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

Tw~
0

gasification _ pl~itts. ·• •

(Continued from pagel)

I
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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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:iVOL-31 NO. ·l23

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$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
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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.
·
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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.·
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~ 1t1t l'tllllllyiYIDI

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

.

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(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

•

.!·supports Iraq

GIBSON ·REFRIGERATORS
SALE

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1980

..

t
·1' .

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.

at

U.lmpo~t port captured

WE GOOFED I I I
n. GIBSONS

e

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4-17 CU.

,.

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J

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Fs

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
·

·
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.
·
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

.

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.
.
·
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.
'
·
~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.
•
.
Wblle aval)able, copies ol tbe Pomeroy CalnpreliiMive Land U• ·
and Rousing Plan may be obtained from Mayor Clarence Alllllewa at .
• the VIllage Hall.

•

Member FDIC

.I

•

..

n..n.

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

.

Pomeroy, Oh.

THE DAILY

Iraq's leader

..

•

�'
•
\

•

2_ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'ue(lday, Oct. 7, 1!1111

'
!1-The Daily Sentinel, Middl'lJIOrt-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, oCt. 7,1980

~----------------~,.

ou~,;o~

Opinions &amp;
Comments ·

~.

Phipps, Bears claw
Tampa Bay BUcs

w.w..

..
AN'TAAQ .
. SLEW UP .

ClnCAGO (AP)' - · Quarterback
Mike Phipps rolled to his right for 5
yards and his first touchdown
rushing in six . years, then sneaked
for another touchdown In the final
minute fl. play, and Bob Thomas
booted field goals of 30, 44 and 29
yards Monday night to le~d .the
CbiCIIgo Bears to a 23-0 victory over
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Until Phipps scored his touchdown
to give the Bears a 10.0 lead midway
In the third quarter, a national
television audience was all but lulled
to sleep by two Inept offenses.
The first haH was a punting duel
between Chicago's Bob Parsons and
Tampa Bay's Tom Blanchard, in·
terrupled only by Thomas' 36-yard
field goal in the second-quarter to
give Chicago a3-o halftirile lead.
~hlpps completed passes of 21 Yl!r·
II:!' to Bob Fisher anct 13 yarda to
James Scott to set up the field goal.
Together, the two teams managed
only 173 neiyap; in the first half.
The Bears came ·to life in the
second half when a 39-yard punt by
Parsons was downed on the Bucs' 2.
by Kris Haines. The Bucs were for·
ced to punt back and Phipps hit,

EACI4 onu:Rs
Olt.

~E\.OS-

Government spends
'too _m uch; too fast

•·

•

Business leaders say the federal' government has failed
to solve inflation because it keeps sinking deeper into debt
by spending money it doesn't have at the rate of ~.3
million a day.
"'
According to business and academic leaders in the
Akron area, the economy recently showed · signs of
recovering, but suffered a relapse when Congress imd the
president continued to increase the money supply.
· William L. Strong, chief financial officer at Firestone
Tire x Rubber Co., said that as the money supply grows,
"we have too much money chasing too few goods,"
resulting in inflation.
The only way the Federal Reserve Board can control the
money supply is by boosting interest rates.
Such rates, which now are around the 14 percent mark,
are having a major impact on the_ auto and_housing industries.
.
·
··
"An interest rates go up, business actiVitywill decline,"
said Strong. " It tends to snowball and can have a
da~ging effih"
·
.
·. Dr. Thomas Coyne, a business econo,nics professor at
the University of Akron, said inflation is not going to get
· any better.
. "The Fed. is exceeding its own targets that are too
·liberal," he said. He contends the agency hasn't gone far
enough in tightening credit because of a fear of hurting the
Carter administration.
· "How do we stop inflation? The major cause is monetary
growth," said Coyne. "You 'have to go to the root of the
problem and cut back on the monetary expansion."
.·
Howard Ryder, chief executive at Coastal Industries
Inc., a chemical and petroleum products trucking company, fears that the ecopomy may be heading for a setback
in the next few months. •
. Ryder said the economy took "a deep fall and is making
·a very slow recovery, but I wouldn't rule out the
possibility" of another downtum.
Attorney Howard Fort, a director of the First National
Bank of Akron and of Gqpdyear Tire x Rubber Co., says
:unemployment is another major problem affecting a
. :possible economic recovery.
: Fort doesn't believe balancing the budget is the a!1l1Wer
· because it would increase unemployment.
"It would be unrealistic to try balancing the budget," he
said. "It will take government, industry and labor working
:together to cure inflation."

j

~ ·T oday

in history.

Today is Tuesday, Oct. 7, the 281st
day of 1980. There are 85 days left In
tile year.
: Today's highlight in history:
• On Oct. 7, 1765, the Stamp Act
(:ongress convened In !'(ew York to
draw up colonial grievances against
~land .

' .On this date:
: ·In 1898, u.s. troops occupied
aBvana, Cuba during the SpanishAmerican war'
: In 1935, the League of Nations
declared Italy the aggressor in
Abysinnia, now known as Ethiopia.

.

Feds could save

In 1949, the Democratic Republic
of East Gennany was establiahed.
And In 1963, President John K~
nedy signed a nuclear test ban
treaty between the U.S,, Britain and .
the Soviet Union.
Ten years ago, Vice President AnWllr Sadat Succeeded Gamal Abdel
Nasser as president of the United
Arab Republic.
Five years ago, the Soviet Union
and East Gennany signed a revised
treaty of friendship that no longer
mentioned reunification of Germany.

Berry's Worlq

open

hearings on the subject are
conswner groups In Michigan, Iowa,
Dllnols, Maryland, Vlrginli and
other states. Also on record In favor
of the proposal are the League of
Women Voters, the National Urban
League, Conunon Cause lind Ral~h
Nader's Public Citizen.
·
But almost 150 members of
Congress have qlllOIIed any change
.ill the regulations. Most ·of theni,
Common Cause notes, are
beneficiaries of the $2.3 m111lon
donated to various politicians during
the 19'16, 19'18 and 1!180 ~lgns .bY.
dairy Industry political action committees.
CNI~s petition bas languished at
the Agriculture Department for
more than a year without Invoking
even a decision on whether to bold
bearings from the federal officials
detennlned to protect their clients In
the dairy industry •
Those officials recently found
time, however, to authorize ibeir
regular semi-annual lncreaae ln
dairy price supports. All a result, the
price of milk could rise by another 8
cents per gallon before the end of the
year.

NEW YORK (API - Tempera
must be hot as Interest rates over at
the Federal Reserve Board today,
wbete nonnally IIIey are cOol,
calculating, 'coilcerned and, they
maintain, rem~ed from tbe
emotions of politics. ·
But they are human bein8a too,
llld It is safe to say they rwcted In
the manner of humanl when
President CaJ1er sua-ted that the
Fed govemon were replllllble for
muchofthenatlon'aeconomlcwoe.
'l1le Fed,' the nation's central
bent, J'II'IIP.""'Ne?
;
The Fed, that hu beea llCCUied by
otben of ~ • fait ACO\'ery
In order to enbance the election of
the same JIIIIID)' Carter?
Fed, that bas what
eonalder the a1ma1t lmpcaslble Job of
counteriJIC the infla\kMW'Y budcet
deflclt10f the very urm pei'IODT , ·
, 'l1le Fed Ia uaed to critic:ilm
bea~~~e, is appointive guardlui ol
the nation'• money IUPPIY, It II wide

, n.

. ..
'

.,

" Your cost-of-living raiseS ought to -~· c.n•.
cBI/Bd out next year by 'b;~ckllt cresp'. "

,I

som.

open to comp1alnta that It keeps the
SIJAlly too big or too small, and lnten!st rates too hl&amp;h or too low.
For this reuon, It al8o baa been
endowed by ltl creators with a great
deal of independenCe from the
pusident and the Cllngress, ltll 1m-

administration, which wW exceed
·
1113011 Ddgbt have ended **let If the $100 bllllan IlK' just two~Fed
permitted a
111pp!y
Fed poll~ often ref14icts u,_
, deftclt8 by-higher
ratel, the
of money into the~.
'l1le Fed .-allY takes a eon- llUI'II\'M being to reduce !lemand an
iervltlve point. of view, ~~e~:rnrtta~ the pllol of avallable funds wlllcb, of
perbape In' Ita C!Nigatioo, u best It COUI'Ie,' hu beea reduced by •· .
ceulve got64IWM1lt demanda.
·
In other wordl, the Fed~ budly
escape vlewlnc ltaelf u a 9lctlm Ill
spending poilclu for wbleb
President Carter Ia ... ('wlhJe aDd
for which the7 feel tiler bave been

._d

.-.ter

Today's commentary

ln...._

aeeldn&amp;an~.

bli bot .tt. G.
mediate boll. It C8ll, llld hu more
tbln - . eGIIIUred prMdentlal
policy.
It '-'t alWIJII been rlchl 'lbenl
are c:,-ertaln crltkl, for a•mple, ..,
malntalrl that tile P'ed often aacerobala ..--!0111. Men1 of 11wm 111U

.

Milllr, tba

triM&amp;) lllfttlr7 and lalw P'ed
chairman, lltated "I U11 .,..-lied
ratel baft 10111 liP 111 qulekiJ." •
Even the )eut eaph'ot!catAid
papnlar econamllllllllierltandl that
7GU'U
I~ if ~ eaallnue
wilboutlltuptoll~
lncame. And the rodm
11011
hu tried tbatforfo!lr pan.

._ve

.

...

And Ill It II bird to balleYe U..
cool felloWI • ~r:.
feel •

J effSopler
6-1, 177lbs.
Senior Tackle

~n NL-~s - West

flag··

Bench discuss future

AtTENTION·

·'

CARRIER
NEEDED

Late .models return
to speedway irack

IN SYRACUSE

Top 20 teams

...

':.:"

believe the Great Depraion of the

Astros

C. T. Cbapman
&amp;-1, 217lbs.
Junior Tackle

CLOTHING HOUSE

president drove off the assembly

-thi.Dgs are hot at the Federal Reserve

Rick Allen
5-11,1sBlbs.
Senior Halfback

NEW YORK

line,' estimated that liO percent of the
workers at the Ford 'p!a!rt fa'IQred
Carter 25 percent were for Reagan,
and another 25 percent were undecided.
"After today, Carter will take 95
percent," said Harrison.
··
ijep. John B. Anderson, the independent presidential candidate,
did not have enough support to
count, HaniBon said. But Wes
DeWitt, an electrician, said'he would
vote for Anderson becall!le "this
plant has been down too much."
It is just such workers as v~
drame, Harrison, and DeW-itt whom
Carter and Reagan are courting In
their battle · 'for the blue-collar
ballots. There has been no Indication
that Anderson Is making a strong
pitch for.such voters. ·

