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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

.

th4i

.

'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

e

. .

.

. 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.''

•

•

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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enttne
~

:VOL. 31 . NO. 125

FIFTEEN CENTS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9,- 1980
-

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).

..

•

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

- ---

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.
•
.

'

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,

-

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

I

.

'

.

: 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.

.'

'

: 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

.

(

•

,

·-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.

,

·

sa.se

fOI YOURSBF

~
I -

-

. SAl!

OR fOR

us

.....

St.IOW.MI\.8YTIII

CHIISTMAS . .

,.

ELBERFELD$ II
l

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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.

.

,

�Meigs faces Ironton
•
big SEOAL Contest
.

. 2-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 9, 1980

Opinions ·&amp;
Comments

(TfA

fO~ WO~ ~~~-'rel£G0a.~

1-lUt.~E

...

·

·, .0 t(; 9EAT IT, GOI..~ILOCK~.... .

~ . 1n ·

"T~E STO~~

UNi 'S ~eN C~~NGEt;&gt;..
N080l&gt;Y G_ETS n~ A

By LANCE OLIVER
· The Meigs Marauders face

proliilbly thell' lnoet difficult . and

· ~E~R'S .~V A~'t'MOr&lt;e.

THE DAILV SENTINEL
( USpS 145-MO)

DEVOTED TO TilE

rNTERESTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

most~conteat of~ lieaiiOn
Friday nisJrt as they travel to Ironton to' battle the league Co-leading
Tigers.
Ironton, 2-&amp;-lln SEO~ action, Is
lied for the first place spot with
Jackson. 1be ·Tigers and the Ironmen who faced each other In thew
SEOAL season openers batUed to a
7-71ie.'
.
PreseaSon predictions had placed
the two teams at the top of e league
· and Meigs .will have to upset the
leaders to prove the pnJg~~ostlcaton
wrong.
Last week, IHS rolled over the
Athens Bulldoga on Athens turf by a
who make up the heart of the Eastern lineup. Front
· EAGJE ~OR FOO'I'IiALL PLAYERS - 1be
score of U-14. Though AHS gained
row, l•r; Greg Wigal (23), Greg.SCarbrough·(64), and
Eutetn Eagle grid team under Head Coach Buddy
more yards nl8hing (AHS-191, IHSRichard Bearhs (81). BaCk row- Dennis Durst (31);
Moon cu:entiy OWII8 a .very respectable H JBIII'k,
1118) and more yards through the air
Ray Werry (52) , Rodney Keller (73) and Mike Welch
~ Is a favorite to be In the l'1llllling for the SVAC
(AHS-167, IHS-133), the game was
champiOMhip. The Eagles are led by ~en seniors . (72).
never In doubt aa the Tigers led 28 to ·,
oat halftime.
Ironton '3howed a balance attack
In that game 8s' quarterback Brent
Wllcoxen passed for two TDs and
four different Tigers ran for the
.
.
other four scores.
Meigs Head Coach Olarles Olancey does not think his team II Intimidated by Ironton. "We're confident," he said of the 1IJICCIIIIln« conEAST MEIGS - Friday evening, components fl. Eastern's "Big own a 4-2 mark. 1be teams who have test, "and I don't \hiDk we 1!1'1! InOle Eutern Eagles travel to South- Green Machine."
beaten Southwestern have gone 1~1 timidated. We 1!1'1! going to pay
alii I m.for an Important SVAC grid · ·. According to Coach Moore, South- elsewhere to add to the Highlander bl!sically
11111111 game. We
western 1s made up of many "good credibility. Southwestern lost both always mate IIOIJie minor adcontest. Both leaml own 4-2 ret'Oida
performers and solid players". The games by a natTOW total of just 10· justments, l!ut there will be no
and are c:umnt1y In tbe running for
theSVAC championsblp.
'
H1gh1ander8 have at least two four- points.
wholesale changes."
Coach Buddy Moore said his
year men Ln tallback Scott Russell
Game time Is 8 p.m.
The Meigs team should be healthy
Eagle~~ "bave to play an error free
and
Jay keys
Burleson.
Thelequarterback
two players were
In last r
game" against the welHea8oned
. llilbJandei'a.
week's 5U romp 0\'er Hannan, W.
COIICb Moore added tbat Ln order Va.
~II rushed for 162 yards and
to butld IIUL'C ¢11 drives .fila aquad
five touchdowns. Ria uperlence and
Will
to ...bUlb a steady runD!nl game, to open Its accurate determinatiOn make him one of the
..
pulincpme.
•
!,ague's premier backs. The
Lut ·week, Greg WlgsJ. hit on Eastern staff noted. that Russell Is
out f/.13 Jlllll8el for 1.24 yarda. · an exceptional rwmer.
Several of tbolle pua plays were .to ' Burleson Is . noted for his hard
thrvwlng. 1be Hlgblander ·quarII1II'HIUidld Dave Wolfe and later
terback likes to hit his main target 6resulted lniCOI'ell:
3 Dale Newl.eny, who'is the team's
Allo a week qo, the Eastern line
Leading receiver as well 8s a great
p1a1ed an oulltandlnc pme to pave
blocker.
·
the way for the agile Eutern back·
field. Butern's big line wiD play a· .
.Coach ~olm. J!!!!!U
big · part· · In Friday's contest,
eepeci•D~ In control1lng the line of

Lei len of opiDJon are welcomed. Th~y shwld M less thaa 30CI w·Dnis long (or .s ubje&lt;"t to reducttoo by the edilor) and mud be signed with the slgaee's address. Name!t may be • ·ithheld upon
publlcation. However, oo requ~l, namts will be disclosed. uners ~boold be in good taste, ad-

, dressing lsslles, norpersooalltles.
PubiJsbed dally e:tlcept Satu.rda.Y by The Ohio Valley Publishing Campaay- Multimedia, IDe. ,
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio t5769. Bu.siDts&amp; Office Phone 992- Zl5&amp;. Edit() rial Phone !m-2157.
SHood class pus Wee paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
.
National advertising repre!#Dtalive, Landon Associates, 3llit Euclid Ave ..• Cle_velaod, Obi~
44115.
The Assodated Press Is er.tluslvely ectHied to tbc use for publication of all news dispatches
cred.lkd to the newttpaper aod abo tbf local n e\o\'5 publlsht'd herein.
PubUsher
Robut Wingett
General Mgr. &amp; City Editor
Robert HoeOicb
News Edlwr
r'7'::
Dale RoUJceb1 Jr.
Adv. l\olaoager
~~
Carl Ghetn
1Slffiil:1 .........._.._-,-, ~=·

~v

....

HIGH

Ohio editorial
commentary

COST

'

MARIETTA TIMES: "Mariettans who fill their glasses
at the kitchen sink are drinking ground water. More than
half the people in the United States use ground water. So
the current controversy over the possible contamination of
water sources affects most of us.
" Locally, one area industrial plant " - Amerian ·
Cyanamid at Willow Island, W.Va. - is on a list of potential ground water contaminators, So are 21 plants in Ohio.
That doesn 't mean they are guilty.
"And industrial finns have a legitimate complaint
·against Senate plans to charge the innocent as well as the
guilty for cleaning up existing waste dumps. The fair way
would be to find the violators and make them pay.
.
"Nobody seems to be opposed to some kind of federal
legislation for contairunent and cleanup of toxic wastes. It
is needed. Just as sorely needed is an accurate list .of toxic
waste dump sites which are actually dangerous. The
premature release of alisfof mere suspects gives a bad
image for some industrial plants which don't deserve it along with plenty who do."
. CINCINNATI ENQUIRER : " An exceptionally large
number of Maine voters went to the polls for the express
purpose of voicing their support for nuclear energy.
"On the ball.ot was a proposal from anti-nuclear forces to
compel the closing of Maine's existing nuclear power
facility and to prevent the construction of additional installations.. .. When Maine voters weighed the pros and
cons, they saw the imporjance of a future in which nuclear
energy plays a part.
.
"The anti-nuclear strategy has been embraced by those
who, for reasons not altogether clear, want a shrinking rather than an expanding - future. They want less consumption, less production and inevitably, fewer jobs.
_
"That's a philosophy with which the nation 's 'haves' can
perhaps feel comfortable. But a future of scarcity is less
than ideal for those who seek to move up the economic and
social ladder - those who will sorely need the jobs that an
expanding economy will produce.''

MEPtUM

COST

HOUSIN~

HOUStNG

Eagles face Southwestern
·i n .important SVAC contest

rur

Carter within reae!h of re-election, if....
WASillNGTON (AP) - The numbers, the polls, the states - they all
come out Ronald Reagan's way. But President Carter is within reach of a
re-election .~mebac~, if the issues and the big states break his way.
And the only safe election bet, with a scant month to go, Is hedged.
Republican Reagan is well ahead in the column that counts, rated the
leader in 25 states with 236 electoral votes. National surveys of public
opinion give him the edge; the latest AP-NBC News poll shows Reagan
favored by a seven-poiritmargln.
'
Carter's South is Likely to crack; Reagan'sWest Is more secure.
The two biggest states seem true to fonn, but Reagan aide James A.
Baker says the candldste Is In more soUd command In California, ·for 45
electoral votes, than Carter Is In New York, f~r {1.
Independent John B. Anderson threatens to lure away votes that could
be vital to Carter in such sl;ltes as Pennsylvania, Michigan, WiscOnsin,
Connecticut and Oregon. .
An Associated Press survey of the campaign situation state by state
showed Reagan rated the leader for 236 electoral votes and €arter for 141,
with 171 in states now coilsldered too close to forecast.
But those appraisals are based·on polls and the soundings of state
politicians one month before the balloting. H incwnbency has put Carter
on the defensive in a time of economic trouble, it also makelhim the candidate with the power to influence events; Reagan says he Is bracing himself In case~~ an "October surprise."

Furthennore, such pivotal states as Texas, Dlinols, Pennsylvania and ,
Florida are rated among the tos8up states In the AP survey. So li ·:
Massachusetts, ,although the trend there appears to be toward Carter. ,.
Among them, they have 110 electoral v!)les.
,
Reagan now Is rated the leader in Michigan and New Jersey, both '
Republican states in 19'16, and in Qhio, which Carter won In the last elec-. ,
tion. Those states have another 63 electoral votes.
·
. ~
Carter Is going to need most of those states to win a second tenn. .
.J
Carter won his first tenn with 'l/11 electoral votes•.J~ 'lT more than be
had to have. It was the narrowest.electoral vote margin In 110 years. Now
a dozen of the 23 states he carried last time are rated ~ low!P" or as ~
Leaning toward Reagan. Five states that went Republican In 1~ are con- .1;
sidered too close to project.
..,
The AP-NBC poll, completed Sept. 24, showed 42percent of likely voters , ~
favored Reagan at that point, 33 percent Carter and 13 percent Anderson, ;
with the rest scattered or undecided. The margin of error wu4 percent, •&lt;•
which could make It a deadlock in popular support.
,
That Included the current preferences of people who said they ~ven't •.. 1
really decided which c:aDdidate to .support on Nov. 4, and Reagan held a
,~
similar 9 pointlead among that group.
But there are blitts that some l&amp;!ues may cut Caqer's way In the final .,
weeks. The poll refiectl a modest Increase in public optimlsm about the
future of the economy.

.

By Don Graff
and with which they are designed to
Automakers aren't the only ones compete to keep at home some of the
turning out a product that is a small-investor dollars pouring Into
sluggish mover on the American the gold market.
market.
Since the United States has of.
There is also the U. S. Mint. The ficially sworn off gold for monetary
gold pieces it began offering for sale purposes, the arts series Is
in July have notprovedthehuge sue- designated "medallions" Instead of
. cess that might have been expected "coins." That could be part of the
HH bonds, whose hol&lt;fers receive inwith •a supposedly gold-hungry problem.
terest checks twice a year, no.w earn
public.
The foreign competition is presen6.5 percent.
Introduced with considerable faf)o ted as coinage of the various realms,
Congress recently gave the
fare, the first issues of the series although there is some debate as to
president authority to raise ·rates by
honOring notsbh! Americans in the the accuracy of the claim, But it
as much as one percentage point
arts feature painter Grant Woed on · may for that reason have greater apduring a six-month period.
the one-ounce medallion and singer
peal to collectors who view the
"Giving small savers a fair return
·Marian Anderson on the half-&lt;~wtce medallions as being In a ·different
and encouraging increased savings
size. All of late September,' in excess class- valuable and decorative, but
in this country are integral parts of'
of 180,00&gt; of the former and 160,000 of withoot the m~que of coins.
,
our efforts to reduce · inflation and
the latter had been sold.
The Mint's medallions are
provide tiie ' enormous invesbnent
Mint people aren't saying how this available for original purchase only
needed to revitalize our economy in
compares with expectations, but do by mail, which also could be part fl.
the 1980s," Miller said in .a
acknowledge that "we'd like to sell the problem. They can be ordered on
statement.
more." And in hopes of doing so, fonns obtainable at U.S. pOst offiCes
The Treasury announcement said
they are extending the sale period, at a vlll'}'ing charge based on the
all outstanding Series E, EE, H an~ .
originally scheduled to end Aug. 30, going free-market price .of gold.
HH bonds and "Freedom Shares' · through Oecember.
Mail Ordft mlly be a practical mersavings notes will benefit from the
Neither are they Inclined to com- chandising method for reaching the
higher interest rates.
)lare sales with those of foreign min- mass market, but It takes conlings, which continue to sell briskly siderable romance out of dealing In

Higher savings bond
rate given approval

,

Ene~iY: a. subject

.

a precious commodity.
The problem certall!!Y does not lie
in the raw material itself since the
bcxrn In gold shows no sign of
abating. Under the stimulus of everhigher prices, even the moribund U.
s. mining industry Is picking up.
Long marginally profitable mines
are now more than that .and new
strikes· have been reported within
recent weeks in California and
Nevada.
•
All for coina, witli each jolt to
world economic and political
stability the demand for them
grows. Among the . more popular ·
issues with American buyers are
Mexican peso pieces, In six
valuations f1'001117Dth of an ounce fl.
gold to 1.ZOWices, and Canada's one-.
ounce Maple Leaf.
.
The . top of the line, however,
remains SouthAfrica'sKruggerand.
More than 29 million have been sold
worldwide In the last decade, at a
total weight of 902 tons fil!uWon and·
a cui-rent value of $18 blillon. Sales!
in 1979 alone came to $1.5 billion.
To keep the rising price of gold
from pricing the Kruggerrand out of

.

' d'

r

8C1"""•1e.

r.

t:
1'

:·

l

TadaJ'•
I

,

(AP)

-

7:00to3: . Saturday

i/f

.
.

Fri., Oct. '10th-. 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. &amp; Sat.,
Oct. 11th......10 A.M. to 6 P.M.
BRING IN THE .OLD METAL' THAfS lAYING &lt;AROUND YOUR HOME.
IT MAY BE GOLD OR SILVER. EVERYONE HAS SOME OLD BROKEN
RINGS AND JEWELRY. TO TURN INTO CASH. WE'LL ~ECK YOUR
GOODS FREE - NO&lt;OBUGATIONS

An

BUYING ALL KINDS OF GOLD. ALSO BUYING

u. 5. SILVER COINS (1964-BEFOR~)

Paying Highest Prices for Your Unwanted or Damaged Jewelry

,

~'*~
~~

Lan7
.
lllmcm Oeardlae
andO'Brien,
David .
Stem
and New .....,. Nell . Olllrmai!
Alab Cclllal, head cf tile ....... .
Labar RllatJ!m CC!Iuwnlttee, In 1
... dltdl l!lrplidaa - - tbat
llepD at • p.m., EDT wu-ta~
......... !Dift .... lmllbllan..
· .,._ It wu - · ODbeD . .
.. ., · - lilt ..., bid "r-s...,
......... JD prta :-faw Gil I D1W
• ...,... cwltiad bltw- tba
· MIA l!lllil .Ill
111 We bape to
11m d
dft•DII llltlld w1tb1i1

*

I .

Ir

·a a

:

.,

tbeaattftdep;''

s

I

I'

. . • •

.... •. d 111'1 Jllltlltllllt lllrt 1111
a a 1 r ~ 1i'rlda1 • .....,. aa .

.. .

lw••

II

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

~~

2

li

-

, ......

?L

....
..........
r;:u;. •:..:"!•.

,~

9

•

Cf~q-

PAYING

OlD GOLD WAtCHES
DENTAL GOLD
CLASS RI.NGS
.
ALL TYPE ~GolD JEWELRY
. . All GOLD RINGS .

GolD BRIDGES and TEETH
Brought In Any C~dltlon
According ht Kere &amp;..Size

CLASS RINGS --

.

.

- MEN'S
-· -

-

'15- to- '40

'20 .to 5150 "

.,

WOMEN'S . '

'

WEDDING BANDS_ ·

'

l'etEN'S _

·'10 1D '35

'

WOMEft'S ·

• to '24 •

Condition Unimj)ortent

.

-.

ANYTH=~I:iRKED

STERUNG SILVER
.SILVER COINS
SILVER FlATWARE
TRAYS
· &lt;'
STERLING SERVINGS~,..

a.Aiif\v£S:
:;
.\

CANADIAN COINS - U. s;
('65 to '69)

Buying Silver at ~he Dally,Closing

Prlf&amp;

- .

'

BUYING IIOOSTR-IAL GOU) ~ SILVER SCRAP
· PAYING CASH

.,

,

p!l ll •.•
. ' III. I ... ~~-.

••

'

I iij,IIIIJ ......

I _. ••• flied
1'1........ ,,. oud•+ 'I Ne1·
I I . I
'l'l!e iiiiiD

l!llldi':

A~ _Buying Wheat Pennies
(1~1958)

WE WILL BUY 1 OUNCE SILVER INGOtS_AT '20.00 EACH _,

__ ·"...,·--o" ......

9

,b.f)?.frc

We are Buying Gold Filled -

WI

tid

10K -14K ~ 18K IN ANY CONDinON -

.

. BUYING

' ..,. · · - · aid Cllilti ad lfltll tba
MIA
''id s.pt. t '1'hiJ llilll
W411 d 'tba rHMflll NwolaJe
viC
9 ad, blat l'lllllpa llld

Energy Dep•rtment ~
eefunetee tile euneat 'dnnwtlcJ
clrude4l JRIIIPly at 117 billlll! 1
barnll, i 'P"iCIIJ tbat .WIIIId m; ;
deed leat far t1 ,_..If tm 1.S at '
tile JJ'It nte cl 1.7 ~
e'
,..., Bal .., aboJd .,. IIIIIIIII If I

,

Open: 7;00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri .

.

O!mml··-

.

:r:•"•·

992- 2709 or 992-6611

.

....

' 'rile

JI'"Nt "• =n ' ;e _

YORJt

Middleport, 0.

'IN THE SEARS CATALOG ST~RE AT 108 ·WEST MAIN STREET

I'IIJI)ar ...... FklaJilllbL
.
. IUcble ~ llttoiuet for the
Nallonll .worMH'Jil ~ liuk'ltball
~~~ (NABR), 111111 with~

All of . these erltlciJIQs in ~

9

923 S. 3rd Ave.

2

' criaaed 6 pet cettt" alnce 1978, 'tbat .
Carter "has Dot IOld a 1inJ1e on-''
I s9Jote Jeue in AJalka," and Ifill tbe'Jl!'l!lideiJt "extended price COidrvJill
on natural gu, which will bold 1
pi'Oductill! far belCIIO Ill paten9W " • ~

Olllllale ar aiiCIIfbaud.ID
me1i ,IM)e'JIIIil IGr -clw 111!11111111 ~
cf thoae ..... Ow t 11• .....
Jlllt bts11lllllfllllnt tiJi
9 1~
plant to I ' ••• to ll'llllllGII• ., ·~
..... 111 _, .... ....., Alii •
rec h&amp;i II 1D I W S .. • 01
;
hupa• Ill&amp;

· · -·· -•

WE
DELIVER

METAL DEALER P.fl7.tct.f.si

I

.,.._,.- wu reedw! W)f toda7.
illtNIII tbe Natimll .••k'ltbaD
Alloelaliall IIIII till! llllion I 4X leDtllllllil au-,~ a poulble
. . . . 111 ........... tbat bad been
tl!i
for tbe llllrt cf the

. "'
r\

to baeufiJre.:DU&amp;illllla.

PR9CES

. WILL ,BE IN POMEROY, OHIO

'

NEW

.

u-...,....

~~~

NBA referees·
·reach
accord
.-

..ut back to the medallions, the
Mint Isn't giving up. The Anderson
and Wood pieces are only tbe.atart t~. :.
.a five-year program a~ by ''l.
Congress for which 1.5 milllon ounces of gold have been allocated. And
should they eventually catch on llllf· ~
ficlently to encourage contlnuaUoo :~
of the series, there's plenty IIICII'e' ~,
where that came fnm. The u. S. ,;
government, with 1110n1 than 2180 ,
miUion OUDces in reaerye, remaJna L
;,
the world's leading gold holder.
That Ia the rOaklnga of a lot fl.'
med•Uions- or colnl. But ilven ~ ~
detennined U. S. ccmunltrllent ·to a It
nOI!ilold standard, ICICIII for a two- ,•
fOMllie sale before a change of , .

=:~::.a:.~~
thorva;ibly. .

~~PRECIOUS

·

Bar• ~Nick Leauard, who
hia an anlde Injury, and Mike
Bl..n wbo II wwldnl bls way Into
ihapeatter. blp pointer, Eastern is.
In good lbape, bealtbwlae.
.
Tbe r..,Iel will field the ll8llle
wlmlnllJDeup tiU week with either.
1-.rd Ill Ray Werry at center,
Gaardll Greg Scarbroucb. Ray Spencer, Taddei Rodney Keller, Dave
Gelll and Ends Dave Wolfe and P.G.
Riffe.
Tbe powerboule backfield will
llllr Grec Wlpl at quarterback with
rep1.lr ..tobone Dennla Durst at
fn1llwcL lllke B'..U -and JollllnJ
8111&amp; wiD '~~tama~e at ,.lngbeck
wblle .JclbDy Rlebellllld David Dural
wllll(llltdlonl attallhack
Tbe illrdobittiDg Hne coupled with
• llrani backfleld makes up the

.

'I

t,

_ ..., ByRobertJ. Wagman
mlni~tratlon will only allow
As "ptoof," Reagan contends that ,
WASHINGTON (NEA) ~ GovernAmericans to find, ·produce and use
"we have a 47-year · supply cl
ment, Industry and the AmeriCBII
it. We have more than enough
(domestic) oil," tbat "crude-oil
conswner recently appeared to have
energy resources to meet our needs
production baa declined in the cooreached a consensus on one of the
until the fuels of the future are
tlnenlal United Stat-. by ll1percent
sharpest public {JOlley cogtroversles , developed."
while .crude-&lt;Jll lmpOrta ,bave·. in·of the 19'/0s - energy. While still dlf- r--.:.,_----------:--:--------'-"'"1
ferlng on some details, all seemed to
agree that the nation must lower Its
dependence on foreign oil whlle
.
'
,developing new energy sources.
Today Is ThW'IIIlay, Oct. 9~ the
chalnnan of the Chineae Cornmnnllll ·
Emergence of this COIISellSW! was 283rd day of 1180. There are 83 days
Party. .
.
expected to prevent energy. policy lefUntheyear.
Ten rears ago, Mnerican B-Ull
from becoming a big iisue in this
Today'ehlgbllgbtlnbistory:
1pounded the Ho Qd MIDI! tralJ Ln/
year's presidential &lt;'Aimpalgn. To
On Oct. I, liM, Kin&amp; Alernnder'J
Lloe.
•
the dismay. of many' In Industry and of Yqoalavla wu e• ' llliid 111• · Five )'8llll ago, Aildnlllakfleroto'
government, however, GOP Croat llludent In Mmeillel, Frealce.
- the father cf tbe sD.ta b$dn;aa'
·pomlnee Ronald -Reagan bas nt- . Ontblsdate:
bomb- '-""the flnt Baftet•
opened the debate by rejecting out of.
Iii 1701, Yale OolJe&amp;e wu founded
cltbiiiJ to win tbeNobell'lllle Prta.'
hand abnOIIt every acUon that lnN~~Ceail.
•
i One year ago, Pr•'deN CarW·
President Carter bas liken oo
In 1'110, tba Rualana captured , 181~ the baWe ll•'nat ildlatlcll
energy over the put three yean.
. would remain the "'Dmer "Mr. Carter hu led ua to believe Berlin.
In mil, Pope Pl.. m died at the ' prlor?ty of ru ldm'nll?ratlon _
that there Ia an acute abortqe of ageolll2.
mnlfltaacue~~pollti...U,barmfaL .
energy relources In this ceuntry," · And In 1978, well JICIIten In 1'1*1111 '
blrtbdaiJI: J'Gaw Beatie
Reqan leila campal8n audiences. deelared tbat Cllina'a . Prime f Jom ~ 1e. J•ruld. =rau•
"The truth Is that Amerl&lt;'J! hU an
M9nLeter, au Irw+nc, 11ac1 been . ·IOI!iaal?wJ'IdllciiBaoawillu.
abundance fl.. energy .. If IIIII ,.... pidled
to . - 1 Mao 'f-h"'41 • •
.t

•

·•
;·

one.ounce "

name.

e:~~

CHESTER, OHIO

of agreeoment,-contrOverSy· .
1

Today in history

" '~TEM: Jimmy Carter SHAVES for politics/
efftlct . ~ ' "

RIDENOUR'S GAS SERVICE ·

"

D

CASH &amp; CARRY

PRICES. : ~UALITY

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

AVAILABLE AT

•'

the · small Investor's Qlal'ket, the
· South Africans are now adding three
new and smaller sizes to the original
one-ounce coin. The Kruggerrand
will now also be available In one· baH, one-quarter 8nd one-tenth ounce sizes- the last, at toclay's price,
selling for more than the
coin brought when Introduced ·into
the United States In 1976.

SEE US F!~ST AND COMPARE OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE PRICES .

'D OXOL ·GAS

bave

-...

U.S. Mint: a' sluggish mover on the market

•

BUILDING OR REMODE~ING?

-----------------------1

•

,

•

WASffiNGTON (AP)- President
Carter has approved a higher interest rate for u.s. Savings aonds,
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller said Monday.
Series EE bonds bought on or after
Nov. 1 wHL earn 8 percent interest,
compounded semiannually, when
the bonds are held to maturity, the
Treasury Department said. The
tenn to maturity will be shortened
from 11 years to nine years.
.The new rate on Series HH bonds,
also effective Nov. 1, will be 7.5 percent. They will continue to mattlre in
10 years.
Series EE bonds, which are
bought at a price below face value
and whose interest is paid out only
when the bond is redeemed, now are
limited to T percent interest. Series

.

.

Artet the contest with Ironton
this week aa junior quarterback Bob
Ashley Ia fully recovered from the · Fri~, they must host Jack9on on
the following Friday.
knee strain that kept him 'OIIl,of most
If MeigB could defeat tbe two
of the. second baH of Mel~' 31 to 0
diubblng of Wellston last week.· leaders, they .would - be In · the
Jerry Fields has also shown steady driver's seat in the league.
A look at the recoi'Wi show the
imprOvement.
With a ~loll SEOAL record, Meigs problems Meigs faces.
Ironton has a total of 166 points
Is locked into a tw~way tie for third
. place with L9gan, behind Ironton this season while allowing their ~
ponents only 64 points in achieving
, and Jackson. 1be good news for the
Marauders Ia that they have a chan- its ~1 0\'erall record. Likewise,
ce to detennlne their own fate as ·Jackson has scored 122 points while
they meet the two leaders the next giving up just 53 to record Its 4-1-1
tally.
two weekends.

. 1'

II.,,

•

food

...

