Street, Pomeroy.
Lots of cloth' ng for the en·
t1re famtly plus many
household Items.
YARD SALE, 810 South
Second Avenile, Mid·
dlepurt
September 19
through October .4 Fur·
ntture, bedd1ng1 ltnens,
dishes, silverstone, toys,
small appliances, clothing,
.tools, Avoh, Christmas
tnmmings, somethmg for
evertvone.

YARD SALE October 3 X
4 two miles on Flatwoods
Road from Five Points
AM FM stereo 1n cab&gt;net,
boys clothes, all sizes
D&gt;shes,
anl1ques ,
stoneware

FIVE FAMILY garage
sale at !he Ronn&gt;e Salser
residence, on the east end
of Southern H&gt;gh School,
Route 124, Racine. Wed·
nesday, Thursday, Friday
from 9·4·30
Lots of nice
1tems'
THREE FAMILY yard
sale, September 29 to Oc·
Iober 3 Phone 742 2669 or
742·2395. Take Depot Street
out of Rutland, go three
miles out Leading Creek
Road to the Durham
residence . One wOOd &amp; coal
stove, early American lime
green couch tor $35.00, tap·
pan g~s range $35 00, one
gas heater for $20.00,
drapes, curtains, one pic·
lure window, wooden,
barrel type lamps, 'h price.
GARAGE SALE: Thur·
sday, Octo~r 2 &amp; Friday,
october ~ on Keno Bashan
Road, behind the fire
depart melt. ·
Clothing,
housewares, mise 9&lt;19·2860.

H

I.

12-PtUIIUIInt I

IICCII/IIktl

D-IIICIVI11nt

M-llectrical
I ltefrleeratton
IJ-4enwll HIUIInt
16-M. H llt.,.lr

YARD SALE
Fr&gt;day,
Saturday, October 3 x 4
from
10· 6. Compton
residence al210 West Ma1n
Street, Pomeroy ,. FurDIIure, clothing, household
items, more
PORCH SALE
October
2,3 , from 9-dark Wash
bas10
with cab1net,
medicme cabinet, more,
also nice bird feeders. ONe
mile north of County Road
18 onsold route 33.
YARD SALE, Friday,
Saturday, October 3·4 from
9 5. In Chester, f1rst house
on nght across bridge on
248 Women 1S x boy' s
clothes, furniture, books,
mise Items
•
NEIGHBORHOOD yard
sale, Thursday,Frlday, Oc
tober 2,3 Children. , adults ,
clnthing, other miec. Hems.
Sta rting al 9 a.m. at the cor·
ner of Firlh " H(M•ker Streele
in Middleport .
GARAGE SALE, continued
two weeks. On county rd 50
between Tuppers Plains &amp;
ReedSVille. Quilts, very
large vice, large anv11,
Franklin fire place, several
large s1ze brass values,
square stand
Forrest
Adams, 378·6276.
GARAGE SALE : Friday,
Saturday, October 3X4
from 8·7. On Rock Springs
Road across from the
Salisbury School. Walch
for signs. Large size ladles
clothes, children's clothes,
household Items, much
more. Rain or shine
YARD SAL"E. Oct 2 748
High St., Middleport, Oh.
From 9·3. •
-I
HUGE YARD sale, Friday
x Saturday from 10 6.
Plano, clothes, mise ,Ar·
nold'S
Water
Street,
Syracuse Prloes 10 cents &amp;
up.
YA.RD SALE: one d~y
only, Saturday, October 4
from 12 5. Chest type
freezer, some tools, guns,
some Old &gt;!ems, clothing,
lsc
Ron
Browning
residence, L~urel Cliff
Road, 992-7685.
12

Situations Wanted

WILL do odds &amp; ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile Call Fred Miller al992·
6338.
Will do babysitting 'In your
home, 5 days a week, any
hours. Cal1949 2875.

WANTED TO
BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
SOLUTE
MARK
PRICE GUARANTED.
BURKETT
BARB
SHOP, MIDDLEPO
OH 10 992·3476
WANTED
Handcrafted
1lems for consignment
sale. Seasonal decoraliohs
&amp; gifts for all occasions
Call 992 6193 for more ID·
formatlon or brihg items to
The Tackle Box, SR 124,
Syracuse, Ohio
OLD COl NS, pocket wal·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds Gold or
Silver Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
Com Shop, Athens, OH. 592

6462

YARD SALE, October •• 9·
5. something tor everyone,
two miles from Five Points
on Flatwoods Road, second
house In Wildwood Estales

ISWonflor Unatr

C:1sh

'"
"'
...."'

Idly
2dlyl

ldlyl
Ulyl

Cllllr. .
1. 2S

'·"
'"
:UJ

l!ac:tt word over tM m lnlntlnllll wwda t1 1 cMb,.,. werd "'day
Alii rullnlq OtMf' tun COMKUtiVa Ayl WHI M eftlr'llliCIIIf tfN 1 Uy

....

In memory, Cant of ,...,... .,..
mlntm•m Cash In_..._.

G~J~•a,. l

1 cMb per ..n~. u •

c.,...,

MOIIIIe Home Hies IN Yutl Ntn .,..ICC. . . . onfy •I"' cas•

CM"hr. JS cent Cf'lrM fw 1411 c.rryllll ... NttmW fn

Tt.e

11

WANT!j:D TO BUY: Class
nngs, wedding bands,
anything stamped 10K,
14K, 18K gold Silver coins,
pockef watches. Call Joe
Clark, 992·2054, Clark's
Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.
13

Insurance

FIVE FAMILY YARD
sale, at 238 Condor Street,
back of Landmor~ Thur·
sday, Friday, Saturday
from 9 4 Varlefy,of llems.,P

.

BIG yard sale, Wtdnesclay,
Thursday, F rlday Good
clothing, lewlllry, diSheS, In
market at ReedSVille. Rain
or shine.

ANTIQUE weapons, guns.
992·7731 between 10·7.