r

home runs but didn't get a hall to the
Among the Dodger wounded was
(.OS · ANGELES (AP ) - Right·
third baseman Ron Cey, whose two:
hander.Ken Forsch, soaked in cham- fence this time.
Niekro's teanunates had jUmped
run home r un in the eighth inning
pagne, predicted his Houston Astros
on Dodger starter Dave Goltz for
won the season finale for Los
would beat the Philadelphia Pbillies
four runs in the first three innings
Angeles and forced the tiebreaker.
In the National League playoffs and added three in the fourth. Four
Cey missed Monday's game because
yet he was so ex~ited he couldn 't
were driven in by first baseman Art
of an injury suffered when he fouled
predict what he would do.
Howe,
who
hit
a
tw~run
homer
in
a
pitch off his left foot just before
Forsch, 12-13 on the season, will
the
third
and
a
two-run
single
in
the
slugging
the homer.
.
face Philadelphia ace Steve Carlton .
fourth
after
Rick
Sutcliffe
had
After
the
finish,
several
of
the
en~ntonlght in the opener of the bestrelieved Goltz.
Dodgers, including pitcher Don Sui·
~ "' · three-of-five series for the title.
Howe
said
he
hit
a
hanging
curve
ton and injured outfielder Reggie
He doesn't think the West's single
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The Kansas City left-bander Larry Gura,
tivate veteran third basema., Graig . game playoff after a deadlocked
for his homer and a fastball for his
Smith , went to the Astros' clubhouse
Kansas City Royals, l!mid growing
who Is 18-10 but winless In his' last ·· Nettles, who was felled by hepatitis
to congratulate the winners and wish
finish would burt the Astros, ex- two-run single, ·
resentment toward Manager Jim
eight starts.
this season, and are . expected to
The Alltros already had attacked
them success against the favored
plaini11g, '"We might' have arrived
Frey, expected to find out t&lt;J9ay who
start him Thursday. Howser is ex- In Pbilly and got ali nervous waiting starter Goltz thanks to inep_t,.Oodger
Howser said his Wednesday lineup
Pl\illies.
will start - and at what position would be? ·Willie Randolph , second· pected to make room for Nettles by
fielding in the first inning. "'1'
,---- -- - - -- - for the game."
In the opening game of the American
base; Bucky Dent, shortstop; Bob
dropping either outfielder Joe LefebSecond baseman Davey Lopes
Houston finally, after 19 years,
League playoffs Wednesday against
Watson, first base ; Reggie Jackson,
vre or utility man Dennis Werth.
won its division with a convincing7-1 bobbled a grounder from leadoff hit·
right field ; Eric Soderholm,
Frey must choose between Darrell • victory over the Dodgers, who had
the New York Yailkees.
,
ter Terry Puhl and then Enos Cabell
Frey bas consistently refused to .. designated hitter; Rick Cerone, cat· . Porter and John Wathan at catcher;
singled
him to third .
beaten the Astros three straight to
reveal his plans to his team. Three
Clint Hurdle, Jose Cardenal or
cber; Lou Pitliella,left field; Aurelio
Morgan
struck out before Jose
knot the regular season at 92-70 and ·
positions involving five players are
Watban In right.. field; and Willie
Rodriguez, th\rd base, and Bobby
Cruz
hit
to
Mickey Hatcher at third
force the single game playoff on
Mays N)l:ens o~ Watban at first
und~ded - first baSe, right field
BrDWII, center field.
for
a
throw
to home In plenty of time
Monday afternoon.
base.
and.catcher. There were mutterings
Left-bander Rudy May, 15-5, will
to
get
the
runner
.. However, Cljtcher
"I've been waiting for this 14
from ane end of the clubhouse to the
Hurdle is especially baffled by
pitc~ for the Yankees Thursdar
years," declared an equally cham- Ferguson emulated a grounded
night against Kansas City rightFrey's apparent waffling. He hit
· other.
whale and dropped the ball, allowing
pagne-soa~ed Joe Niekro, who pitalmost .300 against left-banders but
Frey already has announced his . bander Dennis Leonard, 2il-11. ,
the run to scare. Cedeno's sacrifice
ched the.victory and allowed only six
Frey bas benched him agaiilst southThe series shifts to Yankee
pitching rotation through the first
fly brought In he second tally as both
hits.
Iolli' games. and said be would an- Stadlwn Friday night and Tommy
paws for more than a month. ,
runs In the inning were unearned.
. He befuddled the Dodgers, who
John, 22-!1; will be opposed by Paul
nounce his starting lineup after
Howser pulled somewhat of a sur·
bad won the·past three games with
The or iginal heavyweight
Splittorff, 14-11, In another duel of
prise by naming Tiant to start Game
today's practice.
un-wa shed Levi jean s.
New York Yankee Manager Dick
left-banders. If the series goes to
4. Left-bander Tommy Underwood
Howser announced his pitching
was expected to get the nod.
Game 4, the Yarikees will send
rotation and first-game lineup late
veteran right-hander Luis Tiant, 8-9,
" If I put Tommy in there , I don't
•FLARES
Monday. Left-bander Ron Guidry, against Kansas City right-hander
have a left-bander In the bullpen,"
PIDLADELPHIA (Al.'f' - The Virdon Is expected to go with the
Rich Gale, 13-9.
17-10, wW start for the Eastern
said Howser. " I expect before this
team that finished off the Dodgers iri
Philadelphia Phillies, knocking on
•STRAIGHT LEG
Division champions, opposed by
The Yankees said they will acseries is over, I'm going to need a
the fifth playoff in NL history.
the door of.the World Series for the
left·harlder In the pen.''
. fourth time· in five years, opened
Art Howe should be at first base,
their best-{)f-five-game National
with the veteran Joe Morgan at
League Championship series tonight second, and shortstop Craig
against the Houston Astros.
,
Reynolds and third baseman Enos
CabellroWidlng out the infield. Alan
Steve Carlton, a U.game winner,
Western Division in 19'19 but finished
until after the meeting."
CINCINNATI (AP) - Manager
will pitch for the Phlllles, who won Ashby probably will catch.
third behind the Los Angeles
"It's up to John to decide what be
John McNamara joked that at least
the East over the weekend in ·a
In the Houston outfield, expect
Dodgers and Houston Astros this
wants to do," said Reds President
Terry Puhl, Cesar Cedeno and J ose
he won't have to worry abol\t a pit·
tltreEC'-game set with the Montreal
year.
Dick Wagner. "He's young enough
chlng rotation until 1_1ext March, but
EXpos,
.
Cruz.
"Granted, we've· had as many as
for a lot of service yet. You have to
be's already working on the
Ken Forsch (12-13) is Houston's
Green did say be would use
nine pitching rotations this year,"
want to play this game every day,''
· problems of 1981.
reluctant choice after the Astros
veteran Bob Boone to handle ·
Wagner, following a mid-season ,because of injuries to Tom Seaver,
The Cillcinnati Reds manager's
were forced to a one-game playoff , Carlton, but left unsaid whether he
Frank Patore and Bill Bonham, he
meeting with Bench, said he could
first chore was to meet with veteran
would go to veterans Greg Luzinski
with the Los Aligelea Dodgers to win
not guarantee such a request. said.
catcher Johnny Bench.
and Garry Maddox in the outfield.
the West. They had to use ace Joe
"But overall we pitched very well.
Wagner said he was not willing to tie
Bench bas said repeatedly through
Niekro, (211-12) to get the job don .
You
can't fault the pitching. We just
McNamara's hands with such an
the season that he wants to reduce
Houston went Into Los Angeles
· had inconsistency in the offence. We
agreement.
his catching joad to two games per
with a three-game lead; needing just .
only bad one streak - In the beginBench, who finished the season
week nea:t sea~on and play other
one victory to complete their first
ning, with an 11-1 record,
with
a
.276
batting
average,
up
from
positions the rest of the time.
championship seasim in the fran·
"Mter that we were on a r.oUer
.250 in 19'19, had said O!i!Y that he was
"I've got to meet with John on
chise's !._year history. But they lost
coaster,
We never bad a winning
not
asking
for
a
reduceo
work
load
to
• Tuesday and see what he wants to
all three, forcing the playoff, which
be made part of his contract. Bench streak or a losing streak,'' Mcdo, I' said McNamara. "I won't nuike
tHey won, 7·1.
Namara said. ·played In' only 114 of 162 games this
any further statements about that
The Phillies, meanwhile, clinched
Looking toward 1981, McNamara
season.
•
on Saturday without using Carlton,
McNamara said, after two said the Reds pitching staff was
who starts tonight with seven days of
bright with the likes of Seaver,
seasons with Clncinnat, his top
rest. Forsch has bad just three days
Pastore, Paul Moskau and with
priority - better pitching - was
between starts.
Mario Soto. Charlie Leibrandt, who
well underway.
STEWART- Saturday night the
If that's not enough of a handicap
" I've had 'one good year and one spent the late season In the bullpen,
late models made their return to .
for the Astros, Carlton, the league's
remains under consideration.
year not so good," McNamara said.
Bond's Speedway with Earl Hill
strikeout king and owner of the
Rookie
Joe Price, 7-3, will spend the · second best ERA In the league, has a
The
Reds
won
the
National
League.
clajming victory.in the 25lap feature .
nea:t months In Puerto Rican winter
race. To avoid conflicts with high
2-0 record against Houston this year ·
'
school football gamea, Bond's
·and
a 28,9lifetime.
,
=w~ bow to throw a
Speedway has scheduled Its
Also, the Phillies during the
'
Tloo
Wblle tllere was no 211-game winCALL
remaining events for Saturday
regular'
season were !i-3 agaiilst the
8
•
.
n.e
Top
~
••
~~~The
......,
ner,
Patore
led
with
13-7
and
lO
1
evenings with time trials beginning
West Division champions, ~I at
a!ed Press couege lootbaD poD, wtth 11m.
game winners Included Mike
at 1 p.m. and races at 8 p.m.
•
home and 4-2 in the Astrodome.
1
!'!:c~~
~ ~~· = ·· t&gt;!:f".:: LI!Coss, Moskau and Soto. ~om Houston, however, bas defied the odAfter a week's absence due to a
Hume established himseH as a front·
successful and quite spectacular :ao.tt-1&amp;-17·111-1H H'"12·11· tii-9·HW+3 +
ds all season, so it would be foolhar·
~
line relief pitcher with 25 saves, a
1,252
sprint car show, the. late models :=.~laboma (to )
dy to sell manager Bill Virdon's
2.So. Calllomta
Ul ::: . 1,121
team-leading earned run average of
returned In high style.
team short now.
I t )~
2.561n78games,McNamaranoted.
Racine's Bob Adams, Jr. set fast
Phillies Manager DaUas Green
• ~
IIIII
Soto, who started, did long and declined to announce his lineup until
time deSpite working out some han- 5.UCLA Il l
t~Dome
short relief, pltch!'d 190.1 Innings,
dllni problems in his No. A$5 I.Norlh
before game time (8:15 ~.m. ), but
Caro1jna
~
m
most on the staff, co!npillnlng a 3.08
Camaro which was rebuilt from a
~o':'l.-~
~l~
1~
ERAandledwlth18fmikeouts. .
crubaweell:ago. ·
u .Fiurtda Stoto
t-1.0
1109
Wblle McNamara- was satisfied
Despite th~ ubllly autumn air;
ll:~.
witlj
the offense of Dave Col.llna, "he
.Earl Hill stood out In contrast with a
14.Peln Slat.
3-I.Q
424
, still needs some work play!Jlg center
spectacular drive from his outside .
tl~
~
field,"hesaid.
•
pole slptlng position, Hill warmed ~~
11 .south Carolina
t-1.0
m
,
.
Collina
llld
the
t.eam
with
a .303
up the iocal oval in high flying style
:::~
~
:
batting
average,
79
stolen
bases,
167
wblle Dave . Robinson and Adams
211.So. ~
~
II
hitsandll4runsscored
..
trailed In hot pursuit.
Hill went on to claim the victory
with Adams placing second ahead of
Sla
llbdo
F.E.T.
Sloe
8ladc
F.E.T.
Rohl"""', Roy Pierce, Max Roush,
$2.87
~78 - 13 saa.es Sl .63
H7B-14
Paul Coyan, ,Jbn Deeter, WUIIam
878·13 at.is 1.89 5.60-15
St. II 1.80
Rablnlon, Bruce Neigler, and Hilton
C78-13 811.15 2.12 6.00-151. a•.•s 1.93
Wolfe, Jr.
078-14 liii.IS 2.11 F7B•15 U .ll 2.52
Jbn Wilson won the semi-late
E78-14 40.15 2.33 G78-15 ts.IS 2:68
llllift lh8ad- of 1\tilrk Balzand and
F78- 14 42.811 2.46 ' H78-15 t1.11 2.91
,Lin'y Bond. .
G78- )4 u .es 2.61 1.78-15
50.115 :).14
Racine wry right on schedule,
All prices plus w.. NO nr,.,.DE-IN NEE;DED
atutin&amp; pl'OIIllltly at the scheduled
I .
r r .,..___
timel with 6 heats, a meclwllca
FIOIIT
MJGIIIIEIITS '11.50 lllost Pa taiS
I'
rKe, .ad three features beintl run
. and CIIIIJI!eted by 10:15. Racing
BRAKE SERVICE
I'll !!Z
606 liiAIII
POMUOY, •••
I
JM thla Saturday nicht.

McNamara~

'

Auto Workers, has endorsed Car· the key industrial states both c:am,.
ter's re-election campaign and is palgns have targeted, "Reagan is
urging Its members, at union doing less well among blue-collar
meetings and through mailed voters than (Gerald R.) 'Ford did
brochures, tovoteforthepresident.
four years ago," and that Carter bad
But with the aUto industry In a . a nearly ;-1 lead over Reagan
slump that bas brought record-level 8JilOilg such voters In a September
unemployment to some com- survey.
munlties, questions remain about
Vendrame, the · Michigan auto .
whether the rank~file union worker, said he voted for Carter In
members will follow their leaders' 1!176, but that he is undecided now
recommendations or blame their bow be will vote on Nov. f. He reporecociOOI!c troubles on IJ;lcumbent
ted that an infonnal survey of his
Carter and vote for Ronald Reagan.
companions at the modemlzed Ford
Cliff Zukln of Rutgers University's plant here, now running at full
Eagleton Institute of Polltlcs In New
capacity after being closed for oneBrunaW!ck,N.~:,saidbewasfindlng
half of the 1!1111 model year, found "a
no evidence that "the , blue-collar · lot of negative reaction to Carter."
support Reagan is shooting for"
Jim Harrison, a machine l'eJ)8il'"
would actually end uP In his column man who sidd be would like to make
on Nov. 4, Election Day.
enough money to bily the f/ ,8110, op. ·
ile said that In New Jersey, one of lion-loaded Ford Escort that the

SD
''

·Carlton opens against Astros

UAW's endorsement of Carter's. re-election
WAYNE, Mich. . (AP) - Claudio
Vendrame, wearing Prange
coveralls and a oniM!ay growth ol .
stubble ori his chin, pressed against
a rope barri~r In the'Ford Motor Co. '
pl&amp;nt and surveyed the presidential
c:Ulpalgn as It floWed past him.
TherewasJimmyCarter,nomore
than 211 feet away, moving along the
8S8eiJibly line, shaking hands 'and .
showing · the same clockwork
preclsion as workers nearby who
were assembling new Ford Escorts
and Mercury Lynxes every 60 sef70Dds.
1
'1 wish we had more time with
him," said Vendrame, expressing
an interest In ·talking about the "
hostages in Iran, "employment and
what's bapperung with the Japanese
Imports."
...
Vendrame's union 1 the United

Thomas' ~yard field goal with 6:4S
Brian Baschnagel with a ·:r~-yard
left illlthe game to give the Bears a
pass to the Tampa Bay 5 before he
16-~llead.
rolled to his right and rambled into
The Bears final score was set up
the end zone for his first TD by
when Page intercepted a Chuck
rushing since 1974,-wh!m he Was with
Fusina pass on the Tampa Bay 1.
Cleveland.
Phipps sneaked across on the m!xt
The next -time ,the Bears gained
pia)'.
. • ,
)lOssession, they moved from their
Payton
finished with 133 yards in
own 40 to the Tampa Bay ?:1 on ,the
28
car
ries'
for only his third career
nmnlng of ·Walter Payton before
100-yard
game
against the BucThomas bootejl his 44-yard field
caneers.
It
also
was
Payton's 36th
goal.
100-yard
game
In
the
National
FootThe victory broke a tw~game
ball
League.
losing streak for the Bears and felt
· Late In the first half, Tampa Bay's
both teams with 2-3 records as the
Gary Davis returned a kickoff to the
Buccaneers suffered their third
Bucs' 44. The Bucs drove to the
straight loss.
Chicago 13 and on a fourth-and-1 ,
Early In the fourth quarter, Phipps fwnbled and Dewey Selmon · Williams sneaked to the 12 for a first
down.
recovered· on the Cliicago 23-yard
' On the nea:t play, Williams hit Jimline to give the Bucs an excellent
mie
Giles with what appeared to be a
scoring chance.
12-yard
TD pass but center, Steve
· But quarterback Doug WUliams;
Wilson
was
flagged for holding.
sacked twice earlier by Dan HampAnother
holding
penalty, agaiilst
ton, was bit by James Osborne and
guard
Greg
Roberts,
moved the
fwnbled with Aian· Page recovering
Bucs back to the Chicago 32.
for Chicago on the 21.
·
Williams missed on two passes
Payton, held to only 11 yards'
before .Garo Yepremian tried a 4!irushing In · the first half, then
yard field goal which was blacked by
spearheaded a drive by carrying
Page.
eight times for 50 yards to set up

'.

Royals feuding with manager Frey
"""
·
•
b
as American League playoffs

money but. • •

But the dairy Industry, one of
Agricultural Marketing Agreement
ByRobertWallen .
Act of 1937. That act requires the ·
Washington's
most
powerful
Slleclal·
WASHINGTON (NEA) - The
"
Interest
,groupe,
and
its
allies
In
Agricultural Departme!lt to guaranfederal government bas the power to
tee
evef'oincreasing support priCes
Congresa
and
the
Agriculture
substantlally reduce the price, conDepartment
are
·
detennined
to
formilk.
• ,
.swners pay for fresh milk at the
The
price-support
level for fresh •
superinarll:et wblle simul14neously . n!slst tboee beneficial development!.
'
milk is about ~ cents per ga)lon
saving tupayers as much as $250
higher than for powdered milk
"In the dairy industry, co~
million annually.
because the formet' is a blllky,
petition from new producta is not
Relatively Simple modHicatlons fl.
highly perishable product that
met, It 18 eliminated," ezplalns Rodfederal regulations would allow milk
ney
E.
'
L
eonard,
ea:ecutlve
director
requires rapid transportation, conprocessors to market a product
stant
refrigeration and special
of
the
Community
Nutrition
IDknown as reconstituted milk for
sanitation.
·
stitute,
•
a
highly
respected
almost 19 cents per gallon less than .
WashlngtoD-based
public-Interest
In
theory,
ptocessors
could
buy
the cost of fresh milk, Reconstituted
organization.
·
the
low-cost
powder,
reconstitute
It
milk - which ls produced by simply
and
market
milk
at
reduced
prices.
adding water and, If desired, cream
But federal . regulatiO!JS require
The milk producen liave Jleeil
or butterfat to powdered milk them to pay dairy fanners an ardemonstrating
their
awesome
tastes the same and is just as
bitrary
taa: equal to the price dlf.
political
influence
to
Leonard
ever
nutritious as fresb milk.
ferentlal
between the two types of
since
Aug.
23,
1979,
when
CNI
flied
The · competitioni generated by
milk.
.
with the Agriculture Department a
that Innovation probably would
That's
the
regulation
CNl wants
fonnal petition seeking revision of
drive down the a~e price ci
the
AgrlcultQre
Department
to
the restrictive pricing regulations
fresh milk by &amp; 91!Dts to 13 cents per
eliminate
or
modify.
Supporting
that
applicable to _reconstituted milk
gallon, according to govenunent
position are the Justice Department,
producta.
economists.
the Wllite House Conswner Affairs
The dairy farmers oppose that
· At the same time, the federal
prqlOII8l on the grounds that it would
Office and the Council on Wl!ge and
budget might be reduced by the Pill
PrlceStablllty.
•
disrupt "orderly llllll'keting conmillion to $250 m111lon per year now
Among the more than 125
dltiOIIIJ" - a euphemism far an anti·
required to purchase surplus
organisations' requesting that ·the
competitive pricing structure cOOr·
powdered milk under the governdlnated and supported by the federal . Agriculture Depal-tritent begin a forment's complex price-support
mal rule-malting proceeding and
government through
the
.system,

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THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

BETWEEN .8:30 and

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Go thru ice, mud and snow!:
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Polyest~ cord

snow BITER"
••••••

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 7, 1980

Rock Springs Church-observes
200th annit;ers_ary ,on Sunday
Homecoming and the. 200th anniverllary of.Sunday school were of&gt;.
served Sunday at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
Recognized during the Sunday
sc-hool progrma were Mrs. Eva
fJ;,iley of the ·Pomeroy Health Care
Center, Beuna Grueser and Bill
Grueser, members of the church sinc-e 1932, and Lottie Leonard, a member since 1934. They were presented
cot-sages and boutonnieres. Also
recognized were a memoor of each
Sunday school class who had maintained a pertect attendance record

r

rogetherness
•

rogram top1c
·'Togetherness" was the program
topic used at the recent meeting of
the United Methodist Women of the
Letart Falls Church held at the
home of Mrs. Bert Grimm. Mrs. Andrew Cross was C()-hostess for the
rueeting.
Emphasis of the program was on
how member.s can become closer
..,jth the thought that working
'.vgether on church projects can help
accomplish this. Readings were
;:iven by Mrs. Harold Roush, Mrs.
Inez Hill, Mrs. Mary Louise Shuler,
nud Mrs. Cross who also gave a
prayer. Mrs. Shuler had the
Juvotions using a study from Mattltew with member participation.
During the business meeting communications were read, one from lhe

UMW sponsored eight-year-old
Jamaican girl, Yasmini. A call from
Mrs. Kitty Skeels, Columbus, was
received.' Twenty-four shut-in visits
were made during the month.
Refreshments were served by the
hostesses. Mrs. Hill wilt host the
November meeting.·

Crisisline still open
There are still openings for the
Crisisline Training program beginning Oct. 14, Laraine Sloane,
'Crisisline's Coordinator announced
tod&lt;!y.
People interested in becoming one
of the telephone counselingservice's
volunteers are encouraged to apply.
Topics covered in the training are
crisis intervention·, community
resources, human sexuality, drugs,
values clarification and effectiveness training. The program
includes 40 supervised hours on the
telephone lines.
Training will be conducted on
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 2:30
to 5:30p.m. Oct.l4 through Nov. 2 at
the Gallia CO!JU11unity Mental
Health Center. Residents of Gallia,
Jackson and Meigs Counties who are
over the age of 18 may call Crisisline
