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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.

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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
,,..

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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.
.

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· 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
(

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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.

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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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�. 2-Tbe ~Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, o:, Thursday, October 23, 19M
3-The Dally Sentinel. Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, October 23, 19110

Opinions &amp;
Comments·

,.

Bruised Eagles ready
for Ji'riday~s contest
•

THE DAILY SEN'T[NEL
!USpS 141-11111

DEVOTED TO n!E

· t'

,

-·

··.-

INTD!ESTOF

MEIGS-MABON AREA
Lden of ootaloatre ~med. Tttey •MWd ~lett &amp;baa !00 wont. leuR (or subject to milieU. by die editor) ud must be slped~wltb tiM: i i&amp;Mf'• addrul. N•mn m~y be wltbdd upoa
pablbdola. However; 011. raptetl. u.mee wW M dilde~~td . l..e~n sbotllll be Ia tood &amp;ule, td-

..

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·
Publilber
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Geoeral Mer. a City Editor
Robert Hodllcb
Ntw1 Editor

Adv.Ma~a&amp;er

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"""T""i r-T""'8!!! d·~

Oak RoiJlieb. Jr.
Corle•.. •

L-

:Catholic educators~ "'- .
.applaud Reagan JJ
l.1NCINNATI (AP) - The applause from Roman Catholic
educators was long and loud as
Ronald Reagan voiced support of
tuition tax 'credits for parents of
parochial students.
The Republican presidential ..
nominee told about 300 delegates to a
meeting of the Chief Administrators
of Catholic Education on Monday
that President Carter had reneged
on a promise to them four years ago
to fight for tuition tax credits.
"Not only did Mr. Carter refuse to
hl!lp parents, he played a major role
in defeating the tuition tax credit bill
when it was before the Senate,"
Reagan said. "I support a system of
tuition tax credits because I believe
such a sysiem is the best way to
strengthen the right of parents to
&lt;lecidethe
education of their children. "
His address was interrupted six
times by applause, three times
following remarks about the tax
credit issue.
Reagan also hit out .at what he
called harassment of private schools
by the Internal Revenue Service.
"I can tell you that Wider a
Reagan administration, the IRS and
every other agency or department of
government are going to get out of
the business of harassing parents
and children and start once again to
serve them," the fonner California

governor said.
According to Reagan, those
providing non-public education - including Catholic administrators are at the .heart of the traditional
concept of American leadership.
"In recognition of th ese
achievements, I pledge an increased
role for non-public schools in for·
mulation of national educational
policy," he said. "I believe in ~nd
have always supported a dual
system of public and non-pubilc
education. They should not be
viewed as adversaries, but rather as
complimentary parts of the
American educational enterprise. A
free pluralistic society needs both."
Response from many of the
Catholic administrators was
positive.
"I thought it was a low-key presentation of points of real interest to
Catholic educators," said Dan Kane,
publ.ic relations spokesman for the
Roman Catholic Archodiocese of
Cincinnati. "They're interested in
what he has to say."
Reagan kept the convention
delegates waiting for about 30
minutes as he held an airport con·
ference with fonner Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger and other topranking Republicanil . regarding
SALT U talks. He was greeted at the
airport by abOut 500 people in a rally
organized by Teamsters ~ftllOO.

Jimmy's a baseball fan too
.•

..' ..
'.

WASHINGTON (AP) - If there was any doubt that President Carter is
a baSeball fan, he proved it Sunday night during the World Series.
He was scheduled to leave the White House at 7:15p.m. to address a
1WJd-raising dinner at a Washington hotel. But at 7: 15; the game between
the Kansas City Royals and the 'Philadelphia Phillies was in the ninth inning.
The president's motorcade waited in the driveway. Five minutes
passed. Ten minutes passed. Still no sign of the president.
Finally, the last out was made. Within a minute, Secret Service agents
trotted out of the White House,.accompanied by several Carter aides who
were traveling with the president to the dinner.
One minute later, Carter came out and the motorcade sped off.

.'

.'

".

The dinner was a routine black tie gala. But the early segment - at
which Carter spoke - was beld in a basement exhibition ball. Shimmering silver foil was set up to mask the supporting pillars, but no effort
was made to patch up tape holding insulation to pipes on the ceiling.
The chief beneficiary was Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, whom Carter was
helping to pay off debts piled up when the two opposed each other in the
Democratic primary campaign. That was Carter's present to Kennedy.
But the senator also gave Carter a gift.
When the two men met last August at the Democratic National Convention, no matter how much Carter seemed to chase Kennedy around
the podium, he couldn't get the senator to join hands with him, ann.s aloft,
in a victory salute.
•
.
But SWidaY night, Kennedy obliged and the president could not hide his
pleasure. An open microphone picked up his laughter and broadcast it
through the hall.
•
'

The next day, the president again latched onto Kennedy's coattails, so
to speak, wheiiJIIe~ed together at a campaign stop at the Concord
Baptist Church in
.edford-Stuyvesant section of Brooldyn, N.Y.
·
In almost every
paign stop in New York City, the president has
been accompanied by Mayor Edward Koch. But Koch was nowhere to be
seen at the church, in a neighborhood where the mayor is not well-liked.
His disappearing act raised some eyebrows.
The mayor made waves last week when he was a friendly host to
Ronald Reagan. Asked on Monday why the mayor was not at Carter's
side at the church, Rep. Charles Rangel, a Carter supporter in New York
said: "Is Reagan still in town? Maybe that's why he's not here."

fierry's World

.

•:
;.•

" Why do I always get stuck in a 'No Passing'
zone bBhlnd an old Volkswagen doing 20 miles
an hour UNDER the speed //mit - with a 'NO
NUKES' sticker?"

.• . ' - - - - _ . , . . ; - . . . ; . __ _ _ _ _ _...;..J

•
I

I .

BY SCO'JTWOLFE
EAST MEIGS - In late .August
preceding the pren\ler of the '1980
grid season an enthusiastic Buddy
Moore, head coach ofthe Eastern
Eagles said the SVAC football race
would be "very w~ balanced'.' and
would go right down to the wire.
Well, eight games later, his
statement bolds very true.
With three league contests under
their belts, Coach Moore's Eagles
are sharing the number one spot
with three Ga111a county foes, Han·
· .. nan Trace, Southwestern, and North
Gallia. All four own 2-1 SVAC marks.
How's that for 'balance!''
Kyger Creek, another late
blossoming contender still has an
outside chance of shariiig the crown.
Meanwhile, Southern, the league's
sleeper may awaken to play the role
of "spoiler" with only two weeks
remaining.
.
This week Eastern reswnes the
hunt by facing co-leader North
I Galful on the la~r's home turf.
Speaking Of "turf," the local Eagles
have had their share of tou~h luck on
1

Ohio Supreme Court
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - state
Issue 2 has survived a barrage of
legal challenges in its almost twoyear life, but it must clear a final
hurdle in the Ohio Supreme Court if
it is to go before voters Nov. 4.
Secretary o~ State Anthony J.
Celebrezze Jr. and the conunittee
backing the proposed tax revision
law have asked the high court · to
delay implementation Of a state appeals court order removing the
question from the ballot.
If the seven-member high court
grants their request, voters would be
able to cast ballots on the issue as
s~lieduled. But certification of the
results would be postponed Wltil an
appeal on the merits Of the case is
decided, Celebrezze said.
The last-minute confusion arose
when the stale loth District Court of

Appeals, ruling in a case brought by
opponents Of the propoSal, ordered
the issue off the ballot because part
of it was unconstitutional.
·
Issue 2, a comprehensive revision
of Ohio tax law proposed by
initiative petition, is designed to
provide relief for low·and moderateincome homeowners, renters and
family fanners. But it boosts t!txes
for high wage earners and corporationS.
In ruling against the issue 2-ID-1
Tuesday, the appeals court said thE\
measure violates
constitutional
ban on such procedures.
"The Ohio Constitution directly
prohibits liSe of initiative to classify
real property for the purpose ol.
levying different rates Of taxation,"
the majority , opinion said. "The
proposed ini!lative law, in practice

a

·wm decide issue

and in reality, taxes real property
differently for homeowners and renters who have incomes Of less than
$30,000."

In their tequestfor a stay of the or·
der, however, attorneys for
Celebrezze and backers Of the plan
said it does not constitute a
classification.
Celebrezze said his actloo steml!led from concern about the
logistical problems looming as a
result of the ruling.
·
"My concern is strictly on the
procedural_!!ide," he said. "I take no
stand on the merits of the issue."
According to the secretary Of
slate's motion, tl1f public interest
will suffer irreparable injury if the
stay Is not granted iriunediately.
"The election Is now in progress,"
the motion said. "Absentee ballots

are presently l)eing cast at the boal'
ds Of electlonll. Approximawly :/Al,OOO
absentee ballots will be cast at the
boards bet~ now and the election."
The motion also said granting the
stay would have no adverse effects
on opponents of the plan.
. "They will suffer no hann unless
and until Issue 2 Is ndopted by the
electoril and is about to be Implemented against them," · the
motion said. "TI!ere is.no need to
deprive the electorate of their reser·
ved 'power of initiative in order to
protect theif interest."
celebrezze favors deciding the
constitutionality of the issue after
the electiOn and not before. But
MaryLynn Cappelletti, a co-chair of
the "Yes On Two-Ohio Fair Tax
IintiaUve Committee," disagrees.

...

Catholic Church bishops 'ending work
on sexuality, contraception document
VATICAN CITY (AP )· The
Roman Catholic synod of bishops is
completing work on a document on
sexuality, contraception and family
planning. But it " won't be sensational," says one Of the bishops.
The 216 bishops attending Pope
John Paul II's month-long synod on
family issues, which Is expected to
end next week, voted Tuesday on a
draft of the document calling for "a
much deeper study of sexuality." ·
It also el!pressed a need to offer
"pastoral concern" for couples wbo
defy the church's ban on contraception. 'American bishops and
others from Western and Third
World coWJtries who pressed for its
inclusion said this meant giving
sympathy and guidance in coun·
seling and in confession to Catholics
· who don't follow the church's
• te!'.cl.\i!Jg.
.

During the voting, some of the
bishops submitted amendments to
the draft. A conunittee will incorporate these in the final drllft,
which will be voted on later this
week. The document will then be
presented to the pope for his consideration in deterMining future
church policies. But it will not be
binding on him.
·
No bishop has challenged Pope
Paul VI's 1968 encyclical Hwnanae
Vitae, which reiterated the church's .
opposition to all fonns of birth control except the rhytlun methll!l Of
sexual abstinence.
"There was no de~nd for any
kind of change in the doctrine," Car·
dina1 Tomas 0 Fialch, the Irish
primate, told a news conference as
be gave a brief outline of the secret
·draft document.

Kissinger feels
C:LEVELAND (AP) - Fonner
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
says mounting crises stenuning
from the Carter administration's
Persian Gulf policy threaten peace.
"By some weird and, I mUBt Say,
cynical turn, this campaign has tur·
ned into the issue'O! peace' and war.
\Y}1o can be trusted. to keep the
peace?'' be said at a fund-raialng
dinner Tuesday night.
Kissinger, who arrived in
Cleveland from Ottawa, Canada,.
' referred to President Carter's
recent assertions that GOP nomlilee
Ronald Reagan might not keep
peace, if elected.
"The danger Of war Is not in the
rash act Of an indi~idual," Kissinger
said. "Any president will try to be
prudent. The dallger ol. war is when
there is a constant acceleration Of

But "there were two big
Archbishop Jolm R. Quinn or San
proposals," be said: "first, that a Francisco, speaking for the
much deeper study of selWlllity was American delegation, called early in
required ;· second, that many Of the the synod for "a con\pletety honest
bishops were concerned about a • examination" Of the contraception
pastoral application of the teaching issue. He cited a Princeton Univer. that exists."
sity .study wltich foWld that 76.5 per·
Other synod sources said the cent of American Catholic women
document also calls for a study Of used birth control methods banned
·the problem of divorced Catholics by the church and only 29 percent of
wbo remarry .and want to receive American Catholic priesta believe
the sacraments, a practice bimned contraception Is immoral.
by the church, and calls for a
Cardinal Pericle Fellci, the Italian
redistribution Of the world's wealth.
prefect Of the Vatican's Supreme
The document "won't be sen- Tribunal and a leading con·
sational," Archbishop Dennot Ryan servative, replied that "there Ia no
of Dublin told a press conference.
need of rediscu.sslng it, no need to
"What the synod can do in four pay attention to statlstlca because
weeks is really very litUe," Ar· statlstica don't !lignify anything. The
chbishop Joseph L. Bernadin Of Cin· encyclical is Closed." But other
cinnati said last week. "All we can bishops eontinued to press for a
do is reflect on the problem."
sem:chlng dialosue.

p~licies

revolutions in Afghaniatan prior to
the Soviets' invasion.. He also
referred to the coUapse of Ii "proAmerican government in Iran and
now a war between Iraq and Iran."
Kissinger blamed the rash Of
crises on inexperienced
congressmen. The lawmakers undermined foreign policy efforts
established under the two administrations he'dRrVed, bi said.
· Iraq a'nd Iran are "two countries
hostile to the United States" which
are competing for dominance in the
Persian Gulf and the Middle East,
Kissinger said.
"Ar!d we're in the position that
· there's speculation that in order to
have 52 hostages - illegaUy
detained - released, we should offer
military support and spare parts to a
country that has delcribed uau the
crisis ... "
Great Satan," he Ald.
Speaking at a $150-a-plaw dinner
Kissinger ferrained fnm offering
for the congressional candidacy of an alternative course when
J~e J~h J. NaMa, ~g~
questioned by repolten. But he Aid
said constant Soviet aggression has the cwTent llituti• 111 'ltbll type o1.
occured in Africa, Asia and the Mid- cri.U that threa!AIII the peliee.I!
dle East since 1977, wh8ll Carter · The Iranian-Iraqi war alao
took office.
threatena dally pnDJctlon Of some 9
Kissinger, who served during the million •rre~a til all froin the two
Nixon and Ford administrations, nati0111, booltl all prices, creates incited two inv&amp;sions ol. Zaire by Com- stability 1111011g moderate Middle
munist forces,. Cuban lnflltration In East atatel and lhreatena 11n1e11
Ethiopia, Soviet moves In South I:a~t with other 'Arab
Yemen and t,..o Communist nations, he Aid.

hurt peace

A riew administration Is needed to ·doesn't agree with Sen. Edward
ahow "there ill a reward in being Kennoor, D-~.
.
America's friend and a penalty in
"(But) I bave to agree with hi8
being its enemy," be a&amp;ld.
.statement that a man lhould not be
In Ohio for the second time In two elected because he Will standing
days campaigning for the Reagan there when hi8 foreign policy collapticket, Kissinger said be usually ;sed around him,'' ~said.

Today

-in history• ••

.. . -Today ·is- Thur.iday, Oci.' 23, tiie
Ten pears ago:' ~dent Nixon .
297th day Of 1980. There are 89 days addressed the 25th anniversary
left in the year.
session Of the U.N. General AiseJn. ·
.Today's highlight in history:
bly, calling on the Soviet Union to
On Oct. 23, 1917, U.S. troops saw maintain peaceful relations with the
their first action in World War I near United states.
"
Luneville, France.
Five years ago : Spain!i
OnthiBdaw:
Generalissimo Francisco Fl'llld
In 1596, Turks under Moluunmed
sufferect a sudden relaJlle Of Ill '
· ill defeated Austrian Arcllduke
heart aibnent; he died nearly OJt
Maxim1111an's forces near Erlau, : month later.
•
Hilngary.
•

unfamiliar· grounds, recording onJy Will have ·to establish a better run·
one win against three losses on the nlng game than we have had the past
road;
.two weeks in or"r to be sueOn other other side, however, the Ce8$ful.".The localS hope to go into
past record may prove to be a plus the game running better in order to
for the Meigs Countians If the "law inlx up .J:\Ishes with the "fatal"
of averages" catch up with them. At aerial attack that sparked last
home the Eagles have been "solid" week's triumph.
winners. After last week's big vicContaining .North Gallia's running
tory over Hannan ').'race, a perfect game will be the key to stopping the
home recoril was left intact.
Pirates. The, Pirate crew has conIn !he past, both clubs have proven trolled each game with i~ sucCfSl!ful
to be potentially darlgerous offellBive ground attack, but as an added .
Uu'eats · and have put . together weapon quarterback Don Shupe carl
devastating defensive surges.
add another dimension to the of·
Coming off last week's IU victory fensive punch. Shullf is an accurate
over Hannan Trace, Eastern passer and proven playnlalter.
definitely has a lot of momentwn
Charlie Lookadoo and Turk Payne
going into thi8 key battle. Last make up a quick backfield. This duo
week's victory, however; left both accounts for much of the Pirates'
clubs in less than healthy shape. The total offense.
grueling contest certainly took its
Overall, the Pirates are talented,
toll.
highly skilled, and have good team
Several Eagles were hampered iiJ. experience.
·
eluding fullback Dennis Durst, who
The Eagles will be going with the
is a doubtful starter. Greg Wigal will bread and butter plays that got them
return at quarterback, Jolm Riebel where they are right now, even
will return at tailback, and Mike though they won 't be reluctant to
Bissell at winghack.
take advantage of a turnover or two.
According to Coach Moore, ''We lGametimeis8p.m.

.. .

.f
Richard Bearhs

.

Todd Northon
5-10,14lllbs.

Junior Back

nevertheless they hope to whirl-up a
stonn at Hannan Trace Friday
ni ght.
Despite a loss Southern played a
good game against Southwestern
and showed signs of getting Untracked.
·
Although the Tornado offense
sputtered on occasion, the defense
molded into 'solid fonn and held
fleetfooted Scott Russell to just 51
yards on the night.
C~oaches Mlck Winebrenner and
Howie Caldwell will .be going with

the same line-up with the possibility
of some shuffling a bit to acc6Wit for
some question marks.
John Porte_r will again repl~ce
Dale Teaford at quarterback. The
young playmaker has been doing a
super job'when called upon, handing
off very well and passing just as ef·
ficiently when given enough time ..
Robin FortWie is still a question
mark at tailbatk, although Danny
Talbott and Terry McNickle are
available. Terry Patterson will
resume his position at full hack.
Southern has been tenned by
many as a possible "spoiler."
Meanwhile, Hannan Trace has
just lost one game last .week at
Eastern. TMloss was the iirst one in
20 decisions for the Gallians.
·
Todd Sibley, the league's leading
1115her and scorer, will lead the
Wildcat attack against Southern.
Quarterback Greg Webb has also
been making a name for himself of
late. Besides churning out large
chunks of yardage on the ground this
duo also likes to connect from the
air . . Tim Murphy com~lements
Sibley, in ths Hannan Trace back·
field and is a fine runner.

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED

IN SYRACUSE

·--..

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Buckeyes. heavy ·favorites
Madison; Wis.(AP) - Wisconsin
fans again are bracing for the
Badgers' football clash with Ohio
State.
The nation's loth ranked Buckeyes
are heavily favored to booSt their'
winning streak over Wisconsin to 22
in a row in the Big Ten contest in
• Camp Randall Stadlwn Saturday.
A generation ol. Badger fans, and
: no membel'll of the 191111 squad, can
· recall the game at Madison In 1959
~· when Coach Milt Bruhn's Wisconsin
• team whipped Ohio State 12-'1.
Wiaconaln reserve quarterback .
Kevin Moll, a senior, waa 6 days ·Old
on that October day. Junior split·end
Stracka wu a month old. Badger
qliarterback John JOBien wasn't
born unW a year larer.
Asked about the attitude of the
· ~ ult prepared for Ohio Slaw, a
fan cloie to the UW front office said,

BETWEEN 8:30 and 5:00

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KINGssU8Y

992-2156

Casey Kasem

· "I think the less they dwell on that 45 of 83 passes for 718 yards.
WMPO
"Schlichter is so difficult to stop,"
losing streak the better. They didn't
know before last week that they Wisconsin Coach Dave McClain
SATURDAYS
hadn't won In 22 years at Michigan said, "and Murray probably will be
the. best back we've faced thus far
State."
8 til Noon
t
Wisconsin's 17~7 upset of Michigan this year."
State at East Lansing boosted the ,........,.---------L----=--------1
Badgers to 1·2 in Big Ten play and 24 overall.
Ohio State, fresh from 27·17 victory over Indiana, Is $-1 oo the
aeason and U in the conference. The
Buckeyes !Iring a league-ieading
rushing average of 295.8 yarda per
game into the Wlsconsin game.
The Badgers' 106.2 rushing defefi.
se, best In the C9Dference, figures to
be severely tested by quarterback ·
Art Schlichter and tailback Calvin
Murray.
•
•
' Schlichwr ~ accoWited for 991
yai-ds total offense,·ruahlng fot 273
yardB on 71 carries and completing

MODULAR
.HOMES

.

