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- -~- --··

Five hurt
in crash

By Bob HoefUcb
Middleport has grown 6.5 percent
in population and 15 percent in
housing units since 1970.
'
That was the report of Mayor Fred
Hoffman based on preliminary 1980
census figures presented to Middleport Council members Monday
night.
Mayor Hoffman said he was
pleased with the coWJt based on the
preliminary figures since it had
been projected that Middleport's
population would drop to 2600 during
the 1980 census. Accbrding to the
preliminary count, Middleport has
2,967
people and 1300 housing units.
·the car-Lawrence W. Legg, 39, Bidthe meeting, Mayor HoffDuring
well; Larry W. Jones, 34, Pomeroy ;
man
also
reported
one of the village
Dottie Pierce, 39, Pomeroy; and
police
cruisers
was heavily
Charles W. Van Meter, 32, Pomeroyin
an
accident
last Thur- .
damaged
-were lhfown from the car..
sday morning: The Mayor said the
They were all taken to Veterans
officer on duty was answering a
Memorial Hospital, where Legg,
burglary alarm call to the Royal
Jones and. Charles Van Meter were
Crown Bottling Co. Of! Thursday
~':~!nre~~~~dPiercewere morning when the rear brakes on the .
admitted, where both were reported vehicle went out.
The cruiser collided with an onin satisfactory condition this morcoming
car at Sixth and Palmers
ning.
Sts.
No
one was injured but both
Three pel'SI'ns were also injured in
vehicles
were
heavily damaged, the
a one-&lt;:ar wreck investigated by the .
mayor
reported.
patrol Monday night on SR 233 in
Council agreed to accept the inGallia County.
surance
payment on the vehicle and
According to the report, Leonard
it
towards the purchase of
apply
S. Byers, 26, Columbus, was noranother
used
cruiser. No earlier
thboUnd and driving left of center
when be swerved to avoid an on- report had l)een issued by the police
coming vehicle, went off the right
side of the road and overturned.
Byers and two passengers in his
car-Barbara A. Byers, 24, Columbl!S, and David A. Pruitt, 'n,
Willowood-were injured but not
treated irrunediately .
Moderatl! damage was reported to
Doug Burns, 'n, Pomeroy, found
his car and Byers was cited for exguilty
of receiving stolen property
cesBive speed.
Monday
afternoon following a trial,
No injuries wel;'e reported in a car·
was
sentenced
to a term of six mondeer accident on SR 7 in Meigs Counths
to
five
years
in a proper penal inty early Monday afternoon.
The patrol said Gary E. HYsell, 22, stitution by Meigs Col!lltY Common
Rutland, was northbound when at Pleas Collrt Judge J olm C. Bacon.
Bums was indicted Aug. 21 by the
1:25 p.m. when a deer ran into the
Meigs
CoWJty Jury on the charges
path of his car, was $'lick and
from a breaking and enstemming
killed.
tering
at
the
Pomeroy GWl Club.
Moderate damage was listed to
Frederick
W. Crow, III, ·
Hysell's car and no citations were
represented
the state
prosecutor,
issued.
while Charles · H. Knight and
Douglas Uttle court appointed COWl·
sel represented Burns..
Four others persons, two of whom
The Meigs CoWlty Sheriff's Deparwere
juveniles, were also involved in ,
tment IS investigating an attempted
the
breaking
and entering and :
breaking and entering of the Penearlier
entered
voluntary pleas of
tecoatal Church on SR 124 west of
guilty and have been sentenced. The
Racine.
adults
were Richard Hennan and ·
Soinetime between last WedDon
Hood,
both of Middleport.
nesday and Sunday morning there
'The
state
presented Its case
waa evidence that someone had tried
succession
wittnesses
through
a
to get in the church doors.
the
defense
called
no withowever,
Walter Garnes, · RD, Dexter,
nesses
and
offered
no
evidence
in
notified the sheriff's office of a theft
·
defenlle
to
the
charge.
A
guilty
at the Ernie Lester fann that ocverdict W8ll returned less than 30
curred over the weekend. .
According to the report two rolls of minutes ilfter the cue went to the
wire, wire cutters and wrenclles 'had jury. Burns was remanded to the
custody of the sheriff.
been taken.

