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

Point Pleasant man honored

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Area deaths

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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

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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
•

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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

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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

�$-The Daily Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1980

2-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., WeqnesWiy, Oct. 8, 1980
.
.

.

.

_Sports briefs.
.
•
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1

Opinio·n s &amp;
Comments

'

BASEBALL ·

workout at the Astrodollle ·on July
30. He was rus.hed into . emergency
surg~ry later that day a.OO surgeons
removed a blood clot in a neck ar:
tery.
'

NEW YORK (AP) - Hou8ton
AStros' pitc!ler J.R. Richard, whoSe
Ufe was threatened by a stroke less ·
than three months ago, will Wldergo
additional surgery early next w~
In an undisclosed California
i)os!lltal, Tom Reich, his agent, said.
Richard collapsed ·during a

11fE DAILY SENTINEL
IUSI'S 145-*1
, •DEV.OTED TO TilE
INT}:REST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Ld1en ef opln.ioo 11rt welcomed . Tbey should be less tbaa lOt wordll long (or subj«t to reducdoo by the edltar) and must be signed with Ute slgn~·s addreu. N11mes may be withheld upoa
publication. Howeller, on req11est. name$ will be dtsc l~ed . Lenen: tbould be i.o good taste, a~
dresslallssues, not persoaaliU~ .
·
Pl&amp;blllbed daUy eJcept Saturday by ThUlltlo Vallt)' PubUshiDg Company- MultimtcUa, Inc.,
lll Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohlot57S9. Business Office P hone !92- 2156. Editorial Pbone 992-U57.
'Setoad dass JKlli&amp;alt paid at Pomeroy. Ohiu.
Natlon~~l advertblng repfesenlall\1~ , Landon AssO('Iates, 3101 Euclid Ave., Cle,;eland, Ohio

TENNIS

MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Gene Mayer defeated John. Sadri.&amp;-2,
S-2 while Wojtek Fibak Of Poland,

beat Peter Fleming 7~. IN in firstPHOENIX, Ariz. (AP ) - Lucia
round action at an international Fernandez beat her twin sister Anround-robin 'tourriarnent.
na'Maria 6-3', &amp;-I in second round ac• BARCELONA. Spain (AP) tion of the $100,000 Phoenix Classi~
Gulllenno Vilas, Jose Luis Clerc and women'~ tournament.
Italy's Adrian6 Panatta all won their .
In qther second round matches,
singles mat~hes in the second round Marcie totUe beat Klmaerley Jones
of the international Count Ot Godo ' 8-4, t-6, IN; Ann White defeated
toiii'IUirilent.
Claire Schmoyer 6-2, 6-3; Lea AnVilas d~eated Jose Garcia of tonoplis downed Lym Epstein 7-6, 3Spain, S-2, 6-4; Clerc topped Roberto 6, S-3 and Phillis Blackwell beat
Vizcaino of Spain, 8-4, · 7-5, and Janet Newberry Hi, 7-5,&amp;-1.
·
Panatta beat FrAnce's Georges
BOXING
Gaven, &amp;-2, &amp;-2.
LOS ANGELES. (AP) - Muham-

mad Ali said !hat an overdose of
thyroid medicine' had made him
weak and " physicallyUnfit" to. face
Lari\Y Holmes in their heavyweight
title fight last Thursday in Las
~as.

Ali, addressing a news conference
at UCLA Medical Center, said he
had doubled a daily dose of Thyrolar
prescnbed tiy his doctor two weeks
before the bout.
,
Holmes retaihed his crown when
the exhal!Bted Ali could not answer
t)le bell for the 11th round.

URANIUM IN
LOW-GRADE ORE

1.!rarrium is generallyJound in lowgrade ore with al&gt;out 0.2 percent
uranium content.
.

...

. WELLAND CANAL
The vJ eUand Canal between Lakes
Ontario and Erie has eight locks to
detour the 326-foot drop of Niagara·
Falls and the rapids of the Niagara
River.

tUT YOUR COST EVEN MORE
DURING KROGER'$ GREAT

t4115~

Tbe Associate«! Pressli exclusively ettUtled to Ule' use for publi&lt;'ltion ol all news dtlpatcbes·
credited to tbe oewspaper and also the local news published ~etd.u .
· Robert Wiagett
Publisher
General Mgr. &amp; City Edllor
Robert Hoefiicb
New• Editor
· Ad\'. Manager

r-7: ~

~~

ISl

miii:.~

~v

,...,.,__.._-r, ,...,...,.,

=·.,..

Dale Rothgeb, Jr.
CarlGheta

Ohio Editorial
Commentary

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CH~OicE;
...,, •••.,,.,, T-BONE, PORTERHOUSE OR

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
t~ .m..rttlld 1tems 11 riQUiftd

Each ol
to , .be
~ lll'lilablt tor .... IM 81(~ Kloget StOfe , fi{Cept ••
~ noted tn INI ad. H we do 1\ln out of an ......
' ilem,.we will offet you 'fOUr choice of a C""'J*abie •tern.
~ IV~. reflecting the SM'le Sl\11f9 0t 1 IJJneheck
which wiN entiU. VOU to purcn.t the ~tnillld •tetn at the

B~nelisl

Top
Sirloin Steak

actv..l'- pnce ~XI cttvs.

Here is some editorial conunent from Ohio newspapers
· dwing the past week:
·
CLEVELAND PLAIN DEALER: "Big city mayors are
jubilant because a federal judge in Detroit declared the
1980 census void and ordered it adjusted to correct undercounting, especially of blacks and Hispanics.
"Like Detroit, Clevelapd should ma~e sure it benefits
from the adjustment. Central cities in metropolitan
clusters of population have been losing people. Census
takers aggravate that loss by missing thousands of their
residents. As a result, the city loses legislative representation.
"And many federal programs are based on population.
Detroit's population was undercounted by an estimated
67,000 in 1970, said a National Urban League demographer.
That resulted, he said, in a loss of $52 million in federal aid
in 10 years.
"Detroit, New York; Chicago, Philadelphia and Newark
have filed lawsuits to protest undercounting. Cleveland
has large fractions of population ,.. likely to be lost in the
census counting. It should make certain it gets all the aid
and all the vote power that belongs to it."
·
WARREN TRIBUNE CHRONICLE: "The war between
Iraq and Iran is not just another war between undeveloped
nations nursing an ancient grudge. Instead, it is a conflict
that threatens the economic lifeline of the industrialized
, world + the stream of .oil ta~ers that ply the Persian
Gulf. .
."In his State of the Union message in January, President
Carter enunciated the Carter doctrine, a statement that
any threat from the Sovie~ Union to the oil supply in the
Persian Gulf region would be resisted, by military force, if
necessary.
"We must.keep the Soviet Union from interfering or ex·
tending its"influence in the region. The Kremlin will move
into any vacilwn left by a weakness .or indecision in our
policy.
"We must keep the Strait of Honnuz open and the oil
lines flowing from the other Persian Gulf nations. We must
keep the instability along the Iran-Iraq ~rder from
spreading through the entire region. And above all, we
must avoid any military confrontation between the
nuclear powers in the region.
"We must move more strongly and quickly to lessen our
dependence and the dependence of our allies upon foreign
oil, not merely to protect the dollar, but to keep the peace."
IRONTON TRIBUNE: ''The Ohio Supreme Court deserves the chastisement it has received over .its decision on
whether to place a Republican-backed redistricting plan
on the state's Nov. 4llallot.
"The plan would have taken redistricting out of the
political arena if approved by voters on Nov. 4. However,
· the court in a 4-3 decision killed the issue from getting on
the Nov. 4 ballot.
"The court's decision followed party lines - and .that
means that when redistricting takes place this next year,
the Dernocr~Y, will hold the controlling hand.
~ "Let's hoi&gt;e the issue doesn't die. Perhaps the next tim!!
around, the issue can reach the voters,"

".Let's see ... yes, 'Fighter Tactics'
sixteen .. ·. "

see page 913 verses fourteen through

CC~nl*lb6e brend 01'

refund ._our DUrchiM pnce.

' COPYIIGHT 1HO- T)'41 KIOGII CO. ITEMS AND NICIS

GOOD SUNDAY OCTOIII S THIU SATURDAY OCTOIII 11 .

i0DIAUI$ .

District heating: a simple idea
picked up Birdsill Holly's idea and
wedded it to another good idea, rogeneration.
"
Explanation: When electric plants
turn oil, natural gas or coal into electricity they use about a third of the
fuels' energy. The rest goes into the
air or a nearby body of water as
waste steam or waste hot water.
· John Rodousakis, of the Departmerit of Energy, likens American
electric generation to a dairy farmer
who. takes the butter from a cow's
milk and throws away the rest of the
milk.
. Europeans teamed this a quartercentury ago. They use the steam or
hot water from their electric plants
for district heatirig systems. That
way, about 80 percent of a fuel's
energy is used. The Europeans also
link unconventiortal fuels, like peat,
trash and geothermal power, with
the systems.
Some results: Two Darilsh homes
in five use district heating instead o{
individual heating plants. In
Sweden, more than a quarter of all
home!! use district heting; in
Finland, more than a fifth of all
homes. District heating serves 70
percent of Soviet city heat demand,
and is supplied in West Germany
through 47 central heating networks.

A s~raight answer

t~

$

LIMIT 3 PKCS. WITH COIIPO•

12

liMIT 0!\IE COUPON PU fAMILy

II

IIIJICllO llmiCIIU IIIII I LKIIIUII

- - l ( l. SllftiCI. II, lNI

.I
I '

• •

· W1en•rs ..... .......... Pkg .

99

HOLLY FAIMS, u :s.D.A , INSPECTED

.

Mixed Fryer Parts ....... lb.
IN THE PIECEK.OGU

.

Meat Bologna ..... ... .. .... lb.

Pay close attention: Iran and Iraq are ,at

wai-

o

Embassy
2·~.$449
Coffee ........ Con

Fresh Whole
Pork Loi~

KIOGll
'

$ 19

69

Tomato 10 fo·tU .
Soup ..... ::· coo
1

K•oc;u

lnstont
.
Coffee ....

.

$129

SLICED INTO CHOPS.
FIUH Ill HALF

Ctw.

GAL.I'LASTlC CTN ••• SUh .

·

PER ROL L

Fleete Bat~

79

C

Pork Loin .... .. ................ lb.
HOLLYfAIMS
l·lb .
(h.•1cken Fran ks ........ Pkg.

Kiioon U.S% LOWFAT Mill(

.

·

Whole
·
·
Smoked Picnics ...... lb.

Gil.

$399

Avondale u.•·••
Com ....... c.-

· s,7·LB. AVG.

,.,., 58·

c

Joo

WHOlE KERNEl OR
CIEAM STVU

•oo - s~Ens

·Spring.dale
, 2% Milk

10 ·01 .

20c

...• ou
•
ISSUe ...... .. 0 .

'

s12 9

I&lt;IOGU

SANDWICH

79c

•

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)

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~:~ld ~·~
KIOGEI

Wh•at

Cracked Wheat 16-oz.
8
read ............ ., Loaf
ROYAL VIKING DANISH ,

16·01 .

lool

KltOGllt SELF -.ISING

Com
5
M..I ... .. .. a.i
··~

99
99·c

CINNAMON

Schnecken ..... ............ ~i~:
KIOGIR
'
•
• .
'/,-Gal.
~t~ermllk ....... ,....... , ctn . ·

C

39c
·53c.
ggc

GOLD CI!ST IEGULAI
OIMIN IATUII

Marsh·
•.••
maII ows ... ••I
IIG VAL!JI

s.ntlwlch .
L
2&lt;-Ct.
Cooalts .... ~'~&lt;•·

19

GOLD CltiST

Lemon

6

10·ot.
.Drops ...... •·•

COUfriiTIY OVIN

A&amp;W .
12·oz.$159
loot Beer
cans
•
SLIM ICING COLA 01
s159
12-oz.
ling Cola ... .. .. . · cans

a· .

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

OINATUIAL

O'CIOAI

Sponge Mop .........

Red or
Delicious

KIOG"

Pineapple

• .. ... .. "C•n
·••·
JUICI
AVONOAl£

Pinto
IS. S·CU .
leans ... .. . Con ·
AVONDALE

Nortlttm 11.s....
...
. ...... Coo

38

Baking
15 $269
Potaloes .... ~
Pumpkin
ii.shroo•s.... ~=: $121 Pie.............

IIOGII

PIISHIAIIIDDUTCH

'•

~.~. ~:.~~·

19

:
3
•
12-oz.S209
Orange JUICe.... cons
_.OFFLAIIL;MOUTHWASH .
5119
Llsterine ...............'lir·

!1-PA«) KIOGER FIOZIN SWEETINED

I

AVAILAII.E ONLY IN
STORES WITH
DELl DEPTS.
" HOTFOODS
AVAILAII.E 11 cim
TIL7pm

CALIPOINIA BO,II.UI 01

'·

IWIIT

.

.

a" Pie

,

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SJ2 9
69 e
.

PorU .
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~-=~

.

~d;';;Glap~l .. 1...79° ~~!~~Slaw ........ ;;:.~ ..... llt.$399
lt'WJ'D

PI

Pecan eces.

1. _

Pke.'

5341 Roast Beef...... ~..... lb.
liiiiSHMAOIIOtocOI.ATI

Pelll ..... •·

48°

110
..... ········ ....

&amp;MOIUID,ItOIIIYMw

....

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99e

C:.kles ....:............... o.z.
d 2Loaves SJll

•

.....

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..........

!-•....
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..... SJ31

be._

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...! $179

Pinto
Beans . .. .

Breod .. .. ..

in the campaign and had been sent to.
the netwOrk in error. The medlaman
added that he does not consider the
spot to be negative, that "It JU8t
points out Reagan's record."
Since the beginning ol faU c:arnpalgn, the Carter campaign bu.
been quick to jwnp on Reagan's
every misatatement. But it has'
almultaneously been Betting I'I!CO!Qs '
for hyperbole.
·

tidnp I'IIBIIy beat up.

VACI'AI(

I
I

•

a straight question ..

At one recent campaign appearance, Carter credited bla adminiBtratlon for the recent drop In
Interest rates (never mind that the
rates. .had r11en because of his
monetary policy), for having "COmplelely revenecl the clelpair'' in the
IIIler cltlea (never mind this IRIIDmer's rlota), for having 11rouc1a
peace to the Middle Eut (never!
mind that Egypt IIIII Ilrael are now ,
openly llkeptlcaJ. about the IIIICcell of
theC&amp;mpDavldqreeDBit. ·
Jlemember thAt the faU "'!JIP'Ip
Ia only blif over. It will be Jn. :
1ere1tiJ11 to aee '11'1111 "moderate"
tactlal carter Is •viDs for U..
!lnal da)'l before tbe eleclicll Wilen

11.4 SHUTS fiERitOLl

fleece
·
..l.
TowesI ..... Sl••u

2 :

•••••••••••••••••••
Se.rve 'N' Save
l·lb.
C·

= --

1

I U.S . GOV'T GIADED CHOICE .
Gunno·e's
I IEEF CHUCK - ·s189
Country Sausi • Bonelitsi Pot Roast ........
~•vE
Fresh Catfish ............ ... lb. 5199'
joe
: flESH
.
• ..
s
199
nata.
'.i!~l
1 Qcean Perch F1llets ..... ~~.

...

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

AYOndale
Dlnner .....7 /•...· 0l.

Any Size Pkg. .
$139
Ground Beef ... ·. -=- ... lb. , ·

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

The idea of llsing Wllllle energy.for putting people to work (someone has
district heating never died out here to lay pipe), reducing dependence on
·completely. Smaller. municipal costly oil and ~;&gt;utting trash to good
utilities, especially in the Snow Belt, use. This is still a "demonstration.
clWlg to it. A few big i.Iivestor-Owned
project," says Rodousaltis, as are
utilities, led by New York's Con- those in Philadelphia; in St. Paul,
solidated Edillon, continued to sell Moilrhead and Red Wing, minn.;
waste steam.
and in Piqua, Ohio.
But it wlllln't until after the 1970's
There are other places where
oil squeez.e that interest increased,
dilltrict heating can cut oil depenspUJTed by DOE and, lately, dence. Boise, Idaho, is · uslng
Assistant Secretary Robert Embcy geothermal energy to expand its
of the Housing and Urban Develop- 1 district heating system. Nashville,
. ment Department. •
Tenn., Akron, Ohio, and Madison,
A recent' DOE study shows that,
Wis., are using Vash.
over all, district heating could save
But the great hope; obviously, is
the nation 4 million barrels of oil
ro-generation.
\
What'sthisgottodowithyou?
dally, a quarte of our dally use. That
would require an $82 bil'' '11 invesbnent, stretched over lb to 20
Plenty. Write your congi'e68III8JI
years.
and urge him or IJer to pre:is
But this depends on grass-roots district heating. If you want to know
support. DOE has a relatively small ·more about the subject, Write John
swn1 $2 million to $2 million a year, Rodousalds, Mail Stop 1E031, Co!nto fund planning by community munlty Technology Systems Branenergy teams. In Detroit, foc exam. ch• U. S. Department of Energy,
ple, the team ·cons!$ of Detroit Forrestal Building, 1000 In-.
Edison, the city govenunent, major dependence Ave., SW, Washington,
industrial customers and local folk
D.C. 20085. You can also get inwho are interested.
fonnation from Norman Taylor,
The Detroit team gets $123,000 a
~xecutive Director, Inteniational
year from DOE, which isn't much. · District Heating Association, 1735 '
But it sees district heating as a wa'y, Eye St., NW, Washington, D.C.
eventually, of cutting utility bills, :mMI.

MACAIONI I CHEISI

IEGULAI 01 CHUI PAK

OLL. .. $2 .57)

By WilllamSteif
In Finland a year ago the streets
everywhere seemed to be torn up. A
friend said, "It's for dislrict
heating."
That was the first time I heard the
phrase, "district heating." Now I'm
becoming a lot more conscious of it.
The idea is simple. Acentral plant
produces steam or not water. Pipes
carry the steam or hot water to
clusters of buildings, which can be
heated (and cooled) with it.
Fact: The White House, Capitol,
Pentagon and many other federal
buildings in the Washington area are
heated and cooled by district
heating.
Until 1877, people didn't think
steam could be piped. Then inventor
Birdsill Holly, · . Lockport, N. Y.,
laid 700 feet of pipe from a small
. boiler in his basement and proved it
could be. Soon he'd · installed
systems in Auburn, N. .Y., Garden
City, N. Y. , and Dayton, Ohio. By the
mid-1880s district heating was a
growing industry.
After the World War II, our ample
supply of cheap oil stunted di~trict
heating's American growth. But
post-war Europe had fuel scarcity
and was a lot poorer than we were.
The Europeans, then the Japanese,

BlgK

12....
. . YII'Ggtl Coo

..._

~OMEROY

101
"
N
AND GALLIPOLIS STORES ."
WI llSIIVl THl.IIGHf TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONI SOLD

ByRobertJ. Wagman
Roberts Harris, both.. of whom are
company· of Gerald Rafshoon, the
WASffiNG:TON (NEA) - Seldom black.
,
former White House media adviser
has a U. S. president d!'awn an unIn bold type, the ad proclaimed:
who dlrecls the campaign's addercUJTent of guffaws from the "Jimmy Carter nam\ld 37 black · vertlslng, and wllll approved by high
re-election conunlttee staffers, inpress by giving a straight answer to judges, cracked down on job bias
a straight question. But such was the and created 1 million jobs. That's
eluding fo,m.er White House Chief of
case when Jimmy Carter charac- why the Republicans are out to beat
Staff Hamilton Jordan.
terized his . "re-election effort as him .... It wasn't too long ago that we
Before Its withdrawal; the ad had
"very moderate in tone" • when had Richard Nixon In the White
appeared in about 108 · black
questioned on campaign tactjcs at House ... coddling the bigots and exnewspapers and in several m()l)o
·his latest press conference.
ploiters."
thlies, some ·of which have not yet
In response to another question,
Publication of the ad resulted in a
been distribUted. So, It iB sWl
the president elaborated: " I try to
storm of protest. Republican
guaranteed widespread visibility in
discuss the issues and I do not in-: National Chairman Bill Brock ter- ' the black community through middulge in atiacking personally the in- med it a "Smear." Senate Minority
October.
tegrity of my opponents and I hope li!.~der Howard Baker said: "I'm a
Meanwhile, on the night of Carter's press conference, CBS aired a
that I never shall." In addition, Car- Republican and I want to see Ronald
ter denied that he becomes "mean Reagan elected. The ad calls me a
36-second spot Showing an empty
spirited" on the stwnp or that he racist and I deeply and personally
Oval Office as an off~ voice
asked: "What kind of pemoil should
ever called Ronald Reagan a racist resent that."
or believed him to lie one. ·
Officials in the 'batter carilpaign
occupy the Oval Office? Sbould it be
But as the president was makiJ:tg- responded by "withdrawing" the ad , a pei'SIII who, like Ronald Reagan,
\hose remarks, black newspapers while insisting that its contents ere
has li fractured view of America( .
and magazines across the country "accurate" and ezpresslng fllll1ll'llle
Who speaks diBdalnfully about
Today is Wednesday, Oct. 8, the
naval ai» station in Key West, Fla.
were receiving copy foc a Carter- than anyone would think it accused
millions o1 us as be attacks the .
282nd day of 1980. There are 84 days
Today's birtllaays: Civil rights ·: Monda.le committee advertisement Reagan of racism. They also said
minimum wage and ca118 unem-·
left in the year.
leader Jesse Jackson is 39 yearS old.
featuring pictures of Supreme Court that no one at the White House had
ployment Insurance a 'prepaid
Today's highlight in hist9ry:
Rock singer Johnny Ramone is 29.
Justice Thurgood Marshall (who seen the ad before ita pubUcation.
vacation'?"
·
On Oct. 8, 1776, the Spanish founThought for today : I believe in the
was appointed by Lyndon Jolmson,
But a source at Carter headqlllll'When protests III'OIIe over the spot,
ded a mission in San Francisco.
. discipline of silence and can talk for · not by Carter) and Health and . ters admitted that the ad was
Rafshoon ezplalned that it had been
On this date:
hours about it - George Bernard
.Hlimall Services Secretary Patricia . produced by the communicatiOIIB
prepared foc poalble IJI!l much later
Shaw, English playwright . (1856In 1871, the Great Chicago Fire
1950).
was touched off in abarn.
In i903, the U.S. and China signed
a commercial treaty.
FI1EToWNER
.
' -ByDoaGraff
confederation. Syrian-Jordanian pilcated cinough &amp;iready.)
In 1939, Gennany inco~rated
KENNEWICK, Wash. (AP)
Now pay close attention because
westerrt Poland into the Thir(l lteich.
relations also haven't been 110 hot of
Under the clrcamltancell which
Fred 0 . Lindberg has his own fleet of
this
18
not
going
to
be
repeated.
And in 1945, then-President Harry
late.
The
Syrians
aren't
openly
for
may
not have too IIIIICb to do with
21 antique cars. .
Iran
and
Iraq,
as
you
know,
are
at
the
Iranians,
who
u:e
not
Arabs,
but
Truman announced that America's
the
!11!!!!fd!ate
- - of tbe lr8qlThe vehicles, collected over 12
war.
,
Wider
the
circ:IIJDitancl
...
atomic secrets would be shared only
lrQ!an
canf!lrt,
the North Y.-d
years, are valued to more than
Iraq,
as
an
Arab
state,
is
drawing
The
South
Yemeni,
who
are
Arabs,
with Britian and Canada.
have
had
no
trouble
decidll'l wl*b
$140,000, he said.
considerable
support
from
other
are
foc
tbe
Itanlana.
Tbat
iB
beca111e
licle
they
are
on.
Tbey're
fur the
Ten years ago; Soviet author
• Most Of the cars, which include a
Arab
govenunents,
!Ill
mlglt
be
exthey
have
been
mad
at
the
lraqia
.. Alexander Solzhenitsyn was awarIraqis.
1920 Model A Ford and a 1938
pected. Jordan, for example, whoi!e
ever Since the latter played a
The RJDe cu't be IBid for an Arab
ded the Nobel Prize for literature.
DeSoto, are in driving condition. The
King H~~~~~~ein 18 ciilllng for Arab · leading role 1aat )'it8r In ilaltinC a · leader who ~ 1111 no traabia,
Five years' ago, heaVy fighting in · Ford is worth p),OOO.
set·to between the South Yemeni and
Beirut and northern Lebanonttook at
docldhJI bla licle - Llb7a'• Col.
lindberg, an operator's helper at solidarity with Iraq in "defending Its
dear
homeland
and
national
soil."
the North Yemeni on tenna COl). Muammar Qaddafl. Tbe lraqla,
least 25Tives and shattered the latest
the Phillips Coulee fertilizer plant
sldered more favorable to the Nor- · hard-IIDen after his beert, bave
truce between warring Christians
near here, says he spends a lot .of · Not all Arabs appear to ~
.
therners
- I.e., before the Sovlet- been Qaddlfl's e!OIIIIIllies in the.
ilstening,
however.
The
Syi'ians,
for
and MosleiiiB.
time bilylng license plates.
example,
who
have
Qet!n
feuding
arnMd
Southerners
Jirere able to Arab world. And
been feudlnc '
One year ago, Secretary of Defen- · "It's hard trylnj{ to keep track of
knock them out of the ring.
with Iran'• revolutloilary regime
se Harold Brown said America had
which car needs a 'new plate, and with the Iraqis for the last Yl!l!*'· The
.
(The
Iraqis
are
also
Soviet-armed,
over the mysteriOUI disappearance
feud
developed.
after
they
fell
out
"neutralized" the presence of Soviet
believe me, it does cOst money to
but
let's
not
go
into
that;
this
is
comover
arrangements
for
a
plahned
of
an Ifanlan clergyman ol the Shiite
troops in Cuba by revitalizing the
keep those plates current," he says:

Today.in history.

