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                  <text>Christopher, response enroute to Algiers
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Deputy
Secretary of Stale Warren
Oui!topber led a small party af offtdala to Algiers tod!ly to deliver the
U.S. retponse to Iranian demandiJ ·
for the releue of the 52 American
boltacet, the State Depa$Jent announced.
.
Department offlclall said It was
blchiJ unlikely thai Chrl8topher
would meet with Iranlan authorities,
wllo have been usl!lg Algeria aa an
lntennedlary. But they IBid the
United States 'remalna 'lriiUn¥ to .

,,

.-b Dick Cava

·wiNTHROP
~ --.........-------------...-----.
1

THA.TS ~UNLIKE MS
'THAT ITS SCA~

I .M WORRIED..• I 11-iiNK
!'M' COM IN&amp; WNN WrTf{
SA~LOPIN~ PACIFIO\A.

D

hold face-to-face talks.
· "We have a year's story to tell,
and if Algeria i.s to act for us, they
have to be fully Jnformed," said one
U.S. official who asked not to be
Identified.
Christopller left Washington unannounced at 1 a.m. EST on the flight
to Algiers.
No detall5 of the reply he carried
with him were made public.
Department press officer Sondra
McCarty said In a prepared
statement that the U.S. response,

..

which had been prepared over the Christopher was accompanied to
last week, would be given to the Algiers by Harold Saunders,
Algerian foreign ministry for tran- assistant secretary of state for Near
smittal to Iranian officials in Eastern and South Asian Affairs;
Tehran.
Deputy treasury Secretary Robert
Algeria has been a go-between in Carswell; Sblte Department legal
indirect negotiations between the officer Roberts Owen and Arnold L.
U.S. and Iran ainied at ending the Raphe!, a special assistant to
hostage criais, which entered its 54th Secretary of State Edmund S.
week on Sunday.
Muskie.
Christopher met with Algeria's
It was learned that U.S. officials
ambassador to Washington, Redha decided to make personal delivery of
Malek, four tinies last week.
the American response to Algerian
The .State Department said foreign ministry officials instead of

•

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,,
bVOL- XXIa .NO. 147

at

POMEROY·MIDDLfPORT, OHIO

1

HI
NASfY.

WI NTHRCIP! ,AN.. T
~D TO 5EE )EX!

YOLJ'vt: Cf:I&lt;TAINL:Y cti{Or .
AoTAA~

WAYa= ~HCM'If\q IT! .·

Ed Sullivan
.· "I'm really

You're
a
clty
there
much action in
place like thfs.

•

enttne
MONDAY1 NOVEMBER 10, 1980

FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas concentrations hamper
Boone mine investigations

)

•'

transmitting it through normal
U.S. officials have said that.the firdiplomatic channels so that there st two demands would be less difwould be no misWlderstandings or ficult to resolve than those involv!nil
questions about the U.S. position.
1111 end to legal clainis and the return
The Iranian Majlis, or parliament, of the shah's wealth, which they said
voted on Nov. 2 to set four conditions could pose l!frious obstacles that
for release of the hostages: A U.S. could talre protracted negOtiations tO
pledge not to interfere in Iran's in- settle.
ternal affairs, the lifting of a freeze
Although Iranian officials had
on some $8 billion in Iranian assets pressed the United States for a quick
in this country, the cancellation of response to the demands, State
all American legal clllinla against Department officials said last week
Iran and the return of the wealth of that time was needed to carefully
the late Shah Mohammad Reza study the official transcripts foiPahlavl.
warded from Tehran.

depressed.' fll
never ~ h.!tpDlo!
. agatn.'H n

outside Bel-Air Presbyterian Ouda Sunday. The
Reagans plan to ~ LOs Anples fer their Santa
Barbara ranch for a week of rest 8lld reluatloo. (AP
Laserphoto).

RECEIVES A ~ - Presldent~ect Ronald
Reagan and his wife Nancy look up to well-wishers af-

ter receiving a J'OIIe from Celeste Grant, right, Encino

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Heavy concentrations of methane
gas inside a Boone County coal mine
are hampering investigations into
the cause of an explosion that killed
five miners, officials said.
Inspectors from the federal Mine
Safety and Health "-dministration,
the state Department of Mines and
the United Mine Workers entered
the mine Sunday.:..Jusl hours after
the bodies of the men were taken
from Westmoreland Coal Co.'s
Fefl'cl!No. l7 mine at Robinson.
· "They're still working getting the
methane out," Jack Perry,
president of United Mine Workerli
District 17, said Sunday. "It could be
a long, drawn out affair."
Clarence Justice, a Westmoreland
spokesman, said crews we~e trying
to restore a devastated ventilation
system. . ·
"We really don't know how long it
will take,'' he said.
Perry predicted the investigations
will continue for a week.
The five miners, sent to repair rail
tracks in an Wlused section of the
mine 300 feet down, reportedly died

instantly when a pocket of methane
gas exploded Friday. Tb.eir bodies
were found late Saturday.
Steve Anderson, Westmoreland's
director of conununications, said the
cause of the accident appeared to be
"iniproper ventilation that was not
carrying off the methane.''
Mine ventilating systems are
designed to circulate fresh air to
miners and prevent a buildup of explosive gases. Latge fans force air
down ventilation shafts, and canvas
sheets draped at intervals across the
mine shaft funnel the air into the
various tunnels.
Jack Hamrick, a Westmoreland
safety official, said investigators
were assessing the extent of the
blast damage and trying to deter,
mine why the mine's ventilation
system had allowed methane to
build up.
The force of the explosion hurled
cinder blocks more than 150 feet and
overturned a conveyor belt several
hundred yardiJ away, rescuei;S said.
Rescue workers trying to reach the
men were repeatedly driven back by
gas and fumes before. 1\he singed
bodies were recovered.

Company officials identified the
victinis as Herher:! Kinder, 22, of
Madison; Howard Gillenwater, 28,
of Alkol; Howard Willialnson, 39, of
Peach Creek; Carlos Dent, 39, of
Hewett; and Fred Pridemore, 26, of
Hewett.
Funerals will be held · Tuesday.
The bodie.s are at the office of the
state medical examiner for tests on
carbon dioxide and methane in the
blood of the victinis.
Sandra Gail Workman, a Westmoreland miner who was
hospitalized for a work-related accident, said she might have been the
sixth victini.
"If I had come out of the hospital a
day sooner I probably would have
been with tltem.'' she Sltid, adding
she was discharged Friday.
Cody Bias, a 511-year-old retired
coal miner, said he stood outside the
mine "because l felt I owe the
respect to the men who died. "
He predicted the explosion would
bring on an onslaught about mine
regulations.
''There are quite a few people that
are mad about this now, but time
will dissolve the mad," he said.

Wrecks leave
two injured, Deputies .assist in investigation
The MeigS County Sheriff's Departhree cited
had gone to check on Aubrey Earl Shuler, pastor of the Bethlehem
tment assi.sted the Pomeroy Pollee when he not come back from his Church, that the church had
enBass

been

verdiCt given in murder trial ·
CLEVELAND - A sequestered Cuyahoga eomffion Pleas Court
Jury deliberated throughout the weekend, but failed to reach a verdict
In the murder trial of Anthony D. Liberatore.
Vlaltlnc Perry County Conunon Pleas Judge said the panel was to ·
continue dellberat!ID today•
Ubentore, buslnesa lllllll8ier of Laborers Union Local 860, is
charged with aggravated murder and aggravated arson In the Oct. 6,
19T1 boJnbing death o1. Cleveland rackets figure Daniel J. Greene.

LOOk, the
cow said, "thet-e's
· m :q1'c tre":' in

.~~c

;-- a 'S tur . ~

,,

Decomposed body identified
LOs AJ!IGELES - A decomposed body believed to be that of actor
Victor Sen Yung, best ~own for his portrayal of Hop Sing - the cook
m televial.m's long-rimnlng "Bonanza" !leries - was found In Yung's
home Sunday, authorities said. The houae was filled with natural gas,
theyuld.

''

.

II had not been detennined whether the death was accidental, said
fire department spokesman Steve Ventura.
Ventura lnlllally confirmed the body was Yung's, but police Detective Fred Riaen, 111 the scene, said, "I can't positively identify the
body becauselt~s badly decomposed."

McQueen's remains cremated
/

'
who died Friday after cancer surgery in Mexico, has been cremated in
CaUfornia; McQueen's publicist said Sunday.
· . "Cremalilll hu taken place," said Warren Cowan. Asked when the
crematloo waa perfiii'IJied, he111111wered, "Yesterday (Saturday).''
Cowan llllid be had lalked to McQueen's wife, Barbara Minty, who
told hbn about the crerilalloo.
.
.
~died of heart failure Friday in Juarez, M~co,l3 hours after llll'llet'Y to remove malignant twnors that were causing him pain.
· LQ!I ANGELES - 'Die body of Steve McQueen, the tough-guy actor

~a...p

-..

iMP\..~ Mlf!IT

Sft.'IIIC.f

Jury will probe child's death
DAlLAS - Pollee iay they will aak a grand Jury to investigate the
death of 1 7of110111b.old girl wbo waa slowly auffocated by an S.f~
python that DillY have tried to swallow lier.
AIP'*ellllllll frcm tbe Dallaa CoUnty Medical Eumlner's office say
It DillY bave taken 'l'l!nl Lynn Duboe as long as five minutes to die from
"trawnatic upbyziatioo" after the pet snake ·crawled from ita 30gallc!O aquarlmn l!ld into her crib.
Accal'diDg to police, Duboe told them he waa awakened by his wife
ifler she found the Infant early Saturday. He said the animal left a
trail of blood - a~tly from WGUIIdl on the Child's face - as il
crawledtoawoodenledpoftrthedeadglrl'scrib.

West Yrrginia coal deaths high
. aiAIUESTON, W.Va.- Welt ViJ11ata COil helped fuel the nation's
IDdullria!IJ'OWtb, but lbe rlcb, dark wiDI baWl -never been mined
wtlbout 1011 of llfulld limb.
·
More tban 11,000. minerl have been kllled Iince men first' bepn
IIIIDinc CGI!In West v~ accordJ.nc to the state Department of

--

Weather forecast

a,'l'IM.u-~atedPnu
'
Malt1y d • toallht. Lon.in
Jnld41!11. Sunny Tuaday. Highs In
. the mid to upper 401. Cllance of prectpitatloo near zero percent tonight
IIIII ~. WIDdlllCII'tllnlllerly 1~10 mph lo!Jillht.

u,

wwt 1117dnu&amp;bFrilllr=

.

Fair 81111 ®01. Highs In Ule low to mldo40I north and upper 401 to low
lllltiiCIIItb. Loin In the mid to Upper Ill north IJid upper Ill to low :.Js

IIOUib. .

r
,•

•

Two persons were injured •and
three cited in a series of one-car accidents probed Sunday by the GalliaMelgs Post of the Ohio Highway
Patrol.
The patrol said Beverly A. Rockwell, 18, Gallipolis, was eastbound
on SR 141 at 12:15 a.m. when she lost
control of her car wbjch ran off the
left side of the road, struck an abutment and overturned.
A passenger in Rockwell's car,
Carolyn J. Fobell, 18, Cleveland,
was Injured and taken to Holzer
Medical Center, where she was
treated and released.
Severe damage was reported to
the Rockwell auto and she was cited
by the patrol f9r excessive apeed.
Troopers said Glenn E. Polley, 18,
Vinton, was northbound on SR 160 at
6:25 p.m. when he lost control of his
car, went through a guard rail, over
an embankment and into a ditch.
Polley was injured but not immediately treate&lt;1. His car was
demollahed and the patrol cited him
for reckless operation.
Another early morning accident
was Investigated by the patrol on .SR
588 at the junction with Honeysuckle
Lane.
According to the report, Martin R.
Reynolds, 28, Gallipolis, was westhound at !2:15a.m. when he lost control on a cul've, went off the right
side of the road and into a ditch.
ReynoldiJ was uninjured and sllght
damage llated to hia car. He was
cited by the patrol for DWI.
The patrol said Mitchell D. Allen,
33, Syracuse, was westbound on
Meigs CR 31 at 8:30 p.m. when he
drove off the left side of the road and

Department with the apparent
suicide of James Clark Aubrey, 69,
Libert Lane, Pomeroy, Sunday at
12:37 p.m.
The Pomeroy Police were notified
by Pete Bass, with whom Mr.
Aubrey resided, that he had found
Aubrey's body in a hollow from hia
residence.

daily walk. The body was IBken to
EWing Funeral Home.
•
Friday evening, deputies investigated vandalism Involving windows at Steamboat Inn and Southern
High School. No entry was made in
either building but glass was broken.
Charges are expected to be filed
later.
The department was advised oy

tered. The front door had been pried
open. Nothing was reported missing
however, the church had been ransacked.
Sunday at 12:36 a.m. a deer was
killed when it ran into the path of a
vehicle deiven by Ralph D. Jones,
33, Chillicothe, as he was traveling
north on SR 143. There was
moderate damage.

74 Iranians killed in tank battle
BEffiUT, Lebanon (AP) ~ Iraq .
c),almed its hel,icopter gunships aet
fire to gas installations in besieged
Ahadan and Its tanks killed 74
Iranian troops, while Iran reported
.Its forces destroyed two Iraqi oil terminals ori the· Persian GUlf and
killed 185 enemy troops in Iraqioccupied territory.
An Iraqi communique said waves
of ita gunships pounded a natural
gas storage center and a gas
pipeline in Abadan, the last Iranian
stronghold along the Shalt ai-Arab
estuary at the northern end of the
Persian Gulf. It said·Iraqi infantry
and tanks kllled 74 Iranians in
ground assaults on the city's northem and eastern gates. The communique acknowledged 11 Iraqis

killed. •
An Iranian communique said
Iranian forces attacked Iraqi troopS
Sunday on the northeastern bank of'
the Balunanshir River, on the northeast side of Abadan, inflicting
losaes on the invaders and driving
them back from the edge of the
waterway. The communique also
said Iranian airborne forces and artillery "crushed" .Iranian forces on
the road linking Abandan and
Mahsahr, 50 miles to the east.
Another Iranian communique said
navy commandos stormed Iraqi oil
loading terminals at Al Bakr and
IPK&gt;r AlamaYa, on the Persian Gulf,
and "completely destroyed" the two
facilities.
.
"Iraq will not be able to export

any oil through the Persian Gult' as
a result of the "suicide operstion
mounted by Iran's naval heroes,"
the communique said. It also
claimed Iranian warplanes have
demolished 70 percent of the big oil
refinery in 'Kirkuk, the center of
Iraq's petrolewn industry 150 miles
north of Baghdad.
Both Iran and Iraq suspended oil
exports after the war broke out
seven weeks ago. Iraq had been
shipping 3.5 million barrels of crude
oil daily, while Iran's exports were
estimated at 500,000 barrels.
In other fighting, Iran said its warplanes leveled the Iraqi border post
of Kalal; killing 50 Iraq~ and wounding 100. Iranian conunUniques also
(Continued on pagel2)

stru~ka tree.

Allen was not injured· and slight
. damage was done to his auio, the
report said. .
A Gallipolis man was also UllinJured in an early evening car•r
accldel)t.
Troopers said Charles A. Murray,
41, was westbound on SR 5M at_6:06
p.m. when a deer ran illto the path of
his car.
_
Murray struck the deer, which
then ran on. His car suffered
moderate damage and no citaUons
were Issued.

CLOSEDTUESDAY ·
Meigs County Banks with the exception of Central Trust will be
closed Tuesday in observance of
Veterans Day. Also do!led wi ll be
the office of the Meigs Motor
Vehicles, and Cllunty enurthnuse.

•
... 1\ --~

~

•

..r•
1\

I'·

IRANIAN TANKS 'oiSPLAYEO - A collection of
captured Iranian tanks are on display for the public at
a park in Baghdad. On the war front Monday, Iraq

reported gas installations se afire and 74 Iranian:
fighters, kllled in Abadan. Iran clainied two Iraqi o11:
tenninals on the Persian Gulf were destroyed. (AP.
Laserphnto 1.

�'

~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 10,
I

2-The Dally Sentinel. Mlddlepoit·Pomerov. 0., Monday, Nov. 10, 19110

J9ao

Eagle~

seek return visit to
Superdome in January

Opinions &amp;
Comments
m E DAILY SENTINEL
iUSPSIU.III)

By Auoclated Press
A sign behind the end zone at th~
Louisiana Superdome read, "See
You Again in January." The
Philadelphia Eagles would like
nothing better than -to comply with
that request.
·
The Eagles, who beat the winless
New Orleans Saints. 3(..21 Sunday
behind three touchdown passes from
Ron Jaworski to Harold CBnnlchaei,
moved a step closer to their
divisional title when the New York
Giants upset the Dallas Cowboys :JS.
3S.
"We've got a twl)-game cushion on
the Cowboys now," said J11worski,
who finished the day with 21 completions in ~2 attempts for 323 yards
'- one of eight passers to surpass 300
yards for the day.
Philadelphia's 9-1 record is the
best in the National Football League
and good for a twl)-game lead over
Dallas in the National Conference
East. The division crown would be
the first step toward a berth in the
Super Bowl Jan. 25 in New Orleans,
but tl\e Eagles aren't making any
hotel reservations just yet. .
"The Super Bowl is just too far
away to worry about," said defen·
sive end Claude Humphrey. And
CoachDickVermeilwarned, "We're
not a shOO:in for anything yet."
Maybe not, but the Eagles are a lot
better off than they were a week ago
-thanks to the Giants' first victory
over Dallas since 1974. Phil Simms
completed 18 of 33 pass attempts for
3S1 yards and three touchdowns for

DEVOTED 10 1IIE

INTEIIESTOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
t..n.n" ....... ' "' wd.,.,..,., Tloey abooold be lao- 1M wordal... ( or Rbj&lt;d lo....,..

u.a b)' die ecfJtor) ud mut bt 1iped wttll the •~&amp;He's addreu. Names mr.y be .wttiiWd upoa .
pablkaU.. However, oa requttlt Dame:t wW be tUtt kl8ed. ~twn •bould bela 1ood &amp;ute, .P
dnalalba.... oolpe.....Utiet.
.
.
PU1W1ec1 dally utqt S.tunt.J by fte Ohio VAUey PubUJbil&amp; Compall)'- M1lldmedia. lac.,
Ul Coari St., Pomeroy, Qltlo tsm. Butoeu Office Phone IJ2.. 21SI. Editorial P~fn..Ztn.
~-c\ail PQI&amp;Ii&amp;e paid at PoiDHOy, Qldo.
Na.... adnrtlatac npreeea&amp;aUve, Laadoa Auoeil&amp;n, Ul l Euclid Ave., Clevelud, &lt;*lo
44U5.
nt Auoe1a1ed Preu ls exelusively eadtled to dJe UR for ~bliulioa ol aU oewa ~Iebei .
trtdUed to the DeWIPiper ud abo tbe localaews pubU.bed bere.ID.
Publ.ldler
Robert WiqeR
Geaeral MIV· lo City Edltor
Rol&gt;enHodllc:b
Nen Edltor
A~
DaleR....eb,Jr.

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rT"&gt;o.-1.._..,.,,.,..._=,..,.

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

~

Leuers to editor
Letter answered
Dear Editor,
My previous letter to you was writ·
ten because I felt that an unsigned
letter which I had received deserved
an answer.
Now you have received a letter
from Indiana which seems also to
deserve an answer from me.
I am sorry that I have been accused of political slander. I can
easily substantiate all that was said
in my previous letter. My intent had
. been simply to explain to the writer
of an anonymous letter iny reasons
' for supporting John Welsh.
Now that someone has demanded
that I give more facts in one of the
references I made in that letter, I
feel that I must not sit idly by.
Perhaps, like Simon Peter, I am too
, willing to have something to say. If
; that is the case, however, it is a
· reflection on ' thy personality rather
than on the validity of my position.
; The person to whom l referred as
having suffered great loss at the
. hands of criminals is someone whose
· car was vandalized five times.
, Upon the particular occasion when
she went to the sheriff's office for
help, all four of her tires had been
; flattened with a sharp instrwnent.
, The leiter from Indiana suggests
; that the incident to wl\ich I refer is a
, simple matter of an unsolved crime.
· It is not. The woman, after ex·
plaining what had happened, was
not even asked her name! She was
told that because the crime took
place within the corporate limits of a
village the sheriff's department
would have no authority · unless
called in by village officials.
I have since learned that this is not
true. That does not necessarily
mean that what was said at the
··sheriff's department was an intentional lie, but it does not speak
well of the department.