as the mental
According to Rep. James the state
had already spent $848,578 on the
center. The additional $52,339 approved today will assist the Meigs
• the final
County "--•··•
""'"'the""""oners m
.
~~~

J~es said:

"I am pleased ~t
the state cortrolling board bjls approved the final request for funds to
complete the corrunwuty mental
~th center in Pomeroy. 'The
building IS located near Veterans
Memorial HnmitaJ.
.
-.-

Jury finds

Burns guilty

Parade entries being accepted

..III..Mw.........

N·E·LSON'S .
DRUG STORES

·•

work."
Agents from the attorney
general's Bureau of Criminal Investigation infiltr,aied a pyramid
party Sept. II in Meigs COWlty.
Three defendants in the suit filed
Monday were arrested on criminal
charges after , that party: Marie
Five persons were injured in a
'Thomas and Billie Houk, both of The one-car crash in Meigs County inPlains, and John Peters of Jackson. .vestlgated l&gt;y the Gallia-Meigs Post
Other defendants in the suit in- of the Ohio Highway Patrol. .
clude Russ Tippett of. Malta and
'The patrol said. a car driven by
Roger Cox and Nancy Cox, both of Linda S. Van Meter, 33, Pomeroy,
'The Plains.
was westboWld on CR18at 1:20 a.m.
today whei\ she lost control. Her
'
vehicle went off the right side of the

NANCARIOW~S

· PHA.MACY

director; atrightisWendellM.Belew, the committee's
chief counsel. Differences between the House and
Senate and between Democrats and Republicans over
where budget cuts should be made has stymied efforts
sofartogeta budget approved. (APLaserphoto ).

Census figures show growth
in Middleport during '70's

Probe complaints

60~. Cotton
40~. Polyester

•Zip Front
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SJ99

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The state
attorney general's office has sued
six organb:ers and promoters of an
alleged $16,000 pyramid scheme
known as the Business List Concept.
The suit, filed Mooday in Athens
CoWlty Corwnon Pleas Collrt by Attorney General William J. Brown,
aakB the six to provide full
restitution to all conswner-investors ·
who participated in the alleged
scheme.
The defendants and others .~ who
are wmamed - allegedly violated
the' Ohio Pyramid Sales Act, which
prohibits the sale of schemes which
. thrive strictly on one's ability to
recruit others into it, Brown said.
"Under the guise of helping '
people, the promoters of these
pyramid schemes siphon money oirt

:'!at~:,.:':tio:~

•battery operated

Wool
40% Acrylic
20% Nylon

THE BUDGET STRUGGLE :.._ Chainnan of the
House Budget Committee Robert N. Giaimo, !).Conn.,
center, works with aides Monday on Capitol Hill 0n a
final version of the federal budget for flscal1981 before
the begirming of the lame-duck congressional session
Wednesday. At left Is Mace Broide, staff executive

Six organizers sued

••z

•21"x27" Photo scenes , 3-dimenslonol
•worm oak wood frame
•goes beautifully In any room

40~.

Jones was asked if the cut was
aimed at "calling Reagan's bluff"
on spending cuts or if it was just a
respolll!e to the election results. "I'll
take the latter," he said, laughing.
Although flscal1981 began Oct. 1,
Congress has yet to approve a binding budget resolution, .as required
by its rules.
A draft of the budget resolution
drawn up by the committee staff
calls for a $648.7 billion budget.with
a deficit of $38.4 billion.
But Giaimo called the projected
deficit, based primarily on spending
bills already passed by the House,
clearly "unacceptable to many if not
to most members of Congress."
meet."
He said his amendment would
But, Jones added, "they're (the
Republicans) going to have to reduce the deficit $13 billion by cutgovem some now...tliey don't have a ting all federal spending - except
defense ..:. by 2 percent.
·
free ride anymor~."
That staff projection ill based on a
tax cut of $30 billion to $32 billion,
compared with the PEnding $39.8
billion reduction proposed by the
Senate Finance Committee and enof the pockets of those who need it dorsed by Reagan.
the most," Brown said. "In this
The COJ:lllllittee met in advance of
scheme, many people lost their, the post-election congressional
$1,000 investment when the pyramid session that begins Wednesday in orbroke down and ran out of people in- der to have a budget resolution
terested in buying into the list. ready fqr quick action .
Mathematically, pyramids don't

" e, has
Rep. Ron J·~
_ .._, Proctorvill
Local funds for the project will
announced state controlling board
total ..
••26,863 upon completion. The
approval of
339 · state
1
.,.
'
m
con""'"'n•
struction assistance fWlds for the ~ ...u - figure for the building was
final
t of the
$1•341 •902 •
However, the completed .Project
paymen
. community
mentalhealthcentermPomeroy.
. totaled $.1,4Z1, 780. The additional
The stru~, known as the multi- $52,339 will help pay the additional
purpose building, houses several costs aspokesmanforJamessaid

MIN'S

n•.ts

'S INSULA..· •! f t
THERMAL SOCKS

FIFTEEN CENTS

cuts, presumably he would ask for
an increase in the spending ceiling."
But Giaimo said the action was not
intended to.embarrass Reagan, who
pledged during his campaign to cut
spending.
" I'm not interested in calling the
president's bluff," Giaimo said.
"I'm interested in getting control of
spending.... I'm not trying to be vin-'
dictive."
Rep, James R. Jones, l){)kla., a
contender to replace the retiring
Giailpo as committee chalnnan in
the next Congress, called the 2 per-.
cent cut "qUite a chunk for the new
administration to come in and

Final payment gets approval ~~~~v:~:passengersin

NILSON'S REG.

WALL CLOCKS

WASHINGTON (AP)
Dell)ocrats on the House Budget
Committee want to give Presidentelect Ronald Reagan the opportunity
- and the obligation - to live up to
his campaign pledge of cutting
federal spending, .
'
Rep. Robert N. Giaimo; J).C_onn.,
the conunittee chainnan, said he
would introduce today an across-theboard 2 percent spemU:1g cut as part
of the binding federal budget ceiling
for flscal11181.
It would be up to Reagan to decide
how to make the cuts after he takes
office in January.
"Adoption of niy amendment
would allow the new president the
opportunity to present his proposed
cuts to the· new Congress in
January," Giaimo said Monday. "If
he were unable to achieve theSe

.

"$2995

SPARTUS

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 11,
.
.
.
. 19.80

'

NILSON'S REG. 117.77 ·

POPPIII CIRI

enttne

at

Democrats o
to slice budget

..... 71"

$.1599

ORVILLE REDENIACHIR'S ·
GOURMET

N!LSON'S REG. $1 ...

•

as a

quilt.
•mad•
from
fluffy
"poly..ter
.
•Insulation from Celanese

•10 Bags &amp; Ties

•

Enbiea are being accepted for the
annual Christmas parade kicking off
tile shopj)ing seaSon' in Middleport.
·The event, sponsored by the MIC!dleport Chamber of Commerce, will
be held Monday, Oec. I.
Participants will fonn on the
parking lot at the former Gateway

Market and proceed tnrQugh the
business section.
·
Santa Claus will distribute treats
at the drive through winliow at Central Trust Company. Any person or
organization wishing to participate
should contact Miss Candy Ingles,
chmpber president.

\

department on the accident.
CoWJcil approved the report of
Mayor Hoffman for the month of October. 'The report showed a collection of rt ,717.25 in fines and fees.
A letter from Colwnbia Gas was
read . accepting the recently approved new contract between the
Village and the company. Clerk Jon
Buck read a second letter from
Ashland Oil annoWJcing an increase
of one cent on gasolir]e, all grades,
effective Nov. 5. CoWJcil agreed to
purchase U.S. Treasury Notes in the
amount .of $43,000 from the water
debt accoWlt.
Council members were given
copies of fire hydrant recommendations as provided by the fire

department. Mayor Hof~ indicated that it is hoped that a new
hydrant can be added in the town
each year.
Mayor Hoffman also read a letter
from the Ohio EPA indicating that a
work plan for a pre-sewage treatment program must be completed
by Dec. 31 . Mayor Hoffman said that
he does not feel the plan will be very
costly or much work since the community does not have a heavy industrial complex.
The street committee ~ to
look into a request from the 1dlddleport Church of Christ which has"
asked permission to park its church
bus in an alley behind the church.
(Continued on page 14)

Weekend forest fires total 23
CIDLUCOTHE, Ohio - Firefighters fought 23 forest and grass fires
in southern Ohio during the past weekend.
Wendall Schaller, assistant district forester for eight southern and
southeastern Ohio coWJties, blamed the rash of fires Monday on two
weeks of wann and dry weather.
'
Most of the fires were centered in Scioto and southern Lawrence
coWJties, with the largest blaze burning 150 acres near the edge of Portsmouth, Schaller said. The Portsmouth fire wasn't extingUished Wltil
Monday.
According to SchaUer, the faU fire season hegins Oct. I and usuaUy
lasts through November. ·

Rather given fast ride in Chicago
cmCAGO - CBS newsman Dan Rather has "been in and out of
Chicago taxi~abs" plenty of times, but this time he says he had some
trouble getting out.
Rather than take the veteran reporter where he wanted to go, a cabbie allegedly refused to let him out and raced south on Lake Shore
Drive at speeds up to 75 mph until an off-duty corrections officer forced him to the curb.
The driver; identified. as Eugene Phillips, 38, of Chicago, was
charged Monday with disorderly conduct and refusing to let a
oassenger out. He was released on $35 bond, police said.

Carbon monoxide caused deaths
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The five miners killed Friday in a Boone
· CoWlty coal mine explosion died of carbon monoxide polsioning and
flash burns, according to the state medical examiner.
.
Dr. Irvin Sopher released preliminary autopsy findings late Monday
on the eve of the funerals for the five, who died in Westmoreland Coal
Co.'s Ferrell No.l7 mine near Robinson.
·
The bodies and clothes were singed, though there was no prolonged
contact with a smoldering fire, Sopher said. Carbon monoXide fwnes
resulting from the fire were present in lethal levels in the blood of
three of tile five miners, he said.

Guardsmen, soldiers battle fires
Facing dozens of forest fires and at least four more days without
rain, National Guardsmen, state employees and Army soldiers from
Fort Knox were battling blazes in east~&gt;rn Kentucky and West Virginia
(Continued un pt&lt;ge 14)

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy and continued cool tonight and Wednesday. Lows
tonight 25-30. Highs Wednesday in the UPPEr 40s to low 508. Chance of
precipitation near zero percent tonight and Wectnesday. Winds nor.. therly leSs than 10 mph tonight.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday lllrllqb Saturday:
Fatr 'l'llunday tmd Friday. ChaliCe of sbowen Satuniay. Cool
througb tile period wilb ovemigbllOWI ID lbe upper !Oalllld 30. hl&amp;ba
in the upper 40s to low 508,

,.

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Nov. 11 1!11!0

Opinions &amp;
Comments
M~I,ISA~,
0~~

l'Pt\ SURPRISED

ARE GEt'OtJ'
THROWt.l Ot.IT .

.

'

THERES a.IOil6H
~BI..ICANS 1t)

&amp;\I~!

GO A'ROll~D !I

Uncertainty abounds

•

NEW YORK (AP ) - Uncertainty, indecision l!lld insecurity are the offspring of economic Instability. They are found, as you would expec~
whenever lenders are asked for long conunitments.
In housing, for example:
"Yes, we have mortgage money to lend," said the banker to the young
couple. "We'd like to do business with you."
The couple was elated. " The interest rate will begin at 1~ percent, plus
three points (three percent of the mortgage, paid in advance)" said the
banker. "And there'll bea$150 application fee."
Though shocked, the couple remained seated. The banker continued:
"We are now offering the rollover mortgage." A pause. "That is, the interest rate is subject to adjustment." Pause. "Each year."
The couple was appalled. They saw buying a house as the only way to
get ahead, since inflation grew faster than their income - and they were
expecting. With a house, they thought, they could at least nail down one
expense, the monthly interest charge. But now, they found, that too was
impossible, because the lender could !ldjust the rates.
They took the application form, but after leaving the bank they told a
friend they wouldn't fill it out. They were confused and bitter. In one fiveminute conversation their long-range plan evaporated. .
Shortly afterward, the friend returned to the bank, in a very small Connecticut town, where an officer said the bank had dropped the long-term,
fixed-rate mortgage without any announcement.
"We had to drop it," he said. "We don't see stability returning to the
mortgage market for years to come, so we cannot make ·tong-term commitments any more. Hereafter we just float with the times."
In the bond markets :
·
"Bonds are now bought for price appreciation potential and not for income protection," said Henry Kaufman, a Sal oman Brothers partner
and, in the eyes of many, the high priest of the bond market.
The whole world of debt investments has changed, Kaufman declared a
few weeks. The audience was aware of Kaufman's concern. Some of them
had sought to raise long-term funds and found little investor interest. And
investors seeking safety couldn't find it.
That's not the way it used to be'. In the past, the bond markets were so
stable that a wealthy investor could buy highly rated issues and simply
put them away in a vault while the interest accumulated.
Now, of course, inflation might exceed the interest earned, so investors
don't like to tie up their money fqr 15 or 20 years. And why should they,
when short-term rates are sometimes higher?
" A few decades ago, a speaker on thiS subject would have stressed ...
interest rate stability, the merits of call protection, the value of contractual interest payments, the high quality of private debt and historical
interest rate relationships," said Kaufman.
.
But in 20 years these traditional measurements have vaitished, shattered by the earthquakes of inflation, debt explosion, credit crunch, financial failure, and new investor and borrower attitudes.
And replBced by insecurity, uncertainty and iiidecision.

Today in history.
Today is Tuesday, Nov. 11, the
316th day of 1980. There are 50 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history :
· On Nov. 11, 1918, World War I ended with the signing of an armistice
between the Allies and Germany.
On this date:
In 1620, the Pilgrims signed the
Mayflower Compact, setting basic
rules for their new settlement in
Massachusetts.
In 1933, the first of the great dust
storms of the 1930s swept across
North Dakota.
In 1942, Nazi Germany completed
its occupation of France during
World War II.
And in 1965, Ian Smith declared
Rhodesia's independence, despite
British claims that his regime .was
illegal.

:!:

.,..."'

&amp;.

..

'0

..
·~

Ten years ~go, the Soviet Union
launched a spacecraft on a voyage to
the moon.
Five years ago, the U.S. Congress
voted to reassess America's
relationship with the United NatiOns
after a General Assembly vote
equating Zionism with racism.
One year ago, Abolhassan Bani
Sadr, Iran's new top man at the
foreign ministry, said there'd be "no
compromise and no negotiation"
over Iran's demand that the U.S. extradite the ouSted Shah in exchange
for the American hostages.
Today's birthdays: Comedian
Jonathan Winters is 55 years old.
Fonner movie star Pat O'Brien is
81.
Thought for today: The world war
after the next one will be fought with
rocks - Albert Einstein, Gennanborn physicist (1879-1955).

- !

Nji~
•

.., .!

.AFL-CIO faces December deadline
COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) - The
Ohio AFL-CIO faces a mid·
December deadline in. its drive to
submit to the new Legislature a
proposed law labeling toxic 'substances used in the workplace.
Local unions throughout the state
have been asked to gather 85,000
valid signatures of registered voters
on initiative petitions that would
place the matter before the ll~th
General Assembly in January.
If the union is successful in its
initial petition campaign,
lawmakers,will have four months to
act on the proposal. rt it is rejected
or unacceptably amended, the union
can seek an additional 85,000
signatures next year to put the plan
on the November 1981 ballot.
· At issue is a proposaLthatJ¥-ould
require employers to label what the •

labor group says are more than ditions liid NOT cause the oo- average of $368 per pupil is foUnd in
68,000 toxic substances used in work· cupational disease or death," the Meigs County.
·
places and on job sites.
unionsaid. ·
When examined by · individual•
The union says protecting
districts, the per pupil property
workers' health is one of several A·private research group says coun- taxes for school operation 'range,
reasons for the petition drive.
ties at opposite ends of Ohio will pay from a low rl $166 in the Huntington
The law would make it easier for the highest and lowest average district of Ross County to a high of
victims of occupational diseases to property taxes per pupil for school $4,598 per pupil in the Cuyahoga
seek benefits under the workers' district operating expenses this Heights dlstrlct.
compensation program.
year.
The union says the burden of proof
An estimate from the Ohio Public
The council said the five districts
in such cases now rests entirely with Expenditure Council shows the . with the highest per pupil property
the worker, who has to prove that amount of property tax available to taxes for school operation are
the disabling disease was caused by Ohio's public schools in 1980 will Cuyahoga Heights; Beachwood
toxic substances in the workplace. average $988 per. pupil. It .says· (t;l,923); Brooklyn ($2,973); · fn. ·
But the proposed Jaw would reverse almost 55 percent of the state's dependence ($2,895) and U&gt;ckl•nd
theP!'OCe8!!·
students attend districts that are ($2,873). In addltion to HWltington,.
"After a worker showed he bad a below the statewide averl!ge.
the districts with the lowest per
1
disease associated with a toxic subThe range in average property pupil property taxes for operating
stance used in the workplace, the taxes per pupil by county shows purposes are Western ($169);
employer would have the respon--~Cuyahoga County has-the highest Wasbington (JD); Trimble-($207);
sibility to prove that workplace con- aver"l!ge at $1,553. The lowest and DaWIOII-Bryant ($219).

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deserved high marks for the initial
Vague. Evasive. Unresponsive.
direction of .its African-oriented
Those were the terms used recen- policy. Human rights was its
tiy by a delegation of black leaders keystone, opposition to white
to describe Secretary of State Ed- minority rule was its slogan, and in1., mund Muskie's answers to its
creased U. S. aid to Africa was its
·questionS on U. S. Policy toward cement.
Africa: ·The swne words could be
But that was to change with the
used to describe the Carter ad- resignations of U. N. Ambassador
ministration's initially promising, Andrew Young and Secretary of
later vacillating African policy.
State Cyrus Vance, the renewed fear
The group that met with Muskie
of the Soviet Union following Its in- ·
was headed by Randall Robinson, vasion of Afghanistan and the dicexecutive director rl TransAfrica, tates of election-year politics. Car-•
the black American lobby for Africa ter's policy has now shifted away·
and the Caribbean: Robinson later from U. .s. accommodation to
declared that the secretary rl state's African concerns and toward use of
responses to pointed questions on the contnent as a
of East-West.
southern Africa , foreign aid, confrontation as favored by
refugees and State Department Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
hiring and promotion indicated "the in the Nlxoi&gt;-Ford administration,
impartance of Africa and the Carib- and National Security Adviser.
bean to the United States continues Zbigniew Brze21nski in the Carter
largely unrecognized and the foreign White House.
policy concerns of the AfrGAmerican remain underestimated."
This shift is evidenced by the adMany of those who .met with ministration's failure to oppose
Muskie agree that Jimmy Carter's legislation easing restrictiollS . on:
administration - unlike the ad- covert CIA activity in Angola as well,
ministrations of Lyndon Johnson, as by its opposition to halting Ex-'·
Richard Nilcon and Gerald Ford - port-Import Bank enterprises ·: int

seene

HELENA, Mont. (NEA) - The
' fexas c;ongressionaJ delegation is Indignant about the tax laws here in
Montana and neighboring Wyoming,
Rep. J. J . Pickle, fcir example
claims they are "holding othe1
states as economic hostages.''
Reviling against the 'same
''punishing'' and ••outrageous''
taxes imposed by the two western
states, Sen. lloyd Bentson claims '
the levies are unnecessartly inflating homeowners' electricity billi
in Dallas, Houston, Austin and San
Antonio.
Pickle and Bentsen, both Texas
Democrats, are am(lng the scores of
!)Oliticians throughout the COWitry
currenUy attacking the sevei'IIIICe
taxes on coal production of SO percent In Montana and 17' percent b1
Wyoming. (A severance tax is a levy
!U8ually imposed on non-renewable
resources.)
·

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frequent Invasions of Angolan
territory provide a reason. for the
Cuban presence.
•
The TransAfrlca delegation asked
MUB!de to take the lead in designing
mandatory and e:tcalating sanctions ·
