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                  <text>••
:»--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct. 29, 1980

Mayor's (:ourt
Four defendants were fined and a
. fifth forfeited two bonds in the court
f. of Mldciteport Mayor Fred Hoffman
~ . Tuesday night.
;.: Fined were John E. Tiemeyer,
~' Athens, $225 and costs and three
; days in jail, driving while in·
, loxlcated ; Harold E. Gerlach,
Letart, W. Va., $100 and costs,

'.

· ; Unemployment
~ ,
(Continued from page I)
· county, compared to 439,913 workers
· in Franklin County and 435,036
• workers in Hamilton County.
1
Harriilton County's jobless rate for
September was 7 percent.
Meanwhile, Noble County's work
Ioree of 4,814 - the lowest in Ohio
last month - had an unemployment
rate of 7.5 percent. Vinton County,
with 5,753 people in its labor.force,
reported a jobless rdte of 9.5 per·
·cent. And Monroe County, with 6,758
workers, registered 7.5 percent out
·of work.
ijolmes County recorded the
state's lowest unemployment rate
for September - 5.3 percent, down
from 6.6 percent the previous month.
The county has a 11,90().member
labor force, or' which 700 are out of
work.
Other counties with co mparatively low jobless rates for September included Franklin, with 6
percent; Knox, 6.1 percent; Han·
cock, 6.2 percent; Delaware and
Greene, 6.3 percent; and Geauga, 6.7
percent.
Comparative figures for August
were 6.1 percent for Franklin Coun·
ty; 6.2 percent for Delaware County;
and 6.8 percent for Greene County.

reckless operation; Jewell A.
Logston, Belpre, $100 and costs,
open flask, and George McDaniel,
Middleport, $100 and costs, disorderly manner.
Forfeiting bonds was Alfred B.
Stover, Columbus, $350, posted on a
charge of driving while intoxicated
and $25, expired operator's license.

Funding. approved for Gallia, Meigs projects
~

Emergency squad runs
Four.emergency runs were made
by local units on Tuesday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Services repor- .
ls. They include: Pomeroy Unit, 7:38
p.m., to Anne St. for Christine
O'Donnell, taken to Veterans'
Memoriai Hospital ; Pomeroy Unit
at 9' 22 p.m. for Alfreda McCown,
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; ' Middleport Unit, 12:58
p.m. for Herbert King from the area
of the Dairy Valley to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; Tuppers Plains,
9:31 .m. for Leonard McGil1, taken
to Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg.
TO END MARRIAGES

Two suits for divorce have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Filing for divorce were Doris V.
Smith, Middleport, against
Frederick J. S1nith, Sr., Middleport ;
Jan Roach, Middleport, against
Randall W. Roach, Pomeroy.
The marnage of Vtcki Fink and
James Fink was dissolved.
John Franklii1 Aeiker was granted
a divorce from Anna Lee Aeikerand
the marriage of John B. Stahl and
Barbara J. Stahl was dissolved.

,

Education projects given Priority
I funding are SCORESA expansion
of computer services, $200,1m, and
Human Resources Student Service
Center. $350,000.
Housing projects funded for fiscal
1981 are Findlay Street Redevelopment, Portsmouth, $167 ,328;
Shenandoah Hills, Rio Grande,
$180,1m; Feurt Hill SubdiviSion,
·Scioto County, $100,000; and Senior
Citizens Low Cost Housing, ·Adams
County, $100,1m.
Continuing funding bas been }'&gt;P'
proved for these cQild developlllent
projects: Adams-Brown, $61 ,015;
Pike County, $32,544; lawrence
County, $28,675, 'and Scioto County,
$28,544. Priority II (possible ) funding for child qevelopment projects

PORTSMOUTII- Several projects in the Ohio Valley Regional .
Development Commission (OVR·
DC) district have been assnred AJ&gt;palachian Regional CoWICll (ARC)
funding for fiscal year 1981.
Numerous other projects are
assured continuing funding, also,
Robert Schwable, OVRDC executive
director, said.
Priority I (d•linite funding) has
been assigned to Highland County
Comprehensive Child Development
Program,$159,674, andGallia·Meigs
Child Development Program, ·
. $214,250. Health programs earmarked for definite funding include
Southern Ohio Primary Csre expansion, $180,1m, and Olde Market
Square Comprehensive Senior Ceoter, $280,1m. ·

Area Deaths

niece, Lori M. Mundry, both of Reeq.
sville.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Friday at the White Funeral
Home with Mr. Ivan Everson of·
ficiating. Burial will be in the Reedsville Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after noon on
Thursday.

Sandra S. Powell
Mrs. Sandra S. Powell, 34, Reed·
sville, died·Wednesday morning at
Holzer Medical Center following an
extended illness.
Mrs. Powell was born at Reed·
sville, a daughter of Chester and
Evelyn Dillon Mundry, Reedsville.
She was a member of the Reedsville
Church of Christ and bad resided in
the Reedsville community lor her
entire life.
· Besides her parents, Mrs. Powell
is survived by her husbaUd, Randall
H. Powell; a daughter, Kellie, and·a
son, Kevin, both of . athome; a
brother, Chester Mundry, Jr., and a

FUEL ADJUSTMENT CLAUSE REMOVED!

MINOR MISHAP
.Two · cars received medium
damages in an accident on West
Main St., Pomeroy, at 1:20 p.m.
Tuesday.
Porileroy·Police said a car driven
by Perry Beebe, Route I, Cheshire,
traveling east near the Butternut
Ave. intersection attempting to pull
into another lane collided with a
second eastbound car driven by
William Rizer, Racine. There were
no injuries and no citations.

I I

• •

. UTMlnlp)Oyment. ·

"UUder the (Republican presidential candidate
Ronald) Reagan plan, we can protect the envirorunent
i1nd still pi;'Oduce," Bush said in stopa Wednesday in
Toledo, Springfield and Ironton.
About 1,1m people filled Ironton .High School's
aUditorium for . Bush's appearance, carrying signs
reading . "~t's Bushwha~k the DemOcrats" and
"Goodbye Carter, Hello Reag(ln." He· was ac- .
conipanied by Woody Hayes, former Ohio State
University football coach, who received a standing
ovation.

Hayes said the GOP vice presidential nominee is a
player who's on a fine team with Reagan.
·"You and I know how badly great leadei'Bhip is
needed in Washington," Haye5 said. "NobOdy knows
that more than a good football coach, and I wasn't·too
bad because I was a winner."
Bush said Reagan was the clear victor in Tuesday
night's presidential debate in Cleveland.
"I've learned that Jinuny Csrter and I have ·
something In conunon," Bush said. "We've both lost
debates to Ronald Reagan."
·
·
During his appearanee, Bush criticized the proposed
SALT II agreement.
"It (the treaty) locks us into inequity and unfairness," he said. "We do not trust the Soviet Union.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Nellie Perry, Long Bottom; Gayle Tobias, Middleport;
Vonda Johnson, Pomeroy; William
Cremeans, Rutland; Randell lm·
boden, Minersville; Rita Hughes,
Pomeroy; Donald Bennell, Reed·
sville;
Christine O'Donnell,
Pomeroy ; Alfred McCown,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Daniel Richards, Anna Powers.

electric public utilities. Ron James was the sponsor of the
and he wants to keep using his

experience as an effective voice for yov. ·

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I

'

Woman .acquitted of ax murder
..McKINNEY, Texas - A four-month legal nightmare ended for Candace Montgomery when she was acquitted of murder charges, but her
lawyers says the summer afternoon she kll1ed.a lrieUd with 41 blows of
an ax will haunt her forever.
·
•Mrs. MQn\8omery trembl~ as the verdict of innocent was returned
Wednesday, then quickly left the courthouse with her husband, Pat.
.. The couple plans to move to Atlanta, leaving behind a trial that
·spotlighted her romantic li,aisons with other men and her confession to
· killing a friend, Betty Gore, in self-defense on Friday, June 13.

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.

States was involved in the !~an-Iraq
effect of the hostage issue on the war. "At the very moment when we
presidential election, · it was a were due to discuss the special comproblem the assembly was obliged mission's report on the hostages the
defenseless people of Dezfw were
to ta~kle, the reporter said.
smothered
in ·blood and dust by
Dozens of boycotting deputies
ground-to-ground
missiles," he said,
milled outside. They sent a mel!SIIge
referring
to
last
week's Iraqi ·
into the hl!ll saying a debate would
rocketing
of
the
army
garrison
town.
only "help the cause of the United
.
"America
has
received
many
States, and especially Jimmy Csrblows and will not cilim down easily,
ter," the reporter said.
and
its provocations against this
A source close to the debate said
the boycotters wanted to Stay clear nation will always continue," he
of the U.S. election to avoid any ap- said. "! declare that the hostage
pearance of collusion with the Csr- issue has nothing to do with the Iranter administration over release of Iraq war and the Americans shoUld
the hostages, in their 362nd day of hear in mind that such last ditch actions and in terference in the destiny
captivity today ..
of
this nation will not remain unan·
The protest by liardline· deputies
swered.''
was join.ed by a second smaller raePars, Iran's officiaj news agency,
tion wliich opjloses releasing the
confirmed
the session was cancelled
Americaus on general principle.
and
said
the
discussion of the fin·
Some deputies have called for spy
dings
of
the
special
committee is
trials for the hostages,
scheduled
for8
:00
a.m.
Sunday."
After a delay of an hour, only 162
The
deputies
met
in
closed
session
deputies showed up and parllarnen· .
Sunday,
Monday
and
again
on
Wed·
tal')' Speliker Ha$hemi Rafsanjani
dismissed those gathered in the nesday, but a handful of· members
walked out of Wednesday's 'meeling
assembly hall.
He lashed out at the Western news when it became apparent the issue
was heading back for public
~!lfldagainclalmedtheUnited
Khalkhali said that regardiess of the

scrutiny, parliamentary sources
said. .
Despite the walkout, however,
some deputies had expressed guar·
ded optimism that agreement woUld
come today.
The Majlis was to have heard the
report of a special seven-member
comrnitt~e set up to recommend
conditions for the hostages' release
and one parliamentary source said
the conditions had been set.
Their report containing the
proposals was described as ''very
brief" by those who viewed it. The
sources said the proposals woUld be
debated in the full assembly, and
then the deputies woUld vote on the
report.
·
,
Khalkhali even predicted the
debate woUld end tOday, a Swedish •
radio broadcast reported. "We want
the hostages to be freed before the
presidential eleCtion in the United
States next Tuesday," he was quoted
as saying in Tehran.
Khalkhali reportedly said that
Iran wanted to ~xchange the
Americans for millions of dollars
worth of military equipment paid for
(Continued ~n page 8)

WA8HINGTON ( AP) -A series of
·indicators designed to forecast
movement in the economy rose in
September for the' fourth month in a
row, the Conunei'Ce Department
sald today.
The Index of Leading Indicators
increased 2.4 percent following a
revised improvement of 1.7 percent
in August. The biggest contributor to
the upward movement in September
was a decline in the rate of layoffs
frdm manufac:turing jobs - from 2
percent. in August to 1.5 percent In ·
September.
Eight of the IOindicatorsavailable

for the September report iricreased,
while two declined.
The Index piunged by a total of 15.1
points from October 1979 through
last May and now has recovered 10.9
points of that loss. Using 1967 as a .
base year, at an index of 100, the
September level was at 133.6, stilll.3
points below the January mark.
The second-largest gainer in last
month's index was an increase in
building pennits, which shows new
strength in the construction industry. This indicator rose to 126.3
percent of the 1967 base level.

Wholesale prices of raw materials on vendor companies and in total
.
rose significantly last month, con· liquid assets.
The inflation-adjusted money suptributing to a rise in the overall in·
dex. Analysts view such an increase ply dropped from $820.5 billion in
as evidence of stronger demand for ' August to $817.9 billion in September. Although some analysis
such goods.
consider
this a bad omen for
The value of new orders for
recovery
from
the recession, it is
manufacturing and consumer goods
viewed
as
a
good
sign in the battle
incrased from an inflation-adjusted
against
inflation.
$31.66 billion in August lo $33.08
The only other decline in the
billion in September.
Other gains were registered by report WaS a drop in orders for plant
stock prices; an increase in the and equipment from an inflationaverage work week of manufac- adjusted $12.58 billion in August to
turing employees; strong demand $12.38 billion last month.

Carter~R eagan

AT CENTRAL TRUST

COM~

LOsES TEMPER AND TURBAN - Ayatollah Khalkhall, kQown
as the hanging judge, has lost his turban as he addresses the Iranian
Parliament, the Majlis, in Tehran, Tuesday. Khalkhali denounced the
. group of Majlis deputies who refused to join the debate on the hostage
issue. The session was cancelled because of lack of a quorum. At top is
Hashemi Rafsanjani, parliamentary speaker. (AP Laserphoto) '

.YOUR NEW J

CHECK INTO CHECKING•

1HE
CENIRAL 1RUST

'

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Amid stormy scenes at the
Parliament building, many ltanian
deputies boycotted public debate on
the American hostages today,
leaving the 228:-seat legislature short
of its ~79-member quprum and lorcing postponement of the session un·
til Sunday.
Sixty-sll: deputies defied appeals
by Tehran radio and Iran's chief
· Judge Sadegh Khalkall that they at·
tend today - many of them
protesting any action on release of
the captives before the U.S.
presidentlal elections Nov. 4.
· Khalkhali, the stern Islamic judge
who has sent scores of conviCted
criminals before firing squads and Is
known as a hardliner on the hostage
Issue, stormed to the roatrwri,
screaming and waving his white tur·
· '···ban over his head, and pleaded for a
quorum so debate could begin.
The deputies in attendance
shouted that debate should be held
even without a quorwn, a Danish
radio correspoUdent reported from
the scene.
Saying he was "no friend of the
Uni~ states or Jlmmy .Carter,"

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Boycott forces debate postponement

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· In latest hostage developments

REG. '689.00

11

E·conoiDic ·indicators up in.·S eptember

RON JAMES
J~tmes ,

out and dig a well," said Bush, who has mining experiecne. Now you need 13."
. ... ......,ill' "
Earlier in the day in Toledo, Bush addressed 1,200
.
In Springfield, Bush addressed an audience of 1,500,
people at a shopping mall. It marked his second visit to
mostly students, at Wittenberg University. Joining
the northwestern Ohio city during the campaign.
Bush there were Hayes, Houston Astros second
"Ronald Reagan will keep the country out of war,
baseman Joe Morgan and actor Mike Connors, who ' keep it at peace because he understands Russia," he
starred in the TV series "Mannix."
said. "He understands the best way to keep the peace is
Also attending the rally were Ohio Congressmen
. to have a consistent foreign policy and a strong
Clarence J . Br~wn and Jqhn M. Ashbrook, fonner Ohio
national defense."
secretary of state Ted W. Brown, state Rep. Charles
Bush hinted strongly that Iran is trying to influence
Saxbe, and fonner ambassador William Saxhe. ·
·the outcome of \he U.S. election in favor of Carter by
During his Springfield appearance, Bush said the
reviving hopes about the American hostages' release.
Reagan administration would attack the energy crisis
But Americans "don't give a damn who the Ayatollah
by increasing coal production.
Khomeilli wants for president," he said.
"When we started off, you needed two pennits to go

. POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, 0~10 THURSDAY 1 .OCTOBER 30, 1980

XXJ _NO. 140

STAl£ REPRESENTATIVE·

Pa id tor b y tne Comm lttet to Elect Ron
Proclorville. Ohio.

•

We will enter into a treaty that will reduce these
weapons, but we're alao going to kee,P the United States

at y

Our Complete Stock .o f 'RCA

wll~ begin disappearing from the bills of cu$tomers of

clause~

.

By The Associated Preas
GOP vice presidential nominee George Bush, in a
campaign swing across Ohio, chastised the Csrter administration for overregulating the nation and boosting

You get excellent color performa nce

Beginning. In just a few weeks the fuel adlustment clause

bill removing that

include New Richmond Day Care · Pike qnd Scioto counties. Ctasses
Center, $238,750, and Pike County Priority II was the Highland County
Work Related Day Csre Center, Television Education project,
$250,000.
$129,000.
In the area of housing, continuing
(Priority II · projects are more
funding
was approved for Pike Hills
likely to be funded for fiscal year
Public
Housing, $150,000 and
1982, Schwa ble explained.)
Wellston
Ltd. Assisted Housing, ,
Continuing funding of health
$52,000.
Priority
II was assigned to
programs included Tom C. Smith
.Lucasville
Planned
Unit Housing
Medical Center operations,
(Scioto
County
)
$200,000,
and Brown
$100,000j; Comprehensive Action for
County
&lt;if-site
development
for
Community Health Education
Senior
Citizens,
$100,1)()().
·
(CACHE ), $25,725 ; Sou\hern Ohio.
Under syppl~mental assistance
Technical Assistance ·in Health,
$30,1m and Rur~l Infant Mortality projects, McGee Lane Samtary
Reduction Prog~am, $226 ,5 28. Sewer ·in Jackson County was given
Projects given Priority II status in Priority I funding of $199,000, and
the health program are Vinton Coun- Rio Grande Community.Student
ty Emergency Medical Services Center Phase II was given $310,1m
Facility, $83,000, and Tom C. Smith in continuing funding.
Supplemental AssisU!nce Priority
Medical Center expansion, $320,1m.
II
was assigned to Piketon Delay AdEducation projects ·with condition,
$45,1m, and West Portsmouth
tinuing funding are Csreer DevelOJ&gt;Sewage
Collection System, $330,1m.
ment Program ior Lawrence, Ross,

Ikntist survives ocean ordeal

FINANCE YOUR

CHARLESTON, S.C. -A 36-year-old dentist from Sussex, England,
says she survived 4'&gt;il days adrift.on the Atlantic Ocean because she
wasdetennined "that the sea wasn't going to have me."
Dereka Dodson was rescued Tuesday by a Navy submarine teUder
as her life raft drifted 180 miles east-southeast of Charleston. Angus
Primro6e of Hampshire, England, owner of the 33-foot sailboat that
sank and cast the couple into the sea, was missing and presumed

.'

drowned.

NEW CAR FOR

Murder suspect being questioned
TAMPA, Fla. - ,Joaeph Paul Franklin, held under $1 lilillion bond
question him about racial shootings in .
five cities; was a high school dropout reared in a broken home by a .
mother he hated, relatives II8Y.
•
The avowed raclat and drifter, wearing a Long-sleeved sblrt that hid
the taltocl8 which helped Qfflclals Identify him, appeared in cOurt here
· Wednesday and was ordered held pending a hearing next week to
detennine whether he will be sent to Salt Lake City.
today as authorities prepared to

'

60MONTHS
HP'I. 14.13 11111t M 1101111 IAYIIEIIT
MD "''DEll CIEDif.

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-BANK ONE_ ...

·

.At

Pomeroy • Rutland • TuPJ*ra Plaint
f

l

·

.

.

ClEVELAND 1"' The winning nwnber selected Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally game."The Number'' WUM

ONLY

MNK ONE OF POMERO~1 NA

Daily lo~ winn~r
Wea~

Some mooing clouiun- etpedllly the Ohio .River but
beeominjjiiiOIItly IUMy lhia aftarnoon. (bar ionlght. Contlllbed IIUIIII)'
Friday. Higbl today and Frlctay 50 to Ill. Lon mighUOtolf. Cllnce
It rain._.~ today, tonight and Friday. Varillble wlndllea than
lOmpb today becoming Wilt around 10 mph late toalcbL

" u ..,

.... Ba1 11 "d Fanalt- , Eldended far...tSaturday tbrauah
........., - ConliJnled fair ud dry. Lowllll301. Higbls.twday ~~~­
m,J~e' SundaY IIIII Monday upper 4111 (o middle DOll.

touring 5 ·states
instead of- it being the three-man
By The ABIIoclated Press
Out to gathe~ votes, and obviously race I think it should have been."
no moss In the process, Jimmy Car- . Carter and Reagan alao talked
ter and Ronald Reagan are each Wednesday about the debate, each
trying to knock down what the other
rolling through five cities today,
trying to tie doWn key states' before said before more than 100 million
viewers the night before, but neither
the election just five days away,
Carter hagan ru. day .in Pen- " would say who won.
nsylvania and was winding up in · Two surveys taken . by The
- South Carolina. .His Republican Associated Press indicated both
· challenger started out in Texas and Carter and Reagan picked up an
equal amount of support from the
was ending up in PeJ111Sylvania
which, just incidentally, represents debate- 6 percentage points.
A poll taken Monday had the stanthe largest bloc of undecided elecdings of the candidates as Reagan 43
toral votes.
The president was talking to percent, Csrter 33 percent and Anderson 8 percent. After the debate, a
Polish and . Hebrew groups in
poll put · the ~s at
similar
PhUadelphia, visiting New York's
Reagan
49
peri:el\t, Carter 39 pergannent district, attending rallies In
cent
and
Anderson
6 percent.
Saginaw, Mich.; and St: LoWs, and
As for the catch-up after Tuesday
spendinl! the night in Columbia, S.C.
night's . rhetoric, Reagan said in
. For Reagan, . the itinerary Ia
HoUston
that Carter In the debate
Texarka!IB, TCDB; New Orleans;
implied
the
windfall profits tax on oU
. Lodi, N.J.; PhUadelphia; and Pltwould be paid by the major oil comtaburgb.
panies.
.
Texas, where Reagan started hill
"Who ls he trying to .kid?" the
day, ill considered tAJo cl- to call -Republican asked. "That tax will be
lor either Carter or Reagan and has
paid by you and me, by the con28 electoral votes. Pennsylvania,
sumer
In this country."
where Carter started hil 'Ia)' IIIII
Reagan ends hill, has 'II votee in the
electoral college IIIII .is alao conDama1H .were 1et at apsldaiecl a tou-up state.
pn!dmltely til.... tile renlt "' •
Jobn AndenOn, the Independent
fin
at tile - . rl Mr. IIIII Mn.
candlclate, wu not doinc u well as a
G......,
Qn¥w •llalley RIUIRaed
. traveler- biWIIg Jlllt B~ and
1&amp;11.
a.ID.
11Nhdioy.
Slanford, Conn., toda,)r - lilt he was
p_.,
ll'tft Cbltf Cllarlel
at leut aJin~IOIIIIIIiing neltber of
IApr
....
tile
w.. - tile .r enlt
the otlier candidatil would. .
r1
•
defeetm
11ae
at t11e two nary
Anderlan l8kl Wednelday that u
·
~
.
_
.
Deaut
... were e.the mu who _ , there, he was
tile
.-tilde.
wallrl
tile atrae- ··
. lhl ~in~ nigbt'l Cartertare
·ud
t11en
"'"
ao
lmob
or
Reapn debate. The contea~
. ...... ......... Tllere Ia .._._,
"lllewed the paceptlm," Andenon

sa.•JI'IRE

bed._

..... In ~.

tr.nlfOI'IIIinl

the c:~mp~~lp "into
. , • .'-"~~an
. rae.

Cldel Legar 1

e•

II.

GE1TIN' READY - Craig Sears, 5, aon .of Mr. and Mnl. Jerry
Sears checb out a mask and a pumpkin In getting ready for tonl&amp;bt'a
activity. Trick or treat night will be obaened throughout Melp (louo.
. tythisevenlng.
·
\~

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••
2-The Dally Sentinel, Mld~eport-Pomeroy: 0 ., Thuiilday, Oct. 30,19M

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Opinions &amp;
Comments

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3-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 30, 19M

Annual Eastern -Southern·rivalry set

•

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•• f

BySOO'lTWOLFE
"The Rivalry" • Chapter 19 Saturday night, November I, at 8
p.m., Chapter 19 of the Eastern. Southern grid rivalry will be written. The stage has been set. Afeeling
~ anxiety is in the air. For both
clubs this annual matchup will be
the final battle ~the war.
For 011e team a championship is at
stake. For the other, no more than a
sense of pride is on the line. But d
course, that pride means a lot. That
"pride" is special and invaluable to
all concerned.
·
Eastern owns a 1.,.. edge in the
series at this point.
·
The initial meeting between these
two
on the gridiron defined
the special meaning ~ the game.
The initial dual came back in 1962
and its resulta set the standards for
the games that followed. Eastern
took the ope!ling bout, ~. In a
grueling physi~al battle. ·
Ron Ritchie led ills Eastern offense with an outstanding 145 yard
· running game.
In games that followed, offense
proved to be the name « the l!lllle.
In 1965, Southetn's Bob Grueser had ·
an outstanding individual effort as
he rushed for 201 yards. The Tornadoes fell short despite the effort,
:!U.
. Ukewise, Ray Karr had a put
game in 1960 as quarterback of the
Eagles. Karr rushed for two touchdowns and passed another, wbile
also adding a PA'I'to lead the Elgles
by Southern :IU.

y.

•••
•,

J ··· -

Going into the seventies Eastern

held the upper hand In the classic,
In 1970, tbe Eagles trounced
Southern 56-ll, then followed up in
1971 with a 51~ ambush.
Southern made a bit tum-around
in 1972. Going Into the final two ·
mi nutes of play, the tJ\TO
powerhouses were engaged in a·
scoreless deadlock. Eastern had the
ball as a dense Meigs County fog ·
hovered above. This set the stage for
one of the most memorable and
dramatic roles in the series history.
Southern I!Dd Jim Williams picked
off an errarit Eastern pass and rambled 55.yards for a Southern score tO'
win the game.
Also in '73 and '74 Southern•s
prerruer running back Mitch Nease
had outstanding performances of 123
and 119 yards in the respective even-

schlto'-

...••-•
.•'"...

