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-VO~L~3~l~N~O~
. l~34~--~~--------~~~P~OM~E~RO~Y~
- M~ID~DL~EP~O~RT~.O~H~IO~.~W~ED~N~ES~M~Y.~OC~T~OB~E7R7.22~19=8o~--~--~--------~~F~IIT~EE~N~C~EN~TS:

,.~-- .. Hostage __situation

argued .

Carter-R eaglJn ·debate
slated in Cleveland

.•••

,,.,,~.

By Alaoelaled Press
· the League of Women Voters, who
There have been a lot of rumors Wlderwrote the 1976 debates betlately that th~ American hostages in ween Carter and then-President
Iran may soon be released, and the Gerald Ford.
Both the major party candidates
fate of those 52 Americans is the subject of a l)eW series of charges and . were campaigning In the South
counter-charges by President Car- today, Reagan in Louisiana,
1
Mississippi and.Florida, and Carter
terandRonaldReagan.
While-Carter and his Republican · In Texas and Arkansall. Independent
opponent disagreed Tuesday about candidate Jolm Anderson was stwnwho said what about the h011tages, ping in Michigan.
· their aides were agreeing on the
IWagan, who had talked little
date, time and format for a face-to- about the hostages in r'ecent weeks,
face debate between the two men.
charged Tuesday that the hostages
The 90-mlnute debate will be held "have been there as a result of this
next Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. EDT in admlnistration's policies for almost
Cleveland. It .~ be sponsored by · a year now,"

lUll Ill llll

STUFFED.
IIIIIEYS

· FOOTBALL

'18" atutteci
In biKk Mel
color with a
berl~anatn lila hand. A
big qfue.
!
111011~

BAlKS
realistic bubble gum machine
bank. Put in your coin, pull the
lever and get a bubble gum ball.
Comes complete with bubble
gum.

HOLDER

IILTDI~•IULEY

liMES .

. LITTLE lURlE ill

cent.

•

iliiV

Eaeh
ANNIUIISAIY SAU

Surgeon wins battle but loses war

•••,

AKRON, Ohio - The doctor who fought for and saved the foot of an
lndUBtrial worker won the baWe but lost the war.
Dr. Lawrence Cervino '1'88 able to reattach Steve Czirok Sr.'s
severed left foot without a blood transfusion but he has had to amputate the Industrial worker's foot below the kneecap.
.
As a Jehovah's witness, Czlrok's religion does not allow blood transfusions. Cervino reattached Czirok's foot by using a salt solution in
place of blood during.an eight hour operation.

'

TOIIIIETIL

"PICK~UP riiiiOICS

All metal autllanllc Tonka Pickup Trucks·
with snap clown tlllgatea. Non-toxic colora,
painted au$

19

TRUO~I

Famous Tonica Dump TruckS. S1urcly cq~
tructlon to give ~our Child y.,. ol tun,
Naw Ia

ime to~~~

;.I

Psychic says killer also fJIJJck

ATLANTA- Dorothy .\llisOO, a NeJr Jersey housewife who claims
clairVOyant powers, sBld Tuesday that the killer of 10 black Atlanta
children Ia also hlackand won'tkill while she is in the city.
At a news conference, she described the killer 88 being from ~
Atlanta metropolitan area. But she said she would provtde other mfonnation about the ldller only to the pollee.
"I see where he is, I follow him," said Mrs. Allison, 55, of Nutley,

Each ,
- ·ANNIU£1SAIV $AUKEEP IN TOUCH WITH
VANITY FAIR

WALliETILliE

DURHAM BATTERY OPERATED

SALI
Tllll~~o..~:.
IETll

Snoopy Sno Cone~ Machines. Shaves
Ice cuba&amp; which are then topped with

syi 'i 8

BOARDMAN, Ohio- Mahonlng County Conunon Pleas Judge Clyde
W, Osborne has· refused to negotiate sentences handed down for 16
, ~I teachers in Bo!ll'dman·
.
.
· 1be judge, angered by actions alJ!.l COIJIIWnla &lt;!- suppqrters of
teachers found In contempt of court, siird the 1«HHay sentences and $500 .
fines will stand.
1be 16 tcnored the judge's back-,to-work order during a 26-day
teachers' strike that ended last week In the YoungJ!own suburb. The
10 male and six female teachers served from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. last
Saturday and Swiday. The teachers will serve the same hours for the
next four weekends.

EACH

Each

fruit

Judge won't negotiate sentences

$

popular games from Milton
t;~radley. Fun lor everyone.

IICHIIES

Metts said the first construction C!lntracts should be let by October
1981 and
,. the bridge should be completed by lllll:i.

Hasbro·s· authentic
looking kits with all
the
necessary
equipment for little
doctors and nurses.
Lay-a-way now I

Select now from six 'ssorted

TOYLAND ANNIUERSAIY SALE
HASBRO'S POfULAR
11SIOOPY 11 SilO COlE

ASHLAND, Ky. -The states of Kentucky and Ohio will build a $17.5
million bridge across tile Ohio River between 13th Street in Ashland
and U.s. 52 near Ironton, Ohio.
Kentucky Gov. Jolm Y. Brown told about 50 local Democrats and
civic leaders who attended a Tuesday news conference that K~ntucky
will pay 80 percent of tile cost of the bridge and Ohio will pay 20 per-

DOCTOR

Excellent quality dou·
ble holster sets with
two heavy dye cast
pistols. J·ust the gilt
for that young
cowboy.

FUN FOR THE FAMILY

States will build new brk!ge

•

fo,

DOUBLE PISTOL

A set of two Vanity Fair
Walkie TalkiH. Attracu..
ly dHigned. Alot ollun to
operate.

!U.

FAIOUS

~·••r L't

Weather forecast .

Clear tonight. Lows in the mid-40a. M011tiy swmy Thursday. Highs in
the mid to ilpper 6011. Chance of rain near zero percent tonight and
Thursday, Wlnda southeasterly near 10 mph tonight.
ExteDded Oblo Forecut-Friday tltroaglllluDday: Acballce of
lhowen Friday. Fair IIIII a Ut1le cooler Salarday tmd SIUiday. Hlgbs
Ia tbe lOs Friday IUid ~501 to low IIIII Satardily tmd Sunday. Low8
.ar 50 early Friday tmd m!d..JIII to low ttu..-ty Sllllday. .
·

IIMII

High quatl1y lluGdy-L

Trucka In a variety ol
types. Just the ri.QIIt
atze tor little tote.

Budget
reviewed

$ 81 $

"

SPECIAL AWARD8-Fi·
ve Meigs residents were
presented state and
national
membership
awards at the annual
meeting of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau
Federation held Tuesday
night at the Chester
Elementary School. They
are: seated; l1o r, Maida
.Mora, state and national
membership; Juanita
Sayre .and Ca.therine
Colwell, women's activities; back, I to r, Tom
Hamm, membership; Bob
Burdette, member services and membership;
Mrs. Paul Gearhart and
Golden Canaday, state
· trustees, who made the
presentation.
Meanwhile, four Meigs
. residents who bold the
loilgeit membel'!lldp tn the

A review of the proposed budget
on the cost of constructing a training
center and workshop for the mentally retaided was made when the
Meigs County Commissioners met in
regular session Tuesday.
Total budget for the building is
$1,389,188 of which $1,146,188 will be
from state funds and $243,000 from
the county.
The local match was provided by
fWlds derived from a levy approved
in 1973 for construction of the
facility.
·
Heney Wells· reported $54,371 has
been received for operation of the
CETA II·D and VI·A programs for
Oct. and Nov . .
Phili~ Roberta, cowity engineer
discussed highway oilerations.
Roberta said his department
would not.be able to hard surface an
additional two miles of county road
18, Kingsbury Road, d!Je to shqrtage
offunds.
'
.
Conunissioneni urged Roberts to
review the feasibility of doing the
work this year and compare the
costs against next years's costs.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners, Mary Hobo
stetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

. FREIIHT TilliS
·-. Splderman, lncredlble--t1ulk or
Mlc.key Mouse, batt•ry
operated Freight Train Sits ..
Selact ·now and lay-a-way.

pledge not to talk about the hostages
during the campaign. "The fate of
the hostages is too importanf...to be
made a political .football. I will not .
make an1 statements that would
tend to 9omplicate an already grave
situation.''
·
Then Reagan answered the answer, contending it was Carter who
thrust the hostage issue into the
campaign, back during the
Democratic primaries. And besides,
Reagan said, what he pledged was
that he wouldn't discuss possible
negotiations for the release of tile
h~gea.
.
"Now that's a little different than
simply stating to the people that the
hostages have been there as a result
of this administration's
policies ... President Carter is
speaking with the
inaccuracy
that he usually speaks."
During his Florida visit, Carter
also hammered away again in his effort to raise doubts In the minds of
voters about Reagan's reactions under crisis.
Reagan may be a better earn. paigner, Carter said, but "when
you're in the Oval Office dealing
with a crisis... you can't rely on 3-by5 cards and you can't read a
Teleprompter.''
Reagan, meanwhile, was happy
about the possibility that he might
win the endorsement of fonner Sen.
Eugene McCarthy, the Minnesotan
whose anti-Vietnam war candidacy
for the presidency in 1968 helped
spur the decision by Lyndon Johnson
not to seek another tenn in the Oval
Office. ·

same

$411
Eacll

TJRCO
Clll OPP
BIBBLE lUi

Carter, in Miami, was quick to an-

swer, claiming Reagan had broken a

' Meigs County Farm
Bureau Federation were
presented gills and given
special reco~tion at the
federation s
annual
meeting Tuesday night.
. They were, . far right,
seated, I to r, Ruby
Halliday and Stella
Grueser; standing, I to r,
Pauline Atkins and Vernon
Nease. They are 62 year
members.

1

First Lady stumps in Ohio ·:

•,

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) Rosalynn Carter has her own way of
injecting the war or peace issue into
the 1980 presidential campaign
without even mentioning the name
of her husband's GOP challenger,
Ronald Reagan.
On a five-city campaign swing
through Ohio on Tuesday, she
repeatedly depicted her husband as
a "president of peace" and said
there "is no room for excess or extremes in the Oval Office.''
At one point, a reporter asked if
she was referring to Reagan. She
- replied that conclusion might be
drawn.
The first lady. began her Ohio
plane and bus tour In Niles, where
about 1,000 members and guests of
the ·rrwnbull County "bemocratic
. . _Women's Club .hearo 'her ptoclaini

that ''Jimmy Carter's greatest asset
is his moderation.''

After a flight to Columbus and an
airport news conference, during
which she called attention to recent
economic barometers showing inflation and unemployment coming
down, Mrs. Carter said the economy
is turning upward. And she predi0ted the 1980s would be good years.
Accompanied qy Annie Glenn,
wife of U.S. Sen.- Jolm Glenn, and
Democratic state officials, Mrs.
Carter then boarded · a brightly
decorated campaign bus and headed
toward the state's southern belt.
The area had helped put Carter into the White House four years ago.
And Mrs. Carter made it clear
throughout her stops at Chillicothe,
Waverly and Portsmoth !hat.neither

she nor her husband had forgotten. '
"With your help, Jimmy Carter
will be elected president again on
Nov. 4," she told her biggest clm!d
of the day - about 2,000 chee~,
supporters in a gymnasium at
Waverly High School.
Pike County, the area's
Democratic stronghold, has sup.~
ported a GOP presidential candidat~'
only once - Richard Nixon over
George McGovern in 1972.
While wooing support for he~
husband, Mrs. Carter also endorsed
local Democrll,tic c&amp;ndidates for·
Congress. At Shawnee Community'
College in Portsmouth, she told
outdoor crowd of about 1,500 · tha~
Ted Strickland would make a great
congressman.
. •. .
Strickland is running in the 6th
l)istrict. .
· .·

an

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Stalemate continues in Border War
.

John N.dli-, J'IIM, . lllllllher of Pcmei OJ V1llqe Council. Andersori fills
the 9leiJICYerMted by the resignation of Lou Osborne .
....,al J1IIIIIPI' of Elberfelda In Pwoa 01,
The
term expirellln 111111.
Ia by Pomeroy Mayor Cillrence Andrewa as a new

H11W &lt;XJlJNCILMAN -

~

-IWOI'Il

.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A
stalemate continued today ·aroWld
besieged Abadan and Khorrarnshahr, at the southern end of Iraq's
300-mlle Invasion front In Iran. Iran
claimed Abadan's -defenders
repulsed Iraqi tank 88B8ults while
Iraq said Its forces "t'Onsolidated
their victories."
Iran said its troops and
revolutionary guardsmen In Abadan
beat back Iraqi tanks trying to take
the Bahmanahlr River bridle, the
gateway to the refinery city on the
Shalt at-Arab estuary.
· fran claimed Ita In Khorramlhahr,
Ill chief port 10 miles nort1nrest of
Abadan, poured sniper and
macblne-cun .fire at the Iraqia oc• cupylng part of the city and battled .
the Invaders hand to hand &amp;!I the war
raged Into Its 30th day.
But Iraq said its forces "continued
to consolidate their victories in the

.
sectors of their operations,'•-which

,.,,.

.

'1· •

oil shipping ianes.
: :· ,
extend up to 50 miles deep into Iran's
Although most of Iran's and ltaq'a'
oil-rich Khuzistan Provillce and 300 oil exports· nonnally bypass: the
miles north from Abadan to Qasr+ Shalt al-Arab and go by pipelines~ ,
Shirln. . ,
,
offshore tenninals in the Pe~ '
Iraq's first' deputy prime minister, GuH, it is Iraq's only water route'to,
Taha Yassin RamadanfMid·in an in- the gulf as well. as the waterway ~
terview with the French newspaper Khorramshahr and Abadan. -~
Le Monde that Iraq will hold the abrogated its 1975 treaty with~
Iranian oil fields it has captured when it stepped up border hostllltlllli.
"Wlt'n there is a solution" to Iraq's ·. In September, charging ,~t ,
borderdeD}Bnds.
'
AyatoUah Ruhollah Khomelni's ;a~ '
Iraq's chief demand is for full peals' to Iraq's Shiite M~
sovereignty and cQntrol of the Shalt majority to join his Isl•nlk
al·Arab, which fonns the southern revolution and overthrow the JrM!
end of the border between the two government, which ls dominated ll)i
countries and which Iraq in 1975 Sunni Moslems, violated ~~~
agreed·to share with Iran. Ramadan p)edge in the treaty to stay out fl(
also indicated Iran would have to. Iraqi internal affairs.
· : •~
give up the three small islands at the
Although Iran and Iraq are : ~
entrance to ·the Persian Gulf which Moslem countries, the lraqla: -~
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi Arabs while the non-Arab ~
seized from the Arab ·sheikdom of are the dtilninant etlmlc I.'OIIIIIIIIldt
. I ran.
Sharja in 1971 to gain control ot the tn
.~.. , ", ,

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�3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

- 2::The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1980

·.Opinions &amp;
Comments
.

-.
:r

111E DAILY SENTINEL
iUSI'SI.._.)

«115',

'

Thin&amp;a _ar.e. reaJJy getting Interesting In the
Southern Valley Athletic Coiiference where four teama
. are tied for first place and another has an ouistde chan. ce of ~ for the league crown or at least playing the
role of spoiler. .
Going into Friday's league games, Eastern, Han:.
nan Tr~ce, North Gallla and Southwestern share first
place With 2-1 records. Kyger·ereek is 1·2 but could get
back into the race with wins over Southwestern and
North Gallla the next two weeks. .
.
Jlight now, SQuthern is the only team out of the
race but again, the Tornadoes coUld also play the big
J."Ole of a "spoller.'',Southern must still play Hannan
Trace and Eastern.
·
·
Friday night, Southern ·goes to Hannan Trace·
:muthrn plays at No~ Gallia and Kyger Creek

\

·DEVOTED TO 111E
INTEIIEST OF
&lt;&gt;
-·
..MEIGS-MASON AREA
• .
Letten fill. oplnloo art wtlcomed. Tiley Sbould bt leas thaa 300 words loq ( er subject to rtchlt., ttOb by tM editor) and mUAI ~ 1igued wU.b the sipft's addrtu. Names may be wtu..tklllpOO
publkadoa. However1 on rPqutst, aames will be diuJoaed. LcUen sbould be ta cood tute, ~
dressla&amp; laslleS, aot personalities.
Publilllfll. dally enept Saturday by The Oblo Valley Publillltni Compaay- MuiUmedla, IDe!.,
111 CourtSt',, Pomeroy, Oblo457Ct. Busilless Off let Pbome !I9Z- me. EdJtorial Pbooe m.zt57 ·
Secoodclas!ipustagepaklat Pomerty, Ohio.
·
Nati&amp;Dal adnrtislug rl'!preseotaUv e, L.aiDdoa Au oc&amp;.&amp;et, Slll Euclid Ave., Clevelaad., Ohio
.

Tbe AsSI)Cia&amp;ed._ Press Is nclusively eaUtled lo tbe use. lor publication of aD oews dbpetcbes
credlted to the newspaper aad also the local aews publlshe4 bertlll.
·
PubUaber
~
~rt Wlqett
Geoeral 'Mgr. A Clly Editor
R00el1 Hoeflicb
New1 Editor
~1'7.
Dale RoU.Ceb, Jr,
•••· Manager
""m~
Carl Gbeea
~

~ I"'T"\...-JL-""'T'"I~dl~

qj~

·

•

Someone must walt

I

Portland, Ohio
Oct. 20, 1980
I see in The Sentinel criticism of
Sheriff James Proffitt for destroying
marijuana - because poor people
grow it- could it be some folk judge
others by themselves?
I'm oldest of 11 children and we
were brought up on the Golden Rule.
:·'!Be you to others kind and true as
· ..you would have others be with you. "
· .. I am 73 years old - a widow living
on S. S. pension from my husband.
· I have been poor all my life, but
'have made do witli what I do have
··arii! thankful for anything I have.
: . I find comfort in reading the Bible.
fn Matthew 7, second verse, Judge
·not Wlrighteously, that he be not
·judged ; but . judge ri ghteo us

·-I

~ udgement.

For with what judgement ye shall
judge, ye shall be judged; and with
what measure ye mete, it shall be
measured to you again.

And again ye ~haJJ say unto them,
why is it that thou beholdest .the
mote than is in thy brother's eye, but
considerest not the beam that is in
thyowneye?
· I can think of npthing short of murder - worse than the dope people
use and the mess they make of their
lives even to murder and.!ll'!cide 0. D. or whatever.
People able to grow marijuana
must be able to keep themselves
another way.
I lived in Colwnbus many years,
was volWJteer escort for handicapped people of ail ages and conditions. If everyone could see the
wrecked lives not only of diseases
that cannot be helped - but ones of
dope fiends is so much worse.
Calls c~me day and night. I only
took calls till midnight - many
times I could not sleep the rest of the
night. People dealing with the public
whether paid o·r volunteer
sometimes are busy elsewbere and
someone has to wait. - Goldie Clendenin.

Income experiments
. A surprising amount. of economic experimentation is
'fJ k_oing on in America today.
.
·
.
f.!.:Detroit is betting billions that the long-shunned small
~l car will restore .its health, and utilities everywhere ~re
'4-: risking a return to coal, once a symbol of old-fashioned,
~ olltdated smokestack America.
.
::Homebuilders are cutting costs by clustering houses on
sinaller lots, or are attaching them to each other' the beti ~r to _resist the cold winds of winter. The factory-built
~ h(luse 1s headed for a comeback.
&amp;&lt; Experiments in sunpower are being conducted by so
.~ rftanY small companies that it resurrects the days of the
. great American tinkerers working eut of barns or bicycle

"&gt;e

,.,;:
i

.".shops.

·

Also being given a second look are bicycles, woodstoves,
woolen underwear, log housed as well as once · almost
~ iliscarded items. But most of the experimentation is with
··
.., thingsnew.
~: In electronics they are eager to change the way you live
~ $md work. The office is ~~g automated; _the home might
;; soon be. ·Someday, you rrught shop by VIdeo screen and
,. computer - maybe even deliver your work that way
Erather than beatmg your way to and from the company.
tt~ : The entire private financing setup is changing. Observe
JIBVings banks and conunercial banks competing in the
~ ~me arena, and brokerage hous~ offering checking ac•• )::ounts.
·
·
: ; Traditional, long-term, fixed-rate home mortgages are
i kleparting, to be replaced by variable rates and short-term
"i l.oans that, while they might be amortized over 30 years,
be reviewed every five.
.
~; Fundamental concepts are tested. How strong are
,. ienant and landlord rights? Should pension costs and
::benefits be unisexual, lh defiance of the actuarial tables
.: tJlat show women live longer than men?
~ ;: It is an age of experimentation which could produce
• ~lutions to today's problems. The solutions might come
i l!&gt;morrow, too late for some who suffer today. But when .
~e solutions to today's problems are found, we might
· 3=f1iscover that, like coal, they came from yesterday. ·

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Berry's World

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Strategists see' very close election
ByRobertJ. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NE'A)
Strategists for Ronald Reagan and
Jimmy' Carter share the belief that
the 1980 presidential election will be
"typical" in that the victory margin·
will be only a few percentage points
as opposed to the "atypical" landslides of Lyndon Johnson in 1!164
81ld Richard Nixon in 1972.
What's more, the rival campaigns
cite the same few states as keys to
the election. Both sides concede tht
if either candidate carries New
York, Califo111ia, Illinois and Texas,
he will undou~tedly win the election.
They also agree that the outcome
will be virtuaJJy decided if one can'didate wins New York, California
and either Illinois or Texas. •
All are populous states, of course.
Their electoral votes total 138, more
than baH the 270 needed for victory.
Furthennore, recent polls In all
four states have found the candidates within a couple of percentage points of one l!llother with
substantial nwnbers of voters still .
WJdecided. If ail tour swing one way,
the loser will probably be unable to
score a major breakthrough
anywhere else.
·
Here is how the "big four" stack

Carter has been helped In Chicago
up:
0-3; he lost the 1976 primary to Gov.
by
a flurry of federal gran~! and
New Yorll (U electoral votes) : · Jerry •Brown, the 1976 general elecother
largess that has brought
Early polls showed Carter running
tion to President Ford and the 1980
Mayor
Jane Byrne back Into his '
well behind in this traditionally
primary to Sen. Edward Kennedy.
Democratic state~ But as Democrals
In CQntrast, Reagan has never lost a camp and by the administration's
recent decision to "postpone" forreunited following their convention,
statewide vote.
the state seemed to move back into
Reagan remains ahead of Carter cing a busing plan on Cook ~ty.
It now seems that Reagan, like his
the Carter column.
but by a dwindling amoWlt. The polls
Then Jacob Javits, the state's also show that CaliforniRDS have Republican predecessors, wU1 have
liberal Republican senator, lost his
high negative feelings about both to pile ~P a large lead in central and
primary race and was forced to seek major-party nOminees; majorities southern Illinois to offset
Democratic Chicago. But carter 14
rei!lection Wlder the banner of the
believe that neither is up to the job.
Liberal Party, which has given its·
The political climate is so volatile throwing a lot of money l¢o the
presidential nomination to inthat many voters may continue ·to campaign outside the city. The race
dependent John AndersQn.
change their minds up Wltil Nov. 4. is further complicated by native son
It is expected that many liberal The election may thus turn on how · Anderson, who hails from the northwest part of the state. This elecDemocrats will vote for Javits;
many CalifomiMS go to tbC polls.
while in the Liberal column, they
Crucial to Carter is his ability to tion ID!IY well be decided in the
may puii the lever for Anderson as mobilize the state's many Hispanic suburbs.
nus (Z6 electoral :votes): This Is
well. This eQuid cause enough drain voters, who gave him 75 percent or
another
state that just a few 'weeks
on Carter's support to give the state more of their ballots in 1976. Kento Reagan. As one Reagan planner nedy's help in this regard is ail· ago seemed safely in the Reagan
noted: "We wouldnlt bave a chance important'. As a Carter strategist put column. But' recent polls show bQth
in New York without the Anderson- it, "If he (Kennedy) will WQI"k In candidates within a point or two of
Javits ticket. Now we do."
California, we may well be able to do one another. As In California, the
election inay hinge on ...,Carter's
In the flnBI weeks of the. cam- it."
paign, look for Carter to run a major
IBinolli (28 electoral votes): With ability to get his Hispanic supporters
media campaign along the lines of Cook County's Democratic to the polls.
Look for both candidates to spend
"a vote for Anderson is a vote for organization in disarray, Illinois
large
amounts of money and time in
Reagan."
looked safe for Reagan until a few
these
four states during the final
CaiUornla (U eleeloral votes) : weeks ago. While he ill:still ahead,
weeks
of the campaign.
'
Tilis state should be safe for favorite
the election Is showing signs of
Reagan. Carter's record there is becoming a toss-up.

Appeals cour:t rules against.Issue Two
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A state
appeals court has ruled that Issue 2
be removed from Ohio's ballot Nov.
4.

In a split deeision Tuesday, the
Franklin CoWlty Court of Appeals,
held that the proposal would be an
improper change in tax laws.
The issue was placed on the ballot
by initiative petition.
The 2-1 decision today stems from
a suit filed by the Ohio Manufacturers Association which charged
that classification of taxes as
··outlined in the proposal cannot be
made by an initiative petition.
The ruling is expected to be appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court.
On Sept. 5, .Franklin CoWlty Common Pleas Judge Jay C. Flowers
refused to keep the issue off the
ballot, saying he had no grounds to
order Secretary of State Anthony J.
Celebrezze Jr. from certifying the
petitions.
Issue 2 is comprehensive plan that
shifts some of the direct tax burden
from individuals to the business
corrununity.

"Oh, dear! Edgar stomped on that poor woolly
bear caterpillar. I guess that means we'reln for
a hard winter!" .

Trace Wlldcata. The 10811 was only- HT's first in 20
games covering a three-year period.
!"asjern used an air attack to pulled off the win
The ~gles put together an eight play scoring drlv~
featuring seven pa!s receptions.
·
Dennis Durst's TO reception accounted for the first score. Hannan Traee tied the game in the second
· period when speedy lallback Todd Sibley bJ."Oke loose
on one of his patent runs, a 50 yard jaunt.
Eastern, however, broke the Wildcats' hearts and
back in the waning second of the first half when quar• terback Greg Wigal connected with junior Mike Bissell
on a 41 yard scoring bomb.

Southwestern will try to stay i.n fhe race against
the Kyger Creek Bobcats Friday night. .
.
Coach Jack J!IJiles' Highlanders defeated Southern
~a week agao while Coach Deryl Well's Bobcats will
be hitting the gridiron after a week's layoff.
Last week, neither Southern or Southwestern could
miiSier a good •ttack Wltil midway through the second
period. Scott Russell, ~e ffighlanders' power running
beck, broke the Ice With .a two yard .run. Russell,
anwng league leaders irl rushing and scoring, had 51
yards rushing on the night.
In the second half, Southwestern's senior quar·
terback Jay,Burleson rambled over from 'n yards out.
, Later that period, Burleson scored on 1!11 end sweep.
Russell added the extra points.
. Burleson led the attack with 10 cames for 98 yards
while passing for 77 yards. Robin FortWle paced
Southern with 35 yards in 16 carries while Terry McNickle led the Tornado defense with 10 tackles.
Coach John Blake's North Gallia Pirates go into
Friday's Important game against Eastern with a 7·1
season mark and 2-1 slate in the SVAC.
Last Friday night, North Gallia had an easy time
defeating the winless Hannan, W. Va. Wildcats, 'D.O.
Keith Payne, Charlie Lookadoo, Bob Adkins and Stev~
Fra'iilill'ri proytded the Pirate t~uchdowns .. Payne Jed
the attack With, 82 yards rushing while Adkins completed lot passes for 59 yards.
.
Kyger Creek, after getting its offense untracked
the previous week against Southern, was idle last
weekend. 'The Bobcats own a 3-4 overall record and 1-2
mark in the lesgue.