against South Africa'. The :United ·
States, Robinson Werts,• "holds
steadfast in Its refus,al tiJ sUlously
consider economic ~Oils depiste
.calls for such actlon•by most of the
world'sleaders."
·
Muskie evaded ·Tr8115Africa's
requests for increased ''Q! ~ aid to
Africa, which is lower. ~ tenna
today ~ It was In 'WJ. The
In their meeting with Muskie, the secretary rl state. refuseir.to comblack l~ders sought to return the ment on reports that 6fl:'depart- ' ·
adrninlBtration's Africa! policy to Its. ment's lnterbational Dev~nt
earlier orientation.
Cooperation Agency waa ~to
ForemOIII among their requests eliminate bilateral aid &gt;to several
was inunedlate U. S. recognition rl ' small African COWitries.
•
Angola. State Department offlclala
..
admit privately that their public ex- · Robinson notes that U."S: refugee
cuse for not recognizing Angola - . assistance "grossly disfavors
the Cuban troops stationed there Africa, where over half the world's
is based lllOI'8 on domestic· politics. refugees llve.'~. In fiscal 1910, for
than on foreign policy. Mter all, the uample, Pl3.t million was
United States recGgnizes other conn- · allocated io IJJdo.dJineae refugees
tries that house Cuban troops. And It WldJe only P7.5 mliJiCII went to
recognizes South Africa, whose ~cun!aJees.

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South Africa.
For three .years, the ad·;
ministration has warned while-ruled·
South Africa that its relations with ,
the United States will deteriorate if
its aPa1-theid policy is not reiu:ed. t
Nevertheless, the United States has,
replaced Great Britain as South
Africa's top trading partner. This
country's Imports from South Africa
increased by 70 percent in 1979,
while its exports to South Africa increaaed by 25 percent. U. S. investment in South Africa is growing
at a rate of 7 percent a year.

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Joining in their campaign are ,from'a mandatory 12.5 penent state ·
mayors from Minneapolis
.l'O)'alty pa)'llll!llt &lt;111 oil pi'Oductlm, a
Detroit, senators from Arkansas
· 'separate 12.25 percent produeti.on
Washington, congre&amp;mlen from
tax and a state Income tu on
dlapa and Mississippi and power petrolewn companies. Indeed, oil- :
companies from Wisconsin and ·related levies have made AlUra's
Masaachusett.s.
'state government so WNltbJ that ... '
· But in almost every case, those leglalature spent much ol tbia ;year's !
protesters are espondlng tc
flgarlnc out bow to dllpC!Ie rl .
,parochial interests while lgnorinf
than $4 billloo. In windfall
!comparable lues impoBed by otheJ rrev'statesonotherliOIImllrlenergy.
, While there's no cl8mar for a
Pickle, for Instance, inalata that 'ceiling Cll oil and gu ~
"Texas does not tab advantage of taxee; a ~ effort bu been
other states who Del!d our oil and ·IIICIIIJIIed iD w~ D. c., to
gaa.". What he !ioeln't llllnUon ill limit to w
the CG8I
tbatT-tbiayearwillreapalmOIIt IM!Vei'IIICe tu. lma-f by MonU.211 billion from Its severance w· 'tana and WJOIIIinl,
,on fuels, compared with f/5.3 m!Won
This year llllrked the flnt time
collected in Montana:
that one of the perallllallilla to atLouisiana ·will receive me than lain that goalwaUJllll oved b)' a full
$540 · million from oil and· 1J8S , committee In either IIOIIIe · rl
severance taxea, while Alaska will
':'oocral&amp; Allhoucb there's no chanrake In a phenomenal $2.3 bllllon
::e that U..lellialatlve ~ C8ll be

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By Julian Bond

Montana, Wyom;ing: hostage holders

"I am romantically Involved with a computBr at
the office. "

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Direction of the African-oriented policy
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�7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Nov. 11,1980

Stabler, Campbell heroes

Houston withstands
Patriots' comeback
•·

HOUSTON (AP) - Ken Stabler natioruiny televised game, comfired three scoring passes, two in a pleting 15 of 17 passes for 258 yards.
three-touclldown second period, and He was intercepted only once - and
Earl Campbell scored twice as the it didn't hurt, tJ!anks to the Houston
HoUBton Oilers withstood a furious defense.
New England comeba~k and beat
With the victory, the Oilers raj:jed
the PatriotB 38-34 in National Foot- • their record to 1-a and pulled•back
ball League action Mopday night.
inll! a first-place tie With Cleveland
Steve Grogan rel¥latedly rallied in the American Conference's CeoNew England, throwing three touch- tral Division. Houston and,. the
down passes in the second half. And Browns lead de(~nding Super Bowl
when Mosi Tatupu recovered an on- champion Pittsburgh by one game.
side kick with barely ·a minute to Cleve)and visits the Steelers next
play, the Patriots were on th,4' verge Sunday and the Oilers host Pitof an extraordinary victory/1M altsburgh Thursday night, Dec. 4.
ter driving the Pats from qiw' own
The loss was a costly one for New
48 to the Houston 19-yard ~ ~th ~. · . England, which fell ·to 7-3 and back
seconds to play, Grogan c!vert,hrew· • into a first-place tie with Buffalo in
Stanley Morgan in the left comer of lbe AFC East. They play each other
the end zone and cornerback Greg on Dec. 14 in Foxboro, Mass.
Stemrick made !he interception that
The Patriots, playing cardiac footclinched Houston's emotllio,aJ'triwnr,, blllti.ii'the second half, kept corning
ph.
'~
~Pf"\j!:' threaten Houston's onceStabler's scoring
· · ·the huge lead, scoring four touchdowns,
second quarter wer~ a 7~8 "ex- three ~ them on passes by Grogan
cuse me" dellectioillo4\llke Barjler covering 39 yards to Harold Jackson
and a 4-yarder tp oil,! Pbddy Dave . and 21 and 15 yards to Russ Francis.
Casper.
,' ' ;: ~ ~~.
~ ' Pu.t each time, Houston came up
campbell, who, 81:0~ the llt:i)~ '• .with a play to negate the :-ew
touchdown)11_~t'!l*wi~~ ?-' ,,.Engl!'nd comeback .. Grogan, m a
yard run ~~· p!il&gt;&lt;•fo~ . · 'fiermc performance, completed 25 of
Jatk Tatum's ~Yard"' in\erceptloo . 39 passes for 373 yards.
refurn, also scored on ~·a .' 7-~rd
The second period started quietly
th(ustmidwayinthefo~, quatie_r, ,
enough with John Smith kicking a
Caplpbell surpassed tl)!l1,QOO.yar'd routine H&gt;-yard field goal for the
barrier to remali! ~NatiOnal Ji'oot: ' ratriol8 to pull them into a ~ tie.
ball League~s ··miftfng ?»~(.' ... 'l'heil'the fireworks began.
. .
!idshing
the,game
Witb.tM'yards·to
.
~
On
the
Oilers'
first
play
frOm
'
1
hit 1 094 for the season.
scrimmage, Stabler dropped back
S~bl'r cemented the triumph from his own 21·yard line and lofted
with his third TO pass, a 16-yarder to a pass to Barber rumbling down the
Mike Renfro with 2: 41to play. It tur- right side. Cornerback Raymond
ned out to be the winner.;-. :. .
Clayborn', free safety Tini Fox, BarStabler
was
suP.,rb
in
the
ber and the ball all met
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Schmidt named
Player of
' Year
.
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NEW YORK (AP) - Mike Schmidt, the slugging third baseman
who led the Philadelphia Phillies to
thl!lr first world championship in '¥1
years, was named National League
Player of theY ear by the Associated
Press today.
Schmidt easily outdistanced the
field, leading a Philadelphia sweep
of the first four places in the
balloting by a nationwide panel of
sports writers and broadcasters.
He received 368¥.. votes, finishing
far ahead of Philadelphia pitcher
Steve Carlton, who last week won
the National League Cy Young
Award. Carlton received 81\2 votes.
Phillies bullpen ace Tug McGraw
was third in the balloting with 13,
followed by pepperpot first baseman
Pete Rose, who had nine.
Schmidt set a major league record
for third basemen with 48 home
I'WIS, breaking the mark of 47 set by
Hall of Farner Eddie Mathews in

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i953. It was the fourth lime in the
last seven seasons that Schmidt has
led the NL in homers. ·
He also won the National League
runs batted in crown with 121.
A perennial Gold Glove third
baseman, Schmidt was selected t!&gt;
the All Star team for the fifth time
last season and either led or was
among the NL leaders in several
other batting categories, incluiting
total bases, sacrifice flies, slugging
perc~ntage and runs scored.
· Sclunidt was the driving force in
the Phillies' pulsating race to the
·National League East Division
crown and had the game-winning
RBI in each of his team's last live
regular-season victories. It was his
home run in the 11th inning on the
next to the last day of the season in
Montreal that ended the Expos'
chances and clinched the division
tithi for the Phillies.

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PRESSURE ON 76ERS
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - 'lbe
presaure Is on the Philadelphia 76ero
basketball team loulgbt to maintain
an epidemic of athietlc success that
bas swept this city since the World
Series.
.
Not since Oct. 18 lias a local
professional sports team lost.
On thai dale, the Phlladelphla
Phlllles dropped the fourtb game of
the Series to the Kansas City Royals
4-2. But the local fBDB have more
than forgiven the PhUs, who went on
to deliver the first baseball world
champioDBhlp In the ~year history
of the franchise.
Also on Oct. 18, the Phlladelphia
Flyers dropped a 6-2 hockey declsloo
to the Toronto Maple Leafs. Since
then, they have .not lost In 11 games
and have the best record in the
National Hockey League.

Leonard prepares
for Duran rematch

CAMPBELL HITS HOLE - Houston Oilers' running back Earl campbell (34) hits the hole inside his
left tackle in the first quarter of the NBL game at

Houston Monday night. campbell picked up eight yards on the quick opening play. (AP Laserphoto) .

Georgia's Bulldogs take
over;college's top spot
By Assoclaled Press
After 38 years, the Georgia

All-SEOAL
'
Volleyball
Dream Team
.

First Team
Player-School
Pam Lee, Athens
Kr ls Kerona , Athens
x -Sarah Evans, Gallipolis
Ann Me Brown, Logan

Yr.
3
2
J
3

x -Jak.i Copeland, Waverly

4

Lori Vickers, Wellston

4

Second Team
Shiela Chapman, Waverly

Janet Walker, ironton
Nancy Evans, Gallipolis
Angela Mullins, Athens
Kathy J uhasz, Jackson
Cindy Dorsey, Jackson
x-Kim Keller, Wellston
Lori Rupe, Meigs
'
x - Repeaters
.
Honorable Mention
Athens- Kelly Kyle
Gallipolis-Shirl Stoney
Ironton-Lisa McDaniels
Jackson--Amy Davis
Logan-Carol Hultman
Meigs-Andrea Riggs
Wa,erly- Brenda Reed
W~llston--Sonya Hatten
·'

3
3
2.

2
3
2
4
4

4
4
4
2
4
4

2
4

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Formerc~pion Sugar Ray Leonard
begins his workouts here today,
'l
preparing for his Nov. 25 rematch
with welterweight champion Rober·
to Duran.
FINAL SEOAL VOLLEYBALL
Both fighters will be working out
(Varsity!
· SEOAL
daily at the Superdome, but Leonard
w L
TEAM
begins his training sessions about
12 2
Athens
two hours·later than Duran.
11
3
Jackson
11
3
Duran zipped through his first on- waverly
10
4
Gallipolis
site workout Monday, toying with
6 8
Logan
three sparring partners through six
4 10
Ironton
1 13
Meigs
rounds of boxing.
1 13
He took the World Boxing Council Wellston ALL·GAMES
crown from Leonard by unanimous,
19 3
Athens
15 6
Jackson
though close, decision in June in
18 6
Waverly
Montreal. The rematch is scheduled Gallipolis
18 7
for the Superdome, and promoters
10 12
Logan
9 11
say they expect a live gate of around
1renton
14
6
Meigs
• $8 million.
5 21
Wellston
Duran repeated hia prediction that
{Reserves)
w L
the fight will not go the 15-round TEAM
14
0
Waverly
distance.
10 4
I renton
"I'm better prepared .than I was
9 5
Logan
last time," he said through manager · Gallipolis
8 5
5 7
Luis Henriquez, who acted as in- wellston
3 11
Meigs
terpreter for the Panamanian Athens
3 11
fighter.
0 13
Jackson

Bulldogs, the nation '.s only unbeaten-untied major team, moved
into fh'st place in The Associated
Press coUege football poll today for
the first time since late in the 1942

third with two first-place votes and
1,105 points for a 55-8 rout of Kansas
State. Alabama, the No.1 team two
weeks ago, rose from sixth to fifth .
with 1,067 points by defeating
season.
Louisiana State 28-7.
·
Following Saturday's 26-21 comeNotre Dame was sixth with 1,045
from-behind triumph over Florida, points, followed by Ohio State. The
Georgia received 54'k of 66 first· Buckeyes, who won a wild 49-42
place votes and 1,299'k of a possible slugfest from Illinois, received the
1,320 points from a nationwide pane[ remaining one-half first-place vote
of sports writers and sportscasters.
and 924'k points.
The Bulldogs were rurtnerup to
Pitt, Penn Stale and Oklahoma .
Notre Dame a week ago but the rounded out the Top Ten. Each
Fighting Iri&amp;h were held to a 3-3 tie moved up one position from _last
by Georgia Tech, a 1-7-1 team, and week as UCLA skidded from eighth
slipped from first place to sixth.
to 17th. Pill received 868 points by
Southern California, fourth last trouncing Louisville 41-23, Penn
week, moved into second place with State earned 76a points for a 21-13
six first-place votes and 1,180 points triwnph over North Carolina State
following a 34-9 victory over Stan· and Oklahoma totaled 618 points
ford.
·
following a 21-19 victory over KanFlorida State, a 31·7 winner over sas.
Virginia Tech, held onto third place
There was some shuffling of
with 1,172 points. The Seminoles positions but no newcomers in this
received three first-place ballots.
week's Top Twenty. The Second Ten
Nebraska moved up from fourth to consists of Michigan, Baylor,
Brigham Young, South Carolina,
North Carolina , Purdue, UCLA,
Southern Methodist, Mississippi
State and Florida. -

Top Twenty

The Tq~ Twenty teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with fi rstplace votes in parentheses, season's.
records and total points. Pomts based. on
23-19-111-11·1~ If&gt;. I ~- 1 3-12-IH0.9-8-7 -6-5+3 -2-

Final SEOAL
1
california (6)
V0 lteyb8 ll Stan d•tng.s 3. So.Florida
State {3)
Nebraska

How can we
save you ·money
on auto insurance?

~

1. Georgia(M ~)
2.

4.

74-1
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74-1
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6. Notre Dame
7. Ohio State

a. Pittsburgh

&amp;.! ..

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9. Penn State
10. Oklahoma
11 . Michigan
12. Baylor

13. Brigham Young
14. South Carolina
15. North Carolina
16 . Purdue

618

7-2-j}
8-l.j)
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577
550
464 ..
453

7-2-&lt;l
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19. Mississippi State
20. Florida

868
765

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17. UCLA
18. So. Methodist

1,2991'.
1,180
1,172
1,105
I ,1167
1.045 .
924 "h

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339

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SNOW BITER®goes thru
ice, mud and snow!

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simultaneously on the New England
47, with Fox trying for an interception but getting only a deflection.
As the 'New England defenders
collided, the ball popped up and then
down into Barber's hands at the 40
and he easily beat his Patriot pursuel'!l to the end zone for a 1().3
Houston lead 1: ~5 into the quarter,
just 24 seconds after Smith's first
field goal.
Smith got his second one, a 44yarder, on New England's next
series, but again the Oilers responded with a touchdown. This time, it
took Stabler seven minutes to get it.
He engineered a 12-play, 74-yard
drive capped by his 4-yard bullet to
Casper, his · former longtime
Oakland teammate who rejoined
him a month ago in a trade that sent
three draft choices, including a No.l
next year, to the Raiders. The touchdown catch was Casper's first as an
Oiler, one' of four receptions, 50 yards worth, he made in the march that
widened the gap to 17-&lt;l with 1:57left
in the half.
Grogan tried to bring New
England back in a hurry but it cost
him dearly. Just 17 seconds after
Casper's TD, campbell got his 2yard run thanks to Talwn, yet
another ex-Raider.
The Houston safety stepped in
front of Morgan, caught Grogan's
· badly underthrown pass with ease
and carried it down the right sideline
before guard John Hannah's ankletackle sent him sprawling at the 2. It
took just one play, campbell bulling
through a hugh hole on the right
side, to make it 24-0.

NATIONAL lEAGUE PLAYER OF mE YEAR- Mike Sclunldt,
Phlladelpbi8 Philliea third bue:nan, was named the National League
Player of the Year by tiM! AIIIOdaled Press Tuelday. Sclunldt Ls shown
battlnc a twiHi'JII homer ·during the lfOrld series £l~D~e with Kansas City
Oct.19.(AP~).

~

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�&amp;-Tile Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,Nov.ll, 1980

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 11,1980

Groups report Halloween parties

ASTRO
·GRAPH
1'1111 ~ ,...- yoo
prtllally

Syracuse Church

adilot·• .. _. •iu-

- l l l e .....- . . .. you
eoaltl be llfHiaiiJ tn1e 01 tHrt

trnell.
triDIJOilmakef•---···1·

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SCORPIO (De~ u.NOT. iii Bei;LY"" .....

pe~ where you can function ~ndenUy
today brinl;s out th! bell that'aln you. Y oa 're not
apt to llo u well undei' the dlrrtl.., a1 CJthen.
·Find ou.1 mot'ft of what
abMd for you in the

u.

Ill'-.,

year lollowln(l yoor l&gt;irthdaY
lor your
copy a1 kltn&gt;Graph. loJ.Ill 'I lor eoch to MtroG... pll.llol411, Radio City SlaUoo. ~- Y. IOOIV.
Be ..... tolpOCi( birthdaiA!.

SAGm~ IN... ~ nt Beamicablo

with people you bave dWinp with
~~f, but ..don't treat serious matter~; too
~ - Foolilbneu could defeat your
purpll!lt.

CAPRICORN IDee. IWu. It) lt'o more izn.
that you keep oo lriODdiy lmil5 with
ea~r aaoclltes today than it il to .fulfiU selfish
ambttiona. Play It looee.
.·

ponant

AQUARIUS

(ln.

ZO.Feb.

If)

Major

act»eVements are poeiiPle todly, but Lbey may
not be accomplished oil your first lry. Keep
plugging. You'D aet what you want.

PISCES (Feb. !1-Mardl !I) Valuable leasona
can be learned from your mistakes today.
Pulling a boo-boo Isn't tha emi al the world. In
fact. il could be a blgmplorwanl!
•

~

1.
THE SEGO BROTIIERS and Naomi, professional
gospel singing group £rom Nashville, Tenn. will be
singing at the Reedsville United Methodist ' Church.

Reedsville, Thursday at 7 p.m. A free will offering wui
be taken. The public is invited.

ARIES (Mai&lt;ll ll-AprO It) There's a chan«
. you could get all on the Wl'Oilllool early In the
day and gwn thinp up a bit. However, after you
regroupyourfOI"C'e!!l,you'Uget backoo track.
TAURUS (A prO . .May Ill You're Industrious
and productive today, but not with th1nga whi~h
you dO for yourself. You 3h1ne when it comes to
helping other!.
GEMINI (May 11-.1... 211 1'llill sliould be a
pralltable day, provtiltd you're not looking lo,
somethlnil for ~g. 'lour big ICOI'e comes
lhrough effort and bani wort&lt;.
CANCER IJ ... 11-.loly II) You could e&lt;- ·
perlence • situation today where you're reluctant to do SQJnething, even thoogh you know it
serves your ~st interesta. Follow the dictates r:L

your conacience.
LEO (July 1$-Auc. :131 Onleoayou tate pMde in
your l&amp;sM today. you will not perfonn your best.
Wor1t .. ~ eoch chore I&gt; being graded by
someone whose opinim you respect. ·
V111G0 IAIIC. zs.stpt. Ill You're entitled to
relax and enJOy younelf today, but try to chooee
actlvities which cost you nothing. On tbe free list
there will be ample to choooe from.
LIBRA (Sepl. !WcL 13) Yoo're lorlWIIlle
today regardfng things which can make you
money or contribute to your safety. Don't fritter
your time away on Uivi.alities.

Birth noted

MAGICIAN - Dorian Blake, mag1c1an and
illusionist, will be one o£ the featured entertainers
during the annual Magic Holidya Fantasy to be staged

at the Meigs Junior HighSchool in Middleport on Dec. 3
under the sponsorship of the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment.

Magic Holiday Fantasy
slated by fire dept.
'The Middleport Fire Department
will again stage its annual Magic
Holiday Fantasy.
The '£antasy is a national touring
company, Kenneth Imboden, chairman of the event for the fire department,said.
He conunented that the fantasy is
clean, wholesome entertainment
and will be staged at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 3, at the Meigs Junior
High School in Middleport.

Proceeds £rom the project will go
to the fire department projects.
This is the ninth year for the
holiday £antasy tour and among the
features are jugglers, acrobats,
balancers, aerial perfomters and
perfomting animals. Santa Claus
will also make an appearance.
An advance sale of reduce-rate
tickets is now in progress by the
department.

Weight classes report losses
TOPS-------------------------

.

•

Maida Long and Mary Snyder
were queens at weekly meetings o£
the TOPS OH 570 Club.
Runners-up were Donna Smith,
Shirley Turner and Frances Haggy.
Teresa Wood is leader of the group
and she encouraged members to
keep a diet sheet and at times when
there is a weight increase to pay a

"pig".
The AID meeting held
Friday was discussed and the Area
Recognition day to be held in Columbus on Apri14 was announced. Members were reminded of the nickle
contest which will end on Dec. 16,
and were also reminded to remember their secret pais.

Slinderella---- - - - - - - - - - Membership and weight loss contesta are being conducted by Slinderella at area diet classes and will
conclude on Christmas day.
Prizes will be awarded to the person bringing in the most members
