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16--The Dally Sentinel, Middlepqrt-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. I5, 1!1110

Mason CoUnty family honored
,

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - The G.
" Pete" .. Sommer family of
Southside, W. Va., in Mason County
Wsli recently honored as ohe of West
Virginia's "Outstanding Farm
Famllles'' for 1980.
The Sonuners had previously been
named as West Virginia's "Out·
standing Dairy Producer" a~ were
one ~ 17 families recognized at a
banquet held in Bllcldey on Sept. 26.
Agriculture cOmmissiomir Gus R.
Douglass presented the Sommers
with a plaque and a cash award in
recogniUm of their outstanding contribution to agriculture in West

c:

• Virginia.

, The Sommer family _consists of
four· children, Pam and Julie, who
are married, and ·Georgianna and
Pete, at home. Georgianna is a
graduate of West Virginia Univer·
slty and works full time as
Recreation Director for the city of
Pt. Pleasant. 'Pete is currently a
Junior at VPI and State University
at l!lacksburg, Virginia, majoring in
Dairy Science.
The Sommer !ann operation consists of 565 acres which supports 60
producing Holstein cows and 58

heifers. Eighty acres of com .00 32 as a 4-H Leader In Mason County.·
acres of hay are produced to provide
Mrs. Sonuner Is active In 4-H work
feed for the dairY operation. The l!lld has served as a leader for :i8
fann has consisted of all registered years. She is a plnweater and West
Holstein cows since 1960.
Virginia Ali..Star an~ is also
The Sonuners use 100 percent ar- Women's Chalnnan for the Mason
tificial breeding and are on the County Farm Bureau. All famtly
DHIA record system. Last . year members belong to the 'Hannony
their cows .averaged 16,699 powlda ~ Bsptlst_Churcll.
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milk and 593 pounds of butterfat , The Sommer children were quite
each. They also receive excellent active .In contests and organizations
production from their cropland with and participated In nWilerous dairy..
ari average yield of 34 tons of silage shows and contests. Georgianna and
and five tons of hay per acre.
· Pam won several awards and seryed
All . members of the Sommer in several leadership positions In 4-H
family have been active in fann and and other organizatiOn&amp; Julie was
trade
.associations .and . also very SUccessfui with her. par- .
·organizations. Sommer ~amember ticipatlon in VariouS ~ Conleats and
of the Mason Colmty ASOI Com- ·dairY cattle sh011JS and represented
mittee; Western Soil Conservation the West Virginia dairy Industry In
District; Dairyman's COOperative 1977 as the State Dairy Princess. ~ .
Sales Association; Milk, Inc. and the
The Sommers' son, Pete, served
Mason County Farm Bureau. He has as president and vice president of
served as a director and president of the loca14-H club and·wa5 high point
the West Virginia Artificial individual In the State Da[ry
. Breeders Cooperative, nine tenns as Judging .contest In 19'1~. While in
President of Sire Power, Inc., two high School, he was listed in the
terms as PresidPpt of the West "Who's Who in American High
Virginia Holstein Association, four School" and was a member of the
years on the Board of Directors of high school All-American Football •
the Mason County Fair and 21 years Team.

Six defendants forfeited bonds and
three others were fined in the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Terry Hutton,
Langsville, $35; Melissa . Mathews,
Pomeroy, $31; Arthur Smith,
Albany, $27, and Martin Hughes,
· Charlotte, N. C., $30, all posted on
speeding charges; Mark Riggs,
Pomeroy, $30, assured clear distance; Charles Evans, Pomeroy, $30L
improper backing.
'
Fined were Michael Pierce,
Midleport, $350 and costs, driving
while intoxicated, and $50 and costs,
no operator's license, and Don Bolin,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, p!Jblic intoxication.

TO END MARRIAGE
A suit for dissolution of marriage
was fUed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Early R. Scarberry,
Racine, and Mildred Mae Scarberry, Racine.

standing fann families." Agriculture Commlllioner
Gu R. Douglaas, far right, ~ted tbem a plaque
and cash award In recognltiOII Of their outatandiDg con- , .
tribution to agriculture In the Mountain state.
·

FARM FAMILY HONORED- Mr. and Mrs. G. C.
(Pete) Sommer and family, Southside, W. Va. were
recenUy honored as one of West Virginia's "out-

SQUAD CAU.ED
The · Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call on Route 7 at 10:27
p.m. Tuesday for Paul Baer who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he.was admitted.

Ohio's Wayne National Forest.
U was th~ second such project announced by the government for
abandoned coal mine lands in Hocking County in the last six weeks .
Interior Secretary Cecil D. Andrus said Ohio has placed a .high
priority on the project, which is in an area used heavily for recreation.
The area is about 50 miles southeast of Columbus.

Flames flatten four story factory ,
CINCINNATI - Flames flickered 300 .feet in the air followed by
billowing black smoke on the city's near west side Tuesday afternoon,
flattening a four-story factory and injuring eight workers.
Firemen were on scene through ihe night at the Hill &amp; Griffith Foundry Supply Co. hosing down stacks of coal dust.
Fire officials said late Wednesday that they would probe the rubble
Thursday for a possible body. Officials said they had learned that a
sheet metal worker's truck was found in the debris, but the man's employer said they have not heard from him.

.

NEW YORK - Airlines, stung by rising fuel bills and a recession
that has reduced air travel, are moving to raise fares and drastically
reduce the number of discount tickets sold, industry spokesmen said
Wednesday.
American Airlines said it notified the Civil Aeronautics Board it
plans to cut the maximwn discount offered oil "supersaver" fares
from 55 percent to 35 percent and plans to malie it much more difficult
to qualify for the discount from full-fare prices.

Oct.22.

Lightweight
and
Warm Acrylic Pile.

From~~
,,
Gracefully sheared fluting
in forest green, sea blue,
·or sunset red.

FREE CLOTHING DAY

S·M·L,

Tile Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency will hold its . free ·

clothing day for the low-income persons on Friday, Oct. 17, from 9 a.m.
Witll 12 noon. The agency's clothing
bsnk is located In the old high school
building In Cheshire.

.'29.00

UNGERIE DEPARTMENT
ON THE SECOND FLOOR

MINISTRY PLANNED
Tile Ministers of Love will be at

the Ash St. Freewill Bsptlst Church

ElBERFELDS
IN
POMEROY

in Middleport at 7:30p.m. Saturday.

' Pastor Ralph Butcher invites the
public.
~ERSTOMEET

A meeting of the Meigs Cotinty
Coupon Refunders has been set for 7
p.m. on Oct. 20 at the Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and Loan
Co., W. Main, Pomeroy.

ST. LOUIS - A man fired from his job in a federal rltotor pool has
been charged with murdering his ex-boss and seriously wounding four
other workers in a shooting spree in the garage of the l'j_ew Federal
Building here.
·
Authorities charged that Gene Autry Clark, 39, drove to the garage
Wednesday afternoon, got out of his car, and, without saying a word,
fired a blast from a shotgun that wounded three mechanics standing
nearby.
Muttering obscenities, the gunman then went into an office, where .
he fired two shots, killing Walter K. Dennis, 52, assistant manager of
the motor pool, and seriously wounding secretary Rqby Cassity, 43,
according to Sgt. Robert Bauman of the city homicide-division.

APPLE BUTTER TIME - Members of the Racine United Methodist
Church were out in full force Wednesday assisting with the making of apple butter. At one time, eight kettles were cooking at the sme time. Seventy-five gallons were made. The apple butter sells for $3 a quart or $1.50 a

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STARKE, Fla. - A fracas involving 300 inmates at Florida's
maxlmwn-security prison was quelled on:ith tear gas on the second consecutive day of violence at the facility, where one guard died and two
wen!ln)ilredthis week, authorities said.
... .
One Death Row guard was stabbed and another scalded with hot
water Wednesday, officials said. No prisoners were reported injured.

Actress' son dead from gunshot

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Weather forecast
".:_

Partly cloudy tonight and Friday with a chance of showers and
possibly a thunderstorm Friday. Lows tonight In the mid-50s. Highs
Friday near 80. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight and 30 percent
Friday. Winds southerly less than 10 mph tonight.
E;xleoded Ohio Forecasl- Saturday through Monday:Chance of
showers Saturday and Sunday. Fair Monday. Highs near 70 Saturday,
falling into the 50s Monday. Lows in the 50s Saturday, dropping into
the upper 30s by Monday.

Authorities today are continuing
their investigation into the shooting
death- of a former Point Pleasant,
W.Va. resident whose body was
foWid riear. the old May Moore Farm
off West Virginia Rt. 2, below Crab
Creek Rd., Wednesday morning.
The body of Johnny D. Wamsley,
35, Apt. 3, 1336-Charleston Ave., Huntington, W.Va., an alleged homicide
victlin, .was discovered by a delivery
man at approximately 3 a.m., according · to the Mason County
· Sheriff's Department, which iS
assisting the West Virginia State
Police in the investigation.

Local officials report Wamsley
ha&lt;l. been shot four times, three
times in the back of the head and on·
ce at the base of the neck, apparently at close range with a small
caliber weapon.
The time. of deatl ?a, estimated
to be between midni~··l and 1 a.m.
Wednesday.
Authoritues are further
speculatl!rg Wamsley was kill~
elsewhere; poSSibly in another county, and his body dumped from the
back of a van or car at the rural
Mason County site.

A.._

11'1'-...:n.lal
brought out that· the comrruss10n
111ft 111bdivision for aelf·would like a complete-plan drawn up
....""" campers along the Ohio
on the roadways in the subdivision,
Rlftr in Reedsville was given the
the sewage plan as well as a notation
pn light at Wednesday night's on each deed sold that the land is in a
u.etlng of the Meigs County · floodarea.
Rll!onal Planning Commission
Meigs County Commissioner
jiihh1ded certain stipulations are
Richard Jones said while he cer·
tainly wants to encourage develop'

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DATES
SENIORS &amp; JUNIORS., •••••••••••••••••••••••• OCT. 1$.17
SOPt:I()IV\ORES ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·()c:T_. 20-24- ·
FRESHMEN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .OCT. 27-31
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TIMES
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MONDAY
................. .-..............
I AM to 4130.PM
. -FRIDAY
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Place your savings in our high interestearning certificate ... and watch it pile
up! It no longer pays to leave your long
term savings in a regular account. Ask
one of our financial advisers for details.
Other Savings Plans Ava/lal)Je
Better Banking ~rvlce.

, - - - - - - IMPORTANf IN,ORMATION ---........-----:
1l Students need to make an appointment wltll lllelr edYI-s from NOW until the appropriate rettstra·
tion dates.

:n Once schedule is developed, students must go to the Office of Admissions &amp; Records, In Allen Hill,

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That's the Central Idea.

with thtlr retlstralion form.

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3) The Finance Dopartment will th.. MAIL THE BILL 'TD YOU Wftlt lnstructl- to pay by melt.
ONCE BILL IS PAID, YOUR CLASSa ARE RESERVED.

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we will accept your last Christmas Club payment Friday, Oct. 17 before 2 P.M. Thank You.

4) ALL DROP·ADD SCHEDULE ADJUSTMENTS WILL II 'RIE THROUGH NOVIMIER 7.
5~ II ILLS MUST IE PAID BY NOVEMBER 25. PAYMENTS WILL NOT IE ACCEPTID AP'TIR
THIS DATE. IF THE BILL IS NOT PAID ON TIME, THE SCHEDULE WILL Bl DESTIOY.. DAND
THE STUDENTWILL HAilE TO RE~ISTER ATOPIIN REGISTRATION ON DICIMBIRI,IM.I•
addition, I CHAAOE OF lUG PER DROP·ADDWILL BIIN I'PICT AI"TIR DICIMBIR Ill.

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY

6) A general rqlslratlon wilt lie held November J tltroutlh Nevelllller7.10 AVOID 11t1 RUSH I! I
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT THI OPI'ICI Ofl ' ADMIISIONI &amp; RICORDS IN
ALLIN HALL DR BY CALLING 241:0, IXTINIION . . 11'111,

MIDDLEI'ORT,OH.
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, .... DONAnON MADE - 'File llltcin&lt;! Gun Club Tuesday evening
,.
tell the Racllle Fire Departrumt and emergency squad, the
8yne. PIN Depllrtment and emti. .IC111C1Uid and the Buhan Fire
Deplrtrnent clleclts in the amount ot tlllll for each department, a total of
$501). Making the presentation waa Jim Jotu.GI, president Of the Racine

Although there are no suspects in
the shooting yet, authorities are in·
tensifying their search for Wam·
sley's van. Addjtional state troopers
are being brought in on the in·
vestigation today.
The body has been taken to the
state medical examiner's office in
South Charleston. W.Va. for autopsy.
~-.·
.
Wamsley, formerly operated the
Village Pizza Restaurant in Point
Pleasant, was the son of Mrs. J .E.
Campion of Jackson Ave., Point
Pleasant.

ment of the subdivision, he also feels
plans for phases of the subdivision
should be in writing so that in later
years, there will be a complete understanding as the 50 foot lots are
sold to others than the first pur·
chasers.
The Meigs Health Department and
the Meigs County Engineer will be

contacted on the problems involved
and will be requested to secure the
written plan for the sewage and
roadways. The attorney drawing up
the deeds will be asked to insert the
fact tl1at the land is in a nood area in
each deed.
The corhmission looked at three
(Continued on page 10)

Carter vows to keep
vital oil lanes open

RIO GRANDE
COLLEGE/COMMUNITY
COLLEGE ANNOUNCES
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·.PRE- REGISTRATION FOR
WINTER CLASSES
.

Law enforcement officials report
Wamsley had apparently been rolr
bed. They are searching for a van he
had been driving when he left his
parents' home iil Point Pleasant
shortly before 10:30 p.m. Tuesday . .
The vehicle, a 19'15 Ford van,
bearing West Virginia license nwn·
ber 4V3452, is dark green, with a
missing or damaged grill.
Troop'er F.A. Backus of the West
Virginia and Deputy Jay Parsons,
who are handling the homicide investigation locally, delivered
evidence to Huntington Wednesday.

Reedsv.ille subdivision given approval

••••••••

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pint. There is.also a 50 cent charge if jars are provided. Proceeds fl·om
the sale will be used in the building fund. The apple butter was made at
the Bob Hill residence in Racine.
.
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Authorities intensify
alleged murder probe

FloritbJ prison fr~c.aS quelled

LOS ANGELES - The shotgun blast which killed actress Mary
TYler Moore's on,ly child rriay have been either an accident or suicide,
police said Wednesday.
Richard Carlton Meeker Jr., 24, a messenger at CBS Television City
in LOs Angeles, died late Tuesday in the house he rented with two
female students near the University of Southern California, police
detective Jerry Ferrin said.

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Fired employe charged with murder

~--A~~~-o;;a-t:ii;-1

Rate Effective Oct. 16·22, 1980

FIFTEEN CENrs

POMEROY-MIDDCEPO Rf, OHI O THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1980

Airlines reducing discount rates

BOARD MEETS OCT. %2
A regular meeting of the Southern
Local School District Board of
Education has been set for 7 p.m. on

128

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WASHINGTON - The Interior Department said tOday $1 million

Funding•••

Graveside services for ' John L.
Jewell, Sr., who died May 17, will be
held at the Wells Cemetery at 2 p.m.
Saturday with the Rev. Ditrel Porter
officiating.

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will' be spent to reclaim 89 acres of abandoned strip-mining lands in

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Stephen Smith,
Pomeroy; Beatrice Rairden, H
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
arUord; Betty · McNamara, Hart·
DISCHARG~ ocr.l4
ford; Penny Compton, Middleport;
Stephen Burger, Bernice Brown, Pamela Holcomb, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Paul Casto and daughter, GJ'en- Domingo De LaCruz, Reedsville;
nard Davis, Myrila Hembree, Betty Paul Baer, Minersville.
Kisor, Rexanna Nighting, Susan
Discbarged-Danyel Smith, Mary
Lambert, Etta Luikart, Asllpy · Whaley, Robert Price II, Debora
Mayse, Nora McMillen, Charles
Holter, Charles Tyree; Williiun
Neal, Sheldon Harks, Anna Perry, Soulsby.
Walter Pope, Kathy Roseberry,
Burle Roush, Barbara Shaulls,
Russell Sheets, Jolm Stivers, Jeanie
Taylor, Sally Taylor, Bill Williams,
(Continued from page I)
Mary Worley
match
In the future.
BIRTHS
AI
Lipscomb,
Bedford Township
Mr~ and Mrs. Michael George,
resident,
held
a
general discussion
son, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
upcoming
tsx levies.
concerning
Mayes, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Attending
were
Richard
Jones,
James Warren, son, Jackson.
Henry Wells and Cbester Wells,
commissioners, Mary Hobstetter,
clerk, and Marilla Chambers.

John L. Jewell, Sr.

enttne
'.-.

Mayor's court Meigs County happenings
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Ronnie Dale McGrath, 19, Long Bottom, and Brenda Kay Frecker, 19,
Reedsville; Terry Don Talbott, 43,
Pomeroy, and Mary Jane Herald,
38, Middleport.

""

VOL. 3! NO. 130

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Five defendants forfeited bonds,
four others were fined and one was
given a jail sentence in the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Roy L. Taylor,
Route I, Middleport, and James Curtis Elswick, Leon, W.Va., $350 each
posted on charges of driving while
intoxicated; David T, Givens, Jr.,
Bidwell, $25 spinning tires; Edward
G. Van Meter, West Columbia, $29,
speeding, and Michael L. Grate, $25;
expired tags.
Fined were Lawrence Pierce,
Point Pleasant, and Dennis L.
Rucker, Route I, Reedsville, $225
and costs and three days in jail, both
on charges on driving while in- ,
toxicated; Hubert Farm, Nelsonville, 30 days in jail, petty theft; Ells
M. Griffith, Route t, Middleport,
$100 and costs, conswnption of beer ,
In a car; Larry Lewis, Middleport,
$100 and costs, four days in jail on a
criminal mischief charge.

at y

IMIU"'" ~- 1""' '11• ..~- ~ ~fl i. l ll• •

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Gun Club, Pictured, l·r, Jim Johnson,
Charlotte Wamsley, president of
the Racine ER Squad, Hank Johnson, Racine Fire Chief, Frank I;Uffle,
Blllhan Fire Chid. Jan I;avender, chief of the Syracuse Emergency
Sq1111d and Ken Jacks. assistant Syracus~ Fire Chief. ·

Carter said that should the strait
WASHINGTON (AP)- President
be blocked, the resulting inCarter, while vowing anew that the
terruption in the oil supply would not
United States "will take whatever
only
cause major economic
steps are necessary" to keep the
vital Persian Gulf oil lanes open,
problems but also would "endanger
our own national security."
says the United States could acBut, he warned, " we have a very .
complish that mission using naval
large naval task force there with
and air power and without grqund
superb fighter planes to take care of
troops.
our needs to keep that strait open.
Carter also said Wednesday he
"So I believe that those forces
sees no progress in the "forseeable
already in place, Navy, naval air,
future' ' on winning the release of the
will be adequate. I don't see any·
52 American hostages in Iran,
ground forces of troops going to that '
despite reports that a breakthrough
could occur.
area.''
The president, during a campaign · Carter's words were hacked up by
a· report today in the Washington
appearance In Secaucus, N.J .,
predicted that the Iran-Iraq war will · Post that the United States and its
allies have a neet of at least 60 warnot escalate "to any major degree in
Ships in the Indian Ocean area, inthe near future. " .
cluding 32 U.S. ships. The iJ.S. task
But even if it should, he said in anforce includes two aircraft carriers.
swer to questions, the United States
The coordinated buildup, which
has enoilgh naval and air power in
has bCen kept quiet, gives the allies
· the Persian G~lf region to protect
the oil lanes.
twice the number of the lfJ ships the
Soviet Union has in the area, the
Iran threatened earlier in . the
week to block the Strait of Honhuz,
Post said.
In addition to the United States,
the ~mile-wide gateway to the gulf,
through which an estimated 40 per·
France has 20 craft in the area,
Australia has five and Britain two,
cent of Western oil is shipped.
The Iranians, however, do not
the newspaper said.
Carter and top administration of.
have the equipment to carry out
their threat to mine the strait, Pen· ·ficials, meanwhile, doused as "comtagon officials said Wednesday.
pletely speculative" recent
Pentagon specialists who declined
published reports that a
breakthrough ·is near on the 11 J,2.
to be identified said the small
Iranian navy has no capacity to lay
month hostage crisis ' In Iran mines in the strait. But even should
something Republican presldenllli!
any mines be set, helicopters from . nominee Ronald Reagan has sa14 .
the two U.S. carriers in the Arabian
might happen as a pre-election "Clef
tober surprise."
Sea could dear t~ strait! they said.
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2- 'rhe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday , Oct. 16, 1980

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

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3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct.,l6, ;9llb
...

OSU. mUst solicit
despite big incOme

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111EDAILV SENTINEL
I USPS liS-lifO I

··-'

DEVOTED TOmE

INTEREST OF
ME IGS-MASON AREA
Letters of opinion are ·wi!lcomed. The)' shOuld ·bf Iris than 300 words loog (or subjet"l to mluetioa by Ute editor) aad QJUst bt slgotd "·ilh the slgnet''s address. Names may be withh eld upon
publication. However. oo requesl, names ~- Ill be dlsclosl'd. Lettt'rs shiXIId be in cood ta.str. Hddreu lng IJsues,·not persooaiJtit'!.
Publllbed dally ~ ~:ce pt SatucdMy by Th" {)hlo Vall ~y Publishing Compan)'• Mullimedla , IOf.,

111 Court St., Poml:'roy , Ohio U769. Busintoss Office Phoue It!!· 2-156. Editorial Phune 992-%157.
St:cond class pos.tagf' pald lil t Pomt roy. Ohio.
Natlooal advertising rt'presentatlve, La ndom Ass!M!Ialcs, 3101 Euclid 1\n., Clenland. Ohio

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The Assodaled Press is exdusive.ly entitled to the uu for publlt·ativu of all ne'illii dispalr lks
credlled to Ibe nt wspaperaod also tl~t'l· local n e "'' ~ pub!Js hl'd ht retn.
Ptlblisher
.
Robert Wl11gett
General Mgr. &amp;r Clty. Edltor
Robert llot-nlch
News Editor
no;
Dale Roihgl' ~. Jr.
Adv. Manage r
~~
Carl Ghern
B~m~ ,.,._,'--r' rT""E:!!q,~

SOUTHERN SENIORS - The Southern Tornado
football squad features 13 Seniors for the 1980 season.
· This Friday evening these Seniors will lead the Tornado attack against Southwestern in Southern's annual
homecoming game at Racine. Picture are, front, l·r,

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First Amendment:
a basic U.S. freedom
This newspaper makes mistakes. No matte!;' 'what the
circulation; frequency of publication or number of pages
produced each week, every newspaper makes mistake~­
they are published by people, you see, who are not mfallible.
.
Because news people are human and because of tbe hun· ·
dreds of thousands of words that are processed each day
there are bound to be errors in some stories.
News people sometimes become callous and forget the
sensitivity of the reader who has been wronged. And the
reader often over-reacts to small inconsistencies in stories
or perhaps reads into the story things that are not really
there.
You should feel, as a newspaper reader, every right-no,
every responsibility-to contact this newspaper whenever
you feel errors have occured. Without the understanding
and cooperation of the public, the First Amendment, upon
which press freedom is built, is in serious jeopardy.
With all our faults, the freedoms whicli are expressed
through this newspaper are fundamental to our system of
democracy. The very foundation !JpOn ·which our nation
operates is built upon a free and unfettered press.
The right to criticize-even if we are sometimes in erroris one of the main factors in America remaining I! free
country for its citizens.
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It is no accident that the free press clause of our Constitution is the FIRST Amendment.

