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Two cOal gasi{jcation plants planned for
Mason County .file; airport relocation set.
- POIN'l'..PLEAsANT,._ Consolidated-Natural-&lt;;&amp;s -~UdatecJ.GuSupplyCorporatlon, .
Company BMOunced today it will begin exercising opOrr also pointed out that the plants will comply
tions m 19111 to pllrchase some 1,200 acres of land 1n
with all Envlroruriental Protection Agency (EPA) ·
Mason County for two proposed coal gasification plan- · regulations 1\lld there will be no significant amount of
ts.
pollutants released Into the atmosphere. He said the
I The plants, each to cost an estimated $2 billion, ·pollutant emission from a coal gasification plant would
are to be a co-venture between Consolidated, Pitt&amp;
be li!Sl! than ~e-seventh the amount from the most
bilrgh, and SOIUO; Cleveland. .Actual constructicin is
modem coal-fired electric generating planfplant with
scheduled to start In 1982 and will continue for about 15
stack gas scrubbing equipment.
·
years.
·Residue from the. coal gasification facUlties, ·a c. · The optioned property is located ·from the West
cording to Orr, will be c;lispi&gt;sed Of In hollows near the
Virginia Exilerlmental Farm, along Route 62, to the
plant and then the property will be reclaimed.
The coal gasification facilities planned near Point
Traffic Circle (Wadsworth Ave.) and ipcludes some
Ira~ on both sides of the higl)way. The project would ·
Pleasant will be known as Ohjo Valley Synthetic Fuels.
also necessitate relocation of the Mason County AirIn conjunction with the project, Cons_?lidated
~.
.
Natural Gas CornpSl\y and somo have made joint apIn all, according to Consolidated Gas Land and
plication to the Department of Energy in Washington
Real Estate Supervisor Ed Heiskell, the property
for a $4 million grant to do a feasibility study.
acqulsltionswilllnvolve12landowners.
"This," It was pointed out by' Orr, "is the only
The coal gasifl~tion plants will employ up to 3,000
federal funds that would be involved in the project. The
persons over a 111-year construction Period and 1,500
De~nt .of Energy will, announce on December 1
persons on a permm,ent basis for operation, It was
which of the many propotleC! coel gasification projects
in the United States will be awarded grant funds for
revealed by R. M.. Orr, manager, resources and
feasibility
•
materials, for ' CNG Energy Company, •a division rl
.... studies.

·e

•

- "We ti,Unk-we havt&gt; a good chance of beifig awarded --.
one of the.grants," Orr said, "and this wtuld be a shot
in the arm to mo.ve the project forward...
'
"Our immediate objective," Sl!id._Richard M~ ·
Clelland who heads the project, " is to obtain federal
funds to assist us with the feasibility study. This is the
first step. It- will take many more steps and numerous
federal and state approvals, plus proof that this plant
or any plant using eastern coal can be commercially
. viable, before we will consider COIU!truction.'' · ·
"The , Consolidated System," .according to McClelland, ''has been invohred In·the perfection of coel
gasifi~ation technology, while expending $26 million in
the development of and plarming for production of
pipeline quality gas froin coal. We have also acquired , .
613 inillion tons of recoverable coal reserves in Marshall County, West Virginia, and Green County, Pennsylvania, valued ,at more than $25 million." McClelland also stated that oth~ sources of coal supply
will be considered during the feasibility study. ,
Orr, serving as spokesman for CNG Energy Company, remarked that the proposed project would not be
abandoned even If for some reason the feasibility study
grant application is not approved.

at y

•

_ A very attractive combination Ji. Texacri . and
BGC!Lurgi coal gasifiers is being assessed by Ohio
Valley Synthetic. F.uels for the projeCt. This provides
distinctive economic and envlrorunental advantages.
For example, the coal ash would be an environmentally safe, glass-like substance.
In addition, ·energy production from coal
gasification is attractive envirOIUDentally. .
The plant envisioned in the proposal would be conslructed In phases and would ultimately produce 400
million· standard cubic feet per day of pipeline quality
gas and methanol for fuel and transportation ·use.
These products represent an oil equivalent of 86,200
barrels per day or 30,000,000 barrels each year.
The first phase of the initial plant could be put on
line in 1986 to produce 50 percent as and 50 percent •
methanol with an Investment of $600 inillion, Orr said.
He noted that coal to operate the plant at this point some one million tons per year- would be purchased
in and around West Virginia.
When the first.plant is fully operational, aCcording
to Orr, the facility would necessitate five million tons
of coal per year and Consolidated would then go to its'
(Continued on page 12)

enttne ,_.
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VOL. 31

FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 122

Deputi~~

.·

,.J. ... '

c'

·Priscilla's Po

checking

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BOOKS,
MAGAZINE:$,

·A RAPIO"'

,'

... ·
.·

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rob~ery

Ed Sullivan;.

~JHBJ"tiSE:f~

I
PRAC.TICA.l.LY
DIE OF

f30REPQM/

·OPEC will abandon dollar standard
NEW YORK- The Org~tion of Petroleum EXporting Countries
plans to abandon the dollar standard and switch to "a basket of 16
currencies" for all its oil ~ctions, reports a New York-based
energy P.Ublication.
'
•
The current OPEC pricing system calls for all payments to be made
in dollarS. The proposed system "would weight each currency, all
valuf!d against each other, to come UP, with an ave(age," said Harvey
Marris of·Harvey Marris Associates, an energy consulting firm-in New
Jersey.
.
. ·

Cruise bOat pass~ers ·,reacb, shor.e · ~
SITKA, Alal1k8 - l'aasengers from a -lifeboat that rescuers at first
missed In the pitcll-dark night and stormy waters of the Gulf of AlaSka
finally canie ashote 311.bours after they abandoned the buniing cruise
ship Prlnsendam.
.
In one of the biggest sea-rescues In history, they and more than 500
other people were brought safely to land.
, By SUnday night, they and the other passengers from the 4011-foot
· luxury 1lner had been accounted for and w.ere safely ashore, said the
ship's owner, Holland.America CruiSes. Most were to head for their
homes todav by jet and bus.

.
.·. Newspapers endorse ·Reagan

CINpJNNA'11 - Scripps-Howard newspapers today endorsed
RepubllCil!l Ronald Reagan for president.
. Despite the endorsement, the newspapers' editorial depicted the ·
Ideal candidate for president as younger than Reagan, with more experience in national and international affairs and one who would "not
say silly things that call for a lot of explanatiorls later."
•
•But it said Reagan "was a more successful governor of the largest
state (California) than (President Jilnrn)l) Cartet was of a small one
(Georgia)," that Reagan surrounded himself with able people as
governor, and has "recruited an Impressive brain trust for this elec-·
tloq."
.
.

Franklin may face state charges
.,.,

··•.·

SALT LAKE CITY - Authorities say they are considering filing
state charges against Joseph Paul Franklin, a fugitive who faces
federal counts In the killings of two black· joggers and Is wanted for
questioning in slayings of blacks across the country.
Among the shootings that police want to question Franklin about is
the May sniper attack on civil rights leader Vernon Jordan in Fort
· Wayne, Ind.
.
Franklin also Is Wlillted for questioning In the llel!tha of a white
woman and a· black man In Johnstown, Pa., two black youths In Cincinnati, and a black '1lllll and white woman in Oklahoma City.

.weather forecast .
Partly cloudylonlght and TUesday. Lows tonight In the1ow to mld4011. Highs Tuesday in the rnl~. Chance of ralli 10 percent tonight
and Tuesday. Winda southwesterly 11H5 mph tonight.
·

IIIMIIR C~'i(,CUt.llt

'"'"

UTW1ATU ·'

ExtetldedOhloForeeut- . WednesdaythroughFrtday:Falr
through the period. Highs tn the low to mid-70s. Lows in the upper 30s
to lower 4011 early Wednesday and in the mld-40B to near~ early 'Diur·ac~ay and ~day.

, IIIDWP'I'Iik -

flrt..,..,

Oblo Nlllwl Gulnl

'Ibe Meigs &lt;;ounty Sheriff's Depar- ·
tment is investigating an armed robbery that occurred l!atllrday at 5: 40
p.ni. at the Ridgeview Carry Out on
SR 681 near the Athens-Meigs county
line.
AccOrding Investigating officers, a
.lone mail entered the carry out' and
· pulled a blue steel revolver on the
clerk, Mrs. Marai)a Webb and
demanded money from the cash
register: Mrs. Webb gave the Dian
approximately$2116.69.
The alleged robbrr warned Mrs.
Webb not to follow or he would blow .
her head off; AB he left he drove
southbound oi1681. It was reported
that Mrs. Webb fired two sbots at the
car. It is not known if the bullets
_ fired struck the vehicle.
The person Is described as a white
male, 5 feet 10 inches tall, 28 to 30
years of age, with short black hair,
.-clean shaven, very thin and was
wearing a black leather jacket and
black derby hat.
The vehicle.was described as dark
green or black over medium green
and was described as a medlwn
sizedcar. ·
Area departments responded to
the call and assisted In the search.

Five · mon~y

suits· filed
Five suits for money have been
filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Nancy ,J . Adams, Rt. 3, Ra~ine,
filed suit for $50,000 against John
Hancock Mutual Ufe Insurance Co.,
Boston, Mass, et , I)], and $200,000
against United Investors Life InsUrance Co., Kansas City, Mo., eta!.
The suit is for amount allegedly
· due on policies plus accidental death
benefits. The,compimies have failed
to pay the face &amp;n~ount of the pollees
and the accidental benefits to the
beneficiary, Nancy J. Adams, according to the entry in Common .
Pfeas Court.
A suit for· $100,000 was filed by
Mary Jane Herald, Middleport,
against Orval J. Kerns, Belpre, for
injuries sustained In an accident
that occurred Nov. 7, 19'18 on SR 71n
Gallla County.
.

1erDooil. Tile lGe pet'lllllnu.ndlni thnchool rec:elved
cl• _. llllllllfl!ecl illltrlldlalllll water necue,

ll•lcl•ittl•edJulllfter-.Ru'1JIJtotllliepmt
In.
ldloclllleld Ill 1111 Pcluwo.r . . . Tile
farm ..,., • to equlpniDt cliff ..... fllld freeinl
llllllllo pia ........... to ...... OuQ llld ....... - . vldlnll fnm. moW v.Nclee during tbe day-long
vlllel' _ . . , . ....... to IChool putldpaala Sunday.,_
aehool, ..
..,..

QUEEN AND COURT :-'Making up the C0!1r1 for
the queen at Marauder Stadium Friday night were,
front, 1-r, Patty Cremeans, Linda Kove,tchik, Queen
April King, Linda Eason, Nancy Wallace and Sheila
Fetty; back, Scott Hartinger, Rick Chaney, Mike

Miller, Steve Ohlinger Steve Hood, and David
DeMoskey. The queen was crowned by Meigs High
School Principal James Diehl during pre-game
ceremonies.

Deer-car ·wrecks keep patrol busy
It was.•an unlucky weekend for
both deer and motorists in ·Meigs
County, as the Gailla-Meigs Post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol reported ·
three auto-deer accidents.
The patrol said Brian K. Bran. denberry, 22, Coolville, was northboWKI on CR 1 at 1:25 a.m. Saturday when a deer ran into the path of
his car.
Unable to stop, Brandenberry's
car stnick the deer, which then fled,
. troopers said.
·
Brandenberry was uninjured and
slight damage ·was done to his car,
they added.
Troopers·said Jerry G. Holley, 19,
Pomeroy, was southbound on SR 143
at 8:~ p.m. Saturday when a deer
~as struck and killed by his car.
According to tQe repc:irt, there
were no Injuries and slight damage
was listed to Holley's car.
Another deer was killed in a one-

car collision at 9:25 p.m. Saturday
on SR 338, the patrol said.
Troopers said Joe F. Congo, 26,
Racine, was southbound when a deer
ran in front of his car. Congo was
uninjured and slight damage reported to his car.
A Bidwell woman was injured in a
one-car accident probed by the
;~Btrol early Sunday morning.
According to the report, Shirley L.
Morris, 19, was northbound on KerrHarrisburg Rd. at 4 a.m. when her
car went off the road and overh!med.

Morris, whose car was
demolished, complained of injuries
and was taken to Holzer Medical'
Center, where she. was treated and
released.
The patrol cited a Racine man for
DWI in a one-car crash in Meigs
County late Sunday night.
·
Richard R. Young, 40; was eastbound on SR 1~ when his car went
off the Ie.ft side.of the road, struck an
embankment and overturned.
According to the report, YoWlg
was uninjured but his CB.1' was
demolished.

Pyramid cases going to jury
The Meigs County Prosecutor's office will take pyramid cases to the
grand jury Wednesday, according to
Carson Crow, assistant pro8eeutor.
No charges have been filed against three alleged l_)articipanl:!! ln. ~

FIRE SAFJ!:TY - Bob Bailey, left, coordlna~. of
lhe MeJ&amp;s County Emergency Medical Services, confers with Melp County ~oners Chester Wella,
center, and Henry Wella,at the lunch break of the CCJUIIo
ty lire safety !lChool held Sunday in the Pomeroy area.

"business list" concept meeting in
Middleport raided by local pollee ,
last month, authorities said.
Prosecutor Fred W. Crow ill said
last week he would take the cases to
[Conllnued !!_n oa!!!'.lV .

The luricbeon \1181 staged for the IIOille 100 partlcipanta
not oii1y from f)lelp County but from either area fire

and emergency· groups it the Meigs Senior Citizens.
Center by the Melp Retired Senior Program.

�2-The

.
Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
'

0 ., Monctay, Oct. 6, 1!180

•

'

3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct. 6,1980.

In NL West race
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,---------~--------,TM

Opinions &amp;
Comments

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!USPS 145-9111)
DE.VOTED TO 111E

Playoff will
....
d
.
d.ee1 e Issue

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C~AT~AM ,

I

~--------------------~----~~~~----~41
111E 04ll.V SENTINEL
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OU~'FOL.~S
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VA.

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Utt.en el opbUc. are welcqmed. The~ JIMuld be leu tlula 311 wordt loq (or 111b~t &amp;o ~
Uti by,tbe edl~ ) ud mul be slped with _
u.e slgaee' s addresa. Names may be wiw-eld upoa
Pl!blk:attoD. However, oo requnt. namet wW be dbcl!)led. Letten ahou1d .br: in good tll1ie, ad-

dnul.rrtu~~e~, oot penoa.IJUet!.

Publllled daOy eseepl S.tvay by The Ollto VaUey Publiab.iai Cempuy- M)alt:lmiedla, IK.,
IU_Coart St., Pomn'Oy, Ofalo ti7Q. ~taeas Offlee Pboae ttZ- ZlM. Editerf.ll Pboae tt2-!157.
8ecoDd clau po&amp;taJe r-Id at Pomeroy, Obi!~·
NaU0111I ~e1'111lag, represtatatiw, Lalldoa Aaaoclat.es, JlOl EueUd Ave., Clevelaod, Oldo
fUll •.

Tilt Aaaociat.ed Preas is uclwdnly eottd~ to the un for puPIIcatlo• ol all
tftCHted to the MW1paper aDd also d!f total aews published he~lii -

DtWI

41Jpattlles

Piblbller

RobcrtWIDiell

Gemeral Mgr. &amp; City Editor

Robert HoeOif!h

News Edltar

Adv. MaUJer

~I?.A.

Dale Rotll&amp;eb. Jr.

lf;C...a.

. ~~ ~'-"T'.O .-.-.ec::loo=o

Carl Gbtta ·

t5f
MEIGS' RESERVE VOLLEYBALL TEAM Team members are, front row, Mae Nakamoto, Denise
Cobb, Juli &lt;;!obb, Cathy Dean, and Renee Willis holding ·

Economic mood
of the 80's: fear
In the 1930s the nation was depressed. In the years of the
Big War it was determined, in the early postwar years uncertain, in the 1960s enthusiastic, in the 1970s increasingly
sober and cautious.
What will be the economic mood of the 1980s?
. Fear might be considered in your assessment. It seems
to be everywhere - at the breakfast table, in the bars, in
the factories, the offices, the bookstores, the private clubs,
· the campuses, the executive suites.
The fears are pervasive. A feeling exists that interest
rates, prices, jobs, the housing market and more fail to
respond to the conunands they are given. Afear e;ists that
economic leaders cannot get results.
"It seems that the legacy of the 1930s - fear of protracted hard times - has been displaced in the 1980s by fear of
hard times with ever-rising prices," says Citibank in its
Monthly Economic Letter.
·
The surveys say something of the same sort. Although
some analysts see some improvement, consumer op- ·
timi.Sm remains low. Business confidence is depressed by
: ~ high ad rising interest rates. Investor confidence, at times
bullish, seems to be easily shaklln by the least bad news.
The most glaring evidence 'is found amqng the better
selling business books, many of them written by "financial
evangelists" who· warn of the coming collapse of economic
society. Prepare now, they say.
First on at least ohe popular best-seller list is a volume
called "Crisis Investing," by Douglas Casey. Ashley
Bladen's ,'How to Cope With The Developing Financial
Crisis," is prominent. 'The Coining Curretlcy Collapse,"
by Jerome Smith recently appeared in bookstores.
The nature of popular market letters reveals the same
fears. Howard Ruff's_"Ruff Times" is one of the more successful letters of all time. A half-&lt;lozen others carry the
~me me~age: economic collapse.
Seminars roam the country preaching the same sermon,·
: and people sometimes pay hundreds of dollars to hear the
. message . .
You don't have to look hard to find the same types on
Wall Street. While they have always been there - there
seems to be a market for advice of almost any sort - no
longer are they on the fringe.
Fears also are revealed in the gold and silver markets,
which
have been rising almost solely on fears that
1
economies will collapse or, short of it,. that inflation will
destroy the value of paper.
The sense that economic events are beyond control of .
elected officials and their economic aides, seems to induce
widespread fears and a detennination by people to take
their own private defensive measures.
It may be true that.relatively few (so far as can be determined) are buying dehydrated foods, as Howard Ruff
suggests, but they are buying gold and real estate and
other tangibles that might hold their value.
The debacle might be delayed, it might not come. It
might be 'Only a neurotic fear. But having seen so many
fiscal and monetary policies fail, and so many promises
forgotten, people seem unwilling to trust very much.

Berry's World

~ Bryant

.

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Reagan·: a cautious front-t.u nner
"

centrale on the down side of m'
NEW YORK (AP) - Ronald
his Waldorf 'I'ower Hotel suite, he af·
Reagan says he doesn't feel like a , finns his opposition, but'avoids.any _ cumhency, to focus his Campaign on
front-runner in the race for the
ftat commitnient to repeal or abQlish Carter's reco~d in office. "He can't
run on the record," Reagan Said.
White House, not up against an in- · any of them. ·
cumbent president. But the
That's the style of a candidate who · "H~ has to retreat from it or hide
Rewblican presidential nominee acfigures he is ahead and doesn't want from it ... He; in an attempt to cover
ts like one, guarding bis words,
to make many waves. The latest AP- that up has been resorting to .per·
sonal attacks, and I'm not going to
hfldging his answers. •
NBC News poll, completed Sept. 24,
shows Reagan preferred b;r 42 per- answer them. I'm going to keep
\Fie's not even angry abollt the
Panama Canal treaties these days,
cent of likely voters, President Car- talking abliut bis record."
That is why Reagan doesn't want
ter by 33 percent, independent John
although he used to denounce them
as a dangeroll8 giveaway of
B. Anderson by 13 percent, with a to issue new conunitments, discuss
American property. · That was
handful for other candidates and the in detail what he would do in office
or debate Carter, although he says
Reagan, the challenger, four years
rest undecided.
back. Reagan the nominee said he'd
"I know what the polls say and all he would if Carter also debated Ancheck 01\ implementation of the
that, but that's not all that decisive . derson.
treaties but wouldn't try to undo
when ·you li!Ok 'at that uncommitted
So when he is asked what he would
them and keep the canal.
do about the conflict in the Persian
group and I find it very difficult to
Campaigning, Reagan . regulRrly
feel like a front-runner when you're Gulf, Reagan says he doesn't know
denOUIICell draft registration, the
up against an incwnbent," ·Reagan
all the options, awaits an adDepartment of Energy, the sD-Called
ministration intelligence briefing on
said.
the
situation.
windfall profits tax. Interviewed in
Reagan's strategy is to con-

On the handling of the hOstages in
Iran by a Reagan administration, he
suggests that the Americans may be
freed in an "October surprise" iO:
tended by Teheran to dampen bis
elect!on pnispect.s.
·
.
So, too, on less explosive
questions. On draft registration, fop
example, Reagan says he would
seriously consider tenninalini: the
program Carter instituted. He's said
all along it Is inetfective and pointless, but he stops short of promising
an end to lt.
There's a month of campaigning'
to go, and that siyle could change if the pollsters' odds tilt toward Car"
ter. But at this' point, Reagan Is
playing it like a conservative with
something to conserve, determined
not to squander bis edge by taking
wmecessary chances. '
•
·

Marjorie Holmes:you'd want her on your side
.