for an application.
The Crisisliite number is 446-5554
in Gallia, 286-5554- in Jackson and
992-5554 in Meigs.

,.

Old fashioned
Sunday
celebrated

' Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
under the leadership of Rev. ~ames
Kittle observed old fashioned Sunday, Oct. 5 with 73 people attending.
Some were dressed in old
fashioned dr~sses, hats, jeans and
bib overalls. Old time songs were
sung by the congregation.
The church also presented Rev.
and Mrs. Kittle with two gifts.
Open house will be observed Sunday, Oct. 12, with Dr. Sanders from ·
Columbus.

Ronnie Casto
A party was held recently
honoring Ronnie Lee Casto on his
fourth birthday. He is the son of Ronnie and 'Susie Casto who hosted the
celebration.
A Tom and Jerry theme was
caried out in the cake and the
decorations. Lori and Shelly Casto
won the door prizes. Refreshments
were serVed and games played with
prizes going to each child.
The parents also hosted an outing
at Camden Park. Attending were his
par~nts, and Karen and Ritchie
Guilkey, Patsy Oiler, Bobbie
Cremeans, Scott, Lori, Shelly Casto,
Jeff and Sherry Smith, Angie and
Travis Swartz and Nickie Wliitlatch.
Sending gifts were Ronnie Lee's
grandparents, Audra Arnold,
Pomeroy •. and Oatho and Florida
Casto, Mason; his greatgrandmother, ·Neolia Miller,
Georgie Anderson, Phyllis Bearhs,
Susie and Leslie McGraft ·and
Jessica Wright. .

Homecoming .Sunday
Homecoming at St. Paul's United
Methodist Church will be observed
on Oct. 19 with a dinner at 12:3o p.m.
and the progrma at 2 p.m. feturing
"The Duncans."
_
Communion was observed at the
church Sunday with M attending
Sunday school and 60 attending worship services. The Rev. Richard
Thomas used as his sermon topic,
"The Time of Sharing."
It was announced that the Northeast Cluster Charge Conference
will be held at St. Paul's Church at
7:30p.m. on Oct. 28. Wednesday at
1:30 p.m. the St. Paul's United
Methodist Women will meet at the
church. There will be no Bible study this
week at the churches in Tuppers
Plains or Long Bottom due to the
cluster revival. The St. Paul choir
will sing at the Chester church at
7:30 Tuesday evening.
'

TO MEET TOMORROW
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, will meet at the h;lll Wednesday at 7:30p.m. with Ada Bisell
and Mary Showalter as hostesses instead of Betty Roush and Pauline
Ridenour as was previously an:
nounced.
SNAKES ON DISPLAY
Chuck Carroll of Stewart will
discuss and display snakes at the
Middleport Library on Oct. 11 at 2
p.m. The public .is invited to attend
thesnakeshow. ·
·

ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS BANK
216 . W. MAIN ST. ·. POMEROY, OH.
Each Wed. &amp; ·Fri. at 7:30 PM
_ Beginning' Wed., Oct. 8 th.
·
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the same for all - they were "lear- tivities. But the realm has eXJ}anded
ning by doing. "
to include mode.rn concerns, such u
Graham sought ideas for this new energy, photography and conway of bringing appreciation for servation.
everyday farm and home activities
Volunteer leaders are the heartinto the classroom. Graham wrote ooat of the 4-H program, both in this
'fhomas F. Hlint, Dean of the College country and abroad. These are the ·
of Agricultll{e at The Ohio State adults who donate their time and
Universit~, asking what help the
resources to 'the program, sharing
college might give to his . the knowledge and skillii they have
agricultural club. By 1904, club work acquired through their businesses,
in the public schoo1s enrolled 506 vocations and hobbies.
boys arid girls in 12 groups. A year
Other people in the communicy
later, 1,tl;l6 members belonged to 20 · and at the state level are vital to the
clubs.
functioning of .4-H. They give their
From its early . beginnings . in · support and sponsorship to many
Springfield, 4-H now circles the special programs and activities.
globe. Youth of many nationalities Some serve as subject matter inare participating in local 4-H type structors, while others teach
clubs on six continents. In Ohio, 4-H
business principles. The 4-H motto is
involves more than 208,000 boys and "To Make The Best Better." And 4girls who participate in leadership H' ers and adults internationally are
activities and community service
striving to implement this theory as
projects.
·reality - "for their club, their comFour-H projects still include many
munity, their country and their
of those first agriculture- relatejl acworld."

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Association for Retarded
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Citizens needs
piano
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They share house,
but not married lifo · .

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NOW IN PROGRESS

ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED
.
.
30% TO CELEBRATE OQR. 301H YEAR . .
IN BUSINESS.
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MASON FURNITURE CO.
Herman Grate, owner

Mason, w. Va.

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Members of the Nabby Lee Ames
will be ~- Josep'h L. • Colburn,
Chapter or Athens and the French · Colwnbus, Southeast district direcColony Chapter of Gallipolis, will be tor of the Ohio DAR. Luncheon
guests at the Friday luncheon of reservations are to be made with
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of Mra. Dale Dutton. othel' hostesses
the Daughters of the . American
will be ~- Nan Moore, Mrs.
Revolution.
•
Charles Lewis, ~- Pearl Mora,
Speaker for the luncheon to be
Mrs. Day_ton P111'8011s~ and Mrs.
Harold Sargent. .
held at the Meigs Inn at 12:30' p.m.

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meeting on to other parents. Mrs.
The need for a piano and a sewing
Layh
also told of a field trip being
machine
at
the
Meigs
Community
1 .
plaMed to Bob Evans !ann on
School was reported at a meeting of
BY HELEN BOITEL
• more, but she IS always gone. What the Meigs Association for Retarded
Friday. Bwies will leave at 9 a.m.
Special correspondent
kind of life is this? - BITTER AND Children held Thursday night at the
and some volunteers are needed.
DEARHELEN:
BEW1LDERED
nie recent products party netted
Meigs Inn.
My wife set the tone of our':)J-year DEARBANDB:
$264.62,
it was repOrted, and another
Mrs. Russell Carson presided at
It's a nothing life for both of you!
marriage when the minister said,
party
is
being planned ror Oct. 20 at
the meeting during which time
"You may kiss the bride," and she I'd suggest that you close down this thank you notes were read from the
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs Inn. All of the
turned her face away so that i barely live-in divorce arrangement and ComUnity School for the ·$5,000
proceeds go to,benefit the school for
brushed her cheek. From then on, I really separate. With her savfngs, donation u&amp;ed to purchase kitchen
the retarded. It was also noted that
was lucky to have even tb.i.'! show of she can manage, until she finds a equipment including refrigr· 1tors,
on Oct. 30 a halloween party will be
job.
'!flection.
held for the community classes.
stoves, sinks, and pots and pans and
It may be more expensive, but had
Sex? Enough :o produce children,
Dues are payable before Jan. 1. Coffor
the
curtains
provided
for
the
kitbut she obviously didn't enjoy it, or frugality ever paid off in marital chen. · ·
fee· and cookies were served. At·
anything else in our union except happiness? Neither will it in single
tending besides the members of the
Mrs.
Carol
Layh,
administrative
.
saving money. She was_good at that, "bliss." - IL
MARC were Chris and .Carol Layh,
assistartt
at
the
school;
announced
a
Here's how to solve the high rate
but she put it in a separate account,
administrator and assistant respecpatent and staff meeting to be held
of unemployment: If a man's salary
under her maiden name!
tively, along with three teachers.
Oct. 14 at 4 p.m. in Athens. She said
Because there was no com- is at a certain amount for his size that the Center Of Hwnan Developmunication at home, I- .took tO family, then his wife ~ouliln 't be
ment has given a grant to help
staying away, at the golf course, allowed to work. Likewise, the wage- parents cope with a mentally retarbars, etc., though I was never untrue earner shouldn't be given overtime , ded child in the home: ·
to her. She U:Sed this to turn the _privileges· if he earns his quota· of
The four parents invited to attend
children against me. Never once did dollars. U the government limits will pass information from the
she suggest doing somethffig as a what each family makes, there'll be
family. She chose against vacations enough jobs for all. - AGAINST
and going out so she' could build up WELFARE HANDOUTS
REVIVAL SUNDAY
her bank account, but ' l got DEARAWH:
A reviva~ at the United Pen... And Blg Brother will be
blackl,isted for being an absentee
tecostal Church, Middleport, is
husband and father.·Sex ended long breathing down our necks. Sorry,
being continued through Sunday,
frlend, your b1'1111d of socialism isn't Oct.12, at 7:JOp:m. nightly.
ago.
.
We're alone now, except for visits my dish of "fee." -IL
The Rev. Jeff' Butler, of lnP .S. Tell me, if a wife's salary exfrom our children and granddianapolis, Indiana is the evangelist.
children. My wife is mean and vin; ceeds your limit, would you then inPastor William Knittel invited the
dictive to me, yet she fools people in- sist that her husband stay home with
public to attend.
the kids?
to sympathizing with her.
DEAR HELEN: I'm a junior high ·
She asked for a divorce and tried
history
teacher who sometimes gets
to take the entire $50,000 in "her"
into
political
science. The other day,
savings accoupt, claiming it was all
hers because she had saved it. A discussing ho:!V we , could help
lawyer got it tenned half mine, eliminate global war, I mentioned
luckily.
the necessity of "intercOurse beINSURANCE
Her next move was to insist that tween nations." It was a poor choice
after the divorce ive both continue of words for exchailge of ideas.
Came a voice from the back of the
living in our house, to save money.·
R~UTER BROGAN
She demands that r pay all expenses, room: "So that's how islands are
just as before. She does nothing for · lx'm!" - KATIIY
.INSURANCE SERVICE
me. When l came home from the
Got a problem? An adult subject
• hospital after my third heart attack,
214MAIN
POMEROY,O.
she walked off and left me helpless for di.scusltlon? You can talk it-over
992-6687 or 992:5139
ill her colwnn If you write to Helen
in bed. (I've recovered now.)
Bottel,
care of this ne~spaper. .
I don't golf or visit taverns any

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·go back to the church fpr a party.
There will be a $2 gift exchange.
Guests will be Mrs. Judy Werry,
Mrs. Judy Jewell, Mrs. Gay Perrin,
and Mrs. Mary Colmer.
Members were reminded ·to
rememoor Maude Grueser at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center in
prayer. A sympathy card was sent to
Mrs. Ruth Mas5ar on the death of
her sister, Mrs. Sarah Brown. Cards
were signed for Mrs. Esther Fugate,
Mrs. Rose Ginther, and Mrs. Frances Riebel. The Lol'd's Prayer
closed the meeting. Refreshments
were served by'Mrs. Eva Dessauer
and Mrs. Edna Slusher.

Helen Help Us

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Group makes donations for cross relocation
reported on the church exterior
walls which have OO.n repaired, and
noted that Oct. 12 is rally day with a
fellowship dinner to follow. Mrs.
Paul Nease will have charge of the
program.'
It was announced that World Community Day will be observed at the
Middleport Presbyterian Church.
Members of the Happy Harvesters
Class will meet at Trinity Church at
11 a.m. for a sack lunch preceding
the meeting. Dessert will be furnished.
·
Christmas dinner will be held on
Dec. 5 at Crow's Restaurant at 4
P;m. after'whie" ';"lethe group will

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Donations toward the expenses of
relocating the cross on Lincoln H1ll
and ·repairing the exterior walls of
the church were made by the Happy
Hanlesters Class at a meeting held
Friilay at the church.
Miss Erma Smith presided at the
meeting during which time the
group heard devotioiiS from Mrs.
Edna Slusher who read "God Is In
Charge of My Life, and All That ConREVIVAL BEGINS
cerns Me" from the Daily Word, and
The Rev. William Hatfield of "U God Could Speak."' She conGallipolis Ferry, W. va., will be cluded with "No Regrets" by Bar·
..
evangelist for revival services at . bara Zepp.
7:30 p.m. each evening at the Mt.
Miss Smith reported that the cost
Hermon United Brethren··church of keepipg the cross lighted is paid
by the Busy Bee Circle. She also
Wednesday through Oct. 19.

Nonuenominational
WILL BF: HELD IN

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30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
BIBLE TALKS

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-4-H·:· as it was; as it is

He was a young teacher in a oneroom school house at the turn of the
the longest.
~hildren. On display were old pic- . century. He had a feeling, a persistent belief that the children of that
In the group recognized were tures and newspaper articles dating
Buena Grueser; adult class, 24 · llack to the early 1890s.
· day were rrussing somethiJ!g in the!r
. years; Connie Uttle, young adult
At 2 p.m. there was a program . education. The youngsters needed to
learn more than was presented i11
class. 14 years; ·Pam Evans, teenage with the congregation singing ''Four
their
school books - they sbOiaid
class, nine years; Tim Eblin, junior Thousand Tongues to Sing." The
have
a
way to put their knowledge
class, Tammy Eblin, middlers ; and
Rev. James Corbitt, pastor, gave the
into practice.
.· · • · ·
Tracy Eblin, all four years. Also prayer, and Roger and Mary
On
January
15,
1902,'
Albert
B.
.
recognized was the child in the nur- Gilmore of Athens presented a
started
a
club
called
'
the
Graham
sery the most Sundays since
program of Appalachian music. The
"Boys and Girls Experiment Club,'!
January of this year with Dale Eblin · program closed 'IS the group joined
a
forerunner of today's 4-H
winning.
to sing "Love Divine." During the
organization.
The purpose of ihe firSunday school attendance was 78. church · services world-Wide comst
meeting was ·to bring rural boys
A potluck dinner was held at noon
munity was obSetvett:"""
and girls. together to learn of the
and games were conducted for the
scientific nature of !ann activities.
The boys in Graham:s first club
• grew corn and teste4 . soil. They
•collected insects . and identified
trees. Some learned to tie kl}ots and
splice rope - skills needed in their
agricultural setting. The girls in the
club grew flowers ' and . tended
vegetable gardens. The result _was

Two celebrate birthdays

SIX YE-ARS Tamara
Hayman observed her sixth birthday Sunday. Daughter of Dan
arid Faith Hayman, Syra~use,
•he was presented a Holly Hobby
cake along with gifts and cards
from relatives and friends.

Natiotl4l 4-H·Week •

•

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..

'

•

~TheDailySentlnel,Middleport-Potneroy, 0 ., Tue~day, Oct. 7 1980

I '

DICK l'HACY

'

I

.

.

•

.·

BE FINE:G(JOD,STfi!ONG

.,..,

•

. P'EOP!-E'- ANO AS
MlJCI-1 AS YOU AND I
WOULD LII-&lt;E ,TO .'STEP

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Viewing ·J INHEW_- !

T HEIR · PR0BLEM5 .-

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WHO HO LLEREO·D ·
A? Hfi'

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MORE

MEAt./WH I LE-9L.AM7

EMY

ON THE ~!&gt;RAKe-;
AN D -;PI N=' TH~
WHEH ::;;!

ATTE NTION !

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EVENING

6 :00 CID U CD O @ ®J @ C!) NE W S
(I) BACKYARD
ffi CAROL. BUI!NET'r . A ND
FRIENDS
'
.
@ ABC NEViS
.
· ®® 3-2· 1COIITACT
6 :30.. (I) 0 aJ NBC NEWS ,
· (I)
20TH
CENTURY
GUIDELINES
ffi BOB NEWHART SHOW "
@ FACE THE MUSIC ·
. 0 CIJ ®l CBS NEWS
ffi WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
(j]J .DICK CAVETT SHOW
@ QI ABC NEWS
6:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 CI) O PM MAGAZINE
@
GERALD.
DERSTINE
PRESENTS
ffi BASEBALL: WORLD SERIES
SPECTACULAR
® ALL IN THE FAMILY
(l)(j}) C!) FAMilY FEUD
C!) TVHONORSOCIETY
O CIJ TICTACDOUGH
® MACNEIL.LEHRER REPORT
®l NEWS
!liJ OVER EASY 'Stro ke' Gu'e sts:
Danc er Rub y Keeler and Or. Sam
Ne lken , a spe ciaii st and vi ctim o (
stro k9. Ho sts: Hugh Down _
s and
Frank Blair. (Closed -Captioned)
7:30 CI) G BULLSEYE
,
@ FAITHTijATLIVES .
ffi SANFORD AND SON
000 ® JOKER'S WILD
C!) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
C!J DICK CAVETT SHOW
®&gt;. MATCH GAME
ill) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
W GI FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ffi NEWS UPDATE
•
8:00 ffi G CD TUESDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Beulah Land' 1980
Stars : Lesley Ann warre n, Mich ae l

.' . -

· NO~ ... W.E:LL MAYI3~ yOU
BH TER $ TART PAY IN'

...0
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Sarrazin..

·

ffi

ORAL.RO)IERTS
ffi MOVIE-(CCMEDYl''' l&gt; " It's
A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World"
1963
ffi MOVIE -{COMEDY)"' "Don·

ovan's Reef" 1963
·
I1J (j}) C!) NAT~ONAL LEAGUE

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
(I) ®l SPECIAL MOVIE PRE·
SENTATION 'Mor e Wild Wild
West ' 1980 Stars: Robert Conrad,
' Ross' Martin.
(I)@ NOVA 'Cance rOetectives of
lin X ian : In one of the first films to
co me out Qf modern China, 'Nova'
probes the alarminQ inc ident s of.
es ophageal cancer rec.o rded in the
Chinese provinc e of Lin Xia n.
(Ciosed·Captioned) (eo mins.)
8:30 ffi GOOD NEWS •
8 :58 Cil NEWS UPDATE
11:00 ffi 700 CLUB
0 CIJ ®J ' PRIVATE BATTLE A
d·r ama batJl):d on the true story of
writer co.rnE!IiUs Ry an 's valia·nt
struggle agein"SI c;: ancer end it s effect on his 'family. Stars: Jack Warden; Anne. Jack.son . (2 hrs .)
(!) (j]) BODY IN QUESTION T ry a
Litt.le Tenderness' Or. Miller and his
patient exp lore the compUcated
route a doc tor must take to diagnose abdoininal pains. (Cio sedCaptioned) (60mine.)
..
10:00 ~ G a:J MENWHORATEA'10'
Scraen iegel'\d 'GI.o rla SwaAaon, TV
· ~ 8.ctressearbaraEden and teenage
film ·star Brooke Stiields host a look
at the moSt exciting men·of recent
generatiqns, from flittrs~ofilmstars
and sports heroes to politicians .
(60 mine.)'
'®
SOUNDSTAOE 'Graham

CHEATIN''?! HOW D'YA FIGURE
THAT? NOBODY LOGEGBUT TH'
G&lt;JVERHMENT! ... AN CHEATIN'
60VERN11EHT AIN'T
CHEATIN'! - IT'STRAPITIOI1 ! .

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10:28
10:30

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11:oo

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' HAVING MY OWN
KEY TO lHE ..JOINT

HAS .£075 . OF
At/VANTAGES ,I

I CAN I:&gt;RO.VBE AI?OUN D IDMY
HEART1&amp; CONTENT •.. AND
FIND OUT WH~RE ALL

11-IE ''SKE-LETONS '1 ...:.......,ARE HI DDEN l

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HIS FAVORITE
· CRAVON

EVER' EAT

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"Piayera" .1978

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BEVEiUDGE REPORT
· The Beveridge Report - a white
p&amp;per on social welfare which was

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M~ PENMANSHIP 15

6ETTIN6 WOR5E ALL
THE TIME!

.--------'----,

MAI16E 'I'OV 5110ULD
STICK TO PENCIL5111P...

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HAVE &amp;UCH

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~ ETIR'EMENT M IG HI

. Now arrange the circtE!d leners to
for~ !he surprise a,nsWer, as sug,geste-d by the abo\le cartoon

Ans wer here:

t)
ex I I I I I

IX I

j

(Answers iomorrow)
Ye~ terday s

I

Jumbles MOUND

CHROME DIG'EST
What there was the day a huge cro wd
stormed the li nge rie department A RUN ON HOSE

Answer

POKER

BRIDGE

/.

J

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Wrong lead sinks defense
same at both tables .
.. · A king of spades lead would
NORTH
10·7-BV
beat ·both declarers, bu t eac h
• 97
West led his deuce of hearts.
Identical play brought qome
+ A9752
the contract at both tables.
+ AKQ J8
East took the ace of hearts
WEST
and led back the king of
EAST
+K Q1 0 5 4·
diamonds. South knew that if
•to sf
East held a spade he would
' A Q J9B
. • J 10 6 .
+KQ4 3
have led it, so South immedi+ 10 4 .
• 9 7 3'2
a tely led back a diamond ·
from dummy. East ducked
SOUTH
West- had J'layed his
since
+ A J 6532
jack. South . ruffe with the
.K 7 5 4
deuce .of spades. played the
+B
king of hea rts, ruffed a heart ·
+ ss
in dummy, cashed two of his
Vulnerable: Both
clubs and then proceeded to
Dealer: North
ruf! a diamond with the three
of
trumps.
Wes t North East
Soutb
Don't lhmk this was done
I+
t+
quickly. There · was. much
Pass
2•
Pass
2+
· thought involved, but South
Pass · 3+
Pass
4+
DbL , .. Pass
had worked out the exact
Pass
Pass
East-West distribution.
Now it was a wr.a p-up. The
Opening lead:• 2
last heart was led. West had
· to ruff. He was down to nothin g but. his fi ve trumps while
South was left with the aceja~k-eighl a nd six.
By Oswald Jacoby
It didn't. matter if West
and Alan Sontag
· ruffed with the 10 or four of
spades. He could only collect
Here is ~ noth er tied bOard two trump tricks in e ither
from this year's Spingold Cup. ev ent.
,
The bidqing in the llox was the (NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE .SSN .'

"3

•...

,,

- - - - - - -- - - - - - -- - --

--

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I James M.

37 Shandy's .

creator

-

38 Thomas

- 5 Fonned
- Edison
in droplets
39 Partner of
11 Poet Sexton
feathered
12 " I'm 40 Kadiddlegrateful "
hopper
(2 wds.)
DOWN
13 "The Time of I Spy in
Your - "
Canaan
14 Regarding
2 Resin
this point
3 See 8
15 OstrichDown
like bird
fBom (Fr.)
16 Anais5 Trailing
17 Foam
6 Blessed
18 Park
or main
or Stakes
7 Chalice
20 Magli e of
veil
baseball
8 All dolled ~P
21 Debark
22 Withered
23 Hairdo
style
24 Meticulous
25 "The Times h-+-tThey -

vesterday's
9 Sea inle t
10 Scribble
16 Maternal
admonition
19 Actress, .
- Corday
22 Noted
twins'
-home
23 Operatic
selection