•,

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,,

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-l'otDeroy, 0., Thunday, Oct. 8,19110

Last week's game like Rose

Tod.ty's

Sports ·World

.,,. Auoclated Preu
UCLA II one of five Pac-10 teams
that won't !Mfgolng to the ROijll Bowl
,P.Ua season so the first thing All·

4eet

•
· The AW'World Serl• for mOlt . Carolina Jl, Rlcbmjlnd 14; Vlrglnla
TeD111 (and Otl•bomau) takes TeCh 23, Rhode lllaiid 9; Wllllaril x
place s.turda7 In Oella• ~t'a the
Mary1Ullrtmouth3:MIDif'EST.
75th fo!ltl)ell lilel!tln8 fllTOQf and · ladlaad6, Wloeo.W.l4; un-Js 17,
Ol&lt;lahoma, • fierce rivalry that was Iowa 14; Purclue 33, Mlaa-. 14;
first played In 1900.
Iowa St.lS, Kaa-.St. 10.
·
It'snotjllltanQtherfocOell game. ' 80uTmmrr
lt;s more than wbat ~ call a
Teus AA:M 31, Houston 24;
collegegrldirmdudc. It'su.:' at MJ-II'C:D, (lk)alvma sua; Texas
stirs a rellg!oua fervor ~ both llides , Clrl8tlan 21&gt; Rice 14; Tulaa 1$, North
· andlea'"'rtval)IBI'tilaJIIIIimpfrom Tn:as
St .
7. .
wi!Bf '· ··
exbaUitiaa and vlrtaal buket caaes · ·
after a full night II. wild celebration • ":vy 21 Air Force 7· Callfomla
orlllliiCIH!rownini&amp;IOITOW.
. Oreg. •c .....~.:..._ ....
Alwap the day after, downtown
31,
on :--• " - - - · ....
Dallasloob!lkeadlsutenrea. ·
Oregon st. 14, Brigban) Young 3$,
"Hook •em, Horns!"
Wyoming 1,0; Arizona St. 23,
"On, nnies aal"
Wuhlngtlll st. 13; New Mexico 30,
Bear 8r}&gt;ani bauls No.1 Alabama
Colorado St. :M; Colorado 21, Drake
t.o New Jeraey's Meadowlands for 1 ·&amp;; Las Vegas rr, San Diego st. 13;,
wall:l with Rutgen. Michigan- . West VIrginia 32, Hawaii 13; Utah
Michigan State and Stanfbrd.UCLA
22,EIPaso7.
pt'OIIIile !Jooe.rockers In other areas
of the country.
TAXING
Last week: 37·17; .6ff7. Season: 18(). • TIJe InCOme tu: beca!ne the major
.66, .734.
'I!OUI'ce fi Federal revenues around
Oklahoma rl, Texas m: The ·the Ume ol World War I, according acUons."
· Sooriers not 811 potent without Billy
to a Conference Board analysis.
Satorday was a great day for
Sims belt 112 po1nta aplnst Colorado
l:'revlously, the Federal Governlast week ain't half-bad.
ment depended on tariffs, exciae Florida State people and. not so hot
Alabama 44, Rutgers 14: Rutgers, .taxes and customs duties for Its ln- · for Nebraskans. Not only did FSU
·which upset Temessee a year, is
come.
upset Nebraska 111-14, but FSU grad
reaching for high society. The Bear
will give them a rude bump.. .
UCLA 29, Stanford 211!: The shutout
II. Ohio state sbould have whetted
the Bruins' appetite for more red
1

EASTERN RESERVE NETTERS - Members of
the Eastern Eagle reserve volleyball squad are, front
row, 1-r, Fonda Rapp, Kris Wilson, Kelly Whitlatch,
Dee Dailey, Tanuny Capehart. Back row - Coach

O'Brien, Jenny Bently. Back- Coach Suzanne Wolfe,
Tonja Salser, Raeleen Oliver, Laren Wolfe, Cindy
Evans, DeUa Johnson; Debbie Michael, Denlae Riffie,
Michelle Johnson. Absent was Becky Michael.

SOUTHERN
TORNAbO
VARISTY
VOUEYBALL TEAM - The Southern Tomadol;s
splkers have an abundance or youth In this !'@building
year, bllt still own a respectable 7·9 mark. Front row,
kneeling, Mel Weese, Julie Thorel), Sonja Hill, Linda

Debbie Weber, Janelle Ely, April Parker, Be1.b Ritchie, Pam Riebel, Carrie Chevalier, Jackie Rapp, and
Berretta Deeter.
•
·

.

Houston·evens playoffs with 7-4 victory
PlllLADELPHIA (AP) - Slaphitting Terry Puhl, ..,.~: .{ Jrli~r
drove in two runs with a single and a
double, ignited Houston's winning
raUy with a loth-inning hit as the
Astros erupted for four runs to beat
Philadelphia 7-4 in the second game
of the National League CJuun.
pionship Series Wednesday night
Jose Cruz's second run-scoring
single of the game snapped a tie in
the loth and gave Houston a split of
the first two games in this beat~­
five pennant playoff. Games Three

•

and Four are scheduled for the
Astrodome Friday and Saturday and
a fifth game, If needed, would be
played Sunday.
Pllhl, who sat on the bench agalmt
left-bander Steve Carlton 1n the
opener of this series Tuesday ntgbt,
mOVed into the lineup as part of
Manager Bill Virdon's southpawswinging platoon and the switch paid
off handaomely.
Twice, early in the game, Pub!
made Philadelphl!l starter Dick

with a desperate dive.
McBride, tryingfortherunneratthe
Philadelpbls run In the fourth,
With Pllhl at second, the Phlllles ' plate, threw wildly and the Aslrol
or&gt;OOed wl\h a single and left for pJ.n.
chose to walk Joe Morgari, who had bad men on second and third.
cb-runner Smith. Trillo sacrificed
hurt tbeln earlier with a leadoff
Cesar Cedeno hit a fielder's choice
and then Maddox drilled his second
double in the elgbtb. But the nm grounder to shortstop and Larry
RBI single of the game. ,
batter was Cnlz, Houstcln's llfl. Bowa's throw to the plate was an InIt was vindication for Maddox,
derrated left fielder and lhe leading slant too late to get pinch-runner
who was In tlie doghouse and benRBI man on the club.
Rafael Landestoy. That made the
ched by Manager Dallas Green after
He had delivered Morgan from
score $-3 and then Dave Bergman a costly fielding blunder in a late.
second with a single In the eighth
settled the issue with a triple up the
season game against Montreal.
and came through again with
gap in rlgbt~ter for two more
Maddox dashed to second on the
another hit, acorlng Puhl with· the
runs.
play ~o the plate, putting the poten..
gl&gt;oahead 'l'WI, Right .fielder Bake
The Phlllles made a big bid to win
tlal winning run in scoring position
·
the game In the bottom of the ninth, ·'But Smith escaped by walking Bowa
loading the bases with one out on
Intentionally and then striking out
consecutive singles by Bake Me- "Bob Boone and retiring pinch-hitter
Bride, Mike Sclunl!lt and Lonnie , De!Unser on an easy fiy ball. .
Smith, who bad entered the game an ·
The Aslrol had taken the lead In
inning earlier as a pinch-runner for
the top of the eighth when old pro .
Greg Luzink.sl.
Morgan opened with a double and
Smith, a rookie, fouled ofl a half- dashed home on Cruz's single to cenAL Championship Series.
. .
PlnleUa said be "couldn't judge dQZen pitches before drilling his hit
ter.
Many of the Royals, mlndiul of
bow far the ball was hlt.at first, so I to right. McBride got a late start
Morgan, running on a tender
hesitated coming ln...
playoff losses to the Yankees 1n 1976,
from second base and was held at
ankle, had pulled into second
'77 and '78, were cautious In sizing
The result left Guidry, who walked third by Coach Lee EUa.
-- · gingerly on his two-base hit .off the
up their position entering tonight's
four and gave up five bits, shaking
Now,
with
the game on the line,
right field wall. But be ran home
second game.
Ills head In dilgust.
the A$'011 drew their Infield in, a easily on the base hit to center by
"I believe .In pltchlnt and defense.
The Yankees had runners In every major riBk on the artificial surface. Cruz. That run came off Pbillies
I don't think the home field Jld..
Inning ))ut the eighth, but were held They had done the same thing In a
bullpen ace Tug McGraw and was
vantage is all that tmPOrtant," said
scoreless after Rick Cerone and similar siblatlon in the seventh Inthe first earned run off him in 16
White, who finlsbed with three hita.
Plniella socked conaecutlve home ning anti escaped unacathed.
games since Sept. 1.
"The ~ that pitches well and
runs to left In the second. ·
And they pulled it ofl once more In
plays good defense is going to win."
· "I thought, 'Here.we go .agaln,'" the ninth.
The Royals did both Wednesday 811 - aaid Gecqe Brett w&amp;n asked about
Frank LaCorte struck out Manny
left-llander Larry Gura eontlnued
his reacUon to the two homfors.
Trillo for the second out, allowing
his mastery over the Yankees by
"Then I just relaxed.... We were very the Infield to return to normal depth.
scattering 10 hlta and Ills teammates ' relued today., We won 7-2. I think
Then Garry Maddox, who had tvio
were flawless In the field.
we'll be more relaxed lomol row.••
RBI singles earlier In the game pop.
· · The Yank.!i, meanwhile, bad
Yankees slugger Reggie Jackson ped out ~ first baseman Bergman,
.problems both pitching and catching was hiUess In four at-bata against ending the lnnlng.
the ball. starter Roo Guidry lasted
Gura, stranding five baserunners.
Then Houston went out to break
just three lnnlnga, giving up a game"But the one thing I must em- the tie In the loui.
tying double to White .In the second
pbaslze is that Larry Gura pitched
The Phlllles trailed 3-2 as they
and a tWo-run single to Willie Aikens
great to me. He pitcbecime perfect," came to bat In the eighth, but boWIIn the third:
said Jackson, who also struck out onced off the deck to tie the score
White's hit was a twp.out, two-run
ce. "He stayed away from me
against Dave Smith, Houston's third
I
blooper that fell In front of left
day."
pitcher.
fielder I.oo PlnleUa, who bad come
Brett, who robbed Cerone of a
Luzlnski, whose check-swing
up hobbling after catching Darrell
double with a diving grab In the six- . dOuble had driven In the first
Porter's shallow fly the previous . th, inade It $-2 with a seventh-Inning
play.
bcmer. Willie Wilson followed with a
"I kMw Plniella bad just hurt b1a
two-run double In the eighth after
ankle, so I knew I bad a chance on
Yankees first INuleman Bob Watson
the ball, .. said White.
opened the door with a two-out error.

Ruthven pay for Ills wildness,
helping to cash In bases on ~with
clutch bits. But Ills biggest hit came
opening the loth after the Astros bad
escaped a frightening one-out,
base&amp;-loaded situation In the bottom of the nlntiL
..
.
Puhl opened the lOth Mth a single
to right and the Astros, playing by
the book, bad Enos Cabell sacrlflce
the ruMer to second. Before
Cabell's successful bunt, he popped
up a ball that Philadelphia first
baseman Pete Rose barely missed

Royals Win all important· firs~ game
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - Just
how important is winning the first
game of the American League
playoffs?
Well about all the Kansas City
Royals will concede is that it's a
whole Jot better than losing it.
"When you're one game up, I sup-

pOse you're In tile driver's seat,'' admitted Kansas City second baseman.
Frank White. "But there are still
four games left."
White's assessment came In the
wake of Kansas City's 7-2 victory
over the New York Yankees Wednesday In Game I of the best.of..flve

Healthy Southern
will play KCHS
•
RACINE - According to C!&gt;CO&amp;ch portance of a "winning attitude".
Mick WinebreMer the Southern Tor- They feel their Tornadoes · possess
nadoes are ''bealtl)y and ready to go that attitude with much more corr
again" going Into the Friday's SVAC fldence in what they are doing.
Analyzing ~ Friday's game
rpatcb-up with the Kyger Creek Bobagainst
North Gallla, the Southern
cats.
staff
felt
its ~ played a s1Jper firWith a healthy squad the Torst
half,
but
suffered a second half letnadoes hope to spoil the Kyger Creek
down.
homecoming celebration. Both
Southern will try to get back In the
squads own identical:!-4 marks. ·
winning
groove with . speedster
With Senior tackle Jeff Sopher,
Terry McNickle, and Mike Colllna . . Tailback. Robin Fortune at full
returning to · the line-up, Southern strength, Fullback Terry Patterson,
Wingback Danny Talbott and Quar- .
will field a complete unit for the first
time since the third game of the terback Dale Teaford c;aWng the
signals,_This quartet coupled with an
season.
In that contest against Parker- injury free line Is expected to .
sburg Catholic the Tornadoes took a produce a respectable yaidage outphysical pounding that sidelined put.
Southern's defense bas regrouped,
some integral parts of the line-up.
patching
some gaping holes left
Now Southern bas healed and bas
behind
by
the
Pirate backfield.
taken on a "new attitude" going into
Coach
Deryl
Wells' Bobcats will
the second SVAC bout of the year.
be
trying
to
secure
their third vicCoaches Winebrenner and Howle
Caldwell have stressed the iJn. tory of the season along with Kyger
Creek's annual homecoming
celebration victory.
, Kyger Creek's offense bas bad Ita
problems of late, accounting for only
~ -points in the last three games.
Last week, KC fell to the Eastern

Sports
bri!fs...

au

Chris.tmas
JEWELRY
Layaway
FINAL WEEK

·WATCH
SALE

ALL WATCHES.

Eagles.~

NOW REDUCED

After a field day against Federal •
Hocking,
&amp;l.f, the KC squad bas
PINEHURST, N.C. (AP)- Hal Suttailed
off
on
offense with "fumbles"
ton shot a 4-under-par 68 to lead the
being
the
main
downfall.
.
four-member United·States team to
Kyger
Creek,
despite
Its
offensive
a first-round total of 211 in the 12th
Men's World Amateur Golf Team drought, Is "potentially dangerous"
with the likes of qaarterback Rob
ChampionShip.
Join!ng Sutton were Jay Sigel, at Waugh, fullback Bill Roes and a
71, Jim Holtgrieve, 71, and Bob very quick Kevin Pahona. Terry
Tway, 72. The ltepublic of China and Porter Is allo a sure handed recepSouth Africa had first round totals of tlontst of split end, who helpB open
219. Tied for fourth place were up the Bobcat P"R"' game.
The Bobcata always liked power
Canada and Mexico at 221. ·
plays
and have pronn them SucHOCKEY
cessful
over the Y.fJ8l'l. Kyger a1ao
TORONTO (AP) • - The NHL
likes
to
trap
and throw quick puaes
Players Association voted against
acroaa
the
middle.
playing an overtime period at the
-Kyger Creek kicker Jack Minor II
end of tie games dul'lng the upa
member of an elite group and Ia
comin&amp; season.
noted·
for Ills aCCIII'IIC)' and ~
In June, the NHL Governors voted
ldck:offa.
In favor of an overtime period, wHb ·
Southern II out to 1t1Jp Kypr'1
tlnal approval resting with the
pe..t"' game, lnclucllnc the bl&amp;bl1
Players Alllloclatlon.
IIICI
'Ill and awwp IIIII bupel t.o
AUTO RACI!'(G
bold~t.oamJnhnqm
PARIS (AP)- French Grand Prix
Althoucb ccm.IniJ11 KC'1 of.
driver Jean-Pierre Jaboullle unr..tw
Ullit Ia lqa1ut, tile
dei w•t IUCCel&amp;ful surgery on bOtb
Slodbem
c:a.cliDC lid ,.. tbllt
lep• to ll!t fractures sUffered In a ·
the
"key"
to IIIICCIII and t.o the
crub at the Cauadian Grand Prix ln
111111
II
for
SoqtJ!em Ill pt a &amp;ODd
MCIIItr'NI Sept. a
1tUt.
1be
pme
loob like It II . . .
Jaboullle II not apected to be able
to
be
IIIJ"'t
thriller
with 111111 111M
to n w:11 drlvinll before the end o1 .
.
.t?:Sat
Kn•Cnet.
.the year.

2'0 '%
SELECT GROUP 501{, Off

.
We' hlvt

reduced 111 watches In '
our stores for this 1111 salt. So If
you 1 rt In the m.rket for a Witch
or II you soon will be, stop In
either Olllipolls or P--Y IIICII
1 Hvtanlhewltchaly.. r~
1

•

Rick Edwuds

, Lay~way

Subqu~ack ·

Now For
' '

.Christmas
WATtttES FULLY GUARArrfEED

1

)

)

•

•

NOW rHRU OCI• -~ lflt
•Via
. .