·

' \·

PJULADELPillA (AP) - The Division lead most of the season. "That includes scouts, front office
Philadelphia Phillies will never be The Phillies clinched the pennant in people and everybody connected
the same. They need never again their last series of the season in Mon- with the organization.
wear the label "chokers" because, treal.
"I've been a Phillie for 25 years,
"They talked about the smug, and I know what a special feeling it
finally, they wear the label "World
overpaid Phillies," Mike Sclunidt, is. We've all wailed a long time for
ChampiOIJil."
"For a long time we carried that the Series' Most Valuable Player, this," said Green, who .took over as
label as chokers," Phils shortstop said. "They said the Phillies don't Phllil manager last summer from
WedDHd&amp;y'oSpoi'IITraDBacUooa
Larry Bowa complained. "People put out. I just hope now that we get Danny Ozark. " It finally came down .
BASKETBALL
said we choked, but there wasn't a the credit as a team we deserve.
to the players getting together and
Nation~l BaoketbaU A""ciatioo
, ding it OUt. u
NEW JERSEY
NETS- Waived T~:~ t~
''I want to make a point. People gnn
guy on this team that choked.
Annstrong, guard.
Alffiost forgotten in the revelry
Women'• Professional Bastelball Lugut
"All of the problems we had were claimed this was a dull World
CHICAGO
HUSTLE- Waiv•d
Peggy
the same as everybody else, the Series," Schmidt said. "Well, over Philadelphia's victory were the Conover,
Famie Gay, and Geffrie H~r .
same problems that Kansas City maybe after our playoff series with obstacles the Royals had overcome Released Michele Wrtght, Marlo Elliott,
and Marsha Flager.
had, the siune problems every team Houston, it seemed like it, but you t0 get t0 the Se res.
I
MINNESOTA FILLIES- Wa ived Debra
11
In their 12 years in Kansas City,
Mason. Released Usa Thomas and Diane
has," Bowa said. With this team, ' can't see better baseball in a World
MoraiH . Announced that Kathy DeBoer,
Series, better pitching or hitting. the RoyaIs had never rnade the Fall Sqe
though, everything is magnifi,ed.''
Wahl-Bye and Nan cy WeUen retired .
The Phlllles were born in 1883, one There was no sloppy baseball in this Finale, losing three consecutive
FOOTBALL
.
NaUoaal Football League
·' ri b&amp;seball's original franchises. Un- Series, and anybody who says this years t o th e New York Yankees 10
GREEN BA v PACKERS-Placed John
• til 1980, they had been in only two was a dull World Series ought to the playoffs (1976-77·7.8) . This year, l'hompson. Ughi end, on lhe lnjW'ed "'
however, they beat ••·
Yankees serve
Jlsi. Signed John Lorson, Ughl end .
·
World Series, 1915 and 1950, but they have his bead examined."
un::
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS-Waived MelOn
Wednesday,
the
city
of
three straight to earn the right to Yin Morgan, com ,.back.
had never won. In 1941, the Phillles
lost 111 games for a .279 winiling per· Philade,lphia turned out en masse t9 . represent the American League in . La~MP~uct!~Ywid:u~~~~RS-Waived ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;~
·
c...diaDFootboULeague
I
centage. In 1961, they set a major pay Jhbrnage to their Phillies. The baseball's77thWorldSeries.
"Feeli.na•
are
hard
to
e.h..ress,"
TORONTO
ARGONAUTS-Signt!d . Je· "
league record by losing 23 con- team and Manager Dallas Green
0""
""Y
rome King, defensive back.
• were toasted .in a parade along Royals All-Star George Brett "said . . - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - i
secutive games.
In 1980, however, all those years Broad Street from Center City to "I can forget losing in the playoffs,
were forgotten - as Bowa said, "We Veteran's Stadium. Many fans had but I will never forget this. Losing
stayed up all night, cheering in the the playoffs already is forgotten.
had some ghosts to put to sleep" streets
and savoring that fllOment of
"The World Series is something
and with their 4-1 victory TueSday
glory
they
had awaited for so long.
night over Kansas City in Game Six,
I'll tell my grandchildren about," he
"So many people in this said. "I won't tell them I played in a:
the Phlllles claimed their first World
organization
have worked very hard playoff. When they ask who won the
-. Series tiUe.
and
waited
so
long," Green said. World Series, I'll tell them we lost
"Franldy, !thought it was going to
be the same old thing until August,"
the first ooe, but we won the
second.' '
Bowa said. "I'm the first to admit,
·. we didn't play good baseball, of·
Brett was asked if the fans of Kanfenslvely or defensively."
. sas City would be disappOinted.
In August, the Phillies fina!ly
"Sure, they're disappointed," he
overt~~Qk the Montreal EipoS and
said, "but I think when we beat the
Yankees, · it was like winning the
Pittsburgh Pirates, who had ex·
CALL
World Series for our town."
changed the Natiolllll League's East

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in northern Jordm

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Southern hopes to play 'spoiler'

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Gennany.
.
'l'houeht for today: Fortune lavon~
· In lrT1, a U.S.-owned pipeline
the audlleiOIII - Erlaul, Datdl
Cl8IT1Ing oil fl'CIIJI Bllldl Arallla to . IICholar (about 1-1131) - . .
~.
Medlleminean wu cut and let afire

Allen Jacks
5-9, 155lbs.
Freshman Tackle

5-9, 160 lbs.
Senior End

BY·SCOIT WOLFE
RACINE - Last week both
Southern and Hannan Trace were in·
volved in key SVAC battles. This
week.the league war continues with
Hannan Trace still sharing the lead
in the SVAC grid standings, while
Southern comes off a well-played
game against Southwestern,
remains winless in the .league.
Hannlm Trace is 7·1 overall and 2·1
in league play. Southern is 2-ll and ~
3 in the SV AC.
Again the Tornadoes are ham·
pered with serious injuries, but

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· In 11142; Briialn'i Eilbth Anny u;.·
tacbd Axis forces to becln the Bat· Iran entered New York
eaneer lelia. ·
Ue ri El Alameln Ill El1)lt dartnc
·. Today'a blrthdaya:
. .
'World Warn.
Johnny
Canon
Ia
1111.
~
;
In 1914, Brtt8in, France, the
Sen.
John
Heinz
Ia
G.
A~
.
United Slates ancl'the Soviet Union
director
Michael
Crlcbton
Ia..
.•
llgreed to end their OCCilpatitm of
One year ago: The depolld shah

players.~.

•

World champiQn Phillies
greete~ with huge parade.
.

E3:stern varsity

923

99H786

Jrd Ave.

Middleport,

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

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4-~ Daily Sentmel, Pomeroy-¥iddleport, o., Thursday, October 23, 1980

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Ohio Sportlight . ·

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$--T!ie Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, October 23, 1980

....

Food· for .Thou
ht
More
participation
needed
·
g
~~nt
By Myrtle Clark 111111
AIIIde MEniEPNalrltloaAide
Help c-1y Cooperative

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By GEORGE STRODJ:;
AP Sports Writer

Eslellolaallervlce

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C08TCOMPAIUSONOF
DEEP YElLOW VEGETABLES
Winter ~~quaah, sweet potatoes; and pumpkin all can he purchased
1111 fresh, canned, or frmen·. To determine which form is.the best buy, .
determmeihecostpersei'vlng. Todeterminethecostperserving,you
ml181 know how many servings are in each can, packag~. or pound.
Below Is a table which llata this infonnatioo.
Kind of vegetable and nwnbe~ of servings are listed:
Fresh ~egetables- Fresh winter squash br pwnpkin, 1 to ll'.z per
pound;Freshsweetpotatqes,4perpound.
·
.
F~ Vegetables - Frozen winter squash, 3 or 4 per 9 or 10 bunce package.
·
Canned Vegetables- Canned winter squash, pumpkin, or sweet
potatoes,3or4per16ouncecan.
·
· ·
To detennlne the cost per serving, divide the cost of the"food by
the nwnber ~servings it will provide. For example: 1) Fresh winter
~~quash at 15 centa Jlll.r pound: 15 cents divided by 1 serving equals 15
cents per serving. 2) Frozen winter squash at 40 cents for a 10 ounce
package; 40 cents divided by 4 servings equals 10 cenis a serving. 3)
Canned winter squash at 36 cents for a 16 ollilce can: 36 cents divided
by4 servings_equals 9 cents per serving.
.
.....
1
the
ed
uash
ha
In the auvve examp e,
caM sq _ . tp(leDS t_o be the most
economical buy. Remember that family Ukes and dislikes are also important. H your family will not eat a particular form, It is not a good

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pulling the flea flicker with 31 seconds left. Quarterback Don Hertler Jr.,
sari of Hoover Coach Don Hertler
Sr., passed to Ted Shingleton, who
lateraled to Keith Hart for the ~
yard touchdown bomb. Hoover won
:!S-22.
All of Waynesville's games have
been shutouts, They've won seven of
them and lost one to New Miami. Unbeaten Fostoria hadn't trailed all
season until Sylvania Northview had
a H lead with 46 seconds left. But
Joe Johnson scored on a 4-yard run
to keep alive Fostoria's 18-game
regular season unbeaten streak.
Canton McKinley now has 21 inlerceptions this season after stealing
four passes from Warren Harding
last week. Canton Central Catholic
took two intentional safeties to
protect its 1!&gt;-11 upset of Akron St.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
i. Despite a teachers' strike !hat wiped
out five of its games, Boardman
may q_ualify for the Ohio high school
football playoffs.
U :Boardman beats Warren
Wes~ Reserve this week and
Niles McKinley next week, the·Spartans would have a S4-0 record in
· Division I.
-~
Fred Dafler;, associate commissioner of the Obio High School
Athletic Association, said Tuesday
the Youngstown suburban school
qualifies with the .minimum of five
games for playoff consideration.
"We would take lheir point total,
divide it by five (.for number of
games played) and mutiple the
. quotient by five .for Boardman's
final points," he said.
Daflersaysit'sthefirsttimesince

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CHEERlEADERS- Cheerleaders fof the Meigs seventh anc! eighth
grade football team are, 1-r, Amy Erwin, Brenda Cunningham, Gayla

.

Haning, Jolene Moodispaugh, Debbie Werry, Usa Hoffman and Teresa
,.-Pratt. .

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~~~:~L~£!::~~ ]:;:~~::~:i~~~f~~e~ By~~~tated~~e ~~~?w~goingtoco~~~l~ Bu~::a~~

Around Ohio: Wilson leads the MJShes and 341 yards against lanYoungstown City Series for the first caster Fisher.
time in 30 years. Centrai-Hower,
Streaks - Mogadore, 24 victori~ /
Ohio's Class AAA basketball cham- in a row over three seasons; Indian
pion last spring, has clinched a spot Lake, 26 straight losses; and
in the Akron City Series playoffs for Glouster Trimble, 11 consecutive
the first time since 1971. The Eagles' triumphs.
five-game winning streak is their
Big performances - Glouster
longest since· Central and Hower Trimble quarterback Mike Roback
merged in 1970.
visited Ohio State. on s.itilrday after
Bill Gutbrod, Cleveland St. his 307-yard total perforniance
Joseph's coach of 29 seasons, has against Belpre. Roback, a 6-2", 19!&gt;- ·
been stuck on his !99th career vic- pound senior, has MJShed 41 times
tory for one month. St. Joseph has for 448 yards and hit 50 of 83 passes
played three ties since then.
for 970 yards in Trimble's eight vicScouts from such powers as tories.
UCLA, TeMessee and all the Big
Rushing parade :_ Timmy Baker,
Ten schools are flocking to tiny St. Richmond Jefferson Union, 1,620
, Henry near the Indiana border. The yards this season, a school record
reason? St. Henry's offenSive tackle 316 yards against Linsly, W.Va., InJijn Lachey, a 6-foot-7, 26().pound stitute last week; Doug Fidler,
st!#lior being coveted as a college Greenwich South Central, 198
IiCht end.
rushes-1,340 yards, 20 touchdowns,
;North Canton Hoover snapped . 142 points, ahnd AI Bo!ildin, Cuyahoga
Dfver's 17-game unbeaten streak by Falls Wals Jesuit, 1,040 yards.

.'.· anton
· "41cKz.nlev,
C
1 r.J.
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Willoughby South
.
- ~.'mong new leaders ·

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i~olumbus,Ohio (AP) ,- Willough-

lli South and Canton McKinley have
Cincinnati Moeller and Upper
J\tlington.as Division I leaders in the
Ohio High School Athletic
~ociation's computerized football
~gs this week.
=Willoughy South, No. 13 in The
.G!sociated Press' statewide Class
(1\A poll, took over for Stow as the
~-place team in Region 1. Canton
cKinley, lOth ranked statewide in
ass AAA, was the new Region 3
ader , replacing big rival
tassillon.
' The OHSAA will use the computer
il!t,iDgs to fill its expanded post. mmson playoff field of 40 teams, two
froin each region: The first round
games will pair the winners and runners-up in each region on Nov. 7 or
Nov.8.
.
Columbus Watterson was the only
new Division II leader. The Eagles,
a former big school state poll champion, replaced Perrysburg atop
Region 6. The other Division II
leaders again were Solon,
Youngstown Mooney and Lebanon.
The same teams were in front in
Division III. They were Cleveland
Benedictine, Fostoria, New Concord
Glefllland Hamllton Badin.
In Division IV, Garfield Heights
supplanted Burton Berkshire in
Region 13 and BucyrUS Wynford took
over for Sycamore Mohawk in
Region 14.
Division V regional leaders again
were West Jefferson, Lorain Clearview, Tiffin Calvert and Glouster
'l'r$ble.

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COLUMBUS, - Ohlo

(APJ -

rys~urg

polnip. 2, Stow !r.!-01. 3, Olesterlarld West ,
Geaqga 90.00. 4, Cleveland St. Joseph
5, Cleveland Heighl'J 82.00. 6, Awr

RBGlON 2 - 1, Upper ArUngton 115.00.
2, Sandusky 108.54. l, Westerville North

•
TIUSTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Elll~ K. ran to her third straight victory ill' 'a featured race at
Thistledown on Wedhesday,
covering the six furlovg track in 1:12
4-5:The winner, ridden by Antonio
Graell, paid $4, $3.20 and S2.60.
Pretty Catherine finiShed second
and paid $3.40 and 82.40, while Svaha
Dream returned S2.110 for coming in
third.
In the third race trifecta, the comblru!tion of 1-!&gt;-2 pald 82,876.10.
, . The crowd of 3,8f wagered
$476,541.

63.11? .

4,

Canal

Fulton

59.16. 4, Goshen 55.)). 5, North Bend Tay-

Regional

Untown Fitch 73.96. ·

Kennedy

Northwest 6l.SO. 5, !Jtron St. Vincent..St.
Mary 61.23. 8, Brooklyn 60.50.
REGION 10 - I, Fostoria 84.00. 2 Or·
rville 80.75. 3, Elyria Catholic suS. 4,
Willard 55.25. 5, Milan Edison 52.SO. 6,
H,uron 47.00.
REGION ll - 1, New Concord Glerin
81.71. 2, Irontoo 13.97. 3, Washington
Court House 62.00. 4, Jacbon 61.60. ~. eo..
lumbus DeSales 56.0'2. 6, CircleVille 49 .78.
REGION 12 1, Hamilton Badin
104.00. 2, New Rictupond $ .75 . .3, Carl.i.!le

ltackn in the Oblo High School Athletic
A.uoclation's
weekly computerized foot·
ball rankincs. The first two teams in
each region after the regular season qual·
!Jy for the state playoffs :
DIVISION I
REJIQION 1 - l , Willoughby South ~ . &lt;42
au~.