Debate analysis
CLEVELAND (AP) - President Carter and Ronald Reagan pursued
predictable strategies in their long-awaited debate Tuesday night,
making no apparent major slips while saying little that hasn't been heard
throughout the campaign.
The big difference was they said it this time while standing just a few
feet apart:
·
They differed sharply on the issues, as well as what they emphasized
the most. For Carter, it was war and peace ; for Reagan, it was bread and
butter, Carter's handling of the economy.
Carter kept up his effort to portray Reagan as too ready to resort to
military force, at one point describing his rival'S pbsition on the SALT II
treaty with the Soviet Union as " dangerous and belligerent."
Reagan's opening words demonstrated his approach: " ! believe with
all md heart that my first priority is peace." The use of force, he said,
should be "always and only a last resort."
.
Carter kept on the offensive throughout the encounter. Reagan parried
by repeatedly accusing the president of distorting the challenger's
positions.
"There )toll go again," said Reagan, a rueful smile on his face, as he
· protested that Carter was distorting his position on Medicare.
Reagan reminded the millions of Americans who listened to the
nationally broadcast debate that four years earlier, when Carter was
campaigning against then-President Gerald R. Ford, the Democratic
challenger came up with what he called the "misery index."
That index was the total of the rates of inflation and unemployment.
During the 1976 campaign, they totaled 12.5, a figure Carter said then wa's
toohigh.
.
.
~ Now,jj.eagan said, the same index would be more,than 20.
Reagan saved his misery index argument unttl the closing moments of
the debate.
Carter also saved until near the end a point he says is one of his
Strongest: Reagan's opposition to the Equal Rights Amendment.
The closing statements of both candidates also focused sharply on what
they saw as the most important issues concerning the voters. .
Carter emphasized that " I've been impressed with the stark differe~ces that exist between us" and followed that quickly by sarifig, "!
coDSider myself m the ma1nstream," a coupling that seemed to imply
Reagan was somewhere outside that mainstream. ·
When it was Reagan's turn to close, his appeal was clear and direct. He
said if listeners think the nation is as strong today as four years ago, they
should vote for C;jrter.
Glvlng·his own answer, he said: " This country doesn't have to he In the
shape that it is in .... All of this can be cured and all of it can be solved."

To the People Of Meigs County:
I am writing this letter in regard
to the Nov. 4th election. In my
opinion Sheriff Proffitt has done an
excellent job in protecting the
citizens of Meigs · County .
Lawbreakers are brought in by the
sheriff and his staff only to be turned
loose again by the higher judicial
system; which is not the fault of our
sheriff.
.
Sheriff Proffitt has a tremendously difficult job to fulfill and he
has done a very good job. As we all
now, it is hard to ll_lllke eveyone happy; but, it is titne Meigs County
residents realize what a good sheriff
we do have and we need to keep him
in office.
Rudy Stewart
Rt. I, Middleport, Ohio
Oct. 27, 1980

Dear Sir:
As a citizen of Meigs County, I
would like to take this opportunity to
express my views on the curre.nt
Sheriff's race.
I would first like to state that I feel
that Sheriff Proffitt has done a fine
job in the past four years, with his
limited experience. However I feel
as though the citizens of Meigs Cowtty have a prime opportunity on
November 4th to elect a man \Vhich
110t only has . exceptional
qulaiflcations, but has many years

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V.t--• \
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By wm Grlmlley
AP CorreapeudeDI

Rural- crime _u p 400 percent in 70's
ban problems like crime. That just is
are secured.
Phillips said nothing is safe from not the case."
According to researchers, rural
theft on the farm, including grain,
crime
offenders are m~y under 30
·
gasoline and livestock.
In Cambridge, Guernsey County years old, with the majority between
Sheriff James Carpenter said one of 16 and 19 years old. They are white
the problems in his area ·is males, most of whom are urban
burglaries af rural homes O!:CUpied residents. One third have &amp;'previous
· criminal record and less than one in
by city residents on weekends.
Carpenter said rural residents are three are students.
becoming more cautious about ' · Reaidents believe there are ,
crime. "You talk to a lot of the old several reasons for an increase in
timers, they never thought about rural crime, but they point most often to a perception of lax pUJlish. ·
loc~ing their doors. I think people in
the rural areas are 'becoming more ment by the courts, a lack of law enaware of it."
. forcement and· a breakdown in
In Chillicothe, Ross County Sheriff family life. Only 8 percent blame
Tom L. Hamman agreed. " I don't drugs, moral decay or too much
see how rural residents can help but leisure time.
" Often rural residents don't even
be more aware of crime problems.
·There isn't a corner of this coullty · report thefts," Phillips said.
Most of the Increase in complaints
that doesn't have a problem with
- 51 percent of all crimes reported
burglaries.
·. " In the past four years, our case - was in the categories of vanload has Increased from 3,000 com- dalism and theft.
Phillips says such factors as the
plaints to 4,500. I would say our
burglary rate has shot up between 25 relative isolation of a farm house or
and 30 percent, and juveniles are outbuildings, the work hours of the
responsible for 70 percent of It," he: family and simply the amount of
farm equipment, household goods
said.
Ashtabula County Sheriff William and personal belongings available
Johnson said, "A lot of times city for theft cause increased vandalism
people who move out to the country and burglary. .
The types of items taken in these
believe they're escaping all the ur-

victs.
. Ten years 8!10: ~et:tt Nixon
. called on voters to reject candidates
. who condoned, excused or "failed to
speak up against" · pennluiveness
among Amt.rlca's " violent" youth.
Five years ago: Spain's Juan
Carlos de Borbon 88S1IIJll!d the
' powers of chief of state in a move
. th8t virtually ended 36 years of rule
· by Generalisalmo FI'IUICilco Fran, co.
· One year ago: Preaident Carter
· , nominated Federal Appeals Court
i Judge Shirley Hufstedler to be the
•first aecretary of the department of
education.
Today's birthda;ys: Actor Henry
Winkler 1135. Bueball Hall of Fame
member Ted WWiams 1162.

· Variations abound. Brokers say ill
some instances the seller gives a 1).
year mortgage but with monthly
payments based on a Jll-year amortization, which results in a
payments after 5 years.
The. asswnption made is that the
buyer will be in a better financial
position five years later or that
financing at that time will be inore
easily obtained, and maybe even ai
better interest rates.
During this time, of course, the
buyer buids up considerable equity
from having made regular payments and from appreciation, and thus
becomes a more attractive risk to
the conventionalleilder.
Such contracts involve dangers
because not everyone will be better
off five years from now. And the
prospect Of better financing terms Is
remote. The' trend ljlts been iu

balloon

It was an interesting collOquy bet·
"Football is meant to be a violent
ween twQ old head-knockers of a sport," said Jones, continuing his
rowdier era in professional football, critique of the direction the sport is
• a dialogue which Commissioner moving. "That's what makes it so
Pete Rozelle Bhould have been tuned popular.
into.
"People want blood. They want
"They're fooling around. with toughness. They want violence+ not
c!anger," warned Deacon Jones, the unnecessary and dangerous
one-time rampaging defehSive end physical contact · but-, controlled
· · of the,Los Angeles Rams, and later . violence. Take it away and the
., . of the San Diego Chargers and the . , game's in trouble!"
Washington~:
Aqderley added: "The rules in the
~-., . "The National Football League
secondary now favor the offense.
rules-makers have done a complete Take the bump and run. Vou can
. flip-flop. Now everything is·in favor bump a guy only once in a five-yard
of the offense."
area. Teams are going more for the
"They've taken away our zone and you see less of one-oneweapons," added Herb Adderley, one."
renowned cornerback of Vince LoinJones originated the head slap,
,. , bardi's Green Bay Packers in the since outlawed, where the rusher
,• . '60s who .ended his career with the slaps the blocker's helmet at the
Dallas Cowboys. "Where were the snap of the ball in ~n effort to gain an
·' rules when ~- were chasing Johnny eXtra step. •
·
Unitas?" · ,
..
"I never broke anybody's neck,"
Two of the NFL's legendary defen- , he insisted. "It just caused the of' . sive giants, the Deacon and Ad- fensive tackle to close his eyes and
derley were in New York Wed- let me get away."
_ nesday for the Boys' Club of New
"It's the same with the bump and
York's :All Sports Halls of Fame din- run," said Adderley. "More conner, honoring 17 inductees in various cessions to the offense. Everybody,
sports.
quarterbacks and receivers, sliouid
Jones and Adderley joined havetoholdtheirown."
baseball's Duke Snider and AI
"If they can't stand the heat, get
., . Kaline, basketball's Oscar Rober- out of the kitchen," said Jones,
tson, Jerry West and Jerry Lucas pulling an old Harry Truman chestand hockey's Harry Lwnley and • nutoutofthefire.
Gwnp Worsley in receiving hpnors
"Didn't Hank Stram, while coach
from Boys' Club-chairman David at Kansas City, originate the bump
Mah9ney.
and run?" somebody asked.
"He may have used It but 'Night
Train' Lane started it years ago,"
Ground work being
said Jones.
"Artiflcialsu!'faces are bad," said
laid (or big trades
Adderley. "Cau8e .a lot of injuries.
I'd like to see some dirt on the footNORTH MIAMI BEACH, Fla. ball."
:· (AP) - The baseball general
"And less substitutions " added
managers who gathered behind the Deacon. ''Nobody's playing a full
'• closed doors at a posh country club game any more. Five or six running
• here didn't say very much after the backs are going In and out all the
'' fc first round of a three-day session.
· time. The game loseB its rhythm.
;,_.. ButWednesday'smeetingatTumno Identity."
l: · · berry Isle Country Club could lay the There's
"They don't even get tired," said.
t · • ground work for trades later this
Adderley.
winter.
·

thefts rBnge from automobiles (21
percen\) to tools and equipment (16
percent) and jewelry, guns and ap-

...

pliances (6percent).
With gasoline prices soaring, fuel
is the most frequently stolen Item.
' The methods to prevent rural
crimes are sinil&gt;le, Phillips said.
- Farm .equipment and tools
should be marked with identifying
numbers including the state abbreviation and locked up when
)J068ible. Your social security nwn.' ber is a good figure to IJB!l.
- Ear tags are the most frequently
used identifying marks for livestock.
Even though the tags are relatively
easy to use, the hole left In the
animal's often detenl rustlers and
potential blJyers. Tattooing is the
most often recommended system for
permanent Identification, Phillips .
·said. .
.
The tattoo is usually applied to the
animal's ears with a series of sharp,
metal teeth in the shape of numbers
or letters and coated with ink.
-Lock all gasoline and diesel fuel
,supplies. Combination loeb Bhould
:be avoided because they are easUy
•broken, crime prevention officials
·said. illuminating gasoline ·storage
·areas and enclosing them with fences can also deter thefts.

'
steadily higher rates.
down the price, sometimes at
Properly written, the seller's end
current market value.
of the bargain might be 8aleable at a
There is opportunity and risk. The
discount to another party, and thus
option buyer might benefit from a
permit him to get off the hook. The sharp rise in market value. For
buyer generally ~ no choice but to $1,000 he conceivably could benefit
pay up or default.
by $5,000. He might also find himself
Renting, with the option to buy, unable to buy, and in that instance
has also proved useful to botl1 Seller
might be forced to forfeit his $1,000.
and buyer. The seller receives rental
For the seller, the option gives
income, and continues to benefit some assurance that a sale will take
from appreciation and tax deducplace, or that If It doesn't be may
\ions.
keep the option payment.
The buyer also might be allowed to
Other possibilities in flnaricing a
apply rental payments, or a part of house purchase include help from
them, toward reducing the purchase family or friends. f0Jnclusion:
price. The seller, however, might · Ingenuity in home financing hasn't
charge for giving an option.
been lost, not even dulled. The
For the buyer, ai· option 'has the challenge keeps it alive. Deprived of
benefit of making time stand still. regular financing, Americans have
Though he might not purchase the learned there's more than one way
property for 'ayear or so, he nails
to finance a house.

.

Although appear
no· major
·., _.
, . nouncements
to be an
for-, ' • thcomlng, one general manager said
some names probably would · be
' · kicked around as trade bait after
t:;
businesa lleiSlons were concluded.
: · ' "Tbere's really riot rnucb I can
,..., say. We're here basically to conduct
~~
our buslnelli, talk of the re-entry
"• • draft and other baseball matters,"
~• · said ft9landHemond,Chicago White
• c • Sox vice president. "Tbere probably
will be SOllie talk of trades."
Rumored )J068ibWties Include a
mulU-player deal between the St.
Loo1a CardinaLs and San Diego
Padres and a deal that would send
Bolton ouutelder Fred Lynn to ~Ale
Angeles.

Mother upset by ~on's presidential question
I

WASHINGTON (AP) -A woman "I'll talk to l(OU later II'
in the audience asked President CarWhile the questiOIHlJld..anawer
ter a hostile question and then broke sessions With local cltizenB that have
into laughter, confeaaing. that the become. a staple of Carter's requestion actually had beer. written election campaign don't usually
by her son and that she personally feature IUch llgbt-hearted family
thought the president W88 doing 8 • BqUabb)BI, they often lbow that
good job.
people do not lack ~ when It
Then she began to scold her son, cornea to a once-ill+llfetime op-'
Robert, who allo wu prel!ent at tbe portunity to IPIIk ,dlnctlY to the
questilln-8Jid.enswer llellllm at Hof· prea1c1ent of tbe United Slat..
stra Unlvenlty in New York earlier _ Many people, of coune, llllillbout
tbia month.
serious i.auel such u tbe ecGilGIDy
Carter asked whether Robert had foreign poUcy or regllllllllnteresta. '
voted for him in 19'78. Robert waved
Bat othen! IIIII funnr frivolous or'
his . a~~ dramatically a~d per101111 qUI!Itlona.
even aeek
declated: Yes, I did, and It was the advlee, or lnvltaUona to tbe Whlte t
bigat mlltake of my life!" .
Houle, and llllll1 offer &lt;Mter wordal"
By thla Ume the 1adlence wu ofeJ~CCMqement.
Jaucb1n1 llylterlcaUy. In moc1t iJ1..
At a hl&amp;b IIChoolln Toledo Olllo 1
dipatioo the president declared: last weet, 18-yeaM!d
., Pete

au;.

Gan.ei,

told the president he felt "very
alienated from our government," ·
and asked "If I would come to
Wllilhington, D.C., would you give up
three hours of your time, sit down
and talk to me?"
, The audience laugbed. Carter
.decland fltmly, "No," paualrig for
effect while the'audience applauded.
Then he explained that "there are
230 million people in tbia' nation and
If I pve everybody three boan I
wouldn't have any way to dell with
the problema."
Then Carter turned to the YOIIDII
man's congre8811181l, Lud Albley,
and said, "I'm sure Lad 'IIIIUid be
fllad to," wNJe the audience ...,..,.
ljJpl'eC!aU'ftly at the pa 1' ••a'
lllllleiiVeriDp.
At • ro-called town me«~na _In
•

•

·~•
,·..:

Avoca, Pa., a high scbool teacher
ll8llled Vincent Peperno said, "I
tlint we need a little break in tbe
rpdtine so I'll ask a qu.tlon and I
hope It isn't toO fulley." Hil
qaellllan: "After you'ren-elected.Jn.
November, would you Invite me 8Dd
IIIJ t.mily to the White Roue?"
Tbe pl'l!llident: "II there anybodJ
here that lmowa Vbqnt t&gt;.ipetno?
What ldnd of fellow Ia he?"

.......

Saaaeone piped· up: "Mr.
Pialdenl He'•IIIJ uncle."
Caner: "II there lD)'bodJ heN
that lmows Vincent that'a not kin to
him? Would you Invite b1m to JGII'

'-'"
•• ..

Mid ,.., llld CuW

PI l l~ '~rDIDYIMJQUID

IIIJ ,._,.. be uld.

Today's

Sports World

" Actually, the scariest thing about this house is the payments."

Couples IearD various ways to finance homes

Toda.y in history. ..
Today is Thursday, .Oct. 30, the
30t~ day of 19111. There are J 2 days
left mthe year.
.
Today's highlight in history:
On Oct. 30, 1922, Benito Mussolini
formed a Fascist government and
becameprernierofitaly.
On this date:
In 1817, Simon Bolivar organized
an · independent government in
Venezuela.
In 1918, Czechoslovakia was
proclaimed an independent
·republic.
·
In 1956, Britain and France issued .
an ultlmatwn to Egypt and Israel
. calling for acease-fire.
In 1974, Dutch Marines and police
stormed a prl8on chapel near the '
Hague and liberated 15 hostages who
h(td been held for four da;ys by con-

~

6

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Pichlr\! a pastoral rural setting for your
next horne - perhaps an e~cape
from urban strife. Well, things just
aren't as they seem.
Officials ~ the National Rural
Crime Prevention Center at Ohio
.State University say you're literally
dreaming.
Even life-long rural Ohio residents
are reeling from the 400 percent increase in reported crimes in the past
decade. G. Howard Phillips, director
of the crime prevention center, said
less than 50 percent of some offenses
like vandalism are reported to
.authorities. " If rural residents knew
how little law enforcement protection they have, I don't know what
they'd do," Phillips said.
· In 8 county, he did not identify,
Phillips said seven deputies patrol
an area totaling 900 square miles.
"If you consider vacations, days off
and sick days, that's about one man
a day over an entire year," Phillips
said.
The rural crime problem has increased
so quickly, Phillips said
of experience in the field of law enrural
residents
are juSt beginning to
forcement.
As a concerned citizen I have take steps to cu\ their losses. Four in
heard both candidates speak on how 10 rural families fail to lock the
the office of Sheriff should be ad- doors to their homes. Only one car in
ininistered.
. three is locked, and less than 10 perIn my own opinion I believe that cent of farm equipment and barns
John Welsh with his knowledge of
law enforcement, not only can perform as a more efficient sheriff, but
given the opportunity can procure
much n~ed improvements in the ' .
sheriff's department.
In the past, I feel as though Sheriff
Proffitt's prime concern has been
NEW YORK (AP) -There's more
with drug confiscation, .and inthan
one way to finance a home, as
stallment of a nationwide law enyoung
AmericallB have learned in
forcement computer linkup, of
recent
years.
which 'both are fine achievmeents.
Sellers have helped. The simplest
However, this leaves a wide margin
for improvements in ·other areas of fonn of seller financing is the first .
mortgage, in which the seller perthe department.
As a parent I would like to see forms the same role as a lending inmore cooperation between area stitution, accepting a down payment
leaders and the Sheriff's department to begin with and regular monthly
in the development of more intallments thereafter.
This form often involves a seller
recreation and educational
with
a large equity buildup and a
facilities. Which in turn would help
desire
to avoid the maximum tax on
to deter the spread ~ drug abuse in
his
gains,
or in some instances, a
our young people.
seller'
seeking
a monthly income,
My many thanks to Carl Hysell
perhaps
to
supplement
a pe11Bion.
who with his generous and uh'
If
less
than
30
percent
of the price
'l'erstanding attitude towards our
is
accepted
as.
downpayment,
with
young people, has made it possible
the
remaining
payments
spread
for them to lead fuller lives. A Jot of
this is extended by Carl Hysell over at least another year the seller
may defer or lower his taxes.
,voluntarily.
. Above all I urge all citizens of
Meigs County to exerciso! their right
to vote, regardless of their choice 'Of
candidates.

Letters to .editor
Supports Proffitt

!:•

INVOLVED IN FISTFIGHT - Oddsmaker Jimmy "The Greek"
Snyder, left, and CBS-TV ''NFL Today" anchonnan Brent Musberger
right, got into a fistf!ght In ~ New York bar SUliday after the tw~
argued about the amount of airtime Snyder was getting during the pregame teleca~ts. Snyder shares some 11 minutes of time with Phyllis
George, lrv Cross, game previews, a news package and other segments that Musberger must make work. Both said they were sorry for the
mcident. (APLaserphoto)
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IJ(.Jhen it's a Bob Evans Steak House
that's reason enough!
· Because at Bob Evans ......e serve great tasting
farm breakfasts you can't get anywhere else.
Fresh, fluffy ho• biscuits with our own
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.
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How about an order of delicious farm fresh
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hotcakes, waffles, french toast.
And everything is served with all the good
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·
Of course, if you've got the appetite you can
always order steak and eggs.
If you want a real hearty, old-fashioned farm
breakfast come to the Steek House. It's so good
you'll want to stay for lunch and dinner.

There are some
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your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans
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Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans,as a
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Of course, a Blue Cross and Blue Shield benefits package includes more than just coverage for
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LATONIARESULts

aDCA00 (AP) - Doe'1

the Eastern-Southern games. Some
have been awesome offensive performances and some have lleen
gnlllt defenaive battles: A lot Of individusl effort, teamwork, and
preparation go into making the
event as popular as it is.
This year's Eastern Eagles of
Coaah Buddy Moore own a 6-3
overall slate. The Eagles own a
share of the SVAC lead with a 3-1
league mark. Eastern is tied with
defending champion Hannan Trace
and the vastly Improved Southwestern Highlanders. A victory for
the Eagles would give them a share

Team rosters

WHYINTHEWORI.D

FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Off N
Pacing, a 38-1 lonphot, won the
41,110 featured claiming pace mile
Tuelday Dight in the eighth race at
Latonia Dight and paid fl7 .80, $22.30
and$9.
.
.
.
I
Lut SllOif wu.MCOiid, $9.20 and
$5JO and Senltor Hayes, thrld, ..,.80.
'I11e 8-2 double of Speed)' Stoae Qd
Baron Del paid $21SJ8. Attendance
.waa'ltl and the mutuel'pool totaled
tiO,UJ.
'

illlctb overClUrolcuro.

OVer the years everyone involved
has their own personal memories of

r-;======:::================~

ARCADIA, Calif, (AP) - Partez,
,I\( '
~.40,
won the ..._.,., SUnny Slope
. '
lllllal at Slnta Anita ' by a half•

••

til.

.

0
of the title.·
...
1f
On the other hand, Southern, who
36
26
111
34
is much improved over last season,
24
I
as at 2-7. The Tornadoes are winless
58
0
51
0
intheSVAC.
1972
0
6
Figures, however, are sometimes 1973
0
7
7
0
misleading. The Tornadoes have 19'14
19'15
l5
6
had their sbare of injuries, recently . !976
l4
0
17 . 22
Ieising ace quarterback Dale Teaford 1977
1918
S3
0
with a fractured arm.
,
1979
61
0
}gfJj
Despite the adversity, Southern
has played great defensive football , - - - - - - - - - - - of late, but has been unable to ontrack its offense.
The Eagles are proven winners.
They have played under pressure
with nerves of steel and consistently
done the job against tough competition.
Never-the-less when the adrenalin
fl ows in large quantities like it does
during the Eastem-Slmthem clash,
anything can happen.
Well, the past is behind us, and
only time will tell what the future
holds for the Meigs County schools.
Below is a list of results from past
games:
1965
11166
Jl!e7
11168
11169
1170
19'11

~

li..'\0 BOB EyANS ~A RM FOODS INC

. \t

--,------..::..._n

ATijENS OFFICE: l005 East State Street, Suite # 2, Athe~s. Ohio 4!\701 (614) 592:6273/6232
Serving: Athens, Jackson, Gallia, Hocking, Lawrence, Meigs, Morgan ~d Vmton Counties .

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30,1980

"---'The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30,1900

Stingy. defense.p~rmits Suns
to make best sta1·t in NBA ·
.