·.
-

~~~~iii

.r

. Michigan 23, MJcblgan st. m: The
Wolverlnea JOlt to Notre Dame by
two, the Spartana by five but computendoo'twlnfootballgama.
·SOuthem California 37,-Ariloaa 7:
Marcus Alli!n, al USC's new ,-. '
._
threat, has IIOIIIe toucllads to fOlloW
-from O.J. to CbarlieWhlte.
PittsQurgh 17, Florida SL 7: PIU
hasn't shown theoffenstvepowerexpected fi a title conteoder, but guys
lnthetrencbesare•~·fth
·
..._.,
a-gia 30, Mi!!!dMippt 14: Buck
Belue is the hand you have to watch
· while Hendlel Walker pulls rabbits
. outolthehal
,
Notre Dame 21, Mjaml, Fill. 18:
Gclod chance for .........
here, but the
..,.._.
Flghtln,g Iri8b apirlt conllnuell to
. -.,ailatbame.
.-~•
NorthCarollnal5, WakeFIIrellt7:
The Tar Heel~ 1iu given up
an aver~~e ol U po1nta a pme. You
- gottaeeoretowln.
Ohio St. 15, N'ortliwestem 7: The
· Buck-- are 1.~ t.o have tbil
.
~

··-

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

ALL iJVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED

30% TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH YEAR
IN BUSINESS.

MASON FURNITURE CO. ·

Stow, ·Massillon now
new division leaders
.

· brt)atber after their llbutOut . by
. UCLA.
,.
: : Nebraslra 15,1ta11A118: Ditto for
: the Cornbulken. When the belloon
: bunll, It'sloullb to get regenerated , ·
. lnsevellda"".
•: Penn St. 28, Maryland 13: The Nit- ,
: tany Uonubould be fully 18C0vered
· from ~utive defeata last mon-

OOLUMBUS,Ohio (AP) - Stow
Maulllon are new Division 1
regional ,l eaden today In the Ohio
HJgb School Athletic Association
computerized football ranldnga.
stow ~ over for Willoughby
South atop Region 2. Will.n-...,
n§bby
South ranks third 1n that area this

and

week

•

first time,

Region 8 and Lebanon in Region 8
were new paceaetters, joining
holdovers Solon In Region 5 and
y~ond...,_Mnnn..rlnD-'on 7 . .
-....-"" -·-• •-...

REGION I -

.

Mark-Rice, 1ieed.villi,

:: tianta and

. . . . In tile ·Atbenl
: · M-qwladlan s....... Ram Oct.
: : &amp; wen frcm the Alllml-. but a

Vi11Jousbb1i

l

RWION 2 -

I, Upper

=.

;,1o~d ~ IUii. ~. ~=

- ·-·

1, -

aJ7 poilU. 1.

siXth b.. race

·divillonfrllmlast:year.

..., lt..-11

l'ladlll••nllntbei,OIIOm bi1,
J: ap1Nipq-J.ry ........
:: 11, Lanp9llle, J1th 17:41, tnUIIIil
:-l Roo Bollm-, lt, AIMII, wllb
:' 17:..
.

:

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1

:: ,. Allo - - -· - · · Ia ....
• : IIIIMn; age . . . lldiCIII - , . ,

1.1:11,
;•

I-··

::'m 11 a -·• ••..It\ ·•:11.1;
:: lAIII Cl ' .. ~ ....
&lt; I ill
.tU c, Jr:iU: 0.

dx, . . . . . . . . . 111 1111
msiiiJ

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; .: .... _.. ....... ... . Clitia

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REGION Ill - 1, Footorla 4Ut. 2, El·
YTia Call1ollc 4Uii. I, ~ M.'/1. 4,
IIUsn Edllon suo.. I, -~landc&gt;rf

31ilk:oN11':l"'"- ~...~

a1en11

11 JO. 1, 41.110. 1, 1 - 111.111. 1,
WuhlnciD• Court - . 11.011. 1, eot.....
bul llarlity :13JO. I (tlt), ZlnolvUie Wool
11111idn&amp;Um I11CI
llo8liel 1111.11. ·
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Rtttmon :12.1111. 4, G"ali!l M1ilo Hawilen
allll. I, F.U. DJO.' I, Perry

e.r1.
21.10.

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31.10. 2, ArdiJold Jl.ll. 3, llyamore Mo•"" 11.11. 1. wa,_. DJO. 1, Colmnbus
~21.'11. I, Columbat Wehrle D.ZI.
KI&lt;UIUN 15 - · 1, TOtoomlle Budteye
$Oatb 111.12. 2, so.u. s, Hanover1m U1lllocl 111.111. 4, crooa.wo 21.12. 5,

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42.11. I, l(opclcn 11.10. I, ~ IIII.JII.

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~: Colnrt .... iliulllm 1:1.110. 4,
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REGION • - 1, CVVibCtW 31.18. 1.
~ a.'lt
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:
Mark lUee, 11, a.lm1Je, plaeed .
; : llildb Ia tbe 1,100 liii&amp;Jfl, ... 1J.l8
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REGION 3 - I, MaaiJJon 7UO. 2, Con1m . Mc:XInley IUD. S, IMewoocl Sl. Ed...ro 0.111. 1. Lorsll1 11.011. ~. Brunrwlck
11.111. e, Nework ~6.011. .
REGION I I, Cln&lt;IMaU Moeller
11.21. 2, ClnclDnsli Prtncoton nJO. s,
4· C..tervllle 11·111· 1•
lllddletown.
lUll.
Clayton
N
- 17.10,
I , ClndDnll1 St.
lla.ter 13.'11.
DIVIIIIONI
REGION I - 1, Solon IIJO. I, Slow
w- JOIIdl tl.lll. 3, Mr:otor Lllle Calho-

• : few fnm tbe 1111'1'01111111 eountill

~..a. · · - at
::.: :~~~~m~
lllltdl Daft, .. Aft

Half-Price!

11.111.

1DDivision 2, toledo st. Francis In 13~~N~~· v:::r ~

=. ..:1:'.•. '-....

:: . AmENS - 11le u.jari&amp;J -~~~ Ill-

~7.111.

' · Dayton Rath 11.10.
DMSIONI

i;-

.'
. ..

Fll&lt;b

1

u.-

..

Au.untown

Soulb lUll. I. Cbeoderlond Weot Gelup
M.lll. I, Baordmon 11.110. e. Clevelanol St.
J-IG.lll.

. Maaalllon tOOk advantage of
I.oraln'siC1118 at Findlay to move Into ·
the lead In Reglon3. Lorain dropped·
'ftf-·
..h
·
w .,....,.
Cincinnati Moeller, the 1979 Class
AAA playoff cbamploo, kept its lead He 13.111. I, Genev• 11.111. I, Akron Eut
tll.311••• Rlchlleld !7.'11.
1n Region 4, while UpPer Arlington
REGION I - 1, Toledo St. Fronds
remained first in """'on
2, Sytvonla N - lUI. 3, v....
2 among lUll.
•-...
mliicu lUll; I, l'err)'llluq 411.1111. &gt;, Cotbelargescboola.
, _ w . - 4&gt;1.1111. e, Gsll.., 41.110.
...._
,..,.,.. liSe&amp; the · compu
·
ter 11.1111.
REGION 7 - 1, YOiiiiiiiOIIII lloonoy
•uc """""'
1, DoYor 10.1'1. I, YOUIIIIIIOwn Ra
ratlnp to detenn1ne its poskeason r:;. 411.1111. 4, ND• ~~~ 11.110. 5, . Be~
pla:1(1lf field, moving f1'cm three
REGS:O~· :-_~~ i1.111. ~, Pickcia 11 and ' 12 acbools to five lUI. a. llndllosU a-w.
divlsionalllid 40 teams In l8IIO for the 111.2r. 4, G....We 11.711. I, Urboos IIUii.

.Cleveland Benedictine, the
statewide Class AA leader In The
Alloclated Pre. poll, was the op1y
: tb.
new .,..
•-der In Dt·"""on
:...
v"" 3, .....
• ...,ft .._,,.
: South Carolina ·u, Duke 18: Tfley
nle~~ replaced Akron st. Vincent-Sl ·
·. say South Carolina's ......,
ou -.......
ftLnouDd
1n first pia ce In Region 9,
..... 3
· George Hogen t, a truck wbo nms
joining the other front..numers · IIIIOOtbly as • Cadillac.
Foetorla In Region 10, New Concord
Baylor M, ~dbem MetllodlsUI:
Glenn In Region 11 and Hamilton
. . Soutbwellt matdlup fll the 'lath and
Badin Ul Region 12.
: • 20th rankeii teamli. Home advantage
The Division 4 leaders were the
.• : to the Bem'a.
.
same U last week.
• with Burton
· : f.tm)s!•M St. 18, Auburn 15:• Ob,
Berlrahire In Region 13, : Bucyi'IIII
•
• ' tboae bonHilowiJlC, shooct"'-ml
Wynfonlln Reglaa 14, Tiltonsville
' underthellgbtaatBatonRougel
Buckey!! South in Region 1$ and
:
SyraCIIIe 15, Temple 1t; Bolton
West Jefferson In Region 16,
• College 22, Yale 10; Brown li, Penn
· Two of the four top spots 1n
: 7; Leiqh 17, Army 10; Colgate 18,
Division 5 changed band.s.
·. · Holy CrGI8 15,· Prlnc!!t.oD 1•., CoJIJD)o
.,
__,_.,e replaced Glouster .,.,..~
,_...,.w
.. ,.~
•. ·bia 8; Harvard 14, Oclmell 9; Cirr ble In Regloo1t and~ took
: . clnnatllii,Vlllanova13.
,overforWilliarMburglnRegiCIII:Il.
.
8QU11I - .- - - - Lonln Clearview and~ CellTervt11m a, Georgia Tech 14; . terkllptthelrlelldllnReglon18and
: :. Tulane Vanderbilt 8; NOitli' Reglaa1triiip6Ctbely.
- .
.- OOWIIIIl1l, Cillo (AI') Rooloasi
~ . Carolina St. as, A!JpNadilll st. 7; :111 . . ado liP Aibiollc
'.
•
-·•-•"•
U-"'s
st
14·
•
-~
__...
'~~1locl ..
-·•
•
· - ~...
lwo '""!-_':'
. : ..............
Soutbem~yt-l'llpplll,
Mlnl•ppl
- fot
....o=·~.-,
.• · st. 14; Clem- 17, Vlqlnla 7;,.... East "'

&lt; ... tr, n •. ....

· a4UIId,. ..,,.,
11
iiiiiiiiii '
I

meat.

:: ......111. . 14:11.11 , . , ....

•MIIIIIO!arp

-·--

my

;. A'

-

Bowl ~

Aggies' 23-19 loss to Utah when of. .
cj)ach - Dick Howser led the New
his high school team In Russellville, · ficlals 1'\iled their unif01'1118 were
York Yankees to the American
Ark., when it defeated Fort Smith smeared with some aort of greasy
League East Division title. Mearr · Southside In his senior year. "The
Illegal substance.
.
. ·
while, Ill Montreal, Stan Bahnsen
· ~can safety Kenny Easley
only time I got nervous was when
gave .up the two-l'WI homer to
·shouted when be marched Into the
everyone asked me If I wu nervous.
Doesn't anyone play defense 1n
dre!lsing 1'0011\ after Satorday's 17~ . Philadelphia's Mike Sclunidt in the
It was like when I got marrie!l." ·
Colorado? While Colorado waa
11th lnn1ng that decided the NL
upset of Ohio State was: "This is our
losing to Oklahoma fl2.f2, Colorado
.
East. Bahnsen attended Nebraska.
Roe&amp;Bowl!'Five Utah State linemen were for- State was being swwnped by Iowa
Later, Easley ohanged hlsmind.
,
ce,d to change jerseys early in the . State 69-0.
· They aai_~ Donnie .. Little couldn't
"Tills Ia not like winning the Rose
Bowl, .. be decided. "Tills Ia Col]Jill- . throW the football so all the Texas
bus, not Pasadena. We've got seven
quarterback did in the Longhorns' rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
g~ to go. Ohio State Isn't Our bil( • 41-28 victory over Rice wB;~rcomplete
11· of 16 for 306 yards, including
game by a longsbot."
touchdown j)8SBe&amp; of 57 yards to Jam
Easley also tboligbt Ohio State
Jones and 73 to Lawrence Sam"took us too lightly. They said they
pleton.
.• .
bad ~ easy games - us,
"You
can't
really
·
satisfy
some
srracuae and Northwestern .. Their
people,
.and
I
know:
that,"
Little
said.
All-American quarterback (Art
"But
my
c:paches
and
teammates
Schlichter) couldn't throw~ ball to
have always bad faith In me and I
anyone becaW!e be couldn't see over
think tonight It 'was Justified."
our onruahlng llnemen."
With an Ohio Stadiwn crowd of
Quarterback oavid Beal was one
88,084, plus a near-national TV
audience, watchlng, Easley was · of eight new Texas AXM starters in
the Aggies' 41·21 rout of Texas Tech
ejected In the closing minutes for
'
and be justified Coach Tom Wilson's
hitting a Colwnbus photography
deCision by scoring four times.
shop owner 0!) the sidelines.
Mason, w. Va.
Her'Yian Grate, Owner
773·5592
''This is like ' a dream, really,''
"I'm very upset," Easley said. "I
lOBI my composure. I feel blid for
myself and
team. There was a . r----------.&amp;---------------------~
lot of commotion. I felt I was jostled,
but I can't make any excuse for my

117WWG~

APCeu If

..
-and the school's fonner baseball . said Beal, whose last start was for

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-·-----------~-----------

8-Tbe Dail,ySentlnel, Middleport-Pcweroy, 0 ., 'I'Iwnday, Od. 9,1980

Southern ·High School varsity play~rs .

7-TbeDIII,y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tbursday; Oct. 9, 11180

.Middleport PTA discusses ft~:nd raisers
Fund

ra1s1ng

proje ts

were · over to the PTA for the library
project.. tarent . volunteers for the
reviewed, and teachers were in-' library
re discussed along witb
traduced at the recent meeting of the several . oney-making projects In- .
Middleport PTA.
cludfug having merchants donate a
Mrs. Peggy Wood presided at the
percentage of their sale proceeds to
nieetlng in the absence of Warren ~ . the school.
.
Perrine, president; -and Mrs. . Amott also proposed Friday night
Perrine, vice presid~ Jolm Armovies, the building of a ramp at the
nott, bead teacher, introduced the . church end o1 the \IUIIding for hantescbers, Mrs. ' Mary Rose, kindicapped cbildren· and parents, .and
deigarten, Mrs. Judy Crow and Mrs.
the Importance nf parent-teacher
Debbie Davis, first grade teachers;
conferenCe.
•
Barbara Logan and Twila Childs,
He encouraged parent!! with
second grac;le teachers; Jan Hill and . probl~ of questions to contact him
Marge Barr, third grade teachers; . so that conferences can be arranged.
and Lucy \VIle and Arnott, fourth
The head teacher also asked that
.
parents advise the school where they
grade teaches.
Amott talked about school projeccan be reached during the regular
ts mentioning the need for an 1mday or someone who can, be reached
proved sick toom and library. He
1n the' event of early dismisal of
noted · that $130 raised by the
school so that some alternative can
tescberS"iast year bad been tlll'lled
be worked out for the cbild until the

· discu.8sed, school policies were

sou

.

ATHENS (327)
Craig GOldsberry, 72; Andy Nabrldy, 13; Judd
'I'ENNJI!!
Steven1011, 13; Tim Kerr, loC; Dave
MELIIOURNE, Allltnllla (AP) Mathews, 89.
GALLIPOLIS (335-J - Mark
· Vltu Gendatla defeated John S.drl
1-4, 4-8; H; Gene Mayer IIJpped Allfll, 12; Bradd RodgerS, 12; Tim
• Skidmore, 15; Tim #Mdison, 16;
AUitralla'a Paul MeN- 6-0, 6-0;
Sieve Runyon, 103.
·
and Jlouoy Connon }!eat Peter
LOGAN 1350) - Cliri York, 15;·
Dave Berry, 16; Scott Ingram, 87;
FJemlnc .H, w In 8eCCIIICkouDd Jeff
Morgan, 92; Chri• Pa11Wt 1011,93.
matc:blll at all lnlemationai I'OQndo
JACKS'ON (355) - Doug· Miller,
robin tournament
80; Jeff Moore,IO; Ed King, 96; Eric
coven. 96; Scott Maule, 101 .
. BlUSBANE, Allltralla . (AP) IRONTON (355) ~Brian Lane, 12;
, Austrllla's TIIIIY Roelle lllpped, Jay
WOlfe, 11-4; Randy JohRIOII. 87;
Peter Felgl D1 Allllrla, ~.&amp;-1; while'· Sieve Koenig, 105.
Chris
local fiVOl'lte Mart EdmouOn top. . WELLSTON · (345) - 16; Greg Henry, 90; Bruce
pedcounlr7manKen ~ 1-1, f. Derr-.
Kuntz, 94; Eric Cavanah, '95; Dlvt
3 In the aecoad round Dl tbe ""·000 Mlrti'n, 117.
MEIGS- Fred Young, 16; Tony
Robln8cln'a Soatb Pacific C'•"'c.
J-11. 93; J. R. Wamsley, 94; Brian.
In other matcbee, Jolin Mc:Eljroe Wlll,95;
DaveKennedy,104.
topped Matt Ml~ &amp;-3, 6-1; and' · WAVERLY (385) - Paul Btarhl,
Phil Dent beat Jk'ad Drewett, 6-3; 1- 92; Chris Smilh, 94; Joe Moore, 95;
Ddn Knight, 104; Steve Savley, 110.
1.
•

•

Joe Bob Hemsley
&gt;7; 1381bs,
Jlllllor End

Trevor Clmlone
W, l!llbs.
Fresbmail Guard

Rlcl!anl Lyons
5-4, 108 lbs.

Sophomore Eod

Games of Oct. 11:

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) ~

card.

.

Sharing the.spotlight on Saturday
will be some outstanding independent and traditional clashes and full slates In the Pac 10 and Big '
10 conferences.
· For the surprising .Miami
Hurricanes, it could well be the
moment of truth 118 the Floridians
take their ~ record to South Bend,
Ind., to meet Notre Dame. In 13
previous engagements, the Irish ·
have an 11-1·1 reCord againstMianli.
Interestingly enough, Miami's last
defeat came at the hands of Notre
Dame, 46-15, on Nov. 24, 1979, in
Tokyo.
The Hurricanes looked very good
In stopping Houston and Florida
State In their latest two 1980 games.
But from our vantage point the versatile Iriah appear to be too strong
for the Invaders. We make It: Notre
Dame31,Miaml21!
'
Texas and Okl8homa meet for the
75th time. In Dallas, the Longhorns,
led by A. J. "Jam" Jones, will defeat
the Oklahoma Sooners 21-191n one Dl
tbeir typical bruising baUies. Um-

lrumph! '
other match-ups promise some
exceptional football, too.
Penn State will knock off
Maryland, 17·14, In another bam
burner. At Tallahassee, Florida
State will surprise the visiting Pitt
Panthers, 28-21.
And at Columbia, the South
Carolina Gamecocks will keep on
rolling 118 they whack the Duke Blue
Devils, 33-12. Watch for the
Gamecock's George R9gers to have
another big day. Hak-kaff!
Alabama's Crimson Tide will
make one of their rare treks to the
East They'll journey to the New
York City area to meet the Scarlet
Knights of Rutgers at East Rutherford, N. J, It's a first-ever confrontation for Bear Bryant's Barna
Boys and Rutgers. The Tide has
been rolling up some impressive
iiCOres. They get the Hoople nod to
win this on~. 35-14.
In the Big 10, Ohio • State's
Buckeyes should have little trouble
as they bomb Northwestern, 4,_7;
Michigan will prevail, 24-17, over the
Michigan State Spartans, in the 73rd
renewal of this great intra-state
series; high-scoring Indiana will
edge WisconSin, 24-17; Purdue will
defeat Minnesota, ~21. and Dlinois
will whip Iowa, 21-14.
In the Pac 10, the Trojans of
. Southern California had best pay attention to business as they entertain
tile Arizona Wlldctats. The 'Cats are
capable Dl surprising anyone. But
the Trojans' superior material
should Insure a win, 35-17. And Stanford and UCLA will be a crowd
piGBBer all the way - with the In-·
vadlng Cardinals downing the

UC!ans~24.

In the other Pac 10 contests, we
see 'em: Arizona State 28,
Washington State 14; California 33,
Oregon 21; and Washington 38,
Oregon State 18.
In the Big 8, watch for Nebraska to
continue its relentless march toward
the league title as It whack8 Kansas
~7. UjHlllckoming Missouri will
devour oklahoma State, ~. and
Iowa State will knock off Kansas
State, 30-12.
· The top Atlantic Coast Conference
clasll maiches North Carolina and
unpredictable Wak~ Forest. The
Deacons surprised North Carollns
State two weeks ago but their luck Is
about to run out: The Tar Heels win
a claMi one, ~21.
'
Georgia, winner of four straight,
will make It five ·as il d11111p11
Mississippi, 26-~. In a Southeastern
Conference contest. Aiso in the SEC,
Auburn will play up to its potential
118 ittrill11lphs over lSU 17-10.
For the $atistical minded among
you, here Is a recap Dl the amazingly
accurate Hoople Forecasts for the
first four weeks of the 1980 !ea80II:
1~7 Right, 57 Wrong, 3 Ties for a .732
Average.
Astonishing! Har-umpb!
Now go on with my forecast:
. OCT.U
Alabama 35 Ralgen 14

Browia liPeuU
B!Jckae1117 Lelayette 1«
Califonda 33 Ontall!1
C'-17VIqbdali
Colorado» Drake U
Columbia Zl PriDeetea 8
Dartmoalb 11 WIWIIII6:Muy il

F1orlda St. II PIUabarlh !1
Georcts Zl MIM!ulppl28

Hanvd l«Conlell7
Holy Cruu II Colllate 14
Hoaatoa!ZTeuaAAM14
mlmla!llowaU
Jndlepp zt WiaeGasla 17
Iowa Si. It K•••a St. U
Loa1n111e II Memphl• Sl. )7
Mlchlpia ZOUeblpa St.17 ·
MlululpptSt. MS. MI-tulppt U
MIAoarll5 Ollabtma St. I .
Moatua St. 171A18ho St. !I
NavyZ8AlrForeel3
NebrubUX•-a7
New Mezlco li Colorado St.l3
N.CarollaaZBWueFomtU
N. CuoliDI St. II Applllleldu St. .
11
Notre Dole 11 MWp (Fla.) Zl
o.Jo8tate4t NIII'IIIWeslerD 7
PeDIISL17 Marylud U
PwdaeZS.a-.taU
IUeeZ8TCUZ1
IUdan!llld 1'1 E. Cuoiiu 7
S.UJ- St. U FrelaoSt. U
S. C:U.U. 33 Date U

fAshioN &amp; fiT
fo• ·liTTlE fEn

-..

An ortonletllo
C611ocllon of yoomcl

w-

otyiu that
u Will lllhly
looll. Our Inflation
· flghllng P"hllp ,w here ·
It counta.

-It._

A.rlloDII st. za W81hlngtoo st.u
Arbnsu Z1 Wlcblta St. l3
ArmyUJA.iib 12

':!

.'

lin( )'1111 In a pod lnme o( mind for the root of

tra..t, ~
re80IU'tOI, pcoolble pitfalls and C&amp;re!OI' lor
cornlnl m&lt;rtljlaro aU diJ&lt;ulod In your AltroGraph wblch bqiDa with your tirfhday. Mall II
hJr ooeh II&gt; AllrOGnpll, Bo&gt;; 4111, Radio City
__ Station, N. Y. IOOIV:Be .... to~ bUlb dot..
the cloy.

T"D"aeeSI Geeqla Tedl21
Telral Z1 (IM!Jtoaut u
Talla liN. Taa18t. 7 .
Tulue II VaDderbllt 11
VSC IIAm.-17·
Utah St. Zl Jl'allerl4ll St. U
Utah 14 UTEP 11
VlllauovaUCiw I •UU
VMIZl T•1 IIU CllaUZI ·.
Vlflbda Tedl s. Rllade Iliad 7

Aabal'll 171.SU 10
Baylor zt SMU 8
Belle Sl. !3 Idaho 7
BoatoaColle&amp;e35YaleZ1
Bowllq Green 30 Toledo 28
BYU ZZ Wyomillg Zl

Oblo."

Court reverses Borbon decision
CINCINNATI (AP) -All Obio ap-

disco Cll May 4, 111'1!1. Be was fOWld

peala court has overturned tbe
8888ult conviction of former CJn.
clnnati Reds pitcher Pedro Borbon.
The 1St Ohio District Court of Appeala . ordered a new trial Wednesday for Borbon oo a charge of

guilty in MWliclpal Court In Sep-

8118ulting a bouncer at a suburban

tember 197t
.
' Tbe ~. John Topits, cootended Borbon bit him In the chest
.during a'lllugreement.
Tbe appeal• court IIBid Judge
Donald Schott erred by speairlng to
the jury wben Borbon 8Qd his lawyer
weren't present.
Borbon, Hlltenced to 30 days in
jail, was released m bond pending

MARGU.ERrrr
SHOESlit;.

· P~cim_-ero_y_,o_hioT--~=--:--- ..'l

________

!' Family and frlenW! of the late

c;;Iyde and Ada Noms beld !I reWlion
~ home Dl Rosalie story recen-

&amp;

\

COMPLETE
STOCK

Y2 PRICE·.
*PENPANTS

..

\

starUnc areu. ·

; Attend\nl! were Ricluird and
Ji'eWe Notrls, Randy and Carol
$orris and 1011, Tom, Carroll; BID
lind Coonie lnnen!cllled, Colwnbus;
~e Davis; Parkersburg, W, Va.; 1
J,lldy McCullough, VIenna, W. Va.;

THROUGH ·

·MONDAY

*RINGS ·
*NICKLAa5 ·
*EARRINGS

1Carpenter

..
.·.•

*HAIR JIWILRY
.*IRAQUTS
.
* ·OIAINS

'

~ City ':t-:··=-(D), II--rocCity at New Yn. II - . y

-·--a
---~
·-Two

.'

_

. .BANK ONE,.,_....
.

I IPNJn1 'rhil s ...,_. 1 2

-

pbllw'

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U) No maller...,.llllleyoo
~• ~"be evident

have, your ''"'"""' nature ww. -

- y to tMoe you """' aboul You Dberally
~anythlnuoucan.

VIRGO (Aq. ZNepl. II) -

.

P"' ' l l " U....., (n), Jl.....,

--AND

k•MIII MCCulleu.... lt. I'll. Cllerllt Riffle, It, .....
lt...IIIH..... a.llll.
.
·Mon. t11ru 111. lrll a:m. tot p.m.
, . lullllaytt,•to121•andStotp.nt.

. .,0
Till
BANK ONE OF I'OM:ROV. NA

••4/992·2133

\)
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~

.

PRISCitiPTIONI
.
Pfrl.-ly lervlce ·

PH.tt2·2fiS

E. Main

Pomerwy, 0.

011111 Nftlttl ""

,,

.

of tho

clell&amp;ldfulwoyyou preoent younelf today, others
.w bo ·copCivatod. Tum oolhat old chann for
"'""""'Important.

.

.

'.

·...

Margie Cullen and son, Shawn, Martinsburg, W. Va.; Lonnie and Lula
'Norris, Tucson, ·Ariz.; Erwin and
Margaret Gloeckner, Sally
Gloeckner and daughter, Carrie,
Racine; WaidandOiaSmith,Shade;
Bm and
Smith and son. J~
Dayton; Ella Mae Daugherty, Middleport, and Clarence Story and
Ros.ille Story, Pomeroy.

Jean

Personals

'·

I

•:r:i ......

t

.

SToCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) The 1980 Nobel Prize in literature
was awarded today to Czeslaw
MJiosz, an exiled PoliBh poet and
nov,elist living in the United States.
MJiosz, 69, was born in Uthuania.
Living In America since 1960, he is
professor of.Slavic languages at the
University of Califomia at Berkeley.
"I received the prize for poetry,
written in PoliBh," MJiosz ~~aid when
reached by telephone at his home.
"For that reason, it is for me important. It is Important that the
prize goes to a writer of less known
languages."
, .
MJiosz' reaction to news that the
Nobel committee had selected his ·
work for the renowned literature
Wll8 modest.
·~ .
"What do 'you expect?" he asked.
"I hope not to fall in.to the pitfalls of

He wants me all to ~If. being
very possessive. I can't change him,
although I tell him I love only him
and, as long as . we don't touch,
what's the hann In talking?
Should I break up, ·· or keep on
being- 'IDNGUE TIED?
DEART.T.:
If you weren't thinking seriously
of breaking up, you wouldn't have
written this letter. Continue thinking
seriously! - HELEN
T.:
Can an out-going woman and a
possessive man find true happiness?
Only if one knows the difference between flirting and friendship and the
other lick8 his insecurity. It will take
a Jot of work, especially for Don:
Jealousy is very · hard to cure. -

pnze

SUE

faine."
The 16-member Swedish Academy

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
A mother wbo(eared her daughter .
had joined a religious cult asked if
there were any organizations that
would help parents (or relatives)
· fearful of losing their children. Two
very supportive groups are:
American Family Foundation, .Inc.,
P. 0 . .Box 343, Lexington, Mass.
02173. (Newsletter: The Advisor.)
Citizens Freedom Foumlation Jn.
fonnationServices, Box70CJD.a9,1719
Via EI Prado, Redon!IO Beach, Calif.
90277. (Also publishes a newsletter).
-PEGGY B.
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
.
for
discussion, tw~generatioo style?
I'm 16 and my boyfriend is 17.
your questions to either Sue
Direct
We've b!:en going together for nine
months · and we've discussed - or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination mothermarriage in four or five years.
daughter answer - in care of this
The problem is, I enjoy talking to
newspaper.)
other guys. They're my friends,
nothing more. Don gets really mad.

of Letters cited Milosz as a writer

"who with ll!ICotnpromising clearsightedness voices man's exposed
·· condition In a world of severe conructs."'I'heprizethisyeariswortha
record $212,000.
The Academy took most people by
surprise again with an award to a
relatively liUie known writer. Last
year the prize went to Greek poet
Odysseus ElytiS._
·
Eight Americans have won the
1

By Robert G. Stoekmal, D.O., Ph.D..

ANt. Prvlessor of Flllllily Medicine
Ohio Ualvenlty College
of Ollteopalhlc Medicine .
~on: I seem to be suffering
from "bay fever" but I haven't had
:any contact wi~ hay. How can that
be?'
Aiiswer: Bay fever Is a general
tenn for a condition known as
"alergic rhinitis." The typical symptoms (In vm;ous comblnatons) are

nmny nose, sneezing, post nasal
drip, nasal obstructiOIIB and itching
nose, eyes and -palate. Sev_ere at- .
tack8 may be accomparued by
general discomfort with aching
muscles. There iB no fever, There
may be a sirius headache because
the awollen nasal membranes block
normal sinus drainage. These SYJIIP'
toms are a result of having Inhaled
airborne allergens. The more com- .
mon allergens (l!libstances to wbch
people are ellergic) are pollens,
fungal spires, dust and animal dan'der. Tbe symptoms~ seasonally
when tbe persiJil iB senaltive to the
particular pollen present at that
time. Early spring allergy iB usually
due to tne pollens, ~ allergy
to grasa pollens (tberefon! "bay
fm!r") and fall •lleriY to weed
pollel aucb 81 ntgW I~ Year round
allerg)' Is due to allergens that are
present all tbe time 111C11 aa house
dut or pet dander. A person may
have multiple allergies.
Queltion: What can I do for "Ill!;

lying."

. .

. At the time be was granted per- ..
mission by the Frenc'1 Foreign .
u;.;..;~, to remain in Paris Mi!OS'l ". ·
held the rank of first secretary at the ·
embassy.
A profuse writer of both prose and
poetic works, be has also written a ,.'
partly autobiographical novel but :
regards biiJ!self chiefly as a poetical . , ·
writer, accOrding to the academy. , ,
He al,so is known for political,
literary and cultural analyses.

. ....
~

.

~,

Reeds'Ville

Michael Boring, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh Martin flew J o Panama
City, Florida to spend 10 days with
his aunt and uncle, Capt. and Mrs.
Michael Boring. He accompanied
them lEek to Ohio where they
visited with Mr. Boring's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Boring. Capt.
Boring flew to Los Angeles, Calif.,
where be is taking a course in advanced
pilot training.
I
'
Mr: and Mrs. Frank Bise recently
spent'
a few days with, Major and
discomfort. Don't tempt fate by
Mrs.
Frederick Smith and
marching through the fields, since
daughters,
at Dayton.
pollen will be more concentrated
.
Mr.
and
Mrs. lllli Meredith of
near tbe plants: That is why it is also
Beverly
accompanied
Mr. and Mrs.
a good Idea to cut down. ragweed
E!rnest
Whitehead
On
il vacation trip
grpwing near your home.
through the western states. They
People can be allergic to animals
as well as to planta. For Instance, traveled over 7,000 miles.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs: Warren
you may find - thrtiugh your own
Pickens
were Mr. and Mrs. Earl
observation or a physician'Henderson
of Wheeling, W.Va.; Mr.
administered allegy test- that your
and
Mrs.
Ralph
Henderson of Porpet Is tbe IIOUI'ce Dl your allergy. U
. Uand, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Meredith
so, you sbol,l1d seriously consider finand granddaughter, . Teresa
ding old rover a new home. U your
Meredith of Beverly. and Mr. and
problem is related to molds then it Is
M,rs. Harold Sauer of Middleport Rd.
Important to control tbe dampness
Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Balderson and
they require for growth.
Kay viSited with Major and Mrs. Bill
Dehumidifiers are good for that purWilliams at Charleston, South
pose.
Catollna
recently.
There are many other ways to
·
Mrs.
Gladys
Williams and Mrs.
reduce tbe totaJ·amount of allergens
Kat,hryn
Dietz
vl.llted
with Mr. and
in your environment. Your family
MrS.
Virgil
Buckley
at
Belpre.
physician should be able to help you
- Mrs. L. Balderson
with this problem.

'*" ..,, '
\

.

.w•a.... lln.JIM•••

I

'

SPECIAL

'lEV I.'S
.-SMALL FLARE'

HUSH PUPPIES
PRESENTS
HIS and HERS
..

,·

~
y•t•;~\ ..,.•/''

' PEP ~ ·
BARK/MAPLE~--

HARVARD .
SAND/BROWN

TRUE LOVE:
DOWN TO
MATCHING SHOES
~

THE
SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

COLUMBUS DAY
.
MONDAY, OCT. 13
.

WE WILL NOT 'CONDUCT BUSINESS
'
. .
ON THIS DAY •

INVEST IN 26
Rate Oct. 9-1 s
Minimum Dep. $10,000

11.39%

Levrs

BAHR
,CLOTHIERS
N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT 0.

..

literary prize: Sinclair Lewis tn·
1930; Eugene O'Neill, 1936; PearlS.
Buck, 1938; William Faulkner, 1949;
Ernest Hemingway, 1954; John
Steinbeck, 1962; Saul Bellow, 1976, •.:_
and Issac Bashevi8Singer,1978.
In 1953, the European Community
of Book Clubs presented its
European Uterary Prize to Milosz
for his first novel, "The Taking of •.
Power."
MJlosz was . cultural affairs attache at the 'Polish Embassy in ·
Paris In 1951 when be ignored a :
recall by commwlist Poland. At the -·
time, he said be would remain in ~ ·
France "because I knew perfectly ·
well that my country was becoming .
the province of an empire.''
"I have rejected the Stalinists'
new faith,' • he added, "because the :
practice of lying is one of its prln- ' cipal commandments. The Soviet ~­
religion is only another name for ·

Health Review.

!~Mrs. Roeemary MIDer !!pl!llt a few Mr. Starltey s11are tbe same bir«&lt;&amp;YB In Colwnbas With bar mother,
tbday and Mr. Dye was ~ on 'I'hur·
f!1rB. Glen Gusaway, wbo hal un- ada,y.
.
~one surgery at Grant HO!Ipltal
Mr. and Mrs. WWlam Culwell, Mr.
iD Colwnbu&amp;
.
, IIIII Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, Bryan,
; Mr. and Mrs. William Clllwell,
Keilb and Sarah, Tracie Brown, and
lira. Dawlne Jordan, Keith and . Mr.andMn. WalterJ~Joabua
llarah, spent a day with relatives In
IIIII JereQ~Y, spent an l9elliJig with
1,entucky.
Mr. and ¥no Mendal Jordan before
: Dale Dye, Sr• .IIC'''''•nled hill Mr. and Mn. WUiiam Culweii retar\ 1!1111. Dale; Jr. and daughter, Ruth, Dl 'ned to tbelr btme In Pomona Park,
1 ~ to nodbeln Oblo and
Flarlda. llftlr apendlnc a few daya'
and Mn. Glen Irwin
~tiCII bere wttb .tbelr daucJder,
·
) and family JMII!bm at
Mrs: Dwaine Jordln, and friends
and Ill to HarUord wbere
IIIII reJ.atlvesln the area•
....... Dl Mr•. ~ Mrs: . • Mr. aad &lt;Mrs. HarOld Vorya,
~ Kep!lll' (Mary 0,.) ~
vlllted bar llllter, Mrs.
fPdly llld ..... jGiaed by
Rife, . . niece, Mn. Donald
fever"?
'dbeltlr Bt1 "'P0 dDer (Lucy OilY
eden and flmlb' In tbe DJwville
Anlwm': 1'be best solutiCII II to
avoid tbe allergen. If you bave. a
f'amii7 o1 Oo!itld!" w- DaJt. Jr. . -·
~ &amp;II 1111 ..... Ia' c.Jlternla.
lb. Cella Jrwlll, MaryaviDe, !ll1d - ! allergy you mlcbt COI1IIder
-DIII,Ir.-bame.
lin. D1W11 w.aw, 'Diauw, Marl tUIIII ,_ -uaa at tbat time
•ldl D-Im 1llllild ._. n i'ww
Gs1WQ and llra. ·'IW 0,. and IIIII traftllnc to an - free Dl 1111t
~ ........... lin. M ... - .
a!Mtws, laell,
I~ Dlle 0,.
particular pianL Air~ II
~. .,..""..,.,
'd
~~~~
l!lidlal W8J to ezrlude U.allqen
•llr. . . lfll. ..., WIJ 'B,
llr. . . lira. K ....... cnbtne fnllllbe bame, wart IIIII travel .,
;1111r11 iiiiii, . . Mr.lllt' ...,, -tblwtl hl•~•q..,....ln v~ Clelll or cbaJip your ·
lacll,ar lied . . . . . . , 1 • 'MIIImJIII.·'l\1 t mandiCII•IIIi;l. ftlten "''ularl.y. Electrostatic
ni1W&amp;7 f( lfr, and Mrl. 1fiJDI
llr, 111111 lb. A1t11Jr ~bini · flltlnt ... JIIrilatlarly elfeetive.
1'1- at Cllll'lnl a.dl fl God,
walll ........... w. Va. Ill Sunplanta dllldluge tbelr
Alba, • I ihJ, 11i1L &amp; Mr. .&amp;., ,..,.._.._. tjley'flllt.s hll pollen
Ill tile IDOI'nlnllllll llll!ll'e ln• ....., II idldllllftlilllllll.t . . _. ... Mr. and Mn. Bllllio . . . , wblll till mil dry .Eve~~~~~~
DIN. llr. Dl9ll II -.IMt II&amp; lllllluold daya' are, therefore, betDill ·. . Milt OIJnriJ IIIINII........, a lllrlb IIIII abie 110 tar fGr .njqyla&amp; ble outdoon, II
ilulbaml.
·
bamldlty . ltlelf doesn't lll1l
I
We-kil ..., ~· .... Mr. 'Dn !ll1d
I

2-.ol 7 PI&gt;" l1h f, 10 Imine

llo -

::'.wtn

.
e

$AVE

""""

(D)

· CAI'IIIroRN (Dee. It) Poraons you
meet for tbe flnl time today wiD be favorably
•
~by you. VOUJlrl&gt;joct both ... _,..,,and
..,_In eqioal-..iro.
AQUAaJUII(Ju.»ff',JI)AIIdyfMldbaa
your beol inlerwllot SOrt todoy and abe wants
to do IIOIIIOUllni for )"II lhe '•lldn't do for
olllen.lteepmam, howeyer.

TAURUS (AI'f11 zt.May Ill lt'o fwi to be
IIIOIIIIdyoutocloy.Yoarnaturelseuyilotng•nd
frleodly TIU r&lt;luecl ollnolpi)ero you set altzoctaochen II&gt; yoo
GEHINI (May ·11..,_ Ill A.l you tadde
""' lll'OIIIid tbe bowie tocloy your artlstlc
be quilt evident. ~you pat your
mlJ1d ohoul~ ppealtootheia
Zl-Jaly 111. Tbe genuine tn~~ 1/
terell you ha:'f'or olllen todayroflectallle~
moot prominently In the ease with whldl you COl&gt;
- .•null&lt; freely ...C.uae they tmow you
....... .. ~,
.

Norrises have. reunion

..

_,n.e

.!_.._

)'IIIII - . . . , . ,

and lhlawiD boolroolel1olwloustomomberlof
thellllPGIIIuez.lloD'I-IL

»·

Nature filml and a lqllllft dance
In
the Sycamore Room of the Lake
his appeal.
Pll,.ae AI AGlaooe
Hope
Dining Lodge at 7 p.m. wtn
Borbon WB8 traded by the Reds to
.
conciude
actiVIties. A
........_u.a-a
:' NrSerw.
san Francisco 1n 1m. He later achedule fiSlturday's
• O...OI!t
events can be plcied up
played for the St. Louts 9lnllna1a.
~ City T New Yort I
at tbe Late Hope State Part Dlftce.
~ City leidi - 1.0. """"""'' John Kelley Jr.• Borbon's a~.
. Like Hope State Park Is located
lllid Wednesday he didn't 1mow
New Yarir. ,...,. lS·SI at ka•••• &lt;.:ltr
four
mllei north Dl ZaJeaki ill State
1'--' ..Ill. lol
where Borbon WB8 resldiDg.
.
"'*To Gqo
Route2'18.
C117
i4-lll ol N11r j - - - - - - - . : . . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,.;__ _ _ _ _1

Y... (Jolel IU),

Lid:

SCORPIO (Oct. MoN... 12) Your loyalty to
your real frienda Ia truly admirable today. Not
onlywillyouboollthom,you'Uflcbtthetrballles
fer tbem ~need be.
•
SAGmAIIIIJSIN... JS.Dee. ~~ Yoo have an
........... aJIIIIU!IIolpeQQOII.....-today

Annual fall h iJ;_~ set at Lake Hope ,..,.--:_::ma_v~r~_M.!_:ra_l&amp;a.....z:...._Kem_uS~t.U--.:....,____
Activities will begin on $jiturday
morning at the shelter bouse beyond ·,
the beach from 9 to 11 a.m.
Naturallata will guide these leisurely
Walks which are designed for the entire family.
The hikes will cover a~
p!'Oiimately six minutes d. rolling
terrain and should take abo¢ four
boors. Hikers will follow tbe scenic
trail around Lake Hope and wiiJ be
able to enjoy tbe natural and blstorlc
beauty of this heavily wooded area.
Partidpanta are advised that
wana clothing may be Meded st this
time of year. Sturdy hiking boots or
9boefl should be worn, All hikers
should bring a sack lunch. Hikes wtn
be conducted ,regardless of rain.
Sauefru tea will be provided at the
beclnnlng and at a balf-W&amp;y point
along the trail. Short prog!'8ID8 Will
nm thnlugbout tbe day at the trail

.