~~~~
24 Wood
25 Finally
26 Lost out
28 "My
. Favorite
Wife" star
29 Imperti-

nence
30 Pipe -

35 Blunder
36 - and Fox

Changin ' "
26 F ood .
27 Hidalgo's
a unt
2!1 Janssen
.• TV sleuth
31 Allow
32 River
. in.Wales
33 Greek
ghost
34 Greek
"capital
· :l6 King's title

DAJL Y CRYPTOQUO'J'E .:.. Here's

.'
•

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'

LADIES IN

.I ICJ

NE'IfS
.T ODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
(!) MOVIE •(ROMANCE) •• Y,

I '
I
I

.~

jWtNDAR ~

o CIJ ®I (j}) m

MOVIE ·(WESTERN) "Y.
"Gune of th• nmberland" 1960
11:50 I]) (gilD TUESDAYIIIOVIEOF
THEWEEK'LoveTrap ' 1977Stars:
Tonl._FJanciosa, Donna Mills.
12:30 CIJUCZJ TOIIIORROWHoat:Tom
·
Snyder. Guest: Shirley Macla1ne.
,
~ ·mine .)
·
12:58 00 NEWS UPDATE
1:00 ffi CHARISMA l
1:30 ffi OLD TIME GOSPEL HOUR
1:45 I]) MOVIE · (DRAMA) 0 " "Story
On Page One" 1959
2:00 CD NEWS
®liBELIEVE
. 2:0!_ (Ul Gl NEWS
2 :28 .ffi NEWS UPDATE
2:30· CIJ ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
3:58 ffi NEWS UPDATE
4:00 ffi 700 CLUB
4:15 ®
MOVIE
·(ADVENTURE· DRAIIIA) •••
"Chine Clipper" 1938
•· 4 :55 I1J MAVERICK
.
5:30 (}) JESUS IS THE ANSWER
5:~8 ffi NEWS UPDATE
11:45

"7

~~.f~Hd'
a

''The Profeaalonala" 1966

.

...·

"'..........
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'"•- ~ • ••••.!;. .. "''
.' """
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Parker and the Rumour p'l us the 1 - -- RCO
All · 1·
Stara··. {Ciosed·Captioned)
(60
mins .)
® NEWS
® TliiS EVENING NEWS
@ NEWS UPDATE
@ FAITH 20
ill) EXTENSIONS
@ NEWS UPDATE
'
by

MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
® DICKCAVETTSHOW
11: 15 (II NIGHT GA.LLERY
11:28 ffi NEWSUPDATE
11:30 (}) G C7J THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host : Bill COsby. ·Guest:
Oiahsnn Carroll. (60 m'ina.)
·
CIJ ROSS liiAGLEY SHOW
@
(j}) 8
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
.
liJ CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE ' LOU
GRANT: Dying' Unable to face the
fact that his niother is critically ill,
Art Oono\lsn puts a strain on the city
room that leadslou to give Billie an
unusual assign'l'lent . (Repeat)
'TELL ME MY NAME ' 19 77 Slaro :
Barbara Barrie , Arthur HilL
(1) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
,
®l
MOVIE
- (WESTERrf-ADVENTURE)"•I&gt;

~

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by Henri Arnold and Boo Lee

· I til]

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.

) ~THATSCRAM BLED WORDG AM E

~ ~~~~ ~

Unscramble· these lour Jumbles ,
one lener to each Sq uare ~ to- form
. lour or_9mary worc;ls .

IN AND SOLVE ALL

WHO WA ='
T H Ai J ERK

.

. . i t )t \IN f ) ~)H

·'

commissioned by the British gllvernment- was published in 19t2.lt laid
the foundations for the modern
welfare state in Britain. The author
was William Beveridge, an
economist. The report · recommended
co-ordina ted .unem. ployment and retraining benefits, a
national health service and special
grants such as matertl\tY benefits
and widows' .pensions, the whole to
be supervised by a single ministry .

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFj!;LLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this ·s ample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
I!'Ostrophes, the length and formation oJ the words are all
hmts. Each day the code letters are different .
CllYPTOQUOTES
, PV .

WOGB ,.

FJQBZVX ,

SB

F . GGSGB
SG

BZV

QJV

CF P

QY
JFBOXV . - YXVJRZ
AXQKVXI
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OUR FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE IS
THAT WE UNDERSTAND EAqt OTHER.- MANLY HALL

'

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. ·--- -·-

42,.

10-The.DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 7, 1980

'I

•.

97~

Business Services·

Two bedroom mobile

home p~rtiallv furniShed,

'Round
Meigs
Local

$150.00 a month . Located In
Countrv · Mobile Home
Park, on Route 33, north of
Pometoy. 247-3942 .

Blue Tartin,
.Third, · Mid·
Tues.

PART· TIME RN, 7:00a .m ,
to 3:3G p. m . Call PQmeroy
Health Care Center. 992·

992·~· ·

~-

for Rent
3 AND • RM furnished epts. Phone 992·S43A.

FAMILY yard saite, on Oc. fober 8th at 9 a. m. ~~ the
Woodrow Mora's on Route
7, first lane northeast of
Meigs Memory Gardens.
Many like new useful
things, Including a Bundy
alto sexaphone, a. an elec·
trlc orge·n, no junk. Also
clothing, including a bake
, sele.
·

.

' .

What - is a permanent im- . collected each year for the f(ve
provement \evy? How is it different
years will be $184,000. We are bound
than an operating levy? If these are
,by law to spend this money 'only in
questions you have been asking
the areas mentioned:
yourself, I hope today's article
This levy. will provide the money
be of some benefit to you.
to be spent on our buildings that is
A permanent improvement levy is
desperately needed. The five year
a levy designated for the specific
plan will enable us to have all our
puroses of constructing, adding to, _ buildings in good shape within that
~-emodeling, rehabilitation, imtime period. A priority list will -be
proving, furnishing . and/ or equipdeveloped and items.will be fixed a cping our schools. The money
cordingly.
generated by a permanent in1After your visit I am convinced
provement levy can only be used for
you will personally see the need for
the designated purposes . .In other
the levy. Please take the tifue to see
words, the a.5 mill levy that will be
the needs of your local school facility
on the ballot in November for Meigs
and to work for this district wide
Local can only be spent for fixing
building improvement levy. Further
our school buildings, replacing the
information regarding the levy can
desks, and improving the grounds.
be obtained through my office at 992Some of the areas that would
2153.
qualify for this money include roofs,
windows, furnaces, additional
Let's root Charlie Chancey and his
rooms (Sa I em Center) , sewer
Tootball team home to victory
systems, playground equipment
tonight. Doug Hill and his marching
repair (all buildings including
troops
also be performing so it
Pomeroy ), plastering , painting, fenshould prove to be an .entertaining
ce repair, remodeling for library
evening.
facilities, replacing double doors
(Middleport, Rutland, High School),
repairing gym floors (Harrisonville,
WEEKEND REVIVAL
Junior High), fixing and replacing
PLANNED
. gutters and downspouts (Bradbury,
A weekend revival will be held
Pomeroy, Salem Centev, Rutland).
Friday, Saturday and Sunday at the
replacing student desks (most every
Dexter Church of Christ with
·building needs new student desks) ,
speaker being David Phillips of Cin·
and improving the groWJds (athletic
cinnatl. The song leader will be Tim
.. and playgrounds )'
Russell of Brooksville, Ky. services
' The levy before the Meigs Local
will start at 7 p.m. each evening. The
voters this November is a perpublic is invited to attend.
manent improvement levy for 3.5
mills and lasting for five (5) years.
However, the actual collection rate
RUSHPARTYTHURSDAY
will be approximately 2.8 mills
A rush party will be held by Ohio
because of a rollback factor, which
Eta Phi Sorority :Thursday at 7 p.ni.
is a result of property reappraisal.
at the Trinity Church, Pomeroy.
The approximate amolint of money

will

will

CROWN BEARER AND FLOWER GIRL for homecoming
cereJnonies at Marauder Stadiwn Friday night were Travis Plerce, .son
of Lisa Pierce, Shade, and Mark Pierce, Rt. I, Middle]X)rt, and Tara
Gerlach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gerlach, Middleport.

·1
Social calendar
nJE'!DAY
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM Tuesday at Middleport
Masonic Temple. All master masons
invited.
POMEROY AUXILIARY 2171 will
have nomination for the office of
vice president and chaplai,n Tuesday
at 8 p.m . An amendment to the
bylaws will be read.
MEIGS LOCAL Band Boosters,
7:30 this evening at Meigs High
School band room.
WEDNESDAY
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday evening.
BOSWORTH COUNCIL 46, Royal
and Select Masters, Wednesday,
8:30-p.m.; all companions asked to
attend.
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Uons
Club, regular meeting, noon Wednesday at Meigs Inn.
·
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club, 2
p.m. WQI!nesday at the home gf Mrs.
Robert Fisher. Mrs. Chester Erwin
to give the book review.