'

there are only · three accepted
loaded with sugar and drenched with glorious adventures of each new
methods of treating cancer:
poisons. Rachel Carson (a11thor of day."
•
surgery,
radiation
•and - "Silent Spring") told me once that if
So, vitamins and God go together:
chemotherapy. All are destructive.
any of us made a list of the additives "Physical things are profoundly
As in warfare, although you hit the
on the labels of the food we buy and .related to spiritual things," says this
target, you generally destroy the
took it to the neighborhood druggist, charisiJ¥1tic Episcopalian. Exercountryside.
he would . demand a doctor's cise, diet and .faith are her Holy
- "Both the American Cancer
prescription or make 118 sign a Trinity.
'
Society and the Department of polson register 6efore allowing 118 to
I spent. an evening with Marjorie
Health, Education and Welfare have \have them."
Hohnes several years ago. She mU5l,
fervent anti-smoking campaigns.
- "The power of the food indll8try
have been in her late 60s then, (She
Yet if they were really concerned Is enonnous. They own us, body and doesn't give her age in "Who's Who
about ·cancer caused by smoking,
belly. But they also want to own our in America" but she graduated from
they would tell us about protective minds. They spend billlona selling us college in 1931). I was channed. She
measures and publicize the fact that
on the marvels of the food they sell
was youthful and lively. And lovely. .
VItamin A prolectB ag&amp;lnst lung can- 118 to eat. They have billions to spend
I asked her how she got so much
cer and Vitamin C against cancer of -on endowing the nutrition depart- energy into all 4-foot·l~ inches of
'the urinary tract.
ments of universiUes and on a vast her.
·
-'"More people make their living anny of media spokespeople who
from cancer than die from cancer.
spout the cliche that 'you'll get all
"God and vitamins,'' she IIBid. ~
- food,
The American Cancer Society alone
the vitaminll you need if you just eat parently the book was already In the
In her newest bollk, "God and takes in mind-boggling sums from
a balanced diet.' "
works in her mind
·
Vitamins,'; the little prayer lady W.: donations . .. It maintains a huge
The bOoks Is more about vitamins . She is now on the lecture circuit,.
folds·her clasped hands, curls her lip staff with genei"OUII expense acthan God, but Ms. Holmes still burning the ladies' ears with a few'
and utters a few choice remarks:
counts anii handsome aalaries.
believes that "God will take care of strong words they may never have
- ''The greatest coverup of all has spend millions on administration, yoti." If, that Is, we take care of the heard from her before. She says It
been the suppression of the evidence public relations, parties, fundbody He gave us. And If we renounce 1 all in ladylike fashion, but if.I were
negative, · worried thin1ting and · the AMA, the FDA or General Millll,
concerning Laetrile.
raising and advertising.
.
- "In curtent medical practice!
- "Today's processed foods are "thank~ fOI" the gift of life and the I Would be WOrried.

By George R. Plageoz
She's a tiny woman, not at all formidable looking. But if ~ were the
American Medical Association, the
Food and Drug Administration or
General Mills, I would want her on
my side, not against me.
As one of America's favorite inspirational writers, Marjorie
Holmes commands the attention and
allegiance of millions of women in
this country. If they have learned to
trust her to put their deepest
longings into prayer (her previous
works include the bestsellers "I've
GQt to Talk to SOmebody, God," and!
"Hold Me Up A Little LOnger,
·Lord"), they will certainly trust her
when she talks to them about the
second closest thing to their hearts•
I

Unemployment: you can take it .very
By wllll8m sieiii ~ ·
You probllbly have noticed that
the nation's unemployment rate Is
boJ!!ling somewhere between 7 and 8 ·
percent If you've gof a job, 't hat
may not mean much to you. If you'
don't, you can take It very personally.

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The federal goYenuuent Is sensitive to job!-. More so, in
fact, than you may thlnll.

The u. s. Department of Labor
has been nllllling the U. S. Em-'
ployment Service for a 101111 time,
and an outcrowth ls a CCIIIIIiulerize '
Job Bank that bepn back in 1M8.
U I wen loakinc for wwk, that's I
where rd atart.
.
Tbe Job Bll* ._.t lilt an the 1

@ 1810 by N!A Inc.

• "f tfk• II, lhlln, 111111 you do not epptove of IIHI
ptopoJJd·NINE-dlgft zip code."

'

joblavallable in the COIIIIIry 111 any
1
meaDL Pat Kine. an llqi)OJiiMit
.me. D""P' •• analJit.· 11)'1 it '
/covtn an)J lD to • )lll'eent of the :
'lobi Wlltlll&amp; to be fll1ld. ODe liar tiU II that I'IIUibiJ two-tire~~ of '
ltbe jobl flUid in the natllla a r t lil&amp;ecl anywllere. Private em'plo,ment lll'\'lcell DVVIOUII1 cover

some jobs not listed with the Job
Bank.
But many of the natim'a biggest
employers bllve bee:ome Died to aending their employment orderl to the
Job Bank, which ls apllt 111110111200
aplllc; ........... _ The _ft....._
geogr
..._ ...,...
..,.......1 - "
llsn5-atffennt•ob
·dlaracterlltlca,l
J
including pey, and everY workday
thleJobllal)kgrlndsoutanewlllltlng
1'

of uniiJied jobs. ,

That means the Job Bank,!
available at any state employment
office, liste hundreds of tboll8ands of
permanent, full-time jobs.
Mote than that, the computer
capability permlta the Job Bank to
.... occupatim in demand - that ·-'"•
the Jolf mOlt U"'f
•-uently. li8ted and
where they are. For example, in
July there ware nearly 3110,000 jobs
in about 121i different catesories
""'

~eriously

listed in the Job Bank. More' than
half of these
·
were filled durinc the
month. Incre&amp;ses inJlwnben of Job
openings between June and July
were 15 to 31 percent In Birnungham, Ala., Miami-Ft. Lauder·
dale Fla Col bla S C and
'
••
wn
• ·' ·•'
T~,Fia
.
There are two
to
Bank. u you're ·1:'r.:•the ~
Is, ready to 80 to work tomorrow _

Today
in
'histolj-.
•
•
·1· :te~~::::1 .
I

the:

you're not quite )ll'lllafed to 10 to
Todaii8M~,Oct.e, the~ fetaiCI! In Salt Lake City lbollshed workhelp.:!;
Ba HotJqp caa
day of'18.,. There are • dQileft in polypmy
·
you bwldliDa'fllllble
the ;rem-.
In 1827; the talkq picture era
where ~ work Ia and wbat It_
WaJ!IchlllhliniUtorJ:
bepn~. theopentncaf''Tbe_J_:
Tbe u.
-·~
On Oet. •• 1111, America'• flnt 8lnpr0 ltarrincAl~
~ ...... ,_.,..,.
1
German Httlera arrived in
And in · - rw.ft~ v.o ·.......
placea 7 toe mll1kln peaple Ill . .
- · ........_...
every ,... 1111 ..,._ XJnc. ....
Pblfadelphla.
elecledJMelidelitofCblna.
empl~ omc. (aftla Ill ...
Onthlldate:
rm ,.,.. •. Cldnultablllbed. - hoit!d!lll wltll - ...
,,
Inlt10,KJnclllllrJVIaf~ diplomatic relatione with
WUreleallllfnllltheTowwofLano · Baqlaclelh four yean after
ae11ng and !tot!nc ~
~ 1111, a Morman Cllun:h ce&amp; ~'I irar of lwlependence P•IIIDalt plcb the llllln tab
with Jleklstan .S
tor state emplOJ"*!l a wiew,: .
.

:;!:

s.

....._._

illluWdaftkl.)lllo••:_.
..:i
uP

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team mascot "Hennan." Back row, Lorrie Snowden,
Suzao Ughtfoot, Sherry Holtz, Dixie Eblin, Tina East,

assistant coach Cherie Lightfoot . .

•

captures 300th wzn

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
· Now that Bear Bryant has reached
': ihe 30().victory plateau, is he looking
forward to No. 301? Nppe, the next
· 11wnber Bear Is concerned with is 76.
: · ·"All I've heard abjlut WRS 300, 300,
· 3oo," Bryant groused after top-rated
Alabama trounced Kentucky 45-0
· Saturday and made him the. thitd
coach in college footbllll ·history to
register ·300 victories. " ! want to
make it clear that from now on I'm
. not talkiing any ntimhers game.
From here on I'm worried about No.
78."
'That's because t)Ie "sorry" side of
Bryant's magnificent record shows
77 losses along with 16 ties.
·
U Bryant doesn't tliink much of his
latest achievement, Kentucky's
Fran Curci has a different opinion.
He called the 67-year-old Bryant "a
phenom just to be able to survive
this long. All of Bear's teams play
hard Clearly, he has more talent
than mtll!t people. If anything, he

tried to hold the score down. "
Whil~ Alabama kept rolling along
- 25 consecutive victories in its
quest for an unPrecectented 'third
consecutive national championship
- four members of The Associated·
Press Top Twenty were not so fortunate. Second-ranked Ohio State
bowed to No. 11 UCLA 17-4, thirdrated Neliraska was knocked off, by
No. 16 Florida State 18-14, No. 9
Missouri fell to No. 17 Penn State 2921 and Louisiana State trimmed No.
19Florida24-7.
However, 12th-ranked Oklahoma,
smarting over its loss to Stanford·
anil subsequent drop out of the Top
Ten, stonned back with a vengeance, a wild, recol-d-setting 82-42 rout
of hapless Colorado. The Sooners
rolled up 758 yards rushing and 875
in total offense - both NCM recor·
ds - while the combined total of 124
points set a modern standard.
Fourteenth-ranked Arkansas,
which piled up 610 yards in a 44-7

triwnph over TeliRS Christian, didn't
even bother to look for a place in the
record book.

worked the count to 3-2, once fouling
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
a ball off his left foot before he hit a
· Houston and Los Angeles meet · LaCorte fastball deep into the stands
today in the first regular-season
in lelt..Center field.
playoff game in the National League
Houston led 3-0 at one point. The
since 1962, and the Astros know, to a
Astros scored twice in the second off
man, they must put the past behind .Dodgers starter Burt Hooton on runthem.
scoring singles by Alan Ashby and
Facing elimination for three
Craig Reynolds. Puhl doubled home
straight days, the Dodgers swept ·another run In the fourth.
.
Houston at Los Angeles to force a
Dave Lopes drove in one Los
sudden-death game in Dndger
Angeles run in the fifth with a single,
Stadium, The team;~ wOUnd up the
and the Dodgers got within one In the
regular season with 92--70 records.
seventh on an RBI pinch single by
, "The last three games are in the
42-year-old Manny Mota.
past," Astros second baseman Joe
Elsewhere in the league, Montreal
Morgan said. "We just have to go oul
edged Philadelphia &amp;-7 in 10 innings, ·
and kick ourselv~."
Pittsburgh blanked the· Chicago
Ron Cey, who drove in the tying •Cubs Hl, Cincinnati shut out Atlanta
run to send the first game of the
1-4 San Diego whipped San Fran•
three'game set into extra innings,
cisco
7-3 and St. Louis edged'the New
·was the hero again Sunday. Cey -York Mets 3-2.
slugged a two-run homer in the
Expos 8, Pblllleji7
eighth inning off reliever Frank
Jerry White hit a three-run homer
LaCorte to give Los Angeles a 4-3 ·in the bottom of the loth to lift the
victory.
Expos over the Phillies, who had
The Dodgers were involved in the clinched the NL East title the day
last NL · regular-season playoff, a
before ·with a 6-4, !Honing victory"in
three-game series against the San
Montreal.
.
Francisco Giants in 1962 before the
Philadelphia had erased a lHi tie in
league had split into divisions and inthe top of the loth on an error by
stituted a playoff for the pennant.
shortstop Jerry Manuel and John
They lost that set 2-1. .
Vukovich's RBI single.
The winner of today's game will
Phillies third baseman Mike Schbegin· the NL championship series
midt woWld up the season as the NL
Tuesday in Philadelphia.
home run (iS) and RBI (121) leader.
Los Angeles entered the eighth inPirates 1, Cuba 0
niilg trailing 3-2. Steve Garvey,
Dort Robinson tossed a four-hit
leading off, hit a bouncing grounder
shutout, and Bill Robinson drove in
to Astros third baseman Enos
Pittsburgh's only run. Robinson, the
Cabell. Cabell got caught between
pitcher, :walked one and struck out
hops, 1 and booted the ball for ' an
seven, and he got all the support he
error, aJiowing Garvey to reach firneeded in the fourth inning. Vance
st.
Law tripled and rode Bill Robinson's
Cey, who had taken the tape off his . single hOine.
.
sore right leg' earlier in the game,
Despite going ().for-4, the Cubs'
Bill Buckner wOUnd up with the NL
batting tiUe with a .324 average.
Keith Hernandez of St. Louis hit .321.
Recta I, Braves 0
Dave Collins drove in a run in the
eighth inning with bis third hit of the
game, and Joe Price and Tom Hwne
combined on a three-hitter.
·

Elsewhere,
fourth-ranked
Southern California nipped Arizona
State 23-21, fifth-rated TeliRS fiied
Rice 41·28, No. 6 Pitt mauled
Maryland 38-9, seventh-ranked
Notre Dame edged Michigan State
2&amp;-21, No. 10 North Carolina hammered Georgia Tech 33-4, No. 15
Stanford held off San Jose State ~
21, No. ·18 South Carolina smashed
North CaJ'Ollna State 30-10 and No. 20
Baylor clawed Houston 24-12.
Eigh~ranked Georgia and No. 13
Miami, Fla., were idle.
Besides Bryant, two other coaches
reached milestones. Tennessee
' State's John Merritt became a 20().
game winner when the Tige,rs whipped Long , Beach State $o18 and
Yale'sCannenCozzagotNo. UlOina
17·16decislonover Air Force. ·
Patrick set up
· Freslunan
touchdowns with rwis of 60 and 38
yards and scored on a 1-yard plunge
as Alabama crushed Kenti!CkY. The
· Crimson Tide struggled to a 14-4
balftlme lead but pulled away .by
scoring three touchdowns in a 2:20
span of the final perlod.
Oklahoma and Colorado bettered
Furman's 63-55 triumph over David- .
Deer hunting pernlits are now flees. The applications must be sub- ·-· son last year. Led by David Over·
·street's 258 yards and freslunan
available at most hunting license mitted by October a1.
Buster Rhymes' four touchdowns,
Public and landowner anUerless
agencies, Recording to the Division
the Sooners erased the old NCAA
Of Wildlife of the Ohio Department of deer pennits will be issued in Zone
marks
of 748 rushing yards by
Nabu-al Resources. Deer pennlts One for Allen, Crawford, Defiance,
Alabama
in 1973 and Wyoming's 871 .
cost $10.75 each and lire required in Delaware, Fulton, Hancock, Hardin,
overall
in
1941.
Henry, Logan, Lucas, Marion,
addition to a 1980 hunting license. Arkansas' offemtve display againOhio will have a deer gun season in Paulding, Putnam, Sandusky,
st
TCU include&lt;\ a school record 'SI
all88 counties thip year. The state Is Seneca, Union, Williams, Wood, and
first
downs to go with 475 yards on
divided into four deer.hunting zones. . WyandotCounties. InZoneFour,anthe
ground
- Darryl Bowles scored
· The season dates for the 1980 deer tlerless pennlts will be issued for
four Urnes- and 135 in the air.
Adams, Athens, Ashland, Belmont,
wnesare : ,
UCLA's Tom Ramsey engineered
ZONE ONE - December _I Brown, Carroll, Coshocton, Col~.
two
third-period tlll!chdown drives
throughDecember5, buck only (five biana, Fairfield, Gallia, Guernsey,
against
Ohio State, toesing an 11·
inch antler minimwn). Antlerless Harrison, Highland, Hocking,
yanf
pass
to JoJo Townsell for the
deer pennits will be avaiiRble for Holmes, Huron, Jackson, Jefferson,
first
one.
selected counties. Kelley's Island Is Knox, Lickirig, Meigs, Monroe,
Ohio State quarterback Ar$
Morgan, Morrow, Muskingwn,
closed ~o gWl hunting.
Schlichter
was shaken liP.in the fourZONE · TWO - December 1 Noble, Perry, Pike, Richland, Ross,
111
period
but
is expected to be ready
through December 5, buck only (five Tuscarawas, VintOn, Washington,
next
week.
··
and Wayne Counties.
inchantlerminlmwn).
blew
a
14-4lead
against
Nell.iska
Landowner antlerless pennlts
ZONE THREE ,.. December l for
Flo&amp;ia State when the Seminoles
buck or doe. December 2 through only will be available in Franklin
rallied on four field goals by Bill
·
December 5, buck only (five inch an- CountyofDeerpmeTwo.
Capece an~ Sam ~latt's &amp;-yard 1'!1'1·
The deer longbow hunting season
tler minlmwn).
ZONE FOUR - December 1 . will ()pen sta~wide for deer of either
through December 6, buck only (five . ~~ on' October 10 and continue
inch antler minimpm. AnUerless through January 17, 1981. Hunting
deer pennits will be avaiiRble for hours are one-baH hour before
sunrise to one-baH hour before sunselected counties..
Legal fireanns for the deer gun set. Longbow Sl!BSOn is closed during
season are a shotgun using a single the deer gun season.
The special primitive weapons
blill or rifled slug, or a single shot
mqzzle-loading rifle Of .38 callber or deer hunting season will.be Novemlarger. Hunting hours .are from 7 ber 3 through November 8 .on three
designated are. Bucks only may be
a,m. to5p.m.
taken during this season. The hunThis year, free public antlerless
deer pennits !rill be available iii 53 ting areas are Shawnee state Forest
selected coimtles of Deer Zone One in Scioto and Adams Counties, Wildand Zone Four. An application blank · cat Hollow in Athans, Morgan, and
for a public antl~riesa deer hunting Perry CounUes, and Sail Fork
pennlt Is attached to the pottom of Wildlife Area in GuerllllllY County.
the 1!180 deer pennlt. Hunters wan- Legal hunting · devices for the
. ling to apply fOI" ,nilerlesa
r hun- primitive weapon aea.son are ~lingle
. ling permitS have until
r 22 to shot muzzleloadlng rifles of at least
1.,
.38 caliber, muzzle-loading rifles of..
mail their applications.
at 1ea1t .38 caliber, mualelplldlng
applicants will be d .
·s1Jot8w!B uaing a single b8U, or .
1-andom computer sel
longbow and arrow.
.
be notified by fll8lli
pennita are valid oruv---.aurlng the
The ltatewlde primitive weapons
deer hunt will be January ~. i981
deer gun aea.son.
Qualified disabled vete
who fOI' either buck or doe. deer. Legal
have'certification fi'QIIl the Veterane hunUng lmplemente are the same as.
AdmlnlstraUm and are e:&amp;emJt for the special primitive weapom
from purchulng a hunting license or season except CI'OI!IIbowll may also
deer Permit may request an an- be Died.
tlerleu deer . pennlt application
Deer CI'OI!IIbow season II open
from the Olvllion of Wlldllfe, Ohio statewide f!ll' deer of any sex
Department of Na~ Ralclumll, November 17 through January 17,
' Survey and Invenlori Section. 1500
1981. Huatinil hours are one-half
. Dublin Road, Columbul 43215. Ap- before IIUIII'IIe to one-half hour after
pllcati\JIII must be submitted by Oc- 8UI1llel. Crolllbowa mllllt hive a
'WOI'Idlts lllfety and a one-piece stock
tober :II.
Landownen may obtain one more than 2li incbes ICJIII.
family anUerleu deer pennlt that
Huntlni ot Ill wild anlr.lall except
'..non the Iandowller af the Jan. deer and waterfowl II pi'Qldblled
dow1w'1 cblldnn to hunt apUerteu statewide during the dayJllht houri
.deer m their piOjMII1Y in countlel of the deer gun-. the dayllcht
apeelflell for ant1erlea pertta. Only houri dqrinl the ltatewide prlmitiVII
-~deermaybetlk•per
-JICIIII - 1111, and dariD8 thl
pennlt. W!Oiw- appllcatlonl fGI'- primitive. WIIJICIIII - - Gil the
tine primitive napalll.,... from
• 1111 art. avalllble at oftlclal deer
! '
....... ltaliona and COiUity Soli Novembers tbrouch November a.
and Watl!r eor- vaticld Dlltrlct of-

Den Talk·

Linnie

'

I'

\

Insurance Package

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' - - - -- - -

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\~.:0:... -!' ~~"!'-·\1 :.10 ::-'PJ

PAINT SALE
NOW .IN PROGRESS
10%

CORRAL&amp;'! FIRED
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) Texas IIUIIIlller Pat Corrales wu
fired Sallday and wlll be offered
another polllloa wttbln tbe club
organbatiOD, the t2am'1 board .
ebalrman wd.
.
Club president Ecldle Robin!loD,
IIIII been given .a new title of
eseeuUve vice presideD! wtlh total
reapoualblllty lor baseball
· operatioDI, said Eddie Cblles, iD a
news eoafereuce beld iD the pl'I!SI
box Immediately followiog Te:raa'
seaaoJtoendlllg :J-2 win over Seattle.

QUESTION:
~~rve

tried hard
to conserve
natural gas.
But is it
helping?"

II ,

----

.

'

lNTEIIESl OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

BASEBAlL
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Jerry
Coleman was fired as manager of
the &amp;!II Diego Padres and will
· become the club's director of broad- ·
~~, -.

to 40%

OFF

VANGUARD PAINTS
.

"For All of Your Paint Needs"

EBERSBACH.HARDWARE
Pomeroy, OH.

110 w. Main St.

ANSWER:
"Yes!
Usage is.down 15%,

•

a savings that helps
all of us now ...
and for the future.~'
Thanks to your conservation efforts, natural
gas usage by residential c.ustomers has ~ctually
decreased-down approximately 15% smce 1972. ·
That's progress.
This doesn't mean, however, that the need for
conservation is any less pressing. It is important
that we continue ro find ways to use energy
more efficiently.
And while you contin11e to conserve at home and
at work, Columbia is continuing and expandmg.
efforts to add to our natUral gas supply capab1ht1es.
We've stepped np our drilling programs. New plJl':'·
lines are planned. Vastly expanded storage fac1ht1es
are under construction. And new gas-producmg
technologies are being researched and developedwith synthetic gas already a factnr in our supply
picture.
All of the effort-yours and ours-has been
worth it. Conservation is helping to keep natUral
gas the best buy for your energy dollar. Contmu~
conservation will help keep it a value ... and avwlable For ideas on ways to save energy, ask for our
free bOOkiet, "The Everyday Energy Saver's Guide."

I

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~WMBI~GAS .