$
USDA
____
CHOICE

• TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
E~h.ng .vou buy 11 Kroger 11 guarlnlf!ICI lot 'fOUl" totll
MI.ICtlon reg~~~ of manutactuUit. II vou .,. no! util-fted, Kroger Will r-.ce your 1tem With the ume bland or a

111111

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Luzinski's shot
Phils edge

0

Southern's varsity
players
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ScoUNeue

5-8, 1811...

~11, 1470..

SeDlor FllllbaclE

SeDlorEDd

game

Creek.

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()hi€! Sportlight
I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Logan Elm High School defensive
. back who is a deaf mute is proving
he Isn't handicapped when it comes
to playing football.
Greg Woods, a senior, returned 8
pass interception 38 yards for 8
touchdown in a 24-() victory over Bel'
ne Union last week. Woods was
playing because of an InjunctiOn a
. Circleville judge Issued against the
Ohio High School Athletic
Association.
Around Ohio: Linebacker Mll!e
Larkin's tackle of Cincinnati Elder
quarterback Harry Westerkamp
kept Cincinnati Moeller's .victory
. streak alive at 26 games.
Westerkamp was attempting to run
for two extra points and a 21·21 tie
with 32 seconds )eft.
University of Arizona linebacker
Sam Glangardella's kid brother,
John, has five career field goals for
NUes McKinley and is just a junior.
He broke the school field goal distance record twice in the same game,
booting them from 37 and 47 yards
against Girard last week.
Morral Ridgedale scored 26 points
in the last nine minutes and two
touchdowns In the last 13 seconds,
but still lost to Carey 34-26.
Carrollton's last four scores: 3-2, 7.,'1,
11.0 and 6-4.
, NOI1th Canton Hoover's 488 yards
and seven touchdowns rushing
against Marllngton last week were
Federal League records. The old
marks were 334 yards by Loulsvllle
In 1977 and siJ: scores by Hoover in
1979.
Quarterbacks Pete Schuler ol
Marion Catholic and Dan Grooms of
Sparta Highland combined for 38 of
. 63 ·puaes and 484 ,x,apla last week.
Marion Catholic wop 28-22.
Tom Speros, spi;ngfleld North's
Quarterback, caught his own deflec.
ted p11111 and gained four yards in a
21-210 up1et ol Xenia. It wu North's ·
flnlt vtctory In the series since 1986.
Jrooton, »&gt;-2ln i~ last 31 glllllea,
~·t lOll since the fifth game of :

Junior McBride. of ZanesviiJe has
averaged 17.4 yards on receptions,
punt and kickoff retuma and l'1llhing
this year. He has 972 yards in allpurpose running, with 484 of
1
yards cDnjlng on 211 receptlOM.

avetaae ol Ull. But since pulling a

..

,;

Stole. Hours:

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.:·-; . .

Mon•.sat. 8 am·lO pm
Sunday 10 am·lO pm

L •.

298 SEOOND ST.' .
POMEROY, 0•.
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Prices Effective Through Saturday, Oct. 11, 1980

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. High school ratings
OOLIJIQIUS, Ohio (AP) - llere'a • llatnldo ~ &lt;i aporia wrltm and
brol+-d"M ranD Ohkl hl&amp;h school foot~
boll
lhll fG!' 'l'he Alaodaled
~ wllb 10 ,...... for 11r11 to 1 point
r.. IGib (...... !llo1&lt;il dlvlaill!lO In pa!'

..U.SDA CHOICE

• ·'"I

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PANELING
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-FREE

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--' · 11

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. • Favorht ac;t1v1ty

1/1 x4~xl'· ·

• First rwne
• Maacqt under atone
• Fi18burat atone.
• lnltl8iinlald Into 1he
atone

--.

• Full 1111111 engFliVing
lnllde ring

A.SHEET

otter.

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Thighs .. ~ ..............~

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GRADE A

.....

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Whole F ers .. ~ ... ~~
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MElGS - The Eastel'!l
Eagle re1e1 ve BQuad folloWed in the
foobltepl ol ,Its varsity counterpart
·in defeating the Kyger Creek Bobcats 2M Mcnla)' night. The Eagles
racked up 1D6 total yards to Kyger
CrM's87.
Eastern'• Greg Cole accounted for
123 ~ the team's 125 total yards
1118b1ag, Colt carri"" the ball 13
timet, good for the 123 yards, two.
toucltdowna, and a U average pes:; '
carry.
Eastern gained 30 yards In the air
with quarterback Roger Bissell
. coqletlng three out of alx PILl"&amp;·
Marl! Holter scored the opening
«-•:hwn m a five yard run, with a
Rob Smith J111111 reteptlm following
forthePAT.
.
r..a In lbe game, Cole burst
throlicb the line for two touchdowns
to oqlete the scoring.
Stroud led the K. C. aUack with 41
yards~

. ....

YELLOW .

,

.. Oni0ns........... ~... ~~~.

3

4
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.AAVORITE

-. uargarine .......... .t~~-.
;' "

,·

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LIBBJ~S

.

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·. auttermilk.~
......
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Pum pki·n.. ,.;...z:~.

Deftlllivel;y, Eutem had • ·
.Q euwf'"UU pme. Tbe Eagle line

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dldn,flltlrmee.
Virlll 'h7lor led lia unit Witb 12
~willie Rldlard Bearbs added
niDe.
TrOJ 8lirt., Bobby Jobnenn,
'frvT.aaa.il and Owlle Rltcble

SUNSHINE
CHURl_,_,
·~"
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Pruitt testlJ knee_.

.,g,iiUt_seihawks
BDV.. Oblo (AP) -

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1'1111-.., Prlsllt.
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a - · DIJr wiD 11111111 bla flnlt
.true-tlltahrr•
rhl'l' ' 'IIMelllnDdl)lll It ....... a-Jud

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CH.ICKEN

11110 eredlt.ct with playtng •
JI_'!!(I&amp;..JI!I!!!' - - - . ---

'·
On a Slladlume Deelgnere cla11 • Sunlight atone

•

Breasts.....~....•......

~8~ •

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BeeL.....~-~.1
Ground
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· CHICK_EN DRUMSTICKS OR

-~·

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5, ~ Trimble (1), u.o, 111.
1; Lon1n ~ (1), H ·l, 1111.
7, (4), ~1. 71.
I, Leeloolo (~). S.l~. 411.
I, Liberty Clntor (5), U.O, 33.
·~ llonrJ (5), 6-1~. so.
........,. 10 or IDOI'I!
poinb: 11, Now "lllililltal -eye Centnl 1':. ;l, Woodalleld tl. IS. Burton l!eiUblre •. 14, Gala Milia ~wt.. 21. 15
(llo), Grwnrlch Ceolrol 1111&lt;1 l!elllll&lt;D ~ IZ. 17, Blulllon 21. II
[lie),
a.Jbo and lloollmUe
:18. . ,
Hollhll l'rln1l)' II. 21
(lie), Rillmu llld ll1dd1elown Fenwick
11. 21 (lie), llelpboo Jelfenon ond Wl).
17. 21, - . 14.
~··
Jll'Oire Dome IJ. J1 (lie): · ~
Now Miami and ......._ GOl1!way 11.
211 (lie), . l8llml Cintor F!ilrtlonb and
Glbooallurl 11.
.

~

for the Reds."

·'

I (lie), Neworli Calbollc (S), IMI, and 1
MbPci!ft (5), - , 2110 poiia.
•
·
I, Co9bit1lm (6), . . ., 1..
.
.. MdJoiwld (i), ~ . liS.

u..-.

cALL .
THE DA·u~v ··s· ENTINEL

II'

WITH
·THESE

CLAIBA

..-

NEEDED
.
IN SYRACUSE

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,CARRIE·
R
-·

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con.ora

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'748
- N, 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh.

..

lndoD (S ), &amp;4-1, 14 •
F_... (1), - . 81.
eMil (4h 5-0-1, • 51. .
(lie), El1ria Cllhollc (1), 6-1.0, and

palnlo: II, New
GleM 'II. 13
(lie), tr.iiAan l!lolpwood and Wuhlngton
COurt
21. II, ' 5 ! ! 1 9. It,
BnM*1JD 17. 17 (lie), W
. West·
faD, Mllon Edllm ....
t.bvi...
11. • (lie), ....,... .,,..,...., Clrdevllle
and 011!!....0- I~ :a, SteubellvUie
Calhollc c..tnl IS. II (lio), North Bend
Taylor, and Novarre Fatrleu 12.
1'1, 11. • (lie), Cin&lt;IMall
~ ond w...., Kemody 10.

~

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y'Oa:r· •;.~~l.f,JOSJ. Cl' more

.

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·"'

..CITY
_ UMITS
.....
DRIVE lHRU

An'IN110N·

Bldering. He can't becctme a free
agent until after the 181liii!UOII.
"I'm very optimistic that Jobn
will stay in Clnclnnati," McNamara

4, Urlloiia (21,. - · 118.
~. Akron St. vinCent-St. Mary (3), H4,

., ~

THURSDAYS
9 P.M to ·12 Midni&amp;ht

.

•••

:~

polnll. .
2, Omtlle (1), - · 217.
3, llamiiiOn Bodin .(1) , ~· 181.

7,
I,
••
10

149

Chuck Steak .....L!~ ••.
Chuck Roast ...... ~8

WtlllltcnWe Nartb S. 14, Vermillon 25. 15
(lie), Clnclnnoll Elder and Warren llarllliio 21. 17 (lie), Cloyelond St. J&lt;Oeph and .
Gaile 21. IJ, Bnmlwidl lt. 20, Sanctuaky
17. :U, CUico llc:Kinley Ill. IZ, Fremont
11&lt;Ja 12. 21, Zanosville II. 24 (tie ), BeJ..
lalre and Flncllay 10.
CIAIIIIAA
1.' ~d lleaedldlne (3), ~. 258

lJT.

$

·

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I, Lakewood st. Edword (1), f&gt;.J.o, 51. '
!!\ Flldl (1), ~. M.
UUI!Ir ~ 10 or rn&lt;&gt;re
: II, Nenrl&lt; ill. 12 (lie), Dover and

..,.

'

llench will stay .

~Wlllt!:~:e:::;~

a, Coaten1lle u1. H41. 1111.

"'

LADIES NITE

..

I, Y........... M"'""'l' (2) , ~. 203.
4, Mallll1on (1), &amp;.1&gt;1, 151.
~.. (1), ~. nil.
S, Upper Arlliic""' (1), 11-1.0, 72.
7, LoraiJ1 9ealor (1), 5-1-4, 83.

"

McN&amp;mara believes

refuses to 1IIUJie the options be's coo-

a.uii!AM
I, OndnnaU MooDer {1), ' ~ . 295
polj!IL
2, Qnc!MaU l'riDcel&lt;1n (1), ~. :&amp;.

•.

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"'-~·

.,.
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Rick Edwards
. Ht,l98lbs.
· Juulor Guaril

r----------

FEATURES

8P8CIII

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Hurdle.

$1.!995
U

ring. Strong, durableend
comfortable and now
comfortably priced tool
Brlnq In this ad tor thla vttry

.

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"Tiie way they were playing, they : ,::
jl f I
c:Wid have beat the 1928 Yankees.
,.
No team can stay· as bot as theY
were. 'lbllla a whole new,-,son for
"
body "
'"
eta).
Howser's lineup has dangei'OW!
Wlllle Randolph at second base and ' 1'
leaclingoff, followed by Bucky Dent, ,.
llbortlitop; 8911 Watson, flnlt base;
Reggie Jacbon, right field; Eric
Soderbolm, dealgnated hitter; Rick
,__,.
......... ..,....
• ~ Plnella .' left
.._
.....,, ca"""";
field; Aurelio Rodriguez, third basil, •
"
and Bobby Brown, center field.
...

groin miwie In !Me August, be
sbowB five 1-. and threl' nodecisions in eiCbllltartl and 811 ERA
~ $,70. .
.
· Kanlu Cit)' Martqei Jim Frey
Cl'1!11ted unrest 811101111 many of his
pla;jl!rs by naming Jabn Wathan to
start In right field inlltead ~ Clint

rsai~d~.'~'I~th~ln~k~be~'ll~cootlnae;:~to~pla=yJ~~==;~~==·=-::G:ftd:--:::~~~~

Steve Smith scored all Findl8y's
pG.Inb In a 17·18 upiet Of Lorain. He
ticked a :»-yard field goal. ran for
two touchdowns and kicked two. a·
Ira poi,nts.

-

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) '- JCan.
sas City's 8-4 season record against
the New York Yankees this year

nea

MAC standinffs

J.JrT,

,.

1 '

Royals Willl\ttempt to end
·Yankee jinx in '80 pla\y off

meana the Royals are about to break
game to take a J.2.0 first haU lead
the Yankee jinx ,In the American
against the Tomad~N!B.
League playoffs, says George BreU.
Senior quarterback Don Shupe hit
"We beat them eight times .and
Keith Payne lot siJ: pointa and just they beat Us four," the .Kamu City
before the baH connected with Greg
third baseman said Tuellday 011 the
, Deel on a
flicker play'
eve of the fourth playoff meeting In
Shupe added a siJ: yard TD In the
five yean between the Yanb and
Guidry was 1·2 against tile Royals
third period. Payne hit Scott Howell · Royala.
while ......."""':'ling 1111 18-11 record and
.
with a TD pass in the fourth stanza,
"We all believe this Is. our year,"
ue
ERA. Tbe two lefWimlen dlf~
Shupe added the final TD on a two
said Brett, whose .390 average this
fer dramatically In lllyle, Guidry
yard pbmge. Charles Luckadoo led
season was the best ·1n the major
throwing 1111 oves:powe.ing futhall
Pirate rushers with 9f yards in 17 leagues since 1941. "We think win- and
bard slldlr while Gun must :
carries. Last year, the two teams
rely on control and rr- 111 e.
ning eight out of12 proves we've got
battled to a~ tle In a mud battle at
the best team. ••
· Gura refused to talk to writers
Mercerville.
Larry Gura, who buD't won In siJ: . ter'l'uesday's "111kou'.. ·
Coach Buddy Moore's Eastern
weeks, ..... to start for the Royals
Wathan, a rfCbWuded bitter who
Eagles ffellh off a 2Q.O victory over
against New York's Ron Guidry.
acelled while lll1lng In at catcher .
· Kyger Creek will seek their second
The Yankees, who beat the Royals in this year, betted .... But be Ill not
straight SVAC victory at Souththis best-Gf..five series In lfiS, '71 the equll to llllrdle In the outfield,
western.
8lld "II, will ~ faciDI a 1eft.biDder · and. in ~ Royala Stecl!mg, ,
Eastern's offense rolled up 262
with Its slick. . artlftc:lal turf, tllil '
who hasn't won since Aug. 25.
yards last Friday while its defensive·
Gura finished with an 18-10 record coWd be telllnll.
.
'
unit held the Bobcats to a meager 71
Yankees Y.Mpr Dick Honer .
and whipped the Yankees three
yards.
.
times while complling an earned run
dilagrees wttbBntt's us
•oeat ol
Eaatern got touchdown! from
the regular ..an llel'lell.
.Greg Wigal's long pass t41 ·oave
''We playad the~ they
Wolfe. Wolfe coughed the ball but U
were awfully, awfullY blit/' be said.
was recovered by Johnny Weaver.
... Wigal added a TD In the second
period and passed toP. G. Riffle for
CINCIN!'fATI (AP) - Cincinnati
the final TO In thethlrdquart;er.
Reds
manager JohD McNamara
Again, Coach Deryl Wells BObsays he'• "very optimistic" tbat cat·
cats bad problems mustering an of.
cher Johnny Bench will remain with
tense. The Bobcats since scoring 81 _ the
team nat lle&amp;SOIJ,
points In their opener at Federal
McNamara
met privately with
· Hockin&amp; .have been lJard.ptessed
Bench
on
Tuesday
to d1acuu the
liCOrlng points since then,
· manager's plans for nert seuon.
Southwestern had an ea8y time
. -:- .. ..
Bench baa asked -that be catch no
reaching the scoreboard in 1aat
week's noil-conference game with more than two games a week.
"We could go. along with that,"
the Hannan WUdcats. Senior Scott
McNamara
said. !~We'd be bappy to ·
Russell rushed for 162 yards while
..
honor his request that be catch only
scoring five touchdowns and two estwo times a week.
Ira pointa. Don Carr abo bad a 63
"The only thing ·we IBid we
yard TO run and Ronnie Carr and
couldn't
guarantee Ill tbat be pia)'
.
~e Newberry added some extra
=-~lions In 70 or ao other
poiiJis.

SV.JL~

I

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enu-):

Painesville Riverside has lost nine
regulars through injuries, Including
ace halfback Kevin Herendeen. The
injuries have led to four straight
JoSaes.
Jeff Dinan, No. 3 son of Zanesville
Times·Recorder Sparta Editor
Sherry Dinan, scored on an ll·yard
fumble return and 2knd 18-,..rd
runs, leading ZanesviiJ.e Roeecrans
to its first win of the season, »41
over Buckeye Trail.
The rushlrig parade this season Dan Guido, Leetonia, 1,139 yards;
Darryl Shipp, Woodafield, 1,089 yards; ·Gene Campbell, Glouster TriJD.
ble, 1,018 yards In 92 carries, an 11.0
average, 17 touchdowns; Joe Gibson, Franklin Furnace Green, 912
yards in 135 trles,12 touchdowns. .
Last weel!'s rushing report Dave Campbell, Monroe LemonMonroe, 44 rushes for 276 yards and .
two touchdowns in a 24-15 upset ol
TEAM
,w 0L 1~ ~
Nprth Gallla
Middletown Fenwick.
Hannan Trace
6 o 14 52
Southwestem
4 2 150 56
Eastern
4 2 105 68 I .
Kyger Creek
2 • , eo 90
Southern
By no.._...., _
99 153
--~
CWfa 1eAll a....
North Ga111a
2 0 52 16
"LT M" LT Pd.
C. Mlch.
4001 .• 1001.100 ' HannanTrace
SVAC ONLi1 0.; 20 6
W. Mlch.
2 I 0 .WI S 2 o· .Iiiii
Eastern
1 0 20 o
Ball St.
220.100230.1011 .SOuthWestern
0 1 16 20
IIO.IOOISOJIO "Southern
K"'ISI.
0 1
o 32
MWnl, O.
IIO.IOOISOJIO
Kyger
Creek
0 2
6 40
B. Green
11.0.100140.210
Friday's GameS! Hannan Trace at
N.DI.
I 2 G Jll S 2 0 .100·
North Gallla; Southeml at Kyger
OIUoU..
I 2 ,0 Jll I S 0 .2Jie l
Creek 7:30 p.m., and Eastern at
Toledo
I 2 G Jll I S O• •:111
E.Mlch.
SOUI!Iwestern.
I I 0 .iiO I I G .2iiO

NOW

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Hannan Trace ·visits
North Gallia Friday.
What could be the championship
LaSt · weekend, Hannan Trace
game in the· SV AC is on tap Friday
edged Ironton St. Joe, 1.3-ll while
night when two l!llbeatens, Hannan North Gallia rambled · 32-0 over
Traee and North Gallia meet in a Southern.
headon clash at Vinton. Coach Larry
Todd Sibley, who continues to be
Cremeens' Wildcats go· into the
one of the area's leading offensive
with ~ records, 18 straig~ players, upped his point producUon
victories and lots of momentwn.
to 80 In six games against the Flyers
Coach John Blake's Pirates are · withoneTD.
also S::O, roiling with monentwn and
Wildcat quarterback Greg Webb
have high hopes of their first cham- got the otber siJ: points. Sibley U..
pionship since 1960. ln other league creased his offensive average with
.
tilts, Eastern visits Southwestern 106yards.
and Southern travels to Kyger
North Gallia used its passing

•,-

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PmtADELPHIA (AP) - . Greg llcloM lbort-dreuited the HoUston
llncle off Carlton:s glove. The ball
Luzlnski, battling a . ~ rally and then, In the boUcxn of the
wu bit JO bard it rolled almolt all
long slwnp, hammered a tWIH'WI -wientli, PhDllel Mm~acer Dallas tile way to first bue. Cesar Cedeno
homer that carried the Philadelphia
Green lilted 1111 tQp .tarter fat a pin.
fOllowed with a single to ~r.
. Phlllles to a 3-1 victory over Houston cb-blttet.
'
JD09Ing Cruz to aecood•
'in '1\leaday ·
·s opening game of
It wu a boJd 111CM1 tbllt paid off . After Art Howe flied ou~ Gary
the 111110 National Lailgue &lt;l!am- . wben Greg 01'0111 lltnud 811 RBI WoodS driDed a :&amp;-2 pltcb off .leCOIId
plOIIIIh!P serieS.
single to left, ~ ptd!Jidelplda 8 · bumDan ManiJy TrlllQ's glove,
.
lllllring Cruz. It ..... the lleCOIId hit of
Luzlnski's siJ:tb.lnnlng shot off 3-1 Je.1
Ken FOI'IIch eruec1 a 1.0 Altro lead
.The rest wu up to McGraw, and tbl pme for Woods, who IIPflllt the
and set off flrewarb over Veterans'
the veteru left-bmler prwervec~
iiiiiO eeuon in the Paclflc Coast
stadiwm aa a playoff.fecord croWd the victory, ret1r1nc tlie Jut lbfee
Iague and bad played jut 18
of 66,'¥17 howled.
Houston bette. In Cll'dlr .alter games for the A1tr011 alter being
The HCODd .game In the beskf· wa1k1iJc leadoft man Luis PuJola In . purcluued ftlm Tualoa m Aug. 30.
five series will be played Wednesday the ninth.
.
. Armed with the lead, Foncll Willi
night In Ph!ladelphla.
Carltoo,' cilft'ylng · Cy Young· · brilliant. He allowed a leadoff single
FOI'IIch bad bi!en lacked In a tight credentlall tbllt lnclnK24 regularto Pete Rale In tbe third, but catcher
duel with Steve Carlton, at:e of the le&amp;IOII victories and a major 1e1gue- Pujols called It! a pitdlout on the
Phlllles' staff, but alter Luzlnski's l!'ld'ng • llttlkeoutl, wu abaky
nert pltdl and gunned Roae out on
homer gave Phll*'lelpbla the lead, It early In the pme. ·
811atteqted steal.
fell to relief ace Tug McGraw to nail
Houston left two • - • on bale
The nat ~ Philadelphia hitdown the victory.
In each ~ the b two 1nn1np and ·w/s went down In order as Forsch
Carlton struggled through the then nicked Culton for a run In the
Uled the entlte Ftte zone. He pit·
Astros' seventh, allowing two hits. A
tblrd.
cbed In; out. up and down and had
neat pickoff throw by catcher Bob.·
With one ~ J011e Cruz lined a
the Phlllies clearly off balance. ·

SVAC title may ·he on line

'

5-The Dally Sentinel, MiddleportPoolerOY, 0., W~y. Oct. 8,111110

.