Opponents are merchants',
manufacturers, bankers. They have
said the proposal would mean hi~her
conswner prices as increased costs
are passed along to customers;
higher Wlemployment as companies
lose their competitive edge to finns
. in other states; and higher utility
bills.
Proponents are labor unions, church and senior citizen groups. They
have said the measure offers tax
relief; holds out hope for avoiding a
general tax increase next year; and
makes hal)ks and large corporations
shoulder a fair share of the state's
tax load.
The chief opposition , is a group
called Ohioans for Fair Taxation.
Supporters are gathered under the
banner of the Yes on Two-Ohio Fair
Tu Initiative Committee. ·
A spokesman Ohioans for Fair
Taxation said today that Ohio
Manufacturers AssociatiOII acted independently from his group in the
appeal.
"However, since the possiblity

exists that ·the appeals court
decision may be reversed by the
Ohio Supreme Court, Ohioans for
Fair Taxation will continue our campaign and vigorous opposition to
passage of deceptive tax increases,"
the spokesman said.
Gov. James A. Rhodes and
legislative leaders, the people who
nonnally are responsible for wriling
tax laws, are among those opposed
to Issue 2. Rhodes in pa111cular has
painted a dark picture oi llllio's in·
dustrial future if the plan passes
muster with the voters.
Some major provisions of the
proposal, submitted by the Ohio
Public Interest Campaign, the
coalition which circulated petitions
in its behalf, include:
- Tu relief for about 45 percent of
the households in the state. Refunds
for part· of their property taxes will
go to qualified homeowners, renters
and family · farmers whose
household income is less than $30,000
'per year. Thoae ·whose property
taxes exceed 2.5 percent of their

household income will be eligible, as
will renters if 10 percent of their annual rent exceeds 2.5 percent of
household income. No hoUsehold
could receive more than " $3oo in
refWlds annually.
- Increase personal income tax
rates for those earning more than
$30,000 annually.
-Require banks and other financial institutions to pay the saine corporate franchise taxes levied against other businesses.
-Eliminate two current laws
which aiiow local governments to
suspend property taxes for
businesses in return for new building
construction.
-Lower corporate franchise tax
rates for bu5inesses with net incomes below $75,000 annuaJJy while
raising the rate for those with incomes above that level.
- Require corporations to pay ·
sales tax on equipment and
materials they use in manufacturing
but which do no\ become patt of the
final product.
l

Carter .plays tru~p c~d in final days
WASIDNGTON (AP.) - All the pression that Reagan is warlike
listed again Reagan's suggestions that CO!J)d be played to future anna
days dwindle toward the decision at · from day one of.the .campaign, and . for the use of American ·forces control, In my qpinion, 1.!! ·qot only
the polls, President Carter is playing there are signs he has bad some suc- abroad, among them the idea of a dangerous, bu~ It's ridiculous," Carwhat his strategists see as their cess with it. An Associated ,Preaa- blockade of Cuba in response to the ter said. ·
campaign trump card: An NBC News poll showed '¥1 percent of Soviet invasion of Mghanistan. "I
Reagan emphasized "the margin.
escalating effort to convince voters likely voters - · a substantial
don't have any doubt that this would of safety" In arms, rather than
that they should not count on Ronald minority - fear -that Reagan might ·have· precipitated a majQI" con· presslllg the nuclear superiority
Indeed get the country into war. Fif- frontation between us and the Soviet argument in his Sunday speech.
Reagan to keep the peace.
Carter's success in this can' t be ty-six percent disagreed with that Union," Carter said.
"Governor Reagan's view Ia that by
· judged for certain until the votes are 'view. ·
Carter said he would move as soon restoring the margin ol safety, we
Reagan left, .tempo!"8flly on Suncounted, but his war-and-peace
as possible for Senate approval of will be able to prevent war,".' said
day,
his campaign push . condrive ha/tReagan'sattention.
the anna pact Reagan wanta diJcar· · Regan aide Richard V. Allen.
Regan devoted his first nationally centrating on economic woes under
ded in favor of new talks, for tenns
':Peace ia made by the fact of
televised address of the campaign to ~· He has Sllid Carter Is trying
Reagan says should be more strength," Regan said, accusintl
the Issue, declaring himse): devoted · to CO\'er up his admlnlstrlltion's
favorable to the United States.
Carter of letting that strength erode
to peace and inslatlng that he knows faulta with personal attacks and In"To insinuate that a superiority In to the point of danger.
better than Carter how to preaer:ve nuendoes.
nuclear weapons would be a card
Carter always denies that he
it.
That address was a tacit ad- means to suggest Reagan would
mlasion that Carter hu made head- start a war. Ask him directly and
way on the subject. "My own views he'll 'say no. "I've learned from ex·
have been distorted in what I can pericnce not fo try to make !lllrl1liEa . Today is Wednesday, Oct. 22, the
On this date:
'
only conclude Ia an «fort to scare · of that kind because .f!IY statements :!96th, day of 111110. There are 70 days
In
1962,
Iran
brub
dlpllllliatlc
,peo[)Je throi!gh . lmuendoes and are often misinterpreted,"
left In the year.
relations with Britain 1n a diapute
·mla&amp;tatements of my pcllitions," the says.
Today'a hiehllght In history:
over oil.
But he was not mlliinterpretecl ' On Oct. 22, 11162, President KenRepublican presidential nominee
In !lOS, France sranted Inwhen
he llid the election was a Dedy ordered u.s. air and naval forsaid Sunday night: "Possibly Mr. ,
dependence
to the ~
Carter Is gambling that his long choice between peace and war. He ces to quaranUne Cuba after con- kingdom of t.01.
. ·
litany of fear will somehow Influence later conceded that .,.. an over- cluding that Soviet miaalle l!ues
In lt61, t1 11rae11 ._.. _..
statement.
enough voters to save him."
were being llullt on the lsl'and. •~
reported ldlled when Jl'opUin
Carter, in an interview Friday,
Carter is promoting· the lrrr
mlulleslllD!I
the t1e110yw !latb.
,I

••

'

'

Eastern varsity players •••

'.+.

,
Roy Spencer
!HJ, 190 lbs.
Junior Guard

Dave Durst

Roger Bllisell
H0,135Jbs.
Sophomore Back

S.lO, UO lbs.

"Sophomore Back

Bowl-picture still cloudy

Dennis Durst

leads SWHS offense

P
195
167
168
132
121
112

OP
53
73
70
92
103
214

_Greg Webb

HT signal caller

F oothall fans will long remember
LARGEST SAND DESERT

offensive ·fireworks from Monday
Pl'ITSBURGH (AP) - For foot- linebacker Jack Ham. "But this is
ball fans who savor offensive over. We lost and that's it. We just
firewQI"ks, the O&amp;kland-Pittsburgh have to regroup."
alugfest - the highest scoring game
The game stirred memories of the
In the 1012-year history of Monday
old American FootbaJJ League and
night football - was a game to
left a Jot of players speechlesa. The
1emember. For players who Uve teams C01Jibined for 857 total net
from game to game, it's already yards. Oakland quarterback Jim
)llatory.
Plunkett burned the Steeler secon"We're going to enjoy this all the dary for 247 yards and three touchway home. We're going to enjoy it doWII bombs, two to the speedy Cliff
when we look at the film. Then we're Branch.
going to forget about it and get back
Terry Bradshaw, who came back
to work," said Oakland's Mark van twice from shoulder injuries before
Eeghen.
a jammed thumb on his throwing
"We're going to enjoy this one on hand !mocked him rut for .good,
the way home. But It's a short week retaliated with 299 yards and a pair
aiid we've got a, tough game coming of touchdown pes= And backup
up (with Seattle)," said Raider Cliff Stoudt fired one.
Coach Tom Flores after a stunning
''I don'tlmow what to say,'' said a
~victory over the Steelers.
shocked but exuberant van Eegben. 1
Pittsburgh bad different reasoll8 "You've got to give a lot of credit to
to forget after .dropping back-to- those guys who were playing pitch .
bact borne game~~,for the flnt time and catch.''
·
Iince its last losing seaDI in 1971:
Steeler Coach Chuck Non blamed
"It's a tough loss," said himself for a poor defensive game

Saudi Arabia contains the world's
largest sand desert, about as big as
Texas. Only 1 percent of the entire
coWJtry is cultivated, and nearly 85
percent of its food must be imported,
according to National Geog~aphic.

pliln that gambled with the blitZ and
WlSUccessfully required his secon·
dary to play single coverage on the
speedy Branch.
most disturbed at giving a good per·
"If there's any problem with some fonnance but being outplayed by
of the scores that they had, lay them Oakland.
righthereonme,"Nollsafd. · ·
''We came back. We tried. We
. · "We tried to put pressure on the fought back. But it just wasn't
blitz.Piunkettlaiditupandletthem enough," said Bradshaw, who is
go get it," he added. "I thought we listed as questionable for SWlday's
played 'very, very well. They played gam_e at Cleveland after X·rays of
better.''
·
·
his thwnb were negative.
What made him devise that game
Pittsburgh played without Allplan? "How about stupidity?" Noll Pros F-ranco Harris, Lynn Swann
answered somberly. "There's only and John Stallworth before losing
oneguyl'mupsetat-that'sme."
Bradshaw. A strained knee felled
The Steelers, who started only middie linebacker Jack Lambert in
four of the 11 offensive players who the first period, and he's doubtful for
lined up in the last Super Bowl, were SWlday's game.

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By Associated Press
while losing its first four nonleague
p~event it."
The bowl bids go out three weeks contests. All the Bulldogs had to do
And precedent exists since Big
from Saturday and, as usual, the pic· to represent the SEC in New Orleans Eight rivals Oklahoma and
was beat Auburn , a possibility that' Nebraska not only played in the
lure is muddied.
Also, as usual, it starts with the frightened the Sugar Bowl half out of Orange Bowl two years ago, but also
Sugar Bowl, which last year sweated its wits. Fortunately, Auburn met during the regular season. ,
out the possibility that Georgia prevailed.
However, Holmes . considers an
Once again, Georgia can make it Alabiuna-Georgia meeting "an ·eX·
rather than No.I ranked Alabama
might be the host team.
to New Orleans by winning its treme longshot" because "two
The same situation exists again , remaining conference games again- things are going to be very
except that this time, Georgia, with st Kentucky, Florida and Auburn, no prominent - first, Bear Bryant's
super freshman Herschel Walker matter what Alabama does. The fif. past statements that he wants .to
running loose, would not be 'as un· th-ranked Bulldogs and No.I rated play the top-ranked team available
desirable a commodity as the 1979 'Barna could both wind up 11.0 and, second, the fact that Alabama
club.
overall and !Hl irlleague play since has been here three years in a row."
"I sure like our situation better they don'tface each other.
While several possibilities e~t
than last year," says Mickey • In t hat case, why not match them between now and Bowl Day, secondHolmes, executive · director of the in the Sugar Bowl? The thought has ranked Texas must be considered
Sugar Bowl. "There's a world of dif· crossed Holmes' mind.
the favorite for the host role in the
ference .between !HJ, which Georgia
"Obviously we 'd be very in- · Cotton Bowl. " I don't see Texas g&amp;tis now, and 3-3, which they were last terested, " he says. "There's nothing ting beat between now and Nov. 15:"
year. The two biggest differences within our contractual.agreement to says Holmes.
·
are that Georgia has an offense and r------------_:_------~---can play defense."
·
Last year, Georgia won its first
five Southeastern Conference games

Southern

Jay Burleson

J

J

Kyge r Creek

•

i
•
J

'

.,

TEAM
North Gall i a
Hannan Trace
southwestern
Ea stern

Eastern's

··1

"' I

SVAC standings

son

c.ner.

;;
••
••
..••

.
••
,.

Last Friday night, Coach Buddy Moore's Eastern
Eagles recorded their biggest victory in sometime with
a lU setback of the previously unbeaten Hannan

Today'in history.

·; i.
I'

vislb

western.

Letters to . the editor
''
iI

.

Exciting SVAC race
offers more Friday

·~ ·

.

o., Wednesday, Oct. 22, 11110

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)

;

•

J&gt;efeat
Royals 4-1
..

.·

•

·'

.
to -meet

i. Rag-tag Phillies earn championship title

'
F.HILADELPHlA (AP) - They the season,leant his bat to tim; fairy
came from ignominy, this rag-tag tale with decisiveness. His two&gt;-run
bWlch of' mal""ntents, molded into ·- single in the third inning started the
wi)rld champions by guts, desire and --1980- Philadelphia -Phlllies-'011 their '
. the iron wiU of a man named Dallas way to baseball immortality.l:le was
Green.
· chosen Mi&gt;st Valuable Player of the·
The Philadelpia Phlllies reign Series with seven RBI, six. fW1S
today over baseball's world of scored and a .381 batting average.
gr&lt;iwnup kids, supreme in their own
The Phillies defeated the Kansas
ve~ special realm of make-believe.
City Royals 4-1 in the sixth game of
They rule_it for the first time in the the World Series to wrap it up by
histo~ of a. club that has been · four games to two, and Steve Carlton
baseball's lost child for so many tied a big bow around it for the two
summers.
.
million inhabitants of this town. The
Mike Schmidt, the Peter Pan of town took the gift joyously.
this "Never-Never Land," could not
The Phillies left-bander, who
extrress his feelings.
. almost certainly will win his third
"I can't muster the light words to Cy Young for his 24-9 season, went
describe how I feel," he said. "We're seven stcong innings and didri't give
world champions, and I've barely up a run until the eighth. He struck
had two sips of champagne. !just out seven and walked three to win
feel so good there's no batting prac- his second game of the Series, and
lice tomorrow."
he left to a standing ovation from the
SChmidt, who . led the major crowd of 65,838, the largest ever to
leagues with 48 home runs during witness a baseball game at

,

Veteran's Stadium ;md largest to
watch a Series game in-16 y_ears.
"It's a monumental feeling," said
Tug · MeG raw, who finjshed up for
Carlton. "I've been through a lot. It
goes bacl!: to a club that's.been able .
to put everything aside when we get
on the field and learn how to win.•'
The Phillies won the fi..St two
games of the Series at home, then
lost the first two in Kansas City.
They came back to win Game 5 in
Kansas City and send ·the Series
back home for the clinching game,
the game that gave the Phillies their

Today's

Sports World
By WW Gr!maley
AP Correspondent

PIDLADELPHlA (AP) - The park," ' he said. '·'I wasn't trying to
most important hit for Mike Schmidt knock it out of sight."
The slugging third baseman
in the Philadelphia Phillies' march
to their first World Series cham- drilled a single to right center,
scoring the first two runs in the H
plonsh)p was the one he didri't get.
" It was in the final game of the victory over the Kansas City Royals
N~tonal League playoffs at that gave the Phillies their first
Houston," said the reluctant Series World Series pennant ever.
Schmidt was a solid choice for the
hero. "I failed to get the hit that I
wanted more than any hit in my coveted Most Valuable Player
award, finishing the Series with
life."
:It was the eighth inning of the fifth ' e(ght hits in 21 at bats for a .381
and decisive playoff game, the average. He hit two homers and bat·
Pl!illies trailing the Astros 5-4 with ted in eight runs.
The 6-foo t-2 , 203-pound
runners at first and third. Schmidt,
powerhouse
accepted the award
the league's top home run hitter with
with the cloak of hwnility he had
48; strode to the plate.
·:'I struck out on three straight pit· gained 10 days before.
"I am ecstatic," he said when he
ches, looking at the last one,'' he ad·
dl!d. "I went back to the dugout received the news at the, post-game
saying, 'Good Lord, what am I press conference. " I wish 1.. could
trying to do?' I went ().for-5 in that chop it up into 25 pieces and spread it
around.
final game.
"This is not a one-man tewn or a
l• I was tcying too hard. I was
clirrying too much on my shoulders. two&gt;-man team. At least six or seven
It )vas as if I was getting a message guys could have been voted MVP
justifiably. I am honored it hapfrom God.
. !'Del Unser, who was next up, got penedtome.
a bit and we finally won in 10 innings . Schmid\ said one of his big disappointments was that his grandS:.t. I was really humbled."
mother
did not live to see him in his
Schmidt was wearing his blanket
finest
hour.
of: newly found humility when he
came to the plate in the third inning , "H~r name was Viola Schmidt.
The lu-st ball I ever had, she threw it
Tuesday with the bases loaded.
· " I kept saying to myself, 'Keep it with me. She died on my birthday in the park, just keep it in the. last September 27 in Qa)1on, Ohio."

Phils just kids
.playing a·game
PHlLADELPHIA (AP)- Believe
it or not, the Philadelphia Phillies
are really a bunch of kids pla:ring a
game.
Their cool, calculating image was
drowned in champagne Tuesday
night after they clinched the 1980
World Series.
The Phillies beat the Kansas City
Royals, 4-1 to win the best-of-seven
Series in six games, 4-2
The manager, Dallas Green, and
his boss, personnel director Paul
Owens, hugged and cried together
for several minutes.
The players indulged themselves
in the usual champagne bathing and
drinking. The clubhouse was
bedlam.
The only player not in sight was
winning pitcher, Steve Carlton, who
maintained his policy of not talking
to the media. Carlton wasn't missed
as the Phillies let it all bang out.
Shortstop Larry Bowa, who set a
World ·Series record of starting
seven double plays, shouted his
feelings to the world.
"Everybody said we're smug,

overpaid athletes who didn't want to
win. We proved them wrong. Gentlemen, I told you so.''

ow .

.

...

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CLASSAAA
Cincinnati Moeller (1), JJ.M, 318
IIOints.
•
2, Cincinnati Prin~loo (1), IJ.M, 2&lt;16.
l. Youngstown M()()lley (II ~ 7..0.0, 200.
4, Masslllon (1), 7-6-1, 1&amp;1.
I, Iipper Arlington (1), 7-Hl, 1011.
I; Lakewood St. Edward ()), 7-J.~. 101.
7, w....rville North (1), JI.IHI, 76.
I, Centerville {1), 7-1.(1, 88.
t, Newa~k (I), 7-1.0, 61.
'
10, Can!On McKinley (I), 7-J.~.. 56.

lorth

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.........

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&lt;

LADIES'·

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Reduced -· 20%

Prices Effective Through Saturday, Oct. ·25, 1980

YELLOW

•
0n1ons................:~...

I, New Concord Glenn (Ill), JI.IHI, 52.

.

n.10,

Oeveland

Benedictine

.

(ffi),

6-1-1,

Other schools receiving lO or more
olnts: 11, Akron St. Vincent-51. Mary 46.
2, Tiltonsville Buckeye South 42. 13, To34. lt, Cadlz 29. 15 (tie), Cortland
- . . . and Bucyruo Wynford :1ll. 17, .
lrvoklyn 25. 11, Navarre- Fairless 23. 19, ·
llol 22. 20, Sl Marys 17. 21 (tie), Trenewood, Wllllunsporl w..ttall and
e 16. :It (Ue), casstown Miami

ci.AssA
~.

3LB.4

'
.

McDonald fV) , 84&lt;&gt;, 196.
Newarlt . Catholic (V), 7-1-&lt;l, 1111.
Glou.ster Trimble (V), JI.IHI, lila.
J,iberly Center (V), JI.IHI, lll.
IA&gt;rain Clearview (V), &amp;-1·1, 90.
Leetonia (V), 7-J.O, 78.
t, Arcanwn (lV), 7+l, M.
. ID, Beolllvllle (V), 7-1-&lt;J, 38.
Other schoola ~Jving 10 or more
: 11, Rlttmln 17. 12, Strasllllrg 35.
ia, Gales MIU. HaRWKEN 1,. 1 t (tie), Wll·
_ . , . . and Woodsfield 28. IS, .. tiffin '
~ !4. 17, ' Soolhington Chalj;~r 23: 18,
:Jorlleld Hell!hts Trinity 21. 19, Glbsonl!lll Jt. 20, l!urton Bel'bhir&lt;! 12. 21, Ber.... Surindleld 11. 22 (tie), MJHord Cen• Faii-barib and McComb 10.

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2, Covln«too (V), 84&lt;&gt;, Zltrnmi«ee to. ,

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POMEROY, 0.

.U team. thb ,...k for 'nlo Aasodat.d
Preaa with 10 points for £irst to 1 point

I, Mogadore IV),

DENIM

LAmES'

Sunday 10 ain-10 pm

REG. OR JUMBO

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - l;lere's how
1 statewide panel of sports Writers and
lnodcuters .....U Ohio hiah ochool foot-

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lor lOth (lea=&lt;' playoff divWoos in I""'

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DRESS PANTS

-~-CLE'JELAND -(-AP) - 'l'wo bat. tered quarterbacks are preparing
. this week for a National Football
League showdown between the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Cleveland
Browns.
·
Te~ Bradshaw, veteran quarterback of the Super Bowl champion
Steelers, severely jammed his right
thumb Monday night when · the
Steelers lost to the Oakland Raiders.
"It's not broken, but that suck~r
really hurts," said Bradshaw after
the game.. "It will be a day-t{)o(fay
thing. I will keep ice on it for three to
foWl days, but I hope to practice
Friday."
Bradshaw has an NFL history of
playing well when hurt, but it
remains unclear how rriuch the
thumb injury will hinder his passing.
His backup is Cliff Stoudt, a fouryear pro from YoWlgstown State.
The Browns went into last Sun'clay's game fear)ng that their quar. terback and inspirational leader,
Brian Sipe, would have to miss action for the first time this season
because of a knee strain suffered the
week before ..
Sipe played and had one of the best
days of his career.
In the victory over the Green Bay
, packers, Sipe suffered bruised ribs.
But Sipe said the team is readying
for Pittsburgh.
"We'll all be high, that's for sure,"
he said. "B ut in terms of
preparation, it's important to keep
everything in perspective, and we
will.
"All we neect to beat that team is a
good blend of our offensive, defensive and speeial teams, a good coordinated effort," he said.
Both field generals likely will lead
their teams, at least in the first quarter, before more than 110,000 football
fans expected at Cleveland Sta&lt;Uum.
The two teams, along with the
Houston Oilers, are tied for the lead
In ·the American Football Conference Central Division, each with
~records .'
•
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Other schoob receivq '10 · or more
&gt;Oints: II, Cincinnati Elder &lt;16. 12, Sandilly 33. 13, Willoughby South 29. 14, Fr&amp;

"~~~

FOR
MEN

savor this vjctory ," said the
manager.
Green wasn't surprised that the
Phillies are World. Chlfmpions. "I
told them in spring training that we
could win. It just took us time to gef
our act together. We had some
sinking spells... We had some ghosts
to put to sleep and we did it," Green
said.
Green said the key to the Phillies
victory was keeping the KanSas City
rabbits, Willie Wilson (4-26), U.L.
Washington (6-22), and Frank White
(2-25) off base. '
Green was asked why he took out
Carlton when the ace left-bander got
in a little trouble in the eighth.
Carlton was pitching a strong game.
"Steve was feathering his fastball
a little bit. Lefty and I have a good
rapport. He has to be the Cy Yoimg
Award winner (in the National
League),'' Green said.
Phillies third baseman Mike Schmidt was voted the most valuable
Player of the Series. He had eiglt
hits in 21 at bats for a .381 average,
two home. runs, seven RBI, scored
six runs. He batted in the game winning runs Tuesday night.
''I'm in a coma,'' said Sctunidt. "I
can't muster up the right words to
say how I feel.. .I hope we get 'the
credit we deserve around the coun-

argue, but everybody wa·s safe.
almost immediate troQble again in
Pete Rose loaded the bases with a .the sixth.
bunt single, alid Schmidt strode to
Garry Maddox led off the Phils
the plate~holding
stick .J!oL
f --.i:sixth with a single but was doubled, ·
wood in his Popeye arms. Schmidt , up OOMa'nny .Tfillo's grounderlillck~i•:
worked the count to 1-1, then looped to the .mound. ~ Bowa then : '
a -single toward right field, Scoring doubled and scored Philadelphia's
Boone and Smith.
last run of the 1980 season on a single
That brought Frey out of the by Boone: ·
dugout again, and Gale was through
By then the crowd was cheering at
for the season. Reliever Renie Mar- nearly every pitch, roaring as each
tin got the side out, and the Phils Phillie batter came to !he plate.
· '
were quiet until the fifth.
Carlton, meanwhile; cruised along , • ,
Smith led off that inning with a with some fielding help and an overliner to'center that he stretched into powering fastball. He walked two • •
a double.. When Rose flew to center, men with one out but escaped on a
Smith was on 'third. Martin then double play initiated by Bowa at
walked . Schmidt, :and he was shortstop. He yielded his first hit of
through. Left-bander Paul Splittorff . the game to Washington, who led off
made his first appearance of the the fourth with an ilifield single, but . .
Series, yielding Bake McBride's · Washington was cut down in a
run-scoring grounder, and he was in double play, again started by Bowa.

Bowa , screamed, "There are no
570 W. Main
more guys to beat. We are the best
Pomeroy, o.
baseball team in the U.S.A."
The Phillies' shortstop recalled try."
slinking out of Pittsburgh in mid· r-~~----------L----.....,-------------~--,---­
August, beaten four straight times
by the Pirates.
"We were six down in the loss
column and could have died. But we
went into New York and swept the
Mets five straight. That turned the
season aroWld," Bowa said.
·
Green, who has said he doesn't
want to continue as a manager, left
Ijis position hanging.
.f'At this point, I'm going to wait
before I make my decision. I want to

"A .

6~..
,*\0

only world championship since the
franchise . was moved (rom Worcester...}lass., 98 years ago.
It llfgan with a third inning error
by perhaps the best defensive
second baseman in the American
League, KansaS eity's Frank White.
Royals light-bander Rich Gale
issued a walk to Phils catcher Bob
Boone. Fleet~f-foot Lm.lllie Smith
then bounced a grounder to White's
righ!. Wllite fielded the ball cleanly,
. but his throw pulled shOrtstop U.L.
Washington off the bag. "ftoyills
Manager Jim Frey came out to

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•

\ DONATESSCHOLARSHIP
PHlLADELPHIA (AP) - Mike
!ldunidt of the Philadelphia Pbillies
raid he would donate the $5,000
echolarshlp that goes with the World
!llrles' Most Valuable Player award
10 his alma mater, Ohio Un!verity in
Mbens, Ohio.
Told that the award also carries
lrith It a $9,000 engraved gold wa~h,
ibe power-hitting Philadelphia third
llueman said Tuesday night, "You
_,.I don't get a car? I've already
aut a watch. Heck, I'll just trade it
lora car."
MEN OUTNUMBERED
women !Wterates outnumber men
ill Jllll8t parts of the WlJ\"ld. Female
illltehcy tn Afr!Cil and the Arab
~~-·--~ where women have Jess ac~~~ICboo:;'W: Is about 8&amp; percent.
"'
tll.6 percent of the w11111en
.u111t read or write.

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25, 1980
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1980

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Offer Expires Oct. 25, 1980

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1

�7- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct. 22,198o
6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Oct 22,1980

,j&gt; •.

Philadelphia celebrates after series win

Bengal$ have chance
.
to get .back zn race
'

LADIES NITE

.

..
'

CINCINNATi (AP) .:.. The CinSince then, PhilliPs said be has
cinnati Bengals have a chance, for been asked about those words about
the first time in three yea~s. to get once a week.
back in the race for the American
" I don't know what people think. I
Conference Central Division leader· only know what I~· And I think I
ship Sunday at HoustOJi. _ __ .. ~ _ shQuldn't ha'\"~ satd tt. The less you _
The Oilers are tied foe first with say the less you have lo take hack.
the Pittsburgh •Steelers -and· the Everybody w~.play seems to want to
Cleveland Browns with 4-3 records.
relllllld me oflt.
,
Cincinnati, 3-4, is healthy and has .. "Fort~~ly, ~hat I _say lBil't real
two victories over Pittsburgh and unportant •. Phlll!ps.satd.
.
one over the Minnesota Vikings.
Meanwhile, Cmcmnatl Bengals
They . are hoping to avenge their fullback Pete .Johnson, ~~o ran for
earlier loss to the Oilers here.
115 yards agalllSt the Vifings, says
The Oilers have scored only 13 his sore legs have recovered.
touchdowns while giving up 14 this
season but have running back Earl
Campbell healthy. In their last two
games, Campbell ran 71 times for
38lyards.
The .Oilers also have Ken
Burrough back from a preseason leg .
injury and quaterback Ken Stabler .
THURSDAYS
now has receiver Dave Capser, his
longtime cohort from Oakland, on
9 P.M. to 12 Midnight
the team.
Oilers Coach Bum Phillips indicated he regretted his words last
season when he told 70,000 Houston '
fans: "Last year we knocked on the
door. This year we poWlded on the
748 N. 2nd St.
door. Next year we'll kick tiM; thing
Middleport, Oh.
down."