HISTORICAL SOCIETY
TO MET
the public is cordially invited to
attend the annual meeting of the
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society on SWiday, Oct.

12.

.

A potluck dinner will be served at
I p.m. with the meeting to follow at 2
p.m. The program will be presented
by Ray Swick, Historian for the
Blennerhassett Historicak Park
Conunission in Parkersburg. Swick
graduated from Marietta College
with a B.A. degree in history,
received his master's degree from
the University of Virginia in 1971 and
his Ph. D. in history from Miami
University, Oxford, Oh.

HOMECONDNGSUNDAY
The homecoming of the Flatwoods
United Methodist Church has been
set for Sunday With SWiday school at
10 a.m. ; a sennon at ll ,with dinner
at 12:30 p.m. An afternoon service
will begin at I: 30 p.m. with the Rev.
Bud Hatfield speaking. The
Messengers will sing.

LITTlE ROYALTY-This Small children of the Eastern I,.ocal School
District served as crownbearers and flower girl for hom~
ceremonies Friday night. They are Kimberly Mcintyre, daughter of Mt··
and Mrs. c. D. Mcintyre, and Jll8on Ridenour, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
Ridenour.
-

Marie Leifheit

.

hon~red

Mrs. Marie Leifheit, who will be
leaving soon for her new home in Tiffin, was honored at a recent meeting
of the Chatter Club held at the home
of Mrs. Alice Jacobs.
Mrs. Leifheit will be residing near
her son. A decorated cake was served in her honor. ·Her gift was a centerpiece 'of dried flowers with candles. Both Mrs. Leifheit and Mrs.
Ruth :Young celebrated birthdays at
the meeting.
Dues were collected and the
flower fund was taken. Games were ·
played \\lith severla members wir&gt;- _
ning prizes. Next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Dorothy Roach.

· Baby arrives

TROOP TO ORGANIZE
A senior · scout trOOp will be
organized at the home of Mrs.
Shirley Coger in Minersville on
Thursday evening, 7 ·p.m. Girls In
the loth, lith and 12th grades are Invited to attend. The ~ regiatratlon
fee is to be paid at the meeting.

POMEROY - John and ~bby
Mirgon of ianeSvllle are.annOWJclng
the birth of an eight ~d son, John
Thorn, Jr., on Sept. 8 at Bethes:da
Hoopifalln ZaneSville.
.
~.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Mlrgon, Zanesville, and Mrs.
Wilma Tillis, Route 1, Reedsville.
Great-grandparents are Mr. 'and
MrS. Raymond Fitch, Newark, .ilnd
Mrs. Olive Lawson, Portland.

.,
APPLE BllTI'ER
FORSALE.
••
Apple butter will be made next
week at the Senio1 Citizens Cenwr.
Cost will be $2.7518 quart and thGie
wanting to order should have lhelr
clean jars 'with lids at the center:'\JY
Qct. 15. •The apple butter will. be
madeonOct.16.
·

.,.

,

TOMEETSUND~Y

Public Notice

FOLLOWING : MARY D . '
MILLER, a.k.a . MARY
DORA .
MILLER,
DECEASED ; LOUISE D.
CAVERLEE , DECEASE D;
LOREN
M.
CAVERLEE, DECEASE ·
D;
FRANKLIN, M
CAVERLEE . DECEASE ~
0 ; JOSEPHINE T
CAVERLEE , DECEASE:
0 ;
DANA
ELMER
MILLER , DECEASED ;
GEORG IA
MILLER
DECEASED ; FLOYD
MILLER . DECEASED ;
FREDA MILLER FAR MER, DE,CEASED ; LEE
R.
.
FARMER
DECEASED ; CHAR LES
EDWARD MILLER .

DE'CEASED ; CHA:RLES
E
MILLER , JR .,
DECEASED ; EDWARD
MILLER, DECEASED ;
MARILYN
MILLER ,
DECEASED ; JOHN L.
MILLER , DECEASED ;
WILLIAM
AUGUST
Ml (.LER, DECEASED ;
ELLA
E . MILLER
DECEASED : CLYDE
MILLER, DECEASED ;
HERMAN
ARTHUR
MILLER, DECEASED ;
JOHN WESLEY MILLER,
DECEASED ' ESTHF R
WILLARD · MIL LE R ,
DECEASED ; ALBERT
HENRY
MILLER,

·•;

The annual meeting of the M~
COunty Pl~r Historical Society
FIRST EARTH SATEWTE
will be Sunday, 1 p.m. There wlltlie
China laWJched its first earth 1_ a poUuck dinner precediilg !hi!.:2

satellite in 1970.

p.m. meeting.

e'

.t

·Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
- - --:::--:-.c-_-c-,-;-- - PubliC Notice
--~~0~~~~~·--

. FOUR family yard sele,
Wednesday, October Bth,
from 9'30 to 5 onty. Rain
cancels. on salem St. neat
Frye's Service Station.
Children's clothes &amp;. mise;
· 30' Frigidaire electric
range· oold like new lor
$325.00, also baby · high
chair. Phone 742-2402 after
5. D. Meadows.

Public Notice
CAROLINE
MILLER
FISHER', DECEASED ;
ALEXANDER
H.
FISHER , DECEASED;
ELLA FISHER BRYANT,
DECEASED; HERMAN A.
FISHER, DECEASED ;
HAROLD
FISHER ,
DECEASED; EUGENE E .
BRYANT, DECEASED;
1!&lt;\ARIE
M I LLER
CUSTER, DECEASED ;
SAMUEL E. KAETZEL,
DECEASED ; B.ERTHA M.
KAETZE L, DECEASED ;
WALTER
BENJAMIN
MILLER, DECEASED;
MARY ELLEN MILLER
COX , DECEASED and
DONALD
COX ,
DECEASED

Public Notice
of OhiO; in 100 acre Lot No.
303 and Fraction No. 17,
Town No. 2 and Range No.
13 of the Ohio Company's

LAFF- A- DAY

Purchase and bounded and
described as follows:

3

EMERSON' Jbhnson
, r,tsldence; October 8-9 from
1
-'10·5. ' Large size women's
;; 'clothing, bed, love seat,
': ·lamps, other mlst.ltems.
~ ·~----------------

GARAGE. SALE 10.5, Oct.
.6:10. Off Rt. 7 bypass on old
Rt. 143 ' S. of Jack's Club,
, 1illlow signs.

...•, ..GARAGE .SALE : October
'

: )0.11 at A-frame building
•· rfext to Landmar-k In Middleport. Used doors, win·
·dows, storm sash, cost Iron
f\Jb, stereo, etc .
.8

~,...,.

''CISSIE'S AUCTION House,

''"10 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
, ,d leport, Ohio. we set I one

piece or entire households.
• Nl!w, used, or antiques, In·
; -eluding homes, ·farms. or.
liquidation sales. Get top
dollar. List with the man
who has over 25 years In
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
We
· take consignments. For In• 'lefmatlon and pickup ser·
·: vJce, call 992-6370 or in
• Wes1Virglnla773·5471. Salt
.r 'every Friday night et 7
p:m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice· auctioneer, OSby A. Martin.
_. &lt;ro 1unkl
t

Announcements

'Beginning at the most
southerly corner of a lot
Plano Tuning
Lene
now or formerly owned by
Daniels 742·29511 Tuning
Mary Dora Miller; thence
and Repair Service sll'lte
north 33 degrees west 100
1965. If no answer pholle
feetto the main rock ; then992-2082.
ce south 57 degrees west
100 let ; thence south 33
degrees e~st 100 feet to the
street ; thence north 57
'" SHOOTING MATCH at
degrees east 100 feet to the "I 'd say the children have ma~e Corn Hollow in Rutlan,il.
Every Sunday startlng':at
place of beginning ,
Proceeds being
Excepting real estate our marriage closer- Martin noon.
recorded In Vol. 91, Page and I haVe to band together to donated to the Boy Scout
215 of the Deed Records of hold our own against them ."
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
~T~Ct~~D6E!~A~1~~
The Plaintiff has brouqht
Meigs County, Ohio.
choke
gun only!
·
this a ction naming you as
Further exce.ptlng real
defendants in rne above
estate
conveyed
1n
Vol.
154,
.-------------~-------------- -- named court by filing her · Page 29 of the Meigs CounComplaint on July 14th. ty Deed Records.
PRE · SEASON
SALE ··
1980, in the Common Pleas
Public Not' :e
U.9.CIO-·Mobile home WOOd
Reference
Deed
of
this
Court, Meigs County, Ohio.
parcel is Vol. 84, Page 624
burning systems, the OIIIY
The Complaint. recites
Meigs
County
Deed
Recor·
HUD
&amp; UL approved WOOd
ths.
that each of you is possibly
ds.
burner for mobile homes.
Proposal
Packag_es
may
an heir-at-law ·and ne)(t of
Plaintiff's Complaint
be obtained from Douglas Unit comes complete wLth
kin of Mary D. Miller a .k.a . sheInhas
set forth the names
B. 'M artin, Special Planner, wlltt vent stacl(. See th,em
Mary Dora Miller a.nd each
of
each of the defendants
30 East Broad Street, at Kingsbury Homes Parts
of you may possibly have
having · an interest In said
Columbus, Ohio 43215 at 1· &amp; accessories at Route ,1~4,
an interest 'in the real
or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
real estate and the share of . 800·282·1050
or 1-614·466estate described in the each
coparcener
in ·sa ld
01110.
~ Or
111 .Court St., Pomero.,.,
45769
8326. Proposals must be Minersville,
complaint, which real
real
estate.
.
phone 992·5587 .
.. ·
later
than
5
submitted
no
estate is described as
In Plaintlff's· Complaint.
p.m., Friday, November
follows :
Plaintiff demands that said
14.1980.
i
PARCEL NO. 1: The
JONES Meat Packlnil·..
real
estate
be
partllloned
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
I
follow ing described real
or ordered sold 1f it cannot
slaughtering, custom
&lt;10) 7, lie
estate situated in . the
be partitioned, for allowanprocessing, retail meat.
I Village of Pomeroy. in the ce
of attorneys fees herein!
, Washington Co. Rd. 2~.
Public Notice
County of Mei~s and State
and
further
demands
tha
Little . Hocking, OH """-7·
eANNOUNCEMENTS
of Oh io, and beang a part of
~RENTALS
,
.
NOTICE
.
all parties hereto set up
6133.
.,.,.
l-ea ret of Thuks
Lot No. 442 and bounded
41 - HOUHS for Rtnl
will
be
received
at.
Bids
such
claims
as
they
may
2- ln Memorl tm
and descr ibed as follows :
41-Mobilt Homes
the office of - Bernard V.
have
againstthe
rea
l
estate
Beginning at the southeast
J-Annovncemt nts
for Rent
Fultz, Attorney, in Bank
above described, lnciUCITng
• Rent
4- Givuwly
'i
corner of a' lot now or for ·
M-A!Mnment t.tr
one
of Pomeroy building, RACINE GIJ!I SHOO:r,
the
ownership
therein,
if
!-Happy Ads
merly owned tJy Mary Dora
U-FRooms
Monday October 13, Racine G~n Club, el(l!f'Y
until
any,
or
be
forever
barred
M iller; thence north 57
1-Loltand Found
46-Space lor Rent
1980,
at
11 :00 6'Clock A.M., Friday night starting at
from
asserting
the
same.
7- Yard Sale
degrees east 20 feet ; thence
47-Wenttd to Rent
the
sale
of the Florence
for
You
are
required
to
an·
p.m. Factory choke
I - Public S.lt
north 33 degrees west to the
• 41-l!quipmenl tor lil:ent
McLaughlin real estate, 7:30
swer the Complaint within
guns
only.
1 Auction
north line of said Lot No.
situated at 773 Oliver
days after the
9-WantedtoBuy
~42;
thence south 88 lwenty-eight
eMERCHANDIS'i!
Street, MiddlePOrt, OhiO. .
last oubli~ation of this
eEMPLOYMENT
degrees
west
to
the
north·
The .real estate was ap. GUN SHOOT: Saturday
!11 - Houslhald Goods
notice, which will be
west
corner
of
said
Lot
No,
SERVICES
praised . at $8,000.00. All evening
5:1-CB, TV, RICUO Equlpmlnt
published once each week
starting at 6:30
442;
thence
south
33
,, _ Help w1 nttG
U-Antlt~~UtS
for six successive weeks , bids are subje&lt;:t 'to the ap. p.m.. SPOnsored by the
degrees east 137 feet to the
12 - Situatecl ~¥I !UN
.54-Misc. Mtrctlandist
proval of the Meigs County
and
the
last
publication
will
jllace otOegTnning.lflsllle be made on the 7th. day of
13- lnaurance
SSo-Bullellnt Supplies
Proba• Court and the Racine · Volunteer Fife
.ntention to convey a strip
1-4-Busintts Trtlnlnt
October, 1980.
•
Guardian reserves the Department, at building ln
st- P'.ts for Salt
of land 20 feet w1de from
1s-Schoolstnstr\lctlon
right to reje&lt;:t any atid all Bashan. Factory ch61\e
I
in case of your failure to
the -westerly side or end of answer
,.,_
Rtcllo, TV
bids. .
·
or
otherwise
guns only.
~ ~.
eFARM.SUPPLIES
Lot
No.
«2
of
said
Village
ace JUPfilr
Marvin Kelly,
respond
as
permitted
by
1 -;o ...
&amp;
LIVESTOCK
of Pomeroy.
It--Wanted To DG
Guardian ot
the Ohio Rules . of Civi l
·~
61 -Farm,Equlpm•nt
Save and except the coal
Florence
Mcl.auohlln
Procedure
wit~rn
the
time
30 percent off greenware
61'--Wanttcl til IU'I'
eFINANCIAL
in said premises and the
{10)
1,
2,
.3,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
stated,
·\udgment
by
72-Trucks for hit
tor the month of October.
right to mine the same.
11B&amp;.rslnns
9tc
default wll be rendered
al-Livntocll
Drehel's Ceramics, 59 Jll .
Being a part of the real against
Opportunity
you tor the relief
64-Ht\' 1 Grail•
estate recorded in Vol. 81. demanded
22-Money to LCNn
Second Avenue, MLd·
in
the
Com61SHd
&amp;
~trtill1tr
13--ProlnslonAI
Pall• 498 of the Meigs Coundleport.'992·2751.
"pl'a lnt.
ty Deed Records.
Sarvlus
eTRANSPORTATION
PARCEL NO _ 2: The
. J .i
LARRY E. SPENCER_.
YOST Wrecker Service, _24
follow ing described real
7~-AUtot ror hit
eREALESTATE
CLERKOFCOUR1
estate situated in the
73--'W'•ns ... W. D.
hours a day, wanted luhk
.n - HOfn'' tor Sal• I
Village of Pomeroy, in the COMMON PLEAS COURT,
74-Mottrcyclts
cars.
Call John Yost, R\lllte
32- Mobllt-ttomts
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
County of Meigs ·and State
1s,...,toPans
, tor hit
cf1
1, Rutland, Ohio 45775 . .'·.
1 of Ohio, ·and' in 100 acre lot (B) 26, (9) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30,
I
Acc'tllorltt
ll- Faf-ms for Sale
No. 303 Town No. 2 and (10) 7, 7 tc
71- Auto Rtpalr
J4-Buslnns Bulldlnts
Range No, 13 of the Ohio
Decorated· cakes lor ai~·QC­
U- Lort &amp; ACrNtt
.company's Purchase and
casslons,
character c:•~
U-RN I EJ!tlt Wanttcl
P~bllc Notice
bounded and described as
' " ' .
..
3/- Rtalton
eSERVICES
&amp; Sheet cakes. Call 992~
follows : Beginning 33 feet
or 992·2583.
0 - - - - - - - - , • •1-Homtlmprovtmlflh
REQUEs-T FOR
North and 33 degrees wes!
12-Piumblnt&amp; l•cavath'l
'
Want•Ad Advertising
PROPOSALS
from- alotnciw orlormerly
ll-l,cawatlnt
..
~eadllnes
owned
by
George
Fisher
in
COMPRENEHSIVE
EM·
I,_
_.....::ca:=rdOf"'-'T.::IUI::n"'k"'s
'
--.-. 14-«lec:trlcal
PLOYMENT
AND
the north part of 100 acre
&amp;Refrl..ntion
TRAINING ACT OF 1971
A BELATED Thank YOu to $KTE · A·WAY Will .• .'.~e
7 :f6 'P . ~ - Dan,lot
No.
303
on
the
North
side
u--GH«al Hautlnt
OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
the
Recine, Syracuse and closed Oct. 8 through ,{Xt.
of
the
street;
·
thence
north
12 NOOft Uturd_,.
M-M. H. Rt,.lr
ADMINISTRATIVE SER- Bashan Fire Dtpllrtments 11. Reopen sat .. Oct. : u.
for MOfHiay
33 degrees west 100 feet;
11-Upholtttry
thence south 57 degrees
VICES
lorthelrrespc)nae-our Open Weds., Fri. &amp; Slit.
west jJ.feeno the ThomasThe Ohio Department of house bUrned. Thanks to nlghtl 7:30· 10:00. Al)o.
lot; thence south 33 degrees
Administrative Services, relatlvtt, nelghbon and l available for• private ·.toreast 100 feet to the 5treel;
Office of Manpower trlencta tor · their thought· lift. '185-9996 or 985-3929:&lt;1·
Rates and Other Information
thence along said street The
Is .requesting futness, kindness, mOflOy,
.~
north,- 57 degrees east 33 Development
11 wonts" un. .r •
feet to the place ~Of begin - propouls for a quarterly food and clothing. Thanks FOR SAL:E: FIREW&amp;;io
Ctttl
1 CIMr..
ning, and being Lot num- verification of the CETA to all who helped In any Call, 992·3288
un
1.25
bered 443 of said Village of eligibility determination way. The Hupp's: Arnold,
••
system .
·
•
Jdeys
I.M
Pomeroy.
Sharon &amp;'
Dona, Eddie,
In
accordance
with
20
ldtys
1
Ut
2.25
Save and except the coal
BAKER's Busy ..aee
•
aaays
1.75
therein and the right to C.F.R. 676.75 &lt;bj (3) there Jeremy.
Ceramics,
Tuppen PI.W,
shall
be
a
veri
icatlon
of
mine tne same without In- participant eligibility on a
announces
their felt
Each wortlover tM minimum 1J wwdsls' 4 c•nts"' went per ca,v.
cumbrance to the surfac~ ~
I WOULD Llketothanksell ct•-· Tuesday
quarterly basis · of a ran· . my
lt'Onitll-2
Adt runnlnl ottltr fftan censecutlvedays will bt ctltrltd at 1M 1 ctay
friends,
relatives,
and
·
Being
a
part
of
the
real
dom semple of participants
7·10 &amp; Thursc:ta)itrom·'I0rtlt.
l estate recorded in Vol. 81, · Which IS adequate to neighbon for tt-. ·cards, a.
Page 498 of the Meigs Coun- eslabtlsh tne creditability flowers, and glftl 1 2 a. 7·10. No chlldrtn .,... ,
In mtnuwy, Card ef T!Mftll:'l aM OttiWry.: I Cttlts " ' w.nl, U.lt r
10 pteese. Come -a
ty
Deed Re&lt;:ords.
of ,the system and to deter· received while I wes · e beautiful
,minimum. C. ... In Hwanc..
ChrlltliQI
PARCEL NO. 3: The
mine whether It Is reliable. peilent et Veterans
following described real
presents.
RtiiO,_..e
The
random
semple
shoUld
Mabile Home Nln aiMI YM11Nin art ace"'" lfll., •'"' Ctltlwttfl ;
estate situated In the. consist of participants Memorial Haepltel.
prices. 667·3252, PIVIIIII
GrCtr. 21 c"'t cMrW1 for aft: ~:..-rylftl h• .Nt!MIItr In Cart of TM
•\llltaoe
of Pomeroy, In the
hker.
enrolled durin~ - tllt Louise Bertels.
,. .........
t County of
Motigs ~nd Stele _f?l'_~~edlng tnrH ;3) ml'n·