Idea .of running
came very early
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
Carter has always said he first
became interested in running for
president when he was governor of
Georgia. But recently he hinted that
the idea may have occurred to him
much earlier.
During a town meeting at the
Grand Old Opry House iri Tennessee,
the president talked about · his
boyhood and said:
"I had two ambitions then. My
daddy said, ' Forget it. ' One was to
be president of the United States and
the other one was to stand on the
stage at the Grand Old Opry."
The day after Carter announced his
intention to stop making personal
assaults on Ronald Reagan, repOr·
ters !raveling with him were
mystified when· the public address
system that normally carries his
remarks to the press plane tern·
porarily stopped.
" That's the ejector system," one
White House aide cra cked.
" Whenever we think the president is
about to start taking the low-road,
the button goes on and the system

stops."

'

•

The sound reswned momentari ly.
The next day , Carter said Reagan 's
election would be " bad" for the
country.

..

One of the questioners at a recent
town meeting wanted to know how
far Carter jogs and "are you going.to

runinNewYork ?''

The president, who was forced to
drop out of a foot race last fall
beca use of exhaustion, joked, "I'm
going to run in the election in New
York Nov. 4."
Then he said he used to run six or
seven miles a day , but that has been
reduced. And he gave an unc ha racteri s ti c ally' mod es t
assessment of his abilities.
"This year I've cut that about half
because of the extra duties that I
have to perform during an election
year. " he said. " I generally run
three or four miles, Not very fast."
He said he can do three miles in
about 20 minutes " if I want to really
try. That's the best I can do. I'm 56
years old and I'm not getting any
younger,"

On two occasions during his cam· .
paign forays, Carter was asked
about the rivalry between Zbigniew
Brzezinski, his national security adviser, and Edmund S. Muskie, the
secretary of state.
"That report is false ," Carter
said. "It's an error .... ! make t,he
foreign policy."
'
In Florida a day later, he was
asked if they will remain in their
positions if he wins re-election.
"Well, it's too early for me to say
about what's going to happen for the
next four or 4t years," he said. " My
present intention is to keep them on.
Yes."

,·

,·

.

.

0

'

'•
'.

..

f

0

.--0

.' .

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0

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I'

. "Listen. kid, if you don 't knock off talkIn' about
the number of nltrosamines in beer I'm gonna
have to let you go. "
·

. , \ -- ...

•

In SVAC race

'

Tornadoes,
Eagles
.
facing stiff tests
By Scott Wolfe
RACINE - The Southern Tornadoes host Southwestern Highlan·
ders F~iday night for their 1980
homecoming event. The SVAC contest co\Jld play an important part in
the league outcome, since no one is
out of the title race.
Southwestern is 5-2 overall and H
in the league, Southern 2-5 overall, 02 in the league.
Southwesten has played good,
sound football under new head coach
Jack James, but Southern ~opes to
celebrate its homecoming with a

The R eg,~ t e r
aud TnbunP Synd ,co le

Not anybody's idea of a lobbyist

win.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Harry
Zain is probably not anybody's idea
of what a lobbyist is supposed to be
like. He doesn't have a big expense
account, wear shiny shoes, smoke
cigars or slap people on the back.
In fact , he is a mild-mannered,modestly dressed young man who
works full time as a typist in a word
processing office and haunts Capitol
Hill during his free time.
But according to his own account
and others, Zain may be one of the
most persistent lobbyists in
Washington. So far, he is also one of
the most unsuccessful.
Zain wan•.; Congress to pass a bill
lowering to 12 the age at which girls
may marry. He says this would " put
sobriety " into young people.
He says he has visited 95 of the 100
-

senators about it, calling on at least
60 of them in their homes.
As yet, though, no senator has
even introduced the bill, although
Zain says some have expressed in. teres! and he hopes to get it introduced soon. He does not identify
the senators.
·

Zain near an inside entrance to the
Senate chambers.
Zain said nothing came of this and
he has had no trouble with the
doorkeepers. He said Dole has been
"very gracious" to him.
The doorkeepers say Zain is one of
the most active lobbyists on Capitol
Hill, regularly stalking senators
Zain, 26, came to Washington in
through hallwl'ys and anterooms.
1978 from Charleston, W.Va., where . They say some senators question his
he ran unsuccessfully for the state
lobbying practices Qllt accept the
legislature and in 1975 was jailed
literature he hands out.
three times on charges of
,trespassing in the West Virginia
· Zain said he went ' a public
University Hospital while m:otesting
library and looked in city directories
abortions.
to find the home addresses of
Earlier this year, Sen. Bob Dole,
senators whom he had been unable
R-Kan. , complained to Senate
to contact at the Capitol.
doorkeepers about what he thought
Among those he tried to reach at
was overzealous buttonholing by
home were Sen. Barry Goldwater,

"I always try the office first,"
Zain said. He added that some aides
have been "very, very discourteous," although the senators have
been more polite.
·
Mter he went to the home of Sen.
Strom Thurmond,' R..S.C., in suburban Mcbean, Va., Zain said, Thurmond told him, "Mr. Zain, please
don't come to my home. If you have
business, please come to my office."
"I'm making progress, even
though it's not so visible," ;&gt;:;lin said.

South Africa Foundation·: o_rganized apologists
· By Julian Bond
· and to withdraw $500,000 from
The autwnn return to school of U.
Morgan Guaranty Trust because of
S. college students may fuel efforts
those institutions' loan policies
to divorce· the dollars of Americans
toward South Mrica.
from the minority-ruled government
In April 1979, they succeeded in
and economy of South Africa.
. forcing the irustees of Boston
While it was the campus-based' University to sell $7 million in bonds,
campaigns against nuclear power
preferred stocks and other holdings
and the draft that captured
in 19 banks and corporations doing
headlines last spring, at least one
business in South Africa.
organization is foreseeing renewed
Leadership of the effort to end
protests aimed at exerting economic
American corporate support for
pressure on South Africa through the
South Africa comes from a variety
withdrawal of American corporate
of groups, including the Interfaith
support.
Center on Corporate Responsibility
That organization is the South
and TransAfrica, the black
Mrica Foundation, a businessAmerican lobby for African and
sponsored apologist for its regime's
Caribbean interests. .
apartheid system.
"We feel that once things like the
More than 2,000 ·lOCal, state,
Iran hostage crisis, the presidential
regional and national groups in the
election and registration for the
United States have joined in the
draft disappear, there will be an
movement, and 3!i states have some
opening for the disinvestment guys
sort of organizational network coorto come back in," says Joannes
dinating their activities.
Piei1aar, an official. in the founBut future success depends on an
dation's Washington office. The
annual reawakening of the camP.us
foundation estimates that more than
fervor that flickers out each spring
50,000 ''disinvestment guys" have
as final exams approach. And it
been active in the movement thus
depends on the ability of the
far.
.
movement to spread to other camIn March 1979, tfiey persuaded
puses and to interest those outside
Colwnbia University to sell $2.7
the traditional civil-rights and
million worth of stock in three banks
African-interest groups.

By Robert Walters
SIOUX FALLS, S. D. (NEA) Despite a strident ·year-long
propaganda campaign to "defeat
the kind of the ultra-liberals," hardline conservative groups are encountering difficulty in denying reelection to Sen . Geor,·e S.
McGovern, D - S. D.
The success or failure of the efforts to topple McGovern will have
implications far beyond the borders
of this state for precisely the reason
he was $elected as a high-priority
target by inore than a dozen rightwing organizations. Although other
liberal senators now seeking reelection have been the object of
similarly virulenl attacks, only
.· McGovern has . the nationwide
reputation derived from having been
the Oemocratil' presidential candidate in l972.
• That's wi ly une of the countless

mass-mailed solicitations for funds
til unseat the senator described him·
as "the king of the ultra liberals," .
.then added, "More than any other
politician on the scene today,
McGovern symbolizes ... radicalliberal policies and programs.'' ·
An unabashed liberal in a
resolutely conservative state,
McGovern earlier won election to
two tenns in the ijouse and three
tenns in the Senate only after fierce
struggles. But. none of those campaigns matched the passion and in·
tensity of this year's race.
Right-to-life zealo.ts who oppose
·both McGovern and legalized abortion widely distributed leaflets that
featured a lurid color photograph of '
a dead felus and the allegation that
the senator "has contiriuowlly voted
tax dollars to kill pre-born
children. "
l'hc artwork on another leaflet

a

Organized labor is to become
prime target of the "disinvestment
guys." Anti-apartheid groups will
focus on unions' pension-fund investments, drawing parallels between the earlier struggles of
American workers and the current
difficulties facing back South
Africans who are prohibited by law
from forming labor unions.

health, edijcation and welfare efforts of South African liberation
movements recognized by the •
Organization of African Unity and
the United Nations.
The anti-apartheid movement is
even having . an impact on the
lucrative world of sports through the
efforts of the American Coordinating Conunittee for Equality in
Sport and Society. That group sucAnother target will be the growing
ceeded in having South Africa exanti-nuclear movement, with special
pelled from Davis CupJerulis in 1978
efforts directed at publicizing U.S.and
is currently pressuring CBS not
Aouth African nuclear links.
to telecast the Oct. 25 Mike WeaverMembers of the religious comGerrie Coetzee heavyweight chammunity wiU be called upon to play an
pionship fight from South Africa.
even more prominent role in the an- ,
Perhaps the greatest indication of
ti-apartheid struggle. They wiU be
the movement's potential comes
asked to join tbe Interfaith Center,
from its adversary, the South Africa
Clergy and Laity Concerned, the
Foundation.
American Frien~ Service Committee and other church groups that
In a confidential report for sale to
have sponsored 4:i stockholders'
corporations for $350 a pair, the
resolutions on South Mrica in 37
foundation reports: "It is the broad
major corporations so far this year.
vision of the (antl:apartheid) acThe movements' · organizers are
tivists, their relative success in
cheered by the support they have . achieving disinvestment and their
received from such quarters as the
ability to C&lt;Hipt diverse interest
General Syood of the Reformed
groups that keep .the disinvestment
Church in America, which iast June
movement alive and one that could
called for the sale of stock in corcontinue to present increasingly
porations doing business in South serious problems for U. S. corAfrica and voiced support for the porations in South Africa."

consisted of a target super-imposed
on a caricature of McGovern- with ·
the b\Jll's-eye directly over the '
senat&amp;r's heart
Notwithstanding McGovern's
marriage of '11 years, his five
children and his four grandcbildreiJ,
he has been characterized by selfproclai-med
'• pro-family • •
organlzationa as a man who "opposes traditional family values."
Other literature, distributed by
virtually the entire network of extremlst right-win&amp; groups, portrays
the senator as "pnMIOclallst,'' "soft
oo drugs" and a "baby killer."
1'hoee organizations have apent an
estimated $300,000 to topple
McGovern, with approxirnately half
of that total .coming from the
National Conservative Political Aclion Conunittee.
NCPAC ev~n C&lt;lJTlnlissloned a
statewi!W survey of voter attitudes,

Mick Winebrenner and Howie
Caldwell, Southern c~oaches, have
fielded a much improved Tornado
squad, but bad breaks have hindered
their progress. '
·
This week, sophomore ·quarterback John Porter will replace the
injured Dale Teaford. The talented
sophomore is a good field commander and has a great throwing

R-Ariz., wh9 lives across the street
from Zain, and Sen. Paul Sarbanes,
D-Md., who lives in Baltimore.
Zain said Goldwater tqld him to
come to the office and Sarbanes
wasn't home. He said he talked to
both at the Capitol later,

Anti liberal campaign faces difficulties .

0

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Steve Circle, Terry McNickle, Danny Talbott, Robin
Fortune, Tony Adkins, Flint Greer. Back row - Mark
Simpson, Mike Collins, Doug Duvall, Harry Lyons, Jeff.
Sopher, and Scott Nease. Absent is Senior Dale Teaford
who is out with an injury.

then turned the re.s\Jlts over to Rep.
James Abdlior, R..S.D., to lure him
into the race at McGovern's opponent, •
A recent McGovern ad·
vertisement cites 10 votes Abdnor
"cast for big oil" alongside a list of
20 petroleum-industry donors to Air
!~nor's campaign treasury. A!*or
also has been on the defensive in
recent weeks because some ~those
contributions were among his
N6,000 in receipts frorD various
political-action comm1tteea 11\at
were not · publicly dl!clllled as
required by federal law.
•
When NCPAC recently 11111ouncec1
without giving a reason tbat It would
not resume Ill propapnda campalgn against McGovern, both candklates profeued relief. "'l'holle ads
they ran didn't make -.· ~ IBid
Abdnor.

r

arm.

,

Porter will share the backfield
with Terry Patterson, Robin For. tune, Danny Talbot, and Terry Me·•· Nickle who have produc~ the bulk
· of the total yardage tl\is season. ·
The Tornadoes will have their han·
ds
full with the likes of Scott Russell
'.
in the backfield for the Highlanders.
Russell has gained yardage ·con·
sistently this season and has a total

of 82 points in seven games.
Last week, he rushed for 74 yards
and two TD's against a very tough
Eastern club.
The Highlanders totalled 214 yards
overall, 130 of which were gained by
their ·bread and butter, rushing .
game.
With the homecoming crowd
behind them Southern hopes to give
the Highlanders all they can handle.
Game time is 8 p.m. with the queen
coronation coming at halftime.
EAST MEIGS - The · notorious
Hannan Trace Wildcats will ride into
Meigs County Friday night trying to
protect a perfect 7~ slate in a key
battle with the Eastern Eagles.
Eastern owns a 4-3 record against
some very tough foes and claims a 1·
I league mark. Hannan Trace leads
the race with a 2~ slate that keeps
intact a string of 19 straight victories
covering a three year period.
The Wildcats of Coach Larry
Cremeans have come a long way
over the years, while deveoping into
a SV AC powerhouse. Eastern's
Eagles of Coach Buddy Moore have
been ·consistently tough over the·
years, and again are a major threat
to take the SVAC crown.
Last week, Eastern led
statistically, but faltered on the
scoreboard to Southwestern. Greg
Wigal led an awesome aerial attack
as he threaded the l)eedle con-

"' .'. ~

sistently to receivers Dennis Durst,
Dave Wolfe, and P. G. RifOe.
Eastern racked up 280 total yards,
195 of which came in the air. The
Eagle ground game was held to 85
yards, led by Dennis Dutst's 41.,
This week Eastern will feature the
same potent attack with hopes of
reaching the end zone more frequen·
tly. Last week, Mike Bissell who is
nearing his potential after coming
off¥)njury, scored a touchdown by .
burs1!hg over from the one. The Durst brothers will return to the backfield along with J oho Riebel to help
supply the Eagle offense with the
necessary power plays.
Todd Sibley, of Hannan Trace, is
having a super season and leads the
hard hitting Hannan attack. The
senior tailback gained Ill yards in
19 carries last week as his club
defeated highly touted North GaUia.
Sibley ran for one touchdown and
later scored on a 21 yard pass play.
Quarterback Greg Webb is a fine
playmaker and signal caller with an
accurate passing arm. Tim Murphy
also alternates as HT's other
workhorse. Murphy gained 67 yards
on the ground last weekend.
The game looks as though it's
taking the shape of a championship
playoff and in the end that's what It
may prove to be. Two great offenses
will collide head on with two equally
great defenses. Game time is 8 p.m.
at Eastern High School.

r; : In high school computer ratings

t~p scho~ls
..~-. 16
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) :_ This
was the biggest status quo week of
1980 for the Ohio High School
•. . Athletic Association's computerized
football rankings. Sixteen of the 2(J
regional leaders are the sarpe as last
week.
Perrysburg replaced Toledo St.
, · Francis as the front-runner in
.- Region 6 of Division 2, Sy~amof'eo ,
Mohawk took over for Bucyrus Wynford in Region 14 of Division 4 and
Tiffin Calvert and Glouster Trimble
were new leaders in Division 5.
Calvert went ahead of Liber•. • tyTiffin
Center in Region 18 while
Glouster
Trimble
displaced
Beallsville in Region 19.
The OHSAA relies on the · com... puter ratings to form its post-season
,,, playoff field, which will be increased
from three classes and 12 schools to
, five divisions. and 40 t~ams for the
• 1 first time this year.
'• , In Division I, the leaders again
,, were Cincinnati Moeller, the 1979
,, Class AAA playoff champion and the
.· current Associated Press poll
leader: Stow, Upper Arlington and
MassiUon.
In Division 2, the other first-place
teams were Solon, .Youngstown
Mooney and Lebanon.
Keeping tlleir Division 3 leads
r were Cleveland Benedictine, No. 1 in
· ". · the AP.'s Class AA .statewide poll;
.o Fostoria, New Concord Glen·n and
HaRlilton Badin.
·
Division 4 leads belonged to Bur·
.,. ton Berkshire, Tiltonsville Buckeye
South and West Jefferson. In
' • Division 5,lt's Lorain Clearview and
·i Coviniton joining Glouster Trimble
... and Tiffin Calvert.
,1, COLUMBUS,

.1 "'
1:.

Ohio

(AP l

-

Rejjlonal

lt!Hders in the Ohio Hig h School Athldic
Association's weekly cornputerlzftt foot·

ball rankings. The fi rst two learns In
each region urter the rc~ ular St!ason qual·
,.;. lfy for the .state playo£ra:

DIVISION 1

I ..

REGION I -

'

1, Stow 77.45 polnb1. 2,

Cleveland 81.. Joseph 72.29. 3, Chesterland

Wut Geauga 72.00. 4, Willoughby South

tUI. i, Boardman 66.ta: I,
'

I

t~·
t1

A~tlnl~&gt;wn

Fitch 11.01.

RmJON 2 - . I, Upper ArllnKton 89.50.
2, S.nduaky aua. 3, IJma St!nlur 68.33. f ,

Clayton Northmont 71.50. 6, Cincinnati St.
Xavier 62.25.
DIVISION!
REGION 5 - 1, Solon 71 .50. 2, Stow
Walsh Jesuit 69.16. 3, Mentor Lake Catholic 64.57 . 4, . Geneva 55.50. 5, Richfield Revere 5.5.25. ,6, Hudson 49.25.
REGION 6 - 1, Perrysburg 63.00. 2,
Colwnbus Watterson 62.00. 3, Sylvania
Northvlew 59.77. 4, Vennilion 59.41. 5, Toledo St. F'rancis 55.25. 6, Mansfield. Mala~r 48.16.
REGION 7 1, Youngstown Mooney
74.56. 2, Dover 68.04. 3, Bellaire 53.12. 4,
Youngstown Rayen 49.66. 5, Canfield
47 ~J. 6, Youngstown Chaney 46.70.
tli!A.iiON II - l, Lebanon 61.50. ~ Cincinnati Greenhills 52.25. 3, Pickerington
4,

Urbana

47.95.

8, , _ -

~.

R!XliON I - I, Muaillon 110.11. 2, Can1m !kKlaley •.tl. J, Loke- st. Ed·
ward
4, Newark 71.13. $, Brun.otwfck

a.eo.
69.71. e; I.ora in suo.
REGION

4

-

I,

.(

Cinclmum

The school's oasketoall arena was
),"'~ne~_t_'l5a~aci ty of 15,591 for its__
Clll1renome sc1iellfile last wmter.
With four regulars back from the
B'uckeyes' Big Ten runner-up and
NCAA tournament entry last spring.
full houses are assured again this
season.
"My biggest headache is fi nances
.~ balancing the budget. fin ding additional sources of income, keeping
the stad ium and arena fu ll,
especially the stadiwn," Hindman
said during an interview in his of-

D.C., must get in control of things

throngsofmorethan87 ,000 people in

fice.

foreverybody ."
The largest portions of the 198().81
Ohio State athletic budget are:
- A $3 million annual payroll for
325 full-time employees, 100 of whom .
are classified ciyil service, ad·
ministrative and professionpl
workers.
-$1.75 million in guarantees to
visiting football t~ams, based on
seven home games in 1980.
- $1.2 million in grants-in-aid for
283 athletes in IS men's sports and 12
sports for women. The grants cover
tuition, room, board and books.
" It's big busin~ss and we must run
it like big business," said Hindman,
who is in his fourth year as the
school ' s chief athl etic ad·
ministrator.
Ohio State will spend $3,363.90 on
every athlete from Ohio during this
school year. The annual price tag for
an athlete from out-of-state jumps to
$4,728.90.
" We use private fund raising to
cover the costs of the grants," Hind·
man said. Two years ago, the
university went to its football season
ticket holders and formed the

OhioStadium.

Indeed, Ohio Stadiwn is the
school's golden egg.

5,

Portsmouth

47.91. 6, GreenviUe 46.58.

ley 38.25.

116M'UL- O('M- ~&lt;/.
4

~--Le~h.t

-t-Tk
,

..

THIS WEEK'S 6 MO.
MONEY MARKET
RATE OCT. 16-22

0

11.53%

·Home
National
ilQBank

Casey Kasem
WMPO

S.ATUliDA YS
8 til Noon

JRD ST .. RACINE, OH . .

Member FDl,C

Weekend At Meigs Inn

.

DIVISION J
REGION 9 - l, Cleveland Benedictine
60.00. 2, Akron St. Vincent.St. Mary 56.U
3, "Chagrin Fall! Kefl5ton 56.00. 4, Warren
Kennedy 49.1.5. 5 (tie) , Brooklyn and Canal Fulton Northwest 46.50.
REGION JO - ·1, Fostoria 59.00. %, Orrvllle 57,95. 3, Elyria Catholic 60.75. 4, Milan Edison 40.00. 5, Oregon Strltch 38.50.
6, Ottawa-Glandorf ~.75.
REGION 11 - 1, New Concord Glenn
M.41. · 2, I.ronton 52.98. 3, Colwnbus DeSales 47.45. 4, Jackson 46 .50. 5, Washington Cow1 House 45.00. 6, Colwnbw Hart-

---·

'

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECI~'L 5 TIL 10

'

,.. REGION 12 - 1, Hamilton Badin 8&amp;.00.
2, Carlisle 41.00. 3, New Richmond 45.75.

mwu.--Tossed Salad
Wine
Spaghetti

4, Cincinnati McNicholas 4$.33. 5, North
Bend Taylor 4%.75. 6, Goshen 40.00.

(All you can eat)

Garlic Bread
Tossed Salad
Vegetable
Dessert
Coffee, Tea, Milk

,materials

/

~\

'

.

ENTERTAINMENT

FRIDAY &amp;SAnJRDAY

BRIDGE

NIGHT

, . til 1

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
MATERIAL A'T REASONABLE PRICES.

CASH &amp; CARRY
PRICES

. ~~§!&gt;
·-

PRICES.

QUALITY

WE

SET·
4 piece group

ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD

DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
·.
CORPORATION
923 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

You. must be 21 or. accompanied by parenls or legal guardian.

~-

Wr:ltervWe North 6U3. $, Jo~lndlay 82.25 .
11.00.

.,

Buckeye Club, a big source for the
pnvate fu_n_dj.'21L
-c--- __
''We ra ised almost $1.1 mill wn last
ymr," he said. "We've been fortunate to finish in the black each
yea ,·."
Consistently big crowds keep the
Buckeyes financially sound. That is
not the case for most college athletic
budgets across the nation.
Ohio State ha s expe rienced
sellouts for football at every game
since the third contest of the !968
sea ~on . That adds up to 74 straight ·

·r emain same

113. 16. 2\:1, ~cinnati. Princeton 90.00. 3,
Centervill e 87.00. 4, Middletown 72.50. 5,

49.50.

COLUMBUS, Ohio ·(AP ) - Ohio
State University's home football_,.
- game!&gt;--wtll- gross ne:rrly $4 million
thisseason.
' Yet the perennia l E!ig Ten Conference ·winner must solicit funds to
keep.its athlet ic budget in the bl~ck.
Athletic Director Hugh Hindman
says the reason is simpl e. The
culprit? A$10.5 million budget.
" It's been going up about a mil lion
dollars a year, " Hindman sa id. "The
biggest problem is runaway inflation. Those people in Was hington,

992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. tllru Fri.
7:00 to 3:00 Saturday

-·-

THE .MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.

Mueller

. . ....

::I!,..; _,

·-

••

•I

1

�\
-'nle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thul"llday, Oct. IC, 1980
4-The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday, Oct. lc •. l:J80

Catcher ·Porter·feels
Royals need cheers

Eastern varsity players ••• .·-

~·~PHli.A:DELPlTIA tAP) - Darrell

Porter struck out lea ding off the ninth inning, walked bitterly back to the
dugout. surveyed' almost 66,000
screaming. ecstatic Philadelphia
Phillies fans and ·had a profound
thuu~:ht.