74.00: 4, Vennilion 70.915 . 5, Syl·

lor 52.50. 6, Cincinnati McNicholas t9 .!t3.
D(VISIONIV
REGION 13 - I. Garfield Heights Trinity 75.02. 2, Burton &amp;rbhire 89.12. 3, Rittman 50 .07. 4, Rootstown 48.07. 5; Gates
Hills Hawken n .Zl . &amp;, Perry 32.69.
REGION 14 l , Bucyrus Wynford
411.75. 2, ArchOO.Id 47.00. 3, Sycamore Mohawk 41.87. 4, New London 40.50. 5, North
Robinson Crawford 38.00. 6, ~erwood
Fairview 33.11.
REGION 15 - I , Tiltonsville Buckeye
South &amp;3.fl2. 2, · Toronto 51.37. 3, Croobville 57.13. 4, Hanoverton United 4U5. S,
Cadiz 32.37. fi, Fredericktown ~lfifi .
REGION 16 - 1, West Jefferson $5.ZS,.
2, CinciMati Mariemont 53.25. 3, Belltlf'ook 43 ..W. 4, WheelersburJ( 41.42. 5,
Casstown Miami East 38.50. 6, Versailles
38.25.
DIVISIONV
REGION 17 l , Loraln Clearview
65.53. 2, Mogadore 57.07. 3, Leetonia 37.35.
4, Mcr&gt;Onald 36.00. S, eteveland . Cuyahoga
~~~L'I
30.39. 6, Bergholz Springfield

REGION IS '- I, Tiffin Calvert 53.15. 2,
LJbeJ1y tenter . 50.57. 3, Fremont Sl. Jo-

seph 37 .21. 4, Bluffton 33.00. 5, RawSon
Gory-Rawson 30.00. 6, Mcbomb :!9.75.
- REGION 19 1, Glouster Trimble
45.54. 2, Woodsfield 40.50. 3, Newark Ca~
ollc 36.00. 4. Be.al18ville l:i.SO. 5, Crown
City Hannan Trace 29.69. 6, Hemlock Mil·
Ier :!9.36.
REGION &gt;I - I, Covington 59.21. ~
WiUiiUJ1.3burg 50.0.1. 3 (tie ), Milford Cellter Falrbanb an:t Maria Stein Marion
34.75. 5, Middletown Fenwick 34.50. i , Sl.
Henry 31.25

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SAN DIEGO (AP) - San Diego
slugger Dave Winfield won't conduct
any discussions with the New York
Yankees "until we get clearance
from Baseball Conunissioner Bowie
Kuhn," his agent says.
The Yankees are attempting to
work out a deal to obtain Winfield,
the National League's runs-batted-in
champion in 1979, before the Nov. 13
major league re-entry draft.
Yankee manage111ent is reportedly concerned that the three-time
All.Star might already be drafted by

Browns'
White
•
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m1ssmg
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Rookie
Cleveland Browns running back
Charles White was nowhere to he
found as the National Football
Leaf:lue team begart preparing in
·earnest for Sunday's game with the
Pittsburgh Steelers.

the maximum 13 teams before New
York could select him. By trading
for Winfield, the Yankees would
have at least two weeks to work out a
contract before the bidding war
hegins. Winfield, 29, figures to be
one of the top players available.
Padres' President Ballard Smith
granted the Yankees pennission this
week to talk to Winfield about his
free agent plans. He said the' Padres
are seeking a player with major
league experience, rather than a first round choice in the free agent"
draft next June.
Winfield was reported by the New
York Times to be among 17 players
to have declared for free agency
Wedqesday. That would preclude
him from negotiating financial terms with any team but San Diego until Nov. 10, but he would he able to
discuss other contract items. ·
Winfield's agent, AI Frohman,
was· not available to confinn the
report, but he said earlier that "we
have not spoken to any club and no
club has called us. We are playing
too·percent clean," he said, to avoid
possible tampering charges;
Ofth,e possible trade to New York,
Frohman would only say, "Dave
wants to go to a major city, and a
team !hat has lchance to win:"
Winfield, in his hometowrt of Minr.ll8polis Wednesday, could not be
reached for comment.

-

FASHION BO.OTS
How
or

at

Christma!i!

30% OFF

"But he never did show up,. and I
haven't heard from him yet," said
Rutigliano. "I was concerned ·that
perhaps he had an as:cident or
something, but if he had, I'm sure I
would have beard about it by now."

r----__;-----'----------------1

r~cent

New pledges present for the meeting
were Debbie Hauber, Mindy Hlii,
Melinda Johnson, Darla Kelly,
Margie Lawson, Barb Matthews,
and Sharon Stewart. Refreslunents
were served by VIcki Ault and Patty
Circle.

FRIDAY &amp; SAtURDAY ONLY
•.

Marguerite
Shoes

FUNDS RECEIVED
Auditor Thomas

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proud of his legislative _record for

the people of the 92nd District, but he's al~o prqud· of hi• ·

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;C:::;00
T~.9~14 ~~=~
governme~t
sa

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· • :' levying inc:Ome lues. Meigs County
~ received U2,500.
"' The state office also reported the .
t: distribution of $2,173,538.33 In 1980
r Intangible lues on financial In·
stltutiPCII and securities deallers to
59.Ohio counties. Of !hat tobil Meigs
County received$1,245.32. .

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his experience as an eHectlve fool to help Individual..

REVIVALSET
.
A revival will be held at the
Bethlehem Baptlsl Clwrch Oct. 'll
t llnugh Nov. 1. The revival will
' atart at 7:30 each evening.
• Evqellll will be Marii: McCIUIIII, i
• putor of the Middleport Baplilt
Olurch. Everyone Ia welcome.
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STATE REPRESENTATIVE
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RON·. JAMES

REVIVAL ILII'l'BD
Tbere will be a reYival at the
Trlldty Chriltlan Allembly,
O!ai'VIIle, oct. 31-NOY. I. Rev. Harry
wW billie IP"''•I ..,........
wW be the featured lllne«a·

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P•ldforby ttwcommltNI ME*t R.Of'l James, Craft Allen, aw-m .• •tt. t. '-ttl.
OhiO. ·

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MUSIC MAJOR
George Wigal, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Wigal, formec residents of ·
Racine now living in Prospect, is attending Otterbein College where he·
Ls. a music major, George attended
school in Racine and graduated
from Elgin High School.
. ,

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Y9u r "E xira Touch "
f iloris
F t Si nce 1957

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FLORIST

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PH. 992"2644
351 E . Main , Pomer oy

L-·-

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You r FTD Florist

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

OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
150 Mill Street, Middleport, Ohio 45760
(614) 992-1271

VISITS NEWSPAPER OFFICE - Salisbury
Brownie Troop 1220 from Meigs County visited the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune newsroom Wednesday afternoon during a tour of the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company facillties. Troop members are (from left, fir-

st row), Mandy Eblin, Shelley Smith, Lenora Lyons,
Tracy Eblin, Amy Warth,. Leslie Lyons, Kristen
Slaughter, Amy Brothers; (second row), Kristin King ,
Marsha King, Traci Bartels, Melanie Beegle, Charlene
Mash, KewanaSinger, Amy Rouse.

REPUBLICAN

RALLY

9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.
9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.
9: 00A.M. to 4:00P.M.
9:00A.M. to 4:00P.M.

Monday
Tuesday
Friday
Saturday

Closed All Day
and Thursday
. Wednesday
.

Beautiful gree!IJig caRl
exp~esslons for

llfes special

an

moments.

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t counties and 424 cities and villages

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EXPERIENCED••• EFFECTIVE. • .FULL nME

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SAT· OCT. 25th

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fund money to Ohio's

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State

Marilyn Demmer to be promoting
PTO membership sales. The country kitchen will he operated by Martha McPhail, Mrs. Adams, Ruth
Stearns, and Roberta Maidens.
Other committees are Mrs.
Graves, Chris Jacks, pop; Pete
Michaels, Judy Pape, popcorn; Sandra Hill, Debbie Sayre, hotdogs;
Shirley Sayre, . donations; Sharon
Stewart, jewelry.
Named to ·the game committees
with each person to work one hour
were Jeannie Buckley, Linda
Friend, Barb Bcown, Barb Rowley,
fish pond; Cathy Cwnings, Nancy
Merrifield, Diane Davidson, Pearl
Knapp, duck pond; Hugh McPhail,
Richard Friend, man game; Phil
Burgess, Grodon Winebrenner, and
Kenny Buckley, cane toss.
MiMie Harris, Susan Burgess,
Cindy Swisher, Terri Michaels, ring
toss; Nancy Hub)lard, Kathy Fry,
Marsha Russell, Donna Nease,
checkers; Hilda Weaver, Susan
Winebrenner, tic-tac-toe; Pat
Philson, Linda Grindley, darts;
..Sean Mullen, Jim Adams, television
game; the Rev. Robert Merrifield,
Eher Pickens, Rush Philson, Mike
Stewart, shoot-a-hoot.

..

DR. JAMES P. CONDE, INC.

"FAMILY NIGHT"

102 E. Main SL
Porn , Ohio

through the _maze of government ·bureaucracy. He

The gardener's creed was given in.
unison.
Gardening hints for fall were read
by Mrs. John Rice and Mrs. James
Stout read the verse ·of the month.
The traveling prize donated by Mrs.
BAZAAR SLATED
HYMN SING
Rice was won by Mrs. Floyd Stout
Mrs. Glen Stoot won the hostess ' The Syracuse Church of the . A bazaar and election day dinner
Nazarene will ha~e a hynm sing Sun- will be held Tuesday beginning at 9
prize. Mrs. Cllldwell serve refreshday, at 7 p.m. The event will feature a.m. at the Chester United
ments using a Halloween theme to
"The Harvest Trio," from Reed- Methodist Church sponsored by the
the 11 members and one guest atChester United Methodist Women.
sville. Everyone ~ invited.
tending.

session

the ann~ Cl!ristmaB bazaar.

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record In helping hundreds of citizens make the I~ w~y

costwning to be judged and prizes
awarded. Numerous game booths
and food stands will he in operation
during the evening.
Janice Lisle and Mary Pickens
will handle ticket sales during the
evening with Sally Ehersbach and

CONCERT- Bntce Stone, for- .
merly of Pomeroy, will he
presented ID gospel concerts at
local cburcbes this weekend.
Stone, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Stalnaker was once a
niglit club singer before
becoming a gospel singer. He will
be at the Elilerprlse United
Methodist Church, located outside Pomeroy vlllage Umlts on
Routes 33 and 7 towarda Alhw,
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday anJ on Jun
day be will be at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church at 10:30
a.m. He presents orlgbtal com·
positions as weD as old reUglous
favorites during his concerts.
Several previous concerts given
loCally have been standing room
only events.

NOTIC.E
Effective Monday, October 20, 1980 new hours for the oflice of Dr. James P . Conde will be:

Bunny Kuhl, horticulture chair·
man for Region 11, Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs, talked on plant
care at the Tuesday night meeting of
the Ohio Ets Phi Chapter of Beta'
Sigma Phi Sotorlty.
Mrs. Kathy Cumings presided at
the meeting durtng which time the
group voted to carry out the annual
visits to Santa as a fund raising
project. Plans were also made for

layaway
For

onl~

Committees for the Syracuse
Elementary Halloween carnival
have been named by Mrs. Carol
Jean Adams, president of the
Syracuse PTO.
· The carnival will be helil from 7 to
9 p.m. on Oct. 31 at the school with

Plant care outlined

Buy

contact Mrs. Klein.
Barbara Eblin noted that memhersliip now stands at 72 with three
donations being made. Pencils are
still for sale and RC bottle caps and
Campbell soup labels are beirig
saved.
Mrs. Marilyn Meier reported that
her Brownie troop will cut the ~oup
labels in preparation to sending
thenfinforredemption.
The president advised that
meetings for the rest of the year will
he held on the third Tuesday of each .
month. ,A discussion was held on the
differencehetweenPTAandPTO.
Speaker at the meeting was David
Gleason who talked on the 3.5 mill
levy to he voted on in the general
election. He noted that the money
derived from the levy would he used
only for building repair. Gleason
also reported on roof repair at Middleport, Salisbury and Harrisonville
in the amount of $57,000.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Childs second grade.

Name carnival committees

Mr. and MrS. Charles . Nease, ·
Syracuse, are announcing the birth
of their third child, a son, Ryan
Patrick, born Wednesday, Sept. 17,
at the Pleasant VaUey Hospital.
The infant weighed eight points,
five and cme-half ounces, and was 20
inches Jong.
The maternal - gi'iihdparents are
Mr. fllld Mrs. Charles Blake,
SyraCUBe. Mrs. Thelma Nease,
Pomeroy, Is · the paternal grandmother, and · Mrs. Emma Hood,
Wellston, is the great-grandmother.
Ryan was welcomed home by his
sister, Diana, and his brother, Greg.

AtL LADIES'

I

assist in putting up the shelves. He •
noted that the area at the south end
of the school has been filled and
slopedtomakethe buildingmoreaccessible to the handicapped.
Arnott suggested \hat the PTA and
the teachers work together on fundraising projects.
The head teacher further proposed
!hat an advisory council of three
parents and three teachers bt
organized with Cherole Burdette
volunteering to $erve on the ocmmittee.
Warren Perine presided at the
meeting with the Rev. James
Broome giving devotions.
Mrs. Twila Childs' second grade
led in the ple\lge. Kay Logan,
treasurer , reported that 'the
treasury now stanjls · at $253,92.
Minutes of the last meeting were
read by Peggy Wood, secretary.
Martha Klein, ways and means
chalnnan, announced plans for the
fall carnival to be held on Saturday,
Nov. 1, 2 to 6 p.m. Parents willing to
assist with the.carnival are asked to

Announce birth

third quarter.

Ro_n James Is not

Arrangements demonstrated
Fall, Thanksgiving and Halloween
arrangements for the home were
demonstrated by Mrs. Betty Dean at
a meeting ~ the Rose Garden Club
of Tuppers Plains held at the h!lme
of Mrs. Jimmy Cl!ldwell. ·
Mrs. Dean, a member of the
Chester Garden Club, used a variety
of familiar and available materials
in her demonstration program.
Plans were completed durtng the
meeting for a tour of the Fenton
Glass Co. and Dudley's in Parkersburg on Nov. 15. Devotions were
given by Mrs. Harley Rice who
used scripture and an inspirational
reading followed by the Lord's
Pranr in unison. For roll call members gave an October gardening tip.

"NEW YORK
Q.OntiNG HOUSE·

RECORD
OF·
HELPING
PEOPLE!
-

.

I

the~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;~.

club's
practice
session
Whitemeeting
failed and
to show
up for
on Wednesday, and Browns officials
said they could not locate him at his
condomimium In suburban
Strongs.ville or at his apartment in
La&amp; Angeles.
"I don't know where he is and I
have no idea when he'll be back,"
said Coach Sam Rutigliano.
White called the Browns' offices at
9:30a.m. Wednesday to "say he had
overslept and would be late for the
team meeting.

buy.

I

as much as 19 points, at 'J9.IiO ill the

varua NorthVJew 67.&lt;12. 6, Mansfield Mala·
bar &amp;3.35.
RE GION 7 - 1, Yowigstown M0011ey
91.62. 2, DoYer 77.98. 3, Youngstown Chan-ey 66.91. 4, Struthers 64.03. 5, Alliance
61.00. 6, Bellaire 57.20.
REGION 8 - 1, Lebanon 17 .00. 2 Cin-cinnati Greenhills 75.25. 3, Urbana &amp;i.11. 4
(tie}, Dayton Roth and Pickerington 60.50.
6, Greenville 54.92 .
·
DIVISION ill
REGION 9 - 1. Cleveland Benedictine
69.25. 2, Chagrin Falls Kenston &amp;UIO. 3,
Warren

I

Junior Bridgeman and Brian Winters scored 24 points apiece as , - - - - - ' - - - - . , - - - . : . Milwaukee heat Indiana. The
Pacers led 61.00 at halftime but
didn't score for more than five
minutes at the start of tiMi third
quarter while Milwaukee ran off 14
points. ·
Indiana never led by more than
one'. point after that, and two free .
throws by Bridgeman with 37 seconds left in the period put Milwaukee
aheadtostayat81-79.
LeVI"S
Bullets 109, Cavalfen lit
' ... " '
Bobby Dandridge scored six of his
20 points during a 16-4 streak in the ""IT"h 4 original heavyweight
last quarter to enable Washington to
n-washed Levi jeans.
pull aw~y from Cleveland.
The victory ended a four-game
•FLARES
losing streak for the Bullets and extended Cleveland's losing streak to
four, including three on the road.
•STRAIGHT LEG
Elvin Hayes scored ·25 pointS for .
Washington while ¥!ke Mitchell led
the Cavaliers with a seasori-high32.
Mavericb 107, Soniesl02
Richard Washington SCOred 24
points and grabbed rune rebounds W.

collected only their second victory of the

89.00. &lt;1 , Findlay 82.57. 5, Fremont Ross
80.50. 6, Uma Senior 75.4.2.
REGlON 3 1, . -'Mtton McKinley
11&lt;1.92. 2. Mas.sillon 112~. 3, lAkewood
St. Edward 106.33. 4, Newark 9S.66. 5, Lorain 82.50. 6, Brunswick, . 90.35.
REGlON 4 l . Cincinnati. Moeller
1t4 . ~7 . 2, Cincinnati
Princeton 125.SO. 3,
Centerville 100.50. &lt;1 , Clayton Northmont
90.50. 5, Middletown 83 .:i0. 6, Hamilton
81.00.
DIVISION II
REGION 5 - 1, Solon 97 .50. 2, Mentor
Lake 'Catholic 92.5-:i. 3, Stow Wal!h Jesuit
80.21. 4, Geneva 7l .l6. 5. Richfield Revere
7&lt;1.75. 6, Westlake '$3.2:5.
REGION 6 - 1, Colwnbus Watterson
82.00. 2, Toledo St Franci5 76.75. 3, Per·

j~ed

I

In 1979, U.S. life-Insurance conr
pany assets totaled $432 billion, 10.9
percent more than in 1978.

Yanks uet permission ~~?c:::.~~-~~s::
e·
So;:·::!o~vericks
lk
·
to ta - to Winfield
=~~~~~=~i;::~

•

•

....
The Philadelphia 76ers heat the he positive; we're going to play hard
Detroit Pistons - and lost a record , every night."
in the process.
Elsewhere in the NBA, Boston
"I'm glad their streak didn't end whipped New Jersey 108-1114;
against us," said Philadelphi~ Milwaukee trimmed Indiana 119Coach Billy Curmingham after his 105; Washington stopped Cleveland
team's 94-93 triumph Wednesday 109-96 and Dallas heat Seattle 107·
night extended the Pistons' losing 102.
.
string to" a . National Basketball
Julius Erving's 26 points led the
Association record of 21.
76ers over the Pistons. Detroit, with
The Pistons' losses, 14 at the end of Terry Tyler contributing eight early
last season and seven so far this points, grabbed a 27-22 lead at the ·
year, wiped out Philadelphia's endofthefirstquarter.Butthe76ers
dubious mark of 20 set in th~ 1972-73 got nine second-quarter points from
campaign.
·
Darryl Dawkins and led 49-43 at the
"They will just have to learn to half.
win games like this, the way we
Ce1Ucs108, Nets 10
have," added Cunningham.
Larry Bird scored a game-high 29
Detroit Coach Scotty Robertson points and Rick Robey contributed
was not so sure that this ye;tr's team eight key points in the final P!lriod to
deserved to he saddled with the cement Boston's victory over New
negative mark, considering !hat it Jersey. Robey led a late rally during
has been spread over two seasons.
which the Celtics broke a 93-93 tie to
"I feel bad for my guys," he said. goahead,106-98.
•
:
·
"Many of my guys didn't lUJve
The Nets blew two chances to tie
anything to do with last year."
· the game in the final minute, when
Added Robertson : "Wemaybe{).7 theyweretrailingbyjusttwopoints.

,

I

More
participation m
school actiVIties was proposed by
Jo_hn Arnott, head teacher, when.the
Middleport PTA met Tuesday rught
at the school.
. Arnott sugg~ that the PTA offtcers be more VISible at the school
B?d that parents he encouraged to
vtslt in the cla~sr~oms. He
sugg~ that-a hospttality table be
set. up m the school fo~er on conference . days to assiSt parents
coming mto~ sc~ool and alSo to
serve refres
n!s urmg the day·
f"~ ';po~~ on _the several
sc 001 un ra~ gpro)ectsare~derway including the sale of china
cups, Christmas candles, and mtXed
nuts.
As for the ~ch~l patrol,_ Arnott
reported that more ~onnation s~ch
as the number of chi!~~ walking
and the .areas of crossmg 18 ~eeded
before further action on orgaruzlilg 8
Jl8trol is tak_en.
. ·
Es~blishing the school library
was discussed and Arnott caUed for
parents to .come . to the s_ghool to

r

11..--.

ACTIVITIES ROOM SENIOR ClnZENS CENTER
MULBERRY HTS·, POMEROY, OHIO

BUFFET SERVED 6:30-7:30

ALL REPUBLICAN
CANDIDATES .
WILL BE PRESENT

:

::

'.

FIAlURID SPEAKER

SENATOR SAM· SPECK
OHIO STATE SENAlOR • Twentieth

District

. SPONSORED IY
Meip County Republican bee. Com.,
Richad E. Jon-. Chairman

'
Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph .
Charles lltlffle, R. Pit
·
·
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph. ,
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m . to9 p.m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:30 and S.to 9 p.m •
PRESCRl PTIONS
PH . 992·2955
Friendly Service
E. Main
Open Nights tll9
Pomeroy, 0.

•

·

�f

... ..

• •6- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, O.,Thursdav, October 23, 1980
,...
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,,. ....

I· ~
I

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~.

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•

,.. ..

..

... • . .

L.

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: ,'

ell

,: 1 •

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A

"· '"

D

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1.

I

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1

Your
Libraries

•

~

'""'"~"".... ~-:~

o&lt;~·l·

'1"(1 ....

~

,. (. S'

Y

By·Eilen Bell,
Meigs County Ubrnrtan
' ' i With all the talk there's been lately - in the newspapers, on the
:: : ··r~dio, and.just among friends - . aboutthe high C&lt;lSt of living and taxes
; · ri/ling, many people want to know why are the libraries asking for a
~. ; levy and how much will it cost?
• • ·•
First of all, let's deal with the question of cost. The levies on
November's ballot will be, essentially, based on the valuatiOn of your
; property in 1979, .before the reappraisal. The library levy is for one
hall mill. That meanuou will pay about 171&gt; cents for each $1,000 your
· property was worth in 1979. If your property was worth $3S,OOO, you
will pay $6.13. At todsy's prices, that would buy you about 3 paperback
books!
Why do the libraries need money' One reason is that a state in·
spector laid last year that Pomeroy's furnace needed to be repaired or
replaced. The repairman could find nothing to repair and estimated
roughly $5,000 for replacement.
Another reason is that the steps at both libraries are very hard on
elderly and pregnant people and virtually impossible for those in
wheelchairs or on crutches. An architect, who gave a preliminary
. suggestion for making the buildings easier for older people and han·
·. dicapped people to use, suggested installing an elevator at Pomeroy
and a ramp at Middleport.
·
.
A third reason is that children in Meigs County have never had the
kind of first-rate library service that can only be given by someone
who knows children and children's books and cares about bringing
them together.
Our libraries have many good points, including some hard·
working staff members. But the staff are underpaid, few new books
are coming in, the buildings need repairs and remodeling- and there
, , is barely enough money for the libraries to continue as they are for the
rest of this year.
What's ahead if the levy doesn't pass? In the early 1970s, library
' ' service was afternoons only or three days a week. Providing Pomeroy
Public Library isn't closed altogether by boiler problems, both
libraries will be open for many fewer hours than they are now. Bookmobile service will be cut from 625 hours to 441! hours for 'the year.
Very few new books will be added to the shelves. And the nwnber of
people employed by the libraries will go tlown. (Right now, there are 1
the equivalent of 31&gt; people who are paid by the libraries.)
Your libraries need that 171&gt; cents per $1,000 if you want the
books, films , records, and information you want at a time that is convenient for YOU. Please- vote YES for libraries on page 9 of your
ballot.
. ,.__
_ _ _· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __J
•

·

World Series coverage puts NBC on top
. NEW YORK (AP) - As "Shogun" television, 35.3 percent saw ~~ lea!t
, thrust NBC into first place in the net- part of the program.
·
works' ratings competition after a
In addition to the baseball broadlong stretch in the cellar, baseball's casts, NBC spotted \be third rerun of
World Series helped sustain the net· a Clint Eastwood movie "The
work's dominance in prime-tinte Outlaw Josey Wales," in fiftlt plaCe
this fall, figures fran the A.C. for the week, with an episode of
Nielsen Co. showed.
.
·
"CHiP.l!" ~ixth.
.
· -NBC listed eight of the 10 highestNBC's rating for the week or 25.5
rated programs in the week ending . was the third-highest in the net·
Oct. 19. The four World Series games work's history: The networkS say