Please alow me to explain that my
concern is with issues. Sheriff Prof·
!itt has been very courteous to me
and patient wiht me. I am not attacking him personally, but am
refle cting upon the current
operation of his office.
Also, please allow me to explain
that I make no claim to be able to
dispute that Sheriff Proffitt deserves
credit for some advances which
have been made In the past four
years. I could very well be that he
does. I have made a sincere effort to
understand what is going on in the
sheriff's department now and what
might have happen If the Repugllcan
challenger had been elected.
The letter from Indiana seems to
be to accuse me of detennining my
position on the basis of a single incident. My language regarding the
particular incident was rather uncompromising, but ·it seemed to me
Hold on voters - there's post·
to be deserved.
election tax hike talk going on at the
Yet, I also stated ve;y clearly that Statehouse.
·
I did not see that this campaign has
Republicans, who won control of
to be another of those campaigns the Senate on Tuesday, say the state
waged entirely in terms of is in a fiscal crisis. And they plan to
negatives. John Welsh has practical invite Democrats, who now control
and creative ideas.
both houses of the lame duck
This matter began with my Legislature, to join in a bipartisan
writing a letter to defend myself solution. But the answer well may be
against a charge that I have a very "no thanks."
different position toward illegal
Gov. James A. Rhodes, a
drugs from the position which I ac- Republican, called the Senate
tually have.
leaders in Thursday to talk about a
Now I have done what I could in fiscal crisis that silently gnew worse
these short words to defend myself during the election campaign.
gainst a charge of slander. I~ seems
Sen. Paul E. Gilbnor, R·Port CJin.
thus far that having more to say .ton, who is in line to become Senate
makes my life harder rather than majority leader as a result of GOP
· easier, but It is not my nature to be electiQil gains, said It generally was
silent. Thank you for this second op- agree{! that the only options are inportwlity to defend myself in your creases in taxes or cuts in services.
columns.
He quoted state fiscal experts as
Sincerely yours, .saying state tax revenues ap,MarkW. Flynn

"She's ahead of her time
Code number."

.I t's post-electiQn tax hike-talk time

TodJJy in history.

..

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Berry's World

r·
=~

'l

Also

attending

Thursday's

meeting were Assi3tant Senate .

Minority Leader Thomas A. Van
Meter, R·Ashlaod, who is to become
president pro tern In January;
Rhodes' budget· chief William D.
Keip ; and state instruction superintendent Franklin B. Walter.
Walter attended since any posSible
budget cuts could affect pUblic
education in Ohio. So far, state subsidies to local school districts have
not been slashed.
Rhodes pro!llised no new or in- ·
creased taxes when he was re- •
elected in 1978. But he gelll around
the promise, in his view, by lettiDg
tax hike bills go into law 'lll'ithout his
signature.
He did that iit December when
lawmakers doubled the old $10 car.
license fee to help local government&amp;
repair and expand· local highway
systems.

Reagan: trouble to the right, left of.him
WASIDNGTON (AP) -As a conservative coming to power,
President-elect Ronald Reagan is
far more likely to have political
trouble with the right flank than the
left.
The liberals don't expect much of
him anyhow. So any gesture he
makes in their direction will come as
a pleasant surprise.
It is the conservatives.. particularly the New Right
organizations that put money and effort into his campaign and irito·the
election of Republican senators, who
are waiting to be rewarded. They
will be hard to placate and before
long, some of them almost surely
will be shouting, "Sellout."
Before the last votes of the Reagan
landslide had been counted, those
organizations were posting their

demands. They wanted Sen. Howard
H. Baker Jr. ousted as Senate
Republican leader. The more ardent
conservatives never have forgiven
him for helping President Carter
gain approval of the Panama Canal
turnover treaties. And they want one
of their own Senate stalwarts to be
leader of the new Republican
majority there.
That's a fight'Reagan doesn't need

or want. He signaled so lmmedia~Jy, with word that Sen. Paul
Lualt · of Nevada, his campaign
chainnan, would nominate Baker
when the 53 RepubUcm senators
.caucus to elect their leader.
And he made it explicit at his news
conference in Los Angeles Thursday. "I not only have confidence in
Howard Baker, but I have been in-

formed by members of the Senate
tl\at there is no friction and there is
no move going forward to change in
any way, that his position is solid,"
Reagan said. "He will be the
majority leader of the Senate."
Incidentally, while Reagan was an
outspoken foe at the Panama Canal .
treaties, he said during the campaign that he has no plana to renounce them, although he wiU look into
how they are being Implemented.
Baker was a Reagan rival in tiKi'
early Republican presidential
primaries, but didn't get far. And he
endorsed Reagan for the nomination
early In the game, on April ~. just
before the Pennsylvania primary.
Vice President-elect George Bush,
no favorite of the New Right, won
thllt primary, and kept his bid for
the nomination alive until Memorial

Day.
Reagan says he and Bush are 1
team, ari'd friends, too. "And we
have not found ourselves In ' .
disagreement and ... I want to make
use of what I think is a very valuable '
.asset, and so he will have a nwnber
of things to do."
The president-elect said he'll ~ ;
seeking the advice and ~ c1 bll
supporters, iitcluding conaervatlve
organizations and rellgiou.political ,
groupsliketheM~Majortty,

But the COIJ8ervatives are going to
want more than Reagan' a ear. They ' .
are going to want policies that fit ,
their Ideas of conservative govemJDent.
"
Still, Reagan never promised
New Right a rose garden, That's Ida , ·
territory, or 'l!l1l be after Jan. m.

u.;, ·

Ohlo perspective •·

"!
~

New ballot issue campaign shaping

@ 1980 by NEA InC .

. "I'll have the 'Overregulated Busln6$SI'Tian's
Luncheon/' "

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
A
costly ballot iasue campaign Is
shaping up In Ohio over an insurance
industry proposal that would let
private companlea sell workera
compensation coverage.
Backers of the plan, led by the
Ohio ConunlUee for Free Enterprise
Competition, already have spert ·
about $1 m111ion on Tueeday's
petition drive to place the lsaue
before voters in November 11181.
The conunlttee, made up of independent inllurance writers and
. major Insurance ~ea. Uled
paid peUtlon circulators and volunteers to gather the ~turea or
nearly 500,000 R!1111tered voten. :
About 2115,000 are needed to quaHfy
the lsaue for the ballot.
· Petition circUlaton were paid 25
cents for each signature up to 100

· ana a $25 bonus for 100 names. Eacii
· signature after100 was worth an ad-

ditional$1.
Fred L. Roberta Jr., the group's
campalgn manager, called the effort
by more than 5,000 circulators the
111011t II1Ccel8ful lllle-Uy petition
drive In American political blatory.
''There's no way that getting
2111,000 some llipatures I&amp; going to
be an Inexpensive Ulldertatlng,
either In lenni cl111011i!y or time,"
aald Rober1a, a prcleultllal political
campai&amp;n manager for Bailey and
Deardorff, nubile relations firm.
At leut tlat much - or more 11111 be II*JI.bJ wpportelis and op)ICI1elltB In tiMUr battle over the $2
btilloa fund before votera decide 011
the question, be said. "J wvuld ez.
pect it -ad COlt wt.t an average .
gubernatorial race would COlt," he

v

provided

Winfield's services., Because the ·
. Yankees finished high in the standings last. year, they pick tate in the
draft, raiaing the poalbWty that 13
.teams could pick Winfield before the
1 4in8,.
.
·Yankees' turn comes.
· Winfield, the offensive leader of · But Paul said Winfield has sent the
the National League San Diego team Indians and' several other club&amp; a
fol; leVeral years, has played out his polite letter explaining why he
~and Is a free agent. He repor· doesn't want to' play for th:mt,
~ is seeking a 1()111!-tenn million although, he writes, he has nothing
d8Um'-Pllll contact. . ,
agaln8t the city or the team.
iut Gabe Paill, head man of the The purpose of the letter, as Paul
NMrlcan League Indians, says sees It, is to make it possible for the
\ftifield Is trying to fix the game.
·. Yankees to obtain draft rights to
UDder the draft rules, 13 tesms" Winfield.
lelect n~tlng rlgbla to a
"What Winfield is doing defeats
lf" agent; the ~~electlools made In the whole spirit of the rerentry dra~t

.W

throuch I Ute operated, '

non-profit
· JII'OII'IIIL

social

Insurance

~

U voten approve the

propoa•d amendment, ~bat
prohibttlon would be lifted.
Such a cqe Ia opposad,

:the New
'
••

,,
L

Paul feels Winfield
wants .to alter draft

• •~LAND (Ai) - San Diego
Padres outfielder Dave Winfield Is
'tey~ng to manipulate the I'Hntry
~ in professional baseball, saya
the president of the Cleveland In-

said.
Baled on paat campaigns for
governor and Inflation, the price tag .
couldtotal$2mllllont0$3m111ion. •
"There can now be no doubt that
the people will ~de this Important
iBBue next November," ROberti
said. "Given the choice, we believe
they will say Y• to free ent1rprue
, · and ctve .inluren the right to C~mo
~ both among themselves andl
'lll'ith the state ,fund lclr the writing of
' WOlters compe11111t1111 inlurance."
Ohio'a Conltltution cumnt1y ben
private c:ompud• frmuelling IUCh .
coverqe In the ate. l11llead, tt•1

'

'

..

of

the put season

York Yankees llave
p\l'llllcly said they are seelting to bUy
.
•

.

1980

I

BALTIMORE (AP) - An old·
fashioned serving of plain vanilla
n
' proved to be quite a treat for the
'
Cleveland Browns.
Feasting on a Baltimore defense
which quarterback Brian Slpe
By WW Grlmlley
likened to the most ancient of ice
AP Co!'HipoadeDI
cream flavors, the Browns took sole
possession of first place in the AFC
Central with a 28-27 decision over the
: Wellington Mara, president of the consummate fan. I have been tied to
beleaguered New York Giants, is the fortunes of the Giants as long as I · Colts Sunday.
The Browns, whose series of close
feelinl! pretty good today alter his can remember.''
finishes this season has earned them
The Giants aren't a Johnny-Comeclub's upset of the Dallas Cowboys.
• But last week, as with m~ of the Lately ~earn In the NatioruiJ. Football the nickname of "Kardiac Kids,"
built a 1~int advantage before the
other weeks this season, was an or· League. Neither are the Maras.
Colts
stormed back for a pair of
They
have
been
there
from
the
very
deal, only more so. He made a visit
touchdowns
in the final 87 seconds.
beginning
and
their
roots
run
deep.
to his dentist, who is not partioularlv
The
Baltimore
comeback was aided
Wellington's
dad,
Timothy
J.
iitterested in sports.
by
a·poOr
punt
and
a fumble.
"How's your team doing?" asked Mara, bought the Giants' franchise
But
in
the
end,
it was Slpe's
t,be tooth-yanker, whose reading in 1925 for $2,500. Some put the figure
passing
and
a
pair
of
missed kicks
. ,)jablts apparently also never get at closer to $500. It was part of a
by
the
Colts'
steve
Mlke-Ml!yer
that
loosely~rganized, doddering circuit
:Jieyond the corset-ad page.
gave Cleveland its fifth consecutive
- "Not too good," replied Mara, known as the National Professional
victory and the lone spot atop its
'
fi'ootball
League.
.
we're one and eight,"
division,
pending the outcome of
keep
saying
I
should
"People
: "That's rough," cohunisserated
tonight's
game between secondspend
money
and
buy
a
cham:the dentist, "what's wrong?"
place
Houston
and the New England
pionship
like
George
Steinbrenner
of
:: "Well," replied 'the Giants' chief
Patriots.
the
Yankees,"
the
Giants'
executive
~ executive, who needed this kind of
"We can't seem to do things
:-guestioning about as much as he said. ''They don't realize we operate
easily,"
said Coach Sam Rutigliano
•·rieeded the toothache, "let's suppose WJder a different structure than
of
the
Browns,
now 7-3. "In the first
~·re the chief doctor of a big baseball. When we .pick up a free
half,
we
moved
the ball purposefully
!ho8pital and you had only interns to agent we must give up . com· and avoided mistakes.
In the secyn(J
·
~;the operating, what wollld hap- pensation."
half,
we
had
tOll
many
self•inflicted
Mara said people forget that the
i)en?"
wounds.''
''I'm lllfraid we'd lose a lot of Giants' rurrent administration Slpe did little to spoil his rating as
George
Young
General
Manager
patients," said the doctor.
the
AFC's No. 1 quarterback, comand
Coach
Ray
Perkins,
both
with
~ "1llat's just it, Doc," Mara said.
pleting
15 of 17 passes in the first half
excellent
credentials
is
less
than
"We lose a lot of games."
and
finishing
wtth 22 completions on
two
years
old.
' · ·Mara doesn't just get it in the den29
throws
for
212 yarda and touch"We
took
a
team
that
cowdll't
put
tiBt's office. He gelll it at the
downs
to
Dave
Logan and Greg
Meadowlands in New Jersey where us iii the Super Bowl and replaced
Pruitt.
, tiM! Giants lose most of their games. with'a young team, mosily with two
Afterward, Sipe said it had been
, He gets it when he tries to sneak out . and three years' experience," he
fairly
easy to pick apart the Colts'
, "Of .the stadium, Wl!loticed. And he · said.
basic
pass
coverage.
·
"I think the best team we ever had
gets It when the postman delivers
"If
they
were
an
ice
cream,
they'd
'thl! mail.
' - even better than the 1006 and 1963
be vanilla," he said. "They played
• ''Sure, it bothers me gneatiy," championship winners - were the
some
very conventional coverages.
1937-311
teams.
We
bad
17
second
Mara said. "But it l.sq't a situation
It
was
old-fashioned football."
on
thll
'37
team
and
won
year
players
that I can reverSe just like that, as
Slpe
noted that the defense was
the
division.
In
'38
we
won
the
NF'L
much as I would like to. I Cllll only
championship
only
to
have
the
team
wait, be patient and suffer.
"It's the same for the fans, and no .decimated by the War. I think we've
me could be more sympathetic than got to give these kids a chance."
I. After all, I consider myself the ·

~·

Insurance Package
For You

of first place in AFC standings

Sports World

'

tsburgh, which lost three in a row passes of 10, 6 and 25 yards for the
earlier this season, is now one game Eagles, the first time in his career
he's gotten three in one game.
back of Cleveland.
·
"This is something I've beel!.
The Patriots, meanwhile, lead
hoping
for for 10 years," said CarBuffalo by just one-half game in the
michael,
whose 65 career touchdown
AFC East. The Bills pulled out a 31·.
recepiions
leave him one short of the
24thriller overtheNew YorkJets.
Eagles
record
held by Tommy McIn other games, the Kansas City
Chiefs nipped the Seattle Seahawks _ Donald.
Tony Franklin added a pair of
31-30, the Minnesota Vikings trounced the Detroit Uons 34-0, the field goals and Mike Hogan scored
Chicago Bears beat the Washington the clinching touchdown with a 2Redsklns 3:&gt;-21 and the Green Bay yard run midway ihrough the final
Packers defeated the San Francisco period.
49ers 23-16.
6
Besides Jaworski, Sirruns and .---..;.:(C:::o::n~
tin~u~e"'d:.::o~n.:.P:::JaQ:e=)-~
Bartkow~. other quarterbacks to
pass .for more thaD 300 yards were
Doug Williams of Tampa Bay, Joe
Theismann of Washington, Jim Hart
of St. Louis, Archie Manning of New
Orleans and Dan Fouts of San Diego.
Eagles 34, Saints 21
Cannichael caught touchdown

Browns take
. over sole possession
.

Today's

'

,.~r

•

parently will be at least $400 million
about," Gilbnor said. "This is hunshort of expenditures in the fiscal .dreds of ml11ions of dollsrs,' •he said.
year ending June 30, 1981.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
"I think it might even be worse
D-Akron, and House Speaker Vernal
than that," he said.
G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, were
Earlier, Rhodes and the
unavailable for conunent late Thlll'Legislature initiated a series of
!lday. But it would appear unlikely
spending cuts and other money
that Ocasek, who will run for
saving actions to overcome a projecminority leader, would want to end
ted $266 ml11ion deficit. But since · his six years of majority leadership
then, unemployment has climbed
with a tax hike the GOP might try to
and welfare costs have risen,
hang around Democrats' necks in
Gilbnor said.
1982.
Gillmor plans to ineet with
Asked about what taxes might be
Democratic leaders to discwis the
raised: Glllmor said there were only
possibility of reaching a bipartisan
two possibilities - the income or
solution now instead of waitirig until sales tax. "None of the others
the new Legislature meets In
generates enough revenues to deal
January. Any further budge.t cuts
with this," he said.
will become deeper every da~ the
But he didn't mention the amounts
lawmakers wait, he said.
of what could he the state's first
Still, he doesn't know if the cuts · general tax hike since the income
could be sufficient "to make up for
tax became effective in January
the kind of · mone~ we are talking
1972.

OVER THE TQP - Green Bay Pakcers back Gerry Ellis goes over
the San Francisco 49ers line during action Sunday In Milwaukee. Ellis
gained 83 yards on 17 carries and scored a touchdown as the Packers won
23-16. (AP Laserphoto).

Today's commentary

Today is Monday, Nov. 10, the
Ten years ago, the Soviet Union
315th day of 1980. There are 51 days .released two U.S. generals, their
pilot and a Turkish officer whose
left in the year.
plane had strayed across the Soviet
Today's highlight in history:
border.
On Nov. 10, 1483, Martin Luther,
Five yea~ ago, Angola'became inhe leader of the Protestant Refor.' ;.'· mation, was born in Eisleben, Ger· dependent of Portugal in the midst
of civil war.
r.. many. .
, ... Onthisdate:
One year ago, the U.S. Justice
q, In 1775, the Continental Congress Department was ordered to deport
~ established the U.s . Marine Corps.
Iranian students in the U.S. illegally
as the American hostages ended
:~ In 1871, explorer Henry Stanley
:'; located missing Scottish missionary their ftrst week of captivity in Iran.
·:; David Uvingston in central Africa.
Today's birthday: Actor Richard
In 1928, Hirohito was enthroned as Burton is 55 years old.
( emperorofJapan.
Thought for today: The first
~
And in 1965, fanner President recipe lor happiness is to avoid too
~ Eisenhower suffered a heart attack, lengthy mediations on the past ~, from which he recovered.
Andre Maurois, French writer (18851967).
ill
r; ~------~--~--------------------~

~·

first person in the world to have a personal Zip

the Giants, who intercepted five
passes by Dallas quarterback Danny White. •
Simms hit rookie Mike Friede with
. a 26-yard pass on a flea-flicker play
to set up Joe Daiielo's 27-yard field
goal with 1:07 to play that provided
the margin of vi~ry over Dallas.
Elsewhere, the Atlanta Falcons
and Oakland Raiders took over Sfile
poSses8ion of first place in their
"'
respective divisions.
Steve Bartkow¥i completed 31 of
47 passes for 378 yards in leading the
Falcons to a 33-27 overtime triwnph
over the St. Louis Cardinals~ That
win, · coupled with the Miami
Dolphins' 3:&gt;-14 upset of the Los
Angeles Rams, gave the 7-3 Falcons
a one:-game lead over the Ram8 in
the NFC West.
The Oakland Riuders, led by
rejuvenated quarterback Jim
Plunkett, beat the Cincinnati
Qengals 28-17 for their fifth con·
secutive victory. ·oakland, 7-3,
pulled one game ahead of San Diego
in the AFC West when the Chargers
were upended by the Denver Broncos2().13.
The Cleveland Browns moved onehalf game ahead of Houston In the
AFC Central by edging the
Baltimore Colts 28-27, but the Oilers
will have a chance to draw even
tonight when they host the New
England Patriots In Monday Night
Football.
The Pittsburgh Steelers continued
their comeback by beating the Tam·
pa Bay Buccaneers 24-21. Pit·

==~88' : : . :~

salrl.