.

•

TOll)' AdkiDs

. n

f

l.blw

'

. . 3 LB.
. CAN .

2~~

$3'

Limit 1 Per Cu'stomer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer l!xplrts Oct. 11,

_ . TIDE
DmRGENT

: or$259
Limit 1 Per Customer .
. Good Only AJ P,owell' s
·Otter Expires Oct. 11, "1980

CAMPBELL'S

TOMATO. SOUP
10.75

oz. .

5/$1 .

Lim It 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer E!!~ires Oct,. 11,

.·.

�Not Responsible .for Typographical-=rrors

.

.

.

Open M.f 9 til 7; Sat. 9 tH9
. STH &amp; PEARL, .RACINE, OH.

BONELESS .

AIR CONDITIONED
SUPERIOR
v·

•
Cassie Sheets

EASTERN VARSITY. __: The Eastern Eagle net- · · Back row~ Coach Debbie Weber, Carolyn Rowen,
ters are enjoying an exceU.ent seas9n inceasing their Alison Cauthorn, Sarah Goebel, Patti Edwards, Cassie
perfect mark. to l:Hl last night with victories over Sheets, Denise White, Laura Eichinger, and Pebbles
Southern and Hannan.Trace. L-r, front row (r.neeling) Blake. The Eagles currently lead the SVAC and are
-Tammy Capehart, Berretta Deeter; scorekeepers. makingaStrongbidforthechampionship.

GET OVER THE BALL (13)
backhands a serve during Tuesday svf,.c volleyball
game between Southern and Eastern at ?astern Hlgh

'
School. The Eagle gals l'ltnain unbeaten with victories
over Southern and Hannan Trace. Eastern .now sports
a 15-0 voUeyl!all record.

early lead, with the hustling Eagles
coming right back to the top. The
early part of the game W&lt;IS a see-saw
battle and an exciting game for the
local fans.
Both teams were feeling the intense pressure of the meaningful
. bout. Southern finally faltered io a
!:HI score.
In the second game, the Eagles
were "fired up" from the start and
came out of the chute to post nine
straight points before Southern
could recover.
Southern slowly regained its composure, mounting acomeback to pull

within two points at 9-7. The Eagles
then responded to the challenge and
put up six straight to snag the game
andmatch. ,
Overall, Lalira Eichinger had 12
point serves to lead her team while
Cassie Sheets added nine and Sarah
Goebel seven. Tonja Salser had six
for Southern and Denise Riffle four.
In the first game of the EasternHannan Trace match Eastern suffered a let down and feU to the Wildcats 15-13. Mter a very ciose second
game which gave Eastern a scare,
the locals rebounded to post a 15-8

In theoutfinal
match,
Hannan
pulled
a last
~econd
victoryTrace
over
the Southern Tornadoes. Hannan
Trace, owning a 6-5 mark, opened up
the match with a hard fought 15-11
. win, TheTornadoesrecoveredinthe

the Monday morning qualifying
rounds. It's generally considered the
most difficult part of life on the tour.
On an average, .some 100 players_
compete in those Monday rounds for about 20 spots in the upcoming tournament.
Those 60 or so who fail to make it
are down the road. They don't get
patd. They have .nothing to do for the
week but prac~c.: for the next attempt at qualifymg:
"It's re~Uy .~~ or break time
for the kids, satd veteran Lee
Elder, who spent more than a
decade scrambling for a place on the
exempt list.
" It's hard ~ say just how,tn;
portant 1! 15, Elder satd. Its
probably the most important thing
on the tour, making the top60. Jf you
make tl, you can plan a schedule, put
some order in your life. You know
where and when you're going to be
playmg and you can set up for 11,
make hotel reservations, all that
sort of thing.

Open.

. That's the list of the season's top
60 money-winners. This is the last individual tournament on the schedule
this year ayd, thus, is the last chance
for the prbs to gain a spot in the
coveted top 60.
Those who make it are exempt
from qualifying for 1001 tour events.
Those who fail to make it, for the
most part, face the exacting trials of
Playoffs At A Glance

Beat of Five
American League Champlolllhlp Serle•
WedDetday'sGame
New York (Guidry 17·10) at Kansas
City (Gura 18-101
Tbunday'11Game
New York (May l~ l at Kansas City

'

at

Saturday's Game
Katws City at New York, (r:), if neces-

: sary

.

NatJonal League Champlo111hlp Series
Game One
Philadelphia 3, Houston 1
Pblladelph.la leach 1erlesl~.
Weduetdlly't Game
Houston (Ryan ll-10) at Philadelphia
• (Ruthven 17-10), (nl
TbiU'Bday'1Game
No eame scheduled
FrldaftGame
1

•
,

Sundly' 11 Game
Philadelphia at Houston , (n), if

IN TUESDAY AD

525 MAIN STREET-

STOR'AGE
CHESTS
Or
Floral

OUR BE'ST BRAND
TREASU.RE MASTERS

; ~~cy~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Values To '19.99

lf2 P~ICE

WOOD &amp; COAL STOVE

•

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FW SHOTs - Floyd Canon, Pomeroy, pictured
here 11ettlng Ida flu allot from Femdora Story, R.N.,
.:_ wu one cl271i older ad111ta receiving the vaccine in a
_ t-.day cllnlc beld by tbe Melga County Health Deptn1::: ment at tbe Senior Citizens Center. Additional vaccine
~

-·~cs asks

570 W,Main

To '2.99
FILLED

-SPFA

PILLOW
. SALE

$

WASH
CLOTHS

PANTY &amp;
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HOSE
3 Sizes

Value To '1.29

2For 88~

ON OUR ENTIRE
NEW FALL STOC~! .

TEEN. WOMEN$, EXLARGE SIZES

•TOPS
Velours, Chenilles, Polyester,

planned. Currently OnJy thsoe over 55 and persons considered high risk are receiving the flu shots through the
department.

Brown,

eveeyaoe has been

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Man, Designs

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~ doel provide bope for
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cancer patient; IDterest In
rventlon - many lives can ~
-ved through earlier detection and
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::JIItients - provide transportation to
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~ for treatments, let tbe canpalieDtB Jmow .what hoBpltal
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liP tbelr JDC11eY Ia being used for

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thru Sundtly.

•FALL PANTS

~!::':;:~t' and leens reduced tor only..

Pedwin lets you spend less and get
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shoe. They're made to comfort you
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·

CHAPMAN SHOES ·
"Next to Elberfelds in Pomero , Oh."

education,

pjGfmhaal education, patient Bel"
vrc., eGIDIIIIIIIIty lm'VIcel (prov!de
piGcnmllln e8IIC8I" detection, 111111
(treeDlng, rebabllltatlon and
~ of reglatrles), or supo
IIJ!ftllllllel'Yicel. Tbe budlet reveala
tat lilly 9.7 peml11t Ia used for
~ement oftbe aoclety.
- u111!1 wou,1d be Interested In lleinll
wlunte.' or want to know more
about tbe caacer Society call 992'/S31.

'WITH BLOW£R

a

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..

PC.

GRAPES

LB.

CELERY
BUNCH

89~
39~

FAS,- CH£K DAIRY

$189
AMERICAN CHEESE .. • -~-~·

K·raft
Stack Pak

16

Miracle 6 Sticks .
-·

Campbells

TOMATO
SOUP

•••

LB

MARGARINE .................:..

59/lo

,.

5/$100

.

·

24 oz.