MARAPJ)ER SEVENTH GRADE FOOTBALL SQUAD- Making up
the se~nth grade squad at Meigs Junior High are, ,first row, 1-r, Bobby
Jeffers, David Shuler; second row, Johnny Epple, Robert Sisson, Buddy

.

Goss, Bryan Korn, Brad Robinson, Brian Buffington; third row, John Arnott and John Krawsczyn, coaches, Rick Wise, Parker Long, Lee Powell,
Kevin Meadows, Mike Chance~, Kevin Thoma, Jim Crow and Carson
Crow, coaches. The team is 2-2 this fall.

Games of Oct. 25:

Hoople picks
•,

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Premier Predictor
Egad, friends, there are chills and
~ . thrillsinstoreforyou 1
'·
This weekend Tennessee tangles
: • with · Pitt, Alabama takes on
• Southern Mississippi, Notre Dame
· : .makes a rare nocturnal excursion to
' ' ·Arizona, Texas meets Southern
Methodist and California hosts
.. E
&lt; UCLA - to name just a few of the
, top games. Har-rumph!
The Tennessee-Pitt encoWJter is
_ perhaps the most interesting game
': of the day as it matches Johnny
Majors, the Vols coach, .against his
"' one-time assistant Jackie Sherrill of
Pitt. You'll remember it was Majors
who took over a haplesS Pitt team in
; 1973 and made it a national cham' . pion by 1976 - with the assistance of
~-~
, • Sherrill ... and Tony Dorsett.
, : When Majors returned to his alma
·' mater, Tennessee, in 1977, Sherrill
••• took over at Pitt and kept the pan'' thers in the Top Ten annually while
; ; piling up a 23-7-1 record in his first
, three years. In '79, Pitt won 11 while
: · . rosing but one game. And the '80 ver·
: sion of the Panthers are playhing the
•' same kind of football.
:: So much so, in fact, that Pitt will
' be favored agairist Tennessee.
•' But- ho-ho- watch out. We look
for Majors and the Volunteers to
; ~ knock off the invaders, 21-14, in the
, • upset of the day. Har-rumph!
:: . _ Playing at home, Alabama will
•: take the measUre .of an excellent
Southern Mississippi band of Golden
::. Eagles, 3:&gt;-21. Playing under the
'; lights in Arizona Stadium in Tucson,,

&gt;
I ~'

Tennesse(3 -~ 0ver

the Irish of Notre Daine will prevail,
24-14; and in Austin, Texas, the host
Longhorns will subdue SMU, 38-24,
in the 7oth renewal in this series.
The california-UCLA game is
another old-timer, staging its 51st
performance. California opened the
season with high hopes. But it hasn't
been able to make things happen.
This week - heh-heh - the Hoople
System sees more bad things happening to the Golden Bears as UCLA
triumphs, 27-13- um-kumph!
In other big ones on this week's
card, we look for Georgia to knock
off an Wlpredictable Kentucky club,
33-7; for Florida State to UJH!nd
Memphis State, 3G-IO, and Penn
State to whip old rival Wast Virginia,
30-21.
On paper the North carolina Tar
Heels appear to be superior to East
carolina. But they better .approach
the game with a feeling of caution.
Last year the Pirates came away
with a surprising 24-24 standoff and
will be out to pull another surprise
this week. However, that's not in the
cards and we foresee a North
carolina triiunph, :J:&gt;-22·.
Some other contests worthy of
special note are the quartet in the
Big 8 where Nebraska will down
Colorado, 4~24; Oklahorrulwill repel
Iowa State, 26-21; Missouri wlll
conquer Kansas State, 3:&gt;-16; and
Kansas will overpower Oklahoma
State, 24-10.
Ivy League powers Yale and Harvard will come up with winning efforts as yale thwarts Penn,17·7, and
Harvard's forces overrides Prin·
~eton, 27-15.

Ohio State's Buckeyes have only
lost to Wisconsin seven times in 49
previous engagements and we can't
see them losing this week. Make it
Ohio State 38, Wisconsin 17. Also in
the Big 10, watch for Purdue to
squeak by an improving Michigan
State, 3:&gt;-28, and for Michigan's
Wolverines to stop lllinois by a 21-16
count.
A crowd-pleader in the East will
find invading Rutgers overturning
Syracuse, 27-11, And swinging to the
Southwest, the Hoople System confidently predicts SWC victories for
Arkansas over Houston, 33-21; Rice
over Texas AIM, 21-20; and Baylor
over TCU, 29-20.
The game of the dsy in the Pac 10
conference will find Stanford over·
whelming Washington State 42-12har-rumph!
Now go on with my forecast:
OCT. 25
Alabama 35 S. Mississippi 21
Appalachian St. 25 Furman 22
Arizona St. 42 Pacific 12
Arkansas 33 Houston 21
Baylor 29 TCU 20
Boise St. 21 WeberSt. l4
Boston College 20 Army 18
ling Green 39 Miami (0) 21
BYU 32 Hawaii 7'
, Citadei38Newberry 7
"clemson 19 N. Carolina St. 7
Colgate 15 Columbia 8
Cooner·· ~ut 38 Maine 15
Dartmouth 21 Comella
Florida St. 30 Memphis St. 10
Florida 35 Louisville 18
Fresno St. 20 Utah St. 10
Georgia 33 Kentucky 7 •

Pitt

Harvard 27l'rinceton 15
Holy Cross 14 Brown 12
bidlana 42 Northwestern 20
Iowa 12 Minnesota 10
Kansas 24 Oklahoma St. 10
'Kent St. 17 Eastern Michigan It
Maryland 28 Duke 6
Michigan 21 Dllnois 16
. Missourl35 Kansas St. 16
Mississippi St. 25 Auburn 21
Mississippi 44 Vanderbllt%0
Nebraska 44 VanderbUI%0
New Mexico 42 UTEP 20
New Mexico St.17 Drake 14
Notre Dame 24 Arizona 14
N. Arizona 32Montana 81.17
N. Carollns 35 E. Carollns 22
Ohio St. 38 Wisconsin 17
Ohio University 24 Toledo 20
1!1 Oklahoma 26 Iowa St. 21
Oregon St. 26 Long Beach St. 21
Penn St. 30 West Virginia 21
Purdue 35 Michigan St. 28
Rice 21 Texas AIM 20
R~tgers 27 SYJ:acuse 11
San Jose St. 31 Idaho U
Stanford 42 Washington St. 2
Temple 37 Cincinnati 16
Tennessee 21 Pitt 14
Texas 38 SMU %4
Tulane 17 Georgia Tech 9
Tulsa 18 W. Texas St. 14
UCLA 27 California 13
Utah 14 Colorado St. 7
Virginia Tech 18 Richmond 3
Wake Forest26 Virginia 21
Washington 22 Navy 16
W. Mlchlgan33Ba11St. 17
Wichita St. 23 N. Dllnols 14
Wyomln~33 San Diego St. 18
Yale 17 Penn 7.

l

.CARRY
OUT

SHAMMY'S

W. Main St,"

Pomeroy

992-$786

·1981·

CHICAGO (AP)- MithiganState
th, too. I guess my consideration is
the depth of a team."
' ; Coach Frank "Muddy" Waters
But Purdue has Herrmann, and
; ; didn't have to think long about the
:·· question and flatly state "I think
Waters' task this week will be to stop
, :, Ohio State is way out ahead" when
the play-calling, brilliant passing
quarterback.
·;· asked to rate· the top three conr;: tenders in the Big Ten.
"Herrmann is the best I've ever
:, : Ohio State, Michigan and Purdue seen/' said Waters. "You can't stop
him. You can only hope to slow him
·:: are tied for the conference lead with
down. How? !wish I knew."
•, J.O records, and Waters could have
• ~ dodged aroWld and made a strong
Waters wasn't the only cQach to
' • case for Purdue since his Spartans
cast his vote for the loth-ranked
:.; play the Boilermakers this week.
Buckeyes who will take their powerful .act to Wisconsin this week.
,; : Why Ohio State?
.
' t. "More strength and great depth,"
Wisconsin's Dave McClain thinks a
·: :said Waters Tuesday in a telephone , lot of Ohio State and so does Min- ·
· :interview with the Chicago Football nesota's Joe Salem, the only coach
; Writers. "They can afford to lose in the conference who has lost to all
': somebody and replace him. If Pur- three of the contenders.
;; ·due lost (Mark) Herrmann, it would
"We've looked at the fihns and I'm
&lt;,. be in tough shape. Michigan has dep- very, yery impressed with Ohio

State. We played Purdue and had a , State. "Purdue is big and a strong
chance to beat them, but right·now team physically, and it is difficult to
rWJ against Purdue. Michigan had
Ohio State has a heckuva team.
"Maybe I'll say the same thing John Wangler throwing against OS
when we play Michigan,'.' said Mc- and it seems anytime they want six
Clain. "The big thing, though, is that points, they throw to Anthony Car·(
Ohio State and Purdue don 't play ter.
''Of course, with Mark Herrmann,
each other, and Purdue finishes the
season against Michigan and In- Purdue throws the ball a lot more
diana. If everything goes on and Herrmann has some fine
schedule, it will be between Ohio receivers. Ohio State _could be as
State and Michigan. But anything good, but they just don't throw the
can haplfen."
ball as much as Purdue or Michigan.
" Ohio State blocks well for the run
Salem's Gophers lost to Ohio State
and has a more diversified attack,
47~, to Purdue 21-7 and to,.Michigan
37-14last week.
because Art Schlichter does more
"The day we played them, they running than llie other quarwere the toughest and gave us the terbacks," added Salem.
most problems," said Salem of Ohio

'.."..'.
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Alex English scored 30 points to
•, pace Denver.
Bucks 115, CavBIIen 95
•'
Marques
Johnson poured in :Ill .
•'' points to lead
.Milwaukee over
••I' Cleveland. Quinn Buckner
scored 18
.; points while leading a devastating
Bucks' rwming game.
•
Mike Mitchell paced the cavaliers
•
• with 24 points.
'
Warriors 116, King111l
·Guards John Lucas and Uoyd
! Free combined for 48 points to power
Golden State past Kansas City.
Free, acquired by the Warriors in aD
' • offseason trade with San Diego,
' scored a game-high 28 points lind
•
• · Lucas added 20,
Otis Birdsong led the Kings with 211
'
points. .
.
'
Knfcks 105, BuiiB 97
Ray Williams scored 27 points to
pace New York past Chicago. The
•• sharpshooting New York guard and
• forward Sly Williams shared 18 ol
the Knicks' 28· flrsl-iJuarter pOinll
and Williams adde.d 10 more in the .
thirdquarier.
The Bulls were led by Reggie
Theus's 19 points.
Spurs 1!3, CUppers 120
•
George Gervin's 31 poinll
• triggered San Antonio poSt San
•"' Diego. Mark Olberding hil'a seasonhigh 23 points to lead a group of five
)
other Spurs in double figures.
Although the Spurs led all the way,
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FLORENCE, Ky. (AP)
Edgewood O'Grady won the ,1,100
featured pace mile in the seventh
race Tueadlly night at Latonia llld
paid $5, f3.20 and f3.80.
BUiy be There placed to pay ~ .110
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Sam Pellom again started at center for Atlanta, which has its .top two
centers, Wayne Rollins and Tom
Burleson, on the injured reserve list
and No.3 Steve Hawes sidelined with
a back injury, Forward Tom McMillen also played part of the game
at the pivot.
Snns 111, Mavericks 99
Dennis Johnson scored 21 points
while forward Len "Truck" Robinson and center Alvan Adams combined for 30 more to pace Phoenix
over Dallas.
Robinson, the NBA's third-leading
scorer, finished with 13 points and 17
rebounds. His 11 rebounds In the
third period tied a Suns record.
Adams added 17 points while guard
Johnny High had 12.
Jim Spanarkel scored 20 points for
Dallas.
Rockets 119, Nuggets 117
Moses Malone collected 41 points
and 26 rebounds and led Houston
'' back from' a 13-point deficit as the
Rockets defeated Denver.
••
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first world championship in the !JS. "I'm glad I lived this long to see rang the company's old fire bell to
celebrate the win. It iast soundecl to
year history of the Phillies' fran· them win."
Downtown, they whooped and markthecloseoftheVietnamWar.
chise.
"We've prayed our heads off," hollered, belly-to-belly,' ill the overAt the Fairmont Hotel on
said Sister Joan Marie, 78. "The flowing streets, their ectasy c.emen- Philadelphiia's Broad Street, Ed·
Phiilies are beautiful. After they ted by 25 men in red and white ward Ehlers, 55, of Harrington Park,
won the playoffs I went over in front unifonns whq proved to the world on N.J ., joined the revelers.
&lt;Jf ·the-TV and made the sign-of the . -a frosty actober~ night-that-they are - " I am here !or a water convention," he said. "This is a tremen·
Fross. That Pete Rose is somebody." . the bestin baseball. ·
As the 'night wore on, police, their · dous show you put on for us. Last
Another OWl (she was 83 ·and
wouldn't give her name) recalled numbers bolstered by the can- year in Boston we had the Pope, this
that back in 1916, on the day before cellation or all vacation time and year the World Series."
Gwin Cumo, 48, emerged wearing
she entered the convent, her ·brother days off, reported some fist fights
and scuffles, but few arrests. One of- a-Phillies !-shirt over her.. dress and
took her to see Phillies' immorlal
Grover Cleveland Alexander pitch.
ficer estimated 4,000 fans had carrying a drink.
"I think it is sensational," she
"I remember the Phillles from mustered at one intersection at the
height of the celebration.
said. " I'm only sorry it wasn't the
way back, in the early 1900s when
they didn't win a game," she said.
In Doylestown, voiWJteer firemen Yankees."

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By The Associated Press
The Los ·Angeles Lakers may be
champions of the world, but apparently that world ·doesn't Include
Portland, Ore.
The Lakers have been on the short
end against the Portland Trail
Blazers of late, havifig beaten them
only once iit the last nine games. The
latest ldss came Tuesday night,
when the Blazers beat the defending
National Basketball Association
champions, 107-103.
"I don't have an explanation,"
said Los Angeles Coach Paul
Westhead aboui the Blazers' un·
canny domination over his team.
"When we're here in Portland, they
play an exciting, enthusiastic game.
They just do a very good job when
they play us. That's to their credit."
The loss was the first for the
Lakers this season after five victories. The NBA's other last unbeaten ' team, the Atlanta Hawks,
also went down·with a 122-116 defeat
by Indiana,
Elsewhere, Phoenix beat Dallas
lll-99; Houston stopped Denver 119117 ; Mliwaukee whipped Cleveland
115-95; Golden State stopped Kansas
City 116-111; New York turned back
Chicago 10f&gt;.9'! and San Antonio beat
San Diego 123-120.
Pacers 12I, Hawks 116
johnny Davis collected 14 of his
game-high 30 points in the folll'th
quarter as Indiana knocked injuryriddled Atlanta from the unbeaten

ATTENTION. • •

~..-.J: B~ckeyes still No. l . in. Big Ten race
'

·Lakers defeat Portland

.CITY Ll MITS
DRIVE·THRU

Now .Available at:

end gave them perhaps the biggest
thrill of their lives.
"I burst into tears at the last out;"
said Melanie Wisniewski, 24, who
was in the stands ·when I?hillies'
reliever Tug McGraw threw llie
fins! pitch Tuesday night. "It's been
a lifetime wailingforthis!' .· ~ ...,.
Bartenders .!~' batting helmets
broke open champagne.· A woman
rl!ll down the street kissing every
helmeted policeman she could catch. A man ran down the street in a
tlie Clippers got 'within a point five
Phillles' cap. And nothing else.
times in the final period before sucAt the McAuley Convent in nearby
cessive field goals by San Antonio Bala.Cynwyd, 3: retired nuns
captain James Silas put the game
hugged each other as McGraw, a
away for the Spurs. .
. magpie Irishman, salted away the

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - The the citizenry poured out of bars and
Philadelphia Phillies, baseball's houses to dance and kiss· in the
"Cardiac Kids," won the World streetsunderaharvestmoori.
Series Tuesday night and this town
Today, a parade will be held, and
·-at last cured of playoff heartbreak . the fans, supported by a few winks,
..,.. went nuts. I
wlll again toast a team that ·strained
Pumped up with victory pWlch- · them, then drained them, but in the
(Ah, 1980 was a-goodyeat" after all!); ' -·

'

PRESTONE
WINTER
ANTI-FRE.EZE

$449

G~

�-9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pornerov, 0 .• Wednesday, Oct. 22,1980

Health risks linked to pill may
have been somewhat ~agge~ated

FOUR STUDENTS at the Holzer Medical Center Professional Services at the hospital. The young
School .of Nursing, residents of Meigs County, were · women accepting them, from right to left, are Deborah
awarded scholarship grants for the year 198().81 from Danner from the Class of 1982, Velvet Swisher Teresa
the Kibble Foundation. Presenting the awards was Meadows and Lori Young, aU seniors, membe~ of the
Charles I. Adkins, right, Vice President for Class of 1981.

...

o

Kibble Foundation SCh 0 1ars hlps
awarded to 4 nursing _students
Scholarship grants have been
awarded to four nursing students at
the Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing in Gallipolis, made possible
through the Foundation established
by the late Anderson B. Kibble of
Reedsville, Oh. These grants for the
1!J80.81 school year are restricted to
the hospital's Nursing School
students who are residents of Meigs
County.
This year's recipients are Teresa·
Meadows, Velvet Swisher and Lori .
Young from the Class of 1981 and
Deborah Danner from the Class of
19112. Of particular note is the, fact
that these fow- young women were
the . recipients of the Kibble Foundation Scholarships for the 1971Hl0
school year.

Two of the students are from Mid·
dleport. Velvet Lee Swisher, a
senior, is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William E. Swisher. She was a
member of the National Honor
Society while in high school, and is t
he secretary of the Class of 1981 at
the hospital's School of Nursing.
Deborah Ellen Danner, a Junior, is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Danner. She was the
Valedictorian of the Class. of 1979
from Meigs High School and a member of the National Honor Society.
Teresa Dawn Meadows is from
Portland, Oh., and the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James D. Meadows.
While in high school she was active
on the Scholarhsip Team. She is a

Long Bottom . News Notes

.
The doctor said "not only were with oc Use.
PlflLADELPiflA (APJ- Certain
-OC use in Itself does not illcreui!
there
no
significant
differences
in
health risks that have been linked to
the risk of cancer · of ~ cervb:the use of birth control pills may be overall death rates between cui-rent However, intel'COIII'!Ie-at a young •ge
exaggerated, according to· a recent or past users and those who never and multiple se:rual partnel'll, comH)-year study conducted by -the used the pill in this P9pulation, but mon in some OC users, has been
Kaiser-Permanente Medical Center there was no definite evidence of an linked to cervical cancer. ·.
and funded by the . National ln- increased· risk of cardiovasc.ular
- There is Jio increase in riBk from
stituies of Health.
• disease in users compared to those
circulatory
disease among OC users
"The main conclusion from this who had never used the pill.
who
do
not
smoke.
However, heavy
' " However, OC users in this
study is that in a U.S. population of
smoking
by
itself
was associated
young, adult, healthy, white, middle- population tend to have certain perwith
an
increesed
risk
of circulatorY'
clalis women, the risks of oc·(oral · sonal habits which put them at a
disease
.
. contraceptives) are negligible," Dr. greater risk of developing }iossibly
- !\11 increased risk of mallgnapt
&amp;!vitri Ramcharan, the project's serious types of diseases," she said.
m,elanoma
·of the likin was
The study shows that many earlier
research direct9r, said today in
associated
with
OC users gf all ages.
revealittg the results at a sym- reporied relationshi}lli between pill
posium at the University of Pen- use and diseases affecting the cir- However, the ~chers al8o found ~ •
, culatory, respiratory and rep~oduc- · a significantly higher exposure to •
nsylvania School of Medicine,
The study, conducted in Walnut tive systems may he explained by sunlight, which has Qeen previously
to skin cancer, among OC
Creek, Calif., reports on the major such factors as smoking, alcohol iinked
users compared to non-users.
•'
consumption,
sunbathing,
number
of
fomll! of disease and the causes of
sexual
partners,
and
age
at
first
intercourse.
,--:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
. death in a group of 16,638 women,
ages 18 through 54, wh~;~ were studied
Other findings of the study:
between 1968 and 1977. The project
There is no evidence of an inwas recommended by the Food and
crease
in risk of cancer· of the
Drug Administration's Advisory
breast, uterine or ovary associated
Committee ori Obstetrics and
Gynecology in 1967.

By Associated Press
A $16 billion-a-year problem turned into a 2!&gt;-minute nightmare for
Joan Fletcher last week.
The problem is shoplifting. The
nightmare came when Joan Fletcher was accused of stealing.
She was innocent. "They let me go
with the words, 'It was an honest
mistake,''' she said.

Joan Fletcher ·is not the shopper's
real name. She asked that her identity be concealed. But her experience was real, and it highlights
the crime of shoplifting, and the difficulty of prosecuting people who are
guilty and protecting people who are
not.

Mrs. Fletcher was shopping at a
New Jersey department store when
a young woman stopped her and
flashed a badge.
· '" I'm from security," the woman
said. " Will you come with me? We
think you've stolen something."
Mrs. Fletcher sta rted to llrotest.
"Come along with me anyway,"
tlv!. woman said. "We'll determine
that~ "

CHANGEHOURS
The Hysell Rtin Holiness Ch~ch
will change the hour of sernces
following the time change from
Eastem Standard time to daylight
savings. Evening services will be
held at 7 p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m.

PLACE ANNOUNCED
Lucy Amsb;lry, Serenity House,
hoard president, announced today
that persons may contact her at Rt.
1, Langsville, not at the Middleport
Library as was previously announced.

are victims of "honest mistakes"
and how !J1Bny are guilty.
vi~ir~;,/letcher, 40, was one of the ,
.Chance iook her into tlle department store where she was accused of
stealing an eyeshadow ·stick. She
was taking a short cut to another

\

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AND Tl:fE PROFESSIONS

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614/992-,133

visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul ·
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs· . Bill':
McElroy, Jetf, Joey and Jessica.
Mr5. 1v11 Jollnson is spending a :
few days with Mrs. J. R Murphy :
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Smith,
ThurstonandFrancis!\lldrew.
Kanauga, were Sunday visitors oe
Anyone wishing to contribute Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
items to this column, please phone . Mr. and Mrs. Eimer Bailey were
~275- or ~nd them to Box 7, tong ·- recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Bottom, Ohio.
Sargent and family .

•

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--BANK
Q NE- •• • - - .
.

Erin Beth Wamer was · recent
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
George Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Colwnbus were recent weekend

AAA GAlliPOLIS

store, spotted a cosmetic display chants of what you can do and you
and bought some makeup, paying can't do."
It will specify penalties for repeat
for it with a personal check for
$28.76.
offenders, list the rights of people
Mrs. Fletcher had left the store accused of shoplifting and define the
and was already in another shop crime more clearly, he said.
One of the most common misconwhen the security officer stopped
.
ceptions
about shoplifting is that the
her. She returned to the first store
where her bag and packages wer~ suspect must leave the store before
he or she can be stopped. That's only
searched.
When she asked if she could phone true in SOil)e states, said Granados.
As a general rule, Mrs. Rogers
her office, she said, store personnel
told her: " If we let you go, you can said, a retailer must prove intent;
call from a pay phone."
.
the customer must have passed the
Mrs. Fletcher said she was point where , the item could
"shaking from head to toe." But the reasonably be purchased. Thai point
worst part of her experience . she may he the front door or a cash
said, was that "I did nQt kno~ my · register in the appliance departrights and that's a terribly fearful ment.
situation."
Mrs. Fletcher said she believes
If Mrs. Fletcher had been arrested she may have been stopped because
by a police officer and accused of a she fit somebody's idea of a shoplifcrime, she would have had the right ter - middle-aged, well-dressed,
to can a lawyer, the right to remain "hanging around a store in the midsilent. Did she have the same rights dle of the day."
Mrs: Rogers noted that shoplifters
when she was stopped by a store
security officer ?
· are more likely to be women than
Maybe and maybe not. Less than men, partly because more shoppers
half the 50 states have Jaws covering are women.
an offense specifically called
She said, however, that a recent
shoplifting, said Luis Granados one study done for · the coalition inof two Washington, D.C., -attor~eys dicated teen-age boys are just as apt
trying to develop a model law on the to steal as teen-age girls. "But the
'
subject.
girls are being watched more closely
Some laws penni! no telephone and that's who they're apprehending
calls, Granados said. Most pennit a more," she added.
retailer to hold someone for "a
Mrs. Rogers said the public does
reasonable time,and in a reasonable not understand the seriousness of
m;mner." But the laws usually do the problem. Many peopie, she Said, ·
not define reasonable. ·
mistakenly believe · shoplifting is
Granados said · he and his only a "nickel and dime'·' affair. ·
colleague, Sheldon London; are
"We've got a real educational
process
to go through,'' she said.
working on a model law which will
include "a clear statement to mer-

to know how many people are apprehended" for shoplifting, but she
· estimated that Jess than half are turned over to police for further action.
T)tere is no way of 'knowing, she
said, how many of thoserwho go free ·

Wolf Pen News Notes

NASHVIU£
NOV. 8-9, 1980

senior in the hospital's School of
Nursing.
Lori Young, also a senior, is from
Tuppers Plains and the daughter of
Mr.·and Mrs. Larry Young. She has
been active in School of Nursing activities and, too, was a member of
the National Honor Society in high
school.
In commenting on the four grants
for Meigs County students attending
the Holzer Medical Center School of
Nursing in Gallipolis, Charles I.
Adkins, vice president for
Professional Services at the hospital
said, "We are again proud to have
these four young women recognized
and be the recipients of the Kibble
Foundation nursing scholarship
grants for 1980-81! '

The determination was that Mrs.
Fletcher was innocent, but the incident brought "overwhelming
fear" to her.
State Jaws on the problem vary
widely and often are vaguely worded. Where do the retailer's rights
begin and the customer's end? How
c~ you catch the guilty and protect
the innocent?
.. , . "·
The National Coalition to Prevent
Shoplifting in · Atlanta, Ga.,
estimates that retailers lose a nickel
of every dollar in sales as a result of
tllefts like the one .of which Mrs.
Fletcher was accused.
\Judi Rogers, director of the
fOcterally-funded coalition, said
Pomeroy personals
reiailers actually may be overMr. and Mrs. John Morrison and Woodard. Other recent visitors of
Cl!Utious.
Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Bart, Thornville, Mrs. Woodard were Mr. and Mrs.
J'Tbe retailer is put on the defenspent
Sunday here with Mr. and Bill Woodard and children. ·
s(ve," she said, reluctant to
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Crouser
,_ptosecute for fear o( banning the ·Mrs. Don Barnett. They also visited
and son, Sherman, W. Va., silent
s&lt;pre's image or of lawsuits for false their aunt, Elvira Barr, Sunday.
Benny Wright was the recent Sunday visiting Mrs. Mae Crouser.
arrest. Mrs. Fletcher is consulting a
visitor
of his aunt, Mrs. Hattie
lawyer about filing just such a suit.
Mrs. Rogers said it is "impossible r----:=:=,;,,..,.:='-~-~----..-____________;

The association
will haveOct.a
Halloween
party Wednesday,
28, at 8 p.m. in the community
building. Everyone is to be· in
costume and prizes will b!l awarded
fortmtiosttoThriginai, the ugliest and the
pre es · ose uncosturned wiU be
asked to pay a fine. Hostesses for the
night will he Nellie Andrew, Tetesa
Collins, Dorothy Thurston, Phyllis
Larkins: All are welcome to attend.
EntertallUllent will be provided by
·Pearl- Powell, Mr .. a:rill -Mrs.~Jill' -

. lAST QtANCE

Shoplifting--$16 billion
nightm_.are for Americans
.