'·4

had more time to throw."
Baltimore, now 5-5, sacked Sipe
twice but for the most part gave him
plenty of time to connect on square·
out patterns·for 10 yards or less. His
only completion longer than 17 yards
was the 39-yard touchdown to Logan
in the first quarter.
TENNIS
The Browns' defense, meanwhile,
STOCKHOLM, SW~lden (AP) sacked
Baltimore quarterback Bert
Bjorn Borg and John McEnroe ad·
vanced to the finals of. the $175,000 Jones fiv.e ,times, including three on
Stockholm Open Tennis ChaJn. the Colts' first two possessions of the
pionships alter each posted straight game. It also tOok away Baltimore's
set victories in the semifinals. main offensive weapon, Jones
McEnroe ove..Powered fellow· ·passing to Roger Carr, by keepil\g
American Bob Lutz 6-3, 6-3, while double coverage on the speedy wide .
receiver.
Borg beat Gene Mayer~2, 7-5.
"I had two men on me practically
OLDSMAR, Fla. (AP) - Rosie
day," said Carr, who had two cat·
all
Casa1s registered a 7-5, 64 victory
ches
for 20 yards but was denied the
over Phyllis Blackwell in the first
deep
routes he and Jones favor.
round of a $125,000 toun\ament.
"We felt Carr was the receiver
In another makh, Gall O'Connor
' beat Kim Jones 6-1, 0-e, 6-3. other who could beat us,'' said Rutigliano.
Jones, who finished with 27 comwinners were Lele Forood, Susy
pletions
in 39 attempts for 289 yards
Jaeger, Laura Bemstein, Kathrln ·.
TDs, said the Browns used
and
three
Keil, Beth Nortoo and Qonna Ganz.
five
or
six
different coverages to
HONG KONG (AP) - Secondkeep
the
Colts
off balance.
seeded Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia
beat Brian Teacher S-7, 7~. 6-3 and
won the $70,000 Hong Kong Tennis
Classic. The victory, Lendl's sixth in
Grand Prix competition this year,
was worth '13,125. . •
Top-seeded Wendy Turnbull of
Australia captured the last five
games of the second set and overpowered Marcie Louie~. 6-2 to take
the women's title.
. F1LDERSTADT, Wlillt Gennany
( AP) - Top-seeded Tracy Austin
beat Sherry ACker ~2, 7-5 In the
finals . of the ,125,000 Gtand Prix
Stuttgart Tennis Tournament. lt'was
the third straight year she has woo
the event and It was worth $22,000
similar' tO'that employed by Chicago .
in a 27-21 Cleveland victory last
Monday night - with one major dif·
terence.
"It can work If you get pressure on
the passer," he said. "But today, I

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•

and a sports car.
In the doubles finals, Betty Stowe
of the Netherlands and Hanna Mandlikova of Czeehoslovalda defeated
Anne Smith and Kathy Jordan 7-5, 6-

••

NOTICE'

In observance of Veterans Day the folllowing insurance
offices will be closed on Tuesday, Nove"lber 11, 1980:

DownintChnds lnsurante ·Agency, Inc.
v. D. Edwards Insurance Agency
Mullen Insurance ·Agency, Inc.
P~ J. Pauley Insurance
Davis-Qiickel Insurance Agency

Dale t Wamer Insurance
Reuter-Btogran Insurance Semces, Inc.
Starcher InsUrance Company

Jenldns Insurance AaanCJ

Has your group heard
the latest on the
natural gas situation?
The facts can make an interesting program
- and also answer a lot of the questions you
and your group have concerning nat ural gas.
A Columbia Gas .representative will come to
meet with your club, organization or class,
and give you an in-depth report on just where
we stand in terms of the natural gas situa·
tion. You'll also get anawers to any questions
you have con~ming rates, service, company
plans-whatever's on your mind.
Just call your Columbia Gas office for more
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•
,,

�~111e Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov. 10, l!ltll

4---:'he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov.IO, 1980

·VAUGHAN'S ..·

Fete honors Southern grid squads
Reserve Squad - Jason Hill,
RACINE - 8aturday evening the your hands."
•
Biswa Ganguty, James Bush, Keith
1980 Southern ~ornado football
Coach Mlck WinebreMer gave .cook, Robbie Gibbs, Rlchard l-Y..,..
d
h red t 'ts
I awards to the varsity backfield.
DennJ~ Teaford, Greg Duvall,
squa was ono
a I annua
Trevor Cardone, Rusty F tagg.
football banquet.
WlnebreMer summarized the 1980
Reserve Cheerleaders - Anne
Alter a fine meal, cheerleading season saying, "Anyway you look at Adams Janie Amburger, Missy
advisor Sandra Cobb presented it, It Is disappointing. Not just our cummins. Tina Hilt, Kim
awards to the reserve and varsity
record, but the injuries we suffered. Tracy Riffle, co·captaln; Loro Warcaptain.cheerleaders cheerleading squads. The girls were
We·never had the chanee to PIaY up den,
varsity
Be¥
praised for their continuowr hard toourpotential."
crouch Mel Cundiff, Amber war·
k and
t ff rt in
Coach Winebrenner ·went on to ner D~lal Johnson, Denise Riffle,
rtin
wor
grea e o
suppo g
co-~aptaln; and sonja Hill, captain.
the team. Sonja Hill and Della John- praise his team for its deter·
Manager _ Lee 0111 . .
son received Senior awards.
mlnatlon, dedication, and hwrtle, ad·
Head statistician - Kent Wolfe;
Assistant Coach Bill Hensler then ding that "despite their record, they Assistants, Scott Frederick, Jay
Rees,
introduced the reserve team an d are still winners."
Brown..rom Roseberry,. and· Robert
presented its members with awards.
Both coaches thanked the Athletic
VIdeo Crew - Steve·Sooder, Trfl.l'
bensler said the effort put forth by Boosters, parents, schoolboard, and
Dudding, Tim Evans.
this I!I:OllP of y~sters gives tbe adminlstraon for their cooperation
GOLF
future football program something and efforts in supporting the football
HANAYASHIKI, Japan (AP)
to look forward to.
program.
Tatsuko Ohsako, Japan's leadiDI
.
money
winning woman golfer, ~
flead Coach Howie . Caldwell
1
presented the linemen with their
~;:'C::,~d~~:;~~ted ~~~~kd~1~pson, • tured the $175~000 Mazda J&amp;l*l
awards. Coach Caldwell praised ef· Flint Greer, Steve Circle, Robin For· Classic , beating runnerup PI&amp;
forts of the Athletic boosters, paren· tune, Ton~ Adkins, Jeff · Sopher, Bradley by three strokeir.
ts, and members of tbe schoolboard Terry McNICktes, Scott Nease, Dan·
Ohsako carded a final-round oaeny T~lbott, Dale Teaford, Dave
.
•
for their hard work and support.
Collins, Harry Lyons, Doug Duvall.
under-par 73 for a 54-hole total of 2lJ,
Coach Caldwell said his club's 2~
varsity Linemen Tyrone nine under par. The victory was Will'
. recordwasn'tuptohisexpectations,
Brinegar, Joe Bob Hemsley, th$26250
,
Oewayne Dill, C. T . Chapman, Steve
• •
.
but in many ways was "successful ·
Circle, Doug Duvall, Harry Lyons,
Defending champion Amy AICGU
He noted the continual improvement Jeff Sopher, Mark Simpson, Mike finished in a fourth-place tie at Z11
as the season progressed, and the Coll ins, Flint Greer, Scott Nease.
with Sandra Palnier and &amp;rib
-~'b'ted
·
Varsity Backs - Danny Talbott,
.
·
.
,
1
good pl;ly ""'"
against some Terry McNickles, Date Teaford, Qaniel, two shots behind Japan I
premier opposition.
Robin Fortune, Tony Adkins, Tetry ChakoHiguchi.
The first year coach also told of Patterson, Jon~ 1 Porter, Zane
KAW•T\!Tl:!HJ Japan (AP) -' I
h0 rod his bl 1 10 Beegle, and Lee 0111, Mgr.
·~'"""(
•
!Ill~ Payer w
e
eye e
Special Awards- Most valuable . Jerry Pate ralll~ for a COUI'II
.miles to practice. "That's Player, Danny Talbott; Honorar~ record seven-under-par 65 and dedication," he stated, "The Captain, Terry McNickles; Coache~ the individual title and the first pn.
dedication these kids. put into the
Award IMos) Improved), Scott
f ..,. 570 . th lOth US .J
Nease.
0 ...-,
U1
e
• , BJIIII
game." Then addressing the young
professional golf competition.
players, he said, "The future. Is in ....-----..,...;----==~==========

S UTE TO
ETERA S

Middlepor'., Ohio

Mil''""'

•
SENIOR AWARDS - Thirteen Southern Tornado
seniors were honored Saturday night at the 1980 foot·
~II banquet. Receiving senior awards were (1-r),
'Mark Simpson, Flint Greer, Steve Circle, Robin For-

tune, Tony Adkins, and Jeff Sopher. Standing - Terry
McNickles, Scott Nease, Da1;ny Talbott, Dale Teaford,
Mike Collins,
Harry Lyons, and Doug Duvall.
.

.

Pomeroy

lHIS WEEK'S NELSON'S

A Pomeroy resident was among
3211 runners from six states who par·
ticipated in the second annual October FAST road run held at Parker·
sburg (W. Va.) Conununity College
Oct. 26.
Ronald W. Hanning of 45183 Baum
Addition Road, Pomeroy, was tbe
53rd finisher in his age division and
200th overall. His time was 33:45.
A total of 395 runners registered
for the race which features a hilly
course surrounding the college campus. Glen Barthelomew of Athens,
&lt;lllo, was the overall top finisher
with a time of 20:21 on the 4.2-rnile

•

SUPERIOR TAVERN
WHOLE

QUANTITY
IIEIEIIVED

RIGHT~

H

.

U.I .O.A CHOICE.

·aoiELESS
RUMP ROAST .....

DllUG~RE

u..

::=~~R

SANDWICH STEAKS ..

RED

CARROTS
YELLOW

3-.. !:•.b:.~~~~..~1 00oolI

CORN ............. 5
TEND~R

EARS

CREAM STYLE OR
WHOLE KERNAL

_ .

CORN

RED EMPEROR

GRAPES ............. :.~·.....79•

FOR AUSTIN'S WINDSHIELD
WASHER FLUID, 1 Gal.

TANGERINES 12 FOU1'·

IS 89~

t.

STEAK y
Lb.

CUBE STEAK

__

LB -

$249

MIX OR MATCH.

OR SLICED 16 OZ.
PEACHES 2FOR 99$
HALVES

PEAR
HALVES

16 oz.

DEL MONTE

TO
46-oz.
Can

2 FOR 99$

I
ASSORTED FLAVORS

7-oz.

46-oz. Can

Box

,---GENERIC BUDGET BUYS----.
YELLOW, WHITE DR DEVILS FOOD

THIS WEEK FROM BURGER CHEF

MVE2ff/o

·

•

'

Enjoy delicious meals from Burger Chef at terrific savings all week.
Take advantage of these coupons and save .

WHITE

BATH.OOM TISSUE 4
CAT LITTER ....................25

BurnR

Peck

77c

u..

$J79

Rou

Beg

ALL GRINDS

\

CAKE MIX ..................................18P~~o··59c
ELiO MACAROII .........2 P~u- 99c
SPAGHETTI......................... 2

1-Lb.

. Can

F.ACIAl TISSUE

CREAMY OR CRUNCHY

79

'

..

SIRLOII-·

KRAFT

HI-C FRUIT

Moeller meets
Golden Bears

·

U.S.D.A.
CHOICE

GROCERY VALUES

Winner is li sted f ir st, then loser,
age, weight a nd Club are listed .
Scott Ne igler, ·9, 68, Meigs ; MaM
Jones, 9, 57, Coshoc1on .
Troy Ga tta rde, 10, 70, Coshocton ;

season.''

16 OZ.
3FOR •1oo
16 oz. 3

BEETS 16 oz. 3FOR '1
CARROTS 3FOR'1 00

·Meigs. takes six .hoxing matches

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cincinnati Moeller 's curren t
powerhouse is simil~r t o its 1978
production- with one big exception.
. The Crusaders are in the Ohio high
school football semifinals this time.
Moeller did npt qualify for the
Class AAA playoffs two years ago,
Their only Joss in their last 69
games, a 13-12 defeat to Cincinnati
Princ~ton , kept the Crusaders from
1978 post-season play.
·
But this year Moeller nipped Princeton i 4-13 in the regular s~ason and
then ·poundea the Vikings 28-3 in the
first round of the expanded Division
I playoffs last week.
Moeller will pit its 31-game &lt;Winning spell against 9-1·1 Upper
Arlington in the Division I
semilinals Friday night in Dayton's
·Welcome Stadium.
" We're younger than last year,"
·Moeller Coach Gerry Faust said
Sunday. " We're starting 12 underclassmen, the same as 1978. We
went 9-1 that year and then just
wiped everybody out the next

$. 99

LB.

~~&amp;EtAjti~ ~~~

•

I

1

T
GREEN BEANSFOR FRUI .
__ 16 oz. . I
00
EARLY
- . '1 COCKTAIL 2 FOR 99 4
PEAS 16 OZ. 3FOR•1

FRENCH or CUT

SWEET JUICY 150 .StZE .

honorary captain; Danny Talbott, MVP; IIIII Scott
Nease, coach's award. Back row - ~ Mick
Winebrenner and assistant Bill Hensler. Ooach Howie
Caldwell was not available for the picture.

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs Jackie Jarr t&gt;tl, 9, 73, Ripley .
Tim Faulk., 18, 170, Meigs ; Mark
Dan M cKee, 11, BO, Gtouster ; Jess
County Jaycees sponsored another
Misja , 18, 172, Athens.
12, 78, Park ersburg .
Charles Whitt i ngton, 17, 141 ,
successful boxin g t ournament Gibson,
Br ia n Wi ll is, 13, 80, Meigs; John
Me igs; Tony Jarrett, 16, 129. Ripley .
before a large crowd at Meigs High Gibson , 13, 85 , Parker sbu r g.
Roger Cotterill, 22, 159, Meigs ;
Ricky Hatcher, 12. 86. Ripl ey; John Becl&lt;with, 20, 152, Athens.
School Saturday night.
Jimmy
Hodson,
12,
86,
Parkersbu
r
g.
Dan Clarkson , 16, 173, Ripley ;
Ironically, Meigs Cnunty boxers
Scott Lohse, 12, 89, Glouster ; Tim · Tom Ha yes, 25, 170, Parkersburg .
made a clean sweep of the evening in King , 11 , 88, Rip ley.
Dan Riley , 19, 192, Athens ; Mark
James Acree, 14, 119, M eigs; Tom
a series of hi ghly competitive bouts.
Poling, 23, 168, Athens.
. 14, 118, Coshocton
Brian Ni tz, 14, 103, Meigs; Kenny
Claiming victories for the Meigs Oyer
Ray Smith, 15, 139, Ripley ; Ja rrett, 13, 123, Riple y.
BoX:ng club were Scott Neigler, Clayton Stone, 17, 133, Coshoc t on.
Trampus Hill, 12, 59, ParkerGlen Jarrett, 12, 100, Ripley ; Jay sburg ; Mike Mil ler, 10, B2, _CoshocBrian Willis, James Acree, Tim
ton.
Faulk, Charles Whittington, Roger Jay Johnson, 10, 94, Coshoc ton .
Cotterill, and Brian Nitz.
Overall there were 16 bouts
represented by six bolting clubs, in·
eluding Meigs, Athens, Glouster,
Coshoct~m. Ripley,' W. Va., and
Parkers'burg, W. Va . The com- ,
petition was of excellent quality and
provided the area fans with a full
evening of entertainment.
Following is a list of winners :

Pkg.

MONARCH CAN SALE

'1 .

BROCCOLI ...... ~.~~~~.. 79'
PRI~E

LB.

ROU ND STEAK
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
GROCIRY VALUIS

couree.

SPECIAL AWARDS
Three young men on
Southern's football squad received special awards for
leadership and outstanding play exhibited during the
season. Pictured are (front l·r), Terry McNickle,

--

1,., .

POTATOES ... .1.0.'~: ....... ~.1"

lHROUGH SUNDAY
NOVEMBER 16

THE CORRECT SALE

. . . . . !~.~~:. 99~

SUPER
$119
12 oz .
· BACON ............... .-.. .

STORE SLICED
99~ LONGHORN
CHEESE ... ~.:~.......
BOLOGNA ...... ~~:..
st•
.,C'f/11 SNOW KINO
. ~~ "
CHIP STEAKS ................ '~i.:~ s1"

FARM FRESH
FRUITS
AND
VEGETABLES

CRISPY

69
.,
5

$219

TOP .
LB $249
ROUND STEAl( ........ :.. .

NORTH

SALE PRICES ARE GOOD ·

326 runners

f•IINDUIST SlltVICI IN TOWN
IIGGIST IAIJOAINS IN TOWN

USDA CHOICE

IMPORTANT NOTICE
•

resident among

SUPER MARKErS

18-oz.
Jar

175-ct. PRIN.TS
200-ct. WHITE OR ASSORTED

64-oz.
Bottle
Box

26' OFF LABEL

9
C
TOWELs,•••••••.•••••••
·
6
9
C
BLEACH·.: •• •••• .......
Jumbo

' MARDl GRAS

DAIRY VALUES - -

COITERJU; VICTORIOUS - Roger Cotterill defeated Johil Beckwith in on_e. of ~he fights sponsored by the Meigs County Jaycees Saturday
nrght. Me1gs fighters won six bouts.

., ••

Plastic Gallon

CARDINAL

2% MILK

~?,

CLOROX ,
.

&amp;4-oz. Jug

.

IANQUIT

TROPICANA·
84-oz.
,. Ctn. ·
GARVIN'S ·

....

24

conAGI CHBSI ..............,.......... c:.·

·PHILIP ROBERTS

. MEIGS CO. ENGINEER

.

FR.
..OZEN FOOD VALUES

r--------------,---....,..--_____,

THANKS FOR .YOUR
.
COMPLIMENTARY \fOTE

.

Roll ,

BLUE BONNET
1-Lb.
Pkg.

. , at

•

·

:FRIED CHICkEil ~ $229
•

1

lllf, CHICKEN Ofl TU~KIY

I

·IAIOUn NT PIES ............... 3 ..it":~ 89c

EGUI,A
OR DIET

MT. DEW,
REGULAR OR
DIET PEPSI
16 OZ. '
IIOTTLES

8 •·129
.

�&amp;- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mooday, Nov. 10, 111110

Chester scouts combine jo,- party

Georgia tn/!.Y become nation top team
By Auoclated Pnu
All Gecqla wanted was a first
down.~. the Bulldop
latch onto f.irst place in the national
college football ratings.
While seeond-ranked Georgia wu
pulling a rabbit out of Ita hat in the
form of a record 93-yard Buck Belueto-Lindsay· Scott touchdown pllll
play with 63 se&lt;.'Oilds left to overtake
No.:KI Florida 5-21, lo!H'ated Notre
Dame ran out of miracles and
needed Harry Oliver's 47-yard field
goal with 4:44 remaining to salvage
a ~ tie with a Georgia Tech team
which Is suffering through its worst
season (1'7-lJ since 1934.
That left Georgia (N-0) 88 the
nation's only ilnbeaten-untled major .
team, although Notre Dame and
Southern California are undefeated
but once-tied. The' Bulldogs' exciting
triumph, which Included 238 rushing
yards by freslunan sensation Herschel Walker - 72 for a touchdown
on the game's fourth play - for a
single-season school record 1,334
yards with two games to go, also
. gave them at least a tie for the
Squtheastern Conference crown.
Besides Notre Dame and Florida,
the only other member of The
Associated Press Top Twenty to
stumble was eighth-ranked UCLA,
which l!ll!t 20-14 to Oregon.
Meanwhile, with the bowl bids

may

I GOT IT- Larry Heater of the New York Giants holds the ball for
referees Sundl!y after his touchdown in the second q~r from one yard
out. The Giants upset the favored Dallas Cowboys 38-35. (AP Laserphoto).

nUt

Saturday, . thirdranked f'lorida Stole whipped
VIrginia Tech 31-7, No,4 Southern
Cal trounced StanfOrd ~. ~
rated Nebraska buried KAnau State
5$-4, No.6 Alabama trimmed
Louialana state 21-7, seventb&gt;ranked
Ohio State~ Dlinois ~­
Dave Willon of the IOBerS ]lllll8ed for
six touchdowns and an NCM record
621 yards - No.9 Pitt downed
Louisville 41-23 and No.lO Penn State
turned back North Carolina State 2113.
Ill tbe Second Ten, No.ll
Oklabonla nipped Kansas 21-19,
No.l2 Michigan blanked Wisconsin
U4, No.13 Brigham Young defeated
North Teua State 41·23, No.l4 North
Carolina shaded Clemson 24-19,
No.15 South Carolina beat The
Citadel 43-24, No.l6 Baylor. routed
Arkansas 42-15, No.l7 Purdue
mauled Iowa 58-13, No.18 Southern
MethodiBt whipped. Rice J4..14 and
No.l9 Milslssippl State was idle.
Florida, . behind the 286-yard
passing of freshman· Wayne Peace,
had erased a 00.10 deficit in the fourth period, taking a 21-:KI lead on
Brian Clark's 40-yard field goal with
6:52 .left. 1bings looked even
brighter for the Gaton wherj Mark
Dickert punted out of bounds at the
Georgia 6-yard line with 1:35 to play.
"We were doWI!," Coach Vince
corning up

,
.
Dooley understated. " I don't think
there wu any question Florida had
the game. But no matter how bad it
gets, you've ~to hold on and never
give up."
On ~11, trying to get cl011e
enough to give sure-footed ReJ:
Robinson a shot at a game-winning
field goal, Belue fired a pus over
the huddle to Scott at the Georgia
26 ... "actually a first-down play,"

Dooley said.
"I turned around-and saw 1111 open
field," said Scott, who ancbon

Georgia's 440-yard relay team and
didn't have to be told to start piclrlng
tbem up and laying .them down as
several Florida defenders chaied'
him futilely to the end zone on the .
longest scrimmage play . In
Georgia's history: "I knew it was
about the only chance we had, so I
just gave it all I had. It's just a great
feeling. We're going for No.1."
Georgia has won· five of ·its nine
games this season by a touchdown or
less. "I think this may be the first
time we've been ·at the end and had
to have something big happen tO
win," Dooley said. "We've beld on
with leads, but I don't think we've
been in a position to have to come ·
back at the end. I guess when you
are winning, you need those ldnds of
j!ood things to happen to keep winning."