-.,..up

Wublqteall0rea•St.11

"Lake Hope State park is one fi
several state parks and forests In
Ohio noted for' their outstanding fan
colors during the autwnn," lllid
Donald G; Olson, chief of the
Dlvl.llon of Parks and Recreatioo.
"1be · second or third week of Qc.
tuber should be the peak COlOr
~ for the foliage in southern

un:.

·oung

Stllllfonl Z8 UCLA 1&amp;
Syracue %'I,Temple 7

J

COLUMBUS- Hiking enthusiasta
can enjoy the scenic beauty of the
changing fall colors at Lake Hope
State Park In Vinton County during
the traditional "Fall Hike" Saturday, Oct. 18.
Tbl.s autwnn outing Is 8poii80red
by tbe Ohio Department Dl Natural
Resources (ODNR) Dlvl.llm of
Parts and Recreatioo.

Family illustrates
values·o/4-H here ·

. ~· Sheila R!!eves gl!ve li report :
on room mothers, and also an-,. 1
nounced that she. has' sent notices· '
home with the children regarding: ·
membership in the PTA. Thirty-nine
members were . enrolled at e '
q~eetlng. It was reported that scbOill
pictures will be taken on Oct. 22.
The R!lv. William Mlddl~artb .•
gave an inspirational message en·
titied "School Days'' to open the
meeting . Mrs. DaviS' first grade led
'in the pledge, and the welcome was
extended by Mrs. Wood. Mrs. Kay
Logan reported a baiance of $53.88ln
the treasury.
Carl Hysel!, juvenile officer fot
Meigs County, talked to the parents
on deliquency 811d its consequences.
Refreshments were seved at the con::
elusion of the meeting by the room ·
mothers of Mrs. Davis' class.

Nobel Prize in
Literature awarded

Helen Help Us
Decision for a vasectomy
-should wait a few years
BY HELEN AND SUE B01TEL
Special c,rrespotldeats
DEAR HELEN:
I don' t want children, even if I get
.· THREE 4-H GENERATIONS- FtrSt row -Tommy Pullins and
married, and I'm not that turned on
ChrilJ spencer; Second row- Jeae_ Spencer and Becky Pullins; Third
by marriage either. Tbegirll choose
row~ Angie Spencer and Terrie Piilllns.
·
will have to be anti-kids too.
I don't see why I should wait for
something I'm sure of, 80 I want to
get a vasectomy now. I'm 18, and
that's legal age in California; is
there any law agai/lst it? - TO BE
' SAFEANDSOUND
DEARTBSAD:
As this is being written (October 9,
1980)
there's no California law
In 4-H there is no' generation gap.
Mrs. Pullins and Mrs. Spencer are
againSt
a vasectomy at age 18 - if
advisors of the Merry Makes Plus 5
Yotmg and old work together for the
(highly
unlikely) you · can find
4-H Club.cAngie and.Cbris are memgood Dl4-ll.
someone
who
will perfonn it. But the
bers of this club. Mrs. Pullins also
There is one family In Meigs Counlaw
change:~ in six days. On October
ty.wbo have ~,generations active
has another daughter Terrie and a
ln4-H.
son Tom who are members fo this 4- 15, 1980, our state will join the rest of
the nation in malting 21 the legal age
Hclub.·4-B can be a family affair.
Mrs. Beckie Pullins, Long Bottom,
for voluntary sterilization.
her daughter Jean Spencer, Tuppers
Mrs. Louise Pitzer is also an adSays one of tbe doctor-adviSors:
visor for the Merry Makers Plus 5 4Plains, ar, '.lean's daughter and son,
"A
healthy, . childleSs, unmarried
Angie Spencer and Chris Spencer
HCiub.
man
In his early 20s would be called
are such a 4-H family;
back for several Intensive coun- ,
seting sessions at our clinic before
we'd perform ·a vasectomy. M011t
-~-ASTROGRAPH--- doctors agree here, and many would
refuse him altogether."
·A decision made at 18 could be
P1111D (Feb. IHiarcll Ill Your fair and
Nri WQI ta 1ncreue ~ arntnca w •dd to · ccqJmtive attitude today is your ~test a.ssel
much regretted at age 30, "TBSAS,"
)'0111' oocuriiJ&lt;
lor ,..lhll _.,. ~'"" v...·u aoo~&lt; to do good. for olhera. They In 111111
when you discover (u you well
yur,lhmll!itbecood ....... Gionolbor. 111lo
wiii~~ ·II·Aprll It) You work ex-·•·• might) that your particular
uthellmetoJOIIoomeolllawar.
onolly well with olllers today andean~
operation isn't reversible.
LIBRA fs.,t. ao.:L Di An .-IIIah penon
oqanlatioo and harmony where they are
may do ~ atnmoiJ nice for you, pal::_.withoUt belnR ol!enslve.
HELEN AND SUE

Tracy Allltln defeated Jlar.
bara Hlllqullt 8-0, e.o In tbe $100,000
Pboenix Cla.ulc WCIDC.Il'S tennis
tournament.
.
In other tbird-rouDd actiCII, Renee
Blount beld ill to beat JOIIIIIe
Rllllllel17-6,11-7, 6-1; Wendy Turnbull
Dl AUitralla, . defeated Lucia Fer11811dez 6-4, 6-1, and Julie Harrington
handled Swtberlalld's CbNtiane
Jollsaslnt, 11-1, 6-Z.

Har-umph! Nothing upsets -the Irish
By Major Amoo B. Hoople
UJ11et Speclallat
• Egad, friends, your generosity
overwhelms me!
Better than a week has passed and
I. am still receiving your
congratulatory messages on my kaff-l!aff - exclusive forecast Dl a
South Carollns upset over a good
Michigan tearJ).
Psshaw! 'Twll8 nothing unusual!
Loyal followers of the Hoople
System know that your favorite
correspondent regularly pegs the
biggest upsets of the year - harumph! But enough of this chitchat
and back to this week's sensational

rop.

parentiS home.
Amott was aked about the safety
patrol and he will report on what if
any action on a patrol will be taken
at the OctobeP mee\ing. He also intraduced the janitor and two cooks,
alQJ!8 .wiUI Pauline Horton aild Jane
Bourne, title reading teachers.
Mrs. Wood ~ounced that pencils
and t-shirts are still for sale by;the
PTA and that members ''""
-"-uld continue to seve RC caps and .~pbell
Soup labels. She .also asked for
volunteers to type menus.
The Halloween · carnival was
discUssed along with a fifties dance
to be held sometime in Ncnrember. It
was noted by Mrs. Martha Klein,
ways and means chainnan, that a
total of $221.47 was made on the bake
and yard sale. She also anounced
that sales re being planned by Individual classes.

3RD ST., RACINE, -OH .
MemberFDI~

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�.. a:-, Thursday, Oct. 9, l980

~1be Dally 8eDtlnei, Middleport.Pw&amp; 07, 0., 'nlunday, OcU, 11110 .

·

Woman saves children

'An Lac' based .on true story·
,
.

ByJE1lRYBUcK
· AP Televlatou Writer
UlS ANGELES (AP) - Vietcong
1!1vaders were only six.miJ~ away,
Saigon was about to fa11. and Betty
Tisdale and actress Ina. Balin
worked against the clock tO save the
orphans ri An Lac.
The story of ~r desperate
struggle to evacuate the children Vietnamese red tape and
bureaucracy were as frustrating as
the advancing coinmunlsts ~ is told
· in "The Children of An Lac," to be
broadcast Thuraday from 11-10 p.m.
EDT on CBS.
. Shirley Jones stars as Betty
Tisdale and Miss Balin plays herself, The two-hour movie also stars
Beulah Quo as Madam Ngal, the
head of the orpbanage, and Alan
Fudge and Ben Piazza.
.
The women succeeded In_their
gamble and got mosi'Of the- chudren
out and ~ely to the U.S. in April
1975.

fDO%Sugar Friii Cola
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BATONS - These four girls are members of the. .
Rangerettes Baton Competition Corps frolll' tbl.s area.
They are, I to r, Nikki Ihle, Racine; April Hudson,
Albany; Christi Maidell8, Racine and Shannon Counts,
Racine. The corps ~ced second in competition In

Belpre and second at St. Mary's, W. \ta. TlW girls'are
also inembera of the Riggs Rangerettes Parade Baton
Corps which bas attendeil several parades tbl.s year
and bas won several honors. The corps director is Mra.

JudyRiggs.

~Playing for

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Time
'
top
..
rater .despite :objections

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of

pel-cent saw at least part of the ·renewed production.after the actors'
show.
• strike that began in July, and primeCBS, with four o.f the week's 10 time Schedules still contain plenty of
rerulUI.
highest-rated shows, CQmplled an
CBS and ABC have said they will
average of 17.5, ,one-tentb of one
point ahead of NBC at 17.4. ABC was consider the ne:w Season underway
when original episodes from most
third atl6.l.
series are in haild. NBC maintains,
The networks say that meaJI.!I in an
however, its new season began with
average prime-time minute dUring
"Shogun" week.
the week, 17.5 pereent of the homes
Here are the week's 10 highestin the country Jritb TV were tuned to
rated shows :
cBs.
CBS' trlwnph also ended NBC's twoWeekly ayerages calculated by • .Movie, "Playing for Time," with a
rating of 26.2 repreaenting 311.4
week run as the No. 1 network, a CBS and NBC differ sJlshUy from
million
homes, CBS; "Little House
stand that began with the hit thol!e from ABC, which does not in·
. rnlnlaeries "Shogun."
elude paid polltlcal IIIIIJOIIIlCellents on the Pralrle," 26.1 or 20.3 riilll.ion,
.·Jewish Ol'ganizatiOJIII and their In Its prime-time COWit. The distinc- and · "Jolumy Carson Anniversary
supporter&amp; bad objected to .. the
tion did not affect the standings In Special," 25.6 or 19.9 million, both
N;BC; "60 Minutes," 23.9 or 18.6
casting of VIIJ!ell!l8 Redgrave as · the mll8t recent survey.
AuSchwitz survivor Fanla Fenelon,
· NBC listed the nut two pi\Jgrams . million, and "Dukes o( Hazzard,"
whose memoirs were· the basis for after the CBS movie, "Little· House 22.9 or 17.8 million, both CBS; "Real
People," 22.5 or 17.5 million, NBC;
the three-hour film. Miss Redgrave
011· the Prairie" In second place and
has been an outspoken supporter of · the "Johnny Carson Anniversary .Movle-"Jaws," 21.9 or 17 million,
the Palestinian cause.
ABC; Movle-"The End," 21.8 or 16.9
Special" third. A movie, "Jaws," In
Nielsen says the rating for seventh place, was ABC's top.rated million, NBC; "Dallas," 20.3 or 15.8
"Playing for Time" meaJI.!I o.f'all the show.
million, CBS, and "That's in'
credible,"
19.5 or 15.2million, ABC.
nation's TV~uipped homes, 26.2
All three netwOita are awaiting

YORK (AP ) - Despite ef·
forts by Jewish organizations to
mount a boycott
"Playing for
Time," CBS' drama set in.a Nazi
.cilncentration camp was-the week's
lOp-rated program, figures from ~
A.C. Nielsen Co. showed.
· 'lbe high rating for "Playing for
· Time"- 26,2- helped boost CBS to
· first place in the three-way ratings
race for the week ending Oct. 5, after
~straight weeks .In the cellar.
• NEW

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Fraternity receives
top hon.or
.

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: RIO GRANDE- The B,1o Grapde
cOllege and Conunwlity College
chapter of Alpha Sigma Phi Fraterrilty bas recently been awarded for
the second time, the Grand Senior
President's Award, the most
PresliPous honor given by the Alpba
Sigma Phi National Fratenilty.
The Rio Grande College chapter
which began in 1m when Alpha Tau
Delta became Alpha Sigma Phi,
(il-evlously won the award in 1973.
. . On bebalf of the Rio Grande
College chapter, Kurt Lllfemon and
Mark Williams received the award
AI!I!Uil23ln Nashville, Indiana.
. Wllllams was also named Province Slz President, for the regions of
Olilo, West Vlrlgnla, and PenDB,Ylvanla, and, to the National
Board of Trustees of the NeW&amp; Letter
Aasoclation of Alpha Sigma Pbi. •
: J.,arry Spees, fraternity advt8or,
.

The first.and only Cola that's 100°/o·Caffeine Free,
100°/o Sugar Free with ·100°/o delicious Cola taste.
I

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The Fall State Meeting for 1be

QJdo State Univenity Motb'ers'

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''Ill"

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z#:slld

By PETER J. BOYER
AP Televlslou Writer
UlS ANGELES (AP) - Old and
tired an4 in painfully Ill health,
television's "family hour" came
very close to a peaceful, merciful
death this week. But the U.S.
Supreme Court refused to pull the
plug, sending the family hour into
the suspended existence of a living
curiosity. ..
Perhaps an easy, simple death
would have been inappropriate for
so strange a creature as the family
hour, broadcast television's rather
inept attempt to placate the FCC and
pressure groups by legislating undue ~ts upon itself.
.
Tbe family liour was invented by
Arthur Taylor, president of CBS at
the time, and codified by the
National Association rl Broad-casters in 1975. On the face of it, the
family hour rule was nothing, really,
just a policy demanding that violence and aex should be kept off of
television from 7 p.m.·to 9 p.m.
That was the working policy of the
networks anyway, necesaitated by
the realitieS of sponsorship and

viewing patterlUI. But in legislating • the early hours because SpDIIS01'S
the pollcy, the NAB seemed to be and watchdog groups would atJ.ow
codifying prior restraint on the free nothing else.
,
speech of television creators.
"The whole Idea was Ill-conceived •
So, for the .sake of prln~iple, a · and Improperly arrived at In the fir.
groupofwri.ters,producersandfour. st place,': says M-T·M Produdlons
writers' guilds went to court to President Grant Tinker .
" Evetybody, on both sides, bad
challengetherule.
In 1976, family hour was ruled un- lleC()nd thoughts about it. There's no
coll8titutio~ by a federal judge In
question tbat networks have to be
Los Angeles. But last November, a responsible for programs they air
federal appeals court ruled tbat the and that early evening programs
matter was improperly brought to should be different than p~
court, that It should have been taken scheduled Isler on.
'
before the FCC first.
"But to try to ~~te it 'W8S just a
The writers appealed to the U.S.
mlstake.lt caused a great deal of acSupreme Court, which refused to , tionthatdldn'tneedtollappen."
consider the case. The court's
While broadcast television,
decision bas the effect of leaving in- already impeded by built-in restrlctact the. f~y hour rule. And,
lions, \1I'8S busy writing laws further
presumably, tbat's the last we'll limiting itself, pay television was
hear of the family hour.
establishing Itself beca011e of 11!1
It was all a paper battle, though,
very lack of restriction.
because in practice, the family hour
· And 6even now, after all these
policy vanished four years ago after years and all the changes In
It was originally considered and televlsl~n. after a long court battle
declared unconstitutional in court. · that Wllllt to the U.S. Supreme Court,
Networks continued to do what they the NAB's family hour rule still
had always done, that Is, cool it in lives.

.

~y

PRECEPTOR CHAPI'ER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45p.m. Thor·
sday at Meigs Branch, Athens County Savings and Loin, W. Main,

Pomeroy. .
.
FAll. REVIVAL each evening,

Oct. 8 through Oct. 19, 7:30 at Mt.
Hengon United Brethren Church,
Texas Community, with the Rev.
'WIIUarn Hatfield, Gallipolis Ferry,
speaking.
I
omo ETA PH11'11Sh party Thursday 7 p.m. at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
Society Thursday 7:30p.m. at Thrift
Shop, Middleport.
.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 6:30
p.m. potluck Thuraday at the !Jail.
Products party by Mary Powell
following the dinner.
LAUREL CLIFF Better Health
Club, 6:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Meigs ·Colioty Inf'lm1Bl'y. The Mth
anniversary· of the club to be observed.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30p.m.
-·SALEM TOWNSIDP Flrebelles ·
public kitchen ufensll shower, 8 p.m.
'l'hunlday at fire hall.
OIDO VALLEY Grang~: ~12
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. ThUrsday; poUuck refreshments.

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Claaes wU1 be held through Dec.
10, from 7 to 8 p.m. Emphasis will be
given on v¢oua types of exercise to
music. The fee to attend Is $15.
To rei!ister persons are asked to
send their names, address, pbone
number and cl8iJs registration fee of
$15toKenda Williams, P. 0 . So.863,
Pomeroy, omo ,45789. ·There Is a

. LAY·AWAKEPLAN
Pssst ... wanna good tip on the
next race? Ignore the fellow in line · limited'· class enro~. Deadlllle
•fur registration Is Friday, •Jct.17.
behind you when placing your bet.

Early Sird Special
'

ON YOUR

. FRIDAY
REV1VAL Friday thorugh Sunday
Dexter Church of ·Christ, 111.m.
each evening with 'Dave Phillips,
FRANK FIRST CHOICE
Clnctnnatl, ipeaking and Tim
Marlon Brando's role in the movie · Russell, lkooksville, · Ky. y . song
"On the Waterfront" was originally
leader; Pllbllc invited.
:intended for Frank Sinatra. ·

7

1

CHR

at

•

·CARDS

1

a:':~'\'

Imprinting on Your Photo
Christmas Cards, MlnlmuJII'l •
Order of 25 .

cOuclon must ICComi*'Y Older.
...

'\t:
...._

-

-

COUIION

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I ·
I .

,-

VILLAGE
-·-···-- · ---

lit II I*

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Early Bird Spacial

..,~FIB

I ~

._.

u

. -.

... --·-

II lllill

,.11 . . . 0; ';Ilk
a,
...... R 3 I II I •
·lipQII . to
2 . .. . . . . . .
. failalll
Ia r aad 111 • ·
o1.
c \1 ,....._.
· U1d ..ta1 ~· . aot ..._ Rlllr&amp; V.. Ina II l'lllrllld
. illllill',
'0 ?;1 Jlln, Br,llt.
I ol.
·. lhl.- tq
• we n • Lr*viPII, Olllo .ll 111 p"i - ·
~ dill 1111)' ble I I' U
cllillr....
Jti
w .,...
.
'11
1

High.

· FAITH
Faith is what makes you believe
you can get to the next turnpike
plaza when the gas gauge is on empty.

Gl'der their -a.nldp and lunebeCIII m taU.. frGm Mn.
~=-of Fllrfllld ~.
Vlee
.
and ~
dlaJnDin, 1301 Walker brhe R. N.,

"-.:'i"".:Piftlllt•

.

An em'i:lse dance class will beiiD

on Wednesday, oct. ZZ, at the Senlor.
Citizena Center, Mulberry Hefsbts,
Pomeroy, under the direction of
Kenda Williams, health and pbysical
education instructor at Meigs Junior

SATURDAY
BAKE and yard sale beginning 9
a.m. Saturday at Eastern High
School under sponsorship of Eastern
Band Boosters.

.r::: •. ,,..... r.::r: .,a..

,.

D.ance class begins

Sentinel Social Calendar

•111111111 Old .............. --de: ••

:.-.........
.
· 71 ' illllpll tilt II

•

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The govenunent blocked MAdam
Ngal's e-Vacuation, but sbe did
escape later. She rnsde her way to
the United States and lived with MI.
Tisdale in Georgia unlll her death.
The movie was filmed entirely In
out." .
the Phlllp~ where, Miss Jones
When they got to Saigon, VletcOiig said, "We bad a real United Nailom
soldiers were only six miles away.
crew. We ·bad an Australlan
''It was a race against time, and cameraman, an Englfsh hairthere was so much red tape to take ·· dresser, a Welsh director and flve
care of,'' Miss Jones said. "People. American actors.
were running for their lives, so they
"The ·· humidity was so ·hl8h we
didn't care about a few children. "
were always dienched," she said "I ·
The Saigon government refused to think It gave It a reality. ·The beat, ,
allow the evacuation of any child the lumldlty. the . stench, the
over the !lge of 12.. 'lbey would per- mosqultoos. After I saw the results
mit only 15' children to leave at a on fihn, I knew It had helped It certime.
tainty was real.''

'ftdaUI_IIIIl_IIIPM I I ...... s" . ... . II
1r r u 1111 • · · ' • ' an - , , : : .,, liN, Gu p

t

u.s.

~ate Mmnber for tl. 'llley 111111

1

'Mill Street'.Middliport I Ohh..
992-3542 or 992-3344
'~

'Lamaze classes offered

ATHENS - A series Of Lamaze
Childbirth PreP!Iration classes,
Two Grand senior President's sponsored by O'Bleness Memorial
~wards are given every two yeara. --.... H08pital, will begin on Wednesday,
The Rio Grande College chapter won Oct. 22. This class Is for couples who
the award for schools with a male
expected date of dellvery·ls prior to
enrollment under 4,000 and
December 15.
Clssa partcipants will learn
WashlngtonStateUniversltywonfOI'
the schools with a male enrollment
breathing and relaxation techniques
over 4,1m.
.
fOI' first stage labor, effective ex•
, Among the criteria for this honor
pulsion technique for &amp;e&lt;:ond stage
are campus and community aclabor, physical and emotionalaspecUvttles, membership enrollment,
ta of the birth process, and body·
and flnanclal obligations. The chapconditioning exercises to promote
ters wbo have met these standards
comfort during pregnsncy and postare then obeerved by the Grand
partwn.
Council and selected
Tbe fee for the series Is $35. To
The National Fratenlity, Alpha,
pre-register for tbl.s series, or to
Sipla Phi was founded at Yale
request a schedule of future classes,
Univetllty In 11145. Today, the
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
belidquarters Is based in Delaware, 1 Drive, Athens, OH 45701, or call5930blo.
50111.

· . .,..UIIlwall)j'A._.,.,.,.. · 1
ha b
· "" a.a.t
w.a tc I 1 II 1 .... C!tlla
· " 44. fM • ' aa wllllllo... iO t 11'1 '
+

R ·c BOnLING CO~· .

"Madam Ngal wanted to evaCuate
all oi the children,.. said Mlsll JiJnes.
" Betty said let's take out tblfle we
can. They went at It tootb.and llall"
In an, 275 children were evacu.ted
and ~ced In adoptive bomelln the .

a month to help suppOrt the or- ·
pbanage. She had met W. Balin
when she was there to entertain the
troops, and that's. how Ina got ~
volved. When Vietnam began to fall.
Betty telepixm'ed Ina in New York
and said they bad to get .the children

a:

•

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"Betty Tisdale had been in Vietnam off and on far 15 years, supporting the An Lac orpbansg~." said
tyfiss JO!leS,
"She made speeches around the
colintry and was able to raise $5,1m

1AIIoclatlon wiD be be1c\ Saturday,
,(let. a, at Well Hall, West Cunpu,
&lt;lllo State Unlveudty, C&amp;rmact
,1\oad, Columbul.
.
: Mrll. Dualle Wllllelm of Stalil ,_,.,ttioGlllbJOeUI.
~.State Pl•lden&amp;, wiD pu21ds . Tile State Aaaocla&amp;lon 11 '
at tbe h•tnr•1111rlll. lt10a.m. D.
t1 ,_.., .-wtceto the
iW-m WllltDIIf, a.lmia and , :
IIIII Ita ••lad• State .
&gt;I'Rfr•11 ol. Slallltles It Oldo State 111 n • ll't be1ll aa I*"•• .all
'!lllhallitJ, wiD be tbe jplllt 1,_..1er d mrrtun IIIII jattldw
apeaker. Ilia topic wll be a ,....lldl,y to ''lp ...... - . ..

•

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was namedt htr cbief advisor to the
Province region.
.

Fall State meeting for
:.OU
Mothers
Assn. slated '
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Family hour--still lurking

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PH.ARMACY
Middleport, Ohio
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�Anderson wants voter_s to give ·message
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Jn.. foreign trade defidts and slice
dependent presidential candidate OPEC oil consumptioo.
J9hn B. Anderson urged students · "We don'tWl!lltyourfuturetoconWednesday night to take a message ttnue to be one W:he!'e $90 bllllon
to the two majority parties in the
pours out of thiS 'country and into
Nov. 4general elecUon.
·
OPEC ~e~.
· ')Don't buy ·the line that a vote for.
"I don't ~t your future to be one
John Anderson is a vote for Ronald where 8 m!Won people In this coonReagan," Anderson told an overflow try contl!lue to be jobless."
.
crowd of 3,300, most of them' studenAnderson told the audience that he
. ta, at an Ohio State University was the ooly candidate whO would
auditorium.
·
·
rerease a detailed analysi8 of what ·
"Tell the two majority parties that
his proposals would cost. Those
'your best simply isn't enough,"' Anplans include tu credits of up to 25
. derson said. "Take a chance on your
percent for rehabilitation and
vote and vote for your future."
remodeling of old factories In the urAnderson asked the students to en- · ban North and Midwest.
dorse his · plans to rebuild the · · ·"I am the only candidate whO did
nation's cities; cut inllatton, reduce ·

By Myi'tle Clark aod Amlle Moon
EFNEP Nuirlllon Aides
Meigs Co. _Cooperative
Extenslooi'Servlce
.PUMPKIN POINTERS .

VISIT IN NEW YORK- Ray Bollinger, Mark Buckhold and Jim
Dillon shown m New York at a recent visit.

Youth visit Jehovah's Witness
headquarters in New York City
Ray Bollinger, Mark Buckhold
and Jim Dillon appear in this shot
taken in New York City. These three
tri-state youths were visiting the
world headquarters of Jehovah 's
Witnesses located on Brooklyn's
westside.
" This is one of the largest printing
facilities in the world and most of the
2,000 volunteer workers are hyoung
people. We were quite impressed by
the kind and cooperative spirit show
by all," they replied.
Dick Ciranko, local spokesman for
the international organization explained that Jehovah's Witnesses
work closely with young people and
parents to help develop responsible
adults that contribute in a positive
way to community improvement.
"To that end/ ', Ciranko said " a
special youth "Seminar has been
organized for Oct. 11 and 12 at Valley
High School in Lucasville. The
program will deal with the preventative appraoch to such problems as
crime, sexual immorality, drugs

and peer-pressure. Youth and paren·
ts are both . welcome. The sessions
are free and no collections will be
taken. Those interested in further infonnation can call 742·2951.
Sunday at 2 p.m. Paul A. Allen
from the New York headquarters
will deliver the special discourse,
"Our Refuge Amid Increasing
Dangers."
.
About 50 representatives from

Meigs County have arranged to at·
tend !he tw(}-day program at
Lucasville. Local meetings at the
Kingdom Hall, 37319 S.R. 124 West,
have been suspended for the special
event.
Families attending from this area
include Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wyne,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Chigas, the
Larry Staats family, the William
Plantz family, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Fowler and Mr. and Mrs.
Jonathan Wells.
Meetings of the Middleport
congregation will resume Oct. 14 at
7: 30p.m.

Polly's Pointers

Case of static ' curtains
.

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent .
DEAR POLLY - What can I do
about the static electrJcJty m my
polyester-cotton lace curtains? I
have used favric softener in the rinse water, and sheets one puts m the
dry~r. l ve_ sprayed on a guard
agamst stat1c. They have even been
dry cleaned. What can I do? ROSELLA
DEAR ROSELLA - You seem to
have tried all the
usual things. If
you dry the cur·
tains in your
dryer
tn
removing them
. while they arE
still a bit damp
and then hang
them and smooth
into place with
your bands.
Cramer ,
How about this, readers? I am
sure some of you must have the
same problem at one time or
another. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have
discovered a good use for those
plastic rings that ho~d beve~age cans
together. I cut them apart and trim
the edges and then use them to hold
pairs of socks together. No more
niix·ups'atmy house. - MRS. J . B.

.