By Associated Pl-ess

five other · Kansas City · players
Phoenix led 62-M at halftime, but straight vict&lt;ll)\_
New Jersey trailed by 15 points in scored in double figures as the Kinp
put the game away With a 14-2 streak
The Phoenix Suns will become the to start the third quarter. The CliP" the third quarter but managed to hit won their third game in four outings.
Kansas City scored 14 points In a
stars of the National Basketball pers were led by Phil Smith with 21 five baskets in a row to cut the lead
row
to break a 63-63 tie in the third
Association if they can keep playing points.
to five. But Bridgeman J!lilde five
quarter,
and the J9ngs outscored
defense in the tradition of the old
In other NBA games, the Indiana baskets as the Bucks responded with
Portland
41-25
in the period.
Boston Celtics aod New York Knicks Pacers defeated the Knicks 102-95, a 20-4 streak to put the game away.
Jtoctell
Jot,
Mavertckl 113
teams.
the Milwaukee Bucks bombed the
Moses
Malone
scored
38 points and
~ The SunS improved their record to. New Jersey Nets 132-116, the Celtics
Jazz 109, Spurs 96
.
8-1, best in the -NBA so far, with a ripped the Detroit Pistons 103-85, the
Adrian Dantley and rookie Darrell grab~ 21 rebOunds and HOuston
I~ victory over the San Diego
Philadelphia 76ers \aclded the Griffith combined for 29 points as .staved off a fourth-quarter rally by
Clippers Wednesday night. It was Chicago Bulls llf&gt;-102, the Kans3s Utah outscored San Antonio 42-22 in Dallas.
The Rockets led ·7~ in the third
the fifth straight victory for the Suns City Kings outscored the Portland the fourth quarter to break the
quarter before the expansion
and the fifth straight time they held Trail Blazers llf&gt;-98, the Houston SpUrs' eight-game winning streak.
the opposition under 100 points, a . Rockets outlasted the Dallas
Dantley . scored 17 · in the final Mavericks fought back to tie the
stretch during which the defense has Mavericks 109-103, the Utah Jazz period and 38 for .the night, while game 82-32 going Into the fourth
allowed an average of only 88 points clipped the San Antonio Spurs 109-96 Griffith pitched in 12 in the fourth period.
76ers 115, Bulls 10%
per game.
and the Golden State Warriors nip.. quarter and '!l In the game ..ln adPhiladelphia
won its sixth straight
Forward Len "Truck" Robinson ped the Denver Nuggets llf&gt;-109.
. dition, Griffith held three-time NBA
game
as
Darryl
Dawkins scored 20
scored 23 points and guard Dennis
Bocks 132; Nets 11&amp;
scoring champion George Gervin to
points
and
Steve
Mix and Maurice
Johnson, a perennial .all-league
Sixth-man Junior Bridgeman 10 points.
Cheeks
added
19
apiece.
defensive performer, added 21 to came off the bench to score 26 points
Kings 115, Blazers 98
Chicago center Artis Gilmore led
pace Phoenix offell.\ively.
to lead Milwaukee to its eighth
Otis Birdsong tallied 26 points and
(
I
,
·all scorer:s witb25.
Pacers 102, Knlcb 95 .
Billy Knight scored Tl P.Oints to
·lead Indiana over New York, whicb
fell out of first place in the Atlantic
''
.
Division.
choice," Coach Monte Clark said.
the salne.this season.
Indiana led by 19 points with 40
By Associated Press
Murray was good on his first seven
. At least he's still around and seconds remaining in the fourth
It is called rebuilding. Sometimes,
as ·in the case of a team like the field goal attempts, starting with a available. Penn SU!te defensive end quarter, but a llh'l streak by the
Detroit Lions, it' can seem to occur 52-yarder against Los Angeles. His Bruce Clark, the No.4 choice in the Knicks closed the margin before the
almost instantaneously. Then there first kickoff wasn't quite lis sue- draft, ppted for Canada instead of Pacers pulled away agam.
are teams like the New York Giants, cessful. Qrew Hill of the Rams retur- life with the Green )3ay Packers,
Celtlcs 103, Pistoos 85
for whom rebuilding seems' to go on ned it 98 yards for a touchdown. Sin- just as another first-round pick (BufRobert Parish scored 23 points to
ce then, though, ·few of his kicks falo's No.I a year ago), Tom lead Boston over Detroit, whicb lost
forever.
have
been run back beyond the 20, Cousineau, did a year earlier.
Halfway through the season, 181
its eighth game in nine decisions.
And
with
65 points he's the No.2
Some of the other first-round drafrookies dot the rosters of the 28
Wamors 115, NuggeiB 108
National Football League teams, 45 scorer in the league, trailing only tees who hjlve made it instantly big
Bernard King scored Tl points and
John Smith, New England's plac... in the NFL this year are San Fran- combined with Larry Smith for two .
of them frequent starters.
cisco running back Earl Cooper (the crucial three-point plays as Golden
In the Lions' case, the kicker.
Whited,
ignored
in
the
draft,
was
league's
.leading receiver),' Gin- State wpn its fifth game in a row at
"rebuilding" tag is misleading.
signed
asa
free
agent
out
of
Pacific
cinnati
tackle
Anthony Munoz, home.
They were, after all, contenders for
.
as
a
kick:snapper.
Center
Tom
Tur:
Atlanta
tight
end
JUnior Miller,
a playoff berth or a division title .
The Warriors led by only one point :
every year from 1969 to 1978. Then nure, drafted in the third round, had Seattle defensive end Jacob Green with less- than six minutes left when :
came the crash of '79, when a couple contract problems and didn't report and Washington wide receiver Art King hit a layup and a free throw for :
of key injuries (most notably their to camp until the third week of the Monk, the Redskins' firstfirst-round a 103-99 margin. Ahalf-minute later, ·
quarterback, Gary Danielson ) preseason, giving Whited a chance draft pick since 1968.
Smith added his three-poin,ter when :
Joe ·Cribbs, the Buffalo running he was fouled as he hit a dunk shot.
resulted in a 2-14 record and, as to make the squad. He took over the
befits such a terrible showing, the long-snap duties when Tumure was back taken in the second round our
Dan Issei led Denver with 35 pQinhurt in the third week of the season. of Auburn (center Jim Ritcher was ts.
No.I draft choice.
.
He was Billy Sims - ·and he has And when seconli'year tackle Keith the Bills' No.I pick), has become one
helped the Lions to roar back into Dorney hurt his knee two games of those players who, after playing
prominence as leaders of the ago, Whited became a starter.
somewhat anonymously in college, ~~;;;::==~~=====~·
"When I first saw him I didn't give has burst onto the scene. He's fifth in
National. Conference's Central
Division. But Sims isn't the only him much of a chance," Clark said. NFL rushing, behind the Big Four of
newcomer to help Detroit's cause, "But h~ really )VOrked hard. He Sims, Earl Campbell, Walter Payton
even if he is the most visible. Con- almost changed the structure of his and Ottis Anderson. And he's ninth
. sider kicker Ed Murray and tackle appearance (putting on 18 pounds, to in the le~~gne in receiving, the only
255). He was just a surprise."
player listed among the. top 10 In
EdWhited.
'
The
Giants,
whose
last
winning
bOth rushing and receiving.
Murray, a Nova Scotia native, was
Acouple of other second-and thirddrafted out of Tulane in the seventh season ivas 1972 and whose last title
round, primarily to give place- of any kind Came in 1963, have 16 round selections who have 'earned
'lQOOPAIR
kicker Benny Ricardo some com- rookies on their roster, by far the starting berths are Jets defensive
petition. He ended up kicking Ricar- most of any team. Cincinnati is next back Darrol Ray, Atlanta linebacker
with 10.
Buddy Curry, St. Louis tight end
do out of a job.
Being a top draftee on one of the Doug Marsh, Oakland linebacker
"He impressed us so much with
his deep kickoffs and his accuracy most consistently bad teams in the Matt Millen and St. Louis linebacker
on field goals that he was the obvious l,eagne - or on any team, for that Charles Baker.
matter - doesn't. guarantee 1mStardom, or even success, is not
&amp;
mediate
success
in
the
NFL.
limited
to the first few rounds, of
~7.00. 6, Cinclrlnati Wyoming 53 .57.
Cornerback Mark Haynes, the course. There will always be Don
.
DMSiONIV
REGION 13 - l, Garfield Height, TrinGiants' top choice, was given a star- Nottinghams, guys picked when the
il)' 94.31. 2, Burton Berkshire 79.12. 3,
ting job bL~ch Ray Perkins the "who's he?" names predominate in
Root.o;tuwn 57.62. . 4:, Rittman 56.12. 5,
Gates Mil.l.5 Hawken 45.41. 6, Smithville
moment his name was mentioned at the last rounds, gtiys who come into
42.37
the
draft. He proceeded to throw the ·training camp as bodies and make
REGION 14 - I, An:hbold 59.50. ~
Bucyrus Wyitford 52.25. 3, North RobiMon
job away in the preseason, regained the most of the opportUnity.
SELECT GROUP
Colonel Crawford 52.00. 4. Sycamore Moit early in the season, lost it again
This year's last pick, by the fourhawk ~9 .37 . 5. New London 46.00, 6, Gil).
sonburg 43.78 .
and has it now only because Terry time Super Bowl champion PitREGION 15 - I, Crootsville 71.43. ~
Jackson has a separated shoulder.
tsburgh Steeler, was Tyrone
Tiltonsville Buckeye South 75.70. 3, Toronto 65.37. 4, Hanoverton United 44.75. 5,
The other drafted rookies wbo McGriff, a guard out of Florida
Cadiz 4UIO. 6, Byesville Meadowbrook
start for the Giants these days ue AXM. Being picked No.356 overall,
41 .00.
REGION 16 - 1, West Jeffenon 70.00.
wide receiver Danny Pittman, he figured he had a better shot at
2,
Cincinnati
Mariemont
68.00.
3,
]i.icked
in the fourth round, and making it in Canada, so he headed
Springfield Northeastern 59.84:. 4, Versailles 55.25. 5, London 55.12 , 6, Wheelersafety Bud Hebert and linebacker north - only to be cut by the
sburg 5Ul.
Chris Linnin, bOth taken in the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Back to PitDIVISIONV
REGION 17 ~ 1, UJrain Clearview
seventh round.
tsburgb he came, and thanks to in76.50. 2, Mogadore 88.43. 3, Leetonia 47.$0.
POMEROY
Haynes
was
the
No.8
selection
in
juriestootherplayers,hemadeit.
4, Soulhin&lt;ton Challter 4U6. 5, McDonald

181 rookies dot NFL teams
'

SHAKING HANDS- Indian Pacer forw.ard George Johnson (24 )
and New York Knick forward Campy Russell join hands after Johnson
t.ried to block this first half shot during their NBA basketball game in
Indianapolis Wednesday night. Indiana defeated New York 102-95.
(AP Laserphoto)

Massillon new
football leader
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Massillon led four new leaders this
week in the Ohio High School
Athletic Association's computeriz~d
football rankings.
Massillon's Tigers •.~! . replaced
neighboring rival Canton McKinley,
!).J.O, atop Region 3 with 147.75 points. McKinley, first last week, now
ranks second with 133.37 points.
The two old rivals will play in
Massillon Saturday afternoon to settle the champion in Region 3.
· In Division IV, Archbold replaced
' Bucyros Wynford as the frontrunner
in Region 14 and Crooksville overcame Tiltonsville Buckeye South in

Corryell seeks
more consistency
CINCINNATI (AP) - San Diego
Coach Don Corryell is looking for
more consistency in his aggressive
aerial attack when the Chargers
play the Bengals Sunday at Cincinnati on Sunday.
~~ we've

been ' hot or cold 1 " said

Corryell in a telephone intervi~w
Wednesday about his team's s-;J
record.
San Diego opened the season with
four straight victories but lost three
of the last four to Buffalo, Oakland
and Dallas. They are tied with
Oakland for the American Conference Western Division of the
National Football League.
San Diego has turned the ball over
30 times in eight games, on 16 interceptions and 14 fumbles.
"We went a couple ·of games
without a turnover or a Single offensive penalty. Naturally, when
you're fortunate enough to play like
·that, you win.
"Then came the rash of fumbles
and interceptions. It's hard to accountfor," Corryell said.
"We must win. We've got to start
the second half of the season on a
good note. I know it's going to be
tough there,
though," said San Diego quarterback Dan Fouts; who threw for
an NFL record of 4,082 yards to win
the division last seasn.
Fou~. the only quarterback in
NFL history to pass for 300 yards in
four straight games, said the
Chargers' explosive offense is successful because it's not afraid to
challenge opponents.
"We're an aggressive offense. We
take chances.
"Our offense has· been more
productive thsn it was last year at
this time, Stlll, the bottom line is
winning," Fouts said.

Region 15.
In Division V, Williamsburg
moved ahead of Covington in Region
20.

.

The OHSAA will use the rankings
after the final games this weekend to
determine the makeup of its expanded 46-team post-season playoffs. The on...two teams in each region
will qualify for the playoffs.
The final rankings and playoff
pairings will be announced Monday
by the OHSAA.
Willoughby South, Upper
Arlington and Cincinnati Moeller,
the statewide Associated Press
Class AAA poll leader, kept their
regional leads in Division I.
The Division II pacesetters again
were Solon, Columbus Watterson,
Youngstown Mooney and Lebanon
while Cleveland Benedictine,
Fostoria, New Concord Glenn and
Hamilton Badin kept their Division
III leads.
Other leaders in Division IV were
Garfield Heights Trinity and West
Jefferson while Lorain Clearview,
Tiffin Calvert and Glouster Trimble
continued to pace ·their regions in
DivisionV.
COLUMBUS, ohio ..(APi Regional

leaders in the Ohio High School Athlelic

weekly computerized football rankings. The first two teams in
each region after the regular season quallfy fo r the state playoffs:
A.ssoc~ation 's

DIVISION I

REG ION I -

I. Willoughby South 125.12

point.'!.
2,
Chesterland West
Geauga
11$.00. 3, Stow 113.00. 4, • Cleveland St. Joseph 107.82. 5, Shaker Heights 103.50. 6,
Clevela nd Heights 94 .00.
REGION 2 - I, Upper Arlington 137.00.

2, Sandusky 127.09. 3, Westerville North
. 106.25. {, Fremont Roos 106.00. 5, Lima
92.00. 6, Colwnbu5 Eastmoor 91.41 .
REGION :l - 1, M.owi!lon 147.75. 2,
Canton McKinley 133.37. 3, Lakewood St.
Edward 133.13. 4, Newark 1Z8.12. 5,
Brunswick 108.50. 6, Lorain lll8.00.
REGION 4 l , Cincinrmti Moeller
179.50. 2, Cincinnati Princeton 169.25. 3,
Centerville 128.50. 4, Clayton Northmont
122.00. 5. Xenia Beavercreek lOO.SO. 6,
Middletown JOU3.
• DlVISION n
REGlON 5 - 1, Solon '106.50. 2, Mentor
Lake Catholic 96.62. 3, ~· ruchfield Revere
92.25. 4, Stow Wal.sh JeSuit 89.93. 5, Geneva &amp;4 .00 . 6, WesUake 75.75.
REGION 6 - 1, Columbus Wattersoo
101 .75. 2, Toledo St. Franci.s 98.2$. 3, Sylvania Northview 92.67. 4, Perrysburg
90.00. 5, Vermilion 85.62. 6, Wapakoneta
82.1!.
REGION 7 - I, Young!ltown Mw.ey
115.43. 2, Dover 91.00. 3, Struthers 86.00.
4, Youngstown Chaney n .91!. 5, Ca nfield
77.5o0. 6, Bellaire 67.10.
REGlON 8 - 1, Lebanon 9'2.00. 2, Cincinnati · Greenhills 87.~. 3, Grt!i!nville
78.75 . {, Oa~on Roth 74.00. 5, Pickerington 71.00. 6, Urbana 69.59.
·
DIVISIONm
REGION .9 - I, Cleveland Benedictine
!16.00. I, AkNn st. Vincent-st. Mary 911.61.
3, Warren Kennedy 83.00. 4, Canal Fulton
Northwest 82.00. 5, O:&gt;rt1and I...akevlew
76.81. 6, Chagrin Falls Xenston 75 . ~.
REGION 10 - I, Faotoria "111.43. 2, 01'. rville 83.75 . 3, Elyria

Catholic

30TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

SELECT GROUP

SWEATERS
TOPS.
30% OFF

DRESSES &amp;SUITS
40% OFF ·
l'Ml'S COMPANY

43.00. 6, nergholz Springfield 36.75.
REGION 18 - l, Tiffin Calvert 63.25. 2,
Liberty Center 59.21. 3, Fremont St. Joseph 41.71. 4. Blufftoo 311.2$. 5, McComb
37.7~. 6, R.aWSOII Cory-Rawsoo 36.00.
REGION 19 l , Glousta- Trimble

60.49. 2, Newark Catholic 50.00. 3, Wood-

sfield 48.00. 4, Beallaville 41.00. :;, Portsmouth Notre Dame 36.92. 6, Crown City
1
Hannan Trace J4.57.
REGION :II - I, Williamsburg n .43. 2,
Covington 66.18. 3, Middletown Fen'llrick
43.00 . 4, Hamiltm NN Miami 41.81. 51
Milford Center Fairbanks 41.25. 6, Bradford 4U1 .

the draft. The .No.2 pick, for the
other New York team, was Johnny
"Lam" Jones, the fleet receiver
from Texas. The Jets, everyone
said, would . be devastating with
Jones aod Wesley Walker. Today,
Walker is injured and Jones, inef·
fectlve from the start, rides the bench much of the time while Derrick
Gaffney, who started last year, does

Selection

MEN'S SUITS
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r;;=::=:;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=========

NO. 1 REOOMMEND£D PRODUCT FOR ITOfES AND
RASHES, AND THE NO. 1 PRODUCT FOR POISON IVY,
''
POISON OAK, MD SUMAC, ACCORDING TO AMERICAN
DIUGGISTS.

Terry Reuter. Amy Rouse, Heather

Girl Scouts 11 00'~-------------~~

SIXTH GRADE - Lin Chase, Todd Cullums,
Phillip King, Brenda Sinclair, Brian Layh.

H. 2nd AV£.. MIDDLEPORT, OH.

MOST OUTSTANDING EMPLOYEE- Ron Polsky, right, Gallco
Workshop director, presented Gene Shaver a gift certificate and
trophy for beirig the workshop's most outstanding employee for the
past year.

Puppies'
break the
dress code

20% OFF OF ALL BLOW DRIES
Call Today-Valerie &amp; Betty to serve you.

...... .·•·

5.88

3.88

JAMB·UPr•
WEATHERSTRIP

A"ii~O &gt;T"OlWtiO
!&amp;!tis !hot wl&gt;ot 1 Ol'"ll"lis
~jdoevl1~

"""""'"""

Pt.cp&lt;es· drEM.nl"&gt;oel

Free

Gene Shaver chosen Gallco 's
outstanding 1980 employee

\'(llfie!l

•n $0\l

lle• &gt;Oiot . li'Oifl!wtli&gt;;ll11

toolweor. Whol&amp;ver
VOuOO "'h'f t"oo be
ll"IOiftcomla'!OOie

.

"~l)t\1

the
workshop.
recognizes
outstanding employees of
Gene Shaver was selected as the
workshop's top employee for the
past year. Gene works on the
Federal Mogul contract and also is
involved with mowing .the lawri at
'the Guiding Hand School and Gallco
Workshop. Individual awards 'for
each sub-contractor were also giyen.
Dorothy Lazzarie won the top employee award for the Goodyear
Plant contract. For the Robbins and
· Myers contract,. Tony Kane was
selected as the best employee and
Bill Thompaon received the top
award for the Federal Mogul ci&gt;ntract. Donna Saxon received an

award for the most improved employee at the workshop. Two em·
ployees, Richard Northup and Fred
Erwin tied for the best attendance
award.
A dance was held after the presentation of the awards at which Dale
Tucker, Jona Burris, Earl Robinson
and Seasford Jordan provided the

'

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

Tilr

,.

CHESIDRE - The Third Annual
Gallco Em)lloyees Award Banquet ,
and dance was held recently at the
Kyger Creek 'Employee's Club.
Gallco Industries Incorporated is a
non-profit organization that
provides employment for the handicapped citizens of Gallia CoWity.
The annual awards banquet

\

dOrng I Steal: lt'16-

dre-1$ code rt.e 01•ce

ALUMINUM AND
VINYL WEATHERSTRIP

'•

2• 77 36-INCH
AlUMINUM THRESHOLD

ALL-VINYL
GARAGE DOOR SEAL

17ft. roll won't rust or tarnish. Extruded aluminum with reComes with nails and installa- placement vinyl insert. 3'h-in.
tion Instructions.
W x '\4 in. H. 13/X

THE
SHOE BOX

•Tan

tributed awards for the employees.
,
r~m~USI~·~c.;Se~v~e~ra~l~area~~bi1Sill~·
~ess~e~s;c~on-~~==~~-~~~==~~
11110

95
$34
Increases air

Seal for 9x7-ll. Door ......... 8.88

Directs heal ; saves fue l.
p t.a s I i c .
Replaceable dust
fillers. 11 /52
C tear

-~;::;

15-25 ln. 11 / 53 ........ 3.49

·The AllWEATHERIZER
Season Window Sealing Kit

THE IN-SIDER

.

Seals around top and si des of 16x7-ft.
door . 13/ 830123

10·141N. ADJUSTABLE
FLOOR AIR
$}77
DEFLECTOR
.

DUCT
BOOSTER
flow in
healing and air condi ·
tioning systems. Fits
round or flat ducts. Ex ·
motor. 11 / DB-2

TIMEX
WATCHES
.

STORM WINDOW
5-MIL

34x36 in.
Installs f rom inside . Kit in cludes precut plastic

sheets. top and side trim and Sill.
38XSO·In. 13 .99

13/ ~/ A/ D/ B

38x64-In . 16.99

MON. niRU FRI. 7:00 til 5:00
DOOR STRI.P
Vinyl on ponderosa pine.
Two 7 ft. , and one 3 ff.

length. 13/ M·2

SIUI5HfR LOHSE
,..,~0( '(

l'h•.Jf
k......,. McCul-.... 11.

Pta.

Chtrln Rlfllt, II. Ph.

lat•• ,........ tilt lt.lft.
~Y11z.te11rltaMIIotp.m.
PII.ICRIPTIONI

a. Mal•

~

P,.....tyhf'VIa
0,... Nl"'h fi1 t

PH . ttJ.JtSJ

·5-Ml L WEATHERIZER Polyester s heer witn moun ·
ling !ape. 30x60 in. 13/ WS
7-MIL. WEATHERIZER Mylar• sheet . 13/ W
, l8x44·1n . 5.9·9
3Bx60· In. 7.77
4BxBD-In. 10.99

STORE HOURS ,

25% OFF
Min."""

1"11.992-MM

Yar d · cl ea nup is easy w ith. 15 extr a
strength heavy· duty pa sti c bags.
W/ ties. 16 / TV 7 ~ 15

•,

ReuNNennlftt,R.~

VILLAGE, PHARMACY

from Gino'S"

36-IN. DOOR BOTTOM
Keep out drafts with a flexible Aluminum with vinyl insert fits
vinyl strip that raises when top and sides of doors · up to
door opens to clear carpets.
36 x 84 inches. 1Y•·in. wide.

DISCOUNT

GOOD THROUGH MONDAy

.

8 til Noon

7- BUSHEL SIZE
LAWN &amp; LEAF BAGS

SEAl-0-MATK

'

FOR. COMMON
DIARRHEA

SATURDAYS

20% OFF OF AU. PERMS

wnan m llil roeocP

SrocK

REDUCED

.BAHR CLOTHIERS

l~

SPECIAL
20%

··' ~~

.WMPO

SPECIAL ALL THIS WEEK

SJXm GRADE - Stanley Broome, Tim Ourat, Shaouoo Hiody, Michele Zirkle, Jtrry Baker,
Tim Cassell, Eddie Kltcben, Judi Mees, Cindy
Riffle, Mark SmiLb.

making all A's were:
SENJO~ : Paula Barnett, Crista Beegle, Bon. nie B~. Peggy Bus~, Steve Circle, Sherry CUrtis, Eddie Duffy, SANDY EVANS, PAULA FOR. 'ItrNE, Robin Fortune, JodyGrueser, Sonia Hill,
Della Johnson, Liz Knight, Theresa Manuel,
Janet Mlddleswart, Mary Beth Obitz, Teesa
Rice, Mark Simpson, Mary Slavin, Dan Talbott,
Deanna White, Melissa Yonker.
JUNIORS: Brian Ash, Sherry Beegle, Denise
Deem, Tammy Ervin, Julie FJ!u:la, Kim Follrod,
Phillip Kincaid, JENNY MANUEL, DEBIIA
MEACHEM, Raeleen OUver, Allen Pape, Kelly
Pickens, Richard Randolph, Paul Roush, ·
MEUNDA SALMONS, RITA SLOTER, Elaine
Smith. Renee Smith, Randy Tucker, Mary
Winebrenner, Kent Wolfe, Jackie Zerkle.
SOPHOMORES: KATHY BAKER, Zane
Beegle, Chris Boatic!'t Nick B06Uck, 'l'yrone
Brinag~. Brian Burmamer, Tom Cummina,
CINDY EVANS, Dbwa Ganguly,. Angie Glenn,
Davkt Parsons, Peggy Green, W~1am Hannon,

Hush

~~Across

"Paula Gilkey, Scott Hannillg, Cbarle111 Pullins ,
David Smltb, Darla Hawley, Mite Lewis.

The first six.weeks honor roll of Southem High
School. was announced today.
Making a srade of " 8" or above in all their
subjects with the names in capital letters

Casey Kasem

Open Wednesday thru saturday

DoD HaDDing, principal of Bradbury Scbool ,
bas aDDouced studeots who have made tbe
bonor roD duriDg the lint grading period.
Siudeobl makhigs "8'' or above were:
F1FI'H GRADE- PellD.y Clark. Leab DallDer,
David DIMisOil, Brad Little, Pau1 Meltoo, Kay
Smltb, Eddie Baer, Gay Baker, Sherry Cooper,

Ang~la Sloan, Tarnra Vance.

Dick Howser, the manager of the 1
New York Yankees, was a highschool and college friend of actor
Burt Reynolds,

BErn'S
BEAUTY BOUTIQUE
Mason, W.Va .
Ph. 772-5272

Deem, LEE DILL·, Greg DuVall, Rusty Flagg, .
PAUL HARRIS, Corey McPhail, JANE '
MANUEL, Drema Owens, Alice R1ffie •. UNDA
PROFFITT, Missy Stover, Dorothy Wamer 1
Charlie Wolfe, LAREN WOLFE, Dorothy War-ner , Charlie Wolfe.