Eagles want

Mrs. Helen Simpson, Racine, was
inatalled 88 president of Church
Women United of Meigs County in
ceremonies preceding the World
Community Day program at tbe
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Other officers inatalled were Mrs.
Florence Richards, Middleport, vice
president; MrS. Mary Frances
Baumgardner, Pomeroy, secretary;
and Mlsa Enna Smith, Pomeroy,

lreasurer.

INTEREST PLAN

If. Y. Jets

Cleveland
H..-.

AND

WRITE

Piltlbw'llh

Cinctnnali

West

Oakland
San Diego

229
157
262
142

I I 0 .600
5 5 0 .SOil
Seat)!•
4 I 0 .400
NaUoaal Collfereoce
Eaot
Phlladelphio
9 I 0 .100
O.llu
7 3 0 .700
StLouis
3 1 0 .300
3 7 0 .300
2 I .0 .310

:.~

Mrs. Emerson Jones reviewed
.James Herriot's best seiler,
'"Yorkshire" at a recent meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club. The
book was described as a guided tour
of northern England through quaint
villages, the wild moors, the ancient
·castles, and die seacoast towns. She
said that Herriot used his usual
descriptive language to point up the
:beauty of the countryside as well 88
to paint portraits of characten be
met while on his rounds as a

'IJJ7
114
!II
18'1

2111 135
1911 195

158 299

I 6 0 .400 169 112

w...

••

1 3 0 .700 214 IBP

• • 0 .600 m 211
Son Francilco
3 7 0 .300 213 1193
NewOrieanll
o10 o .000 188 310
Saday'IGaDlel
NewYortGlonto38, O.llu35

'

P.S. BANK ONE even has a way for business
. customers to earn interest on their excess balances.

PltiiiJonh~TompaBayll

.'

O!ICOi&lt;Jlli, .. ultlnololl%1

GIMI111y23, San Il'ronclaco 16
Alllnii!II,SI. Lou1123, ol .
. C.V.Iond •• Bolt1more l'l
M,lletroitO'
Bullllol!., N.., York JetaM
~-.anctnnaUI7

ltalwuCIIY 11, SeoWe 30

Miami•, too Anaelea14

' Mary L.

l'llllldelphia M,llew Or1...,21
Todo7'1 Game

NewEflllandat Houlton, ip.m.

Nat.....,.'•Gema

Clevtlondot~h.lp.in.

91. Lolli o1llollu, l p.m.
H-.o1Cbtoqo,4p.m.
Kanlu City at S.n Dlttro, 4p.m.
NtwYort JltllltDenver;4 p.m.
lllot Francllco ol Mbomi, 4p.m.

..

Nat . . .y'•GII~
Oaklandal&amp;!atue,'t p.m.

II·

· BAN·K ONE. --

suest apeakenat the ~meeting

of the Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Bruch of the American Association
of Unlypty Women held at the

MelpiM.
'ftle ..,.Uen Uied u the topic of
Cbllr c:Gimneuta, ".The Changes
P'ac:ed by the Aging", and talked on
their wwll at the Center. They invited the Branch mernben to meet

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
PomiiUJ • R•nd .!' Tuppers.PIIIna

'•

'

' .

Jl

ad-

cllrectGr ·of aoclal lllli'Vicee, were

at

T&amp;q~~ 81)'11 MJnnesuta, 2p.!TL

Montgomery,

;minlatrlltor of the Pomeroy Healtb
Care Center, and Yvonne Maule,

~ maka.checklng better

·

G...,=atNewYortGiBnta, I p.m.
Lol
aatNewEngJ.and, tp.m.
New Or
at AUanta, I p.m.
AllladelJI~ at Washington, 1p.m.

.,

Earl
hoppers

30%:.0ff!
B~Baod . Pqrtable Radio·
Plllrolmlln"' ca.eo by Realistic
.

4-Cell Lantern
"Reg .
$1 .98 Value!

Offer Good al Partic ipa ting Radio Shack Stores and Dealers

•

~-------------------------------AM/FM Clock Radio with
Extra-Large LED Dispray
Chronomallc'"-213
by Realistic

.Save $ 30

69~

5
Wake to buzzer or radio! Extra -large
LED c lock disp lay can be read from
anywhere in room . Clock fealures
sn ooze control and sleep switch . Rad io
has 31&gt;" speaker. AFC on FM. earp hone
1ack. Hurry lor $10.0 7 sav ings ' 12·1250

ss1s

Hear the excitement of police and fire calls, aircraft, weather slations,
CBers. plus AM and FM! Squelch control eliminates noise between
messages. All-band fine-luning for easy station selection. 4" speaker.
telescoping antennas plus jack for external FMIVHF antenna ,
headphone jack. Bands: UHF. VHF-Hi/Air/Weather. VHF-lo, CB , FM.
AM . AC/batlery operation Batteries extra. 12-111

Hand-Held Electronic
Football
Fun!
By Tandy

12-1250

I~

I

.

with them and work for the benefit of
the residents at the Center.
"Families Facing Change" Is the
1-.at theme for the year and the
IJl'Oill'8lll on aging was the first in a
series of topics to be presented.
Tbe Nov. 25 meeting will also be
held at the Meigs Inn, 7:30p.m. with
Helen Smith as topic chalnnan. A.
llilent auction wl be beld for the
educational fund.
·
Hlllltuaes were Mrs. Fay Sauer,
MLsa Rosalie Story, Mrs. Kathryn
Knight, and Mn. Lee Lee.

Mobile CB with Channel9
"Priority" Switch TRC-427 by Reanauce

Save 24°/o Save
88

•soes

22 ~~~5 $89

AAUW hears Montgomery, Massie

already

~-.Slot Dill• 13

..-ollletroit 1 p.m.
Ba!lolootanctnnaU, I p.m.

veterinarian.
Members discussed favorite
animals for roll call. Mrs. James
Euler and Mrs. Herman Mourning
were guests. Mrs. Ben PhilBon
opened the meeting with the club
collect. A social hour followed the
meeting.
Mrs. Philson announced that the
next meeting will be Nov. 19 at the
home of Mrs. Emenon Jones with
Mrs. ·Dwight Wallace to give the
fi!View.

EAST LETART - Mrs. Elleen attended by several members. It
Roush conducted a pledge service at W88 noted that comforters are still
the recent meeting ol the East for sale. The annual Christmas J&gt;BrLetart United Methodist Church ty was dl.scussed.
The birthday of Mrs Bertha RobinWomen at the church.
son
on Nov. 11 W8l! noted. Mrs. Ada
Taking part in the service were
Rowe
~ refresbments 8nd the
Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner, Mrs.
meeting
cloaed . witb a responalve
Hazel Fox, and Mrs. Doris Adams.
reading
and
group singing of "For
The program was on mlasions wltb
the
Beauty
of
the Earth."
.
membera turning in their thank ofOthen a~ were Mrs. Julia
fering boxes. There was group
Norr!B, Mrs. Elleen Back, Mrs. Lucy
· , singing of "We Thank Thee, Lord.''
. A report was given on the recent Donahue who presided, Mrs. June
: diBti1ct meetings beld In Athens and Wickersham, and Mlsa Kathryn
Philson.

If your balance falls ~ow $1,000, you'll Ray a $5.00
charge for that month, but you'll still earn daily interest .
on every dollar you have in the plan. If you subtract
the interest from this monthly fee, you'll still have one
of the most inexpensive checking accounts available.

IIIII 220
158 201

~ 5 0 .500 111 180
4 5 I .450 116 :101
I 5 I .450 171 200

Allant.o

1elh

· UMW hears pledge service

285 201
200 120
195 229

Ceatral
8 4 0 .800 :UO 1•

Loo Ana&lt;les

martha L. Beegle taking part; "The r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Power of the Spirit in Our Lives"
with a panel of Mrs. Baumgardner,
Mrs. Simpson, Mrs. Rachael
Downie, and Mrs. Elva Cotterill;
and "The Power of the Spirit ·in
Church Women United" by Mrs.
Wallace, with a response from the
congregation.
Participating in stations or areas
of concern in the "People's Platform
for a Global Society" were Mrs.
Richards, hunger; Miss Smith,
health; ·Mrs. Texanna Well, envirorunent; Mrs. Clara Criswell,
education; Mrs. Caryl Cook, justice;
Mrs. Doris Grueser, family; Mrs.
Edith Spencer, housing; Mrs. Edith
Sisson, e!Jiployment; Mrs. Glenna
Rwmnel, human rights; and Mrs.
Beuna Grueser, peace.
The services concluded with a
dedication to action toward building
a ~ collununity witb jllltice and .

:Literary reviews 'Yorkshire '

1 3 0 .100 2511 %19

Dmver

During World War I, German zeppelins staged the first air raids on
England in 1915.

.'

Earn daily interest on all your money in the bankand still write checks.* Keep a minimum balance of
$1 ,000 and you pay.no monthly fees or charges.**

P(l PF PA
.'n 82$41S3
.700 224 175
.5011 221 211
.5011 158 191
.100 176 243

.700
.1167
.100
.300

.

service

Eut

Baltimore
Miami

'

Readings Included "The First
Thanksgiving" by Mrs. Fetty; a
"Thanksgiving Prayer" by Mrs.
Ann Mash; "GatherNutsinFall" by
Mrs. Ruby Frick; ·"How the Deer
Came Back" by Mrs. Doris Shook;

Racine, seated, president; and standing, left to right,
·Miss Erma Smith, treasurer; Mrs. Mary Frances
Baumgardner, secretary; and Mrs. Florence Richards, treasurer.

· Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, retiring
president of six years, extended the
welcome to the nearly 70 women
from 18 churcbes attending the ol&gt;servai\ce. Prognuilleader was Mrs.
Dwight Wallace and the theme was
"Tbe Spirit of the Lord Gives
Power."
Mrs. Wallace er:plalned that
World Community Day was first observed in 1M3 in the midst of a world
war and that in 19M a plqe to work ' peat!e.
•.
and J11'11yer for the establlslunent cl
Mrs: Judy Crooke, Mrs. Guy Hara juatanddurablepeacewusigiled. per, Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield, aud
She noted that in 1976 the service in- Mrs. James Buchanan were the
eluded a commwJity presentation of ushers and receiving the offering
•'The People's Platform for a Global which will go toward special projecSoclety."
ts at home and abroad. Mrs •. Kate
"We continue to work each day Bachnerwasorganistfortheservice
and to pray for peace and justice on which closed with a vocal solo ·by
World Community Day · which, Mrs. Bob Robinson, "Go Tell It On
throughout its history, has em- the Mountain," who accompanied
phasir.ed ~·corporate action for herself on the guitar. The
congregation joined in the chorus.
justice and peace," she said.
Tbe offering for the
was
There was group singing of
"Breathe on Me, Breath of God" and $76.82, and certificates in the
a unison prayer. The litany was amount of f90 were sold with the
divided into ''The Power of the Spirit proceeds to go to the National CWU
in History" with Mrs. Margaret Ed- Headquarters to be used for relief in
wards, Mrs. -Hazel Hilt and Mrs; disaster areas.

THE

Amerlcu~

New England

in unison.

CWU installs president--Simpson ·

NFL standings
BuJfa!o

Group p/arzs holiday potluck

INSTAlLED- New officers of the Church Women
United of Meigs County inatalled at Friday's World
Community Day service were Mrs. Helen Simpson,

· (Continued from Page 3)
Giant. 38, Cowboys 35 •
"We got ambushed," said Dallas'
Tony Dorsett, who ran for 183 yanll!
and two touchdowns. "Emotionally,
we were not as high as we would
have been against a team with a better record."
The game was a wild one that
came down to a flea-flicker play
straight out of sandlot ball. Simms
handed off to rookie running back
Leon Perry, then took a return pitch
before firing a 21&gt;-yard completion to
Friede to set up Danelo's gamewinning field goal.
Falcons 33, CardlDals 27
Reserve running back Ray Strong
burst through the line for a 21-yard
touchdown at 4: 42 of overtime to
give Atlanta the victory.
"I shot through the hole and I got
two great blocks," said Strong, who
has scored three touchdoWns in his
three-year career - two of them
against St. Louis. "R.C. Thielemann
and William Andrews opened it up.
They drove their men almost to the
sideline . .There was no way I was
going to be stopped."
Do1pblDa 35, Rams U
Unheralded rookie David
Woodley, an eighth-round draft
choice, passed for three touchdowns
and scrambled for two more as
Miami surprised Los Angeles.
"When your receivers are
covered, you have three choices - to
be sacked, to throw the ball away or
scramble. I like the last one best,"
said Woodley.
Ralden 28, Beugals 17
Plunkett ran 4 yards for the c~
ching touchdown midway through
the fourth quarter ·as Oakland won
its fifth in a row.
"It's been 2\2-years since we were
in first place. That's a long time. But
we really haven't done anything yet.
Now that we're in first, it's what we
do with it that counts," said guard
Gene Upshaw, the senior member of
the Raiders.

W L T
720
2 3 0
; 5 0
5 5 0
2 8 0
Centnl
7 3 0
6 3 0
6 I 0
3 7 0

and David King, Chris LaDeaux,:
Melinda Mankin, Jodi Schaelrel,
Janet Werry, Kim and Becky Md~
tyre, Ray, Cheryl, Sherry and pel
Laudennilt, Jeff and Andy Hawk,
Amy Metzger, Virginia, Jenny, Todd
and Tony Lee, Amy Murphy, Tracy'
Murphy and Sina.
,
Lila, V. J . and Alvena Van Meter,
Beth Arbaugh, Angie Murphy, ·
Roberta and Mlcbelle Murphy,
Sheila Donna, Gary and Alban Cure
tis, Bob and Mony Wood, Suzann~
Clay, David Cas!Q, Brian Beeler,
Tom and Danielle Kibble, 'tlmmY:
Clark,
Cassie Sheets, Patty, Tllm'
The annual holiday potiuck was "A Veteran's Prayer" by Mrs. Bermy,
Michelle
Capehart, Tim Tom
planned for Dec. 4 at:the home of · tha Parker; and "Pace of Life is Too
Michaels,
Missy
Marcinko, Tina
Mrs. Marge Fetty when the Laurel Fast" by Mrs. Jean Wright.
McGrath,
Tracy
Clark,
Mary Ed'
Cliff Better Health Club met Thur'
Officers' reports were given.
wards,
Kristan
Heines,
Lisa
Pooler;
sday night at the Fetty liome.
Games were played with prizes
In lieu of a gift etchange, the going to Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Shook, Jim, Lynette, Jason, Joe and Jeff
group voted to make ·donations of Mrs. Mildred Jacobs, Mrs. Gilmore, Saunders, Jo and Willie Hill, Bill,
money to a Meigs County crippled Mrs. Mash. Mrs. Bertha Parker won Jean, Mike and Eris Sirn, Dave
child for Christmas. The potluck lj'ill the door prize. Refreshments were Wolf, Susan Wolfe, Shirley l!"d Kinr
be held at 6 p.m.
served by Mrs. Fetty, Mrs. Iva berly Cogar, Phyllis Turner, Cathy
and Bob Workman.
·
During the meeting the 89th bir- Powell and Robin Campbell.
thday of Mrs. Della Curtis was ob- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - . . . . . : . - - : : - served. Mrs. Donna Dilmore gave
devotions from the Upjler Room and
the members had the Lord's Prayer
The Chester ·area girl scouts, evening.
cadettes, Brownies, webelos, and
Among those attending were Bob
cub scouts held a combined and Susan Bauer, Shirley Gibbs,
halloween p!!l'ty .at 9mnP Kiashuta Gina .and Rhonda, Becky and
recently.
Mickey Bauer, Frarik, Joyce, Jay
The ~uts came in costume, and Jill Reynolds, Angie Chapman,
games were played, there was a ·Sarah and Brian Bailey, Sharon,
haunted house provided by the Janelle,' Tim NeuWing, Danielle
cadettes, and the Order of the Arrow Scott, Auston, Shannon and Brett
Indian dancers performed. Refresh- Newsome, Frank, JoAnn, Terry and
ments were served during the Rod Newsome, Harry, Sherri, Carol

Notre Dame managed only 252
yards in total offense · against
Georgia Tech and ~ ' lie ball
ovet five times. "I don't like ties, but
I'll aceept this one for. sure," said
Bill CUrry, Tech's rookie coach. .
Notre Dame's i)u Devine said be
dldn't ·think the IrlM ftre looking
ahead to · nat week's ballyhooed
claab with Alabama.
"We can't uae tbat as an eacuse,"
be said. "Being No.I is llile the
schedule and the weather - you've
got to Uve with It and play with it.
Georgia Tech didn't give any more
of an effort than our kids did. Tbe big
difference was ~ we were ex·
peeled tll win and they weren't.
We've played hard all year and we'll ·
play hard next weet.
"We fumbled more Urnes than we
have in a while (the lrisb lost three
of four fumbles). We've averaged
only abolrt one a game the last four
or five games. Our inability to make
a first down several timeS on thirdand-llbort also hurt u.s. ..
Rick stockstlll palled of 50 and 11
yards for toucbdowqs to Hardls
Johnson in the final .tour minutes of
the flnt half as Florida State erased
a . 7~ VIrginia Tech lead and gave
Coach Bobby Bowden a 5lat birthday Present.
.
.

You calllhe plays on offense
-run, pass. kick I The computer plays defense against
you! College/ pro skill levels.
LED "players." score/ status
display, action sound . For 1
or 2 players . Battery extra .
10·2111

Reg.
139.95

CHARGE IT
!MOST S TORES;

Save 36% now. and save
someone you care about a lot
of time and trouble this
winter. Priority switch lets you
go direclly to Emergency
Channel g when cal ling for
directions or help. With mtg.
hardware. 2f.1534

Check Your Phone Book for the ladle lhaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
A DIV ISION OF 1 ~ N O\

C O ~ PO RA fiON

h 1LCES MAY VARY

AT

1ND1VIDUA~

STORES

�--- -------·--_$-_!be Dally Sentinel, Middl~rt-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov. 10,1960

Cancer volunteers to
gather in Columbus

PTO plans fall festival for
coming Saturday night

Kim Taylor

junior Miss finals
.
planned for Sunday
Southeast Ohio JWlior Miss, Inc.
today announced Miss Kim Taylor,
Meigs County Junior Miss, 1978, will
be mistress of ceremonies for 1961
Meigs County and Vinton County
Jwrior Miss program.
Miss Taylor is currently attending
Rio Grande College and is majoring
in commwrications and ·will be certified in Secondary Education. She is
a part-time dispatcher at the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services in Pomeroy.

She serves as a member of the
Board of Directors of Southe;~st Ohio
Jwrior Miss, Inc.
The local finals will be held Sunday at the Meigs Jwrior High School
auditorium, Middleport, beginning
at 3: 10 p.m. The two winners of the
local programs will represent their
county at the Ohio J Wlior Miss
Finals, January 23-24. Tickets for
the finals are adults $2 and students
$1.50.

Wedding plans made
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Bolling Austin · Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kelton, forof Richmond, Va. are announcing merly of Pomeroy.
The wedding will take place on
the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Julia Marie, to William Fridday, Nov. 28, at 7 p,m. at the
Henry Holmes, Jr., son of Mr. and Varina Episcopal ChW'cb in RichMrs. William Henry Holmes, Sr. The mond. There will be a reception im·
· bride-elect is the granddaughter of mediately following the wedding in
the church fellowship hall.

