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                  <text>President gets Democratic Labor support
OP

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) - Despite northeastern Ohio's economic
troubles, Preside~! Carter will get its traditional Democratic .labor sup- '
port Nov. 4, ~nd hi~ vasit to Ybungstown tqday was designed to help firm it
up, campaign offiCials say.
Ronald Reagan also appeared in Ohio Monday, to address the Con!~renee of Chief Administrators of Catholic Education meeting in CiJ1.
_cmnati~ Reagan_amved in- the-Queen City· aoollt--11~ 3().. and- left irnmediately for Louisville, Ky. following his address.
Gerald Austin•. the incumbent's Ohio coordinator, said Sun®y night
that previously reluctant steelworkers and other union members - courted hea:e 12 days ago by Republican Ronald Reagan - now are showing
enthusi8Sffi for Carter.
·
"You'll see it tomorrow," lie said, referring to plans for Carter to appear at noon on a television station town meeting program, and to greet
what Democrats said would be an enthusiastic crowd of several thousand
outside the downtown studio.
·
. Austin, of Colwnpus, said local Carter-Mondale campaign ~orkers
spent the day Sunday turning out hundreds of signs, "and they were going
as !liSt as they could be made~"
·
R~ Saadey, a campaign volunteer in suburban Austintown, said
the office there made nearly 150 signs. "We're going to give the president
a real blast," he said.
Saadey, a construction worker, said the president's appearance "will
help him tremendous,ly. Even though a JQt of people are upset because the
steel mllls are closed, here he is, coming in two week.s before the election
and taking the heat. " .
.
In response to a question, Austin said Carter's trip to Youngstown had
.been planned all alo11g and was not a reaction to the R~gan visit on Oct.
8. "It was just a quest)on of when it would be,'' he said.
Reagan met in private with a group of local citizens, including several
unemployed steelwor,kers and their wives, and visited a shutdown steel
plant where he sought to portray the !allure of Carter's economic policies.
About 10,000 steelworkers have lost their jobs in the Mahoning Valley
over the past two years. . ·
,

r

--'MY NAME:'5
WIN1H~·-·
·
WHAT'S
.

·

NAM~.

ALLA.B WILEeN BERMAN/

ALIA5 ·HERAAAN WILLiS ...

, Austin said the president's appearance, followed by a trip to nearby
Niles Tuesday by his wife, Rosalynn, represents an attempt to beef up his
. support in 'Ohio, a crucial state with a big block oU5 electoral votes.
Mrs. Carter will continue on to Columbus and southern Ohio after her
appearance in Niles Tuesday morning.
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, [).Mass.,
werein Youngstown last week;.and.the expected Cart~!~·Reagan debate is._
tentatively to take place in Cleveland Oct. 28.
.
. Aust!D said he ..;as delighted with the increased concentration on the .
·state, calling it "the center of the universe " as far ·as the presidential
election goes.
·
Only 40 people were picked to participate in the town meeting at the
studios of WFMJ-TV , because of space limitations. Their names were
drawn Saturday at a public lottery telecast at the station. More than 3,000
people had submitted entries for the prograin.
·
·

Mei--eas y' outh ·h urt
..
A 16 year-illd Meigs UOunty youth
was injured in a t.\\(~111' crash Investigated Sunday vby the GalllaMeigs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said the brakes failed
on a
driven by' James E. Peyton,
Dexter, at 2:35 p.m. on Meigs CR 4
as Peyton was coming out of a
private driveway.
His car then collided with a westbolmd car driven by Denver H.
Nelson, 60, Middleport. Peyton was
reported injured, but was not
treated.

car

Slight damage was listed to ~th
cars and neither were cited,
trOOpers said.
The patrol also investigated a car·
deer accident in Gallia County early
Sunday morning.
According to the report, Richard
A. Corbin, 16, Gallipolis, was south-·
bound on SR 160 at 1 a.m. when a
deer ran Into the path of his car.
Corbin's car collided with the
deer, but the deer ran away.
Moderate damage was listed to the
car, troopera said.

. · · • "?tfjff.
. · ' 5£,1;;
.,,

·'

Carter gains labor support

en tine

aty
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL 31 NO. 132

.

a'CCI.dent

•

e

,..

m·

, ,, . •,' , •.· .. ·
· ··

•
FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1980

Bloody battle at Khorramshahr

by Eel Sullivan

..

Pers·iJJn Gulf .War entering _fifth week

'

HAHA.

GCXJD.' "ICE.D
INK",; "I STINK."
HA NA .' ~ GET IT/

..

Reagan, Glenn given endorsements
· COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Cleveland Plain dealer endorsed
Republican Ronald Reagan for president in its Sunday editions.
"In a race in which neither of the two major candidates has great
personal support from the public, the most important issue in the cam·
palgn is the appointing of people to run the government," the paper
.
said.
Who will appioint the best people? On this issue, Reagan wins hands
dQwri. Carter presides over a dispirill:d : and shatte~. ad.
mlnillration ..."
The Plain Dealer, along with the Columbu:, Dispatch and the Akron
Beacon Jounral also endorsed U.S. Sen. John Glenn for re-elction Sun· .
day .
The Cleveland Plain Dealer called Glenn's first term outstanding.
"There is nothing in his record to indicate that Ohioans should not
return John Glenn to Washington," The Plain Dealer sald. ·

'

WHAT DO
'rOU CALL
IT?

lceP INK.'
'

I ..

WHEW/
'TOU'RE · ·
TELLING' ME.'

- ·

16 people enter innocent pleas
CINCINNATI- Sixteen persons pleaded innOL-ent Friday to federal
charges of selling_drugs at the Internal .Revenue Service Center in
Covington, and elsewhere in Kentucky.
U.S. Magistrate Grrogry Wehnnan set $1,000 bonds for most of the
defendents and released them on their own recognizance.
A 17th defendent was In cuslodf in Pennsylvania.
The arrests resulted from indictments charging dealing in con·..
trolled substances from the IRS center.
Eight present or former security guards at the center were among
those named.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy and cool tonight and Tuesday. Lows tonight in upper

30s to low 40s. Jlighs Tuesday 5!H!O. Chance of rain 10 percent tonight
and 20 percent Tuesday. Winds southwesterly to westerly 16-15 mph

tonight.
EdendedObloForecast- WednesdaythroughFriday :FairWecJ..
neaday. A chance Qf rain Thursday and Friday. Highs in the 60s Wednesday and in the 50s Thursday 1\lld Friday. Lows in the40s.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)'- Iraq
said its infantry and armor consolidated an "airtight siege" of
Abadan and Khorramshahr as the
Peraian Gulf war entered its fifth
week today. But Iran said Abadan's
defenders prevented Iraqi tanks
from penetrating the city's defenses
and that house-to-house fighting
raged in Khorramshahr for the fourth straight day.
Iran also announced it renamed
Khorramshahr - which means fer·
tile city in Farsi - to Kh!JIIinshar,
which means "city of biOO\l" Itsaid ,
thi'naml!:'clu!nl!e w'as-mtribute to
the "epic resistance" put up against
the invading Iraqis by diehard
Islamic revolutionary guardsmen in
the port, which is 10 miles from the
refinery.city of Abadan.
The leaders of both governments
Ignored appeals from other Moslem
nations for ·a four-day cease-fire

GUan-e G'-'""'ector, lranlan·IOI'Ca!l

Hashemi Rafsanjaru told ber in an
interview Sunday: "The Iranian
Parliament will llllll(t ·•.s decision on
the hostage issue iJnntt;11at.ely after
the special parliamentary commission that is worldng now has
presented a plan, and that will happen by the end of this week at the

other vehicles and five enemy
"btmkers."

The communique reported housefighting was continuing in
the port of Khorramshahr, 10 miles
up the Shalt ai-Arab estuary from
Abadan, and said the Iranian nilvy
t~house

after "forcing the enemy to retreat
in hand.t~hand fighting and capturing heights overlooking the
enemy positions, completely
destroyed" an Iraqi ammunition
and equipment depot, and Iranian
artillery blew up another equipment
(Continued on page 10)

.

WASHINGTON (APl -The Carter administration, skeptical yet
hopeful that Iran is near a decision
on the hostage question, apparently
is rejecting an Iranian call that U.S.
radar planes be withdrawn from the
Persian GuH to remove "obstacles"
to the Americans' release.
,
Secretary 6f State Edmund S.
Muskie said Sunday the AWACS
reconnaissance planes were
deployed at Saudi Arabia's request
to protect its territorial integrity
during the Iran-Iraq war. He said
they have no offensive capabilities .
and denied they are being used to
pass Intelligence information to
Iraq.
At the siune time, Muskie real·
firmed the U.S. position of im·
' partiality in the war, but added.
without elaborating: "That position
may hlive to be adjusted as cil'"
cumstances develop.''
Muskie said the war is a separate ·
Issue from the hostages.
Iran's Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rajai suggested Saturday

e-

8&amp;E investigated ·
• The Meip County Sberlff's Depal'"
tmd II ilmltlptin&amp; the breaking
and enterlnc af- the Bald Kno~
Olurdllll Lebanon TOWIIIhlp.
•
. Taken.W't10118 boob, olllamps,

~· vacuamcleaner.
Tim Wllllama, Columbus, wbo
owns a trailer In Hudson Valley,

••

communlqlle" oaidr It 1:lalmed the
destruction of six Iraqi tanks, five

Agneta · Rarpberg, .aid Ayatollah

.

VAN LOCATED

IIC8I'tiCI'OW:

was evacuating the wounded "with
difficulty." Iraq, meanwhil e,
claimed it$ troops overran an
Iranian army camp at Aldaj, near
Khorramshahr. It said eight Irani an
soldiers were killed, 84 were taken
prisonerand 10 tanks were
destroyed.
Iran also claimed that its forces in
the Susangerd area, 90 miles north
o~ Khorramshahr, blocked an at·
tempt by Iraqi troops to advance
and forced them to retreat.·
Another Iraqi conununique said at
the northern end of the front, in the

Carter administration remains hopeful

A van owned by Jolumy D.
Wamsley, 35, Huutlqtoia, fol'
merly of PolDI Pieuut, ••• wu
found murdered Wedllesday ID
Mllea COUDty, was located
. $atvday Ia Huulllqtou. ne van
Wll found IINuldGaecl OD I
pukiDc lot aear tile Marshall
UDivenltyC.mpu. Ma-.
ly lllleriff'1 depu1meat aald DO
aew el- baw beellaoeovered ID
tile bomldde laveatipttoa.

FAIL SCENE- Seenel carrying out the f.U theme are belnR Ulld at
IIUJ1III'OUI bomiiiiD Melli County. This one at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Tern Reuter on fomw Route S3 - pumpkins, com ahoct and a

during Islam's holieit holiday, the latest."
Iranian · communiques repOrted
feast of id el·Adha, which began SWIday. The Koran, the Moslem holy • heavy fighting at both ends of Iraq's
book, forbids the spilling of human 300-mile invasion front as well as in
the central sector. But no major
blood during the period.
Meanwhile, the 52 Americans held change in the battle lines was repor·
·,
hostage in Iran began their 352nd ted by either government.
Iran acknowledged for the first
day in captivity today, and the
speaker of the Majlis, lran's time that the Iraqis controlled all the
Parliament, indicated that lt would highways leading into Abadan and
decide their . fate late this week or said they hit the besieged city with
early next week, just before the first "heavy weapons and artillery fire"
anniversary of their being made Sunday. But the defenders "returned the fire and prevented the Iraqi
prtsonera.
A Swedish radio correspondent, mercenaries from advancing;" a

Re8davule, repprt.ec1

that a stove
nslallen from the trailer within the
last four wee~~~. Both Incidents are
under Investigation.

that the United States could improve
prospects for releasing the 52
hostages, now In their 352nd day of
captivity, by removing the aircraft
and keeping Jordan from aiding
Iraq during the war. He called the
planes "obstacles to solving tile
hostage question."
.
Raja!, while In New York to ad.
dress the United Nations, also
predicted that the Parliament's
decision on conditions for freeing the
hostages was "not far away."
"We've heard statements like that
so many times over the recent week.s
that we've learned not to raise our
expectations,'' Muskle said on
ABC's "Issues and Answers."
"I hope it (the parliament) does
act soon and there're some Indications that it may," he added.
Vice President Walter Mondale, ,
campaigning in Hartford, COM.,
backed Muskie's assessment,
saying: "I see no reason to be lUIduly optimistic or unduly
pessimistic."
•
Iranian lawinakera, meanwhile,
gave conflicting assessments Sun·
day.
.

A hardline legislator, Assadollah
Bayat, said consideration of the
hostages will have to wait until the
Iran-Iraq war is over. Reached by
telephone from Beirut, Lebanon,
Bayat said the Parliament is to meet
on Tuesday, but that the hostage
issue is still in the hands of a sevenmember committee and there are no
inunediate plans for a lull debate on
the subject.
.
But the speaker of the 276-seat
Parliament, Ayatollah Hashemi
Rafsanjani, was quoted in an in·
terview 'with a Swedish radio .
cOrrespondent as saying the con·
ditions for the hostages' release
would be decided "by the end.of ibis
week at the latest."
Rajai said at his news conference
in New York it would be easy to
resolve Iran's previous demand for
•an official apology for American interference in Iranian affairs during
the rule of the tate Shah Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi.
President Carter has insisted the
United States will not apologize, but
Rajai said the administration
alrtla~ has done so in practice,

although he did not say what form it
had taken or who had relayed it. "All ·
it needs is probably to put something
on paper,'' he said.
Muskie sald he considered Rajai's
statement about the AWACS and
Jordan an expression of concern
rather than new conditions. "We
co'nsider our decision to deploy
AWACS as being in our national interest.. . consistent with im·
partiality" in the Iran-Iraq conflict,.
he added.
That position appeared to draw
support Sunday from the camp or
Republican presidential nominee
Ronald Reagan.
Fonner President Gerald R. Ford,
interviewed on . CBS' "Face the
Nation," said withdrawing the radar
planes would be a capitulation.
And Richard V. Allen, Reagan's
chief foreign affairs adviser, said on
NBC's "Meet the Press" that
removing the planes now "would
have ... unfortunate consequences. •' •
The AWACS are modified versions
of the Boeing 7f!l and carry
sophisticated radar that can 'see
electronically about 250 miles in all
directions.

Traffic·accide~ts claim 17 lives
(

ByTbe Auoolated Prell
A double-fatality smashup in Jef·
ferson County and the deatha In
aeparate accidents of two people
from the same lllllall Wood County
town Sonday litted Ohio's weekend
traffic death toll to 17, the Highway
Patrol said.
..
The patrol records traffic
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to mid.
night Sw]day.
The dead:

SUNDAY

STEUBENVIllE - Edward J.
Lyons, 21, ri Steuben~e, and
Karen M. Duplay, 20, of Panna
Heights, In a oge-ear crash on Ohio 7
in Jefferson County.
• BOWUNG GREEN - Ryan Olmstead, 4, of Bradrler, when struck by
a car on U.S. &amp;In Wood County.
BOWLING GREEN - Kenneth R.
Hardy. 37, of Rradner, in a two-car

crash on()hio 199'tn Wood County.

CINCINNATI Marlene A.
Reenan, 20, no hometown listed, in a
one-car accident on a rural
.Hamilton County road.
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE
- Wllllam F. See, of Washington
CO\If! J{ouse, in a one-car accident
on U.S. 62inFayette County.
MASSILLON - . Ernest D. Vaccanl, 22, of Canton, in a one-car accident on Ohio 241 in Stark County.
SAniRDAY
AKRON - Robert W. Crawford, 23,
of Akron; in a car-motorcycle acddent on 1 road ln Swmnlt County.
MIAMISBURG- Joanne McCoy,
43,_ of .1Miamlsburg, in a. two-car
• crash in Montgomery County.
CANTON - Danny Crisp, 24, Can·
ton, in a cal'"motorcycle accident on
a city street.
CHARDON Herman J ,

Newnian, 31, Garrettsville, in a twocar crash on Ohio 88 in Qeauga
County.
UPPER SANDUSKY - Kevin D.
PauUeb, 23, WoOdburn, Ind., in a
two-car accident on U.S. 30 in Wyan· '
dot County.
NORWAl.K - Stephen J . Rolf, 23,
of Wakeman, in a one-car accident
on U.S. 20 in Huron County.
OTTAWA- Michael A. Keck, 19,
of Continental, In a one-car accident
011 Ohio 15 in Putnam County.
RAVENNA- Ralph I. Moats, 30,
of Mantua, in a one-car crash on
Ohio 700 in Portage County.
FRIDAY
AKRON ...,. Freda S. Curry, 67, of
Mogadore, in a one-car accident on a
rural road In Summit County.
CIRCLEVILLE - Mearle E.
Logan Jr., 22, of Circleville, Ina onecar accident on a rural road In
Pickaway County.

�. ~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 20, 1980
Z-TheDaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, oct. 20,1980

Opinions &amp;
Comments

•

'

' _ _ _!.__~ -

-

S.A.P.?

'fRg-JJAlt.TSENTINEL
(USPS liJ-110 )

MEIGS-MASON AREA
I.Atten of oplDioD aft welcomed. The' sbould be 161 tbn 31110 won:lJ loag (or sub)ed to redu l""
Cioa .by tbe edJtor l ud must be slgaed wiUJ die 1lpee's addresJ. Names may be wldlbeld upon
publkatloa. Howenr, on request, ume1 wW be dilciOied· Letten sbould be l.a &amp;ood Wte, ad-

drnalB&amp; luues, aot persooallUn.

Pu.biJIIbed daOy ncept Saturday by The Ohio Valley Publilb.lq: Compaay- ~timt4la , lac.,
Ul C,..riSt., Pomeroy, ObJ,4571t. Bullnea:Offlce Pboaetst- !lSI. Edlto~l Pbootttz..%157.

NewsEdJtor
Ad". Maoager

.•

Robert Hoenlch

· . r7.: •
~~ .

tl:m~ n:&gt;-~._-.-, rr'le!o::::loo=o

HIGH GASOLINE BILLS

Oale Rothjeb, Jr.
Clrl Gbeeo

.

~v

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:. Letters to ·editor

..

~arEditor:
Our Leaders?

Let's go vote!

Almost every
minute of every day on Radio, TV,
and in the newspapers our minds are
filled with election infonnation of
the upcoming Presidential election,
and well they should.
We must not fail to vote. I've been
in countries where people were
fighting and dying for that right and
in a country that is a bout to revolt
for that right. Just·the same as our
ancestors fought and died. And, yes,
some of you reading this in WW II
did too. You in WW II are tired, I
, know. We called you guys and ·gals
Ole Retreads, but with respect. You
taught us, the young aries, how to
stay alive and what we were fighting
for.
So how about it? Let's all, retreads
from WW II, the Korean War, and
Vietnam War, get off it. Get people
to think, vote for someone. They
may not be overjoyed with either

candidate, but they darn well owe it
to us to vote, as we owe it to those
before us and ourselves TO GO
VOTE.
I must add that the news reports
from Iran last week vowed to keep
the Persian Gulf area open for shipping. They today threatened to mine
the gulf area. How many times have
they said "In a f-ew weekS the fate of
the Hostages would be settled" or
they would soon be releasing them.?
Oh, I'm sorry- some of you don't
remember. It must have slipped
your minds. I have the same
problem. Just a bit different though.
I can't get it out of my mind. We've
been on our knees for so long the
Iranians are trying to fill us with bull
leavings. You're 'right, I'm sarcastic
because I'm damned well fed up and
mad. I may be wrong, but it beats
negative thinking or just not
thinking at all. - Bill Foster, Box
475, Racine, Ohio 45771.

Dear Sir :
There has been a serious misun·
derstanding about some recent
meetings held in the public library.
Several interested citizens and
some staff members of the Com·
munity Mental Health Center met to
di scuss the possibility of
establishi!jg some type of local
assistance program for victims of

domestic violence. The need was
clear, but there was neither the funding nor any type of group organized
to meet this need.
In order to get our organization
started (select board members, ap'point officers, define scope, etc.), we
needed a convenient, local place in
~&gt;:hich to meet. Ellen Ball, director
of Pomeroy-Middleport Ubraries,
kindly offered us space in the
library.
' .

Finding ·a home
difficult task

•

NEW YORK ( AP) - The battle
for a · place to live already is
frustrating for many yooog families
and, because of a factor often ·
overlooked in the traditional supplydemand analyses, it may get
tougher.
That factor is the " no children
I allowed" sign.
F a milies already fa.ce a
depressing set of factors: a housing
shortage; a bulge in the age-30
population that seems destined to
add more pressure; rising prices;
rising monthly carrying charges.
Now, a new study shows, the "no
children" sign is going up more
frequently. The national percentage,
the study found, has risen to 26 per·
cent of all rental units from 17 per·
cent in1974.
The study .also ·found other per·
centages that add to the portrayal of
a a huge national problem, one in
which an eptlre generation could be
pressed into undesirable housing or
compelled to forgo ownership.
The study by the ·Institute for
Social Research at the University of
Michigan said families with two
children were excluded from half
the rental units surveyed, and those
with three children from 6 of 10.
Already, the report's autlibrs say,
"Families with three or more
children have been forced to live In
whar they see as lower quality
homes In Jess desirable or less con·
venient neighborhoods .• '
The authors, Robert W. Marans
and Mary Ellen Colten, the increase
of "no children" policies is evident
not only In newer apartment houses
but in older buildings which used to
accept children.
Their conclualons follow a government-8JIOIIIIOred survey they con·
ducted of renters and the managers
I
I

1981 .VOLKSWAGEN RABBITS·
·NOW IN STOCK
RIVERSIDE
446 9800

.

.