By Melody Parker
her relatives there.
Mrs. Alice Rairden recenUy
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Ball have
passed away. She had bee" a patient ~n called on by Mr. and Mrs.
at the Arcadia l'iursing Home at Harold Ball, Columbus, ,Mr. and
Coolville. She is survived by he.r Mrs. Douglas hauber,local.
h1111band, Samuel Rairden, who is · Mr. and Mrs. Keith McPeek of
al:lc1 a patient at the .home. Mrs. Medway and Mrs. Leota Ferrell,
RalrdenMrsEwillestine~
sad!Hay missed by all.
also of Medway, have called on Mrs.
·
m
~
has
been
Mae
"""' Mrs
""""
a..--''"" the Lancaste f . '•" -- McPeek _,..
- · •..,.
_ _Hen'""'"'""
. r atr W!u• sley. .
.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold (Happy)
Newlun gave the Long Bottom Community Assn. a large donation to the
assoclati?n for the me'!lbers cutting
and bummg brush on his property in
Long Bottom. Doing the. work were
Larry Collins, Francis !\lldreWs Joe
Bissell, Stewart Sisson, Bill Thurston, Dorsel and Kenneth Larkins,
and Paul Hauber. The association
would like to thank their outstanding
members for their participation and
hrd work.
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I .1

t

~----~---------#.
i'

Idaho
·Bilking Potatoes .

1C)$ 99

·····-~

...•••

I RC BOTTLING CO. 1
•I ·

.Ant"I·Freeze.,
. .. ... ,..

Corn
5
'
·lb
Meal ....... •·•
GOLD CIUT I((;UlAII
01 MINIATUitl

Marsh· .
lb
maII ow ." ... ·l•··9
IIG VALUE

.S..dwich 2A-O•.
Cookles .... l'l&lt;g .
Leman
IO·oi.
Draps ...... •••

=-~-·~-;·

("IIIIAILIW
-

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Deli \:tvta
Boiled Ham

::~~6 . . .

lunch

5999C

5
Rome Apples .. ~!i
NIW ClOP IASTEIN GROWN

C

4
.
S1
Grapefruit ..........
1
0
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Tangerines ........ loch ..

FIIST Of THI HAlON, FLORIDA
..OSIDIID~WMITI
.

For ..

FLOIIDA TANOILO$ 01

•

,'

IS .S·ol .
. . (gn

AVONDALE

Northern

~ 2'(!)1oER._:"'I

11.5-a •.
. . . .I ,, ... . Con

lroier
·
'--..L
SpiIJIHill ,

UOGfl

Pork &amp;
BeanS .....

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.....

KIOGII

Tomato
altl ......

I. .

· .'

15-oo.

C•f!

33c
'

Can

Coo
KIOGII COIN Oil

.
. . i~
.... -

1-llo .