" We've won a champioll,'lhip,
we've done. what our fans wanted
more than anything in the world ,
·and we haven't heard oric cheer
yet."
It 's true.
The Kansas City Royals remained
in New York after beating the
Yankees in a third strai ght
American League Championship
Series game Friday night and flew
to Philadelphia Sunday for the
opening two games of the 198() World
Series in VeteransStadiwn.
" We should be so joyful going back

\
Jeff Saunders
&gt;-!D. 1SU lbs.
Senior Guard

. Mike Bissell
&amp;-2, 175 lbs.
Junior Back

Ray Werry
6-0, 195 lbs.
Senior Center

home, but we aren 1 t," said Porter.

Underdog Phils whip
Royals for 2-0 lead
PHILADELPHIA IAP I - Mike
Sclu nidt stood at home plate. his bat
over his shoulder and his body
twi stin~ . A little English might ha,·e
kept that ball in fair territor\', he
thought.
- ·
It curved, maybe five or 10 feet
foul. arching high over the foul pole
down the left-field line. and instead
of a hume run, Sclm1idt had a
mean ingless foul ball. They cal l it a
long strike.
" r thought it might have a chance.
but it hooked just like my golf
drives," Sclunidt said of his fifthinning drive. .. I know 11 doesn't
mea n anylhing, but I think th;;t foul
ball might have helped me get
going."
When Sclunidt. the Philadelphia
Phillies' slugging third ba sema n,
got going. he sent the Kansas Cit\·
Royals home with " handful of woes.
Schmidt's ei ghth-tnni ng do ubl e
drove in the winn i n ~ run. and the
Phillies downed the Royals 6-4 Wed-

t'll fi r:st baseman Pete LaCock, a
defensive replacement, sending Unser to third. Bake McBride's 'chopping single over the head of second
baseman Frank White drove in Unser, tying the score 4-4. That brought
Sclunidt to the plate.
Schmidt, who led the majors with
48 homers in the regular season, had
hit a disma l .208.in the playoffs. In
the final game of the league championship, he went 0-for-5, strikin g
out three times. He had an infield
single, two walks and a strikeout in
the Series opener.
'·The champagne would have
tasted a hair sweeter if I had gotten
my uniform dirty in that game,"
Schmidt sa id.
In Schmidt's first time up Wed·
nesday nig ht, he grounded to third.
In second trip, he fought Gura t'o a 32 count, and fouled off a pitch. Schmidt sent Gura's next pitch a mile,
but foul,-before grounding out again.
ln the sixth, he hit a harmless single,
and then. in the eighth, it was all on
the line.
Sclunidt sent Quisenberry's first
pitch to the wall in right-center on
one short hop for double and a 5-4
Philadelphia lead. Rookie Keith
Moreland, starting as designated
hitter in place of the ailing Greg
Luzinski. singled to score Sclunidt
before pinch hitler Greg Gross
finally grounded into an inningending double play.
Ron Reed took over for Carlton in
the ninth inning. He struck out pinch
hiller Darrell Porter, who did not
start aga inst the lefty Carlton and .
was hilling in the spot that would
have been occupied by Brett. Reed
then yielded Hal McRae's third
single of the game. but retired the
side by gelling Otis to hit into a
fie lder's choice gro under and
striking out IVa than.
The Royals will pitch Rich Gale,
13-9 during the season, against Dick
Ruthven, 17-10, in the third game
Friday. It is a must game for the
Royals ; no team ever has recovered
from a 3-&lt;1 deficit to win the Series.
LATONIA RESULTS
F LORENCE , Ky. (AP) - Lady
Art captured the $1 ,200 featured
pace mile at Latonia's fall opening
Wednesday night and paid $7.4D,
$5.GO and $4.
Trying To Do placed, $15.80 and
$7 .20, and Grabber, third, $24.80.
Hustlin ' Baby combined 6-1 with
Cloverleaf David for $89.60 lin the
double and the crowd of 885 bel
$102,590.

"He's done a lot of pitching in the
last six months.'' Schmidt' smd. "But
that shows you that Steve, even at
his wur st. can keep us in any game. ··
The Phillies got off to a 2-0 lead in

the ft fth on a sacrifice fly b)· Manny
Trillo a nd a run-scoring .single by
f.a rry Buwa.
Kansas Cit)• got one -fun back in
the stxlh when Amos Olts singled.
(ld\·anced to second when John
Wathan Wi:jlked and scored on 9

throwing error by Trillo on a high
chopper by Willie Aikens.
The Royals scor ed lhree times in

the seventh. Carlton walked the
bases full. and Otis slugged a tworun double, followed by a sacrifice
The Series moves to Ke~hsa s Cit\·
fly by Wathan . The score wa s &lt;-2 and
for games on Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, if necessary. The Royals . Philadelphia's "Comeba ck Gang"
went to·wurk again.
fa ce the unenviable task of rebounThey had to corne.back from a j.()
ding agai nst a team that has scoretl
13 runs in the first two games of the def icit to win the World Senes
Series, having \von 7~ on Tuesday.
opener. They trailed at one time or
and they may have to face it without
another in all fiv e of thetr National
I,eague Champi onship Series games
All-5tar third baseman George
Brett.
with Houston.
" It seems like we'1·e waiting for
. Brett had to be removed from the
the
other team to score first. .. Phils
game in the sixth inning when a n infirst ba seman Pete Rose sa id. "We
flamma tion of his hemorrhoids. a
know we' re ·going to have e:t big inproblem that began only about a
ning, but you can't keep waiting fu r
week ago, started to bother him too
that. ··
severely. Royals Manager Jim Frey
Philadelphia's bi g inning carne in
sa id he was not certain of Brett' s
the eighth. Royals' lefty Larry GUt· a,
status for Friday .
" We' ll have to wait," Frey said .
18-tO during the season. had retired
the first 13 Phillics he fa ced, but
'·He has lwo- days and it's a da v·tt.&gt;day thing. We hope he's better.''·
Frey had to yank him after six innings when he complained that he
The Phillies started lefl-hander
had run out of gas.
Steve Carlton in Game 2. A 24-ga mc
"When he came off the mound afwinner during the regular season.
" Lefty" had struggled in the pla yofter his last inning, he said he didn't
fs against Houston. In the fou rth
fee l he had his fa stball anymore ,"
Frey said .
game, his second storl, he went only
Enter Dan Quisenberry. 33 saves
51-3 innings. his shortest stint of the
season. He couldn't keep his pitches
during the season and considered
around the plate.
th e AL's lop relief pitcher. If the
Wednesday night, the silent leftga me had gone according to script,
hander was in trouble again. Jn eight
tiM should have been the end of it.
innings, he gave up 10 hits, sjx walks
QuiSenberry got the side in o1·der in
a nd three ea rned rw1s with 10
the seventh, but he wa lked Bob
strikeouts.
Boone to lead off the eighth.
Pinch hitter . -Del Unset· drove
Boone in from first with a dou ble to
Second hunting c(Jurse the wall in left-center. Rose bounced
nesday night for a 2-0 lead in the
best-of-seven 1980 World Series.

will begin Oct. 28th
A second Ohio Hunter Safety Class
has been sc heduled to be~in
Tuesday, Oct. 28 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds.
The event slated for the Coon Hun·
ter's Building will run through Oct.
30. Classes sta rt at 6 p.m.
Everyone is invited to attend the
class, if you have never purchased a
Ohio Hunting License, or are under
the ~ge of 21, and lost your hunting
license, you are required to'take the
safety course to hunt in the sta te of
Ohio.
Ins tructors for the Safety Class,
will be Meigs County Deputy Keith\
Wood, State Game Protectors Andy
Lyles and Rick Stauhl. The class is
being sponsored by the Meigs County Sheriff's Department through the
cooperation of the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources, Division of
Wildlife.
Anyone interested in participating
in the class is t.o call the Meigs Cvun·
ty Sheriff's Department at '992-3371
or 992-3889.

''

~

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For fast , courteous information, regarding rates, dead sizes, space reservation s, copy and lay-outs.
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CARL GHEEN

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.

TIM' HALSTEAD
992-2156

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By WW Griauley

WHERE SANTA

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342 2nd Ave., Gallii!Oiis

~adliner of the college footbaU
lineup this weekend that vies with
llie World Series.
·
; IT'he "Bear" is Bear Bryan~
r~nerable coach of. the Alabama
~fimson :J'lde wh'! has passed the
3(lknark in victories arid is about a
~tlzen away froni the all-tilne record
11(314 by Amos Alonzo Stagg.
: :t'he Volunteers from the land 9f
li!drew Jackson and Daniel Boone
{lflvesetatrap.It'sthejobforwhich
~~hnny Majors was lured from his
·,e,cure post at then-national champilm Pittsburgh.
• Fur should fly .
: ;Last week: 41.,, .837. Season: 221·
t~..752.
: \TennesSee 27, Alabama 20: This is
pje kind of_game that winds up in the
\rWhy ca!e of the team that wants
to ~- The fired-up Volunteers
{"pond to home encouragement.
• .S
' outhern California 31, Oregon 16:
bit and on thy roll, the blg, tough
1'rojans.
·
:Notre Dame .S, .AnnY 7: This is
Where Knute Rockne first 1l8ed the
!1tward pass.
: 'Nebraska 48, Oklahoma St. .12:
"Big Red Machine" husks more
lliancom.
: (OklahoiJIII 44, Kansas St. 7: The
$qoners go on scoring sprees every
bther week'.
.
: Stanford 23~ Washington 20: The
!Jtst game on the Pacific Coast this

wst

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JEWRRY REPAIR

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N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

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tlU team Is for ,real.

gentlemen,

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BROWN DUCK' . .

Full Size
Bed

ready for tourney

PlflLADELPfllA (AP) - " Don't
beforesaid
we b&lt;~;~·~·.nJ!~~~;~~~-;t;h~et'!be~t~Ute~ir ba~ll~.f~o~r t;h~e~p~r~o~s ~a~n~d~th:·e~ -~~ --:...__ ~
211 it tHe WQrld Series,"-pleaded the Boone.
•'E ver-since-5eptemi,Jer-we--ttave- - - - - - -~~~----Dave
. -;,... ..._,.;•,~ .
~
-usty-haired youngster buried in a felt that there was no lead we
be~a n first-round CO(n]l€,tition
After 54 holes, the amateurs drop
-'~
:lust er of question-popping couldn't overcome. It is amazing
"It would mean a
outandthefieldofprosiscuttothe
FLORIST .
II!WSJJlen. "I get all nervous. Ilike to
what has happened to this team.
something together. I don 't know low 35 teams forth~ final round SunpH. 99 2•2644
N1Jk of it as just a sandlot game."
"Earlier in the year there was
how much longer either one of ·us is day.
The reaction was totally un- some heeling and discontent. The
going to play, but we're not getting
Ben CrenShaw and George Burns
JS2 E. Main , Pomeroy
. lerstandable for a 2&amp;-year-old rookie
guys didn't seem together, Then sudany younger_
·
are the defending champions. Other
I
· Your FTD Florist ·
denly
everything
jelled.
You
saw
it
"And
we
could
win
it,
too.
We
play
leading
teams
include
John
Mahaf...,
_
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
·!rust into a HollywOoct scenario
~!h a Hollywood ending,
a~ Montreal, at Houston and now
pretty good together. And we've.
• Young Keith Moreland, a "Hook
.
come close.several times before."·
here.
Horns" disciple who grew up in
,; John Vukovich (reserve · in·
. Dave, winner ofl3 tour events and
ll; mad football atmosphere of the
fielder) is our cheerleader," he
more than $1 million in career prize
Jl)lversity of Texas campus, didn't . related. "Tbe subs, the guys who
money, and Mike, a 3-tirne winner,
IIIOW until an hour before gametirne
don't get to play much, join in. Then
· · ·.
form the most prominent of the four
-bitt he was to substitute for slugger
D;dlas, Pete (Rose) and all the
····.
teams of brothers who are com~teg L.ki in the Philadelphia
others are caught up in it.
PLAYER OF TilE WEEK _
peting in this unique event.
Oll!illles lineup against the Karisas Everybody screaming and hollering
Jerry Fields, fullback aad
In all, 126 teams of two pros each
)kyRoyals.
their lungsol\t.
linebacker for the Meigs
are entered in the 72-hole better ball
I'Dallas (Manager Dallas Green)
"It's wild."
Marauders, has been DBmed
competition, with ~.ooo up for
:old me to go out and lake batting
The Phillies' seventh selection in
• player of lbe week by the Meigs
grabs. The money is unofficial,
*?'cti.ce," he explained. "He said
the college draft, he was signed in
County Jaycees. Fields Is 8
however, and does not count on the
__ ,
June, 1975, ailtl was put through the
Jreg bad a sore throat or the flu or
•o
KWOr.
tolnething and he wanted to use me • · nunoo league w·ringer- Spartanburg,
:ottheOH.
Peninsula, Reading and finally
BOISCLAIR SHINES
;' No, I can't say I was scared ~
Oklahoma City in the American
NAGOYA, Japan (AP) - Out·
.-cited yes but scared no. Alter all,
Association.
fielder Bruce Boisclair, formerly of
rt1 been · lhr9ugh some TexasHailed by Oklahoma City
the New York Mets, hammered a
manager as " the best clutch hitter in'
~homa f~ball games and you
]lllir of tw_Q-run homers, leading the
the league," he .was called up at the
::'.n't get much more pressure -than
'
'flit.''
I .
Hanshin Tigers to a 6-3 victory over
end of the 1979 season. This year,
TRICK
the Chunichi Dragons Wednesday in
)foreland proceeded to lash out
playing behind BI&gt;One, he appeared
Japanese baseball. Boisclair has
in 62 games, batted .314 and hit four
~ lilts. score a run in the fifth in·
INCluDING:
·
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -After a
homeruns.
eight homers this season.
-ling and knock in the final run in the
successful IS-hour operation to
Wild eighth inning Philly rally thai
"Boone is the hest catcher in
replace an ~ery in his rig~
ltOit the Royals &amp;4 for a 2-1 lead in
baseball, '' the youngster
shoulder, doctOrs say there's a good
OPERATION SUCCESS
lie series.
acknowledged. "! can't get mad or
chance
that
rig~-handed
pitcher
MONTREAL
(AP) - John
upset because don't play more.
' Few rookies have had a more
J
.R.
Richard
will
be
able
to
return
to
McHale,
president
and general
Some day maybe I will. Right now, I
, p/xious ljaplililn in This traditional
the
Houston
Astros.
amanager
of
the
Montreal
Expos,
:hampionship cif.America's national
am thinking only of the World .
"The operation ap]l€ars to have
was reported resting comfortably
Series.
,astirne. .
been successful, and the outlook for
Wednesday in a hospital at West
"Our rally didn't surprise me at
"If we win, I may retire."
his return to baseball appears to be
Palm Beach, Fla. , after surgery to
Quickly, lest he be taken seriously,
Ill," said the first-year catcher, a
Ph. 992-6669
good," Jane · Ginsburg, a
remove a kidney stone, the club
he added: "Gosh, you know I'm just
~ench
warmer
behind
spokeswoman for the llniversity of
said.
Plliladelphia's Gold Glover Bob
kidding.''
• California Medical Center, said~
Sunday's operation at Good
•'

Doctors feel
].R. will
pitch again

INSULATED

**
!
**&gt;t
!

broth~r·s

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla . (i\P) se&lt;~sun's uouney winning list.
·- Brothers Dave and Mike Hill have
A new dimension has been added
a special incentive this week in the
to the tournament this year, the proWalt Disney World. National Team ain section. The pros play one round
Ghampionship Pri)-Am, a corn- 011 each ·of three course~, each day
plica ted event that completes the 10- · with a different team of three
month PGA Tour schedule.
amateurs. .The arnllteurs also play a
''It would mean a. lot to us. lt '~
best-ball format, including their
something we'd really like to do
handicaps. Scoring is or\ two levels,

· AP Corretpolllleat

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

Will the Phillies be jinxed in
Roya ls Stadium?
· "I think they can be beat in Royals
Stad itun," he answered softly. "We
had them on the.ropes. After a while,

POLITICAL
j
ADVERTISERS: ~

~

I

~

NOW OPEN

tl1ink we're jinxed here."

MEN'S
JEANS

Hill

.

Sports Wo~ld

it does get frustrating."
finsltothink atxiut?"
•
"Any tinne you score some runs 1:. ·
" It seems like we've been away
from Kansas City ·for about six monand take the lead, y{)u've got to think •
you can win," said designated hitter ; ·
ths, " said Dave Chalk , who will have
Hal McRae. "We just aren't holding ~ '
the enormous task of replacing Brett
leads. That's all there is to it."
if the AU-sta r third baseman can
play no more. " It will be so good to
~::::::::::::::::::::::~
,' •. .
gel back home."
I
Chalk filled in admirably for Brett
when he was injured during an
otherwise enchant~d season that
.., FOR FALL SEASON
saw him bat .390 and drive in 118
•
runs in 117 games. But Chalk said
Large selection of house
plants and hanging
he's not going to fool himself into'
baskets .
thinking he's another George Brett.
" It's a loss to us if he's not out
there, no doubt about it," Chalk said.
• " I'm not going to try to be anylhing
I'm not. You've got to be yourself.
And I have confidence in myself."
Syracuse; Oh. 992·5776
So what good things besides going
Open Daily Mon . -Sat.
9 to S ·
home can the Kansas City Royals

"We need to hear some cheers fro!Jlour side. We need that more than
anythi ng."
The 4D,IJOO-plus Kansas City fans
who will pack Royals Stadiwn
Friday night will greet a team that
now seems almost devoid of
anything positive. The AL Champions are down 0-2 in the best-ofseven series. They blew a four-run
lead in the first game to lose 7~, and
they blew a twl)-run lead Wednesday
night to lose &amp;-4.
Their best relief pitcher, Dan
Quisenberry. got bcmbed. Their best
pl ayer, possibly the best · plyer in
baseball, third baseman George
Brett, was suffering so much pain
· from hemorrhoids he could hardly
walk.
"The next couple of games we'll
see what these teams are made of,"
said center fielder Amos Otis. "We
had everylhing going our way. But
the bottom fell out each time. I just

**************************************'
.
.
*

~

Today's

.

;

Men's&amp;

Ladies

•'

St. 1!8, Syracuae 14: The
~bert Trophy (fastest gun in the
lliPtl is still up for grabs. ·
Loiuslana St. 19, Kentucky 15:
~ are' few race horse backs on
\It lean\.' from the bluegrus
tiNedlng ~try.
• bhio St. 24, Indiana 20: The
Htos~era have the wherewithal to
thla an lnterestlni afternoon.
~ l'lanhae 28,llllnclla 19: No romp for
Boilermakers' Mark Herrmann.