· searlest ; and Sha n- Beegle,
TmRDHeidi
GRADE
- Traci
Bartels, Melanie
Brenda SineIa1r,
Caruth"",
Keny
Doogl.,, Jay
non Slavin, the most original Hwnphn!ys, Kristin King, Aaron Whaley and
Phyllis Bearhs and Loretta Ja;;;CR'ri;=i;: _ Melodi C.rl, Mark Corsi.
Holsinger were the judges.
Vanessa Jay, Nkk King , Jody Taylor, Wesley
Games were played and refresh- ~Jr~ GRADE _ David Beegle, Aodra
men~ served.
- Houdallhell, Kevin Victor King, Shannon Slavin,

Sa lisbury J unior GirI Scout Troop
1100 held a Halloween party at the
Meigs HighSchool Tuesday evening.
Costume prizes were awarded to
Tracy Casto, ugliest; Joan Simpson,
fwmiest; Kathy Pickens, prettiest;

OOMPLDE

SPORT COATS
20%

'Sin~er,

Krist.eh Slawter, Kris~n Stanley, JenniC~r
~~~:w. Amy Warth, Pam Whaley, Betty

TO MEET TONIGIIT
The Meigs County Democrat Cen..
tral Committee will meet at 7 p.m.
· this evening at the Democrat
Headquarters, E. Main S.t..
Pomeroy. Chainnan Bud Wilson
asks all members -to attend the
• session.

r----~-------...L-----------­

For Bums, Nicks, Cuts, ~
Scratcnes and Ab11Skii15

and

L

DEAR POLLY- Having worked
as a secretary for a number of years
I have found tile following tips most
beneficial. When opening a package
of foam coffee cups open it from the.
bottom and there is less chance of
sj)reading germs.
Wash pens, pencils, telephone etc.
with rubbing alcohol after they have
been handled by people who have
colds.
.
While enjOying your lunch break
spray the bOttoms of your feet with a
foot-refresher spray and find it very
refreshing to those tired feet. LOIS
DEAR POLLY- For years I have
carried a small plastic bOttle of inexpensive talcum powder in my purse.
If a bit of grease or salad dressing is
spilled on clothing dust the spot with
some of the talcum, let it sand a few
minutes and then brush off. If stain
remains repeat and let the powder
stay on a bit longer. I have even put
the powder on both sides of a garment. This has saved me cleaning
and laundry bills and also have
having to go around all day with a
stain on my clothing.- RUTH
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

Halloween parties reported

38X44·In. 12 .44

.

.

All UVING ROOM SUITES -REDUCED
30% TO CELEBRATE OUR 30TH YEAR
'
IN BUSINESS.

•
The seventh annual meeting of dinator, and Mrs. Richard Ward,
complimented on their giving for
Athens District United Methodist ·New Carlisle, president.
missions.. Mrs. Homer Matheney,
By Polly Cramer
Women was addressed by the Rev.
r.1rs. James Lehman, Logan, gave Chesterhill, led in worship·and Mrs.
Special
correspoodent
Benjamin Edwrds, superintendent, formal.tecogrlition to Mrs. Everett James Mallett, Athens, conducted
DEAR
POLLY
- ·Can one freeze
Athens District United Methodist Mowrey, Logan;_Mrs. Ralph Robin· the offering for mission work in .
thst
white
cream
cheese
that comes
Church, and Rev. David Frazier, son, Logan; and Mrs. John Glick, Zaire.
wrapped
in
foil
and
in
a
box?
It is the
Reynoldsburg, both of whom com- New Lexington for years of service
Mrs. Raymond Willis, chairkind
often
used
in
cake
frosting.
mented on the endurance of the to the group, and ,stated that a gift person, nominations, presented the
L.A.H.
church, and the importance of for missions would be sent to the following slatll of officers which
DEAR L.A.H.
facing problems with prsonal com- Board of Global Missions for them.
were 11pproved I.Jy the group and inCream chee.se
mitment to the mission of the churMrs. Everett McMahon, stalled for 1981 by Mrs. Richard
can
be frozen but
ch. Mrs. Benjamin E:dwards, president, Gallipolis, called for Ward, conference president: Mrs.
should
be used
honorary ·vice president of the moments of silence to be observed Everett McMahon, Gallipolis,
within
six
weeks.
group, introduced Mr. Frazier, as a for the deceased members. Special president; Mrs. James Mallett,
Wrap
extra
minister from a family of committed mention was made of the loss of Mrs. · Athens, vice president; Mrs. Benaluminum
foil
Cbtistians.
Roy Ballard, Nelsonville, first jamin Edwards, Athens, honorary
around
the
• The group was privileged to have president of the group, and Mrs. vice president; Mrs. Robert McGee,
package before
the following four Methqdist John Wickline, Rio Grande, for- Pomeroy, secretary; Mrs. Clyde
putting it in the
Women's Conference Officers par- merly membership chairperson.
. Cottrill, Hamden, treasurer; Mrs.
freezer
.
ticipating in the dsys activities:
Syracuse Asbury and GallipoliS Wilbur Fuller, Logan, chairperson,
POLLY
Mrs. Billie Curfman, Delaware, vice Grace . United Mehtodist ,Church committee on nominatjons; Mrs.
CRA!'f\ER
presdient; Mrs. Harold Jeffers, units received recognition for ex- .1ames Lehman, Logan, program
DEAR
POLLY
I
have
found
Chesterhill, Christian Personhood cellent particiipation in the resources; Mrs. Raymond Willis, .
that
old
linen
tablecloths
·make
e~­
Coordinator; Mrs. Join\ Cady, Christian reading program. Durjng Gallipolis, membership; and the
cellent
dish
towels.
I
cut
them
in
a
Athens, supportive community coor- the Pledge Sevice, treasurers were Mission Coordinators: Mrs. Homer
generous
size
and
quickly
hem
on
t '·
Matheney, Chesterhill, Christian ·the sewing machine. They are soft,
Personhood; Marjorie Malone,,
absorbent and lint free.- EILEEN
Coolville, Supportive Community;
DEAR POLLY - When breaking
Mrs. Harry Mock, Logan, Sociai'Ineggs in a bOwl or pan and some
volvement; and Mrs. Everett
pieces drop in the easiest way to
Brownie Troop 1 2 5 4 - - - - - - - - - - Mowrey, Rockbridge, .G)obal Con- remove
them is to use an egg shell
Costume prizes were awarded at
Others attending were Erica cerns.
half. - DELORIS
the Saturday Halloween party of Ellias, Mary Beth Stein, Emily
Brownie Troop 1254 held at the Brown, Christa King, Tanya Brown, ~----Honor rolls announced-----American Legion hall in Middleport. Mary Teresa Bryant , Lee
The first sil: weeb honor 1'&lt;111 of the Salisbury
Wally Haynes, BRUCE JOHNSON, Michelle
Receiving prizes were Tracy Ellis, Luckeydoo, Justinia Mullins, Trish •. Elementary
School is belng annourK'ed. Making
Johnson, Robert Kincaid, Becky Lee, Kim
CLAIR MORRIS, Kim Morrow, Linda
Pam Haggy, Tara Gerlach, and Bet- Baer, Susanne Cassell, Teresa Deen, , a grade of "B'' or above in aU their subjects to be Maynard,
to the roll wert!:
0 1Brien, Terry Patterson, John Porter, David
sy Bryant.· Games were played, the Kim ·Baggy, and Kathy Ellias, rtamed
· ,FIRST GRADE - NO grades given first
Salmons,
Tonja. Salser,
Kittie Sellers, Lori Harden , Mel Weese
.
group sang songs, and the children leader, and Brenda Haggy and San- grading peHod.
SECOND GRADE - Jason B,uck, Randy Cor, FR&amp;SHMEN : Anne Adams, Janie Amberger,
were ·served refreslunents by the dy Luckeydoo, assistants.
si, Tracy Eblin , David Frymer, Sleven Gibbs,
Sam Amburgey, Trevor Cardone, Edward Coffle;tders.
Sandy l.andaker, Missy Leach, Lenora Lyons,
.man, KEVIN CU.RFMAN, Lisa Deem, Tony

JEANS

NOW IN PROGRESS
'

Athens District UMW meets Freezing cream cheese

FALL SALE

79.12 . 4,

Willard 65.7:t. 5, Huron 61.50. 6, Milan
Edison 60.00.
REGION II - I, New Concord Glenn
98.31. 2, Ironton 85.25. 3, Jackson 83.25. 4,
Washington Court House 73.00. 5, Circleville 64.25. 6, Colwnbus .DeSales 63.64,
REGION 12 I . Hamilton Badin
132.50. 2, New Richmond 68.25. 3, Carllide
67.34. 4, North Bend Taylor 51.00. 5, ~

Polly's Pointers-

1

I'OWIIf"(IV, 0 ,

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SAT. 7:00 til 3:00 .

�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30, 19110

Racine FFA takes part in ro·ects

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pome~y, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 30,1980

.

Oldest national touring theatre
to peiform 'Ro.meo and juliet '

r-._--~~--~~~
.~.7~-=·~.-~~~

::::=.:.':':r::nc. ....

$111 Oflil,iM.,
The Fann Science Review, the
Racine FFA also had the top two
.
Paul Bunyan Show, and the county scores in the contest with David ......... i:ownuOMTIOIIALUfllll!»
St. Lilli. SUit If fllllull.ln, hi~~ ...... - 01 ... ~
and district soil judging contests Lawson receiving ~. and IfIDAkablltoll
and • ~ dullfll llltCIIfnal:"" .. -~·
_...., • .,....
......... "*"... lbr.,....~•
have been among the many ac- AlbertHolman,~. Olhermem- .._~,,..~tohMiiiii•IDIIN•'*-blrll,
tivities of the Racine FFA so far this be'rs of the team Included Jim
=w~~·"·"' 2 .;;._J.l'P"''~
!'!~!:.!Jill'~ ...,m,JCl.~ c..io.li.ooo.oo"
school year.
. . . _,
Cleland and Randy Annes. The 7;TiEs$\HII((f, I IIIW,..,..,... ~.,dlktliltlllt
At the Fann Science Review in Racine team will represent District .,...,.tobe.....,.~c...
J. llldlflfd t ~ Sllpl II lrDII"MCI of OM
CSell1.2511
Colwnbus the FFAmembers viewed 17 in the state urban sol! judging COD- . MIIO.... . . . IIII'IIIIIM'IOI.I'Miikltiii~-Tht
antique and ultra modern fann test in Marion County. Racine ........... SloiWil*'idatll lnwl'~nte ..... Mil Ollia. ._.
equipment, the livestock exhibits, · placed fifth In the rural soU judging mrbfinllllt CGJII?'!I!ti,TID . . W.,CD
.. it Md ......... ........ amllt,.., Ill n-et Ill
and demonstrations of harvesting conies! In DiBtrict 17. Team mem- .IJ!Pbl*
,.. .. its......,.._....,...,...._.r~~~~~a~~~~mllllilill~s
and plowing. At the Paul Bunyan bers include Bob Lee, Erich PhiJson, . . . by itiiMIMI--- tDhM- .~o~~w~ .. o.:-t. ]I,
1~19; ~ = 7,41Z.Ollm
ll~IEUIO;
Show held in Nelsonville, emphasis Tom CUmmins, and A. J. S.Wolll5
16.111.371. IIICHII,
101,.4]1. EiltiNiftfel
1\lii&gt;:OIO.ot Ool
ll"ll IJilt. Cooiii.IUOlOOIIIIO
was on logging equipment and, Willbarger.
IN wtlli:SS WH:EREDf. lllrrt Mrtut* ~ .., ...... -.i
·
CMid ""*'"be .tfiudll~ Obill, lllldly lllddlkllltllrt
sawmill work with members ob1Se1115Tl
In class the members of the FFA J.Rlttlllcinl Jr., Sllpl 0111'4111111Ct (Ill Oflit_
serving many of the major chairujaw are learning. construction through
manufacturers demonstra~ their building a red bani and a. trppby =~=:=~~~='=~
CONTNffTM.Ifll'•*'co ,·
equipment.
case, troublll shooting on smaU t:trtililltblt
~~ CGnc«11 Slate tt New'Mam~Nftitl , fils~·~ 1M ltws.oi-!NI
Stllt~IOitMidls~!UQ:hl:llfrirllYIIItDtr.-ct
The Racine FFA also participated engineS, practicing ·parllmentary illtllildiii~ .....DIIriate~of~b~ .......
b¥ ib lliWIII...,.. • hrlt ,_. •....., • oea.own.
in the Meigs County soil judging con- procedure and welding in the coD- issiiiWI1
lll'tld- ..OO.J1Jl01.133.20l00: .-IIII.Oll.MlOII
..
....
IIIC,l!!IUI9 .Ill ' -· 160LOP.MI.IIO; b test held at the Gene Yost farm.
struction of ealf pens.
$551 .359.410.00: Mtl nuh, $167,125,257 .00: C1pihl,
Meigs took first place honors with
The Racine Chapter is presently ~~:lfiWERf:(f, ll\m '*..-lllllk:riild .., '*"' llld
Racine taking second, and Eastern, taking orde~"S for its annual citrus eauY!III
lilY Ylllobe lffixad II ColilfnbuS. Ohil, tiMt~ tfMI ~. tiltrt
ISM I~
third. In the District 17 urban soil fruit sale. The sale will continue un- 1 R*N1n1 II.. Sit~ of !IIMnla of OIW.
SUta1 OfOMI. ~ol IM~,~'Bt,c.tifialltflc..tilflcl - Tht
judging contest, the top three teams til Nov. 10. Th~ interested in fruit llldtnicMd.
Suoet' k Jliil ollnlutlnet ollie--~ Ollio,IIIMy
included Racine, first , South- may contact any FF A member or celtifilstllfl
WIM ........TT&amp;~CO .
western, second, and Gallipolis, the advisor, Aaron Savre.
ol Klf1ttrd.Slat. Gf ConlltdiM 1111 complied . . . . -Of IIW; statl
·
....... it 111d i1 ....tMrilld ltiiMIIIM ~ !'III'ID triiiSKIE
third.
thk dltl ib wfPrilll tuinta et mur.u Its Fllllfltill DDMiitiDII is

,,,. .

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TIIURSDAY ·
TRICK OR TREAT in Basban
Conunuillty Thursday from 6 to 7.
Siren will sound to begin and end the
. g's actiVI'ties.
evenm
. TRICK OR TREAT at Tuppers
Plains Thursday from 6 to 1 p.m.
Siren will sound to begin and end the
activities. Members of Orange Fire
Department will be assisting
childrenduringtheappoinlellhour.
TRICK OR TREAT in the village
ofSyracuseThursdayfrom6to7:30
p:m. Tbe siren will sound to begin
and end the activities..

.,
•' • •
•

•

AWAlT OPERATION - Natalie, left, and Valerie
Wackier are shown the day before the start of surgery
to eventually separate the siamese twin daughtes ci
Randy and Rebecca Wackier.of Piqua, Ohio. Born June
17, 1980 joined at the hip, the girls are now healthy

enough to undergo colostomies today at Dayton's
Children's Medical Center. Their physician, Dr.
Charles Goodwin, hopes to be able to perform the
surgery to separate them late next month. (AP Laserphoto)

Auxiliary plans Veterans Day observance
A report was given on the fall conference. Attending from the unit
were Mrs. Etta Will, Mrs. Erma
Hendricks, Mrs. Peggy Caton, Mrs.
Martha Hanel, Mrs. Becky Tyree
and Mrs. Gerry Parsons. At the conference special recognition was
given to Mrs. Golda Mourning
Roush, Middleport, a 48 year member of the American · Legion
Auxiliary. She was prsented a gift
by the district president, Mrs.
Lorrene Snyder. At the conference,
Mrs. Tyree, junior activities chair·
man for the district, conducted a
school of instruction on junior
programs of the Auxiliary.
Officers' reports were given and

the treasurer's report was filed for
audit.
The party at the Chillicothe
Veterans Administration Hospital
was announced for Dec. 18. Loot

ba gs wo'II be prepared and any
·
· di vi dua1 WIS· hin
usmess
or m
· g to

b
donate mone'y or articles for the
bags which will be given at Christmas tlrne to veterans are asked to
contact either Mrs. Albert Roush or
Mrs. Tyree. Acknowledged at the
meeting was an anonymous
donation of $10 to be used on the
Christmas project.
Mrs. Mary Clark whose husband,
Paul, is a member of the Middleport
Post, was welcomed as a new member of the Auxiliary. Sympathy car·
ds were sent to Mrs. William Dunfee
and Mrs. Ben Turner. Lionel Boggs
was reported ill.
The meeting was preceded by a
baked steak dinner served to the
Legion and Auxiliary members. The
door prize brought by Mrs. Hendricks was won by Mrs. Hunnel.

Vocal music boosters meet

•

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.,•

..

nn recently lor the birthday ob-·
anee of their son, Fred. The
Sossn•'s' two granddaughters, An·
drea 1nd Angela, returned to
Pomi· •·oy for a week with their
part OI LS, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sisson,
coming here for a visit and to return
. their lwo daughters. Last weekend
Olga Gaudin of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla. was the·weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Tim Sisson and on Thur·
sday Mr. and Mrs. John Koshun of'
Fort Lauderdale were their over·
night guests. The birthday of Tim
Sisson was celebrated during tyhe
visit of Olga Gaudin. Mr. and Mrs.
Koshun and Mrs. Gaudin left Friday
for their homes in Fort Lauderdale.

GUESTSPLAKERANNOUNCED
Heat!~ United Methodist Church In
MiJr' leport " :1have a special guest,
the ..ev. David Schar, director of the
United Methodist Church Camps in
SoutheastOhio, on Sunday. ·
The Rev. Schar will speak at the
morning worship service at 10:30
and in th~ evening will present a
program on Christian camping in
Southeast Ohio at the evenit)g servoce. There will be 11 carry-in dinner
at 6 p.m. with the program to follow.
The public is invited to attend both
events.

at the Mt. Union Baptist Church near Carpenter. The
public is invited.

r-:-----------~

Manufacturer's suggested retail price. TaMes, transportation, options extra.

23 ~::Est. 33 mpg HighWIJ
Remember. Compare these 1981 EPA I!Stimates with estimated
mpg for other cars. Your actual mileage may differ, depending
on speed. trip length and weather. Highway mileage will probably be lower.
·

5 YEAR, UNUMITED MILEAGE
NO RUST·lHRU WARRANTY
All the198l AMCvehicles Include ZIEBART" FACTORY RUST
PROTECTION, the exclusive AMC Buyer Prot«tlon Plane and
full five- year No-Rust·Thru Warranty. Zlebarre Is • registered
trademark of Zlebart International Corporation.

RIVERSIDE
AMC
.
Gallipolis, Ohio

"'"

llf'denipC, Su~ oiii!Skii'II'ICI of 1M Still of

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caused my 1111 to bt lffuld II CclkiiMM, CHI,IIilllly _, d&amp; RM1
651
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"'"'"

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
YourMain,
FTD Pomeroy
Florist

352 E.

BANK 6NE OF POMEROY, N.A.
in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, i980 published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United Stales Code, Section 161.
National Bank Region Nwnber 4

Charter nwnber 1980
Statement of Resources and Liabilities

Cash and due from depository institutions ..... .. , ....... ·. . ......... .. . ... . $2,412,000.00

·us
. . rreasury securt·ties . ... ....... .......... .. . , .. .. ..... .... ......... . . . 7,776,000.00

Obligations of other U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ............................................. 2,021,000.00
Obligations of States and political
subdivisions in the United States .... . ...... . ................ ; ........... 3,379,000.00
Other bonds, notes, and debentures ..... . , .. . .. •..••.• , .. . ........ . . . .. . , .. , .. 2,000.00
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ..... . ............................ 58,000.00
Federal funda sold and securities purchased
under agr~ments to resell ....... . ........ . ........ , . ....... : .. .... . ... 1,075,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) . .. ... . . .. ...... . . 17,317,000.00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .. ..... .. .. . .......... 171;000.00
Loans, Net .................................. : .. ..................... 17 148 000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
' '
other assets representing bank premises.. . .•...... . .... •. . •.. . .... •.. ..... """·'""'·uu
Other assets ..................................................... : .... .u..t.l!l
1--+- TOTAL ASSETS ............ . .... . ..........•............... . .... . . . .

===

Demand depoSI'ts of'mdiVI·duaIll , prtnsbps., and corps. . ..................... $5,615,000.00

-...
-c
-...

lit
Ill

tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirl

'5,09000

""""" • · "'" "'"'"'"" """'·

111

"'""""·""'"""""'""''""'·Coti&amp;olo•--"'
Ohil. '*""

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnhi
ers ps, and corporati ons .. .. ............. , .... .. ....... ...... .. .' 22,521 000.00
Deposits of United States Government .. . ......... , .. . .. . .... •. •. ... .. . . . . .. . . 3'000.00
Deposits of States and political subdivisions
'
hi the United States .................................................... 2,497,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .. .. .• . •• . . ....• , .. .• ...•.. •. ............•..• , . 350,000.00
Total Deposits ........................ , ............... ·. , . . ........•.... 30,986,000.00
Total demand deposits ..... . .............. . ................. 7,040,000.00
Total time and savings deposits ... . ...... . ................... 23,946,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold
under agreements to repurchase . . ........ .. ............ . ......... .. ..... !flO 000.00
Other liabilities ........... . ........ .. ... ... ....... .. . .. .. .. ...... . .. ..... 525:000.00
TOTAL LIABIUTIES (excluding subordinated notes
·
and debentures) .... .... . . ....... . ...... . : . . .. . . , ... . ... . . .. ..... . ... f31,67! 1000.00

Surplus~·

GO BY THE NUM•RS
1981 A,.MC sPIRIT

1

"'''"l 1211.2».50lot '"'....-iiilli.m ) 4 t l i l -

Florist Since 1957

Preparation of yellow vegetables

IPPkl* mit tnc1 • ~ durinc the a.vrt~rt WtH •~r~M~Ct 111

•''"""-""'"'""" '-~r--•
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197tld•""' . - ...,_,.~,...,., , _ l&lt;l2.Ml47&amp;.00:

Your "Extra Touch"

Conunon stock:
No. shares authorized 16,000
· No. shares outstanding 16,000

( (K CARS, J CARS, X CARS)

ttrtilies tNt AMEIDN ECONOM't • co
",• ..,.,....""' "'"'""'·"""""""""' ,...., •"" so.oo

..:;~~.;1:0::,,;'!.~'13.::.~1:':;'..,~~

..:

Costume
party .'held

•

' ••

:: .
:•
•

'.
•'

Joan Wolfe
October22, IIIII

,.'.

·w~. the loo.ralgned directors au.t the ,-oraa.tra•• of tbla lltatement of reiOIII'Cel IJid

,.,.•'••

liablllties. We declare that It bas been examined'by 111, and to the best ci our lmowledlle IJid
belief 1a·~ IJid eouect.
.
.

.EDISONHOBSTE'l'TER
ORIONW. ROUSH- D~CI'ORS
ROGER MORGAN

'.•

'·•.••••
•

,.

A costwne party was held by The
First Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy at the Coon Hunters Lodge
at the ·Fairgrounds Saturday
evening.
Decorations were in teb
traditional Halloween theme and
refreshments of cider and .donuts
were served. Apple bobbing and
relay games were enjoyed by the
adults and children atteriding.
Tbe prize winners In the ~
divilllon were Donna Spent;er ~ t
original; Sue King, prettiest; e
Rev.WillimnNewnwn,theugllest;
in the older chldren's division,
Michael King, the .most original;
JeMlfer Newman, the prettiest; and
Brian Carr, the ugliest; and in ·the
younger children's diVision, Timmy
· McClure, most original; Jeremy
Coleman, the prettiest; lllld Tricia
Rlchanla, the ugliest.
. Attending were the· Rev. William
Newman, Betly, Brenda, Lisa and
· JenniferNewman,RobertandJoyce
Milia, Donna, Gerald, Karen and
Eric Spencer; Racbael I.A!febre,
Sidle Carr, Brian Carr, Jerry
COIIIMD, Suaan Coleman, Jeremy
Coleman, Patty Smith, Sbelley
Smith, sm Smith. Herabel McClure,
RbojeaD McClure, Clnd)' Wolf'e.
1.J1111 Slater, Brendll Rlcbardl,
.Deal8e Rldlardl, Jerri Ril:harda,
Trlcla iuchanla, Bob McClure,
TJmmy

Sue
Michael
fom.
and ~hlrley
Billy

.~

•

CANCER (June Zl· July tZI It could be \lery

easy for a windfall to start bumir)g a hol e in )'Our
pocket today if you don 't immedia tely put it
where it'Udoyou some good.
LEO (July %3-Aag. 22) Although this is
basically a good day you'll enjoy sharing with
friends, you may be 8 bi t more tired than you
realize. Retnember to quit while you're still
ahead.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Follow your in.stincc
regarding the way you ful a financial situation
!!huuld now be handled. Keep your ideas to yourself, because others JJUIY confuse you.

SLEEPWEAR .

20%- OFF
·15% OFF

.SPORTSWEAR
GORGE.OUS SLEEP AND
LOUNGE WEAR BY "IC"

Warm Sweater Knit Tights

NOW 13.99
·use one of our lay-away
plans. Additjonal 5% .off
for Cash 'n C;,rrv

LIBRA (Sept 23-0eL 23) Friends are,! \,ill..ipr
portant to your cause, but you may have to be-8
bit more careful than usual today that you don't
et
ht .
• I u I ·-

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 w 2 d
p · rn
Oh
CAPRICORN
~Jaa.to19)youcollective
ef- rlgpc;aug~;up;m;somllje;one-s;rr;aiioiinaiipii~iiniis.-~~·~~~-~n~.;;~o~e;r~o~y~,=· ~-~·i
forts
can still be(D~.
beneficial
today , but
fini!h what you've started before either of you
switch to new, unfamiliar interests .

SUPPORT YOUR ME.IGS· COo
PUBLIC LIBRARIES

AQUARIUS(Jon.IG-Feb.lljThen!aremany

aclvantaa• to be. gainec\ today by working out
partnenbip matt.ert. However, make double
oooklns "'' the other guy'• i...

t••

ze..Marcb ZO) You may have the

~~~;~"'~;""~'~··::r.r:~~~.~·~!~~

Vote YES On the Ubrary Levy
Th l'b
·
tl
'th t
e ' ranes are presen y WI ou proper
facilities for the handicapped. Help this to

[~~~~~~~~~~~~~b~e~c~o~m~e~a~p~o~s~s~ib~I~P~r~e~a~l~it~y~.~~~~~~~~~~
Paid tor by the Library Levy Committee, Rt. 1,
Reedsville, Oh. - Michael Schmidt· Treas.