DEAR POLLY - I am answering
Helen who bas trouble with wrinkles
in her permanent press curtains af·
ter a ceriain length of time and a few
washings. I have .extra large cur·
tains and had tried everything and
they had been ironed many times.
Then I tried the following procedure,
after which they never have to be
ironed.
Fold the soiled curtains neatly as
you remove them from the windows
and keep them folded through each
step. If they are white soak in a dry
bleach and wann water and press
down with the hands to force the soil
from the fabric. Next follow the
same procedure using detergent and
warm water. Rinse but keep cur·
tains folded. Place the !olden cur·
tains in the bottom of the empty
automatic washer and run them
through the spin dry cycle only.
Remove · while damp and, for the
very best results, stand on a step
stool while putting them on the rods
and hanging. This method is really
easy and far superior to any I have
ever tried. I never put permanent
presscurtainsinthedryer. - RUBY
Polly will send you one . of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve ·or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S · POIN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

Fall Festival committees named
Fall festival committees were
meeting which · opened with
named at the recent meeting of the
devotions being given by Larry
Young Adult Class of the Bradford
~ckens who used as his theme, "It's
Church of Christ held at the church.
Never Too Late" with scripture
The festival will be held at 6:30
from II Corio. Officers' reports were
p.ni. on Oct. 'J:l with prizes to be
given by Mrs. ·Mstht and Mrs. .
awarded In the costume judging.
Pickens. It was noted that the
Corrunittes are Mrs. · Catherine
ha}'ride was a success.
Russell, refreshments; Mrs. Vicki
Smith, Mrs. Ruby Hysell, Mrs.'Nancy Morri:i, and Becky and Madeline
POTLUCK FRIDAY
Painter, decorations; Dreama and
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine of
· Steve Pickens, treats; Bormie WOOd,
Jerusalem, will have a potluck supEvelyn Wood; and Dreama Pickens,
per Friday night at 7:30p.m. at the
junior and adult games, and Becky
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. All
Painter and Vicki Smith, begl.rJ!jer sojourners an.d their families are in·
games.
filed to .attend.
The class agreed to purt hase .a
case of soap to be sent to the Grundy
Mountain Mission. A layette shower
FEu.o'WSHIPDmRSUNDA,Y .
will be held for Mrs. Smith on No.v.
There will be a fellowship dinner
at 7 p.m. at the church, and the rte:xt
at
Trinity Church immediately
class meeting will ~e place at 7
following
the Sunday morning worP-m. on Nov. 3 at the church with
ship
service.
Meat and beverage will
· Mrs. Painter to have devotions.
be
furnis~.
~
.
11 Mrs. Russell presldef at the

Pumpkin · has an unusual nutty
Ilavor that combil\es well with ham,
sausage, chicken, t.urJ&lt;ey and sugar
and spices. September 15 to October
30 is the peak season for pumpkin, so
right now is a good time to cook with·
this vitamin A-rich vegetable.
· Fresh pumpkin can be prepared to
serve or use in other recipes by
baking or boiling. To bake, cut the
pumpkin in · serving sizes and
remove the seeds and string parts.
Place the cut side down in a baking
dish with one-fourth inch water in
the bottom of the pan. Bake until tender (about 30 to 40 minutes) at 324
Degree F. Pumpkin can be boiled by
placing clean pieces in boiling,
salted water for 25 to 30 minuteS. To
use in other recipes, scrape the pumpkin out of the shell and add according to recipe Instructions. pwn·
pkin can be mashed with spread,
• salt, and pepper to maek a tasty
dish. Plan to alow one-half pound of
fresh pumpkin per person when ser·
· ving this vegetable· baked or
mashed.
Buy a pumpkin with a bart, tough
rind that is heayy for its size. Avoid
those with cuts, punctures, sunken
spots or mold. pumpkins can be
store in a cool, dry area for several
weeks. It's not ,necessary to
refrigerate them.
Pumpkin can be prepared in many
way.s. Below is a Jist of suggestions
for dressing up baked pumpkin.
SugesllosnforServtag
Baked Pumpldn
1. Sprinkle with salt an pepper.
2. A!ld spread or sausage drippings.
3. Dot with marshmallows and
nutmeg. ·
4. Mash with orange juice.
5. Fill with cremed chicken. ham,
or beef. Top with buttered bread
cubes and bake until golden brown.
6. Bake with partially cooked
sausage.
7. Place a small onion brushed
with melted spread under each pumpkin piece. When tender, turn cut
. side up and mash slightly with fork.
Place onion in center of piece and
surround with cooked link sausage.
Bake 10 minutes longer.
Pumpkin seeds are delicious and
nutritious. They are a good source&lt;£
protein, fat, phosphorus, niacin,
thiamin, and riboflavin. Protein is
necessary for cell growth and repair
and supplies energy for the body.
Fat is needed for healthy skin and
also provides energy for the body.
Phosphorus Jl!'Omotes strong bones
and teeth. Phorphorus, niacin, ·
thiamin and riboflavin are all
neededtoroduceenergyforthebody
from protein, carbohydrate, and fat,·
So, don't throw those pumpkin seeds
away. Save them to make a tasty
and nutritious snack:
Prepare toasted pumpkin seeds by
washing the seeds and speadng them
on a cookie sheet to dry. When they
are dry, spinkle with 1 tablespoon of
melted spread and salt lightly. Mix
salt, seeds, and spread. Bake at 275
degrees F. until seeds become
golden brown. Serve as a snack or
use to garnish salads and casseroles.

. Reagan ·tours steel mills
Gallipolla, Saturday, Oct. 18. Dinner theater ·prej,en. !.
tation reservations for this show call My Slater's
Closet, _446 Ute. October 21, 22 are straight ' theater .
shows. Showtime, 8 p.m. Tickets at the door or from
any Theatre 35 member $4.
·
· · · .\

PLAY TO BEGIN - Jay Jennewne, of Gallipolis,
as Ellen Gordon persuades John Eck!!r, of Gallipolis,
to make ~rvations to see "Any Wednesday" also
featuring Greg Miller and Regina Chaney, both of
Jackson. Theatre 35 will present this adult comedy at
the Senior Citizens Center on Route 160 northei\St of

'

.
JOHN JOHNsoN
IN EXERCISE
Marine Lance Cpl. Johnny A.

Johnson, whose wife, Colleen, is the
daughter of tlf. and Mrs. Robert t..
Person of Rt. 1, Box 46, Long Bo.t·
tom, is participating In exercise
"Team .Work 80."
'
He .is a member of 2nd Battalion
2nd Marines, Camp Lejuene, N: C. '
A 1!117 graduate of Warren High
School, Vincent, Johnson joined the
Marine Corps in December 1978.

CF fund collectS ·over $17,000 countjr-wide ·

'.

Over $1700 has beeri collected In
Mrs. Zuelelia Smith, chapeau, project. Funds from this will be used ~
the county-wide cystic fibrosis fund
presided at the meeting which for local ildreri with respiratory ~
drive being conducted by the Meigs
opened in ritualistic form with Mrs. problems 11nd for Children's .
County Salon 710, Eight and Forty, it · Pearl Knapp serving as first derni Hospital. Date books and knives are ''
was reported at a Salon meeting
chapeau, and Mrs. Lula Hampton, also for sale and orders for any of "
Monday night at the home of Mrs.
second demi-chapeau. Mrs. Julia these things may be placed by"
Rhoda Hackett.
Hysell bad the prayer. Mrs. telephoning 992-7022, 99U049 or 992- (
Mrs: Ruby Marshall, chlldren and
Catherine Welsh used a door prize to . 6124.
. '
youth· chairman, noted that all
collect $8.50 for the nurses scholarA thank-you note was read fr&lt;m
monies have not been turned in and
ship fund.
the Watson Bradley family at the ~
Ssked that the drive 1M! completed
A report for e partnership chair- death of Mrs. Smith's broOier. A' '
and the packets turned in to Mrs.
man, Cheryl Lehew, was given and card was sent to Mrs. Glady's
Mary Martin soon. All funds will go
it was noted that the Salon is now Mowery. Announced was tiM! school •
to the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation for . goal plus one. Five American Legion of instruction to be held on Oct. 25 at •
research.
Alllliliary members have been in- the Hilton Hotel In Columbus. Mrs. :;
It was noted during the meeting
vited to attend and those accepting Shirley Wood's bomecoming will be ..
that.there is a cystic fibrosis child in
the invitation are Mrs. Betty Vim held on Nov. 1 at Lucke)C,. and the
the county now and the family will
Meter, Mrs. LOretta Tiemeyer, and national reception for the nationaJ ~
be contacted about · possible
Mrs. Dorothy Wells.
chapeau, Mrs. Violet Aichholz, will
assistance.
Benson fruit cakes will again this 'be on Nov. 15 at the Ralnada Inn, ;,
year
be sold as
a money-making
Columbus.
''
..
.
.

•

Overeaters Aponymous
.'·
meet in Parkersbrirg Sa~day :~
;'J

Halloween
fare planned
Halloween suckers were made
when the Middleport Junior Girl
Scout Troop 1039 met,,'rUesday at the
home of Mrs. Susie S!ewart.
The scouts also enjoyed a piCJiic
and games during he afternoon. ·
Plans were made for selling Veich •
candy? the bars for 50 cents each,
and tins of candy for $2 and $3.
Anyone interested in buying candy is
asked to contact Mrs. Joy Clark,
leader, at 992-:1690.
BAKESALEFRIDAY
AbakesalewillbeheldatKrogers .
Friday beginning at 10 a.m. by the
American ~gion Alllliliary of Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy. Those
with baked items for the sale are
asked to either take them to Krogers
Friday mOrning, or contact either
Mrs. .Dorothy JellkiDs financial
chairman, 992-3133,, or
Pearl
· for pickup.
Kna pp, """
••vv~124
·

Mrs.

' Parkersburg-Marietta area Intergroup of Oveieaters Anonymous
is sponsoring a . workshop and
marathon Saturday, Oct. 11,10 a.m.5 p.m. at the First United Methodist
Church, lOth and Juliana St.,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Reglstnition will be 9 a.m. • 10
a.m. with a fee of fl whiCh will include the day's program, coffee and
tea. Participants_are asked to bring

a brown bag ltmch. ·
.
This event is open to the public but
it is especially for persons wbo feet:l

they have a problem witb overeatins ~
compulsively or those ~ help~
for a friend or family niember witb : •
thisptoblem.
For further Information calJ..i
overeaters anonymous 1~. 1
5353... J

...

~

Council chooses officers recently

•
'provide entertainment.
'
Costumes judges will be George
Foss Mrs Gladys T 1
Jo~n. ·
ay or and I&gt;orsy'i····,
It was decided to place a mailbox;.
In wing A and wing B. The residents' ·
will attend the Arts and Ci-afts Fair
at Bob Evans Fannon Friday.
~,·
The
Hna
· mee_"t was closed by Mrs. ~~
uttle.
The next meeting will be held !l

The residents coimcil of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center met
recently and elected officers.
Elected were Mrs. Pearl Little
president, Mrs. 'Eulah Pennington'
vice president, and Miss
Schenkle, secretary.
It was decided to hold a Halloween
party on Oct 29 at 7 p.m. Refreshments
of cider, donuts and cak• will
be
•

til.y

I.....,..., S. C.

..

He jOined the Marine COI'plln October, 19'79.
·

·Strike talks
.
to continue
.

.

.

Another 1,700 workers are. on Indefinite
layoff, said GM spokesman
Strltinl! aatoworkers and officials
David
Bodkin.
at • Olmolet plant ln Panna will
About 400 members of In·
relurll to the bargalll1ng table ~Y .
ternatiOIII!l
Union rl Electrical;
lnan effort to end a walkout by about
.,., workerL
.
Workers Local 7ffl walked out at
About 1,800 striking steel GE's Cleveland equl)mellt plant in a
, Eight defendants were fined and
fabrteatiDg workers were to vote dispute over layoff policy.
five others forfeited bonds in Meigs
The
plant,
which
has
about
i50
emtoday on a new' contract after a
week·IOUjl lirlke In 11Je Mabon1ng ' ployees, produces lamp-making County Court wednesday. Fined by Judge Pairlck O'Brien
Valley. Talb were to resume at machinerY for other GE plants,
were
Steve McGrath, Rutland, six
which are not affected by the ·
another
shut by the strike.
months
confinement, four months
walkout.
No tala wwe IChedaled in a strike
suspended,
two years probation,
Local 7111 Vice President N:onnn
by el«tricaj WIJI'tera at a General
a
ssau1t.
defendant
plead not ilullty
'
Klein said the company recently anElec:trle plant In Cleveland.
on
an
assault
charge
but found
nounced it would lay ~ 54 workers
Membeta of United Auto Workers
guilty,
45
days
confinement
for
Local 10IMi lit up picket llnee at the nat month. He said the union ob- violation of probation; Keith
jected to the company's lack of
~ plant Wednesday after. a
Musser, Pomeroy, 10 days con.
regard for seniority In selecting
II a.m. strike clepdJine passed with
workers for the first layoffs at the finement, seven days suspended,
no agxeeuwB~t onaloeal contract.
restitution, six months probation,
Tbe plot's 770 Slllaried ilmp)oyees plant since 19611.
criminal
mischief; ·Kathleen RielAbout 1,800 employees at five
rmllm!OCI to work.
mire,
Pomeroy,
$23 and costs,
Union and company spokesmen Wean United Inc. plants In the
speed;
Ronald
A.
Hanning, Rt. 3,
WGUid 11Y only tbat the dllpute In- Mdonlng Valley were to vote on a Pomery, $35 and costs, no valid
new contract. Wean United was one
volved )OcaJ aenlorlty rules and
platea; David H. Mora, Rt. 3,
1lther iasues. 'lbe workers are paid of eight area companies affected by Pomeroy,
$50 and costs, failure to
under the General Motors muter local United Steelworkers strikes stop within assured clear distance;
.
contract, w~ch now is In Its second that began on Oct. 1.
Anotbl!r 1,800 workers remalrted June M. Pickens, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
year. .
Worten at 151 General Motors on strike 8flalnBt Commercial
Sbeilrlng Co., Wllllam B. Pollock
planll are peld $10 an boor plus
eo_, YOUJI8llloWII Steel Door Inc.,
Jlenel!ta. The Perma Chevrolet pial&amp;
Ill{_
Porter Co., Allied Metall Co.•
and four otber GM pJinta bave not
Heltzel Co. aod ~can Welding
retlfled local cootractL
·
and Manufaeturlng Co. .Another
Tbe Parma cout.rac:t apired In
......... 1m. Tbe plant )ll'Gduces 1,3001alcl-off workers are considered
on strike.
tre!!R"in!'IM, drive sbaftl and
Talllll are scheduled today bet•mped lleel pm1B for
ween
ADied Metals and 68 produ~
Cbrnolet a •II&gt;IY p)anta.
lion
workers
at Ita Niles plant At
l.GcallOOI Pr'llicleDt Larry Martin
IsSue
Is
whether
fabricating workers
lllid about a .employees due to
at
small
steel
companies
will win the
return from ~:yolfa on Monday will
benefits
negotiated
In
the
basic steel
.be COIII!dend ·on strike If the
MOSCOW (AP) - President
&amp;greement
between
the
nine top
walkout contlmles and, will lose
Leonid I. Brezlmev signed a treaty
ateelmakers and the USW _
unemployment beneftta.
that ill said to give Syria, the
loogtime foe of Iraq, the status of
virtual membership In the Warsaw
Pac:t. But Brezlmev said the Soviet
•
Union is not going to Intervene in the

c:amPan1

war~ing

•r

issued

Bus ·' drivers· get approval

certificates were · Col·-'-··
on Nov. 8 and 7 and a""
WUUUD
r
illued toll paliOiil'wben the Melp proved the attendance . of Robert
County Bolrd al Education helclllll Bowen, county superintendent, to a
OctoberiJIIIetiDI.
treuurer'smeetinClnChllllcotheon
Bill driver

·B~~d~~~PaS::

Snowden, Jonathan Wells, Howard
Searls, Allee Ward, Roy Smith,
Aaron Sayre; Brian 'fYindon, W!Wam
Cerr and Diane CnJsby.
• Tbe board ...s-:oved the atof J - Rogers, acbooL
~opt.toa state meetill8ln a
,
·

....,.nee

Iran-Iraq
war and warned the West
tostayoulaiso.
Brezhnev signed a treaty of frieJr
dshlp and cooperation with Syrian
President Hafez As8ad oo Wed-

meeting of the Ohio State Boards
Assn.

All county board membera attended the meetng. They are George
Perry, Harold Lohse, Oris Smith,
RobertBurdetteandHaroldRoush. . affairs."
·
·
·
.
Brezhnev cieatly referred to

BOOTS

40%0FF
20% ofF
.

...

THIS SALE ONLY
GROUP .I
.
.
WOMEN'S DRESS

Holds Till
Christmas

. ·-

FASHION

BOOTS'.

ENTIRE STOCK

MEN'S SHOES
'

-

.,.

• BclbOrllle,eD-pro~of

tile

..

.

!

GIRLS
. .

--

"THIS SALE 'ONLYr--.. .

.. "owl bnlnpl.·

$5.00
"~~'

tumlng In

afttn ,eehooll.tne
etNet!C 'elpd........ 1D ........ far
~ -_.. from N
Qli ''• Wander Breld, lAI C1111D
limP, 1.a1 Clllln Pancake and Waf.
de Mlx and leer ltrlpl from B1r..,. Awea lllld OreDp P1111

20%-.0FF

20% OFF

~a -

;-~ ~

'

BOOTS

DRESS SHOES

Ev~ In the comunitli.!IIISked
to help reach tile goal by saving ·and

jO)IJeJN:Vtldeldtbroulb·lhenau-1
t-tTunandn.-'pnpam.

ALL WOMEN'S
DRESS &amp; CASUAL HII(ING

ENTIRE STOCK
WOMEN'S-

• Melli Junior lfllb Schoolldcked
tlf a ec&amp;cn drml Manday elmed at

-·"tdine

I

'

I.

.
.

I

: '

'

-·

- 2_0CfJOFF
ss.otMokll nn

llnal.

~of.-~~it
IIJe Nau-1 PtapiiDDinletor.

.

-

llllaml' DolaHrw aDd a

!he

special proof-ofpurcbue .-Ia from Fun 'n Fitness
brenda. Tbey may be tumec1 over to
MelpJr. lfllbllluCienbtordelivered
tothe~anytlmeduringBchool

antllMay, '11. ,
Tbe c:oDectillll JlflllrPIIl will be uncler the alllpices fl the Health and
P.E. Dlpartmeat.
Mel;. Jr. 8Igb Ia located at Sautli
Tblrd AYII. In Middleport with
lll'fldee .even and e1aJt. Jolin Mora
._ principel ICIIIda Wlllamllll beecl

ofmenLtbe )lll.rlleal edlatlon· ctepert.

oil

if they

are threatened by the llklay-old bet-..
ween the oil giants at the head of the
gulf.
Without naming the United States
or Carter, he accused "lm·
periallsts''
Of
''militaristic
machinations" In the conflict and
118id they hopeci-to use the war to
"reestablish their domination in
The Soviet Union Is "not going to
Intervene In the conlllc:t" between
lr8l1 aod Iraq," Brezhnev said In the
flnbelt Soviet statement yet on the
war. '11!e West, too, 1IIUIIt keep ''han-

dlolfo-events."bewamed.

·.MODULAR
.HOMES
Go¥- Wlltld 1..111 fllrCIIu&amp;llflid IJuytrl · f'HA iU-VA·Cei!VIIII'-1 fin. nell, . ,

Chrlstm•s

OF SHOES.
MIDDLIPORT, OHIO

Florist Since 1957

t-::2
.T~

t
II

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

i

L

_..

_

3S2 E. Ma in, Pomeroy

______

Your FTD Florist

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

DENIMS

$40.50, speeding.
Eight defendants were fined and
five others forfeited bonds In the
court of Racine Mayor Charles
Py)es recently.
Fined were John E. Fisher, Rt. l,
Racine, $38.70, reckless operation;
Rick Deeter, Rt. 1, Racine, $33.70,
loitering; ~lie Jenkins, Greg Huffman and Wayne Cleland, ail of
Racine, were each fined $38.70, for
loitering; John Sellers, Rt. l,
Racine, $33.70, theft; Mark Conlpson, Muon, $29. 7y0, speeding; .
Clyde R. Quillen, Syracuse, Sll. 70,

JR. JEANS .
ASSORTED BRANDS AND
STYLES .
·. Values to 116.95
•

speeding.

Forfeitlns bonds in the amount of
$35 each, all on speeding charges,
were Dale A. Clonch, Middleport,
Rex L. Roy and Charles T. Hill, of
Racine, John M. Ridgeway, New
Haven, and Joe Clarlt, Pl. Pleasant.

Weekend At Meigs Inn
fRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Fruit Cocktail
Tossed Salad
Baked Steak
Baked Potato
Vegtltable
Dessert
Coffee, Tea, Milk

/

~\

ENlERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

QUINTESSEN--

9 ·tn 1

4 PIECE GROU.P

FROM MARIETTA, OHIO

You must be nor •ccompanied by parents or lti!al guardian .

. ;· NJoblle Nome Tr1des Welcome
Show Models

.

Your " Extra Touch "

I
I

NEAT'N'TRM

All LEGAL ·
BEVERAGES SOLD

'

Whll'it Selection ·Ia Good''
.

..,

lfan."

rp-.;;;;;;;;;;~~~i!i!~~!!~!!!!~
u

.

_
h erl·t aga Nousa ·

,._..._. _____

1n a dinner speech only hours after
signing the treaty, Brezhnev said the
Persian Gulf is the affalr of the Persian Gulf states and "no one has a
right to meddle from outside in their

$5.00 HOLDS ANY ITEM "·IN LAYAWAY! -

~

$22 and costs, speed; Jeffrey Root,
Tuppers Plains, $50 aod costa, disorderly conduct; Ricky Deeter, Rt. 3,
Ractue, $40 and costa, failure to
yield.
Forfeitlns bonds ere Glendon
. Faulk, Pomeroy, $35.50, driving
through median; Richard Young,
Racine, and WUllam Saintslng, Tuppers Plalna, $360.50 each, DWI;
Robert B. Dudley, Jr., l)enrent,
Ohio, $42.55, passing stopped school
bus; Don K. Layton, Pl Pleasant,

nOWICed last.week in a massive ef.
.fort to assist domestic steel
producers.
"I want to meet the people of this
industry, people who work in it,
people who manage the site, and I
want to get aU the input 1cim to find
out ... how govermnent can help, ·and
what It is that makes this sort of
thing happen," Reagan told maintenance workers assembled in the
yard of the plant, which is now under
control of the Jones I Laughlln Steel·
Co.
WUilam Sullivan, a J&amp;L con. sultant who is working toward
redeveloping the closed plant,
travel~ in the car with Reagan on
the tour and said the candidate
became quite upaet as he drove by
the dilapidated, rusting buildings c1
the old plant.

=·ran~ S:e~CO:

lllld mueb aeedecl
IIIII otber varloul pieCes
flhparta eqnlpnent Tbe equlpmed

MEN'S DRESS-

percent and a national mark of 7.5
percent. •
· Standing In the yard of what was
once the Campbell Worka of
Youngstown Sheet and Tube
Division of Lykes CIJ.rp.'s blast furnaces, Reagaa criticized Carter for
abandoning a price-control program
delligned to protec:t domestic steel.
makers fron) foreign steel.
.
The program, !QI9WD as a triggerpricing mechanism, is in the process

of being reinstituted by Carter and 18
one of several programs he an-

the Equal Right$ Amendment were
quaint.Andei'SOn joked with the audience
about Reagan's statement that. the
Mt. · St. Helens eruption prodUced
mo!J! .a ir pollution than automobiles.
"The difference . between Mr.
Reagan and me is .that l know there .
is not much we can do about Mt. St.
HelCDII,'' Andei'BOJJ siid. "But -there
is something we can do about air
pollution, unless we want to let It
spew out of 110 million exhaust
pipes.
"There ill something govenunent
can lllld should do about that."
Noting tiiat many of those present ·
would be .voting for the first time
next month; Andei'!IOQ said . the
students JJhould not think only in terms of Democrats or Republicans.
During a question-and-answer
pepod after the speech. ·AndersOn
fielded questions on topics ranging
from nuclear weapons to the
legalization of marijuana. He said
he did not favor considering taxation
of legalized maijuana as a revenue
source il.nd added, "I don't want to
describe it as a remedy for the ills of
this country.''
Earller Wednesday in Columbwi,
Anderson said the United States
must not only maintain a strong
defense but also step up aid to underdeveloped nations to help insure
world peace.
. - - - - - - -..__...__.
- - - -......
-

OctJi!ld Roush was named the .
board's delegate to the 81Ulual
Arab state from foreign attack.

fund raising
campaign 6egins~~
~ :WS~.~
·
·
vital Penlan Gulf routes

'

.

rate of 12.8 percent. That compares

to a state unemployment rate of 9.1

13 cases terminated

9th ANNIVERSARY
.
-SALE CONTINUES!

"luy Now for Christmas
COMPI..E'ID TRAINING
Marine Pvt. John R. Weddle, son
of Od- Hysell of Rt. 7, Port1.and,
has completed recruit tl'lllnlnlat the
~Corps Recruit Depot, Parrla

YOUNGSTO'\YN, Ohio - Ronald
Reagan toured one of the natilin's
mosf depressed ·steel-producing
areas Wednes!lay and blamed the
Carter administration for much of
the region's economic trouble.
The Republican presidential candidate concluded a twc&gt;day tour of
eastern Ohio coal and steel facilities
with a trip through steel mllls.
r.mi closings in the past three
years have lead to the loss of more
.than lO,OOO.jobs and continues to contribute to an area unemployment

· 11)-The AIIOdated Prell

TOPS news reported ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;se;;rvect;;.;A;;bl;uegr;;ass;;band;;will;.~;the;f;trst;;wecinesday;
· ;;~ln;N;ov~embe~r~.·,~;
A new contest, "Let's put the heat
on ihinness", was started when ·the
Rutland TOPS OH 1456 Club met this
week.
Emphasis of the contest will be on
counting calories and attending
meetings. Clara Phillips was e monthly queen and was presented a ribbon and $3. The weekly queen was
Frieda Davis with Frances Hysell as
rurmer-up. The queen was presented
a dollar and a sonfi'was sung in her
honor.
Jo Ann Tewksbary of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Aaaociatlon
was present at the meeting and
talked on tuberculosis symptoms,
treatment and preve,ntion.

• not promise a tax eut the first thing
off the bat," Anderson said- "No, I
said other things have got to be done
. first. It 18 going to cost something.''
At the beginning of his 40-mlnute
address, Ancjenion said the students
will be choosing am'ong three dif.
ferent candidates with different
views.
He said President Carter feels the
" imperial use" _of his incumbency to
promote his re-elecUon is · proper.
"While he does that, the economy is
stagnating, lnfiation is unchecked,
and the nation's foreign poicy is in
disarray,'' Anderson said.
He said Republican candidate
Reagan's positions on pollution and ·

.\. ' KINGSBURY' HOME SAlES &amp; SERVICE
- .,-jilf' ~ First In M•IIUIICUted Housing"

8.

m-7034

Pomeroy, 0.

THE MEIGS INN
..

Phone 992-3629

•

I

Pomeroy, 0.

r
J

I

II

I
~
i"

�&lt;

l\feigs ·place~ sixth .·in. tournament
Meigs golfers carded a 361 Score
Wedneaday to place sixth in the
Cla!la AA Sectional Tournament a
Oxbow COWl...,. Cl b t Bel
-~ failed
' u a to· qualify
pre. for
WhUe• ·Meig$
the District 'l'oui'nament, J. R.
Wamsley of tile 1\!arauder team.
Witll .a 'li, did' gain 11 birth for tbe
distlict~tasthelowesUcorer.

Chesapeake t0ppec1 all teams in

district COJ!!PetitloD with a 324 while
Sheridan bad a 334 and Warren, a

343.

.

n- lhfee teams..Jiu compete in :
district tournament play.
· Other teams conlpe~ the AA
Sectionals, . and the ieam .acores, ·
· were' Belpre M5· New
L
.
e x i n g t o n

'

'

. .

h 0. ld

• ·
8eSS10D

The Southeast Tributarles Water
Quality ManagementAdvisory Commlttee wl1l bold Its next m!leting on.
....._
__.. _ ·Oct • 30 at 7:30 p.m. in the
..,...,....y,
Rio Gl'811de College faculty dining

oeruse

MAJORETTES - Fronting the Eastern High
White, Field Commander; Beth Riebel, head
School Marching Band this fall are these majorette$, majorette; DianeSmithllnd Lori LOuks.
·
from left to right, Becky Eichinger; Rhorida Riebel, ·•

..
.1\.thens .In first place with a 21.0

~'50 Wf.IAT 1-lAPPe N S

"'OW?

slate, Athens, second -:lth .a 17-4
record; Gallipolis, third with a 16-6
reord and Meigs and JacbOn, tied
for fourth with an 8-13. Iron·tone~
•r
~.•1'lpdwiWth a 7·14 record. WA!IIiton, ·
u-1 ail averly, 1-20.
.
·•

5

ro:; Southeast.Tribuiar!es basin
area involves the following counties,
in whole or in part: Athens, Gallla,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pike, Scioto and Vinton.
Main agenda item \vlll be the fOI'mulatioo of baaln advisory committee by-lllws. By-laws will enable
the committee to act more ef·
fectively and cobe!llvely on approval
of or recommenations on the basin's
water quality manago:Jnent Plan.

A!IIMALS

.'

K
·
sey asem

BORN LOSER

l~'bll tQl'T ~'Je IJE. A~~

WMPO

'f'JA HOT

~~

8 til Noon

.

c::Q.l'r UXJI( ~XJW, BUT lllt'7

:rru. 00 ~IM IIJTOTH' ~

SATURDAYS

'

•
lf.\DI~'SU~

..I

AJ:T6RtJCQJ:

10 ce,to.lll !

.BAER'S MARKET.svRACUsE

-YOU HAW:H'T SAID AHYTHIN6,

OCT. 10 &amp; 11, ... 10% DISCOUNT
ON ALL GROCERIES, EXCLUDING
MEAT, PRODUCE. AND DAIRY

SAIIDY, 6UT I C'll KEAR YOI)R
STOMACH

T~'

YIOIW OUT ;ON Til'
5TRffT'! WHAt IF Til'
!lfDHEADED KID IS IN
Tl1' ~ETTER PART
OF TOI'-IH?

ROM~IH'- AH' I'IY
TIJOIH~

IH A111£T.'"'

''

'

COME BACK HERE, 'YOU
COWARDS! 'rOU'VE GOT

your

TO STOP THAT ANIMAL!

CAN'T 'rOll DUMMIES
SEE I'M NOT
GORILLA?i'!