'

·

Still your best enell.Y value.•
And we want to keep 1t that way.

f

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�'

5-The D8iiy Sentinel, Mi~eport-Pomero!, 0., Monda_y, Oct. 6, 1980

.,

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, oCt. 6, 1980

~L

home run cr.own·belongs
lo Re,ggie, :Brewer~' .Oglivie

SALE
DATES
OCTO IllER

6-11,
1980

to reach that plate.u in 13 years, as
" BY ASSOC.IATED fRFllll
Royals 4, Twlas 0 ·
he hurled the Orioles over CleVeland
' Ben Oglivie went out with a bang
Paul Splittorff and Rich Gale COlD'
with · late-inning relief help- from
· - Reggie Jackson just went out. The -- bined on a one-hitter and Hal McRae
DennisMartinez.
'
result was a tie for this season's hit a three-run homer to help West·
American League home run title.
winning KaJil;as City close aut its
" I don 'I want to try to hit one out · · regular season With a shutout Of
every time, but I did try for it Minnesota. - ·
today," Qglivie admitted Sunday af·
' K811§8S City's George Brett did not •
ter his 41st homer helped the play, leaving his average at .390,
Milwaukee Brewers win a ii.l, l:f- highest in the major leagues since
· inning game against Oakland.
ted Williams hit .400 in 1941.
Oglivie's blast tied Jackson for the
Willie Wilson, who on Saturday
league lead and came whiJ.e the New
night became the second switchYork Yankee $lugger was in the hitter in major-league history to get
clubhouse, having departed early 100 hits right-handed and 100 leftfrom the regular seasoiH!nding 2·1
handed, singled in the fifth inning for
victory over the Detroit Tigers.
hiS 230th hit, tying Pete Rose for !lie
Yankee Manager Dick Howser lif· most ever by a switch-hitter in a
ted Jackson after his right fielder season.
tripled In the second inning, pulllng
Orioles 7,1ndlans 1
his batting average up to .300 for the
Scott McGregor gained his 20th
MEIGS' VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Front
visor is Mrs. Jeannie Taylor. The group has new
first time in his 1f&gt;-year professional
vi_ct~, the 22nd Iialtimor~ pitcher
row, 1-r, Betsy Herald, Rhonda Southern· second row
unifonns. Money for tlje unifonns ·was made by selling
career. Howser, in fact, phoned the
Lori Rupe, Kenda Braun, am: : nda K~valchik. A:~
candy and through proceeds from tag day.
presshox froin the dugout to make
certain the _ hit put ·Jackson's
average at .300.
Oglivie ties Jackson
The triple was a drive to left off
Detroit's Dan Schatzeder on which
left fielder Steve Kemp missed a
for home run crown
diving attempt.
Jackson hit 41 homers with lll
By Tbe Associated Pre'ss
RBI along with his .300 average (acBen Oglivie of the Milwaukee
tually .2996, but rounded out to .300
Brewers hit his 41st home run SUnin the record books.)
day to tie New York's Reggie
RUNS : WiLson, Kansas
City,
134;
FINALSfANDINGS
In other AL games, Kansas City
Jackson as the American League's
Yount, Milwauk ee, 121 ; B.unbry, Balli·
AMERICAN LEAGUE
blanked
Minnesota 4-0; Baltimore
more, 117; • Henderson, Oakland, lll ;
leading home run hitter of 1980 on
EAST
Trammell. Detroit, 106.
W L Pet GB
Cleveland
7-1; Texas edged
stopped
the last day of the regular season.
RB~ : Cooper, M il wa uk ~, 122; G. Brett,
l ·Ne wYork
1113 59
.6.1!
Seattle
3-2;
Toronto
defeated Boston
Oglivie's homer in the Brewers' 5- ·
Kansas City, 118; Oglivie, Milwaukee,
Baltimore
100 62
.617
3
U7; Oliver, Texas, 117; Murray, BaltiMilwaukee
86 76
.$31 17
4-1 and Chfcago beat Califoriiia f&gt;-3.
4, !:&gt;-inning victory over the Oakland
more, 115.
il&lt;&gt;iton
13 77
.519 19
Oglivie's homer was a dTamatlc
HITS ' Wilson, Kansas City, 230; ~
A's
brought
him
even
with
Jackson,
Detroit
.519
19
"
78
er, Milwaukee, 219; Rivers, Texas 210·
,.
81
Cleveland
.494 Z3
one,
a solo shot in the ninth that
who
was
taken
out
of
the
Yankees'
2~~er, TexJ:Is, 209 ; Bumbry, Baltimor~·,
Toronto
61 95
.414 38
pulled the Brewers into a 4-4 tie.
1 win over Detroit after he tripled to
WEST
OOUB!..ES: Yount, Milwaukee, 49; Olix-KansasCity
· 9'1 s:; , .599
Then they won it in tile 15th on Vic
raise his average to .300.
ver , Thus, 43; Morrison, Chicago, 40 ;
Oakland
83 7!f
.$12 14
Harris's RBisingle.
·
McRae,
Kansas
City,
39;
Evaris,
Boston,
'
Kansas
City's
George
Brett,
who
Minnesota
n B4 .478 t9t..a
37.
Teus
76 8$
.472 2D'tl
Oglivie's
c~home run title was
didn't
play
in
the
Royals'
4-1
win
TRIPLES: Griffin, Toronto, 15; WUson,
Chicago
70 00
.438 a;
one Of two hitting championships
Kansas City,
l!i ; Washington, Kansas . over Minnesota Sunday, .was the
California
6i 95
.400 31
City, 11 ; I:.andrealll,
Minnesota
11 ·
Seattle
59 • 103
.364 38
won by Brewer players. Cecil
AL
batting
leader
with
a
unofficial
Yount, Milwauk ~. 10.
'
'
x-ctinc bed division title
Cooper
wound up as the AL's unOf·
HOME
RUNS:
OgUvte,
Milwaukee,
41
;
.390
average,
the
highesi
in
baseball
S.tunt.y'aGamH
Re.Jack.'lon, New York, 41 ; Thomas, Mil·
_Toronto 7.J, Boston 6-1, lst game 17 inficial
RBI
leader with 122 after
since Ted-Williams' .400 average for
wa ~ee, 33; Arma.s , oakland; 35; Murray,
run-scoring
single Sunday.
lashing
a
Baltimore,
32.
.
Boston in 1941.
?ew .York H, Detroit ~7
STOLEN BASES: Henderson, Oakla nd
Chicago 4, California 2
. . Yllllkees %, Tigers 1
Milwaukee's CecU Cooper led the
100; Wilson, Kansas City, 79 ; Di.lone:
Oakland 4, Milwaukee 0
·
Rookie Tim Lollar, making his ffr.
Cleve land, 61 ; J .Cnu;, 5eattle, 45; BUffi"
AL in RBI with 121.
Bal timor~ 3-t, Cleveland U
1st game
bry. Baltimore, 44.
13 Innings
'
st major league start, allowed two
Steve Stone of Baltimore was the
PITCHING ( 16 Decisiom) : Stone, Baltl·
Kansas City 17, Minnesota 1
hits in six innings and Eric
more. ~7 , .781 , 3.23 ; Darwin, Texas, IJ..
leading winner among pitchers will
Texas 11, Seattle 6
4, . 7~, 2.63 ; R.May, New York,_ 1&gt;5, .750,
S1Uiday'aGames
Soderholm,
slammed a tw~run
25,
against
seven
losses.
2.i6; McG regor, Baltimore, ~. .714,
Toronto 4, Bo:ston 1 ·
For o~er 20 years Doxol propane has been
homer, as the AL East champion
3.32; John, New York, 22-9, .710, 3.43;
Mike Sclunldt of the Philadelphia
New York 2, Detroit I
an effi cient economical answer to clean
M.Norns. Oakland, 21-9, .710, 2.53; Looe&gt;.
Baltimore 7, Cleveland 1
Yankees beat the Tigers.
Phillies led the National League in
Detrmt, 13-6, .684, 3.77 ; Travers, htll~
ChJcago 5, California 3
quiet
home heating as w~ll as cooking, '
The Yankees, who start the AL
waukee, lz-6, .667, !!.!r7.
home runs with 48 and in RBI with ·
Milwaukee 5, Oakland 4, 15 IMI.ng.s
S~OUTS : Barker, Cleveiand, 188;
Karuas City 4, Minnesota o
water heahng and clothes drying . .. and
playoffs in Kansas City on Wed·
121. Bill Buckner of ihe Chicago
M.Norrl!l, Oakland,
181 ; Guidry, New
TeJW 3, SeatUe 2
nesday,
finished
with
a
103-59
record
York
,
166;
Le&lt;lnard,
Kansas
City
1~
·
that
same pleasant, dependable service is
Cuba
led
the
NL
in
batting
with
324.
REGULAR SEASON ENDS
F.Bannister, Seattle, 1:H.
'
'
by )Vinning 17 of their last24 games.
The NL's leading winner was
still available . . . and it's still economical!
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Rhiladelphia's
Steve
Carlton,
24-9.
• NATIONALLEAGUE
BATnNG (44.$ at bat.s ): Buckn.e r, Chi·

BEEF.STEW .
'

0

18~2

0

r-=:::::.:..::...:=:..==.:=.::...::=:=;..l..===::::=:=:=:=:::;::::::::;_

MEAT

KAHN'S
$199
BIG RED SMOKIES .......~~: ..

•••
•••
•• •• •• ••

i&lt;AtfN'S _

Montreal

PI"-' burgh

st. Louis

New York
Chicago

W
91
90
83
14
67

L
71
72
79

64

98

WEST

88

95

Pc\. GB
.561
.a.'JSI
.)12
8
.437
J7
.IH 24
.396 'ZI

y-Hou:rton
9Z 70
.568
y·Los Angele.s
92 70
.568
Cincinnati
!9 73
. ~9
AU.,nta
81 80
.500
San Francisco
7S · 86
.466
San Diego
73 89
.IS!
x-c:tinched division tiUe
,.v-c:tinched tie ror
ion title

!F
'

J~

11
17
19\Z

S.tunloy~
..
Pnlladelphia 6, Mo a! 4, 11 innings
.Olicago 6, Pittsburgh 0

L. ..

New York 5,, St.Louis 2
Cincinnati 3, Atlanta 2
San Franci,sc(l 4, San Diego 2
Los Angele.!l 2, Howton l
Suaday'• Games
Pittsburgh 1, Chicago o
st.Louis 3, New York 2
Cincinnati 1, Atlanta 0

eago,

.3M;

K.Hernandez,

Templeton, St.Loub,

.:Sl9 i

St.UJuis,

.321 ;

Cedeno,

Hou.

ton, .309 ; McBride, Philadelphi.a, .3(19.
l!,UNS , K.Hernandez,
st.Louls
111·
" Sctlmidt. PhUadelphia, 104 ; Murphy, At~
lanta, 93; Dawson, Montreal 96· Rose
Philadelphia, 96.
'
'
'
RBI .: · Schmidt,
Philadelphia.
121 ;
Hendn ck, St.Lolli.5, l 09; Garvey, Los An·
gele.s,
100;
Carter,
Montreal,
101 ;
K.Hernandez, St. Louls, 99.
HITS: Garvey, Los Angeles, 200 · Richard.'l, . San Diego, 193; K. HerTumdez,
St.Lo~ ,
191 ; Buckner, Chicag~
18'1 ·
Rose, Philadelphia, 185.·
'
DOUBLES :
Ro.se,
Philadelphia ' 42 ·
Daw.son, Montreal, 41 ; Buckner, Chicago'
-«!'; . K . Hemaod~.. St.~, 39; Knight:
Cmcmnatl, 39.

TRIPLES:
R.Scott,
Montreal
13 ·
O.Moreno, Pittsburgh, 13; LeFlore: Mo;
treal , ll ; Herndon, S.m Francisco n ·
McBri~e, Phil.11 delphiil, 11); Griffey, '
cinnali, 10.

an:

HOME

Montreal I, r'hiladelphia 7, 10 innings

l..os Angele.s 4, Houstoo 3

San Diego 7, San Francisco 3
I
MGDday'JGI.Dle

C!ncinnati,

Houston (J.Niekro 19-12) at Los An@ eles
(Goltz 7-101
REGULAR SEASON ENDS
TODAY'S MA.Kli\LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BAmNG (415 at brats): G.Brett, Kansu City, .390; Cooper, Milwaukee, .3:i2 ;
Oilone, Oevela~ , .341 ; Rivers, Texa s ,
.333: Carew, California, .331.

RUNS'

Schmidt,

Philadelphia,

48; Homer, Atlanta, 35; Murphy, Atlanta.
33; Ca rter, Montreal, 29; Baker Los Angele:s, 29.
'
STOLEN BASES : LeFlore, Montreal,
97; o. ~ore no, Pittsburgh, 96; Collins,

19;

R.Scott,

Montrea\

63 ·

Richards, San Diego, 60.
'
PITCHING 116 Dec~lons ), Bibby, Pittsburgh, l!J-6, .760, 3.29; RelW, Los AnBe--

les, 1~ • .750, 2..51 ; Ruhle, Howton

12-4

.750, 2.39; Carlton, Philadelphia 24-9' rn'
2.34; Sutton, Los Angeles, 13-5,' .722,' 2.20:
Pastore, CinctMati, 13-7, .650, 3.27; Hooton, Lao Angeles, lH, .636, 3.116, Ruthven, Philadelphia, 17·10, .630, 3.63.'
STRIKEOUTS : Carlton , Philadelphia,
286; Ryan, Houston, 200; Soto, Cincinnati
111 ; P. N!ekro, Atlanta
176 · Blyleven '
Pittsburgh, 168.

'

''

•

Eagle volleyball

u. s. NO. 1 IDAHO

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APPLESAUCE .•.••...•.......... 2~~~=
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SAUE~KRAUT. ••••....••..•.•..•••• :~:;~ 4_9~
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KRAFT

64

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AP.PLES ··············· ~~~:!. 4
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89
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POTATOES ·············· ·.1

Middleport, Ohio

team on rampage
EAST MEIGS ~ The Eastern
Eagle Volleyball team has been on
the rampage this fall. The Eagles
own ll perfect 11.0 slate overaU that
currently leads the SVAC. The val'sity squad is led by seniors Pebbles
Blake, Laura Eichinger, and Deiuse
White who are backed strongly by
underclassmen Cassie Sheets, Sarah
Goebel, ·.Patty - Edwards Alison
Cauthorn ani:l Carolyn Bow~.
At the reserve level, Eastern owns
a winning record, coming on
stronger with each outing. April
Parker, Beth Ritchie · Carrie
Ch~valier, Dee Daile~, Kelly
Whitlatch, Pam Riebel, Jackie
Rapp, Fonda Rapp, and Janele Ely
make up the reserve team. Eagles
are coached by Mrs. Debbie Weber.

....... :................~.~:.~179

$}79

CE NT ER CU T

tCHUCK

...,.....