... . . ·-- ......
.. ...
· · - ~· - --.-

Homes lor Sale

ED
BARTELS,Loan
Representative, 1100 Easf
Ma1n Sl., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available All types home
financing,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mor·
tgages. Phone 992-7000 or
992·5732
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition With new garage
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
newly Installed central air
conditioning, family room
&amp; stone fireplace, appliances built In, newly In·
stalltKl elecfrlc breaker
system,
attractively
decorated basement, 2
baths, fully carpeted with
most attractive drapes.
Call985·3814 or992·2571
THREE Bedroom house In
Racine, beautiful lan
dscape, two acre yard, one
acre garden. 949 2706
7 rooms house completely
·carpeted, bulll·ln kitchen,
approxlmafely 2'4 acres
with barn in Letart Falls.
247 2684
FOR SALE, three or four
bedroom house, carpeted,
woodburning stove, also
woodburn&gt; ng fireplace
Two car garage Total efec·
trrc. 10 x 27 sundeck, 2 113
acres Bei\IJIIful · sefllng.
985 3934. /
EIGHTY ACRES: 12 acres
of bottom land, 68 acres
pasture, blacktop road,
three bedroom house,
living room, bjllh, kitchen,
dining room, three car car
por,t,
cellar,
part
basement, good barn .
Charles c King, Rutland,
OhiO. 742·2229.
HOUSE &amp; three fourths
acre lot Priced lo sell. 742·
I •

MODERN
COUNTRY
hOm me 41fo miles off 124 on
Co Rd. 28 from Racine I 33 •
acres. 949·2830.
PLEASANT COUNTRY
LIVING Baum Addition.
Home on large aO&lt;I lan
dscaped
lot•, three
bedrooms, 2 113 baths. large
living room, dining room,
paneled tam1ly room, with
stone fireplace, picture
wondow &amp; sliding glass
doors to !J.allo, gas heat,central air conditioning,
extra large double garage,
985-3543.

------

Schools lnslrucfion

PIANO LESSONS Begin'
ners, advanced, adults.
Send
name, address,
telephone number to Vera
Jane HOII&gt;day, Box 224,
Rutland, Ohio 45775.

3 5 acres by owner, In the
country, one half acre
pond, eight room house,
three bedrooms, 2 full
bafhs, modern kllchendlnene, dining room, 24' x
27' family room, fully
finished basement, double
garage, tile block building
Must see fo appreciate.
Shown by appointment
only. Coii61•·98H238.
32

MobileHomes
for Rent

ACCOUNTING MANAGER
Our company has an immediate need for
a full .charge Accounting Manager/Con·
troller. Will lead right peraon to key '
· rbanagement position. A minimum of two
years experlgnce. Responaibllltles will
include all facets of accountlnt. peyroll
tax reports as w•llas personnel and crther
administrative duties. Salary commensurate with exRBrience. Writ. lox W, The
Dally Sentinel,
~t., Pon\t"'Y•
Oh. 45769.

111 Court

54

~

with

MaJOr

liOR SALE Din 1ng room
sutte with six chatrs, has
rose backs &amp; tapestry
seats L1V1ng foom svtte,
oak stand with chrome
feet, anttque sohd walnut
gate leJio drop leaf tab!~.
ladder back sewmg rocker,
ladder back straight chair,
hOuse plants Can be seen
after 5 p m Call 992 2298

TWO bedroom mobile
horne, real n1ce, Brown 's
Tra&gt;ler Park . Adults only
992 332d

44

· 41

FER E RAL ele&lt;:tronlc siren
w&gt;th 100 wan speaker.
Been used 2 hours Ex·
cellent cond&gt;liOn. 742 2236.

Apartment
for Rent

TWO bedroom house for
rent, unfurnished 992·:1010

TWO bedroom modern
house In Letart Falls, Ohio
area Partly furnished, 1n·
eluding stove, retr&lt;gerator,
dishwasher, carpeted with
drapes, fireplace Partial
' basement $135 00 a month
. with depos11. 247 2875.

~1~~H~ou~seh~o~ld~G~~="-s~ , ·~-:::~;;~:J~~(l

5

IN MASON, West Virgmia,
two bedroom furnished
apartment, utilities paid,
no pets Depos11 requ&gt;red .
1·304-882·3356

STOVES·,
We
have
fireplace inserts, free stan
dmg stoves, warm a~r fur·
nace adapters, mob1le
home wood heaters, and
triple wall chimneys Out
door Equ,pmenl Sales, Jet.
Rts. 7 &amp; 35 Gallipolis, Ph
4d6 3670.

'
s 1X room house, turnlshed,

forced air gas furnace, cen·
frat air, garage
2734 .

FOUR ROOM house,
ced air gas furnace, fu ·
hi shed. 949·2734 .
FURNISHED house, 2 or 3
· men; or 2 or 3 women,
private, ullllfies pa1d. 992
7791 after 4
42

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North bf
Pomeroy Large lots Call
992 7479.
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mob&gt;le
Home Park, Cheshrre, Oh.
992 395d
Real Estate- General

Mobile Homes
lor Renf

FURNISHED trailer for
rent $150.00 per monfh.
$100.00 deposlf. Adulfs
only. 992 ~after 5
Real Estate

742·2003

General

Georges. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

Cassady Realty
Belpre, Oh .
NEW LISTING - Tup·
pers Platns
Brick ~
Ranch w&gt;lh tull base·
men!, 3 BR, garage Sits
on eight tenths of an
acre V.ery well kepi
home rn the 50s.
FREE GAS Plus
Royalties on 38 acres
near Eastern High
•S(:hOOI. • r Several fields
and part wooded. N 1ce
stand of pines. $19,000
ARROWHEAD CAMP·
lNG LOTS- Nice Ohio
River beach w1th shade
trees plus lev~l higher
ground Lcicafed below
ReedSVIlle, 0, $3,500 lo
$4,500
Owner will
finance w1fh $500 down
and the rest for 5 years
at 10% Int. Hurry and
get your choice of these.
HORSECAIIE RD. Chnter Twp
Older
house remodeled ms1de.
outside needs some
care Sits on 61h acres
w ith 3 outbUildings, spr·
lng water $24,000 Make
an offer on lh1s one
RENTALS Lovely
older home w1th wrap'"
around porch Newly
remooleled into 2 apts. 1
BR up and 3 BR down.
$37,000
BUSINESS
PLUS
HOME- Beverly, Ohio,
Ball and Tackle shop
fully stocked and op·
erallng wlfh 4 room apt.
upstairs Slfs on 11 acres
with nice stale highway
and river frontage .
Separate house with 5
BR, garage. Owner will
sell separately . Total
$85,000.
Ph. 1/lrglnia Hayman
. 985·4197
---

NEW LISTING - Lovely two story home In
Middleport,
11v1ng
room, d1n 1ng • room,
modern
k t t(hen,
breakfast
room,
3
bedrooms, bath, full
basement
HIGH Sl'. - Pomeroy
Two story bnck
home~~ 3 bedrooms, livroom, mus1c room,
d10ing r~Y";.i t'\ k1tchen,
solanu ~
h, full
basemt.:nr
Asking
$25,000 oo. owner Will
1ct_ke land contract with
onl) $2,500 00 down
POMEROY - Beautiful
2 story
home, 3
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
I&gt;VIng
room
with
frreplace, d&gt;ning room
features
beautiful
chandller, lovely oak
sta1rcase, modern k1t·
chen, full basement,
garage, has 2 rooms &amp;
bath
overhead .
$53,000 00.
FARM 188 acres,
some minerals, mostly
pasture and woods, good
hunting area . Asking
$55,000 00
BUSINESS - Salem St.,
Rutland - Store bldg
and equipment. Renfed
apartment on 2nd floor.
Lease
purchase con
tract
possible .
$21 ,000 00.
ACREAGE - 5 acres on
Hysell
Run
Rd
$7,000 00.
COUNTRY LIVING Over 1 acre w&gt;lh ranch
home, 3 bedrooms, livrng rom. kitchen &amp;' diD
ing room, bath, garage.
Also large workshop or
storage bldg. $39,900.00 .
Give us a call, we have
other llomes fo show.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3171
\Ieima Nlclnsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092

'"9

c:,()\..11

Mobile Homh
tor Sale

1

.....