Richard, who underwent surgery
Wednesday.
in Houston in July ,to remove a clot
Tulane 21, Air Force 7: The · from his . neck, checked into the
Greenies take some of the wind out
of the Academy's hot air balloon. '
The ~year-old pitcher ·had been
Navy 22, Villanova 20: The Mldshipmen must ·throw off last week's , on the Astros disabled list since July
disappointment against the Air For- 16 beca!IS4l of complaints about a
"dead arm. " He collapsed during a
ce.
workout
at the Astrodome.
Harvard 14, Dartmouth 10: The
piece de reistance for the Ivy
League tail-gaters.
North Carolina 25, North Carolina
St. 6,: The Tar Heels' trench diggers
give ground grudgingly.
Iowa St. 31, Kansas 17: A sixth
straight victory for unbeaten and
Hulh PupP.{!f"
unappreciated Iowa State.
breabiiMt
Baylor 28, Te.as AXM 21: The
d..... code
... O!Ong\ollhmllllont
Aggles, at home, can't dent tile Bappeope WhO 1MIIhc:lt "-"''l
tists' SouthwesttiUehopes.
lhet tee! doWll chalga
..tlctlln their headJ. Frw
Southern Methodist 19, Houston
';'O!JIIelt' In 101'1 ' tlexlbte.
llghtw.lghllt.dh Puppies•
15 : This is not the year for Ute 'oil
V.O... Whatevef you
capital of the USA.
Pittsburgh 22, West Virginia 14;
Pitt llegins to shake oEf the
headlness of front cover glory.
The others:
EAST
Brown 27, Cornell 20; Connecticut
20, Holy Cross 14; Penn 18, Lafayette
14 ; Colgate 20, Princeton 17;
Rutgers 30, Wllllam x Mary 9; Temple 28, Akron 7; Yale 19, Columbia 7.
SOU'l11
Auburn 21, Georgia Tech 15; Cleinson 32, Duke 13; Georgia 43, .Vanderbilt 7; Wake Forest 21, Maryand
14; North TelUIS St. fl, Memphis St.
12; Miami, Fla. 20, Mlula9ippi St.
13; Mlssiaslppi 17, Florida 10; Richmond 20, VMI 6; South Carolina 24,
Cincinnati 7; Southern Mi88ls8ippt
30, Arkansas St 9; Virginia Tech 25,
VIrginia 14.

~~~~~~~rSundayfortestson

r~Sama~~ri;tan;;H;os;p;ita;I~w;a;s~t;erm;ed;;ad;;;;;;;;;~~~~::@~~~;~:::~~~:~~~~~:Reap The Harvest With
success.

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Mlcbigan St. 23, Wisconsin 10;
Michigan 38, Minnesota 13; Miuouri
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SOU'l'HWEST
Texas Tech 28, Rice 20; Texas
Christian 18, Tulsa 14.

FAR WEST
Arizona 27, ·Wuhington St. 7; Las
-Vegas .32, El Paso 20; New Mexico
22, Hawaii 14; Brigltarq Young 36,
Utah State 14; Wyoming 28,1Utah 13.

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eBrown

eGrav
eNavv
eWine
eGrav Suede

Marguerite Shoes

102 E. Main
Middleport, Ohio

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

~

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE/COMMUNITY COLLEGE ANNOUNCES
PRE-REGISTRATION FOR
WINTER CLASSES
DATES
SENIORS &amp; JUNIORS .......................... OCT.. 13·17
SOPHOMORES •••••• •-•••••• •••• ••••• •••••••• ••••• OCT. 20-24
FRESHMIN •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OCT. 27-31
. "
TI~ES
MONDAY.fRIDAY•••••••••••••••••••••• ·••••••••• 8 AM to 4:30PM

I.

IMPORTANT IN,ORMATION
11 students need to make an appointment with their advisors !rom NOW until the appropriate reglstra·
lion dates .
21 once schedule Is d,eveloped. students must go to the Office of Admissions &amp; Record s, In Allen Hall,
witll their regiStration form . ·
,j The ·Finance 01p.1rtment will then MAIL THE BILL TO YOU with instructions to pay by mail.
ONCE BILL IS PAID, YOUR CLASSES ARE RESERVED.
.

.

.

4) All DROP-ADD SCHEDULE ADJUSTMENTS WILL BE
FREE THROUGH NOVEMBER 7.
.
5) atLLS MUST BE PAID BY NOV.EMBER 25. PAYMENTS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED AFTER
TH1S DATE. IF THE !IlLLlS NOT ..AID ON TIME, THE SCI;IEDULE WILL BE DESTROYED AND
THE S'JUDENTWILL HAVE TO REGISTER AT OPEN REGISTRATtON ON DECEMBER 1, 1910. In
oddlti4N!,a CHARGE OF ...00 PER DROP·ADOWill BE IN EFFECT AFTER DECEMBER tst .

u A9 on.rat reglsh'.-ilon will be held November I tllrough Nove_mber 7. SO A.YOI D THE RUSH II t
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT THE OFFICE .QF A,DMtSStONS. &amp; RECORDS IN
Ill.LE-N HAl LOR B:V CALLING 245-53S3, EXTENSION 200 or 311 .

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Polly's Pointers

6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. IG, l980

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middl eport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'hur'oday, Uct. 16, 1!180

Early diagnosis vital

Pine- cones
. have uses

1

NEWYORK ( AP)- ABC won the Part VII in NBC's rebroadcast of
18.2 million, both CBS; "Beulah
networks' prime-lime ratings race " Centennial" was No. ~2 for the ' Land," Part II ~ 23.2 or 18 million,
for the first time in more than a week, with a CBS special called
and "Beulah Land," Part l , 22 or .
month with a boost from the big "The Home Front" 53rd. "Speak Up
17.1 million, both NBC; American
league baseball playoffs, fig~res Amerlca"and ." NBC" Magazine with
League Championsliip, Game 2, 21.9
from the A.C. Nielsen Co. show. And David Bri nkley," both from NBC,
or 17 mill ion, ABC, and "That's Innow the advantage shifts to NBC.
trailed, with 'a " Reagan for
credible" and " National League
NBC broadcast-the opening game President" spot on CBS 56th.
Championship, Game I, both 21.6 or
of the 1980 World Series between
Here are the week's 10 highesi16.8 million, both ABC.
Philiidelphia a_nd . Kansas_. Ci lll--~ated-shows : --~---t'·- Tuesday night, and the sports
Natio11al League Championship,
prograrruning is sure to helP the net- Gam~ 5, with a rating of 27.8
PTA TO MEET
work in the three-way competition.
representing 21.6 million homes,
The Middleport PTA will meet at 7
Five of the eight games in the ABC; "Real People," 24.8 or 19.3 p.m. Tuesday ·at the Mid&lt;)leport
American and National League million, and "Beull!h Land," Part
Elementary $chool. Speaker for the .
playoff series were broadcast in
III, 24.4 or 19 million, both NBC;
meeting will be David Gleason,
·prime-time by ABC, and all fiv e "Dukes of Hazzard," 24 or 18.7
superintendent of the Meigs Local
were among the 20 most-watched
million, and "60 Minutes," 23.4 or School DistriCt.
programs of the week ending Oct. 12. .:-- - - - - -- -- -- ---,...-- - - - - - -- . NBC, apparently · ent~enched in
the ratings cellar at midsummer, ·
now has won the competition twice
in the past fotlf weeks, and has been
runnerup the two other times.
V.W.-AMC - JEEP-RENAULT
NBC maintains the 1980-81 prime" Th e Dealer That Cares About Quality"
time season, despite 'the recently
resolved actors' strike that halted
1978 CHEVY
1977 OLDS
production for the three networks,
began with "Shogun" in the week enCAMARO
OMEGA
A. C.. road wheel s, local
4 door , V 6 e ng ., A.C.,
ding Sept. 21. The competing netow ner.
P .S ., V. top.
works have said they will start fall
programming Oct. 27 ..
'3495
'4995
NBC made it close. in the most
tf'LATE SUNDAY - Families attending morning ter of which features reproduction of the Middleport
1976 AMC
recent survey with 'Beulah Land," a
1976 FORD
wo&amp;ip at the Middleport Church of Christ at 10:30 Church of Christ. The dinner size plates are edged in
·miniseries on plantation life in the
a.m. Sunctay will receive a special gift at the close of gold. Showing one of the gifts are Robert Meltori, left,
PINTO
SPORTABOUT WAGON
old South.
the service: Each family will receive a plate, the cen- pastor of the church, and Scott Saltsman,. assistant
Auto., A .c.. cru ise con·
4c ylinder, au1o .
pastor.
The three episodes of "Beulah
lrol, woo•:i4'9s
'2495
Land" were among the week's 10
highest-rated show_s, following a
1978 FORD
1977 DODGE
. precedent set by NBC's "Centennial" two 1"eeks ago and
PINTO WAGON
RAM CHARGER
"Shogun" the week before that.
A. C ., 4 cy l. , auto.
4 w heel d rive .
ABC's rating for the week was
David Gleason, Meigs Local
pledge to the flag led by Mrs. Mary
problem of classroom supplies for
2i.2, to !8 for NBC !8 and 15.5 for
School District superintendent, was
Carolyn Wiley's kindergarten class.
the teachers was discussed and the
CBS. The networ~ say that means
present at the Monday night meeting
They also sang several songs.
PTA was asked to assist financially.
1979 AMC CONCORD
in an average prime-time minute
of the Pomeroy PTA to discuss two
The Rev. W. H. Perrin . had
Some parents and some of the nonduring
the
week,
21.2
percent
of
the
issues - repair of the boiler at the
HATCHBACK
devotions, officers' reports were
certified personnel attending the
nation's TV-equipped homes were
" W e sold it new ."·
school which has been without heat
given and the room count award
meeting volunteered to attend the
tuned to ABC.
and the upcoming levy which will
went to the kindergarten class,
next school board meeting to request
The rating for the baseball game
provide funds for school repairs.
Avote of thanks was given to John
school supplies, particularly paper,
was
27.8. Nielsen says that means of
Gleason reported that repair of the . Ward for his work on' the
1976 MERCU
1977 MERCURY
since it was the consensis of the PTA
all
the
homes in the country ·with
boiler should be completed this week
playground. Barton noted that two
that ·the responsibility for providing
BOBCAT
MONARCH
television, 27.8 percent saw at least
and the school should have heat
water fountains have been repaired
paper and other supplies was not the
part of the sports special.
2·1one . Sharp.
Hatct)back . Red .
when the students return Monday.
and also thanked those who helped
PTA's.
The
concluding
chapter
in
He urged support of the levy, the
with the soup supper. The fall carSpecial recognitioii wsa given to
"Beulah Land" finished third for the
funds from which will be used exnival was discussed and a news letthe non-certified persoruiel including
week,
a step behind NBC's "Real
clusively for school building imter will be sent out with details.
cooks·, janitors and school bus
People."
CBS had two shows in the
provements and repairs.
It was decided not to have a jitney
drivers. Refreshments were served
Top
10,
"Dnkes
of-llazzard" in fourRobert Barton presided at the
supper in November. Christmas
by the kindergarten parents.
th
place
and
''60
Minut~" fifth.
meeting which opened with the
wrapping paper .will he sold. The
NBC had three of the week's five
lowest-rated shows, and CBS two.

in cancer detection

.

Melissa Jacks

ABC boasts boost to No, 1

By Polly Cramer
M small amoun t of water hot enough
Special correspond~ut
lu make a cup uf tea. I have 'a gasDEAR POLLY - We have a large sluve wlm~e pilot light was doing
"Despite the large numbers of dicator of unsuspected intestinal
qwmti!y of pine cones (some fro,n
nulhing bul using extra gas, so I
deaths from cailcer of the colon and bleeding rather than the actual
white pine trees) and would like to bought a tiny tea kettle !hall keep
rectum, the potential for saving presence of · cancer '7"' is recomknow of some ways .to use them in fi lled and over the pilot light all the
lives
from the ~se is_greater mended annually for .~rsons over
the arts-and-crafts field. Perhaps tinle. Now I have hot water illstantly
than
for
moSt cancers," says S. the age of 50. Digttal rectal
some readers have used them and
when! nee!! it. - ELLEN.
wouldilhsre with Ull. Thanks for any ··- · oEARI'OI;LY--~J-havtr ai'olnter -­ Michilel, public .infannation...:llair· ·~-exa minations..a"';-recommended as
man of the American Cancer a part of person s annual physical
information.- ANNA
to help make school lunch boxes last
Society,
Meigs County Unit:
checkup from age 40 on. .
DEAR ANNA longer. Before a new one is used , I
"More
than
6
000
cases
of
the
"These gwdelines for COiorectal. l am sure we will
line the inside with that heavy
disease
are
diag~osed
in
Ohio
·each
·
c
ancer
checkups are intended for
be hearing from
adhesive-backed paper. the box will
year
and
men
and
women
are
af·
persons
who have no symptoms or
many readers .
not rust and is very easy to keep
fected
equally
"
Michael
said.
who
are
not at filgh risk for
You certainly can
clean. .:::·ooNNA, ·
Most
of
the
deaths
from
colorectal
developing
this form of cancer,"
make beautiful
DEAR POLLY - During these
c
ancer
are
avoidable
and
two
out
of
Michael.said.
Persons with a history
Christll)Bs wreatdays ·of trying to stretch every food
three
patients
might
be
saved
by
of
·
chronic
.
ulcerative
colitis or
hs with your
dollar as far as we can, I have a
jason Parker
cones.
Cramer
early
diagnosis
and
prompt
treatcongemtal
multiple
polyposiS
are
,
Pointer that I think will particularly
.
considered
at
high
risk
for
colorectal
ment.
What lovely gifts they would make interest those who live alone or have
The American Cancer Society cancer. "The Society urges you to
for those less fortunate than you. small families. I had to th~ow away
The small cones could be gilded, part of every head of lettuce until I
r e commends a " pro c to " discuss those tests with Y?ur doct~
painted white or whatever and com- started wrapping the head in paper
examination for-colorectal cancer at and ask how they relate to you,
Jason Alan Parker, son of Arlene bined with red val vet or satin ribbon
three
to five year intervals after the Michael said.
towels before putting it in a plastic
and Carl Parker, Tuppers Plains, to make holiday boutonnieres to
age
of
50 for men and women,
Contact. the Meigs C~ty Unit of
Illig. Now l use every leaf and can
was recently honored with two par- wear or to trim napkin rings.or place keep it for quite some time. - MRS.
provided negative examinations the Amertcan Cancer Society at 992ties on his second birthday·.
have been recorded for · two con- 7531 or come and see us at Mulberry
cards for holiday parties. Put the FcE.S.
Jason celebrated at his home with
secutive
years.
Hts. (Old Children's Home) fOJ more
less-than-perfect ones in an atPolly will send you one of her
a clown cake, ice cream and punch tractive container by the fireplace, signed thank-you newspaper coupon
The guaiac or hemoccult test for information· on the detection of
being served by his mother to his as a few dropped among the logs for clippers if she uses your favorite
hidderi blood in the stool - an in- colorectal cance~.
maternal grandparents, Maz:jorie an open fire give off a nice pine Pointer, Peeve or Problem in tier
0
and Theodore Connolly, his aunt and scent.- POLLY
colWTUl. Write POLLY'S POINuncle, Debbie and Raymond Lyons
bEAR POLLY - I used to hate to TERS in care of this newspaper.
FHA MEETS
and daughter, Misty, his uncle, Mike
run the hot water long enough tn v•t
The Buckeye Hills-Meigs district
Connolly and his father. He was
District officers and their advisors
presented ·gifts. Sending gifts were
FHA chapter held its district plan- . came from every school. The local
ning meeting Thursday, September officers installed were Angela
his great-grandparents, Mr. and
25, 1:30 p.m. at the Buckeye Hills Payne of Meigs High School as
Mrs. F;rerett Schultz, and Mr. and
Career Center. The purpose of this Chaplain, and Sherri Myers · of
Mrs. William Connolly, and his
great-great-grandmother, Lola Grifmeeting
was to discuss and finalize Eastern High School as .Ohio
Reedsville United Methodist pleted to go to Fenton's Glass Comfin.
plans
for
the upcoming meeting to Representative Chairperson.
Women met at the home of Mrs. pany. The club also voted to go to the
A second party was held at the
be held Nov. I.
Vivian Humphrey with Mrs. May
county home for a Christmas visit.
home of his paternal grandmother, Humphrey and Mrs. Connie Rucker
Cards were signed for several frienMary Parker, with Bill White also
C()-hostesses. Devotions wet'e led·by
ds. Thirty-three shut-in calls were
bemg honored at that time. A birMrs. Sandy Cowdery, using the topic
made.
•
thday supper and a decorated cake
"God Uses All Things, Broken and
A trip to Lancaster will be made
was served by Mrs. :Mary Parker, Whole." Mrs. Violet Satterfield
by the group in November. Games
Carolyn White, and Mrs. Arlene
assisted with the prognim. Closing
were played and prizes given. Buffet
Parker to Diane, Cindy and Kelly
program was given by Mrs. Viyian
style refreshments using the
White, Ralph and Virginia Parker
Humphrey. Business session was
Halloween theme were served.
and son, Jim Bob, Jack and Teresa
conducted by president. Members .
Door prizes were given to Mrs.
Parker, Lester and Pam Parker and . voted to pay the pledge to missions
Opal Harris and Mrs. Mary Alice
daughte·r Leslie, Bernard Gilkey,
and to raise the pledge for 1981. Mrs.
Bis~.
and Carl Pa rker. Gifts were presenHumphrey announced the district
Members present were Mrs.
ted to the honorees.·
meetings.
Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Lorraine ,
The following officers were elecWigal, Mrs. Sarn!y Roberts, Mrs.
ted:
president, Mrs. Dolly Reed;
David Rice, Jay Swain, Wesiey
Dolly Reed, Mrs. Pat Martin, Mrs.
vice pesident, M('s. Marlene PutHolter, Martha Holter, Roy Dillon,
Marlene Putman, Mrs. Vema Rose,
man; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. Pat
Steven ·Dillon, Brandi Dillon, and
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery, Ml's. Violet
Martin, and program leader, Mrs.
Charles Jones.
Satterfield, Mrs. May Humphrey,
The guests were taken on a Sandy Cowdery. Plans were com- · Mrs. Lillian Pickens. Guests were
hayride and games were played.
Mrs. Mary Alice Bise, Mrs. Opal
Refreshments of ice cream, cake,
Harris,
Mrs. Margaret Grossnickle,
TOPS NEWS
Kool-Ald, lu\d candy were served.
Miss Barbara Steed and Mrs. Erika
. A loss of 11.5 pounds was shown by
Susan Dillon decorated the cake for
Boring. Next meeting will be with ·
the TOPS OH 1456 Rutland Club at
the party. Others assisting with the
Mrs. Pickens. .
this week's meeting. Clara Phillips
party were Jill Holter, Ella Jones,
was queen of the week with Linda•
Lay-away for Christmas While Stock is Complete.
Patty Jones, G. Jones, and Joyce
Bailey and Frieda Davis as rUnnersRitchie.
up. The queen was presented .a
TO MEET SUNDAY
dollar and a song was sung in her
The Meigs County' Genealogical
honor. The flower contest was won
Society will meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at
OF SHOES ·
by Sandra Sergent and she was
the Meigs County Museum. New
·presented a silk flower by each
members and beginners are invited.
Middleport, Ohio
member of the club.
devotions, Miss · Erna Jesae to
present the program.
CARD SHOWER ASKED
A
card
shower for Ethel Stout, Rt.
SATURDAY ' 111f ·
!,
Box
6,
Long
Bottom, Ohio 45743~ is
BAKE SALE Saturday 'beginning
being
planned
to help celebrate her
at 10 a.m. at Kroger Store, Pomeroy,
93rd
birthday
on
Oct. 19. Cards may
sponsored '&lt; by Pomeroy Kinbe
sent
to
her
at
the
above address.
dergarten Class.

RIVERSIDE

Three celebrate birthdays
A PARTY was held recently
honoring Melissa Grace Jacks on
her filth birthday. Cake, ice
cream and gingerbread were served, and gtlts were presented to
Melissa. Attending were Grace
Welch, Roy Stansberry, Deena,
Eric, Bonnie and Wanda Jacks,
Janet, Tara, and Cathy Morris,
Donna Jacks and daughier, Donna, Carol and Robbie Jacks.

Reedsville UMW meets

Anniversary

David Gleason speaks to FTA

SALE I

Our 9thl
ENTIRE STOCK
MEN'S

Joy Swam
A party was held Saturday
honoring Joy Swain, daughter of
Lyle and Mary Swain, Reedsville, on
her lOth birthday.
Atending were Karen Sharp, Tarnmy Welsh, Tammy Kennedy, Tammy Putman, Chris Spencer, Amy
Hager, Jason Hager, Mandy Cozart,
Jason Drenner, Jayne Ann Ritchie,
J&lt;enny Ritchie, Michael Weber,

DRESS BOOTS

40% OFF

IGroup Women's Shoes. ·

1h PRICE I

tage house

Sentinel Social Calendar
THURSDAY
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Thursday 7: 30p.m. at home
of Emmogene Holstein, Syracuse.
REGULAR MEETING, Bradbury
PTA, 7:30p.m. Thursday with Supt.
David L. Gleason as speaker.
WI LLING WORKERS Class, Enterprise United Methodist Church,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs. Kay Logan.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club, I : 15 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. Martha J&lt;ing. Mrs.
Judy Humphreys to have the
program, Mrs. Nancy Grueser, the
contest. .
MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, Thursday , 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Thelma
Osborne. Plans to be made for serving bl oodmobile .~ Mrs. Helen
Blackston to have devotions, Mrs.
Tonda Seidenable to provide the
traveling prize, and Mrs. Susie Abbott and Mrs. Clarice Kennedy to he
hostesses.
MAGNOUA CLUB, home of Mrs.
Cora Beegle, Racine, Thursday, 7:30
p:m. Mrs. Ellen Couch to have

Witt~Browning
•
•
:
. :
•.

Amiscellaneous household shower
honoring Duane Will and his fiance, .
Brenda Browning, was held recently
in the dining room of the Harrisonville Masonic Temple.
The room was decorated with bud
vases of small maroon mums. An
oval arrangement of gold "football"
mwns made by Mrs. Pauline Atkins,
centered the refreshment table.
Flowers were from ti)e Nonnan Will
garden.
Following a get-acquainted .
period, several games were played
under the direction of Mrs. ·Atkins
and Mrs. Virginia Nelson. Prizes
were awarded to the winners.

:'

honored by ·bridal fare

Refreshments of cake, mints, Nelson: Mildred Jeffers, Nina
nuts, coffee and punch were served Macomber, Ruby Halliday, Pauline
by the hostesses, Mrs, Atkins, Mrs.· Atkins, Norma Lee, Lola Clark, Ar~elson, Sharon Jewell, Stella
&lt;\is Waggoner; Janice DeBoard,
Atkins, Ruth Erlewine, and Norma Martha Browning and Mikey, Grace
Lee, after the couple opened their Warner, Neva Nicholson, Jane Wise,
gifts.
'
Glenna Crisp, and Stella Atkins. ·
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. 'DenSending gifts were Enna Cleland,
nis R. Eynon and Christina, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Alan Blackwood, Mr.
Mrs. Robert Jewell and Cheryl and Mrs. Dale Bachner, Mr. and
Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice, Mrs. Clyde Scragg, Reva Snowden,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman, Mr. and Pearle Canaday, Frances Alkire,
Mrs. Henry Browning, Mr. a!ld Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop, Frances
.Bruce May, Mr. and Mrs. David
Young, Mr. and ,Mrs. Charles C.
Riggs, Mr. and Mrs. James J. ProfKing and Chester, Jeanetta
fitt, Mr. and Mrs. Manning Mohler,
Browning, the Meigs County
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Mr .. Sheriff's Department, Joan Wise,
and Mrs. Nonnan Will, Virginia
Ruby Diehl, and Esta While.

'.

JEWELERS

404 SECOND AVENUE

&gt;

:~ Adventists pi{lns services Saturday at 2 p.m.

MODULAR
···t10MES

1
:

:~

6oz.
With Sprayer
Reg. 52.43
ONLY

Gav. assisted lo11ns for qualifi8d buvers ·- ·
~- FHA 26S-VA-Conventional tin. avail.

:'
,:
•,
.•
;
•
•:
..
•
•

Reg. sua
ONLY

KINGSBURY HOME SALES' &amp; SERVICE
"For the First in Manufacuted Housing"
992-7034
Pomeroy, 0.

1100 E . Main

,·

I I
I

Children's Aspirin

I

36 Tablets

Beginning In ll.!st a few weeks the fuel adlustmant clause

Reg. 69c
ONLY

will begin disappearing from the bills of customers.of

SAY

electric public utilities. Ron James was the sponsor of the

NEW

BIC ROUER PENS

bill remov!ng tha.t clause, a_nd he wants to keep using his

Reg. 98C
ONLY

experience as an effective voice for you.

·s7e

Alco-Rex

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

RUBBING ALCOHOL
16oz.

RON JAMES

Reg. 99c
ONLy

67t

LIGHTERS

30% OFF
$AVE
Russell Stover
Assorted

CREAMS or CHOCOLATES
Reg. $4.25 .
ONLY . LB.

$319

Ulti-Mates

SUPPER SOCKS
'
Reg. $1.29
ONLY

77t

Reg. $2.54
ONLY

A salad luncheon was served at
the· Syracuse Church of the
• Nazarene Sunday to District
Superintendent Dr. Sanders, Rev.
and Mrs. Jaines Kittle, Mr. and Mrs.
Gorqon Wlnebn!nner, Mary, !'aula,
and Becky, ·Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Presley, Mr. aod Mrs. Leroy Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Sherrqan Gundiff,
Mr. and Mrs. Jr. MarUn and Harvey, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lavendar
and Beckie and Doug, Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Bass, Debbie Triplett with
Welldy ilnd ·Adam, Jenny Lou Davia,
Richard and Rpchelie, Willie Guinther and Clliis, MAggie Win' nebrenner, Tltebna Miller, Artie
; Grindley, Fannie Alshlre, Sis Cundiff, Louise Frank, Mr. and Mrs.
Mart Davia, Regina Nance, Usa
Pano111, Mark Brown, Jason .
, Powell, Chris Grindley, Steve &amp;J!d'
; ChrlaBus.
•
After lunch, open house was held
: at the panort~~ge. Refreshments
• were of cookies and pw!Ch •

•

$AVE·
lairol

.• oM151
hair conditioner"
Reg. $2.30
ONLY
.

$139

Leathe~

COLOGNES

&amp;se

.

BILLFOLDS ..................'.30%

Plldfor. by tht Comm lttH to ! lect Ron Jlmtt, tr~lg Alttn, C~rrn. , Rt. 2, IOJt 1t5,
Proc:torvlllt, Ohio.

..

a: ,'

••

r

WlllllC:UEfATURDAY

Off

;,~·
.

I

All Loose Diamon~ Colored Gemstones and Mountings

~The largest selection of jewelry mountings in the area will be
reduced .20% . Rings, pendants, earrings, tie ta.cs and many more
will be reduced for a limited time. This would be an exc_e llent ttme
to take your older diamond jewelry and remount the stones rnto a
newer, up-to-date p;ece.

·w_.._, s,..dal

HAVE YOUR·

• For Two Days Only, Friday, Oct. 17 and Saturday, Oct .
18, Mr. David McRae, representing one of the leading col-

EARS PIERCED FREE

ored stone importers in the industry. Mr. McRae will have
with him his complete inventory of colored gem stones, including one of the finest colections of rare exotic gems in
the world.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A '
PAIR OF PIERCING STUDS

only

e310

PAUL DAVIES.JEWELERS

REG. 110.00 SAVE '6.50
we will pierce your ears FREE with
the r.urcllllll of thne surgical steel.
earr ngs. This 11 a.n easy and sate wav
to have your Nrs pierced.
of ... vou
( 11 you are ulleler
parent or
must be

.

\

fridiJ
fill 8:00·

The Mlcldleport tin lleliirtment
• will state • publiC cbleMn blrbecue
t
befllnnlnl at 110811 8aturdllr at lhl
' fire lla$1on. Dinnin can be ..ten''"
:

Pre Christmas·Sale
20% OFF
.. unmounted diamonds in all sizes, qualities and priceranges, as
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AMITY

·;.

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:• Syracuse ChUrch
serves luncheon

English

EXP.ERIENCED•.•EFFECTIVE••• FULL TIME

'I -

:i.
'•
''

Mobile Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

FUEL ·ADJUSTMENT CLAUSE .REMOVED!

:~
•,
:'
:•

d 'be anti-smoking campaigns as anyone interested in enrolling.
ae:~'te of time and money. Some 70 · •'.AIcoholis~ af~ects mo~e homes
rcent of these admit that smokin
and industries m Amertca than
appear to boost the nation s
pe tl .
the' han · ~ drugs do It all starts when parents
economy, but in the long run both the · ~ea Y ~c;;24 pe~C:nt ~;~t ~ offer ~ bubbly glass to their
country and the user lose, according
lik~a~uwill sto , Dittes says
children. They think it's the smart
to Albert Dittes, church temperance
Dilies, who
to the J~e think to ~o,- but they are flirting with
secretary. .
.
issue of his chUrch's national trouble,', Dittessays. .
..
These and other related facts wlll
bll tl "Lif
d Health , ld
Films and other educational
cause the Pomeroy Seventh-day Ad~~c~: maine!sons why ~pi~ materials that present an alcoholventist church to take a close look at
ok .. . 't .
hab't 't .
education program are available
the bl
of drug usag d ri
sm e are: t ts a
t , 1 tS
h Sc
of
. pro ems
.
e u ng .
f . g and they feel It is en- through the local churc . ores
tts weekly services this Saturday af·
Je
high schools across the country are
0
ternoon at 2 p.m.
.
~~ e~tists feel a responsibility to using these materials. The
"AnoverwhelmlngmaJorityofthe
ve
·
denomination's journal of better
help those who want to give up such
..
, hlch . also .
57 million Americans who still
·
·
ha'blts The Five-Day Plan to Stop living, Uaten, w
IS
Ill
smoke one pack of ·ctgarettes a day
Smo~ and the Foilr-DK program · many schoo~ libraries, has ~ manfor alcoholics are available to thly Circulatton of :100,000 COpies.
·

The . p~uction and sale of
alcoholtc drinks and tobacco ffiB;Y

..

the prem1.sea or taken home.

.,,

"

t.

J

�.

.

D&amp;ilySel11linool, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Od . lti, 19110

.,

Answers soug~t in hi~arre· incident
CINCINNATI (AP! - .laull's
fr iendly, interestc'll in phih1suphy
llomem~de, in Hoskins' apartment.
Huskins. an a rtist who bcfn el!ued . "nd a gifted artist.
His pockets. were stUffed with ampo•licenien a nd admired socia l ac''I'm totally sho~eked, ". said Bob
munition when police found his
l.enl1arl, owner uf the .building
body ,
·
tivists, fired a bullet into his head
befor·e police could determine. why · where Hoskins live&lt;l. " Jim was a
·'He had literally hUndreds of
he apparently killed .liis girlfriend . g01&gt;d friend, as easy-going "' you
munds of arrununltion," Menkhaus
and t011k over a television station at · ('&gt;uldimagine."
said. " He was prepared for
gun)1oint for a bout 12 hours.
Huskins befriel)ded a nwnber of
anything. His pockets were ·stuffed
" We never did arrive at his true
policemen, said Police Chief M~n
full. Boxes of ammuiti!Jof!_lV~~
rno!i Vilti&lt;Jn;-'.L..---,;arrt- - r:t:--Dlrl e
Leistler. He said ~1e-had-seen l aying around the newsroom."
Menkhaus, whu tried Wednesday to
Hoskins lifting weights at a downc
WCPO News Director Tom
talk Huskins into surrendering fmm
town YMCA " He was a rather frienthe WCPO-TV studios downtown . .. dly individual," _Leisller said: "He
exhibited m1 signs of any kind of con" He talked a bout ma ny things,
about being a revolutionary. He
duct that would lead you ·to believe
Wanted to ma ke changes in society."
anything like this would happen."
Twenty defe~dants were fined and
Hoskins, 41, of Cincinna ti , was arIn their telephone conversations,
eight others forieit&lt;!d bonds in Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
med wtlh five revolvers, an
Menkhaus said Hoskins hinted he
Fined by J.udge Patrick O'Brien
automatic ~ifle and hundreds of Md some kind of master plan that
included the WCPO takeover.
rounds of aminunilion. when he too)&lt;
were Harrr S. Yarbrough,
Hoskins, who claimed.to be a former
nine hostages at the WCPO studios
Langsville, and Charles Ritchie,
Marine, never got more specific.
Portland, $22 and costs each, speed;
shorlly after2 a .11t.
He ' .never demanded a live inMenkhaus said Hoskins didn't
Samuel R. Karr, Pomeroy, $20 a~d
te rvi~w but told reporter Elaine
claim affiliation with any political · 'costs~ speed ; James Jt1stice,
Green that he was prepared for a
group. " He did say in the early '70s
Washington, W. Va. , $25 and costs,
shootout with police.
he was in San Francisco trying to get
speed; Thomas Manuel, Racine,
Hoskms freed. the hostages after
money together f.or his cause," he
$250 , taking deer in closed season;
an hour and a half and handed over
said.
Victor L. Roush, Middleport, $27 and
his apartment keys ~o police could
Police found 25 guns, most of them
costs, speed; James N. Grueser,
find the body of his girlfriend,
Rtuland, $10 and costs, assured
Melanie Finlay, 31. She was idenclear distance; Beryl Wilson ,
tified as a former nun and a grade
Belpre, and Timothy Litchfield, New
scllool teacher in suburban )11ount
Haven,. $23 and costs each, .speed;
Healthy.
Emery Slagle, Sr., Colwnbus, $21
LIGHT BULB SALE
About 80 police officers cordoned
and
costs, speed; Sandra K. Boring,
The Pomeroy-Middleport Uons
off the . western part of downtown . Club will hold a light bulb sale this
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failed to
while Menkhaus negotiated with
yield one half of roadway; Richard
evening from 6:30 tu 9 p.m. from
Hoskins by phone. When a tactical
P. Henry, ReedsviUe, $10 and costs,
door to door in Middleport. Residen·
unit stormed the building at 1:45
ts wishing to purchase the bulbs are failed to display valid registration
p.m., they found Hoskins ' body in
asked to turn on their porch lights. · and or valid sticker; James Mays,
the newsroom with a bullet wound in
Chester, $26 and costs, speed;
Proceeds from the sale will go for
the head.
William Saintsing, Thomasville, r).
the purchase of glasses for needy
Hoskins' friends described him as
C. $250 and costs, three days conchildren.
finement, license suspended 30 days,

··•· · ··• · · · · r · · ·.~

Area deaths
Wilma E. Dunfee

Hugo Kapteina

Miss Wilma E. Dunfee, 74,
Hugo Kapterna, 79, Rt. 3,
Coolville, deied early Wednesday
Pomeroy, collapsed on Pomeroy's
morning at Camden Clark Memorial
East Second Street Wednesday afHospital, following a brief illness.
ternoon. The Pomeroy ER Squad
Miss Dunfee was born in Troy' - was called. Mr. Kapterna was dead
Township in Athens County. She was l on'll.a:nval at Veterans Memorral
the · daughter of the late Walter E .
H09pttal. , .
·
.
Mr. Kaptema was preceded in
and Effie E. Shotwell Dunfee. She
was also preceded in death by one
death by his parents, Gottlieb and
sister and one brother.
Emma Sattler Kapteina, his wife,
Miss Dunfee was a longtime emWi!elma, one infant son, five sisters
and five brothers.
.
ploye of the former Brafford 's
He was a reltred coal rruner.
Restaurant, Coolville; a former emHe rs survrved by two daughters,
ploye of Camden Clark Hospital and
the Coolville Citizens Telephone Co.
E•runa Mae Kaptema, and Dorrs AnShe recently retired as township
dy, Colwnbus; two sons, Altsus Kaptema, Grove Crty, ·and Fred Kat&gt;clerk of Troy Townhship following 28
years of services. She was a memlema, Loursanna; two brothers,
Charles Kapl~ma, Pomeroy, and
ber of Fidelity RebeKah Lodge 886 of
Coolville and also a member of the
Frank Kaptema, Charleston; 11
'Coolville Senior Citizens.
grandchildren and 11 great grandShe is survived by three sisters;
children.
.
.
Funeral servrces wtll be held
Zola Walcott Loveland Ohio· Nellie
Sat~rday all p.m: at Ewing Chapel.
Root a nd Leia Horsby ~f Deiaware,
Ohio and . several nieces and
Bunal wrll be m Rock Springs
nephews.
' Cemet ery. Fnends may call at the
Funeral ser.vices will be confuneral home after 7 p.m. . this
dueled Friday all p.m. at the White
evening.
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev. Gary Peck officiating. Burial
will be in Torch Baptist Cemetery.
Mildred
Mankin
Friends may call at the funeral
Mildred Russell Mankin
home after . 1 p.m. Thursday.
Pomeroy,
died this morning ai
Rebekah Lodge services will be held
Umversily
Hospital, Columbus.
at the funeral home this evening at
will be anFuneral
arrangements
7:30p.m.
nounced by Ewing Funeral Home.

• •

••.

•- •

•

••"

SAM-LIZZ - THE BUDGET
ALLOCATION CAME THROUGI-f:
MEET THE TWO NEW
PERMANENT MEMEIERS
OF OUR "'!''""·'"' CRI~~!1 - SQ· UAD.

McKee, who was among the ni
hostages, said Hoskins compl'ain
that poor peopleand prison inmat
· were ignored by society'· al\il 1.
news media.
~
" When we started talki!]g, he w.
very, very angry," McKee • sai
" But we were able to talk •u ""!!'•'
~ ~lrn.llimJ9 tbe_pQiol..thai.be "'l'"-';----didn 't remember what he
at."

I THINK
I

~ECOGNIZE

LEE EBONY
-MATTER OF
FACT, ! TI-IIN I'&lt;

r REMEMBER
RECOMMENDING

rfelevision
Viewing.

'

K
IJ
...,,. . .....

'

ocr: 16,1~80
_I

(})II C!JiiJ())@l(fijm NEWS

6:00

CAPTAIN EASY

right to drive to and from worl
DWI; Michael Tillis, Rutland, $· .
and costs, reckless operation; Flo)
Borillg, Pageville, ·110 days !:01
finement, ·non-support, 60 days co1
flnement, violation of probation
Terri S\everul, Coolville, $35
costs, disorderly conduct; Maq ;·
Herald, Middleport, $21 and cosll
speed; John B. Drenner, Mit'
i!Jeport, $25 and costs, 10 days con
finement, one year probation, 'Cor•
fineiJlent suspended, ·no driver
license, $25 and costs, failed to yiel•
when tumil]g left ; Loretta Vankirk
Pomeroy, costs only, obstructing of
ficial business.
Forfeiting honda were Kennelh J
Coen, Albany, $60.50, reckles:
operation; Gene C. Tribley
Wellston, Joyce S. Kilgbre
Sciotoville, and Faith McGitin.
Marietta, $40.50 each, speed; Leland
P. Scheerschmldt, Oak Hill, $35.50
insecure load ; David E. Davis,
Rtuland, $35.50, left of center; Alan
Petzo, Colwnbus, $30.00, speect; ·
Michael Wacks, Rodney, $360,60,
DWI.

WHO ':; JUl. II' 13LAIR ·_AND 11/H'/ II/ERE THEM
, TWO 51DEIIIINDE-R.S
· LOO'KIIJ ' FOR HER~

FIRST TIME I
INQUIRINC:,
E VE-R HEARD OF
A I!&gt;OUT AN
HER lilA? THE' DAY · OLD-TIME G UNBEFORE Y c5TER:- FIG HTER , THE
DAY WHE-N "&gt;HE
MUST A CHI:
CAME . TO THE
KID!
D - BAR ...

THE-N THOSE HOODS SHOWED UP!

6:30

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~-

6:58

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'l'eAH~! I'L.L.. HA~ 'bV ~

l.

•
OH- Rl6HT .1
YOU GO ON IN,

. James Peterson, DirectOr or the
Emerti Center of u .s .c .. Hosts :
Hug h Downs and Frank Blair.
lCi osed -Ceptloned)
7:30 (]) U BULLSEYE
(l) ZOLA LEVITT
(]) FOOTBALL: INSIDE TliE NFL
Len Dawson and Nick Buonico nti
c ombine expert commentary with
act i onh igh lightao fthe week· a foot·
ball games.
([) SANFORD AND SON
I]) D (JJ JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
tm MATCH GAME
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
8 FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
NEWSUPDATE
B:OO (])8CDGAMESPEOPLEPLAYA
visit 1othe 1nnua lc uat ardple throw·

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TIGH A·· I'LL
CATCH UP!

tug-of-war In which the teams are
made up of the wives of World Ser·
ies players ; and an inspirational
story about George Murray, an athlete in a wheelchair. (60 mine.)
(l) MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
CIJ MOVIE ·~DRAMA·SUSPENSE)