Incumbency isn'.t always an advantage

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
"It's a little difficult to judge the ·what be terms a "gentlemanly"
Being the incumbent during a importance of being an incumbent campaign.
"There don't seem to be any real .
period of ravaging inflation, soaring because !'rna freshman."
·
issues
in the campaign,'' Binning
unemployment and general
As a freshman incumbent,
economic discontent can sometimes Williams is vulnerable to attacks said. "I think Williams has been
devalue a congressman's stock at from opponents, said Tim responsive and has built up a
the polls.
Wyngaard, a member of the following In the district. That's what
Just ask U.S. Rep. Lyle Williams National Republican Congressional I would term the value of being th~
of Warren, a freshman Republican Committee In Washington. The com- incumbent."
Out of these meetings Serenity seeking re-election to the · 19th mittee's job is to provide financial
In the McEwen-Strickland race In
House, Inc. was formed. We now are district seat he 'snipped away from and Joglstlcal support for the conservative, largely rural 6th
in the process of setting up training long-time Democratic congressman Republican ·incumbents and GOP District, Harsha's influence is
classes for volunteers interested in Charles Carney by 2,000 votes during newcomers trying to unseat widely believed to be crucial.
transportation of victims to nearby a party split in 1978.
"McEwen will clobber him," said
Democratic congressmen, he said.
shelters. These classes will be held
Portsmouth
.lawyer Ron McKenzie,
Wllliams isn't sure what in"The first couple of terms are
at the Gallia-Jackson Mental Health cumbency is worth.
·
chalnnan
of
the Republican party in
usually where. a congressman can
Center in Gallipolis.
Scioto
County.
"Strickland's outta
"Being the gl!y in office dQilsn 't lose his seat, before be's really ideo- .
We are sorry if we have indicated always give you an advantage," said tified with the office,'' Wyngaard gas and outta money. I think with
any connection between the actual Williams, whO!e Opponent is state, said. "We are paying_attentlon toth~ Harsha's ·backing and help, there's
work of Serenity House, Inc. and the Sen. Harry Meshel, a well·known WiJJiams race. But It is not a race no queatlon that McEwen 1"''1 win."
local libraries. We simply needed a legislator from Youngstown.
where we feel the Incumbent is In
place to meet and our local library
At the oth· ;· end of the state, in· jeopardy."
offered a pleasant, convenient cumbency is an account to be drawn
Meshel's staff plans to make the
location.
on. Long·tenn Republican Rep. incumbency an albatross around
We have moved our meetings to Wllliam Harsha is retiring from hiS Willtam's neck.
Today is Monday, Oct. 20, the
another location and have obtained a 6th district seat ··and campaigning
"Vfe are going to jump on his 294th day of 1980. There are 7~ days
P. 0. Box for our correspondence. heavily for the man who would be his voting record and his record of ab- left in the year.
f .... •
Hopefully, this will clear up any replacement, state Rep. Robert sences," said Meshel aide Don
Today' s highlight in hjstory:
misunderstandings regardi!lg our McEwen of Hillsboro.
Peslck. "Williams has missed about
On Oct. 20, 1918, Gennany acwork and that of the local libraries.
McEwen's Democratic opposition 200 votes in Congress because be cepted U.S. terms to end World War
Sincerely. - (Ms.) Lucy Am· is Ted Strickland, a Lucasville hasn't been there. He's got offices in I and ordered Gennan submarines
sbary.
psychologist seeking the seat for the Youngstown and Warren and a staff to their home bases.
third time.
· of 17 to help him get elected. That's . On this date:
Williams said high unemployment the kind of advantage the inIn 1740, the last Hapsburg emin the steel-&lt;lependent Mahoniog cumbency has."
peror, Charles VI, died.
Valley will move many voters to
Williams counters that the time.he
In 1805, the Austrians were
back GOP presidential candidate spenda in the district ill devoted to defeated by the French at the Battle
Ronald Reagan, but that may not solving constituent problems.
ofUlm.
translate into support for all
"When you represent an area, you
In 1968, Jacqueline Kennedy and
Republicans.
should be a catalyst in drawing new Aristotle Onassis were married on
"I'm not a big believer in 'coat industry," Wllliams said. "And I hiS privately-owned island of Skortailing,'" Williams said. "I'm think the record of success is pretty pios in the Ionian Sea.
leading substantially in the polls, but good in that area."
In 1977, the civilian goverrunent in
I'm still being cautious. I think
William Binning, chairman of the Thailand was ousted in a bloodless
of their rental housing, and which Reagan's support In the area will Republican party in Mahoning Coun· coup by the military junta that had
revealed, among other things that:
help me, but I'm not sure how much.
ty, sees Wllliams being re-elected in installed the regime one year
- Managers believe that in·
creased maintenance costs are the
biggest protilem faced by those who
rent to families with children.
- More than half the managers
sampled said they think families
without kids are bothered by neigh.
.
bors who have children. However, a
its search lor a solution to th~ department store like ·no other, is
By Don Graff
much smaller percentage of renters
problem. But the problem (!self may back with its 1980 Ch!'istmas
BRIEFLY NOTED ...
reported being actually bothered.
There are many causes con· .1 ~ready have answered a question catalog.
- Eighty percent of respondents tributing to the national crisis of about the disco scene - why it
You know this routine. It's the
living in places which exclude or escalating hospital costs, but Texas seems to have so many smooth shopping list for championshiprestrict children said they -would not .. may have come up with one uniquely operators.
caliber conspicuous customers,
move if families with children were their own.
where they can pick up everything
allowed to move in.
Discos.
MORE FOR THOSE
fl1llll rings at a quarter of a mlllion
The "no children" policies can be
It has to do, first things first, with
WITH EVERYTHING
to socks and shoehorns at $10,· and
seen as part of a syndrome in which hospital clothing·- the loose-fitting
As long as the dateline is ·Texas, sometimes vice versa, not to menmillions are faced with un· blue scrub shirts and pants, ..coa~. this annual item might a~ well be lion his-and·her yac!U, monogramsatisfactory choices in housing, at operating gowns and such that are disposed of early.
med dirigibles, sable Sleeping bags.
least in·comparison with families or provided surgical personnel.
Nieman·Marcus. the Dallas That sort of thing.
the previous three decades. ·
The items at. one Dallas ·hospital, r--~-----------,...-----''----'----'1
Already, housing industry officials according to a wire report, are
say, high prices and interest rates, disappe~j,ring at an alarming and
and an economy that discourages costly rate. Replacements are runhome· building, has forced millions ning at more than twice the national
of young Americans to forgo dreams average and last year alone nicked
of ownership.
hospital administrators for a half·
Forced to rent, they are again met million-dollar loss,
by high cos~ . - often.forced on ~nThere apprently is no mystery as
dlorda by nsmg heating and ~m· .to what is happening to most ryf the
tenance expenses - that sometunes . missing garments. They are ending
'
consume 50 _percent of takehome up on local dance floors, where the
pay, or tWice a rule-of-thumb "Dr. Disco"Jookisininabigway.
average.
The mystery is how to stop the
The pressure has led to lonnatlon linen losses. EffortS so far have been
of national tenant groupa, has unsuccessful, so much so that the
provoked numerous battles over hospital's director of services bas
rent control, !llld has been a force resigned in pique and with . a
behind conversions of rental units to · suggestion that the piHerage has
condominiums.
reached that level tllai indicates an
Involv~ in. the disp~tes are fun· organi~ed ring may be in.volved.
damentalt~~Sues, most unportant of
Well, maybe, all}tough it would
W~Ch .SP!lfars to be the ~ghts. of take an awful lot of discoing tO SUppnvate property ownership, WI~ • port a profitable market in hot scrub
some tenants ll)aintaining .thetf suits on that scale of business.
"I feel I'm being OV8r·ftlgUIBtBd. .,
rights to a home are superior.
Meanwhile, the hospital continues

Misunderstanding

wrap up the Phllliee' first World hllmer In th&amp; fourth, led off with an Inning and tied Game s of the th. Frank White worked McGraw for homered earlier.
"I tried to pitch a 1-2-3 inning,"
Series title, but on Sundly, the light infjeld single on a drive thet Royals Nationa1 .League· playoffs with a leadoff walk. McGraw used just
and the rest of the Philadelphia
of victory shone~ on Unser.
· third baae!nan a-ge Brett dove to HOuston. In the next inning, he three pitcQeS to strike out Brett for .McGraw said, "but as"I got deeper
Unser stroked a pinch \louble, hill his left and knocked" down. Phlls doubled and scored the run that got the second 'time in three innings, and deeper into trouble, I began to
Phlllies' "Comeback Gang."
Anc! for that, the Phlls can be third hit In ~ at-bats c1ur1nc the Manager Dil1lu Green then sent Un- -Philadelphia lieU. •
then walked Aikens. McRae hit into pitch more carefully. When Otis
thankful to a small man with a big Series, to tie the game 1t W In the ser In to pinch hit for Lonnie Smith.
Unser's pinch dou~le in the eighth a fielder's choice,' erasing Aikens came up, I tried to make perfect pit·
bat. .
ninth Inning, then IICOI'I!d the win- 'nlat got a lefty hitter against a lnt!ins of the second game of the and sending White to third. That
ches. I didn't care if I walked him.'
Del Unser, a cs,stoff two years ago ning run for a~ victory that backed rlglJty pitcher, bUt nwreove.:, II Worl48erlesstarteda winning, foil.!:· brought up Amos Oti~d¥@ h;ld
brought to bat a man wbo repeatedly • run rally: and ca,usect Sclunidt to
when the Phlllles latched onto him, the Royals Into deep, dark corner.
"Hiving to go Into Phllly IIIII win l).u rallied the Phillie&amp; to victory;tl$ conunent: "He!s.unreal.'t· ·.t~o~o .
perfOI'tt\ed !Jobly onceagain SUJlC!ay,
. .·
· When Qliisenberiy got his sirik:er i-'--:----'--~-------~-----,......;-, . sending Phllllctelphla home With a 3- · two, the odds are ag8lllat you,''· Un- year.
Unser became a Phillie in 1978 just a hair-too high on a sunny but
2 lead In Ute best-of-seven game ser said, "It's a good feelinll going
one game up and having Lefty pit· when he was released outright by cool Sunday afternoon, Unser lashed
World Series;·
the n~ game and Rufus the Montreal Expos. seven teams it toward Royals first baseman
chlng
The sixth game of the Series will
Ruthven)
If he's needed, but drafted him, but none made 1111 offer. Willie Alke1111. The ball took a wicked
(Dick
be ~ Tuesday night with a
seventh game, if necessary, Wed- we'll Blick with our one-gam..at-a- Philadelphia decf'led 1~ eoul4 use a hop and bounced over Aikens' glo.ve,
33-year-old joQI1leyman outfielder scoring Sclunidt all the way from fir·
nesday night. The Phlllies will start time philosophy;"
the left-bander Carlton, baseball's' · The Phlllles, who bave trailed at and acquired him in the re-entry !It M Unser motored into second.
· -premier pitcher, Tuesday night one time or another in all five Series draft.
...
M\lfe~ sacrificed Unser to
Unser has more than proven his third. After Garry Maddox grounded
against Kansas City Royals right- games, came into the ninth down 3-2.
'They faced Kan8a8 City's ace woi'tli. .
hander Rich Gale.
'
out, Manny Trillo lashed a line drive
He stroked a pinch single that that caromed off Quisenberry's
Carlton may or may not share the reliever,DanQulsenberry. ·
Mike Schmidt, who hit a tw1H1111 keyed a five-run rally In the eighth glove and bounced toward third for
spotlight when he-has a chance to
an infield single that scored Unser.
"I've been lucky in this Series;"
Unser said. "The ball bounced over
Aikens' glove by two or three inches,
maybe. He didn't have much time to
GAS AND DIESEL MODELS
react."
AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DEL .! VERY
Rookie Marty Bystrom started for
IS% INCREASED FUEL MILEAGE
the Phlllles, but when 42,369 Royals
OVER 1980 MODELS
fans saw their last swing of the
World Series, It was TUg MCGraw
standing on the mound. McGraw
went three innings, giving up just
VOLKSWAGEN
one hit, a double to Hal McRae. He
Gallipolis, Ohio
struck out five, including George
Brett twice, but walked {our.
The Royals mounted one last
desperate attempt to win in the nin·
KAt&lt;!SAS CITY, Mo. (AP) .:_ It

· now comes down to Steve carlton

STOP

SetODd ctas1 postace paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Nalloaal advertiaing repreteatatlve, IADdoa Associates, 3101 Euclid Ave. , Cle\'tlaod, Ohio
44115.
The Assodated. Preu ill exclualvely eaUtled ,kl tbe use for publication of aU· aews disjlalcbes
credited to the newspaper aDd also the local n~w ' publlsbOO be relD.
Publilber
Robert Wiqett
Ge~nl Mgr. &amp; City Editor

Phillies take one gaine lead in '80 series
a

DEVOTED TO TilE
. INTE8£ST OF.

..

.

Strickland, originally from
, Lucaaville, said be's ahead among
·uncommitted voters and has better
name recogni!lon in the dlstrici. He
twice ran against Harsha unsuccessfully.
"I think It's going to be a tight
race," Strickland said. "I'm sure
the endorsement and active campaigning by Harsha for my opponent
will be a factor, but I'm not sure how
much of a factor.''
Strickland said a poll conducted in
AugUst by the Democratic Natloiud
Conunlttee on his behalf indicated
he was several percentage points
ahead of McEwen among uneommltted voters, who accounted
for 33 percent of those polled.

Today in history. .• •
earlier.
Ten years ago: Dr. Mahmoud
Fawzi, a 70-year-old diplomat, was
certified as premier of the. United
Arab Republic.
Five years ago: The White House
announced a five-year agreement
with the Kremlin under which the
Soviet Union would receive six
mlllion to eight mlllion tons of U.S.
grain each year.
One year ago: Three-year-old
Chad Green, whose. parents' unsuccessful attempt to find a cure for
his leukelnia took him to a Mexican
Laetrile clinic, was buried in
Hastings, Neb.
Today's birthdays: Baseball hall·
of-farner Mickey maptle is 49.
Columnist Art Buchwald is 55. Actor
Jerry Orbach is 45.

On hospital costs •••and other things
This year's one-of·a-kind items include a $9,500 guitar: ~re are.also
books at $700 - on handmade paper,
of · course, and with 22-karat gold
illuminated capital letters. There's ,
more, bu\ not many of ua need or
would want it.
All things considered, this year's
his-and-her speciality is surprisingly ,
modest. It is a brace of ostriches at a
mere $1,500. It is a gift with all 80118
of practical possibilities, the catalog
, oo.,erves, Including one-egg omelet
parties.
·.
Actually, this may be the most appropriate offering In years. It's time
• this dlspljly occuloned ~ OO.d
hiding.
'

SIJARING THE NON·WEALTH
Second Thoughta on Headlines
Department:
"World maaellry Jri 'ko:~lllnl 11llilllloa to Deed to 1 - cleP"" nee
•dollar.''
(From. the Wall Street Journal, .
reporting m the recent WllhiDcton
meelinC of the World Blat IIIII 1ft. .
temlllonll Monetley ll'and. . Pvtlciplnla noted 10 aeodentlng
trend 11110111 cenlrll ..... to accurnuilte West a... 11111b, .
·J..,.- yen IIIII. olllll' ltlble
currencies In · Cl!'d« to dlvenlfy
reaervee and inlu!lte tiMm from the
Ouctuatlna value of lbe dollar.)
And If they find I WI)', II there 111J
chance they'll let Amerlclll conIUillef8inmlt?
·

\

\

Vf/',r:

\

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\

4

Steve Carlton

Tug McGraw

. Burls Tuesday

Big save

··-

Del Unser
.
Mr. Clutch

TodBy's

Sports World
B)'WWG~ey

AP Co~pandent
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The
111110 World Series may go Into-the
histocy boob as "The Series rl.
FlBkes" - decided not by pitched
screwballs liut by screwball pitchers.
Marl&lt; up one for Tug McGraw, the
effervescent, gregarious left..hander
of the Pblladelphla Phlllles.
But don't close the bOok on the
Kansas 'ty Royals' Dan Quisenberry,
ding In the wings with a
bmarfne whip In his arm and a
. lips.

commerits with fiiNlllt remarks.
McGraw came into Sunday's
game In the seventh Inning, struck
out George Brett twice and WW!e
Aikens once, and then, with the
bases loaded on walks, threW a
slider past Jose Cardenal for the
final out.
"I got Catdenal with my Cutty
Sark," he explained. "It sails. I got
Brett the second time with my Jolm
Jameson - It was a· fast, straight
ball- that's the way I like my Irish
whisky."

, /,

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For You

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for State· Auto Mutual's
SERIES ONE Business
Polley ... a modern·as·
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't think in.any sense that I . In the ninth inning, while his wife
am in humor contest with Quisen- Phyllis was near hysterics in the
berry,' said McGraw after saving a stands, Hal McRae caught one of
4-3 vi
that gave the Phillles a 3- Tug's specials on the button and
2 lead g ·g home for the final two propelled It to deep left field.
games.
It was foul by only a few feet.
His vic ·
Quisenberry, who
The crowd Of 42,369 and millions .
has won one and lost two with one on TV saw Tug pat his heart with his
save. He beat McGraw in Game 4.
right hand.
If there is anything more exciting
"My heart was really pumping," .
in a ball game than watChing McGraw said. "If It bad been fair, I
McGraw and Quisenberry come off would have been read)' for one of .
the bench in the late Innings to put those CPR (cardiac arrest) rescue
out a developing brush fire - as units they've. been advertlalng (on
baseball people describe a rally -It the scoreboard) all week.''
is listening to them detail their
McGraw, 38, who coined the "You
Gatta Believe" rallying cry in tbe
peaks and perils.
.
Both have nicknames for their pit· New York Meta' pennant drive In
, ches. Both enjoy postgame repartee 1973, Is big, lq-bairel;l guy who adwith the media, sprinkling their mits he loves attentlm.
Qulaenberry. 26, who tied the
Yankees' Goose Gouage with 33
saves the past lleUOII, Is a quiet,
unimposing fellow with a head of ·
. curly, ruaty hair and a muatachl!.
"I'm a lot more Olllllolng when I
Representing
STATE
'lose than when I win," he confesses.
AUTOijiOBILE
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- Larry
MUTUAL
''Winninginhlb!ts me."
INSURANCE ·
Gura l!lllde only a feeble effort to
COMPANY
hide his anger at Kansas City
. ManagerJimF.-ey.
.
BOWLING
.---------~~--Pie•" tell me .moro •baut tilt
The Royala' left..hander was upset
LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Joe
SERIES ONE fuslneu Polley.
I
, be wu relieved In the seventh Inning Berardi defea~ qualifying leader
I
by Dan Quisenberry in Sunday's flf· Leroy Bomhop, B2100, in the final
th World Series game, wblch the match of the fourth round to take a
------1
Phllliee won 4-3 with a nlnib-ilining narrow leid In the· f100,000
I
:LAE'DFiB:~
rally.
Professional Bowler. AllsoclatiOii
I
1
PHONE
___
J
G11111 had giYe!l up four hits ll1d tournament.
'
one earned run when Frey removed ·
t ---him in the aevventh. •
""-;;;;;;;.-.;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;.....;;;;;;;;~.;~
. .Allked If he wu !ked ih the llflven- 1•
th, G11111 snapped, ... I w1111't one bit

Pitching change

.

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·Don't miss this exciting
Fall Fix·Up Event'
First-quality Armstrong
·· ceilings cost less than
you may think ! And ...
"receive a valuab le
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gift with your qualifying
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'Manutac1Urer"s estimate ol re1a11
pnc1ng Items on sale and pnces may
var\' by reta11er

'&lt;8

upsets Larry Gura

---'1

·- ~ - ~

DR. JAMES P. ~NDE, INC•.

tired."
Aaked If he tried to lqlle with the
~r lllllllllger, he lllid, "I
didn't have a chance to argue.
lipaled(for~berry) before he
got to the iiiOiind."
.
"What do you have to do, pitch a .
perfect game?" Gun ..... liked.
"Tblt would IOive a lot of
p:"Obleml,'' Gui'IIIWW&amp;ed.
Gun IBid' he made ooe miAake,
lbe tower1n1 two-rUn home 1'!111 Mike
Sdmldlwdo8ded over the.tl&amp;-mark
In centel' field In the foarth.
"I made 111111 bad pitch. He hit It
aood. but not pOd lftCIII8I1 to hit It
out thin. 'l'be wind CIJ'I'Iedolt."
P'ny defended hla pitching

OSTiEOPATHIC PHYSiciAN AND SURGEON
150 MIIIStrHt, Middleport, Ohlo4S760

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1 SUPER·PRiZE weekend for two at the Super Bowl!
8 FIRST·PRIZE weekends lor two at major
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Pick up entry form. lor Super
Bowl Sweepstakes from a store
11sted below ... 1111out. and
mail by Nov. 15, 1980. Oo. ob!ain
entry form by sending stamped .
self-addressed eovelope lo:
Sweepstakes. P0 Bo• 3·352.
Milford. CT 06460

Sale ends Saturday, November 8.

(t14) 992-7271

,

. NOTICE
.
EHectlve-Monday, October 20, lfiO new hours for the of.
' flee of Dr. James P. Conde will be:

Monday
Tuesday
Friday
Seturdey

9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.
9:00A.M. to 4:00 P .M,
9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.
t:OII A.M. to4:.00 P.M.

.Closed All Dey Wedneaday anti Thuraday

dlanee·
I

IIOTHIII8 TO BUT' • 9 CHAliCES TO Will!

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lrd and Vine Street
Galtipcjlis, OH

�:-----

-

.

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Oct. 20, 19110 ·

l-The Daily Sentinel, Mil!1leport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 20, 1980

Eagles dump Dallas '
)'

-

~

.
'
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
. ski, sacked
in the first piiriod by
The Philadelphia Eagles w.ere just
defensive tackle Randy White, fum·
going for a field goal, hoping to
bled the ball at his 10-yard line. It
break a 10-10 tie, when quarterback
rolled into the end .zone · and
Ron Jaworski noticed something.
linebacker Mike Hegman pounced
"Ron saw !heir double coverage on it. for lhe score. Rafael Septien
on 'Harold Carriilc!Uierana realized kicked a 33-yard field goal for Dallas
he had enough time to see (Charles) in thes.econd period.
Smith coining over," Eagles· Coach
OUers 20, Bucs 14
Dick Vermeil said.
Running back • Earl CampheU
IIISiead of a possible field goal at- rushed for a career-high 203 yards
tempt, Jaworski connected with on 33 carries, quarterback Ken
Smith for a 11&gt;-yard touchdown and a Stabler hit Mike .Barber with a 1717-10 National Football League vic- yard touchdown pass and Rob Cartory over lhe Dallas Cowboys Sun- penter ran 10 yards for another
day,
score as Houston stopped TamP&lt;!
The victory gave the Eagles a one- Bay.
game lead in the National ton·
The victory ended ·a two-game
terence's Eastern Division wilh a 6-1 losing streak for Houston, 4-3. Tamrecord. Dallas dropped to i&gt;-2.
pa Bay is 24-1.
"Not too many people can stick it
Stabler completed his first nine
in between people like Ron did on passes of the game and hit 10 of 12
that play," Vermeil said. "He tosses as lhe Oilers scored points on
showed tremendous poise."
three of !heir· four first-half
Smith, who scored wilh 4:27 possessions.
remaining in the game, called it
"the biggest play I've ever made. "
"I didn't see the defensive back on
lhe play," said Smith. "I just knew
where I was supposed to be. I saw
Ron looking at me and he really
drilled it. " .
The winning score came three
plays after middle guard Charlie
Johnson intercepted a pass by
Dallas quarterback Danny White.
The ball was tipped by linebacker
John Bunting and Johnson made a
diving catch.
"I saw their backs coming out,"
Johnson said. "And I knew White
was under pressure to get rid of it. I
was just in lhe right spot when J.B.
(Bunting) got a piece of it and tipped
Dolphins 17, Bills 14
it tome."
Buffalo rookie running back Joe
In other games Sunday, Miami upCribbs fumbled three times, setting
set Buffalo 17-14, Cleveland edged
up all of Miami's scoring as lhe
Green Bay 26-21, Cincinnati blanked
Dolphins snapped a two-game losing
Minnesota 1~, Washington stopped streak.
St.Louis ~. Seattle downed the
"He's not a fumbler, " said Coach
New York Jets 27-17; Atlanta clob- Chuck Knox, who saw his Buffalo
bered New Orleans 41-14, Chicago team drop out' of lhe American Contoppled Detroit 24-7, Kansas City ference East lead. "It's just one of
defeated Denver 23-17, New England those things."
tripped Baltimore 37-21, Los Angeles
Cribbs, the AFC's leading rusher,
heat Sim Francisco 31-17, San Diego .was held to 41 yards on 14 carries
crushed the New York Giants 44-7 and his fumbles set up both Miami
and Houston downed Tampa Bay 20- touchdowns and a 23-yard field goal
14.
by Uwe von Schamann.
Tonight, Oakland will he at PitRookie quarterback David
tsburgh in a nationally televised Woodley of Miami completed 11 of 17
game.
passes for 93 yards in only his second
Jaworski, who completed 13 of 25 pro start, including a 3-yard TD
passes for 214 yards, gave the strike.
Eagles their other touchdown in
Beogals 14, VIkings 0
Philadelphia's Hi-point second quarKen Anderson passed for 270 yards
ter when he hit Carmichael on a :&gt;- and one touchdown: and fullback
yard pass. Philadelphia's other poin- Pete Johnson rushed for 115 yards
. ts came on Tony Franklin's 35-yard and another score as Cincinnati
field goal.
crushed Minnesota. It was the first
The Cowboys' only touchdown was time lhe Vikings had been shut out in
scored by the defense when J a war- seven years and only the second

time a Minnesota te8m coached by
Bud Grant h8d been shut out. The
Bengals blanked the Vikillgs 2M in
1973.
· Anderson, who connected oil 2i of
28 passes, hit wide receiver Don
BaS§, with a 55-yard scoring pass in
lhe third quarter tc ice lhe victory
for Cincinnati, 3-4.
• Browns zc, Packers 21
Cleveland quarterback Brian Sipe
connected wilh wide receiver Dave
Logan on a 46-yard touchdown pass
with 16 seconds to play, sparking lhe
Browns over Green Bay. Sipe, who
hit on 24 of 39 passes for 391 yards
and two touchdowns, led an 87-yard
drive in lhe final two minutes for the
winning TO.'
Green Bay had come back from a
13-ll deficit to take a 21-13lead.