Call us, ~'d like to helD ,_.,

More sports
on page 10

1

~~~~~.~~~.~5fH~:.~1 39

VAUGHAN'S

GROUND

&amp;9
.

.
LB.
FRANKS ...........................
·... .

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

x-Philadelphia

$

KAHN..:_SREG.orSUB

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EAST

29

99

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RAGLE

p

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32-oz.
Jar

110.00 purch•••

GENERIC BUDGET BUYS

SEA
· CHUNK IN OIL
OR WAlER

PEANUT BUnER....................................'~~~· .95c

89~

TOMATO JUICE ......................... ;........... ~!~,~ 55c

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY ,

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VEGETABLE

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COCKTAIL
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SCALLOPED POTATOES............ :........ :... ~::· 59c
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DRY DOG FOOD ............:.:._. ...-.: -......... 25 ~il $] 79
..

~

\

..
11IE EASTERN EAGLES,
earready leadlag the SVAC's
·VoUey•u race, DOW owu a perfed 11-G record at the vanity
level Tbe local aellen co1181Jt &lt;1
eight leam members led by
SealOI'I DeuJJe Wblle, Laura
Elcbfa&amp;er, IUid Pebbles Blalte. ID
1llls receat aclfoa llllol, (Satwday J, tbe Eagles are showu Ia a
very Iough scrimmage •tile
•calullt arch rival Southera. The
lcrlmmace did not couut oa
eltller tum'• reeord, biUwasstJJJ ·
very eompetltlve. Tuesday
Eutem 11oe11 Soatbem IUid Haoaaa tnce Ia an SVAC tJi.aagular
lllllleh.

•

•

•

STOCK U". NOW

Suppose you had a special furnace and water
heater that could store heat, saving It for use
· throughout the entire day.
Suppose this furnace and water heater used
electricity only at night.
.
Suppose you could buy that' nighttime electricity at a new lower rete. And this lower rate
would apply to ell the electricity your home uses,
• every night Monc.lay through Friday from 11 p.m . to .
.7 a.m . plus all weekend around the clock from
Friday night until Monday morning.
: ·
Suppose all these things came true, wouldn't
t hat be great?
Well walt no longer because they've just
•
come true. Thanks to a new heating system called
Electric Thermal Storage. ETS, for short.
How ETS stores heat and hot water for your

horne Is an Interesting story. How ETS qualifies
you for a lower electric rate ma)les the story even
better.
·
·
Contact us to learn more about ETS. There's
much more we can tell and we'll give ~ou our
special SAVE' bOOklet on ETS. If you're
Interested, we'll ·estlmate how much
·l
ETS system could save you
!
and provide the names of
l.ocal ETS equipment
&gt;
· dealers. Electric -Thermal
•
i·
Storage ... we
•
thln!llrs the best·
thing to happen
,
In a long, long
time.
l
"la.. Amerlco'oYilluoblelneovY. ,1 .

j

~~---DAIRY. VALUES,_-~-----· FROZEN FOOO VALUES-- - - •

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$ lt.

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ICE. CREAM.,................

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"

�'
•

•

'

7-The Daily Sentinel,'Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 6, 1980

' ' I

•

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 6, 19110

Kearns, Hawk wed

,

•

I

Fall festival ca·ndidates'
.night pl~nned for Thursday
and invitations have been sent to
lly Susan Oliver
each individual whose name will be
Special correspondent
appearing on. the ballot this NovemThursday, Oct. 23, will be a fun
ber. This will be the. fourth Can·packed day ·filled · with ·. endidates' Night the Center has spontertainment, games, .. good food,
sored since 1976 and it has always
Country Store, and, in the evening, a
been well attended. J Din us on
chance for all of you to hear those·inThursday, Oct. 23.
dividuals. running for public office
APPLE BUTlER
express their views on ·their canIt's "apple butter" time again and
didacy and why you should vote for
we lvill be peeling apples on Wed·
them.
nesday, ()ct. 15, with the "s!irring"
The lunch menu will feature s;m·
on
Thursday, Oct. 16. The apples are
dwiches,•soup and dessert with each
ordered,
Louis Thompson · has
item . priced individually (no
some firewood
already
delivered
Nutrition Lunch will be served)·. A
(we
need
more)
and
we
will be again
dinner will be served from 5 p.m. un·
til' 7 p.m., ($3 adults, $2.50 senior asking to borrow kettles and
stirr~rs. The price this year·will be
citizens, $2 children, 12 and under).
Desserts will be priced separately $2.75 per quart so get your orders in
and let your friends and neighbors
tljat evening.
know that we are taking orders.
The entertainment and games will
We need all of your assistance for
'liegin at 12 noon and will be taking
place until apptoxirnately at 6:30 this two day project and, ai3 you
know, even though it is a lot of hard
p.m. The C!llllltry Store will be open
and dirty work, we all have a lot of
from 12 noon un~ll evening. The
fun in the process.
Country Store needs your help in·the
Remember, we must have your
"stocking" of its \shelves; .so if you :
containers (washed and with lids,
have craft itelllS, home-canned
please) here at the Center before
goods, dried flowers, or baked goods
Oct.
16.
to donate they would be appreciated.
FLU SHOTS
We also need dessert itelllS to sell in
the kitchen. The baked goods are
Today and Tuesday morning from
always the most popular Item on the · 9 a.m. until noon, influenza vaccine
menu and just one item from each of · · will be given here at the Center.
you would raise needed funds to. be
There is no prior registration
used towards the lOCill share of con·
required to receive the vaccine and
tinuing our . Senior Citizen
Programs.
The candidates' portion of the ·
day's activities will begin at 7 p.m.

.

•

•
II

J

Soft pack or new Flip·'fup box.

l

Ii

[_ _.

POMEROY- Miss Lynn J{earns,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Keams, Letart, W, Va. and Kelly
Hawk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robe.rt
Hawk, exchanged wedding vows in a
double-ring ceremony at The First
Church of God in New Haven, Aug. 9,
6:30p.m.
The Rev. .David Fielda, Jr. of.
ficiated and Mrs. Jennifer Cundiff
played the organ. Her selections included "Sunshine on My Shoulders,"
" A · Time For Us " a:nd
'
'
uFasclnation."
.
Given in maiTiage by her parents,
the bride wore a gown of sheer nylon·
with white velveteen rose motifs
over organza. It was fashioned with ·
a 8quare neckline : trimmed in
scalloped lac~. short cap sleeves
with narrow lace trim, and an A-line
skirt accented with rows of
scalloped laee down the front- to a
wide ruffle which surrounded the
skirt. Her ven of silk illusion fell
from a headpiece of ·velveteen
scallopS.
The bride carried dark impressions surrounding a cluster of
•:eight pink roses with baby's breath
tied with pink and white satin ribbons with tiny pearl accents in
lover's knots.
Sheila Hawk, sil!ter of the groom,
was the maid of honor and wore a
gown of pink roses on white .with a
deep ruffle border._She r;aiTied pink
and white carnations entwined lvith
dark pink Impressions and centered
with a single pink rose.
Cynthia Kearns, sister of the
bride, served as junior bridesmaid ·
and carried a small bouquet of apple
blosSomS with pink and white ribbOns. Her gown wa8 pink with red
roses and had a deep ruffled skirt.
Robin Hawk, sister of the groom,
registered the gues\11 in a gown of
red roses on whltr and the attendants wore matching roses with
baby's breath in their hair. The
bride's bouquet and all matching a()cessories were made by the bride's

in August.vows

.

'
:

"·-····-· •../

Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Hawk
best man. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Kearns w:~r~ blue
street-length dress and Mrs. Hawk
was in a rose street-length dress
with both having corsages of white
carnations surrounding single pink
roses.
A reception and shower were held
in ~ churcb fellowship hall
following the ceremony. The bride's
table featured a three-tiered wed··
ding cake with pink roses and wed·
ding bells and was topped with the
traditional miniature bride and

· Jimmer Soulsby, Pomeroy, was

.

~y.

Social Calendar

AssiSting at the reception were
Kay King, Stella .Morgan, Lyta
Roush, and Dianna Eades. Mr. and
Mrs. Hawk reside in Pomeroy.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, 7:30
Monday evening at the home of Mrs.
M. J . Fry, Cheshire.

...;....

:;:::::::::::·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:···:·:·:-:;;.;.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-::·:-:;.;.;.:-;-:-:
~ ::

~:

\....
f

.·.·

::::

::::

Calendar :

~:

oro

groom. candelabra holding pink
tapers tied with bows of pink and
gold .flowing over vases of pink roses
completed the table decor.
The new Mrs. Hawk presented ber
sister and brother-in-law, Dianna
and David Eades, witb a two-tiered
wedding cake, a vase of yellow 10ses
with a·gift in celebration of their fif·
th anniversary being observed tluit

______
_________
_
Sr. Citizen I

aunt, Mrs. Marty Riggs.

~~:

'·'·

Meigs Senior Citlze~ Center a()tivitles located in the Multipurpose
Senior Center on Mulberry Heights
in Pomeroy is open 9 a.m.-4:30p.m.,
Monday through Frid!Jy.
.
Tuesday, Ocl 7 - Flu Shot Clinic,
9 a.m.-12 noon; Chorus, 12:4~2 p.m..
Wednesday, Oct. 8 - Social
Security Representative, 9:30 a.m.·
12:30 a.m.; Golden BUckeye card

Signup, 10 a.m.·2 p.m.; Games, 1-2
p.m.
.
Thursday, Oct. 9- Nursing Home
Visit - Leave Center 10 :30 a.m:;
Kitchen Bantl, 12:4~2 p.m.
Friday, Oct. 10 - Bob Evans Trip
· - Leave Center 9:30 a.m.; Art
Class, 9:30 a.m.-12 noon; Bowling, I·
3p.m.
. ~ Senior Nutrition Program, 12 noon
to 12:45 p.m., Monday through
Friday:
Tuesday - Roast beef, sweet
potato, broccoli, butterscotch
puding, bread, butter and milk.

Wednesday- Braised beef cubesgrAvy, peas, buttered noodles, fruit
cocktail, bread, b~tter and mille
Thursday - Baked • chicken,
mashed potatoes, lettuce • dresslng,
ice cream, bread, butter and milk.
Friday - Cheeseburger pie, but'
tered carrots, buttered green beans,
apple cobbler, bread, butter and

ATTEND SWISS FESTIVAL
Mrs. Sharon Riffle and daughter,
Greta, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Mary K.
Holler, Brenda and Gary Holter'·
Bashan, attended the Ohio Swiss
Festival, Sugar Creek. They also
toured the Heinl's Cheese House at
Berlin, and " ate at an · Amish
restaurant, Der Dutchinan, at
Walnut Creek.

Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk served daily.
Please register in advance for your
lunch. Pomeroly- 992-2161.

CAN'T SING
People who sing their own praises
almost never learned how to carry a
tune.

milk. •

,,

Senior Citjzens. ' Scenes

.

there iS no charge.
This vaccine offers prl&gt;tection
against three influenza strains
which recently caused disease in
North America {A-Brazil, ABan'1ok, B-Singapore) .
The vaccine is especially recommended for persons age 65 and over,
and for persons lvith chronic health
problems like diabetes; diseases of
the heart, lungs or kidneys; severe
anemia; or chronic illnesses (or
medication) which lowers the body's
resistance to infections.

Handcr;Hts from around
the world.
Distinctive gifts

•Macrame- •
Lusterline 5.79 &amp;
s.u ppiies
•Waterbeds 'n' Things
•Unfinished F1,1rniture
•Chimes- Mobiles

Wicker House
Phone 446·9458
41 court st. Gallipolis, Oh.

.

A TTENTIO.N ·

C_ARRIER
NEEDED

IN SYRACUSE
CALL

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
BETWEEN 8:30 and 5:00

LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE
.•

/

)

The United Mir:-e Workers ' of Am,ric~, Rank -and File
·membership of local· un·i ons_1957, 1886, 1890, 2150
and U.M.W.A. s~ppo~ter . club, extend the hand of
we'lcome e~nd unequaled support t~ our future ·
brothers and sisters at the Gavin Plant•

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The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.....
,

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Warnfng: The Surgeon General · Ha's Determined
That "Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
•

L--------:---------------'
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VOTE UMWA, Oct. 23, 1980

12 mg "tar:' O.Bmg nicptine av.per cigarene. FTC Repon Oec~79
Box: 12 mg ''tar:· 0.8 mg nicotinp av.per cigarette by FTC Method.

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8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 6, 1960 _

I

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,7-J,.ItC

Jaycee 'haunted poster' winners told .

!51ST ANNIVERSARY - The !51st anniversary of the Rutland Church of Christ will be held Oct. 12. Morning services will begin with Herbert
Elliott as superintendent at9: 30 a.m. Worship services at .JO: 30 a.m. with
communion and preaching by the Church Minister Robert Buckingham.
Dinner in the church social room at 12 :30 p.m. Afternoon program IS to
begin at 2p.m., with special singing, and the senn~n by Eug:ne Underwood, former minister at the Rutland Church. He Is now IIllniStermg
the Bradford Church of Christ. The public is invited to attend ..

Bookmobile schedule for Monday,
Oct. 6- Carpenter, Laura's Store,
2:40-3 :10 - p.m. ; Dexter, Church,
3:0-4:10 ; Danville, Church, 4:505115; Rutland•. Bank One, 5:50-6:35
.. (short film at 6: 15); Rutland, Depot
Street; 6:~7 : 15 (short film at 7);
Bradbury, Red Barn, 7: 4().8:05.
Tuesday, Oct. 7 -Portland, Post ·Office, 2:40-3 :10 p.m:; Success Rd.,
Near 39060, 3:45-4:15; ReedSville,
Reed's Store, 4:3().5:45 (short film at
6:30); Rock Spring~ Church, 7::1&amp;8:05.
_ Thursday, Oct. 9- Coolville, Post.
Office 9:43-10:15 a.m.; Arcadia
Nursu;g Home, 10:3().11; Tuppers·
Plains, Lodwick's Market, 11:30
a.m.-12 noon ; Senior Citizens Cew
ter, 12 : ~1 : 20 p.m.; Mulberry
Heights Infirmary, I :25-2: 10; Antiquity, Antique Store, 2:5().3 :20;
, Letart Falls, Effie's Restaurant,
3:33-4:20 (short film at 4) ; Racine,
Home National Bank, 4:4:;.5:30
(short fibn at 5); Racine, Wagner's
.MM~iJware, 5 : 3~:15 (short film at
W"J; Syracuse, Pool, 6:3().7:45
(short film at 7).
Drop by your nearest Bookmobile
stop for free entertairunent and information. The 9ookmobile has
paperbacks, 45 and lp records:
magazines, large-print books, and
how-to-&lt;1&lt;&gt;-it help for everything
from car repair to dieting .
Please remember to return those
forgotten books and records. No
fines will be charged for overdues.
The bookmobile needs them back so
that someone else can have a chance
to wte them.

4-H week
observed
Oct. 5-11

TROPHY WINNER - Bill Dyer, Meigs High School senior, was the
high individual scorer at the FF A District 17 soil judging meet held rec~n­
tly at North Gallia High School. Dyrr scored 350 out of a posstble 360 pom- · ts in his judging of three sites for slope, texture, drainage, depth of soil,
and air and water movement. Everett Holcomb, vocational education
teacher at Meigs, presented the trophy to Dyer.

MEIGS TEAM - Bill Holcomb, Bill Dyer and Mike Goeglein made
up the Meigs FFA team for the district soil judging meet. The Meigs team
took fourth place .in overall judging score out of the 11 schools participating.

•

~'God Can Use You' theme of

• '

1\

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Chester UMW recent meeting

'

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•

Mrs. Kathryn Bawn and Mrs.
Helen WoH were program leaders
:When the Chester United Methodist
/Women met at the church for a
bJeeting on \he topic, "Can G9&lt;1 Use
!'lou! "
I Mrs. Baurn read scripture from
~obn '4 with Mrs. WoH presenting
3evotlons from "The Upper Room."
;J'he Rev. Richard Thomas gave '
)lrayer· and the group sang "I Love
~ T~ tile Story" accompanied by
l!frs. Clarice Allen.
·. Mrs. Baam stated the purpose of
~ program as being to learn mo~e
about penons in missions, to
~and to Wlderstand the role
at t111fwomen's division in missions.
Mrs. Baum gave tile scripture on the
Samaritan WOillllllat the well noting
that she Is not tile 1181181 image' of a
person in missions, yet she was the
channel whereby many people of
Samaria came·to know Christ. Em- ·
phasls of the program was on God's
ue at all peraons to spread the
'!Good News." Reportl. It was .
!_iogd, trom mllllonarfea, IIBtional
dmrcll leaden and staff at the
florid Dhrl!ion c!. the Board of

·Global Ministries are that the United
Methodist Chtrrches in many parts
of Africa, Asia and Latin America
. are gTOwing rapidly.
Mrs. WoH read a poem entitled
"And the Lord said Go" with Mrs.
Ruth Karr and Mrs, Helen' WoH
singing "In . the Garden." Mrs.
Altona Karr gave&gt; a reading pertainillg to the scripture verse, Luke
9:48.
Mrs. Karr presided at the business
meeting with officers' reports· belng
given. A communication was read
concerning the annual district
rneeting to be held Oct. 15 at the
Athens Richland Ave. Church. A
thank you Jetter was read from tile
Meigs CoWJty Board of Mental
· Retardation for a donation.
An election day dinner will be ser·
ved and a bazaar held in the church ·
fellowship room on Nov. 4. The
UMW will also serve refreshments
at the ·four nights of the Courity
School of Religion to be held at tile
Chester Ch:r,h, Oct. ~23. The of·
' for 1 will be Installed
'
ficers
at the
November meeting.
·

.

Winners in the poeter contest of
the Meigs County Jaycees' haunted,.
house weJte announced t9day. ·
The contest was held In the
elementary schools as a promotion
for the haUnted house Which wi1J be
open on Oct.!7, 18and 19, and Oct. 22
thtough N:ov. I. Starting time wi1J be
at 8_p.m. each evening.
• ·
The winners were:
·Bradbury: David 09dson, Dawn
Keesee, Brad Little, Missy Stevens,
Donnie Bunce, Greta Wines ,
Theresa Uttle, Stanley Broome,

UO.UJ ~Uwn:a, JW.UUWt:yvt. L•!"VU~i't•.)-t

Brewer reunion-- - - - - - - - - -

'

POMEROY ::: Mr~. Joseph L.
Colburn, Colwnbus, the Southeast
District director of the Ohio
DaughJers of the American
. Revolution, will present a program
on " Homes of Women of the
Revolution' ' at the Friday meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
The meeting will be held at the
Meigs Inn wlth a 12:30 p.m. luncheon. Memliers of Abby Lee Anies
and French Colony Chapter will be
guests. Reservations from members
of the local chapter are fo be made
by Wednesday With Mrs. Dale Dutton. Other hostesses will be Mrs.
N:an Moore, Mrs. Charles Lewis, .
Mrs. Pearl Mora, Mrs. Dayton Parsons, and Mrs. Harold Sargent.

"
• TOPSNEWS

Plans for a taste party were made
at a recent meeting of TO~ OH 570
held at tile Rock Springs fairgroundS. The party wl1l be held on Oct. 14
with everyone to take a diet dish.
A nickel contest will begin at
Tuesday's meeting with everyone to
take 10 nickels for the contest. At tile
Sept. ~ meeting Maida Long was
the weekly queen with Virginia Dear
as runner-up. ' Julia Hysell was
queen at the Sept. 30 meeting with
Marcia Houdashelt as nmner-up.
Lucille Murray wu welcomed u a
new member. Anyone Interested in
joining TOPS may call992'3319.

T elevisiori
·v;ewing

COME T'THiioJK
OF If, I WOLH.P'l'T
PUT IT. PA~f HER

Gf!e
~riLL WON'T TALl&lt;.
T'Me... WHAT'RE

Baby arrives

T'~LAM THE D00fl,

IN MY FACE?!

"f'GONNA DO

ABOUT THAT.

EVENING
e:oo Cil8 ClJ G Cil®Hl2J Qt NEWS
(]) RAINBOW FACT OilY
(lJ
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS .
Cil AIIC NEWS
(]){jj) 3-2·1 CONTACT
6:30 Cil8 ClJ NBCIIEWS
(]) THE DOOR
(]) BOB NEWHART SHOW
Cil FACE THE MUSIC
D Cil~ CBS NEWS
(]) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
ffi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
iUl Qt ABC NEWS
8:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 ffi 8 PM MAGAZINE
(]) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
· 1IJ ALL IIi THE FAMILY
' Cil iUl Ill F"AMILY FEUD
ClJ NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
.. D Cil TICTACDOUGH
(]) .MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT

AND IF' I TRY

BU~TIN'

IN SHE'LL

PII.O!l'LY GET HER
FORE!MAN AFTER
ME!' WITH Hll'

5HOTE;-!

H0T5HOH .--&lt;'''""~

Mr. and Mrs. 'LaWrence Edwin

Halfhlll, Rutland, annOunce tile birth of their first child, a·son, Nathan
· POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Johnnie, Colwnbu,; Mr. allj! Mrs.
Edwin,
born Sept. 19 at O'Bleness
Blaine Carter of Albany hosted the
Donald Wess, Donald, David antl
Hospital.
The baby weighed seven .
annual Brewer family reunion at
Tracy, Grove City; Mrs. Carol
pounds,
eight
ounces and was 19 In:.
their home recently.
Brewer, Arnie and Teddy, Darches
long.
·
Attending were Margaret Brewer,
bydale; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Janey,
Maternal
grandparents
are Mrs.
Mr."and Mrs. Tom Brewer, Ted and · "Joyce, Jay. Paul, and Kimberly,
Mary
.F.
Brown,
Point
Pleasant,
and
Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. David Johnson
Langsv.ille; ~r. and Mrs. fl!tul Ferand Melanie, Cindy Rude, Denise
nandez and Tearui8, Norco, Calif.; . the late Howard F. Brown, and the
paternal gTandparents are Mrs.
Rubino, Springfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Eileen Hawkins, Florida; Shirley
Dorothy
M. Halfhill, Bl(lwell, and
Walter Brewer, Mary, Billy and PatMcKnight, Rutland, and Theresa,
the
late
Stacey Kenneth Halfhill.
. sy, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Brewer, Scott
Joey and A~er.
Mrs.
Halfhill
is the fonner Siuidra
and Toney, John, Wes, Janie and
Brown of Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~NEWS

ffi) OVER EASY ·'Afler Work,
What?' Guests: Fritz Feld, actor,
and Jerome Roaow, President of
Work ir1 America : Hosts: Hugh

· Downe
.

SHOWER PLANNED
, A miscellaneous shower will be
held Wednesday night at 7:30 p.m. in
the dining room of the Harrisonville
Masonic Temple honoring Duane
Will, son of Mr. and Mrs. Normah
Will, and Brenda Brow11ing ,
daughter rt Mr. and Mrs. Henry
BroWiiing of Potnt Pleasant. The
couple wi1J be married on Oct. 18. All
friendS and neighbors, both men and
women, are lnvilel1 to attend.

VISIT HERE

Mrs. Genevieve Powell ot Bran·don, Fla., and Mrs. Ernestine Burnell, Charleston, W: Va. are here
visiting their sister, Mrs. Freda Duf.
fy, Syracuse, who is recovering from .
a broken hip.

and

Frank

Blair.

(Cioaed ·Captioned)

I KROPE
I I I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the SUrJlrise answer, as sug-

gested by thtr'above cartoon.

Print answer here: A

SANFORD AND SON
CilD(]) JOKER'S WILD
ClJ liO) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
Cil DICK CAVETT SHOW
ffi) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
iUl Ill FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
8:00 ClJ8 ClJ LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

Oswald Jacoby and Al@n Sontag

Deceptive opening gambit
NORTH
10·6-80
+A.QI096

.KQ

STAND UP AMERICA
ilJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •• "Thlo
Pro~~ 1o Condemned" 11166
(l)lJ2) IIJ THAT'S INCREDIBLE
8 Cll \lDl M.A.S.H. Klinger dis·

+QH
+10 13

(I)

S~Jte!

T11AT'S ~IIY
PVE qor THIS RIG
MM&lt;It·PLATEP llH.E ,
ADIIEAIMIU6HT!!

... 1'/11{11'6 601tNA
HAPPEN TO UG IF I'IE LOGE
"THAT R.EPHEAPEI7
\'!ILL MAAE THIS

tliK.-\L)

covers that his duties al

~T

EAST

+KJ S
•s3
+A87
+AK962

+732
•97&amp;42
+942
+as

SOUTH

tric whim'S of the 4077th officers.

,...--- .t8epeat)

• 8.

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GREAT PERFORMANCES

(I)

• AJ 105

+K J 10 3
+QH

'Tinker, tailor, Soldier, Spy' Part II.

LOVE PAT!

STATE CIF OHIO, DEPARTMENT OF IN!liR·

company

clerk inc lude cateringto theeccen -

SEEM LIKE A

ANCE. CERTIFI CATE OF CDMPUANCE. The
1Uirlc t 'iKn~d . Supetintrnlif nt tlr Insurance Or Tbe
:it1llr m Uhlu. h~ r ~by emtnes thlt Jo'lnt Colony
l.irt• ht~ t • ranr~ Co., or Lrncllbur'l, !Jiate or \llr~~ nl:t hu ~ ~u mpiled ll"lth tile laws !If thls State
applkuiJit• tu· It arul I ~ au thorized dtr rl1111 tht
t·ttrn•m ~r:t.r 1!1 u ttnsaet In Ibis stale Jtt ap IH&lt;~prlalt: im~hlt'&lt;o.'ltl f ln:-nmtnct . lts Hoanclta~ ron.
ttl11un !11 ~ hown hy It ~ anruttl ~late m l'nt to hue
lit·t·n as rollows un lh-c. :u . 1979 : Adm!tt~
. \ :i.~t'IS $ 1 j j -~ ~ !1 . 8!iR. OO: Ll ab ll ltl~ $lfi8, 50U, ·
U:!I . UU; SU rt i i U ~ $:! 5,a!I0,899.00 ; ln~lle $83,1H . .i:i u.uu ; •.:x pendlture~ $ ~9.0 93, 814 . 00;
·" ' 'I A.~~·m $!lS,i37,tl:i'i'. OO; C•plt.l $30456 ,' 1 :1 .~ . 11!1 , IN \\'ITNJ.:SH \\'HEitEOF , I bl.fe htrtll nto .~ uiHaliJ~ d m ~ !!ID•e and caused mr 8t'al to
~~~ ~rr.xt'l l at ('utu mtius, Ohio t bls !lay and ~itt~ .
Ju ly I , 1HW. Hollt'rt J. ltatdJfonl, Jr.. SUpe rlnli'U(It'nl ur ht5ur•IK'I' or Oh!CI . (SEAL)

· 8:30

George Smiley is givefl the task ot
searching out the Russian apyinthe
British Intelligence Service .
(Qioaed~Captioned) (60 mins.)
ffi) MEANING OF MODERN ART
(1) CONSUMER REPORTS PRE·

SENTS 'Tho Good Buy Show' This

fact- pa eked speCial ant ertaining !y
scans the consumer marketplace
and·offera helpful health, safety

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West
Weat North East

•• ••
Pass

3 NT

· Pass

Pass
Pass

South
2 NT
Pass

and money-s aving points.

DCil~

WKRI\INCINCINNATI

Lea Neaaman'aiarm newa reporting on WKRP wins him the coveted

Silver Sow Award from the prestigious Peter Piper Pork Packers
Guild but lea needs a date for the ·
award banquet. (Repeat)

8:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
8:00 CIJ8ClJMONDAYNIGHTATTHE

MOVIES 'Julia' 1~77 Stars: Jane
Fonda, Vanessa Aedgrave.

Cll700tLUB

[!) MOVIE "(HORROR)
" DriCUII" 1879

••y,

Cilil2J 18 MONDAY NIGHT FOOT·
BALL Aec Sports will provide live

(]){jj)

ADVOCATES: ELECTION

'60 Representatives of the Pre-

sidential candidates debate major
election Issues In· a courtroom format . The topic to be discussed will

be U.S.·U.S.S.R. relations. (80

mine.)

10:00 (]) JAZZ AT SNOWBIRD 'Dave
Brubeck at Snowbird' (80mlfla.)

liD NEWS
,
10:15 (lJ TBSEVENINGNEWS
10:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
10:30· C1J R~EJijijjj BE-HEALED
@ OPEN MIND
10:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
11:00 (I) FESTIVAL OF PRAISE
[!) ON LOCATION 'King Goea To
Queena '

GCilliOJ NEWS
(]) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CfRCU&amp;
liD DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:15 IIJ NIGHT GALLERY
11:20 ·(})8(!) NEWS
11:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 C1J ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
IIICilCBSLATEMOVIE 'QUINCY:

WINNIE

I'vE GOT Bll&lt;t'tE
EATING OUT OF
MY HAND::.:NON::::.:.:..
· "-~

1bLO HER WHAT 6HE
WANTED 'TO HEAR . .
HO.V 7HIN ~E LOOKS
... HOW F!A1TEI&lt;IIIG

HEfl.HAIRPO

I HAD Pl.EN'IYOFilME 'TO· PRACTICE- IN PRISON! AND BOON
WINNIE WINI&lt;LE :S GONNA PAY
RJ~ 'THE TIME: I WASTED
5EHIND e.AR5"!

Has Anybody Here Seen Quincy' A

aeries of misadventures prevtmta
Quincy from getting to the offlce.