..... ______ ....

.-

.

WANT- AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156
o.,

,

. Wanted to Buy

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, oold
rings, jewelry, sliver

.. '

1 PAY highest prices
possible' for gold and sUrer
coins, .. rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.
· ..

Public Sele
&amp; Auction

dollars. sterling, etc., wood
boxes,iars antiques,

~ Ice

·. etc. complete households:
. Write M. D. Miller, Rt. 4,
-. Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·
. 776().
Gnld, sliver or foreign
.. coins or eny gold or sllwr
•· Items. Antlq!M furniture,
: gtass or china, will pay tap
dollar, or complete estates.
No -Item tOo Iaroe or too
, . sm~ll. Check prices before
~ selling. Also do appraising.
;. psby (Osslel Martin. 992·
6370.
~

..

:· W_A_N_T_E_D--T-0--B-U-Y
-::
. GOLD,
51 LVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
:..•SOL UTE
MARKET
·· PRICE GUARANTED. ED
~ BURKETT
BARBER
, S+iOP, MIDDL.EPDRT,
~ DH I0 992·347&amp;:

··" · QLD
:- --...,.--COl NS, -'p ocket wet·

'• Ches, CIIIU rings, Vl'lddlng
' barw,ls. diamonds. -Gold or
sliver, Call J. A. Wamsley,
742·2331. Treasure Chest
· Ooln Shop, Att.~s, OH. 5'12·
- ~2.

~WANTED TO BUY: bess

rings, wedding bandS/
anything stamped 10K,
1.4K, IlK gold. Sliver coins.
. pocket watches. Call Joe
. ' Clark, 992·205-4, Clerk's
· Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio..

..

Shops the

WANT AD WAY.
-

.. . . ..
'

'''.

'

......

~ ••• • • 0 •

.-

..

.

.

,,'·"

....

•

.

WILL do OddS &amp; ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at 992·
6338.
Will do babysitting In your
home, 5 davs a week, any
hours. Colt '14'1·2875: .

•'

•'

Wlfl babysit In my home,
day or night, fenced In
yerd, Inquire at 278 Ash
Street, Middleport, Ohio.

""""'"""''c"'''\i!Mf, PNf* RN lltltle
• l.PN
f

. With quelltv - - In
INockgrouncf. Pte.ll Mtlll
NIUIM 110 lltwr thin Oct.
1910. Aree VIII Pltr
"'
lew Orlllnlzatlon Inc.,
Avt ..
;
5 ' Maple
·'~""· Oh. Q701.

2 BEDROOM Unfurnished
apartment. Pomeroy. $150.
morith plus utilities, pius
deposit. 992·6130 ' or 992·
7511.

•••

,

.

ames eesee
Ph . 992-2772
9 . 10 ,1

'192-2478
'
9·28·1 mo:,l&gt;d ·

Windows

J

K

Ouick &amp; Cheetful

m

-======R~N~t~·~st~l~te~~Get~w~-~·~·==:::::::,

2 YEAR Ol.D houll In
Chester, large kitchen &amp;
dining room, 2 batht. 3
bedrooms, family room &amp;
fireplace, fully c•""'"•
central air &amp; ta• hUt, 17GO
lq. ft. living aree. Garage
&amp; 12'x16' • work !lhop.
ID,901f. 915-.:wt, Jack Oln!Mr.

·REAL ESTATE
....

.

~

~ltHOIIIIS

......le

PUT a cold nose ln. your
future. Meigs County
Humane Society, 992·62110.

Perlect for

busy day. This
lOlled sllimmer pops 01e1 your
had, flares lrom 1 hi&amp;h 10M.
dolsn'l clutch you anywhere.
· Sew-Affordable in crisp blends!
Printed Plfttm 4541: Hilt
Sizes 12\1, 14\1 16\1, 18\1,
2011, 22\1• 24\!. Size 14\1 (bust
37) tJites tli Jds- 4~nch.
1

$1.75 flllldl ....... - ................
1
.............. s-Ill: •

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

••

Llrge

MIDDLIPO•T .tetely brick home on e
corner Itt only I IIIOCk frOm lhopplflll, Tnrte
· bedraoms end bttll upetelra. F rve .-ns and bath
clownttelra. Nw lurMct Wlttl centl'll llr concliton·
11111. 011t car 1111'... Wlttl storage 1'110111 up. Full
~~aement. Celt for eneppolntmtnt-Ut.ooo.oo.

CALL BILL CHIDS 192-2342

ltOOftEY oowrnu-llioln
Ohio

491
11te Dlllly seatmel

.... i,

•••t .....

DP, 1111,

Wllr pvt up wlttl hiefl . _
- dolltrt, ... btlflr qllliitrl
SIIMIIIIr our MEW FAU-WINT£R
PAmRN CATALOG. 94 Pllllms.

fttt , . . Coupon (wart!!
fl.15). Cataloc. $1.00.
II F II llillt tlllllltiS1.75

aac.· ,......

I. . . I llf IJNI~$1.75
$1.75
ijj
I 'i' Dlllls. : .$1.75

Call for Free Sidlnt
Estimate, 949·2t01 or
949-2..0. No Sunday
call•.
·
9·14·1 mo.

KAUFPS

.CARPENTER'S
DANCE snJDIO

PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

Shots
x ~m.d,
one
miniature
collie type
female, one Shephard .type
female, one block x ten
Kltrr female. one walker
hound mate.
57

Musical
Instruments
TROMBOME for late In ex·
cellent condition. Call 992·
3218.

-- .... ..... .... .. .
--·
-'.·. . .
;

11

P:arm l!ulpm..t

All. IH Hay end Forequipment must be moved
befOro 1~31-110. lntwrest
free tlnonclllfl untll4· 1-11 If
purchelod by thtt elite.
Metgs Equipment co.,
Pomeroy, Oh. d14-992·2176.
All. SiMPLICITY Llwn a,
Garden equipment priced
neer cost. Must movet
MeiDl EQIIIpmtnt Co.,
POf'l!eroy, Oh. d1,..992·2176.

All types of ..- WGI'II.
new or r-ir gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and pelntlntAII work IIU•r•nteed.

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
10·5·1 mo.

Free Estlm•tes
Reasonable Prices.
Call HC!ward

tlf-2..2

949-2160

ALL STEEL

B&amp;D

fann Buildines

....... J

Owillht ,.

BISSEU
. SIDING CO.

~====~~~~~~======~=~~========;

EAF~RDrn

,,

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

Fr~ E~timate

• Storm Doors

• Storm Windows
• Replacement

• &lt;

TOWERS &amp;
'ANTENNAS

SillS
'•From 30x:IO"
SMALL

UtilJ Buidinp

INSTALATIONS

Sizes trom 4x6 to 12&gt;40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

TV, CB &amp; HAM

•.

Rt. 3, aox 54
Raclne,Oh.
Ph. 614:143-2591
6·15-ffc

Phone 949-2414
~- 10 - 1 mo. P&lt;f, .

SHULER

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

hlall m-1132.
' IChOOII. ,
GOin.,

: PARTTIME Review C-·
~~tor. Responsible for
..
urrent a. ~iw
~ evttw a. lin ecute c.- set·
ttng In 1t11t PoiMt av a...
- weekCIIYI on111.
No
-~or hOIIcllya.Good

IN MASON, West Virginia,
two bedroom furnished
apartment, utilities paid,
no pets. Deposit required.
1-JO.I-882-3:!56.