'.
'
----

11

lt was an a.mazlng game,"

OPEN . DAILY FROM
'
8 AM TILL 10 PM

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• REsERVED

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SEA STAR
BAllER DIP

39

CHUCK

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'RifNDLifST SfRVItf IN TOWN
BIGGEST BARGAINS IN TOWN

FISH

ROAST.............. ~·..

CHOICE
Bears 24, Uons 7

In his first start of lhe season,
quarterback Vince Evans hurled a
64-yard touchdown pass to James
Scott and scored once himself,
leading Chicago over lhe first-place
Detroit Uons.
·
Evans, who threw only eight
· passes, completing five , also set up
Chicago's other touchdown with a 5~
yard toss to Scott while the Bears'
defense throttled Detroit, which
came into lhe game leading the NFL
in offense.
Detroit rookie sensation Billy
Sims, who came into lhe game
leading lhe league in rushing with
651 yards, was held to 53 yards in 14
carries. Chicago's Walter Payton,
No.2 in rushing wilh 582 yards,
carried 27 times for 101 yards.

RIB
JeeS.yre
W, !SIIba.
Junior Tactle

Dave Wolfe '
5-2, l88lbli.

Junior End·

Rodney Keller

By Associated Press
There are still seven teams in The
Associated Press Top Twenty with
perfect records but lhe road ahead
isn't easy.for any of them.
Top-rated Alabama, a 27~ winner
over Tennessee, has a Nov. 15 date
wilh fifth-ranked Notre Dame,
which trinuned Army 34» ... and
don't overlook Barna's game next
week against unbeaten - but lhus
far unranked - Southern Mississip- ·

Oklahoma and Clemson early· next
month. And No.l3 Baylor, which
clobbered Texas A&amp;M 46-7, must
still meet lhe likes of Texas and
Arkansas.
Third-ranked Texas · and No.4
UCLA, tl!e other Top Twenty unheatens, had lhe weekend off. If lhey
cared to look ahead, Texas would
have seen Southern Methodist,
Houston, Baylor and Texas A&amp;M
among its future foes while UCLA
pi.
has to play Oregon, Arizona ·State
Notre Dame has a date wilh and Southern Cal.
second-ranked Southern California
USC was the only one of lhe top.l7
ori Dec. 6.
teams to fall on its face over the
Sixth-ranked Georgia kept on weekend. The Trojans stretched
rolling by thumping Vanderbilt 41~ their unbeaten streak to 26 games
as freshman sensation Herschel but were held to a 7-7tie by Oregon.
Walker rushed for a school record
Meanwhile,
seventh-ranked
283 yards and three touchdowns. The · Florida State crushed Boston
Bulldogs must play South carolina, CoUege 41-7, No.9 Ohio State turned
Florida and Auburn on successive back . Indiana 27·17 and No.IO
. Novel'flber Saturdays. .
Neb~aska !humped Oklahoma State
Eighth-rated . North . Carolina, 48-7.
which ovewhelmed North Carolina
Elsewhere, No.ll Pitt ,mauled
Sta~ 2lh'l, has road dl!tes with
West Virginia 42-14, No.l2 Penn
State turned back Syracuse 24-7,
Nl$foaal FooU.U Leape
No.l5 South Carolina trounced Cin·
AmerkuCoafrn:ace
cinnati
4H, No.16 Missouri trimmed
Eul
W L T Pd. PF PA
Colo~ado 45-7 and No.17 Oklahoma_
New England
6 1 0 JJ57 1J1l 131
downed Kansas State 35-21.
Buffalo
.714
148
lOll
..:
' 2 0
I 3 0 -~11 153 142
BalUmore
But No.18 Miami, Fla., fell to
I 3 0 .~71 99 Ill
Miami
Mississippi
State 34-31, No.l9 Iowa
N.Y. Jets
1 6 0 .113 Ill 161

Patriots 37, Colts 21
Horace Ivory raced 98 yards with
a kickoff to give New· England lhe
lead for good as lhe Patriots
defeated Baltimore for their fifth
consecutive victory and took over
sole possesston of first place in lhe
AFCEast.
Ivory's electrifying dash at 7:18 of
the third quarter came after an 8yard TD pass from quarterback
Bert Jones to Reese McCall had
given Baltimore.a 21-17lead.
Rams 31, 49er5 17
Four touchdown passes by Vince
Ferragamo powered Los Angeles to
its victory over San Francisco. The
Rams, posting !heir fifth straight
victory, · improved their season
record to 1&gt;-2 while lhe 49ers, 3-4, lost
their fourth straight.
The 49ers, who haven't beaten the
Rams in San Francisco since 1966,
got two short touchdown passes
. from Joe Montana in lhe final quar- Pittaburgh
ter.
Cleveland

•
4
4
3

West

Sanm~~o

2
3
3

•

0
0
()
0

5 ~ 0
4 3 0
B 3· 0

Seattle

Oakland

Denver

•r
•

.

SUPERIOR

•

State bowed to Kansas 28-17 and No.
20 Stanford lost to Washington 27·24.
Arkansas, ranked 14th, was Idle.
Bolh Alabama and Georgia teams
have · 3-0 Southeastern Conference
records - as does unranked
Louisiana State, a 17-10 winner over
Kentucky - · but lhey don't meet
each other. If they wind tip wilh 6-0
SEC marks, Georgia will go to lhe
Sugar Bowl.
And Walker would he quite an attra~tion in New Orleans: The 213pound rookie shattered Charlie Trippi's 31'&gt;-year-old rushing record by
carrying 23 times for 283 yards, in-.
eluding touchdown runs of 80, 48 and
53.
"Herschel Walker was lhe difference," said Vandy Coach George
Macintyre. "He's as good as any
back I've ever seen. It takes about
six guys to bring him down out

U. S. NO. 1 RUSSET

•

'

lARGE POL'f

POTATOES·
CARROTS 3~sl

'

..
..'
'f
~

3

4 0
3 •. 0
Natloul Coafertau

.687
.571
.571
.429

156
147
114
108

Phlladelphla

6
5
2
2

.,,,

0
0
0
0

.7U 186 102
.286 140 150
.2116 101 120

I 6
Ceatral

0

.113 98 220

5 2 o

.7lt 176 121
107
150

Dallas
st. Louis
Washington
N.Y. Gianls

Detroit

.857 190

"We played heady and mistake-free
Youngstown State-scored on its fir- Chicago
3 1 o .429 99
.429 102
for lhe most part. The backfield st offensive play, a "4s.:yard run by =~';;'~
.357 96
didn't have the smoothness that it tailback Roby Robson, but went on Tampa Bay
2 1 1 .357 99
normaily has, but the quar- to lose to Morehead State 20-14. Rob- I.A.s Angeles
Weal
5 2 0 .7 14 208
terbacking was aimost perfect."
son picked up 121 yards on 25 carries Allanta
• 3 o .571. 1118
"We heat ourselves," said Miami as lhe Penguins feU to 0-i&gt;-1.
San
Francisco
·
3 • o .d9 161
· New Orleans
0 7 0 .000 102
Coach Tom Reed after Todd Yoho
Dayton remained undefeated wilh
Su.aday'oGamea
ran for 90 yards and scored once for a 35-7 victory over the Merchant
Miami
17, Buffalo 11
Philadelphia 17, Dallu 10
Ohi·o, 3-2 and 3-3. "We simply were Marine Academy. Gary Smith
Cleveland 21;, Green Bay . 21
not a good footbaU team today. We scoredtouchdownsonrunsofland6
Clnclnnall
11, Minn-. o
WuhJngton 23, St.Louis 0
could not throw the ball."
yards to lead the Flyers to their
Seattle XI, New York Jet. 17
"We played pretty weU both of- seventh victory.
Atlanta u , New Orleans 11
Oli.cago 21, Detroit 7
fensively and defensively," Bobcat
Butler posted a 10-0 Heartbind
Kansas City 23, Denm t7
mentor Brian Burke said.- "11 was a Conference victory over Ashland to
New E"'!iand 37, Baltimore 21
.
both
Los Angeles 31, San Francisco 17
hard-hiltmg
game on
sides. It hand the Eagles their second defeat
San Diego 11, New Yorlt Giant. 7
was not a super-flawless game like of the season. The Bulldogs were
Houston 20,
Bay 11
last week" when OU \IPSe! Central sparked by an 86-yard pass from
Oakland at Plttab.t;t?ame
Michigan. Miami dropped to 1'·2 and qual1erback Mike McGeorge to Tom
s...tay,O.l"'
Denver at New York Giants
2-4.
Wallace. Ashland remains in first
Los Angeles at Atlanta
"The first quarter was about the place in the conference.
Minnesota at Green Bay
New England at Buffalo
best f und amenia IIY we •ve ha d," said
Wittenberg remained in first place
New OrleaJU at Wuhlllgtm
Ball State's Dwight WaUace of his in lhe Ohio Conference Blue Divist'on
Pitt..burgh at Cleveland
• 1
r.l
St.Louis at Baltimore
teams w n over ~:.astern Michigan, wilh a 9-7 vic~ory over Wooster. In
Detroit at Kanou City .
1-4 and 1-5. "And we needed !hat other Blue Division action, 1·t was
Chicago
at Phlladelpltla ·
Cinc.irtnati at Houston
shutout. Our defense earned it."
Ohio Northern over Muskingum. ~
S.atUe at &lt;Jtkland
MarkBornholdtranfortwotouch- and ·Capital 17, Ohio Wesleyan 7. . Tampa Bay at San Franclllccl
downs and Mark O'Connell passed Denison was idle. Wittenberg is 440
San Diego ·~O.l%'1
for 172 yards for the Cardinals, 3-2 and Denison 2+1 in lhe division.
Mtami at New Yorlt Jet.

l:1

80

163
1111
135
138
229
209

=

Uzehic said. " We're not ones to ad·
verttse our injuries, but we're reaUy
bangCd up. The guys were playing
wilh a ton of tape and were playing
hard; and I give them credit for
that. "
3-3.forThe
lhe Cards'
hopes
thevictory
MAC keeps
title alive.
They Iflt-•~i,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
tif1
•
"The wind was definitely a factor. and
We were holding the ball, trying play Western Michigan next
desperately to get with the wind," weekend.
Eastern Michigan used four quarsaid Toledo Coach Chuck Stobart.
John Gibbons passed for one terbacks, but they hit on only 10 of 35
touchdown and ran for another to passes for 89 yards. "We had plenty ·
lead Northern Illinois, 4-3 and 2-2, to of opportunities to score in the first
Its first win over Central Michigan, · half," Coach Mike Stbck said. "But
1&gt;-2 and 4-2, sinee 1966. It was NIU's we couldn't do it. I'm very dejected
•
first shutout of Central Michigan sin- about the fact that we didn't execute
better."
ce 1961 and lhe second time the Chip- ·
In other Ohio college games, quar. 'jlewas have lost two in a row since
terback
Garry Harper scored two
joining the conference in 1975:·
Wind also aided Bowling Green, 3-- touchdowns and his reliever, Gordon
'
I·
1 and 3-4, as lhe Falcons took ad- Beckman, ran 47 yards for another
vantage of mistakes for three of as 15th-ranked South Carolina
their four scores. A Kent State punt routed winless Cincinnati 49-7.
The victory put Soulb Carolina at
into the wind went for oniy 3 yards
and put lhe Falcons in position to 6-1 for the year and dropped CinCALL
lead 10-0 and win their third straight cinnati to 0-6.
.
.
Sophomore kicker Bob Clauser
game.
Coach Ron Blackledge of KSU, 1·2 booted three field goals and the
and 2-4, said, "Wind was a factor the Temp)e defense rolled up 123 yards
.
'
on four pass Interceptions as the
w~ole game and it hurt us. We
should have gotten a break coming Owls edged Akron 16-7. Temple,oL
992-2156
Division
I-A,
rolled
up
329
total
yaraway only three points down after a
ds and advanced its record to 2-4.
3-yard punt, but none came.''
The
Division 1-AA Zips fell io 3-3-l.
Falcons Coach Denny Stolz said,
,

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED

IN SYRACUSE

THE DAILY SENIINEL

••

69

LB.'
. MT. DEW
DIET OR REG.

FARM FRESH
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

PEPSI

8

Reg. or Quick

Pkg.

16 oz.

$129

·

QUAKER OATS 180l BOX69C
MONARCH
2BO~Es'1 OO
CRACKERS
Cardinal Ch. Noodle or Tomato

DEL MONTE
GREEN BEANS OR

CORI

~Y.~L
.
.,o......
4~~~.~~:0
PIIEAPPLI,, .. , .... ...... .. ... ,

As·uncommon
as they are,
natural gas leaks
have some
••
common SJgllS.

0 •• , .

DEL MONTE

.

DEL MONTE

.

STEWED TOMATOES ............. ,.,,.,.,,.,,

2

z

DEL MONTE ASS"OATED VARIETIES

PUDDING CUPS ...••.....

.

0 ••••••• : •••••••••••••••••• '0. 0 •••••

79C

16-oz. .

Cans

tS-o.r .
Ceno

4·ct.
0 •••••••• 0 •••••• ••• • •• •••••

DEL MONTE ASSOATED VARIETIES

. FRUIT CUPS .....

f7 . o;r:.

-~

Whole Kernel or
Cream Style Corn
Cut or French Style
Green Beans •

o, ••• , . , . o o •• o o . Can .

SWEJT PEAS••••••• •••• •••o • •, •••••• ••• •••. ••••••

sI oa
.

89C

Pkg

4 . .;1.
Pkg .

DEL MONTE NEW SIZE

44
.CATSU-P.......•...••......
.
99~

Can you recognize them?
Colwnbia Gas keeps close watch on its
pipelines and facilities to assure safe operation. And, although leaks are uncommon,
they sometimes do occur. We feel it's important that you know how to reoognize a leak
and what to do if you should spot one.
Common signs include a smell of gas, inside or outside; a hissing noise; blowing dirt;
or bubbling water over a submerged pipe.
In or around your home or building, ifyou
smell gas, first check to see if a pilot light or
burner may be out. Ifnot, and you still sense
a leak, call us. Be aware the source of a gas
odor could be extemal-gas from service -- '
lines or street lllB,ins that could migrate into
your prelllis(ls tbrough walls or drain lines.
If the odor is strong, open doors and win'dows. Shut off gas appliance valves or mliter
valve. Don't use matcl!es, electric switches
or appliances. Leave the house and call
Colwnbia Gas from ~ and stay there
Wltil a Colwnbia representative arrives.
If you are outside in an open area, eliminate, if po81lible, pdtential sources of ignition
and leave the area. Call Columbia Gas from
another location.
'•
We're pn!ud that calls reporting leaks are
few. But Colwnbia wants you to make them,
even if you only suspect a ~·
~
In every case, Columbia Gas will send
someone inunediately to make a thorough
check.
.
Colwnbia Gas is concerned about safety.
And with your cooperation, we11 keep your
natural gas l!lei'Vice efficient and dependable,

ASSORTED VARIETIES

Ol'

'

FAYGO
' .

POP

19-oz.
13ox ·

EAGLE liAND .MILK

-

1~-oz. $ 00

"' .

SWISS MIXX

COCOA MIX

IDAIRY VALUES I

IFREEZER VALUES, .

~

: BANQUET

·. POTPIES

B-oz.
Pkgs.

BLUE BONNET

00·

MAROARIIIE

...,

QUARTERS

BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY

'

VELVEETA '

..
''

.••'

..•

.

•.

•
••
•

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

A.SSO~D

$ 89

FLAVORS

ICE CREAM .. ~.~~ ..

-

• 12·01. .
Pkg.
IAUIAOE
Olt CANADIAN lACON

...

-

1-l,b.
Pkg.

'·
l~~~

$, ..

TROPICANA.
VELVD PREMIUM

I if·

BETWEEN 1130 and 5100
.........................
.

;

CHEESE FOOD ••••• ; ••••••••••

l

•

Can

'
'
:~

•

1-Lb.

Bottles

ASSORTED FLAVORS
REGULAR OR DIET

14 OZ. CAN 95~

·~-

c6...uMBI~ AAS

79
i'1==~·

., ••

.:,J&gt;

105

1
2
5
5

LB ' •

STEAK ·············•

39

LB.

101

Eut

. - s· .

CARDINAL RED

133
125

.711 210 !:Ill
.571 131 138
.500 137 144
.429 130 156
.429 1~ 142

.

""" "'

SWISS

'119

49

1L

'

Meanwhile, Alabama did it with
defense, limiting explbslve Tennessee to a total of 59 yards in what
Bear Bryant called "one of the best
defensive games we've ever
played." Alabama held lhe Vols
without a first down and to ininus 2
yards in the first half in heating arch-rival Tennessee for the 10lh year
ina row.

15 LB. BAG

1

GROUND
CHUCK

Cranberries 79' ~..... "':.-;:_........_ - f i
COLD CRISP ICEBERG_
RED TOKAY OR WHITE
APPLES~ APPLES
LETTUCE HEAD 49C 1111111PSON SIEDlfSS 79C .ASSO,YID VA""""
WILD ;)fVEET WHITE
· ~
GRAPES
per LB.
B sh 1 PlASTIC BAG •2••
GOOD AS GOLD
,
72 . U 8 ·•••••••••••
ONIONS 2' ~79 .BANANAS 3LBs. 79' BuShel ..••.••• ~x.E.~. •4"

I

there."

LB.

.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ceatnl

Houston

Kansas City

.

•

LB. ,

STEAK$ •.••..• ··•··

LB. '3"
· BONELESS .RIB STEAKS
.
SUPERIOR
.
LB. 99~
WIENERS
•••••••·........................
.

•'

Senior Tackle

CHUCK

:STEAKS
.•••••••• !-!-.
•

,'

5-1, zso !be.

Seven teaiD.s still unbeaten

' -~,-·~

a

SALE DATES ·
OCTOBER 13 • 18, 1980

Middleport, Ul!io

"'="'"'

I

Broncos defeat
..
•
Toledo for fourth MAC ·wm
By Associated Press
There must be sonie magic to the
tape which Western Michigan Coach
. Elliot Uzelac says is holding his
team together.
The surprising. Broncos took sole
possession of the Mid~American
Conference college football lead
Saturday wilh a 17-7 victory over
Toledo, making !hem 4-1 in the MAC
and 1&gt;-2 overall.
Northern lllinois gave the Broncos
hand by blanking previous leader
Central Michigan 26-0. In other conference games, it was Bowling
Green 24, Kent State 3; BaUState 26,
Eastern Michigan 0; and Ohio
University 17, Miami of Ohio 7.
Sophomore tailback Larry Caper
gained 127 yards and scored one
touchdown for lhe Broncos as Toledo
dropped to 1-4 and 1-5.

VAUGHAN'S

Eastern varsity players •••

Cincinnati

Surpris~g

. .

_.. . ·r:tt!

•

·1jJ

'

WA.LDORF '

BAlHROOM nSSUE

4 CT. 99

4

DE
JUICE

;
64·0~-

Ctn .

FRESH CARDINAL

HOMO MILK.:;.c.

79

'-

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,

' .

Monday, Oct. 20,19110

•

DI CK, TRACY

Flower arranging symposium highlights regional meeting

~i¥~~n~E~~nM~E~~~u.r~TN~R, .T elevision
AROUND-

· · TillS TRADITIONAL mass arrangement displayed by Mrs. Suzy
Carpenter, Rutland, was one of eight which she made during her demonstration program, "Ver,satility in Flower Arranging," Saturday aft ernoon at the Region II , Ohio Association of Gai'Mn Clubs meeting. _ . .

•'

.\' .
I
I

r

A FLOWER ARRANGING symposium for exhibitors was a feature of
the morning program at the Region II, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs
meeting Saturday. Using specimens and arrangements brought by ~ .
Chester Garden Club and the Shade Valley Council Club, she evaluated
each display from the judge's viewjJoint encourating questions and comments from the representatives of the 26 clubs attending.
.

Drug abuse discussed
by sheriff candidate
Drug abuse in Meigs County was
discussed by John Welsh, guest
speaker at the recent meeting of the
Riverview PTO held recently at the
school.
Marlene Putman presided at the
meeting during which time reports
were given on the recent school car·
niva l. It was noted that the carnival

was highly - successful: The attendance banner and money were
won by the sixth grade . Mrs . Weber
noted that a date will be announced
for school pictures and that the inservi ce day or county teachers will

Social Calendar

be Wednesday.
Games were played. Room
mothers for the . year were announced as follows·: Betty Dil~
Grace Holsinger, JoAnn Lawrence,
grade one; Lucille Kimes, Juanita
Medling, and Cathy Spencer, grade
two ; Carolyn Bissell, Shiela Fields,
Carol Richardson, grade three;·Sandra Cowdery, Marlene Putman,
Nola Young, grade four; Shirley
Barber, Wilma Dangelo, and Mary
Fol)ner, grade five, and Virginia
Newlun, Rosemary Randolph, and
Sandy Roberts, grade six.