~~~~

••• "~• Feer" 1862
(JJ(12) lit MORK AND MINDY Mork

poses ua talent agent to enter
Mindy, posing aa the Boulder
Bombahell, ln a wiii:J audition tor
dancers at the Bare Facta Club in a
hilarious attempt t o lind out who is
pullingdirtytricks on Nelson Flavor .

i"rni

I THINK 'IOU'RE LYIN' TO ME, SHORTY!
IF 'YOU'RE TMI! STERLING GOLDBRICK,
THEN YOU DIRECTED HER/!

'

R.

Ohioan fac~ weapons charge
A white flaq!
need

n-r-"~v"

. ·

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Reg . 8g,95 .

a whiie

Half-Price.

flaq!

THE WHITE SHADOW
Coach Reeves returns to New York
for hIs high schoolreun ion where he
learns that his father may not have
long to live. (Pt. l . of a two-part epi·
aode: 60 mine .)
()) NEXT QUESTION
® UP AND COMING 'Got With It'
When Valerie finds a soul·mate in
Michael, both youngsters are ad vised to act more sophisticated.
\l;loood·Captioned)
8:30 (}) DR. JACK VAN IMPE
(]) MOVIE ·~AOVENTURE) •••
••suJterman: The Movll 11 1i78
(JJ C!%1 Gl ANGIE Anglo and Brad
decide to spend a romantic wee·
kend alone at home, but soqn find
their privacy invaded by a bungling,
would-be burglar. (Repeat)
(]) ® FROM JUMPSTREET 'The
Blues: Country Meets City' Blues
artists Willie Dixon, Sonny Tarry
and Browmle McGhee perform and
talk with host Oscar Brown, Jr.,
about the growth of the distinctive
musical style called the Blues .
8:58
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ROCKEFELLER-MOORE
DEBATE
(]) ELECTION '80
il)) SPECIAL MOVIE PRESENTA·
TION 'Babv Come a Home ' 1980 ~
Stare: Colleen Dewhurst , Warren
Oates .
® SNEAK PREVIEWS
(j]) niiSOLOHOUSEWorkonthe
hou ae has uncovered aom e untoreseen problema from the roof to the
plumbing and, at the moment, the
dream kitchen ia e nightmare.
(1)(12)8 20.20
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PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
•
(])
MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'CrlmeandPunlahment'PanUI .Still
uncuapected oft he pawnbroker's
murder , Ralkolntkov begins a
peychological cat-and-mouse
game with the Investigating magis·
trale. (Cioood·Captioned) ~80
mlno .)
®NEWS
CIJ TBS!VENING'NEWS
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i1J NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
TOMORROW'S FAMILIES

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Len Oawaon and Nick Buonlcontl
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eo I : Buddv Hlcktlt. (50 mlno.)
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Stare: teabal Sanford, Sherman
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reunite the feuding factlone of Tom
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'McMILLAN ANO WIFE: Oooth II I
Seven Point Favor' Star• : ·R ock
Hudton, Suean Saint Jam ea . The
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m. (Ropell)
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THE

1

WHAT THEY CALLEC/
iHE HOSP'ITAL.IZEC/
M ECH AN IC WHO WA$
AN OI,.D 0ROUC:H .
Now arrange the circled letter s to
fo rm the surpn se a nswer . as sug ·
gested oy th e abOv e cartoo n

"KI I XI) KXI I

r

(Answers tomorrow )
Yesterday·s

I

Jumble s IRONY DI NER MURMUR WH OLLY
Answ er What the wat ch repa trman l1 ked tp do on h1s
vacat mn - UN WIND

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Alone '
Guaata : Threatrical
producer Frederick Brisson and Or.

ALWA'&lt;7 -7f'IW( M'{ MltJO!

RFH/1~17 .

(]) MOVIE ·~FA NTASY) , .. .,.
" PIIO~Aibblt And Tlill 01 Bel·
trix Potter" 1970
([)
CAROL BURNEn AND
FRIENDS
ABCNEWS
® 3-2·1 CONTACT
tD (Z) NBC NEWS
(l) PAUL "-NO MONA
CIJ BO.B NEWHART SHOW
I]) FACE TliE MUSIC
D (I) il)) CBS NEWS
(]) MAINSTREAMING
® DICKCAVt;n$HOW
1m 01 ABC NE'WS '
(l) NEWS UPDATE
(]) 8 PM MAGAZINE
(l) COME TO TliE WATER
CIJ ALLINTliEFAMILY
I]) IJ2l 01 FAMIL YFEUD
CD BACKSTAGE AT THE GRAND
OLEOPRY
Cl Cll TIC TAC DOUGH
()) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
il)) NEWS
® OVER EASY 'Widower: Men

~

THEY THOU6HT I WA5&gt;·· COVERII\JCI ·
FOR HER-- SO THE'Y K IDNAPPED

an

5

Mlnlsettee -vu by Reallstlc!!

INFEK
.... .. c..... ""''
..,...... ~' ..,. , , •..•

·-HO'II'RE tiE
TH' Ot1E FER ONE
SUPPOSED T' FINO WE'RE
THING, HER
OIIE KID OUT 0' LOOKIN' EYES A~E
A~L THE5E .
FOR 15
GTILL
TRASHED-OUT . [)IFFEREHT
ALIVE :"
RUHAWAY~5~
?.~
' ~~

casseHe Recorder
GoesAnwmere!

Unscr amble the se lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square , to l orm
lour ordmary_words

HER,.

18

NEW YORK - An Ohio man, who was one of the first persons
arrested under New York's tough new gun law, has only been charged
with weapons possession, wlilch is a misdemeanor.
A Manhattan grand jury could have lodged a felony charge against
William Jordan, 31, of Springfield, but instead directed the Manhattan
district attorney's office Wednesday to file a lesser misdemeanor
charge of criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree.

W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
l..!!J ~r!.!!) Ul~ . ~Y He~n Arnold and Bob Lee

'flJt\1~:1 fii}'il

~

· (l) BACKYARD

28 ·ciises terminated

. APPRECIATION DINNER - Thirty-nine perso!]s attended an apprecratron dinner held at the Meigs Inn last Saturday night sponsored by
the Southeastern Ohro Garden Tr.actor Pullers Association. It was to
honor members, workers and business establishments who provided
trophies at the Farr pull. Trophies were presented to Davy Washburn,
Coolvrlle, 800 pound chrldren class; Jim Stalkner, Mar'ietta, 800 to 1,000
pound stock classes; Robert Dorst, Tuppers Plains, 900 pound and 1,200
pound stock; Jim Stalkner, Marietta, 900 pound open. Stalkner and Dave
Washburn tied for first place in the 1,000 pound open class. Pictured, J-r
'
Robert Dorst, Davy Washburn and JimStalkner.

J • ..

Squeeze stifles defender._..
three hearts, North cue bid
three spades looking for three
notrump, which South dutiful·
ly bid.
NORTH
10· 16·80
Dec larer won the spade
+A
lead in dummy and immedi ~
• AS
ately led a diamond to his
t KQ7 532
jack. West won , played king
• J 984
and another spade, clearing
EAST
WEST
the suit and putting South in
+Kt09871
t s a2
with the queen .
• K J 10 4
.97 3
Declarer carefully pitched
• 64'
tAB
two low clubs from the
+A
+K6 532
dummy. He only had eight top
SOUTH
tricks: five diamonds, one
+QJ6
heart arid two spades. But he
.QB 62
realized he could ex:ert enor• J 10 9
mous pressure on West by
running the diamond suit.
+Q 10 7
Accordingly , he ran the dia Vulnerable: Both
monds while discarding two
Dealer: West
little hearts and a small club .
West was stone-cold dead.
w..t Norlb East Soutb
He followed to the first
2t
at
Pass
diamond , pitched the 10 and
Pass · 3NT
3+
four of hearts on the ne~t two,
Pass Pass Pass
and let ~o of a spade winner
on the ftfth diamond. Howev·
Opening lead:+ 10
er, the sixth diamond finished
him. If he pitched a heart,
declarer would cash the ace
and drop his king, setting up
South's
queen for the ninth
By Oswald Jacoby
trick.
ud Alan Sontag
If he pitched another spade
winner.
he would be end
The three-notrump game
played with the club ace.. The
reached by North-South in one
remaining spade winner
Ieday's hand i$ hardly an ele- would be his fourth trick : then
gant contract, but declarer he wou·Id have to lead from
made the most of his slim his guarded heart king.
chances in it.
Finally. if West pitched the
After North overcalled two club ace, East would be given
diamonds , South scraped up a the club king and South's
raise on his eight high-card queen of clubs would be his
points comprised of queens game-going trick.
and jacks. When West tried (NEW SPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN )

a•••

~'6td
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Compassion
1 Anagram
40 Moabites
for each
DOWN .
5 Cicero, e.g.
1 French crty
11 Zoo sound
2
Shoreline
12 Indigenous
3
Be involved
13 Volcanic spew
14 Prepared
4 Time period
5 At reduced
to serve
.Prices
15 Compass
6 Political
reading
16 Cornwall
event
7 N.Z. tribe
mine
17 Sumatran ape 8 Bribe (sl. )
9 Gorge
18 Ceremonious
Man's
10
Moscow hill
20
nickname ~
dweller?
Penalize
16
Curvature
21
22 Throb
23 Part of West
Pakistan
24 Pooch
25 Pup 26 Role for
Abe Vigoda
27 Work unit
28 ChalliS
31 Rosary bead
32 Slower
(mus.)
33 A Nixon
34 Dog Star .
36 Get one's
feel wet
37 Extract
a fact
38 "Essays of

Yesterday's Answer '
19 Color
· 26 Full of
22 Statue
vinegar
•
or failure
28 Word with :
. cup or cake:
23 Slavish
•
24 Catcher's
29 Arm bones ;
glove
30 Energy • ;
25 Prickly
~5 Here tFr.) ;
plant
36 Undersized •

•

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
11

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AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter ~imply stands for another. In Ibis sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sin gle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Earh day the code letters are different.

l
l
l

CRYPTOQUOTES
OJDXHOS
K WLX

•

Z G U LX

PGDP

JW D

u

JM

p

u

YGZPJO

DXG

'
PJ

NGRHI'P

XWKHIHDQ.

:l:1••

J

T J 0 U D :X U 0
G N E U Z N P
Yesterday's Cryptoquote ; LET US STRIVE TO IMPROVE
OURSELVES, FOR WE CANNOT REMAIN STATIONARY; :
ONE EITHER ' PROGRESSES OR RETROGRADES. - '
•
MME. DU DEFFANO
() 1tl0 K.ng

fMtu~ Syndicate~

Inc .