Mrs. Alice M. Rairden, 86, Rt. I,
: Long Bottom, died early Wednesdsy
: morning at Arcadia Nursing Home,
: Coolville, following an extended

illness.
Mrs. Rairden was born in Meigs
County the daughter of the late
Lewis and Eliza beth Park Ervin.
She was also preceded in death by
four brothers and one sister.
She was a member of the .Long
Bottom United Methodist Church
and a former member of the WSCS.

Services set Sunday
Homecoming services will be held
at the Carleton Church, Kingsbury
·, - Road, Sunday,.Oct:12.
· · Suriday School will be held at 9:30
a.m. followed by worship service at
10:30. A basket .Junch will be served
,,
at 12:30 p.m.
The afternoon services will begin
. : . at
p.m. featuring
the Gospel
Tones
of 2Charleston
the The
Soul Finders
of Bidwell. The Rev. Gary King in,_ vites the public to attend.

'.

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County . common Pleas
Court Kenneth ROnllne, Pomeroy,
filed suit for dlvoree.against Maria
Romine, Pomeroy.

,
•.

', MEETS TONIGHT
Shade River Lodge 464, F&amp;AM,
. ·. Chester' will meel at • thl8 evening.
•All Master Masons are invited.·

COI.'IHTY CAR~ERSP!!

J.

.'

I

in(vst

·"'-J ~ benefits program is .
considered by many businesses to be the most
effiqent use rl. their benefits dollar. And, of
course, your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans
can be _the source foc the options necessary to
build the most value into a complete benefits
program.
• .
An added benefit dimension is the fact that . ·
your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans are rec- ,
ognized Iea4ers in efforts that are~
more efficient use rl.health care resources. For ·
example, there are innovative Blue CrosS'and
Blue Shield c&lt;ist.containment programs that pay
for certain types rl. treatment OJi an (.IUipatient
basis. These )lrogr3ms, such as pre-admission
testing, post-discharge testing, same-day surgery, and eo&lt;rdinated home health care, can
shorten Or even eliminate many elcpensjveinpatient ~ st,ays ..• with no loss in the quality
ri care. InnOvative programs like these can have
a fav&lt;rable effect 00 the l'lltes you pay health

EXACTLY!

~~~~~~~===:~r~rr.~~t.~CULOYS$'~~

•

care protection.

'

.

GLORY ' BE!!

'

- - ' - -"7:----......,._ Convenient Branch Office to Serve Your Needs-·- - ' - - - - - - ATHENS OFFICE: 1005 East State Street, Suite #2, Athens, Ohio 45701 (614) 592-6273/6232
8ervlng: Athens, Jackson, Gallia,
HoCking, Lawreitce, Meigs, Morgan aild Vmton CQunties.
.
'

\

·'i'ov·KNOW WHA:I' KIND
OF BIRD '100 MPH 6E?

Value added. ··

.'

oswald Jacoby anq Alan §ontag

Creative play buys entry
NORTH

• 8 7 .5

tKe
+A.97 43
WEST
• 93

+5

• J iO 91
+ K 10 6 2

.QJ9 6
tA Q 6 32
+QJ 5

.K

E AST

32

SOUTH

+AKQJ 642
. • A 10 I
• 75

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
West

Pass

North

East · SOutb

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
There.is a considerable· s im~­

iiarity between today's and

0

0

' ~

THE PIKA

I---::;;~------;---~;:;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;.;;:I
~ ~J

NIGHTUNE

FER SONS: George Won ' t Talk '
George Ia riding on cloud nine when
· he Ia Invited to lecture at a college,
but he cornea down to earth in 1
hurry when he flnda out ex!_~?tiY
where the c'ollege Ia. (Repea~) · ·
'McMILLAII AND WIFE: Cop Of The
Year' Stare : Rock Hudson. John
Schuck. (Repeat)
, (I) A8C CAPTIONED NEWS
ila) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) u

"TUAT WA5 P.REm'
60017... MMBE I~
A'MOVRHIN6 WSI.SR"!

''MOIIRNIN6 WARBLER~~.
'fWEI{ 60 LIKE ni'IS.;.

r

tonofdrugolo~ollce,Pepperlohot

onthetrallof adrugrlno. (Repeet; 2
hro:Jo.!5 mine.)•
.
12:30 00•(!) TOMORROW
(]) MOVII! -(HORROR) .. ~ "Tile
Derklt 11178 ,
12:68 (I) NEWS UPDATE
1:00 (]) KOINONIA
1:30 . (]) '
IIOB!IIT
SCHULLER
(CAPTIONED)

~'..J.L--ri=-~

...

.. ,. '

•
'

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

The.pika is a relative of the cottontail and jackrabbit
but bears no resemblance to them. With its short ears it ·
looks like a large meadow mouse, but it has no tail that
is. visible. It lives in rocky places In parts of•Asia,
Europe and North America.

GIIJ CBSLATEMOVIE 'THE JEF •

I{OU'REA

yesterday's hands. In both
instances South has seven top
trump tricks and needs to set
up the last card of a rive-card
suit in dummy. He needs an
extra entry to dummy to do
that and finds it by ·means of
an unnecessary fineSse. .
· East took two diamond
tricks and shifted to the queen
of hearts, South was in with
the ace. He led a· club to
dummy's ace ruffed a Club
high, led his deuce of trumps
and finessed dummy's seven .
This play risked an extra
trick set and .South would
really have looked silly if
East had wQn with .a singleton
nine, but justice and percentage worked out. South's play
would give that extra en~ry to
dummy if West held either
nine or nine·five of .spades
after following with the three.
Now it was a simple matter
for South to ruff another club
high, lead to dummy's 10 of
trumps, ruff another club,
enter dummy with the eigbt
and get a heart discard.
There is another similarity
to yesterday's hand. East .
could have beaten declarer by
leading his singleton tfump
instead of the queen of hearts.

f---.. . :.- ---------:--------

M8n of a Thoueand Facet"
11157
I]) (i}l Ql
ABC NEWS

...

4•

Opening iead:+J ·

11

(JI)
Ql
CHARl.IE'.S
ANGI!LI-POLICE
WOMAN
.Charlie ' o Angelo .. 'l Will Be ,
Remembered' A movie queen hi rea
theangela to lind out who latryjngto
drive her Insane Juat a a ahelaabout
to make 1 big comeback. Pollee
Woman:·'TheSctJre0 Whenayoung
gl~ klllo heroetto"er moiling 1 cor·

10·9-80

+t O8 7

+s

wm

11:50 IIJ

'

.. "'

m a oo

(Answers tomorrow)

BRIDGE

~M'Oea;
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
I Hide
I Breakwater
5 Stadium
2 ll Duce's
entranoe
daugljter
-9 Perfect
3 Easy pace
11 In company
4 Color
13 Minnesota city 5 Strong
U Mrs. Eddie
smelling
6 Wing
Albert
15 Ethiopian
7 Slowly
prince
8 Worker
16 My stars I
with
18-lala
intaglios
19 mega!
10 - Beach,
lending rates
Calif.
21 Cereal growth 12 .Beards
22 Sleep
17 Work
inducing
unit
~4 Submerge ,
20 Progenitor
25 Grand
or light
26 Wooden
match
27 Distant
(comb. fo11111 ~t,-t--+-28 Gaffes

22 - up
(contains)
23 Herbert's
forte
24 Sand ridge
26 Primitive
setting
28 Scary
utterance

30 Costing
much
3t "Essays
of
- "
35 Latvian
37 Pale$nian
org.
39 Cap

29 Essay
30 Bruises
31 Give a - up b.-+-1--+--+32 - danpe
33 Fencing
diiiiiiTIY

36 Russian
. stockade

38 Outdated
40 Series
of steps
n Unspoken
420n
f3 Ham or

DAILY CRYJ&gt;TOQUOTE- Here's

ho~ '-«1 work It:

A X Y D L B A A'X a
LONGFBt ·tow ·

'"8hlrk.... 1&amp;70

. 'PEANur8

"

f!!nter has found rot in the eaves.
9:55 (!) TBS EVENING !IEWS
10:00 Ill IIJ (!DJ THE HOME FRONT In
December t94t, the Travis and
Spinelli families find their llvao
• being changed not only by World
War ii, but also by the bitter con·
troversies that reign within and
between their fa millea. Stars: Craig
Stevens, Jean Simmons. (60
mins.)
Cll MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'CrJmeandPunlshment' Part II. RaS·
~olnikov c Ia irna his pawned tririket a
at the pollee station and mf:'ets the
Inspect o r Investigating the old
woman's
murder.
(Closed·
Caplloned) (60 min a.)
®NEWS
t0:28 (]) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (]) NORMAN VINCENT rEALE
C!J MONSTERS, MAO liEN AND
MACHINES '80 Yeara of Science
Fi ction' Hosted by Gil Gerard , thi'
spepiel features tootege from a
wide range of classic sci·fi
movies.
(fi) TOioiORROW'S FAMILIES
10:58 (]) NEWS UPDATE
11
CIJ
(jDJ
NEWS
(lJ JOHN ANKERBERG SHOW
(]) NIGHT GALLERY .
.
CIJ MONTY PYTHON'S FLY~G
CIRCUS
. (fi) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:28 (]) NEWS UPDATE
11:30 (1) 8 C!J THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guest host :· Robert Klein. (60
mlns.)
(]) ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
[1) FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL
Hoatslen Dawson and Nick Buon ·
icOntl are ~8ck to bring yOu weekly
• BC tio n highlights, ahalyaea and
~edletions from the gridiron.
lll
·
MOVIE
-(BIOGRAPHICAL-DRAMA) ••• Yo

representative.

BkleCross.
EIJe Shield.
e
•

I .

(]) 700CLU8
CIJ SNEAK PREVIEWS Co ·hools
Gene Siekel end Roger Ebert
rev i ewtournewlyreteesedmo\11&amp;~ •
including Woody Allen ' s new
comedY, · Sta,rdust Memories 1•
(fi) TRA!ISITIONS
&amp;:30 CIJ (fi)
THIS OLD HOUSE
Demolition has begun and the car·

LITTLE CRUMB!!

far

.

··

Ye st erday's ! Jumbles · NUDGE MAD LY EFFIGY FLAT LY
Answer : H e resiqned I rom the high·wire ac t b~cause
he was a lways this- TH E " FALL" GUY

·

®
FROM JUMPSTREET
'Gospel and Spirituals' In a rafter ·.
ra ising ser\licie at the Way of th e
· Cross Church of Christ, Washing ·
ton, D .C., Rev·erend James
Cleveland, thaD.C. Mass Choir, the
Mighty Clouds ot Joy and th e
church c ongregation leav~ no
doubt about thE. invigorating effec t
ot
gospel
music.
(Qioeed·Captioned)
8:58 ClJ NEWS UPDATE
9:00 (1) 8 C!J THURSDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES ' Beulah Lend' t980
Stars: Lesle)l An, Warren, Michael

:oo rn e

NOT ONE

J:. SMELL
FRESH-BAKED
OATMEAL
COOKIES!!

You see, the itlea is to stretch your
health coverage dollarS so that you
get the best qwility health care at the .
lowest possible cost. Put these
·
programs to work for you; Call your
Blue Cross and Blue Shield

'

Jen.kin$ Insurance·Aaency'

MY
5ENTI MENT5

can
sme
)00 money.
fM) ~. Pa~agroup

P. J. Pauley Insurance
Davis-Quickel·Insurance Agency
- ·"
Dale C. .Warner Insurance
Reuter-Brogan lnsurariee Services, lne. ·
•'
.
Starcher Insurance Company ·
.

,____.....--.._

•

Downinf(hilds Insurance Agency, Inc.
V. D. Edwards Insurance Agency
Mullen Insurance Agency, Inc.
'

WE CAN HJJACK. 1J.I E
SHIPMENT ANC'
MAKE HER LOOK

• 5~E'&amp; &amp;HIPPING- ALL HER FASHIONS
FOI&lt; THIS BENEFIT SHOW VIA

In observance of Columbus·Day the following insurance
offices will be closed on Monday, October 13; 1980:

'

'""

WINNIE

NOTICE

j_

ASK TOWED
A ·marriage license was Issued to
. Crenson Reed Pratt, 21, Middleport,
and Ginger Ann Cullums, 21,
Pomeroy.

.
e ~;.~1~~ 1N
-•S.,..

NOw arrange the circled letters to
form the surpri se: answer. as sug ges ted by the above canoon .

I 1 I J r I I -I J [I I )"

Answer:"(

7:5a (]) NEWS UPDATE'
8:00 (I) 8 (1) THE CASTAWAYS ON
GILLIGAN'S ISLAND The hapless
c astaways prepare for their
seCondescapefromthe island,this
time in an old World war ilaircratt
that the professor has repaired .
Stars: Bob Denver, Alan Hale, Jr .. •
(ijepeat; eo mine.)
ClJ MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
Cil MOVIE · (DRAMA·MUSICAL) ••
"Low·e Ma Tendar" 1956
@ (i}l CD AMERICAN LEAGUE
CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Game
Two -- New York Yankees vs Kan·

· Sarruin.

means .we're
the bad guys!

Tr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;:;;;:;:;:~~~

JAYCEES MEETING
The Meigs Jaycees will meet Mon:-: dsy, Oct. 13, at 8·p,m. at their new ·
quarters in Pomeroy. All Jaycees
are urged to attend.

THIS OI.IGHTA FIX THAT
Clv'ERGROWN MONKEY!

Regional

Area deaths .
Alice M. Rairden ;

A

. T URNED ~A C:TI CA L
J'OKER! M15HT D O .

tXJ

J II

SENTATION 'Th e Ch ildren Of An .
l ac' 1980 Stars·: ShirleYJon8s, lna
Balin.
Cil NEXT QUESTION
illJ UP AND COMING 'Mavin ' In,
Mavin' On' Parlll.
8:30 (]) DR. JACK VAN lloiPE
@ MOVIE -(DRAMA)"' "Time

ttswith·

· State Farm Museum is an important
. step in the over-all development of
' the Mason County Farm Museum .
Complex. It meana the Museum will
now be eligible for state and federal
funds aa well as grants h'om some of
ihe foundations, according to Gus
Douglass, commissioner of
agriculture. Following the official
program there will be reception for
out of town guests In the dining room
·of the country kitchen.
On July 1, 1980, Mrs. Rairden and
.i:'be Museum will open to the
her husband, Sammy · A. Rairden, public at 11 am. There will be old
who survives ,, celebrated their 66th. tlln~t !Jlusic throughout the dsy as
wedding anniversary.
well as cdler activitiess. 1be
• In 'addition to her husband she is evening progrl!lll will consist ol a
survived by several nieces and square dsnce, from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.
nephews.
under the direction of Gewanna
Funeral services will be held " Johnson.
Friday at 1 p.m. at the White
FuneFal Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Richard Thomas officiating.
Burial will be in Sand Hill Cemetery.
HOSPITAL NEWS
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-·Brooke Lyons,
BOXING SESSION
· • Pomeroy; Paul Edward Clark,
CheshJre; Loulae H. DeLorlg, PorBoys between the ages of 10 and 25
tland:
Robert Lee Price II, Midinterested in joining the Meigs Coundleport;
Debora L. Holter, Racine;
ty Boxing Club are to go to the forWalter
Schreiber,
Pomeroy.
mer Pomery Senior High Building,
Discharged-Oretha Snider, Ullle .
Pomeroy, on Tuesdsy or 'l'bunlday
Adams, Mlcbelle Smith, Candy Rifevening. The club meets twice a
week from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. and fie, Evelana Pauley, l&gt;wigl¢ Burton,
Ha'ttie Swisher.
Saturday from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m.

DICK CAVETT SHOW

WHAT A

C HI RO~AC: TOR

(!DJ MATCH GAME
(fi) IIIIACN!i;IL·LEHRER REPORT·
(}21 &amp;I FACE THE MUSIC

After Time" 1979

MuseWJL
Being designated as

CIJ

.. CIJ

Beth Teaford, Sheryl Bush, captain; back, Tlua
Beaver, Dee Dalley, and Laura Wood. ·

president of tlie AgricultuTal Hall ol
Fame, and Gus , Douglass; commiBB!oner of agriculture and past
president of the Agricultural Hall of
Fame, will jointly sign the'
necessary papers and presebt a
plaque to the officials of the ·Ji'ann

SANFORDANO' SON

I
[j

tCELLOA

eas CitY...Boyale.

PRODUCTS.

Desig:nation program s~t Saturday
The Mason County Farln Muse~
will be desiilnated as a Regional
Sta~ Farm Museum at a program to
be held at the Farm Museum on
Saturday, Oct. 11, at2 p.m.
Dr. Dale Zion, dean of agricultura\.
at West Virginia Uri.iversity and

W

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i

Q I]) (1Q) SPECIAL MOVIE PRE· •

· :,ALIE\"'OP

EASTERN FLAG CORP - Members of the
Eastern High Band flag corps this faU are from 1-r:

J

OF

1IJ Q I]J JOKER'S WILD
C7J HOLLYWOOD SQUARES

c

ANNIE

.

f!!_edic.tiona from the gridiron,

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CLOSED MONDAY
Common Pleas Judge John C.
Bacon announced today that. the .
courthowle will be closed Moodsy in ·
obse"ance of Columbus Day.

-Kil:]

G2i CD ABC NEWS
6:5B (]) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 008 PM MAGAZINE
ClJ t;OIIIIE TO TH~ WATER
Cil ALLIN THE FAMILY
@&lt;UJ ID . FAMILYF~UD
C!J BACKSTAGE AT THE GRA!ID
OLEOPRY
Q (j) TICTACDOUGH
C1J MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
@) NEWS
.,
(]j) OVER EASY ' Getting o Hold of
B ei ng Put on Hold' Guest: Chairman
of the Nati6nal Citi zens Commit1ee
f or Bro.a dc asting Nic holas Johneon. Hosts: Hugh Downs and Frank
B lair. (Closed -Captioned)
7:30 00 8 BULLSEYE ,
Cll ZOLA LEVITT
C!J FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL
Hosts l en oBWson and N i~k Buonico nti are back to bring yb u weekly
ac t ion highlights, analys es and

.•
•1

.

I

I DONUP

® DICK' CAVEn SHOW

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CIJ 8 (!) CI IIJ®l&lt;W ID

O IIJ@J CBS NEWS .
CIJ WILD WILD WORLD

The finalleague_standings shOWed!

EMERGENCY RUNS
Local units answered three calls ,
on Wednesday, the- Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
Headquarters reports. They include
Rutland Unit, 10:11 a.m., Dale Kennedy to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse, 12:42 p.m., Marie Waldnlg
to Veterans Mep~ortal Haspltal;
Pomeroy Unit, 7:49 p.m., Walter
Schreiber to Veterans Memorial.

by Henri Arncild and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
dne· letter to each sQuare. to form
lour ordinary words.
-

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Ca

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I TUHET

NEWS
(]) BACKYARD .
Cil
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIE;NDS
@ ABC NEWS
CIJ(fi) 3-2- 1 CONTACT
· 6 :30 CIJR C!J NBC NEWS .
.' (]) PAUL ANO MONA

.

Athens' Craig Goldsberry was
medalist for the tourney-with a 72.
Marl!: Allen and arad Rogers led
Gallipolis with 82~11 while Carl Yorlt
was low for Logan with an 85, Jeff
Moore, for JackSon with an 80;
Brian Layne, for Ironton with an 82;
Chris Derrow, low for Wellston with .
.;: 84 and Paulllearlv!, Waverly, a

'1t lt~Nl ID'il

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EVE,NING ·

6:00

.

neely.

elevision
Vie.w ing
OCT. II, 11180

.·

'

Advisory
conuni.ttee
,
, w
. •i l l

352; Meigs, 361; South polnt,...3116.;
Nelscnvllle-York;371; Wetlsto!1, 380;
Falrland,442andAlexancler,446.
Scores of Meig$ players were
Wamale,y·, .78·, Brian Will, 91; Tony
Jewell, 95; David Kennedy, 97 and
Fred Young, 98. . .
.
Chesapeake's Scott Ward shot a 74
to lead the top team while Jim
Nasb's 73led Sheridan.
On Tuesday, Meigs fee9rded a 368
to end up in seventh place lri the
· SEOAL Goll .. Tournament at .
Falrgreens · Couqtr)' Clul) at
Jackson.
. Athens won the tourneY '{jth a 327,
Gallipolis placed second With a 335;
Lopn, third with a 350; J~tckson, .
fourth, 350; Ironton, fifth, il58;
'!ellston. sixth, 363 and Waverly, .
eighth, 385. · .
.
.
Scoring for f,leiga in the SEOAL
event included Fred Young with an
86, Tony Jewell, 93; J. R. Wamaley,
9t; Brian Will, 115 and David Ken-

SU S PENDED SENTENCE OR NOT,
WERE STILL GUIL11; I'IIILLiE

..

II
.
.
One letter simply standi fol' another. In thia aample A II
used !or the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sinlie lett~.
a"""rophes, the lenl!h ood formation of the worda ue all
hints..Each day the code letters are dllrererit.
. CRYPTOQllOTBS ,. , ..... ,.
~B '

YPKHT·F
APXTB

. TC T. Z

WEXT

QE .HT .;

WEVYK

EK

HIGGEBY

F~PFWL.- APHL
PZZ
TCPZB
· Yetterday:• Cryptoq.ote: IT IS INDEED A DESIRABLE
. THING TO. BE WELL DESCENDED, BV'I' THE GLORY
BELONGS
OUR ANCESTORS.-PLUTARCH

'rO-

·' Cl ,,. Kfnt F. . . . . two ..

ale, Inc,

�1._The DallY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.; Thursday, Oct. 9,11*)

Small investment, large
re~u~ns, Sentinel Want Ads

'Survey delay .nOt due
't o lack of opinions
: WASHINGTON (AP)- It may be
months before a boiled-down plan is
recommended to Congress on how
.best the govenunent shoUld work In
ll!e future to cOnserve the nation's
soil and water, but the delay is not
because of a lack of public opinions.
And thOle oplnlona are embodied

1n 64,172 responses cOllected dUring

!he first three months of thl.s year
when the AgricUlture Department
aak!!d for views In what' it called
"the RCA process" of implementing
the' Soil and Water Resources eon.
servation Act of 1977_.
: Earlier, going back to 1978,
thousands of l}leetlngs were held
across the country in local conservation districts to explain the
RCA process. Full-scale , hearings
also were held here and· In · other
cities.
. A 200-page report of the public's
~ents was issued on Wednesdsy
by department's Soil Conservation
Service.
·
GeneraUy -speaking, the department last winter offered a series of
docments for "PUblic review and
conunent.
Those included possible alternatives for operating govenunent
conservation programs, some of
them going back for more than 40
years, and some objectives the
government might consider for the
future.
Acccordlng to the report, the ..

Public Notice

8lllE Gl.ANCES

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
public responses lnclud!!d these
ds, down 11 percent from the 19'111
PROIIATE
DIVISION
general characterizationa:
crop, says the AgricUlture DepartM EIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MA'TTER OF SET·
- MOdt people value higljlf the
ment.
TLEMENT
OF AC ·
Yields, at an average natonally of
nation's ~u. water and related
COUNTS,
PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY,
113 pounds an acre, are 14&gt; from last
resources, and
coneemed a bout
OHIO
year, but farmers reduced acreages
the capacity of those .-esources to
Accounts and voucher$ of .
the following named
meetfuture needs.
.,
for the seed harvest.
fudlclarin have -been filed
-They expressed strong support
Ot'egon is the largest producer,
in the Probate Court, Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
for USDA~s traditional objectives for
but red clover seed also is harvested
and settlement:
conservation and the preservation of
iii many other states, Including the
CASE NO. 20199, Tenth
· agricUltural land.
Annual Acc011nt of Palii ·D.
Midwest and Northeast.
Sturg~~Qn_.. Guardian
of
-Most of the responses favored
The report said volcanic fallout
Dwight t:. Sturgeon - and
Mary l. Sturgeon, Ml~ors.
from Mt. St. Helens smothered some
"redirecting pteilent conaervatlon
CASE NO. 20478 Sixth
programs and conaervation perof the red clover fields In
Annua I Acc011nt of Martha
Childs, Trustee Under the
formance bonuses" rather than shift
Washington's Yakima Valley and
Last Will and Testament of
from the traditional voluntary
that the state's acreage for seed was
Bertie N. Wa~,~eased.
CASE NO. .:~.:&gt;n Partial
programs to mandatory or "crosscut nearly in half.
Account of Elmora e.
•'
COJiJpllance" devices that woUld forBole'!£ Ramora C. Young,
and 1&lt;obert R. Boice, Coce fanners to carry out conaervation
WASHINGTON
(AP)
Executors Of the Estate of
measures in return for other federal
Beekeeping has become such a sucRaymond E. Boice,
Deceased. ,
benefits.
cessful sidellile in parts of China that
CASE N1:l. 230U Final
-Those commenting say they
its honey exports are showing 11 sub'
Account of Claro K. Clark,
Executrix Of the estate or
woUld support a national constantlal growth.
"The wolf Ia at the
and he
EarlL. Clark, deceased.
The AgricUlture Department said
~rvation program that is well fun·
carne
In
a
fuel
oil
trucltl"
CASE NO ; 19~ Eleven·
r
lh Account ·.of Joyce A.
ded, voluntary and responsive to
-Wednesday that honey pl'!lduction In
Davis,
Guardian
of the per·
China began Increasing notably' two son and estate of Mary E.
local conditiona and needs.
Russell, arl incompetent
· People who commented on the
years ago, and in 1979 hOney exAnnouncements
3
person.
·
_
'
portsrnse to 41,1100 mebic tons from
department's agencies and conUnless exceptions are
19,1100 in 1978.
.
flied thereto, sald accounts
servation programs generally
SHOOTING MATCH at
will be for hearing before
Corn Hollow In Rutland.
believe that the programs are ef·
A metric ton Is about 2,205 pounds.
Cud of Thanks
said Court on the lOth day 1
Every Sunday, starting at
of
November,
1980,
at
Japan
and
West
Germany
were
the
fective but say that the agencies
I WOULD Like to thanks all noon. . Proceeds being
Which
time
Sllld
accounts
.
major foreign buyers, each taking
coUld do an even better job if they
will be considered and con- my friends, relatives, and donated to the Boy Soout
tinued
from day to day un· neighbors for -the cards, - Troop 2ol9. 12 gauge factory
more than 13,1100 mebic tons, the
had more funding, if they coUld
flowers, and gifts 1 chokegunonlyl
til finAlly disposed Of.
provide more technical assistance
department's Foreign AgricUltural
Any person Interested received while I was a
may file written exceptions patient at Veterans
Service said.
and if they were more eflicient.
PRE·SEASON
SALE··
to Sllld acc011nts .o r to mat·
Memorial Hospital.
Also, exports to the United states
WASHINGTON _(AP) This
ters pertaining 1o the Louise Bartels.
$6oi'I.Oil--Moblle hOme WOOd
execution Of the trust, not
burning systems, the only
in 1979 were about 8,200 metric tona,
year's harvest of red clover seed Is
less than five days prior to
HUD &amp; UL IPPr'OVed WOOd
forecast at about 24.3 inillion pounthe agency said.
the date sellar hear~ng.
. we WISH to express our burner for . mobile homes. '
· Roberts. Buck appreciation and thanks to
Unit comes complete with
JUDGE our friendS &amp; neighbors wall
vent slack. See them
Common Pleas Court, who
sent flowers, cords &amp; at Kingsbury Homn Parts
Probate Olvlslon,
Meigs County, Ohio fOod during our sorrow of &amp; accessories at R011te 124,
(10) 9, ltc
the accidental deaths of
Minersville, Ohio.
or
sister Correne Deluz and
phone992·5587.
her husband Louis DeLuz.
Public Notice
For Rev. Hick &amp; Rev. flln·
· NOTICE
ns consoling prayers. GOd JONES Meal Packing···
slaug-htering, custom
· Bids will be received at bless y011 all.
processing, retail meat.
the office Of Bernard v. Myrtle Lee Abels &amp;
Fultz, Attorney, in Bank Husband Richard Abels,
Washington ~o. Rd. 24,
One of Pomeroy building, Long Bottom, Oh.
Little Hockllfg, OH 667··
until Monday October 13, 6133.
1980,
at
11
:oo
6·clock
A.M.,
into the street.
and a detonating device" at Howe 's
for the sale of the Florence
" I looked up and there was this
mobile home in Santa Rosa.
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Mclaughlin real estate, 2
In Memoriam
situated
at
·
773
Oliver
Racine Gun Club, every
whole sheet of smoke and flame.
That discovery forced the closure Street, Middlepert, Ohio.
Friday night starting at
A·FRAME
building,
514
And then I felt the heat," one eyewitof busy U.S. highway10lforlthours
The real estate was ap·
Street, 7:30 p.m. Factory choke
praised at S8,000.00. All East "Main
ness said. Tiies, glass and chunks of
Wednesday afternoon as bomb ell·
Pomeroy,
will
sell
on land guns only.
bids are subject to the ap·
the car flew through the air, acperts from the federal Bureau of proval of the Meigs County contract, small down
Probate C011rt and the payment. ~-3921.
cording to bystanders.
GUN SHOOT: Saturday
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Guardian
reserves the
evening
starting at 6:30
Shortly after the blast, Mary Howe
the 6th Anny headquarters In San right to reject any and all
p.m. Sponsored by the
bids.
died in the emergency room at Santa
Francisco removed the material.
"Racine Volunt¥r Fire
3
Announcements
Marvin Kell~,
Rosa Hospital. Her father lay dead
Department, at building In
Howe had more than 30 years exGuardian or .
I PAY highest priCes Bashan. Factory choke
F Iorence MclaUDhlin
in the car.
perience with explosives In civilian
possible for gold and silver guns only.
(10} 1, 2, J, 5, 6, 1, 8. 9, 10,
Police Chief Gerald Kohler said
and military life, pollee said The l'tc
coins, rings, jewelry, etc . .
Howe, 52, set off the bomb because
San Francisco Chronicle described
Contact Ed Burkett Barller 30 percent off greenware
Shop, Mlddlej)ort.
he was upset over the breakup of his
for the- month of October.
Howe as a construction worker who
You'll.
Drehal's Ceramics, ~ N.
marriage. .
hired out his demolition siiiLt to
Plano Tuning · Lane Second Avenue, Mid·
tract it down
HaH a square mile in downtown
companies when blasting was
Daniels 742·29511 Tuning dleport. 992·2751.
Cotati, a town of about 2,500 people
needed.
much faster
and Repair service since
1965. If no answer phone YOST Wrecker Service, 24
50 miles north of San Francisco, was
One pollee officer described blm
with a
992·2082,
evacuated after the explosion, but
hours a day. w~nled junk
as "one of thnse guys who can set up
cars.
Call JOhn Yost, Route
WANT
AD
police found no other bombs in the
the City of -Paris (a prominent San
1, Rutland, Ohlo45775.
area.
\ Francisco building) to drop into a pit
Later, they reported fmding "a
with one shot without breaking a
r------------~---------- Decorated cakes for all oc·
large explosive device consJstin8 of
cessions, character cakn
single window In the buildings on 1
&amp; sheet cakes. CaJI992·63o42
several hundred pounds of dynamite
either side."
.
'
-or992·2583.

are

COTATI, Calif. (AP) - Minnie
HoWe i-ushed out of her apartment
just In time to see the car carrying
her daughter and estranged husband
.o bliterated in a fiery blast so strong
it was heard 10 miles away. Pollee
say the explosion was triggered by
the husband, apparently depressed
over the breakup of his marriage.
Moments before, Mrs. Howe's
telephone had rung. It was Johiutie
Howe.
"H you don't meet me at the corner, you'll never see Mary again,"
he told her.
The demolitions expert had just
picked up their 14-year-old dsughter
to take her to schoOl Wednesdsy

morning.
Mrs. Howe said she raced outside,
late to do anything but stare in
horror as a tremendous explosion
ripped apart the 1970 Buick like a
toy, hurting her 14-yeaMld daughter

too

'I
'

II
I

year.
Michael Lynch of .the FTC's
Bureau fi Economics says the
limits, now being COD!Iidered by the
U.S. International Trade Commission, woUld drive down competition and drive up prices.
Lynch testified before the lTC as It
opened hearings Wednesday Into a
request by the Ford Motor Co. to
limit imports to 1.7 million vehicles
a year for the next five years.
The hearings continued today,
with officials of Japanese
automakers, the maln. object of
Ford's complaint, staling their case.

FOR SALE : FIREWOOD
can. 992·3211
'BAKER'I Busy Bee
Ceramics, Tuppers Plain~.
· announces
thalr fall
classes, T\lfto(lay from 10.2
&amp; 7·10 &amp; Thursday from 10.
2 &amp; 7·10. No children under
10 · pleiae. came make
beautiful
Chrlstma•
pre. .ntl.
Renonable
P,.lces. 667·3252, · Pauline
Baker.
RACINE United fMthodllt
Church Is taking"orden for
apple butter. Sale Is Oct.
_15, orders will lie taken until that dale. Price $3.00 qt.,
$1.50 pt: eMira if we.provide
tars. Call 949-2013, 949-2095
or 9-49·2589.

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

-lHIRD ANNUAL

-~

GNIIA COUNTY

Oct. 11, 1980

O.IIIJIOIIS. OH. . . U.S.

"'· u. '

Lynch said American cannakers,
rather than seeking to limit foreign
competition, shoUld offer more autos
appealing to potential buyers.
Ford and . other American
automakers say it will take five
years and perhaps $1) billion to
retool their assembly linea from
large-cartosmall~production . ·
· Supporting the cannakers' plea to
restrict foreign competition, United
Auto Workers · President Donald
Fraser charged that Japanese
producers have been detennined to
"exploit" the American market by
Increasing exports during "a period
of panic-buying fi small, high
(mileage) cars."
The tide of Japanese vehicles
"simply overwhelmed" U.S.

automakers, he sald, also charging
that the Japanese had "turned a
deaf ear" on repeated requests to
limit car . and truck sales in the
United States.
Sen. Donald Riegle, D-Mi~, told
the hearing : "We are seeing the
ruthless exploitation of our current
difficUlties by a trading partner apparently detemined to Inflict deep
and permanent damage on our
people, our econom,y and our
future."
The Japanese say, however, that ·
more crucial reasons for slackening
domestic sales are rising gaaollne
prices, the severe receSsion and
American manufacturers' failure to
adapt quickly to changing carbuying habits.

~sa.

2 FEMALE HUSKIES. 1
year old. Prefer to giVe 10
someone In country . . 992·
3792 after 6 p.m.
-

-

.

CLASSIFIED

Phone~·----------------

e ANNOUNCEMENTS
1

1-&lt;anlftf l'MIIIIs

Print one ''
word In each
space below. E:ach in·
ltlal or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
nome and address or Word1
phone numller if used. .
You'll get-better results
If you describe fully,
give price. The Sentinel
reserves the right to
classify, edit or relect
any ad. Your ad will be
put In the proper
claslflcatlon if you'll
check the proper box
These cash rates
.below
include discount

2-IIIM........M
4-GI~y

1-44.,.., ...

-~

INDEX

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eEMPLOYMEN'r
SERVICES

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'

••generate enerv" - bu been wor111n1 for two 1'JU'I _
on the wood 8lld COIJCI'IIW structure that will bec:oh"'
his family's home sometime next year.
I

,Box 729

T•••·

I•

I,

Pom•roy, Ohlo45769

c..

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Mail This Coupon with RemiHance ·.
· The Dally Sentinel

"'""""

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.

•

1

THREE family yard sale,
Thursday, Friday at 133
Butternut Avenue. Drop
leaf table, rollaway bed,

'
I rocking

chair;

hand

crocheted tablecloth, an·
tlques•.ml~ . 992·3079.

have

openings for full and par!
time positions on day shift,
but will consider other shlf·
ts. Competitive salary, ex·
cellenl working conditions,
life Insurance and
disability pel icy at no cost
to the employee, and
hospitalization Insurance
available. Come visit us or
ca II: Nancy Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen•
ter, 614·992·6606.

Situations. Wanted
YARD SALE: 4510· Eagle WILL do ollds &amp; ends,
Ridge Road, Thursday, paneling, floor tile, ceiling
• Friday, October 9·10 from tile. Call Fred Miller at 992·
! 1G-4 at -Carpenters residen· 6338.
• ce, five miln off Route 7.
12

.r LARGE ho(o family

I

IIAI.F

OIINCIE •• ,

12 x 65 two bedroom mobile
with one &amp; one·half
baths, In country location.
Working people only; noobiectlon to child ren .
References required. 992-

.

yard
, sale, 305 North Second
Street, Middleport, Ohio.
Friday only, October 10. ·.

• T.WO family Yard Sale at
.U2 South Sixth street In
Middleport, Friday, 10·4.
Ciothlng, electric drill,
. doors, toys, games, etc .
Rolncancels.
,:'(,ARD SALE. Behind Cross
Store In R•clne, Oh. Thurs.
. &amp; Fri. 9 &amp; 10. Lots of Items.
~ Center,

tland, Oh. Thurs. &amp; Fri.

Por·

·4 FAMILY Yard Sale at
Charles King's house. Fri.
10, Sat. 11. From 10.5. Co.
Rd. 14.
' .
I
Public Sale
&amp; Auction
0$51 E'S AUCTION House,

20 N. 2Qd Street, Mid·
dleporl, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques, in· •
eluding homes, farms, or

liquidation sales. Get top
!Ioiiar. List with the man
who has over 25 years In
the new, used and antique
furniture business.
we
take conSlgntnet)ts. For In·
formation and pickup ser·
vice, call 992·6370 or , In
· Wn!VIrginla 773-5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7
p.m . Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc·
)loneer, OSby A. Martin.
,. (no lunk)
'
~
W•nled to Buy
)RON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold ~ings;- jewelry,
sliver
dollars, sterling, etc., WOOd
!ce boxes,jars antiques,
etc. complete househOlds.
~rite M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, .
pomeroy, OH1 or call 992·

mil. 1- - - - - - - - -·'
Gold,

sliver or foreign
~olns or any gold or silver
Htems. Antique furniture,
:o1aas or china, will pay top
dollar, or complete estates.
:No Item too large or too
&gt;Small. Check prices before
~lUng. Also do appraising.
• j()sby (Ossle) Martin. 992·
~70 . .

.

WANTED TO BUY :
GOLD,
SILVER,
'PLATINUM, STERLING·
'cOINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
IY, MISC. ITEMS . AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUA.ANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER
•SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
1lHI0992-:U76.

.

I·

: llelllfllltler.

Print

I Shop

and novel~y
_shirts · for politicians,.
ball teams, business or
individuals.
·
Shirts &amp; Hats $4.00 ea.
Special School Rates
"We print AI::MOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"
Ph . 614·949-2358
Evenings &amp; Weekends
10·9·

.

Apartment
for Rent

Vinyl and Alum inurn ~
Siding

"

BiSSELL
SIDING CO.

available for local work.
a 2 rubber tire backhoes
• 1 excavator hoe 11f•

yd.

e2 Doz:ers

• Dump Trucks
All re.lated equipment
992·2478
9·28·1 mo . pd,

Call tor Free Siding
Esti.mate, 949-2801. or
949·2i60. No Sunday
calls.
9·14·1 mo . --

~======~~=~~========~-G~=====~==;

Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 crown Haven, 14 x 6.5,
three bedrooms, new car·
pet. 1911 Cameron; lol..c 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champlor\, 12 X 60, IWO
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x· 60, IWo
bedrooms, all electric. 1~71
Skyline, 12 .x 6.5, · IWo
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/3, new
carpet .
1970 PMC,
12 x ~.two bedrooms, new
carpet 8 x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Viand Street, Point
Pleosonl, WV phone 675·
4-42-i.
32\

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
with 7 x 24 expando. Ex·
cellent condition. Phone
i' 42-3030 or 742·2728.
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
1 ACRE BUILDING site.
Frontage. Racine area.
949·2890.

Real Estate

General

HAYES
REALTY
~~~-POMEROY,O.
Charles M. HayeS, Rt1110r
Neilcll E. Carsey, Br . Mgr . ,
Ph. 992 ·1401 or "~·l710
NR-61