FAS ,, CHEK FROZEN

Lucks

Donald Duck

~~~~ . --··-~-~~:.4/$1
Morto_n

·

POT PIES .. :.......~~~·-·
PINTO

3/$100
.

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3 $1~ •

TISSUE .............
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Daisy Maid

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· · 4 oz. $14~

BEANS ......•........... ~·····

11.39%

PINTO BEANS·

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~-·-

RED

ICE CREAM ............. :?. ~~1;'•.

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$.1)$6

3/$100

Valle.Y Bell Festival

. Place your savings In 0\Jf high Interest·
earning . certltlcate ... and watch It pile
up! It no longer pays to leave your long
term savings In a regular account. ~k
one of our financial advisers for d~alls.
OIINrr S.VInQi Plena AvalleDie

$-11-L-IL
lq:'UI

BI\G

$129
001TAGE CHEESE·........:... .
$139

·swea-.rs
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~Entire
3 ~

lhde In ---·-··..:·. .
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POTATOES

ORANGE
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46 Ol 79~

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49~

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59

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WOMEN$

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for only

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tan

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bliic~

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, Short or long sleeves. Every top on sale

FAS,.-- CHEK PRODUCE

-

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11Jla apeelal Delld fGr tiM* wbo want ·
ltrlb bitdt pa••.•"Y u v~
~ COII&amp;rlbutln or both, or others
:JJ:JaJ1 wpt to pcote..'t tbemltelves

Reg. 99~
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tment and if It Is secured, a clinic for the public Is being

.

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•

99e

CHUCK
STEAKS

r,;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:::;;;=::::~

· ··.Tbe - - there are so many
~ 8lld wby SO 1111111y· are .
~~ 11'11 88 followa: Personal COD-

Now Taking Orders For October 15th Delivery. Factory Direct
Delivery At The Unbelievable
. ..

I

has been requested by the Meigs County Health Ilepat'-

· ·"The American cancer Society ts
tbe largest voluntary ·health
arpniutllln In tbe world," ltalel S.
Michael, puhilc Information chalr'man ri tbe Meigs CoUnty Cancer
'Ullil

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Model 9901-B .With Blower

$359 95

-.

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AI)_Q_LPH'_
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DAIRYYY2·lSS6
VALLEY
...

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.volunteers

.

BONELESS

lB-$2

New ·Fill Stock Goes!

' .

'Price of

J

LB.

,59

LB• •

SHOULDER
SHOULDER
LB.$229 STEAK
ROAST
TOP BLADE
29 BEEF
STEW
STEAKS
PORK
·GROUND
. $169 ·CUBE
LB.
CHUCK
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BERMUDA STEAK$1~19 .
WITH -FRIES ......... $1.59
-

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AS STATED

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Satl5factlon Guaranteed

THE FINAL 4 DA YSI

SWEAT .
• SHIRTS

18"x37"
SHOULD HAVE BEEN

{'hiladelphia at Houston

Pomeroy, Oh.
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Jut!'( Williams
Open: Mon. thru Wed. 9-5
Thur. 9-12, Fri. 9-5, Sat. 9-2

SPECIAL

beginning Thursday .
The leading contenders for the
title. and the $36,000 first prize include defending champion Curtis
Sirange, Hubert Green, Hale Irwin,
John . Mahaffey, Andy Bean, Tom
Kite, hometown golfer Jerry Pate
and veteran Amold Palmer, whose
strong start last week is certain to
make him a gallery favorite.

MENS HOOVIED

LATCH HOOK KITS

Sllllday't Game

Kansas City at New York, if necessary

Phone 992 . 2178

. 108 w. Main st.

ALL IN ONE

KMART SHOPPERS
CORRIOION

New

ISears I

riDe~Ua;La;;w;so;n~fiive;·--~;;-~;;~~;;~iil;;;;~~
THIS WIIK'$

ATTENTION

( Leoruml "0-ll I, ( nI

Friday'• Game
KaiL'I&amp;S City (Spliltorff 14-11 )
York (John ~9 ), [n) •

"If you· make it, you've got one
kind of lifestyle. If you don't, you've
got a different one. There's all the
difference in the world.
"Why do you think veterans like
!\Iiller there (a nod to Miller Barber
working on the practice tee) are out
here grinding away?"
Barber, 49, finishing hiS 22nd year
·of tour activity, is one of the dozen or
so players involved in the scramble
for the 60th spot.
. The position currently is held by
Rex Caldwell with $64,859. Also in
danger of being passed are No.58
Terry Dlehi ($67 ,636) and No. 59
George Archer ($66 675).
The major chall~ngers and their
money in order from No.6! down
are ~nny Wadkins $63 628 Mark
Hayes $62,385, John Fought $61,222,
Lou Graham $57 723 Bobby
Wadkins $56 728 Barber $55 780 and
Brad Bcyant$ss,7o9.
'
·
AU are included in the 156 man
fi~ld that will test the 7,133-yard, par
72 Perdido Bay Golf Club course

AUTHORIZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

second to post a 1~7 win, but fizzled
out in waning moments of the final ·
thriller 17-15. •
·
It took three full games to decide a
winner, but Hannan Trace took
home~;~ victory.
d
led th ·
with 14
Mea ows
e W)llllers
point serves, while Putney added
eight. Mel Weese had 12 for Southern
while Laren Wolfe chipped in 10 and

win and an impressive 15-0 shut out
victory.
Cassie Sheets led with eight point
serves in the match, Alison
Cauthorn four , Sara! Goebel five,
and Patti Edw.ard.s, Laura
.
Eichinger adding three apiece to the
winning margin:
Wright led H. T. with eight while
Meadows added six.

$200,000 Pensacola Open this week
• PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) - The
more easily-recognized seas.onal
championships have been decided
on t11e PGA Tour.
Tom Wlltson ':\Jas nailed down the
money-winning title. Lee Trevino is
assured of the Vardon Trophy. Watson is merely awaiting confirmation
as the Player of the Year.
But the seasonal race that holds
the greasiest fascination, the most
importance to a majority of the
touring pros doesn't end until this
weekend in the $200,000 Pensacola

RED SKIN

BOLOGNA

Eastern volleyball team ·1·5 -0 after big sweep
By Scott Wolfe
EAST MEIGS - The high flying
Eastern Eagle spikers opened up
another perfect night of play,
downing rival Southern and SV AC
for Hannan Trace to remain unbeaten while claiming another SV AC'
Tri-match.
The Ea'gles of Coach Debbie
Weber now own a perfect IS-O slate
after last night's play. ·
The first match-up was between
two Meigs County teams, Eastern
and Southern. The first jiime was
typical of any Eastern.Southern ·
matchup with Southern taking an

9
120Z~~~
-

BACON

'

CHUCK ROAST_

.

$129

POPOORN ................... .

TRASH
lilct.
BAGS ...·..'; ............ ~···

29
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BISQUICK .......~·~~·::$1 29

YEllOW . .

Mr. Coffee

2 ib.

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ALlERS. ............ !~.~.':.:.
Jlf Smooth or Crunchy
PEANUT
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OIL

38 oz.

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With CoupOn &amp; Sl o:oo Purchase
Good at Spencer's Fas ... Chek
Racine, OhiO thru OCt. lith

�..8-The

9-TbeDally SentliJel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 8,1980

DallY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q., Wednesday, Oct. 8, 191ll

four area persons-celebrate birthdays here recent!Y

Mason News notes. . .
By Alma Manball
. home from Mspital. Mri. Mary
. Speelal-poodelrt
Stanley is recuperating at her home
FAMILY PICNIC HELD
from heart surgery. She bad been a
MASON Mrs. Clarence
patient at Chlrleston Memorial
(Evelyn) !hie, l'tlason, entertained
Hospital.
with, aJamlly picnic at her home on
Clarence Baier returned home on
Sllh\Jay. Plarui were made to conSunday from Pleasant Valley
tinue hlt,ving the famlly outing every
Hospital.
year.
Mr. imd Mrs. Robe~ Stewm and
Attending · were · Mary Johnson, · his mOther, Mrs· Evelyn stewart,
Lester Russell, Lora AM Rtwell,
visited recently with the latter's son
Br~nda JohDson, Eve1yn Mae Vanand fll}llily, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Meter, Ray VanMeter, Dee Ann, all
stewm at Indianapolis, Ind.
of Mason.
Mrs. Joy FOreman visited recenAlice Faye Gardner, Stephanie
tly with Mr. 8l1d Mrs. Lester
and Tiffany G.ardner, Mike Johnson,
Foreman, Savannah, Ga. and with
and Chris Jolmson, 11U of Pomeroy;
RodneY Foreman, Atlanta, Ga.
John Randolph and Bobbie Lou RanBonnie WamSley and ,Dorotlly
dolph, Johnny Randolph and
Blake spent a vacation at Nashville,
Christina Randolph, all of New
Tenn. Miss Dorothy Blake, Pl.
Haven.
Pleasant, spent the weekend visiting
Terry Moore, Linda Moore, Bobher mother, Mrs. Wilma Blake at
by, Becky and Alan Moore, all of
Clifton. Miss Bonnie Wamsley,
Syracuse.
.
Colwnbus, visited her ~ts. Mr.
· Masou and area penOIIIIIa
and Mrs. Clarence Wamaley over
Mr. and Mrs. James Rhoden,
the weekend.
Boyton Beach, Fla. visited recently
Mr. 8l1d Mrs. I..ouill Harms, forwith her brother and wile, Mr. and
merly of Toledo, have purchased a
Mrs. Carl SChwarz, Jr., Mason, and
mobile home and will reside in Cllf·
with Mr. and Mrs. Curtis McDaniel,
ton.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Grinstead
Several Mason Extension
and other relatives. Wllile here the
Homemakers attended the LederRhodens went to Cincinnati where
shlp Development Conference
they watched his nephew, Rick
recently at Jackson's Mill 8l1d inRhoden, play with the Pittsburgh . eluded Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Joyce
Pirates team.
Carson, Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrs.
Mrs. Clarence (Evelyn) Ihle
SybU Grinstead, Mrs. J. R. Marvisited her sister, Mrs. Maxine Kirshall, Mrs. Elmer Grueser, Mrs.
by for a week.
Lucille Fowler, Mrs. Grella Allen,
Mrs. Clara Williams accompanied
Cathy . Pleska, Mrs. H. E.
Mrs. Helen Williams to Nitro, where. Beckleheimer, Violet Honey, Nancy ·
the latter visited het'"l ister, Mrs . . Alwood, Delores Wilhelm, Velma
Leona Dudding and Mrs. Williams ' Luckeydoo, Velma McMahon,
visited her brother, Lawrence Mc- · Homemakers, council president, ·
Dermitt, from Friday until SatUrEnuna Withers, Helen Lyons and
day.
Lois Robinson, Homemakers Ex- •
Two Mason citizens have returned
tension Agent.

-

PISCES !Feb. II II)A member of tile
opposite seJ: who is already attached Rilly rm
you more appealing today than 1M! or sbe lbould.
It's best you mind you.r p's and q's.
·

Uctobert, llll

mar

date.
SCORPIO fOd. Z+NoT. Z%) V.oumay be a trifle
too ~m iti ve today, and take offense at thinp
others say or do where no offense wu lntended.

Ue carefuJ.
·
' SAGmARJUS INov. !3-Doe. 21) Things you
do ou your own today you 're apt to be rather t»hwn about, but w.hen it cornea to group activities

you become a real Lake-charge t)'Jl't.
CAPRICORN (Doe. !Wm II) Beirlll first 'llil1
be very impOrtant to you t.oclay. Thia .nll betomll
quite apparent to othen lf they get invoWed with
you In a competitive situation.
AQUARRJS (JaD. zt.J'eb. lt) .Not only are you
extremely observant today, you're abo capable
of soelting up knowledge like a sponge. Even
small details won't escape you.

AJIIESI-21·Ap&lt;IIIT) ~youiMm
up wtthmay ~erW u a !OW'Ce of strength today.
This may help yoU revi\alize aometbing you've

been dawn on.

TAURUS (April·
. May ..) U a job you l1liiJI
do has become borl!lll. today Iaiiie tlllie to try to
create a new twi.st to it. You shGuld find you will
be qwto succ..sful
GEMINI (May !W.. ,.1 You may llld,
beilinnlnl! todoy, tllot a llll!lillar relaUonalllo
might bqln a tranalannaUoo. How well you'U
lllle UW! 'llil1 depend upo1100w l11lldt you delln a
·

choni!•·

CANCER (J. . 21.Jol)' II!) Be ....tuJ at h&lt;me
todoy tllot you·don't tbrow your wtl8ht around
too much. U yo..a bel1n to e&lt;me &lt;11 too ltrOng, It
could iltire up the entire houaebokl.
LEO (J111y !1-Aq. D) Your .JIO'"!'II of C.O.
cenb'aUon .,. ellmDely pruMliiiiCOd todoy.
nu.. Is I cood time to woril on mental
"1·-.breaken." You'll oot·qllit until thlnp are

~

'

.
D) It's OK to look out

. VIRGO (AQ. !J.8ep&lt;.
for your odl'lnlereoia todoy, but try not to
becwne too emotional over material things. you
could do oomethtnl! you'll r&lt;gr&lt;t.

a turkey dinner was served in their
-Nellie Borgan and Joyce Vance honor. Other guests were Mr. and
went to Dayton recently for the Jim- Mrs. Allen Borgan and children and
my Swagga~ Crusade held at the Terry Bot'gan, Colwnbus; Mr. and
convention center. Recent visitors of · Mrs. Larry Birchfield and children,
Mrs. Brogan w.:,re her sister,
Albany; Jim Hartley, Rosella BirFrashln Dowden, and her daughter chfield, Jeff Birchfield, and
al)d her husband, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Heather, Albany.
Fo~
W. Va.On
ATTEND CRUSADE

The Gibbs

Cheryl Jewell
. Mr. 8l1d Mrs. Bill Franci.s of Reedsville entertained recently at their
bome with a cOOkout in observance
of the fifth . birthday of their
daughter, Susan Lynn.
A star Wars cake and ice cream
were served following the cOOkout.
Attending were her brother, Billy,
Mildred Brooks 8l1d Kathleen Francis, grandmothers, Dave, Kathy and
Stacie Reed, Judy, JuUe and Jeffrey
Sloter, Jan Brooks, Keith Brooks,
Roger, Caplolla, _Travis, and Jason
Brooks, George Francis, Dude and
Sarah Gibbs, Gail Neal, Kim, Jamie
and April Weinr.
Sending cards and gifts were
Freda Duffy, great-grandmother of
the honored guest, Mark and Jean
Duerr, Mazie Hannahs, Norma
Goodwin, Genevieve Schneider,
Chris Day, Gerald, Bonnie, Dee and
Matt Broolrs, Garrett and Keith
Watkins, Florence Wyers, 8l1d Jay .
8l1d Michael McKelvery.

Distdct Heafth
..:.....!~ence set
CUl.l..IO
"Stay Well- It's Up To You!'' Is
the theme for this year's District
Health Conference to be held 1r1
Wednesd.1y, Oct. 15, at the Jackson
Area Extension Center. Beginning
at 10 a.m. the morning program will
include sessions titled "H9W Aware
Of Your Health are you?" "And you
decide what health risks to take."
Everyone is required to bring sack
lunches.
Each participant will choose one
afternoon session to att4\Jid on the ·
topic of stress inanagement, first aid
for !ann accidents, or handling food •
IIBfey at borne.
Reservations need to be made by
Friday, Oct. 10. Send name, address,
choice of afternoon session topics,
p!UB $1 registration fee to the Meigs
County Extension Office, Bo:r 32,
Pllmeroy, Ohio 45769. For further
details call m-&amp;696.

RUMMAGE SALE mtJRSDAY
A rununage sale will be held Thursday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Apple Grove United Methodist Church
by tbii United Methodist Women.

.

Cheryl Lynn Jeweil, daiJ8hler .of
Mr. and Mrs. Robe~ Jewell,

Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. David Warth, •
Davy, Leslie and ~Jeeoi\ee, Mr. and
Mrs. Hubert Pattenon, Marty and
Gale, Mr. and Mrs. Butch Gibbs aD&lt;j
Dale Curtis, Hartford; Mr. and Mrs. : .
Huhm Gibbs, 'rimy and Tanya/ilf •
tending.
NewHaven.
\
At the gathering besides the
Mr. and Mrs. John Crawford, Mrs.
honored guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Regina Griffith of Point Pleasant, •
Thomas GibbS, Tommy and
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neece, ..
Marlene, Mr• . and Mrs. Donald
Buster, Garry and Pamela Kaye, . ~
Lyons and Louanna, Mr. and Mrs.
.Mr. and Mrs. RUSilell Robinson,
Hennan · Boles, Mr. · and Mrs. . Rustle and Russell, Freda Eakins ' ' •
Garland Gibbs, Warida, Wendy and
and Davey, Middleport; Mr. and ·: :
Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Warth,
Mrs. Robert Crump, Michael, Eric N
Allen, Charlie and Floyd Dwaine,
and cane, . Racine, and Steve ~
••
Mr. 8l1d Mril. Garry Gibbs and. Oldaker, Mason, W. Va.

8l1d hla son, Garland Gibbs, Hart··
ford, W. Va. were obaerved at a
family gathering held at the Racine
Loeb and Dam Part. A covered
·dish dinner was enjoyed by those at-

Harrisonville, observed her first birthday recently.
A fllllliiY dinner was held at. the
bome of Mrs. Pauline ,t.Wns and
Mrs. Ruby Halliday. inatemal grandmother 8l1d great-grandmother of
the honoree. Others attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn ·Jewell, her
paternal grandparents, and . her
.

~b.

A pink apd white bwmy cake,
baked and decorated by Mrs. Jewell,
Willi served with Ice cream following
a dinDer. Gifts were presented to
CheryL Sending cards and gifts were
Mrs. Stella AWns, Miss Ruby Diehl,
Mrs. Christine Levy, Mr. and.Mrs.
Harry Bolin, Mr. and Mrs. .Bud
Douglaa, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple,
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams, Mrs.
Norma Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
Will, and Mrs. Norma Goodwin,

AmotlleNiayghter meeting at the

..
~

.

Salisbury
Elementary
School.
Tile
pledge.. to the
flag and the
Brownie
promise opened the meeting held

-

"
"

..

"

..

..
~

•

YARD AND BAKE
· SALE SET
Tile Eastern Local Band Boosters
will stage their first project at the
high school Saturday with a yard
'and bajce sale beginning at 9 a:m.
Those wishing to give contrlbUtiOIIB
for either sale are ~~ .to have
them at the high school by sale time.

'.
~

.

'"
M

•••

r;;;;;;;!;i;i~~~·;;;;iiiiliiiiiii~iii

HU I LAI\IU

Tu~sday

with Mrs. Simpson
reviewing the meaning of scouting,
the motto, 8l1d the slogan. Mrs. Jennle Wmh read the Brwnie story.
Refreahments were served by Amy
Rouse and Amy Brothers.
SCOUTS TO ORGANIZE
, An organlzaUonal meeting for a ·
new senior scout troop will be held
Thursday night at 7 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. Shirley Cogar, Minersville.
Girls in the sophomore, j~or and
senior years of high school are invited to join the new troop. They are
to take the $3 registration fee to the

. meeting.

'

RUMMAGESALEPLANNED .
There will be a rummage sale at
the Joe Stobart residence in Racine
from 10 a&gt;m. to 4 p.m. ThurSday and
Friday with pwceedli to go to the ·
Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints.

opened fall activities for the
Salisbury Brownie Troop 1220.
The girls.were registered by their&gt;

mothers 8l1d MI:s- Janet Simpson,
leader, discussed some of the activities planried for the year. Games
wereplayedanddueswerevotedon.
Weekly meetingll will be held on
Tuesdays after school at the '

DEPARTMENT
STORE
Phone 742-2100
Effective Thru Saturday, October 11th

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••••\~·,. '1.19
'

.

PEPPER LOAF ••••••••••.••••••• ;~~.}2.79

a~

I'ADD~E
\lftUUIN. • • •

..
SlJCED atEESE 1•5
12 oz. Kraft
PlmientoSingle •

$

'

BRUSHED BRUSHWOOD

2

Lbs.
For

7oz.

with order of $2

00 or DIOrel

Great for parties! Super for trtck or treating! Tops
off any costume because ~u get to pick frOm
~·: wry funny, monster and fun masks.

With any otder of $2.00 or ,{llOI'e ~u get a
free mask of your chok:e. '
But don't wllit Come on In and select a mask
that IAAU be a real treat for your kids
this H~loween!

Store-Hours' to 5 lfiCIIDar
Open Fri. Nlghttiii:OO P.M.

I

idairy15Je ~
Mlcldl~.

~·

Ollfo

J45 •••• Matn St.
PDIIIII'Oy, Oftlo

JONES BOYS'

r--,--·

FLEX
CONDITIONER
· OR
SHAMPOO

SLICED BACON

~
~

1-LB.
PKG.

YOUR CHOICE

i137 PINE STREET, GALLIPOLIS

16

•00 W. MAIN _STREET, POMEROY

. OZ.

'159

..

99~

••••
;;;;;··~·
~
•• ••

EACH

ii .

••••
MARTHA

,g

(CRISP CRUST)

·SPUDFLAKES

PartyPizza

INSTANT
POTATOES

.7

HELLMAN'S

"'

WHITE

$1 09

.AUSAGE
liA_MBURGER

oz.

2
PK_GS.

REAL

MAYONNAISE

.

~HEESE

oz.

32

EACH

.PEPPERONI

JAR'

--

~rapefrult ·

__

15'111 01.
..-~-

.

)

HUNTS MANWICH .................~. 1'1
)

5 oz. Ar111our

W/3c0ff

VIENNA SAOSAGE ................
. ·22oz.·-·
.
J ar
COFFEEMATE.............· ·····~·~···· _......~
ue,.
WATER ·MAID RICE ... •• ••••••.••:::.
-12 Plk CIIMtlon ..
.HOT ClfOC(Ut E MIX... :-•• ~::. ~
, 'OI.IC!!f.L _
.
.
•
SA•·AD MUSTARD ...........1 ~·.ii.'!• 61'
•

•

•

I

;

I

-

.

LIMIT

1 PKG.

69 c

Maude Cotmwn
Mlltemal grandparenta are Ralph
Eulene 8l1d Eleanor Sue Hall;

WITH
COUPON .

Mlu1ID, d. Welt ColumNa
.
TbeJ·ftl'lllllln'ied Stp!-nbr 22,
18110 by Revamt Napter d. Union
EUBCIIreb.
1'IIIJ are .,._.. of !Gar cblldrea,
Clifford of Roak Hill, South
Cl dr d. Elkblrt, Ill'
dlpna; EveiJD Rollb, ~ Drive,
lflw Btma; IJid W1lml V•n!f Ia

c.rouna:

(declllld).

.

:rtlq ..... 11 pudcblldreD IJid 11

16oz.
bag ·

1

THE JON E$ BOYS'

$129

WITft
.,
COUPON 1\!lli

·~

~::f.-:

TRAC II BLADES

ANTI-FREEZE

WITH FREE RAZOR

!,I MIT 1G~_(._.

'3''

I
I

I
I
I

THE JONES BOYS'

5 CT. GILLEn£

PRESTONE

'16"

.,
Septanber 2Z llll1'ked the IOU!
~. . . ., of two..._
~ etu-, Cecil and Eunice

.

:..~·~

LIMIT 1 BAG

!j411JGtti!ifM'f:
JONES BOYS'

SAW

Couple celebrates
.60th ariniversary

;,fi1

POTATO CHIPS I '
'"·••-•n

L'"·"' AND DECKER
.5~" CIRCULAR

8J'W1Ina

~

.,

MISTER BEE

WIENERS

' liMIT 1 CTN.

99 C

WITH
COUPON

·WITH
COUPON

LIMIT 1

OFFER EXPIRES 10· 12· 80

._::',' j!•lilg.l~IC;Ji~:

I

:=::=:::::=::::::: ~-- :---MEWS 6iNCH--------.. ---

I

I

, .

THE JONES BOYS
SUPER DOUBLE COUPI()N

:INSULATED.
I

THE
BOYS' l
SUPER DOUBLE COUPON :

BOOTS
·

.::=:.::1'::'1· $1- 288.

Preuntttllscoupanalorttwlthanvonemanufacturer's '

I
I
1

'

••cen11 Off' cHpo~~aiMIIItdoullle fhl savlnts at Jones 1-! ~~

=::::.::.."::-..:=.
c...,.n••!lllillun., ikl.

Limit OM doullll C.UIMNI,... manufactv,..,..s coupon.

1:i, ~~

LlmiiiC-PorCol-or

llolllalltllwC,._...,..,~'"cou-•

)( /i(cotJPON/K' ){

~

J

V
.
P
iETA."
E
CHDEN
SOUP
•••
4 Roll Wlllte Cloud

FRENCH CITY
. BRAND

PEPSI COLA

Coler11811;~~

s are Henrietta llurtonshaw 8l1d

THE JONES BOYS '

NES BOYS'

Ranee Coleman,· Rutland, are arh
ncluncing the birth of a - . Timothy
Eugene, on Sept t, at Pleasant
VAlley Hospital. The Infant weighed
. sdven poundflllld 11 ouncee.
·
:Mr. and Mrs. Coleman are aiBo the
Pfi"Dts of IUIOtber-. J~ Gall
Coleman, two yean and 10 months
•
old.
'
Patemal grandparenta are Cyril
EUgeDe and Sblrley Ann Col•vm;
ptitemal gtelt.crarJdpareDta are
Gall and Althel Miller. Blld Alice

Pk9·

11\-UZ. (amlllielll ·

Loalfl4111

69C

.
:Mf. and Mrs. Jerry Lee and Susan

~·~=

DONALD DUCK ·JUICES ~~~~~ ••••.2l59'

Hcilloween Mask

CAKE MIXES

''

her Is Ell:rabeth Alberta Jeffers.

I·

·FREE

LAYER

New arrival

Cart,..;gbt;

CARIBOU CATFISH ••••••••••• ~.~·•• 52.09

BLAZER II (FlEECE UNED)
BRUSHED DROMEDARY

.•.

..

Descendanb d." Samuel and
Adallne Yeauger held a reunion at·
the Bob Evans shelter house on
Route 3$, near Rio Grande, Sunday.
Following the covered dish dinner,
two decorated cakes, one baked by
Mrs. WUilam Neutzllng and the
other by Mrs. Hubm Johnson, Jr.,
both Inscribed "Yfl!uger Reilnlon,
19110" were served.
Attending were Mrs, Lucille Ratbbum, Mr. 8l1d Mrs. Brady Ballard,
Miss Jeannette Scott, Allen Scott,
Mr. and !\Irs. Lewis Scott,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Brenda Hood, Mrs.
Raymond Fife, Jr., Mrs. Unda
Baylor, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Yeauger, ~; Mrs. ~~
Ward, Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Mulford,
Colwnbui; Mrs. Mina Raub, Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Baird, Coming;
Mrs. Mildred Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
t:..anY Gunther, Molly Gunther,
RlchaJ'd Gunther, John Crutchfield,
Carla Coolt:, Springfield.
Mr. 8l1d Mrs. Robert Baird, Jennifer ·and Stepbanle, Jamestown;
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Altier, Greg,
Mike, Chris, Pat, rooY and Brent,
Miss Cheryl Hoffman, Coming;
Mrs. Margaret Clatworthy, Mr. 8l1d
Mrs. James Clatworthy; Mr. 8l1d
Mrs, James BnchaMD, Mr. . 8l1d
Mrs. Lewis Long, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Clatwc1rthy, Middlepol't; Mr.
and Mrs. . Rube~ Jobnlon, Jr. and
Buclly, Mr. IJid Mrs. Ray Redman,
Ray IJid Lori, Man, w. Va.; Mr.
BlldMrs. WUIIam Neatzllng, Timmy
and Jeell, CbesW; Mr. and Mrs. .
0ean1a Scbllllng, Kim, Florence,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Jan Lllng and
John, Worthlngtoo; and Mr. 8l1d
l?fra. Jeffrey Powell, Springfield.

8EnY
CROCKER

Homemade

8
RED
GRAPES.
••
!-.
.-·7f
MARGARINE ••• •• ~ ·

DRIFTER Ill

Yeauger family
meets Sunday

.

Fall activities named
Eilt.erpriae United Methodist Church

/

The birthdays of Charles Gibbs

1 lb. Blue Bonnet

·HA_
R
tL.
E
.
Y
SH()E_
S
.._IN"C.
"Middle of Upper Block In Pomeroy" ·

~

;.-.

...

JUMBO BOLOGNA .•••••••••••• !-~~.. '1.89

L4YAWAY
FOR
CHRISTMAS

. ...

a best of show, a r~rve best qf
Maida Long, ro-chainnen.
both senior and junior exhibitors,
show.
a ho~lculture sweepstakes, ~
Members of the Fernwood Garden but also gift wrapping, Christmas
creativity
award, and a junior best
Club will have charge of ways and . corsages, crafts and commercial
of
show
and
a junior horticulture
meansfortheshow, with Mrs. Janet exhibits.
,,.
·
award.
Koblentz to handle registr&amp;tion and
. Six special awards
. will be given classification. Mrs. Addalou Lewis , . . . . . . ; - - - - - - - --.------------::---::-;:- '
·will be In charge of sweepstakes,
"
Janet Bolin, acceptance and
APPLE Bll1'TEI\
placement, and Bend 0 \ the River,
· FOR SALE
hospitality. The class signs will be
Mem~ra of Racine UJ:~ited made by Mrs. Sally Andrews and
Methodist Church will be making ap- Mrs. Maida Mora, with Mt:s. Bunny
pie butter on Oct. 14 ~ 15, at the Kuhl and members of the Little Red~denre of Bob Hill, Racine.
buda Garden Club to hlindle the en.
. The apple·butler sels for $3 a quart ti'ance decoration. Secretarial work
or $1.50 a pint. If jars are furnished
for the show will be bandied by
there Is an additional charge of 50 Joyce Bunch.
MEIGS JUNIOR VARSITY CHEERLEADERS are front, l·r, Karla
cents.
,
PlanS call for the show to not only
DeMcitla, Andrea Batey; back, Rowena Averion. Advisor is Mris. Jeannie
Tile proceeds of the sale will be include many classeS in artistic
Taylor. Junior vanity membera allo;..:ha:v.:.:e..n.:.:-.:-.::unlf:..:....o_rn..:.ns_:pal:_..d_f_or"':'from----p-laced_
._in_the_
. ch_urch_buil_·_ding_f_un_d_.--arrang--e..,.m_e_nts_Bild
__
ho_rti,:-'cul-ture_·_fo_r...L.._ _ _ _ _ ___;,..;__ _ _ _ _ __;_;_;_,_ _-;-_ -:. proceeds from aeveral lllj)lley .
·
making projects.

Eckrich

~··

Annu·al flower affair planned locally

•.

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\

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..

Committees for the annual Christmas fiower show to be held Dec. 6
and.7, Pom~roy Elementary ~1.
have been announced by Mrs.
Margaret Ella Lewis and Mrs.

-ASTROGRAPH-.

This coming year you
~ ways to improve or make changes in lmpclrtant personal
ftreas. This may, from thne to time, even make
you H bit of ll loner. You 'll want tfrne to won
things Out.
'
LIBRA {ScpL !S-OeL !3) Nonnally you're able
to see the other guy's point of view, but toda)l you
could get upset If anyone tries to do sometbini ,by
methods other than yours_. Rotnance, tr.vel,
luck, re30lll'rel, poMible pitfalls and creer for
the coming months are all discussed in your
Astro-G raph which begins with your birthday.
Mail $1 for each to Astro-Graph, Box 489, Rallo
City Station, N. Y. 10019. Be sure t(l specify birth

I

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:1

I

PA.JR .

1I

g:

----·

SAVE NOW!
·-

MEN'S
ORLON

· IPICIAL
7 SHIIT 14 PAGI

-

DR.ESS..
SOCKS

MAGNETIC

•

FOf

$faG-

•2'

PAIR
FOR
I

SPECIAL GROUP

MEN'S

BLU~

NYLON
JOGGERS

SJ-00 . $7I~AIR-

MILL
ASSORTMENT ·

BATH
TOWELS

2 ssoo
FOR

,

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\ '

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�••

•

-•
lt)-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o,, Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1980

---.~---Former

. 1~-'l'be iJ81Iy Sentmei, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Weanesday, uct. a,IIHIU , ·
- -·
-DICK TRACY
. ""
.

.:

.

elevision.
.
-_vtewing -

resident 1nerits .newf coverage-._______. . . .;

the country liS; .Jl8;t of the T!llll baggage or equipmen~," .Ms. -. peertngln .a tywandseveraladullll .todoi.iltounderstandyourself." .
and then ll&lt;me," npl•lned Ma;.
Dooley ~oundabon_ s ·program to Kirkland explained, adding · that, · !if to the side, just watehing. 1bey
While on assignment. Ms.
Kirkland, notlnl ~t abe wilt
.spread mummizati~ and teach while in Nepal, she will not be
are very f~ , just cUrious,"
Kirkland !rill be paid $250 a mQnth
probably be gone apprGIIImately two.;
~~~~ health and nutrition. . _
~?wed to wear slacks. .
_
The adventure !)egan lnnocenUy
by the FllURdatlon as. weU as transyears.
· :
I m at the nud-life potnt of my
_We have to wear skirts. Women
enough, contends Ms. Kirkland.
portatlon and boullng.
"I just wonder If I will bl 10,:
life and I feel it's the perfect time to !lJ'e not allowed to show their hipS,"
While reading the American Nur"Jiut you bave to realize that the homesick by thelllld cftbe llnmllwo
do it," Ms. Kirkland said; "I'm not the nurse added.
se cine clay, she spotted an a4 about . average 1ncune fi the people there that I will cut It lbart." RDI!erl the~
married, I hilve no children, I just
AI the suggesUon of SIBIIeOIIII wbo
the job. "I answered it just to aee is ~ a year " emPuubed Ma. ·oldest of three dtiJdreD. ·
turned 34 and I have not acql\ited a had already lleen. to Nepal,.
what it was aU about, then I went to Kirkland
•
·
1'•
. One ev111t wbll,!h sbau1d help to
lotoimateril!]possessi~. " ·
Kirkland· is having several 111t1
NewYorkforanliltervlew."
· "They 'have a system of barter
guard &amp;g~iD!!l tbat bOrd •a• ·ll
. The native of Ohio noted that she wrap-around skirts Jllllcle fw
· Four montha after the interview ·with rice aa their lllilin staple
a planned visit by Ms. Kirkland's
has always been interested in and ' "privacy" when nature's
Ms. Kirkland was accepted for the . although aome grow vegetables:
parentstoNepllinJlectmber.
project.
They j118t doll't have anything."
"I have a brodler who wu in tbe
read of Eastern religions, art and are required on the long trip.
cultwe.
_
As
part
of
her
"In-country"
cn.
"It
was
wlien
I
fllURd
that
I
had
At
the
conclusion
of
ber
18
months
Peace
Corps and they vilited 111m 10
By TERRl K. SMI'I11
"I
don't
see
(the
job)
as
enhancing
tation,
Ms.
Kirkland
will
line
Ia
been
accepted
that
I
had
to
Sit
doWn
.
1n
Nepal
Ms.
Kirkland
hopes
do
they're
not exactly stlck-IJI.the.
What would cause a young woman
mynurslngcareermuch,"
admitted
learn
Nepalese,
thel.anguaiJelf
.
.
··
and
make
a
firm
decision
(about
some
'~veUing
before
returning
muds
thelll88lves,~·
smiled Ms.
with a good job and used to the more- .
Ms,.Kirklartd.
"The
attraction
Is
the
COuntry.
'
.
going)
"Ms.
Kirkland
said.
·
home
·
Kirldand.
or-less "luxuries" of life to leave her
adventure and seeing a tota\Jy new
"There are many dla.... I
Al~h the frtp will be quite a
"I ~d Jlke to some travelling· to
"TheY're . apprehenaive, but ell·
home imd travel to the wilds of
view
of
life,
.a
totally
different
will
he
learning
the
dillllcltl..
change
for
her,
Uncia
Kirkland
feels
N-•
then
go
down
to
India
Asia
cited
for me. It'a gi)OII to bave tbelr
Nepal for 18 monthS?
culture."
Gorkha
district,"
Ms.
Kla?'
,
llld.
she
is
prepared
for
the
challenge·
u;:-.,;."'-'~
Japan,
eatU~
support."
"I would say primarily that I've
always loved to travel," stated UnAndtotallydifferent itwillbe.
"Reading the iangu~~~Wl lllat
bothmateriall¥andmentaUy.
r;::"=·-~=-~·
·:-;;·=·~-~~~-';·-·:··~--~--~-=-:-~-:--~--:--~-~--;;
ThejobisactuaUy located60miles · urgent.1belmportala-lllearOntbe
' llllllde Ms.Kirkland
cia Sue Kirkland, director of nursing
west of Kathmandu In the Gorkha nlng conversation, ..... IMI to
Is tlldll' a .two ~ supply of
for the Ogeechee Home Health
District. To reach her destination, communicate withtbe .......•
vitamlal • well u sturdy shoes
Agency. ·
Ms. Kirkland must first travel 14
While in Nepal, Ms. --~..
blldng 111111 aad Wlll'lll clothes
Ms. Kirkland will be leaving
hours by jeep or bus and then com- spend most of her nlgl!llla
c:an be w ' tIll streams.
around the first of October to travel
plete the last 10 hours of the trip on although there will b e a ' - t t •
'"l'be~allosaldtobesureand
to Kathmandu, Nepal, a small counfoot.
in at the main headquarten If . .
11r1ng a C111f1e Gf nice dresses with
try just north of India.
"You have porters with you project.
ICCe ad&amp; -.:t1 u shoes and
Once there, she and another nurse
Sherpa
porters
to
carry
your
"We
will
go
into
the
village,
!Dill
'
·jewelry
for 1111 1a1 occui~, such
will travel to various tribes within
•.
the chief and ~ve tea ~thhllll," • u things to tdlilllldat tile embessy,"
plained Ms. Kirkland. He • _,.
Ms. Kirkland said. "It's kind of ex· ·
us the okay to set up our ... •
citlni-"
.
.
then we will .stay there llld IIIII: for
"Y•I'IIIIlJ Med to be able to enThe Baptist Women's Day of
thepeiiple."
.......
"_..Ifindtba
. t•••y
OHice Hoursily Appointment 9nly
December meeting. A gift of money
- -...:1_
.
• ~
Prayer was. announced for Nov. 3 will be sent to Judson College in
And, according to tbe illfaa "•
1111 dD," 111. D'' I DOted, adding·'
when the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Elgin, ru. , a Baptist school. It was Ms. Kirkland has rec:etwd, tbe
llllt.._n...taannlanabu
Society met Monday night at the
noted that World Community Day, people won't be hard tofllld.
llllped 10 JINPII• 11r z 'e!Jy for
MiddleportFirstBaptist Church.
sponsored by ChurchWomenUnited
"The people there an W~Yimr
tbetrtp.
'·
Miss Rhoda HaU presided at the
of Meigs County, willbeheldonNov. nocent and curl01111," ewpl•lned tile
"I'ft- owned a teleNion,"
meeting which opened with
7 at the Middleport United nur!le. "When you wake liP in,_
acbod laid Ms. Kirkland. "I
devOtions by Ml's. Frances Smart,
Presbyterian Church.
tent you can have six to llfll!l lddl
tblat till h zI tl!llllbing to be able
Electa Circle. Mrs. Smart read from
Mfl!. June Kloes had charge of the ,--:._----------:-=~=,.,.,...,.-----..L-~'=:;==-----,-----,--------:-~="""'Romans 12 and used the theme, "To
program using the theme "Come
~
· .. · ·- _ ______ ....
--~- - --· --God be the Glory, Great Things He- and See ; Go and TeU." It concerned
Has Done." It was an original and
the pllrt which women have had in
moving presentation on reflections
telling the good news from the time •
· of her life as she recalled 50 years as
of Christ until now. Assisting with
a Christian and an active member of
the program were Mrs. Sara
the Middleport First Baptist Church.
Fowler, Mrs. Sarah Owen, Mrs.
She concluded with prayer. Mrs.
katie Anthony, Mrs. Clarabelle
Smart Is moving to Columbus this
Riley, Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, ana
month,
Mrs. Alwilda Werner.
The EJecta Circle served a salad ,
During the meeting it was decided
to ask for an extra quota of bandages
course for a table carrying out a faU ·'
to roll. The love gift dedication was
motif with flqwei's and candles. On
by Mrs. Mary Brewer who was
the serviilg "committee were Mrs.
assisted · by Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin
Kathryn Metzger, Mrs. Brewer,
and Mrs. fred;! Hood wit!J scripture
Mrs. Oeida Chase, Mrs. Gwinnie
frOib Psalms 192 and a reading.
White, Mrs. . Ethel Hughes, Mrs ..·
Members were reminded to take
Hood. Mrs. Brewer had grace.
their Christmas stockings to ·the
· Nancy and Ted Reed, Pomeroy,
~Uy ~·eceived·· a letter from
Clyde ·aitd Helen Kirkland, Kenton,
Ohio, fonnerly of Pomeroy.
Kirldand was district manager of
the P~meroy office of the Ohio
Power Co., approximately 20 years
ago. ife Is now retired.
_
EnClosed, in the Interesting and
newsy letter, was an article about
Mr. and Mrs. Kirkland's daughter,
Uncia Sue Kirkland.
The article read as foUows :

OCT. 8 , 111110

rn BIBLE BOWL
00

.