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIA.L 5 TIL 10

TO lHE VOTERS OF MEIGS COUNTY:

McClure,
McClure,
... I:D.n
Willey McClure, Edward KJns,
KIDio Joeltlnl,
KJni,
.. -··.. IDJ Kllllo Ge1111
O!lemlft, Manlml Sbimlzu,
•'. . eo,,
Mike nower, Lisa
.....
'l'lllllmJ Adkilll Michael

.,!
•••
••
'•
~

r

problein. By 8!1 means follow it, but only after'
1
youfullywulerst.andtheproceduce.

Last 2 Days of Sale
Friday &amp; Saturday
Famous Carters

.

1--+-

.

BAZAAR ANNOUNCEMENT
The First Church of God of
Syracuse will sponsor a Christmas
bazaar next week from 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. each day. On Monday the
bazaar will be held at Krogers, on ·
Tuesday at the New York Clothing
bouse, on Friday at Powell's Super
· 'Xalu, and on Saturday at tl)e
Vaughan's Cardinal. On Saturday a
bake sale will also be held.

&gt; I

liB·

.

October31, 1980
Your successes come in the year. ahead
through completing that which you've already
begun, so don't leave them to try what you think
are greener pastures. The rewards you've been
hoplngfQr are withlhefonner.
SCORPIO (Oct. Z&amp;-Nov. !Z) You're still in a
period where your personal ambitions can be
realized, but know when to stop pushing so you
d()n't change momentum to an opposite direction. Find out more of what lie~ ahead for you in
the year following your birthda.)!f by sending for
your copy of Astro-Graph. Mai $1 for each to
Astro-Graph, Box. 489, Radio City Stati&lt;m, N. Y·
10019. Be sure to s~lfybirthdate.
SAGmARIVS (Nov. Z3-Dec. 21) The way .to
avoid trouble today is to have alternatives ready.
Someone who might be JealoiL'l could try to puL
rocksinyourpath,hoplngyou'llstumble.
•

.
....
.
..
.

Banks (Jan. 28 ); one of the United
States prosecuting attorneys, Vincent BugUosi (March 6); and one of
the nation's top employment ex·
perts, Tom Jackson (Marcb3).
Season tickets for "Stardates" '80
have been reduce to $12 individual,
$5 couple, and $20 family.
Tickets for "Romeo and Juliet"
will be $5 per person, $2 high school
and free to Rio Grande College CommWJily College students with !.D.'s.
F'or further il)formation or to purchase season tickets contitct Doris .
Ross (614 ) 24[).5353), extension rio.
Rio Grande C9llege is located on
State Route 35 West, Rio Grande,
Ohi o.

ASTROGRAPH .- -

.
...

..•.. • . •....•..........• . .•....••..•..••.• , ..•.•...•..•. , •. . • 1,520,()(1).00

L""'~-""""· ~. .. .;,. .,.,"'*"--.. . .

RIO GRANDE - The National ds for new plays and with Meister's
Shakespeare Company will peform . help founded the Negro Ensemble
"Romeo and Juliet" at the Rio Gran- Company.
de College Lyne Center gymnasiwn
" Romeo and Juliet" is a play exWednesday, NOv. l2.
pressing romance, tenderness, and
Portraying Romeo \viii be Mitchell tragedy as two young lovers learn
Sugarman who is in his second the fascination an richness of love,
season wiht the company. and yetlearn hatred and revenge.
Previously he has performl!(! in such
This performanc~ will be the
plays as "Much Ado About second in a series of six "Stardates"
Nothing," "JuliuS Ceasar," "Two to .appear at Rio Grande College.
Gerytlemen of Verona," "Awake and
Upcoming speakers include swimSit\g," and "Jesus Christ Super- mer Diana Nyard·, first person to
star."
&lt;I
swim the 89 mile stretch of ocean
Juliet will be portrayed by between the coast of Cuba to the
Catherine Thorpe. She received a · coast of Florida (Dec. 8); "What to
degree in speech and theatre from do Until the Psychiatrist Comes,"
Wright State University and then psychologist-author. Dr. Murray
moved to New York City where she
performed various off-Broadway
TOPS NEWS
productioM. Her past roles include
Linda
Bailey
was queen for the
''Gypsy,'' ''OliVer,'' ''You'reA Good
week
when
the
Rutland TOPS OH
Man Charlie Brown" and "A Mid·
1456
met
this
week.
The 16 members
swnmer Night's Dream."
attending
showed
a
total loss of 6.5
Director Philip Meister· will lead
the cast of 12 in Shakespeare's best pounds. Donna Frye was welcomed
to the club and runner-up in weight
loved play.
loss
was Donna Frye. A dollar was
Meister, co-founder and artistic
presented
to Ms. Bailey and the
directo•, is a theatre veteran of 25
other
members
sang in her honor.
yesrs. Before be became an inChanns
and
flowers
for Autwnn In·
dependent .producer, be worked. as
spiration
Day
were
displayed
at the
an assistant to Serge Koussevitsky
meeting.
at Tanglewood, and was a directing .
aid at the American Shakespeare
Academy. He seved as production
ELECTIONDAYDINNERSET
manager for Jose Quintero at the
The Auxiliary of the Racine Fire
Circle in the Square and assisted
Quintero in the Broadway premiere Department will hold an election
of O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey In- day dinner at the fire station
to Night." He directed the off- Tuesday beginning at 11 a.m. Bean
Broadway premiere of "Happy En- soup, corn bread, homemade
ding," and "Day of Absence", by ac· vegetable soup, hof dogs, chicken
tor Douglas Turner Ward, who won salad sandwiches, cake, pie, coffee
.the 1965 Vernon Rice and f\h;• Awar· and soft drinks will be available.

..
.

Undivid profits .................................................. . ..... 978 000.00
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves ....... , .................. 'JJ)'000 00
TOTAL~QUITYCAPITAL ......... .' ................................ ..
TOTAL LIABIIJTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAllt\ ......... . . ·. . .. .. . . . . . • . . .

I, of Condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and benet.
I---'- Report

ATHENS - A series of Lamaze .
Childbirth Preparation Classes,
sponsored by O'Bleness Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Thursday,
Nov. 13. This class is for couples
whose expected date of delivery is
prior to Jan. 18, 1981.
Class ·participants will learn
breathing and relaxatioit techniques
for first stage labor, effective expulsion technique for second stage
labor, physical and emotional aspec-.
ts of the birth process, and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and postpartwn.
The fee for the series is $35. To
pre-register for thisi series, or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive, Athens, OH. 45701, or call593- .

By Myrtle Clark awl Anni~ Moon
contains little vitamin A. The other
EFNEP Nutrition Aides
kind is deep orange, mqist, sweet,
Meigs County Cooperative
rich in vitamin A, and contains more
Exteilslon Service
vitamin Cand other nutrients.
Select the sweet potato that gives
Fresh deep yellow vegetables
musr be properly stored to avoid more nutrition for your dollar. Sweet
' · . spoilage and properly prepared to · pOtatoes do not store well on the kitavoidlossofnutrients.
. cher(shelf. They should be stored in
Winter Squash - A winter squash · a dry place at ahout 55 - 65 degrees
should have a bard tough rind and a F. Buy small amounts and use them
brownish stem. The squash should soon. Also handle them carefully sinbe heavy for its size. Cuts, punc- ce they bruise easilY, and the bruises
tures, sWlken spots or mold are all can cause decay. Sweet potatoes can
signs of spoilage. Winter squash also be boiled or baked.
keeps well in warm and dry storage.
To Boil: Wash sweet potatoes.
5049.
•
Ne.ver store them in the Cover with water and cook until tenrefrigenitor. Keep them only a short der. Slip the skins off. By using this
time at room temperature. Acorn method to boll sweet potatoes, few of
ANNOUNCEMENT
squash must be stored in a fairly dry the nutrients under the skin are lost.
The
senior
class of Eastern High
place at 45 deg. to 50 deg. F. If they Peel the sweet potatoes as thin as
School
will
sponsor
a public soup
•' are kept too warm, they become possible if you must peel them supper Saturday evening
preceding
pale and stringy. Other winter before cooking.
the
Eastern-Southern
game.
Serving
squashes should be stored at about
To Bake: Rub a little fat on the
will
be
from
4:
30
to
7:30
p.m.
The
' 55 deg. to fiO deg. F. and in il dry sweetpotateosbeforebakingtokeep
menu
will
consist
of
homemade
•, place. Squash should not be stored · the skin soft. They will cook in 35 chili, vegetable soup, sloppy joes,
'• outside or in open garages. Winter minutes in a hot oven (400-450 deg.
• ' squash may be baked or boiled. F), depending on size. In a m&lt;Kjerate hotdogs,.pizza, homemade pie, cofWash thoroughly. Cut it open. Trim oven (300-375 deg. F.) they will take fee and tea. Soup will.also be sold by
away
any spots and remove all seeds longer. To test doneness, pick up a thequart. .
'.
and
stringy
parts.
sweet potato using a bot pan holder.
·:
To bake: Place cut side down in When pressed, they will feel soft' and
TAKE PART IN EXERCISE
.,.;, one-fourth inch of water on a shallow· yielding. Sweet potatoes.can be serAir
Force Airman First Class
pan. Bake at 400 deg. F. until almost · ved whole like white potatoes.
MarkS.
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Tum over and season (salt,
Leftover peeled sweet potatoes
:: done.
Vernon
L.
Smith of New Hav~n. W.
pepper, or cooking fat), then bake should' be covered and placed in the
,· until
Va.,
recently
participated in
"a fork can enter easily. Three refrigerator. Unpeeled cooked
•
Reforger80andCrestedCap,North
• pounds of squash make about five potatoes need not be covered.
. Atlantic Treaty Organization
.
.,·. servmgs.
(NATO)trainingexercises.
Boiling: Cut in cubes or serving
' I
sizes and cook in a small amount of
:' water until squash is tender.
Seymour Johnson Air Force Base,
MR. VANMETER
North
Carolina
Airman
Smith is assigned · at
Remove peel. Season with salt, pepHOSPITALIZED
per or table . fat. Serve. Winter
Leonard E. (Chick) Van Meter is
,
squash may also be mashed and in the intensive care unit of the
TAKE
PART
IN
EXERCISE
seasoned and used· in place of Vicksburg Hospital, 3311-1 ·20,
Private
First
Class
Carl H.
, • potatoes in hot dishes or oven dishes. Vicksburg, Miss., 39180, after sufWilson,
Jr.,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
.
PurnJ)kins - Pwnpkins are much fering a heart attack Friday morH.
Wilson,
Sr.,
of
Syracuse
recently
: : · like winter squash and ay be ning while on his employment as
•
prepared in the same way as winter chief engineer aboard theW. J. Bar- participated in Brave Shield '110, a
training exercise held at Fort Polk,
squash.
ta. His wife, Coleen, is in Vicksburg La.
:
Sweet Potatoes - There are two and is temporarily residing in Room
Private Willlon is assigned at Fort
kinds of sweet potatoes. Qrle kind is 303 at the hospital to be close to her
Polk.
•, dry, mealy, bland, light colored, and husband.
••

(par value) •.•.. ••........... . .... .. , . :$400,000.00

AmountS outstanding as of report date:
·
·
Time certifj~tes of_dejJOIIit l!tdenomlnati~ of $100,000 or more......... ; ... 1,128,00o.OO
othertimedepositslnamountsof$lw,Ot.oOormore ......................... 236,000.00
Averagefor30calendardays (or calendar month) ending with report date:
Cash 'rf!d due f~om depository !MtitutiOM ................ . ....... .. ...... , 2,253,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell •....... 546,000.00 ·
Tolal ~oans ........................ .... ..... . ........ : .. , ............. 17,133,000.00
Time certificates of deposits in denomlnatiO!lll of $100,000 or more .. . .... . ... . 1,070,000.00
Total deposits .... . .............................. . .................. . . 30,722,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase ... $57,000.00 .
Total assets ......... . ............ . ....... ; .......................... $M,267 ,ooo.oo

· Lamaze classes begin

Food for Thought

""'~

"'"''"""'",.,_'"'
"'"""""""'"c..--Thi
........
s.-oo•o"""'"
.. SOiooiOO;,-

REPORT OF CONDITION

CD

FORGET THE ALPHAB.ET

.

~: 30 ,~o;.n:.~=:rr:~ !i~m{~~~it'ft~j;!~

FREE CWTHING I)AY, lowincome persons, Friday, 9 a.m. to 12
noon at the old high school building
in Cheshire ' · by the Gallia-Metgs
·
CommunityActi_
onAgency.
HALLOWEEN PARTY at Leta"'
..,.
Falls Conununity Hall Friday7 p.m.
All children of Letart Township in-

!:

Personals
•

1""""" &gt;.. ""'·• '"'"M' """"

oo.. . ._ • n"'- -'li,I6Ull
...
r-;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

The Rev. William Newman, pastor
of the Forst Southern Baptist Church
The second meeting of the newly Music choir to participate. The
of Pomeroy, will be conducting a organized Meigs High Vocal Music possibility of presenting a musical
baptismal service at 2 p.m. Sunday Boosters was held Tuesday night at this year was also discussed.
at the Hershel McClure farm.
the high school.
Officers elected were Florence
Receiving the ordinance of bapEd Harkless, vocal music direc- Barrett, president, and Norma
tism will be Sue King, Joe King, tor, presided at the meeting at which Baker, secretary-treasurer .
Denise Richards, Rick Morris, and time it was reported that a profit of Meetings were set for the second
Michael Adkins. As explained by the $577.30 was made on the selling of Tuesday of each month. Next
pastor, Baptists believe that bap- Rex. Harkless talked about the Area meeting will be Nov. 11 in the vocal
tism is the first step of obedience for Choral Festival to be held at Athens music room at Meigs High School.
a Christian in that it pictures the Saturday with the Meig High Vocal
death, burial and resurrection of
Christ.
r---:----------.:_--------~

Lori Kloes, freslunan at Juclson
College in Elgin, Ill. spent the
weekend here with her parents, Mr.
and M&lt;s. Manning Kloes.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry, Flowers,
Pickerington, and Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Roush, Sherry and David, St.
Albans, were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Roush.
' 1r. and Mrs. Tim Sisson were in

-.

~~~~~=E~}~';We~ft':~n.t my,... nl
CIIISM ~wiiObellflud IICol\nniM, Ohlo,lllil4fyand daflaberl

vi ted. Children to come masked and
prizes will be awarded.
Refr~
.
ments,
FRIDAy
HALW
·
WEEN PARTY and dance
I theSe · c· ·
to
music by the Stringdusters. Refreshmen!.&lt;; of cider and donuts and prizes
for a masked gr·and march. All
senior citizens in the area are invitedtoattend.

FRIDAY

Baptismal services set

TO SING - The Uhrig Brothers of Chillicothe will
be presenting a musical program at 7:30 p.m. Sunday

f! .6!3 tiMOJ.OOj Surplus, $1 , 77.441,4%0 .00; 11\C~IIIt.
11')46,i16,t02.00; UfJ!f"!l!llrtl, 1Ji,994,922,1U.OO; Mel lllets,

Sentinel Social Calendar

.

•
• '

An observance of Veterans Day
was planned at the recent meeting of
the American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 128.
A dinner honoring veterans will be
hosted by the Auxiliary on Nov. 9 at
noon. The dinner will be by reservation only and any veteran along
with his or her family is invited to attend. Reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Virgil Parsons or Mrs.
Lanny Tyree before Nov. 5.
During the meeting a $100
donation was made to the Mid·
dleport Fire Department and
emergency squad toward the pur·
chase of a heart monitor. Plans
were made for the annual
Thanksgiving dinner to be held at
the hall on Nov. 26 for all legion·
nafres , Auxiliary members and their
families, along with the jWJior
· Auxiliary members.

...••

&amp;liNn"'
itf. nt\111 u~em~~~~• "'"' t.n .,,... o.c-t.31.
1979: Adllliltld mell, $5,796!431 424.00: lllbililles,

.·~

•

1

..
I

~-"

~~~

·

.

•

and

Flower,
Adkins.

I am Russell (Bud) Wilson, Chairman, Meigs
County Democrat Party. I would like to say to
the voters in Meigs County. Chester Wells,
Meigs County Commissioner is one qf the best
qualified commissioner's we have had for
years. I hope you will support him on
November 4th.

VOTE WEU.S FOR COMMISSIONER
Paid for by Russell D. Wilson

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

I

We're. Your Headquarters for-

·Wrangler AND Carhartt
JEANS

VESTS
CHORE COAlS
PILE
. UNED JACKETS.
fl EfCE UNED OOAlS

COVERALLS
aMTS
JACKETS
VESTS
HOODS
BIBS
OVERAU. PANTS

SPECIAL
Salad Bar
8 oz. Top Butl
Steak
Baked Potatoes
Vegetable
Dessert ·
Coffee, Tea
or Soft Drink

7

$ 25 Plus Tax

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SAnJRDAY
NIGHT

9 til 1
AU. LEGAL

H. B. EXPRESS
4 PIECE BAND

FROM JAcKSON, OHIO

'

BEVERAGES SOLD
.

..

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

.,

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30, 19BO

·Nixon's appearance startles jury

RESPONDS TO QUESTION - Former President
Richard Nixon standing behind a Secret Service agent
in downtown Washington Wednesday responds to a
reporter's question as he heads for the U.S. District
Court House to testify at the trial of two former high of"

ficials of the FBI, W. Mark Felt and Edward Miller.
The two are on trial for .approving warrantless FBI
break-ins at homes of radical Weather Underground
fugitives. (AP Laserphoto)

Boycott

Area Deaths
Home for Funerals between 6 and 9
tonight.

Lidia Ballinger
Udia Mae Ballinger, 78, a resident
of Addison, died Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She had been ill the past two years.
She was born Nov. 18, 1901, in
Mason County, daughter of the late
Frank and La verna J ividen Hill.
She was married twice, first to
George Knapp in 1920. Children surviving from this union are Carl
Knapp and Josephine Stidham, both
of Columbus. Three children from
this uni on, along with her husband,
preceded her in death.
She married Orville Ballinger,
who survives.
Three sisters survive : Mrs. Mary
West, Canal Winchester; Mrs. Ginther Goehring, Middleport; ·Mrs.
Catherine Burns, Akron ; one
brother, Early Boles, Cincinnati.
Thirteen grand, 18 great-grand and
one great-great-grandchild survive.
She was a member of the Addison
Free Will Baptist Church where services will be held Friday ·at 2 p.m.
with Rev. Walter Patterson officiating.
Burial will be in Reynolds
Cemetery.
The body will lie in state at the.
church one hour prior to the services.
Friends may call at the Miller's

Ella Wherry Yost

Meigs County happenings.
Four runs · were made by local
units on Wednesday, the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 8:44a.m., the Racine Unit took
Dorothy Badgley to Holzer Medical
Center; at 7:42p.m., the Middleport
Squad treated Robert Milborne at
his resident; at 7: 55 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Harold Darnell
from Horner Hill to Holzer Medical
Center, and at ll :l9 p.m. , the Racine
Unit treated Dimple Aekins at her
residence.

•

MEIGS MiV' CITED
AMeigs County man was cited in a
tw~ar crash Wednesday morning.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported Harley 0.
Koening, 84, Reedsville, was southbound on SR 7, north of SR 248, when
struck by another southbound car
driven by Larry R. Dailey, 36 ,
C~ester , at 8:05a.m.
No injuries were reported in the
accident and damage to both cars
was moderate. Dailey was cited by
the patrol for failure to maintain
assured clear distance.

o

MARION - ueneral Telephone
:o. of Ohio said its interstate wide
area telecommunications service
(WATS ) customers will be affected
by Dec. 14 changes in the tariff
which regulates the service.
The changes recently were filed
with the Federal Communications
Commission by the American·
Telephone and Telegraph Co.
(AT&amp;T). General of Ohio and other
companies abiile by the AT&amp;T tariff.
Among chief aspects of the new
tariff are "unbWJdling" and usagesensitive pricing, Said Jerry M.
Oberley of Marion, General's
marketing director.
The unbundling provision will
remove charges for installation of
instruments from the WATS tariff.
Instead, local telephone company

MODULAR
tiOMES

tt.

Mol;lile Home Trades Welcome
Show Models

KINGSBURY HOME SALES &amp; SERVICE
"For the First in Manutacuted Housing"
1100 E. Main
992-7034
Pomeroy, 0.

..

~.

6:00

6:30

NAME'S EASY. MA'AM-CAPTAIN EASY!
AND I RECKON 'IOU MU~T 15E
JULIE !!lol-A IR!

OH, I HOPE SOl
I WONDER HOW
HE: MADE OUT IN
Si.LVER CREEK~

IYHil-HACK

AT THi! J)..8AR.

RANCH ...

6:58
7:00

Mary Martin. Hosts : Hugh Downs

l

,__.,,...., i

CIJ ClJ(J) JOKER'S WILD
CD HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(jJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
@l MATCH GAME
(fi) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
iDJ 1!1 FACE THE MUSIC
7:58 Cll NEWS UPDATE
8:00 (]) 8 C!J GAMES PEOPLE PLAY

Tonight's segments-include a tugof "war between machinists and firemen in New Orleans, an -·84 ~
year- old sports enthusiast climbs
California ' s 14,494-foot MI. Whitneyforthe nineteenth time, the 'Little Britches ' rodeo competition ·
among teen -agers in Colorado
Springs, Colorado, and a look at the
light side of the enthusiasm gener·
ated by NFL stadium fans . (60
mins.)

'

___,o!
HEY, HOW!
5TAY L005{:,
AHHIE.'
ANYA TOZE
ISN'T REALLY-

ER-LOOI\., MA'AM··

I'M R&amp; GQf(RY r
60T 'tUlJ INVOLVED,

. HOliEST ...

··I'M PUSHIN' OFF NOI'l
-BUT I'D REALLI

'PRECIATE IT IF YOU
OIDil'T TELL ANY600X ·YOUr----"---'
SAW
~,.. .

NIGHT A am811 boy Is blown away
from Whoville in a howling night
wind and finds-himself face to fa c e
with
the
dreaded
Grine~ .

(Ref1!al)
ClJ W (ig) THE WHile SHADOW

•

Having a tough time keeping up his
interest in school, Warren Coolidge
tells Coach Reeves hewantsto quit
school and try out for the Harlem
Globetrotters. (60 mins.)

-~
-~

~

-~

OH ... MR.GOLDBRICK
PHOII!ED TO SAY HE
WAS llED UP AND

-1 -. ;

...
'
'
_,' ..'

WOULD ..JOIN 'I'OU
lWO LATER!

Ki~gpin ' Kevin helps a troubled
friend and learns a difficult lesson
about
friendship .
tGiosed ·Captioned)

8:30 Cll DR. JACK VAN IMPE
C!J MOVIE -(ADVENTURE) "Y,
11

Every Whkh Way But LooM"
1979

(j)IJ2l8THEHALLOWEENTHAT
ALMOST WASN'T Dracula , Fran·
ken stein and the Wolfman fac e the
hide ous prospe c t of an October
without tt1e traditional shrieking
when lhe Halloween wit ch threa ·
tens to cance l her flight over the
mOon;therebycancelllngthewhole
horrible holiday. (Repeat)

PROFF.ITT
-. .,-..
'VII

'
r,_,

the budget establi5hed by the Board of County Commissioners

-·
....
IJ I

Jazz ' Jazi pioneers Alvin Alcorn
and Roy Eldridge perform end talk
with host Oscar BrOwn, Jr. about
theoriginsof their music. Also seen
will be film clips and early photos
telling the story of ragt ime. the art
form that grewfrom the music oft he
slaves . (Closed -Captioned)

GASOLINE AllEY

Four in the
morninq!

(l) NEWS UPDATE
9:00 Cil U C!J THURSDAY NIGHT AT
8 :58

..

TO CONTINUE the cooperation with the Prosecuting AHorney and all

THE MOVIES 'Oamien -Omen II '
1978 Stars : William Holden, Lee
Grant.

other law enforcement agencies

(l) 700CLUB
ill iDJ 8 BARNEY MIL.LER

TO CONTINUE the .24-hour coverage of the county in order to Serve
and Protect ALL the citizens ol Meigs County

B8rrle"Y, Harris, Woio and Dietrich
find their days of usual neighborhood crises behind them when Inspector Luger, thinking it's a big
favor, has them deSignated a a a '
specialty' squad--and life in the
12th precinct becomes murder.
(Seaaon·Premiere)
·

TO CONTINUE to answer the calls/complaints as quickly as possible
TO CONTINUE the program of drug abuse education and strict enforcement action against illegal drugs

TO CONTt'NUE an OPEN DOOR 'policy so the citizens of Meigs County
can discuss any problem in a confidential manner

.

....

.~~.-

aSENTATION
(I) @J SPECIAL MOVIE PRE'Rape And Marriage:

WINNIE .

TO CONTINUE to utilize- AT NO COST TO THE TAXPAYERS-

The Rideout Case' 1980 Stare:
Linda Hamilton, Mickey Rourke. All
enraged wife and mother brlnga a
charge of rape 8gainst a husband
tor whom she still harbors tenderness. (2 hrs.)

the volunteer services of the trained members ot the MOUNTED

POSSE and other SPECIAL DEPUTIES

. ·•',.'

•BORN illd REARED in MEIGS OOUNlY
Paid For by the Committee to Re·elect Sheriff Proffitt, Becky Mohler·
Treas.
'

'

.,,.,.

. ,,
Il l '

' ,,

..