Shower honors Vicki Smith'

Airman returns from Pacific

r

Navy Airman Daniel E: Williams,
son of William M. Williams of
Pomeroy, has returned from a
deployment in the Western Pacific
and Indian Ocean. He is a crewrnember aboard the ai rcraft carrer USS
Constellation, homeiJorted in San
Diego.
During the seven-month cruise,
the Constellation set a new Pacific
Fleet record of 110 continuous days
at sea while operating in the Indian
Ocean. The embarked air wing flew
more than 28,000 sorties and logged
more than 101500 arrested landings.
In addition to conducting
sustained air operations ill the In(\ian Ocean. during the monsoon
season, the ship participated in
several naval exercises with units

MONDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Chur~hes of
Christ Men's Fellowship, 6:30 p.m.
Monday at the Bradford Church to
load the truck for the Grundy Mountain Mission School. ·The guest
speaker for the evening will be Bill
Morgan, president of the Christian
College at El P~so, Tex. Ladies of
the church are invited to attend and
refreshments will be S!!rved.
MIDDLEPORT - A Halloween
party was held for patients at the
Athens Mental Health Center
Tuesday night by the Homebuilders

of Bend 0' the River Garden Club Gallia Clubs, Cheshire, French City, penter, an OAGC accredited judge
was presented a 50-year com- Gallipolis, Open Gate, Rio Grande, and winner of the 11180 OAGC conmemorative plate · OAGC for ller Vinton Friendship and Wayside, and veutlon "best of show'' award. Emwork lis public beautification chair- three Meigs County, Clubs, Rutland; pll8lis in her demonstration was
'
modern versus traditional with Mrs.
man. Mrs. Paul Shoemaker is the star, and Wil!lwood,
The flower ammglng sympoeiwn Carpenter making e'igbt
new chairman.
Mrs. R. H. Capp reported awards conducted by Mrs. Bolin empllaaiud arrangements many of a creative
for publicity books to Chester, Hill the uae of unii8Wll materiat. and design.
and :Dale, _ Marietta,_ Ei!nie.er, Qeslgn with a!!di~ participati&lt;XL..._..Y!lf _the lunc~_the table __
Rutland, . and Valley View garden by questions and comments. In con- decorations were handled l!y the
clubs. Program book awards were ducting the sympcisiwn, Mrs. Bolin French. City Garden C1ub. 'lbe
given by Mrs. Robert Thomas to Hill discussed the new exhibitor and Che8blre club provided 11M! tulip
and Dale, Frontier, Marietta and judges' handbook and the scoreCar- bulbs for favors, and the coffee hour
ds used in Judging specimens, was llOite&lt;l by the Vinton Friendship
Valley View.
Mrs. Capp explained rules for en- · hanging planters, houseplants, and and Wayside Clubs. The Rio Grande
tering program books and urged ammgements. Sbe used I'08e and and Open Gate Clubs made the name.
mwn specimens as well as several ·tags, and the Cheshire and Wayside
participation in the competition.
Therapy chainnan, Mrs. Richan;l houseplants and sb: arrangements Clubs handled the sales table. Fortynine . d90r ~s were. awarded
Koblentz, was introduced. The Good for her judging CQIIllllelltary.
These were·provided by memben during the a!Hiay meeting.
Lock Club at the Athens Mental
Health Center received first in the of the Chester and Shade Valley Garstate for the club's 1979 program. den Clubs' members, Mrs. Dean,
Honor was also given to the Mrs. Erwin, Mrs. Holter, Mrs Sbeiia
Gallipolis Oevelopmen!al ~9SPital's Curtis, and Mrs. Alice Thompson.
therapy club, and the Nature Club
"Versatility in Flower Arranging"
orgailized over 20 years ago, with was the theme of the afternoon
the programs being provided by the program presented by Mrs. Car-

Fairview News Notes
By Ml'!l. Herbert Rousb
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel and son,
Tim, Barbara, Da!Uiy, Oonette and
Dave Talbott spent a recent Sunday
with Sid and Dennis Manuel at Long
Bottom and helped Denise celebrate
her birthday.
Mrs. Barbara Talbott, Mrs. Edith
Manuel and Denise Manuel attended
the funeral services for Mrs. Sarah ·
Brown at the Ewing Funeral Home
at Pomeroy Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Manuel and
daughters, Donita and Robin, were
guests Saturday of the United
Steelworkers at Kaiser plant at
Camden Park, Huntington.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel visited Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Hart and Mr. and
Mrs. Lynn Hart at the home of her
father, Earl Hart, at Racine. Mr.
J4rt left for St. Cloud, Fla. to spend
the winter.
Joyce and Robin· Manuel visited
Esther West recently at Dorcas.
Clarence and Inez Roy · and
daughter, Nancy, of Racine visited
Mrs. Etha Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush and
children, Ed, David and Cindy, Mr.
and Mrs. Dana Lewis attended the
Roush reunion at Portland Park and
also visited Mr. and Mrs. Arnold ·
Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and
son, Jeremy, Sunday. Other guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Hupp and
son, R. J. Wednesday guests of the
Hupps were Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Durst and friend, Clyde, of Niles,
Ohio, Bernice Roush and ·Nancy
Russell. Chester and Clyde enjoyed
the day squirrel hunting.
Joe, Edith and Tom Manuel, Mr.
and Mrs. Sid Manuel visited Mr. and
Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie ·Hupp and son, Jeremy, Sunday
evening.
Mrs. Lucille Lawson visited her
daughter, Debbie, and daughter at
Middleport recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush and
son, Ed, and Mrs. Sharon Hupp
spent the weekend in Niles, Ohio
.with Mr. and Mrs. Chester Durst and
attended a retirement party for
Chestei' Durst at United
Steelworkers, Local 1375 Hall on
Elm Rd. in Warren, Oh. Saturday
evening.
David Roush spent il week with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Russell

.Laurel Cliff
News Notes

.

Chester class
we'ight losses
earn ribbons

Roush.
Edward Roush _is enjoying a
week's vacation from his employinent at Dravo's Gravel plant.
Cindy Roush spent a few days with
her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis
at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel and son,
Tim, visited Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
McGuire at Pomeroy Thursday.
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel an,d son, Tim, were Mt. and
Mrs. Sid Manuel on Sunday. Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Holsinger of Chester
visited a recent evening. .
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Reeder
and children, Kelly, Craig' and
Melanie of Mineral Ridge, Ohio
·spent Thursday through Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
and family lllld also visited Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and MrS.
Herbert Roush. They also attended
the Meigs County Fair.

OCT. 20, 1t80
EVENING

e.oo

ASTROGRAPH
Octobor21,...
Someone with whom you bave had good luck
heretOfOI'&lt; will prove fortunate for YOU again this
coming )'ear In several situaUoos. He or she is
tQe IYJ&gt;' of person who kno"" how to moke graJ&gt;o
dloseschemeswortc.
UBRA IS.pl. ZS.O.t. tl) SOmeone with whom
you'vedealtprevtouslywlloluisawayofmaldng
you
feel guilty might maneuver you into a
position today where yo_u're far ffiOn! ge11erous

lhHn is !!ell!l.lble. RomanCf!, travel, luck, ~·-...1 ;

"""·
possible pitfalls and career for lhe comln~
months are an dlscu&amp;sed m your Astro-Gra
which J&gt;eains wilh your birthday. MaU 11 or
each toAslr&lt;&gt;{lraph, Box 'It, RodloCity Slalloo,
N. Y. l0019. Besuretospedfybirthdate.
SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov. !ZI Friends may not

==u:rJ!%f.:.::.\\d.~~

into cons/deraUon.
SAGmABrus (Nov. zs.o... 111 Find Joy In
~wng the goab you eatablbh for yourself
today. Aglum attitude will niake lhlna!• ""'"'
dlfiicult than they really oro and oooild even
depriveyouofvictory.
CAPRICORN (Dee. !WOILII) Wlllloul being
don'tSome
countpotential
too h&lt;avUy
oo luckyouto will
gel
ncJ!iUve,
you .by today.
obolaclea
haveloworkoutthehardway..
AQUARrus (Ju. »Fob. II) Unleu YOII'te
prepared to treat others as generously as you expec! them to treat{.ou today,= very
P1=wlfFT~,..:,""~glv~
operatlngunder_pressureyour judgmetltisqulle
keen today. On.. you bealn to..,.. -Uoo,
OOwever, you may become very uneertafn.
ARIES !Morell 11-Aprtl Ill You'll sW1 out
with good Intention, today, ancl even a IOW&gt;d
plan of attack. However, outside infllltiiCel
beyood your (.'()(llrol coold lead you utray.

:....n:.~oo:~r.= .

.~~:;,~~~ru

Don't Jet pride stand in the way of twn1ng 1111
with
the best(May
pe.....,,
GEMINI
II.Jat10ll) Clooely •opervlse
""Y work or service belna dooe 10!' you tOOay.
The proJect coold develop ln a direction opposite
fromwha1youwanteddone.
CANCER ' (J... lhloly !21 Your way of
thlnk~may not be loo oooulor today, oo don\
betoo ldoroplnionatedifagoodfrlendtriesto
tell you w.u..,.. feel. Listen:
LEO !Jo1113-Aac. U) Be extremely careful
business- today. lnvolvemenll with the
wrong types could prove eootly ancltroubl....,.,
eventhoughlhelntenlolbothparU.,balncere.
VIRGO IA•I· !Hepl. IZI Y- oW••••rd....-... ll~tadayudtlon'suH
::':.~~~"::,. r.
~- .,.Y

r-...,..

SUPPER PLANNED
The Ladies AUxiliary of the
Orange Fire Department will sponsor a Jitney supper at the Tuppers
Plains Fire house on Saturday with
serving to begin at t:30p.m. Chicken
or ham, dressing, homemade
noodles, al!lw, macaroni lialad and
dessert are included on the menu.

CAROL BURNETT AND
f'Ril'NDS
ABC NEWS
{jJ) ~2-1 CONTACT
1:30
D CD NBC NEWS
THE DOOR
BOB NEWHART SHOW
FAC_E THE MUSIC
C1J (lQ) CBS NEWS
WILD WILD WORLD !)F
ANIMALS
DICK CAVETT SHOW
ID ABC NEWS
&amp;:58
NEWS UPDATE
. ·
7:00
IJ PM MAGAZINE
(]) NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
(I) ALLIN THE FAMILY
CIJ!HJ ID FAMILY FEUD
NASHVILLE ON THE ROAD
C1J TIC TAC DOUGH
·
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
.
OVER EASY 'Thero'oGotTo Be
(I)

~

CAPTAIN EASY
1!.1·THE

I

~ IR9T"

PLACI!, AAE. You

SURe THE KID
WOULD liE
"CREAKY" NOW?

..

Play SOc to $6.0G and pick
your favorite 3 digit
number and

Print answer here:

KI I I XI XJ1

I Jumbles: POWER

GRAIN HANDLE AGENCY

Splinter bid tells much
NORTH

.A.KJ 6 &gt;
• K 10 9 2
+Q8 &gt;

SANFORD AND SON
CIJIJCIJ JOKER'S WILD
(I)(!Q) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(l) DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueol:

MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
GJ FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 ; NEWS UPDATE
8:00
8 (!) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE

60RL! WHY I HAFf
NOT 5EE YOU IN

.---.....A..---;,_

LE550H5 ..·1N

CLASS BEFORE?

!..

.+ 90
+Qt0 96&gt;

SOUTH
+Q3
.AQ6H

t

AJS

+874

(Qioead·Captloned)
Cil ROCK CHURCH
(I) MOVIE '(COMEDY)'" "Hou-

~~

•a

• 10 8 7 4

+

MAIRIE Dub Taylor gu,eat stare ae
an old fel low who tries to turn over a
newleatandbeco'mearespectable
farmer so he can adopt two young
orphanedbrotherswhofaceaepai'·
atlon.
(60
mlns.)

OH? I VOULDHAFF THOUGHT 'i
5HE ALREAilY HAD PLEHTY i~

EAST

WEST
+92
.• J 7 3
K 10 7 2
+AKJ 3

{jJ)

·~SPEAK, LEETLE

10·20-80

+z

Actor·dlrector·author John Hus ·
ton. Part I.

'

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Wesl
EasJ

11

b at 1D58

~WzliD THAT'S INCREDIBLE

1J [)) !IDl THE GOLDIE HAWN

Pass

SPECIAL Goldie Hawn sings ,
dances and clowns on the basket ·
ball court with the Harlem Globe·
trotters, and demo nstrates her.
specialized skill as a comedienne.
GuestsincludeGeorgeBurns,John
A itt er and Shaun Ca as idy . (Repeat;

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:•K

eo mine.)

[))

GRfAT PERFORMANCES

'Tinker, Tailor, Soldler,Spy'PartiV.
Aa George Smiley moves a step
closer to the answer, he recalls his
. one meeting with his nemesis, the
ominous Soviet superspy Karla.
lcloood·Captloned) (60 mlna.)

BE Pl.AYJNG
OPPOSITE AI..L THE
GLAMOROUS STARS...

, .. ,:r~rLL

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sontag
Oswald: "Thirty years ago
the North·South bidding of
today's hand would have
found South at a nice ga me
contract. He would make six
and comment that there was
no way to bid it. What's more,

{jJ) SEVAREID, SALISBURY, REA-

SONER
'Th ree American
Reporters ' Three outstanding jour·
nalista , whose reporting spans
decades, talk about the ir own car·
ears and the current state of the
country and of American
I_Q__umalllm.
·

GARBO, 'CRAWFORD,

DAVIES, BENNETT!
WE'LL MAKE 'IOU
FAMOUS!

if the hand were played in
duplicate ,that tour-heart contract would be reached at every table."
Alan: "Toda y, any expert
pair that didn't ,...t to six
would be disgusted· with their
bidding. A modern invention
railed 'The splinte r bid' would
have been used to show that
singleton club in t~ e North
hand and 13 HCP opposite 13
would have been enough lor
the slam."

Oswald: "North wants to be
in game or higher as soon as
he hear s the two-heatt
response to his spade opener.

He tells this to his partner
plus the additiona l tact tha t
he has a club singleton by the
simple expedient of jumping
to foUr clubs."

Alan: "Three clubs would
have been a forc ing bid, show- .
ing clubs. Four clubs is a
splinter."

Oswald: "North's splinter
bid tells South that all South's
points will be workers. So,
South accepts the idea of a
slam by cue bidding in
diamonds ."
'· Alan: "North has a minimum ope ner and merely goes
to lour hearts, but South
makes one above · game slam
try by going to live hearts.
North accepts and bids th e
slam."

·

(NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE AS..t;;N .)

1...---------------------

8:30 (!)MOVIE
-(HORROR)''" "Ha~ r
ween" 1i7i
8:58
NEWS UPDATE
t :OO
8 &lt;Il MONDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES 'A Cry For Love· 1980
CIJ700CLUB
[J)!HJID MONDAY NIGHT FOOT·
BALL ABC Sports will provide live

~

'

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

(I)

AN.N IE

(Answers tomorrow)

BRIDGE

you back to rock's golden er&amp;, faa ·
turing the Beach Soya performing
their great hits.

by THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS
42 Pretend
Till now
1
43 Bettor
Oakland Raiders and tho Pllle6
Julius
for worse
burgh §!eaters.
IJW(lg) M.A.S.H. ASouth Korean
on the green
DOWN
woman misirltiJrprets Klinger's mo·
11 Kumm~l
1 Tasty
Uvea when he tries to aid her
dau.Q!lter financiallyo. (Repeat)
flavoring
2 Champagne's
(l) WI ADVOCATES: ELECTION 12 Unassisted
waiting place ~~~Jt
'80 Former Governor Michael Du·
l3
Projected
3
Office
kakia hoe ta thlaeontin ulng aertea of
dabatea between repreeetatlvea
TV series
fixture
Yesterday's Answer
ot tha leading candidates for: Pre14
Spiked
4
Japanese
.ulentJ.SO mine.)
t:30 .cll!IDJWKRPINCINCINNATIAn
with booze
·volcano
20 Son to
28.Swab
advertising campaign engineered
15
Here,
5
Tire
Noah
30
Indian
by Herb Tarlek to promote WKRP
in Nantes
6 Obstinate
23 Number
official
reaultaiA illtun-nlliQr8v8Jition by
Venua Flytrap. (Repeat)
16 Korean G.l.
7 Palm leaf
of Muses 31 Speechify
10:00 (1) MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) ••• 18 Sumatran ape 8 Garner
24 Umbrella 's
·~~rman: The Movie'' 1878
kin
32 Less
•w(!Q) LOUGRANT.Thodleap· ' 19 With thickness TV vehicle
available
pearance of Mrs . Pynchon ' a 21 Lard
9 Burden
25 Quartet's
beloved Yorkie, Barney, alerts the
22 Indian moun- 10 Calmed down favorite
37 Individuality
Tribune to a vicious ring of dogfight
promoters who steal pete for their
tain pass .
17 Danube
girl
39 Nigerian
bloody events. (Repeat: 80 mine.)
23
Strike
the
tributary
26
Least
tribesman
C1J MOVIE -(MUSICAL) ••••
right Swlng Time" 1838
NEWS
24
Walked
TBS EVENING NEWS
10:15
H Bogged down
Nl'WS UPDATE
t0:28
RISE AND BE NEALED
t0:30
27 One of Ben
OPEN MIND
Cartwright's
10:58
NEWS UPDATE
boys
6--+-+-11:00
D CD IJ (l)!IDJ NEWS
FESTIVAL OF PRJIISE
28 One-track
DICK CAVETT SHOW "
11:15
NIGHTOALLI!RY ·
11:28
NEWS UPDATE
29 Johnny
11:30
. ( I ) THE TONIGHT SHOW
.. ,'Boat Of Carson' Gueets: James 30 With.one's
Garnor, JameaGalway. (Rtpoal;
goose cooked
coverageofthegamabetweenthe

GASOLINE ALLEY

WINNIE

11

'THE MEN WERE
i30UNDAND

.• THE: TR:UCK WI'TH
YOUR ENTIRE
COLLECTION WAf;
H/..11/CKEll? L ..
CAN'T

6A66ED, BUT

n+ANK
tiEAVEN5

FOR 71/AT..

THEY .wERE

~UTWHAT

EVENTUALLY
FOUND UNf-IA12MED 1

ABOUT TilE
FASH ION
SHOW~,....,

IT \\11\&amp; O.NCELLEt:;.OF COUR&amp;E- WE
HAD NOTHIN6 TO ;:,HOW... AND TtlERE
WERE A LOT OF, V~
Pi&amp;APPOINTED
I &amp;HOULD

PEOPLE 'THERE!

. 7HINK so .. .

AT$200P£R
T/C/(ET',I

I
t

I

-AA"/I~~aAGLEYSHOW --

-~U!Juslim_fll!llleb-+-1----1---

.(l) Cal LATE MOVII! 'QUINCY 3t Spire
M.E. : An Unfriendly Radiance'
ornament
Slaro: Jack Kklgmtn, Garry Wal- ·
th
barg.Anax·conlounJustlyarrested 35 Au or Levin
for poeaaeaion ot narcotics and
manalaughtdr and Quincy has dif·
fie ulty In olea ring the men. (Repeat)

. ; LOOK¥ WHAT MOMMY
·

CHICKEN!!

GOT FOR TATER • • -

: A BODACIOUS WIND-UP
SPONSORPARTY
Ohio Valley Grange 21112 Letart
Falla will spollBOI' a Halloween party
for all the children in Letart Town- '
ship Friday, Oct. 31, at 7 p.m. at the
Community Hall. All chllda'en are to
come masked. Prizes will be given,

Now arrange lhe cirCled letters to
form. the ·surprise answer, as suggest ad by the aOOve cartoon.

bolter-A WAGON

as HBO presents this
one-hour taped special that takes

,

FA~ER'

Answer: What the "artistic " horse might have drawn

~lbratlons'

No)N Available At: ·

992-5786

Sarurd: y·s

7:30 CIJIJ BULLSEYE
(]) WORDS OF HOPE
(1) THE BEACH BOYS IN CONCERT Gel ready for eome 'Go od

McArthur,
. Cailed 011 her mother,'
Murl Galaway.
a - Prathe K lucky
~...::::
r, en
'was an
overnight guest of hill father-in-law
and mothe ....•~la
Mr. and Mrs.
u .. w,
Lewis Smith.
Mr d Mrs Waite Jordan
. an
.
r
' spent
two days in Cincinnati Where he attended seminars "'ven b·v the Cinli'
'
cinnati College of Mortuary Science
and they attended the funeral services for Dr. George M. Sleichter,
well known educator there.

w. Mairi~ Pomeroy

IHAVEEBj

I

~factory.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Woodrum

605

r

1

{Qiosed-Captioned)

ov·-'""'
c-..,....•

.

WHAT THE

SAID WHEN HE WAS
TOLP 'THA'T H16 Pl5 WAS
TAK:INIS A eA'TH.

a Place For Ua ' Guest: Anth·
ro~ologiet Jennie Keith . Hoate :
Hugh Downs and Frank .Blair.

ennessee. They attended shOWS at

SHAM MrS

1

I

Opry land in Nashville and viewed
·
many attractions there.
Mary Dl" Kepnar Haltford
· "'
'
•
came here for the liOth wedding
celebration of Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers, and was an overnlgbt guest
of her father Dale Dye then tooi
'
'
Mr. Dye and Murl Galaway to ..
Coshocton on Sunday, where they at..
tended a 30th wedding anniversary
celebration for Mr' ·and Mrs
Chesier
. '
Bawngardner (Lacy Jo Dye). They
were
anests of the Kep- .
onarsandretumedhomeonTuelday.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan and
Sarah Faye and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan spent Saturday In the
"Uttle Switzerland of Ohio" area
Mill burg vi ..tftn m•hts and
near
ers
en~ .:J&amp;5'•
viaiting places of interest including a

OHIO'S NEWEST!

MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) ••

" Where Time Began''

Herman

RETURNSBOME
Reino Lind
returned home Sunday r;:::::::::::::::::~
after visiting relaUves in Colwnbus
where he also saw his eye doctOr at
University H(!Spital, and visited Mr.
and Mn. Jobn Kern in McGuffy. . ·

rnema
CIJ®Jiillm NEws
(]) RAINBOW FACTORY
(1)

·Family memben from a distance
.who were here for the 50th wedding
annivers&amp;ry of Mr. and Mrs. Reed
Jeffers were Mr. and Mrs. Lee Jeffers, WaterfOrd, California, Mr. and
Mrs. Jobn DOnbam, .connie, Yvon- :
ne, John Carl and Richard, and Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Jeffers, Niki,
Krbty, Michelle and Kelly, all ol
New BOston, Illinois; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Cordray, Westerville and
Mrs.
Cordray, Athens.
who enjoyed a special dinner
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers
for their 50th weddipg anniversary
which was held at Oblo University
Inn included Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jef.
fers, Marco and Robert, Jackie
Young, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Lawson and son, Mr. and Mrs. ·
.Lester Jeffen, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Jeffers, Mr. and Mrs. fJ!vem. Jordan and Jerrie s.ue, Bret Allman,
Mr. and Mrs: Larry Birchfield and
children, Mr. and Mrs. David
Llewellyn and daughters, Jack Jordan and Jason, Mr. and Mrs. Dan .
Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Dunbam
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Rlchilrd
Jeffers and daughters and the guests
of honor, Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers.
A reception held at the Carpenter
Bafttlot Church in the evening Was
~·
attended by more than 100 friends
and relatives
· .
.•' ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kermeth Crabtree
~t a weekend tn Kentu"'"• and
J:"1
l..Al

nwse

qne Ieber to each square, to form
four Ofdlna~ WOfds.