played in prime-time held the first that mt;ans in an average primefour positions in the ratings.
\tme rnmute during the week, 25.5
The part of Game 5 between percent of the nation's TV.,equipped
Philadelphia and Kansas City broad- homes were tuned to NBC.
cast in prime-lime Sunday evening
CBS and ABC tied for the run- 38minutes - was the week's No. 1 nerup position for the week at 15.9.
program, with a rating of 35.3. That
NBC's all-time high rating of 26.4
means of all the n~tion's homes with was recorded earlier this seasort, for
the week in which it carried the 12-.

nouncements figure heavily in the
ratings. ABC, unlike CBS and NBC,
does not include the spots in its
averages. The distinction has not affected the three-way standings.
Four _ads promoting president,ial
· Clllfdi!lliti!!l - one for LibertarUiii
candidate Ed Clark_, three for
Ronald Reagan - were among the week's five lowest·rated sbows. The .
week's least' watched show was an
"ABC News Closeup" call.ed "The
Apocalypse Game," ir.67th place.
Here are the. week's 10 highest,
rated shows:
·
·
World Series, Game .5, with a
rating of 35.3 representing '1:1.5
million homes, Game 2, 34.4 or 26.8
million, Game I, 32.9 or 25.6 mlllion,
and Game 3, 32 or 24.9 mlllion,
Movie-"The Outlaw Josey Wales,"
'1:1.9 or 21.7-mlllion, and "CHIPs,"
25.4 or 19.8 mlllion, aU NBC; "That's
Incredible," 25 or 19.5 million, ABC;
World Series, Pre-(&gt;arne I, 23.5 or
said he wanted to stop at his office 18.3 million, and World Series, Pre. Game 2, 23.1 or 18 million, both NBC, 1
where he'd left his wallet.
Upon arrival, he hit the button to and "Country Music AsSociation
raise the garage door. And there was Awards Show, " 22.9 or 17.81ilillion,
CBS.
a bus, with his message or love.
"At first I thought, 'Oh, that's
neat, somebody did this;"' Miss
Smith said. "Then I looked at it teal
close, and said, 'Wait a minute. This

hour 11Shogun'! rruntseries. · The
second-highest rating was compiled
· during the 1978 World Series.
NBC entered the fall mired in
third place, -a position the network
asswned in the 197~76 season. The
ac.tors' !trike ~I began July 21
delayed production of mom prime- .
time series, but NBC went ahead
with.th:C sea~on Sept. 15 in spite ol
the obstacle. Both ABC and CBS
maintain the 5eason starts Oct. '1:1.
Both ABC and CBS had one
program in the Top 10 in the most
recent survey - ABC with "That's
Incredible" in seventh place, CBS
\Vith the "Country Music'Association
Awards Show" in lOth.
Repeats and paid political an-

CINCINNATI (AP) - When Steve
Thacker popped the question to Julie
Smith, he did it in writing · on the
backs of Queen City Metro buses.
Thacker, an account executive for
Batchelder Co., which sells transit
advertising for the bus system, said

'T'urns
one
.1.
j

The first birthday of Patricia Sue
daughter of Susie and Gary
was observed recently with
homemade cake and ice cream
·being served.
.
: Attending were her grandparents,
; Homer B. Smith and Ruth A. Smith,
:aunts, Becky Ward, Terressa Smith
iand Connie Smith , great, grandmother, Mrs. Basil Cremeans,
, an uncle, Homer B. Smith, Jr., and a
; cousin, Raymond John Ward.
~mith,
~mith

'

,

is me."'

"Her jaw hit the floor, then she
started crying, then she started
laughing/' Thacker said.
But most important, she said yes.
The date was set for next summer.
.In the meantime, Miss Smith
keeps seeing the big question all
over town.
"I saw.one the otjter day up by the
University of Cincinnati," she said.
"I was sitting right behind it. It was
1
.embarrassing.
"I looked around at everybody. I
felt like they were aU staring at
me."

Low, Lo w Mil es .
Local one owner, V -6,
A!C, Vinyl top.

•3495

1977 MERC,URY
MONARCH
4 door ·seda n 2 tone
blue . Extra · low
miles.

The 11th I!IIDual Teaford reunion
was held last August at the Racine
Locks and !)am on the West Virginia
side.
A poUuck dinner was enjoyed at
noon. The grace was given by Dana
Ray Teaford.
During the afternoon, a business
meeting was held, conducted by the
president, Carroll Teaford. The
secretary's report was given by
Janice Lawson, and the treasurer's
report by Jane Teaford. In charge of
the tables was Raymond Teaford.
. VIsitors from another branch Of
the family were MJ:. and Mrs. Mason
Wood, Ashland, Ky., and Mr. and
Mrs. John DeHart, Huntington, W.
Va.
A moment of silent prayer was
held if! memory of the departed this
past year, Josephine Teaford,
Columbus, Ohio, and Howard
Teaford, Granville, Ohio.
Births added to the ·family tree
wereAmy, daughter o!!&gt;'.r. and Mrs.
Cecil See, and Amber, daughter ol
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Kearns.
'
· The 1981 reunion will be held at the
Syracuse VIllage Park, the first Sun·
day in August.
The officers elected w••,. Suzanne
Teaford, vice presid• .•; retained,
Carroll Teaford, president; Jane
Teaford, treasurer, and Janice
Lawson, secretary.
In charge of the registration will
be Jean Hall; games, Dana and Linda Teaford; gifb, Jane Teaford.
Door prizes went to Nellie Wood,
Betty Teaford, Skip Teaford, Kay
Hill, and Earl Teaford.
Gifts went to the eldest lady, Edith
Teaford; the eldest man, James
Teaford; traveling the farthest.

1978 CHEVY .
CAMARO
Local owner . Si lver,
spoke road whee ls.

1977 PLYMOUTH
ARROW GT
Price Reduced .' Air,

au tomatic ,
rear
de frost e r, c ustom
wheels.

'4995
19~0

MERCURY
COUGAR XR:7

Extra n_lce, 302 V·8,
A/ C, padded viny l
top, radials.

NOW

'3795

PINTO WAGON
. Air
con difioning,
automati c, 4 cy linder
-New .conco rd

trade.

'6995

'3895

1979 .AMC
· CONCORD
. HATCHBACK

1976 AMC

1979 PONTIAC

SPORTABOUT SW

GRAN PRIX LT

Roof ra ck, air cond itjon_ing , wood gra in,
cru.se control.

Loaded with lots of
extras, dark burgundy, r:usset velour in·
fer ior .

We sold it new .
Automat
c
ec.onomical
6
cylinder engif"!e.

9 til 1
ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD·

PATRICIA JONES

Observes
..
birthday
WHISKEY
RIVER
4 PIECE, 1 VOCAL
LANCASTER,

'

· You mltst be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

study be made to find a new way to
adequately finllnce repair and construction of new highways .
BE IT RESOLVED that on any
fut ure embargoes of .farm products
by the Federal Government a means
of protection be Qi'Jen to the farmers
harmed by the dt!cisions.
.•

Freddie Teaford; the largest family,
. Lawrence Teaford; youngest boy, ·
Danny Teaford; and the. youngest
girl, Amber Keams.
Nellie Wood gave an invitation to
the 1981 Indiana reunion to be held
the second Sunday after the Fourth ·
of July. She also gave a brief report
on the updating of the history of the
ancestors.
Games played were uitder the
direction of sh8r0n Kearns and
Charlotte Wamsley. Winners were
Richie Wamsley, Erica' McBride,
Monica Hill, Darei Wolfe, Sonia
Kearns, Billy Teaford, Diana
Teaford, Charlotte .Wamsley ,
Dwight Nealis, and Freddie
Teaford.
Attending were William, Sharon,
and Skip Teaford, Nellie and Mason
Wood, Raymond, Margarete, and
Suzanne Teaford, Kathy, Darlene,

more stringent
of r;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~ii;
trespassing
lawsenforcement
and b i gger
- -----penalties for unauthor ized vehic les
trespassing on private property .
BE IT RE SOLVED that the Meigs
Cou~ty Commissioners and County
Engmeer establish prior ities for
.....--r epair to improve roads and br idges
on a more permanent basis.
BE IT RESOLVED that the
seriousness of the drug situation in
Meigs County be fully realized an d
1036
that authoritie~ be encouraged to
take immediate S'nd forceful action.
Bt;O IT RESOLVED that the Farm
Boreeu favor continuation of the
county-wide Green Box Pick-up
Program .
BE IT RESOLVED that a feasible
study be made to find a way to
adequately finance repair and con struction of new highways.
STATE
.
BE IT RESOLVED that we very
thoroughly study all proposed
legislation relative to land use as it
would pertain to farmers.
·
BE IT RESOLVED that Slate and
Federal money be made available
for re clamation Of properties
damaged because of strip mine run ·
off and residue,' not presently
covered by restoration programs .
BE IT RESOLVEDthatweoppose
the lege~Hzation of marijuana .
BE IT RESOLVED that Nat ion ·
wide Insurance reinstate the Safety
car Program .
.
BE IT RESOLVED that an
agriculture person be appointed to
the next vacancy of the Board of
Regen ts of Ohio State University.
BE IT RESOLVED that we con ·
tinue to monitor all foreign land investments in the United States and
an immed iate study to determine an
992-2284
_Pom_eroy, 0. h.

lAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS

and Amy See, Harold and Ina
Teaford, Leo and Helen Hill, Tee and
Earl ~eaford, Betty, Teresa, Jack,
and Tim Teaford, John and Ruth
DeHart, Carl Fae, Brett, and Teresa
Wines, Carroll and Eva Teaford,
Larry Lee and Gail Teaford,
Lawrence and Mabel Teaford, Fritz
•Teaford, Thelma Walton, Dwight,
Myra, and Danny Nealis, Virgil and
Helen Teaford, Carla, Wendi, and
Erica McBride, Freddie, Diana, and
·Tara Teaford, Barbara Northcraft,
Sharon, Sonia, B. W., and Amber
Kearns, Kay, Monica, Melinda, and
Mandy Hill, Dick; Charlotte, ·and
R,ichie Wamsley; Bert Teaford,
Robert, Tanuny, and Jamie Miller,
Fred, Darci, arid Tyler WoHe, Jeannie and Travis .Grate, Carrie
Swisher, Sampson and Jean -Hall,
James and Jane Teaford, Veronica
Provo, Janice and David Lawson,
and Rev . FredSams.

CHRISTMAS CRAFT
FABRICS, MANY ITEMS
-Place Mats

SPECIAL

$468 .

-Ciuisbnas Table Cloths

·-Sewing BasketS

-:Sewing Machines

-Cutting Boards

-Buttonholers

-ScissOrs

-Quilted ·Fabrics

-Stuffed T.

-Gift CertifiCates

THE FABRIC SHOP

in· ~~~~~~~============~::::-:~~~~~==~==~

Banquet tickets now on sale
.

Tickets are on sale for the Meigs
GoOdyear and F.F.A. Land
Soli and Water Conservaton District Judging awards will be given at the .
annual meeting and banquet meeting.
scheduled at 7 p.m. November 20, at
Reservations should be· made
the mul·tlpurpose · building, before November 13 lll!d tickets are
fomeroy.
$4.50 each are available from the
Following a ham dinner served by following: E;xtension Office, John
the Council on Aging, there will be Rice; Landmark, Jack Carsey;
an election of one supervisoc, an in- ASCS, Davit! Fox; SCS, Reid Young
teresting three dimensional slide and Opal Dyer; Meigs SWCD superpresentation by the Stauffer visors, Rex Shenefield, Tom Theiss,
Chemical Co. and presentations of Roy Miller, Thereon Johnson, and
district awards.
David Gloeckner; Sugar Run Flour
Candidates for the supervisor Mills, Thea Smith; Horace Karr,
election are David Gioedmer and Baum Addition on Route 7 and Rod·
Rodney Chevalier.
ney Chevalier.

Social Calendar

FRIDAY
HALLOWEEN Costwne Dance for
students, parents ·and teachers of
Rutland Elementary will be held
Friday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. HaWl·
ted house and other activities.
Refreslunents will be sold and a
bake sale will be held. Admission 25
cents. Sponsored by Rutland PTO.
The event will be held 'in gym at
Rutland Elementary.
SATURDAY
BAZAAR
and bake sale Saturday
SPECIAL GUESTS
10
a.m.
at
Carl
Barnhill residence,
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe .
Bissell and Kennedy, Long Bottom Tuppers Plains. Sponsored lly St.
were Mr. and Mrs. Albert Woode, Paul United Methodist Women.
Mrs. Tom Chambers, Brad and
Heather, Jeromesville; Mr. and Elementary Saturday beginning
Mrs. Harold Holter, Judy and Mark, with a turkey dinner at 6 p.m. DinLeona· Herisley, Mae McPeek, Mr. ners are $3 for adults and children 12
and Mrs. Steven Holter, Stacy and and under $1.50. There will be
games, country store, disco room
Stephanie, Long Bottom.
and other activities. Door prizes.
Sponsored by ~tart Falls PTO.
BIR'l11DAyNEAR •
Mr. and Mrs. James Fugate are
presently i;'esidlng at 19 East Main
CANDIDATES' NIGHT SET
Street, Pomeroy. Mrs. Fugate W88
The Meigs County Women's
recently discharged from' Holzer
Republican Club will observe canMedical Center. Mr. Fugate will dldates' night at the Meigs Inn at .
celebrate his 92nd birthday In
7:30 p.m. Monday. All Republican
November. Cards may be sent to the
women are invited to attend.
coupleat the above address. ·
Refreshments will be served.

equitable
limit as
vestment should
be. to what this
' BE IT RESOLVED that Farm
Bureau study what relief could be
given to·farmers who suffer a severe
financ ial reverse due to natural
disasters .
BE IT RESOLVED that the Wind·
fa ll Profit Tax on M ineral Owners be
reduced or equalized ·· to the In dependent Producers' Tax level .
BE IT RESOLVED that adequate
access be bu ilt to the Ravenswood
Bridge fro~ the approach to
existing major highways .
BE IT RESOLVED that a feasible
study be made to find a way to
adequately f inance repair and con·
sfruction of new highways.
NATIONAL .
BE IT RESOLVED that we very
thoroughly study all proposed
legislation relative to land use as if
would pertain to farmers .
BE IT RESOLVED that we sup·
port a supply and demand concept ,
and oppose importations of beef and
other farrn products which would be
detrimental to the American far·
mer. ,
BE IT RESOLVEDthatw.eoppose
the legalizat ion of (Tlarltuana .
BE IT RESOLVED that due to
erosion which has occurred along
the Ohio River we favor a re·
evaluation of this land to determine
the true acreage and also how many
acres have since washed away and
also that there be an equitable way
to reimburse the owner for his loss.
BE IT RESOLVEB that we con·
t inue to monitor all foreign land investl)lents in the ·United States and
an Immediate study to determine an
equitable limit as to what this In·
vestment should be-.
BE IT RESOLVED 't hat we sup
port the con cept of equal exchange
of grain for crude oi t.
BE IT RESOLVED that th e Wind ·
fall Profit Tax be reduced or

HALLOWEEN
SUPPLIES
FOR All OF YOUR PARTY AND TRICK OR TREAT NEEDS
INCLUDING:

•Candy •Decorations •Costumes

.Village Pharmacy
,,. 992-6669
271 N. 2nd Ave.

FALLFESTIVALM~tartFalls r~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~·;;;;~~~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;~;;;;~

1978 FORD

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp;·SATURDAY
NIGHT

Unda Vaughan and daughter, Crystal; Shirley Sayre
and daughter, Stephanie, and Martha Gerhart; hack, 1
tor, Roy Vaughan, AaronSa)Te and David Ohlinger.

QUEEN FOR WEEK
Allie Hill was queen for the week
at the TOPS OH 1456 Rutland
meeting held this week on the basis
of her weight loss. Rwmer-up ·was
Frances Hysell. The queen was
presented a dollar and the members
sang in her honor. T9e club will participate in completing waters and
name tags for Autwnn Inspiration
Day to take place on November 8 at
·
Marietta.

Tossed Salad
Fruit Cup
8 oz. New York
Strip
Choice of Potato
Tossed Salad
Vegetable
Dessert
Coffee, Tea, Milk ·

eq ualited to the Independent
Producers' Tax level .
BE IT RESOLVED the! Farm
Bureau study what .relief could be
giv.en to farmers who suffer a severe
fiil~ncia .l reverse due to a natural
disaster .
BE IT RESO,LVED tha t a feasible

COUNTY
BE IT RESOLVED that we urge

Teaford ·reunion held in August

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL _5 TIL 10

'3795

•4S95

.THE
SHOE IH801
MIDDLE

Land
Rover
by'

Mr. and Mrs. Tim Massie,
Gallipolis, announce the birth of
their first child, a son, Timothy
Jason on Sept. 25, at Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed nine
pounds and five ounces and
measures 21 and one-haH inches in
length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Dale Kautz, Pomeroy.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Massie, Gallipolis.
Maternal great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Battrell, .A]bany,
and Mrs. Ina Kautz, Pomeroy.
Paternal grea t-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Elliott and
Mrs. Anna Massie; all of Gallipolis . .

PATRICIA SMITH

Colors:
•Black

NEW MEMBERS - These new members were
presented pins as the annual meeting of the Meigs
County Fann Bureau Federation held Tuesday night at
the Chester Elementary School. They are, front, I to r,

Announce birth

OMEGA

TAHOE

The foUowing local, state and
national resolutions ·were adopted at
the annual meeting of th.e Meigs
County Fann Bureau Federation at
the Chester Elementary Schooi
Tuesday,

More than a hundred attended the
afternoon pogram of the Duncan
Family. Other music was provided'
by the St Pa\11 Choir and by U~e
minister's wife, Mrs. Bonnie
Thomas.
Activities of the church announced
include a charge conference for the
Northeast Cluster on Tuesday, Oct.
28, 7:30 p.m. at St Paul's. and a
,Halloween get-together on Oct. 31
for the entire congregation. The an·
nual Thanksgiving dinner is planned
for :Nov. 11 at 6 p.m. An informal
program is being planned by the
program conunittee, M111. Lorean
Gorrell, Mrs. Getirude Russell, and
Mrs. Evelyn Spencer.

1977 OLDS

Tal&lt;e on a new image.
Smooth leather. B'raided
seam trim. Ta ile r heel s. A
lool&lt; that wi ll keep you
ahead of the crowd

Farm Bureau resolutions get approval

r--:-----------,_.

Meadowbrook
Manor seniors
celebrate
birthdays

Dal'idson, aU 35 years; Vitgll King, Carl H. Shenefield,
25 years; back, I tor, Rodney and Debbie Chevalier,
Wilma and Donna Davidson, 35 years; Mrs. Virgil King ,
and Mrs. Carl Shenefield, 25 years. .

LONG TIME MEMBERS - 'These 25 and 35 year
members of the Meigs Coimty Fann Bureau Federaton
were 'honored'Tuesday night at the federation's annual
meeting at the Chester Grade SchooL The group includes, front, I tor, Betty Dean, Mr. and Mrs. LeodeU

Buses used to propos~ marriage

;Church celebrates homecoming
:: Homecoming was celebrated Sun' 'day by the St. Paul's United '
' j'dethodist Church with the Duncan
· f aniily of Colwnbus being the
, fea tured singers for the day.
· ' There were 71 persons in at·
. ;tendance at Sunday. John Rice is
:_the superintendent. A_t the morning
; .worship service where the Rev.
: Richard Thomas spoke on Walking
' ~ith Christ, 80 attended. Sixty-eight
enjoyed a covered dish dinner
foHowing the service. The tables
were decorated by the women of the
church in keeping with the fall
season. The pastor gave grace.
'
·

7-The Daily Sentinel,·Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thursday, October 23, 1980

,

The eighth birthday of Patricia
Jones wu celebrated Sunday with a
party. A Halloween theme was
carried out in the decorations. Two

cakee
the
bonoree,were
one apraented
pumpkin to
repllca
belrad by Mary Ann Myen, and the
otJier a witch with other Halloween
decaraliDIII baked by Donna Pullina.
lee cream and Kooi•Aid were served
with the cake.
., Gamel were played with prlzel
' 8linl to Patty Jonee and SUsan
·Palllna. Olberl attendinc were Tim
Bauer, Robert Frye, Janice and
Dlvid Fetty, Mar)' Ann, Tom. and
ADtly Mytn, Leigh Eltrldle, Calh)'

and Crill Smith, Carrie Camp, [)an.
Ill and 8ulan Pulllnl, 'hlllllle Jlan.
ar, aDd Kim and
1-.
allq wllb the ............ Mr.
and Mn. Raymoad ~and Mr.
' lind Jllrl, 'I'bomu Jontl.

~~:;:;:;:::;==;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
·-

NOW IN"PROGRISS

ALL.UVING ROOM SUITES REDUCED
30% TO CEI EBRATE OUR 301ll YEAR
IN BUSINESS.

.....,..n"

''

WOOD SPLITTIN'
.

'

SEASO~
·All OF lliE SUPPLIES YOU NEED

• AXES ·• SLEDGES
• MALLS • WEDGES
• BUCK SAW'S • AXES DOUBLE BIMD
.

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Herman Grate, Owner

773·5592

•

Meson, w. va.
•

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�... .

- ...

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~

.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Thurs&lt;bly, October 2;!, 1980

.....••••.,.
...

Anderson blasts Carter, Reagan
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - In·
dependent John B. Anderson, saying
he's.l!tillln the presidential race, has
for
agreelng to participate in a deQ;Ite
without him.
. "Ronald Reagan was·. vecy quick
to show that he could practice the ·old
politics just like Jinuny Carter
could," Anderson said durlng a news
conference.Wednesday. He referred

to back Anderson because he can't
Anderson said the nation's
win the election.
~nomy cannot afford a Carter vic"I reaUy believe it constitutes a tory.
basic distortion of the Democratic
"This city, like cities across the
process, a ·kind of bralnwashlng of nation, has seen soarlng lnterest
the American people into thinJUng rates, has seen factories closed - ln
that after a man has been described short, lias borne the brunt of four
as sqle and qualified, he should be . •years of Jlnuny carter's Tinl!ertoy . dismissed because he somehow economicS," he said.
can't win;" he said.
Attacking what he called !he
"I think it's. degrading. I think it president's dismal track recor.d lor
plays on . the fears of people," he generating emploYIIlerit for blacks,
said. "I just don't accept the : Anderson said he would pump 1110re
judgment that I can't win."
money lnto
federal . job programs. '
.

to the Republican's decision to
debate the president alone Oct. 28 in
Cleveland rather than with the ln·
dependent, too.
"The debates are not anything
very sacred to him (Reagan)," he
said.
Dui'ing the conference, the Illinois
congressman blasted a report that
Senate Majority Leader Robert
Byrd, D-W.Va., is urging voters not

Sohio earnings
18 percent

The nation's bl,ackS "are par·
ticularly conscious that they csme
out of the last recession and never
really regained the position they had
before," he said.
The president also has used the
American hostage situation ln Iran
politically, Anderson said.
"I think the president of the
Uni&amp;d States has- despite his self·
righteous proclamations about other
people using that Issue in a ·political
way -I thinll he has politicized the
issue/'

.
''
• He said he hasn't pledged to. avoid . •
speaking out on the hostage Issue. ,:i
Earlier Wednesday, while acb"d
dressing a raUy sponsored Qy the ~
Toledo Federation of Teachers at •
Bowsher High School, An!lft'sOII.,-~!
denounced Reagan for his support of :
.tuition tax credita (or. priva~ ~ : '
schools. The measure wbllld make ~ ~
putillc schools an "educational ghei- ; · ;
to for the poor," he sai.:.
·
Following his Toledo visit, An-' :
d~rson left for Kal.,nM.oo, Mich., -.
for another campaign stop.
'-

._ ·

Mlt.I E Ill THAT CITY
TO CHeCK HE It

•·~!

"

$299

SPONSORS DINNER
The Racine Emergency Squad is
sponsoring a dinner at the Southern
High School, Sunday, Oct. 26. Serving will start at 11 a.m. The menu
will be ham, creamed baked
chicken, mashed potatoes and
gravy, nOOdles, green beans, pie,
cake and drink!&gt;. Take out orders
will also be available. Anyone
wishing to donate is asked to cai194!1202B, 949-2533, or 94!1-2366.

' t i lf:rll ·'-' · · · 1

;

•

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Reg. Separate Items 399.80

program now underway

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One watt of power for greater range
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MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Crime and Punishment ' Part IV .
Though Raskolnlkov outwits the
Mag l,trate , hie obseealon that
pun ishment meana redempt ion
makea confession a reel temptation. (Cioaed·Captloned) (80
mine.)
·
NEWS
NEWSUPDATE
·
NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
TOMORROW'S FAMILIES
NEWSUPOATE
•
IBl IDl •
NEWS
I]) JOHN ANKERBERO 8HQW
(J) FOQTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL
Len Dawson and Nick Buonicontl
combtne expert commentary with
actin highlights of the week 'a toot·
ball games.
()) NIGHT GALLERY
C1J MOYIE -(MUSICAL)

rn rn • rn

I

•"li

I

DICK CAVETT SHOW
!!JWSUPDATE
eClJ THE TONIGHT SHOW
'Beet Or Caraon' Gueeta: Henry
Fonda, Fred Travalena, Chrlalern·
mon. (Repeal; 80mlno.)
C1J ROSS BAGLEY SHOW
()) MOYIE ·(MYSTERY) ••• ,

1182

NEWS
!I!.GJ!TUNE
ecll CIS LATE liDVIE 'THEJEF·
FERSONS: Otorge'o B"t Friend'
Stare : Sherman Hemelay,laabal
Sanford. Wh8n Geor'"'' old N•vy
buddy ahowa up at the Jeffereona,
he makes a paaa at Loulee.
(Ropul) 'Mci•U.LLAN ANO WIFE:
Guilt by Aaaoclation' Stare : Rook
Hudson, Suean Saint Jamte.
Mildred Ia attacked while on Jury
duty and the next day, a fellOw juror
I.Liound murdorod. (R~tltl ,
ll!VMOYII! -(COIIIEDY) • ''Pmrolo
!!JovyQtllgt._l;I'F...... " 11188
'11:50 ctJ . !Ill •
CHARLIE'S
ANQE..-aucl!
WOMAII
Chl~le'o AngoJa.. 'ThtCOntentlng
Adull•' A c•JJ glr1 operollon wHII 1
burgl•rv ring going on die oldt
makee the mlltlkt or robbing a
ayn.:Ucate
m1n.
Pollee
woman- ·' Above and BtW"ond ' In
order to lnv..tlalte 1 parole of·