FOR SALE: 12 x 60 King
mObile home, 1970 lnOdelln
excellent condition. Eltc·
' trlc range &amp; relrl~rafor,
drapes, gas turnece, cen·
tral air conditioning. ~
Gecll"v- HOlter or Call ••·

53

Anhques

ATTENTION :
( IM
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec
t1bles or entire estates
Nothing too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411 .

Real Estate

General

Housing
H eadquarters

:·I~~~!~~s~m
~16
E. Second Street
Phone

1· (6 I 4 )-992·3325
BARGAIN
t'KICED
FOR QUICK SALE Rural6 room home with
bath, forced air furnace,
large front porch, panel·
1ng, ce111ng tile, n&gt;ce kit·
chen with bar and wood
cabinets, and large lot
w&gt;lh drilled well Asking
ony $12,000
DO YOU LIKE BRICK?
Here's a modern
ranch with 3 nice s1ze
bedrooms and 2 baths.
Has a large family
roomin the full base·
ment. Mooern bulf· m
kitchen for mom Car ~
port and nice l~rge lot
for $47,500
COZY AND NICE Compact 3 bedroom
home with a fireplace In
the tamlly room, equip·
pe(j kitchen, utility
room,
and
metal
storage on corner lot in
Middleport for lust
$16,500
LAND LAND LAND 365 ACRE
FARM - Will sell all or
part. Has a 5 bedroom
renovated home with 2
baths and large family
room. Lots of river. end
road frontage on good
state route Mosfly fenc·
ed and free gas for you
$225,000
COUNTRY LIIIING AT )
ITS BEST - Large .('
bedroom family home
near Rutland. Nice kit
chen with formal dining,
and huge family room
wlhf fireplace and wine
cellar. Has 3 acres and 3
bay utility bulldmg for
$39,500.
SIX INCOMES- Large
br&gt;ck building In the
heart of town !hat will
help your Income. Want
to hear more, 1us1 call!
DON'T Bl! ALONE IN
SELLING
YOUR
HOME, LIST WITH US
FOR YOUR PROTEC·
TION.
call ttH32S or ttt-•76

2655.

•

FOR SALI! : 1973 &amp;qlt, ~

992-7354

x ., two bUt oom, -

ballll, ltleellent candltiOII.
l'urnllhlcl, 1G x 20 flltto

cwer,I'Od Iron, twoelrCOIII·
dlllonen, UllderPIMing lo

CARPENTER'S
DANCE S11JDIO

IIIChors, 992-70.

Buildin~

S1zes
"F rom 30xlO"
SMALL

tltility Buildings
SilOS from 4X6 to 12X40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Rac1ne, Oh .
Ph. 614 843·2 591
6·15 tfc

V.C. YOUNG II

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Pullins
Excavating

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
etnsulat1on
• Storm Doors
t Storm W1ndows
• ~~~~~';:;'·""t
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
9 10 1 mo

E)l(penenced Operators
avatlable for local work.
• 2 rubber tire backhoes
•1 excavator hoe 11!4
yd
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ tpment
I

992· 2478
9281mopd

PARK
FINANCIAL
REAL ESTATE LOANS
Federal Ho~stny
Veterans
Ad,ministratton
107 Sycamore
Pomeroy
Office 992-7544
Home 992·6191

317
Middleport, Oh1q
PH 992·6342
TRY US!
complete Dry Cleamng
and Laundry
• carpet
• Orapenes
• Furn11ure
c"We're No 1 1n
Serv1ce &amp; QualitY"'

RUTLAND'S FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOP
·"Drive A LiHle-Save A Lot"
OPISFU
ED
GRASS CARPET
" TURF "

•3" .
Sq.Yd

CARPET
W/Pad
Installed

Rubber Back

•s" ~

Sq. Yd.

cash&amp; carry

•9"
Sq.

SEPTEMBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET
Any regular carpet jobs Installed With free pad.
N1ce Selectton of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742·2211

Reese
Trenching Service
•

Water· Sewer·E lectric· Gas L me·Dttches,
WATER LINE HOOK·UPS
SEPTIC TANKS COUNTY CERTIFIED

Phone 367-7560

.Roush Lane

....... . .............
- ~· . . . . . . . . ..... .. 4 • • •

IB~,

1979, VW RABBIT, two
door, fuel inlecled, stan
dard shill, good gas
mileage, like new con
dll1on . Call evenings 2d7·
3051

lrfAlTO•

Jumpe&lt; one day, a dress the
nel&lt;l~lh&gt;s kind ol classiC, seosonless fash1on 11 !(lUI besl &gt;n-

,...ment. Easl"(ut, eas~sew~ no
wa1st seam Enjoy 11 now'
Pnnted Pattern 4785 M1sses
Sizes 8, 10, 12 14, 16, 18. 20.
Silt 12 (buSI 34) takes 2\i yards
60-onth fobnc.
$1.75 fir- ...... Ml •
fir - ...... fir linklw
. . . . . . . . . . Sold II:
AIM AMI

hlllnli¥

to 11w It IQII81 cere. S»,OOO.

HOMI avaliab141 for only
MAOO. fl 111111 acr•. can,_, 11111- )MIII't last

s• 145-

ctnter o1 town

~utlful\ot, 7YI acrtS. se,ooo.

CM1 81&amp;1 Clfijs ttN342

IODIIEY
Mi1illlp ari, OhiD

491

Tile Ddy Se II
IU 1111t 17

.:..LOTS..::
SYRAcus•- urge building lot In
on the main highway. 16.500.

ml-•1

Farm

- Addonsand
remodeling
- Roo11ng and gutter
work
,
- concrete work
- Plumbing and ~
electrical work
(Free Est•matesl

Seasonless!

Of paulblt~-ylfllll.

•.•

ALL STEEL

~=========4==========-~========::;=.