• !ION'T WO~~Y, WINNIE-. I'M SURE

-m E fOUCE WILL EVENlUALLY

CAPIURE 111E BUIWvlA:R:_5,;-~
WHO ff ltJLEYOUR -

(]) (jj)

l7E&amp;leNB&gt;- •

9:30 (J)IDJ8 tT'SALIVINGWido·oyod

-~

and innoqent Vicki Allen Ia thrilled
when an airline pilot asks her to
spend the weekend In Palm
Springs, but also sc;ared because
shenever.haagonaawaywlthaman
before. Stars: Susan Sullivan, Mar·
ian Mercer. (Premiere)

. '·

(]) (jj)
·

even thougii--the weather's Icy-·
cold 'out! That's bec ause these
mid-high toasty-worm. IIMd b oots
with fashionable roll-d own tops
ond fun sole treatments work overl ime to· make you extremely
comfortable . Safe. too.. .with suregrip sdes. Keep cozy inside: no
molter what it's like outside!

eritage house
,Of SHOES
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SNEAK PREVIEWS

Co-hosts Gene Siakeland Roger
Ebert reviewthelateal films .

[1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiii

A. warm fro.n t's
•
•
cot-nJng m. • •

X1 X 1

Yes t er day s

I

Jumbles BOOTY DUNCE HALLOW BEP..CON
·
Answer: Should be do ne w ith skill by~a football player
turned airline pil ot - THE TOUCHDOWN

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Thoughtful gamble pays off
NORTH

10-30-80

+K9

.32
+A 7%
+K Q 10 5 42

WEST
• Q 10 3 2
• K 10 8 4

tJH

EAST
+J86 5
.97
+QI064

+96

+873

SOUTH
+A 74
.AQJ65

tK83

+AJ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: ~utb

,.

w..t

.Nortb

Eut

Sou"

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass
Pass

ZNT
INT

3NT
6NT

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alaa Sootag

the logical call. The jump to
three notrump shows about 15
or'l6 points and notrump-type
hand.
What do the modernists do
with a hand that was just too
strong for a notrumf opening?
They nave a specia bid. They
rebid two notrump and plan to
take aggressive action later.
Thus, South rebid four
notrump after North raised
two notrump to three. This
wasn't · Blackwood. It merely
showed that South held 18 or
19 card points and a notrump.
type hand.
North only held 12 highcard points, but be also was
looking at a good six-card
club suit. He had no interest in
bidding a grand slam, but
wanted to gamble the hand
out at six. Hence, he took
direct action and bid the
notrump slam.
.South counted 10 tricks outside the heart suit. Not one to
waste time South won the
spade lead in dummy, tried
and lost heart finesse and
spread his hand for the small
slam.

In basic standard American, the two-notrumP,_ rebid
arter a two-over-one response
is supposed to show the equivalent of an opening notrump.
Modernists merely use it to
show a hand with which it is

Like most slam hands the
contract could and should be
reached b¥ any partnership,
yet when tt was played in a .
~egional master pairs those
who bid six notrump received
9 or 10 matoh points out of a
12-point top.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(])lllJ FROM JUMPSTREET 'Early

•?

'

rI

(Answers tomorrow)

(J) N!XT QUESTION

&lt;

.'

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
ges ted by the above ca~on . -

(fi) UPANOCOMING 'Return ofthe

ALLEYOOP

... .' II

\Al.W~1YS DOIN5THI

Printanswerhere :

(j)IDJ8HALLOWEENISGRINCH

~

SHERIFF JAMES J. PROFFITT PLEDGES

(]

YOU SHOULDN'T
I!E LI EYE. A PER'SON IN
BED BECAUSE HE'~

I I I

vsNewYorkKnicks

:

;--t

r

I I

Cll MISSIONARIES IN ACTION
ill I,IASKETBALL Atlanta Hawks

&gt;. .·•.

SHERIFF JAMES J. "Jigg(

IINGINN j

Blair.

'

•

'- ' .

I BREYD I
I I I

Q!!dlorn.
I!J SANFORD AND SON

.'j

IE-ELECT

But I keep
TEl-LING you...

I I I

' Len Dawson and Nick Buoniconti
combine expert commentary with
act ion highlights oft he week' afootball games that brings you we(tkly
predictions and analyses from the

1

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square. to form
four ord inary words.

7:30 (]) 8 'BUL.LSEYE
Cll ZOLA LEVITT
C!J FOOTBALL: INSIDE THE NFL

,., ,,

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; :.•

Frank ·

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
· byHonri AtnoklandBob l-ee

1.:9 ~~ &lt;»

(C1osed·Captioned)

,, ,., .... I.'Vl I\, II

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

EVENING
ffi 8 1Il0 Cil@Jii21 8 NEWS
Cll BACKYARD
Cll CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(j) ABC NEWS
(])(jj) 3-2-t CONTACT
ffi U IIJ NBC NEWS
Cll PAUL AND MONA
CIJ BOB NEWHART SHOW
(j) fACE THE MUSIC
a m @J CBS NEWS
(I) MAINSTREAMING
(jj) DICK CAVETT SHOW
iDJ 01 ABC NEWS
(I) NEWS UPDATE
(]) 8 PM MAGAZINE
Cll COME TO THE WATER
CIJ ALLIN THE FAMILY
Cll iHJID FAMILY FEUD
C!J BACKSTAGEATTHE GRAND
OLEOPRV
fiJ (j) TIC TAC DOUGH
(]) MACNEil--LEHRER REPORT
@l NEWS
(fi) OVER EASY Guest: Actress
and

'ftJti}Nt j']}'il

~

NOJIT

OCT. 30, 1gso

Levrs

TO CONTINUE an effective, efficient operation within the confines of

i

•
•
VIewmg

'.'

• ' r (

tariffs will apply. Usage-sensitive
pricing involves setting rates ac-'
cording to how heavily the customer
uses the service. Oberley said the
revisions will result in decreased
charges for many customers.;
However, extremely heavy users:
may face higher rates.
1
The WATS service is used mainly;
by business and industrial concern,s. '
It enables them to make long dlstan-'
ce calls to various regions of the
country for a nat monthly fee based !
on hours of use.
'
''General of Ohio has about 600
customers subscribing toWATS service. The new tariff is scheduled to
take effect Dec. 14 Intrastate WATS ;
service is not affected.

Television

CHARLEY, 'T'HE NEW
APAR'TNIEN'T' MOM
ANO
1-&lt;IDS ARE .
INTO WON'T

'"*

Eight defendants forteited bonds ·
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Wednesday
night.
Tliey include John Manley, Middieport, $100 posted on a charge of
leaving the scene .of an accident;
Ronald Jones, Syracuse, $70,
speeding, and $150, reckless
operation; Cora Felty, Marietta,
$31, speeding; Eli D. McCall,
Murray City, $30, speeding; George
Holman, Racine, $25, speeding;
Ronald Taylor, Middleport, $50, no
operator's license; Tony Hutton,
Langsville, $50, driving while under
suspension; Clifford Longenette,
Reedsville, $50, failure to register
plates and $28 for ·failing t,o pay
parking meter violation.
·&lt;

'piiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;;ll-----~-iiif

II

.
.
.
$10,000fines.
"
·. revocation) to be a prohibition"
The break-ins occun-ed In 1973 and against the FBI 'lfirector's con- ; ~
1973 - wllen, Nixon sa)d, thousands ductjng warrantless brea\1-ins. " It
of terrorist bombs were exploding just meant things went back to 'the
acl'OII!lthecountry. .
·
way they were."
Nixon said the FBI director had
Nixon said there were more than
.. '
authority from the president to 40,000 bOmbings or bomb scares, "\
authorize warrantless break-Ins In with 23 persons killed an&amp; millions d •- I
foreign Intelligence cases - the ve'l dollars in property damage, bet&gt;
point defense lawyers have beeil ween January 1~. wben he took of•'
making.
·
fice, and Aprll1970, just before the ••
.
Two of Nixon's former attorneys Huston plan was developed.
•
general, John N. Mitchell and
" As we sit here today, we can be
Richard G. Kleindienst, testified fortunate that we have peace in the
Tuesday they never were asked to world and that we are not at least.in
approve such break-Ins.
armed combat," Nixon said. "I bope : ·'
Nixon also said there was "hard neither President Carter nor Gover- ,
evidence that the Weathermen had nor (Ronald) Reagan, If he becomes
very definite foreign COlUleclions," . president, has to write letters to :,,
the standard that the defense and people whose sons have been •
Nixon agreed must be met before a .killed."
I
.: :
•warrantless entry could he ap- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - :!
proved.
'
Telling jurors that he delegated to
former FBI Director J. Edgar
. Hoover the authority to make
decisions on warrantless break-ins,
Nixon said: "In matters of foreign
Intelligence, the llne went directly
from the_president to Mr. Hoover."
Hoover's successor, L. Patrick
Gray III, had the same authority
because lt rested "with the office,
not the man," Nixon said.
Felt and Miller have admitted
authorizing the break-ins, . but said
,The original heavyweignt
Gray told them to resume the
un-washed Levi jeans.
burglaries, which had been stopped
by Hoover in 1966. Gray was indicted
along with his former top aides but
•FlARES
has been granted a separate trial.
The entries approved by Felt and
•STRAIGHT LEG
Miller, conducted to photograph infonnation rather than install elecIronic surveillance devices, were
called "black bag jobs."
·
Nixon said he personally
authorized warrantless searches In
1970 as part of the ·controversial
Huston plan, a proposal to take
covert actions against terrorist
groups such as· the Weather Un· •
derground.
&lt;-· j
The former chief executive said he
.
-;;
revoked the plan four days later af, : ;$
ter Hoover raised objections, but he
· ·1
added, "I did not intend (the
:

Mayor's Co.u rt

DRIVE CAREFULLY
Since trick or treat ill being held
throughout the county this evening
Sheriff James J. Proffitt urges area
motorists to drive with caution.
He asks that motorists reduce
their speed and be on the alert for
youngstefll. "Help make this a safe
and happy Halloween" the sheriff
asked.

Hamm.
DEER ACCIDENT
deer was struck, but not injured
when it ran into the path Qf a vehcil~
driven by MrS'~ ·Marjorie Connolly,
41, Rt. I, Reedsville Tuesday at 6:30
p.m. the Meigs CoWJty Sheriff's
Department reported. Connolly was
traveling south on SR 7 when the incident occurred. There was light
damage to the Connolly vehicle.

u

derground
convicted,
they face upfugitives.
to 10 years in prison
and

Wats customers will he affected

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Eggs
- Prices paid to country packing
plants for eggs delive~ed to major
Ohio cities. Cases included consumer grades including U.S. grades,
minimum one case sales.
Carton l.arge A 68-71. Medium A
SS-07, Small A 53-59.
Sales to retailers in major Ol!io
cities, cartons delivered : Large A
white ~9 , mostly 8(h'!2, medium 7786, mostly 77-79.

SEEKS MONEY
A suit in the amount of $2,291.10
has been filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Ben H. Ewing,
dba Ewing Funeral Home ,
Pomeroy, against Thomas Goett,
Syracuse.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Elizabeth Stover, Middleport; Wilma. Gibbeaut, Point
Ple~~SBnt; Gertrude Lehew, Port!and.
Discharged--Alfreda McCown,
VIckie Roush, Donald Covert, Clair
Lynch, Artie Houdashelt, Paul
Moore, Donald Bennett, Albert
Jesse, Rita Hughes, William
Cremeans, Mary Spencer, Stella
Morgan, Emily Kuhn, Harold

(Continued from page 1)
by Tehran but sitting in the United
States because of the trade embargo.
Some deputies have suggested
that additional terms may be added
to the four outlined six weeks ago by
Khomeini. The · revolutionary
leader's terms were return of the
late Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi's wealth, a pledge of noninterterence in Iran's affairs, withdrawal of lawsuits against Iran arm
release of $8 billion in Iranian assets
frozen in U.S. hanks.

Mrs. Ella Wherry Yost, 90, of 2345
Stoney Hill Road, Lancaster,
formerly of Alfred, Ohio, died early
Thursday morning at the Lancaster
- Fairtield Hospital following an extended illness.
Born in Pleasants County she was
the daughter of the lateWilliam McClellan and Martha Welling Whei;Ty.
Mrs. Yost was a memberofthe Bear
LIVESTOCK REPORT
Wallow Ridge Church of Christ.
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Hogs
Surviving Mrs. Yost are a son a_nd · 1,300: BatrOws and gilts active, 25 to
daughter-in-law, Delbert R. and 50 cents higher; 1-2 21().245lb 47.75Maxine Yost, Lancaster; one sister, 48.00, 150 head 48.25; 1-3, many 2,
Mrs. Eva Kronin, Hammondsville, 200-255 lb 47.00-47 .75; 2-3 256-270 lb
Ohio; one brother, William E . 46.00-46.75.
Wherry, Parkersburg; four grandSows : moderately active, fully
children, two great-grandchildren,
steady ; 1-3 300-400 lb 42.00-43.00,
and several nieces and nephews.
over 500 lb 48.00 to mostly 413.50.
Mrs. Yost was preceded in death
Cattle 1,300 : Compared to
by her husband, Aaron Thomas
Tuesday, slaughter cows 2.00 to 3.00
Yost, in 1970, three sisters and none
lower, bulls 1.00 lower.
brother.
Slaughter cows: utility and comFuneral services wlll be held
mercial 2-4 42.00-46.50; cutter 1-2
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the White 30.50-42.50.
Funeral Home, Coolville, with
Slaughter bulls: J-2 1,05().1,950 lb
Eugene Conger officiating. Burial
52. ()().57 .00.
will follow at the Willow Island
Sheep 75: Held for noon auction.
Cemetery, St. Mary's, W. Va. Calling hours are after 2 p.m. Friday.

Emergency squad runs

WASifiNGTON (AP J .- In the
same. building where the legal batties over Watergate were fough~
Richard M. Nixon walked Into a
federal courtroom and waved ·ft:am
thewitnesschairtoastarUedjury.
In dramatic testimony Wednesday
at the trial of two fonner FBI officials, the fonner president said the
FBI's director had authority to ap.
prove warrantless break-ins in.
foreign intelligence cases at the
height of terrorist activity In the
early 1970s,
" We must recognize," he said, " it
was quite different than it is today."
Nixon's appearance . in U.S.
District CoUrt evoked a sense of deja
Vl!:· Tbe man who had been driven
from the White House by a scandal
stemming from a break-in WI!S in
court six years later to testify about
other break-ins ordered during his
administration in the interest of
national security.
Moments after he began
testifying, three persons interrupted
with shouts of " War criminal" and
"He's a liar." Secret Service agents
rushed to Nixon's side, but the former president appeared unruffled
and U.S. marshals ejected · the
hecklers/
Jurors, sequestered during the
seven-week trial, appeared
astonished when chief prosecutor
John W. Nields Jr. called Nixon to
the stand.
" How are you employed?" Nields
aSI\ed.
" Retired," Nixon replied.
The former president's 45-minute
testimony focused on the FBI director's authority to order warrantless
searches and White House efforts to
combat terrorism and the dissent
swirllng through the coWJtry during
the Vietnam.War.
The two former FBI officials on
trial are W. Mark Felt, once the
bureau's No. 2 man, and .E dwardS.
Miller, former head of the domestic·
intelligence division. They .are accused of violating individual civil
rights by auth~rizing warrantless
break-Ins at the homes of friends
and relatives of radical Weather un-·

THAT REMINDS ME-NEED A NEW PAIR
OF LOAFERS

THIS OLD HbUSE In lhla

episode the ceilings are leveled
and renovated and the bulkhead is
r_!Palred and renewed .

10:00 WIHI. 20.20
(]) ELECTION'80
(fi) NEWS
10:15 (I) TBSNI!WS
10:28 (I) NEWS UPDATE
10:30 (I) NOR!IAN VINCENT PEALE
(!)
SNEAK
PREVIEW:
NOVEMBER
.
(jj) TOMORROW'S FAll ILlES
10:58' Cil NEWSUPOATE
1t:oo m• CIJ m • CIJ ~ ~D&gt;•
NEWS
Cll JOHN ANKERBI!RG SHOW
(!)WHISPERS FROM THE WHITE
HOUS£ ·'Facts Your Hlatory
Teacher Never Told You' A coM.c·
lion of facts about 1he prlvatallvaa
of the Natlon'afirst familiae.

&lt;J)

MASTI!RPIECE THEATRE

'Pride and Prejudice ' Epleodel.
Thlsfive·p.l\rtdramatlzatlonofJane
Austin's aattrlcal claeelc open1
with Mrs. Bennet eying Mf. Bklgfey
a aa good an4righlful marriage pro·
apact tor one of her five daughters.
(l;lohd·Coptlonod) (eo mlno.)

(fi) DICK CAVI!TT SHOW

11:18 CIJ LOVI!AMEIIICANSTVL!
11118 Clll'lSUPOATI!
11:30 (I) CD THI! TONIGHT SH9W
Heat : Johnny Carson. Gueatl :
George Carlin, Joe O.raglola.l&amp;O
mlno.)

(l) IIOSSIAOLI!Y SHOW

(I) MOVIE -(MYSTERY) •••

"llfct.

• n_lghtLoc:e" 11180
'
(J) IHJ •
ABC NEW~
NIGHTLIIIE
,
GCilCBSLATt:MOVIE'THEJEF·
FERSONS:

~-~;d'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROISI;
DOWN
1 "Pistol
I Ball film
Packin' - " 2 "Green
5 Duo
Mansions" hero ~~~
9 Touch upon
3 Party game
tO Old master
4 - standstiU
13 Arizona city 5 - mache
If This instant
6 Old French
15 Ivy Leaguer
decree
Yesterday's Aaswer
16 Shame on you! 7 Japanese
19
Toward
27 Angle
17 Comprehend
statesman
18 Proofreading 8 Prize items
shelter
29 Kitchen
21 Condesneed
mark
for a
20 Coterie
prize fight
cended
:13 Girl's name
21 Quantity ·
II Increase
22 Acknowledge 34 Brawl ·
(math.)
12 Wobbles
23 Take a mate, 36 You (Ger.)
23 Clean off ·
16 Campus
old style
:17 Waikiki
24 Realty sign
~~~~~~25 - Calhoun
wreath
25 Fare
~
26 Formerly
27 Witch
assemblies
281rish ~~alas!"
29 Afflictions
30 Royal
mattress
irritant
31 Attempt
32 Sprite
35 Menlo
Park name
37 Beastly
abode
36 Acquire
39 Spirit lamp
40 One into
''futures"
11 Bri~er's

cliche

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

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply atondo for another. In tblo ample A II
used for the three L's, X lor the. two O's, etc, Slncle letten,

apoatrophes, the length ond formation of the worcla an an
hlnto. Each doy the code lettera on diiTennt. ·
CllYPI'oQUOTES
.tEGNFRT

NWVZP

PYWRWLM

VFCW

URH · WTTP.- QULC
GDVFR
YfJihrclaf't~lte : THE SECRET OF EOONOMY JI''I'O
UVl!: AS
Y THE FiRST FEW DAYS AnD
PAYDAY AS YOUIJVEDTHE LAST FEW DAYSBBPORB.NUQ

UNJCti!OWN

�.

11-'J'be Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, !kt. 30, 1980

.

lO-The Oa!ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30, 1980

5 10

USDA starts new meat inspection program
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
· Agriculture Department is
inaugurating a new meat inspection
program at three plants today.
The voluntary program, adopted
1
last A~~gust, is designed to provide
quality control at all meat and
poultry processing plants that
choose to participate and abide by
federal standards.
"Quality control inspection will
lessen the regulatory burden on industry without any reduction in consumer protection," said Agriculture ·
Secretary Bob Bergland. "In the
long run it will reduce many of the .
costs assOciated with inspection."
The first three firms to take part
in the program are Equity Meat

1 PAY highest prices
possible for gold and silver
coins, rings,: i~welry , etc.
Contact Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, MiddlepOrt.

.

.

Corp. of North Baltimore, Ohio, a
producer of fresh beef patties; Peter
Eckrich x Sons Inc. of Chicago, a
sausage and lunchmeat manufacturer, and Berks Packing Co. of
Reading, Pa., which produces
sausages and cured and smoked
products. ·
Assistant Agriculture Secretary
Carole Tucker Foreman ill visting
the Berks plant today to observe the
inspection process and to discuss it
at a news conference.
The Agriculture Department is
also planning to present a certificate
of acceptance into the program to
the Equity firm on Friday. Officials
said that Eckrich decided against a
public ceremony to mark its entry

into the program.
approve a plant's total quality conThe plan is the result of a year-()ld trol system based 011 assurances
pilot project to determine if that all products manufactured in
qualified processors could operate the plant will meet requirements for
their own quality control programs wholesomeness and accurate
with a minimum of federal super- labeling, Bergland said. - .
vision.
Federal inspectors . will monitor
A dozen plants took part in the ex- · critical points in production,
periment sod Agriculture Depart· especially where the safety or &amp;&lt;lment officials termed it a success.
curate labeling of a product may be
The program does not apply to the jeopardized, he added.
inspection of cattle, hogs, chickens• The Agriculture Department may
and other livestqek in slaughtering withdraw its approval of any plant
operations. It is available to plants producing adulterated or miabranproducing frozen dinnerS and soups ded produc~, Bergland said.
conlaining meat and poultry, in adThe department has not estimated
dition to producers of_ processed how many plan~ may apply to take
meats and poultry.
part in the program. But there are
The Agriculture Department will about 6,900 plan~ now operating under federal inspectloJI...
The department alio announced
that it will extend from Nov. 8 until
Jan. 5 the time for comment on a
proposal to revise net weight
labeling regulations for meat and

poultry products.
The propoeed · cbanges would
revise labeling reculatillll to define
how much packa&amp;ed rDellt Ol' poultryproducla may vary ftun labeled
weights. It would allo set up sampling procedures to help 1n11pectors
enforce accuracy at the plant and in
the marketplace.
. WASHINGTON (AP) - Citrus
fruit growers appear to be having a
record harvest, the Agriculture

WASHINGTON (AP) - A pilot
'program to test the effl,clency of

Department said.
The CUITellt forecast indicates a
record citrus crop .of 18.5 million
tons. The OI'IIIJBe crop ill ·apected to
top 276 million boxes, a percentage

point hlgber than the 19'19-80 record.
The grapefruit crop ill forecast at
68.7. mllllon bozes, a 2 percent
decline from laatyear.
The big c:ltrua gain Ia the orange
c:rop in California. A r~ crop of
65 mllUon ~es, 9 percent more
than last season, is expected.

transportation t~Uves for far-

SHOOTING MATCH at
Corn Hollow in Ruttand.
Every Sunday starting at

mers was announced Wedneeday by
Agriculture

Secretary

Bob

·noon.

Berglan!l.

Widow

~s ·disability

CINCINNATI (AP ) - A 66-year- swollen eyes and varicose veins.
old Kentucky widow took on the
She said the agency ruled -she
legal minds of the Social Secui-ity could only receive additional aid if
Administration in a federal appeals , she entered a nursing home.
court and won her own disability
" I felt I was headed for a nursing
case.
home to die. Although I am not a
. The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Ai&gt;' lawyer, God has granted that I
peals on Wednesday overruled a haave lived this long and in my
lower court and sent the case of • lifetime I believe I have gained some
Virginia 0. Humphress, Cam!&gt;" knowlege which has enabled me to
bellsville, Ky. , back to the Social becqme aware of the facts of life,"
Security Administration with orders she wrote in her appeals brief.
to give her widows disability
She said that after her case was
payments.
lost in U.S. District Court at Bowling
"I just got mad because I had seen Green, Ky., she was unable to find a
so much of that kind of rotten stuff. lawyer to appeal. So she decided to
They use old people as merchandise do it herself.
to fill nursing homes and just let
Mrs. Hwnphress argued her case
them. wait there to die," said the ·earlier this year saying she was
grandmother of 14. She sajd she was angered that Social Security social
not so concerned with the money as workers are pennltted to sign old
the principle.
people over to nursing homes
She now receives $140 a month in without their consent.
supplemental income payments. But
" There should not be two laws in
she doesn't know how much more the United States: the general law
she'll get for disability.
for citizens and the special law for
In April, 1976, Mrs. Humphress a!&gt;" Social Security that 'superpass' the
plied for the funds. She said she was United States general law or even
disabled by arthritis, high blood the U.S. Constitution," she wrote.
pressure, diabetes, emphysem,
Mrs. Hwnphress said she has a

.

.~.
'

1
I
I
I
ninth grade education but once I
worked as a typist for a lawyer _ 1

;~~h

helped her some with her

gunsonly.

I

Curb
lnfla
· tl.o ne
·
·
'
· c . h f. .
Pay as
Or
·
.
Classlfleds and
Save I l.l

Orehel's CeramiCs, 59 N .

Second Avenue.
dlepOrt. 992-2751. ,

ternoons

Santa Claus Letters: Per·

'S"onalized letter from Santa
.child'·s name &amp; address,

plus $1.00 to Santa Claus
;letters, 291 Cozy Glen
.Orive, Oak Hill , OH 45656.

PUiiL~C NOTICE
The Meigs County 198i
General Revenue Sherin~
Survey has been corm
pleted, and the document
may be viewed bklh(
.

WANT AD INFORMAnON

('

Roy Rogers waving hats to Houston raUy crowd Wednesday. (AP Laserphoto)

.

I

Box 729

Pomeroy, Olllo45769

ideas

in

resident care with a highly
motivated ' staff? Pomeroy .

Health Care Center has the

answer for you. Due to
achieving near maximum
census, we now have
openings far full and part
time positions on day shift,
but will consider other shif·
ts. Competitive salary, excellent working conditionS,
life
insurance and
disability policy at no cost

Nancy

Van Meter,

Owossor Mi. 48867 .

dresses; P.O. Box 1083, St.
Petersburg, Florida 33731.

_

...

7)-YHII4W.D.
71 fPlctl ' ' ' ' "

.......

D-LIIIt&amp;

75-

&amp;Aeietw'-'

ac,... ·

~·-· llfl?l ......
J1-JIHitwt

UIRl/ICIS

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

11-HIIM 1.... 1'41flllftfl

Want-Ad Advert111111
Deacm~

~

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

--·
..............
. _,........

a-tt••- A ••ciiYalhl

........,.
,..,.

Rates ilfttOtber

Iem
iM

...••••••

.,

........... c.. .. ,..........
•1 I
.c. .. - - .

,:-;===;::;:=:::::=::;:====
;:

Ml

•"

t•

LIS

.

.~':'.:.":Y::;::::=::=::,.~-;:

·

•------------- . ·-·~·--·-~·-·-·~~~;•:•:niMI:;.__~':___..,.,·....,_...,___,__..,.,....J

electric, gas, and city
water. Only $5,200.

REASONABLE, YET
NICE - Carpeted 3

bedroom

home

with

natural gas heat,

city

equipped

kit·

chen, utility room and
back porch, for just
$16,500.
COUN:TRY VIEW COUNTRY LIVING Family home with 4
bedrooms

in

Me i gs

School district. Nice kit-

chen, formal dining, and
· huge familY room with
fireplace. 3 car garage

and 3 acres tor $39,200.

Many other features. ·
NEW LISTING- Cozy

2

bedroom

garage

apartment with level lot

in

Middleport.

Fully

carpeted and freshly
painted outside. THis
you will like for only

$16,000.
THESE ARE SOME OF
OUR BEST BUYS.
COME IN AND LOOK
OVER THE PIC ·
TURES. OUR HOME
- SHIELD WILL PROTECT YOU IF YOUR
HOME PASSES . CALL
992-3325 OR 992·3876 for

tgages.· Phone 992· 7000 or

t

()

Public sate
&amp;·Auction
OSSI E'S AUCTION House,
20 N. 2nd Street, Middleport, Ohio. We sell one
piece or entire households .
New, used, or antiques, In·
eluding homes, farms, or
liquidation sales. Get top
dollar. List with the man
Who has over 25 years In
the new, used at antique
furniture busln s.
we

- ,. 1
-

'

·;
·•

.•
~

·.
:· •·

•r

·:
:'
.•
:

. For In·

"Two stbry older
seven " rooms,

home,
bath,

Wlnled to BW

.·,&lt;-f.·--------OLD COINS, pocket wal·
, chel, ct1n rlnga, l"lldlno

Pomeroy, Oh.

ROUSH

basement,
hardwood
floors, fireplace . On four
large lots with river frontage . Main Street,
Pomeroy.
Financing
available. Call after 5, 992·
728~. $26,500.

•New Homes • extensive remodeling
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
10·24-1 mo.

20 Year~ Experience
All types roofing work,
New &amp; Repair.

All types of remodeling,
inside and

out . ~·

FREE ESTIMATES
Call Tom Haskins

949-2160
'10-13-1 mo.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
new or repair gu)ters

and downspouts, guner

10 ROOM brick. 3 baths, 1'1•

.a cre; 6 rooms, 2 baths, lV2
;acres; 6 rooms basement,

!bath, 2 mobile homes;
1Mason, 3 bedroom never
tlved In, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'12
miles south of MiddlepOrt,
Rl. 1.

2

BEDROOM

Mobile

cha i ned,
un ·
derpinned, with large buil1
on room, fireplace with
Heatolator,
air
con ·
di.tioning, new carpet, 6 ROOMS , bath, basement.
12x24 living room , washer 1 child accepted, deposit,
&amp; dryer, 50 ft. bricked por- reference, no . pets, no
ch, =car garage, fenced in drunks. John Sheets, Jl/:2
area tor pet, on 1h acre on miles south of Midd lepOrt,
Flatwoods, many other ex· Rt. 1.

tras . 992 -719.

Three bedroom house for

1978

12x65

BAYVIEW rent in Rutland . 99l-5858.

Mobile Home. 2 bedrooms.

· Located near Southern
Ohio Coal Mines. $6,500 . 42
Mobile Homes
992-7UJ7.
tor Rent
THREE bedroom mobile
MOBILE HOME for sale. home at roadside park in
Exc . cond. See John Green
behind M iddleport Sunoco.
Bla Ck top road · to mine,
Ravenswood
bridge.
Eastern School District.

Make offer. If interested
call614-843-4802 or 949 -2038.

Syracuse. $200.00 a week .

four bellroom, 2 lull bathS,
large living room, nice size
kitchen, • laundry room,
cellar. Block chlnin•y for
woodburner, new septic
syst•m. chain link fence,
also large storage bulldlnq,
can be used for business or
storage. Natural gas fur nace. Reasonably priced.
Sits on one half acre. 9-4'1·

Misc. Merchanise

54

HEATING OIL No. 1 &amp; No .
Buy now at Summer
Prices. Excelsior Co. 614-

2.

992 -2205.

HEA TWAVE . Fuel

oil

heating stove. 50,000 BTU ,
automatic, ec. cone. !li200 .

698 -6372.

Invest in Classics

10 x 50 two bedroom trailer

near Racine. 992-5858 .

44

Apartment

for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished apts. Phone 992·5434.
Fur:nished apartment, Four

rooms with bath : 992-5908.

46
Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

Eight room house with
fireplace, total electric,
_·! banda. diamonds. Gold qr sundeck, 2 car gMige, 2 &amp;
· , all..,.-. Call J. A. Wamslty, one half 1eres, IUbll1ntllil
. • 742·2331. Tre•sure C'*l - . , payment, IllUme 1
.. ; Coin Shap, Athens, OH. 592· .-rcenl lcian If qu1llfled .
985-3934.
• ~ 6462.
'

a

new fur·

nace. Only l14,500.00.
CALL TODAY AND
ASK ABOUT OUR
OTHER HNE PRO·
PI!RTIESII
' REALTOR
Henry E. Claland, Jr.

985-3891 .

992·5682 •
10·7·tfc

Mutz car eight track stereo
deck with one speaker .

-.
Pets tor

Nothing too large. Also,

coin collections. Call 614.767-3167 or 557-341 L
54

4~

Dally Sentinel
243 IIIII 17 S~t
... Y... NY

111011. """

-...us.
IIIIKI.

"2-5692

Why put up with hilh pricessue dollars; gel bettt&lt; quality!
Send for our NEW FALL·I'IINT£R
PATTERN CATALOG. 94 patltrns.

&amp; .m

' Antiques

guns, pocket watches and

hlltm Dlttt

free Plltern Coupon (worth
$U5). Ci1a1oL $1.00.

uu

lin . . . Qlllliq$1.75

J»babiiSI.- 'Jt.501.75

134slcl!~ TIIMflrs.$1.75
127--- •• Dlllla... $1.75

"We print ALMOST
anything on ALMOST
anything!"

excellent conditon size 141/J

-$20.00. 992-3690.

'

Beagle
females
blooded

Sale ~

Misc. Merchanise

Antique love seat, excellent
condition, seat upholstered
in pink velvet. Call992-583-4
after 5 p.m·

Evenings &amp; Weekends

weane~l.

old ,

985· 4335 .

-- ·

~

chen sink $10. 992-7473 after
5.

.,

&amp; L I westBEI«

61

Farm Equipment

FOR SALE or Trade. 1965

ELECTRIC wheel cha ir' 1!.
battery charger . Good
cond. For information caiJ

992-3455 .

Massey Ferguson trac tor,
I H corn
picker , HA
rotavator. See Leo Morris
at 7 42-2455.

Wanted to Buy
Good used ceme nt blocks.
20 cents each. 742·3063.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
62

Pomeroy
landmark
New Wood Burner

Stoves

Only $350

Range

$100

1 Good Used Gas

Large Supply of
Holland Tulip Bulbs

Q ,._

Pets for Sale

3085.

Motorcycles

74

1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle,

color

blue.

call949-2649 .
Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

slab. $10 per ton . Delivered

Fl FTEEN foot steel truck
bed with loggi ng racks . 992-

to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
Pomeroy 992·2689.

63

Livestock

DICK French Livestock
Haul ing , local or
distance, day or night.

5468 .

COMPLETE
DUAL
exhaust system for 19721978 Chevrolet or GMC.
Head pipes, mufflers, tail
&amp; clam ps_ $75_ 949-

yrs. exp. (614) 593-5132 or
(614) 593-8883.

pipes
2083.

PIGS for sale. 985-3540.

77

1ranspattatleiF":"'"

~.LANDMARK
Pomeroy

condition, very low
mileage, nice topper accept older medium 6r small
car
in trade.
Price
$1,995.00. Will di cker. 661·
ce ll~nt

76

POMEROY

E. Main St.

hall ton, heavy duty ex-

diameter 10" . on largest

end. Sl2 p-er ton. Bundled

Now At

Trucks for Sale
1974 C-10 Chevy truck one

........ ...
-····--·_... .....

SEARS SHALLOW well
piston pu·mp. $50., fuel oil

10·9·

puppies, 4 three
one male, full
but don't have

papers. Six weeks
Firewood for sa le. 992·5449 .

·

Ph. 614-949·2358

$35.00. Also girl's ·coat in =--- ----'-=="--"=' - -

and ponies and riding
lessons .
Everything

for . antiques and collec·
tibles or entire estates.

ZIP, Sfl(, 1141

·Jean Trusaell 949·2660
. OFFICE "2·2259

56

novelty

shirts for politicians,
ball teams, business or
individuals.
Shirts &amp; Hats $4.00 &amp; up
Special School Rates

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

PTO manure spreader .
Two year old P into mare.

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

AT TENT I0 N :• ( I MPORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

"2-6191

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottle Turner

.

CustOm
Print
i Shop

T·shlrts . and

Hrs.: Mon.- Fri.
9

pony saddle. Case or Ford

56

53

Anne Adlm

ft

-Auto and Truck
Repair
~ Transmission
Repair

ONE horse saddle and one

992-7419.

. Merebandlse

P1im little band collar. Charm·
in&amp; wide Vyoke front and back .
Lone cuffed 01 elbow sletves .
Sash this shirtdress (no waist
seam) for a great look. ,
Prinled Pattern 4649: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20.
Size 12 (bust 34) takes 3% yards
45-inch fabric_
.
$1.75 tar uch palllm. Add 50$
fir IICii patln fir filii-diD
alnnall1114 hlndliwl- S..d II:

Call Howard
,4,·2862
949·21&amp;0
1·22-tfc

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

stove, ,$10., . porcelain kit-

$36,900.

garage, and

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Phone 1-304-752-4665 after

Mobile !:lome for rent, furFour year old double wide, nished, excellent condition,
24 x .64 in excellent con- quiet neighborhood, $125.00
dition . Must be moved from per month, plus deposit,
presenl
toca't lo n
in utilities. ' 992-5834 after 5
Syracuse.
p.m.

2

SOUTHERN SCHOOL
DISTRICT - A 1V2
story frame house with 3
bedrooms, fireplace,

All work guaranteed.

1614) H2~21~ P..,.eroy, Q!o_~ __

Home~

bedrooms and a nice
front sitting porch .
JUST $16,7001
IMAGINE A. 1.8 ACRE
YAROt- And a nice 3
bedroom, 2 bath home.
You will love this one.

$9,000.00.

cleaning and painting ..

Superior Siding Center

drunks . John Sheets, 3'12
mi. south, Middleport, Rt.

WOODED BUILDING
SITES- Close to Meigs
Hlgh School. Eoither buy
10 acres Of 20 acres.
Utilities ·available.
$1,200 an acre.
SALEM ' CENTER Approx. 'h acre bulldng
slle with a -40&gt;&lt;6/J glazed
tile building that has a
full basement. Asking

CONSTRUCTION

'

Mid·

with

Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614·843·2591
6-15-tfc

dition . 992-6268 .

dleport. Nothing to
repair
because
everything Is in tip top
shape In !his 7 room, 3
bedroom home . Has a
lull basemen! and 2 car
garage. $42,600.
NEW LISTING CLOSE TO SHOPPING
- A level lot and a 5
house

Rl. 3; Box S4

All types of roof work,

ONE BEDROOM un ·
iurnished apt. $125. a month plus utiliti es. 992-7511 or
992-6130.

room

V.C. YOUNG II

nentals

Partially furnished, two
porches, underpinn.i no,
cement blocks. Two se·ts of
steps · in excellent con-

NEW LISTING- Nice2
in Mid·
front and
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
DOirch.es . Storage
ranch brick home in Baum ll ibuildllng and nice lot.
Addition. With new garage ~~·:' · usTtNG _ A
&amp; genie door. Gas heat,
newt~ installed central air
lovely 2 story home on a

pllar.ces built In, newly In·
stated electric breaker
system,
attractively
•.' =--.......,'7':'......==:._...:·2!1• decorated baSement, 2
:. ::-Thai's pi'obo'"'.- a bill ....._ baths, fully carpeted with
..,.
most attractive drapes_
·.: lor; goocan!hilaan,: "
C 11985 381 40 ~ 2 25
a
.
' " ' 11.

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

1973 Nashua thr ee bedroom

with a bedroom built on.

2 BEDROOM apt. fur·
nished, utilities paid, 1

In

(Free Estimates)

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

Housing
Headquarters

street

Utility Buildilgs

992 -5732.

an inspection.

nice

-P lumbing and

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x4R

992·6215 or 992-7314

SERVICE

7759 after 5 or 304-773-5905_

Furnished apartments, 992·

conditioning, family room
8. stone fireplace, ap-

SMALL

electrical work

E MAINTI~"AN1CS,

Lol 8. 1971 12 X 55
home in Mason, furnished ,
a fr conditioner, Call 992 -

·3129, 992·5914, or 1-304·882·

-'

.......,l.natl ..............

well and nice large lot.
Asking only $12,000.
What would you give?
BARGAIN- 2 LEVEL
LOTS - 6 room house
and trailer hook-up with

refinancing, and 2nd mor·

remodeling

-Roofing alid guHer
work
-concrete work

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING &amp;

7.

; OHI0992-W6.

I

modern bath and k!t·
chen. HaS a new forced
air furnace, good drilled.

available. All types home
financing,
new , otd,

Real Estate - General

TO BUY:
SILVER,
: PLATINUM, STERLING·
, COINS/ RINGS,JEWELR·
• Y, MISC. ITEMS. AB·
' SOLUTE
MARKET. : PRICE GUARANTED. ED
• BURK"E!TT
BARBER
' I SHOP, MIOOLEPORT, 2042.

•LU

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
REAL BUY- A6 room
paneled home' with

money

PORT, OHIO

t GOLD,
WANTED

I.U

16 E. Second Street

Mortgage

Sizes

HFrom 30x30"

t-I==========+-=========+:::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::~

Syracuse. $23,000. 1-304-7524665 alter 5.

furnished,
underpinn ing,
anchors. 992·7473.

Farm BuHdings

-Addons and

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

THREE Bedroommobile
home at roadside park in

2566.

.; 9

Clllrtit

7473.

· CARPENTER
SERVICES"

child excepted, no pets or

home in Bashan, three to

lnform.etlon

IJ . . . wu...r

WILL do odds 8. ends,
paneling, floor tile, ceiling
tile . Call Fred Miller al9926338.

;

~

16-M.H.I_,r

,.

Situations Wan'ed

. : formation and pickup ser' vice, call 992·6370 or In
_ ~ west VIrginia 773-5471. sale
• every Friday. night at 7
; p.m. Auctlonee~ Howard ·
, Beasley, apprentice auc·
·tn Eastern School District,
l~~~k osby A. Martin.
Modern two story, .country
1

n-A•tt••~r;

-

Main St., Pomeroy . Oh.

992-2342
DOWNINGQtiLDS AGENCY, INC.

&gt; take conslgnmen

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

t~~~L~-~:.LB

ED
BARTELS.Loan
Representative, 1100 East

CALL US.

'·

I

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

12

Housing
Headquarters

water,

Hill

,.,. .....

f'llft,

1

yoUr

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS

PHONE 992 2156

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

"Hoy, Dad, play that old-fashioned rooord
agaln ...the one by those guys called the Beatlosl"

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH?
DO YOU HAVE THE COVERAGE?

.:

. - . . . . . _ . . . . . . . . . . , ........ 4 . . . ,., . . . . . . ..,.
Ml~...,tllllllll Ill MWtllyswiHM...._. . . . . I..,

Coupon with Remittence The Daily Sentinel -

develop

ERVING SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE 186

"

.,----~___...-~~-",-;;,.;'-=-"'-'·'..•£.

, ,.,

Mall Tills

shifts? Feel the need to

IXMNIJtGQtiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE ,

roo;:e.:;~· g~~~~~:.~ t~flce ''k
~~'l':~~M:sa~~ex~~d%~
to the Ohio Rlver, Which ttheho · M~lgs County Cour.

... OII

bedr:oom with one and one
half bath , total electric in
excellent condition. 992-

us right away and get on ~~:;;;:;;:;:;::;;:~~:':'"r.~~~;::;;~;;;:~;:=~1 1973 Eagle, 12 x 65 two
the: eligibility list at 992- I Real Esta,e- General
bedroom, 1 'IJ bath, ex2156or992-2157.
cellenr condition, partially

1'-'l' -------''"-ns.,u,_,r_,a,_nc'!,e ___
flood - roaa A\.ITOMOBILE
IN vicinity . ReWard . 992·2121 . SURANCE
been can celled?
Lpst your
operator's license? Phone
992-2143.
13
1nsur1nce
coin

. Public Notice

32
33.....
_
- -_
-_
-__
-_;...
-

HAPPY TRAilS TOGETHER - Republican
presiden~ial candidate Ronald Reagan llJ!d old friend

•.One small black pony,
-gelding, white star on
1forehead. Lost in the Lin-

We}o,f-

~ ,ltl .... lno •• TM"-vYS

some great gifts as· a Sen·
tinel ·route Carrier. Phone

;6c,__ -~L"'o"'
s 1'-'a"'~"'d_,_F__,o,ue_:n,_d__ Will do .babysitting in my
home, any shift. Close to
.LARGE tan female . dog schools
&amp; town. 992· 5555 .
found in Rock Springs
area . Phone992-2770.
do babysitting in my
'•'- - - - - - - - - Will
home. 985·4250.

Cash In
James J. Proffitt
Sheriff
Meigs County
30 ( 11 l 6, 13, 3tc

use.
sewer IS for the use and
benefit of !he gr anlors, the
grantees and the owners
and occupants Of Lots No. OOl 30, ltc
296, 295, 29~. and 293, their

742-3()30 or 742·2728.

Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus

mailed In December. Send

Lots No.

1980 70 x 14 mobile home

11

' Write a M issionary' Ad·

293, In Pomery,
and assigns, a sewer
,passage of sewage and sur·
,face water~ In, acrOSS and

4424.

1973 EAGLE 12x65 two

ce Bla.ke farm .

(10)

Pleasant, WV Phone 675·

with 7 x 24 expando. Ex. cellent condition. Phone

r--"YOOiNGS11.--------.
.,
ALLSTEEL

I

KAUFF'S
PWMBING
AND
HEATING

x Viand STreet, Point

2nd

No Item too large or too
small. ·Check prices before

to the employee, and
regular skating. 985·3929 or hospita I ization ·insurance
'985-9996.
available. Come visit us or

'ting on Charles or Lawren·

ao. _ _ _ _ __

·1
1

-after

1976
two
1971
two
new

carpet. B x S Sales, Inc.,

dollar, or complete esta?'es,

challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating

Business Services

x 65,
three bedrooms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron. 14 x 64,
two bedrooms, new carpet .

carpet. 1970 PMC .
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

glass or china, will pay top

call :

29. _ _ _ _ __

34. _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ __

Sun.

for Sale
--- -·- ---

bedrooms, ne.w carpet.
Cameron, 12 x 60,
bedrooms, all electric:.
Skyline, 12 x 65,
bedrooms, bath &amp; lfJ ,

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

Slug 8. buckshot match, R.N.• Director of Nursing,
Sunday November 1st, at Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
Corn Hollow, Rutland, fer, 614-992-6606.
,Ohio. Starts at noon .
Proceeds to be dona ted to ENVELOPE Addressers
the Boy Scout Troop 249.
need!! For information
Mail Self-addressed stamNo tresPassing or deer hun- ped envelope. to : Box 82,

28. _ _ _ _ __,_

31. _ _ _ _ __

or

---~·-

1973 Crown Haven, 14

1972 Champion, 12 x 6/J, two

antlqu~s,

boxes, jars

RNs and LPNs, looking fOr

. SKATE·A·WAY announces
_winter schedule starling
•Nov. 2. Open to P4blic Sun.
afternoons 2-4:30, Weds.,
Fri. 8. · Sat. nights 7:3()·
10:00. Private parties Mon ..
8. Tues. nights; Sat. ·af·

wllh the
said
and

....

26. _ __;__ _ __
27. _...,...._ _ _ __

Mid-

Apples 8. Sweet Cider:
Romes, Grimes. Red, 8.
Golden Delicious. Now
selling at $4.00 8. up per
buschel. Fitzpatrick Or·
chards, State Route 689_
Phone 669-3785.

P.ublic Notice

,,_....,.. ,

25. _ ___,_ __

Fi·re

·for the. month of October.

.

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

2_
2-_
- -_
- '_
-_
-24.
_

Volunteer

:30 percent off greenware

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

21
22.. ------"--~_ _ _ _ __

ice

etc. complete households
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4;
Pomeroy, OHl or call 992776/J_

·

Department, at building in
Bashan. Factory choke
guns only .

ded.

Phon•--------------------

.

-.

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

She argued for what she considers I
to be her basic rights of citizenship. , '
"I had a choice to make: give up
my citizenship rights and my
. Write your own ad and order bY mail with this
•
freedom of choice to receive SSI, a
coupOn. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
or Write Dally Sentinel Classlflitd Dept.
medical card and food stamps or die
results. Money not refundable.
.'
Ill Court St., Pomero'f, o;, 45769
for my freedom perhaps for lack of
I'
li v
essentials. I, and aU who need help,