and to the one losing the most weight
~ore Christmas.
At the Monday night meeting of
the Mason class, Donna Elliott and
Emma Paugh lost the most weight
while at the Tuesday morning clvss,

.,
•'

·,

.•

..

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,.

..'

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'

:.
·'

Judi Fry and Virginia Robie lost the
most weight with Mrs. Robie
receiving her 20 pound ribbon and
certificate.
Debbie Fink lost the most weight
at the Middleport class with Linda
Turley as runner-up, while at the
C~ester class, there was a tie bel·
ween Maxine Jordan, Karen Smith
and Melissa Barker £or the most
weight loss with Betty Barker as
· runner-up.

-----Hosts WMFI----'-Mrs. Jean Wright hosted ·a recent
meeting or the Laurel Clif£ WMFI.
Devotions were on Thanksgiving
with Mrs. Doris Shook
acknowledging cartons sent to
Rhodesia in April. Mrs. Wanda
Eblin and Mrs. Mildred Jacobs had
prayer.
Mrs. Shook explained how to make
grandchildren li£e members of the
GYM. Next meeting will be held on
Dec. 2 at the horne of Mrs. .Wa!lda

Eblin. Mrs. Shook had the closing
prayer and refreshments were served by · Mrs. Ann Mash and Mrs.
Shook.

.

'

EMTs visit Rutland school

~ MMJ~r:~~=

Rutland Elementary School, •
following up a visit £rom the Rutland . ~Vld&amp;on annre q
Fire Department during Fire Situations concenPnll accldenlll.
Prevention Week, was treated to an
This is the second.ln a IM!rles &lt;i
assembly by the Rutland Emergen- prevention aaaembll• tbat are
cy Medical Service. Janet Bolin, . scheduled In the school for~ year.
Wilma Davidson and· Marjorie •' The next~bly will be ~ucted
Davis, technicians for the Rutland In • December to cmtlnue emMedical Service, presented an phaslzlng safety·
assembly on "First Aid for Little , - - - - " " " ' : - - - - - - People."
Margaret Johnson, D.P.P.F. aide
for Meigs Local Schools, organized
the event to help the students to
FOR FALL SEASON
become more aware of wh!tt to do in
Large selection of house
an emergency. A film supplied by
plants and hanging
General Telephone and Electric
baskets.
acquainted the children with pr.inciples of £irst aid and placed emphasis on the importance of getting
help.
,1
SyraucseiOh.
"2·5776
Following the movie, a disclJSSion
Open
Daily
Mon.-Sat.
was conducted by Janet Solin,, on
9 to 5
how to get this help if an emergency

1914-15 KYGE!jl GRADE SCHOOL - Pictured are
the studenlll of 1914-15 .at the Kyger Grade School. The
students were taught in two rooms with teacher £or
grades one through four beillg Mrs. Emmett Ne!iion
and her 1&gt;1""!"!_1, ta~ ibe •upper four grades. The
photo is the ~rty of Mrs. Enna Bales, Route 1, .
Cheshire. · 'Die "stuclerils plctilffil, with the known
married names of the girls In parentheses, Include:
First r:o*, sitting- Oscar Spires, Floyd Rupe; Frank
Sims, Roy 8earles, Claude Rupe, John Spirea, Stanley
Searles, Forrest Rathburn, Kenneth Vanzant,' Frank
Hogue,'tecll Searles, Delbert Kennedy. Second row Emerson ' 'Spires, Helen llradbury , (Kennedy),
Margaret• Athey · (I..yneh), Iva Borham, Marjorie

'·

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'

VISIT HAUN'i'ED HOUSE
The NYI of the Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene visited the haunted
house during the Halloween season.
In the group we~ Scott Grueser,
Richard Cook, Richard Davis, Lori
Stewart, Pam Amburgey, Paula
Wineb~nner, Robin Savage, Bobby
Willis, Mark and Sue Davis, Regina
Nance, Lisa Parsons, Mark
Winebrenner, and Debbie Triplett;

· SPECIAL REVIVAL Serylces

t

wW be held Wednnday lbrGagb
Sauday, Nov. 11, 7:30p.m., at
Laurel Cliff ll'ree Metbodllt Cb
cb. Featured ip!l8ker *J1!1 11Dger
wW he the Rev. DeJJa!d Glui of
C&amp;mbrlciCe. Tbe Rev. Mr. Glau
~darted 111 10111 ev.uce~~sm 1n
J.Mf, JJDd 1a
bepn biB
putanl 1111111110'· He II pre~e~~tly
completiDc ~ elPtb year ••
Jiutar at CamiJddce ·wlleft be

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

mz

Golden Mountaineer Club&amp; Golden Buckeye Club Cards H-tcl

,..

...

~darted. Culltrttlle ~
A"""'v .. lJ'H, ad }.; IIDee

PAT HILL FORD

s. 3rd Ave.

acted 11 ,&amp;dml•h11 8 a.. F1oyd F.
Slloek, patGr fll tile Laurel Cllf
~ lllvitel tile pabllC.

Middleport, Oh.

Ph. 992-2196

''The phone

systems

big

one.
It
••
for us~ .. :·.

-PhD BowmaD, Vice Preslde.-t, Waterloo Coal Co., Oak Bill .

Methodist Church recenUy. Donna
Byer, chalnnan of education, planned the party with the assistance of
junior and senior high school Sunday
school classes.
The cl•"es did the decorating and
planned a spook house and bouse or
spiril.!l. Refreslunents of cider, KoolAid and donuta were served. Prizes
were silver dollars.
The prize winners were, second
grade and under, Penny Lewis, the
· fwmlest; Lee Luclleydoo, prettiest;
Adam Krawsczyn, ugliest; Michelle
Frash, most original; and C!tteat.
Ertn Krawsczyn; and third grade
and up, Mary llyer, funniest; Luke
Burdette, ugliest; and Charles
Davis, most original.

A Halloween skating party was
held recently at the Skate-a-Way
Rink £or those ·who attend the
·syraCIIIIe Church or the Nazarene
Sunday Scttool and the Belpre Chur·
ch or the Nazarene.
Attending from the Syracuse
Church were the Rev. and Mrs.
James B. Kittle, Ralph and Jan
lavender, Beckie and Doug, Wille
Guinther and Chris, Mae Grueser,
Scott and Kevin, JW!jor Martin and
Harvey, Gordon. and Sue Wlne!X'enner, Mary, Paula and Becky, Mary
Pickens and Eber, Jr. , Melis8a Hubbard and Scott, Kathy Rizer and r-----:---c-:------------~--­
Kristy, Kenny Rizer, ,Jr., Vicki
Rizer, Bill and Debbie Halley,
ChriBty Debbie and Billy Jo, Debbie
Triplett, Wendy and Adam, Ora
Baas, Betty Donavan, llrent Shuler,
Candl and Tammi Staats, Richard
DOFATOMEET
-District 13, Daughters or America
Friendship Night, will be held Thursday evening at the Chester lodge
hall. A potluck Slipper will be held at
6:30 p.m. Those attending are to
take a covered ilish, their own table
service and Items for a silent auctioo. Initiatioo will be beld and mem- .
hers of the team are to wear white.

Meigs Tire

Center Inc.

TUESDAY
EASTERN BAND 80011ters, 7:30'
p.m. Tuesday in band room of high
jessica Wright
school with parents of band students
on elementary; junior high and
senior high levels to attend; refreshmenl.!l.
MIDDLEPORT LOOOE 363, R
Jessica Dawn Wright celebrated and A. M. Tuesday, 7 p.m. Work in
her first birthday recently at the · the fellow craft degree. AU Masons
home .or her Jl81"!att..·Bennie and
Invited to attend.
SandyWright,P~. '
. VETERANS DA'Y Services
~ · to··
A clown cake •
Tuesday at 11 a.m. in front or the
Jessica.
Favors
were
SiYen
to each
'
/o. "·
'
Court House, Pomeory. Speaker will
of the guests.
. l·' ' .
be Undsey Howe, Eighth Oi8trlct
Attending 'Jean Wright, first vice commander.
8eciy and John '~ MlltY
DISABLED American V~
Chapter
53 will S4jrve Vetei'JIIII Day
and
Jeremy
Leach,AmberC
.,~,··· dlmer Tuesday at 6 jun. at the
and J. T. Northup,·
Krt~Wn,
chapter horrle on Butternut Ave.
Joey Hensler, SUsfe and a-te Lee Women or the chapter to .biing ·
caato, Angle and Travis Swartz, covered dish. Meeting to follow dinPatsy and Lila Oiler, Janet and Jeff ner.
Russell, and Vir&amp;~.* JOihua, and
RACINE . LODGE 461 FllAM
Doug Phalln. Amy l&gt;avis aent a gift.
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Electioo or or-·
, fleers.

'·

..'

GRANGE TO MEET

MEIGS HIGH VOCAL Boosters

Rock Sprlnp Grange will meet at Tuesday 7:30 p.m. in music room at
7:30p.m. Thlirsday at the hall.
· high school.
·

.
..•'
w

3t blg savings.
Roper offers a full featured Hlectlon of their
free-standing gas and electric range models at the most
·
affordable prices ever.

"'...... ..

Reg. SO

2

SHANK

CJS.ClL

SUI'PUMIIII"Al

CALCIUM
·tAILOS
·$

lll1ll
VITAMIN

D

,,..,

.

Aeg . tt.H

fteg. 13.H

LYSOLIOWL
NWER

•UI33

~:$139

: ~!;..'239
I.J-01.

sn

DID~'I

l'iot. It .II
ICIIIIII

•w&amp;KE
MILTilt

eriAans

50•
$1 ,1 I

LAUNDRY
1"-'·~'-:'&lt;:~li&lt;:·:;:: ~~ lASKO

••
•••u
Reg.lt .DI

MOOEL2221
· 30" ELECTRIC RAHGE

-

cook mlnder clod&lt; wjlh one-llour

Ill-up cccookiOktci Op&gt;O for ease o1
cleaning
one 8" (2100W) .rod lhree 6"
(I~ IIUff~~ee elemlnta
'dtlay -.ticoollfol! OYIIrlOI*atlon
OYIIrllnterio&lt;lighl
blacl&lt; glass o11en door
wilh elr-llow design
storage drawer

.$39r

. MODEL1221
30" GAS IWIGE
• lllwltlronl biiCk panel wilh eaay
to clean glaa front rod bright
trim
• conceoled ...... \'8111
• dock wl&lt;h lour·hour Miner
• ...... Interior light
• ....,..,.. ...... door wl&lt;h
- e n d ....flow des(gn
• cooklop IIIlo uplol!
• roll-out broiler
• pore aloin I*' end grid

SAVE '50 ·

~~63°
Reg. 11 .71

ALPHA

lORI

SAVE 140
ONLY

$3lf5 ·

INGELS FURNITURE

"

••
••

(

1•••

Lasso a new Roper

remov-

'

..

101

.NNEN
SOF'STROKE

CLOSE··
IOOIHPASIE

A~~rJ·

·./!"

sp~1' iii 1b1~j 11 hs ..

FAlERIE

Att·

.MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

· Social Calendar

' .

'

DITIIOINT

According to · Ohio
and West Virginia
State Law the legal
periOd for studded
tires start Nov. 1,
1980.

SRADBURY - Costwne ·prizes
992·2101
Mgr., John !=. FultzPom.e roy, Ohio
were awarded ·at the recent·
Halloween carnival held at the Bradbury School sponsored by the Brad- j-.,----.,.. .:. . ;·.:. ·;;:;
.. ::.:.···~---'_:___..;_______:__---:-'----j
buryPTA.
'
Judged oo the basis or prettiest,
ugliest and televisloni personality'
the winners were u follows: Mrs.
Betsy Horky and Miss Kyle Miller's
class, J88011 Bush and Donald Stein;
Teresa Casci's class, Samantha
Roush, Shain Ingles and Leah Danner; Joan Corder's cla.ss, Donald·
llunch and Rhonda Rathburn; and
Roger Birch's claaa, Pat Shrlmplin,
Scott Hanning, and Sherry Cooper.
Games and activities included
ring toss, basketball and softball
toss. pingpong pitch, £ootball, billgo,
, ring a nose, fish pond, jail, fortune
teller, apron lady and a sweet shop.
Door prizes were won by Tim
Deem, Kitty Cassell,,Laura Fry, and
Charles Cassell.

Celebrates.birtJJday

.,

DAWN
DIMWASIIIIIG

Will Stud
Recapped and
New Tires

standard oven wirvtn\11

BAZAAR TiJURSDAY
The annual Sacred Heart Church
bazaar will be held at the church
auditori urn Thursday. Dinner will be
served .beginning at 4:30 p.m. There
will be games. entertainment and

""'·.....

Aeg. It .10

..'

When is a coal company not a coal
company?
When it's also into trucking, farming and mine supply.
They're all parts of the Bov,oman family businesses, each with
its own phone system. But they
outgrew these systems, and
asked the General Telephone
CommunicationsConsultantfor
help. We suggested a GTD120C computer-controlled sys- ·
tern.
"Without Communications Consultant Esther Klinebriel, we_ wouldn't have
known what was available to save us time and
money," said Mr. Bowman. "Our new phone system handles calls for
all four companies. Yet each gets its own phone bills for accounting
purposes. The night-answer feature is very
important. Now we get after-hours calls at
, home-these are almost always very important calls."
·
Our Communications Consultants
have only one job: to make your telecommunications better and better.
We have what you need.

judges, Roger and 'Yharon Birch, to
Juanita Frederick, prettiest; Mike
Parsons, Bobby and Tim Willis, Johnson,. ugliest; and Rodney
Richard Cook, John .Riffle, Danny Beegle, most original . RefreshBarton, Sdltt and Harley Barton, . menis of donuta, hot chocolate and
Malcolm Guinther, Chris Grtndley, ciderwereserved. .
,
Barry 1\fcCoy, John and Jeff Frank,
Others attending were Shann:··" .
Regina Nance, Chris Deemer, Mary Riffle, Shane Slmpaon, Jeff ....J
and Sue Davis, and Jeff and Brenda Tooy Connolly, Tony, Sberry and ·
Davis and Serena.
Romaine Frederick, Lizzie Wood,
D · C
Leanna and Crista Beegle, Joy,
orcas ommunzty
Carrie and Shannon Morarlty,
Chllcjren of the Dorcas community l{aren Johnson, Jo Ann and Alan
enjoyed a Halloween party at the Crisp, Kevin, Tanuny and Wendell
Bethany Methodist Church annex Clark, Tet'eSII and Bridget Bing,
recenUy.
·
Tanuny and Andrea Theiss, and the
Prizes were awarded by the Rev. Mark Flynn.

rr==~~~~~~

MIDDLEPORT - A Halloween
party was held at the Heath United

,.-------...,-----4--------,..---

MORE DAYS TO SAVE

PhyWa Kennedy (Mul£ord), Hel8J1 Rupe (Frazier),
VIola Dale Rupe (Weimann), Pearl Rupe, MIIJ'iel
Athey (Spirea), Clifford Buttricb. Third row, standing
- EWaoo Boatman, Perry Bradbury, Benaon Thomas,
Harold Ward, Lucy Conkle (Hoctor), Adrian Kennedy,
Lyda IIUpe (Eddy), Margaret Vanzant (Coughenour),
Jessie Kennedy (Figley), Marcus RUJ)ue, Charlei!
Searles, and Hatlow Tate. Teacher: Mrs. Elilmett
Nelson. Among those deceased are 08car Spires, Floyd
Rupe, Margaret Athey Lynch, Iva Borham, Pearl
Rupe, Clifford Buttricks, Ellison Boatman, Perry
Bradbury, Benson Thomas, Lyda ·Rupe Eddy and
Charles Searles.

Holiday parties
successful

HUBBARD'S
GREE..HOUSE

7

Spires (Ganlner), Jessie Rile, Phena Sims (Staniey),

.

NOW OPEN

I

POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs. John
Deall are aMouncing the birth of a
daughter, Sarah Beth, o Oct. 2at the
She
Holzer Medical Center.
1
weighted nine pounds, four ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Dean has two sons,
Jeremy and James.
Grandparents are ·Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Dean, Pomeroy, Earl'
Watkins, Massillon, Mrs. Donna
Stackhouse, Okaloma. Great·
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ken·
neth Markins, iacine, and Mr. and
Mrs. Hobart Smalley, Okaloma.

CONDUCT DISCUSSJON- Marjorie Davis, Wibna Davidloo, Janet
Bolin, members or Rutland Emergency Service, CQilduct dllcualoo oo
First Aid for Little People at Rutland Elementary School.

'
and Rachelle Davis, Jason Powell,
Adienne Kuntz, Doug Stewart, Lisa

••
"•'

MIDDLEPORT, OH•

•

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•

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�11-:-The Dail3' Sentinel, ~~umeroy, o ., Tuesday,.Nov.ll, 1980
DUXTRACY
.

10- ·The Dally Seritlnei. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov. 11, 1980

Television
•
•
VIewmg
,.OV. 11, 1980
EVENING
11:00

•

. Cil

6 :30

CAPTAIN EASY
HOW COLI~P If
PARI&lt; POWN
THI!RI!:-ANP l

.

IT '~

HAD N,O LIGHT!

11:58
7:00

.

(})e (!) Cj(l)®)(i}i • .NEWS J

. Soft pack or
new Flip·1bp boL
BORN !mER

PROGRAM UNANNOUNCED •
(!) MOVIE -(DRAMA) ' ' "Hide In '
Plein Sight" 1980
([)
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
(J) ABC NEWS
(J)(fi) H·1CONTACT
(}).(I) NBC NEWS
Cil
2DTH
CENTURY
GUIDEUNES
(l) BoB NEWHART SHOW
\
(I) FACE THE MUSIC
DCIJ®I CBS NEWS
(J) WI~ WI~ WORI:D OF
AI!IMA~
'
®DICK CAVETT SHOW
ABC NEWS
Cil NEWS UPDATE
CIIe PM MAGo\ZIIIE
Cil
, GERALD DERSTINE
PRESENTS
([) ~LIN TIE FAMILY
(i)ll})G1 FAMILY FEUD
ffi TV HONOR SOCIETY
D(J) TICTACDOUGH
liJ MACNEIL-l.EHRER REPORT
@)NEWS
® OVER EASY Guool: Allred
Kahn, Chairman of the Council on

(J2).

Wage and Price Stability. Hoata:

I SURNP

tlJ

J

J I I

ON WHAT K IND OF
A 6HIPMI&amp;HT
A SIUC'EN'T S"TUDY!I'

I
. J KI l
-.A(XIIXIXIII11

tCHANIG

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the SUfPriSe answer, as sug·
gesled b\llhe above cartoon.

{Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles; QUEER

Yesterday·s

I Answer

GAUGE

MEASLY

EQUITY

Why a pig can ' t keep a secretHE'S A SQUEALER

Jumttt. Boot No. 14, contelnlng 110pua..e,la avl]llable for$1.75poelpllcl
frolnJumtHa,clo this newapaper, Box34, Norwood, N.J. 07148.1nclude your
MrM, ackiNII, zip code and mak• checka PIY•btt to New~tperbooka.

Hugh Downs and Frank Blair.

~10a.R~10
~a .A.)(A\100,

~ CALLED,W.UIJ'

~ r-10116 QJ ~ 10DAY

1?.4l Ot.Die,

(Cioaed·Ca~tioned;

7:30

BU~SEYE

U.S.A.)

BRIDGE

(!)FAITH THAT LIVES
(!) MEN'S GYMNASTICS: CEA·
SARS PALACE INVITATIONAL
HBO p.resents an excluai"e
gymnastics spectacular that tea-

11..1 OtJ AWlt-10

IIYrl\~ti' ~rr A~~

CIIe

/lWAPRA~~

tur~s top male gymnaate, in an
evening of top competition.

CII SANFORD AND SON
CIIDCIJ JOKER'S WILD

Oswald Jacoby .and Alan Sontag ·

Pat game not easily bid

(I) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
(I) DICK CAVETT SHOW
(jQ) MATCH GAME
®

7:58
8:00

SKEEf?! WHAT EES

•

THATRECOROYOO
PUT OH ZE

ER .• IT'S "616EUE'JUST LIKE YOU
~ID!

oro

THE MOVIES 'Smokey and I he
Bandit' 1977 Stars: Burt Reynolds,
Sally Field.
Cil ORAL ROBERTS
(l) BASKETBALL Atlanta Hawks
vs Los Angeles Lekers
(i)ll})QI HAPPYDAYSJoanleand
Chachi spend an outrageous night
tO remember in a motel honeymoon
suite when their car breaks down
after the young lovers sneak otft o a
concert
in
Chicago.
{Season-Premiere)
D ClJ @I GNOMES A lamily ol
Woodland GnOmes preparing for
the wedding of the eldest san, who
at 101 is juat about old enough to
marry, are absented by the
treacherous , tiresome, tricky
Trolls. The Trolls are out to seek
raiJanQe on the Gnomes for healing
an injured owl and releaSing a bear
from a Troli hun1ing trap. (60
mina.)
·
lll® NOVA 'Voyager: Jupiter and
Beyond' On November 12. 1980.
the 9pacecraft Voyager I wilt make
it's long-awaited 'fly-by' of the planetSatum,yialdingmoreintormation
than ever before possible on the
majestic ringed planet . NOVA
documents Voyager's journey
through the oUter solar system to
.... date and lo~ke to the future .
(_Cioaed·Capteoned; U.S.A.)

8:30 (!)GOODNEWS
(])ll2JIIt U VERNE AND SHIR~Y
WhenShirleyfindaoutthatCarmine
is running around with other girls,
she decides to play the fi81d h~r­
self. (Repeat)
8:58 Cil NEWS UPDATE
Q:OD- 00700 CLUB
(!) ON LOCATION: RICH LmLE
'The Second Annual Rich lillie and
the Great Pretenders' Maeter Impressionist Rich Liltle Ia back tor
antoher evening or muelc and
. mimicry as he hoata hla own On
Location ape2ial.
CIJIUl 8 THREE'S COMPANY
Jack's first day on the job at a diner
heats up when his attractive older
boss tries to spice up her life with a
f&amp;w healthy pinches of the new
cook.
llJCIJ®ITUESDAYNIGHTMOVIE
'The Promise Of Love' 1980 Stars:
Velerie Bertinelli, Jameson Parker.

LIGHTS
LOWERED TAR &amp; NICOTINE

WINNIE
• IF

THE

HELP

POLICE CAN'T... OR IAK'l-.!'T'
HAVE TO HELP

.'

'AND A LOCKSMIT!-1
I WANT ALL 111E
LOCK5 ON OUR
PRIVATE FIL!OG
Cf1ANGED!

!

TEE -HEE. THAT~
LIKE LOCKIN6 UP

WE. MRN Af:TER
1t1E HOR8E HAfl
• BEEN 8IDLEN !

(I) (llJ BODY IN QUESTION
'Shaping the Future' Or. Miller'
reviews what happens at the '
moment of conception and how a
fertitiz.ed egg is transformed Into a
lull-grown .
adult.
(Closed·
Captioned: U.S.A.) (60 mlno.)
9:30 (])IH!ID TOOCLOSEFORCOMFORTTed Knight ataraaaan overly
proteclive father whose hllarloue
efforts to keep te bs on hie twopret •
ty and tun ·lovlng daughters grow
even tougher when tfle girla, in the
pursuit of freed om, move away from
home. but only to the apartment
below. (Premiere)
10:00 CII D ffi THE DICK AND TOM
SMOTHERS
BROTHERS'
SPECIAL The Smolhero Brolhers
arejolnedbyGienCampbell,~artin

BARNEY

LET ME 'GO,
SHERIFF, AN'
I PROMISE
FAITHFUL--

1D: 15
10:28
10:30

1D:58
11:00

Mull. Pat Paulsen, the Flying Karamazov Brothers, David Somervill~nd Roo Morgan. (60mina.)
CIJIBIB HARTTOHARTAbrlde·
grOom's abrupt departure leaves
the confused bride In the erma of
JOnathan and Jennifer Hart, whoae
efforts to find the misaing groom
entangles them In a aurprlaing
murder inveatlgiltlon . (SeaaonPremiere; 60 mine.)
(j) SOUNDSTAGE 'Eddie RobbiH
and Bobby Bare'
(CioaedCaptionOd; U.S.A.) (60 mlno .)
(llJ NEWS
([) T8S EVENING NEWS
Cil NEWS UPDATE •
Cil FAITH20
(!)MOVIE -(WESTERN)•• "Chino
Q Ubet1y37"
@ EXTENSIONS
Cil NEWS UPDATE

m
• oo m• m®Jil}) •
NEWS

Cil TODAY IN BIBLE PROPHECY
Cll MONTY PYTHON'S FLYING .

.ne spirit of Marlboro in alow ·tar cigarette.

1t:15 ~ NIGHTGA~RY
.t1:28
UPOAT!
11:30
Hoat: Johnny Caraon. Gue•t:
Chari eo Neloon Reilly. (80 min a.)

~~-THETONIGHTSHOW

• Cll .C81 uiii'MoViFLOU

q~ANT: Houaewormlng' Storw. Ed

Aaner, Linda Kelaey. June Kavner
oueat ataraaa a btltt«ed wtte, the
unwilling IIJbject tOr Billie · New·
man'a let"iaa of arliclea about wife
beating, (Repeal) 'VACATION IN
HELL' 1978 Storo: Michael Bran·
don, Priacllla Bamea. Five waca·
ttonera at a tropical reaort are
grounded on a remoie part of the
islarfd during a bOll trip . ~Repeat)

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That. Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your.Health.

12 mg "tar:· 0.8 mg nicotine av.per cigarene. FTC Rqpon Oec:79 ·
L...--------------------'Box:12mg"tar:'O.Bmgnicolineav.percigarettebyFTCMethod.
t

/,

''

11·11.. 0

+JU2

.... 5li2

+s

+AJ65

WEST
+10

EAST
+AB7H

.KIO

.93

tKQ10161
.K1073

+Q92

+83,2

SOUTH
+KQV
.QJBH

tAJ7

+84

VulDerable: North-South
Dealer: West
West N - Eu1 Sool.ll
It
Obi.
I+
2+
3t
Pass Pass ••
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead:t K

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alu Sontag

If West opens his king of
diamonds South will make 12
tricks by the simple play oj
winning the diamond, finess·

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~!UI."tr
br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

1 She With the

1 Longest
"delicate air" sentence man
5lmportune
2 Revere
3 Glacial
10 Sudden
pinnacle
inspiration
•
Indian
11 Frolics
13 1948 Garfield 5 staid

6Make

fllm
IS Epoch
16 Monkey's

allusion
7 "Pri.Ina"
uncle?
donna
11 Dutch
8 Quite a few
commune
9 Absent
18 Get well
oneself
Ill Fishy product 1% Uke win·
!1 Bard's adverb ter roads
ZZ stretched
14 Roof edge
to the limit
19 Bacteriol23 'vulgar
ogist's wire
!I Wellseasoned
Z7 Sprint
Z8 Windy City
Z9 " - just
about
had It!"
30 Wee onion
34 Hanoi
holiday
35 Detroit
product
Sl Where (It. )

Yesterday's AIIBwet
30Setting
22 Shadow
31 Humble
23Simon