LAND NR IALI - Close to 10\Yn, Will consider
dividing IIIIa 100 plus acres Take all or your choice

..~~~,:r~:==~:=~~

Free Estimates

Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949·21 60
1·12-ltc

"YOUNGS- -CARPENTER
SERVICES"

Phone 949· 2414
- ·9101mopd

Ca ll:

and lerga garege
lergeiMng
room,
us your offer.
:=!~~~~~~:~~·~~

OUIU COUIIITitY

TV, CB &amp;HAM

POMEROY

56
Pets tor Sale
NEW LISTING
HILLCREST KENNE LS
COUNTRY
AT ·
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
MOSPHERE
IN
indoor
outdoor facil it ies
TOWN! Where can you
Also
AKC
registered
l10d a 4 bedroom , tam1 1y
Dobermans 61~ «6 7195
11--.ror&gt;m, living room, kit·
and bath w1th
HOOF HOLLOW Horses
-Backhoe
and
be&lt;&gt;Uiiful
hardwood
and pon1es and ndmg
floors, and 3~ acre for
Dump Truck Ser·
lessons
E veryth mg
iUSI$27,000.
VICe
&gt;maguwble &gt;n horse equ &gt;p
NEW LISTING- WHY
-Shop and Port·
ment
Blankets, be lts,
LOOK LONGER - A lot
boots, etc. English and
of work has gone 1nto
able Weldtng.
Western
Rutn Reeves
thiS one floor plan, 2
(614) 698 3290.
bedroom home, 1n·
cludmg a new sept1c
system, new furnace,
GET A Nice soli lovable
new
roof ,
new
killen from your Humane
9 26 1 mo
alum1hum siding, and
new carpetmg . Also a
Donat&gt;on Shots
required
. 992· I1Society.
8. wormed
fenced area for farm
6260. Hours 12·7 Gall¥&gt;
antma ls Yours for only
closed Tues
Tabby 's,
$26,900.
tigers, &amp; a pure bla ck , all
NEW LISTING
males.
PANORAMIC VLEW OF
THE VALLEY• W1th 35
CALL foday tor a beaui&gt;IUI
acres and an 8 room
puppy or dog Humane
house that has been
society, shots 8. wormed.
remodeled for modern
992
6260
llvmg, 2 patios, each
Now open w1th a studiO
with slidmg glass doors,
in Pomeroy and Racme.
PUT a cold nose· m your
bUilliD ki tchen with
Classes offered are
future . Me&gt;gs. Counfy
dishwasher, massive
Ballet, Tap and Jan.
Humane Soclefy, 992·6260.
11vtng
room,
4· 5
For 1nfo and enrollment.
Shots x wormed, one
bedrooms ,
all
m' nlature collie type
acarpeled, 10 Bedford
Call 949, 2710
female, one shephard type
Townsh&gt;p $58,000
9 28 1 mo
female, one black x tan
NEW LISTING - DOU·
Kerr female, one walker
BLE LOT IN MID·
hound mate.
DLEPORTI W1th a 2
bedroom home that
needs
some
57
Musecal
redecorating, a nice 2
Instruments
57
Musical
car block garage w 1th
Instruments
dnveway. n1ce trees for ' "TRAYNOR" Guitar am
EXCELLENT used trum
shade . $13 ,000.
phfier with cover, 200 watt.
pet, professtonal style, like
NEW LISTING
3 channel , reverb &amp;
new $200 00 992 5786
GRAT FOR FAMILY
tremolo. Asking $200. 742
LIVING! All · the room
2300
your
family inwillthiS
need4 II~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
for ,years
bedroom home w1th
built in kifchen, formal
d101ng room, huge living
room, full basement,
and mud room, laundr\1'
61
Farm Equipment
room, in town ~ close to
Printed
Pattern
1978 JD 450C Dozer, 6 way
school : $35,000.
blade, w1nch, ca nopy 11mb
NEW LISTING- DAN·
risers, 1700 hrs exc cond
VILLE! ThiS approx. 58
$28,000. Atter 5 p m 7d2
acre tract , of vacant
2372
land has about 10 acr~
of bottom land. Many
bu(lding sites, pllsture
WANTED A f1ve foot pull
and woodS which lays
fype rotary cutter. State
ntce For i ust S17 ,-000
price, reply , H. Prt ce, Box
NEW LISTING
3, Portland, Ohio, 45770 •
RIGGS
CREST
MANOR I A 5 acre
FORD 3000 lra ctor 949
building site w1lh ap·
2340.
prox half of It level and
part 1s cleared. Asking
62
Wanted to Buy
$10,000.
NEW LISTING
CHlP" WOOD Poles max
Eliminate maintenance
diameter 10" on largest
w1fh th1s br 1ck ranch
end $12 per ton Bundl ed
house - 3 bedroms, 1112
slab $10 per ton Delivered
b~lhs, fireplace, baseto Ohio Pallet Co, Rt. 1,
ment, garage, on a~
Pomeroy 992 2689
prox 1 acre land. JUST
$45,000.
63
Livestock
'TERRIFIC
PRICE
CUTI Are you Mndv.?
PIGS for sale. 985·3540
Only decorating re·
qu&gt;red to put th1s 3
bedroom home '" t1pfop
65
Seed &amp; f'erlihzer
shape. Has central air
conditioning, equipped
NEW EAR corn for sale
k1lchen and 1s easily
$2 65 bushel 985 4116.
healed .
Now 1us!
$18,300.
REALTOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
11
Aufos for Sale
Jean Trussell949·2660
1966 Thunderbird, out·
Dottle &amp; ROger Turner
stand1ng
cond1t1on,
tt2·56H
$2600
00.
La
r
ry
Armstrong,
DFI:ICE-tt2·2259
10 Oak Street, The Pla1ns,
OhiO. 797·4015.

ESTATE

.-...---

TNII Ho.d hal BR •a with hardWOOd floors. lerge
MHn kltchtlt, llvl..,lft cabiNis, full batment, hes
liMn t11utn good taN Of end wa!Hng lor new-

INSTALATIONS '

All types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleantng ilnd ~Mintingw
All work guaranfeed .

•New Homes • ex ·
tensive remodeling
•Electrical work
• Roofing work
~
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush .
Ph. 992· 7583 •.
9 14 1 mo

TOWERS &amp;
ANTENNAS

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

B&amp;D

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259

12 x 60 two bedroom mObile

home with air conditioning,
walher, dryer, two por·
ches, utility building. Set
ur. on renfecl lot In Mid·
d eporl. 992·6115.

Call for Free Siding
Esflmate, 949-2801 or
949·2860 . No Sunday
calls
9 1d 1 mo

~LANDMARK
E. Main St.
Pomeroy

Hl.'il(fquarters

1910 70 x 1• mObile home
wlfh 7 X 2-4 tXPindO. Ex
cellon! condition Phone
7.c2·3030 or 7.c2·2728.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Wood Burner
Stoves
Only Sl95
~plus blower
1 L1ke New Sears
ColdS pot Side by
Side Combo
S4DD.
1 Good Used Frrg&gt;da&gt;re
Refrigerator
SISO

'\?.,. _

Housi11g

4424.

Vinyl and Aluminum
• Siaing

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

-Business Services.

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmark

Houses for Rent

TWO BEDROOM un·
furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart
. ments. Call after 6 p m.
992·2288.

Misc. Merehanii"!