~c:,WrAIN EASY
rAAT GUY WHO YeLLeD AT

Ot.l&amp; !&gt;QUAWK
OUTA YDU, &amp;AEJY.
AND YOU'VE 8fi1'N

HeR· · HE JUST MADe A U -TURII!
NOW He~ COMIN' UP FA!7T
ON OUR 'fAIL!
.

JOHN A. WADE, 'M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPitAL

HADIT!

.

BORN LOSER

. ~~~Q..,
r~

1'-;u·"

,~,,AlJD

~A

.iiMJAY

PRECEP ' uft CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45p.m. Thursday at Meigs Branch, Athen8County Savings an11 Loan, W. Main,
Pomeroy.
FALL REVIVAL each evening,
Oct. 8 through Oct. 19, 7:30 at Mt.
Hermon United Brethren Church, ·
Texas Corpmunity, with the Rev.
Wi!Uam Hatfield, GallipoliB Ferry,
speaking.
OIDO ETA Pill rush party Thursday 7 p.m. at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
Society Thursday 7:30p.m. at Thrift
Shop, Middleport.

MONDAY

7:30 MQIIday night at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Mrs. June
Van Vranken, director, !IIIIIO!IIICed
lhat a program on "God and Colmtly" with classic, gcspel and popular .
music, Is being planned for around
'ntanbgiving. Proceeds from the
cmcert will be put in the Lincoln Hill
a-01111 relocation fuDd.

CREATE A

.•.

- OVER 1,000 COLO~!

Br3nds Used'

O!tler

~enlified Brands
Ta~on Uni!len·

#Cases Rely
Involved Brand

tilied

Brands

COC Study # 1
(compO!ed

June 20) ,

52

COC Study #2
(completed
September 12)
Other cases
reported to COC
Total COC cases
(lhroilgh
September 23) .

so

17

43

2

22

0

.
35

24
19
---100
-to!O ·-'

242

76

1~

84

• "Brands used" totals more than the number ot cases reported
becase some women uSICI more tnan OM branll.

On September 21, P&amp;G convened
a scientific advisory group to review
all known data relating to TSS. The

• \bmiting or diarrhea

ACROOK'? ~ll)5f·
1 DEAL IH COKTRABIUP CI6ARETTES?
COI'.E OFF IT, IUD!~

~ AH' '(()Of llE

Send your unused Rely tampons
wit!J. your nsme and address to:

P.O. Box 8-448, ·

.

T&lt;WIARI75 111' OAY
WHEH EVEI!.Ye®Y'S
RIPPIH' f'/ERYJOI)Y
CfF, AM' IT ALL
~~iii~ COMEG OUT

'"I'&gt;''

PICKENS HARDWARE:

'

'

.

!!r

00 OUIZ ESTEEMED MIS~
WINNIE WINKLE .I S GOING
TO HAVE A e&gt;ENEFIT
FASHION SHO.V
OIZPHAN51 EH ?

WHAT, PRAY
TELL, HAVE
WE HERE?

0

IT
NO FUN
SWIMMlN' ALONE
'

2:1111
2:28
2:30
3:18
4:00
4:35

WAS

Si30

1:35
S:SIJ

•'

EAST

.,

tKJ 7 5

•a z

tKQJ9
+Q8652

t7 5 3
+10743

.,

SOUTH

+K9 •

break 4· 3.

·

The fifth diamond was
Vulnerable: East-West
going
to be !let up. UnforDealer: South
tunately for South, there
West Nortb East
Soutb
would be no entry to dummy
to cash it after it was up.
Pass 2t
Pass
Could South manufacture
Pass 4NT Pass
.
an
extra entry to dummy?
6t
Pass SNT Pass
Yes,
he could, with the jack of . ,
Pass 6•
Pass Pass
clubs.
Pass
So South led his. nine of
clubs, took that · normally
Opening lead:t K
unneceSsary finesse of the
aqk, ruffed another diamond,
ed to the ace of clubs and got
By ,Oswald Jacoby
his spade discard.
aDd Alan Sontag
_ West could and probably
. should have found the way to
It is remarkable that so- upset South's app~ecart. He
called book bands keep occur- · could play his 'I,Ueen ·of clubs "
ring time and time again. · · on South's nine and kill that
.-South lind:: himself in a nor- extra,club entry.
mal Sil·beart contract. If (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
either his hand or dummy

I.••3.

l

"·

t!SMJ·VJ·rl
by THOMAS JOSEPH

·-· .

40 Snake
ACROSS
41 Moslem
1 Wrap
prayer caU
5 Late existenDOWN
tialist
I Wish for
10 Gaze
11 Straightened 2 Nimble·
footed
out
3 Do it solo
13 Vessel
4 Lamprey
14 East Indian
5 Plebes
cedar
15 TV's Tarzan 6 Syrian
city
!&amp;Energy
7 "Winterset"
11 Au!ttralian
character
bird
8 Mastered ;
Ia Gift for
subdued
an Oolong
9 Maritlnne
_fancier
%tFaucet
measure
lZ Peach
problem
and plum
%1 Racing
circults
!! Title• %3Whacked

zs "of !~l:.o~ry!~")
(19110

Z6Com meal
cake
%7 Astute
Z8 Ololeric
!9 Cavalryman
3ZCheer
33Aglow S4 Gardening
need
35 FuniceUo's

i

"AiexanderttteGrut" 1868

2:00

~

+QI03

+A82
.AQJI0975

e

.I

I D-8-80

held one more club and one
·less spade it would be·a cinch · '
contract since a ruff in dummy would provide an easy
12th trick.
.
As it was, with two losers in
spades to cope with, South bad
to try to set up dummy's fifth
diamond for a spade discard.
. He took dummy's ace of
· diamonds, ruffed a diamond,
played ace of hearts and a
heart to dummy's klng.
Then be led and ruffed
another diamond .. So far so
_ good. Diamonds were going to

rn o m

ern

NI!WS
IIEUEVE '
• NI!WS
()) NI!WS UPDATE
()) R018BAGLEY SHOW
(J) NEWI UPDATE
(f) 700 CLUB
(f) IIIAVER!CK
~ BOB GAI8
RAT PAniOI.
·
NI!WS UPDATE

.

'

16 Cantinllas 25 HigiH!trung ~,.·
movie
21 Black eye
19 Satisifed 30 Main
20 Narcotizes
artery
23 Football

31 FortlfP.

pass

cation
33 Theater boxc.
... Striftlifttt

M Part
of
.

' ""

Czech&lt;&gt;slovakia

,.....,.

37 Lambkin's

cry

t:!lj:
.

'
•
'

•'

co-star
'37- of Avon

38 Printed .

quantity
381'heater
group

'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worldt: _:

'

AXYDLBAAXa

ONLY ActiVE VOLCANO .

II

MlliiRt Vesuvius is continental-.

.

Clinton, Iowa 52'TJ6.
.And you Will receive.• refund
including cost of mailing

"

LONGFICJ:'LOW

One letter aimply atancb for another. In tbla lll!lple A Ia j ·
· u!led for tbe three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Slnale !etten.
apoatropb•, the lencth and fonnatlon of the worda are all '
.
:
.hlnta. Each d131 the code letten are 'dllferenl
'
CaYP'l'OQVOTES ,

. Europe'a only active volcano.

CROSS BORDER

Cenadlan IDdiana croaa u. s. bo'
den under an old law aaauring them
. free acce.u as native North ·
·Americans.

VL

'

VR

LOVBA

VBZHHZ
LP

SH

N

ZHRVCNSQH i

FHQQ

ZHRYHBZ ·

'

;

.

I'

, HZ,
'ftlbMAS BECKE'IT

'l'btlmu Beckett ntumlld

,

MASON, W. VA.

0nceln P•rt•" 1078

(f) (!§) CBS WEDNESOA Y
NIGHT MOYIE 'PortraH Of An Ea·
con' 1980 'Stara: Susan Anap&amp;ch, '
Tony Bill.
11:30 Cll CI!.Rt,.ES M. SCHULTZ ... TO
REMEMBtR Thla year markalhe
30th annlverury of 'Peanuts' , and
PBS oelebratea with a look at
Charles M. Schultz, ttte creator of
the famOus comic strip.
@ ART OF UVING
10:00 (]) GOVERNMENT AS IT IS ' The
Legialative Branch' Colum~1at
Jack Anderson probes the ct,anglng power balances and divided allegiance&amp; which have ahaped the
past and present behavior of the
U.S. Congress.
®NEWS
10:211 ())NEWS UPDATE
10:30 Cil MAX MORRIS
(jJ TB6 EVENING NEWS
·
® FEELIN~ . ·
10:58
NEWS UPDATE
11
(J)
ill) IBI •
NEWS
()) JEWISH VOICE
(I) BASEBAU: WORLD SERIES
SPECTACULAR
(I) MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING
CIRCUS
&lt;HJ DICK CAVEn SHOW
11:28 ()) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 C2J
THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host: Kenny Rogers. (60
mine.)
()) ;ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
ill MOVIE-(COIIEDYI'•• "BaMot
Fire" 1M2
(f) fm Q)
ABC NEWS
NIGHTL!NE
Q
CIJ
CAMPAIGN
CO!JNTOOWN
(]) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®J MOVIE -(DRAMAI" " Ambuoh
Bay"1066
.
11:150 (i)(J))Q) LOVE BOAT-POLICE
. WOMANLoveBoai --'TheManWho
Loved Women ' A charming ba·
chelor falla gen\llnely In love with
thre!B women at the a a me time.
Pollee Woman-· 'Pewne Of Power'
Pepper worka undercover to ex·
poee a rna salve counterfeiting
operation. (Repeal; 2 hra .• t5
mine .)
12:00@ STANDING ROOM ONLY
'Burteeque U.S.A.' Red Buttona
hoata a salute to baggy panta
, comedians, alapatlck aketches
and elaborate musical dance
numbers Of the vaudeville era.
G(f)CBSLATE MOVIE 'GOLDEN
"
NEEDLES ' 1974 Stare : Joe Don
Baker, Elizabeth Aohley. A mylll·
millionaire coveta an ancient Chin·
••• atatue reputed to promlee
health and ~'&lt;lor for Ita owner.
12:30 (f)
!Il TOMORROW
12:18 (f) NEWS UPDATE
1:00 ()) GOOD NEWS
;:30 (J) REX HUIIBARD
'
MOVIE
1:ol5 (f)
... BIOGRAPI:IICAL·DRAIIIA) uo

·!_AILEY OOP

...

'

tA10 8 42
+AJ

•

0

•
•w

.

BRIDGE

.K43

())® ARTHURII!IUI!RONHOME
GROUND Arthur Miller, 0;ne of the
moat performed playwrltee of our
generation, talka candidly about
thealgnltlcant event a of hie life, his
~Melopment a a a writer, and th8
Influences that have shaped many
of hla playa. (90 mlna.)
8:30 (I) JOitll WESU:Y WHITE
8:58 ()) NEWS UPDATE
11:00
MOYIE OF THI! WEEK
'Beulah Land' 1980 Stare: Lesley
Ann Warren, Michael SarraZin.
ill70oCWB
@ MOVIE -(ROMANCE) ••
11

NOTE: 'lflu may see Rely adi.X!rtisements in flu! November iss~s of various womenll
··
magazines. Unforwnat.ely, t/U!se issues were already printl!d whe" flu! decision to ~~USpend BQ/es
·
of Rely was made on September 22, 1980.

'

I

Jumbles: W~. I N E GUEST INWA RD ORIG IN
Answer: Ladies in retirement mighl have such
habits- N IGHTGOWNS

+ 9 64

me(!)

· SHUCKS·,
I WISH JAMEY

.

'T XXXJ" r XI J .

TH E

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

'

' Roea M•rtln.

WORIWi'

•,.

How to retum Rely
.and obtain refund:

~y,

If you have these symptoms during
yo_ur menstrual period, discontinue use ·
of tampons ·and see.your doctor at-once.

Choose ·one or more from over a thousand colors
.that look as fantastic on the wall as they do In "¥OUr

, I

"1853

·rn
:oo m •

DEFINITE.TSS CASES REPORTED TO CDC

Yesterday's

NATIONAL LEAGUE
CHAII!PIOHSHIP SERIES
• (f) ®J SPECIAL MOVIE PRE·
SENTATION 'More Wild Wild
Wool' 1960 Stare: Robert Conrad,

e.

You should know
· the&amp;e symptoms of '
'lbxic Sh~ck Syndrome:
• High Fever (100°) and
"'

· mind.
NoW: ·you ·can out-do everyone with your cratiW ••
genius. Easy-to-apply, tasy clean-up LUCITE Cuitom . ·
Color Wall Paint' makes you an expert.

(ll).

....

(J)

'lliURsDAY

A renearsal for the Voices of
Uberty Choir has been scheduled for '

'

~ (Answers to morrow )

II!OYie -(WEITI!IIW) ••••

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 6:30

Clil''~ REHEARSAL

gested by the above car:toon.

'

11

group conclud~d that the available
data were still fragmentary, but
advised that the resu Its of the latest
CDC study should not be ignored.
'
, Therefore, on September 22,
Procter &amp; Gamble announced it was
suspe.nding sales of Rely-and that it
would refund money to consumerS
who had Rely in their homes.
The Food and Drug Administration offers this advice to consumerS:
"The current evidence indicates
that women should ,stop using Rely.
Women who want to reduce their risk
of toxic·shock even further may want ·
to consider not using any talllpons at
all, or using napkins part of ~he time
·during their periods.
· "Women using tampons who
develop a h!gh fever and vomiting or
diarrhea during their periods should
stop using tampons and see their
doctors right away:·
The FDA and CDC have said they
will continue studying Toxic Shock
Syndrome to find out what causes it
and why it is assdciated with tampons.
Procter &amp; Gamble will participate
with the government in this important
·
effort.
In the meantime, Procter &amp;
Gamble advises women not to use
. Rely tampons and to return unused
Rely for a refund. ·

Now arrang e the ci rcled letters to
form the s urp ri~ answer,. · a ~ sug·

Clever finesse bags .slam

eWif' GOIULLA!J

But on September 15, CDC
announced a new st~. It compared
women who had Toxic Shock Syndrome with women who did not. The
study confirmed that Toxic Shock
Syndrome was associated with
tampon use. It also indicated that Rely
was apparently involved with more
cases than anv other brand. Here are
the key data avajlable to date:

MSWerhere:

- '•

-

SUMMIT! I lOL.D

Women who use Rely" tampons
should stop using them and return •
the unused product to Procter &amp;
'
Gamble for a refund.
Government studies sHow that
tampons are associated with an increased risk of Toxic Shock Syndrome
(TSS). This is a newly-discovered
disease that affects mainly women
who use tampons during their periods.
Toxic Shock Syndrome can be
very serious and is believed to be responsible for a number of deaths.
Almost all women who have had the
disease haVe recovered.
Some recent studies indicate that
Rely was apparently involved with
Toxic Shock Syndrome to a greater
extent than other tampon brands.
Toxic Shock Syndrome was first
reported in November 1978. It is
believed to be·caused by a toxin produced by a bacterial infection
(Staphylococcus aureus). In June 1980,
the U.S. Center for Disease Control
(CDC) first linked it to tampon use. No
one yet knows how or why tampons
are associated with this disease.
In June, based on research conducted up to that point, CDC said that
tampon use alone was not sufficient
to cause the disease, CDC also said
that no particular brand of tampon
was tpore involved than others.

_I l l D

NORTH -

Sentinel Social Calendar

.,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BEFORE; I AIN'T

p.m. potluck Thursday at the haU.
Products party by Mary Powell
following the dinner.
LAUREL CLIFF Better Health
Club, 6:30 p.m. 'rhursday at 'the
Meigs Couoty Infirmary. The 44th
anniversary of the club· to be o~
served.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United MethodiSt church, 7:30p.m.
'
SALEM ToWNSIDP Firebelles
public kitchen utensil shower, 8 p.m.
Thursday at fire haU.
omo vALLEY Grange 2612
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday; potluck refreshments.

, ~T!+A~L~LY~F-----~:;.:
~o::r---1

7 :58
8:00

0

Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, 7:30
Wednesday evening.
BOSWORm COUNCIL 46, Royal
and Select Masters, Wednesday,
8:30 p.m.; aU companions asked to
attend.
-POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT Lions
Club, regular meeting, noon Wed·
nesday at Meigs Inn.
'
MIDDLEPORT Literacy Club, 2
p.m . Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
Robert Fisher. Mrs. Chester Erwin
to give the b :k review.
·

, · -·~

HE ~E5 1 6NED F R'OM
THE HIC5H-WIRE AC.T
SEC.A U5E HE WAS
· . ALWA'YS THIS.

~ (/U.~ "1Z:l

or (304)-675·2144

WEDNESDAY

,.:-..;.

me (!)

•••!!r

CALL (614)-992·2104

REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy

.,

'

Comedian Morey Ameterdam and
nutrition expert Dr. Marion Neatle.
Hoats: HughDownaandfrankBialr. .
(Cioaed-Captlonedl
7:30 CilG BUL.UIEYI!
Cil AT HOME WITH:n!R-..E
Cil MOVIE ·(FANTAIY)
"Petor Rabbit Arid T - O t PoHer"11170

--

EAR,' . NOSE &amp; lHROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

W omen s Day of Prayer planned

..

I............
•.[J
_..__ ...I I

A'ND

(I)@ 3-2· 1 CONTACT
NBC NEWS
ffi 30 MINUTES WITH FAllER
MANNING
([) BOB NEWHART SHOW
Cll FACE TtE MUSIC
a (f) ®J CBS NEWS
'(I) WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
!ID DICK CAVETT SHOW .
.
G})OI ABC NEWS
6:58 (I) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 m G PM MAGAZINE
(I) SEND FORTH YOUR 8P!IIIT , .
00 AL( IN THI! F AMll.Y
(J) fm. FAMILY FEUD
- C1J WILD K!NGDOII
D(f) TlCTACDOUGH
(I) MACNEIL.-LI!HRI!R RI!PORT
®J NEWS
!ID OVER EASY 'Nutrition' Gueata:
8:30

::;::·:·

·

CAROL BURNEn

"-

FRIENDS
(J) AIIC NEWS

to

.,

-

e:oo rn e rn a CIJ®li!ll e NEws -

IWt...

a-

I'

EVENING

*

that

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
I '

-

;·
'' j

SDL

LOR.

SHQPBAR :
..
NBYHRLPCR.- GQDLNCYO : ·
AQPCE

Bngland lrtlm ude in France in
1170.
· ,

LP PDC
, Yeatuday'1-Cr1flCilllll: WE MU8T ASSIST ONE ANOTIIER. :
IT IS 'niE LAW ot NATURE.-rRZI:Nal PROVERB
, , ;·

-!

,

to

~

e ............... :;

a

. ..

·

--

'

�''

,P--lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday; Oct. 8; 1980

,

11181.

December · I, 1980 to

Beaver

35
Ohio.

in the

eastern half of

weeks. If teinperatgures are 50 to 55 ·.
degrees F., fruit will ripen in about

-

'

.

'

.

Book fair planned

)

Harvesting and Curing · Gourds :
The time to harvest bard shelled and
ornamental gourds Is when the'
sterna begin to dry and tUrn bfOWll or .
when the leav~ start to die.
~ harvesting, waah gourds In
wann, soapy water. Rinse in a clear,
wann ,..ater.with a~ amount of
hoWlehold disinfectant added. Dry
, the gourds thoroughly and sort out
poor specimens that are not Uitely to

0.,

are apouaoriog a county-wide Book
Fair at the IIChool, Oct U thrvuch 17
RegulatiOM
digest.
down
billion bWlhels last
•
The wildlife specialiat adviSes that
in the Eric Hart Ubrary dnring
Bobwhite' quail - No hunting peryear to 1.88 this y ear .
all hunters' and trajlpers to carefully
.
mitted.
regular BChool hours.
.
It's a bullish report as far as the
read the 1980 Hunting and TriPP,Ing
Everyone
Is
Invited
to
browse ·
Pheasants
and
chukar
partridge
,
Meigs County
crop esmn..tes a re concerned, but
Regulations dllest they receive
through
the
many
bOolm
(levels
tinNovember
15
to
December
13,
1980
keep in mind that it is still the third .
• Feeder C8lf ~ - G.Wpolls,
when they buy their hunting licendergarten
tllroiiP
llixth),
rec:ordl,
.
on
private
lands
;
November
15,
1980
bctober IS ud !!. A.._• Otlober l.argJ'St corn crop we've ever had
ses. The publication contains details
~.
.
pasters
and
calendars
and
to
place
to
January
17,
1981
on
~tate
public
and the second largest soybea n crop
on ·seasons, ' hunting hours, bag
.orders.
hunting areas. .
·
we've had.
: POME~QY - I attended a ®ef
llmilll and huritlhg zones.
In addlti011, Ill selections will !le ' -.
White-tailed
deer
October
10,
· OUtlook meeting last week a nd they
Trapping - Tom Stockdale, Ex· Harvesting and Storing
available for inlpection during P1'0 ·
1980 to January 17, 11181 for longbow
. re. predicting feeder calves to be
tension wildlife specialist -a t The
keep.
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Tomatoes : With fall frosts due soon,
open
house scbeduled for Oct. 13 at
and crossbow hunters; ~ber 1
about 72 cents this fall .. This Is five
Ohio State UniverSity, outlines some
you may want to be prepared to save
To cure the gOI!fds, place them on
.
7:30p.m.
Open houae this yeat will
~~ents below 78 cents for last year,
or the regulations approved by the . to December 5 in zones 1, 2 and 3 and those last tomatoes on the vine,
seve~ layers of DelfSPIIpers In a 'To
provide
everyone
a chance to meet
These are averages .and weight and
Wildlife Council April10, 1980.
. December 1 to December 6 in Zone 4
to ~ degree F . room or other area
The best tomatoes for storage are
for gUll hunters.
with
the
teachers
and
meet Douglas quality will affect this figure,
Sq)lirrels September 5 to
those harvested from healthy vines .. where there is air circulation.
As in past years, hunting hours for · Only mature: green tomatoes will
Behnke,
the
principal.
; Com - Because of the 'plentiful
Novemoor 8, 1980 on private lands ;
Curiilg takes from. two to four weeks,
Anyone wiahlng more Information '
rainfall Ohio received this season,. September 5 to December 20, 1980 on - squirrel and ruffed grouse are fJ:QID
ripen properly in storage, so jWlt
depending on ireather conditions
one-half hour before sunrise to oneabout
the books, oontact chair- :
corn ·and soy~n production is high,· state llliblic hunting 11reas. ·
off those beautiful, and the size of the gourds.
before frost
half hoilr after sunset . .For rabbits,
persQns
Enuna Ashley, 992-78'74 or ·
and growers can .look forward to
Ruff!!(J grouse - October 10, 1980
To ~ the drying process, you ·
green specimens, gather · and store
favorable prices. , ,.
pheasant
and
chtikar
partridge,
the
Kathy
Rice;
742-2924, or the school at to February 28, 1981 on a U lands in
may want . to drill a small hole
them. The right stage is a greenillb742--.
.
hunting hours are from 9 a .m . to 5
thestate.
/
' In tenns of price, the latest crop
through the.flower end of large, hard
white color on the blossom end or
p.m
.
production report shows a 20 cent
Cottontail rabbit - November 15,
· shell gourds. Gourds are dry when
those showing a blush of pink color.
Trapping seasons are as follOWs:
jump in soybean prices and an eight
1980 to January 17, 1ll81 on private .
seeds ratue upon shaking them. ·
Place·mature, ~tomatoes in a
Fox, o~wn. skunk, and weasel
to 10 cent incr ease in corn prices. ·
la,nds; NoVember 1, 19110 to January
FREE CLINICTVESDAY ·
Stqre cured in cool, dry place.
't ry or cardboard box one or · two
- November I, 1980 to January 17,
The crop production report shows
17, 1981 on public hl!flting areas.
Tbe
Harrisonville Senior Citilena ·:
layers deep. Store · t.bem in a
SWEET~'l11
1981.
a drop in nationa l corn production of
will not
Several public hunt ing
will
bold
a free blood pressure.cllnlc
basement. or other cool places. In 65
Nibbling a sprig of parsley
Mink, mWlkrat and raccoon . U billion bushels - from 7,7 in 1979 · permit rabbit hunting this year; see · •
hun
10
a
.m. to 12 ,noon on Tueaday .
to 10 degree temperatures, the
refreshes the palate and /lelps to
NOvember 13, 1980 to January 17,
to 6.6 in 1980. Soybean production is
the Hu'lhng aiid Trapping
at
the
Harrisonville~.
tomatoes will ripen in about two sweeten the breath.
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from 2.2'

BY JOHN C. RICE
F.xteuloa Agent
Agriculture -

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9hlo

1\ills

41 ·
HOUi tstorRent
TWO BE DROOM
• furn iShed house, a lso two
bedroon, furniShed &amp; one
bedroo!ll furniShed apartments. Call after 6 p.m.·
9'12-2218.