elnsula .tion

Two bedroom furnished
WANTED l.IVE·IN lady or· ~~~7-:~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~iapartment, -$150.00 month,
~1r1 992·2686
l32
Mobile Homes
plus
u!llltles, $50.00
Now open with • studio
• .
•
deposit. 9-19·2875.
in Pomeroy and Racine.
for Sale
Closses offered are
41 · Houses for Rent
Ballet, Tap 11nd Jnz.
ONE &amp;one third acres with
44
Space for Rent
For info and enrollment.
AUTOMOBILE
IN - 12 x 50 two bedroom mobile TWO BEDROOM un·
COUNTRY MOBILE' Home
SURANCE been can- home, ready for qc· furnished house, . also two
Park, Route 33, North of
celle,d?
Lost
your cupancy. Located on Route bedroom furnished a. one
ca11949:271o
Pomeroy, Large lots. Call
operator's license? Phone 143. 992-3081 or 992·6095. '
bedroom furnished apart·
992-7.79
.
.
9·28·1 mo.
992-2143.
ments .. Call after 6 p.m.
ONE bedroom mobile- 992·2288.
home, 1972 moctel . Phone
15 Schools Instruction
992·2598.
HOUSE · FOR Rent. 2
PIANO LESSONS Begin·
bedrooms, with stove &amp;
ners, advanced, adults.
refrigerator furnished. 992·
Send name, address,
3090.
telephone number 10 vera
• 0' ... .. . ' • '' ' .... .
Lots &amp; Acreage
Jane Holliday, Box 22~, 35
42
Mobile
Homes
Rutland. Ohio &lt;45775.
1 ACRE BUt LDING site.
for Rent
Frontage. Racine area.
Household Goods
12
x
65
two
bedroom mobile 51
9~9-~.
11ea1 estate
home ,with one .&amp; one-half STOVES · , . We have
baths, In country location.
flreplilce Inserts, free stan·
Wbrklng people only, no ob· . ding.rstoves; warm air fur·
iection to children.
31
Homes for Sale
nece adapters, mobile
References required. 992·
home wood heaters, and
· ED BARTELS,Loan
2272.
triple wall chimneys . Out·
Representetlv.e, 1100 East
door Equipment Sates, Jet.
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Rts. 7 &amp; 35. GalliPOlis, Ph.
Mortgage
money
available. · All types home II~•PoMiiiciY:
446;~
financing,
new,· old,
ij?
Antiques
refinancing, and 2nd mor·
!gages. Phone 992· 7000 or
ATTENTION:
(IM992-5732.
- Ntw Listlnl - RUttiC
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
beautiful . new fhrtt
pay cash or certified check
family room,
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom . ,..,...,. home,
lor antiques and collec·
In yard. Thll ont
ranch brick home In Baum ••oon'l&gt; " " long . Priced In teh IDW
tlbles or entire estates.
Addition. With new garage
Nothing · too large. Also,
•New Homes - ex&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
pocket watches end
guns,
POMEROY, 0.
newly Installed central air
tensive remodeling
coin collectlons. Call 614·
992-225'1
conditioning, family room
'67-3167 or 557·341i.
•Electrical work
&amp; stone tlr.eplece, ap•Roofing work
'IIEW LISTING - A
pliances built· In, newly In·
In
the
counhome
54
Misc.
Merchanise
12 Years
stalled electric breaker
approx. l t acre.
system,
attrectivety
Experience
4 bedroom home
decorated basement, 2
Now At
Greg Roush
forced air heat will
baths, fully carpeted with
want to soli
Ph. 9'12-7583
you
roomy
com·
PomP.rov
most anractlve ·· drapes.
and the price Is
9- 1~ · 1
Cai198H81A OIW2·2571.
landmarl&lt;
right! Near the mlnesl
$15,000.00.
.
Sfovos
Only nn
EIGHTY ACRE )I: 12 acres
NEW LISTING' - Nice
ptus blower
54
Misc. Merchantse
of bottom land, 68 acres
BIG Yard- a 11h story
pasture, blacktop · r!Nid,
1 Good M. Werd
TWO gas furnaces. one
frame house with 4
three bedroom house,
Electric Renge . $75
good 60' Tappan electric
bedr.ooms, TV room, llv·
living room, bath, kitchen,
lng· room, kitchen, and
1 Good Used
range, one restaurant Hot·
'CIIntng room, three car car$100
point ele&lt;:trlc grill, electric
Gas Rango
bath. Several fruit trees
,p'ort,
cellar,
pert
1 Good Used Frillldelre
2 pot Silex coffeemaker, 30
in the back yard that
ba1ement, good barn.
Rtlrlgor•tor • $150_
gallon electric hot water
have (ust started to
Charles c. King, Rutland.
bear! $20,500.00.
POMEROY
heater, two wall lavatories,
Ohio. 742·2229.
COZY DEN - LUCKY
one commode, one nine foot
._.LANDMARK
glass front showcase, ·T
YOU 1 Even has kndny
VIRGIL II. SR."•"O'
pine paneling t This 3
li. M•ln St.
PomeroY
cushion sofe, occasional
MODERN
COUNT'RY
211 E. SfCond Street
bedroom home has 2 I~==========~~ chair, 42 Inch x 4 Inch
homme ..,,.. milts off 124 on
round kitchen tables wltn
bathS, full basement t
Co. Rd. 28 from Racine 1.33
Phone
leaves, one Dam·m;ngs
with laundry and rec,
acres. 949-2830.
1-(614)-992·3325
water pressure lank, one
room, 3 greenhouses,
Sears electric shallow well
shed and all on 5 acres
· 3.5 acres bV owner, In the
NICE FAMI L:Y HOM I!
water pump; one eloctrlc
of lev•l land. Close to
country, one half . acre
4
Bedrooms,
bath,
bridge.
$58,700.00.
r~aster,
one antJ~ue
pond, eight room house,
plus carpeting. Modern •
.National cash register, one
SEVERAL INDEED!
three litdrOoms, 2 full
kitchen with bUIIt·ln
lot cement finishing tools.
With new .carpeting,
baths. modern kitchen·
stove.
Full
basement
new
paneling,
ther·
985-3521
or may be seen one
dinette, dining room, 24' x
with lncl ner a tor, on
hell mile out Route 248;
mopane windoWs, eloc·
71' , fatniiY room, tully
Chester, Ohfo. Cleo Smith.
~5x100
lot. Near
tric heat, also wood·
finished basement, double
playground.
burner,
3
bedrooms,
garage, tile block building.
FIREWOOD, all hard·
NEW LISTING - Furbath, on 1h acre tot.
Must ' " to eppreclet•.
wood; sPill. 992·7625.
~lshed 2 bedroom home,
$21,500.00.
Shown ' by · apPOintment
new Qlls furnace, full
OLD, BUT· FUN only. Caii61A·985·4238.
PONTIAC POtatoes, 10 cenbasement, on the edge
Redecorate to your own
ts tb, small potatoes, 05
of Middleport, plus '13
taste! This 3 bedroom
cents lb. Cecil Toban, 992FOR SALE: three or lour
acre of land. $28,000.00.
home has a new tur·
bedroom hoUse, carpeted,
SYRACUSE - Family
nace. 2 fireplaces,
5045.
woodburnlng stove, also
room, 3 bedrooms,
storage buildings .
woodburntng fireplace.
carpeting, kitchen has.
$16,000.00.
55
Building Supplies
Two car garage, total etec·
side by side refrigerator
MOBILE HOMI!I 1980,
trlc. 10 x 27 sundeck, 2 &amp;
BUILDING MATERIAL.
and stove. PIUS garage,
1Ax52 Liberty Special, 2
one third acres. Beautiful on level lot '18x12~ .
12' trusses, 2'X.4' ceJIIng
bedroom with utility,
panels,
windows,
senlng. 985·3934.
HOME &amp; BUSINESS
range, ret.; with blocks
aluminum gutters, metal
BUILDING- Thlslsan
and
underpinning.
siding panels. 992·2759.
opportunity tor a ·couple
$9,000.00. Lot rents for
TWO story older home,
to run 4 gift shop or
$45.00 e month.
seven rooms,
bath,
whet have you. In actdl ·
FOR THE YOUNG SET
!II
Pets for; Stle
basement,
hardwood
lion has
kitchen,
- STONE COTTAGE
floors, fireplace. On four
HOOF HOl.LOW: Horses
bedroom and bath. For
with 3 bedrooms. Rght
targe tots with river Iron·
and ponies and riding
only $12,000.00.
size for young couple.
tage." Meln Street,
lessons.
Everything
WANT TO BUILD?- 9
Has equipped kitchen,
Pomerov.
Financing
Imaginable In horse equipwasher, drv@r, w.e.
available. Call after 5, 992- Acres with water and
ment. Blankets, belts,
fireplace, forced air
sewage nearby, for a
7214. $26,500.
boots, etc. English end
nice home with plenty of
he•t. Complete privacy
western. Ruth Reeves
on 1 acre lot. Asking
room for kidS. High and
Old . h~ with one &amp; one
(61A) 698·3290.
dry, overlooking the
$28,000.00.
third acres on New l.lma
OhiO River.
REALTOR .
· R~. Phone992·2598.
SYRACUSE
- , 2
Henry Cttl•nd, Jr.
GET A Nice · SOft tovaple
bedroom home with
m-1"1
klnen from your Humane
bath within walking
· ASSOCIATES
HOUSE &amp; thre..fourths
Society. Shots &amp; wormed.
distance to store. Has
Jean Trusseii ·M9·2MO
ecre lot. Priced to sell. 742·
Donation required. 992·
neW forced 11\lr furnace,
R - I Donie Turnor
6260. Hours lH. dally,
2068, ·I
m-Mt2
blseme~t. front .&amp; back
closed Tues . Tabby's,
and
large
extra
porches,
OFFICI!
"2-22D
tloers, &amp; a pure black; ell
PRICE REDUCE!): OWlltr tot.
.
males.
must sell. Three blclrooihs,
2 &amp; 0f1t
bathe. large
Housiny
familY,_, with fireplace,
CALL today for a beautlful
fully c!erPtted, lerge sun
puppy or dog. Humane
Ht!.Jclqu,lrtuts
dock. patio. WlthlnWIIIklrlg
Society, shots &amp; wormed.
dlstence of eltmeatery &amp;
992·6210.

h•"

.. .

EVERYBODY

Situations Wanted

Pullins
Excavating
E&gt;pirienced Oper•tors
available for loc1t work .
e2 rutJber tire INckhoes
el e:w:cav~tor hoe 11/,.
yd.
.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

Aluminum Siding

Apertmet~t

44

Weds.,

12

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSUlATION
VInyl &amp; .

TWO bedroom . mobile
home, real nice, Br~n· s
Tralltr Park,. Adults only.

9-6.

By Supt. David L. Gleason

v

--

Rent
--- - tor
- ------·

-

l

---- ~

Mobile Homes

CONSTRUCTION
-Backhoe ·and
Dump Truck Service
-Shop and Portable Welding.

MiddlePOrt, Ohio
PH. "2·6342
TRY US!
Complete Dry ettonlng
and Laundry
eCorpet
•Draperies
• FUrniture
c"We're
Service &amp;

Calla
992-,354

9-26·1 mo.

61
Farm Equipment
KUHN HAY .Tedders on .
sale at close-out prices.
Camping
Meigs Equipment Co. Jl
Equipment
Pomeroy, Oh. 614·992,-2176.
1973 Starcraft travel
trailer, loaded. 992·3129:
62
Wanted to Buy
CHI:" WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. SIO per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet co.. Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992·2689.
II
H!lnll

........ ......
-L O l l '
' ' ••' "

lmpr~vements
'

'

71
Autos tor Sale
1966 Thunderbird; outstanding condition ,
12600.00. Larry Armstrong,
10 Oak Street, The Ptelns,
OhiO. 797-4015.
1979 VW

RABBIT, two

S &amp;· G . Carpet Cleaning.
Steam cleaned. . FrH
estimate .
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. 992·
6309 or 742·2211.
REMODELING work, In·
stall ceilings ille, .,.nellng,
doors, flooring. 992·.2759.
12

dard

shift,

mileage,

goOd

like

new

vas

con·

dltion. Call evenings 247·
3051.
1974 CHEVY Nova, 350
automatic, power stHrlng,
71,000 miles, runs good. 742·
3035.
1980
VW
Rabbit,
automatic, gas fuel injetted. 992·3129.
1972 2 door Monte Carlo.
Runs good, new. paint lob.
$1,095. 11 ft. truck camper,
self contained, hot water
heater,

furnace,

refrigerator,
3839.

stove.

'115·

Trucks tor Sale
1969 DODGE one hell ton

72

SWeepline

SIX

CYlinder,

standard. 1595.00. 9A9-2589.
19V7 CHEVY Step side 'I•
ton, 350 engine, auto.
Asking $2,000. Number to
call992·32«l.

•

74
Motorcycles
YAMAHA MX 250, racing
bike, runs good . 742-3035.

Plumbing
&amp; HHtlnt

door, fuel Injected, stan·

HEATING &amp; air con·
dlttonlng,
fwrnace
cl•anlng,plumblng.' Call
992·2364after 5 p.m ..

DOZER work, small lobs •
specialty, quick dtpen·
,dable service. 742-2753.
14

E lectrlcat

I Refrigeration

SEWING MACHINE
Repairs, service, all
makes1 992·228A . The
Fabric- Shop, Pomeroy.
Aufborlzed Singer Solos
and 5arvlce. we Sharpen
Scissors.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR SWHpers,
toesters, Irons, all 1111111
appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3125.
APPLIANCE SERVICE i'
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dfshweshers,
disposals, water tanks. can
Ken Young et 985-3561
before 9 a .m. or after 6

p.nn.

'

~------------------~-----------.--,---­
They'll Do_It Every Time

�.
b

1S-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 7,191kl_

Point Pleasant man honored

•

~

Area deaths

e
t

~

~

CHARLESTON- Ambrose Chapman of Point Pleasant was·honored
today as one of the top vocational
rehabilitation clients of Fiscal 1.1180
by Governor John D. Rockefeller IV
ig ceremonies at the West VIrginia
RehabiH~tion Center at nearby Institute.
Donald I. Craft ol Grafton was
recognized as the state client of the
year. In addition to Chapman, from
the Division of Vocational
Rehabilitation's Hllntlngton district,

•1, .

·~

~~obert R. McKay
:t, Robert R. McKay, 69, of 228 West
• Perkins Avenue, Sanduall;y, formerly ~ Buckeye Lake, died Oc~~. 2 . In the GOOd Samaritan
,r-tal after a lingering illness.
. "• Born at Bashan, Mr. McKay
• il!raduated from Pomeroy High
~ with the c1aas of 1930, and
• :.WU employed with the International
~~ement l)evice Company,
• ~oualy'having worked for Cedar
• 1j!'oint, Incorporated.
.·
Surv:tvoralnclude his wife, the for: !lllel' Ulna ROUSII, from Mason, W.
. \va.,; ·one aon, Robert of Sandusky;
.~daughter, Mrs. James (Jeannie)
;;'. illlams, Ontario, California, and

n

• ,five grandchlldren.'

·

~·

Mr. McKay was preoeded In death
:,11y his parents, Raymond and Rosa
~ ,·Tackett) McKay and one brother,
olm.

&lt;

~~

Memorial services were held at
· ~l0:30a.m. Saturday at the Charles J .
· ~ Sons Fimeral Home, Santiiusky, . with · intennent being in
~lC!rkersville, Ohio. Memorial con: liibutions, If de9ired, lllBY be made
. ~the heart fund.

.,
.~fEthel
Mary Nelson
'

:j
.
.1 Ethel Mary Nelson, 82, Salem
~t.

~t

Rutland, died Monday mor-

nlng at Clifton Nursing Home

following an extended illnellll.
Mra. Nelson was born in Salisbury.
Township on Dec. 25, 189'1 ·the
~ughter of the late Isaac and Cora
Pullins Russell. In 1915 she mar'ried
· H: M. Nelson who preceded her In
death Nov. 9, 1951. She was also
preceded In death by one brother· ·
and one sister. ·
She jVBS a member of the Rutland
Chuch of Christ·lor 40 years where
she !aught Sunday School for many
years.
She is survived by two ctaughters,
Mra. Ed (Doris) Thomas, Rutland,
and Miss Helen May Nelson at
home; two granddaughters, Mrs.
Charles (Karyn Dee) Easter,
Galena, Ohio lind Mrs.. Roger
(Kathy) · Schultz, Coiumbus; four
great granddaughters, Kelly,
Heather, and Paige t&lt;:aster, Galena
and Desiree Barrett, Colwnbus; one
brother, Lawrence Russell, Parker.
.
· sburg.
Fimeral services ·will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Walker
Funeral Home, Rutland, with Gene .
Underwood officiating. Buri!'l will
be in Riverview , Cemetery, Middleport. Friends may call at the ·
funeral home after 2 p.m. on Wednesday until time of services. The
family will receive friends Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

1Speaker named for
~frecognition dinner
r

~degree.

NO QUORUM
Pomeroy Council did not meet
Monday night due to a lack of
quorwn.

END MARIQAGES
. .. •
In Meigs Cowlty Cmrimon J'leu
Court the marriage of ·Saudra L.
Kom and George J. Korn, Jr., diasolved. ·
James 'N. Grueser- grllllled~a
divorcefromDianaGrueaer.

VETERANS MEMORIAL

· Anniversary Sale Prices
on our entire stock of
women's vests, pullover
and cardigans. Many
beautiful colors and
styles. Sizes s. M. L and

extra sizes, too.

REG. $16.00

f:r•tifPr~

SALE s12.79

primary defeat

MIAMIvicious Democratic runoff, Sen. Rlcbard Stone
has become
fourth lnclimbent senator to suffer a primary defeat
thts year. •The man who ousted him faces a tough race against the most
successfu1 WOil!Bll politician in Florida history.
Reversing a 1974 runoff loss to Stone, state Insurance commissioner
Bill Gunter on Tuesday captured 574',238 votes, or 52 percent, to the frr·
st-termsenator's 535,671 votes, or48 percent.
.
·
Meanwhile, !onner Public Service Commission ~hairwoman Paula
Hawkins scored a ·decisive victory in her bid for the Republican
nomination against former Rep. Lou Frey Jr.

REG. $18.00

SALE 114.39
REG, $23.00

SALE Sl8J9
REG. $_27.00

. SALE szl.59

Action could hurt coal operations ·

E·LBERFELDS IN POMEROY ..

ROBERT E. MERCER

COLD FRONTMOVEUN
A cold front, extending from
of Lake.Hlll'Qn to northern Indiana
&lt;Wemight, was to move Into Ohio.
~arly today . . The predominant
weather feature during the day,
however, was to.be a mild now of air
into the state from the West ani!
Southwest.
No rain is forecast for today,
although an isolated shower is not
impossible.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio- Ohio reclamation chief Charles Call says that
If the federal government takes over coal mine inspection in the state,
~could be a sjx-month freeze on new mining pennits.
,
Such action cotild ,idle most Ohio surface mine operations, depen·
·ding on tetms of the takeover.
.
·
.
Call said be hoped.to avoid such a freeze by obtaining federal approval no later than the end of the year for the state to continue ad·
ministering the program.

CoUrt refr,uJes to rev~~ findi,g

WASHINGTON- The U.S. Supreme Court refus-dMondaytoreview
in
u. hiring, claastfi.~ticin and promotion policies.
'
The actiOn came on .the same day Toledo city officials decided to
withdraw their appeal of a lower court ruling that such.discrjmination .
took place.
The withdrawal was one of the conditions city officials had agreed to
Ill! they could preserve $1.4 mllli~ _ iii federal revenue s
baring funds eannarked for Toledo. .

'
The case goes back to lJ.S. District Judge Nicholas Walinski, whe
will decide what danlages.the women involved may receive and will
devise a remedy for the discrimination. .

.,

UNITED PENTECOSTAL
CHURCH
..
S. 3rd AVE., Ml DDLEPORT

•'

.

Higbs in tbe low to mi&lt;WOs. Chance of rain 10 percent tonight and near
!lei'O percent Thursday. WindS hortherly less than 10 mph tonight.

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
(Graduate of Jackson College of Ministries
. Jackson, Mississippi)

EJ:b fed Oblo Forecast- Friday through Sunday: Partly cloudy
through t,he pertod. Highs In the 60!1. Lows In the 40s.

r

'

PASTOR WM. KNITTEL
EVERYONE WELCOME
•

.

billi~,

•

~•• it helps yOu plan.

'5595

1978 FORD
Low, lOw miles, A.C..

c..1om wheels.

console,

1979 AMC CONCORD
'45 9 5

Columbus and Southern has a plan to help Y-OU plan. It's called
"budget billing", and it's especially helpful if you use more
·
.
electricity during one time of year than another.
. · ~f you heat your home with eleGtricity, your whiter bills may
be h1gher than the rest of the year. Or, if y~ use air conditioning,
you m11y spend v!ore for electricity in the summer. ··
Budget billing helps even out the bills for the whole year so
you can budget too.
-'
.
. 'Life is full of surprises, but budget billing is 6ne thing you can
count on.