POTATOE S: 10 cents
pound, Centennial sweet
p&amp;tatoes, 20 cents lb Cecil
Toban, 3 miles west ot Dar·
win

2 BEDROOM Furnished
tra1ler for re nt Cheshire,
Oh 992·3954 ,

1973 Crown H11ven, 14 x 65,
GET VALUABLE training lhrH bedrooms, new car·
as a young business person pel. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
and earn good money plus two bedrooms, new carpet,
some great gills as a Sen· 1972 Champion, 12x 60, two
llnel route carrier. Phone bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
us right away and get on Cameron, 12 x 60, two
the eligibility list ·at -992· bedrooms, all elecfrlc. 1971
' Skyline, 12 x
, two
2156 or 992·2157.
bedr9&lt;Jms, befh &amp; ~. new
1970 PMC,
PART· TIME RN, 7 :00a .m . carpet .
12
x
60,
two
bed
roo , new
to 3:30 p.m. Call Pomeroy
Health Care Center. ~2· carpet B x S Sales; Inc,
2nd x VIand Street, oint
6606.
Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
WOMAN
FOR
housecleaning. 994!·7625.

.

'
OJ,JR BOARDING HOUSE

1975 Two bedroom mobile
horne partially furni shed,
$150.00 a monll'r Located' in
Country Mobil e Home
Park, on Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. 247 39d2 .

'·

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
your
celled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone '
992·2143 .
FIVE room house with 13
acres of land, asklng$7,000.
Call992·5553
15

'

42

3 AND 4 RM furnished apts Phone 992 5434

14K white gold three piece
wedding ring set One·
fourth carat diamond.
$.450.00 Call 992·7731 be!·
ween 10 7.
·

31

Lots &amp; Acreage

Miscellaneous

2068,

WANTED good used desk,
preferably . with plenty of
drawer space. 992·3110 af·
ter 5 weekdays, anytime
weekends.

11- UtMMifatery

Rates and Other lnformatjon

hnllnel

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Fnday night starling at
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only

LARGE yard sale, October
2,3,4 from 9 5 at Fourth x
Crook Streets In Syracuse.
Dishwasher, coffee table,
Quaker fuel oil stove,
children's
to
adult's
clothing all sizes.

Gpld, sliver or 1ore1gn
coins or any gold or silver
1tems. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete esfates.
No 1lem too large or too
small Check proces before
selling. Also do appraising.
Osby 1Ossiel Martin. 992·
6370

tSERVICES
11- HDmatmprov•mMH

2 filS ~ Dill~
n Noon S•tunl-v
tor MOnciiY

RACINE GUN Club has
changed therr gun shoots
from Sunday's to Friday
n1ghts starting september
26

FOUR FAMI L.Y yard sale,
October 1,2,3,4 from 9 5 ~~
245 North 5th Avenue
behind the PresbYterian
church In Middleport All
sizes of clothing, stereo(
bedroom suite, desks,
dishes, records, books

41 - Houaes for Rt nl

Wanted to Buy

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold
rings, Jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc .. wood
Ice boxes,Jars antiques,
etc . Complete households.
Write M . D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·
7760

1 YARD SALE : lots of 1tems,
priced reasonable Some
furniture. 830 South 3rd.
Street, Middleport, Ohio
October 3, ·4fh Ram can
eels

~

I ANNOUNCEMENTS

9

P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
Dan&gt;els 74129511 Tun&gt;ng
and Repair Serv1ce s1nce
1965 11 no answer phOne
992 2082

PRE -S EASO N
SALE-$649 00 Mob&gt; le home wood
burnmg systems, the only
HUD &amp; UL approved wood
burner for mobile homes.
Untt comes complete with
wall vent slack See them
at Kmgsbury Hom es Parts
&amp; accessones at Route 124,
Mtnersvllle, Ohio
Or
phone 992 5_587

Public Sale
&amp; Aucflon

OSSIE'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd street, Mid·
dleport, Ohio We sell one
p1ece or entire hOUseholds
New, used, or antiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or
llquld~llon sales Get top
dollar . List with the man
who has over 25 y~ars in
the hew, used and antique
furniture business
We
lake consignments. For in·
formation and pickup ser·
v&gt;ce, call 992 6370 or In
West VIrginia 773·5471 Sale
every Friday n1ght at 7
p.m . Auctioneer Howard
Be1tsley, apprentice auc·
t&gt;oneer, Osby A . Martin.
(no junk)

I would like to thank all of
my friends &amp; neighbors tor
the1r prayers, flowers, car
ds, &amp; VISitS While I was tn
the hosp1ta l A special
thanks fo Dr. Ehlmger, Dr
R1dgeway, &amp; the nurses
Who were so good &amp; kind to
me M ay God Bless You
All Mona Farra , Ractne,
Oh10

WANT AD INFORMATION

l
l
}
)

8

Card ol Thanks

pra&gt;sed at $8,000 00 Al l
btdS are sub 1ect to the ap

Probate

· They'll Do It Every Time

Mobile Home•
for Sale
' ' TWO BEDROOM mobile
home with bath &amp;. 113, ex·
panda, one acre fenced
land, 12' x 16' building, fruit
&amp; nut trees, Co. Rd rural
water, skirted &amp; tied down;
moving must sell
Bank
appraised at $15,000. Ex·
cellenl
condit ion
15
minutes from new bridge
TOSHCOII61.-949 2038

· SECLUDED building lot In
Wildwood Est on Flaf
Woods Rd., 1 plus acres, all
wooded, utllll&gt;es ava&gt;lable.
Ca II 992·5396

Small,investment, large returns, S~nti~el Want Ads
Pubf•c Notice

•

1~The Dally Sentinel, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 .; We&lt;lnesdar, Oct. 1,1980

35

'

Pub he Not•ce ___._

'

YARDSALEFRIDAY
..-UNDAY
The Rutland Church of GOO Ladles
HOMECOMINuw
Au:xilia will hOld '1!1 final y rdsal.e!er-~ JlomecQiiung will be held Sunda: ~~
1
ry
at the Hemloelr: Grove Christ!at
a
,
of the season at the Bob Ead s
ChurCh. FoUowlng morning worshlr
rest denee on Sillem St., RuUand,
at 9:30 a.m., a basket dinner will b&lt;
beglnnlng at 10 a.m. Frtday.
held In the church basement at 12:31
p.m. The aftei:JIQQ!! program start:
SHOWEROCTOBER 9
at2p.m. withtheHarvestTriofrorn

••u. 1'11111

ZIP, SIZE. ..
Wily put up wflll hill! prices- dallatt, Ill bolltr qualiiJ1
Sind b our ruw FAU.-W1NT£R

I~TT£RN

CATALOG 94 paltlrttl,
f1W ,llflrtr Coupon (worth
11.751. CltllaL $1.00.
-

!11.75
s;.. .

l»fiilt n....

•• s.