(Ropea1) 'THE SAINT: Tho Paper
Chase' Stars: Roger Moore, Ron-

ald ljinas. (Repeat)
(]) A8C CAPTIONED NEWS
CJm MOVIE ·(ADVENTU~E) ••% ·
"'TIFIIBulbl" 1882

11:45 ([)MOVIE.,(MYSTERY)•••• "Mo~
tiH F11con" 1041

Cilil2118 NEWS
11:50 (})8(!) THETONIGHTSHOW
Guael hoot: BIIICosby. Go ell:Doni
Stevana. (80 mine .)

.

12:00

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--

NEWS UPDATE
TRANSFORMED
(]) D. JAMES KENNEDY
NEWS
1IJ MOVII! -(ADVI!NTURE) ••
"Volley.oltheGianto" 1138
CI) .NE'NS
CIDi IBEkiEVE
2:28 C1) NE'NS UPDATE
2·30 C1) R08S BAGLEY SHoW
3;25 ([)IIOVti!.,(COMEDY),'' "AlwiJI

1"2:58 (])

· - 1·00
1;30
1:35
1.50
·
2:00

. 'I

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I

.

$oyde"i. Guest: Or~IV-OPiyanguy,

world·famoua plastic aurgeon. (90
mlna.)
·

FeRRIS

'b

,,""

·

il2l.

WHEEL

. '

"Proph~"

12:15 ([) "(j2J g
~BC
NE'NS
. NIGHTLINE
12:311
BIG VALLI!Y
12:50 m•m TOMORROW Hoot:Tom

THAR'S ONLV ONE -woRD
FOR THAT BODACIOUS

I
I

(1) MOVIE ·(SCIENCE-FICTION)

••

'

'

(I)

il2l.

Le•v• 'em Uughlng 1148 ..

3:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
4:00 C1) 700 CLUB
5:30 (J) WORDS OF HOPE
·e:58 C1) NEWS UPDATE

l

1503 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis

-.. -.--..

698 West Main St., Pomeroy

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TilE 6ROCER'5
TOURNAMENT!

2325 Jackson Ave., Pt. Pleasant

i

I

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

To clean discolored bread and meat boards, rub
them with lemon rinds, wash them in warm water and
dry thoroug
· h!y.

Dana.

99¢

well deserved. Your team won
every . match ea~ily and
showed exceptional form."

Oswald: "Anyway, each

South knocked out the ace of
diamonds and watched West
rattle off four club trickS."

SPECIAL MOVIE PRE·
SENTATION'ToFindMySon'1980
Slars: Richard Thomes, Justin

Chicago Bears.

OUT WITH
:'{OUR HAWDS UP!

Oswald: "Your victory · in
this year's Spingold Cup was

1---,...--=-----.,.------------DISCOLORED BREAD

Ill(]) \lDl

COM~

By Oswald Jaeoby
and Alan Sontag

Alan: "This was my first
win in this event. Four of my
teammates had won It before.
You have won it seven times,
haven't you?"
Oswald: "Yes. Two of my
wins were with B.J. Becker,
whose son Mike was on your
"team Ibis year. Why don't you
write about your wtn in this
week's articles?"
Alan: ''Here is a hand from
our semi-final match. It was a
tie since both declarers were
down one at three notrurnp."
Oswald: "! take it that both
Wests opened the deuce of
clubs to conceal the fifth cal'd
of their suit. If West bad
opened the six spot each
declarer would mark him
with a five.carder, would take
the double finesse in spades
and wind up with ten tricks."
Alan: "Indeed they would.
Each one toyed with that idea
after the deuce lead, but finallY. decided that East was very
hkely to hold the spade jack.
'fhat would leave West w1th
fourteen .high-card points and
many top players use a ISpoint notrump when the spirit
moves them.'

Tampa Bay Buccaneers and the

coverageofthegame betweenthe

JELLY AND HASH·ROUNDS

.

.

.BRIDGE

wlthagrou'pofyounghoodl.uma.(60
.mine.) (Closed-Captioned)

Wake up to two
scrambled eggs, toast, jelly, hash
rounds and a big "Good Morning" smile
at Burger Chef, at a low price that you can afford!
Only at participating neighborhood Burger Chef Restaurants . .

(Answers tomorrow)

nemt, eddrtas, zip code an make checks paytble to Newspaperboob.

vey and his yo~ng son set out to find
a new life--but coma face to face

.,

'----=;._----------------

.li ~ltf..., t,(
by THOMAS JOSEP'H
2 Nasal . .
ACROSS
1 Gallery
sensation
3 Noted
5 Japanes~.
vegetable
opera star
8 Same (Lat. ) t Ted's
9 Negligent
initials
• 13 Cozy spot .
5 Bearlike
14 Where men
6 Bus terminal
were men
7 Boxer,
Yeslerday's ADswer
15 Be mistaken
Lee 16 Union initials J OHe wrote 19 Crawiord 29 "Old Wives'
17 Old hand
"God Bless film
' Tale" author
18 "Notorious"
America" Zl Bar items 33 Encourage
star
11 Of the
22 Daydream 34 Stained
glass
20 Son of Bela
breastbone 23 Of aircraft
21 Engen~er
12 Overfill
25 Anneal
26 Pointer
23 "- Christie" 16 Roman
27 Masculine 37 Neighbor
24 Sun (comb.
statesman
or feminine of Ga.
fonn)
25 Procreated
26 Bard's river
27 Misquote
28 D,C. group
(abbr.)
zt Kind of tea
3t Shrewrnouse
31 Oppoeite
of WSW
32- session
35 Went wild
37 Spaiiiish•iuke~l--l-38 Along
in years
39 Mortgage
441 Apiece .
U Poker term
DOWN
· 1 Salesman's
wares

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:·

-

ia

AXNDLBAAX .R ·
LONGFELLOW

One Jetter simply· standi for another. In this aample A II
used. for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slnale !etten,
apootrophes, the length and formation of the word• are oll
hints. -Eaeh doy the eode !etten are different.
.·
CKYPTOQUOTES

-·- --

S11'1SS MACHINERY
K R X AD XL S • ·w D G H-' K A J H A H G L H
Oleese and watches are - Switzerland's best-known e1porta.' ' D L
EH
RGJHXLSBGJ
S N .B S
· However, the !118nufacture
machidefY is Ita major Industry.
HBYN
KSNHX . ':..... TBGWQ
NBWW
Swlller!Uid's lnduatrlal output Is sol
Yiiieriliy'a-~&amp;e: - LIFE Wiu. Do A il:ir OF
extensive that It holdS an IIUiuaifalr,·
GROWUNG BUT IT WON'T HURT YOU UNLESS YOU LET
, - well-attended by lndustrlall.!ta all .
. . IT.-k.W.s.u«PSSN:
.
over the world - at Basel.
..

oll

Open for Breakfast 6·10:30 a.m.

• L,..... ... .

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Jumble Book No. 14, containing 110 puzzkla , Ia a¥~11ablt for $1 .75 p~tpald
fromJumblt, clothla newsp1'', Box 34, Norwood, N.J.07648.Include your

PRAIRIE Widower Jonathan Gar-

'

ON

.
"DOTTY"
Answer : What those domtno nut s were-

Saturdays

movies .

t u I&gt;! llrril~d a t Co :umbus, Ohio tbb du
111111 d:tk July l, 1980. Hobtrt l . Ratchford ,
Jr.. l)U [Il't lnt ~ nde nt of l115Urlnee of Obill,.

TWO SCRAMBI.ED EGGs, TOAST,

KXI ]

: I Jumbles: APART LOUSY DAHL IA BUTLER

(lJ

BRFAKAAST

by Henrl Arnoldand Boblee

UnsCramble these four Jun1bles,
one laMer to each square . to form
lour ordinary words .

MACHINES '80 Years of Science
Fiction' Hosted by Gil Gerard, this
spec ial featUres footage from a
wide range of claaaic acl -tl

Spaulding, Steve and Debra , ~-..;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ch~sterhill; Mr, and Mrs. Denzil
Welsh, Jeannie and Denny, Mike
STA~ OF OHIO , DEPARTMENT OF' INSUR·
AN CE. CERTIFICATE Q1 COMPLIAJICE. Tbt:
Harrison, Ron Harrison, Scott and
uruk r ~ IK ~ d, Superlntendtflt Or JnsUranec Of Ttlt
Maria, Vicki Ellis and Richie, MidSln tc Uf Ohio. lr~eijy certlftes that RrP~Jbllc
Sntlon111 We lns uranc~ CO., or D~llu, St.ltr ol
dleport; Sharon J;'ratt and Reggie,
Tt·.~u s hu~ r.um t rH~d ll'llh the ln'l ol t lltJ State
lljljlii('I I I JJ ~ I U ll lltld I s I UlhorLJed dUrlnc t he
Pomeory; Cathy Hoffner, Lanny,
t·llrrt•llt )'t'!tr tu transact ln th ll state 111 IP·
Jenny and Benjamin, Tracy Mopro jl.'illll' IHW 11t'S5 Of lll!l\ltllnec. lts 1\nandal
L'OIIIillli\)11 l~ -~11.11\"ll IJy Its liVIUI.( l tatt ment to
Mann of Cheshire, Lisa Jenkins, Mr.
h.Lv~ l.k't•n i s fo llll\11 on Uce. 31, 1929 ; AchJUtd
and Mrs. Bill Frye, Jenny, Belpre;
.\s:wt~ $635,.{3!,500.00 ; Ll•btutlu I511,8U .l77. 00 ; t:)urplus $M.l9UO I. OO ; Income
Lona Frye, Williamstown, W. Va.;
$ lHJU , (HH.~ 80.00; EIIJ~nd l tur.fl $348,272,129.·
UO
; N"~ l .h'i!'t.Jj $63 ,~90,322 . 00; Capital $9,.
Theresa, Joey and Adam Carter,
:iU:.!,!I:.! 1.00. IN WJTN&amp;s:; \\'HEREOto', l ban
Albany.
llt•, t&gt;Untu &gt;UIJ:;eri bPd my l'llme and a~used DIJ

FIRST KNOWN FATALITY
Vladimir Komarov of Russia
became the first known space
fatality in 1967 when his craft.
. became entangled in the re-entry
·P,.rachute.

~ THAT $CRAMBLED WOAO GAME

7:30 Cil U BULLSEYE
I]} WORDS OF +lOPE
[!) MONSTERS , MADMEN AND

Carter reunion---------POMEROY - Till! Carter family
reunion was held recently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Carter,
Albany.
Gifts were presented to Lona .
Frye, the oldest; Benjamin Hoffner,
the youngest, and Blanche Parsons,
who won the door prize. The potluck
dinner was attended by Juanita
Clark, New Haven, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Parsons and Amber,
Gallipolls; -Dorothy Dandakis,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Bob

ftJ1\tl.\..ft ~'if

~ ~ ~~U;:l~ ®

OCT. e, 1880

~UPP05E

.

DAR to meet Friday

v

YOU NEt:DN 1T WORRY
ABOUT. I.OSING YOUR
BOYS Bt:CAUSE OF. ANY
HOSPITALIZATION
YOU MIGHT NEED-

King, and Kevin King.
.·
Michele Zirkle, Eddie Baer, and
Syracuse: Jane Jett, Tracy HubDol\llle Stein.
bard, Angie Davis, Deana Wataon,
· Pomeroy: ChriS Smith, Jennifer
JilL Nease, Lois Davidson, Candy ·
Swartz, Tina Riffle, .David
Statts, and David Deem.
.
Capehlfrt, Greg Fields, Teresa
Racine : · Lisa ..Pape, Alan
Walker Jo Ellen Crane, John BritMaynard, Matt Harris, Donnie Rlf·
ton Je~er Couch, Kim Calvert,
fie,
Tammy Holter, Lonny Rolls, and
Sh~Uy Wolfe, Tosl)a O'Neil, Terri
Cniig
Brown.
· ·
Grover, and Donia Crane.
Plans
are
also
being flnaliled 111
. Salisbury: Raymond Riley, Gina
·
the
Meigs
County
Jaycee~~
fiN' tbe firScarberry, Todd CUllums, Melissa
Foster, Heather Lynn Cullwns, - st home boXing match .of tile season.
The event will be held at Meip
Jeremiah Prater, Brenda Sinclali',
Senior HighSchool on Nov. 8.
Kathy Pickens, Kris Roush, Phil

-Families enjoy reunions

i.UVil~,)', V\."• '-'t •..UU_

TRApY

~~:~.

National 4-H Week is being observed Oct. l&gt;-11. This is the week set
aside nation-wide to recognize boys,
girls, m~n arid women in 4-H. .
4-H has received a Jetter of
congratulations from the president
which readS:
"On the occasion of National 4-H
Week, I am proud to congratulate
the members, volunteer youth
leaders and professional youth
workers who participate in this worthwhile program.
"As your theme indicates, 4-H is ·
'Expanding Horizons' for young
Americans .::"both ruran and urban
- from all social and economic
backgrounds, Through activities in
your local communities, you are
helping to advance our national efforts in energy conservation, in
stricing for better nutrition, in wise
use of natural resow:ces. in combating inflation and in many ,other
areas. In adition, you are gaining
knowledge and skills that will assist
you in your future careers. Through
the useful exchange progTams you
sponsor, you are expanding your
horizons to many countries and
cultures around the world and furthering international understanding
and go9dwill.
"You are proving how effectlvely
young . Americans can meet the
challenges of the eighties. And in so
doing, you are sharing in the important task of ensuring a more
satisfying and rewarding future for
all Americans . - Jinim;t Carter."

V,,

.

�Q

til-The Daily Sentinel Mlddlepo"'li Pomeroy 0 Monday Oct 8 1980

li- The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0

Surprising Bills only NFL unbeaten team
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Presenting all alone atop the
National Football League standings
unbeaten after five weeks ladies
and gentlemen the Buffalo Bills r
Yes the same Buffalo Bills who
were league patsies not so long ago
are the only unbeaten team left m
the NFL after rallymg for tw&lt;l touchdowns m the final penod to edge the
preVIously undefeated San D1ego
Chargers 26-24 Sunday
I m surpnsed we are 5-11 admitted B11ls quarterback Joe
Ferguson We didn t do well m the
pr eseason and we only won seven

games last year The season we
went to the playoffs With 0 J Sun
pson (1974 when Buffalo was 9-5 )
was exciting but bemg 5-lJ 1s the
highlight of my career
The Detroit Lions the only other
club to win 1ts first four outings
tumbled from the unbeaten ranks by
corrumtting a senes of turnovers
that helped the Allanta Falcoos to a
43-28 VIctory
At the other end of the standings
two clubs remam winless - the New
York Jets and New Orleans Samts
The Jets were beaten by the New
England Patriots 2111 while the

downed the Washington Redsklns 2414 and the Dallas Co\l?boys trounced
the New YOrk Gl8nts 24-3
Tampa Bay IS at Chicago torught
Buffalo s renaiSSance dates back
to Jan 11 1978 when Chuck Knox
left the Los Angeles RaniS to become
head coach of the Bills who had won
JUS! frve games the preVIOUS two
seasons Knox who compiled a 54If&gt;. I record and won five diVISion
titles m f1ve seasons With the Rams
led Buffalo to a f&gt;.ll record m 1978
and a 7 9 Ol8rk last year t?efore hit
ting paydirt this faU
Both of Buffalo s fourth-quarter

Samts got clobbered by the St Lows
Cardinals 4(),.7 The Kansas C1ty
Chiefs meanwhile posted the1rfrrst
vrctory of the season beatmg the
Oakland Raiders 3117
Elsewhere the Denver Broncos
trimmed the Cleveland Browns 1916 the Seattle Seahawks upset the
Houston Oilers 26-7 the Pittsburgh
Steelers beat the Minn~ota Vikings
23-17 the Baltimore Orioles defeated
the Miarru DolphinS 3(}.17 the Green
Bay Packers edged the Cincmnab
Bengals 14-9 the Los Angeles F,ams
outscored the. ~ Francisco ~rs
48-26 the Philadelphia Eagles

touchdowns which wiped out a 24-12
deflcl~ were the result of San D1ego
ffilStakes
FalcoDR 43 Uoas Z8
Atlanta s defense accounted for 2.lj
pomiB - a 1&amp;-yard blocked punt
re1ilrn by Frank Reed, a :JG.yard
fumble return by Buddy CurrY a 42yard fwnble return by Joel Williams
and a safety when Williams nailed
Detroit quarterback Gary Daruelson
m the end zone
Detroit Coach Monte Clark
agreed They kicked our rears and
handed them to us on a platter he
sa1d after watching the Falcons race

3H halftime lead
highest scoring haU ever

to a

with

thelr

Cblef1 3J, Raiders 17

Kansas City mtercepted five
passes, recovered three Oakland
fumbles and registered six quarterback sacks en route to its first

•

VIctory

Linebackers Gary Span! alld Whitney Paul scored the fiJ'st touchdowns
of the therr careers on fumble returns as the Chiefs spnnted to a 31~
lead
Raiders quarterback Dan
Pastonru suffered a broken ngbt leg
during the first baH

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Not ce
subm tted t o a vote of the
peop e of sad Townsh p at
a General ELECT ON to be
held n the Townsh p of
Columb a Oh o at the
regular pace of vat ng
there n on Tuesday the
4th \laY of November 1980
the quest on of levy ng n
excess of the ten m I
I m tat on for the benet t of
Columb a Townshtp tor the
purpose ot prov d ing and
ma nta n ng
f re
ap
paratus
appl ances
bu d ngs o s tes therefor
or sources of water supply
and mater a s therefor or
th e establ shm e nt and
ma ntenance of I nes of f r e
alarm te egrap.h or the
paymnent of permanent
part t me
or
volunteer
firemen o f re f ght ng
compan es to operate the
same
Sa d tax be ng an ad
d t anal tax of 2 0 m I s to
run for 5 years at a rate
not exceeding 2 0 m I s for
one dollar of valuat on
wh ch amounts to twenty
cents for each one hundred
do Ia s of valu~t on for
f ve years
The Po Is of sa1d E ect on
w I open at 6 30 o clock
A M and rema n open unt I
7 30 o c ock P M of sa d
day
By o de of the Board of
Elect ons of Me gs County
Oh o
Ernest A W ngett
Cha rman

PUbliC NOtiCe

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOT CE s hereby g ven
that n pursuance of a
Resolut on of the Board of
Coun y Comm ss oners of
the County of Me gs
Pomeroy Oh o

rassed on

the 26th day o August
19BO there w II be sub
m tted to a vote of the
peep e of sa d County at a
Genera l ELECTION to be
held n the c ounty of Me gs
Oh o at the r egu ar pl aces
of vat ng the e n
on
Tuesday the 4th day of
Nov em be
19 80
t he
quest on of levy ng n ex
cess of th e ten m 1
1 m tat on tor the benet t of
Me gs County for the pur
pose of prov d ng for the
coll ect on and d sposal of
ga r bage
or
refuse
(operat on an d rna n
tenance of the Me gs Coun
ty Landt II )
Sa d tax be ng an ad
d t ona ta x of 1 o m II to
run for f ve years at a rate
not exceed ng 1 0 m I tor
ea c h one do lar
of
valuat on wh ch amounts
to t en cents for each one
hundred do a s of
va uat on for f ve years
The I'&lt;&gt; Is for sa d E lee
Ton w II open at 6 30
o clock A M a nd rema n
oren unt I 7 30 o cle&lt;:k P M
o sa dday
By order of he Boa d of
E ect ons of Me gs County
Oh o
Ernest A w ngett
Cha rman

County of Me gs Oh o at
the regu ar places of vat ng
ther e n on Tuesday the
4th day of November 1980
the quest on of levy ng n
excess of me ten m I
m tat on for the benet I of
Me gs County for the pur
pose of prov1d ng a t ota l
emergency medical ser
v ce n Me gs County
Sa d tax be ng an ad
d I onal ta x of 1 0 m II to
run an ndef n te per od at
a rate not exceed ng 1 0
m II t or each one dollar of
v aluat on wh ch amounts
to t en cents for each one
hund re d dollars of
valuat on for an ndef n te
per ad
The Polls for sa d Elec
ton w I open at 6 30
o c loc k A M and reman
oren unt 7 30 o clock P M
o sa d day
By order of th e Board of
Elect ons of M e gs County
Oh o
Ernest A w ngell
Cha rman
Dorothy M JOhnston
D r ector
Dated October 1 1980
(10) 6 13 20 27 41C
Publoc Notoce

Doroth y M Johns tort
D rector
Dat ed October I
1980

(10) 6 13 20 27 4tc
Publ c Notrce

on w II open at 6 30
o c lock A M and rema n
oren unt I 7 30 o clock P M
o sa d day
By order of t he Board of
E ect ens of M e gs County
Oh o
Ernes t W W ngett
Cha rman

Dorothy M Johnston
0 r ec tor
Dated October 1 1980
(10 ) 6 13 20 27 41C
Publoc Notrce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE s hereby g ven
that n pursuance of a
Resolut on of the Counc I of
the V llage of Rae ne Oh o
passed on the 2nd day of
September 1980 there w II
be subm lied to a vole of
the peep e of sa d V II age at
a Genera ELECTION to be
held n the V lage of
Rae ne Oh o
at the
regu ar places. of vat ng
there n on Tuesday the
4th day of November 1980
the quest on of levy ng n
excess of the ten m 11
I m tat on for the benet 1 of
Rae ne V age V lage tor
the purpose of Current ex
pense
Sa d ta x be ng a r enewal
of an ex st n-g tax of 3 0
m lis to run for f ve years
at a rate not exceed ng 3 0
m lis for each one do lar of
valua t on wh ch amounts
to th r1y cents for each one
hundred dollars of
va uat on for f ve years
The Polls for sa d E ec
t on w 11 open at 6 30
o clock AM and rema n
open unt 17 30 o c ock P M
ofsaddav
By order of the Board of
E eel ons of Me gs county
Oh o

5a a tax be ng an ad
d t onal tax of 3 5 m lis to
run for f ve m lis at a rate
not exceeding 3 5 mills tor
ea c h one dol ar of
valuat on wh ch amouf1tS
to th rty f ve cents for each
one hundred dollars of
v ~ luat on for f ve years
The Po Is for sad Elec
t on w 11 open at 6 •o
o clock A M and rema n
oren unl I 7 30 o clock P M
o sa d dut y
By order of the Board of
E ect ons of Me gs Coun ty
Oh o
Ernest A W nge1t
Cha rman
Doro thy M Johnston
D rector
Dated October 1 1980
(10) 6 3 20 27 4t c
Publ c Not ce