Name ;
I
as things stand now, are in the same
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
boat," she said.
Add~a, ________________ I
I
Mrs. Hwnphress also had some
difficulties actually gelling to the
eANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS
Cincinnati-based appeals court.
1-c.rdofTMMs .
41-HWMS tor Rtllt
2-hiM ......... m
42-MoltUt Homn
"I arrived in Cincinnati, a 66-year'
'
,_..........ctm...b
Print
one
word
In
each
old fat, sick lady, carrying a suit·
........1\'tiWIY
space below. I:ach In44-A!MrfiMftt.: · - ·
$-HIIIIPY Adl
•5-PRooms
case looking for a place to stay overItial or group of figures
.,_LOll aM P•M
,.._l,.ctferRtnt
counts as a word. Count
night. I wallied the streets until I
1-Yirdllll
47- Wanfttltt R1nt
name
and
address
or
._, .... tchle
found a hotel room for $12.50. Then I
olt-!-•w•"""' tor Rent
phone number If used. Words
overslept and missed iny case the
:-\~·
t
oau
You'_ll get better results _-~~~..!!!!!!~:!!~~-!
eMERCii.-iNDISE
eEMPLOYMENT
if you - describe tully,
next day.
s1-H.,......OMft
SERVjCES
give price. The Sentinel
n-ca; rv. ••ao•..U•'"""'
"I went to the court and asked
11-Http wantW
reserves the righf .to
12-llfMNtl
.........
them to give me just five minutes.
M-MIK. MtrcMIMflte
. classify, edit or reject
11-l.........cl
SJ-8ulllllllll SuiJII't...
They gave me 15. I really , don't
any ad. Your ad will be
14-l•aiRIII Trtlnlftl
put In the proper
remember what I said. I opened my
15-ICMoll h11tr.c:tlon
I
clasiticatlon If you'll
16JIMto. TY
-e FA·RM SUPPLIES
inouth and Good took over," she
check the proper box
' II'• &amp; . . .,..••
These cash rates
&amp;LIVESTOCK
said.
' l._W....... TtDt
below
,..,., ,,.,...,.,.m
•.,__.
Include discOUnt
eFINANCIAL
72-Trwclctferhlt
n- ..,,._.
41-l.lvm.G
l Wanted
- IIV
..-Hay&amp;Qraiii 17. _ _ _ _ _ __
l For Sale
22-MOfMrtiLMn
•J-·S . I lll,...lltt'
. 2J-P..........
l Announcement
18. ...,....__;__ _ _ __
ltrylctl
,.b. ;
l For Rent
19. _ _ _ _ __
e TRANSPDRTA TION :
20. _ _ _ _ __
e REAL I ITATE '

,,.

•

case

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

dollars, stertlhg, etc .• wood

Friday night starting 43t

Mishaps down; patrol meets goal

I

silver

7:3() p.m. Factory choke

Small investment,
large
.
returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice
November 1980, -the
following described real
estate:
The following real estate
a public sale w lll be held at situated In Meigs. County,
105 Union Avenue, Ohio, and being part of Lots
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for 296f 29S, 294, and 293, In the
cash the following VII age of Pomeory, boun·
collateral, to-wit:
, ded and described as
1976 Chevrolet Monte follows: Beginning at a not·
carlo, Mfg's serial no. chin the base of the cliff at
the Northwest corner of the
1H5lV6B529259
19.73 Ford Pick -Up, Faris property formerly
Mfr . 's
serial
no . owned by Schwegman:
thence South 7~ feel to a
F1OG L044730
The Farmers Bank and rock wall ; thence South 80
Savings
Company{ degrees 10' East 10 feet
Pomeror,
Ohio
reserves along the rock wall; thence
ADDING ANOTHER DAY - Construction worker
days of captiVity for the hostages in Iran on a sign at
the righ to bid at !his sale; South 81 degrees 25' West
Dan Scott changes the digits designating the nwnber of the IBM Building construction site Thursday in New
and to.withdraw any of the 26 feet to the outside of a
abOve mentioned vehicles rock wall; thence aton_g the
York. (AP Laserphoto)
prior to the sale, Further, outside of · said wall south
The Farmers Bank and 70 Degrees 08' East 35.5
Savings Company reserves · teet to the corner· of wall;
the right to reject any or at I thence South 9 degrees 50'
West 3U feet. along the
bids submitted.
base of the wall to the cor·
ner of said wall at a 10 toot
(10 ) 29, J(), 31, 3tc
a Iley: thence South 77
Lt. E. W. Wigglesworth, post com- rural traffic fatalities and we are
causative factors involved in our
Public Notice
degrees -15' East 71 feet
al 0 ng rock . wall; being
mander, Gallia-Meigs Post of the well along in achieving our 1980 goal
local accidents. They were
LEEGCAOLUNROTT01CFECOM· along the North side of the
IN
TH
Ohio State Highway Patrol, reports of 10 percent reduction for the year
operating while under the influence10 foot alley and Main
MON PLEAS, MEIGS Street; thence North 11
that on a basis the end of the third Lieutenant Wigglesworth said.
three, left of center-three, speeding, COUNTY,
OHIO
degrees 25' East 11~ feet;
quarter, the highway patrol has met
experience-one and pedestrian The BUckeye Building 8. thence North 16 deg 50'
Fatalities statewide: both urban
Co. and State of Ohio, West 42 feet to the baSe of
its goal of 10 percent rural traffic and rural, are down by nine percent
struck • one. In the drinking . ac- Loan
Department of Taxation
the above mentioned cliff 3
fatal accident reduction for the year. Ohio State Highway PatrQI figures
cidents four were killed.
,
feet back of • stone wall;
Plaintiffs
vsthence North 83 deg. ~s·
During 1979, the state rural traffic show.
Lt: Wigglesworth reports past Harry
A. Miller
West 76 feet along the base
· fatality totals wer 9M fata\s, 1,090
Oefendent
Unfortunately, as reported by Lt. - records Indicate all fatalities are
ot · the cliff; thence west
killed. As of Oct. 1, 1980, we have Wigglesworth and Capt: M. E.
Pursuant foa~en N8iil;~~ 31 . ~ feet a ion~ the base of
still showil)g the following trend in
to me ,·n the cliff to he qlace of
recorded 794 rural fatalities with 926 · Kijowski last week, District Nirie,
causation factors : (top five) speed, OF SALE ·ssued
Also, a certain
'entitled case, .I beginning.
th,e
above
parcel adlolnlng the North
killed. This results in a 15 percent which encompasses 10 southeastern
drunk driving, failure to, yield right will pffer for sale at public . side
of the above and which
reduction of rural traffic fatalities Ohio counties, is up for the year by
of way, pedestrian action and left of auct:on on the front steps of Is boUnded on the West by
Meigs County Court an extension Of the West
for the year.
four percent. Lieutenant
center, generally being in that or- the
House, ~omeroy, Ohio, at line of the above pro~rty;
Our enforcement efforts are con- Wigglesworth had another recent
der.
10:.00 o clock A.M. on on the North by the south
Fnday, . the 28th day of line of the property of Em·
-tinuing to pay off in reduction of news release which explained the
.
.
·
·

jewelry,

selling. Also do appraising.

Low-interest loans and loan
guarantees will be provided by the
government for demo~tratlon
projects, Bergland S8ld. If the idea
sup:eeds. it could lead to leglalatlon
creating a federal "Rural TransportAtion AdniinistraUon,'' )Ill ad-

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice Is hereby given
that on Saturday, Novem·
ber 1s!, 1980, at 10:00 A.M.

being

rings,

RACINE GUN SHOOT, Osby (Ossie) Martin. 992Racme Gun Club, every 6370 .

railrOad branchservlee, be said.

'

Proceeds

donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I

Bergiarxl aald the approach,
m!)deled on the 45-year-old Rural ·
Electrification Administration,
wOUld explore cooperative ownership of local railroad branc:h Unes,
trucldng equipment and fnlghthandllng facllltllll!.·
'
· The program's (liii'IIOISe would be.
to pi'OYlde freight and passenger aervtee for rural areas that have lost

.

.

9 - ---"W,_,anted to Bu_"L
· I ,__E_GL_A_N_C_E_s_,.-...,...--------.::b~v_::G::II:.:IF~o~x
IRON AND BRASS BEDS
---::X:~L~J
old furn iture, desks. gold
I'
·

'

__ . ,. . __Mobile Homes
-----

32

71

Auto Repair

RIVERSIDE
VW·AMC ·Jeep·Renault
Parts 8. Service Dept.
Will Be Closed
For Inventory
Sat., Nov_lsi, 1980

Autos for Sale

19BO Trans Am, loaded,
take over paymentS, sti ll

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses under warranty . 949·2793.

1973 &amp; 1974 Chevy's. $500.
imaginable in horse equip- for
both . Raymond Sn ider .
Blankets, belts, 949-2629.
boots, etc. English and

ment.

western.

(614)

Ruth

Reeves

~9~ - 3290 .

1977

Chevette,

condition . $2500.00 985-4256.

Put a cold nose in your
future!! Shots, wormed,
Meigs County Humane

81

excel lent

Home
Improvements .

s

8. G Carpet Cleaning.
Steam ' cleaned . Free

1970 Bu ick LaSabre_ 992- est imate.
Reasonable
7274 after 5 p.m.
rates. Scotchguard. 992society, 992·626/J, between
6309 or 7~2 · 2211.
the hours of 12·7, closed 1975 Pinto, $995.00. 1-304Tuesdays. Black 8. tan 773-5679_
83
Excavating
Kerr, tri -colored beagle,
four Shephards, four
J 8. F BACKHOE SER·
Trucks lor Sale
Labradors, very pretty, 72
VICE liscensed 8. bonded,
special chocolate colored, 1978 F250 4 x 4 super cab.
lovable dog, if. you I ike loaded, extra good con· septic tank installation,
water 8. gas Iines. Ex·
chocolate 8. vanilla sun- dition. 742·2068.
cavating work &amp; transit
daes, she's sweet, she
layout. 992·7201.
barks, with a great perCh
f
sonallty_ You'll love this 1973 evrolel one hal ton ---====;::;:=:;:::;=:::;::==
dog. 992 -6260 .
pickup. Heavy duty suspen- 84
Electrlcal
sion. 992·271 9.
&amp; Refrigeration
~---------.1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ S E W t NG M AC H I N E
Repairs,

Remington cash register,

service,

all

O~~~~~~~~~~&lt;r.;;-;--::-~~~~~~~ makes!
992·2284. The
set of meal or produce l:'
Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
scales, air hockey table,
Authorized Singer Sales
1968 Dodge ton van, Ford
and
Service. We sharpen .
2000 tractor, International
Scissors .
Cub tractor. 949-2079.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
Fltewood, S30.ilo per load,
REPAIR
Sweepers,
delivered, split, cut,
toasters, Irons, all small
slacked. 2~7- 242~ .
_., --'' appliances. Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Used lumber, while
Garage on Route 7, 985alumimum siding, insld' &amp;
3825 .
outside

doors,

windows,

trim, oak mantles. oak
sliding doors . Call 992-6254
after6 p.m .

APPLIANCE SERVICE:
all -makes washer, dry.,..,
ranges, dlsnwasners,
disposals, water tanks. Call
Ken Young at 915-3561
be fort! 9 a.m. or ettwt 6
p.m.

one recliner chair wllh
vibrator, one rocker chair

that swivels. UJ7·3968.

~\:FINITELY
1&gt;.. HOOPLE •

IS - Generll Haul!nt AGRI -LIME Spt'Hdlng,
limestone and fill dirt
hauling. Leo Morris. 742·
2455 .

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'

-

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - White
House officials say the ~overnment
will quickly complete its study or the
economic impact of clean air standards on ·high-sulfur coal production, according to a Unit~ Mine
Workers leader from Ohio.
John Guzek, head of UMW District
6, headquartered in Dilles Bottom,
Ohio, said White House chief of staff
Jack Watson promised the study
would be completed no la.ter than
Dec. 15. Guzek and other union
leaders met Wednesday in
Washington with Watson.
" It has been under study for 2¥..
years, and the EPA (Environmental
Protection Agency) would never
give us any answer;" Guzek said.
If the study finds severe economic
dislocations resulting from federal
EPA standards, an order making
possible expanded use of the state's
high-sulfur coal could result, a White
House official said Wednesday.
Landon Buller, deputy White
House chief of staff, said the Ia w
"requires the EPA to look for
economic dislocations resulting
from the clean air standards. If the
EPA finds that severe economic
dislocations exist, they can require
the use of regionally-produced coaj
or the use (by utilities) of pollution
control equipment to handle lowsulfur coal. "
This section of the law is the basis
of a threatened court suit by District
6 against the EPA.
Guzek said the union will continue

delaying action on the suit for now,
or at least until the union receives
feedback from two propoSals made
to Watson. He refused to provide
details of the plans.
" He (Watson ) promised to get
back to us by Friday," Guzek said.
"We want to give them a chance to
study the proposals."
The union leader said he was
satisfied with the meeting "as far as
it went."
"Whenever we meet with the
EPA, it's always somebody riew,"
he said. "They don't understand .the
problem.... If we could get a meeting
with the right people, we could Show
them where the government is
wrongon some of their standards.
"Watson is somebody else new.
But I believe he's sincere in saying
he'll see that something is done." .
. UMW leaders blame high unemployment among District 6 mine
workers on the clean air regulations.
They said Ohio utilities have been
bringing in low-stilfur coal from outside the state rather than installing
expensive pollution control
ment needed to bum Ohio coal.
About 5,000 miners have been laid
off in the district, which includes
parts of Ohio and West Virginia.

·,

.

SALE

JUNIOR TOPS

1.4 ounce blue denim pre·
Sizes 27

lawyer, Mitchell from the campaign. That came two
Rogovin, sent a telegram to Carter days after the Wall Street Journal
campaign manage~ Robert Strauss reported he used his influence, while ·
reminding the president of his he was in the Nixon White House, to
pledge. While 'there was no im- obtain lucrative consulting conmediate answer, it wi!S highly . tracts. Allen has denied any
unlillely Citrter would debate An- wrongdoing.
derson in the last crush of the cam"He withdrew, so in the last few
paign.
days he will not become an issue,"
Today, both major party can- said Reagan, who' had turned the
didatos were again racing from Allen matter over to his chief of
politlcai rally to political rally, Car- staff, Ed Meese.
ter trying to keep an uneasy jlold on
Meese issued a statement saying,
his native South, and Reagad trying "It is clear that any allegation or imto tie up large and as yet undecided plication of improper conduct is unindustrial states [,, the Northeast · true. Allen continues to have the full
and Midwest. Anderson was cam- confiden'ce of Ronald Reagan and
paigning in New England and New the campaign organization."
York.
· I
The president's troubles came
Tl;le Reagan campaign announced with the disclosure of a Justice
Thursday that foreign policy adviser Department report saying he had
Richard V. Allen was withdrawing been "fernarkably uncooperative"
•

at

washed. Choose straight
leg or boot flare styles.

VO~.

REG. $5.00 SALE $3.99
REG. $7.00 SALE $5.59
REG. $12.00 SALE $9.59
REG. $15.00SALE $11.99

End-of-the-Month Sale

enttne

BIG BEN
CARH~RTT

INSULATED

B.ROWN DUCK

WORK
CLOTHES
A complete selection
of·styles and sizes in·

eluding Insu l ated
coveralls · bib
overalls
- lin ed
. dungarees - jacKets -

SALE
PRICES

Seaga u.~
KINGSTON, Jamaica - Edward Seaga, a Harvard-trained financial expert, scored an overwhelming victory over socialist Prime
Minister Michael Manley in Jamaica's violence-scarred election and
vowed to restore economic growth, pursue a balanced foreign policy
and send Cuba's ambassador back to Havana. ·
The latest unofficial returns indicated Sea·ga's party would take
about 50 of the 60 seats in House of Representatives, .where the ·
majority party elects the prime minister. Manley's party, in power
since 1972, ·had held 47 seats. Final, official returns were expected
today.

MONTH SIZES

CHILDREN'S
OUTFITS

Action back for comfort
· concaled snap · seven
pockets. Zips from top
or bottom.

-·

Brown or 01 ive

Sizes S, M, Land XL .
Stretch suits, take-me-home outf_its, , sweater

187 school issues on ballot

sets, jogg i ng sets, dresses and 2 pc . outf1ts.

Month sizes : Newborn to 24 mos.

tr

COLUMBUS, Ohio - The state's voters will decide on 187 schoolrelated tax Issues in Tuesday's election, says Ohio's superintendent of
public instruction.
·
Franklin B. Walter said Thursday the issues have been placed on the
ballot by 174 Ohio school districts. The issues include 113 proposals for
new operating levies, 32 for capital improvements or building funds, 'J:1
for bond issues, 13 for renewal levies and '-""&gt; lor a combination ol
opera\iJlgand building funds.

REG. $6.00 ................... SALE $4.79
REG. $9.00 ................... SALE $7.19
REG. $12.00 .................. SALE $9 •.5~
· REG. $16.00 ...... ; .......... SALE $12.79

Freed
..

For transportation to your voting place, call these
numbers: 992-2354, 985-3971,843-3311.
Pd . Pol. Adv.

CHRISTMAS CLUB
CHECKS
SPECIAL GROUP

BEO BLANKETS

SALE .

GUN CABINETS
Reg. 5309.00

100% acrylic blankets with nylon
binding - fiber woven for IOr:19 wear
and warmth. Machine washable.
Limited quantity. Twin and full bed
sizes.

$10.49 to $12.99
Blankets
$16.49 Blankets

Home
National

o~Bank
3RD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member FDIC

. . .$11!=--:--1·---

DRAPERY.SALE .

Sale $7.50
Sale510.50

CANNON
TOWEL SALE
Choice of two colorflol libra! pat·
terns in blue, rose or gold colors. ,
Excellent quality by Cann.on.

$4.44 Bath Towels
Sale $3.39
Sl.SO Matching Hand
Towels .......... Sale $2.19
$1.29 Matching Wash
Cloths ...... , ...... Sale 99c ,

Reg, $319.00
6 Gun Pine
Reg. $379.00
7 Gun Pine
Reg. $419.011
10 Gun OAK

Sale 1241*
Sale $264.00
Salli·$304.00
Sale $336.00

SAVI

· Lay-Away tor Christmas at
these sale prices and really
save!
Jrd floor - Furniture Dept.

ON

DiAPERIIS AND SPREADS
~ring

In your· measurements, let us quote

you on a 30% off Sale of draperies and
bedspreads. Big selection of patterns and
colors.
.
SALE ENDS NOV. 1ST, 5 P.M.

STEREO TAPE

SALE

..

'Two Day Sale prlcea on all l·track and :
casse"e pre-recorded tapes.
•
Popular · Rock- Country · Religious · In- :
strumer\tals • Sound '!'racks.

· REG. $3.79 •• ~.......... SALE $2.95 ;•
. REG. S5.79 ............ ~ . SALE $4.65 ;
REG. $7.79,. : ........... SALE $6.25
REG. ".79 .............. SALE $7.15 ;

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

They heard a speech by Premier Rajai and joined in chants of "Death to·
Reagan, ·Death to Carter." (AP Laserphoto) .

Swedish airliner reque~ted
in latest hostage situati~n
By Tbe Associated Preis
Iran has drafted a "just method"
for releasing the 52 American
hostages, Tehran radio said· today,
and Swedish airline officials reported a request for a standby airliner,
possibly to fly the hostages out of
Iran.
The radio statement said Iran's
hostage plan, whi.ch it did not detail,
shoald not be viewed as a sign ci
weakness bec_ause it will "expose
the long criminal · history of the
U.S.A."
.
Tehran radio BIUiounced today
that President ' Abolhassan BaniSadr would hold a news conference

CUSTOM MADE _

6 Gun Pine

DUE NOV_
EMBER 3, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

MEN'S '39.!15

VOTE FOR WEllS FOR COMMISSIONER

1981 CHRISTMAS CLUB IS

accused the Republicans of leaking
the repOrt and, though he said he had record. "
.
not seen the document, added that it
He called Reagan's changes of :.;
"doesn't. say the White House was position "political plastic surgery,"·
uncooperative."
citir.g the former California goverReagan brought up Shakespeare's nor's original opposition to John F_. ::
"The Comedy of Errors" 'in . Kennedy's Medicare program; his :
Texarkana on the Texas-Arkansas statement, now denied, that ~ · 'C:
border, while saying of the Security should be voluntary; and· '
president, " He gave us five his support for grain sales to til!! .;: e&lt;;onomic . programs, and yet our Soviet Union, which he onc;e opo . •
economic mess has only worsened. pbsed.

OCTOBER 31, 1980
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO FRIDAY,
'

XXI NO. 141

DEATH TO CARTER, DEATH TO REAGAN - Thousands of
. Iranians leave Tehran University Friday after weekly rayer sernce.

FIRST PAYMENT ON YOUR

cooperated."
•
Hts press secretary, J ody Powell,

'

He's p u n i a h e d u s long
enough....He has not earned the :
loyalty of ~ose who SIIPPOrted hlm." ·
Carter, after his New York rally
Thursday, went to Michigan, then to
Missouri, then to Colwnbia, S.C., .f&lt;r
the night. At his final rally of the .
day , he told a crowd at a shopping ·
center in St. Louis that "Governor
Reagan has become an expert in '
rewriting the l)istory of his own "

•

I offer you full time quality Service for )'OUr
support on EleCtiOn Day

1,
1980

in its investigation of his brother
Billy's dealings with Libya.
Sources familiar with the report
said Carter on at least three occasions had refused to meet with
department investigators.
Carter, asked about the report,
would only say, 4 1 We've

to 42 waist ,

lengths 30 to 36.

County Commaoner.

WILL BE
MAILED
NOVEMBER

.

'

Anderson ~ s

•

Knits and velour tops In
an array Of colors in Vnecks, turtle necks,
cowl necks, hooded
styles and many others.
Junior Sizes S·M· L·XL

JEANS

hoods - vests.

I am Chester Wells

By Tbe ABBoclated Press
at Carter's. economic policies - "a
Ronald Reagan evoked tragic comedy of errors," he dubbed
Shakespeare to criticize Jimmy Car- them - while the president again
ter and the president suggested sen- harped on the Republican's
ding the former actor back to statements about calling out the
Hollyvrood as the two Cllndidates troops.
.
~igned furiously toward the
''Let's make sure that we don't
denouement of the 1980 election.
have to find out when he'll call fpr
But whatever drama there was in use of American military forces next
· the campaign T.hursday came more year by sending him back to.
from possible embarrassments to Hollywood, California, where
the candidates than from their on• Anlerican military forces won't
the-road rhetoric.
listen to his voice," Carter said at a
.For Reagan, there was the with- rally · in . New York's gafll\ent
drawal from the campaign of his district.
·
chief foreign,~&gt;Diicy advilier amid a
Independent .candidate John Ancontroversy, and for Carter, the derson 'lj'as making a last desperate
disclosure of a Justice Department bid to get Carter · to debl\te him,
report critlclztng him in the han- meanwhile, calling on the president
• dling of the Billy Carter-Libya af- to make good on the statement that
fair.
.
'
· he would consider other debate
The campaign rhetoric had challenges after his face-to-face
Reagan continn!ng to hammer away meeting with Reagan.

FRIDAY·, OCTOBER 31st 9:30 AM .TO 8:00 PM
SATURDAY., NOVEMBER .1st 9:30 AM TO 5:00 PM

Billy Martin, the colorful baseball
manager, had a lifetime batting
average &lt;1f .333 for the New York
Yankees in World Series play.

quarter were $8.2 million or $1.19 per
share, an increase of 9.2 percent
over the $1.09 per share reported in
1979. In the third quarter of both
years securities transactions were
nominal and did not affect earnings
per share.
Including Bank One of Fairborn,
NA which became affiliated on October 1, 1980, Bane One Corporation
operates 21 affiliate banks with 125
offices in Ohio.
Bank One of Pomeroy, NA is an affiliate of Bane One Corporation.

Presidential campaign enters home stretch

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

Bank One directors declare dividend
The Directors of Bane One Corporation have declared a Fourth
Quarter; 1980 cash dividend of 41
cents per share payable on December 19,1900 to shareholders of record
as of the close of business on December5,1980.
Consolidated resources of Bane
One Corporation reached $2.77
billion as of September 30, 1900,
which is an 11.3 percent increase
over a year ago.
Operating earnings before
securities transactions in the third

I

•

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 30,19110

Clean air ·standards
get quick·attention

'

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........ "'Mr:ud Mn. ..._
D161, ar.lberry B...... Mill
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8lle
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Saturday; but shortly afterward a
spokesman said the conference was
cancelled because the president had
to " g~t out Qf town on QI'gent
business." There was a brief flurry
of speculation the conferencce had
been called to deal with new
developments in the hostage crtsis.
· In Stockholm, airline officials said
a f99-seat ~ airliner is on standby
possibly to fly the hostages out &lt;:i
Tehran on twO-hour notice. The officials of Scanair, a subsidiary of
SAS, Scandinavian Airline System,

told reporters an unidentified company in LOndon, acting on behalf of
an untlisclosed client, made the
request.
Swedish Foreign Ministry'
spokesman Erik Pierre said the
Foreign Ministry had been notified
by Scanair of the request for a
plane ..
Foreign Minister Ola Ullsten, in a
separate phone call to The
Associated Press, said "the Foreign
Ministry is not involved in this
case." The U.S. State Department

Iraqi guardsmen
·poun.d oil city
BAGHDAD Iraq (AP) ~Iraqi ar.
'
tillery pounded residential districts
. of Iran's oil refinery city of Abadan
With a "murderous barrage" today
as diehard Iranian revolutionary
guardsmen fought to block an Iraqi
t8nk attack on.the beleaguered city,
Iran's &lt;Xflcial Tehran Radio said.
Iraq said its f9rces completed the
encirclei'nent &lt;:i Abandan today and
ita infantry aqd annor "mopped one
pocket after another of Persian
enemy resl!tance" in preparation
for a filial drive on the' island city,
Iran's main stronghold on the
eutem coast of the embattled Shalt
ai-AI'ab waterway,
The governor's office In Abadan
reported Bill pei'!IOIIS!njured by Iraqi
sheiH!J:e, telrin Radio said. It also
reported two Iranians ldlled in runnJnc cla8hes with Iraqi troops on the
:
'
,
IN IIARJE'lTA
Blcbard Jones, president · of the·
Melp County BOard &lt;X Commlas!OIIen, announced today that
s-ki Reagan, Republican ~ ·
dldate for president of 'the 'Qnlted
Statel, wW be in Aeartetta, Sunday
( at 2 p.m. at the V1111 ~ Field
' . House on the campua at Marietta
'College.
~-

mairr Abadan-Bandar Sbahpur high'
way.
.
Iraq claims its 'forces severed
IAbadan's highway, railway and
pipeline links with the rest of Iran,
including Tehran, ·two . weeks ago
~nd have since been pounding: the
besieged city of 350,000 with air raids
and artillery fire_ to soften its defenses. Abadan's glanf refmery_complex, 'which provided 60 per~t of
Iran's petrolewn products, has been ..
in flames ·since the
in the 40day-old war .
Tehran Radio said revolutionary .
guards continued to hold the V!tal
river bridge connecting Abadan with
· Iran's oil port city of Khorramshahr,
(\IDe miles to the north. Tbe bridge is
the key link in Iraq's long-awllted
drive Gil Abadan. '
An Iraqi tank CIUII1l8llder told
Western correspondents in
Kkhorramshahr on Thursday that
IIi was walllnl! for orders ·to llelld a
demolltlon team to check that the
Iranians had not wired the bowshaped concrete bridge with ex-.
piOIIvp before ~ storrlla It with his
lallb. 'He said he gpec:ted Iraqi forces to cross the bridie within the
(Continued on~
. e16)
'

eat

declined.to comm~nt~n the report.
In Washington, a. State Department official who asked not to be
identified said he was aware of the
(Continued on page 16)

man to continue fight

WNDON , Ohio- For more than two years, Floyd "Buzz" Fay was
prisoner No. 152397 in the Ohio penal system, serving a life sentence
for a murder he didn't commit.
The 28--year-old Fay finally walked out of the medium-security London Correctional Institute on Thursday, a free man and '1:1 pounds

lighter than when he'd entered prison. i\nd disillusioned about a
judicial system that took so long to recognize his innocence.
Following his release at about 6 p.m. Thursday, Fay vowed to continue the fight he started from his prison cell against polygraph tests,
one of the keys to his August !978 aggravated murder conviction.

Weather

Continued sunny today and Saturday. Clear tonight. Highs today and
Saturday 55 to60. Lows tonight 30 to35. Chance of rain near zero today,
tonight and Saturday.
Extended ForecastExtendeq forecast for Sunday through
Tuesday - continued fair through the period. Highs in the 50s except
some 60 c:tegrfl! readings Monday. Lows in 30s with some upper 20s
readings Sunday morning.

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