·- · • • .. •ke
COUNTRY OVEN

~~~··~-;~·
lrottr

38-l-

·· · · · 49~'
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' $139,_..,
.......
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KIOGII

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39c
53 c.
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S699

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ctnr.:

1-Ct.
. Pkg .

Tll7pm

~ · -···· ·

PIISTONE .

Sun Gold
Buns .

COUNTIY OYIN

'1~~$119

..

SANDWICH 01 WIINEII

COLD CIE$T

AVAILAILE ONLY IN
STOlES WITH
DELIDEPTS.
HOT FOODS
AVAILABLE llam

Kroger
White Bread
IIOWN 'N' SEIVE
48
C
Kroger
Rolls ....... 'Jk;~·
•
TAIUTS
.
. ·
lOO·Ct. S1
Tylenol ...................•• ~.

'·

$179

·lb .

Beans ..... '"•

KIOC£1 SELF -IISINC

Esprit Yogurt ........... l;::i. 5

.
.'

Pinto

Bread ...... •••'

•

Pkgs .

'''

4

Wheat

3
·
$209
Orange Juice........ g~~:: .
2
$109
Broccoh Spears ...

'

s329

..

ICIOCEI

·

Grade A.
large -Eggs ... .:.... .. ooz. ·

• '•

Fleece Bath
T•ISSUe . ...all
•ko .

t&lt;IIOGU

KROGER

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

139

U.S. GOV, GRADED .CHOICE , PORTERHOUSE
STEAK ORTAIL·LESS .

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'

$

Coo

Clulek

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,....
"-•·

11-oo.

..... " " '·" ' l'lo • .

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"

·

'

�10-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesd&amp;y, Oct. 22,19110

Retired teacher
_tells her story
through poetry
Listen, dear friends, and you shall hear
Wha t happened to me in my teaching career .
ro-a Normal School c1tter high school 1went
Whi ch was hard, except for books did n' t cost

~

acent.

Had nine pupils and all eight grades

- MF:.rpories of that year remai n w hile others fade .
One board member whom 1 coul d mention
Was going to se nd his con through the 8th gr ade twice to complete his
ed ucation .
When told t hat paw-paws wer e liked by my dad
Two brothers brougtH a bushel th ey had
For me t o take home to him
And that bushel wastjlled clear to the brim .

Meetihg one of those pupils after twenty -five ye ars
She sa id, " It was the best school year of my life,"
With her eves fu ll ot tears.
Taught severa l ye ars before ma r r iage and coming to Pomeroy
Where I ' ve spen t forty-five years with much happiness. sorro.,..~ . and
joy .
Substituted for three dollars a day .
Ca n you imagi ne such a teacher ' s pay?
Subst ituted the whole yea r in ' 38 a nd '37
Taught si.Jch notables as Frank Vau9han and Howard Mullen.
Taugh t the mosT intelligenT girl 1 ever had
Turned out to be a floozy - al l bad.

And w ha t happen s in the scheme of life and drea m s.

]erica Clark
has birthday

f Sears

LB.
OFFICERS EI..Ji:CTED ~ The Ohio Office
Edueation Steno Club at Meigs High School recently
beld an election of officers. Chosen were, left to right,
Angela Payne, pre~~ident; Joyce Janey, treasurer;
Kathy fllake, secretary; and Mary Beth Hawley, vice
president.
Senior members are : Angela Payne, Donna Little,
KeUy Brown, Tetesa Fetty, Sheila Fetty, Ruth Blake,

MAR!Q:TSET

The Middleport Garden Club will
Sponsor an old fashioned market on
Oct. 25, beginning at 10 a.m. at the
Sewing Center on the T in Mid-

Angela Kennedy, Tammy Adkins, Angie Siilclair,
Mary Ridgway, DeQise Brickles, Ana Tello, Joyce
Janey, Tina East, and Cathy Hess. Juni.or members
are: Mary Beth Hawley, Kim Pa~terson, Kim DeMoss,
Lisa Robson, Barb Haley, Teresa Basham, Kim Bir;
chfield, Jodi Goble, Sandy Hale, Gina Blanton, Kathy
Blake, Melissa Snyder, Tanya Allishire, Lynn Kloes,
Connie Smith, Robin Hawk, Cindy Spires, Amy Halley,
and Annette Might.

CENTER CUT

RIB PORK

LOIN PORK
CHOPS

CHOPS
'

THIN SLICED CENTER CUT

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

PORK

TOP ROUND
STEAK

CHOPS
.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
'

other homemade goodies.
Those who have ba)&lt;ed goods to be
picked up are to call Louise Thompson at 992-3585.

dleport. •
All items will be homemade such
as cakes, pies, vegetable soup,
baked beans, variety of breads and

CENTER_ CUT

TOP ROUND
ROAST

USDA CHOICE BEEF

$259

CUBE STEAKS

LB.

EXTRA LEAN

SUPERIOR JUMBO

GROUND
ROUND

DINNER
FRANKS
LEnUCE

DETERGENT

DAWN
48oz.

$219

3
DOWNY

'

•

64oz.

JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••L.~ $1.79
.• .

r~ Join 'CZ:P'

Continued to substitute on cold days and when teachers had the flu .
Each wa s an experience sometimes old and sometimes new.

I was stumped when a little girl said to me, very proudly,
" I'm the teacher's chai r committee .' '
Fina lly I asked, " Wh at is it you do? "
She said, "Carry that chair arou nd for you ."
So every t ime I moved fro m place to place
Along ca me m y commit;tee with a smile on her face.

The lnflaticm Fighter! Take personally-planned
auto trips on gas ~ saving routes, with guaranteed
rates at motels, discounts at many travel aHractions ... backed up by the finest, 24-hour Emergencv
Road Service at home Or around America ••• plus
many other money-saving AAA benefits~

.1500 OFF
OF $25 NEW MEMBERSHIP ONLY
!OiferExpires Nov. IS, 1980) ·

I
I
1

1
l l Court Street
446--0699
Ten Other convenient Offices to Serve Your.

SLICED

CHEESE .. ~~~-.

$1.79

1-Lb. Parkay

MARGARINE.~.~- 79~

If you prefer To mall, send
coupon with \'OU nam.e, ad·
dress, phone number, and
check for $20.00 made ouT ·
to
"Auto
Ctlib
of
· southeastern Ohio" to:
Coupon Ofler, 710 Waller
ST., PortsmouTh, Ohio
~~.

One senior and the principal were hav ing constant contention
Be_c:;Buse the senior ~aO~'·t ser.ved his. ma ri'v detent1ons. :, · ·

21bs.

KRAFT STAC· PAC

VALLEY BELL

COTTAGE CHEESE ....... ~~.?~: ..

10 lb. Local White

POTATOES .....?~~. •1.49
Jib. New Yellow

ONIONS .........~~-- 59'
88 Count California

I

never looked.(or fit) better.
STride R lt.. · has all The color~
!hal make kids and mom look tor·
ward 10 fall . And WITh every
Stride Rite style
choose, you
can look forward to a wide varle·
ty of widths and •Izes, Too. Plus,
as your Stride Rite Children's
Shoe SPO&lt;:Ia llsl, we will lake The
time IO ensure a healThy Iii. Com ·
forting news for you and your
Child .
.

vou

EleaOor Thomas and Lea fy Chasteen were two of the Seniors that
year.
,
They were delightful and brought In much humor and cheer.
Can you imagine B ill Nelson as a sophomore?
He said I made h im stand upon the floor.
He liked the girls, and the girls liked him .
He was full of gab, vigor and vim .
Justas..he is now, as I'm sure you know
That was so many long years ago.

'·

69~

Stride
'
CHAPMAN'S
SHOES
.
"Nextto E
in

1l

FliNTSTONE

VITAMINS .... ,..-.. ... ~. .~-t: .
0

.

16 01. Van Camp ..

PORK-N-BEANS •••••••· ~ •••••••••.
2/75'
16 oz. luper Fine . -=-. . .
__.
LIMEGRANDS ••• ~~ ••••• :....... ~~:. 4',

$299
CRANBERRY

2

.

NOTHIIIG TO IUY • 9 CHAliCES TO WIN!
~11.02.-~~

. Winners will jef to
a super weekend
slayal hotel. anend
Bowl game . and
receive S500 in

C...'l]3(;\m:J[!) (}0;1] ~'G~

.

P ic~ up entry form . lor Super .
Bowl Sweepstakes from a·store
, listed below . fill out . and

1 SUPER-PRIZE weeken4 for two at the Super Bowl!
8 FIRST·PRIZE weekends lor two at mijor
college bowl games!

expense m·oney. too•
VO id w~e&gt; ~ PIChitlllfd by law

ROSE IOWL • ORANGl IOWL • COnON IOWL • SUGAR IOWL

HOT .DOG CHILl ••••••••••••••••• 2/89'
TOILET TISSUE •••••••• ~ •••• ::~:. 't29
YEWM

·

'

DUNCAN HINES
DOUBLE FUDGE

m.t1l oy Nov. 15. 1980 Or. oblain
entry form by sendmg stamped

23 oz: $ 29

BROWNIE MIX .............-.....

sell-addressed envelope to:
Sweepslakes PO. Box 3-352.
Mil lord. CT 06460,

WILSON

LIBBY ' S

1 PEAR HALVES ..........1•6. ~-~·-

·

.

POPCORN••:••••••••~·.9•••

24 01. MorfOII House

_

69'.

BEEF STEW ....................~~~.

~AMPBE!..!.

-

1

59~
$ OO

TOILET TISSUE

DETERGENT

•

CHEER

'

FAMIL.:Y SIZE
PAK

'4"

With coupon &amp; s1o.oo Purchase .
Good at Spencer's Fas..-Chek
Racine, Ohio thru Oct. 25th

87 ·OLIVE STREET
' (Ill IIPOLJS, (Jt.

(

..

EVAPORATED MI1K~~.~~:.2/8f TOMATO SOUP.. ..1.~~~.~~:.5/ 1

Sale ends Saturday, November 8.

CARTER 'ANQ..EVANS
·LUMBER CO.

'

TODDLER DIAPER .................. ··~· .... -..............4.t~~-:. ··$599

10 01. 'Castleberry

~ R'oll Charm in White

$}49

'

BlAEANNCHUTSED
16 oz . . $129
COCKTAIL ............~~.~~: ... .
p
...................... .
}00
SPAGHETTI
· 79~ SPAGHffil ........ ~~.~~: j$
SAUCE "·~-~-~/~-~-~.~.}-~.~.~·.. _
gal
69~
SHORTNING ..........~.2-~.1: .. $} 49 BLEACH-······:·······: ........ .

~··••i••·······-·····~·········· · ~ -

FRUIT
COCKTAIL.:
•••••••••••
2/$1.39· ·
10112 oz. -campbell's
·
·
CHICKEN VEGETABLE S0UP•. 2/73'

99

FASvCHEK GENERIC BUYS

vary by retarler

12 o~. Don!!ld Duck

2·1b. Pops-Rite

'

box

_
$}29

;;~ID. .... . . .. . . . .~ ~~-. . $1

I

Stride

The school vear was, 43 and 44 ,
Some of y·ou remember we were at war .
Taught Freshmen, Sophomore, Junior and Senior English, World
HisTory,
.
Senior ·s cience, and had diarge of the library, too,
As well as the Senior'activities, of which there were a few.

CAKE MIX

FAS ,..- CHECK HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS

17 oz. Del Monte

Everyone was happy except the Baptist preacher
")\boo boo I made. What a teacher!

99'
$}89

89'
CINNAMON ROLLS......... ~~:. .
SUNBEAM

Don·t mi ss this exciting
Fall Fix-Up Event!
First-quality Armstrong
ceilings cost less than
you may think! And ..
receive a valuable
free sp·orts Illustrated
gift with your qualifying
ce iling pllrchase!
· Manulacturer's estrma te of retar!
pncrno Hem s 0r1 sale and pnces may

:.

'•.

So to school an hour early I went
Until all the delayed detention was spent.

DUNCAN HINES

SPREA D
. ........................ .

______________________________
..
.
ORANGE JUICE •••••••••••••••••••• .7'!
I..
24 oz. Del
.. .
:CArsu·D . .
· · ·. · · · bottie r.e
9

Some of them wanted to act a fool ,
Others car:ne to see what they could learn at school .

$189

"5/'100

SINGLES CHEESE.. ..... ~~ .~~ -

12 oz. Kraft Pimento

~--------------~--------~------,
GALLIPOLIS OFFICE

Marcus Roush, the principal at Rutland, had t o give a state test,
Some Of YOU here, Of course, know ttre rest .
Went for a day and stayed the rest of the term,
Learned soon that you had to be firm . ·

LBS. -

-FASvCHEK BAKED GOODS

.

Take this coupon to any office of •
The Auto Club of Sou.ttJea tern Ohio,
or mail with your ,s:heck.

S199

SHE DDS

HAM SALAD ••••••••••• ~ •••••·.~~~. $1.19

Cut here

'1 00

PEARS

FAS,_.. CHEK DAIRY

Homemade

Save Money on Auto Travel Tripo!
Save Worry With America '• Finest
• Emergency Ro11d Service!

Every time 1 hear ' ' Deep in th e Heart of Tex·as' ' tune
I remember Sy rac use School at noon!

PKGS.

WASHINGTON STATE

~clrrich

------------------------------CHEESE FRANKS •••••••••••••••• s1.69
Now's The Time ltC'll\ And Savel

So a da nce class for gi rl s I had at noon each day
And the boy s, baseball wished to play .

39&lt;;

HEAD

CARROTS

.

.

.

FAS ...- CHEK PRODUCE

Eckrich
- - 16- oz.

Spri ng was Very soon in the air
And you ng ro mci nce started to flare.
"

LB .

10

So I bring this missive to an end,
And hope you weren ' t too bored, my friends!

Af1er Pear l Harbor thought a study of Japan should be given a tr y
Kenny Wiggins and Houdashelt thought I was a spy .

$_269

POTATOES

But that Is Impossible in this World of ours
And hope that one sometimes inspires.

Taught departmen tal geog r aphy anC history, too
Had Fifth Grade home r oom , with QU ite a few.

•

29

AIR CONDITIONED

IDAHO

The years rolled on, time came and went .
Many happy hours I really spent
Teaching and plarininQ and p·l anning and tea ching
But perfection never reaching .

To Syracuse at that time 1 went
And what a half year 1 spent.

Ar Eas,er, when eggs we colored so bright

Open M-F 9 til 7; Sat. 9 til8
5TH &amp; PEARL, RACINE, OH.

I

Popsicles and ice cream bars w e r e all greedilY eaten.
After that, some of them did not mind being beaten .

Stayed to educate the students who w er e here
And tielp them choose the right career .

At the program. ftlcse wer_
e distingu is ~ed from all dthers.

We Re.Mrve
Llinlt QutCMtlti•N

Tried to get the school to have Field Day for everyone
So all the pupi IS could have some fu n.
Didn' t succeed, but T hi rd Grade had one of their own
Ra ces wer e run and balls were all thrown .

Along came th e ye ars of World War Two
Teachers left the profession , buTa few

"'At Christmos tne Third Grade made corsages tOr th~ir mothers~

POR-K
LOIN

Because Christ mas vacation was ours to enjoy
For every teacher , girl and boy.

One teacher paid me to substituTe to wat_ch what 1 did .
I kid you not. This is no fib!

Two year's at Chester qui(:kly passed
And Sugar Run came at last . .

QUARTER SLICED

Wheth er we scooped them, or they scooped us
We never had time to r ea lly di ~c us s .

· So vou never know about env iron ment and genes

m.v

Not RespQnsible for Typographical Errors

-.

Teach ing , pie socia ls , squ are dances and givi ng plaY'S
Helped to filf'bur nighTs and days.

Back to grade school I deci ded to go
.
I twas
first love, as s~me of vou know.·

•

Scholarship winner
·in dairy business

When my dad saw the place in Belmont County hills
Ther e deti nitely _wer en' t any fancy frills
He said, " My god; you have to 1ie' down to see the sun."
Yet it was a yea r of new ex perience and quite a bit of fun .

.

com-.
In eonjwlction with a national ~rved. The highway safety
.
program to emphasize the pPwer of m1ttee arid carpool commit!~ gave
women's vote, members are asked reports. The Young ·, Careerist
to · go to the poll5 lifter 4 p.m., program will be carried out at the
preferably in a group, this to show November meeting.
, office.
their support for the equal rights
Introduced by Becky Mohler,
amendment. The nationwide
deputy in the sherjfrs department,
program is being carried out to emthe speaker disc.ussed drugs and the
phasize the 60th anniversary of
women's l'lghttilwte.
crimes to which they lead. The
Mrs. Alwilda Werner w11,5 named
program w11,5 under the direction of.
local chairman for the ·· Florence
Jellll Will, chaiiman of the · public
Allllll Scholarhsip to which each club
relations committee.
Jerica Renee Clark, daughter of
Mrs. Eva Robson presided at tbe is being asked to donate. Yearboo~ · Mt. and Mrs, Rick Clark, Lincoln
meeting during which time the
were distributed and refreshments ·Heights, Pomeroy, recenUy o~ .
members were encouraged to vote. carrying
the Halloween theme served her first birthday With a
.. out
•,
"Winnie the Pooh" party.
Orange and yellow was the color
Bill Gibbs sUrely produced a queer sight.
scheme and balloons in assorted
.n;:RICA RENEE CLARK
· He forgot to have his egg hard boiled
colors
decorated
the
home.
Party
And, yes, he broke it, t~e floor was al l soiled .
favors were paper blowouts, hats,
When telling the story about the I= irs! Thanksgiving Day
and suckers. Jepca )lad an inoor coaTes said ... Thai' s The same thing Gabby Hayes had To say ...
dividual Pooh bear cake, while her
Never a dull moment when he was about.
guests were served fnm a sheet
Always a ·laugh, a giggle or shout.
cake decorated With bears and
Jennie sue Thompson at that age was interested in art
balloons. The cake was served with
And at Sugar Run she got her start
ice
cream, chips, and cherry Kool~
She made a dog of paper mac he
Aid. The door prize went to Carol
And she is st ill in terested in art to this daJ&lt; .
Patricia Parker, a 1980 graduale
King.
of
Meigs High School, iS attending
The O"Br ien ki ds - Pam. Pat and Mi ke
Others attending were Mrs. the Agricultural Technical Institute
Defin ite ly were not alike.
Etoilla Cassell, Mts. Joann Clark, at Wooster, studying in the field of
.sa ndra p ·o tts and Brenda, too
The Buckleys - Joyce and chubby Sue
Harry, Sherry, Carol and Dave
dairy business and management.
were students who were very nice
King,
Vi~,
Brent,
and
Chad
HanPatty was the recipient of a McAnd to te aching added fun and spi ce.
son, Paula Mora, Sherry and Donald's ·scholarship through 4-H,
Benny Ewing hi s puppets would always bring
Jeremy Buskirk, Julie Baity, Becky, and also a Kibble Foundation
And his shows would cause much laughter to ring .
Wendi, Kenda and Amy Kloes, and Scholarship.
Valerie Van Meter.
The era of Sugar Run was through
A nine-year member of 4-H, she
And Pomeroy Elementary was the new.
Sending gifts were Wanda an4 has shown dairy cattie at the Meigs
It started the term of '61 and '62.
Scottie Gardner, Debbie and Micll County Fair each ·year. She is an acMr . Gibbs watched it as it grew .
Jones, Robbie and Crissy Hawkins, tive member of the technical schools
It joined the old schools of Centra l and Sugar Run
Bernice Fry, Donna and Roy John- dairy dub, helping With several
T hus the new era wa s begun.
son, Tammy Bearhs and Todd dairy sales at the Wayne County
Smith.
The building was all shinJ~ and new
Fairgrounds.
Had a gym, a sta ge and a kitchen, too .
Patty is the daughter of Mt. and
Mrs.
Leland Parker, Pomeroy.
Hot lunches the ch ild ren could always eat ,
And after lUnch boKes,·this was a treat.
BOOKMOBILE
'Bookmobile schedule for Thill'
The first group was one of the best 1 eve r had
sday, Oct. 23 - Coolville, Post OfBut the year was to prove to be quite sad .
AUTHORIZED CATALOG
fice, 9:45-10:15 a.m.; Arcadia NurFor we lost little Effie befor e th e term was throu gh
.SALES MERCHANT
sing Home, 10:30-11 a.m.; Tuppers
And we all shed a tear or two.
Plains, Locwick's market, 11:30
Debbie Crow, Twile Clatworthy an d Melanie Burt
a.m.-12 noon; Senior Citizens cenwere some of those who were bad iy hurt. ·
ter, 12:5().1:30 p.m.; Mulberry
Heights infinnary; 1:21&gt;-2:10; AnBut life must quickly goon its way
Phone 992·2178
But we all remember Effie to this very day .
tiquity, Antique Store, 2:50-3:20;
108 W. Main 51.
Letart Fall5, Effie's Restaurant,
1
Pomeroy ~ Oh.
Romances sometimes in Thi rd Grade get their start
(IWNED AND OPERATED BY
3:35-4:20 (short film at4); Racine,
And Don and Bernie Anderson ended up in the Valentine heart.
Jack &amp; Judy Willi ams
Home National Bank, ·4:45-li:30
Open: Mon. lhru Wed. 9-S
I didn't remember about all of this
(short film at 5) ; Racine, Wagner's
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9-5, Sat •.9·2
Unti l Don arid Bernie entered into marri ed bliss.
Satiifac.tion Guaranteed
Hardware, 5 : ~:15 (short film at
~. or Your Money Back
5:45); Syracuse Pool, 6 : ~7:45
A Negro Santa Claus we had in our Christmas play
Esquire had One on their cover next .day .
(short film at 7).

.-,

I was asked to teach in the town where I went to school
But I had always wanted to teach iri the country - INti at a tOOt!

t

..

Proffit Middkport 's BPW speaker
Meigs County Sheriff James Prof. fitt was the speaker at the Monday_
night meeting of the Middleport
Bilsiness and Professional .Women's
Club held in the Columbia Gas Co.

Mrs. Ellen Gibbs, r~tired Pomeroy tei!Cher a.nd Wife of Charles
Gibbs, retired Pomeroy Schools Superintendent, was recenUy i!Sked to
present a program to members of ~ptor Be~ Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Mrs. Gibbs prepared reflections from her long teaching career in
rhyme and her presentation follows:
·

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 22. 1980

•

.

CHARMIN

·.. 6

FAMILY SIZE

PAK

., ~

With Coupon l ·S10.00 Purchase
Good at Spencer' s Fas ..- Chek
Racine, Ohio thru Oct. 25th ·

�13-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesljay, Oct. 22, 1980

• 12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 22,1980

Pantorrzime
highlights
UMW
Bible
~study
F a:q~ily ·Medicine

:.. ~------~----~--~----~~~------~~~--~,
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A regular feature prepared by the
American Cancer Society, to help
save your life from cancer.
QUESTION :' "What is smoker's
tongue? Is it cancer?"
ANSWERline: "Smoker's tongue"
is

a

di sease common among

smokers. Its correct name .is
leukoplakia: This can become cancerous if continually irritated by
tobacco smoke, illfitting dentures,
or jagged teeth. L&lt;:ukoplakia appears as thickened white patches on
the mucous membranes of the lips,
gums or other areas of the mouth. It
is very ir[lportant to have your dentist examine this condition and treat
it. The condition may be removed
"ith an electric needle or by
surgery. This may require either
local or general anesthetic.
QUESTION: ""Does whaling
asbestos cause lung cancer?'
ANSWERline: The inhalation of
asbestos fibers has been implicated
in mesothelioma, a cancer of the
lining of the chest cavity. Asbestos
workers who also smoke have been
foWJd to be greater risks for lung
cancer. Asbestosis is a chronic lung
disease that affects many workers in
asbestos-related industries.
QUESTION : "Can colon cancer be
caused by a soft diet?"
ANSWERiine: Although the cause
of colorectal cancer, like that of
most cancer, is unknown, statistical
evidence indicates that dietary patterns do play a key role. Some scientists believe that a diet high in fat or
low in fiber content may be a
1

tunate in ventures where you function tn·

depend entl y, r&lt;:i lht'r than those where pa rtners
are Involved. If you do team up w tt h a nother , be
sure he or she has soniething to otrcr .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-{lct. t3). You're a trifle

vulnera ble today to high-pressure ~\e~persons
and there 's &lt;~ chcmce you may do somethinH
' fooli sh which could pro~·e to be costly. Kl.'t!p your

:

"' .. guard up. Romance, travel, luck. resources,
poS5ible pilla lls and career for the coming mo n-

ths are all di scussed tn your Astro-G raph which
begins with your birthday. Mail J2 for each to
A.!tro-G raph, Boll 489, Radio"City Station, N. V.

.. SAGmAR JUS (N o,., %3-0 e·c. Zl ) There's a
•po:!Sib!lily that some neglected lctsks could ca tch
up with you t!)day. Feeling gui lty coul d cause vou
.•
to perfonn them hastily ur poorly.
CAPRICORN (Ott. 22-Jart 19) Be on your best

behavior today socially, Any form of misconduct
or ove ri ndul ~ e n Cf' is likely to be talked about for
some Ume to come.
' • AQUARIUS (Jaa. 20-F'eb, lt) A.votd arrogant
~ -individuals who t l")' to Impose their views on you.
~ ' •Nonnolly you just sht\Jg such things of(, but
• 'today you may ~::ross swords.
• ARlES fM•rcb Zl-Aprlll9) Ext11t prudence ls
called for today in managinH your re:rources. Be
careful when making purchases, and to whom ,
., you lend anything. . . ,lj. 1
TAURUS (AprD 20-M•y 20) It may lake all
you've Hoi to muster up some tad whim confron ted with opposi tion from an unexpected·
~ , quarter, yet if you :don 't you'll make matters
!

, worse.

l

• GE!MJNI IMay 21-June zt) Excuses won' t help
ycu today. Neglected tasks or obligations will
have to be \liken care of now, whether ~onvenlent

J

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,

CHICKEN .BAiUIECUE
• . The Middlepbrt Fire Department
t will hold a public chicken barbecue ·
; at the fire ~tation beginning at 11
•' a.m. Saturday.
r

November meeting. .Forty•six shut. in visits were reported,
Mrs. Gertnide Mitchell 1viJ1 have
Th
the program in November.
e
group formed a prayer . oircle . lo
dose the meeting with Mrs . .
. Eichinger giving the prayer. Mrs . .
~·· Goeglein and Mrs. Joann
Vaughan were.hosiesses.
..--'-----'-- - - - - -

ANNOUNCE BmTH
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Grueser are
announcing the birth of a daughter,
Danielle Elizabeth, at the O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital ori Oct. 13. She
··weighed eight pounds, 11 ounces and
was 20 inches long. Mr. and Mrs.
Billie C. Grtleser and Mrs. Renee
'ston~ 'are the grandparents. The
Gruesers have two daughters,
Kelley and Tara.

AmMAN SPENCER

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THI ACaNT ON IIAUTT

DIAMOND .

IAIRINGS
AND
PEIIIDAN1S

,
•
.:

.·~

'

DIAMONP

C'LUSTER

·I•

PENDANT

M"lchK II1t .cluiltr
e.rr lngs. 14kt: gold
,chain .

· 2· DIAMOND
PENDAJroiT
2 s.tl im mtri ng
dia mond' sel ln
whi te 14 kt. {!Old.

DIAMOND
PENDANT
AND EARRINGS

~CfBP
'Q"Jettelers
21 4 E . MAIN • POMEROY

«HaD~"]
·rRE.A..TS

tt
t

WE HAVE THE CANDY TREATS THAT ¥0U'll NEED FOR WHEN .THE
GOBLINS COME TO YOUR DOOR

BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL
Special correspondents
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
.l'm only 13, but I see what my
parents pretend not to. It's my grandmother. Every single night lately
she's so drunk she can't get to the
bedroom without falllng.
She hides her whisky in the garage
and in her closet, then chugs it. The
·family knows but no .one says
anything - I guess they think I'm so
~
yoWJg I don't notice.
· U Grandma is ashamed of
boozing, she should stop insted of
pretending to take only one ladylike
" drink with my folks, then making a
., beeline for the garage, or running to
: her room every half-hour.
~
She doesn't have to many
~
problems: she goes ballroom .dan~ every week and out to lunch
with friends, and her family loves
her.
.
f Shoq)d I ~II her we know about the
llqlior? Nobody else lvill. - CONCERNED ABOUT GRANDMA
DERCAG:
An alcoholic's greatest jlllY is
suence - pretended unawareness from people who love her.
:!. By all means, express concern to
your grandnnother, and discuss the
~ . situation with your parents. Nagging
won't help, of course, but a conc
retied effort to understand her
· problem and help ber conquer it
~
may bring her to realization that she
needs therapy. - HELEN

,.

, CONCERNED :
' VIsits toAiateen (for young people
with alcoholic relatives) would show
you ho\v best to proceed. The number is in your phone book. - SUE
DEAR RAP:
I'm 18, male and in college, My
problem is that !look like a 12-yearold boy: I'm just 5 feet 5, and weigh
100poWJds.
.
The doctor, after a c«implete

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RUBB~R

LATEX
HORROR MASKS

someone puts you in a position where you a re

asked to choose sides. If you 're smart you won 't
do it.
LEO (JUly tS-Aug. HI Take nothing for granposili on could have been a t)[t more going for him

Explorer Ferdinand Magellan
began his voyage aroWld the globe·in
1519.

or her than yoU first think.
VIRGO IA•g. 23-Sept. Z%~ Be careful "'today
hqw you present stroog opinions, beca u.se you
could run into someone who holds equally finn
opposing views.

The American frigate Old Ironsides was laWlched in 1797.

t~!&lt;~

today in competitive situations. Your · op-

STOP
HIGH GASOLINE BILLS

1981 VOLKSWAGEN RABBITS
NOW IN STOCK

99 ·

99

t

't
t
t

PIG - SKULL - MONKEY

Plus Space Robot Style~ .
Regular 99'

66~
.

Gamporla. 0111o
I •

t

•LACE CURTAINS
•LACE TRIJetS

·89~To $}39
·Yes .. We Hpve
.
.
• Trlclc or ·'J'reat lags ·
~

MAS.KS

t10 Styles All f1ew Charclers

VOLKSWAGIN

4469100

•Over Head .
TO
•Half Head · $
'
IL--~·~O~ve~r~--~_!--~~--~~----~~=-~::_Jt
H.ALF MASKS
ONE LARGE GROUP
•HAREQUIN .
REDUCED MASKS

t

•

f
t6

Red Devil, Old ,Man, Skull, Frankenstein,
Wolf, Scarface, Werewolf and Many
Others. Some with Hajr, Come See!

CHILDRENS A~D YOUTHS •
TRANSPARENT PLASTIC

GAS A"ND DIESEL MODELS
AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DEliVERY
15% INCREASED FUEL MILEAGE
OVER 1910 MOD.E LS

..
RIVERSIDE

USE THEM FOR YEARS!~

·i!_9~ AND 79*_
·I

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physical, said I'll grow eventually,
I'm healthy and not a midget.
I started t~ do some build-up exercises but lost patience and quit. As I
hj!ve no job, I can't afford a gym.
Willi be this way all my life, and
how can I face it? - SKINNY
DEAR SKINNY:
You may be shorter than average
all your life (though late-teen growth
spurts aren't unheard of), but you
can build up your body with good
' food and proper exercise.
It doesn't cost anything to consult
a college nutritionist and your
physical education teacher. Ask
their advice - and follow it !
HELE~ AND SUE
HELEN AND SUE :
My uncle is always culling down
kids. No matter what I do- and I've
done pretty well - he never notices,
just takes every opportunity to call
teen-agers punk. What do I do? UNCLE-IRKED
U-1:
What ' you can't change, ignore
When unk starta up on "punk," tune
home out or walk away.
This quote by Logan Pearsall
Smith help : "Denunciation of the
young is a necessary part of the
hygiene of older people and greatly
. assists in the circulation of their
blood.-- HELEN
UNCLE-IRKED:
Let's hope your parents don't let ·
unk do aU the talking. Adults who
don't argue ,with a prejudiced
relative are helping his prejudices
grow.-SUE
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, tw~rgeneration style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a· combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)

·Hallo~een carnival skzted Oct; 31
'
Oct. 3.1 was set as the date for the
: annual Halloween carnival to be
:.• ' held at the Syracuse Elementacy '
"School by the PTO at a meeting hefd
( Tuesday night at the school.
~
There will be food and games
along with costume judging' and
: prizes. Committees were appointed.
• It was decided during the meeting
:· to purchase pompons for the
i cheerleaders and to buy practice

i•

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·halls and game balls for the basketball team. Weekly reader.&gt; purchased for each student by the PTO
are now in use, it was report~d. It
was also noted that the front doors to
the school had been painted.
Joyce Thoren, R. N. introduced
the speaker, Lois Jarvis from the
Epilepsy Service in Athens who
talked on the cau5e, effect and con' trol
of
the
disease
.

.

Stivers ville News Notes

Mrs. Don Crwnbley ltnd Tom,
- East Liverpool, Mr. and Mrs.

L&lt;:wls and family, Buffalo, W.Va., a
recent Friday.
· Richad Van MMI!r, Beverly, and Mr.
Pvt John Robert Weddle, UsMC,
and. Mrs, Doc Dailey !fd Jonathan, recently spent a 13 day leave with
I~; vialted Mrs. Esther Dalley,
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Hysell and
recently.
.
family, and Is now stationed at Aber_, Mrs. Mae Van Meter, Long Bot- deen Proving Grounds, Md.
' tom; Mr. and Mrs; Gordon
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ables, Long
RidenQUr, Chester, vlaited Monday Bottom. visited Mr. and Mrs. R. R
with Bob Van Meter, a patient at Durst on Sunday afternoon.
.veterans HOIJlital, in Butler, Pa.
,Mrs, Zella Kopplck and lien, Mid• Albert LaWIOO, Columbus, waa a dleport, were callers at the home of
: 1ue11 recently of his mother, Mrs . Mr. and· Mrs. Dale LaWBon and
Ollv! LaWIOO and other relatives.
children recently.
'" Mrs. Joe Lipps, Vincent, Mrs.
HALIAiWEEN DANCE
Bruj:e Enlow and son, NewpOrt, and
Rutlalid PTO wj.ll · spoi)Sqr a
1 Mrl. Dlvld Rtaena and daughters,
j Utile llocklnl. called. on Leota Blr- costwne Halloween dance Friday,
Oct. 24, from 7 p.m, to 9 p.m. in the
. • ch, one day last week.
: IMr. and .Mrs. Gene Hauger, Mal' gym at Rutland Elementary. ln.ad-.
: llnlllurB, vlalted Mr. and Mrs. Ger]e dltion to the dBnce: there will be a
I Carpealer and Mrs, Sylvia Cal' haunted house and other activities..
Refreshmenta will be sold and a
: JIIIIMrn-rtly.
.
• lfn.ltaby Bryant and Mrs. Penny . bUe sale will be held. Admission Is
\ MIMwnn vlalted Mn. Myrtle 25cents,

!

'

• Wlqdow Decorat,ons
lafl· Slcelefoltl, ~ More

Participation in the Meigs County Iris Kelton, an honorary member
Christmas flower show was now living in Virginia. The garden
discussed at · the Tuesday night calendilr "M the month was given by
meeting of the Windinf!.'l'rail Garden. Mrs. Marianna Mitchell, assisting
Club held in at cabin of Mrs. Alice , hostess for the meeting. She said
Thompson.
that narcissus, crocus. and lilies
Mrs. Thompson noted that fi ve • should be planted this ' month and
classes in the artistic arrangements that plants can be fertilized until the
of the show to be ataged on the first ground freezes. She also •suggested
weekend in December at the · that the mulcher be put on the
Pomeroy Elementary School had , mower to take care of the leaves, or
been drawn for the club at the COWl· that leaves be
· Pit !I) a compost
ty meeting. She also reported on Pte pile. She also said that bailed or
regional meeting held in Gallipolis burlaped trees and shrubs are better
over the weekend. Refreslunents for fall planting. Caimas, dahlias,
will be provided by the club for the and sweet potatoes should be dug atstand to ~ operated at the Christ- ter a Iilllng frost.
mas flower show.
Peggy Crane demonstrated a still
The civic beautifiCation project at life arrangement She said that
the Meigs County Infirmary · wa5 everything used in a still Ufe must be
discussed and plans made for a work ,useable and musl· tell a story. Ruth
5e58ion there Wednesday afternoon.
Moore gave an article on ternRegular meeting times for the perature extremes and the special
club was changed .from the second problems they provide for
Tuesday of each month to the third ' houseplants. She said that plants
Monday of each month. For roll call should nevertouch a cold window.
members named their favorite· fall
Attending' ·the meeting besides
flower. Mrs. Addalou Lewis and those named were Mrs. Margaret
Mrs. Pat Thoma were appointed' to Parker who presided at the meeting
review and make amendments to and guests, Mrs. Opal Payne, Vinthe club constitution.
ton , and Mrs. Marie Budd, Overton,
. Program plans for the year were Nev,,. sisters of Mrs. Thompson. A
discussed and members selected the dessert course was served by the
month in which they will host the hostesses.
club. A letter was read from Mrs.

· Her parents ignore
'
~· grandma 's drink probkm

DR. JAMES P. CONDE, INC.

be wi!H':lg to gili e an inch by way of corn-

-prom.!se,

.

HOBO PARTY
Preceptor · Bela Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will hav.-a
hobo party at the home of Mrs. Jean
Werry, Hemlock Grove, T\Iursday,
Oct. 23 at 6:30 p.m, On Sunday, the
members will meet at 10:15 a.m. at
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and will attend !he services
ina group,

Completes training

10019.
Besure( (\(t.
tospedrybirthdate.
SCORPIO
24-Nov. %2 ) You may have to r------~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~------1
negotia te a matter toclay with a tou!Jh hor.. setrader. Unfortunately, 1t's not likely either of
"YOU will

'

· remain the same this year, $441. ·
M
d Mrs
Mrs: Dill, Mrs. ~. an
.•
Lucke attended the, aMI!Bl meeting·
of the United Methodist Women held
at the ru~.,_ Ave. Church. Mrs.
Alice Struble was nominated to fill
. the office of Christian social involvement. Me111bers were advised
to take thank you boxes to the

1'he 49th wedding anniversary of
Glenn and Mae Lambei-t, MidAirman Curtis J . Spencer, son of r;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~::::::::::::::::::;;;;
significant causative · factor .
dleport, was observe&lt;! recently at Donna
R. Spencer of Pomeroy, has \1
Howevr, more research is needed to
their home in Middleport.
been
assigned
to Sheppard Air Force
confirm their observations.
The affair was planned by Mrs.
Base,
Texas;
after completing Air
QUESTION : ." Can a mamLambert's sister, Helen Knight Will, Force basic training.
mogram indicate a cancer in my
who with her husband, Rolahd, has
During the six weeks at Lackland
breast?"
-\
OSTEOPATHIC P.HYSICIAN AND SURGEON
been visiting relatives in the county.
Air
Force Base, Texas, the airman
ANSWERline : Mammography is
Also attending was Franklyn
150 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760
studied the Air Force mission,
a diagnostic procedure based on the
Rutherford, a cousin from Montana organization and customs and
(614) 992-7271
soft tissue X .ray of the breast. It
who came at this time especially to received special training in human
shows breast masses that to a · see Mrs. Will who lives in Lexington,
NOTICE
radiologist may indicate whether or Mass. The two had not seen each relations.
In
addition,
airmen
\fhO
complete
·
Effective
Monday,
October
20, 1980 new hours for the ofnot a malignancy iS present. The
other for several years.
basic
training
earn
credits
tolfard
fice
of
Dr.
James
P.
Conde
will
be:
procedure generally is not used by
Others there were Mr. and Mrs.
an
associate
degree
in
applied
scienitself, but is combined with a more Pete Elberfeld and Mike, Chester,
Monday
9:00A.M. to4:00 P.M.
ext&lt;:_nsive examination by a breast Mr. and Mrs, Chester Knight, ce through the CommWJity College
Tuesday
9:00A.M.
to4:00 P.M.
of
the
Air
Force.
cancer specialist. The definite . Pomeroy, and Mrs. Gladys
Friday
9:
00A.M.
to4:00 P.M.
The
.
airman
will
not
receive
diagnosis of breast cancer must Walburn, Middleport. Cake and ice
specialized
instruction
in
the
airSaturday
9:00A.M, to4:00 P.M.
finally be confirmed by biopsy of the cream were served.
craft maintenance field, Airman
suspected tissue.
Spencer is a 1980 graduate of Meigs
Closed All Day Wednesday and Thursday
QUESTION: "What is ultraFlu
vacci
;
!/
arrives
High School, Pomeroy.
soWJd, and how does it relate to canThe Meigs County Health Departcer? "
ANSWERline : UltrasoWJd is a ment has just received a limited supmethod for locating and measuring ply of flu vaccine. It will inununize
tumors in the huinan body, It works the general public on a first come,
on the sonar principle used by the first serve basis on Wednesday, Oct.
navy to track down sublllllrines, 22, from I to 4 p.m. and Thursday,
'SoWJd waves are sent into the water . Oct. 23, from 9a.m. to 12 noon.
Only individuals who are 13 to 28
and when they are stopped by an olr
struction such as a submarine they years of age wiD Deed two (2) sh&lt;!ts,
boWJce back. Technicians can read one month apart. UnfortWJately, we
the patterns of the echoes in order to cannot guarantee we will have ,
identify the target. Similarly, sound enough vaccine left over for the
f0-21-80 '
waves directed into the body send second shot. But, there are some
back echoes which ~re recorded as local private physicians who have '
dots on an oscilloscope screen which- the vaccine available. The Health
produces a composite picture of the Department services are free.
tumor, if one exists.
Call 992-7531 for further inSUCKERS· 'BUBBLE GUM· SWEET TARTS· CANDY ROLLS·
fonnation.
MANY MORE -·THE CANDY ITEMS THAT. KIDS LIKEI
MEETSTIIURSDAY
The Middleport Past Matrons of
We're Candy Experts. Each piece for Trick or Treat Night Is wrapped. All our bagged candy Is discount
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
priced, every day! It's fresh. We receive candy often. Why pay more? Stop In soon at Shoppers Mart for
Eastern Star, will meet .at 7:30p.m.
your Halloween Treats. Don't tardy toe/long , Ills selling fast.
Thursday at the home of Mrs. Jaines
Clatworthy. Members of the Past
Matrons Club of Pomeroy Chapter
or not. Grin and hear it.
CANCER (Jurae %l..July !2) There may be
will be guests.
trouble brtwirl!!! ln yo ur cl rd e today, when

--ASTROGRAPH-Ortober 2J, 1980
Ttlls comin~ year you are Hk.e]y.to be more for·

.

Mrs. Robert Mc&lt;;ee. A report was
given ori "the sunshine box.es
delivered by tile Rev. and Mrs.
McGee aod several thank you notes
for them were read ·during the
meeting. Mrs. •Wildermuth thanked
the group for'the foOd furnished and
donationS received on the luncheon.
A note of thanks was also rea&lt;,l.
from Dale Robinson, assistant
superintendent of the McCurdy.
School in Espanola, N. M. for a $50
gift.
.
.
· The traveUng basket whiCh conta.iried an apron with many pockets
for donations was returned to the
meeting containiJig gifts of $60. The
annual pledge to the dislrict will.

Coupks return
from Switzerland

·I Cancer Answer]ine

'•

· .on the story which Jesus told. of a
,..,
man who loan ed · money t0 ,;.o
people, o~e. $5,000 and the other,
$5QO, and then forgave the debt with
ii&lt;!ripture frolh Luke 7·
In conclusion, Mrs. Dill described
the parables as "nUrsery stories
·· ,
with heavenly meaning5,'"- ,The monthly pledges were paid
during the meeting conducted by

·A Bible study on the parables with ·parable of the prodigalson with Mrs.
portrayals in pantomime Eichinger reading IJ,le lSth chapter
'
By John c. WoU, D.O.
unless your physician wrote "DAW" highlighted the recent meeting of the of Luke relating to the parable.
Mrs. Elizabeth Cutler in ap(dispense as written ) on your United Methodist Women of the
AsslslaniProfessorof
propriate
costume of gold lame ' hat
Family Medicine
prescription. It should be mentioned Pomeroy Church.
and
blouse
with much jewelry and a
Oblo University College
· that not ali drugs luive a generic . Mrs. thelma Dill was leader for
small
authentic
prayer box around
of Osteopalhlc Medicine
equivalent and when available the program which described each
GENJ\ltiCANl) - ·· ·- generic drugs are ~not - always -of the 46 parables-taken from the her neck containing liCripture verBRAND NAME DRUGS
cheaper. But, when a pharmacist books of Matthew, Mark and Luke, ses, read a pOrtion of the 23rd chap( ~titor·'s note : Dr. Stockmal has
makes a generic substitution he or and gave the m~aning of each as it ter of Matthew pertaining to the
parable on hypocrites. ·
Dr. John C. Wolf to be guest she is usually trying to save the would apply tOday,
Mrs. Evelyn I,ucke pantomimed
colwnnist this w~k . Dr. StOckmal customer a little money. I would · Mrs. Dill also noted the parables
lviJI be hack again nextweek.)
guess that this is what your phar· come closer to ·saying .what Jesus the parable on \he lost sheep using
would speak or preach today .i f he sheep figurines and brass bells. from
QUESTION: I had my blood madstwastrying todo. ·
the East as shr read several verses
was
on earth.
·
QUESTION: Mter having my
pressure medication prescription
from
Luke IS.
Polly
Eichinger,
Kay
Wilde.rmuth
refilled the other day. ·The pills look medication refilled last time, it
The
pantomime on the treasure of
and
Marie
Chapman
portrayed
the
different from the ones I have take..n didn't seem to work as well as
the
fields
was given by Mrs. Marie
for years. Why is that? Did the phar- before. My pharmacist assures me
Chapman
with her scripture being
macist make a mistake and give me that he dispensed the proper
from
Matthew
13, verses 44 to 47,
the wrong mediCine?
generically equivalent medication.
Wildermuth
presented the
and
Fay
ANSWER : It is not likely your Is my illness worse, or is there
parable
of
the
two
sons,
one told to
pharmacist made a mistake, but you some thin g wr ong with th e
go
out
and
work
on
the
farm, b4t
might check with him to make sure . medication?
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Anderson and would not, while the other was told to
The medication you received when
ANSWER: Witlwut more history
you refilled your prescription was and a physical examination I can't her motber, Mrs. Nora Riggs, have go work and· said he would, but did
probably a generic equivalent of the make. any judgements about your returned from Geneva, Switzerland; not. Her scripture was taken from
medication you usually ta~e . Most illness, but your medication may be · where they visited with Mr. and . Matthew 21 .
The final parable portrayed was
likely you have been taking a brand all or part of the problem. The state Mrs- Dean ,!lurngardner am! family.
name drug which was made by the'" "'"and federal standards that . both They returned the Bumgardners'
company that first patented .and generic and brand name drugs must daughters, Kim and Usa, who have
marketed the medicati on. When a meet may not accurately reflect all spent the sununer here visiting with
drug has been available long enough of the things which determine the their ~andparents, Mr. and Mrs. ·
for its patent to expire it can then be medication's response in your body.
Anderson and Mrs. Ullian Burngar·
made by other companies. These The slight variation in the potency of dner, and their great-grandnnother, ·
generic drugs must pass the same a drug from batch to batch and . Mrs. Norma Riggs.
quality sta ndards as set by the tablet to tablet may be greater in a
During their five weeks in Europe
federal and state governmen t. generic drug. This small variation they visited not only places in Swit·
Because of these controls you can be may be enough to cause prOblems. zerland but also portions of France
confident that the generic qrug will Each tablet or capsule has other and Gennany. Among the scenic
almost always have the same ingrfllie nts to hold the medication places they · visited were Zermatt,
medica l effec t as the brand name into the desired shape, P&gt;Ior and · Matter Hom, Gustaad, Lousanrte,
product. As you stated in your consistency. These additions to the Gruyeres. They took a boat tour on
question, however, generic medicine medication - which can be"different
Lake Geneva and .went to France
usually looks different. It will in the generic drug -'- rarely causes spending time on the Riveria and
probably have a different size, problems. If, however, you are one staying in Nice, C~Mes, Monaco and
shape, color ·or texture from the of the few individuals who is sen- Menton.
brand name drug.
sitive to one o.f them, it certainly can
In Gennany they visited FrankThe reason you received the affect your body's response to the
fort and Heidelberg and called on
generic drug is that the phannacist medication. You should discuss this
Paul Anderson's niece, Mrs. Jean
has the right to substitute a generic with your physician and your pharGiidiz and family at Gisson, Gerbrand for the brand name drug macist.
many.

Anniversary observed

.

Christmas flower
show 'discussed

t
dJ

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�...

' Middleport-Pomeroy,-0., Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1980
14-The Daily Sentinel,

~ftl}~ ID'it ~ THATSCR-111 1 ID. . . CIAIII

ln. today's sexuality

Young pe~ple welcome rules :
CINCINNATI (AP)- Tr'aditional
rules about sexuality are welcomed
by many young people who often
find themselves iii undesirable
situations, according to a Roman ·
Catholic educator.. ·
_ _ _
''A lot of kids don't want to be
Sexually act~· They don't feel
they're ready 'for it, but the pressure
they're under - it's not OK to say
' ~o,"' said the Rev. John Forliti,
director of religious education in St.
Paul, Minn. He spake Tuesday at the
national meeting of the Chief Ad·
ministrators of Catholic Education
in Cincinnati.
Forliti described his archdiocese's
"Reverence For Life And Family"
program, which was begun last year
for freshmen, their parents and
teachers.
"Our program says it's OK to say
'no,' and you have a church that will
support you," he said. "The relationship is more important tha n sex.
You don't .have to make love !Jy
having sex.
LONG TIME MEMBERs-These long time members
of the Meigs County Farm Bureau Federation were
presented awards at the federation's annual meeting
held Tuesday night at the Chesler Elemenwry SchooL

·-

The group and theit length of membership includes :
fron t, I tor, George Holter, 45 years; May Holter, 45;
Genevicye Guthrie, 50, and Ada Holte r, 50; back, 1 tor,
Starling Massar, 30 years; Ha rry Holter, 45, and Roy
Holter, 50.

New checking account system w'l1l
be unveiled at Bank One Nov. 1
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA, will
unveil a new checking account
system Nov . 1. Called checking one
and checking two !he system's two
plans respond to new

pro-con~tmler

Congress the time had come for
•
change.
Checking one is a conventional
checking account with some new
services to benefit those with small
account balances. The checking two
plan gives checking account convenience with savings account in-

banktng regulatiOns thai Bank One
helped develop.
Bank president Paul A. Barnett
" The
lraditional
explained.
checking account had become increasingly obsolete because federal
rules wouldn 'I allow us to pay' interest on checktng account deposits.
The Mason County Sta'te,Regional
Checking accounts have been an
.
Farm
Musewn will hold an old
inrportant source of funds that banks
fashioned
Southern ''pig pick in ' " on
reinvest in their conunw1ities. So we
Sunday,
Oct.
26.
took lhat message to Congress
J
ohn
E.
Greene
of Milton is
becoming one of the first fi nancial
donating
a
300
pound
pig which the
institutions in the country to testify
men
will
start
roasting
at 9 p.m.
in Eavor of the legislation that will
.
S
aturday
night
over
a
hot
bed of
nol permit whal are in effect nattonwide , mterest bearing checking ac-

teres!. Checking two customers will
earn daily interest on all their
money in the bank and be able to
write checks . There will be no fees
or service charges for up to 40 transactions a rnoTJth with a minimwn
balance of $1,000.

'Pig pickin ' event Sunday

counts .. ,

Evidence offered in tha t tes timony
came from Bane One Corporation's
own experience with 'its Che~k ing
/Savings Plan . That account.
pioneered by member banks of Bane
One Coporation two years ago, combined a checking account and a
savings account by computer. All
funds were depositecllo the checking
account and U1en automatica lly
transferred to savmgs to earn interest. Each time a check was
processed just enough money to
cover it was transformed back
automatically. The success of
Checking/Savings helped convtnce

Turns 10
J ody Lynn Levingston celebrated
her lOth birthday recently with a
pal'ly at the home of her parents,
.
"
Mr and Mrs. Daniel Levingston.
Attending were Beth and Jo Hobstetter, Wendy and Scott Gilkey,
Todd 911d Ricky Price, Mike Arm~trout. Tarru11y Ward, Denise,
Kathy and Becky Williams, Cristy
and Matthew Haynes, Darla Hatfield and Lisa Hatfield, Gloria,
Tania and Brady Johnson, Mae ·
Crouse r. Shirley, Sabrina and
Sherry Wilson.

Missionaries
will speak
The Reverend a nd Mrs. Willia m
Markham and family, United Pentecostal Church missionaries to
Brazil, will speak October 24 at 7:30
p.m. in the United Pentecostal Church of Middleport. Pastor William
Kriittel lnvites the public to attend.
Missionary William Markham has
previously pastored in Kingsburg,
California and served on the board
of Christian Education, Sunday
School Department of the Western
District. Their presentation ' in our
city will include slides, artifacts and
special music.
The United Pentecostal Churc-h International, one of the fastest
growing churches in the world. has
seen its overseas ministries triple in
the past decade.

" We teach the value of fidelity to produce seirually, and the guys :
how you develop now as a teen-ager ' were relieved of the pressure that so you have the capacity to be fai th- they have to be tbe coiiquerer,
ful in a relationship later." .
macho, a scorer."
.
-:
For some time, the Roman
An unusual aspect of the program •
Catholic church has.been strugg•ing--is a course fm:.parent.uruitet~c!!e_~ ~
!o deyelop its position on sex and Forliti said.
•
morality, Forliti said.
. "Everyone is telling them that the ·':
· " We do not have a consistent kids know more about sex than they
· teaching in the church on sexuality, do," he said. " They (adults) will nof
a tea~hing bl)sed qn values,' 1 he assert themselves. They don't know .
said. "There's a hazy Eeeling that the language, and they don't know,··
the church is not credible in this what the church teaches·anymore.
area."
·
·'
"The main purpose is to help theni
. The program incorporates sex - parents and teachers - in the ;
education in its 1:&gt;-lesson course on · moral education of their kids."
"
relationships, marrriage, Eamily life ·1
and faith.
~
11
There's more to -"Sex education
than an organ recital," he said. " It 's
, ,'t'
'
God's creation. Marriage and. the
•
family - they're treasures and
BUMBLE AND HUMBLEBEES ~
values."
Bumblebee
and humblebee are :
Many freshmen who took the courboth
names
for
a family of large, '
se appeared · pleased at the
halry,
social
wil!l
bees, and boll\
program's end, Forliti said.
mean
the
same
thing. The
liames
" They were more relaxed, hapbuzzing,
hwruning
sounds
are made
pier ," he said. " The weight of being
.bY
their
rapid
wing
movements.
The
active sexually as a measure of their
is
kin
to
the
Dutch
hornhwnblebee
worth had been lifted off of them.
mel bee and the German hununel
They could be themselves.
bee.
"The girls no longer felt they had

POOR, OVE RCROWP~D
CON D IT IONS- BUT
THAT DOES N 'T
HAPPEN OFTEN .••

Television
•
•
VIewmg
I SEECfb
II _ .......
C2Ja (!)O CIJttOJ(j2) .

~ ~ ~~ ·

qtJI OF I=RUSTRATION
I=ROM l-IVING IN

I HE

Unscramble theM four Ju.
one lener to each square, to Iorin
·four ordl n~~ ry words.

OVER YOU R
HEAD
ISN 'T" AN
A P P EAL.ING
•IDE A TO
E V E N TH E
MOS T
FRUSIAATED
OF PEOPLE."

OCT. 22, 11180 .

EVENING

8:00

CIJ BIBLE BOWL
CIJ CAAOL . BOANETT

...

~

i

CAPTAIN EASY
THI~ ji\A @I\ZUJE "OLP WE!&gt;T" 15
WHERI:: JUL i e EILI\IR READ THE-

SHE CLAIME'D TO

Bt:: A !'tEAL WE5TE'to:N

MIJ!&gt;TI\ CHE KID INTERVIEW- A'-ID
LEARNEP YOU WER E Hl5 Fto: IEND i

I

BUFF -- AND LI:T 0 '-1
5 He WAS DVIN6 TO
MEE'T HIM - -ON LV
A
Ht0'5

"'ow

RECLU6E!

~

(I )

BORN LOSER

\T'U. ~ FY&gt;.ID

~ TI-t~

OF 1110~ -

l.CQ&lt;.1IF '1bll1RBOOitJ0

I'VG HW A LOr OF
e;)(.~IJ'5E'S

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msr&lt;

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I

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!..Ill~ c:HAI~El!/ l

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- ,~E

EAR,. NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

•• JIJ5T LEAVE IT TO
EIZ··EiEEPAL 5KIP SMITH, AN HIE!
50KR'l'
!'LL COVER. FOR. 'l'OU. I 1' HEAl\ IT ~
KM0\'1 HOWIT 15- I'MA 1"----z&lt;
~LLETOMANE MYSELF!

'

I

Office Hours by Appointment Qnly

11

"'Al'iHOLE BUNCHA
LITTLEBROODG
~ ENT UP THERE!
TH' REDHEAD
BEEN ONE
THEM. !l n"'!!!!:

CALL (614)-992-2104

~

.
''

,.,.

. ,.

,,

AILEYOOP
DON'T 11-lOANIE BABY" ME, STERLING!

NOT ONE OF Tl-IEM

T HEARP ALL ABOUT 'YOUR UGLY
GORILLA MAN! YOU CAN
COUNT ME OUT!

Center:

Requiem' Zubin ~ehta condu c ts
theNewYo rkPhilharmonic lnaben ·
eflt pe,rformant:e ·of Verdi 's
'Requiem' , sung by Montserrat
Caballe, Bianca Berinl, Michael
Svetiev and Martti Talvela. (90

i

\NOULP EVEN LISTEN

10 ME:! WHAT AM I
GOING 1D DO ?

in the co nfused net of her own
Imagination learn a the difference
betwe~m harmleea fantasy and
maglng Ilea. (Repeat)
8:58 ;
NEWS UPDATE
1:00
e&lt;D DIFF'RENT STROKES It
the seventh game of the World Serleateneceaaary, 'Diff'rentStrokee '
I be pre-empted.

I

.

(Answero tomorrow )
1-&gt; "
SCOUR NAUSEA HANGAR

Jumbles: PECAN
Answer: What the entenainer turned 1$lo:&lt;JI p igeon
did-"SANG" TO THE COPS

BRIDGE
Oswald J~coby and Alan Sontag

Modernistic bidding used
sl'linter or some other forcing
btd.
South 's four and fiv e
notrump bids were Blackwood . North's fi ve- and sixspade responses, however,
were a form of modern Blackwood where. a club response
shows zero or three, diamonds
show one pr four and hearts
and spades each show two hearts in case you don't like
your hand, spades if yoo do
like it.
Thus, North held 19 H.C.P .
with very good spades. Hence,
• his five-spade response. As for
the six-spade response, he had
kings of both spades and diamonds plus the queen o£ diamonds to back up his king.
South might have bid seven
without this encouragement;
he had no worry after the

WEST
• 8 614
• 10 8 a
• J 875
+10 6

SOUTH
• . QJ9!2
- • A5
• A2

+K843

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

w..t

North · East
! .•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

4.
~
~

Pass

Soutb

Pass
Palis
Pass
Pass
Pass

I+

INT
5NT

7.

e ncour~ gement.

By Oswald Jacoby
aDd Alan Soacag
T~e bidding of today's hand '
is mndemistic, indeed. Thus,
Nonth's jump to four spades
showed 18 or 19 high-card
points, four spades and no
singleton. With a singleton he
would have either used a

When East showed out on
the first spade lead, South did
have worries. If he drew lour
rounds of trumps, he would
have to find some sort of
squeeze to get rid of his second heart and fourth club.
The squeeze was there, but
South decided on the simpler
play of cashing dummy's ace
and queen of clubs. After that
it was a cinch to ruff a low
club in dummy, draw trumps
and claim the grand slam.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.) ·

WJ.,~~.l'ARUE'S
CIJ~

BOUQUET OF PERFUMES
Two billion rose bushes grow in
Bulgaria's Valley of the Roses in the
cente r .of the country. The picked
blooms produce 40 percent o£ the
world's rose attar, used to enhance
the bouquet of perfumes.

The midqet!

ANGELS
CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE ' Pieaouro Palaeo '
1980 Stare: Omar Sharif, VIctoria
· Principal.
1:30 (j)
GREAT PERFORMANCES
'Live
From Lincoln Center:

out!

It could be

10:00

a tr;:1p!

VARY

NEWS UPDATE
MAX MORRIS
THE BEACH BOYS IN CONCERT Get ready for aome 'Good
VIbrations' aa HBO present a thla
one-hour taped special that takes
you back to rock's golden era, f aa ~
turing lhe Beach Boyo performing
their great hita.

.I

l~~ (I) ~~ 'lboQ.TErn (IaJ wa

",,''

NEWS
JEWISH VOICE
•
.
DICK CAVETT SHOW
11 : 10
NIGHT GALLERY
11:28
NEWSUPOATE
11:30
GClJ THE TONIGHT SHbW
'Beat Of Caraon' Guests : Jamea
Stewart, William Devane, · Gal·
her . (Repeat; eo mklo.)
ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
MOVIE -iDRAMA) •••• 11 D. .r
Hunter 11 1178
(I) ()I) •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTLINE
•
(I)
CAMPAIGN
' I;_OUNTOOWN
®)MOVIE -(COMEDY) •• "Wa,

1

''
.,

,

YOUR
CHOICE

~

.'''
'

,· '·

'

'
:.

•'

'r'OUR GIT·WELL CARD
CAME A LITTLE
LATE, LOWEEZV

BY TH'TIME
IT GOT HERE,

I WAS ALREADY

I SHORE .
AM SORRY TO
-HEAR THAT

FIT AS A FIDDLE

'

'•

(

•

21"X21u

Dramatic Mirror designs on glass reflects
off .colorful recessed scenes. Pecan color
wood frames and a rich finish . .All -docks
featu·re precision quartz·· movement and
... operat~s on one batte:rv.

'

.
·BILL, '{OU AAVE ~E

RRST TWO I-lOURS .

..•
I

FIND AIUCE TO STAND
WH~ '{OU COULD
SPOT AN&lt; INTRUDERS...

·

· W,ay Out" 11188

11:ol0

C1J MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) 00 1io

'11111!&gt;1J!! lha Grtul," 111111
LOYEBOAT- POLICE
WOMAN Love Boat--'The Underaludy' A seemingly na ive crew
train•• plana to win the heart of
Captain St ullino andtakethecruloo
director' a Job from Julie. Pollee
Woman--'ThePurgo'BIIICrowloylo
suapended from the force •• the
ICCUHdkillerOfi15·YIIr·CJtdboy.
(8!1.Q_Nt; 2 h,.., 15 mlna.)
12:00 ellJCBBLAT!MOYIE 'ThoMon
Who Would Bo King' t878 Store:
Soan Connory, MlchooiCaklo. Two
daredevil rogue• aet thema•lvea
up •• rullra of 1 primitive country,
but find th•ir dreama of glory end
rlchoa filled with do119or. (R-ot)
11:110

12:30
12:18
1:00
1:41
2:00
2:0t
2:28
2:30
3:41
3:18
4:00
1:30
5:45
1:118

I'

ART OF LIVING
SHEAK
PREVIEW:
•
NOVEMBER
(I) illl. VEGA$
Cl) THE 1170'o: AN EXPLOSION
OFCOUNl'RYMUSICFifteanolthe
moat popular country"Jnuaic acta
perform at the hlatorlc Ford ' a
The•ter In Washington, D.C.. (80
mlna.) (If t:;e ~eventt, game of the
WO:ilifSeries ia necessary, 'Th 8 ·
1970's: An Explosion of Countr~

~FEELINGS

'

Mirror Mat
....t\nld Scenic
Cloc~s ...

~

CIJI)J).