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/

10- The Da1ly Sentmel, Muldlepo1 t-Pome1 uy 0 . ThdJSday Od 16 !980

'

li- The Dally Sentmel, M1ddlepurt-Pome1oy, 0 , fhuo sday Oct 16, W80
i - - - Publ.c- Sa le - - - 17 - - - SIDE GLANCES
by Gill Fox
~ ___ ~ ~ ~c1 ''!"
~·~cella MeOu~ _ .
r;::;::-:;;:;,:...;..-:-""""-~~------:---:--'--;.-;-l
OSSIE S AUCTI ON House, For sale quai1I Yused lum

Baghdad, oil fields targets of border war
BASRA, !1aq ( AP ) - !J aq1 M1Gs
)J " " '·"' capital \\ eJ e set abla•e by
coa sl ul t!Jc cmb"ltl cd Shalt ei-Arab
II aq t cporled " fierce biJttles" nn
Iraq and the other Persian Gulf
cut the h1ghway between Abadan
' - pounded Tehra n's ml storage tanks
1a1dmg !raq1Jels t11at alsu struck at
waterway &gt;lllh l clu a n, the !J am an til\ uutsku ts of Dezful, a m1hlary
states
and the 011 fields to the east, the
!oday'and !raman ""'planes bomt'olo an ny camps neat !J·an''
ca p1tal and U•e 1est vf 11 an have lwadqua JleJs c1ty a nd ot1f1eld center
No confmnabon bf any of the
refmery City's last supply lme, the
bed Baghdad for .the thu·d stra ight
weste1n c1ty of J&lt;erma nshah, 250
been seve1ed and the, adw statwn m 140 miles north of Ahadan Tehran
nulltary clallllii was available, but
Iraqi News Agency reported Wedday, the Iraq1 command repcrted
uules southeast of Teh1 an and 70
Abadan has been captured, the Rad1o reported I raman Pres1dent
bOth !raman and lraqt comnesday mght
11 aq also sa1d 11 cut off Iran's
east of the Iraq1 bOrder
ll aq1s sa HI
· l m if'··· . A~~b'~'il~h::a~sss~a~n~~i.I~B~a~n~J~-S~a~;d~r· R,~~:p; :r~1 m~~e:-~~ :~~~:~~~~~ilth~~e~r~epc~rts~o~f~th~e.eti~r~o:f;--·-oJ~'l'~h:e-:;~~~ir;;~,~~~t~~;~:::f~
Jefmery-ctty-t&gt;f-'- Abadarr at- -the-c - Jrules
The-rotnmanttclau rre112o:t imma u -- J\-ct1un -al~n WasTeiM'feil fr
suuthe1n end of the wa1 It on t, but
soldiers killed and 20 taken pn suncr
Center a n~ 111 the nt)J the1n sectm of other members of Iran's Supreme
there
told a VISiting INA team his troops
11 an sa1d 1t pushed the 11 aq1s back
m the last 12 hours of ground actJon
Iraq's JtJO.nul&lt; mvas nm front as its NatiOnal Defense Council VISited
Ahadan
fraq made no
had taken control of Ahadan 's radio
a nd that the people of Abadan took to
that completed an Iraqi "ege of the
wa1 to wm full control uf the Shatt a !- Dezful Wednesday and ' spent three
menhon of the Ilamsector
stab on, captured 100 !raman
tJ enches and were p1epa1ed for
bw mng 01l c1ty of Abadan and the
Arab estuarv, Jts water'ol ay to U1c huu1 s mspectmg the battle fronts unAbadan, 30 miles up the Shalt a!1rnhtary persollllel mcludmg two
hand to-hand tom bat
ne1ghbonng port of KhorranJShahr
Persian Gulf, went mto 1ts 25th da}
der the barr)lge of enemy artillery
Arab from the Perstan Gulf, and the
high-raillung offiCials, destroyed a
'l he l1 aq1 conu nand, Ill a cuomThe h1ghway, ra ilway and p1pehne
Iran cla1med that 1ts army killed f1re
01! port of Khorramshahr, 10 rruies to
'huge" amoUllt of annored equlpmumque broadcast by Baghdad
lmks of the two c1t1es on the eastern
1,000 Iraq1 troops m airborne
RaJal \las expected tn New York
the northwest, were the two !raman
ment and mfllcted heavy casual!les
RadiO sa1d the oil reservn1 rs of the
today to argue Iran's case before the
strongpomts on the estuary that foron the !raman defenders.
assa ults m the !lam sect01 250 m1les
northwest of Abadan
UN, Secunty Council The council
ms the southern 'end of the border
The INA report sa1d !raman
opened debate on tbe war Wedbetween Iran and Iraq and has been
planes !ned to attack the advancmg
nesday, and' Fore1gn Mmlster Sada maJor temtor1al 1ssue between
Iraq1 troops but that they saw one
doun Hammad1 of Iraq told tt Iran
them for centunes
!raman Phantom shot down and that
provoked
the
conflict
by
vJO!atmg
tis
Iraqi
troops
and
tanks
that
adIrag1 jets destroyed the SIX 011
(Contmued from page I)
Vote1s shll undec1ded on theu
and Patfl ck H O'Brien Judge ot lhc
197~
trea
ty
w1th
Iraq
and
by
trymg
to
vanced
eastward
above
Khorramp1pelmes
that collllect Ahadan w1th
clearmg house 1tems wh1ch mclude
chu1ce fm the elected public off1ces
Count} Court
export
Ayatollah
Ruhollah
shahr
and
Abadan
and
then
turned
Tehran,
stoppmg
the flow of oil to
the establiShment of day care c~n­
on the l\ ovembe1 ballot, are mv1ted
Also scheduled on the program are
Khomeuu
's
Islamic
revolutiOn
to
south
toward
the
gulf
on
Wednesday
the
Iranian
capital
and other Cities.
ters for Me1gs and Galha Counties
to a Ca ud1dates' N1ght progr Thur
representatives of the library,
w1th requested funding totalmg
'dav, Oct 23 at the Multipurpose
emergency med1ca l serviCe and the
$2ll3,000
, the establishment of waste
Bmldm g. Mu lberr}
He1ghts,
county disposal contamers lev1es
dJsposJ!Jon
fa c1hlles planmng
water
Pomc1O\
\\hich are on the November ballot
Tuppers
Plams
fundmg at $41 000
m
fndJVJduals seekmg pubhc off1ce
Candidate's N1ght winch will
and
a
grant
for
the
Me1gs County
who have mc!J cated they w1ll a ttend
begm at 7 p m 1s a part of an entire
on
Agmg
for
$33,684
for the
Council
lllli ucle J&lt;ick E Steche1, Represenday of aciiVIIIes at the Semor
new
motor
purchase
of
three
t&lt;~ live to Co ngress
Ron J ames,
Clt1zens Center The center's annual
vehiCles
St&lt;~te Rep1 cscntat1ve, 92nd D1stnct ,
fall festival Will be takmg place w1th
James M Jenmngs of Jennmgs
'
( ilt slcJ Wl'l ls and R1chard E Jones,
plenty of good food , bmgo enplanmng
consultants
for
Assoc1ates,
Cu nnt } COJm msslOner James J
tertamment a nd Country Store The
the council Colwnbus , outlined
Pl uf[Jlt and John C Welsh, Shenff ,
Announcements
lunch menu w1ll feature soup and
3
aspects
of the rrnplementatwn
I ~" " Spencer Clerk of Courts
=~=================
sand" 1ches wh1le a ham dmner IS
strateg1es for Year I for the comElcwJOJ Robson County Recorder:
VISIT our new g1ft sect1on,
ti4NUA
planned from 5 until 7 p m
= ~~~u~c~~~nfi =-=
rrusslon developed under a Farmers
handcrafted g1fts, seasonal
IS
I PAY h1ghest pnces
decoratiOns by local ar
II£WAYS
Home Admm1strahon ProJect
poss1ble for gold and S1lver
GtVIN6
t1sts Halloween 1tems on
Purpose of the Year I and II reporcoms, nngs, 1ewe1 ry, etc
7110SE
Sare now Check our pn ces
Contact
Ed
Burkett
Barber
ts bemg complied by the Colwnbus
VA~Ii,
&amp; select1on f~rst Also wilt
Shop, Middleport
At~~'·
accept handcrafted 1tems
firm IS to prepare ways to put mto
I he Me1gs County Sheriffs Depar'
SF'eCIRC
Salem Township Bobby Molden, 2\l, actwn one or more parts of Me1gs
for cons1gnment sale 992
/NVITifTIONS
P1ano Tun1ng
Lane
6193 The Tackle Box, SR
tment 1mest1gated two accidents
Athens, '.las travelmg north when he
County Comprehensive Plan conDan
1
els
742 29511 Tuntng
124, Syracuse, Oh1o 45779
Wednesday e'emng
passed a southbound vehiCle dnven sldermg econom1c development,
and Repa1r Serv 1ce s1nce
At 6 59 p m on Dark Hollow Road
by Bruce Bee ley, Dexter
1965 If no answer phone
housmg, water supply and waste
992 2082
Will iam C W1se, Rutland wa~
As the veh1cles passed a 2X4 fell
disposal
tJ ovehn g east at a high rate of
6
Lostand Found
ft om the Beeley veh1cle and struck
8wrIn preparmg the Year I report, the
--------- -SHOOTING MATCH at
L/STEN70
speed The car wen off the road on
the headlight and fender of the
LARGE TAN female dog
1972 comprehensive plan for the
Corn Hol low m Rutland
lfeP.
F
the left and struck a vehicle owned
Molden vehc1le There were no mfound 1n Rock Spnngs
Every Sunday startmg at
~TAKE.
county and all of such pnot repel ts
area Call 992 2770
by F1 anklm Lauderm11t
noon
Proceeds bemg
JUnes and no cttatwns 1ssued
NER~ ·
we1e exammed to 1dent1fy the perdonated
to
lhe
Boy
Scout
ON
IT•"'
W1se was Cited to cour t on a
The department 1s mvest1gatmg
tment recommended actiOllS, acTroop 249 12 gauge factory
FOUNQ trader l1sc en ce
ch,u ge of reckless operatton W1se
the theft of a cham saw from a
choke gun only'
plate, no 5557U1 Owner
IIVIlles or programs that rrught he
compla med nf kilee lllJUnes but was
p1ckup truck owned by John Rankm
can call985 3581
considered for unplementation unnot nrunedmtely treated There was
JON
ES
Meat
Packmg
Tuppers PlalllS The mc1dent ocder ' these lour proJects These
sl aught e r1ng ,
custom
heavy property damage
curred somebme after 8 30 p m
recommendahons were then subprocessmg, reta11 meat
At 6 30 p m on county road one m
Munday
Wash1ngton Co Rd 248,
Jected to a c1tlzen part1c1patwn and
Lillie Hockmg OH 667
local govermnent rev1ew and com6133
ment process mcludmg mcorporatJOn of ne w recomRACINE GUN SHOOT
mendabons
Racme Gun Club, every
FJ':'1day n1ght starttng at
lenmngs sa1d th1s rev1sed set of
A sml m the amount of $26,000 has
7 30 p m Factory choke
Towhnsh1p of wh1ch the plamttff are
planmng goals became the overall
guns on l y
been fil ed 111 Me1gs County Corrunon pat t owners
APPLES, $4 95&amp; up 111 your
GARAGE sale, 1n BASH AN
obJeC
tive
for
the
project.
planmng
contamers, c•der, potatoes,
Pleas Cow r by Opal Harper . Rt 4
The entry charges that the defenThursday, Fnday, Satur
Burson's
us
33,
12
m11es
As
a
result,
the
Me1gs
CoUllty
Pollee
GUN
SHOOT
Saturday
Pomeroy a nd Crystal Keaton Er· da nts Willfully , wantonly , and
day, 16,17,18 at Frank R1f
north
of
Pomeroy
even1ng
starrmg
at
6
JO
AdvisOry Conuruttee dec1ded to
fie res1dence Little g1rl ' s
Vlll Rlclunond Ind aga mst Cla1r mahcwusly destroyed ands tore
P m Sponsored by the
c:loth.ng,
shoes
lad•esl
on
focus
the
remammg
work
effort
E t Pa t 1 M1tchell James Large and
Rac1ne Vo lunt eer Ftre
down and demolished the home
Apples &amp; Sweet C1der
-:ens, dresses, slacks pal(.
LEARN
to
make
your
own
preparmg
a
planmng
and
developDepartment,
at
bu1ldmg
1n
Romes Gnmes, Red &gt; &amp;
Thoma s C11sp, all of Rt 1, located on the real estate and contsu•ts, teans, so forth, some
chocolate
covered
Bashan
Factory choke
ment program that would both exGolden Dei1C10us
Now
men's c lothmg, coll ector
Langs ville
chernes,
peanut
butter
verted the sa1d propety from
guns only
se
ll
1ng
at
l$4
00
&amp;
up
per
pand and Improve the housmg stock
J •m Beam bottles Avon
cups, candy bars, d1p
AccOJ dmg to the entry the plam- res1denbal use to the nght-of-way
buschel FJizpatr'Jck Or
bottles electr1c typewr1ter
chocolates,
&amp;
more
Free
of
Racme,
Tuppers
m
the
areas
. tiffs cildrge that the defendants en· use to other property owned by the
chards, Stat~ Route 689
Decorated ca kes for all oc
ceram1c ttles, good ppr
candy class startmg thts
Plams and Portland
Phone 669 3785
cass1ons charpcter cakes
te1ed on real estate located m Sutton defendants
table color tv , mtsc
week Call Carouser Con
The construchon of new housmg
&amp;sheet cakes Call 992 6342 fechonery, 992 6342 for '"
1tems
or 992 2583
Blue Band will be en
formatton
w1th modern water and sewer sertertainmg at oss1e's Auc
Yard Sa le, Fnday &amp; Satur
VICes m these areas, which may be
t1on House '" Middleport
day, October 17 18 Baby
unpacted by the new Ravenswood
at 7 p m Saturday
1tems. 10 speed b1cycle , CB
r----------------------~1 startmg
Br1dge and other factors , would also
October 18 Bluegrass &amp;
rad1o bed spreads other
Country mustc Admtss•on
household 1tems On Rou!e
stimulate local econorruc develop$,'! 00 each, half pnce for
681
at Alfred Watch for
ment, Jenmngs reported
I
Children under 12
stgns
A local survey 1denhfted the tentahve housmg needs, possible s1tes
and other data Public meetmgs
were held to gather more mformabon from the three comrhunlly areas
cnme Most people arrested 111 rural
By JACK A. SEAMONDS
Cop1es for the 1Year I report have
areas are from 16 to 19 years old,
Associated Press Wnter
been
sent to governmental agenc1es
COl UMBUS Ohw (AP) - The and 74 percent of them are under 30
m
Colwnbus
and Washmgton C E
Wr.te your own ad and order by ma1l w1th this
'
dn ector of a cn me prevention agen- he sa1d
coupon
Cancel your ad by phone when you get
d1rector
of
the
Blakeslee,
execuhve
" If rural people knew how
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
results Money not refundable
C} sa) s rural residents who don 't
cornrrusswn,
reported
that
the
vulnerable
they
are
m
terms
of
rural
111 Court St., Pomero'f, 0., 45769
Jock the1r doors at mght because
I
Jl2,000 Farmers Home Adpollee
protectiOn,
I
don't
know
what
they ar en't wom ed about cr1me
rrumstrahon grant for the Year II
they'd do,' Phillips sa1d
Nama ,------~---------need to change the1r athtudes
program has been approved w1th
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
He
sa1d
easy
access
to
cars
and
You walk up to 10 houses m rural
$4,000 m kmd services to round out
available
roads,
and
the
ISOlatiOn
of
Oh10 a nd you'll fmd four of the doors
the necessary fmancmg
some rural homes make them easy
aren't loc ked,
sa 1d Howard
• ANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS
Durmg Year II three meetmgs, at
p1ckmg
for
vandals
and
thieves
Philli ps, director of the Natwnal
1-Card of Thinks
41-Houststor Rent
least,
some
of
wh1ch
w1ll
be
pubhc,
2-lnMemorllm
Phllhps said that 111 one Ohw coun4l-Mobllt Homes
HUJ a! Cn me Preventwn Center at
3-Announcemtnls
lor Rent •
Will be set up m the areas of Raeme,
ty lvllh many weekend homes, the
Prtnt one word m each
The OhiO State Umvers1ty "Some of
4-Giveaw•v
44-Apertmtnt ,.r Rtnt
below
Each
tn
space
Tuppers
Plams
and
Portland
to
t-HIPPVAdl
populatiOn sometunes doubles to
4rFRooms
the people w11l tell you they don't
,_Lost ancl Fot,~nc:l
ltlal or group of f1gures
4f-5..-ce tor- .... ,
40,000
people
d1scuss
more
spec1ftcs
of
the
planknow whe1e the keys to the front
'-YirdS..It
counts as a word Count
47-WintH to Rttll
mng
areas
' This county has seven sworn
1----P'ublk hit
• .._Equlpn\ent lor Atnt
name and address or
door atte becau.se they never lock 1t "
&amp; Auction
The
cornrrusswn
also
discussed
a
phone
number
1f
used
pcllce
offiCers
to
cover
900
square
He was Speakmg Wednesday at a
~WonledloBur
eMERCHANDJSE
You'll get better results
grant to the county comrrusswners
e EMPLOYMENT
three-day workshop for -county ex- IIU!es," Phillips sa1d "If you work
st-HCMJtthold GI)Ods
''
you
descr.be
fully,
SERVICES
which Will be used to a detailed plan
• that out over a year, countmg
Sl-CI, TV Rldlo Rqulpmtnt
tensiOn agents from 17 states
g1ve pr1ce The Sentme l
11-HIIp WIIIH
SJ-AntlctHI
for
county-owned
property
on
vacatiOns
and
stek
leave,
1t
amounts
reserves
the
r1ght
to
Ph1lhps sa1d vandalism and thefts
54-Mise Mtrdllndlst
12-Sitult.ti "'"'"
classify, ed1t or re1ect
Mu'lberry He1ghts 111 Pomeroy
ll- lns"r•nc:•
to one person a day patrolling the
55--lullellnt Supplies
accuunt for 51 percent of all rural
lf-IUSiMSS Trllnlnt
any ad Your ad will be
~Pth lor Slit
Jeff Burt, Buckeye Hills-Hockmg
area And I don't th111k that's a
1~Sdl0ol&amp; lnslructlon
put 1n the proper
\
IfIIIUio,.:rv
Valley RegiOnal Planmng Comumque s1tuat10n "
clas1f teatton 1f you 11
eFARM
SUPPLIES
I Cllltptlr
check the proper box
rrusslon mtroduced Pete Bell, an
&amp; LtV ESTOCK
He sa1d rural residents often don't
SATURDAY INSPECTIONS
These cash rates
11-Winted To Oo
below
•1-F1rm EQUipment
•nctude d1scount
engmeer who will be working w1th
bother to report vandalism and thefThe Ohw Stale Highway
12--Wanttd to luy
eFINANCfAL
the Mafletta headquartered comts because they beheve nothing w1ll
n- Tr~tekt tor Sale
Patrol's motor vehicle mspect1on
11- IUtlMll
U - LIYtstocll
Opportunity
rrusston
be
done
Wanted
team w11l conduct a volunteer ln'-4-Hiy &amp; Gr1ln
22-Monn tD L01n
For Sale
Others attendmg the meetmg were
17__,..__ _
"Their perception 1s also that the
U-Setd &amp; P'trtlllltr
2:1-PrDIMSIONI
specllon program Saturday from
Announcement
18. _ _ _..;__ __
S.rviCII
L W McComas, Onen Roush, who
court system wtll JUSt let the
9 a m to I p m at K mart on UpFor Rent
eTRANSPORTATION
19. _ _ _ _ _ __
presided , Chester Wells, Henry
crurunals go, so what's the bother'"
per R1ver Rd., Gallipolis.
JI-AlltOt; tor Stile
e REAL ESTATE
7J-VInii4W D
Wells, Fred Hoffman, and Thereon
Philllpssa1d
Jt-H..,.HfOrllltl
Anyone w1shmg to have h1s car
20 : ~-----74-Motlrcyclu
21
_
_
_
_,__
_
_
_
l2-Moltl.. tlfNS
Johnson
He sa1d vandalism and thefts have
mspcelcd ts urged to do so.
75.t.•te .Parts
tor 111e
22 _ _ __,___ __
,,_,,,.,.,tor hit
I •cclllorltls
become so pervasive that people of77-Auto
• ..,..,,
~._.,,..., lullcllnes
ten don t realize how much 11 costs
If-Lots &amp; Acrtttt
23.,
,
Emergency squad runs
N-RHiaslltt W1ntH
2 - - - - - , - - - , 24. _ _ __.__ __
eSERVICES
4.
_ _ _ _ _ __
3-----~
Local Umts answered several
25
--_
- _.___.;
; - -_
-_
11-tt"" lmpravements
26. _
_
12-ftllllllllll"- I E•CI\I'Itllllt
HOSPIT &lt;\L NEWS
W1nt·Ad Adver1tllnt
calls on Wednesday, the M'e1gs
ll-EJ~CIVIfll'tl
'
5·:
.
Dtldllnes
6
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
Emergency Medical Serv1ces
27 ---'---r---M-EIKtrlcll
and
daughter,
James
Canaday
Sr,
28.
_
_
_
_
'
VETERANS MEMORIAL
&amp; Rtfr...,.•Hon
Headquarters reports
:t Jl .. M Dilly
.
7. - , . - - - - - ' - - - ' - - 29:....,.---'---:---IJ--.Gfteral Hlulktt
Admitted-Arti e Houdashelt, BHj. Nettle Carter, Tammy Crabtree,
II NMA llhl«&lt;.,
At I 35 a m , the Pomeroy Umt
16-MH R_.ir
Dillard,
Eleanor
Donley,
Bob8.
_
_
'
Pearl
lorMendly
well , Em1ly Kuhn, Pomeroy, Alvm
17--Uphoti..,Y
~·----+-:--took Phyllis Burns1de from her
Mye 1s, Reeds ville, Kimberly bl Dunphy, Vernon Fa~rchild, Dav1d
1~·------residence to Veterans Memorial
WII son, Pomeroy , Lynn Crow Garfield, Ros1a Hale, Randy Ham- · Hosp1ta, at 9 36 a m , the Mid32·----+---'--11 . -_
-"
--_
-12
_
_-_
_
_ 33:·--'-----:-'-Ratti and Other Information
Sy1acuse; Kathleen F'alls, M1d· mond, Dorothy Lavender, Richard
34,_ _ _...,..._ __
dleport Umt took Chr1stme Vmcent
dleport, Dana Howell, Pomeroy; Layne, Mrs Duane LeMay and
'
tiWGrds or U•u.. r
from her home to Holzer Medwal
13·- - - - - - 35
.
,
.
.
Amee Hubbard, Syracuse ; Ina daughter, Ke1th McCarty, Fanny
Cllb
CMr..
Center, at 5 17 p m , the Pomeroy
14. --:--'----.,.--l .. y
Metcalf, Jason Ntegler, Lo1s OsborIN
liS
Hupp, Long Bottom
Umt took Dana Howet~ from his
15. _ _ _ _ _ _.,---:.:
111
ne,
Gregory
Phillips,
Catherme
ldlyl
Dtscha rged-Lola Gflff111, Velma
home near Pomeroy to Veterans
16. _ _ _ _ _..;__
•uvs
Imboden, Rose Lee, Stephen Sm1th, Plymale, EriC Roach, Garrett
Memorial, the Transfer Umt took
Cha t Jes Yost, Ray Su ll1van, Luvema Saylyr, Everett Sharp, Ge01ge
Stephen
Smtih f1 om Veterans
Sharp, Emma Stewart, MaviS
Hayman, Sarah Boyles
Memorial
Hosp1tal to the Holzer
T~ylor, Harry V1ckPJ s .])Mail This coupon with Remittance
Med1cal
Cente1
at 5 12 p m , the
In mtmery. C:ard of Think'""' Otlltulry 4 cenh ,., Word u 01
BIRTHS
miiMtftum Clllt II 111\raftct
umt
took
Mrs
Arnold
Hupp
same
The
Daily
Sentinel
'
1
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Mr and Mrs bon Bowman.
!rum her horne to the office of a
Box 729
1
DISCHARGES
MCliN It Home UIH oM
areac-llld •ly wltlli Cll" w1tt11
Galhpchs, son , Mr. and Mrs Gary
phys1c1an
at
5
48
Gf11tr 2S CeMt dllrte for ldl Clrryl.,. . . . Nu....... IR Cart e1 T...
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
'
I
Ralph Amus, Mrs B'!.bby Bollmg
Murray, Jackson, daughter ,
SfftiiMI

1

Candidates' night event set

Reedsville •••

llqu,datton sales Get top

18

WANTED TO BUY
GOLD,
SILVER,
PLATINUM, STERLING
COINS, Rl NGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC ITEMS AB
SO L UTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP, MIDDLEPOR T,
OH 10 992 3476

Deputies check two accidents

OLD COINS, pocket wat

ches etaS~ lnngs, weddmg

bands, d1!1'monds GOld or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley,
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co10 Shop, Athens, OH 592
6462
WANTED TO BUY Class
rmgs, wedd1ng bands,
anyth•ng stamped 10K,

"'
~·

whatnots, lamps, stands, or

Curb lnflatl~n.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

l
l

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Addrau _________________

,_-~

,_...........

...

····~

...'"

·-·j

't,,,.. .....