or Crist, e.g . 32 Plain tc
24 "Show
see
Boat"
33 Bradshaw
hero
of football
25 Varnish
S8 Partner
ingredient
of tuck
211 Perceptive
3! River into
Z8 Hunter
the Volga

31 Being a tool
48Tooth

u Deborah
or JOhn
t2Hansen's
disease
sufferer
f3 Dilettantish

I I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

CIRCUS
® DICK CAVETT SHOW

ffiNIGHTLINE
TW~y~ JIEws

'

NORTH

MACNEIL-LEHRER REPORT

ll2JGJ FACE THE MUSIC
Cil NEWS UPDATE
(}) 8 (I) TUESDAY NIGHT AT

log in trumps, playing a sec·
ond trump and going after
spades. East will take his ace,
but with the 10 dropping from
the West hand, South will get
to discard one club on
dummy's jack of spades and
will ruff both. his low
diamonds. ·
U West opens his singleton
spade he will ruff the second
spade and hold South to five.
We have shown North dou·
bling the one-diamond open·
ing, but doubt if many players
did double. In fact we believe
that some West players will
be allowed to play at two dia·
moods after a pass by North,
a spade by East, a pass by
South and two diamonds by
West.
Of course, if the bidding
goes that way South should
and in most cases will try two
hearts after the two-diamond
call cames around to him and
North will raise to three or
four. If he only bids three he
will be sorry and deservedly
so.
The play at two diamonds
will probably result in West
getting set but he will still get
a good score for minus 50 or
even minus 100 if he
misguesses everything after
North opens a spade.

II

AXYDLIIAAXR
LONGFBLLOW

One letter almply atanda for another. In this ample A Ia
used for the threo: L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
apo~trophea, the lenl!h and formation of the worda are all
. hints. Each day the code !etten are different.
caYPTOQUOTES
LA

w

GJQZ

R LEI

GWEWQZ.

LA

W

L

L

HLQM,

OILAJQ

VJO

RLEI

ALMWAVLXMWJQ

~A

PILMR.- ZIJOZI
TIOQLOP
ARLH
Ytllthlllf'l Clypllllll&amp;e: MARRIED MEN AJU!: MERELY
BACHELORS WHO WEAKENED uNDER 11IE STIWN.GEORGE ADE

�13--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 .
:z

12- - TbeDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Nov. 11,191Ul l

In Loving memory of Leroy
Holmes who peslled Nbv.
1937, because of w.w.1
Sadly missed by sister
Allee Freeland.

Grain supplies must be tightly stretched to ·meet !demand
WASHINGTON (AP) - Not much
has hqppened in the last month to
change the government's official
view that gi'ain supplies wW be
tightly stretePed to meet domestic
and foreign demand In the coming
year.
Tbe latest indication canie on
Monday with the Agriculture Department's
-estimates showing far·
mers are harvesting sharply

new

reduced crops of com and ~oybeans.
Some other crops, notably cotton,
·also were shriveled by last summer's drought and hot weather,
Officials said the 19110 corn harvest
now is estimated at 6.46 billion
bushels, virtually unchanged from
prospects a month ago but still 17
percent less than last year's huge

harvest.
The new com estimate, based on

SHOOTING MATCH at
. Corn Hollow In Rutland,
Everv sunday starti119 at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Scout
Troop 249. 12 gau~~e factory
choke guo only!

MATE 'RNITY · tops:
Velour, flannel, turt le

was

neck, blouses, tong sleeves,

short sleeves. , 11)aterQitv
jeans, Slack$, 1 rdr.es,~s.
lingerie and mor~ at the
Watermelon Patch, "5th St.,
New Haven,_W.Va. ,.

¥JeY

POUnCJANS REMEMBER - The leaders of
Britain's three major political parties, Liberal Leader
David Steele, (left),
Labour Leader
.
. James Calla~han,

(center), and Prime Minister Margaret ThatCher,
stand with their wreaths, during the annual Remembrance Day ceremony at london's Cenotaph Sunday.
(AP Wirephoto) .

Iran receives destruction threat
'

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein
threatened Iran with destruction if it
did nbt surrender its claim to the
disputed waterway between the two
countries, but Iranian President
Abolhassan Bani-&amp;dr claimed his
forces have "effectively stopped"
the Iraqi invaders.
"We were not happy to see Iran
destroyed (before). But since Iran
became our enemy, we shall be very
happy to see if destroyed," Hussein
said Monday In response to written
· questions from more than 150 journalists.
"We may find it necessary to increase twisting Iran's ann until we
wrench our rights," he said. " II the
amount is not ·sufficient; we shall ex. ceed it to the limit until they are
ready to negotia.te ...
"No matter how long th~ war
takes, we are prepared for it. We are
ready for future battles next year or
in two years.''
Kuwaiti newspapers said Hussein
was sending Vice Premier Tarek
Aziz to Moscow to seek arms, spare
parts and ammunition under the
Iraqi-Soviet friendship treaty. Iraq
has ordered 60 Mirage jet fighters
from France but deliveries are not
expected to start until early next
year.

Iraq invaded Iran Sept. 22 to Iranian jets Monday in Iran's oil·
regain sovereignty over the eastem rich Khuzistan Province. Iran said
haH of the Shatt al·Arab estuary, its paratroopers killed 100 Iraqi
which forms part of the border bet- soldiers near the provinci\11 capital
ween the two COijDtries and is Iraq's of Ahwaz, and that its helicopter
only outlet to the Persian Gulf, and gunships atiacked Iraqi positions
to expel the lraniansfrom three tiny near the refinery city of Abadan. ·
islands at the mouth of the gulf
At the northem end of the 300-mile
which the late Shah Mohanunad invasion front, Iran said its artillery
Reza Pahlavi seized in 1971.
destroyed Iraqi positiODB near Qasr~
Pars, the Iranian news agency, e Shirin, killing about 30 Iraqis and
said Bani-&amp;dr reported Iran's ar· wounding more than 50. It said
med forces "effectively stopped the Iranian anti-aircraft 1lre downed an
enemy and are hoping to begin the Iraqi transport helicopter in the
second stage of the fighting, which is same area, killing about 20 troops.
the pushing back of the enemy to
where they came from.''
TO MEET FRIDAY
With the war in its 51st day,Retum
Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
Tehran Radio !:l!llOrted that Iran's
· of thlr American
the
Daughters
Supreme Defense Council decided at
Revolution
will
meet at 1:30 p.m.
a meeting Monday night to seek
Friday \'it the home of Mrs. George
clarification of peace proposals conMorris. Allen Elberfeld of the Hunveyed by Cuban Foreign Minister
tington Corps of Engineers, will talk
Isidoro Malmierca.
The broadcast said one of the poin- on the subject, "The Ohio River.
Past, Present and Future."
ts Malmierca suggested was for Iraq
to withdraw from Iranian territory if
HOLDS PARTY
Iran accepted the 19'15 agreement
The Bradbury Brownie Troop 1062
that gave half the Shatt al-Arab to
held a Halloween party recently at
Iran. But Iraq abrogated this pact a
the home of Lisa Poulin. Games
week before it Invaded and now apwere played with prizes going to kim
parently is seeking territory on the
Hanning, Lisa Poulin, and Nikki
Iranian side of the waterway as well
Meier. The scouts bobbed for apples.
as all of the estuary.
Refreshments were · served after
Iraq said its forces downed two
which there was a ghost story.

4:30·7:00. Games, en·
tertainment . Everyone
welcome.
.t-. 1
.u '

-·

pM

CORNER 184 &amp; 143

NEW TOYS, TOOLS, FURNITURE.
SOMEnfiNG FOR Ev£1Yb~E ~- ·.
AT BELOW WHOlESALE ~RICEt

and terminations are ad·
ministered with regard to
race, color, national origin,
sex, ancestry, age, political
affiliation, handicap or

----------1:........._, ____ _
Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Card ol Thanks
· 1 _wish . to tlulnk Ewing
. Funeral Home, Rev Shook,
I· and all my , lr}ends.· ~nd
1 neighbor~ who,. ~·l~td·
1 during the Illness ond otthe
I death of Mro, Esta Wise.
Landerfleld and
I Mary
Family.

C

Oli1

WANT AD

•1

L

. I'

•

CLASSIFIED AD :INDEX

Addr••·----------:--e ANNOUNCEMENTS

Phon•·~------------~---

1-CardotThukl
2-1n MtMOrlaftt

'

eA E lilTAL,S

41-.._..,. ....t

.... ,...

j

1 .f

...

J-Announc.nitttts
4-0iYNWiy

5-Ha....,Adt '
6-tost lncl ~~,. ...
7-YardSate

42 M.... IHIIMI

,

,.~

11-lwiMIIilf l.,.lft
$f-flltl ,.,. ....

.·• ~ FAIIIM SUPPLIES
~ LlVII'I'C!CK

___ . ,... .

.,

,1 .................,....,

eFtNANCIAL

,ot,

at- ... ,IMts

1.--:.._ _ _ __

22 .
23. _ _ _ _ __

I

12. _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __

f •

•s-~ &amp; .,.......

'I

•

eTRANSPORTATlDN

eREAL ESTATE

71-'vtettir ....
7J-.YIMI4W.D.

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

74 Mellictcla

111\ lll.. tiiiiMI

75- • -""''•"'

• AcCetMr... '·

..

N-RIII•stlteWt.....
17-R...._.

71-AIJNI ...Ir

HousirHf
.SERVICES

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

H v, Hlfl 11.1 r t e rs

11-tlonttlftl~eueii4W.

:U. ....:.,._ _ _ __

Wlnt·Ad AIIVIrllllftl
DMdliMI
•.

27. _ _ ___;._ _

~- 1,

IIT.M:..,.11'/...

,__,

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

30 . _ _ __;__ _
31. _ _.__ _..;..._

_______

'

32. _ _ _ _ __
33 . _ _ _ _ ___;.

,..

,~,,

t !&lt;til

11-\.~IAc­

· --_
- ._
...
,7•._ _ _..;__ _ 28.,_
29., _
_
_
-:--

11. _ _ _ _ _ __

)fi-:U\IIIItli!*

11-Halllllfwlall~

H

... .

.,..,,.....1.1alt

.'

,._......,...,.~

24. _ _ _ _ __

4-------6-------....;._ __
I 10.a.__
_ _ _ _ _ __
'·------

I

P-lllarMtlerhlt

2-----~3. _ _ _ _ __
.25. _ _ _ _ __

s. ______

-n

i

.

22 ""'" t te LOM
2t-PrWftslOMI

I'
I'
I'
I'

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

54-MIK.Mtt~lllllllt

&amp;CIIItPIIr
lt-Wa•tMI Ta Da '

18.
19.
20.
21.

,

0

tJ-Sc ..... , lrlttrvctiOn
16RHio,TY

&gt; For Sale
) Announcem.,nt
) For Rent

t

~ ··

·,,_tnsurancl
,._."'1•"' Trllntftl

o,..rtvlftlty

.

sz-&lt;lf,yv........._.....

ti-Melp Wallted
11-Sttu.tldWaiMII

17. _ _ _ _ __

35. _ _ _ _ __

'

I. .

,.

................
•

.

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

Insurance

ltll&amp;IIHHI ...

110-M.H.R17-ull .....

........ u.....

J ..,.

16. _ _ _ _;...._ _

a-............ &amp;IICIW'I""'

AGENCY INC.:

Rates lnd.Otber lllformetl•·1·,

,

"'·------...
15.-------

-

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

c..

,,,
...

1.11

ltcll..,.ever1Mmlftlmum1S'"'*ll&lt;tc.ts~~,....,.

.....

AlllrvMI"IttMrtMwconaacutiHMY•..,.IJII~tt-1..,

FITZGERALD MEMORIAL TAKES PLACE - A
cadet from the Great likes Maritime Academy, Pam
Hyalop, tosses a wreath upon the waters of Grand
Traverse Bay, honoring the 29 crewmen losl when the
(

ore carrier Edmund Fitzgerald asnk five years ago
Monday. flvo cadets from the academy were.lolt when·
the cartler sank durtng a gale in eastern Lake
Superior. lAP J.aserphotol.
t

STOCK FARM - Want
peoce of mind and extra
Income? This Is it, 2
older homes that can be
rented and a 2 !ledroom
mobil~
home, large
block building lor shop,
loylog hens, or cattle.
Good fen Oft •~And a II
mlnerols.
INFLATION' HEDGE. Home with rentals or
can be used as 4 apart·
ments. Also has a l8r!IO
'building about 24x36 for
.car repair or what have
you. 3112 acres of land.
Asking only 145,000.
What will you give? ·
PUT YDUR · MONEY
WltERE IT WILL
GROW. WE HAVE
SEVERAL GOOD PRDPER:rtES FDR YOU
TO SEE. CALL m-ms
DR9t2-H76.

e MEIIICHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Mlil This Coupon with RemiHanc11
Tilt DillY Sentlilll
Box 729

1n-..COM 11 . , _ , _

.. IN~RANCE

SOUJHWltRN OHIO SINCE
'

ARII; YOU PAYII'fG ,TOOMUCH?
.Do vqu HAVE THE coveRAGE?

FOR AU. YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS
CALL US.

r .

31,____~
H~om~e~s~fo~r~S~a~le~-Seven

room

double

In-

sulated ranch style home
with electriC heat, wood

burner,

~as

available on

three acres of ground one
m i le from
Racine.
Reasonable priced. 949·
27~.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale .
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bed looms, new car·
pet. 1971 Cameron, 14 x 6-4,
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1912 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet. 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyline, 12sx 61, two
bedrooms, bath &amp;· 1/J, new

Mason, 3 bedroom . never

Pretty Apron

lived in, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3•12
miles south of.Middleport,
Rt. 1.

Utility BUl'ld"mes
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Ph. 614.843.2591
6·15-tlc

y

c. B. Base station, tram o
1973 EAGLE 12X65, 2 201A with 0104 mike ,
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, total frequency counter and watt
electric, exc. cond. 993· meter, used bery little.
7473.
$600. 742·2211 or 985·4338.

.

TRAILER with lot. Fur·
nlshed, city water, natural
gas, ready to move loto.
949·2277.

BEDROOM

un ·

MODERN 6 room house

near Dexter. Forced air
heat. Close to · mines. 742·

2877.

Four room house &amp; garage
in Pomeroy. Cai1992·2502.

LISTING

42

1969 12x60 Fleetwood
Mobile Home: Has 2
bedrooms. sliding glass

and a deck . All for
$9,800.
SYRACUSE - A really
cute 2 bedroom home
that has an equipped kit·
chen, central air and a
level lot. JUST I $24,900.
23 ACRES- That has a
nice building site and a
mixture of bottom land
and timber land. ln. the
Eastern School District,
Asking 118,000.
AT THE EDGE OF
TOWN - Approx. 6
acres and a lV2 story

home with 3 bedrooms,
room,

family

buildings,

heat,

and

hot
a

out·

water

water

softener. $29,500.
DECORATED IN RED
- Is hoW to describe a
Ux m"&gt; bedroom with a
large walk· in closet and
sewing room. Home also
has 3 other bedrooms,
full basement and an
equipped kitchen. Lot
size Is liOxtOO. Just!
$28,500. '
COMPLITEL "
·DECORATED AND 15
BEAUTIFUL - Has
new wiring, new plumbIng, new Insulation, and
• new Woodburnlng
stove with a new
chimney. Perfect place
for children with 3
bedrooms •nd 1 large
yard. JUS.T I $28,500.
R&amp;ALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
99Hit1
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell Mt·2HG
Roger &amp; Donie Turner·

_A_..nJ
tJ A\1

2 bedroom, with kitchen

'

992·5682

Ph. 446·4741

317
Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992·6342
TRY US!
Complete Dry Cleaning
and Laundry
• Carpet
• Draperies
• Furniture
c"We're
Service &amp; ,.,..,;,,.,

All types Ot roof work,
new or repair guners

and downspouts, gutter

cleanlng and palnflng•
All work guarani~.
Fre.e Estimates

Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949-2862
949·2160
1·22·1fc

71
Autos for Sale
1978 PLYMOUTH Fury
Salon. A·l cond. 4 door. 985·
3900.
1974 MONTE Carlo. Many
good cond. 949·2217.

~xtras,

Fl REWOOD for sale. $20.

$25. 992·5050.

t

OW

Pomeroy
Landmarl&lt;
Saw
SIOO
HotPtintMicrowave Oven
Ret. S42t
S369
Homelite Super 2 cltmin Saw
(:ZJ-2000)

Re9. Slts .95

Now SIU .9S

CPrice Includes Free carrying

'

C-omfort Glow Kerosene
Heaters, Econ~my (21·0863)
Reg, $139. 95
Now $129.9S
Stlkt · Bt d Coaster Wagon
(22-2U1),Reg . $4• •U Now542.f5

~POMEROY

.,_,.. LANDMARK
E. Main St.

Pomeroy

HOOF HOLLOW : Horses
and ponies and riding
Everything

imaginable In horse equip·
ment. Blankets, belts,
boots, etc. English and
Western.

Ruth

Reeves

Bobcal Loader, $3,500.00.

Jotin· ·oeere 1010 Diesel

Meigs

County

Humane

72
Trucks for Sale
RAWLEIGH Products,
1965 Ford Ranchero $2,500.
collectors item, 650 Honda
Motorcycle $495. Shaklee
organic products. 992·7825.

loader, . $6,000.00. Davis
Trencher, $3,500.00. Wheel
Loader , I one eighth yard
bucket plus forks. 1-6 14·457·
RAWLEIGH Products,
3139.
1965 Ford Ran~hero $2,500.
collectors item, 650 Honda

Motorcycle $495. Shaklee
organic products. 992·7125.

&amp;2
wanted to Buy
vaos &amp; 4 W.O.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max . 73
diameter 10" on largest
end . S12 p-er ton . Bundled 1979 JEEP CJ7 10,000 ac·
.slab . SlO per fon. D~livered tual miles. $5,900. 992·7829.
'
to Ohio Pallet co., Rt. 2,
74
Motorcycles
Pomeroy 992·2689.
1978 KAWASAKI KZ 650
motorcycle,

color

blue.

Call949·2649.
71

Autos for Sale

$tF

1979 CHEVY MONZA, still

under warranty, loaded, in·
eluding, air conditioning,
power brakes, power
steering, am·fm stereo
cassette tape deck, 21 ,000
actual miles, in excellent
condition, only one owner.
Great Buy!!! Phone 992·

3110 after 5 p.m. Jusl )Ike a
brand new
cheaper!!

car

only

1614) 698·3290.

. Furnished apartments, 992· Put a co ld nose in your
3129, 992·5914, or 1·304·882· future!! Shots, wormed ,
2566.

Farm Equipment

Used S•~n Tractor. 10 HP/ snow
bl.cte.
O"e good used Hcm•llt, Cttain

Needs

work. $200. 992·7549.
61

truc k. load. Delivered. Split

pesi _ trac.

spee'd,

247·3444. .

lessons .

Apartment
for Rent
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap·
ts. Phone 992·5434.

44

1977 Pontiac Sunblrd. Am·
fm radio, Sunroof, e&gt;e·
cellent cOndit ion. 29 mpg,

81
Home
_ _,_,
lm=pr,_,o,_,v;;_
em=en~t~sc__

GENE'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu·look back In
your carpet, highly recom·
mended, reasonable rates,

Scotchguard.

Free

estimates. Gene Smith, call

now 992·6309 or 742·2211 .

a,3_ __:E:c•:::c:::a:.:v=.a~ti:!ng.._,_
$2,600. or best offer. 985· J &amp; F BACKHOE SER·
3596.
v1c E llscensed &amp; bonqed,
septic t~nk lnstallotk&gt;n, '
1974 MONTE Carlo. Many water &amp; gas lines. Ex·
extras, good cond. 949·2277. ca vating Work &amp; transit
layout. 992·7201 .

Society, 992·6260, between
, SIZES
the
hours of 12·7, closed
45
Furnished Rooms
Tuesdays. · Black· &amp; ta.n
S-8 -10
PRIVATE rooms, cooking, Kerr. trJ,colored beagle,
M- 12- 1-4
TV, UO. per week. .four Shephards, four
cable
l-16-18
nJ-5651 .
.
Labradors, very pretty,
FORD Mustang, low
special chocolate colored, 1978
mileage, a.c .. 4 speed, exc. DOZER work. Small lobs a
lovable
dog,
.If
you
like
specialty. Oependablt ter·
46
Space for Rent
chocolate &amp; vanilla sun· cond. $3,500. 992·7689.
vice: 742·2753.
'
COUNTRY MOBILE Home daes, she's sweet, shePark, Route 33, North of barks, with a great per· 1978 TRANS AM. Must sell,
Electrical
many· extras. 992·5689 or 84
. long-slemmed embroidered Pomeroy. Large lots. Call sonallty. You'll love this 742·2516.
_ _,.&amp;~R;:..el~r!lig~e:!:ra~t~lon!'!.._ _
.
dog. 992-6260.
IQses and compliments are de- 992·7479.
SEWING
MACHINE
signed lo1 the homei!Jaker who
Repairs,
service,
all
chooses an apron that's efficient TRAILER spac,. for rent.
' .
makes! 992·2284. The
Southern Valley . Mobile
and beautilul. Easy!
Fabric Shop, Pomerov.
Ptinled Pahern 4655: Misses Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
Singer Saies
Authorized
992·3954.
~
Sizes Sm. (8·101: Med: (12-14); ·
and Service. We sharpen
lie. (16-18). Med. Site tailes
Scissors.
2 TRAILER LOTS. fpr rent.
1 S/8 yds. 45-inch. Transler.
Call742·3122.
BOWERS
ELWOOD
$1.75 "' - )1111111. "' ........... "' llnl ....
REPAIR Sweepers,
.._.
'
·
linllllllll ...... hll.lll:
.,, . , ....
toasters.
Irons,
all small
.
. '
appliances. Lawn IYIOWI!I" .
Next to Stole HighWay
Gara~~e on Route 7, MS·
1'1111111 .,.,.,
191
3825.
DOORS, fully Insulated ex ·
DalJJ Senllllel
terlor doors, al~a new In·
APPLiii!NCE SERVICE :
IU l.t 17 ~,,.., Ill terlor doors, all types of
molding. 992·6113.
all makes washer, dryers,
. .11. 1'1111
ranges, dishwashers,
SIZE, IM1
....
disposals,
water tanks. Cell
~
Antiques
. Ken Young af 985-3561
Why put up wijh hifi prices-- -·---~ - -· .....
-belon! 9 a .m. or after 6
ATTENTION :
(IM ·
1M dol"rs, cet bettef quality!
p.m.
PORTAN\ TO YOU) Will
Send lor our NEW FAU-WINTER
pay cash or certified check
PATTERN CATALOG. !14 patterns,
for an1iqties and collcc·
~
Gener11 Hlullnt
Free Patter• Coupon (Wiflh
t ibtes. or entire estates.
$1.75) Cltlf!l, $1.00. • '
AGRI
·
LI!VoE Spreading,
. too · large. 'Atso,
1W' 'h ..... 0.1111111$1.75 'Nothing
limestone and fll1 dirt
guns,
pockel
watches
and
131 lleellc ..Sial Ja.1Ut.75
haul109. Leo · Morrla. 7-42·
coin c ollections. Call 614·~~i.......$1.75
2&lt;155.
7~1 .!16 1 or 557 3411 .
U7...... 'o IIIIHe ... $1.75

l '·

.

Mobile Homes

furnished . 992·2749.

........

,,.,.92

Are My Business"

television . $100.00.

color

for Rent

doors In living room,

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

I~======~~::+=::::::~~~

easel

SPACIOUS 2 story youse in
Middleport. Walking
distance to stores, large
living room, 3 bedrooms,
laundry room. Low
utilities. 992·2319 or 992·
2101.

acres, of ground with a

AAA"Your
Aluminum
Needs

GARAGE

1969 CHEVELLE SS, 396, 3

bedroom furnished apart·
ments. Call after · 6 p.m.

the fireplace In this 3
bedroom ranch that has
a large living room, din·
lng room and a full base·
ment. ONLY! $17,500.
NEW LISTING- DAN·
VILLE - Nice laying 4

FREEtsTIMATES

Quasar 23 inch console

furnished house, also two
bedroom furnished &amp; one

Warm your cold toes at

&amp; Siding

Installed
&amp;
Repaired
12
rears
expe.rience

CAKES decorated tor all
occasions. 992·6342 or 9922583.

bath, partially furnished.
On Racine Bashan Road :
949·2591.

.NEW

New &amp; Repair.
All types of remodeling,
inside and out.
FREE ESTIMATES
Call Tom Haskins
949·2160
10·13·1 mo. pd .

Tri-axle.trailer
for hauling
1973 Nashua 12x60 Mobiie cars.
equipment.
etc. 1·
Home. with all cement $1 .500.00 . 992·7l54 evenings.
block, underplnlng, 2 por·
57
Musica,
ches, with bedroom built
lnstrumeots
on . Very good cond. 992· One 8,000 gallon under LOWERY electric organ,
ground fuel storage tank.
6268 or can be seen at 479 $1,500.00.
992'7354 evenings. chord &amp; rhytym section,
Sycamore St., Middleport ..
perfect condition. Not a
toy. $550. 992·2044.

41
TWO

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

. Ah·;otypes
Years Experleoce .
roofing work,

,~O~h~-~~:!11::::~-;-~~~~~~1\~~~~~~~~~
~~~~R~a~c~ln~e~
Roofs, Gutters, . ROGER HYSElL'S
ROUSH