42

Molllle Homes
for Rent

TWO

bedroom

mobile

home, real nice, Brown's
Trailer Park .. Adults only,

m-m•.

12 x 65 two bedroom mobile
with one &amp; 9118·half
baths. In cOtmtr~ location.
Worklnt people only, noobjecti&lt;Jn to children .
References. required. m·
2272.

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel\vant Ads'

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~u~b~l~
ic~N
~o-1i c_
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IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
VIRGINIA
GROGAN
TAYLOR ,

Public Notice

'

In Memoriam
IN MEMORY of Geo. N.
sargent who departed this
life 14 years 0110 today Oct.
8th.
Now this earthly strife Is .
2

NOTICE

Bids will be received at

the office of Bernard V.
Fultz, Attorney, In Bank
One of Pomeroy building,
until Monday; October 13,
1980, a Ill :00 O' ClOck A,M.,

over

1

Announcements

3

3

JONES Meat Packing···
slaughtering, · custom
processing, retail meat.
Washington Co, Rd . 2&gt;48,
Lillie Hocking, OH 61iT·
6133.

Aimouncements

CLUB CALf SALE

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WANT AD INFORMATION

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"If It's a ama11 world a.'ld growing S!"BBer. why do
your pOef8ge rates keep DC?Ing up?"

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
OSSIE' S AUCTION · House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. We sell Oil!!
piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques, In·
cludlng homes, farms, or
liquidation sales: Gel top
dollar. · List with the man
wno has over 25 years In
the new, 'used and antique
furniture business.
We
lake consignments. For In·
formatl,on and pickup ser·
vice, call · m -6370 or In
Wes1Virglnla773·5471.Sale
every Friday night at 7
p.m. Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·
tloneer, OSby A. Martin.
(no(unk)
9

Wanted to Buy

IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, des~s. gold
rings, jewelry, silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wOOd
Ice boxes,fars antiques,
etc. Complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Po,meroy, OHl or call m .
7760,

GARAGE SALE 10.5, Oct.
6·10. Off Rl. 7 bypass on old
Rt, 1&lt;43 s . of Jack's Club,
follow signs.
GARAGE SALE : October
10·11 at A·frome building
next to Landmark In Mid·
dleport. Used doors, win·
ctows, storm sash, cost Iron
tub; stereo, etc.

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero'f', 0 ,, 45769

·Nama ,- - - - - - - - - -

.CLASSIFIED AD INDIX

Addrau________________
Phon•·~-~~----------

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1- Card ot, Thank1

2- ln Mtmorlim

Print one word in each

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You' ll get better results
If you describe lufly,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the r ight to
classify, edit or reject . tl'o~~~~:::~~~~
any ad, Your ad will be JIUI In t he proper
claslflcation If you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
Include discount

I

9-Wanlodlo811f.

..

) For Sale
) Announcement
) For.Rent

17, _

s1:....HouMMta OOids

D-CI, TV, RICIIOI41UIJftltftt
,._

1t_Htlp wintM
11-SiruatM , .....

54-Mitc: . ~ .......
SJ-IuiNIInt lu.,..es

tl--lnsur.nc
. 14-IVtln"s Traialnt

st-PettfwSate

'

ts-SctMMMtlnltrYC:tiOft
16fi!Hio. TV

.
e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

ICIR.,.lr
I~WanttdToDo

t1-~.,m

11 · ----~-·12.
_ _ _ _ __

13· - - - - - - : - -

15.- - - - - 16. _ _ _ _ __

33.
3&lt;1.

JS.

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far Salt •

•• ' eawlel ,

,,_.,.,

3J-11Jarms for S•lt

H-811tktfts ._,,._,...
u--Lots a .t.c,....
M-RNI.ItlttWatttecl
l7-RNifon

10 SPEED bicycle. Cilll
Bob Fisher. 949·2378.

.SERVICES

11-HtmtiM...........tJ

' Wani·Ad Advertlslftl
Deadlines
.12 Noon SaNrdiPY

1

torMONtay

1

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.OJ-u-....,.. .....
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C.IO

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I .II

c-....

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us

ltcft ..,... • .,., ttte mtrllnutM 11_,.. tl • c.tl ,__..,.....,.
Ads,......... .....,. JMR ewtMCUHWI .. YI wiH ............. I . ,
.

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In..........,, CINI
_

efT-...,.- C*tNry: t a.tt 1111r _... UM

M~Me ..............

v..,., ..... .,.....,......,.. .............

eM...........

THE MEIGS CO . Board of
Menlo I Retardation Is now
taking resum••s for the
position of cook. This per·
son should have at least one
year experience ·cooking In
.a school or Institutional
program, be familiar with
record keeping, and _have
some understanding of
nutritional preparation.
Resume's will be accepted
until Friday, Oct. 10.
Please send to .Meigs Co.
Board of Mental Relar·
dation, 3&lt;16 E. Main · St.,
Po,meroy, Oh. 45769.
RNs,
looking
tor
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
shifts? Feel the need to
develop your Ideas In
resident care with a highly
motivated stall? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the
answer for you . Due to
achieving near maMimum
census, we now have
openi'ngs tor full and part
time positions on day shill,
but will consider other shlf· .
ts. Competitive salary, ex·
cellent working conditions,
life Insurance. and
disability policy at no cost
to the employee, and
hOif&gt;llallzatlon Insurance
available. Come visit us or
call : Nancy Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy tfealth Core Cen·
ter, 614·m ·6606.

cwrrMI ... ........, ... c.. .. .,...

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THREE family' Yar&lt;l Mit,
Thllrlday; Friday at 133
BufllrnUt Avenue. Drop
1.., table, rollaway bed.
rocklng chair, hand
crocheted tablecloth. an·
tlq~ misc. ~·3079.

EIGHTY ACRES: 12 acres ;::
of bottom land, de acres -·
pasture, blacktop road,':~
three bedroom house, ..
living room, bath, kitchen,
dining room, three car car·
P9rl.
cella~.
part
basement, good barn .
Charles .C. King, Rutland,
Ohio, 742·2229.

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12
Situations Wanted
. WILL do odds &amp; ends,
paneling, tlopr tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at 992·
6338.

Will batiyslt In my home,
day or nltllt• fencecl In
y.,..,, '""'"
at 271
SlrHI,
Middleport,
Ohio.IIIII

Hel Wa~
'-'--...!:~P!.!!~"~-!!...-GET VALUABLE training
u a YOAJIIII bull- penon
end earn tiOOd money plus

Headquarters

FOR SALE : three

or

POMERQY,O.
992-2259

four

bedroom house, carpeted,

woodburnlng stove, also _ ·
woodburnlng fireplace .
Two car garage, total elec· .
trlc. 10 x 27 sundeck, 2 &amp; ·
one third acres. Beautl{ul ·
selling. 985-393&lt;1,
·
TWO story older hom.e,
seven r9oms, bath, .
basement,
hardwood ,
floors, fireplace. On . four ·
IarOe Jots with river Iron· .
tage. Main Street, ,
Pomeroy ,
Financing
available, Call after 5, m· •
7284. $26,500.
.

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2 YEAR OLD hoUse In
Chester, large kitchen &amp;
dining room, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms, family rdom &amp;
fireplace, fully carpeted,
central air &amp; gas heat, 1700
sq. ft. living area. Garage
&amp; 12'x16' work lhop.
$47.900. 985-.(1.49, Jack Gin·
!her.

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Mobile Hom"
for Salt
1973 Crown Haven, 14 • 65,
three bedri:roms. ..W cer·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x' 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Chemplon, 12 X 60, two
bedrooma. new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms. all electric. 1971
Skyline, 12 X 6$, two
bedrooms. bath a. '12, new
carpet. 1970 PMt,
12 x 60, two'*"-· new
, carpet. B x S Sales.1 nc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleesant, WV Phone 6754424· .
.._
JO x 14 mobile home
with 7 X 24 OlCpando. Ex·
cellent condition. " ' 742·3010 or 742·2721.
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DIU.ON

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LISTING - A
QUiet home In the COAJrl'try 0f1 approx, 1 acre.
This 4 bedroom home
with forced air heat will
give yoiJ roomy comfort, and the price Is
rlghll Near the mines!
$15,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Nice
BIG Yard- a 1'12 story
frame hOUse with 4
bedrooms, TV room, llv·
lng room, kitchen. and
beth. several fruit trees
In the beck , yard that
have tust started .to
bear! $20,500.00.
COZY DEN - LUCKY
YOU I Even has knotty
pine panellngl This 3
bedroom home " hes 2
baths. full basement
with laundry and rec.
room, 3 grHnhouMI,
shed and all on 5 •crea
of level land. Cl- to
bridge. $58,700.00.
SI!VERAL I NDEEDI
With , _ carpeting,
new paneling, t~er ·
mopane windOWS, elec·
trlc heal, elso wood·
bur,.r, 3 bedrooms,
bath, on . '12 acre · lot.
$21,500.00.
OLD, •uT FUN Redecorate to yOAJr own
tntel Thla 3 bedroom
- h. . a new fur..
nace, 2 fireplaces.
ator
buildings.

·

2 STORY DUPLEX One bedroom apt. up,
fully furn ished, 2 BR
apt. down , Rent will pay
for home. Good location
lnMiddl-'·
2 OR 3 BEDROOM
HOME close to pool, .
park &amp; schools. Newly
redecorated Inside &amp;
out. Prime location.
Gravel HIJI In Mid·
dleport.
3 BR "OME - Family
room,- living room, IarOe
eat-In kitchen. Paneled
&amp; . carpetd on 124 In
Syracuse. Afum. siding.
2 !IIR I'R~E-'- 2 acres,
close ln.
2 BR FRAME - Ciose
to schools, park &amp; pool.
Cheaple.
REDUCED - 7 rooms
and bath. Could be used
as business, storage· or
. home.
'
4 BR HONIE on Rt, 7 In
Pomeroy, Eat·ln kit·
chen. All rooms edra
large, Pull size bele'
men! could be made Into
a nice rec. room.
Faye Manley, Br. Mgr.

Stoves

Only $395
• plus Jilower
1 GoodM. War&lt;l
Electric Range
175
lGoociUsed
.
Gil Range
$100
1 Good Used Frllldalre
. Refrigerator
$150
~.. - POME~OY
E. Main st.

A,..rtment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone 992·5&gt;134.
.
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IN MASON, West. VIrginia,
two bedroom furniShed
apartment, utilities paid,
no pets. Deposit required.
l·:I(W·882·3356: .

44

2 BEDR'OOM UnturniShed
apartment, Pomeroy . SlSO.
month plus utilities, plus
deposit. m ·6130 or m ·
7511 .

m ·7m.

44

REALTY
742-2003
· -GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW LISTING - LOvely 2 story home with
vinyl
siding.
4
bedrooms, living room,
dining room, breakfast
nook. 1 beth and modern
kitchen. Washer, dryer,
. stove and refrigerator
stiy, On nice size lot
with 2 buildings.
NEW LISTING- Char·
mlng home on 100'x1&lt;40'
lot In Middleport, on
Gravel Hill. Large
spacious r~oms . 4
bedrooms, 2 baths,
family
room
has
fireplace. Quaint fish
pond gives this home ex·
Ira fl61r. Call for your
showing.
POMEROY - Older 1
floor plan, solid buill
home with 3 bedrooms,
kitchen, beth, full base- .
~ Gas forced air
furnace. Garage and
nice size lot 75'x170' . .
Asking $27,000.00.
·
NEW LISTING - What
a buy II 1979 Windsor
home with central alr
and sterwo. 3 bedroom.s,
l~lol
electric, fully
equipped kitchen wit~
micro-wave. The home
has vinyl undersklrtlng.
Situated on almost 2
ecres with chelnllnk
tence, 20'x14' . · building
and dwarf orchard. All
for ONLY $29,500,00,
MIDDLEPORT- S. 3rd
Avenue. 2 story home
with 3 bedrooms, kll·
chen has birch cabinets
with side breakfast
.~k. Extra nice carpet.
Gas furnace Is only 4
yrs.old. New roqf and
paint lob. Sells for
UI,OOO.OO.
.
8UJLDI NG SITES- we
t ·o.ovo•&amp;•Rolf

LAND FOR SALE - Close to town, Will consider
dividing this 100 plus acres. Take all or your choice
of possible 3 way spilt.
THIS HOME has3 BR'swlth h•rclwoodtloors,large
eat· in kitchen, bulll·ln cabinets, full basement, has
been taken good care of and walling for new owner
to give 11 equal care. 139,0011.
QUIET co'UNTRY HOME available for only
UI.OOO. 37 plusacrts. Call now. this one won't
. last.
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LAND- Lots Of land, located In beautiful Southern
'Ohkl,~llls. Peaceful and private, also mineral
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COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 •. North Of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
TRAILER spaces for rent.
·SOUthern Vallev Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

51
Houseltold Goods
STOVES · ,
We have
.fireplace Inserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air fur·
hace adapters, mobile
hOme Wood heaters, and
triple wall chimneys. Out·
door Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rl$, 7 &amp; :15. Gallipolis, P~.
446-3670.
5:1
Antiques
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU! Will
pay cash or certified check
for · antiques and coil~ · ·
tlbles or entire estates.
,Nothing too la•ge. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614'
767·3167 or 557·3&lt;111 .
54

Misc. Merclulnlso

RAZING sale, Saturday 1()5 at foot of cross of Llncol n
Hill Road,. Pomeroy. Lum.. ber', trim, doors, windows,
siding, flooring, antique
oak mantles, antique oak
sliding doors, stairs, ralls.
alate roofing, mise:
GE gold refrlgeral~r for
$200.00, 1974 Pontiac, runs
good, S250.oo; pickup topper, $150.00. Call949·2368.

Her Wardrobe!

HOOF HOLLOW: Horses
and ponies and riding
lessons.
Everyth i ng
ment. Blankets,
bells,
Imaginable
horse equipboots, etc. InEnglish
and
·western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 69N290.
.

SIZES 2-8

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REAL ESTATt

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Now open with a studio
In Pomeroy and Racine.
&lt;;,lasses offered are
Ballet, Tap and Jazz.
Fo~ infoand enrollment.

141.

us right _ , and 11e1 on
tho eligibility llat at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

m-••·"'

tON;

12 Park St.
'-'iddleport, Oh.

Free EstllllaiH
Reasonable Prlcos
.Call Hciwar&lt;l
M9-2a62949·2160
1·22·1fc

Ph. 992-,263
Anytime
10.5-1 mo.

~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~+~==~~~~~~~
"YOUNGS
ALLSTEEL
B&amp;D
Farm Buildings

P&amp;S
BUILDINGS
·
•

TV, CB &amp; HAM

PUT a cold
nose In
YOAJr
future.
Meigs
County
Humane Society, ~-6260,
Shots x wormed, one
miniature collie type
female, one Shephard type
·femole, one black x tan
Kerr female, · one walker
hound male.

CONSTRUCTION

,

SMALL

Utility Buildings
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614 . 64 3-2 591
6·15·1fc

Ph

one 949-2414
9·10·1 mo. pd,

It~~=~~~~~==~~:=::=:~=~~~~t===~~~~~~~
ROUSH
SHULER ·
J&amp;l BLOWN
.

AKC
REGISTEREO
Apricot poodle, $75. with
papers, male. .358 Grant
St., Middleport.
57

TOWERS &amp;
ANTENNAS

s1zes

" From 30x30"

V.c. YOUNG II

Ins:::~:~

cellent
condition.
CallInm
TROMBOME
for sale
ex·3288.

CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes - ex tensive remodeling
•Electricai.)Nork
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.-992-7583
• · ••· , mo.

B

Vinyl&amp; -

~

·k h

d

ac
oe
an
Dump Truck Service
·
-Shop and Portable Weldtng .

..,..

INSUILftA'TIQN

Call:

99.2 ·7354

Aluminum Siding
elnsulaliim
• storm Doors
• storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph.

9·26·1

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6Z •
Wanted to Buy
'
CHIP WOOD. ·Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 P.er ton, Bundled
•slab, $10 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pallet co,, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy m·2689.

TRY US!
Complete Dry Cleanjng
and Loundry
a carpet
eDraperies
a Furniture
C We're No. 1 in
service &amp; Qua

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71
Autos for Safe
1979 VW RABBIT, two
door, fuel inlected, stan·
dard shltf; good gas
mileage, like new con·
~~~~n. Call evening~ ~47·
1974 CHE,VY Nova, 350
automatic, power steering,
71,000 miles, runs good. 742·
3035,

1972 2 door Monte Carlo.
Runs goop, new paint job.
$1,095. 11 11. truck camper,
self contained, hot water
heater,
furnace,
refrigerator, stove. 985·
3839.

11

.,..om
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8, 1,------- ,H
1mpro~ements
,,
s &amp; G Carpot Cleaning.
Steam ,cleaned:
Free
estimate
Reasonable
rates. scotchguard , 992·
6J()9or742·2211 ,
·B ELL BROS . Home lm·
provemenls .
Roofing
(Shingles!, siding, (vinyl &amp;
aluminum) painting In
side, ,paneling, . drywall,
and painting. Ph . 8&lt;43·2803 .
If no answer, call 9&gt;4'1·2739,
12

Plumbing

a. Healing

HEATING &amp; air con·
1978 AMC GREMLIN, 4 dlllonlng,
furnace .
cyl, , blue,. good gas cleanlng ,plumblng. Call
mileage. Must sell 1hls 992·236&gt;1 alter 5 p.m,
week . Bestofjer. 985-&gt;1398. .
197.3 Camaro, good running
car, new point lob. Call m ·
3931.
CAMARO Z28, 11,500
miles loaded, extra nice,
new ~r .orderect, must sell,
make offer. 742·21&lt;43.

·74
Motwcyctos
YAMAHA MX 2!0, racing
bike, runs good. 742·3035.
HONDA 50 .. Ho!lda 70. Call
Bob Fllher. 949·2378.
Campl1111
l!'l!!l!l!IIMI
1973 Starcraft travel
trailer, 1~. 992·3129.
A

Excaval!!!l

CAR
W/Pad
Installed
'9:Yd
GIGANTIC SAVINGS ON ALL CARPET
Any regular carpal jobs installed with iree fN!CI.
Nice Selection of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts.

14

Electrical

a. Refrlger:otlon

SEWING

Repairs,

MACHINE

service,

all

makes! 992-2284 . The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. we sharpen
Scissors,
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, Irons. all small
appliances, Lawn mower.
Next to State HighWay
Garage on ,Route 7, 985·
3825.
APPLIANCE SERVICE :
all makes washer, dryers,

ranges,

dishwashers,

disposals, w•ter tankS. Call
Ken Young at 985·3561
before 9 e.m . or after 6
p.m .
U

Excavating

DOZER _.k. amall lobS a
specialty, quick depen·
dallle MrVIce. 742·2753.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

742-221
I

Public Sate

lr-____.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;&amp;;A~u~ct~l~on;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~~-~

AUCT·ION SA. .;.;
.

•

1.~

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11 &amp;
OClOBER 18• 1980
12 NOON TO 6 P.m.

CONTENTS OF
RUTHY GOSNEY'S ANTIQUE SHOP
26 No. Znd St., MlcldlepoH, Ohio
(CinterofTownJ
OCTOBER 11TH - 2 Circle
FURNITURE: 4' WD oak hall tree w/seal, Oek·
serpentine dresser, claw It,, Oak library table, Wd.
kitchen mantel shelf clock, Oak drop-leaf table,
Walnut console mirror, old victrola (many old
· records), oak tem table, beautiful oak boW front
china, English step bock walnut bookcase, walnut
flat · walnut marble lOP table, mah. slant top
bureau desk, slate top stand, very fancy old chrome
coal heater, old oak high chelr converts to lllroller,
Everelf bebY grand plano, plano stool, ·Duncan
Fhyfe sofa, mah. bese rocker, matchlnt mah. side
choir, walnut empire chest, tall buffet with mirror,
walnut Queen Ann type dining table /4 matching
chairs, oak sewing machlllf!, oak (painted) draMing
table, ·oak (palnld) bed, Eastlake sofa, Chii!Ciendale
chair, mah. large urpenllile dresser, milh. mat·
ch lng Gents chair, hlg~ chair, flat wall cupboard,
Old 9x12 rug, Iron coal heater, st~olghl desk chair,
. swivel desk chelr, organ, picture !ramo, misc. odd
chairs, rocker, stands, Po. Outc~ quilting frames. ·
GLASS &amp; CHINA) (CUI &amp; Pattern),Carnlval, Ruby,
DePression, clear, pink, yell-. blue a. gi'Hn. Minton, Cobclll Blue, Flint, Discontinued I.G. (Chine)
English, Austria, Haviland, oc:c. Japan, Nortakl,
Blue . \IIIII-. Nortakl Ginger Jar, Fenton,
Rodkwood vace, Signed gold leaf vase, Ink wells.
Bottles, Hair receivers, Hat pin holder, R_.,llle
Pottery, , Hull, Champhor glass. Fostoria and oil
· lamps,
MISCI!LLANEOUSITEMS: Store scales. lOoft. Pa. ·
Dutch corn sht.lier, Primitive her- maker, c :1.
large !etten for chimneys, ~ balko!, copper kettle, old crockS. chums, wicker doll butJIIy, on.
toys, Gents frock coat, _ , • lhlrt, tap llat, qllllt
top. old typewriter, old edvertiMI'IIOJIII. Almenacs
1•, albUms, books. INIIIIIZI-, belli.
i*tcards. Currie a. 1 - prints, old c.-..m of wheat
prints. old KIIOOI desk. wall llantlnt. alate

"""*•

andl._, trunk._,.. baSket.
Sllwr tea let, candle lllclcs. fountain statue and
f(poJriML Pwwler and~
,.._........... a:• 1'.. will IIIIIIICI a11 w111t MMr
1111¥e tilt • Ckl 111 11. • !len llcated ., o........... " - '*-' ... ...
Mil Ill lt. Ttlll IWIP trly II aiM ter sale, llltt llllt ... ,

.,..... -..ra.....

'

WATER LINE HOOK-~PS
.
SEPTIC TANKS COUNTY CER11PII!D
.
'

i
I ACR. IUILDINO ~~tt.'
Front. . . bclnt ·

·-Lint

- ·--- ·

,.:lifO.

'

I

RO(fl~
All types of roof .wor11.
new or .repa lr guttora
and doWnspouts, fUller
cleaning and P"lnllntiAII work guarant..;,

EA
.

Call949_2710
_ _ mo.
9 28 1

weter-Sewer-Eiecirlc-G•s Llne-Ditcl1eS.
.. Number ala :L~~MIIwll!'~' 11J
Tllen C-tlolt CompuJ,
Done In llf4, W. wort II
typkll . . ' ..

H. L WRIUSEL

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
H nNG

DANCE STUDIO

ONE .. - third Krt1 With
12 x so two bld1 oom 11101111e
home, ready · for · oc·
cupenq. Loclted on Route

great Offta ... Son·
llnel rout1t carrier. Phoile

992-2478
9·28·1 mo. R;C!,

Call tor Free Sldlllg
Estimate, 949·21111 or
949·2160' No ...Suriday
calls.
9·14·1 mo.

INSTALATIONS

·Trucks for Sale
liD CHEVY Step aide 'I•
ton, ·350 .engln&amp;, auto.
Asking $2,000. Number to
call m ·32«1.

~

All r elated equip,me nt

SIDING CO.

Slz" from 4x6 to 12x40

n

CAL US TO BUY OR SELL
Haner Je.,.....- Associate
Mf-2154

.

• Dump Trucks

CARPENTtR
SERVICES"

Printed Pattern

4737

BISSELL

GET A Nice .. soft lovable
kllfen from your Humane
Society. Shots &amp; wormed.
Donation required , 91'2· ' -Addonund
remOdeling
6260. Hours 12-1 dally,
=:,lng
and gulfer ·
closed Tues . Tabby's,
tigers. &amp; a pure black; all
-concrete work
males.
-Piumb!ng.and
electrical work
(Fr"' Estimates)
CAll today for a beautiful
puppy or dog , Humane
Society, shots &amp; wormed .
f9H215ort92-7314
m ·62110.
Pomeroy, Oh.

1980 . VW
Rabbit,
automatic, gas fuel In·
lected. m ·3129.

, large
and Iorge
livinggarage
rQOm,
~~~~~~~~~~=~~~t
us your offer.