~~~cro=:g~ws
NIWI UPOAT!
RI!X HUIIIIARD
MOYIE
-(ADVENTURE·BPECTACULAR)
• "Burning Of Ro1111" 1180 · .
GOOD NEWS
NEWS
I BELIEVE
a NEWS
NEWS UPDATE
ROBBBAGLEYIHOW
MOVIE-(SCIEIIC!FICTION)' 0

•

t--------------- - ------

ppelia '

~Mu•::::::.;~e==~:)

10:10
10:28
10:30

MAY

.,

Froni lincoln

·
8:05 C1J .. (1) REAL PEOPLE .It the
seventhgame oftheWorldSerleala
necessary , 'Real People' will be
·empted.
8:30
JOHN WESLEY WHITE
(j) (!D) PUFF IN THE LAND OF
THE LIVING LIES AIIHie girl caught

STYLES

0

Yeste rday's

XXI I XXIII)

mine.)

..

•

Cr••h Dive" 1843

LOWEEN SPECIAL Things ore not
atwaya what they aeem, eapecl•lty
on Halloween . Th11' sthele..onFat
Albert and hie pale learn, among
other thlng1, as they plot their
'creepiest, baddellt, ac arleat'
!J!.Ook night ever. (Repeat)
UV aD GREAT PERFORMANCES

(304~75-1244

'~

Msw.HEWAS(

(I) illlG EIGHT IS ENOUGH
8 (j) (!D) FAT ALBERT HAL-

'Live

OPEN DAILY 10-9SUNDAY 1-6

Now arrange the cirCled letters to
form the aurprtse answer, as suggestfd by .tho above cartoon.

CIJ .

TH~, JJ.L fV-.V0 W

lD
l!j0 F\1~ BIL..L-rlHAT'6
~1.) f.li'Dl)OO

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL ~ HOSPITAL

cha rcoal and continue all nig ht until
night until noon the next day. The
women will start serving at 12 :30
p.m. and continue to serve until the
meat is all go1ie.
A $.2 plate lunch includes a
generous helping of roast pork,
baked 'beans and cole slaw. All
proceeds will go towards the
upgrading of _the museum. The
museum will he open all day Saturday for visitors. A square dance will
he held Saturday evening under the
direction of Gewanna Johnson.
The museum is located four miles
north of Point Pleasant just off State
.Route 62, adjacent to the fairgrounds.

" ::'::~..~-·-

NEWS

AND
FRIENDS
ABCN!WS
® ~2- 1 CONTACT
8:30
• (1) NBC NEWS
CIJ 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
•
BOB NEWHART SHOW
F AI;_E THE MUSIC
(j) ®) CBSNEWS
.WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
DICK CAVETT SHOW
aABON£WS
8:58
!'lEWS UPDATE
7:00
e PM MAGA.ZIN£
SEND FORTH YOUR SPIRIT
MONSTERS, MADMEN AND
MACHINES '80 Yoaro 01 Science
FICTION' GU Gerard hoetatheae
excerpt a from aci-fl claealcs tor a
look at the ex aggerated , horrific
world of imagination gone wlldl
ALLIN THE FAMILY
!lila FAMILY FEUD
WILD KINGDOM·
TICTACDOUGH
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
NEWS
OVER EASY GueSt:·Actor Dick
S!'lawn . Hosts : Hugh downs and
Frank BlAir. (Cioa~d-Captloned)
7:30
BULLSEYE
AT HOME WITH THE BIBLE
liANFORD AND SON
.(JJ JOKER'S WILD
HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
DICK CAVETT SHOW Gueot:
Joyce Carol Oates, author.
$100,000 NAME THAT TUNE
MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
·
a FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
NEWu,IPDATE
•
aJ WORLD SERIES
8:00
CHAMP.GAME71FNECUSARYII
th' championship has been decid·
ed, regularty scheduled program ming will air.
CIJ SIGHTS AND SOUNDS OF
LIFE
C!J MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ' ' '
"You Only Live Twice" 1187
Cil
.
MOVIE
·(ADVENTURE-DRAMA) " '

.
-.

. or

bVHonri -MdBob i,M

o\NtMDamned" 1185 ·

WIUPDATE
OOCLUB
OB GABS ·
TPATROL
WS UPDATE

'

t!iNtA VJtlf
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
37Box
1HaH a
38 Barrier
bikini
39 Driver's
4 Doubt
offer
one's eyes 40 Viva !
9 Wild bog
DOWN
10 Joseph
1 "Howler"
Conrad's
2 Whoop It up
native land
3 Noun suffix
Yesterday's Aalwer
12 Geraint 's
4 Less
is Added factor zs Done for
love
sedendary 18 " Mefistofele" Z9 Bring out .
13 Type of bird 5 PerfecUy
composer
3G Clark of the
14 French
late show
,
19 Woman's
1 Hgt
· article
7 See -2 Down
name ·
3% Hindu _
•
15 Indy stop8 Covenant zz Bring
female slave •
ping place
9 Com or
into accord 35 Mobster's
16 Briny
Bible %3 Stretch out
weapon
17 Threefold
11 Muffle
Z4 S.A. rodent
38 Commotion
19 Be the banker
20 Get around
21 Feminine
suffix
22 Plant touse
%4 Myron
of comedy
25 Waste
allowance
2t - of one's
existence
27 Foofaraw
Z9 Dodged
31 Sonora's
tree
3% Laraine
Or Doris
33 Tanguay
34 Candy fllllng
38 English .
river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTB - Here'a how to work

It :; :~

AXYDLB~AXa

lo

• '
- '

L '0 N G F B L -L 0 W

One letter simply ltlnda for 1nother. In lhi1 _.mple A II ::.
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ot&lt;. Sin11e lettera, ;::
apootrophn, the lenath and formation o! the worda are all '•·
biota. Each day the elide letter~ are dilerent .
;•
"'"' i

CaYPTOQVoTu :

w
XL

.•'· '••
A F 8 Q.:
I;

RQYYV!QXDNG
IFSGN

W

RFTYC

FK
FK

AWl

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LJFGGXLN
RSFBQSM
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Yetterd8y'1 ~: I HAVE N~R MET ANYO!ft ·i

WHO COULDN'T TELL ME IJOME'niiNG !HADN'T KNOWN '
BEFORE.-CHARLES M.IOMBROUGH ,
CltiEKintl- Syndico11. Inc.

:.. ~

&lt;· "

�. The DQily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 22,1980

Dead battery ·bad cold weather curse

f·.

That cold weathe~ curse - the
dead battery - is the target of a
colorful and potentially sight·saving
tool from the Ohio Society to Prevent
Blindness.
· The society supplies bright yellow
vinyl safety stickers to b1191nesses
throughout the state. The stickers
detail the one safe way to.jump-start
auto and truck batteries.
·
Ohio industries have ordered
16,000 stickers in recent months and
the society hopes to extend the
safety campaign to the public.'
Battery acid spills, fires and explosions can all threaten sight as a
result of improper jUillp-sta~. said
Virginia H. Benton, the society's
executive director.
" Jump-starting a battery is not as
easy as people think," added Clair
W. Young, leader of safety for the
Ohio State University cooperative

extension service.

11

There's one

right way and several wrong ones."
OSU ordered stickers for all 66
county extension offices.
The long-lasting stickers can be
attached to the ins1de of a vehicle's
hood, jusfover the battery, or to the
jumper cables themselves.
To avoid accidents which could
send acid, sparks or battery
fragments toward the eye, the
stickers advise motorists to:
- Clamp one jumper cable to
positive pole of dead battery. Then
attach cable's other end to positive
pole of good battery.
- At good battery, clamp second
cable to negat1ve pole, then attach
cable's other end to dead car's
)UST IN CASE - Lynne Dow, a staff member of the Ohio Soc1ety to
·Prevent Blindness, places one of the Soc1ety's new battery safety stickers
l: 1ns1de the hood of her automobile just above tbe battery The durable
1: , VJnyl st1cker outhnes the proper way to jwn!&gt;'slart dead batter1es and
~ av01d sparks, fires , ac1d sp1lls or even explos10ns which can threaten
-- s1ght. The stlckers, bemg adopted by Ohio mdustnes, are available from
•:
,, the Society, P. 0 . Box 2020, Colwnbus, Ohio, 43216 "

engine block on side away from bat·
tery.
- Start car with good battery.
Tllell start disabled car.
- Remove c•ble from engine
block first and then from other car's
negative pole. Finally, remove cable
!rom positive poles.
Attaching tbe cable between the
good battery 's negative terminal
and tbe engine block of the disabled
auto provides. maxiMum p~tection
against sparks contacting battery
fumes.
Don't's include: don't smoke ;
don't let the cars touch; don't jumP"
start batteries with frozen fluid and
don't try to Jum!&gt;'slart batteries of
mismatched voltage.
" The stickers are a good idea,"
said l..ee Thomas, safety coordinator
of Columbus-based Landmarks Inc.
" The potential hazard is often
overlooked when someone is trying
to start a stalled vehicle."
Charles Tisi, industrial relations'
manager for the Dresser industries
plant in Defiance, distributed
stickers in employee pay envelcpes.
" It's follow-up to eye safety in and
outaide the plant. if• this preventa
just one possible eye loss, it'll be
well worth it," Tisi explained.
Stickers are prtced at the Society's
cost; 25 cents for the first and 12 cents for each additional on orders of
less than 10; 12 cents each for orders
of less than 1,000, and 10 cents each
on requests for more than 1,000. Or·
ders should be mailed to the Ohio
Society to Prevent Blindness, P . 0.
Box 2020, Columbus, Ohio, 43216.

Area nurses will meet for a
daylon11, seminar " Nutritional
Assessment" Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Speakers for the day will include
John A. Wade, Jr., M.D., ear, nose,
throat and· allergy specialist rJ.
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ron
Lessard, R.Ph., director of pharmacy, Franklin Regional HosvitRl,

,,
,,

17-The Daily Sentinel, Middi!PDf~•Pomeroy, o.,

Franklin, New Harnplblre, and
'Sharon B. Klttelberger, RN, M.S., ·
director of medical nutritional nUl"
sing services at Ross Laboratories
•
in Columbus.
Rhoda Dailey, RN, BSC, inle,rvice
director of Veterans Memorial
Hospital, will serve as moderator fop
the day.

PUBLIC AUCTION

·.,'•..-.
'I,·
'•

-

r,

Out ol Athens lake 51. Rt. 33 north to 51. Rl. 5541 to
Amesville, Ohio - turn nor1h on St. Rt. 329 far about
1 mile or firs! Co. Rd . to the lell known as Kaster
Road - slay straight lo lop of hill -turn right on
Co. Rd. J6 pass church then "'ake square right turn
down hrll - then right In first land to-t,he Dow
Linscott FArms. Follow signs.
!FARM MACHINERY, SHEEP, ETC.)
!FARM FOR SALE BY OWNERS)
FARM MACHINERY, ETC,: 1952 Ferguson tractor
Model 35, good rubber, good condilion; Ferguson
wagon on rubber, good ; Ferguson 121n. plows; 3 pt:
posthole drgger, manure spreader on rubber; New
Holland mow1ng m ac hine PTO ; Massey Ferguson
hay rake, 32 ft. elevator has elec. motor; 1 raw
Ferguson corn pocker; (Belle City); horse drag har·
row, old pl ow; scrap •ron; water tank for cattle;
over 100 bales hay ; sm tractor corn grinder,
endless belt; nice old buggy - no lop; wheel bar·
row, old saws, cedar lumber ; hand tools, grease
guns, other tools, etc ., horse plow, etc.
SHEEP: 21 head ewes (crossed Columbia &amp; Finn l. 3
&amp;. 4 years old - all bred to Finn ram 1 Finn ram -4
years old .
Some household items and other items not listed.
Thi s wr ll be a very good little sale. Clip this ad tor
lrm e &amp; location Su&lt;t.day,"Ocl.l6 at 1 p.m Terms Cash or c heck w/ posltive11&gt; day of sale. Notr espon·
Si ble for acc1dents.
Aucltoneer- Bill Janes, Phone 557·3411
Hav1ng retired, thiS farm is for sale by the owners
- Mr. and Mrs. Dow Linscott. App. 18 Acres, well
watered w/ springs. Mineral rights, lease for coal,
gas &amp; oil. Has 1 gas well w/free gas for farm . I storY
house w/4 ro~m &amp; bath, lull finished basement.
Mobile home (14x65 II.) extra rl wanted . Tlmber &amp;
very good pasture larm w/pine trees - very
beautiful home site. Excellent hunting grOunds.
Priced for sale bv owners - must see to appreciate. ,
BILL JANES-AUCTIONEER

Publi c Notice

PubliC N0t1 ce

Public Notice
aga1nst
you tor the rel1ef
man Pleas court of Me•gs
County, Pomeroy , Ohio, . de ma nded 1n the com
pla1 nt
45769
La rry E. Spencer,
•Th e ob1ect of the com
Clerk of Court,
pla1nt IS to annul a
Meigs County, Oh10
marnage entered mto on
August 12, 1960, at Mrd (10) I, 8, 15, 22, 29111) 5, 6tc
d le por!, Ohio
· \IS·
You are requ~red to a n
Public Nottce
... JAMES TAYLOR ,
swer t he compl a1nt w1th1n
Defendant.
twenty e1ght day s after the
PUBLIC NOTICE
No. 17,619 last publicati on of th1s
'•
The an nua l elect1on of
'•
NOTICE BY
nOtiC e, WhiCh Wi ll be the
Me1 gs
County
:,
PUBLICATION
pu blished once each week Agncultura
l Soc 1ety D1 rec·
1 TO . Jam es Taylor, whose for SIX success1ve weeks
1,
las1 known address was The las t publi cation wil l be fors will be he ld Monday,
November J , 1980 in th e
made on November S, 1980,
:: Oetro,t, Mich•gan
room of the
'•
You are hereby nohf1ed and the twenty e1ght days conference
Metgs . County Extens•on
r
that you have been named for answer w11l commence Off
1ce, Mulberry H t s.,
!,
Defenda nt in a legal ac tion on that date
5 to 9 p.m.
In case of you r ta1lure to from
1 e ntttl ed Vtrgm1a Grogan
Qualifications for d1rec·
r.; Taylo r,
Pla•ntlf f. vs
answer or othe rw ise tors
a re that they m ust be a
I;
James Tay lor, Defendan t
respond as req u1 red by t he
11
Th1S act1on has bee n Oh iO Rul es of CiV Il qua l•f •ed voter of Me1gs
!r
ass 1~n ed Case No 17,619 Procedure 1 jud gment by Count y and must have a
1
me mbersh ip t1cket m sa1d
a nd IS pend •ng 1n the Com
l
default wil l be rendered SOCiety
of 1980
'
Candidate s
pet 1tion s
must be f •led with the
Secretary no later th an 5
P m Monday, October 27,
1980 On ly persons holdi ng
. I
memberSh ip tiCkets at the
close of ttle 1980 County
Fa1r or at least ( 15) ca leh
dar days before the date of

"'•

3

IN THE
/•
COMMON PLEAS
~
COUR T OF
~
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
/: V IR GINIA
GROGAN
'• TAYLOR ,
',
Plamt1ff,

APPLES, IUS &amp; up in your
conta1ners, c1der, potatoes,
Burson's u 5. 33, 12 m11es
north ot Pomeroy .
LEARN to make your own
chocolate
covered
cherries, peanut butter
cups, candy bars, dip
chocolates, &amp; more. Free
candy class starting this
week. Call Carousel Con·
fec tlonery, 992·6342 for in·
format1on

~ON'T

· r----------------------Curb Inflation.
1 Pay Cash 'or
. f Classifieds
and
.,.
.
'~~I
Savel I I
I

roR6ET

I

~

J

Name . - - - - - - - - - . . - -

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Phone·------------

•ANNOUNCEMENTS
l - CarCI of Thanks
2- ln Memon• m
J- Announc:emenfs
4-Gtl'eawar
J- Happy Ads
6-Lostand Found
7- Yardh'•
t - Pubhc hie
&amp; AuciiOfl
9-WantedtoBuy
• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11- H• 1Pwa"'"
12-SHu•teclr'nlecl
13- lnsur~nce
11-Buslnus Tn1tn lnli
15- SdiOOISinstructton
16- Radio, TV
&amp;ca lilep•'r
11- W1ntedTo Do
eFINANCIAL
BUJintn
21 opportunity
22- Monertololn
n - Proftsslonal
Strvrce•
• REAL ESTATE
JJ- HomeslorSalef
l2-Mobu...4omes
1ors.1e
JJ- F•rmstorS•I•
34-luslntuauudtnt•

rt
I
1
I
I
··f

Print one word 1n each
space bel ow Ea ch in·
it•al or group of figures
counts as a word Cou nt
name and add ress or
phone numbe r 1f used .
You' ll get better results
if you descr.be fully,
I+ • QIVe pr.ce The Sent1ne l
reserves the rt ght to
_ 1 classtfY, ed1t or reject
1 any ad Your ad W ill be
t
~"" Ir pu
In t he pr ope r
r!· ( lastflcat•on 1f you 'll
J c heck the proper box
below

'I

dI .

1:1

These cash rates
1nclude diSCount

l Wanted

·,,..

ForSa le
) Announcement
) For Rent

'1

)

·1
1
1

)' ' 1'

17 - - - - - - - - -

lB._________
·

19· - - - - - - - 20 ·- - - - - - - -

21 - - - - - - - --

I
jl

-'·.,----------

22 . - - - - - - - " 23 - - - - - - - 24 - - - - - - - - 25
-------26 - - - - - - - -

.;;-J
•
· . :1
1fl i
9·---:-----. •t 10. ~-------

27 · - - - - - - - - 28 . - - - - -- - ··
29 ·- - - - - - - - - 30··- - - - - - - 31 - - - - - - - 32 ·- - - - - - ' - - - -

ili A
·'1 -l
v•
•

•1
""
'

'f'
1

1

'~'l

'1

_I

.:1

2 _ _ _ _.:..__ _ _

3. · - - - - - - - -

5· - - - - - - - 6. -------,-.....,...
~ 7. _________
8·------...:.11 , - - - - - - - -

12

· -~~----13 - - - - - - - 1-4. - - - - - - - -

r'.'~

. ....want Ad Ad
·
ver115 '"9
Deadlines
l.JoP.M 0 ~ 11 .,
11 Noon ••turd.,
lorMondn
.

34._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
35 - - - - - - - -

i:.,

,. I
1
--1
.

~!=~:=~~~~~:-::nftd

l7- Realtors

33 · · - - - - - - - - - ' ' -

...,
··• II 15 - - ' - - - - - - 16.

Th' C
Mail
IS ouponwith Remittance

1
,.
1I
I
1
1

The Daily Sentinel
I
.•1
729
I·
i~~:1
'
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
. ---------...
--.-----------JI
Bov
~

JC- l.l..