1,

1.75
l~T-- 1.75
IZ7..,.._ 'I' 11111111 .$1.75

1973 OLDS CUTLASS
Supreme 67,© 00 m11es,
good running cOnd, 350 VB
auto., p.b, p.s., a.c., am1m rad1o $650 firm 992·
7567
1974 CHEVY Nova, 350
autornat1c, power steering,
71,000 miles, runs good. 742·
3035 •
•
1979 CAMARO Z28 loaded
11,000 miles, brown x gold
in excellent• cond1tlon
Priced for quick sale. 742·
2143 ask for Duane
'

74

Motorcycles

YAMAHA MX 250, racing
b&gt;ke. runs good 7d2 3035.
75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

83
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Acces,ones

2 NEW CAR Seats Will lif
1n van $25 each 992 5786.
FOR SALE 35 fool semi
trailer for storage or office,
1nsu1ated, part &gt;ally w&gt;red.
$750 00 742·2537

77

Camping
Equipment

OVER the cab truck cam ·
per sleeps four. 992·3090
1971 Camper tra&gt;ler 18 foot
long with new 8,000 Btu air
condlltoner. No reasonable
offer refused 992·5853.

11
Trucks for S•le

1979 CHEVY 4X4, shorl bed,
p s., p b , am·f m, like new,
4500 miles, must sell,
$5,200 Call992 5396 after 5.
73

V•ns&amp;4W.D.

1979 FORD BRONCO
Reds&amp; white. 7

42 303\

HEATING &amp; air condlttoning,
furnace
cleanlng,plumb1ng
Call
992·2364 after 5 p m

12 fool alummum john boat
for sale 843 2924

1975 1/W Beetle, automatic
transmission, good con
dillon. 11,900 00. 992·3401
72

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
steam cleaned.
Free
est I mote
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211'1
REMODELING work, In·
stall ceilings file, paneling,
doors, flooring. 994!·2759

Excavalong

J X F BACKHOE SER·
VICE llscensed and bon·
ded, septic tank in ·
stallation, water and gas
lines Excavatingworkand
trans111ayout. 992-n01
DOZER work, small iobs a
specially, qu1ck depen·
dable service. 742 2753.

1M

'

Electrical
&amp; Refrlpr•flon

SEWING
MACHINE
Repatrs,
serv ice, all
makes-1 992·2284
The
Fabric Shop, POmeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service We sharpen
Scissors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons, all small
appliances Lawn mower.
Next fo State HighWay
Gar eve ,.on Route 7, 985- ,
3825.
APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dlthweehen,
diiPO&amp;IllS. water tankl. Call
~en Young et 91}3561
before 9 a.m. or after 6
p.m .

�. ~ ·· ~ .

..
.

.

•

16-TheDailySentinel,MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, O.,Wednesky,OCj,1: 198o

Efforts

--

~ -

-¥

.

.a9and~ned

~.

.

•

' •

·....--

:

.

to· pl~ce proposal

~n

,

1

Nov. 4 ballot_ .