Viewing

Carpenter
Personals

Clus of the Middleport Church of
• . ChriSt.
Attendance at the Free Methodlst
·.
Jj . ··
. . · Games were played with prizes Church Sept. 28 was ffl. Choir memAttending were Tracy'~nuth, Ila · going to the winners. There was bers present were 12. A solo was
Thomas, Gladys Holstem, Linda group singing of hymns and prayer sung by Mrs. Former.
Keller •. Gert1e Sheets, Penny Monk by Ed Evans. Decorated cupcakes,
Cecil Wise, Chester, attended the
and Vicki ~ Margaret .Bio~t, Lon ice cream, potato chips, bananas morning services.
B?unt,, DalBy Clay, Alice Light, Jo and Halloween candy were served
Mr. and Mrs. Phill Wise, Beverly,
Light, Lou, Lovejoy, Becky Lovejoy, withKool-Aid.
attended morning services, then
Sandy Hom, Anna Maxwell, Melba
Going from here for the party visited With Mr. Wise's parents, Mr..
Keller, Amy, Jason and Samantha were Mrs. Clyda Allensworth Mrs ..and Mrs. Cecil Wise. .
Smit~, Effie Smith, Becky Smith, Reva Beach Mrs. Coleen' Va~
Mrs. Tina Jacobs, who has been
Debble- Foster;· Mi's: ~dkins. Shilla Meter, Dee Hartinger, Evans, H~r- very ill, is much Improved·. and is
Brown •. and !helma Hicks. .
man Kincaid, Mrs. Alice Robeson, staying in her trailer home.
Sending gifts were Tootste Bostic, and Mrs. Nora Rice.
Cliff Jacobs has beell reported
· - - - - - - - - - - - very ill.
Diana Layton, Darlene Sapp, Marie ••
Blackburn, Thelma Stewart, Terri
Steve Eblin was reported 'ili"but
Efaw, margie Garten, Rose Sheets,
was
able to attend Sunday services.
Debbie Sheets, Ruth Schoolcraft,
Wyatt
Schafer, Mt. Vernon, spent
Bunny George, and Virgie Garten.
several days recently with her .
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mr. and 'Mrs.' John Norman,
Wellston, visited Sunday with Mr:·
and Mrs. Nonnan Schaefer.
Mrs. Esta Wi.!e, Colwnbus, forfrom Great Britain, Singapore,
merly
of this community, has been
Japan, Australia and New Zealand.
Weight
loss
was
recorded
in
the
reported
very poorly.
Port calls were made in Singapore,
classes
of
Slinderella
with
one
36
the Philippines and Pusan, South
Korea.
pound weight loss ribbon being
Mrs. Jerri Ferguson, son, James
Ferguson, Columbu,!J, visited Sunday
The long trip home was made ex- awarded in the Chester class.
At the Monday night Mason class with·Mrs. FergUS!In's mother, Mn.
tra special when 350 ·fathers, sons
and ftiends of the crew embarked in Linda Wamsley lost the most weight Bertha Parker and Mr. and Mrs.
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii for the final with Doru)a Elliott being the runner- 'l'homas Gene Parker.
up. Virginia Robie and Lois Purley
Mr. and MrS. Paul Archer, CQlumleg of the homeward journey.
lost
the
most
weight
and
Joyce
Dye
bus,
called on friends here recently.
The Constellation is 1,0'72 feet long,
and
Barbara
Z1l8pan
tied
for
runnerOctober
9 the Laurel Cliff Health
carries a crew of 2,800 and can acup
at
the
Mason
Class
on
Tuesday,
Club
)leld
the ~ year anniv~
commodate 2,150 personnel and 85
while
Rhonda
Roush,
Linda
Turley,
with
\line
members
and one gueat,
jet aircraft assigned to an attack airDebbie Fink and Delores Hawk were ' Mrs. Stewart, Colwnbus. A potluck
craft wing.
Williams joined the Navy in June · the ones losing the rnost weight at dinner was held at the Me!gs County
the Middleport Class. AI the Th\IJ'- . Infirmary.
1978. His wife; Leslie, is the daughter
sday
night Chester Class, Betty
.Roy Howell has been returned
of Don and Jerri Smith of 923 Walnut
Newell
lost
the
most
weight
and
home
from Holzer Medical Center
St., Nelsonville.
·
Melissa Barker was the runner·up.'
much improved.

'

A layette shower was held recently honoring Mrs. Vicki Smith of
near Pomeroy at the home of Mrs.
Lou Lovejoy in Charleston, W. Va.
1•. ,The shower was hosted by Mrs.
Drema Smith, Mrs. Thelma Garten,
and Mrs. Penny Monk. A pink and
blue color scheme was ca rried out in
the decorations. Games were played
- - with pfi:zen;orng to-Debbie Foster
and Anna Maxwell. Linda Keller
won the door prize.
Refreshments of ham salad and
chee~e sandwiches, potato salad,
chips, nuts, mints, a decorated cake
and punch and coffee were served.

A fiower . arranging symposium
and demonstration by two of Meigs
County's outstanding arrangers
highlighted the Region 11 meeting of
the Ohio Association .of Garden
Clubs held Saturday at the Grace
United Methodist Church, Gallipolis . .
Mrs. Pat Holter, POI'(leroy, Region
__ll..dir.edm:,: preslded .al.th~on
which was attendP.d by Mrs. Frances
'Titus, Jamestown, president of the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,
_ a!id Mrs. Louise Bennett ,
Miamisburg, state advisor.
Ano~r high!ighi of the meeting
attended by representatives of 26
clubs was the presentation of awardS including the regional outstanding garden club member, Mrs.
Betty Dean of the Chester Garden
Club, and the regional amateur gar·
dener, Mrs. Ruth Erwin, also of the
Chester Garden Club. They were
recognized and presented certificates and checks for $20 each.
Also presented a certificate from the
OAGC was the Rio Grande Garden
Club which has been organized for 54
years.
Hosted by the Gallia County Garden Clubs, the regional meeting
opened with a slide presentation of
garden scenes in Australia, New
Zealan&lt;l, England, Germany,
Austria, . and Alaska which Mrs.
Huber Fulton collected during her
travels. The slides were shown by
Mrs. Eva Robson. Mrs. Charles
Shaver extended the welcome, and
Mrs. Irene Brannon gave devotions.
The state officers were introduced
and Mrs. Titus announced that Mrs.
Bolin will be the flower show chairman for the 1981 conveil~jon of the
OAGC to be held at Denison University, Aug. 11,12and 13. The show will
be a memorial tribute to Mrs. Alta
CullinS, an accredited judge, Marietta.
When Mrs. James Andrews took
the roll call of clubs, the Cheshire
Garden Club won the attendance
award. Reports were given by the
county contact chairmen and Mrs.
Earl Bender presented flower show
awards to Meigs County for the
Christmas show, second in Ohio; the
Meigs County Fair flower show, the
Washington County Fair flower
show, and the Chester Garden Club
flower show, all with excellent
grades.
Mrs. Bolin, the new flower show
school chairman for Region 11, introduced the OAGC judges and
students including Suzy Carpenter,
Dorothy Bender, Pat Parsons, and
encouraged participation in the
exhibitors and judges' school held
twice each year.
Mrs. Richard Barton of the
Chester Garcten Club, the new '
regional horticulture chairman, was
introduced. Mrs. Wilson Carpenter

'ftrf~NliDlt ~ THATSCR••F!!WOIIIIGAIII!
byHenriAmoidandBoillee
Unscramble 11&gt;eoe lour JumbleS.

r::iJ ~ ~~ ·

WALK¥ CLOWN!!

'THE NEW AVENGERS: Foward
Base ' Stars: P'iilrlck Macnee,
Joanna Lumley. (Repeat)
(JD) MOVIE -(COMEDY)" "Allor
tha Fox" 1111&amp;
11:&gt;15 [)) MOVIE -CQRAMA) •• !'o

~~O:"NTw~

12:15 (l) '(S g
ABC NEWS
·
NlGJiTJ.!NE
.
12:30 CIJ.CD TOMORROW Hoot: Tom

WIN Ill
The Number

'

f~and=~re:freslunen::
·:ts:serv::ed::..---1~==========~

i!LL ~ CON.RAD! OLIVIER!

W0005TOCK! HARRIEr!

-

..__.. __

Snyder. Gueeta~ The Roachea , a

36 Muscle

Of the
cheekbone
40 Soviet lake
41 Mountain
crest
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXB
II LO .NGFELLOW
One letter timply stands for another. In this sa mple A Is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single leiters.
apostrophes. the length and formati on of the words are all
hints. Ea ch day ihe code lett ers are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
38

folk lrlo. (90 mine.)
(1) MOVIE -(DRAMA)'" "Somt
· TI.mt,Nox1Yoor"1117t
12:35 [)) CAROL BURNETT AND
lENDS
g BIG VALLEY
ENU
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BNREXB
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12:58
NEWS UPDATE
1:00
Q. JAMES KENNEDY
MXBOXMRTAQ
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1 :35~·
NEWS
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TRANSFORMED
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2:28 ~ N!WIUPQATE
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TQURTQORTHX
DNOKYRTXU.
3:58 ~ Nl'WS UPDATE
4:00
700 CLUB
·
N Y X VN Q G X B
JNYFXB
4:10
MOVIE '(MYSTERY)" ''CharChan at the Clrcuo" 11138 ·
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHATEVER IS RIGHT OR WRONG
5:30
WORDS OF HOPE
IN
OUR WORLD IS EXACTLY WHAT IS RIGHT OR WRONG
5:40
RAT PATROL
5:58 OO NEWS UPDA·TE
IN THE INDIVIDUAL HUMAN HEART.-MARGARET
LECKIE

'

�•

•

.

'I-The Daily Sentmel, Mtddlf!:'Ort Pom eroy, 0 Monday, Ol;t 20, !980

•

Electric, telepho~e serviCes prOvide jobs

•'

•

WASIUNGTON (AP ) - E lectnc
servtce and telephones a re m ore
than a convemenc e m ru ral
Am~nca, the Agrteulture Depart·
ment says They are a source of

thousands of JObs
Accordmg to a new department
survey, e le ctnc and telephone
systems fma nced by the agency m
1979 helped c reate 47,200 Jobs

The ftgure mcluded 28,600 Jobs
There also are thousands of urban
directly and 18,600 mdirectly m 1,536
jobs m makmg electrtc and
conunerctal mdustrtal and comtelephone eqwpment, veh1cles and
mumty fac1hties, the survey sa1d
bwlding supplies used by the elecThe f1gure does not mel ude JObs
!ric and phone systems, he satd
for new constructiOn or additions to
WAS!fiNGTON (AP) Most
"ffisttn g e lectric and )I hone - gntrrshlpments coq Into export
fac1ht1es
elevators m the Umted States no
The Agncult~&lt;re Department's
longer must be off1c1ally we1ghed,
rural electnflcation admimstratton
the Department of Agncul(ure !la1d
provtded loans for 1,194 systems last
Leland E Bartelt, head of the
year
federal g ram mspection service,
' Besides the direct estabhshment
S81d the new law took effect last
of JObs, the total unpact of the elecweek, but the government w1ll conInc and telephone lmes on rural
tinue to provide wetghing services
economies IS obvtous but hard to
temporarily
m easure " Agriculture Secretary
There w1ll be off1c1al we1ghing ot
Bob Bergland sa1d
gram m and out of the elevators for
He sa1d m the last three years the
30 days after a new rule under the
law IS publiShed m the Federal
loans helped create 86,000 JObs , not,
co unllng employment fr om
RegiSter, he s,wd
econorruc growth of rural areas
After that, elevator operators may
' These two essenllal utility serchoose to eontmue off1c1al we1ghing
vtces, once beyond the reach of most
for the exempted gram if they WISh
rural farmlies,. now are foundation
resources for further unprovements
on which rural conunumhes can
bwld,' he added
Many of the proJects also mvolyed
JACKSON
The annual
loans and grants for housmg, water
Econorruc Outlook Conference for
and sewer additwns, off1c1als wd
agrtculture and the fanuly wtll be
AleK P
Mercure, assistant
held on Wednesday, &lt;kt 29, from
agnculture secretary m charge of
4 30 to 8 30 p m at the Jackson Area
rural development, sa1d that smce
ExtenSIOI\ Center, two miles south of
1977 the department has approved
Jackson on State Route 93
$18 b11lion m loans and loan guaranThe conference 1s specifically
tees for 2,100 electnc and phona
geared to help the agnbusmess
s ystem prOJects
professiOnal and farmly consultant,
Robert W Faragen of the rural
as well as educators m the fields of
electnftealwn admlnittra!lon sa1d
agriculture and home econoiiUcs
that smce the government began
From 4 to 6 p m there Will be a
s urveymg commumty development
general sess10n to bnng you up-t()o
actlVItles of 1ts borrowers m 1961,
date on the overriding factors, Clrmore than 700 000 JObs were created
cwnstances and events that mold
tl)rough 15,600 local proJects m rural
the directton of our total economy,
areas

•

dleport

-------- - - --1__ __ _YiJ!.dJ~ e_ _ _ _
Three family yard sale
Wednesday 22nd from 9 3
ram or shtne

AtbeulJn•toek Sales
Auction

street MlddlePQrt Jeans

Solunloy Oct "1181
Feeder Steers (Good and ChoLL'e) S00-500 lbll

WAS!fiNGTON (AP ) - Farm
populatwn m the Uruted States ap.
pears to be declining steadily, the
latest census f1gures mdicate
The farm population dropped m
1979 to 6 24 lllllhon, down from 971
milliOn 1R 1970
But the Agnculture Department
sa1d part of the decrease may be due
to a change m the way the figure IS
computed
Under a new deflrution adopted m
1978, a farm must have at least
$1,000 m annual'sales of agncultural
products

Beech

39~

6&gt;-75 2$ 500-700 lbo 57..., 50
Feeder Hellen {Good andC!loLce) 300-500 lbs
51~ 50 500-1001bo ~
Feeder Bulb (Good artd Cho!c.:-e) :I»-SSO lbl'
.. 2$-74 50, 500-700 lbo 5SSla~~ghterBulls (Over l OOOibs J 14-56 75
Slaughter Cows UUhUes ~ 50-50 75 CaMera
and Cutters M ~ 10
Springer Cows (By the head ) 42 50-46 50
Cow and caU pairs (By the Wlit) :;oD-640
Veals (CbotceandPrime)58-76 50
BabyC.lves (8ytheheadt2f&gt;-95
HOG PRICES
Hogs (No 1 Barrows and Gill•) m-2.10 Ita
t7-47 al
Butcher Sows 36 7~
Butcher Boars 33-43 7:;
Feeder Pigs (By the head) 12--Z500
SPEEH PRICES
Feeder Lambs46-M 25

flowerpots, b1cycles m1sc

PORCH SALE Monday
from 9 5 one day only
Many ttems
1nclud1ng
some antiques, moving to

mobile home Located at
660 • H1gh Street Mid
dleport Ohio

13

"

how the complex liUX of mternational affairs, government
domestic actions and conswner
goals relate to each other What are
the expected results for 1981 and
beyond 1
After dinner there will be two
sess10ns and you may select the one
you WISh to attend
Section A on Farruly Econorrucs L!VIng W1th Econom1c Uncertamty Evaluatmg Selected Non
Market Options for Farrulies " This
section w1ll focus on cons1derabon of
the COSTS as well as the benefits of
selected non-market actmties (such
as home production, bartermg, etc )

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION

NOTICE 1S hereby g1ven
that •n pursua nce of a
Res t~ lut•on of tne Boa r d of
c ounty Cornm ssroners of
t he County of M e•gs
Po meroy Oh1D passe d on
the 26th day of August
1980 there w•ll be sub

m•tted to a vote ot the

peopl e of sa•d County at a

General ELE CTIO N to be
held 1n the County of Me•gs
Oh •o at th e regula r pl aces
of vo t .ng t here1 n
on
Tu esday the 4th day of
N ove mber
1980
the
ques t ton of levy mg tn ex

cess of the ten mill
1 mttatton f or the benefit of
M e gs County for the pur
pose of provtd.ng fo r the
c:ollec t •on and dtsposat of
garbag e
or
r e f use

-

Public Nottce

( ope rat to n and
ma n
tenance of th e Me gs Coun

ly Landfdll

Satd tax be ng an ad
d• t •onal tax of 1 0 m1 11 to
run for tJve years at a ra re
not exceed1 ng 1 0 mtll for
each
one do llar
of
valuat on w hJC h amou nts
to ten cents for each one
hundred dolla r s of
valuatiOn for ftve yea r s
The Polls for sa td Elec
t on will open at 6 30
o clock A M and r emam
oren un t I 7 30 0 clock PM
a sa1d day
By order of fhe Board of
E lect tons of Me gs Coun ty
OhiO
Ernest A W .ngett
Chatrrnan

Dated

Doroth y M Johnston
D tr ec t or

Dclober

I

1980

1101 6 13 20 27 die

r-----------------------~

I
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!

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
.
Classifieds and
Savel I I

I

1

Wnte your own ad and or der by mad wt th th 1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get

I

I

Phone

1

I
I

Pnnt one word n each

space be low E ac h 1n
1 111a l or gro~ p of f1 gures
counts as a word Cou nt

I

I

1

I nam e and address or
I phone number 1f used
I You t1 get be tter resul ts
1 tf yov descrtbe fully
1 g1ve price The Senttne'

cl astf tcat1on

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below

•f

1I

I

These cash rates
tn clude dt scou nt

I
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17
18.. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
19 _ _ _ _ __ _

1
1

20
21 _ _ _ _ _ _ _
22 _ _ _ _ _ _ _

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1

30
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I1 n10 ------------

32
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33
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3S
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I- Ca rd ol Thank$
l- In Memor11m
l - Announcem ents
4- G vnwa'i
5 Happy Ads
.-- Lost and Found
1- Ya rdSal@
8- Pub It 5all
&amp; A1,1chon
9-- Wanted to Buy

ll-

2s
I
26 _ _ _ _ _ _ :
4---~--5 _ _ _ __ _
27 _
_~---28
__ _ _ _ __ 1
6 -- --'-- 7. _ _ __ _ _
29 _ _ _ _ _ _ 11

12 - - - - - - - - - 13 __~--------14 ___________

e ANNOUNCEMENTS

15~------

16 _ _ _ _ __

Mat! Th1s Coupon w1th Rem•ttance
The Da1ly Sentmel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

NOTICE s hereby gtven
tha t •n pursuance of a
Resolut•on of the Board of
Trustees of the Townshtp of
Columbta Me tgs County
Oh1o passed on the 9th day
of Au gust 1980 there Will be
submtttedTo a vote oT the
people of sa1d Townshtp at

a Ge nera l ELECTION to be
held .n the TownshiP of

Columbia Ohto, at the
regular place of vottng
th eretn on Tuesda v the.

Insurance

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RadiO

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby g1ven
that n pursuance of a

Resolut•on of the Board of
Trustees of the Townshtp of
Chester
Chester, Oh10,

a General ELECTION to be
held In the Townsh ip of
Chester
Oh1o
at the

regular places of votmg
there1n on Tuesday the

4th day of November 1980

eMERCHANDISE
s I - Household Goods
u - ca Tv RadiO Equlpmtnl
SJ- Anllqun
J4- Mtsc Merchandtse
U-Bulldlnu su,plies
16--Peu lor Slit

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
" - Farm !:qlllpment
n - wanhM:I to Buy
1t- Trucks tor \•••

eu smeu

oren until 7 30 o clock P M
a satd day

e TRANSPORTATION
7l-Autos fOr Site
1J- Van1 &amp; 4 W D
14-Mottrcyclea
1!.-uta Parts
IAccenorles
17- Auto Rti)Atr

Sa let

32- Moblle+tomes
lorUie
JJ- Fums for Salt
l4- Bllstneu Bu ilding•
JJ-Loh &amp; Acreage
J..,_Re11 ESII!t Wlnltd
37- Jiflalton

'

12 Noon Saturdr,
tor Mondav

OhiO

Ernest W Wtngett
Chatrman

Dorothy M Johnston

Otrector

Dated October I 1980
.SERVICES

Want Ad Adverhsmg
Deadlmes
7lO PM O.liV

( 101 6 13 20, 27 4tc

11 - Homtlmprovements
11- Pivmblngl Exc•vating
IJ- E~~~oc•~atlnll

2 days

J d•ys
6 day s

,,.

..."'