flcere' delllth, Pepper goea undercover at a parolee and become•
the object of a bank robber• a tree·
112•· (Repeal; 2 hra., 15 mlno.)
2:00 ,(1)
MOYIE
]
-(IUIPEN8E·ROMANCE) ••10

ABC

1878
-1it::io
12:118
1:00

II A OIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

PRICES MAY VARY AT lNDIVIOUAl STORES

t

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2:00
·

TOIIIORROW

.

WI UPOAT!
ROBERT
TIONEO)
OINQIIIA

lD-23·80

I. 3.,.

f - - - - - - - -_:__________

~t'.a'A'OtJ
bv THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Lead off
1 Malay title
41 Useless
plant
5 Configuration
10 Asian river
DOWN'
11 Loch -

1 Swift

13 Napoleonic, e.g. current
14 Now!
%Cuyid
15 Feminists'
3 Betrayer
concern
4 "All the
• Y~terday 's Answer
Things
(abbr.)
16 Suffix for
You - "
16 Toward
27 Supple
affection
5 Due
shelter
31 Persian
17 Sesame
i Tabled'19 - up (feeds
tiger
18 Bargain
7 I love
the kitty)
33 Hurt
20 English
(Lat. J
20 "34 Painter,
river
8 Famous
Muchachos!" Grant 21 Having
hand washer 21 Customer
3C Health
a backbone
9 Gird
2Z Roofing
resort
z:!'Conduit
1Z Crossed
pieces
37 Lay :em in
24 Celerity
out
25 Beef cut
the aisles
25 Thread··. ··
21 Way back
when
27 Exhausted
28 School
organiza·
ti~ (abbr.)
Z9 Italian
film beauty
38 Msamoll
· IAitrum!dani r.-lf--f--~+-

~

I

one. Thus, South has enough
strength for a takeout double,
but prefers the . overcall
because he wants to show his
.H
+AQJ853
good spade suit immediately.
+9
North's two-heart call
shows the modern way of
WEST
EAST
respondmg to an overcall with
+95
. +73
a good hand. This cue bid
.J84
.KQl096
merely shows interest in
• 10 7 4
• 62
game and has nothing to do
+Q7632
+AK lOB
with the heart holding.
SOUTH
On the convention card this
+A K lO 8 4·
player shows a cue bid is a
.A32
one-round Ioree and will also
tK9
show that jump raises are not
+J54
!orcing.
Without the ..ace of hearts
Vulnerable: North-South
South would merely rebid two
Dealer: East
spades. With the ace of hearts,
West
Nottb Eul
Soutb
South feels that he can afford
a real heart cue bid.
Pass
Pass
North sees some slight slam
Pass
Pass . 5t
possibility and bids four
Pass
P..S Pass
diamonds. South raises to five
Pass
at which point North looks
carefully at his singleton club
and jumps to six spades ..
West could have saved a lot
of time if he had opened a
club. East would take the first
trick and that ·would end the
By Oswald Jacoby·
proceedings. After the heart
and Alaa Sontag
lead South played out the
nand to the end, but had no
In modem theory the s1m· way to avoid losing .the last
pie overcall may range from trick.
a weak hand to .a very good (NEWSPAPER EN'PERPRISE ASSN.)
NORtH
+QJ62

CIXIDFROIIJUIIPSTREET ' Weol
African Heritage ' Featuring performances by Hgh Masekela and the
Wo'ae Dance Theatre\ hoa1 Oscar
Brown, Jr., examine a the special
role of music in African and Afro·
American ·
cuhure.
oaed-Captloned)
NEWS UPDATE
• ClJ THURSDAY NIGHT AT
TH.E MOVIES 'Paradloe Alley'
1978 Stars: Sylvester Stallone,
Lea Canalito.
.
I]) 1'00 ~LUB
()) !121111 WAYLON JENNINGS
SPECIAL
• ()) ®) SPECIAL MOYIE PRE·
SENTATION'TheLaolSong' 1980
Stars: lynda Carter, Dale Robin·
etta.
()) CBJ
SNEAK PREVIEWS
Co·hoeta Gene $lakeland Roger
Ebert review lhe latest films .
()) CBJ THIS OLD HOUSE In I hie
episode the house is insulated and
the old furn!Bce is replaced with a

()) 1BJ •

·- I

.. -

Interesting new approach ,.

oaed - Captioned)

••ex~mentlnTtrror.,

...,

.

1388 25

On guard while you 're away! Turos
lights or dev'ices on/ off one or.more
times dafly. Makes it.look like you're
home when you're noi. Dial sets
for auto or manual Hurry in and save
.07! 83...3

SHE gj';ALLY IS DEVABTATEDI
AND I 'M e,E61NNIN6 TD
6ET I&lt;EVEN6E FOR
HEIZ Plln1N6 ME 13EHIND 6AI&lt;O YE-AR&amp;

11:28
11:30

j

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Oswald Jaco,by and Alan Sontag

UoneAreFree" 1861

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~UT I'M AFRAID 'THE
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CEASE GRIME DOOMED HECKLE
Answer: Why- th e circ us man who was shot out
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OR. JACK VAN iiiPE
MOYIE ·IADVE~TURE) "
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ctl!l21111 ANGIE Angle's wacky ,
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MISS FLICH SAID
"rrU W,O.NTI:D lO
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UPSTAIRS!-

-~ '

(MOST STORES)

ODNR rejorestration
portion of the order must be in pine.
Windbreak stock is not eligible for
matching.
"We are once again happy to
cooperate with WES1VACO in the
· reforestation · of rural lands of
southeast .Ohio," said Ernest
Gebhart, chief of the Division of
Forestry. '·'The cooperative effort
will improve woodland productivity
and develop better wildlife habitat,
watershed protection, recreational
opportunities and aesthetic appeal."
Persons who own land in the 12·
county area may order trees under
the program by contacting the of·
!ices of the local service foresters,
Agricultural Stabilization and Con·
servation Service, Cooperative Ex·
tension Service and Soil and Water
Conservation Districts. Information
may also be obtained from the
Division of Forestry, Ohio Depart,
ment ·ef Natural Resources, Foun· ·
lain Square, Columbus 43224.
Telephone: (614 ) 466-7842.

GOMETHIH' ·· SACK

' ' I
''I

CHARGE IT

rI I I Jr I I I)
(Answers tomorrow )

'!!.ed · Caplloned)

h oSts a zany television show In
which Mindy and theirfrlenda give a
cosmic performance to save can·
d idate Nelson Flavor from blowing
hia big chance on the tuba.
{!!eJ!!&amp;tl
llllJJ ®) THE WHITE SHADOW
Coach Reeves ex,lenda hi a stay In
New York. when he learn a the aeriouanassfl!fhis fathll(a illneaaand
the two of them begin to develop a
new understanding . (Conclusion :
60mina.)
.
.
()) NEXT QUESTION
CBJ UP AND COlliNG 'lncldenlal
Hamilton High ' When Marcuala attackedatachool by_
a white bully, he
aeeka
violent
revenge .

ER ·· I J~ FOR60T

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form the surprise answer, as sug~
gested by the above cartoon.

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SANFORD AND SON
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DICK CAVETT SHOW Guest:
Film director Jean·Luc Godard.
IBJ MATCH GAllE
CBJIIACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
.FACE THE MUSIC
7:58
NEWS UPDATE
8:00
.ClJGAIIESPEOPLEPLAYA
feature on an 82-year-old stab·
leboywho was a jockey until he quit
45 years ago, a report on the bar·
tenders invitational competition, a
bathtub race in Oakland, and a tug
of war featuring wives of pktyera in
the World Seriea. (60 mine.)
I]) ~ISSIONARIES IN ACTION
I]) MOVIE -(DOCUMENTARY)"

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Mitch Miller. Hoats: Hugh Down a
and
~
Frank ~
Blair.

.·,.
'

sale last year.
The sale is sponsored by the Wood
County Beef CatUe Improvement'
Association, in conjunction with the
United Livestock Sales.

WATCH REPAIR
JEWELRY.REPAIR
APPRAISAL

;

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APDRESS&gt;-- AND
CALLED A NE;WS·
PAPSR FRIJ:ND OF

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VISA

NEWS
BACKYJI!ID
. CARal. iURNETT . AND
FRIENDS
ABC NEWS '
CBJ £2-1 CONTACT
1:30
e w NBC NEWS
PAUL AND !!DNA
808 NEWHART SHOW
FACETHEIIUSIC
()) IBJ CBS NEWS
IIAINSTREAIIING
DICK CAVETT SHOW
.ABC NEWS
8 :58
NEWSUPOATE
7:00
• PMIIAG~NE
COIIETOTHEWATER
ALLIN THE FAIIlLY
IBJ. FAMILY FEUD
. B,.CKSTAGI[6.T .THE GRAND

SO I TOOK Hl=l&lt;.

. :'

Robinson buys grand champion

COLUMBUS - Landowners in 12
southeast Ohio counties will get one
· tree free for each one they purchase
during the 1981 reforestation
program of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' (ODNR )
Division of Forestry.
WESTVACO, Inc., a maj or
eastern forest products company,
will pay half the cost of the trees ordered by landowners in Athens,
Belmont, Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Vinton and Washington coun·
ties.
The counties are in the timber·
buying area of the company's Luke,
Md. plant. WES1VACO has sponsored the program in Ohio since
1966. There is no requirement to sell
the mature timber to the company.
The landowner must purchase a
J1linimum of 500 seedlingS to qualify
for WESTV ACO to match 500. The
landowner may purchase hardwoods or pine, but the matching

I

,•

CLEVELAND (AP) - The Stan· results to higher crude oil pi'ices,
dard Oil Co. (Ohio ), after seeing its better. margins in .marketing and
earnings more than double in the reflntng operattons, htgher
past three quarters, posted an 18 chemicals prices and a better debt
.
percent rise in third-&lt;)uarter profits. situation.
Sohio earned $433.4 million or
Decontrolled otl now accounts for
$1.77 per share this year, comp~red 46 percent of Sohio's production,
to $366.2 million, or $1.51 per share, growmg at a rate of 4.6 percent a
in 1979's third quarter. Sales and month. The company sold otl for an
operating revenue totaled $2.5 ' average $24.50 a barrel, compared to
billion in the 1900 period, compared $21.35. a year earlier.
. . .
to $2.1 billion a year ago.
Whitehouse satd $104 rrullion m
Daily net production of crude oil ""ndfalis proftts tax and higher maveraged 714,000 net barrels in the come taxes and exploration costs
1980 quarter, up from 621,000 last reduced profits from the $451.3
year.
milli9.n of the second quarter.
Chairman Alton Whitehouse at· Sohio's $489 million tax burden was
tributed the improved third-&lt;)uarter up72 percen!over lastyear's period.

At the fifth annual Calf' Club Sale
at the United Livest&lt;&gt;&lt;:k Sales,
Mineral Wells, Wilbur Robinson, ·
Robinson's Farms, Alfred (Meigs
County), purchased the grand cham·
pion, a three-quarter Sinunental and
one-quarter Angus, which weighed
540 pounds.
The reserve champion, tipping the
. scales at 575 pounds, was purchased
by Charles (Red) Carr, alos of
Alfred. The animal was threeeighths Chianina and five-eighths
Angus. The sale saw 42 steers sold.
Many of the animals are purchased
each year for 4-H and FFA Projects.
The 1900 grand champion at the
Mason County Fair was sold at the

•

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Television

31 Pulpit topic
3% Gresham·~
1

35 Actor, Cook, Jr.
S7 Teus city
Sl Make a
second probe
3t Roman
emperor

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worllll:
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used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sl~ ale letters, ,
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Yesterday'l CeyploqMte: A PENNYWEIGHl' Of LOVE IS
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' !()-The Da1ly Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Thursday, October 23, 1980

Bergland
WASHINGTON
( AP)
Agriculture Secretary Bob Bergland
says the new gram trade agreement
between the United States and China
showed the superiority of President
Carter's farm policies over those of
Republican Ronald Reagan. But he
insists it was not timed for poht1cal
advantage.
Bergland- said Wednesday the
Chinese were eager to negotiate with
the Carter adJmmstration partly out
of fear that a Reagan admirustration
would establish more formal ties
with Taiwan
The Chinese " believe Reagan is an
amateur/' Bergland satd, 11 They're
an_'tious about the U S. election and
U.S. producers ought to he also."
Bergland s~id the Chinese may
have concluded the trade agreement
now because they regard "Reagan's
tw&lt;&gt;-China policy as so clumsy" it
would be a nsk to wait.
The agreement was s1gned Wednesday in Pekmg and takes effect

insist~

•

Jan. I. It calls for the Chinese to buy
6 million to 9 million tons of
American grain a year for the next
four years at market prices. Most of
11 will be wheat, and the rest, from 15
percent to 20 percent, will be corn.
Bergland said the proof that the
agreement was not timed for the
election was that it "has been under
study-for two years and negotiations
have been under way smce May.
There's nothing new or unusual
about this."
Bergland said the agreement will
provide a stable market for
American farmers without causmg
any increase in food prices here. He
said the cost of a loaf of bread would
not be affected by the pact since the
United States is already selling so
much gram to China.
" The agreement will benefit our
farmers by providing assurances of
a stable, high level of exports to
China. We see 11 as a new nulestone
m our country's relationship with a

nation that mcludes one-fourth of the
world's people," the secretary said.
In the current fiscal year, China is
expected to buy more than $3 billion
worth Of U.S. farm commodities, including about 6 million tons of
wheat, 2.5 million tons of corn,
almost a million tons of soybeans
and ~ riullion bales of cotton, U.$, of-'
f1cials said.
Bergland sa1d "this agreement
provides the way ~or private U.S in·
leresis to compete" in the China
market.
He said there was no reason for
the government to consult grain
growers before concluding the
negotiations because U.S. foreign
policy interests were of paramount
concern.
"We don't consult with arms contractors" before agreeing to provide
armaments ,to other nations,
Bergland said.
Bergland said that when COIJ)o
pared to Japan and Western

Fall forest fire season arrives
•

October I was the the begmning of Wardens in the Shade River Protecthe 1980 Fail Forest Fire Season in tion Area. This area includes aU of
Oh10. The fail season 10 OHio starts ' Me1gs County, the southern third of
the first day of October and runs Athens Cotinty and parts of Gailia,
thr oug~ the last day of November.
Washington, and Vinton Counties.
Durmg this tune a burnmg pernut is
ATHENS COUNTY
reqmred before domg any open burAlexander Townshtp
nmg This mcludes debns burning
Name, add r ess and phone number
and the burnmg of household trash.
are li sted
Roger Coe, Coe' s Store, Albany,
Other restnctwns are paced on the
698-2775,
Dorothy Wtngo,
pr1vate IOdiVIdual as a part of their Ohto,
Hebardsvll le, Oh10, 593 3836
respons1b11lty to burn 10 a safe and
Ath ens Townshtp
Tom Atkt ns, R tch land Area
reasonable manner. Some of these
V. F.D , Athens, OhiO
are:
Carthage Tawnshtp
(I) No open burning IS pemutted
W. A . Ba r nh tll, B arn htll' s Sohto,
before ~ p.. and all fires must be out GUYSVille, OhiO, 667-3420.
Lodt TownshiP
by 6 a.m of the following day
Maggre Buck , Buck' s Lake,
(2) Someone must be present w1th GUYSVi lle, Oh iO, 696-1109.
Troy Townshtp
a burnmg perndt. while the fire IS
Joe
Owe ns,
S. E 0 EMS ,
burmng
Coolv il le, Oh1o, 667 3&lt;1.45
(3) Open burning is pcohibited
GALLIA COUNTY
when wmds are m excess of 10 MPH.
Morgan Townshtp
Kenneth Ward, Up Creek, Btdwell ,
( 4) Ail local state and fe&lt;)eral
OhiO, 388 8542
t eguiatwns must be followed.
VINTON COUNTY
(5) Vwlatwn of the burnmg perndt
Wtlkesv tlle Town sh•p
Dean Burns, State Route· 124,
laws can 10volve fmes of$20 to$100 .
Wt lke S\I il le, OhtO, 669 4234 '
Fall 1s the tune of year when the
WASHINGTON COUNTY
leaves beg1n to turn and we in
Decatur Townsh•P
Mt lto n O' Ne tl , Rt. 1, Box 43 , Lt ttl e
southeastern Ohio have some of the
most beautiful scenery m thi! coun- Hock1ng, OH1o, 667-3980
Belpre Townsh•P
try. Along w1th the beauty of fall
Bernard Rauch. L.• ft le Hocking ,
comes the hazard caused by the Ohi O, 989 2138
MEIGS COUNTY
fa ilmg dry leaves. They are exBedford Township
tremely flammable. Help us to
Fred Burson, St. Rt 33, Shade.
maintain this beauty_by burning m a Oh10, 696-1028
Chester TownshiP
sa£e and responsible manner
John Ridenour, Ridenour's SepFollowmg IS a list of Forest Fire
1

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Attendance at Sunday morning
service at the Free Methodist Church was 78. Choir members present
were 12. A duet was sung by Larry
Clark and daughter, Tanuny. Guest
speaker was Rev. Paul Rice, a
missionary from India.
Pastor and Mrs. Floyd Shook are
visiting relatives m Columbus,
Newark, and Pennsylvania.
Mrs. Pearl Clark, Mrs. Bauder
Roffard, Worthington, and son
Roger, Ida Mash, Columbus, Mr .
and Mrs. Clyde Hmton, New Albany,

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stewart, New
Albany, viSited recently With Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Mash.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Powell,
Dayton, spent several days With Mr.
Powell's SISter, Mrs. Grace Jones .
Mrs Edna Howell, Columbus,
spent a week with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James
Will.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Oct. 12 was 75. Choir mem·
bers present were 12.
Monday, Oct. 20, there will be a

ply, Chester, Oh10, 985 3308, Ralph
Trussell ,

Bashan,

Long

Bottom,

Ohi O. 949 4609
Columbia Township
Reed Jeffers. Rt 2, Albany , Oh 10,

698 2588 .
Lebanon Townsh1p
Gordon
Proff1tt,
Proff1tt's
Grocery , Portland, 0h•o, 8.43 -2900
Letart TownshiP
Randall Robert s, Letart Fa lls,
Rac me, Oh10
Olive Township
J M or Rhonda M •ll .ro n~~' Shade
R1ver State Forest , Reedsville,
Oh10 ; 378 6116; D N Smal es,
Forked Run Sta te Park, Reedsv ille,

OhiO, 378 6206

Orange Township
Dorothy
Rob1nson,
Alfred,
CoolVI lle, Oh10, 985 3892, Robert
Tnpp, Box 24, Tuppers Pla•ns, Ohio,
667 3941, Nor man Weber, T uppers
Plams, Dh1o, 667·3074
Rutland Township
Rose Carson. 35352 Litu s Rd ,

plans lor providing credits to Poland
European countries, trade with million metric tons of grain to the
includes $310 million in comSoviet Union 1aat January afte~ the
China has nofbeen very reliable.
modities.
"We do need to have some Soviet OCC1!Pfttion of Afghanistan.
The designations call for up to flllO
regularity The Chinese trade has Reagan has Cj!Ued for lifting the ell)o
mlliion
for feed grains, ~ million
,
bargo.
been Irregular. We need to he
protein
meals, S3 million for lard,
for
The
lateSt
estimatea
are
that
the
prep!.red and aware of what their
needs are," he said. The grain Soviet grain harvest will be 181 $24 million for soybfans, $4 miiJion
agreement, he said, "eliminates the riillllon metric tons, ab01lt25 million "for vegetable oll8, $3 million for
edlble soy protein, $3 million for rice
below what the Agriculture Departelement of surprise. "
and$3
million for alfalfa seeds.
ment anticipaied as recently aa two
Ber~and also said the adThat
brings tq $417 million the
ministration's partial embargo of weeks ago.
amount
of commodities that the
Bergland said the Russians "are
grain for the Soviet Union was adding to distress in Russia. He said feeling the sting (from the embargo)· departmf!lt has des.gnated for
Poland uncler a $370 million program
the only way the Soviets could ease and they're feeling it hard. :Ibis is
of Joan guarantees on r"!"'!''a
their food shortages would be to the time to keep the beat on. '-'
Exporter's must complete
resume full-scale grain trade with
WASIUNGToN (AP)
The deliveries by Sept. 30 to be eligible
the United States. ·
Carter suspended sales of 17 ,Agriculture Department's latest for the guarantees.

Terry

Center
V F D.. Vinton, OhiO, 742 2437 ,
Har ley Grafe, Rt l, Langsville,
Oh10, 669 3B48; Eugene Holl iday ,
Twp Rd 3, Dexter, Oh10, 698 3804
Salisbury Township

Students representing Meigs County
were Mark McGuire, Mark Cline,
and Fred Young. Earl Young,
teacher at Meigs High School, accompanied the group.
The youths simulated a day m the
life of a college student, moving
from classroom to classroom for the
mini-le c tures ,
given
by
distmguished faculty of The Ohio
State Umvers1ty.
Dr. Roy M. Kottman, dean,
College of Agnculture and Home

...,
. "'"·''......

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow In Rutland
Every Sunday starling at
Proceeds

being

donated to the Boy -scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory

Announcements

GUN SHOOT: Saturday
evening starting at 6:30
p.m. Sponsored by the ·
Racine

Volunteer

F.re

Department, at bUilding In
Bashan. Factory choke

guns only.

Albany, Oh10, 698-4499

noon.

30 percent off greenware
for !he month of October.
Drehel's Ceramics, 59 N.
Second

Avenue,

dleport. 992-2751.

choke gun only I

Mid·

Apples &amp; Sweet Cider:

RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starling at
7:30 p.m Factory choke
guns only

Romes, Grimes, Red, &amp;

Golden Delicious. Now
selling at $4.00 &amp; up per
buschel. Fitzpatrick Orchards, State Route 689.
Phone 669-3785.

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

1I Curb Inflation.
Pay Ceish for

week. Call Carousel Con·

Wnte your own ad and order by mall with !his
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

eRENTALS

l-Car11of Thinks

41-HOUMifDrll ...t

~.lnnot.tnnm~~nts

42- MMIIe Hemu
tor Rent

4-Giv.away

.,__.Public Salt

classify, edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be

Announcement

·I

For Rent

I
I
I

SS- Iultdlnt lu"'ln
...,,.... fer Salt

15-SchOOII llntructlon
,....._

These cash rates
Include discount

IIUIIMII
OtaPorivnlty

Services

..

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__

SOME OF THE MEIGS COUNTY teachers attending Wednesday's mservice program held at Meigs
High School are shown m this Katie Crow photo. The
teachers were J.lllening to Dr. Evans, professor •I Ohio
University diJcUII SChool law for teachers. Other
speakers during the day were Dr. John O'Donnell,

chairman, department of educational administration
for the University of Dayton and Dr. Stephen Douglas,
psychologist for the Columbus Police Department.
Russell Moore, served as chairman of the lnaervice
planning program.

...

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Call985-3814 or992-2571
Real Estate

General

Moving

must sell,

bedroom mob1l e home one
acre, much. much more.
No reasonable offer
refused May take some
trade . Call anyt1me, 9.49
2038, 843-2'171, or Ul 4802 .

-Backhoe a 'n d
Dump Truck Service
- Shop and Port-

bills.

Ap-

I•NR .. - New L.sflnt - Ruslic

Deautltul new lhree
home. lam1IY room ,

fenced ,n yard Th11 one
last long Price-d in leh low

tarege lot, fam•ly room, recrea
I
room,tw:ocar garage, bu llt
I
plenty of room lor
you want " ' '" ""
Pnced
for qu•r:k

1f you really want to sell
list with us today.

W1ndsor home situated
on almost 2 acres Furnished w1th nice furniture and app\1ances.

mtcro wave oven. Home
has central a1r and
stereo. Dwarf orchard
and
bu1ld1ng
on
acreage.
Sells
for

$29,500.00.

We have other properties to choose from.
Give us a call.
Velma N1cinsky, Assoc.

Phone 742-3092

auto., Ruger ..41 magnum, Ste\lens single shot t1p

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.

magnum ,

Phone 742-3171

Real Estate- General

Housing
Headquarters

COUNTRY LANE - A
peacefullarm nestled 1n

the gentle countryside
that can be enjoyed
w1thtn a few m 1nutes

drhle from town. Big
woods and rolling
hayf1eldS with a
remodeled 2 bedroom
log cabin. A more
leisurely and relaxed
way of life. Let's take a

look
NEW LOG CABIN
HOME - 2 bedrooms,
bath, k •tchen, dining,
living room,' and loft for
storage _ Has a level tot
with river frontage Just

$25,900.
$1,000 DOWN - 4 room
frame fix It yourself
with .4.7 acres. T.P.
water near S79.~ mon-

thly for 5 years at 13%.
Save on
home

this

SA,SOO

'360 ACRE

FARM Mostly fence and some
timber, with lots Of river

frontage or will sell

house and 1 acre. Ask-

Ing $225,00 tor enllre

farm Let's talk.

ATTRACTIVE ANO
COMFORTABLE
Very nice 2 bedrOOITI
home with woodbur.ning
fireplace in den Has full
basement, garage and 3

lots 1n town. This you

will like for only s.ts,ooo.

2 IUS I NESS PROPER·
TIES - Good Income,
good locations. You
can 't afford to pay your

.

COLLECTION OF KNIVES: Over 200 In all~ includl.ng caaa, Boher, Puma, Queen, Kobar, ancl '

earning in taxes. invest

many more.

in one of these and write •
it off.
PROTECT YOUR LIFE
AND VALUABLES,
OPENING
YOUR
DOOR TO ANYONE
CAN COST YQU, LIST
WITH US. WE ARE
NEXT TO POMEROY
POST CIFFICE , CALL
992·3325 or "1·3176.

INDIAN JEWELRY: Includes rings, neckf'llcn,
walchiNinds, ole.: Gold rlnQJ, men's and ladles'
POCKET WATCHES : near 50 of all varieties,' In
gold and sll- plolld c -. Some gold cases. ·
C:OIIII: Large collection of sliver dollars aJid other
colnt.
•
tills 11 only 1 pertlel list of 11111 large sale. Don't
111111Janes
IIIII -In·cherge of lilt. Notnlnt shown belor~
1111
daY of 11t.. Lunch on premises. ,
niiMI: ~SIUII'CIIK- Willi Plllllve !D.
.
1Mt
hi' -l•ent. P...IY of perklfit.

,..,Jiilill....
ca...,....-"allebll.

Hou"n"

•
lllUCTIONIIIII: IIIIJa•eulldAISOC.

li •, 'rltjl•.l. ft

,_114-157-4311

..

f\

~~

. . ...,.