·
·
get on the ballot tiWi year Jones and portlonment bOIInl, wblcb met 10 ,
'the high court are !!Ills.
f
.
others had been ~ an
yean qo· and drew new Jealalatlve ,;
Democrats and the ruling upholding
Thomas M. Her~rt, ormer
.
apbowidariea lblt belped lbem coohim was 4-.'! along party lines. ·
•· Supreme Court justiC::n.~ .Is
~licans say it WBII g rryman. trol the ~sJ•ture througboutiDOit "
Jones said the court decision wBB . FAIR's COWlllel, advised..,....._ ap- . · derln . a Dernocr kon e
of the 1r10B.
·
••
'
l!latantly partlaan and WBII &amp; result
pealing to the federal courts to .~ to ·
g by
. . •
trolled apUnder the ballot propa1a1, ltate of.
of Democrats detennined to retain
flclala would Invite citllena to aub-,; .
their map-making authority mit plans buill on ezistlnc lepl, :
1
namely control of the state Ap~for equal populatioll, ~
portionment Board from which they
••
districts, contiguOus to eacb. 00181\'t.:
can gerrymander or Shi!pe district ·
lind other criteria. The plan tbit: :•
boundaries to favor :~dldates of
\...
came the cl~ to meet1n1 tbe··',.,
their party.
nh ,
She is survived by two d&amp;ilghters,
requlrementnould be adopted.
.:·
As soon as the official results of Lillie Gr:oppe
acher Mrs. Anna Jane Klncade, Rt. 1, Mid- · The same system would be Uled to :
the 1980 Census are available, the
Lillie. Groppenbacber, 88, Rt. 1,
dteport; Mrs. John (Mary Lou) draw new congre&amp;fional dlatrl~. ::.~
board will~ districts for the Ohio Middleport, died Tuesday at her •Quirk, Kena&amp;a Lake, N. v.,; one son;
They are &lt;levlled, ' under
Senate and House for use In the
homefollowillg II Ungerlnj! illness.
Samuel Carr Winter, Jr., Rll, Mid-- ·law, • by tbe General Allemlily. '
Mrs. Groppenbacher was bom In dleport; two ~. John H. . · Democrats currenUy control tbe ·: •
Ceredo, W.Va., the dailghtet of the Groppenbacher, Hlllaboro, and Senatela.JSalldtbeHOUiess.p.
•
W~r80DS urt·
C-DUS ·
lateJohi!andAnnaW'lllsLyons.Sbe PrestonGroppenbacher,Cinclnnati;
Joneaand~wererejectedby ;
Two persons were injured In a
demolished. .
•
'
was also preceded in death l!y her tw.o sisters, Julia Gtlm and Arlona
the aecretary of state because they,;
two-car : ac.cident investigated
, Willison and Wolfo~ were tranfirst husband, Sam~el ~w:rs, Quick, both of Tulaa, Okla., and
sulmltted two lets of
Eight defendarits forleited bonds early tthoday by
Gallia-Mel!ls
~U: H~= M='~nter by ~~ba=~ fo::thers, 0
~~ec:!~ces~s.be held
differing eo~
. ;~
and on~ was fined in the court of / Post of_ eOhio.Highw~yPatrol.
'w
y were
slsterandonestep.son,
.
the
u......
He said tbe error did ·nolb!ni to ;Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
The patrol ~1d Bonrue C. Willison,
~ted and released, troopers said.
Mrs. Groppenbacher was a mem- Frida&gt;' at 2 p.m. at
Raw-~ ~h•n- the -~•'n" or effect of their · ~ •
Tuesday night.
28, Vinton, and Shannon R. Wolford,
Willison was cited for left of center,
ber of Jehovah Witnesses.
Coats-Blower Funeral Home with
~
Celebreae aau('
Forfeiting were Randy Martiri .. I, Vinton, a passenger in Willison's j"'ley added.
·
the Rev. Andy Beliyi officlaUng.
· 0
~lilt ·
Pomeroy, $350, posted on a charge of . car,. suffered visible injury' when I 'f!le patrol also_probed a tw~r
A
~ d
l'
Friends . may call at ~ funeral
a ruling ~~ woWJl-.., lila om 1 :
driving while intoxicated· Jimmy Willison's auto collided With another
accident on Lanai Dr. at 10 a.m.
reB ,ee supp 1er &lt;...t
hogJeThursdayfrom21';l4and7to9. • ~not lntMidJedgi~ tbe ce ,
Arnold, Pomeroy, $38, ~peeding;
car operated by Harley L. Wing, 39,
Tuesday.
.
,
. chanues C)Wnership .
Burial wlll be in Riverview
~ , '.
. "' .
coo- ~
Beth Huffman Racine $34
Laurelville, atl2:50a.m. on SR160. ·,
Troopers sa1d a car dliven by
e
Cemetery.
stituti ·
.,.
speeding· TimofiiyFaulk P~meroy
Aceordlng to the report, Willison Shirley A. Beaver, 37, Gallipolis,
Centra!SoY,aofOhio,69Syeamore
$30, lett' of center; B~bby prn: was northbound when her car went
fa~edtoyieldandcollided witha_car St., ~feed supplier, h8ll ofPomeroy, $30, assured clear distan- left of center and struck Wing, who
driven by Freda Hill, 64, Gallipolis.
flci8lly
ed hands, according to.
. ce; David Wolfe, Rscllle, $27,
was southbound.
No_mjurtes were reported and no
DonBihl,
tmanager. . . ·
Severe damage was listed to
citations Issued, ~ccordlng to the ·
The f
Is now known as Boso
speeding; Brian Bowling, Racine,
$33; speeding; $50, driving while· on- Wing'scarandtheWilllsonautowas
report.
Agrt-Center, named after its new
der suspension, and $300, resisting
owner, Ray Boso, Belville, W.Va.,
•
arrest. ·
.
escapes
._
~....,
_
whotookpossession -ofthefirmtwo
Fined $200 and costs on a".petty
U.l.
weeks ago.
.
\
.I. .
theft charge was Burlin Mullins,
Boso is one of the largest
William Todd Knittel, year and · property owned by the Rev. and
hog-feed suppliers in West
'Dexter.
one-half old son of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Knittel.
Virginia, Bihl noted, and has done
Twelve·defendants were fined and
Trent Knittel, Route 1, Middleport;
The car then went over an embusiness with Central Soya in the
miraculously escaped Injury after a bankment hitting a garage·wall at 8
past. Boso first became interested in
eight others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor FredHof·
wild auto ride Ill Pomeroy at 3:50 East St.;-owned by Roy Betzing, and
buying CenttaJSoya In June, 1979, he .
fman Tueaday night.
. . p.m. Tuesday:
then went d.own a hill crashing into
added.
Forfeiting were David L. Spiney,
Mrs. Knittel had stopped momen- the home of Maurtce Durst where it
The firm, which employs 21 per·
Moss., Tenn., Mark Compson," tarily at t!Je home of her parents-in- . came to rest.
sons, Is still offering the same line of
M!iSon, W. Va., David W. Reed,
law, the Rev. and Mrs; William KnitThere were only moderate
feed, fertillzer, Bee!! and fanp supMason, and Steven C. Hill, Racine,
tel at 10 East St. with Todd damages to the car but damages to
plies, Bihl said, althoUgh It has
$350 each, posted on charges of
remaining in the car. The chjld the Durst home were expected to run
recenUy added Ralston-Purina
driving while intoxicated; Del
somehow knocked the car out of several thousand dollars. Efforts of
feeafOlts inventory.
.
8UY "OW FOR
Ogdln, Langsville, $25, left of cengear and set it on its wild ride.
family members nearby to stop tbe
The agri::-center also has a new
ter; John Workman, Mason, $25,
The vehicle, which had just been
car when it started to roll were In
manager, Steve Newberry, I,etarf,
stop sign violation; Ada Tackett,
purchased by the younger Knittels,
vain. Todd, removed from the car
W.Va., vr,ho replaces Norman PenBEST SELECTION!
Rutland,$27, speeding, and Jerome
rolled down the driveway into a
wbenitstopped,escapedlnjury.
ton.
.
..
L. Thomas, Mason, $28, speeding.
garag~ door and wall at 12 East St..
Aside from those changes, Blhl
Fined were Tanuny Cleland,
Emergency squad runs said the employee struciure is the
1ST FlOOR - N'OTIONS ~PT.
Cheshire, s1oo and costs, disorderly
Local uru·ts made nve runs
same as before.
.
. manner; Tom Cleland, Cheshire, •
--e
The firm, wtuch has been in
$100 and costs, disorderly manner;
The Meigs Marsuder Golf team
Tuesday, the Meigs County
Gallipolis for the past 30 years, was
William Eakins, Racine, $50 and placed second behind Warren Local
Emergency Medical Service . known as Master Feed and Supply
costs, disorderly , manner; .George Tuesday at Oxbow Golf Course,
Headquarters reports.
until the 1980s, when the name was
Bel
They include Middleport Unit, ·
·
McDaniel, Middleport, $100 and
pre.
.
•
12 ,39 p.m., Sharon Roush from Mid- . chailged to Central Soya of Ohio.
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Citing
a lack of time, a group promoting an
Ohio legislative' redistricting
proposal·has decided to.abandon ef: forts to get'it on the Nov. 4 ballot.
But the Committee for Fair and
Impartial Redistricting - which
calls itself the FAIR committeesays it will undertake a new petition
drive to place their proposal befqre ·
voters in November 1981.
' David B. Jones, the group's
executive director, said TueSday
" we owe It to the nearly 350,000
signers of our petition, and to all•
Ohio voters concerned with good
government, to pursue our q~est to

get the anti-gerrymandering wll"
on the ballot."
.
Backed strongly by RepUblicans,
FAIR wants to change the present
way new election districts are drawn
for members of the Ohio Senate and
House and the state's members .ol
the U.S. House.
.
But the group was sidetracked by
a recent ruling of Secretary of State
Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr., later sup,
IIOrted by the Ohio Supreme Court,
that it didn't meet legal requirements for placing the issue on the
November ballot.
.
Celebrezze and four of the seven

· ·· T
·
c
.
.
Mayor's . ourt
.

. members · of

Area
· ·.d, ea·th·s..

emtlngr

h · •· traffi
m , .

·

.

• ha'

p

.

;!

the

petlti':t= ;,

=e.

=· .

H·--.,.

,••.•rt..-.
.