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

]. Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I
1

FINI&gt;-NCIN6

PHONE 992-2156

I

.J.

DE.FI'-!T

WANT AD INFORMATION

Wnte you r own ad and order by mall w•th th• s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundabl e

1e11v

,3 ••1,.

d Y'
Ulrs

e RENTALS
41- Houses for Aenl
41-Moblle Home1

for Aenl •
44- APirtment Ulr Rent
U- FAoom1
46-Sp.~ce lor Rent
47- Wintedto Rent
41-Equtpment tor R1n1
eMERCHANDISE
Jl - HouseholdGoocls
52- CB,TV, RadioEqulpmtnt
»-Antiques
~o~~-Mtsc M•rchlndiu
U--lt.uldlngSuppllts
H-PtiiiOr lilt
1
e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
•1 - Fir"'EII"IPm• nt

•2- W•nttcltoluy
n- Trvc" ttr Sale
u-Livt~stoc:lt

M-Hiy&amp;Gr•ln
u - sttei&amp;Fertlliztr
•TRANSPORTATION
,,-AutOstorS•I•
n-v•ns&amp;4W.D
74-Motlrcyctes

1s-

.AoutoP~rtw

&amp;Acienorln

n-AuteRep.~lr

•SERVICES
11- Homtlmltf'OYtmtnts
u-Piumbint,
EaciVItlno
IJ-E~natlnt
M-Eiectrlcai
&amp;

Atlrlttr~tion

•~o*"eral ~lint

M-M. H. At~t~l r

IJ- Upt,olsterv

Rates and Other Information
,
uwon~sorUndtr
cash

choir,.

I.H

1.2S

uo

r" '
uJ 1

,,.
110

Public Noflce
d1V1S10n of personal proper
ty accordl119 to present
possession The Defendanj,
Roger Dale Farley, 1S
hereby notified that he Is
required to answer said
Compla•nt within twentv
eight 128) days alter the
last publication of this
notice.
Said cause will be heard
on or about 9th day of
December, 1980, or as soon
thereafter as meets the
convenience of the Court
SOUTHEASTERN
OHIO
LEGAL SERVICES
P at nc k c McGee
Attorney for
Plaintiff
24 West Unron Street
second Floor
Athens, Ohio 45702
Telephone: 1614)
992·5478
110) 22, 29 llll 5, 12, 19, 26,
61c
Announcements
I PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coms, rings, jewelry, etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Mrddleport.

3

us

Elchwardoverthtmlnhnum1SWOf'dsls4centsperword~terclly
Ads ruftnlnt o"'tr than conse&lt;utJYtellyswlll ttt ch.rtHit"" 1Clay

••••

,.,::~:::·~~~~~=--~=:•~ oiWI Obituary : 1 e~t~ll ~r ..,., sue

o!.~~~~=·~::'::e•:Y~':c:'!~ 1:!,':~·==~v1 :"~!!'~~=
sentintl.

Announcements

30 percent off greenware
for the month of October.
Drehel's Ceramics, 59 N.
Second Avenue, Mid ·
dleport 992·2751.

1~ I

Apples &amp; Sweet Cider:
Romes, Grrmes, Red, &amp;
Golden Delicious . Now
sellrng at 14.00 &amp; up per
buschel F rlzpatrrck Or·
chards, State Route 689

9

Wanted to Buy

'
WANTED TO BUY: Cl•ss
rrngs, wedding ban~s.

r~~:~~~ gof~~~rv:r c~~~:

pocket watches. C~ll Joe
Clark, 992·205-', Clark's
Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio;
Yard Sale items, in gOOd
condition, sheets, curta(ns,
bedspreads, blankets, lin·
lant &amp; children's clothrrg,
whatnots, lamps, stands, or.
what have you I Phone 992·
7494.
i
Gold, sliver or fordign
coins or any gold or sliver
Items. Antique furniture,
glass or china, will pay tfop.
dollar, or complete estates.
No item too large or 'too
small. Check prices before
sellrng. Also do appraising.
Osby 1Ossrel Marlin. 992•
6370.

~~A~A~A~B~U~R~E~e~m~e~n~t~s~LJ Square
Phone 669·3785
dance at the Shade

~

3

,.

12--s-;tUitiOni Winted -

1\JR,egistered

Wt LL do odds &amp; ends,
panelong, floor tile, cellrng
tote Call Fred Miller at 992·
6338

dietician ADA
.with experience In nursing
home consultation . To con·
suit with dlet4ry super·
visor. Needed on weekdays
-only. Mlnlmum of 10 hours
monthly. Mileage &amp; hourly
fee paid. Call Mrs. Cadle,
614·992·6606, 1

Announcements

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow m Rutland
Every sunday startrng at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the · Boy seoul
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only!
JONES Meat Packing-slaughtering, custo m
processing, retail meat
Washington Co Rd. 248,
Little Hocking, OH 667
6133
RAC INE GUN SHOOT,
Racme Gun Club, every
Frrday night startrng at
7 30 p m Factory choke
guns only .
GUN SHOOT · Saturday
even 1ng start1ng at 6 30 ,
p.m Sponsored by the
Rac1ne Volunteer F•re
Department, at bUild ing in
Bashan
Factory choke
guns only

AUCTION SALE
SAT., OCT. 25,12:00 ~OON
On St. Rtl'. 33 midway between ATHENS &amp;
POMEROY . The comple1e household furnishings of
the late Luella K. Burson will be sold. GOOD
CLE ANSALE - Many1'I ems l'k
1 enew .
HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Frigidaire refrigerator,
elec. range, GE elec. dryer, sq. tub Maytag wronger
washer, 35,000 btu Warm Morning gas heater, china
cabinet, matching buffet, qualtty recliner-rocker
(new), Zenith color TV, 5 pc. breakfast set (like
new), s pc . solid fl aple bedroom suite (twin beds
complete, double ~dresser, chest of drawers and
night stand), 4 pc. Wa1erfall type bedroom suite,
pair nice llreside chairs, davenport (long), oak hall
tree. Hoover upright sweeper, Zoom broom, cedar
chest with tray, 2 porch rockers, 2 wood kitchen
w
be , n 1g hi s1an d , pore h
base cablne ts , meta 1 waruro
glider, 3 utility cabinets (2 WOOd) , g lass top coffee
table, various stands and tables, variety of lamps,
solid state clock rad1o, Zeni1h AM FM pocket radio,
dutch oven, 2 old quilts, 3 pes. Depression glass (2
bowls and large vase) , other dishes, fireplace equip
ment (screen, andirons and tools) , splint basket,
GE Westmlnste r chimeelec mantel clock, mirrors,
cameras, usua 1 items found in kitchen , small elec.
appllonces, canned goods, linens, towels, bedding, 3
twin size elec. blankets l 1 new), 60" drapes (floral
and plain) , Samsoni1e luggage, nice hand woven
throw rugs, afghan, spreads, large window fan , Bi ·
ble with large prln1, many misc . items.
JEWLERY: 14K diamond ring w/ 3 diamonds, 14K
v.cdd .ng band; 17J Signal lady's watch, gold plated
nng dnd earrings,• 2 Jewe1rv boxes, costume
jewelry .
GUN, MOWER &amp; MISC.: H&amp;R 6 shot 22 short barrel
'posto, r .t wheelbarrow, stepladder, scythe, good
mrtkcan, LawnChiefpowermower,etc.
MANY ITEMS NOT LISTED. NO EATS.
NOT ~ESPONSlBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
Terms : Casborchec:k wllh pos. ID
CORA BEEGLE, OWNER - Ph. 949· 2294
C. E . SHERIDAN, AUCT. - Ph. 441-4263

~~--------~----~--~'
IIL-------------------~1
•

..

School Saturday October 25
from 9·12 p.m. Music by l,_,l_ __,H_,e'!ll!p~W!.'a'!n~t~td!!....__
Lester Young &amp; the Hart
looking
for
Boys Sponsored by the RNs ,
challenging and reward(ng
S~ade 8th grade class.
work? Tired of rotating
shills? Feel the need to
4
G1veawav
develop your Ideas in
Male d~ one year old a lso resident care with a highly
5 beagil puppres will be motivated stall? Pomeroy
'teadY to give away in 2 Health Care Center has the
answer for you. Due to
weeks. 742·2648.
achieving near maximum
census, we now have
Lost and Found
openings for full and part
6
time positions on day shift&gt;
FOUND in Minersville, but will consider other s~lf'
yellow male dog wrth tatoo ts. Competitive salary, ex·
in ear. Call992·7650.
cellent working condltla'ns,
_
. life insurance and
LARGE tan female dog dlsablflty policy at no ~ost
found rn Rock Springs to the employee, and
area. Phone 992·2770.
hospitalization insurance
8
Public Sale
avallabfe . •come visit us or.
&amp; Auction
call : Nancy Van Meter,
R.N.. Director of Nursing,
OSSIE' S AUCTION House, Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid· ter, 614 9'12·6606.
dleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households.
New, used, or antiques, in·
Real Estate- Grmerat.
e luding homes, farms, or
liqurdatlon sales. Get top
dollar. Llst wtth .lhe man
whO has over 25 years in
the new, used and antrque
furniture busmess.
we
take consignments For information and pickup ser·
vice, call 992·6370 or in
2 STORY DUPLEX West Virginia 773·5471 . Sale
one bedroom apt. up,.
every Friday night at 7
fully furnished, 2 BRp. m Auctioneer Howard
apl down. Rent will pav.
Beaslev, apprentice auc·
lor Mme. Good location
tioneer, Osby A Martin.
in Middleport.
(no junk)
I OR 3 BEDROOM
' HOME Clost to poo1,
park &amp; schllbfs. Newl¥·
9
Wonted to Buy
redecorated Inside &amp;
out. Prime location.
WANTEO TO BUY
Gravel Hltl In MidGOLD,
SILVER,
dleport.
PLATINUM, STERLING·
J BR HOME - Family.
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR·
room, llvlnj@n
.. . n, larg&amp;
Y, MISC ITEMS. AB·
eaHn kl,
•aneled
SOLUTE
MARKET
&amp; carpel. on 124 In
PRICE GUARANTEO. EO
Syracuse. Alum. siding,
BURKETT
BARBER
I BR FRAME -2 acres,
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
close ln.
OHIO 992·3476 .
2 BR FRAME - Close
fo schools, park &amp; pool,
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
Cheaple.
ches, class rings, Wedding
REDUCED - 7 rooms
bands, diamonds. Gold or
and bath. Could be u~
s rlver. Call J . A. Wamsley,
as business, storage or
742·2331 . Treasure Chest
home
- ,
Coin Shop, Athens, OH . .592·
' 4 BR HOMI on Rt. lin
6462,
Pomeroy. Eat·ln kitchen.
All rooms ~
IRON AND BRASS BEDS
large, Full &amp;IZt
Old furniture, disks, gold. mont could be tNtdtl to
rings, lewetry, silver
j
dollars,sterllng,etc .• WOO&lt;l ' 1 • nice rte, room.
l'aye
Mllnley,
Br.
Mtr.:
ice boxes,fars antiques ,
ett Complete hOuHholds: .
Wrote M 0 Mill
R
PomeroY, O.Hl ore~'au ~: ;
'
7760. •

cr·--------==--

DILLON

REAL mATE

-----~-

CALl 992·2511 :
DAY OR IIIGHlj

'Oct. 22, 1980
Mob1le Homes
for Sale
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedrooms, new car·
pet . 1971 Cameron, 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, l2 x 60, 1Wo
bedrooms, all electric:. 1971
Skyline, 12 x 65, two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/3, new
carpet.
1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
carpet. B X S Sales, Inc.,
2nd x V1and Street, Point
Pleasanl, -wv Phone 675·

32

They'll Do It Every Time

~

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
SUR-ANeE treen ·
cel led ?
Lost
your
operator's license'? Phone
992 2143.

Insurance

Business Services

-·------~-

4424 .

H. L WRITESEL

CARPENTER
· SERVICES"

ROOFING

All types Or roof work, 1
new or repair gutters.
_and downspouts, guHer
Cl&amp;aning and painting.
All work gu1ranteed.

1980 70 x 14 mobile home
wlth 7 • ~4 expando. Ex·
cellen1 condlt1on. Phone
742·3030 or 742·2728.

[)(MNING411LDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

(HOOPER RIDGE, ATHENS. CO.)

Small investment, large returns_, Sen~inel Want Ads

,,'• '