Modern home, six rooms,

OHIO

- -" ' • - .. - · - " ' " "

i

SERVICE

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~1~1-~5~-1~mgo~-~~~~==========~1~~~7~-ffc~

992 · ~288.

AGENCY. INC.

1111

Pomeroy, Olllo •s769
-- .__..,,...___.,..,....,___,..,..........a
·---------·-·-··-·--·-·-··-·--·-·-.l.i::_
____
•I

Sizes
SMALL

·10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1• gas, ready to move into.
acre; -6. rooms. 2 baths. 1Vz 949·227'7,
acres; 6 rooms basement,
bath, 2 mobile homes ;

9SZ·D42'

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

•l•l•o"'"c"""'•
, ·
_ . _ . _ ,..,.,.,.-..c..,..f.., __ _
11

BUY:

acres of woods. Asking

....
...,
.,_.
...,.._,............
L I'

TO

$50,1100 .

47-WntMteltftf

,_W....,IoB/11'.

l Wanted

,,

,..._.,..

t-P••nctalt

or any gold or silver
Antique furniture,
or china, will pay top
ar, or complete estates.
No item too large or too
small. Check prices before
selling. Also do appraising.
Osby IOssie) Martin. 992·
6370.

H~•ms.

ment, sundeck; and 24

·~"

.... _ .....d~ ....
4HPI-. ,

0 AU&lt;"!" /.

foreign

slclnQ!" '"'
•....
""'

"From 30x3D"

Trailer lot tor sale, $5,000. · carpet. 1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
12
Situations Wanted
7, three bedroom farm· carpet.
B x s Sales, Inc.,
hou·
s
e
located
on
Route
7.
WILL do odds &amp; ends,
2nd X Viand Street, POint
paneling, floor tile, ceiling 992·257\·
Pleasant, wv Phone 675·
4424.
. .
file. Call Fred Miller at 992'
6338.
House &amp; lot for !ii!le, eight
•New Homes · exroom &amp; bath, wittrlireploce 1971 HOMETTE furnished tensive remodeling
in family room. Two por·
13
Insurance
home. 56x12, 2 •Electrical work
ches, one enclosed, mobile
bedroom,
baths, water •Roofing work
AUTOMOBILE
IN · basefllent, outbuilding. Has b~d. new1'12 central
air,
SU RANCE been can_,.. been remodeled. On corner washer -dryer included.
· 12 Years
celled?
Lost your of Main &amp; Tyr~e In Racine . owner moved out of state.
Experience
operator's license? Phone 949·2778.
S7,500. firm. 992·5893 8:30·
Greg Roush
992·2143.
5:00 after 5:00 992·2271 or
Ph. 992·7583
Older home on Long Street 367·0412.
10·24·1 mo.
in Rutland. Three bedroom
Real Estate
with central heat, storm 1978 12x65 Bayview mobile
windows, on large lot . Car- home, 2 bedrooms, located
port &amp; garage. Price near SOVIhern Ohio coal .54
Misc. Merchanise
31
Homes for Sale
reduced to $12,500. 742·3074. mines. $8,500. 992·7667.
Firewood for sale, Mixed
BARTELS , Loan
ED
Representative, 1100 East HOUSE for sale by owner, 1960 MODEL 10x50 Mobile types of wood. $35.00 per
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh . 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living Home. Partially furnished pick·up load . . Delivered,
Mortgage
money room, eat in kitchen, &amp; set up at local traitor will stack for Senior
Citizens. 843·4951 .
available. All types home garage, large utility room court.
Ph~ne992·3!157 .

lot . Wfth furniture
$32,500,1ess if not.
LAND · LAND· LAND
- Nice laying land lor
excellent farm or can be
subdivided for a
development. Utilities
available. 30 acres plus
- f6t you -,o-dO Whatever
youwant. ·
NEAR NI:W BR'IDGE
- 81-level . 3 bedroom
home with woodburner,
Has rice carpeting,
wash room, fu II base·

•

.!Y

Nancy Van Meter,

"*,

·Farm_~ui1dines

"I got a $10 raiM and a $12
wltt1holcllng tex lncr-1"

full blJsement, and large

or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court .St., Porrtttro.)", 0., 45769
'

life insurance and
disability policy at no cost"
to the employee. and
hospitalization insurance
available. Come visit us or

llli

"-rH,;r.

ALL STEEL

have

cellent working conditions,

~Just

V.C. YOUNG II

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
JUST OFF OLD 33 Good · 3 bedroom, 1'12
storv home. Nice bath,
eat·ln modern kitchen,

PHONE 992-2156

Name.~·-----------------

now

fuSS\
United States Steel
- ~ ....z rna.

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh.

. 21~ E. Second Street

much faster
I j th .a

.

or

t~~~L~.~:t Ji

You 'II

r:.

silver

Headquarters

tra t It d

'

we

openings tor full and part
time positions on day shift
but will consider other shifts. Competitive salary, ex·

~IsnQ

electrica I work
(Free Estimates)

achieving near maximum
census,

.. . There's only one/

- Plumbing and

l!lnswer for you. Due to

R. N.. Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter, 614-992·66()6 . .

Housing

l

•·jr,

work

-concrete work

RNs and LPNs, looking for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
shifts? Feel the need to
develop your Ideas in
resident care with a highly
motivated staff? Ppmeroy
Health Care center has the

call:

.,

WANT AD. INFORMAOON

,,

-Addonsand
remodellog
-Rooting and guNer

nished, city water, natural

:~~======~~~~~~·

Write your own ad ond order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel· your · ad by ptione when you get
·results. Money not refundable.
•

1) ___ J:!elp Wanted___ _

~~AWNuM, -~~b~~IEN~: ·
COINS. RINGS,JEWELR ·
Y, MISC. ITEMS , AB·
SOLUTE
MARKET
PRICE GUARANTED. ED
BURKETT
BARBER·
SHOP, MIDDLEPORT , financing , new, old, on 2 acres of land in good
OHI0992·3476.
refinancing, and 2nd mor- location. $29,000. 667·6455
lgages. Phone 992·7000 or . alter 5.
OLD COINS, 'pocket wat· 992·5732.
ches, class rings, wedding
HOUSE, 7 rooms, on bath,
bands, diamonds. Gold .or BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom full basement, large lot
silver. Call J. A. Wamsley, ranch brick home in Baum with river frontage . Alter 6 ·
742·2331. Treasure Chest Addition. With new garage 992·7284.
Coin Shop, Athens, OH. 592· &amp; genie door. Gas heat,
6462.
newly Installed central air NICE 2 story home in
conditioning, familY room Bashan. One hall acre, im·
WANTED TO 'BUY: Class &amp; stone fireplace, ap· mediate possession. Price
r.lnQs, wedd(ng b.a nds, plittnoes built in, newly In· reduced. Phone 949·2042.
anything stamped 10k, 14K, s~lled electric breaker
attractively
18k, gold . .Silver coins, system.
pocket watches. Call Joe decorated basement , 2
· Mobile Homes
Clark, 992·2054, Clark's bat~s. fullY carpeted with 32
most attractive drapes.
___ _,f"'o,_r~sa,l,_,e_ _ _
Jewelry, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call985·3814 or992·2571 .
TRAILER with lot. Fur·

IN HARRISONVIu.E

'fers. promotions. layoffs

LOST S&lt;:chnauzer. By New
Lima Rd. Female black &amp;
If seen or found
I jlleas•ec,all742·3189.