~------------------~----J

,,.
'"
'"

;x::::::::::::t~e~p ~"!i!!d ::::::::·
GET VALUABLE tra1n1ng
as a young bUSiness person

and earn good money plus
some great 91fts as a Sen
t1ne1 route earner Phone
us nght away and ge1 on

the ehgJbohty I1SI at 992
2156 or 992 2157

'

'.

most

fireplace, .,. fully carpeted,
large sun deck
pat1o
Wlthm walk1ng dtstance of
elementary &amp; h1gh schools

Ca ll985 3814 ar992 2571

TWO story older home,
se v e n
rooms ,
bath,
b as ement
hardwood
fl oor s, fireplace On four
la rge lot s wtth 1':'1ver froo
tag ~ £, !-:,Ma 1n
Street,
Pom~r,p~
F1nanc1ng
available rCa II after 5, 992

.•,,

RNs,
look1ng
for
...... JIIengmg and reward1ng
work~ T.red of rotat1ng

1d~as

1n

res1dent care With a h1ghiY
mot1vated staff? Pomeroy

Health Care Center has the
answer for you Due to
achtev 1ng near max1mum
census ~
we now have
openmgs for full and part

t•me posJtJons on day Sh ift,
but will cons1der other sh1f
ts

Cam~tltlve

salary, ex

cellerWworkJng cond111ons,
life

"

'•'•'
'
•''

1nsurance

and

dJsabJIJIY pot1cy at no cost

to the employee, and
hosp,tal1zat1on 1nsurance
available Come VISit us or
call Nancy Van Meter,
R N, D1rector of Nursmgl
Pomeroy Health Care Cen

ter, 614 992 6606

•

'•

,••'

,,..
..''

HAVE A Toy Party &amp; get
free Chr.stmas g1fts Call
992 3561
WANTED LIVE IN lady or
g.rl 992 2686
Telephc;me wor:kers needed

773 $476 or 773 5465
12 Sotuatoons wanted
Wt LL do odds &amp; ends,
panet1ng, floor tile, ce1!1ng
tile &lt;;all Fred Miller at 992
6338
-- ~

.
'

'·

'•

'I,·
,.
,.'

''

~·

Pr.ced reduced to $12.500

742

Jon

Prtce reduced owner must
sell 3 bedrooms, 2 If:~ baths,

large familY room W1th

Dw1ghl GOinS 992 7132

32

room

house

13

Insurance
---- -----

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN
can

cel led?
Los1
your
operator's r1cense? Phone

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three

bedroom ~

for Sale

pet 1971 c ameron , 14 x 64,

two b,edrooms new ca rpet
1972 Champton, 12M 60, two

Cameron 12 x 6P two
bedrooms, all el ectnc 1971
Skyl 1ne 12 x 65, two
bedrooms bath &amp; '1a, new

carpet

MUst

12 x 60 , two bedrooms

Housing
Headquarters

T~~~l~~:t J3.
16 E Second Street

Phone
1-(614)-992 3325
NICE
HOME

COUNTRY
has 3

bedrooms ,

modern

bath, large eat 111 k1t

chen fu r I basemeht 011
forced a1r turnace, T P
water
out 33 way

$32,500
SUB DIVISION -

30

acres plus on o ld 33 near

the new rest home Ideal

trade Call anyt1me 949
2038

excel lent cond 1t1on
Par
t 1ally
furnt shed,
un
derpmnmg anchors 992

7473.

x 60 wtth buil t on room for
w ood burner $5,000 949

2042

A FRAME
E a st

20 acres

bndge $50 000
' ,
COUNTRY LIVING - '.
70 ~ ~r~!, with good
feriees 'on old 33 Two
houses, 2 bedroom
tra1ter, natural spr ing
and atr mmerals Th1s IS
a htll farm w 1th some
n1ce t1mber
Asktng

$65.000 oo.
OPPORTUNITY
Workshop for the han
dyman off 33 North
Duplex for add1t1ona11n
come Can be turned 1n

to 4 apts very easJIY
T P water and 3 acres
plus Bulld111g's only 12
yrs old Ask1ng $45,000
HAVING A PROBLEM
SELLING, TRY THE
TEAFOI!DS AT 992·3325
or 992 3876.

down

HIGH - A SIX year Old
house w1 t h J bedrooms
extra large I1V1ng room

-!J::::==~~~:b~Rent = -

finished) Has a wood
burnmg stove and 2
acres w1th a garden

from Pomeroy

and a full basement (not

$29,900
EASTERN SCHOOL
OISTI!ICT - A b1g
bea~tlful
k1lchen

heatllator fireplace, full
basement, and 4'/ 2-- acres
rs 1ust par1 of the charm
of thiS 2 bedroom home

Allfor $36,500
FEEL CRAMPEO•

~

You won't tn th1S 4
bedroom home Has a
n•ce kl1chen w1th lots at
cab1 nets and 1S sttuated
on 4 level lots Several
storage bulldmgs and IS
close t9 the m1nes

rent on Sf Rt 143 3 m11es
F ree gas

$200 00 per rnonth 949 2057Complete pnvaay
House for rent , four
bedroom 992 57 42 or 992

2D94

Holiday Helper!
Printed Pattern

pe tcd,

5165 00

depos1t reqUired

rooms, bath, adutts only,
no pets M1ddleport 992
3874

board

the

py

month

~

9

Home Park
992 3954

Ch esh~re

•

4J ___W_lt!!_f~dJ~~e:!!.t ~WORKING couple needs
house to rent 1n Me1gs
Ga ll1a area Prefel'i country
se t ] 1ng
Referen c es

available
(Athens!

Ca ll

S] ---- ~'!!'£!'!.!~-- ­

ATTENTION
( IM
PORTANT TO Y.OU I W1tl
..-pay cash or certtf1ed check
for anftques and collec
t1bles or ent1re estates
Noth1nQ too large Also,
guns, pocket watches and
co•n collectiOnS Call 6I 4

54

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

HEATINGOIL No 1&amp;No
2 Buy now at Summer
Pn ce s

2205

E xcels1or Co 614

&amp;

19

Used V 30 D1tch W1tch tren
cher

w1th hoe

1 614 694

7842

New Wood Burner

4938

doubles. as a smock or tuniC
ttants
Pnnted Panern 4938 M1s~s
SJZes Small (8 10) Med1um
(12 14), Lat~e (16 18) Med1um
likes I 518 yards 4~mch
$1.75 "' . . pdtlm. Add 50C
fir .a 111111111 11r •m-c~~a
lirllllil 1111 .... SeoHI 18:

ln..

Stoves

Only $395
plus blower
1 GoodM Ward
Electrtc Range , 575
1 Good Used
Gas Range
$100
1Good Used Frigidaire
Refrigerator , suo

Q,...""

POMEROY

~LANDMARK

""E. Main
" St.

PH 992 6342
TRY US!

Slles from qx6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Complet e Dr y Cl ean1ng
a nd Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora pen es
1 Furn 1ture
c We're N o 1 1n

Ph 614 843 2591
6 15

ttc

__
1

CARPENTER
SERVICES"

s6 ==~ ~e}S:tOr Sate
HOOF HO LLOW

Hor ses

and pon1 es and n d ng
l e sson s
Ev e ryt l11ng
1magtnabl e m hor se equ1p

ment

Blanket s

be lts

boots etc E ng t1s h and
We st ern
Ruth Ree v es

(614 1698 3290

RUTLAND
FURNITURE'S

- Addons and
r emode lmg
- Roofrng and gutter
work
- co ncret e work
- Piumbmg and
elect nca l work
(Free Esf1mates)

CARPET SHOP
ROLL

REMNANT

SALE

V.C. YOUNG II

CLOSEOUT
PRICES
Green •••
SS9
B lue
Rubber Back •• • •• SS4
12 , 13 1
scg
Su mm er Br own ••• :u

992 621S or 992 1314
Pom ero y Oh

~ 3!~~!ati~
-- -----

12 x l J

~--

----

Aut os for Sa l e

71

12 x l 2 4

1971 Vega

two doo r good
t1res run s I ne some ru st
Ger lach 463 Grant Str eet
M•ddleport 992 5877 afler 4
pm

12 ;d 5 4

243w.ti7~=NY '
Hill.,..

GET

A

N1Ce

SOft

lovable

k1tten from your Humane
Soc1ety Shots &amp; wormed
Donat•on requ1red
9rn.

6260

I" t;no..-.

Hours 12 7 daily,
Toes Tabby s •
IIi a pure . bl&amp;ck, all

..,, . . . .
•
, 1:'"'2·62110,'
Wily .pul !ltl with fiiclr pn~
;·U--.,T,...-a;:.c,;_o~ld-:n~o-".,"
, ·,·~-y-o-i
u~
- aatilrs, PI bettlr quahty' '
future
MeigS •..--tounly
Send for o•r NEW fAU.WINTER
Humane Soc•ety, 992 6260
PAlTERN CAlAtOG 94 patterns
Shots I' wormed, one
Free Pattem Coupon (worth
m1niature collie type
I!~)Cltllal. SI.OO.
female, one shept\ard type
=·-I~ -~JS
f~ma,Je. dne black x tan
• s1l
.75
Kerr female one walker
lJt.Giicltfli .,..... 1.7t
hound male
127...... ·~ Illllll
1 7S

W

SELM ER

wood en

clannet
$100 00
Hollo n
tenor saxopho ne, $250 oo
99 2 2 429 after 5 p m

197d Datsun 210 hntchback
contact Wayne Turner
R utr and Ot110

1979 Old s Roya le

aa

two

61 == ~ai~§~P~ ~ni Dozer

d 1eset

39 13

Dee r e,

backhoe ,

way

d1esel

e c $9 750 Bobca t d esel
load er $6,000 D1tch W, tY,
trencher

$3 500

Vermeer

trencher 100 h p $17 500
Goosenec k tra iler 3 axl e
$3 300
Tr ader
3 axl e
new $1,600 Ca ll 1 614 457
3139

$58
Clad Wood •• •• •• SS6
Canyon Ru st • •
"'79
Sa nd Bet g e • ... '75
Honey Gr een "...'78
K19
F re nch Blue
Sl56
Rubber Back •• ••
12 x 15 1

12 ld4

12 x 15'

rru ck s tor Sa l e

72

1977 CHEVY Ste p srde

1 1

ton
350 eng1ne
au1o
As k 1ng S2 550 Number to
ca ll Y92 3240
1971 Ford
autom at1 c

Drive A Little Save A Lot

F100 p c ku p
S5 25 DO 992

v~

CARPET SHOP

63 26

to Bu y
- Wanted
-------r-

62

- ~

CHIP WOOD
diameter 10

Po les max
o n large st

S12 p er ton Bu ndled

slab $10 per t on Del 1vered

to Oh10 Pallet Co
Pomeroy 992 2689

Rl 2

~ _ __ -~~est~c ~
Horse for sal e o ne &amp; on e
half year old sorr el frl ly
ver y gentle, r easonabl y
pnced 99 2 6 134 '"'

Ca m per ,
exce llent con
d 1t 1on sot 1d sides pop up
fu rnace stove w1th oven
fn dge s teeps 7 985 4279

---

=

----83

...

---~-

Hom e
Im prove me nts

....

S &amp; G Carpet Clea n1 ng
St eam
c l ea ned
Fr ee
es h mat e
Reaso nab l e
r ates Scotchg uard 992

6309 or 74 2 2211

Polled Her eforQ cow w1 th
bull calf Good mil ker/ vac
onated &amp; wor m ed (304)

Re,model1ng
panel ng
ce 1llngs pa tn t 1ng 99 2 27J9

---

8-2 -

71

Autos for Sale

1968 Chevy M a libu

needs

mechanical

$75 00 985 43 46

r uns
wor k

742

:S:e:r2ie~~

3 YEAR OLD regoste'ed
773 5381 or 773 5397

Rutland
Furniture2211
Ma m St

C.1mp ng
Equ 1pm en1

78

Bl

5

12

Older Allee Cha l me r s tr ac
tor
Needs m ec han1 cat

work $275 00 965 43 46

Peca n •

12 xll 3
12 x 14 4

door
fu ll power equ p
ment am im ~tereo cb
r ear defogger
l eather
sea l s sports wheels tan
dau roof more Only 9 100
m 11es Sharp $7200 00 Ca ll
Marv n Ke ebaugh Days
992 6614 after 7 ca ll 985

s tx

Slat e. St one •. • ... •

_

E~ ~ ~cll_l '!._9 __

_

DOZER w ork sma ll tob s a

spec talty
qu1 ck depen
d able ser vr ce 742 2753

J

&amp; F BACK HOE SER

V ICE l1 scensed &amp; bond ed
se pt tc tank tn stal lat, on
wa1 er &amp; ga s l1nes Ex
&lt;:avar.ng w or k &amp; tr ans1 t

layou t 992 7201

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

- P!Um-b~n 9 --&amp;1!i ea!' ~9

HE A f l NG &amp; a 1r con
d tf t&lt;Jn1ng ,
f ur nace
c le an1 ng pl umbtng
Ca ll
992 2364 after 5 p m

84

I;: l ectnca I

___&amp; Rcfngerahon
_.__ -------

S EW IN G
Repar r s

MAC HIN E

ser v1ce

ma kes1 992 2284

al l

The

Fabnc Shop
Pomeroy
Authonzed Smger Sa les
a nd Ser vice We sh arp en
SCISSOrS

IIJ~f~i~~~~~!~~~t~;L~~~~~.~~~~~;;E~~-1- REPA
E L woI R0 -D -

Dally SeutiDel

r.ffdi;.~·--

317 N 2nd Ave
Middleport, Oh1o

Utility HU1Id1ngs

Call949· 2710
9 28 I mo

blade 1974 $10 500 John

'

You'll g1ve tflanks at
dmners lor thiS handy I
that coveiS jOu so completely

IPDitlY DR!'ftiiG-BilOKER

Now open w1th a studto
m Pomeroy and R acm e
Classe s offe r ed eir e
Ballet, Tap and Jazz
For 1nfo and enrollm ent

Mrsc Merchamse

F ~rewood, $30 00 per load,
delivered, split, cut,
stacked 247 2424

M-12-14
L·18-18

CALL BILL CHILOS 992:2342
'

SM ALL

Rt 3, Box S4
Rac•ne, Oh

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STIJDIO

592 6076

Prospect H1ll , Pomeroy ,
OhiO 992-7822

........
............
bvltt

llist~rson

Stzes
' From 30x3 0 '

9 26 1 mo

Oh

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmark

_,

949 -2160
10 13 1 rn a pd

mo

Servo ce &amp; Qu.ality'
~========~+~==;;;;;;~==~i
"YOUNGS
L------~--_-_-_:...__o:._J.J_"'_u_ ;.._...J_

OFFICE 992 2259

. .; "'

Ca ll Tom Ha skm s

Park RouteMO&amp;ILE
33, "North
of 1,
COUNTRY
Home
~ ~";!~~Y Large lots Call

'
GOOD used llvtng room
su1te Richard vaughan ,

sk1rt~

Riggs Addition,
ttvel hOme on
ttmlly. rotm. r«rn-

FREE ESTIMATES

Farm Bulldmgs

992-7354

_=-~~~f ~~R,!~ __

grey 992 2805 or contact
Elden Walburn, 380 South
lhlrd, Middleport

Roger &amp; Dott1e Turner
992 S69l

cH&amp;ditRE - Beauttflll:0.d home overlooltll'\9 the
Oh1o -lftY.,. lf . you're te4klna tor .Pt.ac• and q~tiet
with pltn'Y 01 I'IJOnUM lflolne YGD-be III'DIIIf*lf,
call us-on thiS«Jt YOU'~!JOfto-it SAS.~ -

20 Years E xper 1enc e
All t ypes roofmg work,
New &amp; Repa ir
All ty pes of r emod elmg,
111S1d e and out

ALL5TEEL

Call:

vacanc1es Tra1ned &amp; ex
per 1enced 992 7314

motor
ltke new
A l so
f1rebnck &amp; apprO&gt;omatel y
2,000 regu lar brick color

992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949·2660

'I

10 51

- Backhoe
and
Dump Truck Ser
111ce
- Shop and Port
able Weld mg .

~ __ '=.U_!:~S._!!~ ~~~~ ­

Slone, 2 bag 7 horse power

Henry E Cleland, Jr

H

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp;
HOME MAINTENANCE!
SERVICE

12 Park St
Middleport, Oh.
Ph . 992 6263
Anyt1m e

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

Furn1shed apartment four

MORTAR mi xer, , make IS

17_ __Miscellaneous ...... _

.,m

PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

992-2478
9 28 1 mo pd

pe1s

3790

t'f-fk.- //.!.._~

-

Ex~ating

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Tr uck s
All related equ1pment

Between 4 6 call992 2362

camper se lf conta1n ed
Pnced r easonab le
992

yard w1th bJg shade '
frees JUST' $29,500
OPEN6DAYSAWEEK
· 9 To s-.- ALSO OPEN . "
MON ,AND FRIDAY
UNTIL 8 PM FULL
TIME STAFF•
REALTOR

:·
'
•••

10 7 tfc

If

9

month ,

~ No

New dmette taple

furnace and a nice level

'

992· 5682

stree1 par km g, fully car

sv111e, Oh1o 614 378 6295

A
CRACKLING
FIREPLACE - And a
wood burper 1S a[l 'YOU
need to lit!at lh1s 7 room
u.nusua\IY shaped house
It also has a hot water

somt green S20 oo p1ckup
lbad 985 3906

10

comp[etely fu rn1shed, off

1n your conta1ners Closed
Sundays South of Reed

ONLY'

----- -------F1rewood, some dry &amp;

Ph 614 949 2358
even1ngs &amp; Week ends

KAUFF'S

3324

HUMPHREY Farms 'have
good supply Kennebec
potato~ts on
hand now
Large SIZe, $8 00 per 100 lbs

$6,200

992 2143

ALMOST

any th mg on ALMOST
anyth1ng1

Pullins

one bedroom apartment,

992

turn th1S 6 room house

Housing
H eadq11arters

pnnt

Re pa .r
- Trans m1 SS1on
Repa 1r
Hrs Mon Fn
9AM 5 30PM

767 3167 or 557 3411

th1s 2 4 acres ch1tdren or
animal s can have the

•nto a home

" We

ycj

_Two bedroom apartm ent
w1th 1arge 11v1ng room &amp;
kttchen Furn iShed Adult s
orHy
Browns Tra 1ler
~92

and novelty
Shirts to r poh f 1C1anS,.,._
ba ll tea m s, bu s1ness or
md1Vt"u a 1s
Sh1r t s &amp; H at s M 00 &amp; up
SpeCI!ll School Rates

Ex per•enced Operator s
available for loca l work
• 2 rubber t1r e backhoes
el e~cavato r hoe 1 14

3 AND 4 RM lurm~h ed ap
Is Phone 992 5434

Pa rk

Shop

T ·s h~rts

mob1le

Apartment
_. _f 2_r _R ~ n_! _ __ _

44

ROGER HYSEU'S
GARAGE

Pnnt

I 22 !tc

Three bedroom house for

$26,900
ROMPING ROOM - On

tached And a storage
bu1ld1ng JUST I $17,000
REAL CHEAP! - With
a l 1ttfe work you can

county hills

s m a ll

Rc:ntals

NEW LISTING
CLOSE TO MEIGS

NEW LISTING - 4 yr
old country home of 3
bedrooms bath, large
family room, on h1gh
plus w1th some woods
for huntmg Near new

Str e et,

992-2259

available

the

build1ng, 514

Ma1n

payrnent 992 3921

POMEROY,O

home with 2 rooms at

overlookmg

_

Pomeroy, w•l l sell on land

)lme of their life In
eludes a 12x60 mobile

land

Mot&gt;1l e Homes
tor R ~ nJ __

TRA I LER spaces for r ent
Southern Valley Mobile

~4 _ _B~~n~~ !l~~~~ ~

water

TP

949 2862
949·2160

.

2 bedroom mobfle home, 12

for plotttng mto a mce

pro ,ect

---- · - - -

ROOM S for rent, roorn &amp;

1973 EAGLE 12 x 65 two
bedroom 1 &amp; one half bath,

contract,

General

n ~w

carpet B x S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x Vtand Street Po1nt
Pleasanl wv Phone 675
4424

sell, 2

storage bU1Id1ng Onlled
well At Letart Falls, along
St Rt 338 Call 614 247
2097

Street, Middleport or call
742 2607 $7500 00

PMC,

1 ~ 70

742 3030 or 742 2728

w1th

FOUR room house for sale
May be seen at 110 Lynn

new c ar

W1th 7 x 24 expando Ex'
cellent condtt1on
Phone

MobJie Homes

21t2 acres, 3 or 4 bedroom

4

__ ______
for Sale_. __ _ _

1980 70 x 14 mobJie home

MOVING

total electnc, !~replace,
carpel lJX&lt;?Pdburn,ng stove,
l0x27 d~~ 2 car garage
Mu$t see 'BS 3934

Mob1le Homes

32

bedrooms new carpet 1976

q ectroom Mobile Home 1
acre &amp; much, much more
No reasonable offer
refused May take some

2044

your

bath
cen1rat heat
10
sulated, storm w1ndows

7284 $26 500

1 need the ch1mney sweep

develop

- __

OLDER HOME &lt;&gt;n Long
St , Ruttand 3 bedroom,

&amp; a load of f~rewood 992

sh•fts? Feel the need to
''

.

!O~ 5~~

BE AUT IF UL :) bedroom

Real Estate

,,

~

cloth~ng,

what have you' Phone 992
7494

'

-

_ _HO~ eJ

ran ch bnck home tn Baum
Add1t1on W1th new garage
&amp; geme door Gas he~t.
newly mstalled central atr
condt t 10111ng fam11y room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap
pl1anc es built ln newly 1n
stalled erec:;: t nc breaker
system
attracttvely
decorated j:)asement
2

Jewelr y, Pomeroy, OhiO

fant &amp; Children s

"Last week, due to a computer error, I was
This week, due to a computer error, I was rehired!"
31

drapes

Free Est1mates
Rea sonabl e Pn c: es
Call Howard

992 3324

992 5732

attracttve

F 1ve room ho use w 1th ba th
near Rac 1ne 992 5858

TWO bedroo m

ava 1labl e All types home

baths fully carpeted w1th

All types of roof work,
new__ot-r..e p.aU'. -gutter s
and downspouts, gutter
cleanmg and pa1ntmg ..
All work gua ra nteed

949 2734

42

C~om

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

hom e real n ce - Brow n'S
Tr a iler Pa rk A dults onl y

Matn St , Pomeroy, Oh
Mo r t g ag e
money

f1replace new fue l 011 fur
nace new roof, &amp; spoutmg
basement ce men1 block

$26,000 court action filed

Director of crime
•
preventzon says
'attitudes must change'

---

ED
BART E LS Loan
Represenlal •ve, 1100 East

14K, 18K gold S1lver co ns,

Yard Sale ttems, In good
cond1t1on, sheets, curta1ns,
bedspread ~ blankets, 1n

•

I

f

Homes to r s-aie

bathroom, sun porch, &amp; a
back porch carpet1ng

pocket watches Call Joe
Clark, 992 2054, Clark's
~~ 1

0

.::.::-v,i:a~ted]o.::o:UV:: ::::::::
IRON AND BRASS BEOS,
old lurmture, desks, gold

se1110g Also do appra1s1ng
Osby IOSs1e) Martin 992
6370

Business Services

un

house • ql so two
boclroom lurn tshed &amp; one
b&lt; llrnom t urnt shed apart
mcnl !t Cn ll after 6 p m

HOUSE For r ent, StK
roo m s bath garege ~ f ull
basement centra l h e a t ..- a ~r
condtt iOn tn g n 1ce garage

l

Gold, s11ver or fore1gn
cams or any gold or Silver
1tems Ant •que furn1ture,
glass or chtna w111 pay top
dollar, or complete esta tes
No 1tem too large or too
small Check pn ces before

BEDROO M

t urn1s h ~(f

ce rpcled 992 3090

Ha ve- ~ac ancy m m y home
for elderl y per son Room
b oard ,
l a u n dry
r easonable 9 92 6022

f•n a nc 1n g,
new
old,
ref 1nancmg, and 2nd mar
tgag es Phon e 'i9 2 7000 or

TWO

~

House for rent four r ooms
unfu rnt shed, fully

';

etc Complete househo(ds
Wr.te M D Mil ler, Rt 4,
" Pomeroy, OH1 or call 992
7760

=

7593

-~--

t or Rent

H ou ~ e ~

t;~&lt;ll h

!

r1ng s, 1ewelry
Sli Ver
dollars, sterling, etc , wood
1Ce boxest~ar s anhques

1'"111 . .