'l'he annual fall festival of the Mrs. Candy Brothers, Mrs. Jeannie
Salisbury PrO will be held Saturday Robie, and Mrs. Richard Martin . .
Conunittees for games include
night at the school.
The kitchen will open at 5 p.m. Mrs. Dick Folmer, Mrs. · Bobby
with the coWJtry store, Christmas Foster, Mrs. Robert Scarberry, and
bazaar and sweet shop to be in Mr. and Mrs. Eiu-IGilkey, fish pond;
operation at 6 p.m. and the games at Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sinclair, Mr. and
6:30.
Mrs. Larry King, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Yvonne YoWJg is general Charles Houdashelt, and Mr. and
chairman for the carnival.. Tickets Mrs. Fenton Taylor, duck pond; Mr.
will he sold by Mrs. Judy Well, Miss and Mrs. Robert Duncan, Mr. and
Rosalie Story, and Mrs. Wendell · Mrs. Robert Whaley, ~- and Ml'l!.
Hoover, with Mr. and Mrs. Gar)' Wayne Cobb, mill&lt; ~e toss.
·Mrs. KeMeth Hayes, Mrs. Sharon
Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Narkless,
Miss Kim Ohlinger, and Mr. and Swindell, Mrs. Darlene .casta and
Mrs. Ben SlaWter to handle Mrs. Janet Wllllarnson, macaroni
registration for door prizes to be game; Mrs. Wendell Jeffers, Mrs.
awarded during the evening.
Bruce Zirkle, and Mrs. Harold
· Movies will be shown by Mr. and Casto, dish games; Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Leland Carker, Mr. and Mrs. William Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Don Moore and Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Peavley, and Mrs, Diane caruthers,
Moore, while the sweet shop toss across; Mr. and Mrs. David
operation will be hand!C\1 by Mrs. Reed; Mr. and Mrs. Don Cullwns,
Karen Sloan, Mrs. Martha King, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Hudson, Mr.
Mrs. carol Lyons, Mrs. Dorothy and Mrs. Paul Will, cart throw;
Chaney, Mrs. Kathy Corbitt, Mrs. Uoyd King, Ray Pullins, Dan HunCharle~ casto and Mrs. Randy Humnel, Fred J illiamson, foot~ll toss;
Mary Dorst, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
phreys.
Mrs. James Fry, Mrs. Jennings McLaughlin, Mr. and L rs. Richard
Beegle, Mrs. Manning Roush, Mrs. Douglas, roll-a-ball; Mr. and Mrs.
Jackie Brickles, Mrs, Jan Eblin, and Tom Reuter, Mr. and Mrs. Rich
Mrs. Brady Knotts will have charge Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Buck,
of the country store, while Robert clown toss; Jimmy Fry, Manning
Sloan, Arland King, Rollin Radford, Roush, and Mike Brothers, ring the
Jack Williams, Wendell Jeffers, and bottle; Kenneth Hayes, Anthony
Bruce Zirkle, will sell pop and coffee Corsi, Gene Whaley, and Roger
dW'ing the evening.
Young, the jail; Mr. and Mrs Chris
On the kitchen . conunittee are Layh, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Young,
Mrs. Helen Corsi, Mrs. Susie Mr. and Mrs. Mike Branham, and
Pullins,. Mrs. Charles Warth, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Stanley, knock
Wallace Hatfield, Mrs. Ray Roush, the pin; and Mrs. Uoyd King, Mrs.
Mrs. Robert Blankenship, Mrs. Judy King, Mrs. Rollin Radford,
Michael Hlad, Mrs. carl Mash III, Mrs. Judy Williams and L rs. Judy
carla carter, Mrs. Dennis Simpson, carl, Christmas bazaar.

Social Calendar
'

MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, 7:30 Monday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Election of officers.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 Monday
night at the Pomeroy Elementary
School. Door prize to be awarded
and third grade sb!denis to present a
Thanksgiving program,
POMEROY CHAPTER 80, Royal
Arch Masons Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Work in the mst excellent master
degree:
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH
Athletic Boosters Monday 7:30p.m.
at junior high.
TIJESDAY
EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday in band room "of high
school with parents of band students

on elementarY; jwrior high and
senior high levels to attend; refresh- .
ments.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363, R.
and A. M. Tuesday, 7 p.m. Work in
the fellow craft degtee. All Masons
invited to attend.
VETERANS DAY Services
Tuesday at i1 a.m. in front of the
CoW'! House, Pomeory. Speaker will
be Lindsey Howe, Eighth District
first vice commander.
DISABLED American Veterans
Chapter 53 will serve Veterans Day
dinner Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
chapter home on Butternut Ave.
Women of the chapter to bring
covered dish. Meeting to follow dinner.
RACINE

LODGE

~I

F&amp;AM

Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Election of officers.

TRACY

.

.

TeleVision

•
•'

•

'M:ore than 600 American Cancer ment of Health and Human Service&amp;
Society volunteers from across Ohio Sixty county writs will be honored
will gather at the Sheraton Colum- with special recognition for the a~
bus, Nov. 15-16, to make plans for the compllshments in last year's
society's 1980-81 fund-raising crusade. The 1~ Ohio Divisioo
Crusade total tllpped an all-time
crusade.
The 1980 Crusade Training Con- high with f/.~.387. The Meigs
ference provides the opportwrity to County Unit. will receive the Gold
train volunteers in the areas of Club Award by achieving a 15 pel"'
residential crusade, memorial · cent increase over last year with a
giving, special gifts, special events total of $10,846. Highlighting the conand public inforination. Under the ference will be the selection of
leadership of Charles E. Osbarn, Ohio's 1961 Nurse of Hope. NW'Ses
Lima, Ohio Division ~de Com- representing 35 Ohio county writs.
muttee Chairman, volunteers in the will be participating In an
society's 9o county Wlits will be educational and selection, program .
culminating in the announcement of •
aiming for $8.1 million in 1961.
Special guest speaker at the an- the society's official· statewide
nual Awards Banquet·will be Harriet representative of hope in cancer
Naylor, retired director of Volunteer control. Ohio's 1960 Nurse of hope Is
Development for the U. S. Depart- Ruth Dicke~ R.N., Perrysburg.. · •
Pamela Robinson, R.N., Middleport, .•.' •
'
will be representing Meigs County.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Attending the conference from the ' '
POMEROY.,.Judge Robert Buck Meigs County Unit besides Miss :
will talk on delinql!ency at the . Robinson will be Erma Cleland and
Tuesday night meeting ci the Opal Hollon, crusade coSyracuse PTO to be held at the chairpersons, ·Pat and Mary
Elementary School. Refreshments O'Brien, Special events, and Delores
will be served.
Frk, executiv~ director,

NOV.10, 1V80

8:00 (1)6tiJ0(I)(l~il£· NEWS

AU

1AGGUE I
I I 0 tJ
I MALEYS±
I KI J

()) RAINBOW fACTORY
([) CAROL BURNETT AND
f'RIENPS
([)ABC NEWS
(f)(jj) 3-2·1 CONTACt
8:30 (]) . (!) NBC NEWS
.
()) THE DOOR
(])WHISPERS FROM THE WHITE
HOUSE 'Facta Your History
Teacher Never Told You About The·
Preaidema' HBO special that presents the man behind the Preaidentialimageendoffera a collection ot
facts about the private lives of the
nation's Firat Fammea.

YOU .

TELLIN' Ml!'
THf MU,TACHe
to:IP'!J BeEN
HURTll

: BORNLOSER

Answer here: HE'S A
,
Saturday s

SECr:tEI.

r I XI XI I 1 )
(Answers 1omonow)

I Jumbles:

WAGER ENJO\Io SI NGLE
Answer : " What did Delaware? " " HER NEW JERSEY"

I.
~

i

;

([) SANFORD AND SON
I]) g Cil JOKER'S WILD
CD@) HOLL 'I'WOOD SQUARES
Cll DICK CA VErT SHOW
GlJ MACNEIL-j..EHR!R REPORT
ilJ) ID FACE THE MUSIC
7:118 ()) NI!WS UPDAT!
8:00 (]).(!) LITTL!HOUS!ONntl!

• I-IL..:I........I:.:JI

'

oL-_ _ _ _._

HOW l'lf¥\T'? 'llER.E '(OU

REGULATION DOG 1'()00? I'M AFRAID

"'u,_, '1'00'\.L AAI'E TO SETILE FOR v.I4AT

we Hill Fat DtHIIER!

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

' Where Did They Get 19 KidaO' ·
Vou 'lllaugh and cry with the extraordinary Debolt family as they
meet life's challenges.

1

MEIGS IDGH VOCAL Boosters
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. in music room at
high school.
OffiO ETA PHl CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, .Tuesday in the
Pomeroy parking lot between 6 and
6:15 p.m. for a progressive dinner
and meeting.

BRIDGE

U.S.A.)
' 7:30 C2J. BULLSEYE
(]) WORDS OF HOPE
(]) WHO ARE THE DEBOLTS?

••·

I'IHAPS l1f M1£R,SIIW?
I'IHY ARE YOU ACTIH' TI'IAT
AROUMP SKIP SMITH?
HE'S OUR FRIEIID!!

Spring charity game hand

.....

NORTH

WEST

+As

+K53

•Hs

.K 10 3 2

• 54
+K98S3

+QJIOII711
.A74
• J9

.....

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer:· North

daring West German who flew the
Atlantic strapPed to the top of an
airplane, a railroad dieaater that
may have ~een averted by a
premonition, an 11-year·old self~
made millionaire , and a top stunt
pilot attempts to perform the
world's flrat ·upalde· down loop a
mere 25 feet from the ground. (60
mine.)

AUEYOOP

•Qu

+Q642

SOUTH

(]) ROCK CHURCH
([)MOVII!-(COMI!DY)••I'o "Th•t
Toucho1Mink"1Q82
Cll1!2JIDTHAT'81NCIIEDIBLE A

W.. l

Nortb

Eut

Soutb

Pass

It
z+

Pass
Pass

I+
4+

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:• 5

Cl Cil @) SPECIAL MOVIE PR!i:·
SENTATION 'The Champ' 1979
Stare: Jon Voight, Faye Dunaway.

H~ored

By Oswald Jacoby
tUUI Alan Soatag

aD GD THE SHAKESPEARE

PLAYS 'Hamlet' Derek Jacobi

stare as Hamlet, a ro le which wOn
him International acclaim when he
P&amp;rt9fmedltonlondon'!!IWestEnd.
The~ diatlngulahed caat alao Includes Claire Bloom ae Gertrude,
Eric Porter a a Polonlua and Lalla
Ward as Ophella. (3 hra., 30
min a.)

PAT HILL FORD
Ph1992·21 96

S.3rd Ave.

M lddlepoi't; Oh.

8:30 (]) MOVI!i: ·(DRAMA)
.. Yinkl" Ut78

Alan: "In this hand from the
charity game, we are
showmg the bidding and play
that :we would expect to occur
. at a good percentage of the
30,000 tables. West will open
the unbid suit. South will rise
sprin~

•••11o

with dummy'• queen. East's
king will fall to South's ace.
South will lead a diamond to
dummy in order to discard a
losing heart on tbe ace of
clubs and just make his

game."

+

PRAIRIE When Laura auapecta
that her new husband Is paying
romantic attention to a local beau·
ty, she gets into a wild atreet fight
wlthherrlval·-andthenmoveaback
to her parents' house . (80 mine.)

MORE DAYS TO SAVE

ll · l0-80 .

.• Q98
.AK107l2
AJ 10 7
EAST

(Cioa_e d·Captioned; U.S.A.)

Golden Mountaineer Club &amp; Golden Buckeye Club Cards

DEPICT

Jumble Book No. 13.contalnlng 110puzzl••· 11 available tor 11 .75postpald
lr:om Jumble,clothltntwapaper, Box 3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648.1ncl.u dt your
namt,lddrtu, zip code and ,mtkt ch-=ka peytblt to Ntwtpaptrbooh.

OVER EASY Gueata : Singer
Johnny Desmond and Or . Abram
Sacher, Chancellor of Brandeis
University. Hoata: Hugh Downs and
Frank Blair. (Closed-captioned;

! :

On Ohio Sales Tax price increase, and Pat Hill
Ford's Inc. bjg Discount on a II 1980 or 1981
·Ford cars and trucks except the Escort.
Order or choose from stock NOW!

CAN'! Kli.E P A

CfiJ

FREE CLINIC PLANNED
POMEROY-A free blood pressW"e
clinic will be held Tuesday at the
Senior Citizens center, 10 a.m. to 12 :
noon. Mrs. Femdora Storr, R. N.
will be the nurse in char~e.

8

~
WHY A PIGo

Now arrange the drdect' letters to
lonn the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .

([) BOB NEWHART SHOW
(j) FACE THE MUSIC
Cl Cil@) CBS NEWS
Cfl WILD WILD WORLD OF
ANIMALS
GlJ DICK CAVETT SHOW
G211D ABC NEWS
8:118 ()) NEWS UPDATE
7:00 (]). PM MAGAZINE
.
CIJ NORMAN VINCENT PEALE
CIJ ALLINntEFAMILY
Cfli!2JID FAMILY FEUD
(1] NASHVILLI! ON THE ROAD
DCIJ TICTACDOUGH
(f) MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT
®!NEWS

.....
' ....

byHenriArnoldandBobLee ·

I"'_.,
I· ... __ ...[J
,__,_
....__

EVENING

CAPI'AINEASY

~ ntATSCRAMBlEDWORDGAME

Unscran1ble these four Jumbtes.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

•

VIewmg
.

..

'

lfJrj)f.\.ftfi;)'il

~ ~ ~~ -

Oswald: "Some South players may respond two spades.
If they do, Nortb may well get
bullish and go past four to five
01' six. Or an unmediate four
spade response may also lead
to disaster_"
Alan: "They may also get
too high if North rebids three
diamonds or bids again over
four spades."
Oswald: "We did hear of one
pair who played four spades
and made six. At this table
South responded with a direct
four spades. West opened his
fourth-best club. Dummy's ten
was covered by East's queen
and ruffed . Then South led the
eight of spades which was
allowed to hold . Next came
tbe queen of spades. East put
up his king and West had to
play his ace. Then it didn't
matter what East led back.
South ws going to make the
rest of the tricks."
Alan: "I guess East blamed
West for the debcale. We
blame Easl There was no
reason for East to hold back
his ace of spades the first
time."

·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A~N.)

8:118 ())NEWS UPDATE

8:00 CIJGC!JMONDAYNIGHTATTHE
MOVIES. 'Ice Castles' 1979 Stare:

AL.

•

Robby Benaon, Lynn-Holly John-

GASOlJNE ALLEY

Not

lonq,
Clovial

It's one big. reason your electric·
rates are below .the national average.

1D:OO
10:28
10:311
10:118
-11:00

Amy Davis
11 :28
11:30

Little Misses have birthdays
Amy Jo Davis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Davis, Pomeroy,
celebrated her first birthday last
Friday.
A Halloween theme was carried
out with · a pwnpkin shaped cake
being served with ice cream and
pop. The cake was baked for Amy by
her aunt, MarY Fry. Attending were
Aaron Davis, Lou Ferrell, Mel,
Mary, Melanie and Andrea Fry,
Mike and Mary Davis, Robin,
Kathy, and Tanya Phalin, and
Teresa Jenkins. Sending gifts were
Jeff and Janet Russell and Bennie,
Sandi and Jessica Wright.
MILLIONS JOBLESS
GENEVA,' Switzerland (AP)
The jobless and underemployed
around the world now number 455
million workers, according to Francis Blanchard, director-general of
the International Labor
Organization. Over a billion jobs 880 million of them in developing
countries - will have to be created
to achieve fall employment by ·the
end of the 20th century, Blanchard
says.

THANKS
TO THE VOTERS OF MEIGS CO. for your support
and vote in the recent election.

LARRY E. SPENCER
· Clefk of Coul1s

coverage of the game between the
NewEnglandPatrlotaandtheHoua·
ton Oilera.

ACROSS
([) TBSEVI!-G NEWS
I Yiddish author
()) NEWS UPDATE
5 Put togelhe
()) JliS! AND BE HEALED
·
r
CICil ?!Oll / l?l'li14~?WCBS 10 Leather
®I LADIES' MAN
product
()) NEWS UPDATE
11M0ist
(])GIIleCIJ®J NEWS
.ens
the roast
()) ,ESTIVAL OF PRAISE
(]) M'OVIE -IADVENTUR!i:) •••• 13 Ninny
"L8Wrenc• 01 Ar•bl8" 1M2
u Laundering
([) NIGHT GALLERY
t
()) NEWS UPDATE
'
agen .
C2JU(!) THE TONIGHT SHOW ' 15 Before
'Beat of Carson' Guest a: George '

Pepparo, David Leu.,man. Buddy
Rich . (Repeal: 60 mlna.)
()) ROSS&amp;AGLI!YSHOW
([) MOVIE ·(MYSTERY) ••11o
"Third DIY" 1N5
DCilCBSL.AT!MOVIE "QUINCY
M.E.: let Me Light lhe Way' Staro:
Jack Klugman, Cla"y Walberg.
When a victim of a aexuat attack
dlea.lhe pollee are lrualraled In

Angela Vada Dawn Chaney,
daughter of Roger Lee and Pamela
Sue Chaney, was honored with a party in celebration of her first birthday
recently.
Attending were her grandpa'rents,
William and Ada Congrove, Reed·
sville; Jolm and Dorothy Chaney,
Minersville; Hazel Barton, Reed·
sville; Debbie and Misty Lyons,
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Sending gifts were Linnie and Kay
Miller, Little Hocking; Mr. and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson and family, Lori
Mundr)', Reedsville; and Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Chaney and family,
Minersville.
"Happy Birthday" streamers and
balloons were featW'ed in the
decorations. A Holly Hobby cake,
cupcakes, ice cream, potato chips
and punch were served. A Flintstone
theme was carried out in the table
appointments and party hats. Gifts
were presented to Angela.
In 1891 : when the Kentucky Derby
wail run over a mile il!ld a half
distance, Kingman, the winner, was
clocked in in the very slow time of
2:52§.

their attempts to proaecute a man
they suspect Ia guiHy of .i aeries of
aimllarcrimea. (Repeal) 'THE NEW
AVENGERS : Dood Men Are
Dangerous' Stars: Patrick Mac·
ne•, Joanna Lumley. Steed retuma
to hi a house to find &amp;'llery,thlng des·
troyed. (Repeat)

Cll ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
®I MOVIE -(CRIME-DRAMA) '
••• ~ "Frlenda Of EddJe Co~.. "

I&amp; Arikara

17 Biblical

ruler
18 Son
of Neptune
Zt - out
(just got by)
!1 Hotbed
. !% Demarcation
line

39 Heartburn
source
•• T
't
"" exas Cl Y
n Carriage
DOWN

1 Val ed 'te
U I m
%Bake, as eggs
3 Inherit
II
4 Marcher's caU
Yesterday's Aaswer
th
5 Not In e
30 Old Greek
audience
19- Haute
6 Mrs. to Mr. 20 Rousseau
colony
7 Sober
book
31 Tea case
-judge
%3 Salsa's chief 33 Ancient
8 Finds the
inaredient
Asian
.. -e
mother lode Z4 Detennlned 36Irillh
9 Conceal
25 Femme
monk's
12 Sunglasses
fatale
cell
37 "Why(sl.)
%7 Himalayan
11 - Bonheur
cedar
· I Born?"

%3 Czech
mountains
25 Work-bench
devices
%8 Bouquet
%7 Salvador

11173

Gll DICK CAVETT SHOW

...-.
- ...
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11 :4&amp; Cll!JDID NEWS .
12: te Cll i!2l •
ABC NEWS
NIGHTUNI!
12:30· (]).11) TOIIIIQRROWHool: Tom

I TOOK MV EVES OFF tATER
FOR ONLY .A 5ECONT, Mil SMITH,
AN' HE GOT IN TH' PASTE POT

Snyder. Rona BarreHwlll comment

on tha 'punk' movement and
viol*nce. (90mlna.)

11:311

•

11:18

1:00
1:30
1:18

" • 4 '

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2:00

.

It takes 'I lot of fuel to make
the electricity our customers
use . And because fuel is the
major factor in the cost of pro- ·
ducing eleciTicily, yqur electric
costs are directly affected by the
kind of fuel we use.
, . ·
Coal is the answer. It's

cheaper to burn than oil. It's an
abundant f)Jel source. And it's
found right here in America .
Last year the American
Elec!Tic Power System which
we,'re part of burned over 38
million Ions of c~al. And that
saved our country over 150

million barrels of oi1.
Just as importar1t, it helped
keep your electric lilies be lolA(
the national average. • And
that's good news ror all of us . .

.

.

'&gt;

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IT'S Ml( E'XPEOITION .

800T5. SIR ..WHILE WE'RE
LOOKIN6 FOR CHUCK, WE

We give it our best.
OHIO POWER COMPANY

MI61-!T RUN INTO SOME

.. ; ..

il)).