Dtrector

Dated October 1 1980

NOTICE OF EL-eCTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION

NOTICE ts hereby g tven
that •n pursuance of a

Dorothy M JOhnston
Dtrector

Dated October 1, 1980
(10) 6 13 20 27 4tc

that 1n

a

Educatton of the Southern

Local

School

D1stnct

Ractne, OhtO, passed on the

Local School Otstnct Mtd

dleport, Oh1o passed on the
29th day of August 19ao
there w•ll be subm1tted to a

vote of the peop le of sa1d
School DIStnct at a
General ELECTION to be
held m the School DIStnct

of Me1gs Local Metgs
County
Oh10, at the
regular places of votmg
therem, on Tuesday the

4th day of November 1980,

vote of the people of sa1d
School D1stnct of Southern

the questton of levymg1 '"
excess of the ten mtll
lin'ittat1on, for the benefit of
Metgs Local School D1stnct
for the purpose of con
structmg
add1n9.
to,
remodeling rehab1ltfaf1on
1mprov1ng furn1shmg and
equtppmg butldtngs tor
school ·purt5oses
Sa1d ta&gt;&lt; bemg an ad
dtt1onal tax of 3 5 mills tn
run for five ye~rs at a rate
not exceedmg 3 5 mills for
each one dollar of
valuation whtch amounts
to thtrty ftve cents for each

Local, Me1gs County Ohto
at the regular places of
vottng thereto on Tuesday
the 4fh day of November
1980, the quest1on of
levy1ng, tn excess of the ten
mtll lim1tatton for the
benef•t of Southern Local

School DIStrict for the pur

pose of construct1ng ad
d •ng
to
remodeling,
rehabthtattng tmprmnng
fvrn •shtng and equipptng

bu1ldmgs for school pur
poses

Satd fa&gt;&lt; bemg an ad
d•f•onal tax of 3 0 m1t1s to
run for three years at a
rate not exceed 1ng 3 0 mtlls
for each one dollar of
vatuahon wht ch amounts
to th.rty cents tor each one

hundred

dollars

of

va1uat1on for three years

one

hundred

o clock AM and rem run
open untt I 7 30 o clock P M

Eastern Standard T1me of

sa1d day

By order of the Board of
E lect1ons, of Me1gs County
OhiO
•

Chlrte

'"

Dorothy M Johnston

Dated October I 1980
!10)6 13 20 27,4tc

The Polls for sa1d Elec
liOn w1ll open at 6 30

o clock AM and remam
open unt111 30 o clock P M
of satd duty

By order of the Board of

E tecttons of Me1gs County

Oh iO

"'

f25

Countv of M e1gs Oh10 at
the regular ptaces of votmg
therem on Tuesday the

rate
In memorv c art! of Think ( ud Obllu•ry 'cents per word SJ 00
m in mum Cuh t!11dvance
Mobtle Home sit•s and Y01rd : alas are accepted only wlfll cnh wifh
orcter 2J cent chlrge lor ads car.-ylng Bo• NumDtr In Cart ol TIM
Senftnel

&lt;llh day of November 1980

the Quesrton ot levytng tn
excess of the ten mtll
llmttatton for the benef1tof
Me QS County tor the pur
pose at provtd tn9 a total
~ •ncrgency
medtcal ser

Fnday ntght start1ng at
7 30 p m Factory choke
~ guns only

SHOOT

Saturday

start1ng at 6 30

Sponsored

by

th~

Ractne Volunteer Ftre
Department at building m

Bashan

Factory

choke

guns only

Dated October 1, 1980
(10) 6 3, 20,27 4tc

30 percent off greenware
for the month of October
Drehel s Ceram1cs, 59 N
Second
Avenue
Mtd

dleport 992 27SI
Decorated cakes lor all oc
casstons character cakPs
&amp; sheet cakes Call992 6342

or 992 2583
APPLES $4 95 &amp; up m your

Have vacancy tn my home
for elderly person Room

the Counly of Meigs,
Pqmeroy, Oh10 passed on
tM 2nd day of Septem~er
1980 there Will be sub

Burson s U S 33, 12 m1les
north of Pomeroy
LEARN to make your own
chocolate
covered
chernes
peanut butter

cups

candy

bars

diP

chocolates &amp; more Free
candY class startmg thiS
week Call Carousel Con

fect1onery, 992 6342 for m
formatton

Apples &amp; Sweet C1der
Romes, Gnmes Red &amp;
Golden

Delicious

Now

at $4 oo &amp; up per
buschel Fltzpatnck Or.
chards State Route 689
Phone 669 3785
sell~ng

ntghtcrawlers for sale

hm•taflon, for the benefit of

Meigs County for the pur
pose of provll!tng cvrr&amp;nt
expenses of a Public
Library !Me1gs County
Otstncf L•brary)
Satd ta&gt;&lt; being

an ad

d1110na1 tax of 112 m111 to
run for ftve years at a rate
not e&gt;&lt;ceeding 1/2 mill for
each
one dollar of
valuatton, whtch amounts
to ftve cents for each one
hundred dollars of

1ce

bo&gt;&lt;es,jars

p1e ton1ght Mom "'

---Announcements-,
~-PAY

highest prl!es
POSsible lor gold and Silver
coins rings, jewelry etc
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport
SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow 1n Rutland
Every Sunday startmg at

noon
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy scout
Troop 249 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I

il----.--Homes tor Sale

ED
BARTELS Loan
Representative 1100 East
Mam St Pomeroy Oh
Mortgage
money
available All types home

Real E5tate

antiques

etc Complete households
Wnte M D M1ller Rt 4
Pomeroy OHl or call 992
7760
Gold, Stiver or foreign
toins or any gold or s1lver
ttems Anttque furn1ture
glass or chtna w1ll pay top
dollar, or complete estates
No 1tem too large or too

small Check pnces before
Osby (Osslel Marlin 992
6370
WANTED
TO BUY
C:::LD
SILVER
PLATINUM STERLING
COINS RINGS,JEWELR
Y, MISC. ITEMS AB
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED ED
BURKETT
BARBER
SHOP
MIDDLEPORT
OH10992 3476
OLD COINS pocket wat
ches class nngs weddmg
bands diamonds Gold or
s1lver Call J A Wamsley
742 2331 Treasure Chest
Co1n Shop Athens OH 592
6462
WANTED TO BUY
nngs,

weddmg

Class
bands

anythmg stamped lOK
l4K 18K gold Silver COinS
pocket watches Call Joe
Clark, 992 2054 Clarks
Jewelry, Pomeroy Oh10

General

back

yards

Jus right away and get on

TUESDAY, OCT. 21
7:17 P.M.

&amp; a load of firewood 992

1tinel

For

reservations

the eligibility I&gt;St at 992
, 2156or992 2157
1 need the ch1mney sweep
20«

by

Noon Mondly,
ALINE WEAVER'S Beau
tv Shop Curly Perms
$10 00 Monday and Tu.,.
day only Balance of ~~~
Iober Operators Alme and
Cathy Call949 2666

RNs,
looking
for
,challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
' shifts&gt; Feel the need to
develop your tdeas 1n
res1dent care with a highly
motivated staff? Pomerpy
Health care Center has the
answer for you Due to
achieving near maximum
census,

we

now

have

ppenlngs for full and part
time POSitions on day shift
but will consider other shll
ts Competitive salary, ex

4__=_G.!_~!_W~l_-==
Puppies
4 males,
females 247 3314

route earner Phone

2

----------------,
6
Lostand Fo'iiii&lt;! -

---------Call In the Rutland area

742 2014

FOUND In Minersville,
yellow male dog with tatoo
ln ear CaH 99276SO

Two story

older home

seven
rooms
bath
basement,
hardwood
floors fireplace On four
large lots wtth nver fron
tage
Matn
Street
Pomeroy
Ftnanctng
ava1lable Call after 5 992
7284 $26 500

May be seen at 110 Lynn

most

Street, Middleport or call

drapes

4 room
house
With
bathroom sun porch &amp; a
back porch, carpetmg~
ftreplace new fuel oil fur
nace new roof &amp; spoutmg
basement cement block

storage bu1l~mg Drilled
well At Letart Falls along
St Rt 338 Call 614 247
2097

bath, central heat
1n
sutated, storm wtndows
Prtced reduced to $12 500

742 3074
Four houses (one a double)
&amp; ftve extra lots all •n one

blOck on OhiO RIVer 1n
Reedsville
All rented
Illness forced sacnf1ce at
only $37 500 for all Pnvate

party Dlal614 378 6221
House &amp; lot lor sale 8
rooms, bath 2 porchs
basement out bu1ldmg All
have been remodeled Cor
of

Matn

&amp;

Tyree

General

742 2607 $7500 00
EIGHT

room

house

fireplace

total electric,
sundec~ 2 car garage, 2
and
one half
acres
substant1al down payment,
assume 7 percent loan 1f
qua11f1ed 985 3Y34

pel 1971 Cameron 14 x 64
two bedroom~. new carpet
1972 Champ1on, 12 x 60 two
bedrooms new carpet 1976

Cameron 12 x 60
bedrooms all electrtc
Skyline 12 x 65
bedrooms bath &amp; l!J

two
1971

two
new

carpet
1970
PMC
12 x 60 two bedrooms new
carpet B x s Sales, Inc
2nd x Vtand Street, Potnt

wv

Pleasant,
4&lt;124

Phone 675

1980 70 x u mob1le home
w1th 7 x 24 expando Ex
cellent condition Phone
742 3030 or 742 2728
Movtng must sell
two
bedroom mobile home one
acre much, much more

No

reasonable

offer

May take some

&amp; set up at local tra1ler

NR U R iggs Add ition
beaut1ful split level home on
lerege lot f.amlly room recrea

1960 10 x 40 mob1le home,

court Phone 99~ 7848,

everything you want e&gt;cecuflve
home Prlcedforquicksate

If you really want to 5ell
list w1th u5 today

Re•l Estate- General

NEW LISTING Loll m a
pool next summer• ThiS
18 diameter x 4'• depth
abobve ground pool 1s
Included with lhts 10

Housing
Headquarters

l~~~~~:tJi
_ 216 E Second Street
Phone

1-(614) 992 3325

log

a

few mmutes

cabtn

A

more

1e1sure1y and relaxed
way of hfe Let's take a
look
NEW LOG CABIN
HOME - 2 bedrooms,
bath, kitchen, dlnmg
ltv1ng r.oom and loftlor
storage Has a level lot
with river frontage Just
$25,900
$1,000 DOWN - 4 room
frame fix 11 yourself
w1th 4 7 acres T P
water near $79 64 mon
thly for 5 years at 13%
Save on thi~ $4,500
home
•
:WO ACRE FARM Mostly fence and some
timber, with lots of river
frontage or will sell
house and 1 acre Ask
lng $225,00 for entire
form Let's talk
ATTRACTIVE
AND
COMFORTABLE
very nice 2 bedroom
home with woodburnlno
fireplace In den Haslutl
basement, garage and 3

lOIS In town Thll you
wlllllke for only ~.ooo
2 BUSINESS PROPER·
Tl ES - Good Income,
oood locations You
can t alford to pay your
earning In taxes, Invest
'"one of these and write
it off

PROTECT YOUR LIFE
AND
VALUABLES,
OPENING
YOUR
DOOR TO ANYONE
CAN COST YDU, LIST
WITH US. WE ARE
NEXT TO POMEROY
POST OFI'IC&amp;, CALL

)"elepnone worken peeded
773 S.76 or nil 5465

!-I ilii'· '" ' '

99HUs orttHU•.
If,

.1!((/liolff t •(,\

m Eastern District This
home also has 1112 baths,
rec

room, offtce, sew

lng room, all carpeted,
natural gas forced air
heat

full

Fully

msulated,

basement

garage,
storage

furmsh~d

part1all y

set up

at local trailer
Phone 992 7848

room .t bedroom home

w1th

laundry,
room,

workshop, chimney for
wood burner Huge at
tached carport and ap
prox1mately 2 acres of
level land All for just
$41,500 00
GORGEOUS AUTUMN
COLORINGS - Are a
background to lh1s new
ly constructeq, 3
bedroom home range
and hood In kitchen, 1'1•
baths, w b f p , electric
heat, carpeted, full
basement wtth garge on
approximately
1 75
wooded acres close

JUST' 542,000 oo
THE
COUNTRY
SCENE - On approx
1mately 13 cres of land
wtth a 4 bedroom house
near Syracuse
In
sulated, natural gas
heat,
carpeted
$39 900 00
INSULATED - Costs
less to heat lh1s 3
bedroom
home,
carpeted on a lOO'x1oo
lot,
In
Syracuse
$26,900 00
SNUG HAVEN - FUlly
Insulated, new thermo
pane windows plus e
wood burner to supply
electric heat will keep
you warm In this 3
bedroom home on 112
a~re lot Approved lor
Fermers Home Loan
$21,500 00
CAREFUL IT'S LOAD·
EDI Call nowtogelflrst
shot at this feature
laden 14 x70
mobil
ehome
2 baths, 3
10

bedrooms, central air,

buill In
kitchen,
carpeted, electric heat,
on approximately 1 acre

lot 18,500
BUILDING LOTI On old
Chester Golf Course
Utilities available Approximately 1 acre
$6,000
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland, Jr
ffl-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; DoHie Turner
,2-5692
J tin Trussell 949·2660
OFFICE 992·2259

AtB

Call Howard
9492162
949 2160
1 22 tic

remodeling

"From 30x3D"

-Roofmg and gutter

work

SMALL

UtilitY Buildings

yd

-Concrete work

SiZes from 4x6 to 12x40

• 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equ1pment

-Piumb•ng and
fFreeEst1mates)

V.C. YOUNG II

P&amp;S BUilDINGS
Rt 3, Box 54
Rac1ne, Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 tfc

992 2478

992 6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy Oh

9 28 1 mo pd

r
contact~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;::::~~==========~======~