~~~~

~··

Two bedroom house back
of
Racine
Pr.ce
negotiable Must be handy

.

44

Two bedroom apartment
with large livtng room &amp;
kitchen Furn1shed Adults
only
Brown' s Tratler
Park. 992 332.4

m ·s.n

Jean Trussell t49·2UO
OFFICE"N2St

SpaceforRent

47
Wanted to Rent
DESPER ATELY needed .
two bedroom unfurn ished
house or apartment or
tra11er, not ov'er $75 to $100

a month . Please phone 992
3151 after 6 or Inquire at630
South Third Avenue, Mid·
dleport. Mus! be in Mid·
dleport area . Must have
washer and dryer hookup

Couple With two children
would like a 2 or 3 bedroom

house or tra iler. 992·5783.

4947
10~20],!,

ATTENTION ·
(IM PORTANT TO YOU) Will

insulated, new thermopane windows plus a

"2·61fl

ow

1n ·

Vou hale lhe best chmces!
Ta~e a notcfted collar or Simple V
neckline and a gathered or
straight sleevt You'll en)oy thiS
so~ dress day after day
·· P11nted Pattern 4947 Half
SIZes 10\1, 12 \1. 1411. 16\1,
18\1. 20\1 S11e 14\1 (bust 37)
takes 211 yards 60.1ncb
$1.15 "' ........... ~ 504
. . . . ,..... .. lllltoda

..... .. ,....,, s.o• Ill:

-~

,_Dipt.

19 J

Dally SentiDel
24.1 lhst 17 ~ Till, NY
IGOU. Prlat
Alliii£SS,
ZIP1SIZE, IIIII
NWIEI.
WhY pul up With h•rh pncesdol/Irs, PI bolter quality'
Send for 0!!&lt;. ~EW FAU·WINTER
PAnERN CATAlOG 94 patterns,
Free P1ttem Coupon (worth
$1.75). Cltlkll. $1 00
IJU.-. .._ Clllllilll$1.75

...

'·e~'.. 9t~He ... $1.75

$1.1S
~U.~-IfJal~ Tlwlln .$1.75

117

p.ay cash or certified check
for antiques and collectibles or entire estates.

Nothing too large

Also,

guns, pocket watches and

colp collect1ons Call 614767·3167 or 557-3411

Anytime
10 5 1 mo

r~========~

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
All types of roof work ,
new or repatr gutters
and downspouts, gutter .
c1ean1ng and painting _
Al l'work guaranteed.

t

j

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnc es
Call Howard

Pomeroy
Landmark

949·2862
949-21 60

New Wood Burner

Stoves

Only 1395
plus bl~wer
1 Good M . ward
E1ec1r1c Range
175
1 Good used

Gas Range
1100
1 Good Used Fr1g1daare
Refrigerator
1150

v... _ POMEROY

~ .LANDMARK
~~E=·=M==•=,n~S~1~.~~====~

72

Trucks for Sale

1972 Chevy three fo urfh s
ton flatbed , heavy duty
suspens1on, 350 automa t1c,
new t~res, runs great

Ask1ng $4SU.OO 992 7770 ask
fo r Robert .

and p:mies and rid1ng
lessons
Everything
imaginable in horse equip-

81

Western

&amp; G Carpet Cleaning
Steam c leaned
F ree
Reasonabl e
est i mate
rates. Scotchguard 992

Home
Impro vements

ment Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and S
Ruth

(614) 698-32'10.

Reeves

Put a cold nose 1n your
future! ! Shots, wormed ,
Me1gs County Humane

Society, 992-6260, between

6J09 or 742·2211.

F loors, ceilings, panefin g,
wall paneling, paintin g

the hours of 12 7, cl osed

Phone 992·2759.

Kerr, tri-colored beagle,
four
Shephards, fou r
Labradors, very pre tty,
special chocolate colored,
lovable dog, 1f you lik e
chocolate &amp; vanilla sundaes, she's sweet, she
barks, wi t h a great per·
sonality. You'll love this

82

Tuesdays

Black &amp; tan

Plumb.ng
&amp; Heat1ng

HEATIN G &amp; a1r
'192 2364 after 5 p m

a,.3____~E~x~ca,_v,a,.,t,in,g.____
DOZER work, small 10bs a
spec~a lt y ,
quick depenReg istered female St. Ber- dable service. 742-2753.
nard, one &amp; one-half years
old. $100.00. Phone 985·3597
J &amp; F BACKHOE SERVICE hscensed &amp; bonded,
McLeads Pet Grooming, sept1c tank insta llation,
most poodles groomed for water &amp; gas l ines Ex·
$6.00 with bath $8.00. Flea cavat1ng work &amp; transit
dipping $1 .00. All large layout. 9'12-7201.
breeds pr ices vary. Call
Coolville 667-3915 for In·
dog. 9'12-6260

formation &amp; appointment.
No Sunday work . 9 a.m .

84
ElectriCal
___c&amp;
~R~e~
fr~ilt
ge
~r~a~t~
IO"nc___

p.m. weekly.

SEW 1NG
Repairs,

makes1

Misc. Merchanise

61
Farm Equipment
55 lb. pull, SIOO.OO Ul-2711.
FOR
SALE
or Trade. 1965
Electric clothes dryer, Massey Ferguson
tractor •
S60.oo , 843-2711 . Baby
stroller In good condition, IH corn picker , HA
$20.00, 843-2711. Four used rotavator. See Leo Morris
!ireS 1200 X 16.5 for S100 00. a~742 · 2o455.
843 · 2711.
Umbrella
stl1loller In excellent con- 6_,2, ____,w'"a,.,n,_,t_,ed
"-'to~B~
u Ly___
dillon. S10.00 843-27\ I.
CHIP WOOD. Poles mu.
diameter 10" on · largest ,
Winchester 94 30 30 rifle end. $12 p-er ton. Bundled ·
like new . Call 985·3597. slab. $10 per ton . Delivered :
$100.00.
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rl. 2, ;
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
Firewood for sale, S20.00
per truck load, will deliver.
.. ... ' '
Local areas only . m ·5050.

. .. . . .......
'.
.............

for S200.00. Phone 698-6784.

MACH IN E
service, • all

992-2284

The

Authorized Singer

Sales

Shop,

Pomeroy

and Service . We sharpe n

Compound bow, Rob 1n
Hood, Little John, like new

automatic washer, May tao

con·

d1t1oni ng j
furna ce
cleaning ,plumblng
Call

Fabric

One large upr ight freezer
!hat holds BOO pounds. One

1 n rt c

Pets for Sale
56
HOOF HOL LOW Horses

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

$26,900.00
SNUG HAVEN - Fully

ASSOCIATES
R011er I DoHie Turner

furn 1shed

eluding cable TV. $200
month . No children or pels
Call Mon.- Fri 9-4, 992-3381

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Souml!trf Valley Mobile
Home' Park, Cheshire, Oh
992 3954.

bedroom
home,
carpeted, on a IOO'x lOO'
lot,
1n
Syracuse .

bullt · ln
kitchen ,
carpeted, electric heat,
on approximately 1 acre
lot. 18,500.
BUILOING LOTI On old
Chester Golf Course.
Utllllles available. Approximately I acre.
$6,000.
REALTOR
Henry E. Ctelond, Jr.

utilit ies

992 7479

heat,
carpeted .
$39' 900.00.
INSULATEO - Costs
less to heat this 3

12 Park St.
· Middleport, Oh.

MISC. Merchamse

FU RNISHE D- AP T for
rent '" Middl eport All

Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy Large lots. Call

with a 4 bedroom house
• near Syracuse . In sulated, natural gas

HEATING

Brass s1n gle headbna rd,
four ladder ba ck c~a.rs ,
ant1que dresser , naple
deacons bench . water sled.
motorcycl e
leathers ,

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home

1n. JUST! $42,000 00.
THE
COUNTRY
SCENE - On approx·
lmately 13 cres o1 land

bedrooms, central air,

S4

Apartment
for Rent

01 L.atNo.Summer
1 &amp; No.
BuyING
now
3 AND 4 RM formshed ap- 2HEAT
Pric es. ExcelSIOr Co 614ts. Phone 992 5434.
9'12-2205.

46

heat , carpeted , full
basement wtth garge on

$21,500.00.
CAREFUL IT'S LOAOEDI Call now to getfirst
shot at this feature
laden Wx70' mobil
ehom!'. 2 baths, 3

C.:! II

5.

baths, w.b.f.p., electr ic

Farmers Home Loan.

(614) 992-3213 Pom•ror , Ohio

Street in Middleport. 9923030 between the hours of 9·

and hood 1n kitchen, l'h

wOOd burner to supply
electric heat, will keep
you warm In thiS 3
bedroom home on 'h
acre lot. Approved tor

Superior Siding ' Center

Four rooms &amp; bath, upstairs apartment . Palmer

tached carport and approximately 2 acres Of
level land. All for iust
$41,500.00.
GORGEOUS AUTUMN
COLORINGS - Are a
background to this newly constructe~ . 3
bedroom home, range

1.75

AND

1-d·~·'

rooms with bath. 992·5908.

heal. Fully insulated,
full basement with

close

11111•

Furnished aparfment, four

pool next summer! This
18' diameter x 4' depth
abobve ground pool is
included w1th th1s 10
room, 4 bedroom home
in Eastern District This
home also hasllf2 baths,
rec room, off1ce, sewing room , all carpeted ,
natural gas forced air

approx1mately

n1
•
-/1om.
In

Printed Pattern

NEW LISTING-Loll in a

KAUFPS
PWMBING

Ph. 992-6263

man. 992-7288

For Day After Day!