~

New Listing -

Rustle

Hills, be~~: ut l ful new three
bedroom home, family room,

Will do babysitting In y011r
home, 5 days a week, anv

hours. Call949·2875.

WANTED LIVE·IN lady or
girl. 992-2686.
1~3'--~--"l"n's~u~r=-an""c~e~-­

AUTOMOBIL.E
IN SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·21o(l.
Schools Instruction
PIANO LESSONS Beoln·
n,rs, advanced, adults.
Send ilamil, address.
telephone number to '{era
Jane Holliday, Box 224,
Rutland, Ohio -45775 .

41

HOUSE FOR Rent. 2
bedrooms, with stove &amp;
refrigerator furnished. 9923090.
Real Estate- General

15

Housing

Headquarters

T~~~~~:.tH:
_

31
Homes for Sale
ED !'IARTELS,Loan
Representative, 1100 East
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh . .
Mortgage
money
available. All types home
financing,
new,
old,
refinancing, and 2nd mortgages. Phone 992-7000 or
992·5732.
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch brick home In Baum
Addition. With new garage
&amp; genie doOr. Gas heat,
newly Installed central air
cor\dltlonlng, family room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap·
pllances bUilt In, newly in·
stalled electric breaker
system,
attractively
decorated basement, 2 ·
baths, fully carpeted with
most attractive drapes.
Call985-3814 or9'12·2571.
EIGHTY,ACRES: 12 acres
of bottom land, 68 acres

pasture, blacktop road,
three bedroom house,
living room, bath, kitchen,
dining room, three car car··
port,
cellar,
part
basement, good barn .
ChariH c. King, Rutland,
Ohio. 742-2229.
MODERN COUNTRY
homme 411:1 miln off 124 on
Co. Rd. 21 from Racine 1.33
acres. 949·2830.
FOR SALE: three or lou r
bedroom - ·
carpeted,
woodbUrnlng
lloVe,
also
woodburnlng fireplace.
Two car gar-. total elec·
!ric. 10 X 27 SUndeck, 2 &amp;

16 E. Second Sfreel

Phone
H614)·992·3l25
·NICE FAMILY HOME
- 4 Bedrooms, both,
plus carpe"ting. Modern
kitchen with built·in
stove. Full ba'sement
with Incinerator, on
•45xiOO lot. Near
playground_.
NEW LISTING - Fur·
nished 2 bedroom home,
new gas furn-ace, full
basement, on the ~ge
of Middleport, plus 11:1
acre of land. $28,000.00.
SYRACUSE - Family
room, 3 bedrooms,
carpeting, kitchen has
side by side refrigerator
and stove. Plus garage,
on level lot 98x124.
HOME &amp; BUSINESS
BUILDING - This Is an
oppertunily for a couple
to run a g ift shop or
what have you . In addl·.
lion has kitchen ,
bedroom and bath. For
·
only $·12,000.00.
INANT TO BUILD?- 9
Acres with water and
sewage nearby, for a
nice home with plenty of
room for kids. High and
dry, overlooking !he
Ohio River.
.
5 Y R A C USE
Z
bedroom home with
bath within walkjng
distance to store. Has
new forced air fur,Q!Ice,
basement, f_ront &amp; back
porches, and large extra
I0 t ·

fenced In yar d. This Of'\C
won't I list long . PrlcHI in teh low

.....

NR ·U
R:iggs Addit io n,
beautiful sl)l it leVel hdme on
lolirege lot. family room. r ecrea·
tion room, two car gl!rage, built·
In appliances, p1enrv ot room for
everything vou want, eKecutivt
home . Pr ictd for Quick Si!lle.

tfyou really want to sell
list with us today.

Real Estate

POMEROY, 0 .
992·2259
'IIEW LISTING - A
quiet home ln the coun·
try on approx. 1 acre.
This 4 bedroom home
with forced ~ir n.e at will
give you roomy com·
tort, and the price is
right! Nee ~ the mines!
$15,000.00.
.
NEW LISTING - Nice
BIG Yard - a 11f2 story
frame house with 4
bedrooms, TV room, liv·

lng room, kitchen, and

bath. Several fruit trees

in the back yard that
have just started to
bear! $20,500.00.
COiY DEN - LUCKY
YOU 1 Even has knotty
pine paneling! This 3
bedroom home has · 2
.baths, lull basement
with laundry and rec.
room,' 3 greenhouses,
shed and all on 5 acres
of level land. Close to
bridge . $58,700.00,
SEVERAL INDEED!
With new carpeting,
new paneling, !hermopane windows, elec·
tric heat. also woodburner, 3 bedrooms,
bath, on 1;, acre lot.
$21,500.00.
OLD, BUT FUN Redecorate to your own
taste! This 3 bedroom
home has a new fur·
nace, 2 fireplaces,
storage
buildings .
$16,000.00.
MOBILE HOME! 1980,
14x52 Liberty Special, 2
bedroom with · utility,
range, ret., with blocks
and
underpinning.
$9,000.00. Lot rents for
$.4.5.00 a month.
·FOR THE YOUNG SET
- .STONE COTTAGE
with 3 bedrooms. Rght
size for young couple.
Has equipped kitchen,
washer, dryer, W.B.
fireplace, forced air
heat. complete privacy
on 1 acre lot. Ask ing
$28,000.00.
REAL TOR
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992·6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660
Roger&amp; Dottie'Turner
992·5692
OFFICE 992·2259
. _,

,.2371.

REAL ESTAJE.
II

CUJIIJICY, I.OCet.d 111 Route
14. 9ti·D1 or,....,•.

MOIILI HOMII 12 x ..
Willi- llul" 111 for 1111011
IIUriW, 111 llllhMI . . Ill

r-· ......·~ ·

Banet, Tap and Jan.
For info and enrollment.

Call 949·2710
9· 28-1,mo.

•

I

L

O

0

53

Antiques
ATTENTION:
liM PORTANT TO YOU) Will
for
antiques
and collec·
pay cash
or certified
check

tlbles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614767-3167or 557-3411 .
Misc. Merchanise

FRIGIOAi RE mini washer
&amp; dryer, In good ahape.
New parts. 992·7081.

.Check This Out!
Printed Pattern

llidtlpa(., OlliD

TOWERS &amp;

Sizes
"From 30x:JO"
SMALL

ANTENNAS

Utility Buildings

-Plumbing and

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X40

INSTALATIONS :

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

TV, CB &amp;HAM

electrical work
!Free Estimates)

Rt. 3, Box 54

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-2591 .
'6·15-tfc

992·621 5 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

•New Homes- extensive r11modeling
•E lectrical work·
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph.992·7583

-Backhoe
and
Ou m p Truck Ser·
vice
-Shop and Port·
able Welding.

Phone 949·2414
9:W-i mo. pd '

992-7354

1

~~=~~;;9;-1;4·;1';~ ;=====9=·2=6=·1=m=o=.~~;;===· =·9-=1~0-=1=m=o=·=··~
54

Misc. Merchanise

TURNIPS. S3:oo bu . you
pull them. $4.00 bu . we' ll
pull them. John Cleek, Portland. 843·2285.
Sunray gas range, one year
old, used two months, 7422416. Three piece bedroom
suite, call after 4:30 7422416.

ROGER HYSELL'S .
.GARAGE
-Auto and Truck
~epair

Stoves
Only 5395
.
plus blower
1 Good M. Ward
$75
Electric Range
1 Good Used
$100
Gas Range
1 Good Used Frigidaire
Refrigerator
S150
Q.,_ POMEROY

Repair
Hrs.: Mon.-Fri.
9 A.M.·l :JO P.M.

E. Main St.

Pomeroy

55
Building Supplies
BUILDING MATERIAL.
12' trusses, 2'x4' ceiling
panels,
windows,
aluminum gutters, metal
siding panels. 992·275'1 .

Relaxed, slender, even easy lo

1'1111111 . .
-,..,DdyS Zrl I
243*-U~rtlll,tn
1.11. ....
DIIESS,
liP, SIZE, 1141
....

' hip pricesput up oritll
1M dollm, Ill betltr qulity1
Send 1vr aur flEW FAU·WINT£R
PATTERN CATALOG. 9o4 patlems,
Whr

Free Pltttm Coupon (worth
.1.75). CataQ, $1.00.

IUIIIIIIIIHilll .......75
a~ •sna.75
I
Tlllllfllt.$1.75
117
. . . ... .$1.75

56
Pets lor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and penles and riding .
lessons.
Everything
Imaginable In horse equipment . P,lankets, belts,
boots, ftc. English and
Western . Ruth ReeveS
(614) 698-3290.
GET A Nice SOft lOVable
klHen from your Humane
SOCiety. Shofl &amp; wormed.
Donation required. 9926260. .Hours 12·7 dally,
closed Tues. Tabby'S",
tigers, &amp; 1 pure black; all

males.

tOday fOr I beaUtifUlpuppy or d'!ll· Humane
Society, shots &amp; wormed.
992·6260.

I L.AL. L

PUT a cold nose In your
future . Meigs County
Humane SOCiety, 992·6260.
ShOts x wormed, one
miniature collie type
female, one shepllard type
female, black X tan
Kerr
one walker
hOundm•le.

tern•••·

AKC
REGISTERED
Apricot poodle, 175. with
papers, male. l5l Grant
St., Middleport.
Musla.l
l"strvTROMBOMI! for uloln ox·
cellent condition. can 992-

$7

:me.

\

_

.. .,

.

Complete Dry Cleaning

.. . . .

I bi' 11!Si1Efl

62

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled
slab. $10 per ton. Del ivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
63
Livestock
REGISTERED
polled
Hereford's, 3 bred Heifers,
1 open Helfer. 985·3374.

. ...... .. ..
..................
~

~LANDMARK
u
r ·

t,-(h._ ..ftl,_s

Middleport,
PH. 99H342
TRY US!

-Transmission

and Laugdry
RAZi NG sale, Salurday 10• Carpet
5 at fool of cross of Lincoln
• Draperies
99H682
Hill Road, Pomeroy. Lum• Furniture
ber, trim, doors, windows,
10·7·tfc
c"We're No. I in
Serv.ice &amp; Qu•alit('
siding, flooring, antique 1;=========~
oak mantles, antique oak ;
sliding doors, stairs, rails,
I~======~~~~
slate roofing, misc.
F
~;
11
~

. New Wood Burner

· SIZES 8-20

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
• 1nsulation
• Slorm coors
• Storm Windows
• ~~~~~';!:'ent
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992_·, 2772

II

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmark

4886

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Cia : ·

GE gold refrigerator for
$200.00, 1974 Pontiac, runs
good, $250 .00 ; pickup lopper, $150.00. Call949·2368;

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

ROOIIEY DOWNINC-IROKER

SERVICES"

-Acldonsand
remodeling
-Roofing and 1une
work
-Concrete work

Farm Buildings

- - · .J

.... ~ . . .,, SeN to:

CALL Bill CHILDS 992-2342·

CARPENTER

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

Now a dress is desi&amp;ned thai's
everythin1 ,au wanl · for this
minule and 1981. Send!
·
Printed Pattern 4886: Misses
Sizes 8, 10. 12. 14, 16, lB. 20.
Sin 12 (bust 34) takes 21! rards
6Q.inch lab!ic.
11.75 r. .a ..... AM 50e

CHiiifii"l B'IIIUlltUI ofd home ciYertOoi&lt;Jrijj lfii
·Ohio River . If you're looking lor peace and quiet
wtth p1111ty Of room and a holM you can lie proud of •
call usonthls-. You'vegotiOMI it. 54,000.00.
'
'

B&amp;D

ALLSTEEL

.. ...

51
Household GOOds
STOVES · ,
We have
fJreplace inserts, free stan·
ding stoves, warm air furnace adii!pters, mobile
home wood heaters, and
triple wall chimneys. Out·
door Equipment Sales, Jet.
Rts. 7 &amp; 35. GalliPOlis, Ph.
446-3670.

54

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2862
949-2160
1·22-tfc

~~==~~~~==~Pr========~~~==~~~===~
"YOUNGS

..... . ............... .
•

All types of root work,
new or repair gunersand downspouts, gutter
clea'ning and piiinting .. .'
All work guaranteed .

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

V.C. YOUNG II

sew (no ~houlder or waist seams).

=

ONe&amp;.- third acrw With
•12 XID IWO llldl aom tneblle
'home, readr for oc·

TRAILER spaces lor rent.
southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992·3954.

m,

.-

~ -~-:-:--~:--

46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479 .

o 0

1- - - , - - - - -

bicycle. Call

vacancies. Trained &amp; ex·
board -by the month-perlenced. 992·7314.

General

Beautlfutl~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·~•;•-;tT~OII~;
•

45
Furnished Rooms
ROOMS for rent, room &amp;

Now open with a studio

in Pomeroy and Racine.
Classes offered are

lar~e

Houses for Rent

TWO BEDROOI\Il unfurnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; ·one
bedroom furnished apart·
ments. Call after 6 p.m.
992·2288.

Two bedroom furnished
apartment, $150.01t month,
plus
uti Iities,
$50.00
depesit. 949-2875.

H..L WHITESEL
ROOFING

KAUFPS
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

2 YEAR OLD houae In
Cltelllt', large kitchen 1o
' ------~--~----... dining room, 2 baths, 3
:wANTED 1'0 BUY: Class bedroGIIIS, femlly room 1o
· ·rjngs, wedding bands,
fireplace, fully carpeted;
:anything ltamped IOK, central air a. on hot, 1100
11AK, IlK ~· Sillier QOins, ' sq. fl. living 1ro. Garage
~ waldlel. Cell Joe
&amp;. 12'x16' work llhop.
:c11111. m-21154. Cln'• 147,900. 915-4349, Jack Gin·
IJ-wy, PometOf,OtiiO.
tllar.

110 WilD

PuiUns
Excavati
. RI
Experien.ced Operators

T-shirts

~ome

I

•COin ShOp, Athens, urt. 592·

Rates Milt Otber lnformatJon

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

census, we now

'6462.

'

Gve~

custom

Phone
992·5434.
3ts.AND
iRM
furnished ap- [

~5,

··SI!RVICI!I
11~
I I
~PIU illll&amp;e. . uatlat

n

TWO bedroom . . mob ile
home, real nice, Brown's
Trailer Park .. Adults only.
992·3324.

CIIGCK

44

!letting. 915-39U.
one third acres.
TWO story older home,
seven rooms,
beth,
basement,
.
hardwood
I
•
floon. 11t:pplace. on four
large loiJ with river froo!dLO COl
pocket wal· . tage.
Street,
•chel. cl• ring~, wedding PomeroyMain
.
Financing
1
• ballcll, dlamonde. Gold or
Call after 5, 992·
1111ver. c.,n J. A. Wamsley, avellable.
7214.
*26,500,
,7&lt;12·2331. TI'OIIIre.J~hesl

'

·n-vMia •.w.o.

811TT5 tN
70

Hoove't'

I

'

12'-T.-olw-

21- ........
?p; rtMity

••••

.....

'

16-

.

I

~

14-I....... TraiiiiAtl

Wanted
For Sale
Announcement
For Rent

HI

n-c~ TV, . . . . . . . IJfiiAI
1........11, II

eREAL •STATe

. PYRAMID POWER IS the ~OIIOIIhY beNnd Jim
"Onan's new sill-atory bouse In Gumee, m. '!be building
•; contractor - who Is conVinced that pyramids .
'

- ·--

..

41 liiiiiiiiHMMI

J-ARil tbSMihMtl

n-MeMftfw....,
n ,,, .._..

Ill

FOUR FamilY yard Mle.
OCtober 7,1,9,10 from 10.4
on . Route 338 at letart
,Falls, first lane pelt
telephone exchange. 4!m·
ps, rugs, clothes, antiques.
Rain cancels. Men'ssults .•

- f't)l'

2272.

- ~ARGE YARD SALE: Oc·
, tober 9-10 t£om 10.5 at the
leonard Bess residence on
Slate Route 124 In .
Syracuse. Lavatory with
cab)net, bird feeders, plan·
looking
for
tors, door knockers, a lot of RNs.
these llelng new- Items, challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
very old Avon bottles, elec·
shifts? Feel the need to
t•lcal appliances, all sil,es
develop your Ideas In·
.ol clothing, from huge to
resident care with a highly
:teeny tJny, drapes, cur·
motivated staff? Pomeroy
1talns. misc. • Something for
•everyone at this sale, don' t Health Care Center has the
answer for you. Due to
~~· ; miss
·
it.
ISAVE,SAVE,SAVE.992·5006.· achieving near maximum

Recreation

YARD SALE 2n Main St.,
Middleport, Oh. Friday 10
&amp; S.t. 11. 9·4.

wZs

#li.RSEI.P•·

·B usiness .Services

' s.

Yard Sale

1

'

Add~•---------------­

Her~ert

.YARD SALE at Proffitt's

or Write Deily Sentinel Classlfi~ Dept.
111 Cgurt St., Pomeroyo. 0, 45769

Name .~
· ~~------------­

&lt; l
&lt; l
&lt; l
( )

.

Glvoway
.
KITTENS. 2 maiH. 992·

4

PHONE 992-2156

Write YOIIr own ad and order by man with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
Tesults~ Money not refundable.

t

'

APIIfOI(IRiately U lOcallY ....... top -llty
._.,.,.... CIIIVW wtft l!e
Offlnd for sale Ill Hf &amp;
FFAmemben-1. .
for ...... leedlftl ......
1ecu.
Call
U14J
......,..,~, l!xt. 22, f9r fur.
IIMrdetalls.

NOTIC£?

r esidence in Bradbury.
'rhursday &amp; Friday from 9·.

• Street: ' Gall Miller's,
: wooden playpen, wooden
1 babybed, sewing machine
: cabinet with sliding top.
' October9·10,

&amp;M:at.d ' mi. _ , ol

~----...

J!V£1t·

Mobile Home$
for Rent
1975 .Two bedroom mobile
home partially furnished,
$150.00 a month. Located in
Country Mobile Home
Park, on Route 33, north of
Pomeroy. 247-3942. ·

riVE family yard Sllle at
the

iy__A_R_D_S_A_l_E_:_2_57_L_In-co-ln

'
·· GaiiiiiC-ty
Jr. Fal111"""1C1s

42

YARD SALE. Oct. 9, 10, 11.
Clothing, curtains,
dishes. many other items.
iAt Mrs. Clint Johnsen's on
Old Portland Rd.

''

·a:00 PM·

-They'll Do It Every Time

'

9·5.