Third Middleport

F~rewood

S30

oo

court

per load,

~~~~k~~et4724~~l•l

cut

Used V 30 D1tch W1tch tren
cher w1th hoe 1 614 694
7842
Ftrewood for sale, some
dry some green $20 00

CARPENTER'S
DANCf STUDIO
Now open wtth a studto
Pomeroy and Racrne
Classes offered are

Ballet, Tap and Jazz
For mfo and enrollment

Only $395
plus blower

I GoodM Ward
Electnc Range
$75
1 Good Used
Gas Range
$100
I Good Used Fr•g•da~re
Refrigerator
$150
[\?,_ POMEROY

~LANDMARK
u ......

by

RUTLAN

-

_..ZmH.IIII-

rt f ive yoo

1

slcll-'1" ''"'""""''
lelt'dl)'l l

I

FREEl

6 Storm Wtndows or

Superior Siding Center

(6141 H2-32n POMe..,y, Ohio

C• l Anrttme

brakes,

pump 1acks and ladder
1acks for $125 oo 10 1nch

FURNITURE'S

1\esterson.

"Dr1ve A Little-Save A Lot"
SHOPISFULLYSTOCKED

Black and Decker rlldutl

arm saw lor $250 oo Phone
992 3714

BROWN
Rubber Back
RUBBER
BACK
SHAG
SQ Yd
f995 Sq Yd
Installed
Cash &amp; Carry

'5"

t~~========::::::.~

Skirt Your Tops!
Printed Pattern

Middleport, Oh•o
PH 992 6342
TRY US!
complete Dry Cleantng
and Laundry
• Carpet
• Ora penes
• Furmture
c We' re No 1m
Servrce &amp; Qua

'9"

Sq Yd

Sq Yd
cash &amp; Carry

N1ce Selection of Carpet Remnants and
Lmoleum Remnants at B1g Discounts.

camp1ng
Equipment

RUTLAND FURNITURE

1956 CHEVY BUS camper,
four bunk beds double

Houses for Rent

TWO BEDROOM un
furmshed house, also two

CAR PET
W/Pad
Installed

$499

GOLD, RUST

&amp; BLUE PATTERN

s nk gas refrtgerator

11

Mam St

HOOF HOLLOW

Horses

near Racme 992 5858

and pontes and rtdtng
lessons
Everythtng
tmagtnable 1n horse equ •p
ment
Blankets
be lt s

Three bedroom house for

boots

F 1ve room house W1lh bath

Western

rent on St Rt 143 3 m11es
from Pomeroy

Reeves

or

dog

Humane

Soc1e ty, shots &amp; wormed
992 6260

Mob1le Homes
for Rent

TWO bedroom mobtle
home real n1ce, Brown s

44

Ruth

CALL today for a beautiiUl
puppy

Trailer Park
992 3324

EngliSh and

(614) 698 3290

Free gas

$200 00 per month 949 2057
complete pnvacy

42

etc

PUT a cold nose •n your

future
Me1gs County
Humane Society 992 6260

Adults only

Shots x wormed
one
m 1mature collte type
female one shephard type
female one blacK x tan
Kerr f emale one walker
hound male

Apartment
for Rent

3 ANO 4 RM furn•shed ap
ts Phone 992 5434

Get a happy pet'

From

Two bedroom apartment
with large llv,pg room &amp;
kitchen Furn1shed Adults

Humilne Soctety
Shots &amp; wormed 992 6260
Hours 12 7 daily closed on

only

Tuesday One male beagle

Brown s

your

Trailer

young one black &amp; tan
Kerr one female Labrador
type
brown &amp; blac k

Park 992 3324
Furmshed apartment four

shephard type female

rooms, bath, adults only
no pets MiddlePQr! 992
3874

Musical
1nstruments

FURNISHEQ APT
for
rent In Middleport All
utdltles furnished '"
cludmg cable TV S200
month No ch&gt;ldren or pets
Call Mon Fn 9 4 992 3381
45

Furntshed Rooms

ROOMS for rent room &amp;
board by the month
vacanCies

Tr~lned

&amp; ex

perienced
Elderly
preferred 992 7314

4!__ __~ce lo':_Rent __
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park Route 33. North of
Pomeroy Large lots- Call

992 7479
TRAILER spaces for rent
Southern Valley Mob1le
Home Park Chesh~re, Oh
992 3954

Just whal all your lops and
1ackels are callinf for now l a
sl1m sk1rt w1th htp softne&gt;s 2 a
WlliP Skirt With 11ppled Stde
tuli1&gt;curved hem

$1.75 r.IKII ,..... Add 5IM

............. fint.cllll
linull .......... Setld •

......

4'3 1

l'llln Dlpl.
DaUy SeoiiDel

Z43 IIIII 17 St., llw , ... IY
10111 1'1111 .... Mlli£S$,
ZIP, SIZE. 1H mu IIUIIRl
Wily put up
..,. dollars

w~h

aet

h•Jih PfiCOSbetter quality'

~EW FALL WINT£R

house to rent m Metgs
Gal Ita area Prefer country
setting
References

Sl 75) Cltaloc Sl 00

avo1lable
(Athens )

13QIIclllllt 1-'-' $1 75
IZ1...._ e' D1111e1 Sl 75

5916076

pr~ced

PAnERN CATALOG 94 pettems
Free Pattern Coupon (worth

uu....,llllllt Qli!WI 75
l»S•IIIIIt•SU.

)1.5Ul 75

81

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam cleaned
Free

2176

est1mate

82

Allts Chalme r s model CA
tra ctor wtth s1de mower

d1esel

soc

HEATING

Company Pomeroy OhiO

83

All •s Ch almers mode l WO

tra ctor

Sha rp

Metgs

Equ tp ment

$950 00

backhoe,

Com

E xcavat~ng

spec talty

qutck

depen

dable serv1ce 742 2753
J

&amp; F BACKHOE SER

FOR SA-LE or trade 196S

v tCE IIScensed

Massey Ferguson tractor
1H
corn p1cker
HA
rotovator See Leo Morns
at742 2455

sept1 c

cavaling work &amp;
layout 992 7201

- - -Wanted
----to Buy

84

tank

water &amp;

62

gas

&amp; bonded,
1nstallatlon,

lines

E)(

transit

Electrical
&amp; Refrtgerat.on

Poles ma x

dtameter 10 ~ on largest

S EWING

end $12 per ton Bundl ed
slab SIO per ton Delivered
to Oh iO Pallet Co Rt 2
Pomeroy 992 2689

makesl 992 2284
The
Fabnc Shop, Pomeroy

Repa rs,

gentle

reasonably

100 lb lambs, ready for
slaughler Phone 949 2S90

MACHINE

all

service,

Authonzed

Smger

Sales

and serv1ce We sharpen
Sc 1ssors

L1vest,~o:=
c::.
k ___ .

63

ELWOOD
REPAIR
1

I

BOWERS
sweepers,
trons, all small

t6asters
appliances

Lawn

mower ~

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7 985
382S

Howard Ervtn

d•esel

New Holt and baler for sale
742 201&lt;1

con

DOZER work, small tobs a

pany Pomeroy Oh10 992
2176

blade, 1974 SlO 500, John
Deere,

a1r

&amp;

992 2364 after 5 p m

45769 992 2176

way

e c $9 750, Bobcat, d1esel
loader $6 000 01lch W1lch
trencher $3,500 Vermeer
trencher 100 h p $17 500
Gooseneck trailer 3 axle
$3 300
Tra11er, 3 axle
new Sl 600 Call 1 614 &lt;157
3139

Plumbing

dtt1on•ng,
furnace
ct ean.ng plumbmg
Call

S97S 00 Me1gs Equ pment

priced 992 6134

Dozer

992

&amp; Heat1ng

very

Farm Equ1pment

Reasonable

rates Scotchguard
6309 or 7 42 2211

Ford SN 1ractor •n good
cond ttton $1650 00 Metgs
Equtpment
Company
Pomeroy Oh•o 992 2176

Horse for sa le one &amp; one

61

Home
1mprovements

half year old sorrel f1IIV

Prtnted Pattern 4538 M1sses

- --- WORKING couple needs
Call

SELMER
wooden
clan net, $100 00 Holton
tenor saxophone $2.50 00
992 2429 after 5 p m

Watst S11es 24 25 2611 28 30
32 34 S11e 26\1 slim skirt Ill
yds 45-ln wrap 2\1 yds

Send fot out

waii!ed to Rent

square baler
sal e
at $4500 00 Interest
tree fman ctng tlll 4 l 81
Metgs Equ •pm ent Com
pany Pomeroy Ohto 992

435

CHIP WOOD
57

gas

stove and runs good Call
992 9905 Monday thrq)Jgh
Saturday

bedroom furntshed &amp; one

bedroom furn1shed apart
ments Ca II after 6 p m
992 2288

No chilrtoel« esllmetr

CARPET SHOP

1cemaker for $200 00 E 19ht

lientals
41

n.. -

'')ust

fuSS'
United States Steel
~

9 26 I mo

side refrigerator freezer
alummum

~IsnQ

purchase of com
plete stdtng 10b

992-7354

DINETTE SET, ExtenSion
table, four chal rs $25 00
Phone YY2 2835
Side

Ph 614 949 2358
E ven1ngs &amp; Weekends
1 9
There s only one/

S Pa.r Shutters wtth

Call:

Pomeroy

anythmg!"

10 13 1 mo pd

-Backhoe
and
Dump Truck SerVICe
-Shop and Port
able Weldmg .

novelty

Spec1al School Rates
We pnnl ALMOST
anything on ALMOST

949 2160

-

a, ~

sh1rts tor pohflclans,
ball teams, business or
IndiVIdUals
Sh~rts &amp; Hats $4 00 &amp; up

Call Tom Haskms

SHULER
CONSTRUCTION

New Wood Burner

tout

T sh~rts

FREE ESTIMATES
Call 949-2710
9 2a I mo

Pom eroy
Landmark

COPPERTONE

Print
' Shop

20 Years Exper1ence
All types rooftng work
New &amp; Repatr
All types of remodeling
1nsrde and out

1n

Now At

Stoves

~Custom

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp;
HOME MAINTENANC
SERVICE

p&gt;ckup load 985 3906

E Mam st

1960 model
10 x 40
mob&gt;le
home
Partially
lurmshed

0.

Free Esl1mates
Reasonable Prices

Expenenced Operators
avatlable tor local work
• 2 rubber lire backhoes
• 1 e)(cavator hoe 1114

-Addonsand

MORTAR m1xer make Is
stone, 2 bag 7 horse power
motor
hke new
Also
f~rebnck &amp; approximately
2 000 regular bnck color

1973 Crown Haven 14 x 65
three bedrooms, new car

refused

POMEROY,
992 2259

10 7 tf c

electrical work

MOb1le Homes
for Sale

32

trade Call anytime, 949
2038 843 2971 or 843 4802

hon room two c~~tr G~~trage b!Jilf
In .!t!ppllances plenty of room tor

All work guaranteed

~~:::=~~~~~==~~=========~Pr=========~
"YOUNG S
ALL STEEL
Pullins
CARPENTER
Farm Buildings
Excavating
SERVICES"
SilOS

2 Buy now at Summer
Pnces Exce1s1or Co 614
992 2205

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

OLDER HOME on Long
St Rutland 3 bedroom

t;~~:nt:;'";l~""~
guHer
r
Pllnllng.

Elden 9922805
Walburn or380 South
grey
FOUR room house for sale

baths fully carpeted w1th
attracttve

Mon Fn

992-5682

HEATINGOIL No 18/No

...

cellent working conditions,
life Insurance and
disability ~llcy at no cost
to lhe emj)loyee, and
hospllallzatfon Insurance
available Come visl!.':'.' or
call Nancy Van meter,
~ N Director of Nursing,
• Pomeroy Health Care Cen
ter, 614 992 6606

"

ranch brick hom~ rn Baum
Addttton W1th new gltrage
&amp; gente door Gas heat,
newly mstalled central atr
condlt lonmg, famtly room
&amp; stone fireplace, ap
pltances bu11t m newly tn
stalled electr•c breaker
system,
attract1ve1y
decorated basement, 2

NR 61 - New Llstif1t - Rustle
Hilts be11utlfui new three
bedroom nome family room
large tenced In yartl This OM
wont last long Priced In teh tow

dnve from town B1g
woods and
rolling
hayflelds w1th a
remodeled 2 bedroom

GET VALUABLE tra1n1ng
as a young bUSiness person
1and earn good money plus
some great gilts as a Sen

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom

Real E51ate

w•thln

Help Wanted

--

-~---

Cherles M Hayes Realtor
Neacll E Car~ey l!lr Mill"
Ptl 992 2•03 or "2 2710

bedspreads blankets In
lant &amp; children s clothmg

11

CHESTER GRADE
SCHOOL
· CALL 992·2111

REALTY
. . . POMEROY, 0

condltton sheets, curta los

starts

- - ----

Racme, Dh1o 949 2778

Yard Sale 1tems m good

what have you ' Phone 992
7494

--- ---------Homes for Sale

31

ner

HAYES

COUNTRY LANE - A
peaceful farm nestled '"
the gentle countryside
that can be enjoyed

FARM BUREAU
ANNUAL
MEETING

/

Hey 1 Can I have your p1ece o£

11ea1 estate

stlver

part1es when the sewage

LAFF-A-DAY

General "'LECTlON to be
held 1n the County of Meigs

the

rewelry

whatnots lamps stands or

Betty s carry Out now has

stlnk1ng

mttfed to a v&lt;fte of the
people of satd County at a

1980,

IRON AND BRASS BEDS
old furOilure, desks gold

treatment plant located 1n

••

board,
laundry
reasonable 992 6022

tgages Phone 992 7000 or
992 S732

contatners ctder, potatoes

our

-~...._,

---~------

p1ece or ent1re households
New used or antiques m
cludtng homes, farms or

selling Also do appraising

bnng a $500 000 00 damage
su1t aga1nst respons1ble

Commtss•oners of

quest1on of 1evy1ng In ex
cess of the ten mill

Ea(h word o11tr "" m•nlmum IS words is 4 cenll per word per day
Ad s runn ing other fhan consecull vt days wtll be ch.,ged at the 1 day

Rac~ne

GUN SHOOT,
Gun Club, every

Dorothy M Johnston

Dtrector

is--wanted to Do

m1nmg operot1on Call 367
7593

Wanted to Buy

s.-- M•sc- Merct.aruse-

Call985 3814 or992 2571

dollars sterlmg, etc wood
RACl NE

Chatrman

m pur!uance of a

Pomeroy Ohio passed on

County at a General ELEC
TlON to be held 10 the

Nothmg too large Also
guns pocket watches and
co1n collect1ons Call 614
767 3167 or 557 3411

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

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

9AM530PM

ttbles or enftre estates
for anttques and collec

OSSIE S AUCTION House
20 N 2nd Street M1d
dleport Oh10 We sell one

9

Hrs

~f!!'9_U~5

pay cash or certlfted ctreck

been

WANTED to Lease coal

rmgs

A Wingett

Ern~l

PUbliC NOtiCe
NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE 1s hereby g1ven

November,

)71

~133

Nottce Bernard J Dtddle
&amp; •nterested restdents wtll

Clerk

the

there wtll be submttted to a
vote of tne people of satd

of

248,
667

Ernest A Wtngett
Chatrman

Tuesday, the 4th day of

the 261h day of August, 1980

d&lt;Jllars

valuatiOn for f1ve years

The Polls for said Elec
t1on wtll open at 6 30

county Commtsstoners of

Me,gs

Me~gs

19th day of August 1980

Ohio at the regular places
of voting therem, on

of

SURANCE

____

ATTENTION
(1M
PORTANT TO YOU) Wdl

Insurance
----------------AUTOMOBILE

property for underground

Packmg

custom
ret a 11 meat

~

13

ftnanc•ng
new
old,
refmanclng and 2nd mor

Washmgton Co Rd
L1lt le Hockmg OH

p m

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby goven

Education of the

pursuance of

Meat

processmg

GUN

that m pursuance of a
Resolut1on of the Board of

Public Nottce

Resolut1on of the Boara of
County

9 Libe rty
Avenue
Pomeroy will
repa trsewtng machtnes

&amp; AucttOO

West V~rg'n'a 773 5471 Sale
every Fnday ntght at 7
p m Auct1oneer Howard

s l aughter~ng

even111g

Chatrman

that

Public Notice

1S Words or Under

IDO

Dorothy M Johnston

Public Nohce

Count')~'

14- Eittlrlni
I liteln gerallon
I J-Gen...al HIU itng
u--M H Repa.r
I 1- Uphoh tery

Cash

Chatrman

Resolut1on of the Board of

Rates and Other I nformatJon
1 day

By order of the Board of
Elect1ons of Metgs County

Ernest Wingett

Ernest A Wmgett

Oh o

tt on wt l! open at 6 30
o clock A M and remam

4-4- Hay &amp;Gran
U- Steel I Ferhluer

eREAL ESTATE

the quest•on of levymg •n
e&gt;&lt;cess of the ten mtll
ltmttat.on for the beneftt of
Chester Townsh1p for the
purpose of mamtaenmg and
operat1ng cemetertes
Sa1d fa&gt;&lt; bemg a renewal
of an extsttng tax of 0 4 m111
to run for ftve years at a
rate not exceedtng 0 4 m111
for each one dollar of
valuat •on, whtch amounts
to four cents for each one
hundred dollars Of
valuat1on for f1ve years

OhiO

(10) 6 13 20 27 41C

The Polls for sa1d Elec

U- Livestock

OpporhJnlty
22--Money to Loan
23- Proteu lona l
Ser11 ttt

31--Homea lor

eRENTALS

41-Wanted to Rent
4t- Equ•pment lor Rent

e FINANCIAL
21-

submttted to a vote of the
people of satd Townsh ip at

By order of the Board of
Electtons of Metgs County

of satd day
By order of the Board of
Elections of Metgs County

there w•ll be subm•tted to a

" - space tor Rent

TV

open unt111 30o clock PM

Dorol hy M Johnstqn

PUbliC N0f1ce

day

JONES

- Auto amt'fru-ck
RePair
- Tr&lt;~nsmtSSIOn
Repa1r

Bas s

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Announcements

3

valuatton for ftve years
The Potls for satd Elec
tton will open at 6 30
o clock AM and remam
open unt1l 7 30 PM of sa1d

The Polls for sa •d Elec
t1on wtl l open at 6 30
o clock A M and rem am

Resolul10n of the Board of

Chatrmar

Pubhc Nottce

penod

Ernesl A Wmgett

By order of the Board of
Elect tons of Me.tgs County
Ohm

Dated October I 1980
(10) 6 13 20 27 &lt;lie

U- FRooms

&amp;CBRiplr
11- Wanted To Do

Pubhc Nottce
vtce 10 Metgs County
Sa1d tax be1ng an ad
dtttonal tax of 1 0 mtll to
run an mdehntte pertod at
a rate not exceedmg 1 0
mtll for each one dollar of
valu afton wh1ch amounts
to ten cents for each one
hundred dollars of
vatuatton for an rndefmtte

hookup

l1le Call Fred Miller at992
6338
Gene

KAUFPS
PLUMBING
AND
HEATING

ROGER HYSEU:S
GARAGE

M iddleport Must be 1n
Middl eport area
Must
have washer and dryer

panehng floor tile, cetltng

992·2342
DOWNINGOIILDS AGENCY, INC.

the new used and anttque
furntture busmess
We
lake constgnments For In
formatton and ptckup ser
v 1ce ca II 992 6370 or '"

Business Services

992 2!61a fter 6or 1nqu1re at
640 South Third Avenue

S1tuattons Wanted
-------WlLL do odds &amp; - ~"'''"'-1-

FOR AU YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

tlqu1dalion sales Get top
dollar LISt w1th th~ man
who has over 25 years m

--

DE SPER ATELY Needed

12

ERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 1868

~ · --~~P~u~b"ll~c~S~a"le~--~·

---

Wanted to Rent

two bedr oom unfu r n•sl'led
house or apartment or
tra ler not over $75 to $100
a month Please phone

fee pa1d Call Mrs Cadle
614 992 6606

DCMNING:cHILDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

, (no tonk)

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF
THE TENMtLL
LlMITA"flON
NOTICE IS hereby g1ven

day

01rector

41 - HOUSfl tor Rent
U- Mobtll Hames
forRenl •
44- A~artmentl•r Rent

l l - lnsurance
14- Bus ntu Tralnmg
IS- Schools Instruction

23~------1
24
__________ 1

2
3

IN EXCE.JS OF
THE TEN MILL
L!MlTATION

on the 12th day of
August 1980 there ~Ill be

1-HeiPwantM

- - - - , . - -___
1I 8·9. _ __________

1
1
1

I

) For Sa le
) Announ ce m en t
) For Rent
1

ONTA~EVY

~assed

12- SUuat.O f'lnftd

you It

} Wanted

NOTICE OF ELECTION

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

prope r

I check the prope r box

1l

1

reserve s the nght to
claSSifY edtt or re1ect
any ad Your ad wtll be

1

Pubhc NOtiCe

o,

II

the

110 ) 6 13 20 27 4tc

or Wnte Datly Sentmel Class1fled Dept
111 Court St., Pomeroy,
45769

I

1n

Da led Ocl I 1980

PHONE.992-2156

1

resu lts Money not refundab le

] put

Dorothy M Johnston
Dtrector

WANT AD INFORMAnON

1

1

I
I

be subm tt ted to a vote of
the people of sa d V •llage at
a Genera l ELECTION to be
held 10 the Vt ll age of
Ractne
Oh 1o
at th e
reg ular pl aces of votmg
ther eu" on Tuesday the
4th day of November 1980
the quest1on at levymg tn
excess of the ten m 1ll
l• m •tat •on fo r th e benef1t of
Rac 1ne V llage V11lage for
the purpose of Current ex
pense
Sa d t ax be1ng a renewal
of an ex •sttn g ta x of 3 0
m il ts to run f or f1v e years
3t a ra t e not exceedtng J 0
m• l ls for each one dollar of
vat uatt on wht ch amounts
to th1r ty cen ts for each one
hu ndr e d dollars of
va lua tt on f or f tve years
The Pol ls f or sa td Elec
t•on w It open at 6 30
o ctock A M and remat n

1

I Address
I

Septem ber 1980 the re Wil l

:
I
:

I Name
I
1

Ernest A Wingett
Chatrman

that '" pursuance of a
Resolu t ton of the Coun c l of
th e V •ll age of Rae ne Ohto
passed on the 2nd day of

PubliC Not1ce
4th day of November 1980
the question of levytng tn
excess of the ten mtll
ltmttatton f or the benef tf of
Columb1a Tawnshtp for the
purpose of providing and
ma•nta•n•ng
f1re
ap
paratus
ar,p lt ances
buildtngs or St es therefor
or sources of water supply
and matena ls therefor or
the establiShment and
ma1ntenance of ltnes of f 1re
alarm telegraph or the
paymnent of permanent
part t• me
or
volunteer
firemen or f1re f•Qhttng
compari1es to ope!i:afe the
same
Satd tax be ng an ad
d1t1onal tax of 2 0 mtl ls to
run for 5 years at a rate
not exceeding 2 0 m1lls for
one dollar of valuat•on
wh 1ch amounts to twenty
cents for each one hundred
dOllars of valuatiOn for
ftve years
The Pollsofsat d Electmn
wilt open at 6 30 o clock
AM and rematn open until
7 30 o clock PM of sa1d

:

:

I
I

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
tN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMlTAT!ON
NOT CE IS hereby g1ve n

Publtc Nottce
open unttl7 30 o c lock PM
of sa td day
By order of the Board of
El ec t1ons of M etg s County
Oh 10

They'll Do It Every T1me

Regtster ed dteftctan ADA
Wtth e"&gt;&lt;pert ence tn nur stng
hom e consultatton To con
suit wtth d •errtr v super
vtsor Needed on wee kday s
only M n•mum of 10 hoUf's
monthlv Mtl eage &amp; hourly

DO YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

bemg populanzed as effective op.
lions for conswners Presentatlons:will Include slides, transparencies.
and prmted matenal which can be•
used With customers
:
Section B on Agncultural Com-:
mod1ty Outlook
Spec1f1c;
discusston of economic trends
relatmg to f1eld crops, livestock and
farm mputs ' Cost/pnce expectations and the factors to watch
which effect seasonal vanat10n will
be highlighted
Persons wishing to attend, please
call the Extension Off1ce at ~96
to make dinner reservations no later
than Friday, Oct 24 Costfor the dinner IS$4 50

__.

47

celled?
Lost
operator s license?
992 2143

Beasley, apprenttce auc
t1oneer Osby A Marttn

- - -, P;;:uc;b:;-hc:c
c Not ' ce-

-------

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH,

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want A.ds
PubliC Not1ce
~~~·

.,.

" - - - H~ ~~a~t~d_ __

Lost or Stolen, m Mid
dl eport regtstered bOxer
one yea r old, answers to
Wtn ston
Rewa r.d
No
questtons asked 1nqu1re at
127 Fairlane Dnve M1d

Economic outlook conference set

SOUTIIERN CROWN BEARER AND F LOWER BEARER - Tucke r
W1lham s (left ), served as c rown bearer for Southe rn's homecoiiUng
cerem omes wh1le Tama ra Hayma n served as flower bearer Tucker IS
the son of Mr a nd Mrs Jac k W1lha ms of Syracuse Tamara IS the
daughter of Mr and Mrs Dan Hayman of Syrac use

____

Lost •nd Found

6

The old Utreshhold was $250 a year
and usmg that f1gure, the nwnber of
persons livmg on fanns would be
7 55 rrullion last year

The gram elevators stUI will be
reqwred to provide records on all
gram received and shipped, Bartelt
added
The department plans to honor all
requests for official wetghmg of
grain for a fee- as long-lis personnel
are available, Bartelt smd

___ ___ _

:I-The Daily Sentrnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Oct 20, 1980

71 - -AutOS for Sale- - - -------~--

1971 Vega two door good
t •res runs f tne, some rust

Gerlach 463 Grant Street,
M&gt;ddleporl 992,5877 afler 4
pm

----------

Auto Parts
______
__ __
6 Accessones

--~

76

......

2400 Round Baler demo
untt pnced to move at
S.5600 00 F 1nance mterest

Whtte

free l1ll 4 I 81
M01gs
Equ1pmenl
Company
Pomeroy Oh10 9Y2 2176

for alumtnum &amp; dtfference
949 2631 or 949 2181

f•berglass

topper

w1th Sl1dmg glass, light
Like new $400 OO'will trade

APPLIANCE SERVICE
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges
d ishwashers,
disposals water tanks Call
Ken Young at 985 3561
before 9 a m or after 6
pm

-

-

~--_Q&amp;n~r!lltaUI!!!L__

AGRI LIME Spreading,
hmestone and fill dirt haul
lng Leo Morris, 7~2 2455
~

M. H Repair
Soulhern Service tom
pany, heating, mobile
home furnaces, electric hot
water tank repair Cell&lt;4463008 emergency night num
ber, 367 7131
/

�0.

•

3.5 mill levi sCho.o l board topzc

10-The Daily Sentinel, Mi~dlepo~-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 20, 1!180

••
~

·Southern Ohio filled .with
ingredients for gasohol .

.

CINCINNATl (AP) - Engineers · zero in a relatively short period of projects currently is arranging
working on ethanpl plants see time," Long said. "So what you do is financing," said R.W. Dub!, vice
southern Olllo's abundant grain ter- graft it onto some other business. ·president of a Cincinnati consulting
inina!s and transpOrtation outlets as For gasohol, it's the grain engineering firm. "High interest
rates six monthS 'lfgo brought
promising ingredients for the business. ''
everything
to a st&amp;ndstill."
PEDCo, based in suburban
production of gasohoL
Duhl
predicted
it will be near the
At least three Cincinnati firms are Sharonville, is designing and super- ·
turn
of
the
century
before a majority
lining up. contracts to design plants vising construction of ethanol plants
for the production of ethanol, alcOhol in Ne' aostop, Mayfield, Ky., and of 1:1.S. motorists are using alcohol .
fuels:
New Iberia, La., Long said.
distille&lt;l primarily from grain.
Although smaller-sized ethanol
Schenley
Distillers
plant
in
A
Ethanol is mixed with gasoline to
plants
lulve 'sprung up across the
Lawrenceburg,
Ind.,
is
nearing
comproduce gasohol f,o,r use in
country,
·the corrunercial-scale planpletion,
company
officials
said.
It
automobiles. Some energy experts
ts
are
more
effecienl, said Raphael
will
be
the
first
corrunercial
scale
estimate as much as 20 percent of
Katzen,
a
designer
of alcohol plants.
ethanol
plant
in
th~
area
when
" the United States' gasoline conHe
said
quality
control
also is an imswnption can be replaced by the finished.
portant
factor
in
building
plants.
Although gasohOl plants seem to
fuel.
.
"If
alcohol
is
made
properly,
there
William Long, vice president of be a promising investment, ·
is
no
long-term
danger
to
carS,"
KatPEDCo International, said the grain engineers said the recent dipping
zen
said.
"But
if
you
don't
ferment
it
business will play a central role in gasoline prices, climbing grain
properly,
you
can
get
organi.c
acids
prices and high interest rates might
the budding gasohol industry.
which cause corrosion.''
"Yau cannot really construct a pose obstacles.
"The principaf problem for all
whole new business from ground
0

0

RUTLAND FURNITURE STORE held a drawing
Saturd,ay in conjunction with its recent grand opening.
Approximately 1,500 jlersons registered for prizes. 'No
purchase Wll!! necessary to participate in the drawing.
Sixteen names were drawn by Rutland Marshall Mayo
Bales, right. On the left is David Grate. Prizes must be
claimed by Oct. 25, according to Grate. Winners were
Betty Hobstetter, Rutland, Benchcraft sofa; Janet Sue
Manuel, Rt. 2, Racine, Gipson freezer; Phyllis.
Spangler, Rutlal),~, Chromecraft breakfast set; Ola
Sinclair, Pomeroy, webb chest; Orval Hogue. Mid-

State, . federal
fundibg,avail~le
.
'

Heating oil dealers say between
1,000 to 1,500 gallons of healing oil
are burned in most oil-healed homes
each winter.
Electric heating bills should
average about $134 a '!lonth for
homes equipped with heat pwnps,
according to the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co, Last
year, the average bill was about$122
a month.
· Coiiunbia Gas' says users of gas
heat will pay $981o $106 monthiy this
year, compared to $91 to $102 last
winter.
Under the energy assislaqce
program, people aged 65 or older,
and people permanently and totally
disabled, can receive help in paying
their healing bills, provided that
family income does not exceed
$9,000.
The aid amounts to 30 percent' of a
family's bill when the income is

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Nearly
$129.3 million in state and federal
funds is available to help low-income
Ohioans pay their winter heating
bills.
Roger Whaley, who supervises the
state's energy credits program, says
more !hart 356,000 Ohioan.S could
benefit from the energy credit
·
program this winter.
Jacl&lt; Brown, a researcher in the
state Department of Economic and
Community Development, said funds for government assistance have
increased over the las~ year.
Some $90.8 million ·in federal
money has been added to $38.5
million in state funds available
through the·state emergency credits
program. But fuel cbsti also have
risen.
Home heating oil, which averaged
84 cents a gallon last year, is selling
for about 95 cents a gallon this year.

$5,000 or less and 25 percent when income is between $5,000 and $9,000.
Persons using wood heal receive a
one-time check for $125.
Those receiving energy credit
assistance also could qualify for
HEAP assistance. People are
eligible who receive public assistance through Aid to · Dependent
Children, general relief, food stamps, and certain social security or
veterans benefits.
Depending on family income,
benefits would range from 14 percent to 43 percent of monthly heating
bills, but the maximwn subsidy for
the healing season will be $500,
unless more funds are available.
Income limits for the program are
$4,738 for a single person, $6,263 for
two persons, $7,788 for three persons
and $9,313 for four persons. For each
additional family member, the
allowable income level increases
$1,525.

~--A;;~-o~~iil;-1
Leo l Billl Riebel
Leo W. (Bill) Riehel, 48, 4500 20th
St., N.S:, Cantori, was dead on
arrival at the Aultman Hospital on
Saturday, Oct. II.
Mr. Riebel, a former Meigs
resident, had been in failing health
for some time. He was born at Long
Bottom but had resided in Canton
most of his life. He was a 29 year
employe of Babcock and Wilcox Co.,
retiring in January due to illness.
He served with the U. S. Army
during the Korean Conflict. He was
a . member of the ,Canton Moose,
Lodge 233; the LegioQ of the Moose
No. 34, and the· Canton McKinley
Senior Boosters Club.
Preceding him in death were his
.wife, Betty, in !971 and by his
mother, Elizabeth. He. is servived
by three daughters, Mrs. · t.onie A.
(Patricia) Boone of Canton; Cheryl
Kasler and Karen Riebel, at home; a
grandson, William Kasler; his
father, Elber Rieber of Long Bottom; a brother, Roger, Long Bottom and a ·sister, Mrs. Wilbur
(Eileen) Monroe of Chillicothe.
Funeral services were held at II
a.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 14 at the
Welch-Sekeres Funeral Home with
the Rev. Harold R. Davis officiating.
Burail was in Sunset Bills Cemetery.

Reagan, . Carter claim peace
:'i"~;-&lt;

By Tbe Associated Press
President Carter and Ronald
Raagan laid out cold, hard cash to
talk about war and peace, and then
both came down on the side of peace.
"Peace is my passion·... peace is
my p)e&lt;lge," the president declared
in a radio speech Sunday for whtch
he purchased time on the Mutual

Broadcasting System.
Reagan, for his part, said during
the half-hour that he bought otl CBS
television that he shares with all
Americans "the deep and abiding
hope for peace."
Each man also tried to portray the
other as more likely to get the nation
into war. Reagan sai.d Carter had

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS ~IEMORfAL
Saturday Admissions: Lillian
Schenkle, Pomeroy; Sherrie
Might,Pomeroy; Uonel Boggs,Middleport; MorrisSnider,Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges:
Dana
liowett, Hattie McMurray ,Domingo
DeLaCruz, Mary Braley, Barbara
Mullen, John Davis, Wayne Hubbard, Jeffrey Thornton.
SWlday Admissions : Clair Lynch,
Athens, Karen McDaniel, New
Haven;
Charles
McKinney,Pomeroy; Cheryl Wells,
Ewington; William Pickens,
Racine; Dwight Swisher,Cheshire;
Alfred Stitt, Racine; Eulalie Webster, Pomeroy; Marvin Darst,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges: Herman
Ferrell, Betty McNamara, Eunice
Nutter.