ORDINANCE
NO 1100 80
An Ordinance to Fix Rates
and Charges for Water Ser
vtce tn the Vtllage of M d
dleport Oh o
WHEREAS
the
V II age of M dd eporl owns
a water system serving the
residents of the v llage of
M ddleport and areas ad
acenl
thereto
Now
herefore
Be t orda ned by the
Counc I of the Vt lage of
M ddleport Me gs County
Oh o
Sec I That begrnn ng
November 1 1980 the
fo low.ng shal be the rates
charges monthly by the
V I age of M ddleport Oh o
for water furn shed bY the
V I age of M dd eport to Is
nhab I ants and other users
thereof
METERED
SERVI(:E
For the f rst 2 000 ga lions
per month or less $3 95
M n Charge
For the next 3 000 gallons
per month S 16 per 100
gals
For the next 10 000
gal ons per month S 13 per
100 gals
For the next 15 000
gallons per month S 12 per
100 gals
All over 30 000 ga Ions
per month $ 09 per 100
gals
MINIMUM CHARGE
FOR METERED
SERVICE
Through one half nch
meters $3:96 per month
Through J. ve erghths rn
ch meters .. 96 per month
Through three fourths n
ch meters S6 B6 per month
Through
one
nch
meters $13 73 per month
Through one and one half
nch meters S22 97 per
month
Through ~wo
rnch
meters U1 18 per month
Through four
nch
meters S80 01 per month
Through s x nch meters
$148 72 per month
Sec II. All brlls for the
above serv ce shall be ren
dered month y on the f rst
day of each month or as
soon thereafter as
s
reasponably possible for
the
serv ce
rendered
dur ng the preced ng mon
th Bills thus rendered are
payab eon or before the ex
p ration of len (10) days
from the date rendered
Payments after the ex
p ration of ten { 10) days
are sub,ect to a penalty of
len per cent (10 per cent) of
the amount of the b II but
n no nstance shall sa1d
penalty be ess than forty
cents($ 40)
Sec I
Each user of
v lage water serv ce who
does not own real estate
shall make a deposit to
secure the payment for
water service of the sum of
$25 00 which sum shall be
held by the village w thou!
nterest to the depos tor
Upon the termination of
water service such ar
mounl of the deposit of
$25 00 as s necessary shal
be applied 1o the water bll
and the balance returned to
the user
Sec IV There shall be
charged for the onstallation
of a new tap ttie sum of
One Hundrea Twenty Five
Oo Iars ($125 OOJ A new
tap s hereby del ned to be
the nstallation of water
serv ce on a I ne where
none formerly ex1sted and
wh ch requ res the n
stallat1on of new lmes from
the water main and the n
stall at on 01 new meter and
meter box m a ocl!ltion not
formerly served by water
services from the said
water main
Sev v That In the event
that service Is drscontrnued
as provided herein
a
charge of s x dollars {S6 OOJ
shall be made by the
VIllage for restor ng ser
vice Service shall not be
restored unti
the full
amount 01 the del nquency
l,5 paid lnclud ng the charge
staled above
Sec VI This OrJ:I nance
shall take effect and be In
Ioree from and after
November 1 1980
_
Passed the 22nd day ot
September 1980

l

Do othy M Johnston
0 rector

Dated Oc ober 1 1980
(10) 6 13 20 27 4tc
Pubhc Not.ce

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOT CE s hereby g ven
that n pursuance of a
Resolut on of the Board of
Educat on of the Me gs
Local Schoo District M d
die port Oh o pas~ed on the
29th day of August 1980
there w tl be subm tted to a
vote of the people of sa d
School D str ct at a
Genera ELECTION lobe
he d n the School D str ct
of Me gs Loca I Me gs
County
Oh o
at the
regular places of vot ng
there n on Tuesday the
4th day of November 1980
the quest on of levy ng n
excess of the ten m 11
I m tat on for the bene! 1 of
Me gs Loca Schoo D sir ct
for the purpose of con
struct ng
add n9.
to
remodel ng rehabll tat on
mprov ng turn sh ng and
equ pp ng bu ld ngs for
school pu poses

Ernest A W ngett
Cha rman
Dorothy M Johnston
0 rector
Dated Oct I 1980

&lt;10 ) 6 13 20 27 4tc
Publoc Notrce
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATI91\l
NOT CE s hereby g ven
hat n pursuance of a
Resolu t on of the Board of
Trustees ott he Townsh p of
co umb a Me gs County
Oh o passed on the 9th day
of August 1980 there w I be

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
or Wnte Darty Sentmel Classrfred Dept
111 CourtSt Pomeroy- 0 , 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

Card of Thanks

• G vuwa.,

41-Houtes for Rent
42 Mob eHomes
or Rent 4
44-Apartmtn 1.t Ren

5--Happ)'Ads

4~FRoom•

t-L.o1 and Found
7-YardSa e
I -PUb kSa I

4.-Sp•ce or Ren
41-Wantl(l o Rent
41-Equ pmen for Ren

2- 11 Memor am
l-AnnouncemMts

on
9-WantedtoBuy
&amp; Auct

eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11-Hetp wanted
11-S tuated W•nfecl
11- nsurance

I

These cash rates
nclude d scount

wanted
For Sale
Ann'ouncement
For Rent

I
I
I
I

- - - - - 11

17
18 _ _ _ _ _ _
19 _ _ _ _ _ _

:zo
21

1
I

-----1

22------1

23 _ _ _ _....,...._1
24
25; _ _ _ _ _ _
26 . _ _ _ _ __

1I

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

'.)

14-Bus lllll Tr• n nt
15-Sclt!M s nstnn:t on

16--

Rad o TV

e FARM SUPPLIES

•ceRe~l

&amp; LIVESTOCK

11-Wintecl To Do

, Fa m Equ IH"ent
61-wanftd to luy
72-Truckt for s. ..
u L vesteck

eFINANCIAL
IUs nets
o,poMun 'Y
22-Mont)' to Loan
U - P o Ill onal
Ser'IIICts
21-

64-Hav &amp; Gr• n
u- Seect &amp; r=ert Iter

eTRANSPORTATION
-A Ufos tor Sale
1)-Yintl' W D

e REAL ESTATE
J1-Homlt for S•t•l
32-Mobl e+iom••
for
ll-Ft ms or S•te
~Ius nessluildlnts
JS- Lota &amp; Acre•t•
JhRu Est•te W•ntfll
17-ltl tors

74-Motfrc.,cles

s•••

.-,.m.Parts
&amp; Accestor IS

15--

71- AutoRea-1

eSERVICES

Wont Ad Advertising
Deedllnes

27 ..
28 ._
29'·-_
-:_
--JOr. _-_
_
31 _ _ _ _ __
~

.

3
2
-_
-_
-33 ._
__
__
3
4
-_
--_35 _
_
__

llGJioMDa'/
2 NOOtl S•turdlrV
forMond•Y

)1-tiouseho d Goods
52-:CI TV Rad o Equ pment
Sl-Ant QUII
54-M tc Mt cnandlse
Sf-Bu ld ng Suppl es
s.-Ptts lor Sale

II Homttmprovements
12-P •mbolnt&amp; Ellc•vatlnt
11-I!JIICII'IIat ng

N-Eitctrlcal

&amp; Rtfr gerat on

1.

IJ-Oenera Hawt "'

lt-M H R.,. r

11-UDholtltrY

Rates and Other lnformat1on
U Words or Undtr

....

.,...

Ca1h

1 ctay

15~------

tdays
Jdlyt

16· ..- - - - - - : : -

'""'

,
'"
310
'"
'"
Is 4 cents per word Pfr day

l!acl\werd over tht m nlmum U wo d1
Ad1 ruftnlnt•tfl•r than cansecu 111 days w

Mail Thts coupon wrth Remrttance
The DatiY Sentrnel
Box 729
Pomeroy Ohro 45769

~-----------------------

....

..

Cbar..

Attest Jon Buck
K
Marvin L elly
Presldenl of
council
(9) 29 &lt;101 6 21c

be cha ted at the .,..,

Publrc Notrce

In memory C•rd or Th•nk1 a!HI ODih.lf'Y 'ct"ts per worO 1:1 oo
min mum Cnh n ldvanct

J

-LEGAL NOTICETO WHOM IT MAY CON
CERN
A Petition for AnneXation
to the Village of Recine
Morgs County Ohio of ad

M-'lle Htll'lt aatN 1M Y~rcl s.lft are aen,tM enty wltft ealh w ffl
.,.,. 2S cent cM,.e ftf' 1411 carryl"t hx N11mMr In C•n of Tltt
Stnf ntl

•

I

Publoc Notrce
Publtc Not ce
1acent territory hereinafter
votong there n on Tuesday
described has been duly
the 41h day of November
fried with lhe Board of
1980
the quest on of
County Comm ss oners of
levy ng n ••cess of the ten
Me gs County Ohio to-wit
m n • fimilat on for the
S tuate an Sect on 16
benet I 01 Southern Local
Town 2 Raoge 12 Sutton
School Dfstroct for the pur
Townsh p county of Meigs pose of construct ng ad
and State of Ohlo Begin
dmg
to
remode ng
n ng at the center of Cross rehab lllaflng lmprovlbg
M II Road on the I ne be
turn shlng and equ pp ng
tween Lots 5 and 6 thence
burld ngs for school pur
south 88 degrees 32 W 665
poses
feet to the N W corner Qf
Sa d Ia• be ng an ad
Othey Cross land the N E
dltional fax of 3 0 m lis to
Corner of M R Wolfe s run for three years at a
and orr Buffington lsl~nd
Road and the S E Corner rate not exceed ng 30m lis
of Grace Donaldson s land for each one dollar_ of
n LOT NO o rnence Norm valuat on wh ch amounts
to thrrty cents for each one
462 feet to the N E Corner
hundred do Iars of
of Grace Dona dson s and
valuatron for three years
the S E Corner of Mary E
The Po Is for sa d E lee
Wolfe s land and the S W
1 on w II open at 6 30
corner of Clara Ross land
o clock A M and remam
thence north 87 degrees 6
open untrl6 30 o clock P M
E 540 feet to the center of
Eastern Standard T me of
Cross Mrll Road thence
said day
along said roadS 14 degres
By order of the Board of
4.5 E 480 feet to the place
E lee! ons of Meigs County
of beginning containing 6
Oh o
441100 acres 01 land
Reservrng to the State of
Ernest A W ngett
Oh o all coal ol gas and
Cha rman
other m1nera s with the
right to operate for the
Dorothy M Johnston
same
Clerk
REFERENCE DEED
DatedOctoberl 1980
Volume 274 Page 391 Meigs
(10) 6 13 20 27 4tc
County Deed Recoras
'
The Pet lion w II be
~~-;;:====~heard at 1 00 P M 011
Publrc Notoce
November 14 1980 at the
NOTICE
Common
Pleas &lt;:our1
.l ds wrll be received at
Room a~ the Court House
11 e otf ce of Bernard v
Pomeroy
Ohio
The
Fultz Anorney In Bank
One of Pomeroy building
Petition with a map 01 the
territory to be annexed s untrl Monday October 13
on file at the Office of the
1980 at 11 00 0 Cle&lt;:k AM
Auditor of Me gs County
for the sale of the Florence
OH o where t may be
McLaughlin real estate
voewed by any Interested
sotuated at 773 Oliver
person
Street Middleport Oh o
RANDY K PYLES
The real estate was ap
Agenllorthe
prarsed at S8 000 00 All
Pet toner
b ds are subiect to the ap·
_!!) 15 22 29 (10) 6 41c
proval of the Meigs County
Probate Court and the
Public Nottce
Guardtan reserves the
ORDINANCE
right to retect any and a 1
NO 1101 80
b ds
Marvin Kelly,
An Ordrnance to Amend
Guard1an ot
Ordrnance No 1088 79 An
Florence McLaughlin
Ordrnance to establish
(10) 1 2 3 5 6 7 8 9. 10
V llage robs and wage 9tc
rates and establishmg
legal hohdays vacation
and sick leave
Be 1 • ordained by the
Counc 1 of the Vrllage of
M ddleport as to lows
Sec I. Thalthe follow ng
class1flcat on of Sect on 1
be ame~ded to read as
follows
L feguards - $2 25 per
hOur
Sec I Be II further or
datned that an emergency
exists and th s Ordinance
shall beCOJ'Ie effective at
the earliest date proy ded
bylaw
Sec Ill Th s Ordinance
shall lake effect and be n
force from and after Sep
tember 23 1980
Passed the 22nd day of
I II have page lhr"" Hold lhe
September 1980
haddock
Attest Jon Buck
Clerk
Marv n L Kelly
Pres dent
of Counc I
(9) ~9 {10) 6 21c

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby g ven
that 1n pursuance of a
Resolu11on of the Board of
County Comm sstoners of
the County of Me gs
Pomeroy, Oh o passed on
the 2nd aay of September
19BO there will be sub
molted td a vble of the
people of said county at a
General ELECTION to be
held In the county of Me gs
0hlo at the regular places
of voting therein
on
Tuesday, the 4th day of
November
1980
the
quest on of levying n ex
cess of the ten mil
lrm fallon for the benefit of
Meigs County lor the pur
pose of prov d ng current
expenses of a Pub lc
L brary
(Meigs County
D strict Library)
Sa d tax being an ad
dlt onal tax of 112 mill to
run for five years at a rate
not exceeding 112 mill for
each one dollar of
valuation wh ch amounts
to f ve cents for each one
hundred dollars of
valuation for five years
The Polls for said E 1ec
I on will open at 6 30
o clock A M,. and remain
open uotll 7 "'"PM of said
dl!y
•
By order of the Board of
Elec~lons of Meigs CouAty
OhiO
Ernest Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Director
Dated OctOber 1 1980
(10) 6 13 20 27 4tc
Public Notice

NOTrcgNotAW.fJ~ON
IN EX!;ESSOF
THE T•NMILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is llereby given
that In pursuan~• Of a
Rnolullon of the Boerd of
Education of the Southern
Local Sc:heol District
Racine Ohio pasMd on the
19th dey of AUIIUII 1980
there will be submitted toe
vote of the Dtdole of Mid
School District Of Southern
Locel Meigs County Ohio,
at the regular places 01

i

GUN SHOOT
Seturday
evening stertlng at 6 30
p m S~ld by the
Rec:lne Volunf"r Fire
Department et building In
Beshen
Factory choko
guns only

vr-•re

30 percent off
fOr 1111 month of Oclabor
Drehol s Ceremlcs. " N
Second AYtnuo
Mid
d~ 9922751

GET VALUABLE train ng
as a young business person
and earn QOOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen
tlnel route carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the ellglbll IY lrst at 992
2156 or 992 2157
PART TIME RN 7 00 am
to 3 30 p m Call Pomeroy
Health Care Center 992

I need the chimney sweep
&amp; a load of firewood 992

6

Lostand Found

TWO cock a poo puppies In
the Long Run Road Long
Bonom area One black
one wh tewoth black mask
Lost around October 1
Call8432911
7

YardSale

YARD SALE October 6 X
7 at Rut and Fire House
FOUR family yard sale
October 7 8 9 10 from 10 4
on Route 338 at Letart
Falls first lane past
telephone exchange Lam
ps rugs clothes antiques
Rain cancels Men ssults
YARD SALE ,..,nday &amp;
Tuesday 5() years of collec
ling odds &amp; ends 51 Rt 7
Massar Hill The residence
of Maude Gray Rain can
eels
YARD SALE Tuesday &amp;
Wednosdat October 7 &amp; 8
at 698 Laurel Street Mid
dlepor1 Ohio
YARD SALE Oct 6 7 8
Dishes tamps clothing
books lots of other Items
685 Locust St Middleport
Oh

31

PORCH SALE In Mason
108 41h st Oct 7 starting at
9 00
Furniture dishes
clothes etc

THE MEIGS CO 13oard of
Mental Retardation s now
taking resumes for the
posrt on 01 cook ThiS per
son should have at least one
year exper ence cooking In
a school or lnslrtutlonal
program be famrl ar with
record keeping and have
some understanding of
nutritional preparat on
Resumes will be accepted
unt I Friday
Oct
10
Please send to Meigs Co
Board of Mental Retar
dation 346 E Main St
Pomeroy Oh 45769

9

Wanted to Buy

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
old furniture desks gold
rings
jewelry
sliver
dollars sterling etc Wood
Ice boxH tars antiques
etc Complete househOlds
Write M D Miller Rt 4
Pomeroy OHl or call 992
77f4
Gold Sliver or foreign
coins or any gold or sliver
Items Antique furniture
glau or china will pay top
doller or complete Htetes
No Item too lerge or tiro
lmell Check !""ICH before
selling Alto do epprelslng
Olby lOuie) Merlin 992
6370
WANTED TO BUY Clau
rings wedo:!Jnt ~ands
•nyfhlng st6rnp.a lOK
14K liK gold Sliver coins
pockot wakhn Call Joe
Clerk 992 205-4 Cl•rk s
J-lrv Pomeroy Ohio

44

N MASON West V rgon a
two bedroom furnoshed
apartment utll ties pa d
no pets Depos t requ red
1 304 882 3356

Mobrle Homes
for Sale

FOR SALE 1973 Eagle 12
• 65 two bedroom one v,
baths excellent cond loon
Furnished 10 x 20 petro
cover rod Iron two alr con
dltloners underp nnlng &amp;
anchors 992 7473
TWO BEDROOM mobole
home with bath &amp; V&gt; ex
panda one acre fenced
land 12 x 16 building fru t
&amp; nul trees &lt;=o Rd rural
water skorted &amp; I ed down
moving must sell
Bank
appraised at $15 000 E•
cellent
condollon
15
minutes from new br dge
Toseecall614 949 2038
ONE &amp; one third acres wrth
12 x 5() two bedroom mobole
home
ready tor oc
cupancy Le&lt;:ated on Route
143 992 3081 or 992 6095

VIRGIL B SR " ' 0 ,
216 E Second Street
Will babys I In my home
day or night fenced In
yard lnqulre M 278 Ash
Street Middleport 'Ohio

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
N
SU RANCE
been can
celled&gt;
Lost
your
operator s license"' Phone
992 2143
Schools fnstructron

15

PIANO LESSONS Begln
adults
Send name
address
telephone number to Vera
Jane Holliday Box 224
Rutland Ohio 45775

ners advanced

17

Miscellaneous

14K white gold three piece
wedding ring set One
fourth carat diamond
$450 00 Call 992 7731 bet
ween 10 7
ANTIQUE weapons guns
992 7731 between lll-7

31

Homes for Sale

ED
BARTELS Loan
Representative 1100 East
Main 51
Pomeroy Oh
Mortgage
money
avellab e All types home
financing
new
old
ret nanolng and 2nd mor
!gages 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 buill In newly In
stalled electric breaker
system
attractively
decorated besement 2
baths fully cerpeted with
most anrec:tive drapes
Call9t5 3814 01'992 2571
EIGHTY ACRES 12 acres I
o1 bOttom land 68 acres
pasture
blecktop road
throe bedroom house
living room beth kitchen
dining room thrH c:er car
port
celler
perf
baatmtnt
good barn
Charles C King Rutland
OhiO 742 2229
FIVE room IKIUM with 13
eskll19 S7 000
Call992 5553

ac:res of land

PRICE REDUCED owner
must sell Thr" bedrooms
2 &amp; 0111 half births. lerge
femiiY room with firePlace
tully carpeted large sun
deck. patio. Within walking
dlst-o of elementary &amp;
hloh schoolS
Dwight
Goins, 992 7132

'

51

Phone
1 (614) 992 3325
NICE FAMILY HOME
4 Bedrooms bath
plus carpetong Modern
kitchen wrth bu It n
stove Full basement
w th rnc nerator on
4S.100 lot
Near
playground
NEW LISTING - Fur
n shed 2 bedroom home
new gas furnace full
basement on the edge
of Modd eport plus 13
acre ot land $211 000 00
SYRACUSE - Famoly
room
3 bedrooms
carpel ng k !chen has
s de by s de refr gerator
and stove Plus garage
on level lot 98x124
HOME &amp; BUSINESS
BUILDING- This san
opportunity for a couple
to run a gift shop or
what have you In add
lion
has
k tchen
bedroom and bath For
only $12 000 00
WANT TO BUILD?- 9
Acres with water and
sewage nearby for a
noce home with plenty ot
room for kids Hrgh and
dry
overlooking the
Oh o River
SYRACUSE
2
bedroom home woth
bath within walking
distance to store Has
new forced air furnace
basement front &amp; back
porches and large extra
lot

-

Headquarters

have

Real Estate- General

LISTING A
home In the coun
approx 1 acre
4 bedroom home
forced air heat will
vou roomy com
and the pnce s
Near the m nes

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

LISTING - N ce
BIG Yard- a 112 story
frame house w th 4
bedrooms TV room I "
ng room kitchen and
bath Several fru t trees
n the back yard that
have JUS! started to
bear• $20 500 oo
COZY DEN - LUCKY
YOU Even has knotty
p ne paneling Thos 3
bedroom home has 2
baths
lull basement
w th laundry and rec
room 3 greenhouses
shed and all on 5 acres
of level and Close to
brrtlge $58 700 00
SEVERAL INDEED!
With new carpeting
new panel ng
ther
mopane w•ndows elec
tr c heat also wood
burner
3 bedrooms
bath on Y2 acre lot
$21 500 00
OLD
BUT FUN Redecorate to :your own
taste Thrs 3 bedroom
home has a new fur
nace
2 frreplaces
storage
buildings
$16 000 00
MOBILE HOME• 1980
14x52 L berty Spec Ia 2
bedroom w th uti I ty
range ref with ble&lt;:ks
and
underpinning
S9 000 011 Lot rents for
$45 00 a month
FOR THE YOUNG SET
STONE COTTAGE
w th 3 bedrooms Rghl
size for young couple
Has equ pped krtchen
washer
dryer
WB
toreplace forceQ air
heat Complete prtvacy
on 1 acre lot Asking
$28 000 00
REALTOR
Henry Cleland Jr

h;jj~esomeii

53
Antrques
AT TENT I 0 N
{ IM
PORT ANT TO YOU) Will

SR 145- Beautiful lot 712 acres SB 000

CALL BILL CHILDS 992 2342
f ROONEY DOWNING-BROKER

'