If budget billing can help you plan, call Columbus and Southern.
r

IM_,..rl COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN OHIO ElECTAIC COMPANY
215 N. FI\ONT ST.. COLUMBUS. OHIO 43215

,i

enttne
"

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) 7 The 52
American hostages in Iran are "all
right," a ll)ilitant student at the occupied1U.S. Embassy In Tehran said
today, but he refused to say if the .
Iran-Iraq war posed a danger to
them.
Asked about the psychological .
state of the hostages, now in their
340th day of captivity, he said, "I
suggest you ask questions about the
lllBrtyrs (Iranian soldiers 'kilied in
the war) and the condition ol Iranian
captives held in Iraq."
He accused Western news media
of ignoring such topics and added:
"But when a number of Americans
are held here imme!iiately the whole
world starts asking, 'how is lheir
mental state, are they receiving .
medicine andsoon1'''
The militant was telephoned by
The Associated Press in Beirut. The
AP i!lso phoned Iranian officials in
Tehr1'11 Tuesday, and they repqrted
11,1en that the bailtag• ~re saf'!,
. Iran's official Pars news agency
said, meanwhile, that the special
committee of the Iranian
Parliament studying the Issue of the

~s::.

had its third session

Woman enters
guilty .plea '•

Unda Freeman, 38, Pomeroy,
Tuesday entered a guilty plea on a
bill of Information charging grand
theft In conjunction with her having
. improperly received monies from
the Meigs County Walfare Depart·
men~.

The theft was discovered and subsequently Investigated by Keith Uttle, investigator for the Meigs County Welfare Department, with the
cooperation and asSistance of·Paul
Gerard, investigator for the Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney's of·
flee.
· Grand theft, as charged in the infonnatiOD, Ia a felony of the fourth
degree, With a possible penalty of six
months to five years In prison and
possible fine of up to $2,500.
Upon receiving her plea, Judge_
Jolm Bacon ordered the matter of
sentencing continued upon completion of a pre-sentence . investigative report.

tervals on Iranian positions near
Abadan, Associated Press
correspondent Jeffrey Ulbrich
reported from the Iranian port city.
Iran claimed its anti-ail'craft bat_teries' sho! do"11 tWo of the Iraqi
planes attacking Abadan.
· An Iraqi major in conunand of the
Khorr!'P)Shahr port area said ,Iraqi
armor had driven around that city
and cut the supply highway hetween ' \
Abadan and ·Ahwaz, the capital of
oil-rich Khuzistan Province 70 niiles
to the north. But Iranian sniper fire
prevented independent confirmation
of this claim.

..

FIFTEEN

CENT~

\,

HOJ'IORED- Sm senior memberll o1 the $outhem
High School Band were honored during· halftime

ceremonies Friday night. They were presented !lowers
and a resume of their :chool careers given. They are,

J

seated, ·l to r, Annlntha Holter, Donna Hubbard,
Melissa Yonker; back, I to r, ~oseph Malesio;k, the ·
director; Becky Rhodes, Mary Slavin and Peggy Bush.

Reagan campaigns in Ohio
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) Ronald.(1Jeagan, campaigning in

portheaS£ Cibio today, stressing his

pledge to IJII!I8 gyvenunent restrictions on the coe1 and steel industries
if elected Nov. 4.
The Republican presidential .can-·
didate · new Into Youngstown and
met privately late Tuesday with a .
group of laborers and labor leaders.
The former California governor
was accompanied by Gov. James A.
Rhodes. He clearly tried to make
political point&amp; with Independents .
and Democrats, many of whom have
supported Rhodes in the past.
Reagan apparently. agrees with
Rhodes' clalm that the U.S. EnViionmenlal Protection ~ency has
crippled steel mills and Coal mines
which do.n~. meet federal clean air
standards . .

Reagan sounded that theme late
Tueaday afternoon at a rally in
downtown Steubenville and at a
meetiDg with area leaden!.
He was·to tour a clOBed steel mill
today and to visit an active mill to
talk with laiKr and · company
representatives. •
Reagan met Tuesday in
YoUngstown with a previously selected group of unloit leaders, hourly
employees, and their spouses,

among others.
Reagan told ·between 1,500 and
3,000 people in Steubenville that
overregulation by the federal EPA
has caused many of the area's
economic problems. He said
President Carter is attempti.Qg to
downplay the impact of the EPA,
and that If the president is reelected, there would be no relief.
from the agency's strict oversight.

He also said Carter was trying to
minimize ail upcoming increase In

Social Security assessments "whicl!
will take $$86 billion next year out of
the pockets of American workers.''
Reagan said Carter has been accusing him of wanting to destroy the
Social Security system. Carter has
implied Reagan would do so because
he favors voluntary participation In
Socl81 Security.

Financial issue 'unresolved'
Meigs County Probate Judge
Robert E. Buck met with the Meig.q
County Commissioners Tuesday to
discuss the juvenile court budget.
Judge Buck said the auditor's of.
flee had lnfotmed him that the
salary account of the juvenile officer
would not have sufficient funds to
complete the year and that the
travel expense account is presently
in the red.
Judge Buck said he would prepare
a transfer request in order to cover
the travel expense. The matter of
the salary account was left
unresolved.
Requested transfers . Within the
county highway department were

made following a discussion with
Phil Roberts, engineer and Dave ·
Spencer, manager.
Necessary transfers within the
Emergency Medical Services
budget were made to pay for the Hew
emergency vehi.cle that will be used
·at Rutland. The vehicle was
delivered Tuesday; Meeting with the
~ommissioners regarding the transfers and the new vehicle was Bob
Bailey, EMS coordinator.
Attending were Ricbard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Cham·
bers.

·. S heriff says area _k nown ·as
''Meigs County Green'' now ·

•

2 Door hatchback, light blue,
gOOd gas mileage.

TOLEoo, Ohio (AP) -Auto-related companies have begun calling
'I!Ofkel'll back for the new car year, causing the Toledo-area unemployment rate to drop sharply in August.
.
·
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said the unemployment
rate for the m011th was 10.6 percent, compared to 12.4 percent for July.
That II the first decline In the rate In five months.
· The rate Ia above the August 1979 rate of 7. 7 percent, and the number
o1 unemployed workers totals 39,700, or 11,000 more than a year ago.
There are 334,000 people employed In the area, a,n increase of 4,000
overJuly.
· .
The bureau said 1,600 of the new jobs are in the transportation equip'
ment category.
Partly cloudy tonight. Low! In the mld-tOs. M!lStii sunny Thursday.

EVANGEL,IST REV. JEFF BUTLER

5 speed tr•nsmlsslon. Removabl~
top.
•

Auto-related fimis recall workers

Weather forecast
'

MIDDLE PORT, 0.

•

Hostages
•
remarn
all-right

....

THE UVELY STONES

•

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1980

VOL. 31 NO. 1?4

.•'

Special Singing by

.

at

WOMEN'S.
SWEATERS

Emergency squad runs
Local units answered four
emergency calls on Monday, the
Metgs County Emergency Medical
Service Headquarters reports~
.
They include Middleport, 12:53
p.m., John Stivers from his home In
Middleport to Holzer Medical Center; 3:03a.m., Middleport, Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments, Lois Cornell to
Pleasant Valley Hospital; 5:50a.m.,
Pomeroy , Charles Lee from ·
Kroger's to Veterans ,Memorial; .
Rutland, 8:44a.m., S!!m Beller, New
Lima Road to Veterans Memorial.

'
of the Iraqi people In their efforts to
Iran.
to have downed thr~ Iraqi MiG jets,
In a major policy speech in
regain their rights over their
two near Dezful and one n,ear Ahwaz
territories and waters." Iraq, Jor- Boston, Deputy Secretary of State
in the southern sector of the 3oomile-long batUefront on the 17th day ·, dan and North Yemen are- Arab Warren Christopher said the United
nations while Iran is non-Arab Per- States will honor "req!lests for
of the war. Iraq acknowledged the
assistance from non-belligerent .
loss of two MiGs.
.
·
.
sian.
. .
The Beirut sources said five ·ships friends in the (Persian Gulf) area
The Iranian cO!IImunique-reported
flying Iraqi or Jordanian flags and who feel threMeried by the
by Tehran Radio said Iraqi forces
cOncentrated an attack on Dezful's · loaded with cargoes from the Soviet conrevent the war from expanding ,
stockpJies . in Marxist-governed in ways that threaten the security of
key military base and Shushtar, 20
Yemen and Ethiopia have the region.
South
,
.
miles to the southeast on the road to
Iraq
said
its
jet
fighter-bombers
doclted
at
Aqaba.
The
sources
said
Ahw~z. capital of Khuz~n P,r.ovln· .
·the supplies were carried by truck to destroyed the television station and
ce.
_··fuel depots at Abadan, near the
the Iraqi border.
Jordanian officials In Anunan said
mouth of the Sh;ltt ai-Atab estuary. 1
In
Moscow,
a
Foreign
Ministry
King Hussein .and President Abspokesman termed "slanderous and · Iraqi artillery to the west and nor- ·
dullah ,Saleh of North Yemen, In a
false" a Tehran Radi9 -report that thwest of Khorramshahr, 10 miles to
telephone conversation, Mfinned
the Soviet Union had offered armli to the west, were firing at regular in~ir countries' ·~ Pan-Arab support

116th ANNIVERSARY SALE

7:30 P.M.
TUES.-SUN., OCTOBER 7, 12

..•

heavy losses on Iranian forces on the
ground while the air war concentrated on supply lines. '
Iraqi forces have stepped up air
and artillery attacks on Abadan and ·
batUed holdOuts In the port of .
Khorramshahr, seeldrlg to complete
their co.nquesl of the I.ranian side of'
Iraq's W.aterwayto the gulf.
Iran sent air strikes for the second
straight !laY against the Iraqi oil
center of Kirkuk, 200 miles north of
Baghdad, and the southeastern Iraqi
city of AI Amarh, which controls the
· supply lines of Iraq's. invasion force
in the oil-rich section of southwestern Iran.
Iran's military command clairried .

ELBERFELD$

REVIVAL

•

. BAGHDAD, Il:aq (AP)- Iraq abd
.Iran· carried on relentlessly today
tbeir ground and air war while pjo.
Wtltern North Yemen was reported
tD have joined Jordan In expressing
IIJPPOrl for I111C!.
The United States has pledged to
IIJPPly military hardware to neutral
Persian Gulf nations that feel
lllreatened by the Iraq-Iran war.
Iraq '!'aS reported to have
received five shiploads of Soviet·
made military spare parts and ammunition through Jordan's Aqaba
fDl1 since the outbreak of the war 17
*ys ago. 'l11e Soviet Unipn denied
.offering mllliary aid to Iran.
Iraq claimed to have inflicted

I

east

;' Admi~Evelana Pauley, Por·
' tland; Gertrude Bass, Pomeroy;
,, John Harrison, . Middleport;
O,Michelle Smith, Middleport; Dalton
;::Badgley, Hartford; Candy Riffle,
,;.Racine; Charles Lee, Pomeroy.
~ Discharged-Joseph Proffitt, Dana
';Biumenau•er, Ida White.

•

U. S. ·pledges aid to Persian Gulf nli.tions

1 f1nci1ng that Toledo's pollee divlsloo discriminated against women

~

.=

REV. ·WILLIAM MID· ·
DLESWARTII, MEIGS COUN·
TY, has been el~ted ~hillrptnon
of the Board Ill Dlrecton Ill the
Gallla • Ja~ • Meigs Community Mental Healtb Center.
Rev. Mlddle~~~rtb, whe has se~
ved OD the board dnee lflt, has
long been active In civic ud
human service activities Ill the
area. He presently serve~~ u a
member of the Gallla-Melp
Commaolly . Action Agency
Board, the Headstart Polley
(:ouocll, the Meigs Couoty
Mlolsterlal A811oclatioo, the TriState Coofereoce of Amerlcao
· Lotheran Chllfthes aod the Uo118·
Club.

SOROIUTYTOMEET

Preceptor Chapter ~ Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet at 7:45 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Branch,
Athena County Savings and Loan
Co. ,Pomeroy.

based on the many probleml he had ;
to overcome to become employed u
a laundry Worker at Pleap"* Valley ·
Hospital in Point Pleasant.
•
Disabled by the resld1iall ol jiOIIo
ilnd other conditiOIIII, ChQmaa II liD
excellellt sample ol aelectlve Job
placement, accordlnc to hll COUll- '
selor,. Joaeph F. Gwinn, Jr., ol tbe ,
dlvlllon's.Lakln brallcb oftlce. ,
The dlvlllori prepared him for 1111 '
job by providln8 bim phyBieal
restoration services and training at
the center.

\

'

. RIO GRANDE - Robert E. Mer,cer, president of the Goodyear Tire
• and Rubber Co., will speak. at Rio
- Grande College Thw'sday at 8 p.m.
; at the recognition dinner honoring
. friends, alumni and benefactors of
the college. .
• - Mercer, whose speech is entitled,
."Revitalization In a One-World
' Economy,'' has been with Goodyear
:since 1947 where he rose through a
~ series of shles and executive
~ IIOSitlons before being named
•president in 1978.
The dinner is intended to honor
_those contributors and active par,UciPI\Ilts wbo were involved in the
. college's · fund-raising campaign,
; "Challenge of the Second Century."
~ Dr. Paul C. Hayes, Rio Graode
~ College president, will confer upon
• Mercer an honorary doctorate of law

~

CLOSEDOCf.13
COLUMBUS - Director -Clifford
Reich of the Ohio . Department of
Uquot Control announced toQ~y that
all state liquor stores, agencies and
departmental offices will be closed
Monday, Oct. 13, in observwice of
Columbus Day. ·

other district~ honored ivere:
Jo Aim McGuire, Raysal, McDOweJ.I
County; Delores· .S. Pyles,
Charleston; Roberta A. Wolfe,
· Morgan~; David B• . Dawson,
. Romney; Charles E. Vainer, Davis;
and Sandra K. Rusnak, Wheeling. ·
Chapman's &amp;election as the Huntington district client of the year was

...

Iraq-Iran war continues

'

•,

{!!

..
t •

••

Due to the large amount of ·
marijuana raised here, Meigs cow}. .
ty has been nicknamed "Meigs
County Green" it was learned
during the monthly luncheon
meeting of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday.
Sheriff James J. Proffllt w&amp;S the
featured "P"Plrer for the session held
at Meigs Inn.
Proffitt observed that Meigs Coun- .
ty haa the pn~per.cllmate and soil for
growiiiiJ a good crop of marijuana.
· He feels residents bave moved Into
the county from big cities such as
Detroit, Cleveland, Chicago and
NeiV Yorlt for the plirpoSe of growing
marijuana. He added that most ol
those peopl~ are .on welfare and
receive foool stamps.
Aller the crops are· harvested,

they ieave the courtly and go back to
the cities and usually take off for tbe
Bahamas or Hawaii, Proffitt said.
In recent weeks, the Meigs County
sheriff's department has confiscated
approximately $1 million wtlrth of
marijuana, all of which bas been ·
destroyed.
It was reported the chamber will
sponsor a second goU to;.mament
Thursday, Oct. 9, at Jaym&amp;r .Golf
Course. Entry fee is $10 plus green
fees. First prize will be a set of golf
clubs. The event is open to the
!!Ublic. Tee off time is 1 p.m.
It was announced tl;!at Jim
Frecker was elected president of the ·
chalnller and John Apdel'llon vice
president. Jlnna Amott was named
secretary and treasurer.
Frecker, who presided, got the approval of members to add additional

Chrlstmas lights on 'Main Street

providing mont.y Is avallable.
Fred Crow, past president,
suggested that an awardS banquet
be held iii tile near future. No action
was taken, however. C. E. Blakeslee ·
repo~ that Meigs 'County History
books are again available. The
books sell for $35.
t
The chambei: asked for ideas 011
the annual Christmas promotion.
Guests of the c'hamber, whe were
introduced, were Jaclt; Bales ol T.
Jay Bradshaw Optometric Vision
Center and Dr. NonnanElllnger.
Attending w~re Frecker, Phil
Kelly, Crow, Proffitt, Leo Vaughall,
Jlnna Amott, secretary, Blakeslee,
Hank ·Cleland, Billy J. Spencer,
Dave Jenkins, Bill Quickel, Joe
Young and Bob Mlller.

•

r

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