10-7 tfc

Complete Dry Cleantng
and Laundry
• Carpet
• Orapenes
• Furn1ture
c"We're No 1 1n
Serv1ce &amp; Qualt

'\!!:) Xll'tZ S'll•lol, SIIIH
1~.-;u

job.

ili!!i~~~~ ~,;;;;;;:;;:;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:~

WOOded acres -

992-5 682

PBEI
Windows or
F1ve room house with bath ,, Storm
Pair
Shutters
with
near Racine. 992 5858
of com·

garage,
laundry,
storage
room,
workshop, chimney for
wood burner. Huge at-

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

1

1

t
I

furnishe'a . 992·3090.

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

Hr s. : Mon .- Fn.

9 A.M.-5:30P.M

~IsnQ ~ .United States Steel

~

House with four rooms &amp;
bath, fully carpeted, un -

a

PH 992 6342
TRY US!

Repair

9·26-1 mo.

New house in Syracuse. No
children or pets. Deposit &amp;
references
requ1red
$200.00 per month. 992 7841

day , on ly 535,000.00
GOOD BUY - 1979

featurea

Houses for Rent
TWO BEDROOM unfurnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one
bedroom furnished apart·
ments. Call afler 6 p.m.
992·2288.

317 N.

Mtddleport, Oh10

- Transm iss1on

Call:
992-7354

home Partially furnished
&amp; set up at local trailer

Kesterson

-Auto and Truck
Repair

able Welding.

·1960 model 10 x 50 mobile

•

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

OONSTRUCTION

two

41

overhead apartment.
Corn cn b, cellar and

K1tchen

44

SHULER

court Phone 9'12-7a.l8.

of

PISTOLS · Include Derringer, .38 specia l, Colt 25

mort.

••
,.~••·

:I

Mail This Coupon with RemiHinc:e
1
The Dally Sentinel
I •
Box 729
I
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
~o-----------~------·-·----·-·~IL....:.,:..::.,:;...

•

''·

11- HIIM lm...-ov......ts

Went·Ad Advertising
Deldllnn

..

drapes.

pliances stay. Several
ruce bulldmgs. Call to-

M·nl bolt act. rifle with scope 270 col., L.C SMith
single bt. trap with rib 12 ga ., Winchester M-12
pump 12 ga., D~kln ngo Single bl with rib, Winchester M-12 pump 12 ga., Winchester M-97 pump 12
ga. Lefever single bl. 12 ga., Winchester M-11 auto
12 ga., llhica dbl. bl. with hammers 12 ga. Winchester M·37 single bl. 410, Savage 1&gt;911 act. rifle
with clip 25·20, Remington M-788 bolt oct. rifle with
scope22-2SO, Marlin M-1895lever act , riJie&gt;IS-70cal,
WincheSter M 1980 pump 22 cal., Stevens lever act?
rille :15 cal_, Stevens M-44 lever act. rifle 25 cal ,
Marlin M·336 lever acl. rifle 30.30 cal., Savage over
and onder 410.22 cal., Winchester M-37 single bl
shotgun 410 ga., Remington Gamemaster M·760
pump with scope 30-06, Marlin over and under w/ rlb
16 ga,, Winchester M-55 auto., rifle 22 cai.,"Brela
single bl. trap special 12 ga., Winchester M·1911
auto. 12 ga_ remington M·41 auto. rifle 22 col.,
Stevens M-46 crack shot lever oct. · rifle 22 cal.,
Herters bolt acl. rifle with scope 243 cal., Zartan full
stock Kentucky rifle, Winchester M-1836 lever oct.
rifle 31·56 cal.
· ·•
GUN ACCES~DRIES: A Large assortment of ac·
cessorles such os bullets, molds, holsters, and much

'·

•SERVICES

possibil ities

heating

GUNS: Include Stevens favorite .25 cal. rlmflre,
Stevens favorite , .32 cal. rlmf ire, Stevens mod 73
22 cal., Remington rolling block mod. 4- 22 cal.,
Remington rolling block .22 cal. shrwt AMERICAN
BOY SCOUT RIFLE, Argentine MauserCustom
.250/3000 Weaver K·10 scope, single bl.
muzzleloadlng shotgun Inlays on bbl. and lock, c1v11
War Confederate musket .58 cal., Tower musket 58
cal. full stock, u ga. muzZieloadlng shotgun Horn
,bullpla1e, ...a cal. muzzleloading set trigger, Glen
field 30-30 lever act. Remington 22 bolt act., Mouser
7.65 army rifle with exira clips, Savage bolt act 308
(new) , Winchester M 24 dbl bl 12 ga. Winchester
M·67 boll act. 22, Winchester M 97 pump 12 ga
Jukar &gt;IS cal., Winchester M-25 pump 12 ga. Rem
lngton dbl . bl. 12 ga_ Winchester M-74 auto., H&amp;R
single bl 410, Stev~ns M 9..0E pump 410 ga., Winchester M·77 auto 22 col., Remington M·llOO auto
with rib 12 ga, Savage NRA bolt act. 22 cal. Win-

.'

77-lut.R. . r,

M-IU11nn1 llfl1411 ...
Jf-Lefll AcrMtt
.._...llstlte Wanted

has

mander .45 cal. auto., Lama revolver with swing'

1

~Ace'....,...

D-fl:1rms1WS.Ie

acres with nice .4
bedroom home. Garage

alum mum sldmg, storm
w 1ndows, new roof. Low

chester M-70 bolt act. rifle 308 cal., Remington

7J-Van&amp;I4W.D.
74-MofA-cyclft
15- ·.l.VftJ-Irtt

men! property
NEW LISTING - Mini ·
farm '" Rutland. 17

an1mal shelter. Asking
$52,000.00
NEW LISTING - 6
acres w1th 3 bedroom
home . central a&lt;r,

cylinder 22 cal., H&amp;R 32 cal. auto., Stevens 22 cal
single shot, Colt official police 22 'cal., Smith ·and
Wesson M-36, 38 cal ., Smllh and WEsson 22 cal. lg .
frame, Lama 38 cal., Smllh and Wesson M-6/J 38 cal.
Smith and WEsson M-17 22 cal ., H&amp;R 22 cal., Smith
&amp; Wesson mod . 27 nlckle plated 4 ln . bl . w/ display

'•

1,_..............

.., ,.

'

case.

•TRANSPORTATION

e REAL ESTATE

'I•1
I

1

.

11-ProlftiiDMI

742-3074

special (old mod ), Smith and WEsson mod. 10
heavy bl. ,38 special SPECIAL HIGHWAY PATROL
COMMEMORATIVE REVOVLER, ENGRAVED
AND WITH FITTED CASE, LIMITED EDITION ,
NEW UNFIRED; Colt Blsley frontier mod. nlckle
plated with hard rubber grips, all orlg. 38 cal. Colt
revolver nlckle plated 357 mag., Colt combat com-

6.J-Livatecll
64-Hiy 1 oral•
,,_S....IIJI:...IIIHr

IZ-Moftty tO LN•

St, Rutland , 3 bedroom,
bath, central heat, insulated , storm w1ndows.
Priced r edu ced to $12,500.

mod. 28, .357 magnum highway patrol 6" bl. , Sm1th

·1-IIMrlll l .. ltlment
62- WintH tl hY
72-TrvcklforSa ..

eFINANCIAL

Lon~

and Wesson mod 10 military and police revolver 38

I•

attractive

at $29,000.00.

single action (new unfired in box), Smith &amp; Wesson

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

lt-WintMI To Do

OJ_DER HOME on

up, Coli .32 auto., Ruger Blackhawk

I

llladlo, TV
&amp;CIIt.,.lr

JI-H.,.ellor Satlf
JI-MoiMie+tomes

'I

,I

16-auslntu Tralnlnt

Homes for Sale

and location)_ It Will appear one time. All day sale
held regardless of weather and in our modern
hilated building. One .of the biggest and best gun
sales we have had. GJns will be on display day' of
ule only. Selling large collection of antique guns,
munle loilders, hand guns, modern guns, rifles,
long guns, shotguns, over 200 knives, watChes, etc.

I

SJ-AIIftqvtt
.M-MIIC. Men:handl1e

31

Don'! Miss this large sale. (Clip Ad lor Date, Time,

'

most

starter home or invest·

Columbus, O!'lo.

,.'

baths, fully carpeted with

Would make a llreat

mtles Northeast of Athens, or ao ·Miles southeast of

ft-CI. fV, RHio l,._.ipwlent

wa"'"

A Ita I E syate

or take~St. Rt. •o North out of Manella to McConnelsville, cross river through Malta on St. Rt. 78
West for 2 m•les. Stay left at top of h1ll onto St. Rt.
377, to Pennsville, at the Bill Janes Farms. or 30

'r.

In

Middleport. Home on
corner lot overlookihg
nver. Can be used as in ·
vestment property , L •ve
downstairs and rent the
upstairs. Won' t last long

BEAUTIFUL J bedroom
ranch brick home in Baum
Add1f1on. With new garage
&amp; genie door . Gas heat,
n~wly installed central air
conditioning, fam ily room
&amp; stone fireplace, appliances built in, newly installed electric breaker
system,
attractively
decorated basement, 2

ONLY $8,500!!! What a
buy . 3 bedroom frame
home with gas floor furnace. S•tuafed on n1ce
size lot on Condor St.

Take St. Rt. 60 out of Zanesville to McConnelsville,

eMERCHANDISE

11-Situt*l ft'tn,t H

21-

Wanted
For Sale

'

51-Hou .....td Goocl1

l:t-lns•nt~cl

proper

,.

I

'I

,,_Help

reserves the right to

for elderly person. Room,
board,
laundry,
reasonable. 99:i-6022

PUBLIC AUCTION

&amp;Auction

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

wanted to Do

Have vacancy in my home

PENNSVILLE, OHIO, ON ST. RT. 377
SAT., OCT. 25-10:30 A.M. SHARP
LARGE GUN, KNIFE, POCKET WATCH, MUZZLE LOAOER, HAND GUN AND COIN AUCTION.

4+-Ap.ufm.nl.: hnt

t-WamedtoBuy

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.
Brok er

'·

•J-Fittoml
,...._S,.ce hw Rent
47-WantN t. Rent
• ,.._lqUIPf"'tt!fltrltlfll

7-YardSift

You'll get better results
If you describe fully,
give price. The Sentinel

the

tioneer, Osby A. Martin.
!no junk)

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

counts as a word. Count
name and address or
phone number 1f used .

claSif1catlon If you'll
check the proper box
below

p.m . Auctioneer Howard
Beasley, apprentice auc-

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

s-HappyAdl
6---Lost .,_ FDUftd

in

formation and pickup service, call m -6370 or In
West Virginia 773-5471. Sale
every Friday night at 7

•

space below. Each In
ilia I or group of figures

put

who has over 25 years in
the new, used and antiqUe
furniture business
We
take consignments For in·

Male dog, one year old also I
5 beagle puppies will be ' :;==;:;:::;~~=l
Help Wanted _ . -'
ready to_J give away In 2, 11
weeks. 74'&lt;-2648.
GET VALUABLE !raining
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
Los! and Found
6
some great gifts as a Sen' LARGE tan female dog ' tinel route carrier. Phone
found in Rock Springs us right away and get on
the ellglblliiY lis! at 9'12area . Phone 992-2770.
2156 orm·2157.

PHONE 992-2156

18

liquidation soles Gel top
dollar. List with the man

1

2-111 Mtmorja'"

I
I
I
I
I
I
II
.I

dleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or ent1re households.
New, used, or ant•ques, Including homes, farms, or

bands,

WANT AD INFORMATION

Pubhc Sale

DSSIE' S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Mid-

992·:1054, Call
Clark's
pocket watches.
Joe
~==j~~~===·il Clark,
Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.

Address. _ _ _ _ _.;...._ _

Print one word in each

wedding

OHIO

&amp; Auction

•ntlques,

fectlonery, 992-6342 for in- anything stamped IOK, ,
formitlon.
14K, 1BK gold ._Silver coins, 1

Name-------------------

.

Econonucs, welcomed the youths to
the campus.
The mini-lectures focused on
sc1ent1sts' efforts to demonstrate
and describe The New Frontiers in
Science m their areas of research
and teaching.
· Students were chosen on the basis
of their scholastic interest and
abilities. Me1gs County sponsors for
this trip were the Soil and Water
Conservation District and the Meigs
County Extenswn ~fice.

rl •Js,

742-2003
NEW LISTING -

8

WANTED TO BUY :
SILVER,
GOLD ,
PLATINUM, STERLING·
COINS, RINGS,JEWELR Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB 3
Announcements
SOLUTE
MARKET
Square dance at the Shade PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BARBER
School Saturday October 25 BURKETT
from 9-12 p.m. Music by SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
Lester Young &amp; the Hart OHIOm·3476.
Boys. Sponsored by the
OLD COINS, pocket wa1-.
Shade 8th grade class.
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, dlalj'londs. Gold ..LEARN to make your own sliver. Call J. A. WamSley,
chocolate
covered . 742-2331 . Treasure Chest
cherries, peanut butter Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592-l
cups, candy bars,
6462.
'
1
chocolates, &amp; more.
candy class starting
WANTED TO BUY: Class !

Classlfleds and
Savell I

In 1930, the Nazi government
decreed that Jews be deprived of
German Citizenship.

/

General

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

992-2342
DOWNING-aiiLDS AGENCY, INC.

"We were playing doctor ... but these days, all the
girls want to be doctors, tool"
3

Sutton Township
George Cummms, Box 232 ,
Rac1ne, Oh1o, 949-2470, Vernon
Nease, Nease Settlement, Mmer SVIIIe, Ohio, 949-3661, Woodrow
ZWilling , ZWilling Upholstery Shop,

cot-

No Item too large ..- too
small. Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising
O.by (Ossie) Marlin 992·
6370 .

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

Real Estate

FOR ALL YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

dollar, or complete estates.

_,,,,, .,

Insurance

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE
ARE YOU PAYINGT'oO MUCH?
'
DOYOUHAVETHECOVERAGE?

glass or china, will pay top

VIllage of
Middleport

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

DCMNING-aiiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

Gold, silver or foreign 1
coins or any gold or Sliver
items. Antique furniture,

Jon Buck
Clerk-Treasurer

Utility Buildings

operator' s license?

Inch, antique

boxes,lars

SMALL

992·2143

etc. Complete households.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy, OHI or call 992·
7760.

St., MiddleporiL Ohio, Monday through t-rlday 8:00
AM to4 00 P.M.

Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport.

...

'

e 2 Dozers
• Dump Trucks
All related equipment

I

Stzes
"From 30x30"

AUTOMOBILE
SURA NC E been
Lost
ce ll ed?

Wanted to Buy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold
rings, jewelry , silver
dollars, sterling, etc., wood

PUBLIC NOTICE

SCipiO TOW!p.hlp
Myrtle Stanley, Snl&gt;wv!lle, Rt 2,

Halloween ska,ting party for every
one sponsored'by~the Young Adults
Class of Sunday School.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs IS somewhat unproved in health since returning
fromHMC .
Mrs . Tina Jacobs is not so well at
this writing.
Mr. Roy Howell is a patient in
Holzer ME!dical Center.

13

tiK.

tpo\s,

yd .

Miller at 992-

9

Census Bureau Form RS·
9F ·1979 Survey of Federal
Revenue Sharing Ex·
penditures of the Village of
M iddleport is available for
publ iC inspection at the
Mayor's office, 237 Race

29, ltc

lamps,

Situations Wanted

•

Farm Buildings

Experrenced Operators
available for local work .
e_2 rubber tire backhoes
e l excavator hoe 11f4

available. Call after 5, 992·
7284. $26,500.

l

ALL STEEL

Excavating

floor tile, ceil1ng

2,, t to t Sofa,

tables.

Pullins

WI LL do odds &amp; ends,

fttmaktr,
tltc
roaster,
ciOfhlag. odds and ends, QUIIb
I rvgs. \".1 Milt East Of CMIM,
St. Rt. l41 CltoSmlttl .

PubliC NDt1ce

(10)

&amp;

.n
dlshas, small

Ice

coins. nngs, jewelry, etc.

Syrac use, Oh1o, 9'12 5162

\2

ranee, small tiK. rtlrl,.rator,

( 10) 23, 24, 26, 3tc

Ohio

•

sat.-Sun., n

rantt hood ,

Central Trust Co .. Mid
dleport, Oh. reser ves the
r 1ght to bid at th is sa Ie.

Pomeroy, Ohio, 992 5913, Howard

Daily. 570 Grant St, Middleport,

3704.

YARD SALE

Gill Fox

cMin,

4B69C61040745.

3
Announcements
1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver

Nathan B1ggs, 38960 St Rt 124,

SIDE GLANCES

cash
t he foll o w 1ng
collateral tow1t
I, 1976 Buick Sky lark, 4
door
Se r 1a 1
No

Rutland, Oh1o, 742 4573

Salem Township
McGu1re, Sa lem

Wanted: lady or girl to 11ve
in. Light housework 992

S·m all investment, large
ret.u rns,. Sentinel Want Ads
Public NOIICe
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not1ce 1s hereby given
thai on November 5, 1980 at
10 00 a m. a Publ ic Sale
Wtll be held at the offices of
Central Trust C&lt;&gt;. N.A,
Middleport, Oh1o lo sell for

Two story older home,
"'-~:::.;; r~~~;;.;,~;;.:~C::JI seven
rooms,
bath ,
t•\
/
basement,
h-ardwood
.. floors, fireplace. On . fpur
large lots with river fran·
tage . Main Street,
Pomeroy .
Financing

..

r------------------------------,; :. - ------

Students represent Meigs County
Three outStandmg
science studen,,
Is were chosen to represent Me1gs
County 's ~tvdent body in the 15th annual Youth and Science Conference,
Oct. 11. at the Ohio State University
Union
"The New Frontiers in Science"
was this year's conference theme,
sa1d County Agent John C. Rice.
Students attendmg heard minilectures on a vanety of topics such
as "Booze and Babies," "Flying
Seeds," and "W1ll Eatmg K1ll You?"

Business Services-

grain agreement no political move

Trucks lor Sale
72
1967 Ford pickup In fair
condition. 742· 2536.

Scissors.

ELWOOD
BOWER S
REPAIR ~ sweepers,
toasters. irons, all sma ll
appliances. Lawn mower.

Next to State Hlgrtway
Garage on Route 7, 9853825
APPLIANCE

SERVICE:

all makes washer, dryers,
r anges,' dishwashers ,
disposals, water tanks. Call

Ken

Young

at 985:3561

before 9 a.m. or after 6

pm

IS
General Hauling
AGRI -LIME Spreading,
limestone

and

fill

dirt

hauling Leo MorriS, 7422o455.

�12-The Daily sentinel, Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, 0., Thursday, Octoll!!r23, 191!0

'

'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

Area deaths
Mabel L. Bailey .

.·

.

Lawrence D. Teaford

'

· Mabel L. Bailey, 56, Rt. I, West
Colwnbia, W.Va. , died Wednesday
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Lawrence D. Teaford, 60, Shanks,
W.Va. died Oct.17. Born Feb. 6, 1920
at Letart, he was the son of the late.
Delbert and Vada Hawthorne
Teaford.
, Born AprU 20, 11122, in Winfield,
He , was married to the former
W.Va., daughter of the late John and
Mabel
Bowman, wbo,urvives; along
Irene F. Schiltz, she was a.factory.
with
three
sons, ' Larry of Win· worker. ,
chester,
W.
Va.;
Dana of Rolilney,
Surviving are her husband ,
Chester; three daughters, Mrs. W. Va.; Freddie of SoQth Carolins,
Janet Williams of Marietta, Mrs. who is in the Air Force; four
Sharon Williams of Chester and Mrs. daughters, Barbara Northcraft of
Betty Cremeans of Tuppers Plains; Augusta, W: Va.; Carla McBride,
two sons, Jerold Lambert of Tuppers Myra Neales of Shanks, and Susan,
Plains and James Taylor of St. at borne: 10 grandchildren; five
Albans, W.Va.; 12. grandchildren brothers, Carroll, Bert, Fritz,
Morris, Delbert, Jr., all of Racine;
and o,ne great-grandchild.
and two sisters, Lucille White of
• '"' Funeral services will be held at Mesa, Arizona, and Hildred Graffton
1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Foglesong of Ravenna.
Two brothers preceded him in
Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va. , with
the Rev. John Wildman officiating. death.
Funeral services were held Oct. 19
Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial
at
the Augusta Cemetery in
Gardens. Friends may call at the
Augusta, W. Va.
funeral home Friday from 4-9 p.m.

...

· FRIDA .Y;.SATURDAY SPECIAl.$ .
.

OPEN
FRIDAY . NIGHT
TIL 8
.
.
.