Wanted : lady or girt to live
in. Light housework. 992·
3704.

~~~----~H~e~tp~w~an~t~ed~---

13

, .~--------------------------------~------------------------------------------------------------------------~----.J------------------------------------------------------­
' '

'•
!·

,. ====
1 -:

SUNDAY, OCT. 26 at 1:00 O'CLOCK P.M.

the village. However, those wishing
to post signs may secure a pernut
for $25 from the mayor and this
amount will be refunded when the
s1gns are satisfactorily removed.

~--'H""-el!l!.pw"-"a~n~ted!!-_

.

.(FARM SALE)

::
1:

NO SIGNS ALWWED
Rutland Mayor John Miller repor·
ts VIllage ordinances prohibit the
placement of s1gns on buildings,
utility poles and other locations in

=:::11

Seminar Thurst/ay

'

Free Estimites
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·2162
949·2160

PuHins
Ex. . . .

Experienced Opentors
available for local work.
• 2 rubber tir.e backhMs
el exc•vetor hoe 1114
yd.
e2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DO YOU H:A'VE THE COVERAGE?

.fOR ~LL 'YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALl US.

992-2342
OHIO
18

Wanted to Do
Have vacancy tn my home
for elderly person . Room,
board ,
laundry,
reasonable. 992 6022

,Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE !raining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and gel on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992 2157.

1----------r---------~

Real Estate- General

31
Homes for Sale
Two story olde r home,
sev e n
rQonts,
bath,
basement,
)lardwood
floors, firepla&lt;jl&gt; On tour
large lots with river fran·
tage. Main Street ,
Pomeroy
Finan c ing
ava•lable . Call after 5, 992·
7284 $26,500.

BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
l(ddition With new garage
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
newly installed central air
conditioning, family room
&amp; stone ' fireplace, ap·
pllances built in, newly In·
stalled electric breaker
sys1em ,
attractively
decorated basement, 2
baths, fully carpeted with
most attractive drapes.
Call985 3814 or992 ·2S71.

EIGHT room house,
fireplace, total electric,
sundeck, 2 car garage, 2
and one half acres, sub·
stantial down paymen1,
assume 7 percent loan 1f
qual if red. 985·3934.

Real Estate- General
Listing - Ru1tlc
beautiful new three

- New

NEW. \.t5T1NG ~ Tup-.
pers Plains. Brick
Ronch with full base·
ment, 3 BR, glrage. Sits
Q!1 elght·lenlhs of an
acre. Very -11 k..,t
home lrttlle 50s.
FREE ·· GAS P/US
Roya111es on 31 a~res
near Eastern High
School: Severa'! fields
and part wooded. Nlce
stand Of pines. SJ9,000.
ARROWHEAD CAMP·
I NG 'L.OTS - Nice Ohio
R1ver beach with st\ade
trees plus level higher
ground, Located below
Reeds11111e, 0 ., S3,500 to
$~.500 .
Owner will
finance with $500 down
and lhti rest for 5 years
at 10'16 Int. Hurry and
get your choice ol these.
HORSECAVE RD . .,.,..
Chesler Twp. Older
hOuse remodeled ,lnsi!le.
Outside needs 10n1e
care. Sits on 6'12 acres
with 3 outbuildings, spr·
ing water .. $24,000. Make
an off.,- pnthisone.
.
RENTALS Lovely
older harM with wrap·
around porch. Newly
remodeled Into 2 apts. 1
BR up and 3 BR down.
$37,000.
BU~INE$5
PLUS
HOME- Beverly, Ohio,
Ball and Tackle shop
1ully stoclled and op·
erattng with~ room apt.
upstairs. Sits on 11 acres
with nice stale highway
and river frontage.
Separate house with 5
BR, garage. Owner wlll
sell separately. Total
. $85,000.
Ph. Virtlnia H~ymon
915-4197
Real E!late

General

HOBSTETIER
REALTY
742·2003
'

Georges. Hobsle»er Jr.
Broiler
NEW LISTING )n
Middleport. Home on
corner tot overlooking
river. Can be usecl as in·
vestment properly. Live
downstairs and rent tile
upstairs . .Won't last long
al$29,000.00.
ONLY $1,5001 11 What a
buy. 3 bedroom frame
hOme with gas I f - fur·
nace. Situated on nice
size 'lot on Condor ,51.
Would ' make a great
starter hOme or Invest·
men! properly.
NEW LISTING - Mini·
form In RuHand. 17
acres· with nice 4
bedroom home. Garage
has posslblfllles of
overhead apartment.
Corn crib, cellar and
animal lhtlter. Asking
$52,000.00.
NEW LISTING 6
acres with 3 bedroom
home. Central air,
aluminum aiding, storm
WindOWS. new roof. Low
fteatlng bills.
Ap·
pllancn atay. Several
nice IIUfldlnga. Cali today, Gilly 135,000.00.
GOOD IUY 1919
WllldeOI' llome lltueted
on a l - l 2 ecr•. Fur·
nllhed wllll nice fur·
nlture •nd appliances.
Klichen ftalu rea a
lml~ro-wave
oven. Home
hal · cwlltr•l air and
alei'80. Dwarf orchard
and
building
on
acreage. Stlll for

129.-o.oo.

we INtn allier P, :par
nn tt c!IMie from.
Give Ul I Clll.
Vti""'Niclltllry, AISOC.
I
. . . . . . , . . .2
Cheryl Lemley, AIIOC.
P"hlnt 7411-3171

'----

yard Th is one
Priced In teh low

fenced In

l.st tonv

Four houses &lt;one a double )

POMEROY, 0 .
992· 2259

Real Estate

General

Housing
Headquarters

t~R~~~.~:.t J3
16 E. Second Street

1

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
COUNTRY LANE - A
peaceful farm nestled In
the gentle countryside
thaf can be en(oyed
within a few minutes
drive from town. Big ,
woods and
rolling
hayflelds with a
remodeled 2 bedroom
log cabin . A more
ietsurety and relaxed'
way of life. Let' s lake a
look.
NEW LOG CABIN
HOME - 2 bedrooms,
bath, kitchen, dining,
living room, and loft lor
storage. Has a level lot
· with river frontage Just
$25,900.
11,000 DOWN - 4 room
frame fi~-11 yourself
with 4.7 acres. T.P.
water near. $79.64 mon·
thly for 5 years at 13%.
Save on this $4,500
home.
360 ACRE FARM MOstly fence and some
timber, With lots of r iver
frontage or will sell
. house and 1 acre. Ask·
lng $225,00 for entire
farm. Let's talk
ATTRACTIVE
AND
COMFORTABLE
Very nice 2 bedroom
hOme with woodburning
fireplace In den. Has full
basement, garage and 3
lots In town. This you
wlllllke for only $.45,000.
2 BUSINESS PROPER ·
TIES - Good Income,
good locations. You
can't alford to pay your
earning in taxes, Invest
In one of these and write
It off. ,
PRO'I'ECT YOUR LIFE
AND
VALUABLES,
OPENING
YOUR
DOOR TO ANYONE
CAN COST YOU, LIST
WITH US. WE ARE
NEXT TO POMEROY
POST OFFICE. CALL
tn-UU or tn-317f,

Houses for Rerit.

NEW LlSTl NG Loll in a
pool next summer! This
18' diameter x 4' depth
abobve ground pool is
included with lhrs 10
room, -4 bedroom home
in Eastern Drstrlcl. This
home also has l'h baths,
rec room, office, sew·
ing room, all carpeted,
natural gas forced air
heal. Fully insulated,
lull basement with
garage,
laundry,
storage
room ,
workshop, chimney for
wood burner , Huge at·
!ached carport and ap·
proximately 2 acres of
level land . All for ius!
$41,500.00.
GORGEOUS AUTUMN
COLORINGS - Are a
background to lhrs new
ty constructe~. 3
bedroom home, range
and hood In kitchen, 1112
baths, w.b.f.p., electric
heal, carpeted, full
basement with garge on
approximately
1.75
wooded acres - close
in. JUST! $42,000.00.
THE
COUNTRY
SCENE - On approx·
lmatefy 13 cres of land
with a 4 bedroom house
near Syracuse . In·
sulated, natural gas
heat ,
carpeted
$39,900.00
INSULATED - Costs
less to heat !his 3
bedroom
home,
carpeted, on a lOO'xlOO'
lot,
in
Syracuse .
$26,900.00.
SN\IG HAVEN - Fully
Insulated, new thermo·
pane windows plus a
wood burner to supply
electric heat, will keep
you warm In this 3
bedroom home on 111
acre lot. Approved for
Farmers Home Loan.
$21,500.00.
CAREFUL IT'S LOADEDt Calf now togetlirst
shot at this feature
laden 14'x70' mobil
ehome . 2 baths, -3
bedrooms, central air,
bufll · ln
kitchen,
carpeted, electric heat,
on approximately 1 acre
lot. 18,500.
BUILDING LOTI On old
Chesler Golf Course.
Ulllltles av•lfable. Ap·
proximately 1 acre.
$6,000
REALTOR
Henry E. Clel•nd, Jr.
H2·6191
JISSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Do»le Turner
HN692
Jean Truueii94NUO
OFFICE H2-2259

&amp; five extra lots. alf In one

block on Ohio R1ver in
Reedsville.
All rented
Illness forced sacrifice at
only $37,500 for all. Private
party . Dial614·378·6221.

"C:OA~Fi)RTAiii::i'• 3 bedrooms, large living n&gt;&lt;tm.•
also family room, slorag&amp; bldg. and large garage
space. Asklng $37,000. Give us '(Our offer.

LAND FOR SALE - Close to town, will consider
dlvldlng !his 100 plus acres. Take all or your chOice
of possible 3 way spill.
THIS HOM I! has 3 BR's with hordwood floors, large
eel·ln kitchen, built· In cabintts, full balement, hos
been taken good cere of and waiting for new owner
to gtve It equal cart. $39.000.
'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

-Auto and Truck
Repair
- Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.·Fri.
9 A.M.·5:30 P .M.

;::==:;::=.::;;==:::;:==:.=::::

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 AN 0 A RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992· 5434
Two bedroom apartment
with large living room &amp;
kitchen. Furnished. Adults
only . Brown 's Trailer
Park. 992 3324

=allnQ
fuSS'.
''Just
- ~ -.:z

united States Steel

rn ~,.,. rou •

l'l'la.

•••~;

•, _- flomlt

sldlnQI" "',..d....•.,./

Homes
lor Sale
Mov1ng must sell, two
bedroom mobile home one
acre, much, much more.
No reasonable offer
refused . May take some
trade. Call anyt1me, 949
2038, 843·2971. or 843·4802 .

KAUFPS
BROWN
RUBBE-R
BACK
· SHAG

Furnished apartment, four
rooms with bath . 992-5908

.::::::;::::::::::::::~ stairs
Four rooms
&amp; bath,
up·
apartment.
Palmer

~

Quick Tops!

•t•s

Street in Middleport 992 ·
3030 lie tween the hours of 9·
5.
45

sq.

Furn1shed Rooms

PWMBING
AND
HEATING

CARPET
W/Pad
Installed

Rubber llack

'5"

Sq. Yd .

'9"

Sq . Yd

Cash&amp; Carry

GOLD, RUST
&amp; BLUE PATTERN

ROOMS tor rent, room &amp;
board by the month··
vacancies. Trained &amp; ex·
perienced
Elderly
preferred. 992·7314

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

$499

Cash &amp; Carry

Nice Selection of Carpet Remnants and
Linoleum Remnants at Big Discounts .

e

,fMisc . Merchan1se
TRAILER spaces lor rent.
Southern Valley Mobrle
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.
47

Couple with two children
would like a 2 or 3 bedroom
house or trar ler. 992·5783.

.., .... . . ....... .
0

~·· J . O

"--0

0

"-"

Antiques
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec·
tlbles · or entlre estates.
Nolhing lao large. Also,
guns, pocket watches and
coin collections. Call 614·
767·3167 or 557·3411 .
53

· SIZES 8-20 10!4:20!4

&amp;,-/h._ -/1.1-s

Misc. Merchanlse
MORTAR miKer, make is
Stone, 2 bag, 7 horse power
motor, like new. Also
firebrick &amp; app.-oximately
2,000 regular brick color
grey 992·2805 or contact
Elden Walburn, 380 South
Third, Middleport

54

Slttch up each cas111i top in a
motnrnJ- they're that EASY'
Sa,. $$S 011 thrrfty, wod.. wtdth
cottOn blendrstrrpes, prrnls or
border fobrrcs.

Printed Pattern 450 1· Ml""s
Sires 8, 10, 12, i~r 16, 18, 20
Iliff Stres 1011, 12,, 1411, 16\1,
18\1, 20\1.
$1.7SIIr-" ........ MI5CM
.. - ...... fir ftnl.ctla
111111111114 ....... S...i II:

"'

- Adar1ai
....... o.,t.
Daily Seatlnel

=I

!43
Willl'rtrtt
(7
lOIII.
ZIP, SIZE, 1111
-

1

·~

Used V 30 Ditch Witch tren·
cher with hoe 1-614-694·
7842.

Brass single headboard,
back chairs,
.. 9. 1 t.anHaUEladder
dresser, maple
deacons bench, water sled,
motorcycle
leathers,
racing
type.
949·2286.
hot, If

..as,
11f1M1U.

HEAT ING OIL No . 1 &amp; No .
Buy now at Summer
Pnces. Excelstor Co. 614
992 ·2205
2

Wanted to Rent

DESPERATELY needed
two bedroom unfurnished
house or apartment or
trarter, not over $75 to $100
a rnonlh . Please phone 992·
3151 afler6or rnqulreat630
south Third Avenue, Mid·
dleporr. Must be in Mid·
dleport area . Must have
washer and dryer hookup.

Wit, put up With ~rlh prtctsdollars, Ill ltl!1ll quolitr!
s.nd fir otr NEW fo\U·WINT£R
LAND- LOIS of land, located In beautiful Southern
PAJTERN CATALOG. t4 patterns
Ohio hills. Peaceful and prlvahl, alao mlner•l
fill I'-. Ceupon (werth
rights.
1.75). CatafGI, Sl 00.
CAL US TO BUY,OR SELL
j II' l'iullillt ~1.75
Nancy Jospan- A._iote
t4...:NM
51. 1.75
, _....Jll7
TIIMflll.
1.75
..... . 1.75

QUIET COUNTRY HOME avaliable for only
$40,000 37 plus acres. Calf now, this- won't last.

Sizes from ~•6 to 12•411

~ow open w1th a studio
1n Pomeroy and Racine.
Classes offered are
Ballet, Tap and J1u
For info and enrollment.

House &amp; lot for sale. 8
rooms, bath, 2 porchs,
basement, out building. All
have been remodeled . Cor·
ner of Main &amp; Tyree,
Racine, Ohio. 949·2778

Housiny
Headquartnt \.

Utility Buildings

House w•th fo ur rooms &amp;
bath, tully carpeted, un
furnished. 992-3090

OLDER HOME on Long
St , Rutland . 3 bedroom,
bath, central heat, in·
sulated, s1orm windows.
Priced reduced to $12,500.
742·3074.

home, tamllv room,

cuudy Really
Belpre, 011.

41

TWO B EDROOM 'u nfurnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
31
Homes for Sale
bedroom furnished apart·
EO
BARTELS ,Loa n menls Call after 6 p.m.
Representative, 1100 East 992·2288.
Maln St., Pomeroy, Oh.
Mortga~e
money F1ve room house w1th bath
avarlable. All types home near Racine 992 5858
f1nancing,
new,
old,
refma nc1ng, and 2nd mor·
!gages. Phone 992·7000 or
992·5732.

Heat Estate

DOWNING-afiLDS AGENCY, INC.
11

Rentals

compound bow, Robin
Hood, Little John, like new
55 lb. pun, SlOO.OO. 1143·2711
Electric clothes dryer,
$60.00, 843 ·2711 . · Baby
stroller in good condition,
$20.00, 843·2711 . Four used
tlres 1200 x 16.5 for $100.00
143 · 2711 .
Umbreffa
slrOoller In exc'ollent con·
dillon $10 00843·2711 .
_,_ ,

_____

__
,

Wrnchester 94 30·30 rifle
lrke new. Call 985·3597.
$1011.00.
DINETTE SET, exlensron
table, fou r cha.rs . $25.00
Phone 992· 2835.
·
COPPE RTONE side by
side refrigera tor · freezer,
rcemaker lor $200.00. Eight
foot aluminum brakes,
pump jacks and ladder
racks for $125.00. 10 inch
Black and Decker radial
arm saw lor 1250.00. Phone
9923714

56
Pets lor Safe
HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and ridmg
lessons
E'Veryth1ng
lmagmable 1n hOrse equ1p
ment Blankets, belts,
boots, etc Engl•sh and
western . Ruth Reeves
(614) 698 3290.
Put a cold nose m your
future!! Shots, wormed,
Melgs County Humane
Society, 992·6260, between
the hours of 12· 7, closed
Tuesdays. Black &amp; tan
Kerr, tri ·colored beagle,
fou r Shephards, four
La bradors. very pretty,
speqal chocolate colored,
lovable dog, if you like
chocolale &amp; vanolla sun
daes, she'!. sweet, she
barks, w1th a great per
sonalrty You' ll love thr s
dog 992·1\260.

F1rewood for sale, $20 00
per truck load, will del iver .
Local areas onlv 992·5050.
One large upright freezer
that holds 800 pounds. One
automatic washer, Maytag
tor $200.00. Phone 698·6784.

Now At
- Pomeroy
Landmark
New Wood Burner
stoves
Only $395
plus blower
I Good M . Ward
li,tec:tric Rangt
175
1 Good used
GIS Rl(!te
$100
1 Good Usect Frigidaire
Rttrigerotor
$1541

Q,._ POME~OY
...~LANDMARK
~;;;;;;.
E. Mtln St.

Pomeroy

56--- Petsfor sate

__ _
-------- -----

Registered female 51. Ber·
nard, one &amp; one·half vears
old. $100 00. Phone 985·3597.
Pet Grooming,
most poodles groomed lor
$6.011 with bath $8,00, Flea
dipping $1 .00. All large
breeds prices vary. Call
Coolville 667·3916 for in·
formation &amp; appointment.
No Sunday work. 9 a m to 9
p m. weekly .

"

g

ser
81

lees

Home

_ __,l_,m,p,_,r_,o:_ve~m~e,n,ts,___
s &amp; G Carpel Cleaning .
Steam cleaned . Free
est1mate.
Reasonable
rates Scotchguard ·m 6309 or 742·2211
'

s
!]

,.e

.lfs
ll

Floors, ceili ngs, panelinG,
wall paneli ng, pa inting.
Phone 992·2759
82
Plumbing
_ _ _.::
&amp;:..:H
.:;e,a,t,on,.g' - --HEATING &amp; a ir con·
dltionlng ,
furnac;e
clean1ng,ptumbing. Call
992·2364 after 5 p.m ..

n

Excavattnp
DOZER work, small jobs a
specially, quick depen·
dable serv ice 742·2753 .

83

'1

Farm Equipment
FOR SALE or Trade. 1975
Massey Ferguson tractor,
1H corn picker , HA
rotavator . See Leo Morr~s
at742 2455 .
Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p·er ton . Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.
62

...... , ···•· ... "
• i. t

....

' . ,,__,,..

J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonde\1,
septic tank Installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavati ng work &amp; tran1lt
layout. 992·7201.
14

Electrlc•l

m

&amp; Refrigeration

ro

SEWING ' MACHIN,E
Repa1rs, service, all ~
makes 1 992·2284. The
Fabric ShOp, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sates
and Service . We shar.-n.
Sctssors.

118

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, fl'ons ; all small
appliances Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway·
Garage on Route 7, 9853825.

Autos for Slle
71
1971 Vega , two door,
tires, runs fine, some
Gerlach, 463 Grant Street, 1- - - - - - - - - Middleport. 992-5177 after 4 APPLIANCE SERVICE : ·
p.m.
all makes washer, dryers,
ranges, dishwasher~,
72
Trucks lor Sale
disposals. water tanks. C.. II.
Ken Young at 985·3561•
1972 Chevy three fourths before 9 a .m. or after 6
ton flatbed, ' heavy duly p.m
suspension, 350 automatic,
new tires, runs great.
Grmeral Haullnt
Askrng $450 00 992·7770 ask IS
lor Robert
AGR I-LIME Spr&amp;adlng,
limestone and flll dirt
1967 Ford pickup In fair hauling. Leo Morrls, 742·
conditrun . 742·2536.
US$.

ld

lie
be

lib
nt
n

tel
ry,

be

.
lhe

be

ectad

�..
.•.

-

-~

,

.
.
a-'l'be Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, oct. 22,'1980
,;.-

. .

In hostage situation

.Holzer Clinic ··branch will ·
be relo~ating. in· Jackson

1---

New conditions .may be added to demands

.
Party who si!S on the seveiHIIemblir
conditions for the release of the · conunlttee, said in a telephone inAmerican hostag~ in Iran may be terview with The Associated Press
.added to those outlined by Ayatollah "some more conditions may be adRuhollah Khomeini, a hardline ded" to the four basic tenns outlined
· ·member .of Iran's Parliament said .. by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
today . . '
· Last month)Chomeini said the conHe said a special committee of the ditions were the return of the late's
Parliament has finished a report on shah's fortune, a u.s. pledge not to
the 52
hostages, and the meddle in Iranian affairs, dropping
· proposed conditions for their release ·of law suits-against Iran, and release
will be presented to the.full assem- of~ billion in frozen Iranian assets.
bly on Sunday.
· Noori said the conditions proposed
B¥t All Akbar Nateq Noori, a by the panel would remain "secret"
member of the Islamic Republican until they were unveiled to the 22SBEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - New

hamper . the clinic's ability to
operate, but would aJao t"efU)t In
higher costs to pe_tienls. Daniel emphasized that the clinic his always
been satlafied with and. very ap1981.
.
.
The cllnlc's new facility in
preciative of the support given It by
Soviets
Jackson is Pl'ellently owned by Dr. the Jackson County Health
Facilltles Board In providing
Jotm Cook of Oak lllll and 1s pertially occupied by· Dr: Robert medical services to the Jackson .
Williams, who will be relocating his
County area.
practice elsewhere in the area.
"Our group regrets having to
WASHINGTON (AP)- A former
Robert E. Daniel, Holzer Clinic · leave theJenkinsCllnlc, but because
CIA officer was recruited by the Administrator, indicated that of the federal reirtrlctlona, we have
Soviet Union to obtain U.S. in- representatives of the clinic and the no recourse," Daniel added.
telligence secrets and attempted un- Jackson County -Health FacUlties
Plans for beginnina operations In
successfully to join the staff of the met la:lt Friday to discuss the Jackson will start inunedlately with '
Senate Intelligence Committee, clinic's decision to relocate its the flnsilzation of the jlurchaae of .
federal law enforeement sources operations. Daniel indicated that Dr. Cook's property there by the ·
Holzer's primary reason for leaving clinic this month. After that is comsay.
.
'
These sources, who asked not to be ·· the Jenkins facUlty was its un- pleted, the clinic will begin ordering
identified, said a wide range of ac-. willingness to accept federal restric- . equipment so that the !Jui!ding will
tivities by onMime CIA clandestine lions as required by,the Depertment be ready for petient operation as
officer David Barnett has been the of Health and Human Services.
close to the first of the year as
s.lbject of a complicat!ld FBI and
The restrictions would not only . possible.
Justice Depertment investigation
for more than a year. They said the r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;ijjjii;;;•iiiijj
Holzer Clinic Ltd. of Gallipolls
today aMOWlced that it will be

relocating its Jackson CoWlty Branch operations from the Jenkins
.Memorial Clinic facility in WeJistnn
to 25 South Street, Jackaon, in earty,

recruited

•

{Qnner CIA agent

Citizens Fall Festival to be held Thursday at the senior
center. There will be fruit and vegetables, ceramics,
cider, and a wide range of handcrafted articles for
sale. The event will go from 1 to 6 p.m.

''

. }Villiam W. Sauer, Bucyrus, forq,erly of Meigs County, died Oct. 14.
He was born Sept. 28, 1894 in
Pomeroy, a son of the late William
and Eve KQpe Sauer. He was
married May 6, 1919 in Pomeroy to
the former Ellen Elizabeth Beckie
who survives. He is also survived by
It sister, Mrs. T. H. (Florence )
F;iselstein and four nephews.

.I

' Mr. Sauer moved to .. _Bucyrus in

1919 and operated the Sauer In,U..ance Agency for 38 years. He was
,;_ ITiember of. the St. Paul
ICvangelical Lutheran Church in
Bucyrus since 1919 serving on the
Q)lurch council and as a trustee of

l\layor's Court
Three defendants forfeited bonds
and one was fined in the court of
POmeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night. Fined was Terry
Watson, Pomeroy, $50 and costs,
disorderly manner, and forfeiting
b-onds were Michael Holland,
C])arleston, W.Va., $100,leaving the
~ne of an accident; James Rake,
Athens, $31 speeding; Marion
Rayburn, Mason, $150, reckless
Operation.

the St. Paui's endowment fund. He
served in the Marine Co11&gt;s in World
War I and was a charter member of
the Col. Crawford Post 181,
American Legion.
Mr. Sauer was a life member of
the Bucyrus Historical Society, serving as trustee and past presidenL
He also belonged to the American
Red Cross Board, the YMCA,
Masonic Lodge 139,. Eastern Star
' Chapter 3, the Oakwood Cemetery
Assn. an d was a life member of the
Bucyrus Conununity Hospital Assn.
Funeral services were held at the
Wise FWteral Home on Friday, Oct.
17, and burial was in the Oakwood
Cemetery.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Nonna Evans, Portland; Ellis Myers,Middleport;
Debora Burke, Pomeroy; John
Bogard, Long Bottom; Ruth Buffington, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Lionel Boggs, Delton
Garnes, James Wyatt, John
Harrison, Ernest Roach, Oscar Imboden, Karen McDaniel.

A Gallipolis man was injured in a
one-&lt;:ar crash probed Tuesday night
by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol. ·
Lowell E. Halfhill , 35 , was northbound on SR 7 in Gallia County at
8:25 p.m. when he lost control of his
car, went off the left side of the road
and overturned, troopers said.
Halfhill was injured and was taken
by the Gallia EMS to Holzer Medical
Center, where he was treated and
released. His car was demollshed
and the patrol citedHalfhillforDWI.
The patrol also investigated a twocar crash In Meigs C~ty Tuesday

at y

•Be sure to see all
of
our
other ,
Wrangler denim
jackets and vests
and quilt lined
jackets and vests.

$2695

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Police S!lid a truck driver from Akron, Ohio
was shot and l&lt;illed by one of two holdup men late Wednesday night
when be was unable to produce his billfold.
Officers said Rodney R. Bryant, 35, of Akron was working on his
iruck with assistance from two nlen when they were accosted by two
men, one armed with a hand gmt, who demanded their billfolds.
Police said that when the holdup men were advised that Bryant
didn't lu!ve his billfold on him, one of them reportedly shouted, "shoot

•

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY

him."

ANNUAL CARNIVAL
The aMual Pomeroy Elementary
. Sl;:hool Halloween carnival will be
~d from 6 to 9:30p.m. Saturday at
,!)le school. There will be games and
refresiunents will be available.
MEETS TONIGIIT
• The Southern Local· Board of

· Educatjon will meet at 7 p.m. this
evening in the high school cafeteria.

,

.

"1

.

·--~

.. \

COLUMBUS, .Ohio - Unemployment dropped l9 462,000 in Ohio in
September, down 0.2 percent from the month before, according to the
state Bureau of Employment Services. ·
The state's tqtal employment nwnbered 4,718,000 in September,
down 0.4 percent from August, the bureau said.
Employment in Ohio's manufacturing industries climbed to
1,257,oilo in September, up 2.8 percent compared to August. That increase stemmed from automaker recalls, the bureau said.
In the state's non-manufacturing Industries, employment totaled
3,161,000 in September - up 0. 7 from the month before.

•

TO PAY FOR

Ink definitive merger -agreement
CHICAGO - The chainnen of the diversified Beatrice Foods Co.
and pork-sausage processor Bob Evans Farms Inc. have announced
the signing of a definitive agreement to merge the two firms.
The agreement was aMOWiced Wednesday by Daniel E. Evans, Bob
Evans chali-maJI and secretary, and James L. Dutt, chainnan and
chief executive officer of Beatrice.
·
The signing followed approval of the merger by the Beatrice board
of directors. The directors of the Colwnbus, Ohio-based Bob Evans
had approved the agreement on Oct ..9.

YOUR NEW J

Daily IQttery winner
CLEVELAND - The winning nwnber sele¢ted W$esday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" iS 107.

FROM

services we .offer you
and the list goes on.
Benefit from our Full-Service Bank
THE
,,..

--

CENTRAL TRUST

COMPANY
MIDDLEPORT,OH ,

en tine
FIFTEEN CENTS

Trucker killed during 'hQldup

MONTMS

Weather forecast
Jilcreasing cloudiness tonight. LoWs around 50. Rain likely Friday.
Highs in the low to mid-ells. Chance of rain 20 percent tonight and 70
percent Friday. Winds southeasterly 1().15 mph tonight.
· .,.

NOW THRU
NOV~. .30

ExtendedObloForecast- SaturdaythroughMondjly:Achanc.eof
showers Saturday. Fair SWlday and Monday. Cool,during the period.
Dally high temperatures In the 50s and nighttime lows in the 30s and
low.44Js.
.

.

· Samuel W. Spe'ck, Jr., Ohio State
. Senator. 12th district, will be the
guest speaker at the Republican
Rally Saturday, Oct. 25 In the activit)' room at the Senior CIUzens

'·

Cen\er.
· A buffet dinner will 'be served
(rom 6;30 p.m. to 7:30p.m.
Speck representa Belmont, Fairfield, Guernsey, Monroe, Morgan, ·
' Musldngwn (part), Noble, Perry,
Washington (part) Counties.
he WBII elected In November 111'18
' by nearly a~ margin. He II .
'member of the finallce committee;
hichnYB and transportation committee and cbalrinan of the state's
Unreclalmed Strip Mined Lands

60MONTHS
*ft. llU Willi M Iaiii PMIIUII
lllfD II PIWMD CIEIIII'.

.ONLY

AT

BANK'ONE~
BANK ONE OF POMEROY, NA

Pomeroy • Rutland • Tuppers "--na
(

· .

..
2..

DR. STEPHEN OOUGLAS, psychologist for Colwnbus City Police, a
psychotherapist for the Columbus Area ~!ental Health Center, was the
]\eynote speaker at the Meigs County Inservice program held Wednesday
at Meigs High School. Dr. Douglas spoke on "Teacher Stress and Burnout." The program was for all Meigs CountY Teachers.

CLASSROOM MOTIVATION was the topic used by Dr. John O'DonneU, chaimian, ·Department of Educatio!llll Administration, University
of Dayton, at the Meigs County IJ1Servlce program Wednesday at Meigs .
High School. All county teachers participated in the day-long event.

Issue .2 tax proposal back on ballot
COLUMBUS, Ohio (A~) - Issue 2,
a hotly-debated tax proposal, will
appear on the.Nov. 4 ballot after all,
following its restoration there by the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Without corrunent, the court
issued a stay order Wediiesday on a
finding made earlier this week by
the lOth District Ohio Court of Appeals. The appeals court struck the
proposed law from the ballot, saying
both it and its origin violated the
Ohio Constitution.
~ matter will be argued after .
the election, according to the
supreme court. But for now, Issue 2,
designed to shift a major portion of
the tax burden from low and middle
income to wealthy taxpayers, will go
before voters, attorneys in the case
said.

The stay order, signed by court ter it becomes IBW, u approved,
clerk Thomas Startzman, said ac- Goozner said.
"That's their right," he said.
tion on the appeals court decision
Meanwhile,
reportS from corwill remain subject "to further orporationsaround
the state which
der of this court."
have
contributed
to
the group opThe filing of briefs and other
posing
passage
of
Issue
2 continued
necessary procedural stepa ensure
that the court cannot act -on the to pour into the secretary of state's
lower court's finding until after the offioe. Candidates and commlttes
supporting issues face a 4 p.m.
election, the attorneys said.
Merrill Goozner, a spokesman for deadline today for filing pre-election
the "Yes on Two" Committee, ex- financial statements.
Neither "Ohioans for Fair
pressed satisfaction with the stay orTaxation,"
which opposes the
der. It was fair, he said, because it
proposal,
nor
the " Y~ on Two"
means the courts will not be trying
.
group
had
filed
their reports Wedto rule on the constitutionality of a
nesday.
But
more
than 130 comproposed statute.
panies
bad
submitted
individual
The Ohio Manufacturers
reports
showing
donations
ex~
Association and other groupa opposed to the Issue can challenge it af- ceeding $840,568.

Iraqi forces gain territory

One of the largest contributions,

$36,450, came from the Standard Oil

Co. (Ohio). Other top donations
carne from The Timken Co. of Canton, $25,1XXl, and Federated Depertment Stores of Cincinnati, $23,000.
Contributions of $20,000 apiece
were reported by Mead Co11&gt;. ofDayton, Anchor-Hocking Co. of Lancaster, and Champion Sperk Plug
Co. of Toledo.
·
Records at the secretary of state's
office show that at least 28 financi81
institutions also were among the
companies contributing to opponents of Issue 2. That llst includes
BancOhio National Bank in Colwnbus, $15,000; First National Bank of
Akron, fl ,000; and First National
Bank of Cincinnati, $6,000.

.

Heavy fighting reported in co~,~flict

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iran
and Abadan, leaving heavy the Sheik Bedair area, and that an the invaders withdraw from Iranian
Iraqi gWtboat attacked and sank an territory.
said Its forces beat back more Iraqi , casualties.
Today was the 355th day in capattempts to penetrate into Abadan, ·
Iran also reported that the Iranian supply ahip at Khor Mousa,
tivity
for the 52 A,merica'\ hostages
but It admitted enemy gains in
Amaniye neighborhood of Ahwaz 20 miles southwest of Bandarin
Iran,
and a flurry of reports from
neighboring Khorramshahr and said
was under Iraqi tank fire but said Shahpur.
Tehran
raised speculation that the
Iraqi Defense Minister Adnan
Iraqi tank fire liad reached Ahwaz,
Iranian artillery batteries were
revolutionary
govenunent was get- ' ·
a 160 acre fann in Adams .Township, the capital of oil-rich Khuzistan
pounding Iraqi positions near Ker- '!{bairallah satd his forces have " enling
ready
to
free
them. Carter adGuernsey County, New Concord, Province 70 miles to the north.
tered" sill Iranian cities since the inmanshah 230 miles to the northwest
.
ministration
officials
were ex,Ohio.
Iran's official Pars ne~ agency
and 50 miles east of the Iraqt border, vasion began Sept. 22 and captured
,
tremely
cautious
but
hopeful.
reported heavy figbting Wednesday
and that Iranian jets bombed the about 8,000 squa~ miles of Iranian
territory, about the area of New Jerto the east and SOUth of Abadan, inIraqi capital of Baghda~The optimism stemnied mm
sey.
·
cluding a battle ,at the bridge over
statements
Wednesday by two
The U.N. Security Council
the Balunanshlr River, gateway to
Iraq said its M!Gs.also went into
leaders
of
the Majlis, Iran's
· the refinery city on Vte disputed
action hitting a rail tenninal south scheduled its fifth meeting on the
parliament,
indicating
that It would
Shatt al-Arab waterway that flows
of Ahwaz, oll depots in Masjed war for this afternoon. But Irallian
inlothe Persian Gulf.
Soleyman 50 miles northeast of Ah- Prime Minister Mobarnrnad All agree this weekend to release the
. But it said the Iranians held off
waz and a petrochemical plant near Rajai, who addressed the coWtcil hostages if the United States mel the
renewed tank assaults on-the bridge,
the Iranian oil port of Bandar- la:lt week, reiterated in a Tehran four conditions set by Ayatollah
Radio broadcast that Iran will n~ Ruhollah Khomeini, and a statement
11111 Tehran Radio said: " The Shahpur, 20 miles east of Abadan.
It said Iraqi ground forces blew up negotiate with any i!ttemational by Rajai tl)at Washington appeara
Iranian forces are ready to defend
their trenches with .the la:lt dfotl of _ oil pipelines between Abadan and group or discusa a cease-fire Willi ready to meet those conditions.
their blood."
It said Abadan came wider fierce
artjlJery and tank shelling again
"
Wednelday evening.
Iran conceded, however, that
Iraqi unltll In the port of Khorramshahr, 10 miles northwest of
be secured tram Mrs. Muriel
The annual election of the Meigs Wllllam Radford of the Rock Springa can
Abadan, had captured the prison
Bradford,
fair board secretary. ·
area has als&lt;i filed a peUtlon as a
11111 a brid&amp;e in the middle ¢ .the · COWlty Fair Board has been set for , candidate for the board.
Pelltlona
of
caridld8cy must be
city', conflnning reports made Nov. 3 from 5 to 9 p.m. in the Meigs
signed
by
10
memberS of· the
Residents are eligible to rWl for a ·
· CoWtty EXtension Service Office,
~ btthelnvaders.
agricultural
society
and must be
seat on the board if they have-been a
It lllld the defenders were fighting Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy.
Incumbents running for reelection memlier of the Meil!ll CoWlty returned to Mrs. Bradford at 1eut
the Irlqil frGIII bawle9, trenches and
Agricultural Society for at least 14 aeven days befon the Nov. 3 elecband IAI blnd,.llld that Iranian wal\' are Lucille Leifheit, David Koblentz , days before the election. A pet!Uon tion. Mrs. Bradford can be reached
planes bombed Inql positions on the Gerald Dou~las and Hugh Custer.
,&gt;
bypboneat lle#Tt
perimeters of both Khorratnshahr
Senator Speck

_Speck named speaker

FINANCE YOUR
NEW CAR FOR

are all part of the

ol

BOLIVAR, Ohio - Five Tuscarawas Valley High Sch'ool students
were killed when their car collided with a tractor trailer in front of the
school Wednesday, the state Highway Patr~l said•.
Troopers identified the victims, all from Bolivar, as Janlie Scotl,
Terrie Winovich, Hope Fisher and Renee Smith, all 16, and Debbie
Franks,l4. .
,
' All were members of the school's volleyball team.
The driver of the truck was slightly injured.

Omo ·UnemplQyment shQws decline

•Regular
savings
•Certificates
of Deposiis
•Checking
Accounts
•Farm Loans
•Auto Loans
•Home
Improvement
Loans
• Personal Loans
•Business Loans
•Christmas Clubs
•Home Mortgages
•Bank By Mail
•24 Hour Depository
• Di'rect-beposit of
social security Checks
•Drive-In Banking .
•Travelers Checks

Asked what would happen to the
hostages if the U.S. government
found the conditloqs unacceptable,
Nool'i -said, "Our. first daclsion -will--·
beputinforce,thequestlonoftrtal."
.- All . Akbar Parvai"e$, · anOther .
member the corrunlttee, told The
Associated Press Wednesday the
hostages would not be put on trial if
the Parliament approved the committee plan. Prime Minister
Mohanunad Ali Rajai tl)ld The AP
earlier this week trial was a
"remote" possibility.
•

Five teenagers die in accident

~

:::Five defendants forfeited bonds
and eight others were fined in the
i:purt of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoff!pan Tuesday night.
-· Forfeiting were Keith E.· French,
Mtddleport; Burlin Mullins, Florida,
•rid Montie Hart, Racine, $350 each
¥» posted on charges of driving
lirhile intoxicated; Curtis A. Ramey,
.Rio Grande, $25, spinning tires, and
noctney Pierce, Long Bottom, $100,
disorderly manner.
· ·Filled were Dale Herman, Middleport, $225 and costs and three
Clays in jail, driving while intoxicated, and $25 and costs, no
operator's li cense;
Jonny
Pridemore, Rutland, $225 and costs
"1IPd three days in jail, driving while
l!ltoxicated; Walter Ellis,Rutland,
j22 and costs, speeding; Patricia
' McCarty, Middleport, $25 and costs,
• ~xpired license tags; William
Walters, Middleport, $10 and costs,
ftumtng a stop sign; Larry Lewis,
Middleport, $1110 and costs, disorderly manner; Billy Lewis, ~id­
l!leport, $1110 and costs, fleeing a
C JI!I.lice officer, and $100 and costs,
• resisting arrest; Clarence Potts,
~ -Middleport, $1110 and costs, elisor. • "ilerly manner; $200 and costs,
: resisting arrest, and J300 and costs
and 20 days in jail on a charge of
:'assaulting a police officer.

·

.......

,------------1-----------------:-----:----

Three runs were made · by
emergency units on Tuesday, the
Meigs Emergency Medical Service
reports. At 10:47 p.m., the Middleport Unit took Carl Still from
Hudson St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 9:31p.m., the Syracuse
Unit took Ruth Buffington from New
St., Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, and at 8:17 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Mrs. Molden
from Oak St. to Holzer Medical Center.

"It is not enough to just say, ~we
accept.' because our conditions are
put in a special way that will be
known later," -he said. ''U the
(United States) acls in one minute
then we will ~ree them the next
moment."
"What 1 mean by acting is to
remove barriers, 'for example, the
transfer of the l!hah's wealth to some
other place so that we can .deliver,"
said Noori, who · was reached
through the Iranian Parliament's
switchboard in Tehran.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO THURSDAY1 OCTOBER 23, 1980

VOL 31 NO. 135

·•Western style
snap front pile lin·
eel for warmth, cor duroy collar, navy
blue denim. Sizes
36 to46.

afternoon.
According-to the report_!lJ ymond
A. Norris, 28,. Albimy, •v1·.s southbound on Scipio Twp. Rd. ;;J8 at 4:15
P.ni. when his car collided with a
northbound car driven IIY Theron D.
Durham, 34, Pomeroy.
Troopers said both cars met on a
curve and struck each other head on.
Damage was severe to Norris' car
and moderate to the Durham auto.
There were no injuries and no
citations.

Emergency squad runs

member assembly on Sunday, the Parliament, he said.
hostages' 358thday in captivity.
He added it "wont take more than
Asked if the United States was one week" for the first round of
Uke!y to a~pt the conditions, he debate but that more roWlds may be
said, '' Maybe not -now that some ·necessary if the full assembly refers
more .will be added, for- the con- · the repOrt back to corrunittee f.or furdltions may not be limited to the four ther study or changes: ·· ·
·
conditions" of Khomeini.
Noori, who lll!llded the special
I;lespite some optimistic predic- collrts thattried suspected members
lions that the issue could be solved in ' of the undergroWtd . anti-clerical
a matter of days, Noori suggested group known as Forghan; said more
the whole proceSs may be time- time might be consumed while the
cOnsuming.
U.S. govenunent considers the con"11 IS Wlpredictable because ditions.
opinions vary in the Majlis," or

Pile Lined Denim
Jacket

'Man irijtlred in accident .

Area deaths
William W. Sauer

FBI and Justice Department officials declined ·to comment on the
case, but it was understood that the
government and Barnett's lawyer
had reached an agreement that Barnett would plead to charges to be
brought by a federal grand jury. It
could not be learned exactly .what
charges the government planned to
bring as part of the deal.
One government source said Barnett's alleged instructions from the
Soviets were to penetrate the U.S. ·intelligence conununity and that he
was not limited to the legislative
branch.

'

•

E
. LBERFEL-.....

~~~u:~:k~ lik~ly to bear fruit

.
FALL FESTIVAL - Grace Holter, left, and Alma
. Woods are pictured with only a part of the wide range
of articles to be sold at the annual Meigs County Senior

v.s.

.

Boud.

',

u ... ...,
·'

·He graduated sUIIIIIIII cum laude
frun Muallingum College where he
Wll premdent of the llludeRt body
11111 jnaldent of the Weliey group. .
He graduated from Harvard
. Unlverllty, M.A. IIIJd Ph. D., end
. , 11p1111 1 ,._. In Africa 11 Rotary.
Fellow and apent a II8COIId year In
Africl1111 Pb. D. Beld ~
Spedr IIIII JU wile, the hforii'IJDIJMI!r
m.. Jlllie Andenan, haft two
10111, Sani 11111 Derek, end reside on.

.

Fairhoard election slated .Nov. 3

~

...

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                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
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