~

'

........ ~~

..

o--------------:----'------.i

HALLOWEEN ·SUPPLIES

Child

J·u·ry

·MASKS, COSlUMES,

HATS, M'' OOftS,
CANOY,
PARTY GOODS

PARlY FAVORS

Mei as takes second

A SMALL DEPOSIT
· HOLDS YOUR
SELECTION
TILL CHRISTMAS

.ELBERFELDS IW POMEROY

.manner;
Kim
costs, disorderly
Hayman,
Racine, $100
and cos!S,
open flask; $100 and costs, criminal
trepasssing, and $100 and costa,
misconduct.
Lawrence Tabor, Gallipolis, •100
•
and costs,, indecent exposure; Kathy
Robinson, no address recorded, $100
and costs, assault; Reva Vaughan,
Middleport, $10 and costs, littering;
Tim Crites, Cheshire,$100 and costs,
petty theft; Bob Dugan, Middleport,
$100 and costs, disorderly manner;
,James Pettit, Pomeroy, $225 and
three days In jail, driving while intoxicated; Tony uttle, Dexter, $100
and costs each on two charges of

MeigsLocal
carded
total of 185 while
Warren
hada 175..
Scores for Meigs golfers were J. .
R. Wamsley, 42; Fred Young -and
Tony. Jewell, ~ with 46's; Scott!.
Harrison, 51; BnanWill,55.
· 1
For warren Local goIfers were
Wes Kaufman and Matt Proctor, .
both with 43's; Jim Brant, 44; Scott
'" ; Tim Murphy, ....
••
Wynn, ....
Metgs record Is 12-13, SEOAL
record, 7~. Meigs will play
Gallipolis today at Riverside Golf
Course, Mason.

dleport Elementary School to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland, 12:10p~m., James Fugate
from Pomeroy ijealth Care Center
..to residence; RuUand, i:16 p.m.,
Mex and Roma Harrah from
residence to the office of a
physician; Middleport, 9:48 p.m.,
Velma Imboden from home to
Veteraos Memorial Hospital; Middleport, ll:ll p.m., Edna Madden,
Middleport, treated on scene.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Wanda
Ward,
Pomeroy; Tami Gilland, Racine;
Lisa Blake, Middleport; Sharon
Icenhower, Pomeroy; Velma Imboden, MiddlePort.
Discharged-Robert Riffle, Opal
Cummins, Goldie Holman,
Gatl\erine Roach, KimberlY Lute.

SEEK IJCENSES ' '
Marrtage
licenses were lss.ued to
criminal !repassing.
·
·
Russell Eugene Starcher, 20,
Pomeroy, and Susan Elizabeth
Sprague, 16, Pomeroy; Joseph
Harold Ililboden, 22, , Minersville,
(Continued from page 1I
and Debra Mae Rose, 23, Minerstill meeting fierce re~lstance jlt the sville.
· four major cities in Iran's 011-rich
Khuzestan Province, and the 1&lt;klayold invasion appeared to have
bogged down.
·
·
An Iraqi captain escorting reporters on a tour of the central sector of
the 300-mile invasion front told them
Iraqi troops had pushed into parts of
Ahwaz, the provincial capital 5()
miles from the border, and would
.eRegular
probably gain complete control of'
Savings
the City today or Thursday,
•
Certificates
But AP Correspondent Jefdrey •
of Deposit
Ulbrich said Iraqi officers reported
eChecking
fighting still going on six miles south
Accounts
of the city as well as inside it.
eFarm Loans
Seventy, miles to the north, Iraqi
eAuto Loans
forces were still trying to capture
eHome
.
Dezful. And at the southern end of
Improvements
the line on the Shatt al-Arab estuary,
Khorramshahr, Iran's major port,
• Personal Loans
and Abadan, the oil refining center
• Business Loans
15 miles to the southeast, were under
• Home Mortgages
siege and heavy artillery attack but
• Bank by Mall
apparenUy Iran's revolutionary
•24 Hour: Depository
guards werz holding on there ..
• Direct Deposit of
The National Irantan Oil Co. in a
Social Security .Checks
broadcast on Radio Abadan called
.
• Drive-In Banking
on the people of the city to "prepare
• Travelers Checks
,trenches in the streets, make
• Christmas Clubs
Molotov cocktails and any other
destroctlve means, arid prepare for
a fight agalm!t the enemies of God
and the masses.':
·

. Iran will

.LIS!IB

'

are all part of the
services we·offer you ·

.

.Man pleads guilty
Bnan Taylor cha~ed with trafficking in drugs plead ·guilty recenUy when he appeared befOre Meigs
County Common Pleas'·Judge Jotm
c. Bacon aCCOfll!ng to an entry In
Meigs County Coriunon Pleas Court.
Taylor was rei~ on 'his. own
recognizance until pre-sentence lnvestl84tlon 1a 11!8de. ·
·&amp;even VanMeter, Middleport and
Debra Lee Van Meter, MJddlepok,
flied for dl.uoluUon oflllll'l'lage.
Jamea R. Sbeeta W8ll apPOinted as
~deputy aherlff.

BIU~-

..

'

And the list goes on! En loy the benefits of
our one-stop, full service banking ... you
_might lust save more .than step! I Come lhl
'

Better Banking &amp;lrvlee. That'I! the ~tral Idea.

THE

'

CENTRAL TRUST
-COMPANY

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;=====;•=:==;;;;;;;;;;ii.:

. PRICES IN EFFECT ·
·ocT. 1HU OCT 12

LY

5D YS
TIL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

co.•s·

-GRAND OPENING SALE

$4,200
MERCHANDISE
GIVEAWAY

.

· 16 .CHANCES TO WIN

Prizes will eonslst of:
I

I·

-3 WOODEN ROCKERS ;· ·~~
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TV
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RECLINER . ·.
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. '
.
-RIVERSIDE ALL WOOD COPPlE TABU .

-3 CUSHION -.INCHCRAPT SOFA
-3 CUSHION BUIHLINfSOFA -GillON CHUT PBIDR, ~
-12xlt Plltl OF CARMT PROM llNNAliAMCi
-HOOVER COMCIPt ONE POWER D~IYIN IWIIPII

-7 PC. OtiOMI.ClAn IRIA_K,AIT 1R
-BIG HONIYMAN Wll CHUT
,.
-SIALY POI'I'U81DIC IOXSPIING &amp; MAmas
· fl'uii-Sille)
-.A t 100 LAIOI AU. GtAII HUIIICANI LAMI
I

.

. ,........,.....,.. HtnN. ,......_.....,, .......... , .....m .

'

, _o:e\&amp;\..:m.s ~ · ~~~~~·FM
. . . _R_U_·~-;pu~PHARMACY
FILLING YOUR ·' •
·
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f

- PRESCRIPTIONS ·

.. "J11E. EVERYTHIN~ .STO.RI=" .

,

':·; ; ' 101 SlltTft AVE:

'HUNTINGTON, W. IIA.

_

•, ' '' '. 2501\IAOKSON A.VE.

·

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P.O)NT ~'-IJ~sNtT, W. VA.

' ' . ". 120

w. 2nct ST.

. WELL~TON, OHIO '

•

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ALL STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS

AWEEKI

FREE PARKING

.

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