WANTED

Au CT 10N •·

job performance&gt; ,
II Is our policy to take af'
flrmatlve action to ensure
that all training programs
and all ,personnel actions
such as a rate · of com·
pensatlon, benefits, Iran·

__________..

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
day. Write: Millennium· and earn good money plus
Ministries,
Box 353, some great gifts as a Sen·
Newark Ohio 43055.
tine! rdute carrie~. Phone
us right away and gel on
RUG WEAVING . .$2.75 the el iglbi Iity list at 992·
2156or992·2157.
yard. 992·5971.

SACRED HEART Church

PUBLISHED POLICY
beliefs.
applicant feels he/she has contact Joseph Knight, 216·
STATEMENT
Joseph Knight, Ass't been discriminated against 861'1456 to pursue the
The Ohio Conference of · Exec. Dlr., will have the in employment, seekln\j properdlscrlmlnatloncom·
, P,,I"~J!lll/
T... mste rs, Serv Ice Bureau over a II respons 'bill' y of a d· employment and/or .P, lalnt_.
, ,re.
Is committed to equal em· ministering the program. training with this agl!flcv,
1.,
-~
1
ployment opportunities tor 11 a program participant or he/she should lm~edlatei,Y ill'&gt;1j,'"l¥,c
all applicants,
and
employees participants
In all facets 1---------'--...,f-----,.,-,~...;..-..,...+---------t-­
of Its operations; and
8
where
defi
c
i
enc
i
es
are
~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ.iiiiiiii~~~~i.iiiiiiii;J;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
noted to take affirmative II
action to correct such
·
•
··
deficiencies.
In
addition,
it
.
is our policy to recruit, hire
and promote In all job
classifications without
regard to race, color,
religion, national origin,
7~00
~~a(ex~1.' w:c•;~P':t~o~a~
J
1
1
1
1
qualification), ancestry,
age, political affiliation or
beliefs, or· handicap
(provided
physical
Imitation does not prevent

"YOUNGS
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

CONSTRUCTION

Public Notice

FRIDAY NOV 14th AT

•

Modular home lot.on Route

.

Public Notice

Business Services

return. Join us in preParing
the body of Christ lor that

Bazaar Nov. 13. Inner from

..-

...

MillenniUm
Box · 353,

I

Small investment~ laige ·
returns, Sentinel W1q].)'Ads
Public Notice

THE TIME has come lo•
•
belie\lers In Jesus C~rlst to
unite in preparation tor His
return . Join us In preparing
the body of Christ lor that

Giveilway
RACINE GUN SHOOT, •
Racine Gun Club, every 3 BEAGLE female pupFriday night ·starting at .
7:30 p.m. Factory choke pies.7weeksold.742·26o18 . .
guns only.
3 BEAGI.E female pup·
GUN . SHOdt: • Saturday pies. 7 weeks old. 742·26o18.
evening starting at 6:30
p.m. Sponsqred by the 6!..__~~~os~t.!'!a.!!n~d!:.F~o~und~-­
Raclne Volunteer Fire Found : Liver colored coon
Department, at building In dog found In Portland area. ·
Bashan. Factory choke 843·3484.
guns only.

grown

Public Notice

' '
Announcements

3
Announcements - ·
I PAY highest prices Newark Ohio 43055.
possible for gold and sliver
coins, rings, jewelry, etC. THE Tl ME has come lor
Contact Ed Burkett Barber believer$ In Jesus Christ to
ShoP. Middleport.
unite In preparation for His

u.s.

'

3

day , Write :
M i nistries,

surveys the first of the month, com- percent o1. tbe com had been bar- ·decline from the 1979 harvest-of 814.3 generally are above yeaHgO levels.
pared to the record 1979 harvest Of vested In the majilr stateS, com- million. However, the latest 11le 11101t recent five-day average
' estimate was lip from the October prices computed by the tlepartmert
. 7. 78 billion liushels.
pared to only 5f percent a year ago.
show wheat at $U'I a llu8bel and ·
foreeut of5f7 million bushels.
Officials also reported further
It l.s tbe first annual decline in
Cottcll production wu put at 11.2 comat$3.14&amp; bushel.
declines in harvest prospect~~ for cot- com production since bad weather
A yaar qo, wheat pril.'eS at the
ton and a few other 1!180 crops. But shriveled yields In 19'/t, reducing the millioo bales, down 23 percent from
farm
averqed $3.94 a bulbel. and
there was some improvement 1n harvtilt to U blllioo bushels, a ·l7 14.8 million in 1979. The October
com
$2.2'7
a bushel, according to ofyields of soybeans, rice and percent drop from 5.87 billion estimate was 11.8 million bales.·
The department did not ilsue new ficial records.
sorghwn from estimates made a bushels produced in 19'13.
month ago.
OVerall, the department's "all productioo estimates for wheat and
WASHINGTON (AP) 1be
The department's CJW Reporting cropa" production index for 19110 was a number ol. other 11180 CI'Gpl that
Board said"that as of Nov. 1about 1111 shown at 129 percent of the cJW already have been harvested. Thill Agriculture Department says
• production in 198'1, a base year used year's wheat crop wu a record of prospects for 00 year's tobacco
for comparlsoll. Laat year, the Index about 2.36 billion busbels, with most barvest declined sJ.llihtly in the last
rose to lUI an.t1rne lUgh of 144 per- o1. It being harvested before the full month but that the crop sUU Is ex~ to be al!Out 17 percent larger
cenl
impact of last surnriler's dtought.
.
Soybean production was
Com is the largest grain CJW than In 1979.
'Total production~ mostly made
estimated as of Nov. 1 at 1.'1'1 billion
In the Unl~ States and, 88
bushels, a 22 percent decline from livestock feed, is a vital element In up of flue-cured and burley types last year's ~ of 2.27 billion. A the production of meat, poultry and is expected to be about 1.71 billion
month qo the CJW waa estimated at dairy products for American con- pounds, c'llllp8I'I!CJ to 1.5.'1 blllim
lastyear. A month qo, officials
1.76 billion bullhels.
sumers.
The latest figurei showed rice farAlong with wbeat and soybeans, estimated the output at 1.79 blllioo
mers sUU are ezpected to harvest a com 8IBo is a leading conunodity pooods.
Bued on Noy. 1 Indications, tbe
record CJW, now estimated a! about among U.S. agricultural exports to
146.1 million hundredweight or 100- scores of foreign markets, including n~ crop
~ted at 1.1
pound bag~. up frmn 112.8 million In· the blg overseas buyers such 88 b.illion. ~; · up · l6 percent from
Japan and ihe Common Market ~
dlcated a month ago and from the
and
at 555 millioo
COWitries.
'
1979 harvest of 131.6 million.
poililds, up 25 perci!nt, the departGrsln prices at the farm have • ment's Crop Reporting Board said
Sorghum grain was estimated at
560.6 million bllllhels, a 32 percent risen . from earlier slumps and

year,

1ft Memoriam - - -- ___

*

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

~.

-.ss.

-- -

.,

I'

�14- ·'l'beDal\ySelltlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov, ll, 1980

Ohio's financial crisis

Ashtabula ·School District
borrows funds to .stay open

More spending cuts may be necessary

'

'

l

'j

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
AlbtabWa County school district has
becaiDe the eighth Ohio system to
bocrow money from the State this
year in an attempt to remain open.
1be State Controlling Board approved a loan Monday to offset a.
'148,470 deficit . facing the
Pymatuning Valley: Local School
Diltrtct. 1be deficit was certified by
the state auditor.
In the matter, controllers approved a request by the state Department ol Educafi~on to use money
from an emergency school advance
account. The fund was created to
help financlally troubled districts
avoid WISCheduled cJOilings.
1be district's loan followed !he
voters' rejection of a 7 mill tas levy
on Nov 4. According to state
education officialll, no tas levy has
been approved !here since a 5.5 mill
levy waa passed in 1977.
Uncler the Joan's tenns, the
.Pymatunlng district has until June
1982 to repay the money at an interest rate of 6.5 percent.
·
In other action Monday, the
legislator-dominated board agreed

to ·release $'11,655 to continue Ohio's
program for dealing With possible
emergenclei at nudear power plants. 1be A!ljutant General's office
told the controllers tllat the program
is mandated by the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory CoiiUIIission but has no
federalfundsprovidedforit.
Failure to approve the state funda
could prove disastrous to nuclear
power programs in Ohio, the adjutant office said
" It would effectively render Ohio
useless to respond to nQCiear power
plant emergencies arid would cauae
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Federal Emergency
Management Agency to withdraw
any approval of Ohio's Emel;gency
Response Plan," the agency said in
its written request.
Such a.ction could cause
operations to cease at the Da\'J.
Besse nuclear plant near Port Cllnton, the office said. The move also
could suspend licensing procedures
for the Zinuner nuclear facility,
currently under construction along
lheOhioRiveratMoscow,ltsaid.

Response given explanation
ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) Deputy Secretary of State Warren
Chri8topher met again today with
Algeria's foreign minister to further
explain the U.S. response to Iran's
tenns for releasing the 52 American
hostages, Algerian sources reported.
1bey said the American position
was discussed at a luncheon given
by Foreign Minister Mohamed
Benyahla . and that Algeria would
forward the response to Iran
following the explanation.
Christopher delivered the
American reply in a meeting with
Benyahia on Mondsy for transmission to the Tehran goverrunent.
Christopher flew to Algiers with
Deputy Treasury Secretary R!&gt;bert

Carswell and three other U.s . officials from Washington. They planned to remain in the Algerian capital
to await Iran's response.
It was asswned that the ~ of the
U.S. reply was forwarded to Tehran
within hours of the one-hour
meeting. But early today Radio
Tehran said: "U.S. and Algerian rl.ficials have remained silent on the
U.S. reply to Iran's conditions,
which is expected to be conveyed to
the Iranian govenunent in the next
few hours. "
Meanwhile, the Algerian Foreign
Ministry denied rumors that a highlevel Iranian delegation was enroute
from Tehran for indirect
negotiati~s with Christopher
through the Algerians.

Census figures
(Continued from psge I )
The mayor reponed on an Ohio EPA
inspection of sewage treatment
facilities. The report was satisfactory except with the frequency of
testing and that testing requirement
is now being met, the mayor stated.
Tbe flll8Dce committee' agreed to
met with the clerk and mayor to
discuss a reconunendstion by the
Board .of Public Affairs on the
distribution of interest collected on
unused water department funds.
1be fire department was given
permission to look into the
possibilities of constructing another
garage building for vehicles of the
department on the village-owned lot
near the post office.
At the request of Councihnan Mar-

vin Kelly, Mayor Hoffman will talk
to Pomeroy Mayor CJar,nce. Andrews on the possibilities of a new
sign near the Pomeroy bridge
stressing !he prohibiting of through
traffic trucks from the bridge
through Middleport.
Councihnan Carl Horky urged that
trash haulers sbould understand
that they are to serve all residenlll
requesting their services and should
be equipped to haul bigger items
when their licenses are' renewed
next month.
Others attending the meeting were
Harry Evans, Marietta, investment
advisor for the town, and Councilmen Dewey Horton, Jack Satterfield and Williwn Walters.

Reclamation project
explained at session
Approximately 30 interested
citizens attending a public meeting
beld at the Scipio Township Hall
Monday evening heard a discusson
on the Rural Abandoned Mining
Program (R.A.M.P.), being administered by the U. S. Soil Conservation Service (S.C.S.) and the
Snowville Reclamation project, administered by the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources (O.D.N.R.).
The proposed project is in the
Pageville area or the West Branch of
the Shade River Watershed.
Representatives from SCS and
ODNR explained the reclamation

In other ictlon, the board gave the
Ohio Department rl. Heelth balf r1.
wbat it requested to continue
operation ol a labl!i'atorY aervlng
health &amp;~eooes 8CI'OIII the state. ·
Controllers rel~iaed PIO,OOO in
emergency funds to help a&amp;et alO..
ol federal money wbicb tlnatenecl
the laboratory services divlalon, the
department Said.
Tbe board, acting at the request cl
Rep. M,)Tl H.' Shoemaker, D- ,
Bourneville, also ordered the
preparation of leglalatlon thet would
allow the department to begin
chargliJg for some lab teats that now
are free. VariOus · teats are conducted by the laboratory for local
health departments, doctors and
hospitals, Including rabies
examinatiOIIII.
Tbe bill may be conaldered at a
post-election ~on rl. the General
Assembly, whlcb beglila Wed·
nesday.

'

Seven runs were made on Mondsy
County Emergency Medical Service
Headquarters reports. ·
They include Pomeroy, 9:31p.m.,
Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy, ' to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Pomeroy, i:46 p.m., Guy Lee to
Veterans Memorial; 6:05 p.m.,
PomeroY, Unit, Linda Dickson, Rose

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (APJ Five southern West VIrginia coal
mining families spent Monday af.
ternoon pceparing to bury their dead
in the wake rl. last weell's methane
gas explosion at a . Boone County
mine.
All five of the men killed at Westmoreland Coal Co.'s Ferrell No. 17
mine at Robinson were scheduled
for burial Tuesday.
Meanwhile, work ems continued
to claan up the section ol the mine in
which the men were killed, and a
federal mine .safety official predicted that federal inspectors would
reach the blast site Tueaday. He said
the inspectors immedl.ately would
begin their investigation Into the
cause of the accident.
"We hope that they can go to work
rather quicldy once they reach the
blast site," said Frll(lk O'Gorman of
the Mine Safety and Health Administration. .
Work Crews had reconstructed
ventilafing walls in the shaft he
said, directing fresh air to the stie of
Friday's explosion, where a major
buildup of methane g&amp;s' had been
present. He siud crews were being
l1&amp;mpered by standing water in the
mine, but added that more fresh aL·

~

V

Meigs~'~ounty
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted·-·Ernest · Cross,
~e; Helen George, Bidwell;
Mazy Sberon, Middleport; Le Anna
Plants, Middleport; Linda Dickson,
Pomeroy; Guy Lee, Pomeroy; Norma GoodWin, Pomeroy.
Discharged-Lorena Leiving,
Leota Schaeffer.

EXPRESS 111ANitS
Members . of the Pomeroy Fire
Department bave extended their sincere thanks for the many contributions they received during the
recent house to house C811V8sa.
A total of· $2,li00 was received
which will be ·~ to pay the indebtedness on the tanker. 111oee who
were mJ.t.ed and wish to make a
donaUon may send It to the Pomeroy
Fire Department, Boa 247
Pomeroy,Ohio46~.
'·

The Ohio Department ol Natural
Resour!:ea, Dlviaon rl. Forestry, Ia
off4ll'ing, trees to be planted &amp;lain
thi.s Y'BI'·
trees can be ordered by vocau-1 agriculture
studenta and 4-H members.
Tbe ordering and plantlnfl ol trees
by Vocational Agriculture students
and f-H members can be a very
frulUul learning experience; and for
ihi.s reuoil 'the Divialon ill Furestry
will furnl.sh JlO seedliiiCB, all of the
same species only, free , to each
studtmt ur cluo n1t'rnber. Only one ·
Sl~'cles may be nrdere&lt;l by eac·h per-

'' '

,

'

&gt;llln.

destroy
, 11

hair

· ,.============~;:=========~{

.

n-

I'

began today. Taxi~creases would be have been easier to deal with the
considered after implementing as problem, "I think we have to look to
many spending cuL• as possible see if we've cut as much as we can
while maintaining essential ser· without destroying the essential ser·
vices, he said.
vices of the sts,e," Van Meter, R·
"I would like it to be ... if we had to Ashland, said.
do it ... in the form of a temporary
State Budget Director William D.
surcharge in the sales tax or income Kelp blames the revenue problem on
tax," he said.
the national economy. Every major
No other taxes produce enough Ohio tax source tied to the economy
revenue to deal with such a large has been behind budget estimates
budget problem, Gillmor said.
during the first four months of the
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, cur.rent fiscal year, he said.
assistant minority leader, said GOP . "Revenues through October have
lawmakers warned of the budget made It apparent that further action
crunch months ago when it wonld must be taken imm•diatelv." hP

said.
According to Ocasek, the absence
of substantial action on budgetary
matters in the lame duck session
reflects ea rlier plans to wait until
the fi rst of the year.
"This is not a shift in our policy,"
Ocasek said. "I want to see what
November and December do" inter·
ms of revenues produced by existing
tsxes.
Before the election , Ocasek said a
tax hike would have to be studied in
January as part of a long-term
solution to the ailing budget.

•

•

at y

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1980

VOL XXI NO. 149

&gt;

Glenn may seek presidency in 1984
WASHINGTON (AP) - .FoUowing his overwhelming election victory in Ohio Tuesday, Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, says he is considering
running for president in 1984.
In anticipation of such a move, Glenn said today he will start ac. cepting speaking engagements outside Ohio - something he has
avoided since being elected to his first Senate term in 1974.
He said he will base his final decision on an assessment of how
President-elect Ronald Reagan handles the job.
In particular, Glenn said he will look at what the new Republican administration does about the problems of inflation and unemployment.

Celeste heads back to Ohio
WASHINGTON (AP)- Peace Corps Director Richard &lt;;eleste, who
will be out of a job when President-elect Ronald Reagan takes over in
January, is ·preparing to turn his agency over to the Republican ad·
ministration.
'
"I'll be back in Cleveland full time the end of January," Celeste, a
Democrat and a former Ohio lieutenant gov~rnor, said Tuesday.
Celeste, 42, said after he gets back to Ohio he will "sit down with my
family and talk about the future.' '
Celeste, who lost a narrow decision to Gov. James A. Rhodes in the
1978 governor's race, has said he expects to run.for governor again.