""Ten Seconds to ...... 1Mt

2:28~ SPORTS
RI!I'ORT •
ROBS BAOLI!Y
SHOW

•• • • t

..

Cll CAROL BURNETT AND
AIIENDS
till • .BIG VALU!Y
(}) SPORTS AIPORT
(}) TRANSFORMED
Cil D. JAMES KENNEDY
NEWS
([)MOVIE •(ADVENTURE) ••11o
CD NEWS
iJDliBI!LII!VE

I . • ' •

Pd. Pol. Adv. b Cand.

8AD weATHER-.

TIIE5E BOOTS AAE FILLED
WllH 6005E DOWN ..

8liT ttOH'T WOlR'(.SIIt.
IF WE MEET A 600.$1,
1{0\J CAN PRETEND

2:30
1:18
4:00

·

. ..cl!ITS RI!I'ORT
700 CLUB

MOVIE ·(MYST!RY)

I·

%8 Lansbury
stage
vehicle
291'Ype of
medication
32 I love, to Nero
33 Swab
h....+-+34 Brown ltiwi
35 Stored,
• as gasoline
37 Zigzag
38 New York
lake

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

••11o

''Charh Chell •t the Ot""plca"

11137
5:311 Cil WOROI Ofl NOPE
([)RAT PATROL
.
1:18 (}) 8PDRTSUPDATI

It

AXYDLBAAXB
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply at•nds for another. In thll aample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O"s. etc. Single letters, ; ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the worda are all . :
hlnll. Each day the code letters are dllrerent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
XDIIAZT

t{OV OON'T KNOW ME!

OILY NUTS
Grind no 1111n than half a cup of:
bllndled or Wlblanrbed alJnondl In
an electric blender at ~~ time to
•keep the nuts from becomlrig oily.

r

·r--~
~~~;;~~~~~----~~~il~~~~~~

(]) 700 CLUB
.I
Cllil2leMONDAYNIGHTFOOT·e'lfA
".,...
eon .
BALL ABC Sport• will provide live
loy THOMAS JOSEPH

HDNLZOUIP

XZK
CLU

DI Z

XZIZOE &gt;

CZDVZKZT

RKTZI ; :

J LZ

P J I DAK.
Q ZUI QZ
D T Z :·
Yelteriay'• 'Crn~tGqaoie: nr ALL ECONOMISTS~WERE l ••uu· : ·
END TO ~~.- THEY WOULD NOT REACH A ;
CONCLUSION.-G.B.SHAW
•
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.f

�...... '

16 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, J'iov. 10,1980

·.

Tax-cut ·bill faces lame-duck Democrats
WASIDN!}TON (AP) - · The
Democratic-controlled
96th
Congress opens its lame-duck
session Wednesday uncertain of
what it will accomplish. Unclear,
too, is the fate of a $39.8 billion ta•
cut bill endorsed by President-elect
Ronald Reagan.
The measure was drafted by the
Senate Finance Committee and is
supported . by both Sen. Russell
Lllng, D-La., the committee chairman, and Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan.,
who will asswne Long's role in
January when Republicans take
control of the Senate for the first
tUne since 1954.
Senate Minority Leader Howard
Baker of Tennessee, who will
become majority leader in January,
said Sunday he thinks the bill " will
pass the Senate.! think we can move
pretty promptly on 2 tax bill. "
But what happens in the House; he
added, is another matter.
There, Rep. AI ffilman, D-Ore.,
the Ways and Means Committee
chairman, says he will not move to
block the bill following his defeat
Tuesday.
But Ullman, whose committee
would likely take up the measure,
says he also would not want to move
any Senate-passed bill forward
unless President Carter and the
Democratic leadership concurred.
So far , Carter and his economic
advisers are sticking w1th ,their
argument that a tax cut now would
be ·inflationary and should · be
delayed until next year.
And Carter could still veto any tax
cut passed this session. Baker said
Sunday he had "grave doubts" the

president would sign any tax-cut
that emerged from the lame-duck
session.
The Finance Committee's bill includes about $22 billion in individual
tax cuts and nearly $18 billion in cuts
for business. The $37 billion tax cut
Reagan supports would cut individual tax rates 10 percent a year
for three years.
Yet, Reagan said last week, " it
would be fine with me" if the Finance Committee bill won speedy approval.
Even before reaching the
pr·esident's desk, however, any tax
r ut faces several other obstacles :
--House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill
Jr. has sa1d he doubts the lame-duck
session will pass any legislation except appropriations bills needed to
keep the government running.
- Expeditious action on a tax cut
could be frustrated on the Senate
floor by what one top congressional

- And the volwne of work facing

P

mustpasslOstalledappropriations
bills - without which most federal
· ha e o money to operate
agencws
v further
n
the stopgap
- or extend
financing that has kept the governmen! going1 since the fiscal year
began Oct. ·
In part, it was failure to pass tbe
ul
Proprl.ations bills by the
reg ar ap
beginning of the fiscal year that

•

·

~~~u~~~~~~~f.
~=n r:I:t. ~
revent any consideration of a tax

cut.
Indeed, the lame-duck session

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Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for

classlfleds and
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

·

Phon
Print one word in each

itial or group of f igures

Deed Reference: Being

counts as a word . Count

name . and add:ess or Words

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. HAPPY HOWARD - Sen. Howard Baker, R-Tenn. , and his wife Joy
wa1t for Baker to begin responding to questions before ABC's Issues.and
Answers program Sunday in Washington. Baker, who is Senate minority
leader, IS expected to become the majority leaa~r of the Senate.. (AP
Laserphoto).
·
·

The leader of the drive is likely to them, " Helms a dded.
be Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., who is
Food stamp spending ran into a
in line to become chairman of the barrage of opposition last May,
Senate Agriculture Committee. when Congress voted to ~pend an exHe~ns has been one of the strongest tra $2.56 billion on top of the $6.2
critics of food stamp spending and billion that had a lready been
has vowed to cut the program.
provided to k~p the program going
Helms, now the ranking for the rest of the fiscal year.
Republican on the Agriculture ComCongressional budget analysts
mittee in the lame-duck Senat~, ~aid estimated that the cost of the
he believed that waste, fraud and program c ould go as high as $10.4
general abuse are rampant in the billion in this fiscal year if unemprogram.
ployment starts to climb again.
Earlier this year he said that 15
The Carter administration defenpercent of the recipients did not ded the program, asserting that
qualify for the suhsrdies but nearly all of the money was going to
received them because the the needy .
Agriculture Department couldn 't
Democrats said that in 1981 to
stop fraud . He said after the election qualify for the stamps a family of
that the program could be cut as four must have an income no higher
much as 40 percent without denying than $7,450 a year.
stamps to the most needy.
They adopted some changes
''The future as far as I'm corr designed to save millions of dollars,
cerned is to red uce it to those who including a projected $300 million
are truly needy," Helms said.
savings by adjusting the payments
He said the program " has got to be upward for inflation only once a year
changed so you won't ha'e so mwy instead of twice.
free loaders on it." The government
But Helms a nd others have conshouldn't be " dishing out these- food tended that change should be far
stamps to people who don't deserve more sweeping.

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•· •·~•

) Wanted
) For Sale
) AFonrn oRuenctement
n

Words ca nnot ex press our

part of the real estale feel ings of appreciation &amp;'-''thanks for all the kind·· ~ '
Page 151 , Meigs County nesses shown to our famil y'~'·
Deed Records.
during the death of our- ":·
PARCELthe
NO .2:follow ing Mother,
Also
Mrs. Mary Co&gt;C•' ·
described real estate, All the flowers, food, cards: ... · ·
situate In section 4, Town· visits, &amp; prayers were ap- ,. ~
ship 4, Range 12. Orange preclated more than we.,_-;. :
Township, Meigs County, · can say. It is our hope that ·•
Ohio, in the Village of Tup· God will bless all of you. ~.
pec~~~;.~~iing at a poinlln Bob &amp; Edna Wood.
the northeast corner of said
section 5; thence south 2
In Memoriam
~ .
alonp the east line of said
Sect1on 5, Orange Town· rn memory of Ralph Keller · . .
ship and the west line of who passed away one year ,-; ~
Section 34, Olive Township, ago today, November 10, · ·
2459 feet, more or less, to a
point in the . grantors 1979.
southeast property corner; Gone Is the •a ce, we loved ·
described in Volume 250,

phone number tf used .

if you describe fully,
I give price . The Sentinel
reserves the right to to
I classify,
edit or reject {
I any ad. Your ad will be
1 put In the proper to JS
1 clasllication if you'll
I check the proper box
I below

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•• 1 ,r,, ,.
_,,,

•! .
PARCEL No . 1:
Being Lot No . . ·9 of
Hickory Acres Subdivision, ~~~~~~~~--~·
Card of Thanks
• r
in sectton 5, Town 4i North, ..1.
Range 12 Wes\, Oh o Com· SI nCer'~ thanks to a II who : ;
pany's
Purchase,
as
described in Plat Book No. helped us In any way ,. ,
4, Pages 58 and 59, Meigs during the death of our • '
county Plat Records, S\Jb· husband &amp; father, Glen~ :
l'ect to the building restric- Lee. Edna,&amp; Gary Lee.
. .
Ions as contained in said
Plat Record.

Address

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

wit :