.

s.... ce tor

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

Real Estate- General

NEW LISTING - Tuppers Plains. Brick
Ranch with full base·
men!, 3 BR . garage. Sits
on eight-tenths of an
, acre. Very well kept
home In the 50s.
FREE GAS Plus
Royalties on 38 acres
near Eastern High
School. Several fields
and part wOOded. Nice
stand of pines. $19,000.
ARROWHEAO . CAMP·
lNG LOTS- Nice Ohio
River beach with shade
trees plus level higher
ground. Located below ·
ReedSVille, 0., $3,500 to
$4,500. Owner will
finance with S500 down
and the rest lor 5 years
at 10% 1~1. Hurry and
get yOAJr choice of these .
tiORSECAVE RD. Chester Twp, Older
house remodeled Inside.
Outside needs S(lme
care. Sits on 6'12 acres
with 3 outbuildings, spr·
ing water, su,ooo. Make
an offer on this one.
RENTALS - . Lovely
older home with wrap·
arOAJnd pprch. Newly
remodeled Into 2 apl$, 1
BR up and 3 BR dpwn,
$37,000.
BUSINESS
PLUS
HOME- Beverly, Ohio,
. Ball and Tackle shop
tully ·stocked and op. eratlng with 4 room apt.
upstairs. Sits on 11 acres
with nice slate highway
and river frontage .
Separate hoUse with 5
BR. garage. owner will
sell separately, Total
$85,000.
Ph. VIrginia Hayman
. 915-4197

..

yd.

e2Dozers

.CARPENTER'S

Pels for Sale

56

.

e2 rubber tire beck hoes
e1 excavator ttoe 11!•

lG-Hfc

55
Building supplies
BUILDING MATERIAL. ·
12' trusSes, 2'x-4' ·ceiling
panels,
windows ,
alum inum gu!fers, metal
Siding panels. m ·2759.

A""rtment
. for Rent
Two bedroom furnished
apartment, S15o.oo month,
plua
utilities,
$50.00
deposit. 949-~

Experien,ced Operators

992-5682

Pomeroy ·

Vinyl and Aluminum
Siding

.avo liable tor lpcal wor k.

Hrs.: Mon. ~ Frt.
f A.M,•5:30 P.M.

~LANDMARK ·

CALl '992·2598
.. ._i
DAY OR NIGHT

Caswdy Really
' Belpre, Oh.

.,-Auto and Truck
Repajr
-Transmission
Repair

Lmdmarl&lt;

-·

·Pullins
Exeavating ·

ROGER WfSm'S
GARAGE

Now At
Ponwrny

71

1t

PART· TIME RN, 7:00a.m.
to 3,30 p.m. Call Pomeroy
YARD SALE: 41510 Eagle Health Care Center. 992·
Rldfe Roed. Thurlday, '606.
Frldar· 0c1a11er Ho from
111-4 a Carplllttn rwleltrl·' I need the c~lmney . _ ,
ce, flw miles off Route J.
• a · load of firewood. 992·
:1044.

Housing

MODERN COUNTRV
hom me 4'12 m lies off 124 on
Co. Rd. 28 from Racine 1.33
acres. 949·2830.

32

YARD SALE: 257 Lincoln
Strut, Gall Miller's,
waod111 playpen, wooden
babrbed. Mwlnt machine
cabinet with sliding top,
ClcMier9-10.

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition. With new garage
&amp; genie door. Gas heal,
.-ly Installed central air
conditioning, family .-oom
&amp; Slone fireplace, appllances built ln. MW?y In·
stalled electric breaker
system,
attractively '
decorated baaement, , 2
baths, tully carpeted with
most attractive drapes,
Caii985·38U 01'992· 2~1 .

L..:;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;o;J ,_

~

16o--M.H. R. .Ir

Rates and Otber hiform•tlon

,.,._

PARTTIME Review Coor·
dlnator. Responsible tor
concurrent &amp; retrospective
rev Jew &amp; an acute care set·
ling In the Pomeroy area,
weekdays on:Jy , No
weekends or holidays. Good
eommunlcall- lkllls a
must, prefer RN or LPN
with qualitY ' assurance In
background. Please send
resume no later than Oct.
17, '1910. Area VIII Pier
Review ·organization Inc .,
1805
Maple ' Ave.,
Zanesville, Oh. &lt;43701.

WANTED LIVEH N lady or
girl. 992·:1616.

~·tldrfcal

J.•
I

Help Wanted

12-"lu..-... &amp;8nn•tt~~t ~'

lllltfrltlrlftu

~:H JI.M •.Daily-

11

Will do bebysllllng In yOAJr
home, S days a - k . any
hours, Cai19&lt;19·2875.

JJ-\I'aRtl4 W.D.

74--IMtftocyc ...
7f- ~.,.....rtl

n-Mo.alettom••

(

••

eTRANSPORTATION
,,__.....
,., ....

Jl._HGm" lor s•••,

I

'

'

61-Stell a Ptrtlllnr

eREAL ESTATE

1.

I
I
I
Mail Tills couPcln with Remittance ·
I
· The Daily Sentinel ·
I
Box 729
I
I
Pomeroy, Olllo45169
I
e.-----.~------p&gt;-----------J ·
t

3,

o-u.,..ttctt

s.rvlcu

~-__:_

YARD SALE . Oct. 9, 10, 11. WANTED TO BOY :
SILVER,
9·5. Clothln~. curtains, G9LD,
dishes, many other Items. PLATINUM, STERLING ·
RINGS,JEWELR·
AI Mrs, Clint Johnson's on COINS,
Y,
MISC
. ITEMS. ABOld Portland Rd,
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
YARD SALE: Thursday, BURKETT
BARBER
October 9th, Lisle's In · SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
Syracuse next to Larry's OHIOm·:M76, -Grocery. Clothes, girls size
1, roll away bed, toys, 15in·
OLD COINS, POCket wat·
ch SIMI radllliS &amp; misc. ches,
class rings, wedding
.
Rain cancels. ·
bands, diamonds. Gold or
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley;
FIVE family yer&lt;l sale at 742·2331. Treasure Chest
the Herbert Hoover Coin Shop, Athens, OH. SM·
residence In Bradbury. 6462.
'
Thursday &amp; Friday from 9·

....._Hay lOrain

2)-~rofft&amp;6eNI

I
I
I
.'
I
1. _ _ _ _ __
22 •.- - - - - - I
23.
I
2.
_ __
24. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
.: 3. _ _ _...;__ _
25.
I
26. _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
4
·--"--. 5. _ _ _ _:___ _ 27, _ _ _ _ _ _ 1
6. _ _ _
28,
I
7. _ __
29.
I
8. _ _ _ __:___
30,
31 .
32.

- n-Trlldt1 fer S.le ..

L 4 1nus

"2:t-Mont y Ia LMn

18.
19.
20,
21 .

1

• .,.,......,

ii-wantM f9 luy

o,...._,nlty

1

_____

_

' eMERCHANDISE

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

21 -

~ ~·--------

11
I

._•._.,,,..,..,,for

e FINI\NCIAL

,I1 10.
9·-' ___-__
_

1I

,.._SINU tor IUt'll

47-Wanttfttltnt
R•t

1--PubfiCSIIt
&amp; ,_uctlon

phone number if used .

I &lt;
I {
I
I
I
I

45-PRoonu

7-YantSale

name and address or

I
I
I &lt; ) Wanted

44-A:'rt'!::t . . Rtnt

,___Lost aiHI F'oulld

counts as a word . Count

'

412-Moblle Hom"

l -AnniMin&lt;tmenh
4-GIYNWIY .
""HI,.,. Adl

space below. Each In·
Ilia! or group of figures

eRENTALS
411-HOCIISU forR•t

31 ' lfomts tor Sale
ED
BARTELS,Loan
Representative, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortgage
money
available. AU types home
financing,
new, old,
refinancing, and 2nd mo"·
!gages. Phone 992·7000 or

r:.====~~~:::::l-:::::::::::::::~~----~_32_,___________

,·,

PHONE 992-2156

Write your own ad and order· by mall with this
coupon, Cancel you r ad by phone when you get
·results. Money not refundable.

.£.

Phone
614 )-992-33U

NICE FAMILY HOME
4 Bedrooms, bath,
plus. carpeting . Mod~rn
kitchen with bulll· ln
stove, Full basement
with Incinerator, on
HxlOO lo t.. Near
playground.
NEW LISTING - Fur·
nlshed 2 bedroom home,
new gas furnace, full
basement, on the edge
of Middle·port, pius 11:1
acre of land. $28,000,00.
SYRACUSE - Family
r oom , 3- bedrooms, ·
carpeting, kitchen has
side by side refrigerator
and stove, Plus garage,
on levellol98x124.
HOME &amp; BUSINESS
BUILDING - This Is an
opportun lty for 6 couple
to run a gift shop or
. what have you, In addl·
· lion has kitchen,
bedroom and bath. For
only $12.000.00.
WANT TO BUILD?- 9
Acres with water and
sewage nearby, for a
nice home with plenty of'
room fOr kids. High and
dry, overlooking the
Ohio River.
SY .RACUSE
2
bedroom , ·home with
bath within walking
distance fO store. Has
new forced air furnace,
basement, front &amp; beck
porches, and large extra
lot.

Real Estate

8:00PM

1

H

~
j

Oct. '11, 1980

lI
I

-

Schools I nstrucllon
PIANO LESSONS Begin·
ners, advanced, adults.
Send name, address,
telephone number to v•ra
Jane Holliday, Bo• 224,
Rutland, Ohio 45775.

•

Saturday Evening,

!

Second Street

15

GALLIA COUNlY

Curb Inflation.
Pay (:ash for
Classifleds and
· Savell I

La~

-

THIRD A.. NUAL

1

Insurance

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURAN"CE been can ~
your
celled?
Lost
operator's license? Phone
m -21&lt;43.

A· FRAME building, 514
East Main
Street,
Pomeroy, will sell on 'land
&lt;9nlracl, . small down
payment. m ·3921.

No more suffering no more
tor the sale of the Florence cares
Plaintiff,
Mclaughlin real estate,
- VS·
Yet our' hearts are sad and · RACINE GUN SHOOT,
si tuated at 77 3 Oliver
JAMES TAYLOR ,
lonely
·
Racine Gun Club, every
Street,
Middleoort,
Ohio.
. Defendant.
For
we mis s
him
Frltlay
night slartjng at
The
real
estate
was
ap·
No. 11,619
-everywhere.
7:30 p.m . Factory choke
praised at $8,000.00. All
NOTICE BY
Missed by his wife Barbara
guns only .
bids are subiect to the ap,
PUBLICATION
&amp;Family,
proval of the Meigs County
TO: James Taylor, whose
last known address was Probate Cov rt and the
GUN SHOOT : Saturday
Guardian reserves the
Detroit, Michigan:
IN MEMORY of Paul L
evening starling at 6:30
You are hereby notified r ight to re ject any and all
Manuel who passed away
p.m, Sponsored by the
that you have been named bids.
two years ago today, Oc·
·
Marvin Kelly!
Racine Volunteer F ire
Defendant In a lega l action
Guardian o
entitled Virg inia Grogan
Iober 8, 1978, Sadly misSed
Department, at building In
Florence Me Laughl in
Taylor, Pl a intiff , vs .
by Bob &amp; Carrie Roush &amp; Bashan. . Factory choke
James Taylor, Defendant . 110) 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10,
guns only .
sons. Helen Manuel &amp;
T h is act10n has been 9tc
daughter.
assi~ned case No, 17,619
Gone, dea r Father, gone to 30 per~enl off greenware
Public Notice
~np tS pending in t he Com·
rest,
mon Pleas Court of Meigs
tor the month of october.
Away from sorrow, care &amp;
County, Pomeroy; Oh io,
ORANGE TiNP,
Drehel's Ceramics, 59 N.
pain.
45769,
REVENUE SHARING
Second
Avenue, Mid·
i The obj ect of the com·.
REPORT
· May you rest In peace, dear
dh;pOrl. m ·2751.
plaint is to annul a
The copy of the Budget
Father,
.
.G•llla County
marriage entered into on
for Revenue Sharing is
Until we meet again.
Jr;
Fairgrounds
August 12. 1960, at Mid·
available for public in·
YOST Wrecker Service, 24
.. Announcemen.ts
q leporl, Oh io.
spection between July 1, 3
hours
a
day,
wanted
1unk
. You, are requ ired to an·
1979andJune30,' 1980althe
Located 4 mi. west of
cars. Call John Yost, Route
I PAY highest prices
swer the complaint wit hin
clerk's home.
Gallipolis,
Oti. on u.s.
I
,
Rutland,
Ohio.CSn5,
twenty-eight da ys after the "'
N1na Robinson, oossible tor gold and silver
Rl. 35.
'
l~st publi cat ion of t his
Clerk coins, rings, fewelry, etc .
notice, which will be
Rl. 2, Coolville, Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Approximately 35 local·
Decorated cakes for ·•II oc·
P&lt;Jbli ~hed once ,e ach week
Ohio 45723 Shap, MiddlepOrt.
ly grown, top quality
cassions, character cakes
f or Sl )( success1ve week s.
{1 0 ) 8, ltt
beef steer talves will be
&amp; sheet cakes. Call 91'2-63.42
'l he last p~bl icat ion will bE!
or 91'2·2583:
rflade on Nove mber 5, 1980,
offered for ••leto 4·H &amp;
P iano Tuning · Lane
~d the twenty·eight days
FFA members looking
Danleis 742·29511 Tuning
f Or answer will commence.
and
Repair
Service
sJnce
SKTE
·
A·WAY
Will
be
for
slier feeding proop that da te.
1965, If no answer phone
dosed Oct. 8 through Oct.
1ects.
Call
C614) ·
, In case Of your failure to
446-4612, Ext. 221'11Wfur·
m ·2082.
17 · Reopen Sal.; 0 c I' 18 ·
an swe r or other w i$e
1 · card of Thanks ·
!her
details.
respond as r equi r ed by the
Fri. &amp; Also
Sat. 1~=::::;::::;~:;:~===
' Weds.,
Oh1o
Rules of Civil
nig~ts
7:30-10:00.
I WOULDLikelothanksaii ·· SHOOTING MATCH at . Open
F'.rocedure, judgment by
available
lor
private
par·
:1 7
· Yar&lt;l Sale
.mv friends, relatives, and · corn Hollow in . Rutaand.
·defaul t Wi ll be rendered
neighbors
lor
t
he
c~rds, ' Every Sunqay starting at
tles,
985-9'196or985'.1929
.
.
'
EMERSON
Johnson
af,ainst you for the relief
flowers, and
gilts 1 noon.
Proceeds being
d manded In the com residence, O.clober 8-9 from
received while 1 was a donated to the Boy Scout
Pa int.
· •
FOR SALE : FIREWOOD 10.5, Large size women's
Larry E. Spencer,
patien t at Veterans Troop249.12gaugefactory
Call, m ·3288
·clothing, bed, iove seal,
Clerk of Court,
Memorial Hospital.
choke gun only!
- - - - ----------'- - - ' lamps, other misc. items.
•
Meigs Countv, Ohio
Louise Bartels.
(10) 1. 8, 15, 22, 29111) 5, 6tc
BAKER ' S Busy Bee
PRE · SEASON
SALE ··
Ceramics, Tuppers Plains, SALE . Friday only. Across
S649 .1l0-·Mobile home wood
announces · their tall
Frye' s , Pennzlol,
burning systems. the only
classes, Tuesday from 10.2 from
Salem
St., Rutland.
HUD &amp; (J L approved wood
&amp; Thursday from 10. Women's suede jacket, size
r~---------------------- burner for mobile homes: &amp;2 &amp;7·10
7·10, No children under ' 14, SlS.oo, men's beige coat,
Unit comes complete with
10 please. Come make size
,j(), SlO~oo. Work boots,
wall vent slack. See them
beautiful
Christmas
100 $10.oo, Work boots,
at Kingsbury Homes Parts
I
presents.
geasonable size
size 100, sa.oo, curtains,
&amp; accessories at Route 124,
prices. 667:3~. Pauline few dishes, winter clothes,
Minersville, Ohio.
Or
Baker.
'
lamp.
·
pllone 992· 5587.

13

byOIIIFox

2416. Three piece bedroom
suite, call alter 4:30 742·
2416 .
.

REAL ESTAtE

-

.

Sunra.v gas range, one yea r
Old, used two months, H2·

Real Esllte - - a l
HOUSE FOR Rent. ·2
bedroomJ; With stove &amp;
refrigerator furniShed. m3090.
.

areas

"'

197J, TWo bedroom mobile
home partlelly fur nllhed,
1150.00 a month. Loc:atea ·Jn
Count ry Mobile Home
Park, on Rqute. 33, north bf
Pomeroy. 2&gt;17·3942.

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·Auction.... - I f lllloiiSiod.
Nef ............ ter acclclellts er '- al fiiiP lrfV.
OWNER: Rdl N. GISIIY
· TIRMS: CnllwCIIocllwlltl ......wet.D.
AUCTIONEER:
Howard
lleaaJey-I'IIHe
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*"m-M71
APPRENTICI AUCTIONIIR:

ORr A. MIIJ:tll ,_Ill IIU9UIN

Auc:llll•on"'INoirr Nete: Tile . . . . . . . Cllltla ...... '-\8
saleswln-. ..ae~-J..--.
WI! •uY OLD AND SJLV.It

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li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 8, 1980

down a clark stretch cif rural road
near ,this centra\ Ohio community
when be lilh large object 'lying in•
Ills path.
He thought it was· a bag of garbage. .
· It actually was Charles c.
· Meacham, i8, who had been sleeping
·in the mldd)e of the road. Meacham
•was])l"Onounced dead at the scene.
No one know~ how long Meacham
bad ~ lying there, flat on his
back, parallel to the center line with
his bead to the east. The road was
unlighted, with farm fi~ds and deep
drainage.ditches on both sides.
Several motorists saw him, but no
one stopped. One man said be was
afraid It was a set·up for a mugging.
But according to the Franklin
County coroner's report, Meacham
was in no shape to harm anyone.
Coroner William Adrion said the
young man had three times the
therapeutic level of Vallum in his
• blood.
Kessler's car dragged Meacham
389 feet Franklin County sheriff's

,Iraq's ground missiles killl80 Iranians

wards when It bit Meacham.
deputies said. The call'lf of death
Pollee did not arrive on the ilcene.
bas not been determined, pending
until
after the accident
reports on toxicolqgy· tests, a
About
five,bours later, half a mite
coroner'sspokesman said today. .
away,
Hillard
pollee fvund a groggy
' Neither Kessler, nor his .four ,
Dana
Hendricks,
19, of Hilliard,
passengers were Injured in the acsprawled
across
the
front seat af a
cident. No one was cited.
car
that
bad
rammed
a wooden
James
Stewart, 26, of Pi81n City
.
barrier
post
at
the
entrance
to a
was one of the motorists who saw
muillcipsl
park
bicycle
path.
Meacham before he was hit.
Hendricks said Meacham bad
He said be stopped for a moment,
been
driving the CIU" at about 1:30
but was afraid to get out of his car.
a.m.
when
It hit the post, He said he
That wali just after 4 a.m. on Sept.
fell
asleep
soon
after. that and could ·
20. After seeing Meacham, Stewart,
not
remember
what happened af·
drove about a mile and a ball .to the
·
Hilliard police station, where the terward.
Ralph
Ca~llo
of
the Franklin
dispatcher notified the sheriff's
CIHlllty
sheriff's
departn'lent
said he
'department.
·
believes
Meacham
passed
out
while
·Then Stewart returned to the
trying
to
walk
home.
·
scene. ~e ~d he '!£0ve ~t slowly
about f1ve times, still afraJd to stop.
'f ,' 'Ithoughtiflwllll;ldhavestopped
too !~ng, S?mebody would have got
Emergency squad runs
me, ,.e SaJd.
He said he saw Meacham move,
Three runs were made by !QCal i
pulling his legs up toward his body. ·
units
Tuesday, the Meigs EmergenSeveral eastbound cards passed
Meac!Uun during the time Stewa)t cy Medical Service Headquarters
watched. Stewart said he saw the . reports.
They Include 9:22 a.m. Syracuse'
headlights of Kessler's car jerk upUnit, Tammy Klein, Welshtown Hill,
to Pleasant Valley HosPital; transfer unit, 9:45 a.m., Ethel Evans,
charges, open flask and disorderly from VeteJ:IliiS Memorial to her
manner; George McDaniel, Mid- residence in Huntington; 7:05 p.m.,
dleport, $100 and costs, disorderly- Middlepo!:t Unit, Charles Pennington, Page st., to Veterans
manner; Dwayne Qualls, MidMemorial
Hospital.
dleport, ·$100 and costs, obstruction
of official business and $200 .and
costs, resisting arrest; Richard Herman, Middleport, ,0 and costs, lit·
teri!lg; $100 and costs each on three
additional charges Including
criminal mischief, disorderly manner and assault.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A new
Two defendants forfeited bonds,
sfudy of the tax burden in Ohio bas
one was fined and a fourth was
confirmed what many people
assigned work duties in the court of
already know: government Is taking
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
a bigger bite out of their paychecks.
. Tuesday night.
The Ohio ·Public Expenditure
Forfeiting bonds were Larry HenCouncil says federal, state.and local
dricks, Middleport, $31, and Jeffrey
govenunent tax collections in Ohio
DeLong, Pomeroy, $30, both posted
for 19'19-80 added up to $37.5 billion,
on speeding charges. Ronnie Pearup 14.9 percent from last year.
son, Pomeroy, appeared in court on · The rate of increase over the last
a charge of failing to pay old fines
decade Was twice that of the governand was ordered to work 21 days for
ment's consumer price Index, which
the village . to pay the fines·.
measures changes in the retail
Raymond Pullins, Jr., no address
prices of certain goods and services.
recorded, was fined $100 and costs
The private stUdy group says total
on a public intoxication charge.
19'19-80 tall collections In Ohio were
$24.7 billion more than for 1969-70.
n.t h¥ rta an ~ 0( 1M
percent, ~ to a consumer
price index boost af 98 percenL ·
"Although state and local government spending continues to increase
substantially and merits close observation, it Is obvious that a more
urgent need ex1sta to control federal
government taxation and expenditures," the council says in Its
October newsletter.
lt says federal taxes have more
than doubled since 1976, with Inflation moving taxpaye~ into higher
tax brackets each time they
received a salary increase to compensate for rising prices.
"Families are finding that
because of higher Social Security

16 cases terminated

Eight defendants were fined and
eight others forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hof·
!man Tuesday night.
They are Von S. Stewart, New
Haven, $350, driving while intoxicated; David Mora, Pomeroy,
$350, driving while intollicated;
Gloria Jean Alexander, Middleport,
$25, failure to yield; Jeffrey A.
Morris, Pomeroy, $45, speeding; Edward L. Amott, Racine, $25, left of
center; Clarence M. Mooney,
Gallipolis, J28, speeding; Danny M.
Griffith, Pomeroy, $43, speeding ;
Ralph Bush, Cheshire, $50, dlsOr·
derlymanner.
·' Fined in the court were Kenneth
R. Wilt, Minersville, $15 and costs,
speeding; 'Penny L. . Smith, Middleport, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while intoXIcated; Kevin D. Gallagher, Am·
· sterdain, $225 and costs and three
days in jail, driving while intoxicated; Anthony E . Ben·
tz,Racine, $100 and costs, possession
of marijuana; Bob Dugan, Middleport, •$100 and costs on two

JUDGING PROFILE - Students are shown in the pit judging soil
profile which affects p~t root growth. (Photo credit: Boyd A. Ruth, SCS.
USDA).