DISCHARGESOCT.18
Ruth Bowen, Vance Cline, Mildred
Conley, Lowell Crabtree, Cheryl
Cunningham, Elma Dement,
Valeria Donley, Elizabeth Dotson,
Barhara Folden, Mary Fraley, Mrs.
Michael George and son, Unda
Harrison, Mary Hood, John
Hopkins, Judith Ireland, Ebnore
Leach, Violet Lloyd, Clarence
Molden, James Morrison, Mrs. Gary
Murray and daughter, Charlene
Parsons, Ruby Sexton, Connie
Shafer, Effie· Sievers, Isabelle
Torres, Vernal Wallen, James Well

BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Delavelle,
Middleport, son; Mr. and Mrs.
Philip Hampton, Gallipolis, son; Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Stapleton, Oak
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Hill, son.
DISCHARGES OCT.l7
DISCRARGESOCT.l9
Sylvia Adkins, Deborah Bernard,
Sherri Barcus, Mrs. Gary Blaha
Cora Birch, Sandra Canterbury, , and daughter, Mrs. Dan Bowman
Mary Claar, Megan Darrow, Bobby and son, James Dodrill, Donna
Jo Edwards, Arnold Grate, Christi Gray, Wayne Harbarger, George
Johnson, Amy Lauderback, Mrs.
Hodgson, Andrew Manning, Clyde
Roger Mayer and son, Winona . Mount, Deborah Reese, 'Wanda
McKinney, Melissa Nance, . El)iott Reigel, Beverly Schumacher,
Perry, Mabel Ramsburg, Marjorie George Stiffler, James Swann,
Rippeth, Ullie Roush, Mattie Roush, Laura Swick, Alex Wallen, Jeanette
Georgia Smith, Rockford Spurlock, W e I h e r h o I I · .
Hiram Stutes, Mrs. Nick Summers
BIRTHS
and daughter, Lois Thomas, Thomas
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Blust, Oak'
Walls, Virgene Ward, Mrs. James
Hill, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Warren and son, Gladwin Werner,
Layne, Racine, daughter; Mr. and
Charles Williams.
Mrs . Michael Neutzlinger,
BIRTHS
Pomeroy, daughter; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. David Hawks, VinRonald Roble, Bidwell, son; MI-. and
ton,
daughter . Mrs. James Smith, Jackson, son.

Meigs County happenings. •
ASK TOWED
Marriage JicellSes were issued to
Warren David Reeves, 24, Rt. 2,
Albany, and Luella Arih Hudnall, 23,
Rt. 2, Albany; James David
Howard, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; and
Cheryl Renee Roseberry, 20, Rt. 3,
Racine.

I
I
I

~·

MEETS WEDNESDAY
Ameeting of the Board of Trustees
of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society will be held at 7
p.m. • Wednesday at the Meigs
Museum in Pomeroy.

BLOODMOBILE VISIT .
An American Red Cross Blood. mobile will be at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy from I :30 to 6
p.m. Wednesday.

allowed the nation's military strenth
to erode, and Carter declared that
Raagan's policies could lead toward
"the nuclear precipice."
Independent presidential candidate John Anderson, meanwhile,
spoke before a Jewish group in the
Chicago suburb of Evanston and
warned of growing anti.S.mitism.
"An attack on the Jewish people is
by implication an attack on liB all,"
Anderson said. "If' we do not draw
the line here and now, we can't draw
itanywhere." '
·
carter and Reagan left the paid
airwaves today to head out on the
campaign frail, the president to Pennsylvania, Ohio and New York, and
his
Republican
rival
to Ohio,speaks
Kenlucky
and Illinois:
Anderson

'

0

MEETS TONIGHT
A meeting of the Meigs County
Coupon RefWlders Club will be held
at 7 this evening at the Meigs Branch, Athens .. county Savings and

.
,
··
·

Board me~ber Robert Snowden said he had been
told by the auditor's office that the tax levy this year
. was unnecessary and that he had ·been advised the
board should have waited until May before putting the
levy before voters. The discussion brought out that the
district wilteml the Year-With lf$68;oooaefiCiC ·
BOILER WORK DONE
.
Gleason reported that' repair work has been cornpleteil on a boiler at .the POmeroy Elementary School
and will be rested today. If test results are satis- raetory then heat can be put into the building which has
been without any heat this fall.
The board aJiproved professional leave "for Jack
Slavin, Tim Flesher, ~olin Redovian and Martha YenJ1l!ri. However, leave for the latter three who are
guidance counselors brought statementS from board
members who said they.want to see the results of coonselors attending these meetings. They said.students
and parents should be advised of the fmancial aid and
scholarships which are available and the board should
also see a progress report on what is being ac. complished.
.
·
Joyce Seelig and Kim Ohlinger were employed as
elementary teachers for the remainder of the school
year and Sandy Kom was approved as supervisor of
the Pomeroy Safety Patrol for the year and Bruce
Wilson was named seventli grade boys basketball

e

Emergency squad runs
Local emergency units answered
a nwnber of calls over the weekend,
the . Meigs County ·Emergency
Medical Services reporta.
At 8:53 a.m. Saturday, the Middleport Unit took Keith McCarty,
Middleport, to Holzer Medical Center and at'5:26 p.m. the Racine Unit
took Chris Lane from Ebn St. to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday, the Middleport Unit,
at 8 p.m. to Clyde Brookover to
" Veterans Memorial Hospiotal and at
6:48 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit look
Marvin Darst from his residence to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Pomeroy Unit' at 2:20 took Mrs.,
Eulalia Webster,206 Spring Ave, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
just after midnight the Pomeroy
Unit took Mark Rayburn, from Lan-'
dmark to Veterans Memorial

Hospital.
Monday morning, the Rutland
Unit ai 7:24 a.m., took flollls Clark
from Zuapan Hollow l!J Holzer
Medical Center and at 2:05a.m. the
Middleport Unit took Bill Dunfee
from his home on Hysell St. to
Holzer Medical Center. At6:56 a.m.,
the Middleport Unit took Jessie
Houchins from her home on Park St.
to Holzer Medical Center.

At Pomeroy .Village
'

Anderson appointed·
to seat on council
gasoline. The department was in- those holding parking permits.
BY KATIE CROW
structed
to fill the cruiser only once
It was indicated that persons with
John Anderson, general manager
.
aday.
the
permits would not be allowe&lt;l to
of Elberfelds in Pomeroy, was
Lyons,
acting
police
chief,
Harry
park
at just any space. The permits
named to a seat on Pomeroy·Council
said
he
was
trying
to
cut
down
as
would
be for six days of parking.
Monday night filling the vacancy
much
as
possible
without
putting
the
Council took no action on the
created by the resignation of Lou
proposal. Council did indicate that
Osborne. Osborne resigned Oct. 1, department in jeopardy.
Council did study its annual apo two parking areas are seriously
due to excessive traveling which
kept him from attending meetings. propriations for each fund to deter- being considered for additional
mine if all funds were within its parking sites.
Osborne's term expires in 19111.
Wehrung also discussed the comF:ollowing the ap~tment, coun- budgets.
Harold Brown, councilman, on plaints being received by residents
cilman Larry WehrWlg, reported
that· as a result of a fiuance Com- behalf of Rod Karr who was absent, regarding the poor reception from
mittee meeting, It was learned that reported · Karr had submlttoo a cable 'IV.
He noted that a representative of
council was $10,697 in the red in the proposal on allocating parking
spaces for persons who would wish Poin1View cable was at the last
active accounts.
meeting, but council failed to meet
A resolution transfer,:.•g $10,000 to purchase parking permits.
The parking permits are $75 if due to a lack of quorwn.
from the utility fund to the general
It was suggested that a represenfund and $3,000 from the meter fund paid by the year or $1.44 a week, $90
if paid every four months or $1.73 a tative of cable 1V meet with COWICil
to general fund was approved.
at the next regular schedU\ed
Wehrung pointed out his com- week.
It
was
suggested
that
the
extreme
meeting.
mittee is seeking solutions to cut
DANGEROUS INTERSECTION
down on expenses. The pollee depar- upper end of the upper parking lot
and
the
extreme
lower
end
of
the
Council
discussed the uitersectlon
tment has already been instructed to
lower
parking
lot
be
set
aside
for
(Continued
on page !6)
cut down on ·the purchase of

ELBERFELDS
Free Date Book!

JACKSON FIRM GETS CONTRACT - The Stone
and Webster 'Engineering Corporation, construction
manager/constructor for the U. S. Department of
Energy's gas centrifuge enrichment plant at Piketon,
has awarded a $149,759.90 purchase order to Mourning's, Inc. of Jackson, Ohio. The purchase orde• is for
fumishing, delivery, and installation of office furniture
for the new administration building to be used by Stone

and Webster personneL The building is a single story,
44,000 square foot facility and will house personnel
working on the multi-billion dollar project. Atending
contract ceremonies were, left to right, Don Mourning,
Vice President of Mourning's, Inc.; GeJTY Seivers, Sr.,
Bnyer for Stone and Webster Engineering Corporation; and Jean Mourning Stewart, President of
Mourning's, Inc.

fELDS IN POMEROY

Help .may be on. way for
t~ ~~e~ H~~:~~e. vict.i ms of family violence

Welker taken

President Carter, trying to speed the release of the 52 Americans .
held in Iran, said Monday he will lift sanctions against that country if
the hostages al't sent home.
.
During a campaign stop in Youngstown, Ohio, Carter said he would
work ''toward a resumption of nonnal commerce with Iran" when the
American hostages are released. The 52 Americans, seized when the
U.S. Embassy In Tehran was overrun by a mob, will have been captives for a full year on Election Day.
Carter said: "If Iran should release the hostages, then I would unfreeze their assets, which are several billions of dollars. ... I would
dro(i the embargo on trade with Iran and work toward a resumption of
nonnal commerce with Iran in the future."

Persian Gulf

Two cops Will he'disciplined

I98I~'s

HARRRI.SBURG, Pa. - Two policemen wbo displayed Ku Klux
Klan medallions on their urdforms will be dlsc!Pllned under an
agreement signed by the city and the state Human Relations Commission, officials say.
But an Inquiry .found the KKK had not infiltrated the police, Mayor
Paul Doutrich said Monday.
Sgt. Willard Crossland wu reprimanded lor wearing a KKK
meda111on whlle on duty in May, and policeman Dick Henninger was
disciplined for selling the medallions, officials said.

are.here.

·The Farmers Bank
• niaking
IS
new car loans.

Grain embargo costly ·to Soviets
WASHINGTON· Secretary of Stale EdmundS. Musk!e says the par-·
ttal grain embargQ and other commercial penalties imposed on the
Soviet Unloll following the invasion of A(ghanislan will cost the Soviets
many billions of dollars.
Muskle on Monday noted that Soviet grain production this year may
be 4li mllllon tons below the KremliM' target, adding that during the
first half of 1980 the Soviet. were denied at least on.tenth of their total
grain requirements. '

' Weather forecast ·
Clear tonight. Lows In the mid l!J upper 308. Sunny Wednesday mornlng but partly cloudy In the afternoon. Highs near 60. Chance of rain

Farmers
· B ank
I

enttne

at

FIFTEEN CENTS

Freed hostages·will end sanctio:r:ts

The

•

r------------~------------"

The perfect solution to forgetfulness - a
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Pomeroy, ()h.

Member

ne~~r zero percent tonight and 10 percent Wednesday. Wtndil variable
leu than 10 mph tOnight.
•

Erl ded O..oFoneut- Thursday through 'Saturday: Achance of
rain 'l'hunday. Fair Friday and Saturday. Hlglll In the 60s Thursday
and FridaY·and In the upper 6011 and low 1011 !!atunlay. Lows in lh,e 40s

andlowerUO..

FDIC
f

. grounds that the firm wa,o;; to work for the board and not
for the administrator, Gleason, and that Gleason
should have asked the board before using the serviees
of the firm. The board agreed tb a request for combini~g the juniOLand senior 5leno clubs at the-high--'s.chool mto one group and ·approved the free and
reduced price meal land free milk )!rogram for the .
district for this year.
· .
.
ROOFING BILL PAID
Following a lengthy discussion on finances and
questioning by Snow~~ on the running of a number of
small accounts "in the red", the board agreed. to pay
$57,000 to the Hackett Roofing Co. for roof work at the
Harrisonville gym, the Salisbury gym, and the Middleport Elementary School. Gleason displayed photos
of the work done. Snowden asked for delailoo explanation on the financing of the work and other aspec:ts of the building improvement filnd which is some
· $91,000 in the red.
Doug Behnke, .new principal of the Rutland Elementary School, reported on activities at that school and
the relationship that Is being built with the corrununity.
Board President Carol Pierce corrunended Behnke
stating the Rutland building " Is a different school" this
year. A report from Greg McCall, principal of the
Harrisonville School, was also presented to the board
(Continued on page 16)
·

VOL. 31 NO. 133

r;r:Loaf:n~,=W=.M=a=in=S=t.,=P=om=e=ro=y=.=d~~~;E;L;B~E;R~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~

(Continued from page I)
depot.
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency; said some 200 Iraqi troops
had been killed or injured in the
Gilan-e gharb area Saturday night
and Sunday.
There was no confirmation of any
of the claims since foreign reporters
were barred from the battlefronts.
In the air war, Iraq said Iranian
jets bombed Baghdad and the north
Iraqi ctties of Suleinianieh and
Wassel. Damage and casualties
were not reported.
Iran said Iraqi MiGs attacked
Abadan and the railway stal.ion at
Ahwaz, the provincial capital 70
miles to the north. Iraqi planes
raided Iran's offshore oil terminal
for the loading of SU!JI!rtankeri' at
Kharg Island, at the beid of the Persian Gulf, and the neighboring nawtl
base at Buahehr twice Saturday
night, but anti-aircraft fire drove
them off, the Iranian news agency
reported.

coach.
Harry Yarbrough, a te~cher, was given a leave of absence and at a 3-1 vote,' Brian Windon and Lela ·Hall
were employed as full time bus drivers. 'Member
Robert Snowden voted against the e~ent
·-because one of the'llrtv~rs, Windon,-lives outside of the
district.
Employed as substitute drivers were Ronaid Wood
Pauline Snowden, Jonathan Well and Howard Searle~
With Snowden abstaining from voting for his sister- inlaw, Mrs. Snowden because of the relationship.• N111ped
to the substitute teacher list were James Brewington,
Mary Powell, Roberta Maidens, Mildred Hite and
Heidi Ewing. .
The board accepted the resignation of Karen Goins
who )Viii join her husband, Dwight Goins, who was formerly administrative assistant in the district and
r~igned to accept an out of county poSt. Supt. Gleason
highly corrunended Mrs. Goins for her work as a
teacher. The resignation of Donna Daniels as a kindergarten bus driver was also accepted. Mrs. Daniels
will remain as a regular bus driver .
The board agreed to take whatever steps necessary
to sign a deed which turns over the Rutland gymnasium to the Village of Rutland and agreed, again at a
3-1 vote to pay the attorney bill of the firm of McDowall
and Whalen, Cuyahoga Falls. Snowden objected on the

•

TO END MARRIAGES
Judy Kay Farley, Pomeroy, filed
suit for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Roger
Dale Farley, address un1&lt;nown.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
were Sheila · Curtis, Rl. 3,
Pomeroy ,m and· Paul Curtis, Rt. 3;
Pomeroy.

tonight in Schenectady, N.Y.
The president's trip today into the
industrial Northeast follows a staff
assessment that Reagan's forays into the traditional Democratic
strongholds may be producing few
results among the blue-collar voters
he's fighting so hard to win.
White House press secretary Jody
Powell said Sunday that
"everything we see shows those
people starting to come back home."
Without citing specific poll findings, Powell said recent surveys
showing Carter pulling closer to
Raagan found that "the biggest
movement has come among bluecollar workers.''
In the radio speech Sunday, for
which he paid $22,000, Carter maintained that Reagan was advocating
measures that could move the nation
closer to nuclear w~r.

FIRE CONTROlLED
Pomeroy Firemen were called to
Union Ave., Sunday morning where
an abandoned house owned by
SPECfAL MEETING
Delbert Fridley was being burned.
A special meeting of Middleport .
EVENT SET
The fire threatened the nearby ·
Welge 363, F&amp;AM, will be held at
Trick or ·treat night has been se~
mobile horne of Fridley and was
kept under control by the depart- 7:30'p.m. Tuesday with work in the for Oct. 30 in Rutland Village from
Master Masons Degree.
ment.
6:30to7:30p.m.
'

0

dleport, Berkline recliner;· Nancy Arnoid, ·Rt. ,
Pomeroy Busllline sofa; Sandy Hysell, Middleport,
Hoover Concept One sweeper; Bobby E. Payne, Middleport, Seall'' ~=• springs and mattress; Art Sldnn~r,
Middleport, 12 X 12 piece of carpet; Phyllis Ritchie,
Racine, wood rocker; Sharon Hein, Rt. 1, Minersville,
Zenith 1V; Roberta Musser, Pomeroy, Riverside coffee table; Doris Thomas,' Rutland, wood rocker;
Foster Van Sickle, Gallipolis, glass lamp; Kay Logan,
Middleport, wood rocker; Joyce Peterson, Rutland,
Zenith radio.

0

BY BOB HOEFLicH
.
A 3.5 mill lax levy to be voted upon in the district on
Nov. 4 wail a major topic for discussion when the Meigs
.Local School District Board of Education met in
" regular sess!o~ Monday night.
.
.
Present to dlscu&amp;s the levy' was Mrsol\nn-ehaprnanof Pomeroy, who questioned liS to why the levy was
placed on the ballot at the general election rather than
next May.
' •
Silpt. David L. Gleason said the levy Is designed~
provide funds for the repair of buildings of the district
and that the funds are ne.eded as soon a~ possible. May
.would have meanta later collection d'ate, he said.
Mrs. Chapman pointed out that the levy would have
brought in considerably more money if it had passed
next May because of the increaSed valuation of property across the county. However, Gleason said the levy
would h8ve been reduced in inillage had the board
wailed to place the tax before voters next May because
the $185,000 to $200,000 that the tax will bring in under
present valuations each year for the five year period,
will be adequate to get buildings of the district into
good Shape.
Mrs. Chapman questioned tbe use of additional income for the district as a result of the property reappralsal and was told that the increased monies would
not be received this year.

j

·

recently sentenced to six months to
five years after pleading guilty on a
bill of information charging Ira!licking in drugs was taken to the .
Ohio Penal Medical and Reception
Center, Colwnbua, today by Meigs
County Sheriff Deputies to begin serving his term.
· The departmen.t is seeking a
tailgate from a pickup truck
belonging to Roy Proffitt, Racine·
Anyone seeing the tailgate is asked
to call the sheriff's department.

By KEVIN KEU.Y
When the details are finally
M~Orked out, there may be help for
victims of family violence in Gallia,
Meigs ~nd Jackson coWlties, thanks
to Serenity House, Inc.
A non-profit organization recently
chartered with the state, Serenity.
House has applied for release of funds from the board of commissione[s
of each county to combat domestic
violence.
" Family violence is s social
problem of critical importance," the
&amp;lrenity House proposal reads. "A~
cording to recent studies, 10 to 25
percent of the nation's 47 million
married couples suffer violence as a
common occurrence.
"In many instances, victims of
family violence are subject to lifethreatening or physically abusive
situations in which few alternatives
are available," it continues.
Using a review of calls logged between January 1979 and January 1980
' by Crisisline, a 24-hoilr emergen~y

Two persons hurt

in auto accidents
Two persons were injured' and
another was Cited for DWI in traffic
accidents probed by the GalliaMelgs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol Monday.
The patrol said Barbara Lambert,
'24, Wllkesville, was southbound on
SR160atl:41i p.m. when she collided
with a car driven by Beth Peck, 23,
Bidwell.
According to the report, Peck was
turning left onto SR 554 and drove in.
to the path of Lambert's car.
Both were injured and taken to
Holzer Medical Center by the Gallla
EMS, where they were treated and
released.
Moderate damage was listed· to
both tal'!l and Peck.was cited by the
·patrol lor faJiure to yield right af
way.
. ' . .....
No Injuries were reported In a onet
car craah on SR 588 late Monday '&gt;
night.
· Troopers said James Collison, Tl,
GaiUpolia, was westbound on 588,
east of Green Twp. Rd. 7, when his
c~ went off the left side of the road
and struck a ditch.
Minor damage was lialed to
Collison's car aJid he WBB cite(! by
the patrolfur DWI.

hotline, 72 calls came from abused purchase of emergency medical ser.
women and 71 calls requested in- vices for victims of family violence;
and the debelopmenl and
formation on child abuse.
-distribution
of brochures and
"This would indicate that family
posters
increasing
P.Ublic awarenesll
violence is a significant problem in
and
knowledge
of
available
servicf!!·
the three-county area,'' the proposal
in the area.
states.
The proposal points out there Is no:
Serenity House has been in
operation since late summer and shelter house at this time for tri··
was instigated by concerned Meigs • county residents, but Serenity Hoi!Se:
Coun\ians, who have since met with is , recruiting volunteer · trah.interested representatives from sporiation crews to take victims tO
:
Community Mental Health · and "neutral" places. · '
According
to
Ellen
Bell,
Mei~
Gallia-Meigs Community Action.
Funding for the organization County district librarian, who lUIS
comes from the marriage tax licen- been involved with Serenity House
se revenue collected by each county. since Its beginning, volunteer
Under Ohio Senate Bill 46, the response in Meigs County has been
counties are required to use the favorable.
The victims will' be transported to
revenue to belp fund local domestic
two
permanent shelter houses In
violence services.
Proposed Serenity House services southeastern Ohio--My ' Sister's
will include transportation for vic- Place in Athens and Eve, Inc., In
tims of domestic violence to a Marietta . •
If the victims have been injured,
shelter or corrunercial housing; purchase of residential services Trom Serenity House will also helii. defray
shelters or comme'rcial housing;
(Continued on page 16)

Average evaluation up 49 percent.
Average evaluation of all real estate in Meigs
County is up about 49 percent for taxing plll'Jl08CS,
the Meigs County Auditor's office reported today.
Residents paying tues this December will be
affected by the Increased valuation, but at this point
in time, there can be no dollars and cents tai figure
provided for Meigs County property owners, a
spokesman at the auditor's office said.
The tai rate has not been set and will not be until next month, the spokesman said. The rate is ~ob­
ject to approval by the State Board of Taxation.
Increases in the evaluations at the 49 percent
average figure do not necessarily mean that the
property taxes of residents will be up that percentage, the spokesman pointed out. Thete is a 10
percent rollback plus another reduction factor to be
considered, it is reported.
Also determining the taxes to be charged
'

I

I

property owners are the tax levies which are to be
voted upon at the Nov. 4 eleciton.
However, it has been noted that, undoubtedly,
the real estate tax collection across the county will
be up considerably due to the revaluation of property and those subdivisions recei'l'lng moneys on a set
rate will be receiving more moneys from that
collection. The millage on some levies will be·
reduced ·to produce on the higher valuation, the
same amount of funds they were providing
previously.
.
·.
.
It was reported that real estate taxes will not be
increasing from 60 to 70 percent in December u
· W!IS reported in an earlier account.
The real estate reapprailal which has increaaed .
the valuations about 49 percent took place under an
Ohio law which requirelllhat reapprlilals are to be
conducted every six years.

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