.,
t space below.
Each in-

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Public Notice

~~~i~~ill, ~~!lnstv~~~~~it

5ave I.J I
Name

~; ·.

----=
P'"'
ub" l"lc""N"'ot=lce=--'

. answer th is Complaint "
NOTICEOFSALE
28 day$ afl~r tile last
By virtue of an Order of within
publ icatlon of thiS Nottce.
1 Sale issued out of the Com· The last publication will be . ·
the Jlh day of Decem~
.
I County,
mon Plea•,~ourt
of c~se
Meigs
Oh 0,' In the
of on
ber, 1980. In addit\on, ywl_t: •
I First Federal savings apd are notified that th1s cause ... •
be heard In the Co_m· • • :
I Loan Association, Parker- wlll
man Pleas Court of Me1gs ... ,
county, Ohio at 9:00 a.m. :i:•·
Morlan, et al., Defendants, on the 16th day of Jan~ary , ~· ·
upon a judgment therein l981 on the merits. Fa1lure •: ,
re ndered, .being case No. to appear may cause ~. J
17574 in $aid Court, I will of·
ll judgment -to be e..-:; •
fer for sale, at the front defau
tered agalnsl yoEu. S
• &lt;:!
door of the Courthouse i~
L"rry . pencer•• ., 1
Pomeroy, Meigs County,
' ,clerkofCourtsof. ,,
Ohio, on the 13th day of
Meigs County, Ohio......
December, 19801 at 10 :\)0 ,(1) ~. 10, 17, 24 (12) I, 8, 6tc : ; •
o'clock A.M., the following
lands and tenements. to· --,-~.:..=:::::::::::::;:::::::::::::;:::=: .••
. :1..

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These cash rates
include d iscount

17.
18.

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19.

20.

.

thence west along the gran ·

so dear,

.

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tors south property line, 792 Silent if the V&lt;'ice, we loved _
teet, more or ress, to a point to hear.
21 .
I in the grantors property Too
far away tor sigh! or •. ·
22 - - - - - - - - 1 corner; thence south 5 speech, ·
,; .
·
degrees 52' 51" west along
not too far for thought" .
1.
23.
I the grantors proper!~ line, toButreach.
, v:
2.
24
I 59 ,85 feet to a point m the
·
1 grantors south property Sweet to remember him •.:''~
3
25.
line: thence north 87 who once was here,
·
4.
26.
I degrees 52' 01" west alon g And whOi thought absent, iS:.
5
1 the grantors south proper1y iustasdear .
·
27.
I line, 89.18 feet to an Iron pin Missed by wife, childreri;, 11.~ •
6.
28.
In the existing westerly
7
I right·ot·way line of State granchildren,_&amp; family . · \. ·
29
·
·
I Route No. 7 and the real
8.
30.
point of be~inning for the
"'
9.
31
' I land hereon described;
·
1 thence north 87 degrees 52 ' In memory of Donatd
'" •
10.
32.
01" west continuing along
11 .
33.
1 said line and passing_ an (Bud) Miller of Tuppe~~ ·
12
1 iron pio at 199.79 feet a Iota 1 Plains who passed . away .
34.
1 distance of 439.79 feet to an November 10, 1979.
·
~u...~
13.
35.
iron pin ; thence north 9 Beyond the sunset we know ·
14.
1 degr~es 43 ' 29" east along a
your wolting ,
• ·•
1 line, 100. 00 feet to an iron
And
someday
we'll
mef.C
•
1 pin; thence south 87 you there.
· '
15.
I degrees 52' 01" eastalong a
16.
line..llnd p assing a n ird'!n pin Where the flowers aPe '
1' at2-.00 1ee1,a to1a 1 tS1an · always blooming,
I ce of 440.00 feet to an iron And the skies are alwa~' .
I, pin in the ex is ting westerly fair.
• ·v_._
. riQht·of·way line of State Sadly missed by father '&amp;"
Mail This Coupon with Remittance
1, Route No. 7; thence south 9 mother I ,Lewis &amp; Rubv.;
43' 29" west. along
The Daily Sentinel
I degrees
the existi ng westerly right· Miller, several relatives 8n
~ • A,
Box 729
1 of·way line of State Route friends.
No.
7,
94.00
feet
to
an
I existing
'I ,.:
Pomeroy,Ohio45769
concrete ;==:;=:=:=::::::==.:==:;o
monument; thence south 11 J!__~A!.!nn!!!o~u!!!n~c~em~en!!!t'!s_.;. ·~ :
degrees 43' 29" west con · 1 PAY h ighest prices"' ._
tinuing along said line, 6.03
feet to the point of begin· possible for gold and s ilver_
ning, containing 1.001 acre. coins, rings, jewelry , etc~·,
Subject to all legal high ~ Contact .Ed Burkett Barbe/., :
•n
ways and easements et Shop, Mtddleporl.
record.
---------..;.
~ .
Deed Reference : Being
part of the real estate SHOOTING MATCH at· '
described in Deed Book Corn Hollow in Rutland•.:;
262.L Page 187, Meigs Coun· Every sunday starting at-&lt; .
ty ueed Reeords.
noon.
Proceeds being'~ •
or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
Parcel No. 1 was' ap- donated to the Boy Scout., :
praised at $34,700.00. Par· Troop 249 . 12 gauge factort~' .
111 Court St., Pomero~, 0 ., 45769
eel No. 2 was &lt;ipP,aised at choke
gun only!
$37,500.00.
· Terms of sa le : Cash
James J. Proffitt RACINE GUN SHOOl',., ·
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
Sheriff of Racine Gun Club, every,;;.
Meigs County Friday
night starting at- .
(11 ) 10, 17, 24,3tc
7:30 p.m. Factory choke•'.
e ANNOUNCEMENTS
eRENTALS
gvns only .
'"' J •
1-C•NI or Th•nks
41 - HOUIHfor Rtn t
.,
-----......:!
' '\" '
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2- lnMtmorlam
42-Mobllt Hori1es
J-Announctmtnts
GUN SHOOT : Saturday
lor Rtnl
4-GI\I . . Wily
44-A,.rtmtnl lfr ltftll
evening starting at 6:30''. ,
5-HippyAds
45-fi'Rooms
p.m. Sponsored by the '• ·
6-Lost tnd Found
.._SPICI for RHI
Racine Volunteer Fire~,
Publlc ·Notice
l'- Ytrd Stlt
47-W&amp;nlld to Rent
-_.:LEGAL NOTICEDepartment, at building ill&gt;•.
1-Publlc So~ I•
• 4t--Equlpmtnt for Atnt
IN THE COMMON PLEAS Bashan. Factory choke",
&amp; Auction
9-WantedtoBuy
, _;;·:
COURT OF MEIGS COU~ ·:, guns only.
eMERCHANDISE
TY,OHIO
....
,, I
/q, _
eEMPLOYMENT
51-Hausettofd GOOds
VALERIA M. TEKAUCJC
SERVICES
52- CI, TV, Racllo Equlpmnt
SKATE·A·WAY announc"'
36160 Bashan Road,
11-Htlp Wtl'lftd
S:t-Antlqves
Long Bottom, Ohio45743
winter schedule starllr!O~ ,
12-$1tutttd lfanttd
54-Mise:. Mercll•tt&lt;tlu
Plaintiff,
·
No•. 2. Open to public Surt.,;&gt;: ·
1)- lnlur.nci
n - Bultalngsuppll•s
·vs-,
afternoons 2·4: 30, Weds:~rt ,
14-l!hnintu Tn ln lne
56-Pets for Sale
EDWARD F. TEKAUCIC
1!-Schoolslnstructlon
Fri . &amp; Sol. . nights 7 :30-_ .
.
18416 Lake Shore Blvd.
• ltRadiG, TV
10 :00. Private parties Mon~ .
e
FARM
SUPPLIES
Cleveland,
Ohio,
44119,
I. Cl Rt p.tlr
&amp;LIVESTOCK
His last known address and &amp; Tues. nights, Sat. ae;:, .
11-Wtnttd1o Do
whose address is otherwise ternoons or Sun. after. ·
11-Farm aqvlpment
unknown.
regular skating. 985·31129 or ·
62-WOftted 10 luy
e FINANCIAL
72-Truclu tor Sele
Case No. 17649 985-9996.
21IUslntu
&amp;rllvestocll:
- NOTICE BY
Op..,-tunlty
64-H•y &amp; Grain
PUBLICATION
13-Monty to Loan
IOPI~;,. ·
u - SHCI &amp; F,...llller
Edward P. Tekaucic, MA-TERNITY
2l- Proftn lon ar
whose lost known address velour, flannel , turtle"' ·
.
5f'r¥1UI
is 18416 Lake Shore Blvd. neck, blouses, long sleeveJL"' ·
eTRANSPORTATION
Cleveland" Ohio, 44119, bul' &amp;hort sleeves, maternlfi::J1
71--Autot; tor S.le ..
eREALESTATE
whose adaress is otherwise · jeans, slacks, dresses; :~ ·
7J-V•n.s&amp;ew. o .
31- Homt tlor Sale~
unknown, will take notice
74-Motfrcycles
32-MoiHie+temes
lhat on tne JOth,day of Oc· lingerie ond more at lhf"· '
75~IIIlO P•rts
lor Sale
tober, 1980, , Valeria ~-M . Waterm~lon Patch, 5th st:r ·'
&amp;ACI:HMrles
l:t-Ferms lor SeN
'C•,).'.
Tekouclc
filed a Complaint New Haven, W.Va.
77Auto
R.,.lr
M-lu.sii'IHI Build ings
against h.im in lhe Com111on
l5-Lors 1 A.cr••ee
PleasCourtofMelgsCovh· ' SHOOTING
MATCfil,s&gt;· ,
l6-liiNI Estote Wanted
ty Ohio, Case NO. 17649, R 11 d A
J7- 111Niton
eSERVICES
alleging that he iscf._ullly ·ot
u an
merlcan Legl;·, , ·
11-Homelmprovem..m I ,
gross neglect of uty and e•e"'
· • Sunday, 1·.00. Bl '.'.'·.,
12-Piumlrint 1 •lllcentlne
Want-Ad Ad•ertlslng
e~treme cruelty towards prizes &amp; games. Factor,v-U-E~cavaHnt
her and wherein . s~e • chokes only.
•m '
Deadlines
· 1+-IIKirlcal
demands that she be dlvor·
: : ·:,
&amp; Retrl.-rettoft
l:Jd"P.M. ~ellr
u--a... ral Haul~
~edr~~~e~'fo ~~ 1:1,~~~~x SACRED HEART Churc'll~::
12 NDOn bturday
1.
N-M.H.
R.,.lr
name of Valeria M'. La Bon· . B.azaa~ Nov . 13. lnn"r froo:~~, ~:
fWMOftUY
17-Upllolltery
te; for her costs therein,. 4. 30·7.00. Games, en ,~
and for such other relief as ,tertalnment. Everyone " :
to which she may be en· ·weltome.
..
titled. You are required to
''"'·
Rates and Other Information
·~·.··

1

. -----------------------J

I

WANT AD INFORMATION

,

PHONE 992-2156

..

1

ou •

lS WordsorUfHier

I day
zdey,
ldeys

tdeys

JACKSON

WILLIAMS

REAGAN NAMES C9MMITTEES - ·P residentelect Ronald Reagan named three prominent
Democrats to a foreign policy advisory committee to
ehlp him "rebuild a bipartisan base fur Americ foreign
policy." They are Sen. Henrv M. Jackson of .
I

STONE

ALLEN

Washington, . Sen. Ri chard . Stone of Florida ~nd
Wasltington lawyer Edward Bennett Williams. Among
others Reagan named to his foreign policy advisory
panel was Richard V Allen, Reagan's senior campaign
~dviser on foreign p:· i!ey. rAP J,~,erph.,to i.

,,

~

SrnaII mves
•
t men t ' .large
s
•
I
Ad returns, entine
ant
S .:~:

up if Democrats, who will also see
their House majority cut 33 seats
come Jan. 3, try to push through pet
projects.

Food stamp program faces cut
WASIDNGTON (AP ) - The food
stamp program may be put on a
strict diet next year.
The federa l program , which helps
feed about 22 million Americans, or
approximately one in 10, faces sharp
c utbacks if several mcoming
Republican leaders have their way.
With Ronald Reagan in the White
Ho11$e and the GOP in control of the
Senate for the first tune since 1954,
cost-cutting measures are expected
to find a favor unseen in recent
years.
The food stamp program has
grown rapidly in recent years and is
likely to be a fa t target for GOP
leaders vowing to pare the federal
budget.
''The food stamp program is in big
trouble," said Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland in assessing the Impact of last week's conservative
Republican landslide.
While con'inued Democratic control of the House of Representatives
may forestall drastic food stamp
reductions, prospective GOP Senate
leaders say .they are determined to
make the effort.

''"

staff member called a lot of bitter, necessitatedthelame-ducksession.
'I~ '
before recessing for the election
1980 level until Dec. 15.
'· wounded · tigers, " who might
The stopgap bill Congress adopted alloh agencies to spend at tbe fiscal
prevent passage from being a "neat _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;,._____.:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,,
and speedy process."
~
•
- Additional time could be taken
'' •

Moral majority
registers 70~000
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Ohio 's
Moral Majority registered more
than 70,000 new voters before the
Nov. 4 national electiOn, according
to the Ohio chainnan of the conservative evangelical organization.
Rev. Tom Trammel said, that " In
Cincinnati alone, we registered over
35,000 that week before Election
Day." He also estimated since the
Ohio organization was founded in
July, about 300,000 people in Ohio
were involved with Moral Maj ority.
The organization, founded by
Virginia television evangelist Jerry
Falwell, is against abortwn and pornography and for nati onal defense.
Trammel believes the Ohio group
can be used in local areas as lol&gt;byists conduct busmess in
Washington D.C.
"It is our responsibilty to protect
our government from the forces of
evil," Trammel said.

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....'·"
..'·"..

Char91
l.IJ,
I.N

us
us

llactt wont over tht minimum 15 words 11 4 Cenh perWoril ,., day.
,Ads ru1111i1'1g ottler Ut..- I:Gnlecutlve days wllllbl cttarttd at ltlt1 Oy

rete.

'

11'1 memtry, C•rct of Ttt.nln etM Olllltv•rr-: '.::.nfl ,.,

mlnlmvm . C•th ln•d..,ance.

.....a, ~ - •

Mobile Heme satn a ltd Y~trd tates .,. acc.,tN en1y wllft ...a wlltt
ont.r. lS t:fftt cftlrtt ,., eels carrvlnt h• N~~mMr In Certlf TM

SM!tll•et

11-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Monday, Nov.lO, 19M
- ---·
3
ARnouncemonts
_!!!!p_~._nt~_ - - .
THE TIME has come for
OKlo Oil Co. offer IJigh
believers In Jesus Christ to An
Income, plus cash bonuses,
unite In preparati&lt;in lor His benefits tb moture person
return. Join us In preparing In the ,Meigs area. Regar·
the body of Christ for lhat dless of experience, write
day . Write : . Millennium P .H. Read, American
Ministries,
Box 353, Lubrlconts Co., Box 696,
Newark Ohio 43055.
Dayton, Ohio 45-401.
THE TIME has come for
believers In Jesus Christ to
unite in preparation for His
return . Join us In prepa ring
the body of Christ for thot
day , Write : Millennium
Ministr ies,
Box
353,
Newark Ohio 43055.
BEGINNER
Cake
decorating class starling
soon at carousel enlectionary In Middleport.
992·6342 tor Information .

Business Services
C.B. Base station, tr'am D
201A with 0104 mike,
frequency counter and watt

meter, used bery little.
S600. 7.12·2211 or 985-4338 .

11 Situations warittd
WIL L do odds a. ends,
panel ing, floor tile, ceiling
tile. Call Fred Miller at 992·
6338.

ow At
Pomeroy

Remodeling,
walls,
panelhlg, ceilings, tiles,
floors, doors, pa inti ng, 992-

.

Landmark

AU· types of roof work,
new or repair gutters
and downspouts, gut1•r

cleaning and Pl'inllng.
All work guaronleO!d.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howord
.949·1162
949·2 160
1·22·tfc

2759.

Insurance
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Phone
992·2143.
1J

IMMNIN&amp;atiLDS AGENCY INC.
INSURANCE

"YOUNGS
CARPENtER
SERVICES"

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

ALLSTEEL

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From 30x30"
SMALL

-Addonsand
remOdeling
-l! oolingand gutter
work

Utility Buildings

-Concrete work

Sizes from 4x6 to 12X4G

- Plumbing and
electrical work
(Free Estimates)

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54

V.C. YOUNG II

A•cfne, Oh.

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

Ph. 614-1&lt;13·2591
6·15-tfc

''Do you euppoee aphlda are catching?"

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO SINCE

32
31
Homes for Sale
Older home on Long Street
.
AREYOUPAYINGTOOMUCH?
In Rutland . Three bedroom 1973 crown Haveri,-14 x 65,
;, ·jjo YOU HAVE TH.E COVERAGE?
with central heat, storm three bedrooms, new car·
"
windows, on large lot. Car· pet. 1971 cameron, 14 x 64,
port &amp; gara'ge . Prke two bedrooms, new carpet.
reduced to $12,500. 742·3074. 1972 Champion, 12 ~ 60, two
bedrooms, riew carpet. 1976
u~
12 x 6lJ, two
Attractive home In Mid· cameron,
dleport, five bedrooms, two bedrooms, oil electric. 197.1
12 x 65, two
baths, renta I apartment Skyline,
bedrooms, bath &amp; 113, new
over double garage. Good carpet
. 1970 PMC, Put a cold nose in your
location. 742·2095.
12 x 60 , two bedrooms, new future II . Shots, wormed,
carpet. B x s Sales, Inc., Meigs County Humane
Attractive two story home 2nd x Viand Street. Point Society, 992·6260, between
In Bashan. One half acre Pleasant, wv Phone 675- the hours of 12-7, closed
Immediate possession . 4424.
Tuesdays. Black &amp; tan
Price reduced. Phone 949·
T,-shlrts and
Kerr, lrl·colored beagle,
2042.
shirts
for politicians,
four
Shephards,
four
Aline weaver's Dress &amp;
1971 HOMETTE furnished
Homes for Sale
ball
teams,
business
or
BO!auty Shop. Curly perms, Jl
mobile home. S6x12, 2 Labradors, very pretty,
indl•l~uals .
.
acres, · 6 room frame bedroom, lila baths, water special chocolate colored,
$10.00 &amp; up, Monday, ED
Shirts
&amp;
Hats
$4.00-.
up
BARTELS,Loan 3house.
2 baths, 1'/2 miles. bed, new cehtral air, lovable dog, If you like
Tuesday, Wednesday until RepresentollvO!, 1100 East
Special School Rates
Tl'lonksglylng. One ~ third Main St., Pomeroy, Oh. South Qf Reeds•llle, Oh. on washer-dryer Included. chocolote &amp; vanilla sun·
"We
print ALMOST
daes,
she's
sweet,
she
S.R.
124.
1SVEU
miles
norOwner moved out of state.
off on all dresses, pant Mortgage
money
anything
on ALMOST
suits. Aline &amp; cathie available. All types home . th of Forked Run Lake. 378· $7,500. firm . 992-5893 8:30· barks, with a ·great per·
anything!''
sonallty . You'll love this
6363.
5:00
after
5:00
992·2271
or
operators. 949·2666 for ap· financing,
new,
old,
Ph . 614-949·2351
dog. 992·626/J.
polntment. Fifth a. Vine refinancing, and 2nd mor367-0412.
Evenings&amp; Weekends
Streets, Racine, Ohio . .
tgages. Phone 992·7000 or HOUSE tor sale by -owner,
2 bedrooms, 1 bath , IIYing 1978 12x65 Bayview mobile
992-5732.
Instruments
room, eat In kitchen, home, 2 bedrooms, located 57_ __..!.':~~=~-Musical
garage, large utility room near Southern Ohio coal LOWERY electric organ,
BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom
2 acres of land In good mines . $8,500 . 992·7667.
4
Giveaway
chord &amp; rhytym section,
ranch brick home In Baum on
location . $29,000. 667-6455
Addition.
With
new
garage
perfect condition .. Not a
3 BEAGLE female pup1973 EAGLE 12x65,
&amp; genie door. Gas heat, after 5.
tov. $550. 992-2044.
pies. 7 weeks old. 7.42·2648.
1
bedrooms, 1 12 baths, total
newly Installed central air
lnstalle·d
&amp;
cohditlorilng, family room Beautiful private location. electric, exc. c:;ond. 993·
Farm SUIJIIits
Repaired
3 .BEAGLE female pup- &amp; stone fireplace, ap· Eight room house on SR 7 7473 .
pies. 7 weeks old. 742·2648.
&amp; bl'reslaEll
12
years
expliances buill In, newly in· near Memory Gardens.
stalled electric 'breaker Two &amp; one half acres. 985·
perience
system,
attractively 3934.
6
Lost and Found
61
Farm Equipment
decorated basement, 2
Mobile Homes·
FOUND. Dog . Resembles baths, fully carpeted with 32
Houses for Rent
41
Bobcot Loader, $3,500.00.
St. Bernard , red with ~ most attractive drapes . --'-~~~~o!.r'!Sa!'l'=e_ __
John
Deere 1010 Diesel
TWO BEDROOM u~
"Your NeedS
. white feet, male, on a Catt 985·3814 Or992·2571 .
TRAILER with lot. Fur· furnished house, also two loader, $6,000.00. Davis
Are My Business"
.chain. 992·5325.
Trencher,
$3,500.00.
Wheel
nlshed, city water, natural bedroom· furnished &amp; one
Ph. 446-4741
10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1• gas, ready to move Into. bedroom furn ished apart- Loader, 1 one eighth yard
11 ·5·1 mo . J)d.
Found : Liver colored coon acrei 6 rooms, 2 baths, 11h 9~9· 2277 .
.
ments. Call after 6 p.m. bucket plus forks. 1 · 614~ 457·
3139.
dog found In Portland area.
acres; 6 rooms basement,
992-2288.
IU3·3484.
bath, 2 mobile homes;
TRAILER
with
lot.
Fur·
Mason,. 3 bedroom · never
Li•eslock
nlshed, city water, natural Modern home, six rooms, '~2----..:W~a!lnt~ed~to~B~uLy__ 63
lived
In,
2
bedroom,
rented
gas,
9
wanted to Buy
ready
to
move
Into.
1
.
both,
partiatly
furnlstled
.
CHIp
wooo.
Poles
max.
Registered
American sad·
2 acres. John Sheets, 3 12
949-2277.
on
Racine
Bashan
Road.
diameter
10"
on
largest
die
bred
m~re, . five years
miles
south
of
Middleport,
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
949·2591.
end. $12 p·er ton. Bundled old, dapple grey, excellent
Rt. 1.
old furniture, desks, gold
Champion mobile holl'le, 12
slab. $10 per ton. Deli•ered English pleasure or good
rll\gs, jewelry, silver
60 two bedroom. has been
brood mare.
Shown
In 4-H.
t C0 ·• Rt · 2' Phone
dOllars, sterling, etc., wood Se•..n room double In· xremodeled.
614· 592~
1963 or·
592·
Mostly fur- MODERN 6 room house to Ohio Pelle
.
5JS9.
•
ice boxes,jars antiques,
sulliiO!d ranch style ' home nished. $5,500.00. 992·3281 near Dexter. Forced air Pomeroy992·2689.
·eft. Complete households. with electric heat, wood or992·3611.
heat. Close to mines. '742· 1,:::::::::::::::::::===~
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
bl.·•ner, gas available on
2877 .
"'
POiner0 y, OH1 or call 992· three acres of ground one
1960
MODEL
10x50
Mobile
776lJ.
mile from
Roclne .
Four room house &amp; garoge
·Reasonable priced . 949· Home. Partially furnished in Pomeroy. Call992·2502.
1ransportatlon
&amp; set up at local trallor
2706.
Gold, silver or . foreign
Phone992·3857
.
coins· or ony gold or sll'ier ,
Apartment'
Items. Antique furniture,
Autos for Sale
71
Trailer lot tor sale, $5,000.
tor Rent
glass or china, will pay top Modular home lot on Route
Real Estate General
1980 Special Edition Trans
dollar, or complete estates. 7, three bedroom farm·
3 AND 4 RM furnlshlid apAm, still under warranty,
No Item too large or too
house located on Route 7.
. ts. Phone992·5434.
loaded . Take over paymen··
small. Check prices before
992 ~ 2571 .
ts.
949·2793.
selling. Also do appraising.
Furnished apartments, 992~
OSby (Ossle) ll('lartln. 992·
House &amp; lot for sale, eight
3129, 992·5914, or 1·304-8821979 CHEVY MONZA, still
6370.
room &amp; bath, with fireplace
2566.
under warranty, loaded, In·
in family room. Two por·
eluding, air conditioning,
WANTED TO BUY : ches, one enclosed,
45
Furnished Rooms
power brakes , power
GOLD,
SILVER, basement, outbuilding . Has
PLATINUM, STERLING· been remodeled. on corner
P-RIVATE rooms, cooking,
steering,
cassette tape
am·tm
deck, stereo
21,000
COINS , RINGS,JEWELR· of Main &amp; Tyree in Racine .
cable TV, $.10. per week .
actual miles, in excellent
POMEROY,O.
Y, MISC . ITEMS . AB· 949-2778.
773-5651.
condition, only one owner.
SOLUTE
MARKET
992-2259
Great Buy!! I Phone 992 ~
PRICE GUARANTED. EO
3110
alter 5 p.m. Just like a
46
Space
for
Rent
BURKETT
BARBER
'NEW Ll"fiNG -Real Estate- General
brand
new car only
.SHOP, MIDDLEPORT,
warm your cold toes at
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
cheaper!!
Oti I0 992 -3~76 .
the fireplace In this 3
Park, Route 33, North of
Housing
Pomeroy. Large lois. Call
bedroom ranch that has
1978 Camaro, 27,000 miles,
o large living room, din·
992·7479.
OLD COINS, pocket wat·
air shocks, keystones, F:60
Headquarters
lng room and a full baseches, class rings, wedding
white lettered radials, ex·
m..nt. ONLY I $17,500.
bands, diamonds. Gold or
TRAILER spoces for rent.
tras,
must sell . \J\12-7060.
NEW LISTING- DANsilver . Call J . A. womsley,
Southern Valley Mobile
VILLE- Nice laying 4
742-2331. Treasure Chest
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
1972 Chevrolet Impala ,
acres-of ground with a
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592·
992-3954.
.
very good · running con·
1969 12x60 Fleetwood
6-462 .
dltion. $400.00 . 992·7658 .
Mobile Home. Has 2
_ 21' E. Second Street
bedrooms, sliding glass
WANTED TO BUY : Closs
doors In living room,
1977 Pontiac Sunblrd. Am·
rings, wedding bands,
Phone
and a deck . All for
fm radio, sunroof, ex·
anything stamped 10k, 14k,
1-(614)-992-3325
$9,800.
51
Household Goods
cellent condition. 29 mpg,
1111, gold. Sliver coins,
SYRACUSE - A really
'
$2,600.
or best offer. 985·
pocket watches. Coli Joe