BAGHDAD, Iraq • (AP) - Iran
~ today the Iraqis used
ground-to-ground missiles for the
!irst time In the war, killing all many
as 180 Iranian civilians and wounding hundreds more In attacks on
!WO Irai1ian cities. Iraq's president, ·
apparently extending atteJnpts to
get Outside help or mediatiOn to set·
' Ue the confllct, sent top envoys to
four nations.
· But Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomelnl
predicted Iran would win the war
and said his goal was to take Islamic
government to Iraq, Tehran Radio
said. Iranlim planes oombed the out. ' skirisofBa~d.
.
~
. Iran said Iraqi Invaders
threatening Ahwaz, capital of
· 1Qtuzlstari. Province, were thrown
· back 13 miles, but Iraq said its
planes severely damaged a large
(actory there. Iraq also reported
Iranian attacks on the northeUtern
clty of Klrkuk wounded 18 civilians
and that . Iraqi anti-aircraft
~e Iranian warplanes away from

fire

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'northern cities of Erbll and
Secretary G. Wllliam Miller reporMosul.
ted tha( North Korea's communist
Iraq claimed Its f.orces "continued • governme'nt.was selling ammunition
to destroy en!!ffiY installations and to
and medical supplies to Iran, But he
strike at military and economic
said spare partS and other equlp·targetsdeeplnJranianterrltory,ln- . ment needed for ·Iran's U.S.flictlng , heavy ICJSSeS In life and
equipped military machioe are
equipment." But there was no .com.. · unavailable 011 the world market.
ment·on the mi88Ue claim or word on
The State Department said IIJ:'
the progress of its key offensive to
formation gathered by the four U.S,
complete; the conquest of the Iranian
electro%
"co rvation planes sent to
port of Khorramsbahr and move on
Sa11di
last . weejt was being
to the neighboring refinery city of
made ava" le to friendly cowitrles
Abadail,
in the war ~one to le$Sen .the threat of
King HUSSein of Jordan, brushing
air · attacks on · them. The Inaside American and British war- · fOI"IIll!tion . was rep(lrted going to
nlngs .following his declaratlem of
Kuwail · and the United Arab
SIIJIP&lt;irt for Iraq, said be would send
Emirates, botli major oil producers,
Jordanian troQpi to fight alongside
and Oman, as well as Saudi Arabia.
· In Moscow, President Leonid I.
the Iraqis If they were needed.. But
be said that was not lnunlnent yet.
Brezhnev and · Syrian President
The Jordanian port of Aqaba was
'Hafez Assad signed a treaty af friencrowded with about 40 ships, three
dship and cooperation that sources
times the normal nwnber, ·as supin Damascus said gave Syria, a
longtime foe of Iraq, the status of .
plies for Iraq were diverted there to
. be moved overland to Baghdad.
virtual membership in the Warsaw
li1 Washington, U.S. Treasury f act. But Brezhnev said the Soviet

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. Union is not going to intervene bt the said a woman and two children were
side. of · the· Shalt ai-.Arab estuary
Persian Gulf· war and warned the wounded, and !here was "some. were blocked by revolutiOI)UY lilwWest to stay out also.
dari!age to civilian Installations,"
ds battlln¥ stUbbornly in parts of the
At least · three Iranian planes
The Iraqis claimed '11 Iranian
portclty. --.
raided Baghdad, the Iraqi capital,
tanks, three other vehicles, two
The Iraqis on Tuesday were nipor.
about 8 p.m. Wednesday, and repor·
boats and a m!MUe base destroyed
ted in C9111rol of the city's port, With
ters in the ~ter of the city could in operations Wednesday and one
their artillery anci air fol!ce )lOUDsee large fires on !he outskirts for
helicopter · . sh.ot down. A comding Abadan and Its giant re&amp;lery 10
about 10 minutes. The planes ap- munique said two Iraqi"ll were killed
niiles down the Shalt ai-Arab. But
partllltlf', slipped through the city's · and 11 were wounded.
. neither Iraqi nor Iranian comIran's official Pars news agency
radar defenses undetected because
muniques reported aliy developsaid Iranian ·forces pushed back- ments on the Khorramahahrthere was no advance air raid alert.
There was an air raid alert in ' rraqi troops 13 mites from Ahwaz in
Abadan front Wednesday.
Tehran Wednesday evening, and an , fighting Wednesday after Iraqi arIn Basra, the Iraqi, port aerllll the
lranlan jumbo jet carrying Iranian . tillery shelled the city, klllliig 33
Sbatt ai·Arab, Valentin Medele, first
passengers from London via Paris people, most 'of them In a mU!tscy engineer of the Romanian trelghter
was dlver!e4 -to Mashhad, 440 miles . hospital. Pars said the Iraqis also
Olanestl, said his ship was aet.aflre
northeast of the Iranian capital,
rocketed Dezful, 80 miles north of
by Iranian shells and abandoned
Tehran Radio said It was not 1m- Ahwaz, destroying 40 houses and apTuesday. He .said five or als lblp8
medlately known if Iraqi planes at- parentiy killing or wounding "a
that left Khorramsbahr to aeell
tacked the Tehran area, however.
high,·thO!@! yet unknown nuiilber of
safety in the middle cl the Shalt a)Iraq also reported two Iranian air civilians."
Arab were sunk or damaged and .
attacks on "residential areas and
Reporters were barred Wedthat when the crew cl an Indian ahlp
economic Installations" in Ktrkuk,
nesday from the front lines at
jumped into the water ''Iranian ·
the oil center in northeast Iraq that
Khorramshahr, where Iraqi forces
machine guns opened up, hlttiJ18 '
is a frequent target. A. communique
trying to take control of.the Iranian
several of the Indians In the water.''

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GRAND OPENING - The rutland Fumlture Co. Is store of the company wia destroyed by fire last winter
observing grand opening in Its new quarters in and the new structure was recently completed IIi the
Rutland. The store is offering special bargains and will · same locatloo. Pictured are Herb Grate and Ron
give away some $4,200 merchandise prizes. Refresh- Hysell moving oat a bedroom suite purchased by a
ments are being served each day. The former main eustomer during the open bouse.

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:VOL. 31 . NO. 125

FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9,- 1980
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Tax burden eating paychec¥
That Is .less working time than
and income taxes, they cannot keep
required to pay their federal, state
.up with living costs just by getiing
and local govenunent tax bill for
wage gains that match escalating
this year.
conswner prices," the council said
Spending by federal,. state and
Tuesday.
"
local
govei'I!IDent ~ estimated at
Some public officials and .
$927
billion
for fiscal 1980, up by
economists have advocated a
more
than
$100
billion from 19'19.Sinsystem of tax indexing to solve part
of the probl~. The system involves,
among other things, annual adjustment · of income tax rate
brackets by a percentage to offset
CLEVELAND (AP)-Tbe U.S.
the previoW! year's inflation. ·
Department
af Energy bas been
The council said federal governasked
to
consider
aiding in
ment tax collections in Ohio in limo
struction
of
a
coal
gasification
plant ·
80 were up 2011 percent from fiscal
near
the
Ohio
River
in
'West
1969. State govenunent tax payments were up 225 percent from fiscal Virginia.
'nile .,......,. 01 Co., Oblo, and
11'111, wblle loeal go;etJiddlt _..
ConsoUdated
Natural Gaa Co. have
were up 104 percent from calendar
submitted
a
JlrOIMBIII to federal
llrnl.
.
The sales and use tax was the energy offlciala for study of a plan to
build the $2 bllllcn facility,
largest state revenue producer in
The plant would be operated by
Ohio for fiSC81 year 1980, yielding
Ohio
Valley Synthetic Fuela Co. of
$1.6 billion. Researchers said the
Pittsburgh,
owned by Soblo and Conpersonal income tax was Ohio's
.
solldated.
It
would be constructed on
second largest revenue produce~ at
1100
acres
near Point Pluant,
$1.1 billion.
W.Va.,
across
the Ohio River from
The group said average
Americans will work more than onethird of this year to pay their share
VETEIWIS MEMORIAL
of the nation's total estimated tax
AdmittedTanuny Bable, Long
bill of $820 billion. They will spend
Bottom;
Milton
Gary, Racine; Ethel
abnost three hours of each workday
·
Evans,
Huntington,
W. Va.; Denrill .
to earn enough money to pay for
MCKinney,
Rutland;
Cbarlei. Penhousing, food, beverages, recreation
nington, Middleport.
and household operation in 1980.

Meigs· Future Farmers of
America (FFA) were team winners
and ·Bill Hoicomb, Meigs FFA, Bill
Dy~r, Meigs FFA, and A. J.
Willbarger, Racine FFA, were first,
second, and third place scoring Individuals ln. Meigs County's FFA
Land Judging Cootest held recently
at the Gene Yost farm in Sutton
Second and third place teams
were_Raclne FFA and Eastern FFA
respectively. There were 26 students
participating.
In the contest, 361nch deep pits are
dug for each team In d!Herent fields
Within walking distance of each
other. ·The lite and 11011 are
examined by contestants to determine slope, erosion, and needed conservation pracUces for each site.
Tbe"pits were dug by Fritz Teaford

ce 1880, total govemmental u- ·'
pendlturea in the United States bave :
Increased by 514 percmtL
:
Tbe council said two-thirds II. the · .
tmase can be attributed to the :
federal govenunent and the rest to :
state and local goumment llpeD- :
ding,

Federal ~d sought.for plant:
Galllpolls;
Two advanced coal palflcatlan

con. ·teclmologles would be Ulled at the

Discharged-Jerry !Wwe. Barbara

Land judging contest held

township,

NEASURING STEEPNESS - Participants are shown detennlning
steepneu of slope which helps determine what crop rotation Is best suited
lorUie field. (Photo Credit: Boyd A. Ruth, SCS.USDA).

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oung_mart res w 1 . yzng
on road ·in Frank·l in ·county
HIWARD, Ohio· (AP) - oean R.
KesSler was driving aroWJd 50 mph

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of the Racine Gas Company.
· The contest . was judged by Bill
Shumate, retired SoU Conservation
Service (SCS) Soil Scientist, and
Boyd Ruth, SCS Acting District ConservaUonlst. They were asailted by .
Aaron Sayre, Tim Simpson, and Arthur Arnold, vocational agriculture
instructors of Southern, Eastern,
and Meigs respectively.
The Meigs Soil and Water ·Conservation Diatrlct sponsors the land
j!ldg!ng contest as part of Its
educational~Atrophy will be presented to the
Meigs team and caih prizes of $i5,
$10, and $5 will be awarded to the top
three individuals at the Melga
S.W.C.J). annual banquet and
meeting to be held Nov. 10 at the
Multi-Purpose Bulldin8 in Pomeroy.

Davis, Paul BUrns, Cecll Kincaid,
Wanda Wood, Floyd Cummins, Mal-!
vinDarst.
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SEEKS DIVORCE
Anthony L. Cole, Pomeroy, filed
suit for divorce In M8lgs County
Common Pleas Court against Glenna J. Cole, Coltunbus.

plant, said Consolidated spotemwn
JQBellb Conti. .
.
Tbe p-opoul to the DOE illdodlll
a ......,. fOl" a $5.1 m1111an
feasibility study, with tbe goveur
ment banclllng $U mllllllll of tbe tab
and the two companies llbarll!s tbe

.

Two. terrorists hanged in Turkey
ANKARA, Turkey - ~ convicted terrorists dropped through the
,gallows floor here before dawn Wednesday in the firSt executions in
Turkey in eight years. The hangings were taken as a grim warning
from the new military regime that terrorists are in mortal danger If
they·reswne their activities.
One of the condemned men, a leftist, put the rope IU'OWI4 his awn
neck and shouted "damned be colonialism. Damned be faaclsm," a
,Turkish newspaper reported,
.
The terrori!ts' lawyers, the pt'OileCUtor and a Mosllllll clergyman
.'. watcbed as rightist Mustafa Pehlivanoglu, 22, and leftlat Necdet Adali,
24, were ban&amp;ed inalde Ankara'• mulmum security prison,

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Drama encJs without any problems
COLUMBUS, Ohio- A man on a one-day pass from a halfway house
for ex-i:OIIvlcts barricaded hlmaelf in a stolen CIU" for about eight hours
early today, threatening tO shoot himself If pclllce came near.
The drama ended at about 8 a.m. when Rtissell RUssi, 19, fell asleep
and was apprehended by police. He wali charged With aggravated robberll( and carrying a weapon while still a felon.
Reynoldsburg Pollee Sgt. Charles Rausch said as many as 100 of·
fleers were on the scene at various Urnes during the night on a coimtry
road on the eastern edge of Columbus.

resL
According to CIQI, the DOE liked

for proposals fol: synthetic fuels
projecta. Tbe qnecy Ia ezpected to
make a declalon by December on
whlch project studies It wiD fund.
•

LOCALEXBIBIIVR
Meredith Flll'!llll II. PwMIOJ wW
be an ublbttor at the 1810 North
~can lntemalllllal UYeiJtock
~'Ill, ~ to Harold
Worllman. Manager of the bpi.
wonm.n IBid u.t Meredith baa ea. tered one bead II. Hli!efmd f« competition at the North ,American International, lll1 event which will take
place during Nov, 8-22111 LoulavWe,
~- '!'be NAILE will lie held at the ·
Kentuc$y Fair and Expnelt.klo Cen-

ter.
Tbe North American IptemaUonal
Uvestock Exposition Ia enteriulltl
seventh COIIIJeCUtive year tbla
aeuan, and thole wbo COI!tpele will
vie for more than
In total
. premillllll aDd &amp;warda.

.-.ooo

ELBERFELDS
'

WIMBLEY
· TIES. .
.,

Our new fall selection
of ready tied tiel end

CHRISTMAS
.
STITCHERY .

four-In-hinds. Solid
colors end nHt pit·
terns.

r~ew

The

popU Ia r wktth.

CHRISTMAS KRAFT,
FABRICS, IDEAS &amp; ITEMS

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: Crackdown coming on dog fights
: COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A newspaper report says law enforcement
: officials soon will seek indictments against about 20 people In five
: counties on dogfighting charges.
· The Colwnbus Dispatch said in Its Wednesday editions that It would
; be the first Ume proseCution has been sought since a state law making
: dogfighting a felony was passed in J,_. -~
; Officials conflBcated !.Qpit bull terriers ~ training equipment in
· raids last month In Montgomery and Hamilton counties, No arrests
: were made In either Incident. Instead, officials are taking m.iden~
, directly to grand juries, the newspaper said.

.'

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: l9hn Doe defendants to he named
. COLUMBUS, Ohio • Two "Jolm Doe" defendants lri a $10 million
· civil damage suit filed In connectloo With the shooUng death of a
· Cohunbus Internist soon wW be Identified, an attorney said Wed. nesday.

· PhyslclarPiawyer David Ucker and podiatrist Donald Plotnick II.
· Columbus and Ralph DeLeo cl Muaachusetti have been named in the
' suitbythewidowofDr. Walter Bond, whowaskllledonOct. 31,1977,
Mrs. Bond has moved to New Orleans. Her attorney there, Michael
. Ogden, Bjlld the U.S. District Court suit will be amended to Include
. names of the previoualy unidentified defendants.

~ N!' link found in fatal shootings

.

PROORESS - Work at the site of the new Racine United
Methodist Church Is progressing. Recently ground was broken for the
new structure. A "!'all bas now been erected
at the rear of the I~ Block
'

bas been delivered for the first floor of the new church. The structure'
abov~ the first floor will be made of wood. Mr. and Mrs. E; A. Wingett

have given the land for the new church.

.

Bacon gives Neece, W e.lker jail ·terms
.

I

Department on Sept. 30 in whieh approximately three-quarters af a ton
cl marijUana was confiscated.
Well!eryesterdayentereda voluntary plea of guilty to the charge.
In another case, James Gillenwater,
3~, Kanauga, entered a plea of innocent to charges of aggravated
trafficking 1n drugs when he was
arraigned before Meigs County

Edward D. Neece, 31, Route I,
Mlddleport,enteredapleaofnocontest (technical plea of guilty) to a
chatge of vehicular homicide Wednesday In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Neece was charged as a result of
an traffic accident Aug. 15 near
Langsville in which a cblld, Terry
Rathburn, was struck and kllled by a
car driven by Neece. "I:he grand jury

~
~~di=t
~~s~::~~~·
Bigfoot
caused the death of the child, a

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·-Cuttilg .._.

-Bultllnbale•~

WINNING TEAM - Melp' ll'innlng team Wu, left Ill r1811t. BW
Holcomb, Bin Dyer, Mark Goellein, and Mike Goeglein. (Photo credit:
Boyd.A..Rutll, SCS.USDA).
••

TOJS

lHE FASRIC SHOP
115 w. 2nd St.

992·2244

Pomeroy, Oh.

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sa.se

fOI YOURSBF

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. SAl!

OR fOR

us

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St.IOW.MI\.8YTIII

CHIISTMAS . .

,.

ELBERFELD$ II
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The Meigs County Grand Jury did
not return any lndlctme.nta aa a
result · of the pyramid games In
Meigs County when it met Wednesday,
The · grand jury, however, waa
briefed by pJ'G8eCiltor Fred W. Crow,
m, on the progress of the iJp
vestglgation of the pyrainld ociMme
In Meigs County.
,
In other action, the grand Jury cld .
return four Indictments. Indicted
were Robert RJffle, Pomeroy, for
breaking an entering In COIIjllciiOII
with an Incident In Seplember at the
Ed Nottingham residence. Several
iteml, including to&lt;ill were taken.
Breaking and entering Ia a felcln;y II.
the fourth degee with a penalty of
not less than als montha nor more
than five years In a j1(vper penal liP
stitution of the State and a One cl up
to$2,500.
Ra1ffiODd E. Brown, Coal G...we,
11'118 indicted for brealdng IIlii . .
terinc In conjuctlon with an 1Dtldel¢
in September at the Jack Spirel
residence. .

Harrilomule,

ISIIIIult Ia a leiCIII)' cl the - cSetpw, with I penalty II. DOt ...
thaD two uor. mon
10 ,_,. Ia •
pruper penaliDitiiiiUOIIII!d aiDe«

SILEU3
'

.:.Quled Fabrics
-St~

.

Sl... WIMILRY Tll!l

BUY JIOW '

Jury fails to
indict players
- · ---

waa indicted oo c:barpl II. MMIQae
as~~~~ult as a result cl an Incident In .
July .In which Harold Jlndneu, a
neighbor, wu !lbot.
F~

SALE 15.&amp;3

-Diristmas Table CWIIS
-sewing.... Machines

Washington state by averaging bet·
ween 200 and 300 miles a day through
the underbrush, creekbeds and bottoms to their new home in Oblo.

Harold Damell,

,I

S).SO WEMILEY Til.

-Plate Mals

.

may be roaming Ohio hills

: B(JFFALO, N.Y. - The beating death of an e14erJY black man
. whql8 body was found In tbe trunk c1 bla lui Wedneada)' ajJparently
: has no link to the fatal Shootlnga of four black males last month, the
: county prosecutor says.
,
District Attorney Edward C. Cosgrove II. Erie County sal.d at a news
. conference that Parlar W. EdwardB, 71, an Independent cab driver
· fnm Buffalo, wu apparently bludgeoned to death With' a blunt Instrument In a robbery.
.
•
l 1be four vlctiml1 were 1!bot In 1 31 bOur period fnm Sept. U.H. AD
:. were shot on streets or in pafked cara.

.

agent. He entered a plea cl inDocent
yesterday lind his trial was let· fOl"
Nov. 24. Bond was set at $5,000.
Aggravated trafficldng in drjlga, aa
char&amp;ed in the lildlctment, Is a first
degree felony With a penalty of not
leSs than five years nor more than 2S
years In prison with a reqwmnent
of five years of actual Incarceration.
·

.
·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A for·
fired in the crea!Jlres' direction.
mer big-game. hunter believes that
"The creature had its back turthe elusive· creature known as
ned," said Gardiner. "After the shot
Bigfoot may be roaming the hills of
was fired, the hunter saw the Bigfoot
soutbtlrn Ohio, along With other · drop its right shoulder. It may have
members of Its family.
been wOU!IIIed.
"I lillY there's a family, more than
Gardiner said be spent part of the
one," said Robert Gardiner, 40, of
pastweekendtaklngplastercastsaf
Columbus In an Interview Wedfootprints tha~ he and members of
lltlSday evening.
·
his team found in ravines.
Ganliner, president of the North
. "There were six different size of
American Bigfoot Research Team,
footprints," be 'said. "The whole
said be discovered footprints of the
place was crowded with footprints of
creatures In the Wayne National different sizes and weights."
Forest, four miles west of McArthur
The smallestfootprint measured 8
on U.S. 50..
,
inches long and the largest was 17'rit
"They have been shot at 13 times
Inches long and nine lncl!es wide.
since Aug. 24," said the Lexington,
"They're from the Pacific Norl{y., native. "The same two people · thwest, migrating here from Mt. St.
have been doing the shooting."
Helens due to the volcano eruption."
Gardiner said the two Vinton
Gardiner said.
County lunters saw a pair of · He said the creatures spanned the
· creaturesonAug.24andoneofthem nearly 3,000.mile distance from

misdemeanor of the first degree.
Upon receiving the "no con~"
plea, JudgeJolm C.Baconsentenced
Neece to the county jail for a period
of six months and fined him $500.
The·Jail sentence was suspended and
, Neece was placed on probation for
twoyeats.
Joe Welker, 24, Pomeroy, was
1
given a sentence of not less than six
montbsnormoretbanfiveye.arslna
proper penal institution when be appeared before Meigs County Conr ·
mon Pleas pourt Judge John C.
Bacon Wedtiesday 1on a bill of Infonnation charging cultivation of
marijuana.
The charge of filed In the bill of Information by Meigs '. County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow
m Is a felony cl the fourth degree.
Welker Willi charged followil)g ~ rajd
by the Meigs County Sheriff's'
,~,

Common Pleas Court Judge Jolm C.
Bacon Wednesday.
. Gillenwater was Indicted by the
grand jury in July, this year, and
was just taken into custOdy Tuesday
by Gallia County authorities.
Gillenwater was charged as a
result of an incident in Meigs County
in July, 1979 in which a quantity of
I.SD was sold to an undercover

u.a

weaihei-fo~
Lon bi tbi low lOt. P8rtJ.y dell!lf Frlda1.lfl&amp;'-lll

uptofl,IIJO.

Clear hmlpt
tba mid IDIIUJIPII' 'Ill. C'IJince afnlaMII'..O ,__ hmlptud JO
)III'Nit P'rlclay. Wlnda ftl'llble 11M tbiD lD lllpll .....pt

D

~ tliDII'IJIIIL
i 11 .. .
came a al'llllll II. e raid llepL II, 111

whlcb Melp OduniJ Sbdf· oow•"ated iMI ''"'Meir ttne-

' d Ollltl'a II st-llltardaJ llllwlb flllllda7:Faiftllraalb

\ the periGd.lfllblla . . uppll' . . lalllllclwtiiiiiWrdiJ, Wll'lllllll to .
. tba ........ IIlii lolllr '1111 bt .......,' ._In ............ to the
Jllldotlll......, 111111 ...,., w . . . udlll tl!llllkl to IIIII*' ...
MGiiday~, \ -· -

'

MJchae1 Woollrd, lfemloekaro..,
Wll,llldlcted far treMc+l~ . . .

.
RBCEIVES PIRST PLAal: -

--·
'l'l!a 11:11tem lf1lll'
School BIDd recelftd ftnl ~ In the D09Ice dlvlaloo
at Athens on SaturclaJ, Oet. 4. s.lar '-1 nw•.._,

with -the trophy are frGm left to rl&amp;bt: DeniBe.
White, Beth Riebel, Connie Stout, back, Kathy Pooler,
April Parker, Laura Eichinger, and Kenny N....,ll ..
. '

shown

'

•

quaaWB II..- of~

tnf.
flcldDc In llrap, ....... pel Ia tbe

lnclletment Ia a felGIIJ of tba foal1h
degree.

.

,

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