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildmgs
Stzes
From 30xJO
SMALL

-Addons and
remodel ng
-Aoot.ng and guMer
work
-Concrete work
-Plumbrng and
elec1ncal work
(Free Est mates)

Utility Buildings
S zes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

VC YOUNG II

Rt 3 Box 54
Racone Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

•
992 6215or992 7314

TOWERS &amp;

landmark
New Wood Burner
Stoves
Only $395
plus blower
1 GoodM Ward
Electric Range
$75
1 Good Used
GasRange
$100
1 Good Used Frrgrdarre
Refrigerator
SUO
Q,._ POMEROY

~LANDMARK
Pomeroy

PONT lAC potatoes 10 cen
ts lb small potatoes 05
cents lb Cec I Toban 992
5()4.5

~-=========~
~

CONSTRUCTION

ANTENNAS

Modd leport Ohoo
PH 992 6342
, TRY US•
Complete ory Clean ng
and Laundry
ocarpet
eDrapenes
1 Furn1ture
c Were
Serv•ce &amp; Ouolillv"

•New tiomes
ex
tensrve remodeling
•Etectrrcat work
• Roofrng work
12 Years
Experrence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
9 14 1 mo

INSTALATIONS

TV, CB &amp; HAM
Phone 949 2414
9 10 1 mo pd

RUTLAND'S FURNITURE'S

CARPET SHOR

FERERAL electron1c s ren
with 100 watt speaKer
Been used 2 hours Ex
eel lent cond lion 742 2236
TWO gas furnaces one
good 40 Tappan electr c
range one restaurant Hot
point eleclroc gr II electr c
2 potS lex coffeemaker 30
gallon electric hot water
heater twowa llavator es
onecommocte onentnefoot
glass front showcase T
cushion sofa occas ona
chair 42 onch X 48 nch
round kitchen tables w th
leaves
one Demm ngs
water pressure tanK one
Sears electr c sha low well
water pump one electr c
roaster
one
antique
Nat onal cash register one
lot cement finishing too s
985 3521 or may be seen one
half mrle out Route 248
Chester OhooJ:Ieo Smith

FIREWOOD all hard
wood spl rt 992 7625
56

Pets for Sale

HOOF HOLLOW Horses
and ponres and r d ng
lessons
Everylh ng
Imaginable In horse equip
men!
B I ankets
belts
boots etc English and
Western
Ruth Reeves
( 6 U) 698 3290

Dnve A lrttle-Save A lot
SHOP IS FULLY STOCKED
CANDY
STRIPE

•3"

•s"

Sq Yd
Sq Yd
CPnce Does not tn
lude onstallatron ) Cash &amp; Carry

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Marn St

742 2211

CH P WOOD Poles max
on largest
end S12 p er ton Bundled
slab $10 per ton De lvered
to Oh o Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

74

63

78

d ameter 10

L vestock

REGISTERED 3 year old
Po led Hereford cow w th
bull calf Good milker vac
clnated and wormed 773
5397

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

CALL today tor a beaut ful
puppy or dog Humane
Society shots &amp; wormed
992 6260

Houses for Rent

PUT a cold nose rn Your
future
Meigs County
Humane SO&lt;: elY 992 6260
Shots x
wormed
one
miniature collie
type
female one shepha'rd type
female one black x tan
Kerr female one walker
hound male

Mollllo Homes
for Aont

1975 Two bedroom mobile
hOme partfelly furniShed
$150 00 e month Located In
Country Mobile Home
Park on- Route 33 north of
Pomeroy 247 39G
TWO

bedroom mobile
110me real nlce Brown s
Trailer Park Adults only
992 3324

I ne
leneth detr I Wrnter s go-w th
all 1aclret teams with pants
sk rts d esses Sew rt n qu it ng
welveteen satrn sr ky crepe
Pr nted Pattern 4183 M sses
Szes 8 10 12 14 16 18 Srze
12 (bust 34) takes 2 118 ~rds
4f&gt;. nch nap fabo c

$1 75 fir Oldlllll"'ll Add 584
"' Oldl ,... fir flost-dlss
lillllil . . hlildlllr. Solid

Anne AdoJM
pfllllnl u.pt.

'*

49 1

Tbe Dally SeDUnel

U3 Wost 17 SL ... Yon, IY
111011 Prillt lAM£. NIDI£SS,
ZlP SIZE, _, sm.£ IUIIIEI
Why put up wth hrgh prrces-

Musical
Instruments

57

TROMBOME for sale In ex
cellent condition Call 992

3288

... .........
-.--.........
... . ... .
..... . ...... .
....._

0 ..

0

I

~

61

71

Farm Equipment

KUHN HAY Tedders on
sale at close out prices
Meigs
Equipment co
POIT]eroy Oh 614 992 2176

1974 CHEVY Nova 350
automatic power steer ng
71 000 m les runs good 742
3035
1980
VW
Rabbit
automat c
gas fue 1111
tectod 992 3129
1972 2 door Monte Carlo
Runs good new paint job
$1 095 11 II truck camper
self contaIned hot water
heater
furnace
refrigerator
stove 985
3839

$1 75) Callllrc $1 00

72

Trucks tor Sale

1979 CHEVY 4x4 short bed
p s p b am fm like new
4500 miles
must sell
$5 200 Call992 5396 after 5
1969 OODGE one half ton
Sweepllne six cylinder
standard $595 00 949 2589

ALL I H Hay and Forage
vans&amp;4W D
equipment
bet~~~~ ~ ~ 73
before
II
1979 FO~O BRONCO
freelln.on.olno
Reds&amp; while 742 3035

13UIIIilolllllfat Qroilllooa$175

130-S.-•Si• --~$175

~=~=--~~~

ALL SIMPLICITY LaWn &amp;
Garden equlpmonl prlced i
nur cosl Must move•
Meigs
Equ pment Co
Pomeroy Oh 614 992 2176

Camprng
Equ pment

1971 Camper t r a er 18 foo t
long w th new 8 000 BTu a r
cond toner No r easonable
offer refused 992 5853

1973
Star crafl
tra ve
Ira ler loaded 992 31 29

SeFwiees
81

Home
Improvements

S &amp; G Carpet C ean ng
Steam
clean ed
Fr ee
estimate
Reas onable
rates Scotchguard 992
6309or742 2211
REMODELING work n
stall ce I ngs tUe paneling
doors f oor ng 992 27 59
82

Plumbrng
&amp; Heatmg

HEAT NG &amp;
d t onrng
clean ng plumb
992 2364 after 5 p
13

air con
f urnal:e
ng
Ca I
m

Excavattng

DOZER work small iObS a
specialty
qu ck depen
dable service 742 2753
14

Electrical
&amp; Refrrgeration

SM dollan gel better qualrty 1
Sorld for our NEW FALL WINTER
PATIERN CATALOG 94 patterns

Free Pattern Coupan (worth

YAMAHA M X 250 r ae ng
b ke runs good 742 3035

Autos for Sale

~

_ _ .. ,

Motorc:ycles

..._ ,

1979 VW RABBIT two
door fuel m1ected stan
dard shofl
good gas
m1feage
like new con
d ton Call even ngs 247
3051

R ght rn every respect

Sq Yd

Nrce Select1on of Carpet Remnants and
Lmoleum Remnants at Brg Drscounts.

992 6191

TWO
BEDROOM
un
furnished house a ISO two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart
ments Call after 6 p m
992 2288

•9"

OCTOBER SALE
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON A l l CAR PET
Any regular carpet 10bs tnUalled w th tree pad.

ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949 2660
Roger &amp; Donie Turner
992 5692
OFFICE 992 2259

41

CARPET
W / Pad
Installed

Rubber Back

1966 Thunderb rd
out
standrng
condlt on
$2600 00 Larry Armstrong
10 Oak Street The Pia ns
Oh o 797 4015

4t_

SYRACUSE - Large building lot In center of town
on the main highway S6 soo
-

0 5lmo

GET A N ce soft lovable
killen from ~ur Humane
Society Shots &amp; wormed
Donation requrred
992
6260 Hours 12 7 da ly
closed
rues
Tabby s
tigers &amp; a pure black all
males

HOUSE for rent In Mid
dleport 1 416 1788

~LOTS-

Call949 2710
9 281 mo

N

Go-With-All Jacket

12 Park St
Mrddleport Ph
Ph 992 6263
Anytrme

t~;;,;=====1=22:t:fc~~~=~P~o:m:e:r:o:y:O:h==::~======~6~1~5~1f~c~.
B&amp;D
ROUSH

Now At
Pomeroy

~E Marn Sl

HEATING

Ballet Tap and Jazz
For nto and enrollment

M1sc Merchan1se

Real Estate- General

MIDDLI! PORT - Energy efficient with insulaled
aluminum siding Vet"Y comfortable thrH bedroom
2 bath hOme full basement S40 000 00

Now open w1th a stud1o
lh Pomeroy and Ractne
Classes offered are

H• L WRITESEL
ROOfl NG

Free Est mates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard
949 2862
9 49 2160

0

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND

~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~*~========~

70 000 BTU natural gas
floor furnace Good con
dlloon $51 22 Phone 992
5706

54
POMEROY
9'12 2259

992 2478
928 1 mopd

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STIJDIO

9141mo

All types Of root work
new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts guner
cloning and p•rntong
All work guaranteed

for
antiques
pay cash
or certand
fed collec
check
trbles or ent re estates
Nothing too large Also
guns pocket watches and
coin collect ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

1 ACRE BU LDING site
Frontage
Racine area
949 2890

REAL ESTATE

1

'i! 3 :7~

Velma Nlclnsky Assoc
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley Assoc
Phone 742 1111

Housing

We

ding
stoves
warm
airstan
fur
fireplace
Inserts
free
nace adapters
mobile
home wood healers and
trrple wall chrmneys Out
door Equipment Sales Jet
35 Gall polls Ph

SECLUDED building lot In
Wildwood Est on Flat
Woods Rd 1 plus acres all
wooded ut lilies available
Call992 5396

NEW LISTING - Love
ly 2 story home with
vinyl
siding
4
bedrooms llvmg room
drnlng room breakfast
nook 1 bath and modern
kitchen Washer dryer
stove and refrigerator
slay On nfc&amp; size lot
with 2 buildings
NEW LIST! NG - Char
mlng home on 100 x140'
lot In Middleport on
Gravel Hill
Large
spacious rooms
4
bedrooms
2 baths
family
room
has
fireplace Quaint fish
pond gives this home e•
Ira flair Call for your
showing
POMEROY - Older 1
floor plan solid built
home with 3 bedrooms
kitchen bath full base
ment Gas forced alr
furnace
Garage and
nrce size lot 75 x170
Asking $27 000 00
NEW LISTING - What
a buy r 1979 Windsor
home with central air
and stereo J bedrooms
total electr c
fully
equipped kitchen with
micro-wave The home
has vinyl undersklrllng
Situated on almost 2
a.s;res w lh c~alnllnk
fence 20 x14 building
and dwarf orchard All
for ONLY S29 500 00
MIDDLEPORT- S 3rd
A venue 2 stQry home
w th 3 bedrooms kit
chen has birch cabinets
with side breakfast
nook Extra nice carpet
Gas furnace Is only 4
yrs old New root and
paint job Sells lor
$«) 000 00
BUILDING SITES- we

Call for Free Sodong
Esllmate 949 2801 or
~!~ ~i60
No Sunday

Household Goods

STOVES

Lots &amp; A&lt;reage

7422003

EAFORD[B

Vmyl and Alummum
Stdmg

Mobrle Homes
for Sale

George S Hobsteller Jr
Broker

WILL do odds &amp; ends
paneling floor tile ceiling
tile Cal Fred Miller at 992
6338

W ndows

Free Estrmate
James Keesee
Ph 992 2772
9 10 1 mo

992-7354

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

WEW
ONE bedroom mob le
home 1972 model Phone
992 2598

• Replacement

Call:

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33 North of
Pomeroy Large ots Call
992 7479

35

Expertenced Operato rs
ava1lable for local work
• 2 rubber I r e ba ckhoe s
el excavator hoe 1 4
yd
• 2 Dozers
• Dump T r ucks
All r elated equ pm ent

Space for Rent

46

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
w th 7 x 24 expando Ex
cellent cond loon Phone
742 3030 or 742 2728

Excavating

•Insulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm W ndow s

9 26 1 mo

1973 Crown Haven 14 • 65
three bedrooms new car
pet 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
two bedrooms new carpet
1972 Champ on 12 x 60 two
bedrooms new carpet 1976
Cameron 12 x 60 two
bedrooms all electrrc 1971
Skyline
12 x 65 two
bedrooms bath &amp; 13 new
carpet
1970
PMC
12 x 60 two bedrooms new
carpet B x S Sales Inc
2nd x Viand Street ~~rnt
Pleasant WV Phone '-1175
«24

Pullms

Vmyl &amp;
Alumonum Srdmg

- Backhoe
and
Dump Truck Ser
VICe
- Shop and Port
able Weldrng

Two bedroom furnished
apartment S~OO month
pi us
ut I I s
$50 00
depos I 949 28

32

MODERN
COUNTRY
homme 4V• miles off 124 on
Co Rd 28 from Racine 1 33
acres 949 2830

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

2 BEDROOM Unfurnr5hed
apartment Pomeroy $150
month plus utrl toes plus
deposit 992 6130 or 992
7511

TWO story older home
seven
rooms
bath
basement
hardwood
floors fireplace On four
large lots with river Iron
tage
Main
Street
Pomeroy
Finane ng
available Call alter 5 992
7211.4 $26 500

HOUSE &amp; three fourths
acre lot Priced to sell 742

Business Services

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM turn Shed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Srtualoons Wanted

12

Publrc Sale
&amp; Auction

OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Street Mid
dleport Ohio We sell one
P ece or entire households
New used or antiques In
eluding homes farms or
liquidation sales Get top
dollar List with the mM
who has over 25 years In
the new used and antique
furniture business
We
take consignments For In
formation and pickup ser
vice call 992 6370 or In
West VIrginia 773 5-471 Sale
every Friday night at 7
p m Auctioneer Howard
Beasley apprentice auc
lloneer Osby A Martin
{no junk)

6 1900

FOR SALE three or four
l)edroom house carpeted
Woodburnlng stove also
woodburnlng fireplace
Two car gari!lge total elec
trlc 10 x 27 sundeck 2 &amp;
one thtrd I!Cres Beauhful
sen I ng 985 3934

32

PARTTIME Rev ew Coor
dlnator Respons ble for
concurrent &amp; retrospective
revif!!W &amp; an acute care set
ling n the Pomeroy area
Weekda~s
only
No
weekends or holrdays Good
commun1cations skills a
must prefer RN or LPN
with qual ty assurance In
background Please send
resume no later than Oct
17 1980 Area VIII Pier
Rev ew Organ zatton Inc
1805
Maple
Ave
Zanesville Oh 4:1701

Oct

35 acres by owner In the
country
one half acre
pond eight ri\Om house
three bedrooms ~ full
baths
modern kolchen
dlnene dlnong room 24 x
27 family room
fully
finished basement double
garage tile ble&lt;:k bulldong
Must see to appreciate
Shown by appo ntme.,
only Call n~ 985 42311

2068

2()44

13
FAMILY yard sale on OG
Iober 8th at 9 a m at the
Woodrow Mora son Route
7 first lane northeast of
Meigs Memory Gardens
Many
Ike new useful
things Including a Bundy
alto saxaphone &amp; an elec
trrc organ no junk Also
clothing lnclu,dfng a bake
sale

Monday

Homes lor Sale

YARD SALE Blue Tartan
803 South Third
Mid
dleport
Tues
Weds
Thurs 9 6

I

RACINE GUN SHOOT
Racine Gun "Club every
Frl~ey night starting at
7 30 p m Factory chOke
gur}Sonly

Help Wanted

Decorated cakes for all oc
cassions character cakes
&amp; sheet cakes Cali 992 6342
or 992 2583

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow n Rutland
Every sunday starling at
noon
Pre&lt;:eeds being
donated to the Boy scout
Troop 249 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I

-RACINE GUN Club hes
c:henlled their gun shoots
from Sundays to Friday
nights starting September
26

11

ADDRESSERS
wanted
gOod pay write American
Service Route 2 Box 108A
Gallipolis Ohro 45631

EMERSON
Johnson
residence October 8 91rom
10 5 Large size women s
clothing bed love seat
lamps other mise Items

JONES Meat Pocking
slaughterIng
custom
Pre&lt;:esslng retail meat
Washington Co Rd 248
Llnle Hocking OH 667
6133

OLD COINS pocket wat
ches class rings wedding
bands diamonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Coin Shop Athens OH 592
6-462

YOST Wrecker Service 24
hours a day wanted JUnk
cars Ca 1John Yost Route
1 Rutland Ohlo45775

Plano Tuning
Lane
Daniels 742 29511 Tuning
and Repair Service since
1965 If no answer phone
992 2082

PRE SEASON
SALE
5649 00 Mobile hOme WQOd
burning systems the only
HUD &amp; UL approved wood
burner for mobile hOmes
Unit comes complete with
wall vent stack See them
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
&amp; accessories at Route 12-~
Minersville
Ohio
Or
phone 992-5587

WANTED
TO
BUY
GOLD
SILvER
PLATlNUM STERLING
COINS RINGS JEWELR
Y
MISC
ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OHI0992 3476

6606

I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins rings ewelry etc
Contact Ed Burken Barber
Shop Middleport

Announcements

Wanted to Buy

No huntrng trespassing or
fiShing on my property
Maxine Diddle Sellen

FOUR family yard sale
Wednesday October 8th
from 9 30 to 5 only Rain
cancels on Salem St near
Frye s Service Station
Children s clothes &amp; mise
30
Frigidaire electric
range gold like new for
$325 00 also baby high
chair Phone 742 2402 after
5 D Meadows

3

Public Notice

Announcements

3

9

1970 Honda 350 good con
dillon $350 00 992 5752
1979 Suzuki PE 175' very
good condition 992 5217

SEWING
MACHINE
RQpa rs
service
a
makesl
992 2284
The
Fabric Shop
Pomeroy
Authorrzed Singer Sales
and Service We sharpen
Scissors
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers
toasters Irons oil sma I
appl lances Lawn mower
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7 985
3825
APPLIANCE SERVICE
all make!! washer dryers
ranges
dishwashers
disposals weter tenks Call
Ken Young at 985 3561
before 9 a m or after 6
pm

�/

\

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•

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Oct. 6, 1980

Tw~
0

gasification _ pl~itts. ·• •

(Continued from pagel)

I
i~

Valley Synthetic Fuel's proposal highly attractive to
DOE," McClelland s&amp;d.
R. Jack Powers, manager of public relations and
administrative services for Consolidated, praised the
work and cooperdion of Point Pleasant Mayor John C.
· Musgrave and businessman E . Bartow Jones In
helping secure the proposal facility for !'®sOn County.
. "Mayor Musgrave has woi"!&lt;ed diligently and
. devotedly for over a year to lana the c&lt;ial gasification
factllties for Mason County," Powers said. Powers &amp;so
said Consolidated offici&amp;. are very mKch impressed
with the cooperative effort put forth hy Mr. Jones aild
· the Mason.county Commission members.'
Consolidated offici&amp;s have met with Commissioners Charles FoWler, president; Bob Powers
and Michael Whalen to discuss the significant role they
will play in the overall project and to discuss the need
of relocation the Mason County Airport once the second
plant is underway.
"The conunissioners have been very cooperative
, and bave agreed unanimously to allow relocation of the
ali-Port once the need arises," Orr said. It was also
pointed out by Orr tliat Consolidated will bear the entire cost of relocating the airport.
Also, arrangements are being worked out with
West Virginia University to relocate the Experimen~l
Farm along Route 62. This would also be done at the expense of Consolidated and somo.
(Copyright, The Ohio Valley Publishing Company.) .