JUST
OFF OLO 33 DOORS, fully Insulated ex·
cute 2 bedrocim home
3596.
Clark, 992 ·20~. Clark's
Good 3 bedroom, 1'h
doors,
also
new
in·
terlor
that has an·equlpped kitJewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.
story home. Nice bath,
terlor doors, all types of
chen, central olr and a
eol·ln modern kitchen,
1976 Ford Granoda In ex·
molding. 992·,173.
level
lot.
'JUST
I
$24,900.
full basement, and large
cellent condition, new tires,
DOLLS &amp; toys In good
2J
ACRES
Thai
has
a
lot. With furniture
·extra sharp. Must sell for
cond. also baby clothes.
nice building site ahel a
$32,500, less If not.
$2, 100.00. 949·2021 .
992-7494.
53
Antiques
mixture of bottom land
LAND - LAND - LAND
and
limber
land.
In
the
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
-' Nl~e lay ing land for
1978 PLYMOUTH Fury
Eastern School District.
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
excellent farm or can be
Selon. A-1 cond.~door . 985·
Asking $18,000. ·
pay cash or certifiO!d check
subd Ivlded · for a
AT
THE
EOGE
OF
3900.
for antiques and collec·
de'leiQIIment. Utllltres
TOWN - Approx. 6 tlbles or entire O!Siate]l. ·
avollabiO!. 30 acres plus
acres and o 1'12 story 'Nothing too large. Ajso,
Help Wanted
11
1974 MONTE Carlo. Many
for you to do whotever
hom" with 3 bedrooms,
e~tras, good cond: 94'1·2277.
guns,
pocket
watches
and
you
wont.
GET VALUABLE training.
family
room, out- coin collections. Call ·61~·
NEAR NEW I!RIDGE
"! 1 young business person
buildings, hot water
767·~167 or 557·3411 .
- BHe•el J bedroom
1974 MONTE Carlo. Many
aild earn good mC!f!OY· Plus
heat, and a water
horne with Woodburner .
extras, good cond . 949·2277.
some great gifts as a Sen·
SOftO!ner.
$29,500.
Hos nice carpeting,
tiMI route carriO!r. Phone
DECOR ATEO ·IN RED
54 Misc. Merchondlse
wasn room, full baseus: right oway and 11"1 ,on
- Is how to describe a
The ai1mmetric is the, newest 1978 FORO Mustang, low
ment,
sundeck,
end
2.4
tli! O!llglbltlty list at 99226x17'12
bedroom
with
a
mileage, a.c., ~speed , exc .
CAKES
decorated
.tor
all
fasllion
an&amp;l&amp;-a &amp;real JICket
acres of Woods. Asking
2156or992·2157.
.cond.
large
walk-In
closetond
$3,500. 992·7689.
occasions.
992·6342
or
992·
sllape above a slim skirt one IIIJ,
S50.000.
sewing room. Home also
2583.
fla~ tile nut. Maile one .er~on
STOCK FARM - Want
hos 3 other bedrooms,
Rl'js and LPNS, looking for
72
Trucks for Sale
peace of mind and nlro
m~tchina olher unmotched!
full
basement and on
c:J;AU..nglng and rewarding
Income? ThiS II II, 2
Trl
·axle
trailer
for
hauling
Printed.
Pattern
~isses
·
equipped kitchen. Lot
1978 F·250 4 x 4 super cab,
work? Tired of rotating
cars, equipment, etc .
older homes that can be
Sizes, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size · loaded, extra good con·
size Is 110x100. Justl
• sillfh? Feel me need to
rented and a 2 bedroom
$1,500:00. 992·7354 evenings.
12' (bust 34) jacket 114 J&amp;rds
dillon. Phone 742-2068.
$28,500.
devetop your .lden In
mObile home, largO!
S4'i1Klh; skirt I I18.
.
C' OMP· LETELY
resident care with a highly . biQ!:k building for shop,
one 8,000 gallon under $1.75 fir IICII ..... Mil !IG4 1976 Chevy one holf ton
DEtORATEt:l AND IS
motlvatO!d staff? Pomeroy
loylng hens, or cattJe.
'ground fuel storage tank.
BEAUTIFUL
Has
Health care center has the
pickup, 350 automotlc ,
Good fences and all
lint new wiring, new plumb- si.500.00. 992·7354 "•enlngs. .fir.........
llffewer for you. Due to.
. ... ...."'
, s-Ill:
$1,800.00. AISOi.....!.o,!'Per ,
mlnerell.
Ing,
new
Insulation,
and
IIC!IItvlng near maximum
$20.00. 992·3611 GrYY7·3281.
INFLATION HEDGEa new woodburnlng Reell! hitch &amp; hay lor Sll ie.
cinaus. we now nave . Home with rentals or
stove with o new
opentnos for full and part
75 cents a bale. Nate
can be used 11 4 apart·
RAWLEIGH Products,
·~hi mney. Perfect place
·lime positions on daY shift,
vanamon Ruflond. 7~2menll. Alto lin a large
1965
Ford Ranchero $2,500 .
for chlldr..n with 3
but will consider other shif2761 .
building about 24x36 for
colle&lt;:tors item, 650 Honda
bedrooms
and
a
large
ts. competitive aalary, ex·
car repair or wllat nave
Motorcycle. $4'15. Sheklee
yard. JUST! $28,500.
tel lent working conditions,
you. 31J'J acres of land.
FRANKLIN Wood stovO!.
organic products. 992·7825.
REALTOR
life lnaurance and · Alklllll only s.c.s.ooo.
Used 1 year, Ideal for small
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
·dliablllty potlcy et no cost
What will you give?
home,
trailer or basement . .
HH1t1·
to the employ", and
RAWLEIGH Products,
I'UT YOUR MONISY
Reasonably priced. Carl
ASSOtiATES
.hcllpltallzetlon lnaurance
1965 Ford Ranchero $2,500.
WHERE IT WILL
1&lt;
loes.
992:301•.
Jun Trussell Nt-2660
lVII IIabie. come visit us or
collectors Item , 650 Honda
ORO.W. WE· HAVE
Roter &amp; o.nle Turner
·c:an : Nancy, van Meter, .SEVERAL
Motorcycle $495 . Shaklee
GOO!;) PRD992-5692
SMALL Sun coal and wood
R.N .• Director of Nursing,
organic products . 992·7825.
PF.RTIES FOR YOU
OFFICE H2·22St
burning stove. Call 742·2263
Pomeroy Health care Cen· ' TO SEE. CALL HHUS
afler 3:30 Price SSQ .
ter, 61H9H6lJ6.
·--· ·- -- ·- -· -·
•
~· ~. - - ~~t!r9_!;1_!~ -- ~
· - - - - ·- --~--·Quasar 23 Inch console
H•HISifl&lt;f
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
llbysltter needed In my
nome. Call alter 6 p.m. 992·
color television. $100 .00.
motorcy cl e, color blue.
'
247·3444.
Call949 ·26oiY.
6233.
1/,•_ ''''1"·"1&lt;''~

FOR All YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL

992-2342
DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY, INC.

fiiil
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OHIO .

ROUSH

KAUFF'S

CONSTRUCTION

PWMBING
AND
HEAnNG

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

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

+~:;=~=;:~~~~~~===::=====~~~~===~~~~~
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Repair
-Transmission
Repair

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RUTlAND.FURNilURE CARPET SKIP
NOVEMBER CARPET SALE
Kl EN
CARPET

~.95

Go Slim or Flared

And Up

From

3ROLL

$4,99

Blue Up
Gold
Rust
cash and

With
Padding
and
Installation

carry

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Blue
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Installed _
Reg. $15.95
Now$12.95

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RUTLAND FURNITURE
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1 PI(:IIIIInl

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Class A chimneys
are equipped with
all solid fllel

0

lronr CJ •l'itln Q [

lleilt er

J...r ·- _-_,'"'

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burning stoves.

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Wldlh · 22''
Height · 41''
Otpllt ' 28"
hk•• loge up to 2ol''

o • • 0 -' .I ,._ I ' • I 0 _.
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l l l ' l r"" O

ms:

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----------

I

317
Middleport, Ohio
PH . 99Hl42
TRY US!
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
eCarpet

Hrs.: Mon.~Fri .
9 A.M.-5: JO P.M.

AAA Aluminum

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cremcrveb'-• w/cnt

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• Hnvy PUOII steel

construction

Sold BY

PAUL R. KARR
Ph. 985-3538

·

Camping
Equipment
Terry Travel Trailer, 23

Chester, Ohio

78

foot, clean. self-contained ,
awning, screen room, reese

84

Electrical

&amp; Aelriperatian

SEWING MACHINE
hitch. $2,j()().00. Route 1; Repairs, servlcO!, all
three miles north of makes1 992·2284 . The
Chester . .
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales
sep 1 iees
and Service. We Sllorpen
SCissors.
·
Home
11
·Improvements

GENE ' S
CARPET ·
CLEANING. Deep stream .
clean puts nu-iook back In
your carpet, highly recom·
mended, reasonable rates,
Scotchguard .
Free
estimates. Gene Smith, call
now 992·6309 or 742·2211 .

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR Swnpers,
t011sters, Irons, all smell
appliances. Lawn m -.
Next to Slate Highway
Garoge on Route 7, 915·
3825.
APPLIANCE

SERVICE:

all makes washer, dryers,

E xcanti,ng.____,_
J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
VICE liscensed &amp; bonded,
septic tank Installation,
water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
cavatlng work &amp; IronS!!
layout. 992·7201-.

83

DOZER work. Small lobs a
specialty . Dependable ser·
vice. 74'2 ·27'l:! .

..-- ---- - - -

ranges, dlshwashera,
disposals, water tanks. Calt
Ken You1111 at 9115-3561
before 9 a.m. or afftr 6
p.m .
15
Generel Haullnt
AGRI · LIME Spreading,
limestone and fill dirt
hauling. Loo Morris, 7G2455.

�: SapDicmcnl

12- ·The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mmday, Nov. 10, 1980

I

years.

Democrats earlier in the session his JS.meffiber CIUCUII elects bim liS
which stalled imjloriant legislation expected, possibly this week.
Since Ohio baa no Ueutenant
and provided Van Meter and his
GeOrge Voinovlch
heavily bankrolled Senate can- governor didates with campaign·ammunition. resigned to become · mayor of
After tile smoke cleared Nov. 4, Cleveland - Glllmor will be.next in
Van Meter wasn't hearing claims line for governor if anything should
.that Ronald Reagan's presidential happen to GOP Gov. James A.
landslide spilled over and prod~Jced Rhodes, who Is 71. Rhodes' term
runs unW January 1983.
the Senate victories.
l&gt;f!clipr:s pronOWICe the govemor In
"We've been in this for two
years," he said.
good h8alth.
'
Van Miller wants to run for gwerGillmar agrees with
top
lieutenant but says he thinks . the , nor In 1 • and It had been spectecl .
Reagan tide wa.s one factor in the that · t~ · outspoken Ashland
Republican would come forward and
Senate triumph.
A 41-year-old lawyer who has been challenge Glllmor, the current
minority leader, for the top Senate
in the Senate since 1967, Gillmor will
"
be more than just majority leader if post. •

Sen. Paul E. GUlrnor, R·Port Clinton, who is in line to become S!lnate
president, and Sen. Thorpas A. Van
Meter, R-Ashland, the likely No. 2
man, are busy a.s beavers. ·
"Look . at all these telephone
calls," said a smiling GWmor in his
office last week, holding up a fistful
of pink slips put before bim by his
secretary.
Gillmor, who has been minority
leader since 1!171, is loving it. So is
Van Meter, tile chief strategist for
the campaign 'effort that gave
Rep~bllcans tile Senate for the first r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:~
time since 19'14.

BUILDING DEMOLISHED - The downtown
Commerce Building was destroyed SWlday by a :JOO.
pound dynamite blast, which reduced the structure to a

pile of rubble. The demolition wa.s cJone.by Xplo Corp.
of Gretna, La. It took the 86-year-old structure three
seconds to fall to tile ground.

Area
Deaths
Mae Smith

:I

J

l 74 Iranian

locally an aunt, MrS. Hilda Schmoll,
Middleport, and nephews, Charles
and Henry Werry of Pomeroy. ·
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the VunnQuigley-Ciriejlo FWleral Home,
Grant St., Akron, where friends may
call from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Edgar M. Harrah

Edgar Maxwell (Max) Harrah, 91,
Rt. I, Long Bottom, died Saturday at
Mercer Nursing Home, Clifton,
Emergency squad run~ following an extended illness.
Mr. Harrah wa.s born in Blue
· Local units answered a number of Sulphur Springs, W. Va., the son of
calls on the weekend, the Meigs the late James Aken and Julia Ann
County Emergency Medical Service Thoma.son Harrah. He was also
Headquarters reports.
preceded in death by three brothers
Runs Saturday iilcluded Mili- and three sisters. His wife, Roma G.
dleport, S:25 p.m. for Cloyd Harrah preceded him in death in
Brookover, taken to Veterans · Oct. of this year.
Memorial Hospital; Racine, II:30
Mr. Harrah was a retired
a.m. for Mark Hamon taking to machinist Of tile Hislop Machine
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens.
Shop, Pl. Pleasant, a member of the
SWlday runs included Tuppers Middleport Presbyterian Church,
Plains, 7:21 a.m., Mabel VanMeter p8st .master Masonic Lodge 363
from residence to Holzer Medical F&amp;AM, and past patron of
Center; Tuppers Plains, 1:13 p.m., Evangeline Chapter 172 OES.
. Nellie Andrews, Long Bottom, to
He is survived by three daughters
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport; and sons-in law, Maxine and Henry
3: S4 p.m., Mike Manley to Veterans Piggott, Tuscon, Ariz; Marie and
Memorial Hospital; Middleport, Harry Watson, and Rowena and Leo
10:51 a.m., Cloyd Brookover to VaUghan, both of Pomeroy; one son,
Veterans ·Memorial Hospital; Robert Harrah, Kridersville, Ohio;
Rutland, 5:15 p.m., Roy Ellis from one sister-in-law, Loula Lewis, Pl.
residence to Holzer Medical Center.
Pleasant; 12 gn111dchildren, 32 great
grandchildren, and seven great,
HOSPITAL NEWS
great grandchildren. Funeral services will be held
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Tuesday
at 1 p.m. at the Rawlings-Saturday AdmissioM-Betty TemCoats-Blower
FWleral Home with
pleton, Pomeroy; Lorena Leiving,
the
Rev.
Robert
McGee officiating.
Albany; Rudolph Gordon,
Buri~ will be in SWlcrest Cemetery,
Gallipolis; Charles Williams,
Pl. Pleasant. Friends may call at
Letart, W. Va.
Saturday Discharge&amp;-Mary Still, the funeral home today fnm 2 to 4
Donald Little, Kenneth Braun, Ger- and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services will
trude Lehew, Janet Korn, Elizabeth be held this evening at 7:30p.m.
Stover, Herbert Farms, Patricia
Hoffman, Linda Crites.
Sunday AdmissioM-Ross Kent,
Addison; Marie Dixon, Coolville;
.
Carol Triplett, Middleport; Bessie
SPECIAL MEETING
Sellers, Racine; Doris Haynes,
John Arnott has Caned a meeting
'Pomeroy ; Leslie Hayman,
for 7 p.m. Wednesday at the MiliPomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Wilma GIJ&gt;. dieport Elementary School for all
beaut, Edith Barton, Loren Lee, Jr., persons interested in the upcoming
Curtis Riffle, Connie Francisco, Meigs Local intermural elementary
basketball program.
, Velma Brown, Preston Parsons.

· Riffe
the~~:~~~~e=:.
Jr., D-New Boston, was able to

(Con\lnued from page 1)
reported l'fl lraqJ soldiers killed by
helicopter . gunahips elsewhere in
Iranian territory at a cost of six
Iranian paratroopers killed and one
helicopter lost.
None of the battlefield claims
could be confirmed.
Meanwhile, Iraqi President SaGdam HWISI!ln said the conflict was a
holy war in which his nation was
defending the Ideals of the Prophet
Mohammech
"The heroic Iraqi armed forces.. ;are fighting a cllque linked by
inheritance; thoughts and activity to
the Persian Empire that was
destroyed by Islam," Hussein said
in a message marking the lWIBr
Islamic new year. "They are in fact
surpassing the cause of defense of
tile land of p-aq and its people...to
defend the ideals for which the
Prophet Mohammed and his great
SJJPPOrters waged their holy war."
Iraq and Iran are both Moslem
nations, but while Iraqis are of Arab
descent the Iranians are of Persian
ancestry. Both countries are waving
the banner of Islam, and each
claims the other is defying the faith.

.,
REVIVAL TO CONTINUE
The Salvation Army, 115Butternut
Ave., is continuing its revival Monday and Tuesday nights at 7:15 p.m.
with the Rev. Chuck McPherson a.s
~er. SpeC1al music is provided
each evening and the pubiic is invited.
.

'

D~.PLANNED

Pomeroy Chapter 53, DAV, will
serve Veterans day dinner Tuesday
at 6 p.m. at the chapter home.
Women are to take a covered dish.
A meeting will be held following

ELBERfELD$.

·GC!JaDDel Master
f S'l,ereo

:C~~~::::::
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, DAkron, who ls being criticized in
some quarters for letting
Republicans reverse what had been
an 111-15 Democratic edge.
"He's hurt, and I would be," Riffe
said.
.
But there were serious
disagreements between the · two
.

,_,a

.

BIRTHS
Mr. ..id Mn. Lawrence Haley,
1011, Gallipolla; Mr. and Mrs. James
.._rrls, daughter, Long Bottom.

ARTIFICIAL

RISTMAS TRE

America's most succeuful
e,ergy saving product. ·
Utlliz.e your dryer to heat your home,
saves you up to $15 per month in
winter heating costs. Recaptures
thousands of BTU's of heat.
•Safe for use c;m gat or electric

2 Ft. Douglas Pine
25 Tips
Plastic Stand

clothes dryers.
•Tokes minutes to install.
•Sold complete with Instructions, lint
fil.ter and mounting clips.

'479

Middleport p' arade
COUpon available

Roady 10 sproad '
•Chocolate Fudsjo
•Vanilla

DELUU FUDIE
IIDWIIE Ill

'369
NELSON'S REG. $4,5.

16'h Oz.

6 FT. FOLD AWAY

NILION'I-.

The annual Christmas parade to
be held In Middleport, sponsored by .
the Middleport Chamber of Commerce will be held Monday, Dec. 1,
Candy Ingels, president, annoWlced.
The parade will fonn on the
parking lot at the fonner Gateway

-

.

"·"

Green Scotch Pine
42 Branche&amp;, fll· Tips
Tripod stand, 4"
meter

WHEITIUTS .
SIACl

'22995

Market and proceed through the
busine!IB section. With the parade
will bring the arrival of Santa Claus.
Santa will distribute treats to the
children in the drive through at Central Trust Company, NA.
Any person, group or organization
wishing to take part in the annual
event is uked to complete the
coupon below and mall to Candy
Ingels, Ingels Furniture and
Jewelry, Middleport, Ohio46760.

Model HP 6847

7

oa.

NELSON'S RIG.

99~

WITH'"·SPEAKERS
,., COMPLETE'
..... _, '"'"·' "'"'"'''.\

Stereo 8· Track Player wiih AMiFM Siarto
Receiver and Deluxe Automatic Rilcord Changer

'

'

Great s1ereo ~uyl Features high sensitivity and selectivity; Phase Locked Loop (PLLI FM stereo
circuitry; pushbutton function selectors for AM,
FM tape, phono and auxiliar)'; built-in automatic
frequency control (AFC); lighted slide rule vernier
tuning; rotary controls for volume, bass, treble,
balance and tuning; LED program indicators; full
size record changer;·cue and pause control; ceramic
cartridge/ diamond stvlus;'bass reflex Ported speaker
system; 6'A" full range speaker; dust cover.
Speaker size: 20" x 11 ll" x 7".-Walnut graine~
vinyl veneer on wood product construction. ,,

ANNUAL CHRISTMAS
PARADE DEC. 1
NAME . .. . .................. .. . .
ADDRESS .................. . .. .

EJAR
•F,reezer onJ
ov•n proof

NUMBERINGROUP ........... .

r ___________.._____...;,_____:_;·.:.

.;~

1

OLD
FASHION
BEAN POT

.,,,

EtBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ORGANIZATION ........ ~ .. .. , ,.

' ·.

•Many styles to choose from
•Stoneware

---

_____....;.

NILSON'S RIG. $11.ft

SlACK JAR .

..

I

MASONIC SERVICES
Middleport LOdge 363 will hold
Masonic Services for Edgar Harrah
this evening at 7:30 p.m. at the
RawUngs-Coats:Biower Funeral
Home,.Middleport.

•Assorted pictures ·
on jon

•
'·

...,

WILL PAY RF.'lPECI'S
Members of the Pomeroy Fire
Department are to meet at the fire
station this evening at 6:46 p.m.
Members will go to Ewing FWleral

'

•.'

CLOSED TUESDAY
Poblic libraries of Meigs County
will be closed Tuesday in oJ&gt;.
servance of Veterans Day.
Home to pay their respects to Harold
Ebersbach.

•Stoneware

•Dishwasher SOfe .
•Without cover shield
•22. Watt Clrcllne Fluor.. cent bulb will
. lost fo~ years
•Bulb Included

$189

•Mode of Western
Sloneware

NELSON'S RIG. $6,ft

5 Pt.

Saves $'s on yOur energy bills.

$7''
NILSON'S lEG. n.H

',,"'
'

.

.

'

"

•100 Bags

.•

16 OJ..

lAG

,~ -

•eows.110. n•

·-

Make 49 payme~t,~ ~,··:· . ,',~.,.
get the soth FREE~ ·· "·

BIDAD PEII DUTCH
IDODLES

~

'

LIPTON TEA BAGS

LIPTON

.•. ,.

'

Open a ··
Christmas ·c lub ··Ac&amp;ifmt
at the Farmers Bank.
.

..

'•

'~ :t~.

,,

te-.

stevens, Leona Trout

AMERICAN TREE &amp;
WREATH

HEAT SAVER

.

am~n~c

':li...!'J.~.:..·:...~
" !;
''l.::"!....

thedinner.

'

THE HEAT SAVER
HEATING VENT
FOR CLOTHES DRYERS

Meigs County happertings

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. 7
Teddy Barker, Stephen Betz,
William Bonecutter Jr., Garland
Boston ll, Mrs. Greg Browning and
daughter, Randy Clark, Ronald
Cochran, Lawrence Delawder, Jehu
Farley, Elizabeth Finnicum, Rose
Floyd, Helena Gardner, Joan
Gherke, Dorothy Gordon, Julia
Grimm, Glenn Hammonds, Chad
iliJJ, Evelyn Jones, Louie Li.the,
Jack Mills, Catherine ·Muir,
Debor'ah Mullins, Reba Parks,
Larry Preis!, Edra Proffitt, Darlene
Rapp, Austin Roush, Neil Sanders,
Roy Sayre, Amy Siders, Louise
Stollings, Erma Thomas, Gloria
Triplett, Vemle VanDyke, Linda
Ward, pamela Wells, Oscar
Wheeler.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Jenkin.!!,
daughter, Jackson.
NOV.B
Luetta Ally, Lyadell .Anderson,
Clamaee Barlett, Margaret Bal'Edward Blair, Uooel Bogp,
. Jeu Boyer, Janet BufflqWo,
Mlupret Chamben, Sharoa Cborcll, Claytoa Crow, Doris DeHart,
Mldulel Drummood, Heory hlrelllld, Mellua Flllley, lmle Haueo,
Juet IIlii, Mn. Roger HYHD aad
....,.._, Sadie Mlller, Doaald
Baybara, LIIWidN!e Wllb. ·
NOV. I
Nanna Berry, Ann Coe, Mrs.
David Edwards Jr. and son, Tara
Ecgers, Joeeph Ferrell U, James
Hammond, Terry Jenkins, Ainber
Mohler, Mrs. Joseph Osborne and
80n, Mrs. Francis Shafer and
• daughter, John Sharp, Clarence

P~memy

SALE STARTS TODAY!
.
.
-GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 10

his

,

The

Lobbyists, .favor seekeJ:'S
prey upon GOP ·leadership:
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
newly elected Rapublican majority
in the Ohio Senate already has been
set upon by lobbyllls and other
favor-seekers who have been courting the Democrats the past six

Mrs. Ellis (Mae) Smith, Akron,
fonner Meigs resident, died SaturdayinAkrom
She wa.s a daughter of the late Concord and Mary Guinther. She was
also prt!Ce!ied in death by three
sisters, among whom.was Mrs. Emma Werry, local.
Surviving are her husband, Ellis;
two daughters, Mary Lou Yehnert,
Creston, and Jean Seyfried, Columbus; three grandchildren, and

1111

•

•
i

MRI11Rc··

....

NIUOi'l'l 110. U ,lt

r

ELECTRONIC GAME

II.
1111 FREEZE

LIPTON
CUP·A·SOUP

EG-a IOQDLES
AND SAUCE

' ~iptan

&lt;t~

Farmers

Bank -

. Member FDIC

. . . . . t:a
SNAGGED - Parachutist Ken Hamilton strucBies to lllllangle the
lines of his parachute after jumping from the New Riyer Gorp Bridge in
Ansted, W. Va., Saturday. Halnilton fell onto roclul m feet below the
bridge and wa.s reported in satiafactory condition Sunday, at a ho•pilal
nearby. IAP Laserphoto i.

The Community Owned Bank
I

•

Q.OSEO NOV. 11 FOR VETERANS DAY.
I'

NILSON'S IIG. W

.• Hearty Chicken

Senlln• .

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