'

SALE

GIRLS'

WOMEN'S SWEATERS

WINTER TOPS
SALE

oeautiful colors and styles including
pullovers and vests. Sizes
and Extra Sizes.

·~~orn:n~ns,

Reg, $14.00
$16.00
Reg, $19.00
Reg. $27.00
Reg. $34.00

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

Sale $11.00
Sale 512.00
Sate $15.00
Sale 521.00
Sale 527.00

sweaters - Blouses · Knit Tops- Flannel Shirts - vests. Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to
4,4to6X,7.to14.
·
Reg. $4.50 • •• . •.•• • . Sale $3.79
Reg. $7.00 .......... Sale $5.99 /---~~.Reg. SH.OO .... , ... · Sale$9.39
Reg. $16.00 ..... : .. ·Sale$13.59 ·
·

t--· __
.,..

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

.

..

__

...

Floor .

SALE
PRICES

SALE

Funds assured, Riffe reveals

REG. $29.95.

SALE $1995

Special group of Givenchy
Bras,- Slips, Camisoles, _
Bikinis and Panties, Body
Language Bras and Panties.

MECHANIC: STREET
WAREHOUSE
KING

WH 1LE THEY LAST

'n PRICE

WOODBURftiNG

HEATERS

SALE! FRIDAY AND sATURDAf

JACKETS AND VESTS
Boys' sizes 8 to.20- · An
excellent selection of
styles and colors. Save
on what you need !his
weekend.

Designed for style, englneere.d
for comfort, King Automat1c
Wood Circulators provide the lux·
u'r y of automatically controlled
\temperatures with economy of

operation .
.. Auto.matic thermostat
*Refractory brid; lining
*cast iran grates, ash and feed

door

SALE

* 2-speed blower

"SALE!
Let It ,_ known

PRICES

MEN'S
SHEER INDULGENCE

· far and wide:

PANTYHOSE SALE

~u

.u&gt;b~p~

w

~Mog~

yOUJr,

~~£U4,
~f:J=6c~~~:.~9ao

(/
/
_
.
11 657./0
·

PANTIES &amp; HOSE IN ONE

DENIM JACKETS

•Sheer control Top
•Ultra Sheer Control Top
•Sheer Regular Top
•Sandalfoot or Reihforced Toe

Wrangler No Fauit Blue Denim with
rwarm pile living- Choice of two styles
in Small (34-36), Medium (38-40),
'Large (42-44) and Extra Large (46'-48) ..
,Limited Quantity .
$49.95 Denim Jacket I Coat Length) .. , . 532.00
$44,95 Denim Jackel I Waist Length) . . . . $29.00

Reg.$2.50 ................... , ••••
Reg. $3.00 •••••••• 1 • • 1 • • • • • • • • • . •
Reg.$3.25 • • ••••••••••••••••••••
Reg.Sl.. SO •• ,,,;, ••••••••••••••••

SPECIAL SALE

''

TH1SWEEK'S6MO.

SEMINAR - Almost 40 area registered nurses attended a day-long
seminar on "Nutritional AsSessment" held Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Pictured at the seinar from the left .are Ron Lessard,
R.Ph., director of pharmacy, Franklin Regiorial Hospital, Franklin, New
Hampshirei Sharon B. Kittelberger, RN, M.S., director of m~catlon
nutritional nursing services at Ross Laboratories in Columbus, both
speakers for the day, and Mrs.l_lhonda Dailey, RN, BSC, lnservice director of Veterans Memorial Hospital who served as moderator for the day.
A third speaker was John A. Wade, Jr., M.D., ear, nose, throat and
allergy specialist at the local hospital.

Automatic - electric · with con·
trolled heat and ·automatic signal
light. Heavy gauge aluminum.

•

SaleSl.ft .
Sale $2.39
Sale$2.59
Sale$2.79

Bring in your measurements
·- See the many samples of
fine quality custom m&lt;!de
draperies- Select what you
l)eed - and save now &lt;!:ustom Made Bedspreads
ihcluded.

Gel

52,00 ln·lhe-mail when
you buy any two Items of

Hanes• Thennel underwear
men OtilQ,ys,
- '

fq(

SATURDAY OPEN 9:30.TO 5 P.M~
'

-.

..

Mass funeral held for 49 children
-ORTUEILA, Spain - This poverty-stricken 'Spanish mining town
was draped in mourning black under a driving rain today for the
. funeral of one-ninth of its children, killed when a powerful gas ex·
plosion leveled thei{ granunarschool.
The governor of Vlzcaya Province issued what he said was the final
toll: 49 children aged between 6 and 8, and two adults. Initial reports
said as many as 64 people were killed, but officials said some were
counted twice.
.
One of the adults was a teacher and the other a plumber, who investigators said could have unwittingly caused the explosion. They
said there were Indications that a soldering iron the ptwnber was
using nea.r the school's g!lll-fired heating boiler may have set off the
gas explosion.
.

Crisp refutes polls, sees victory
.ONCINNATI ~Mary Crisp, who quit the GOP National Conunlttee
to work for Independent John Anderson, says polls showing the
congressnian losing ground with U.S. voters are meaningless.
.
Crisp who quit the Republican campaign after the national convention' fitlled to support the Equal Rights Amendment, vigorously
defended the Illlnois la~r's chances of winning the election a,n~ "
·attacked GOP candidate.Ronald Reagan.
.
. ·
''Ronald Reagan's platf(!rm, which Is dominated by the right wing,
Is outrageous " she said Thursday at a news conference in Cincinnati.
"Gov. Reaga~ made his state!llent to .American women in Detrolt"
when he agreed to support the platfonn, she said.

at y ~en tine
1~80

FIFTEEN CENTS

spearheaded the petition drive to
place the issue on the ballot.
Major expenses reported by the
group included $339,000 to Nelson
Stern Advertising of Pepper Pike lor
television advertising and $45,000 to
Loudspeak,er Inc. of Los Angeles for
television production.
Meanwhile, the group for State
Issue 1 said it's gotten $56,996 to help
win approval of the proposed constitutional amendment to protect
property owners against inflationsparked hikes in property taxes.
"The "Vote Yes For Issue One
Committee Inc." reported expenditures of $52,1411 and a balance
on hand of $6,856. Most of the money
came from the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation and county farm bureau
groups around the state. Major expenses were $50,000 to the Byer and
Bowman Advertising Agency Inc. of
Columbus.

Iraq claims 'greatest victory of war'
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Iraq hard-driving troops in control of the
said its tanks and troops captured city's northern sector overrun the
the vital Iranian port of Khorram- entire port.
shahr and overran "every yar;d" of
Iraq made frequent ' •., ... in the
the city today in their greatest vic- · past that Khorramshau., Iran's
tory of the 33-day-old Persian Gulf mabt commercial port on the emwar.
battled Shatt el-Arab waterway, had
"The Iranian flag was lowered fallen and each time Iran denied the
from over the goverrunent house In claim.
The Iraqi communique said Iraq's
Mohammara (Arabic name of
Khorramshahr) and the Iraqi flag Defense Minister Gen. Adnan
was hoisted over the building to · Khairalla telephoned the news of
declare the return or the city to Arab Khorramshahr's capture at midday
rule forever," said an Iraqi military to Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
communique broadcast by Baghdad at the operation's room of the Iraqi
radio.
army, according to the broadcast.
The battle for Khorramshahr has
"Our troops and tanks have capbeen one of the toughest of the war tured the city's main bridge on the
between the Arab nation of Iraq and Karon "river and all the residential
buildings overlooking it," the com.its foe, Persian Iran.
There was no immediate con- · munique said."
·
firmation from Iran that the city had
The Iranian command said earlier
fallen, but according to earlier that at daybreak hand-t~hand comreports the governor of Abadan said bat flared into a seventh straight
Iraqi fol'\!es were trying to penetrate day in the street~ of Khorramshahr,
Khorramshahr from the east to help which Iran's Supreme Defense

Pair arrested in B&amp;E
Dennis Musser, 20, Pomeroy and a custody of her parents.
female juvenile were arrested by the . The department is investigating
Meigs County Sheriff's Department the breaking and entering of the
Thursday in connection with the Salem Center School. Three TV sets
breaking and entering of the William were taken.,
Jock Goode, 38, Reedsville, was
Kennedy residence, HarrisQnville.
arrested
In connection with the
Musser was taken before Probate
alleged
assault
on Ruth Koenig,
Judge Robert E. Buck on a bill of InReedsvUle.
Goode
is lodged in jail
formation where "he plead guilty.
Judge Buck ordered a pre-sentence pending a hearing.·
Investigation so ·Musser was
released on his OWJI recogniance.
The juvenile was released to the

Council recently renan1ed Khuninshahr, or City of Blood, in tribute to
its ''sell-sacrificing Moslem defenders. "

Hundreds of diehard Islamic
revolutionary guards of Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini's regime have
bi&gt;en killed in the seven days of
house-to-house fighting that
preceded the city's final fall, ac.cording to the Iraqi communique.
The Iranian news Agency Pars
today said helicopter-borne Iranian

pa"ratroopers staged new hit and run :
attacks in the central sector of the
front, knocking out !9 Iraqi tanks.
Iran claimed its air Ioree drove
Iraqi bombers away from its huge
offshore • oil terminal at Kharg
island, !50 miles south west of
Abadim in the gull.
An Iraqi communque claimed six
Iranian tanks and three rocket launching bases were destroyed in the.
Abadan-Khorramshahr-Ahvaz area
of operations at the southern end ol
the war front.

Two Lancaster men injured
Two Lancaster men were
seriously injured in a on...car
crash in Meigs County Thursday
night.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of . the
Ohio Highway Patrol reported
William B. Hicks, 18, and Gordon
Hicks, 28, were northbound on
U,S. 33 at 8:45p.m. when they lost
control of their car on a curve and
overturned.
·
The car was demolished,
troopers said, and both lllen were
taken to, Veterans Memorial
Hospital by 'the Meigs EMS. They
were then transferred · io the
emergency room at LancasterFairfield Hospital, Lancaster,
where William Hicks was treated
and released.

Gordon Hicks was transferred
to University Hospital, Colwn·
bus, where he was reported in
sa tisfactory condition this morning.
The accident is still under investigation by the patrol.
No injuries were reported in a
car.Oeer accident probed by the
patrol early Thursday.
According to the report, Brenda J. Johnson, 21, Racine, was
eastbound on Meigs CR 5 at 7:55
a.m. when a deer ran into the
path of her car.
The deer was killed in the
collision and severe damage was
listed to Johnson's car. No
citations were issued, troopers
said.

Debate tickets hard to ~me by
"the carter-Reagan debate.
Lee Hanna, debate director hired by the League of Women Voters,
said only 1M of the ha1l's 3,000seats are available to obseryers.
The league chapter bt Cleveland had hoped to have 1,7'flo seats for
the public, media and campaign.staffers after 1,300 seats are covered
by a platform to be Uled for television and photography equipment.
Of the 750 seats that will be available, Hanna said the candidates will
eadl get 100 ticketl to allocate, reporters will .get 200 and the
remaining 350 seats will be allocated by the local, state and nation81
LeaR~~~! of Womens Voters.

Weather forecast
Rain tonight, ending Saturday and turnln8 much colder. Lows
tonight In the mid to upper 40a. Windy Saturday with temperatures
, remaining bt the 401. Cbance of rain near 100 percent tonight and 70
· ~t Saturday. Wlndii!OIIthwesterly lt.-25 mph tonight.
·

'

E BERFELDS IN. P-OMEROY

. 3RD ST., RA.ClNE, OH.
Member FDIC

•

CLEVELAND - There will be few oppotunities for a person without
• some IJIOCial connections to get a ticket for a seat in the Music Hall for

Hanes
THf FlMA. ',

CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERIES

samf!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The reported total donations of $1,780,190 revenue went to Hamerolf-Milenthal
battle over Issue 2, a proposed tax and $350,000 in proceeds from a bank Inc., an advertising agency in
reform law on Ohio's Nov. 4ballot, is loan. It reported" expenses of Columbus. Another $227,000 was earstrictly a big bucks affair.
$1,585,856 and a balance on hand of 11)3rkedfor National Direct Mail SerCampaign finance reports "filed $544,331, with outstanding loans, "vices Inc. of Bethesda , Md.
with Secretary of State Anthony J. debtsorobligationsof$362,258.
"Ohio Fair Tax Initiative Com·
Celebrezze Jr. show opponents have
Hundreds of individual con- mittee, " which supports Issue 2,
amassed a war chest of ~.1 million tributions for small amounts were reported total donations of $604,735,
to help defeat the plan. Backers of included in the group's lengthy W!penses of $599,821 and a . balance
the issue report comparatively report Thursday, apparently on hand of $4,914. Most of its cash
meager contributions of $804,735.
revenue generated by direct mail came from labor unions.
The filings cover contributions advertising. Among those were conThe American Federation · of
and expenses through Oct. 15. Final tributions of a penny apiece from a State, County and Municipal Emreports are to be filed after the elec- Portsmouth man and an anonymqus ployees in Washington, D.C., con!ion.
donater whase letter bore a Man- tributed $115,000. Other groups and
If approved by voters, Issue 2 sfield postmark.
amounts included the Ohio State
would provide tax rellef .to qualified
But the largest amounts came United Auto Workers CAP Council,
low and moderate-income from a long list of Ohio's top cor- $153,000, and the Ohio State AFI.r
homeowners, renters and family -·porations, including $50,000 from CIO COPE, $100,000.
fanners. The proposal would boost 'Procter and Gamble Co. of CinThe committee also reported intaxes for high wage earners and cor- cinnatl and .$40,000 from Goodyear kind contributions lor staff and
facilities worth more than $87,000
porations. .
Tire and Rubber of Akron.
"Ohioans lor Fair Taxation,"
At least $600,000 of the group's from the Ohio Public Interest Cam'!l'hich is seeking defeat of the pl11n,
paign - the coalition which

REDUCED 10%

.DEEP COOKER-FRYER

jumping 1.6 percent after increasing substantially less than during the
August. Meats, summer. Home prices, meanwhile,
poultry, fish and eggs alone ac- jumped 1.3 percent.
counted lor three-fifths of the ln-Gasoline prices fell 0.5 percent,
crease. Beef, pork and poultry about the
as .!Q,August. Public
prices shot up lor the third con- transportatiOn costs were up 3.6 per- ,
secutive month, reflecting the sum- . C';Jl( new car flric.es, 1 percent; and
mer's severe brought in many used car"prices, a sharp5.6 percent. .
areas.
- Apparel and its upkeep rose 1.3:
- Eating out at a restaurant cost percent following substantially ·
0.9 percent more in September than smaller increases in the preceding·
in August, while purchasing an three months. The jump was_atalcoholic beverage was 0.5 percent tributed to the introduction of fall
more expensive.
clothing Jines.
- Housing costs rose 0.7 percent
- Fuel oil prices, as winter apcompared with a slim 0.1 percent in- proaches , declined 0.1 percent, but
crease in August. Mortgage interest charges for gas and electricity rose
rates continued to decline, but by 0.7 pe rcent.

1.1 percent in

Issue No. 2 battle big bucks affair

Plant now for early
spring flowers
·
Good selection of
varieties.

selection of styles
and colors. Home
Furnishings ,
1st

I

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24,

DUTCH AUJNER BULBS

EUREKA UPRIGHT
SWEEPERS

Two persons cited by patrol
.following separate mishaps

written to David Weir, director of
the ·Ohio Department of Transportation, requesting Weir to speed
up the advertising lor bids for the
three sections: Sardinia to Macon,
Macon • to Winchester and Win- ·
chester to Peebles.
The highway was opened between
Mount Orab and Batavia on Sept. 5.
·'A finished Appalachian Highway
.
Will
be a' boost to the employment
picture and lor southern Ohio as a
whole. Action must be taken now to
get the construction of these
remaining projec)s under way," Rifle said.

e

.

11.-_...:~-

Stop in to see our new

GEORGETOWN, Ohio (AP ) Ohio House Speaker Vernal Rifle, [).
New ·Boston, says the funding to
complete the Appalacl\ian Highway
from Sardinia .to Peebles nearly
assured.
Rifle, in a speach Wednesday
night at the Southern Hills Joint
Vocational School, said he was
assurred by Neil Goldschmidt,
secretary of transportation, that the
80 percent federal funding was
available.
Rifle pledged that state matching
funds would be ready when construction begins. He said he had

economy. At one point, he accused fonnance as measured by. the Labor seasonal adjustments. Over the
the administration of manipulating Department's Consumer Price In- year, spendable earnings · declined
economic statistics lor political pur- . dex was far more favorable than the 6.7 percent alter inflation was taken
poses, a charge officials strongly pace !Sst winter when conswner Into account.
prices were I'&amp;Cing at more than an " Patrick J_ackrnan , a Labor Depar·
denied.
tment economist, said tlie difference
September's consumer . price ·18 percent annual rate. .
ligures proiled wyrse th/¥1 Augu8t's .. - However, the ! percent increase betweeo September's 1 percent
0. 7 percent increase and the zero was worse than many economists jwnp and August's 0.7 percent rise
movement registered in July. In- predicted. Moreover, food prices are was due largely to a slowing in the
flation was at an even 1 percent in .expected to accelerate in coming decline of mortgage interest costs.
June.
·
He said sharply higher costs of
months, say economists, Including
pork
and beef also played a
The report showed retail food Carter's chief inflation adviser,
significant role in last month's price
prices once again rising sharply, Alfred Kahn.
·
The Labor Department also repor- acceleration.
while housing costs began to acThe September inflation report,
ted that average weekly earnings afcel~rate following this summer's
deellne. Gasoline. prices, however, ter deductions lor Social Security adjusted for seasonal variations,
fell for the fifth consecutive month.
and federal income taxes decreased showed :
-All food and beverage prices
September's inflation per- 0.4 ·percent from August after

VOL 31 NO. 136

County.
Brown was on parole from a
previous theft offense at the time of
his arrest, Prosecutor Crow reports.
Brown entered a plea of guilty
when he appeared belo.re Judge
Bacon. He was remanded to the
custody of Sheriff James Proffitt until he is returned to prison to begin
serving the sentence. .

Two persons were cited for failure milt.
The patrol also investigated
to yield right of way in separate accidents in Meigs County probed by another two-car crash at Olive Twp.
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Rd. 114late Wednesday afternoon.
According to the report, _Dora 0.
Highway Patrol Wednesday.
The patrol said Edward L. Pierce, 60, Long Bottom, was westLaudennilt, 37, Middleport, was bound on the road at 5:20p.m. when
stopped at the intersection of S.R 7 she met an eastbound car driven by
and CR5 at4:57 p.m. when.he turned ·Aaron L. Morris, 19, Rutland, on the
into traffic and into the path of a curve and went left of center.
Morris' car then collided with the
southbound car driven by Jack L.
Pierce auto, continued on and went
· Clark, 49, Middleport:
Laudennilt's car was demolished over an embankment. There were no
in the collision, while Clark's car injuries.
Damage was moderate to Pierce's
sustained moderate damage,
car
and severe to the Morris vehicle,
troopers said. There were no injuries and the patrol cited Lauder- and Morris was cited by troopers.

.
'
WASHINGTON (AJ:') - Inflation
jwnped back into double digits in
September as consumer prices, led
by rlalng food costs, jwnped a full!
percent, the governrnenfsaid today
· In Its !list inflation report before
Election Day.
Last month's rise translates into a
12.7 percent compound annual innation rate, compared with the 13.3
percent rise In 1979. From January
through September, consumer
prices have risen 12.1 percent.
The inflation issue has. beCome' a
central theme of· the presidential
campaign, with Republican nominee
Ronald Reagan sharply attacking
President Carter's handling of the

I

Brown sentenced
Raymond E. Brown, 22, Ironton,
was given a six months prison sentence when he appeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
John C. Bacon Wednesday morning
on charges of receiving stolen goods.
The charge stems from an incident on Sept. 2, in which several
items of furniture were stolen from
the Jack Spires property in .Meigs

•

Q_o uble digit inflation hits again

'

'

\

Exl q«edOifliiF-t-

SundaythroughTuesday:Oumceot

lll""lOmlll"'ern• north and fair 11011th with raU. cool tampelllturea through
the period. Highs In the 40a Sunday llld IMll Monday and Tuesday.
Nighttime lows mainly In the 3011.

SET CLOCKS
- BACK
.
ONE HOUR
SUNDAY
OCTOBER26
2 A.M.

..,.

CHECK PRESENTED - Manning Kloes, left, of
the Centllll Ttust Co., NA, Middleport, Thursday
presented Kenneth Imboden, chief of the Middleport

E:mergency Squad a check toward the purchase of a. :
heart monitor to be UBed In the emergency vehicle. Im- :
baden stated that the department has collected $2,700· :
ofthe$6,500.needed.
·

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