I

-.. -· -WANT AD INFORMAnON
-

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young bu$1ness person
and earn good money plus
some great l!lfts as a Sentlnel route carrier. Phone
GAR,AGE SA'-E: October us right away and get on
10-11 at A-frame bulldTng · the eligibility list at 992 ·
next 10 Landmark in Mid· 2156 or 992·2157.
odleport. Used doors, win·
doW$, storm sash, cost Iron
PART· TIME RN, 7:00a.m.
tub, stereo, etc.
to 3:30 p.m. Call Pomeroy
Health Care Center. 992·
:.OouR - F~mily l'"orch Sale.' 6606.
- 1'rl~ay onlt. Oct. 10,- 10·3.
vancooney•s, 522 Grant
St., Mlddlepert, Oh. Rain
cancels. - ·
·

~-

I

Pay ·cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Yont Sale
GARAGE SALE 10.5, Oct.
6·10. Off Rt. 7 bypass on old
Rt. 143 S. of Jack's Club,
fallow signs.
1

SabldiJ Ewnin(,

11-----------1

Curb Inflation.

~~~--~~'~'~z~t~P~\~!~f~'P~&amp;~It~r~~4~~~0.~T~~I~s,~'~~

a.ua CAll SALE

mv

Auto restrictions would
cost consumers billi(Jns
WASHJNGTON. (AP) -A Federal
Trade Commission official says
· proposed auto import restrictions
woUld, if enacted, cost consumers
between $3 billion and $5 billion a

·Announ~•"'"'"

SK.TE· A·WAY . Will be
closed Oct. I through Oct.
11. ~eopen s.t.. oct. ·11.
Open Weds., Frl, lo ht.
nights 7:30.10:00. AIIO
available for prlvats per·.
ties.~ at 915-3929.

'0

Horrified mother sees bomb
blast that kills daughter.
.

,

..-

-r

~

~· ·

78

Camping
Equipment

1973 Slarcrafl travel
trailer, loaded. 992-3129. .;
'

CAMPfi R- BUS. Sleeps 6.
992·5260.
1976 20' Tag·A' Long Travel
Trailer, SJ,ooo.; - 1 heavy
dutv Reese trailer car hitcb
$150.; 1 heavy duty . front
bumper, fits bumper &amp;
truck frame 535.; also, 850
bales _of hay S.75 cents eoch
while they last. Nate
Vanaman, 742-276·1.

ser lees
·

"

81

71 ~
Autos for Sale
1979 VW RABBIT, two
door, fuel injected, stan·
dard shift, goOd gas
mileage, like new con·
dition. Call evenings 247·
3051 :·
1974 CHEVY Nova, 350
automatic, power steering,
71,000 miles, runs good. 742·
3035.

Home

Improvements
s &amp; G Carpet Cleani'1Q.
Steam cleaned . Free
estimate.
Reasonable
rates. Scotchguard. m 6309 or 742· 2211 .

BELL BROS. Home lm·
proitements . Roofing
(Shingles), siding , (vinyl"&amp;
aluminum) pa inting in
side, paneli(lll, drywall.
and painting. Ph. 843·280:1.
If no answer, call949·2739 ..

1980 ·vwRabbit,
automatic, gas fuel inJected. 992·3129.

12

1972 2 door Monte Carlo.
Runs good, new ·paint lob.
$1,095. 11ft. trucl(camper,
self contained, hal water

HEATING &amp; air can·
di_tloning,
furna~e
clean1ng,piJJmblng . Ca-ll
992·236olafter S p.m ..

refrigerator,

13

·~
....

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

~

heater,

3839.

furnace ,
985·

stove.

1978 AMC GREMLIN, 4
cyl., blue, good gas
mileage. Must sen tllls
week. Best offer. 915·4398.

Excavating

1::if

DOZER work, small
specialty, quick d
·
dable service. 7&lt;12·2753. ."',
14

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

1973 Camaro, good running
car, new paint job. Call 992·
3931.
1979 CAMARO Z28, 11.500
miles loaded, extra nice,
new car ordered, must sell,
make--742·2143. ,
12

Trucks fer Sale

'
-1977 CHEVY Step
side If•
ton, 350 engine, ,au1o.
Asking SMOO. Nur)'lber to
ca.11992·32ol0.
•_

74
Motorcycles
YAMAHA MX 250, r8clng
bike, runsll00d.742·3035. HONDA 50 &amp;H-70. Call
Bob·Fisher. tol9·2371.

f\,

... '

SEWING
MACHI~£
Repairs, service, i .t l
makes1 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomerq(.
Authorized S_loger Sales
and Service;- We sharP!!'
Scissors. .
•
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweeperll.
toesten. Irons, all small

appliances. Lawn mo••tNext to stele Hlghwar
Garage on Route 7, , . .
3125.
;:"'

APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all rnakft w-r. dryenl,
ranges, dlshwalhers,
dlspouls. water tankl. Cell
Ken Young It 915-3561
befonl 9 a .m. or after 6
p.m.
•

�(

11&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 9, !980

LAST
'

·tl-~

BOYS HANES

-

SO per cent cotton, 50 per cent
polyester blend, warm comfortable,
resists shrinkage, two layer knit fo r
warmth . S, M, L and XL ·if'l long
sleeve top or ankle length drawer s.
Anrliver~ary Sale.

Smart and fashionable fall and wioter
dresses tor juniors. Casual and dressy
by

TABLE
COVERS
For this sale, our entire

UNDERWEAR

JUNIOR DRESSES
styles

116th Anniversary Sale!

$4.49 THERMAL

SALE

~,,,&lt;s

'

stock sale priced. Oblongs,
ovals, . square covers,
rounds, solid colors and
patterns.

-,___,_

\/icky Vaughan, L.ucy Jr. and

Teena Page. Junior sizes 3 to 15.

,";;

Reg. S19:00
Reg. S23.00
Reg. $28.00
Reg. $36.00
Reg .. $44.00

~

~~~~~i

CHAIR
SALE
Anniversary Sale prices

. --.- ..... Sale $15.19
......... , Sate $18.39
. .. . . •. _.. Sale $22.39
. - .... ... . Sale $28.79
. .. ..... ... ·s ate$35.19

on our · complete stock of
B'e rkline and · Kroehler
chairs. Recline·rs, rock-oloungers, swivel rockers
and wall·aways.

•

t

if

~
~r-ta

\r
Js

··' §
~~,, ~\V
.$
.:r+'" .

f.t
N:$~

~ ~1

"•;

3112 ounce skeins, fine QUality Coats and
Clark's Red Heart Wintuk Yarn . Big selection of color~.

-

· ,_.)

~\ ,

1

s, M,

CARHARTT BROWN DUCK WORK CLOTHES
SHEETS AND PILLOW CASES
MEN'S AND BOYS' TUBE SOCKS ·
MEN ' S ROLFS BILLFOLDS
BOYS' SHIRTS FOR FALL
CHI LOREN'S SLEEPWEAR
. ' GIRLS' TOPS AND SWEATERS
WOMEN'S SWEATERS
MEN'S QUILTED FLANNEL SHIRTS
MEN ' S WEMBLEY TIES
BIG BEN MEN'S INSULATED COVERAL LS
JUNIOR JEANS DENIM AND CORDUROY
MEN'S WINTER JACKETS AND VESTS
BOYS' WINT&amp;R JACKETS AND VESTS
WOMEN'S. FALL SLACKS
MEN'S WRANGLER JEANS
DUTCH FLOWER BULBS
MEN'S F'-ANNEL WORK SHIRTS
BOYS' DEON.IM OR CORDUROY JEANS
KITCHEN CARPET AT WAREHOUSE
METAL CABINETS AT WAREHOUSE
WOOD BURNING HEATERS AT WAREHOUSE
MEN'S FALL DRESS SLACKS
LITTLE BOYS' NUMBER SHIRTS
CHAIR SALE-FURNITURE DEPARTMENT
WOMEN ' S LINGERIE SALE

Land XL long steeve tops, ankle

knitf::nair:t: :1:~o:~~:ight

5

.

)

116th Anniversary Sale!

MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
Sma ll ( 14: 14'12 ), medium (15·
15 112 ), large (16-16112), extra large
&lt;17·17 112 ) . Solid colors, excellent
patterns, trOe western styling by
ca mpus, Wrangler and Ely . In c ludes our western flannels, too.

STEREO ALBUM SALE

Communities urged to unite

19.95
WRANGLER ··
.

College supporters
hold big·celebration

32

..

!16th Anniversary Sale

BOYS' '24.95 JOG SUITS
Sizes small (6-8), medium
(10-_1 2), .large (14-'16), extra
large (18-20) . Fleece lin'e d
sweat shirts with matching
sweat pants, .limited quantity.

'16"
ANNIVERSARY SALE
WOMEN'S

GLOVES
.
. --AND .KNIT
-.
ACC_ESSORIES
Be prepared for the cotd weather with

HONORARY DEGREE CONFERRED -,. Dr. Paul
Hayes (at podtwn) , Rio Grande Coll~ge president,
·congratulates Robert E. Mercer (wearing robes) after
Mercer received an honorary doctorate of law from
RGC during the "Challenl':e of the Second Century"

warm lined gloves, driving gloves, mitsets~

tens, scarfs, knit hats and

reduced for our Anniver~ry Sale!
FROM ONLy

victory dinner at the college Thursday night. Mercer, •
13th president of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. , was
also guest speaker at the dinner. Flanking Mercer is
Dr. Keith Brandeberry (left), RGC trustee, and Carl
Dahlberg, Dr. Hayes' assistant for externalaffairs.

All

:Teachers
face jail
·sentences

f209

AND MANY, MANY MORE ...

WOMEN'S

Y2 PRICE

FAU AND WINTER

DENIM JEANS

MEN'S SWEAT PANTS

Maverick, Toddly Winks, and Wrangler
qua lity . Slims and regulars in sizes 1 to7.

GIRLS'

and colors . Misses

to20.

SALE

DENIM JEANS

HALF-SIZE DRESSES

Straight leg and flair legs.
Fashion jeans.
Regulars and slims.
Toddlers sizes thru 7 to 14.

Famous makes in suedes, polyes1er prints:
velours and blends, Quality fashions at sale
prices. Half sizes 12'12 to 24 112.
REG. $19.00
REG . $34.00
REG. $44.00
REG.$59 .00

Reg. $7.00 .. . ... . ...... : • . Sale $.5.59
Reg . $11 . 00 .•••.•..•• , •. , •• Sale$8.79
Reg . $15.00 · ···· · ·-··'··· Sale$11 .99
Reg: $22.00 ... . .. - . .••••.• Sale $17.59

WINTER COATS
AIJ coats and snowsuits are machine washable.
Pile lined, quilted, water repellent ... mariy
styles. Sizes.: months, 2 to 4, 4 to6x ant~ 7 to 14.
REG ; $16.00 ...................... ,
REG. $21.00, . ...• .••.•••.••.•.•.••
REG . $28.00 • • •.
REG. $36.00 ...... ; ................
I

•

••

I.

0

•••

0

•••

•

••

•

•

SALE $13.59
SALE $17.89
SALE $23.79
SALE $30.59

'

'Madman' sought ~ · violent killing

Reg. $21.00
•
Sale $16.79
'
Reg. $32.00
Sale $25.59
Reg. $39.00
Sale $31.19
Reg. $48.00
Sale $38.39
Reg. $64.00
Safe $51.19

BUFFALO, N.Y.- The body of a black ma)e, the sixth to be slain in
the Buffalo area in less than three weeks, was foiiDd Thursday with his
heart cut out, authorities said.
On Wednesday, the body of another black rnan - Parler W. Edwards, 71 - also was found with his heart removed. The victim found
Thursday was identified as Ernest Jones, 40, 'of Buffalo, said District
Attorney Edward Cosgrove of Erie County.
The four earlier victims - a 14-year-old youth and three men 'were all shot to death with the same .22-caliber gun in Buffalo,
Niagara faUs, and- suburban Cheektowaga during a 36-hour period
Sept. 22-24.
•

Layton faces U.S. arraignment

• , ... . ... ....... SALE $15.19
.. ... ·.......... . SALE$27.19
.................. SAlE $35~19
.. ....... .. ...... SALE$47.19

116th Anniversary Sa tel

CHILDREN'S

WASIDNGTON -The U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved a
federal loan guarantee of $32 million to construct an ethanol plant at
So11th Point, Ohio, Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, announced Thursday.
The plant, to be completed in early 1983, will be the nation's first,
large-scale coal-fired ethanol facility. It will produce 60 million
galloll$ of ethanol per year from 24 million bushels of Ohio corn. The
plant will be built by the Ohio Farin Bureau Federation, Ashland Oil,
and Ptiblicker Ini!ustries.

Toni Todd, Puritan, Happenings, Kay Windsor .and
Flutterbye quality .. Latest

Sizes 30 through 42. Draw string waist,
solid colors, warm fleece lining, many
have sweat shirts to match or coordinate.
Men's $7.95 Sweat Pants ... ......... $5.80
Men's $15.95 Sweat Pan1s ......... $11 .88

REG . $6.00 . . . . . . ........ . -. SALE $4.~9
REG . $8.00 ..... ... .... ..... , SALE $6.39
REG . $11.00 ..... ... . - .. - ... . SALE $8.79
REG . $13.00 . . . . .. .. .. . . ... . SALE $10.39

South Point .plant loan approved

DRESS
SALE

116th Anniversary Sale!

LimE BOYS' .

r••

•

MEN'S SWEATERS
AND SWEATER VESts

·NEW .YORK - A member of the People's Temple will be flown here
Friday from Guyana for arraignment on charges in connection with
the killing two years ago of Rep. Leo Ryan, D-Cali(., the FBI~d
Thursday.
.
Larry Layton, 33, ill being brought here from Georgetown, Guyana.
Details of the transfer, including what charges would be placed against Layton, were not known . But the Oakland (Calif.) Tribune reported
last week that Layton would be brought back to stand trial for con·
spiracy in Ryan's deatil.

Review board declares POW dead
SAN ANTONIO, Texas- The last Air Foree prisoner of war in Viet-

nam should be declared dead, a review board says, and his embittered
wife blames President Carter for reneging OJ) prornilles to families of
POWs and M!As. " It breaks my heart," said Marian Shelton.
"For tllem to decide my husband Is dead when they really don't
know, It's just like the 1,300 others (Vietnam POWs and MlAs)," she
said:
Col. Charles Shelton was shot down over U!OS on May 24, 1965; his
33rd birthday. UntU Thursday afternoon, he had been listed as a
prisoner of wilr - a status that held out some hope for his wife that one
day pe Jllight come home.
. •
.

s,

All of our men's sweaters are Included: Sizes M, L
·and XL. A beautiful selection of sllpovers, cardigans
. and swel!ter vests. Solid colors, patterns. Let us help
you with yo11r selection.
Men's $13.95 Sweater Vests . • •••.•••••••• • • • $11.00
Men's S19.95 Sweater Vests ••••, ••••••••••• :•• S15.80
Men's S22.95 Sweat.,rs ... . .. ........ . .. ..... . $18.10

Mei1's $26.95 SWeaters.~ ·· -. •.. ~ ..••••••••••.• $21.30 '

Weather forecast
Mostly cl01,1dy with a chance of showeflllonight and Saturday mor·
ntng. Becoming PartlY cloudy Saturday afternoon, Lows ionlt"t 1'1 the
lower 50s.lllghs Saturday 80-66. Chance of rain 30 percent tonigbt and
Saturda)'. Winds westerly to southwesterly !~IS mph tonight.
'

OPEN SATURDAY 9a30... A.M~ TO 5 P.M._

•

EldeDded Ohio Foncut- Swtday through Tuesday: Achance of
anow Ourrles and rain showers northeast SWiday morolng. Otherwise '

..

ELBERFELD ~ IN PO.ME.ROY.

'

,'

FIFTEEN CEN TS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, ·OCTOBER 10, 1980

'1565

Specia l group ro country, ·bluegrass,
popular and soundtracks.
WHILE JHEY LAST!

-

entine

1

ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS

this is a daily occurrence, our own forces are causing

similar explosions in Iraqi territory."
He said Iranian ground forces advanced six miles·
against the Iraqi invaders along a 24-mile front in the
sector near Ahwaz and declared, "We are entering the
final phase of the war."
Baghdad Radio said Thursday that Iraqi forces were
"destroying vital military and economic installations"
at Dezful And that the city, 150 miles north of Khorramshahr "is at t~e mercy,of. our &amp;round fire."

at

36. Snap front, two snap pockets, snaps on
wrist. You'll really save during our Anniversary Sale.

SAVE' ON THESE

length drawe rs. Cotton polyester blend, two

layer

MEN~S

141

'5A9 TH~:~:~:DERWEAA
S1zes

VOL 31 NO. 126

'1 19 _Skein

11

•

Iran accused Iraq of using giant ground-to-grollnd
missiles for the first time in the war Wednesday ni ght.
It said the missiles hit Dezful and neighboring Andimeshk, killing 110 civilians and wounding 300 in Dezful and killing 60 to to people in Andimeshk.
An Iranian military communique said each missile
weighed 4,400 pounds and had a range of about 40 miles
- about the di~tance from the Iraqi border to Dezful, a
vital·r · d and rail center that connects western Iran to
Tehr , he capitaL
A to lah Ruhollah Khomeini, Irah 's revolutionary
lead r and Shiite Moslem patriarch, called Iraqi
Pres dent Saddam Hussein " the dirty agent of
colo ·alism" and said he "will be driven out of his
&lt;!Duntry and an lslarhic government will replace him in
Iraq."

warplanL&gt;s also bombed two hospitals in Ahwaz, killing
"a · number of people," and ,l!helled Abadan,
demolishing part of the Red Cre.scent .building.
Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, in a
statement on Tehran Radio, urged ihe Iranian people
not to be; alarmed by the e.plosions in Ahwaz, saying

•

BLUE DENIM WESTERN
SHIRTS
Neck sizes 12- to 2o, sleeve lengths
to t

Other RCA Consoles at Anniversary Sale
Prices.
Mechanic St. Wa r.ehouse

--

Khorr~mshar confirmed that the Iranians . were
thr41wing up stiff resistance beyond the Karun River.
Iranian·· artillery shells exploded· aro11nd the Iraqi
positions.
· An Iraqi commander said the Iranians continued to 0
hold the key bridge with an emplacement of five or six
tanks. He said the Iranians were able to lob shells on ·
the port but could not adva nce on the ground.
·. An Iraqi military conununique:reported two Iranian
helicopters shot down over the southern sector Thur- sday and said. l6 Iraniahs were killed. It said Iraqi
ground forces destroyed pojVer stations and set fl\el
depots :ifire in Ahwaz.
The Iranian ne,ws agency reported an Iraqi MiG jet
raided the railroad station in ·Ahwa• and artillery
shelled the station, killing 14 people. Iran sa id Iraqi

e

.KNimNG YARN

.

ANNIVERSARY
SALE

~:~~-~
~\
;g,

WINTUK

25" DIAGONAL PICTURE
XTENDED LIFE CHASSIS
ELECTRONIC TUNING
REG. 1689.00

~

.,

' BAGHDAD, Iraq 1API - Iraqi forces were reported
running into sUI! resistance in Iran's oil port of
Khorramshahr and falling back along a broad front
, near Ahwaz as both s ides poured reinforcements into
·the battle zone at the head of the Persian Gulf.
Libya declared support for Iran in the war, becoming
the first Arab nation, to do so, and demanded Sa11di
Arabia return four U.S. planes used to spy on the
fighting. The Libyans also were reported supplying
Iran with large quantities of arms and ammunition.
Iraq issued little information on its' 19-day-old of,
·· fensive aimed at Khorramshahr on the dispuled Shalt
al·Arab ·waterway and at the nearby Iranian refinery{
of Abadan, some 70 miles 'south of Ahwaz, capital o .
Iran 's oil-richKhuzistan Province.
B11t reporters in the Iraqi-occupied sector of

Ol!r $1 •.~9 ·

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

reszstance

•

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P. M.

\f
Ji '.

rl

Iraqi Orces· meet s.t i

TWO DAYS
ELBERFELD$ l16TH ANNIVERSARY .SALE.
.
FRIDAY &amp; SA TURD.A Y

•

pert1t cloudy Sunday. Fair Monday and Tuesday, Highs in the 50s Sun·
da;r and Monday lind in the 80s Tuesday. Overnight lows In the 30s
earl:r Sunday and Tuesjlay and in the mid-20s to lower \l()s early Mon·
da;r.
'

BOARDMAN, Ohio (AP) - A.
dozen striking teachers in the Board·
man school district faced 10 days in
jail and fines of $500 each plus court ·
coslj; if they failed to report to work
today.
The 12 teachers, all negotiators for
the Boardman Education
Association, were foWid in contempt
of court Thursday by Mahoning
County Common Pleas Judge Clyde
W, Osborne. They had refused to
abide by the back·t~work order he
issued last week.
oSborne said the sentences were
negotiable If the teachers returned
to work today. If they did not return,
they were to serve the sentences
over the next five weekendS.
"I'm not a strike breaker," Osbor·
ne said. "I'm here for one purpose.
I'm here because I put .an order on
these people to go back to work and
cease a strike which is in violation of
the law."
The strike involving 290 teachers
began on sept. 8. No negotiations are
• scheduled. ·

Thi-ee p~rsons hurt
in auto accident
Three persons were injiired in a
two-car accident prohe!l Thursday
l!Y the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Foster E. Jenkins,
68, Rt. 2, Patriot, was southbound on
Gallia CR 8 at 2:20 p.m. and failed to
stop at the junction with U.S. 35.
Foster's ur then collided with a
car driven by Lora J. Jenkins, 24,
Wellston, which was eastbound on
35, according to the report.
Jenkins' car was .demolished In
the crash, while the Lewis car sllffered severe darnage, troopers said.
Both Jenkins and a passenger in
bet car, Teresa A. McClalkey, 18,
Wellston, were injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the G~
EMS.
Jenkins was treated and released
while 'McClaskey was admitted and
listed In stable condiUon this morning.

.

Also injured was a passenger In
Lewis' car, Pauline E. Lewis, 68, Rt.
·2, Patriot, 'trhll was also treated and
released at HMC.
Foster Lewis was cited by the
patrol for failure to yield right of
way.

By KEVIN KELLY
the college.
Expressions of thanks and a
Dr. Paul Hayes, college president,
message for business and education noted that Evans was chosen by the
to band together to foster economic RGC board of trustees for being acgrowth were the highlights of a victive in community affairs , for be ing
tory banquet at Rio Grande College recognized as a leader , for an
Thursday night.
honorable personality and liis inThe victory being celebrated was terest in the college.
Rio Grande's achieving its goal to
Evans, a 1928 Gallia Academy
raise more than $4.9 million to im- High School graduate, began· hi~
prove the college and its faCilities.
career as a farmer but has been coAccording to Dan Evans, general
founder and chairman of the board
chairman of " Challenge of the
of Bob Evans Fanns, president and
Second Century," as the three yearconsultant to the Ohio Valley Bank ,
old fund drive is called, RGC has Holzer Foundation trustee, cobeen successful in getting $5.6 foiiDder of Ohio Valley Health Sermillion in pledges, well within the vices . Foundation, and Gallipolis
five years the drive set for itself in
City Schools board member.
1977.
,,
The evening's guest speaker,
"All of us here have one thing in
Robert E. Mercer, president of the
corrunon-the well-being of Rio ·Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.,
Grande," Evans noted.
received an honora ry doctorate of
"Obviously, our campaign has
law from Dr. Hayes and spoke on the
been a success," he continued. "But necessity of business and education
bel!ause we have been successful, · to combine to fight current economic
we cannot sit.on our laurels. 'It is 11p hardtimes.
·
to us to continue our successes.' '
Citing what he called the federal
For the financially troubled, 104
government's policy of " big
year-old institution, the millions
brotherism, " Mercer decried
raised in the drive will allow for inAmerica's falling from·grace as the
creased scholarship. aid and a com· world leader in labor, technology
mWiity and student center for
and finance.
special programs, Evans Said.
Because of industry's failure to
A RGC fellowship was awarded to
rival the foreign market, govemEmerson E. Evans, "a country boy rpent must cease over-regulation, he
who just wanted to help out," for his
said.
·
years of service to Gallia County and

"Government has simply tried to
do too m11ch .. .it doesn't seem to do
anything else well except spehd ·
money, '' he said.

"Business and industry must resell the business enterprise system
that' made this country's economy
the envy of the world," Mercer continued.
"It is time for missionary zeal to
counter the creeping mania that afflicts our economy ·and weakens·our
ability to compete in the world
market," he commented.
Mercer stressed the role local
businessmen and organizations can
play in bringing back the free enterprise system, and credited RGC
for holding annual free enterprise
seminars.

In looking for solutions to today's
economic problems, Mercer said
"the American people are beginning
to understand that ~:overrunent
alone cannot provide for them.
"That will require a combined effort of all of our forces-business,
labor, goverrunent and education,"
Mercer also jabbed at industry
critics, . naming environmentalist
Barry Commoner and conswner advocate Ralph Naaer a$ examples.
''As for Ralph, l'vefaiways maintained there's nothing a wife, kids
and a four·year-old car won't do for
him, " Mercer joked.

Explosion kills student, 33 hurt
·INDEPENDENCE, Ky . · (AP ) Linda Whittenburg's dozen ·art
students were painting Halloween
goblins on the Simon Kenton High
. SChool windows when a classroom
wall shared with a boiler room started hissing.
Within seconds, . an 1 explosion
knifed tlirough the wall, flinging the
students across the room in a hail of
brick and flames. One student was
killed in the first of two explosions
Thursday that gutted three floors in
the school's north wing.
Thirty-three people, mostly
adults, were treated at two hospitals
for Injuries. Kentucky fire invesUgators had not determined the
cause of the blast Thursday night. A
school official said it originated in a
firs~floor boiler room adjacent to
the urt room.
Most of the 1,000 students safely
evacuat~ the building in the half

hour between the two explosions, the
first shortly before noon. Several
firefighters suffered minor injuries
extinguishing . a three-hour fire
ignited by the explosions.
Residents a half-mile from the
school said they felt the tremor from,
the second explosiOn,
" We heard a sudden hissing, like
steam, cormng from the wall we
shire with the furnace room ," Mrs.
Whittenburg said, describing the
original blast. "Five seco!ldS, and
the whole wall blew up. II threw us
across the room.
" Thank God, they we~e all standing. It would have been a di~ste~ .
If any of them had been s1ttmg, Jt
would have been all over.
" The kids were great. They gralr
bed me off the floor. W~ had barely
time to get out. The flames rolled
right towar~ us." .
.
Mrs. Whittenburg sa1d students

Millions needed to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio
.wants to spend $2.1 million to begin
planning for additions to its prison
system, but millions more will be
needed before construcUon can
start.
Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed
a bill· authorizing site selection,
acquisition and preliminary
engine~ring studies for new
faciliUes in Chillicothe arid at four
other locations arowtd the state.
Sponsored by Rep. Myrl H.
Shoemaker, the bill calls for a tw~
unit facUlty with a· total capacity of ·
1,000 reformatory and penitentiary
irunates at the Ross County site, part
of the . Bourneville Democrat's
district. It also provides for a study
of the feasibility of locatillg SITI81ler,
~te prisons in Dayton, Cincinnati, northeast and northwest
Ohio.
•
The Chillic~ facility would be
used as a reception center for new
prisonefll until they are assigned to
other institutions around the stale. It
WGIIld replace the current reception

D_hio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP) -

Tbe win-

DIDC aamben selef!ted Tblll'llday
Dlgbt Ia the Oblo Lottery's dally
gam " The NllDiber" aDd lilt weekly
"Pyramid" 1D11 "Lacky Buok"
games are:

TheNumber-689
Pyramld-60;

m ; %584

LaellyBu~k-Zi;

ZS0448

'

A friend said classmates
recngnized Williams as a gifted ar·
tis!.
"He was the best artist I've ever
known," said Donna Ridner, 17, Of
Independence. "He was a big joker.
He was well-liked by other students.''
John Engle, business manager for
the Kenton County Public School
District, said it was a miracle more
studeniS weren't killed. He said
many students were in the cafeteria,
at the other side of the building,
when the explosion occurred ,
possibly contrib11ting to the low
number of casualties.

updat~

center, located in the old Ohio
Penitentiary comple.x at Colwnbus,
which is to be closed by Dec, 31, 1983.
Current plans call for the new
Ross County prison to be built ad·
jacent to the state's Chillicothe
Correctional Institute. The complex
is a fonnei' federal refonnatory
which the state has leased since
!966. Negotiations are Wider way in
an attempt by the stale, to acquire
title to the property, S!lid Charles· A.

' .

scrambled to safety thro11gh a closet
connecting another art room. The
Kenton CoiiDtY coroner's office said
Robert Wilhams, 16, of In·
dependence, died m the blast. His
body was foiiDd in the art room.

408; 7189; 34875;

prisons

Abercrombie, public information officer of the rehabilitation and
correction department.
'
Construction of the new reception
center collld take three years and
cost $30 million to $50 million, Aber- ·
crombie said Thursday. Building
funds have not yet been approved by
the General Assembly,
As originally proposed, the bill
had called for the planni,ng Or two
prisons, one in Ross County and
another at an unspecified site In northern Ohio.
·
.
B11t it was amended in response to
those who favored the construction
of smaller faciliUes closer to !ll'ban.
areas from whlch most Inmates are .
committed. Opponents in the Hoose _
had also unsuccessfully sought to ,
delete the rural SOIIthem Ohio
location in favor of one located In
centralOhio.
.
The state's ·inmate population' .
currently' is 13,296, but the Ohio.·
Unified Correctional Master jllan •·
rates the prison system aa capable
of holding 10,720 persons.

t

,.

...

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