-

Wanted to Oo

WANTE D t o Lease , coat
proper ty f or unde r gr ound
mm1 ng opera tt on Cc, l l 36 7

31

1

991 21M8

tJoneer, Osby A Ma rtin
(no )Unk)

i

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

be r sl13te roof mg doors
w mdows , pme tl oon ng etc
can be see n Satur day from
l O 5 c all992 6254 eve n•ngs

dollar Li st With the man
who has over 25 years 1~
t he new used and ant1qu e
furn1ture busmess
We
take cons1gnm ents Form
' format1on and P]Ck!JP~ r
.,..... Vl ce,- call ""9V26 70 o~ '"
West V1rg1n1a 773 5471 Sal e
eve ry Pnda y n1ght at 7
P m AVct1oneer Howard
Beasley , apprent1ce au c

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
IIO . . ' l ' I U ...... I

20 N 2nd St reet, M• d
dleport Oh• o We se ll one
p1 ece or e-nt1 re households
New used , o r ant•ques. m
eluding homes, far ms, or

~

wEs

BSwe
0 ep ers
R
toasters 1rons, all sma l l
a ppltances Lawn .mower
Nex t to St ate H 1ghway

Garage on Route 7, 985
3825
APP LI ANCE

SE RVICE

all makes washer , dryers,
ra n ges
d iS hwashe rs
diS p o s a l ~ wat er tanks Ca ll

Ken You ng at 985 3561

be for e 9 a m

pm

a(

or after 6

_: M.::H~ ~ep~r_:::: ::::

Sou th ern serv1ce Com
p an y, heatmg. mobile
home furnaces, electric hot

water tank repair Call 446

3 008 emergency n1ght num

ber , 367 7131

�. ..
. 12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. Io, 19&amp;1

EMS implements new procedures
M··•gs County Emergency Medical
Services h~s bcgur! implementation
uf new atlvanrt:!d procedures uf

patient care by area sq uads in Meigs
County. T~is new program is being
e&gt;iablished (u provide a higher level
of patient care and care rendered to
the 1·esidents of Meigs County.
Throu ~h lht&gt; n;1rt;,..i!"l'"'t;"r&gt; •\' ··11

ATIEND FARM FESTIVAL
Several res idents of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center attended the Bob
Evans Farms ·Festival Friday. Accompan ied by Terry Stotts, activities dir~ctor{, with the assistance
of volunteers, Dorothy Morris and
Donna Good, and Yvonne Massie
social director, were Ann and
Jerome Cook, Gertie Kloes, Lucy
Spencer, Henry Cunn ingham, Pearl
Little, Jessie Carr, Flossie Story,
and John Dill.

PARAMEDICS: Kenny Byer and Gary Ellis administrating advanced proeedu1·e to a patient during training exerciS€s:

Welsh reacts to sheriff's chamber talk
Republican candidates for Meigs
County Sheriff John C. Wel ~h has
reacted to the October•7 speech of
County Sheriff James Proffitt when
Proffitt alleged that most marijuana
in Meigs County is grown by welfare
and food sta mp recipients.
Welsh sa id he believes that the olr

Welsh further said, "Possibly the
current Sheriff would be better advised to attempt to control the
violators who threaten Meigs County
residents and their property ·ra ther
than to make publicity ra1ds

designed to enhance his re.elec;:tion."
"'"-~ ,_.,-.,, .';·- •
Weish made those. observations
following the opening of the Meigs
·coun ty Republican Headquarters -in
Pomeory;October 14:

In Meigs County
.'

t·uunty squad units working wilh
Life Lines to patients requiring atlhigher level o(care.
ph)'SICialls fl·mp Veterans Memorial
di tional care while prior to arrival at
These new procedures are being :
H.n spita I in . P&lt;11fl eruy , new
the lu ispil,al.
.
implemented and additional ;
pn &gt;&lt;;cdurcs and guidelines have
The implementation of this intraining to the Licensed Emergency ·
been drawn up and i111plementL-d to
!ravenous therapy program will
Medical Technicians of each squad :
allow squad personnel's License'&lt;:!
enable· the squad personnel to
station in the county, is .being con- :
Emergency Medical Technicians to
stabilize critjca}ly iU or \njured vicdueled to initiate these new •
establish and maintain lnlr~v~n&lt;l.Yli- .!im~.Jl!OJ:I' jn their. preparations and --~lll:!l.S..:-~-:-- :':--;:;:-:-:- ~;;--;-~
transport to the nearest medical · The total concept of these ad- •.
facility. . .
.
van~ procedures will allow Meigs :
FALL FESTIVAL OCT. 25
Ii helps S!!Uads to help stabilize the County Emergency Medical Ser- '
· Afall festival will be held at Letart
patient's condition prior to their
vices to provide more and better ser- :
Falls Elementary on Oct. 25, beginvice to the residents of Meigs Coun- :
arrival at the hospital, thus enabling
ning with a turkey dinner with all the
the patient transported to be given a
ty.
trimmings at 6 p.m.
.The dinner includes turkey, r-;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;~
dressing, homemade nOodles, green
beans, slaw, beverage and dessert.
Dinners are $3 for· a&lt;lults and $1.50
for children 12 and under.
Following th~ dinner games wlll
PROGRESS
be played. There will also be a country store, rna I«!up lady, and disco
room. Door prizes will be a warded.
The event is being sponsored by
Letart Falls PTO ..

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

NOW IN
All UVING ROOM SUITES REOUCID

30% TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH YEAR
« IN BUSINESS.

RETURN FROM CHARLESTON
Mr. and Mrs. James Criswell have
returned after spending two weeks
in Charleston, W. Va. caring for
their grandchildren whose parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Custer, were on
vacation.

MASON FURNITURE CO. ,
Mason,

Hert,nan Grate, Owner

773-5592

w. Va.

vious purpose of these marijuana

S€izures was politically motivated
and designed solely for publicity just
prior to the election.
Continuing. Welsh said, "If the
sheriff has ev idence of such illegal
activities as he stated, then arrests
should have occurred during the
past three years. It is strange that
the sheriff can find and seize
marijuana only a couple of weeks.
prior to the election and be unable to •
consistently control this problem for
the othe&lt;· years of his term ...
·Welsh stated furth er that " If, in
fa ct. Proffitt has the information
relating to welfare fra ud and food
stamp fraud, then he should provide
this informa tion to the propc•·
authorities wl1o would be able to

FRIDAY.
:OOOBER
17th- SATURDAY. OCTOBER 18th
•
I
!
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
-..-...----.
_________________ ._.._.._.._.._,_
.-.~--·-...J.-------~·----.._....__.._.._..__._.._._

Cloc~s

r-.. .

Course completed

£requencies.

Williams is a central office equipment installer in the company's
Athens district. He has been with
General12years.
Courses at the development center
arc designed to enhance employees'
job skills. The subjects range from
basic electronics to management
skills.

I
I

and knlt sla cks. Sizes

to 24 months and 2 .
to 7

6

SPECIAL
SAL£

JUNIOR JEANS

1

I
I

Special group of Wrangler denim jeans in
junior sizes 3 to 15.

II

REG. su.OO •••••••••••• SALE s7.88

I ..........___, I
i
1

PRICES .

----_..·-~·-~----_.._.._..._,_._..-

_!

.

FASHION
JEANS
MEN.'S 11895

FASHION

JEAN~

MEN'S 119.95

1

14.20

FASHION JEANS 114.90

FLANNELSHIRTS

1 Sizes 30 through 42 wa is!.
DEE CEE brand. SOlid col·

Colorful plaid patterns - 50% Kodel
polyester; 50% cot-·
ton. Sizes S (1414112), M (15·151/2),
L (16-16112), and XL
(17·17'12).
Two
pockets, full tails.
Excellent quality.

or grey or brown. 84% cot·
too, 18% .polyester. save

this wee k' End.

$}688

MEN'SS21.95

Carter· and other officials, meanwhile, were playing down the United
States' tensions with Iran.
The president, who called Iraq an
"invading nation" Wednesctaynight,
contirJued to emphasize U.S. support
for Iran's national integrity.
Asked on a campaign stop if the
administration would suppqrt Iran's
complaints against Iraq at the
United Nations, Carter said,
"Disputes like this should riot be settled throueh aggression or invasion
· of another country's territory."
The Pentagon denied a published
report that the United States and its
allies have built up an annada of 60
warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open to Persian Gl!lf oil traffic.

$699

MEN ' S 122.95

FASHION JEANS 117.20

,VAN HEUSEN"'
.~. . .~vv,

MUBkie stressed that if the
hostages are returned, the United
States would lift its economic sanctions against Iran and possibly allow .
the shipment to Iran of military
spare par\3 now stockpiled around
the country.
Chicago television station WLS,
quoting what it said were four
"highly placed sources" on three
continents, reported Thursday that a
deal is in the work io the United
States to trade milik.~- spare parts
for release of the hostages, now
spending their 349th day in captivity.

WASIUNGTON (AP) _ In a
report that could signal an end to the
191M) receMion the Commerce
Department said today that the U.S
economy grew by 1 percent in th~
third quarter due chiefly to a sharp
rebound in personal spending.
A preliminary report showed the
lnflatiOIHidjusted value of all goods
and aervlces - the real gross
. national product - rose by $3.5
bJWon . during the July-september
period to an annual rate of $1.41
trilli011.
' ·
Before . adj!Liting for inflation
GNP I'OIJe 10.2 percent during th~
quarter, to $2.511 trillim.

The third-quarter perfonnance
contrasted with the recoi-d 9.6 percent decline in real GNP 'in the
-second quarter. The Corrunerce
Department S&amp;id the turnaround
was caUBed by a 3.7 percent, or $91
billion, increase in final sales after a
10.2 percent decline during the
previous three months.
~ersonal spending, which had
fallen $2.9 billion in the second quarter, rose $55.2 billion in the third. A
key factor in that increase was
higher automobile sales, which
raised the purchase of durable goods
by $24.5 billion in _the third quarter

after a decline in the second.
·
, deflator Indicated prices rose by 9.1
After-tax ·personal income rose
percent m the third quarter com$51.6 billion during the quarter and pared with 10.7 percent in the
spending was up $54.7 billion. second.
. .
Savings as a-portion of personal inToday's report. '?dicated tha' by
come,dropped from 4.9 percent in one popular _defm!lion, there ":as no
the second quarter to 4.6 percent in 19110 recessiOn at all - sunply
the third.
because the downturn was limited to
Business investment rose $3.2 one calendarqua~_r..
.
billion in the third quarter after a . The popular defwtion of recess10n
$4.4 billion plunge in the second IS .two consecutive quarters of GNP
threemonlhsoftheyear.
decline. Statlsticl~ns . say the
The Commerce Department's economy began sliding. m January
measure of inflation, called the GNP or. Feb~ry, but the first quarter
deflator, showed the price spiral still registered an overall growth
slowed in the third quarter. The rate of 1.2 percent.

... '

.

-

./

...... '-...._...
~

{ /~ \
I; I I
.·. I

The original heavyweight
un· washed Levi jeans.

•FLARES
•STRAIGHT LEG

SALEI
VAN HEUSEN

·, I

&lt; _.,J

our new f-all selection in

neck sizes 141/z to

17 1J:~,

sleeve lengths 32 to 35.
Solid colors including
Super Silk and Qui ana, ·plus
a fihe groUp of patterns .

VAN HEUSEN $14.00
I ••

I~

•• I I ••• I

••••••• I

I •• •••

'10.92

VAN HEUSEN 116.00

DRESS SHIRTS ..•••..•••.•...••..•. , .••••••••111.70
N 116.50

............... ~ ............... '12.87

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

•

. POMEROY, OH.
&lt;

a _aoe»oo1'n~

DUTCH FLOWER BULBS

FORT SilL, Okla. - An investigation is under way into the crash of
a C-123 cargo plane that killed four crewmen, including three Ohioans,
at Fort Sill.
The Air Force Reserve plane crasbed at the artiUery center's west
range Thursday less than 30 minutes after its 8:30·a.m. takeoff from
the fort's Henry Post Airfield.
The plane left Rickenbacker Air National Guard Base in ColwnbUB,
Ohio, Qn Wednesday. A Rickenbacker spokesman said its crew spent
the night at Fort Sill as part of a training exercise.
Air Force spokesmen identified the dead as Lt. Col. Donald Griffith,
42, of Clarion, Pa.; Maj. Thomas Brady, 38, of Reynoldsburg, Ohio;
Capt. George Freeland, 32, of ColumbUB, Ohio, and TechnicaL Sgt.
Michael Snodgrass of Blanchester, Ohio.

Flood relief help deadline set
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The federal Small BUBiness Administration
says victims of August floods in five Ohio counties have ul!til Oct. 23 to
apply for SBA loans.
.
.
SBA disaster branch manager Nonn Davis said a loan off1cet' Will ·
take applications at .welfare offices in Colwnbiana, Guernsey,
MUBkingwn, Jefferson and Belmont counties during the next two
weeks.
"We want to insure that everyone who may need an SBA Joan has the
opportunity to file for it," he said.

Gasohol explosion victim dies
DAYTON, Ohio - One of seven people injured in an explosion last
· month at the Farm Science Review at Ohio State University has died
inDayton.
,
Richard Williamson, 48, of Cedarville died Thursday everung in the
• bw-n unit of Miami Valley HOspital where he was ll'ansferred after the
Sept. 26 accident in ColwnbUB.
•
The explosion occurred when a spectator inadvertently lit a container full of gasohol. The con~iner was part of an alcohol still display
which demonstrated how grain alcohol could be distiUed and UBed as
fuel.

CINCINNATI - Fifty-six firefighters probing the still-smouldering
rubble of a coal powder plant have been unable to locate the body of a
34 year-old roofing contractor.
Seven of eight people injured in the spectacular explosion of the Hill
&amp; Griffith Foundry Supply Co. plant Wednesday remained
hospitalized, three critical.
Wells said a head count indicated all 13 workers employed at the
:V plant made their way to safety.

. f

Gunman had killed girlfriend •

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 20. plaid patterns In

CINCINNATI - The Hamilton County Coroner says James Hoskins,
who took control of a Cincinnati television station for 12 hours, shot his
·girlfriend several times before going to the station and eventually
killing himself.
Coroner Frank Cleveland ruled Thursday that Hoskins, an artist,
died of a self-inflicted gunahot wound to the head.
Hoeklns, 41, took nine employees hostage at WCPO-TV for anJ10ur
and a half early Wednesday morning, telling them he had killed his
girlfriend, Melanie Finlay, in his apartment.

'

DRESS SHIRTS

!

DRESS SHIRTS ..•...

•

Probe begins in cargo plane crash

Firefighters check ruins for body

BOYS'

FOR TWO DAYS ONLY

.~ ''

FIFTEEN CENTS

The Iranians have threatened to
mine the strait.

FASHION JEANS 116.40

' )

and chainnan of the Local Corrections Planning
Board center back, were among those. who met with
Gatz Thursday to discuss the program which is
designed to work toward community correctional
programs.

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1980

U.S. economy shows ·third quarter gain

.

MEN'S WRANG'ERL $9.95

. Size 44 thru
1I ,$.21.95 Extra
1
Sale $18.88

.•

..

REG. s3.00 ••••••••••••SALE '2.39
REG. $4.00 ••••••••••• SALE S3.19
REG. SS.QO ••••••••••• SALE s3.99
REG. '6.00•••••••••• •·SALE S4.79

WORK PANTS

l!

denim . Many new styles
in the selec tion.

and carson Crow, assistant Meig:~ County prosecutor,

enttne

at

Could recession be over?

Decorative scarves
. add just the right
touch. Squares and
oblongs In prints
and solids.

REG. s16.00. •• •• : ....... SALE sg,58
REG. S19.00 ............. SALE sn.38
REG. s24.00 ............. SALE s14.38

SALE

Waist sizes 27 to 38
lengths 30 lhru 36. Most
all are pre·washed blue

relurned from a vacation in the

FASHION
SCARVES

:rr~;--

SPECIAL SALE!
MEN'S BLUE DENIM

Smoky Mounta ins. .

SALE $12.79
SALE $14.39
SALE $17.59
SALE $22.39
SALE$28.79

11

1
1·

RETURN HOME . •
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arnold, Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Kasper, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Smith and Mandy have

.. .... . ... ..... ,
•.•. , ..••• , .....
....... ••. ... .. .
, .............. ,
............... .

I

slacks, denim slacks

i
I

$16.00
$18.00
$22,00
$28.00
$36.00

I

1

II
I

vests .

REG.
.R!:G.
REG .
1' E.G.
R, ' G.

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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SALE

Kni t top s, swea t
s hirt s, cor du ro y

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MARION - Charles Williams of
Vine Street. Racine , a General
Telephone Co. of Ohio employee, has
completed a course al the company's Robert M. Wopat Employee
Development Center in J\1arion.
Students learned how to test and
repair " carrier " equipment.
Carriers can transmit several
telcphorye conversations over a pair
of wires by using different radio

,

' The Meigs County Local Col're(l&gt; Licking, Franklin, Ma ri on , emP!lasW: . co?U"unity place~ent ·
Uons Planning Board was presented Muskingum, Summit, Pike and ross.
and rehabilitation r~ther thanpr1son
a check for $1,682 in state funds to
In making the award, Gatz noted
for norH!anger9UB VIolators.
develop a wide range of community this is a demonstration progralil
It . was noted that ~e amount
correctional progr8ltl!l Thursday.
which will be evaluated on a con- rece1ve~ by each co?"ty IS based on
Thecheeltr:epresentsone-fourthof tinuing hasis to determine if parpopulation, per c~p1ta income, and
taxation along ~th seve.r al other
the money which Meigs County will ticipating commwtities can limit the
conunitment of non~gerous of- factors. Conurussione_r, R_tchard
receive {or the year ending June 30.
A total of $6,728 in Community fenderil to crowded state prisons, a
Jo?~ pro~s~ ~1cab~n of
.\
ColTectlons Act funds has been set major objective of the program.·
e_XIStirJg legiSlation t~ mc!ude a floor
aside for use here.
Gatz reported Ohio has an all-time figure for the counties mvolved in ( "" ,
Nick Gatz, Administrator, Board liigh of 13,500 persons in the eight the program.
of Community Services .of the
penal institutions of the state. he
. Last spnng, the county received
Department of Rehabilitation and said this is an increase of about 5,500, $10,000. under the C~rnmun ity
Correction, presented the check on since 1973 and that the capacity of Corrections Act as a plannmg grant.
behaU of the Governor's office to the
the eight institutions is considered to
Meigs County Commissioners.
be 10,1110. .
Ohio lottery winner
Also present were Carson Crow,
Emphasis of the community
CLEVELAND (AP) - The winassistant Meigs County prosecutor
correctional programs over the
ning
nwnbers selected Thursday
and chainnan of the planning board,
state will be to reduce the nwnber o~
night
in the Ohio Lottery's daily
imd Paul Gerard administrative
non-dangerous offenders sent to
"The Number" and the
game
1188istant.
',
prisons through rehabilitation
Ii.ECEIVES CHECK - Richard Jones, president of
weekly
"Pyramid" and "Lucky
Meigs County is one of nine · · programs in the counties. The ·
the Board of Meigs County Commissioners, left,
Buck"
games
are:
demonstration areas .In Ohio
program is expected to continue for
.received a $eck for $1,692, the first of four payments
The Number -148
receiving funds under the program
atlea.,tanotheryear.
to total $6,728, in Corrununlty Corrections Act funds,
Pyramid- 40 ; 539; 1628
created by the Ohio General AssemLocally, the plan is to use the
from Nick Gatz, administrator of the Bureau of Coin-.
money from the state to employ a
blyinJuly,1979.0therparticipating
Lucky Buck - 96; 373; 5678; 67627;
munity Services of the Departm!\llt 9f Rehabilitation
counties. and cities include Clark,
parWrne probation officer who will 3400112
and Correction. Commissioner Chester Wells, right,

WASIUNGTON (AP) - U.S. of- hottrs after Carter had attended a
ficials from President Carter on charity banquet in the city, and was
down, while denying that any deal to plead Iran's case in its ?Jklay war
has been made or is being with Iraq before the U.N. Security
negotiated, are sending conciliatory
Council later today.
signals to Iran in a bid to free the 52 ' Rajai is the · high~st-ranking
American hostages.
Iranian official to visi! the United
Carter Said Thursday he would be States since revolutionary forces
Willing to meet and diScuss the overthrew the late Shah Mohammad
· hostages with Iranian Prime Reza Pahlavi in January 1979.
Minister Mohammad Ali Raja!, in
There were no indications the
Neo;r York for an ~xpected ap- hard.line Islamic fundamentalist
· pellnlllCe at_the United Nations; "if · would meet with carter or any other
he should be amenable." Secretary U.S. off'-,laJ, but Rajai's trip neverof State Edmund S. Mwrkie added
theless fueled frenzied speculation
that "the door is open" for
about the hostages and U.S.
negotiations.
relations with Iran- all of which the
Rajal·arrived in New York shortly
Pentagon and the State Department
after midnight Thursday, about two
tried to dispel.

Wine or blue Devon Coordinates in misses sizes.
Blouses, i ackets, slacks, skirts, sweater and sweater ·

REG. $525.00 Che ~ ry . ... .. . .. . . . Sa I.e $420.00
REG. $630.00 Mallie or Oak ,. , ... Sale $504.00
IR EG . $695.00 Oak .............. Sale 5556.00
IR EG. $875.00 Pin ~ .... , ......... Sale $700.00
IR EG. $975.00 Che ~ ry., ., .. , , .... Sale $780.00
Lay-Away for C~ristmas
At These Special sa te Prices!

.! ·]..~1\usterlJtolVt\~
II SPORTSWEAR

Columbus Police Department and
the Ohio State PatroL

SALE

Howard Mi ller Graddtather
are exqu isite time
pieces that will give your hom e a per sona lity a11its own.

consistent enforcerrienl combi ned
with loose accusations of criminal

criminal investigations with the

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Hostage deal denied

_._... ..

WOMEN'S DEVON SPORThl'IEAR'

CLOCK SALE
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assa ults.
Utilizing his long experience in

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VOL. 31 NO. 131

As a police officer with over 25 years
of experience. I find such in·

\'iolent crimes such cts shooting and

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adequateiy investigate this misuse.

activity intole•·able in an electi on en' furcement offi cial.··
Welsh sa id the policy of his office
if elected sheriff would be to concentrate on. the crimes that affect
Meigs County residents daily suoh
as tl1eft. b1·eaking and entering, and

Funds .allocated for
.~ -·r.ange__ progr_am -.-·

regular styles plus westerns.
Wrangler , Mr. Leggs and
Campus brands. Friday &amp;
Saturday Only.

BOYS $6.95 FLANNEL SHIRTS •••••••••••••.. ' 5.93
BOYS '8.95 RNINEL SHillS ................. '7.63
BOYS '9.95 FIMNEL SHillS ................ '8.43
BOYS '10.95 FLANrtn SHillS ............... '9~

Weather forecast

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Showers and thundersto1111!1 likely tonight. Lows in the low to 1flld508. Partly cloudy Saturday, Highs near 70. Chance of rain 70 percent
tonight and 20 percent Saturday. Winds southerly to southwesterly 1~
25 mph tonight.

SATURDAY STORE HOURS 9130 AM TO 5 PM.

EROY

the daJ wttb the old fashioned long handled tltlrren. Another 60 or so
aenlor cltlzaw helped Widnesday with peeling the apples. The proceeds
go Into the IOCillhare of funds required for operation of the Center.

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ExteudedObloForecallt-SundaythroughTueada)':Varlable
cloudiness and cool through the period, Highs in the mid-50a to mid60s. Lows in the 40s Sunday imd Monday; cooling to the mld-308 to low
40s Tuesday. .

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