Woman faces child srealing charge

VETERANS DAY OBSERVED- Members of Drew Webster Post
39 and Racine Legion 602 took part in the annual Veterans Day ob,ser·
vance held 'in front of the court house in Pomeroy Tuesdav at 11 a.m.

ELBERFELD$

REVIVAL SLATED

A reY!val is underway at the
Syracuse N&amp;zarene Church with services beginning eacb evening ai 7
p.m.
Special singer at tonjght's service
will . be Raynard Martin. The
evangelist is the Rev. Don Bock.
Speci•l music Saturday evening will
be by the Gosileltones. 1be Rev.
James KiWe Ia the pastor. ·

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) ~ The

Home fire kills Kentucky woman

Daily lottery winner

SILENT AUCTION
Mary Shrine '!1, White Sluine of ·
Jerusalem, will bold a silent auction
at their regular meeting Friday,
Nov. 14, at 8 p.m. at ~ Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

Clear tonight. Lows 30-35. Mostly sunny and wanner Thursday.
Highs 55-60. Chance of precipitation near zero percent tonight and
Thursday. Winds easterly less than 10 mph tonight.

MEETS TONIGHT

EXTENDED FORECAST

.
Friday through SWJday:
Aclumce of showers Friday. Fair Salunlay 111111 Sunday. Higbs In the
micHOs to mid-50s Friday and mostly in' the 40s Saturday and Sundsy.
Lows in the mid to upper 3118 Friday and In the mid 20s to low 38s Saturday and S!lllday.

EVENING SERVICES·
Evening services at the Hysell
Run Hollnesa Churcb have been
changed from 7 to 7:30p.m.

A one-car accident in Meigs County was still under investigation
today by the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Ohio Highway PatroL
Troopers report Kenneth G. Hartley, 30, Pomeroy, was westbound on
SR 143 sometime Tuesday whim his
car went off the left side of the road.
The vehicle then.struck a mailbox,

Daily lottery
•
wmner
ClEVELAND (AP) - 1be winning number selected Monday nlgbt
in !Jblo LotterJ'• dally 1111111 "Tbe
Number" was IDS. Tbe lottery replll'tecl eamlnp rl. tl&amp;7 If/Ill fiam the
money WBfered on the pme..

1

your.-.

.

SECRETARY NAldED - SuSHn n~~r . center. has . cham!Jer Tuesday ~grl!ed to sp&lt;msur an advertising
been named secreta~for th• Pmneroy Chaw!Jer of' campaign (hal "ill benefit all ,rel!idrnts of the county,
Conunerce. Shown with Sasan are, lett, John An· rath•t· than tlw annual Gold Star C hri.~\u ms promotion .
dersun , vlcepri'Sidenl iwd .Ji111 P'n·, kcr, president. The

r

He told radio station KAYO in
Seattle that the hostages were
gratified by U.S. public and govern·
ment support, adding "We have no
doubt that tbat is continuing, and at
this particularly crucial time in the
discussions going on .. . support is
even more important than ever."
But Laingen said he could not
comment on the note's delivery. " I
am in no position, as you probably
know, to speak to that. We are
totally out of touch in tenns of the

oubotance ot the problem."

The five-man U.S, team that
delivered the American reply to the
Algerian goverrunent for relay to
Tehran was returning to Washington
from AIJliers today. Their U.S. Air
Force jet developed meclianical
trouble en route, and the group spent
the night at Shannon Airport in
Ireland.
The two days of discussions that
ended Tuesday betwe en the
American team, headed by Deputy
Secretary of State War ren
Christopher, and the Algerians were
described as "intensive and useful"
by John H. Trattner, a State Department spokesman here.
Christopher's group left Algiers on
Tuesday despite its original plans to
remain up to a week to receive an
answer to the U.S. response. There
was no word here on whether

, Cbriatopher's mission was con- ,
sldered a succeos . and Christopher

had no comment as he left.
Algeria is acting as an intennediary between Tehran and the
United States because the two
nations have no official diplomatic
relations.
Christopher's group met with
Algerian leaders to give a
"generally positive reply" to the
Iranian demands, U.S. State Department officials said.
The Iranian Parliament outlined
four demands, including a pledge of
U.S. non-intervention in Iranian af·
fairs, cancellation of American
financial claims against Iran, return·
of the wealth of the late Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and
release of more than $8 billion in
frozen Iranian assets.

continued on and collided with an
embankment before turning on its
side, according to the report.
No damage estimate or time of the
accident was available from the
patrol this morning. Hartley suf·
fered a cereberal concussion and
t11ken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, where he was treated and
then transferred and admitted to
Holzer Medical Center, where his
condition this morning was listed as
stable.
The patrol also investigated a
tw&lt;K:ar accident in Meigs County
late Tuesday morning in which two
persons were injured.
Troopers said Frances 0. Young,

69, Pomeroy, was westbound on SR
143 at 11:55 a.m._when she made a
left turn and collided with an eastbound car driven by Pamela M,
Starchler, 24, Athens.
Both drivers were injured. Starchier was not immediately treated,
but Young. was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the Meigs
EMS, where she was ~reated and
released.
Both cars we re moderately
damaged in the crash, and Young
was cited by the patrol for failure to
yield right of way.
No injuries were reported in a twocar collision in Gallia County
Tuesday morning.

According to the report, Carol S.
Meadows, 17, Crown City, was nor·
thbound on SR 216 at 6 a.m. when she
made a left turn onto CR 33 and
struck an eastbound car driven by
James L. Walter Jr. , 54, Crown City.
Troopers said damage to both cars
was slight, and Meadows was cited
for improper left turn.
Jeffrey W. Zerkle, 26, Cheshire, ,
was also uninjured in a car-deer accident on SR 554 Tuesday night.
The patrol said Zerkle was eastbound at 9:15 p.m. when he struck
and killed a deer that ran into the
path of his car.
Damage was moderate and no
citations were issued.

'.S anta shops Pomeroy' promotion.
theme for 1980 Christmas season

Wrangler corduroys are a handsome, practical
Inn your boy will love. This straight leg corduroy
jean of IW% cotton, 16% polyester will stay fresh ·
end neat' looking all day. Slz: ~~egular and
sHm. plus stuCietit sizes 26 to
gths 30 to 36.
11nng n•m '"to try on a !Hill 1uehly ana you'll see
why Wrangler has the fit that won the west.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

have an exc- tD hann thoo.lalamic
republic ofirari,"theradiosald.
Meanwhile, in an unpr.,.,edented ·
interview with an America~ radio
station, Bruce Laingen, the senior
U.S._ envoy held hostage at th~
Foreign Ministry in Tehran, said he
.was fine and "We're auxious to
leave, hopefuL "

in traffic accidents
Three people hurt
.

Weather forecast

1be Apple Grove United Methodist
Women will meet this evening at 7
p.m.

Auxiliary members also took part in honoring the dead. Lind!;ey
Howes, Eighth District first vice conunander, was the guest speaker.
The welcome was given by Pomery Mayor Clarence Andrews and the
invocation by Leo Vaughan.

No reaction
. given to . U.S. response

U.S. reply to Iran's l!!nns for freeing
TOLEDO Ohio - A warrant has been issued for the arres,t of a
the 52 American hostages was
Toledo w~n ir\ the abduction of a baby from St. Vincent Hospital
delivered to the Iranian goverrunent
earlier this month.
·
in Tehran today, an aide to Iranian
Floretta Kerkulah has been charged with child stealing, police said.
Prime Minister Mohammad Ali
- A warrant iiJSO. waslssued for ttlemlsslng child;-Joe-Jusn-Kyle, so - - Rajai reported.
·
authorities can take custody of him.
Rajai's office, reached by
An anonymous tip was telephoned to police during the past weekend
telephone from Beirut, gave no in·
about a woman who had been seen with an infant. The caller said the
dication of the initial Iranian reac·
wornsn' s neighbors don't remember her as being pregnant.
tion. But American officials thought
it might be several days before Iran
made its next move.
HARDINSBURG, Ky. - A Breckinridge County woman Is dead af.
The Iranian Parliament, the
ter a residential fire Monday night.
.
Majlis, discussed the hostage issue
The sheriff's office identified the victim as Alberta Brown, who was
·during its session today, Tehran
in her early 508.
radio reported, but it gave no in·
Firemen responded to the alarm about 8:'30 p.m. and said the house
dication on whether the deputies had
was engulfed in flames when they arrived.
. been told the response was 'received.
Cause of the fire was unknown.
One deputy, Fakhreddin Hijazi of
Tehran, accused the United States of
using delaying tactics to put off a
solution
to the crisis "in order to
CLEVELAND .:_ The winning number selected Tuesday night in the
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 789.

happenings •••

Species avallabiB tbia Y'8l' are
White Pine, Red ~ Red Oat. and
Bladt Locust. You may place an order fw the -'1lnp by writing to
the Melp Counl;y EJ:ta""1111 Office,
P. 0. 8os 31, Poli*o,, Ofllo 4678.
You may allo call the Extenalon Offlee and piKe
(88ll . , .
'1"- WF3IyAOO Corporation wli1
provide (llOO) free trees in R '1111t·
ching )II'OIIram for Vo. Ag. studentll
arid 4-H mer~. 1be lndivldaal
may ordL'I' hardiroods, but the matdun~ Jlllrl paid for by WEirvAOO
wti! br in pines. The deadline for orll· ·i· iilt' t ht~ trees is Nuvember21 .

FIFTEEN CENTS

•

Today • • • •

ODNR-·-offers free plants
. ..

..

.,

offlcialll have speculated, though,
' ' The only thing I can tell~ · ·Such f;railedies, the elderly mlnlster
that the gas was ignited by a spark when scmethlng like this happens Is sighed. ·
from an electrically powered vehicle that JesuB Christ Is their source of
"I've seen lots of tragedy in the
the men were riding.
"
help and comfort. Man is helpless in coal field&amp;," he said. "But I've never
Investigators also will be trying to tunes like this."
•
before beeit where men died in a
~bllsh what.caused the disruption
Asked whether be was used to . bwtch IQte tlliB·"
m the ventilation Q'Stem's air flow,
\.•'
thus allowing the fatal buildup of
.,.
methane. West:rnoreland · officials
accepted the blame for the methane
accumulation but said they didn't
know wbat caused the failure of the
ventilation system.
(Continued from page 1) ,
The victims were Howard Gillentodsy.
:
water, 28, ol Alkol, Lincoln County;
More than 35,000 acres ~ · ss · aquare miles :_ has burned since
Herbert -Kinder III, 22, of Marmet;
Friday, officials said.
...,
Howard Williamson Jr., 39, rl. Peach
Arsonists were believed responsible for most of the fires. Officialll
Creek, Logan County; and Carlos
said deer bunters and squirrel hunters r1.ten burn brush to flush out
Lee Dent, 39, and Freddie Wayne
their quarry. Ralph Glove• of the West Virginia Department of
Pridemore, 2fi, both of Hewett,
Natural Tesources also bllllDed •'people mad at landowners or people
.Boone County·
who just like to see fire'burn."
State Mines Director Walter
.ll 1
~
Miller appeared before a legisliltive
anna 8
·•OOl C
interim committee on coal mining
PORTSMOUTH; Ohio- Vandals apparently have destroyed an 11Tuesday. He gave the legislators an
foot rocking chair which was beintl displayed for !he opening of a furexplanation of the Ferren No. 17
nlturestore.
mine layout, using · a map of the
The upholstered rocker, placed Ill !I vacant lot next to the new furmine, but declined to speculate on ·
nlture store, was destroyed by\:.(lre Monday night. It had been
what caused the explosion or who
exhibited there Sunday.
~· .
wasatfau!t.
. ,
The chair, whose value was not immediately known, recently was
~e Mlller was addressing the ,
built by ernpioyees r1. Best Chait Co. in Ferdinand, Ind. It had been
legislative committee, the Rev· R.H.
displayed outdoors by a furniture store in Hickory, N.C. for two weeks
Kennedy sat in his study at Hewett,
wlt!MJut incident before beintl taken to Portsmouth.

would
be available
once the water preparing
for the
was pwnped
out.
ol Dent andsermons
Pridemore.
1befunerals
8G-yearO'Gorman 11!1\il 'MSHA bad no old United Metbodiat minister, a
theories as to Wliat sparked the ex- · veteran of 3t years in coal-field
plosion that killed the miners, whose cburches, said he had prepared
bodies were n!covered ·Saturday many such sermons during his daf'
night.
•
. United Mine Workers union in southern West Virginina.

',.

' out project area and procedure to lt&gt;cal dtilena.
OONR officialll point

e

one ol the IJJndnds that have scorched more than
~.000 acres in iUiem KentuCky since Friday. (AP ·
l.aserphoto) • "
•

Explosion victims to be b.q tjed.· today

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV.ll
procedure.
Susan {lm[, Phyllis Dailey, Beulah
Project Work is scheduled to begin Derenburger, Bobby Pout, Theresa
next spring and continue until the Harvey, Chad Hill, Bertha Hogan,
eroding mining areas are reclaimed. Susan Leonard, · Howard Mandell,
Land that is reclaimed will have a Mae Patterson, Mary Tate, Mrs.
contract life of five years. This · Stephen Pearson and son, Betty
means the land cannot be used for
Russell, Fnnlllin Slsson, Lucretis
production purposes.
Smith, Mary Stiffler, Wye Warren,
Once the contract life has expired, Gladwin Warner.
then the areas may be used as
BIR111S
pasture, hayland or other areas such
Mr. and Mrs. Milan Fain,
as woodland or wildlife !lind. Con- daughter, WellBton; Mr. and Mrs.
tinued local support and cooperation Samuel Hisle; son, Gallipolis; Mr.
is appreciated in order to ensure and Mrs. William White, daughter,
successful completion of the project.
Bidwell.

Hill, to Veterans Memorial; Rutland
Unit, 11:20 a.m., Marie Young to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport,
12:~ p.m., Le Anne Plants, Bradbury School to Veterans Memorial;
Syracuse, 12:29 p.m., Herbert Ferris
to Veterans Memorial, and
Syracuse, 10:07 a.m., Dorothy Hartenbach, to Veterans Memorial.

SMOKY - National Guard troops and state employees were he~ to battle forest fires Monday .in
eastern Kentucky. This bla2e northwest of Hazard was

dered a 3 percent state government
spending cut, effective Dec. 15, to
help offset a projected $403.7 million
deficit in the fiscal year ending June
30,' 1981. But that move will solve
only $50 million oi the problem.
"The problem's here now and
we're not even in the majority yet,"
Gillmor said. "It's a problem we're
going to have to try to correct, unpleasant as it may be.''
Gilhnor ·has urged majority
Democrats, so far unsuccessfully , to
begin work on a bipartisan solution
·to the problem during a lame duck
session of the Legislature which

'

Emergency squad runs ·
by local emergency unils; the Meigs

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - ' succeed Sen. Oliver Ocasek, [}.
fl:epublican Senate leaders say ad· Akron, as Senate President in the
dittonal spending cuts and a tem- 114th General Assembly, said GOP
porary boost in Ohio's sales or in· lawmakers have made no com·
come taxes may be necessary to mitment yet in support of an aperase the state's staggering budget proach for solving the budget
deficit.
problem. But he said the only opThe GOP asswnes control of the tions are trirruning expenses or
~ppe~ . cham\Jer - along with hjking tas revenues.
" If there is going to be a revenue
inhentmg the state defi'cit - for !he
first time in six years on Jan 1 increase, it will certainly be coupled
Republicans reversed an 111·15 with cuts that are as deep as it is
Democtat majority in the Nov 4 - possible to make and still meet vital
election.
· · services," said Gillmor, R-Port Clin·
Sen.
Paul E. Gillmor ' current ton, on Tuesday.
. .
Gov. James A. Rllodes has ornunortty leader who's ' expected to

f

The annual Christmas parade will
. "Santa Shops Pomeroy" will be
be
held &lt;\1!. Friday, Dec. 5, beginning
the theme used by the Pomeroy
at
6
p.m. It will form behind the forChamber of Conunerce in its annual
mer
Pomeroy Junior Rlgh Building
Chi-istmHs promotion. ·
Meeting Tuesday at the Meigs Inn and travel down river through
chamber members agreed to ·drop Pomeroy.
The annual Christmas parade
the annual Gold Star Christmas
promotion for an advertising cam- kicks off the Christmas shopping
season in the village of Pomeroy.
·~
paign.
The first advertisin~ campaign The parade will also welcome the
will appear in The Daily Sentinel on arriva l of Santa Claus who will
Wednesday, Nov. 26, with par- distribute treats to the youngsters.
It was indicated that the Meigs
,ticipaling merchants off erin g
County
Jaycees will offer pictures
specials al their respective stores.
with
Santa.
The chamber suggested ·
Asimiiar ad will appear the e~l"i y
J)llr\ of Decembet· wi th tl H&gt;Si! merchants remain open during the
sr&lt;'l'&lt;als offerL'll over a w••t•kH•d evening hours until Chrislmas
f )' •. , ·d.
following the Christmas parad&lt; ·
Inirodur •ed Wl!I'C ~l:.~ii!'; l:&gt;ut:l\
.l

,,

newly appointed secretary for the
chamber, and Mary Lee Montgomery, administrator of the
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
·
Mrs. Montgomery told members- "
that physical therapy had been ad~
ded to the center. She also said she·
felt the residents of Meigs County ..
were very friendly and she offered to ·
participate in any of the promotions· ·
staged by the chamber.
:
Attending were Jirit Frecker · · •'
'. .
president, John Anderson, vice · · .
president, -susan Baer, secretary, : :
Marjorie Hoffner, Betty .Ohlinger,::·
Joe Clark, Bill Quickel, Paul Simori, : ·
C. E. Blakeslee and Mrs. Mon,c· : :·
..
tgomery.
'

..

.....,.

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�</text>
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