·oo,(Ql ~c'"ts of co&amp; reserves In western Pennsylvania
and open aeep mines. The coal would be barged to the
Ohio Valley Synthetic fuels site.
'
• The entire first pbase would be completed in 1989
with ~pacit)dor 200 million s~ndaro cubic·feet ·per
day of pipeline quality gas for adaily oil equivalent of
43,100 barrels which includes fuel grade methanol.
· Completion of the second phase in 1994 would
double the plant's output. The facility would use ~.000
tons of coal per day at this time requiring production
from six large underground mines.
Ohio Valley Synthetic Fuels will be s~ffed by pel'
sonnel from Consolidated and SOiflO. l'hose individua~ who have extensive e~perience in energy
production, environmen~l matters, and marketing
throughout the United S~tes will manage the project.
The plant site is within the four-state territory in which
Consolidated markets natural gas at retail and
wholesale to three million customers. It is also within
somo·s marketing territory for gasoline and other
fuels.
McClelland pointed out that the objective of !he
feasibility study is to detennine whether the project
should proceed. It will assess the overall economic and
commercial Viability of such coal gasification effort.
"The overall ·combination of Consolidated and
somo as participants, our highly attractive plant site, .
and finn coal supply for the project should make Ohio

a

Eptergency squad runs

Area.deaths
ago.
Surviving are his wife, Mildred
Vineyard. Collins; two sons, Robert
and Roger of Canton; three
daughters, Mrs. Pete (Jean) Zovach
and Mrs. Steve (Marjorie) King,
both of Canton, and Mrs. Kathereine
Hoffman, Cleveland, eight grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews. Besides his parents he was
. preceded in death by an infant
daughter, Dorothy, and a brother,
Gordon.
Funeral services will be' conducted at I p.m. Tuesday at the
' White Funeraj Home in Coolville
with the Rev. Father Paul Welton officiating. Burial will be In Success
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m. today.
The family will receive friends from
2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today:

Wallace L. Myers
•

Wallace (Wally) L. Myers, 66, Rt.
1, Albany, died Sunday morning at
his residence following and extend~
illness.
Mr. Myers was born in Ramsey
County, Minnesota, the son of the
late Oliver and Jenny Hill Myers. He
was also preceded in death by two
brothers and one sister.
Mr. Myers »;as a retired employe
of the Apex Corp., Athens; organizer
of Cub Scout Pack 50; employed at
Huffman Transportation Co., for 20
years and was a member of
Cucklers Five bowling team.
He is survived by his wife, Juliet
Johnston Myers; ' three daughters,
Mrs. Neal (Nancy) White,
Pomeroy; Janet Myers, Albany, and
Karen Barrows, Wellston; one son,
John Myers, Albany; ooe . sister,
Mrs. Margaret Anton Voeller, St.
Paul, Mirin., and eigh,t grandchildren.
Funeral services will held Wed(Conti nued from page 1)
nesday at I p.m. at the BigonyJordan Funeral Home, Albany, with
Larry Edward Cummins, Rt. 2,
Andy BenYi officiating. Burial will
Racine,
and Nancy Ann Cummins,
be in Alexander Cemetery. The
same
address,
filed suit In the
family will receive friends at the
amount
of
$70,000
againSt Centi-iil
funeral home Tuesday from 2 to 4
.Soya of Ohio, Inc., Cleveland, for
and 7 to 9 p.m.
· proximately caused damages to
plaintiffs pepper and tomato crops
Kenneth R. Collins
caused by defective and dangerous
Kenneth R. Collins, 76, former
platic purchased by the plaintiffs aoMeigs resident, died . unexpectedly
cordin~ to the entry.
Saturday at his !Jome in Canton.
Mr. Collins was born in Meigs
The Farmers Bank and Savings
County, a sop of the late George R.
Co., Pomeroy, iiled suit In the
and Sybil Adams Collins. He was a amount of $7,943.53 against Kenneth
machinist with the E. W. Bliss Co.,
. Canton, until his retirement 14 years McFann, Ablany, eta!.

Five·money

A number of runs were made oyer
the · weekend by local units, the
· Meigs Emergency Medical Service
Headquarters reported today.
They include on Saturday Mid. dleport Unit, 6:38 p.m., Barry
Kingery, treated on scene; 6:52
p.m., Middleport, Mabel Winebrenner, treated on scene; Rutland Unlt.
5: 17 a.m:;' Rodlley Zerkle from
Meigs Mine 1 to Holzer Medic&amp; Center; Racine, 10:26 a.m., Floyd
Richards from home to Holzer
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains,
1:05 a.m., Rodlley Baker, Bashan
Road, to Holier Medical Center.
Sunday runs were Rutland Unlt,
7:18 p.m., Don&amp;d Cheadle- to
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens;
Pomeroy, 7:47 p.m., William Montgomery to Veterans Memorial
Hospi~l i · Middleport, 7:48 p.m,,
Alice Plantz to H'olzer Medical Center; Tuppers PlalDs, 1 a.m., Aunda
Klein to Veterans Memorial
f!ospital; Syracuse, 2:40 p.m., Bob
Parsons to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; 9:34 p.m., transfer unit,
William Montgomery from Veterans
Memorial Hospital to Holzer
Medi~l Center. .

.'

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'••I''

:iVOL-31 NO. ·l23

. j•

·I·

.

$478

~~~~49.95

Spurlock; Pebbles Blake, hoinecoming queen and hir
escort, Brett Mathews; carla Chichester, senior attendant, and her escort, Steve Browning, and Lori
Longenette, senior attendant and ·her escort, Rick
Long. In front are the junior attendants, Kimberly
MclntyreandJasonRidenour.

COURT-This is the Eastern High School
homecoming queen and her court as they appeared at
the Eastern-Kyger Creek game Friday nlght From
the left are Lori Robinson, freshman attendant with
her escort, Llirry Cowdery; Pam Murphy, sophomore
attendant, with her escort Brian Collins; Cassie
Sheets, junior attendant, with her escort. Rodney

I

S~LE.

ONLY2

23" COLOR
CONSOLE TV
SALE-

.$55~.

Reg. $699.95

25" COLOR
CONSOLE TV ."·

-- -.

~.,.
COLOR
TELEVISIONS . .
19" PORTABLE

SPACE COMMAND

Maple&amp;Oak

SALE

SS4995 .
$799.95

SALE

R

Pyramid .
(Continued from page 1)

the grand jury if it is called.
In a related matter, charges
against two McConnelsville men aocused of promoting business list concepts in Morgan County were dropped last week when two witnesses
failed to give evidence against
Richl!rd and Danny Dille.
State investigators have pointed
out the pyramid schemes; which
swept through Southeastern Ohio
during the late summer, were
initiated by out-of-s~te con men,
and local legal efforts to stop
business lists from spreading have
met with opposition from investors.
Massive rallies supporting
pyramids were held in September in
McConnelsville , Logan . and
Zanesville.

VANDALISM OUT
Acts of vandalism will not be permitted in Pomeroy, ·Mayor Clarence
Andrews said today. Mayor Andrews says that any further report of
such acts will bring on a curfew to be
established at 9 p.m. each evening.

ASK TOWED
A !118rraige license was issued to
Jerry Lee Barber, 21, Long Bottom,
and Judy Lynn Buchanan, 17, Rt. 1,
LongBottom

::tbe

ISSUED IN 1851
Canada's first postage stamPII
were issued in i851.

. ' :air

ELBERFELD$' 116TH ANNIVERSARY .

.

SALE.I I
Carhartt Brown
.Duck Work Clothes

NOON MEETING
The Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club will hold its regular meeting at
noon WednesWiy at the Meigs Inn.

I
.'
l

SAVE 12%

SALE

$54995

Reg. $59'-95

lit tbe Palace Tbeater.

NAPOLEON, Oblo- A former Jiayrol1 cltn been Indicted on charges
of eiJIIjeallng more ihan 'li,IIOD In school c11.tr1ct fwlda.
.
,.
. Cbuges wen Wed ~Y ~ Janice Raltocan, 41, of
. Napoleon, who ,bad been employed by the scbOo1 ~for about lt

I

yean.

Bency County ~ Jay Hanna said Mn. Raatocan took tbe ·
' J money by writing an atra payroll check for about $300 to herself •
every two !Jee11a from December 19'17 to August.19110. Hanna said tile
missing fWids were dlllcovered during a reconclllng of bank

l

them

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

statemen-

t.. .

; ·· Fireworks g1eets Ronald Reagan .
, ~ WHEELING, W.Va: - Even before Republican presidential ean; ·' didate Ronald Reagan stepped off the plane here today, there were
'
poiiU~fhewwb.
. •
·
.
.
1be llpll'b bepn eiPlodlnl! Monday when, at a II8Wll conference,
the J)nJIIdent of tbe DIBtrid 23 United Steelworkers unim 8IIIIOWlCed
that IU 11'01111 wu pu11lnc out qf the "Save Oar Steel Committee,"
wblch Ia iiP(IIIIOI'Ing Ralpn's vlalt of tbe Ohio Valley ilteellndustry.
Paul Rwleit said tbe union group was dlapleased with the visit and
bad ~ been CIJIIIUlted about it. The national uniOn baa endorsed
Pi flllldint c.rter for' I'Hlec:tlm.
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, p.;- A step ahead of wll!ter, 550 CUban
WI Monday for milder weather at a raettle••«eampatll'orta.ffee,Ark.
jacbta, cape and scarves againllt the
1 1be C.twns, t.mdJed In
pre-4awneblll, wen par cpn Withe f1nlt tine f1lghls to Arkansas.
AboutJ,apeople frGm tlil reseUlement ~will be fiOWII to Fort ·
. Olaffee, Mort are 70U118 111111, lllliiHkU1ed or 1makllled laborers who ,
canie to the United Statehlcllle.
·
.
.

•

Weather forecast

'

_The I98I's ar~ here.

OTHER
25" MODELS.

SALE

a

Fonner payroll ~lerk indicted

ca 1""11a
1~tt
men
wear

.

'6 7800

19'' COLOR
PORTABLE• TV

.~:C.:U::!::;'.:t~.in.::.=~~
lllate Univallllty lltad8nta

SINCE 1889

$448

$175

Prelident Carter's re-election.
Young wDUalk to lltudlllll and eonduct a pre. conference for high

a co•"omllr center~~ tor ~addrels to ohio

•

Who

OOLUMBUS, Ohio - ·Fonner United NaUona Ambuaador Andrew
Young will campaign Friday In Cleveland and Colwnbull m behalf Of

:'
'

·Syria .blasts.

Young C&amp;Jilpaigns

,I

Heavy duty 100% conon Brown ,
Duck Pre-shrunk machine
washable. · Wind resistant and
snag proof- triple stitched seams.
Union made in u. S. A. Complete
selection of sizes in Bib Overalls,
Insulated
Cover a lis,
Lined
Jackets, Dungarees, Hoods. Save
during our Anniversary Sale• .

Rugged •• the

all Arab nations to support the Iraqis

.

The. Farmers Bank
•
IS making
.new· car loans.·
I

~

.

~ 1t1t l'tllllllyiYIDI

FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR -17 CU. FT. FRIGIDAIRE COPPERTONE
20.6 cu. FT. FRIGIDAIRE
. Reg. $699 .

.

*'

.

(f.f

$439

FIFTEEN CENTS

------------~----~----~~------~--------~~-------

550 Cuban refugees leave cold area

$498

only 1 Deluxe

•

no longer reach the port and the only
_;,1tUI ..... Iiilentl say Iraq baa caj)- against tbe non-Arab Persians of Iraniana still fighting In the city
llured tbe port area of Kborram- Iran "becawre a victory for Iraq will were arna1l pockets of snipers.
Khomunshahr had been under
.~~. rr.n•s cblef port, and a·drive · be a victory for all Arabs."
liege
and beavy arW1ery aM air at'1lln .-rb)' Abadan and Its giant Sources In ·Beirut said the Soviet
.
tact
aliil:e
soon after Iraqi forces In·
."it'eflner)' Wll espected.
' Unioo, Iraq's chief supplier of anns,
::::'
. lnlq'• air force attacked Tehran, W8ll shipping unrnunitlon, IIJIIIre vaded Iran to secure full control of
,.,..._. lralllan _.._, on three sides
tbe SbaU al-Arab, the J:l().mlle
parts and other war materlet to Ita
.~~
~~
' ;and there na ~ unconftnned ally vta the Jordanian port of Aqaba. • waterway that connects the Iraqi
' ·report that.tbe local oil Afineri W8ll "' 1be sources aal!l tbe shipments were port of Basra as well ils I~an·s
Clilt, tbe ofttciallralllan Jiewa agency ~ fl:om Soviet stockpiles ·In Khorramshahr and Abadan with the
Persian Gulf. Iraq ci8imed several
::Pan reported. Tebran. Radio said SouthYemenandEthl~.
·
raiders killed fcJur people, wounIran continued to deny tbe reports times to have captUred the cjty, and
: :de!! eo and damaced a factory and of decisive Iraqi advances In Iran denied the clalm each time.
The clvlllan popi!)ation was repo"
! '@Ia airport.
Khomunshabr, one . of the chief
ted
to have fied early In the siege.
;i Meanwhile, Jordan's King targets of Iraq's drive to control the
The
Iraqi news agency said the air
l ~USIIelh becaJDe tbe lint Arab chief adjacent Shatt "al·Arab estuary. It ·
raid
on
Tehran Monday wu in
1 of stafe to declare Open, concrete ~d Its forces remained "in full conretaliation for Iranian air attacks on
: ,IIUIIPOI't for Arab Iraq In tbe 16-day· trol" of the city.
civilian targets in Iraq.
• eld war. He ordered moNllzatlon of
But Western reporters who visited
"The Iraqi air force is able tO
: ill tnnsporl vehicles to carry food there Monday niported the lraqla in
shake the ground wider their feet .
: land IIIIJII)Ies to tbe Iraqi army, wu finn control of tbe vital port area.
and Ill able to destroy any target
; ,reported lending bues to tbe Iraqi
Tiley said Iranian arttllery fire could
deep inside Iran," an Iraqi comforce and In a bl:oadcast urged
munique said.
An Iranian conununique said four
people were killed and 25 wounded
. wheli Iraqi jets boinbed Koubdasht,
in the centr&amp; ·sector of the war front
about 50 miles from tbe Iraqi border.
An Iraqi conununlque said Iranian
j
jets bombed civilian targets near tbe
cities of Klrkuk; Hajomran, Amara
and Utlhkar. Iran denied ila.J6lanes
I
mded civi!ipn areas of Iraq.

1 GOLD 19 CU. FT. GIBSON

Re:~~:.9S

.

: I ~ B \GHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Western

.· ,

SEVEN TREATIFS
The bordell' between the "United
~tes and Canada is the result of no
less than seven treaties. Negotiators·
wllo signed the Treaty of Paris In
1782 relied upon a map drawn 'r1
years earlier In defining the border.
The map's Inaccuracies raised boundary questions that were oot
resolved unW the Treaty of 1925.

n. GIBSON_S

Reg. 'S79.9S

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.!·supports Iraq

GIBSON ·REFRIGERATORS
SALE

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1980

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SUNDAY'S ADVERTISEMENT SHOULD HAVE READ:

3 Colors

. . . ._en tine

~Jordan leader

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-None.' ·
Saturday Discharges-Betty Bass,
Cheryl Fry, Roy Showalter, Shirley
'Powell, Helen Gibbs, Sylvia Roush,
NIGHT SET
Ruth Medley, Steve Chappell,. Kevin
Trick or treat night In Pomeroy
Napier, Lisa Blake, Frances Hewet- .
·.·liaS' officiilly been set for Thursday, son.
Oct. 3(), from 6:3() to 7:30 p.m. The
Sunday Admissions-Lillie Adams,
siren will sound to mark the opening . Long Bottom; Charles Tyree, Midand .closing of the evening's aodleport; Hattie Swisher, Ewington;
tivities.
Nellie Haggy, Rutland; Ray
Sullivan, Spencer, W. · Va.; Edna
Swick, Middleport; Mary Whaley,
Middl~port;
Jepnifer Miller ,
BURNING NoT ALLOWED
Burning is not permitted in ·Racine.
Sunday
Discharges--Louise
Pomeroy Village without special
Eshebnari, ·Katlu'yn Eblin, Olive
permission, Mayor Clarence AnWinebrenner, Judith Lee, Sharon
drews said today. Those wishing a
Icenhower.
pe.rmit should con~ct Mayor ·Andrews or Fire Chief Charles Legar.

4-14 CU.

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U.lmpo~t port captured

WE GOOFED I I I
n. GIBSONS

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4-17 CU.

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Reg. $499.95

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DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -Syria,
Iraq's traditional~, tqday lam~ Iraqi Presidelt Saddam
"H-ut in the first public criticism
~his leadersblp from an Arab coun·
bjY since the Will' with Iran broke out
daya ago. It called 'the conflict

LOG HEWING, a method of pvlng form to a single
solid log usln&amp; only heavy hand tools, will be among the
iOO traditional crafts demonstrated durlnc the loth annual Bob Ev81111 Fann Festlv&amp; Friday, Saturday and
Sunday at tbe Bob Evans F11r111ln Rio Grande. Lloyd
Weddell, Luckey, Ohio, who demonstrates log hewing

1."tbe war of America."

The editorial in AI Baath, tilt officlal newspaper of Syria's ruling
Soclau.t Baath Party of President ~L

::~Aisaw!~~':qf!:!stau:-; ~

Unlted States. . The Carter ad-·
minlstratim has said It is main·
talnlng a pos!Uon of neutrality In the
war.
The Syrian newspaper described
lraq'a .political ~ u ""perverted" and said Huaseln. l'tas ·an
"imperialist agent out to play .the
role of·the shah."
"Tbe IJUI1IOI8 Is perfectly clear,"
It said "AttenUon is to be diverted
from tbe Arabs' main struggle with
Israel and the United States and
Israel are to be provided with an excuse to Intervene In the (Persian)
Gulf."
.
Al Baath said tbe potenUal of both
Iraq and Iran tbrowlng their weight
behind a eo~lfi ca&amp;tatlm with Israel
might have been decisive in the Middie East's bl1ance of power. .
"TIIIa Ia what Saddam was asked
todt!stroy, and be has certainly complied,"It said.
Iraq la.n&amp;led by a rival factioo of
tbe Baath Party wblch Syria aocuses of ·ann!D&amp; and training on- ·
derpwncl oppoaiUiliiiiJ'OIIPII Jlllalnst ,
tbe Allaad govemment.
. 'lbe edi~ ll18o reflected Syrian
official fears that 8n Iraqi victory In
the war would establlah Hllllliln •
the llrongeat mllltary leader In tbe
Persian Gulf region and bo!IBt hls
pnatlce in tbe relit . ol tbe Arab
wwld.

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Ttompson reszgns sup·e rintendency
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Clarence Thompson, of the G&amp;lia- ·
Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational
School, Monday morning submitted
his resignation as superintendent of ,.
thattri-countydistrict.
·
According to a statement released
by Thompson, he will be retiring on
November 1, with his 1aat working
daysetu0ct.4.
Thompson's resignation came two
daya following a unanlmou!l vote of ' .
the G-J-V joint board o( educatiori to
.sUBpend the superlntenden,t, pending
final action to tennlnate. That ac- .
tion resulted from 'l'hompeon'a
refusal to tenc1er an lrnmediate
reslgn&amp;Uon, u requested ·by UJe
board, on Saturday.
The vocaUonal board of education
met in special session Saturday to

Rutland
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discuss the details of a post-audit

review presented confidentially to
four members of that body on September 29 by the ~te Auditor's Of.
flee. On August 26, the tri-county
board had formally requested a
State audit of the student 11ctivity account at Buckeye Hills Career
Center. ·
The full report of the findings of
the State Auditor's Office is expected.to be released late this mon·
th. That release could be withheld or
delayed if the county prosecutor
Should choose to consider the
possibility of pursuing crimin&amp;
charges.
In announcing his retirement,
Thompson silid be plans to take care
of some private business, "I should
have taken care of the past three

years.''

Thompson graduated !ron Ohio
Northern University in 1969 after •
spending three years In the U.S. Army during World Warn. He is also a
&amp;raudate of Miami University at Ox·
forti.
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He began his teaching career as
football COaCh at Elid,a High Sebool
In 1949. A native of Wellston, be was
bead football coach at G&amp;lia
Academy High School from 1953 until 1956, and · principal at Kyger
Creek High School from 1957 through
1965.

·Thompson served as superintendent at Middleport In 1966 and at
North Gallia in 1967. He was county
superintendent from 1967 unW 197~.
He was named superintendent of
Buckeye Hills career Center In 1973.

man faces as-s ault charge

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steve McGrath, 19, Rutland, was
Sheriff James Proffitt requests
cause a driver to lose control of his
arrested Sunday by Meigs County . parents caution their children from
vehicle which could cause an acaberlff's deputies on 8 'IUIT8Jit throwlngobjectsatvehlcles.
cident. Throwing objects at vehicles
charging that ..cGratb did
The sudden shock of the objects &amp;so cause property damage the
1mowlngJ.y cause or attempt to cause
striking the vbeicle .could possibly
sheriff stated.
physical harm to Roy Edward
Showalter, 75, .Beech Grove Road,
lalt '111unday ·IIIGI'!Iing. McGrath
will appear .In Maigll County Court
oo Wednesday.
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·
Mayor Clarence Andrews has announced the completillll ol the
'lbe ~t Is lnvwUgtalng
Pwneroy
IRJD.funded Land Use and Housing Plan.
.
vandallllln to two mellboaes One
Nearly
$650,000
In
capltallmprovementa
have
been
funded
within
llllli1boK .lit Riverview School, SR .
the
past
year
ill'
various
State
and
federal
.
f
undlng
sources.
124, near Reedsvi11e wu damaged·
The finaliZed Comprebenalve Land Use and Housing elements
u wellu aootlw Jlllilbol·~ by
recently~ will provide an lmpomnt information base in order
Mn. .Joe BI!IJey on. county road 211.
. to make recommendatiOill cooceming programs and Incentives to
The Incidents occurred over tbe
follter tbe
!bat revttallzatlon.
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~Goals Include: (l) development of a tisable data base with
reproducible base maps with an eye towards goalll and objectives
wblcb are apjllVjlliate tor Pomeroy, u well u toward future lltudlel
and grant appllcaUoas wblch will be aided bu llllcb material; (2) 'lbe
~Ojilldll cif a land wre plan which Ia concerJied wltb tbe dlrectlm
and tnt..lty .of cmrtb and tbe iiii8DI to regulate them, tbe
clen'ft'I8IICII "' land •W. uprlale to the .WiDDiidly. and tbe
top*daad..m.nc:e them; (3) Tbedeiek\MIMMl ofahoullng
- - . t wNdi 84Ljllcni needaand opporbu&amp;W.

·HUD project finished

BCI usists with
JJ&amp;E investiptio:n
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rar-'*'*IICtlan.

••tical, and.__ rehabilitation.
t.. a ~ tbla work will -ble tbe Vlllap ta.klaltl() lllVWtb

areas and ta11e full economic advantage of them. 1be data blie will be
an obvloas1lid to future planning and management effDI111: At the
same time, areas unsuitable for development sho11Id be nu'ile easily
ldenUflable.
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Wblle aval)able, copies ol tbe Pomeroy CalnpreliiMive Land U• ·
and Rousing Plan may be obtained from Mayor Clarence Alllllewa at .
• the VIllage Hall.

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Member FDIC

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Farmers
Bank :

at the festival, will be working on·a log Uke the one piotured here from 9 a.m. until ~ p.m. each ·day. In addition to craft demonstraUons, there will be continuous
entertianment, food on the grounds and even old-time
contests.

PI ot

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Pomeroy, Oh.

THE DAILY

Iraq's leader

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